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December II, 1980

Page-12 Tile Daily Sentinel
I(

MEN'S WRANGLER '9.~

I
I
I
I

REG. •75.50

NATO warns:SovietS--keep out

FlANNEL SHIRTS
. Slzes ·S, M, Land XL . Col·
orful plal~s TiN!~ pockets ·
full shirt coats.

1WO DAYS ONLY - FRI., DEC. 12 &amp;SAT., DEC. 13
OPEN EVERY NIGHT UNTIL 8:00 P.M.

Sale Price

..

BRIJSSEI.$; Belgllllr\ (AP) - ~·
NATO foreign rnlnlsters; declaring ·
"Poland should be free to decide its
own future" warned today they
would react If the Soviet tfruon intervened In Poland, but did not
specify what their governments
would do.
'
Soviet Intervention would mean·
the end of East-West detente, they
sald.But it wa.~ generally accepted

.

•
"

.' -

$79fJ

TWO DAY SALE

KNIT
ACCESSORIES

*

HAlS - SCARFS •

MIMNS · GLOVES

PAJAMAS

·SETS

CHRISTMAS SALE

SALE $2.80
SALE $3.95
SAlE $5.20
SALE 56.80

-ALL LIVING ROOM SUITES ON SALE

-ALL CHAIRS ON SALE

W

•

THIN SCAN "POCKET'' SIZE ....... SALE $12911
BEARCAT II1... ....
· ••••8•Channels
t'AI I: $1'tftlll Yi
•••••·· ••••·'•~
L~- tl:!.

REG. 1 178~ BEARCAT FOUR-SIX .~.~~~:~~~~-~~~-"-~~~SALE

JUNIOR

SAVE! MEN'S LINED VESTS

(~~

,

.

M

1

..

every

SALE PRICES
.
' .

~./_,1

.~~

/'1
~

·

Appl!~ntees

CHILDREN'S

MEN'S AND BOYS' $1.39

SLEEPWEAR SALE

. TUBE .SOCKS

Men's 522.95 Vests
Sale $18.36
Men's $26.95 Vests
Sale S21.56

day wear or dress
up . Sizes 5 rhru 15.

...

14.

~

Reg. SS.OO ;, .... SALE $3.99 ~
Reg. S8.il0 ...... SALE $6.39 .
Reg. $14.00 .... SALE $11.19 .,.
Reg. S19.00, , ... SALE $15,19 ~

Save this weekend on warm
winter coats in misses and
half sizes . Fur lined coats,
dress length coats, short
sytles and quilted styles.
Reg. $41.00. , .••. Sale $32.80
Reg. $64.00 •.•••• Sale $51.20
Reg. $76.00 .•.••. S;.le $60.80
Reg. $92.00 .•.••. Sale $73.60

group of styles and colors.

BOYS' LINED VESlS
Very

popular for sc hool

and general wear ..Sizes 8 to
20 . Good selection.

BOYS $18.95 VESTS
SALE 516.15
BOYS $21.95 VESTS
SALE $18.75
BOYS $29.95 VESTS
SALE $25.45

CHILDREN'S

COATS AND
SNOWSUITS

BED BLANKETS

ALL SIZES - MACHINE
WASHABLE
(

,?..-'

CARHARTT BRCMN DUCK

MEN'S WRANGLER

WORK CLOTHES

S19fi DENIM JEANS

\{A.)
'

Sale pr ices on our entir e stock
insulated coveralls · l ined

jackets and

coats · bib

overa lls - lined dungarees · lin·
ed ~oods .

SALE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
'

MEN'S WORK JACKETS
Our entire. stock m en's work
coats and jacketS. Sizes 36 to
50 . Denims and quilt lined
uniform jackets . Carhartt and

Blue Bell brands.

Quilt Lined
JACKET ...........
9~ Blanket Lined
T .....•........
.99 Blanket Lined
CKET ...... .....
.99 Blanket.Lined
COAT ........ : .....
nl!6.9'5Sherpa Lin~d
JAC KET .. .. ... . .

S19.95
$21.25

~- ..~
" ..., .
•
~ . :

WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 8 to 20. Good style:
and color selection.
Boys $29.95

JDETS
.. ; SAL£ ~.45
Boys $34.95 · _ · . _
._ '
JACKETS
... SAL£ '29.75
Boys $39.95 ·
JACKETS
.... SALf .'33.95·
Boys $59.95
JACKETS •. ~ .SAL£ SSCL95

.
,
@
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.

BICYCLES

WINTUK
YARN

MEN'S
SHIRTS

'1'19, Skein

• V•n Heusen Dress Shirts
eM.,•s Knit Shirts

AT SPECIAL .SALE PRICES:

prepared.
•
Two other men also have been accused of participating in the

NEW YORK .{AP) - Jolm Len·
non's widow says the despafr over
her husband 's slaying is getting out
of hand, and she has urged rock fans
not to treat his death as "the end of

·alleged plot, in which a telephone caller said food had been poisoned in
threeoftheH.E.B. chain's six Wacoston;~~. ,

· Vandals cut down city's tree

an era."

.Ohio lottery l$Jler
ClEVELAND {AP) - The winnlng numbera selected ThUI'!Jday ·
night ln the Ohio Lottery's dally game "The Number" and Its weekly
"Pyramid" game are:

Jonathan Marks, a fonDer federal
prosecuter, was appointed in Adlerberg's place.
MeanWhile, fans contlltued to
mourn IMnon's death, maintaining
a Yl8ll oullkle the excllllive Dakota
apartment buildl.ng where Lennon
lived ln Manhattan. The rock star ·
, wa8 tditot jllllt outside the b!illdlng on
Monday night, just hoan after he
had ~ an liutot~rajlh ftlr Chapman.
· About 2G people held a memorial
service for Lenno.t, who '&lt;'tR •o. at
the Jlllnols ~tale Capitoi '"' 1'h~l·

Pyramid -15; 876; 4309

eMen's Velours

SANTA ClAUS WILL BE ..IN THE STORE .ON FRIDAY AND SATIJRDAY 6 TO .7:30 P.M. AND
MONDAY 6 lO 7:30 P~M . BRING YQU~ CHILDREN IN F~ A VISIT

Excellent s,lection-au sizes •

ElBERFELDS IN POM-EROY .

REDUCED 20%
•'

.

't,

BPC*esmanlbe Reagaa team hopes • the sba'pe Reagan wants, n~ lbat
David A. Slockman of Michigan as · will be respected in both Congress
during the campaign Reagan
budget dlrectfr, Reagan campaign and in financial circles.
promised at least a 2 percent cut,
manager William J. Casey as CIA
Stockman, who will inherit the job · "and I think there's no indication
director, retiring Sen. Richard S. of molding the federal budget into
that we will back offfrom that."
Schweiker R·Pa. as secretary of
Wernberger, who won the
health and h~n . services, Con'
nickname '.'Cap the Kni_fe" for his
necticut industrialist Malcolm
budget-cutting work m former
President Richard M. Nixon's a~
Baldrige as coiJUllerce secretary
and deputy Republican Party chairA suit in the amount of $6368.20 nurustratron, wa.s asked about his
man Drew Lewis as transportation plus 10 percent interest retroactive plans now for nahonal d~ense. .
secretary.
to March 18, has been filed in the
He refused to be specifrc but S8ld,
Regan, chairman of Merrill Lynch Meigs County CoiJUllon Pleas Court " I . support a strong . American
&amp;Co., the nation's largest brokerage WagaatiensrtDtihsteri~~~.:es !i~~~.~h=~Yr nulitary force wher~~er 1t ISm our
finn, joined Baldrige in labeling in·
best mterest to do so.
flationthe nation's"No.1problem."
J.B. O'Brien, 1001'. Court St.,
Reagan still must ~e seven
Both tax cuts and budget cuts are Pomeroy, is to claim payment for more Cabmet-level appomtees, and
needed to fight inflation and damages to real estate owned by va~10us sources ~Y · he will. move
stimulate productivity, said Regan, O'Brien, allegedly caused by the qurckly to nonunate Ha1g as
whose appointment• gives the breakage of a water line on the secretary of state- perhaps by this
Cabinet roster an economi~ property.
\V~kend.

Judgement SOught

sday.

Miss Ono has asked that 10
rrJnutes of silence be observed
worldwide at 2 p.m. Sunday to honor
Lennon's memory.
In Miami, WWWL program director Rick Peters said 10 Florida
stations would go off the air for the

vigil. Two Ohio rock music radio
stations, WWWN·FM in Cleveland
and WSAI·FM in Cincinnati, said
they would suspend broadcasting for
JOminutes.
Lennon's body was cremated in
suburban Hartsdale, N.Y., and his
ashes giyen to Miss Ono to be buried ·

privately at a secret place.
In a recent interview, LeMon said
he did not believe in worship of the
dead. He was also said to have an
aversion to the cult worship at the
·graves of such stars as Elvia
Presley.

' threats.

Tlle.Nlllr\ber - ~1

• WHtern Shirts
• Flannel Sport and
Western Shirts
• Von Heusen Qulanas _
Splendor KnitS anct
Su-s

Mechanic St. warehouse

·.Re.p,.. . . al.omtnrd~.

"So many things are happening ...
people are committing suicide. They
are sending me telegrams saying
this is the end of an era. I'm ~lly so \
concerned," Yoko Ono said Thursday.
Earlier this week, two people apparently despondent over Lennon's ..
death took their own lives.
Mark David Cbapman, who Is
cbarged with the shooting. death of
the internationally famous rock
star, was taken to court ln a bullet·
proof vest for a hearing TbUI'!Jday in
which hlB court-appoliiteil attorney
withdrew froin the case. A new
lawyer was appclnted.
.
Lawyer llerbert Adlerberg said
tile case was "becoming an
' al]lfttrosa," with his one'man pra~
tice interrupted by a flood of
telephone calla from joumaliBts and
the curious. Adlerberg denied reports that be had received death

UTrlETON, Colo. - This Denver suburb is looking for a new
Christmas tree. Someone made Off with the old one, lights and all.
Last week, the city planted a live evergreen ln a newly landscaped
traffic island. Electric outlets were .!ilstaUed and the tree was
decorated with lights.
,
But vandals chopped down the tree and hauled it away. The tree was
valued at $157.10 and the lights at $23.

•

RED HEART 1A9

support tax cut

Attorney withdraws from case

ROME - The Italian govenunent raised the price of premium
guollne 33 cents a gallon today to"·7'i to raise.money for the southern
areu devastated by an earthquake last month.
The price of regu1Br gaiOilne wu incre88ed 32 cents I! gallon to
" .so. The price of gasoline ln Italy has has risen 30 percent this year.

SAVEM

AU. RCA CONSOlfS

WACO, TeXlls - Two brothers have been arraigned on federal
charges ln conneCtion with telephone calls demanding $60,000 in cash
ln exchange for the location of grocery items supposedly laced with
strychnUne.
·
U.S. Magistrate Roy Rutland on Thursday set the bond of Steven
V~ Howard, 24, and David Wayne Howard, 21, at $100,000 on charges
of mterference with interstate COIJUllerce. Police Chief Larry Scott
said state charges of attempted theft of more than $10,000 were being

.Italian gas goes to. $3.77 a gallon

- 2'6" wheels- racing style
-only three to sell

$22.15
$22.7 5

. I)YS'

.I

1

Excel lent quality hand kni1tin9 yarn by coa t s and
· Clark - 31h ounce skei ns. Big coiQ_r se_
lection.

$16.95

MEN'S
FlANNEL

REG. 1123.95 MURRAY 10 SPEED

Basic styles in sizes 27 to 42
waist. Pre·washed No·fault
blue denim . Straight legs or
boot flare .

WASIUNGTON - 'Ibe Senate has rejected a move to give the 52
American hoSbjgeS ln Irjlll a special bonus that would have 81)10unted
. to about $40,000 per captive already.
Sen. Mark Hatfield, R.()re., said he proposed the $10Q.per-{jay bonus
as a " Cbrisbnas present" for the Americans when they are released.
They have been ~d ln captivity since Nov. 4,1979.
By a 44--'!6 vote, the Senate decided Thlll'1ldaY not to consider the
special bonus at this time. ·

Charge brothers in grocery case

' Sizes s, M. L and XL plus Ta ils M, L
and XL · Big Man 's sizes 18, 19, 20 and
Big Tails sizes 18, 19, 20.
E«ellent quality by Mr. Leggs and
Elv·.
$14.95 Flannels ............ $11.66
$15.95 Flannels ............ $12.46
$16.95 Flannels ............ $13.26
· $18.95 Flannels ............ 514.76

REDUCED 20%

Senate rejects hostage bonus

•

WORK
SHIRTS

This sale in,:ludes all of our blankets. Twin
and full bed sizes and king sizes. Solid colors .
patterns. Electric and flannel sheet blcmkets
are included .

.WASHINGTON (AP) - Ronald
Reagan's fli:st eight Cabinet choices
-all white, male and Republican - ·
are speaking up quickly ln favor of
the president-elect's plans to reduce
taxes, cut the federal budget and
,.strengthen national defense.
Still to come after presentation of
the first group Thursday: Reagan's
decision on a secretary of state, an
important foreign policy post that
retired Gen. Alexander Haig seems
increasingly likely to fill.
The first eight selections Included
New York financier Donald T.
Regan as treasury secretary ,
Reagan confidant Caspar Wein·
berger as defense secretary and his
personal lawyer, William French
Smith, as attorney general.
There were no surprises as

Pajamas, gowns, . robes
and blanket sleepers.
Sizes for infants thru size

Men's sizes 9 to 15 - Boys
sizes 7 to 11 ., While with col· ·
ored tops. Many school colors.
$pringfool quality .

F riday and Saturday .
zes B to 20.
Flannel shirts · knit shirts westerns - velours. A fine

,,

Carnival Crea tions matching sets
in assorted colors .
Also strapless .bras fealuring a
0
.
son •

1

Warm
and
fash ionable junior

on sale. Coat styles · vests
· and slipovers. Sizes S, M,
Land XL.

.(~1~
, ') LINGERIE SALE • ,~ ..

Denims - polyester .and down fil led
nylons. Sizes S, M , L , XL and XX L.

Reg. $16.00 ...... Sale $13.59
Reg. $21.00 . .. ... Sale $17.89
Reg. $28.00...... Sale S23.79
Reg . $36.00 ...... Sale $30.59

•295 · ,if/
..'

SALE PRICES
. START AT ONLY

s14900 i \ . · ·~ ~ u~sf~".;~~e.w~~~e~r"~~~~~
REG. 1299!1i BEARCAT 210.. !'.i.V.~?.".~~~~~~~.".~~:.SALE s23!JOO · • .. /,::c~ :~~::!: ~t::::::::: ~:t~:~:!~ ! / :
No crvstals needed.
REG . $5.00 ... ....... SALE $4.25
REG. s8.oo .......... SALE S6.ao • ,·
REG. '399'l BEARCAT 220... .
20Chan~:'!. SAL£ S]1fJ
. .
REG. $8.50 .......... SALe$7.25

COAT SALE

WILLIAM Caaey, left, wbo
Presldeat·eled Ronald
Re!lgan's choice to become
CIA director, &amp;alb wi&amp;h reporten Tbunday In Waablngton
with ni.en Reagan has
designated for Cabinet-level
JIOIIIB. From left are: Casey;
Rep. Da~ Stockman, R·
Mich., &amp;he choice for budget
director; Drew Lewis, selected to become Transportatloo
secrelary; WOllam French
~th, dealgDated for &amp;he po11t
of attoney general; Caspar
Weinberger, the selection for
Defense secretary; Donald T.
Regan, oamed for the pest of
Treasury secretary; and
Malcolm Baldrige, Reagan's
choice for Commerce
secretary. (AP Laserphota) .
.,

AI (of our men's sweaters •

~l&lt;l¥1':1::!"""~.-r;::l•lll:.llllllllllli:.II';'¥1111JJ;¥llllrl=!fl:&lt;lo:ll ~ ~

Men's $29 .95
Jackets •...••..•. Sale $24.50
Men's $39.95
Jack ets .......... Sale $32.70
Men 's $49.95
Jackets ••••••.•. Sale$40.90
Men's 569 .95
Jackets.......... Sale $57.30

coats for

2· 0ay Sale prices on our. entire stock · of a-track and
cassette pre-recorded tapes.

!•

Stock

SIZES 36 to 50

I secti on, 12 pag~s I SCents .
A Multi media 1nc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middl'e port, Ohio Friday, December 12,1980

The Reagan
Team ...

MEN'S
SWEATERS

S.T ADAPTER SCANNER,
4 CHANNELS

Entire

Priced

•·

'

SAVEl

REG. 19gm

1149~
REG. 1149~

enttne
•

I~

BEARCAT SCANNERS

REG.

dependence."
Foreign ministers of the Nortb
Atlantic Alliance, winding up their
annual winter meeting today,
agreed that Soviet intervention·
could take varying forms, r8nglng
from a military strike to a regime of
repression by a pupPet govenunent
in Warsaw.
The ministers alse agreed that dlf·
(Continued on page 12)

!"

CHRISTMAS SALE

WINTER
JACKETS

used force In breach of the principles
of the U.N. charter and international
law.
"Detente has brought appreciable
benefits to East-West cooperation,"
their declaration went on. "But it
has been seriously damaged by
Soviet actions. It could not survive if
the Soviet Union were again to
violate the basic rights of any state,
its territorial integrity and in·

•

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•

-ALL GUN CABINETS ON SALE -ALL DESKS ON SALE

SALE MEN'S

review. At the same time genuine
S&lt;Jviet efforts to restore the confidence necessary will meet with a
ready response from the allies."
The coiJUllunique set the Polish
crisis against the background of the
year-old Soviet intervention in
Afgh;mistan and what was described
as Moscow's "continuing military
buildup.'' ,
The Soviets, the allies said, have

•

~

Sizes A, B. C
and D. Coat
style top. Ad·
justable •grip·
per
boxer
waist bottoms.
Choose broad·
cloths or .!ian
nel.

-All CEDAR CHESTS ON SALE - ALL DINING ROOM FURNITIJRE ON SALE ~~~:.Jll

own future . . The allies respect the
principle. of non-Intervention and
strongly urge others to do likewise.
Any intervention would . fundamentally. alter the entire ln·
ternational situation.·The allies will
be compelled to react ln the manner
which the gravity of this development would require.
"Therefore the council will keep
the situation in close and contlnuol!S
I

Vol. 21, No. 110
, Copyrighted 1980

fURNITURE SPECIALS

'

Sale

.

·~

MEN'S

REG. $3.50
REG. $4.95
REG. $6..50
REG . $8.50

~

$1()95

at the meeting tha~ direct NATO
mllltar)' action would be undesirable
and probably touch of a world war.
A COIJUllunique issued by the
foreign ministers at the end of their
annual winter meeting Underscored
the "great concern" felt by the allies
at "the menace which hangs over
Poland."
The declaration said ln part:
"Poland should be free to decide its

I .

..
CHAPMAN BROUGifr BACK TO BELLEVUE maD appeared at Mmlllattan Criminal Court. QlapCorrectiOII offleera escort Mark David ChapmaD ceo- man, aceused ·of killlDI fermer BeaUe Jolul ~ Ia
ter wllh coat over head, Into the prison wa~ at New York Monday lllgllt, a..,ellftd 1D caur&amp; wttllldu•
~lli-&gt;11&lt;' kospi!111 in :-oew Yt·rk thuMday, after Chvp- torney-wbowlthdrewfremfllecaae. (APLuerpllotDJ •.

~

f'

�~·· CommentarY

The DailY

S~n_tinel_
Page-

2·

·-·....· ---~-----~------------:-----~

·:·.,The '80 economy:
~~r~er~w~· ~·Tet£6~
::· mri.c)t talk, little action N:f
..
~;

.

By many measures, the economy this year has been as troubled as any
· · · since the Great Depression Of the 1930s, even if we've learned to adjust to
difficulties 8 bit better than we did back then.
It has been a year also of much talk but little constructive action about
problems, which today are essentially the very ones that made last year's
.
holiday Ughts seem 8 bit dimmer.
There are energy and housing problems, inflation, high interest rates,
big budget deficits, lagging productivity, unemployment, threatened
and warnings of recession.
.. . ,bankruptcies,
The wage earner has seen median weekly earnings rise 8 percent and
' conswner prices 12.8 percent in the 12 months through October. And
• • many companies - in autoo and steels especially - are in trouble after
~ .;. corporate profits fell13 percent in the third quarter.
·
.
Oil prices are being blamed for almost everything, which adds to the
' ··· !~ling that we've come this way Wfore.
l:: : The p~esident began the year with promises to cut the budget deficit,
but again it got away and ended the fiscal year $59 billion in the red, the
second largest deficit ever.
In January, the conswner price index rilse 1.4 percent, the sharpest
• . monthly increase since a l'ise of 1.8 percent in Augus.t 1973. It hit the same
...' ' figure in February and March.
..
These increases were, of course, declared outrageous, just as the I per.: . cent increases in September and October were said to be intolerable.
': ; :
As the year began, the pMme rate was heading toward 20 percent, and
• when that point was reached in April it was said to be a unique event. But
·, : Wednesday, Dec. 10, thepMme hit aJ again and was headed higher .
.: . :
Henry Kaufman, credit-wise partner in Salomon Brothers, the investent firm, said in February the nation faced "a national emergency"
because of big credit demands. ·This w~ek·he warned of "enormous new
credit demands" of $412 billion in 1981, a third higher than in 1980.
The amazing thing abo4t the persistent weaknesses and excesses, and
all the promises and threats in regard to them, is that the nation in the
meantime has come through a supposedly ''corrective'' recession.
The big difference over the past year has been political. In fact, for one
. . of the few times in recent history the economics of the situation outweighed the political considerations. AJill a president lost his job.
Various analyses have been made of ilonald Reagan's defeat of Jirnrily
Carter, but one that seems fair and logical is that people were upset about
the economy and the unfilled promises to improve it.
The hope which seems to have been expressed in the recent elections is
that a new administration with new ideas will make headway against the
problems. But right now those problems seem intractable.

...

Berry's World

...... • ------·
@

1980 by NEA lm;

"It isn't often one encounters a smoking
jogger."

.. '

Letters
to the editor
.
Who's responsible?

.
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Dear Editor:
I have never wrftten a letter to
complain about anything before, but
I just ·have to speak my piece this
time. On Dec. 7 (Sunday) we (hy
husband. and I) attended the funeral
of our close neighbor and beloved
friend, at Ewing Funeral Home. As
the long line of relatives and friends
were leaving town with the deputy
sheriff leading, there were not a city
police in sight. All but lour or five
cars made it through the light then
people started cutting in. They got in
front of us and just poked around
and we couldn't gel around them ..As
funeral procession went on, we got
lost from them and didn't knoW
which wal:' to go.
.
We went out Rt. 7 a little ways and

''..
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The Daily Sentinel
111 Coa.rtStreet
Pomeroy, OhJo
lli-Jt2.!151
Dl!VOTED TO 111E INTEREST OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

'·'.

~lb

Bm~ r"T""1.....1,_-r.~c:::f·c:::::~

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...

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it stopped. It \)'as lucky we knew the
wa y to get there, so we took the lead
as the other cars were people from
out of town.
We made it to the cemetery O.K.,
but that is not the point. Had we not
known the way, 'the others would
have been lost.
People in this day don't have
respect for anything or anyone.
But someone Should have been at
the light to direct traffic so this
wouldn't have happened .
I don't know whose job this is but I
think it falls to the city police. I hope
whoever is supposed to do this job
does it the next time, as this was a
terrible mess. - Donna Bogard, Rt.
I, Long j3ottom.

ROBERTL. WINGETI
PUbUJber

BOBHOEFUCH
Geaeral Maaqer

PAT WIIJTEHEAil
1\1 I -

p,.W' •

/c-tnDer

DALE ROTIIGEB, JR.
New1Edltor

4

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ER rf 'I'M AIHdll&amp;lll Pretl, Jallad Dilly Prell Auocladoa •ad the
W.Nn t t hWIII!fn.u..r•&amp;Ma.

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. . . . .. Nl ...... lettm will be IJII.blilbed. Lentn Mould be ID IO&lt;MIIa!:le, ::.H.-.s1la~

....... .cperr......

-·

'
GETS .TROPifY AND A KISS, TOO - Helsmao
Trophy whmer George Rogers, center, gets a kiss from
.: b1s mother, MrS. Grady Rogers, after be was formally
~ preseoted with the tropby Thllr!lday Dighl8la dloner ID .

..

'

t

~

New York. Rogers, the sliir I'IIDIIiDg back oo the
Uolverillly of South CaroliDa team, 118ld when be accepted the tropby that It "sb&lt;iqld be awarded to the
team tnatead of JOe." 'At left Is South Carolloa Gov.
Rlcbard W. Riley. (AP Laserpboto}.

Jln,mhle Rogers gets
1'80 Reisman Trophy
"On the other hand, for your other foot

"

Rhodes' -budget· sessions: ·what does
he hope to acconiplish?--'Not much'
Lukens, a nationa) campaign
COLuMBUS, Ohio (AP) - At
worker
this year for President-Elect
least two Republican senators have
gone -on record against a general tax Ronald Reagan, says Ohio's
increase to bail Ohio out of its finan- 'lawmakers and other elected officials failed Ui get the conservative
cial crisis.
Their ranks may grow to three on message expressed strongly by
Jan. 5 when the GOP takes over con- voters last month iii Ohio and across
trol of the upper chamber for the fir- the nation.
The Middletown lawmaker may
st time in six years.
Sens. Donald E. "Buz" Lukens, R- get tapped for a spot in the Reagan
Middletown, and John R. Kasich, R· Administration, and would not be
Columbus, both deplore all the talk around to help decide the tax issue.
about a tax hike and maintain the But among newly elected GOP
budget should be balanced by fur- senators, at least one - ·Sen.-Elect
Bill Ress of New Philadelphia- has
. ther spending cuts.
The current crisis, involving at said he would not vote for.a tax hike
·
least a $353.7 million budget deficit, under any circumstances.
"gives us an excellent opportunity to
Gov. James A. Rhodes and House
, streamline state government/'
Kasich told a news conference this Speaker Vernal G. Riffe, D-New
week at which he pro~sed ~ series Boston, were in an expansive mood
when they greeted reporters prior to
of selective cuts to balance the
a recent budget-balancing meeting.
budget.

It was another in a series of
sessions to discuss ways of solving a

•

back, using a tewonse the speaker
has conunonly replied:

projected' deficit of at least ~.7
Rhodes, who was the first to arrive
million in the state's budget.
One reporter asked Rhodes what 'for the leaders' "summit" meeting
he hoped to aC!:Qmplish at the at a private club, seemed impatient
closed-&lt;loor meeting with legislative while waiting for the other Jill!"
ticipants.
.
·leaders. "Not much," he replied.
"Maybe they're In here," he:said
Then he and Riffe turned their attention io the group of almoSt 30 88 he peered Into an adjoll\lng parlor
reporters who had ~hown up to cover where a meeting of linother'll'!IUP
was already under way.
the session.
Rhodes seemed relieved when
"Here's what we ought to do.
We've got eight seats," said Rhodes, Senate President Oliver OCasek, 1).
pointing to the chairs reserved for Akron, arrived for the session. "The
the top state officials. "Let's put the dean Is here. Clear the house," the
governor said as he signaled the
. press down and let them decide."
· Then Riffe picked up on the theme. start of the private meeting by
Mimicking a man-an-the-street in- shooing reporters out of the room.
terview, he turned to a nearby repor·
He banished p.em to an adjoining
ter and asked: "How would you parlor for the duration of the
solve Ohio's budget crisis?"
session, but provided coffee ·a nd ·
"No comment," the reporter shot rolls for the early morning wait. •

Standing room· at WH for souvenirs
WASHINGTON (AP) - It's standing room only at the White House
photo office these days, as departing ·
White House staff members line up
to locate souvenir pictures of themselves and President Carter .
The official Wl)ite House
photographers have turned out, over
four years, a frame-by-frame pic·
torial history of the Carter presiden·
cy - thousands upon thousands of
pictures.
And many of the middlti-and
lower-level Carter staff members,
who saw the president only rarely,
would like to decorate their dens
with a display of pictures of themselves and their soon-to-be former
boss.
The only problem is, everyone
wants a bunch of pictures and there
iSn't the time or darkroom staff to

turn them out.
The center of attention is the photo
library on the foUrth Door of the Old
Executive Office Building, next to
the White House. An entire wall in
the spacious office is covered with
shelves holding black looseleaf binders containing photographs of the
president.
The books are being pored over by
the souvenir hunters, remembering
a bill signing or a reception where
they shook the president's hand.
Billie Shaddix, who heads the
White House photo staff,
acknowledged that tbe end-«-tenn
rush is "a natural thing," but he said
he has been forced to impose lbnits.
"We can't tum these out for
everybody's album," he said.
"We're not going to tum this thing
into a circus."

Once Carter leaves the White
House, and the official
photographers begin to focus on
Ronald Reagan, the pictures of the
last four years will join other
documents .of the Carter:years at a
presidential library.
·Photographs were also on the minds of the memqers of a-delegation
from the Japanese Diet, or
parliament, tbat visited the White
House for a conference with Vice
President Walter F. Mondale on
Tuesday.
The meeting was in the Roosevelt
Room, decorated with memora!lilla
of Theodore and Franklin D.
Roosevelt.
The Vice president was 10 to 15 ·
minutes late for the meeting, and the
Japanese took advantage of the

known stars who were ~ at the
party given In cqnjunctlon with a
celebration that night at'the John F.
!{ennedy Center for the Performing
Arts.
Amy appeared JDOBt a::clted when
she cornered Pat O'Brien, the actor.

.

Weakening of the once solid Dem South
states prime exampleli of how to
In Tennessee, some 16,000 black · compete with the Democrats in their
voters chose Republican Ronald own backyard.
More evidence of the weakening of
Reagan over Democrat Jinuny Carter on Election Day. Reagan won the the once solidly Democratic South
can be seen in the new U. S. Senate,
state by 6,000 votes.
In Arkansas, some 8,000 blacks which includes 10 Republicans fr0111
chose Reagan over Carter. Reagan the 11 slates of the Old Confederacy.
Twenty years ago, no Republican
carried that state by 5,000 votes.
Nationally, Reagan may have won even dreamed of winning a Senate ·
as much as 14 percent of the black Seat in the South. Ten years ago,
vote, a I percent improvement over only four of the region's 22 senators
fellow Republican Richard Nixon's were members of the GOP.
Ten Senators do not a party make,
showing in 1972 and twice as many
as Nixon received against Hubert and 'a few thousand black votes do
Humphrey in 1968,
not herald the dawniltg of ' twoThe Arkansas and Tennessee vote party system in the South. Neither
offer a lesson to tho_se hOping to build does Reagan's almost Shera competitive two-partr system in manesque sweep through Dixie
the South. In both states, the guarantee thst fugure Republican
Republicans have labored !Qng and candidates will be able to do the
'
.
hard to bring blacks into party same.
The South has tended' to be
politics. The progressive Republican
administraiton of Arkansas Gov. Democratic since the party's founWinthrop Rockefeller in the late ~ by Southerners like Thomas
1960s and the long tradition of Jefferson. In the posi.CMl War era,
Republicanism among blacks in the regi~n first voted aoUdly
western I enn~SJet an&lt;l •vh•t•~ \11 Democratic in 1880 to punish the
eastern Tennessee have made the.., &amp;p"Ll;c•ns for Reenn.&lt;truct1on, and
~
By Julian Bond

white-supremacist politicians and'
whites-only primaries assured
Democratic ~ throughout
the South in the years that folloWed . .,
The first break in that pattern did
not come untill920, when Tennessee
chose Republican Warren G. Harding over Deml)!:rat' James Cox. In
1928, five Southern states voted for
Republican Herbert HooVJ!r, 88
much for Democrat AIJ~th:a
Cathollclam as for any a~
the Great Engineer.
In 1932, Franklin Rooaevelt
engraved the Democratic donkey Into Southern baUot boxes wllh a firm.
ness that held until IMS. That year,
faced with a choice between
Democtat Harry Trwnan's civil- .
rlghla plank and Thomas Dewey's
GOP, four Southern states opted for
Strom Thurmond's Dixiecrats.
· In 1952, the wandering four returned to the Democratic donkey into
Southern baUot boxes with a firmness that held untill9t8. That year,
faced with a choice bet-n
Democrat Harry Tnaman's clvfi.·
rl~ht.• plank and 'Thomas ,Dewey's
i.

'

...,Gallla,

.

~- To'1lght at Larry R: · Morrison

Olofgymnasium the Meigs Local
,.(!Marauders face a stiff test against
· the Waverly Tigers. The Tigers were
ll&lt;' unanimous choice to win the SEOAL
,..;.cage race, but have struggled to a 2r·1.3mark.
On the other hand Meigs is winless
-a t ~. but has been irtiproving each
outing. The Marauders have been in
~game right down to the wire.
Coach Gord,on fisher's club lost a
heartbreaker last week at Ironton
despite playing an outstanding floor

·

'I

p··,.- GalllpollsatJackson
Waverly at Meigs
. . Wellston at Logan
~~ Ironton at Athens
":: Portsmouth at Russell
-.u: CirclevilleatWashingtonCH
• c Chillicothe at Whitehall
~
Wheelersburg at Portsmouth West
~ Hannan Trace at Southern
'1""' Eastern at North Gallia
s..-1.: ·Southwestern at Kyger Creek
r ,,
. , Salurday's Game&amp;
~~ .. Meiga at Federal-Hocking
~''" Waverly at Wheelersburg
• Lancaster at chliJicothe
10 ~,1 Washington CHat Portsmouth
.~a. ElkYalleyatKygerCreek
Eastern at Mlller

..

Meigs gals top Tigers
1

Led by Andrea Riggs' 18 points,
Meigs incte~ its season record to
4-2 in girls' basketball Thursday
night with a 47-40 win over Wavelry.
Also getting double figures was
Crooks with 14 points. Reed led
Waverly with 13 points.
Meigs hit 30 percent from the floor
and 46 percent at the foul circles.
The Marauder gals travel to
Gallipolis Thursday.
Meigs (47)- Crooks 7·0·14; Riggs
8·2·18; Drahel 1·1·3; Sm ith 3·3·9 ;
Oliver 1·1·3, Totals 20-7-47.
waverly (40) - Copeland 1·3-5;
Reed 6·1 ·13; Nun 6·0·12; Sowers 1-o2; Maple 1·0·2; Tripp 1·0·2; Patrick
2·0·4. Totals 11·4·40.

Hannan Trace, ~. under new
head coach Mike Jenkins bave im·
proved over last season. The Wildcats have posted wins over Symmes
Valley and Kyger Creek.
Coach Dennis Eichinger's Eastern
Eagles are still undefeated at this
stage -and hope to play a big part in
the SVAC race. At this point,
Eastern is 3-0 overall with oite vi~
tory in the league. Eastern travels to
North Gallia who owns an 0-2 mark.
The undefeated Eagles bave been
led by Tim Dill and Gene Cole.
Eastern employs a very . sticky
defense that has played an im·
portant part in a successful season.
Each varsity contest is scheduled
for 8 p.m. with the prellminaiJ'
reserve contests slated for6:30 p.m.

.

GOP: four Southelil states Opted for
Strom Thunnond's Dixiecrats.
In 11162, the ~ ·twr ~­
ned to the Democratic ranb to VGte
for Adlalstevenaoll, but four othen
chose Republican Dwight
~r. Four years later,
Elllenhower added Loulalana to the ·
GOP cOlumn. But wileD the bealcn .
general dllpatcbed lederaJ troope to
UWe Roclln 18117 to quell 1 wldll
mob at Cenlnl Hilb School, the
South solidified IJI8in.
By um, the South wu IOIIdJJ
Republlcall, a trend . Cllly - . . •
porarlly halted by Carter In J¥11, '
when nglonal cllauvtallm·
blm to capture fl'ff/f'l Southern
.
areept• VIrginia. 'l1lllt ebi

=

held

game. Many feel it is only a matter Southern hosts the Hannan Trace
of time before the former the former Wildcats tonight at Racine. Southern
Indian Valley South assistant men· Is 1..0 in the league as are the Wild·
tor can mould a winning team.
·cats. BoUI clubs 'a!BD' own~ ~,..
'
The Marauders will ]le looking to ds; ,,
stop hot shooting Chris Smith and
Tuesday night, Southern sharpRick Teeters who have consistently shooter Dale Teaford ripped the nets
led the Tigers throughout this cam- for 24 points to lead Southern to a 62paign.
43 win over North Gallia. In that conKevin Smith and Jeff Wayland test another key figure was Kent
have been leadirig Meigs in offense Wolle, who netted 19 points, in
this season, although every boosting a second half rally.·
marauder has contributed in some
Although the Tornadoes have
way.
posted wins in their Initial outings,
SVACGames
they bave never really developed a
Defending SVAC champion consistent scoring attack.

Area couples will return to action
ru.tonight. at all three Meigs County
q...Scl!ools• as the Meigs, Marau~ers
heist the Waverly Tigers, Southern's
n!!!Tornadoes host Hannan Trace, apd
-{I the Eastern Eagles travel to North
0 ,,

. ~~ Tonight's games

One souvenir hunter at 8 White.
House reception Sunday ,night w~ .
;\my Carter, the president's 13-yearold daughter.
Sbe Wllndered around with an
autograph book, looking for some of
the entertainment world's best

sophomore year. They painted a picture of a 6-foot-2, 22S-pound running
back who does more than just beat
his chest and run'over people.
"George's biggest problem was
studying," Mrs- Wertz said. "He
never got organized in high school.
He didn't know how to take poles or
how to study for exainS. We worked
on a lot of basics with George. But
it's not true that he wouldn't have
gotten into cOllege without football.
He had a projected 2.0 grade point
average.

Meigs schools· play tonight"

,.,}

delay to pose, one after another, for
photographs their colleagues snapped with small jloctet camer88.
The backdrop they chose was an
oil painting of FDR, their nation's
World War U foe.

leading rusher was formally presented with the Heisman Trophy and
modesUy said it ''should be awarded
to the team Instead of me."
Besides Gov. Richard W. Riley,
university President Dr. James B.
Holderman and Coach Jim Carlen, a
number of South Carolina faculty
members were on hand for•the annual Heismait dinner, including Mrs.
Sandra Wertz, a professor of communications in the College of
General Studies and , Rogers •
academic adviser since his

NEW YORK (AP) - "If you only
knew what it took for me to get
here," George Rogers said last week
when he was announced as the 1980 ·
Heisman Trophy winner.
Rogers · was referring to his
childhood, coming from a rough
Atlanta, ghetto and then bouncjng
from one Georgia town to another,
his parents separated and his father
~tied for almost eight years
for fata,lly shqoting awoman .
.,,., Thursday night, South Carolina's
star running back and the nation's

~- rar 1t1 ~. ~ -

DECEM•R
,~.

·CLEARANCE
. PRICES

NEW CHANGE. OVER

TIRES
~

I •

•PASSENGER
.'
•TRUCK
•USED TIRES
I

.a4ECK WITH US
fOR ABARUIN!

1111, ~i~NP'the

and . . CGUIIRIJ, ~
Senate Ill the ... c
l
A 1ruJJ biputlan 8aulll wltll . .

F

Jlllli1 i!Wiiilllb4

~ ftlr bljd .
....... _bat .

will .. . aft
ilnniiiied Jllll Ill tbe 1'111!11'•
black
. lllsNI!IiCBia.
'
.' .
.

'

'

Save our RC, RC·lOO, Nehi, Upper 10, Diet Rite
and Da~'s R~ot P.eer bottle caps for charity.

�•

•

f-••

December 12, 1!!0 •

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Toledo is nation's fifth best scoring team
tertains Michigan, +.kron awaits
point average.· Sophomore Mitch when they were a Division II school.
"We're playing with intensity," Muskingum and Cleveland State
Adamek is averaging 13.3, and 197!1.
said Chippewa Coach Dick Parfitt. faces visiting Kenyon.
80 regular Jay Lehman 12.0.
Ohio State., the nation's eight
With less than two weeks of non- "Four of our sophomores (starters
conference tuneups gone, Central Melvin McLaughlin and James ranked major college power, is
Michigan (5-0) and Toledo are the Koger and· substitutes Gary Tropf taking this week off to concentrate
defense.
o/uy
undefeated teams in the Mid- and Rob McQuaid ) heve matured. on final examinations for the fall
This week, the Rockets are the fifWe're showing much better shot quarter. The Buckeyes (2-1) play inAmerican.
th top-scoring team in national
selection.
We're more patient on of- vading South Alabama on Tuesday
Neither was expected. to be a
major college basketball with 96.7
night. .
points per game. Toledo's margin of prime league title contender before
The Hoosier·Buckeye Conference
McLaughlin leads four double
· victory, 34.7 points, is No. 1 the season began. Toledo was selecnationally.
ted to finish fourth behind Northern figure scorers for Central Michigan has a full schedule with Earlham at
Wilmington, Manchfl!tet at DefianSuch imposing offensive figures Illinois, Bowling 'Green and Ball with a 20.2 scoring average.
In other games involving Mid- Ce, ]&lt;indlay at Hanover and Bluffton
already have Toledo Coach Bob State. Central Michigan was picked
AmeriCan schools tonight, Western at Anderson.
for seventh place.
Nichols squirming.
Elsewhere Saturday, Tiffin plays
Central Michigan, which plays Michigan (3-2) takes on Louisiana
"The thing that concerns us is
playing defense the way we like to Central Florida in a first-round Tech in a first-round game in the at Steubenville, Ashland at Oberlin,
play, and running on offense is very, Tangerine Bowl game tonight, has Bayou Classic at Lafayette, 4'·· and Central State at Indiana State' very taxing physically," Nichols posted its best start in its decade as Eastern Michigan (2-3) plays at Evansville, Hiram at BaldwinWallace, Capital at John Carrol~
said of his 3-0 Rockets, who face in- a major college team. The Chip- Michigan State.
Walsh at Denison, Heidelberg at
Elsewhere
Saturday,
Ball
State
(
3pewas
last
won
five
straight
games
vading Detroit on Saturday night.
,
Adrian,
Betheny at Marietta, Ohio
2)
awaits
Indiana
State,
Bowling
"I'm not sure we can do it for 411 at the start of a season in 197M!.
Wesleyan
at Marshall, Wittenberg
Green
(3-1)
plays
at
Morehead
minutes, whether we're strong
at
Centre,
Allegheny at Hiram,
State, Northern Illinois (2-2) at
enough physically to play that way,"
Southern Illinois, Miami (2-2) at Wilberforce at Malone, Rio Grande
he said. "Our depth is going to be a
Xavier and Ohio University (0-3) at at West Virginia Tech, Urbana at
big help in that direction; but even
Dillard, Columbia, Ill., at CedarYoungstown State.
then it will be herd to do."
The run-and-gun Rockets shot 61
Meanwhile, in other major Ohio ville, Mount Vemon'Nazarene in the
percent in crushing Cal Polycollege basketball Saturday, Cin- Aquinas, Mich., tournament and
EAST MEIGS - The Southern cinnati plays at Temple, Dayton en- · Dyke in the Taylor tournamen!.
Pomona and cooled off to 51 percent
in a 110-&lt;ill rout of Ashland last week. Tornado freshman squad of Coach
The way they did it disturbs Nichols.
Bill Hensler made it three wins in a
"If we decide to live by the outside row .Thursday, with a 46-25 victory
shot, we can also die by that," he over Coach Buddy Moore's Eastern
said. ~ 'That's a dangerous way to Eagles. Eastern dropped to 2-1.
. In the ' first period, Eastern
live. We took some bad shots. "
Harvey Knuckles, one of two star- doubled Southern's score at 2-6, but
ters back, leads Toledo with a 17.3 the Tornadoes rebounded in the
second period to outscore the ·host ll&gt;6. The offensive surge by Southern
propelled the young Tornadoes to 21The Dai ly Sentinel
18 halftime lead.
lUSPSlu..MO)
Both clubs handled the pressure
A Oltllloa of Multipledla, IDe.
very well in the first helf producing
Published every afternoon except Sunday,
a first class battle.
Mondaythrouih Friday, Jll Court Street, by
tile Ohio Valley Publlilhlng Company •
In the second helf, however,
Multimedla, Inc., Pomeroy, Ohio 46769,
Southern
turned the game around.
912-2158. Second class poeta11e paid at
Pomeroy, Ohio.
In the third period Southern erupted
for 17 points while holding Eastern
Member: The AIIOCiated Presa,lnlontl DalEFFORTS REWARDED ly Prtu AUociation and. the Amerlcan
to just one. All season long Coach
The
bunting efforts of Jackie GinNewap~per Publllberl Aaaoctatlon, National
Hensler's he!!time pep talks seem to
NOW OPEN FOR
AdverUalna Repreaentatlve, Landin;
ther, Portland, were rewarded
AIIOClltea, 3101 Euclltl Ave., Cleveland,
boost his Tornadoes to awesome
CHRISTMAS SEASON
recently when sbe bagged lbl!i
Ohio,tet15.
third period performances.
Large Selection of
eight point buck. Jackie Is the
P&lt;l6TM.ISTER: Send addrou to Tho Dolly ·
The third period proved to be the
daughter of Rayuiond and Mary
Sentlntl, 111 Court St., Pmntroy, Ohio~789 .
POINSETTIAS
1 detennining factor in the game ~nd
Lou Proffitt.
11.00 TO 110.00
8UII8CIIIPTION RATES
·FROM
Southern led 38-19. Both .teams
By C.rrter or Motor Route
• Christmas ' Cactus
played on equal tenns the final can$1.00
GOLF
ono Month .. .... ................ ... t4.IO
• Hanging Baskets
to, but Southern came out on top of
One Year .. . .. . . . . .. . ... .. . . .... . . 162.10
LARGO,
Fla.
(AP)
Gibby
Gilbert
• House Plants tl)e
Eagles
46-25.
.
BINGLE COPY
PRICES
Wade Connolly and Tony Deem led and Sandra Spuzich combined to fire
HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
Dally .. .. .. ...... .... .. .... .. .. II C.nta
all scorers with 10 points each, an opening-round 66 to tie fo~ the
Syracuse, Oh.
992-5776
Sublcrlbert not .dealrlna: to~)' the carrler
Kevin Curfman nine , Dennis lead with three uther pairs in the
Open
Mon.-Sat.
9
to 5
may rwnit ln advance direct to The Dally
Teaford, Tony.Riffle six, and Jason · $400,000 mixed doubles J.C. Penney
Sentinel on a S, I or 12 month bull. Cred{t
Sun.ltos
will be &amp;iven carrier u.ch month ..
Hill, · Paul Harris two apiece. Classic.
Eastern was led in scoring by Jim- ~------No tubocrlpUORI by mall pmnllled In IOWIII
when home carrier tervice llavailable.
my Newell with eight, Roger Balser
six,
Mike Collins four, Troy Guthrie
0
MAn. IUII8CRIPI'l0N8
Ohio ud Weol VlrJ!Dia
four, Tim P~bert two, and Larry
3 Moolh .. .. ...... .. .. .. .......... 110.10
Cowdery one. Southern hit four of
Sll month .. ... .... .... .. ........ . 111.10
I Yoor .... ...... .. .. .. .... .. ..... 133.00
eight from the line for 50 percent
Rllt.el Outllde Ohio
while Eastern sank three of five for
IIIII Wool Vtqtall
3 MIXIth .... .. .. ...... .. ......... 111.00
60 percent.
I Month ........ .. ........ .. .. .. .. PO.OO
Southern travels to Kyger Creek ·
1Yeor .. .. .. .. ... .. ....... .. .. ... pa,oo
Monday.

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lli;;,i----~---~-----1!!11--1&lt;11!--!'101'

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1.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kr ' . er,
l,Minersvllle, recently ente n~
'* With a 'party honorln tbe1r ·
!'daughter, Amy, on her
blr! thday.
~ Cake and ice cream w served
• to Amy's grandparents, Mr. and
· Mrs. Ha'rry Krautter andpetty Im'1 bqden, Mr. and
Eber·
&gt;t"sbach; Mrs. Nancy
old, and
~Richie, Ivy Stewl\11, J , Mike ~d
,._John Imboden, Mr.
Mrs. Keith
:: Krautter, Wendi, and ).!Chael.
-t' Amy Is tiHi grandd#!Bhter of the
:;late Calvin Imboden ·Minersvj))e.
':.

Cale111 ·r _·

;.· COAD Senior trition Menu Oec.
¥. 15 through Dec. 1 : .
f ·
:t Monday - P h sausage,. sweet
I' potatoes, !tali e gree~l beans,
·'' apncots, hot ro , butter, nillk.
J. Tuesday- B ed chick~- gravy,
*- mashed potat , · bu~ peas,
!: pears, bread, b· tter, ~
'b'
Wednesday !' Beef ew, com·~ bread, peach c&amp; p, bU: , milk.
· ' Thursday - Uv¥r onions in
:.. gravy, spinach, I t cocktail,
:.. tapioca- whipped cr , bread, but·
I
·""'"' ter, milk.
~:; Friday - Baked
on, buttered
.~ potatoes, stewed ' toes, pineap·" pie, rolls, butter,
.
'1: Coffee, tea &amp;J)d, ·choice of whole
~ milk or butte
served daily.
~ Please rej!ister · advance for your
;,: lunch. Pomeroy 2161.
~·
Meigs Senio itlzens Center ac-3;' tivities local iii the Multipurpose
~ Senior Cente Center on Mulberry
~ Heights in
meroy Is open. 8:30
~ a.m.-4:30
., Monday through
,. Friday..
{ Monday,
. 15- Square Dance,
.. 12:45-3 p.
'I' Tuesda Dec. 16 - Crocheting
.:_ Class, 0:30 a.m .; Stress
Man8g nt, ,11 a.m.; Chorus,
~ 12:45-2p .
.
.
:!'• Wedn y, Dec. 17 - Social
Securi Representative, 9:30 a.m.~ 12:30
.;·Games, 1·2 p.m.
·
t
Y, Dec. 18 - Nutrition
1:: Ed on,' 11:15 a.m. ; Kitchen
~ Band, :45-2 p.m.
:; Fri y, Dec. 19 - ' Art Class, 9:
.;.. a.m.d2 nqoll; ·Kni~ Class,
a.m.; Musewn Visit, 1
Bowllng.~-3 p.m.
Senior Nutrition Program, 12 ~Won
to 12:46 p.m., Monday
7 • Fridayj '''-\

SAVE •···········-•3,540

E

•
A cushiony soh, di•ided upp&amp;r MICtion
h.ndle rings, ••rings ll1d pinl. Sp.ciout I tor• is n-tillblt in two roomy
duwen. Wooden chest Is h l~t~r.d
bv mirtared fl ip·top lid . 10M. 11 5-118

With Any
Ch IIJ• URI
ft.-

·~

S'M\IW
~w.

A $15.00 Retail J'alue

Rock or Recline at your leisure.
Convenient magazine pouch,
:arefully tailored stvllng · and
controlled posture
for the luxury you
., deserve I
Long
weatlng 1~ her•
culon fabric and

easy

•

c•r~e

soft vinyl
blnatlon.

glove
com·

DALE HILL
FORD TRACToR •..
Pom~roy,

garters.

.INGEL'S FUR~.ITURE.

&amp;

JE~ELRY

'1WO-IN.ONI
ii IIIIi N. 2nd AVL

~

• ~ GIFTS
"·1

OH.

..
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING
352 E . Main St., Pomeroy, OH .

hOPAh.9·9·
2-2:4'
4'
•
or 992-6290

II
1

~-~~~~~~~--:-~~--~l-5~~,-~~--~l-l~~:u.&lt;g·-~-~l-I~M(·I!!II~·-I~~~-~t-~~~~~~·I!!II'M(~I-1.1!!11:-g•--~l-!'101--~
CHRISTMAS SPECIAL
•50% MORE
mil~.
SUCTION POWER
•All STEEL VIBRAGROOMER II BEATER BAR.

Better

Let us show you.

0

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DIAL-A-NAP.
•TRIPLE FILTER
1BAG
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See our wid e variety o f
LeSabre models now with
·Stand ard 3.8 l1 ter V-6 . or
ava ilable 5.7 liter diesel V-8. !!!'~.::!..!:!.~...!1~~
· A\\IJ!d AOOut Engrnes: TheSe Buicks am ~ipped with GM-tloltt engrnes

$9991
WITH 6 PC.
TOOL SET

produced by various division s. See your dealer lor de1a11s

Lowest Prices You ' ll Find This Year

.INGEL'S

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

Furniture &amp;Jewelry. w.

See : Jimmy Deem, J .D. Story or Bill
Nelson
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy, OH .
· 500 E. Main

· "Two 1nOne Store"
2nd Ave.
Middleport, Oh.

Famous·Brand
Name Like

*BERKLINE

$50 TO $75 ,OFF

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
.DAVE GRATE
Rutland, Ohio

742-2211

-e

can recall when most men

OPEN TILL 1;00 .TILL ·c.411STMAS

BRANDS

CHRISTMASII

I

I
l
I

:f

, WOI~s00]{GARTI~

STYLE NO. 412C

00

OFFER ENDS DEC. 31, 1980

...._~MERRY

We h;we po1nset t1n s to
gladden Clu 1stmas hearts. So
mnke us you r h ea dquarter~
for eve ry bl oomm· need 1 Call
or slon u1 today. Ch nst mas IS
get11ng close r.

FAMous'

RETAIL •••_••••••••••• ·••••• $13,725.00
SALE PRICE ............... $10,185.00

,.

An old, OLD-timer is a

The Daily Sentinel

J&amp;R SPORTS
SHOP
w
992-2184
Pomeroy, OH . W

RECLINER

GIVE·
•
A MAIL SUBSCRIPTION TO
SOMEONE WHO .HAS MOVED AWAY

•

,

WALL HUGGER

\ ROCKER RECLINER

124 W. Main Street
Pomeroy, OHio
Phone: 992-2848

w

W 748 E. Main

. •.

.'

Moore's American Hardware

Mrs.

arid Mrs. Hortense Frankel ri
Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hartman and daughter, Carla, Mrs. Mar-·
cella Casto and son, Joshua Chester;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Clary and son,
Derek, Newark. The Van Meters'
son, Bill of Cheyenne, Wyoming,
telephoned holiday greetings to the,
gathering.
·

A FREE Jewelry Box

----...L..-----------4

. W'CC:,; 6\J.ES,

The Curtis WoUe family spent
.Thanksgiving with their daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene ,Van Meter of
Granville. Other relatives attending
were Mr. and
Uoyd Wolle and
son, Denny ; Mr. and Mr Rick Jindra, Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Wolfe
and son, Eric, Akron; Mrs. Marlene
Thompson, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Howard A. Wolfe and son, Ri cky,

Buy Now Receive

on.-.. . . "."". .". ... "

We will GIVE YOU a Gift ... a Beautiful
Stainless Steel "Do-lt-All" Knife for
1
• vour thoughtfulness for a One Year ·Gift
•· ·
Subscription by mail.

Spend Thanksgiving with daughter in Granvilk-

To\81 donations were $1,315.30
whicb is an average of 60 cents frolrt
each participant per day. Lunch is
served from 12 noon untll12:45 p.m.,
Mondlly through Friday for persons
age 1¥J and older. Register in advancti for your IWlch by signing the
regislf,lion tablet located at the
front desk or by calling 992-2161.

SALE

Southern frosh
win third game

MOORE'S HAS A LARGE SELECTION OF
CHRISTMAS GIFTS AND DECORATIONS

An adult Christmas Dinner of the Scioto Valley Association of
The First Southern Baptist Chur- ~aptisl, sharing humorous inch was held December 5 at the cidents that have heppened to
Riverboat Room, with Daisy Pat- them during their ministry.
Attending were Rev. William
. terson catering the meal. Table
candles and a lighted Christrnss and Betsy Newman, Rev. Clifford
tree were among the decorations, and Doris Coleman, J .1'. and Gil,
and a birthday gift was presented · Hershel and Rhojean McCiure11 ·
to the pastor's wife, Betsy Roger and Dottie Turner, BoD
and Jovce Mills, Lee and Rachael
N~wmab.
·
The program inCluded Rev. Lefebr"e, Ernest and Sadie Carr;
William Newman, pastor of the Troy and Sylvia Zwilling, Pat and
church, and Rev . . Clifford Daisy Patterson, Ed and Sue
Col
n, Director nf Missions In King and Cindy Wolle.

e-::.

Meal!!.

\

fense."

SPECTACUlAR
DIAMOND PENDANT DRAWING

n

pre-holiday
,JRECLINER

By GEORGE STRODE
1biB can't be the sar::e T0ledo
learn that has won or shared 11" last
two Mid-American Co.nference
basketball titles with a miserly

Don't Give Up On Y~ur
Gift List. . . . I

The Meigs CoWJty
CltiJ.ens sons (which includes most of us! ) in
Center, located on: Mulberry dealing with all of the many tasks,
Heights, Pomeroy, Is q Monday Interruptions and unexpected
through Friday frop1. •a.m. until problems that occur in our daily ·
4:30 p.m. Da:lly sell\ ~ include lives. On Wedneaday, Dec. 17, a
quilling, crafts,
, cs, cards, Social Security representative will
games, woodwor . and special be at the Center from 9:30a.m. until
' 12:30 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 18,
"programs."
Activities plann.J for this coming Nutrition Education·is the program
week include ihe fqliO)Vingi Sunday, scheduled for 11:15 a.ni. and
Dec. 14, 2 p.m., ~ &amp;enitr Citizens Friday's activities inclu!le art.class
.Chorus and KitclleD Band will beginning at 9:30 a.in. and a
· (~resent a Clu-istnlas Pro~ which musewn vi.sit in the afternoon.
Thanks go to all who dofU!ted and
Is open to ihe public. Asocial hour
assisted
with the Chrisbnas bazaar
Will be held follqwing programs.
held
last
week. Christmas items will
On Monday, pee_ 15) the weekly
be
available
for sale until Chrisbnas
llqu,are dance will be d beginning
arriVes.
'·
at 12:45 p.m. Tuesday,
. 16, at 11
The COAD · Senior Nutrition
a.m., Nancy Kohlri r, director of
Program serVed a total of 2,193
Consultation andicaiton, Com- meals during the month of October,
munity Mental Hea Center, will
lle at the Center to resent a progr- 1~, Of this total 1,657 were
ina on Stress
ement. This congregate (served at the Center)
)Vorksb&gt;op is 11lmed
those per- and 536 were Home Delivered

Our. greatest

Riverboat Room site
of adult holidqy·fare·

•

•

The vote of the 14 American
League clubs was 11-3 against ad-

.

VALUE OF $450.00

activities r next week

In other developnients at ~ ·
sday's session of heeebell's IIIIIU8I
mitting 'the 71-year-old shopping cen- winter meeting, the Loa Ance1u ·
ter magnate into their exclusive Dodgers withdrew their effort to ob-l
club.
taln outfielder Fred Lynn from the '
The main reasons offered by the Boston Red S., Natlmal Leque ,
majority, and baseball com- president Chub Feeney recelvlld a
missioner Bowie Kuhn, were the new three-year contract, and the
lack of local ownership and alleged Oakland A's a&lt;Xjulred catcher Cliff
high pressure tactics by DeBartolo Johnson fl'llll\the Chl. .o Cube for
There were no major trades com- ,.._assoc_
· -ia~teS_to__fo_rce_a_r_av_o_ra_b_le_v_o_te_.__min_o_r_~ea
__gu_e_p_itcher-..-Mlk-e-:Klnc-'"'~;;;·;;;;,­
pleted Thursday with the major
business at the meeting centering ·
around the American League rejection of Ohio businessman Edward
DeBartolo's bid to purchase the
Chicago White Sox. .
another dii-ection in which to turn.
A source disclosed that the world
champion Philadelphia Phillies
have offered ~ Brewers four
players for LezcMo. The Phils are
willing to part with starter Randy
Lerch, relievers Dickie Noles and
Ron Reed and minor league pitching
prospect Scott Munningboff.

T he Da il Sentinei- Pa

.

Brewers 's tudy Siinmon$ acquisition
received reliever Bruce Sutter and
that made Fingers expendable. ·
Simmons was angered over the
cardinal signing of free agent catcher Darrell Porter on the eve of the
winter· baseball meetings and
demanded a trade.
Harcourt met with ·Br.ewers
General Manager Harry Dalton for
2'rlt hours Thursday itight and
resolved nothing in the Sjmmons
case. After the meeting, Dalton told
the press that he would get bacl9 to
the Cardinals tonight lor further
discussions.
Should the Brewers-Cardinals
deal fall through, Milwaukee has

Pomeroy - Middlepo rt, Oh •o

December 12, 1980

• • •

•

DALLAS (AP) - The Milwaukee saction, Milwaukee would also·
Brewers were poised to acquire receive reliever Rollie Fingers, otr
veteran catcher Ted Simmons from tained by the Cardinals on Monday,
ihe St. Louis Cardinals at baseball's · and pitcher Pete Yuckovich. In exwinter meetings tocjay.
change, St. Louis would get a numThe only thing holding up the ber of players including outfielder
multiplayer deal was the need for Sixto Lezcano and pitcher Lary
Slmmona' approv~ and his agent, Sorensen.
LaRue Harcourt, has placed a $1
million price tag on that.
Harcourt's price lor Simmons' a~
. Beca~ he is a to-year vetera'n proval could be reduced and it may
with the last five years on the same be that St. Louis and Milwaukee
team, Simlnons holds veto power would split the cost. A similiar
over the transaction. And Harcourt arrangement allowed the Cards to
wasn't' surrendering that item trade another Harcourt client, Ken
easily.
Reitz, to the Chicago Cubs earlier
If Simmons agrees to tiM' trRn- this week. In that deal, St. Louis

t' •.

ddg

Retail Prices '8.00 to 122.00

21•
ICII .COI.OI IV/2!1YMOII5M
EARLY AMERICAN SffiiNG .. .tnewo!mlt\and
ol Ea!ly American cablnehy. Maple !Mh on
hardwood solda, WOOd composition tJOOrd and
li'nutated wooe1 occenta.
I

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l

'

DISCOUNTED '125
FOR CHRISTMAS .

BAKER
FURNITURE

POMEROY lAN-DMARK
I

PH. 992-2181

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

Pomeroy, Oh.

E. Main
·'

•

,

·

40% OFF

•

All AMITY PRODUCTS

Fashionable Gifts For Jiim or Her

VILLAGE PHARMACY
2nd Ave.

Ph. 992-6669
M

Ohio

�..

•
- Middl

Friday 's Sermonette
"WHAT IS 'l1IE MEANING

OF CHRISTMAS?"
Christmas is a happy season of
tbe year. All the old year passed
by we have the opportunity to
share our joy aod happiness for
several days and weeks. We
di!CQrate our homes, churches
and stores with gaily colored
ligljts and trees and greenery.
More important than all this is
tbe fact we share smiles, happiness, and joy, all because about.
1980 years ago a babe was born in
a stable In a very small town in
Judea called Bethlehem. His
name would be Jesus.
Not such a great event you m;;y
well say. I'm sure many other
babies were bom that night in
bigger towns and in finer places
than a stable. However, this birth
was different. Angels sang to
shepherds on the hillside, a bright
new star appeared in the eastern
sky which led some wise and
special men from far away to the
place this baby was to be found.
They brought gifts of Gold,
Frankincense, and Myrrh. I'm
sure few babies received such gif·
ts as these. Because these men
came and brought gifts, we today
share our joy and love through
gifts to our family and friends.
We share happiness and joy. We
look beyond ourselves to the
needs and joys of others. What
could be better'
What is the meaning of Christmas ' It's the story as read in the

Holy Bible, Luke 2. It's loving
also and sharing and smiling and
singing and beauty to the eyes to
the hearts and ears of all
mankind. It's shouting Merry
Christmas to friends and
strangers alike. All year long we
hardly notice these people and
very seldom greet them with a
smile or a word let alone a happy
shout.
What is the meaning of Christmas? You ask well. It is a feeling
of a great joy which shall be to all
peoples. For unto us is born, a
Savior, which is Christ the Lord.
It is great joy in our hearts, it is
great compassion and concern
for others. It is a marvelous
feeling of all of us being of one
body. it may he snow, and
decorated mantels and doorways
and trees and smiles on
everyone's faces. It is also
Children. Children who are excited and happy and better
behaved than they are for the rest
of the long year. It's vacation
from ' school, friends getting
together, and church. It's candlelight, Christmas carols and
the old, old story of a babe, born
in Bethlehem and it's peace in
our hearts. Need we say more?
The meaning of Christmas is all
this and more. It is good. It is
very, very good. - By Rev.
WiUiam Middleswarth, Meigs
County Lutheran Churches.

'Aot"ound Me·z~as
'
,
6
f

I

GUESTS OF DINNER
Edna Slusher, Kay Logan and Erma YohooftheTwinCityShrinettes
were guests of the French City
Shrinettes at their Christmas party
and dinner held recently althe Down
Under Res Ia uran t , Ga lli
. polis.

HAVE GUESTS
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Slusher had
as their guests recently Pamela
Bassett, Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Ron
Campbell, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Mr.
and Mrs. John Roush, Jennifer and
John, of Ashley.
BAILEYS RECEIVE
VISITORS
Major and Mrs. Bruce Bailey and
daughters , Amy, Jennie, and
Rachel, of Lawton, Okla., recently
spent four days visiting Mr. and
Mrs. John Bailey, Rt. 3, Pomeroy.
Major Bailey is a medical doctor in
the Army, and he and his family,
great-nephew and nieces of Mr. and
Mrs. John Bailey, and also of Mrs.
Ada Holter, were to return home
Thursday. '
Also visiting the Baileys were Mr.
and Mrs. Olin Bailey of Cleveland.
GROUP I MEETS
The Presbyterian Group I met at
the home of Eleanor McKelvey
recently, when ,new officers were
elected for the coming year. they are
Carol Ann Harper, president; Marcella yoleman, vice president;
Carolyn Satterfield, secretary ; and
Ruby Vaughan, treasurer.
Devotions were given by Ruby
Vaughan, and a gift exchange was
held.
Attending the wedding were
El eanor McKelvey, Marc.ella
Coleman, Ruby Vaughan, Pam
Vaughan, Judy Crooks, Carol Ann
Harper, and Carolyn Satterfield.

Count~1J
'J

FREE CLINIC TUESDAY
The Harrisonville Senior Citizens'
Club held its monthly free ·-blood
pressure clinic Tuesday, with 34 persons attending. Mrs. Fern Dora
Story, R.N., was in charge of the
medical service, and two guests,
Mrs. Edna Schaffer and Mrs. Bertha
Parker, were present at the clinic.

:•

01110

Singing the blues over Christm
'

.ALSO 30" BROWN STOVE

REGAL PARTS and

ol Loofillll

CHRISTMAS DINNER
MONDAY
The Winding Trails Garden Club
will hold its annual potluck Christmas dinner Monday at 6:30p.m. at
the Meigs County Museum.
Margaret Parker and Peg!ly Crane
are the hostesses.
A wrapped gift exchange will take
place, and corsages will be judged.

QUARTZ

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•..'

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~;

;•

•

•

•'•
•

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Eastern Star installs
Worthy Matron, Patron

H§.__,. .

(Up To '750

Middleport M

MODERN SUPP-LY
'

399 W. Main Street
992·2164
Pomeroy, OH.
The Store With "A II Kinds of Stu If"
For Pets-:- Stables - Large a ,nd Small Animals .
Lawn s- Gardens

PWS 12% A.P.R. FINANCING

nts

AVAILABL£ ON THUNDERBIRDS,
GRANADAS AND MUSTANGS

"'

'

GIFT-A-RAMA

xzoso $130

Stop in and register for a Free Aquarium and a Lam· ·o
be given away Dec: 24th.
.

.

By Ellen BeU,
'independence,' 'Individualism,'
Meigs Couuty Ubrarian
•self-reliance, ' 'coutage,'
I was reading an article called
'initiative/ 'invention/ and 'in"Economic Outlook" from the
dustry' - nearly discover themSeptember/October 1980 issue of selves."
"Mother Earth News" (whlch
The Great Frontier has now
you may ~rrow from either tbe
been rriap~ and tapped. The
Pomeroy or the Middleport limitless resources were found to
Public Ubrary) and realized that have limits after all. Technology,
libraries may llave more im- says Webb, cannot add to the
portance for more people in the
resources, it can only change
years ahead than-ever before.
their form. And that change may
The writer of the article (who is actually be contributing to the
not identified) read Walter downfall of our civilization
Prescott Webb's 1952 book "The because it accelerates the
Great Frontier" and found an ex- destruction of our resources.
planation for the current national Even the Associate Director of
and international moral and the Shell Oil Company could see
economic problems. Webb, ac- in the early 1950s that petroleum
cording to tbe writer, said that production would pea'k in the late
Western Europe, from roughly
1960s, He tried to encourage
1300 to 1500, had reached a leyel people to stabilize the population
of "se~-starvation, subsistence and switch 'to solar, wind, and
balance on the land it Inherited." water power.
Suddenly; thanks to the discovery
- and plundering - . of North
The writer of the "Mother EarAmerica, South America, South
th News" colwnn (after a lot
Africa, Australia, New Zealand,
more words')' concludes by saying
. and assorted islands, "the
"it's a safe bet that you and your
amount of gold and silver hanfamily can face the trials ahead
dled by the inhabitants of Europe
much more comfortably if you
was multiplied 15 times over."
start- right now! -stocking up
Europeans had more goods and
on real wealth: A little piece of
more kinds of goods than they
land on which you can grow your
could have enjoyed before even in
food, a passively solar-heated
their'dreams. This boom la~ted,
earth-sheltered home, how-to
according to Webb, until about
books and d&lt;rit-yourself skills,
1950.
barterable goods" and the other
"It's rather difficult, you know,
things "Mother" reconimends.
to develop a work ethic when
Your libraries spent a good porthere's not enough work - or
tion of the available book money
wages or even food - to go
this year buying how-to books so
around." But if tbe available
you can grow your own food betwealth seerns limitless and
ter with less work, build your own
people seem to get rich in direct
passively solar-heated earthproportion to the amount of time
sheltered home, and learn to do a
and energy they Invest in grab- " lot of other things yourself. Come
bmg pieces of it, "our most share the resources available at
your libraries. It's all FREE.
cherished concepts - 'freedom,

Chester Auxiliary meets
for December with potluck

:'

IN Gin CERTIFICA
AT PARTICIPATING

Gold-tone model

I

•

Egg carton

The Women of the First Church of Blessed Christmas." The article told
God of New Haven· held Ita annual ~ow to have a meaning-filled ChristChristmas dinner In the Missionary mas by setting priorities and
building, beginning at 5:30 p.m. on organizing our schedules in order to
Friday, Dec. 5.
experience a celebration with
The room was decorated in meanlhg that wiU continue to rever· ·
keeping with the Christmas seaaon.
berate throughout tbe new year.
After the dinner a business
After the program a gift exchange
IJleetlng waa conducted by the was beld. The two door prize winpresident, Orpha Fields. Prayer was ners were Iva Capehart and Mickey
given by Fay Carpenter Blld Loretta . Dodson(
Stewart had devotions taken from
The next meeting will be January
Luke 2:1·20. Several Christmas B at 7:30 p.m. In the Missionary
carols were sung by tbe group.
' Building with Bonnie Fields, Norma
The secretary's report was read Greene and Grace Cunningham serand the treasurer's rwort given. ving as hostesses.
Spiritual Life Director, Delores
Taylor announced that tbe offering
Those present were Loretta
for Christ Birthday Observance Stewart, Mickey Dodson, Lufema
would be received on Sunday, Dec. Weaver, Sue Erwin, Susie Bess, Nor21. She alao announced that the Fall ma Greene, Mary Kelly, Rena Joljn,
Bible study had been completed.
son, Sarah Gibbs, Fay Carpenter,
Ill"
~..I
..
ByCiarleeAIIea .
Lore~ Stewart, Stewardship
Ilelores Taylor, Bonnie Fields,
lll.shed. Alter adjournlnent of the
The December meeting of the business, a social time was enjoyed
Director; received tbe penny-a-day Becky Reed, Eleanor Davis,
envelopes, and reported on the Margaret Dodson, Grace Cun- Ladies Auxiliary of the fire depart- with readings, games and a gift examount turned in on the Christmas ningham, Patty Maynard, Iva ment, wa~ he1d Wednesday evening change.
prject.
Capehart, Orpha Fields, Roberta at the home of Clarice Allen.
The birthday gift went to Dprothy
The meeting opened with "The Myers and the door prize t&lt;f Erma
Orpha Fields read tbe group an ar- Maynard and guests, Pat Cunticle entitled, 1'10 .,Ways To Have A ningham and Florence Powell.
Lord's Prayer," followed by roll Cleland. ·Refreshments of cake,
call. Each · answered by naming a coo~ies, candy, punch and coffee
Christmas flower. The minutes of were served buffet style from the
the previous meeting were read by dining table. The home was
Clarice Allen and bills were paid. A decorated In keeping with the
card of thanks from the Bod Wood holiday season. Contributing
family was read. Plans for the an- hostesses were Charlotte Smith and
nual Christmas dinner for the Dixie Beiar.
Auxiliary, firemen and families
In attendance were Inzy Newell,
were finalized. The dinner will be at Enna Cleland, Dorothy Myers, Marthe firehouse on Sunday evening at 5 cia Keller, Opal Wickham, Virginia
p.m. with each· to bring a covered Lee, Dixie Beiar, Betth N
dish ; meat and drinks will be fur'Ibe Racine Chapter 134, Order of Eleeta; Lynne Crow, warder; and
Eastern Star, recently installed J oe Bissell,sentine.
1
,
Louise Stewart as Worthy ?Utron
Jane Wagner was presented her
and Wflliam Stewart as Worthy past matrol) pin by her mother,
Patron of the organization for the Helen Pickens, and Ben Phllson wsa
corning year. ·
presented with a gift by Ralph
Lois Pauley, Installing officer, . Webb.
·
assisted by Opal Diddle, leona Hen·
Over BO members and guests were
sley, Dorothy Terrell, Wilma Styer, welcomed, the latter representing
E!Bie Schoenian, Ernest Wingett, the communities of Albany,
and Laura Circle, ' 'conclaeted the Pomeroy, Marietta, Middleport,
ceremonies, aod the soloflt was Bea Harrlsonvllle, . Beverly, Belpre,
00
Kuhn.
•
GloUBter, New Marshfield, Athens,
)
Other officers installed at the Amesville, and Cheshire.
Distinguished guests honored
meeting were Lillian Weese,
Associate Matron; Ralph Webb, were Roberta Mindllng, past Grand
•
Associate Patron; Cora Webb, Matron; Howard Shull, past Grand
secretary; Barbara Dugan, · Patron; Shirley Ingram, Grand
treasurer; Creatly~ Hlll, wn- Esther; Eatelle Ankrum, Deputy
ductress; Brenda Johnaon, Grand Matron; Donna McLean,
associate conductress; Jane Grand Representative of South
Wagner, Chaplain; Laura Circle, Dakota; JoAnne Mahaffey, Grand
marshall; Lee Lee, organist;
Representative of Vermont; and
f,~I,.ADA
Patricia Struble, Ada; Sharo~ Blr-. Lois Pauley, Grand Chapter comAuto. trans., ps, pb, air 'cond ., rear defroster , vinyl
eh, Ruth; Pam Diddle, Esther; Ann ' mltteeMember.
roof, tutone·palnt, plus more. List Price S8893.00
WUes, Martha; Margaret Weft.
17

5140

with Ease

WITH PURCHASE OF ANY
HEATH WILD BIRD FEEDER
THRU
31st

'

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1111~,....11! ®=~

l ll t

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XZ055

SLB. WILD BIRD SEED

Women·ofChufch pfGod
hold annual holiday fare

Your

creations ~

By Polly Cramer
Special correspondent
DEAR POLLY - I hope you or the
reade~s can give me some ideas for
the use of empty foam egg cartons.
- Rosemary.
DEAR ROSEM.
ARY - Such cartons can be used
as
packing
material in larger
cartons when
movi.Qg or shipping things.
. Cramer
Some Use them to hold costume
jewelry in dresser drawers, as the
divider sections keep things neatly
divided. In a desk drawer they can
keep paper clips, rubber bands, etc.,
nicely separately. I am sure some of
the readers will be sending us
imaginative suggestions for their
use.-POLLY
DEAR POLLY- To keep multiple
strands of yarn from tangling, insert
each skein in a clean potato chip can
and then pull the yar-n through a
smooth hole you have made in the
lid. When I have each strand pulleti
to a working distance and all of an
equal length, I fasten the cans in a
cluster with tape or a heavy rubber
band. The weight os the cans and
yarn keep the entire cluster ·on the
floor or beside me, all tangle free
and clean. - BILUE
DEAR POLLY - When cutting
bathroom carpet, the d&lt;rit-yourself
kind, instructions usually say "cut

with the scissors." I like a singleedged razor blade for cuttmg
through the rubber backing and
have no small piles of cuts around.
They simply unwind and a straight,
even ·edge is left. Of course, this is
done after tOC pattern is drawn on
the ba cking, and one cuts from the
back side.- MARY ANN
DEAR POLLY- I attached one of
those long poles with a bright flag on
top, designed for bicycles, on my
grandson's tricycle. When he is on
his bike. in the driveway or around
parked cars we may not see him but
the fiag is clearly visible above the
cars.
A new plastic garbage can with a
lid can be decorated with a child's
name and make an ideal storage
place for toys that otherwise might
be left out in the play area ·or the
yard. This works great near a sang
box. - DOROTHY

r~c;~sm~RiEs1
~

~

FOR SALE

Way the Racine Emergencyi
Wsquad starting Sun., Nov .w
W30th at the Racine SquadW
WBuilding,.
.
W
W Mon .-Fro . 6 p.m. ,to 9 p.m . ~
'li Sat. 1 p.m. to 8 p. m. 111
Sun. 1 p.m. to 6 p.m.
11.

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If l'O:Il'O:I""' 1!0011!0$1!&lt;:&lt;1!&lt;::&lt; I!«&lt; I!&lt;::&lt; """- !1!0:!'1!&lt;::&lt;110:&lt; !1!0:!'1'0:1""" '1'0:1 !!&lt;:&lt;I!«&lt; I!&lt;:&lt; !1!0:! ~

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WE'RE MORE THAN JUST A
W
BOOKSTORE
a
w
a
W WE'RE YOUR ONE-STOP
W
~
HOLIDAY SHOPPING ~

~

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WE HAVE

- ~ •Fenton Glass

I
i1

w

•Bibles
•Tapes &amp; Records
·•Gift Books
•Study Books
•Religious Gifts

•Pfaltzgraff
•Cape Craft
•Carolina Candles
•Ideal Books

'li
w
'li
I
If •Children's Books

Vi
Vl
~

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•Dictionaries

FREE
DECEMBER
EACH

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NO PURCHASE

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1977 AMC tllRNET ~ .......~~~[·:;.~~·:.·.~'::·:~:~: ...'1995
19~ _~M: ~TAI.INA. ......................~1395
2 dr., auto., p.b., p.s., 53,000 miles. ,
1975atm $JATIONWAGON .. ~~!~·:~·?::~:~·.. '1695
1974 FORO PICKUP' FlOO.......... ~~'.o.-:~:~: .. :'1695
1975 FORD PICKUP Fl50 ....... ~!~~~~;~.~~:':: .. $1495

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MUSTANG 2 DR
4 cyl eng., 4 speed trans., ps, pb, AM/ FM, Plus more .

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RIGGS USED CARS
I

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Open M·T-W-F 9-S

Thun.-Sat. 9 ti 11
915-4100
Chester, Ohio..- _ _ _.J(.:&gt;n..(irovet_

vs· aula. trans ., ~lr cond., AM/ FM/ Siereo. rear
defroster, int. decor, tinted glass plus more. List Price
$9118.00.
22 PerMonlh

*195

'

'

Payments in this ad are computed with $1000 (cash or
trade) ilnd Rebate Down. Apr. 12% tor49 months.
(Ohio Sales Tax and Title Fees not included.)

See Garland Parsons or Pat Hill, Gen. Mgr.
.
992-2196
o61 ~ rd-A-ve. --'--"--"-~" ------ - \

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MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE

'/i

Open Every Night Till Christmas Till8:00 P.M.

t~l'O:Il'O:I~~l'O:I~l'O:Il'O:I"""l'O:Il'O:I!I!O:!l'O:Il'O:Il'O:IW~--~~-~

SIMMONS OLDS-CADILLAC, INC.
Load ed Demo

1980 OLDS 98 Regency Sedan ••••••••••s1o,ooo
1976 VW Dasher Cpe.••••••••••••••••••• s3995
11.000 miles, 6 cyl .std . $4295
1979 CHEV 11.7~2 lion C1Q •••••••••••••••••
1979 FORD LTD Cpe.••••••••••••••••••• ~395
I

1978 Olds 98 Regency Cpe.••••••••••••• ~395
1978 CAD. DeVille Sedan •••••••••••••••• s7995
1978 OLDS Royale Sedan •••••••••••••••• '4995
1978 CHRYS. Cordoba Cpe ••••••••••••••• s4295

.1980 AMC Spirit Cpe.................... '4595
1974 OLDS 98 Sedan ••••••• !···········'1295
1975 OLDS Cut Sedar••••••••• ~ ••••••••s1295
1973 CADILlAC DeVilk! Sedan ••••••••••• 11295
1973 CAOIUAC DeVille Sedan........... SS95
'

PAT HILL FORD

~

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1976 FORD Granada Cpe.••••••••••••••• s2695
1977 PONTIAC GP Cpe •••••••••••••••••• s3695.

·'8.1 THUNDERBI~D

•
•

PerMonth

. List Price $6992.00

..

~

AT

OFFICE.

Shop At
\ and SA
In Every

'

USED CAR VALUES

•

DRAWIN~S·

Y 3:30

'

2 OR.

'

llJH 10 CHRISTMAS .

1-"100.00 &amp; 3 '

.

.....

\

•

-Pomeroy

•

PARKING I

~

Now Pulsar Quartz gives you a dress
watch that has both the slim silhouette
today's fashions demand and the near·
perfect dependable accuracy of a quartz
watch. It's always beautiful and always ·
tells you the correct time. And you never .
have to remember to wind it.The batteries
w ill keep it running without bothering
you for approximately two years. Take
your choice of white or gold tone case with
matching easily adjusfable bracelet,
Pulsar " Quartz. Always a beat beyond.
In technology. In value.

ers

'81

~

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W

STOP ANO SHOP AT THE

.

I

If

GET YOUR

You'll buY-it for its looks.
You'll love it fur its ac~

..

HOMEMAKERS
. TAKETOUR
MASON- Abus1full of Mason Ex, tension Homemakers went to

Blue dial

fElEDERS

.

Attelldini were \VIra. Betty Rose
and son, Mrs .• Cecilia Harris and
. daughter, Mrs. Lou Carpenter and
son, Mrs. Sarah Spencer, Judith
Statcber, Pat Mossman, Ann Van
Meter and Mary Capehart.

1-----------------------

Oaign to Compliment
Your Grounds
•Redwood Conttruction

'

strator.

Page-7

'

.

eM~etn

PARTY HELD

MASON - Mrs. John Sisson
recently held an interior decorating
party with Susan Hayes, demon-

WE'RE OFFERING PRIZES 'EVEN
SANTA CLAUS.CAN'T BEAT!

XZ049
$130

~hv

zy .
40% OFF
33 JD '273
RANGES '
*224.95

KROEHLER RECLINER

HEATH Redwood

ellf91 Seed

'

COMING 10 TOWN!

spent Thanksgiving with his paren·
ENTERTAIN GUESTS
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i
ts, Mr. and Mrs. George Roberts at
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Roush,
Bashan.
Syracuse, entertained several
Mrs. Dorothy Sayre and daughter, guests dunhg
· the past deer season.
CHRISTMAS
Mrs. Peggy Gregory of Columbus Among them were Warren and Tom
VISIT HERE
and Mrs. Betty Harris of Reedsville Bale, Delaware; Dale Roush, Apple
,.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Adams, Letart enjoyed Thanksgiving weekend at Creek; and Steve Penn and Steve
Falls, spent Thanksgiving weekend Virginia Beach. David Sayre spent Roush, both of Bellsville, Md.
in Raleigh, North Carolina, visiting r---'-----~---~----,..-----------1
REG. 1171 to '351 NOW
their daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Pike.
I
ATTEND WEDDING
Mrs. Lottie Bradford am\' Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Bradford of Racine
AT
attended the Dec. 6 wedding of Miss
Kelly Ann Hutchison to Brent Bradford, at the Central Christian Church
in Wooster.
PH. 423-4089
Brent is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Brian Bradford of Wooster, and is
employed .by the American Electric
COUNTY ROAD 51 OFF OHIO RT. 7
Power System River transportation
Division at Lakin, W. Va.
P/z MILES NORTH OF BEL~RE
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Horton will
hold an open house Sunday, in honor
of their 25th wedding anniversary.
Friends may call at the Horton home
· between 2 and 5 p.m.

· SUNDAY
· ,MASON - A Christmas program
Will' be held this Sunday, Dec. 14,
7' ijO .p.m., at Christian Brethren ·
Church in Mason with Mrs. Unda
Zuspan, _director. ·Tbe young people
of tbe church will present a play en- ·
"tlUed, Unto the Least of These.
RecitatiOIIB will be given by the
various classes.
Throughout the evening the choir
will present special songs accompanied by Helen
Fields
.
'
.o~ganist, and Co!lllie Thompson,
. pianlst. The young people will sing
old favorites such as Santa Claus is
Coming to Town, Rudolph the Red
Nosed lqlindeer, Jingle Bells, We
Wish You a Merry' Christmas and ·
Away in the Manger,
An adult nativity narrated by Ruth
Thompson and Ruth Riley will conclude the program.

Miss Evelyn Lockett feU recently
nW' ber lune In Clifton and broke
bet hjp. She is a patient at Pleasant
Valley Hospital, l'OOl!lllO.

Apple Grove News.Notes

The next blood pressure clinic was
scheduled for January 13, 1981, at
the HarrisonvillP Townhouse from
10 a.m. to I p.m.

CHRISTMAS PROGRAM

The Daily sentinel

· Polly's Pointers

• •

Sunrise where they viewed the
decorated Christmas trees of other
countries. Their driver was Roger
Harrah.
. Those enjoying the day included
.Joyce Carson, Laurene Lewis,
Matilda Noble, Catherine Smith
Hazel Smith, Evelyn Proffitt, Sarah
Spencer, Clara Williams, Lea
Belcher, Ramona Sydenstricker and
Vebna Luckeydoo.

CUFroN PERSONAL

THE WIZARD

Tile Sift of rur-Round P1ts

W~ID E~RD

BY ALMA MARSHALL
Correspoudent
Bt(SYBE&amp;'ITOMEET
. MASON - The B1111y Bees 4-H
Club of Mason will meet on December 15, 8:10 p.m. at Mason United
Methodlst Church to go Christmas
C&amp;rollng.
.
On Decomber 20 at 2 p.m., the
club's Christmaa party and gift eXchange will be beld. In the Mason
United Methodist Church soclal
' ' room. Afterwards the group will
take favors ·foi- patients at Pleasant
Valley NW'8lng Home.

Sentinel Social Calendar

- Middleport, r.m, ·,

Pomero~

Mason County news.

season ~

Crisisline received one-third more
of depression or "the m;;y stay home ~use they don't
calls
over· Thanksgiving than it did
to
impose
the.
i
r
bad
mood
.on
want
blues" are coiTUllon during the
in
·a
typical
ThurSday through Sun.
·
other
people.
She
recommended,
"
If
holiday season. "The holiday season
day
period
reported Newsome. Clinical
your
family
or
friends
invite
you
to
may be particularly hard for people
Crisisline
has
received more calls those
spend
time
with
them
over,
the
who live alone, are recently divorover
the
holidays
than at other times
·
holidays,
accept
the
invitation.
They
ced or widowed," said Laraine
throughout
its
four ·years of
Shs1utitzll\ ~vided some tips for
would
rather
have
you
there
with
'Newsome. Coordinator of the
operation.
Crisisline
operates
24
having
a
holiday seuon:'
them
regardless
of
your
mood
than
Crisisline, The Gallia-Jacksonhours
a
day,
seven
days
a
week.
The
"Haye
expectlons
for tbe
know
you
are
at
home
feeling
Meigs Community Mental HealLI
.
number
in
Gallia
is
446-5554,
ih
weeks
ahead.
If
you
don't
get
alont
r;ntttr's telephone counseling ser- miserable."
Jackson
286-.5554
and
in
Meigs
992with someon~ tbe rest of tbe year,
vice. She said that deore••P&lt;l """''1P
5554.
will suddenly get
don't
•
"Also available at aU times is along
is Chrtstmastime.
emergency counseling in person at Don't
children to behave all three coun.Ues," said John
you will be.able to:
Shustltzky, Ph. D., Coordinator of
ever'Ythilll! you h~
tlal members urged to attend.
FRIDAY
the
Gallia
Center.
"Someone
is
VOUO' e1rtra days off.':
.
SATURDAY
THE WILUNG Workers C1ass En·
always
on
call
and
available
through
·realistic. Expect to·
THE MEIGS Chapter of American
terprise U.M. C. will have their
Crisisline,"
Shustitzky
said.
·
enjoy
the
but don't expect
Christmas meeting Friday at 7:30 Association of University Women
a
counseling
Shustitzky,
them
to
be
Take
tlme to enp.m, at the home of Marjorie Bowan. will have their Christmas brunch
joy
being
your
family
and frien~
psychologist,
agreed
that
the
SPECIAL MEETING, Meigs December 13th at II a:m. at the
holidays
can
be
a
difficiilt
time
for
ds oorr ,:~~~time~
·
with someone .
REAct Team, 7:30 p.m. Friday Meigs [nn. The program is-a Christless
f~
yourself."
people.
"Memories
and
e~tions
THE WILUNG Workers C1ass En- mas Story by Mary Virginia Reibel.
. cause people the most t~ouble over
SUNDAY
terprise U.M.C. will have their
MEIGS COUNTY Genealogical the holiday season," said Sh~titzky. r;;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;;;;;;;;;:;:t
Christmas meeting Friday at 7:30
"We think of relatives wtw have
p.m. at the home of Marjorie Bowan. Society will hold regular meeting died, or of friends who have'!moved
NOW OPEN
SPECIAL MEETING, Meigs Sunday, 2 p.m. at Meigs Museum, • away. We remember the good times
week
earlier
than
usual
due
to
REACT Team, 7:30p.m. Friday at
we had with them and tend~~- forget
Nathan Biggs home; dues payable holiday season; workshop will be
the'bad times."
/
.
i
at that time. All members and po(en· h~ld. '
"Our expectations are . a
Pomeroy's New Game 'Room
'Fine Family Entertainment"
·problem ,"· said Shuslitz ky ,
'
"because we think the holidays will
Located
At .
be fulfilling, satisfying '- the
234
E.
Main
St. )
Thanksgiving Day with his parents, highlight of the year. When exBy Mrs. Herbert Roush
Pomero'y, Oh.
. Roger Parsons and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre at pectations are too high, the reality is
OPEN
MON.-SAT.
bound to fall short."
'
Angie, of Ashland, Oh. visited Mr. Racine.
10
A.M.
to 10 P.M.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
Television and other
show
and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons Tuesday.
Mrs. Louise Wandllng of St. Albans, visited Mrs. Jessie Hussell, Mrs. people enjoy perfect .. vuua 1 "1 "We
W: Va., Mrs. Ethel Moore' of New George Burge at Millwod, and Mr.
Haven were dinner guests of the and \VIrs. Bill Brooks at Letart, W.
Va.Sunday.
Parsons Tuesday evening.
Michael Henry, son of Vicki Ables,
Thanksgiving Day dinner guests
was christened at the local
of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Michael Methodist Church Sunday morning
were Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Pickett
and daughter, Tracy, Mr. and Mrs. by the pastor, Rev. David Harris.
Roger Roush and daughters, Kim- Attending the christening were the
berly and Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. grandmother, Mrs. Shirley Ables
and . great-grandmother , Alice
' Max Pickett of Xenia, 0.
,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert, Mrs. Balser.
Mary
Ables
of
Colwnbus,
Mrs.
Walter McDade visited Mr. and Mrs.
Ruby Congo .and Ruth Congo visited
Dana Lewis at Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. Randall Roberts and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables Sunday.
children, Todd, Leslie and Chad
Ji ~elings

Decembe·r 12, 1980

.w¥1

.

SIMMONS OLDs.cADILLAC, INC.
You'll Like Our Quality Way of Doing Business
\

�Sentonel

CHURCH
·NEWS
pastor, Roy Mayer , Sunday school supt
Church School, 9:15 a .m. worahlp aervlce, 10:30 a m. Choir rehearsal , Tuesday , 7:30pm. under direction of Ahce
CHURCH

OF

THE

NAZARENE Com•r Union and Mulberry,
Rev. Clyde V. Henderson , pastor Sun-

cloy Khool , 9.30 a .m. Glen McClung,
1Upt.; morning worship, 10.30 o .m.:
evenln; aervlce, 7:30 m•d-week service, Wedneoday , 7 ·30p m
GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH -

326 E

Main Sf., Pomeroy The Rev Robert B.

GrO'Itl, rector Sunday services at 10 30
a m . Holy Communion on the first Sundoy of ~ month , and combined with
morning prayer on the third Sunday
Morning prayer and sermon on all other
Sundaya of the month Church Scliool
ond nursery care prov1ded Coffee hour
In the Parith Hall lmmad•otely followmg

the aervlce.
POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 212 W

Main St . Neil Proudfoot , pastor , B•ble
tchool , 9 :30 a m. morning wonhtp ,
10 30 a .m., '1'outh mMflngs , 6·30 p.m .
evening wonhip , 7 30 Wednesday ntgh t
prayer meetmg and 81ble study. 7 XI
pm .
THE SALVATION ARMY , 115 Butternut
Ave . Pomeroy Envoy and Mrs Roy W1n·
lng, officers In charge Sunday-holiness
meeting. 10 am , Spndoy School , 10 30
a m Sunday school leader YPSM Eloise
Adams . 7,30 p.m. , solvot1on meettng ,
various speakers end mus1c specials
Thunday- 10 a.m to 2 p m. ladies
Home league all women •nv1ted . 1 30
p.m prayer meehng and B1ble study
R•v Noel Hermon teacher
BURLINGTON SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHAPEL, Route 1. Shade Bible school, 7
p.m . Thursday , worship serviCe , B p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST
W Mom St , 992 5235 Vocal
music Sunday worsh1p , 10 a m . B1ble
study , 11 am ., worship , 6 p.m W~ne s
day Bible study 7 p m
OLD
DEXTER
BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH . Re" Rolph Sm1th . pastor Sun·
doy school , 9 30 o m , Mrs Worley
Francis supenntendent Preaching ser
v1ces first &amp; third Sundays followmg Sun
doy S&lt;:hool
GRAHAM UNITED
METHODIST ,
Preaching 9 30 a m hrst and second
Sundays of each month th1rd and fourth
Sundays each month worshtp service at
7 30 p m Wednesday e'lemngs at 7 30
Prayer and 81ble Study
SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTIST Mulberry
Heights Road , Pomeroy Pastor , Albert
Olttes , Sabbath School Superintendent
Rita Wh1te Sabbath School Saturday
afternoon of 2 00 w1th Worsh1p Serv1ce
followtng at 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCHSISter Harnett Worner Supt Sunday
School . 9 30 a m . mornmg worship
IO·•Sam
1l
THE HILAND CHAPEL . George Casto
pastor Sunday School , 9 30 a .m . even
mg worsh1p 7 30 Thursday even1ng
prayer serviCe 7 30 p m
POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST
Dovtd
Mann minister W1lhom Watson Sunday
school supt Sunday school 9 30 a m
morning wonh1p 10 30om
FIRST
SOUTHERN BAPTIST , 282
Mulberry Ave Pomeroy Rev W1lhom
R. Newman , pastor Hershel McC lure ,
Sunday uhool supenntendent Sunday
school 9 30 am , mornmg worsh1p ,
10 30
wemng worsh1p
7 30 p m
M1dweek prayer serv 1ce , 7 30 p m
MIDWAY COMMUNITY CHURCH . De &lt;·
ter Rd. , Rd , Longsv1!1e Rev A A
Hughes . Pastor Sunday School 10om
Services on Tuesday Thursday and Sun·
day , 7 30p m
FAITH TASERNACLE CHURCH Bailey
Run Road , Rev Emmett Rawson , pastor
Handley Dunn supt Sunday sdlOol 10
om . Sunday even•ng serv1ce 7 ·30 B1ble
teaching 1 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION lawrence Manley
pastor, Mrs Russell Young Sunday
School Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Evening worsh1p , 7 30, Wednesday
prayer meetmg 7 30 p m
MT. MORIAH CHURCH OF GOO ,
Racine- Re" James Satterfield . pqstor
Morning worsh1p , 9' •5 om
Sunday
school , 10 45 am , evenmg worsh1p , 7
Tuesday
7 30 p m , lod1es prayer
meeting , Wednesday , 7 30 p m YPE
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST Corner
Sixth and Palmer , the Rev Mark Me
Clung , Sunday school 9 15 a m , Randy
Hayes , Sunday School supenntendent
Dan Riggs osst supt Mornmg Worsh1p
10·15 a m. Youth meetmg , 7 30 p m
WednesdCJy , mduding wee tots eager
beavers, jUniOr astronauts , and 1un1or
and sen1or high BYF , cho1r proct1ce . 8 30
p m Wednesday prayer meetmg and Bl ·
ble study Wednesday , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF CHRIST, M tddlepart 51h
and Mom Bob Melton , m1n1ster Scott
B1ble
SOiflman , associate minister
School. 9 30 a. m. , morn1ng worship,
10 30 a m , e'lening serv1ce 7 00 p m
Wednesday Bible Study and youth group
meetings, 7 00 p m
MIDDLEPORT
CHURCH
OF THE
NAZARENE, Rev Jim Broome pastor
Bill White , Sunday school supt Sunday
mornmg worsh1p ,
school, 9 30 o m
10 30 a m , Sunday evange liStiC
meeting, 7 00 p m Prayer me&amp;l!ng ,
Wednesday,
7
p m
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY OF
MEIGS COUNTY , Dw1gbt L Zov1t2, direc tor.
HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN, Rev
Ernest Stricklm, pastor Sunday church
1chool. 9·30 a m , Mrs Homer Lee ,
supt , morning worship , 10 30.
MIDDLEPORT, Sunday school 9 } 0
am .. Richard Vaughan , supt Morn1ng
worsh1p , 10 30
SYRACUSE
fiRST
UNITED
PRESBYTERIAN Church Worshtp ser.,.ice
9·30 a .m . Sunday Schoo/10 30 a m Mrs
Scmpson Hall, supt
r
RUTLAND CHURCH Of GOD, Randol!
Bailey , pastor Sunday school . 10 am ,
Sunday worsh1p , 11 am , Chtldren s
church , 11 am . St.Jnday evening ser·
vtce, 7:30 p.m .. Wednesday evenmg
young ladles auxiliary , 6 p m Wednes·
day family worship , 7 30 p.m.
HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH , Noor
Long Bottom, Edsel Hart, pastor . Sunday
school, 10 a.m.. Church, 7 30 p m.
prayer mMtlng, 7:30pm. Thursday .
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAl, ThtnJ
Ave , the Rev. William t&lt;nlttel , pasfor
Thoma a Kelly Sunday School Supt . Sun·
day school, 10 am. Classes for all ages ,
ev.nlng service, 7 .30, Bible study ,
Wednesday, 7 30 p.m .; youth services ,
Frldoy, 7 30p m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST, Cor.
ner Aah and Plum Ralph Butcher,
pcntor. Saturday evening service, 7 30
p.m .; Sunday School , 10.30 o.m .
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH,
Richard W. Thomas, Director
POMEROY CLUSTER
Rev. Roberl McGee
Rev. James Corbitt
POMEROY, Sunday S&lt;:hool 9 . 15 a m
Worahlp service 10:30 a.m. ChQlr
reheanol, Wltdoesday 7 p m Rev .
Robert McGee, pastor.
ENTFRPRISE, Wonhip 9 o .m Church
S&lt;hool10a m.
- ROCK SPRINGS, Sunday-S&lt;:hool 9 15 a m . WC'rlhtpservice JO ( m

:200

"

.'

Complefe
Auromotl"e
§erv• ce

. TRINITY CHURCH, Rev W. H Po,in

N.aoe
POMEROY

1

~~

locust
I e;~~~~!~~
ffl,ft'J:l
,

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.
John F Futh . M9r
Ph 991' 21 0 1
Pomeroy

Ohoo

tl

IIINHI Tlw

Uwrd1 ' uf

Yo ur Cho
T/lis Su11

RALL'S

K&amp;C JEWELERS

b

BEN
.
~FRANKLIN"

l

Middleport. Ohto

Brown's Fire &amp; Saff!lv
Equipment

212 E . Mllll SlrHt
9t2 3115, Pomeroy

of Your Choice

SAL.ES and SERVICE
Rutl•nd, Otno 45715

.This Sunday.

J Wm • &amp;•II" Br awn, Owner
!"!tone (614 ) 7422717

FRENCH'S

P. J. PAULEY,

SUNOCO

AGENT

SERVICE
CENTERS

Nationwide Ins Co
of Columbus, 0

aocw

Keepeai&lt;L'
,_,._._

~m

212 W

992-2 lll Pomeroy

~In

H2·f962

Attend the Church
of Your Choice
This Sunday

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.
216 S Hcond
PDmeroy

"!"'~~·

Meigs County Branch

Athens County

__,..,,

&amp; Loan

Pat

Hil~

Ford, Inc.

- 461 S Third, M•dd'-port

:l16 E .

"2 2196

The

PIZZA SHACK

Chur•.. hl

E.t In or
Carry Out
126 E Main

of Your Choice
This Sun~ay

pomeroy

RACINE
PLANING
MIU

It snowed yesterday and when It stopped, I walked along the
creek 1n a world of frosty splendor The woods were hushed tn
maJestic stillness, and I tread softly. A JBV screeched overhead ,
and bendi1'1Q trees shivered stealthily, with squeaking , icecoated
branches The falls at the curve of the creek stood 1mmob11ized
wtth hoarfrost and ICICles, but bendmg near I heard soft and surely
lhe murmur of the mov1ng creek beneath the ICebound surface

MillWork ·
Clblnet Making
Syr•cust "2·3971

It came to me, ~owl1ke that creek my faith rlhs been Att1mes
th1s fa1th has been covered by nmes of doubt and self•shness
Often 11has been embittered by angu•sh and despair But always
under that glactal exterior there coursed a stream of consCiousness thai knew no turning from God- and the th1ngs I had been
laugh! from chtldhood

of Your Choice
This Sunday

MARK VSTORE
Middleport
-441 L.Dcust

m-lotl

Middleport

THE DAILY
SENTINEL
Middleport·
Pomeroy, o.

How glad I am my parents took me to church and broughl me
up w1th such a sure knowledge of God's love that 1t susta1ned me
even when 1 tned to turn from His ways
•

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY
We Fill Doctors'
Prncriptions

S.:uptu1es seleciOO lly
Tne Ameur.iln B1~e Soclllly

992-2955

p.m .
II
TRINITY Christian Assembly , Coolvl e
- . Gilbert Spencer, pastor. sUnday
school, 9·30 a m., morning worship, 11
am . Sunday evening service, 7:30p.m .;
midweek prayer service Wednaday.
7:30pm .
MOUNT Olive Community O!urch,
Lawrence Bush, pastor , Ma)( Folmer , Sr.
Superintendent . Sunday School and morning worship, 9 30 a.m Sunday evening
service, 7 p.m. Youth mHting and Bible
study, Wednesday, 7 p m
UNITED FAITH CHURCH - Rauto 7 on
Pomeroy bypass Rev Robert Smith, St .
pastor . Re'l Ja_mes Cundiff, aSJistant
poster . Sunday School , 9:30o m .. morn- "
ing worthlp. 10:30 a. m.; evenlflSI worship, 7 30 Wednesday nilfht prdyer ser'lice 7:30 p .m. Women s Fello...wship ,
Thuradoy, 9 30 o m
~
FAITH BAPTIST ChurcK, Mason, moat
at United Steel Workers Union Hall ,
Ra1lroad Street, Mason. Pastor, Rev.
Richard Jordan Morning worshlp 9:30
am , Sunday School 10:30 cr.m. ' Proyer
meeting Wednesday , 7.30 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST - Rav . Nyla
Borden , pastor
Cornel1u1 Bunch ,
superintendent. Sunday school , 9· 30
0 m . second and fourth Sundays worship servtce at 2.30 P..m.
MT MORIAH BA~TIST - Fourth and
Ma1n St. , Middleport. Rev. Colvin Mlnms , pastor. Mrs , Elvin Bumgardner.
supt. Sunday school , 9:30am .; worship
service, 10 45 am.
•.
NORTH BETHEL United Melhodls t
Church. Rev Chbrles Domlgon, pastor
Sunday S&lt;:hool, 9 30 am, WorsKip Ser vtce 10 ~5 a.m . : S..ndoy Bible· Study ,
7 oo' p .m .; Wednesday prayer meeting ,
1
7 30p.m .
•
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH , Roule 1, Shade Pastor Dan
Block . Affiliated with Southern Bopt1st
Convention Sunday school , 1·30 p m ;
Sunday worship , 2 30 p m Thursday
evemng Bible study, 7 p.m.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY
Racine ,
Route124, William Hoback, pastor. Sun
day school 10 a.m Sunday evening ser·
'ltee, 6:30 p.m. Wednesday eenlng ser
vice, 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST, Rav. Freeland '
Norris, pastor Don Cheadle, Supt Sun day School, 9 30 a m Morning Worsh1p,
10·30 a.m Prayer Service, altarnata
Sundays
NEASE SEnLEMENT FREE WILL BAP·
TIST, Donald R. Kerr , Sr., postbr. Fnday
a .... ening service, 7 30 p m
Sunday
school, 10a.m

Qlpyrlgflt !980 KeiSler A.d'lems~ng Serv•fe
P 0 Bor 802' CharlotTBSVII/6 V~rg1111a 2Z906

Attend The Church
of Your Choice

214 E. Main
992 5130 Pomeroy

This Sunday

FLATWOODS , Church School 10om
Worsh1p 11 a m
MIDDLEPORT CLUSTER
HEATH Church School 9 30 o m Wor ·
sh1p 10 30 o m UMYF 6 p m Robert
Rob1nson Pastor
RUTlAND Church School 9 30 o m
Worsh1p 10 30om
SALEM CENTER
Warshtp 9 o m
Church School 9 •5 o m
SYRACUSE CLUSTER
Rev . Stanley Mernf1ed , M1n1ster
FOREST RUN Worshp 9 a m Church
School lOam
MINERSVILLE Church School 9 a m
Worship 10 a m
ASBURY Church School 9 50 a m
Worsh1p 11 a m B1ble Study 7 30 p m
Thursday UMW ftst Tuesday
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Re" Dov1d Horns
Re" Mark Flynn
Rev Florence Sm1th
Hilton Wolfe
BETHANY , (Dorcas), Worsh•p 9 30
om Church School 10 30 am B1ble
study , Thursday , 7 30p m
CARMEL Worshtp second and fourth
Sundays ot 10 •5 a m Sunday School
second and fourth Sundays 9 30 a m
Worship and Sunday School of Sutton
Un1ted Method1st Church on f1rst and
th1rd Sundays Bible study together each
Wednesday at 7 30 p m Fom•ly mght
dinner together each th~rd Thursday at
6·30
APPLE GROVE , Sunday School 9 30
am Worsh1p 7 30 p m 1st and 3rd Sun
days Prayer meetmg Wednesday 1 30
p m Fellowship supper first Soturdoy 6
p.m UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 P m
EAST LETART, Chruch School 9 am
Worsh1p ser'IICe 10 a m Prayer meehng
7 30 p m . Wednesday UMW second
Tuesday 7 30 P m.
RACINE WESLEYAN - Sunday school
10 a.m , worship , 11 a.m Choir proct1ce
Thursday , 8 p m
LET ART FALLSWorship serv1ce 9
am Church School lOam
MORNING STAR Worship 9.30 a.m
Church School 10 30 a m
MORSE CHAPEL , Church School 9 30
am Worsh1p 11om
PORTLAND, Sunday School 6 30 P m
Evenmg Worsh1p
7 30 p m
Youth
Meettng, Tuesday 7 30 p m Btble Study ,
Thursday . 7 30 P m
SUITON, Sunday School ftrst and thtrd
Sundays , 9 30 a m. worShip , first and
th1rd Sundays , 10·,.5 a m . Worsh1p and
Sunday School at Carmel
Untied
Methoc:tist Church on second and fourth
Sundays Bible study together eoch
Wednesday , 7 30 p m Fam1ly mght dm
ner together each third Thursday ot 6 30
Pm
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Richard W Thomas
DuaneSydenstricker Sr.
John W Douglas
Charles Domigan
JOPPA , Worship 9 00 om Church
SchooiiO 00 a m.
CHESTER, Worship 9 om. Church
School 10 a.m Choir Rehearsal 7 p m ,
Thursdays . BtbloStudy Thursdays
7 30 p.m.
LONG BOnOM , Sunday School at 9 30
am . E\lening Worship at 7 30 P m .
Thursday B1bleStudy , 7 30p m
REEDSVILLE Sunday School 9 :30 a m .
Mornmg Worship 10.30 a m Evening
Worshp 7.30 p.m. Btble Study
Wednesdays ol7 30 p .m
ALFRED , Sunday SChool at 9 45 a m .
Morning Worship at 11 am. Ya~th . 6 30
p m. Sundays Wednesday N1ght Prayer
Meeting , 730p.m
ST PAUL, (Tuppers Plams)· Sunday
School 9:00 o .m Morning Worship at
10 00 a m Bible Study, 1 30 p m Tues .
day
SOUTH BETHEL \Silver Ridge) Sunday
School 9:00 \l m Morn "9 Wo-..h1p 10' 00
a m Wednesday Bible !)tudy 7 30 P m· '
KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST Oh.,.er
Swain, Superintendent Sunday schcol
9 30 e'fery week .
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
Rev
Keith Eblin , pastor Sundav Schobl , t.- :Jt:
a 1t, • leonard Col more first elder
bven•ng 'ervtrr - JO p m Wedn esday

I

Church of
Your Choice
This

prayer meetmg 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHR IST Duane Warden m•n•ster Btble
doss , 9 JO o m , mornmg worsh1p , 10 30
am
ENemng warsh1p , 6 30 p m
Wednesday B1ble study , 6 30 p m .
NEW STIVERSVIltE• .COMMUNITY
Church. Sunday School serv1ce, 9 45 1
o m
Worsh 1p
ser'lice
10 30
EvangeliStiC Serv1ce 7 30 p m Wednes day Prayer meetmg , 7 30
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST , Pomeroy·
Harnson11tlle Rd , Robert Purtell , pastor
Btl I McElroy Sunday school sup! Sunday
school 9 30om , mormng worsh1p and
commun1on 10 30 a m Sunday worsh1p
ser v1ce 7 p m Wednesday evemng
prayer meetmg and 81ble study 7 p m
ST JOHN LUfHERAN CHURCH, Ptne
Gro"e The Re" Wilham Middlesworth
Pa stor Church servtces 9 30 o m . Sun
day School10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST, Jerry
P1ngley pastor Sunday school 9 30
0 m , morning worsh1p 10 30 am
Wednesday e . . enmg ser.,. •ce . 7 30
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST, Rev Earl Shuler,
pastor . Sunday school 9 30 a m Church
7 pm
youth meeting, 6
58 rv 1ce
p m Tuesday B1ble Study 7 p m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE ,
Rev John A Coffman , pastor Martha
Wolfe Cho•rman of the Board of Chrisflon L1fe Sunday School , 9 30 am , mor·
ning worship 10 30 Sunday evemng
worsh1p 7 30 p m Prayer meehng,
Wednesday . 7 30 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST, Don L Walker ,
Pastor Robert Smtth , Sunday school
supt Sunday school 9 30 a m , mommg
worsh 1p 10 40 a m. Sunday evening
worsh 1p 7 30, Wednesday even•ng B1ble
study 7 30
DANVILLE WESLEY AN Rev R 0
Brown , pastor Sunday School 9 30
mornmg worship 10 45, youth ser0 m
v 1ce , 6 45 p m even 1ng worship , 7 30
p m prayer and praise Wednesday,
7 30 p, m
SILVER RUN FREE BAPTIST, Rev Marvm Morkm, pastor , Ste"e L1ttle Sunday
sc hoo l supt Sunday school , • 10 om ,
mornmg worsh 1p, 11 a m Sunduy even1ng worsh1p 7 30 Prayer meeting and
a1ble study , Thursday , 7 30 p m. ; youth
ser.,. 1ce 6 p m Sunday
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH 393
N 2nd A .... e Middleport Pastor Bob
Hollins Sunday ser\IICes, 10·00 a. m and
7 p m Tuesday and Fnday serv1ces 7 00
pm
HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE .
L•berty Ave
Pomeroy Pastor Ketth
Adk 1ns Ser.,. 1ces Sunday 3 00 p m Fri·
day 7 30p m Tuesday 7.30 p.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD . Rev . R. E.
Rob •nson, pastor Sunday school , 9 30
o m , worsh 1p service. 11 a.m. e'ltning
serv 1ce , 7 00 youth service, Wednesday , 7 OOp m.
LANGSVIllE' CHRISTIAN CHURCH,
Robert E Musser, pastor. Sunday school,
9 30 0 m Paul Musser, supt , morning
worsh1p , 10 30 Sunday evening service,
7 00 m1d- week serv1ce, Wednesday , 7
pm
SYRACUSE
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE , Rev . James 8 K1ttle, pastor; f
Norman Pres ley
Sunday School
Superintendent
Sunday school 9 30
0 m , morn1ng worship , 10 45 am ,
evangelistic sarvtce , 7 p .m. Prayer and
Praise Wednesday
7 p m , youth
meetmg, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN CHRIST,
Elden R Bloke, pastor Sunday School10
am. , Robert Reed , supt , Morntng serman , 11 a m , SundQy night serv1cea
Christian Endeavor, 7 30 p m , Song ser·
vice 8 p m
Preachmg 8 30 p m .
Midweek Prayer m'!'etmg Wedne:;doy , 7
p m , Alvin Reed , lay leader
CHURCH Of JESUS CHRIST, localed at
Rutland on New Limo Rund , next to
Forest Acre Pork Rev Ray Rouse,
pastor Robert Musser Sunday School
supt sunday school , 10 30om worsh1p
7 30 p m Bible Study Wedne•cloy 7 30
p rn Saturday ntghf prayer servtce 1 30
p rn
• •c.r~~C(I( .;~ ov&amp; ( dillS rtAfl · ~~ .. e•
Wot o;on 0,,., 1;: Jf;(t~7~~ [ .- 1 ;
, 1 n·n
sch. 1j •, 1 lv\o... 111 ~ , ..A
• ' 10•

y

of Your Choice
This Sunday.

Sundoyschool, 10 30 a m , evenmg ser ·
VICe 7·30 ·
MT UNION BAPTIST Joe Sayre, Sun Sunday
day School Superintenent
school, 9·45 am evening worsh1p , 7 30
p.m Prayer meeting, 7 30 p.m Wednes -

day
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Ymcent Waters , pastor. Howard Blair
Co lwell , supenntendent Sunday School ,
9 30 a m. mormng church , 1Q.30 am
Sunday eventng servtce 7 30; Wednes day Btble Study , 7.30 p.m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE,
Re" Herbert Grate pastor. Fronk R1ffle ,
supt Sunday School, 9·30 o.m Worship
servtce 11 o.m and 7 30 p m P.raye.r
meeting , Wednesday, 7 30 p m
LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH . Re\1 Floyd F Shook , pastor ,
lloyd Wnght, Director t of Christian
Education Sunday School 9·30 o m :
Mornmg Worship, 10:30 a . m ., Choir
Prachce, Sunday, 6 30 p m; Evening
Worship , 7 30 p.m . Wednesday Prayer
and B1ble Study 7·30 p m
DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST, Charles
Russell , Sr , m1nlster R1ck Macomber ,
supt Sunday school 9:30am.: worsh1p
service 10 30a m Bibl e Sludy , Tuasdoy ,
7 30p m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF lATIER DAY SAINTS ,
Portland RCJcine Road W1ll1am Roush ,
pastor. Phy ll is Stobart, Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9 .30 a.m .. Morning
worship, 10 30 a m , Sunday evening
service 7 p.m Wedn~sdoy evening
prayer services , 7·30 p.m.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST, Rev Eorl Shuler
pastor Worship service, 9·30 a.m. Sundoy school, 10;30 o .m Btble Study and
prayer sarvice Thursday, 1 30 p m
CARLETON CHURCH, Ktngsbury Rood.
Gary King pastor Sunday school, 9•30
o.m , Ralph Carl , superintendent even•ng wonhip , 7 30 p m Prayer meeting,
Wednesday , 7 .30 p.m.
LONG BOTIOM CHR ISTIAN , Tam
Rtchoson, pastor Wallace Damewood,
Sunday School Supenntendent Worship
service at 9 a.m . Bible SchoallOo m.
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH, Sun·
day School at 9 30 o.m. wonh1p ser·
vices at 10.30 o. m. Pastor Rev. Theron
Durham. Thursday serv1ces at 7:30 p. m.
wllh Rev Okey Cart
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bol d
Knob , located on County Road 31. Rev.
lawrence Gluasencomp, · pastor; Rev.
Roger Willford. assistant pastor.
Praoching services, Sunday 7•30 p.m ,
prayer meeting, Wednesday. 7 30 p.m ,
Gory Gnfflth, leader Youth groups..
Sunday e'leing, 6:30p.m. with Roger anCI
Violet Willford as leaders Communion
services first Sunday each month
WHITE 'S CHAPEL, Coolville RD Rov
Roy Deeter, pastor. Sunday school 9:30
o.m . worship service, 10·30 om Bible
sfudy and proy-r service, Wednesday,
7.30p m
RUnAND CHURCH OF CHRIST, Brad
Henderson, pastor, Herb EII10H, Sunday
school supt. Sunday school, 9·30 a m ;
morning worship ontf comunion , 10 30
o.m
RUTlAND BIBLE MtlHODIST CHURCH,
Amos Tillis , pastOr, DannY Tillis, Sundov
S&lt;:hool Supt. Sunday S&lt;hool, 9 .30 o.m .
followed by morning worship. Sundov
erenlng service, 7:00 p.m. Prayer
m-ting, Wednesday, 7·00 p.m.
RUTLAND
CHURCH
OF
THE
NAZARENE , Rov Lloyd D Grimm , Jr ,
pastor . Sunday school, 9 30 a.m.; worship service, 10 30 am Broadcast live
over WMPO; young people's service, 7
p m Evangelistic ae('Jilce , \. 7 30 p m .
Wednesday service, 7 .30 p.m.
FIRST SOUTHERN B~PTIST , Corner of
Second and Anderson. Mason . Pastor
Fronk Lowther Sunday school, 9 45
o.m , worsh1p service, 11 a m. ond 7:30·
p .m Weekly Bible Study , Wednesday ,
7 30p m
MA~ON CHURCH OF CHRIST Miller
Sl , Ma5on W Vo Aurlce M1ck , pastor.
Sul"day B•ble Study 10 o m Worsh1p 11
n m ond 7 p m 8ib1e SJudy Wednesday
1 p m
Vocal ml''iiC
Mt~ )t5N A SS F~', ffL Y ()f. COP IJ\.dd•niJ
• ..1 •
t• o•• W v'a ~a w , " IW q le C

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daoly sentinel Page-9

FAMIL.V

IN THE
BUILDING
ITSELF

GOT OUT
J:;JNE. ••

YOU- &amp;ANANA
IIOS!l ~ see1~ HE',. IIEAOY

T'TAL.Kl

RISHT. 80!05 !I~ HE:
AIN'T HOT eNOU8H
&amp;Y NOW- MAYBE , .t:
CAN MAKe IT A "'
LITTLE HOTTER!

CH!E:Z:,IT'S LII&lt;E AN OVEN!
MAYBE- THE POOR JERI&lt;.
RI!ALLY 010 PASS OUT!

I'IH - '&gt;! THE LOCK ()I ftiY
~HAPSACK 15 OPEII! OIV I

YE!'. MARTIIY KHO!Iii
Hell. WAV IIII.OOHD A
KITCIIEit All RI6HT •

lEA'ttf IT THI!T

1'/Ai'?~Oit

AHHIE HAVE
PICKfO

Meigs .
Property
Transfers

Pomeroy

Reuter-Brogan
Insurance
Services

O!c•mber 12, 1910

Services 11 a .m.
SACRED HEART. Rov Fothec Pqul D.
Welton , pastor. Ph0f'1e 992-2815. Sotur·
day evening Mota. 7 30; Sunday Mass, 8
and 10 om ; Canf•nion, Saturday,
1
1·1 30p .m.
,
VICTORY BAPTIST - 525 N . 2nd St.,
Middleport, James E. KHsee, pastor.
Sunday morning worship , 10 a m ; evening servtee, 7; Wednesday tvenlng worship 7 p.m ; Vlollotlon , Thurodoy , 6 .30

WhlJ don't

Heavens, no! I wouldn't
P:,ison her little mind
with
kid

let her
win one?

IT?!

to earn
in this
world!

lJOU

;

Rose Pastor Sunday School 9·,.5 a m :
Morning Worship 11 am . E"ening Ser·
vice 7 30 p m Wadnesday Women's
Mtnistries 9 a .m (meet1ng and prayer.
Prayer and Bible Study 7 p m
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION , The RtW William
Campbell , pastor. S..ndoy School, 9 30
o .m . James Hughes supt , even1ng service , 7:30 p.m Wednesday evening
prayer meeting, 7.30 p m. Youth prayer
serv1ce each Tuesday
• FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. letart: W.
Yo 1 Rt 1. Mark Irwin, pastor. Worship
serv1ces, 9.30 a.m., Sunday school, 11
am . evening worship, 7·30 p m Tues.
day cottage prayer meeting and Bible
Worship serv1ce,
study, 9 30 am
Wednesday , 7:30p.m.
CAL VARY BIBLE CHURCH now l ocated
on Pomeroy Pike, 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 30a .m Btble
study, Wednesday, 7:30p.m
INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH ,
INC. Pearl St, Middleport. Rev.
l. 'Dell Manley , pastor , Art hur Barr, Sunday school superintendent. Sun~y
school , 9 30 o m . e'lening worship, 7 30
p m Prayer and praise service, Wednes
day, 7 30p m
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST Elder James Miller Bible
studv, Wednesday, 7 30 p m.; Sunday
School. 10 a.m . Sunday night service,
7 30p m.
POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS Harrisonvi lle Rood, Dewey King, pastor,
Henry Eblin, Jr., Sunday S&lt;:hool Supt .
Sundav School 9·30 o m ; Morn1ng Worship 11 a. m.; Sunday evening service,
7 30 m: Prayer Meating, Thursday, 7·30
pm .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD Not Pentecostal , Rev George Oiler,
pastor Warship servlc' Sundav, 9·.t5
o .m : Sunday school , 11 a.m., worship
sarvica, 7.30 p m . Thursday prayer
meeting, 7 30 p m.
MT. HERMON United Brethren In
ChriSt Church. Rev . Robert Sanders,
pastor, Dan Will, loy leader . located In
Te)Cas Comry'lunlty off CR 82. Sunday
school. 9.30 a.m Morning worshlp.,.. ser·
vice , 10 45 am.; evening preochtng ser·
vice second and fourth Sundays, 7 30
p.m , Chrlltion Endeavor, first ond thtrd
Sundays, 7 :30 p.m Wednesday prayer
meeting and Bible lludy, NO p.m.
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES, 37319 Stole
Route 124 (One mile east of Rutland).
Sunday , Bible lecture 9.30 o . m., Waf ·
chtower study, 10 ·20 a.m. ; Tuesday, Bl~
ble study , 7 30 p.m.. Thursday,
Theocratic School, 7 30 p.m.; Service
Mooting, B 20p m.
RUnAND FREEWill BAPTIST Church Or. James A . Bruhl, pattor. Sunday
school, lOam: Suncfov evening service,
7 00, Wednesday pray,,r meeting, 7.00
~m
~
CHURCH Of GOD of Plophecy,located
an tho 0 J. Whlto ""ad all highway 160.
Sundov School 10 a.m. SufMrintendent
John Loveday. First Wednesday night of
month CPMA services, second Wednet·
day WMB moollng, third thn&gt;ugh llflh
you ttl ••~Ice George Croyle, pastor.
HOPE •APTIST "CHAPEL - 570 Gronl
51 , Middleport; Sunday Sdtool, 10 a.m.;
morning war~hlp, 11 a. m evening worship, 7 p. m Wednoodoy evening Blblo
study and prayer meeting, 7 p. m. Af.
filiated with SOuthern Baptist Convention
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRISTEugene Underwood, postor. Harry Hendricks, superintendent. Sunday school,
9 30 a.m : morning worship, 10.30 a .m ..
e'ltlnlng worship , 7 p m Wednesday Bl·
ble study, 7 p .m.
JUBILEE CHRISTIAf'l CENTER
Goorgo's Creek Road. Rev. C. J.l-1-t.
pastor John Failure, superint..,dent.
Church school, 9·30 a.m.; morning worship 10 30, evening Mrvlce, 7 p m . I!Jible
Study Thurs. , 7 p.m Clo11• toraH ages.
Nursery provided for worship services. •
ST. PAUl lUTHERAN CfiURCH, ComO&lt;
of Sycamore and Second Sts , Pomeroy.
Tt14e Rov W•lliom Middletworth, Pastor.
Su·H~(I'/ ' t. .,oc! rot 9 4'5 om 'Qn-:i Church

. .

r

' Nonna Jean Coleman to Charles
Henry Williams, Parcels, Olive.
Jolm T. Smith to Carl E. Smith,
Inc., Right of Way, Orange. 1
Kenneth C. Newland to Jolm R.
Murphy, dba Murphy Oil Co., 3 5003
acres, Chester.
Douglas G. Allen, Mfidavtt,
Pomeroy.
Douglas G. Allen, PamelaK. Allen
t,o David T. Huddles!on, Mary Ann
Huddleston, 281 acres, Racme
Village.

/MY13E llil5
WOULD BE A GOOD
11ME ro HIT HER
UP fOR A RAISE!

C&gt;ESIDE5 1 WE'VE HAD A

• HERE'S, YOUR M:JNEY BACK ~

HMMM •

600D YEAR, DE&amp;PITE
THE OONN IE O'BRADY

WINNIE 15 THROWIN6 THE
CtiRISTiW\5 PARTY HERSELF
TiiiS YEAR.

EPIOO~AND WINNIE

WAN 1"'

m

I WANT IT 10 i!&gt;E: A
SPECIAL HOLIDAY/

13E1Nt5 00 INVOLVED WITii MY
C&gt;U51NE55 PR013LEM5 THE R'\BT
FEW WEEKSL I 'D ALIWJST fOR t50TTJ:N THA 1 01 RISTNAB

o

&amp;HOW

COME HOME
FOR IT!

IS UPON U5 .

HER 6R/'ITITUDE I

~!&gt;ILLY AND
FOLK&amp; CAN

I HOPE

lliE

'

Personals'
Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Bailey and
children, Amy, Jennie and Rachel of
Kansas, and Mr. and Mrs., Olan
Bailey, Cleveland, are here visiting
' Mrs. Ada Holter and Mr. and Mrs.
James Bailey.
Dr. and Mrs. Richard Fox and
children, Bryan and Jennifer,
Mason, Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Davis
and infant daughter, Tricia Kay, and
Mrs. Ada Holter jomed Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Holter, Eddie and Alan, for
Thanksgiviqg dinner.
Mr. and Mrs. Denver Rice and Bill
had as Thanksgiving dinner guests
Mr. and Mrs. Kermeth Harris, Ken
and Davis, ,Mr. and Mrs. LeWIS
Harris, and Mrs. Homer Rice.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hoeflich and
Jayne w~re weekend guests of Mr . .
and Mrs. Mike Hanuner and family,
ColumbiiS.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Halley and
children, Paige and Brad, Upper
Arlington, spent the holiday
, weekend here with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Knight. Mr. and MrS.'
Knight returned recently from a ,
vacation in Florida. They visited
with her brother and his Wife in
Hfllllosassa and other points of interest in Wildwood, Lakeland, Winter Haven, and St. AIJSustlne.

Evening television listings
DEC. 12, 111110

1:oo rnem•Cil~w• NEws

C1J STUFF

.

'

(1)
ITIPPINQ OUT; THI
DEBOLTS GROW UP HBO pre·
senti an eJtcluaiveholiday apeclal
thlt cetebratas the life, spirit and
ne"er-endlng achlevementt of tha
phyalcslty-handlcappetJ DeBolt
children.
Cll CAIIOL BURNETT AND
FRII!NOS
(I) ABC NEWS
()) 3-2·1 CONTACT
CD ova I!ASY 'What Ia Gerentology?' G•ett Or Robart Butler,
Director at the Natlan•tlnathu1e on
Aging Hoata· Hugl'l Downt and
Frank
Blair.
oood·COotktned;U.S.A.)

1:30

~ INIULUOII

em IIICNI!wa

(I) BOll_.... SHOW
(I) FACaTHEMUSIC
emtlll caiii!Ws

W&amp;D . 'fWLD

(I)

..

W()RU) OF

~

liD

c--

I...:.::~
7;00
• I'IIIIIAOAZINE

-e

THEITOIIY
(]) FOOTUI.L;
THI! llf'L
(I) ALL .. THEFAMLY
(I) CMIIISTMAIIIACCOONI An
antmetedohttdntl'tiP8olalfeetur
lng the votcea of Rkh Llttte, Alta

8•58

i

Kevin Sheppa'rd, a senior at
O.S.U., is currently doing his student
teaching under Aaron Sayre in the
Vocational Agriculture' lleparqnent
at Southem High School, Racine.
Sheppard attended the
Agriculture Teclmical IDstttute at
WOOllier before ~erriilg to

thlngl going on at 96 Pac:ltlc Way,
seductive Sharon St Clair th1nka
her ticket to stardom has arrived
when heavyweight producer and
'Family Man of the Year' Jerry
Keyes accepts herpropoalhon, but
a atartUng and traolc 111m of events
change• her life Stare Hilary
Thompaon,BetayPalmer (Conclu·
alon, 60 min a )
CIJ 700i:LU8
([)COLLEGEBASKI!TBA.UDuke
vtVir!Jinla
(I) (H). FRIDAY IIIQHT MOVIO,
'TheBrlnka Job' 1978Stare Pater
Fa t ~eter Boyle
e w (JI THE OUKES Of' HAZ·
ZARD A pair Oll!lneak thieves, a
pretty girl and a haunted Muse
make life exclteng tor luke and Bo.
mina)
BILL MOYI!OS' JOURNAL
MASTERPIECE THI!ATA!
'Teelament ol Youth' Eplaoda n
Roland'e"l"'ldaooounlaofthetlqhl·
lng In France Inspire Vera to
become a wartime nurae She tur
vlvea the drudgery or h• training
tnd lookt forward toe ChrJatiNII
reunion wtth Roltnd CCioatd·
Cootk&gt;nod;U.S.A )(eo mms )
1:30 &lt;I&gt;IIOYIE~UifCAL)••• 11Hiah

-~·-

10:00 mem IIIIC IIAOAZ1Ne W1TH

DAYID . . . .U:Y'
.:1)(11 DALLAl The aiftkingofan
oil tanker end the to" of 800,000
galk»naotcrudeollhiiiJ.R delklht·
ad but to Bobby 1t'a only a minor
ineonv'enlence unlit he dlacovera
t~at the oil was not lntured (eo
mlllt.)

o.s.q,

1

-IQU-

-::oo

•'

THI! IIIUIIIC

,..
•

7;58

WWJUPDAn
1;00
e m -MorloOomond
et.,, o•t In hilh ttyle ae ehe It
tolned ~ gHat allr O.vtft .....
cleoclln the pre~nlere of her . . .

(

AMI!RICAII FILM THEATM
'Lot!IR the Stare' Set In South
Afriot and b81ed on Altn Paton' I
'Cry the S.lo'lad Country', thltfllm
Ia • pauionatt piH tor racial
!!JUOIIIy
WJMA-ANDTNUEAUTIFIIL

· IIA~

---·ceo'""'") lt:: flll~~n(l) r!IHIJ •
~-tco.DYJ ...., . _
·==~IIIWI
Pssla&amp;dl" 1171

I
n ..·-TON ........ ....,
rar

. · 1r~-M&lt;U

fann

--··-·_...
...,.Gnitohen KrHI

GET YOUR FOR
POWJ'DON
Cut your bread upon the waleni
~ days and the EnvirGnmental
~on Agency will get you for
pollution.

' · 10:21 INIWI
NI!WI UPDATe
10:30
RICHAIID HOOIII!

CAvnT-

agricult,ure and will IIJ,'aduate in
March. He and his wife, SUsan, live
on a 80 acre beef
m Meigs
County:

.Bii'ua.n
THELII._

7::10

HI" is studying productior,

t

•

JI!'...._YFI!UD

•

end h1r okllldiDOfltd, Bentoa,
l:lssAMIIIMOfiiW'OMwhOCMMip

.....

..-....

-----

'
' -

(I)

I'll A. . - . - Dlono'o

bro1Mr WI I.., qe~arrel• wtth hla

,

........... c_ _...
t; I halll . . . hl atftVM. INIII
M of ....,.. IMIJIIal IMfil

1

I'

~M.L..,_,...IIICHool

~htAtCOMiftCheCreek"1gfi3

!l21.

•

, ()g) I BELieVE

2;11
NEWS
2•28 C1J SPORTS III!PORT
2:30 ()) ROSS BAGLEY' SHOW
2:415 (!) MOVIt! ·(DRAMA) ""'-- "Five

i

POP 001!1 THI! COUII'TRY
(l)ncTAC(J))
MAC:.L.U-0

1'0111'

12•00 CIJ MOYIE-(SCIENCE·FICTIONI
.. "" "Five Million Ya1ra To
Earth" 1968 ~
t 2:30 I]) •
(!)
THE 'MIDNIGHT
SPECIAL
12:40 (]) SOUD QOLD Co hosts Glen
Campbell, Dionne Warwick Gold
record wmnera perform the1r hit
song a
(H) •
MOVIE -(SCIENCE FIC·
TION) '"' "Thing Wllh Two
11
Heedt 1872
12•58 C1J SPORTS REPORT
1:00 (}) JIMIIY'SWAGGART
1:15 @MOY1E-(DAAIIA)'' "BigBIId
1
Mimi" 11i174
2;00 I ] ] . NEWS
I]] 30 MINUTES WITH FATHER
MANNING
([)MOYIE -(WESTEAM) •• "Gun-

Q:OO (f)II(!)NUMBER06Amongo~her

Cool-ood"-lHolmoo.

Doing ;tUde.n! teaching

Louis Rukeyeer
C1J NEWS UPDATE

DeytFromHorwe" 11i178

3;58

.,oo

'"aw:..:::.
• "M"'

SPORTS III!PORT
700 CLUB

(]) MO~ oo(COMI!DV) •• \il "TIM!
Mlltton.. raee" 1.0
5;30 CIJ PHIL ARMS PRESENTS
5•58 C1J SPORTS REPORT

DEC. 13, 1880

e:oo (lJ

CHAMPIONSHIP

WRISTUNQ

(I) 1121 8J THE LOVE BOAT
Gopher &amp;Job Ia on the hnewhenhe
and a ml1d·maonered man behe'le
th!lt a woman Is from outer apace
and a be aulili.JI mode! pretendihg to
be mamed learns a lea son rrom two
baahelors Oueet stars Tommy
Smothers Helen Reddy {60mlne)
~l oaed Captioned, US A)
II (I) (11) FREEBIE AND THE
BEAN Chasing cnminal maatar·
mtnda could be InJurious to your
health.aaFraebleandtheBeanfmd
out when they go u!lderco.,.erln s1de
ehaalth 1n at nuta ,the link to s sene a
of holdups that could onlybe1n11de
ba (80 m1na )
8.30
THEL£SSON
ONCE UPON A CLASSIC
Swish
of
the
Curiam'
(Ctosed-captloned,U S A)
(ll) SNEAK PREVIEWS Co Hol!lll
Gene Slake! and Roger Ebert
10.00 (J) ROCK CHURCH
CIJ MOYII! •(DRAMA) ••% ''And
Justice For AI" 1878
(I) (J2I •
PERRY COMO'S
CHRISTMAS IN THE HOLY LAND
Perry Como presents a moving
celebration ol Chnstma aandHanu
kah 1n an 1nterfa II hspec Ia ltapedon
location in the Holy Land with
special guest star Ri chard Cham·
bar hun lsraei'a Ambeuador ot
Song the Baptl ~ l Choir Singers of
Praia~ and the Shalom Dance
Troupe are also featured at such
historiC localeaaalha Walling Wall
and the Church of the Nal1'1ily tn
Bethlehem (60 mlns.l

ffi

~ysSanta

CHRISTMAS SONGS Mal
Torme leads an all atar cut tn a
warm and aentlmentaltrlbute to the
holidays rea turing popular carols
and lf&amp;ditlonat songs (90 mlns )
8.30 • (I) ®J 'TWAS THE NIGHT
BEFORE CHRISTMAS The el·
tlzens or Junctlonv1lie are troubled
thatSantaCiausw111paaeovertheir
village when
r~nQ that hht feel·
lnga have bean hurt by an unsigned
tettertotheedltorolthelocalpaper
denouncing him aa a m~h Narra·
tor Joel Grey
8 00 1]).(!) SATURDAY NIGHT AT
THE MOY1ES Dog Day Aftern0011'
19715 Stars AI Pacino, John

'"•Y

eCIJ~NEWS

tlr:\lt•~ tal

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Parliament Harlequm
tary rule
1lem
6 Slwnper
5 M1ss Muffet 's 7 Neoghbor
vtsttor
of lnd
11 Pearl Buck
8 Amaz
herome
9 Ftrst Earl
12 Lake Erte port of Avon
10 Routine
13 Minnesota
Yesterday's Answer
16 Indosposed
chntc
39 Lackluster
18 Odd JOb
27 Down on
14 Prepared
41 Small
19 Scotto's
the mouth
15 Colorless
offertng
28 European
btrd
17 Suffix
42 Before,
20 "Father of
nver
for hero
onpoetcy
the
30 Chmese
18 Marble
44 Dander
Jndustrwl
pagoda
Zt Roman date
Revolution" 35 Drtp through 45 Gapttal
24 Altar (II.)
group
22 Hore
36 Austen
25 Ancestry
(abbr)
23 Egyptian
novel
t9 SIOUX
46 Gnaw
earth god 37 ChrtsUan
war leader
31 Tshombe's
26 Almoophere of E~gy~p~l-r;,...,~~~h
province
32 Chafe
33 Spellbound
~4 Wooden core
35 Part of a mm
38 Blushing
10 Played
the ham
43 Stevens
of the Met
47 Kingdom ,
48 Zone
49 Rain sound
50 Propensity

DOWN
t Home cooking

ffi

I KJ

· =-~-·--

.KJ
.

AXl'DLBAAXIt

....._lng.

lo LONGFELLOW

([).WHI!IHAWGueeti·Porter
Wo,go,iO.•. L•~rt- J. Do~on. Hogoro,

xJ r
I BEJARBj

I I K

Prfnl-- lin:

11174 .. Two
. . .. Mtllbett
8topNo -of·
Llchl
1 Cttoryl
diving

oeemlt'Yto-toood-gold
lloo ot tllo bollam oiJito __ •
7;:10

W'l'

DANCI F'IVI!O

1.-...j...-t-

expert
2Menu term
3 Put in words
4 Be conversant with

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Hero's how to work It:

r C81 LATI! 110¥11!
'TJ!EAIUfiE OF JAMAICA AliEF'

••~~~urt~er......_, ,

Tam~ B~ Rowdies

t11)

"Qo.

~~OAMY~A~
•
1e10

Cl) SOCCER Atlenla Ch1ets '18

()) COLLEOEBASI&lt;ETBALLOitlo
Wesle~an va Marahall
@) FRONT PAGE SATURDAY
NIGHT
(fi)THtSdloHOUSEHoatBobVIIa
demonatratea how to lay a parquet
kitchen
~
floor
(Closed Caplloned,U S A)
8;00 I]].(!) BARBARA MANDReLL
AND THE MANDRELL SISTERS
C1J 700CLUB
@MOVIE ·(ADVENTURE) ... 'Iii
"DUtmonde Ara Forenr" 1871
(I) FOOTBAll SATURDAY ON
TBS
(l)tHlm BREAKING AWAY
D(I)®JsuGSBUNNYLOONEY
CHRISTMAS TALES h'e a holiday
treat tor everyone when Buge
Bunny and hie bend ol caro tere
celebrate with their own version ot
'AChrlslmeaCsrol' ,WlleE Coyote
discovers that Road Runners tlete
snow, and the Tasmanian Devil

(J) COBIIOS 'Persletenee of
Memory' Or Carl S•gan uplorea
the human br•ln and nervous
syatem In an effort to underttand
what contt1tute• Intelligent Uta.
(Ciotad·Ceptloned,U S.A ) {eo
mina.)
, (fl)unMIIONS
8:30 ~ill) • NIWS
(I) CONCIRN
CBSNIWI
VICTORY OAROeN
7;00
eNIWI
ILACKWOOO BROTHI!RI
CilTMtll.I.IPOATSTtHieMclutive
1porta tpeotecular lakea vou to
Colarodoktrtho UNIOWorldSpood
Stlllng Champlonehlp• Hawaii for
exciting twang-gliding oon~petltion
and on lo Arl~ona for perlloua

DIC1l CAftTT11;11
-Uf'DATI!
11;:10
e (!) THE TONIGHT SHOW
Hoet JohHY Ctrton Qvellta.: Rl·
chard Pr,or, Rlotwdhnjamtn COO

ClJ -IIAGI.IY&lt;D-j,CO.DY) .. IIt

C1J
C1J

Cazale

ll) THE LUNDSTROM&amp;

-y
\

I

'THill

AC:~

HAS IT

I!IEHIND I-IlM.

•

One letter simply t~tands for another. In this aample A II
med for lbe three L'&amp; 1 X for the two O's, etc Sincle let ten. ,
apostrophes, the lenath and formation of the wards are all
hints . E1ch day the code letters are difFerent.
CltYPTOQUOTBS

Now •rrange lhe circl8d lettafa to
form the aurpriae answer as sug·
gostod by lltt11&gt;9110 co noon

A( I

I I I I I I)
(Anoworl tomorroW)

-·- - - . '"-- KNACK - NEEDY - HECTIC" ""f'ROtiO
dtt ,
Jum-.
etler Y1 Answer A nan thought she'd newr get rich working
1
for this- CHICKEN FEED
\

QWTAXNEPKYDYRF
TYEHYT
RX
ZXTTWVMY ZNEZXTY; WF WT T'WDZ·
MU
FBY
QYTZPWE
XJ ,9XNRQYQ
T Y M J · M X H Y . - JYRYMXR
Yettorday's Crypluq110lo:

PEOPlE

PLANTS LIKE·to BE TAUCEO TO
THAT

THEY

CANADA

DON'T

CARE

WHO nUNK

WHAT

THAT
HAVEN'T NO'MCED

YOU SAY ......J&lt;lHN

'

�Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

December 12, lf~

Pomero y-Midd leport, Ohio ·

by Larry Wright

curntniiY accepting .applications tor the following
positions: ·
·
. REGISTI!$RED NURSE - Psychiatric Inpatient
Hospllallzatlpn Program. Previous psychiatric experience , desirable, · but not required .
Medical/SUrgical experience helpful . Fixed night
sl)lft and possible rotating shifts.

NEW sandwich at McCiures Palry Isle In Middleport. Ham &amp; cheese on
rye &amp; chicken pattie,
Italian sub.

~:~~J.:'EN~-TCY.::ar:~~~~T~~:ITIO~~ ~~~~

GOOD SALARIES AND EXCEl-LENT FRINGE
BENEFITS. PLEASE CONTACT THE PERSONNEL DEPARTMENT, GALLIA - JACKSON MEIGS COMMUNITY MENTAL ·HEALTH
CENTER, 412 VINTON PIKE, GALLIPOLIS,
OHI0,4"31; 614-446-5500.

PREPARED eY

Public Nati.::c:_
e__

State of Ohio
OtparttMnt of Trantportatior~
Olvltlon of HI_.WGYI

LEGEND

I

PROPOSED
Oil' :sIt, ~54IMPI'IOVfMENT

•

IN THE COURT
OF COMMON PLEAS
OF GALLI A
COUNTY, OHIO

·--·1

Jackson Production
Credit Association,
Plaintiff,

•

ca se No. 80 CL 361
Homer Gilbert ,

u- 80

Rt. 554 hearing. to
he held January 7
MARIETTA
Proposed
Smith will discuss location and dividuals may express their views.
reconstruction of a .61-mile section design details, tentative right of way
Hearing records will remain open
of Ohio 554 in Cheshire Twp., Gallia a cquisition
and construction at the district office through Jan. 19
county, will be discussed during a n schedules and the relocation following the hearing. During this inOhio Depatiment of Transportation assistance program of the depart- teryal, the public may submit addipublic hearing, J a n . 7, in Cheshire .
ment. Alternate locations and tiona! comments to the district depuThe 7 p.m. hearing wil be con- designs will be presented.
ty director, Musklngwn Drive,
ducted by ODOT District 10 Deputy
A draft assessment of the pro- Marietta,- OH 45700. All comments
Director Walter G. Smith, Marietta, posal's impact on the envirorunent received will be reviewed by ODOT
m c heshire-Kyge r Elementary will be available to the public for . and the Federal Highway Ad3chool on Watson Grove Rd.
viewing at the hearing and prior to ministration . Recommendations
Improvement would extend nor- ,the hearing at the District Office. A and .suggestions developed as a
theastward fr om approximately list of other, designated locations, · result of the hearing will be imonEHtuar'ter mile northeasterly of where the draft assessment may be plemented, where possible, in the
the Africa Rd. ( CR 32) junction with viewed, may be obtainhed at the final design.
Ohio 554 on improved alignment and district office.
elevated grade in a n area subject to
Government agenc ies, civic
Further information is available
Se'J,SOnal nooding.
organizations and all interested in- at the district office.

Republicans announce committees
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Newly
elected Republican leaders of the
Ohio Senate announced today the appointment of committee chairmen
for the 1981 session starting J an. 5.
Senate President-elect Paul E.
Gillmor, R-Port Clinton, will head
the powerful rules committee, while
Sen. Thomas A. Van Meter , RAshland, president pro tern, will be
chainnan of the reference committee:
Gillmor and Van Meter announced
a realigrunent of the committee
structure, shifting some functions of
existing committees and con-

solidating others.
The new committees and their
chairmen are :
Agriculture, Commerce, and
Labor - Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, Defiance .
Health and Human Services Sen. John R. Kasich, Colwnbus.
Education, Retirement, and Aging
- Sen, Oakley C. Collins, Ironton.
Elections, Financial Institutions,
and Insurance - Sen. Paul R
Matia, Westlake.
Energy, Natural Resources, and
Environment - Sen. Sam Speck,

New Concord.
High.,ays and Transportation Sen. Theodore M. Gray, Columbus .
Judiciary - Sen. Paul P!eifer,
Bucyrus.
Local Government, Urban Affairs,
and Small Business - Sen. Thomas
F . Walsh, Canton.
Ways and Means - Sen. Richard
H. Finan, Cincinnati.
State Government and Federal
Relations - Sen. Donald E. "Buz "
Lukens, Middletown.
Finance Sen . Stanley J .
Aronoff. Cincinnati.

Predict rise in gasoline prices
WASIDNGTON (AP)- Gasoline
' prices could climb 40 to 45 cents a
gallon by next sununer due the Ira""
Iraq war, a new congressional
analysis predicts.
Such an increase could occur even
if the conflict ends by spring and the
two Persian Gulf nations begin
rebuilding their oil empires, said the
analysis by the Congressional
Research Service of the library of
Congress
Tighter supplies will be a major
cause of the price increase, not only
in higher prices for crude oil but also
in refiners taking advantage of the
tight market to recoup profits lost ,
during this year's gasoline glut, said
the study released Thursday.
In addition, the study said,
refiners are unlikely to dwnp their
record inventories on the market .the historical practice, and one that
helps hold down prices - because '
the war has convinced the industry
that stockpiles are valuable assets
and should be conserved.
''Gasoline prices might rise by 40
to 45 cents per gallon between now
and mld-198111 ull the components of·

,

this increase are realized," the
study concluded .
Before their war, Iran and Iraq
were exporting a total of 4 million
barrels of oil a day. But those sales
have virtually stopPed.
·
While the report estimated that
the ' actual impact on g)ohal oil
markets of the war is somewhat less
-400,000 to 1.4 million barrels a day
- nevertheless " higher world oU
prices will likely result in the aftermath of the war, even if it ends
within the.next few months.''
The world oil
was about
$32.50 per barrel before the IranIraq war and had been expected to
climb $2 per barrel next month. But
the report said that, "rather than
this modest increase, a notably sharper one should be anticipated ... in a
market where countries previously
dependent on Iran arid Iraq scramble to make up suppUe~ on the spot
market."
The analysts said an " informed,
best-guess reaction to the present
situation" would put world crude oil
prices at $38 to ~ a barrel next ,
---"~-- __
year. .

price

,

Defe ndant.
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Defe nda'ht,
Si eve rs
Truck Serv ice, is hereby
notlf1ed that he has been
named Def endant in a legal
act1on wherem Jackson
Prod u ct ion
Credit
Assoc iation is Plaintiff and
St evers Truc k Se rvice
whose address is unknown
an d can not w1th reas~Jnable
di ligence be ascerta ined, is
a Def endant . Plaintiff has
attempted to ser ve notice
pn orly on Defendant,
Stevers Truck Se r vice, but
the ce rtified mail envelope
was r eturned. This action
has been fil ed in the Ga l l Ia
Count y Comm on Pleas
Co urt
and has been

ass igned Case No. 80 CL
361 The last known ad·

dress of Defendant, St ever s
Truc k Service, is Route 3,

Box 155,

Ga llip_oli s, OJ-I

45631 .
The obiect of this action
is to secur~ and enforce the
payment of a certain
promissory note executed
to Pl a.n tiff by Homer
Gi lbert et a!, on or about

December 26, 1975, and to

for eclose the security for

~----------

deer

week for si'l&lt; consecutive
weeks. 1n the event that
you tail to answer within

I
I

SHOOTING MATCH at
corn Hollow lh Rutland.
every sunday starting at
noon.
Proceeds being
donated to the Boy Seoul
Tr~p 249. 12 gauge factory
choke gun only I
RACINE GUN SHOOT,
Racine Gun Club, every
Friday night starting at
7:30 p.m. Fac1ory choke
guns only.

~~c ~eg~~~;~ d~~~.sht!~
7:42·:22::36-~

Il i
I,

WANT AD INFORMATION

..

PHONE 992-2156

1

I
1

or Write Dally sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomero.,.. 0., 45769

I!

'

CLASSIFIED AD INDEX

I

I

I

I; '

1 Address

I

Phone

I
1 Pnnt one word in each
'I space below. Each in·
itial or group of figures
I counts as a word . Count

I name a nd address or
I phone number if used.

I
1
1

CIRCLE
AD WANTED
3

6

I ~~•--------

t-Card of T ... nks
2- ht Memorftm
:t-AnAOUncernents

41-HDUI.i for lent

4-GIYtiWIY

w-A..-rtllltflt IH' Rlltt
U-PAoonu
46-S,.ct r., llttflt
•n.:.....war~tH tolttnt
4t-E(IUipmenttor Rent

10

torR•t

~Wanted 1o Bl!l' _

4

--These cash rates
Include discount
17 __ _ _ _ _ __
18. _ _ _ _ _...:;.;;;;::
19._ _ _ _ _ __
20. _ _ _ _ _ __
21._;._ _ _ _ __
22. _ _ _ _ __

.....

11-HMp wanted

1Z-SINtte411ftnttf
11-lnsur.,.c
lt-luslnns Training

M-Misc. MweMMist

SJ-IulldlftltiU,IIH

N-htl,. lilt '

1s-sciHtOistftstrucnon
1.,_
R141to, TV

• FllRM SUPPLII!S
&amp; LIVESTOCK

&amp;CI A_,.lr
11-Wtnted To Do

!

61-t~•rft lqutpmlnt

eFINANC1AL

I

:I

eTRANSPORTATiON

,., ....\ alt
»-Farms

24.-====

7t-VIM&amp;4W.D.
'7t trMtlrc'f'Cin

'

n-&amp;AcnuM'MI
"""'•m

for
14-lu&amp;hMt• luUcllnts
J5-Loti&amp;AcrNtt

77-A~R~Ir

'

.

,

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U-lttttton

25 . ....,

26.~-----

Want-Ad Advertlslne

27.-_
-_
-28. __
_
_-

Deadllftel
2~30 P.M,-ui~J~r

29.-_
-_
-_
- _30.
_....;...,.
31 . _ _ _ _ __

11Noofllltu....,
,.,MMCIIV'

32·- ._
, -_
--_
' -_33._-_
_

eSERVICES
11- Homelm'""""'""
~l~&amp;awa....

,&amp;
e.-.~ectr~cal
. _
..,.,_

IJGIMratH"II"'

11-M.H. lt.,.lr
17-u~tM~stery

I

Rates illd-Otbttr

34. _ _ _ _ _ __
35. _ _ _ _ _ _ __

....
.....

Information

11w•••~r -

a...,.

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...
_ - -....., ...11. . " " " ' - " "J..,.r-•
"'rate._
·

Mail Tlios coupon with RemiHance ,
The Daily Sentinel
·
' Box 729
Pomero.y, Ohio 45769

.

'

.,

....

a:.
..............
y.,. .....,..................
....
.,..,!' u..,
...,.. ......
c.. .. .,...
In tWtfMI'Y. Canl of TfiHIIt Mill - - . . , , t .... _. .....
Rtlalm•M. CUll IIIIIIVMU.
' •
.
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10·7·ttc

bath, 2' mobile hOmes;
Mason, 3 bedroom never
liVed In, 2 bedroom, rented
2 acres. John Sheets, 3'12
miles south of Middleport,
Rt. 1.

NURSES

Trailer lot for sale, $5,000.
Modular honie lot an Route
7, three bedroom farmhouse located on Route 7.
992-2571 .

'~;~::~;t Bi1~e,:: 1'\..ong

· Term Disability, Hos: pltallzallon.
Salary
. · commensurate with experince . ,_
Contact:
Teresa Collins, RN
VETERANS MEMOR·
IAL HOSPITAL, Pom·.
OH.
Ph.

NICE TWO bedroom house
with three car garage In
Racine. $33,00.00. 949-2801.
No Sunday calls.
OLDER House on 87'X156'
lot behind Burger Chef.
Please call992-3458.

WILl Do small business
bookkeeping at home.
Have references. 992-7274
after 5 p.m.

32
Mobile Homes
_:____f,oe..r_,S=•,Iec__ __
1973 Crown Haven, 14 x 65,
three bedlooms, new carGeneral welding &amp; cutting, pet. 1971 Cameron, 1.1 x 64,
qualltf work, COI'llpetltlve two bedrooms, new carpet .
rates, · portable. Pphone 1972 Champion, 12 x 60, two
992-2535.
bedrool1)s, new carpet. 1976
Cameroh, 12 .. x 60, two
bedrooms, all electric. 1971
Will _ do sewing a. Skyline, 12sx 6l, two
bedrooms, bath &amp;. 113, new
alteratl9ns. 949-2145.
carpet.
1970 PMC,
12 x 60, two bedrooms, new
Insurance
carpet. B x s Sales, Inc.,
IN - 2nd x Viand Street, Point
AUTOMOBILE
·SURANCE been can· Pleasant, WV PhOne 675celled?
Last your 4424.
operator's license? Phone
992·2143,'

54
Misc. Merchanlse
FURNISHED' 4 room &amp; Firewood for sale, Mixed
bath, adults only, no pets. types of wood. $35.00 per
Middleport, 992-3874.
pick-up load. Delivered,
will stack far Senior
Citizens. 843-4951 or 1143·
2815.
42
Mobile Homes
for Rent
3 BEDROOM trailer In GRAVE Blankets. 949-24'13
southern valley Mobile or 992-7320.
Home Park, Cheshire, Oh.
992-3954 . Will accept 1 have two lots &amp; two Yaults
In Meigs Memorial Garchildren.
dens for sale, real cheap
10 x 55 two bedroom mobile for $600.00. PhOne m -5927.
home near Racine. 992· Also will sell farm; 29
acres on Long Hollow
5858.
Road .

2 'bedroom mobile home,
utilities paid, adults only,
deposit &amp; references
required . 992-3647.
1975 1wo bedroom trailer,
excellent condition located
in the Country Mobile
Home Park. $175.00 per
month, $100.00 deposit. No
pets. Serious calls only.
Phone 247-3942.
1 bedroom . trailer, furnished. $125. plus utilities a.
deposit. 992-7479.

unfurnished 3 bedroom
trailer, located south of
Middleport. 992-6637 bet·
ween9-4.
44

,j~~~~~~Jw~a~n~tecl~t:o~o~o~~

RCA Color TV, 25 inch
XL 100 $125.992-6259 .

•

PWMBING

AND
HEAnNG

Utility Buildings

12 Park St.
Middleport,-Oh.
Ph. 992-6263
Anytime
11-16-1 mo.

Comfort Gtow
Kerosen e
Heaten, Economy {28 0863) ,
Reg. $139 95
Now $129 .95

!

•

elnsullfion

eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows
e Replacement
Windows
Free Estimate
James Keesee
Ph. 992-2772 · 1•
11 ·19-1 mo.

Free Estimates
Reasonable Prices

Call Howard
949-2862
949-2160
1·22-tlc

AKC Registered poodle
pups. 2 small miniature
and 1 toy. 1 feiTJ,ale, apricot.
1 light chocolate brown
male, 1 dark chocolate
brown male. After 5 p.m.
992-2967.
'

PUWNS

EXCAVATING
eoozers
• Bllckhoes
Hourly Contract
Large or
small jobs.
Ph. 992-2478
11·20-3 mo. pd.

· ~-w

CARPET

With Padding

$~Q. Yd.

8.99 For '699

&amp; Up
1nstalled

4 Rolls
SHAG
Reg . $15 .95

$1295
Instal!ed

Good selection roll end remnants $3 .99 up

.

MAIN ST.

742-2211

I.
1------"----+---------Excavating
J &amp; F BACKHOE SER Iiscensed a. bonded,
septic tank installation,
water &amp; gas lines.c· Ex72
Trucks tor Sale
cavating work a. transit
1976 LUV PicKup. AM·Fm 8 layout. 992-7201.
track, a.c., topper, good
iires, runs good. $2,600. 992- Dozer a. ditcher work, land
6323.
clearing, water lines, gas
lines, grate work. Charlie·
HaHield. 742·2819.
73
vans &amp; 4 w.o.
i979 Jeep Wagoneer, 4
wheel drive, fully equipElectrical
ped. $7,500 . 742-3117 after 5. 84
&amp; Refrigeration
SEWING MACHINE ·
74
Motorcycles
Repairs , service, all ~
1978 . KAWASAKI KZ 650 makes1 992 ·2284 . The
motorcycle, color blue. Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Call949-2649.
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service. We sharpen
1979 Suzuki PE175, very Scissors.
good cond. 992·5217.
ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR sweepers,
Auto Parts
76
toasters, irons, all small
&amp; Accessories
appliances. Lawn mower . '
s, 15x6, 6 bolt stock wheels Next to State Highway
and hub caps, fits G.,. 4 Garage on Route 7, 985·
wheel dr . $65. 949·2181 or 3825.
949-2631.
APPLIANCE SERVICE :

Autos for Sale
1975 Granada, 78,000 miles.
$1,200.247-2761.
11

servlees
81

83

ail makes washer, dryers,

ranges , dishwashers ;
disposals, water tanks . Call ·
Ken Young at 985-3561. 28
years e~perlence . Also will
sell parts you fix .

Home
1mprovements
GENE 'S
CARPET
CLEANING. Deep stream
clean puts nu-look back In
your carpet, highlY recom ·
mended, reasonable rates,·
Scotchguard .
Free
estimates. Gene Smith, call
now992-6309 or 742-2211.

85
General Hauling
AGRI -LIME Spreadlng ,llmestone and fill dirt
hauling. Leo Morris, 742· ·
2-455.

WILL do handyman work
in your home . Fl{rnlture
repair In my shop. Jim
Bent!, 4th St., Syracuse.

TRASH
HAULING,
Syracuse, Rock Springs,_.
Flatwoods Rd. 992·5715.
Lawrence Manley Jr.

1---------""';;.,________

---.-.---·-··-----•••• :
\

CARPET

tt.....:----------~---------•

~~

-,

KITCHEN

IU.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

-r

' '

mo.

DRIVE ALITTLE- SA 'IE A LOT

or

'

12-8-1

lnstallet'

,'

~'

1'

PH. 742-2328

RlJMND RJRNITURE CARPET ..
DECEMBER CAR.PET SALE

.. ··

Ill. . k•CIItettitli 1

WE CAN DO In

All types ot roof work ,
new or repa ir gutters
and downspouts, gutter
cleaning and pain1ing.
All work guaranteed.

Granny &amp; Ripp'le!

• .I.{'

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

ROOFING

VInyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Apartmen1
for Rent

W.

Sizes from 4x6 to 12x40

IF YOU NEED IT
FIXED,

H. L WHITESEL

ao·

..

Building &amp;

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-25&gt;&gt;
6-15-tfc

J&amp;LBLOWN
INSULATION

THE
MEIGS
County
I
area. 992·3728.
Humane
Society
pets
of the
41
repairs, electrical
. UNFURNISHED apts. In
week are: Several adult
, LOST : $100. reward for
plumbing, mobile
EDROOM un- Middleport a. Pomeroy,
cats, 5 black 8. tan puppies,
51.
Pomeroy
or residence. 992- . TWO
Blue · Tick coonhound.
house, also two 992-7511 or992-6130.
black labrador, black Irish
Male, l!pproxlmat" weight 5B58 . claulfled
ads bedroom furnished &amp; one
'
1
·•etter
, collie type,
lbS:, In Beech Grove Trash hauling, Syracuse, bedroom furnished apartfurnish~ r
shepherd type, black &amp;
area .. Call 992'3938 afl'er 5 , Rocksprings, Flatwoods ments. Call after. 6 p.m. Large2 bedroom
$200
·
house broke medium
p.m.' '
·
Road . Call 992-5715 992-2288.
apartment
' per mon
dog ready to be loved,
plus utilities.
8-37,weekdays.
lo"able
mixed breed. 992·
Lawrence Manley Jr.
992-5545
or after
949-2216.
•
6260.
I
.
one of Mlddleporrs finest
7
Yar~ Sale
wanted to do: small homes offered for rent, Furnished apartments, 992.MOVING SALE. Antique business bookkeeping In three bedrooms, large kit- 3129, 992-5914, or 1-304-882PUREBRED
Eng'lish
furniture &amp; glassware, plus my home. 992-7274 after 5.
chen, dining room, living 2566 .
Shepherd puppies. Stock
room, family room, one &amp;
beds, chairs, washer &amp;
and watch dogs. Phone 247·
dryer, refrigerator, clothes
one half baths, basement,
2161 .
..................
.._
&amp; many-other Items. AI 560
garage with storage cenReal estate- General
·~···North second St., Midter, gas heat, central air,
2 AKC registered poodle
Phone 4&gt;18-3821 4&gt;111-2555.
dleport' Dec. 11-12-13. 12
pups. 1 black male for $125.
31
Homes for Sale
noon tlll6 p.m.
1 chocolate female tor $100.
9 weeks old. Call anytime
7 ROOM HOME. 2'12 acres, 3 bedroom hOuse, living
room,
dining
room,
family
a1992-7102 .
fireplace,
woodburner,
t
Wanted to Buy
1'12 bath, hot water
total electric, carpeted, 2
IRON AND BRASS BEDS, car garage, basement,
1 8 month old· male,
old furniture, desks, gold 1OX27 sundeck. F trst house
registered Blue Tick &amp;
Hngs, Jewelry, silver past Memory Gardens S. R. NICE two bedroom furBlue Tick pups, 8 weeks
dollars, sterling, etc., wood 7. 992-7741.
nished house In Racine .
old . 949-2545.
Jce boxes,jars. antl~s.
S200 per month. 949-2801 .
etc. Complete hOusehOlds. N1CE two bedroom country No Sunday calls.
Write M. D. Miller, Rl. 4, home. VInyl siding, full
Pomeroy, OH 1 or call 992- basement, S13,?0Q.OO. 94'1'{76tJ.
NEW LI-STING- This 8
2801 or will rent. No sundav
room house has 4
calls.
bedrooms, family room, 1
USED FURNITURE . Gold
61
Farm Equipment
big living room, full
&amp; silver, class rings, pocket
Beautiful
three
bedroom
basement, nice cabinets
1 b.6 h.p. walk behind
)Natchft. chains, diamonds ranch brick home In Baum
In the kitchen, and built·
Gravely. Just overhauled,
&amp; 10 on. Copper brass and Addition,
Pomeroy, Ohio.
in book shelves. The
new tires, electric start, hf~tterles, antique Items,
Gas
heat,
central air conwoodwork Is original
lo range, 30" mower. $900.
'also do appraisals, com- ditioning, Call
985-3814 or
and it has french doors.
1-5 h.p. Snapper rider, 26"
plete auctioneer service. 992-2571 .
All for 533,000.00.
cut hand start. $400. 1-8 h.p.
pver 30 years experience In
Gravely rider, 30" cu1,
APPLES · PEACHES&gt; ·
puslness. Will buy com742-ZOOa
,GRAPES - right in
electrlct s1art . $800.
'Georges. rlObsletter Jr.
Plete estates. Also take
Real Estate- General
your own back yard
Gravely Tractor Sales a.
consignments. Auction
Broker
with this 1'12 slor¥ frame
Service, 204 Candor 51 ,,
· jtverv Frldey night, 7 p.m.
HotJsing
home. Two bedrooms
Pomeroy, Oh. 992-2975.
Dssle's Auction House,
NEW LISTING - 42
down and 2 up, dining
Middleport, Oh,992-6370.
i!lcres
on
Sliver
Bridge
'
.
room, utility room, and
Headquarters
Road. Spring fed
62
Wanted to Buy
many other nice
"'ANTED TO BUY :
pastures and barn. Exfeatures. $20,500.00.
CHIP WOOD. Poles ma x.
GO~D.
SllVE~.
cellent locatio·n tor huntLIBERTY MOBILE
diameter 10" on largest
PLATINUM, STERLINGIng
lodge ,
Only
HOME - An almost
end. $12 per ton . Bundled
COINS, RINGS,JEWE;LR·
$20,000.00.
new 14x52 mobile home
sial?. $10 per ton. Delivered
J!'• MISC. ITEMS. ABRUTLAND Great
with 2 bedrooms, underiRGIL
B.
SR
.
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2,
'~OLUTE
MARKET
starter
home.
Nice
size
Wa~m
as
a
hug
from
granny'
pinning, and a metal
_ ,, E. Secon~ Street
Pomeroy 992·2689 .
PRICE GUARANTED. E·D
rooms with extra lqt for
This is a happy, useful afghan .
storage building, Lot
BURKETT ,8 ARBER
garden
.
Sells
for
SQuares
and
waves
of
color
can
be
rented.
$9,000.00.
Phone
SHOP, "'IDDlfFPORT,
$21,500.00.
Livestock
63
combine lo create th1s family
A BRAND
NEW
1 ' (614)-992-3325
pHi0992-3476.
111 ACRES with
;. ,
..
treasu1e. Crochet 1n two colors of
HOUSE . - Haven you
2, 8 month old calves, half
mineral rights. 2 old
always wanted a new
medium-weighl sport yam. A Hereford. 949·2179.
RT.
33
~ On buS line.
barns
and
old
2
story
OLD cot NS, pocket wathouse? This one Is
beaulifu l, easy-lo-make, thnfty
Has bath, · 3 bedrooms,
frame home. Pasture
ches, class rings, wedding
gorgeous. It has a big
afghan.
Pattern 7216: d~rections
nat
gas
furnace,
CIIY
land ·a nd 'woods. Good
!Iandi, diamond"- Gold or
llvlnO room with a nice
, _.
water,
and
near.,
town.
$1.75
lor
each pattem . Add 501
buy
at
only
$55,000.00.
sliver. Call J. A. Wamsley,
fireplace and ,glass
Ollf
Acre
with
pine
each
pattern
lor
firsl-class
airINVEST
in
thiS
Mid742-2331. Treasure Chest
sliding doors that open
trees.
mail and handling, Send to:
dleport riverfront protoln SnOp, AlheJII, OH, 592onto a deck. Situated on
71
Autos for Sale
30 ACRES - Nice layperty . Many possiMlcellfttaM
3A
a
1'.4
acre
wooded
lot
f4'2Ing .an good hard roed·
Not41omft llepl
.,
bilities with this 2 story
1976 Honda four speed,
that
Is
so
peaceful
and
that has T.P. water line,
home . ... AI present
quiet. Call for more In·
'Dally sentinel
good condition . 42,000
OSED FURNITURE. Gold
well drained that would.
upstairs and dawnslalrs
formation . $42,000.00.
miles , '"dial tires .
i. allwr, class rings, fiiiCket
make a nice farm or
a.il
163,
oid
cheisss
s11.
NiW
are separate rentals .
WOODED BUILDING
$2;450
.00. Phone 742·2211
'iwatchft. chelns, lllamonds
development.
Yon, NY IOIU. Prinl Name,
Will talk about land con-.
SITE- Approx. 5 acres
before 5 &amp; 742-2201 after 5.
i. 10 on. Copper brns and
BARGAIN .- 5 rooms
tract to qualified
Addi'ISS,
Zip,
Pllltm
Number.
In Riggs Crest Manor. A
IMtterin, 111tique .Items.
and bath, city water,
buyers.
excellent
Catch on to lhe craft boom! Send
beautiful place to buld a
•lsa dO •ppraluls, com- . chll!lney for . wood terms. only $29,000.00 .
1971 2 door Monte Carlo,
for ou1 NEW1981 NEEDLECRAFT
home.
Utilities
auetlonHr MrYice.
burner or natural gas.
MIDDLE~ORT - Want
automatic, bucket seats,
CATALOG.
o.er
172
designs,
3
available.
Asking
3 years experience In , ·can 111 used for a
a unique home? This
350 V-8, p.s., disc brakes,
free patterns inside. $1.00
$10,000.00.
__. Will buY · com· · buSiness. reeldence or
home has a quaint fish
am-tape stereo. After 5
AU
CWT
BOOKS.
.$1.15
IICb
A
large,
MIDDLEPORT
IJIIm ntatn. AIIO tlke both. Went lust$11,000.
pond and many nice exp.m. 992-2967.
kitchen, a large dining
133-flllllallllilllt Quillin&amp;
~onalggme~ts.
Auction
il ACRE FARM tras you just don'1 find
room,
full
basement,
2
132-QIIfl Oriallllk
~ FrldiY night, 7 p.m.
Prime location an four
any~ore .
~argo
car garage and 3
1972 Belaire . $300 :
131-'dd allicl Quill
QUie's Auction Houte,
lane- road. All minerals,
spacious rooms. Extra
bedrooms ·are but a few
Reglst.,red Blue Tick coon '
131-Swtllllfllllloni-Silall-5&amp;
Mldlllellal1, Oh.992·6370.
2
·houses.
IHirn,
large
nice size lot, In prime
I
of
the
fine
qualities
of
12~-Q~idt '•' Ear , __
hound.
$175. · 350 Chevy
block building and 2 ,
location . Sells for
thiS 2 story frame hOUse.
motor &amp; automati&lt; Iron· ·
121-(-.,.
l'ltclliuGI~ Qlt,lltl
bedroom mobile hOme.
$42,500.00.
Must see this one to
smlsslan. Before 3 p.m. 992· ·
: SMALL HOMI! - Has 2
127~~'•' DoiMI
2 ACRES .,-- With 1979'
believe how nice. Just
7263.
bldrooma,. natural vas
Wlndaor home. Fully
125-llHiftr
Ctllly
FlGwtn
142.600.00.
'
ton:eclalr furnace, bath,
equipped kitchen. All
125-Piill
Gillis
------:-~ 1
REALTOR
porchn' and . large lot.
set and ready lor your
MGB White black top 1976
124-EIIJ Glib 'o' O..tllll ·
Henry
E.
Cleland,
Jr.
City water and good .. famify .
Asking
am·fm, 8 track, best offer.
123-SIItdl '1' Plldl 'QIIIIs
tfHlfJ
's torecl-.
,
$29,500.0\1.
992·2470 after 6. Nova, 1974,
IU.SIIff 'o' Puff Quilts
,
ASSOCI
A
"tES
SAVE YOUR PROF.ITS
Coli • - t theH and our
.1 door, V-8, radials, cassetIIUIIclllt with $41ln
· Jean Trussell Nt-ZUO
IV INVI!STING AND
te, green-white top, $1.800
homes today. We
Roger
&amp;
Dottle
Tumor
117-J-.
Art
"
....
n
pint
WR ITB IT OFI'. WANT
have m•ny nice properor best offer. 664-44'13 after
ft2-56f2
115-illftr-flt\Y
Qulltl
· IT SOLD, · THIEN TRY
, tlos to cltoolelrom.
6.
' O.FFICI! fH-5692 II~ Art II llfltllo Cntebll
US AT , "2·U2S er
G-18 s. Hollltetter Jr.
114CGmfl)lll
Af&amp;IIM
loll
Man.
Broker ":-57:19 ·
112-PllaA._..
1973 GRAND PRIX. 2 dr. ,
VIlma NIQnsky, Assoc.
107·llllilll Sftin&amp;
am ·fm , bllc~et seats, runs
,I llJ'II·-,
Pllene 742-30911
10$-I.tllt CIICIIit
good. $400. or best otter.
Clleryl Lemlory, Asoo~
304-773·5013.
..,.... "' loda(s u.; ••
Pholle742-3111
II- .Hiijii.J, :.·t&gt;
~. ';":---- · --

'

Rl. 3, Box S4

landmark

cese)

AL TROMM

Sizes
"From 30.:30"
SMALL

Now at
Pomeroy

1 Repossessed Ha rdw ick Deluxe
G11s Dryer Here's a gOOO pla ce
to save money .
1 Used Hotpolnt
$115.00
Retrlger11t0r
New Bikes As Low As
$ 1 ~.95
Hotpolnt Microwave Oven,
Reg, $429
SJ69
Homelite Super 2 Cheln Sews
(28· 2001 Reg . S195.95 Now Sl65.95
{Pri ce includes F ree cerrrlng

STEEL

Farm Buildings

5

11--P'tu~Hint&amp; l•cawatt~tt

..

992-5682

- ~ ·

71-AIItils,...teM

eREALESTATE

LOST: Black &amp; tan coon
clog. In Hemlock Grove

icres; 6 rooms· basement,

TION :
(IM ·
TO YOU! Will
or certified check
antlqu,es and collectibles or entire estates.
Nothing too large. Also,
41
Houses tor Rent
guns, pocket watches and
Nice 4 room house with coin collections. Call 614- ·
·767-3167 or 557-3411.
garage for rent . 992-2502 .

-Auto and Truck
Repair
-T·ransmission
Repair
Hrs.: Mon.·Fri .
9 A.M.-5:30P.M.

I

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

1&gt;-•S... iP.,Iflur

SOrvl&lt;es

Jl-""'"

23----.,----

I...._LI¥..toek
'M-Hiy&amp;Gralfi -

Zl- Money to LN11
:t._l'nfnalon•t

tor S.le!
12-MoMitft..._••

..

11-WutMitolu., ·
72-TrvcQ foriiJt

IUIIIMU
_,.niiY

•
Lost and Found
LOST Black &amp; tan dog.
Male COOfl dog. 992-7698.

31
Homes for sa~
10 ROOM brick, 3 baths, 1'1•
acre: 6 rooms, 2 baths, ·1•12

Immediate Qpenlng
Intensive Care Unit
Full Time, 11 to 7 nurse,
wJth experience In ICU ,
CCU Is preferred.

t

..

si-Hounhctlel GOOids
~~~:,ltHial ...lpMtnt

S.ERV,CES

21-

'

eMERCHANDISI

e EMPLOYMENT

I
I:
I'

.

42-Molbllt t,om..

&amp;AIH:tlon

RNS and LpNs, lOOking for
challenging and rewarding
work? Tired of rotating
shifts? ,FHI the need to
develop your Ideas In
resident core with a highly
motivated staff? Pomeroy
Health Care Center has the
answer for you. Dlie to
achieving near maximum
census, we now have
openings for full and part
time poelll- an day shift
bill will consider other shifts. Competitive salary, ex·
cellent working conditions,.
life Insurance and
diHblllty policY at no 'cost
to the employee, and
haepitallzatlon Insurance
available. Come visit us or
call: Nancy Van Meter,
R.N., Director of Nursing,
Pomeroy Health Care Center, 61~-992-U06.

• New Ho"les - extensive remodeling
• Elecfrical work
a Roofing work
12 Years
Experience
Greg Roush
Ph. 992-7583
12·4· 1 mo .

REALTY

eRENTAI:.S

r-YarctSala
t-Publlc.Sate

check the proper box

I

eANNOUNCEMENTS

J-HaPP'fAdl
._Lost aiMI Found

1
' ll get better res ults w_o_r_d·~~~!l:¥~t~ ;
1 ifYouyou
describe fully ,
priesce.the
The rSentinel
~~~~~+~+~~~
I give
reserv
ight to - _110
I classify , edit or re ject 1
I ar\y ad. Your ad w i ll be , 0
1 put in th e pro per --+--+--t::-:::i:-:-:--:-_j,
1 clasification if you'l l

i

4 Giveaway
DOG. 31;, years Old, . been.,
spade, house broken. Good
house dog . Part Poodle. After 5, 992·2967.
·

l

results. Money not r efundable.

Gasoline prices are federally conI 3. ----'-~--trolled, but re finers can pass on 1 4. _ _ _ _ __
I 5. _ _ _ _ __
their cost increases - an action
6. __,._ _ _ __
refiners were forced by competition I
I
7. _ _ _ _ __
to forego during this year's supply
glut. That, in turn, cut their profit
a·---,-----margins.
1
9 · ---~Federal law, however, allows the 11 10. _ _ _ _ __
refiners to " bank" those allowable
increases and impose them later,
1 13-----~
when the market will bear them.
The study says some $8 billion a I 14. .- - - - - - year in '!ba~ed" priced increases 1 15 . - - - , - - have accwnulated and are likely to 1 16. - - - - - ' - " lie passed along sooq.
1

tomor.t:QJ!IJ!Ie dJ~L:c

REV. Ralp~ Dean from 1
Huntlngton, ·W.Va. will be ·
·preaching at the Zion
Freewill Baptist Church on ,
Rt. 682 at Lower Plains,
Athens. Sun., at 7' 30 p.m.
Special singing by _ IH~ .
Beulah Quartet · from
C~pelike. Pastor Rev.
Eddie Boyer.

i

I'
1 Name------~--- 1 ,

I
I
I
I

pearlng at the Rock-N-R 10
p.m.-2 a.m. Fri. a. Sat.:
Located 10 miles south Pl.
Pleasant on Rt. 2.

MEIGS HISTORY Books
for sale for Christmas at
Meigs Museum every
1 Friday and Sunday af1 ternoon during December spade, exc. with children.
or at Pomeroy Library.
l;:===:-=:=:=::l::G:ood
:;;;w;:a;:'ch:;:d;;;;;og:
.

Write your own ad and order by ma il with this
coupo n Ca nce l yo ur ad by phone when you gel

l below
I
I
Wa nted
The analysis said such price in- I
For Sa le
I
I
creases would ,a dd 26 to 31 cents a
Announcement
I
c
gallon to gasoline prices by the midI· I For Rent
dle of next year.
I
But that is not the only impact
I t. _ _ _ _ __
gasoline prices will feel, the study I
I 2. _ _ _ _ __
said.

DIETTOMQRROW
Our neighbor has depa rted the fat
farm till afle: the holidays. His mqtto: "E" t, drmk a~d be merry, for

SWEETSAVAGE . Nawa~ ·

.........~-·-·-,--·-.---,

I

II

DISCOVER the fun of,
creating beautiful hand
painted linens with genuine,
Artex Decorator Paints.
Free tns~tructlon classes.
Allee S. ' Nease. 61H85·
3942.

3~---'A=nn,o,u:::n,c::::•m
=•:.:c
nl:.:s---'-,.

the prescribed period
ju dgment by default may
or will be ·returned'against GUN SHOOT : Saturday
you for the relief demanded evening starting at 6:30
in the complaint.
p.m. Sponsored by the
CHERRINGTON Racine Volunteer Fire
&amp; EVANS Deoa,·trr•ent, at building In
BY: D. Dean Evans
choke
K of P Building I'9Un!l.oruy ,
Gallipolis, OH 45631 - - - - - - ; - - - - : Telephone No. HAVE YOUR deer trophy
6141 446- 17137 mounted.
&lt;
Birchfield's.
Attorney for Plaintiff east on 124 at Rutland. 742Dec. 12, 1~. 26; Ja~ . 2, 9, 16
_
2178

Curb Inflation.
! Pay Cash for
II Classifieds and
I
Savelll
1

_

real property. II was
necessary that the said
Stevers Truck Service be
made a party to this_
forec losure proceding as a
result of said judgment
l i e~ou are required to an·
swer the complaint within
28 days after the last
publication of this notice
which shall be once each

I,

1

........
. .......
.... .,.
, ..................

County, Ohio, which has
become a l ien against saiq

11
Http w,antecl
'
GET VA~UABLE training
at a young bull ness person
and earn IIOo.d money plus
some great gifts as a Sentinel route ca'rrler. Phone
us rlgllt away and get on
the eligibility list at 9922156 or 992·2157.

Business Services ~

AL~

THE MENTAL HEALTH CENTER ISA PRIVATE,
NOM-PROFIT CORPORATION AND AN EQUAL

FAYE'S Gift Shop, Jn·,Middleport wJII be ~n !rom
12·5 until Chrlstml's.

8, 12. 2tc

BROWNING Base CB, 2
piece transmitter, and
receiver, extra crystals,
works good. 304-773-5013.

CLINICAL TYPIST- Must type 60 wpm correctly,
Good spelling ability essentiaL Knowledge Of
medical terminology helpful.

HOMEMADE Chill
fllew feature at McClure's
~airy Isle In Middleport. 10
pc:t. dl~ount for Golden
~uckeye Members .•

(12 )

.... ' .........
.......
........... .

ART THERAPIST/CRAFTS SPECIALIST - Art! .
therapy certification preferred; related experience·
canlfdered. Must have general knOwledge of basic·
_ arts and crafts techniques and ability to adapt prdtects to all levels Of psychological functioning,

•soup.

, Public Notice
LEGAL
NOTICE
sa id note, riamely 1 02
Large three bedroom
acres, more or less, situate home In Pomeroy, apin Section 5 of Raccoon praised for $25,000.00 . Healing Fuel, 1 &amp; 2 Ex:
Township, Galli~ county, House in excellent neigh- caltlor 011 , company-, ·
Oh io Pl a intiff demands borhood and a very good Phone 1·61H9H205.
tha1 it received jVdgment. purchase . For further
'
against
Defendants, details · conta c t Edna To be afraid Of ·the :Life
Administratrix
Homer Gilbert et al, for Schoenleb,
of the Estate of Mary Dora Science ChUrch Is to be
the total amount of
Miller, telephone area code weak, narrow minded, &amp;
note remaining u
614, 992-2074 or Fred W. afraid o• the Bible.
together with 1nterest and Crow, Attorney at Law, However, Intelligent le9el
costs , that the mortgage , Pomeroy, Opio, 992-2692 .
headed, broad, minded
sec uring said note be
people may like it. Phone
(12)
7,
8,
9,
10,
11,
12,
6tc
foreclosed and tha·l • said
98H17.,j, .
property be ordeoed sold
Public Notice
and the liens · marshalled
RACINE Gun ClUb special
against sai d property; and
FOR SALE
Louis A. DeLuz real meeting . Thurs. Dec . 18.
t hat from 1he proceeds 1hat
Pla intiff's claim be paid. estate with large Holly E lectlon Of officers for
.
Plamtiff tur1her demands Park mobile home. Will be 1981.
such other relief that may sold at auction at the office
be proper and necessary of O'Br,len a. O' Brien, AI· Ra~lne Gun club dues for
together with attorney's torneys at law, 100112 Collrt 1981 payable now. Must be ·
fees.
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio
paid by Jan. 1, 1981.
This notice to Sievers 10:00 a . m . Saturday,
Truck Service is required December 20, 1980. For fur·
as a result fo a certain cer· ther information call 992- MEIGS Co. FIsh &amp; Game
Club - will have regular
tificate of judgment that 2720.
monthly meeting Sat 13 at
was filed by said Stevers . Appraisal Value$26,500 .
1 p.m. There will be a
Truck Service 1n the Clerk (12) 12, 14, 15
feed &amp; refreshments to all ·
of courts' Office of Gallia - -- - members.

TRAILER spaces for rent.
Soulhe•n Valley Mobile
Home Park. Cheshire', Oh .
992-3954.

SOCIAL WORKERS -:- To provide general outpatient therapy, letting, and community consultation
as necessary. Master's level persons preferred.
Must be creative and sell-paced with a desire to
work ~lth and support other servl~e ag~ncte~.

•

Apartment
for Rent

3 AND .I RM furnished
ts. PhOne 992-5434.

cnMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, -INC.

DEER .cut &amp; wrapped at
Maple Wood Lake between
Syracuse , &amp; Racine, Oh.
$25. per head. S5 additional
for skinning.

44

They'l! Do It Every Time

�- -~""
(

•

t

Pomeroy--Middleport, Ohio

\

~

......... -.---4 ... - -

..

..

..

.

.E xpect·quick changes in policies

..

wtthout penruss1on; John Dailey, with a 30.00 caliber rifle, $25 and ' sllilpended, one year probation,&lt; ·
Rt. 1, Vinton, $25 a11d costs, possess- costs, after killing a deer failed to licenses suspended three . years,::
ing a deer improperly tagged, $100 deliver to a checking station; Paul possession of illegal deer, $250 and
and costs, untagged deer; Edward Price, Tuppers Plains, $25 and costs, costs, 10 days confjnement 8118pend- :
.
Dailey, Radcliff, $25 and costs, hunting deer with gun after 5 p.m.; ed, spoUlghting from vehicle,
Raymond
Evans,
Minersville,
$25
Jean
Whitney,
GaJllpolill,
$20
and
;
failure to detach temporary tag
and
costs,
traps
without
tag
bearing
costs,
speeding;
Harold
McGrath,
where killed, $100 and costs, attempt
to take more than one deer; David name and address of user; Jolut Long Bottom, $200 and costs, three ·
K. Rice, Wheelersburg, $25 and YDung, Gallipolis, $25 and costs, days confinement, license suspend- •
costs, improper · tagging; Thomas possessing a loaded firearm in the ed 30 days, DWI; Brian Teaford, :
Hackworth, South Point, $50 and . field after taking and tagging a Chester, John F. Vale, Chancey, $23 •
costs, improper tagging ; .John deer; John E. Yelenosky, Cleveland, and costs, each, speed; James Peck, :
Kalikin, Panna, $25 and costs, il· $25- and ~ts, illegal hUI)ting ; Minersville, $10 and costs, left of :
legal hunting; Randy VanMeter, Donald Ward, Westerville, $50 and center; Dwight Haley, Jr., Mid- :
dleport, $150 and costs, ' three days ·
Reedsville, $50 and costs, hunting costs, possession of illegal deer;
without permit, $25· and costs, no John Brewer, Reedsville, $25 and confinement, DWI, ·$00 and costs, :
hunting license; Harold Holter, costs, fine suspended, taking deer three days confinement .8118pended, ;
Long Bottom, $5() and costs, possess- without pennit; Paul Sigman, Mid· no operators license, six months pro- :
, ing an untagged deer; John Fisher, dleport, $75 and costs, illegal tagg- bation; Everett Holcomb, Albany, •
Racine, $50 and costs, hunting deer ing deer; Mark A. Haning, Rt. 4, $24 and ctists, speed;· James Cook, :
from vehicle with loaded fireal'ln in Pomeroy, $250 and costs, 10 days Mason, $23 and costS, speed; Alvin :
collfinement, confinement suspend· Taylor, Portland, $10 and ~. left :
vehicle.
Mike Webb, Cleveland, $150 and ed, taking deer in closed season, $250 of center, $25 and costs, no operators ·
costs, hunting deer after taking and and costs, 10 days confinement, one license; Michael Brown, Pomeroy, ·
. checking a deer; Bermie Rose, Dex- year probation, attempt to take deer $21 and costs, speed; Homer Baxter, ·
ter, $100 and costs, taking a deer while spotlighting from vehicle, $500 Pomeroy· and Chuck Legar, Jr.; :
and costs, $250 suspended, 10 days Pomeroy, $25 and costs each, loaded ·
confinement suspended, ~ic;ense firearm in vehicle; Walter Arnold, :
suspended three years, fleemg of· . Langsvlle, $25 and costs, public !no ·
· fleer; Garold Dishong, Rt. I, Delller, toxication on roadway; Robert E.
$100 and costs, license suspended for Groves, Colwnbus, $25 and costs, lit· ·
one year, hunting and taking deer tering; Robert D. Fife, Middleport,
with rifle, $100 and costs, license $25 and costs, improper backing;
suspended one year, hunting deer· Donald Ward Westerville """ and
accepted
on a roll-top desk and two without hunting license, $100 and
'
' ..,..deer; .
school
buses.
costs, possession
of illegal
FWlds were alloted to . Chester costs, license suspended one year,
Wllliam G. Camp, Mason, ~ and ,
hunting and taking deer without1980 costs, speeding; Agnes V. Sellers, ·
El emen t ary t 0 pure hiSe a pemu't L l Hanln Rt 2 Alba
Rt. I, Portland, $10 and---'-, failure
milkshake machine for the school ..,.., and
; costs,
Ye 10 days
g, confm·
· • ement
ny, to Yt' eld '
~""""'
cafeteria. Additionally, $150 was _...
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _· - - - - - - - - granted to the Chester P. T.0. for use 1
in their Xerox Project.
· Tbe board approved the use of
Eastern High School for an independent basketball tournament,
sponsored by the Eastern Athletic
WECANSAVEYOUASMUCHAS
Boosters, which will be held over tbe
Christmas vacation.
The Eastern Board of Education
will conduct their organizational
meeting January I, 1981, at 9 a.m.
"
This · meeting will be exclusively
IN FUEL COSTS ALONE In The Next 12 Months
organizational, with approval of
, $2,547 Over Three Years Time.
temporary appropriations.

.

'

mlniBtratlon of the EPA CIIUld do without legislation ·thlngl we have pleaded with (EPA Director) Douglas
·Coltle to look at
the past two or three years - that
CQUJd be done without comprOmising the Clean Air
Act."
Bagge cited .. a prime eumple "modeling," the
Whnlque the EPA 1111111 to determine present air
· q...Ul)' atandards in an area before deciding whe\her a

. W~GTON (AP) - Coal Industry spokesman

oom

c.rl BlUe ll8)'a that once President-Elect RoOatd
1R•pn tabl offl.ce be apects to see quick ac;tlon to.

d!arice reauialorf

polld111 which he blames for
td condlti- in the Industry.
888ge, president of the National Coal Alloclatlon.
"lllcl be bellevei on the bulB of Reagan's campaign
'pmnilel that there will he a new regulatory at~ at the Elnvlrllmnental Protection Agency
l(lld that It will quickly bnprove what he ilees aa one rl.
•

!Jia~'sblggeetproblem,

· ·

·new faclllty can be approved.
·

" "The ·IIIUeet,aiDgle constraint on coal produc;ti011 IB
.lhe uncertaillty In Industry and the utility sector on
~ implement the Clean Air Act," he. said in a
Interview.

"We have been arguing for years about the 888WJIP'
tiOIII they (EPA) bulldinto1helr ffiO!Ielll," he said.
when a coal p.roducer l!iea to lnS_tall a preparation
plant to wash eokl, remOving IIUlf1!r to tty to meet EPA
stanllards, the EPA makes a model ofthe,area to see If
the air quality will meet federal standards lifter the

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

-

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I

Donald Skaggs

Frank and Agnes Dicks Skaggs. He
was also preceded in death by two
brothers.
Donald E. Skaggs, 65, Cheshire,
Mr. Skaggs was a member of the
died Thursday morning at
Charleston General Hospital Cheshire Baptist Church, a Jllavy
Veteran of World War II, and was
following a lingering illness.
Mr. Skaggs was born Nov. 21, 1915 employed at Kaiser Alwninwn
·in West Virginia the son of the late Plant, Ravenswood as a bridge
operator.
He is survived by his 1'&gt;ife,
Earldene Blizzard (Stor my)
Skaggs; one son and daughter-in·
EMERGENCY SQUAD RUN
law, Donald Earl and Joan Skaggs,
The Meigs County Emergency
Charleston; one grandson, John
Medical Service Headquarters
Donald Skaggs, Charleston; one
reports one emergency run was
sister Mrs. L. S. (Mae ) Soisson,
made in the area Thursday. At 3:01
Gallipolis; three brothers, Harry of
p.m. , the Rutland unit tra nsported
Victor, W. Va, Wesley of McArthur,
Gracie Swain from Salem Center to
W. Va., and Beuford of Delonica, Ga.
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Funera l services will be held Sun·
day
at 2 p.m. at the Rawlings-CoalsGRAN1'ED DTVORCE
Blower
Funeral Home with the Rev.
Charles M. Butcher, Pomeroy, has
William
Uber officiating. Burial will
been granted a divorce in the Meigs
be
in
Cheshire Gravel Hill
County Common Pleas Court, from
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
Nancy J. Butcher, Room 34, Spartan
funeral
home
Saturday ·from I to 9
Inn, Athens, on grounds of gross .
p.m.
neglect of duty.

Meigs happenings

Two guidelines for administration
were esta blished by the Eastern
Local School District Tuesday
during the regular meeting of that
district's Board of Education, with
all members present. Procedures
were set for the evaluation of
Eastern's superinteQ~ent and prin·
cipals, and a policy was set for tbe
. district in the case that the clerk·
treasurer or superintendent were to
be incapacitated.
Joseph Myers, Donald Eichinger,
and James Wright were employed
as substitute teachers, and Angel
Rucker was hired as a·substitute bus
driver.
In other business, the board ·en·
tered into a lease with a drilling
company for a gas well at Tuppers
Plains Elementary, and bi&lt;ls were

Ln US SHOW YOU HOW

One person was cited in a two-car
No injuries were also reported in a
accident in Meigs County Thursday.
one-car crash inGallia CountyThur·
The Gallia·Meigs Post of the Ohio'
moming investigated by the
Highway Patrol reported Douglas 1... sday
patrol.
Johnson, 75, Racine, was eastbouna
Hubert Marcmn Jr., 24, Vinton, I
on SR 124 at 2:20 p.m. when his was westbound on CR 11 at 10:50
vehicle collided with a car driven by a.m. when he swerved to avoid
Margaret J. Crane, 34, Pomeroy.
collision with a deer and went off the According to the report, Crane left side of the road, striking an emwas backing out of a private bankment.
driveway when she struck Johnson's • . Slight damage was reported to his
car, causing slight damage. Crane car and no citations were issued.
was ci¥ for failure to yield.

''

RIVERSIDE VW
195 Upper River Rd.

446-9800

Gallipolis, Ohio

Ir~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

WILD BIRD SEED HEADQUARTERS

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Thursday admissions-Jan Rees,
Vinton; Vickie Yost, Rutland; Carol
Baker, Middleport; Irene Christy,
Middleport ; Deanna VanMeter,
Pomeroy ; Phyllis Clark, Pomeroy;
Grace Swain, Langsville.
Thursday discharges--James
Priddy, Teresa Spencer. Eunice
Cooke, John Stevens.

.. ~' BuRNs- A fire l!f DDde&amp;ermlned ,origin gutted a traDer
Gil Georg11 Creek .Rd. oned by Dould K. Martiu, Rt. 1, G.WpoUs,
Friday aftenlooiL Twen1y-lln'ee GalllpoUs flremeD weat to the scene at
•

l:le' p.m.lllld remalaed there !1Dd17 p.m. The fire, wbicllls believed to
have atafted ID the froat pert of the lraliei, lguited bo&amp;b the trailer fD.
lerlor ~Its ~ontenla, caaaing ,18,1101 d!I!Nige, (Steve WiiiGn photo), ,

. =um~ ~offi~s to

• • .the _Bird Feed Specialists

a

SUGAR RUN·:MILLS
180 Mulbeny Ave.

co~v§. 0111~ (AP) - state .recesiiCJII.trllllered buili!et Clef!el
, ctficlilll were ID'ged Saturday ~0 wblcli officials now are saying CIIUld
_ take wlla'teveractions are needed to mushroom to~ mlllioo or more by
protect mental ~th, prison, the end of the fiBcal yearnext June
: welfare, , education and other state 30.
• ~ II) tbe face o1 a spiraling
The big question faced by the
govel'llor and lame duck legislators
: st~~te,budget deficit.
• Gqv. James A. Rh!Jdes ·was who will · reconvene Monday is
mlsalng, but a dozen of hiB cabinet whether to raise taxes to bring the '
rnembel:s listened for· two-aJK1.o11e. state out of Its fiBcal dogdays, or ojt
.. half houri! as lobbyists and rep~n- for major spending cuts in the last
_. tatives of . other special Interest slJ:IIIOIIiblolthefiBcalyear.
·: groups testified at a public meeting.
The Republican govemor will adWilliam D. Kelp, Rhpdes' budget dress a joint session of the Senate
.• director, moderated the unusual · and HOWle on Monday afternoon. He_
.... event Which attracted about 200 per· is expected to recommend either a
.::
, although only about 140 could tax hike or a major spending cut801111
:: get into the 8lll8il auditorium In the or combination rl. the two - but
• James A. Rhodes state Office may sbrlpiy give the Democratic
.., Trier
Legislature a series ol optl01l8.
::! Kelp said Rhodea called the · • Some . Democrats said at a
-: ~to get public reaCtion to the meeting of theil' party's state com-

992-2115
Ohio

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mlttee . Friday night that they
belleve Rhodes, re-elected iD 1978 af·
ter his fourth gubernatorial campalgn promise not toralae taxes, will
trY to force DemOcrats into biting
the tax bullet.
·
Kelp Indicated the'. testimony at
Saturday's meetlJC, most of it
calling at least lnclrectly for a tax
hike but lacking inlpectflcs, wouid
be relayed to the governor. "The
governor's plan will be introduced
Monday," he said.
Asked what the meetlrig accomplillhed, AdminiBtraUve Services Director WIIJllm W. Wilkins
said , It was intended to give the
public "an organized way to
respond" to recent administration
announcements of what lies ahead ·
with regard to the biggest firlaru;ial
crisis In Ohlo'alilstbry.

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FURNITURE DEPT. 3rd FLOOR

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.GOLDIE HAWN

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FILMED IN
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BRING THE cHILDREN TO SEE
SANTA WUS lOfiiGHT 6:00.7:30 P.M.
SATURDAY NIGHT AND MONDAY 6:00.7:30 P.M.

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Born in Gallipolis, Col. Caldwell
graduated from Gallla Academy
High SchOOl and earne(l a bachelor's
degree ~ education from Rio Grande College, He .ailo bolda a
bachelor's degree from Ohio University and a master's ftcm · Central
'Mlchilan University.
He was an Air Fon:e..pilot in 195357, aervillg In Korea, Japan,
'Okinawa, the PhiDipille I.sljlnda,
Fonnosa and Hq Kq. Following
tIda dlur of duty, ba became a jlllct
with Eastern Alrltnes. • Caldwell
joined Rockwell International in
1963.
He was appointed commander of
the 355th Tactical Airlllt Squadroh
al Rlckenhacker Air Force Base,
-Oalunlbus, 011 Oct•.25,J976, by orrler
of Pre~i1lent Jimll'Y C~rter.

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PRICEI.ESS RECORD- Troy S&amp;Dtone, IMMier of A~ Sdlloi
Kldll Recorda, dllpla)'l the cold allium be bou&amp;ht recently at a neant_.
vent1011. Tbe album, praented to JohD Lennon for Sgt. Pepper's Lalelr
H~ Club Bud llbam llallll, II 011 dllplay at the store dDriDC tile da:J
ud In a ballk walt at allbt. I!I&amp;DtoDe beUeves ttl value lw ' - eued
from lbe P,M be paid lor It alnce I.ennen tru ldlled Ia New Yort .._,.
day, (AP Laaerpltoto).
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D~A T. CALDWELL

• GAWPQUS '-It was announced
Saturday Dana T. Caldwell, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Caldwell,
Gaillpolill, was promoted to full
colonel in the U.S. Air Force Reserve.
Col. Caldwell Is presently
manager of contracts of the missile ·
diviBion of Rockwell International in ·
Columbus, where he resides with hiB
wife, the former Bernadette Dorsey,
and his four 801111.
Caldwell's brother, Jimmie, was
promoted tO full colonel in the Air
Force in 1975, and Is stationed at 1
Wright-Pattet80n Air Force Base,

Large size bean bags are filled
with ·polystyrene pellets and
covered with durable vinyi.
The side seams are double
stitched for added strength
and _each has double zippered
closmgs. Blue, Tangerine,
·
Beige, Red.

FRIDAY THRU
JAN. 8th ·
I'IATHETIC fARTHUNGS ..•
WHO CAN SAVE YOU NatN~

BEAN BAG
CHAIRS

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Views differ
·o n OPEC prices

Caldwell
promoted

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lowered," said a bank economist
who specializes in energy matte~s .
Sources at Pertamina, Indonesia's
state-owned oil company, said the
u~ual alphabetical
seating
-arrin&amp;ementfiiriOclicOntetencillill
being altered here 10 that delegates
of the warring nations of Iran and
"The only thing you can be sure Iraq won't be seated next to each
abo1,1t is that the price won't be other.

·whatever .action:. ne~eo.eo

SERVICE SET
The Order of Eastern Star,
Pomeroy Chapter 18, will hold its in·
stallation of officers Monday
evening at 7:30. Officers wiU rehear·
se Sunday afternoon at 2 p.m.

on with an Edwards Hauling Co. coal
truck driven by Leo C. Stumbo, 23,
Bidwell.
The crash demolished the Roberts
auto and caused moderate damage
to the truck. Stwnbo was not injured, the report said.
Roberts' body was taken to the
Willis Funeral Home by the GaiDa
EMS. Dr. Donald Warehime, Gallia
County coroner, said Saturday
Roberts died of internal
hemorrhaging.

GALLIPOLIS - · Gallia County's
fifth traffic fatality of the year was
reported early Saturday morning in
the wake of a two-vehicle accident
onSR160.
Dead is Danny Glenn Roberts, 22,
Bidwell, according· to the GaJlla·
, Meigs Post of the Ohio Highway
' Patrol.
The patrol said Roberts was southbound on 160at4:55 a.m. wben is car
went left of center and collided head-

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Names drawn· for jury .d uty

. COLO'\' · .

entittt
Crash kills
·Gallia man

OLDS CUTLASS OWNERS

One hurt in traffic accident

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"I take a great deal of comfort in knowing we're
going to have a whole new caBt of characters over
there," he' said. adding that beyond modeling, a very
basic change is needed In the clean.air program.
He blames the . Garter Administration policies for
holding down a shift from increasingly expensive oil to
coal in utility boilers.
"Western Europe and Japan have made com1
mitments to coal and have gotten off oil to a far greater
degree than we have," he said.
He cited as evidence of this the lines of foreign ships
"stacked up" waiting to haul U.S. coal to~ hollers
in Europe and Japan.
Friday there were 110 ships waiting at Hampton
Roads, Va., to load coal, Bagge said.

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preparation facility"- which has to burn coal to dry lbe
washed coal - ill in &lt;Jplll'8tion.
"They build into the model the worst possible assumptions they can dream up - that tbe projected
fll$sion rate will continue Z4 hours a day, that the air
above the plalltjustslts there without moving.
"Because of thelle IIIJ81IlllPliOilll we don't get the per·
mit," he said.
This would be changed with some realistic adjustments which'Bagge lnailts could be made without
sacrificing cl~ air lltaJidardB,
"If they (EPA) wanted the economy to expand, If
they wanted jobs, they Would liBt8n to us," he said.
Bagge thints the Reagan admlnllltration will listen.
. "On the nitty gritty of Uilwnptlons in the modeUng
progr8111 alone the Industry could do a lot more than it

"'nlei'e are a number of things a more balanced ad-

By ROBli:RTL. SHAFFER
AIIOdlted Preu Writer

administrati~e guidelines .-

DRUG BOAT - A rifl.,.wlelding Coast Guardsman watches over
some. of 11 ~uspects aboard a drug smu~gling boat loaded with 80 tons of
man]uana lD the Gull of Mexico Thursday. ACoast Guard cutter went to
assist in the boat when it was spotted aground off tile Louisiana coast.
(AP Laserphoto).

COOPLE SEPARATES
Danny Eldon Morris, 35210 Blake
Hill Rd., Pomeroy, and Carla Sue
Morris, Syracuse, have been gran·
ted a separation agreement in the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

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Eastern school hoard adopts

Area Deaths

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December 12, 1tao; :

53 cases end ~ Meigs County ·~o~rt
Forty·four defendan~ were fined
in Meigs County Court Wednesday
and nine others forfeited bOnds.
Twenty-six d those were deer
related cases.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
were' Donald Lisle, West Jefferson
~ and costs, possessing a loaded
· gun in field after taking and tagging
a deer; Donald Gibson, Arcanwn,
Oh., $25 and costs, failed to tag deer
immediately; Tbomas Sanders
Spencerville, $25 and costs, hunting
deer with detached tag; Delmar
Grady, Racine, $50 and costs
. ' at·
tempt to take deer on private land of.
another; Wetzel Bailey, Jr., Dexter,
$25 and costs, possessing a loaded
gun while returning from deer hun·
ting af:er hours; George Ratcliff,
Reedsv•lle, $25 and costs, hunting
after 5 p.m., $25 and costs, hunting
on another person's property
without pennission; Roy Stover
Gallipolis, $25 and costs, hunting
after 5 p.m., $25 and costs, hunting

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