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                  <text>l&gt;-12- The S'unday Times-Sentinel , Sunday, Sept. 2,1979

.'
,,

Tentative bus schedule announ~ed
PT. PLEASANT - Mason County
Schools announces the tentative bus
schedule for tbe opening ol school on
Tuesday, September 4.
The Mason Count y Board of
Education would like to request that
parents with children who ride buses
that cross the Shadle Bridge be
patient if the buses run later in the
afternoon than normally scheduled.
The Shadle Bridge repair is and will
continue to cause delays until the
bridge work is completed. The
Boar d of Educati on and the
Administrative Stall are working
with Point Pleasant City Officials,
Henderson Police Chief Bob Fruth,
Bridge Project Dire ctor- Joe
Gnrdon, and the West Virginia State
Department of Highways to move
the bu.ses across the Shadle Bridge
in the safest and most effi cient
manner.
For additional information, please
contact the Mason Co unty Board of
Education TranSJlOrtation Depart·
rnent.

~

Bus No . 52 Ope rator- Maury
Burnette (evening Run Only ) 3:00
Central School, 3:05 Henderson, 3:30
Pt. Pleasan't Junior High School,
3:40 Pt. Pleasant Senior High
School. 3:50 Carolina Lumber, 4:05
Central Elementary, 4:10 Main &amp;
First Streets. 4:16 Kingtown .
Bus No . 53 Operator-Wallace
Mayes, 7:20 Palestine Creek Road,
7:35 White Pine Road to Milton
Upl and Roa d, 7:45 Hann an
Elementary &amp; High School, 8:00 Hod
Chapman Road to Milton Upland
Road , 8:12 Ca bell County Line
(Alford Turn) , 8:25 Ha nn a n
Elementary &amp; High School.
Bus No . 54 Ope rator- Elmer
Harbour , 6:45 Departure Big Sixteen
Mile Road , 7: 00 Jerrys Run Road to,
7:10 Akers Turn to, 7:18 Mt. Union
Ridge Road to, 7:26 Adkins Turn to,
730 Jerrys Run to. 7:56 Sunnyside

Elementary to, 8:20 Hannan High
Road to, 7:46 Route 2 to, 7: 48 Sun·
nyside Elementary to Route 2 to,
School &amp; Elementary.
Bus Nu. 55 Operator- Raymond 8:21 Pl. Pleasant High Schoo:, 8:25
Pt. Pleasant J unior High School,
Zuspan, 7:15 Departure Sassafra s
6:27 Vocational School.
Road to, 7:23 Lieving Road to, 7:30
Bus No . 61 Operator-Sharon
Woodland Road to, 7:32 Lakin Road
Willcoxen, 7:20 Departure Chestnut
to, 7:37 Woodland Road to, 7:40
Ridge to, 7:23 Route 33 to, . 7:26
Ueving Road to, 7:45 West Columbia
Elementary, 7:50 Route 62 (Mason
Tomblinson Road to, 7: 39 Route 33
to, 7:43 Letart Elementary to, 7:47
Aggregates Turn Around) to , 7:56
Route 33 to, 7:50 Longdale Road to,
Wahama High School, 8:00 Clifton,
7:56 Longdale Road to, J:56 Route 33
8:10 Ma son (Anderson, Third ,
to, 6:05 New Haven Elementary,
Center Streets) to , 8:25 Wahama
8:18
Wahama High Schoo).
High School, 8:28 Clifton, 6:36
Bus No . 62 Operator- Robert
Lieving Road. 6:40 West Columbia
Elementary.
Lanz, 7:00 Departure Rt . 2 Apple
Grove to, 7:21 Millstone Road to,
Bus N.o. 57 Operator~eo rge
Kearns, 6:56 Departure Bus Garage · 7:37 Woods Elementary to, 7:39
Crab Creek Road to, 7:56 Beale
to, 7: 10 Bethel Road t Turkey Run to
Elementary to Route 2 to, 8:15 Pt.
Bethel Road to, 7:31 Robinson Creek
Pleasant High School, 8: 19 Ord·
Road to, 7:47 Potter Creek Road to,
nan ce Elementary, 8:25 Pt.
7:50 Route 62 (John C. Roush Turn
Pleasant Junior High School.
Around) , 6:16 Pt. Pleasant Junior
Bus No. 63 Operator- Leonard
High School, 6:19 Vocational School,
8:22 Ordnance Elementary, 8:27 Pt. Smith, 6:45 Departure Leon to, 7:10
Arbuckle Creek Road to, 7:15 Route
Pleasant Senior High.Bus No. 58
62 to, 7:28 Leon Elementary to Route
Operator-Glenneth Wandling, 7:20
Departure Wandling's Sand Hill
62 to, 8:00 Central Elementary, 6.:05
Road, 7:30 Oshel Road Hickory Hill
Point Pleasant High School, 8:10
Point Pleasant Junior High School.
Estates Turn around, 7:40 Oshel
Road Mattox, 7:46 Sand Hill Road,
Bus No. 68 Operator- David
Watterson, 6: 50 Departure J errys
7:56 Ordnance Elementary, 6:00 Pt.
Run Road to Route2 to, 7:15 Flatfoot
Pleasant Junior High School, 8:08
to,
7:16 Millstone to, 7:20 Mud Run to
Route 62 to Staff House Road, 6:14
Route 2 to, 7: 35 Sunnyside to, 7:54
Route 62 L&lt;Jck 25, 6:18 Pt. Pleasant
Ashland Upland Road to, 8:15
Junior High School, 8:22 Ordnan(~
Hannan High School &amp; Elementary.
Elementary, 8:26 Pt. Pleasant High
Bus No. 69 Operator- Delories
School.
D;IVis, 7:20 Dep,.rture·Sunnyside to
Bus No. 59 Operator- Pamela
Route 2 to, 7:30 Glenwood Road to,
Simpkins, 7:20 Thomas Ridge
7:35 Chandlers Ridge Road to, 7:50
Departure to, 7:35 Route 2 to, 7:47
Guyan Creek Road to, 8:09 Palestine
Roosevelt Elementary to, 7:49 Route
Cree~ Road to, 8: 10 Ashland UJlland
2to; 7:56 Neale Road to, 8:02 Central
Road to, 8:20 Hannan Elementary &amp;
Elementary, 8:07 Pt. Pleasant High
High School. .
School, 8:10 Mason Blvd., 8:15 North
Bus. No . 70 Operator- Kenneth
Point Elementary, 8:24 Pt. Pleasant
Foul, 6:45 Departure Road 29, 7:20
Junior High School.
Forks Lower Five Mile Road, 7:22
Bus No. 60 Operator- John
Woods Eleme ntary, 7:25 Forks
McCarty, 7:00 Departure Seven Mile
Upper Five Mile Road, 7:40 Route
Ridge Road to, 7:35 Jerry's Run
35, 7:48 Forks Three Mile Road, 7:52
Three Mile Turn around, 7:55'Route
35,8:05 Central Elementary, 8:16 Pl.
Pleasant Junior High School, 8:20
Pt. Pleasant Senior High School.
Bus No. _71 Operator- Gail
Stephens, 7:00 Departure Roosevelt
Elementary, 7: 15 Greer Road Turn
around, 7:30 Roosevelt Elementary
to Route 2 to , 7:50 Central
Elementary, 8:00 Pl. Pleasant High
School, 8:05 ?t. leasant Junior High
Schcol Route 62 to, 8:10 Old Town
Road Route 62, 8:30 Ordnance
Elementary.
Bus No. 72 Operator- Catherine
Wandling, 7:30 Departure Long
Hollow Road, 7:37 Sand Hill Road,
7:47 Transfer to Bus 76, 8:15 Ord·
nance Elementary, 8:20 Pt.
Pleasant Junior High School, 8:21
Vocational School, 8:25 Pt. Pleasant
Senior High School.
Bus No . 73 Operator- Linda
Grimm, 7:20 Departure Route 33
Schillings, 7: 27 Broad Run Road,
7:51 Union Camp Ground Road, 8:00
New Haven Elementary Route 33,
8:20 Wahama High School.
Bus No . 74 Operato r- Gari
Worley, 7:15 Departure Lieving
Road, 7: 17 Frye Hill Road, 7:30

Peeps.

THERE WAS TillS tiny dog, feisty
and quick-etepping, on his way down
Second Ave. in front of the Park Cen· ! .
tral Hotel. He had a white envelope ;
in hiS mouth, nearly as long as he :
was. Eight or nine yards back of him ~
came Stanley Saunders.
•
The dog reached the State St. cor- •,
ner, started to turn right; but
Stanley gestured across State St. •
toward the Public Square. Pitty-pat
went \be. pup across the street, and •
on tbe comer tbere you see a metal •
light pole. A few feet beyond were
two men seated on tbe bench.fence.
•' .
Ja c k, the four-year-old •
Chihuahua, dropped his letters at
the pole, and trotted on over to the two men. A couple of sniffs, and ';
pitty-pat he came back. Stanley :· ·
Saunders pointed to tbe letters. The
dog picked them up, walked toward
the Ohio River, dropped one, and 1
Stanley picked it up to place it in the '
Chihuahua 's mouth.
Stanley pointed .the otber way.
Jack obeyed. Pitty-pat across Second Ave. and out of sight.

Ev BY BOB IIOEFUCII
East en through sch~ls . of the
. em Local School Distnct were
11
~~Uy
open today' they were
ik lly closed as _the result of a
:
~ by non-a!rllfted employes of
~4tstnct. .
c et lines were set up at all of

..

Joday,
· .. .in the world
Officer shot
CLEVELAND (AP ) - A
Cleveland policeman was shot
several times in an incident late
Monday on the city 's eastside.
Euclid General Hospital said
John Gallagher, 44, of Cleveland
and a member of the aeveland
Pollee Department, was in
critical condltlon with nine
separate WOWJds suffered from
gunshots.
. Gallagher underwent surgery
m the early morning hours.
aeveland pollee did not lm·
mediately reveal Gallagher's
rank or his Job with tbe depart.

ment.

ELBERFELD$

Boater injured
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (AP) -

The 1979 Portsmouth River Days

CLOSED MONDAY, SEPT. JRD

power boat race was marred by a
second serious accident Monday.
Douglas Oick, 36, of Ashland
was injured when he lost control
of hlB boat during a morning
practice run. He was llsted in
stable condition at University
H011pital in Columbus.
In an accident Sunday, Nick
Roboulet, 23, of 0ey1on died after
being cast into the Ohio River
when hlB power boat capsiUd.

FOR LABOR DAY
OUR BACK TO SCHOOL SALE
CONTINUES ALL THIS WEEK

200,000 jam area

ENDING SAT., SEPT. 8TH AT 5 P.M.

C!NCINNATI.(AP )- Upwards
of :100,000 persons Jammed the
downto'lm and the Ohio River·
front for the third annual
fireworu show Labor Day
evening and pollee reported ''sur·
prisingly UtUe trwble."
The giant fireworks show, paid
for by radio statlon WEBN, was
orchestrated to music on tbe
statlon.
Touted as "the largest
fireworks show ever" by station
owner Frank Wood, the masses
pressed portable radi011 to their
ears while a staccato ct. flreworks
bw-st from si.1 barges on the
rlver.
Thousands also lined the rlver·
front on the Kentucky side of the
river in Newport and Covington.

MANY SPECIAL SALE PRICES ON SCHOOL
CLOTHING FOR BOYS AND GIRLS, YOUNG
SELECTLONS ARE TERRIFIC.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
...,... IQ
..

,_
'

~1400 $400

.

11 Pontiac Bonnevilles $1400 $400
2 Buick Electra
Limited $1800 $400
.

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WUDfiOU

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,.·=

12 ' ·0 ..

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..-·
0

'

REBATE

-;ffi ---t:P':

•
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® EJ

''

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w.u oqu
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BEDROOM
10' ·8"

12'·0"

in Stock.

3015C

Q640

521

·~~x2~

3 GK FD 3 BEDROOM-GALLEY KITCHEN-FRONT DINETTE

,()()() UNFURNISHED

$23,000 FURNISHED

PRICES INCLUDES DELIVERY &amp; SET-UP
ON YOUR FOUNDATION

•Total Electric , 30Gal. Water Heater
•2"x~ " Sidewall a, 16" O .C.
0 2"x6" Floor Jolats
•Rafters, 16" O.C.
•Copper Wiring
•Smoke Detector
•Carpeted Throughout

•Exterior light at Each Door
•Woad Hollow Core Cabinet Doors
•Valances in Living Room
•Copper and Galvanized Water Lines
•Maaonlle Exterior
•Single Roof
•Storm Windows

REBATE CAN BE

OPEN SUNDAY 2:00 to 6:00 PM

APPLIED TO PURCHASE
PR,ICE OR PAID IN CASH

Kingsbury Home Sales, Inc.
"For The Finest In Manufactured Housing"

I
·:

'I

t

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1100 E. MAJN ST.

992-7034
I

POME~OY,

0.

enttne

th_e fo~ schools of the districtRivervtew, Tuppers Plams, Chester
and the junior and senior high
school:-this morning by the non·
certified employes. Teachers
rep-orted to their respective
buildings but few crossed the picket
lines.
There was a smattering of
students in classes of the various
schools and a few students.
At Tuppers Plains there were two
teachers and 20 students in the
building this morning whlle at the
Riverview School there were 25 of
the 140 students in the building but
fiVe teachers dJd report there. In the
high school building-which houses
juruor and sentor high school)~velsthere_ were fow- teachers m the
building according to reports and
less than one-fourth of the student
body. I! was noted that a number of
parents tranSJl?rted students to the
high school bmlding. They did not
CI'l;lSS the picket lines but let their
children out of the a~tomoblles ~nd
they entered the building by walking
across the lawn. At the Chester
building, ther e were two teachers m

the building, according to j, report
this morning and a few students
were on hand.
· What with the strike by the noncertified employes, students of the
district were without transportaUon
via school buses and there was to be
no lunch program in the schools.
students attending were to take sack
lunches for their noon meal.
This is the first strike in the
Eastern Local District and today
marked the first day of the second
week of classes fer the new scbool
year in tbe district.
At the high school this morning,
Bob LeCiain, field representative for
the Ohio Association of Public
School Employes, said that
negotiatioos between the board and
the employes have completely
lroken down. He indicated that
employes are ready to ·negotiate a
settlement at any Ume in any
location.
The strike at Eastern is the first in
Meigs County this year but more
striking is expected . LeCiain ·
reports that the negotiating
conunittee of Meigs Local has

Three perso~s injured
in weekend accidents
Three persons were injured in four
weekend accidents according to tbe
Galiia-Meigs Post, State Highway
Patrol.
Bryan Hamilton, 17, Rl. 2, Vinton,
and Millard McCoy, 86, Rio Grande ,
·~ lr8li!)X&gt;rted to Ho~r Medical
Center Sunday evening following a
collisloo on Rt . 325, near tbe Rt. 35
intersectlon .
According to patrol, Hamilton was
southbound on Rt. 325. McCoy was
attempting to make a left tW'II at the
intersection. The two vehicles
collided. McCoy was cited by tbe
petrol oo a failure to yield charge.
Hamilton waa admitted to Holzer
Medical Center· at 7:56 p.m. for
-~ ·:·:· :·:·: ·:·.·:·:·:· : ·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:·:·:·:· :·: ·:·: ·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:::·:;7·: ::::: : ·:·:·::

450 TRAFTIC DEA111S
By The Aa.O.,tated Press
Traffic accldenll took 4541 lives
during tbe ·Labor Day weekend, the
summer's lut long holiday.
The Natiooal Safety Council
est imated before lhe holiday begao
that bet ween 450 and 550 persons
could be llllled in traffic between S
p.m. Friday aod mld.nlgbt Moaday.
DID'ing a thr~ay noo-boliday
weekend at tbls time of year, 440
highway deatbs could be expected,
the council said.
Last year, there were 537 traHic
deaths over the Labor Day weekend .
The worst sueh holiday 11'88 lo 19e8,
when 6118 persons were ldUed.
~::·:;:·:·:·:· :&gt;:·:· :·:·:·:· :: :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:;:::::;:;:::·:·:·:·:· :·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:··

treatment of knee and temple inJuries. HeW11Sreleasedatl0:30p.m.
McCoy W'I1S admitted to Holzer
Medical Center at 6:59 p.m. He was
treated for abrasions, ann and
forehead injuries and was released
at 9:45p.m.
William Gloyd, %1, Dexter, was
taken to Pleasant Valley Hospital
with injuries following an wtusual
accident on County Rd. 4, west ct. Rt.
124 in Meigs County around 11:5li
p.m. Sunday. Patrol · reported
Gloyd's vehicle struck a hone on the
roadway . Tbe animal waa killed.
There was slight damage to the auto.
Roxann Hale, 19, Vinton, driving
south on County Rd. 211, west ct. Rl.
160, went olf tho rlibt .fid- PI lbo
road. Her bicycle slnlck a tree
stump. Tllere W'I1S moderate damage
to the vehicle. 1bere were no
citations.
One accident which OCCUlTed at
·6:30p.m. Monday in Meigs County
was still under investigation today
by tbe patrol.
WINNERS NAMED

ClfESTER - Winnlnll prizes as
the beat entries in the Olester Flre
Department's Labor Day
Celebratlon Monday were Cub Scout
Pack %35 with a float, ~ prize;
Eastern High School band, second
place, U5; third place, Allen and
Susan Darling and tbeir 3011, Peter,
$10, and Cub Scout Pack 234, a mar·
chlng unit, fS .

turned down the final best offer of
tbe board of education in that ,
district. The non&lt;ertified employes
of Meigs Local will meet at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds this evening to
discuss the matter further and may
vote to strike at that time. There is
also a problem with non«rtlfied
employes in the Southern Local
School District and negotiations are
to reswne there today.
Meantime teachers of the Meigs
Local School District dO not bave a
contract for the new year and they
also have 11 meeting scheduled this
eyening at the fairgrounda.
David
Gleason
new
superintendent of the district; Dan
Morris arid Dwight GQ!ns of the
central office of Meig.!i Local as well
as several members of the district's
board of education met with
teachers of the district at the high
school this morning. Gleason at that
time addressed the teachersmeeting in general session as is
traditional before the opening of
classes tomorrow.
Classes in the Southern Local
District are scheduled to open
tomorrow also .
;::::::::=:-:-:-:-:=:: :· :· :: ::::::::::~: ::::::: :::: ::::::::::::: ::::::;::::: ::: :: :::: : : :::: :· :

SPIOOLS ARE OPEN
Eastern Local Scbool District
Rlcbard Raberts reported today that
schools of tbe district are officially
open despite a strtl&lt;e by non·
certified employes of the district.
Roberts said be is pleased witb tbe
1eacber representallon and lbe
student percentage In lbe buildings
today . and Indicated !bat tbe
sitllalion should Improve. He said
about ZO percent of the studenls are
In the buildlupln spite of the strike.
Students attending clasoes must
provide their own transportation
1111d must bave a sack luucb for their
oooo lime meal, Rebert&amp; stated.
::::::::::;:::::::;:;::=:= ~:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;. :·:-::;.;:::::;:;:;::::: ;:;:;:;: ;:;:;: ;::·:.;.:·:·

W~ther
aear tonight. Low in the mid 60!1.
Partly cloudy Wednesday with tbe
high In the mid 801. Olance of rain is
10 pe~t tonight and :aJ percent

ON S.TRJKE - Non«rtificated employes of tbe Eastern Local
School District were manning picket lines this morning at Eastern Hlgb
School after refusing to accept the board's final contract offer. Similar
lines were placed at tbe four district elementary buildings.

Killer heads
toward coast
COCOA BEACH, Fla. (AP ) Hw-ricane David, the killer of at
least 800 persons, churned along the
Atlantic Coast today with dead aim
on Charleston , S.C., alter
pwnmellng the coast of north·
central Florida.
Residents of coastal areas of
Georgia and South Carolina were
evacuated
as
weather
officialshpredicted the storm
packing 90 mph winds would hit land
a&amp;&amp; in later today .

"There's no question about it,"
said Dick Shenot of the Natlonal
Weather Ser vice at Charleston.
"Charleston
is going to get
hit .'ghzHe predicted that by
midalterrioon hurricane-force winds
would sweep the historic city of ·
60,000 residents, home of Ft. Swnter
where the Civil War began, with
tides 6 to 8 feet above normal. At 8
a.m. EDT , the hurricane was
located neilr latitude 30.1 north and

Sheriff's deputies
have quiet holiday

moving toward the mrth at 12 to 15
mph .

Wednesday.
SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered three calls over the
holiday weekend.
AI 7:56 p.m. Saturday, the unit
took Bertha Nichcls, Ash St., to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
!2:30p.m. Monday the unit took Bob
Gardner, Uniontown, Pa., from a
riverboat to Veterans Memorial
Hospital. At 1:14 p.m. the unit took
Hubert Stewart of new Plwn St. to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

I

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Munidpal Oerk of Courts Ted
Hysell estlmates that Colwnbua
could lose upwardll ct. $300,000 a
year because hlB office will no
longer notify persons receiving
parking tlckets that their tlckets
must be paid.
Hysell said the practice of sen·
ding notlflcatloo to violators of
past due lines will be dl8con·
tinued because the state Bureau
ct. Motor Vehicles won' provide
his office with tbe names of
violators witbout a fee of between
50centsand$1. •
The bureau will not permit his
office to tie into a lll&amp;llSive data
storing system which would allow
it to get the needed informatlon
because "the ,BMV. says's we 're
not a law enforcement agency,"
Hy~~ell said.
" There are limes people
honestly don' know they got a
parking tlcket, " he said.

11'-4 ..

Special Rebate Program N'o w Thru Sept. 5. Close-Out
· on All Buick LeSabres, Eiectras, and Pontiac Bonnevllles

at y

Could lose funds

LIVING ROOM
BEDROOM

•

Ea~tern Local hit by strike

GRANDMA GWOOD's diary : Jan .
'll, 1883-The river ice is almost
gone. The Virvie Lee went upriver
· today . Aug. 9, 1883-We took our two
eldest children up to GaUipolis to see
Bam..:.•'s show. Sept. 17, 1883-A
new boat is on tbe river, the Nora
Bell, owned by Mr . Cornwell and
Charley Small. Dec. 7, 1883-My
sister came down from Gallipolis on
the Lawrence and brought her
organ . Other relatives came on tbe
Louise. Heard that Laura Gwood
and Charlie Mullineaux were mar·
ried at the parsonage. jan. 211, 1884-ll is terribly cold. Much of the
potatoes and apples in the. cellar
froie . The river is lull of ice and tbe
boats are tied up. Much snow on tbe
ground. This !ann life is killing me !

MEN AND LADIES -

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_vo~L-~_v_u_l_N_0._99_________PO_M_ER_O_Y·M_I_DD_LE_P_OR_T._O_HI_o ____________~T~UE=SD~AY~
, SEP_TE_M_BE_R_4_,l_9 _79____________________P_R_IC_EF~In_E_EN~CE~N~
~-

.

Union Camp Ground Road, 7:37
Longdale Road, 7: 52 Route 33, 8:00
New Haven Elementa ry, 8='05
Hartford Elementary, 8:15 Wahama
High School.
Bus No . 75 Operator- lsa bell
Stone, 6: 45 Departure 13 Mile Creek
Road, 7:00 Cain Ridge, 7: 10 Cain
Ridge Turn around, 7:22 Gunville
Road to Route 67 to Secondary 28 to,
7: 32 Route 87, 7: 45 Mt. Flower
Elementary, 7:50 Jackson County
line, 8:t0 Chestnut Ridge Road, 8:30
Mt. Flower Elementary.
(Additional Mason County school
bus schedul es will appear in
tomorrow's Register.)

BEDROOM

9 Buick LeSabre Limited

e

domin;~ting .

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALUPOUS-&lt;;ary Stewart, age
15, one of the TimesSentinel carrier
boys , drew this picture of and for
Marie Foster, the top person in cir·
culation for this newspaper.
If you haven't been in our front of.
fice in GaUipolis, you probably will
think that it's not a good likeness of
Marie, but if you watched her at
work you'd certainly agree that
she's a Wonder Woman. Gary moved to GaUipolis from Crown City this
swruner. He lives now at 1461
Eastern Avenue with his mother,
Pauline Hornsby , and her husband,
John Hornsby. His Mom is an artist, .
too, and Gary says that her best
work was a painting of the Last Supper. Gary himself did his first draw·

REBATE SALE
•'

• •

A Gallipolis Diary

BUICK and PONTIAC

DISCOUNT

ing wben he was six years of age.
The Wonder Woman picture is in
color, with red, blue, and yellow

Meip County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports that tbe department's activities over tbe Labor Day
Holiday were relatively qulet.
Saturday morning deputies took a
theft report from Mrs. Margie
Banks, Rutland. She said two tarpis
(12 ft. x 45 ft.) were stolen from a
semi trailer parkl!d at the
Crossroada on SR 124.
Deputles cited James L. Jarvis,
36, Rt. I, Langsville, to Meigs County Court on a charge of hitskip
following an accident .a t I :05 a.m. on
Salem Street in Rutland Sunday
morning.

According to tbe report, James L .
Jarvis WBB traveling east on Salem
Street in his 1968 Chevrolet Nova and
struck a parked vehicle, a 1971
Dodge Demon owned by Robert
Hawkins, Rutland. There was heavy
damage to both vehicles and no In'
juries were reported.
Sunday, received a report from
Mrs. Norman Weber, · Tuppers
Plains, who said the rear glass on
her daughter's 1975 Hooda had been
broken out during tbe night. A large
piece of limestone was found near
tbe vehicle.

811.&amp; - - . or 811
- - ..- o l Jac:Uonvllle,
Fla . Picking up speed slightly, it was

longitude

Charleston residents cut short
Labor Day celebratlons, canceled
school today and started battening
down for the stonn.
"There's not a loaf of bread left in
the store," said Billy Powell, a comanager of a James Island grocery.
A Charleston department store
reported brisk sales of flashlights,
radio batteries, cooking fuel, camp
stove!!, lamp oil and hurricane
lamps.
Low areas of the plush resort of
Hilton Head Island near the Georgia
border were ordered evacuated and
the two-lane bridge· leading to the
mainland was burnper.W.!Jwnper
with cars.
Rain and gale force winds gusting
to 45 mph were already bolffeting the
Georgia coast off Brunswick. With
the approach of the worst hurricane
area to threaten the area in 32 years,
the causeway linking coastal Sea
Island and St. Simons Island was
already closed by water.
The densely populated Miami area.
was spared Monday as David, one of
the century's worst swnmer storms,
hit the United states mainland after
taking a heavy toll in the Caribbean.

$180,000 needed
I

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP ) The Mansfield Rotary Club Is
trying to raise 'lOll,lXXI to build a
aenior dtlzens day-eare center.
Ills believed the center would
be the first of Its kind In the
nation.
The facility would be a part of
Mansfield Memorial H!ltles Inc.
Geriatric Center, a private non·
profit organization which has
been operatlng in Mansfield for
several years.
The center would be for perSOI.lll at least 60 years old .who
woUld need a referral fr!ltl a
physician.

TillS FWAT COMPLETE With teepee by Chester
Cub Scout Pack 235 was first place winner in the armua1
Labor Day Parade in Chester Monday. The event was
---~

· aponsored by the Chester Volunteer Fire Department.
The winning float received a cash ,Jrize of $25.

t

ALLEN AND SUSAN DARl.JNG of Chester on horseback and their
son, Peter, driving a pony cart werethirdplacewlnners in the Labor Day
parade at Chester sponsored by the Chester Flre Department.
~

)

.

�2-~

,

DailySentinel, Middleport..Pomeroy, O., Tuesday,Sept. 4, 1979
NOTICE
PUBLIC NQTfCE
Of 100.00 feet to the place ot

Notice is hereby given to

all whom It may concern

that the Trustees of
Harrisonville Cumberland
Presby1erllln Chuirch of
Harrisonville have filed a

Pelilion in Cose No.

1~262,

Meigs (;ounty, Ohio, \..Om -

mon Pleas Court pryelng
lor aulhorlly to sell I he reol
es t~te

des c ribed

as

follow! :
Lot Numbers l.c, 15 and a
0.011 acre trac t between

same .

Si luoted In Section u,
Fraction 13, Township 7 N,
Range 1&lt; W, Sc ipio Town·
sh ip, Village of Harrlson vilfeh Meigs County/ Stale
o1 o io, Bnd being urther

described as follows :

Being allot Lot Number •
and Lot Number 15 ot
Wilson and Irvin's Addition

to Harr isonvillf' as recor ·

ded in Plat Book 2 Page 41 ,

in the records of ~he Meigs
County Recorder's Office
ana continaing 0. \37 acres
In Lot 14 and O..n .. acres in

LOI 15.
A lso following described
troct between Lots No. U
and 15.

Beginning at an iron pin
in the northwest corner ot
said Lot No. 14 and the
easterly right ot wavline of
Church Street : thence N 22
· JO'-QO" E along me
existing easterly r ight of
way line of Church Street
7•.&amp;6 feet to an Iron pin In the
southwest corner of said

Lot No. IS; thence s 63 - 00'
· 00" E ol011g the south line
ot said Lot No. 15, 100.00

feet to an Iron pin in the
southeast corner of Sllid
Lot No. 15; thence S 22 - 30'
· 00" W along the east line
of the Plat Of Harrisonville
7.46 feet to an iron pin In the
northeast corner of said
Lot No. 1~ ; thence N 63 ·
00" W along the north line
of said Lot No . u a distance

beginning and containing

0.017 acres.
Hearing on said Peti tion

.....

;!
.E

ASTRO•GRAPH

equal em ployment opwill be held on or after Oc· to
Jl()rtvnities tor all ap·
Iober 3 1979.
and
Pauline Atkins Kennelh pl icants, partlcirants
in al facets of
Welsh , Clai re Waggoner, employees
Its operat ions ; and where

Bernice Bede Osol

-~hday

Carl VIncent Gheen, Sr .•
and David Riggs , 'rrustees.
Harrisonvi lle Cumberland

def iclencles are noted, to
take affirmative act ion to
such deficiencies.
Presbyterian Church ot correct
In addition, i·t is our pol icy
Harrisonville .
to recru i t, hire
and
promote in
al 1 job
Steven L. Story .
cl assifica tions
withou t
Attorney for Truste-es
regar d to race. color
national orlginL sex {excepf
(9) •· 11 , 18, 25, •tc
where sex Is a oona -fide oc Cupational qualificat ion),
NOTICE
age, political affiliation,
Not ice is hereby given ' ancestry,
handicap
th at, in joi nt sesslonwlth (provided
phys ic al
the Board ot Com · limitation does not
prevent
m issioners of M eigs Coun - job per forma nce), or
ty ,, Ohio, a meeting Of !he beliefs.
Execu~ve Committee of
lt1s our policy to take af ·
the Board of Trustees ot !lie firmatlve
action to insure
Community I mprovement that all training
P.rograms
Corporation of Meigs Coun - and aU personnel actions
ty will be held on Sep· such as rate . of com tember 4, 1979, at 6:30PM ~nsation, benefits, tran at the ott lees Of the Board sfers
and promotions,
Of Commissioners of Meigs
layotl and terminations be
Meigs County, Meigs Coun - admlnister-eQ
without
ty Courthouse, Pomeroy,
regard to race, color,
Ohlo1 f?r the purpose of (a)
origin, sex, age,
considering without or not national
poilllcal affiliation , han ·
the proposed supplemental
djcap or beliefs.
f i nancing of the nursing
Henry Wells, com home to be OWned and missioner,
will _ have the
operated by ~omerov
overall responsibility of ad ·
Health Care corp. is in
ministering the programs.
compliance with the Plan
If a program partlc:lpa·n t or
adopted by the corporation applicant
feels he-sne has
pUrsuant to Q,R. C. Section
been discriminated against
1724.10 and confirmed by
in emf)loyment, seeking
Meigs County, and (b) con· emptOiyment
and - or
sidering any other matters
training with this agency,
which may laWfully come
he·she should Immediately
before said meeting.
contact the E. E.O. Com ·
~laint Officer, 1. carson
Edison Bakei--t
Crow to pursue the proper
Secretary or
dlscrfmlnation complaint
Commuf'!ity
procedure. Telephone 992·
Development
5526for appointment.
Corporation of
EEO·Aifirmallve Action
Meigs County
Is a legal, social and
econom ic necessity for the
(9 ) 4, lie
Meigs
County
Commissioners
C . E . T.A .
Programs. All employees
are asked to assist in this

/

'

oo ~ Yoo ~tAN~'c~' ~CKB(S
••• '&lt;ES, Wcll-n\t'&lt; 'N'itt&gt;.N .
I

CAPAICORI!

OLD KLUNKER.'

-

:0:

:;
...-

-=:-

(Doc. 22-Jon . 11)

AOUARIUI

BRIDGE .

Help partner avoid error

Pass
Pass

South

Alii lbC I!XPCPtl

...

News Item: FTC wants to require used car dealers to inspect all parts.

':

.,..

Bond's viewpoint
How to get black vote

. ..

Pass

!:1 -4-H

.• KQJ 10 981SH&gt;

• 2

Opening lead : • K

+B
Mi ssouri reader as ks
wh at bid we reco mmend in
two-hid opening.
There is no sci entific way to

If you can kee p from looking at either the Wes t or th e

South hands, you are ready to

study East's pl ay at trick one.
His partner has opened the
king of dia monds against

South 's four-hea rt contract.

When this hand was played
in

a regional tourna ment.

most East players dropped
the deuce . When thi s
happened, all Wests led the
queen of diamonds at trick
two and South proceeded to
make his contrac t.
1\ C'O upl r of W,-.&lt;: t.: rli rl "to r

bid this freak hand , but we
recom mend bi dding six
hearts. Anything may happen .
but we like our prospects -

provided , of course, tha t partner won 't bid six spades .
I N~ W SPAP ER ~NTERPR I SI:-;

·;

ASSN 1

(Do you have a question for
the experts ? Write " Ask the
Experts.'· care of this newspaper_ Individual questions will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped, self-addressed
en velopes. The mos r interes ting questions will b e used in
this column and will receive
copies of JA COBY MODERN.)

I"
In 1962, for the first time in cen·
turies, a French cliiel of state made
an official visit to Gennany, when
President Charles de Gaulle arrived
inBoM.
In 1967, Israel and Egypt clashed
anew along the Suez Canal,
engaging artillery, small anns and
patrol boats.
In 1968, three terrorist bombs
kllled one person and blasted a bus
station in Tel Aviv. It touched off an·
ti-Arab rioting in Israel.
In 1971, II people died when an
Alaska Airlines jet crashed in the
m01mtains near Juneau.
Ten years ago : Gen. Leonard
Chapman ordered the Marine Corps
to stop discriminating againsf
blacks in promotion, assignments
and social activities.

SaysE~eW~.presidentol

Joint Center for Political
StudieS, "Blacia tend to reptter and
vote as Democrats, to vote in a bloc,
and to vote at a relatively high rate
once they are rel!la1ered. In tr/6, 83
percent of the 8.7 ml111on blacia who
were regl.!tered actually voted."
the

· THE DAD.Y SENTINEL
IUSPSla.l

~1~-·~-·DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF

MEIGIJ.MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLIOI
CllyEdller
Pabt.hed dalilf es:cepi8•.._, by The Oblo
YIUef Plblllblq Co......,. MaltbDed.LI, l•c.,
111 C01rt SL, Pomn-ey, Ohio &amp;1711. Batlneu
Office Phae liZ- ZUI. Edl......_. Pbo11r:

IIIWIJ7.
SeaJad c.... poatap pUd •tPomtroy, Oblo.

N1ltoul Hver&amp;IIID.I repreHati!Uve, lADdoa

Au~lltea ,

Jltl Eudld Ave., Clevelaad, OIIJo

44115.

•

Sllblcrtpdoa raleti: Df!tweted b)' curler
where avalllble M Hllll per week. By Malor
Route •bere e.IT'ierotnb lOt •nllable, ODe

moath, p .M.

Tlte Daily Sea btl, b)' maU ll OIUCI llld We.&amp;
Vlrpala, oar ye~~r P:UO; Sb: m1111tbl tl1.51;
du-te ma.lbl flUI. Ebewlllere • .M; lb.
mouU.•·•i llrMIDimU.
Tbe Auoc-laled Preall entulnly eatiUtd
lo l.be ue for publkaU.a alaU ann dlapattbes
cntlited to &amp;be Mwtptper IIIII •llo tbe local
DnrtpubU.Hd berell.

•n·•·

He urges that black-voter
regiltration efforts be aimed at the
IS. to 24-year-olds, beca111e their
numbers are growing and their par·
ticipatioo rata are so low, and at the
~ to 64-year-olda, beca111e they
reprtAent almost anMIUd of aU
black valera and theJr partlclpatioo
rat. are uaua1Jy high.
Jl carter and COIDpally want to
maintain the hich lt78 pet cerllage of
black votes in 1980, the White H01111e
wouid do well to imitate the Kennedy
adminlltratlon, wbich created the
Coounialloo on flelllll;ratloa and
Participation. JFK, fearful that his
civil rl&amp;lrt8 inltlati- mlabt !ole the
whlte South In 11&lt;14, Wlled private
foundatl0111 to create the voter
Education Project - then and now
the single IIII!IIC)' dedicated IOiely to
~minority voters.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP ) - Few people
knew it at the time, but 50 years ago
this week Wall street and tl&gt;e United
States stood at a landmark point.
In the first week of September
1929, a runaway bull market in
stocks reached its climax. Less than
two mooths away was the crash that
was to usher in the Great
Depression .
"On Sept 3, by cmunon coosent,
the great bull market of the 1!120!1
came to an end," the economist John
Kenneth Galbraith wrote in his book
"The Great Crash 1929."
"Economics,
as
always ,
vouchsafes us few dramatic turning
points. Its events are invariably
fuzzy or even indetenninate . On
some days that followed - a few
only - some averages were actually
higher .
"However, never again did the
market manifest its old confidence.
The later peaks were not peaks but

SOCIAL SI~lTRITY
Bill Steif

A

response to partne r's strong

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

November an election-day holiday );
automatic abeentee-regiatratioa applications for disabled penons;
Saturday and-or Sunday elections,
and Ubour elections.
Other suggesti0111 Included uaing
"Hollywood sian!, athletes and
others" in a TV campaign plua
special campaigns cllrected at away·
lrtim-bome college students ..
But NO strategy wu aimed at activating the group 111011t lillely to be
sympathetic to the carter-Mondale
I'Hiection C8Dipaign - the werwhelmlngly loyal black electorate.

You hold:

I•

:;:
.:
•
..,
: :
••
:-

(Jon. 10-Pib. 111

lnatead of t r~lng to eolve 111 prob·
t•m lor a fr iend, you will be more
h•lpfullf you ·n,.plain why ah• haa
II and let h•r work it out lor

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
NEW YORK (AP) - " Yaz" Is a
famlllar wcrd In big league baseball.
Get uaed to it. It could be arowtd for
the nell :In to 25 years.
Kidding ? Not In the least,
Another
Carl
Michael
Yastrr.ernski ill being readied to pick
up the glove and bat of the old man
when Y!ll Sr., Mr. Indestriletible of
the Bostm Red Sox, finally decides
he 's had l!flOugh - if ever.
Keen-&lt;!yed diamond scouts call
Yaz Jr., just turned 18 and a
freshman ·at Florida State, a
natural.
"Sure, I'm pointing f« a baseball

:;. career, " the trim , handsome

By JullaD Boad
Sixteen years ago, on the eve of
por!unity policy will be
President John F. Kennedy's
cause for appropriate
htrHII.
auasslnatioo,
the President's Com·
disc iplinary actron .
"ICII JPI·· 10-Meroh 101 "''
ttn to a vlca today. but do not
mis!lim
on
Registratim
and Voting
Henry Wells,
glva mora cradanc::t to OU'ttrl'
l'llrticipatlon
report
noted
that
Commtssioner
1tattmtnt1 th•n lhty dlltrvt.
MEIGS COUNTY
Rtly upon your own lnttlllQtnca
"one.wrd
of
(American)
adults
do
COMMISSIONERS IIWtfl.
not
vote
In
presidential
elections,
(9) 4, ltc
AAIII (Meroh II·Aprll 11) Tno
dlllrt to , . .k ln fotmat lon
and more than ·half do not vote in
dOIIM ' I i"tiCIIIIrlly gL.Jirtntll
congressional elections."
you 'll comt up with tht right
anaw1r1. Strore appiy lr1g M r~tw
On a hot Friday afternoon in July
Today Is Tuesday, Sept. 4, the
technique, double·cl"ltck with a
J96g,
the Carter White Houae con11cond source.
247th day of 1979. There are 118 days
TAUAUI
(April
1!0-Mor
H)
Prior
vened
a dozen regialration experts,
left in the year.
to Jumping to I he conclullon that
political
scientists, pollsters and
Today's highlight in history :
11 friend would welcome help
good;!ovenunent
types to report the
today , check tlrst. He or ahe
On this date in 1781, Loo Angeles
might Interpret your action · 11
results
of
the
Kennedy
Commission
was fowtded by Spanish settlers.
butting ln.
recmunendatlons.
QEMINI (M1y 21•Junt 20) You
On this date:
may be able to see clearly now
They were told, "The majority of
In 1870, the Third French Republic
two people close to you should
the
legal obstacleS have been
handle their a!talrs . But hold
was proclaimed.
your' tongue. Your ad vice won' t
eliminated
in the 16 years since the
In 1811i, Apache Indial18 led by
be welcome .
report
was
issued. Nevertheless,
CANCER (Jun• 21·July 22)
Geronimo surrendered to Gen.
Because yOli could have 100
voter
turnout
has fallen from a high
Nelson Miles in Skeleton Canyon,
much on you r mind today, you 're
of
63.8
percent
In the presidential
Jicible to forget the tiny details
Ariz.
election
of
11100
to
5U percent in the
that makt! up the who le pic ture .
In 1917, during World War I, the
Yo u' l l have an unt inis he d
1976
presidential
election."
pori rail.
American Expeditionary Force in
White Houae interest in voter parLEO {July :Z3· Aug . 22) Give all
France suffered Its first casu,lty.
the advice you want about the
li,cipatlon
Is more than academic :
philosoph ical thing s in life bu t
&lt;'arter·Mondale
re-election
avoid t811ing anyone how to handle his ll nancl al a n a~rs You'll
·
!lrateglata
a
t
to a major leer en d up a sca pegoat .
not that the all-lmportant black vote
will defect to another candidate but that it woa1appear at all.
In 1976, Carter defeated Ford by 56
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
electoral votes. In three sta\ell Ohio, Pennsylvania and MIMisslppl
'
- a shift of 2 percent of the voting
electorate would have given each
stateand the election -to Ford.
to think fir st. hu t no Wes t got
In Ohio, a shift of 3,800 of the
around tn 1he 11mned1 ate clu b
NORTH
~I-4 · A
shl1 t
•
:110,000 black votes cast would have
• AK J
Al tw o tLt bles. th e East
put the Buckeye State in the GOP
.. Q J 10 4
players Uid no l gi ve the tr
colwnn.
• J li
partn~r s a chanCe to go
The White House meeting covered
.+ A K 7 5
wrong . On the theory th a t
varioua
initiatives to increaae the
WF.ST
EAST
when yo u kn ow cxa ctl v wh at
1980 vo~ turnout. Theile Included:
to do· you s houl d Uo 1.1. t hey
• 965
• 10 a 7 4 :;
• 52
•AG
took th.al hrsltri r- k with th e i'r
legislating postcatd registration,
+ K Q 10
+A9742
Hcc and led back the sin gleton
now the rule in 18 sta\ell; pennanent
nin(t of clubS. Late r un. they
• 10 an 4 2
• !l
registration (in force until a voter
won the first tru m p. put thei r
SOUTH
changes his address); making
partners in with th e st~c ond
• Q2
general election day a national holi·
diamond and got a cluh ruff
¥ K 987 :3
day (19 states make the first Tuesthat
they
wanted.
• 8 53
day
after the first Monday in
+ QJ 3

East
Pass
Pass

--,..
:::.

Before allacking l he ideas ol an
associate , be sure you lull y
understand what he or lihe iii
tr~lng to say . Look lo r the big
picture. not the small pa'rts

ployment opportun1ty . Any
w i llful
or
deliberate
violation by an employee of
our equal employment op-

North
I+
4•

Sports World

LIBRA (B•pl. 23-0ct. 23) The
ability to visualize is what It takes
to be creative. but it is practical
and logic al ' appl iCation th ai
makes d reams productive . Don' t
contuse I he two.
SCORPIO (Ocl . 24-Now. 22) Yo ur
inslincts lor mater ial gain are
ext refl"'fi!ly acute today . so 1r~ to
l ind profitable uses for your
hun!.=hes. Don' t broadcast yom
ideas, hOwever.
SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23·0-.:. 21)
let compas sion r athe r than
practicality go vern the way you
treat lolf8d ones· tOday . 11 ~our
senti ment s tak~;~ precedence
over cri ticism, ever yone will be
happier

Tbat •reasonable' charge
necessary Medicare fo111111 . After
By Willlam SteU
some delay -during which the doctor
(llthof14partst
kept worrying her with monthly bills .
Medicare's medical insurance . she received a check for $960 from
covers 80 perce'ltt of doctors' herMedicarecarrier.
"reasonable"cbarges-afterthelirst
With the check, the carrier sent a
$60a year, whlchyoumustpay.
fonn telling her the reasonable
Tbat reasonable-charges provision charge for ·her operation was $1,200
Is tricky. Here's why.
and, therefore, she .was receiving 80
Reasonable charges are decided by percent of that amount. That seemed
Medicare carriers - insurance com. to mean Ellen would have to pay the
panies picked by the federal govern· doctor the remaining $640, which she
ment to handle medical-insurance dldn 't have since she was living on a
claims. ~ rea!Onable charges are small retirement income,
supposed to be baaed on the
At that point, Ellen got her back up.
customary or most-commoli fees . She wrote the doctor a note pointing
charged m your area as determined out the carrier's reasonable charge.
by surveys of doctors and suppliers.
She enclosed a check for $1 200 and
Some doctors have agreed to abide asked him to forget the rest 'because
by these reasonable charges.
the extra $400 was Wll'easonable by
Those doctors are paid directly by the standards of his cohorts in his
Medicare for services to you. You are area and because she didn't have It
only expected to pay the difference anyway.
between the actual charge and what
In Ellen's case, the doctor
the carrier paid your doctor on behalf "forgave" her, probably asswnlng he
of the federal goverrunent.
couldn't get blood out of a stone.
But other doctors- more and more
But the lesson Is clear. Find out
of them lately- have refused to do the what the doctor plans to charge
paperwork to get their part of your before he starts working on you.
fee . They have also refused to abide Press him to keep his fee down. And
by t~ reasonable charges set by the don't be afraid to fuss if the charge looks WU'easonable.
camers.
They instead bill you directly: Then'
For more advice in handling Social
you have to do the paperwork.
Security and Medicare problems
The carrier sends you 80 percent of consult my book "What You've Got
what it thinks the reasonable charge Coming in Social Security and
should be. You are then expected to Medicare." For your copy, send $1.50
. send the doctor the whole of his fee.
jllus 50 cents postage and handling to
Result: Lots ~ people ~n Medjcare "What You've Got Coming in Social
rece1ve doctors billa far m excess of Security and Medicare" In care of
thejr area's reasonable charges. So, this newspaper, P. 0. Box 489, Radio
they seem to be stuck with those bllls. City Station, New York, N. Y. 10019.
Example : A Washlngton surgeon
(~XT: DisabUitybeaeiltll)
recently billd Ellen $1 ,600 for nerve
surfery in ller back. She filled out the

Eagles dump Waterford 28-12

Tochy's

~

Stpl. 5, ,878
Th1s com ing yea~ ~ou may be
uniquely drawn · inlo a r al her
strange but pr ofita ble partnership arrangement . For be sl
result s. sectecy may be required
01 both parties.
VIAQO (Aug . 23· S•pt. 22) E11ery·
lh ing will go along beaulirull~
l oday unless someone chal·
lenges your viewpoinls. You
won' t take too kindly I O l t"la l and
could sound Qfl abrasively. How
to get along with other signs is
one ol the seclions you'll enjoy In
your new Astr a-Graph l eller
that begins with your birt hday
Mail $1 for each to AstrO-Graph.
Box 489 . Radio City Stalion . N.Y
10019. Bt:! sure to speci fy ~ b i rlh
date .

effort to achieve equal em -

West

...

.......

The Me igs County Com missioners
C .E .T . A .
Proorams are comm itted

Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer : North

3- The DailySenl\nel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Sept.1, 1979

brief Interruptions of a downward
trend ."

In the stock market Sept. 3, the
day after Labor Day, General
Electric reached 3961'• , three times
where it stood a year and a half
before; Radio hit 101, having
quintupled in 18 months, and u.s.
Steel was 261 ~•• double its early-Jt28
level.
" Remember that on that day few
people imagin~ that the peak had
actually been reached, " said
Frederick Lewia Allen in his book
"Only Yesterday."
"The enonnous majority expected
the Big Bull Market to go on and on .
For the blood of the pioneers still ran
in American veins; and if there was
no looger 110111ethlng lost beyond the
ranges, still the habit of oeeing
visions persisted ...
"StiU the American could !Pin
wonderful dreaiiiS - of a romantic
day when he would sell hill
Westinghouse oomon at a fabulous
price and live In a great houae and
have a fleet of shining cars and loU
at ease on the sands of Palm
Beach."
Two days later, on _Sept. 5, there
WM a small f!l'ertmner of the
disaster to come when the market
declined sharply in what became
known as the "Babson break."
Roger Babson, ali economist
known as !IOI!lething of a maverick
and a perpetual prophet of gloom,
declared that day in a lwtcheon
speech to a busineu cooference that
"sooner or later a crash Is coming."
His f«ecast, however lli.mi1ar to
ooes he had made befcre, touched
off a wave of selling.
BY the next day, Friday, Sept. 6,
the market had steadied. But Wall
Street was still rufOed by what had
happened, and Bab!IOil was rowtdly
criticized.
The historicBI chart of the stock
market shows a lofty, tsoiated peak
In the late 1!120!1. The mowttain was ·
built out of margin - borrowed
money used to finance speculation in
stocks.
Once the market started to
decline, it generated Its own
downward momentum by wiping out
the value of the coUateral on thOse
loans, forcing more and mare sales
of stock.
A:s It turned out, the Dow Jones
Industrial average, after reaching a
high of 386.1 in 1929, did not get back
lo that level again for 25 years.

The Department of Cunmeroo say~ ·
Americans each consumed 14.9
pounds of chocolate and other candies
in 1978. The figure Is down from 15.4
pounds per American in 1977.

:::-.
-·~

~·

-:;

•

;
-

youngster said while lounging in the
Red Sox dugout prior to Mon&lt;Jay 's
game with the New Y«k Yankees at
Yankee Stadium.
' 'Dad want8 me to get an
education first. I'll try to work my
baseball around my studies. I have
been playing in an independent
league this summer.
Yaz Jr . motored down from
Bostoo with his lather for the
Yankee series, hoping w oee his
famous dad .get his 3,000th hit.
Earliel' \hill year, he. had seen the
elder Yastrzemski hlt his 400th home
run .
"I think. that's the toughest - 400
home runs ," the kid said. " Anybody
can hit singles."
Yastrumski, a Boston fixture for
19 years, needed only five more hits
of any description to join .the
""clU!Jive .400 hcmer-3,000 hit club.
"That will be scmething special,"
the yoWJg.oter said proudly. "Only
Hank Aaron , Stan Musial and Willie

By Gftl ilalley
Junior tailback Greg Wlga!IICOI'ed
three touchdowns and sophomore
John Riebel rushed lor 71 yards as
the Eastern Eagles started their

Mays have !lone both. Nobody in the

DENVER ( AP ) - Not rriany
. teams !"Ould be looking fcrward 1tJ
playing the tough Loo Angeles Rams
on only three days' rest.
The Denver Broncos aren, really '
~
anxioua about the prospect either,
,. but they're heading into Thuraday
" night's game on a high note.
The Broncos used a big i&gt;lay
... defense , including a dramatic goal·
nne stand, and a ball~trol offense
..., to crush th e Cincinnati Bengals I~
:: Sunday in a National Football
.,. League seiiSln opener.
:'" I was pleased with our defense ,
·. • our offense Is improved and our
1: kicking game was good , too," said
'. Denver Coach Red Miller. "We also
.:;: came out of the game free of injury,
.,. which Is very important when a
~. team has 1D make such a rapid
~- tumarowtd.
~
"Los Angeles Is a tough team, but
we play them here, so that 's good f«

.t

:=
~

us.''

Indeed, except far scme holding
penalties and the inability to take
full advantage of scoring
opportunities, Miller found few
things to C{lllplain about after the
;,. Cincinnati game .

:.! Jim Turner kicked a 37-yard field
': goal just bef«e the half as Denver
~ took a ~ lea d over the B!!ngals. On
-..
, their ne1t possessim, the Broncos
marched 88 yards in nine plays for
"" the game's only touchdown - a &amp;;• yard pass from N«rls Weese to
• Dave Preston .
Weese set up the TD with a 47·yard
.'.:.. pass to a wide-open Rick Upchurch.
Weese, who beat out veteran Craig
4'
.,. Mll'\on for the starting job during
.: the pre-aea!IOil , completed 13 of 20

..

record and an SVAC crown.
Waterford was expected to be an
easy test for the Eagles, but through
the first quarter the host Wildcats
were mighty stubborn.
~ith 10 : 48 to go in the second can·

Yaz Jr., clean~ut with an
athlete's bulld, said his father stuck
a bat In his hand when he was big
enough to toddle and he ham't been
spittin •distance f« a war c.lub since.
" AI first, he taught me the do's
and don 'ts," the youngster
explained. "Now he doesn 't correCt
me too much. We wcrk out together
all winter. "
The Yastnemskis live on
Highland Beach IIi Florida, not far
from Boca Baton . Mike - as he
prefers to be called so there will be
no confusion with father Carl - Is
the only boy. He has three sisters,
ooe older, twQ yoWJger.
Mike specializes as ·a third
baseman-ootfieider , Is a switch·
hitter but a natural left-bander.
Scouts contend he has all the
ingredients of potential greatness power, speed, excellent ann and the
inspiratioo of a father destined for
the· Hall of Fame.
Although his father attended
Notre Dame and got his degree from
Merrimac College, young Mike
chose Florida State because of its
reputation for producing good
baseball teams.
While Yaz Jr. equid break into the
minors today, hiB father insists on a
college education.
The Flordia State baseball team Is
coached by Dl~ Howser , fonner
Yankee coach.
Meanwhile, the search continues
for that 3,000th hit and there are two
Yazes - not just one - goil)g
through the agony of suspense.

to, Riebel crashed wer lrt1lll tbt
five-yard line fer peydllt and )like
Hauber kicked the eztra point.
'
Wigal crashed fiVer the gOII!IIIe
just three minutes later oo 1 Gillyard plunge, with Hauber IC8in 111-

din(the extra, and

American League ."

Flanagan, 20 game winner

l!Y ASSOCIATED PRESS
Mike Flanagan and Nolan Ryan
can stop worrying - Flanagan
about winning 20 games and Ryan
about the condition of his valuable
right ann.
F1anagan, the Baltimore leftbander who had to settle for 19
victories a year ago, became a 21).
game winner fiX' the first time
Mooday and the f1rst in the majors
this seiiSln by defeating the Toronto
Blue Jays ~I on a seven-bitter to
amplete a double-header sweep.
The Orioles, who lead the
American League East by 81&gt;
games over Milwaukee, w~ the
opener Z.l on Eddie Murray's tlelreaking bases4oaded single in the
lith in ning. The second-place
Brewers dropped another half11ame
off the pace despite a &amp;.3 triumph
over the Oakland A's.
Meanwhile, Ryan, coming back
from a late July elhow injury,
recorded his 14th victory of the
season but only his second since he
fired a one-hitter acainst the New
Ycrk Yankeesoo July 13 as the West
Division-leading California Angels
edged the artcago White Sox 6-S.
l!y winning, the Angels
maintained their 11&gt;11ame lead over
Kansas City in the AL West when the
Royals nipped the MIMesota Twins
HI.
Elsewhere, the New York
Yankees outsiugged the Bostm Red
Sox 1~. the Cleveland Indians
nipped the. Detroit Tigers 4-3 and the
• T""as Rang_ets defeated the Seattle
Mariner• 4-1.
. Pat Kelly , whose pinch Single was
turned into the winning rwt in the
first game , led off the second inning
of the nightcap with a homer to
ignite a four-run outburst that was
passes. The Broncos showed good
balance, getting 200 yards through
more than enough for Flanagan,
the air and 199 on the ground.
who posted his sixth consecutive
Dave Preston led Denver rushers
victory and lOth in his last II
with 70 yards m 10 carries.
decisions. It also was the Orioles'
But it was the defense that showed
14th consecutive triumph over
more of a flair for the dramatic. The
Tcronto, nine this season.
Bengals crosaed midfield four times,
· Ang~la I , White Sox 5
and each time they were thwarted
Don Ba'yl« hit a three-run homer
by fine defeilstve plays by the
in the first .iMing, and the Angels
held on b!lhind lhe reUef plt&lt;:lllnt! ol
Broncos.
Mark
Clear, Dave LaRoche and
On the final threat, Cincinnati
John
Montague.
drove 1D the Bronco J.yard line in the
" I threw a lot better, but I still
fourth quarter . On third-and;!oal,
don't
know where the ball ill going ,"
&lt;llarles Alexander tried to dive aver
said Ryan.
the IDp but was stopped shirt of the
goBI on a hard hlt by All·Pro
German ThOOIBS hlt his 38th home
arnerhack Loui5 Wright, with an
nm of the seasoo, tops in the
~Wist from safety Bernard Jackllon.
American League, and Jim Slaton
On fourth down , the Bengals went
woo his 13th game with help from
wid e, sending Deacon Turner
Jerry Augustine in the eighth as
around the right side. But Wright
Milwaukee recorded Us 17th victory
slammed into Turner and, again
in the last 23 games. The Brewers'
IWisted by Jacbon, drove the
Larry lflsle, playing his first game
Cincinnati runner out of boWids at
since going m the disabled list May a
the Z.yard line.
with a shoulder injury, opened a two" I just reacted," said Wright, a
run seventh iMing with a single
five-year pro from San Jose State.
while Don Money and Cecll Cooper
"It 's a guessing game SOOletimes."
drove in the runs with singles.
Of the third-down play, Wright
&amp;yala I, Twins 0
said, " It was just a read ori my part.
Dennis Leonard pitched a four·
From the time he got the ball , you
hitter and struck out nine while U.L.
knew he wanted to go over the
Washington singled home the only
middle."
run In the eighth inning as Kansas
And, regarding the fourth-down
City kept pace with California .
stop, Wright said: " I knew it was
Washington singled with two out in
coming. I knew where the goal-line
the eighth off Gwff Zahn to score
WM . A:s long 8B he went down, I was
Darrell Pll'ter, who drew a leadoff
all right."
walk, was sacrificed to ..,cond and
Wright also put the clamps on
took third on a groundout .
Cincinnati's top receiver, Isaac
Yanaes 10, Red Sox 1
Qu1ls, who caught only one pass for
Oscar Gamble and Bobby Murcer
14 yards .
hit twMun homers and rookie Brad

--.. Bronco ball control
- defeats Bengals, 10-0
~

1979 grid campaign with a 21H2 vic·
tory over h&lt;illt Waterford Saturday
afternoon.
The Eaglea of Coach Joe Mitchem
ended last year with a sparkling 11-1

Gulden drove in three runs with a
· single and double to help Ron Guidry
win his ninth straight game and 15th
of the season. Gamble and Murcer
coonnected in the first two innings
against Deml.s 'Eckersley, who has.
surrendered nine h0111e runs to the
Yankees In 17 innings this season .
Guidry gave up solo homers by Jim
Rice and Butch Hob9on and needed
eighth-inning relief from R9n Davis.
Indians 4, Tigers 3
Mike Hargrove led off the fifth
inning with a homer off Jack Morris,
breaking a 3-3 tie . Rick Wise, 14-7,
scattered five hits, including Ron
LeFlore's two-run homer that tied
the game in the top of the fifth .

Io the locker

Eutem went III-

room with e 14-4 bllf·

time lead.
Meanwhile, the stubbom Eacle
defense was Iliff, and ended tbt
evening yielding only three 111'11
Andre Thorntoo also homered for
downs.
Cleveland.
Eastem scored twice In the t1jnl
Rangero 4, Mariners I
period
while still blantlng the boltiHome r1111s by Bump Wills, Willie
Wigal
tallied
on a four-yard run IUICI
Montanez and Greg Mahlberg
a
three-yard
plqe.
powered Texas over SeatUe. WiMer
Hauber's toe was true on botb oeDoc Medich, 7-6, needed relief help
casions,
and the Eagles were in front
in the sixth inning from Jim Kern ,
2&amp;{1 with 2:00 to go In the third
who picked up his 23rd save.
.
Wills hit his fifth homer of the period.
Coach
Mitchem
then began subseason off loser Floyd l!annister, 7· ·
stituting
~ly , as did the Wlldcat
14, in the fir'!! inning. Mootanez
coach.
·
followed with his fourth homer since
Waterford's second and thlrd
joining the Rangers in the second
string
offense scored twice in the
and Mahlberg COMected for his first
final
period
against ihe ElgiN'
major league homer in the seventh
subs.
Two
big
plays
accounted for aD
inning .
the .Wildcat pointa.
With 9:13 to go In the ~­
quarterback Mike Carter broke
loose on a 63-yard run to paydllt, and
with 2:15 to go, Carter hit Bechprogram. Delicious refreslunents miller with an 80-yard IICOI'Ing lo!ls.
were served by hostess.
Eastem ended the afternoon wltb
The August meeting of the Ruth a total of311 yards, 280 on tbe fii'Wild
Circle of the Racine Baptist Church and 51 through the air.
met at the home of Phyllis Bailey
Fullback Mike Blsaell gained SO
with 10 members present. Phyllis, yards on nine carries while Riebel
president, opened the meeting with a
had l1is 71 yards on just 12 !riel.
reading "Strings across our lives."
Wigal ended the evening witb 48 yar·
The White CrO!lS quota was read by
da on 13 attempts.
White Cross chairman, Marjorie
Mark Norton had 2t yardl and
Grimm, who also had the opening caught two passes for 17 yerdl willie
prayer. Business was carried on as BlsseD caught one lo!ls for 16. Pnlbusual. Doris Hensler was appointed man Dave Durst drew pnile fnlm
love gift chainnan to take the place coach Mitchem as the lpeedlter
of Ollie Mae Cozart who recently gained 33 yards In seven !riel and
passed away . A day was set for
caught one pass for 12 yiu:dll. Dun&amp;
cleaning the church before the Fall also had a fine night 011 def-, •
Association Meeting. A collection of did Wigal who led In tactlel.
$15.50 was taken. The program was
Friday night tho! Eagles open their
given by Marjorie Grinun, filling in home season when they holt a tougb
for Shirley Roush who could not be Zane Trace squad. The Pl._
present. The program was entiUed won their opening Wt last week.
"The Year of the Child." The hymn
Statistics
entiUed "Jewels" was SWig by the
E W
group .. A reading by Marjorie, "We First DoWI)S
II I
are the sons and daughters of God." Rushyds .
2110 10
The scripture reading was from
Passyds.
51 •
Luke 18th chapter, 15th through 17th Pass Cornp.-ett.
~14 H
verses. A second reading "UNless Pen.·yds.
6-«11:1-'IU
You Become Like Children," was Punts.av.
1-40 •
read by Martha Lou Beegle. "God 's Fumbles lost
~2 4-1
Children" was read by Helen Slack. Int. thrown
3 0
" Re.ponsibiliti~," was given by
Scoring:
Te"""' Van Meter . "Oec:laratlon o1
2nd C l - : 10:4&amp;, Jollol 1W*. I
yd. I'Jlll, Mike Hauber 'llk:k. 7:•, 1
the lUghte o! Children," """ read by
Phyllis' "Children's Rights in our Greg Wigal, I yd. run, Hauber ldct.
Church, " by Barbara Gheen; "A
3rd quarter: 8:19, Greg Wlga1, 4
Piece of Clay," by Naomi Stobart; yd. run, Hauber Kick. 2:00, GI'IIJ
"A Temple,'' by Doris Hensler ; "A Wigal, 3 yd. run, Hauber kick.
Child 's. Prayer and a Mother's
4th quarter: 9:13, Mike Carter, a
Prayer," by Marjorie. Martha Lou yd. run , run failed. 2:15, Carter to
Beegle brought a reading from her · Beclunlller, 80 yd. pass, run failed.
program book, "All God's Children
By Quarters :
Meet at the Well : Living Water E
0 11 14 8-JI
Flows from us to refresh others." w
0 0 0 1:1--12

Racine Social Events
The Booster Clalls of the Racine
Baptist Church met in the church
fellowship roonl with Helen Slack as
hostess. Meeting was opened by
Helen Simpson, president, with the
group singing the hymn "In the
Sweet By and By." Helen gave a
reading "Now I Look Through a
Glasll Darkly" and followed it with
prayer. Roll call was answered by a
scripture verse from each one with
14 members present and one visitor,
Mrs. Linda Grinun, of Green Acres,
Florida. l!usiness meeting followed
with plans being made for Rio Grande Association meeting which will be
held at our chur,ch on Sept. 8 fnxn to
a.m. wtW 3:30p.m. Also new dinner
plates have been ordered for the
church. The program was presented
by Ura Morris. She opened the
program by reading a portion of the
23rd Psalm, also a meditation about
the Psalm followed by a sentence
prayer. There was a reading by each
one concerning the topic.
The Lord Is my Shepherd, I shall
not want, by Marjorie Grinun.
He maketh me to lie down in green
pastures, by Linda Grinun.
He leadeth me beside the still
waters, by Helen Slack.
He restoreth m,y soul, by Mildred

Hart.

He leaclelh me In the paths of
righteousness for His name's sake,
by Helen Si.mp!lon.
Yea, though I walk through the
valley of the shadow of death, I will
fear no evil, by Florence Adams.
Thy rod and thy staff they comfort
me, by Gamet.
Thou prepares! the table before
me in the presence of mine enemies,
by Clara Powell.
Thou anointest m,y head with oil,
my cup runneth over, by GrettaSimpson.
Surely, goodness and mercy shall
follow me all the days of my life, by
Marie Roy .
And I will dwell in the house of the
Lord forever, by Vera Beegle.
A hymn "When We AU Get to
Heaven" was sung by the group. A
reading by Billy Graham entiUed
"The last days" was read by Velma
Taylor. "God Is Everywhere," by
Ura. The last reading, a prayer, was
by Dorothy Badgley. AU held hands
and sang ''Bleat Be the Tie That Bin·
da" and repeated the Lord's Prayer.
Hostesses for meeting In September will be Helfl!l S1mpson with
Marjorie Grimm having the 1

-- Collins' single dumps Braves, 6-5
...
•

&lt;;'"

.,...
·-

-

ATLANTA (AP) - Dave Collins
handed Atlanta Braves reliever
Gene .Garber a dubious honor and
gave the Cincinnati Reds a 6-St
;:: victory over the Braves Monday .
;
night when he slapped a rwt..coring
single in the eighth.
::
Garber, &amp;-15, Is the new holder of
:; the major league record for most
- losses by a relief pitcher In a sell!IOil.
... He had a poor comment for hls new
distinctioo.
;:,
"It 's a delight," said Garber. "I
• have no other comment to make,
': except ! 'have to be a pretty good
relief pitcher to get that many, don 't
-. I?"
"He hasn't had any luck aU
::; season," Braves Manager Bobby
.,. Cox said of Garber. "Pitchers have
:, to have a little luck. Hitters get in a
r,. slump when nothing falls for them,
.. and pitchers go Into a slump when
:.. nothing goes right for them."
~
The previoua record for most
losses was 14, held by pitchers in
both the NationBI and American
.• . leagues, most recently by Los
" Angeles' Mike Marshall in 1975.
oJ
,,
The Reds' victory, coupled with a.
'::. I~ Houston loss to Loa Angeles, put
Cincinnati into first place by a half·: game in the see-aaw battle (or the
:;:. National Leacue West flag .
George Foster knocked a two.rwt
:t: single in the third to put the Reds up,
: : ;. &lt;

-=:

..a

t

!
·'

but Atlanta's Joe Nolan slugged ·,;
two..-wt single in the fourth and
Gary Matthews belted a run-fiCOring
single In the fifth f« a 4-3 Atlanta
lead.
Foster came back in the seventh,
cracking a twiH'IIll homer to give the
Reds at 5-4 lead. Atlanta's Jerry

Reds ' hurler worried·
ATLANTA (AP ) - Cincinnati
Reds relief pitcher Marlo Solo was
frantically trying to find out about
his family (n the Dominican
Republic following the aftennath of
HID'rican.e David.
Solo was horrified as he watched
th~ evening news on his hotel
lele visiori set showing the
destruction.
"One picture I see was five
minutes from my house . Telephone
poles and trees were pulled out of the
growtd . Five minute~ from my
house ," at Bani, said Soto.
"My mother lives In my house
with my sister and her baby. 1\fy
lather and mother are separated. I
tried to call them last (Sunday)
night but I cannot get through. They
said no tines available."
Soto's wife and chlldren remain in
Cincinnati but were preparing to
leave far the Dcmlnican Republic
before schools starts.

Royster answered with a score-tying
single In the. bottcm of the seventh.
Ray Knight pWlched his third
Single of the game to lead off for ·:
Cincinnati In the eighth. He stole
second and then scored when Collins
belted his single tO center off
Garber.
"I didO't think he (Garber) would
C{llle back with a fast ball inside like
he did," Colllna said. "He threw me
a sinking ball over the plate, and I
happened to get it in the right spot."
Doug Bair, 1~, the Reds' third
pitcher, got the victory, striking out
the slde after Royster's game-tying
single In the seventh.
"We rise to the occasion ," .Bair
said . "We play sloppy sometimes,
but when we get in a position to win,
we come through. "

• thru Fri.
Sept. 3 thru Sept. 7

FRENCH FRIES
29$
Register Now
Old Car
Sweepstakes
(No purctt.se nKesury)

Our

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Here, at The Insurance Store, we are independent agents,
We represenl a number of fine insurers-like The Continental
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analyze your requirements and select the best insurance ··
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YOU HUlE AN AGENT"

,,

..

�.

6- The Dally~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 1979

.

4- The Dany Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Sept. 4,1 979

.

Senior Citizens Scenes

Montreal wins doubleheader from Mets

'

BY ASSOCIATED PRFSS
Rodney Scott ls a real speedburner, so it's no surprise when
Montreal Manager Dick Williams
uses him as a pinch-1'\lllner for slowfooted Rusty Staub.
"Let's just say Rodney 's a slight
bit faster than I am," says Staub
with a grin. " You time him with a
stopwatch - you time me with a
calendar."

But it wasn't Scott's speed that got
Montreal 's winning run hon'le
Monday in the second game of a
double-lleader with the New York
Mets. It was his head .
Scott used it to deflect a throw by
second baseman Doug Flynn after

he was seemingly caught f!at.footed
in a rWldown play between second
and third. The baD boWlCed into left
field and Scott raced home to give
the Expos a 6-0, !()·Inning victory
and a sweep of the twin bill.
"The bBll hit me right on the back
of the head," said Scott, whose team
also won the first game, 7·2. "! saw
right away where the baD went. I
was sure going to try to go all the
way home."
Elsewhere in tile National League,
Philadelphia beat Pittsburgh 2-U in
the opener of a double-header before
losing the nightcap 7-3; St. Louis
edged Chicago 2·1 ; Cincinnati
defeated Atlanta 6-0 ; Los Angeles

••••••• •••••••
••••• •••••

BASEBALl SCOREBOARD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
Pittsburgh
82 5.S .599
Montreal
76 5~ .585
st. Louis
73 61 .5-45
Chicago
71 62 .530
Philadelphia
69 68 .504
New York
53 81 .396
WEST
Cincinnati
7R 60 .565

Montreat a t Chicago

7'h
9'h

13
27'h

60

.562

65

72

... 74 12 lf2

San Francis«&gt;
San Otego
Atlanta

60 78 ..05 18
58 80 .• 20 20
5l 83 .3'10 2A

lh

Saturday 's Games

Pittsburgh S-7, San Francisco 3·2

Philadelphia 6, Atlanta 4

Montreal7, Cincinnatl2

Houston 3, New York 1
Los Angeles 5, Chicago&lt;
St.Louis 5, San Diego 3
Sunday's Games
J;

10 in·

nings

New York 5, Houston 4
Los Angeles 6, Chicago 2
St. Lou is 2, San Diego 1
PiHsburgh 5, San Francisco J

Monday's Games

Philadelphia H, Pittsburgh 0 7
Montreal 7·6, New York 2·5, 2nd
game 10 innings
St. Louis 2. Chicago 1

Cinc inna!l6, Atlanta 5
Los Angeles 1, Houjston 0

San Diego J, San Francisco 0
Tuesday's Games
New York (Eiis 2·6) at Montreal

!MavnJ
St.

Louis

(Vuckovld.

12·9)

Chicago (Caudill 0·6)

Los Angeles at Atlanta
Pit1sburgh afSt . Loujs
San Diego at Houston
San Francisco at Cincinnati

21h

77

Philadelphia 2, Atlanta

New York at Philadelphia

GB ·

Houston
Los Angeles

Montrealll, Clncinnatl1

Wednesday's Games

1

at

San Francisco (Cur tis 9-9) at San

Diego (Shirley 6·13)

Cincinnati ( Pastore 3-6) at Atlanta
tMcWl\1\em$ 1·'1)
LO'S ~ngeles tHooton 11 ·10) at

Baseball At A Glance
By The Associated Press

By The Anoc\a1ed Press

Saturday's Games

South

Austin Peay 10, James Madison 6
E . Carolina 31, W. Carolina 6
Jackson St. 1A, Alabama St. 7

Kentucky St. 2~. Fayetteville Pt . o
20
.
Md.· E. Shore 35, ~owie Pl. 19
Morgan St. 3~. Towson St. 7
Nicholls St. 37, Ark .-Monticetto 7
Norfolk St. A1 , St. Paul's 0

Liberty BaptisT 41, Hampton lnst.

N. Carolina A and T l.tt, Winston Sa lem 7
S. Carolina St. 28 , Virginia St. o
SW Lou isiana 17, NE Louisiana 13
Midwest
Augustana , S.D. 23, NW Missouri

St. 13
Cent. St., Ohio 8. Etlzobeth City St.

Na!lonol Football League
AtAGtonce

0

Mloml
New Eng.
N.Y.Jtls

Baltimore

Buffo to

•'

PA
1 0 0 1.000 9 7
D t 0 .000 13 16
D t
D t

1
1
1
0

Cleve.

Pitts.
Cine .

Denver
Kan. City
Oakland
San Diego
Seattle

0
0
0
1

West
1 0
1 0
1 o
1 0
0 1

0
0
0
0

1.000
1.000
1.000
.000

0 1.000
o 1.000
o 1.00o
0 1.000
0. .000

29
25
16
0

26
27
13
10

10 0
u o
2A 16
33 16
16 33

St. LOUiS
Wash .
N.Y . Giants

Chicago

.'

1
1
0
0

1
0
0
1
1

Centr111
1 0
1 0
I 0

0
0
0
0
0

1.000
1.000
.000
.000
.000

0 1.000
Minn.
0 1.000
Tampa Bay
0 1.000
Green Bay
0 1 0 .000
Detroit
0 1 0 .000
West
Atlanta
t o o 1.000
LosAng .
o 1 o .ooo
New Orleans
0 1 0 .000
San Fran .
0 1 0 .000
Saturday's Game

22
23
21
27
17

21
17
22
29
23

6 3
28 22
31 16
3 6
t6 31
40
t7
34
22

34
24
.0

28

Philadelphia 23, New York Giants
Minnesota 28, S~n F r ancisco 22
Atlanta 4, New Orleans 3.4, OT

Dallas 22, St.Lou is 21
Chlcogo 6, Green Bay 3

Cleveland 25 , New York Jets ww,

OT

Kansas City 10, Baltimore 0
Denver 10, Cincinnati 0
Oa'-"tand 24, Los Angeles 17

San Dlego33, Seattle 16

.

Monday ' s Game
Pittsburgh 16, New England 13.

OT

Thursdilly 's Gill me

Los Angeles at Denver
Sundoy, Sept. 9

Cinc i nnat i at Bu ffalo
Houston a1 Pittsburgh
M innesota at Chicago
New Orleans vs . Green Bav at
Milwaukee
St. Louis at New York Gil!l nts

washington at Detroit
Tam~

Bav at Baltimore

Cleveland ai Kansos City

Dallas at San Francisco
New York Jets aT New England

Oakland at San Diego

.;

Indiana ST. 19, Drake 12

Murray St. 21. SE Missouri 21. tie
Nebraska -omaha 38, Evangel o

Sea t tle aT M iam i

Monday, Sepi.·IO
Atlanta ot Phitadetpnia

Ripon 30, Sl. Norbert 12
S. Dakota Ft. 28, St. Cloud St. 7
S. Dakota Tech 28, Sioux Falls St.
13.
SW Minnesota 13, Winona Sf. o

Yankton 14, Dakota Wesleyan 7

Southwest
Abilene Christian 35, E . Central

7

1A

u.

Ark .-Pine B luff 26. Arkansas Tech
CenT. ArkanSBs 16, N E Missourl14

Tampa Bl!ly 31 , Detroit 16
Sundav•s Games
Houston 29, Wash l ngton 27
Millm i 9, Buffalo 7

17

Georgetown , D. C. 15, Evansville

McNeese St. 6. Tulsa J

0 .000 0 14

Eul

Phila .

10

.000 22 25

Na11onal Conference

Dallas

E. llt inots2•. S. Dakota tS
E. Michigan 21, N. Michigan 7

D I 0 .000 7 9

Central

Houston

0

Dakota St. 26, NW Iowa 20
Day ton 28, K ings PoinT a

By The Assocla1ed Press
American Conference ..
East
W. L. T Pet. PF

when his first extra point attempt
alter Thornton had scored the
Steelers' first TD on a 2-yard- nm
was just plain bitd, left Pittsburgh
·
trailing 7~.
And his first try at a pro field goal,
a 43-yarder with Pittsburgh trailing
I~ in the third period, was equally
poor, short and off line.
But when it mattered, when he had
to jrove that the Steelers' decision to
hand Roy Gerela his walking papers
was a sound one, he came through
perfectly.
His kick was dea&lt;kenter and
easily 10 yards longer tban it had to
be, this despite a timeout called by
the Patriots in an attempt to build
the already awesome jressure.

"In a situation like that, the tough
FOXBORO, Mass. (AP) - You
guys
just naturally come out," said
can play perfect football for 59
Bradshaw,
whose
21-yard
minutes, but make one mistake
touchdown
pass
to
Thornton
tied the
against the Pittsburgh Steelers .and ·
game
with
4:09
to
go
in
regulation
you can pack lt up and go home with
play Monday night and whose canny
a loss.
play-calling put Bahr in position to
That ' s what makes them
win
it IS.!3at 5:10 of overtime with a
champions. That 's what the New
41-yard
field goal.
England Patriots have to live with .
"We
just
made up our minds and
They played well - very well did
·it,"
added
Bradshaw, one of
against Terry Bradshaw's passing
those
"tough
guys"
who played most
game virtually all night. But a
of
the
game
with
a
painfilly
sprained
mistake here, a slip-up there, and
toe
but
who
still
managed
to
the noose began to tighten .
complete
15
of
26
passes
for
221
They clamped down on Franco
yards.
Harris' pile driver running, but
Bahr, the rookie from Penn State
when they paused to take a breath,
who
started his pro career raggedly
he and Sidney Thornton &lt;an by them
like locomotives.

Sports briefs.

• •

Weekend Sports In Brief
Indianapolis cars at the Ontario
By The Associated Press
Motor Speedway.
Unser became the first three-time
TENNIS
NEW YORK (AP) - Four-time winner of the California 500, winning
Wimbledon champion Bjorn Borg jreviously in 1974 and 1976. And it
had to struggle for the first time in was the first time In any 5()().mile
Kansas City
73 64 .533 11J:z
the
!979 U.S. Open tennis Indy-type car race that teammates
Minnesota
10 66 .515 4
championships, oot still advanced to bad finished 1-2-J.
Texas
67 71 .&lt;186 8
DARLINGTON, S.C. ( AP ) Chicago .
59 77 .434 15
the quarterfinals with a 6-4, 1~. 7~,
Seattle
58 81 .417 17_
David Pearson, driving a Chevrolet,
7-5 victory over Dick Stockton
Oakland
46 93 .331 291/,
Eddie Dibbs upset 1977 Open took the lead less than 100 miles
Saturday's Games
champion Guilermo Vilas of from the finish and coasted to ~ap
Seattle 3, Toronto 2, 10 Innings
Kansas City 9, New York 8
Argentina 6-3, 5-7, 7-5, S.l; fourth- victory over Bill Elliott's Mercury in
Texas s, Boston -4
seeded
Vitas Gerulaitis, beat lOth- the Southern 500 stock car race .
Oakland 6, Detroit 3, 10 innings
Terry Labonte finished third in a
seeded Jose-Luis Clerc of Argentina
Minnesota 3, Baltimore 2
Cal ifornia 7, Cleveland A
Chevrolet and Buddy Baker, also in
7~. S-2, S-2, and WJrankell Johan
Chicago .-t, MilwaUkee 3, 5 inni ngs ' Kriek of South Mrica, a 6-3, ~. -Hl,
a Chevrolet, fourth, aU two laps
shortened
behind Pearson.
1~. 6-4 defeated 19-year~ld Yannick
Sunday's Games
Oakland 5, Detroit 4
BASEBALL
Noah of France.
Toronto 8, Seottte 5
WS
ANGELES
(AP) - Manny
Among the women, second&lt;;eeded
BalTimore J , Minnesota 1
Mota,
41,
became
the
major league's
Martina Navratilova beat No.IO
Texas 7, Boston 6, 11 in ntngs
.
aU-time
leading
pinch-hitter
with an
New York 6, Kansas City 5, 10 in Greer Stevens of South Africa S-2, S.
nings
2; No.4 Virginia Wade of Britian eighth Inning single off Chicago
Ca lifornia s, Cleveland 2
advanced when 12th&lt;;eeded Regina Cubs pitcher Lynn McGlothen .
Milwaukee 7, Chicago 2
It was Mota's !45th career pinchMarsikova of Czechoslovakia had to
retire
during
the
opening
game
of
breakiing a tie wiith ·Smoky
hit,
College Football Scores

Only games scheduled

FOOTBALL

Cardinals Z, Cubs I
Rookie
right-hander
John
Fulgham hurled a five-hitter to pitch
surging St. Louis over Chicago. The
victory was the fourth straight and
eighth in the last 10 games for the
Cardinals.
,
Fulgham, 6-4, recorded his fourth
straight triumph , giving up
Chicago 's only· run on Dave
Kingman's double-play grounder In
the ninth Inning.

Steve Carlton and Tug McGraw
teamed up on a ""e-hitter - Sieve
Nicosia 's sixth-inning double - to
lead Philadelphia over Pittsburgh in
the opener of their double-beader.
The opening-game loss snapped a
six-game winning streak by the
Pirates.
Dale Berra drove in three runs
and Jim Rooker gained his !DOth
career victory as the Pirates beat
the Phillies in the second game.

Mistake kills New England
.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
'10 46 .662
Baltimore
M i lwaukee
83 56 .597 8'1'
78 56 .482 11
Boston
74 60 .552 15
New York
73 65 .529 18
Detroit
Clevell!nd
70 68 .507 21
Toronto
.. 9&lt; .319 47
WEST
California
75 63 .543

Houston (Williams 3·5 or Forsch 9·6)

•

blanked Houston 1.0 and San Diego
whipped San Francisco 3-0.
The Expos won the opener as Gary
Carter keyed a threfo&lt;'un first inning
with a two..-un homer and Bill Lee,
14-10, and Stan Bahnsen combined
oo a slx-h itter. •
Cmtbined with Pittsburgh's spilt,
Montreal 's sweep pulled the Expos
within 2~ games of the divisionleading Pirates in the NL East.
Phillles 2-3, Pirates 11-7

McMurray 35, LubbOck Christian 6
N. Texas St. 35, Texas El Paso o
SW Texas Sl. 38, Prairie View 13
W. Texas St. 14, S. tllinoisO
Far West
Arizona 33, Colorado ST. 11
New Mexico 34, Louisiana Tech 0
Santa Clara 21, Northridge St. 9
Utah 34, Long Becich St. 10
Weekend
Sports Transactions
BV The Associated Press

- BASEBALL

American L.eague

BOSTON RED SOX - Activated
Jerry Remy, second baseman, Bob
Montgomery , catcher, and Jim
Wright , pitcher . Reca lled Joel Fin ch
and Chuck Rainey , pitchers, from
Pawtucket of t he InternaTional
League.

CAL IFORNI A ANGELES

-

Re called Brian Har per, catcher,
from El Paso Of the Texas League .

CHICAGO

WHITE

SOX

Recalled Gi l Rondon, pitcher, from
Iowa of the American Association .

NEW

YORK

YANK EES

-

Re ca lled Brian Doyle , mldflelder,
and Roge r Slagle, pitcher , from
Columbus of the
lnfernationa l
League

their match because ol a tw\s\ed

Burgess.

ankle; No .5 Evonne Goolagong
Cawley defeated Jeanne DuVall 6-3,
~. 6-(), and Billie Jean King beat
Kathy May Teacher 6-3, 6-(),
GOLF
CLEVELAND (AP) - Mark
0 'Meara
crushed defending
champion John Cook 8 and 7 In a J6..
hole final to win the 79th U.S.
Amateur Championship.
O'Meara, the current California
amateur champion, ignored the
pressure to shoot 4-under-par over
the 29-bole match.
ENDICOTT, N.Y . (AP) - Howard
Twitty sank a 4-foot putt on the 18th
hole after watching Doug Tewell and
Tom Purtzer fall on the same hole to
wln the $275,000 B.C. Open golf
toW1lament .
It was Twitty's fll'!ot ·victory in four
years oo the PGA tow'. Twitty shot a
4-under par 67 over the 6,915-yard
EnJoie Golf club course to finish
with a 72-hole total 270, 14 strokes
Wlder par f&lt;l' the tournament.
SPRINGFIELD, IU . (AP) - Jo
Ann Washam sank a IS-foot birdie
putt oo the final hole to win the
$100,000 LPGA Rail Charity Golf
Classic played over the 6,300.yard
Rail Golf c! %.
Washam 's final score was a fiveWlder par 67 for a five round 275
total, a one-j!troke edge over secondplace Sylvia Bertolaccini.
Shelley Hamlin fired the second
best roWld of the day - a 68 - and
finished third at 'll7 11-Wlder-par.
WOODBRIDGE, Ont. (AP) - Lee
Trevino won the Canadian PGA
championship with a !oteady, final·
round score of one-under-par 70.
Defending champion Lanny
Wadkins fln8lq)k3 final round 72,
giving him a 288 total, good for
second place, three strokes behind
Trevino. Tom Watson was two
strokes further back in third .

HARNESS RACING
DUQUOIN, IU. (AP) - Surprislng
Legend Hanover , with George
Sholly driving, won the 54th
Hambletonian 1n straight heats with
times of I :57 and I :561-5, defeating
favored Chiola Hanover in photo
finishes each time .
The son of Superbowl, owned by
Dr . Raymond Galt of the Messenger
Stable in Golf, ill., put on a pair of
brilliant stretch drives in defeating
Chiola Ha!lover, piloted by Jirruny
Allen.
GENERAL
BALTIMORE (AP) - Jockey
Kenneth Pichette, who feU when his
mount collapsed from heat
exhaustion at Timonium Race
Course last week, died of head and
abdominal injuries. He was 35.
SWIMMING
TOKYO (AP) - U.S. swimmers,
led by world record holder Cynthia
Woodhead, won five more gold
medals on the final day of the first
International Swimming Federation
World
Cup
Swimming
Olampionships.
The Americans ended up winning
17 of the 29 events in the meet, far
ahead of three victories by an aD·
European team and two by Canada.
They also won the team title with
258 points - 139 for the men and 119
for the women. All-Europe had 209.5
and Canada 192.
Woodhead , the 15-year-llld
Riverside, Calif., freestyle expert,
broke her own world record in the
women's 20!kneter freestyle,. the
only W&lt;l'ld mark of this meet. Her
ooe minute 58.23 seconds beat the
1:1&gt;11.43 mark she set at the Pan
American Games In Puerto Rico in
July.
WORLDUNIVERSITY
GAME'S
MEXICO CITY (AP) - Amy
Caulkins woo the IQO.meter freestyle
and anchored the vict&lt;l'iou.s 4()0.
meter medley relay team as
American women swimmers
collected two of the first four gold
medals at the World University
Games.

AUTO RACING
ONTARIO, calif. (AP ) - Bobby
Unser won a duel of pit stops with his
Penske teammates Rick Mears and
Mario Andrettl to capture the
$294,000 california 500 auto race for

SHOP

National

Named

George M c Fadden promotional
di rec tor .
Canadian

Football League
HAMIL TON TIGER ·CATS

Acquired Tom Clemen ts, quar ·
Terback, from the Saskatchewan
Roughr iders for a player, or players
To be named later .

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
VANCbUVER CANUCKS

-

Signed Ric k Vaive, right wing, to a
four ·year contract.

COLLEGE
UNIVERS ITY OF CALIFORN IA
IRVINE - Na"'ed Ralph Barkey

assisTant aThletic director.

~(

~

(

~~~~E~Yo~~~~~~H~
MASONAFuRNiTuRE

1

Mon., Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.

)

8:JOto5 : 00Thursdavtiii12Noon

.

.

DODGERS I, HOUSTON 0
Jerry Reuss hurled a two-hitter
and Joe Fef8USOD singled in the
winning rm to lead Loa An&lt;eles over
Houston. The lou, coupled with
ClncinMati's vlc;tory over Atlanta,
dropped the Astroa into ~JeCCX~d place
in the tight NL West race, a haUgame behind the Hecla.
Houston's Joe Nlekro, 18-8, had a
no-hitter going through five lnnlntli
bef&lt;l'e Johnny Oates singled to open
the D!&gt;dger sixth. Nlekro walked
DuSty Baker in the seventh .-.d wild·
pitched him to second before.
Ferguson singled to score Baker.
Padres 3,Giaalt0
Dan Brlus singled and 111pled
and scored· a pair of Mlllll and
Gaylord Perry pitched seven
shutout innings as San Diego
blanked San Francisco.
Perry, 12-11, aSked to be taken out
after seven C&lt;JDplete lnnlnp and
was replaced by Eric Rumuuen,
who fin.i!hed up and earned his third
save of the year. Perry scattered
seven hits before leaving.
SCIOO'O DOWNS

Herman Grate

Mason, w. va,

I

RIVER DOWNS

CINCINNATI ( AP ) - River
DQwns closed out the ll:klay
summer meeting with a recocd
betting handle of $89,048,956, up
from S61 ,8!S,090, the preYiollll record
set last summer.
The $50,000-added Governor 'a
Buckeye Cup on Sunday was wm by
GeaUB• Bonsl, runnin8 as an entry
with Royal Potion . The flnilhed onetwo paying $4.40, t3.80 and M.40.
Winning time for the mile and a
quarter waa 2:05. Go Knobs finished
third,. paying $5.60.
The 1().8 daily double of Reverse
Gently and Vlbs Twin paid ~ .
The largest crowd o! the season
tW1led out f&lt;l' the final day, .J0,741
and bet $1,174.~ .
Attendance for the meeting waa up ·
five percent over last year, 619,346. ·

!
)

•

REnJRNED ro HOLZER
Mrs. Correne DeLuz ol the StlveraYIUe area has been returned lo
Holzer Medical Center for ob!lei'Vation and treatment following
surgery on Aug . 16.

RE'niRN HOME
Mrs. Eva Hartley and Mn.
DonlCh7 Roller have returned frcrn
Waldorf, Md. where they allended
the wecldlnc of tbelr ~f~Ddaort. Jimllll( Roller lo Sharoo Haney. They
were the pests of U. Col. Ret.
James M. and Mrs. Roller. They
were called home by the death of
Mrs, Hartley's sister-in-law, Mrs.
James Winegar, Gallipolis.

tiquity spent the weekend with Mrs.
Peggy Gregory In Columbus. They
saw the Kenley Players and Betty
White In Hello Dolly while there.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morris and two
children &lt;X Bowling Green spent a
week with her mother, Mrs. Anna ·
Wheeler and attended the Meigs '
County Fair.
Mrs. Bessie .Stitts entered
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Tuesday. Her grandson, Mike
Myers, of Columbus came Monday
evenift8 to spend his vacation with
her.
Charles Hupp of Colwnbllll spent ~
the weekend with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Portland.
Mrs. Jean Bass, Kenda and Corrine,
of Clifton spent Monday with the

Hupps.

'

THE MIDDLEF'ORT Masonic
l.OOge No. 363 wUI have its regular
meeting on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., .
and wW be conferring the Entered
4\pprentice Degree on one candidate.
HOMEMAKERS UNLIMITED,
7:30 Tuesday evenlnl at the Riverboat Room, Athens County SaYings
and Loan Co., Pomeroy office. Pro8f&amp;ffi by Patty Asbeck on reading
activities for young children. PUblic
lnYited
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, Order
of the Eaatern
7:45 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Members are to take Items for an
auction.
MEIGS BAND BOOSTERS, 7:30
Tuesday In the Meigs High School

star,

Mr. and Mrs. Lester Roush spent
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
band room.
Walter McDade at Troy.
Mrs . LoiB GornaU and daughter,
Helen, of Columbus visited Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill attended
Mrs. Russell Findley recently. Mr. · the Ohio State Fair at Columbus
and Mrs. Don Flndley, daughter
recently .
Angle of Columbus spent a weekend
Mr. and Mrs. Rocky Hupp and son,
with the Flndleys and attended the
R. J . spent the weekend with Mr.
Meigs County Fair.
and Mrs. Junior GawthrOp at SumMr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
mersville, W.Va.
Mike and Mandy, spent a few days
Mrs. Eddie Hupp entertained with
with Mr. and Mrs. Tom Suma cookout at her home Monday
merfield at Medina.
evening In honor of her hu.sband, EdSwxlay Mr. and Mrs. Arnold An·
die, who was celebrating his birderson, Brenda and Lori, Bart
thday. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
. Rhodes, Joe Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. RW!Sell
Owen Anderson, Mr. and Mrs.
Roush, Cindy and Ed, Mr. and Mrs.
Wallie Morris enjoyed a picnic at the . Jim Hupp, Billy and Jinuny, Mrs.
home &lt;X Lester Rhodes at Baden, W.
Irene Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Rocky
Va . In honor of Arnold Anderson's
Hupp, son R. J., Robert Lawrence,
birthday. JOlninB the Andersons
Mr. and ·Mrs. Keooeth Bass and
Monday to help celebrate Arnold's
daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
birthday were Mr. and Mrs. Ted
Hupp, Sharon, Eddie and Jeremy
W'llford, Kim and Usa, Mr. and Mrs.
Hupp.
Wallie Morris.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Rou.sh,
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons were
daughter Kimberly, spent a
in Athens Wednesday. Mr. Parsons
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Don FinCO!lllulted an eye doctor.
dley and family at Colwnbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
visited Mrs. Jessie BusseD and
Dorsa Parsons vi:lited their aunts,
daughter at Millwood, Mrs. Ethel
Mrs. Iva Durst at Jacksoo General
Moore, New Haven, and Mrs. Hazel
Hospital at Ripley, and Mrs. Jessie
Herdman at Evans, W.Va.
HusseU and family at Millwood Wed-

Cub Scout Pack 234 ri. Tuppers
Plains spent a day recently touring
the Marietta ,area.
The day be«ln at 9:30 with a tour of
the Fenton Art and Glass Co. at
WUilarnstown, W. Va. where the
cubs watched the factory workers In
action. The demonstration showed
how the glass Is heated, molded ,
reheated, trimmed, CO&lt;iled, painted,
and packed. Each of the scout&amp; purchased a souvenir from the 8Ift shop
before leaving.
Frcrn there the cubs went to
Broughton's Dairy Co. at Marietta
and were conducted on a tour of the
plant by Rez. Robinson, director of
quality control. They saw how milk
is pasteurized, how It Is tested for
bacteria, how cottage cheese is
made and packaged, and the storage
vault for Ice cream. Robinson
treated the boys to ice cream sand-

wiches before they left the plant.
After lunch, there wu 1111 hour at
the WUhlngton Crunty falrii'OUIIdl
park for recreation, and then the
cubs toured the Campul Martllll
Muaeum and the Ohio River •
Museum. They saw the II minute
narrad slide preaentation of the
development of riverboat&amp; and
water transportation syatema,
toured the riverboat, W. P. Snyder,
Jr. and fed the fllb In tbe Mulk·
ln8um before ieaYinB.
·
On the trip were David Rice, Cbrl8
Spencer, Craig Bowen,Cbad
Sinclair, Mike Weber, Branda
Weber, den leader; and Keltb
Weber, cubmasler. Any boyl between the ages of 8 and 10 who are Interested In joining the cub scout In
Pack 234 are Invited to contact Mn.
Weber at 985-4268.

nesday. They also called at the
Crow-HWISell Funeral Home to pay
respects to theii cousin, Melissa Lee
Bauer, who was killed In an auto accident at Hartford and visited her .
family , Mr. and Mrs. Max Bauer,
daughter Valerie and other relatives
at Point Pleasant.
Mr.· and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
Mike and Mandy, Mr. and Mrs.

Russell Rou.sh, Cindy, Ed and
David, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert RQUSh ·
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewll
Sunday evening.
Mrs. Margie Hunt has returned to .
her home after spendin«.some time
with her son, Wimpy Hunt and
family due to a broken leg.

FOR MORE INFORMATION
24&amp;-&amp;3&amp;3 EIT. 2DD
Warch for our Fall Quarrer Schedu le ol C!a ssBS. in your
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AGENCY

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Represent ina:
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16. oz. BTtS.

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for

AND REFERRAL

Just a reminder to cmpare prices
on prescriptions. There is
sometimes a great variatioo in the
price of a prescription am001 the
vari01111 druB stores. No one druB
store is consistently lowest 110 check
each one of them out. "A penny
saved is a penny earned" and a
dollar Is better.
Have a nice weelt.

By Mrs. Herbert Roub

Ml:. and Mrs. David Sayre of An·

TUESDAY
.
MIDDLEF'ORT GARDEN CLUB,
7:30 Tuesday night at the home of
Mrs. James Tltllll with Mrs. John
Kincaid, co-hostess. New officers to
be installed and a memorial tribute
for Mrs. E. 0 . Tewksbary.

BEEF ROUND STEAK ..................~~~~. '1'
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8

~~

ACI'IVITIES
The Center will be closed
tomorrow for Labor Day. On
Tuesday and Wednesday, the fihn
"Dough and Dynamite " will be
shown. This film stars Charlie
Chaplin in a fut slaprtick comedy.
The film feature for this Th~Jr!W!ay
and Friday ill called "The Fiddler.''
Acountry fiddle-maker carves a fid·
die with care and love. At the end he
participates In a contest with other
country musicians pla}'in« the weD
known "Chinese Breakdown." A
true slice of Americana.
HEARING TESTS
Monday, September 10, Usa r.,cCUe, GaUia -Jackson -MeipMental
Health Center, wiD conduct hearing
tests for serilon at the Center from 9
a.m. to 12 noon and i to 4 p.m. The
hearing tests will be free of charge,
110 if you are haYinB difficulty with
your hearing why not plan to come to
the Center that day and get a
checkup?
INFORMATION

Cubs tour Marietta

9

Wecilnshow
you ways to
save money
onyourauto

•

~

...
. .
. . ..
•

The new nuning heme, Puneroy
IINith care Center, located outalde
Pllmeroy Ia nearing completion and
II acheduled to open In late September. Recently Mr. Ron Zldlan,
Administrator of the nursing home
and hla wife, the Social Services
Dlrector,lllGpped at the Center for a
.sikcqu8lnted vjsjt. They were very
mucb lnterated In lellior citlzens
·becoming Involved In volunteering
at the lllinlnc home. Some of the
volunteer openlnp that wUJ be
available are vlalttns, writing let-ten, reeding to patienta, helping
with activities, and taking patients
to the activity area, Hped•lly those
wl» 1.-1 to be taken by wheelchair.
Since the nuning heme II a 100 bed
patient operatloo, thla wiD be a place
where we can Ule a large number of
volunteera. U you would be . In·
lerelted In volunteering at the ourline bame for a three to four hour
period during the ' week, call the
RSVP office at 982-7884. We hope
that if you are not currently enrolled
in RSVP and thla type of volunteer
·•mgnment •PP""l• to you, you wiD
tall 111 and Bet involved In glYinB of
your talent and lime to person!l who
are IMI fortunate.
WJJ..U.UtSBt1RG TRIP
For t11o1e ot you who have reaer'ioru for the WllllamaburB lour
St,&gt;Lember 25, 211 and 'll, the bus wiD
leave the Center at 7 a.m. on the
Z\h. Payment In fuU for thla trip Is
due September 10. We are taking
naml!l!l lor the stand-by list, caD 99271184 if i . •. ted.

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP) - James
H. Tup , driven by Sam Noble, wm
the featured ninth race at Scioto
Downs Monday.
It was the lith win In 12 starts for
the horse , wbo took the lead at the
half and went an to win by a baU
length. He paid $7.60, $3.60 and ~. 40
f&lt;l' a time of I :1&gt;11 3-6.
Most Luck retW'!led $3.40 and ~.110
f&lt;l' place. The show horse was Hue
Hanover, ·who paid ~ .60.
The lOth race trifecta romblnation
of 7-6-1 paid $2,169.90.
The Labor Day crowd of 8,431
wagered f/28,198.

) OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
1
· 773·5592

VOWNTEERB

$115,
.
.
.
:;:.~;;:or,:
$

FOOTBALL

Football League
OENVEI'! BRONCOS -

Bears 6, Packers 3
Bob Thomas kicked field goals of
25 and 19 yards in the second
quarter, while the Chicago defense
held Green Bay to a third-period
field goal by Olester Marco!.
Browns %5, JeiB 22, OT
Don Cockroft booted a 27-yard field
goal with 15 seoonds left in sudden
death overtime alter tying the game
with a J:&gt;.yarder 4 seconds from the
end of regulation as Cleveland took
their second overtime victory over
New Y&lt;l'k in two seasons.
. Oilers 29, Redoldno Z'l
Earl campbell sc&lt;l'ed his second
touchdown of the game with I :57
remaining to cap a IS-point fourth
quarter and give Houston a comefrom-behind 29-27 win over
Washingtoo .
Dolphins 9, Bills 7
In his first regular season game
with Miami since 1974, Larry Csonka
buUed ooe yard f&lt;l' the only
touchdown of the game and ran 16
times for 87 yards. Ewe von
Schamann, who kicked his first NFL
field goal, missed an e:rtra point and
had another field goal try blocked.
Buffalo cornerback Charles Romes
retW1led it 76 yards f&lt;l' the score .
VIkings %8, 4"'rs 22
Sammy White recovered a San
Francisco fumble in the end zone
witli 17 seconds left f&lt;l' the wiruJ!ng
points, alter Minnesota teammate
Ahmad Rashad caught four
touchdown passes from quarterback
Tonuny Kramer .
Cowboys :Z, Cardinals Zl
RAfael Septien 's third field goal of
the ~arne from 'll ya rds out with I: 16
left to play gave Dallas its 15th
straight Opening Day vict&lt;l'y.
Broncos 10, Bengal• 0
Following veteran Jim Turner's
37-yard field goal in the second
quarter, Norris Weese passed si:x
yards to rWlning back Dave Preston
in the third . The closest Cincinnati
came to scoring was the Denver I
yard line where they were stopped
on third annd fourth down .
Raiders %4, Ramsl7
Oakland's Ken Stabler capitalized
on two Los Angeles turnovers by
throwing a pair of thlrd-&lt;juarter
touchdowns to Raymond Chester ooe to tie the game and the other to
win it.
Eagles 23, Giantal7
Ron Jaworski hit Harold
Olarmichael twice for TDs as
Philadelphia scored all its points in
the second quarter. New York,
which made a habit of scoring 17
points a ~Bme in 1978 - doing it
seven times - took a brief lead on a
first-quarter field goal by Joe
Danelo.
Bucc&amp;Deers 31, Lloas 16
Rookie running back Jerry
Eckwood rambled f&lt;l' a club-record
121 of Tampa Bay's 229 groWld yards
then took advantage of many of
Detroit's mistakes in Saturday's
ooly game.

APPLEBUTI'ER MAKING
. -FALLFMUVAL
POMEROY ~ The amual apple
butler making will be held thla year
In conjunction with the Fall
Felllval, October 5. The apple butter
will ae11 for ~.50 per quart and we
Ilk that you supply your own jars
and Ucla (they should be ready to
Ule). Pleue place yOur orders by
September 30 Uld have your jars
here by October 4,1979.
011 Tbunday, October 4, we need
apple peelers! ! ! Bring a container
and a sharp lmlfe and help WI out
with peeling 18 bulhela of appleS.
NURSING HOME

Apple Grove
News Notes '

-·

.

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAIL~ 9 TO 10.P-.M.
SUNDAY 10 10 10
Federal

We lceseM the Right To Limit Quantities

8 PAK 160Z. 9· 9~

Bns.

Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

.

�•

..

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday. Sept. 4. 1979

!:&gt;/Jade Valley Coulncil sponsors prog~am

Changed times,
different eating

..

An yoo a secret fast food lover? According to Dr. Appledort, "SoTorn between the convenience of
called food purists are confll$lg
today 's modem food supply and
many customers as to the safety~nd
memories .of mother's three home- wholesomeness of conveniebce
cool&lt;ed meals a day ?
roods. "
,;We shouldn't feel guilty that
"The government's nutritional
today 's busy schedules no longer
labeling regulations for these
permit the IIIXIIr)' of three home- restaurants compounds the concooked meals a day," claims Dr. fusion," says the professor, "and
Howard Appledorf. "Our changing
you have fast foods corning out with
times call for changed eating the unfair image of having Utile or
habits ...
no nutritional value."
As a member of the Kentucky
As an example, Or. Appledort
Fried Chicken Time Out Institute, cites a recent hearing of the Senate
Dr. Appledorf, professor ol human nuliition sub&lt;onunittee chaired by
nutrition at a leading Wliverslty, is Senator George McGovern who conadvocating a healthy and realistic cluded: "It's not correct to say what
ouUook on foods for loday's busy they (fast food restaurants) are serpeople -especially working mothers ving is junk. Under the current
and single parents.
regulatory approach to labeling, the
Founded in 1m by Kentucky fast food industry is unable to
Fried Chicken, the Time Out In- correct the perception olthelr food
stituie was established to examine being low in nutritional value."
the changing role of today 's
Dr. Appledorf, who .has parAmerican wcmen and to contribute ticipated in a number of Senate subto lllll infonnation available about conunitteee hearings on nutrition,
their problems, attitudes, needs and says "the crux of the problem lies in
concerns. This year's focus on single the fact that the government wants
parenting reflects the fact that 90 each possible combination of food
percent of all single parents are nutritionally labeled separately,
women . · To promote better WI· based on weights and portions.
derstanding of this group, Kentucky However, in the majority of these
Fried Chicken is underwriting restaurants, the Qumber of food
national research about single combinations reaches infinity."
parents and will be announcing the
He continued, "At Kentucky Fried
research results this fall.
Chicken, for example, the chickens
"Women are our most important are not a processed or portioncustomers,'' says Jessie Vicha, Ken- controlled product, which means the
tucky Fried Chicken Tiine Out In- chicken parts just don1 grow to be
stitute Coordinator. "We have a exactly the same size. You can
product that we feel Wliquely fits imagine tryuing to do a label for
their cl\!jnging lifestyles and meal every single piece of chicken sold."
quality concerns, and we want
"Knowledge of its inherent·
women to feel good about our com- . nutritional value should free fast
pany as well as our product. That's foods from the image problem of
why we are so involved in learning being junk food and allow their use
more about and helping woinen WI· in the preparation of quick, conderetand their new roles and venient meals at home. Such
situations.''
knowledge would also reduce the
Describing modem' or fast foods 'guilt feelings in people who feel they
as a technological boon to our are cheating their families in sersociety, Dr. Appledorf concludes ving fast foods. The fire! step, of
from his numerous laboratory tests course, is for the goveriunent to
·that "it all bolls down to the fact that loosen the labeling regulatons which
fast foods, like all foods, can provide would enable fast food cmpanies to
your body with the needed easily provide nutritional inchemicals (food being a chemical fonnation.
and nutrient delivery system).
11

Mrs. Dean guest of Rutland Gardeners
Mrs. Earl Dean of the Chester cuttings from geraniums and lanGarden ' Club was guest tana, and prepare to bring
&lt;lernonstrator at the Monday night houseplants indoors being sure to
meeting of the Rutland Garden Club check for insects.
held at the Rutland United
Mrs. Charles Lewis made the
Methodists! Church.
table arrangement of field daisies,
Using "Splendore of Swruner" as Mrs. Ralph Turner, tbe arrangeher theme, Mrs. Dean created 10 ar- ment on the registrar's table.
rangements explaining the Hostesses were Mrs. Marvin Wilson,
significance and meaning of each Mrs. V. E. Nelson, Mrs. James
one as she worked. With most havirig Nicholson, Mrs. Jack Robson, Mrs.
a religious element Mrs. Dean show- Lewis, and Mrs. Everett Colwell.
ed arrangements for Palm Sunday, Gifts were presented to all those atAsh Wednesday, corrununion Sun- tending.
day, an anniversary celebration,
Easter using a madonna, and one entiUed ''Shadow of the Cross."
New members welcomed
Guests at the meeting were
Three new members were
members of the Chester and
Wildwood Garden Clubs and the welcomed at the Middleport class of
Shade Valley Council of Floral Arts, Slinderella last week at Heath
and Mrs. Dena Hoffman of Church. Mary JeweU lost the most
Charlotte, Fla. and Mrs. Donna weight and Terri Michael and Edwina Scott tied for runners-up. Mona
Jenkins, RuUand.
. Mrs. Ralph Turner read a Jetter Russell reached her goal and was
from the Shade Valley Council an- accepted into the sUm and trim
nouncing a program to be presented class.
At the Point Pleasant class,
at the Royal Oak Park on Sept. s'
Virginia Johnson and Connie Edfeaturing Mrs. Irene Jackson.
The meeting opened with devo- wards tied for losing the most
tions by Mrs. Harvey Erlewine weight. ChriBtine Wilson reached
taken from Ideals and entitled "The her goal and was accepted into the
Wannth of Summer" and a poem, slim and trim class. At the Mason
class, two new members were
'Queen's Lace. The Lord's Prayer
welcomed. Pearl Phalen lost the
was given in uni59n. .
Gardening tips for September most weight, and Madeline Roush
were presented by Mrs. Roy was the runner-up.
Snowden who noted that gladioli and
dablla bulbs should be dug, illy bulbs
planted, and soil prepared for a nice
lawn. She also suggested getting the
The fifth birthday of Stevie Wood,
cold frame in good condition, take son of Mr. and Mrs. Earle Wood, was
celebrated with a family party on
the lawn at the Wood home ln Middleport.
Attending were the hosts and thelr
•
Mrs . .Alma Woods observed her 75th daughter, Stephanie, Mr. and Mre.
birthday on Aug . 26th. Her guests Burdell McKinney, Mr. and •Mrs.
were Mr. and . Mrs. Arthur Ernest Wood, Jo McKinney and Dan
Woodgerd, Marietta; Dale Edwards. The decorated cake, a
Woodgerd, Ashland; Mrs. Frances replica of a baseball diamond, was
Barnhart, Chauncey; Mrs. Linda made by Mrs. Margaret Edwards.
Cleland and sons, North Ridgeville; Gifts were presented to Stevie.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Sayre and
children, Hartford, W.Va.; Mr. and
GUN SHOOTS DISCONTINUED
Mrs. Paul Knotts and Aaron,
The Racine Gun Club has disconGallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. David
HenBier and children, Mr. and Mrs. tinued Friday evening gun shoots.
However, shoots will be held every
K~th Maritins, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Cleland, Mrs. Betty Sayre, Sunday at I p.m. beginning on Sept.
9.
Racine.
11

Birthday celebrated

Mrs. WoodY-is 75

7-·The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Sept. 4, 1979

POMEROY-The Shade Valley
Council of Floral Arts wll sponsor a ·
program on traditional, modem,
and kinetic design in flower arrangement with Mrs. Irene Jackson 8!1 the
demonstrator on Sept. 8 at Royal
Oak Park in the air conditioned
recreation building.
The program will begin at I p.m.
and there will be a sale table,
refreshments, and door prizes
donated by local florists. Co6t wU! be
S2 at the door.
Mrs. Jackson is an accredited National Council master judge, an accredited flower show school and
symposium instructor, and accredited instructor in the SOGERSU
School of Japanese Floral Design. In
addition, she has extensive instruc-

tion in the O'Hara,. Ikenobo, and
Ischyio School of Japances Design.
The demonstrator is a fonner
elef1ll!ntary scho&lt;.l teacher and for a
number of yeare was an employe d.
the U, S. Department of Agriculture
serving in the field of home finance
and land management.
For the past 35 years she has exhibited arrangements, and has been
successful in winning all flower
show awards now offered in competitive flower shows.
She has been the featured speaker
at many state conventions, and has
taught DoWer arranging in many
States throughout the nation. She has
given programs in New York City
and will return there for a flower
show school on Oct. 3. Mrs. Jackson

has also taught symposiums of advaneed flower arranging in East
Lansing, Mich., Oiariottesville, Va.
and Chicago, Ill.
In addition to her flower arranging
skills, Mrs. Jackson Ia a wood carver
and sculptor of considerable ability,
having designed and assisted in the
· execution of m8ny pieces ol modem
metal sculpture which ~ve been
prize winners in shows ol contemporary art.
On six occasions Mrs. Jackson has
represented Ohio as a designer at
the Central AUantic Conference of
state Garden Clubs as well as at the
1972 convention of the National
Council.of state Garden Clubs held
in Cleveland where she also appeared on the program as one d. the

patrick, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wong and
son, Mrs. Connie Walls and family,
Mrs. Sharon FitzP,.trlck, aU from
the Lancaster ilrea.
DorSal Larkins has recenUy been
a patient of the Holzer Medical Center with a severe slnua infection. He
is at home now recuperating.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. 1'41Uard
Ball have been Mr. and Mrs. Doug
Ball, Montgomery, w: va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Douglaa Hauber and family,

Long Bottom News Notes
BY MEWDYROBERTS
Recent guests ol Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Andrews and Barbara have
been Mr. .and Mrs. John M. Andrews, Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs:
Paul J. Andrews and Christopher of
. We8lervllle, also Mr. and Mrs. P. L.
McCrery, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph

featured de8ignera.
Mrs. Jackson was the founding
director d. the Jackson Region,
Garden Clubs of Ohio, and for 18
years has served in various
capacities on the encutlve board d.
GCO. DUring the two adminlltra·
lions in which she held the post d.
horticulture chalnnan, she authored
the~ booklet, ''G.-. Gnm
Your Program" and reviJed "Hortulana" for ltnecond pubU.catlon. ·
Mrs. Jackson Ia well known for her
dry and facetious humor aa she
takes a Ught-heiuied approacb to the
serious subject of flower arranging. .
Additional infonnation may be obtained from Mrs. Marianna Mitchell, 992-62'19 or Carole Erwin,
9115-3958.

Corrigan, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Curtis, st. Petersburg,
Fla.
Overnight guests ol Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Andrew were.Mrs. Cathy
Salkowitz and Derick, Zanesville.
. Guests of Mrs. Emptine Hayman
have been Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Fitz-

local; Mr. and Mrs. Bill WhiUock
and family, local; Andy Ball of
Cleveland. Andy • has been
vacationing with his grandparents
and will be returning home this
weekend.
CllngratulatioMr. and Mrs. Larry
Driggs on a new baby boy, named
John.Loren. This is the Driggs' first
son. They have four daughters.
Mrs. Irene Starcher entertained
with a party in honor ol her son

Jerry's birthday Friday evening. Mter he opened his gifts, all sang
"Happy Birthday" to htm. Ice
cream, cake, and Kool-Aid were ser-·
ved to Mae McPeek, Leona Hensley,
RuthStethem, Jeanie Starcher, Jimmie Starcher, Bobbie Price, Shirley,
Karen, Kevin, Teddy, Terry, Tracy,
Monaka Sparks, Jerry Starcher, the
honoree and Mrs ..Irene Starcher.
Mrs. Ethel Larkins and J08ephine
.Osborne, local, caUed on Ruth

Stethem recently.
Mr. and Mrs. · Michael Bissell
visited with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Jtlf' Bissell and Kenneth They
also visited the Leona Hensley-M••
McPeek home.
The Golden Rule Sunday School
classes of the Jocal chore~ held
held tbeir August meeting at the
Methodist Church basement in Long
Bottom recenUy.

CORN KING

.

WIENER$.....~~~:...
'

WE HAVE ACOMPI.ETE
UNE (f
osrAR MEYER PROIWS

Catzcer S'o~iety holds annual Board meeting
The annual board meeting of the
Meigs County Cancer Society was
held Friday evening at Veterans
Memorial HOI!Ipltal.
A total of $9,159 has been received
for the year, which is 15 percent better than the best year since the
society was formed. Mary O'Brien,
crusade chairperson, thanked
everyone who assisted with the fund
drive, and wishes to ezpress her appreciation to everyone who contributed or . supported the cancer
society in any way.
More young people and adults
were reached through literature,
filrnB, programs, tapes, and other
media, than ever before, according
to Pal Arnold, public education
chairperson, wbo ~ed her
thanks to each one for help and support.
Teresa Collins, service chairperson, reported on the increased
use of transportation services and
hospital supply assistance, and high
hopes by the organization to help
even more citizens of the area this
coming year.
Unit director Delores Frank
congratulated members on a highly
successful year, and ezpressed concern irith aiding cancer patients and
their families to cope wilh the
illness.
Mrs. Frank presented awards to
Mary O'Brien, for her dedicated
crusade work, and Pat Arnold, for
her work in public education.
Several officers and chairpersons
will be attending the Ohio Division
meeting, to be held Sept. 15 in
Columbus. Joe Feeney and Dr,
Olarles Hubay will be speaking at
the gathering.

Attending the meeting were Clara
Lochary, Dorothy Will, Enna Smith,
Ella Osborne, E!ther Simpson,
Teresa Collins, Mary O'Brien, Bernadette Anderson, Jeannie Taylor,
Sharon Michael, Pat Arnold ,
Harless Frank, Delores Frank, and
Dr. Wilma Mansfield.
The next board meeting wiU be
held on November 'll at 8 p.m. in.the
East-West Dining Room of Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Bike rodeo held
Syracuse Cub &amp;out Pack 242 held
a bike rodeo recently at the hotne of
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McPhail.
The winners in the various activities, listed first, second and
third, were:
Brian Weaver, Chris Baer, and
Shane Simp9on, figure eight; Kevin
Grueser, Shane Simpson, and &amp;ott
McPhail, sialon; Kevin Grueser,
&amp;ott McPhail, and Chris Baer,
coasting; Scott McPhail, Chris
Baer, and Shane Simpson, slow
race; Chris Baer, Shane Simpson,
and Kevin Grueser, straight race;
Chris Baer, Shane Simpson, and
Todd Usle, quick stop.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Bailey, Chris and Andy Baer; Mr.
and Mrs. John Lisle, Todd, &amp;ott,
and Travis; Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
McPhail, &amp;ott, Heather and Corey;
John Grueser &amp;ott, and sons,
Ke,vln and Mrs. Dave Stout, Chris
and Robin, Shane Simpson, Bryan
Weaver, and Jerry Aleshire.
HARVESTF1!SIIVAL

SET SUNDAY
The annual harvest festival of St.
John Lutheran Church, Pine Grove,
will be held Sunday, with worship
service at II a.m. Guest speaker will
be the Rev. Jolut Kennedy, Lutheran
Social Services, Columbus. There
will be a basket dlnnerr at noon and
an old fashioned hymn sing at 1:30
p.m. Everyone is welcome.

79¢.

FULL CUT

.

~~~~.................. ~~.199

7
9
.BACON..........~.

~

CRISPY SERVE

'

STEW....................~. CUBE
~
$

TURBOT
FILLET
FILLET
OCEAN PERCH

T-BONE
$349
STEAK .....................~~... ·

99

RED SKIN

.

SLICED

BOLOGNA .........•• f!l!l.".~.

gge

WE DO CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING

CHUC·K ................... ~....
DELORES FRANK, left, director of the Meigll
County Cancer Society, Thursday night presented
awards to two residents for outstanding service to the
unit during the past year. Receiving the engraved
plaques were center, Mrs. Mary O'Brien, crusade

chairman who Increased receipts 15 s*-cent over any

· Homecoming held
The annual homecoming was held
recently at the Asbury United
Methodist Church, Syracuse.
The Rev. John (Dick) Sauvage,
formerly of .Syracuse and now of
Huntington, was guest speaker for
the worship service. A potluck dinner was enjoyed by those attending.
The Rev. Richard Jarvis, a former
pastor, and his wife, Lancaster,
were present for the homecoming
with the minister speaking during
the afternoon.
'·
There was special music by the
church choir and the Parables or
Elkin, W, Va. wbo entertained with
songs and testimonies during the
afternoon program.
Mr. and Mrs. William Arnott, Columbus, was awarded the traveling
trophy.
I

'
WOOD REUNION SUNDAY
The annual Wood reunion will be
held Sunday, Sept. 9, at Forest Acres
Park near RuUand. There will be a
basket dinner at noon.

PREVENTION
IS litE
BEST POLICY

'l'bomas Reed. Mrs. Reed is the
daughter of Ralph Shain. They were
celebrating her birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Grimm
returned to their home in Green
Acres, Florida. They have been
visiting here for two weeks with
their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Roderick Grimmand friends.
Mr. and Mre .• Ray Soucie and
children of Wyandot, Michigan
visited here with relatives, Mr. and
Mrs. Dennie Manuel and Mr. and
Mrs. Wiley Ours. Also visiting the
Manuels were Mr. and Mrs. Vernon
Donohew and Mr. and Mrs. Drew
Fisher of East Letart.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Gawthrop of
Summerville, W. Va. visited recently with her parents, Rev. and Mrs.
Don Walker. Mrs. Walker kept their
two children while they were
vacationing.
Mr. Max WoHe of Sandusky has
been in the hospital. He is the
brother of Helen Simpson.
Mr. and Mre. Harold Roush visited
with her sister and brother-in-Jaw,
Mr. and Mrs. Cot Hensler.
Mrs. caroline Miller spent a day
shopping in Gallipolis.

7«Jd

But, we also have a vital In ·
terest In l oss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage

and

safety

&amp; Jonathan

CENTER CUT LOIN

PORK CHOPS ........................ ..

3 LB.

.

Pound

LOIN END

.

,

$

PORK ROAST .......................... Pound
'

109

$

COUN'TftV Sl'Yl.E

SPARERIBS .............................. Pouna

3 LB. BAG

J19.

~

.. .

preventive measures wh ich can
keep that ca r acci dent from hap ·
pening , that building fire from
starting, that home burglary
from being comm ined .
Preventiol) saves life , limb lind
properfy .. and helps control in ·
surance co5ts and premiums.
Wt1en losses do occur. our
polic vholders ca n count on pro ·
tec1ing and serving in time and
need . Bu1 we still Siiy - preven·
tion is rhe best policy .

HAWAIIAN

171 oz.$4 99
TIDE •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

PURINA

DOG CHOW.............. 25 ;:g '5 49
GLAD LARGE

30 ct. ,

Limit One

~ARBAGE ~~~~!i ...........~~~ ..

R.C. COLA ·p~~·;:~~~:;···· 8 ~~~:~·

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

•1 09

"2·214)
102 W. Main
Pomeray

2

SAVE
MONEY.

•

Cut heating and cooling costs
up to 30% with Certain-teed
Fiber Glass Attic Insulation

16

179

BATHROOM
TISSUE

..

COTTO NELLE
WHITE OR ASSORI£0 OOWRS
THURSDA Y ONLY

KEEBLER VANIUA WAFERS ................................ ~ k~~·&amp;~
KEEBLER FRENCH VANILLA CREAM .............. ~:~· 9~
ARMOUR TREET.. .............~~-~ ............................. ~ a~~- $1oo
KEEBLER
ZESTA CRACKERS •..•..•......•.••.•.•..••..•..•....... Boxoz. 7f!
GOLDEN GRAIN
MAC/CHEDDAR ................................................ 3 ~·:x~~- 7~
PURITAN COOKING OIL ...................................... :;,~z.sl!IJ
2

GREEN GIANT

RC COLA

• 16-oz . Whole Kernel
• 16-oz. Cream Style

CliR
Jc...
s .. ................................... 3
GIANT

8

16 OZ. BTLS.

WITH PURCHASES

'99~

o,o SHiRES • .CARDINAL fOOD STORES --~~1"1""'-

00

'-

GIANT CUT OR FRENCH STYLE

BEANS ....................
2
.

HEINZ

R!

CIDER.

Umir on• w ith CDUPOfl

169 ~

N OF ARC

~

~

0

TENDERLEAF

~

~

oo u;.oo" ~&lt;:,~

TEA BAGS.·.•....•...•••.•.•.........•.......•..• '1"

TaKe a day or less to mstall
CErtain-teed F1ber Glass
Ante Insulation between
the joists m your attic fiOOf

o,o S l ORIS • CARDINAL FOOD SlORIS ·~~l"'""'r."r"'n

j

00

..i

It's the most economical

way to save big money on

-c

thoSe skyrocketing heiltH'lQ
and cool tng costs You 'll
be warmer 1n winter and

1 HEINZ

WHITE
Umlt on• with

cooler 1n summer. too
Come in now. We'll show

~
~

~

D

you how to do the job

. · I

Quickly and easily

American.

'
•'

.•

MINUTE

MAID

Pim~nto

or Swiss

FRESH CHILLED

64 -oz. $'1 1'f

ORANGE JUICE ...................... Cln.
FRESH BORDEN
Gollon
CHOCOLATIDRINK ..................
Jug

'

••

We ha ve a number of il lustraled talk s and
film presenlations av~i labl e wilhout charge to
your dub or organization. Just call our office.
The number is 992-3786.

CEMENT BLOCK CO.

OHIO POWER COMPANY

The Department Store of Building Since 1915

'I"

VALLEY BELL

2% MILK ................... GAL
POMEROY

$}69 .

Lb.
Pkg .

ASSORTED VARIETIES
TURKEY
SALSBURY STEAK

MR."'G"

.Vah Bel Festival

~

.

STEAl FRIES ·····~························~ ••• 2

MARGARINE 2~~~::$} 00

MAIN ST.

••••••••••••••

BEEF NOODLE
BEEF STEW
CHICKEN NOODLE OR DUMPLINGS

NUMAID

.•

All~

BUFFET

46" long cover 48 SQ tt

Betts Pf! rforated a1 23" tor
use between 16" or 24w lra mrng

t;i

StgrU

001506H 1~

Baits 5' tr~rck , 15Vt" wrde and

•
•'

timely topic?

NEW YEU.OW .

SALE OATES SEPTEMBER 4TH - 8TH. l979

•
••
•'

on a

LOIN

10 LB.

fl RST CROP OHIO Red &amp; Gold Delicious

f inanc ial protect ion in case of
'loss .

caution

.U.S. NO. 1

QUANTITY
RIGHTS
RESERVED

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

As an Independent Insurance '
agency, our pr im ary function i!
to provide policies which a"ord

care ,

p

PRODUCE

89¢
POTATOES·························
59¢
ONIONS
.....................
:
......
.
:s~~M4r.#ffffff~
~~M~~1#»'Ar$!r()tlt ~"' e
89¢
APPLES ..................... ....... .

ma~rial .

Racine Social Events
Mr. and Mrs. cadiz Betz of
Wellsville, Ohio, Dorothy Daktarlus
of Athens, Mr. and Mrs. KeUy Arthur and three children of Columbus
visited recently with Helen Simpson.
Mr. Kelly is a nephew of Mrs. Simpson.
Mrs. Irene Payne of Pinellas
Park, Florida is visiting relatives
and friends here. Some of the
relatives wbo visited in Racine are
Mrs. Helen Simpson, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre and Mrs. Roderick
Grimm.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre, Irene
Payne and Helen Simpson visited on
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs. Waldon
Kinney of Brohard, W. Va.
Mrs. Garnet Ervine and fV. and
Mrs. Robert Hardin attended the
carson reunion recently at Krodel
Park in Pl. Pleasant, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shain of Antiquity, Mr. and Mrs. Dave Shain
and their son Jason and Garnet Ervine spent Sunday, Aug. i9, in
Logan, Ohio with Mr. and Mrs.

mal

prevloua lund drive, and Pat Amold, public education
chalnilan who made the local unit 15th ln Ohio out of 10
units by reaching youth with cancer educational

QUARTERED
9. 11 CHOPS

~

~

Lb.

Pkg.

RIEl. ~.~.

~ ICE CRE~M ............................... ~ •• ~~.•••'1 39
,.

•

0
~

~

7100

..,

CARD INAL fll"

�8 - The 1\Hily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Sept. 4, 1979

•

Your Best Buvs Are Found In the Sentinel Classifieds
MENTAL HEALTH CENTER HAS .
OPENINGS IN PSYCHATRIC INPATIENT
HOSPITALIZATION PROGRAM.

I

WANT AD
CHARGES
I~

Wnr•h ur L'ndr r
l'n~h

(llat~l!

Jd,n

I 00

~t ill"

l [,0

I 90

~ tl av~
~till}'

I 8il
.l (l(l

2.25

15

1 25
~ . 75

r :wh WCltcJ O\"r t Jh~ · minimum
u. nnl~ 1~ ~ t'•'T1\Ji pt•r word p•l!t

., ,t~ num1n~ nthrr lhHn rnn·
~£'&lt; ut11 I' rl:ty~ u.•111 bt• r hat!-1('(1 &lt;H

lla)

llw ld&lt;l' tli ll'

In
;; rul

lli H ilMI
Olil[uar~

l'&lt;ml 0\f TIUJnk.s
fo

l'l'llt~

1.11-1 mmn num

JW t Wtlr&lt;l ,

Cosh m Hd ·

\1 {1\Hk !!nnw ..alt•.s Hnd Ya rrl
!-Jdt•'&lt; ll tf' ;ll'l'l'J'll'll ()(1\~· l'ilh
t'H ~ h "''llh nrdl' r ?.5 rt·nt chnrge
f11r ;ub t'Hrn·in ~ f}flx Ntunht&gt;r In

Puh\ 1~lwr wtl l no •! llt' r t· ~pu u s! hlt•
ftw liWI'I' than tl nr ltl&lt;'tlfrf'l'l 111 ·
-..·rllolf1
l'hi&gt;!W &lt;»2 -215(.

NOTICE
WANT-AD
DVERTISING
' DEADLINES
MnruiH.\
\l r~&gt; n n11 S:~t11 rday
l'lu ·~ r i H\

thn1 Fmf&lt;tr
41' .\1
lht• rt·r\

IX'fnn• pui,IH'il ll on
Sun lbv

4 I' .M·
F n r l ;t ~·

af1t'rn,,... .

N.otices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7-30 PM RACINE GUN ClUB.
FACTORY CHOKE G UN S ON·
LY.

MEIGS CO UNTY HUMA NE
SOCIETY
997 -6'160 . Pe ts
av ailable for adoption and inlor mpt~q~s.!~v i ~
c •::·~--GUNSHOO f , FORKED Run
Sportsman Club .each Sunday
starling Sep t. :2 . Factory choke
guns only .
AMB ITIOUS
A TTENTI O N
coupl!'!s or indivi duo ls. Supp lement your rncome wi th no inveumen t Be you r own boss in
your own hom~;~ , Unli mi ted op-portun iti es . Atten d free
seminar at the 'Meigs Inn.
luesdoy , Sep t. 4 at 7:30 pm .
Call for r eser vation: Mid·
dlepor t .992 -3-443 . New Hoven
30&lt;-882· 25 11 .

YARD SALE. Tuesday and
Wed .. Sept . .tl and 5 689 Beech

s'.e· ---~-~--

YA RD SALE. 9 to A Sept. 5. At
East Main St ., Pomeroy .
Miners-. itle Corp. line .
YARD SALE . 5-41 High St .. Mid·
dleport . Sep t. 4, 5, 6 from 9
om to 5pm .
YARD SAl E. Sept . 3 through 8.
810 S. 2nd 51. , Middleport,
OH . Old stove. bedding,
linens . dishes. dolls. clothing.
w a sher
and
dryer ,
Silvers ton e , lamps , toys .
Something fo r everyone
Com e s9e .
YARD SA LE and Bake Sole . Friday . Sepfmeber 7. 8-4 pm
Chester Methodist Church .
Sponsored by Chester U. M .W.
YARD SAlE . Sept . 4-6. Dorrell
Dugan's Broadway St., Rocine ,
OH . Clothes and misc. items .
9-.4 . Rai n or shine .
YARD SALE. Wed . 5th . 10-5
Teaford's, 606 Main St.,
Racine.
YARD SAlE . 2 fam ily. House
~eh ind
State
Highway
Goroge. Sept . 6. Thurs. only .
Boby co r s•ot, high ch air,
misc. items.

Pets for sale
HOOF HOlLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
ond
harness . Hors• s and ponies .
Ruth Reeves. 61.4 -698-3290
Bard ing &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core produc ts.

POO DLE G ROOMING . Judy
Tay lor . 61 4-367 -7220.

Auctions
BIG AUC TIO N ev9ry Wed ., 7
pm
Har tford Community
Cen ter , Hartf ord , WV , 114 miles
obove
Pom•r oy - Mos o n

B_0_~~':... -- - - - - - - -

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
POMEROY , OHIO
45769
CHARLES H. MORRISON
AND
SARA
ANN
MORRISON, Route 2, Box
130-A. Mineral Wells, West
Virginia 26150
PIa intiffs
VS

FRANK G . WEAVER and
NANCY L. WEAVER , and
MICHAEL L. CONLEY ,
Address unknown

NINE

PEDIGREE

Sr\11orw

spaniel pups. Wh ite. li ver and
ticked. 5 weeks old. Toil s and
dew cla ws removed and
wormed . 5 moles , 4 females .
$35 and '/, 30. Seen olt9rnoon .
Sept. 5th . 1669 lindoln Hill,
Pomeroy. 992-3694 .
GIVE A nice pet o good home.
Shepard, beagles , poodles ,
elkhound terrier , · loveoble
mixed breeds . l...ittens , cots.
Humane Society. 99'1-6'260.

Auto Sales
1974 VEG A -HATCHBACK , co li
303-675-1501 or 305-675-248B
Of 30-4 -675- 1553.
197 4 DODGE CORO NET 4-door
Custom. 992-5858 .
1973 CADILLA C Eldorodo .
showroom
condition. Call
992·6255 .
1974 CORVETTE, A.C. , P.S.,
P. B., AM -FM B-track, headers ,
chr ome show tube , Crage r
mags. I· roof , chrome ports on
motor . $5800. 949-2.466,
1969 BUICK SKYLARK Custom
wit h air. Price negotiable.
992 -7007 between 5:30 and 10
pm .
1973 PONTIAC CA TALINA .
V-8, auto., P.B., P.S., A .C.,
good runni ng condition . Afte r
5. 949-249B .
1978 PONTIAC GRAND Prix ,
pla ti num 2- door sport . w ith air
condit ioning, ti lt steerin g. 1/,
vinyl lop , CB, AM-FM ste reo.
15 .C.OO miles . E)(cellent condi·
lion. 992-5770 .

GEORGE CLLINS, a s
Trea s urer.of Meigs County ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
1975 CUTl A SS SALON , low
Defendants
mileage . P.S ., P.B.' 350
Case No. 17, 170
engine , AM radio w ith tape
NOTICE BY
deck . 1 owner. 843 -259 1.
PUBLICATION
Frank G . Wea11er and
1972 MUSTANG , 2-door herd·
Nancy L . Weaver ' an d
top, auto., P.S., air, low
Michae l L. Conley, whose
mileage , good body , cl ean,
last known res idenc e was
Six tir es , $1400. 992-5530.
Box 301 Waver ly, W. va .
26184, ofherwlse the . pl ace
1975 MONZA . Exce ll ent
at residence of ea ch of said . Shop9.
605 W . Main, Pomeroy.
Defendants
bei ng
unknown, w il l ta ke notice
1977 BLUE THUNDERBIRD.
tha t on Ma y 2, 1979, Charles
32 .000 mi les . Excellen t condi·
H . Morrison and Sara A _nn
tion . 2 new studded snow
Morrison fil ed a com pla .nt
tires . 992-6671 Monday-Friday
i n the Comm on Pl eas Court
5' 30.
of Meigs cou nty , OhiQ,
a ll eg ing that th e De f en ·
1978 FORD PICK UP F-100 ~.
dan1s. Frank G . Weaver
ton bed. 6 cyl, 3-speed . 22.&lt;XXJ
and N ancy L W eaver and
miles, ch rome wheels . Col i
Michael L . Con l ey, are
388-8666 offer 9pm.
' ointly and solely liable t o
he Plaintiffs in the sum of
1976 OlDS CUTLASS Supreme.
$21,829 . 8~ pl us in te rest of B
P.S.. P.B., A .C.. new rodia l
percent per annum from
tires . 992-34 43.
Februarr. 1 ~. 1978(, and tu_r ther al eg1ng 1 at sa 1d
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE . ExPlaintiffs have a fir st morce ll en t conditio n. 29 ,000
tga ge on
real estate
miles . $2400 . 99'2-3198.
described in Mortga_ge
BOOk 137, Page )OS, Me1gs
coun t y Mortgage Rec ords.
Plaintiffs
demand
· udgr_nent
against t he
Hetendants in 1he amount
of $21.829.8-4 plus interest at
8 percent per annum from
February 12, 1978, c os ts of
Give Away
suit and further dem and
the foreclosure of the r eal
TWO ADUlT sp ayed cots ,
estate destrlbed In Mor
female . 1 bl ue . I black . Need
!gage Book' 137, Page 105 of
good homes by Sept . 6.
the -Meigs County Mor ~8S-3524 .
tgage Recor ds and such
other relief as ma y b.e
I NEED o home , I om o you ng
p r~~ of the Oefe':ld an ts shepherd ferrl• r unusually
mork.d. We ore look ing for a
named above is requ1red to
good
hom e,
Ameri can
answer on or before the ex
domestic ~ 1 1fem1 and co ts.
piration of 28 days aft~ r
last publicat ion ot . t h1s
Lou ie type wit h 4 whi te feet.
notice which date w• I J t&gt;e
to il, female Beagle, young ,
octooer 30, 1'79.
.
mole and fema le, niCe domily
Charles H . M or n son
pets, shots . Humane Soci ety .
Sara Ann M orr ison
992-6260.
(8 ) 28 (9) ~ . 11 , TB (10) 2, 5tc

l

·I

YARD SAlE in Che!&gt;ler. Baby' s,
molernif) . older men's a nd
woman·s clo thing . lois more .
Follow signs off SR 7. Se pT. 5
and 6 from 10 til ??

Mobile Homes Sale's

MOBilE HOME and lot in
Mason. WV. Coli 304 -773 -5905
or 99'1· 7759 .

,I

Yar!l Sale

W'·

216 E. 2ND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
NOW YOU CAN
Get a Home Protection Plan on your electric, heating, central air units, water and
sewage lines.

Essie Brammer, R.N ., Inpatient Coordinator
C/ O Juanita Atha , Personnel Administrator
G ·J ·M CMHC, 411 Vinton Pike
Ga llipolis,OH 45631 or call6l4-444·5SOO

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·
ding . Call367·029'l .

1965 GENERAL 60~el2 . 'l bedr.
1970Sylvo, 60xl2 , 7bedr.
1970 Castle, 6(hd 2-, 2 beck
1974 Mo rk line, 50a:11 . 1 bedr.
1969 Va lian t. 17~e60 . 2 bedr
1967 National, 12x50, 2 bed r.
B'S MOBilE HOME SAlE S, PT.
PlEASANT . WV. 30114 -675 -4424.

992-3325

Previous psychia tri c experience not required .
Medical / Sur gi ca l experience desirable for
r egis tered nurses st affing t he npatient Unit .
Rotat ing shifts or steady even ing or night sh ifts
available . Two w eekends per month off . Salary and
fr inges excellent . Part -time employ m ent on even i ngs and / or nights is poss ib le tor R .N . c o'Verage (only) . We are "" equal employment opportun ity
employer .

GUN SHOOT EVE RY SUNDAY I
PM. FACTORY CHO KE ONLY.
RACINE G UN CL UB .

1974 14 )I 70 mobile home
Good condition . 992-5858 .

T~~a~q~p

Interested in developi ng new and innovative pro ·
grams? Would you like to become a part of a
developing ma jor men tal health ce nter ?

Th1• l 'ubh ~ twr n•scrvts UK!•
rtl.!ht II• r'1:til ••r n·jet·l m•~· atl s
dl'l'mrtl
l) bjHtwnal.
Thr

lEAD GUITAR player wonted
to join country· rock band:
992·2'169 .
BABYSITTER for 2 children in
my home in · Middleport .
M onday· Friday ,
days .
992·3937 .

Services Offered

American Home Shield Management will
give you service . should you have a
breakdown. This will put you one step
ahead of other sellers. When you list with ·
us this plan will be offered to you for your
protection for one full year after the sale.
Call 992-332S to list and get this protection
at no cost to you.

Tl"'l,.....,.,.,,.,..,..,..,.,,..,..,.,.,.

200

NOW HAUliNG limestone in
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Cal l f or free estimate .
367-7 101.

'
ACRE

FARM between
Pomeroy and Athens : 3
bedroom house and good
barn. $97,500. Only $25.000
down . Owner will finance .
Call 992-5266.

NICE COMFORTABlE 9 room
home on opprox . '2 acres of
levelland with plenty of ;hade
tree s,
o n Rutland Rd.
99'2-7255.

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Free estimot•s. Co/1949·2686.

SEVEN ROOMS a nd bafh. 2
acres. 992·2523.

DOZER , END loader and dump
tru cK . Wi lt do basements
po nds.
brush ,
li mber '
l jmestone ,
ond
grovel.
Chorl •s Butcher. 742-291140.

SIX ROOM house , both
remodeled home on ~ 692.
Carpeted. No appointment
necessary . Lou ise Di xo n.
698·5211 or 698 -7429.

HOTPOINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

. SALE PRICES
POMEROY
LANDMARK

C\7"'-_:

Jack W. Carsey

lAtu•....U•

Mgr.
Phone 992 -2181

~

Wil l DO baby sifting In my
home for a chi ld from 3 to 9
years of oge. Coli Alice
Williams . 949·2571 .
ELECTRI CAl WIRING for form ,
home end business. Electric
heat and lighting. New work
or modernizi ng. Joe Deluco,
742-2795.

COAl , liMES TONE . sand,
grovel , calc ium ch loride . fe r·
1\\i;r.e, , dog food , and all 'I)' pes
of soh. E xce l si~r Sol t Works .
Inc.. E. Main St. , Pomeroy,
992·3B91.
CANNING PEACHES now thru
Sept . 15 . Bob's Market ,
Mason , WV . Open 7 days
Phone 304 -773 -5721 ,

BUSINESS
FOR SALE'
Well established
bakery in
Middleport, Oh .
Inquire at

992-3555
lUMP COAL . $38 per
deli vered. 992-7126.

SXIMASK-

Business Services

R . N .'s with Diploma, Associate Degree or Bac - ·
calaurea t e Degree , New and recent graduates.
Psy ch iatric Aids / Assistants

l 'nri• ••f TIIC ,~ '!IIIJWI

PAWNS HOP ROBBER

ton

COBRA CAM 89 CB base. Com·
plate antenna . Over 50 ft . of
co-ox. 992-7126.
% Quarter horse,

1
/• Arabian
Sorre l gelding. Arabian sod·
die more, spotted. 992-7528.

lENNOX CENTRAl air conditi oning and hEKJ ting with
ducts . 992-2560 .
USED HEATWAVE woodburn·
irig stove , $200. 2 double
beds, 1 meta l. 1 antique , $100
eoch' 2 lamps , $20 eo.
9·9-2.50 .

608 E .
MAIN
POMEROY, O.
NEW LISTING - 1 year
old ranch, l lf2 acres, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, din ing room , wood -burning
fireplace in living room ,
beautiful built -in kif ·
chen with bar , garage .
Quality work ma nship
througho u t.
Plush
carpeting and other ex ·
c el le nt
features .
$44,800.00.
NEW LISTING - In the
country , 6 acre mini
farm , close to th e
mines. Remodeled 1'h
story home with 3
bedrooms, new kitchen ,
and living roo m w ith
wood -burning firep lace.
part basement, and
storage building . Many
new featur es. $24,500.00 .
NEW LISTING - Han dyman 's delight. Great
hedge against Inflation
everyone, should own a ·
rental. $6,500 .00.
HOME FIT FOR A
KING And Queen .
One
of
the
most
ela bor a te homes i n
Meigs County . Features
10 rooms oi royal living,
up t o five bedrooms for
those little heirs. - If
you really want elegant
livi ng, you must see this
one. Would vou beli eve
only $58,900.00.
STAT.ELY 2 STORY Original oak wOOdwork
b lends read ily i nto th e
modern features of this
home . Fireplace, all
s torms ,
Pomeroy
Elementary, nice lot
with off street parki ng .
A Bargain At $3~ ,500.00.
COZY - 2 bedroom hom eon 50x260 tot in Mid ·
die port , din i ng room ,
some remodeling, fruit
ce l la r
an ,d
garden
s pace. A STEAL AT
$16,200.00.
OWNER NEEDS SALE
- 10,900.00 will buy this
2 family home .
A HOME FOR YOU - 1
floor plan modernhom e,
· with full basement , nice
lo .t,
excellent
neighborhood . Redu ced
to $19,900.00 lor im ·
mediate sale.
WE HAVE BUYERS
WAITING FOR THE
RIGHT PROPERTY LIST WITH US, TO DAY!
REALTORS
Henrv E . Cleland, Sr .
Henrv E . Cleland, Jr.
992-2259
992-6191

BlACK WESTERN saddlo. Good
condition. 9A9-2453 .
CANNING tomatoes. Pick
your own. Field weed free. S3
bu . Andrew Cross, Adams
Rd ., Lefort Folts , OH.

For Rent

21 " RCA conso le color TV. $95 .
6000 B.T.U. A.C.D.. $125 . 8000
B.T.U. A.C.D.. $160 . 992-3324 .

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Pork ,
Route 33. north of Pom•roy.
Lorge loti . Catl992-74 79.

135,000 BTU basement fuel oil
furnace . Excellent condition ,
$200. 30 gdllon noiurol gas hot
woter heater , $20. Phone
742 -3045 .

3 AND 4 RM fu rnished and un·
furn is hed
opt s. . Ph one
992-543.4 .

16 GAME HENS and roos ter .
9'92-394114 .
PORTABLE WASHER and dryer.
71142-3035 .

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . _ Poles ma x.
d iame ter 10" on lorgest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $1 0
per ton . Delivered fo Ohio
Pollef Co .. Rt . 2, Pomeroy.
992·2689.
OlD FURNITURE , ice bo xes
brass beds, iron beds, desks:
etc.. complete hous•holds .
Write M .D. M ill er, Rt. .4 ,
Pomeroy or call 992-7760.
OlD COINS . pock9t watches ,
class rings , wedding bands.
diamonds . Gold or silver. Ca ll
.1 . A . Wamsley , 742· 2331.
WANTED : SAW logs. Payment
upon del ivery to our ya rd . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods, SR 339. Barlow ,
OH. 678·2980.

ANTIQUES. FURNITURE . glaos ,
chi no, any t hing ~ See or call
Ruth Gosney , antiqu es . 26 N.
2nd . ,
Middlep ort ,
OH .
992·3161.

3.65 ACRES APPROX . 2 miles
west ol Rt. 7 on H3 . level
ocntOge. 742-2656 .
BY OWNER ; 3 bedroom house.
Completely remodeled. Wall
to walt carpeting, fireplace,
new oil furnace. Citu water.
6.9 acres . Location 34618
Boshon Rd .. long Bottom , Rt.
1. $23.500.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
eGuHersand

Announcing Opening of

OPENING SEPT. lith
Classes: Ballet
Tap &amp; Jan
Agos~andup

DownSpou~

Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone "2-2172
8-17 ·1 mo.

Shh1ty Corpenttr
Instructor·
ChoreOgrapher
Localod In Raclnt, 0.
(iormerly
Weavers
Skill Building)
Ph, 949-2710 or 949-215o
8 - ~ - 1 mo

New, repair,
guNers and
down spOuts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949-2862--949-2160

TRAILIR SALES

Hours9-1 M ., W.• F .
Other times by appoint·
ment.
1Q7 Syumore (R· e~r)
Pomeroy, o.

CALL 992 -7S44

40 ACRES land on Bailey Run

n:no Montgom•r'f Rd .
L•nts¥1 11e, Ohi o
Eunings
1 M i lts E.st Of WII!IHville
614·Wf·•l245

SUPE~
TRAIL E~

GOa5E

7•2 · ~442 .

FOR SALE : modern 5 year old 3
or 4 bedroom house. Ful.ly
corpe tttd. Full basement. Drill·
ed we ll. Situated on Dppro.ll .
2Y! ocres of land. $35,500.
71142·3074 .
19 ACRES. 2V, miles from Middleport, 2 mobile homes compl•tely set up. Rural water.
Mineral rights . lnterest.d per·
sons. call992-6305.

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

BY

J&amp;L INSUlATION
Free Estimate

CALL
992-2772

HOBSTETTER

7&lt;2·2036.

T~ERE

YOU SEEN P01&lt;1N'
'/Ell 815 HOOK NO$!
INTA THIN&amp;,. THAT

V. C. YOUNG Ill

YA GO AGAIN--

~'mAn;

GETTIPIJ' N06-V! !?ES
WOT I MEAN~"" HIGH
TIME T~f ~051: 0F)'fR5
50T 5TAAIGHTEI&gt;IED
OU T. PAL!

DON'T CONCE-RN

TH' &amp;IG IDEA

KICKIJJ' MEr WISE OUY ~
'(OU WA ~T A POI(E
lloJ THE- MOUTH1!

O~Lt-tE

DID·

DID HE~ WHY, YOU
MISE-RA&amp;Le
PU~K-!

"(A , MAC:!

RACIHI!, D.

949-2741 Or
. 992-7314

8-6· 1 mo.

tfte ) •r~Jest

fhdi•tor
sm1 11e1t He•tor c.r•.
ll ul lciOitr

ANNIE
51E/lPA ~llll.H .r

SARAH~ ~ 9RUN6 "''UH COMMN'( .. ,

M~T BfAUTI~UL

VOU'P NE~R. GUESS WHO ·H
DANG THAT WOM~ ... SARAH f
WI-IAR ~ Y\.11--li'

61RL tt-l THE WEST-..

YOU lUCKY

ooa ...

IN SYRACUSE

•New Home
•Addons
* Remoldlngs
*Free estlm1tes

Smith Nelson
McmS, Inc.
Ph. 992 -2174

U1'TLE ORPHAN

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING

Servlctr
F ro m

992-6011
7-12

Pomeroy

REALTY

I

PHO~

742-2003

NEW LISTING - Nice
size lot in Arbaugh Add I·
tion. It already has sep·
tic system af'1d water
top . Callloday.
POMEROY - On Stale
Street, 2 bedrooms, liv ·
ing room , utility room ,
bath and nice k itchen .,
Sells for only $16,500.00.
RUTLAND
Exira
nice 2 story home . 4
bedrooms, I illi ng room ,
dining room, ~itchen
and bath . Garage and
building .
Asking
$35 ,000.00 .
LANGSVILLE - Nice 2
bedroom home On a little over an acre. It has a
new root and f urnace.
Alumin um siding and
storm windOW's. A good
buy at $22.500.00.
BASHAN ROAD - 6'h
acres with a J bedroom
hom~ . Call Hilton Wo lfe
for more detai ls. Sci!
Price 539,900.00 .
WEST RUTLAND E &gt;&lt;celtent J bedroom
home,
with
family
room , living room , laun·
dry room and '11 base ment. Price reduced to
$49,000.00.
POMEROY. Owner
wants to relocate so
they say sell this nice 3
bedroom home. It has
aluminum siding and
storm windows. Many
nice features to this
home . Call laday for
more delalls. ASKING
ONLY $25,500.00.
If you would like one of
the abOwe homes but ,
can•t find
financing,
give us a call . We will
help you.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742-2003
GeorgeS. Hobstetter,
, Jr .
Bro~er 992-5739
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc.
949-2589

Roger Hysell
Garage

Services
OHered
All Ma$0nary Work
Foundation,
~rick l.aying.
Coricrete Finishing.

1 4 mile off Rt. 1 by·pan
on St . Rt . 124 tow1rd
RUtl•nd .

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

Free Estimates
992-S304, 992-2238

•

8·21 ·1 mo .

6-6-1 m o .

Real Estate for Sale

4 30-tf c

Reallstate Loans

REAL ESTATE: I acre lot in Riggscr•st Manor. betw .. n Tuppers Plain• and Chest•r .
Phone 985-3929 and 985-41'19.

Purchase

&amp;

sty lint.

Main St.

HOWERY AND MARTIN b covotlng. septic •yst•m•.
do~:•r ,
backhoe. Rt. l43.
Phano I (614 ) 6'18-7331 "'

Sw~rs , tooatera, irons. all.

small appliances . lown moer.
newt to State Highway Goroee
on Jl:oute 7. 91$.312$.

IN STOCK for Immediate
d•li-.ery: various 1l1:es of pool
kill. Do-it- yourself or let us
install for you . 0 . Bumgardn•r

SEWING MACHINE R-ln .
1ervice, all mok ... 992-2284 .
Tho Fabdc Shop, Pomoroy .
Authorized Singe-r Sol.. and
S.rvlce. We thorpen Scl.sor1 .

WILl HAUL lim•stone and
grov•l. Also, lime lwuling ond
spreodlng . Leo Morris Trucking , Phon. 742-2455.
ANN'S CAKE D.c:orating Supplies. 50716 Osborn Rd.,
RHdtvill•. OH 45n2 . For ln·
formation coli , 667-4"85. Will
be o~n lot• If you nMd
SOrMthlng.

ELWOOO !lOWERS REPAIR -

EXCAVATING. da•o' . laacMr
and boctlihoe . work: dump
truck• and lo-bOys for hire.
will haul fill dirt, tap 1otl,
llm.atone and grov•l. Coli lob
a&lt; R...,. Jeffon. day phon.
992 -7089,
night
phon•

992·3525 "'992-5232.
EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe ond ditcher, Chari••
R. Hotfleld. Block Hoe Mrvlce,
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 742·2008.

., Proceed

41 Ulle aome
winter days

ltem5
II Melalll!e
I! Tenn In Je"-

mistake

I say
I Turned
ootwar&lt;!

II Superficial
1

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
been cancell~ lost your
optraton
lfcens•? Phone

?.1 Wrath
.:•Dm't

!landstiU

14 Not easy

Uke a uw

%7 Cheering
word

lt Pool
equipment

Z9 One kind

ZZ Greek
portico

of story
30 Foreigner

23 Argues

34 Restore
31 N&lt;Hlo

lor George

U In toto
%5 "- Sw&gt;K

31 One kind

Blue"

of lie

delete
1-.----l-~~-1-­

: fond of

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

a
!

Arena,

aid style
)I Special
: nighla
11 Ungula
:Z. Jujube
;zt Compoel• Uon

I

&gt;tPorker
'!3 Tree
:uSavUe Row
; eraftmwr b,...I.-

ILLAC

I K)

I-+-11--+-

~ Cheele

•!I New York

'

city

1

.,.5

'
: DAIL V CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
'
lo

AND UP
Installed imd Pad FREE
GOOD SELECtiON OF •
CUSHION VINYL

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

' One l etter simply 1tand1 for another. In tblt sample A 11
· used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letter s,
: apottrophea, the lencth and formation or the worda are all
1 ~lnt1. Eath day the code letters are difl'erent.

.

1' 1F
I .I 'I I 0

CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

•

RUTlAND FURNITURE
Rutland, o.,
t

ZLSWQZ

MRWQZA

•' M J

MRI

: JHI Q

GJAI

LQP

M WSI

:MH J

'

HI

SJ

G W VI

VJGMRLS

T J M R

MOILABOIA,

UOJXWJBA

AM

J

v
.

S L Q

__ .

_

~ Y'"eiierilioj'o ~.Ole: "fiiE GREAT MAN IS TliE: MAN ,
WHO DOES A TlfiNG FOR TilE FIRST TIME. - ALEXAN- •
DER SMITH

ITYLPENj .

lJ

'

~ULD
•rr•noe

) I K j

A

CRYPTOQUOTES

.

TUESDAY. SEPTEMUR4, 1979
7: 15- A .M . Wea ther "'3 i 7 ::~.~­
Famil y ,_ Affair 10; 8:0G--Capt .
5:00- B-onanza 3; Be ve rly Hillbillies
Kangaroo ·a, 10 ; La ss ie 17;
8; M ister Roger s: Neighborhood
Sesame St . 33.
20, 33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10;
8.30--Romper Room 17; 9:CIO--Bob
Six Mi ll ion Dol lar Man 13; Little
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15;
Rascals 15: Star Trek 17 .
Big Valley 6; Porky P ig and
.5 :31).-News 6; Petticoat Juncti on 8;
Friends 8; Razzmatazz 10; Lucy
Electric Company 20; Mary
Show 17; Mr. ROger s 33 .
Ty ler Moore 10; Abbott and
9:30-Sanford and Son 8; Hogan' s
Costello 15: Doctor Who 33.
Heroes 10; Green Acres l7 ; Once
6:00-News 3, 10, 8, 13, 15 ; ABC
Upon a Cl assic 33.
News 6; Family Affllir 17; Vi lla
10 :oo-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Alegre 20 .
Night 6; All In the Family 8, 10;
6:3o-Nac News 3, 15; ABC News
Morning Magazine 17; Movie
13; A!1 dy Griffit h 6; CBS News 8,
" Man Afraid" 17.
10 ; Father Knows Best 1-7 ; Over
10 : 39-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
Easy 20.
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Bewitched
7:00- Cros s-Wit s 3; Ne wly we d
6; Whew! 8, 10 ; MacNeii·Lehrer
Game 6, 13; Pl ease Stand By 8;;
Report 33.
News 10; COve'. Amer ican stYle
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Cat! 10.
15 ; Get Smart 17; Dick Cabett 20,
11 :()()-High Roller s 3.15 ; Laverne &amp;
33.
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10;
7:30-Hol lywood Squares 3; Candid
11: 30- Wheelof Fortune 3, 15;
Camera 6; Gong Show 8; Sha Na
Fam ily Feud 6, 13; Sesame Street
Na 1J; Abbo tt -!lnd Costello 15 ;
33.
-r. Baseball 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
11 :55- News 17 .
!Report 20, 33 .
12 : ~Newscenter 3; News 6,10,13;
S:QO-Runaways 3; Happy Days 6,'
Mindreadef"S 15; Young end th4t
13 ; Billy Graham Crusade 1.5 ;
Rerstless 8; Love American
Wonder Woman 8, 10; McGuffey
Sty le 17.
Lane 20; City Notebook 33.
12 :3()-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search far
~fl\lrut fi;}~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME 8:3o-Taxl 6, 13; Two Ronnles 33.
Tomorrow 8,10; Not for Women
9:00--NBC Wh ite Paper 3, 4, 15 ;
~ ~ ~~ ~
by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee
Only 15; Mo\lle " A Girl In E\lery
Thre4! 's -Company 6, 13; Movie- ·
Port" 17; Electric Co. 33. ·
Unscramble theM tour Jumbles.
" Speedtrap" 8, 10 ; Joffrey Ballet
I :00--Days of our Lives 3, 15; All my
one letter to each aquare, to 101m
From.
Art
Park
33;
Bill
Moyers'
lour ordinary words.
Chi ldren 6, 13; News 8; Young
Journal 20.
and the R~!iofleu 10.
9 : JO- Laza r us Syndrome 6, 13 ;
1: 30--As the World Turns 8,10;
10:()()--Ll ttle Miracle 17 ; News
2:oo-Doctors 3, 15; One· Life t~
20; 10 :lo-Rat Patrol17; Like It
Live 6, 13 .
Is
20
.
1
2 : 2~ News 17; 2:30-AnotherWorld
11 :00-News 3, 6, 8, 10, 13, 15; New
3,1 5; Guiding Light 8, 10; I Love
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cabett 40.
Lucy 17; Sugar I ~ lhe Gourd 33.
11: 3o-JDhnny Carson l , 15; "Guln 3:00-Gen eral Haspltel6,13: Lilies,
ness Book Of World Records 6,
Yoga and You 20; Rebop 17.
13; U.S. Open Tennis Highlights
R; ABC News 33; Movie " Sons
3: 3G-MASH B; Joker's Wild 10;
and Lover s" 10; Mo¥1e " We!olern
Bllnana Splits 17; 0\ler Easy 20.
Ur.ion " 17; 11:-45- Ba r naby
4:0G-Mr. Carton 3; Password 15;
Jones 8.
Merv Griffin 6 ; Addams Family
12:55-Movle " Forbidden Planet" 8;
51; AN
8; Sesame Sf 20,33; Six M illion
t
:
~TomorroN
3,
4;
News
13
,
UNeXPECTED
Dollar Man 10; Mike Douglas 13;
15; 1: 3D-Baseball 17; .4 :00c&amp;ET-IOGE1'1-1Ef&lt;'.
Fllntstones 17 .
News; 4: 20- Untour:hables 17 .
4:30- Lone Ranger J ; Hogan 's
Wednesday-, Septembers, 1979
Heroes. 8; Lucy Show 15; F'arNow
tha circled lett• rl 1o
trldge Family 11.
form I he surprise answer, as sug- 5:20--World at Large 17 ,· 5:45--5:00--B onanza J ; Beverly Hillbillies
ge~ted by the above cartoon
Fa:rm
Report 13; 5:50-PTL
8; Mr . Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Club 13.
Pyle, USMC 10; Six Million
lj BS-Su mm" Seme sl" 10; 6' 00-Dollar Man 13; Little Rasca ls 15 ;
Prlntanswerhere :
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -- -1
PTL Club 151 ; 700 Club 6,8;
Star ' Trek 17.
!
~Answ.ers lomcmow)
6 : Jo-- News 17 .
.5: 30-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
. ... .... _., ,
6:2s-chrlstopher Closeup 10.
.
E leclrlc Co . 20; Mary Tyler
S..!urday'a/ Jumblel : UPPER CHANT INBORN BU TLER
6:3G-Dragnet 17; 6:.t!S-Mornlng
Moore 10; Abbott and Costello
Anawer : What hs got after eating It - HEARTBURN
Report 3; 6: 50-Good Morning,
15; Doctor Who 33.
,-- - - West A Virginia 13.
6:00--News J,8,10, 13,15; ABC News
Ja.mbl• lcttOkNo. t:~·,~ontlin!ng110~MJuiii.IU'tlllbltforl 1.7&amp; postpald
6 : 55 - Ch uck Whl te Reports 10;
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
tromJumlllt,clothl.n•wa()-IP"r Bod4,Nor. "~# 1 J.D7141.1nclud.yowr
News 13 : 7:QO- Today 3, 15 ; Good
20.
nan.., addr•••. alp 1:01.. • •d ~·_.._.. _
' ,_cl·: ~~
to N•••P•~ ~
Morning America 6, 13; Wed6:30--NBC News3, 15: ABC News 13;
nesday Morning 8; Batman 10;
Andy Griffith 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Three ~ · OOQes - Litlle Rasca1s ,17 .
Father Knows Be st 17 ; Over
Easy 20.

rr

•'SIM111ewn
: contents

RUBBERBACK CARPn

742-2211

Yestent.y'• Alllwer

formally

10 Notched

23 Was overly

.

DOWN
I Lorboanl
! Disinterested
SOver and.

lsh cool&lt;ery
13 European
over
city
t Ganlen tool
14 Gretna Green 5 Swift
viollor
1 r.ennan city
IS Sock part
7 Nigerian
II Child of Loki
tribesman
11 Make.
a Say whal

REASONABLY PRICED caunfoy
house In Pomeroy area. Phone
985-4366 •venlngs.

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN .STOCK

Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992 -~342 1 Eve, 992-2449
Middleport, 0.

I Wall Slftel

front
%1 -

CASH &amp; CARRY

DOWNING-CHILDS

lt AUI!ury

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Complete Sef\llc•. Phone 992 -2478,

992-21.43 .

TV Log .

by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
ll'rlmrose

wanted to Rent

•4·~DUP

CUSTOM BUILT HOME ius! two years old on St.
Rl. 143, only 2 "1iles from Rt . 7. Peaceful J bedroom,
1\h beth , living room with fireplace, dining room,
kitchen and laundry room . Central heat and air con·
dition . Garage and workshop plus a pony barn . Over
J acres wllh spill rail fence . Call for apJ1intment.
$39,900.00.

CRA"ZY_

03 ·1 mo
MADFOftD, AuctlonMr , Compl•te S.rvic.. Pl'tone '"9-2-'87
or 949·1000. Rocine, Ohio,
Crltt Bradford.

Sal" . Inc. 992-572• .

IVAH73"1D WORK ...

Athens

E-C ELECTRICAL Controc:-tor
Mrving Ohl.o Vall.,- region.
She days o weN. , 24 hour~ ••r·
"'ice. Emergency co ils. Call
882.2952 "'11112·3.454 .

Housing
Headquarters

FOR SALE

Stat~ ,

e iLL 15 FIERCELY
INDEPENDENT HE

592·3051

Pomeroy, 0.

'-----~8~-2~6· 1 mo.

742-2593.

HE I'QV,EW IT WOULDN'T
BE EASij' BUT SITTING
A ROUND ALL DAY 15
DRI VINi&amp; MINI STI R

~-r, ~. WINNIE?
• ...OU !.DOT&lt;. WORRIE-D .

IRElAND
MORtGAGE CO.
77 E.

WAY OUT - J acres on
124 with J bedroom
house . Shower
bath,
dr i lled
w e lt ,
wood
burner, cellar, barn, 8.
db I. garage. $17,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 2
bedroom , one fl ., bath,
equipped k it . 2 car
garage 28x50 under con stru ction on .63 acre lot.
$20,000.
25 YRS . OLD - Modern
3 bedroom frame home
with fireplace in The l iv ing, full basement, nat.
gas F .A . .furna ce bath,
and view of river for on ·
ly$20,000. Will F .H.A.
INCOME
2 lots
40x 120, trailer set ·up for
2, large 8 room house
and garage on c orner
lot. Asking S17,500.
FAMILY HOME - 5
acres, 4 bedrooms, 1'12
baths, full base ., .s.s.
sink ,
d i shwasher ,
dispesat , and · oil F .A .
furnace . Asking $30,000.
INCOME
Store
bildlng ,
balh,
clly
wate r, nat . oas heat, on
124 in Rutland tor only
$12,000.
IF YOU WANT A
REASON ABLE PRICE
OUT OF YOUR HOME
CALL "2-J32S.

WINNIE

30 Ye•r Terms
A - No money down
(eligible V@t~rans)
FHA - AS low IS 3%
down tnnn· vetenns )

992 · 2367
216,E. Second StrMt

1nd

Refinance

men's

SYRACUSE . IJ,
double, 2
bedroom, semi furnished,
adults only , no chlldr.tn or
pets . Oeposif992·2749.

LOST: FRIDAY while in Kroger
parking lot, I 7Y! yeor old
spayed f•male dog, block
body w ith white face and feet .
Half husky , bu t smaller wit h
husky markings . Finder will
recei¥e a reword . I.I .Wolfe,

drlvewlys.
!FREE ESTIMATE)

etJNi~A~: I

Rd. Good hunting. timber. all
mineral
r ights . $12 ,000 .

THREE BEDROOM counlry
home on CR 26 . 985-3846 .

Call992-7164 .

( EASY. JUSr eor 8RACEP e,v A

Ph. 992-370 or m -11n
l -1·1mo.

• S 1 mo

wee~doys .

REWARD: LOST in Hemlock
Grove oreo. Medium size dog.
Block , curl y hair. 4 .ite feet,
white on ches t, grey around
muzzle. Answers to "Abner".

STO Ck

NOW AVAILABLE .

FOR SALE OR RENT , Th,oe
Bedroom 1YJ both. country
home. New hoven area .
oher
Spm
30A -882 -2339

Lost and Found

down

unclor Ntw Mana . .ment (formerly Sylvia's
Upholstery),
acron
from Codner's Tu:1c0.

I

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

work ,

UPHOLSTERING

4·5·tk

Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans.

Guller

spouts, some CCHICrttt
work,
Wilks 1nd

A&amp;H

H. L Writesel
Roofing

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Vi I loge Manor, 992-7787.
SENIOR CITIZENS, I bedroom
opts . for
rne t. Rental
ass is tan ce
a v ailable .
'1'12-772 1.

ADD ONS &amp;'
REMODELING

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

rI

I I I I I I I

7: 00-:- Cross.Wits J ; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Porter Wagoner 8;
News 10; Love, American Style
1.5 ; Get Smart 17; Dick Cavett
20,33 .
7:30--Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6;
Mupper Shaw B; The Judge 10;
Family Feud 13 ; My Three Sons
17; MacNeil. Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00- Real People 3; Efght Is
Enough ~.13;
Billy Graham
Crusade 1.5 ; Movie " The High
and the Mighty" 8,10; Movie
"For Love or Money'k ' 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; ,...All
Creatures Great and Small 33.
9.00--Movle "Katie: Portrait ot 8
Centerfold" 3, 15;
Movie
" Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"
6, 13,· Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Wise Parents
Know Their
Children J3,
10:00-Great Performances 33;
News20.10: JO-Oragnet 17; Best
of Groucho 20.
11: 00- News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 1.5; New
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Book Beat 33.
11 : »-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; U.S. Open Tennis
Highlights · 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "Crosscurrent" 10; Movie
" The Toll T" 17 .
11 · 45-S wltc-h 8; 12 : 40- Bdaretta
6,13; 12,55.-Kajok 8.
1:00--Tomorrow3; News 15 ; Movie
" The Gypsy and the Gentleman"
17.
1: 50- News 13 ; l : 20-news 11;
3:40- Mo\lle "The Good Ole
Young " 11.

In 11106, lhe !'eM Slate football
learn slrut out nine """"'""t.s.

In a IM7 football game, Penn Stole
held Syracuae to mln111 107 yards ln

. Mll!hlng.

.

Belore becunlng lhe Indians, lhe
Cleveland bueball loam wu kno'llll '
aslhe SpidenJ, lhe Blueo,lhe Blueblr·
ds, lhe Bronchooand lhe Napo.
·
Catcher Ray Schalk wu behind lhe
plale for four no-bilten, a record.

Bobby Bonds d lhe Cleveland In- 1
dlans """ 111e Callfomll mte lonaliiiiiP champlonlhlp """ )'8al' with •
leap d Zli feetond 31ncbes.
Infielder

Toby llorrab of lhe

Cleveland IndJana allended Oblo Nor·

them Univenjljoooa football adloltr-

shlp.
Rick Walta, ClevelaJid lndlu-·.. ,

paw, 1a111 tile NaUCIIal Anlh1111
beforealt'llpmeap!aotTI1nJIIIo.

�10- The Oail)I.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 4, 1979

~arietta teachers striking
Associated Pr..s
The end of the Labor Day weekend
brought a new rash of teachers'
strikes across the state, while two
walkouts that began last week
continued .
In Marietta, the city 's 250teachers
officially went on strike at 6 p.m.
Monday when their contract
expired, and picketing was to begin
outside schools at 5:30 a.m. this
morning .
Negotiators for the Marietta
Education Association and · the
school board were meeting Monday
night in a last ditch attempt to avert
the walkout.
In Lorain, the 726 members of the
illrain Education Association voted
overwhelmingly Monday night to go
oo strike after hearing a report from
an appointed arbitrator. The
teachers planned to begin picketing
today in thesystem, where classes
are to start Wednesday.
The illrain teachers are refusing
an offer of an increase in the current
$10,500 to $12,300 over three years.
Teachers in Euclid, a Cleveland
suburb, were meeting late into the
night Monday, seeking last-minute
negotiations to avert a strjke
threatened for today. The president
of the 420-member Euclid Teachers'
Association said the teachers will
not work without a new contract.
In Portage Cowtty, 80 Rootstown
Education Association members
went on strike at midnight over
sruaries. The teachers are seeking a
base pay boost from $9,100 to $10,200,
but the board has offered $10,000.

The strike affects 1,550 pupils in
three schools. All grades were to
open as scheduled today, but the
schools were to be dismissed at

said Superintendent Lawrence
Marazza.
The injunction, issued at the
request of the school board, also
limits picketing by the district 's 170
te achers, and m;~kes salary
increases retroactive to 10&lt;\BY or
whatever day a teacher chooses to
come in, said Marazza.

noon.
Teachers in the Springfield Local
School District in Holland, Lucas
County, voted Monday night not to
report to work today, pending lhe
results of an early morning meeting.
The appro]\imately 150 teachers
have been working without a
contra~'\ since January.
• The school board has offered
teachers a 13.2 percent increase
over two years, whUe the teachers
have asked for 17.5 percent.
In the Ohio Valley school district
iri Adams , Highland and Brown
cowtties, negotiations between the
school board and the local
educationassociation
were
continuing Monday night, said
Assistant Superintendent Lavonne
Gaffin.
.
Most of the 300 teachers have been
oo strike since sch.ool opened Aug. 27
in the 6,~udent district. Classes
have been held in the 18 schools, but
attendance has been sparse. The
dispute centers on wages and fringe
benefits.
An impasse hearing Is scheduled
for Wednesday in the contract
dispute in the 3,400-pupil Galion City
school district in Crawford Cowtty,
where teachers struck Aug. 29.
Crawford County C001mon Pleas
. Judge Nelfred Kirnerline issued a
preliminary injunction Friday
ordering teachers and the school
board to participate in the impasse,

RECEIVES SCHOLARSHIP Lowell Ridenour, oon of Mr. and
Mn. James RldeiiCIW', Cbetter,
hal ~elved a ~ ~&lt;:bolanblp
from lbe Nallooal Councn,
Daugbten ol America. Ridenour
wW be attending Rio Grode College lbll faD majorlug In accounllng 111111 bullneoladmlalllniUoa.
He 18 a 1179 lfBduale ol Eutern

•

16 die zn Ohio

\

By The Associated Pr.. s
At least 16 people, including four
pedestrians and one bicyclist, died
in 16 separate traffic accidents in
Ohio over the Labor Day weekend,
the Highway Patrol said Tuesday.
The patrol counted highway ·
fatalities in the state from 6 p.m.
Friday wttil midnight Monday.
The dead:
·
MONDAY
ROSSI"'RD - Grace Daley, of
Toledo,lige not given, a passenger in
a single-car accident in the Wood
County community of Rossford.
SUNDAY
SANDUSKY - Robert B. Sidner,
64, of Sandusky, when the bicycle he
was riding collided with a car on a
Sandusky street,
JAcKsoN - Timmy A. Kent, 12,
of Coalton, pedestrian hit by a car on
Ohio 93 in Jackson County.
MARION - Tanuny S. Troiano,
16, of Carey, in a ooe-car accident on
a Wyandot County road.
CIRCLEVILLE - Mark Ellyson,
20, of Ashville, in a one-car accident
oo U.S . 23 in Pickaway Cowtty.
SATURDAY
NEWTON FAU.S- Troy F, Ginter,
6, of Newton Falls, pedestrian hit by
a car on a street in the Trumbull
County community of Newton Falls.
TOLEDO- Sonja Atoy Riley, age
not given, of Toledo, pedestrian
killed in a hit .. kip incident on a

lOgb School. Hlo molber, Ealber

Toledo Street.
HAMILTON Robert M.
Landenwitsh, 31, of Westchester, in
a two-car accident on a Butler
County road.
XENIA- Thomas J . Espy , 22, of
Dayton, when his motorcycle
wrecked on a rural road two miles
south of U.S. 35.
CLEVELAND - Larry Richard,
27, of Euclid, when his auto colUded
with another vehicle on a city street
in Cleveland.
CLEVELAND - Larry Moore, 34,
of Bedford Heights, in a three-car
crash on a city street.
CINCINNATI- Jason Phillips, 3,
of Cincinnati, pedestrian struck by a
car on a local street.
FRIDAY
BOWUNG GREEN - Daniel D.
Meeker, 28, of Portage, when his
automobile collided with another car
oo Ohio 281 in Wond County.
WEST UNION - Betsey Blevins,
40, of Blue Creek, when ·the car in
which she was riding collided with
another automobile on U.S. 52 near
the Scioto-Adams Cowtty line.
BOWUNG GREEN -Charles D.
McDaniel, 23, of Toledo, in a two-car
crash on Ohio 582 near 1-75.
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - William C.
Burgy, 33, of Bellaire, when he fell
from the back of the pickup tr1,1ck in ·
which he was riding .

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

I N. W. ·coMPTON. O.D.
I
OPTOMETRISt

"i

l

I

1
'I OF'FICE HOURS : 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
! . . _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ..;. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
II
' ONTHURS.) - EASTCOURTST., POMEROY .

I

•

Ridenour, and hlo two grandmolben Elizabeth Hayes llld
Pauline Ridenour, are members
of Cbelter CDW1cll3Z3, Daugtben
of America.
HOMECOMING SERVICES
Chester Nazarene Church will
hold a homecoming Sunday Sept. 9.
Services will 'be held at the regular
hours with a basket dinner at noon .
A singspiration will be held at 1:30
p.m.
MEETS TONIGHT
Pomeroy Council will meet this
evening at 7:30 pm. at Pomeroy
City Hall.
LODGE TO MEET
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F. and A.M .,
Will meet In regular session at 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at the hall. All
master Masons are invited.

HAIFA, Israel (AP) - Egypt's
Anwar Sadat sailed into Haifa
harbor aboard a presidential yacht
today for his first meeting with
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem
Begin in two months, and he
declared Egypt has a "moral
commitment" to resolve the
Palestinian issue. Sadat says he will
insist on a comprehensive
settlement by year's end ,
Setting an optimistic and friendly

I

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPT 1
Harold Ault, Alice Booten, Stanton
Burdette, Roy chamberUan, Anna
Crabtree, Lewis Dailey, Tammi
Dalton, Jan Erwin, William Ferrell
Il, Alice Globekar, Norma Jones,
Mrs. Robert Martin and son, Frank
Maynart, Helen Mcclees, Helen
Niday, Lewis Sarson, Roy Smith,
William Saunders, CarlSocrell, Lena
Thomas, Chuckie Walker, Anthony
Ward, Jerry Zirkle.
BIRTHSEPTl
Mr . and Mrs. Greg Short,
daughter, Crown City.
DISCHARGES SEPT. 2
Rhoda Cahoon, Barbara Collins,
Dennis Cook, lnna Cooper, Linda
Davis, Michael Easter, Kenneth
Emerson, Mildred Evans, Janet
Gardener, Lewis Raburn·, Mrs .
Robert Lambert and daughter, Mrs.
Paul McElroy and daughter .
Dorothy MacKenzie, Lewis Pauley,
Jeff Tayborn , Robert Williamson .
DISCHARGES SEPT. 3
Delbert Duhl, illuise Hawkins,
Jason Hill, Ella Jones, Roberta
Maidens, Sarah McCArty, Edna
Rogers, Mary Saylor, Christine
Ward, Gladys Willis. ·
BJRTIIS SEPT. 3

Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Smith,
daughter, Gallipolis Ferry; Mr .
andMrs. Donald Keetoo, daughter.
E:wington.

torie from the outset, the Egyptian
leader told a cheering crowd of
Israelis that he regarded Begin as
"my friend ."
"By now I know Premier Begin,
and I think I can do business with
him," Sadat said before he and his
wife, Jihan, who is visiting Israel for
the first time , were driven to a hotel
atop Mount Cannel overlooking this
northern port city, 20 miles south of
the troubled Israel-Lebanon border.
Israeli jet fighters saluted Sadat's
475-foot-long yacht Horreya with a
fiyover as it entered the breakwater
and docked, escorted by Israeli and
Egyptian warships. The gleaming
white yacht had set out Monday
afternoon from Port Said, Egypt.
Balloons and doves were released
into the sky as the Egyptian
president spoke at a municipal
welcoming ceremony. Tens of
thousands of schoolchildren lfued
the streets and other Israelis
perched on rooftops and pressed
against windows of office buildings
to catch a gllrnpse of him as he rode
through streets festooned with ·
Egyptian and Israeli flags .
Sadat, on this third visit to the
Jewish state, was welcomed by
Begin and Israel's president ,
Yitzhak Navon .
ASKTO~D

••

Marriage licenses were Issued to
Jeffrey Clay Wickersham, 18, Rt . 2,
Racine, and Sharon Louise Crouch,
19, Rt. 2, Racine'; William Perry
Ault, 22, Middleport, and Vicki Kara
Wolfe, 22, Racine.

SEE US FOR AN AUTO
LOAN TODAY

WE'LL ARRANGE THE MOST CONVENIENT
TERMS FOR YOUR BUDGET.
'THE FRIENDLY BANK" .
Walk-Up Teller Window Optn Frid1y Evening I, 5 to 7 p.m.

./JibeM lfallonal Bank
MICidleport,O.

€~

j

.,!
I I

·I II

·I!

•I

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissicns--Bessie
Sellers, Racine ; Russell Little ,
Middleport; Creston Newland ,
Re~dsv ille ; · )')enver
Gibbs ,
Hartford ; Mildred Tubbs, Pomeroy;
Harold Stobart, Racine; Mary
Pickens , Racine ; Harry Swan ,
Portland ;
Bertha
Brickles,
Middleport.
.
Saturday Disc harged--Gary
Scholderer, Mary Brown, Nellie
Crisp, Sandra Sweeney, Delmarva
Kirk, Karen Johnson, Mark McKee,
Joseph Stewart.
Swtday Admissions-Dickie King,
Pomeroky;
John
Murfild,
Delaware ; Robert Van Meter, West
Columbia; Geneva Wise, Vinton .
Sunday Discharges--Bar ry
Stewart, Minford Jewell, William
Morris, Hazel Cullurns.
Monday 1\.dmissions--Helen
Capehart , Pomeroy ; Velma
Imboden, RuUand ; Herbert Noel,
Pomeroy;
Roger
Roush ,
Middleport; Dorothy Hysell,
Pomeroy ; Tammy Custer, Long
Bottom.
Monday Discharges-Matthew
Erwin , Clifford Christy, Paulette
Sigman, Paul Burton , John Murfild,
Clara Pullins.

Sadat-Begin ·meet
for m_or~ talks

. •Thinking About
A New Model Car

..

HOSPITAL NEW!-i

f

...,

. . . . . . ~ .I

.:'I ll(...\

'

·
'

·..f

~~ ..

!Aember F.D.I.C. Deposll_s tnsur1nce Ill 140,000.

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The ladies auxiiiary of the
Middleport Fire Department will
meet Wednesday, Sept. 5, at 7:30
p.m. In charge of serving will be the
executive committee.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy · ER squad was
called Monday at 12:22 p.m. to an
accident on East Main Street.
Herbert Noel was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. The accident is
under investigation.
At 6:16p. m. on Monday they were
called to New Street for Brian Hiles
who was tal.,n of Holzer Medical
Center.

Pomeroy's financial situation very bleak

- 11 ·1

BY kATIE CROW
funds from the two a
ts
t
The 'financial picture for the be
ccoun may~
village of Pomero Is very bleak
.
enoiJI!h to soothe the fmane~al
This wu dlaclo~ t
lengthy woes.
meeting of COWl
Ma :ay night
.. II was emphasized thalpasaageof
0
lllatthe villag lsc In
ed in tw
the l.llncome taz wulmperatlve for
funds to the ~e 1 , 1 ~ 000 Th~ the village to oarvlve.
cemetery fwtd ha: a denctt of
Council dlscll88ed the poalbillty of
, 10 000 and the street fund S6 000
clulrging for escorting payrolls as a
The above figur.. do not u;clude mean ol revenue and also changing
outatandlng bUll to be ald. Cowtcll working time schedules for the
agreed to curb
P d
pollee department. However. the
. many of the ~~~lepay as two suggestions will be taken wtder
Larry Webrung coWldl m~ber
advisement.
NOT ENOUGH FUNDS
announced thai the flnanc~
cmuntttee will meet this e ening at
Meeting with council were Kim
7, 30 pm. was indlca~ council Shields Of Buckeye Hllls and
can trllftsfer11 funds from the general Gregory .Herrick of Burgess and
and p&amp;rklng
ter funds H
Niple regarding the S432,000 HUD
me
· owever • grant to extend the sewage system

.

U:

.
·
and make repall' to the wall on
East Main and Nye Ave .
Laurel St.-eet.
Herrick pre11ented the village with
Shields informed council there
an engineering cuntract which IVill
would not be enough money
be reviewed by council and the
available to do the entire sewagew
village sollcit!JI'.
~Ystert_~ from the Kroger SIDre to and
The cootract provides that the
mcl~mg Kerrs Rwt.
.
.
engineering linn will provide SW'Vey
Sluelda suggested council begm · design, meet EPA approval, ~~elect
larb!g growxl work to get addltional
the contractor, provide services
. fundmg from· ARC ~nd HUD and . during construction and offer
added a compreherllllvew plan was
IJispeCtion.
needed . The village will nOt have to
Couilcil passed a resolution
lay out, any capital Instead · authorizing acceptance of a 701
Pomeroy s ~are. of the expense
grant from the Ohio Department. of
would be Ul kind.
Economic
a.nd
Commumty
Herrick said that the sewage
Development.
system would run from the Kroger
The reaolutioo slated Pomeroy
Store. to three fourths of the way to
cowtcll has determined there e~
the trafflc light atthe intersection nl
a need to study and produce a

•

VOL XXVIII

NO. 100

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

JOHN P. JUSTICE
John P.Justice, 84, Rt. I, Oak Hill,
formerly of Delbarton, W. Va., dled
Monday at 2:30 a.m. at Holzer
Medical Center.
Hewas a retired coal
He was a member of the Rock
House Freewill Baptist Church at
Delbarton and a veteran of World
War!.
He was born March 24, 1895, in
Mingo Cowtty, son ol the late John
P. and Dicie Varney Justice. He was
preceded in death by his wife, Martha Chapman Justice, on July 21,
1979.
Four brothers and one Wier also
preceded him in death.
He is survived by five daughters:
Mrs. Betty Maynard, Oak Hill; Mn.
Cleo Pecco, Belfry, Ky.; Mn.
Esther Lou Hale, Kenova, W. Va.;
Mn. Charlene Wlnters, Lesage, W.
Va ., and Mrs. Vella Lea Payne, of
Ashland, Ky., and one son, John P.
Justice, Jr., of Huntington.
One brother, L. D. Justice, Sr., Apple Grove, W. Va., survives.
Two sisters, Mrs. M Yantlce
Maynard, . Delbarton, and Mn.
Arizona Farley, Columbus, also survive, along with 13 grandchildren
and 17 great-gandchlldren.

miner.

•

BYBOBHOEFLHll
Non-certified employes of the
Meigs , . Local School District,
supported by teachl!l's of the district,
went on !trike Wednesday morning.
The strike Is the second In the
three local school districts of Meigs
County.
Eastern non-certHied employes,
also supported by most of the
teachers of that district, set up
!»cket lines in that district Tuesday

Funeral services will be at 8 p.m.
Wednesday in the Crow·Hulllell
FW!efal Home, Point Pleasant, with
the Revs. Roser Partaoos, Bryan
Blair and Lewia llall dficlating.
Additional services will be held at
the Rock House Freewill Baptl!t
Owrch, at Delbarton on Thursday at
I p.m. where the body will be taken
one boor before service.
Burial will follow in the Mountain
View Memory Gardens, Maker, W.
Va.
Friends !DBY call at the funeral
home after 7 p.m. today .

morning.

Won't support Carter

CLUB TO BU IW CENTER
MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP ) - The
Mansfield Rotary Club is trying to
raise $106,000 to build a senior
citizens day-care center.
It is believed the center would be
the first of Its kind in the nation .
The facility ;:.ould be a part of
Mansfield Memorial Homes Inc .
Geriatric Center, a private nonprofit organization which has been
operal.\ng in Mansfield for several
years.

FOR A LIMITED
TIME ONLY

12 EXPOSURES
Only '2.19

20 EXPOSURES
Only 13.19

24 EXPOSURES
Only '3.27
DOES NOT INCLUDE
FOREIGN FILM

Offer Expires SEPT. 15
CAMERA DEPT. - 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 5, 1979

Meigs schools ·hit by strike

Area Deaths

WHITESVILLE , W.Va . (AP ) Arnold Miller, president of the
185,000-member United Mine
Workers i.rlion, says he would
support any presidential candidate
except President Carter in the 1980
campaign.
Miller endorsed Carter in the last
election but Is now disenchanted
with the Carter administration
because it basn 't shown enough
support for coal, he said.
Miller Wid reparters Monday at a
UMW Labor Day picnic that he
would have no qualms supporting
Sen. Edward Kennedy , should the
Massachuseus Democrat become a .
presidential candidate.
Apparently pointing a finger at the
Carter administration, Miller told
about 2,000 miners and their families
that politicians in Washington were
respoosible for massive layoffs in
the southern Wes t Virginia
coalfields.

enttne

:Teachers honor pickets

RAY MAXON UVENED things up Monday at the annual celebration
of the Chester Fire Department in Cheater. Ray roamed the community
in his clown get-up.

MIWRED E. TUBBS
Mildred Esther Tubbs , 70, 103
Condor Street, Pomeroy, died
Saturday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital ,
Mrs . TUbbs was preceded in death
by her psrents,Stephen and Cora
Young Martin, three brothers' and
one sister. She was a member of the
Pomeroy Methodist Church .
Mrs. Tubbs is survived by two
sons, John of Washington Court
House, and William of Phoenix,
Ariz .; on e sister , Anna Mae
Greenlee, Pomeroy; two brothers,
Leo Martin, South Point, Ohio, and
Herman Martin, P001eroy; nine
grandchildren and two great great
grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services were held today
at 1 p.m. at Ewing Chapel with the
Rev. Robert · McGee officiating.
Burial was in Beech Grove
Cemetery .

and white paint was needed to paint
at the school moe and the newly
paved area . Cowtj:IJ approved the
request.
Also meeting with council was
Jerry Roush regarding ru11 on
Skinners Lane and a broken culvert.
Mayor Andrews Informed Rolllb
that the would look the mtuatioo over
and will try to inake repairs.
Arequest!... a liquor tranafer was
made ·by Richard Stone, DBA,
Mulberry Inn, Lasley St., Pomeroy,
to Clarence Gans, DBA, Mulberry
Inn, Lasley st., Pomeroy. Council 1s
asking citizens input on the request
before making a deruton.
Chief of Police Jed Webster
Continued on Page 11

•

•

at y

e

.
comprehensive plan for land use and
Housing .
The ordinance authorizes the
village to enter into a coo tract for .
assistance provided by the Oh.lo
Depart~ent of Economic and
Community Develpment.
The HUD grant was approved on
the basis that council must adopt a
Fair Housing ordinance, designate
three individuals who are not elected
officials to serve on a Fair Housing
board. The three individuals along
with the Mayor and council
members will attend session to be
held on Sept. 15, from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. at the Lafayette Hotel,
Marietta .
Mayor Andrews reported yellow

PICKET UNES were aet up al aU ICbooll ol the Melp Local School
Dlatrict t1U IJlOI'1linc wbal cl• u were ecW•Jed to lJecln lor the new
achool yeer. The group lhown here were al Melp HICh School. Memben
ci tiU group aald no teechen cro 11 d the pic:ket Une and anly about five

students.

Classes were scheduled to begin
this morning in the Meigs Local
District. However, the noo-certlfled
employ.. strike hit with . a hard ·
im(lllct In 11001e of the Melp Local
Schools. Employes on the picket line
at the Meigs High School said they
counted flve students entering the
building Wednesday morning.
There were no teachers crooslng the
picket line at the high school
although administrators and
secretaries were permitted to enter
the building without any prolllem. ·
Supt. David Gleason reported the
strike Is effective in some of the
schOols. Howevl!l', he said clauea
were going full blast in the Salem
Center and Harrisonville Schoola
with many students and teachers on
hand:
Pickets at the high school said that
no buses arrived at the high school
today . Glea801t said some buses did
rm to the Harrisonville and Salem
Center schools ai\d that some
parents did transport their children
to those scnools.
Teachers of the Meigs Local
District met in special session
Tuesday night at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds
and
voted
overwhelmingly to reject the board
of education's latest offer. The
teachers' negotiation team has
requested federal mediatloo .
President Boonle Fisher stated
that district teachers are bonoring
the OAPSE picket Unes.
The noo-certified employ.. of the
district voted ~1-li in favor of SU'iking
when they met last night at the
fairgrounds.
The group's negotiating team then·
went to the Meigs Junlll' High
School in Middleport where they
conferred with the board's
negotiating team. However, Supt.
Gleason said the board could not
meet the wage request of the noncertified employes, so the strike was
m with picket lines set up at all of

Pomeroy Chamber .
sponsors event
The Ptmeroy · L'lwnber ci Comrnercewill be ~a golf tournament according to an an nouncement by Paul Simon,
president, at Tuesday's noonlunclleon meeting at the MelgJ Inn.
Bob Miller, chairman cl the event,
ezplalned thai the open tournament
will be (leld Sept. 13, on the Ptmeroy
Golf COurae beginning at 1 p.m.
The tournament, which Is open to
the publl~. will be a best ball acramble with a shotgun start, Miller com-

mented.
The person who drives a baU
cloaest to the ·pin on number seven
will re&lt;:eive a trophy. There will be
four man teama with the winners of
the low g.- re&lt;:eiving abi: bells
eech and high gnlll8 three b&amp;IJHach.
Miller said there will be a S2 entry
fee plus green fees . Sandwiches and
beverages will be provided. Those
Interested In (IBrtlclpating are to
contact Miller, Simon or Jim
Frecker.
Simon noted that the blacktop
plaCed over the section cl railrotld
tracka colt f4,tl00 and the money was
donated by local bualneal men.
Simon .also said poles for p&amp;rklng
meten to be placed In the area have
been ordered.
It WBI aJao reported that John An·

.Today
...
. in the world
Ullttmuas generous
Ohio residents contributed
nearly $2;8 million to the Labor
Day effort to raile mooey for
inulctllar dystrophy, a MUIICular
Dystrophy
A.ssoclation
spoke11111811 said.
NaUonilly, the Jerry Lewis
14th annual 21t-hour telethon
ralM!d a total of more than ~
mUllon.
The aasoclation'l regional
director, M.D. Alench, said
seven televilton ablti0118 In Ohio
helped ral.e $2,788,000 dollars to
help fight the dlaease.

.Trials slated
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
second ci the so-called carnival
ContinUed on Page 11

deraon and Frecker wen responsible for the guard rail that was
placed on East Main near the dlp
between the two pmting Iota.
S1mon reported the stage will be
built Cl1 the upper ~~~~~ lot. The
worlt has been hampered by rainy
weather.·
II wu
lbal 111e dlam-

•-IIC'Od

ber 1011 over ft.• • lbe Replla.
Attending were Simon, Frec:ker,

Miller, Dave Jenldna, Dale Warner,
Bill Mayer, Phil Kelly, John Andenton, Bill Gruear, Wealey Buehl,
Jlnna Arnott, secretary, Scott
Lucas, Pat O'Brien, Thereon Johnson, Fred Crow and the Rev. Robert
Graves.

$750,000 suit
filed in court
A $750,000 judgment ICiion has
filed In GaDla County Conunon
Pleas Court by the father ol a seven
year old child fatally injured when
struck by a GaDla Cowtty Local
School bull Aug. 1978.
Micbael D. Moore, administrator
ol the eslate of Seldon Michael
Moore, Plml!l'O)', flied the suit
agalnat the Gallla County' Board of
Education, 220 Jackson Pike;
Gallipolis, and Harold V.
Coughenour, Rt. I, Gallipolis, a former bull driver employed by the
board.
According to the CIIIIPlalnt, the
child was struck by the bus operated
by Coughenour at 3:40p.m. Aug. 29;
1978 on Kelly Dr. in Addison Twp.
Plalntlff charges defendant
Coughenour with willful, wanton
disregard lor the safety of. the
deceased resulting In great pain of
mind and body by the crushing of his
body.
Plaintiff seeks $5110,000 for pain
and suffering ol the deceased,
$50,000 for the alleged wrongful
death and $200,000 as exemplary
&lt;!Jlmages, plus costs.
~n

a.

SQUAD RUNS
• The POmeroy ER Squad was
called Tuesday at 11:06 pm. to tile
Meigs Inn lor Paul Wolfe who was
taken to Hoiter Medical Center. At
6:13a.m. today they were called to
Ann Street for Everett Dailey who
was also talien to Holzer Medical
Center.

,.

the schOols of the district this
morning.
In a statement this morning, Supt.
Gleason said :
·
"At 12:30 a.m . this morning, we
were assured that OAPSE Chapter
17 of the Meigs Local School District
would be on !trike. We deeply regret
, tills happening. This is a sad time for
us all .
"However, we do not want the
pubtic to get down on our OAPSE
people because they are striking.
We believe our employes feel this is
the only way they have to fight
Inflation and the eroding buying
power af the dollar .
"'J'he board has offered a 211 cent
per hour increase the first year and
IS cents the l!eCOnd year. We also
· know that this is not enough to keep ·
~ witlllnDatim, the same inflation
that is eating •way at our salaries.
"I have been in this district now
for two months as your
auperintendent, I have met most of
our OAPSE-- - - et.teachera and I have gained respect
for maJiy of these people. They are
good people, good employes and
gond teachers. Whenever I have
asked or suggested things to any of
these people, they h•ve worked hard
to carry out those requests. We are
working to establish pride in our
people. A strike is not the answer;
strikes hurt us all.
" ! was shocked during our

Weather
Cloudy with a good chance of rain
tonighl. Low in the mid Ill. Mostly

cloudy with a chance ci showers or
thunderstorms Thursday. High near
80. &lt;llance ol rain Is 50 percent
tonight and 30 percent 'l'hur3dsy.
::;.;:;.;.;:;.;:;.::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;.;:;:;:::;:;::;::;.;::::::::=:::::::::::·:::::·:·:·:··

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
lbnaCb Sunday: Fair
lbrvu&amp;h lbe period. llllba In llle
mid 701 to lbe low 1111. Low In lbe
Friday

Ill.
:-:::::::::=:::::=:-::::;:;::;:::;::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::=::::

negotiatims session last night when
the chief spokesman for OAPSE said
they did not care whether the· board
did or did not have any money .
Obviously, the chief spokesman was
wtder stress at that point because
we believe it is essential
At the present time we are in the
process of trying to set up another
meeting With OAPSE Ill' 4 p.m.thls
evening. I sincerely hope we can
solve our differences at this time."
M ·.antime, Supt. Gleason offered
suggestions ,,.. parents if the strike
cootinues. Gleason asked parents to
send their chUdren to school, to pack
lunches lor them with drinks to be
available for a nominal fee at the
schools. He asked that parents unit
to form car pools and that they
contact their child's teacher and ask
them to return to work . He also
suggested that parents volunieer at
schools to do such things as answer
phooes, clean buildings, set up
chairs and other work duties.
GM!._ . lndl&lt;:at&lt;&gt;d

that

ouch

volunteers will be (lllid. pending

board approval at the next special
meeting of the board.
NO PROBLEMS
In the Southern Local School
District schools opened without a
hitch .
Earlier It was indicated that there
were serious problems . in that
district involving the non-certified
employes. However, negotiatiOM
looks place yesterday and as a result
lill of the issues were worked out
except the wage problema.
A
negotiations session was set for Oct.
I7 at which lime any remaining
problems will be discussed between
the board and the noo-cerlfled
employes.
At yesterday's board of education
meeting Treasurer Linda Spencer
submitted her reslgnatioo and that
was tabled by the board. .A special
meeting was !let for 1 pm.
Thursday.

EASTERN STRIKEC4l'!11NUE8
1n \he Eaotem 1..acid Dbirlct
where non-certified employes set up

their picket lines Tuesday, the flntl
day of the second week of clas=lll
11-year-old ch,arged
that district, Supt. RichBI'd Roberta
'•
said from 50 to 100 more student.l
reported for classes today than
in store B&amp;E, theft
yesterday In spite of the strike. He
A 17-year old Middleport youth indicated that attendance in the
was arrested in record time Tuesday district by students today wBB about
following a breaking and entering c1 25 percent.
the Spencer Market, Middleport.
Supt. Roberts said that OAPSE
Roger Spencer, owner, reported employes in.that district are asking
hlo grocery had been broken into for a wage Increase of $1 an hour
~ween 9:15a.m. Sept. 3 and8a.m.
over the next two years. The board
Sept. 4.
has offered the employes a 16
Rolled coins and a cash register percent increase over the next two
containing money were recovered at years which would mean an Increase
11: 10 a.m. Tuesday following the ranging from « cents to 76 cents an
report given by Spencer at 8:28a.m.
hour, depending on the present
Middleport Pollee Olief J. J. · salary of the employe, Roberts
Cremeans reported the 17-year old reported.
was taken into custody and had conRoberts said eniployes are also
fesaed to the breaking and entering.
asking for full hospitalization and
Olief Cremeans highly com- major medical which would be a
mended Hennan Henry of the BCI cost of $82 n year. He said that the
and officer Eric Chambers for their
board is now p&amp;ying S47 a year l&lt;r
excellent and quick work. The each non-certified employe and has
juvenile will face charges before offered to pay $75 a year for each
Meigs County Juvenile Judge during the negotiations. An employe
Robert Buck lmmedlately.
Continued on Page 11

MEETS THURSDAY
The Catholic W&lt;men's Club will
meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. In the
auditorium of the Sacred Heart
Church. Hostesses will be Alice
Freeman, Janet Duffy, Rita Hamm
and Waldnig.

Meigs board approves
•
contract extenszon
•

A resolution approving the eztenslon cl. the present contract with
the Meigs Local Teachers' A.aoclatlon to Nov. 211 was approved
Tuesday during a special selljon of the Meigs Local Board cl.
Education.
It was agreed that a federal mediator would be brought In If a new
contract is not approved by both parties at that Ume. Any pay Increase
granted in the new contract would be retr()llctlve to the start ci the
achoolyear.
·
According to a letter sent by Dennie Wbalen,lormer negotiator lor
the local district to Ted Bibler, field representative af the Ohio
Educati011 ABsoclaticin, It was agreed following a Jwte 21 negotiations
session to mend the present contract through Nov. 20.
In other matters, Barbara Williama, a junior at Ohio University,
has been employed as a p&amp;ra1lrofeasional to conduct a gymnastics
prograrnatMelgsHighSchool for the new sch(!OIY~·
The school has been without the gymnastics program for a couple
af years d\10 to the lack of an Instructor.
Miss Williams was employed when the Meigs Local Board of
Education met In special session Tuesday morning at the high school.
The board also employed Debbie Sibert as a special education
teacher.
Four names were added to the substitute teachers list and they Include Linda Fisher, Andrew Lyles, David Jenkins and Jayne Seelig.
Appropriations were ameiJded.

'\

BOOK COMPILED- Melp County lealage driven llbauld beiu1w
more knowledgeable tbanJai ID the efforll ci Carl Hyaell, juvenile Clftlcer.
HyaeU has compiled a booklet on Ohio Traffic Lawa which has been
distributed to students laking driven educa!lm In the ClllilltYo Hyaell
stated that the booklet.l being dlatrlbuted by the Melp eowlt, Juvenile
Court wW help the youth.of Meigs County to become better Informed aa to
the traffic laWB, therefore may beco111e safer and better drivers. 8ponlon
o1 the booklet are local attorneys, Pomeroy NaUonal Bank, Farmers
Bank, automobile Insurance agenta, and The Quality Print Shop.

I'

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