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                  <text>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

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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

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

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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.

€~

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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

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HOSPITAL NEW!-i

f

...,

. . . . . . ~ .I

.:'I ll(...\

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!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

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·
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.

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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

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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'

�' '
, 2- The Dally Sentinel: Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. ~. 1979

Washington Today
ByWALTERR.MEARS
AP Special Corrapoadeat
WASHINGTON iAP ) -It turns out
that even your nice, quiet, typical
Georgia rabbit can do eztraordinary
thingJ when threatened.

other regiOilll.
And if the current odds aren 't
good, they aren ~ as bad as the ones
Carter faced four years ago, when
he was an obscure politician with the
far-fetched idea that he could win
Ukeswlm.
the presidency.
Rabbits are always turning up in · In those days, Carter could have
fables, and perhaps that's the moral
paddled off an annada of rabbits
in the tale ci the Georgia president and nobody would have paid much
and the swimming hare.
attention.
A good ~Y politictsns are
Still, when you look at the
writing off Carter as a one-term problems the president faces, the.
president, figuring that he can~ rabbit·probably got off easy.
rebuild confidence in his leadership
It doesn ~ have to run in 33
before the balloting starts on
presidential primary elections next
presidential nominees six months year, with the polls bleak and the
lnmoow.
economy slumping.
It may be a bit early for that. In· ·
Besides, as Carter tells the story,
cmnbent presidents are not easily It was all splash and no bash.
put aside.
Originally, as Carter aides recoun·
The one-term theory goes that ted the fishing story be told them,
Carter wtU suffer defeats in some of the rabbit, teeth bared, attacked
the early primary elections, perhaps while the president was fishing near
to write-In votes for Sen. Edward M. Plilins lilsi April :Ill, and he repelled
Kennedy, perhaps to California Gov.
it with a canoe paddle. When the rabEdmund G. Brown Jr, and then will bit tale surfaced, Carter seemed
step aside.
amused by the fuss, and described
Tell that to the rabbit.
the beast as "a quiet, typical
Carter's people insist that no mat- Georgia rabbit."
ter what happens in the early going,
But aa the yam got out of band, be
he will not droP from the com· recounted a somewhat less dramatic
petition for the t911l Democratic version of the encounter, saying that
nomination.
it really didn'tatlilck.
And while the first round of
But maybe he'd better keep the
primaries is in Kennedy's New
paddle handy. Come primary time,
England territory' the second set is
there will be some Democrats trying
in the South, where Carter's stan- to take over the whole boat and push
ding has not eroded as )ladly as in
him out.

- --- - - ---- ·- -.. "-- --·

-~ --~-

MY

Business
•
mzrror

I GAN 'T AFFoRD
To BuY i:JA§ - - BARTENDER...

'

9.~ . 6~
---rrr---.

If'~

Middleport-Rutland LL teal¥
finishes second in tourney

.

Editorial opinions,
comments

... MAKE IT
W~~~E,
A
DoUBL£'.
THAT g,TuFF
CAU~E&amp;

CANCER!
•

By Greg Bailey
The Middleport-Rutland Little
League All.Star team took second
plilce in the recent Jackson All-Star
Tourney and fourth plilce in the
Wellston All.Star event.
One highlight of the Jackson. tour·
ney waa the All.Star team sconng 56t
runs In four games. Good pitching
came from Danny Thomas, Shawn
Baker, Eddie Miller, and James

Washington
Report

f\.{'~~:;--.~~

'Ohio Perspective'
stitutional amendment. Voinovich's
fate in the upcoming Clevelilnd elec·
tiona will most likely determine that.
Meanwhile, the 53-year-&lt;&gt;ld Senate
leader, who gets accused of running
the majority caucus by concensus
Instead ci strong leadership, thinks
he is taking a bum rap, especially
the businellll about being devious.
Recently, during an interview in
·his office, Ovasek let some of his
frustrations fly. Some people guess,
incorrectly, at what motivates him,
he said, adding: "I wonder what
things I am doing today that
someone will say . was devious, 10
years from now."
Some of Ocaaek's "bad press"
might be attributed to the inevitable
comparisons with House Speaker
Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D-New Boston, a
forceful, conservative deal maker
who keeps his ducks in a row in a
style closely akin to that of four·
term Rhodes.
But in all fairness, Ocasek deals
.with 18 Democratic senators who
carry more political clout than any
one of Riffe's 62 (out of 99) House
members. The senators feel that
clout, and use it when they don't
agree with Ocasek.
Two used it to cause an em·
barrassing delily this summer in the
House-approved, two-year state
budget bW. That happened in a par·
ty brush ftre, fanned by some GOP
senators who eventually voted for
the budget.
Ocasek says he takes it aU In
stride, adding that "you guys
(reporters) will write what you want
anyway."

Washington briefs...

Berry's World

"'

c;;;;;;;~::J

KID CAN 'r FIND A Jol!&gt;,
INFL.ATION'a KtLLJN6 ME,

By ROBERT E. MILLER
A.uoclilted Preas
Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Senate
President Oliver Ocasek doesn't try
to hide the fact that he wants to be
governor, but the Akron college
professor fairly seethes when.
anyone
suggests he is being devious
Bill Steif
about it.
His dander is up now because of
How to gel dlsabWty
defend its deniai of the disability
recent
media speculation that he
By WWJam Stell
clilim.
will
block,
or try to block, a con·
(l21h of 14 plrll)
-If you are still rebuffed, you may
In addition to providing monthly go to the Appeals Council, a kind of stitutional amendment providing for
checks to retirees, Social Security appellate court of Social Security's the filling of·Vacancies in the office
helps younger workers who become administrative lilw judges.
of lieutenant governor.
disabled.
Lt. Gov. George V. Voinovich is
-Finally, after exhausting all these
Almost 5 million disabled people remedies, you can appeal to the seeking to become mayor of
and many of their dependents receive federal district courts.
Cleveland this fall, and if he is suc·
these payments. The program today
You may wonder what the result of cessful, the No. 2 state job would be
represents about one-ninth of the all this paper shuffling is. Here's the vacant until a new person is elected
Soclill Security budget or slightly box score for 1977:
in November 1982.
more than $14 billion in 1979.
About 1.2 million disability claims
Present law just happens to make
Social Security's definitino of were decided; 721,000 of them were the president of the Senate next in
disability is very strict. The disability disallowed initially. Of those 721,000, line to become governor, should the
must prevent the beneficiary from slightly more than 100,000 were rever·
governor resign or die in office when
engaging in any substantial gainful sed somewhere along the line.
there
was no lieutenant governor.
activity for a year or more or be ex·
(NEXT: Retirement earnlilgs)
Republican
Gov. James A. Rhodes
peeled to end in death.
will
be
70
Sept.
13, but his health apPayments do not begin until the six·
parently is ellcellent, and the odds
th month ol disability. They continue
lor Ocaaek being vaulted into the top
until the beneficiary dies or recovers
office by political accident appear
and returns to work.
slim.
The first step in applying for a
Still, there are those who woo 't
disability benefit is to get in touch
with your local Social Security office.
listen to arguments that there is no
After the initial paperwork is done,
need to provide for a way to fill the
your case will proceed along these
lieutenant governor's office when It
lines:
is vacated. Indeed, there are some,
NEW YORK (AP) -As seen by including Ocasek, who claim it ·
- A state agency, usually your
state's voCational rehabilitation agen· some, including congressmen and
riJight be wise to abolish tb! job. Lit·
cy, will judge whether you are businessmen, it is the British tie power accrues to it, including the
"unable to engage in any subslilntial di$ease.
youthful, energetic Voinovich.
gainful activity by reason of a
To others, including Dennis
Ocasek, among others, is not sure
medically detenninable physical or Carney, head of Wheeling- if an attempt will be made for a con·
mental impairment that is expected Pittsburgh Steel Corp., it "is as
to last 12 months or to end in death." American as an apple pie."
1bose are the law's words.
"It" is the government loan
The agency will consider medical
guarantee
to private parties, such as
and other evidence produced under
Wheeling-Pittsburgh
and Lockheed
guidelines laid down by the Social
Aircraft,
and
maybe
also
to Chrysler
Security Administration.
Corp.
and
eventually
to other
WASHINGTON -(AP) - Health
- If you are rebuffed by the state
and environmental officials have
agency, you can file a second time. financially troubled companies.
Defenders insist that such support
concuded that the Potomac River,
That filing goes to a separate recon·
for years so polluted it was called an
sideration section ol the Social is in the nation's best interests
open sewer, now is clean enough for
Security Administration, often with because, among other things, it
secures the jobs of workers and
additional evidence.
swimming.
-If you are again turned down, you helps maintain physical plants the , A position papj!r approved by
can appeal to one of the Social country might need in an
Security Administration's 648 ad· emergency.
mlnistrative law judges.
Opponents say the guarantees
taxpayer solvency.
These judges do not operate on the perpetuate poor management,
It was the request for federal aid
adversary theory of normal courts. create unfair competition for
by
Chrysler Corp. that exploded the
You simply present your case in the healthy companies , discourage
issue out of the classrooms of
best p~&amp;ible light; the government private risk-taking, and eventually
academe and into the kitchens and
does not appear before the judge to endanger the federal treasury and
living rooms of America, that .gave it
vivid rather than abstract
dimensions.
For years, however, the issue has
sm9ldered, and even some
opponents of federal aid have been
adding their bits of kindling,
allowing
their
philsophical
objections to be routed by personal
interests.
Today the nation probably has
more of "it" than many people
realize. Government guarantees
secure many home mortgages,
bolster the borrowing power of New
York City and provide for rail
passenger service.
They've helped Lockheed Aircraft
through a financial crisis, and now
they are helping a steel company,
Wheeling-Pittsburgh, to finance the
construction of a rolling mill, to the
distress of its competitors.
SUch government activity, said
Robert Slater, president, can only
discourage the commitment of risk
capital, such as the $85 million his
company recently spent to
modernize its railmaking facility .
CF&amp;l sued.
But won 'I the new facUlty produce
jobs? Not necessarily. It might cost
them too, according to Rep. Jack
Kemp, R·N.Y. Already, he said,
workers are idle at a Bethlehem
Steel
rail facUlty in Lackawanna,
d l m l, lf'lfl&gt;
N.Y.
While details of the Chrysler
"Remember how we always laughingly wonpackage
haven't been revealed, it is
dered 'how the other half lives'? Soon we 're
conceivable that even more direct
going to find out. "
aid - rather than. just loan
guarantees
- could be requested .
- · - ~~ -- . ---,··-· ··--··-

SOCIAI_J Sl~Cl~ITY

--::::=:::::::::.. . ::::

Herbert L. Tucker, director of the
city's Department of Environmental
Services, says the city could
establish a safe swimming area
along a two-mile stretch of the river.
That verdict caps a 14-year
cleanup that cost three quarters of a
billion dollars.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
William Proxmire, D·Wis., says
upcoming Senate action on the
second concurrent budget resolution
is "the single most important ·
economy test the Senate has faced
since I the passage of the
Congressional Budget Act of 1974."
The budget resolution, he said,
would "bring the deficit back under
control by forcing the Senate
authorization and ap(!rOJ!riations
committees to reverse earlier big
spending decisions. This would be
accomplished
through
a
reconciliation bill that would amend
legislation already passed and
curently pending."
- - WASHINGTON (AP) Washington's subway system began
Sunday operation this week · and
carried an estimated 17,000 to 20,000
persons to the opening game of the
Redskins' football season.
"As of today Metro is operational
365 days a year - and some years,
366," Metro spokesman Cody
Panstiehl said Sunday.
- - WASIDNGTON (AP) - A
regional economist has been
appointed to assist the Suthwest
Border Regional Commission in its
efforts to improve the standard of

~ Chrysler Corporation bas
been driven to the brink ci economic
diSaster, and its cries for help can be
heard quite clearly here in
Washington.
Granted, many of Chrysler's own
executive policies have steered .the
nation's tenth largest corporation
toward what could prove to be its
financial ruin. But II meddlesome
federal government, intervening
like a backseat driver, lias done
much to put Chrysler on its present
colllsion course.
The most recent reports put
Chrysler's projected 1979 losses at
StiOO million to $700 milllon. After
losing $260 milllon in the year's first
sill months, Chrysler bad its
problems compounded when auto
sales dropped off sharply in July and
August as a result of the oli shortage
and rising gasoline prices. In spite ol
Its present difficulties, America's
number three auto manufacturer
maintain!l that It will be out of the
red and into the black In 1981. If it
survives until then.
The foundering corporation has
aaked the government to bail It out
with a $1 billion caah advance. In
general, such a request should
receive an equlvocable "no" for an
answer. The capltallat system
remaina strong and derives its
power to advance fnm the basic
principles ci free enterpriae. Cor·
porations that are efflcie .t survive;
thoee that aren't do not. Cor·
porations that are respoiWve to coo·
swner demands and sensitive to ec·
nomlc fluctuations prgeper; those
that aren 'I do not. Thla Is as it should
be to produce an economlc system
which Iii stable and enremely ef •
flclent.
However, the American en·
terprise system has beel1 scmewhat
less than free because of ellcessive
government Intervention and
regulation. In 19110 industry will pay
fl:!ll billion to comply with government regulations. The auto industry
is hit particularly hard. Last year,
federally
mandate

By Clarence
Miller
d features added an ave~e ci •
to the cost of every new car - or a
total of fl billioo In accelerating
Chrysler's economic woes.
The Chrysler Crporatioo ltseU, ci
course, is far fnm blameless. But it
bas been making a concerted effort
to help itself out of ita preaent
economic doldrwns. In recent w~
Olrysler haa come up with rltl
million to lend financial support to
Its 4, 733 dealership~ as they cut
prices and offer rebates in an at·
tempt to shrink their bl011ted In·
ventories. Reportedly, the company
is plilnning to dlsnlas 5,000 whitecollar employees. Already 23,1100
productioo workers have been laid
off.
If the government is ever to ball
out a corporation - and I lor one
question whether they ever llhould it must be one that is doing all it can
to help itself. This in fact, llhould be
the basis for almost all financtal aid
programs, be they on a large or
small scale. In thia case, the
Chrysler problema are large acal,e.
Half a million jobll depend on
Chrysler's staying above water.
A!ihougb past experlencea ~,tar
from comprehensive, It does appear
that a bailout could prove beneflclal
to most - including the. tupaytnc
public. When Lockheed waa ball~
out, it stabilized financially .and tile
fees it paid to the Treasury allowed
the taxpayers to make a profit.
When PeM Central waa left to fend
for Itself it flopped, went bankrupt,
and the government waa left to subsldile Amtrak and Conrail, this time
costing the taxpayers many dollan,
Add to this the fact that we do not
ll:nolor bow much effect a Chrysler
collapee would have oo the economy,
and a bailout does present Itself as
an option worth conslderatioo.
If the government is going to in·
tervene In the free enterprise
sysfem.the conditions calling for the
intel'ventioo must be exceptional.
The Chrysler crtais may turn out to
be·just such a cause.

Capital ideas
ByTOMRAUMN
A&amp;Jociated Preu Writer
House · and Senate energy con·
ferees, among the scrappiest and
most long-winded combatants in
Waahington, are staging· a return ·
bout.
The main event: an attempt to
provoke a compromise standby
gasoline-rationing and energy con. servation bill. Work geta underway
within the next few days.
ParticipantS are lilrgely the same .
two groups that fumed, argued and
battled their way to a compromise
energy bill in 1978.
.That effort began in 1977 and it
was nearly a full year before the
work was finished and a compromise produced.
, So when congressional leaders
predict a short conference, as they
have been doing, few oo Capitol Hill
seem to be taking them seriously.
House-Senate energy conferees
deadlocked and brawled 110 much in
their lilst encounter it took 11M! in·
tervention of President Carter to
cool tempers and keep the talks
from collapsing entirely.
Squaring off for the new battle are
the same leaders of the Senate and
House teams as in 1977·78: chairmen
Henry M. Jackson of the State
Energy Conunittee and Harley 0.
Staggers of the House Commerce
Cwnnlttee.
Jackson, a Democrat, declared
from the outset that he thought the
House"ji88Sed rationing bill was
"riddled with loopholes"and "com·
pletely unacceptable" to either him
or the Senate.
A top Jackson aide, promised

living along the U.S.·Mexican
border.
Dr. Gilbert Cardenas, associate
professor of economics at Pan
American University in Edinburg,
Texas, was selected for the post.

anonymity, W88 Baked ~everal days
ago how long It ·would take to reach
agreement. "~ long as It takes for
the House side to agree to dump all
the garbage the House put in the
bill," the aide said.
I
Staggers, a West VIrginia
Democrat, also approached the
negotiations with his poeltion clear.
"I'm against all forms of guollne
rationing. It only leads to corruption," he recently told a reporter.
Another leading House Democrat
on the panel said he would give his
· assessment of the situation if his
name wasn't used. " I'm fed up with
the whole thing," he said.
Even after agreement is reached
on rationing, there will be other par·
ta ol Presldeut Cal1er 'a energy blll.s
to negotiate.
Congress Is offlclillly expected to
quit for the year Oct. :Ill. But no one
believes that, either. ·
"Probibly, when Congress does
recess around Christmas, the
energy conferees will be left behind
to work," one energy aide said.
That happened, too, In 1977, with
·dubious results.
Not only did the Congress not
produce a compromise biD 88 a
result of staying in town dwing the
Christmas recess, but an un·
fortunate well·wlaher dreased as
Santa Claus mistakenly walked into
the room where the conference com·
mittee waa meeting.
He was booted out of the room by
an Irate Staggers.
After aU, this Is a tough group.

111E DAO..Y SENTINEL
iUSI'!il-1

~~ --:--·~-·-

FINISHEDSE&lt;XlND IN AIL$I'AR TOURNEYThe Middleport All~ finished second in a recent
all«ar tournament at Jackson. Team members were
left to right, Rick Wise, Doug Priddy, Tim Cassell, Max
Blalte, Donnie Becker, James Acree, Trey Cassell and

Scot Gheen. Second row, left to right, Bobby Spires,
Coach Dal~ Clonch, Shawn Baker, Tony Welch, Eddie
Miller, steve trow, Bobby Southern, Kenny Wise, Dan·
ny Davis, Danny Thomas, Tim Wamsley and Coach
Bob Southern.

Meigs County Humane Society, P.O. Box 692, Pomeroy, Ohio .45769
The check enclosed is a donation to help the animals.
- - I would like to become a member of the Humane Society.
- - I ;,..ould like to become a working member ol the Hwnan.g Society.
(--make runs - - - care for animals-- work at Thrift Shoppe)
- --1 would like to be put on the waiting list for a pet.
Dog- - - Puppy--- Cat - - - - Kitten - - -Phone No . . .... .
ALL DONATIONS ARE TAX DEDUCTIBLE

Richmond 2, Syracuse 1, series

tledH

.

Wednesct.y's G•mes

cotumbus at Tidewater
Richmond at Syracuse .

It's big boy 'Barna over Georgia Tech
By Major Amoo B. Hoople

Marshall30Toledom (N)
Marylilnd 21 Villanova 13
Miami (0) 26 Ball St 21
Michigan 42 Nrthwstrn 14
Mlchigan.St 351Uinois 12
Minnesota 211 Ohio 6 ·
Miss St 28 Memphis St :Ill (N)
Missouri 32 San Diego St 28
Montana St 23 No Dakota 13
NewMeJ:St22Drake21 (N)
NCarolina 28 SCarolina 13
NC St 28 E Carolina 21
Ohio St 'l1 Syracuse 10
Okla St 24 NTea St 22
OregonSt 17NMellico 14 (NJ
Pacific 16 UTEP 14 (Nl
Purdue 35 Wl.sconsin 23

Peerleu Prognosticator

Egad, friends, in these days of the
expanded 11-game schedules, the
"Big Boys " - kaff-l!af f - Iose II tile
time in going after each other.
It used to be the major powers·
would take on a few warm-up op··
ponents before tangling with their
peers -urn -!nun ph !
But here we are in just the second
week of the fledgwig season and, on
national 1V. mighty Alilbama will
meet an ellcellent Georgia Tech club
at the latter's historic Grant Field
(1914) in Atlilnta.
No less than eight of the teams in
the Big Ten Conference are clilshing
head-to-head. And how about some
of these others for openers?
Southern Methodist vs. Rice in a
SWC encounter; · Arizona State
entertaining CaU!omia in a Pac 10
meeting; Colorado, with Chuck
Fairbanks returning to the Col·
leg! ate rank.l from the pros, en gag·
ing Oregon ; Ohio State, with Earle
Bruce taking over from the legen·
dary Woody .Hayes, playing host to
Syracuse; and Pac 10 powers
Southern California and UCLA
meeting SWC foes Teus Tech and
Houoton teopectively ! Jove ' What a
Saturday this will be I .
In the big one oo.the mligic lantern
- heh4leh- we look for Paul " Bear"
Bryant to rurr his all-time !'KOrd to
285 victories, n defeats and 18 ties
as his Crimson nde beats Georgia
Tech, 21·13. 'Twill be a battle of ell·
cellent quarterbacks - with Stead·
man Shealy· of Alilbama out~ueling
sophomore Mike Kelley of the 1
Yellow Jackets . .
In the Big Ten, here Is bow the
Hoople System sees 'em: Purdue's
Boilennakers will whip Wisconsin in
a good game, 35-22; Michigan State
will have an easier time with TI·

Transactions
TUISdiV'S

Bv 1he Assoclatfll Press
BASEBALL
N•tlonal Leo~gue
SAN DIEGO PADRES - Named
Jack McKeon assls1ant general

manager .

Hockey
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACK HAWK S

"'
linois, 35-12; the same goes for
Michigan aa tl!ey romp past Northwestern, 42·14; the Indiana-Iowa
fray is a toss-up with the Hoople nod
going to Indiana, 2~:!ll.
In other contests, watch for SMU
quarterback Mike Ford to put on a
dazzling display 88 his Musl.angll
stomp Rice, ~12. and Arizona state
to get olf to a good start by edging
California, 24-14.
In a p&amp;ir of ' 'homecomings" so to
speak, CHuck Fairbanks, who made
his conference debut as a head coach
at Oklahoma, will return to the Big a
to lead the Colorado Buffaloes past
invading Oregon, 22·14, while Earle
Bruce, a '53 graduate cl Ohio state,
returns to lead the Buckeyes against
SyraCU!e. It will be a happy
homecoming for Bruce 88 the
Bucks.win 21-10. Har-rumpb!
Southern California's Trojans, the
Hoople choice for No. I, will prevail
over host Texas Tech, 33-21, and
Houston will prove to be a rude guest
- kak.Jiaff - as it defeats UCLA,
~:Ill. in the Los Angeles Coliseum.
In worthy contesta, you '11 find
Minnesota dumping Ohio University, 28-6; North Carolina taking the
measure of South Carolina, 26-13;
North Carolina Slate edging Intrastate rival East Carolina, ~21; and
Bobby Bowden's strong Florida
State Seminoles whipping the
Southern Mississippi Golden Eagles,
~17.

In perhaps the most spectacular
game of the day - er, make that
nlglt - the Cougars ci Brigham
Signed Warren Skorodenski, goa lie.
MONTREAL CANADtENS Young will surprise viaiUng Tell88
Named Bernie Geoffrion head coach
A[M, 23-14. Watch for the Cougars'
and signed him to a mulll ·year con·
Marc Wilson to have a field day! Or
tract.
PHILADELPHIA FLYERS is It - um-launpb .field night?
Named Bernie Parent a goallend ing
Now go on with my forecaat :
coach .
SEPT. I
BASKETBALL
Air Foree 23 Tulsa 17
Notional
Baoketboll Association
Alilbama 21 Ga Tech 13
CLEVELAND CAVALIERS
ArizSt
24 Calif 14 (Nl
Signed E t,.more Smllh, center.
Baylor 31 Lamar 12 (N)
Named Morris McHone assistant
coach.
Boise St 18 U1g Bch St 14 (N)
NEW JERSEY NETS - Signed
BowlingGr33E Mlch 13
Cliff Robinson, forward .
BuctnelliO Dayton 7
FOOTBALL
National Football Le1gue
BYU 28 TellAiM 24 (N)
DETROIT LIONS - Signed Jerry
Cent
Mlch 24 wMlch 12
Goldsteyn, Quarterba ck, and Ernie
Cltadel32 Prsbytrn 14 (N)
Jackson , defensiYe back .
NEW YORK GIANTS - Signed
Clemson 33 Furman 18
Tom Neville, offensive tackle, and - Colorado 22 Oregon 14
Dwight Scales, wide receiver .
Delaware 38 Rlsland 12
Released
Todd
Christensen .
fullback, andOan Fowler, offensive
Fla St35So Miss 17 (N)
tackle.
Gnnbing28MrgnStt4 (N)
WASHINGTON REDSKINS Houston 28 UCLA :Ill (N)
Signed Lonnie Perrin, fullback , and
Indiana 24 Iowa ~
John McDanie l, wide receiver.
Placed Ike FOrte, running back, on
Ind St 31 Wichita St 21 (N )
the Injured reserv~ list. Waived Kris
KentS!
17East Ky i4
Haines, wide re c elv~r .
Lafayette 211 Gettysburg 7
COLLEGE
ADELPHI - Named Laurence
Lehigh 21 West Chester :Ill
Keating sports·fnformat lon director .
Louisville 35 Va Tch27 (N)

:: :;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:; :;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::: : ::;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;: ;:;: ; :; :;:; :;:;:;

Tuesday's Gamn

Cleveland s, Detroit 3
New York 3, Boston 2
Minnesota 5, Kansas City I
Chicago 10. California 7
Te•as 5, SeaMie 2
Only games scheduled
WednHday's Gemes
Toronto (Edge 2· 1) at Baltimore
(D. Marll""z 14·12)
Detroit 1Rozema 3·3) at Cleveland
(Svttlner 8·3)
Boston (Stanley 15·9) at New York
(John 18-6)
Kansas · City ISplitlorff 13·141 at
Minnesota (Gollz12-10)
Chicago (Trout 8·7) at California
(Knopp 3·3)
Milwaukee (Caldwell 1~ · 5) at
Oakland IKeoughO·U)
Te•as (Jenkins 13·11) at Seal!le
(Dressier 0·1)
Thursday's Gomes
New York at Detroit
Chicago at California
Only games scheduled
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
82 55 .599
MOntreal
77 54 .588 2
St . Louis
74 61 .548 7
Chicago
71 6-4 .526 10
Philadelphia
69 68 .504 13
53 82 .393 28
NewYo~k
WEST
Houston
78 60 .565
Cincinnati
78 61 .561
'"
Los Angeles
6S 73 .• 71 13
San Francisco
61 78 .439 17'h
58 81 .417 :zo•;,
San Diego
54 83 .39. 23'12
Atlanta

TuesdiY 1S G1mes

Montreal 5, ~ew York 1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Cliff
charged Into the lead in the stretch
and held on for a one-length victory
over Wallys Tar in the featured race
at Scioto Downs on Tuesday night.
The winner, circling the mile in
2:03 1.0, returned $14.60, $6.40 and
$4.20. Wallys Tar paid $7.60 and $4.110
for second and Newstime Red, $3.60
for show.
The 6-5-2 first race trlfecta was
wortli $J,692.30.
A crowd of 3,796 wagered $306,570.

!

·
'
:
.

® (:1.\SS RIXH

PU'S FREE Cl:S'f()~( FEATl'RES!
Design your own class ring
t'i n ·hu r 'i l
undt&gt;r ~ IUIII'

Sunlih· ·

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I!H IM: 1~ Till S All Tn (;f:T Till S OHEH WHE N
YO ~ OIWEK ~· o u R SILAOI UM KI~G .

JOHN ROBERTS
m•m·~•·or·· . . . ,
CLASS RINGS

~~·

••
•••

'QJetieler.s

L . __

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Blsobltll AI A Glance
lly The Auocioted Pren
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W.L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
90 46 .662
Milwaukee
83 56.597 8'1•
Bostoo
78 57 .578 11'1•
New York
75 60 .556 W h
Detroit
73 66 .525 18 '1•
Cleveland
71 68 511 2&lt;Ph
Toronto
+I 9• .•319 •7
WEST
California
7S 6-4 .5.40
Kansas City
75 65 .529 11h
Min,..sota
71 66 .518 3
Te•u
68 71 .•79 7
Chicago
60 n .431 1•
58 82 .414 17'h
Seattle
Oakland
46 93 .331 29

SCIOTO RE'lULTS

;.~ ~D~~U)Il':\1

mE . MAIN· POMEROY

st. Louts 6, cntcago 4
Son Funcisco3, San Diego 1
Atlanta 7. Cincinnati 6
Houston 9, Los Angeles •
Only games scheduled

w.-sntl•y .. Clemes

Montreal (Schatzecler 9·4) at
Chicago cReuschel16·8)
New York (Swann 12-11) at
' Phll!ldetpnla (Christenson 5·10)
Los Angeles (Sutcliffe 13-91 at
Atlanta (P. Niekro 17· 18)
• Pll!sburgh (D. Robinson 7-61 at St.
LOUiS (Denny 7·10)
San Diego (Jo""s 10·11) at
Houstoo ( K . Forsth 9·6)
San Francisco (Montefusco H)al
Cincinnati (Norman 10·10)
Thursday's Gomes
Montreal at Chicago
New York at Philadelphia
Los Angeles at Atlanta
San Francisco at Cincinnati
Pillsburgh aiSI . Louis
Sao Diego at Houston

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JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••••• !-.'!·}1.49
Tueoday's Sports Ill Briel
By The Auoclaled Press

BARnETT LS 59~
E•••••• ss~ PEARS •••••••• ~.

TENNE

NEW YORK (AP) - .Turuny
Qxmors and Chrts Evert Lloyd
advanced to the quarterfinals of the
U:S. Open tennis championships.
Coonors, the defending champion,
defeated lith seeded Brian Gottfried
6-2, 1~. 6-4, 7.0 while Lloyd, the
defending women's champion, came
from behind to defeat Sherry Acker
H, s-o; 6-2.
In other matches, Roscoe Tanner
defeated Tim Gullikson $-3, 6-4, 7.0;
Pat DuPre upset seventh seeded
Harold Solomon 3-6, 6-3, 6-2, H, 6-4,
and thir&lt;keeded John McEnroe
topped unseeded Tom Gorman 6-2, 64, 6-1.
In other women's matches,Tracy
Austin outlasted Kathy Jordan~. 61, 7~; Sylvia Hanlka of West
Germany
surprised
Dianne
Fromholtz of Australia 6-7, 6-1, 6-1,
and Australian Kerry .Reid edged
Anne Smith ~. 7-5, 7~.
....................................

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Tbe swimming seasoo at Lon·
doaPooi In Syracuse bas been ell·
leaded to lhrougb Ibis comlag
weekend, It was aonolllleed today
by Pool Maaager Hermaa Lon·
doa.
London said the h0Ul'11 the pool
will be open will depend on
weather coodltlou aad wben
scboob are In session. The swim·
mlDg seuon bt belag extended
tbe additional week becauae of
tbe unusually rainy summer
wbereby 111a11y persons did not
gel u mucb utlllzaUoo ol thelt
111!11100 tm'e8 •• In the JIBll~ London said.

••••
~
•
I: i • •

...

Jackson All.Star team, the same
team that beat them at the Jackson
tourney.
Good defense by the whole team
characterized the play by the locals
In the Wellston games. Steve Crow,
Donny Becker, Bobbie Southern,
Miller, and Gheen all had fine defen·
sive plays, as did the rest of the
team.

:;.;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;.;.;.;:::::;.::::;.;:;::::::::.;:::::::::::::::::::::::;.;:::::::::::::::

Richmond 24 Virginia 19
Rutgers 21 Holy Crou 6
S Illinois 35 SW La 28
SMU 45 Rice 12 (N)
Stanford 39 Tulane 18 (N)
USC 33 Texu Tch 21 (N)
Utah35Hawall l5 (N)
Utah St 211 SJ011e St 17
Wm&amp;Mary 2$ VMI 21
WForest 38 AplchlanSt 14 (N)
Washington 32 Wyoing 23
Wash St 2:5 Arizala 18 (N)
WCarolina 24 Tenn Tch 19 (N)
WKy33Tenn-Cbatt31 (N)
WTeaSt35TeJ:·Arl33 (N)
WVa. 38 Temple 33
(N) Night game

'

e Soll10 AM to Noon

NAME: ...... .. . .. . . ... . .... .. ADDRESS: ... .. . . .... .. . . . . ... .. .

lntemotlonal League
By T~e Associated Press
Playofh
Tuesday Results
.
Columbus 7. Tidewater 4, 15 in ~
nings, Columbus leads best·of ·five
series 2·1

Acree .
A bunch of home runs came off the
bats of Miller, Acree, Sammy Davis,
Tim Wamsley, Steve Crow, Baker,
and Scott Gheen.
In the Wellston tourney, strong pit·
ching by Thomas and Baker took M·
R to the consolation game Saturday
night. Thursday night M-R lost to.the

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.,

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.~, 1979

•- The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort·Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday ,'Sept. 5, 1979

Today's

Sports World
By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent
By Wll..LGRIMSLEY
AP Speelal Correspondent
What magic ooes Earl Weaver
weave that makes him the best
manager in all baseball •
" He has good talent to work with
but he does a heU of a job
manipulating it ," concedes Yogi
Berra, senior Yankee coach who has
managed teams in both the
American and National leagues.
" He seems always to make the right

Billy Martin.
This was the year that was
supposed to produce another
dogfight between the Yanks and
Boston Red Sox for the American
League East title, and look what
happens. Weaver takes an Oriole
team rated no better than fourth in
the preseason prognostications and
proceeds to run away with 'the race.
He has picked the pockets of the
Red Sox and Yankees. Leaving the
moves." .
Labor Day barrier for the stretch.
" Earl gets more out of his players
run, the Orioles had the winningest
than anybody I've ever known, "
record in either league - 90
adds Reggie Jackson . "He's a fun
victories - with an 81&gt;-game lead
guy to be around. He 's got a steelover the Milwaukee Brewers, II
trap mind but he manages to keep
ovet the Red Sox, 15 over the
you loose.
Yankees.
"I" would rate him one in the top
One of Weaver's malo attributes,
two managers in aU baseball. "
in addition to his faculty for
. Reggie, who played in three World
inspiring top effort from his players,
Series at Oakland under Dick
is
patience.
Blessed
with
W~arns. now at Montreal, declined
remarkable baseball instincts, he
to identify the other manager in his
stays with players when others have
private "Big Two ." Olances are it
soured on them.
isn't the New York Yankees' volatile ·
Earlier, this year , there was
pressure to take Steve Stone out of
rotation . Weaver held firm . Stone
came through . A similar situation
arose a year ago with left-bander
Mike Flanagan, who finiShed 19-15 in
1978 and has just won his 2Qth this
year, first to reach that plateau.
The puckiSh, graying bosa of the
Orioles long has been one of the least
appreciated and least decorated of
baseball's field generals.
In II years as Baltimore manager,
loogest with the same club of any
current skipper, he has won five
Eastern Division titles, three
American League penants and on~
World Series.
During the height of his success,
1969-1974 when he had three straight
seasons of 100 victories and over and
led the division live out of six tim~,
he was repeatedly passed 1lver for
Manager of the Year hooors in the
AL. The award finally came to him
in 1977 when the Orioles tied for
second behind the Yankees.
Through 1978, he ranked fourth on
In Black, Wine,
the all-time list of major league
or Brown
managers in won-lost percentage.
As a major league 111anager he has
ONLY '25.00
never been lower than fourth - that
only once,last season - and has not
had a losing season since his first
year as a manager in 1967- 22 years
Middle Upper Block in Pomeroy
straight now above .500 in minors
9 l.m.-5 p.m. Mon.
and majors.
thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.

Lowly Braves knock Reds out of first

Smith will remain with Cleveland team
CLEVELAND ( AP ) - Huge
Elmore Smith, a free agent since the
Na tional Ba s ketball Association
season ended, has elected to remain
a member of the Cle veland
Cavaliers.
The Cavaliers also completed
their coaching staff by hiring
University of Geor gia assistant
Coach Morris McHone to become the
assistant to new Coach Stan Albeck.
The Cavaliers on Tuesday
announted the new contract with
Smith and the signing of McHone,
but did not reveal terms of those
contracts.
Albeck said McHone has been a
defensive specialist in the college
ranks.
11

Morris 1

credentials

are

impeccable in the college ranks. He
is strong in the area of defense,
coming from a winning program
with one of the top defensive coaches
in the country, Hugh Durham,"

1

Albeck said.
Morris now will be able to work
with Smith , who has been among.the
top defensive players in the NBA
when he has beeu healthy . ·,
The 7·fOot center was the
Cavaliers' Most Valuable Player in
the 1977·78 season . The Cavaliers
front office revealed that Smith ,

whose

nickname

is

11

E, ,

incorporated himself as Eimoreco
Inc. before signing.
A 2W-pound, seven-year veteran,
Smith saw limited action with
aeveland last season after suffering
a knee injury during a pre-season
game.
Smith, 30, came to the Cavaliers
from the Milwaukee Bucks in
Januray, 1977, Along with Gary
Brokaw in exchange for Rowland
Garrett and the right to Cleveland's
first round draft picks in 1977 and
1978.
He became a lulltime starter in

January 1978, and in 41 starts that
season , he averaged 17.6 points , 11.7
rebounds and 2.6 blocked Shots a
game. He ranked eighth in the NBA
in blocked Shots.
Smith played his college ball at
Kentucky State and has also played
for Buffalo and los Angeles in the
NBA.
.
McHone, 36, attended Wingate
Junior College before graduating
from Florida State University in
1965. He spent three years coachiing
in the high school ranks, then
returned to Florida State in 1969 as a

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~ "'J4ed '" lhl . , ti ..,. do ,...., out at ,... IC\Iert!MO
~. will oH.. vOo.o yovt cf\ooct .ot • com~• •bl• • t~&lt;m .
~ I YJ&lt;i1041. r-'l« tong tl\f Mme t.avong&amp; IJI 1 rl oncl'eek
!illllf'IICn Wlllenl!n. vou to our cn.ne the ldvert._, •tem '' the
~- ptlc.l ....,tll!n XI q.tvs
bc;h

144 W. 2nd 51.

Pomeroy, OH.

Parts Plus
autosto.-.

Pomeroy,

I

·Gala
Paper Towels

~.

.,.

1~: ..~

:~~

"And it shows, Ann. That's because
San~&lt;_a• Brand is 97% caffein-free.
And 100% real coffee:·

JUSTIN!

lb .

Kroger 0. 5 %
Low f at MI•lk.. .. .........

5.. 7. tB . AVG . WHOLE fRESH

Picnic
Pork Roast .. .. ......

AT LAST
YEAR'S PRICES!!
Ctn.

Baking Hens

FEATURING:

'

ELECTRONIC VIDEO GUARD TUNING
Tuners have no movi ng parts' to corrode, we ar or cause
pi cture problems.

CHROMATIC ONE-BUTTON TUNING

'
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Selec t pre-se t Color Level and Ti nt p lus Picture
Control ac:Hu stment s.

. . gsc
~'~~•·

.

•

• Picture Con1rol

I
I
I
I

If too much caffein bothers you, it's hard to enjoy
good coffee, and still have others enjoy you.
That's why it pays to drink Sanko" Brand Decaffeinated Coffee.
It's 97% caffein-free, but 100% real coffee. So
you can savor rich coffee flavor, without the caffein
you don't need. That way, when you have people
over you can enjoy your coffee. And have them

A

eeseDinner

enjoy you.
' Not only does it
pay to drink Sonk,a"
Brand Decaffeinated Coffee, now it pays off. Take
advantage of a $1.40 worth of coupons offer good
on your next three purchases of Sanko"
Brand. The 100% real coffee that Jets you
G"
be your best.
...

•

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FRESH DRESSED SEA TROUT ......... · ...... · ·
HOltY fARMS , U.S.O.A.INSPECTED

Calif.ornia
Celery

DelMonte
;b.$249 .'D
Fruit Cocktail ...... .
lb.$179

IIU

Mixed Fryer

VACPAK

Del Monte
Corn .......... ~ ........ .

12
Of

.

I

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

1

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- ---------------~~

.
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liMIT 3STALUWITIICHI'OIIUD S7.st AIDITOUL
PfiCMAH (llCLHING TillS ITIMJ
..
l1MITONICOUPONPERf;t.Mil't
_,. _ _ IIDTIIMIJU.UMMt smtl.llliH

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.,.CT n lffUCUU llln alKAl uus

-------~----·--------AVAilABLE OIILY IN STOIU 11111

--

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DELi DfPAITMERTS.
MOT FOODS AYAIIAILE llAM ·7PI

•'

&gt; '

Club
Ice Cream

$ 99
NEW CROP, RED OR GOLDEN

a.

Delicious
·lb.
AppIes ...............

Bog

..

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oo;[:u;;:k"CKIN

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lilt

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White Grapes

ATTHUlGULARPR1CE

16·0~119·

'

...

llUI 01 THOMP'SON

Wheat Bread

.

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SAVE
60'

BUY ONE

I The cotr..lhat leta yau be your belt
Na me
I Tt tilt rttailtr· Gentr1l FOOds Co!p reimbune
·
1
I grocery store. I have enclosed 2
I Y(llj tort~.r~c! value orthlscG~Jplll1 ~rn ~ •tor
A proof of pur·
Add••••
'? ",'~'"• •'rou rtce~n tt ontlt~uleof the speu·
Proofs .of purchase
.
,
I~
lllprceludtlld t l ~ pon reqnsl yllll tu ~llll ln! ·
1. I
I chasers
an rnner seal from any srze
~ dence ~ r ~utrnasethl!rNt uttlltctlll'ytoGenerat
l5 1
I JBr.of Sonkp• Brand. Instant or Freeze·
c1ty
1
,.roo.tsCOip. Cou~on mar ~ot btusil niCI. 11ans·
Cuslomarnnt ''~ 1ny ules
I
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Dned, or a square rnch ~piastre
from
I gz turlldVrJi~lll' rtptoduced.
wlll!rt prtJiubit!d tmd orrestuctlld by
I thel
idof Sank,o Brand Ground .·
Sta te
Zl
1aw CoOOcn'YinUSA f'll ato ~lcoaoou s Gov't
1
Mtal Cull valle, 1120• CG!pon MM n ~ be
I MAIL TO .' So nl(.o · 9 rand Coupon R e · OFFER EXPIRES FEBRUARY 29 1980 OfferJlI'Oid where rohrblled I 1bDI!IJ!CII!
pr!sentN thrw,ll outs/de litndes, ~~~lll s or ~h•s wtiOII'IIIIIrltfil dstribu·
I
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fund Offer, General Foods Corporata~ed or otherwise restncted Atlo~ 6 ·8 ...;eoks lor process!~ request'
1
~enol
our merchandr~e or s~l!tllcally tu1~«11ed bt us to prest~~d:011pons fof rldtr!ljltion
I
11
Box 3007 E ast Court S tr eet
OHer good only 1n U.S A. Puerto Rico and u s Government Installations
red!mph:_ot prop• ~ te~weiland h1mlled couporlt mtrt to Gtn1111fOIICis Corp , ,0
I K ankP:O
·
k
Ill
'
Cert 1ll cal&amp; may not be lranslerred, excha nged or sotd nor rna 11 b&amp;
· 1
103, kl nbkee, tt 60901. n.ts CiMIIIIIMilllfJ " f ir·
I
8 ee, I nOIS 6 0901
reproduced or opled Lr mlt one per family
y
Cllllt olpriiGIIcl IMI!nllt AIJ Ol!ltr
Ctllltitllt" fntH.
I. . _ _GENERAL
•
• ~~ (lJIInllln~•te: lntmHr3D, 1111
40C
___
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_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ CERTI
__
__
__
_ _ _YOUR
__
____ .,
GENERALFOOOS OORPORATION
•I
FOODS
CORPORATION
FICATE
MUST
ACCOMPANY
REQUEST
.

· · .. ..

16·0Z. l0Af KROGER CRACKED

-----------------------------$1.00 coupon refund offer on Sanlcl.l: 1 ScM. 40e;. Sanlal:
~~·~~·n~~~~
~~~~;;~~~~~;;~~od
Brand Decaffemated Coffee at my

4,..$1

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MAil-IN CEATIFICAtE

FRESH

loilll

It pays to be your biii:
1
1

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

FRESH OCEAN PERCH fiLLETS ·· ·· · .. .. ··· .. " ." ··· ... . ..
ChND.t.llMACARONI&amp;

•

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I
.I
I
I
I

FISH"~'jg'Q

.

FRESH POND RAISED CATFISH ............ ................

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11MIT ONE COUPON PER fAM1l Y
C . . . -....I.SIPTIImtr.llliiiiO,IlmHII. ltJt
_.ntt~m~C~~~JnattllKil Tun

Gal.
Pla1tlc
Ctn.

a* 9!

Avondale Rice

••

Channel Selector

I~~

R. C. Cola
or Diet Rite

U.S.O .A. INSPEC:TED
s .. 7·LB . AVG . FROZEN

RTV

• 100% Solld-S1ale Ti1an · Chassis
• Power Sentry Voltage
Regulating Sys1em
• Brilliant Chroma color Picture Tube
o One-Knob VHF and UHF

LIMIT I PIIG. WI Til Coti'OM a•a $7.50 ADDITIONAL
PfiCIUf(UCLIDING TMIS ITEI)

DAD'UOOTIEER,

23~ ''0" ' _
CONSOLE

Casters.
ZENITH PERFORMANCE
FEATURES

LYI.

(INCLUPING TWIN POPS, ROOT lEER FLOATS.
1CE CREAM SANDWICHES ANI) MANY OTHER
VARIETIES)

PINT RETUINAILE

4·01.

LOW
$59995
Stop in
todav

fRO UN HO~IL1\lS

lb.

NEW1980

Med iterranean styled fu ll base
consol e. Peca n wood·grained
tm1sh appt1ed to durabl e wood
pr oducts on top and ends. Fron t
and base o f si mulated wood .

ON All KROGER

I

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OFF

so~

•o-rrt

5.. 7.LB . AVG . WHOLE

l2318P

liMIT ONE COUPON 'liR F.t.Mil Y
CMNI--I.IIm... I-UTHMI, KPTtl.lliiU
..CTTtiPPUCAal PITt lliW lUll

I

Kroger 20-o:z.
White Bread .... ..

Can

liMIT I CA. WITI COII'O• AID $7 .SO ADDITIONAL
PflC"AH (EXCLIDI.G TMIS ITil)

,
.

VISII'

The PALERMO

l2!:J

SHEETS PER ROll

Smoked
•
•
PICRICS ................

-Roll

(SAVE) 12-oz.

I

"Remember how nervous too much caffein used to make me?
Well not anymore, since I started enjoying Son~&lt;_a• Brand
Decaffeinated Coffee. No~ I feel terrific:·

Northern
Bath Tissue

. Spam
Luncheon Meat

tO DIA l iiS

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Rt. 33
Mason, W. Va.

44'

WI IISUVI r"IIIGHT TO l iMIT QVANTITIU HONl SOlD

THERE'S ONE NEAR YOU

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

r-----..4
SAVE

Grade A
Large Eggs .........oo•.

See store display tor details'

DENIM $PECIAI.

AOOSHEET"EUOLL

KROGER

COf'YIK;Hl ,.,, • lHf ltiiOGU CO. ITI.t.U AND ,.IIClS
0.000 lUN ~ Y Sl'llMill 2 TH.U lA TU.OA Y
III'TIMIIU !'791N GAlLI PO LIS &amp; POMEII O'f StORES

'99

YOUR COST$

guy just yells and they Oy o!fsldes,"
said Modzelewski .
Although the Buffalo Bills only
gained 45 yards on the ground In
their opener with the Miami
Dolphins, Modzelewski thinks the
Buffalo offensive line Is superior to .
Denver's.
He also noted the running threat of
Terry Miller, who 'gained 1,060yarda
last season as a rookie.

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOI!

~toong vou /JU., 1 1 Krove&lt; ,. llUa&lt;l&lt;1tMd IO&lt; yO..• u;~ yl
•t.rt.c1ron reg"'dleu of ~I'II.Jf.ctu•., If vou ,,. not Uh~
fled. l(rooe&lt; ..,,11 riPf.C. \I()Uf 11-"'1 Mtl'll l'lt Umt DriM Qr I
c:on'IPI'IbilllliM'\0 or tetuna vour outcn.w D'ICe

$1 .50

"Sometime~ they get allldltioned

too much to getting off the ball. A

*EXCEPT QOSEDSATURDAY MIDNIGHT TIL 9AMSUNDAY
Except Hinton &amp; Whit• Sulphur

TOTALS&gt; TISFACTION GUJ\RANTEE ·

•
'
••

the Braves Shined againllt the Reds.
"The team is starting to play
defensive ball," he sajd. "Anytime
we're playing a team that's In
contention, we will give it our l!est."

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOI!

OPE
24HRS.
ADAY*

STOll '01

flUS~

'450

HARTlEY SHOES

h.m.·8 p.m. Fri .
Closed Sunday

home run of the season for Atlanta in
the fifth and Joe Morgan belted his
ninth for the Reds in the sixth .
Braves Manager Bobby Cox said it
Should have come as no surprise that

the new Bengals coach.
" Tom Landry brought the 4-3 into
"No team ' Should be able to drive
the NFL when 1 was with the Giants
on you like they did. I don't care who
in 1956 and , he was an assistant
they are . We mi~sed some · coach. It was my first year in New
assignments and we didn't react
York and we had Sam Huff and Andy
well all the time, but we pretty much
Robustelli and that bunch. We got
knew what they were going to run.
away with lt for a long time. 1 was
Mostly they just overpowered us,"
there eight years and we were in the
piling up 199 yards on the ground
playoffs six times," he said .
wllile averaging live yards per
The Bengals' defensive line was
running play .
allio called seven times for being
Modzelewski said, however, that
offsides, but the Broncos' running
Cincinnati will stick with lts basic 4-3
game was so successful they
defensive line-linebackers system.
accepted only three penalties.

ciNCINNATI (AP) - Although
he 's not saying what they are,
Cincinnati Bengals defensive line
coach Dick Modzelewski Is making
" adjustments" f&lt;r Buffalo, whose
offensive line he believes is even
tougher than Denver's.
" To put it bluntly, we got
overpowered Sunday against
Denver, " he 8ald of the I~ loss.
" When you get overpowered by
people, it means they're playing
better ball than you. It's not the fault
of the defense that was called, " said

'OilHtllfGH
TliltOUGHOUT THI

71" 0/

FABRIC SHOP

The first live Reds to bat in the
ltlth singled, with Dave Concepcion
driving in two runs and George
Foster the other.
Pinch hitter Mike Lum hlt his fifth

Bengahtomakeadjushnen~----------------------

~00-

super

DENIM

innlng. Atlanta took the lead ll'\ run.
scoring singles by Barry Bonnell
and Joe Nol~n in its half of the fourth
but the Reds regained the lead wl~
three runs in the fifth .

had a lot of problems, but we're
playing good baseball now."
In Tuesday night's game, Bob
Horner keyed a thre.e-run seventh
innin g with a two·run double to seal
the victor y lor Atlanta , which broke
a five-game losing s'treak .
The Braves trailed by a r un when
Eddie Miller and Matthews opened
the Atlanta se venth with singles
against Doug Bair , IG-7 , t he Reds'
third pitcher .
Horner drilled a Shot down the
right field line to score both r unners.
He took t hird on the throw to the
plate and scored on a sacrifice fly by
Dale Murphy.
Joey McLaughlin, 5-3, was the
winner in relief.
Cincinnati scored first when Dan
Driessen singled home Ray Knight,
who had doubled 1 in the fourth

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORES2~=~:;:::::;:==~::::,

&amp;

112 W. 2nd Ave.

ATLANTA ( AP ) - "Even the
COOtenders can't take the Braves
UghUy," Atlanta rightfielder Gary
Matthews said following the Braves'
7~ victory over the Cincinnati Reds
Tuesday night.
Reds catcher Johnny ~ Be n ch
agreed.
"You don 't figure anything is a
cinch in Atlanta," said Bench. He
added that he's more worrled about
the Houstoo Astros, who are battling
the Reds f&lt;r first place in the
National League West.
Bench said he'd rather deal with
that kind of press11re than be out of
the running like the Los Angeles
Dodgers or Atlanta.
" It 's a lot less frustrating than if
we were in LA's place - or in the
Braves place ," he said. " It 's going
to go down to the last game. We' ve

"..,_PROFESSIONAL
PARTS

CREATIVE
·TOUCH

Style
and
simplicity

graduate assistant in the basketball
program
In 1974 he became Hugh
Durhams's top assistant at Florida
State, and alter eight years with the
Seminoles he followed Durham to
. the University of Georgla in 1978.
, "It 's a tremenoous oppoctunity foc
Morris/ ' Durltam said.
"It's a compliment to his ability.
We've been together for 10 years,
and there is a mixed feeling when
you lose a quality per~m such as
Morris," he said.

,,

Fried Chicken ....... ..... ..... .Each

~~:~

.,

$399

•••• ,. , •••• • •• . •• ,, •• , . • ••• Each

''

·

$2 99

.....

~r~~nles ... ..... .... .. ... ...6.Fa•ggc
' I'

'

I

.. .'
...

.

-.
'

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1979

_

Columbus artist to lecture at Riverby tomorrow
As an important part of the ob-

EDIE MAE HERREL from Colwnbus, whose exhibit is now at River·
by for the 15th Anniversary of the French Art Colony, hangs a seven
plate, four color etching of the Creation.

SAL·E!

Sears

T
H

S
N

I

0

N
K

W
! .

Announce birth
MASON - Dr. and Mrs. Andrew
Canale (Dr. Kay McGowan),
Boston, Massachusetts, are an. nouncing the birth of a daughler on
August :Ill at New England Medical
Center H~pital.
Maternal grandparents are Dr .
Thomas B. McGowan, Mason, and
the late Katharine McGowan.

TRACTOR NOW
'IN STOCK
10-H P Electric Start
Lawn Tractor

CUT '150

Features 36·in . side-discharge mower
deck . 3 speeds forward, 1 reverse.
Medium -back seat.
On Tractor
8
with Blade

servance of the 15th Birthday of the
French Art Colony , the accomplished and recognized artist
Edith "Edie" Mae Hamilton Harrel
from Coliunbus will present a
demonstration lecture tomorrow
evening at 8 o'clock at Riverby, entitled , "The Renaissance of the
Original Fine Print."
Earlier tomorrow, she will be inIA!rviewed during the 12 Noon News
program on Channel3, WSAZ-TV, by
Ms. Mason Weaver. She will also be
featured in an interview with Dene
Wagner on WJEH (\nd WYPC on
Tuesday, Sept. 11. Her unusual and
most appealing exhibit of prints will
be in both GallerieS at Riverby
throughout the month of September.
Edie Mae Herre! is a free lance
graphic designer and illustrator.
The more than 40 prints of varying
sizes that make up the September
Exhibit for the French Art Colony
were selected to represent the principal media in which she works, in·
eluding etchings, engravings, dry
point, wood cuts and pen and ink.
Her limited edition signed prints are
framed. ·
Tomorrow evening's program at 8
a.m. is open to the public. It is an excellent opportunity to learn about
prints from a true expert, while
gaining an appreciation and
becoming more knowledgable in the
purchase of prints for a personal
collection. Choosing from a collection such as Mrs. Herre! 's is an ideal
way to select original art at a very

.

8839

MaBon Penoaal
Dr . Tom McGowan has been spending some tirile with hia father, Dr.
Thomas B. McGowan in Masoo after
praCticing in Minneapolis, Minn. Af'
ter visiting their father, Dr. Tom
McGowan and his sister, Miss Cellne
McGowan, they went on vacation to
England, Scotland and Ireland. Miss
McGowan has returned to IA!aching
In Washington, D. C. and her brother
will continue vacationing in Europe.

SAVE 185

OTHER SNOW REMOVAL ATTACHMENTS
ARE AVAILABLE
(Lawh deck must be rPmnvPr1 whPn tlsina· snow blade)

• Shpping extra • Prices are catalog prices
• Ask about Sears credit plans · •
• Now on sale in our ''P" catalog supplement

234 E . Main St .

.

Pomerov, 0 .

OWNED AND DERATED BY
4
'
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon . thru Wed. 9-5, Thur. 9·12, Fridpy 9·S, Sat. 9·2 .

State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson &amp;nnOWICed the statewide
distribution of auxiliary Aid to
Dependent Children (ADC) funds
totaling, $3,:!00,2!h. Of the total,
Meigs County received $9,519 for 999
claimants.

Ohio. 992-2178
W. Va. 773·9577

Isears I

ADCAID
ANNOUNCED

Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

modest price, either to initiate or expand on personal collections.
A grl!duate of Ohio State University College of Fine Arts, her works
have received awarda at the. local
and state level, and are both
exhibited and collected in many
states. Her style diSplays the ~incredible delicacies and atiAlntion to
design and detail of a cameo and her
etchings as well as her pen and ink
works express a fresh crisp
statement of faith, truth and reality.
In addition to being recognized as
a designer and illustrator with her
own studio, since 1958 Mrs. Herrel
has taught, lectured and conducted
workshopB in a number of arey. On
behalf of the Greater Columbus Arts
Council she directed and designed
the first Arts Action program for gif· ·
ted high school youth. She has been
commissioned to do work for
schools, historical societies,
businesses and universities as well
as for nwnerous private collections
from Florida to Michigan and from
california to Mas.'IBchusetts.
Her husband is F. Michael Herrel,
and they have three children, Dan·
ny, Michael and Nancy Sue. As a
family they enjoy traveling and .
camping. Over the years Mrs.
Herre! has been a dedicated community leader. Her stimulus to
create comes from a sense of personal involvement with her subjects
and from her intention to reveal the
deepest truths that lie behind the
physical realities we see.
Edie Mae Herre! is the newly elected President of the l.Jturglcal Art
Guild of Central Ohio. She holds offices and responsible positions in
more than a dozen professional and
volunteer organizations in the
Columbus area.
The French Art Colony feels most
fortunate to have her works
e:rhibited as a part of their 15th An·
niversary observance, and in par·
ticular, to have her present a lecture
demonstration tomorrow evening at
8 o'clock at Riverby.

N&lt;M
IN
STOCK

WAHNER REUNION

ON SUNDAY
The Warner Family Reunion will

be held at the Herman Warner
residence at Wolf Pen Sunday.
Those attending should take their
lawn chairs. A poUuck dinner will be
served at 12 noon,

FOR
'IHE

WINTER

HELD COOKOliT
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Walker held
an afternoon and evening cookout at
their h&lt;me at 123 Union Ave.,
Pomeroy. ,
Attending were Gladys Walker,
Pomeroy; Miss Jeanie Brown,
Troy; Bill Greer, New Haven ; Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Tatterson and
children, Craig, Mark and Jonathan,
Pl. Pleasant; and Mr. and Mrs.
Nelson Bostic, Gallipolis.

SEASON

Leila. Blake

Ms. Blake to compete
Miss l.Jela Blake, 16, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Elden Blake, Jr.,
Reedsville, has been selected to
compete in the official state finals of
the 1979 Miss United Stale! Teenage
Pageant.
Contestants from all over Ohio will
be competing for the title. All contestants must be between 14 and 18
and they must maintain a "B" or
betiAlr school average. They also
perform in the volunteer community
service program. Winners are awarded scholarships and trips. The state

EDY'111E WELCH

winner will receive a 1500 acholarship plus prizes.
Judging is on personality,scholastic ability, civic
achievement, beauty and poiae. ·
Each contestant may cboole to give
either a two minute lllent praentatioo or a speech on "These United

Mrs.E:~~:-rwelcbisa

PICKENS HARDW-ARE
""':

•

_____.;.M~A~S;;O;.;.N~,.-W.i.iiV.iA....______..

resident of Pinecrest Care Center,
Galllpolis. Her room number is 223.
Cards would be appreciated.

A BAIJ

THIS WII'K'S

PORK
CHOPS
END CUT

~D~E•R•M•A~S-SA•G~E~----~~-----89~

LIQUID

22 oz.

,.

.

JEU.Y

Sweetbrier Sliced Yellow Cling
Size 303

PEACHES ·

I
I

CHUNK

79~ LB.

SLICED

89~ LB.

CHOICE

CHUCK

KIES
49~ PAPER TOWELS

Jumbo
Roll
69e

BONNIE

ss~ DOG FOOD

25 lb.

$329

$}19
PORK 'n' BEANS

29

LB.

STEAK

Enjoy Every Bite

,79

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

ENGLISH ROAST

~

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST
USDA CHOICE .BONELESS

BEEF STEW
KLEENEX TOWELS •••1·u!'!~.~0~1•• 59~
VLASIC

YELLow
LB.

DILL PICKLE CHIPS .• .1.9~~~···79

ONIONS
31b. Bag 59$
16oz.

1
1I

I

1I
I

·------------------·

. Fine for Grilling

GRAPES
79c u1.

BACON

$1.29 LB.

LB.
1

I

992-2556
570 W. Majn
Pomeroy, o.

SUPERIORS

49 oz.

I
I

CALL: For Information
For Appointment
(614) 992·2878 Of (614) 992·2387
·H. D. l'lrown, D.D.S., Inc.
200'12 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 4S769
By request of those who were unable to make an_ Appointment by Sept, 1, 1979, this offer is being cordrally
extended through the month of Sept,

DAIRY VAllEY

RED

CENTER CUT S}.39LB.

DETERGENT

II

ADOLPH'S

'

•
rape_
1801
Apple-n -Biackberry

FULL DENTURE " " ... " ......... ......... $125.00

FISHTAIL ............. 8~
WITH FRIES ••••••••· s1 19

POMEROY, OHIO

$ 69

II . DENTURE SPECIAL II

SEPT. 6-7-8, 1979

SPECIAL

SMITH NELSON MOTORS

GAIN

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

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

Sponsoring Mias Blake are Dr.
James Cmde, Middleport; Bawn
Lwnber Co., Olester; Reed 'a store,
Reedsville, and the Eden U. B. &lt;llurch, Reedsville.

LB• •

9:001111 :00
Saturday 9: oo.9: o~
CLOSED
~UN DAYS

com leaves to depict the cross, with
yellow zinnias and ears of com,
while another had honeysuckle,
grapevine, lilies in a tall green container.
Using "Schooldays" as her theme,
Mrs. Betty Milhoan _Wied joe pie
leaves and red cannas with dried
grass in a large red water jug.
Peggy Moore took "Tea Time" as
her theme and used asparagus fern
leaves and zinnias In a gold teapot.
Also on display were sunflower,
aster and rope plant specimens by
Mrs. Ada Holter.
At the conclusion of the Dower
show, refreshments of punch,
cookies, sandwiches and deviled
eggs were served.

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

States."

1978 BUICK REGAL 2 DR . SPORT CPE . . , ........ , .... , .......... · ·. , SS495
1976 PLYMOUTH VALLIANT 4 DR .. 6 cyl . ... . .................. ..... . S2595
1977V.W. RABBIT2DR .,6cyl ..... . . , . • , ... ........ .. . ..... , ... · . . .. M595
1976 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR . Loaded .. . . .. . .. ... .. . . . .... ....... .. · .. S3795
1975 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DR ... ... . ............. . ..... . ......... .. S259S
1975 BUICK ELECTRA LIMITED ..... . ... .... . .......... ....... · ..•. S2395
1975 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX 2 DR ...... .... . .. ........ , , .. , ....... .•. $2395
1975 A.M.C. MATADOR 4 DR. Small V-8 ... .. . ...... ... . ...... .. ... . .. . S2195
1975 PONTIAC VENTURA 2 DR ., low miles .. . . . .. . .... , . .. . ...... .. ... S2S95
1974 FORD T· BI.RD, Loaded . . . ........... . . ......... . .. , • , ..• ....... S269S
1974 PONTIAC CATALINA . . ......... . ..... .... .. ... ... . ....... . . . .. S199S
1974 BUICK CENTURY 4 DR .. . ... . ........... ......... . . . .. . ...... .. S1995
1974A.M.C. MATADOR 2 DR., . ................ .. ................... . $1295
1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO ............. , . . .. ....... . .. .... .. $2295
1974 PONTIAC LEMANS 2 DR. The cleanest ............ , . , • , •... , , • , .. $2195
1974 CHEVROLET NOVA 4 DR . .. . . .......... . , . ........ , .. ......... . S109S
1973 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 DR . ...... . .. , ... ........... ... . ...... , ... S895
1973 BUICK CENTURY 2 DR, ....... ...... , .... ... ... ... .. , . ......... S149S
1974 BUICK APOLLO 2 DR . . . , ... ... . . . .. , .... ... .. ................. S1695
1974 BU lCK APOLLO 4 DR. X·tra .low miles .. ...... ...... . .... .... .... S1795
1973 BUICK ESTATE WAGON . Sharp .. . . ...... . .... ....... . .. . ....... $1595
1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 2 DR . ... . ... ...... ........ , . ......... . ... . $595
1973 G.M .C. 1f2 TON 307,3 spe~d . . ... .. .... .......... ...... .. .. , ... , ... S99S
1969 INTERNATIONAL 112 TON, lspeed . .. ....... ... . , •.•. • , •.• , • , • , .. . S99S

$700

PHEBE' S STOI!£
~Thursdav. Sept. ' thru Sept. 11
We , taa•y Accepn-ea . ,.ood Stamp's
Monday lhru Friday

rangement was chrysanthemums
and dahlias with celosia and
gardelia in a large basket. Evelyn
Hollon 's "Golden Memories "
featured yucca and hardy yellow
dahlias while another arrangment
was of deep red and purple zinnias.
In a small green container Mrs.
Mae Holter used red zinnias and
greenery to depict "The Hot Summer Night." Other arrangements
were by Mrs. Dorothy Smith, "Summer Freshness", with zinnias and
greenery in a tall white glass
basket ; Mary Nease, a blue container of yellow chrysanthemums
and greenery with a small blue jug
accessory. Mrs. Nease also showed
a Thanksgiving arrangement using

(MAKE AN OFFER WE CAN'T REFUSE)

ROCK WOOL
· -INSULA.TION

SLICED

frorn the Galllpoils State Institute
pertaining to the garden therapy
program, and an announcement of
the program to be held Saturday by
Irene Jackson at Royal Oak Park, 1
p.m. Also read was a letter from
Mrs. John Gniy regarding membership.
It was noted that Mrs. Evelyn
Hollon and Mrs. Ada Holter had
reCeived blue ribbons for their
Dower arrangements at the Meigs
County. Fair.
Exhibiting in the Dower show were
Mrs. Ada Holter who used the theme
''God Raises the Trees" with an arrangement of weathered wood,
daisies, cattails and canna leaves ;
Hilda Yeauger with a small white
container of carma leaves and
begonias; and Tin8 Davis and Jennifer Arnold, both guests, who
displayed white vases with zinnias,
baby's breath, and celosia.
Carrie
Grueser
used
"Harvestime" as her theme and
showed. yellow mums, red zinnias
and greenery with onions and grapes
on a woven mat. Jane Harris in a
small white pik:IJer placed baby's
breath, small roses and pinks, and in
a second arrangement which she
tiUed " It Beets Me" had an arrangement of coleus leaves and periwinkle
on a can of beets.
"Autumn · Growth" waa Marcia
Arnold's theme and her table ar-

CLEARjC)UTI BUT FIRST CHECK THEM OUT

Rll 16 Rll 15" O.C.

PER 'BAG

by the Wildwood Garden Club in the
basement of the Forest Run United
Methodist Church.
Mrs. Dorothy Smith presided at
the meeting which opened with the
Lord's Prayer and reports from the
officers.. Several communications
were read. These included a letiAlr

WOOD OR COAL BURNERS

Meigs County Pm~ona Grange 46
will have its annual inspection by the
county deputy Friday, 8 p.m. at the •
Rock SPrings grange hall.
The fifth degree Pomona will be
presented in full form. Baking, sewing, and needlework contest will be
judged during the meeting.
Members are requested to take an
item valued at $1 for the white
elephant sale. Refreshments will be
served by the Racine Grange.

THI
f1.

KING

Inspection set

THINK ENERGY· SAYING !!!!!!!! !!!I

70 SQ.

A flower show was staged recently

AUSTIN

9
5
PAN ROLLS ····}'·····•·········
BETSY ROSS
.

VALLEY BELL

MILK
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BACON ..........L.B:.~~~

22 Oz

WINDOW CLEANER ••••••. ~ ••• 39

3/89~

FRESH LEAN SlAB

k
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SUPERIORS DART

79 °
90

••

BACON ........~~.~:.~~~:6

U.S. NO. 1 FRESH

PEACHES
NEW PRIME GOLD

APPLES!

3
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9-The Daily Sentlnel, Middlepxt-Pameroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 5, Ur79

Smart
Shoppers
Will Be
Early
Thursday
For

Best Buys

1: '

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8

CANNON
BATH
TOWELS

COVERED

Very Good Weight. A repeat of our
January very special buy . If_ perfect.
you would pay $2.99. Pr ints or solid
colors. L imit 6 each customer . 300

each store.

On Sale thursday 10 a.m.

$}00

Decorative

FIBREBOARD

STORAGE
BOXES

CAKE
BAN. .

40 Ounce

AIR

SCOPE

FRESHNERS

BAKE AND SEE
SIZE 13X9X2 ·
Lock Tight Cover
Regular $2 7'

REGULAR 544!
The Big Size
18 Each Store

$29~

$166

musty
a·w ay .

Sale
Priced

GRAPE
JELLY

BY CANNON
Solid color Cannon wash cloths at a
very l ow sale pr ice. If perfect , you

~would pay 49c each. While they las t.

1&amp; OZ. JAR

79¢

5

·

FOR

·

smell

Compare
At

$109

SAVE

$100

41'

famous "Westbrook"
'/

BLANKET SALE
•Green •Yellow •Pink
m ill imperfects. SO percent
50
Percent

polyester ,
acrylic .
Washable.

Mach i ne

REGULAR 17.99

..

$400

• i! ..

Jumbo Roll

Just
Arrived

&amp;.::,;SAAND

SELF-ADHESIVE I'LAIJFIC

\

2

$ 500

FOR

$~

PRACTICE
WORK BOOKS

FRAMED
PICTURES

arrived, Sizes Med.- Lg .-XLg .

. Grey
Navy
Green
Blue

3 size.s
framed .

$599

wood
Use as

REGULAR 79'

~ _,
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2

FOR

$}00
&lt;

· • -• "'i

·~crt

.

.. I

01

Perfect Qual ity . Washed den ims,
f aded denims, twills . Junior sizes
s to 15. American made. Small lot
each store, buf great buys.

RE~ LAR 112.99

$788

.l

~

OTHER BIG YANK

$122 ,
•

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· plastic . Complete wi th gold
chain . White or yellow .

Bracket not included, very

To

$}999

cotton, Ideal for work or casual
wearino Waist sizes 28 to .42 .
Americit"n. made of course .

•Navy
•Loden
eBrown

1Z

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,.

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decorative. While they last.

· SAVE 66'

$133

Keeps your lid on,
gro un d free of
litterc Attaches in
seconds on c on ta i ners up to 30
gal. Sale priced .

Jid.
1ighls -~ 1ighls

[Jnnba.

50 percent polyester , 50 percent

$999

Reg. To 1211

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$}66

stanley®
all steel thermos

HANDY

MENS
BROWN
JERSEY
GLOVES

Tough, rugged and ready to refresh

you with . a
hours after
warranteed
work, or to

HOUSEHOLD

SPONGEs ·

$23 99

Regular

Save 34c . Use them around the
house in kitchen or bath .
Handy for outside w indows
and au to wash ing too.

hot or cold dri nk even
you fill i t . And it' s fully
for:. s years. Take It t o
the game.

SAVE

'522

$1877

REGULAR &amp;9'

59¢

Zl A

Wom~~:~'.'"" .! ! ~

'

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Cl
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10 Sheets . Magnetia
pages. No glue needed .
You'l l wan t several at
this saving price.

. 12 Titles · 64 Pages Each

JEANS
.l

--

ALWAYS SOMETHING NEWI
I
~
KEEPS TRASH CAN LiDS ON "'

p R.

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HANGING
PLANTER

groups.

~

ROLL

·

.11 INCH

$}00

-

FOR .

..

59~
·F leece ·lined .
Rag l an
sleeve, new stock
has

3 88·¢

GET THOSE PLANTERS INSIDE!

STOCK UP! ·

Jeans

PHOTO
ALBUM

Latest learning skills deve loped
by Dr . .Richard E . Wylie . Kin .dergarten, grades 1 and 2. Latest
and finest methods for teaching .
Fun to do.
·

Regular Size
3.5 oz.
. Bars

NO LIMIT!

2.17 '

20 PAGE
MAGNETIC

IRISH SPRING
SOAP

SCRUB STRENGTH

$}22

Organize Your Summer Pictures

. FUN - LET EDUCATIONAL

!

$ ·1 99

l B.. vinyl with sel f stick back ing. 3
Yard roiL Apply to wood metal
glass, plaster and wall pape;. 16 Ne.,;
Patterns.

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MENS BULL DENIM

l':...':lict·

~

WHITE OR COLORS

5

88

. ,,.;s~ ,,.ish sprrng

1 .'-;,

BRAWNY
PAPER
TOWELS

Size 72x84. Fits full or twin
beds . Cannon' s run of the

-()

•With Center Valance
•Solid Colors Too
Perfect Quality

sa le Th ursday , 10 a.m .

-10 A-.M.

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PRINTED
PLASTIC DRAPES

WASH CLOTHS

KRAFT

rain

.

Size 24Xl3X lOih
Paisley Print or
Woodgrain Finish

Decorative Owl or
Flower Shop Cat . 2
ounce size. Take the

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36
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Limit
4 Pr.

Jumbo Pack Of 20

66~

We're Loadedl We've Added
Mpny New Lines • Come, See •

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(Continued from page 1)

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Sept. 11 In Fraaklln County CGm-

' I

.

IJIOII Plea COurt.

1' I

'· j

::1

Judge George Tyack let the
date ru.daJ for the start of the
trial ol ea-r M111111, who is
charaed with bribery and theft In
oftlce.
Moil Ia cme of 18 people
originally charged with parUdpatlng In I scheme In which
Cleveland offtclall allegedly ac. cepted brlbel from camlval

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Ohio ranks 35th

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WASHINGTON (AP)- Ohio
ranb 3lltb 811101111 the states In Its
action to rid educaUon of BeJ:
discrimination, a branch of the
National Organlutlon for
Womenaya.
·
A lltudy by the Project for
Equal EclucaUm IUgiU, an af.
filiate of NOW's Lepl Defeme
and Education Fund, found - .
· dlscrlmlnaUon perlilla In IChool
admllliltratlon, athletics and

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A lelf·
avowed Ylpple sympathizer
disrupted a meeting of anti-bluing
f~rces Tuesday night, while prayer
meetings were held In 12 city
churches f~r the peaceful opening of
public schools.
Gary Smith, 30, waa threatened
with expullion from a meeting of the
National
Association
for
Neighborhood Schools after his
lhouts inte~ted a speech by Jean
Ruffra of Loulaville, Ky., national
prealdent of NANS. He said later he
JACOB A. 8CaM
felt
the speakers advocated violence
Jacob A. (Jake) Sc«t, North
and
that "I got carried away with
Second Ave., Middleport, died
their
racism ."
Tue11day aftemooq at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Mr _ Scott was · &amp;nllh said he has w~rked with the
Ylpple movement and waa fired
78.from
a job as high IChool mlth
Mr. Scd:t waa born March 9, 1901
teacher
in Columbus after It was
In Gallla County tile aon of the late
learned
he
made a cream pie that
Winfield and Sara Ella Phllllps
was
thrown
at Gov. James A.
Scott. He Wll allo preceded in death
Rhodes
during
state fair ceremonies
by Clle brother and one llilter.
In
August
11177.
He II survived by two sisters,
Smith left the meeting quietly to
Laura Bell Scott, Middleport, and
talk
with r~rters and then left the
Mra . Mary Ann Gries, Columbua;
area.
During the disturbance, an
two brothen, George and Bennie
unidentified
spectator commanded
Scott both of Columbu.s; I!E'Veral
attention
of
the eacimated ~
nla'S .00 ·nephews.
apectators,
shouting
from the front
Funeral service~ will be held
of
the
high
school
auditorium
that he
Friday at 11 a.m . at the Rawling•
wanted
to
hear
scheduled
lpelkera.
Coats F~meral lbne with the Rev.
As the peacemaker brought order,
Noel Hermann officiating. Burial
Smith's
shirt was torn by a man
will be In Chelhlre. Gravel HUl
Identified
mly as a NANS II!CIIrlty
Cemetery. Frlenda miY caU at the
officer.
Robert
DePrez, a NANS
funeral home Thursday fnlm 2 to 4
necuUve
from
LoulsvUle,
ordered
and 7 to 9.
·
Smith to quiet down or leave.
The peacemaker steadfastly
refuted to give his name but said
_later he 11poke out because "I want to
lEVY DEFEATED
know what I can do to stop forced

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Area Deaths

HAMILTON, Ohio (AP) -Voters ~ld.them I didn't come to hear
In the llamUton School Dilltrlct
~erwhelmlngly defeated 1 5.5 mill a radical, that I came to hear .
operating levy In a special election viewpoints of the speakers."
Tuesday
Smith said: "I came to 11ee this
The n~ative vote was 5 079 to · and Iounded by raclst8."
1 718
'
'lbe speakers said peaceful ways
'Til~ vote count was delayed to oppo11e buJing Included tsklng
Tueaday night by a computer chUclren out of public schools,
!allure the Butler County Board of ~~eeklng publicity for their cause,
Elect~a said.
urging Congreu to outlaw biLling

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Mrs. Sauer moving

Kidnappers release
B rttts
• • h busr.nessnaan
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waa

Course offered

•18

Columbus teachers
approve new pact

not

parents keep a po8ltlve, attitude,"
she said. "I'm looking forward to a
normal achool opening and a normal
achool year."
'
"Everyone seems willing to
cooperate, and their only concern is
for the safety of the students," said
Fran Clark, a kindergarten teacher
at Siebert Elementary School.

Miss Spencer Rotary
speaker Friday night
MIDDlEPORT - Mlas Vicki
Spencer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Spencer, Chellter Road, ouWned IIP'Ctl of her year In Germany
81llngulaUc iltudent Wider I Rotary
Scbolanblp when the MlddleportPmleroy RotarY Cluli· met ~ndaY
nlgbt at Heath United M~

Church.

.

Mlas Spencer not only told of the
IIE'riOUI llpeCti _J;A her educational
esperience but NahliiJhted ber the
account year's esperlence with
OOmoroul stories ollncldenta which
occurred to her In Germlny.
Tom Boyd of Huntlneton, W. Va.,
was aueet Rotarian ~ the meetl.ni
and local guelt8 were Doug Little,
Bill Quickel and Robert Meltoo. Mr.
and Mrs. Spencer were also 111t1t1
to bear their daugltttr's talk.
Women olthe church aerved dinner.

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more pay

'ew-am'" 'al

roLUM.BUS, Ohio (AP) - The he became upset by racist remarks
last apparent roadblock to
he said he heard at the meeting.
succesaful implementation of court'lbe lnter.falth church 11ervlces
crdered busing in Columbus schools were sponsored by the CoaUtion of
baa been lifted with the threat of a
Religious Congregations.
teachers strike ended :
At me of them, the Rev. Thomas
'lbe Board of Education and
Liggins salt!: ''Our purpose Is to
Columbus Education Association
bring he religious community
reached agreement Tueaday - just
together In a spirit of prayer and .
two days before schools are worship.
·
"We are asking them to make a
scheduled to open - oo a new twocommitment for a program of
year contract for the system's 4,500
and one-half foc cafeteria w~rkers
and for payment for attending post
quaUty education for all chlldren,"
teachers.
high echool courses or workshops.
That cleared the way for classes to
he added during the 11ervlce for
begin
on
a
stll88ered
basis,
with
about 30 people at St. Paul's African
However, Supl. Roberts said
elementary
pupUa
and
~~eventh
and
Methodist Episcopal Church.
efforts are being made to set up
lOth
graders
starting
school
on
'lbe desegregation plan provides
another negotiating meeUng tonight
Thursday
and
the
rest
of
the
Junior
for
a black enrollment of between
1r .tomorrow to detennlne If the
20.9
and 50.9 percent at all the
and
IIE'Dior
high
stlll1enta
starting
on
problems can be worked out.
Friday.
system's
158 achools. 'lbe s)'St!!m is
Late this morning, James
·
Being
bused
for
de~~egregatlon
about
37
percent
black.
WUbelm, prestdent of the Eaatem
purpoaes
wiU
be
about
35,000
of
the
Teachers
lntervlwed
al random
Local Teachers Assn., stated that
Tuesday
confidently
more
than
78,200
youngsters
forsaw
no
his 8880clatloo Is
on strike
attending
Cvlumbus
public
schools.
problems
with
the
Integration
effort.
against the Eastern l.M:al Board of
In anticipation of the unpopular
"I doo't anticipate any trouble,"
E&lt;llcatlon.
busing,
12
Cviumbus
churches
held
said
John Handley, a math lelicher
The non-certified employes
prayer
meetings
Tuesday
night
and
at
Woodward
Park Junior High
represented by the Ohio Aasoclation
the
National
Association
for
School,
where
about 21.5 percent
of Public School Employes are on
more
Neighborhood
Schools
sponsored
a
blacks
will
attend than last
lltrlke and have 1et up picket lines at
rally
at
a
north
side
high
school.
year.
aU four schools, WW!elm sail! and
One Incident occurred at the anti"If there are problems, It wU1 be
· emphasized that although most
bualng
rally
when
a
spectator
the
same as always - coming from
teachers are hooorlng the OAPSE
the
parents, not from the students,"
shouted
remaru
at
a
speaker
and
lines, teachers are not on strike. ·
scuftled
brlefiy
with
a
security
he
said.
.
"The Elastern I.ocal Teachers
officer.
Hls'lhirt
was
t1r11
but
be
was
Anna
Thomas,
a
Spani8h
teacher
Allociatlon Is Interested In getting
at
East
allowed
to
remain
when
he
quieted
High
Scllool,
also
doubted
the problem resolved between
any desegregatioo-related conOicts
OAPSE and the board of education\', . down after being threatened with
will arise.
ejecUon.
Wilhelm said and asked for
"I doo 't set. any problems as long
'lbe
man,
who
Identified
himself
lnunedlate negotiations between the .
as
Gary
Smith,
30,
of
Columbus,
said
,.
as
the teachers, students and
two parties.
,

Meigs schools
(ConUnued frlllll page 1)
In the top pay range would receive a
salary !ncr- of about $1~ a year
plus insurance benefits of $300 In the
offer m1de by the board, Supt.
Roberts stated.
Supt. RobePts aaid employees are
also aaklng for lncrealled vacation
leave Including two weeks for
employes of five years; three weeks
foc th011e withfiveto lOyearsservlce
and four weeks for thOIIE' over 10
years. Supt. Roberts said the board
cannot afford vacation pay In the
amounts Involved for, •• an
example, four weeks for a bus driver
who might have worked as little as
four hours a day over a 10 year
period.
. .
Nm-certifted employes of the
district also are ,asking for binding
arbitration and for accumulated
sick leave which would Involve large
payments at the tennlnatiCil of an
employe If the plan were followed,
Supt. Roberta lllid. The employes
have asked for an Increase of.from
the present foUr hours a day to five
/"

28,000 teachers in 13

The Central Ohio Chapter of the
Cystic Flbrollls FOWidatlon an·
noWICel the appolnbnent of the
following aa Olairpenons of their
1979 Fall Slke..-'Ibon or Door-toof clasaes · for 8tlllle 8,000 lltudents,
By BARRY HANSON
Door C8mpalgn In Meigs County.
while walkouts continued In
Aloocilted Preu Writer
The Slkece-Thoos are to be held on
Pemsylvanla, Ohio and Vefii).OIIt.
Angry
teachers
~ more than
for the coast from Brunswick, Ga ., any weekend during the lllQilth of · 28,0011 strong ~ walked picket lines
'lbe JefferiCIII Union High School
to Cepe Fear, N.C., and gale October and the Door-to-Door Cam·
District In Daly City' Calif., V~~wed
In
13
states
today
as
a
burgeoning
warnings were caUed from Cepe paign recommended dates are Sepwave of walkouts disrupted clasaea to keep schools open today with
Fear to Cepe Hatteras. Winds tember 8 to the 16. Funds thuB raised
substitutes and administrators
for more than 600,000 students from
ranged from 6S mph to 75 mph , and wiD support reaearch to find a cure
despite a walkout Tuesday by 475
C08!t to coast.
were diminishing as the storm for Cystic FlbrcislS, the B«&lt;nd
teachers and other employeel •
Demands for higher pay In an
leading ldiJer of American children.
remained over land.
Officials In the New Jer~~eftowna
lnflatlon..-avaged economy marked
Trackers said the eye of the storm These events also bring more public
of Woodbridge and Perth Amboy
most of the disputes as teachers In
was no longer identifiable as It awareness regarding the symptoms
said they would . hold half-day
Paterson, N.J., Eugene, Ore.,
moved through South Carolina of this genetic killer. One In every 20
Spokane, Wash., Springfield, Ill., aeaslons to keep !lclloola for 22,000
today. Tornadoes spawned by the. Americans Is an Wllmowlng carrier
and Indianapolis picked up picket pupUa 6pen despite walkouts by ·
of the recessive gene.
stormdamaged~rdestroyedat least
more than 1,&lt;100 teachers.
signs Tuesday. They Joined more
Half of aU children with CF stiU
nine hcmes.
In · western Pemaylvanla, ltrlkea
than 3,000 teachers already oo strllte
The National Weather Service die before age 19, and IWI8· · In Oklahoma City and sublrban New
~~pread Tueaday to 10 achool dlltrlcts
office In Columbia canceled flash ·damaging dlaease~ stiU take the
affecting 41,0011 students. A walkout
Orleans.
fiood warnings fir central and lives ol more children In this country
allo hit the Western Pennsylvania
In Michigan, strikes spread to 37
oorthwestem SoUth Carolina at 3 than any other dlaea11e except can·
School for the Blind In Pittsburgh,
districts with more than 10,000
a.m. "The worst Is now over for the cer.
where 45 striking teachers were
teachers and 221,000 students
Ms. Katheryn Metzger (If 180 Cole
residents of the South Carolina
joined by 66 aides, houae parents and
affected. Scme. 1,800 teachers In
Street, Middleport, will conduct a
coaa," It said.
·
Flint joined the action Tuesday night
nurses.
Meanwhile, Tropical Storm door-to-door campaign In MldStrikes began Tuesday In three
after negotiations over wages, work
.
Frederic, packing winds of 50 mph , dl~rt.
Ohio districts, including Lorain
hours ind c1aas size broke down. 'lbe
Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs. Ruby
waa southeast of the Dominican
where the star! of clauea for 14,000
district has 33,000 pupUa.
Marshall and their 8 et 40 wamen 's
Republican and moving west .
Teachers In the northern Chicago ·students was postpmed until next
Several thousand people remained gro~ wiU conduct their door-to-door
week . The 726-member Lorain
silhurb of Highland Park agreed
In their homes as the barrier islands campaign for the rest ol Melp COunEducation AMoclaUon turned down
Tuesday to return to \t"l)rk pending
off Georgia and South Carolina were ty. Mrs. Martin's address Is 20 North
an offer raising balle salaritl frlllll
Intervention by a medlstor, but
evacuated In preparation for David. 2r1d Street, Mlddl~rt.
$10,050to $12,300overthree years. In
walkouts began In five other Illinois
South em,lina Gov. Dick Riley
aU, strikes were under way In IIE'VeD
districts, including the 15,7001)upU
urged people.to "stay In their homes ,-1\
Ohio districts tmtallng 28,850
Springfield system where 900
and shelters" overnight.
l 'I I
v,
students.
teachers hooored picket lines.
In Georgia, two students from
A walkout by 240 teachers also
Elsewhere, about 430 teachers In
France, who were not lnunedlately
Mr. and Mrs . Ed Sisson,
cmtlnued
In Rutland, Vt., where
Southington, C11m., voted Tuesday
ldentlfed, went swimming after the
MinelSvllle, Route I, are 8llDOWIC· to stay away from today's first day
3,700 pupUs were enrolled.
hurricane passed and were missing
lng the birth of a son, Nathaniel
today, apparently dragged out to sea
Jacob, born Cll Aug. 2111, at the Holzer
by strong currents.
Medical Center. The Infant"weighed
More than 900 people were ldiJed
five pounds five ounces and waa 17
In the Dominican Republic befpre
lncbes long.
Mrs. Edith Sliuer, who baa IIOld
David bounced off Florida Monday.
.Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. her home 1n Middleport, and will be .
Uoofficial estimates put damages 1n
Phil Ohlinger, Role HUI; Mrs. Edith moving 10011 to Columbua, was
OLBIA, Sardinia (AP) - Brltil!l
F1orida at more than $60 million. Six
Sillon, Pollle"'f; and Mr. and Mrs. pre~e~~ted a golng..way gift at the
deaths, ranging from heart atlacts
RalPh Slalon, Flatwoods. Great· 'l1lurld8y lllgbt meeting ol the Busy buJinessman Rolf Schild stll88ered
to car accidents, were blamed 00 the
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Her· 'Bee Clall ol the Middleport Flrlt · Into a pollee outpost early today and
said he had been badly treated by
storm in that state.
man Ohlinger, Poolero)'; Mrs. Elma Blptilt Curch.
.
kidnappers who are still holding bla
Holter, Minenlvllle; and Mrs. Ber·
Meeting at the home ol Mrs.
Elizabeth Searles, the devotions wife and daughter. UncCilllnned
nlceEvans,Gallljrils.
were given by Mrs. Roma Hawkins reports put the ransom demand for
who read 1rcm the 48th Psalm. and them at $25 mlllton.
Schild, 55, told pollee his
gave a medltatioo entitled "Let GO
abductors
led him qn a horae before
and Ulle of the boycott as an antiand Let God." For roll caU llll.'!l.!len ·
releasing him near the vlllage of
busing tool .
gave Bible vereea. n was noted that Bu,ltel Tuesday night. He said he
'lbe city IChool system Is under
The Rev. Tom McElroy, a reMrs. Jllllell Murray has been
took a bus to another vUlage, Bono,
federal court order to bus nearly cent graduate of Moody Bible In·
holpliallf.ed.
and pollee drove hhn-to Oblla.
hall it.s e:r;pected 78,000 students this
1be progam was by Mrs. Nelle
!ltitute, Chicago, m. will be the guest
"Part of the way of the way I
fall in a mamer that wiU aChieve
Werner who bad a reading, and Mrs.
speaker at a "Youth Quake '79" to
put
on a horse, I don't know why but
near racial balance In public
Searles who conducted a puzzle on
be held at the Carleton Chw'ch,
probably
to make Slll'e that I do not
echools.
women ol the Bible.
located on County Road 18,
trace
the
way back," Schild told a
'lbe church cmgregatlons were
Mrs. Searles, Mrs. Nora Jordan,
Kingsburg ltoed, Friday' Saturday
pollee
official.
urged
to
accept
school
and Mrs. Hawkins, served.
and Sunday eveningll at 7:30p.m.
Schild was In "very poor
de~egregatloo whether or not they
refreabments.
The Rev. Mr. McElory Is married
condition,"
long-haired, unshaven,
approve.
to the former Geneva King and they
with
cbawed
\lpl, and cold .,rea,
"We are aaklng them to make a
have one aon, IUcbud. n. ••••~
said
Asaociated
Preas photo editor
commitment f~r a program of
will Include (IOIIIIelllllgic, puppets,
CHICKEN
BARBECUE
Glanfranco
J•copozzl,
who saw him
quall(y education for aU chlldren," sldts,andspeclal~.
SEPTEMBERS
In
the
national
pollee
staUon here.
the Rev. Thomas Liggins said of a
The New Haven Volunteer Fire
Pollee
olflctala
said
the
Germanmeeting at St. Paul's African
Departemnt AuzllilrY will sponsor a
born
electronics
engineer
waa
Methodlat Episcopal Olurch. About
chicken barbecue Sept. 8, beginning
wrapped
In
a
blanket
and
appeared
30 people, black and white, attended.
at 11 a.m. The menu consists of
exhausted.
A four-le&amp;IIOil Dower arranging chicken, hot clop, baked beaDs and
'lbe NANS meeting was promoted
Schild wu examined In Oblla by a
c:ourae wiD be offered by the Melp potato salad. The event wiU be held
as offering Information about busing
doctor,
who prescribed some
and telllng parents what to e:r;pect County Garden Club's AaloclaUIII at the fire staUon.
medicines
and rest, pollee said. He
beginning
Monday
lllgbt
at
the
now and In the future .
allo
met
with
his Italian attorney
recreatloo
building,
Royal
()all:
Kaye Cook, local chapter
MBE'IINGSEPT. U
Glanfrao
Cualbo,
who refuaed to
Park.
president of NANS, called for
1be September meeting ol the
discUIS
possible
rBIIIIOin
demandll
Mrs. Janet Bolin, accredited Judse
boycotts against firms she said
Melp County Board ol Eclucatim
with
reporters.
~
of
the
Ohio
Association
of
Garden
contribute
to the National
wiU be held at 7:30p.m. on Tuelday,
Schild disappeared with hll wife
Aaoclatlon for the Advancement of Clubs, will be the lnstructor for the
September l, ,a t the board office.
Daplme
and 14-year-c~ld daughter
four
classes
which
are
open
to
the
Colored People, which has flied
AMabelle
on Aug. 21. Pollee Capt.
public.
The
charge
Ia
$5
for
aU
four
achool desegregation suits In Obi&lt;).
Enzo
Plroddl
said he was c:vnvlnced
cia
·
ea.
While
the
claslea
will
be
llle said the purpoee of the
SPECIAL MEETING
after
talking
with Schild that his
held
on
Monday
evenings,
there
will
meeting "is to tell you how to
The Southern Local School Board
wife
and
daughter
were ''unharmed
be
no
clilas
on
Sept.
17.
obJect," and that "the buses will
will meet In special aesslon
and
In
good
coodltloo."
The
flrat
session
will
be
on
tradiCUitlnue rolling until we get a piece
Thursday, Sept. 8, at 1 p.m. In the
Kidnappers
have
already
tional arranging.
of legtslaUon out of Washington to
office of the llllperintendent.
collected
between
$12mlllloo
and
atop them."
mll1ton ransom thil year for 12
tourists abducted oo Sardinia, a
summer playland for wealthy
EIII'Opeans. Atypical tacUc baa been
to kidnap ~~everal per.,ns and
release me to ransom tbe others.

disrupts meeting

'lbe meeUng waa opened by
by Mayor Andrews.
:~~~-~we~ re Mayor Andrews,
J1
clerk, Rod Karr, Bill
Harold Brown, Larry
W!~~n.!e~an~d ~Betty Baronlck,
a
Harlan Wehrung,
E . F. Roblnlon,
mernbera of the board of public
affairs, and Ollef Weblter.

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storm PBIIIE'd.

David, which baa claimed at least
900 Uvea, struck savannah In its
second slap at the U.S. mainland In
two days. Heavy rains, high !leU
vocational education, reducln&amp;
and anKiety spawned by the
the long-range opttona ol wcmen
hurricane were blamed for at least
andgirla.
'
seven deaths In Florida, Georgia
and South Carolina. '
At 3 a.m. EDT , the National
Hurricane.Center said the center of
Hurricane David was near latitude
33.7 oorth, longitude ao.7 west or
(Continued from pqe 1)
about 21) miles southeast of
hla report for hla
Columbia, S.C. It was moving north
departn~enl: for the mmth of August. at about 10 mph .
department Investigated 30 - Hurricane warnings were posted
laccidenlla, made 4$ arrest~, lJIIIed

, ''

..

SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - Slipped
of Its ldiJer force and still losing
strength, Hurricane David crept Into
South Carolina today aiter churning
through historic Slivamah.
The National Hurilcane Center In
1Miami said hurricane warnings
issued f~r the Atlantic Coast from
Georgia to North Carolina were io be
downgraded to gale warnings at 6
a.m . EDT as David moved Inland.
"We were very fortunate,"
Savannah Mayor Joon Rousakis
said Tuesday after the storm, one of
the worst lllllers iA the century,
moved away from this coastal city,
leaving behind widespread but llgbt
damage.
"Water is cut off, we have some
fioodlng ... but other than that, even
though there are lncCilvenlences
now, people are In fairly good
lhape," Rousakls said.
"Not much more than a good
northeaster,"
was
the
IJ'Onouncement of Merl M.cClaln, a
retired Nayy man who stayed In his
Jekyll Ialand, Ga ., home as the

Chairpersons named

Bamboo has a sort of time c1oclt
that 11ets the span of Its life,
acCCJ"dlng to National Geographic.
Some bamboo gives out alter only
five cr iU years while other kinds
last for u long aa 65 years before
deteriorating and dying.

OHIO VALLEY
LIVESTOCK CO,
MARKET REPORT

All prices taken from the auction
of Saturday, Sept. 1, 1979. Trwndl:
Feeder cattle $3 to $6 higher. cows
steady to suo lower. Veal calves 15
to S7 higher.
'.
Total Mecl, 340
F....,... Steers: Good and Choice
250 to 300 !Ill. 15 to 110; 300 to -400 lbt
eo to 102; «10 to 500 lbt. 75 to90; soo to
600 lbs. 70 to 17.50; 600 to 700 lbl
67.50 toll; 700 to aoo lbs. 62.50 to 67;
800andovtr80to64.75.
'
Feeder Heifers: Good and Choice
250 to 300 lbt. 65 to 79.10; 300 to
lbs. 65 to 75; oCIO to 500 lbs. 80 .to 74.80;
500 to 1100 lbl. 80 to 71 .50; 600 to 700
IIll. 54.50 to 70; 700 to soo 1111. 51.50 to
62; 800 and over 50 to61.50.
F....,... Bulla: Good and Cholet 250
to 300 lbl . .. to 105; 300 to -400 1111 80
to 100; 400 to 500 till. 75 to 92.50; !oo
to 600 lbs. 70 to 11; 600 to 700 1111 62 50
to 74.75; 700 to aoo 1111. ST to 681 ioo ·
andover 52.50 to61.
·
Holstein Bulls (300-800 1111.) suo
to 73.75.
· · ~ulla (1,0011 1111. and over) 54.50 to

a

58

Slaughter Cows (utlllt!n) &gt;15.50 to
50.30; !canners and cutten) o10 to
&gt;15.75.
.
'
Springer cows (by tht hetd) 30Qo
ol35.

.

Veel Calves 90·106.
Bilby Celvtl 25·100.

Hots

Top Hogs 210 to 230 38.50 to «1.
Boen 25.50 to~·
Pigs·· by tht liNd 10 to 23.
sows·-450 lbs. and over 21 to 32.50.

I'

�•'

12- r he Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Seot. S. l 979

,

,

. Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES

Wanted to Buy
.:HIP

I

I day
2days

ldayo
&amp;days

IS Words or Under
Cash
Charxe
1.00
l.ts
1.50
1.10
1.110
us.
3.00
3.7S

I~~~"t:! =~t::rn:~:;

day. Ads runntng other lhan conHeutive d.ly11 will ~ Chaf8ed al
the 1day rate .

In memory. Card of ThankS
and Obituary : 6 centa per word,

13.00 mlnimwn. ~! h in ad·

vanf't .

MGbile Home sales and Ya rd
sales are accepted only with
cash with order. 25 cent char!!fe
for ads carT)'ing Box Nwnber In
Cart' oJ The Sentinel.
'The Publisher reserves the •
right to edH or reject any ads
obj ectiona l.
The
Publisher will not br re.!lporu~ l ble
for more tha n one lncorrecl in·
sertion.
dee med

WOOD.

Poles

max.

d ia meter 10'' on largest end.
$12 per ton. Bundled slab . $10
FM'' ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2. Pomeroy.

992·26H.
brass bed1 . iron ~ds, desks ,
e tc., complefe households.

VillogeMonor, 992·7787.
SENIOR CITIZENS. 1 bedroom
op ts . for rne f.
Re ntal
a s s is tan ce
a v a i lable .

OLD COINS. pocket watches ,

992-7721.
THREE 8EDROOM

class ringt 1 weddln~ bonds.
diamonds . Gold or silver. Call
J. A . Wcmsley, 74:2-2331 .

home on CR 26. 985-JiU6.

WANTED: SAW logs. Payment

upon del ivery to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdoy 1. Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 33'. Barlow.
OH. 678.,80.

SYRACUSE , % double, 2
bedroom, se m i furn ished,
odulta on ly, no children or
pets. D~s lt 992-2749.

ANTIQUES , FURNITURE , glou ,

ONE SMALL trailer fo r 1
or 2 persons. 992·7785 .

chino, any thing. SH or coli

992-3161.

· Real Estate for Sale

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

PHOitf 742·2003 ...

NEW LISTING - Nice
size lot In Arbaugh Addi ·
tlon . It already has sep·

l.\pVERTISING
' DEADUNES

tic system and water
tap. Call today .

For Sale
COAL ,

LIMESTONE .

POMEROY - On Slate
Street. 2 bedrooms, llv·

oond,

grovel. calcium chloride, fer·
ti lizer, dog food , and all rypes
of salt. Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomeroy,

Tuesday

thru Friday
4P.M.

ing room , utlllty room,

balh and nice kitchen .
Sells lor only $16,500.00 .
RUTLAND Extra
nice 2 story home. 4

992-3891.

· the day btfore publ ic~t tion

bedrooms, living room ,
dining room, kitchen

CANNING PEACHES now tt-lru
Sept. 15 . Bob's Market,
Mason , WV . Open 7 days . ·

Sunday
4P.M.

Friday a fte rnoo~

and bath . Garage and
building .
Asking
$35,000.00.
LANGSVILLE - Nice 2
bedroom home On a I it ·

Phone JO.I. 773-5721 ,
'~•

In Memory
IN MEMORY of our beiOV·
ed husband, father and
grandfather, carl Walton,

who passed away nine
years ago, Sept. 4, 1970.
September brings sad
memories of a loved one
gone to rest

You will never be forgotten
by those who loved you
best.
Sadly m issed by his wife,

Virginia and children and
grandchildren.

Quarter horse, '1. Arabian
Sorrel gelding. Arabian saddle more , spotted . 992-7528.

tie over an acre. It has a
new roof and furnace .

LENNOX CENTRAL olr conditioning and heating
ducts . 992-2560.

Aluf1\lnum siding and
storm windows. A good
buy at $22,500.00.
BASHAN ROAD - 6'12
acres with a 3 bedroom
hom~ . Call Hilton Wolfe
tor more details. Sell
Price $39,900.00.
WEST RUTLAND E•cellent 3 bedroom

wlrh

Pick
CANNING tomatoet.
your own . Field weed free. $3
bu. Andrew Crou. Adams
Rd .. letart Falla. OH.
135,000 BTU basement fuel oil
furna ce. Excellent condition,
$200. 30 gallon natural goo hat
water heater. $20. PI-lone

available for adoption and informc tlon service.

GUNSHOOT,

FORKED

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY I
PM. FACTORY CHOKE ONLY.
RACINE GUN CLUB .
COME, PLAN to share an
of

Christian

Fellowship
with
us
September 7, 8, and 9 at
7:30 p.m. at the Carlton
Church, located on CR 18,
Kingsbury Rd. Our guest
speaker will be Rev . Tom

POTATOES FOR winter.
Cobbler,

wan1s to

and

HOT POINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Head'quarters
Ap'pliances
Sales &amp; Service

SALE PRICES

~..u.,...

is married to the former
Geneva King and they have
a' son, Richard . The even·
ing will Include Gospel
magic, puppe1s, sk i1s and

special singing.

Lost and Found
LOST: FRIDAY wt-.ile In Kroger ·
parki nv lot. 1 7 1!, year old
apoyed female dog , bla ck
body with wtlite face and feet .
Half hu sky, but s ma ller with
t-.usky markings. Finder wil l
receive a reward . I.I.Wolfe.

742·2036.
Help Wanted
LEAD GUITAR player wont..!
bond .

992-m9 .
BABYStTIER for 2 c tlildren in
my home In Middleport .
Monday - Fri doy .
days .

992-3937.
WOMAN WANTED to live
in with elderly lady . Lt.
housekeeping . Sa lary. Call
collect, Athens, 1·592·1365
or 1-593·8247.
APPLICATIONS being a c·
cep!ed for Registered
Med ica l Lab Tech. Phone
992 ·7279 .
LIVE ·IN HOUSEKEEPER
wanted In ••change tor
home and se&lt;;urlty. 985·4392
or write box no. 45898, Long
Bottom, OH .

house in Pome roy area. Phone
98 ~4366 evenings.

Real Estate for Sale
REAL ESTATE looni . Pu rchase
and refinance. 30 year t•rml ,
VA. No money down (eligible
ve terans). FHA · As low ·as 3
pe r cent down (non · v~terans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., n E.
State, Atl-lens . 614-592-3051 .

REAL ESTATE: 1 ocrolol in Riggscrest Manor. between Tuppen Plains Ond Ches ter .

Phooo 985·3'1" ond 'IBS-•12'1.
NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room
home on appro~~~: . 2 acres of

relocate

well ,

wood

bur ner j cellar, barn, &amp;

dbl. garage. $17,000. ·
TUPPERS PLAINS - 2

acres . 992-2523,
3 .65 ACRES APPROX. : Z miles
west of Rt. 7 on 1.43. level
acreage. 7-42-2656.
•o ACRES land on Bailey Run
Rd. Good hunting , timber, all
mi n eral right s. $1:2 ,000 .

742·2442.
FOR SALE : modernS year old 3
or 4 bedroom house. Fu1 .1y
carpeted. Full boaement. Drill·
ed well. Situated on opprox.
2 11, acres of land. $35.500.

7•2·307• .
19 ACRES, 2 1!, miles from MidJ tePort, 2 mobile homes completely set up . Rural water.
Mineral rights . Interested per·
sons. caii992·630S.
200 ACRE FARM between
Pomeroy and Athens. 3
bedroom house and good

born . $'17,500. Only $25 ,000
down. Owner will finance.

Coli 992·5266.

equ ipped

kit.

2

car

garage 2axso under con ·
struction on .63 acre lot.

1969 BUICK SKYLARK Custom
with air . Price negotiable.

ing room, wood -burning

bedrooms, 2 baths, din ·
fireplac e in living room,
beautiful bullt·ln kit·

992·7007 between 5:30 ond 10
pm.
1'173 PONTIAC CATALINA .

chen with bar, garage.
Quality workmanship
throughout .
Plush
carpeting and other ex·
cellent
fea1ures .

V·8, auto., P.B., P.S., A.C.,
good running condition. After
5, '14'1·2•'18 .

$44,800.00.
NEW LISTING - In the

1978 PONTIAC GRANO PriJC,
platinum 2-door sport, with air :
conditioning , tilt steering. Vr
vinyl top . CB. AM·FM stereo.
15 ,000 miles . Excellent condition . 992-5770.

country, 6 acre mini
farm , c lose to the
mines. RemOdeled. 1lf:z

story

home

with

3

bedrooms, new kitchen,

and living room with
Wood·burnlng fireplace,
part basement, and
storage building . Many
new features. $24,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Han·
dyman's delight. Great
hedge against Inflation

1'175 CUTLASS SALON , low
mi leage, P.S., P.B.' 350
engine, AM redia with tope
deck. 1 owner. S..3-2591 .
!'In
BLUE THUNDERBIRD.
32,000 miles . Excellent condttion . 2 new studded snow
tires . 992-6671 Monday-Fr iday

everyone, should own a
rental. $6,500.00 .

5,30,
1'178 FORD PICKUP F· 100 \',
ton bed. 6 cyl. 3·ope..t. 22,000

HOME FIT FOR A
KING - And . Queen.
One of the most

miles , chrome wheels. Call
388-8666 aher 9pm .

elaborate homes In
Meigs County. Features

1'176 OLDS CUTLASS Supremo.

10 rooms Of r oyal living,
up to live bedrooms lor
those little heirs. - 11

P.S.. P.B.. A.C.. new radial
tires. 992-3.-43.

you really wan1 elegant
living, you mus1 see this
one. would you believe

1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE . E•·
29,000

mUoo. $2•00. 992·3198.

only $58,900.00.
STATELY 2 STORY -

1969 FORD BRONCO, 4·
wheel drive. While spoke
wheels, 3 speed trans. Call
614-44H595.

Original oak woodwork

blends readily into the
mOdern features of this
home. Fireplace , all

storms .
Elementary,

Pom e roy
nice

lot

MENTAL HEALTH CENTER HAS
OPENINGS IN PSYCHATRIC. fNPATIENT
HOSPITALIZATION PROGRAM.

wilh off street park ing ,
A Bargain At SJ4,500.00.
COZY - 2 bedroom ha ·
meon 50•2611 lot In Mid ·
dleport, dining room,

R.N.'s with Dlploml, Auoci1t1 Degree or Bac·
calaureate DegrH. New and recent gr~duates .
Psychl1trlc Aids/ Assistants

cellar and garden
space. A STEAL AT
$16,200.00 .
OWNER NEEDS SALE
- 10,900.00 wi ll buy this
21am lly home .
A HOME FOR YOU - 1

some remOdeling, fruit

1

ffooi- plan modernhome,
with full basement, nice
to t,
excellen1

neighborhood . Reduc ed
to S19,900.00 lor im·
mediate sale.

WE HAVE BUYERS
WAITING FOR THE
RIGHT PROPERTY 'LIST WITH US, TD·
DAY I
REALTORS
Henry E . Clelond, Sr.
Henry E. Clel•nd, Jr .
992·2259
992 6191

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Choreogrophor

RACIH~ , O.

Located in Racine, 0 .
(formerly
Weavers

949·2741 or
992-73t4

Skill Building)
Ph. 9t9·2710 or 949·2150
8·, ·1 mo

I

'

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
W indow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

(FREE ESTIMATE)

NIGINN

CA~AIN EASY
H fY ~

TH&amp;

'

'

·

ing, full basement, nat.
gas FA furnace bath,

and view of river for on ·

UPHOLSTERING

ly $20,000. Will F.H.A.
INCOME 2 lOis
40x120, trailer set-up for
2, Iaroe 8 room house
and garage on corner

lot. Ask ing $17,500 .
FAMILY HOME - 5
l!cres, 4 bedrooms, 1'12

TRAII.fR SALES
•

Rd .
L.angsvllle, Ohio
6 1 4-U9 · ~24S Even ings
2 Mile-s Easl of Wilkesville

Now arrang1;1 the circl~· leners to
form the surprise ansWer, as sug~
geslod by lite aboVe ca~oon .

'

GOO SE
STO C~
TRAIL E iit N ~W AVA I L ABLE ·
~51

mo

baths, full base., s.s.
sink ,
dishwasher ,

disposal, and o il FA
furnace . Asking $30,000.
INCOME
Store
bild ing , bath , ci ty

water, nat. gas

heat, on
12-4 in Rutland tor only

$12,000.
IF YOU WANT A
REASONABLE PRICE
OUT OF YOUR HOME
CALL 992-3325.

Housing
Headquarters

Radiator·,......-""
Servlctr

MotOrs. Inc.
Ph. 992·2174

fVJJ \l.OW 'ttJJ !?A1B Mf P6 A
ND'll~li!C:-IIJ-Ut&gt;.VJ al t.. ~ OF

IS lHAT ·Bf:CAlJ% I'M 100

CAlJDIPI 6,\.L.DV '?

OHered

Ro&amp;er·-· Hysell

All Masonary Work

Gaage

Foundation,

an St. Rt. 124 toward

114

~utland .

Brick La~ng.
Concrete Finishing.
Free Estimates
'BUILT IN 1177 - Completely restored 1970 brick stalely home on Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy.

They just don 't build'.1hem like this anymore. Ce~1ral heat and air conditioning. You 've got to see th1s
~orne

10 appreciate. Call tor appointment.- $.48,000.

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992-2342, Eve. 992·2449
Middleport, 0 .

992·5304,992· 2238
8·2H mo.

...

CA.LL

HOOF HOLLOW. English and
Weste rn ,
Saddles ' and
harness . Hones and poniet.
Ruth Reeve1 . 61~ · 698-3290.
Bordlng &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Care products .
RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

Toylor. 61-4-367-7220.

THIS tS WHAT YOU ASKE.D FOR -

GIVE A nic4 pet a good home.
Shepard. beoglea . poodles.
elkhound terrier. loveoblo
mixed breeds, k:lttent , cots.
Humane Society. 99:2-6260.

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport· Poemroy a rea.
Coli fo r free estimate.

367-7 101.
PAINTING AND oandblooting.

14 acres Of

Free estimates . Ca ll9"9·2680.

nice rolling land with a 11/2 story hosue That sits batk

DOZER, END loader and dump
truck. Will do batements,
ponds ,
bru s h ,
timber .
limes to ne ,
and
g ravel.
CharleaButctl•r. 742-2940.

Off the road surrounded with maple trees . Lg . pond
stocked with fish . Nicely located in Morning Star
.area. Pri ce $33,900.
FAMtL Y HOME - Lots Of possibil ities WITh tn is
real n ice 2 story home. Many features, like cen1ral

air, built ·in appliances, all carpeted &amp; so forth . A
very good investmen1 with several nice building
lo1s. On approx . ..tl/2 acres in the center of Racine,

Ohio. Asking only $54,000.
LARGE LllltNG ROOM -

40x26, home with 3

bedrooms, carpeted throughout . Eat ·in kitchen on
3/.. acre lot. 111, car garge &amp; storage building . Asking
$39,500 .

HOME &amp; INCOME - Immediate possession , large
3 bedroom home, living room &amp; fam ily room, all
nicely carpeted . Eat·in eqtJipped kitchen, 2 full
baths, l/2 basement, garage, nice garden area . In·
come from 1railer on properly . Racine, S-45,000.

COUNTRY SPECIAL - Nice remodeled 2 bedroom
home on blacktop road . Mos tly carpeted . F.A. na t.
gas furnace . A ve r y attractive small home and1
acre land . Priced for quick sale for $17.500.
S32 ,000.00 - C, ood 3 bedroom, all c arpeted home '
close to Pomeroy &amp; Middleport. Located on good 1•12
acres of land.

SHOULD BE SOLD - 70 acres, house.&amp; good barn,
about 1,000 feet Of beautiful Ohio Ri ver frontage.
Nice recreation spot, minerals, loo. Let's have an
offer. Price $57

.ooo:

LOTS OF LOTS - From 1 to 75 acres, bordering
Pomeroy .
MiDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home approx. W yrs
old, stove &amp; refrigerator, lg , storage bldg. Pnced at
$35,000.
RACINE - 2 BR trailer on nice lot. Asking$11 ,500.
55 ACRES - Available back of Ra c ine, can be d ivid·
ed, !Imber. $55,000.00.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY - 2 unit Income plus
space for two more units, each section has own elec. /
meter &amp; hot water, separate entrance and comes{

nicely furnished . Let's talk about this•ono
INCOME PROPEK 1 T - Now 1 ~mea as one unit, ·
could be made Into 2 units, other possibilities wi th
balance of hOme on 3 lots in Pomeroy . Asking

WILL DO baby s itting In my
home for a child from 3 to 9
yeora of age . Call Alice

Wllllamo. 94'1-257 1.
ELECTRICAL WIRING lor form ,
home and bus lnets . Elect ric
heat and lighting . New work
or modernizing. Joe Del'-',ca .

7•2-2795.
Give Away

~

.4W, THAT

.
'

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949-2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCI ·\ TE
949-2654 or 949·2591

RA1T LESNA Kf "'

~fl

Vulne r ~ bl e : Ne ithe r
De ale r : West

'" 8l.JT

HERE "·

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
worntn's
perms.

stylina,

Call for •ppt. or walk in.

ALLEYOOP

Pomeroy, D.

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
C0.Athens
17 E. State,

592-3051

4·23· 1 mo.

BRADFORD, AuctionHr. Compl•te Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000 . Raci ne . Oi'•lio,
Critt Bradford.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Swnpen . toas ters . Irons . all
amoll oppliancH . Lawn moer.
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 985-3825 .

SEWING MACHINE Ropaln.
servi ce . all
lhe Fabr ic
Authori zed
Ser.o lce . We

makes. 992-n&amp;A.
Stlop, Pomerov.
Singer Sole~ and
allorpen Sciaaors .

,E XCAVATING , dater . loader
and backhoe work: dump
trucks ond lo-boya far hire ,
will haul fill dirt , top soli,
limestone and gra vel. Coli lob
or Roger Jeffers . doy phone
992-7 089 ,
nlgnt
phone

992-3525 or 992-5232.
EXCAVA TING , dozor,
bockhoo and dltchor, ChariH

plete "Service. Phone 992·2,.78.

992-6260.
BEAGLE and blue ti ck
pups, male. Shots, worm·
ed.
Humane
Society .

992 ·62611 .

Rutland, Ohio. Pono 742-2008,
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com-

,.

YOUNG FEMALE beagle.
Loveable pet . Shots .
Humane Society, 992 ·6260 .

been cancelled? Lott your
operators
license? Phone

1970 Cattle, 60x1 ::Z, ::Z bedr.

197' Morkllno, 50• 12, 2 bttdr.
1969Voliont, 12•60. 2bttdr.

Mason , WV. Call 304-n3-5905
or 992-7759.

LYNN HAVEN 14X65 3
bedroom .
Vlndale 12x63 with expan ·
do, 2bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3
bedr.
,
1973 Skyllne12x55 2 bedr.
Bonanza 12•52. 2 bedr .
'.
B&amp;S MOBILE HOME
SALE S, PT . PLEASANT,
wv ., 304·675·4424.

I fiqqered the1.1

send som~

thin'

Cleaning .

St eam
c leaned .
Free
eStimate .
Reasonable
rates .
Scofchguard . ,

biQ'

992 ·6309 or 742·2348.

-

E·C ELECTRICAl ControctOI"
ser:ving Ohio Vo lley region.
Six days o week , 24 hours ser·
vice . Emergency calla. Call

882·2952 0&lt; 882-:US..
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
systems ,

dolor, bcickhao. Rt. 14a.
Phono 1 (614) 698-7331 or
7•2·2593.
IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various I iles of pool
kits . Oo-- it· yourtelf or let ua
Install for you . 0 . 8umgordn.r
1
SaiM, Inc. 992-5724 .

WINNIE
WINN IE CAM E R16HT
OUT AND A~KE:ll ME
Ai!&gt;OUT YOUR
WORK .

WILL HAUL llmHtono ond
grovel. Also. lim• hauling and
spreodlng. Leo Morris Truck..

lng, Phono 742·2•55.
ANN'S CAKE Docorotlng Supplin , 50716 O.born Rd ..
•eedtvllle, OH 45n::Z. For In-'
formation coli, 667-6485. Will
be open late If you need
something.

SHOO!!
SHOO!!

••••

AND UP
CASH &amp; CARRY

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN .STOCK-

•995

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE

: PEANUTS

LVOW16 VAN SEAGLE i

.GOOD SELECTION ' oF ·

CUSHION VINYL
CALL 742·2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

742· 2211

Rutland,

Pass

6+
Pass

wa ~

hea rt s and now South

decided to save at six clubs.
West doubled a nd led his sin · .
glet on dia mond .
.J us t 10 prove lhat bri dge is
a ga me of· luck. the contract
w:i s a wr,ap..up.

r easonabl e and

South we nt ri ght up wit h
du mm y's a ce of dia monds.
~re w tr um ps a nd lost the
spatle fin esse. West di d not
have a second diamo nd to
lead and played his king or
hearts. Sout h r uffed. discard·
ed dum my's losing diamonds
on s pades a nd came home to a
surpri sed w inner
! NE W ~ !' Ai'EH

E:'--ITERPH ISt: .A. SS :"'

Money' k '

17;

I

(For a copy of J A COBY
M OOERN. send $ 7 to: " Win a t
Bridge . .. ca re of th1s newspaper. P. 6. Box 489, Radio City
Sta tron . New York. N. Y.

News 20 . 10:30-Dragnet 17; Best
of Groucho 20.
11 :00- New s 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Dic k Cavett 20;
Book Be at 33.
11 :»-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Poll ee
Woman 6,13; U.S. Open Tennis
Highlights 8; ABC News 33; .
Movie " Crosscurrent" 10; Movie
" The Tall T" 17.
1 :45- Swltch 8; 12:4Q- Bdaretta
6,13; 12 : 55- Kojak 8.
1:00-Tomorrow3; News 15; Movie
" The Gypsy and the Genlleman"
17.
'
1: 50- News 13 ; 3 : 20-news 17;
3: 40- Movle " The 1;ood Ole
Young " 17 .
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1'7'
5:40-World at Large 17; 5 :45Farm Report 13; 5 :50-PTL Club
13.
5:55-Summer Semest~r 10; 6:()()700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15.
6 : 10- News
17 ;
6:25- For
You .. . Biack Woman 10.

6 :30-Dragnet 17; 6 :45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning,
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-Chuck
White Reports 10; News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15 ; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Thursday Morning 8; Batman 10: Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17.
7: 15- A.M . Weather 33; 7 : 30Famlly Affair 10; 8:00-Capl.
Kangaroo 8, 10; Lassie 17;
Sesame St. 33 .
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:oo-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13, 15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B;
Love of Life 10; Lucy Show 17;
Mister Rogers 33.
9:30-Sanford &amp; Son B; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.

10:00-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Magazine 8,10; Morning
Magazine 13; Movie "The Busy
Body" 17 ; Unto the Hills 33.
I 0: 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15 ;
$20,000 Pyram id 13; MacNeilLehrer Report 33 .
10:55-CBS -New s 8; House Call 10.
11 :00--High Rollers 3,15 ; Laverne &amp;
• Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 :55--News
17.
12 :00-Newscenter 3; News 6,10,13;
. Mlndreaders 15; Love American

t OO t9.)

Style 17.
12:»-Ryan' s Hope 6,13 ; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10;' Not For Women
Only 15; Mov le "Stage to
Thunder Rock" 17; Elec. Co. 33.
1:00-0ays of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; News 8; Young &amp;
by THOMAS JOSEPH
the Restless 10.
1
:30-As
The World Turns 8, 10.
ACROSS
42 Relay race
2:00-Doctors 3, 15; 2:25-News 17.
1 Dressed
DOWN
2 :30-Another World 3,15; Guiding
5 Word with
1 Doctrine
Light 8, 10; I Love Lucy 17; Sugar
in the Gourd 33.
blade
%Peggy Lee
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
or board
song : 19S2
Yoga &amp; You 20; Infinity Factory
11 Function
3 Gobel's wife
17 '
12 Lombard
4 Narrow
3 :»-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10;
13 Iniquity
valley
Banana Splits 17; Turnabout 20.
4:00-Misler Cartoon 3; Password
U Jewelry item 5 Fearful
15; Merv Griffin 6 ; Addams
15 State
I Declined
Yestenllly'• Auwer
Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Six
17 Grand Coulee, 7 Bother
Z2 Thor or
21 Easter event
Million Dollar Man 10; Mike
for one
8 Spilled
Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
Zeus
:19 Backbone
18 Miner's quest the.beans
%3 Lapel
30 An Osmond 4 :30- Lone Ranger 3; Hogan ' s
Heroes 8i Lucy Show 15; Par-.
19 Rubicund
9 Scrubbed
omament
31 Fragrance
!ridge Family 17.
ZO MemorabiUa 10 Cossack
Zl Trap
32 Doctrine
5:00-Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
Zl Open,
leader
Z5 Yawn
35 Core
8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle iO; Six Million
in bridge
II Dry
Z6 Cease and
31 Seat
Dollar Man 13; Little Rascals 15;
!2 Narrow
%1 Drone
for baby
Star Trek 17.
valley
5:30-News 6; Petticoat Junction 8;
28 Hollow grass
·Eiec. Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
25 One kind
~+--+-+10; Abbott &amp; Coslello 15; Doctor
33.
Who
of standard
6:00-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
Z6 Over
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
27 Hiwie's
20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
residence
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Andy Grlf.flth 6; CBS News 8, 10;
28 Curved lettl!rfisjjFather Knows Best 17; over
%9 Tr~ output
Easy 20,33.
30 Twnbler's
7: 00- Cross-Wits 3: Newlywed
need
Game 6, 13 ; Marty Robbins'
Spotlight 8; News 10; Get Smart
33 'Japanese
17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
coin
7:30-College Football ' 79 3; .
34 Make ready
Bonkers 6; Match Game PM 8:
36 Where
5100,000 Name That Tune 10;
Nashville on the Road 13; Dolly
Roma is
15; My Three Sons 17; MacNeil ·
38 Fairway
Lehrer Report 20,33.
club
8:00-LIIellne 3; laverne &amp; Shirley
39 Abandon
6, 13; Billy Graham Crusedit 15; .
to Occasion
The Body Human 8, 10; National
Geographic 20,33; Movie "Love .
UHomeon
has Many Faces" 17.
the plains
8:30-NFL Football 6,13 ; 9 :()()Qulncy 3, 15; Hawaii Flve-0 8; .
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here' s how to work it:
Billy Graham Crusade 10.
AXYDLBAAXR
9:30-Biac k Man' s Land 20 ; Greet
Is LONGFELLOW
Performance~ 33.
10:oo-Mrs. Columbo 3,15; Steve &amp;
One le tte r simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Eydie 10; 10 : 1~nedln Line 17.
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters, 10 :30-News 20; Dance at Dawn 33.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all 11 : 00- News 3,8, 10, 15; Hocking
hints. Each day the code lett ers are diffe rent.
Valley Bluegrass 20; Book Beat
33 ; 11 : 15-New Soupy Sales 17.
CRYPTOQUOTES
11 : »-Johnny Carson 3, 15; New:.
6, 13;
U.S .
Open
Tennis
DVSSZHOJJ
J
QOHOIZKZVR '
Highlights 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Man with the Golden
I X N
GOO
QX W C
QAG
Z G
Arm" 10; Dick Cavett 20.
11 : 45--Mash 8; Movie "Decision at
ZJ
TNZOI.
GDVG
WO. LORXSJ
Sundown" 17.
12: 00-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13; 12:2()Movle " Don't Go Near tno

m--r---.-

J,BARNE Y

RUBBERB_ACK CARPn

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Pass

4+

or

~dM~~

GASOLINE ALLE Y

FrM EstlmiiH
JAMES KEESIE
p - m-2112
1·17·1 mo.

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE AUTILE
SAVE ALOT

1974 1" )( 70 mobile home.
Good condition. 99:2·5858.

Pass

res ponse

992-2143.

Mobile Homes Sale's

1965 GENERAL60• 12, 2 bodr.
1970Sylvo, 60•12, 2 bttdr.

INSURANCE

Obi.

Pa ss

learned .
On the 01he r hand , there
must be some deity who pro·
tects such un fortunates.
Eas t 's
two -diamo nd

Down $poult

septic

5+

:1 NT

South
2 NT

dangerous wh en your partner
·. does not know w ~at you have

o Storm Doorl
oStormWI-s
oRepflcomont
Wl-s
oGutton•nd

ca vatlng ,

Pass
Pass

2t
Db I.
4¥
5¥

gerous thing and particu la rl y

J&amp;J.. BlJ)WN

S&amp;G CARPE r

F.ast

Pass

A l ittle l earning is a da n-

8·26·1 mo.J

FHA- AS low as 3%

down (non-veterans)

North

1¥
Pass

By' Oswa ld J acoby
and Alan Sontag

992·2367
Moln St.

West

five

Opening lead: t 8

&amp;

etMulatl•

AUTOMOBILE

BRICK HOME - Central air, fir eplace, 3 good size·

fireplace, Iaroe utility room and plenty of storage,
two -car garage has elec1rlc door opener . One great
lea lure afler another. Listed $75,500 .

~ ttlGED

GETS

SA I?A.M NEEDS A PET TO ~55
OVER OR S11E 'D GIT LOI&lt;IIfSOMf

Mlck's
Barber•
Style center
.. lntroduces' -

INSUlATION
VINYL ~NO
AWMINUM SIDING ·

I NEED a home. J o.m a young
shapherd terrier unu!lual ly
marked. We ore looking for a
good
home,
Amer ic a n
domestic kittens ond catl.
Lass ie type with "' whita feet ,
toil , female . Baagla, young ,
mole and female, nice domily
pets, al-lots . Humane Soc iety.

98S.3524 .

1967 National , 12)(50, 2 bedr.

LARGE SPLIT LEIIEL - on 3 Acres, 4 BR home,
tully carpeted, equipped kit ., family room has nice

Real Estate Loans

R. HatHeld. Black Hoe Service,

B'S MOBILE HOME SALES , PT.
PLEASANT, WV. JO.I-675·4424.
MOBILE HOME ond lot In

ranch style home. Priced for quick sal e. SJ3, 000.

'

men's

..

• 75 4
• K 1095 3

6·6·1 mo.

FOIIUrlnt :

AI R olh a nd promptl y ra JSed
wha t soun ded li ke a nor ma l
notrump bid 10 game.
Ea st do ubled and South
rea lized tha t some thin g had
go ne w r ong and ran out to
fo ur clubs . No rth a lso knew
some thi ng had gone w ro ng
and passed . But a ft~ r East bid
fo ur hearts. when lhc bidding
got back lo Nort h he compel·
ed w ith five cl ubs. East tr ied

..

UITLE ORPHAN ANNI E

992-2772

Purchase
a nd
Renna nee
30 Year Terms
A- Na money down
(eli gible veterans)

TWO ADULT spayed cats ,
female. 1 blue, l black . Need
good homH by Sopt . 6.

$13,500.
bedrooms, Ph bath, ra iled front porch and mature
trees , shrubery all add to the appeal Of thi s fine

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992· 5682
O O·ttC
'

Sl!lllh "s tv•o notrump wa ~
nwant to he (me fl l tho~l' unu su&lt;.t I not rum ps inventcll by
that gre(tt bidding the(Jnst AI
Roth . Nort h ha d nt:!vcr ht•ard
o f th a i co nve n tion or e ve n o f

o-5

SOUTH
+ A .J975

Pets for Sale

ding. Coll367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING. Judy

JUST LISTED - Minifarm w / a beoutlful bric k bl ·
level, w/3 bedrooms &amp; fulll&gt;asement, large carport,
total elec. Not expensive, fully Insulated, all hard ·
wood floors. 31arge hothouses. You can have all th is
with approximately 5 acres of land for only $63,500,

mile off Rt. 7 by -pan .

Stumbling slam bid makes

• 1\ 3 2

~LTI TUO£

Services

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

+ A J 762
WEST
F./\ST
+K 8 42
• 6:1
.A'k iS43
• Q J 10 !l
t KQJ 10 9 6
• R
• Q 4
+8

Free Estimate

7·12

OPPOSE

---

NORTH
• Q 10
• 862

J&amp;L INSUlATION '

992·6011

p"omeray

ment .

BY

•New Home
•Addons
•Remoldlngs
*Free estimates

PLENTY

BRIDGE

ALUMINUM
&amp; VINYL SIDING

SIDING
Smith Nelson

BORN LOSE R

CALL 992-7544

C.· R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.

El{PERIENCED

Hours,., M,, W., F .
Other times by appoint101 syeomoro ( Rnrl
Pomeroy, 0 .

Ph. 992-3743 or 9t2.J752
B·l ·1mo.

LILAC

Answer: Could Qe an unexpected gel- togetherA COLLISION

&lt;

IN SYRACUSE

SUPE R

(Answers tomorrow)

I Jumbles: ALIAS

Yesterday's

Love

'

10 :00- Great Performan ces 33;

MM: r I X)'0 r X I I J ( I I )I

-·

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

from Codner's Texaco.

" For

.'

Master p iece Theat re 20; All
Creatures Great and Small 33.
9 :00-Movle "Katie : Portrait of a
Mov ie
Centerfold " 3, 15;
" Brea k ing Up Is Hard to Do"
6, 13; Upstairs, Downstairs 20;
Wise Parents
Know Their
Children 33.

~ 1Tit-J6 II'J5ECT5'? .

Veterans Admin . Loans.

Undfl' Now MlniQe·
mont (formerly Sylvlo's
Upholstery) , ocrou

27310 Montgomery

WHAT'5 THE ~EST
WAY TO PREVENT
INFECTION F~M

IT A'-10 CAL L A COP !

REAL ESTATE •
FINANCING
Fedor~!
Housing &amp;

A&amp;H

MONTGOMERY

!

~IJy WA5 5HOVtiJG THIS
I ~ MY &amp;ACKJ HEORE---TA ~ ~

. - · Htic ]

j

7 :30-Dolly 3; Match Game PM 6;
Mupper Show 8; The Judge 10;
Fa mily Feud 13; My Three Sons
17 ; MacNe ii ·Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 : 00- Re a l Peopl e 3; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13;
Billy Gra ham
Crusade 15; ·Movie " The High
~ nd the Mighty " 8, 10; . Movie

tJ

'
'"949-2862 -949· 2160 ' '

8-6·1 mo.

3 bedroom frame home

WE HAVE CON:V.ENTI.QNAJ.. FII\I~IIIS·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS low AS 5% DOWN. ,.
.
608 E. ·
MAIN
POMEROY,O.
NEW LISTING - l year

Roofing

down

spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks ond
driveways.

bedroom, one fl ., bath,

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

old ranch, l lf:z acres, 3

Ess ie Bremmer, R.N., lnpotlentC-.IInetor
c/ o Juanita Atha, Personnel Adminlstr•tor
G ·J ·M CMHC, 412 Vinton Pike
, Goll1polls,OH 45631 or caii614-446-S500

drilled

so

Custom . 992· 5858.

Previous psychiatric experience not required.
Medical / Surg ica l experience desirable tor
registered nurses staffing the npallent Unit.
Rotating shifts or steady evening or night shills
a vailable. Two weekends per month off. Salary and
fringes excellent. Part-time employment on even ·
lngs and / or nights Is possible tor R.N . coverage (on·
ly ). We are an equal employment opportuni ty
employer.

bath,

with f irep lace in the liv-

742-3092

1'17' VEGA HATCHBACK, coli
303-675-1501 or 305-675·2•88
or304·675-15S3.
1'174 DODGE CORONET 4·door

1nterested In develoPing new and Innovative pro·
grams? Would you like to become a part of a
develaplng major mental health center?

Shower

992-7255.
SEllEN ROOMS ond both. 2

Phone 992 -2181

condition .

house.

$20,000.
25 YRS. OLD - Modern

Auto Sales

cellent

WAY OUT - 3 acres on
124 w ith 3 bedroom

work,

Gull or

I ORXAB

l

Wednesday, Sept embers, 1'7'

':':;..eo:..-··_..,. ..

H. L Wrilesel

I

Instructor-

levelland with plenty of shade
trees , on
Rutland Rd .

Jack w. Carsey
~
Mgr.

.. .

216,£ . Second Str:_eet

;

'-

ADD QNS &amp;
REMODELING

OPENING SEPT. lith
Ctuses : Bolle!
T1p&amp;Jon
Agos-4 •nd up
Shirley carpenter

LfiELE
r . rJ

.. !

-

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

REASONABLY PRICED country

Velma Nlclnsky, Assoc .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

of Moody Bible Institute,
Chicago, Ill . Rev . McElroy

wanted to Rent

Television
Viewing:

UnsctamtH these tour Jumbles,
one leher to elteh square, to form
four ordinary worcts.

·Business Services
'

Owner

they say sell this nice 3
bedroom home. If has
aluminum siding and
storm windows. Many
nice features to this
home. Call today lor
more details. ASKING
ONLY $25,500.00.
If you woutd tlke one of
the obove homes but
can't find financing,
give us 11 call. We will
help you .
.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc.
Phone 742·2003
GeorgeS. HobsteHer,
Jr.
Broker 992-5739
Hllion Wolle, Assoe.
949-258,

A NICE EArly American
living room suite, $125.
Platform rocker, $20 .
Phone 992·7331 .

Q;:

join country -rock

Kennebec,

Superior. Phone 843 ·2491 .
Tom Sayre, SR 338.

McElroy, recent graduate

to

$-49,000.00. •
POMEROY -

Run

Sportsman Club 4KICh Sunday
startingSept . l . Factory choke
guns only.

evening

99n'l44 .

I

TH ~EE BE DROOM house.
Well water. In countr y.·
992-5871 .
'

home, with family
room , living room, laundry room ilnd 'h base ·
ment. Price reduced to

742-3045.
16 GAME HENS ond rooster .

Notices
GUN SHOOT, EVERY FRIDAY
7:30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY.
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIHY . 9'12·6260. Polo

count ry

Real Estate for Sale

Announcing Opening of

ONE II:DROOM apta. Co ntact

Write M.D. Miller. Rt. .. .
Pomeroy or call992-7760.

Ru th Gosney . antiques. 26 N.
2nd . .
Middleport ,
OH.

Center, Ha rtford , WV, 4 miles
Pome r ay · M"o son
a bove
Bridge.

992-5.43&lt; .

OLD FURNITURE, Ice boxes,

WANT~AD

Noon on Saturday

COUNTRYMOBILE Home Pork,
3 AND • RM fu rnis hed and unf.urn iJ hed
op ts.
Phone

ADS ON PAGE 14

Monday

Auctions
BIG AUCTION evory W..t .. 7
pm. Ha rtford Commun ity

Route 33 , north of P omer o~ .
Lorge lots . Call992-7479 .

MORE CLASSIFIED

NOTICE

For Rent

t

'

z

Water " 8.

..

1. ~~~----------~_.~------~~~~-~.-~~·

I

! :()()-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1 : 1~ ..
Baretta 6, 13; 1: 15-Movle " The
Deadly Bees" 17.
2:2Q-News 13 ; 3 : 10- News 17;
3: 3()-IV\cvle " Hostile Guta" 11

•

�••
1.~

-The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 5, 1979

available. County voting equipment
was also present, permitting
fairgoen to register their opinions
on a number of pubUc issues,
Celebrezze said the voter
education program is occurring at
most other COWity fairs throughout
the summer and is designed to ••emphasize the importance of every
citizen's vote." Celebrezze added
that ''the III'OI!"am also stresses the

Fair results announced ••.
celebrezze also noted that 52 county
citlze1111 were registered to vote
during the recently concluded Meigs
County Fair.
The Board, In cooperation with
Celebrezze's office, sponsored a fair
booth where voter information and
regl5tration materials were

Seventy-five percent of thoee who
voted at the Meigs County Elections
Board fair boclth do not believe that
the current gas shortage Is real, according to figw'el released by Ohio
Secretary d State Anthony J .
Celebrelle, Jr.
In announcing the figures ,

Yard Sale
YAIIO SALE. S.l High St., Micldleport. Sept. ~ . 5 , 6 lrom 9
amto5pm .

GARAGE SALE. Sept. 6

YARD SALE. Sopt. 3 throogh 8.
810 S. 2nd St., Middiopo(t,

7.

for

everyone

&amp;

Tuppers Plains, across
street from Hawks' Penn·
zofl . Furniture. jars.

Ot-4 . Old stove , bedding,
linens, dishes, dolli, clothing,
washer
and
dryer ,
Silverttor~e ,
lamps . toys .
Something

YARD SALE. Sopt. ~ - 6 . Oonell YARD SALE . Starling
Dugan' s Broadway St., Racine , Massar residence, 2 hoUses
OH. Clotnes and misc. items . on right abOve Eastern
9-4. Rain or ahlne . .
Hlgn Schooi..Used dresser.
YARD SALE. 2 family. Houso bed, dinette set, 3 way mlr·
behind
State
Highway ror, vanity, braided rugs,

YARD SALE and Bake Sale. Friday, Septmeber 7. 8-.4 pm.
Chester Metkodlst Church.
Sponsored by Ctwnt•r U.M .W.

Garage. Sept. 6 . Thura. only. clothing,

clothes. etc. 9 tiff ~. Spon·
sored by St. Paul United
Methoaist Women.

FIVE FAMILY Yard Sale.
Bfll Pulilhs residence.
Mudsock Rd ., Alfred, OH .
Sept. 6, 7, 8.

.

Come sM.
,.,

Oil. ......

111 ..__, Cwtificae-

•iciiN

YARD SALE Thur. at Ciif·
ton. Follow sign, 2nd lane
from pond . Children ' s
clothing. sink. 2 dinette sets
and other misc. items .

~ o1 ..... Dlltiflfllll m

~rll, t'7t.*ntd.-s.~purt~glassware,
dishes, division, F1ve Points. 9·4.
=··:.,r;~J...'UI~~~.ra.1f~ri.ll bedspreads, curtains, rugs, m_-5060
__. _____
11t Mii:Si Mi. 1 '-' hMIIIID .-n1111 ~ baby furniture and Items,
011
...
..,. ~ "" •• Ill • ltfillll • ....., ~o. complete
B rownle suit I
tllil de¥ llld dill . .., '4 , . . :!MI. ~ IMiniiCt CJI Oit..
(StlllilM)books~
toys.
sewing
~ Dli•. o.~~ o1 hwlllt1, Cllli~w- machine, golf clubs, bowl ·
~~- - -•,...-.'rn~lng balls and bag, set of
·
-tild
lilt ~~~lir~~•''!U•
ot lidn '-home Stereo speakers .4th
PROBATE
COURT OF
•
. · ..,..... . ..
. .11
·
·
MEIGS COUTY
IDI!IIII\IfWitll. tiiiiJin~!ti•lllt 1 111." 11 .11
house
up
from
Ashland
OHIO
,.
utmaddlrinct~a:nrt,..totrftll1 nudltl!h · 1 B ik Pf nt I Ml
s If I
•
....,.. u"'•oi i~~~~M~M~. kiRrwwilla:rilitullll U
a
n . nerve,
ESTATE
OF GEORGE
r,:_:,u;t'it1B:U::::=.~~~~~:,,1;'l:,OH. Phone 992·5823 or DEWEY PULLINS[ eko
Uilili~n 11 ;,(19,2'!18.1!0; Swp111, a,it.Willllnall!t. 992·2550.
Dewey
P u II n 1,

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ttsfi..UIIccMitioltis

'

DECEASED
CoseNo.22783

LEGALNOTICE
MEIGS COUNTY

NOTICE

COURT
caseNO.l400
Larry
Smith Smith and Janet
Plaintiffs
vs •
•
Linda
Sturgeon
Defendant

u•liti•jj• hoJ.&amp;M.lxun Surp1111. • u m_IJl: ...,_ ~ it• .....- ......,. to'- 111m •klllon a.
-... V.IR•• _........, ut.tDlaO!I: u.u.r 31 111t .._ttld .-,Jts-,nun
&gt;01 -111.74llllOD. """' · "~ OldOl
UoOIIIin illl,llt,III.O~
~"7.00:
Pursuant to a WRIT OF
,,...,._,._,.,. _ _ .,.., iMi.iul-.lll - " " ti!.'Oll!070D. RESTITUTION in the

. ,.,__. ,..,;=--•"!"' .. -'t;'' "" "'"'" ""::::":~ &lt;Jt!o.
tli•••••·
v.-.s..cH•..rs.•~i
!1:11

~

!liD. o.t1lllll ol . . . . . IMtifialt al

Cllli~• t1111-

d ·till 111 o1 Gtto,

~ca..

If

1111

il.

Thursday,

111
..,.,..,_.:.,....,.,_.,=-·-FOUR
FAMILY Porch
tJ 1111 !11 atloto'"J"~11 =. 11 r.="' Sale. sep1 . 5th and 6th. 9·5.
:':..~~l"''''"'tMoltlli•tih•tc.we lD it:. Men's, women's, children's GIGANTIC YA~D SAle.
~s ••~~U~,.IIIIamtt,..tot!IIIIICI: .iflllli•ll!lll and baby clothes. Good Thursay and Frtday, 6th
:;·=~:i~·=·:=::~::O::~ winter
coats, shoes, and 7th . . Crow•s Sub ·

THREE FAMILY Yard
Safe. Friday, Sept. 7th. 9
am·J pm at 39~ Beech St .•
Middleport.
Adult ,
children , and baby
clothing.
a.. 111

l)io

e1c .

car soot, high chair. Friday, Saturday, 9·5 p.m.
No sales before Thur$day.
mltc. ltems.

Baby

•~ 1111-.

'*

*"'illlllillltlllt•llttil!laf;IIWICIMetoi\•i•
llllaiJMillillltllliiCifiiiCJUiobMIIdilllil\lltlllib
nA.allllllllllialll
liiMII, its .....
011o111111t 31 1111: MlitiM .-.. 5l&amp;a.CCil
U.-llltln ..7,403,354110; ,_,. .. 13UD22tiiD;
' -· 11 15.-.•llll.f:Pt~ao:Oilut"'

.,.., ...._,i,....
....._.b:!._.._ ...._.

,.,.w,

'"'~~0!: """1.~.

above styled case Issued to

jjj}(71

...::..-d...,.,· ~:"~-:~011-=.,bllllo::, me on the 21 si day of
ttris~lfiCitkt. ltfl'! v. •

11;. ~

~n~~naorOia. August, 1979L I

OF

t~~fCJr.~=~
t
.

OnAugus
17, 1979,tnthe
Meigs
County
Probate
Court, Case No. 22783,
Ether t Smith
N~e
St
p omeroy,
• 1558 Oh
ree
o
.(5769 was appointed
Executrix of the estate of
George Dewey Pullins • a ka
Dewey Pullins,, deceased,
fate Of 15439 71;e Slreet,
Pomeroy~Ohlo 769.
Robert e. 'Buck
p b t J d
1

will expose
i'&gt;''"l tor sale at .-UBLIC AUC·
lilt o1 IJIIQ, Dtp!flnlllt rJ. ,....,..., cartifiw o1 T _
I ON at the side en1rance
ro. a e u ge
a..~m-llltllllllni~1 S.~IilftriM~.__ of the Courthouse,
·
Clerk
dU•b•allllio,......,mnlfij••ltiii:Dil.-t Porn roy Ohio on Satur·
CO.,olfiitlthdfltlll..,t_I ... &lt;!"'Pitdllillltllf
e
(8)22 29(9)5 3tC
l.. altN•~•~•ic.w•)Oit;.litiiAtuiiiCIUIJtfll day, the 15th day of Sep_·
'
•
Qrllfltl'•tot..mln~sueiu.....n••- tember. 1979f at 10:00
PUBLICNOTfC
d 1. . . .. h R..eill Wtilll'l i• lllillit 11r 111..., o'clock A M
he following
. ,
.E
..._.,, ....... lfAIM011~31, 1911: nood
nd'clia ttels to-wit· .,. Sealed btdS Will be
1

1

1

M111ttttd

'"'''t.''' · '"h~:4. 00; u.~ititi••· • Ze~·~h
1

TV

Moctel

H

93

1

"''':.'.l'.li'flftL"'i~~':.,., ... ., R\illlil~"iij
. ~ii!Ol'MJ:;'"it.'"::':: serlai No. 765363
_ .. _,.,IIJ»•Ifli••DII...,c». Sl&amp;IU10.0R .. ,III),IIIDIJl
.
Realls1ic 23 Channel CB
~ ......... ~, ...._.,. •-•..,
"•· ,.,. """"~-....,., Base ,.
Station Radio Serial
(Sui m J --~rwr.Uiolllllfilld ...... IIIIM. . ~. N
t••
a1 Clit. _ _ . o1 ......... Clllitaa o1 . tli•••••·tirrrw...,.. ~. dlnlnadOii~.
o. 2~" 5001
..,.,..,_.,_~--·CBMikeModel2lll73
~till '-• ~Olio.
mrtiks ,.IITD. OCUI !
"' Oli o.,.t,.. ~ __, lllltiftcae ~
2 speakers
a ca. olllll__.l., alllll•llll•• ~~. . ...:'·,...,.• .,..,,.n..-...a~~~~~~~~rr:e Mod602APF Tape Deck
•tt~*l.. atWtlllllflllitalllt!Oit~i•NMi• 11 u.s• o1 lltilil, ""-br ~e~~ilitstw fOIIIOST Serial No 8507
~··CI)IM,..ID~ hstli•~.•ts.....,ri~ .-:~. m. or hill llliliil. sa. If •\tiD!.1111
Th
bo'
ood
d
... etthii!ID•iclllhtoihNiis
e a ve g s atnh.
.................... w~a~.-..n .,.itdwitt~tr.t
llllht:rl••••tiiiCI!flllt.,..totlWtllldift~' . . its chattels taken as
e
tnt -.-nM _,,, "'ri!lzoue: l.illlititin, --•••-otiana. bfi..-iala.iti111is pr~rtyof LindaStui'geon
~.m,m.oa: s.,tn. ~s .Z7UJ: lllaiiM, *-lit its.-.l......, ,, 11111 ..... toiiMIIII to satisfy the judgment and

received

in

the office of the

August grocery prices down
By JOE McKNIGIIT
Asaoclated Preas Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Lower
meat and
vroduce
prices
CCIIltributed slgnlflcunUy to a cut In
the cost of a standard grocery
shopping list among Ohio Associated
Press survey points last month.
Acheck on the coat of a Lalxr Day
feast like a typical Thanksgiving
dinner tbat was priced last Nov. 30
costs more now.
OveraU, the cost of 17 standard
grocery Items among stores
surveyed In 18 cities dropped 1.4
percent at the end of August from
the end of July. The August average
was $21.2!1 ~pared with $21.81 a
month earlier. The same grocery Ust
a year ago cost $19.99 - 6 percent
less than now.
Turkey. pumpkin and sweet
potatoes may not be standard fare
for a Lalxr Day but since prices
from last Thanksgiving were on file,
a spot check of colll far the typical
holiday meal showed It Is 90 cents
higher now tban nine months ago.
The average then was $16.78,
compared with $17.88 at the end of
August .
~ly two of the 18 reporting ciUes
-Conneaut and Painesville -listed
higher prices for the regular
shopping list this month than last.
DecUnes ranged from 1 cent at
Columbus and Toledo to $1.27 at
Centoo .
Among the 17 standard grocery
items surveyed, prices on seven
went up over the past month and
cost of the other 10 declined. Only
two of 18 reporting cities Conneaut and Painesville reported higher prices on the
regular Ust this lliOIJth. Among the
18 dtie~ with lower prices, the
average In ColumW8 and Toledo
was down 1 cent and Cantoo's
average was off $1.27.
The average cost of a pound of
hamburger declined 6.6 percent over
the onHIICIIlth cllect period, fnm
$1.51 to $1.41, wbiJe·a bone-in-blade
chuck roast declined 2.2 percent,
from an averaged ol 74 a mooth
ago to $1.70.
Cost of Cllle pomd of name-brand
bacon decUned 7.9 percent, fronl an
average ol '1.89 to .1.74 while whole

Village Clerk,, Pomeroy,
Oho, until12 oclock noon
on
September 17, 1979, for
thefollowin~:
For repa1r Of wall on
M lb
A
u erry
venue an.d
LaureiStreet:
1600feet Stree1 Piling
150fee1 H·Pipe Dead men
18each Rod Ties
200t 8 kflll
on ac
lOOton Pavement
iiO:m.a•• ~~.
.625-lt Ifill_.., tlrDNit 31 atilt Mil"-' .-s, S257!'lt,943.00; .
t 1 f
of L
120 yards Concre1e
1111 ~:i5\_\21J:',.=~~~~~~i.~ ·~ ~~ifh a~d Jaa~O:t Smith~rrv
~~~-~':..•_:• .-.n~~e~~.,
Removal of Old Stone
- .. - ....... .,.., ... _ .... -:
ii&gt;lll·.,.,. ....-iiiloa.
Terms: Cashlnhand
Walls .
.
tlut.;_. ... _
..,v. • .S.. allrlullacl&lt;Jiio.
'"
'MD((J,ttwhHeinoMitribldmy
JamesJ Proffitt
Util•tlesandMov•na
need to ~ the number d per(Sill loin 11nulll.~"" ••10 w•t!hM• Qltii!Oa, ~o.
· Sheriff
Each bid must contain ions who pirUclp~le In our election
s., ~ (llio.
lllntl:i. c.ti!icm ~ tli•MJaiiUllt. IW"''V. ...,.,SriP . ol.,illl~~i
Meigs County the full name of every per-

(Oul!l l

\!::'11

___.li

~~;:.-~ t~~~==.~~~.=;

11•

~

lllo, Dlplr!Nnl o1

111

~~wnt,

f~n t~~ c~:J:n~~~teb:s~ec~ process.''

t*tiliCIIt o1 (9) 5, lfc

~~.":'~~~~:::~~{CI.,~~~::. ~T.;-a~ 111i~...=-=:e=~
it....W ............. .,..~on.rs i•iti•• rM'I Ufl ID. co., d Oi• • S.• otlliMii•. 1111

comP.~nied bv ~ bond or
certtfled checK tn the sum
lt• .....••••llli....... ltlfl•1illa6lion IIINIIIItllil' ,,. ,.,ortMs bl•iQbl•lllit ntis
OF MEIGS
of $100.00 to the satisfaction
u
~-=''W'f::.::r~taw$1~~,:='1 --.-::r:~=:i"",.,:.~=~=·=-~!
COUNTY 0HIO
of the Village Council as a
u•litiu, SU,.3lUKot
-.129.417,131.~ =·CG11111i~t~ iul. . llt'itu•lllltllliMinHtolwflll ESTATE OF HARRY 0 guaranty that If the bid Is
~co111 , Jla,tU ,UO .Z14 .0 ; hpnti1u ru , ..., • WI• •. ~ u 1'1t Mtitltd ..u. BOLINGER, DECEASED · accepted( contract will be
--~ 'HIIDF 1• ._. ....,11.. ~ tts,~•nS20.00: u.-tttt!!~ i7,925,1'IJIJ.I»'. ~liS. Case No 22101
entered 1nto and Its per ·
..... ~.,-.'IOIIItlft••Cd=Ciiit. &amp;: 1~~':·. ,_.., 11n.m .n&amp;.OO; ~.,...,,
NOTICE OF
· formance
properly
Piliiiiiii .... NrrJW. • • W. d~ .. '=l
APPOINTMENT
secured.
111 lii'SSMDEII. I'*'I'tlriiiiDMIIICrillld~
,_
-""-"'"'"""'"'""''""•"''·
OFFUDfCUARY
,These cnecks or bonds
"'*''"'"'· ""''· ""· .,.· ·-(Oul~) on August 29th 1979 in wtll be returned at once to
·
th' M 1 c t ' p Oba
' t alf except the successful
!tl• tJ Olio. ~ a1 - - .. l)rtlllclt or
e e gs oun V r
e bidder. His check or bond
_, _ _ .. ..,.....,.. .- • - Courth Case No . 22BC1, wlff be held until the con - a years.
:x'.~:~ "'.:~tt'L~;.,~~ Josep lne L. Bolinger, llu tract or . bid is properly
C~~Nc~ia., 1111 Cllfllllllld Mttl tilt ' • at ttlis !lit wo.lfe Drive, Pomeroy~ executed by him.
• 11UQIIIttoit llltl is.-.;Mu•tt.~nlfi•ID Ohu;!' was . l~P:polnted Ad
The right is reserved to
trn~:~ i 111111111 t~ l(lp!Up'i. . . . . . ot illltfi!ICI. min1stratrtx Of the estate of re·tect any and all bids
bRftftill01111111illltan.n,i:uiiUII~to Harry
0.
Bolinger,
·
"",r'.;:';o,r,.~,""';, ~~~~~'"'",:r',::'.!: de~eased, late of llQ Wolfe
Jane Walton
VETERANS MEMORIAL
~m.illoa. - · 11\w.lniir _,.,,, Onve, Pomeroy, OhtO.
Clerk
tt.l I,MIIllll 101 - iB!.m Ill"""'·
Robert E. Buck
VILLAGE OF Admissions---Doris
Haynes,
MO,&lt;D[ciiiJ.oo.
.
Probate Judge
POMEROY
1
Pettit,
Pomeroy;
Pomeroy;
Joseph
.!
!~~
Cieri&lt; !8) 29 (9) s. 21c
tttillltfllltldii:•. Hin'f¥.
: ~9) s. 12.19, Jtc
Sylvia Wolfe, Racine; Edward
Capehart,
Pomeroy;
Oscar
:: :p:~ :~~~~y
Imboden, Minersville.
Discharges-Diclde King, Heidi
BaUey, Crestoo Newland, Benjamin
Neutzllng, Sara Brown, Gladys
Bennett, Herbert Noel, Katherine
In other poll results, 56 percent of
thoee voting were In favor ol
reestabllahlng the mJlltary draft.
such a draft were lnatltuted, 56 percent d. the votent tbought both men
snd women lllould be drafted. Thirty-nine percent of fair voters IUPported a cbange In the length d. a
president's term from four years to

PROBATE COURT
1

!Th

:,{: : : : :

::::&lt; ::::: ,\

:\ Personal Notes \;

looking
for a good
savings plan?
PASSBOOK ~::::~~~~~~.rterfy 5 Y.a %

·90 DAY CERTIFICATE .....~:.;~ ... 51h%
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE ......~:~~~ ...... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~:~~~---.71A%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~~~~.... 11J2%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE----~~;~~-- .. 7%%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
Minimum Sl,OOG.OO. Interest r•te of I If•"' under
yield of.Treasury Se&lt;uritles.

the

average 4 vear

MONEY MARKO CERTIFICATE
SlO,OOCl minimum. lnleresl rote equol to the rate of !12 day treasury ,
As,determined ot weekldy oucllon.

bHI rote.

INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT

7~%

Substontlol Penolty For Eorfy Wllhdrawaf
COME IN TODAY AND START THE
SAVINGS PLAN TO FIT YOUR NEEDS

Farmers Bank
' OHIO
POMEROY,
.'-40,000 Maximum lnsinnee for bch ,Deposito&lt;
Memt. Ftderal ~~!posit '""'ranee Couxntion

BY BOB HOEFUCH
A strike by non-&lt;:ertified employes
of the Meigs Local School Districtof one day duration-ended at 3 a.m .
this morning.
Negotiating teams of the Meigs
Local Board of Education and Local
17 of the Ohio Association of Public
Scho&lt;ll Employes met Wednesday
nieht at the Meigs JWlior Hi~h

Mr. snd Mrs. Andy Eskew ol
Xenia spent the weekend here
vtslllng relatives. Mrs. Eskew is the
former Rosemary Snowden.
Jan Holter bas returned from
Florida where she spent a week with
other employes of Dr. John
Ridgeway at Sanibel Island, ·Fla.
Mrs. Richard Fox snd cblldren,
Bryan and Jennifer d. Mason were
weekend vlsilol'll d. her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Holler snd family.
Mrs. Harold Johllllon has returned
to her home In Springfield after a
week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Davis.
Susie Lochary of Glen Ridge, N. J.
is here with her grandparents, Mr.
and Mrs. Patrick Lochary, and will
be attending Ohio University
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser and
Larry, and Mrs. Vena Whaley, McConnelsville, were weekend vlslton
of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Quinn, McConnelsville.
JEFFMIIJ,ER

PROMOTED
OXFORD, England - Jefrey G.
Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gail M.
Miller d. 566 Fourth St., Middleport,
has been prtmoted to the rank of
senior airman In theU. S. Air Force.
Airman Miller is a recreations services specialist at RAF Upper
Heyford, here, and serves with a
unit d the United States Air Forces
In Europe.
The airman l.s a 1978 graduate of
Meigs High School, Rock Springs.
ANNUAL MEETING ANNOUNCED
The annual fall meeting of the
Meigs County Garden · Clubs
As.soclaUon will be held on Oct. 15 at ·
. Royal Oak Park in the recreation
building. At that time plans will be
made for the annual Chrlatmas
flower show. Miss Erma Smith, a
mem~ of the Middleport Amateur
. Gardeners, will be Installed as the
new Meigs County contact chairman.

Davis.

A strike by non-certified employes
of the Eastern Local School District
moved into its third da)l Thursday
with picket lines at all of the four
schools in the district.
This morning Supt. Richard
Roberts was in negotiations with
representatives of the employes.
Attendance in the district today
. averaged 25 percent. There were
some teachers in the buildings,
although the education association is

-

18 in favor of accepllng teams of the
agreement.
District Superintendent David
Gleason had the highest praise not
only for members of the negotiating
team but for members of the union
who responded to telephooe calls at
such late hours and reported to the
school.
He termed the settlement a
''tremendous effoct".
District schools were to have
opened for the. first day of classes
Wednesday were virtually closed In
some instances. Teachers of the
district supported the strike by the
supporting the strike by the nonnon-&lt;:ertified employes and in some
certified employes.
schools not one teacher crossed the
;.;:;:;.;:;:::;::::.:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::::;.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;.:·:·::;.;:;. picket lines set by the non-certified
employes.
omo EXTENDED
As the result of the early morning
OIITLOOit
settlement
of the strike, claSS!!S did
By the Astodaled Press
start
in
the
district-«~e hour later
Saturday lhroagb Monday ~ Fair
normal4his
~ing and aU
than
lbrougb the period. lllcha In tbe upservices
were
into
operation .
per lOti and '108. Lows In the mid •
The
district's
board
of' education
tolbelow5011.
will meet this evening to approve the
:·:&lt;·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::;:;:::::::;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:::::::;:::;:;::
settlement.

•

e

3· OUNCES OF
ACCURACY IN ACTION ...

VOL XXVIII

NO. 101

·District moved through its fint day. A member of the

group reported tbat no teachers and only two students
. entered the elemetnary school during the day.

entine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MEIGS LOCAL 17 of the Ohio Association uf Public
School Employes was well represented at the Pomeroy
Elementary School Wednesday afternoon as a strike
by non-certified employes uf the Meigs Local School

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1979

Russians warned:
•

Treaty won't be ratified as long as troops remain zn Cuba
WASHINGTON (AP) - More than
1,500 retired generals and admirals
urged rejection oft he SALT II treaty
in a letter delivered today to .the
Senate by a former chairman of the
Joint Chiefs of Staff.
Adm. Thomas H. Moorer told the
Senate
Foreign
Relations
Committee that he 5!1Ught the views
of retired military officers because
"active duty military leaders are
not permitted to flatly oppose SALT

BULOVA

LCD QUARTZ
TRAVEL ALARMS
New featherweight fashion lor travelers. Keeps
hours and minutes in continuous display with
electronic quartz precision .
• Accurate to within 20 seconds a month.
o Operates lull year on a single battery . ..
never needs winding .
• Permits precise to-the-second setting.
• Tells A.M./P.M.
• Back ,panel has· fingertip controls for
minutes/seconds, night light, 4 minutes extra
snooze, 24-hour repeat alarm or second
· time zone display.
• Weighs under 3 ounces .

U ."

The letter charged that the
strategic ~rms limitation treaty
gives the Soviel Union a heavy
advantage and that the United
States. would not be able to detect
possible Soviet cheating .
"A3 military professionals, and
with all due respect for our more
circwnscribed colleagues stU! boWld
by their active service, we strongly
urge you to reject SALT n as

The way was cleared for the final
step of financing thenew Pomeroy
Health Care Center (nursing home )
Tuesday night when the Meigs CoWlty Commissioners met in joint
session with the Meigs County Community Improvement Corp., and
representatives of Americare Corp.
Commissioners approved an ad-

GOESSLEII'S
JEWELRY STORE
COURT sr.

injurious to the security interests of
the United States and its allies,"
said the letter signed by 1,678 retired
officers.
It was presented as the committee
resumed its hearings on the pact
after a day's delay for closed-OOor
lrieflngs on the pr.,.,nce of 2,000 to
3,000 Soviet troops in Cuba.
Sen. Frank Oiurch, D-ldaho, the
commi ttee 's chairman, served
notice Wednesday tbat "there is no
likelihood whatever the Senate
would ratify the SALT treaty as long
as Russian combat troops remain
stationed In Cuba."
Sen. Jacob Javits of New York,
ranking committee Republican,
declined to · join in Church's
statement , saying , "A t this
particular moment, predictions
would be very hazardous. "
Moorer's letter was signed by such
well-known treaty foes as Adm .

ditlonal parity bond issue in the
amount of t35(),000.
The commissioners bad originally
approved a request for Americare
Corp. In issue up to to million dollal'll
In Industrial revenue bonds in 1978.
However, only $1,650,000 was issued
then. The balance d. t35(),000 was approved on Tuesday night.
Althot111:h CIC snd county com-

POMEROY, OHIO

ELBERFELD$
..

JfS.
NEW SHIPMENT .

STRAIGHT LEGS &amp; TAPERED L£GS

wrinkling and puckers.

SIZES 3 to 15

Elber'felds In_Pomeroy

NEW SCOREBOARD - Thanks to The Farmen b811k and Savings
Co. and a heap of volWlleer help, fans snd teams at the Meigs Stadium in
Pomeroy wiJI watch a new scoreboard beginning Friday evening. when
the Marauden meet Point Pleasant. The bank purchased the new
scoreboard and this made It possible for the one used previously to be
taken to Middleport and installed for use on the Meigs Junior High Field.
Ben-Tom provided the crane to lnstaU the new scoreboard and Fulton
Thompson with Harold Robinson and Fred Thompson as workers
provided the equij)ment and set poles for the ol~ scoreboard on the Middleport field. Volunteer sports enthusiasts who worked on the entire
project include Uoyd D. King, Phll Harrison, Jack Seelig, Bob Seelig,
Mike Young, Eddie Young, Wayne Leifheit, George Nesselroad, Ed Kennedy, Dwight Golps, Charles Chancey, Bill Perrin, Fred Thompson, BW
Wilford, Harvey Whitlatch, Jr., George Korn, Russell Esheirnan, Jolm
Blaettnar, John Bentley, John Arnott, Lee Roush, KeMy Harris, Jr., and
~yZirkle.

~

Vance, speaking at a State
Department news conference before
going to Capitoi Hill, said the
administration " will not be satisfied
with maintenance of the status quo"
in Cuba. He did not rule out the
possibility that the arms treaty
would be held hostage unless the
combat capability of the- Soviet
troops were eliminated.
The secretary said he will begin
discussing the ~ue with· Soviet
Ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin
when the Russian dipiomat returns
to the United States Friday. "I do
not want to go into what our
approach will be," Vance said.
He indicated-the Untied States will
not ask for the removal of ·Soviet
personnel from the island. "It is the
combat nature of the unit whicb is a
matter of very serious concern to us.
We have realized that there are
training and sigrl'al units stationed
there over a period of time," he said.
President Carter met for 90
the drilling of a Newburg deep gas
minutes
with his National Security
weU near Stiversville In Lebanon
.
Council
to discuss the Cuban
Township Monday.
The test weU will be two miles situation. A White House official,
who asked not to be. named, said
northwest of the old Newburg field
Carter
was presented with
drilled in the late 1960's.
recommendations about possible
Total depth of the well will be
action to take .if the status of tjle
approximately 5200 fet. Adams and
J. D. Drilling and their associates Soviet troops does not change.
Senate Republican . Leader
have approximately 5,000 acres
Howard H. Baker of Tennessee
throughout the area. A Newburg
field equal to the wells in the late emerged from the Foreign Relations
1960's would mean a $20,000,000 to Committee briefings to declare: "If
$30,000,000 boom for Eastern and we don't do something to call the
Russians' bluff, not only Latin
Souther Meigs County.
(Continued on page 9
Adams and J . D. Drilling are also
drilling a $2,191,000 Berea program
for different parties in Gallla,
Meigs, Hocking and Perry Counties.
They anticipate drilling another 25
wells before the end of the year.

treaty, nor does it commit the
totafty at ease with aU the provisions
committee to any particular
of the agreement."
timetable."
· Eugene Rostow, of the Committee
Meanwblle in Havana, Cuba, the
on the Present Danger and another
official
government news agency
SALT critic; testified that the treaty
U.S.
statements about the
said
would hinder U.S. efforts to
presence
of
Soviet combat troops
maintain military equality with the
''maneuver" aimed at
there
were
a
Soviet Union.
discrediting
Cuba
during the current
In announcing the reswnption of
meeting
of
non-aligned
nations.
.hearings, Church left no doubt he
in
the first
But
Prensa
Latina,
would try to use the treaty as a lever
official
reaction
to
the
reports,
to force removal of the Soviet troops
stopped
short
of
denying
the
troops'
in
Cuba.
The
statement
echoed
an
presence.
He said resumption of the·
unofficial
COOllllent
by
a
earlier
hearings "does not c&lt;mmlt the
government
spokesman.
committee to any given action on the

Gas well drilling
scheduled Monday
The Adams Drilling Co. and the J .
D. Drilling Co. of Racine will begin

Dr. Ucker
acquitted
of·murder

missloo approval was needed, the
county l.s not responsible In case uf
default.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Zldian, administrator and social director for
the new factllty, discussed employment and admittance
procedures.
Zldlan announced that Oct. 7 has
been set as a tentative date for open
house and that the facility wiJl open
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Dr.
for business on Monday, Oct. 8.
David A. Ucker was hurrying out of
Zldian said Interviews are now the Franklin County Courthouse
being held with potenUal employes. Wednesday when he encountered a
Persom llvin8 in Meigs County wiJI woman who had fainted on the first
be given top priority.
Door .
In other business, commissioners
Ucker knelt beside Terri L.
agreed to proceed with the
McKinley on the marble floor. "Just
necesaary steps to vacate a portion breathe deeply, breathe slowly," he
of township road 217ln Sutton Town- told the stricken woman. "Did you
Bhip, adjacent to the Greenwood
hit your head?"
Cemetery. The board also approved
"1 just got te1111e," the woman told
various departmental transfen.
him. "Just got too tense."
.Attending w~re J1ernart1 Fultz,
"Well, it . _happens," Ucker
Edlaon Baker, Dr. Harold Brown, · respooded. "I felt a little tense
Howard Frank and Vernon Weber,
myseU."
of the CIC, Bruce Pinkney, Chet
Moments earlier, both had left a
Bradeen, Gary Hazelbaker, snd Mr.
courtroom in which Ucker had been
snd Mn. Zidian d. Americare Corp.,
acquitted of murder by a jury that
snd Bt&gt;by Young, bond coUncil,
included Ms. McKinley. The jury
Richard Jones, president, Henry
had deliberated 11 hours after
Wells snd Chester Wells, comhearing testimony foc four. 'weeks.
mlsslooers, and Mary Hobsletler,'
Following the verdict, Ucker
clerk.
strode out of the courtroom without
commenting, other than to say, "I
feel great."
During the trial, Ucker, a
prominent physician and a lawyer,
Partly cloudy Thursday night with was linked to·an Wlderworld hitman
a chance of late afternoon and and a biracial love triangle.
But the jury found Ucker, 53,
evening thundentorms. The low
tonight In Pie' mid 60s. Mostly sunny former head of the obstetric
Friday. Tlie high 75 to 110. The chan- department of Grant Hospital,
ce of rsln Is 30 percent tonight and 10 Innocent of the murder of Dr. Walter
Bond. Ucker was accused of giving a
pei'Cl'Jtt Friday.
.
firearm to convicted felon and
admitted hltman Ralph F. DeLeo.
YOUTHS iNJURED
Ucker, a white physician, had
The Middleport Emergency Unit been charged as an accomplice in
was called to Fairiane Drlve .at 2:49 the fatal shooting of Bond, 44, a
p .m . Wednesday for Robert black internist. Bond was killed
Southern and Harry Roush, hath 13, outside his Columbus office on
who were injured in a motorcycle Halloween night 1977.
·accident. They were taken to Holzer
DeLeo, 39, an escapee from a
Medi~al Center. At 9:25 p.m.
Massachussetts prison, had pleaded
Wednesday the unit was called for
guilty to being the triggerman in ·
James Amos; 7, Middleport, who Bond's death and served as a
was taken to Holzer Medical Center witness for the prosecution In
also .
exchange for a . reduced sentence.

Weather

Wrangler Designs of pre-washed
"No-Fautt" 100% Cotton dark
denim for freedom from shrinking,

Elmo Zumwalt, who with Moorer
was a member of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff in the early 1970s; Maj. Gen.
John Slnglaub, who was relieved of
his South Korean c&lt;mm8nd after
criticizing the administration's
troop withdrawal policy; Lt. Gen .
Daniel Graham, former head of the
Defense Intelligence Agency; and
Maj . Gen. George Keegan, former
chief of Air Force intelligence.
Moore was teatlfylng as a leader of
the prCH!efenJe Coalltloo for Peace
through Strength.
Active duty mllltary officers are
generally expected to support
administration policies, but are free
lo express their personal views when
asked in coogressional appearances.
The current members of the Joint
Oiiefs of Staff earlier this summer
characterized the treaty as a
"modest but useful step" in anns
limitation, but 8aid "none of us is

Final financial step taken

• Only 1"'•· high, 43/•" wide, "'•" deep.
• Leatherette travel pouch included .
• Choice of black case/silvertone trim or
brown case/goldtone trim.
Another fir\e gift idea from Bulova . . . a name
you know on a clock you can trust.

RUMMAGE SALE

A rwnmage sale will be held Friday and Sattll'day at the Middleport
Malonic Temple basement, 9a.m. to
4 p.m. each day. The sale Ia sponsored by Evangeline Chapter 172,
Order ol the Eastern star.

-

School in Middleport to continue
negotiations and just after 11 p.m.
an agreement was reached.
Members of the local union were
SWJl1Iloned by telephone to the
junior high school cafeteria and at
abou.t 2 a.m . began considering
aspects of the agreement. At 3a.m.,
a vote was taken and the vote was 34.-

Eastern strike in third day

'1.

....,I.....IIR-•••·•--•tu
ll),t.

One-day·strike ends
at Meigs Local today

frying chicken per pound went down pounds or sweet potatoes COI!t8 $1.ot
an average of 2 cents, from 61 to 59 now, up 2 cents from nine mon~
cnts. Per pound cost of center cut ago. Aooe-p&gt;und boll of brown sugar
pork chops declined an average of averaged t4 cents, down from 4e
cents last November while a p~et of
3.3 percent, from $2.09 to $2.02. ·
Average cost of a galloo of store- 11111all marllhrilellows cost 41 cents,
brand whole . milk went up four unchanged for the nine montbl.
A bOll of pre-mixed stuffing
cents, from ,1. 73 to •1. 77 and a pound
uf name-b-and stick margarine averaged 81 cents on the lalellt price
averaged 87 cents at the end of check, up from 73ceiltsln November
.while a bunch of frellt celery COIII4e
August, up 2 cents.
An 1kunce Jar of name brand cents now cm~pared with 74 cenll
peanut butter roae two cents, from then. Average cost oo a can of
$1.19 to $1.21 and a dozen grade A cranberries Is. 44.5 cents now
large eggs Increased 10.5 percent, compared with 42 cents nine months
back while a half-dozen oranges now
from 78 to 84 cents. Afive-pound bag
cost
$1.32 compared with 85 cents
uf granulated sugar Increased 3.4
last
Thanksgiving.
.
percent, from $1.15 to $1.19 and a
A
bunch
of
fresh
brOccoli
alllts 84
pound uf name-b-and coffee rose 18
cents
now
coonpared
with
88
cents In
cents, from $2.81 to $2.99.
November
wblle
a
pick
of
brow!(
A 10%-ounce can of tomato soup
and
serve
rollll
Is
115
cents,
up 1Q_
lncreued 2.6 percent fnm ZU cents
cents
over
the
check
period.
A
Cllleto 23.1 cents and a 13-oonce pact of
_
pound
can
of
pumpkin
colll47
cents,
chocolate chip cookies decllried
fractionally, from $1.14 to ,1.13 on up 8 cents for the nine 111111ths while,
average. A 12-ounce pact d. frozen a half-pint of whipping cream is 88•
~
&lt;range juice s1so dropped me cent, cents, up 11 cents.
Overall
lowest
prices
for
the
from $1.01 a mooth ago, while a 11).
pound sack of Idaho potatoes standard shopping list were found at
declined an average of 15 cents, Centon with an average of $1he 17';
Items.
'
from $1.80 to $1.115.
Cost for the shopping list at other
Average cost on both ooe pound of
lmlatoes and a head of lettuce was reporting cities were: Athens, •
·cincinnati,
.21.10;
58 cents this mooth, with tomatoes $21.44;
Cleveland,
nz.
44;
Columblla,
t22.32;
declining 7 cents per pound on
Culneaut,
f22.36;
Findlay,
t22.211;
average and lettuce dropping 2 cents
Fremont,
$21.10;
Kent-Ravenna,
.
per head.
f20.93;
Marietta,
$21.30;
M•MI1loo;
Prices foc the holiday IDS! were
Painesv!Ue,
U2.13; •
checked In 14 clUes snd the per $19.40;
Pllrtsnouth,
$21.111;
Salem
,
$21.4e;
po111d cost of turkeys under 12
Steubenville,
$21.94;
Van
Wert
po111ds averaged !N cents, compired
f22.37;
snd
Youngsto11m,
_!20.5e.
with 99.7 cents last Nov. 30. Three

Rutland youth
sentenced in

Two injured in
auto accident
Two persons were Injured In a
motorcycle accident around 7 p. m.
Wednesday on Rt. 554, near Rt. 180.
According to the Gallla - Meigs
Post, State Highway Patrol, Ernest
North, 19, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, was
travallng west around a curve on a
motoreyc!e. Patrol said the North
vehicle ran off the right side of the
road and overturned.
There was moderate damage to
the vehicle.
North entered Holzer Medical
Center at 7:25 p. .m. where he was
treated for multiple contusions. He
was released at 8:55 p. m. A
passenger, Chris Daniels, 18, Rt. 2,
Galllpolls, was admitted to the
hospital at 7:25 p. m. where he was
treated for multiple contusi01111 and
superficial taceraU01111. He was
released at9 p. m.
Nlll'th was cited by patrol for no
motorcycle ndonement.
At 7: 10 a . m. WEdneson County
road 28 east of Rt. 124 in Meigs County, patrol reported vehicles driven
by Hubert M. Settle, 31, Oek Hill,
and Delmer L. Grady, 44, Rt. 2,
Racine, collided heati-oo on a curve.
Both vehicles Incurred heavy
damage. There were mnor injuries.
Settle was cited on cbarges of (allure
to yield half uf the roadway, according t+ patrol.

recent theft
A RuUand yuth has beeil ~ed
with the breaking and entering snd
theft of approximately $300 worth ol
toolll froni the Meigs Local Bus
GArage on August 20.
The youth, who appeared before
Meigs County Juvenile Judge
Robert Buck, has been sentenced to
the Ohio Youth Commission.
According to the youth's
statement following the August _,
entry of the bus garage, the tools
were taken to the creek near the bua
garage snd hidden along Its bank. A
few days later, the heavy rains
caused the creek to overflow.
The youth went to the scene a few
days after the water went down and
discovered that a CB cooverter and
an impact wrench had been
damaged by the flood water snd be
then threw them Into the creelt.
He left the other tools hidden until
he took Sheriff James Proffitt to the ·
scene earlier this week. 'lbe
remaining tools were recovered.
Investigation is continuing on tbla
case snd additional arrests could be
made.
Deputies are Investigating the
theft of a bicycle from the Larry Edward's residence at Rutland.
Edwards found the bicycle Wednesday, but the front wheel wu
missing. The Incident Ia under In·
vestlga~ .

J.

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