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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,

...r...-;: ,.,

:=i=~~~~...
aco. lll....._titot~. -.a:lllphM
r.,.ttt~~ 1 t.
tuit ~ i tldtDr\llld
••!IIII_.,..ID~Ifllllis .. ,u...na
llli- 1111 .,.....tsR..0111-'tiCI!ittiiMflllll lt•
,, ._._•flllcJn•~ l!

•'!'•

..••..,.
llrtMIIItllllllllllll.&amp;Ja!llCilUiirti '
1.12UICI,IS5.CQ: Sw,l111, 111U517U.III: t~:
1t.MWt_':·OD: •~.tn!J170,YS.01D._OO: Nit

"'r.'llfe~"'':O~.:......, I!O""M"~\£'""· a7.1!1.111.111 101 """
_ .. _ _, ............._OM. li.M!!Il.lll lolll.lll.OO\OD.
.
tt~s.., .. ••· ...-, v -. '-· d ..._.~~1; ~ ~~"" ,!;·~ ~llfi":~011':.,111tltli'7.

••• • ""'·
,_" - · ,.,.,..,
• ,.,..,,. .., ...,,,..,.,.,. • ..._(!o~'li~
Qllllllt•
-lllt..,..--.n...._.
111 .__. t•• otllio. ....-a~-... lllltlfle8 a1
dllllbtaiOi~-..,.terti'sntiiii:MERBJTUII
.,.., • . , ....... _,..._.,. ..,.,..,_.,_,..,.._._
•CIIIIII!IIIII'Iit:flltltltnolllliiS..W~•Dtt ·iiil ~ m. t•• 11 Olio, ..-, ctttiliu n. ~
~·--., • .,.,.~a~~~~~,...w.._
.til tills~ .-.a ca., or . ...._ s.e ~ W12J11!1"· ~
111..,.-i....._.,i....bfWtl:iiii!DIItttOII GillllllliMIIitlllhll•cltlilt!lltWICiblttGtiWIIIII
l,~
... .,its..-.._.toiiMIM•IotloMon
IU:t.lrilltiM 11 tt.c.rM,.•tot~.-:ti~lti• . . its
n tt1t MllnM ISIIU.~4l7,4710); ..,.n••llllll~n~l......a.
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

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• 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

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"No-Fautt" 100% Cotton dark
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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

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• 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.

�-~

.:-Mle Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 6,1979

Editorial opinions,
comments

In Washington_

Today's commentary

~-

!

Do

YOU THINK
THI.§ WiLL AFFECT
THE RELATiONSHIP
BETWEEN
BLACKfu AND J[W0?

WE 'LL CONTINUE

Summer insanity
By Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA ) ·The 1980
presidential election may be 14 rriooths away, but the first returns
already are being counted and
analyzed - in the middle of the summer before the suinmer before the
,election. ·
It's actually happening in Florida,
where candidates seeking the
presidential nomination of both major political parties have been forced
into participating in a senseless
popularity contest.
In mid-November of this year, the
Republicans and Democrats will
hold separate state conventions,
where delegates will participate in
straw votes to indicate their
presidential preference.
County caucuses to select
delegates to the GOP convention
began on Aug. 1~ - and Rep. Philip
M. Crane, R·nl., promptly issued a
mid-August press release proclaim,
ing victory in two predominantly
rural counties, Monroe and Putnam.
In Pinellas County, which includes
the city of st. Petersburg, the murky
results of the August caucus indicated that Republican contenders
· Ronald W. ReBgan and John B. Connally were the apparent popularity
leaders.
Even when the results are
clarified at the state conventions
this autwnn they will have no binding influence, because Florida's
delegates to ihe presidential
nominating conventions won't be
elected until a statewide primary is'
heldneztMarch 11.
'The only excuse for the preference
polls lies in their appeal to the news
media and professional politicians
as a first-in-the-nation indicator of
political sentiment.

Nol-tlo-equal repre~entation
Episcopalians, teachers and men
are overrepresented in the House
and Senate, while Baptists,
engineers and women are underrepresented.
That's the conclusion of Rep. Paul
Simon, o-m., who commissioned a
member of his staff to eompare the
demographics of Congress and the
country. Among the results of the

study :
Lawyers dominate the Congress,
holding 44.3 percent of all seats,
although attorneys comprise only 0.5
percent , of the total work force.
Astronauts also are heavily overrepresented, with two spacemen
holding Senate seats.
Teachers, bll8inessmen, bankers,
journalists, clergymen · and scientists also are represented in above
average numbers, while engineers,
farmers and physicians are underrepresented.
Of the total population, 51 pereent
is female and 11 percent is black.
But each of those groups accounts
for only 3 percent of Congress.
Only 2.2 percent of the country's
population is Episcopalian, but 12.7
percent of the legislators are affiliated with that church.
MethodiSts, Presbyterians, Latter
Day Saints and Unitarians also are
among the overrepresent~, while
Roman Catholics,
Baptists,
Lutherans, Jews and Seventh Day
Adventists are among the underrepresented religions.
A measure of wealth
Official government figures ranking the 50 states on the basis of in·
dividual or family income in·
variably fail to take living costs into
account, thus ignoring the relative
spending power of dollars earned.
But the First National Bank of
Chicago has undertaken an ambitioll8 project using Census Bureau
and Bureau of Labor statistics
figures as part of an ela~rate formula to measure wealth as accurately as possible.
On the basis of those computations, Wyoming emerges as the
richest state, with an adjusted annual median family income of
$23,061, followed by Alaska,
Maryland, Texas, Nevada, California, Colorado, Michigan, Minnesota,
Washington, Florida, Oregon and nUnois- all above the $20,000 level.
At the bottom of the list is Maiite,
with $14,921. But the real surprise is
the state ranked 49th - New York,
where the dollar doesn't buy much.
Others in the bottom five are Vermont, Massachusetts and South
Dakota.

SOCIAL SI~l1UTY

Troop -presence
hurts relations
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary
of State Cyrus R. Vance said
Wednesday the United States "willi
not be satisfied with the
maintenance of the status quo•i
regarding Soviet combat troops in
Cuba.
Vance said the Soviet troop
presence "w ill affect SovietAmerican relations." He did not rule
out the possibility that the situation
would influence Senate action on the
strategic anns limitation treaty
with the 'Soviet Union .
•
Vance said at a news conference

he had asked that Soviet
ambassador Anatoly Dobrynin
return to the United States from
vacation as soon as (l&lt;lssible to
discuss the troop situation.
In the meantime, he said, the
Carter administration believes the
Senate's ratification hearings on the
SALT 11 treaty should go forward.
But Vance stopped short of saying
the Senate should vote to ratify the
treaty regardless of the outcome of
the issue of Soviet troops in Cuba.
" I think hearings on ratification
should go forward. But because this
is a matter of serious Importance,
we must keep in close con tact with
members of the Senate as the
discussions with the Soviets
proceed," Vance said.

said Senate Democratic Leader
Robert C. Byrd of West Virginia.
"There will be ample time for the
committees to be briefed about this
before the treaty comes up" on the
Senate floor .
But Senate Republican Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr . of Tennessee
took a harder stance. "I think the
Russians are thumbing their nose at
1JS 1 I I h~ said.
Baker said the stationing of Soviet
combat troops in Cuba, coofinned
last week by the State Department,
was one of a lengthy series of
provocations intended to test the
Carter administration.
Byrd said the .2,000 to 3,000 Soviet
troops may have been in Cuba for
some time. The state Department
said they may have been there since
1976.
The Senate Foreign Relations
Committee abruptly postpon~d
resumption of public hearings on the
SALT treaty and arranged a daylong series of closed meetings with
ranking intelligence officials and
Vance.
Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, the
committee chairman, said Tuesday
the panel wants to know how long the
Soviet troops have been in Cuba ,
what their mission is and what the
implications are for the United
States and other nations of the
Western Hemisphere.
"What possible justification is
there for Soviet combat troops in
Cuba?" Church asked.
"It would seem that the presence
of Russian troops in Cuba poses a
much more serious threat to Mr.
Castro's self-described status of nonalignment than it does · to the
security of the United States," said a
senior White House official who
asked not to be named .

He refused to say what will satisfy
the administration regarding the
troops, although he noted it was the
BillSteif
combat capability of the troops that
of
concern
to
the
was
Jaw reduced the age to 70 starting in
Rules OD Oulllde EarniDg
administration .
1982.
.
By WIUJam SteU
Meanwhile, Senate leaders
Those amendments also raised the
(1311Lof It ptrts)
from a briefing by top U.S.
emerging
Can you make some money after limits on the amount Social Security
intelligence
officials differed on the
retirement and still get Social retirees can earn between ages 65
Impact
the
Soviet
troop issue might
and 72 (or70in 1982).
Security? U so, how much?
on
the
SALT
treaty.
have
In 1978, you could earn $-1,000
Investment income - such as
"I
don't
think
this
should have any
dividends, interest, real estate ren- without losing any benefits: in 1979, ·
impact
on
the
merits
of the treaty,"
tals, and return on capital - is con- $4,500; in 1980, $5,000; in 1981,$5,500,
sidered unearned income. and in 1982, $6,000. Thereafter the
Therefore, it is exemptfrom the ear- amount increases by the percennings limits on Social Security tages that wages rise 81Ulually.
Once retirees exceed their earnbeneficiaries.
The same is true of pensions from ings limit, however, $1 in benefits is
NEW YORK (AP)
A
private retirement plans, although withheld for each $2 earned over the
Depression, " experts'' still argue
remarkable test of wills, like that in
you could argne that they are earn- limit. '
about whether the correct monetary
One of the trickiest parts of the
a poker game, is taking place
ed.
policy was pursued during the 1930s.
between lenders and borrowers.
'The point is that Social Security earnings limit is the S&lt;H!Blied ''monThe traditional view is that loose
So far, neither one is revealing
beneficiaries are limited only in pre- thly test" that applies in the year of
money encourages economic
many signs of weakness, even
sent earnings, not past ones. What is retirement. For a full explanation of
activity and that tight money
though the stress has been building
being partly replaced by Social this test, consult my book "What
restricts it. But, as some economists
relentlessly. Lenders keep raising
Security retirement benefits is the You've Got Corning in Social Securisay, these are not traditional times.
their rates. Borrowers keep paying
income you would have if you con- ty and Medicare." For your copy,
The ingredient not fully
send $1.50 pl118 50 cents postage and
the rates and asking for more.
tinued to work.
understood , they assert, is the brand
Aren 't higher interest rates
Social Security always has had a handling to "What You've Got Comof inflation. Some maintain we
supposed· to discourage borrowing?
retirement test, designed to limit the ing in Social Security and Medicare"
shouldn'teven use the inflation label
That's what the books say, but it
money a person can. earn after he in care of this newspaper, P.O. Box
to describe some of today's rising
retires. The idea is that it would be 489, Radio City Station, New York, ·- hasn't been working out ·that way.
prices. It's misleading, they say.
And that in itself is discouraging
very costly to pay Social Security N.Y. 10019.
Simplified, the argwnent is: Many
The test means that in the year
more than a few economists.
benefits while a person was earning
of today's high prices result not from
you retire, your earnlngsd limit is
In fact, as borrowing continues
substantial amounts of money.
increased demand or because of a
you can hear the critics grousing
The retirement test has been calculated on a monthly basis. You
shortage in the productive capacity
can earn no more than 1/12 of the an·
that the Federal Reserve has it all
liberalized somewhat by Congress.
of the country. People are going out
wrong - that people and companies
In the 1950s, a provision was added nuallimit each month to retain your
and buying, and industry is not
are borrowing bec,use they have to,
to the law pennittlng anyone 75 or full Social Security benefit. If you
straining at the limits of its capacity
not because they want to.
older to earn as much as he wanted retired in June 1979, for example,
to produce.
There's a difference, they say. If
and still retain his Social Security you could earn oly $375 a month
What is happening, it is argued, is
borrowing were a mailer of choice,
benefits. Later, the age at which $4,500divided by 12).
that the standard of living is really
they say , then raising interest rates
unlimited earnings were permitted
decreasing.
Rather
than
might indeed discourage such
was lowered to 72.
surrounding themseves with goods
choices. When it's needed people wiU
And the 1977 amendments to the
and services, people are being
·JOrrow at any rate.
11IE DAILY SENTINEL
denied them.
(USPS 145-lllH
And if that is so, they cootinue,
And why are they being denied?
high interest rates merely add to the
Since·so much income is going into
cost of manufacturers, distributors,
maintaining living stanndards,
retailers, consumers and others,
DEVOTED.T011iE
AIRLINE MILES
which have become enromously
INTEREST OF
becm!lng in effect an inflationary
WASHINGTO N ( AP ) - The
more costly because of the sudden
MEIGS-MASON AREA
factor themselves. . ,
ROBERT HOEFLICH
scheduled airlines now account for
rise in the price of Imported energy.
City Editor
They
add
that
so
long
as
the
84 percent of intercity public
Whatever, Federal Reserve policy
Plblllbed dally ucepl Slblrda)' by Tbe Ob.Jo .
country has 13 percent inflation the
Valley Pv.bii.Jb(IJI Compr~nJ· Multlmedla, lac.,
passenger miles in the United
seems aimed at reducing demand by
111 Cllllrt SL, Pomeroy, Ollio &amp;578. BuJlneu
Federal Reserve's 10.5 percent
States, according to the Air
raising interest ·rates, and it has
Office PlloDe 1ft. tl51. EdJterill Pb(lot
discount rate and the banks' 12.25 • considerable support among
!12-tJS7,
Transpoct Association.
Secolld dau poi .. Jt pt~klat Pemeroy, Ob.Jo.
percent prtme lending rate are poor
ATA President Paul R. Ignatius
economists and business people. ·
NadoaladvertUI.q: n!pnsutatl\'t, LIIDdon
deterrants to borrowing.
Aaaodatn, 3111 Euclid Ave., ·clevelllnd, Ob.lo
says, "The 1978 air traffic surge has
They see it as the only corrective.
.
In
fact,
this
school
of
thought
cootinued through the winter and
When high interest rates have
Sublcr:lptl11D nlel:· ~llvtnd by a~rrltr
observes, it can even pay to borrow.
wbrrr avaU.ble 10 &lt;'tn111 per week . By Motor
spring of 1979. There is the prospect
forced tbe economy to slow, they
RwW wbtrt canier strvlct: -..1 na.U..ble, ODe
In many instances, 13 percent
that the airlines this year will carry
say, the aberratioos will disappear.
mooth, S:UCI.
inflation effectively cancels out
Tbc DaUy ~oUael. by w.U Ill OIUo aDd Weat
more than 300 million passengers,
It may work out that way, but with
Vlr&amp;iDJI, ooe year w .• .; Sb moolba U7.51;
costs.
But
those
"costs"
borrowing
cootinuing their JX"edominant role in
of the "experts" still arguing
some
Uu-ee moaltu tl0.$1. EIRwbrn JU.M; 51.1.
still are tax-deductible .
moniJUIJII.te: dlreem&lt;Jilt.bdll....
'
intercity public passenger service over whether the United States
Tilt Auoc:ll&amp;at Preu it e.aclulvely nUUed
The issue is indeed a confusing
84 percent domestically and ~
pursued the proper money policies
1o ~~oe,., for ,..blk:otloo oloU ....,lUI,.....,
ooe, and' even today, 50 years after
cn:dUed to Lbt otWIPiprr all:! .~ ~ local
pe"'-"flflt to overseas points.''i
W~ears ago, you never can be sure.
ae"WI paWialmf bertiD,
the begin ning of the Great

Business mirror

~Ill .

Sports World

After the ayatollah

EAc~ 0Tf1(R.
ByDoaGraff
Holding the Ayatollah Khomelnl's
coat must be a full-time job for someone in what passes for a government In Iran these days.
That grim eminence shows no
hesitatloo whatsoever in taking on
all comers in the factional infighting
into which the glorious rev o lutlon
against the shah's tyrimny has
degenerated In less thana year.
He has suppressed dissident Araba
in the vital oil-producing region at
the head of the Persian Gulf 'and
launched a military campaign
against a Kurdish rebellion that
turned out to be m081ly his own lm·
aginatlon.
He has silenced press critics of his
authoritarian policies and In recent
days .appears to have g~ed the upper hand over an array of leftist
groups that once were key allil!ll in
bringing the revolutiorl to pass.
Mean~e. his firing squads co
ntinue to pick off Individual
undeslnsbles at a steady clip.
His has been the type of ruthless
perfonnance that gives revolution a
bad name. But it has been successful
in guarailteeing that one question
that need not be asked about Iran today is who's In charge.
In charge of what and for how long
are, however, entirely different matters.
Khomelnl 's Iran Is comlnjj more
and more to resemble that of the
shah - only In some unpleasant
respects even more so. Politics are
still tlghtly controled. The IWembl,y
to complete a new constitution is
packed with his Ilk~ mullah
colleagues. He talks now li an
Islamic state of one or at most two
Ideologically similar parties.
Govenunent is not a matter of
laws but of repressive force. This
may be effective for a time but, u
the shah discovered, not indefinitely.
In the Kurds, with centuries of
struggle for a natiooal Identity
already behind them, and the lef·
tists, dispersed but far from

destroyed; Khorneinl faces formidable opponents who are not going to be bested through thwldered
quotations from the Koran. And It Ia
not beyond poulbllity that Western~ libera!B, who had hoped for
genuine democratic reforms from
the revolution, may yet find a voice
and their strength.
The economy is also a problem.
Even at reduced levels of production, Iran cootlnues to accumulate
oil revenues, more than It can productively spend. Which Is part of the
problem. 'The eeooomy, functioning
at less than half the p!'H'I!Volutlon
output Ieveli, cannot absorb large
inputs of fresh capital. Unemployment is high, ·Inflation uncbecked
and develOIJ(IIental projects at a
standstill.
The Iranlana are reported to be
sounding out the European Cool·
munlty concerning po .ospecta of
loog-tenn economic cooperatioo.
The Europeans have the capability
to replace the American expertiJe
and presence that vanished with the
shah. But even lf agreements result,
the effects will be fiOOle time In being
felt in the Iranian econcmy,
While the ayatollah may be In
charge, he Is far from unchallenged.
And even should all these actver-·
Sarll!ll be no match for him, there Is
another that surely will.

'~Who 's No. 1?"
"W~'re No, 1."

,,

'...
'

••
••

.

"

.

•D
.,•

.-.
·~ W.

"

'"
,.,

"'

'"
.
' "'

Time.
Khomelni 's performance is
remarkable for an lr)-year~ld. Bul
he is an lr)-year~ld. And for all that
he may be in complete control of the
situatian today, the time Is very
short In which to establish an order
and aasure a suceessloo that will
maintain It after his paulng.
1be history of revolutiOflfl Ia
against It, suggesting inltead a progression through greater turbulence, more repf'elllan and
bloodletting, to the emergence of
new forces who may give a new
direction to the revolutloo.
The real cauae for concern in Iran
may not be what' has 'come to pau
but what Is Cllllllng. It could be that
the revolatlon Is only beginning.

"

..

"

High interest rates·

"

worries homebuilders
rate would present a "very
danjterous" situation f&lt;r builders.
As a backdrop to his pessimism,
SWnichrast points to the housing
indll8try 's current cooditloo,
Housing starts this year are
expected to decline :a! percent from
1978. 'The industry faces the losa of
480,000 jobe and $H billion in wages.
Bankruptcies among h&lt;mebullders
during the first six mooths of 1979
are 33 percent higher than in the
same period last year.
Sumichrast believes housing
starts next year could plummet to
1.5 mililon units cc:rnpared with
slightly over 2 million last year .
That prediction Is strongly
rebutted by Jack Carlson, executive
vice president of the Na,tlonal
Association of Realtors, who !M!ell
holl8ing starts rebounding next year
to 1.9 million units.
" True, the prospects of
homebuilders are not happy, but
they're not nearly as bad as the lut
time around," says Kerin . The "lut
time around" was the 1973-75
reeessioo when rousing starts fell
more than 50 percent from their
peak.

Bearded Borbon
facing $115,000
judgment action
CINCINNATI (AP) - A nowbearded Pedro Borbon was·
portrayed as a peacemaker by his
. laWYer, but the f&lt;rmer manager of a
.disco testified the pitcher was no
reliever in his establishment May t.
The former Reds pitcher, since
traded to the San Francisco Giants~
. waa charged with assault by John
Toplis, 20, a f&lt;rmer bouncer at the
West Side Story disco.
. He claims Bor bon bit htm oo the
chest. Top its is also suing B&lt;rbon for
$11S,OOO in a civil actioo.
The trial continued today in
Hamiltoo County Municipal Court.
"I asked Pedro three different
times to sit down and stay out of it,
that it was taken care of,'' said Tom
Stark, f&lt;rmer manager of the club .
However, said Stark , ~orbon
"started raising all kinds of heck
and interfering with the running of
the place."
Borbon's laWYer, John K. Kelley
Jr., told the jury thatBorbon had left
the bar to mske a
a friend
telephooe call. While he was gone,
another patron att'acked the' friend
and Ba'bon 'came to the rescue, he
said.
" Mr. Ba-bon , being an athlete,
wasn't about to take any gulf and
told them, 'pick on somebody your

at

own size.'" he said.

Kelley said several fights
culminated in Borbon being tackled
and that not ooe prosecution witness
testified that the pitcher instigated
the melee .
Toplis testified he stepped
between Borbon and another man
fighting to break it up . He said
llorbon then hit him above the eye
and he countered with a headlock .
He said they both fell to the floor .
"I just felt someone chew into my
side. 1 was oo the ground for a good
two minutes with him chewing on
me. !let go,. fjgurlng he'd let go, but
he was still chewing on my chest,"
he said.
Topits said Ba'bon later walked
over to i)tm, shook his hand and said,
"I SO£ry I bite you."
Topits said he ordered Ba'bon out
of the disco.
HILLBIL~Y

OUTHOUSE
No. 2, First
Annual Jamooree
Hillbilly Disco
Sept . a. 1979,
8 P.M . Ti ff Mldnlghf
Pl . Pleasant Youfh
Center. SPOnsored by
Mlkk l Casto's Ballroom
Dance Studio . Music &amp;
disco lighf show by Pled
Piper Mobile DIS&lt;o. Ad·
mission S3.00 per per·
son . Ch ildren, teens, &amp;
adulfs. 3 dance conrests,

procteds

for

each

category . Prizes lor
besf dressed H i llbil l y
lor each category .
Refreshments
available . Tickets may
be purchased at Fruths
Pharmacy , Gallipolis,
Pl . Pleas.. Rard in's
Shoe Center, Pt . Pleas.,
AbboH's Music Box, PI,
Pleas., or call Mlkki
Casfo 61S · 4S39
or
675-6669. Ya'll come on
down .

It's a question - and response that inspires passion among college
football buffs. They start spouting it
with a hoist of index finger the first
week in September and don't lower
it until the final tabulations after the
bowl games.
Even then, controversy cootinues
to sizzle.
The "Big Two " in the pre«ason
poll make their debut Saturdsy
against reputable - but not
awesome opponents - and you can
expect talent~oaded Southern Cal
and defending titleholder Alabama
to escape unmarked,
Southern california 33; Texas
Tech 10: It should be a romp unless
Charles Wblte (I ,760 yards and 13
TDs in 1978) takes a trip to China.
Alabama 24, Georgia Tech 14 : A
bitter rivalry that once had to be
susp.ended out of fear of violence.
Wishbone lightning.
Purdue 31, Wisconsin 7: A new
look in the Big Ten , thanks to a 6-5
quartetbacck
named
Mark
Herrmann and a slew of slick
receivers.
Michigan 49, Northwestern 6: The
Wolverines' JX"oblem will be trying
to keep the score respectable
without making it too obvious.
Stanford 28, Tulane 7: On one
cooditioo - that new coach Rod
Dowhower can keep his young stags
off Bourbon Street.
Florida State 33, Southern
Mississippi 6: The Seminoles were
all dressed up (8-1 ) last year and
nowhere to go. They're bowl hungry.
Mi,.igan State 46, Dlinols 13: On
probation last year, the SpartarlS
could play it loose. Now they have to
bite the bullet.
North Carolina State 20, East
Carolina 14 : The Wolfpack may be
the best in their league , but Pat Dye
can be hard on the molars.
Washingtoo 30, Wyoming 10 : Joe
Steele , Tippecanoe and Tyler, too
(Toussaint Tyler, that is - he runs
over and around you . )
Texas A&amp;M 23, Brigham Young 7:
This is one the Aggies will have to
win with their shoes on . Barefoot
kicker Roo Franklin is now a prp.
The others:

non~eagueopponents.

Friday night, Kyger Creek visits
. Wahama, Hannan Trace goes to

aod completed eight ol eighteen
pa11e1 for 74 yards. Tbe
IOpbomore algilal ealler allo
punted three times for an
average of t9 yards.

PLAYER OF WEEK - Tbe
Melp CGwlty Jaycees •ve
Rleeted their crld player of the
week. Tbia week'• RleeUoo II
Melp Marauder aopbomore
q~clt Bob Aabley. The
Marauden fell Jut Friday to
Belpre U-!2. In that eonteet
Aabley oeored two toucbdOWDII

SCIOTORF8ULTS

20; Utah 19, Hawaii 15; New Mexico
20, 0 .
MIDWEST
Ml.wluri 34, San Diego State 6;
Indiana 25, Iowa 18; Minnesota 23,
Ohio U. 6; Ohio State 27, Syracuse 7;
North Texas State 28, Oklahoma
State 17; Bowling Green 38, Eastern
Michigan 13; New Mexico state 15,
Drake 13; Eastern Kentucky 14,
Kent State 7; Central Michigan 27,
Western Michigan 3; Bali State 14,
Miami (0.) 9.
SOurHWEST
Southern Methodist 48, Rice 12 ;
Baylor 28, Lamar 7; TexasArlingtoo 23, West Texas State 14.

SVAC STANDINGS .
WL
P OP
Kyger Creek
1 0 30 0
I 0 28
12
eastern
Hannan Trace
1 0 27 8
Southwestern
102012
South~rn ·
0 I 0 40

Teilm

...j
~J
.' ~

end of

·,,

t~

s

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Lima
Power led from wire to wire and
held on for a thre~uarter length
victory over Florida Lady In the
featured race at Scioto Downs on
Wednesday night .
The winner, circling the mile in
2:02 ·4-5, returned $4.110, $3.60 and
$2.80. Florida Lady paid ~.20 and $3
for second and Wildwood Brook, $3
for show.
The 3-U first race trifecta was
worth $12,~110. W but no $3 bettors had
that cm~bination.
A crowd of 4,~ wagered $321,139.

,"1

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On paper, along with the first
game results, it appears the SVAC
race will be very competitive this
fall.

We're your loc1l ind1p1nilent h1rdw1re lftWchlllt
witfl nation•l ch1in-buyi1g IIIOWtr.

EAST

Rutgers 37, Holy Cross 22; Temple
25, W. Virginia 23.
SOUI'H South Carolina 28, North
Carolina 19; Tulane 19, Air Force 14;
Clemson 42, Furman 7; Richnlond
20, Virginia I~ ; Louisville 22, Va .
Tech 10; VMl 23, Wm. and Mary 17;
fla State 211 S. Mississippi 6; Miss.
Sta\e 26, Memphis State 7;
Maryland 31, Villanova 7; Marshall
20, Toledo 12.
MIDWEST
Missouri 34, San Diego State 6;
Indiana 25, Iowa 18; Minnesota 23,
Ohio U. 6; Ohio State 27, SyraCU8e 7;
North Texas State 28, Oklahc:rna
State 17; Bowling Green 38, Eastern
Michigan 13; New Mexico State 1~,
Drake 13; Eastern Kentucky 14,
Kent State 7; Central Michigan 27,
Western Michigan 3; Ball State 14,
Miami (0 .) 9.
SOUTHWEST
Southern Methodist 48, Rice 12;
Baylor 28, Lamar 7; TexasArlingtoo 23, West Texas State 14.
FAR WEST
Arizona State 21 , Calif&lt;rnia 7;
Arizona 25 , Washington State 16;
UCLA 23, Houston 20; Colorado 36,
Oregon 14 ; Fresno State 35, Idaho

Hannan, w. va., Southeastern plays
at Southwestern, Zane Trace is at
Eastern and North Gallla travels to
Huntington of Ross on Saturdsy
afternoon.
Last weekend, four of the five
SV AC squads enjoyed a winning
night.
Final results were as foUows :
Kyger Creek 30 -Federal Hocking 0;
Wahama 40 - Southern 0;
Southwestern 20 • Oak Hill 12; Han-

A full slate of games Is on tap this
weekend in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference all involving

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

.,

WASHINGTON (AP) - Housing
industry w&lt;rries are mounting in the
face of ever-increasing interest
rates, but homebuilders will
weather the tight-money climate,
say many ecooomists.
Builders will have to "play It a
little more cau•lously, but they woo 't
fall off the edge," says KeMeth J .
Kerin , economist f&lt;r the National
Association of Realtors.
That view was echoed repeatedly,
in telephone interviews Tuesday , by
economists representing private
forecasting firms, thrift institutions
and real estate agents.
Homebuilders frequently face
interest rates 3 percentage points
above the current 12Y• percent
!X'ime rate. Many economists are
saying the prtme rate may reach
121'. percent as early as this week,
and probably will go to 12'% percent
befoce long. The prime Is the rate
cmunercial banks lend to their best
custonters.
Disagreeing with many of his
professional colleagues, Michael
Swnlchrast, chief ecoo&lt;mist for the
National Association of Home
Builders, says a 121'. percent prime

Full slate of games on tap
by SVAC grid teams

Today's

NO, I Tl-JINK

To MI§&gt;UNDERaTAND

J-The Daily Sentinel, Mldc. 'eport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 6, 1979 .

923 S. 3RD AVE.

992-2709 or 992-6611
OPEN: 7:00 TO 5:00 MON. TliRU FRI.
7:00 TO 3:00 SATURDAY

MIDDLE.PORT, OHIO

.,

.,
.,

••

'"

.:o
.,)

!~

r.

,.••

I·

�5-Tbe Dally Sentinel, MiddlePort-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thlll'!lday, Sept. 6, 1979

Giants ire manager ]oe .Altobelli

•- The DailY Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tblll'!lday. Sept. 6, 1979

Oakland's Matt Keough wins first game
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
This may be September, but as far
as Oakland pitcher Matt Keough is
cmcemed, it's the start of a new
baseball season .
"The way Ilook alit, I'm !.and~, "
said the rough-luck pitcher after
finally gaining that hard-to-catch
ftrst victnry of 1979.
Actually, Keough is 1-14 after
Wednesday night's 6-1 victory over
the Milwaukee Brewers, but you can
pardon his lapsided view. The
triwnph allowed him tn escape the
dubious distinction of tying the
American League record for most
COO!IeCUtiVe losses OVer two seasons.
He had 18 before he beat the
Brewers.
He had already tied the record for
the worst season start by a major
league pitcher with 14.
" They're all behind me now," said

a euphoric Keough, celebrating the
occasion with champagne.
"I never gave up, " added Keough,
who played in last year's All-Star
Game before going sour. "If I did, I
wouldn't have been able to look
myself in the mirror ."
In other AL games, Caifornia
edged Chicago 9-8; Minnesota
outscored Kansas City 8-3 ;· Seattle
beat Texas I-ll; Bostoo blanked New
. York 5-0 and Detroit routed
Oeveland 9-3. Rain washed out the
Baltimore-Toron to game.
The A's backed Keough with a 12hit attack in snapping an eight-game
winning streak by M!lwaukee
pitcher Mike Caldwell, 14-6. Dwayne
Murphy drove in four runs with a
third-inning single and a three-run
homer in the sixth.
Calllornla 9, Chicago 8
Merv Rettenmund's tw!Hlut single
in the seventh inning drove in two
runs and rallied California over
Chicago . With two out in the seventh,
Angels catcher Brian Downing beat
out a single and Bobby Grich
walked. Larry Harlow then bounced
a ball behind second base, Downing

scoring from second while Grich and
picked up their run in the first inning
Harlow moved up a base on second
on Willie Horton 's twMut single
baseman Tim Morrison 's wild throw
which scored Julio Cruz. Cruz had
home.
Opened the game with one of nine
Guy Hoffman was then called in
walks off Ferguson Jenkins, 13-12.
from the bullpen to replace Randy . Cruz reached second with his 40th
Scarbery, 2-8, and after walking
stolen base and moved to third on a
Rick Miller, gave up the single to
grounder.
Rettenmund .
Red Sox 5, Yankees 0
Twins 8, Royals 3
Butch Hobson knocked In three
Ron Jackson drove In three runs
runs with a triple and a homer and
with a triple and a single tn pace
Bob Stanley scattered seven hit$ as
Minnesota over Kansas City .
Boston broke a four-game losing
Jackson tripled in the first inning In
streak by beating New York.
score Bob Randall from second base
Stanley , 14-9, recorded his third
and put the Twins ahead 1~.
shutout and eighth complete game
Jackson 'ssingle in the sixth knocked
this season .
in two more runs .
Bostoo reached Yankees starter
Winner Dave Goltz, 13-10,
Tommy John, 18-7, in the second
scattered 10 hits.
Mariners 1, Rangers 0
Rob Dressler, 1-2, and Byron
McLaughlin combined for a folll'hitter as Seattle beat Texas and
snapped . the Rangers' foilr-gan\e
winning streak. The Mariners

Norman records
1 OOth victory

LATONIA RESULTS

CINCINNATI (AP) - The best
part of Fred Norman 's night
Wednesday, when he won his tooth
major league game, was probably
when Johnny Bench poured
champagne on the black and gray
hair of the 37-year-old pitc)ler.
The early part Of his night wasn't
so hot. Cincinnati beat San
Francisco , S.S , but Norman pitched
only five innings before leaving with
a leg cramp. He gave lip four runs :....
two on a line-drive homer by Mike
Ivie - in his fifth attempt at No. 100.
"I almost gave it away," Norman
told a gang of reporters who
gathered to ask him about the
milestone . He didn't seem thrilled .
"l'n\ glad it 's over. I knew it was
there. I thought about getting it my
first two times out (after No . 99 on
August 9), rut then l thought, if I
win, I win . I'm not going to worry
about it," Norman said.
"The tOOth doesn't mean - that
much. I'll probably think about it at
the ~nd of the season. We're in a
pepnant race now."
The Reds remained one-half game
behind National League Westleading Houston, which beat San
Diego, 4-3, in 10 innings on
Wednesday .
l'jorman was angry with himself
about a pitch to the Giants' Mike !vie
in the lOP of the fifth Inning, a
ch;mgeup which !vie sent over the
left-field wall and cost Norman a
lead.
"l was very upset. It just wasn 't a
good pitch in that situation," he said.
"John (Bench) called for a fastball
and I threw a changeup."
!vie's homer gave the Giants a 4-3
lead, but George Foster's twoof'un
shot to left in the bottom of the
inning gave Cincinnati the lead for
good. Ray Knight had singled and
homered earlier for the Reds, and
Johnny Bench stretched his hitting
streak to a career-high of 17 with an
RBI single.
Dan Driessen, who had three hits
to continue his steady hitting,
knocked in the winning run with a
bloop double In short left in the
seventh.

FLORENCE, Ky . (AP) - Latonia
apens 2ii days Of through bred racing
tonight with the $15,000 1nagural for
3-year-olds over six furlongs . .
Post time on week nights with be
7:30p.m. It will be 1:30 p.m . on
Saturdays. The track is closed on
Sundays.
Frank Arsenault, director of
racing, said the track has carded six
stakes races worth $100,000. The
track will run through Oct. 4.

TOURNAMENT SET
There will be a fast pitCh softball
tourney to be held in the near future
at Marietta, Ohio. For further infonnation call Dick Spindler in
Marietta at 37:!-9739.

Black
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innmg lor two runs on five hits ,
including Hobson 's RBI triple. The
Bostoo third basunan later hit a
two-run homer in the eighth.
Tigers 9,1ndians 3
Ron LeFlore 's ninth-inning triple
broke a 3-3 tie and ignited a six-&lt;'wt
rally that carried Detroit over
Cleveland.
lAser Victor Cruz, 3-9, walked
Alan Trammell leading off the ninth .
LeFlore followed with a line drive
that bounced past charging Bobby
Bonds in right for a three-base hit.
Pinch-hitter AI Greene walked and
Steve Kemp followed with an RBIsingle.
Aurelio !Apez, 8-4., got the victory
with three innings of shutout relief.

VALUES TO -$15.00

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CINCINNATI (AP) Joe
Altobelli, last year 's National
League' manager of the year, was
fired early this morning as the
manager of the disappointing San
Francisco Giants by owner Bob
lm'ie, who said he " felt the club
should have been a contender."
Veteran manager Dave Bristol,
who was the team's third base

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball at A Glance
I
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
w. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
90 -46 .662
Milwaukee
83 57 .593 9
Boston
79 57 .581 11
New York
75 61 .551 15
Detroit
74 66 .529 18
Cleveland
71 69 ,5()7 21
Toronto
44 94 .319 47
WEST
Cal iforn ia
76 64 .543
Kansas City
73 66 .525 2'h
Minnesota
72 66 .525 3
Te•as
68 72 .486 8
Chicago
60 78 .435 15
SeaMie
59 82 .418 l7 1h
Oakland
47 93 .336 29
Wednesdilly 's Games
Toronto at Baltimore, ppd ,, rain
Detroit 9, Cleveland 3
Boston 5, New York 0
Minnesota 8, Kansas City J
California 9, Chicago 8
Oakland 6, Milwaukee 1
Seattle 1, Te•aso
Thursday Games
Toronto (Edge 2·1) at Baltimore
(D . Martinez14·12l.
New York (HOOd Hll at Detroil
&lt;Wilco•1hil .
Chicago (Trout b8.J) at California
(Frost 14·9) .
&lt;Only games scheduled)
Frld•y•s Games
Ba ltimore at Boston
Toronto at Cleveland
New York at Detroit

' "There's still some blood on my
hands," Driessen joked. The ball he .
hit off former ·Reds' reliever Pedro
Borbon was way inside and Driessen
was fooled . But the blooper fell
behind third base and scored Dave
Coocepcion from second.
"Maybe it's my turn to have some
Texas at Minnesota
Milwaukee at California
fall in," said Driessen, hitting only
£hie ago at Oakland
.236 before the game .
Kansas City at Seat1ie
The Giants' dressing room was
somber, not an unusual mood since
the All-Star break. San Francisco is
NATIONAL LEAGUE
16-32 since then and 4-17 in the last
EAST
three weeks.
W. L. Pel. GB
Pittsburgh
83 55 .601
" Everybody here knows we've got
Montreal
78 5• .591 2
a much better team than we show,"
51 . Louis
7. s. .591 8
!vie said. " We haven 't had much
Ch icago
71 65 .522 11
Phlladelpllia
69 68 .504 13 '12
luck. We 've been hitting a lot of balls
New York
53 82 . 393 28'12
right at them ."
WEST
!vie's home run in the fifth
Houston
79 60 .568
Cincinnati
79 61 .56•
lh
extended his hitting str~ak to eight
Los Angeles
66 73 .•75 13
games . His average has swelled
San Francisco
61 79 .m lB IJ1
from .241 to .314 in the last two
San Diego
58 82 .414 21 1; ,
months and he already has personal
Atlanta
54 84 .391 24'h
WednesdiY's Games
highs in home runs (23) and RB!s
Montreal4, ChicaooJ
(79) .
Los Angeles 5, Atlllnta 3, 10 inn ings
"I've been hitting well for three
New York at Philadelphia , PP&lt;L
rain
months. I'm seeing the ball well and
Cinc i nnat i 6, San Francisco 5
I'm getting good pitches to hit," he
Houston"· San Diego J, 10 innings
said .
Pi ttsburgh 7, St. Louis5, 1t innings

Thursday 's G1me5
Montreal (Palmer 7·2) al Chicago
(McG lothen 1l ·10J.
New York (Hausman l ·S and
Fa lcone 5·11 J at Philadelphia !Lerch
7·12and Espinosa 13-10), 2.
Los Angeles ( SuMon 12 ~ 12) at
Atlanta ( Hanna 0·1J.
San Franc isco &lt;Knepper 9·10) al
Cincinnati ( Seaver 13·6).
San Diego (Owchi nko • ·9) at
Houston (Richard 15·12J .
Pittsburgh (Bibby 10·3) at St.
Louis &lt;Martinez12 ·7) .
Friday~s

Rucker's catch said

Games

'best in long time'

Philadelphl_, at Chicago
San Diego at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Cincinnati
Pittsburgh at New York

Sen Francisco at Houston
Montreal at St. Louis

BEREA , Ohio ( AP I - On e
football expert - although partial believes a catch made Sunday by
aeveland Browns receiver Reggie
Rucker was the best ever in
Rucker's long and checker ed
career.
" I've seen you catch a lot of
passes, Reggie , but that catch
Sunday in New York was the best ,
the absolute best, " said Cleveland
Coach Sam Rutigliano In the !~year

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Wednesday

Mixed League
Aug. 29, 1979

Ph.

T~m

a

No.2
NO. 4
NO. 5

6

6
2

No , J
No. 6
2
No1
0
High serie5 ·· Larry Dugan 582.
Carol yn Bachner 485 ; Bill Port!r

pro .

566. Pat carson •7.s.

Rucker leaped high, reaching up
for a Brian Sipe pass late in the
contest, and that's the one that
caught Sam's eye.
Rutigliano admits tn appreciating
Rucker's talent ever since 1972,
when both were part of the New
England Patriots organization .
The Browns acquired Rucker
from New England for a fourth
round draft choice in the spring of
1975, and he has been a starting

High game .. Bill Porter 213, .Sue
Beegle 180; Charl ie Van Meter 201,
Maxine Dugan 177 .
Team serie5 -- No . 41895 .
Team game -- No. 3660.

Early sunday
Mhced league
August 26, 1979
Te•m

Pts.

No. t

6
6

No. 6
No. 3

6
2

No. 5

2

NO. 1

No. 2
2
High 5erle5 -· John Tyree 555,
Becky Ktoes 522 ; Bi ll Wi lford 527,
Marlene Wi Ison 515.
High game -- Bill Wi ltor:d 213,
Becky Kloes 195; Darrell Dugan 196,
Helen Phetp• 187.
Team 5er ies ·· No. 42035.
Team game -- No. " 721.

receiver ever since .
He found a home with Cleveland,
his fourth National Football League

team.
Rutigliano's compliment was in
· refe.mce to his team's overtime :1$.22

might make us crack," Montreal
Manager Dick WUUams said after
the Expos stayed within two games
of Pittsbucgh by chalking up their
ninth straight victory . Tommy
Hut too 's twMut single in the ninth
Inning drove in Dave Cash from
second base to snap a 3-3 tie and
hand the Cubs their sixth straight
loss .
Astros 4, Padre• 3
San Diego 's John D' Acquisto
threw four straight bad pitches to
Enos CabeU with the bases loaded in
the lOth Inning , forcing Houston
pitcher Joe Sambi to hmte with the .
Astros ' winning run that kept them
one-half game ahead of the Reds in
the West .
Samblto led off the lOth with a
walk and Cesar Cedeno bunted him
to second . Terry Puhl was given an
intentional walk before Jeff Leonard
and
Cabell
were
passed
unintentionally.
Dodgers 5, Braves 3
Atlanta's Gene Garber, who set a
major league record for relievers by
losing his 15th game of the season
last Monday night, lost No.16 this ·
time when Von Joshua singled to
apen the Dodgers' lOth, wok second
on a grounder and scored on Steve
Garvey's lw!Hlut single .
Garvey also had an RBI l;louble in
the eighth . The Braves scored all
their runs in the eighth, two on Mike

victory over the New York Jets. This
the team is preparing at its
Baldwin-Wallace College training
camp for an encounter Sunday in
Kansas City against the Chiefs.
Although Rutigliano and the team
have received same criticism for
nearly losing the game in New York,
Rucker feels the Browns will benefit
from the contest.
"Something Uke that helps teach a
team how to win, " said the Boston
University graduate .
"The odds were against us . We
had on e foot in the grave and the
other on a banana peel, but we
stayed in there, didn 't quit, and
came out ahead . It 's going to help us
in the long run .
"The first game in a winning
streak is the most important
because, until you win one, you don 't
have anything . Now we've got
momentum going into next Sunday's
game.
"It 's time to forget the Jets and
think about the Chiefs," he said.
"We need total concentration and
dedication for what's ahead. We
need to stop re-living last Sunday
and get ready for next Sunday."
w~ k

GROUP Ill

Some of Our Best Carpet.

in SEOL golf opener
Gallla Academy High School '• golf
equ.ad defeated hoet Meigs, lli&amp;-187 in
the 1979 Southeastern Ohio League
opener for both !Chool5 Wednesday

Lum 's pinch-homer.

. HILLBtLl: Y
OUTHOUSE
No . 2. Fir5t

WHY
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Annual JambOree
Hillbilly OiKO
Sept. 8, i979,

8 P .M . Till M idnight
Pt. Pleasant Youth

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Oanct Studio . Music &amp;
dl&gt;co l ighl show bv Pied
Piper Mobile Dls.::o. Ad ·
m1ssion $3.00 per pe-r son. Children, teens, &amp;
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proceeds
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best dressed Hillbilly
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Rtfre5hments
available. Tickets mav
be purcha&gt;ed at Frulns
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36.
Gallia 's Mark Allen, Who flnlshed
with a 39, fired an eagle on the par 5
fifth hole.
Other Blue Devll scores were
AaronJeffers,37 ; Brad Rodgers, 44;
Tim Skidmore, 47 ; Jeff Beattie 46
and Mark Dunn 50.
For the Marauders , J . R.
Wamsley was low man with a 42.
Fred YOWig had a 46; Scott McKin ney 47; Dave KeMedy 52; Rob Davis
f&gt;S; Brian Will 59; Tony Jewell 52 and
Scott Harrison 54.
Gallipolis will host Chesapeake,
Fairland and South Point at borne today .

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finished third with an 89-73 record.
His career record in the major
leagues is 225-239.

contender after a 7:Hl7, fourthi&gt;lace
finish in 1977. In 1978, San Francisco
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evening .
. The match was played on the
Riverside Golf Course in Mason City.
The victory left GAHS 2-ll averall
and 1~ in the league .
J .D. Jones of Gallipolis captured
medalist honors with a Ofle-over-par

\\.

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RUBBER BACK PRINTS·

Lurie said he didn 'I know
Altobelli's plans. The owner said
Altobelli was not offered another
position with the Giants .
" Joe Altobelli is certainly a fine
manager," Richardson said . " He 'U
make somebody a fine manager."
Neither Lurie nor Richardson
would be !!pecific about the reason
for the firing. The owner said he had
been thinking about ftring Altobelli
for ''the last few days."
" He took it like a man, 11
Richardson said .
The general manager was asked
why the Giani$ made the move so
close to the end of the season, with
only 22 games left.
"(If) you're going In make the
move, make the move. Why wait?"
Richardson said.
Altobelli, who played in 166 major
league games, was~ a highly
regarded manager for Rochester in
the International League when the
Giants hired him away from the
Baltimore Orioles' system in 1977, In
six seasons at Rochester, his teams
finished first five times arid
compiled a 50~1 record.
He turned the Giants into a

GIANT STOCK REDUCTION

CHAIRS

• Sq. Yd. Installed
• Heavy Pad.

his fault ."

Blue Devils top Meigs

Crepe· batter is similar to pancake
batter but uses more eggs and less
flour to produce a thinner and lighter
product .

.

VALUES TO $20.00

" I thought If we didn 't win it (the
National League West) , we'd be
close . We're disappointed . Things
just kept getting worse ," Lurie said.
San Francisco, picked as one of
the favorites in the West this year, is
in fourth place with a 61-79 record,
18 'h games behind first-place
Houston .
The Giants have been beset with
poor pitching and injuries; only two
players - first baseman Mike !vie
and third baseman Darrell Evans who started opening day were
healthy enough to start Wednesday.
The team was 4-17 in the last three
weeks and 16-32 since the All Star
break.
Lately the team had been troubled
with dissension . Pitcher Vida Blue,
1().13 with a 5.18 earned run average,
·)'ll8de threats against writers for
\Jeing critica l of the team 's
performance. And John Montefusco,
a disappointing 3-7 on the mound,
threatened tn quit the team after
being fined for drinking on the team
plane.
Altobelli refused comment on his
dismissal early this morning.
" I've got a great deal of respect
for Joe," Lurie said. "It wasn't all

'

Pirates given 7-5 victory
When Darold KnowleS fired a
baseball wildly, St. Louis lost
another ball game . But when San
Francisco lost another .ball game, it
fired Joe Altobelli .
Knowles, who had come on in the
lith inning with the bases loaded to
face John Milner, tried instead to
pick Bill Robinson off first base . He
hit him Instead, the ball bounded
away and two rwmers bounded
across home plate, giving the
Pirates a 7-5 victory over St. !Auis
that kept them two games ahead of
Montreal in the National League
East .
San Francisco, which was
supposed to be in the thick of things
in the West, lost its seventh in a row,
1).5 to Cincinnati, and Bob Lurie,
owner of the Giants, decided enough
was enough, firing Al\Obelli and
giving Dave Bristol his fourth shot at
major league managing .
In the rest of the NL, Montreal
beat Chicago 4-3, Houston shaded
San Diego 4-3 in 10 innings and !As.
Angeles beat Atlanta r.-:1, also in 10.
The New York Mets' game at
Philadelphia was rained out.
It was the second time this year
that a bad pickoff throw by Knowles
has cost St. !Auis a game. It also
happened June 8 against San Diego.
Expos 4, Cubs 3
"Peaple are saying we 've got a
young team and that the pressure

coach, was named interim manager
by Lurie and San Francisco General
Manager Spec Richardson.
"There's not any one thing that
brought it to a head," said Lurie,
who told AltobeUi he was being
relieved in his hotel suite hours after
th e Giants lost to the Cincinnati
Reds, S.S, on Wednesday .

GALLIPOLIS, -OHIO

..

�b- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 6, 1979

CBS cops top ·three programs

Birthda

...)

I •

7-The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Thursday, Sept. s. 1979

.

\....•

. •.

Randy Carpenter
Randy carpenter celebrated his
eighth birthday Monday at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. John Chaney. Cake,
potato chipS, and koolaid were served. Gifts were presented to Randy .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Randy
Carpenter, John and Dorothy
Chaney, Eddie Chaney, Gene,
Grace, Mary and John Chaney.

"Wonder Woman" special on CBS
NEW YORK tAP J - With the
1979~0 season a week or two away.
No. 46and "Carol Burnett &amp; Co." on
there was somethi ng in the
ABC No. 48.
networks' ratings race in the week ·
The rating for "M-A-S-H" was
25.3. Nielsen says that means of all
ending Sept. 2 for both ABC and
CBS.
the homes in the country with
television, just over a quarter saw at
For CBS, it was the week's three
least part of the program.
highest-rated programs. For ABC, it
was the next 10.
ABC, with 11 of the week's Top 20
programs, had a rating lor the week
Figures from the A.C. Nielsen Co .
with a rating o£16, followed by CBS
showed "M·A..S-H" as the week's
most popular program, followed by
at 14.4 and NBC at 13. The networks
say that means in an average prime"WKRP in Cincinnati " and "Lou
Grant."
time minute during the week, 16
percent of the homes in the country
ABC kicks off its 197~0 season
with TV were tuned to the
SEPT. 10, WITH CBS and NBC to
lrontrunning network.
follow a week later. All three
NBC's third place finish was its
networks have used the last several
weeks to test some of their new
13th in a row.
programs. ABC, for example , took
CBS and ABC each had two shows
the wraps off "240-Robert," a new
among the fiv e lowest-rated. The
action-adventure series with
bottom five : No. 58 "Dorothy" on
CBS, No. 59 " Prime Time Sur1da]1:.:..._'
satisfying results - the show was
No. 5 in the latest ratings.
on NBC, No. 60 "Hanging In" on
Most shows on the schedule this
CBS, No. 61 "All Star Junior
time of year are reruns, but the
Pyramid" on ABC and No. 62
acceptance for first..-un programs is
" Plastic man Saturday Sneak Peek "
not necessarily widespread . "Facts
on ABC.
of Ufe" on NBC was No . 34 , a

The week 's To~ 10:

"M-A-5-H, " with a rating of 25.3
representing 18.8 million homes,
"WKRP in Cincinnati,'' 24.2 or 18
million, and ''Lou Grant," 22.9 or
17.1 111i1Jion, all CBS, and "Soap,"
22.5 or 16.8 million, "240-Robert,"
22.3 or 16.6 million , " Barney
Miller ," 21.7 or 16.2 million ,
'·Charlie's Angels," 21.4 or 15.9

11

FOR:n

, Hush "RAINBOW''
PupJ?.i,! §"

Final Clearance
OUT THEY GOI
STARTS
'FRIDAY 9:30 A.M.

DRASTIC
REDUCTIONS ON
MISSES
AND
CHILDREN'S

SUMMER DRESSES
• TOPS • COORDINATED SPORTSWEAR ·

Appointment noted
Jeannie Starcher has been named
local representative of Federal
Kemper Insurance Company. It was
announced today by the Company's
Regional Sales Manager, Dick
Wrathford.
Federal Kemper Insurance Company, a Kemper Corporation Company, writes all forms of Fire and
Casualty insurance. Jeannie Starcher fonnerly was associated with
Davis-Qulckel Insurance Agency,
114 Court St., Pomeroy. She is active

Health Review

CBS; "Little House on the Prairie," ,
million , "Three's C&lt;mpany ," 20.8 or
NBC, and "Dallasu and Banlaby ,
15.5 million , "Happy Days," 20.5 or
Jones," both CBS.
15.3 million, and "Angie," 19.7 or
14.7 million, all ABC.
The next 10 programs :
"Veg.a $t "Taxi" and "Laverne ' ·
and Shirley," all ABC; "M-A.S-H"
(Sunday special) and "Dukes of
Hazzard,'' both CBS; "Eight is
Enough," ABC; "The Jeffersons ,"

~

TWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

in Long Bottom Methodist Church.
She attended school in Reedsville,
and is a graduate of Eastern High
and Mountain State University.
The Starchers live at Long Bottom. They have one cbild, age two.

118 E. MAIN

SHOE BOX

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY

992-2347

Mulch good for variety of uses

The Biggest Name in Little Computers r ..

By Lamar C. MOler

D.O.,
CUalcal Auodate J&gt;releqor
crf FaDdly Medldae

Oblo Ulllvenlty Collece
ul O.felpatble Medlellle
HlRE ON BLOOD CL&lt;mi
QUFm'ION : Venography was
mentioned 11 the m08t accurate way
to dlagnoee blood clots. Are there
any other procedlll'l!ll?
ANSWER: There are other
techniques available for diagnosing
blood clota. Some of these
procedures, however, do have more
llmllationa, Including decreased aceuracy, eapec:ially tn vetna above the
lmee, and a delay ul 24 to 411 hours
before reeulta can be interpreted.
In one procedure, a dose of
radloadlve Iodine is given to the
patient by lnJecilon and thl!n traced
2f to 411 hours later. Another similar
~ure called "radlonucllde
venocraphy" is occui0118lly used. A
third technique caUed "ther: IJIOCI'II)by" used a machine called a
lbemlograph to find "hot" spots in
. the lep where vein lrTitation is oc; currlng: Tbe moat delllrable feature
: crf thia procedure IB the elimination
· crf the need to Inject any material ln. to the veinll. These testa all need fur.
; Iller ~lnement, althougil they can
~ be quite helpful In the banda ol
, peoplelamll!arwilhthelrUIIe.
: QUESTION : How are blood clots
' manqed?
ANSWER: The treatment of
tbrombophlebltla (vein Inflammation uaoclated with a blood
clot) has routinely included
elevation and bed rest unW the
IDltlal lrrltation disappears. Recently, the uaefw-&amp; crf beat has been
QIHIItionect. Althougil heal doe. help
~ relieve local pain and IIOI'elleas, it
apparently doesn't aid the body In

.

eliminating the clot itself.
.
Most thrombosis of the deep veins
are treated by bospltalization and
anticoagulation of the blood. An·
licoagulation means giving
medication to thin the blood and
prevent progression of the clot
through the circulatory system.
Most physicians continue these
rnedicatioliS for variable periods of
Urne - from six weeks to six months,
or even longer. Being on such drugs
Involves periodic tests to make sure
the blood Is maintained at the rigta
level rl. "thickness." If the blood
gets too thin, bleeding may result.
On the other hand, if the blood
remailiS too thick, it indicates the
medication Is not being used at a
strong enough dosage. 111ese tests
are run at intervalll of every one to
fourweeks .
·
QUESTION : Are there surgical
procedures available for removing
or dls.solving blood clots?
ANSWER: Most ci the time it Is
not necessary. U the clot is large
enougil to completely block the
return of blood from an estremity
(ann or leg), a thrombectomy
(surgical removal ol the clot) may
be performed. Also, if it is high
enougil in the leg or In the pelvis, the
attending physician may wish to
remove It lhrough an incision.
Very recently, procedures have
been developed to remove clots from
the lungs. This kind ol. surgery wben feuible -can be lifesaving.
Tbe best treatment for blood clots,
as with most medical problelllB, is
prevention. ~rly walking after
surgery, where possible, and elastic
bandage wrap~~ during periods of
prolonged bed rest are very im·
porlant. Also, exerctae of the leg
muScle&amp; in bed by the patient or
prol.easlonal personnel is of help.

JAMFSJONES
COMPLETES TRAINING

Mr. and Mrs. Terry Lee Pickens of
Zanesville are aMouncing the birth
of their second child, a son, Terry
Lee n. He was born on June n at
Bethesda Hospital, weighed seven
pounds, II ounces and was 22 inches
long.
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
. and Mrs. Thomas Schoonover of
Rutland, and paternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Larry Pickens of
Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Pickens also
have a daughter, Jill, one.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES, SEPT. 5
Dennis Adkins, Wayne Baker,
Watson Beatty, Granville Blanton,
Erica Bowles, Deborah Carhart,
Elizabeth Clark, Myranda Clary,
Angela Cobb, Lilly Collins, Harvey
Collins, Hertha Compton,Stephen
Cook, Stanford Cox, Ruth Franklin,
Grace Gloeckner , John King, Robert
Kuhn , Claude Lancaster, Katherine
Lovell, Mrs . roger Rou sh and
daughter , Steve Runyan , Ruth
Sayre, Richard Scites, Mrs. Greg
Short and daughter, J ason
Smallwood , Ruth Stevenson,
Barbara Twyman , Ernest Van
Inwagen,. Linda Webb, Robert
Williamson.
BIRmS,SEPT.5
Mr. and ¥rs. Craig Fischer,
daughter , Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs.
Michael
McCormill,
son,
Huntington ; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Smith, daughter, Sandyville, W.va.

Marine Pic. James H. Jones, son
of Ayward C. and Mae Jones of Rt. 2,
Box II, Racine, has completed
recruit training at the Marine Corps
Recruit Depot, Parris lBiand, S. C.
During tbe 10 and one-half-week
training cycle, he learned the basics
of battlefield survival. He was introduced to the typcial daily routine
that he will experience during his
enlistment and studied the personal
and professional standards traditionally exhibited by Marines.
He participated in an active
physical conditioning prngram and
gained proficiency in a variety of
military skills, including first aid, rifle rnarkmanship and close order
drill. Teamwork and self-discipline
were emphasized throughout th(,
training cycle.
A graduate of Southern Local High
School, he joined the Marine Corps
in October, 1978.

OVER 100,000 COMPUTERS SOLD. SO ECONOMIES OF SCALE
LET US PASS ALONG SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS TO YOU!
Model I
Level I 4K TR5-80
System as shown*
Was $599 in
1979 Catalog

ENTE.\TAIN RECENTLY
Mary Roberts and carolyn Uttle
of Middleport entertained recently
with a party honoring Stevie Chaney
on his birthday. The party attended
by 26 persons was held at the home
of Jim Adams, Rutland.
The group enjoyed music and
singing along with refreslunents.

BEARS RETURN
MOSCOW (AP) - Bears have
returned to the forests which ring
the Soviet capital of Moscow after an
absence of nearly 20 years.
Naturalists said they believed the
bears had been driven away by
massive construction projects in
Moscow - the number of which has
dwindled in recent years.
Weekend strollers have been
warned to avoid the animals.

game cassette.

t•oru·~·r nt • tl

Order Now for Earliest Delivery
from Any of Our 7000 Locations

Your system will include everything picturedeverything you need- plus the manual. And
it's waiting now, less expensive !han ever, at
your nearest Radio Shack store or participating
dealer.

1-[UUd

VILLAGE PHARMACY
Middleport,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
o.

!if' DIVISION OF TANOV

CO RPORATI ON

992-3382.

$3450

I

MOIII!tmt
lito lvlillblt II

lwalth ~

. 271 N. 2nd Ave.

FROM

Thousands with no computer experience-just
like you - have discovered computers with a
Level I system. Many are using our dozens of
ready-to-run cassette programs, while others
_have learned to program TRS-80 themselves.
Levell's r(lanual makes programming easy and
fun to learn . Then you can convert to the powerful Level II language for more advanced
capabilities.

RADIO SHACK HAS OVER 7000 STORES AND DEALERS IN THE USA AND CANADA/
wilh

Awards eafl!ed durin&amp; the summer were pn!Rnted at a recent
meetillf! crf the Chester Cub Pack 236
held at the Cbe11ter IICOIIt hall.
· '!bole receiving awmit were Or.-We Hill, Ertc Slm, D&amp;le Laudermilt, Terry NeWsome, Mony Wood'
A'lban Olrtil, Timmy Lawaon, Matt
Darling, WUlle Hill, and Roger
Carpenter, the honor Wilt patch and
tr.e summer activity awanl. Matt
Han1a and Brent Norton of the
webeloee allo earned the awards.
For the cub olyrnplca beld in June
at Rio Grande College for acouts of
the MGM area, Eric Slrn who took
aecond place In pu!hup11 and Matt
Han1a who took third In high Jump
received awards.
Following the meeting
refrelhmenb were served and plans
were made for entering a float In the
Labor Day parade in Chester. The
float took a firlt place In the parade.
DIU White provided the trailer.
AnY boys In the·Cbester comrntmi·
ty interested In Joining the cub
acoubr or webeloes are Invited to
contact cubmaater, Gary Dill at
915-4274 or Fral!k Newsome,

Two years ago . Radio Shack introduced the
TRS -80: The wired, tested. UL listed and
ready-to-run microcomputer that more people
have bought than any other single computer in
h1story . TRS-80 is like a big computer. but it
stores less data and runs at a lower speed . It
has proven ideal for uses in school. business,
lab and home , where a large computer is impractical.

\ !'- nu • rnlu·r~ uf 'nur ('nnununihun d U!'o an irnpnrtanl pari of ~· our
" lu·alth lirw" to ~our tltu·tor.
our plrarmat•i•l• ar&lt;• &lt;INii•·alf'd
to &lt;lt·li"-r tlu· lu·• t in prnft·" ion\Oil .

Cub Scouts
receive awards

·Level refers to version of BASIC langu~ge Level I •s a beginner's language,
whtle Levell I is very advanced. Le\lel and
memory can be expanded All systems
include 232 -page users manual and

We've added a bigger, more powerful
"brother" to the TAS-80 family . It's
TRS-80 Model II - a completely new
microcomputer fo r business applications . Its capabilities begin where
TRS-80 Model I approaches its upper
limits . Storage capacity from 112 megabyte to 2 megabytes!

.\\ ·t·'rt•

Model I
L~vel II TR5-80
System*
Was $988 In .
1979 Catalog

$499 $849

Meet TAS-SO's Big Brother!
The New TR~SO
Model II

ul .. t·nitT lu

Sept. 9 at the Firlt Southern Baptist
Onirdl, Pomeroy, and will continue
through Sept. 18.
The Rev. Herb Capehart, a Leon
evancelilt, will be leading the lei'·
v!ceawhlch start at 7 p.m. nightly.
Gapehlrt, who w11 bom In New
Haven, was saved at the qe ci It
and baptized later In the Ohio River.
Hla lonna! education Included the
New Haven Grade School and
Waharna H1i11 School, Muon Cowley, W. Va.; Moler Barber College,
Wheeling; NorthwMtem Bible College, Mirlnupolls, fdlnn., and the
Dallaa Theological Seminary,
Olllu, Tell. He lias a B.A. degree In
Bible from Northwestern, which In·
cludel among Its u.t ol. former
praidenta, the famowr evangelist,
Or. Billy Grtilam. Graham was
president II the time Gapehart
eMilled.
. Capehart bu been preaching for
• yean and hu putored churches
In Minnelota, Te:a:aa and Wf!l!t
VIrginia. He was putor ci the Jud1011 Baptist Church in Teays Valley

TM

•

Aadio S,eck
Dtlltrt.
Look tor thlt
sign in your
neighborhood .

PRICES MAY VARY AT INDIVIDUAL SlORES

I'

for 10 yeal'3. His ministry has
covered radio, revivals, evangellstlc
rneetinp, visitation and personal
work. He has Wfll'ked as a rural missionary with the Wl.scona!n Rural
MIJislon, Chippewa Falll!, Wis.
·Tbe people of Flrlt Southern Bapu.t Church., 2112 Mulberry Avenue,
Invite the public· to attend the services.

Accept co -cbainnanship
Mn. Charles Marshall l!nd Mn .
O.by Martin of Meigs County Salon
710, Eight and Forty, have accepted
the co-dlalnnanshlp for the _Meigs
County cystic fibrosis fund drive .
They will have charge rl. all solicitation In Meigs County with the exception rl. Middleport village.
The fwd drive will be conducted
fnm Sept. 8-16. Volunteers are needed for Rutland, Tuppers Plains, and
~ Letart area. Anyooe willing to
'solicit Is uked to cootact Mrs. Martin at 1192-7022. National chalnnan 15
Gabriel Kaplan, television star.

Confined to bospitai
Helen V. WUllamB, Columbus,
formerly rl. the Dexter commwlity,
has been confined to the University
Hospital, 1t{eans Hall, for the past
two weeiiB receiving tnatment for a
heart ailment.

Mn. Wllllamson expects to return
to bel' home at 12:06 Nell Ave., Col·
urnbua, ~1, thta week. Retired for
the past three years, Mn. WUllamB
w11 formerlY employed at University H01Pital. Her daughter, Jennllee
Barnhart ol Neapolis, and her son,
Ronald Wllllams, Bryan, visited
wilh ber over the weekend.

Family fare hekl
A family gathering was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
McLaughlin over the weekend u a
farewell to Kevin McLaughlin of the
u. s. Marines who will leave Sept.
11 for a three month tour of duty in
Turkey. McLaughlin is stationed 'at
Camp LeJeune, N. C.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Willlam Howells and family, Rittman, Mr. and Mrs. Alan
McLaughlin, Fostoria; Terry
Yeauger, Pomeroy; Bob Anderson,
Harrlaburg, Pa.. Mr. and Mrs.
Duane McLaughlin telephoned from
their horne in Idaho.

on

of the growing season.

Mulcbes aid In maintaining a
uniform soli lern!Jerature. Tbey act
as an tnaulatlon In keeping the soli
warmer during cool spells and
cooler during the wann months of
the year. By maintaining uniform
soli temperatures, freeze-thaw
cycles during winter are retarded,
and heaving of perennial plants Is
reduced.
Mulching materials Increase
water holding capacity of light sandy soils and increase aeration rl.
heavy clay soila 8s they gradually
become mixed with the basic soli.
Organic mulches aern 11 food for
many m!Cl'(H)fganisms found In the
soil. During decootpoaltion of the
organic material, soli micro-

organisms secrete a sticky material
which promotes the granulation of
the soiL The mulch also maintains
mo~ stable temperatures so ihe activity of the mlCI'CMirganisms can
preVail at an even rate.
Mulching alds In preventing surface soli erosion particularly If it has
been established a few weeks.
In addition, D!ulches help keep
leaves, flowers, and fruits free from
soU which Is important wilh
strawberries, tomatoes, rock garden
planbr, etc.
.
The time to apply. a mulch Is in
mld-llpring when the soli bas suf.
flcienUy warmed up for active root
growth. AppUed prior to thia, the
mulch will keep tbe ground cool and
root growth may be slow. U planting

Government lauds appliance recall
Social Calendar I
111URSDAY
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club
Thursday 7:30 p.m. In auditorium of
Sacred Heart Church. Hostesses
Alice Freeman, Janet Duf!y, Rita
Hamm and Winnie Waldnig.
SOU111ERN LOCAL School Board
speciallleiiSioo Thursday I p.m. in
office of superintendent.
FRIDAY
BAKE AND YARD SAU: Friday
at Chester Methodist Church from 8
a.m. to 4 p.m. Sponsored by Olester
UMW.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, 8 p.m. Friday at the Rock
Springs Grange Hall.
YOt.m:l QUAKE '79, Carleton
Church 00 the Kingsburg Road, 7:30
Friday, Saturday and Sunday evenIngs.

YOUTif REVIVAL at the Carleton
Church, County Road 18, Friday,
7::11 p.m. with T11111 McElroy, 11llnols, as evangelist.
SA'IUlWAY
MARY SHRINE 37 products party

Fall revival set Sunday
.A fall revival will begin Sunday,

COLUMBUS - A mulch is a layer
of peat moss, shredded bark, or any
slrnllar material spread on the surface of the soli under and around
·planta. The application of mulches
have many advantages, such 11 Improving plant growth, enhancing the
appearance ci the land.!cape and
reducing time spent In maintenance.
According to Tbe Ohio Nurserymen's Assoclaton and Tbe Ohio
State Univel'3ity, the most conunon
reason for using a mulch is that it
will eliminate or at least retard
weeds. Where the mulch layer Is sufficientiydeep, few weeds will grow.
By reducing the amount rl. soli
water evaporation, mulches conserve moisture which Ia particularly
important during droughty periods

for members and friends Saturday
7:30p.m. in banquet room at Atbens
County Savings and Loan, P001eroy.
ClfiCKEN aARBECUE at New
Haven Fire Statioo Saturday begin·
ning at 11 a.m. Sponsored by the
auziliarY. Chicken, hot dogs, baked
beans and potato salad will be sold.
SUNDAY

HOMECOMING Sunday at
Chesler Church ol the Nazarene.
Sunday morning services at regular
hour!!. Basket dinner at noon.
Singsplration at 1:30 p.m.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
government is hailing as "ambitious
and innovative" the voluntary recall
by Coming Glass Works of 18.5
mllUon of its coffee pots because of
the danger that their handles will
fall off.
"This probably is a milestone in
recall history," said Sam Zagoria,
vice chairman of the Consumer
Product Safety Crorrnission, which
negotiated the voluntary recall
campaign with Corning.
Corning announced at a news
conference Tuesday It will publish
advertisements in more than 1,000
newspapers around the country
starting Monday urging its
customers to stop using the
defective, white ceramic-glass
Corning Ware percolators sold since
1960.

1\n expoxy sealant holding the
metal band of the handle to the pot
was found to become dry and brittle,
allowing the handle to slip off the pot
suddenly.
Both electric and stove-top models
are affected, but no problems have
been reported with Corning's
"Pyrex" clear glass percolators or
olhel' Corning products.
ZagOI'ia said the newspaper ads
will contain a coupon for pot owners
to fill out and mail to Corning. The

Receive recognition ·
Beulah White and Jerry Pullen
received special recognition Sunday
at the Middleport First Baptist
Clurch.
Mrs. White received a 33 year attendance pin and a gift and Miss
Pullen received a 25 year pin and a
gift from the Swrday School.
Others receiving attendance
awards were Jeff Burke, Ryan
Cowan, Doddie Cletsnd, Heather
Goins, Sbelly Metzger, and Debbie
Cleland, one year; Penny Lewis and
Sis Van Meter, two years; Fred
Klein, Van Klein, Mary Brewer,
three years; Marybelh Brewer and
Lillian Demoaky, four years; and
Jennifer Ueving and Teresa Ueving, eight years.

COOipany WW mall them a box for
returning the tops from their coffee
pots, rendering them unusable.
In addition, If the pot was
manufactured before 1970, the
ownel' will be offered ·a 50 percent
discount on up to ~ worth of other
COI'ning products, Zagoria said.
If tbe pot was made after 1970, the
owner will be offel'ed a refund,
minus 10 percent for each year the
pot has been used, or coupons for
buying other Corning products to be
featured in a special catalog lhe
company is preparing.
Corning spokesman Alan Donnelly
could not estimate the cost of the
recall , saying it would depend on
consumer response to the recall
offers.
But the commission said it was the
biggest corrective action involving a
consumer product since the agency
was established IP 1972. Even If only
half the 18.5 mi!fion hazardous pots
are returned, it still would be the
biggest recall In commission
history.

PTOTOMEFr

Letart Falll! PTO will meet Monday, Sept. 10, at 7:30p.m. at Letart .
Falls Elementary.
PRODUCTS PARTY SA'IUlWAY
Mary Shrine :n will hold a pro- ·
ducts party for members and friends
Saturday, Sept 8 at 7:30p.m. In the

River Boat Room d the Athens
County SavlngB and Loan, P11111eroy.

Is done in autumn, apply the mulch

immediately so that the soli temperature will be kept wanner
longer.
Most mulches should be applied at
least 2 to 3 Inches deep 11Vet the
whole area. Herbaceous planta
which require winter protection may
require an additional! to 2 Inches In
autumn around the crown or base rl.
the plant.
Weed seeds may be Introduced Into the landscape with hay, straw,
and strawy manure and aerve 11 a
source of troublesome weeds. '
Varloua kinds rl. bulla or corn cobs
may have grain 01' seed mixed ln.
Molds often develop on cocoa bean
and buckwheat b.u11s when they are
kept too moist or are In shady
locations. Stirring the surface of the
mulch to aid In drying will eUmlnate
maida.
Several of the matertala used for
mulching require an addition ol fertlllzer to reduce the chance ol.
nitrogen deficiency ol the growing
planta. Wood chlpa, sawdust,
crushed coniCobs, straw, and shredded bark need additions r1. fertilizer.
Apply a complete lawn or garden
fertlllZer at tbe rate of two pounds
per 100 square feet prior to application &lt;l tbe IJlulch. U the foliage
of the plantB become yellow during
the growing season, additional fert!Uzer sbould be applied.
Sphagnum peat mOllS Is generally
available and ideal for mulching
evergreena and other planta which
grow best In acid soil. Its color Is
pleasing, it is free of weed seeda, and
remains effective for one to two
years, depending on tbe thickness
applied.
Shredded bark makes an excellent
mulch which lasts as long or longer
than peat mOllS. Bark chunks are
available In various abies and are
val11Bble in beautification.
Straw is used for winter protection
and 11 a summer mulch In fruits and
vegetable plantingB. It may carry
weed seeds and 15 Oanunable, so IIBB
It away from areas where cigarettes
may be thrown.
Crushed stone, gravl\1 chip, and
pebbles are excellent in the landscape for effect In · highlighting
plants.or garden features. They are
available! In vartoua colors and can
be selected to blend In with the
features of the h&lt;ime, patio, or Jan.
dscape.
Black polyethylene Is used
primarily In vegetable gardens, and
both black and clear poly are used In
landscaping. Tbe clear should be
covered with another mulch to
. prevent weed growth.
Crushed corncobs are used eztenalvely In some areas but do
require supplemental fertlllzer applications.
Buckwheat bulla are fine textured
and may blow in windy areas but
have a good neutral color and are
long lasting.
Sawdust 15 commonly used where
readily available. Nitrogen deficiency is almost certain, If fertilizer ill
not applied regularly. Wood chips or
shavlng,s decoolpoae slowly and may
need additional fertilizer.
Flberglasa mala, Inorganic In
nature, will not rot, corrode, or burn
and are long lasting.
Salt hay, spent hops, lawn cUppings, leaves, sugar cane, cocoabean bulla, leaf mold am paper pulp
have all been satisfactorily used for
mulching and, If available, should be
considered.

JAMES AND ETIIAUNDA Moore
DANNY
BUFFINGTON
family rewlion, Shrlners Park,
HOSPJTAI,JZED
Racine, Sunday, with a basket dinDanny Buffington, 31, son of Mn.
ner at I p.m. Relatives and friends
Rulh Buffington, Pomeroy, has been
invited.
transferred fnm Holzer Medical
WOOD FAMILY REUNION, Sun·
Center to University Hospital, Colday, Forest Acres Park, Rutland.
mnbus, where he was placed on a
Basket dinner at noon. MONDAY
kidney machine. His room nwnber
MEIGS COUNTY 710, Eight and
Is 936.
Forty' Monday 7:30 p.m. at the
Riverboat Room rl. the Pmleroy Of.
RECEPTION REI.D
flee, Athens Cowlty SavlngB and
A
reception
lvill be held for Lois
Loan Co.
Ann Pauley, deputy grand matroo o1.
WARNER ·FAMILY rewlion at the
Dlstlct 25, Order of the Eastern Star,
Herman Warner residence at Wolf
Saturday
night at the Harrisonville
Patty
Neutzllng
entertained
SunPen, Swlday wilh potluck dinner at
Masonic
Temple
by Harrisonville
day
evening
with
a
farewell
cookout
12 noon. Thtlee attending are to take
Chapter,
O.E.S.
Refreshments
will
and
party
honoring
Tracy
Smith
wbo
lawn chairs.
be
potluck.
will
be
moving
with
her
parents,
Mr.
HOMECOMING at Dexter Church
and Mrs. 'Howard Smith, to
of Christ Sunday wilh Mark Timothy
Ru.Mell, former pastor, speakl"l! at
&lt;llarleston, W. Ya. In lhe near
future. The party was held at Patty's
10:30 morning worship and a baaket
SHOP
dinner at 12 noon. ·
·
Uncoln Heights home.
HOMECOMING AT Chester
Gifts were presented to Tracy. AtChurch of the Nazarene Sunday
tending were Julie Batey, Mike Van
beginning with Sunday School, 9:30
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
Meter, Stacey Stone, Usa and
a.m. and preaching at 10:45. Basket
Teresa Stewart, Don and Chris
TRISTATE AREA
dinner at noon followed by a
Grogan, Kenda Dunfee, and Dennis
slngsplration at 1:30 p.m. with The
Harris, Jr.
Davis Trio of Buffalo, W. Va., as .
special singers. Pastor Herbert
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
Grate Invites the public.
FIR111DAY CELEBRATED
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday ti1112 Noon
Dorothy Smalley will be
HOMECOMING at Silver . Run
OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINJMENT ONLY
Freewill Bapu.t Church, begins at
celebrating her 9lst birthday anniversary at lhe Maple Heighta . 1
10 a.m.; preaching l!Y Rev. Hoard
Herman Grate
Nursing HOOle, Wellston, Ohio C5692
Kimble; special slnl8n lhroughout
Mason, W.Va.
773-SS92
day. Dinner at noon. Rev. Bill Price,
on Wednesay, Sept. 12. Friends are
afternoon. Everyone welcome.
uked to send cards.

Entertain Sunday

MASON FURNITURE

MASON FURNITURE

MONDAY

TWIN CITY Shrine Club Monday
at 7:30p.m.
lET ART · F AlUl PTO Monday
7:30 p.m. at Letart Falls Elementary.

unmi

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets
eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
·see our lot model today .

t'!!M

travel
inCLOGnito!
No sense tl)'ing lo mix in
with the crowd when
you're wearing Connie
c logs! 'Cause with
these attentiongetting leather tops
a nd shiny. wood
bottoms in all
kinds of exciting
new shapes-you'l l
be a STANDOUT!

KINGSBURY

HOME SALES
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992·7034

heritage house
OF SHOES
----------------:2N:D~A:V~E~---------~M~ID=D=L~E~P:O=R~T~,~O~.-------·
,,
r,

�·.

r.-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept, 6, 1979

Annual Blankenship-Martin reunion held Sundt
The seventh annual John Edward
Martin and Mary Blankenship Martin reunion was held Sunday at
Forest Acres Park near RuUand.
Mrs. Mary Martin had grace
preceding the dinner. Recognized
were Mr. and Mrs , Alheri Martin,
Sr., Michael Martin, Mr. aad Mrs.
Osby Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Mitchell, and Mrs. Edna See, all
with perfect attendance at the n!U·
nions; Bessie Mitchell, Columbus,
the oldest .person attending; Mrs .

Louise Marlin Mitchell, Columbus,
the oldest Martin·attending; Jeffrey
Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Martin, the youngest Martin attending ; and Foyster William Sr. family of Artemus, Ky. the ones traveling
the farthest.
Door prizes were won by Mrs.
Albert Martin, Jr., Bob Marlin,
Alliance, Annie M3rlin, Pomeroy,
and P. J. Clark, Galloway. A gift
was presented to Vincent Marlin.
The birthday of Mrs. Leslie Gibbs

was noted , as was the marriage Mr.

and Mrs. Mike Martin. All of the
children under 12 were presented
gifts.
Officers elected for tbe next reunion scheduled for Aug. 31 at Forest
Acres Park were E. R. Martin ,
president ; and Annie Martin,
secretary-treasurer.
Robert Martin of Alliance
distributed copies of the Martin
family history to members of the
Martin family. Games were played

-. . .- -

during the afternoon.
Attending wer~ Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Kibble, Brian and DanieUe,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Menbalt and Debbie, Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Mitchell, Mr~ and Mrs. Rick
Montgomeroy, Lisa and Todd Webb,
Maxine Webb, Sheila, Joseph and
Terry, Jeanne Drowen, Bob Martin
and Louise Anderson, all of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Martin, Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Martin, Mr. and

Mrs. E. R. Martin, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Martin, Leona Martin, aU of
Pomeroy; Paul Clark, Galloway;
Margaret Wyatt,. Mason, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Haialet, Norton;
Robert Martin, Stephanie and
Steven, Debbie Ringwald, Alliance;
Mary Ellen Mills and Kevin,
Artemus; Zelia Smith and John,
Flatllck, Ky. ; Mr. and Mrs. Allen
Wickline, Cohnnbtl9.
Katie Carpenter, Rutland;
Patricia Martin, Colwnbw • Kate

program to help the elderly and poor
with winter ·heating bills.
Janis said Wednesday that Asner
will remake the ads, which were
outdated by failure of the
Legislature to enact the program in
July as expected, at "a nominal

cost."
The announcements recently were
called back because
they
erroneously mentioned a Sept. I
deadline for eligible Ohioans to sign
up for the 25 percent heatin~ bill

Hypertension leading
cause of stroke--AHA
Senior Nursing students Connie Lyons (c) and Krista!
Hash (c). Ma. Lyons is from Portsmouth and Ms. Hash
from Bidwell.

Freshman class arrives at school of nursing ·
Members of the Class of 1982
began to arrive last evening at Davis
Hall, home ol the Holzer Medical
Center School d Nursing. Assisting
the Freslunan class members who
were moving into the donnitory
facilities at Davis Hall, were upperclass students, faculty members
and.the housemothers.
The official tw&lt;Hiay orientation
program began this morning with
breakfast at 7:30a.m. Following an

official welcome to the school by
Janet M. Byers, R.N., Director of
Nursing Education, the new nursing
students spent the day getting acquainted with the school, the
hospital and the community in which
they will be living and learning dur·
ing the next three years.
Tomorrow (Friday) the students
will continue their orientation with
their instructors at the school as well
as the faculty with whom they will
work fr(IJI Ohio University. They

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer

Spilt fingernail polish
DEAR POlLY - I spilled fingernail polish on a fitted sheet and
would like to know how to remove it.
-MRS.M.
DEAR MRS. M. - Nail polish
remov~r will rem~ve polish ·from
some·fabrics but destroy others, so
teat the effect before plunging in.
Acetone (buy at the drug store) will

Generation Rap
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Would you please publish a thank·
you from Douglas Widner to aU the
nice people who sent contributions
for the Jerry Lewis Muscular
Dystrophy Fund?
We really appreciate their good
thoughts and help, and we've sent
the money on to Jerry for his kids.
It's wonderful that so many of
your readers cared. Doug's high
point of the summer was when he got
a personal letter from Jerry Lewis
(who read about his work for M.D. in
your column). That was his greatest
wish !
· Thanks to everyone! - DOUG LAS
WIDNER AND HIS PARENTS,
West Chester, Pa.
DEAR WIDNERS :
And thanks again, 11-year-&lt;lld
Doug, for devoting ahnOBt your
whole swnmer to raising money for
Jerry Lewis' kids. We're proud to
know you, long-distance. -HELEN
AND SUE
RAP;
I have a 12-year-&lt;lld friend who is
in a big hurry to grow up. How can I
teD her to slow down when she
doesn't like anyone to tell her
anything? - JENNIFER JEN •

NIFER :
Slowing down a girl who wants it
aU, right now, Is like trying to catch
a whirlwind In a teacup. You may go
separate ways temporarily until you
grow up - and she matures - a bit.
·(MORE) HELEN
FROM SUE ; This Is her parents '
problem -and I wish them luck !

r1

-Your
· ="Extra Touch"
l=lorist Since 1957

I

I
I
I

~
p~

I
I
I
I

l

en e

,....,..~..-.....,

FLORJSl

PH.

992-~644

I

1
3 s:i E. Main; ,.:urneroy
I
1
t.,._ !2!!!.!!!9.t!~i.~-·---

work on some blends but is poison to
acetate rayons. Amyl acetate
(banana oil) may ·bleach colors and
has different effects on different
fabrics. Test anything before using.
-POlLY
DEAR POlLY - I would like to
share the way I found for removing
that sticky1feeling from plastic ware
that Is not used regularly. Put bak·
lng soda in a saucer, dip a moist
paper towel in it and rub the plastic.
Finish by washing in soapy water
and every trace of the stickiness
should be gone. -MRS. F .H.
DEAR POlLY - If you are president of a club or have some similar
job, jot down on the calendar what
you wore to the last meeting. Do this
each time and you will not repeat the
outfit at a future date. If your slip
straps slip, tuck them under your
bra straps and have no more trouble.
I pull out the cotton that is in the
top of a pill hottle, pour out the pills
and put the cotton in the bottom,
replace the pills and the cotton does
not have to be taken out every time.
I use a plastic measure in my
sugar canister because the sugar
does not stick to it as it does to a
meialmeasuring cup. -SAlLY
DEAR POlLY -In one box I keep
wrapping paper, bows and ribbons,
transparent gummed tape and an
older pair of scissors so that when I
want to wap a gift in a hurry
everything is right at hand.
Polly wW send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses yourfavorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
column . Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

wW spend time in the special
facilities of the school 9f nursing in·
eluding the Ubrary and the AudioVisual Lab of Davis HaD.
The weekend will be free as they
prepare for the official opening of
the Fall Quarter for all of the nursing students, freshmen, junior and
senior clases on Monday morning.
On Monday afternoon at 3 ;30 p.m.,
the traditional Annual Striping and
Chevron Ceremony which
tecognizes the student entry into
both the junior and senior classes,
will take place in the main lounge at
Davis Hall. Women receive a navy
blue band for their nursing cap and
men a blue chevron for the sleeves of
their nursing uniform, each of the
two years, junior and senior.
The traditional "Walk Around the
HOBpital" wiD be held at 7 p.m. on
Thursday evening, Sept. 13. This
features the freshman and junior
students circling the hospital, carrying lighted candles, hoping the flame
in each of their candles continues to
burn throughout their walk to
forecast the successful completion
of their nursing education.

By the
American Heart Aaao.
Many young Americans are prime
candidates for a stroke, though most
don' realize it. While It Is generally
believed that strokes affect only
senior citizens, one of every si.x
stroke victims is under the age of 65,
according to the American Hearl
Association's publicity chairperson
in Meigs County, Roberta O'Brien.
Strokes are the third leading cause
of death in the United States today.
The Heart Association's report;
"Heart Facts," states that over one
million Americans are afflicted by
stroke each year; and of those vi~­
tims, 200,000 die as a result.
Hypertension, or high blood
pressure, is the major cause of
stroke. The disease is easily ignored
because often it displays no symptoms. However, a doctor can detect
hypertension in a matter of minutes
and can usuaDy bring it under control.
Cigarette smoking also increases
the risk of stroke. Studies show men
who smoke more than one pack of
cigarettes per day are five times as
likely to have a stroke as non·
smokers.
Strokes occur when the oxygenrich· blood supply to a part of the
brain Is cut off. Nerve cells which
control sensation and most bodily
movements cannot function without
this oxygen and, consequently, begin
to die.
Usually a blood clot Is responsible

Shorty Wright named Queen
Shoriy Wright was recognized as
queen of the week for having lOBI the
most weight at the Tuesday night
meeting of TOPS OH1456, Rutland.
Members sang in her honor and
presented her with a dollar bill.
Runner-up was Cindy Krautter.
Marcia Elliott became the club's second K1W. The club pledge, roll call
and officers' reports were given.
Two transfers, Joyce Frye and Dottie Pierce, were welcomed along
with new members, Goldie Carson,
Linda Blake, and Ruby HyseD.
Displayed at the meeting was the jar
for the scale fund. The weigh-in

showed a net loss for the members of
39 pounds. It was suggested that
members losing weight over ' the
Labor Day weekend donate money
to the scale fund.
Ms. Krautter distributed lista of
members and their addresses to be
used for telephone encquragement
as needed. Members were reminded
to take in their membership cards to
the next meeting. Plans i.ere made
for a mail box with names to be
drawn and cards to be brought in for
the person whose name is-drawn.

credits.
Eckart complained ab9ut the
inaccuracy, and he called on the
commission last week to withdraw
the announcements. He termed
them " a waste of t81payers'
money."
They had been distributed on
tapes to more than '180 Ohio
broadcast ouUets and aired by shout
seven before the commission asked
the stations to hold them back for
further clearance, Janis said.
He said telephone calls were made
to all of the 140 radio stations and 42
televiBion ouUets which received the
ads.
Janis .said he had "asswned" the
pending bill, of which Eckart is chief
sponsor, would be approved by the
Legislature in July, belen summer
adjournment. It has yet to be
enacted, but final approval is_
expected later this month.
Janis told the commission on
aging's monthly meeting that Asner,
whom he occasionally referred to as
"Mr. Grant," has offered Ulle of his
own production staff and his
personal services free for a second
time.
"Mr. Grant is .e1tremely
sympathetic" about the problem, he
said.
He said the new package wW cost
the coounission ooly about "',000,
ampared to $32,000 the first time.
He said he also thinks the original
ads can be used in 1980, when he
envisions a Sept. I signup de!ldline.
Eckart said last week that he
earlier had asked the cunrnlsslon to
update
or
revise
the
announcements, but received no
response. He said they were causing
confusion and misunderstanding
among the many thousands of
Ohioans eligible for the heating
·credits.
Janis told the cunmission that
Eckart was out to get publicity
without having all the facts at hand .
"As a former member Df the House
of Representatives, when I took a
stance, 1 had the facts from both
sides," he said.
However, the director said Eckart
deserves credit for sponsoring the
first energy credits program
enacted in temporary law in 1977.
"He did such a fine job in
introducing it," said Janis.

"'aii

Call (614) 286 ·SS31 for free estimates.
serving southeastern Ohio, and West Virginia .
Commercial , Residential, Industrial

17S Tall ROad, P .O. Box 909

Jackosn, Ohio 45640

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 8TH
UNTIL 6 PM

"FAMILY PICNIC"
OF

BOILERMAKERS
LOCAL NO. 667
PARK OPEN SATURDAY EVENING UNTIL 10 P.M.
OPEN SUNDAY - 11 A.M. UNTIL 9 P.M.

CAMDEN PARK

us ...

~---x;~-a-n;;;;ih~-~

ANNOUNCES APPOINTMENT - Ohio Secretary of State Anthony J .
Celebrezze, Jr., today announced the appoinbnent ol Dean R. Kahler, of
Albany as a Field Representative ol his office. Kahler, 29, a native of Can·
ton is a fonner field representative for the Handicapped Services Section
.ol the Industrial Commission of Ohio, Divi!ion of Safety and Hygiene. "As
Field Representative, Kahler wW act as liaison between our flflce and
the conununity in a nine county region in southeastern Ohio." In addition
to working with community groups, Kahler wW assist the county boards
d elections with their respoosibillUes. Kahler will be Secretary Celebrez·
ze 's representative in Athens , Fairfield, Gallia , Hocking, Meigs, Morgan,
Perry, Vinton and Washington counties.

Water quality
SeSSIOn slated

.

'

ment. This lack ol a fuUy certified
management element and designation of management agencies will
hinder the progress fl other water
pollution control programs, such as
awarding of construction gram
funds to local units "ol government,
contained in the federal Clean Water
Act.
Because of federal timetables, a
functioning management structure
and designated management agen·
cies for the Southeast Tributaries
Basin must be established no later
than Oct. I. This deadline Is
neces311J'Y because of the U.S. EPA
regulations that state that after Oct
1, 1979, grants for construction of
wastewater treatment facUlties wW
be awarded only to "designated
management agencies" which are
identified in certified water quality
management plan.
All members of the Polley Ad·
v1sory Committee are urged to at·
tend this very important meeting.
Anyone ~ to cunment prior
to the meeting or requesting addi·
tiona! information, please feel free
to contact James Flautt, Public Participation Coordinator at (614 )
466-86 or write to James Flautt, Of·
lice fl the Planning Coordinator, 361
East Broad Street, Colwnbus, Ohio
43215.

There will be a meeting d the
Southeast Trlbutarle5 Policy Ad·
visor)' Committee (PAC) on Sept. 20,
7:30 p.m.; Rio Grande College
Cafeteria, Rio Grande.
Purpose or !hill meeting will be to
discuss the role fl the PAC during
the present and fulure stages ol
water quaUty management plaM·
log . Immediate tasks to be accomplished by the PAC consist of
taking approval action on the Initial
Water Quality Mariagement Plan
and recommending managemert
agency designations . Such
desl8nated management agencies
wW be ruponslble for carrying out
portions of the Initial Water Quality
Management Plan for the Southeast
Tributaries Basin.
None of the Water Quality
.Management Plans completed in
Ohio have a lully certified mangage-

HAPPY BIRTHDAY
UNCLE BILL
OHUNGER
FROM JAY, JON
&amp; JOSHUA

AcriONS FILED
In Meigs County Conunon Pleas
Court Patricia Heath Austin filed for
support under the Reciprocal
Agreement Act against Richard
Earl Ours, Jr.
Gregory Vining, Pomeroy, and
Vicky Vining, Rutland, filed for
dissolution ol marriage.
Twruny L. BDs ~as awarded
custody ol one minor child subject to
reasonable rights of vistation by
David E. Blis. Anna K. Shuler was
granted a divorce from Richard
Shuler.
·

Casey Kasem

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Ch11rles Riffle , R . PI\. "
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Man thruSat . 8: DOa .m . to•p .m .
Sunday 10 :JO to 11 : lD a'nd S to 9 p. m .
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Friendly SerVICe
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Ladies' Winter &amp; Car Coats
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BAHR CLOTHIERS

U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

•'

Explain school lunchroom Po lcles

Goins, Administrative Assistant,
South Third Avenue , Mlddleport,Ohio 992-2153, for a hearing
to appeal the deciBion. The policy
Cllntairul an outline of the hearing

CALL

plained for the new members.

Building a new home, or remodeling
older home?
Call Superior to install your plumbing, heating or air
conditioning.
·superior has trained service personnel to install water,
gas, sewer lines and septic tanks, as well as repair ser-

•

The Meigs Local Schools, Eastern

The "fun" money contest was ex-

SUPERIOR PLUMBING, HEATING,
AIR CONDITIONING SERVICES .

vice.

for blocking the brain's blood supply, but a stroke can occur when a
diseased artery bursts and floods the
surrounding area ol the brain with
blood. Head injur'les can al8o lead to
a stroke.
Other areas ol the brain can
Slmetimes take over the damaged
portion's bodily function, but this is
not always the case. Injured brain
cells -unlike thoae of other organa cannot repair themselves, so
prevention Is of the utmost importance.
Many times a major disabling
stroke follows smaller strokes or
warning signals that go unnoticed by
the victim. The Hearl Aasociation
urges everyone to know the warning
signals of a stroke. Doctors can take
steps to correct these problems and
may be able to prevent a serious
stroke from occurring.
Stroke victhns olten experience a
sudden, ~e~nporary weakness or
numbness ol the face, arm and leg
on one side of the body. They may be
temporarily unable to talk or have
difficulty speaking. Dimness or looa
of vision, usually in one eye, can
signal trouble. Unexplained diz.
ziness, unsteadiness or sudden falls
are other indicators fl stroke.
A stroke affects the victim's
family and friends as well as the
patient. During recovery and
rehabilltation, the patient may
laugh or cry unexpectedly, appear to
be Irrational or have trouble un·
derstanding or speaking.
To aid the family and patient, the
Heart Association Is organizing
stroke clubs throughout central
Ohio. These clubs serve the dual purpose of aiding in the rehabilitation
process while providing a social
outlet for the patient.
For further informatioo on stroke
and stroke clubs. contact the Central
Ohio Heart Chapter fl the American
Heart AMociation, lnl E. Rich St.,
P. 0. Box 739, Columbus, Ohio 43218.

. ,.

·
Each Additional
mlsrepreantaUon .;/. lnfonnation
and Southern today 8JliiOWlCed its Family Member
may subject the applicant to prf)- p~ure .
p&lt;&gt;Ucy for free and reduced-price
If a family member becomes
1,450.00.
2,260.00 secution Wider applicable state and
meals and free milk for children
Chlldreil from families whose in· criminal statutes.
uoemployed or if family size
Wlable to pay the full price ol meals come Is at or below the levels shown
In certain cases foster children
changes, the family should contact
and milk served under the National are eligible for free or reduced-price are also eligible for these beneflta. lf the school to file a new application.
School Lunch, School Breakfast, and meals or free milk. In addition, a family has foster children living · Sue~ changes may make the
Special Milk Programs.
families not meeting those criteria with them and wishes to apply for
children of the family eligible for
The Special Milk Program makes
but with other unusal expell!lell due such meals and milk for them it
reduced-price meals, or for addiit possible to make available an ex- to unusually high medical expenses, shouid contact the schoot:
'
tiona! benefits such as free 01eals
tra one.fialf pint of free milk, in addi- shelter CO!Its in excess of 30 per cent . Under the provisions of the policy and milk if the family inCilme falls at
tion to that with meals, to children of inccme, special education ex- building principals wlii review ap- or below'the levels shown above.
who are eligible for free meals.
penses due to the mental or physical pllcatlons and detennine eilglbllty.
In the operation of. child feeding
Local school officials have condition of a child, and disaster or If a parent Is dissatisfied With the
programs, no child will be
adopted the following family sized casualty losses are urged to apply.
ruling of the official, he niay ~ to
discriminated agaist. because of
income criteria for determining
Application forms are being sent • discuss the decision with the deter- race, sex, color, or nallonal origin.
eligibility;
.
Each school and the office of the
to aU homes in a letter to parents. mining olflclal on an informal basis.
Family~ized income scale for free
Additional copies are available · at If he wishes to make a lonna! ap- Administrative ~istant _haS a copy
meals and free milk and reduced- the Principal's office in each school. peal, he may make a request either
of the complete policy which may be
price meals effective July I, 19'19 for The infonnation provided oo the ap- orally or In writing. to H. ~ight
reviewedbyanyinterestedparty.
1979-111 School Year.
plicatin is confidential and wW be
A - Family Size: Parents, used only for the Jlii11IOIIe of deterailldren and Others ; B - Income mining eligibllty.
Scale for Free Meals and Free Milk;
Applications may be submitted at
C - Income Scale for Reduced- any time dliring the year.
Price Meals:
To disCilurage the poss!btllty fl
A
B
C milli'epresentstion, the application
I
' 4,500.00
' 7,160.00 forms contain a statement above the
2
6,0t0.00
9,420.00 ~~P&amp;ce for signature certifying tliat
If your organization or
3
7,480.00
11,680.00 aU information furnished is true and
4
8,940.00
13,940,00 correct. ApplicaUoiu. are being
club needs a program.
5
10,390.00
16,:1J&gt;O.OO made in connection with the receipt
6.
11,840.00
18,470.00 ol federal funds. School officials
Wc"ll be happy fo .providc a
7
13,290.00
211,730.00 may, for cause, verify the lnfonnakn ow ledgeable ..,pca kcr a nd an
illuslrarcd talk or fil m
8
14,740.00 . 22,990.00 tlon in the a)llllicatlon. Deliberate

Allton, Wilma Barllharl, RuUand ;
Mr. and Mrs. Everett See, Colum·
bus ; Mr. and Mrs. Foyster WIU!ams
and Scott, Galloway; Mr. and Mrs.
Foyater Wllllams, Sr., Artemus,
Ky.; Mr. and Mrs. James Mitchell,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Martin, Jr., Jeffrey and Jan, Vincent; Mrs. Lealie Gibbs and Jimm.Y,
Rutland; VIncent Marti11, ~eroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Emil Thclnas and
Chris, Norion; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Batche, Norton; and Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Newlarid, Mason, W.Va.

N. 2nd Av,.
I

.

.

~

Erroneous ads called in by Legislature
COLuMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Astate
official and a member of the Ohio
House appear to have resolved their
bickering over a package of public
service announcements featuring
actor Ed Asner of television's "Lou
Grant Show."
Martin A. Janis, director of the
Ohio Commission on Aging, and
Rep . Dennis E. Eckart, D-Euclid,
have been in the flareup.
It involved publicity for Ohio's

STIJDENTS ARRIVE -It was a busy evening last
night as Freshman studenta arrived at Davis Hall.
Helping them were Betty Jo Barsotti, R. N. (1), and

- · &amp;-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, 1'hlmlday, Sept, 6, 1979

I

I'

Middleport, OH.

Treaty •••

HOMER GILKEY
Homer
Gilkey , 96 , 1265
Pennsylvania Ave., Columbus, died
Wednesday at Doctor's North
Hospital.
Mr. Gilkey was born AprU 15, 1883
in Galion County the son of the late
Bowen and Sarah Schuler Gilkey.
He Is survived by three daughters,
Mrs. Mance! (Lena) Parfitt,
Groveport ; Mrs. Kathryn Coppi,
Columbus and Mrs. Charles
(Frances) Derrurest , Delaware, 10
grandchildren,
33
great
grandchildren and three great great
grandchildren; friend, Mrs. Marie
Clark and family with whom he hade
his home .
Funeral services will be held
Saturday at 10 a.m . at the HeldReams Funeral Home with the Rev .
Jerty
Watkins
officiating.
Graveside services wW be held at
1:30 p.m. Saturday at Gravel Hill
Cemetery, Oleshire. Friends may
caD at the funeral home today from 7
to 9 and Friday from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.
MRS.PAUUNE M.MARKJNS
Mrs. Pauline M. Markins, 73 , Main
Street, RuUand, died at 6;30 am . .
today at Jackson Health Care
.Center, Jackson, following an
••tended illness.
Funeral arrangements will be
announced by Walker Funeral
Home, RuUand .

Eagle presentation
slated for Sunday
Th• highest award in scouting, the
Eagle award, will be presented to
Charles H. Stone, )8, Middleport,
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, Pomeroy.
Stooe, son of Renee M. Stone of
Middleport , and the late William D.
Stone, is a senior at Meigs High
School. He met all of his
requirements for the award before
June of this year. All Eagle scouts
and the public are invited to attend
the open presentation.

Teacher
strikes
spread

an &lt;~ wcr

(Continued from page I)
America but most of the wocld would
look at the United States as a paper
tiger."
He said the issue "doesn't kill
SALT ... but we in the Senate must
take account 'of this development."
Baker, a treaty opponent, urged
that the SALT hearings and debate
not be halted by the controversy.
. "Maybe we ought to do that later If
the Russians don't remove these
troops," he added.
Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., a
treaty supporter, said the troops
i&amp;&lt;!ue "obviously pompllcates the
(SALT) debate, at a minhnum."
He said the United States should
not make any ultimatums to the
Soviet Union at this point. "I don't
think we should be closing off all
doors of diplomatic retreat by the

period . Ju"t ca ll us at

91%-3788. Ji .'f(

OHIO POWER COMPANY
'' .

KING

COAL &amp;WOOD HEATERS

Russians," he said.

Biden suggested the issue might
be resolved if the Soviets "dil!band
· the combat nature" of the troops,
but stop short of sending them home.

SEEK LICENSES
Marriage licenses were issued to
Gregory Allan W'mebrenner, 22, Rt. .
2, Coolville, and Elizabeth Marie
Edwards, 22, Reedsville; Matvin
Keith Wisecup, '!1, Pomeroy, and
Teresa Lynn Honaker; 19, Syracuse.

MEET SEPl'. II
Chester Township Trustees will
meet Sept. 11, at 7;30 p.m. at the
town hall in Olester.

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110 W. MAIN

POMEROY

PH. 992-2811

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

MENU
Shrimp Cocktail
6 oz. Kansas City
Steak
Baked Potato
Salad Bar
Roll

By BARRY HANSON
Associated Press Writer
School officials struggled to hold
classes today and some strikers
faced judges' return-to-work orders
as walkouts by more than 32,000
teachers spread to 16 states,
including Alaska.
More than 700,000 pupils
nationwide enjoyed an extended
vacation or showed up for classes·
taught by administrators, nonstriker~ or substitutes, some paid as
much as $100 a day.
One school in Daly.City, Calif., a
suburb of San Francisco, closed
after only nine minutes Wednesday
when more than 350 teachers struck
the 6,600-pupil Jefferson Union High
School District .
"It looks like we have a very
effective strike," said Tom
Fitzpatrick of the American
·Federation of Teachers Local 1481.
Pickets went up around the 52
public schools in the Anchorage,
Alaska, area Wednesday· after
rejection of an offer that would bring
the average salary for the 1,900
teachers to $26,979 this year. The
teachers wanted a boost to $27,944.
No further negotiations are
planned and classes for the district's
38,000 pupils were coriducted by
substitutes and volunteer teachers.
.

prc~cn tati o n &lt;H no L' hnrge. E\·crv
pre\ental ion i ~ dc\ig ncd. to
·
encou rage a que\ ! ion :tnd

I

Tea,
Coffee or Milk

C~-'---'----:®/'$6~~us tn
..... --

ENTERTAINMENT ·
FRIDAY &amp; SAnJRDAY ·
NIGtff

\\\ \\\ 1.
ALL LEGAL
BEVERAGES SOLD

NIGHT
SHIFT

'

'•

.•

5 PC. GROUP
FROM PARKERSBURG

..

You niust be 21 or accompa-ii1ec1'by parents or legal guardian .

,.
"''

••

THE MEIGS INN
Phone 992-3629

Pomeroy,

,,•

·'•••
f),

�•
IJ-

The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Tr tSday, Sept. 6, 1979

You~

Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

.l
.,
-

WANT AD
CHARGES
I$ W.ords or Under
lday
2days
3days
6days

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest end .
$12 per ton . Bundled slob . $10
per ton. Delivered to Oh io
Pollet Co., fH . 2, Pomeroy .

COUNTY

1.25
1.90
2.25

f ormation service .

3.00

3.75

GUNSHOOT,

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY I
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONLY.
RACINE GUN qua.

for ads carryi ng Box Number In

11M' Publisher teSl'rves the
righl: to edlt or n&gt;ject any arl ~
deemed
object ional
The
Publisher will not be respnnsible
irl ·

Phone9!r.!·2 lW

NOTICE
WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
.DEADLINES

LOST: FRIDAY while in Kroge r
parking lot, 1 7 11, year old

spayed fem9le dog. b lock
body w ith white face ond feet .
Half husky, but smaller with
husky markings. Finder wi ll
receive a reward . I.I .Wolfe ,

Moncla r

Noon on S;1ti1rda y

7•2·2036.

Tlresd:t l'

4P.M·.

Friday aflemQ&lt;in

PERSON

one who didn ' t .
304-675·1954.
MANAGEMEN T

Call
POSI ·

TION in Southeastern Ohio
f inancial i nst itute . Equal
opportunity
employer .
Send resume to Box 729A ,
c the Daily Sentinel, 111

home and sec;uritv . 985·4392
·or write box no. 45898, Long

Bottom, OH.

OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
clau rings , weddi ng bands ,
diamond a. Gold or sil ver. Call
J. A . Wamsl11y , 742-233 1.
WANTED: SAW logs. Payment

for rnet.
Rental
assistance
ovoilable :
apt~ .

Yard Sale
FIVE

LOST : REWARD . Fema :.•

FAMILY

m .7nl.
YARD

.~

Mudsock Rd ., Alfred, OH .
Sept. 6, 7, B.

Ridge area . 304-675·17911.
LOST : CHESTER CR · 82,
Pekinese, white with black
streak . Female, 2 years.
Answers to Susie. Humane

Society. 9112-6260.

Transfers

ROSE HILL , Sept . 10·11 ,
Monday, 6 to 8 p .m ., Tues day 9: 30 a.m. to
Baby car sea.t ,

slacks,

a

p.m .
men's

32

W.

L. 31 ,
women 's size 16, girls
clothing, infant to size 12,
winter coats &amp; jackets.
Have no place to store
these items, so most will be

sold for 25c &amp; less, some
items will be given away .

Mary
M . Browning,
Jack
Browning to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., Easement, Scipio.
Roy T. Holter, Patricia T . Holler
to Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Easement, Chester.
Alice Mae Reeves, Granville
Reeves to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Electric Co., Easement, Scipio.
Charles Bissell, Margaret Bissell
to Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co., Easement, Pomeroy.
Cheryl Boston, John C. Boston to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co., Easement, Chester.

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Vi llageManpr, 992-7.787.

SENIOR CITIZENS. I bed&lt;oom

Sale, Bill Pullins residence .
Walker ·hound . McKinzil

PORCH

SALE,

Davis

resipence , Rose Hill, Sept.

10 ond 1T, Monday 6 to 8
p .m . Tuesday 9: 30a .m . taB
p.m. W i nter clothing,
jackets,
slack
suits,
blouses, dresses, odds &amp;
ends .

YARD SALE,

Broadway

St ., Racine. Bob St . Martin .
Infant's, chi ldren, materni ty clothes, appll'ances, 2

TV 's. Saturday and Sun ·
day,9 til5.

FOUR

FAMILY

Garge

Sale in Pomeroyon Skin ner ' s
Lane
near
Minersville limits. Satur day, Sept. 8, 10 a . m . to 7

p .m.

Youth

bed,

baby

SVR"CUSE.

•; ,

double ,

2

bedroom. semi furnished .
adults only, no ch ildren or
pets. Deposit 992-2749,

TWO BE 0 ROOM apt. 2
construction

m en

only .

m ·2BB5.

ll jOOO miles, V-8, auto ., P.S.,
P.B .• air condltoned, viny l trim,
white over camel finish , truly a
creme puff .

YARD SALE. Four family ,
238 Condor St ., 9 til 4.
Something for everybody .
Fri., Sat .

FIVE FAMILY Yard Sale .
Bill

Pull i ns

reside-n ce .

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU
CLASSIC
'2295

Mudsock Rd .• Alfred, OH .
Sept . 6, 7, 8.

-4 door, 76,950 miles , V ·B engine,
automatic , P.S., P. B ., factory
air, tint . glass, am -fm s1ereo
rad io, c leaninterior , dark blue
finish .

THREE FAMILY Yard
Sale. Friday, Sept . 7th. 9
am ·3 pm at 394 Beech St.,
Middleport .
Adult,

1975 CHEVY G-10 VAN
1
2499

clothing .

6 cyl., std . trans ., radio ,
speakers, partial co nversion with
carpeted interior , bed, air vent &amp;
sky roof .
1

1976 CHEVY C-60

4995

Cab c hassi s, 292 engine, 2 speed
rear axle, 824X20 ti r es, solid c ab
&amp; goodmechanically . 102 " to ax·

children ,

YARD

and

babv

SALE .

Star ling
Massar residence , 2 houses
on right above Eastern
H lgh School. Used dresser,
bed, dinette set, 3 way mirror, vanity, braided rugs,

clothing,

etc.

Thursday,

Friday, Saturday , 9-5 p.m .
No sales before Thursday .

Ie.

1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUS
1
2495
Travel or recr eat ion, fold-down
seat. iCe box, good t ires, clean
inter ior .

1971 CHEV. ClO PICKUP
'1295
Cheyenne
ca b ,
V -8
automatic, P .S., r~dio ,
Gover on bed.

eng _,

a lum .

.VISIT OUR LOT CHECK OUR
NEW CAR &amp;TRUCK
DISCOUNT PRICES
WANT YOUR BUSINESS

Auto Sales
197• VEG" HATCHBACK. coli
3()3.675-1501 or 305-675·2•68
or30H7S.l553.
197• DODGE CORONET 4-door '
Custom . 992-5858 .

1973

PONTIAC CATALINA.
V-8. auto .. P.B.. P.S.. A .C..
good runn ing condition. Afrer

5, 9•9·2•98.
.
197B PONTI"C GRAND Pri x,
platinum 2-door sp_ort, with air
conditioning, tilt steering . 1/ 1
vinyl top, CB, AM-FM stereo.
15,000 miles . Excellent condition . 992-5770.

1975 CUTLASS SALON . low
mileage, P.S., P.B.· 350
engine, AM radio with tape
deck . 1 owner. 843-2591 .

1977

BLUE

GiveAway
BEAGLE and

blue

SLEEPING

ROOMS

for

rent in Racine. 949·2591 .
ONE SMALL ' trailer for 1
or 2 persons. 992 -7785.

pups, male. Shots, worm ·
ed .
Humane
Society .

YOUNG FEMALE beagle .
Loveable

p et.

Shots .

Real Estate for Sale
REAL EST ATE Loans. Purchase
and refinance . 30 year terms,
VA. No money down (eligible ,
\l&amp;terons) . FHA - As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State, Athens . 61,.· 592-3051.
REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Rl£t
gscrest Manor. between Tuppers Plains and Chester.

Phone 985·3'129 ond 985·•1 2'1 .
NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room

home on opprox . 2 acres of
levelland with plenty of shade
trees . on Rutla nd Rd .

SEVEN ROOMS and both. 2
acres . 992-2523.

3.65 ACRES "PPROX. 2 miles
west of Rt. 7 on 143 . level
acr&amp;age. 7,.2-2656.

1970Costle, 60x l2, 2 bedr .
1974 Mark line. 50x 12. 2 bedr.
1969 Va liant. 12x60. 2 bedr.
1967 National . 12)(50, 2 bedr.
B'S MOBILE HOME SALES. PT.

dleport. 2 mobile homes completely set up . Rural wafer.
Mineral righfS . Interested per·
sons. caiiM-6305.

200

"CRE

Pomeroy
h.droom

F"RM

Ath&amp;ns . 3
house and good

born . $97 ,500. Only $25,000

approx . 21fl acres of land.
$35,500 . 7•2·3074.

MODERN

742 ·2047 .

216.E. Second Street
APPLES . Now picking
Grimes Golden . Other
varieties fo follow . Fitz ·

patrick Orc hards, SR 689.
Phone

Wilkesville ,

669·3785.
EIGHT

WAY OUT - 3 ac res o..
124 with J bedroom
hOuse. Shower bath,

drilled

well ,

wood

burner, cellar, ba rn , &amp;

FOOT

camper,

self -contained . F its 6 or B
ft . bed. E xcellent c ond i ·

lion . 949·2597 .
A NICE EArly American

dbl . garage. 517,000.
TUPPERS PLAINS - 2
bedroom, one fl. , bath,
equ ipped kit . 2 car
garage 28x50 under con ·
structlon on .63 acr e lot.

suite,

$125.

Platform rocker ,
Phone 9112-7331.

$20 .

$20.000 .
25 YR5. OLD - Modern
3 bedroom frame home

POTATOES FOR winter .

with firepla ce in the liv ·
ing, f utl basement, nat.
gas F .A. furnace bath,
and view of river for on -

living

room

Cobbler.

Kennebec,

and

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

HOT POINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

SALE PRICES
POMEROY
LANDMARK
Q ....-.:: Jack w. C•rsey
~

UUfDMAII• .

Mgr .
Phone 992-1181

THUNDERBIRD .

ly S20,000. Will F . H.A
INCOME 2 lots
40x120, trailer set -up for
2, large 9 room house
and garage on corner

lot. Asking $T7,500 .
FAMILY HOME baths, full

base ., s .s .

sink,
dishwa s h er,
di sposa l , and oil F .A .
furnace . Asking SJO,OOO .

IN COME
Store
bilding , bath . ci ty
water, nat . gaS hea t , on
124 in Rutland for only

512,000.
IF YOU WANT A
REASONABLE PRICE
OUT OF YOUR HOME
CALL 992·3325.

Housing
Headquarters

tools, toyS, tool boxes , always som ething d ifferent .

1973
ELDORADO
CADILLAC , $2500 . Call
Dave, 992-6255 .
1969 FORD BRONCO, 4·
wheel drive . Wh ite spoke

wheels, 3 speed trans. Call
61H46-9595 .

Not respon si ble for accidents
Terms of sale c1sh o ~ check with positive I D .
Auction eer, B i ll Brown

liUILT lN 1

· - Completely restored 1970 -

brick statel y hoiT)e on Mulberry Ave. in Pom eroy .
Th ey just don' t build them li ke this. anymore. Central hea t and air co ndit ioning . You've got to see this

home to appre c1ate. Cllll for appointment.- $48,000.

DOWNING-CHiLDS

Dea l ers welcome .

Wanted to Rent
REASONABLY PRICED coun t'Y
houae in Pomeroy .Jreo. Phone
985-4366 e_vc_
•n--i00
ngo:•::.·- - -

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING
Under

New

Federal Housing &amp;
veter•n• Admin. Loons.

PARK FINANCIAl
SERVICES, INC.

Monove·

ment (formerly Sylvil ' s
Upholstery} ,
across
from COdner's Texaco.

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

'

IFATOLA
I
(J I I

5U6PlCIOU5L-Y
L.IKE A

ISPEEXO
t
I I I J

5WIMME!i::.
Now arrange the circled letters to

form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

Print answer here: " (

El(PERIENCEO
Racllator·...---.
Servlctr

I I I I ]"

107 Sycomore (Reor)
Pomeroy, 0 .

IN SYRACUSE
Ph. 9112-3743 or 992·3752
8+T mo.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp;ALUM.
SIDING
•New Home
•Add ons
Remoldings
*Free estimates
992-6011

OHered
All Masonary Work
Foundation,
Brick Laying,
Concrete Finishing.

*

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
..Introduces' -

MARK MORA
HAlR STYLIST
Featuring :

perms.
Calt for appf. or wal.k in .

992 -2367
Main St.

l'h

ACRE

trailer

LOT .

n ear

3%

592-3051

Pomeroy, 0 .

12X65

Tuppers

Plains . 614·667 ·3305.

• ·23 ·1 mo .
BRADFORD. Auctlon ..r . Compi•,. S•rvice. Pkon• 949-2487
or 9-49-2000. Racine, Ohio,
Crltt Bradford.

on R""to7 , 985·3825 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs,
••rvice, all makes , 992-2184.
The Fabric Shop , Pom•roy.
Au thorized Sing•r Sales and
S.rvice. We sharpen Seiners.

cou nt ry .

608 E .
M A I N --iiAI.,I.,,
POMEROY,O.
NEW LISTING - T year
old ranch, l lf2 acres, J
bedrooms, 2 baths, din·
ing room , wood -burning
fi replace in liv ing room ,
beautiful built -In kif chen w ith bar, oarage.

Qualify workmanship
throughout .
Plush
ca rpeti ng a nd other ex ·
cellent
features .

$44,800.00 .
NEW LISTING - In th e
country, 6 acre mini
farm , close to the
mines. Remodeled 11;,
story home with 3

bedrooms, new kitchen,
and living room w ith
wood -burning f i replace,
part basement, and

storage building , Many
new features . S24,.SOO.OO .
NEW LISTING - Han ·
dyman •s delight. Great
hedge against lnflallon
everyone, should own a

ren1al. $6,500.00.
HOME FIT FOR A
KING And Quee n.
One of th e
most
elaborate homes in
Meigs County . Features
10 rooms of royal living,
up to five bedrooms for

those little heirs . -

If

you really want elegant
living, you must see th is
one . wou l d you believe

only $58,900 .00.
STATELY 2 STORY Orig ina l oak woodwork
blends readily into the
mOdern fea tures of thi s
home. Firep lace, all
storms,
Pomeroy
E lementary, ni ce lot
with_off street parking.

EXCAVATING , dozer , looder
and bockho. work; dump
trucks and lo-boy1 for hire.
will haul ti ll dirt . top soil.
limestone and gravel. Coli Bob
or Roger JeHers , day phone
992 -7089 ,
ni ght
pho ne

m .3525 "' m. 5232 .

NOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport-Poemray ar•a .
Co li for fre• esti ma te.
367-7101 '
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
Fr- estima tes. Coll949-2686 .
DOZER, END loader ond dump
truck. Will do basements,
panda ,
brush ,
t i mber,
limestone .
and
grovel.
ChoriH Butcher. 7•2-2940.

my

home for a child from 3 to 9
yeora of oge. Coli Alice
Wlllloms . 949-2.571 .

ELECTRIC"L WIRING lor form.
home and busln•ss. Electric
heot and lighting. N•w work
or moderni~:ing . Joe O.t.uca.

7•2·7795 ,
CHILD CARE in my home.
Weekdays. 9'12·3413.

ST~D'?

Shun lamentable luxuries

DIW... OCW .
THB W/&gt;..WR.
Plf'E;S OORST.

NORTH
• 10 7 6

''
UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

:iRPIIAN MiNIE-BACKWARD, TURN BACKWARD ••
YOU OlD LIAR,

OlliE! SAME otD
50fT SOAP! BUT
I LOY£ IT ···

HAll£! THAl HAIR~

6fAUTIFUL AS SPUN
GOLD '··

..•'
"

Pets for Sale

... ·,

"'
--.1

.

...•

19 Recline
2Q Fabric
21 Asian bird
%% HoiiSton
athlete
%4 Musical
work
Z5 Biblical
valley

WINNlE

lmmodlato

deliv•ry: various sizes of pool
kits. t» l t· yourself or let us
install for you . 0 . Bumgardner

Solos, lnc: m .S72• .

11

r

•

desirable

fringes excellent. Part-time employment

on

spew

j,;+---1-t--+--+-

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's It ow to work
Is

it :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply &gt;lands for another. In tb
.uple A is
used for the three L's , X for tbe two O's, etc . .,mgle letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dllferent. .
PEANUTS

WO~I&lt;ED
1-lA~D PREPARIN6

I

THIS MEAL

even -

CRYPTOQUOTES

MA~SE

IFIT WE~c
LEFT OUT IN THE RAIN
FO~ A FEW 0AI{5. ~.

NQSZC

RSV

GVJl&gt;

MG

S ZQ M

ZVL

MBSZP
YZQ

ZM

M G OJ M

CG

OM

KS

E Z IS

CG

ESZQ

CESR .
KTJJ
LOQZVC
Yes~rday'o Cryp&amp;oquole: HAPPINESS IS BENEFICIAL FOR
THE BODY, BUT IT IS GRIEF THAT DEVELOPS THE
POWERS OF THE MIND. - MARCEl. PROUST

Essie Brammer, R.N., Inpatient Coordinator

.t

33 Lack
35 Dress up
341 FirewOO&lt;

Lobo"

.....,

Ings and/or nights Is possible for R.N. coverage (on·
ly) . We are an equal employment opportunity
employer.

.

-

37 Vic of SOIIIl
. 38 Foreshadow
39 Funereal
poetry
40 Mooey : sl.

''

for

ctoJuonlto At111. Porsonnal Admlnlllrator
G-J -M CMHC, 412 VInton Pike
Gall.l polls,OH 4563T or coll614-446·5500

9 Beg of
li Queeg's
ship
15 Texas city

.' ·•

registered nurses staffing the npatlent Unit.
Rotating shifts or steady evening or night shifts
available. Two weekends per month off. Salary and

mediate sale.

I GOT TH'
CREEPS!!

LOWEEIY ?

Previous psychiatric experience not required .
experience

%9 Type
of orang•

%%Menu tenn
23 Goodly group
24 Fictional
sleuth

3% Old saying
34 Spellbinder
36 Volcanic

IBARNEY

WHAT
AILS 'IE,

Interested In developing new and Innovative pro·
grams? Would you like to become a part of a
developing major mental health center?
Medical /S urgical

street

8 Real

28 Actor
Joseph 3G My : Fr.
31 Wayne's

rates .
Scotchguard .
ding. Coll367·0292 .
992-6309 or 742·2348.
POODLE GROOMING . Judy
Taylor. 61•·367·7220.

lot,
excellent
neighborhood . Reduced
1o $19,900.00 for im ·

28 Dress
fabric
28 Sidekick

menace

Rd ..

R. N.'s with Dlplomo. Assoclote DttrM or aoc r:allureata DqrH. New and recent graduates.
Psychiotric Alds/ Assistonts

18 Actress
LyM Zl N.Y.C.

2'1 Neronian
hail

ing. Phono 747·2•55.

RMdsville, OH 45n2. For in- HOOF HOLLOW, English and formation call, 667-6485, Will
Western .
Saddles
and be open lote II you n-.d
harnen. Hanes and ponies. something.
Ruth Reeves. 61-4-698-3290.
Bording &amp; Rid ing Lessons and S&amp;G CARPET Cleaning.
Hora• Core produch.
Steam cleaned.
F'ree
Reasonable
RISING STAR Kennel. Boor- estimate .

Yesterday's ADswer

28 Closet

WILL HAUL limestone and
grovel. Also, lime hauling and
tpreodlng. Leo Morrlt Truck·

MENTAL HEAllli CENTER HAS
OPENINGS IN PSYCHATRIC. INPATIENT
HOSPITALIZATION PROGRAM.

ing questions will be used In
th is column and wm receive
copies ol JACOBY MODERN.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
I Ferry pier
I Brogan, e .g.
5 Fido 's skin 2 Preminger
affliction
film
10 Abhor
3 What's the
11 Tilt
difference?
1% Unseat
4 One's darling
13 [)()wnright · 5 Borgnine
14 Epoch
film
15 Drollery
8 Timetable
11 Capek play
abbreviation
17 Georgia
7 Quite
city ·
similar

Fire awal.l. Iebf 1f
40u bash m~ shack.
1..10u qoin' t: have t:
bash us,too!

do•or. bockhoo. Rt. 1.:1.
Phono I (61•) 698-7331 or
7•2·2593.

Ooborn

envelopes. The most interest-

~

GASOI.JNE AtLEY

swttems .

1

(Do you have a question tor
the experts? Write " Ask the
Experts . .. care of this newspaper. fndMdual questions will
be answered if accompanied
by stamped. self-addressed

a tnck shore

882·2'1S2 a&lt;882· 3.&lt;~ .
HOWERY "NO . M"RTIN Ex·

50716

(NEWSPA PER ENTt::RPRISE ASSN

South ruff ed t he t hird
s pade. cashed his ace of
hea r ts. led a second hea rt to
dumm y·s kin g a nd played a
diamond .
East we nt right up with t he
ace and led a third trump.
South Loo k t he prove n finesse
wiLh the I 0 but eventuall y had
to lose a cl ub Lrick to wind up

E·C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Vall-r region .
Six days o wHk, 24 hourt service. Emergency calla. Call

pllos ,

Not upset at a ll. South
would pla y out all the clubs to
r ull the l as! one with
dummy 's last trump.
With just tw o ca rds left in
each ha nd , he would lead one
of dumm y's diam onds . East
would ha ve til ruff. South
could overruff and sco re the
ga me.

Pass
2+
Pass
Pa ss

and 1\lan Sontag

INSUR ... NCE

for

dealt just one heart.

PaSs
2•
J•
Pa ss

By Oswa ld Ja coby

1

STOCK

North East

Pass

Opening le ad : + K

been cancell.d? lost yaur .
operators license? Phone

IN

Q 5J

West

3t
Pass

~

do10r .

septic

+K

,.

backhoe ond dikher. Chari"
R. Hatfield . I IO&lt;-k Hoe s,rvice,
Rutlond, Ohio. Pone 742-2008.

cavating,

• 84

Vuinerable : Both
Dealer : West

OPENING SEPT. Tltlt
CIOIIOS: Bolle!
Top&amp; Jon
Agu_.ondup
Shirley Corpentor
Instructor·
Chor-ropher
Locottcl In RICIM, 0 .
(formerly
Weavers
Skiff Building l
··
Ph. Ut-2710 or Uf·21 JG
8·2'1 ·1 mo

m ·2t•3.

• J 54
.. J 8 7 4
t A2
• J 976
SOUTH
• 92
• A Q 10 6 5
t K7

A WNtE ~ WH'(, I' VE HfARO
0 ' '(OIJ , Y"OUN&lt;i'UN ~ SHORE

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

"UTOMOBILE

..,;

EAST

WEST
+ AKQ 8 3
• 3
• Q9864

Announcint Openlnt of

EXC "V"TING ,

··what could I have done r ·
asked South . .. Nothin g breaks
for me.''
''One tri ck better.'' sa id
North. ·when West bid three
diamonds he had drawn a
blue print of th e ha nd for you." '
North was right. South ·s
play of the trump a ce was a
luxur y he co uld not a lford. He
shou ld me re ly have Jed a
trump to dummy 's king and
then playe d the diamond. Now
East co uld not p ick up
dummy·s last t rump with a
trump lead . He would proba·
bl y have returned a diamond .
South' would ta ke his king
a nd cash his ace of trumps to
fi nd out that West had been

• K 92
t J lO 5 3
+ A 10 2

ANN'S CAKE DecOI"atlng SuJ)-

floor plan modernhome,
with full basement, nice

WE HAVE BUYERS
WAITING FOR THE
RIGHT PR.O PERTY 'LIST WITH US, TOOAYI
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
H enry E . Cleland, Jr.
992·2259
. ·- 99.Nl91

A ~1'5QJ

CVNtJ ... 1HW

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

r

PULLINS EXCAVATING. COf'l'to
pl•te Service. Phon• 992· 2478.

Services Offered

WILL DO baby sitting In

WA~~

BRIDGE

,.

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
eStormWI-1
• R eplacemnt
WI-I
eGu"orund
Down Spouh
FrM Estlmotos
JAMES KEESEE
Pllono 992·2712
1·17·1 mo.

SwH~rt . toasters. irons. oil
small appllancM. Lawn moer,
rtekt to State Highway Garage

THREE BEDROOM house.
In

'

I'

INSULATION
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING

ELWOOO BOWERS REP"IR -

Wel l

water .

~~CNJ

f'OJJ MUGH

J&amp;l BLOWN

and

as

/&gt;.. D/J..'{ ...
Fl R'7T 11£ DISH-

• 30 tfc

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens

'------___:8:_:·26· 1 mo.

Real Estate for Sale

mile off Rt. 7 by -pass

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair .
PhO~'" 992 -5682

Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No money down
(eligible veterans 1

lOW

1/J~,/&gt;.T

I

~ns

Purchase

FHA- AS

&amp;
stylin-g,

women ' s

Jd

Thursday, Sept . 6

1\1E' ~l~le.tfWATC4Z

on St . Rt . 114 toward
Rutland .

down (non -veterans)

men's

Pomeroy

8·21 ·1 mo.

Real Estate

v

Garage

Free Estimates
992-5304, 992-2238

7·12

BORN LOSER

Roger Hysell

Servl~es

TREATY

Jumble lOok No. 13. c:ontalnlng 110pUUI.I, It IVIIltbll fc.rS1 .75 poatptld
from Jumblll, c/o thla newepaper, Boa 34, NCNWood, N.J. 07141.1nelude JOUf'
nnte, llddfeil, zip code and make checkl paytbte to ~twspapetboolca.

. ,.'
.. '

Nelson

Ph. 992-l!H

INNING

.f&lt;am blllng insOG!s?-DONT BITE ANY!

Motors, Inc:.

CALL 992-7544

BORAX

Answer: What's the best way to prevent Infection

·• .,;,.,,,.

Sm~h

ment.

I Jumbles: YIELD

Veste&lt;day·s

tfl1

F"ro m

tulldour

HourS9·1 M., W. , F .
Other times by •ppolnt-

cellar
and
garden
spoce. A STEAL AT
$16,200.00.
OWNER NEEDS SALE
- 10,900.00 will buy this
2 family home.
A HOME FOR YOU - 1

1969 OLDS, A· T condition.
Call9112-5323 after 7 p.m .

RIGHT NOW You· vee GOT A LOT
MOflE Sffli0U5 I'ROSLE/115
T' WORRY A60Un

()

(Answers tomorrow)

some remod eling, fruit

1963
COUPE
DeVille
• Cadil lac. E xcelelnr s hape ,
992-7315 after 4.

T ........ -

tS 1 mo.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

A Bargain AI $34,500.00.
COZY - 2 bedroom ho·
meon 50x260 lot In Mid·
dleport, dining room,

1976 PLYMOU TH VOLARE . Ex·

· ·e have moved uur l!alt· from flutiRnd tu 91 Culum·
bu11 Rd. and "'ill rt•foit•ru • Fri. Ew . (or t'on·
1 ignme nt11 . fi r"''' l rnmt-- fif'll1 llt--f'\t ' d .
Also our regular Sa1. eve . sa le, don't forget to bring
a chair. All kinds ot mer c handise , radios, f urnitu re,

5

acres, -4 bedrooms, 1'h

.

r
.=-=-.r:::.:..-.
1

I CHITH
I KJ

,...

SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAILER t4~WAVAIUBLE .

4-S·tf c

9·7·1 mo.

CANNING PEACHES now thru
Sept. 15 . Bob's Market.
Mason. WV . Open 7 days.
Phone 30ot -773-S721 .
LENNOX CENTRAL air conditioning and heating with
ducts. 992· 2560.

ll

~

r•
.!
w'l''l

"4 ·Uf-4lU En" lr~ gs
1 Miles Eutct Wltll:•svlll•

. 949-l~ol--949 -216~

m ·SBTl.

.

=·

27UOMonttomer,. Rd .
Ll"''"'llle, Ohio

Free Es rmates

THREE

bedroom total e lectric
home on a large ·lot in Hutchison
Sub - Division .

TUNYT
:

TRAILER SALES
'

Gutt~r c~~anil1g

RACINE, 0 .
949·2748

down. Owner wil l finance .

cellent condition . 29.000
miles . $2400. 992 -3198 .
·

Rd .. ;\tht&gt;m. 0 .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Coll9112·5266 .
MODERN FIVE year Old 3
or 4 bedroom house. Full y
carpeted . Full basement.
Drilled well . Situated on

THAT DO.

YOU HANDLE AREA
ROCK TALENT.

"'
'·f

New, repair ,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning

and

(FREE ESTIMATE)

and

1976 OLOS CUTLASS Supreme.
P.S., P.B., A .C., new radial
tires. ~2- 3443.

9l l:nlumbu ~

down

driveway~ .

between

5,30.

FRI. &amp;SAT. EVE. SEPT. 7 &amp;8

walks

MIX ED BREED with short

7•2·30R
19 ACRES . 21/ , miles from Mid-

992· 3891 .

work ,

992·6260 .

1965 GENERAL 60x12 , 2 b&amp;dr .
1970 Sylva, 60xl2 , 'l badr.

LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom .
Vindale 12x63 with expan·
do, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3
bedr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2 bedr.
Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr.
B&amp;S MOBILE
HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT,
wv ' ' 304-675·4424.

work ,

male . Tradi1ional .fawn col ·
or and black and white.
Shots . Humane Society .

and white Beagle, female .
Humane Society . 9112 ·6260.

AGENCY- ! UNDERSTAND

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

MoNTGOMERY

H. L Writesel
Roofing

spouts, some concrete

COLLIE PUPS, female and

1974 14 x 70 mobile home.
Good condilion. 992-5858.

PLE ... SANT, WV. JO.I·67S·••2• .

Gutter

Humane Soc iety, 9112·6260.

hair . Brown and white.
Female. Benji, female
black and White. Brown

'

''

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

... ........

Television
Viewing

'

Unscra1'lble these four Jum"bles,
onelener to each &amp;quare, to form
four ordinary words.

ONE OF JUSTA
COUPLE AGENC

;.111,'-1:

9112·6260.

FOR SALE: modern 5 year old 3
or -4 bedroom house. Fu 1.ly
carpeted. Ful l basement. Drilled well. Situated an approx .
2 1/ , acres ol lond. $35 ,500.

Mobile Homes Sale's

32.0CX&gt; miles . Excel lent condition. 2 now studded snow
t ires . 992-6671 Mondor· Friday

AUCTION

tick

THAT's HOW T GOT"
THE NAME OF YOUR

,"'/1'

ADD ONS &amp; ·
REMODELING

m .n55 .

dressing fable, stroller, ·
,h igh chair, infant seat,
For Sale
lamp. Girls' , women's,
men's c lothing including
COAl. · LIMESTONE , sand,
coats. Toys, antique dishes
grovel. calcium chloride ferand lots of misc . Ra in or
tilizer, dog food , and all types
shine!
of soft. Excelsior Salt Work s
Inc .. E. Main St .. Pomeroy '

1978 IMPALA 4 DR. '5695

p m . Hartford Community
Center. Hartford , WV , 4 miles
above
Pomeroy-Mason
Bridge.

OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes ,
brass beds, iron beds, desks,
etc., complete households.
Wri te M .D. Miller, Rt . 4,
Pomeroy or ca ll992-7760.

----

Care of~ Sentil)e l.

Sunda1·

AMBITIOUS

wanted to work in place of

~

·Business Seroices

BIG AUCTION every Wed .. 7

9112·2689 .

COME, PLAN to sha re an c ourt St., Pomeroy, OH .
upon delivery to our yard. 7:30
ev en i ng
of
Christian
to 3:30 weekdays . &amp;loner
F e llowship
with
u s CI'TY LIMITS . Bartender
Hardwoods, SR 339 . Barlow,
September 7, 8, and 9 at needed . Evening shiff .
OH . 676·2'180.
7:30 p .m . at the Carlton Must be 21. Apply in per ·
ANTIQUES , FURNtTURE, glass,
C~u rch , located on CR 18, · son.
chi na, anything. See or call
Kingsbury Rd . Our guest
Ruth Gosney . antiques. 26 N.
speaker will be Rev. Tom WOMAN WANTED to live
2nd .,
M iddleport ,
OH .
McElroy , recent graduate in with elderly lady. Lt . 992·3161.
of Moody Bible Institute, housekeeping . Salary . Call
Chicago, Ill. Rev . McElroy collect, Athens, 1·592· l:M5
is married 1o the former or 1·593-8247.
Geneva King and they have
For Rent
a son, Richard. The even · APPLICATIONS being ac ·
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park .
ing _will include Gospel cepted f or Registered
Route 33, north of Pomeroy .
magtc, puppets, sk its and Medical Lab ·Tech . Phone
large lots . Call992· 7479 .
special singing .
9112 ·7279.
3 AND 4 RM furnished and unfurnished
opts .
Phone
LIVE · IN HOUSEKEEPER
9112· 543&lt;4 .
Lost and Found
wanted in exchange for

cash with order . 25 cent charge

thru ~, mit~ I '
4P.M. .
tht&gt; dH}' befun· ]JulJiie;rtion

Run

gu ns only .

Mobile Home s.a lcs a nd Ya rd
sales a!"t! a ccepted only with

one int'otred

FORKED

stor t1ng Sept . 2. Factory choke

In memory. Card of Thclnb

m·3'137.

HUMANE

Sponsmon Club eactl Sunday

and Obituuy : 6 cents .per word .
$3.00 minimum. Cash in lld·
vanct .

ll"llt ll

BABVSlTTER for 2 children in
my home in Middleport.
Monday - Friday ,
days .

1.&amp;0
I.M

the 1day rat~ .

mort
M&gt;rtian.

GU N SHOOT , EVERY FRID"Y
7,30 PM RACINE GUN CLUB .
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS OW
LV .
SOCIETY . 992·6260 . Pets
a vail able for adoption a·nd in·

Each wDI"d over the minimum
15 wOI"'(b ls 4 cents per W()td pt'r
day . Ad! runn i~ other than consa:utive days Will bP ehatJ!ed at

(Of"

Wanted to Buy

MEIGS

Chat~t:

Cash
1.00

Help Wanted

r

'"'

Auctions._ _

Notices

]l}t~NfOO'il ~THATBCR-LEDWOROQAME
byHenriAmoldlndBobloe

~ ~ ~~ ~

''

·- .

•

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER6, lt7t
9 :3()-Black Man's Land 20; Great
Performances 33 .
lO :DO-Mrs. Columbo 3,15; Steve &amp;
Eydie 10; T0 :15-0nedln Line 17.
10 :3()-News 20; Dance at Dawn 33.
11 :00-News 3, 8, 10, 15; Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20; Book Beat
33; T1 : 15-New Soupy Sales 17.
11 : 3()-Johnny Carson 3, 15; News ·
6 , 13;
U .S .
Open
lennls
Highlights B; ABC News 33;
Movie "The Mon wllh !he Golden
Arm" 10; Dick Cavett 20.
II ' 45-Mash 81 Movie " Decision at
Sundown" 17.
12 ,DO-S1orsky &amp; Hutch 6. 13; 12 :2()Movle " Don' t Go Near the
Water " B.
!: DO-Tomorrow 3; News 15 ; 1:1()Baretto 6, 13; 1:15-Movle "The
Deadly Bees" 17.
.
2 : 20-News 13; 3 : 10- News 17;
3:30-Movle " Hostile Guns" 17.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1979
5 :45-Farm Report 13; 5: 50-PTL ·
Club
13;
· 5 : 55- Summer
·semester 10.
6 :1l0-700 Club · 6,8; PTL . Club 15;
6 : 1o-News 17 ; 6: 25-Socletles In
Transillon 10.
6 :3o-Dragnet 17 ; 6: 45-Mornlng
Repor1 3; 6 :5o-Good Morning,
West Virginia 131 6:55-Chuc ~ ·
White Reports 10; News 13.
7 :DO-Today 3,15; Good Mornln~
America 6,13 ; Friday Morning B;
Batman 10; Three Stooges· Little
Rasca ls 17 .
/ : 15- A . M . Weather 33 ; 7 : 30- .
Family Affair 10.
8 : OD-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Lassie
17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :30-Romper Room 17; 9:DO-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,151 Big
Valley 6; Love oj Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Mister Rogers 33.
9 ,3()-Sanford &amp; Son 8; Hogan' s
Heroes

10 ;

Green

Acres

''·
I

.

·'

. I

17;

Mister Rogers 33.
lO :IlO-Card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Nigh16; Allin The Family 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13 ; Movie
11
Hell Below Zero" 17 .
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Bewitched
6; Whew 8.10; MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 33.
10 :55-CBS News 8; House Call10.
11 ,oo-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; Sesame St.
33; 11 :55-News 17.
12 :0D-Newscen1er 3; News 6,10,13;
Mindreaders 15; Young &amp; t he
Res tless 8; Love American Style
17.
12 :3D-'-Ryan 's Hope 6,1 3; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Not For Women
Only 15; Movie " Convicted" 17;
Elec . Co. 33.
1 :DO-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; News
8; All My Children 6, T3; Young &amp;
t he Reslless 10; Big Blue Marble
33 .
1.:30-As The World Turns B, 10;
National Geographic 33.
2:0D-Doc1ors 3,15; One Life to Live
6,13; . 2:25-News 17.
2:3()-Anolher World 3, 15 ; Guiding
Light 8,10; I Love Lucy 17.
3:1l0-Generaf Hospital 6,13; Lilias
'/'bga &amp; You 20; Rebop 17;
Japan : The Changing Tradition
33.
3.:30-Mash 8; Joker' s Wild 10;
Banana Splits 17 ; Over Easy 20;
Planet of Man 33.
4:0&lt;f-MJs1er Cartoon 3; Password
15; /W)rv Griffin 6; Addams
Family 8; Sesame St. 20,33; Si x
Million Dollar Man 10; Mike
Douglas 13; Fllntstones 17.
4 :30- Lone Ranger 3 ; Hogan ' s
Heroes 8; Lucy 6how 15; Par·
tridge Family 17.
5,00--Bonanza 3; Beverly Hillbillies
B; Mister Rogers 20,33; Gomer
Pyle USMC 10; Slx Million Dollar
Man 13; Little Rascals 15; Star
Trek 17.
5:3()-News 6; Petticoat Jundlon 8;
Elec . Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore
10; Abbott &amp; Costello 15; Dodor
Who 33.
6:0&lt;f-News 3,8,10, 13, 15; ABC News
6; Family Affair 17; VIlla Alegre
20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
6:30-NBC News3,15 ; ABC News 13;
Andy Gr lffl1h 6;; CBS News 8, 10;
Father Knows Bes1 17; Over
Easy 20,33 .
7: 00- Cross ·Wils 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; Plio! " Gu!nness
Game" 8; News 10; Love
American Style 15; Gel Smart .
17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7: 30-Hee Haw Honeys 3; 1978 Big'
Ten Football Highlights 6; '
Family Feud 8; Price Is Right
10; Pop Goes The Country 15; My
Three Sons 17 ; MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 20,33 .
J: O&lt;f-Diff' rent Strokes 3, 15; Billy
·
Grahom Crusade· 10; · Fantasy
island 6,13; Incredible Hulk 8; ·
Washington Week In Review
20,33; Movie "The Curse of !he
Living Corpse" 17 .
8:30-Facts of Life 3,15 ; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9:1l0-Rockford Flies 3, 15; Movie
"Breaking Up Is Hard to Do"
6, 13; Dukes of Hazzard 8, 10;
Buckeye Holiday 20; Money
News &amp; VIews 33 .
9 :30- lssues In World Com ·
munlcatlons 20; Such Good
Companions 33.
lO :DO-Eddle Capra Mysteries 3.15;
Dallas 8, 10; Onedln Line 17;
News 20; David Susskind 33.
10 :3()--(;onsumer Survival Kit 20;
11 :llO-News 3.6.8. 10,1 3, 15; New
Soupy Sales 17; Two Ronnles 20;
Book Beat 33.
.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Com.
ple1ely off !he Well 6,13; U.S.
Open Tennis Highlights 8; ABC
News 33; Movie "Stanley" 10;
Movie "Road to Ball" 17.
11 : 45- Bonk~ r s 8; 12 : 00- Mont)
Py1hon's Flying Circus 33.
12 :05-Pollce Story 6,13• 12 :15Juke· Box 8; 12 : ~5-Movle "The
Big Gem~" 8.
1 :oo-Midnlght Special 3, 15; Movie
"House on Haunted Hlll" 10.
1: 1()-Movle " A Swinging Summar"
17 ; 1:40--(ronside 13.
·2:3()-News 3; 2:40--News 13; 3:0DNews 17; 3: 20-Movle " Secret
Fll~" 17~

·'

I •.

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I

•r

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�~-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., l'nuraday, Sept. 6,1979

August auto sales
down 5.3 percent
DETROIT (AP) - Domestic auto
sales in August were 5.3 percent
percent below the record level of
August 1978, company reports and
estimates showed Wednesday.
Manufactur~rs ' discounts to
unload cars bef&lt;re the new model
year, however, helped the
aut.omakers record their fourth-best
August ever.
Sales of troubled Chrysler Corp.
soared 23 percent in ohe final third of
the month as customers hurried to
collect factory rebates of $400 per
car , fir st offered on Aug. 18. Models
on which rebates were offered rose
~2 percent.

Mayor's Court
Five defendant.. were fined and
four others forfeited bond in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday nght.
Fined were Jack Neff, Middleport,
$25 and cosiB, disorderly IDI!nner,
$50 and costs, resisting arresi; Kenny Mohler, Middlept, $25 and costs,
disorderly manner; Dale Herman,
Middleport, $100 and cost.., destruction of property ; Roger Nelson,
Pomeroy, and Lorinda Seth, both $25
and costs, squealing tires.
Forfeiting bond were Gregory
Cundiff, Middleport, $3li0, driving
while intoxicated; Hubert Stewart,
Middleport, $50, disorderly manner ;
Thomas N. carroll, Reedsville, $50,
disorderly manner ; Donald A.
McKinney, Gallipolis, $25, parking
in yellow zone.
Six defendant.. forfeited bonds in
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Wednesday
night.
They are Ricky Taylor, Racine,
$350 posted on a charge of driving
while irltoxicated; Richard Shuler,
Pomeroy,$25, speeding ; Paul Wolfe,
Racine, $100, intoxication ; Charles
ZW!pan, Letart, W. Va. , $30 running
a red light; Darold Annstrong,
Chester, $370, driving while
intoxicated , and George Carper,
Pomeroy , $50, unsafe vehicle.

Domestic manufacturers sold
703,800 cars during the month, 6.5
percent below the record 752,826
cars sold in the corresponding
month of 1978.
'
Imports in August were estimated
at 200,000, I percent below the
201,934 for the !X'eviouw August. The
total was 903,800compared to 954,760
ill AIII!US\ 1978.
For the month , sales at troubled
Chrysler Corp . were down 6.9
percent; General Motors Corp. was
off 4.8 percent ; and Ford Motor Co.,
which reported record sales at midmonth , dropped 15 percent.
American Motors Corp. enjoyed
an increase of 4.3 percent lor the
month as its small cars met
increasing
demand,
and
Volkswagen Manufacturing Corp.'s
Pennsylvania-boUt Rabbit was 324
percent above August 1978,
according to an estimate of VW aales
this August.
The estimate was necessary
beca use VW faDed to report Its
sales. August 1978 was the first full
month of sales of the Pennsylvaniabuilt VW.

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Union Ave. at 3:30p.m.
Wednesday for Curtis Spencer who
had a broken ann. He was taker. to
Holzer Medical Center.
At 6:41 p.m. the squad went to
West Main St. for Don Bolen who
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital and at 1:08a.m: Thursday,
the unit went to CIIH Apartments for
James Ferguson who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

SHOP FRIDAY UNTIL 8:00, SATURDAY UNTIL 5:00

·-~------~---·-~~-·-

JUNIOR BLOUSE SALE
Junior sizes S, M , L in western
plait ; and fancy solids.

REG. sn.OO••••••• SALE '9.69

'Eaftl\!

DRESS SALE
Girls sizes 2 to 4, 4 to 6x and 7 to
14. Our entire stock of Fall
jumpers, pant suits, jacket
dresses and dresses at special ·
prices.

REG. s20.00•••••• SAL£ 517.59

SALE

AS~

BOYS' FLANNEL
SHIRTS
Special group of plaids in sizes 8 to
18.

REG. $8.95 ••••••• SAL£
~.95 •••••••

~.88

SALE SS.68

$619

under the lnlluence rl aicobol and
marijulnlat the time.
The board said the driver, Alan
Cole, 18, had consumed be
alcobollc equivalent r:l aeven bot·
ties~ beer before the aub.
The board ruled that tqh iipeed
and reckleu drlvtnc "by a drlverl
who wu under the lnlluence d.
alcobol and marijuana .. _ , the
probable CIUIM rl the crub, rl the worst In Maryland hlltory.

SALE 51099

100 inJured

----------------

PHILADELPHIA (AP) -

BUSTER BROWN
SOCKS AND CLOTHES
FOR KIDS .

BOYS' JEANS·
Slim .or regular sizes 8 to 18 in cotton -poly
blend twi lis or brushed cottons.

~

windows and Jumped out, rl·
flclals said. About 100 penonii
suffered minor lnjurlee.
Pollee said the Injured were
!rated at bolpltals for lillOite
Inhalation, cuts and twllted
anklee. No aerlous lnjurtes were

reporled.
"'Ibere wu a real loud ez.
piOIIIon, ~I bricht flubea +
red and blue. People started
coming blck fnm the first two

spending time together. A little
love ca n be the nicest gift of all.

~~~~~ffi~W 1 Home Bank
For

Meigs County

People

RACINE·
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
Raciner Ohio

Cll'l," said Wllla Mae Weaver,
II, a ~er In the third car d.

NEW SHIPMENT

the iiUbWay.
"Everybody W81 fairly calm
untlllillOite started coming back,
then it wu everybody for himself," sbe aald.
'Ibe woman said the doors In
the car would not open and
puaengera broke windows to
escape.

MEN'S BELTS
New shipment of quality leather belts
m the latest styles.

Trouble brewing
a" Southern Local

BOYS' '7.95

TUBE SOCKS

like to co nvey to grandparents

mak ing it a spec ial day ... giving gifts,
h&lt;lVin g fun and, most important,

'5''

\ ~l\11

Men's and boys sizes in whiter
with "school color" stripes.

3

PAIRS

•

.

•
•'
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~-------~~-~----~----·------·--~1-~~--·--·-----------~--------1 .•:

SCHOOL
SUPPLIES

Quality products at the right price.
Binders, filler paper, pencil
tablets, pens, pencils, crayons,
Elmer's school glue, book satchels
... •verything for school.

nllh hour 1bunday,

panicking riders who smuhed

Waist sizes 30 to 44.

Sizes 8 to 20 in regular and. western
short sleeved styles

A

smob and flames 81 It ground to
a halt while entering a Illation

Quality children's wear

SPORT SHIRTS

·::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;::::::::~:::~:~:::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::~:::::=::

subway train ape wed · aparb,

New fall line of pants and tops for
nursery school, kindergarten and
grade school children.

' New fall styles and colors.

how much they mea n to us all by

By 'lbe A8~lated Press
school students watched
football fllma in Anchorage, Alaska,
while their teachers walked picket
lines as walkouts over higher pay
disrupted fall classes today for more
than 680,000 students across the
nation.
Strlldng teacbers in Rutland, Vt.,
grudgingly agreed Thursday 'to
return to work under a court order,
and a smattering of settlements
were reported In smaller districts.
But lllCII'e than 30,000 teachers In 15
states remained on strike, including
dlstrtcta In Oklahoma City, Spokane,
Wam.,lndlanapolis, Paterson, N.J. ,
Et~~~ene, Ore., and suburbs of New
Orleans and Chicago,
' About IMI percent of Anchorage's
700 teachers stayed off the job
Thuraday, while about ~ percent of
the 38,000 students In the district
!~lowed up fcr clau.
At some of the school.,, students .
viewed college football fllms and

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Nati«W Transportation Safety
Board said Thunday the young
driver ~ a pickup truck wbich
craahed In rural Maryllnd last
iiprlng, ldiUng 10 tee~Hgera, wu

Waist sizes 29 to 38, lengths 30 to 36,
100 per cent cotton . Choose straight
leg or boot flare style.

SOCKS

everywhere. Why not show them just

Teacher strikes
continue today

DWI main cause

MEN'S sl395
BLUE DENIM JEANS

REG. '6.95

Anklets, knee socks, footies.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1979

High

JUNIOR SIZES S, M, L

Special

•

enttne

... . in the world

at sensible prices.

Love. That's the message we'd

at y

NEW FALL STYLES AND COLORS.

CHILDREN'S COATS

sizes.

•

Today

JUNIOR TOPS

ENTIRE STOCK OF

Sunday, September 9

Wholesale prices are an Important meuure ~ future Inflation because
they signal price trends Ukely to occur at the retail level a few months later.
The simultaneoua releaae ~ the two glouny ecoocmy.reports tmderscored
Prealdent Carter's dilemma In trying to cunbat high Inflation through tight
fiBcal policies while at the same time trying to keep from aggravating a
receaalcn that could mean high unemployment In the 1980 election year.
The Lallor Department aald the number ~ unemployed people rose by
300,000 dlll'ln8 Alll!uat to 6,1 mllllcn, with moat of the lncreue reaultlng from
factory layoffs:
'
Total employment fell by 310,000 jobs In Augtllt to 96.9 mUllen, the government said, following a rile~ 450,000 jobs In July.
Unemployment rates for virtually all major groups of workers bued on
age, llellt and race jncreaaed laat month.
·
Purlnl the prior 12-inonth period, the WlelllPloyment rate bad been

remarkably stable, ranging from 5.9 percent to a five-year low ~ 5.6 percent
reached In June.
•
The government said employment has shown virtually no growth lliDce
March, after lncreaalng by a strong 2.1 million jobs durlni the m montbll
previous to March.
Tbole ftcuree provided stron« evidence ~the econll!lic slowdown lbat hu
gripped the economy since the lleciood quarter, administration officials said.
The Labor Oeperiment gave U.. IIII8IDI)loyment figures for vlri0111
working groupe compared with the July unemployment rates :
- Whites : UpercentlnAuguat, up from Upercent In July.
- Non-whites: 11 percent, up from 10.8 percent.
- Full-time workers: $.4 percent, up ffl)fll5.3 percent.
-.1\dultmen: 4.2percent,upfrom4.lpercent.
- Adult wunen: 5.9 percent, up from 5.5 percent.
-Teen-agers : 16.5percent, up from 15.3 percent.
- Non-white teen-agers: 30.7 percent, down from 30.9 percent.
(QJntlnued on page 10)

FROM ONLY

ON OUR

Girls' and women's

year.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXVIII NO. 102

BACK·TO-SCHOOL
SALE PRICES

Grandparents Day

cmswners l"OIIe 11.l percent durlni the prevloual2 months. Inflation at the
consumer level has been l'lll1lllng llllghtly higher - 11t a 13 percent rate this

e-

REG. s12.00•••••• SALE 510.59

REG.

01\

WASHINGTON (AP) - Tbe twin effects rl receasion and high Inflation
radled the ecanomy In August u the unemployment rate rose to 6 percent the hlgiwt tn more thana year - and wholesale prleea advanced by 1.2 percent, the gOflll IW*'t reported today.
Tbe Labor Department aald the rlae In unemployment from a 5.7 percent
rate In July ~rked the flnt time that the jobtesa rate had been at the 6 per·
cent level IInce July 1978.
Tbe Carter Admlnlltration had expected WJemployment to rile In August
81 a l'elult ~ the ........moo that began In the spring. Labor Department
econam1at John Breger said the latest jobleaa reports provides ''Very
stronc evidi!Dce ~a downturn."
But Inflation alao ccntlnued to rage In August u prices at the wholeaale
level iibowed the bl&amp;llelt monthly advBDCe iilnce January, the depllrtment
said In a aeparate report. Tbe rile In wholesale prices wu paced by another
steep climb In the COlt d. energy productll and the first lncreue In food
prices IInce March.
The govenunent aald wboleaale prices at the ltage just before !iooda reach

MANY VALUES THROUGHOUT OUR STORE ON QUALITY CL01HING
AND SCHOOL SUPPLIES.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Lois Gibbs, Hartford;
Zelma Grady, Racine ; Fay
Dunlavy, Middleport; Sally Bias,
Pomeroy.
Discharged-Robert Theiss, Roger
Roush .
'·

~metl\hef. tl\.e
s~etest 'People

Nation's unemployment rate rose in August

ELBERFELD$ iN POMEROY

TIMEX
WATCH SALE

20 PER CENT OFF ON MEN'S,
WOMEN"s AND CHILDREN'S
STYLES.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

••

.

Teacber problema may be for·
tbcoinlnll In the Soutbem Local
School Oiltrlct, Ben Gerber, CCII·
aultant of the Ohio Education
AIIOCiatlon, report&amp;.
·- A~ to Gerber, Jut year an
arbitrator workln8 on a dl.pute bet·
ween the Southern Board of
Education and the teachers
uaoclal;lon granted the teachers a
1.110 lndeualary schedule.
Gerber aald . Soutbem teachers
were under the imprelillon that the
· I.llllndel: would ccntlnue thul they
had not requested an Increase In
aalarles.
Gerber aald he had confen:ed with
TliomU Coyne, the Southern
Board's necottator last Friday, and
he thought the Index waa to remain
In effect.
However, the board of educatloo
reduced the Index to 1.62 Tuesday,
Gerber reported •
This decrease will reduce
teacben' aalariee In the district u
much ai ,1,800 In some lnltances
over the next two yeBI'II.
1be l'eductlcn, Gerber said, Ia
"unprecedented" and there will be
another meeling with the negotiator
to dlacua the problem.
. Gerber said the district Is
recelvjng approximately $240,000 In
additional funds this fllcai year. The
coat ~ paying the aatary lndel: of
Ul at the $11,1100 base figure would
amOWlt to about $145,008 amualiy,
Gerber reporta.

BIG WINNER - JIIDIII Soalaby, ceal«, Pumei 11'/
Po'tma•er, became •.ooo rtcber Tbutlday altemoon
wllrn be received bill prise !rom the tine card match
Ohio Lottery game. On the left II Jom Greene,

mli'IC'II' ~ the Gateway Supermarket wbere Souiaby
purcbllled the winning ticket, and at the right II Bill
At.Wia, retlional •ep untative d. the Olllo LaUery
CGnmlalon.

Syracuse council acquires two lots
Syracuae VWage has completed
all necessary work and acquired two
lots at the corner of Water and
Bridgeman Streeu according to an
announcement at Thursday's
regular oouncll meeting.
The property , which has a two

story house· on It, was bot~~~ht for
$12,000 from Mr. and Mrs. Jesse
Brinker, Joann L.Colllns and LoweD
Thomas Collins.
Council a11o heard a report that
officials of the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources Thursday

Strike settlement
details unavailable ·
No detaiLs of a strike settlement
between the Meigs Local Board of
Education and the non-certified
employes of the Meigs Local District
were available to the media today.
The agreement to !Oive a one day
strike by non-certlfled employes was
approved by the Meigs OAPSE
Chapter at 3 a .m. Thursday
morning . The Meigs Local Board of
. Education met In executive session
Thursday night and approved the
agreement.
News media
representatives are not pennltted to
attend executive sesalons. It had
been the understanding that media
representatives were to be called to
the board meeting after the
e~:ecutlve seSBion to be presented
terms of the agreement between the
board and the certified employes.
However, during the executive
session, lt'wu reported, that the
board verbally agreed that Supt.
David Glea!On Is to review the "high
points" of the agreement with the
media. Media representatives as a
result were not called Thuraday
night to be told any details of the
agreement or were not Informed
even that the agreement had been
approved by the board. ln the past
school strikes, terms of agreements
between employes and the board
have been disclosed tnunedlately
upon settlement of the disput~.

CLEVELAND (AP) -Here

are tile willllllil -ben

dran

Tlianday fD the Oblo Lottery:

Bille Ill; White OS; Gold 8;
WIH·dloa MUS.

Meantime, negotiations between
the board and the teachers are
continuing. A negotlatlcn session
was held at 4 p.m. Thurllday and
addlticnal sessions have been set for
Monday , We&lt;klesday and Thursday
of next week.
Teachers of the district met
Thursday night at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds and heard reports on
the p~ess of these negotiations .

Buckeye members

meet Sept. 15
A special members · meeting wW
be held by the Buckeye Rural Electric Cooperative, Inc .. at Buckeye
Hliii Career Center, RJo Grande,
(old Route 35) on Saturday, Sept.
15),atlp.m .
Regiltration will start at 12 noon.
Tbere wW be election rl two
trusteea, (one fnm Jackson CowJty
and. one from Gallla County J &amp;101111
with reports from c'ooperative rl~
flclala and such other bwilneu as
may property come before the
meeting.

1beagenda follows :
1 p.m. - Call to Ordtor - Neal
Taylor, president; Invocation - Rev.
Charles Lusher; proof ~ mailing;
reading of minutes of previous
meeting - Clyde B. Wailler,
secretary-treasurer; report of
nominating
commltt.ee ;
· nomtnatlona from noor; election d.
two trustees and reports by Neal
Taylor, Clyde B. Walker, aecretarytreasurer, C. M. Ramsay; manager
and Robert Cleveland, Ohio Rural
Electric Cooperative Inc. and
, Buckeye Power, Inc.
Other buslnesa as may properly
come before the meeting.
Entertainment will be by Tu
Harrlaon and the Valley Boys. IJJl)lt
refreshments will be served.

Inspected the area of the Syracuse
Municipal Park proposed for a boat
ramp -and marina area.
The village has rued a grant
appll~atlcn for Bureau of Outdoor
Recreation funds that would provide
50 percent of the money for the
proposed project. BOR funds are
administered in Ohio by the
Department of Natural Resources:
In other activities, councU agreed
to ditch varioWI areas of the town
with coWlcll member Jlnuny Joe
Hemsley to be In charge.
Council complimented pool
· manager Herman l..aldon on his
ef!lclt!nt operation of Lodon Pool this

sununer.
Attendj.ng were Mayor Eber
Pickens, J . ~- Hemsley, Mick Ash,
Troy ZwUllng, Wlllle Guinther and
Jack Willlamli, council members,
Bob Wingett, IP'ants administrator,
Herman London, pool manager and
Dolll! Hemsley.

FREE CLINIC
Afree blood pressure clinic will be
sponsored by Harrisonville Senior
atlzens on Tuesday, Sept. 11, from
10 a.m. to I p.m. at the town hall.
Per8011s of all ages are welcome to
attend.

EXI'ENDED00'11.001t
Bllllday tllroqli 'l'lleaday Dry,Jd&amp;lil fD tile 1IJIIIel' . . to Itw
'Ill llllllday, llle low to mid 'Ill
M-.y IIIII the 1ft to lllld . .
Tueldlly. Lowa fnilii the 1lppet' .
411 to the lower Ill s.day IIIII
, M-.y IIIIIID the III'IUeaday.

·Weather
Clear tonight. Tbe low 50 to 55.
Parly cloudy Saturday. High near
70. 'Ibe chance rl rain Ia near zero
percent Friday night and :ID IJel"Ce!lt
Saturday.

REPS COMING
Arepi'Melltative from the office~
Congreaaman Clarence Mlller wW
. not be at the Meigs Court.hOuse on
Sept. 1Z as a jllrt ,;f the
congreuman '• open door policy.
However, a repreMntatlve to meet
the public will be at the courthoule
on Wednesday, Oct.10.

STRIKE CONTINUES
.. A lltrlke by 11011-certllled employes
of the Eaters Local School Dt.trlct
IDitlaued Friday, the fourth day of
tile .u.pate.
.. Ho-ver, Supt. RJ~bard Roberta,
Ill uegodalloaa ai!IID tills moi'IIIDg,
reported Jli'OIP'est II beiDg made ID
aeltliDg tbe •rllte. He poiDted out
tilat tile origlllal requests by die DOD·
certified employes would meau a .
salary lucreaoe of about f15ll8 plus
IDslll'lUICe beoefltl of $300 over the
nut two yean.

movie reruns shown by volunteers
and non«riklng teachers, but In
others upils walked out of classes In
droves.
Rutland teachers voted Thursday
to cunply with a court order to
return to class In Vermont's second
largest city. But the teachers said
they would ask Rutland Superior
Court Judge Thomas Hayes to lift
his injunction until the Vermont
Supreme Court rules on an appeal.
"We're going to ezhaust every
legal remedy at our dlspoaal," said
Olarles Ochmansk:l, head of the
Vermont Education Association.
"Even though this decision went
against WI, we don't feel this is the
last of the issue."
Most of Rutland's 240 teachm
have been on .strike since last
Thursday, the first day of clasaes for
the district's 3,700 pupils.
Meanwhile, public school strikes
continued
In
Michigan,
Pennsylvania, Rhode Island,
Connecticut, Ohio, California and
New York.

Junior Miss
contest rules
are announced
e

, Ralph H. Werry, president,
Southeast. Ohio Junior Mils, Inc.,
Plmeroy, announced today the
following rules and regulations for : ·
the 1~ Meigs and VInton Counties Junior Mils Programs :
·
(A.) Contelltant muatbeslngleand
SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad never have been married, divorced
was called to Ball Run Road at 10:33 or had a marriage annulled.
(B.) Contestant must be a lllma
. p.m. Thursday for Wllllam Morris ·
who was taken to Veterans fide high school aenlor and be
enrolled In the aenior clasll d. a high
Memorial Hospital.
IChool or ltber lnatitutlon· ~
equivalent scholutlc standing IIIKI
will not ·graduate prior to May 1,
NEW YORJt (AP) - Clllbuk,
11180.
tile aatioa'l ~est ballk,
(C.) Contestant's age 011 March 1,
nip r"e-1 .today to lacreued
11180 shall not be lelili than fourteen
pr eunre !ram the Federal Reler(14) years, nor shall she atta!Q bar
ve ud railed ftl ..-t- Jendfng
19th bbtbday prior to May 31, 1M~.
rate from twelve IIIII oae-foarlll
(D.) Contestant must be ~ gOod
pereeat Ill I ,_-,! twelve IIIII
character, poeaeaa polae, per·
oae bV percent.
aonallty·, lntelllsence, attractlvCltfbu*'• move - followed
and good grooming.
alm•*'""""'""lely by Cbemleal
(E.) ContestamtmustpnmaiiiKI
Bllik, tile ullea'• lifdl.larcest
display a talent. Tbll talent may
but IIIII No. 7 Cwthwtal
take the form of singing, dancing,
Wheolt! of Cbleqo. Otber bub
playing a musical 1n1trument,
were ~ted to follow.
·dramatic reading, art dllpiay, m'11le fDCUIIt 'IIU tile leCOIMIID
dealgnlng, or she may give a talk &lt;11
the d.-ely watelled lllterelt rate •
a subject d. her choice. It Ia a·
• cllarled by bub to 1llelr beat . pri!ssly understood that lbouid any
'«pwete -t.aen - ia Jeq
contestant's talent routine at the
lhan two ......
Southeast Ohio Junior Mils Fln8la
exceed 90 aeconcla, such c:ont.eatam
will be diaquallfled fnm receivq .
any points In the creative and performing arts category .
(F.) No ccnteetant 8ball be dented
the right to participate tn a local COlitest because ~ nee, creed, color «
religious belief.
(G.) Contestant must be a cttiMn
No one wu Injured In two Thur·
d. the United 'States d. America and
sday accidents lnveatlgated by the
a bona fide reeident ~ the State ~
Gallia·Meiga Poet, State Highway
Ohio.
Patrol.
(H.) Contestant must have parwiFirat mlahap wu reported at 11 :30
tal pennlaslon to enter the local
a.m. on Rt. 35, near the Rt. 325 In·
flnala.
tenectlon.
(1. J Southeast Oblo Junior Mila,
Charles A. Gallagher, :ID, Bar·
Inc. reaervee the rlgllt to n~)ect any
llllvllle, Olllo wu headed eut In the
contestant not ccmplylng witb the
left lane aJid made a right turn tn
rule~~ and regulatlcnl for aelectlni
frGnt of Carlos c. Caldwell, 19, Rt. 2,
contestants.
,
·
Bidwell. Tben1 waa heavy damage
Tbe orientation meeting for all lnto both vehlcl!!l. Gallagher wu cited . tereated high liCbool aenlor girls wW ·
for changing Ianea without cautlcn.
be held Sunday, September2S, at the
In Meigo CoWlty at 7:30p.m., on
Melp Inn Banquet Room, lJI'o!.
Rt. 7, near state RAlllte 681, Wllllam
Eut Main Street, Pomeil1'j, bec1n- '
'K. fllapman, 18, Tuppers Plains,
nlngitSp.m.
told patrol he WU headed IIOIIth IJ1d
Additional lnformatiCII fGr the
wu attempting to make a rigid tum PI'08I'illll can ba Clbtalned by
wben an unidentified vehicle atop.
writing: SoutbeutOIIIo~uni«Miu,
ped and backed Into his vehicle. tbe
Inc., P. 0. b 104, PIJmiiO), 46'Nf.
unknown motorist left the acene.
'Ibe flnall wW be held Saturday.
'Ibere wu minor damage to the
November 17, at the Meip Jlllllor
fllapmancar.
High School auditorium, MIMleport,

No one hurt
in two wrecks

.'

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