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D-10- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 9, 1979

As fair grows,
so do injuries

Appeals Court meets Sept. 12
POMEROY - Judge Earl E.
Stephefl!l)n, Portsmouth, presiding
Judge of lhc Fourth District Court of
Appeals. announced that cases are
scheduled to be heard on Sept. 12,
when lh e court convenes in Meigs
County.
In addition lo Judge Stephenson,
lhe Court is comprised of J udge
Lawrence Grey of Alhens , and
Judge Hom er E. (Pete) Abele, of
McArthur.
The Court of Appeals directly
reviews all cases heard. or tried In
lower courts In which a decision Is
being appealed. These cases may
have been tried in Common Pleas,
Probate or Juvenile, Municipal or
County Courts, and may be eilher
civil or criminal cases.

Tiw Fourth District Court of
Appeals serves fifteen counties in
Southern Ohio . They are: Adams,
Athens, Brown, GaUia, Highland,
Ho ckin g, Ja ckson, Lawrence,
Meigs , Pickaway, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Vinton and Washington.

WOLVF.'l ROMP
ANN ARBOR, Mich. (AP) Michigan quarterback B. J. Dickey
ran for two touchdowns and passed
for another as the Wolverines overwhelmed Northwestern 49-7 on the
season's first coUege football game
for both Big Ten Conference foes
Saturday.

NEEDS HOME - Dropped several weeks ago this animal was cared
for by a good family and then the Humane Society acquired itfor a l~st attempt to place it in a pennanent horne. She's a real sweetheart if you
want a playful; lively pet who Is a really nice looking animal - red wilh
white feet, face, collar and tip of taU and a litUe black sprinkled across
her back. CaD 992-&amp;:ISO.

Hoofs and Paws
By Marton C. Crawford
Meigs County
HwllaDeSoclety
When our good friend and
humanitarian Mary Ann Smallwood
decided to help us by at least taking
the many phone caDs off our backs, I
told her she was going to get an
education about people. AI the time
she didn't know what I meant, bullet
me tell you, she knows now.
This past week had us 'really
talking to ourselves and what we
were saying wouldn't be printed so
let me teD you about some of the
aninnals !hat nice people J&gt;rought to
us or called to leU us about.
Puppies were dropped in a remote
area - when discovered one was
dead, having been run over. We got
three, aU of which mere male, with
extended swollen stomachs, full of
worms and .starving. We cleaned
them up, fed them, provided them

'79 TRANS AM

$7995

Air , crv sie, cast alum . wheels, cust om interior , low mileages.

'79 CHEVETTE
Automatic , blue, low m i les, showroom cond .

'78 GRAN PRIX ~\)
A ir, AM ·FM, 10,240 mil es, new

.

f)~ . 111e trade, like new.

'78 CHEV. CAPRICE 2 HDTP
Classic, cruise : AM -FM, Rallye wheels, 22, 127 miles . Sharp.

$5995 $5495
$5695

'78 CHEV. MAILBU 4 DR

$3995

22.127 miles.

ESS
Pontiac tr ade.

$3995
3

• 6, 90o miles. Still

smells new.

'11 BUICK ELECTRA
2

or. Hdtp ., loaded with power assists, silver with silver landau top.

$5995

sha rp.

'17 OLDS 98 SEDAN

$5995

$4995

Regency , loaded w ith ex tras, silver. one local owner.

. IMPALA SEDAN

$3995

lie silver one Of the nicest around .

'11 TRANS AM

Bl ack, AM ·FM ·Tape, new Prem billboard tires, one local owner . 79
Tr ans Am trade.

'71 PLY. VOLARE SW

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

Light bl ue, 6 cyl. au to., 23,466 miles.

~295

$5495

$3895

~-

'76 PONTIAC~~~~~~~~~-------"'1------t"----'"11
GRAN PRIX ·
$4495 $36 95
L .J . Burgu ndy Wi th matching landau top, loaded . Nice, new Gran Prix
t r ade.

'76 MONTE CARLO

$3995

Air , whi te wi th burgundy landa u top, Rallye wheels. Sharp .

'76 BUICK SKYLARK

$3695

A Or ., air cond .• one owner , V -6 eng. Economy here.

Welcomel
Come In and Browse Around

$3295

I

wilh comfortable quarters and wor·
medthem.
Provided with this care by the
Humane Society and lots of hugs and
pets too - they are now quite
, healthy, have their shots and these 7
or 8 week old puppies that are the
cutest litUe Beagle-Blue Ticks I've
seen in a long Iinne, are available for
adoption.
More puppies dropped along side
the road - in better hea!tl! at the
time, a litUe older, but not much,
they were wormed, bathed, made
comfy, and at this writing we have
two left out of three - they are
Collies, one male and one female
and cute as the d,ickens ... just Jove
to be cuddled and smart, sensitive
little things. They are available too.
Unbelievable - A beautiful black
and white English Spaniel after .
having been someone's trusting pet
for long time, after having !oat
some teelh, and gone completely
blind, was taken for a ride and dropped in Rutland. I picked her up when
a compassionate woman found her
on the front porch Monday and
cWiedme.
I brought her home, bathed her ,
combed and groomed her hair and
provided her with a smaU area
where she could easily memorize
where everything was -so she only
bumped her head a few times. That
was the nicest animal and so full of
·love, even after what had been done
to her .'we advertised OilWMPO and
we waited the required three days
before taking her to the vet. I had a
good cry over lhls one.
But before the vet could end this
dog's life humanely, I just happened
to tell a real grea I woman in
Cheshire about this Spaniel. WeD,
she caUed the vet (in time) and now
has !hat sweet dog in her home and
will care for it.
I can't imagine in my wildest
dream, keeping a pet so long and
then when it needed familiarity and
someone it loved most, it was thrown
out. Uke I said, unbelievable.
Another horror story: A little
Poodle, toy type, gray and only
weighing about 6 pounds, old, with
heart trouble and just a few teeth again, at an age and with the sort of
health when it needed someone most
-it was dropped on a busy highway .
Determined by the vet to be with
too many problems to give a new
owner, it was hwnanely put to .sleep
and will never have to suffer pain
and neglect again . During the days
we hoped someone would advertise
that they lost these two last dogs I
told you of. I spent a lot of time with
them and when they were taken
away I was miserable ... hurting
because I laved those two Uttle
helpless animals and mad at the
thought of the heartless people !hat
could desert them. The Humane
Society had to assume the owner's
responsibility.
We have anolher beautiful aninnal
who wiD be taking that last trip if we
don't find a good home soon. A
female Beagle-Terrier, red with
beautiful white markings and if you
know Beagles you know they are
sweet, lovable pets as weD as good
working aninnals. Too many Beagle
owners are careless about breeding
·though and as a result many aninnals
suffer, Won't someone give this little
10-llmonthsolddogagoodhome?
Also, in ow· possession are several
cute little kittens just waiting for the
chance to live and be cared·for by
some good families. We bave a Per·
sian cat too. And we are trying to
pl!lce several other animals being
held by folks who just can't keep
them - A half Shepherd, a Benji
type, and another Beagle type as
weU ail a nice Utile mixed breed. If
interested in any of the above men·
tioned aninnals please call the jl'leigs
County Humane Society at 992-6200.
For thoSe of you wishing to help us
.financially you may do so by sending
a check to PO Box 682, Pomeroy,
45769, made out to the '·Humane
Society.
If you want to be put on our roster
of those seeking particular kinds or
breeds of a 1innals or you want to
help us with our runs, call the num·

POINT PLEASANT- Each year,
as the Mason County Fair grows, the
nwnber of persons treated at the aid
station increases too.
This · year, 122 persons were
treated with five being transferred
to Pleasant VaUey Hospital. The
emergency room physicians at the
hospital are now in contact with the
aid sllition at' the fair grounds
through the · emergency squad
radios.
For more than seven years,
Pleasant Valley Hospital has man·
ned the 11id station at the fair with
assistllnce donated by hospital per·
sonnel, public health n_urses and
other county nurses.
Now, there are also paramedics,
emergency medical technicians, fir·
st aiders and ambulance drivers
from au the county squads there
giving valuable lifeof!Sving aid to
falrgoers.
This year, a child was kicked in
the chest by a horse and had to be
recuscitated innmediately. Harold
Norton, an EMT from the Mason
squad was on the scene, and his
quick action saved the child's life.
The five county rescue squads
e...,h provided an ambulance and
personnel to the (air for one day,
along with scheduled hospital nur·

ses.
Point Pleasant EMT's included
Loretta Rainey, Todd Mayes, Olive
Fauver, Fern Oneil, Naomi Nott and
Mackie Rickard. EMT-Paramedics
Elaine Hunt and Tom Philli]l8, and
first aider David Bass.
New Haven EMT's were Shelma
Jones, Shirley Hesson, Dorothy Jar-

a

PROMOTED- Steve Jolwao11,
21, hall been promoted to cllllrlct
mauager for Bob EVUI Farm
Foods loc. HI II' mop01111lble lor
overall realaunmt operallo1111 to
lhe company,' a developlq West
Vir8lDI&amp; marllel. Jblulaon jolued
lhe company lD 1f'70 as au bonrly
employee at lhe Bob EV8111
SaUJage Sbnp ID Rio Graude,
Oblo. He entered tbe
mauagement program ID 19'11
and bas inauged Bob EV8111
Reslaurant ID Elyria, Oblo alii
Cbarlesloo, West Vlrglala. A
GaWpolls, Oblo nallve, Jolmloo
currenlly realdea ID Sl. Alba1111,
West VIrginia wltb bill wife,
Vicki, and lbelr tbree-year-&lt;~ld
son, Cory.

.

her noted above, and many, many
sincere thanks to those of you who
have given homes to our sweet or·
phans and to those who will in lhe
nexi few days.

vis, NeUine Pethel, Wendy Divers,
Bernard Ueving, Carolyn Hesson,
Havalene Flesher, Danny Rizer,
Chuck Zerkle, Joyce Circle, Charles
Smith, Ray Fielda, Randy Parsoos,
Lee S umgardner and Bustet
Weaver. Harry Hoffman, am·
bulance driverfor lheday.
Mason Rescue Squad EMT's Den·
nls Deal, Lillian Stover, Bill Blaine,
Emr Gillespie, Sandra Olapman,
Sam Sturgeon, Rlc;hard Holley, sandra HoOey, Unda Holley. EMSA 's
Bob Long, Alfred Chapman and
·Melvin Hlll, drivers.
Mt. Flower Rescl!e Squad EMT's
Sue Eades, Maxine !.egg, Gloria
King. EMT·Paramadlc Jenny ('_ar.
pcnter and F .A.'s Denver tasto,
John Carpenter, and Shirley
Uvingston and Ed Legg, driver.
Hospital personnel were Louise
Roush, R.N., Doug Eades, LPN,
Mildred Hlll, LPN·EMT and Floren&lt;. ce Howard, LPN, and some of lhe
above EMT's who are employed by
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Temporary clerk
named by board

'•

PINS SCOUT AWARD - Mrs. Renee Stone pins
the Eagle Boy Scout award, the highest given in Boy
Scouting on her son, Charles Howard Stone, at
ceremmies Sunday at the Drew Webster Post 39,

the board, replaces Linda Spencer,
who resigned but wiU serve ulntU
the or ganiza tional meeting in
January .
The board discussed with teacher
representatives, salaries for lhe new
school year.
A financial audit wiD be made by
the Department of Education,.Office
of School Management, within lhe
nelrt week as a result of the
discussion .
A cash audit, customary with lhe
change of personnel in the
tre&amp;SI!J'er'spost, will also be made in
the near future.
The next meeting was set for .
Wednesday at 2 p .m. AU members
were present along with Bobby Ord,
snperintendent, and reiJ'esentatives
of the teachers.

FAIRGROUNDS SITE
McARTIIUR , Ohio (AP) - The
Vinton County Fairgrounds north of
McArthur will be the location of a
"country living field day" Sept. 1~.
The event is designed ·to show
rural and urban residents how lhey
can ile more self..sufficient.
The program will feature
demonstrations and displays on
topics such as energy production
. alternatives, energy conservation,
log and rough -sa wn building
construction, meat and vegetable
production, beekeeping , maple
. syrup production, farm pond
construction, clothing selection and
ways to weatherize htmes.
RAPID CAMERA
DAYTONA, Fla. (AP) - CBS gave
television viewers a feeling of how
it's like to drive a race car at 190,'
mph during the running of the
Daytona 500. A camera was
mounted behind driver Benny
Parsons' shoulder.

ELBERFELD$
It's Football Season With
World Series Time Approaching ·

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• Room Light Sensor
• Energy Conscious 100% Soild State Chassis
• Modular Chassis Design
eGE ln·Line Picture Tube System
• Black Motrix Picture Tube
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Control
l
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• DC Restoration
e Set·And ·Forget Volume Control

SPECIAl.

990

I

elllumlnated Channel Windows

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 103

Backers push tax
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Backers of a prllp«&lt;al to increase
the state tu on the wholesale
price r:J gasoline say they may
give an extra push to the idea in
the next two weeks.
Although. !here isn't enough
support in the Ohio Senate for the
tu boost, The Columbus Dispatch repc)ked in Its Sunday editlons
that most H~ memben. woold
support an Increase in the
gasoline tu . ·
Supporters of the tu boost say
that the House will approve and
send to the Senate a $1.3 billion
transportation
department
budget bW that does not contain
an increase in the tu. Senate
President Oliver Ocasek then
could determine If there I!
enough Senate support for the increase, which would amount to
aboul2 or 3cents a gallon.

Sheriffs on trial
Two more Ohio sheriffs are
scheduled to go on trial on a
variety of charges.
The opening of the trial of
Seneca County Sheriff James
Roberts on four counts of alleged
mlause of county funds and per·
jury I! set for today.
Meanwhile, the trial of Clark
County Sheriff Donald sanders is
tentatively scheduled to start on
Sept. 17. Sanders will face
charges on 17 counts including
perjury, dereliction d. duty ,
failure to report campaign funds ,
intimidation, falsification , 00.
structing justice and theft in of·
· flee .
No trial date bas been set for
either Guernsey County Sheriff
Andrew Beros or, former
Mahonlng County Sheriff Ray T.
Davis. Beros Is charged wiU!
bribery, theft in office and gain·
bling, while Devts faces charges
of extortion, bribery and
racketeering. ,

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )
Ohio iamllies of four which bave
incomes of $11,800 or less would
receive federal ald to help them
pay their heating · biDs under
leglslatlon introduced this week
in the U.S. Senate.
The leglslatUon, whose spon·
sors includ( Sen. Howard Metzenbaum 1 0-0hio, would
authorize $1.6 billion in such
federal aid for the fiscal year
beglning next month and an ad·
dltional $5 billion annually
through flscall984.

PROMPT EXPERT SERVICE FOR ALL OUR TV CUSTOMERS
SALE ON AGENDA
An open meeting will be held at 7

ON MECHANIC STREO

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.
'

.

•

enttne

at

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

County Boy Scout Conunittee; Pat Wood, committee
chalnnan and scout commlsaioner of Boy ScQut Troop
249· Charles Howard Stone, the honol'ejl, wbo Ja a mem~of Pomeroy Troop 249; Bob Arms, Troop Z49 Scout·
master · and Bill Sinn,' associate scoutmaster of the
troop.

I

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 10, 1979

I

Eastern school strike now history

,.

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE

•

e

Bill offers help

(

Am~can Legion Home in Pomeroy. His father was
the late Wllliam D. Stone. Charles is a senior at Meigs
High School. .

RACINE - Nancy Carnahan was
appointed temporary . clerk·
treasilrer of thle Southern Local
School District Board of Education
when the board Thursday evening.
Mrs. Carnahan, a former clerk of

HIGHEST HONOR - The highest honor in Boy
Scouting waa bestowed upon Charles Howard Stone
Sunday afternoon when he became an Eagle Scout.
Ceremonies were held at Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion Home in Pomeroy. Particlpaling
were left to right, Bill Knight, member at large, Tri·

~~

this evening at Camp Klashuta to
discll88ed the proposed sale of the
camp site and possible action to
oppose the sal_e. AU interested
persons are asked to attend the
meeting.

Afour day strike by Eastern Local
School District 's 39 om-certified
employes ended Saturday evening
when the district's board of
education approved a contract
package, agreed upon Friday by the
employes.
It took a five hour session
Saturday afternoon and evening to
work out the fmal approval by lhe
board and some 200 Eastern school
parents were on hand for the
session , most of them insisting lhat
the strike be settled and schools
opened,
The strike had begun last Tuesday
and the teachers' associ ation
IJ'esident, James WUhelm said lhe
teachers ' group supported the
strike. The schools were open and
:-:·:-:·:·:-:-:·:·:·:-:·:·.·:·:·:·:·:-:·:-:·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:-:-:-:·:·:·:::·:·:::

EXTENDED FORECAST
Partly cloudy WedDelday IUid a
cllance ol 1bowen Tbanday IUid
Friday. fill• ID lhe upper 'IIIII to
lhe mid . . Wedaeday, IUid ID
tbe ,... Tbandliy aDd Friday.
Lows In lhe 5011.
·:·:·:·:-:-:-:-:-:·:-:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:-:-:-:·:;:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:·:-:-;:;.;-:·:·:·:·:·:·

Weather
Clear tonight. Low in the mid !lOs.
Mostly sunny Tuesday. High around
Sl. The chance of rain is near zero
through Tuesday.

some teachers were at their posts
during the four day strike. School
officials said.that some 25 percent of
lhe students did attend classes for
lhree days of the strike, providing
their own transPortation and noon
lunch.
The hangup in the final board's
approval, it was rep&lt;rted, was in the
w&lt;rding in the cootract that there
would be no reprisal against
employes f&lt;r the strike. It was
reported aillo lhat lhe meeting
became lenglhy not only due to the
discussions but aillo due to the fact
that at one point lhe board
adjourned the session rather than
recessing and found Itself wilh a
technical problem when It tried to
move back into ~en session.
A contact for advise was made to
Columbus and an emergency session
was callect In accordance wilh
infmnation provided by Columbus
so !hat the meeting could be
resumed .
According to Bob LeClain, field
representative of the Ohio

Association of Public School
Employes, the Eastel'l! w&lt;rkers
under the new one year contract lWill
receive from 57 to 90 cents an hour
increase in salaries, the school
district will pay 97 percent of the
hospitalization insurance of the
employes andlOOpercentofthe costs
of the maj&lt;r medical phase ; the

24 killed on Ohio highways
By The Allloclated Preu
Ai least 24 persons were l!llled in
weekend traffic accidents oo Ohio
roads, · the state Highway Patrol
ssid.
The victinns included three Lima
teen-agers, kllled in a three&lt;ar
crash Friday night on Ohio ·309 in
ADen County.
The patrol counts highway
fatalities in the state from 6 p.m.
Friday until midnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
DAYTON - Ernest Amurn Jr., 50 of
Dayton in a one-car accident on
Interstate 75 in Montgomery County.
OREGON
Tinnothy L.
Frampton, " 20, of Oregon, in a
motorcycle accident on an Oregon
city street.
TOLEDO - Danny C. Gordon, 31,
of Swanton in a tw~ar crash · on
Ohio 2 in Lucas County.
DELAWARE - Howard L.
Swartzlander, 39, of Westerville, in a
oo~r accident on a Del~ware
County road.
LEBANON - Geraldine Lee, 34,
of Franklin, in a one-car accident on
oldU.S. 25 in Warren County.
GEORGETOWN
Cheri
Trim bel, 23, of Sardinia, in a one-car

SQUAD RUNS
The Pc.neroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Coodor St. at 2:09
p.m. Sunday for George Kauff who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Ati :IM a.m. Monday lhe squad was
caUed to Welsh town. However .no
patient was found at the home to
where lhe unit was called.

operator •s license were Ujken. Other
items in the purse were thrown
around on the ground near the
unlocked car.
Sheriff Proffitt aillo advises !hat
his department has received a
report from Everett Hutton that one
of his cows oo Township Road 25 was
wounded by a shotgun about five
days ago.

accident on Ohio · 32 in Brown
County .

SANDUSKY - Eric T. Shelly, 20,
of Milan , a passenger, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 113 in Erie County.
SATURDAY
DELAWARE -Charles L. Braddy,
60, of PoweU, in a ooe-car accident
on Ohio 257 in Delaware County.
USBON - John C. Betteridge, 26,
of East Liverpool, when his
motorcycle crashed on a Usbon
village street .
HAMILTON - William L. Gray,
4!, of Hamilton, when his
motorcycle crashed on Ohio 4 in
Butler County.
PAULDING - RDbert J. Jacob,
22, of Sherwood, ·in a two-car
accident on U.S. 24 in Paulding
County.
MEDINA - Donald E. Robert, 13,
of Medina, when his moped and an
auto collided on Ohio 57 in Medina
County.
XENIA - Evan A. Foshee, 17, of
Dayton, a passenger, in a one-car .
accident on U.S. 4Z in Greene
County .
OTIAWA - Jack White, 32, of
Delphos , ·when his motorcycle
crashed on Ohio 190 in Putnam
County.

.,.

MILLERSBURG --' Peter 1.
Biggs, 26, of Shreve, when his
motorcycle crashed on Ohio 60 in
HolmeS County.
GREENVILLE - David G. Riley,
24, of Greenville, in a one-car
accident on a Darke County road.
LEBANON Bradley L.
Henkener, 19, of Dayton, il) a twocar accident on Ohio 73 in Warren
County.
WARREN - Daniel K. Richards,
22, of Mantua, when his motorcycle
crashed on Ohio 5 in Trumbull
County.
PAINESVILLE Marcella
Aleshire, 17, of Eastlake, a
pedestrian struck by a vehicle on
Ohio 2 in Lake County.
PAINESVILLE - Constance J .
Johnson, 45, of Cleveland, in a onecar accident on Interstate 90 in Lake
County.
FRIDAYNIGm
CANTON - Mark Lewis James,
20, of Canton, when his motorcycle
crashed on a Canton city street.
DELPHOS
Rebecca . L.
Lindeman, 18; Carol M. Nellis, 17;
and Theresa A. Hershberger, 16, all
of Urn a, in a three&lt;ar accident on
Ohio 309 in Allen County.

.;w·.,.

Middleport hosts
area fire school
The Middleport Fire Department
hosted representatives from 21 area
fire departments at a Hocking
Valley Regional Fire School held aU
day Sunday in Middleport.
There were 130 men and women
from the departments which include
Salem Township, Jackson, WeUston ,
Amesville, McArthur , Gallipolis ,
Reno, Coalton, Tuppers Plains,
Logan,
Waterloo Township,
Rutland, Syracuse, Middleport,
Orange Township, Athens, Hamden,
Racine, Mason and Albany.
A home-the Bradbury homeplace·Was burned during the day as a part
of the training . · In charge of that
operation was Capt.,Earl Goodin of
Athens assisted by Kevin Dailey of
lhe Middleport Department. There
were five other classes including
arson investigation taught by Gene
Jewell ; mutual aid planning by
Charles Williams; air mass by Don
Palmer; fire reports by Charles
Wright, and ladders by Joltn
Hagedus.
The school was from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. and headquarters was lhe

school level training. There Is to be ·
no reprisal against employes
because of the strike and there were
contract language changes to maked
the contract more understandable.
Employes were back to at their
jobs this morning and the third week
of school in lhe district was
underway.

Bad weekend

Pocketbook stolen, cow shot
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Prof!'itt reports deputies are
investigating the theft of a
pocketboo k owned by Donne
Adkinson, Henlawson, W. Va ., who
reported that her purse was taken
from her car when she attended a
service at Beech Grove Cemetery
Sunday afternoon.
A small amount of money and lhe

hours of cafeteria workers were
increases one-balf hour per day,
vacations were increased, extra pay
given f&lt;r extra trips by bus drivers.
There will be binding arbitration
and a professional growth IJ'Ogram
for non-certified employes was
approved so that they can attend
workshops and other post high

--. -.-

Meigs Junior rugh Auditorium in
Middleport where Mayor Fred
Hoffman gave an address of
welcome and prayer was given by ., ..
the Rev. Bob Robinson of Healh
United Methodist Church to open the
day 's actvities.
During the day Joe Struble of
Pomeroy was presented a plaque
from Capt. Goodin in appreciation of
his wo~k at secretary-treasurer of
the Hocking VaUey Regional Fire
School. Certificates were presented
to those who had taken the day's
training . Providillg door prizes
were G. and J . Auto Parts, Ace
Hardware, H. and R. Firestone,
Western Auto, Middleport; Bob's
· C.B. Radio, Gallipolis ; Motor Parts,
Middleport; Alice 's ·Ceramics ,
Middleport ; Neal Johnson Fire
Equipment Co., Columbus; Fire
House, Newark, the Fratema!Order
of Eagles and Jinnmie's Pastry
~ulshed by firemen to demoostrate how flrell ci dlf.
TRAiNING SESSION - This,aged home on. PoweU
provided donuts for a coffee hour m ·
fe'i-ent kinds are put out. Then, the house wu set afire
St.,
Middleport,
.known
aa
the
Bradbury
homeplace
·
lhe morning. Lunch was served by
to buni down under the supervlalon ol firemen of the
wu burned u a part of the training at a regional lire
Aerie 2171, Fraternal Order of
region. The land, it iB reported, wll1 be a part of an
held
L1
Middleport
Sunday.
A
nwnber
~ variOIIS
school
Eagles, Pomeroy.
apartment complex planned for lower Middleport.
tYP. of fires were.started inside the houae and were eX·

'i

-.

'~

•

�~-The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Sept. 10, 1979

3-TheDailySen~l,Mi.'dleport-Pomeroy, O. , Monday,Sept. 10, 1879

INVE§TM[NT PLANNING FOR P~H~~(fflGIT

Editorial opinions,
comments

pVT IT IN

A QUILT. nn: HWING

YOU 't-AV't. WILL MORE:

THAN OFFSET TH£ LO:.T INTIR(f&gt;T.

In Washington
No easy SS votes
WASHINGTON {NEA) · Battered

tu lllCrealles, the pubUc faces either
even steeper withholding rates or
benefit cuts In the coming years.
The unpleasant choice has
developed becalllle natiooal leaders
have Shielded the full story of Social
Security fl.nancing. The impact of
past decisions l8 becoming more apparent With the growing number of
senl~ citizens collecting ever higher
prenuwns.
The Congressional Budget Office Congress's source of economic expertlse - predicted recenUy that by
1984 the government could have
trouble paying benefits on time to
the elderly.
The government, of course, will
mate sure that all its obligatioru~ are
paid. It faces several optioru1, including a relatively simple traru~fer
of funds from the disability and
hospital insurance programs - the
smaller programs operated by the
Social Security system - to the oldage program.
Or Congress could reduce Social
Security benefits or supplement
Social Security tax revenue with in·
come tax revenue. ·
The forecast of new problems is
disconcerting becalllle Congress in
1977 enacted a huge increase in
Social Security taxes -an additional
$227 billion in the next decade. AI the
time, President Carter said the bill
would "guarantee ... Social Security
funds will be sound" for the next 50
years.
The new Ia w increased an
employee's maximum annual Social
Security tax from $965 in 1977 to
~.ot6 in 1967; this year, the $22,900
Ud on wages subject to the tax
ffiearul an individual ceiling of $1 403
In Social Security taxes.
employer matches the worker's contribution.
But even these higher taxes will
not pay the new bill for several

The

reasons.

.First, the number of recipients of
disability has jumped 80 percent
since 1970 and the costs have in·
creased fourfold to a total of $14 ·
billionannually.
I

In addition, "' . catio of workers to
retired people has been lower than
expected. That means .there are
fewer wage earners to meet the added costs of sustaining the system.
Finally, the rapid rate of inflation
during the past few years has meant
automatic increases in Social
Security benefits at the same time
that relatively high unemployment
has •ut into the number of workers
who pay Social Security taxes.
As a result, congressional committees have begun to Investigate ways
to improve the Social Security
.
balance sheet.
The House Will debate next month
a bill to cut disability benefits by
nearly $1 billion annually. Under
current law, many workers receive
more money in disability benefits
for themselves and their dependents
than they earned while employed.
The bill has generated strong opposition, however, from a coalition
of elderly, disabled and minority
groups called SOS (Save Our Security),
Coogress probably will reject
several cutbacks proposed by President Carter, including eliminating
the $255 death benefit for workers
with Social Security and postsecondary school support for
dependents of recipients.
IDtimalely, however, Congress
will have to heed the conclusions of a
new book on Social Security by Martha Derthick of the Brookings Institution. She says that elected
leaders must discuss with the public
the sensitive financing and benefit
issues affecting Social Security.
"In the absence of vigorous and
competitive politics, there is no
assurance that a wide range of alternatives has been coru~idered, and
there are grounds for questioning
the quaUty of the general consent to
what government is doing," she
warns.
As Rep. AI Ullman, Mre., chairman of the House Ways and Means
Committee, said following passage
of the 1977aniendments to the Social
Security law: "There are not going
to be any more easy votes on Social
Security .."

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP)- With the U.S.
government's public debt now
amounting to $813,140,000,000, it
might seem odd that it should be
asked to ball out Chrysler Corp.,
which may lose only $0011 million this
year.
That, however, is the unusual way ;
in which things add up these days. If
recent events seem illogical don't
blame yourself and search more
deeply for the hidden explanation . It
may not be there.
Those numbers, for example, are
real. The government will run a $30
billion deficit this year. It pays more
than $4 billion a month · just to
maintain its debt - not to reduce it,
but merely to pay the charges.
But reality may not count. This
year's budget deficit, one of the
biggest ever, is said by President
Carter to be tight. And Washington
last week guaranteed a loan of more
than $100 million to a private
ctmpany - Wheeling-Pittsburl!h
Steel Co., which plans some of the
money for a new rail facility.
Bethelehem Steel, meanwhile,
says so much raihnaking capacity
already exists that its workers are
idle.
, Carter claims to have made the
control of inflation his top economic
priority. But in Davenport, Iowa, he
interrupted his recent riverboat
cruise to ask people to consider ·
paying more, not less, for goods.
The appeal was part of a pitch for
American-made · goods.
Buy
American, he said, and you'll help
reduce the imbalance in U.S.
International payments. And, he
might have added, give a boost to
inflation.
The term ''windfall profits" has
been used in regard to the potential
profits to oil companies from the
market imbalance in supplies of
energy. Unearned and undeserved,
said the president.
If that is so, what then should we
call the billions of tax dollars that
will accrue to the federal
government not because of higher
reallnctmes - personal income has
been declini~Jg - but because
inflation simply boosted incomes
Into higher, more costly tax
brackets?
The confusion involves the private

In the stock market, which hates
con fusion and uncertainty, you can ·
find today a mislunash of notions
such as hasn't existed in years.
There is very little consistency; the
variance in views is kaleidescopic.
Far out on a limb are some well,regarded savants who insist that
stocks are overpiced and headed for
a twnble. On the other side of the
tree, just as far out, you can find a
covey of analysts who maintain the
Dow Jones industrial average will
double within three years.
If you feel that these and other bits
of economic news fail to fit together
into a logical pattern, do not make
the mistake of attributing it to some
failing of your understanding. It
isn't you; it's the world.

11IE DAILY SENTINEL

!USPS I~)

A securities firm advertlses, for
example, that you can put inflation
to work for you by Investing in a debt
security that might pay nearly 10
percent. Yes, but inflation is 13
percent. Please explain.

•'

PUT YOUR FUNDS INTQ HOME

REPAII&lt;~. PLUMBER!; AND
E.LECT~ICIAN&amp; NEVER COME,
AND YOU'LL l&gt;AVE THE MON EY
YOU WOULD HAVE ~PEN T.

Pameroy
Alnham IJncoi,

Six·ye~~r-old

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
It was touted as a rematch . It
wound up looking m..-e llke a replay.
Eight months ago the Pittsburgh
Steelers ignored or took
advantage of .- freezing rain and
beat the viSiting Houston Oilers 34-5
to take that big step that got them
into the Super Bowl.
Sunday 's regular-season game
was being haUed as a rematch of
that 'American Conference title
showdown. This time the weather in
Pittsburgh was euctly the opposite
- warm, sunny, clear - but the
result was virtually the same. This
time the Steeles-s mauled the Oilers
38-7.
"I said last January that the
weather ctidn't beat WI - Pittsburgh
did - and they. woo the ballgame
today in ideal weather cooditions for
both teams," Houston Coach Bum
Phillips admitted.
In Sunday's other National
Football League gamea It was New
England 56, the New York Jets 3;
Buffalo 51, Cincinnati 24; San Diego
311, Oakland 10; Tampa Bay 29,
Baltimore 26 in overtime ; Dallas 21,

saw a splendid cbance to havefun at hill friend, Allltin Glllaher~
expeose. The two bo)'l bad Wllnl
themselves out playing totetber IUid
hunting rabblta with blcli:oey clulilln
the woods near Abe 'a Knob Creel
heme in Central Kentucky wbl!ll '
they decided to rest awblle. Abe
. , threw hla cap onto the IJ'Oillld and
cOmbed a tree while Austin, allo
- taking off his hal, lay down and
st:retclled Ol!t on the ground below,
aqd ~ 8eemed to be fut ulep. " .
PUT YOU~ MONEY IN NON ~ In the branches, he found him·
TRADITIONAL INVESTMENTS
self litting directly over AIIIIID 'a
DUCH A~ ART
'
OB.JECT~ .
outstretched body. As he looked Ill •
his friend lying comfortably In the "
shade below, he noticed that AUitin
ALL MY
MONEY
had placed his cap next to him 111 the ..
I~ IN
ground with Ita irutide facing up. CERAMIC1&gt;
ward, a perfect target for 1 Paw
-$l.'l7
Paw Abe had picked a few minutes ·'
before and placed in hla pocket.
At thai Instant, Abe decided, 81 he
'7Y
recalled yean later, that It ''Would
RoC•"! ,.., TN .
be great fun to drop In (the Paw .
NEWS ~£A
Paw) lntoAuitin'supturned cap."
Abe reached for the Paw Paw, 10
ripe and soft that he could barely get
of local draft boards.
it out ol. his pocket fully Intact. He
Their job . would be Ill classify
then dropped It right oo the denier ol.
registrants and hear appeals from
Austin's cap, with ita yellow 111me
those who fell they were
spattering In every direction.
misclassified - men, for example,
Abe expected Auatin to Jump up at
arglllllg they were needed at home
him In disgust. He could cllallence
as the sole support of mothers and
him to a fight or Ue there and cry
sisters and brothers.
helplessly, but neither action would
But there would be fewer
clean up his 11p1ttered hat!
Selective Service for two years and
deferments
and exemptions than
!nlteadcidoingeitberoftbese
Will go back to his old job as deputy
there were during the Vietnam War,
tllinp, Austin .did not move an incb,
director once the Senate confirms
when enrolling in college was a way
but just remain IIIIBI'OU9e&lt;i.
President Carter's choice of
to avoid the draft - and a source of . Abe thought that rather strance,
Pentagon manpower expert
irritation for those who were for he knew Austin bad not bad
Bernard B. Rostker for the top spot.
drafted.
enough time to go IOIIIId uleep. CerShuck says that under a plan he's
Shuck believes the one-day
tainly the lp8Uer ol. a Paw Paw npa
drawn up, the country could raise a
next to hla helld would artlule him.
huge civilian army in a hurry if it . registration could be carried out by
local election officials, who are
had to.
Did Austin have aomethlng In IIIGre
accustomed to registering large
for him? Wu Auotin setting him 1P
He says he needs $2 million more
numbers
of people.
for a surprise? ·
than Congress has been willing to
He says the first draftee would · Abe at In the branch o1. the tree 111
appropriate to develop his plan for a
regisler
within 10 days of a
"quick registration system" under
bewilderment for awldle with •
presidential
proclamation of a
~which four millioo men would
tesPonae coming up to him 'from
national emergency, receive his
below, then finally decided to llide
register on a single day. He opposes
induction
notice - greetings
drafting women, incident,.lly, " untU
down the tree to the ground. Perblpl
delivered by Mallgram - 10 days
men develop the capability to have
Austin would Luh out at him wben
later and be in uniform 10 days after
babies."
he got down. Or could he have been
that.
sound asleep during thll time after
The $2 million would go for finding
"Wi!piit 180 days, Selective
all? Austin 'a alrange silence puzzled
and training citizens in every county
Service
would deliver 650,000 men,"
him.
who would serve as unpaid members
he says.
When Abe reached the ground, he
found that, much to hill IIUrpl'l.le
Austin had been awake all along.
telling thll story many yean later,
Abraham Uncoln aaid that ''While I
" was climbing the tree he hitd very
adroiUy changed cape, aublllilutini
my own for him, 10 that, Instead o1.
tormenting him as I wu intending I
ByDoaw·.Jf
had
simply beameared my ~
lower Uving standards and even
headgear."
If you're looking around for a new worse inflation.
buzz "\'ord, you could do worae than
There at Knob Q-eek, Kentucky
It is much easier to describe what
"productivily."
Uving
In a valley "IIIITOWlded tJY
is
than to determine why and
It won't necessarily make you the whst to do about it. One factor l8 cer- high hilla and deep gorges,'! young
.conversational star of the cocktail tainly the age and inefficiency of im- Abraham l.Jncoln had learned a We- circuit, but It will cue you In on what wrtant segments ol. the U. S. in· long lesson. "He who dip a pit will
is becoming a leading topic of dustrial plant. Eur!Jpeans and fall Into it; and a serpent will ))jte
discussion In economic circles.
Japanese, forced to rebulld from the him who breab through a wall. "
{Ecdesiastea 10:1)
Basically, productivity is a way of wreckage of World War II, now have
measuring the individual worker. the advantage of more modem
Rising productivity, increasing out- equipment.
put of goods and services per inThe character of the U. S.
dividual, is the sign and the impetus economy has a.iso changed, shifting
of a healthily expanding economy.
from manufacturing towanJ serIn the United States, productivity ~ces. Soo!e industries, becalllle o1.
is still rising, but at a progressively high labor costs among other
presented the Uiuted Sta'tes with a
slower rate. A considerable body o1. reasons, are no longer efficl~t comproductivity challenge _ yet _ may
expert opinion bellevea this is the petitors With foreign operations. Ap.
provide the most Wleful guidance In
essential problem with the parel is a prime example. But
dealing with the problem.
American economy, underlying and phasing out can be both
Britain years ago reached an even
contributing to mounting trade economically and politically painful,
more pronounced stage o1. hardening
deficits, the declining dollar and in- so they continue to exert a drag on
economic arteries yean ago. It 11 a
flation .
the overall productivity rate.
primary goal of Prime Minister
That includes Jtnimy Carter, who
Cases are also made agalrult ex- Margaret Thatcher's PI'OIII'IIIIl to
has fingered Uru!Btiafactory produc- cessive government regulation and reverae Ulat situation and revive
tivity as a symptom ol. the malaise tax and Interest-rate poUciea that
growth through a package of
he sees afflicting the American work against capital investment and
me&amp;sures trimming government 'a
spirit.
business expanaion.
direct
Involvement in economic acU. S. productivity was long -and
Interestingly, the one major in- tivity and encouraging private
until not so long ago - wuivaled In dustrial country which hss not initiative.
the world. Along With sheer size, it
was the major factor In the preeminence of the American economy.
But in the last decade growth has
been slowing until today It is down to
about l percent annually.
That is not sufficient to keep pace
with the rest of the Industrialized
world. As the congressional joint
economic committee observes In a
current somber report: "If present
trends continue, Gennan and French workers Will be. outproducing WI
within six years; Japanese and
Canadian workers will follow soon
thereafter."
It might be asked why it should
matter whether U. S. workers fall
behind their foreign counterparts In
the productivity race. The answer is
that in the short term it would make
more difficult If not lmpoeaible the
effort to balance U. S. trade bills and
halt the decline of th~ dollar's value
on thatfront.
In the long run, it could mean a
stagnant or declining economy,

Congress considers
WASHINGTON {AP)- At 11 on a
Tuesday morning, a receptionist is
sealing envelopes, a whistling mail
clerk wheels his cart by, somewhere
a typewriter is slowly tapping out a
letter. The phones rarely ring.
Selective Service headquarters is
hardly the hustling place it must
have been when the late Gen. Lewis
B. Hershey oversaw the registration
during World War II of 40 milllon
men and the induction of' 10 million
of them.
These days the Selective Service
System , on deep standby and
subsisting on an annual budget of
$7.8 million, drafts nothing but plans
for what to do if the draft is revived.
It has been more than six years
since a young man in America has
reached into his mailbox and puUed
out a sununons to ~rve his country.
The last draftee was Inducted in
Oakland, Calif., in June 1973.
And no young man has had to
register for the draft since March 31,
1975, leaving Selective Service with
litUe to do.
But Congress now is considering
reinstating registration as a first
reluctant step toward reinstating the
draft.
The House is expeced to vote this
week or next on resuming
registration . Resuming the draft
itself - a far ·more controversial
proposition - would take a separate
act of Congress not now likely.
Advocates of registering young
men say the aU-voluntary military
isn't working. They argue that in a
war, having men registered would
make it possible to raise an army
faster than starting the process from
scratch.
The Pentagon is divided on the
issue, but the administration
opposes registration and hints
President Carter would veto such a
bill.
And &amp;bert E. Shuck, of all
people, also opposes a new draft
registration. Shuck, from Kokomo,
Ind., has · been acting director of

strange about it.
In fact, ratUesnake roundups in
late sununer are not unusual in the
area.
While ·back home in Plains, the
president spent considerable time at
the fishing hole where he
encountered the bunny, which he
described as "a robust rabbit" that
swam toward his boat In April and
was chased off by a splash of water
from a presidential paddle.
There was no indication that he
ran into the rabbit again. But,
rtru~ing home from the pond -,it's
ooly about six or sevllll miles from
there to his home -he encountered
a pair of tough-oounding dogs.
Secret Service agents preceding
the president and his wife
discovered the beasts and became
upset over tbe dogs' loud reaction to
the approaching party.
It seems a team of joggers is not
an everyday sight along a dusty,
red-clay road in southwest Georgia,
and the dogs set to barking quite
angrily.
This in turn caused some nervous
talk among the agents, but the
president and first lady managed to
pass the animals' lair without
further incident.

Today's commentary
Getting the word

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Basebllll At A Glence
By The Asooclaled Pres\
AMEitiCAN LEAGUE
EAST
Balllmi&gt;re
Milwaukee
Boston
New York
Detro! t
Cl@velalid

Toronto

Collfornla
Kansas City

Mln~ra

Te•as ·
·cnlcago
Seattle
Ooklond ·

Pd. Gl

.671

.sao 11 '"
.S61 14'h
.5.50 17

17 63
76 61 . 521 20
74 69 .517 21'"
+I 98 310 51
WEST
86 64 .556
75 67 .528 4
n 69 .511 6'h
71 72 .4'17 8\7
61 82 .427 18'h
60 ~ .417 :zo
SO U .347 JO

Satarbay'ao.-

Sunclay'l Games

Oelrlt 3, New York 1
Baltimore 16, Boston 4

Cleveland u. Toronto 10
Texas6. MlnnHOta.5
Oakland 3-Q, Chicago 0·7

Callfornlo s. MliwaukM 2
Kansas City 3. SeaMie 1
Monday's Gam"
Minnesota IGoltr 13 ·10 and
Erickson 1·9) at Kansas City tSplll ·
torff 13·15 and PaMin 4·2 or Eaton O·
OJ, 2
Baltimore (0 . Marllner 14-12) at
Boston &lt;Stanley IHJ
SeaMie &lt;Dressier 1-1 J at Texas
!Jenkins 13·12)
Only games scheduled
Tuelcfay's Games
Now York at Boston
Baltimore at Toronto
Cleveland at Detroit
Oakland at Milwaukee
California at Chicago
Mln~sota

at Kansas City

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W.L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
8S 57 .599
Montreal
81 S5 .596
76 64 .SAl 8
St . Louis
Chicago
73 67 .531 11
71 71 ..500 1~
Philadelphia
New York
55 85 .393 2'1
WEST
Houston
81 62 .566
Cincinnati

National Footblll Leagut
AlA Glance
By The Associated PrtiS
American Conference
Eost
W L T Pet. PF PA
2 u u 1.000 28 17
Miami
BuHalo
I I 0 .500 58 33
New Eng .
I I 0 .500 69 19
0 2 0 .000 26 A3
Bait.
0 2 0 .000 25 81
N.Y. Jets
Central
2 0 0 1.000 S2 -46
Cleve.
2 0 0 1.000 54 20
PIMs.
I I 0 .500 36 6S
Houston
0 2 0 .000 2~ 61
Cine.

w..t

••

."•

..

•

.563

'h

San 010110
2 o o 1.000 63 26
Oenver
I I 0 .500 19 13
l&lt;an. City
I I 0 .500 38 27
Oakland
I I 0 .500 34 -14
SeaMie
0 2 0 .000 26 52
National Conferenct
Eosl
Dallas
2 0 0 1.000 A3 34
I 0 0 1.000 23 17
Philo.
. I 1 0 .500 411 36
St. Louis
1 1 0 .500 54 S3
Wash.
0 2 0 .000 31 so
N.Y. Giants
Centro I
2 0 1.000 32 10
Chicago
2 0 0 1.000 32 10
Tampa Bay
I 1 0 .500 31 2S
Green Bay
I 1 0 .500 35 411
Minn.
0 2 0 .000 40 58
Oelroll
west
Atlanta
I 0 0 1.000 40 34
Los Ang.
I 1 0 .500 30 33
New Orleans
0 2 0 .000 53 68
San Fran.
0 2 0 .000 35 49
Sunday's Results:
Buffalo 51, Clnclnnatl24
PIIBburgh 38, Houston 7
Chlcago26, Minnesota 7
New England S6, New York Jets 3
Green Bay 28, New Orleans 19
St.Louis 27, NeW York Glanls14

Coach John Blake's North Gallla
High School Plntes, led by the

powerfuii'IIIIDin8 of !50-pound senior
baclt Tim Howell, rolled over 0061
Huntingtcln ol. Roll, 2-7, in their 1979
grid opener at Huntington Saturday
afternoon.
11te 10111 left the Huntsmen with an

.

Grand Valley 7, Middlefield Car·
dlnaiO
Hamilton Bad in 27, Cln. Hughes 6
Lakewood St. Edward 53, Cleve.
KennedyO
Mans. Malabar 14. Lexington 0
Millersport 3, Fisher Calh. 0
Minerva 20. West Branch 12
Mlnroevllle «),Seneca East 6

Niles McKinley 7, Cleve. East o
Parma Padua n warren w.

· Reserve 22

Poland Seminary 20, Young.
Wilson 14
Ports .:Notre Dame 3~. Trimble 0
Rocky River 7, Parma Normandy
6

St . Marys42, Lima Cent. Cath. 13
Sebring McKinley 27, Cnalker 26
Shaker His. 27. Bedford Chanel14
Steu. Cent. Cath . 26, Youngs. Nor ·
lh 12
Stow.16, Akron Kenmore 14
University Schooll6, Hawken 12
Valley Forge 13, Parma His. Holy
Name7
·
Walsh Jesuit 27, canton Cenl .
Catn. 16
Youngs. Mooney u , Mentor Lake
CalhOIIC 7
Youngs. Rayen 6, Brookfield o.
Washington 27, Detroll24
Tampa Boy 2'1, Baltimore 26, ot
Cleveland 27, Kansas City 24
Dallas 21. Sen Francisco 13
San Diego 3(), Oakland 10
Mlaml19, Seattle10
Monday's G~me
Atlanta at Philadelphia
Sept. 16 Games

Rues 29, Colts 26
Greg Landry of Baltimore was
cocking his arm to throw on the third
play of overtime when Randy
Crowder of Tampa Bay got to him.
The resulting fumble was recovered
by the Bucs' Bill Kolla.r - and Neil
O'Donoghue inunediately kicked a
31-yard field goal that beat the Colts.
Cowboys 21, 49ers 13
O.J. Simpson of San Francisco ( 43
yards ) and Tony Dorsett of Dallas
(54 yards) made their season debuts
at rwming back- but it was Roger
Staubach's first two touchdown
passes of the season that gave the

Southwest

Baylor 20. Lamar 7

17

Brigham Young 18, Texas A and M

Southern Cal21, Texas Teen 7
Southern Meth. 3S, Rice 14
Texas -Arlington 10, w. Texas St. 6
Te•as·EI Paso31, Pacific u. 7
Far West
Arlrona 22, W"'hlnglon St. 7
California 17, Arlrona St. 9
Houston 24, UCLA 16
Long Beach St. 9, Boise St. 7
Nev. ·Las Vegas35, Fullerton St. u
New Mexico 35, Oregon St. 16
Oregon 33, Colorado 19
San Jose St. 08, Ulan St . 08, tie

~2mark.

Howell ruahed for 147 yards in 33
carries, scored one of. the three North Gallta touchdowns and'had a twopoint conversion.
North Gallla scored the game's
first touclxlown with 16 seconds left
In the first half when Howell raced In
from sll yards out. The run for extra
points failed.
In the third stanza, Bob Shupe hit
Greg Deel with a !&gt;yard scoring
strike With 5:40 left and then tossed a
tw01Kiint cmv.ersion pass to Keith
Payne to make it IW.
The Huntsmen got on the board in
the third period ·when Jeff Vickers
scored on a 32-yanJ pass play.
Vickers kicked the extra point.
Final Pirate score came wbeti
Charles Lookado raced over from
seven yards out. Howell ran the extra points.
11te Pirates dominated the game's
statistics, picking up :II first downs
to Huntington's four. N"rth Gallla
had 298 total yards and Umited the
Huntsmen to 81 yards, only 14
rushing.
Otarlea Lookado had 22 yards in
eight trips for the winners. For Ross,
Wes Lanun was the top ground
gainer with eight plays in nine trips.
Friday, the Pirates will host
Southeastern of Ross County In
another non-conference game.
Here are Saturday's statistics:
St•tlsllcs
Department
NG H
First downs
20
4
Yards rushing
191
u
Yards passing
107
67
Pass attempts
6
15
Completed
4
7
1ntercepted
2
I
Penalties
9-92 8-98
Fumbles
I
I
Lost
1
1
Punts
~ - 110 ~- 121

Sutcliffe admitted that be wanted
to continue · pitching because the
game was on national television and
he's gunning for rookie-of-the year
votes.
"I was in pain, but I kept telling
him {LeSorda) that it felt fine,"
SutcUHe said. "If I'd been smart I
probably would have come out of the
game. But I had nothing to gain and
everything to lose by ctming out."
Cincinnati second baseman · Joe
Morgan reached another career
milestone when he walked and stole
second base in the first inning. That
gave him 24 steals this season and
597 in his career, tying him for 14th
place with Hugh Duffy on the major
league aU-time Ust.
The Reds are off today , then host
the division leading Houston Astros
for two games starting Tuesday
night.

Volleyball squad
showing promise
BY DONNIE DUDDING
The Marauder Volleyball team is
showing promise early in this season
through its recent victories over
South Point and Gallipolis.
ln the first games of the season,
Meigs defeated South Point 15-11,
and 15·6. At Gallipolis, Meigs
defeated the hosts 15-5, 15-10.
ln the first match with South
Point, Oterie Lightfoot served 10
points in the first game and eight in
the second.
With help from the several spikes
by Terri Wilson and the nine sets by
Tonia Ash, Meigs found a Uttle
ll'ouble put11ng the Pointers away.
ln the match with Gallipolis, Sonia
Ash had six very wellillaced serves
and went on to score 9 points in Ute
second game- Also in the second
game of the match, Dodie Chapman
had severla nice spikes.
The Meigs Volleyball Team hosts
Fort Fry, today at 6:311.
MARAUDER SCHEDULE
Sept. 10, Fort Frye
Sept. 13, Waverly
Sept. 17, Nelsonville -York ·
Alexander, Varsity only
Sept. 20, Logan
S,ept. 25, Eastern (away)
Sept. 27, Athens (away 1
Sept. 29, at Unloto-Logan Elm ·
Waverly, Varsity only
Oct. 1, at Nelsonville ·York

North Gall Ia

0 6 8

8.. 22

0

7.. 7

0

7

OPTOMETRISt .

"

Pomeroy

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MONEY.

Cut heating and cooling costs

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Fiber Glass Attic Insulation
Take a day or less to install
Cert~in·teed Fiber Glass
Attic Insulation between
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It's the most economical

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COLLEGE
OELAWARE STATE - Named
Ajac Triplett head basketball coach.

Attic

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Ba tts 6"' th 1ck. 15Yt" Wide and
45' long cover 48 sq f1
Batt s perlora1ed at 23" tor
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Detroit at New York Jets
New England at Cincinnati
Philadelphia at New Orleans
Kansas City at Houston
Miami at Mlnnesot~ .
Tampa Boy at Green Bay
Buffalo at San Diego
Chicago at Dallas
Oakland at Seattle
Pittsburgh at St. Louis
Son Francisco at Los Angeles
Sept. 17 Game
New York Giants at Wasnlngton

.I. N. W. 'COM_PTON, O.D.

992-2143
102 w. Main

Oct. 25, at Jackson

ARGONAUTS
runnin~;J

\

lion is the best policy.

Marietta, Varsity only

Canadian Football League

TORONTO

'

As an independent insurance
agency, our primary function Is
to provide policies which afford
financilll protection in case of
loss .
But, we also have a vital In ·
terest in loss prevention, as
shou ld our clients. We encourage
care, caution and safety ...
preventive measures which can
'keep that car accident froni happen ing , that building fire from
starti ng, that home burglary
from being committed.
Prevention saves life , limb and
property ... and helps control insurance costs and premiums.
When losses do occur, our
policyhOlders can count on pro ~
tecting and serving in time and
need . But we sti ll !:;ay ~ preven·

Oct. 20, at Fort Frye -John Glenn ·

Weekend
Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
Signed Eddie Payton,

!

PREVENTION
IS THE
BEST POLICY

Oct. 18, Ironton, Parents Night

Score b'( quarters:

Hunt . ~oss

Cowboys their victory.
Staubach hit Drew Pearson for 22
yards and a score late in the third
period to wipeout the 49ers' I~ lead
and found Billy Joe DuPree for 13
yards and a TD in the fourth
quarter.
Dolphins 19, Seahawks 10
Miami's Bob Griese threw two
touchdown passes - 7 yards to
Norm Bulaich and 3 yards to Nat
Moore - and rookie Uwe von
Schamam kicked field goals of 36
and 31 yards to .beat the Seahawks.
The Dolphins intercepted three
passes by Jim Zorn and each one Jed
to a score, including the two field
goals by von Schamann, who
replaced Garo Yepremian on the
Miami roster.
Be81'8 21, Vlldnga 7
Walter Payton amassed 182 yards
- 141 of them In the second period in Chicago 's trouncing reserve
quarterback Vince Evans combined
with James Scott ~ a 56-yard
scoring pass play. Tommy Kramer,
who threw for four TDs last week for
Minnesota , ran 2 yards for the Vlkes'
lone score -this week.
· Packers 28, Saints19
Steve Atkins ran 3 yards for Green
Bay's winning m, then sprinted 60
yards to set up a 3-yard scoring run
by Eric Torkelson that locked up the
Packers' victory over New Orleans.
Cardinals 27, Glaata 14
Ottis Anderson of the Cardinals
became only the forth rookie in NFL
history to rush for 100 yards in his
first two games, tacking 111 onto his
193 of a week ago as St. Louis rallied
from a lW deficit to beat the Giants.
Redskins 21, Lloos :U
Washington's Ma.k Moseley,
given a second chance by the Lions,
beat them with a 41-yard field goal
eight seconds from tbe final gunds
for having too many men on the
field. Joe Theismann threw two m
passes for the Redskins.
BroWWI 21, Cblefs :U
Brian Sipe threw three m passes,
the final one a 21-yarder to Reggie
Rucker with 52 seconds left, to vault
Cleveland past the Chiefs.

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

at Wellston
OCt. 9, Eastern
Oct. 11, at Gallipolis
Oct. 15, at Ale&lt;ander
Oct . ~.

B.altlmroe at Cleveland
Dem1er at Atlanta

''"'

J.... :~

.,.,.

!

.~ ...

1'1 '1
t "t I

I~

:.J
Our cunun't Jnit y (Oillmu nit:at io n'

.
r~----------------------------~-~

:·
I

il 'oFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 !&lt;:LOSE AT NOON :
li ~ON
__THURS.}._ ___________
...;. _______________
·tt
EAST COURJ'
ST., POMEROY.
. 1_

--

College Footblll Scores
By .Tile Associated Press
East
Rutgers 28, Holy Crosso
.
South
Alabama JO, Georgia Tee~ 6
Clemson 21, Fvrman 0
E. Tennessee Sl. 31. James
MadlsonO
Florida St. 17. S. Mississippi 14
Jackson St. 27. Tennessee St. 21
Marsnall31. Toledo u
Maryland 2~ , VIllanova 211
McNeese St. 10. SE Louisiana 7
Memphis St. 14, Mississippi St . 13
N. Carolina 28, S. Carolina 0
N. carolina St. 34, E. Carolina 211
Presbyterian 21, Clladel13
Tomple38, W. Vlrgin ia16
Tn.·ChaManooga 41, w. Kentucky
28
Tulane 33, Stanford 10
Virginia 31, Richmond o
VMI 7, William and Mary 3
VIrginia Tech 15, Louisville!~
Wake Forest 30, Appalachian St.
23
W. Carolina 24, Tennessee Tech 7
Midwest
Bowling Green 32, E. Michigan 6
Cl!l11. Michigan 10, W. Michigan 0
Orakel~, . New Me&lt;lco St. 13
E. Kl!l1tucky 17, Kent St. U
Indiana JO, Iowa 26
Indiana St. 21, Wlc~ita St . 9
Miami, Ohio 27, Ball St . 3
Michigan 49, Normwestern 7
Michigan St. 33, llllnois16
Minnesota 24, 0hlo U. 10
Mlssourl-45, San Diego St. 15
Ohio St. 31, Syracuse 8
Oklahoma St. 25, N. Texas 51. 7
Purdue 41, Wisconsin 20
S. llllnols17, SW Louisiana 7
Youngstown Fl. 33, Illinois St. 27

Tulsa 2A, Air Force 7

.

: ·

tough on us," Garvey said. "He gets
pwnped up for us becalllle he used to
be with us. He works oo your
anxiety . You see a ball that's not
going very fast and you try to kill it.
"Having a pitcher like him on your
staff is good becalllle it's such a
drastic change between Bill Bonham
and him, or Tom Seaver and him,' '
Garvey said.
Each team got a run in the second
inning, the Dodgers on a sacrifice fly
by Joe Ferguson and the Reds on a
bases-loaded walk to Norman .
Garvey led off the seventh with a
homer over the left-a!nter field wall,
and the Dodgers added an insurance
run in the eighth on a sacrifice fly by
Davey wpes.
Rick Sutcliffe, 14-9, pitched seven
innings and allowed the Reds just
five hits despite being jolted on his
pitching arm by a line drive hit by
Bench in the second inning.
"I kept checking with him, and he
kept telling me be was alright," said
Dodger Manager Tommy LaSorda.
"You look at that ann, though, and
it's unbelievable the way it 's
swelling. It may be broken."

Pirates win opener
22-7 over Huntington

E. Llverpool36, Cleve. Hay 12
Elyria west17, Oberlin 0
Erie (Pa. ) Sl . Vincent 31,
Ledgemonto
Falrless11, Tuslawo
Gllmovr Academy 31, Beechwood

FOOTBALL

•.

63

Ohio High School
Foo1bllll
By Tile Auoclattd Prell
Saturday's Rtsulls
Batavia 31, Cln. Country Day 12
Brooklyn 21 , Cleve. Rhodes 0
Canton Tlmken 19, Erla (Pa.J
PrepO
Col. OeSales 28, Cln. LaSalle 7
Day. Jefferson 26, Alter 20
Oay. Meadowdale 6, Day. Dunbar

0

..•.

81

Los Angeles
68 75 . ~76 13
San Francisco
61 81 .A38 18'h
san 010110
61 83 .424 20'h
Atlanta
55 87 .387 25 '1,
Saturday's GamH
New York 3, PiMsburgh 2, 15 In·
nlngs
Philadelphia 9, Chicago&amp;
Cincinnati~. Los Angeles 1
San Diego 9, Atlanta 2 ·
Montreal7. St : Louis 2
San Franclsco2, Houston 1
Sunday's Gamn
Pltrsburgh 6, New YorkS
Son Olego~. Atlanta I
Chicago IS, Pnlladelphla 2
Los Angeles 3, Cincinnati I
Montreal~. St. Louis I
Houston~. san Francisco 1
Monday's Games
No gamessclle&lt;luled
Tutlclay's Gamts
Chlcagoal Montreal Ill
St. LOUIS at Pltrsburgn
Ph lladelpnia at New York
Houston at c lnclnnatl
San Diego at Los Angel..
Atlanta at San Francisco

0

SeaMie at Texas

..

(

W. L.
94 46
aJ 60
7'1 60

Baltlmre 3, Boston 3
Cleveland 5, Toronto 4
Oakland 2, Chicago 1
New YorkS, Oelrolt 4
Texas 6. Minnesota 2
Calllornla 3, MllwaukPe 2
SeaMie 4, Kansas City 2

Berry's World

I

•
II •
•

tr:

"Marlette. Hartley and James Garner, in that
commercial, SAY they are not married to each
other, bull don't BELIEVE them. "

CINCINNATI (AP) - ,Steve
Garvey and Fred Norman played
about tbe same number of games,
which was not very many, for the
Los Angeles Dodgers in 1970.
Garvey was still five years away
from beaming the Dodgers' regular
first baseman, while Norman was. in
milkareer trying to finally stick
with a major league club.
,.Garvey hit a · home run off
Norman, his 24th .of the season, as
the Dodgers defeated the Cincinnati
Reds 3-1 &amp;mday, knocking the Reds
out of first place in the National
League West .
Garvey's homer was one of only
five hits surrendered by Norman, 1111, in what catcher Johrmy Bench
called "a great game'' .
"He just got a pitch up to
Garvey ," Bench said . "Other than
that, I thought he pitched well.
Everything was wocking. "
Norman pitched complete ga,me
victories in his other two starts
against Los Angeles this season, and
Garv!!)' said he frequenUy has been
the i10dgers' nemeis.
"He (Norman) has always been

••••
••••• ••••••

I ••

in Terry Miller'&amp; shadow, touched it
seven times.
Chargers 30, Raiders 10
San Diego waited a full year to get
even for what has become known as
the "inunaculate deception ," Ken
Stabler's intentional fumble that
was kicked and dribbled into the end
wne by Pete Banaszak and Dave
Casper for a last-second winning
touchdown.
1
The Chargers got even when Dan
Fouts passed for three touchdowns
and linebacker Woodrow wwe ·ran
in a Stabler interception for another.

l;arvey's blast dumps Reds

~

wroo8

emerged the biggest winner .
About ooe-llalf of his winnings
were gained on one card when he
beat the dealer and picked up a $400
pot, observers reported.
Thel), when the game ended In the
early morning hours of Labor Day
and his night's work was done he
and his Secret Service agen~, ~ho
~d not join the game, headed out
mto the darkness.

the Jets he wa s magnificent ,
cm1pleting five touchdown passes
covering 49, 44 and 28 yards to
Harold Jackson and 37 and 50 yards
to Stanley Morgan.
BU!s $1, Beqals Z4
Buffalo, which displayed its
defensive prowess in a narrow 9-7
loss to Miami last Sunday, mowed
what it is capable of doing with the
ball.
.
More specifially, &amp;land Hooks
showed what he can do with the ball.
The onHime reserve nmning back
behind O.J. Simpson, now residing

San Francisco 13; Miami 19, Seattle
10; Chicago 26, Minnesota 7; Green
Bay 28, New Orleans 19; St. wuis 27,
Ute New York Giants 14; Washington
27, Detroit 24 ; Cleveland 27, KBnsas
City 24.
Tonight
it's
Atlanta
at
Philadelphia.
"They did everything that got
them to the Super Bowl,'' Phillips
said of the Steelers. ·
In fact, it was frightening what the
Sleelers did .
On offense , terry Bradshaw
passed foc two touchdowns. One of
them went to Sidney Thornton, who
also ran f..- a m .
But it was the ·Steel Curtain
defense that really shone. The Oiles-s
managed a scant 124 yards - total
yards - agairuti Joe Greene, Jack
Lambert and friends.
Patriot• 541, Jets 3
A deferu~e i.m't the only thing that
can take the Ufe out of a defense. A
more potent offense can, too - Uke
New England's, for instance.
A week ago it looked weak against
Ute Sleelers. Steve Grogan's passing
game was clearly off. ~ut against

; :·: II

draft reinstatement

Carter's son Chip, in PIL ... with
his father, wandered over to the
motel in Americus, Ga., where the
press was staying on &amp;mday night
and came away $800 richer.
He entered the nighUy blackjack
game, played what one participant
caUed p. "wild imd fast game," and

aector alao.

Seveatb-Day Actrealllt Cllllrch

0rEJN

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASHINGTON (AP) - Forget
about the killer rabbit, the banzai
bunny, the horrible hare. There are
other beasts lurking around
President Carter's Plains, Ga.,
hangouts that are ferocious:
ratUesnakes and dogs.
Just hours before Carter arrived
home 'last Thursday night for the
Labor Day weekend, Secret Service
agents guarding his ranch-style
home on Woodland Drive killed a
rattlesnake on the back porch.
It was one of several that have
been killed in the area over the
swnmer, and at least one Plains
native who was consulted about the
proximity of the snakes to Carter's
home thoul!ht there was nothing

Mighty ·Steelers maul Oilers, 38-7

ByPutGr Albert DIU.

DON'T PUT MON['( IN A BANK.
BIL~

by r:ecent staggering Social Security

Sermonettt

.

POMEROY

prog ram

offer~ timely p r c .,c ntation~ dealing with dif'·
t't:rent a s n~:~..:t' of the cncr g. ~' sillla1inn. To

"~hedulc a program for your g.roup. ju'i t l all
Bft..3781. · 1\11 prcscmatiun" a r e without
charge.
1

OHIO POWER COMPANY

CEMENT BLOCK CO•
MAIN ST.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915
'-

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1
...
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'

~

�5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 10, 1979
~ -.
Persons of all.ages are welcome.

4- The Dai~v Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Sept. 10, 1979

'Harvest Happenings '
topic of recent meeting

KA111Y CLELAND
LGaD Officer

Loan
Officer
named
POMEROY-Kathy Cleland is the
loan officer for the newly establish·
ed Park Financial Services office in
the Sycamore Street office building
in Pomeroy.
The company, headquartered iii
Columbus, provides assistance to
Meiga Countians in securing loans
through the Veterans Adminlstra·
tion and the Federal Housing Ad·
ministration.
Before the office was opened here
Meigs Countlans had to trav~l either
to Athens or Gallipolis to make loan
application. The loans, guaranteed
by the federal government, have a
current interest rate of 10 percent.
As the local loan officer, Mrs.
Cleland counsels with applicants,
assists them in completing fonns,
and then verifies their credit, hank
and employment records. She
received her training for the position
in the ·Columbus offices of I'ark
Financial Services.
.
Mrs. Cleland maintains hours of 9
a.m. to 1 p.m. on Mondays,
Wednesdays, and Fridays, but is
available anytime, day or evening,
by appointment.
She and her husband, Hank
Cleland, Jr., local realtor, and their
fO\II' sons, reside on Wright St. in
Pomeroy.

"Harvest Happenings" was the
program topic for Mrs. Joseph Cook,
devotional leader at the Friday
afternoon meeting of Happy
Harvesters Class of Trinity Church.
Mrs. Cook spoke of the golden
days of autumn as ·a time for enjoy.
ing the beauty of nature and reflecting on the happy times with family
and friends . She commented on
modem conveniences mentioning
particularly food and its availabili·
ty. She spoke of the supermarket
where shoppers select their cuts or
meat comparing that to the time of
the neighborhood butcher and the
loss of the personal relationship.
Mrs. Cook discussed spiritual
things, the impersonal church, the
feeling that no onecares, and con·
eluded with the comment that Christ
is never impersonal but always in·
terested. A poem "Harvest Time",
and reading of the hymn, "What a
Friend We Have in Jesus" was read
by Mrs. Cook in closing.
Miss Erma Smith presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer.
She extended a welcome to Mrs.
Jolm Terrell who has been absent
due to illness. Various reports were

CB club discusses
coffee break plans
The coffee break to be held on
Sept. 23 at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds was dlscussed during a
meeting of the Ladies Auxiliary oi:
the Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club, Inc. Thursday night at the
lxme of Mrs. Shirley Gibbs.
It was noted that proceeds from
bake sale will go toward special projects foc the coffee break. Members
were reminded to take their bottle
caps to the next meeting. A •'fun
pond" will be held at the coffee
break by the Auxiliary.
Plans were also discussed for a
potluck dinner to be held later this
month. The door prize donated by
Mrs. Gibbs was won by Mrs. Marie
Thmlas, Mrs. Patty Capehart won
the gift donated by Mrs. Ethel
Drake. Mrs. Capehart will have the
next meeting, Sept. 20, with Mrs.
Maxine Jordon as co-hostess. New
officers were nominated with the
election to take place on Sept. 20.
Sandwiches, potato chips, pickles,
coffee and lemonade were served by
Marie . 1bomas and Mrs. Leona
Krautter.

given. Ben Neutzling, Everett
Dailey, and Esther Fugate were
remembered by the class. Roundrobin birthday card was signed for
the Rev . W. H. Perrin who
celebrated his birthday Saturday.
The birthday song. W._!lll sung for
Mrs. Stella Kloes and Mrs. Neva
Seyfried. Communications included
thank you cards from the Erb family
and Mrs. Marie Hauck.
The class will again be selling birthday cards and get-well cards as a
project. A rummage sale was announced for Oct. 3and 4.
World wide communion service on
Oct. 7 was announced and will be
followed by a fellowship covered
dish dinner for members and their
guests.
Hostesses for the October meeting
will be Mrs. ,Terrell, Mrs. Archie
Swartz, and Mrs. Arthur Slusher.
Mrs. Lillie Hauck and Miss Smith
were hostesses. The table decora·
lions carried out the fall motif. A birthday cake baked by Mrs. Dale
Smith in honor of all the 00 year old
members of the class was served.

Miss Florence Circle was honored

with a surprise birthday party on
Sept. 1 at 7::.l p.m. at the home of
her nephew, Larry Circle, Racine.
A three-tiered birthday cake
decoated with yellow roses was bak·
ed for the occasion by Mrs.
Margaret Tuttle. Miss Circle receiv·
ed numerous gifts, cards and
flowers from friends and neighbors.
Cake, punch, coffee, and mints
were served to Mr. and Mrs. Gayle
Price, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Alkire,
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Circle, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Ables, Mr. and
Mrs. Hayward Bissell, Mr. and Mrs.

SOCial Calendar .

I

SACRED HEART GUILD will
hold executive committee meeting
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in church
auditor ium . All offi cers and
commis::ion chairmen are asked to
attend.
MEIGS COUNTY Board of
Education meeting Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m. at office on Mulberry Heights.
XI GAMMA MU CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 6::.l p.m. Tues·
day progressive dinner. Appetizer to
be served at Ruth Riffle 's home, the
salad at the home of Susie Baer, the
main course at Annie Chapman's
and the dessert at the hoine of Mrs.
Carol McCullough.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. James Titus. Mrs.
Everett Hayes on Shakespeare for
the program.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
CLUB, 8 p.m. Wednesday at the
Riverboat Room of the Athens Coun·

MONDAY
TWIN CITY Shrine Club Monday
at 7:30p.m.
LETART FALI,S PTO Monday
7:30 p.m. at Letart Falls Elemen·
tary.
BETHEL 62, International Order
of Job's Daughters, 7::.J Monday
night at the Middleport Masonic
Temple,
TUESDAY
BIG BEND CITIZENS BAND
RADIO CLUB, 7:30 Tuel!day at the
Rodi:-.Springa Grange hall. Final
plans for coffee break on Sept. 23. AU
membel'll Baked -to attend. lAdies to
take cookies, coffee furnia!Mid by
club.
Ohio ETA PHI Sorority Tuesday,
7:30p.m. in river boat ·room.

PROCLAMATION SIGNED- Mrs. Mary Martin,
left, and Mrs. Ruby Marshall look on as Mayor Claren·
ce Andrews declares Sept. S.16 as Cystic Fibrosis Week

program
ministering
children was presented by Mrs.
Helen Teaford assisted by Mrs.
April Harmon and Mrs. Mary l.Jsle
at the recent meeting of the United
Methodist Wome~~ of the Asbury
United Methodist Church
Mrs. l.Jsle opened the meeting
with devotions using ''The Light"
from "These Days." Thirty sick
Wayne Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Harold ·· , visits were reported and those allenCircle, Steve and Matt, Mr. and Mrs.
ding turned in their blessing boxes.
Plans were announced for the Day
James Cundiff, the Rev. and Mrs.
Carl Hicks, Mrs. Martha Lee and·
Apart district meeting to be held in
Becky, Mrs. Lula Circle, Mrs.
Nelsonville. Mrs. Teaford reported
Dorothy Harden, Pam and Sandra,
that the m.t,.sionary birthday cards
Jack Follrod and Kim, Mrs. Avis
had been sent to Margaret Rickard
Jackson and Jeremy, Miss Vema
o!Okayama..l(en, Japan.
Circle, Mrs. Mary Russell, Mrs.
The spiritual life closing was by
Sylvia Pool, Mrs. Rose Deem and
Mrs. Opal Kloes with members givMichael, Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle,
ing the Lord-'s Prayer. Attending
Miss Julie Rose, Chester Van Meter,
besides those named were ~Mr. and MrS. James Patterson and
Margaret Eichinger, Mrs. Nora
Terry, Sue Hager, Mr~· and Mrs.
Houdashelt, Mrs. Anna Hilldore,
Douglas Circle, and Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Rose Ann Jenkins, Mrs. Mary
Cundiff.
·
Larry Circle, Shane and Grant.

FREE BLOOD PRESSURE
CUNIC sponsored by Harrisonville
Senior Citizens Tuesday from 10
a.m. to I p.m. at the town hall.

In Pomeroy. Mrs. Martin and Mrs. Marshall are co-

chainnen for the week. The proclamation concludes,
"I hereby urge all citizens to ollllerve this period by
donations to this wocthwhlle cause."

Yrogram heard Plans made to
A
on
to
attend event

BUTT
ROAST LB·

g·gla
SAUSAGE...~
·gge
BALLARD
· ·

JOINT CONCERT

Misti King

Turns four years
Misti Dawn King, daughter of
Danny and Cindy King, Route 2,
Pomeroy celebrated her fourth birthday recently at the home of her
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack

NEW YORK (AP ) - Marilyn Horne
will sing a special joint concert with
Dame Joan Sutherland at Lincoln
Center's Avery Fisher Hall Oct. IS.
The concert is to be broadcast
over PBS television staurs.

King.

A Scooby Doo cake was served
with ice cream, chips and koolaid.
Gifts were presented to Misti by her ·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack
King and Mr. and Mrs. David Campbell, Connie, Kim and Ricky Patterson, Kim, Jason and Jeff Dowel~
Roger King, Gary, Tony, and
Jeremy King, Dink Wilson, Otis,
Deanna, Angela Norris, Greg, Dick,
Timmy, Carla and Darla King,
Brian and Jackie Justice. Sending a
gift were her aunt and uncle, Jerry
and Sandra Edwards, New Richmond.
Austria 's Kurt Waldheim was elec·
ted secretary-general of the United
Nations in 1971. Waldheim succeeded
.the retiring U Than!.

I

SHOP
MEIGS
COUNTY
FIRST

STRETCHES YOUR DOLLARS

mal

Our On6 Lo w Pnce. No Hidden C11bAet

Owr One Low Price. No Hldden Charwa
Cuu'bm FullllfJ Per &amp; {ul/ lo w~ r d r nru rts .

For Complete Information Call FREE

1-800-282-6410

Outside Ohio Call Free 1-800-848-6478
CDII todllY fo r
your Fr ~ ropy

of Dr.

R itift~'s

m formuri ~·r

hrocl!urr

l.lr. RlvleR pays fo~ the coli!

Riviere Center
Dr. RolliN F. RI,Mrt
Dr A.J. S ta~ ~l r • Dr. G.J . Srombauah • Dr . C. W. lkal
Or W .ll. Kimball • Or J .C. Murph ¥ • Or v.IJ_ . Stulr l
f)r t, ,W &lt;\ ~ 1m 1 • Or . G . A Muort

9ft F.

I~

A¥t.

Col•mbus, Ohio 4JW.

89

ON IONS······ 3. LB. 59
.

N.EW YELLOW

~

~s=
ocl&lt;s-=1 WE WANT YOU TO SHOP WITH US

MEALS

CAMPBELl'S

PORK 'N

GAR5~J

For Only

DEL MONTE

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

-

FABRIC SOFTENER

MOST COUPONSEXPIRE FEB. 28, 1910,
AND ARE TRANSFERABLE .

OVER $200 WORTH OF THESE COUPONS REQUIRE NO ADDI·
TIONAL PURCHASE. THE ONI:.Y ITEMS YOU ARE REQUIRED
TO PURCHASE SOMETHING ELSE IS IN THE RESTAURANTS '
AND THAT IS BUY ONE, GET ONE FREE.

Participating_Merchants In Meigs County SHOP·A·THON Are
BEN FRANKLIN

M!IGS INP'f
MEIGS INN PIZZA
ROBINSON 'S DAY
CLIANERS&amp;LAUNDRY

KIDDII! SHOP PI!
RIDENOUR'S SUPPLY
CARTER ' S PLUMIING &amp; MaATINO
RIDENOUR'SOAI STATION
RIDI!NOUR ' S TV &amp;A,.I'LIANCE

SKATI· A·WAY
ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO SI!RVICI
SUGAR RUN ASHLAND
J&amp;RSPOitTSMOP
MARK VSTORE

PROGRAM CONDUCTEO BY NATION WIDE ADVERTISING Cu.
ROUTE 14, BOX32SC BOWLING GREEN, KY.42101
Phone 842-3191 - Direclor, larry W. Gibbs
FOR MORE INFORMATION
Call Us AI99Z.S9.00 Aller Sepl. 10, 1979

CAN
11

.A

lb

Jer

$11••
A

COLUQE INN

$2495

TWO ' S COMPAN Y DRESS SHOP
MIDDLEPORT BOOKSTORE
CROSS HARDWARE
THE SEWING CENTER
ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II
POMEROY BOWLING LANES
ACE HARDWARE·&amp; RADIO SHACK
Fot.BRIC SHOP
MOOR!! ' $ STORE
HARTLEY' S SHOES INC .

oz.

, CHICIEI BROTH

FIIIL TOUCH

SHASTA POP ................................ 6 '2.;~: s100

laMAR BEAUTY SHOP
VILLAGE PHARMACY
PAT HIL L FORD INC.
SMITH NI!LSON MOTORS
IREND~ ' S BOUTIQUE
POMEROY HOME' &amp; AUTO
FRANCIS FLORIST
MtCLUiiii: 'S l · IN.ONE

16

IESTLES QUill

AISUA1£D AEG . • IJIET fL,:O, "' u"S

Groceries

·
16 oz. 99'

SPAGHETTI OR MACARONI

IN MEIGS COUNTY .•.

YOU t:AN GET EVERYTHING ON THIS t-r=-AD AND MORE - OVER 1275

BEANS· ·······~ .. •••• ·

3

MUEllER

110.00 purch•••

Service
Call

· REG. SIZE

oz.
09
CHEERIOS·... ••• •.. ~. •.. •. •. • 15 oz. ••• •••. '1

HITE SATIN GRANULATED

t=re~ TV

Men's

DAIRY VALLEY
{or

POTATOES .. !~.~~:. 89~

3
'
CANNING LIDS •••••• •••• 12 CT. BOXES 99'

RC

THURSDAYP~NLY

~

LA8160L99
.
CO
WITH PURCHASES

Custom full upper &amp; lower

While you wait.

· U. S. NO. 1

CENTER SLICED

KERR

BE LISTENING FUR YOUR PHONE TO RING

Dentures

LB. BAG

WHEATIES·~ .................. l8

SAVE OVER S275 BY SPENDIN(I ONLY S205
It's A Book 01 Coupon• Thlt 5JMnd1 Like Money

Ser. Calls
Panties

APPLES
3

SALE' DATES
SEPTEMBER
10-15. 1979

FREE.

~Heating

OHIO FIRST CROP

,!WU'.ANTITY RIGHTS RfSERVfD

SHOP-A-THON PROGRAM

!

PRODUCI

HAMS......~.!.1

IS SPONSORING TH"'

IN

Phone number IS same as Grocery Store

FRENCH CITY

PORK BUTT

THE MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES

50.00 .

THE SHOP 992-3471

BACON •.......~ .. }
s169
WIENERS.~.~•..

SLICED

'

1

Sunday School attendance on Aug. · and Mrs. Waid Swartz of Athens ;
:J3 was 33. The offering was $19.36.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Swartz, Shadez;
Atendance at worship service was Grsce Swartz, Mr. am! Mrs. Hobart
Swartz, Nina Robinson , Clara
29.
The U.M.W. at Janet Moore 's this
Follrod, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Swartz
month was well attended. Some of.
of Pomeroy; and Boyd Ruth and
fleers had to be changed and more
family , Pomeroy; Mrs. Zura Hawk,
infonnatlon will be published later.
Shade, and Charles and Helen
Mr. and Mrs. Wilber Parker at- Woode, local.
tended a family picnic at the home of
The Shelter House has received a
Mr. and Mrs. Parker Thursday
new paint job.
evening. Others rpesent were WU1is
The homecoming at Alfred U. M.
Parker, Parkersburg, W. Va., April
CHurch will be held on Sunday, Sept.
t6, with special singing. "All are
and Aaron Parker, Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Parker and Mr. and Mrs.
welcome.
Marion Parker, all local.
r-----------~------~=· The Swartz family reunion was
HOW'S YOUR
held in the Woode Grove Sunday,
Aug. 26. Due to the rainy W\!ftther the
people from northern Ohio did not
attend.
Harold Swartz ot: Willlamston, W.
Va. acted as president Others at-~ . . u.cnn-...,.1
tending besides the Harold Swartz
Gregg Gibbs
family were Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
99~ ·3443
Swartz and family of Marietta; Mr.

$ 49

FRENCH CITY
SLICED

TAVERN

SHOP
MEIGS
COUNTY
FIRST

OVER

ITAUAN SALES

ROME (AP) - Toiletries and
COllllletics sales in Italy came to
almost $1.7 billion last year, up from
51.49 billion in 1977, according to the
National American Association of
Chemical Industries.

Alfred Social Notes

RED &amp; GOLDEN DELICIOUS &amp; JONATHAN

,

Jean Roush, and a guest, Elva Hudson.

It listenlno
For Yo11 P•ont
To Ring

F1UDAY
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, meeting 1:30 p.m.
Friday at home Ill Mrs. Paul Eich
with attoriley, Mrs. Barbara Knight,
u speaker.

TURKEY .
.LEGS ...........~

PORK

AT NELSONVILLE
Mrs. Opal Klees, Mr!. Margaret
Eichinger, Mrs. Nora Hoodashelt,
Mr!. Helen Teaford; Mrs. April Har·
moo, Wendi and Crystal, and Mrs.
Rose Ann Jenkins were in Nelsonville recently to attend a district
meeting of the United Metllodbt
Women.

'The Pearl of Great Price'
subject of UMW.meeting here
Mrs. Kathryn Windon was the program leader for the September
meeting of the United Methodist
Women of the Chester Church.
"The Pearl of Great Price" was
the topic with the purpose being to
praise God for a Christian heritage,
to pray for commitment, and to present information about the women's
division and to pledge gifts for mis·
sions.
Mrs. Windonstated that over a
hUndred years ago a handful of
women launched an organization
that would send missionaries into all
the world. She noted that the Bible iS
clear in teaching that Christians are
to share their possessions and respond to the needs of the world.
Mrs. Helen Wolf was pianist with
Ruth Karr as song leader for group
singing of "A Charge to Keep I
Have" and "Jesus Calls Us'" Scripture for the program was taken from
portions of Chapter 5 and 6 of Matthew. " Amazing Grace" was played
by Mrs. Wolf as each member plac·
ed her pledge card on the altar by a
lighted candle. Mrs. Windon closed
the program with a prayer.
Mrs. Bernice Bailey presided at
the business meeting. The
nominating committee, Eva Hollon,
Bertha Smith, and Elizabeth Hayes
reported with the new officers to be
installed at the November meeting
by Mrs. Altona Karr and Mrs. Ethel
Orr. Officers' reports were given.
Forty sick calls were made by the
group in the past month. Cards were
signed and sent to several persons of
the community who are IU. Mrs.
Kathryn Baum was reported a patient in St. Joseph Hospital,
Parkersburg.
Named to have charge of the election day dinner in Noveniber were
Ruth Karr, Helen Wolfe, Kathryn
Windon, Bertlui Smith, and Altona
Karr .
Attending the meeting besides
those named were Betty Roush,

prayer chairman, will be speaker
when Pomeroy Chapter Women's
Aglow Fellowship meets at 7 p.m.
Thursday at Meigs lnt' for dinner
and meeting.
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
Chllpter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
6:30 potluck dinner at the home of
Mrs. Teresa Swatzel, Chester Road,
Thursday night Members to take
covered dish. Social conunittee in
charge of dinner.

WE DO CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING

ATTEIIID MEETING

Plans for going to Vienna, W. Va.
to attend Cadette Event '79 were
made when the Southeast Melga
County Cadette Troop · 1180 met
Tuesday night at the home of Mrs.
Patty Capehart, leader.
·
The Black Diamood Council program for cadettes will be held on the
last weekerid of September. Filii activities were discussed and anyon~
interested In joining the troop ill invited to attend the meeting Tuesday
from 7 to 8 p.m. at the Chester town
hall, Refreshment .were served
following the meeting by Tammy
Capehart.

Florence Circle honored

Entertain with
wedding party
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Morris entertained on Saturday, Aug. 4, following
the wedding of their son, Dan, to
Carla Teaford, with a party at their
home.
The buffet table was centered with
a floral arrangement of pastel
mwns. Ham, barbecue, cheese,
relishes, potato chips and beverages
were served.
Attending the party were the
honored couple and the hosts and
their daughter, Carol, Jim Anderson, Tina Connor, Mike Tlllls, Pete,
Terri, Lori, Greg and Tricia
Michael; Roland and Fern Morris,
Don and Donna Rose, Ron and Nan·
cy Russell, Jim and Sandy Codner,
Christy and Cathy Hess, Dale and Jo
Goodnite, Terry, Debbie, and Jackie
Reid, Kenny, Terri and Angie Had·
dox, Jolm and Sylvi~ Blake and sons,
David and Jolm, Dan and T811Uny
Wetzel , Jeff Newell and Tammy
Teaford.

I

ty Savings and Loan Co. Pomeory office. Francis Schaeffer to present
program on dahlias. AU garden club
members invited to attend.
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR
GARDENERS, 8 p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Edward Burkett, with Mlas Er·
rna Smith, co-hostess. Officers will
be installed.
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club meeting noon Wednesday
atMeigsiM.
ALL BOYS between 8 and 18 in·
terested in scouting report to the
Boy Scout building, Racine, (next to
barbershop), 7:30p.m. Wednesday.
AU boys mi!SI be accompanied by a
parent or guardian ; this is only
signup this fall .
mtJIISDAY
WESTERN SQUARE dance,
Thursday, 7:30 to 10:~ p.m. at
Royal Oak P~trk recreation building.
Chad Johnson, South Pollit, caller.
Refreshrilents will be served and all
W~m square dancers cordially
llivited.
JOYCE HOBACK, intercessory

VALLEY BELl

COTTAGE CHEESE $}
FRESH BORDEN

BORDEN

Ll

Gallon
Carton

$

19

'

CHIP I DIP ................................:....... .'~;~~- 791
BLUEBONNETIOFT

I -Lb .

MARGARINE '""'""""""""'""'

Tub

79(

JOB SQUAD

TOWELS

· !l&gt;O STORES ' CARDINAL FOOO
&lt;:;

57

JUMBO
ROLl

DEQMAIEDDA

SPRITE, TAB OR COKE
I fRffZfR VALUES

J9

96-oz.
Bottle

8 Oi Bns.
PAK 16

$109

Plus Tax And Deposit

v

'

li
~

?!

'bo STORES
&lt;§'0 ST ORES o CAR01NAL FOOO

...

...
~

·z
5

MT. TOP APPLE PIE .......... ---·--~- ...................... ----- .......... .':t~
.

•1"

12-oz. , , t

ORAIIIE .JUICE .................... ~~~..

$1••
ICE CREAM SAIDWICHES.-.. ---- -- ........ -.....•......... -- ··,.,
12-Ct .

ICE C

u

0

FUDGESICLE ..................... ~~.~~~~ ....99~
.,L::::::_)&gt;....

i...

KEE

z

VALLEY BELL

MINUTE MAIO

~

..."'
u

ES "
69(~
w

11115/JI
I flloy•l lhl• l1a'"

e"'
Vl

cA'Roi1~·A,I#

COUPON

AL
!
$127~
"'
"'
CAROIT~AL 1/f
0

I:

�6- The Daily Se· ' . 1, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday , Sept. 10, 1979

•

Sentlilel, Mfddleport-?omeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 10, 1579

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

lff}ji~ fi)'il ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ·
byHenriAmoldlndllobLee

..::
-.
.r,

Unscramble these l®r Jumbles.
onelener to each square. lo fOfm
. four o&lt;pinary -us.

~.

( RUHYR

i .

WANT AD
CHARGES
IS Word.'l or Under
Cash
ChlltJ!tt'
1da\'
2da}ts
3 dllyS
6 days

1 -~

1.00

uo

1.00
2.!$

1.110
3.00

3.75

Each word ovN the minimum
15 words is 4 cents per word per

day . A&lt;b runnm~ other than consa :utivf' da)'!l wi ll bP r har~cd "'
thf.o I day nh:.
Jn memory, Can.l of Ttll!nks

and 0bitua r)' . 6 cent.&lt;s per wurd,
$3.00 minimum. Ca~h in advanl.'t' .

Mobile Home sales and Yard
sale11 are aC'C.'e pted ooly wi lh
cash with order. 2S L-ent cMrgc
for lids carryif18 Box Number In
Care of The Sentinel.
Thf: PubUsher reserves tht&gt;
righl to edl t or reject any ads

deemed ob ject iona l. The
Publisher will not be tl.'!-ipnnsiiJlt•
for more tha n one incurred in
serti&lt;fn .

Phone

992·2 1 ~

NOTICE
WANT~AD

APVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monilll\'
Noon on SatUrday

Notices
GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRID"Y
7.:10 PM R"CINE GUN CL UB.
F" CTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY.
MEIGS COUNTY HUM.o\NE
SOCIE TY . 992·6260 . Pots

COUNTRY MOBILE Home t'ork .
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
Lorge lots . Call 992.-7-479.

available t or adoption and in·
forma tion service.

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
, Village Manor . 992-nB7.

GUNSHOOT.

SWlday

4 P.M

Friday a rt crnoon

-~

Tu..der, Sept. 11

ASTROoGRAPH
Bernice Bede Os ol

~'-Your

~'Birthday
Sept. 11, 1SI79
You r chances tor success took
ver y good this coming yea r. pr ovided you don'! se t more goa ls
than you an ach ie'.'e. Foc us on
the most pr oductive and pass up
the othe rs temporarily .
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sopt. 22) A
member at you r famil y may no t
be as percep tive. and inno v8tive
as you are . so you may have to
ju st go ahead and pr ove yourself
right . You ca n do 1t. Find out
mor e of wh al lies ahead tor you
m the year l ollowing your birth ·
day by send ing for yo~Ji'" copy of
Astra-Graph Le ller. Mail $1 fo r
each to Astra-Graph . Box 489.
Rad io City Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth dat e.

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0ct. 23) Keep

you r clever thought s to yoursell
today. You could run the risk of
someone snatching them away if
y ou tell the wrong person .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Now. 22) Your
1deas could be fant as tic today.

but make certa in vou are aware
ot their price tags before barging
lull steam ahead. You might
deem them impractical.
SA·GITTARIUS (Now . 23-D~ . 21)
Other s are likely to have more
la•th In your ingenious plans
today tha n you Cl o yourself. Step
back so you can see wt1 at they
see.
CAPRICORN (DK. 22-J•n . 19)
It' s to your advantage to tell it
I1M.e it is today, rather than to
hold anything back. Honesly is
your best policy. even it !he truth
hurts.
AQUARIUS (Jin. 20-Feb. 19)
You may become involved in a
speculative silua!ion l oda:y that
has pr ofitable promise . The
return s may not be as large,
howe\ler. as you might imagine.

Run

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUND...V I
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONLY.
RACINE GUN CLUB.
ABSOLUTELY no hunting on
my f orm . Freemon Williams .
M inersville, OH.

3 AND 4 RM furni shed and un·
fu rn i shed

opt s.

Phone

992·5•3-0 .

ass i stan c e

a v ai l able .

9'12·7721.
1

SYRACUSE .
/ J double. 2
bedroom, semi furnished,
adults only , no children or
pets. Deposit 992-27 .. 9.

APT .

FOR

ren1

in
Pomeroy , after 5 :30, call

992 ·5621 .
C. Haye s i s
prese ntly working at the
H air Harbor in Mason,

WV . Call lor appointment 304·77 3·5369.

Mobile Homes Sale's

LARGE HOM!: in
Le tart Fall s a r ea .
Referen c es reQu ired.
F or information, con·
tact Fred W. Crow,
evenings, 992·2562 or

197.. 14 x 70 mobile home.
Good condition. ~2· 5858 .

LYNN

HAVEN

14x65 3

bedroom .
Vindale 12x6J w ith expan -

do, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12 x60 3
bedr .
1973 Skyline 12x55 2 bedr.
Bonanza 12x 52, 2 bedr .

B&amp;S MOB ILE HOME
SALES , PT . PLEASANT,
wv ., 304-675·4424.

Wanted to Buy

GiveAway

9'12-2689.

TAURUS (April 20-Moy 20) Car-

Ing deeply tor othera and
expra111ng It maaterlully today
will c~rtalnly work to your advantage. However, one with little
scruples mav try to uae thla to
his benefit.
Q!MINI (Moy 21-Juno 20) It's
belt to work alone today II poaalble, because your craetlvlty and
orig inality could be diluted by
one who thlnka ne Ia helping but

Isn 't.

CANCER (Juno 21-July

22)

Plans lormullted today will
prove to be sound and clever,
evan though It might be dlfflcull
to put !hem Into action today.
Don 't discard them .

LEO (July 23-Aug

22)

The

resourceful and shrewd manner
which you conduct your alfalrs
today will reward you handsomely . Taka care not t o be
overwhEIImad by success.

In

( NEW SP APE~

ENTERPRISE ASS N )

WILL DO baby sitting In my
home for a child from 3 to 9
years of age. Call Alice
Williams. 9~9 - :2571 .

992·3018.

AND

mother

cot.

REGISTERED MALE Carin tar·
rier . 4 y8Cirs old. Female
beagle , spay.d. Not suitable
for children . 992-3090.
old, all shots . Too good home.

742-2545.
FIVE MALE tiger co!S ond 1
male hound dog, 3 mo. old . 1
lemole hound. 3 years old.
147-2624 .

TWO COLLIE ·HUSKY

Snoopy

lype,

Baby

car

slacks,

small

W.

32 L. 31,
size 16, girls

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

HOT POINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances

container.

985-3808, 2 miles east of
Chester on SR 248.

1976 OLDS CUTLASS Supremo.
P.S., P.B., A .C.. new radial
tires. 992-3443.

Help Wanted

1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE.
SECRETARY

shorthand

and

typing ,

knowledge of bookkeeping
helpful.
Good
fringe
benefits. Permanent job.

All replies confidential . Interviews will be arranged
immediately. Reply giving
full resume to Box 406,

Pomeroy, Oh 45769.
APPLICATIONS

EM·
29 ,000

condition .

miles. S2•oq. m ·3198.
1976 FORD VAN . 6 cyl . oulo ..
AM· FM cassette. 992-6137.
1973 GRAND PRIX. good ·Condition, sun roof , tap~. $1700.

9'12·5083.

1977 GMC ONE ton dump.
23 , 000
miles . $5500 .
BEING . 742·2395.

accepted for Registered
Medical Lab Tech. Apply
at the off ice of Dr. James

Conde, 150 Mill . St., Middleport, OH or phone
992·7271.
LIVE ~ IN

cellent

HOUSEKEEPER

wanted in exchange for
home and security . 985-4392

or write box no . 45898, Long
Bottom,OH .
MANAGEMENT POSI TION in Southeastern Ohio
' financial Institute. Equa l
opportunity
employer .
Send resume to Box 729A,

c the Daily Sentinel, 111

Evening

shift .

SECRETARY

lur

educa1ion ogency .
Good typing and steno ski lls
required , pleasant telephone
personality. Prefer maturity
and experienced person but
will accept capable person
with minumvm of 3 years ex·
perience . Available immediately . Submit resume to
PO Drawer 825, Athens , OH
-45701. An equal opportunity
employer.

25 LADlES 1o do tem ·
porary ,
telephone
survey work f.or Meigs

co . Jaycees ' Shop ·A·
Thon Program . No age
limit, no educational re ·
qu i rements , no ex perience
necessary .
Must speak c learly and

be able to read well. Pay
hour plus liberal bonus
for production. Two
shifts available,. 9 a. m .

to 330 p. m. and 4 p. m.
to 9 p. m. daily . High
school age OK . Apply in
· person to Mrs. Gibbs at

107 Sycamore St. in
Pomeroy, Ohio. Apply
Monday , Sepl . 10th,
from 11 a. m . to 4 p. m .

No phone ca lls please.
Do not call Jaycees con cerning this ad .

MEN, WOMEN, BOYS
OR GIRLS lo do llghl,
temporary
delivery
work for Meigs Co.

a y c e e s
Shop·A-Than Program .

J

No edu cational
re quirements , no age
limit,
no experience
necessary . Must have
neat appearance, a
.valid driver 's license
and your own transpor tat ion . Must know Meigs
Co . area well . Earn up

to SSO per day . Work any
hours you like between 9
a . m . and 9 p.m . daily .

High school age OK . Ap·
ply in person to Mrs .
in Pomeroy, Ohio, Mon ·

THREE BEDROOM house
1n

country

992-5871.

new

tires. 985 -3504

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

UPHOLSTERING

1975

MONZA.

excellenl

rust. 992 -5786 .
1969 FORD BRONCO, 4·
614·446·9595.

Under New M•n•. .ment (formerly Sytvii 'S
Upholstery),
1cross
from Codner't TexicO.

Other times by appoint-

Ph. 992 -3743 or 992-3752
8·1-lmo.

CALL 992 -7544

Real Estate for Sale

BRADFORD, AuctionHr , Complet• S.rvlc• . Phone 949· 247
or 949-2000. Racine . Ohio .
Critt Bradford .

REAl ESTATE loons . Pvrchos•
end refinance . 30 yeor terms,
VA. No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA - A.s low 01 3
per cent down (non- v•t•rons) .
E.
Ireland Mortgage Co.,
Stat•. Athens. 614- 592 . ~1 .

COAL,

LIMESTONE,

sand,

grovel , calcium chloride , fertilizer, dog food, and oil types
of salt. Excelsior Soh Works ,
Inc .. E. Moin St., Pomeroy,

9'12·3891 .
CANNING PEACHES now thru
Sept . 15. Bob's Market.
Mason. WV. Open 7 days.
Phone :W.- n:J.5721 .
IDEA No.20 2 row .
mounted corn picker or w ill
trade for 1 row. 985-3929 or

NEW

9•9·2660.
ORNAMENTAL
ALUM INUM concrete
moulds for making pic·
nic tables, bird baths

POTATOES FOR winter.
Kennebec ,

and

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

APPLES .

picking

Grimes Golden . Other
varieties to follow . Fitz ·
patri ck Orchards , SR 689 .
Phone
Wilkesv i lle,

669·3785.
EIGHT

prolecled plan . $46,250.
NEW LISTING - Coal

miners look at this one

camper,

self -contained . Fits 6 or 8
ft . bed . Excellent c ondi ·

tion . 949·2597 .

WINTER POT...TOES . C.W. Pro-

about 7 years old . The

closets, nice kitchen ,
dining
room,
utility,
carpeting, garage ,
storage building. Priced

Uitt farm , Portland , OH. $8 o
hundred ond $5 a hundred .

trailer

992 -6191

near

Tuppers

Plains. 614-667·3305.

MODERN 3 bedroom lotol
electric home . On a Iorge lot
In Hutchison sub-division .

742-20o47.
SI X ROOM house. large lot ,
natural
gos ,
Pomeroy .
$10,()(X). Coll992· 6168 after 6.
Will f inance .

w~

Jaycees concerning. this

PIGS , SEVEN

ad .

ooch . Strow , $1 .25 a bole.

19 ACRES , 2 /J miles from Middleport, 2 mobile homes completely set up. Rural water.
M inffral r ights. Interested per·
sons , Coll992-6305 .
1

200 ACRE FARM between
Pomeroy
and Athens . 3
bedroom house and good

born . $97.500. Only $25 ,000

$20

down. Own•r will finance.

Coll992-5266 .

3

tytt•r'ns ,

i

- Housing
Headquarters

Oswald: "My collection of
old bridge book.. includes one
written in 1935 by the late
RufllS Sommerville. He does a
pretty " good job on play and
his bidding is Interesting
because it shows how bidding
has improved over the last 50
years.'
Alan : "I note that his bidders seem to get to the right
contract. Do you think that he

STOCK

lhat were jes' a
N'Art.tt·P shot. men!

an' Rufus
ain't budqin',
is we, Rufus?

IVE BEEN

MEANING 10
A5K YOU ... HOW DO YOU
GE:T YOU R WH ITES SO
WHITE
YO UR
SO BRIGHT'?

WILL HAUL llmottono ond
gravel. Also. llrM hauling ond
spreoding. leo Morris Trude·
lng , Phone 742-2455.

REAl ESTATE: I acre i'Ofln Rig-.
gscr•at Manor, btltween Tupper• Plains and Chester .

Phone 985-3929 ond 985-41:1'1.
NICE COMFORTABLE B r05n
· hom• on opprox. 2 acr•• of
l•v•llond w lttl pl•nty of shade
trees ,
on Rutland Rd .

992-7255.
SEVEN ROOMS ond bolh. 2
acres .

m

~ . \.:., ,

3.65 . ,c...R.:S A?PROX. 2 mihts ·
west of Rl. 7 on 1~3 . level
acreage. 7"'2 -2656 ,

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "Win at·
BrlcJge, " care of this newspa- · P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Statton, New York, · N.Y.

ACROSS
35 ''Green -":
1 Gannent
J. Doraey hit
for Dracula '31 Infuriate
5 One kind
3'1 Hue; tint
of Uger
38 Gary
10 Word with
Cooper role
ant or mole 31 Remotely
11 Holding
DOWN
of office
1 Culled
lZ Spoken
Z Milde pubUc
u Diasolute
3 Confronting
lt Vin's
with
deacrlptive
t Building
1S Surnamed:
wing
Fr.
5Turf
II "The GenUe- I Girl's name
man 7 Obstructed
Dope..
• Dia!.n17 Spencer
tegration
Tracy role
t Scotto,
1t lntlecl egg
or Tebaldl
2e NlbUck
number
%1Greek

Ye~tenllly'a

11 Binding
material
1S Senora's

__,.

M lntermealie!
Zl Succeed
%II Aclrells
Ve~o

tiUe

Zl Powerful
beam
31 On one's
last -

18 Begetter

Z1 Hurtful
ZZ O'Hare

occupant
U Court·

34 Youngtlter

31 Greek

I'OQIII

fl&amp;ures

letter

porch

zz Indian
city
UDoe or
Bull
UTwlt
Z5UnfaWng
za Before
%'1 Embroi· .

Reedsvill•, OH 45n2. For Information coil, 667·b-485. Will
be open late If you nMd
something.

dery
yam

FELLERS
HEAR I MADE THREE
DOLLERS PLAVII\I' 811\160 !!

WAIT TILL

BALLS

FIRE !!TH' NEWS

SHORE TRAVELS , FAST IN THIS
NECK OF TH' WOODS

AND UP

.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

by THOMAS JOSEPH

•4••

I

••

+AQJ·Uu•
A Maryland reader wants
to know your rebid after partner responds one heart to your
one-club opening.
We simply jump to three
clubs and ·hope for the best.

· t'l~,.,,. -orr

ANN'S CAKE D..:orol109 SuP'
pli01. 50716 Osborn Rd.,

CASH

• KQxx

••
AlLEYOOP

. RUBBERBACK CARPn

Asking $17,500.
WANT TO REST
ASSURED YOUR HOT
WATER HEATER ,
ELECTRIC
AND
HEATING SYSTEMS
ARE PROTECTED
OURlNG
YOUR
LISTING TIME WITH
US, AND FOR ONE
YEAR AFTER YOU
SELL CALL 992-3325.

HenrY. E. Cleland, Jr.

12x65'

Opening lelj,d : t 3

·By Oowald Jaroby
aDd Alllll Soatag

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

·~:;~~kin~n~he rl~~~~

at just $37,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.

LOT .

septic

pm. Hartford Community
C•nter, Hartford, WV , 4 miles
obo ... e
Pomer·ay · Moson
Bridge.

bedroom home abo\le all
flOOds . Nat. gas furnace,
city water, bath, block
2

100 ' x400' .
Three
bedrooms with double

ACRE

You hold:

992·6309 or 742·23411.

BIG AUCTION ovory Wod .. 7

Want

WILL BARGAIN -

lot size is aPproximately

llh

3

- On the Ohio River.
We can also sell 5 acres
of woods for only $7,500,
on blacktop road, near
water line .

Beautiful brick and
frame ranch type home

$35,500. 742 ·3074.

••

KEEP LOOktM' ' "

$15,500.
RIVER FRONT LOTS

MOO ERN FIVE year old 3
FOOT

'" VIOLENT LIKf'...

AROUND

HERE ... GOTTA JUST

Steam
c leaned .
Free
est i mate .
Reasonable
rates .
Scotchguard .

INSURANCE

Auctions

large lot. City woter
stores .

tT SEEMED TO DIE

901 EVERYBODY SAYS

11 WAS RI6H1

S&amp;G CARPET Cleaning .

do•or, bockhoo . Rt . 143.
Pnono 1 (614) 698-7331 or
742·2593 .

bedrooms, bath , front &amp;
back porches, storage,
one extra building on

$6,000.00.
NEW LISTING

or 4 bedroom house. Fully
carpeted. Fu ll basement.
Drilled well . Situated" on
approx. 21J"' acres of land.

cavatlng,

enclosed ceramic bath,
2 car garages, Ohio
Power heat r and over 1
acre for the children .

near

-

TH' Ffl(ER5 AS liAW

per lence . Coli Athens, col lect, Gerold Clark 797·&lt;1857
or Tom HO!klns 797 ·2745.

HOWERY AND .MARTIN Ex·

that has 3 bedrooms,

-

WAL, NO,NOT fXACTL'f .. .

.,

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: East
Weot North E.ost Soath
It
Dbl.
Pass
3t
Pass 6+
Pass
Pass
Pass

ORPHAN ANNIE-"SEEK, AND YE SHALL J!'IND"

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor
IN STOCK for lmmlldlate
serving Ohio Valley reg ion. ·
dellv•ry: variou1 sizes of pool
Six doys a week , 2"' hours ser·
lo;its. Do- it· yooraelf or l•t ut
vice. Emergency cells . Coli
in•totl for yOll . 0 . Bumgardner
882·2952 or 882·3-0S..
Solei, Inc. 992-3724 .

copper plumbing over 1
acre. American Home

farm, O'Ver 6 acres. nice
1•;, story home with new
addition. Woodburnlng

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

Roofing,
gutters
and
downspouts .
Free
estimates .
All
work
guaranteed . 20 years e)( ·

m ·2143 .

Dbl. sink, eat·ln kit .,

$45,250 .
NEW LISTING

t A2
tAQJIII!

OHIO VALLEY Hootonw .

been cancelled? lost yoUr
operators
liurue? Phone

bedroom ranch home .
Dishwasher, disposal,

lol. $23,500.00.
SALEM
CENTER
ELEMENTARY - Mini

992-2259

AUTOMOBILE

--- -

SOUTH .
.• 7
• K Q 10

• 5 1 IT\0

PULLINS EXCAVATING. Com-

.

+&amp;

TQAilER NOW A\/Ail&amp;ll l l! .

pl•t• S•rvlc•. Phon•992·2o47B .

duplex .
NEW LISTING - New 3

chen , 3 bedrooms, large

LARGE SIZE Frankl in

Cobbler,

home, l lfz baths, nat .
gas heat, city water, 2
car garage on corner
lot . Can be made into a

.$19,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENTARY
Brick 1v, slory on a
good street. Bullt ~ in kit ~

.'

Pomeroy

GOOS E

may he taken a little liberty
with what . actually happened
at the table? South's final bld
of six clubs looks as if he were
flying blind in a fog and needed to know about North's singleton diamond in advance."
Oswald: "The slam would
be hard to reach hy modern
experts . Actually, South's
final bid of six clubs was typical of the scatter-gun slam
bidding of the early days.
North's two-spade jump was rl
force back then. It showed at
least two quick tricks. One
and a half in spades- pillS a
half in clubs this time. 'As for
the · singleton diamond , that
was a lucky guess. Of course,
the slam was a cinch."

IHO-A
NORTH
+ AQ96
• B 53
• 7
+Kl0743
WEST
EAST
• J53 2
e K 10 8 4
• 9742
• AJ6
• 96 4 3
tKQJ1115

1 Milors E n ! oiWIIIInvlll•

backhoe and dltcher. Chari••
R. Hatfield . Block Hoe S•rvice.
Rutland, Ohio. Pone 7~2- 2008 .

storage

bldg. Only $17,500.
$15,000.00 - Big 9 room

quick sa le and will deal ,
nice home with full~\
basement, large 1ot. 1

o lder home In Pomeroy,
large lot. Needs some
interior repairs. ONLY

Adams,

kit., full basemen!, 2 cor
and

Scatter gun slam bidding

BORNLOOER

"4-t6f ..lll10 E \'ltfll n•s ·

m ·3525 or 992·523'1.
EKCAVATING , dour ,

carpeting, knotting pine

$42,200.00.
POMEROY ELEMEN TARY - Owner wants

and misc . 742·2746.

SO . Forrest
378-6276.

11 ROOMS - 1v, baths,
garage,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ttn t Montto'"•"' •• ·
L•n•svltl•, Oftio

SUPER

(Anowero~)

BRIDGE

........%

TRAILER SAL£S

EXCAVATING . doz•r. loader
and backhoe wor;k: dump
truck• and !()-boys for hire,
will haul fill d irt, top soli ,
limestone ond gra ... e l. Call Bob
or Roger Jeffers, day phone
992· 7089 ,
nigh!
phon•

992·ll2l
2to. E. Second Street

- Syracuse Elementary
- Large family room
with
woodburning
f i replace , large garage,
3 bedrooms, dining ,
built -in kitchen , ex ·
cellent condition, ex ·
cellent location, many
features .
ONLY

•

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, toattert. Irons , all
small opplionc... lawn ma-r,
ne)(t to Stat• Highway Go rage
on Route 7 , 985-3825.

608 E . ·
MAIN
POMEROY , O.

RANCH

-.....

MoNTGOMERY

s•rvic•. all mok•s. m-~ .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy .
Autkorired Singer Sal.. and
Service. We sharpen Scluors.

fireplace, close to the
mines . $24,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Lorge

fireplace . New quilts.
Wood cook stove. 1 base
cab inet. Many items.
Between Tuppers Plains
and Reedsville, on CR

Ph . 992 -117&amp;

A(IIIIII)

CHIME QUf.VEA UNTRUE
· What a glrl naeda to capture a man"HE-QUIPMENT"

-

"'

Smith Nelm

SEWING M.o\CHINE Ropoirs ,

mercia! lots East
Main Street, Pomeroy,
priced as land va lue on ly, conta ins old houses
that could be used . Call
for details.

•

Mom, Inc.

~UPPORiEII: FO~
~E ~PEAI&lt;EF('.

·- -- Yestorday'al .Jumbftt : EMPTY

Racli.llDr

, ment.
107 Syc•more (Rnr)
Pomeroy, 0 .

IN SYRACUSE

Print enawer hete:

•

••e~ror

5m.1Unt .,.,.,., car..

A

Now arrange the drclod tettero to
toon the surprl.., lll1SW8r, as suggootod by the cartoon.

I KJ

'

Servtc•
ttt• ' ,,, ....
lullchu•r

trJ

IMUSSE

llrum

Hours 9-1 M., W., F .

n

BEAUTIFUL
1973
ELOORADO
CADILLAC, $2500. Call
IJave , 992 ·6255.

Racllator·t"""'"-...,

&amp;

Veterans Admin. loans.

NEW LISTING - Com ·

wheel drive . White spoke
wheels, 3 speed trans. Call

E~ERIENCED

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

WE'LL BE WAlTit.l6
UH-ER:·O~. ~ES!
AT LAtSUAflOIA AI~­
·I MEAN IJ -NO! OF
POR:T~ &amp;UT OON'T TELICOURSE NOT!
IINVON6 l 'VEf FOUND
HER:! •.YOU SAVVY J

8·21 ·1 mo.

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Housing

.
•

Free Estimiltes
992 -5304, 99l-2231

4-JO ·Ifc

Federal

OUT, PRONTO !
HOPEFULLY, T'S OME
PLACE WH!iRE THE
MAFIA CAN 'T FIND
YOU!

All M;mmary Work
Foundation,
·Brick Laying,
Concrete Finishing.

Rutland .

after

condition . Low mileage. No

Services
OHered

l 4 mile off Rt. 7 by -pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward

•New Home
•Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimiltes
992-6011

CLE'A~

4-S· If c

Roger Hysell
Garage

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

belled tires or S2700without

5:30p.m .

We1vers

Skiff Building)
Ph. 94P-2710 or 90-215G
8·29·1 mo

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992-2772
'
8·17-1 mo.

Rural water . 742 ·2746.

water .

Cformert.v

FrH Estimltes

Salem Center. 4.8 acres

Well

Loc•ted in R1cine, o.

Down Spouts

near

V·B; auto., P.S., P.B ., $2950.

Gibbs, 107 Sycamore St.
day, Sep1. 10th, 1979. Ap·
ply from 11 a . m . to 4 p.
m. NO phone calls
please . Do not call the

LOT

Four new all weather steel

For Sale

health

BUILOING

Clloreogropller

• Gutters 1nd

Real Estate for Sale

1976 BUICK REGAL, while

son .

GENERAL

Phone992 ·2181

with r~&lt;;J racing stripe and
red vmyl interior, radio,

Court St., Pomeroy , OH

CITY LIMITS. Barlender

Jack W. Carsey
~
Mgr .

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949 -2862-?49-216Q

. Instructor·

A&amp;H

I\?n-.::

..-D-- ·

OPENING SEPT. lllh
Cllssos: Ballet
Tap&amp; Jon
Aves-4 and up
Shirley C•rpenter

7·12

SALE PRICES
POMEROY
LANDMARK

Custom. 992· 5858 .

H. L Writesel
Roofing

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

• Replacement
Windows

Sales &amp; Service

HAVING SAVED FL06~Y FflDM THE MOB,-·
EA&gt;Y PHONES Mcl&lt;EE TO SEND HIS JET~

• ·23·1 mo.

Announcing Openfng of

etnsul•tlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows

I I I

State, Athens

9-7·1 mo .

I

TRIVED
CAPI'AIN EASY ·

592·3051

INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

742·2795.

Judy 698·679• .

MONDAY, SEPTEMIER.I0.197t
6:3()---NBC News3,15; Carol jltJrilett
6; ABC News13; CBS N...n 1,10;
Bob Newhart..17 .
7:oo-&lt;:ross-WIIs 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; Newlywed Gl!me 6, 13; New:a
10; Love American Sty~
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
- 20,33 .

•

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E .

94r-274t

J&amp;l BLOWN

home and· buliness. Electric
heat ond lighting. New work
or modernizing. Joe Deluca ,

NEW JANITORIAl Service!
lpecioliring in offices , new or
remodeled homes ond apartments. Call Bunny, 698·6031 or

KI)

down (non -veterans)

RACIN~ 1 0 .

8-26· 1 mo .

ELECTRICAL WIRING for form .

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK, coli
300-675-1501 or 305-675·2488
or30H75-1553.
197• DODGE CORONET 4·door

Must be 21. Apply in per-

BY CLARICE AlLEN
Mrs. Pauline Ridenour and Mrs.
Mace! Burton attended a three day
Garden Club Convention at Akron
University.
Mrs . Opal Eichinger and Laura
Jean spent the weekend in Colwnbus
with Mr . and Mrs . Charles
Eichinger and Suzannah.
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Zimmerman,
Newhall , Iowa, and Martha Lee and
Becky , Bashan, were recent visitors
of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur OIT.
Miss Mary Hibbs and Miss Tammy Sayre spent a couple of days with
Miss Faith Ann McCain , Marietta.
Miss Suzannah Eichinger, Colwnbus, spent a week with Mrs. Opal
Eichinger and Laura Jean.
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. RidenoW" attended the Qhio State Fair recently.
Mr. and Mrs. David Tysinger,
Tara and Brenna, SpartanbW'g , S.
C., spent a week with ·Mrs. Enna
Cleland . They also visited other
relatives in the area . ·
Mrs. Elma Reuter, Akron , spent
several days with her sister, Lucille
Smith.
Virgil Wood, Springfield, was a
recent visitor of his mother , Letha
Wood .
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur OIT and grandson, Bob Bill Lee, spent Thursday
night with Dr. and Mrs. Roger
Grueser and family, Logan, and the
weekend in Galion with Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Newnan and family. They
also visited in Ashly with his sister,
Mrs. Edith McElfresh.
ll&lt;lbby Hecox, Rockford, Ill., was
here for the Parker reunion and
called on Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hawk
and Mrs. Letha Wood .
Miss Faith Ann McCain, Marietta ,
spent several days with her aunt,
Mrs. Erma Cleland .
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour
received word of the death of Curtis
Carter at Wintersville, Ohio.

DOZER. END loodor and dump

Auto Sales

FARM CATS, 9 or 10.

own

men's

YARD SALE. Sept. 12 and 13.
9-3. One mile north of Chester
off At . 7 on CA 82 . 3 piece
bedroom suite. clothing, misc.

992 ·6260 . .
Bring

seat,

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

Beagle puppies, male·.
wormed .
Humane
Society .

needed .

Chester
News Notes

PAINTING AND sondblo1ting.
Free estimates . Coll9.. 9-2686.

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

KITTENS

needed. Must be good in
20)

367-7101.

.-.

FHA - AS lOW as J%

V.C. YOUNG Ill

Pomeroy, 0.

614-698·3B07.

truck. Will do bosem•nts,
ponds,
brush ,
limbe/,
l im!Jstone ,
and
grovel.
Chorles Butcher. 7&gt;42·29-40.

OFFICE

PISCES (Fob. 20-Moroii

Davis

Main St.

(eligible veterans)

(FREE ESTIMATE)

992-2367

rent house or nice apt. i n
Pomeroy ·Middleport area .

p .m . Tuesday 9 :30a.m . to 8
p . m . Winter c loth i ng ,
jackets ,
sta ck
suits,
blouses, dresses, odds &amp;
ends .

ANTIQUES, FURNITURE, gloss,
chino , anything. See or ca ll
Ruth Gosney . antiques. 26 N.
2nd ..
Middleport.
OH .

Deci sions you make today
should be based upon their longrange benefits, rather than on
their Immediate returns. Consider tomorrow, too, no! just today.
ARIES (Mtrch 21-AprU tt) Your
Ideas are good and should be
carried out today, but don 't
deceive yourself Into thinking
they are grander than they really
are. Be reallallc.

SALE ,

COUPLE WOULD like to

NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport- Poemroy area .
Coli for free estimate.

I ()

Loans

Pur c hase
a~d
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No money down

Gutter work , down
spouts, some ·concrete
. work,
walks and
drlvewavs.

Felturing : men's &amp;
women's
styling,
perms .
C1ll tor appt. or Willk in.

E.~e

Real

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

house in Pomeroy oreo . Phone
985--4366 e\l•nings.

tens 3 block , I yellow , many
others. 1 adu lt Persian .
Humane Society , 992-6260.

Shots ,

992·3161.

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
.. 1ntroduces'·

REASONABLY PRICED country

Services Offered

--

'::
._.
~

Wanted to Rent

10 and 11 , Monday 6 to 8

OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
clan rings , wedding bonds ,
diamonds . Gold or silver. Cal l

OH . 67.8-:1'180.

CARPORT SALE . Monday end
Tuesday, Sept . 10 and 11.
i0-5. Rain o r shine. Portable
typewriter, baby Items .
Reosonoble. 918 E. 3rd Ave .,
Middleport , OH .

residence , Rose Hill, Sept.

pups . 3 to 4 monfhs old,
females . 1 blonde, 1
brown and black . Also,

WANTED: SAW logs. Payment
upon deH ... ery to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods, SR 339, Barlow,

Business Services

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

TINY AMERICAN Domesti c kit-

OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes.
brass beds. iron beds, desks,
etc ., ~ om plate households .
Write M.D. Miller, Rt. · . .e .
Pomeroy or call ~2-n60 .

J. A. Wamsley. 742·2331 .

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sole. Tuesday and Wednesday at Don
Walker's , Fifth · St. , Racine .
OH . Pickup truck . lots ol
school clothes , many other
items.

PORCH

BORDER COLlE. mole , 1 year

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma)( .
diameter 10" on largest end .
$12 pe r ton. Bundl&amp;d slob. SID
per ton. Deli ... ered to Ohio
Pallet Co .. Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

YARD SALE . Monday ond

FOUR FAMILY Yard Sale. Mon·
dciy, Sept. 10 thru Friday Sept
111 . lots of good clothing. 3
miles north of Fairgrounds on
Old 33 . King residence.

992 2692 , days.

.....

Pets for Sale

l OST: VICINITY f.exos com· . HOOF HOLLOW, English and
muni ty , 2 bl ock Angu 1 West•rn .
Saddhts
and
Heifers. 6 mo. old . 995 - ~1 76 .,
harness . Horses ond ponies.
Ruth R•eve•. 61-4-698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Yard Sale
,Horta Core products.

ding. Call367-0292.
Tuesdoy . Every Item in yard.
$.10
each.
Union
A
\1&amp;.,
Close
.
POODLE GROOMING . Judy_
SENIOR CITIZEN S, 1 bedroom
Taylor. 614·367-7220.
oph .
for
rnet . Rentol toRt. ?. Storts at 10.

RI.T A

th~iday

bef~mblil'ation

FORKED

Sport• man Clu b each Sunday
sta rt ing Sept . 2. Factor)- choke
guns o nly .

1'\II;'Sdl:l}'

the ilily

Lost and Found

For Rent

I

Television
Viewing

30 Nlcltname
of 1936
31 Nora
Charle.l
portrayer

sz In the

1=-+--+-t;:-+--t-+-+--t-

style of
SS Mutineer

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

&amp;CARRY

II

.,.5

AXYDLIIAAXR
LONGFELLOW

s,ALE ON All CARPET IN STOCK

One letter siinp1y otanda for another. In thla sample A iJ
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, eto. Single letters,
ap011lroplteo, the leneth and formation of the worda are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD ' SELECTION Ot
CUSHION VINYL

CRYPTOQUOTES

.
CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
WendtH or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

..

,-------~----,IT

REPEAT THE QUESTION,
WILL 'IOU, MAAM?THERE'S
AN ECHO DOWN HERE ...

GQW

PBCT

TW .G YV HQ PTE T W L,
JXY

OYETYWT

TCTHD

Y.

0

AQD

YZ

YVH

OEBMTO,

ODESQLXD

WT.f'AO
LXT

EQHATW

LV

I.XTE

DTQH.

7 :30-That Nashville Muslc 3;
Muppet Show 6; Joker's Wlfd I;
Family Feud 10, 13; Nashvltle ~
The Road 1S1 My Three Sons t7i
MacNetf.Lehrer Report . 20,Ja
8 : oo-Holocausl 3,15; 240-Robert ,13;
Edward the !(lng 6; Bugs BuMy
8,10; Bill Moyers' Journal 33;
Falcons Football 17; Bill
, Moyers' Journal 20.
8:3()---P\Iff the Maglc Dragon B,'ID.
9:oo-NFL Football6,13; Mash 8.10r
Movie "Sex &amp; the Single Glrr'
17; Once Upon A Classic 20;
Murder Most English 33.
9:3()---WKRP In Cincinnati 8, 10.
lO:oo-Lou Grant 8,10; Poldark 33;
News 20.
10:30-Coplng With Klds 20; 11 :ooNews 3,8,10,15; Dick Cavett 20;
Book Beat 33.
·
11 :3()---Johnny Carson 3,15; Harry 0
8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
"Caprice" 10; Movie "The Fife
on Thelmo Jordan" 17.
12:00;--News 6,13; 12 :30-FBl 6;
Emergency One 13; 12 :40McMlllan &amp; Wife B.
l :oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1:30--

News 13.
1:35-Movle "24 Hours to Kllf" 17;
3:35--News 17; 3:55--0pen Up _
17

TUESDAY,SEPTEMIIER 11,1979
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL
Club
13;
5:55-Summer
Semester 10: World at Large 17.
6:0Q-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;
6:10-News 17.
6:2&gt;-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
6:31f-Dragnet 17; 6 :45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 :so-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6:55-News 13;
Chuck Whlle Reports 10,
7:oo-Today ' J,l5; Good Morning
America 6,13; Batman 10;
Tuesday Morning 8; 7:15-A.M.
Weather 33.
7:3()---Faml ly Affair 10; 8:oo-&lt;:apt.
Kangaroo 8,10; Leave 11 To
Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30--Romper Room 17; 9:oo-Bob
Braun3; Phll Donahue 13,15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Lucy Sllow 17; MIsler Rogers 33.
9 : 30-Bob Newhart 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
10 :00--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Famlfy 8, 10;
Morning Magazine 1J; Movle
"Run. Psycho, Run " 17.

·

10:30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10; MacNeiL·
Lehrer Report 33.
10 : 5~BS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :oo-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Prlce Is Righi 8,10;
Know Your Schools 33.
11 : 3D-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6,13; 11 :55-News
17.
12 : OD-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; Mlndreaders 15; Love
Amerlcan . Style 17;' Big Blue.
Marble 33.
12 :»--Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Not for Women
Only 15; Movie "The Jokers" 17;
Elec. Co. 33.
l :OQ-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
1:3()-As The World Turns 8,10;
2:oo-Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6, 13.
2:25---News 17.
2::»-Another World 3,15; Guldlng
Light 8,10; Glgglesnorl Hotel 17.
3:oo-Genera1 Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; t Love Lucy 17.
3:3()--Mosh 8; Joker's Wild 10;
Fllntstones 17; Crockett's Victory Garden 20.
4:oo-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hillblllles 8; Sesame St. 20,33; .
Six MUllen Dollar Man 10; Tom
&amp; Jerry 13; Spectreman 17.
4:»--Lone Ranger 3; Pelflcoat
Junction 8; Blonlc Woman 13;
Little Rascals 15; Gllllgan's Is.
17.
s :oo-Bonanza 3; Sanford &amp; Son 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Abbott &amp; Costello 15; My
Three Sons 17.
.,5 ::»-News 6; Gomer Pyle 8; Etec.
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10; ·
Happy Days Again 13; Lucy
Show 15; t Dream ot Jeannle 17;
Doctor Who 33.
6:0Q-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnettt7; Vllla Alegre
20.
6:3G--NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6 ; CBS News 8,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20.
7 :00-Cross-Wlts 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; News 10; Best of
Donny &amp; Mrle 15; Santore &amp; Son
17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:3G--Hollywood Squares J; Candid
Camera 6; Joker's Wild 8;
Hollywood Squares 10; Sha No
Na 13; My Three Sons 17;
MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33 .
a:oo-Sharks 3,15; Happy Days 6,13;
Wonder Woman 1,10; Movie
"Coptaln Newman M.D." 17;
Dreams of Manhood 20.
· 8:»--Angle 6,13; Two Ronnles 33.
9:00-Holocaust 3,15; Three's
Company 6,13; . Movle "Can You
Hear the Laughter?" 8,10;
Hollywood Television Theatre
33; Clr1 Workl.na 20.
_
9:3G--Taxl6,13; Dance at Dawn 20.
· 10 : 00-Lazarus Syndrome 6, 13;
10:3()---Baseball 17; Like II ls ·20.
11 :110-News 6,10, 13; Dick Cavett 20;
Book Beat 33.
11 :05-News 3,15; 11 :3D-Movie
"Revenge for a Rape" 6,13;
Barnaby Jofles 8;; ABC News 33;
Movie "EmbcJssy" ,10.
11 :35-Johnny Carson 3,15; 12 :oi0Movle "Dawn : Portrait of a ·
T~tJ_age ~unaway"

1 :00-Movte

a

"The ' Boy Crled

Murder" 17; 1 : Os-Tomorrow 3;

News 15.
1: 35-News 13; 3:80-News 17;
3:20-Untouchabtes 174 : 20-Draan~t '' ' 4:50-Dragnet 17.

)

.

�&lt;&gt;

8- The Daoly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 10, 1979

Gallia, Mason and Meigs dairymen
invited to field day Sept. 25th
Dairymen and their families in
Gallia, Mason, Meigs and surrounding counUes are invited to the 1979
Extension Dairy Field Day to be
held on Tuesday, Sept. 25, from ,12 :30
to 2:45 p.m. at Valley View Dairy
Fann, Rt. 2, Bidwell.
Blaine and Vaughn Taylor, and
their parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Taylor, will be hosts.

Tour highlights are :
- Well fertilized, managed stripgrazed pastures - divided by electric fence . Grazed from mid-April to
early October.
-$ Holstein cows - one of Gallia
County's top herds - A. I. bred - approximately 17,000 pound herd
average.
- Free.etall housing - 7'2 stall

- Bale Rustler dl!mlllll!lraUon handles $-1,500 lb. large bales. Can
load 5 bales hydraulically In two and
one-ball minutes and unload 'all in 30
seconds.
- Ught refreshments wW be. served at conclualm of the tour.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Wanda
Powell, Racine ; Billy Brewer,
Portland; Paul Andrews, Long
Bottom.
Saturday Discharges--Doris
Haynes, Bertha Bricldes, Geneva
Wtse, Ernest Taylor.
Sunday Admissions--Wanda
Guinther, Syracuse; Loretta Wooda,
Pomeroy ;
Evalena
Pauley,
Portland; Clair Bo8o, Portland;
Kathryn Lambert, Rutland; Anna
Uter, Lmg Bott&lt;m.
Sunday Discharges--Tammy
CUrtl.s, Marcia Hobstetter.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES SEPJ'. 7
James Baker, Sandra Beaver,
Raymond Boothe, Clleryl Caid, Mrs.
Orland Cremeans and son, Frank
Earles, Connie Evans, Elsie
Hackney, Terry Hesaon, CClllnle
Jones , Mrs . James Jones and
daughter, Mildred Mcaffee, John
McDaniel, Anna McKinney, Harold .
Mercer, Connie Morrison, Edward
Neece, Abby Neville, Paul Perkins,
Thelma Roberts, VIrgil Roush,
Cllarles Rowland, Marla Rutt, Irene
Sayre, David Shaw, Hubert Sheets,
Grant Stanley ,-Bmnle Taybor, Jane
Vinson, Teresa Williams.
BIR111S SEPJ'. 7
Mr. and Mrs. John Wlaeman, son,
Point Pleasant; Mr. and Mrs. Oliver
Fowler, 1011 , Wellstcn ; Mr. aild Mrs.
Carl ThcmBll, son, I.mg B«tom;
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Coleman,
son, McArtrhur.
DISCAIIRGES, SEPI'. 8
Jaaon Abbot, Douglas Adltina,
Arnold 'Barnett, Eva Bartra, Bess
Belisle, Ruth Bottomer, Audrey
llreece, Harold Copley, Mark
Ferrell, Shelly Fields, James
Frankli.on,
Ester Fuggltt, Ray
Hawk, Teresa Higgenbotham, Ellla
H11nt, Mildred Jacobs , Mrs.
Mlcbales McConntll and son, Joe
. Paugh, James Saunders, Gwen
Sheets, James Stewart n, 1bomas
Trapp, Michael Waggcner, Rebecca
Waltm , Mlna Womer.
BIR111S SEPT I
Mr. and Mrs. David Oldaker,
daughter, POint Pleasant.
DISCHARGES SEPI'. 9
Dennla Adllina, Rolla Blazer, Joe
Craig, Mrs. James Dobblna and son,
Mrs. Craig Fisher and daughter,
Dooald Funk, Helen McGuUre, Mrs.
Eldridge Stanley and son, Maude
Swan, Charles Thronton.
BIRDISSEP1'8
Mr. and Mrs. Roonie Silvers,
daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Buttrick, son, Gallipoll.s.

crushed to death In an Industrial
accident early Sunday, Hamilton
County sheriff's deputies said.
Witnesses at the Totes Inc.
plant, which makes ralnwear,
said Wilson, 32, was emptying a
machine when It began
qJeratlng, pulling him ln.side.

Attack rumored
DUBUN, Ireland (AP ) - A
police spokesman said Sunday
that Irish security officials are
considering the possibility of an
an attack on Pope John Paul II by
Protestant extremists when he
visits Ireland Sept. 29-Dct. I.
But he declined to comment on
a report in a London Sunday
newspaper that Protestant "hitmen" from the British province
of Northern Ireland have plans to
kill the Roman Gatholic pontiff.
"Everything is a possibility
and the precautions that will be
taken during the visit will in·
corporate every possibility," said
the spokesman Jor Garda, the
Irish police force. "But we caMot
answer questions on particular
stories like this . We.don't pay any
attention to those sort of things ."
SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Unit
answered a call to Pine Grove Road
at 2:36p.m. Sunday for Mrs.Kennelh
Lawson who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

LODGE MEETING
Racine Lodge 461, F&amp;AM, will
meet I at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
temple. All Master Masons are /
invited.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
A regular meeting of Pomeroy
Chapter 80, Royal Arch Masons, will
be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
th e temple and this will be followed
at 8:30 p.m. by a meeting of
Bosworth Council 46, Royal and
Select Masons. All companions are
asked to be present.

Area Deaths

1
TO END MARRIAGES
Dissolutions of marriage in the
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
include those of Kenneth K. Snyder
and Sherry R. Snyder and David
Reeves and Candy Bea Reeves.

WITH A
SAVINGS PLAN
FROM
FARMERS
BANK
Daily
51/ 0/
Compounded Quarterly
/4 /0
PASSBOOK Computed

90 DAY CERTIFICATE .....~:~~?:~~~- .. 51/z%
1 YEAR.CERTIFICATE ......~~·~~:~~ ....... 6%
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE ..... ~:~~~~~ ... .714%
6 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~;~~~~-- - J1/2%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE ....~:-~~-~~~--·· 7%%
Minimum

4 YEAR MONEY CERTIFICATE
M i nimum $1 ,GOO .OO, Interest rnte of 114% under the average 4 year

yie ld of Treas ury Securities.

MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
$10,000 min imum . Interest rate equal to th e rate of 182 day treasury

.
INDIVIDUAL RETIREMENT ACCOUNT
bill rat• . As determ ined at weekldy auction .

7%%

Substant ial Penalty For Earfy Withdrawal

COME IN TODAY AND START THE
SA VI NGS PLAN TO FIT YOUR NEEDS

Farmers Bank .
POMEROY, OHIO
..., n a

VISITORS TO the 1979 Jackson Extension Area Dairy Day see this 110
cow Holstein dairy herd at Valley View. Dairy Fann, Rt . 2, Bidwell,
q1erated by Blaine and Vaughn Taylor in cOoperaUon with their parents.

l

·~0.000 Millmuin Insurance F01 Each Oepositor ~

Member federal Deposit tnSUiance Conxntoo

FRED KAY
NEW HAVEN-Fred Kay, 90, died
Sunday at his residence in New
Haven . .
Mr. Kay· was born Dec. Z4, 188l!, a
son of the late John and Emma
McClain Kay. He was also preceded
in death by his . wife, Anna .
Surviving are a son, ·Robert Kay,
New Haven; a grandson, Daniel
Earl Kay, New Haven; two sisters,
Alesta Farrell and Hattie H~le, both
of Logan, W. Va. ; a brother,
Landford Kay, Mason, and several
nieces and nephews.
Private funeral services will be
held Tuesday. Burial will be in
Kirkland Cemetery. Friends may
call at the Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy from 3 to 9 p.m . today .
ROBERT BARNHART
Robert Barnhart, 94, died Sunday
morning at his home In Coolville
following a lengthy lllness.
Mr . Barnhart was born in Meigs
County, a son of the late Whitmore
and Martha Jane Olborne Barnhart. ·
He was a 55 year member of the
Whit e's Chapel Church near
Coolville and had been a Iarmer all
of his life.
Surviving are his wile, Nora, to
whom he had been marriM for 67
years; a son, Marvin D. Barnhart of
Coolville; three daughters, Mary
Belle Barnhart, at home; Mrs.
Harold (Bessie) Richards, Coolville,
and Mrs. Wilbur (Doris) Sinnett,
Athens; a sister, Mrs. Almon (Lena )
Morgan,
Carroll;
three
grandchildren, Karen Kempton ,
Beverly Dixon, Coolville, and Bob
Sennett, Millfield, and two greatgrandchildren. He was preceded in
death by his parents, two sons, a
daughter, lour brothers and two
sisters.
·Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter and the Rev . Phillip
Ridenour officiating. Burial will be
in White's Chapel Cemetery near
Coolville. Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime.
BONN:fE WOY AN

Bonnie Mae Long Woyan, 70,
Southside, died this morning in
Pleasant Valley Hospital followin g a
long Ulness.

.I

Born June I. 1909, in Apple Grove,
daughter of the . late William and
Luella Bright Long, she was a
lifelong .resident of Mason County.
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Geneva McCarty, Apple Grove and
Mrs. Wilma Jean Martin, Gallipolis
Ferry; three sons, Clifford and
Dallas, both of Southside, and Glen
of Seminole, Fla.; two sisters, Mrs.
Goldie Fooce, Apple Grove, Mrs.
Eunice Woyan, Marysville, O.; two
brothers, Worthy and Fred Long,
both of Apple Grove; 25 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday , I :30 p.m. at the
Wilcoxen Funeral Hoine with the
Rev . Charles R. "Tommy" Kinnaird
and the Rev. Odell Bush officiating.
Burial will follow in the Beale
Chapel Cemetery, Apple Grove.
Fr iends may call at the funeral
home after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

.

REUNION SLATED

The annual Gilmore Family
Reunion will be held at the roadside
park, on the right going north on
Route 33 Saturday. There will be a
covered dish dinner at noon. Those
attending are to take their own table
service.
.

MEETS TUESDAY
Meigs Chapter ~3 . Disabled
American Veterans, will meet at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the home on
Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
BOOSTERS TO MEE;T

The Meigs Athletic Boosters will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
high school.

p~-tYMAN

Pearl Hayman, 85, of Old Neal
Road, Point Pleasant, died Sunday
morning in the Cabell-Huntington
Hospital followin g a long illness.
Born July 12, 1894, in Mason
County, he was the son of the late
Stephen and Rosella Huffman
Hayman.
He was a veteran of World War I,
former employee of the Marietta
Manufacturing Co., retired plwnber
and member of the Church of God in
Jesus Name, Point Pleasant.
Surviving are his wife, Stella Belle
Hannon Hayman; five daughters,
Mrs. May Elizabeth Adkinson, Mrs.
Esther Patterson, and Mrs. Sherry
Lee Cogar, all of Point Pleasant,
Mrs. Helen Pratt, Gallipolis, and
Mrs. Eleanor Lo.ng, Gallipolis
Ferry; three sons, Stephen and Paul
Mason, both of Point Pleasant, and
James of Gallipolis; 23 grand·
children and 22 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday, l :30 p.m. at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home with the Rev. Ira
Wellman offlclattng. Burial will
follow in the Kirkland Memorial
Gardens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 p.m. today.
ASK TOWED
Car mel Lorene Murphy, 21,
Pomeroy, and Joseph Lee Evans, 35,
Christiansburg, Ohio.

I
1
I

FULL DENTURE . ••• . • •• • ..•... • .. .. .. •.. .• $125.00

CALL: For Information
i
For Appointment
I
(614) 992·2878 or {614) 992·2387
H. D. Brown, D.D .S., Inc.
200'12 w. Main St.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
i
By request of those who were unable to make an Ap·
pointment by Sept. 1, 1979, this offer is being cordially
extended through the month of Sept.

SESSIONSIATED

Eastern 'Local Band Boosters will
meet at .7:30 p.m. Tuesday In the
high school band room . Among
subjects to be discussed willl be a
membership drive, fund raising
projects and band activities. All
parents of any band student are
invited to attend the meeting.

·-··
---------------,
I DENTURE SPECI"L I
I
I
II

talks·

WASHINGTON (AP)- EgypUan President Anwar Sadat
called on the United States oo
Sunday to begin talka with the
Palestine
Liberation
Organlzatloo, saying such a
dialogue l.s neceasary If the
Mideast peace process l.s to SUC·
ceed.
The Egyptian president said he
bas been urging presldenta alnce
Richard Nlson to talk with the
Palestinians, but conceded ''it l.s
for the United states to decide"
how to reconcile such
negotiations with premises made
to Israel.
The United States bas said It
will have no dealings with the
PLO until the Palestinians
recognize Israel's right to exist
8llanaUon.

PTO WIU.. MEET
The Syracuse PTO will meet at
7:30 pm . Tuesday at the school.
Parents and teachers are invited.

I
I
I
I
I

1
I

1

·-----------------~-

POMEROY-MIOOLEPORT, OHIO

ELBERFELD$

Take better
pictures, more
places

Steve A. Bonecutter, 20, Village
Green Apartments, Pomeroy, is
being held in the Meigs County jail
on a warrant from West VIrginia
charging felonious theft.
According to investigative infonnation, Mrs. Margaret R. Roney,
owner and operator of the Roney
Market at New Haven, was alone in
her store around 1:30 p.m. Monday
when a young white male entered
and ordered two pounds of lunch
meat. When Mrs. Roney went to the
counter to ring up the sale on the
cash register, the suspect grabbed a
calaup bottle and struck her on the
head. He then reached into the open
cash register drawer and took some

t

bills.
Aa he fled the store, a customer

'

CINCINNATI (AP ) - The
estate d. Genette Lemmon, an eccentric spinster schoolteacher
who clied last. April at the age d.
81 , bas been appraised at $1.16
rnillioo in Hamilton County
Probate Court.
After Miss Lenunon clied,
police found $42,1)00 in cash and
5502,000 in stocks, bonds and un ·
cashed checks in her disheveled

was entering and was able to furnish
police with a good description of the
man and his getaway vehicle.
The description w8ll radioed by
New Haven Police to Mason Police
who spotted the vehicle traveling
north on US Rt. 33. Mason Police
began chasing the suspect who
drove across the bridge into
Pomeroy. During the chase Mason
Police notified Mason County
Sheriff's deputies and the Pomeroy
and Middleport Police departments
who began converging on the area .
The suspect drove Into the
Pcmeroy Kroger store parking lot
then drove behind the building at the
loading dock and jumped out of the
vehicle. He fled into the woods
behiind the Kroger store.
Arriving on the scene were Sheriff
James J. Proffitt, Deputies Dave
Ohlinger, and Manning Mohler,
Special l)eputies Milford Hysell and
Charles Rife, Meigs County Game
Protector Andy Lyles, Sid Little and
Eric Chambers of the Middleport
Police, Chief Jed Webster and Steve
Hartenbach of the Pomeroy Pollee,
and two Staie Highway Patrol all of
whom joined the two Mason Pollee
officers.
Following a search of the wooded
area , Booecutter WBll taken into
custody without resislanee.
Bonecutter was transported to the
Meigs County Jail and is being held
on a felonious theft warrant signed
by New Haven Police Chief T. J.
Parsons.
Bonecutter is to appear today in

Meigs County Corrunon Pleas Court
to sign waiver of extradiUon so that
he · can return to Mason County to
face the felony charge.
Bonecutter's vehicle was sean:hed
and $41 in currency was found under
its seat.
Mrs. Roney was traiwported to the
New Haven Medical Clinic by the
New Haven Emergency Squad,
where she wsa treated and released.
Chief Pal'l!Ons advised that the
wound required four stitches.
In other department activity, Paul
David Milliron, 25, Rt. 2 Racine, was
cited to Meigs County Court on a
charge of hitsklp. According to the
report, Milliron WBll driving thrOUgh
the Letart cemetery when his
vehicle struck the entrance poets.
He then struck an open door at the
restroom in the caretaker's
building. There was light damage to
the right side rl Mll1lron 's 1968
Cadillac.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reports that riiOilt of the
cemeteries in the county are closed
at dark and persons found in the
cemetery after dark are subject .to
arrest on charge rl trespaas,

BUD..DING PROGRESSES - Progress is being
made on the new mulU1Jurpoee building adjacent to
the Veterans Memorial Hospital. The building, which
will cost in excess of a million dollars, Is being built by

Weather

BV BOB HOEFUCH
Plans for attending a lair housing
development grant training session
scheduled Saturday in Marietta
were made when Middleport Village
Council met in regular session
Mooday night.
Mayor Fred Hoffman said the
workshop is being staged by the
Buckeye Hills--Hocking Valley
Reglmal Development Commission
to train peri!Oilnel of communities on
steps to take in progressing with
applicatioos lor grants. He said the
cmunlssi.on Is requesting n&lt;X only
village officials to attend but the fair
housing boards of the c&lt;mmunlties.
Mayor Hoffman said he will attend
along with members of the
Middleport Fair Housing Board
which is composed of Jon Buck, Pat

home.

I

The house had no running
water, · and police said it appeared that dirt and garbage bad
been accumulating for many
years.
ACCOI'dlng to court' documents,
Ml.ss l..emJjloo had Sll2.445 in
cash stashed around the house
and in a savings deposit box. Ac·
counts In local banks totaled
more than half a million doUars .

Acid spillage
DE LAND, Fla . (AP ) - A
chemical eiploslon at a defense
contracting finn spewed toxic
fumes over a !&gt;«tuare-mlle area
of east&lt;entral Florida Monday,
forcing the evacuation of
thousands of residents and
students for several hours, police
said.
Volust.a County Civil Defense
Director Paul Reid esUmated
''probably a thousand residents"
rl the area were evacuated after
the explosion at the Brunswick
Corp. plant at 12:29 p.m. The
plilnt manu!actures camouflage
netting and other materials for
the u.s. military.
Reid said the eJq&gt;losion was
caused by an accidental mixing
d. polyester resins with nitric
acid . He said the chemical milt·
· ture produced nitrogen dioxide +
••a very dangerous gas.''

Middleport's mayor
seeks ·land donation
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman said today he has forwarded
a letter to the Columbus rlfices of the Columbus and. Southern Ohio
Electric Company requesting the donation of the C and SOE lot on
Park St. to the village.
This property is adjacent to the village garage and has been
used for many years by maintenance crews of C and SOE wbo now
operate out rl Gallipoll.s. The lot is not being used at this time and
could be of tremendous benefit to the village for Its maintenance
department.
The mayor said he did not feel this was an unreasonable
request in light of the fact that only recently the C and SOE donated
property to the City of Columbus, for the use of the public.
The mayor continued, "The citizens of Middleport certainly
deserve the same consideraUon as citizens rllarger conununlties.
This property could be put to good use by the village and would be
beneficial to aU its citizens. There has always been a good relaUonship between the C and SOE, villiage officialll and citizens and It
would certainly be in the best ipterests of both the electric company
and the village if this property would be given to the village for
public use.
"Removal of the offices has certainly been a loss to the village.
DonaUon of this land to the village is certainly not too much to ask
in return . Revenue from the sale of this land would certainly be
only a drop in the bucket In comparison with the total assets of the
electric company.
"I feel that immediate favorable actim should be taken by the
electric company in this matter. If not the company should el)llain
to Middleport residents why land can be given to Columbus and n&lt;X
to our area," the mayor Stated.

Kitchen and George Miller. It has
been requested also that one council
member attend the training session
' but as yet that council member has
not been named. Mayor Hoffman
expressed concern that· lack of
attendance might reflect disinterest
in the community .
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
announced a rate hike of 34.98 cents
per 1,000 cubic feet of gas effective
oo the Oct. I billing of Colwnbia Gas
of Ohio, according. to provisions of •
the gas adjustment clause . He ilio
announced that gasoline from
Ashland Oil increased two cents a
gallon as of &amp;pt. 1. The village is
now paying 85.6 f!l' leaded and 81.6 a
gallon ,for regular gasoline.
Grate also aMounced plans of the
Office of Consumer Council to
protest rate hllles requested by the
electric utilities. The Council has
employed several consultants and.
speclall.sts to help in its presentation
before the Ohio Public Utilities
Commission. Village officials can
still voice their complaints· and
• protests on Oct. 29.
Council agreed to have the
exterior of village hall sandblasted
with Councilman Carl Horky in
Four persons were injured during_ charge of the project. The August
two accidents investigated Monday repa-t of Mayor Hoffman showing
by the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway receipts of ·S2600 wa~ approved.
The mayor . reported represen·
Patrol.
tatlves
of the Envirorunental ProtecBetty J . Waugh, 21, Crown City,
Uon
Agency
from both Logan and
was listed in stable condition in the
Columbus
as
weU
8ll representatives
intensive care unit of Holzer Medical
from
the
U.
S.
Corpe
of Engineers
Center this morning following a two- .
and
the
town's
engineering
firm of
vhicle accident on BladenFloyd
G.
Browne
and
Associates
Mercerville Rd., two-tenths of a mile
met In Middleport recently with him
east of SR 218.
and
Wlllis Anthony of the board of
Called to the scene at 4:45 p.m.,
publlc
affairs to examine river
the patrol reports that a west bound
eroelm
at the sewage disposal
auto operated by Kathleen Rose, 36,
lagoon
and
to detennine If some help
Crown City, and an east bounil
Is
available.
vehicle driven by Waugh collided in
Council discussed more strict
a curve. Rose was cited on a cha111e
of a quiet zone sign on
enforcement
of left of center.
Custer
St.,
painting
the roof of the
Waugh and two passengers, Sarah
K. Waugh, 17 months, Crown City,
and David A. Stapleton, 3, Crown
City, displayed visible signs of
injury and were transported to
HMC.
Waugh was admitted to the
intensive care unit for treatment of
internal inju~ies and a laceration .of
Tutors for Meigs local School
the cheek. ·
District handicapped students are
Sarah Waugh was treated for
needed, Dan Morris, director of
multiple contusions of the forehead
ctirriculwn and lnatruction and
,and a laceration of the lip, and
felleral programs, said today.
released.
There are currently four Meigs
Stapletoo, son of Elmer and
Local students in need of tutoring
VIrginia Stapleton, was treated for a
services and these Include a high
contusion of the forehead, and
school girl who is home bound due to
released.
surgery and Will need instruction for
Both vehicles incurred moderate
approximately eight weeks begindamage .
ning after auiatmas; a junior high
One person was injured during an
boy, home bound due to surgery for
auto-motorcycle accident on U.S. 35,
approximately three months ; an
at the lntersectioo of SR 325.
elementary boy, homebound due to
Galled to the scene at 5:47 p.m.,
cerebral palsy, and a junior high
officers report an auto operated by
boy, with hearing impaired, and the
Franclll Burdell, 70, Crown City,
latter tutoring must be done during
pulled from 325 into the path of a
school houn.
west bound cycle operated by James
Any teachers in the district or any
Miller, 25, Rio Grande. Burdell was
certified teacher who might be in·
cited on a charge of failure to yield.
terested In the tutoring is asked to
Miller displayed visible signs of
contact Morris at the Central Office,
injury and was transported by a
992-2153.
relative to Oak Hill Hospital lor
Tutoring needs tO be provided for
' treatment.
five hours a week with the rate of
There was meiderate damage to
pay being S5 an bour. Scheduling can
the motorcycle, slight damage to the
be flexible, Morris teports.
auto .

Four persons
injured in
accidents

Meigs Local
seeks tutors

The new KODAK EKTRALITE 30
Camera was designed to help

you do jus! !hal. I! has a
swing-out e lectronic flash ,
ready day or night, indoors
or out. Aut omatic e;.. posure
control helps VOL!. get cor-

rec t exposure depending on
the lighting conditions. Sim-

ply aim and shoot lor be!ler
pictures wherever and whenever""'

the opportunity occurs.

Outllt, complete with
.

UNDER '6'00

Karr Constructton general contractor. The funds for
the building are drived from federal grants. The
building will house the senior citizens center, community mental health center, TB clinic and the MejgJ
County Health Department.

·Training session plans formulated

Mostly clear tonight. Low in the
low 6Q! . Moetly sunny on Wednesda~ . High in the low to mid • ·
The chance of rain Is near zero percent tonight and 10 percent Wed·
nesday.

New
KODAK
EKTRALITE 30
Camera

film and batteries

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11 , 1979

Store robbery suspect
facing hearing today

HOSPITAL NEWS

LOVELAND, Ohio (AP J Gary D. Wilson rl GO!hen was

Calls for

enttne

acre.

Crushed to death

AREA EXTENSIONAGRONOMIST John Underwood examirles ~­
.condition of a large round bale of alfaHa wrapped in fescue. Visitors to the
Jackson Extension Area Dl!iry Day, Sept. 25 at Valley View Dairy fann,
Rt. 2, Bidwell, will see about 50 bales like this one at this dairy farm.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 104

•

at

e

pure aJfalfa; the rest alfalfaorchardjjraas. Hay ylelda rl U tons-

building and double-four
herringbone milking parlor.
- De-LIIval O!allenge Feeder activated by transponder to get extra
concentrate to higher producing
cows.
- Call hutches for raising baby
calves.
-Liquid mamue storage facility.
- All hay from 130 aCI'ell stored In
lal'l!e round bales. About 86 acres

•

SALE I

KODAK CllO Film

.

___...____ .

REG. II.7612 EXPOSURE ............... . ...... IU4
REG. I2.26 20 EXPOSURE ...................... 11.84
CAMERA DEPT., 1ST FLOOR

Elberfelds In.Pomeroy

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INTERIOR WORK - This worker was busy Mon&lt;!&amp;Y afternoon laying block on an Interior wall of the
• 'I

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new mu!U-purpose building, Pomeroy. Occupancy of
the new structW"e by several governmental offices is
expected to be April!, 1980.

,.

..t

j

garage building, the possibility of a
charge ·for emergency services by
the town 's emergency squad, a
se~er near the waffle shop and
lightin g of the community park with
no official action taken.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman, Clerk-Treasurer
Grate , and Councilmen Horky,
Dewey Horton, William Walters,
Allen Lee King and Marvin Kelly .

$l7. (){)() blaze.
'
h' r·ts residence
Damages were estimated at
$17,000 at the result of a fire at the
home of Mr . and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer, Laurel Cliff, at about '4
p.m . Monday.
- Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar said that Schaefer had built a
lire in a woodbuming stove at the
home Monday morning to take the
chill out of the house . The fire
apparently built up during the day
and tar and soot in ~the chimney
caught fire and spread to between
the walls. Chief Legar said that the
blaze might have smouldered for
hours before lreaking out.
Both the Pomeroy and Middleport
Fire Departments were on the
scene.· Damages by fire were heavy
to the upstairs o.f the home while
first floor damages were the result
of smoke and water. There Is
insurance, Chief Legar said.
Chief Legar urged all residents to
check their chimneys for soot and
tar built up as a faU preventative
against fire.

Weak cold front moving
south in Buckeye state
By TheAssoclatectPress
A weak cold Iron t bisecting Ohio
laterally will move slowly south in
central and eastern Ohio by·
Wednesday morning, but remain
staUonary in the western part of th.e
state.
Conversely, during the day
Wednesday the front will remain
stationary In the east while It will
start moving north as a wann front
in western Ohio, the National
Weather Service said.
It will be partly cloudy north of·the
front and skies will remain mostly
clear to the south of the front. There
will be little change in Ohio weather
conditions until a cold front
approaches from the west
Wednesday night and Thursday.
.:::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

EXTENDED OU'ILOOI
A cbaDce rl lbowen or &amp;lnut-

dentGrml 'l'lnliaday tllld Fridlty.
Fair Salurday. HilbliD lbe IQ'It' to
mid IIIII Tlmnday, tllld iD lbe 'Ill
Fridlty tllld Salurday. Lows ID tile
11pper SO. to low .,. early Tlnusday, ... ID tile low IIIII by early
Salurday.

. .
'

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