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                  <text>10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 11, 1979
,!""""

.

Craft school ends second year

.
.
BILl!. COOK,INSTRUCI'OR of the school 's basket weaving class strips a p1ece of white oak for weavmg.

RIO GRANDE - As Bill Cook
scraped the la5t strip of white oak
for use in yet an~ther basket, there
was a smile on his face . Around him
were the ·remnants of an eleven
member basketweaving class.
Pieces of white oak dotted the floor
and three class members remained
to finish their projects. And the
smile - a symbol of a job weD done
and knowledge in the fact that his
craft had been grasped and brought
to life in Rio Grande.
Cook was the ninth instructor in a
craft school clilled the School of
Homestead Living. The school, offered throughout this past swruner,
was a cooperative effort of the Rio
Grande College and Community
College office of continuing
educ11tion and Bob Evans F11nns,
Inc., both of Rio Grande.
Nine, one-week heritage craft
workshops were held including
blackmnithing, Btl!in glass, rug
weaving, pottery, basketweaving,
chaircaning,
wool
spinning,
dulcimer playing and relief carving
were offered. All classes were held

a cto r ~t~.

Economy may be main fi
BOSTON (AP ) - Sen. Edward M. .
Kennedy says the way President
Carter deals with the faltering U.S.
economy may be the determining
factor in his decision about whether
to run against him.
In an interview published in
today's editions of the Bo5ton Globe,
Kennedy said another major factor
in his decision will be "the American
pebple's perception of how things
are and whether things are going to
get better.
"I have not ruled out the
possibility of a candidacy, "
Kennedy said in the interview. " I
have no time frame, l have no date
and I have no further comments or
statements about a date. "
He said his decision will be based
in part on Carter's 'o own ability to

-,

deal with the economy." Asked if he
expected Carter to be the
Democratic Party candidate, a
posi lion he has repeated previously ,
Kennedy said:
"That question can best be
answered by his own ability to deal
with the economy."
Kennedy said he, Carter and Mrs .
Carter lunched at the president's
invitation Friday in the White
House.
" I indicated to the president that l
wanted to work closely with the
administration over the next few
months on energy and the economy.
But that's all 111 say about the
lunch ."
He and Carter have "some areas
of disagreement," said Kennedy,
without elaboratmg on details.

Will abolish allocations Sept. 30
By The Associated Press
Odd-even gasoline allocations in
Maryland, Northern Virginia, and
Washington , D.C., will be abolished
00 Sept. 30 if no major supply
problems develop by then, officials
announced Monday.
The joint action would mean that
aU of the Eastern states that adopted
the plan when supplies became short
and gas tines long earlier this year
have gone back to normal selling.
It would leav e odd-even
~llocations in effect only in
California, where the nation 's gas
crunch first surfaced and where
some
counties
in
major
metropolitan areas still limit sales.
On Saturday, Pennsylvania lifted
its odd-even pian, one day after such
plans were rescinded in New York ,

Connecticut and Rhode Island. New
Jersey had lifted its program on
Thursday, and Florida, Texas and
Delaware had done so previously.
Monday's decision was made·
during a conference telephone calli
among Virginia Gov. John Dalton,
Maryland Gov. Harry Hughes and
D.C. Mayor Marion Barry. Odd-even ·
allocations were imposed in their
three jurisdictions oo June 21 at the
height of the gasoline shortage .
The odd-even plan meant that
motorists whose license plates
ended in an even digit could buy
gasoline only on even-munbered
days of the month, and drivers with
odd license plates could purchase
gasoline only on odd-numbered
days. In some states, out-of-state
license plates were exempted in an
effort not to discourage tourists.

I
I

I

He denied a report in the Atlanta
Con5titution and Journal Sunday
that he asked Carter hot to seek reelection.
'iThal 1S wrong," Kennedy said.
"He denied it. I denied it. It didn't
happen."
Kennedy said his attitude about a
possible candidacy changed during
the swruner congressional recess.
"Over the latter part of July and in
August, I had a good deal of time to
reflect both on the direction of the
country and how we as a society are
coming to grips with the issues that
face our people;" Kennedy told the
Globe.
"These issues are intensifying ,
and that's why I'm not excluding the
possibility of a candidacy.
"I've been approached by people
in the Democratic Party, by political
leaders and by ordinary working
people urging me to recoosider the
possibility of a candidacy.
"My position at this time is that I
have not ruled out the possibility of a
candidacy. That's basically my
current thinking."

MEDICAL PATIENT
Thomas Edwards, Minersville, is
a medical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center and is expected to be
confined for the entire week .

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the Valley Lumber Co.
at 4:36 p.m. Monday where James
A. Pellegrino had received a foot
injury. He was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
treated and released.

Having just completed its second
year, the school seems de5tined to
grow and prosper. Bernie Murphy,
director of continuing education for
the college, pointed to the improvement in participation in this
second year of the school.
"We had a late Btl!rt in publicity
the fifllt year and only 17 persons attended the school. Thill year nearly
three times that number, 48 persons
from ohio, West Virginia, and Indiana took part."
Limited enrollments in many of
the craft classes will always keep
the nwnbers small. 1 'For example,"
said Murphy, "our blacksmithing
class was limited to six but we turned away at least ten others."
"The smallness is a big advantage

William A.Proctor
William A. Proctor, 64, Loiville,
formerly of Meigs C&lt;&gt;unty, died
Mooday at Akron c ity Hospital.
Mr. Proctor was born May V,
1915. He was a retired truck driver.
He was preceded in death by one
son, Tom Proctor.
He is survived by his wife, Agnes
Bugor, six children, Bill Proctor and
Mike Proctor, Gallipolis ; Ann
Hemsley, Syracuse; Helen Braden,
Somerset , Ky .; and Lynn Walker
and David Proctor both of Minerva;
six step-dlildren, Doris Crews, St.
Louis, Mo .; Ronald Bugh , Roger
Bugh.• Jean Brown, Kim Bugh and
Dick Bugh aU of Canton ; 12
grandchildren and nine · s tepgrandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at II a.m. at the SlierIsrael Funeral Home, 917 E. Main,
Louisville. Burial will be in
Sandyville.

Sears claims Reagan
is in driver's seat

ANew

Pick uo
on the Farm

up an applicaSotionI picked
for a low coat loan!
On qualifying. I got the
cash [ needed on the spot
.•. and at terms suited to
my budget!

"The Frif&gt;nd/y Rank ''
Walk-up teller window
and auto·teller window
Open Friday Evenings to 1 p.m.

s

Cililel\s ~utio~al Bal\k

Gb

1980 primary "does reflect a change
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - John
P. Sears, executive vice chairman of
in our position. We want to
the national Reagan for President
demonstrate to the people of Ohio
that we are interested in ·cooducting
Committee , claims his candidate is
a long and productive campaign,"
in the driver's seat.
He made these claims Monday on
Sears said.
behalf of former California Gov. : Sears also said he does not think
Carter will be · able to win
Ronald Reagan :
- President Carter probably can't
renomination because of his
get renominated by his own party
continued poor showing in the polls.
next year.
"The polls show him as being
-Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, Dweak," he said .
Mass ., probably could get the
He thinks Kennedy can win the
Democratic nomination , but it would
Democratic nomination ,
but
split the party and he might lose the
"whether he could be elected is
another matter." The senator
general election.
-Sen. Howard Baker, R"would certainly have one enemy Tennessee, who along with Reagan
President Carter," Sears said.
and several others is a contender for
The Reagan campaign official
the GOP nomination, has run well in
announced that state .Rep. Donna
some polls but has been unable to set
Pope, R-Parma; was being named .
up an effective organization.
co-chairwoman of the Ohio
campaign to serve northern Ohio
-Former Treasury Secretary
John Connally of Texas, another
and act as a liason between Reagan
and Republican members of the
Republican contender, comes across
Legislature.
in the image of the late President
Hamiltoo County Commissioner
Lyndon Johnson, which hurts him.
Norman
A. Murdock of Cincinnati, a
Sears said many Americans now
former member of the Ohio House,
_think of Johnson as "the man in
charge when everything started to . was appointed earlier as cocha.irnlan f&lt;J" southern Ohio.
go wrong .''
Sears al.so presented to reporters a
Sears, in Columbus to announce
list of names of 4500hio Republicans
appointments
for , Reagan's
who have joined in the Reagan
campaign and io stress his
effort, including several county
candidate's desire to get an early
chairmen and committee members. ·
start on his Ohio primary campaign
this time, said he believes those and
other reasons indicate that the tiSyear-old Californian is next in line
NOON LUNCHEON
for the White House.
The
Meigs County Retired
Reagan brought his campaign into
Teachers
Association will meet at 12
Ohio late in the 1976 primary race
on
Saturday
for a luncheon. Speaker
and still polled 45 percent of the
wUI
be
Mrs.
Phyllis
Hackett who will
Republican vote against former
tell
of
her
trip
to
Jaan
. Reservations
Preside nt Gerald .R. Ford .
to
be
made
no
later than
are
Starting campaign work more
Thursday,
than eight months before the June

....

...
I

~

I

Bob Evans craft barn off US

Member F. D.I.C. Deposits Insured to 540,000.00.

CORRECTION
Mr. and Mrs. Doug Adkins had a
daughter on the 4th. The Adkinses
are from Bidell.

America ns eat mdre than 3 billion
quarts of ice cream each year . This
is enough to fill 1,711 swimming)
pools that are 165 feet loog, 693 feet
wide and nearly 6 feet deep, says
!)Ia tiona! Geographic .
·'

'

to the students, however," Murphy
added, "those students can learn on
a one to one basis and, after a day of
classes, be able to use the facilities
into the night."
Future considerations, however,
point toward offering some advanced level workshops in some of
the crafts. This would allow increased participation without
sacrificing the personal attention of
the limited enrollment classes.
In assessing what makes the
School of Homestead Living special,
Murphy concluded, ''Our instructors
are true craftpefliODS. For eurnple,
Bill Cook a fourth generatloo basketweaver. One of his baskets has been
featured in "Ripley's Believe It Or
Not." Ussie Fannie has been spinning wool for 60 years and Bill
Preston, our blackmnith, has taught
metal work for over 31 years. These
and all our instructors are craftsmen, not just kltmakers. "
"The cooperation of the college
and the farm adds to the school's effectiveness," said Murphy. "With
college housing available to participants for a very modest fee, the
school becomes an affordable
vacation for almost anyone."
Next year the !Chool should grow
and prosper. Target areas for advance publicity will be a seven state
area. Bob Evans will have information in his restaurants early
next spring and brochures will be

sent to any interested persons.
In a day rl slumping productivity
and built-in product oblloleacence,
it'' comforting to know that the
American tradition of quality
heritage crafts is being preserved.
And for craftamen like Bil,l Cook,
that's important.

State files suit
against Ohio EPA
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
state of Ohio has filed a U.S. District
Court suit against the federal
Environmental Protection Agency
in an attempt to overturn the EPA''
disapproval of Ohio 's proposed
water quality standards.
The complaint alleges that the
federal
government
acted
irrespoosibly in its review of the
standards, which were submitted in
Fetruary 1978 and disapproved
three moo ths later .
It states that EPA Region V staff
members did not properly
considered supporting technical
materials supplied by the Btl!te and
were inconsistent in their use of
guidelines f&lt;r reviewing state water
quality standards.
In addition, it says the EPA may
have violated ooe of its own
regulations by failing to properly
consider materials submitted by the
Btl!te concerning use designations of
rivers and streams. A use
designation specifies uie general
quality of part or aU of a stream and
the degree to which it mUst be
controlled .
OU TO GET GIFT
ATHENS, Ohio (AP) ~ A gift of
175 Japanese cherry trees will be
presented to Ohio University on
Friday by a Japanese school in
honor of the American institution 's
!75th anniversary.
The trees will be given on behalf of
the Chubu Institute of Technology of
Nagoya, Japan, which participates
in an exchange program with the
university. They will be planted oo a
half-mUe stretch of university land
along the Hocking River.
The gift will be presented by
Chubu President Karuo Yamada ,
who will receive an honorary doctor
of laws degree from the university
on Thilrsday. The first tree wU be
planted during ceremonies the next
day.

Despite tensions,
no major problems
CLEVELAND (AP) - Black
students arriving at John Mst side
were greeted with racial epithets
lettered in red on the side of the·
building today.
But police reported no major
incidents in the Se&lt;:ood day of a corderd racial desegregation of
aeveland schoOls, with up to 3,600
students scheduled to make crosstown rides.
Maintenance wock..-s at John
Marshall began painting over
messages of "White Power," "Niger
(sic) Go HOOle" and " Busloads of
Baboons" as school began. ·
A!!IO greeting the students from
the city's pred&lt;ITlinanUy black ea5t
side, however, were members of
WELCOME , an organization
seeking
to
foster
racial
understanding.
Paula Estok, a 17-year~ld white
John Marshall student greeting
blacks and campaigning for student
council president, looked at the
graffiti and said, "l wish it hadnl
been dooe."
In an attempt to avoid a repeat ol
first-day ards with route numbers
were displayed oo windows of the
school district's !~us fleet.
Superintendent Peter P. Carlin
said fewer arudous parents were
calling the school system today than
Mooday, and added, "We had many
calls late last evening from parents
who felt more confident and said
they feel very c&lt;mfortable with the
system."
Carlin even said today might e
cmsidered a better than normal day
in the first week of school. "People
are paying attention to details better
than usual," he said.
On
Monday.
only
minor
demonstrations
and
busing
coo fusion hampered the ~rt of the
limited court-ordered
racial
desegregation plan.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--B-renda
Barber,
Portland ; Stella Kloes, Pomeroy ;
Bernard Diddle, Racine ; Wllma
Riggs, Racine ; Carmon Evans,
Middleport ; Dorothy Demoskey ,
Middleport .
Disharged--Goldie Lynch, William
Wells, Brian Buffingtoo , Denver
Gibbs , Edith Manuel , Loretta
Woods.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
OISCHARGESSEPf . IO
Ray Barker, Emerson Bing, Jr .,
Virgil Chaney, Kevin CUrtis, Daisey
Douglass, Mrs. Oliver Fowl..- and
son, James Fugg ltt, Darlynn
·Gaffney, Geraldine Gerlach, Wilford
Gilliland Ill, Robert Hampton ,
Rhonda Markin , John Miller,
Mildred Rice, Russell Sheets, Carl
Stewart Sr ., Joe Viars, Terry
Warren, Mrs. Jdln Wiseman and

son.
Bffi111S SEPT . 10
I Mr . and Mrs . Stephen Hibinger,
son, Northup; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Rafferty, daughter, Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Detty, daughter ,
Jackson .

Hurricane Frederic roars to·w ard Coast
MIAMI ( AP) Hurricane
Frederic, described as "extremely
dangerous," roared toward the Gulf
Coast today with winds of 130 mph as
residents of three states were
beginning to evacuate.
Forecasters warned it could
become the most vicious hurricane
to hit the area since Camille caused
widespread death and destruction a
decade ago ago.
-The National Guard was called out
in the Florida Panhandle and
schools were closed in three states.

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 105

.

fl:~~~
• Aut omatic 2-sl ice toasting, both sides at once, shuts off
and door pops open when toast is done.
• B~o il s hambu!gers, hot dogs, steak, chiCken , sea food.
H1gh wa ll bro1 1er pan for cleaning convenience.
0 200' to 500' ?ven for baking potatoes, bisc uits, rolls,
entrees, pot p1es, etc.

• Signa l Light tell s when on.
• The ideal second oven. Saves electrical energy.
.• Remo_
vabl e oven.tray, broi ler pan and crumb tra y for
c1ean 1ng convenience.

HOUSEWARES DEPT. • • • 1st FLOOR

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

•

a1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

was a No . 5, a "catastrophic "
hurricane. It took 256 lives .
ln Mobile, Ata., Qvil Defense
Director Norman Davis s~id
residents were ordered to evacuate
coastal areas, house trailers and
Rood-prone areas along the rivers
and roadways. Emergency shelters
were set up at high schools.
Frederick was expected to kick up
tides 5 to 15 feet above normal.
Residents in low-lying areas of
Plaquemines Parish, La., were
ordered to evacuate this morning.
Those remaining on Grand Isle were

packing up.
Sgt. Roy Wilson, a spokesman for
the Esclllllbia C&lt;&gt;untu sher iff's office
in Pensacola, said persons who
refuse to evacuate when asked to do
so will be asked to fiJI out a form
lisiting their name, age and next of
kin.
"By law, we can't make people
leave," Wilson said . "But that
quest ion about 'next of kin" will get
the point across to some of them. "
Divers hunted for a man believed
trapped when an oil rig Ripped over
in the Mississippi River Gulf Outlet

as it was being towed away from the
storm.
Another man died when he fell
from a Tt-ans World Drilling Co. rig
tender under tow in heavy seas ln
the Gulf off the Louisiana Coast. He
was pulled from the water, but could
oot be revived , His name was not
released .
The missing man was among
more than 2,500 offshore oil w&lt;rkers
called back to land as Frederic
strengthened Tuesday. Another 200
were to be brought in today, officials
said .

en tine
•

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1979

Settlement terms released
Meigs Local School Di5trict Supt.
David Gleason today announced
terms of the settlement between the
Meigs Local School District and' noncertified employes of the district.
Members of the local chapter of
non-certified employes met early
last Thursday morning and
approved the agreement following a
one day strike. The district's board
of education met in executive
session Thursday night and
approved the agreement.

Bonecutter
arraigned
GUEST DAY WINNERS - ''Guest Day" was observed Tuesday at the Pomeroy Golf Course sponsored
by the Pomeroy Ladies Golf Associatioo. Guests from
Riverside Golf Course, Mason, Hidden Valley, Polnl
Pleasant, and Gallipolis as wen as members from
Pomeroy participated in " guest day " Tuesday.
Following the event a luncheon was served at the
Meigs IM. Winners pictured are front row, 1-r, Becky

1 ·,, I

1.-.

'.. 'l

::today;
...
in the wotld .
•
lnhreaten strUke
BOSTON (AP ) - Complaining
of low pay, chllly studi05 and dirty 5tools, the men and women
who pose nude for art classes
here say.theirs is a tough way to
make a living . They are
threatening to strike unless conditioris improve.
' 'Art models have been ignored
for too long," says Randy Jansen,'
24, rl nearby Somerville. "We 're
tired of being treated like objects .
We are professionals, and we
demand respect ...
The worst of it is the pay, he
said in an interview this week,
and unless they get more r1 it,
some of the models say they will
strike at least ooe Boston art
school, possibly next month.

WASHINGTON (M' ) - The
House Budget Committee,
acknowledging the impact cl
raging inflation and a worsening
ecorumy, recommended a $S48.7
billion 1980 budget, $16.7 billion
more in spending than C&lt;&gt;ngress
agreed to last May ..
On a 16-9 vote, the panel sent
the PfOI)osed spending package to
the full House, which is expected
to consider it next week.
The House committee 's
proposed budget calla for a f29.2
billion deficit in fiscal 19110, which .
starts Oct. l. That deficit figure is
f6.2 bllllon more thali recommended by Congress last May
and $1.2 billion higher than the
Senate Budget Committee's
proposal.

Levy rejected
~/~

Hurricane warnings were posted
from Panama aty, Fla., to Grand
Isle, La. Forecasters said the storm
was "extremely dangerous."
The National Hurricane Center in
Miami said Frederic was " one of the
mo5t intense hurricane to threaten
the central Gulf Coast during this
century."
The storm, picking up strength,
was approaching No .4 on the
Natiooal Hurricane Center's 1-li
rating scale. Camille, one of the two
strongest U.S. storms this century,

e

Spending higher

3-IN-1, Toaster, Broiler, Oven

One man was killed and another
was revorted missing as 2,500
offsho r e oilfield workers were
leaving rigs in the path of the storm .
At 8 a .m. EDT, Frederick ,
packing winds of 130 mph, was
located abqut 180 miles south of
Pensacola, Fla ., and about 245 miles
southeast of New . Orleans, near
,latitude V .6 north, longit ude 87.3
west. The storm was moving
northwest at 12 mph and was
expected to remain on that course
most of the day.

MIDDLETOWN, Ohio (AP) Voters rejected for the second
time Tuesday a 6 mill operating
levy in the Middletown School
System, ending all extra
curricular activities, il]cluding
the football schedules of two high
schools.
.The issue, which was defeated
by 60 votes in June, was rejected
7,496to7,064.
The li,&lt;MIOi)upil district wlll
remain open with no deficit expected.
The school board · said earlier
that the football scheduleS of Middletown High School and LemonMOJ\roe High School would be
canceled if the levy was defeated.

Anderson, third Right , low putts; Mar)' 'Burton, third
Rlght,low net ; Mary Roush, first flight, lot putts; back
row, Dorothy Karr, second Right, low gl'tl6S; Iliana
Karr, third flight, low gross; Helen Fenderbosch, first
Right, low gross,longest drive and closest to pin ; Mary
Ingels, first flight, low net; Nancy Reed, second Right,
low net and Alice Icard, second Right,low putts.

West .Virginia firm
must post road bond
Meigs County Comm issioners
Tuesday ight instructed county
engineer Wesley Buehl to contact a
West Virginia _firm coostructing a
gas tine over county road W
regarding the posting of a $2,000
bond for any damages done to the
road.
The action fol lowed numerous
t'Ompiaints received from residents
living on the road .
A gas tine is presenUy being ilud
along the road by a West Virginia
Company, creating damages.
Buehl was instructed to contact
the c&lt;mpany before the start of work
this morning and request that a cash
bond in the amount of $2,000 be
posted . Should the company fail to
comply the request, Buehl was to
direct them to stop con5truction .
Michael Swisher, county welfare
director, discussed different aspects
of the welfare department
operation .
Bob Bailey and Bob Fisher a lso

Drivers
certified
A number of bus driver
certificates were issued Tuesday
night when Uie Meigs County Board
of Educatioo met in regular session .
Receiving certificates were
Harold White, William Carr, Julia
Flagg, !Ulger Hill , Thomas Hill, Lori
Wolfe , Charles Wolfe, Hilton Wolfe ,
Jr. , Ella Mae Southern, Donald-Kar ,
and Gary Dill.
Mona Frecker, a secretary in the
county office, was given a leave of
absenc-e from mid October through
Dec. 31.
Plans were made f&lt;r members to
attend a meeting of the Southeastern
Ohio Boards of Education Assn . in
Athens on Sept. 27 and County Supt.
Robert Bowen was authorized to
attend
a
state
county
superintendents meeting to be held
in Springfield today through Sept.
14. Harold Roush was named to
represent the board at the Ohio State
School Boards Assn. meeting to be
held Nov. 13-15 in Columbus.
Hobart Day and his daughter-inlaw, Mrs. Jeffrey Day were present
and requested that the board
transfer the Day farm , now in the
Eastern Local District to the Meigs
Local District . The matter was
tabled .
Attending the meeting were Supt.
Bowen and members, George Perry,
Harold Lohse, Robert Burdette,
Harold Roush and fris Smith.

met with the board to report on the
operations of the Meigs Emergency
Medical Services. Administrator
Bailey was auth&lt;rized to advertise
for bids on communications
equipment.
The grant applicatioo for the
access road was discussed and it
was reported that a decision should
be forthcoming by Oct. 1.
Betty Hobstetter, clerk of the
co unty court, was granted
permission to attend a meeting of
.Jhe Ohio Association of Municipal
Court Clerks to be held in Columbus.
The construction of the multipurpose building was reviewed and
it was reported that good progress
was being made.
Attending were Richard Jones·,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, commissioners and Mary
Hobstettewr, clerk.

Judge Gr~y
assignment
announced
Judge Lawrence Grey of the Fourth District Court of Appeals ha' been
;wigned as a visiting judge to the
Ohio Supreme Court in Columbus.
" Where one of the seven Justices
o~ the Supreme C&lt;&gt;art disqualifies
himself from hearing a case the
Chief Justice appoints a Court ~f Appeals Judge to fill the temporary
vacancy," Judge Grey explained. "I
am pleased and honored to have
been selected. "
The Fourth District Court of Appeals sits in 15 Southern Ohio Counties , including Adams, Athe)lS,
Brown, Gallia, Highland, Hocking,
Lawrence, Meigs, Pickaway, Pike,
Ross, Scioto , Vinton and
Washington.

Steve A. Bonecutter, 20, Pomeroy,
Ohio. who was arrested by Me igs
Count y aut horiti es Monda y for
a llegedly robbtng Rone y's Market,
New Haven , has been extradited to
Mason County and is now lodged in
the Mason County Jail .
Bonecutter reportedly netted S41
in the robbery. and was caught afte r
a chase which ended in woods behind
Krogers in Pomeroy .
Aiding in the chase were the New
Haven Police Department, Mason
Polic e Department. Oh io State
Troopers. and Meigs Count y
Sheriff's Department.
Bone c utter w•s • rrai gned by
Mason County Magistrate Miles
E pilo g for armed robbery, and bond
was set at $10 ,000.

Doctor accused
NASHVILI.E, Tenn. (AP ) - A
doctor who prescribed drugs for
Elvis Presley in the months before
the singer died could lose his
medical license for alleged abuses of
prescription powers, authorities
said Tuesday.
A spokeswoman for the state
Board of Medical Examiners said
Dr . George Nichopoulos was
accused with indiscriminately
prescribing
stimulants
and
depressants for Presley and others
over a three-year period.
The accusation said the board's
inquiry showed
Nichopoulos
"exhibited a pattern of indiscrimate
prescribing of prescription drugs"
and that its examination indicated
drugs were prescribed "not for a
legitimate medical reason or were
prescribed in excessive amounts or
were not prescribed in good faith. "

Weather
Increasing cloudiness tonight with
a chance of rain by morning. Low in
the mid 60s. Periods of rain Thursday. High in the low io mid 70s. The
chance of rain is 30 percent tonight
and 80 percent Thursday.

According to the terms, the
employes will received a 20 cent an
hour wage increase effective Sept. 1,
this year, and another 10 cents an
hour starting Jan. I, 1980.
Accorctmg to the terms, the
employes can reopen negotiations on
the two year contract, 90 days before
Sept. 1, 1980, to discuss further
salaries and calamidydays. Federal
medjation and a no strike agreement
is included in the terms.
Bus
drivers' wages were increased for
extra trips including regular rate for
the first two hours and $3 an hour for
every hour thereafter. Insurance
provisions of the agreement include
major medical provided b~ , the
board of education and an increase
in the term life insurance from $3000
to $4500.
Employes are permitted to
accumulate 160 days of six leave
under the new agreement and
:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:::::::::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;.;:;:;.;:;::

SEEKS MEDIATION
The Meigs Local Board of
Education is sending a letter to the
regional director lo Cleveland
asking
federal
mediation
Involvement In negotiations between
the board and the district's teachers
association, SUpt. David Gleason
announced.
Glea8011 said both the board and
the association are required to
request such mediation aod the
board is now doing so . The teachers
association voted earlier to ask for
mediation In the
negotiations.
Negotiations are continuing between
the bargaining teams of the two
grot-,s this week, however.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

OU Branch would get

$3 million from bill
SOU'Ili POINT, Ohio (AP) - A
state legislator from southern Ohio
Tuesday revealed ooe item in the
closely guarded contents of state
capital improvements . legislation
soon to be presented to the General
~mbly by Gov . James A. Rhodes .
At news conference here, Rep.
Ronald James, D-Proctorviile
announced that $3 million would b~
appropriated for the Ironton branch
of Ohio University.
James said House Speaker Vernal
Riffe, D-New Boston , assured him
that although he had not seen the
legislation , the money would be
forthcoming.
Rhodes ' administration has been
tight~ipped about the contents of the
capital improvements bill, although
the total package is known to contain
money for . state projects totaling
more than $500 million.

a

severance pay will be calculated by
multiplying one-fourth the number
of sick days with the result to equal
the severance pay permitted with a
maximum of 40 days allowed.
The agreeme11t excludes all
administrative secretaries 11nd
supervisory personnel from the
bargaining unit in the future and the
number of years disciplinary action
can remain ill an employe' file was
reduced from five years to three
years.
The agreement provides that the
board shall maintain lull premium
of the current hospitalization plan
for one year for any noo-c\ll'lified
person hurt on the job and disabled
as a result. A reductioo in force
policy was adopted in case a school
would be closed or enrollment would
decrease . Automatic dues deduction
was granted all non-certified
personnel and a no reprisal clause as
a result of the strike wa s included in
the agrement.

Official says
energy policy
in bad shape
BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) A leading U.S. oil executive charged

today that Carter administration
energy policy was in disarray
because "we've got a bunch of
amateurs running the government"
whose only concern is the 1980
election.
John E . Swearingen, chief
executive of Standard Oil (Indiana)
and board chairman of the
American Petroleum lnstitule, told
reporters Carter was attacking the
oil industry to boost his re-election
chances and that the stragegy
threatens future U.S. petroleum
supplies.
" He's president of the United
States, but I don't believe he's
acknowledged as leader of the
Democratic Party ," Swearingen
said. "I don't believe his energy bill
is goirtg to be enacted in the way he
proposed it ."
He said his first meeting with
Carter's new energy secretary ,
Charles Duncan , had been "very
friendly," but that it was unclear
how much control he would have
over U.S. energy policy.
" After aU, he's not an oil man and
he doesn't even known the jargon of
the business," Swearingen sBid.
"He's a good businessman but he
has a lot of catching up to do."
Swearingen said he thought the
world would have no shortage of oU
and gas if polltical- and economic
considerations did not Btl!nd in the
way of their development .

;:;:;:;:;:;:::.j:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

EXTENDEDOUTI.OOK
Rain Friday. Fair Saturday
and Sunday. Highs in the low to
mid 708. Lows In tbe upper 50s to
low 60s Friday, cooliDg to the upper tOll to low 5011 Sunday,
.:::;: ;:::;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::~::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:: :;:;:;:

CONTRACl' RENEWED
Middleport Village Council has
renewed a three year mutual aid
pact with Pomeroy Village for
mutual aid bet .. ~en the fire depart·
ments of the twn towns.
-..

AND AWAY THEY GO - Students at Syracuse
Elementary School were taking advantage of the
beautiful ~oatherTuesday. The merry-j!o-round on the

1ti
'

lot at Syracuse Elementary has been there many
many years and definitely should be replaced or
off-limits. The piece of equipment is antiquated to 18Y
the least.
"

placed

\II

�I

3- The Daily Sentinel, tMdleport-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1979

HT, Kyger Creek seek third
straight wins Friday night

2- The Daily Srn&lt;lncl. Middleport -Pomc•roJ , U.. Wedn~sda y , Sept. 12,1Yi·1

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

Editorial opinions,
comments

Pressure alleviated

Once upon a time there was an em- Congress will likely have to wreatle
peror, Nero by name, who aUegedly with the emotional lndochlneae
state Controlling Board, on which he
fiddled while Rome burned. Now refugee problem. The Senate, In the
By ROBERT E. MOJ.ER
serves,
that
some
districts
would
be
there is a Congress, the 96th by face of the recent Soviet troop
Associated Press Writer
in
big
trouble
if
they
failed
to
receive
name, who many allege is fiddling presence in Cuba, will be
to
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP l - Gov .
full
1979
subsidies.
"That's
why
their
while
the country does a slow burn . . vote on SALT 11, the Strategic Arml
James A. Rhodes may have eased
we need that bill, or something like
I for one, share the concern !hat Limitation Treaty.
some pressure in the Legislature to
it
,"
he
said
at
the
time.
there
is too much fiddling going on
The road ahead is not smooth; It 1.1
re-a'rrange the fiscal year
legiSlation,
which
Shoemaker's
here
in
Washington and not enough riddletJ with rocks and potholes. A
operations of Ohio 's more than 600
does much' more than rearrange
construction action being taken by lot of politically unpopular deci.llona
school districts.
districts'
fiscal
year
operations,
is
either
the Congress or the Ad· will have to be made if we are to
One of the main motivations for
pending
in
the
Senate
Education
and
ministration.
The country and the truly address the problema at hand.
the bill was that it appeared the
by
Rep.
Health
Conunittee
headed
world
are
rife
with problems, Let's hope the Admlnlstration and
state would have to temporarily
Marcus
A.
Roberto,
[).Ravenna.
problems
that
demand
solutions. In- the Congress have the backbone for
withhold about 10 percent of the
Earli~r this summer, a substead
of
sitting
on
theit
collective tlie task .
monthly subsidies due schools
conunittee
of
that
panel
uncovered
hands
with
respect
to
the
energy
during the last half of 1979 - to deal
1(\Cal
fiscal
problems
that
some
of
watching
inquestion,
instead
with a state cash flow problem.
I'
Lt..
could
arise
by
changing
the
fiscal
Oatioll
go
out
of
sight,
instead
of •
Now, Rhodes says, to the relief of
Today in History
Some
senators
said
the
House
year.
GIVE
YOU
ignoring
communist
advances
money pinched districts, this
·By The Assocaled Press
apparently had overlooked them,
around the world, instead of turning
A HEART
probably will not be necessary.
Today is Wednesday, Sept. 12, the
and
the
sub-commi.ttee
deleted
the
a deaf ear to our nation 's security
By law, districts may not borrow
ATTACK
255th day of 1979. There are 110 days
fiscal
year
change.
needs, the Congress and the Ad·
funds locally other than tllose which
left in the year.
However, until last week, when
can be repaid by the end of the
On this date in 1944, the lirl!t
the
governor
said
he
didn't
think
the
I!!I[.;__==----....:::;~~~~!!!?!:::_
_::~~~~~J
ministration
must
act
con·
structively. They cannot continue to
current calendar year.
American
troops reached German
. be petty, parochial, and political.
Schools have fiscal and calendar school money would have to be
They cannot continue to ignore the soil in World War ll.
years that coincide, running from delayed, Shoemaker indicated he
On this date : In 1814, American
would
insist
that
the
language
be
problems facing our country in the
Jan. I to Dec. 31, while the state
forces
successfuliy. defended
hope that they will mysteriously go
operates on a fiscal year which star· restored.
Baltimore
against the British in the
Now, be and others are watching
away . The Congress and the
ts July 1 and ends the nelrtJiille 30.
War
of
!812.
President were elected to solve
Under a bill approved by the and waiting for official word from
In 1869, the National Prohibition
building in one of the most active
WASHINGTON (AP)- In politics
problems not compound them, and it
House earlier this year, school the governor's office of budget and
Party
was organized in Chicago.
non-campaigns ever waged. There
as in show business, the real
is time they started doing just that.
districts would operate on the same management that a way has been
In
1943,
during World War n,
now are draft-Kennedy movements
foWJd to keep the school flUids intact. professional always leaves the
The pace of the 96th Congress to
calendar year as the state.
dictator
Benito,
Mussolini was
in at least 19 states, and while the
Rhodes' exact comrilent was "No, audience wanting more. And Sen.
date has been exceedingly slow.
Its chief sponsor, Howe Finance
rescued
by
German
paratroopers
Massachusetts senator has told their
Only a few major pieces d
Chairman Myrl H. Shoemaker, D· I don't think there will be any money Edward M. ReMedy is a political
from
a
hotel
where
he
was being
leaders he is not a candidate, he's
pro .
legislation have cleared both houses. held by the Italian government.
Bourneville, noted that if the sub- taken from the schools ... "
never said never.
That 's one of the reasons his 1980
Instead, he said he thinks state
Almost all have been in the area ci
sidies were withheld, it would be too
In 1945, Gen . Douglas MacArthur
·There is, after all, the smali
campaign
plans
are
WJfolding
bit
by
payments
into
the
five
state
foreign affairs, most significantly, had the secret Black Dragon Society
late in the calendar year for districts
matter of an incumbent Democratic
bit- a tantalizing hint here, a poker
retirement systems and some other
the enactment of a new international dissolved in Japan and many of its
to borrow before the Dec. 31
president in the way. President
face
disclaimer
there.
will
be
enough
to
get
maneuvering
trade act, and the funding of the leaders arrested .
deadline.
Carter has given no signals that he is
That way, the momentum keeps
Israeli-Egyptian peace treaty.
He recenUy told a meeting of the through the cash flow problem.
In 1953, Sen. John. F . Kennedy of
anything but a candidate for rePerhape, we should in part be thank· Masschusetts married Jacqueline
election.
ful for this slow pace. For in years Bouvier in Newport, R.I.
By all accounts, Kennedy is
past, it seems all the Congress did
In 1965, an estimated 75 people
becoming convinced that Carter's
was pass regulation upon regulation. were killed when Hurricane Betsy
public health and environmental political troubles are chronic and
Instead of alleviating problems they hit Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi,
However, he had said previously
cannot be healed in time for next
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- George
law.
all
too often created new ones. and Arkansas.
the new job was not going well
D. Tablack, a former state
Tablack, 48, has been in the real year's election.
Hopefully
this tendency is behind
because of continued controversy
Ten years ago : President Richard
At an Aug. 9 meeting with Gov.
representative whose appointment
estate business in private life, but
them.
over
whether
he
was
qualified.
NiMn
ordered bombing missions
to the environmental board of
his backgroWJd aiso includes long Hugh Carey and Sen. Daniel P .
As Congress returned to business · resumed in the Vietnam war, saying
His
appointment
by
Rhodes
Feb.
5
stirred
Statehouse
review
public service, in the state Moynihan of New York, Kennedy
this past week it faced a full docket the Communists did not intend to
brought criticism, from some
controversy last winter , has
Department of Taxation before expressed concern that Carter
of
new and continuing concerns. At scale down the fighting.
Democrats and Republicans, that he
might lose to a conservative
resigned.
in
the
House
more
than
eight
years
the
top of the list are the old issues of
lacked
specific
statutory
Five years ago : Marcus Wayne
Republican .
The Campbell Democrat could not
starting in 1970.
energy and inflation. Americans Chennault was sentenced to death
qualifications
which
include
"a
He also is said to have told them he
be reached for comment when the
The Senate confirmed the
can't wait any longer for meaningful for murdering Dr. Martin Luther
broad working knowledge" in such
was worried that a Carter-led
resignation was annoWJced Tuesday
appointment, for a term ending Oct.
action on these issues. Reports that King 's mother and a Baptist church
thiiJgs
as
pollution
control
and
Democratic ticket might suffer
.22, 1984, by a vote of 28-2 on June 28.
by the office of GOP Gov. James A.
the American public has returned to deacon .
- 0. • .
abatement
tec
hnology
,
ecology,
·wholesale defeats, particularly in
Rhodes.
U.s wasteful ways of old, dictate that
behooves you to co-opera te to
Shun co-wOrker s. Saying the the Senate. There will be 34 Senate
Tt'tursday, Sept. 13
stem
steps be taken tq cutback on
the fullest today with thOse with
wrong th ing to one who carries elections next year, and 24 of them
111E DAD.. Y SENTINEL
Wanted to Rent
whom you share an mterest. Be
energy conswnption. With inflation
tales could harm you r image with
I USPS IIWIII
are
for
seats
now
held
by
supp ortive and don't mak e
the boss.
at 13 percent, and going higher,
REASONABlY PRICED country •
·Naves .
TAURUS (April 2Q.May 20} If Democratic senators.
house in Pomeroy oreo. Phone
Americans cannot begin to keep up
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23·Dec. 21)
9ermce Bede Oso l
you're shopping lor necessities
t.~~~~--Kennedy was quoted as telling the
985-4366 evenings .
Take yourself ou t ot the picture
today, vou should have good
with
the
increasing
cost of living. U
when negoliahng or c1rawing u,P
luck fin'ding the exact items at two New York Democrats that "by
COUPLE WOULD like to rent
DEVOTED TO 11lE
we are to reverse these trends, we as
a contract. tf you don·t appear
the r ight prices. Look for the
li'II'EIIDlT OF
house or nice apt in PomeroyThanksgiving I'll have a pretty good
seu-servmg . the other par ty will
bargains.
going
to
have
to
make
a
nation
are
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Middleport
area .
benci over backward tO please
GEMINI (M11'21·June 20} lntor ~ idea" as to whether he will run in
ROBERT HOEFUCH
sacrifices. We are going to have to
61'-698-3807 .
you
matlon or knowledge you seek Is
CllyE.tliO&lt;
1980.
(Dec.
22-Jan
.
19)
CAPRICORN
easily
ob
taina
ble
todav.
If
need
cut
from
our
budgets
the
nonPubU..'" c~au, ncept S.lllnlay ~Tilt OUt
'W'Birthday This is one of those days when be, pic k the brains of people in What Kennedy already has going
Valley Pu.blllbiq c ....-111- Maldmedia, l.ale.,
essentials, those extras, that for
tw o head s are be!ler th an one.
Yard Sale
the know. They' ll be most help- amounts to a national campaign
111 Court SL. Pomeroy, Ohio tiTII. a.-.
SepL 13. 1979
Before pr oceeding full -steam
now, we can do without. nus means
ful.
Office Pb- 1ft- lilt. Edllor1ol without
a
national
headquarters.
t rmgm be alllicull to see aT The
aheM . check with a co-worker to
CANCER (June 21·JUIY 22} An
11!-!117.
drl ving less, spending less, and
lARGE YARD Sole . Nice cl90n
·nomen t bul lhi s coming ·.1ear
gel his or her 1houghts.
inside tip may be given to you
S«&lt;~Dd d•u post..ae pOl a I PomtrO)', ow..
whole
operation
got
fresh
The
school clothes , all !.izas . men's
mil turn ouT to he a most lOt doing less. Unless we acknowledge
.AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
today that could prove quite
Natioalllldvmlll.al rrprtHaCidvt, ....._
and women'!., baby clothes
impetus
when
he
chose
to
tell
the
:unate one. f ou may not recogYour benefits come today
benefic ial, it you choose to take
Anucla\et, 3111 Euclld An., Ot-vdlld. OIUe
the
severity
of
these
problems,
we
and knick-knocks , something
nile ·t because Lady Luck .15
thr ough persons with whom you
4411$.
advantage of it. However . take world that his mother and his wife
cannot begin to solve them.
for everyone. Siept. 13 . 14 . 15
~o~ o rk1 n g 1ncogn1 10. but she .s
feel close personal ties. Those
Sublt'r1pUoll ra&amp;n : Delivered by tarrier
care not to betray a confidence.
have
said
they
wouldn
't
object
if
he
,nf!re
you know little about could ha\le
ot Mary Layne's , I st house on
wtwre IVaU.blt • CHII pPr wfft.. By MtCtt
LEO (Jul, 23·Aug. 22} It's not
two
major
issues
Beyond
these
'IIRGO (Aug . 23·Sept. 22) Go
more interest in themselves than
Roulcwbfncatrkr Krvk:e DOtavaU.I*, 0 .
like you to ta il to reciprocate the ran in 1960.
left otter you cross railroad
there are many more demanding atdlter what you want Ieday 1n a
moadl.tUe.
in you.
generosity ol lrlends. Be ca reful
tracks ot Cheshire.
Kennedy
followed
that
up
by
Tbt DIU)' StaUaeL by m.U lD 0..0 1.t Wet&amp;
subtl e and gentl e manner and
PISCES (Feb. 20·Morch 20)
that you 're not ail take and no
tention in the months ahead.
VtrpaJa, oat year t:33.• : Sis moaU. UUI;
your pa1!s Nill be oYerltowmg .
When it comes to th ings dealing , give tod av.
saying he still is not a candidate, and
Congress
will
be
asked
to
help
lhr1!e IDOGLIII 111.51. Elaew~ $11.• ; tb
... he oppos1 te w1il be true if you
with the home. you , rather than
TwO FAMILY Yard Sale .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
had no particular time frame for
IDODU.IZt.• ; ~ moalhiiiJ ,II.
1
Jppear gn:~sp 1 rrg or selti sh. Fine
your mate, are the luckiest
Chrysler out of their current finan·
Clothes . household toys , hand
Tbt Aalocllted Pl"ttl ll a:dutvtly ndW
todfl.y _ II there·s a toss-up as to
deciding when to become one.
1JUI more ol wnat lies anead tor
VILLAGE OF
tools and misc. Wed .· Fri . 9·• .
cia!
dilemma
;
and
what
they
do
or
to the aae for pablklltloe of aU Dewt diaplkkl
10u in the year following your
whose views to follow. use yours .
RACINE
He
didn't
repeat
what
had
been
his
530 laurel St .. corner of Beech
t mllted Co Uw aewsp.per ead 111o u.e lecal
o1rtnday by sending for your
ARIES {March 21-April19) Stick
don't do could well dictate the fate of
RACINE, OHIO
by elementary school.
MWI pabUJbed bertla.
standard line: that he expected
co py of Astra-Graph Letter. Mail
to sociahzin!l with friend s today.
ORDINANCE
that
company's
140,000
employees.
$1 tor each to Astra-Graph , BoK
NO. 255
be
the
nominee
and
Carter
to
TO VACATE THE ALLEY
GARAGE SALE . WilHam 489 _ Rad iO Ci ty Station. NY .
i0019 . Be sure to spec1 1y birth
THAT DIVIDES LOTS 7 intended to support him .
Reeves residence on 661 at
PROBATE COURT
AND10ANDLOTS8AND9
date.
The uproar that generated is what
Allred . Sept . 13. 14 . 15.
OF MEIGS
OF MEYER'S ADDITION
LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) It's
"""PROFESSIONAL
COUNTY,
OHIO
Truckload of new carpet , 50
sets
the last of the Kennedy brothers
TO
THE
V
I
LLAGE
OF
1mport an t to keep str ong ta!th in
ESTATE
OF
HARRY
0.
cerami c plante rs,
dishes,
RACINE,
BETWEEN
PARTS
~o~hat
you're domg and w1th
apart from any other political
BOLINGER, DECEASED
THIRD STREET AND
cosmeti cs , lamps ,
books ,
Nhom . because something qwte
Case
No.
22801
figure.
It
was
a
response
Kennedy
FOURTH STREET .
subsl an tial Will come your way 11
clothes. , old records , boby furNOTICE OF
Whereas , there has been
you don 't falter.
surely anticipated. It was read by
niture , other new items.
APPOINTMENT
laid oul in the plat of !he
SCORPIO (Oct . 24·Nov. 22) It
OF FUDICUARY
some Democrats as the functional
Village of Racine, Ohio, an
on August 29th , 1979, in
alley dividing Lots 7 and 10 equivalent of a declaration of
YARD SAlE : Re in or shine at
the Meigs co unty Proba te
wanted to Buy
• W1ntertze wtth
from Lots 8 and 9 of
leona Stewarfs , Mulberry
Court, Case No. 22801 ,
Meyer 's Addition to the candidacy. The draft-Kennedy
S1momz " Sh 1nes like
Ave . Friday , Sept . 14 from 9to
Josephine L. Bolinger, 110
Village of Racine, Ohio,
people rejoiced, and said it would be
WANTED: JUNK. Bottlitries .
the Sun" week after
5p. m .
Wolfe Drive, Pomeroy,
which
alley
runs from
radiators . motors , auto. trans .
Ohio wa s appointed Ad ·
week
a
big
help
in
their
efforts
to
organize
Third Street to Fourth
BIG YARD Sole . Piano , No S._l:lndoy call s. 949·2563.
mini stratri x of the estate of
Street in said Villa~e ; and,
• Start s br~ghter
and raise funds .
Harry
0.
Bolinger ,
clothing .
boys· clothing ,
WHEREAS sa 1d alley
stays blighter than
deceased , late ol 110 Wolfe
Anyone
else
would
have
been
choirs , many misc. i tems . Sam
has
not
been
used
by
the
Auto
Sales
the leading prem 1um
Drive,
Pomeroy,
Ohio
.
general
public
and
In
the
Arnold' s residence , Water St.,
laughed out of the running for
Robert E . Bu ck
wax
opinion of the le~isla.tive
Syracuse . Sept .
12, 13 ,
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . call
Probate J udge
announcing that he had his mother's
authority there IS good
14.- 10-?
303-67S-1501 or 30S-675·2466
Clerk
cause for vacating said
permission to run for president. But
or 304-675- 1553.
(9) 5, 12, 19, 3.1c
alley and such vacation
.
for Kennedy, last -son of a farruly
YARD SALE . Friday . Sopl . 14 . 9 1974 DODGE CORONET 4-doar
will not be detr imental to
the genecal intere.st, and,
am to 4 pm . Corner Rt . 7 and
that. has suffered two political
PROBATE COURT OF
Custom. 992-5658 .
WHEREAS the Village of
Flatwoods Rd . (Rive Points).
MEIGS COUNTYb
assassinations,
it seemed natural. ·
Racine
is
the
owner
of
Lots
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE. Ex·
HIO

wed

. DREAM FISH- Brad Young, 12, son of Mr. and Mrs. Victor Young,
Jr., P.cmeroy, caught his .rdream fish" Saturday night. Brad was
checting his trotllne at the Youngs' summer cottage at Lowell on the
Mu8klngum River when be made the catch. With the help of his dad and
his uncle, Bill Harris, Brad pulled in a 20 pound, 34 inch shovel head catfish. Brad has been called "the fisherman" by friends in the Lowell area
and Saturday night he lived up to his nickname. However, with the ex·
citement of his big catch, Brad spent a restless night after capturing his
dream fish. The fish will be mounted as a trophy lor the young Pomeroy

_

U

flabennan.

Washington today

Karolyn seeking
half of assets
CINCINNATI (AP) - The wife of
Philadelphia Phillies f1rst baseman
Pete Rose has asked for half his
assets plus alimony and child
support in a divrrce action that
would end their 14-year-old mariage.
Karolyn Rose filed for divorce
Tuesday in Hamilton County Court
of Domestic Relatioos. She said she
had no ccmment when asked about
it.
Rose, in New York Tuesday, also
said he would have no ccmment.
Sle .Is recuperating from a blood
clot in her leg. She said during her
h9spitallzation her husband had not
called, but said she still loved him
and understood he was busy .
The suit charges gross neglect of
duty and asks for a split of all
property plus reasqnable alimony
and child suppcrt.
The couple has two children,
Fawn, It, and Pete Jr., 9.
Rose, who played with. the ·
Cincinnati Reds for 14 years, moved
to PhUadelphla as a free agent last
year. His contraJ'I was reported
worth 1800.000 for each of four years.
Rose also is reported receiving
substantial
income
from
enoorsements and other business
ventures .
The couple was separated for
seve:al months during the 1978
Cincinnati Reds season and have
separated again .
They are both from Cincinnati and
were married Jan . 25, 1964.
Her lawyer asked reporters not to
telephone Mrs: Rose.
"This is a very low point in her

Capital Briefs • • •

..

ASTRO•GRAPH

~'Your

.

Authoriled CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I

PEOPLE

· '~

ROSE Hill . Wednesdoy on.d
Thursday . Sept . 12 ond 13, 6
p .m . to 8 p.m . i tems grea t ly
.reduced . Nothing over SOc .
Good winter coots , jackets ,
SOc: boby clothes , si ze 1-4, Sc :
dresses ond misc . 10c· 15c .
Odds ond ends.
YA RD SALE . Wed . 12th thn.i
Sun , 16. Walter Wilso n
res idence on CR 19 between 4
lone 33 and Old Rt . 33 . First
yard sole ever . Boys ' pants , 10
and 12 husky 9 trll 0 eoch doy .
Ra in cancels un t il following
week .
YARD SAlE Ma1n St .. Ru!land .
Friday . Women's and men 's
cloth ing .
GARAGE SALE
J1m May 's
garage . l!Jr n ot Chester on to
(R 25 . I sl house on left. 5
fam ilies . Thur s. 13th and Fri·
day 1'!h . Watch for \ igns .
YARD SALE . Thursday Sept.
13. Marilyn Powel l V m&amp; St. ,
Racine . From 8-4 . l ot s of nice
children's clothing.
YARD SALE Sept. 13 and 14 .
Thurs . and Fr i. 10-6 . 308 Poge
St . M iddleport . Boys' cloth ing
t izes . 2 to 12 . G irlS ond
women '• cloth ing siun 3·.41 to
11 -12. A ¥on . Singer sewing
machine comero ond Iars of
mis c.

--.-....,..._

YARD SALE . APpro• '3 mi les
obov• Fairground s on Old 33 .
Ernest Cullvms . Thurs , Fr i.

So . . .... .

ce llent condition . 29 ,000
miles . $2-400. 992-3198.

1973 ELDORADO CADILLAC.
52500. Coli Da ve . 992-6255.
1969 FORD BRONCO 4-wheel
drive .' White spoke wheels , 3
Spee d
frons .
Call
61•-446-9595 .
1976 BUI CK REGAL , '!'W hile wi th
red racing stripe and red vi nyl
interio r , radi o , v.e, auto.,
P.S.. p .b .. $2950 . Four ne~ oil
weather steel belted tires or
S2700 without new tires .
985· 3504 after 5 :30 pm .
1975 MONZA, excellent con&amp;
lion . l ow mileage . No rust .

992-5766.
1973 GRANO PRIX , good con·
dili on , sun roof . ! ape . S! 700

992 -5063.
1976 FORD VAN . 6 cyl. . au to. ,
AM -FM casselle. qq2-6137 .

IN THE MATTER OF
DAVID EUGENE ROB ·
SON

Case No. 11810

NOTICE OF
HEARING ON
APPLICATION FOR
APPOINTMENT
GUARDIAN OF
MINOR
In the Malter of THE
GUARDIANSHIP
of
DAVID EUGENE ROB ·
SON, Minor
No. 22810
To David Eugene Robson,
Roure, Pomeroy, Ohio and
Richard L. Robson, ad dress unknown
You ~re Hereby Notifie d

that

an apl?lication was

filed in satd Cou r t by
James B. Robson on the

101h day of September 1979,

for the appointment of him self or some other suitable
person as Guardian of your

person .

Said applicat ion will be
for hea r ing before said

Court in Pomeroy, Ohio, on
17th . day of September
1975 CHE VROLET NOVA. 6 !he
1979, at 1:OOO 'CIOCk P.M .
cyl. , std . sh il l , 4 new radials .
You w ill therefore ap $995. 992-3406.
pear in said Court on or
before said t ime of hearing
197B FORO -4x4 . 351 engi ne , anc:1 select some suitable
person to act as your Guar ·
cus tom poinl job a nd interior . dian or the Court will ap 15.000 m ite s. Lo ts of ac
;&gt;oi nt a GUardian for you . if
ce:sso r ies. S7S&lt;Xl. Phone no. a Guardian be
found
992-2656
neces sary .
WITNESS my signature
1976 MONJE CARLO , 350 and the seal of sa id Court,
engine, a•r cond i t ioning, AM- th is IOih day of September
FM rod 1o new rod iol tires
35 ,000 miles . $2600. Pho n~

1979

Rober! E . Buck
Judge

992-2656.

1972 BUI CK SK 'ItARK . Auto ..
• · PS. AC good condi tion .
$1200 . After 5 p . m . 949· 2445.

By Caroly n G. Thoma s
D•puty Clerk ·

iJ

(9 )

12, IIC

7 and 10 of Meyer's Ad ·
dilion to the Vil l age of
Racine, and Roger Adams.
aka Roger L . Adams, is the
owner of Lots 8 and 9 of
Meyer 's Addition to the
vnrage of Racine, which
properties are all of the
properties !hal abut !hal
portion of said alley to be
vacated ; and,
WHEREAS the said
Roger Adams. aka Roger
L . Adams, and his wile,
Nancy Adams, have given
their written consent to

Five years ago : !he Soviet Union
launched Soyuz 15 into orbit - with
two men aboard.
One year ago : Cardinal Albino
Luciani of Venice was elected Pope,
taking the name John Paul. He died 34
days later.
Today's birthdays: Retired Gen.
Maxwell Taylor is 78 years old.
Newspaper editor Benjamin Bradlee
such vacation which con ·
is
58.
sent is duly flied with the
Thought for today : National honor
legislative authority of the
Village of Racine; NOW
is national property of the ·
THE~EFORE,
BE IT ORDAINED BY- value. - James Monroe (
THE COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF RACINE,
STATE OF OHIO :
Section 1: That the alley
that divides Lots 7 and 10
from Lots 8 and 9 of
Meyer 's Addition to the
Village of Racine, and
which runs from Third
Street to Fou r th Street, be
and the samr
vacated .

hereby

Is

Section II : That th is Or ·
dinance be and remain in
force from and after the

earliest period allowed by
law .
Passed this 4th day of

Sep tember, 1979.

Albert Hill Jr .
ATTEST :
Mae Cle land

President

.
M

Char!PS Pyles

M ay·'
19) 1 ~

....
•,.

~~= G&amp;J AUTo PARTS G&amp;J Auto Parts ":t~:
114 W. 2nd St .

Rt.33

Mason, w. Va.

Pomeroy

•

."
..,
."..'.
~
~

•

PARK RESERVED ·
I

League, and parents and other
adults are also invited. The youth
group (boy scouts, girl scouts, HI,
etc. ) with the most members
present will receive a $20 prize. An
adult leader must accompany the
group.
The day 's activities will conclude
at approximately 3 p.m. with
drawings for all door prizes. Prizes
have been donated thus far by Fritz
Sisson of The Tackle Box in
Syracuse - rod and reel combo,
lures, and many other fishing items;
Pickens Hardware
reel ;
Ridenour's Supply - $10; Newell's
Sunoco - $10; Gaul's Market - $5;
Baum Lumberof lures.

box

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30, SUNDAY 1"-G ,

• IIUfl' l ,.ICy II II jNI•

''"" tdy

·

Tolal Head 735

SCIOTO DOWNS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Star
Born, Yacht Club and Atina Hanover,.
won the three divisions of the $49,200
final elimination leg of the Ohio
Sires Stakes for. 2-year-old pacing
fillies Tuesday night as the season
ended at Scioto Downs.
Star Born, driven by William
Haughton, took the lead at the threequarter pole and moved out to a 1().
length triumph over San Juan Hill.
Touring the· mile in 2:00 3-5, the
winner paid $2.40, $2.2C and $2.2C.
Sam Noble Ill guided Yacht Club
to a narrow decision by a nose over
Flying Candy in 2:03 4-5. She paid
$6.60, $4 and $3.
Alina Hanover, with Joe Aamsky
in the sulky, took command b the
stretch for a one-length victory over
Steady Beacon in 2:00 4-5. She
returned $7, $3.60 and $3.
·
The top points scorers in the five
legs now advance to the $106,000
championship final Sept. 25 at
Lebanon Raceway .
The 2-ll-1 first race trifecta was
worth $1,911.60.
A closing night crowd of 6,791
wagered $627,664.

NorthGallla
Eastern

1 0 0 .35 7

Southwestern
Southern

1 1 02626

.,

1 1 03634
0111252

WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. SALE

Feeder Sfeers : Good and Choice
250 to 300 lbs. 85 to 117; 300 to .00 lbs.
80 to 106; .Ql to 500 lbs. 80 to lOS ; 500
to 600 lbs. 8010 92 .50 ; 600 to 700 lbs. 70
10 86. 25 ; 70010 800 lbs . 62 .75 IO 76 .50 ;
800 and over 60 to65.75.
Feeder Hei fers : GOOd and Choice
250 to JOO lbs. 76.50 to 94 : 300 to .Ql
lbs. 72.50 IO 88 ; .00 IO 500 lbS. 68 to
76.75 ; 500 to 600 lbs . 61 .50 to 74.50 ; 600
to 700 lbs. ~ . 50 to 69.25; 700 to 800
lbs. 55 to 63 .75 ; 800 and over 52.50 lo
61. 75 .
Holstein Heifers 300 to 600 lbs.
77 .50 to 99.
Feeder Bulls : Good and Choice 250
lo JOO lbs. 86 to 118; 300 to o100 lbs.
8-4.50 to 104; .00 to 500 lbs. 78.50 to
100; 500 to 600 lbs. 62.50 to 8-4 .15; 600
to 700 lbs. 60 to 77.25 ; 700 to 800 lbs.
55.50 to 1&gt;4.50 ; 800 and over 55 to
1&gt;4.50 .
Holstein and Bulls (300-800 lbs . )
55.50 to 12.50.
Bulls (1,00 lbs. and over) 56 to 62 .
Slaughter Cows 1Uiili1ies) 47 .75 10
55 ; Canners and Cutters .Cl to 46.75 .
Springer Cows (by !he head) 300 to

WHITEWALLS

""*d .A'Ja'l.

For v•r IMntfit, I( m1t1
•to ..1'\tiCH Iff IWHUf·
llr un~tt -~ un Ill mNt'l
rip! II *c'fiflt ..,, left/ ICII,

2.34

'*"''•II
01 Ul
u r 1!.1 nht.ll

2.53

.,.ltltr
...,.,. 1

.,l!ltlltetl Of -I'll fllltl
IIIIIICh crutt or unlln••
.,. wrltl tnfc ttry or 111Mit

2.59

*"rt~tt

Cllllliiltlfl, 1 _wM. . ·
CU II .IM1 Jft'll I{ 111111

!1M
1 ...,tttn Miftr ol .. ,._.
llltft l t f Mh nHilll plltl.
.... ... llrtlu \VItam Plltl
~nttbt"""•lilly
Nttl"'""; I( flllf l '"IY 111
ill lllldfl'ltltl rtfv• 11 otr·

' ""' ..,., partlll ltr.. t joll
ttf.l'f' is II

WOOD OR COAL BURNERS

IN

FOR

rnE

2.82

51.18

3.11

Plus F.E.T. 1.74 Each
All Tires Plus F.E.T. Each

t/ftl70ur

9
2.44

1.77

MAINTENANCE -FREE
K mart"
/48 BATTERY
Our Reg. 54.88

PREMIUM
RADIAL-TUNED
SHOCKS

A78x13
Plus F.E.T. 1.62 Each
All Tires Plus F.E.T. Each

Install 4 se ts Quality Brake

Shoes

2. Mach1ne 4 Brake Drum s
3. Rebuild Wh eel Cylinders (1f
po ss ible)
4 . Inspect Master Cylinder

5. Repack Wheel Bearings
6. Bleed Hydraulic Line
7. AdJ ust BrakPS and Road
Te st

•

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W.VA.

'48

---------COMPUTER SPIN
BALANCE
SPECIAL
Sale Price

.,.·~. :11 •,
Use o n cars with radial . bias or belted tires.
Sizes fo r most U.S.
ca rs. Shop at Kmart.

Sllle Price

Work done on most
U.S. foreign cars . Disc
brakes are extra.
Save at Kmart .

Sale Price

••
...

Reg.

22.77

1.66

With Ex~h.mge .
Never needs water!
Calcium -lead con·
stru cte d . For most
cars and light !rucks .

STOCK

54.11

Reg.

34.88
A78x13

BLACKWALLS

'42

NOW

2.76

'26 0w

'

ECONOMY-PRICED
POLYESTER CORD

Cow-Calves (by the head) 425 to
785.
Veal Calves95.501o 110.
Baby Ca lves 351o 87 .50.
Hogs
Top Hogs 1210·230) 37.50 to 39 .70 .
Boars 26.50 to 29.60.
Pigs (by the head) 8.50 to 24.50.
Sows ( ~ lbs . and over) 28.50 to
32.10.

KING

51 .18

'.

MOUNTING INCLUDED • NO TRADE-IN REQUIRED

. . .,. .,IMII

SEMET SOLVAY DIVISION

CAMDEN PARK

a

FIBERGLASS
BELTED

OF

OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY-11 AM TIL 9 PM

seniors Paul Lasseter, Greg Smith,
and Victor VanSickle.
In addition, the Bobcats have a
strong defensive unit particularly
against the run. However, the KC
secondary has showed sign• of inex·
perlence.
Last Friday night, Alexander tied
Oak Hill 13-13. In order to win, KC
Must stop the hard running of Brian
Zoulek.

Kmart
SERWICE POLICY

FAMILY OUTING
ALLIED CHAMICAL CORP.
ASHLAND PLANT

Coach Bob Ashley's Southwestern
Highlanders will try to bounce back
following a loW loss to Southealtem
against the winless Hannan Wlld·
· cats.
Southwestern a 20-12 Willner over
Oak Hill t-wo weeks ago wu
somewhat shocked by the Pantherll
of Richmondale.
Hannan, meanwhile, after lllling
ita tor quarterback in PIe aeaiCJI
scrimmage against Southern, hall
lost by big scores in its first two
·games this faD.
Coach Jolm Blake's North GaWa
Pirates seek their second straight
victory against Southeastern. ·
Last Saturday' the Pirates behind
the rushing of senior tailback Tim
Howell dumped Huntington of Roas,
22-7. Howell gained 147 yards in 33
carries, rushed for one TO and
scored a conversion.
The Pirates dominated the game
completely getting 20 flnrt doWns ·
and a tota1298 yards .
In Meigs County Friday night,
Eastern, 1978 defending SVAC
champions, will try to bounce back
froma one-game losing streak again·
st Miller. Coach Joe Mitchem's
Eagles fell to Zane Trace, 22-7 last
week. Pioneer bullback Frank carper ' found some holes in tbe Eagle
defense as he rushed for 162 yards.
Southern, shutout all of 1aat year
and the first game this season,
scored 12 points to tie Federal
HOcking 12-12.
Dale Teaford and Robin Fortune
scored the Tornado points.
SVAC STANDINGS
W L T P ._,
TEAM
Kyger Creek
2 0 04512
2
0 07314
Hannan Trace

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

steady .

WINTER
SEASON

SATURDAy SEPTEMBER 15TH
UNTIL 6 PM

BY GREG BAD..EY
National Hunting and Fishing Day
will once again be celebrated by
Meigs Countians and surrounding
areas. nus year's celebration, on
September 22, will be held at Royal
Oak Park, beginning at 9 a.m.
Spear-beaded by the Izaak Walton
League and sui&gt;porled through
donations by other sportsman's
clubs of the county, the day-long
festivities will include shooting, ar·
ellery, muzzleloading, trapping, gun
safety, canoeing, fishing, and much
more. Youngsters four years of age
and older will get to participate in
lJ()IIII! activities, and there will be
door prizes galore.
Free lunch will be provided by the

OHIO VALLEY
LIVESTOCK CO.
MARKET REPORT
All pr ices taken from the auction
of Saturday, Sept . 8. 1979. Trends :
Fil!eder cattle are S3 to l5 higher .
Cows are Sl to lS higher. Veal ca lves

~

HUNTINGTON
lie

,..,
G
..••

·nen Talk

Thus far, KCHS has relied heavily

ona torrid ground game led by

things. ~'

~

Clerk
APPR OV ED :

Pomerov,O.

OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jock &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon.lhru Wed . 9-5,
Thur. 9· 12, Fri. 9·5, Sal. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

•

nan, W. Va. 4H. ThUs far, tile of·
fense has he led by junior halfbl!ck
Todd Sibley and senior running
back-kicker Jay Bray.
Sibley had two touchdown runs
last week giving him 30 points in two
outings.
Bray who had nine points against
Sym)nes Valley also added 11 poinis
Friday night.
In their season opener last Satur·
day, Huntington was beaten 22-7 by
North Gallia.
.
Kyger Creek, very much im·
proved over last season, will seek
revenge for last year's trouncing at
Albany against always tough Spar·
tans.
The Bobcats' first two victories
have been 3~ over Federal Hocking
and last week 's stunning lf&gt;-12 win at
Bachtel Field in Mason.

435.

Phone 992·2178
234 E . Main St.

....

life," said Jerome Teller.
It wa$ the second legal action filed
against Rose.
Terry Rubio of Tampa, Fla., filed
a paternity suit against Rose
claiming he is the father of her
daughter , Mrrgan Erin Rubio, born
March 24, 1978.
Gerald Herms, her attorney, said
the case is scheduled for trial in
December .
"That 's terrible and I'm not being
sarcastic, " said Herms of the
divorce action.
Herms said the divorce action has
nothing to do with the paternity suit.
But, he said, " As a practical
matter, it certainly complicates

Hannan Trace and Kyger Creek
will attempt to keep their winning
streaks going Friday night as all
teams in the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference continue play
against non-league opponents.
Coach Larry Cremeens' Wildcats
will entertain Huntington of Ross
County while Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats return home for a headon
clash with an old nemesis, Alexan·
der.
In other games, Southwestern
visits Hannan, W. Va., Miller is at
Eastern, Southeastern of Ross plays
at North Gallia and Parkersburg
· Catholic travels to Southern.
At Hannan Trace, the Wildcats
will go after their third.straight win,
their best start ever. In their two
previous starts, the Wildcats dum·
ped Symmes Valley, 27-3 and Han:

4FoR'13

·,:_-:, ::' - We Will spin balance
each wheel for I m proved handling and

tread wear. Save.

.,

..

,,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 12,1979

Concepcion, ·Foster homer in Reds' 9-8
··
CIN CIN NAT! ( AP ) The
Cincinnati Reds lead the National
League West by hall a game today,
but don't bet the rent that the
Houston Astros aren't on top again
by toolorrow.
The Reds took over first place with

noted that Cincinnati still must play
"He had to reach across his body
single in the seventh that gave
the Astros three games in the Houston the lead until Concepcion for the throw and I could have killed
Astrodome later tllis month .
him ill wanted to, but there wasn't
hit his home run.
" We need to win , but if we lose
any need. I was sale anyway,"
Houston third baseman Enos
tomorrow night that 's not Lhe Cabell, icing a swolen ankle , said he
Cabell said.
,
peruiant," Virdon said.
He called the game "one of the
took the ~unt of a seventh inning
The two teams pounded out 28 hits collision with Bench.
most exciting I've ever been in.' •
in a game tllat was supposed to be a
pitching duel between the Reds'
Ti&gt;m Seaver and Houston's J .R.
Richard. The duel lasted three
innings before the craziness began.
Cincinnati scored lour times in the
lourtll, the Astros scored twice in the
fifth and sixth to tie, and by then
both starters were gone.
" It was a crazy game. There's no
explaning it,u said Seaver. " That
f.!· -will happen sometimes."
~
Seaver left with six strikeouts to
take over fourth place on the major
league career strikeout list with
2,874, but Tom Hume, 1().8, was the
l,
eventual winner. The loss was
charged to Joe Samblto, 7-3, the
Drivers now's the time to be ext,ro cautious. There are more
fourtll of five Astro pitchers.
~\
kids on the r.oad. more bike5 in t.he streets. more urs picki!'l
The Reds went ahead by two in the
up and droppjng of! students. Be prepared .to stop at an mstant's notic~ lives are dependma: on you!
.
bottom o! the sixth, but Houston
sc~red three runs in the seventh to
,t • Parts AUTO PAin ITOIU How quick you stop depends on a
take the lead. Cincinnati finally won
V Plus ANO mv1a DIAim well tuned suspension system. GOOD
it in the seventh on back-to-back
BRAKES are not as effective with
homers, a two-run shct by Dave
fUTURE BRAND NAMES AND
worn SHOCK ABSORBERS. A WORN
Oxlcepcion and George Foster's
QUAliTY SERYICI TMlT ...
BALL JOINT or IDLER ARM can throw
27th of the year.
LEAD
TME
CLASS
you
out of control If you have to make
"We got the big hits and we played
slop. NEW WIPER. BLADES
a
panic
~ good defense," said Concepcion,
and
BRIGHT
HEADLIGHTS Improve
who reac)Jed a career high with his
~
@].
[E)
your
visibility
and
assure you of stop.
15th homer of the season.
LOCAL WINNERS of "guest day" held at
IIU11UTUU
ll(,f!Tifi6Uill•l
Elizabeth Lohse, low putts. The event was ll(&gt;Onsored
ping
short
of
a
potential
accident
"We played a lot of games this
Pomeroy Goll Colll'l!e Tuesday were, 1-r, Margaret
by the Pomeroy Ladie!! Goll Association. Lwlcheon year that made this one look like a
Make sure your car or truck is tuned
TRW
Follrod, longest drive; Peggy Moore, closest to pin and
to stop.
was held following the event at the Meigs Inn .
IUIP!Ift~ ,Atn l'fSTIIIS .
fundamental success," said Johnny
Visit your local Parts Plus Auto Parts
Bench, referring to several mental
~Gabriel ®
Store or make an appointment wlth •a
II. D. SIIOCI U10UIII
errors. "It seems everytime these
Parts Plus Service Dealer to have
two clubs get together they either
your "Stopping System" checkitd
slam batig at each other or it's a
soon.
CU..U ¥1SIOII nsn•1
very low~coring game."
!none unusual play, the Reds were
awarded what at the time was the
lSYJAlsOCIATED PRESS
go...Jtead run in the sixth on · an
Three of the low' pennant races in
obstruction call against Houston
the two leagues stlll remain very
pitcher Joaquin Andujar when he
much
in
doubt
with
less
than
20
days
knocked
down Concepcion during a
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Chicago slipped by california ll-7,
in the 1979 baseball season.
left
Carl Yastrzemski will get his
rundown
between third base and
Minnesota downed Kansas City 3-I
SIOIIS(IAED 1Y THE FOLLOWING COJICEAIUD \;~A::.,' AUTO PARTS STORE$ AJIO THEIR PARTIC.,.UIIfl f
Only Baltimore in the American
3,000th major league hit today ... or
home.
and Texas defeated Seattle 5-2.
.._: ~~· SEfiYICf: Df:AURS DISPU~IMG TlfE 1(. •.c:!• OUAliT'f SlRYICI SIC. ...
League East is running away witl1
Thursday ... or the day alter ... but
Astro second baseman Rafael
Brewers 5, A's 0
its
division , while the AL West and
he will get it. "I never thought one
Landestoy had a perfect five-for-live
Cecil Cooper smashed his 22nd
both divisions in the National
hit would be so hanj to get," the
night at the plate, including an RBI
homer and added a sacrifice fly to
144 W. 2nd St.
League
remain close. And it looks
Rt. 33
Boston slugger said Tuesday night
lead Milwaukee over Oakland. Jim
P&lt;1meroy, OH.
like
direct
confrontations
between
Mason, w. va,
after failing for the second straight
Slaton, 14-8, scatter«;d five hits for
the pennant contenders in each of
game to become the first player In
the Brewers, who broke a four-game
those
divisions could decide it.
American League history to have
losing streak.
Alter
Tuesday night's action,
3,000 hits and 400 home runs.
The loser was Matt Keough, 1-15,
Baltimore
held an II-game lead over
But Reggie Jackson of the New
who had lost 18 decisions in
Milwaukee
in the AL East, but the
York Yankees isn't worried.
succession unt~ he beat the Brewers
California
Ang~ls
led the Kal'lS81
"You know as well as I do he's
in Oakland last Wednesday.
City
Royals
by
only
lour games ln
going to get his 3,000\h hit as sure as
Blue Jays 3, Orioles I
the
West
.
the sun's going to come up,"
Tom Underwood scattered nine
In the National League, Montreal
Jackson said of Yastrzemski. "As
hits and Rico Carty cracked his-lOth
led
Pittsburgh by less than one onelong as he doesn't ~et upset and start
home run of the season as the Blue
hundredth of a percentage point ln
pushing."
Jays defeated Baltimore, snapping
the East since the Expos have two
Yastrzemski went hitless in three
Toronto's 15-game winless &gt;ireak
WOMEN'S
fewer
losses, and the CincinnaU
official at-bats against former
EXTRA LARGE
STURDY FIBREBOARD
against the Orioles.
Reds led Houston by a hall game ln
t.eamrllate Luis Tiant and relievers
POUCH
Underwood was the winner in
the West.
QUEEN SIZE
Ron Davis and Rich Gossage as the
TOTE
Toronto 's last victory over the
The
Reds
and
Astros
have
traded
Yankees defeated the Boston Red
Orioles on Aug. 6, 1978.
PANTYHOUSE
BAGS
that lead five times since Aug . 211.
FLORAL
Sox 8-3. He walked - his first base
Alfredo Gri!fin had three hits for
Shoulder
str
ap,
top
Milwaukee is in the odd position of
Per te&lt;IOudlil'l' F1hlhe
OR
on balls since Aug . 13, 45 games ago
zip, side pocket , 13 "
IMger l ady or ql r l
Toronto, which also snapped a "!lot having a single division game
squ&lt;~re .
5 Cqlor 5.
WOOD GRAIN
- popped to second baseman Willie
Be i ge
lone
color
seven-game losing string.
Reg . U .99
Regul&lt;u S! 19
left, and the Brewers must rely on
FINISH
Randolph in shallow center field ,
Tigers 14, Indians I
other East Division teams to slow
flied to right and fouled to catcher
Compare
At '2.19
SAVE 52'
Jason Thompson doubled home
down the torrid pace of ·the Orioles.
Jerry Narron.
three runs as Detroit exploded for
The Orioles, who sport the belt
"The law of percentages is on my
eight runs in the first inning, then
record in baseball, have won 14 of
side," Yaz said . "I'm not being
slammed an eighth-inning homer to
their last 19 games. They have not
given a chance to think of anything
lead the Tigers over Cleveland.
lost more than lour in a row since
else. I've had very few hitter's
. PRI,·~ TED
Lance Parrish added a two-run
July 7 when they ended their longest
pitches to hit . I've been getting
homer to the Detroit attack.
PLASTIC
losing streak of the season at five
pitcher's pitches. I want to get it
The eight runs was 'the most the
games.
'
DRAPES
over with ."
Tigers had scored in a single inning
Fits . '
The Orioles have three games left
AWONDERFUL FALL SELECTION!
Regular '1 .29
Even the Yankee starter, Tiant, is
since the !ourth inning of an Aug. 30,
against
the
Boston
Red
Sox,
who
Full
~~~
pulling for the Red Sox veteran.
1975, game against the California
SWEATERS
•
BLOUSES
01
trail
by
131'.
games,
Sept.
14-16
ln
"I want him to get it but not
Angels.
Baltimore, and finish up with homeT11in
against me," Tiant said . " He
White Sox 8, Angels 7
TOPS·
SHIRTS
~
\
,
Bed
and
..away
series
against
Cleveland
deserves it, but I'm not going to give
1
Jim Morrison slammed a pair of
and
Detroit.
Milwaukee
finishes
up
.
~'rs~
~~'!
:n'
!
n:n:
:;;
'
,
~sh:~~
-:
~~'J
it to him. I like him as a player, as a
solo home runs and Alan Bannister
wtJn fed ~m&lt;tll coll ar blouse~. We
.;;_ , ~-against Oakland, California,
SIZE 72X84
human, as a friend . I'm proud of the
g.:.therl!d an outst11ndlng .nray of ~
--~·~
,, ~'1)'singled home the tie-breaking run to
1
SeatUe.
-,.
Minnesota
and
Siyles
that
you'
ll
want
Look
ou
r
F&lt;'lll
:t
'/
.
1
man.''
Col lection O\ler, you 'll be pleased I ' I
lift Chicago over California.
BLANKETS
I
4 SIZES
The Angels and Kansas City,
In other AL games Tuesday,
Don Baylor powered his 33rd
Cannons run ot m ill We~ tport
,.~~~
,
meanwhile,
play
seven
games
with
Toronto stopped Baltimore 3-1,
LARGE
'\ Oli!nlo.et Potyu ler Md acrylic
homer of the season, a three-.run
At
each
other
down
the
stretchthree
ble110 MachiiW! washable
Detroit stomped Cleveland 14-1,
SPONGES
shot, and Brian Downing added his
J\ .i.P"!. (~~
· • ~.
Prices
in California Sept. 24-26 and lour in
Milwaukee blanked Oakland 5-ll,
(
,
Regular 79'
lOth home run for the Angels.
To Help
Kansas City Sept. 17-20.
a 9-3 victory over Houston Tuesday
night, the seventh time the division
lead has changed hands in two
weeks .
"I think we're going to win it, but
from here on out our most important
game is the next one," said Ray

·
Knight, who may be the Recti' most
valuable player in his first full year
at third base. "Up to now, this was
the most important game we played
all year."
Houston Manager Bill Virdon

PLEAS·
. . . .·E
:.

~ • Parts
V
Plus.sAYs

~::1F'~LSIGNS!

DON'T SPEED!
THINK SAFETY!
STAY ALERT!

SCHOOL
·

OPEN

l:t•r.ta

3,000th · hit alludes

Boston's Yastrzemski

Three races
still on line

~·

G&amp;J AU10 PARTS

G&amp;J AU10 PARTS

SALE ENDS SUNDAY • ADVERTISED PRICES IN EFFECT NOW
STORAG~

CHESTS·

77¢

Dozens Of Un-Advertised Special Buysf

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88'

w

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504

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Just Arrived!

1976 BUICK LESABRE 4 DR CREAM. PUFF ....................................... :3695

BUNCHES

1975 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 DR .................................. SALE PRICED 12595
1

1975 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX - LOADED, BUILT IN CB........................... 2395
1

1974 AMC MATADOR ·2 DR SHARP ............................................... 1495

20 PAGE ·

Give your r-.grnc a new look for
the tal l r.ei!son. T-t1ese ar e
color co-ordinated into at lrltc·!lve bouqveh. Quite a
good variety o t Jiflerenl
flower s.

PHOTO
ALBUM

Poud1e5 , d uubl~ ht111dles.
totes Bag s for U)Ual. dressy
or e'o'erydo!ly use. Tan , bl&amp;ek,
walnvt, rust brown i'lnd other
wan ted colors. Direct lrom the
New York mc'lrlo.et.

Regular 11.99

looks Ours Over

LATCH
HOOK

1974 BUICK APOLLO 2 DR PRICED FOR A QUICK SALE ............... .... ... '1695

RUG

1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 ................................................... .... 1795

SCHOOL
WORK
BOOKS
For

Pre-School

&amp; Grades I And 2
H ~ lp s

tl'l em wi t h
Reading ,
Spelling,

Ari thme ti c, etc .

KITS

FOR NEW OR USED CARS

r

$699
POMEROY

TO

$} Q99

(Edge 2-21

New York (Hunter 2-8) at Boston
(Rainey 5-5)
Cleveland (Waits 14·12) at Detroit
(Wilcox 11-71
, California (Knapp 3-3) at Chicago
&lt;Kravec 11 -13)
.
: "M~!~~~! (~~~~~~~-6)12· 13) at
'
Minnesota ( Koosman 18 -12) at
· Kansas City (Leonard11 -101
•
seattle (Honeycuttl0-10) at Texas
; , (Medlch 10-6)
1
Thursday's Gamn
• ''I New York at Boston
~ ' Baltimore a!Toronto
•
Cleveland at Detroit
: - Oakland at Milwaukee
•
Mlnnesot• at Texas
! Only games scheduled

! ..

EAST

W. L. Pci. GB

, ''Montreal
• PittSburgh
, ' St. Louis
1 " Chlcego
~ Phlledelpll la
New York

,
,
I
:

Chicken Breasts..~~.B gc

NATIONAL LEAGUE

•
'

·
Age
WHOLE FRYERS.~•.'!I
GRADE A.

83 SS .601

57
76 65
73 69
72 71

~

'h

.601
.539

9

.51' 12 '1•

.503

55 86 .390
WEST
Cincinnati
82 63 .566
Houston
81 63 .563
Los AOVI'Ies
68 76 .f72
San Franc isco
63 12 ..GI
San Diego
62 83 .4211
Atlanta
56 87 .392
•
TUflday•s RHUI!s
'_ Monlreail-3. Chicago 6-2
• Pittsburgh 7, St. Louls3

u

JO

Chicken Thighs .... ~ 79c

•;,

13 1h
19
20
25

~ ~~~!:r~~r. ~."i::"Y'ork 2

San Diogo 3, Los Angeles 1
Atlanta 2, San Francisco 1
. WetlllltiiNy'sGemn
Atlenta (Solomon 6·11) at San
Francisco &lt;CurtiS 10·91
St. Louis (Forsell 9·101 at PittSburgh (Candelaria 13-8)
•
Chicago (l..amp 11-11 at Montreal
'! (Rovers 12-91
Houston (J . Niekro 18·9) at Clrtclnnall &lt;L.aCoss 14·61
Philadelphia ( L.erch 8·121 at New
York &lt;Swen 12·111
San Diego (Rasmussen • ·B) at L.os
.l'lngetes (Hough H)
TIMirsday•s Gamn
Atlante •t Se_n Francisco
Sl. LOUISa! PIIISI&gt;urgh
Chicago at Montreal
Phll-lphla at New York
Sen Diego et l..OS AOVI'Its
Only games scheduled
Tuesday's
Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
eASEBAL.L
Alilorlcan League
NEW YORK YANKEES - An·
nounced tney will move tntlr Class
M farm club from West Haven
tConn.l of the Eastern League to
Nasnvllle of the Southern L.eague ;
end the! IIIeY would add 1 new farm
club, Greensboro of lhe Closs A
Western Carolina League.
National Lugue
National
Buketba 11 Association
NEW
YORK
KNICKER ·
BOCKERS Released Vincent
Joy-. forWard, and Billy Tucker,
guard .
SEATTLE SUPERSONICS
'Signed VInnie Johnson, guard, to 1
two·year contract. Signed Dennis
Awtrey, center, and Joe Hassett,
guo rd .

BALLARD'S . .

CENTER CUT LOIN

2 · BASKET WEAVE

~~8~n

9
g

·¢P-ck

aspec ts of the energy

:•
'',

. .·

PORK CHOPS...... ~...
USDA CHOICE

..

$119

CHUCK ROAST......~~ .•

SEEDLESS

situation and are
designed 10 encourage
a question and answer
period. Our phone
number istf12.3781

Ohio Power

.

e

.

WHITE GRAPES ..L!·.6.9 ·

HOCKEY

Call us. We can P• ovide an illusora1od 1aik
Or rilm prese ntat ion
for your group at no
charge. The programs
deal wi th varied

4 · OPEN WEAVE
3 - WAFFLE WEAVE

·

National Hockey LHIUI
ATL.ANTA ,FL.AMES - Signed
Kent Nilsson, forward, to a multi ·
vear contrect. Signed Pat Riggin,
goo lie; Mike Perovich, defenseman ;
Dale L.ewls, left wlnv, and Earl
lnvarfleld, Jr .• center ...
NEW YORK RANGE...S - Signed
L.ance Nelflery, lorward .
FOOTBALL
National Football Lugua
ST. LOUIS CARDINALS ~ Signed
lirad Oates, oft.enslvellneman .
SAN FRANCISCO 49ERS Placed Mike Hogan, fullback, on the
Injured reserve llst. Signed Jeff
Mcintyre, linebacker .

I

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1st Qualitr - Save 40' Pack

.

994
SAUSAGE•.........•..;.
·
$149

9
ge
RED APPLES...... :~G••
rAuLA

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$}09

MIRACLE WHIP.!.f..
l _': o_.w o N

'

KRAFT

&amp; Cheese

·, .1

Customer
Good Only at PmNell
Offer Expires

.

3 LB.

3/$1 CELERY................4/$1

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OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT

COUPON

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HYLAND CHUNK

DOG FOOD
..~. 25 L~. $329;·;.!. .·Wl
Limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Expires Sept. 15, 1979 .

TIDE
DETERGENT

$219
·-·~:;;\,

84 !~~r

Limit 1 Per customer
Good Only at Powe.ll's
.,
Offer E xpl res Sept. 15, 1979

Company

OPEN
SUNDAY

I To 6

298 SEOOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
/RICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT. 15, 1979

KRAFT

INCLUDES CHRISTMAS DESIGNS
Two sizes avll ll.3bllt. Acrllan yar n. Start your
rugs ll(Jw lor your home or lor gill~ . L11tch hook~
are not Included.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

•

EDUCATIONAL GRADED

1974 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO .................................................. 12195

SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY

e;

$}22

$149

1974 NOVA 4 DR ................................................... SALE PRICED 1995

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LEATHER OR VINYL$

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sal 8 am·lO pm

WEST

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1976 PLYMOUTH VALIANT 4 DR 6 CYL.. ........................ .. ............ ~. 2495
1

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\

HANDBAGS

1978 BUICK REGAL 2 DR. THE SHARPEST USED CAR ......................... 15495

..,

- tellfornle
80 65 .552
, .. Kansas City
76 69 . . 52~ 4
• .. Minnesota
74 70 . 51~ 5 1h
.. Texa&amp;
72 73 .497 •
62 82 . .(II l7 1h
0 Chicago
' • seattle "
50 as .418 19'h
\ . Oekland
50 95 .3oi.S JO
•Tuesdlly's Results
New York 8, Boston 3
•
J
Toronto 3, Baltlmore1
a ;'!"~ Detrnft 14, Cleveland 1
, ~ Milwaukee 5, Oakland 0
- · Chicago 8, California 7
~ •...,_ Minnesota J, Kansas City 1
Texas .s, seattle 2
Wednesday's Games
Baltimore (Palmer Nl at Toronto

~~

....

L

Ba-ll AI A G .. ncl
By Tile AIMCillld Prest
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Balli more
9~ ol8 .662
Milwaukee
84 60 .583 11
Boston
80 61 .567 13'h
New York
78 63 .553 15'h
Detroit
n 68 .531 18'h
Toronto
ol5 98 .315 4'/'lz

'

·''

POINT PLEASANT OR MASON ' ·I
'

---- ....·j

�6- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1979
'7 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,Wednesday ,Sept. 12,11179

Program heard on 23rd Psalm
A program on the 23rd Psalm was
presented by Mrs. Emerson Jones at
a meeting of the United Methodist
Women of the Haath Church, Mid·
dleport, Monday night.
Mrs. Jones spoke of the comparison between the shepherd and
his sheep and the Lord and Ills

people. ~he talked of the necessity
for water as a restoring element and
gave as an example the trail of
Bishop Asbury through the Blue
Ridge 'Millintains with slops at all
the springs. Mrs. Jones said that
water brings peace and that the

Bahr reunion held

..
'' .
•

The annual Bahr famlly reunion
was held at the Forked Run State
Park on Aug. 2.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Winters, Parkersburg; Alan
and Cheryl Sparks, Teresa and
Cassandra, Vienna, W. Va .; Robert
Tammi and Jessica Bacher, David
and JeaMe. Baker, Charles Maxine,
Charlene Michael and Mark
Goeglein, Victor and Wilma Bahr
Kathy Stone, Jane and Joey Coates:

''

'I '
'.'
'

SERVICE UNIT DIRECTORS - Mrs. Pat Thoma,
left, who has served as serVice unit director for the Big
Bend Neighborhood of the Black Diamond Girl Scout
Councl for the past six years, handed over the reigns of
the local scouting program to Mrs. Becky Mankin of
near Chester, and Mrs. Martha Graves, left, Pomeroy,
at Tuesday morning's service unit meeting. Mrs.
Mankin will be director for the girl scouting program
m Eastern and Southern Local School Districts. and

Helen Help
Us ... lh llo·lo·nllutto·l
HUSBAND LENDS TilE MONEY:
EXPECI'S HER TO COLLECf IT
By Helen Bo11el
DEAR HELEN :
My husband lent $150 to his cousin
who be knows is COilYeniently forgetful. He frets about it but never
reminds the guy.
Last night he told me to call and
ask for the mooty, as it will he
easier because I'm not related. What
should I say? -ABOliT TO BECOME
THE VILLAIN
.
DEARATBTV:
... To the cousin, nothirig. To your
husband, three little words : "Dun
him yourseU." -H.
DEAR HELEN:
Last year you and another columnist criticized older teen-agers for
trick or treating at Halloween - said
they spoiled it for the little kids, and
turned off people who gave out
treats. I've heen.burning ever since.
My daughter, age 16, plans to go
out in cOstume again this Halloween.
It's a custom she and her friends en·
joy. They don.'t harass the
yOWigsters; in fact, they protect
them.
Please retract your words. - Mrs.
J.B.
,
DEARMRS . B ~

I came down hard on rowdy teens
who terrorize small trick or treaters
and sometimes vandalize even as
they collect bounty... the t,Vpe who
spray "cheapskate" on a house
where they've been handed sticks of
gum instead of a candy bar.
If your !&amp;-year-old enjoys kid stuff
while protecting the kids, great. But
I 'II bet this will he her last year on
the TorT circuit.- H.

Mrs. Graves J.m handle Meigs Local School District.
Volunteer troop leaders are needed in Tuppers Plains,
ReedsVille , Racine, and .Salem Center for both the
brownie and junior levels. Those interested shOuld contact either Mrs. Mankin, 992·2201 or Mrs. Graves, 9922432. Uniforms are also needed and residents with
uniforms to sell or donate to the program are asked to
contact one of the service unit directors .

r------ ------

Grandchild born ·
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Gorby are anno"?cing the birth of their first grandchild, Christopher Robin, to Mr.
and Mrs. Gorby of Conway, S. C. on
Aug. 24. The baby weighed seven
pounds and two ounces. Maternal
grandparentS ' are Mr. and Mrs.
Carleson of Myrtle Beach, S. c. ·
Mrs. Gorby returned home Friday
after spending a week there with her
son and his family.

Thursday at Meigs Inn for dinner
and meeting.
1
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
WEDNESDAY
Chapter, Beta_Sigma Phi Sorority,
REGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy 6:30 potluck dinner at the home of
Chapter 80, RAM, 7:30 p.m. Wed- Mrs. Teresa Swat.;o:el, Chester Road ·
nesday at Pomeroy temple followed Thursday night. Members to tak~
by meeting of Bosworth Council 46
covered dish. Social committee in
·
RandSM,8 :30p.m.; allcompanio~ charge of dinner.
ureed to attend.
.
· SYRACUSE - MINERSVILLE
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY Baseball Association meeting, Thur·
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the sday7:30p.m. at Municipal Building
home of Mr. James Titus. Mrs.
in Syracuse.
Everett Hayes to have readings of
RACINE CHAPTER 134, OES,
Shakespeare. Dues will he collected,
past officers club, 7:30 p.m. Thur·
and for roll call members are to
sday at-Masonic 'l.'f,OJPitl in Racine.
name their favorite Shakespearean
MEIGS • COUN'i'Y ' Humane
character. ·
Society, 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY Thrift Shoppe, N. Second Ave., Mid- .
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the dleoort.
home of Mrs. James Titus. Mrs.
Wehelos scout meeting at the
Everett Hayes on Shakespeare for Chester scout hall, 7 p.m. AI 7:30
the program.
there will he a round table at the
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN Point Pleasant armory with a
CLUB, 8 p.m. Wednesday at the covered dish dinner.
Riverboat Room of the Athens CounROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8
ty Savings and Loan Co. Pomeory of. p.m. Thursday night at the hall .
lice. Francis Schaeffer to present Election of officers.
program on dahlias . All garden club
Kandi Bachtel
. PRECEPTOR Beta Chapter, Beta
members inVited to attend.
S1gma Phi Sorority first meeting of
MIDDLEPORT AMATEUR the fall at 6:30 p.m. Thursday at
GARDENERS, 8 p.m. at the home of home of Theresa Swatzel with a picMrs. Edward-Burkett, with Miss Er- nic. Those attenduig are to take a
ma Smith, co-hostess. Officers will covered dish, their own table serA birthday party was held recenbe installed.
.
Vice. Dessert will be provided.
tly honoring Kandi Bachtel at the
OIDO VALLEY Grange 2612
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT
home of her grandmother, Mrs. May
Lions Club meeting noon Wednesday Letart Falls, will meet at the hall at
Mayle.
.
at Meigs Inn.
8 .p.m. _Thursday. Racine Grange
Cake, ice cream, chips and KoolALL BOYS between 8 and 18 in· will be Vlsitmg for the evening.
Aid were served to Ronald and Trina
terested in scouting report to the
Bachtel, Rnnnie and Diane Bachtel,
FRIDAY
Boy Scout building, Racine, (next to
Tina, Wendi, Tracy Collins, Kathy
COMMITTEE MEETING for
barber shop), 7:30p.m. Wednesday. Chester Cub Scout Pack 235 at 7 p.m.
and Tonya Phalin, Toni and Larry
All boys must he accompanied by a at the Chesler scout hall. Pack
Nutter, Pam and Patty Landaker,
parent or guardian; this is only meeting at the same lime.
Sharon, Shawn and Amy Durst. Sensignup this fall.
ding gifts were Leo Young and Ron·
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
THURSDAY
nie Lee Casto.
Chapter, Daughters of the American
WESTERN SQUARE dance
Thursday, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. ai Revolution, meeting · 1:30 p.m.
Royal Oak Park recreation building. Friday at home of Mrs. Paul Eich
Chad Johnson, South Point, caller. with attorney, Mrs. Barbara Knight,
A pitcher has to appear in 182 or
Refreshments will he served and all as speaker.
more innings to qualify for the ERA
Western square dancers cordially
SATIIRDAY
championship.
invited.
MEIGS· , COUNTY Retired
JOYCE HOJ;IACK, intercessory
Teachers Association luncheon
prayer chairman, will he speaker meeting at 12 noon Saturday at
when Pomeroy Chapter Women's Meigs Inn with Phyllis Hackett
SUNDAY
Aglow Fellowship meets at 7 p.m. speaking. on her trip to Japan.
DEEM FAMILY reunion Sunday
ReservatiOns must he in no later at Royal Oak Park; relatives and
than Thursday.
friends invited.
freelance writer, but you'll never
WALTER GILMORE family
COUNTY-WIDE prayer meeting
make it if you insist that your reunion, Saturday, roadside park on
2 p.m. Sunday at Rutland com:
material be printed as is or not at Route 33, on right going north.
munity Church with Glen Bissell
all. Them's fightin' words to an Covered dish dinner at noon .
class leader.
'
editor! -H

Social Calendar -/

~~~ $59~~\l)(l')l "' (:1.\.~S

Hush PUPP.l!,, .
fashion boots
comfortably priced

the hospital.
Film stripe relating to smoting
and ill effects will be llhown eacb
evening and Dr. Lewil Telle will be
on hand on Tuelday evenlnc and Dr.
WUma Mansfield on Wednelday

2000

NOW! SS50
Exclusive
" Magic"

The leglalation committee will be in
charge. Mn. Becky Moebler Ia the
chalnnan.

Sheriff. James Prolfl1t will be the
guest speaker. AU memhen are
urged to attend.

clas~

~Weld Plalllpe ~ IC~Ctster and
~ Plalllpe ol IAipn ftl'e
Saturday villtora ~ Elvira Barr.

Mrs. Barr villted Sunday with
~HaDdley.

\l a•I'HI

tllul o· r ' '"II''

ABC ; ''M· A.S·H, " 22.4 or 16.7

million, CBS; "NFL Monday Night
Football," 20.7 &lt;r 15.4 million, and
"Taxi," 20.2 or 15.1 rnllllM, both
ABC, and " WKRP in Cincinnati,"
20.1 or 15 millioll, CBS.
The next 10 shows :
"Eight is Enough" and "Happy
Days," both ABC; Movie-"The High
and the Mighty," CBS; " Bteaking
Up Is Hard to Do," Part II,ABC;
Movie-"Speedtrap," CBS; Movie"G host of Flight 401/' NBC;
" Laverne and Shirley," "241).
Robert/' and "Monday Night
Football," Thursday edition, all

ABC, and Lou Grant," CBS.
11

THIS WEEK'S

SPECIAL

CHUCK WAGON •• ••• 69'
WITH FRIES ••••••••· 99e
ADOLPH'S

En route to bla record time of 2:24
in winning the 11173 Belmont Stak~.
the great Secretariat was timed in
1:09 4--5 for the first six furlongs, run·
.
' I the wind
in the
rung
agams
.
backstretch.

DAIRY VAL1£Y
992-2556
570 W. Main
Pomeroy, 0 .

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY

60" VELOUR ............................. J.~: _$449
LL COLORS AVAILABLE

EPT. 13-14-15 197

THE ·FABRIC SHOP

FROM .THE PICK
Of THE PORKERS

Pomeroy, 0 .

QUARTER PAK PORK LOIN
-·
LB.

CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS ..._. ................ ..1:~:. s1.59
,THIN CUT BREAKFAST CtllPS ................. ~:. s1.69
lDIN END PORK ROAST......................... !-!!·.. s1.49

Frencll City

BOILED HAM ••••••••••••••••••••••
'12 lb. $119
• •
Armour
DRY SALT CHUNKS ••••••••••~~~ •.sl.09

SUPERIORS

DART BACON ............. !~.~:.. 69e

Homemade

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••L.~·•• s1.19

USDA QIOICE
I-LB.

PARKAY Quarters
MARGARINE .......

POTATOES ........... .7'1
88 ct. California

$}Sg

FOR A QUICK LUNCH

ORANGES .......... 6/8'1

12 oz. Kraft Swiss
Single Sliced

· ·

IIEE~ ~TE'"'···················~~ ..

10-lb.

,
69

.

·
uaiu
l8:.'1.19
TONY'S
HOMEMADE """'
SAlAD ..............
. HAM .................
lB:. $169
STORE SUCED .atOPPED
•

. 30 ct. California

CHEESE .........~1.49 CELERY............. 2/5'1

32 OZ. OLE SOUTH
COBBLERS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••
CAll Varieties)
s1 •49

STORE SUCED BOILED HAM ...................L8:..$}99'
•

ALL STAR

2%

FRUIT DRINK ••••••••••••••••••••• _
•• 79~
14 112 Showboat

MILK

PORK 'N'BEANS. ••••••••••••••••• 2/59e
VIENNA SAUSAGE ••••••••••••••••• 69e

GALLON

8 oz.

'159

FIRESIDE COOKIES •• ~i:.o:.':':!~~- 2179e

t"ir, •hu r• l

UIHI •· r • l oont•

Recocnition for work done during
the put three months was given to
Committee I ol the Ladles Auxiliary
~ the Middleport Pentecostal Chur·
chat a dinner held recenUy.
The table wu covered with pink
carnation~ in a bud vue. Each
member ol the committee received
a pink carnation. A cake. ~
congratulations wu served during
the covered dl8h luncheon.
An Identification Bible game and a
pocketbooll game were played and
Mrs. Rachel Hutton won the door
~-

The week encllng :;ept. ~ was tile
last of the sununer season , and ABC,
with several specials .and sneak
preViews of new programs, was the
big beneficiary in the ratings race.
Here are the week 's 10 highestrated ~ows :
"31st Enuny Awards Show," with
a rating t,lf 27.3 representing . 20.3
million homes, and " Three 's
Coolpany," 26.1 or 19.4 million, both
ABC; "Miss America Pag~ant ," 25.2
&lt;r 18.8 mllllon, NBC ; "The Lazarus
Syndrome," 23.1 or 17.2 million,
"M&lt;r k and Mindy," 22.7 or 16.9
million, and "Breaking Up is Hard
to Do," Part I, 22.5 or 16.8 million, au

'-

.··· j•.

ring

Recognition given

SyncuM.

Button-Fitting
But ·
tonholer, Exc I usive
Solid - State
Cir cuitrv,Exclusive Elec tronic Stitch Selec tion,Exclusive
in dividual
Preference
Panel

112 w. 2nd Ave .

ABC, a strong No. 1 in the ratings
entering the
new
Se!lson,
repositioned the programs to
trOvide lead-In strength f&lt;r new or
comparatively weak existing
trOgrams. So the Ioog-range effect
may be a boost for ABC, rather than
aid for the competition.

RECENTVI81TOR8
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr and
Shawn ~ Jacboo wwe rec:ent
villton ~ bla brother and bla
family, Mr. and Mn. Mllre Barr ol

. 5 oz. Van Camp

KIN( I

4 Roll Wh.ite Cloud
~ un l it .•

TOILET TISSUE •••••••••••••• ~~~~.':~. 97~

11111lo •r • I Oifl o'

29 oz. Golden Isle

rEACHES ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 69e

II IU :'\'C 1:\ Tlfl."' \l l TO LFT Till S ! lt'FEH \\ IU:'\
YO U WWEB ' ll lll ...; ll.\ll ll \1 HJ:'IH ;.

JOHN ROBERTS
,.,...........',..,,.......
CLASS RINGS

~~
~Jettelers

•
·'

TO MEET MONDAY
The Middleport Business and
Professional Women 's Club . will
meet Monday, Sept. 17, at the
Columbia Gas office in Middleport.

show.

evenq to IIIIWel' ·qutllonl ~ thoee
altelldlng the five evening Belliona,
ruMing conaecuUvely Sunday
tl!rouP Thunday.
There Ia a ~ reglatration fee for
the cHnlc and n~~ldenlllnteresled In
altelldlng may call the holpltal, 9922104 •

Gallon Broughton

'44.00

'•

'.

Two members of the local medlc:al
profession will be on hand at
sessions of the stop smoking clinic to
be held at Veter8llll Memorial
Hospital next week.
The clinic 8pOiliiOI'ed by the Seventh-Day Adventist Church will get underway Sunday for the flrllt ol five
evening sessiOM numing fl'lllll 7:30
to 9 p.m. in the East dining room at

SEW FOR

FALL
SINGER MODEL

homes in the COI!'Liry with television,
22.7 percent saw at least part of the

Stop smoking clinic set

Visit Camden Park
The primary and junior cl!lsses ot
the Syracuse First V11lted
Presbyterian Church were treated
to a day at Camden Park on
Tuesday, Aug. 28.
Making the trip to Huntington
were David · Duffy, Todd Adams
Kim Adams, T. J . Robanna, Tamm~
Wolfe, Terri Roush, Tarniny Theios,
Carol Adams, Katie Crow, Cheryl
Crow, Lori Crow, Robby Crow
Genevieve Schneider, Michaei
McKelvey, Jay McKelvey, Eleanor
McKelvey , Andrea Theios, Jeannette Duffy and Gertrude Neigler.

12.7 rating In Its new Friday night
lime slot In the latest check by the
A.C. Nielsen Co.
.
Indeed, It's dUflcult to say what
effect, If any, the achedllle lhlfla will
have In the new eeuon, wblch ABC
bepn Monday nl8ht. The ratings, In
any Instance, are subltanuaJ for the
three · programs, regardless of
poaltlon In tile !IChedule.
Nlelaen saya the rating of 22.7 for
"Mork and Mindy" meam of_all the

CANDY BARS .••••••••••••••••• 8/sl.49

EMPIRE
Brushed pigskin
Black &amp; Panto (ruby)

Pl.l S 1-lUm ( :rsTml t'E.\Tl'IG~S!

·''

an average rating of 28.5 m
Thursday nights in the 1ut season,
compiled a rating of 22.7 In lt8 new
Sunday night slot in the week ending
Sept. 9.
-" Laverne and Sverne and
Sheley," which averaged 30.6 on
Tuesday nights In the 1978-79 season,
rated 18.6 last Thursday night.
-"Fantasy Island," with a 1ll.8
average on Saturday nights, pulled a

Milky Way, Reese Cups, Hershey Almond

You 'l l make your own fashion statem ent
. this fall in boots that talk your language com fort and value. The look is right. The fit's
,.-;:~:c}n.'~aturo l. And you'lllove the p rice.

1

yuur own

NEW YORK ( AP ) - ABC, in an
effort to tighten its grip on first place
in the networks' ~rime-time ratiilgs
r~e. shifted some of its most
successful programs to new time
slots f&lt;r the upcoming 1979- sea!iln.
The schedule changes can hardly
be declared successful,· though, by
the same yardstick, they can't be
proclaimed unsuccessful, either.
Some examples:
-"M&lt;rk and Mindy," which had

of:

Party held

DEAR HELEN :
Three years ago I wrote you a letter and was very upset to find the
last paragraph shortened and
altered in print. It was my opinion
and I didn 1 appreciate your chang:
ing it.
I'm taking another chance with
the letter enclosed (in favor of the
Equal Rights Amendment) but
please don 1 edit and chop out
anythini. That's unfair! - MARY
ANNE
DEAR MARY ANNE :
You've written an excellent letter
PERSONAL to "Scared to Try" :
- as was your first to me - but 1
It's
been said that sucvess often
can't print all four pages in one brief
comes
from not knowing your
colwnn, which requires an equallimitations.
Knock off the "sensible ''
time response from the other side.
excuses
and
shoot for the top. People
While striving to retain the meanwho
always
play
it safe are only hall
ing, we columnists must cut and edit
-H.
alive.
wherever a letter is overlong;
obscure, or ungrammatical. Yours
Got a problem? An adult subject
is simply overlong.
for
discussion? You can talk it over
And here's some free advice :
in
her
column if you write to Helen
you 're talented enough to become a
Bottel, care of this newspaper.

Dt•~'&lt;ign

Betty Stivers, Norma, David and
Laura Hawthorne, Russell, Linda,
and jieather Well, Don, Lila, Alvena
and V. J . Van Meter, Evelyn Kenneth, Brian Well, Kaye, KeVin , and
Kirk Fick, Janet Connolly, Marilyn
Robinson, all local ; Mr. and Mr.i.
Jeffy Bahr, Scotty and Christopher,
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bahr, Sr.,
Steve, Tom and Kimberly, Mark and
Denise Codwalder, Allen Bahr,
Polk ; Philip Will, Columbus ;
William Will, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs. Golden Bahr, Athens; Nancy,
Kevin, Holly and Karen Tiptoll(
Zanesville; Flora Betzing, AI and
Eloise Hansel, Chandlersville; and
Norman and Daylen Bahr.

Mork &amp; Mindy moves, captures fewer ratings

overflolring cup comes fl'lllll wor.
shiping God.
The piano prelude, ''God So 1..9ved
the World" was played by Mrs
Jones and in ab!ence of other
ficers, Mrs. Clara Criswell
secretary, presided at the meeting:
Mrs. Elizabeth Mourning had
devotions using material from Helen
Steiner Rice and Guideposta.
During the business meeting, a
thank you card was read frqm Mrs.
Mary Rinehart . Mrs. Maxine
Philson gave the treasurer's report
and a letter was read from the
dlstrict treasurer. announcing a
meeting to be held at Logan on Sept.
23.
Mrs. Rinehart was named to the
nominating cOmm!ttee which will
report at the October meeting.
Reported ill were Mrs. Mae Ket.
chlja, Mrs. Herbert Moore, Mrs.
Faye Dunlevy, and Mrs. Emma Kay
Clatworthy. Mrs. L. W. McC&lt;mas
was welcomed as a new member.
Thirty-two sick call! were reported,
The Lord's Prayer closed the
meeting. Refreshments were served
by Miss HaJlle Zerkle and Miss
Nellie Zerkle, Mrs. Lettie Yotmg and
Mrs. Enuna Wayland.

21; E . MAIN · POMEROY

.10 oz. Folg.er•s

SHOES
9 a.m.- p. m. Mon . Middle Of Upper Block in Pn,m .. rnv

lhru Thurs ..&amp; Sal ..
9a.m. -8p.m J.:ri.
Closed SumJay

'

INSTANT COFFEE •••• ~ ••••••••••• $4•99
10 112 oz. Campbell

·

VEGETABLE BEEF SOUP. •••••••. 2/69e

RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED
4 OZ. CAN

.,,.

IIIIRDWYE

FROZEN

GREEN
BEANS
CUT OR FRENCH STYLE

2

·10

oz.

BOXES

age

MAGIC BUTTON

BETSY ROSS

CANNING
·LI.DS

LARGE .

3

EVERYDAY LOW PRICE

PIES
16 oz.
LOAVES

89C

�8 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.l2,1979

Long Bottom Community Eight &amp; Forty plans fall projec~s _
Assn. meets recently
quality items), cleaning products
and many more various items too
nwnerous to mention. It will be conducted at 8 p.m. Wednesday, Sept.
26. Also 25 percent of all proceeds
will be given to the club. So please
try to come and purchase aome
Items, as It will help to remodel the
building. The meeting will be started
at its regular time 8 p.m. on the
same evening as the party. Refreshmenta will be served.
Those attending the meeting
were : Pearl Powell, Leona Hensley,
Mae McPeek, Pat Neutzllng, Clyde
(Bud) and Lilly Adams, Ernestine
Hayman, Sanuny Rairden, Bill and
Dorothy Thurston, Nellie and Francis Andrew, Tom, Sue and Beth
Hayman, Joe and Ada Bissell,
Virginia Newlun, Harlan and Alta
Ballard, Emerson McDole, Dorsal
and Phyllis Larkins, and Mary Ellen
Andrew.

The Long Bottom Community

Association recently held its monthly meeting with 241n attendance.
Mrs. Leona Hensley conducted the
meeting opening with pledge of
allegiance and a reading from the
scripture.

Mae McPeek gave the secretarial
report and also read the minutes
from the previous ftleeting.
Ernestine Hayman presented the
current financial standing of the
association. It was repot:te&lt;J we
made $.:1 on a bake sale In August.
Harlan Ballard, vice president,
said be will be starting repairs on
the kitchen, and anyone wishing to
help In any way is welcome to contact him or any other member as to
the dates they will be remodeling.
Mae McPeek and Leona Hensley
informed the group that they Invited
a salesman from Belpre to conduct a
"Products party," consisting d
Jewelry (costume as well as more

Fall activities and projects were
planned during a meeting of the
Meigs County Sa.lon 710, Eight and
Forty, held Monday night at the
home of the chapeau, Mrs. Veda
Davis.
Mrs. Ruby Marshall, children and
youth chairman, announced her
plans for giving two plaques at $100
each to the National Jewish Hoepital
In Denver, Colo. for their work with
respiratory diseases. She also
proposed that the Salon have special
projects to raise mooey lor a piece d
equipment to be given to the
Children's Hospital, Columbus, to be
assigned by them to a child with
cystic fibrosis. During the meeting,
donations from the members began
the fund .
Mrs. Iva Powell, pouvior member,
announced a school of Instruction to

d Mr. lllld Mrs. Charles Manhall,
Hemlock Grove, both rJ. whcm died
with cystic fibrosis . The money wasput
into the pulmonary rotary fund
pointed national partnership chairfor
services to . cystic fibrosis
man and has St\t as her goal for the
children.
nation a partnership of 25,000.
Mrs. Davis served cake and cot- '
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, scholarship
fee.
The October meeting will be
chainnan, used a door prize ror a ·
held
in the Riverboat Room rJ. the
fund raising project with Mrs. Eunie
Athens
Cowlty Savings and Loan Co. ·
Brinker winning the prize. It was
with
Mrs.
Dollie Hayes and Mrs.
noted that dues of ~ were payable
Goett
as
hostesses.
now and should be mailed to Mrs.

Flight for Achievement and Success." It was noted that Mary Mar·
tin of the local Salon has been ap-

be held Oct. 6 at the Imperial House
North, Columbus. Mrs. Jocelyn
Bowman, depart emental chapeau,
wiU have charge. The luncheon will
be $4.60. It was noted that Mrs.
Bowman's theme for the year will be
"Joy." A reception honoring Mrs. ·
Bowman and her Ia secretaire
Violet Nchholz, will be held at
Galion on Oct. 28 with several members of the local salon to attend.
An Area D children and youth .
seminar will be held at the Sheridan
Airport Inn In lndianspoUs, Sept. 28:ll. Mrs. ldary Martin and Mrs.
Pearl Knapp plan to attend.
A report on the national Eight and
Forty convention was given by Mrs.
Mazy Martin who noted that Mrs.
Maxine Martin was installed as the
new national chapesu. Her theme
will be ' 'The Purple Martin Time In

Martin.

Presented at the meeting was a
letter to Mrs. Marjorie Goett from
Dr. Gordon Young of Children's
Hoepital, asking the salm to extend
appreciation to students at Meigs
High School for their charity drtve
contribution to the Eight and Forty.
The local salon sent the contributim
to Children's Hospital in the name Ot
Sherr! and Brian Marsball, children

Barber reunion held at dam Sunday
The family of the late Roy and
Ellen Barber held a reunion at Dam
:IJJ picnic area on Sunday.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Ancll Barber, Irondale; Walter and
Joey Barber, Reno, Ohio; Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond Barber and Klm.berly, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. Ivan
Chevalier, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert
Powell, Mrs. Ruth Barringer, Mr.

No doubt a lot of Middleport Route 7 resident, who has been
reaidents - the ones who have been having some health problems recenaround a while - felt mixed tly and her activities have been a bit
emotions Sunday when the Brad- curtailed. Mae, as always, is one of
bury home on Powell St., was bur- the county's most pleasant.
Polly Cramer
ned as a part of the training at a
Everyone - especially me - was
regiooal lire school held In Mid- glad to see her on hand for the obHELP ~'OR MUSTY CUPBOARD
dleport.
servance.
By Polly Cramer
The home went way back - ac- .
POU.Y'S
PROBLEM
tually farther than I had Imagined-.
Roy Geyer of Euclid was In town
DEAR
POU.
Y
- I cannot get the
It was acquired In 18t6 by the Powell
over the weekend to visit frtends and musty odor out of an old bread cupfamily and was known as the Powell relatives. Roy left Pomeroy many
board that had been stored In my
homeplace. It later became the years ago when be was a freslunan
aunt's basement and had gotten wet
home of Laura Powell Bradbury and
at Pomeroy High -he's now a youthonce. lllave scrubbed It with baking
her husband. The home which
ful 74 - but Pcmeroy never really
sods,
put vinegar In it and left the
seemed to hold such memories lor so
wore df. Su, he and his wife come drawers and doors open so It could·
many had deteriorated to ·the point down from Euclid about three times
air out but nothing has helped. l need
that renovation ill this day and age a year for visiis. Mrs. Geyer loves
the extra space this nice cupboard
would have amounted to a small for- the Ohio River and loves to come
would give me so hope you have a
tune.
down even though she is not a native.
solution.
-KAmY
The home at the death of Mrs.
DEAR
KATHY - Crumple
Laura Bradbury passed Into the hanOris Roush, Salem Center, is
newspapers up and flU the drawers
ds of her grandson, James M. Ardoing well since extensive knee . and Interior of the cupboard, cloee it
nold, who is a teacher In Cincinnati.
surgery at Riverside Hoepital In up and leave for a couple or three
Jim will retain the land that the
Columbus In May. So well, In fact, weeks. Also pans of charcoal could
home stood on and it will not become
that he was not able to go hunting,
a part of the aparlment C&lt;J!Dplex· which requires a lot of walking, on be placed on the shelves and In the
drawers that should then be cloeed
being planned for the Powell St.
Friday and Saturday. Keep smlling, and left for a lime. -POLLY
area.
Oris - and Oris knows I've been
DEAR I'OU.Y -I set my small inRuth Arnold and daughter, Judy,
recommending that smiling bit for dividual molds In a muffin tin before
were among thoee who really were
many years.
putting in the gelatin and then ihere
perturbed about the burning down of
are no spills when carrying them to
the property Sunday. Ruth is the
the refrigerator. This would also be
daughter of the late Laura Powell
a sure way for Mrs. L. H. to get her
Bradbury and even though the burcupcakes baked In ice cream cones
ning was a necessity, there were a
to the oven without spilling. Stand a
lot of memories involved and it was
cone In a muffin cup. - JUIJE
a time for feeling low. The Powells
DEAR POLLY - Every morning
who lived In the home lor two
my neighbor found several dog
generations were, of course, Ruth's
"calling cards" on her lawn. This
grandparents and great RACINE - Robert E. Waldnig
went on lor years until I took her
grandparents. Other members of the was honored recently with a sursome oregano shoots and told her
family undoubtedly hated to see the prise birthday party. Abuffet dinner
home go up In smoke also.
was served and many gifts were she should plant them In her yard
where the dogs always went. She did
presented to him.
and
it worked. She is amazed and
The afternoon was spent boating,
Loyal and John Holman, sons of
has not had one mess since then .
skiing,
and
swimming.
RefreshMrs. Jacob Holman of near Racine,
Oregano is easy to plant as you Just
both 1979 graduates of Southern ments were served In the evening
stick a shoot in the ground. If dogs
and
there
was
guitar
music
by
Dick
High School are spreading their
Uke to come up your steps and raise
Roe with disco, polka, modem and
wings away from the nest.
jitterbug
dancing.
Loyal has gone to Toledo where he
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
is attending the National MeatWayne
Briggs and Aaron, Mr. and
cutters School and John is In MarietMrs.
Mike
Moore, Chad, Brad, An- White of Jackson; Mr. and Mr·
ta to attend George Washington
drea
and
Scott,
Mr. snd Mrs. Alan Wesley Barnett and Cryst.
Technical School.
Petzo, Shelley and Kennle of Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Bill Pullir.
Mr. and Mrs. Tracy Whaley wrap- Galloway; Mr. and Mrs. James and Lori, Mrs. Debbie Hawl•
ped up quite a celebration Sunday In Moore, Bob Waldnig, Jr., Joe Moore, Rachel and Ryan, Bob Hemsley,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Smith, Mr. and Penny, Candy and Jimmy,
observance of their 50th wedding anniversary. People from everywhere' Mrs. Paul Blount, Patty and Paula, Pomeroy; Julius Waldnig, Mrs.
Miss Judy Smith, Miss Chris Smith, Wanda Lamllert, Mrs. Winnie Waldattended the observance held In the
Riverboat Room d the Athens Coun- all d Grove City; Mr. and Mrs. Bill nig, Miss Cindy Roush, Racine; Mr.
Waldnig, Mechanicsburg; Mr. and and Mrs. Eddie Hupp, Portland.
ty Savings and Loan, Meigs Branch,
Mrs.
Jimmy Smith; Jr., Mr. and
In Pomeroy.
Mrs.
Howie
Priest, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Tracy's hobby through the years
Jame~~ Bowers, MI. Sterling; Mr.
has been stringed music and there
and Mrs. Dick Roe, Mr. and Mrs.
was a talented group on hand to
James Smith, Sr., aU of Columbus;
present selections through the afALBERT PE:ITIT
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Bloesier, Joe
ternoon and near the end, Tracy
HOSPITALIZED
and Jean Chandler and sons, Her·
could resist no longer. He took off his
Albert
Pettit
is a medical patient
man and Paula Chandler and
coat, grabbed his guitar and joined
at
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital. His 1
daughter, Groveport; Mr. and Mrs.
thegroup. ·
Harold Priest, Sr., Miss Tracie Room No. is 140.
Among the guests was Mae Mora,

Tina and Jonning, Toronto, Ohio;
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Lowers, Tommie, Debbie, Melinda, Brenda,
Angle and Steve Lowers, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mrs. Becky Kirby,
New England, w. va.; Mr. and Mrs.
John Utile, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs .
Roy Pullins, Darlene, Mary and
Joyce, Coolville; Mr. and Mrs.
Roger i\Ckley, ~ Tina and
Brian, Guysville; Miss Jo Ellen Bar·
ber, Mrs. Jackie Rader, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Jlnunie
Pellegrino, Gina and Marta, Middleport ; Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Jackson, Bobble, Terry and Todd, .
Coolville; Mr. and Mrs. Joe Rosen,
Eric, Jeremy, and Craig, Cincinnati; Harley Linthicum, Mrs.
Beverly, ~Y, Reedsville.
Mr. and Mn. Herbert Rood,
Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. BW Lowers,
Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Taylor, Pomeroy; Mr. and Mra.
Gary Rood, Herbert and Michael,
Bloomlngtondale; Paul Holalnger,
Brenda SamP'K'I, and Lena Sampson, Reedsville; Keith Hendricks,
Racine; Raymond Barber, · Jr.,
Parkersburg, W.va.; Mrs. Florence
Goff, Kevin and Heather, Tuppers
Plains; James. Lowers, Parkersburg, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Barringer, Mitchell, Jody, Dmnle
and Brian, Reedsvtlle; Pam Rice,
Toronto; Mr. and Mrs. James
Morris and Mart, Toronto; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Davis, Lisa, Love,
Jamie and Kelly, Irondale.

and Mrs. Carl Barringer and
Patrick, Bonnie and Amanda
Barringer, Mr. and Mrs. Kerry Hetzer and Peggy, Mr. and Mrs. Rick
Barringer and Michelle, Reedsville.
Mr. and Mrs.- Francis ChevaUer,
Painesville; Mr. and Mrs. James
Channel, Danny and Jeannie, Toronto, Ohio; Mr. and Mrs. James Mays,
Kevin and Terrie, Mrs. Penny Wills,

POLLY"$ POINTERS
their legs on the ooor, etc., put a IX'
of oregano at the foot of the steps or
rub some leaves In the area. -MRS.
K. I.
DEAR I'OLLY - After repottlng
plants I used to wash my hands and
scrub my nails but could never get
aU the dlrl out from under my
fingernails. Now I take a thin hard
sliver of soap and run it under each
nail while lily hands are In water and
every speck of dirt disappears. FREDA
Polly will send you one of her sign-,
ed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem In her
column.
Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

----

SPAM

120Z.

$}Z9

STEW

SINGLE ROLL

NDER LEAF

TEA

· 10112 oz.

PAPER

59¢

79e

...,.._, ., ttlll old tt - oo run out f'JI .., i!IM!rti!WI
;o.111 ott!!' voo .,.our cnooce al ' con1v.t r~ ttem

~

11.em

~

"""'*" ..,..,..

ret\Kt""ij lf'oe. yme w~~ 01 • "'f\(1'1«~

~ ....,.. tt~lttle yov t o p.M" ChKI! t he !Klver1!5ed •tem •' 1"1!
..-jverf,._, P"Cot ...,,,,_ J.) l»ys

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON
TOT AL SAT iSF ACTION GU ARANTE E
lvervtt&gt;tnv roo ouv

11 " ' ~ ~ ou• • •nt~ ! ()I
Whtl fCI &gt;(li'11 "1Jl'l~ I&gt;IIT'Iltl&gt;v lottlu• ~• If yQoJ

AVONDALl

Vegetable Oil

::·~~149

1&gt;1(1 «.roge; """'

I

VUtu tow•

••e "(( I Wh~

•euo!Kt yOu r 111'"1 "'' ' " !he .wtJI'C!

bo.tr&gt;d

STOKELY

0&lt; .!

II

Fruit
Cocktail..... _....... .

COO'l'(lolll ilblf tw~ 00 tefunod HIUI pUI(Ni ~ 0111:1'

COI1"1'11GHT lt7t - THI KlOGU CO ITI'MS AND 'IICU
C.OOO SUNOA\" Ul'tiMUI • f HIU SAJUIDA 'I' SII"TIMNI
II , 1911 IN GAlLIPOLIS &amp; P()M.£AOV STORES

CHAPMAN
SHOEs·

:

Stokely
Applesauce

NEXT TO
ELBERFEl...DS
IN POMEROY

1
1

".JJ

~
L.:!:J

~01.3

c

100$HEHSPERROLL

Bounty
Towels .................

2 $129
Sinsl•
Roll•

&amp;:;~T

KIOGU

Catsup

77c

3$
C0ff ee .,. . ......:.

29

Kroger0.5%
Lowf at M•lk
I ...... ....

I
I

G~~deA

Large Eggs ...... oo..
MA~KET BASKET G~ADE

7 c

1

Mixed Fryer
Parts ... .... .... ... ....

12

PKG .. . $1

I
I

12

LB.

$1.69

89c

3-LB. BAG

LB .

I-LB.

BAGS 2/29~

69~
DART SLICED

BACQ_N

CHEESE
CHUNK'

99¢
220.l. 49¢

12 0 Z.

89

'1"

liMIT ONE COUPON PElt FAMilY

UIPOI COHMINTSHU.IIIITNIWSATIIOAT SlmMIE115. tm
SUJJ(CT TOAI'fltCAiliSTAn llOCil TUU

Tropicana
Oran Juice

LB.

SIC

LIGHTERS

12 oz. pkg.

99c

CELERY
39~

SAVE

40'

Kroger 20~oz.
uih•t
. d.... ... Lv;.
n I e Brea

Y2 -Gal.

160 I

I

39

Glass

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

I

09

20-ox.

..

,··'..
~:

Shortening

~.

42-01~149

...''•.' ·.
'

.A.INSI'ECTEC
10·12-LB.AVG.

~-

Y.oung

Can

•
••

'I'

Turkeys

·:

:::~~hick en .. . ...........

1
PER
CUSTOMER

$

,.

1··17-LB . AI/G .

CARROTS

$}89 LB.

LONGHORN

Semi- Boneless
Smoked Hams ... .lb.
Whole Fresh
Pork Loin .... _.... .

APPLES

CUBE
STEAK

LB.

14·17-LB . AVG . WHOLE

RED DELICIOUS

I '

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPOI

Country Club
Ice ( ream .. .. .. .. ... . c,._

3

c
e:
I

NO liMIT WITH COUPON AND $7.50AODITIONAL
PUICHASEiEXtlUDING THISIHMI
Df

I .
I
I
I
I
I

SAVE 1 lb
30' . .
Hill
Pkg.

Pak

ROUNDTOP

I
I
I
I '

Serve 'N~ Save
Wieners

'/,· Gal.

lb.

I
I
I

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMIL 'V

r
HOll V FARMS U.S.O.A. IN§n('Tffi
GRADE A

I :

I

Of

Sugar Free Pepsi
or Pepsi Cola

49

$

I
I ..

liiiiT 2CANS WITH COUPON ANO $7.50 ADDITIDUI
PURCHUE (EXClUDING THIS IHMI

Bag

WITH BLOWER

I ,
I :
I

6.5-oz.
Cans

·

!.!,

I
I

$

AASELlCT_Luc;uc&gt;GS

a$

102 1 '
I .

Chicken Of The
Sea luna

·lb.

U.S. GOV 'TGRAOEOCHOICE
PORTERHOUSE OR

I
I
I

IN OIL

I
I
I
I
I

I
I

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMIL Y

I ,..-.::";:,\'

Plaotlc
Ctn.

I
I
I -

Jug

I,........~.
I

I

I
I

Gallon

I

Gal .$

I

LIMIT lJUC WIT~ COUPOUND $7.50 AOOITIOUl
PURCHASE (EXCLUDING THIS ITEM)

1
I

$

1o1 I

Clorox
Bleach

I
I
I ,..-,_
I

WI IU.lltVI tHl i iG HT TO liMif OUANTiliU NOH( tOlD
TODIAUIS.

ICROGUWHOLE OISLICIED

CHOC. CHIPS

DETERGENT

Except Closed Saturday Midight Til
9AMSunday
Except Hinlan , White Sulphur , &amp; 7TH
Avenue Charleston

ot tt&gt;etoe ..:Jver1oMd ,,.,..,, " req"••ed to be
~~~ .tv~ 101 Yle '"' eKh "''0\K' S t o- ~ e ocept H

E..o.;h

Tail-Less
T- Bone Steak

SWEETHEART DISH

694

1'110011&lt;"

LllllD lllOW All MT
A•IWIXAW\U

Itt.

BLUE BONNET

SLICED

Otif •tOGIIIIAHO

Qt.

SLAB BACON
LB-

lfOI'I '01
PAN1A$TI( IAVIHOS

STOVE

We • oadly Accept Fed . Pood Slampi

$159

0.:0\IGHOUT THI

WOODBURN lNG

margarine

SLICED

OPEN
24 HO~URS
ADAY .

lOOtl fOil '"" 510"

KING

1-LB. QTRS

thru Fridoy
9:00tll7:00
Saturday 9:00-9:00
CLOSED
~UN DAYS

YOUR FRIENDlY KROGER STORE

Green Beans

VzGal.

Monda~

permanent a temporary 1977
program whereby the state
subsidizes winter heating bills of the
elderly, disabled, and low-income'
families.

vote Thursday on a 1979-1981 budget
for the Transportation and Highway
Safety departments. They were
placed on an Interim budget in July .
The Senate could vote as early as
Thursday on a bill making

AVONDALI CUT

BUTTERMILK

PHEBE'S STORE

the ut111ty , commercial and
industrial classe'.
Under the Ohio Constitution, all
classes must be taxed at a uniform
rate. Hlnlg says this means
residential snd farm properties bear
an unusually heavy share of the
burden to the benef1t of businesses.
Thirty bills were Introduced In the ·
two houses as they reconvened, but
no floor actions were taken.
Among the new proposals, one
would allow pictures to be taken of
litter law violatocs for prosecution
purposes, while · another would
exempt "gasohol" , a synthetic fuel
produced in part with alcohol taken .
from corn, from the state's motor
vehicle tax.
Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr ., DNew Boston, said the House may

I .--·-'-"
I

VALLEY BELL

$}49

a.~ wue as upsetting to constituents
as this one."
·
Mayor Lucille Reed of Bedford
Heights led a group of Clevelandarea taxpayers who brought the
27,000 signatures to the Statehouse.
Several bills similar to the
Calabrese's are petlding in both
chambers.
The · Senate has been studying
since July a proposed constitutional
.amendment inteoded to protect
owners of re~~idential and farm
property from inflation .
Rep . William E. Hlnig , D-New
Philadelphia, its sponsor, wants to
allow lhe classification of real estate
lor tax purposes. He says fjrm and
residential classes should get lower
rates because their land values have
soared In_recent years compared to

I'--"""

SMOKED SAUSAGE

2-LB.
SLICED

values - lDlless some relief is
forthcoming. Those counties either
are being reappraised under laws
requiring that this be dme every six
years, or having their property
values "updated" by county
auditors under a 1976 statute that
sought to take some of the
Inflationary sting out of the six-year
reappraisal cycle.
In Cuyahoga County, it is an
"update," and Sen. Anthony ·o.
Calabrese, 0-Cleveland, says it will
mean property tax hikes of up to 30
percent. He introduced Tuesday a
bill to freeze this year's tax billa at
last year's levels, which actually go
back to 1976 - the last reappraisal
year for the county.
The veteran senator said In his 25
years of service, "I have never ,seen

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - State
lawmakers, back In session after a
seven-week recess, have found that
pressures foc property tax relief
Intensified In their absence.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, was presented Tuesday
with the signatures of 27,000
CUyahoga County taxpayers who
want their bills frozen at 1978 levels.
Ocasek promised to consider the
petitions, and gave assurances that
various types of property tax relief
will be · reviewed during the
Legislature's two-to-three-week
session this month.
CUyahoga County residents are
among those In two dozen Ohio
counties who will have to pay higher
taxes this year - reflecting three
years of Inflation In real estate

Cans '

ECKRICH

JOWL
BACON

Property tax relief pressures intensifies

17 ·01.

Honored by
surprise party

5th &amp; Pearl

9- The Daily Sentinel; Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1979

RC &amp; DIET RITE alA

All Mt!af
Bologna .. ....

FIRST OF THE SEASON

Flame Red
Tokay Grapes ... .
\

\

' '

,,

~~~~a~o~

... ..... ...

99C

•••
•

•
'•

5199

•

6•·· 99

••

•. .... lb

FIUH IAKIO

lb.

Jb .

~:
....

1

C

•

'

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport. Pomeroy . (,)., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1U79

F~ound

Your Best Buys Are
WANT AD
CHARGES
r'&lt;i!'h

Jdaf s
fidays

1 2!i
1.00
2.25
l .75

Phone

SE NIOR CITIZENS, 1 bedroom
opts . for
rnet . Rental
assistance
available .

992·7721.
SYRACUSE . ''l double, 2
bedroom, semi turnish&amp;d .
adult s only , no children or
pets . Deposit 992-27-49.

Vtlnl't'.

Tht Publi!:lher reserves lhto!

to edit or reject uny aJs

drt'med object ional
Tfll'
Publisher l'i ll nut bt• rt&gt;spunsibiL•

REAL ESTATE : I acre lo t in Riggscrest Manor, between Tup·
pers Plains and Che:s ter .
Phone 9BS-3929 and 985-4129.

· ONE BEDROOM furni shed
ground fl oor opl. Pomeroy .
$115 per m!)nth . Ca 11992.22B8.

NICE COMFORTABLE B room .
home on opprox . :.2 acres of ·
levelland w ith plenty of shade
tr ees , on Rutland
Rd .

FOUR ROOMS , bath, furn ish·
eeL No pets. 992-7706 . After
4:30 .

for mort' than om· int"rrf'd m·
S4:rt ion.
Phonc992-2156

NOTICE

For Sale
liMESTONE ,

COAl ,

~_DVERTISING

DEADUNES
Mml!la y

Nntm ur1 S.J\untar
Tut·...d;r_\·
thru Frular
&lt;P.M .
lht· da~ befun· publin 1lion

Call992·5266.

CANNING PEACHES now th ru
Sept . 15 . Bob's Mor"ket ,
Mason, WV . Open 7 days
Phone 3()4 . 773-5721 ,

SIX ROOM house, Iorge lot,
na t ural
gas ,
Pomero y.
$10,000. Col! 992-6168 after 6.
Will finance.

WINTER POTATOES. C.W. Pm·
ffitt fa rm. Portland , OH . $8 a
hundred ond $5o hundred .

PIGS , SEVEN week• old, $20

4P.M

eoch . Strow , "$1 .25 o bol e.

Fnday afternoon

L.l-------·-

EIGHT FOOT camper, self.
containe-d. Fits 6 or B ft . bad .
Excellen t condi lion . 949-2597 ,

card of Thanks
THE STOBART fami ly would
like to thank the doctors and
nurses at Holr:er Hospital and
eve ryone for their prayers ,
cords and visits whi le George
D. Stobort , Sr. was confined to
the ho ~p ital.

available for adoption and in·
formation service.

ABSOLUTElY no hunting on
my form . Freemon William s.
Mlnersvile , OH .
TUPPERS PlAINS Church of
Christ revival , Sept . 10 thru
14, Spacial singing every
night. Fred Wagner speaker
from Kentucky Christian &lt;;allege. Randy Koehler, tiost
minister.

POTATOES for wi nter . Cob·
bier, Kennebec and Superior.
Phone 8.43-2491. Tom Sayre.

Lorge livi ng room, fireplace ,
bay window , formal dining _..
room , k itchen , lots of
cab inets , 6 bedrooms. modern
both, cabinets, Iorge porch,
patio off dining room. ook
woodwork , carpeted . garage.
nice yard . Acreage ovoilable,
coli Louise Dixon, 698-5211 or
Robert Clark , 742-2966.

992-S.21.

FOR

985·411l4.
BIG BLUE manure spreader.
Zip seeder. Woods pull ty pe 1
brush hog , 5 ft . Ford scraper.
All like ne w cond ition.

NEED

Ll STINGS!! ! If you are
thinking of selling give
us a call.

SAlE .

Chetyl Lemley
Associate
Ph. 742 ,2003

992·7271 .
OFFI CE SECRETARY needed .
Must be good in shorthand
and typing . knowledge of
bookkeeping helpfu l. Good fr .
inge benefits . Permanen t job .
All replies confidential. Inter ·
views will be arranged im·
med iately. Reply giving fu ll
resume to Box 406, Pomerov ,

v;_:
~

WIDMM~• .

OH 45769.

'25 LADIES to dO tem ·

RESPON SIBLE PERSON to bobv
sit in my home for one child .
tha t's two years old . Fi ve davs
a week . Contact M rs . G regory
Grover ot992-5620 oft&amp;r 4.
CllY
LIMIT S.
Bartender
wanted . Even ing shif t. Must
be 21 . Apply in prson .

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles mox .
diameter 10" on larges t end .
$1 2 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
per ton. Deli..-ered to Ohio
Pollet Co .. Rt. 2. Pomaroy .

992·2689.
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes ,
brass beds . i ron beds . desks .
etc. , complete households .
Write M.D. M1ller , Rl. 4,
Pomeroy or coll992-7760.
OLD COINS. pocke t watches ,
class rings , we-dd ing bonds ,
dlomond5 . Gold or si lver . Coli
J. A . Wom5ley. 742·2331 .
WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
upon delivery to our yo rd. 7:30
to 3.30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods . SR 339 . Ba rlow ,

porary ,
t e lephon e
surve y w ork for Mei gs

Co.

Ja ycees•

Shop·A·

Thon Progra m . No age
limit, no educatio nal r e·
qu i rem e nts , no ex ·
perien ce
necessa r y .
Must speak c lea r ly and ,
be able to read we l l. Pa y
hou r plus liberal bonus
f or production . Two
shifts available. 9 a . m.
to 330 p . m . and 4 p. m.
t o 9 p . m . daily . H igh
sc hool age OK. For
more information ca ll

992 ·5900 . Do nol

ca ll

Jaycees co ncern ing thi s

ad .
MEN , WOMEN , BOYS
OR GIRLS lo do light,
temporary
de l ive r y
work for Me igs co .
Jaycees
Shop ·A ·Thon Pr ogram .
No educational
re ·
qu i r emen ts , no age
li mit.
no experience
necessary . Must have
neat appearance, a
valid driver 's I icense
and your own tra nspor ·
tat ion . Must Know Meigs
Co . area well. Earn up
per day . Work any
to
hours you ll k.e between 9
a. m . a nd 9 p .m . daily .

sso

OH . 678 ·2'180.
ANTIQUES . FURNI TURE gla" .
chmo . anything, See or coli
Rvth Gosney , antiqu es 26 N .
OH .
2nd
M i ddleport ,

H;gh School age OK .

'

For
call
the
th is

more information
992 ·5900. Do not call
Jaycees co nce rn ing
ad .

chen . 3 bedrooms . large

lot. $23,500.00 .
SALEM
CENTER
ELEMENTARY -M;n;

Associate
Hilton Wolfe
Associate

Georges.
Hobstetter, Jr., Broker
Broker, 992·5739

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E.
4-23 ·1 mo .

frame ranch type home
about 7 years old . The
lot size is approximately

100 '• 400 '.

Three

a !just $37,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992·l259

992-6191

DOWNING • CHILDS

Ohio R;ver front.
LONG BOTTOM - N;ce
6 rm. older home,
carpeted. Barn plus 2

RODNEY, BROKER
BILL, BR . MGR .
Phone 992·2343 Eve. 992·2449
Middleport, Ohio

out buildings on approx. ,
1!2 acre . $18,900.

HOCKING PORT -

10

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

bec:L , 11f2 bath , trailer on

WE HAVE CONV.ENTIONAL FINANe- ·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.

Ohio R;ver . E•pando
Hving rm . $16,000.
Call
Virginia Hayman
985-4197
.I

THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR - 14 acres of
. nice roll ing land with a 1112 story hosue that sits back
off fhe road surrounded with maple trees. L g . pond
stocked with fis h . Nicel y loca t ed i n Morni ng Star
a rea . Pri ce $33,900.

home, 1112 baths, nat.
gas hea t , city water-, . 2
ca r garage on co rner
lot . Can be made into a
d upl ex .
NEW LISTING - New J
bedroom ranc h home.
D ishwasher, d isposal,
Obi. si nk, eat -i n k i t.,
copper plumbing over 1
acre . American Home

protected plan . $46,250.
NEW LISTING - Coal
miners look at thi s one

that has 3 bed rooms,
enc losed cerami c bath,
2 car garages. Ohio
Power hea t , and over 1
acr e for th e c hildren.

$45.250.
NEW LISTING 3
bedroom s, bath, fro nt &amp;
back porches, storage,
one extra building on
large lot . Ci t y w ater
near
stores .
Want

$15,500.
.
RIVER FRONT LOTS

- On th e Ohi o River .
We can a lso sell 5 ac r es
of woods for onl y $7,500,
on blacktop road , ·nea r
water" l i ne.

3

bedroom home above a l l
fl oods . N at. gas furnace,
ci t y water, bath, block
ga r age and 2 lo t s
overlooki ng t he river .

Asking $1/ ,SOO.
WANT TO REST
ASSURED YOUR HOT
WATER

HEATER,

ELECTRIC
AND
HEATING SYSTEMS
AR E PROTECTED
DURING
YOUR
LISTING TIME WITH
US , ANO FOR ONE
YEAR AFTER YOU
SELL CALL 992 ·3325.

- -Hous;;ig ·' ·
Hiladqua,te,s_

Oh;o. Asking only $54,000 .

LARGE LIVING ROOM -

Services
Offered

A&amp;H
UPHOLSTERING

All Masonary Worll
Foundation,
Brick La~ng,
Concrete Finishing.

Under

HOME &amp; INCOME - Immediate possession, large
J _bedroom home, li ving room &amp; family room , all
ntce ly ca rpeted . E at -in equipped kitchen, 2 full 1
baths, 112 basement, ga rage, nice garden area . In ·
come from trai l er on proper ty . Racine, S4S,OOO .

COUNTRY SPECIAL - N;ce re modeled 2 bedroom
home on blacktop road . Mostly carpeted. F .A . nat .
gas furnace . A very attractive small home andl
acr e l an d . Pri ced for quick sale tor $17,.500 .

ServlcEF
th e

! o~rc,esl

R'o~dio~tor

Nelsoo

7· 12

Pomeroy

Pets tor Safe
HOOF HOllOW , English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Hones and ponies.
Ruth Reaves . 614·698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core products .Wastarn
boots , Chi ldren' s $15.50,

Adults $2'1 .00 .

POODlE GROOMING. Judy
Taylor . 6U-367-7220.

REGISTERED BEAGlES. $25 . 7
weeks old. 304·882·3242.

LOOKING FOR a good home
for o brown and white femole
rarrier , 3 to 6 mo. old. Also
shepherd beagle. female ,
very young, Iovas people ,
fri:sky , Must see to appreciate.
Humane Soc:iaty , 992-6260.
SIX YEAR old border collie,
minds good . ex cellent watch
dog; 8 mo . old mala, port
black and ton coon hound .

985·3557 .

Mobile Homes Sale's

1972 l ~NN HAVEN

14•~

J

bedroom .
1970 Vinda la 12x63 with ex·
pondo, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12d0 3 bedr,
1973 Skyline 12xS5 2 bedroom .
1972 Bononr:a 12d2, 2 bedr:
8 &amp; S MOBilE HOME SALES ,

PT . PlEASANT .
304·675-4424 .

f ~ll y carpeted, eq~ipp ed l&lt;.it ., family root;n has ni ce
f treplace, large ut tl ity room and pl enty of st orage,
two -car garage ha s elect ri c door opener . One great
. feature after another. Listed $75,500.
JUST LISTED+ 6 year old home with 3 bedrooms,
dining and utility room , kitchen equipped with stove
and refrigerator . Most of the house new ly carpeted.
Forced air gas furna ce ~n ly 10 years old . Also
garage . A co mpl ete t rai ler hook up w ith nat. gas tap
and sept ic can add income to the home. Over 2 acres

of land . All for $29,900. Ca ll for appo;ntme nt .

service , all
The Fabric
Authorized
Set'llce. We

makes , 992 -:228.4 .
Shop , Pomeroy .
Singer Soles and
skorpen Scissors.

EXCAVATING . dozer, loader
and bock he. work ; dump
trucks and lo-boys for hi re ,
will houl fill dirt, top soil.
limestone and grawel. Coli Bob
or Roger Jeffers , doy phone
night
phone
992 -7089 ,
EXCAVATING ,
dozer ,
backhoe and dltcher , Charles
R. Hotfleld. Block Hoe Service,
Rutland, Ohio . Pone 742-2008 .

PUlliNS EXCAV"TING . Com·
plete Service. Phone 992·2478 .

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

b"n cancelled? Lost your
operofors
license?
Phone

9'12·2143 .
E·C ELECTRICAl Contractor
se,.....lng Ohio Volley region.
Six days a w..k . 24 hours ser~o~ice . Emergency calls. Call

882·2'152 or 882 · 34~ .
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
covating, septi c
dozer , bock hoe.

systems,
At. 143.

Phano I (614) 69B·7331 o•
742.2593.
IN STOCK for immediate
deli..-ery: various sizes of pool
kits . Do- lt· ~ourself or let us
Install for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sales, Inc. 992-5724 .

. ,,.'.

I Jumbles FORCE

CHAOS

PERSON

VANDAL

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

.'

Bad bidding-good bidding
NORTH
• "J to 1
.5
t A QJ 3
• Q J 10 4
EAST

WEST

• a 53

t

But where the 1930 East just
bid two hearts, we have a dis·
tinct difference today. The
modern good player jumps
right to lour hearts.
Four hearts makes. but the
modern South would surely
bid lour spades. At this stage
in the proce~dings , West
might well go to five hearts.
Doubled it woulll only be one
down, but North might take
the push to five spades . Down
one also.
.
Anyway, in 1930 South bid
three clubs. West tried three
hearts. North lour clubs, East
four hearts, South four spades,
all pass.
,
The bidding gave West the ·
brilliant idea to lead a club.
Maybe his partner would be
void.
East wasn't, but South was
sure that someone held a club
singleton. So, South decided to
avoid the ·spade finesse and
play ace and •one trump. This
play saved his bacon. East,
who held the club singleton
also. held just two spades and
the ruff did not materialize.

~12

K4

• 10 9 8 3 2
t K 10 8 4 2

• AKQJ6

.7

• 75
• 96 2

Hourst· l M ., W., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment.

SOUTH
• Q96 2

UTILE QRPI!\N ANNIE

• 74

• 96

•AK853

•••
•

CALL 992-7544

Mick's
Barber&amp;
style center
.. Introduces---

Vulnerable : North-South
Dealer : West

,.

North
Dbl.

.

South

3.
4+

Pass

..· •.
'

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

•·•

Opening lead : • K

-~

Featuring ; men's &amp;
women ' s
styling ,
perms.
Call tor appt. or walk in .

OH , 'I O'Tl-IIN' MLJCI.I , •

.JUST A. COUPLE OF
01.D B(XliG5 I F'Ol.IND
'THA'T 'TH' FIR:E

992· 2367
Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
L._ _ _ __,8o_:
·26· Tmo.

St&lt;IF'I'ED 01/EIO:.!

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

By Oswald JaCGby
ud Alan Soutag
West's opening bid of one
heart was incwrect in 1930
and just as Incorrect today
but it i5 the sort or bid that
lots of playen make when not
vulnerable against opponents
who are vulnerable.
North's double is correct.

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

(For s copy of JACOBY
MODERN; send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge, " care ot this newspa·
PfW, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N. Y.
100 19.)

down

spouts, some concrete
work, walks and

~-VH~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

driveways,
!FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

ACROSS

RACINE, O.
M9·l741 or

GASOUNEALU:Y

DOWN

1 "Blowout"

1 Suave

5 Trivial

ZVlcleo'a

'it -Velez
9·7·1 mo.

HAUL limestone

U Arab

bue
stealer

' Old
chick
course: abbr. 5 Company
Yellenlay'• Alllwer
17 Luau
lover
Z2 Economic Z8 Italian
baking pit
I V4!11tibule
surge
river
18 Senile
7 Conunotlon Z3 Shining
Zl For the ZG Acting Hunter I Breeze
eumple
(temporarily)
Zl "There iB along
Z4 "- What
30 Tribe's
a sUp ... "
I Hennlt
Comes
symbol
Z2- nolr
ID Employee's
Natur'liy"
:15 Stadlwn
Z3 Saucy
summary
Zi Beach house
cry
:w Luau
Z4 Lavish
11 DIBmlued ze Gold
deposit
delicacy
affection
U Challenge
Zi Solicitude ..,........,._,,_.,..,....
Z8 Nonaen~~e!

ANN'S CAKE O.Carollng S..ppllos . 50716 O.born Rd..
Reed1YIIIe. 0H 45n:Z . For Information call , 667-6485. WUI
be open late if you need
sgmething .
S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning. Steam
cleaned . Free estimat•.
Reosonoble rates . Scot·
chguard .
992 · 6309
or

742·23411 .
OHIO VAllEY Roofing. Rool.

WINNIE

lng, gutters and downspouts,
FrH estimat... All work
guorente.d. 20 y.ara ••·
perlence . Call Athens. collect,
Gerald Clark 797·4847 or TOfft

Hask ins 797·2745.
J,.

I CWJ.O tJAVE HAD
A JOB ~y NOW, BUT
BIRDIE DOESN'T
WANT M E: TO
TR:'\V!;.L..

THANKS R:&gt;R HELPING
Wlnl l11E GROCf:RIE&amp; .
WANT 10 COMf:: IN
FOR SOME COFFEE ?

..
... ,

I. CAN UNDER -

STAND THAT1
AFTER YOUR
PLANE [;7lJNKED
)'OU INTO l'H E
SEA.

BESIDES , I WANT TO
BE WITH MY WIFE
AND SON BUT I
CAN'T SEEN\10
LAND A .JOB
HERE.

27 Rainbow

lc--+-+-4-

shape

Z8Food
31 Word
of dilgust
3% Patch

LOST on 143 toward Harrltonville, femalt beagle. Answen
to "Shorty". Humane Society

b-++-

orRowan

.

33 Pursue

34 Fungus
MHalf gone

quart

••

37 Immaturity

"'ARNEY

ONE DADBURN LOG?
TOLD 'IE TO BRING
IN AN ARMlOAD!!

IT

38A tlme

WUZ

bict

AN ARMLOAD

Sll Stamen

part
HThe
same:

Latin

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
II

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK
AND UP
Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION ' VINYL

Judy 698-6794 .
DEPENDABLE BABY sitter
Monday thru Friday . 2
children. Call Denise Wolfe.
949-2377 after 6 p.m.
HOUSEWORK DONE In evenIngs and Soturays . CAll

~

f

f
J
~

RUTLAND FURNITURE
-

CRYPTOQUOTES

PEANUTS

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

Jo__;,;,;;..;;.,;..;._
742·2211
ltutland,
_ _ _ _ _..;;.;.;.:;:;.;::.:..;.:..,

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

O.&gt;e letter simply stands for another. In this sample A ls
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the len·g th a nd formation of the words are· all
hinls. Each day the code letters are different.

'995

NEW JANITORIAL Services
specializing in offices , new or
remodeled homes and apart merits . Coli Bunny, 698·6001 or

,.:
-~

I(ES, MA'AM, I T~IINK
I KNOW THE ANSWER

Sl XTEEN .. FOU~ ..
Tf.li~N·SEVEN

ON SECOND 1'1-lOUGf.lT,
Tf.lAT MAY BE Ml(

LOCKE~ COMSINAIION!

S Q D UiJ

CD I

UQXFJ

GMF

UQXFJ.

FZW

QJ

C

csw

DBF

COBEBUQWJ

XBS

AWNWEJ

BOER

OBSFQBD

6 :00-News 3,B, TO,T3,15; ABC News
6: V:llla Alegre 20.
6 : 31&gt;-NBC NewsJ,T5 ; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, TO;
Bob Newhart 17 ; Over Easy 20 .
7 : 00- Cross .W its 3; Newlywed
Game 6, 13; News . 10; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:31&gt;-Dolly 3; Teamwork Makes It
l:fappen 6, TO; Joker's Wild 8;
Family Feud 13; Wild Kingdom
15; My Three Sons 17; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 :00-Real People 3,15; Eight II
Enough 6,13; Movie " The Bingo
Long Traveling AII · Stars &amp;
Motor Kings" 8,10; Movie "The
Prlvafe Wor of Major Benson"
17; Masterpiece Theatre 20.
9 : CO- Holocaust 3, 15; Charlle'J
Angels 6, 13;
Great Par .
formances
33 ;
Upstairs ,
Downstairs 20. ·
10 :00- Upsta1rs, Downslarls 17;
News 20; Pilot "Bender" 8, TO .
10::Jo:-Best of Groucho 20 ; Frankie
&amp; Johnny 33.
11 : 00-News 3,6 ,8, 10, 13, 15 ; New
Soupy Sales 17 ; Dick Cavell 20;
Book Beat 33. .
11 :30--JohnnY Carson 3,15; · Pollee
Woman 6, 13; Your Turn : Letters
ot CBS News 8; Movie "Machine
Gun McCain" 10; Movie "The
Furies" 17.

1

12:00-Swltch B; 12 : 40-Baretta
6,13; 1:OG-- Tomorrow 3; News

15.
1 : 10- Hawaii

Five-0

8;

1 : ~0-

Baseball 17; 1;51&gt;-News 13.
4:11&gt;-News 17 ; 4:30--Untoochables

17.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1979
5:31&gt;-World at Large 17; 5;~5Farm Report 13; S:50--PTL Club
13; 5;55-Summer Semester 10.
6 :00-700 Club 8; . PTL Club 15;
6: 10-News
17;
6: 25-For
You .. Biack Wo.Jilan TO.
6 :31&gt;-Dragnel 17 ; 6;45--Mornlng
Report 3; 6: 50--Goo.d Morning
West V1rglnla 13; 6:55-Chuck
White Reports TO; News 13.
7 :00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6, 13; .Thursday Mor·
nlng B; Batman TO ; Three
Stooges·Little Rascals 17.
7 : 15-A.M'. Weather 33; 7:30Famlly Affair 10; 8:oo-capt.
Kangaroo 8, TO; Leave II To
Beaver 17; Sesome St. 33 .
8 :31&gt;-Romper Room 17 ; 9:00-BoB
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Phil
Donahue 13,15; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends B; Love of Life TO; L~cy
Show 17; .Mister !lagers 33.
9 : 30-Bob Newharl 8; Hogan's
Heroes 10; Green Acres 17.
TO:oo-card Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night·6; Allin The Family 8,10;
Morning Mag821ne 13; Movie
" Arizona Bushwhackers" 17.
10 : 30-Hollywoqd Squares 3,15;
S20,000 F'yramld 13; Andy
Griffith 6 ; MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 33 .
TO :S5-CBS News 8; House Call TO.
11 :00-High Rollers 3,15; •Price Is
Right 8,10; Elec. Co. 33.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,15 ;
Family Feud 6, 13; Faces of
Communism 33; 11 :55-News 17.
3;
News
12: 00-Newscenter
6,8, 10,13; Mlndreaders 15; Love
American Style 17.
12 :30--Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Not For Women

15 Never: Ger.
11 Mount ella-

spreodlng. \eo Morrli Truck·
ing, Phone 742·2455.

Losrand Found

country

1' Scarvt!ll

••
oncl ""

II'CN•I. Also, lime houllng and

'192-6260.

complement

3 Term for a

1% Indian city

-...
WILL

(Answers tomorrow)

Wednesday, Sept. IZ

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

742·2795.

304· 773·5-422 or 3(U,773·5069.

r I XJ r I I I X]

NO OVERHEAD

'499

CHilO CARE in my home .
Weekdays . 992- ~•3 .

WILL DO house · cleaning .
Hours to coli 9 om to 6 pm

THE

"

RUBBERBA'CK CARPET

ELECTRICAL WlfiUNG for form
home and bu si nau. Electrl~
heat and lighting. New work
or modernir:ing. Joe Deluco ,

( ALL JIMMY DEEM. ASSOCIATE 9•9·2J88
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCI ,TE
••9·2654 or 949·2591

Prlntanswerhere:

. . .. i

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE ALOT

NOW HAULING limolfona In
M iddloport-Poemroy area .
Coli for free estimate.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US ACAU

0

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

amald

Services Offered

742·3119.

(J I

Answer: Why drive·lt'ls make so mu ch money - ·

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

work,

ISAUCCUI

Yesleoday's

~

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Lans.

Gutter

I I

-~· ·

WV .

MIDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home appro&lt;. 10 yrs.

ranch s tyle home. Priced lor qu; ck sale. $33.000.
I
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - on 3 Acres, 4 BR home,

SwHpert , toasters, lront , oil
small appliances. lawn moer,
neil to State Highway Go rag~~
on Route 7 , 985-3825 .

992·3525 or992·5(.l2 .
GiveAway

WILL 00 baby sitting In my
home for a child from 3 to 9
yean of age. Coli Alice
Williom:s. 94t9-2571 .

BRICK HOME - Central air, fi re pla ce, 3 good size
bedrooms, 1112 bath , r a il ed front porch and mature
trees , shrubery a ll ad d to the appeal of tflis fine

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

SEWING MACHINE Repairs,

From 1 to 75 acres, bordering

SS A~R ES - A va ilable back of Racine, ca n be divid ·
ed, t tmber . $55,000.00.

BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Complete Service. Phone 949-2487
or 949-2000. Racine , Ohio,
Crltt Bradford .

WHAT HE .e.,~_,..
WHEN HE 1 t.J\i 1~·i:r-,
HER' 'TO A
15AFI:N DANCE,

~-,

....::;:.

107 Sycomorei!!Hr)
Pomeroy, 0 .

•New Home
•Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992-6011

LOTS OF LOTS -

RACINE - 2 BR t ra i ler on nice l ot . A sk ing $11,500.

I

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

El(PERIENCED
Radiator·,--.-.,

PAINTING AND sandblasting,
Fr&amp;e e5fimota_s. Coll9-49-:2686.

$35,000.

.,..
.,.''
•

OK AY, 6-AI!-Y.. DON'T MAKE ANY
FUss : JUST S~T UP ANP 5TA~T
WALKINS TOWARD THE: POOR:

"

367·7101.

old, Stov e &amp; r efrigera tor , I g . storage bldg . Priced at

-,
.......

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

Ph. 992·3743 orn2·375l
8-H mo.

$32,000.00 - Good 3 bedroom, a ll carpet ed home
close to Pom er oy &amp; Middleport . Located on good 1112
acres of land .
SHOULD a'e SOLD - 70 a"cres , house &amp; good barn,
about 1,000 feet of beautiful Ohio River frontage.
Ni ce rec rea ti on spot, m inera ls, too. Let's have an
otter. Price $57 ,000.
Pomeroy .

~nage ­

IN SYRACUSE

Free Estimates
992-5304, 992· 2238
8·21 -1 mo.

197-t 14 x 70 mobile home .
Good condition . 992-5858.

$39,SOO.

New

ment (formerly Sylvi1 ' s
upholstery),
across
from Codner's TIICaco.

40•26, home w ;th 3

bed room s, ca rpeted throughout. Eat ·in k itchen on
~.. acr e lot . 11!:. ca r garge &amp; storage building . Asking

I

• s 1 "" ('

Lots of poss;blntles w;th th is

rea l ni ce 2 story home . Many features, l ike cen tral
air, built -i n appliances, all carpeted &amp; so f orth . A
'V"ery goOd investment w ith several nice building
lots. On approx. 41J2 ac r es in the center of Racine 1

STOCK

NOWAVAtLA8LE.

A 5 tfc

JUST LISTED - Mini farm w / a beautifu l br ick b i ·
level, .w/ 3 bedrooms &amp; full ba se ment, large carport,
total elec. Not expensive, fully insulated , all hard ·
wood f loors. 3 l arge hothou ses. You ca n have all this
with approximately 5 acres Of land for only $63,500.

G OOSE

TRAILE R

RISING STAR Kannel. Boar·
ding, Coll367 -0291.

rm . house on 1 acre.

WILL BARGAIN -

uno MontgorTt«!r'¥ Rd.
L•ngs villf, Of!io
•I~ · Wf · U4' Even ings
2 Mile l E a1 101 Wilkt!villt
SUPER

HAVE- Me "::1
Pl\eED: l!&gt;U'T WA IT ~
HERE WHILE ! ?E.E.
IF THE~~·s At.JV WAY
TO CA LL THE: TOWEit
MID FIND OUT
HIS I! .T.A.:

,u ,

Weavers

mile off Rt. 1 by -pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland.

949-2862--949-2160

IGRENEeJ
~E'LL

l4

gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

I I ( · X)

..."'l

Roger Hysell
Garage

New, repair,

Ph . 991-2174
- 2 bedroom and bath trame
large
Recently remodeled, new roof ,
heat. Just $16,000 .

]·«

Skiff Building)
Ph. 949·2710 or M9·2TSO
8·21H mQ

MONTGOMERY

H. L Writesel
Roofing

NEW LISTING - Large

$6,000.00.
NEW LISTING
Beautiful brick and

(formerly

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
B·17·1 mo.

592·3051

~

Choreographer
Located In Racine, 0 .

Free Estimates

Television
Viewing

' '"

Instructor·

Windows
e GliHet's and
DownSpouts

State, Athens

farm , over 6 acres , nice
1112 story home with new
addition . woodburning
fireplace, c lose to the
mines . $24,500 .00.
older home in Pomeroy,
large lot . Needs some
interior repairs . ONLY

Unscramble these four Jumbtes,
one letter to each square, to form
lour ordinary words,

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11,

OPENING SEPT. 111h
Classes: Ballet
Tlp&amp;Jon
Ages-4 and up
Shirley Car"nter

• Storm DoOrs
• Storm Windows
e Replacement

Motcxs, Inc.

1 car garage, full base ·
ment, bullt·ln kitchen .
Sets, on over 3 acres with

bldg , Onl y $17,500.
Sll,OOO .OO - s;g 9 room

Mgr .
Phone 992 -2181

1•12 story on a

good street. BuHI ·In k;t-

byHenriAmoldandllot&gt;Lee

'

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUQIO

elnsulatlon

FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans)

Sm~h

LONG BOTTOM
Lovely neat 5 rm . house,

11 ROOMS - 1'12 baths,

Jack W. Carsey

$19,900.00 .
MIDDLEPORT
ELEMENTARY

houses. bath remodeled
inside. Each with l ·car
garage plus nice yar'd.
Fu'lly carpeted, including kit. appliances.

car peting , knott ing pine
kit ., full basem ent, 2 car
garage,
and storage

SALE PRICES
POMEROY
LANDMARK

TARY - owner wants
quick sale and will deal ,
ni ce home with full
basement, large lot.

INVESTMENT - M;d·
dleport, 121U Powell St. 2

216 E. Second Street

Sales &amp; Service

features .
ONLY
$42,200.00.
POMEROY ELEMEN ·

bedrooms with double
c losets, nice kitchen,
d i ning room , util ity ,
carpeting,
garage ,
storage building . Priced

Velma Nicinsky

FAMILY HOME -

cepted for Regis tered Medical
lob Tech . App ly at the offi ce
oi Or. Jomes Conde , 150 Mill
St ., M iddleport, OH or phone

~ Sy ra c u se Elementary
- La r ge family room
with
woodburning
f irepla ce, large garage,
3 bedrooms, dining ,
built -in kitchen , ex ·
cellent condition, ex ·
cellent location, many

ERA MERCER
REALTY

SR 248.

ac·

RANCH

and
Purchase
Refinance
30 Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans}

, milll r st Hl'lll!l r C•nr .

WOOD DRY Oak ond hickory.
Som.egreen wood . $18 pickup
load. will deliver. 985-3906.
2'1, miles east of Chester on

HOTPOINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances

for de ta ils.

WANT?'' ASK S

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

''

Announcing o"nlng .of

J&amp;L B(OWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

Real Estate Loans

F rr&gt;~ n

992.5266.

liVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER wonted
in exchange for home and
security . 98.S.4t392 or write box
no . 4()8q8 , Long Bottom , OH .

tha t could be used . Call

THEY

ARE

,·:.

Business Services

B v l ldo l tr

Could be 2 apts. $3S,OOO.
LONG BOTTOM - 3

PIGS. seven wee.ks ' old, $20
eoch , Strow , $1 .25 bole.

CITY LIMITS . Bartend er needed . Evening shift . Mu5t be 21.
Apply in person .

BI:ING

bed•.

1977 KAWASAKI 400. Only
ICXXJ miles , blue in color. Like
new. Call" after 5 p. m.

Southeastern Ohio financial
institute. Equal opportunity
employer, Send resume to Box
7'19A, c o the Doily Sentine l.
111 Court St .. Pomeroy, OH .

APPliCATIONS

ALUMINUM

742-2233.

MANAGEMENT POSITION in

bedroo m home on a t it ·
tie over an acre. Sell

.

bookcase headboards with 5
drawer dresser, hutch . 1963
Vo-Ko -shun -ette
comper ,
sleeps six , Beorcat Ill scanner,
women 's coot , size 16.

GENERAL SECRETARY for
health education agency .
Good typing and steno skills
requ ired . pleasant telephone
persona li ty. Prefer maturity
and e)(perienced person but
will accep t capable person
with minumum of 3 years ex per ience . Available immediately . Submit resume to
PO Drawer 825. Athens . OH
45701. An equal opportunify
employer.

1'l 1 acre lot. 12 x 65 trai ler
n ea r
Tuppers
Plain s .

bedroom
home . You
must see rt to appreciate

669·3785.

SOliD MAPLE bunk

Help wanted

Ws beaut y. On ly
$35,000.00.
LANGSVILLE- Nice 2

Lovely 4

WE

RAV 'S USED Furniture , Ad·
dison, 367-0636. 4 oak chairs ,
$15 eo . Chest of drawers, $20.
GE auto. washer , $65. Electric
range , $45. Gas range , $45 ,
Refrigerator . $6S, Oil heater,
$75. Rocking choir, $25.:
Breakfast set $35. Lamps . pot- ·
tery , glassware.

GUN SHOOT EV ERY SUNDAY I
PM. FACTORY CHOKE ONlY .
RACINE GUN ClUB .

re.al'buys.
RUTLAND -

M ODERN FI VE year old 3 or 4
b ed ro om house . Fully
carpet ed. Full basemen t. Drill·
ed well. Si tuated on opprox .
2'/, acres of land . $3 ~ , 500 .
742 -3074 .

HOME

merc ia l lots East
Ma in St ree t, Pomeroy,
pr iced as land v alue on ly , contains old houses

Brick

N ice lot in Arbaugh Ad ·
di tion
with
septic
system and water tap,
POMEROY - We have
2 nice hom es that are

BUILDING LOT near Solem
Center . 4.8 acres . Ru ral
water. 742-2746 .

cOncrete moulds lor making
picnic to lbes, bird baths and
misc . 742-2746.

Sportsman Club each Sunday
starting Sep t. 2. Factory choke
guns only.

a ppl . today . S47 ,500 .00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS -

APPlES. Now picking Grimes
Golden. Other varieties to
follow . Fit:zpotrick Orchards.
SR 689. Phone Wilk esville

ORNAMENTAL

Run

NEW LISTING - Total
e lectri c, 3 bed r oom
home. Dini ng r oom , kit ·
chen, living room and
1112 bath s .
Carpet
throughout .
Th is
beautiful home is brick
wit h a garage and full
basement . Call for your

price S22,SOO .OO.

lARGE SIZE Franklin fireplace.
New quilts. Wood cook stov9.
I bose cabinet . Many items .
Between Tuppers Plains and
Reedsville, on CR 50. Forres t
Adams , 378·6276.

MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY . 992-6260 . Pets

PHO~ 742-2003

b14·b67·3305.

SR 338.

Notices

HOBSTETIER
REALTY

200 ACRE FARM between
Pomeroy and Athens. 3
bedroom house end good
bern . $97,500. Only $25 .000
down . Owner wil l finance .

992.3891

NEW LISTING - Com ·

BEAUTIFUL

19 ACRES . 2112 mi les from Middleport, 2 mobile homes· com·
pletely se t up. Rural water.
Mi nera l ri ghts:·lnterested per·
so~s . call992·6305 .

sand ,

Su11day

HOUSE FOR sole on Brownell
Ave . 992-520.4 .

992.7255.

g ravel. calci um chloride . fer tili:zer, dog food . and all types
of salt. Exce lsior Salt WorkS ,
Inc .. E. Main St .. Pomeroy ,

WANT-AD

FORKED

Real Estate for Sale

608 E .
MAIN
POMEROY,O .

,..,,.,.•., 'CAUSE T HEY

•

.

SEVEN ROOM S and bath . 2
ocres , 992-2523.

TWO BLOCKS from bus iness
district in Middleport, out of
high water, 3 bedroom . eat· in
kitchen, pantry, dining room ,
living room ond both . Natura l
gas (urnoce , full basement ,
and atti c, enclosed bock yard .
washer .
d ryer ,
range ,
and
refrigerator, · C\,l rtoins
carpeting included in purchos·
ing price . Coll992-3243 after 6
p.m . for appointment.

REAL ES TATE Loons . Purchase
and refinance. 30 year term s,
VA . No money down (el igible
vete ran s) . FHA - As low os 3
per cent down (non-veteran s) .
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State , Athens . 614·592·3051.

•

ID'it

~ ~ ~~ ~

. n

992·5871.

ONE SMALL trailer for I or 2
persons . 992· 7785 .

LARGE HOME in l etart Fa lls
area . References reqv ired.
For informati on , contact Fred
W. Crow. evening5 . 992 -2562
~~2- 2692 , days .

Mobilt&gt; Homt' sale!! H.nd Y~trd
sa les are IICtYJII l'd ooly wilh
t•ash voith order. 2S cent l'har~t·
for tl(l:; l'arrying Rox Nurnht•r In
C.rt' of ille~nl tn c l .

GUNSHOOT.

FOR SAlE · 3 bedroorr house .
Well water . In 8rodbury .

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
Village Mono1 , 992-7787 .

In memor)'. Oml nr Thank..
and Obit WI~': 6 n•nL'I per wonl .
S3.00 minimum Cash irl ~uJ ­

9'0'2·3161.

opts .

992,543• .

F.11ch word O\'t' r the minimum
15 wor'd.'l i!l 4 ct&gt;nl.'i pt&gt;r word per
W!y . Ad:&lt;~ nmntn~ ntl1e r lhun t'OnSt"l' ul i\'l' d~ ys \l•il\ bt&gt; l'har.;I."' I HI
I~ I day rail•.
.

ri ~ tK

FOUR ROOM house . garage.
reo I nice . 992-2502 .

l utn 1shed

\ harj.!t'

I ((I
1 :;(]
1.80
:1.00

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33. north of Pomeroy .
L..:'rge lot.!_· Call992· 7479 .
3 AND 4 RM furmsh9d ond un·

15 W!•r1ts or Undt&gt;r
ld11)'
?. davs

For Rent

In the Sentinel Classifieds

• \;11&amp; ,

Real Estate for Sale

R ea 1Estate for Sale

For Rent

\trJ\}~

,
·-

•

BX

FSMW

UQXF

FZRJWEX. - ·

Only 15; Movie "Warning Shot"
17; Elec. Co . 33.
1:00-Days of Our Lives 3, TS; All My
Children 6, 13; ; 1 :30-As The
World Turns 8, TO.
2:oo..-:Doctors 3, 15; One Life to Live
6,13; 2:25-News 17 .
2:30--Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8, TO; Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00-General Hospltal6,13; I Love
Lucy 17; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30--Mash B; Joker's Wild TO;
Fllntstones 17; Turnabout 20.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Password
IS; . Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hillbillies 8; Sesame St. 20,33;
Si• Million Dollar Man TO; Tom ·
&amp; Jerry 13i Baseball 17.
4 : 3~Lone
Ranger 3; Petticoat
Junction 8; Bionic Woman 13;
Little Rascals TS .
5:00-Bonanza 3; Sanford &amp; Son 8;
Mlsier Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle TO; AbboH &amp;
Costello 1S.
5:30-- ; News6; Gomer Pyle 8; Elec.
Co . 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Happy Day~ Again 13; Lucy
Show 15; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-News 3,8, 10,13, 15; VIlla Alegre
20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
6:31&gt;-NBC News3,15; ABC News TJ ;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News 8,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy
20,33.
.
7:00-Cross-Wits 3; Tic Toe Dough
B; Newlywed Game 6,13; New$
10; Love American Style 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick Cavett
20,33.
.
7 :30--Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers
6; Joker's Wild 8; $1110,000 Name
That Tune 10; Nashvll'le on the
Road 13; Archie Bampbell l5;
My Three Sons 17; MacNeil·
Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:OO-Holocaust 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Movie "Gator"
8, TO; National Geographic 20,33;
Movie "Baby, the Rain Must
Fall" 17.
8 :30- Benson 6,13; 9:00- Barney
· Miller 6, 13; Black Man's Land'
20; Dam len 33.
9 ; 3~Soap 6,13.
10 ;00-20·20 6,13; Barnaby Jones
8. 10; Onedln Line 17; News 20.
10 :31&gt;-NBC News 3.15; Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20 ; Sneak
Pre~lews 33.
1
11 : 00-News 3,6,8110,13, 15; New

Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Book Beat 33.
11 : 31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC
News 33; Movie "The Prime of
Miss Jean Brodie" fO; Movie
"The Stran{ie Love of Martha

Ivers" 17.
WHWSJBD
12 : 40- Baretta
6, 13;
1: 00Yeoterday's Cryptoqao&amp;e: HOW'MuCH BE'I'mR IT IS TO GET ·
Tomorrow 3; News 15.
WISDOM THAN GOlD; AND TO GET UNDERSTANDING 1; 11&gt;-Banacek 8; 1:50-News 13;
2 :00-Baseball 17.
THAN SILVER. - SOLOMON
·
~ ; 31&gt;-News tf; 4:50--Dragne\ ,17.
C&gt; 1f1t King fiHtvrtl Syncl~, Inc.

~

�Meigs' three districts spent below average

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Ponmoy, C., Wednesday, Sept. 12, 1979

Marietta instructors reach agreement
By The Assoriated Pr""s
Teachers in the Marietta City
School District today reached a
tentative agreement with the city
school board on a new contract .
After an 8'k·hour ne gotiating
session with a federal mediator that
began Tuesday afternoon, both sides
emerged from the talks shortly after
midnight to say a tentative
settlement had been reached to the
strike that began September I.
The school board and the
members of the Marietta Education
Association were to vote on the pact
this afternoon . No details of the
agreement were announced .
Meanwhile, classes were to begin
today at the EHOVE Joint
Vocational School in Erie County,
despite a strike by teachers.
And strikes continued in L&lt;lrain,
the Ohio Valley Local district in
Adams County and the Weaver
School for the Mentally Retarded in
Tallmadge, Ohio .
The 1f&gt;O striking teachers at the
Weaver school for the mentally
retarded in Tallmadge, Ohio, have
been ·given until Friday to return to
their jobs or face dismissal.
The Summit County Board of
Mental Retardation delivered the
ultimatum tv the Weaver Teachers
Association on Tuesday .
But a spokesman for the teachers

indtcated that they would not be
intim idated,
"Threats and firings of teachers
aren't going to settle anything ," said
Jim Lyon. "Teachers are only
asking to be treated fairly , and when
Uta\ is done the strike will end. "
Teachers at the 500-pupil Weaver
school have been on strike since last
Friday, seeking a 13 percent raise.
The current starting annual salary
is $9,526.
The board said the strike is in
violation of an Ohio law , alleging tlle
teachers are absent without leave
and have failed to report for duty .
The board said •it was not invoking
the Ferguson Act.
The board said there would be no
talks until teachers re\liJ'n to work .
The EHOVE board of education
voted at a special meeting to open
the classrooms for senior students
with
administrative
and
management personnel filling in for
striking teachers. Schools have been
closed since the strike began Aug.
30.
Schoo lofficials say
underclassmen will be called back
later in the week on a siaggered
schedule.
Teachers went on strike after they
failed to reach agreement with the
board on economic issues in their
new contract. Negotiations between

High School Seniors
.I

Now is the time toCall us for an appointment for ;our senior portraits
while the weather is beautiful an we can use the outdoor beauty of nature as backdrops for some of your
previews. And, of course, your previews Include traditional indoor shots before oil backdrops.
You'll like our relaxed atmosphere and reasonable
prices.
Call today for your appointment.

THE PHOTO PLACE

-~ ~- ~ ,
,

-use

I

(Charlene and Bob Hoeflich)
109High St.
Pomeroy

llodok paper...
a good loOk.

l.:t. for

Rebates available on ever_y

the two g roups are cun tinulng.

School administrators in the
14,IJOO.pupil Lorain schoo l system
tried to keep schools open and
fun ctionin g Tuesday as stiking
teachers continued picketing at 22
schools.
Attendance at the city's three high
schools was reported as sparse.
Ten minutes after doors opened at
8:30 a.m . at Admiral King High
School, only about 12 of 1,800 pupils
bad come to school, and they were
watching the film "The Hustler"
starring Paul Newman.
Only about 30 of 1,378 pupils came
to Southview High School and 31 of
1,675 pupils at Lorain High School
came to school.
The bitter dispute between tlle 70~
plus teachers in the Lorain
Education Association and school
officials shows no sign of improving.

Mayor's Court
Two defendants were fined and
tllree others forfeited banda in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Thomas Eakins, Route
2, Racine, $25 and costs, \repassing,
and $25 and costs, speeding, and Don
Geary III, Middleport, $10 and costs,
unsafe operation. Forfeiting were
Connie Van Meter, Mason , $18,
speeding; Frances Whittington,
Route 1, Middleport, $31, speeding,
and Rex L. Roy ; Racine , $20,
speeding .
Two defendants were fined and
two others forfeited ·bonds in the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Robert Dugan,
$100
and
costs,
Rutland ,
intoxication, and Paul Spencer,
Middleport, $40 and costs, speeding,
and $25 on a contempt of court
char ge. Forfeiting were David
Craig, Dexter, $30, posted on an
improper backing charge, and
Douglas Anthony, Lancaster, $30,
left of center.

•

Buy any une at the qualtfytng mooal s, 1111
ou t H1 a mo ney -- ba c k co upon Ir on' ~·our
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19sqr;~;~M ~

you r owner's rogtstratiDn card as your pruot
ol pu rcha 3e . Progn:m1 l~ Ovt: rs pu rch ases
horn Septambe1 10 \luu ·oc tobe r 15, ,979.

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On Tuesday each side accused the
other of attempting to prolong the
strike by refusmg to accept. a
mediation or arbitration plan.
A side effect of the strike occurred
when the Lorain Board of Education
decided Monday night not to let the
city high schools participate in
sports
extra-curricular and
activities until the strike by the
teachers has been settled.

County Court
Twenty.five defendants were fined
and 24 ochers forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Robert H. Harrison, Jacksonville, Fla., Abel F. Winton, Jr., Hun·
tington, Roger C. Harsh, Wad·
sworth, Gregory M. Asendorf,
Baltimore, Md., Sharon Loper,
Shade, David R. Kesterson,
Syracuse, Harry Carleton, Coolville,
Dennis L. Rucker, Rt. I, Reedsville,
Donald G. Guthrie, Rt. 2, Coolville,
and Ressie A. Shaffer, Racine, $15
and costs each, speeding; Ricky
Taylor, Racine, $1 and costs, stop
sign violation; Kathern M. Reit·
mire, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, left of
center; Robert Davis, Middleport,
$125 and costs, overload; James J .
Rupert, Wellston, $175 and costs,
overload; Lawrence Manley, Mid·
dleport, $15 and costs, improper
right turn ; Joseph Struble,
Pomeroy, $10 and costs, assured
clear distance; William T. Knittel,
Middleport, $S and costs, unsafe
vehicle; Jacklyn R. Killen ,
Gallipolis, and Jerrena M. Dill, Rt.
1, Minersville, ll5 and costs each,
left of center; Ralston D. Hemsley ,
Rt. 2, Pomeroy and Danny Darst,
Pomeroy, $35 and costs each, speed;
Richard L. Lambert, Rt. I,
Langsville, Sl5 and costs, improper
turn; Fred Osborne, Reedsville, and
Emily Boggs, Rt. I, Shade, $150 and
costs each, three days confinement,
license suspended 30 days, driving
wfu.le intoxicated; Mark Lauder·
milt, Rt. I, RuUand, $75 and costs,
three days confinement, limited
driving privileges, driving while in·
tollicated.
Forfeiting bonds were Randy Randolph, Rt. 2, Pomeroy, Brian C. Rit·
chhart, Syracuse, and Steven
Goebel, Rt. I, Racine, $62.55 each,
reckless operation; Michael lllad,
Jr., Rutland, $60.50, drag racing ;
Jackie Todd Cummins, Rt. 2;
Racine, Charles Spires, Rutland,
Allen E. Davidaon, Syracuse, and
Ronald L. Mencinl , Panna, $360.50
each, driving while intoxicated;
Harvey A. Hawk, Athens, $35.50, expired operator's license; Paul Atha,
Patriot, $35.50, insecure load; Oril
P. Welch, New Martinsville, and
Bennie Stumbo, Bidwell, $35.50, left
of center; Dwaine E . Allen,
Pomeroy, Randy Williams, Rt. 1,
Rutland, Leonard Peach, Glouster,
Corbette Ralliff, Jr., Columbus,
Randy Marshall, Hemlock Grove,
David W. Fisher, East Sparta,
Richard L. Stewart, Vinton, Bryan
L. Baker, Middleport, Nat Willtenson, St. Albans and Tony M. Hutton,
Rt . I, Langsville, $35.50 each,
speeding; John R. Hunnell, Antiquity, $112.55, menacing threats ;
Herbert Farms, Nelsonville, $200,
trespassing.

25"

r~ccess

Fer1\lnes Audio C ontrol
Ce11 1Ur , Aud to Power
AmphHor an d 4-S peaker
SLllll ld Syst~m. Full Syst em :J ,
quatr t y and relrabr lrl y. E:l egan t Frt~n t.: l r
Provtnc1 ul ca btnot uses genu me PeLLIII
w ood vun~e r s on to p and onds wrth a
matct1tr1 g ~u nulate d wood on the !runt
.-u 1ll tJase .

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uro,'lt va' uu ilny lil lltl
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The Best Zenith Ever ... Is Even Better!
Tf~I - FOCUS

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PI CTU RE fUBE lu r the §t1&lt;J I PQ~ I ler 111t1 p1 L. Iure t: ve11 TAIPL E ~ PLUS CHASSIS IS tlcsrgnecl to
C OLO R SENTRY IS lum th s m0s1 ~;op h t::; l l l . &lt;~led i;\V\QIT}Q\t _t;: c alm contro l.

AARON E.BRADSHA W
Aaron Eugene Bradshaw died at
birth this morning at Holzer Medical
Center.
He IS survived by his parents
Belinda Ross and Arthur Eugene
Bradshaw, Middleport ; maternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs .
Clarence Bing, Pomeroy; paternal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Homer
Bradshaw, Middleport.
Graveside services will be held
Thursday at 10 a.m . a t Miles
Cemetery.
VERADREHEL
Vera Drehel, 68, Rt. 1, Middleport,
died Mooday afternoon at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs . Drehel was born in West
Virginia the daughter of the late
Charles and Anna Boldenko. She
was also preceded in death by her
husband, Frank, and several
ocothers and sisters.
She is survived by two daughters,
Mrs. D. M. (Mary) Bruno, Carson•
City , Colo ., and Mrs. William
(Anna) Mangus, Cincinnati; lour
sons, James and Frank, Jr .,
Middleport, Nick of Blair, W. Va. ,
and Steve of Lodi, Ohio; 10
grandchildren and one great
granddaughter.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at the Rawlings·
Coats Funeral Home with the Rev .
Andrew Parsons officiating. Burial
will be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home today from 6 tv 9.

1933. He was also preceded oy 10
ocothers and stx sisters including his
twin brother, Herman who died in
1973.
Mr. Taylor was a member of the
Alfred United Methodist Church
where he had been custodian for the
past 24 years. He was an oversee
Army Veteran of World War I
having served in France. He had
been a coal miner and oil field
worker and employe of B. F.
Goodrich of Akron and in later years
owned and operated his own farm.
He is Survived by his wife, Iciola
Conant Taylor, one daughter, Mrs.
Uoyd (Doris) Dillinger, Shade, two
sons, Col. John H. Taylor , Medrid,
Spain, and Charles E. Taylor,
Bowling Green, one sister, Miss
Gertrude Taylor , Parkersburg,
eight grandchildren and two great
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at 1 p.m. at the Alfred United
Methodist Church with the Rev.
Richard Th&lt;m.a s officiating. Burial
wJIJ be in Coolville Cemetery .
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home after noon on
Thursday. The body will lie in state
at the church one hour prior to
services.

MUNCIE RIDER
Muncie Elizabeth Rider, 75, a resi·
dent of Rt. I, Cheshire, died at 11 :30
p. m. Monday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Pl. Pleasant.
Mrs. Rider had been ill the past
three years. She was born Nov. 23,
1903, Pliny, W. Va ., daughter of the
late James Wright and Emmazetta
Wallace Wright.
ERNESI'TAYLOR
Mrs. Rider attended Mertle School
Ernest Taylor , 84, Rt. I, Guysville,
near Crab Creek, W. Va. She worked
died early Tuesday monring at his
in a fruit jar manufacljuing plant in
residence following an extended
Kanawha City, W. Va ..
illness.
Her first marriage was to Charles
Mr . Taylor was born near
P . Hudnall in 1919. To that unioo,
Jacksonville, Ohio, the son of the
four children were born. One
late Tbomas an Annie Snowden
daughter survives, Mrs. Newaza
Taylor. He was preceded in death by
Clakrson, Rt. I, Cheshire.
a son , James Lawrence Taylor in
Her second ~ge was to
Clarence B. Rider in 1952. He sur·
vives and resides in the Cheshire
area. One sleP1100 survives, Fred
FOUR MEN HANGED
Rider, Rutland . Seven grand·
children, 23 great1!landchildren and
NEW DELHI, India (AP) - Four
two great1!1'eat1!randchildren sur·
Hindu men were hanged today for
murdering 12 girls and a young · vive.
One sister and five brothers sur·
woman for a village elder who
vive: Nettie Van Sickle, Rt. I,
believed a witch doctor's advice that
Cheshire;
Stanley Wright,
offering tlle victims' blood to a local
Hollansburg, Ohio; Lester Wright,
god would bring fertility to his
Welt· Jefferson, Ohio; Hansford
mistress and make him wealthy , the
Wright, West Jefferson; Roy
United news of India reported.
Wright , Hardensburg, Ky., and Barb
However, the Indian news agency
Wright, Bradford, Ohio. Several
said the village elder and his
nieces and nephews survive.
mistress were acquitted of the
Funeral services will be hel.d 2 p.
murders, committed between 1972
m. Friday at Miller's Home lor
and 1974 in Manwat, about 220 miles
Funerals with Rev. Jack Finnlcwn
· east of Bombay. No explanation of
officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel
the ruling was immediately
Hill Cemetery.
available.
, Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p. m. on
Thursday.
TO END MARRIAGES
One 's uit for divorce and an action
for dissolution has been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Southern ,
Robert Trent'on
Middleport , filed suit for divorce
ASSIGNED VISITING
against Ella Ma:,: Southern ,
JUDGE
Middleport.
ATHENS - Judge lAwrence Grey
Edward Allen Young, Rt : I, Shade
of. the Fourth District Court of Apand Debbie Kay Young, Pomeroy,
peals has been assigned as a visiting
ftled for dissolution of marriage. , ·
judge to the Ohio Supreme Court In
Colwnbus.
"Where one of the seven JU.'!tlces
on the Supreme Court disqualifies
HOMECOMING SET
himself from hearing a case, the
Morris
Chapel United Methodist
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Chief Justice appoints a Court of ,\pAdmitted--Billie
Runnion, Church will hold a . homecoming
peals Judge to fill the temporary
Rutland: ·Belinda
Connolly, Sunday. Sunday School will be at 10
vacancy, " Judge Grey explained. "!
Stella
Grueser, a.m. with afternoon services from
Pomeroy;
am pleased and honored to have
been selected.''
Middleport ; Jean Hall , Syracuse ; 1:30 to 4. Everyone is welcome to
Francis come and take part.
Harry Ervin , Athens ;
Andrew, Long Bottom; Bertha
Lasher, Rutland; Paul Van Cooney;
Langsville.
Discharged-Roma Harrah, Mary
Pickens, Henry Romine, Velma
Imboden, Clair Boso.

The RONDO • SL2577P 0 !1\1,,_, J,A J.

1 Rerr wto
IJll ii 1Hl l1 He cl
. cll. tHnel ~elc1 tron t=tJtl 105 cha nnel
~l v.rrli~b t l l! ~ wr!tr C A IV -. w rt ch Also adJUSt
' vulwnu up n r ti OW!I l rt &lt;~rry level , comple t e ly
rnutu !:&gt;t JUthl . llnn I V (Hl l oH, and ZOOM
l or r r~::&gt; ld n l ~.: l o :-.c ups

Area Deaths

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DlSCHARGF.'l SEPI'. 11
Delbert Aldridge, Peggy Bescoe,
Edward Callicoat, Glenda Christian,
Charles Coburn, Mrs . Marshall
Coleman and son, Efelbert Conrad,
Cybert Coon, Frank Cox, Betty
Dunca n, Christa Dunn, Charles
Durst, Alma Gee, April Harris, Earl
Holbrook , Mark Manning, Richard
Meadows, Lovern Montez, David
Radcliffe, Alma Reese, Daryl
Shumaker, Roy Sibley, Mrs. Ron
Silvers and daughter, Mrs. Donald
Smith and daughter, Lilly Stover,
Carla Swain, Leonard Van Metre,
Lewis Whitt.
BIRTHSSEPT. ll
Mr . a nd Mrs. Leslie Burnet, son,
Gallipolis; Mrs. and Mrs. Billy
Holland , son, Gallipolis.

l'u.,l , .. 1l iJ.l" /l' l t l ll t\'t.:rl

Zenith REBATES available on every SYSTEM 3 with Computer Space
DANCE PLANNED
There will be a round and square
dance Friday, Sept. 14, from 8 to 11
p.m. at the senior citizens center,
Pomeroy .
The dance is open to the public. ·'
Admission is $1 for adults with
children under 12 admitted free.
Music will be provided by the
Stringdusters.
.,_.
I

During the 1978·19'19 school year, Meigs County's three local sc!tool.dlstricls
lpellt below the statewide average ol. Sl,056 per student for staff salaries, State
Audltor'l'homu E. Ferguaon said today.
Fergu.on ilald the Meigs County school districts averaged ~pending $875
per student for staff salaries. Meigs Local spent $928 per student, he said,
Eastern Local, f803 per student and Southern Local, S801. .
Information regarding per pupU expenditures resulted fl'llll a com·
puterized study hill office conducted lithe state 's 616 city, local and exempted
village school dlstrlcta.
The study explored each school district's student and staff populatio!18, the
attendant per pupil costs and employee«udent ratios of certificated and noncertificated employees.
The data baae for the study, the auditor noted, wBB a school district's filing
of Form No. OCCI&gt;-6, uaed by the state Department of Education to conduct
salary studies of school dlstrlcta. AU of a school district's employees were con·
sldered in the study.
School employees were broken down in nine categories : Official - Admlnlllratlon; Pn!fesslonal·Education; Profesaional - Other; Technical; Office
·Clerical; Craftll and Trades; Operative; Laborer; Service Worker.
Ferguson ilald gathering of information for the study yielded figures
showing that "For the past five yean the rwmber of school district employees
.

1

.

in Oruo's 616 city, local and exempted village school districts has been increasing -while the student population has been decreasi.r.g."
1be auditor noted that statewide the school employee • student ratio was
one employee for every 14 students in 1973-74, one employee for every 13.5
students in 1974-75, one employee for every 13.2 students in 197!).76, one em·
ployee for every 13 students in 1976-77, one employee for every 12.6 students in
1977-78 and one employee for every 11.5 students during the 1978-79 school Yl!lilr.
"There have been mandated programs added to school district respon·
sibilities in the areas of special and vocational education, along with
educational service personnel, during the past five years but they were funded
by additional state and-«' federal aid, " Ferguson said.
"However, statistically, the fact remains that between the 1973-74 school
year and this pBst, 1978-79, school year, the number ol school district employees
has increased, while the nwnber of students has decreased, on a statewide
basis."
.
Ferguson said his study's intent WB$ not to make value judgements about
individual school' districts' programs and that there were possible mitigating
circumstances In operations from district~ct.
The Auditor did say, however, he felt there was a ''need to present to tax·
payer - residents of school districts, this clear and concise, yet simplified and
factual infonnatlonabout where the bulk of a school district's dollars is spent."

•

e
VOL XXVIII

NO. 106

enttne

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Hurricane rips homes,
flattens businesses
MOBILE, Ala. (AP ) - Hurricane
·Frederic hurled its fury at the Gulf
Coast today from Florida to
Louisiana , ripping apart homes,
shattering hospital windows and
flattening businesses with winds of
up to 130 mph before it began to
. abate, still packing a powerful
punch .
Before dawn , the power or' the
winds had dropped to 80 mph.
There were two confirmed deatlls
as the born-again storm hit
Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi

.Today
. .. in the world

Larger subsidies ,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) with lower incomes wlJI
receive larger subsidlea to PIIY
w111ter beating billJ Wlder compi'OIIlilea reached on legislation
to make the state energy credits
program permanent.
Senate Finance Committee
Chainnan Harry Meahel, DYounptown, said hil panel wlJI
vote today to recommend
puaage of the measure, which
would provide about $73 miWon
to elderly, diaabled and low·
lncmne beada cl lwseholds
during the next two wlnten.
Under the changes, qualiffed
reclptentl who earn Wider $5,000
would receive 30 percent of their
heating bllll for the Dllllltha of
November through March, while
peraona earning fl'llll $5,000 to
fii,OOO would receive a 25 percent
llllboddy.
Ohioan~

Earthquake hits
JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) An eartbqualle measuring 8.0 on
the Richter scale rocked the
eutern Up of the Indonesian
province of Irian Jaya on Wed·
nesday, destroying lwilf the
bou8ea In one town 2,:m milea
eut of here, officials said.
Interior
Department
IIPOkesman Faiaal Tamln said
there wa.s no immediate word on
the fate of the 8,000 residents in
the devastated town of Ansua .
Tamln said major damage also
wu reported In the town of Serui.

and the Florida Panhandle,
churning up 15-foot tides before it
weakened over land and posed a
different threat - flooding .
"I would say there is not a
dwelling , business or any other
building in Jackson County that does
not have damage ranging from
mino.r to total destruction," said Ken
Phillips, director of disaster relief in
Pascagoula, Miss., which alon g with
Mobile appeared to take the brunt of
the storm.
Nearly half a miWon people fled ·
tlleir homes as Frederic stalked the
patll deadly Camille took 10 years
ago in killing more than 250 persons.
Frederic damaged the roof and
ripped a cupola from tlle historic
City Hall in Mobile, where mdre
than 5 inches of rain feU between 9
p.m. and 10 p.m. Wednesday.
Century~ld oaks littered the city's
boulevards and littered streets kept
firelighters from three reported
blazes. Downtown storefronts were
blasted out, and officials said one
s hopping cent er which housed
several stores was "virtually blown
away ."
County engineer Joe Ruffer woke
up city chain saw dealers to ask for
clean-up tools , but added , "I may
have to cut my way into the area
where my work crews live."

Relief coordinator Gerald Baxley
said there were reports of people
trapped under collapsed roofs in
Mobile's northern suburb of
Prichard. Resc ue efforts were
delayed until daylight .
The storm's wind and waves eight
feet high destroyed 120 homes in the
Florida Panhandle, said Escambia
County administrative spokesman
Pat Dcnnelly. He said a 38-foot
sailboat was sitting in a street 100
yards north of Pensacola Bay and
three marinas where luxury yachts
were docked were destroyed.
The storm 's main thrust was
between Mobile, a city of 300,000,
and Pascagoula, about 30 miles
southwest . Maximum winds had
diminished to 80 mph as Frederic
moved inland early today.
At 6 a.m. EDT, the center or tlle
storm was located near latitude 31.8
north and longitude 88.5 west , 30
miles southeast of Meridian , Miss. It
was moving north at 15 mph and
weakening rapidly. Forecasters said
the major threat of the storm
appeared to be the chance of
nooding and tornadoes .
'·
In Pascagoula, two dozen National
Guardsmen were forced to take
cover in an ammunition vault when
the hurricane leveled their armory .
Continued on page 9

Man dies in helicopter crash
MASON, Ohio ( AP ) A
helicopter crash near Kings Island
Amusement Park late Wednesday
killed ~ Pickerington man who was
the passenger and Injured the pilot.
Terence J . Morse, 31, was killed
when the helicopter crashed on
Interstate 71, the Ohio Highway
Patrol reported:
Ernest Grotsky, 32, the pilot, was
taken to Bethesda North Hospital in
Cincinnati for treatment of multiple
contusions.
The patrol reported receiving
citizens band radio reports of a low
Dying aircraft nem; the highway

shortly before the cram, but the
cause or tlle trouble has not been
determined.
The helicopter which was
demolished was taken to the
Lebanon
patrol
post
for
investigation by officials of tlle
Federal Aviation Administration.
The 1975 F-28A Enstrom 2-&lt;ieat
aircraft was owned by G&amp;W
Masonry Systems Inc. of Colwnbus.
The . two men were returning to
Columbus from a pleasure trip in
Cincinnati when the crash occurred
at about 11:15 p.m., the patrol said.

MOTORISTS BEWARE - ~ tra-nllac
State Route 124 at LangBville, in Meigs County should
use extreme caution when ·crossing . these railroad
tracks. Recently .work was done at the traCks,
however, the work apparently caused deep dropoffs on ·

WASHINGTON (AP) -

COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - A barebones budget for the Transportation
and Highway Safety departments
was expected to PBSS the House
today.
The spending document, while its
$1.3 bill ion total · may sound
staggering, actually is less than a
continuation budget.
·It contains virtually nothing in the
way of new construction, no new
revenue sources, and may even be
less than needed for full
maintenance.
Members of the House Finance
Committee, who recommended
approval 1~ Wednesday, added an

The

give, and receive.

'"

ROLFS .. ,it shows you care.
MEN'S DEPT. • 1ST FLOOR

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

nesday to require 18-year-old
men to register for the military
draft, something they haven't
had to do since 1975. ·
·
By a vote of 252-163, House
members turned down a plea by
Rep. G.V. "Sonny" Montgomery,
o.Misa., to require all1&amp;-year-old
men In the country to register
beginning oq Jan. 2, 1981.
The House voted 259•155 to take
the draft-registration measure
out nf a $42.1 billion weapons bill
and InStead directed President
Carter to conduct a study cin the
matter.
No young. man has been
required to register for military
service since March 31, 1975. The
last draftee was inducted in June
1973.

ANY SUGGESTIONS?
Middleport residents
having suggestions on the Ulle of this lot on the corner of
Third and Garfield are invited to send them to the
Village hall for coMideration of village officials. This

. . . . . . . . . . .t-:a.'lba,OIIIe'O ...
waya reports that re[lalr of the road

1

· - - . . . .

ts tbe l'eaponsitility of the raUroad. It is al8o reported that It will be
about three weeks before the repair work Is done at the
hazardoua cros,slng.

~

Bare-bones transportation
budget passage set today

House rejected an attempt Wed-

A wallet that gets a lot of use day in and day out has
to be rugged as well as handoome. And that's the Rolfs
Townsman. A slim, modern billfold with two pockets
for cards and photos pluo two handy tuck-in comport.
mcnts. Holds all the cash you'll ever need to carry and
yet folds flat and neat. Whatever the occasion, a Rolfs
Townsman, like all our fine leather product.., is better to

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1979

No registration

I

"Residents of a district know ,their sehools best and after having been
presented with this infonnation, and studying it, if they're satisfied With tbe a:pendltures and the employeH\udent ratios, then so be It," Ferguson said.
When"Students Per Total Employees' were considered Eastern ~.
barely, exceeded the statewide average of pne employee for every 1UIIIludents -employing one person for every 10.96 students.
Eastern Local and Meigs Local both exceeded the statewide average when
just "Non~rtificated Employees" were cdnsldered. Eastern Local employ_ed
one person for every 28.13 students -while the statewide average waa one employee for every 33.211 students. Meigs Local employed one person for .evtrY
31.50 students.
The Auditor noted that rural districta with their related transportatiOn
requirements tepd to exceed statewide averages • ratios of students to 111111certificated employees. Bus drivers and support staff are non-eertlflcated personnel, he said.
Ferguson said from the 1977-78 to the 1978-79 school year, Meigs Cqunty
school districts had a net enrollment decline of 92 students and 13 teacherl.
SOuthern Local wa8 the only district to have a student Increase. They gained
four students. Eastern Local gained three teachers whjle losing 47 students. The
three districts receive a total ofS2,567,616in state funds. Included in that IIUIIllll
Sl,t05,400 for Meigs Local, $591,252 for Southern and $570,962 to Eastern Local.

lot wu given to the village by Mary Elizabeth Har·
linger Thomas, of Belmont, MP'IS. The home of Mrs.
Thorll8ll' mother, Mrs. Bessie Hartinger was located
on the lot before it was moved.

amendment under which the
Transportation Department will
monitor its finances and report
quarterly tv legislative leaders.
Transportation Directvr David L.
Weir said the reason for the belt·
tightening is the impact of inflation

Appella~e

on highway projects. It drives up
costs about 2 percent a month, he
said.
.
Ohio earmarks gasoline and
user · taxes
for ·
highway
transportation, and the department
has to live on these funds.
1

Court upholds conviction

Judges for the Fourth Appellate
District, Meigs County, Judge
Homer Abele, Judge Earl
Stephenson and Judge Lawrence
Gray, rendered their decision
upholding the conviction of John W.
Fleming.
Fleming was con vic ted of the
murder of William Middleswart in
Dec., 1977, and was sentended to a
term of 15 years to tile in the state
penal system.
Fleming was committed to the
penal institution for several months
but posted $30,000 bond and was
released from the penal institution
pending the outcome of the appeal.
It is expected that Judge John C.
Bacon, common pleas court, wiU
order Fleming to SUrrender himself
to the law enforcement officers
shortly to begin his sentence.
Judge Abele wrote the opinion,
which was llllanimous, upholding the
conviction which indicated that aU
assignment of errors aUeged by the
defendant were not well taken.
Freda Mlddleswart was also
convicted of the murder of William
Middleswart, her husband, and is
currently serving 15 years to life in
the Marysville Reformatory for
Women.
It is not known at this time
MEDIATOR COMiNG
A federal mediator will tentatively
be in the Meigs Local School Dllllrict
next Tuesday to meet with
negotiating teams of the district's .
board of education and the teachers'
Blii!OCiation. As .required, both the
board and tbe association requested ·
the mediator.

whether or not counsel for the
defendant, Joseph Vanity, Athens,'
will appeal to the Ohio Supreme ·
Court.
.
Prosecuting Attorney, Fred W,
Crow, In, has indicated he has not
made the decision as to whether or
not Fleming will be tried for the
perjury charge now pending. This
charge stems from F leming's
testimony at his murder trial and his
testimony given at the hearing on
the motion to suppress the-evidence.
A decision as to the perjury charge
is expected shortly.

Complaints
checked
Meigs County Sheriff James J.
Proffitt reporta depUties bd an accident report Wednesday. Frederick
D. Thomas, 18, Rt. 1, Cheslre, reported that some time during the day an
unknown vehicle struck IU 1971
Mercury while parked at the Meigs
High Parking lot.
ThOOJ&amp; Is working for a roofing
contractor there. There was 8llgbt
damage to the left front quarter
panel of hill car.
·
Deputies are Investigating the hitskip accident that occurred on SR
124 at 7:15 a.m. Tuesday on SR 124
near Meigs Mine No. 1.
According to the report, a red 1978
Ford pickup traveling eaat went left
of center and sideswiped a wealbound 1978 Buick driven by Jerry M.
Johnson, Racine. The Johnaon
vehicle went off the road on the
right. The other vehicle failed to

stop.

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