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                  <text>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

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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.

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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.

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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.

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rnutu !:&gt;t JUthl . llnn I V (Hl l oH, and ZOOM
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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.

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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.

�TOM •s SOUNDATIONAL

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 13,1979
1

Carter announces p.roposal
HART·FORD, Conn. (AP ) President Carter announced
Wednesday an expanded proposal to ·
provide $2.4 billion a year to help the
poor , agec;l, blind and disabled to
meet rising energy costs.
The forum
for
Carter 's
annowtcement was a visit to New
England where many thousands of
families are roncemed about the
soaring cost of home heating oil. He
came to Hartfcrd to address a
health~are forum sponsored by
senior-citizens groups.
Under the Carter blueprint, the
energy aid would total $1.6 billion
this winter and $2.4 billion per year
thereafter.
In a statement, the president said :
· "This proposal will addresS a
critical need - alleviating the

impact of higher energy prices on
those who are suffering most from
higher energy prices. Our energy
policy must be compassionate.
Without a substantial program such
as this one our most needy
house holds, incuding many of the
elderly on meager fixed incomes,
..-ill face almo.s t impossible
pressures on household budgets ...."
When the president announced in
April that he would gradually
decmtrol domestic oil prices, he
called for $800 million of aid to low
income families. He said he was
raising the ante because of June's 40
percent rise in crude oil prices.
In addition , he added a $400
million proposal to allow the states
to "help low-Income households
faced with hea lth-threatening

Editorial opinions,
comments

energy emergencies."
To finance the assistance plan,
Congress would have to enact
Carter's proposed "windfall profits"
ta~ on oil-industry· revenues, which
is by no means certain.
The plan would provide special
energy allowances to households
with an incane below 125 percent of
the federal poverty level. The
poverty level currently is calculated
at $7,160 for a family of four and
such a family would be eligible for
aid if its income was 'under $6,950.
Payments would vary from state
to state, depending on local heating
needs.
A White House fact sheet said
allowances for individuals living
alone probably would average about
$100 a year and be double that for
families . About 3.6 million
individuals and 3. 7 million families
would get federal payments.

been a member of the minority party in Congress, Baker has few
legislative monwnents to his name.
It is the job of Republicans in
Congress primarily to challenge
Democratic proposals, not to make
their own.
Thus Baker is known primarily as
a
dealer rather than a thinker or
inW~on.
·
manager.
Like former President
In contrast to candidate Jimmy
Gerald
R.
Ford,
who previously had
Carter and former Celifornia goverbeen
House
Republican
Leader,
nor Ronald Reagan - the leading
Baker
is
a
solid
legislator
who
has
19110 GOP contender - Baker offers
not
been
in
a
position
to
demonstrate
himself as the candidate experienced with the issues, politics the leadership capabllities required
and personalities that are a part of of a president.
The Tennessee Republican spent
legislative
dealmaking in
the
entire month of August trying to
Washington.
·
combat
these doubts. Speaking to
Baker's interesting approach
audiences
in 25 states and Puerto
could fall flat on its face. His
Rico,
he
sought
to build up his camproblem is that he is not a ''true
paign
organization
and gain more
believer" on many issues of great
public
exposure.
concern to the conservatives who
A campaign aide Said Baker was
have increasing control in
pleased
with the reaction and feels
Republican primaries.
his
campaign
is gaining momentwn.
Not only did he vote for the
During
the
next
two months,· he
Panama Canal treaties in 1978, but
plans
to
spend
half
time on the cam·
he rejects the tactics and tenets of
paign
trail
particularly
In the
"New Right" leaders who believe
early
primary
states
-and
half
time
the public is tired of business as
as
Senate
minority
leader,
worlclng
usual in the nation's capital.
Baker believes that Republlcal\5 primarily on the SALT treaty.
Baker plans to launch his
have the best shot of winning in 1980
If they select a candidate who can at- presidential campaign officially in
tract Democratic and independent November, at which time he will
keep his Senate leadership post but
· voters with a centrist platform.
hand over most of the duties to
As Senate minority leader since
Minority Whip Ted Stevens of
1977, he has had 'some success
uniting . the diverse corps of Alaska.
Rep. John B. Anderson of lllinois,
Republicans behind a common
position on taxes, energy and the most liberal Republican
presidential candidate, has told in·
national defense.
He stresses that he has spent terviewers that only he and Baker
much of his career In Washington can attract enough Democrats and
· and is experienced in the art of com· independents to defeat a Democratic
promise and how the system works. opponent. Anderson himself
He tries to remind his audience of remains so low in the opinion polls
that his nomination would be a
his role in the 1973 Senate Watergate
distinct upset.
hearings by stressing that politics is
.· an "honorable profession."
The question Howard Baker faces
But all these pluses could also be as his popularity lags considerably
minuses for Baker. The public may behind that of Reagan, is whether
be disenchanted with politicial\5 who Republican voters are more interested in a candidate with a clear
try to be all things to all people.
While he has tried to place himself ideological bent or one strong on
in the middle of the political spec- Washington experience and com·
trum, he has also appealed to con- promise. II they choose the latter
servatives with his strong criticism course, Baker will be the man to
of the Strategic Anns Limitation beat.
Treaty pending in the Senate. Many
Richard E. Cohen is a reporter
SALT supporlef11 believe that these
. attacks have not been carefully •.with the National Journal, The
Weekly On Politics and Governthought out.
Partly because he has always ment.
Cempromlalng Experience
By Rlcluml E. Coben
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Sen.
Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., is
gambling that the country has learned a lesson from 1976 -that it is a
mistake to elect a president who
does not know how to get things done

Berry's World

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·Business
•
mirror First drop noted in Ohio
delinquent property taxes

Compromising experience

"It was just a tflougflt imperial presidency. "

FRIDAY, SEPT. 14TH 10:00-B:OO ·SATURDAY, SEPT. 15TH 10:00-5:00
MARANTZ ...

BACK TO SCHOOL SPECIALS AND GIFT IDEAS ~::~~·:L~

~~h~~~=~· called to say he's bringing home a new fuel-efficient recreationa

In Washington

SAl-E~··~·--··-···Th-. ~···mi

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.•

NEW YORK (AP)- In support of
their campaign to obtain some tax
relief for savers, savings and loan
asoociations have noted that the
Japanese save 25 percent of their
disposable income but Americans

COLUMBUS, Ohio·(ap)- Proper· • in 38 counties, the council noted, · amount of the loss included,
ty tax delinquencies In Ohio took with over 63 percent of the total oc· Hamilton, $15,829,999; Franklin,
only 4.5.
$14,115,000; Lucas, $12,731,000; Swn·
curring in Ohio's 10 largest counties.
The American rate has been their first drop in a decade last year Even so, delinquencies in five of the
mit, $10,460,000; and Stark,
but
still
cost
governments
more
than
falling too. Over the previous two
$6,50t,OOO.
10 big counties were lower in 1978
million.
decades, personal savings averaged $240
The council took note of efforts In
than the previous year.
Delinquencies
on
real
estate,
more than 6 percent, and as recenUy
Franklin
Ceunty to collect past due
Counties in which the total tax
public utility, tangible personal and
as 1975 were near 8 percent. But they
taxes,
saying
the cowtty treaaurer
intangible personal property tax and losses increased and the amaunt of
have twnbled recenUy.
reduced property tax IIJIIM!8 by $8.2
assessments rose steadily the delinquency were Cuyahoga,
u.s. corporations nave done special
million.
from
$79 million in 1968 and ac- $57,947,000; Mahoning , $11,217,000;
poorly, too. Their savings, or
The difference in the amount d.
cording
to
the
Ohio
Public
Ex- Montgomery, $10,678,000 ; and
retained earnings, have declined as
tax
delinquencies in 1978 over 1977
penditure Council reached a high of Trumbull, $7,455,000. The difference
a percent of gross national product
ranged
from a $2 million lncreue in
in Lorain, $5,384,000, waa less than .
in the 1970s. And the federal $243 million in 1977.
Charnpalj!n
and Lorain counties to a
Last year's drop of 1.3 percent 0.10 percent.
government, of course, hasn't saved represented $3.2 million more in$5.8 million decrease in Franklin
Other big counties malting up the
a cent .
County.
come
to
tax
collectors
than the bulk of the delinquencies and the
And that, say the savings
previous
year.
instititions and corporations and the
The council noted that a subfederal government is a very large stantial portion of the Increase each
reason why American productivity, year fr001 1970 to 1977 could be ator production efficiency, has also
tributed to financial problems of thl!
declined steadily.
Penn-Central Transportation Ce.
You need savings if you are going and the Erie-Lackawanna Railroad.
visit Boston earlier and said the
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen .
to have investments in new plants,ln It also noted that some delinquen- Edward M. Kennedy , D-Mass., is
senator, a Roman Catholic, may
modern technology, in better
decide to greet the pontiff in
being
invited
back
to
the
White
marketing and distribution services, cies may have been collected since House following last week's muchMassachusetts rather than at tile
in research into new products and tax settlements were completed in publicized "private luncheon " witli
White House.
1978.
development of existing ones.
Kennedy aides were reported to be
President
Carter
but
he
may
Nearly 70 percent- $166 million Since savings haven't been readily
discussing
"the most appropriate
the
invitation.
decline
available, America hasn't been of the delinquencies trace to taxes
The
White
House
sent
informal
role
for
the
senator."
innovating.
Japan
spends due on real estate and public utility word to Carter's potential iival for
proportionately three times as much property. Tangible and intangible the 1980 Democratic pre · dential
Carter's people, including his
as the United •States on new personal property accounted for 25 · nomination that Kennedy will be ·political operatives, are seeking out
ventures. And France and Germany percent, or $60 million of the tax invited to the Oct. 6 White House
Influential Catholics to invite to the
lOBS, and special assessments made
twice as much.
papal
reception , which Ia expected
reception
for
Pope
John
Paul
II.
up 5.8 percent, or $14 million.
II you want to follow the chain of
to
attract
nearly 5,000 guesta.
However,
Kennedy
spokesman
Delinquencies reported in 1978
events further you'll find that as
Unda
Peek,
spokesw001an for the
TOOl
Southwick
noted
the
pope
will
productivity falls, production costs were higher in 50 counties and lower
Carte r-Mondale Presidential
ri!l" . And that as costs rise so must
Committee, said the campaign
prices, and that as they do, living
organization has been given an
standards suffer.
allotment of invitations to distribute
That living standards already are
to Catholic supporters of Carter's
suffering is probably not news to
unaMoWlced campaign.
A Commission for Reapanyone. What does seem like news,
Trying to get either the White .
COLUMBUS - State Senator portionment and Redistricting
is the discovery by Morgan
House or the campaign conunittee to
Oakley C. Collins (R-Ironton) repor- would be created by the proposed
Guaranty Trust that Americans'
reveal the scope of the political
ts that the Committee for Fair and Constitutional Amendment. The
urge to save might be even lower
allotment was, judging from what
Impartial Redistricting (FAIR) is primary purpose for the existence of
than we think .
has been published in recent
continuing to circulate petitions the Conunission is to accept any and
"II savings in the form of pension
months, somewhat more difficult
proposing a Constitutional Amend- all plans submitted to It and deterfund reserves are excluded from
than gleaning the secret of the Hment to change the way in which the mine, through the application of the
aggregate savings, saving dropped
bomb from government files. No me
legislative districts for the Ohio
to less than 1 percent of disposable General Assembly and the Federal mathematical formula, which plan
would talk.
comes ciosel!l to complying with that
income in both 1977 and 1978," the
Congressional Districts are deter- mathematical formula. The Comfirm reports In its monthly survey.
Jody Powell, the president's press
miSsion would be comprised of five
And pension fund savings, large as ·minf\1.
secretary,
took his family to
My previous report discussed the members. The leaders of both parthey are, don't really suggest a great
Kennedy
's
Massachllsetts
for a late
present methods of redistricting. ties in the Ohio House of Represenmotivation toward saving. Most are
When
Powell
was
summer
vacation.
Currently the Ohio General Assem· tatives and the Ohio Senate would
beyond individual control. And some
asked
why
he
chose
Cape
Cod
for
his ·
bly determines the districts appoint one member each.
of the savings were forced by laws
holiday
,
another
White
House
aide
Congressional Districts while the
The fifth member, the Chainnan,
requiring stronger funding.
interrupted to jesl, "He got trapped
state Apportionment Board deter- would be selected by the four mem·
Why then the reluctance to save? mines the districts for the seats in
behind enemy lines."
To begin with, it doesn't pay . the House and the Senate of the Ohio bers. The members of the ComIn truth, the potential cartermiasion could not be holding any
lnflation, and taxes on the illusory
Ke11nedy
clash occupied center
General Assembly. This report will polltlcal office.
profits, leads to a net loss on
the
White House all week, so
stage
at
discll&amp;'l the "FAfR" proposal.
The procedures used to select
savings, even though savers earn
far
as
most
reporters were
The "FAlR' • proposal attempts to redistricting plans would be as
the highest interest rates ev!Jr.
cmcemed.
When
Sen. Henry M.
achieve three things. First, It at- · follows: All plans would have to be
You can figure it yourself, as
Jackson,
0
-W
ash.,
emerged
from a
tempts to"eliminate the politiclans
thousands of would-be savers have. from involvement in the decision filed with the COIIIII1ission for Reap- group meeting with Carter on
portionment and Redistricting no
You eam 5.5 percent on your
making process for Ohio's later than the First of July In a year energy, many of the que~lons
passbook savings, but taxes take
Legislative and Congressional ending 1n the nwnber one. The pur· Jackson faced dealt with
perhaps 30 percent of that, leaving
presidential politics · and his warm
DistriCts. Second, the proposal used pose for ch0011ing the years ending in
you with 3.85 percent. After inflation
words
fer Kennedy.
a mathematical fonnula to .deter- the nwnber one for redistricting is to
oi 13 percent you're left with a loss of
"!
have
not endorsed President
mine the shapes and sizes of the take advantage of the new Federal
9.15 percent.
Kennedy,"
insisted Jackson , who
districts based upon tbe · state's Census data which would have been
quickly
corrected
himself, looking
population.
compiled In the previous year.
very
embarrassed.
By using a mathematical formula
The conunlssion would then have
Five years ago: the United States
the current oddly shaped or to select the most mathematically
stopped shipping uraniwn fuel to InAfter Vice President Walter F .
''gerrymandered" looking districts precise plan by the OOth of Sepdia wttU New Delhi clarified ifs
Mondale
returned from China last
would be eliminated. Third, the tember of that year. The plan would
policy on nuclear tests.
week,
President
Carter called him to
"FAIR" proposal opens up the go into immediate effect and would
the
Oval
Office.
News
redistricting process to public in- control the districts for Legislative
photographers
and
a
small
group
of
volvement.
and Cengressional races in Ohio for
reporters
were
permitted
to
record
The public involvement is the the next ten year period.
TilE DAILV SENTINEL
the scene, with the reporters
WSPS 1~5-980)
major benefits whicl\ can be obAs an example, If the amendment
clustering around the back of
tained from passage of the "FAlR" were passed by the voters next year
~~~~·~d·Carter.'s chair, the better to
proposed Constitutional Amend· the Commission for Reap·
overhear the conversation.
ment. If the amendment would pass, portlonment and Redistricting
DEVOTED TO TilE
lnterrupting the proceedings, the
INTER&amp;'TOF
any person could submit a redistric· would be organized ln January of
MEIGS·MASON AREA
president
suggested it might be
ling plan. This proposal once sub- 1981. The Commission would then
ROBERT HOEFLICH
inappropriate
to "have all the press
Clry Edl\lr
mitted would obtain equal con· hand down the Legislative and
Published dally u.tept Saturday by Tbe Ohio
In
the
photograph
when the vice
sideration with any and all other Congressional Districts for the next
Vail•y PubUsh.hl8 Cumpany· Multtmedia,lal'.,
president
is
ostensibly
giving me a
Ill Coort St.. Po~UUuy , Ohlu t57D. Busi~~e~s
proposals submitted because the use ten year period by September 30th of
Offlc~ Phoue 9tz· U51. EdUorlal Pbo1e
secret
report
on
his
trip."
of the mathematical formula
!fn-2151.
1981.
The reporters moved;
Secoud cla!il po&amp;Uii~ paid al Pom ~ roy , Ohio.
eliminates the possibility of any in·
These districts would then apply to
N1tionaladvertislag reprt'l~ alative, Landoa
fluence being exerted on the selec· the next five elections held for
AlrilfW'IateR , llUI Euclid A\'e., Clenlaod, Oblo
44115 .
lion of a redistricting plan.
choosing members of the Ohio
SubsrripUou rtb&gt;-8 : Ueitvered by Clrrftr
Thought for today: The more
Quite simply stated the plan that General Assembly and the Congress
wh!! r~ avai!Hblt- !10 f enlM per week. By Molor
ltt"'lc wht're curlr.r ~n ice out available, Out
"wins" would be the plan that comes of the United States. These elections people have studied different
month . SJ,!WJ.
closest to complying with the would be 1982, 1984, 19116, 1988 and . methods of bringing up children, the
Th~ DallySenllnrl. by mall in Ohio11Dd West
\'lr,.;lnW, on~ yt·a r $33.00; Sis. munthl JJ7.50;
mathematical formula. Tl)e only 1990. The Commission would then more they have come to the
thr•'t' nmnlhll $10.50. Elsewhl!re $311 .00 ; sll:
requirement for submitting a plan is meet again in 1991 to choose new conclusion that what good mothers
mulllh!i 120.00: three months ,u.oe.
The Auoclakd Prt.."IIS Ill cJtcluslvely enUUed
Ulat it be supported by obtaining at redistricting proposals to be in effect and fathers instinctively feel like
to the use ftlr publl• ':i!hmnf all nevr.s dispatches
least 1,000 oignatures of registered through the el~tions of the year doing for their babies Is best after all
credited tn tbt' ue"' -;papcr aud also Che h~t• al
news published hw•lf'.
- Benjamin Spack (1903-) .
Ohio voters.
2000.

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�4.,. 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport·Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 13, 1979

5- 'lbe Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 13, 1979

Cincy hikes West lead

Reds-Houston series not pitching duel
CINCINNATI (AP) - Pitchers'
duels' Hah! The Cincinnati Reds
and the Houston Astros banged out
51 hits in their two-game series,
which the Reds swept to vault into
first place In the National League
West .
"Thai just shows you how wrong
I've been," said Cincinnati third
baseman Ray Knight. "1 m11de that
prediction just the other day ."
The Reds cm\pleted the Sw-eep
Wednesday night with a 7-4 victory
to move Jl-'z games ahead of
Houston . But .a three-run edge
through the final three innings didn't
satisfy Knight .
"I didn't feel safe with a 7-4 lead
even in the last inning," said Knight,
who went three-for-four at the plate.
"Those guys are reaUy batUers. I
wanted to score a couple more
rWts.''
· Dave Cdlins had a perfect threefor-three nigbt, reaching base all
three times he led off an iMing. He
walked once and bunted for a
basehit once, and singled in a run his
other time at bat.
Cincinnati baserunners were so
bountiful that two scored on double
plays. Houston's six pitchers all
trouble, except for Joe Sambito.
"They (Reds) have their good
days, like anybody else in the
league, but we've had great pitching
aU year," said Houston pitcher J .R.
Richard. "I'm stUJ confident that
our pitching will be good enough to
win the pennant."
In the series, each team started its
two winnlngest pitchers - Richard
and Joe Niekro vs. Tom Seaver and
Mike LaCoss.
Three didn't last long enough to
get a decision, while Niekro, 18-10
took the loss Wednesday . Rookie
Frank Pastore, H, was the winner
in relief.
"This series wasn't that drastic a

series," Astro Manager llill Virdon ·
maintained. " It leaves us with
having to win. But you don't get
panicky until the day before you're
eliminated. We still have a long way
to go: '
Houston got a run in the first
inning when Cesar Cedeno singled,
went to second on a sacrifice,
advanced on an infield out and
scored on a single by Jose Cruz.
Collins started the Cincinnati first
with a single, went to second on a
passed ball and scored when Joe
Morgan boWJced a double off the
center field wall .
"That one surprised me ," Morgan
said. "I don 't usually hit a line drive
that far. I guess it's just because I'm
f~eling better and swinging better."
Morgan then scored on a double by
Dave Concepcion, who went to third
on another passed ball and scored on
a double play ground ball.
In the fourth, Foster got a leadoff
single, moved up on Johnny Bench's
single and a wild pitch and scored on
Dan Driessen's sacrifice fly. Knight
singled in Bench, went to second on a
wild pitch and scored on Collins'
third straight single.
The Astros came back with three

LATONIA RESULTS
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Eleven
$2 ticketholderscollected $1,895.60 at
Latonia 's daily double Wednesday
night on the 11·12 combination of
Surgary Jill and Fox Park.
There was also a $10 ticketholder
who collected $9,478.
In the $3,700 featured eighth race,
the wiMer was Our Bold Lady,
paying $6, $4 and $3. Gorgeous Lady
placed, paying $13.20 and $5 and the
show horse was Well Smoke, paying
$3.80.

A crowd of 3,020 bet $426,023.

Cleveland coach confident
BEREA, Ohio (AP) - Despite
criticism being leveled at the
Cleveland Browns, Coach Sam
Rutigliano remains confident his
team has the makings of a National
Football League playoff contender.
"We are not apologizing for being
2-0," Rutigliano said following nip·
and-tuck victories over the lessthan-awesome New York Jets and
Kansas City Chiefs.
:The criticism has been directed at
the team 's defense, an error-prone
offense, the number of penaltil!l!
drawn by the club and quarterback
Brian Sipe - who has passed for ·
more MS yards and five touchdowns
but is accused by some of playing
way over his head .
"ll people want to draw something
negative out of what we've done,
that's their business," Rutigliano
said with a shrug. "I can't address
myself to that kind of nonsense. But
our chances of reaching the playoffs
are better than they were last year,
for two reasons .
"One is we all have a better grasp
of our system and have a
quarterback who can make it work .
The other is we had an excellent
draft , maybe the best in the National
Footbal League this year.
"I'm pleased with our 2-0 record.
The only thing that would bother me
would be if we were ().2. That's the
bottom line and is all that matters.
We're somewhere between being

good and being lucky, but we're ~.
"They key is our ability to stay
healthy. If we do, we have a chance
of getting into the playoffs. But
that's something a lot of teams can
say."
The second-year head coach
admitted the first two games were
not gems, but still finds reasons to be
uptimistic .
"1 know we were fortunate ln our
first two games, but we did a lot of
things well and have the makeup of a
fLne team . We have the ability to be
very competitive, although the
ability to be totally involved with
Pittsburgh in our division is still a
year or two away," he said.
"That's why I say, don't put a
crown on us. It's still too early. But
please don't get upset with us for
blowing a 2~ lead (against Kansas
City) or not beating the Jets easier
than we did."

PLAY TODAY
Coach Bill Leedy's GallipollB
eighth grade football team will open
1ts 1979 season at Pt. Pleasant this
evening. Game time is 5:30. The
GAHS f~ of Coach Ron Janey will
open the1r new campalgn at home,
starting at 5:15 p.m. against Pt.
Pleasant's freshmen .

runs in the fifth after piilch hitter
Dave Bergman, Cedeno and Craig
Reynolds au singled to load the
bases. Bergman scored on Terry
Puhl 's sacrifice fl y, a nd Cruz
doubled in the other two on a double

to the right !Lei&lt;: corner .
Driessen wa s hit by a pitch in the
Reds' sixth , went to third on a hitand-rWl single by Knight and scored
the final run when Cesar Geronimo
hit into a double play.

Pittsburgh,

Mo~treal

keep pace wiih wins
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Montreal Expos are holding
onto first place .in the National
League East ... one-half game
behind the Pittsburgh Pirates.
No, you didn't read that wrong .
Yes, it's true .
The Pirates have won three more
games than the Expos While
Montreal has lost two less games
than Pittsburgh. But the Expos have
a .6043 wiMing percentage while the
Pirates are chugging along at a .6041
clip .
Figure it. out yourself. Pittsburgh
ts 87.{;7 and Montreal is 84.{;5.
Pirates Manager Chuck Tanner,
however, isn't worried .
~
"Fractions of percentage points
don't matter to me. All that matters
is that we keep winning ," Tanner
said after Pittsburgh beat the St.
Louis Cardinals 2-0 behind the six-hit
pitching of John Candelaria and
reliever Kent Tekulve Wednesday
night.
The Expos also won, 6-3 over the
Chicago Cubs. It was Montreal's
16th victory in its last 17 games.
"I'd have to say it's reaUy
discouraging for Montreal to play
the way they' re. playing and they
can't i:CB.ttlhJ up, It 'saidlrffionner ,
ignoringlthema\lierilalieal' fa'tt that
the Expos hold a slight edge. "It's
tough when you keep winning and
you can't catch the team in front of
you. It makes it hard. There's a lot of
pressure on them."
Despite their hot streak, the Expos
have not been able to gain much
groWJd on the Pirates, who have won
14 of their last 17 contests.
"Montreal can't possibly play any
better than they have played, and
they've only picked up a game and a
half," Tekulve said. "You win 16 out
of 17 and only pick up a game and a
half. That's got to be a little
frustrating ."
In other NL games Wednesday,
San Francisco nipped Atlanta 4-3,
CinCinnati stopped Chicago 7-4,
Philadelphia blanked New York W
and Los Angeles downed San Diego
5-2.
Expos 6, Cubs 3
Veteran Tony Perez drove iii two
rWJs with a double to ignite a three- ·
run eighth-inning rally and carry
Montreal to its victory over Chicago.
Dave Kingman, Larry Biittner
and Steve Ontiveros
stroke!! run-scoring singles in
the first inning to provide the Cubs
with a 3-0 . lead. But the Expos
boWJced back with a run in the third
on Larty P;nTish's 25th homer of the

~'!~\lhir~Ufl~Pt~~ames.

~~Med the contest witfi two

rWJs 'lllil'le seventh ,: , ' •.
Giants t, Br~ves 3
Left-bander Vida Blue, whose bunt
single helped ignite a two-rWJ third

innmg, won his 12th game as San
Francisco edged Atlanta .
Mike Ivie slammed his 24th home
rWJ of the season, a solo shot for the
Giants in the fifth iruling. '
Dodgers 5, Padres %
Bill Russell and Steve Garvey
collected three hits each to back the
eight-hit pitching of Charlie Hough
and Bobby Castillo as Los Angeles
stopped San Diego.
. Hough, 5-5, worked into the eighth
mnmg before (:astillo took over
'
recording his sixth save . ·
Dave Winfield slugged his 30th
home run leading off the Padres'
seventh, spoiling Hough's bid for his
first major league shutout. ·
. With his three hits, Garvey is 16
hits away from his fifth 2ro-hit
season in the last six years.
Phillles t, Mets 0
Randy Lerch tripled in two runs
and hurled his first shutout of the
season as Philadelphia defeated
New York. Lerch, 9-12, scattered
seven hits and New York got more
than one hit in only the first inning.
The left-bander walked two and
struck out eight in pitching his fifth
COIIIplete game of the season.

TIIISTI.EDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio (AP) Danny Weiler rode Noble card to
victory Wednesday in the $10,000
prep fcc the Ohio Debutante Stakes
fcc fillies and mares.
Noble Card ran the mile and ~
yard event in 1:40 4-5.
Slle paid $9.80, $4 and ~.80, while
second-place La Crolxretumed $2.80
and $2.60 and third-place Noyrna
paid $4. .
The trlfecta of 11-3-9 paid $720.30
oo 77 winning tickets.
The crowd. of 4,555 wagered
$521,921.

Sports briefs . , •
By The Associated Press
,.
BASEBALL
BOSTON
(AP )
Carl
Yastrzemski of the Boston Red Sox
lashed a two-out ,single~ the eighth
LMmg of Boston s 9-2 wm over the
New York. Yankees to become the
fll'st ~encan League player to get
3,000 h1ts and 400 home runs in his
career·
Yaz' sharp groWJder off Jtrn
Beattie skipped beyond the reach of
second baseman Willie Randolph,
making him the 15th major leaguer
to reach the 3,QOO.hit mark and only
the fourth big leaguer to join the
3,000-bit, 400-homerclub. The others
are aU Hall of Famers from the
National League - Hank Aaron
Willie Mays and Stan Musial.
'
TENNIS

TOKYO ( AP) - Dana Gilbert
upset defending champion Virginia
Wade of Britain &amp;-2, 3-6, 6-4 in the
first roWJd of a $150,000 tournament.
In other matches, Dianne
Frofllboltz of Australia eliminated
Brigitte Cuypers of the Netherlands
6-4 , IN; Wendy Turnbull of Australia
ousted Barbara Jordon 6-1, 6-4 ;
Australia 's Kerry Reid beat Diane
Desfor 6-2, 6-2; Billie Jean King
defeated Julie Harrington U, 6-1, 61 and Laura DuPont downed Jeanne
Duvall 6-1, 6-4.
ATLANTA (AP)- Ricky Meyer
upset No.2 seed llie Nastase 3-6 6-3
6-1 in the third round of the Ati'an~
Journal-Constitution Open.
In other matches, third seeded
Eliot Teltscher eliminated South

African Cliff Drysdale IN, 1HJ and
Kevin Curren outlasted Ray Moore
&amp;-! ~7 7-9
wcx)m,ANDS Texas (AP) Sherwood Ste~art and Marty
Riessen scored a 6-3, 6-4 victory over
Mexican Marcello Lara and
Australian John Bartlett in firstround play in the $150,000 ATP World
Doubles tennis tournament.
In other action, the No .2-5eeded
team of Raul Ramirez of MexicO and
Peter fleming defeated Ted Erck
and Paul Crozier 6-2, IN, while South
Africans Bob Hewitt and Frew
McMillan, ranked fifth, beat Tim
Garcta and Ashok Amritraj of India
6-1 , 6-3.

HOUSTON ( AP ) - It could have
been the absent-minded professor
lecturing his attentive students on
American military history.
Reminding the audience of a
Houston pilot who was a hero in the
Battle of Midway in Wccld War II, he
asked "Now who wants to tell me his

name!' "

GEORGE STRODE
the Big Ten. We've got a good
attitude. Our athletes are good
enough to win it," said the 6-fQOt~.
238-pound Fritz, the 1975 Ohio Prep
Lineman of the :Vear.
Fritz, who played for Woody
Hayes fcc three seasons, detects a
new spirit under Bruce. "The guys
are closer together. You doo't bave
to worry about a mistake," be said.
However, he's been around the
league long enough to know that a
trip to Minnesota will be vital to the
Buckeyes' Big Ten title ambiUoila.
"I've been up there twice and we
always have a tough time . The year
we went to the Orange Bowl we only
woo 9-3 at MiMeaola. We will be
tested more this week. Minne10ta
has such big defensive lineman.
Syracuse's defense was too !llft," he
said.
.
The strongest player oo the Ohio
State squad - he bench presses 425
poWlds - has wfonned aa a
defensive tackle , middle guard and
offensive guards since being
recruited as a center by Hayes.
"Offensive guard may not be a
glory positioo, but it bas been the
hardest fer me to learn. 1had a hard
time catching on," said Fri~,
· stationed at that spot since hla
sophomcce 91!81011 .
•
But he's handling It 10 Willi now
that professiooal scouts consider
him a prime prospect.
"I've heard fnm 10 to I~ teania
with their questionnaires. I'm beuw
bugged by letters from people who
want to be my agent. But I'm not
aUowed to pick an ageni no\.
anyway ," said Fritz.
An appearance in the Role Bowl
Jan . I would be a red letter day fcc
the re&lt;Ulaired Ohioan. But an even
bigger day comes in March. He and
his wife, Terri, are expecting their
first child.

~:;:;:;:; : ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:i :;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:; :;:;:; : ;:;

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THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'. Meigs golfers
By Gret Bailey
The Meig&amp; golf team took third
place In a quadrangular match at
Athens Monday with the ho8tl winning with a 162 performance.
Jacboo...., aecond with 183, Meiga
wu third at 187, and Ironton ....,
fourth at IW.
Craig Golclaberry and Brian
' ·- LaWliOII led Alhens with a 39 each
while Tony Yerian had a 311 for
.,... Jacboo to Ue fer meclallot horlors.
: Other sc:oren for Athens were Ran·
: dy Nogrady - 41, Dave Richards -

at

'lbe Hoople bUDch II the ~eld
advantage will prevail with
Michigan winning a thrilling 21·20
corUst.
IlNdy to meet at University Part,
Pa., Penn State and Rutgers have
only played nine tlmea in the put
with tbe Nlttany U0111 holding elgbl
victorlee. But tbe KDigbll have
come up with IICIIDe acelleot foot·
ball teams under the direction ~
COICh Frank Bllmll iDd could pull a
few IIIII])I'IIM. Oae Gl the aurprtaee

be tb1a net, bow ever, u tbe
Paul StatenJ lbow their mUlde with

Will 't

a3&amp;-Uwin. Um-kumpbl
Clfii!IIOII-MII'Jland, au Atlantic
CCJUt Conference gamut Clft!IIJOII,
S. C., will be a cl,. contftlt all the
iray. Rebuilding Clfii!IIOII will be a
17-14 victory. In bla ooly prevloua
game u head COIIcb, young Danny
Ford ol Clem8on led bla fortM to vic·
tory over Oblo ~Ce In lut year '1
Gator BoWl, the game that marked
the end Gl Woody Hayw' fabulous
career with the Bucb7&amp;
Teu.s A and M did nat Uve up to ita
prtmlae last MIIOII, flnlllllng fifth
in the swc. But that lhould cbange
this year. And right at the start.
Watch fw tbe Aggiea to sacll Baylor,
32-12.
On the West CCJUt, USC plays the
Beaven in Ccnallls, Ore. The
Trojans have too much Gl everythlnc
for Oregon State. We ~eel&amp; Southern
Cal 38, Oregon State 10 - u the
Troj8111 open defenae Gl their Pac 10
Utle.
Hopecotc~Jlnj! around the country •
• heiHleh - here are 110111e more ~

to

Buckeyes, and
inspire his team,
he slammed his fist · through a
blackboard.
"That got them started," Hayes
smiled. " I told thenn to get the
blackboard out of there because the
sports writers would make a big deal
out of it. But the real thing that
wccried me was when I start putting
my fist through a · blackboard in a
non-eonference game, you know
we'te in trouble."
That was only the beginning of
Hayes' problems with his fLst last
season .
Hayes was seen on national
television during the Gator Bowl,
slugging a Clemson player who had
just made a game-caving tackle. He
was relieved as head coach after 28
years.
There were several jovial'
references to Hayes temper flares
during introductions.

dllplays ol the year. Mark Malone,
Sun Devil pueer deluxe and
leg!Umate All-America candldate,
will keep the air In Tampa, Fla., full
ol foctballo On the other side ~ the
line, the Seminolel count.er with two
great quarterbacU, aea1on Wall)'
Woodham aoil Jimmy Jordlll. We
see Arizona State winoini agemdne
thriBer, »-31. Klff-bffl
PUling will be the 11111D11 1111 tbe
game at the Loa Azllelea Collleum
where the Bru1JIII ~ UCLA holt the
Purdue Botlermaken. Look for
Mark HerrmaM to out.unw Ricll:
BuiJore U the Purdlle lads win in I
nail-hitter, 21-24.
Anatber contefl wblcb lbould be
jtllt u cl- will find Colorado tor·
n!n8 back lnvadlnt! [n.,IFau State,
14-10, at Bo.,lder, Colo.
In the Big 10, Oblo State will defeat
I good Mime1cJta leUI, 2WO. In the
Atlantic Cout Conference, North
CaroiiM State will bave little
trouble ~ over VlrgiDia, 3&amp;-7.
In otherc:ootella, w - i wlllnmp
over llllnoia, G-7, and Houlton will
outacore Florida, llll-12.
Miami "' ll'lorlda will turn back
Ulullvllle, 22-17. In that affair,

Miami.. Howard !jchnellenhqer
makee 1111 flnt lllrt u heed eoech
in tbe collepate 1'111111. SclloeiJen:.
bertler, who did a short 8tlnt u hetd
man 1111 tbe Baltimore C4lta In the
play.{or~y ranlrl, llbould open up
tbe Hurricane ctferwe. Hill dlaDcea
~ Jllllklns a winning debut depend
on how bla forces contain stu Slram,
~ wbo Ia
the 11011 "' famed e.-NFL coach
Hank Stram. 'Twill be an Interesting
lfllmoon in Miami. Klff.utfl
Now oo with my forecut:
Sept.U

the Cardlnala

......._st.•,....st.n

A Home Bank
For

one," Williams said.
The shaving, he said , is a form of
commitment to football . He was
upset by his play in last Sunday's 51·
24 loss to the Buffalo Bills and
wanted to renew his commitment for
this week's National Football
League game with the New England
Patriots.
"This is just another way of
putting more anununitioo in my
weapons. And this is a good time to

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SATURDAY • SEPTEMBER 15th

People

y

LEBANON, Ohio(AP) -Star City
Coaltown, woo won ti!O,OOQ this year,
and Dec ian's Mwllc, who won $87,000
last year as a 2-year-old, are favored
tonight In a field of six in the $90,000
Rising Sun Trot at Lebanon
Raceway.
Myron Boy woo the featured pace
mile by a nose on q&gt;enin8 night
Wednesday, paying f67.60, $19.40
and $11.20. Clieatin' Brad placed,
paying .J6.80 and $Ul and Brandy
Mountain was third to pay $3.60.
Mlghjy Belay and Ell, ~. woo th~
doUble, paying J61.80. The crowd of
2,011 bet $143,886.

have that anununition . We're right '
on the eve of an even more
disastrous season than last year and
· we don 't even have the same
excuses. We don't have the injuries
and we don 't have the same
problems with management, "
William s said, recalling the 4-12
record.

u•••olt:J

PARK RESERVED

Meigs t:ounty

Near Stiffler's in P'omerQy .
2nd Street
992·3586
Pomeroy, o.

LEBANON RESULTS

CINCINNATI (AP ) - Cincinna ti
Bengals linebacker Reggie Williams
has shaved his head following the
Bengals winless performance in the
first two games of the season.
"I didn't want to cut my hair, "
said the Dartmouth psychology
major .
"I didn 't want to give up that
security. For me, it's a great
sacrifice. I don't have a steady lady
and this isn't going to help me get

Anayii('M ellei!UI
Aabullhl:a-18t.U
BaDSt.atT.W.U ,
s.n.
7Malllel
Brlp ·Y.... GWeberStll
Olllftnda at ArtloM lt

•·
•

WINDBREAKERS ,.

· •·ormer Houston Oiler General
Manager John Breen preceded
Hayes to the miC:. ophooe and said " I
brought Woody in here throUgh the
kitchen and even tbe cooks ducked ."

.ua-17 Ctl4ndaSt. U

our llerllnB predlcUons:
otlahoml, where Barry Switur
hal cunplled an 8llllling 8U-2
record In six season~ at the belm ~
the Soonen, will mall:e Ita flnt«er
meeting with the Iowa Hawkeyee a
winning one. We give it to Oklahcma

·: and

Hours:
9:30 to 5:00
Mon . thru Sat.
· 9:30 to 8:00
Friday

. I

third

Meiga Reserve scores were Brian
wm 62, Scott Harrlaon M, and Tooy
:. Jewell63.
;• ' Tueaday night, Meigs bested hoe!
• · Nellooville-York 1711·179 at Bishop~ : vUle. Scott McKinney ol Melga took
:: meda1llt honors with a fine 39. Wam·
. ; sleyhad a 43, Young a 44, Davis a 50,
Kennedy a 62.
: For the hostl, Chuck Hubbard led
~. the way with a 43. Mike Bishop had a
• · 44, David Koon a 46, and Mat Oden·
;:thai a 50.
: : For the Meigs Reserves, Brian
:.: Will had a fine 46, Jewell a 49, and
: , Scott Harrison a 56. For the hosts,
• Jeff Sparks had a 49 and Eric
~ Maurer had a 53.
~ Nen match for Meigs is tonight at
~ Riverside GOlf Course againat
: : Wabama. Meigs' overall record for
;· the year is.2-4 and l-3ln the league.

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Oa

....
.. ; _,.,

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StEEPERS, PJ's and GOWNS

:Jorw.

: . ForJackaon, Yerlanhad38,Steve
: : Haynes had 44, Jeff Moore a 48
: : Doug MWer a 52, and Ed King 58. '
:
For Melga, Fred Young and Scott
: McKinney each carded a 46. J. R.
~ Wllllllley had 50, Rob Davis 56, and
:: David Kennedy 58.
=; Ironton had Jay Wolfe at 4$, Steve
• . Hurley at 46, Randy Johnaut at 4$
: : Brian Layne at 54, and Pat Riley

COATS &amp; SNOWSUITS
(SNOWSUITS-12 months to size 7·,
COATS &amp;.JACKETS-2 thru 14)

PuPP.{!!®

By Major AlDOl B. Hoople .
Tbe Wlrard Gl Oddl
'·
Egad, friends! Any place you look
this Saturday there are out.tandlng
malciHqx! on tap. Har-niiiiPII 1 Indeed, '111 almcilt a football fantasy
come true.
· lbe game of the day may be at
Ann Arbor, Mich., wbere about
105,000 fiN - equalUIIg tbe avel'lllle
Wolverine turnout in 19'18 - will
gather to see Michigan oonfront the
Fighting lrlsb ~Notre Dame.
. OOier blghligbta Include the Penn
· State-Rutger fray; the Clemson·
Maryland claah; the Texas Aand M·
. Baylor meeting; and the Southern
Callfornia·Oregon
State
erJ818I!!IIlellt.
Going into this 8e88011, Notre
:. Dame had the hlgbest winning per·
centage (. 778) ~ any college team with a . .180-38 mark over~'!:
But It hasn't complied that
record by manhandling Michigan. In
12 (ftVI01111 conlest8 between theee
great powers Michigan hal trtum·
Jibed 10 times, leaving Notre Dame a
. .meqer two wina to show for ita ef.

• 43,andTbnKerr-44.

ALL BOYS &amp; GIRLS WINTER JACKETS,

of military strategy.
But it was clear " Professor"
Woody Hayes, former Ohio State
footbaU coach, had his audience
enthraUed.
Hayes, a well-informed student of
American
military
history,
entertamed the audience with a
blend of patriotic remembrances of
past U.S. military victories and
former Ohio State football victories.
And the same fire was in his eyes
wben he discussed either subject.
"We were outmanned ~I in that
battle," Hayes said, referring to ·•
Midway . "Yet, that was the most ·
heroic battles this country ever
fought. "I like tbe George Gays
because they saved our collntry."
Hayes said Gay was a young pilot
shot down during the battle.
Hayes noted that Ohio State .
trailed Baylor at the half last
seaS\)n , his last as coach of the

Hoople says Michigan figures to edge Notre Dame

.. .finish

:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::·

PLAYER OF WEEK
Tbe Melp Coaaty Jayeee~
bave oelecled their grid player o1
the week. 'l'llla weell'• Kleditm II
DUe Teaford, qaarterllaet for
the Soatbera Torudol. Ill Frtdll;,
DIPt'• pme, Teaford plDeol t6
yards OD tbe IJ'8QIId. tllrew for ZZ
yardl, leOred I TD, llld puled
for aa average 1111 35 yanll.

Surprisingly~ scattered voices in
the crowd of mcce than 500
responded " Ensign George Gay."
Later, discussing the devastation
Germany following World War ll,
the speaker asked "In 1947 they
were starving until we instituted
what ?''
This time, a louder chorus echoed
"The Marshall Plan."
It was an abrupt cbange in the
·usual format of the Houston
Touchdown Club, a gathering of
local businessmen who meet weekly
to dlSCuss footbaU strategy instead

.p!

ONE WEEK ONLY-FRI., SEPT. 14 · SAT., SEPT. 22

Hush

Woody enthralls Houston ·a udience

Ohio Sportlight
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - It's
ironical that Ken Fritz, 15th-ranked
Ohio State's Ali·Big Ten guard,
chose the Buckeyes over Michigan
for his college football .
"I came to Ohio State because I
wanted to play in the Rose Bowl.
They had been there three of the last
four years," recalled Fritz, drifting
back to his days as a prized recruit
at Ironton High School.
Since his college career began ,
Fr1tz bas not fulfilled his ambition .
He's played in the Orange, Sugar
and Gator Bowls. Meanwhile ,
Michigan has represented the Big
Ten in the Rose Bowl.
The Buckeyes, under new Coach
Earle Bruce, are fccecast to finish
no better than fourth in the
conference this fall. Ohio State
opens Big Ten play Saturday at
MiMesota.
Still, Fritz is optimistic he can be
playing in the Rose Bowl New
Year's Day.
.
"In the back of my mind, I feel it's
going to happen. I think we can win

Bengal gets rid of long hair

Pom etoy 0 .

�0

..
7- The IMIIy Sentinel, Middleport-Ptmeroy, 0., Thunday, Sept. 13, 1979

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 13, 1979

Yastrzemski gets
·3,000th base hit
BY ASSOCIATED !'BESS

The fir st 3,000 hits are the hardest
says Carl Yastrzemski. And yo~
know what' He isn '! joking.
!J1 what must have seemed like an
etern1ty to the Boston Red Sox
veteran, Yastrzemski was shut out
12 straight times in search of his
3,000th career hit.
Then he finally made contact.
"l know one thing - the last hit
was the toughest of all the 3 000 "
said Yastrzemski after gettin'g h'is
long sought-after hit in Wednesday
night 's 9-2 victory over the New
York Yankees.
Yastzremski 's historic hit was a

single off Yankee reliever Jim
Beattie in the eighth inning - in his
last time at bat -'- after he walked ,
flied out and grounded out twice.
Before his hard ground ball skipped
into right held in Fenway Park past
the glove of Yankee second baseman
Willie Randolph, Yastzremski had
been hitless in 10 official at-bats and
walked twice,
'
His last hit was a single in his final
appearance in Sunday's 16-4 loss to
Baltimore.
Elsewhere in the AL, Toronto
edged Baltimore 3-2; Chicago
outscored California 11-5; Kansas
Ci ty blanked Minnesota 4-0 ;

•••••••
••

•• ••
••• •••

LEAGUE
· EAST
W. L. Pet,
94 49 657
85 60 .586
81 61 .570
78 64 .549
78 68 .534
74 71 .510
46 98 .319
WEST

Baltimore
Milwaukee
Boston
New YOrk
Detroit
Cleveland
Toronto

Milwaukee 7, Oakland 0

California

Kansas City

M in nesota
Tex as
Chicago
Seattle

Oakland

80
77
74
73

66

Kansas City 4, MinneSola 0

Texas 13, Seattl e 3

GB

10
12

Thursday's Games
New York (G uid ry 16·7) at Boston

&lt;Eckersley 16·10)

15'11
17'11

Baltimore (Flanagan
Toronto (Huffman6-14}

48 111

(Morris 13 -H

Oakland

71 .510 51f:z
73 .500 7
63 82 .434 l61f:2
61 86 .425 191!2
50 96 .342 30

WednesdaY's Games

Boston 9, New York 2

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Open Evenings 8 P .M.

Milwaukee defeated Oakland 7-0;
Texas routed Seattle 13-3 and Detroit
turned back Cleveland 4-1.
Blue Jays 3, Orioles Z
Rick Cerone's two-run single in
the sixth inning and Rick. Bosetti's
oolo homer in the eighth carried
Toronto over Baltimore. It was the
second victory over Baltimore in as
many nights for the Blue Jays, who
had dropped their 15 previous
meetings with the Orioles dating
hack to Aug. 8, 1978.
"Maybe we're a little anxious at
the plate," said Baltimore Manager
Earl Weaver, trying to explain a
three-game losing streak. " But
when you get into a slump, that can
happen."

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Brown &amp; beige color .
·
List $11.918.00 SPECIAL PRICE

White Sox 11, Angels 5
Jim Morrison drove IIi three runs
with a single and sacrifice fly and
Mike Col bern hit a two-run triple to
lead Chicago over California. The
loss was the second in a row for the
Angels, whose lead in the American
League West dropped , to three
games over Kansas City.
The White Sox scored six runs in

the first inning to chase loser Chris
Knapp, 3-4, after only two-thirds of
an inning. Ken K avec, 12-IJ,
pitched 51-3 in · gs and was
credited with
\ictory.
oyals 4, Twtos 0
Dennis Leonard pitched a threehitter and Amos Otis drove in two
runs to spark Kansas City ·over
Mirmesota. Leonard, 12-10, tossing
his fourth shutout of the season and
his second against the Twins in 10
days, struck out three and walked
two.
·
Loser Jerry Koos man , 18-13,

a}
.
econ
annu
S
d
,
•
Conservat IOn
event Planned
The Second Annual Wildlife and
Conservation Day will be held Saturday, Sept. 22, from 10 a.m. unW 3
p.m. at the Bob Ev,ans Farm on
State Route 35, just east of Rio Grande.
The program ill being held in olJ,
servance of National HWiting and
Fishing Day and· ~&lt;lly Bob
Evana Farms in coojunctic'in with
the Ohio Department Of Natural
Resources (ODNR).
Featured will be education and instructional program, demon~a~ons, and .displays concerning
wildlif~ !l"d woodland management.
In addition, the Gallia County Con-

servaUon
Association
barbee~ venison
and will
wildcook
game,
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Toronto 3, Baltimore 2

1979 CHEVY BLAZER 4 WH. DRIVE

at

Cleveland (Wise 15-7) at Detroit

21

.548

21 -7)

Minnesota &lt;Hartzell6·8) at Texas

(Comer15·10l

·

Only games scheduled

Friday's Games
CleVeland at Toronto
Boston at Baltimore
Detroit at New York
California at Milwaukee
Oakland at Chicago
Seattle at Kansas City
Minnesota at Texas

LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet

NATIO~AL

Montreal
Pittsburgh
St. Louis

84 55

GB
.60-4
If::
.604
.535 10

87 57
76 66
Chicago
73 70 .510 13 1h
Philadelphia
73 71 .507 14
New York
55 87 .387 31
WEST

Cincinnati
Houston

83 63
81 6-4

.559

San Francisco

64 S2

. ..c38 19

LosAngeles

.568
l lf2

69 76 .476 13'1'

San Diego
62 84 . ~25 21
Atlanta
'
56 88 .389 26
Wednesday 's Games
·
San Francisco 4, Atlanta 3
Montreal6, Ch,icago 3
Pittsburgh 2, St. Louts o
Cincinnati 7, Houston-t
Philadelphia 4, New York 0
Los Angeles 5, San Diego 2
Thursday's Games

Atlanta tHanna 1-0l at san

Fran ~

c iscolKnepper9-11)
·
St. Louis (Fulgham 8·5) at Pit ·

tsburgh (Biyleven 11 ·51
Chicago &lt;Reuschet 16·9) at Mon ·
treal (B . Lee 15·10)
Philadelphia (Carlton U -11) at
New York (8erenguer0·0)
San Diego &lt;SHirley 7·14) at Los

Angeles (Reuss5·13l

·

On ly games scheduled
Friday's Games
St. Louis at Montreal.(2)
Chicago at Philadelphia
Atlanta at San Diego
Cincinnati at Los Angeles
Houston at San Frl!lncisco

scattered six hits before giving way
to Pete Red!em in the eighth after
the Royals scored their third run .
Brewers 7 A's 0
Cecil Cooper and Ben Qglivie hit
homers and Mike Ca ldwell pitched a
two-hitter as Milwaukee defeated
Oakland . Caldwell, I!Hl, set down 17
straight Oakland hitters after giving
up a leadoff single to Mitchell Page
in the second.
The A's did not get another man
aboard until Page took a Caldwell
fastball on the shoulder in the eighth
inning. The second hit off Caldwell
came on a single by Rob Picciolo
after a double play IIi the eighth.
Rangers 13, Martners 3
Willie Montanez drove in five runs
with a grand slam homer and a
single and Buddy Bell hit a double
and two singles as Texas routed
Seattle. Montanez' blast capped a
live-run fourth inning and the
Rangers came back to send 12 men
to the plate for eight hits and six
more runs in the sixth.
Doc Medich, 9.0, won his fourth
straight game. He scattered nine
hits , striking out two and walking
one before Jim Kern came in to pitch
the ninth .
Tigers 4, Indians I
Milt Wilcox and Aurelio Lopez
combined on a four-hitter and Jerry
Morales and Lance Parrish hit RBI
doubles as Detroit defeated
Cleveland. Wilcox didn't allow a hit
until Dave Rosello's two-&lt;&gt;ut single
in the fifth and gave up a homer to
Cleveland's Ron Hassey with two out
in the seventh before needing Lopez'
relief help.

;~-----------------,
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DENTURE SPECIAL . II

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

1 CALL : For Information
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When you sit down to a fancy
meal , normally you whet your
appetite with something delicate like fresh shrimp or cold consomme
- and pick over a nice salad
dripping French dressing.
Not Notre Dame. The Fighting
Irish, opening the college football
season. have chosen to leap right
into the beefsteak, taking on
Michigan, Purdue and Michigan
State in that order. Then it's plop,
plop, fizz, fizz .
The Irish should chew their way
through the bone and gristle of their
first course, beating the Wolverines
in Saturday's TV feature . It . gets
tougher after that.
Last week 's tally : 30-12, .714.
Taking a day out of the week's
vacation, here goes another spin :
Notre Dame 25, Michigan 17. The
Irish, with Rusty Lisch directing,
avenge last year's setback against a
rebuilding power.
UCLA 'J:I, Purdue 20. An upset. The
highly
rated
Boilermakers,
preseason Big Ten favorite , will he
looking ahead to the Irish game. ·
Penn State 35, Rutgers 10 : Dayle ·
Tate, if he can keep from breaking ·
any more bones, should fill Chuck
Fusina's QB shoes nicely.
Southern California 42, Oregon
State 12 : The Trojans could make a
creditable showing in the NFL.
Nebraska 45, Utah State 14: Keruiy
Brown and Junior Miller had 5J
catches between them in 1978. Hipp,
hipp, hooray .
Georgia 33, Wake Forest 7: The
Bulldogs are getting better ratings
down South than their former
governor, J inuny Carter.
Texas A&amp;M 19, Baylor 14 : Stunned
by Brigham Young, the Aggies settle
a year-&lt;&gt;ld score with Baylor.
Oklahoma 47, Iowa 7: How can you
drop the Sooners from title
contention as long as Billy Sims.

(1,762. yards) is loose?
North Carolina State 30, Virginia
12: This is the Wolfpack team that
beat Pitt ill the Tangertne Bowlbigger 'n better.
Missouri 38, Illinois 7: Phil
Bradley'sarm and Jun Wilder's·legs
should allow the Tigers to roll like
01' Man River.
Washington 30, Utah 10: The
Huskies, getting off to a better start
than in '78, should be a definite bowl'
contender.
Florida State 28, Arizona State 20:
One of the day's best games, wilh a
nod to those two FSU stingers,
Jimmy Jordan and Wally Woodham . ~.
Louisiana 'State 27, Colorado 20: •·
" Win 'em for Mac " is the Bayou •
rallying cry for departing Coach
Charlit McClendon .
•
Army 20, Connecticut 14 : Lou
Saban gives the Cadets some spit, .
polish and plucl&lt;.
The others :
•
EAST
Tennessee 47, Boston College 6; ~
Navy 28, Citadel 7; Holy Cross !5,'
New Hampshire 10; Pitt 32, Kansas;
14 ; Syracuse 'll, West Va . 19·
Temple 22, Drake 7; Massachuset~
20, Villanova 13.
:
SOUTII
Auburn 25, Kansas St. 17; :
Maryland 19, ClelllliOII 14; East ,
Carolina 15, Duke 6; Furman 20, '
Presbyterian 10; Miami (0 .) 17, ~
Kentucky 7; Mississippi 15, ;
Memphis St. 9; Miami (Fla.) 21, •
Louisville 7; VMI 25, Richmood 14;
Va . Teth 17, Appalachian 0; Wm .
and Mary 13, Colgate 7.
MIDWEST
Nerthwestem 22, Wyoming 10;
Ohio St. 19, Minnesota 6; Indiana 'J:I, '
Vanderbilt 18 ; Iowa State 23 , •
Bowling Green 13; Oklahoma St. 21
Wichita St. 9; Ball St. 10, Toledo
Wisconsin 29, Air Force 10· Tulsa 25' ·•
SW Louisiana 7.
'
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7:

Only games scheduled.

foods the opportunity to taste samples.
A presentation on Bluebirds and
Bluebird boxes, what they mean to
Ohio's envirorunent, and their value
Marauder volleyball
as an instructional tool will be given
by Richard TutUe of Delaware
team posts third win
Ohio.
'
A pond clinic, covering pond
The Meigs volleybaliers raised
des1gn, construction, financial • their record to 3~ Monday with a
assistance, fish stocking, and _pond
convincing win over Fort Frye.
management will be given by the ·Meigs took the match two games to
ODNR Division of Wildlife.
none, winning the first game 15-11
The division of forestry will lead
and the second llHi.
tree farm tours and discUS8 the
Tonia Ash served 100 percent and
relation of firewood and forestry to
Cherie · Lightfoot had three great
wildlife.
saves to pace the varsity.
Bow hunters, muzzle loaders, bird
T)le Meigs Reserves gave the Fort
c"rvers, and bird callers will give Frye team a 15-11 win in the first
demonstrations throughout the day. game but then came back strong to
Other ODNR programs will cover take the last two games, 1!&gt;-12 and 15topics such as wildlife habitat 9. That was_the first game of lbe
management, Ohio's non-game . season for the Meigs Reserves.
species, and hunting laws and licenNext match for Meigs is tonight at
se to Ohio.
Meigs at 5:30 in the league opener
The dsy-iong program is free and
against Waverly.
open to the public.

i

For Appoint'ment
(614) 992-2878 or (614) 992 -2387
H. D. Brown, D.D. S., Inc.
200112 w. Main st.
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
By. request of those who were unable to make an Appomtmenf by Sept. I, 1979, this offer is being cordially
extended 1hrough the month of Sept.
·

Abortion~

:m

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. 4

a

·Crystal Eblin
Mr. .and Mrs. Tony Eblin of 1258
Powell St., Middleport, are annouilcing lbe birth ~ a daughter,

AIJ&amp;.

22 at the 0 'Bleneu Hoepltal,
Albena.
The Infant weighed seven J)OWllll,
live CJ1IJal and wu I) Inches long.
She bu been named Cryatal Am.
Matemal grmdfathel' II Owen
McKinney, Addlaon, and the mater. nai~JUt-crandplrenll are Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas MdClnney. Cbelhlre.
The palerrull grandparenla are Mr.
and Mrs. Kenneth Eblin, Rutland,
and the gl'ellt11J'Udpuents are Mr.
llllli Mrs. Dewey HudaGn, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eblin,
Pomeroy . Mrs. Nora Bubo,
Pomeroy, Ia a great-greatgrandmother.

CHERYL JEWElL
Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Jewell,
HarrilonYllle, are lllliOUIICin8 the
bir1b al their ftnt child, I dauchter,
Cberyl Lynn, at
aa.pttal,
Athenll. Born on Sept. Babe weighed
!JY&lt; powlda, II ouncetl and..,.. 17ln·
che.lung.
Mrs. Pauline H. Alkina al Rutland
Ia the maternal grandmother. Paternal grandparent. are Mr. and Mrs.
GleM .Tewell, Dcnrnlngton. Mrs.
1ay, Rutland, II the
•, Ruby 1
·; maternau b~ ..:at.grandmother.

o-.-

:r- Social Calendar

See us before
the snow
hltL

MOORE'S
W . 2nd or W. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

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V.W. -AMC-JEEP

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biggest star, Johnny Carson, have

agrt!ed to let a judge decide when
Carson's &lt;mtract as "The Tonight
Show" boet actually expires.
Ratings-troubled NBC was shaken
last spring when Carson amoWJced
he wanted out of his duties as hollt of
the Jate.night tallt show at Ul~ end of
the year.
NBC responded that Carson, who
has been "The Tonight Show" star
fer 17 years, would be expected to

~ered~~t!:'

SUNDAY
. DEEM FAMILY reunion Sunday
at Royal Olk Parit; relatives and
friends Invited.
CX&gt;UNTY-WIDE prayer meeting,
2 p.m. Sunday at Rutland Com·
munlty Olurcb with Glen Biaaell,
'clua leader.
MORRIS CHAPEL UNITED
Metbodlat C!urcb hcmecomlng Sunday. Scbool School at 10 a.m. AJternoon program 1 :30 to 4. Everyone
welrome to attend and talte part.
MINERSVILLE
UNITED

attend.

• MINERSVIllE

l Ba""'all A.ociltion u.et~n&amp;, Tbur·
lday7::1lp.m. at Municipal Building
In SyraCllle.

l
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RACINE CHAPI'ER 134, OES,
put alflcen club, 7:30.p.m. Tim': ada)" at Malonic Temple In Racine.
MEIGS COUNTY Humane
1Society, 7:30 p.m. Tbunday at the
.i Tbrltt Shoppe, N. Second Ave., Mid-

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' .dleoort.

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT Business and
PI'IJI'esaional women's Club Monday
at Collanbla :u 'fflce in Middleport. The leglalation committee
w1ll be in cbarge. Mrs. Becky
Moebler Ia chalnnan. Sheriff James
Proffitt wW be the guest speaker.
Memben urged to attend.

First meeting
held bry scouts
.

.
Salisbury Cub Scuuta, Den 2, held
their flrlt meeting ~ the M:bool year
at the home of Mrs. Frances Htinnel,
leader, with Mrs. Judy King
aasillting.
1be meeting ~ with Den
Chief Jim Parlter leadhig in the
pledge to the flag and members
giving the cub scout oath. Kooi-Aid
and cooldes were aerved. Camp

Arrowbead t...uta were presented
to the troop for attending day camp
during the II1IIJlll1el'.
Cub ac:out olympic ribbons went to
Tim Jeffers and Joe Hall, wolf
badges and gold arrow polnta to
David Beegle, Kevin King, Art HWInel. and Darrin Warth. Kevin King
and Art Runnel were alao presented
silver arrow points.
Cub scout songs were aung by the
group and games were played. Attending beeidel tholle named were
Otla Norris and Eric WUaon. Next
meeting w111 be at the borne of JUdy
King.

UONSMEET
resuJar meeting

The
~ the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions Club was
held Wednesday at the Meigs Inn.
On Oct. 10, dlatrict Gov. lion,
Roller W. Engle, Lanca.ater and zone
cbairmln liM, Don Kerns, NelacmYllle, w1ll be preSent for the &amp;Mual
visitation of the PomeroyMiddleport Uo1111 Club.

Webel01 ac:out
at the
:I tMre
IIIII, 7 p.m. At 7:30
wlll be a round table at the
Qlelter

meeting

IICOUt

;1

' Point Pleuallt armory with a
covered cllitl dlnnlr.
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE, 8
: j p.m. 'lbllradaY . nigbt at the IIIII.

' ale. Thole attending are to take a
covered dllb, their own table service. Deuert wlll be prvvided.
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2812,
Letart Falla, wiD meet at the hall at
I p.m. 'l'llllrldlly. Racine Grange
will be vlaltlng for the evening .
FRIDAY
ROUND AND SQUARE DANCE
: , fridaY from 8 to 11 p.m. at senior
· cltiselll center, Pomeroy. Admlaaillll fer adulta, children Wider
, 12 admitted free. ·Music by
: s.rlngduaters. Open to public.
t COMMin'EE MEETING for
' Qlester Cub Scout Pack 235 at 7 p.m.
at the a.ter scout hall. · Pact
meeting at the same time.
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
., Chapter, Dallllhlerll ~the American
1 Revolution, meeting 1:30 p.m.
· : Friday at home ol Mrs. Paul Etch
'• with attorney, Mrs. Barbara Knlgbt,
uapealter.
SATURDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Retired
·i Teachers Association luncheon
' meeting at 12 noon Saturday at
l Meigs IM with PhyWs Hackett
l speaking on her trip to Japan.
! ileservaUona must be in no later

'I

; thaD Tbanlday.

WALTER GILMORE

medically necessary abortions or
rounseling services. Kinneary said
medically necessary abortions
include "serious health damage to
the very young and very old" as well
as C(!ndltions such as cancer, drug
addition or "genetic afflictions."
Benson A. Wolman, executive

potentially be burdened further by
the medical expenses of a crippled
mother with a 'categorically needy'
child. The state's legitimate interest
in promoting childbirth can by
pursued by other means which do
not involve the denial of federal
statutory rights."
The injunction will serve the
interest of poor women qualified for
Social Security benefits who can now
obtain government funds for

family

! .Uon, Saturday, roadside park on

unidentified network spokesman
explained the matter Ulls way :
"Carson maintains that his
&lt;mtract expired in Apru of this
year. He bases that on a 1972
&lt;mtract which he claims expired in
April under a California law which,
in essence, precludes personal
aervices &lt;mtracts for more Ulan
aeven years.
"NBC maintains that since then,
there have been at least three new
and independent agreements, the
last of which was entered into in
1971,
The statement said, "NBC is
&lt;mfident that our &lt;mtract with
Carson , which runs Ulrough April
1981, will be upheld."
Carson's lawyer, Henry Bushkin,
said Tuesday that Carson would
&lt;mtinue his duties as host of "The
Tonight Slow" and that he has no
present intention of leaving .
Carson could not be reached for
comment.
The stipulated agreement will be
wcrked out with retired Superior
Court Judge Parks Stillwell at an
undisclosed future date, the network
said.
Carson, who is paid a reported $3
lnillion annually by NBC, said last
spring that he'd had enough after 17
YearS as host.
In addition. there have been
reports Ulls swnmer that ratingsleader ABC is interestea in luring
Carsoo, and is willing to pay him $5
million a year for services, includliig
movies and specials.
Partly to keep Carson happy and
partly to boost its low prime-time
ratings, NBC has announced that
Carson's 17th anniversary show will
take the form of a two-hour primetime special next month. Earlier
anniversary shows have been aired
in Carson's regular late-night spot.

directcr of ACLU of Ohio, said
Kinneary's decision was "hwnane,

just and proper ." The net effect of
the decision will "free up more Ohio
money for indigent women Ulan was
previously available," he said.
The plaintiffs charged that both
the amendment and the state plan it
replaced were unconstitutional and
violated federal statutes, including
the Social Security Act.
the dinner.
Attending were Jason 's parents
and brother, Mr. and Mrs. Jolm
Li.sle and sons, Todd, Scott and
Travis, Syracuse; Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jenldns and daughters, Rochelle
and Kimberly, Minersville; and his
greati!I'alldmother, Mrs. Florence
Potts, Syracuse.
Also calling were Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Lisle and daughters, B!lr,
bara, Jennifer, and Bea-anna of
Syracuse. G~ were presented to
JIIBOn at both parties.
After returning to their horne,
Mrs. Li.sle served cake and ice
cream to Jason's neighborhood
friends.

jason Lisle

Parties held
Two parties were held for the four th birthday of Jason Alan Li.sle, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Keith Lisle, West
Jefferson.
On Sunday, Sept. 2, a dinner was
given .at the home ol his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Jalnes John·
sqn, Middleport. A Winnie the Pooh
cake and ice cream were served
following the dinner. Attending were
his aunt and Wiele , Mr. and Mrs.
Van Johnson, Pomeroy, cousins,
Leah, Natalie, and Karl Abend,
Enon; Bob and Jenny Wells,
Bucyrus, and his parenta, Keith and
Karen Li.sle, and brother, Nicholas,
West Jefferson.
The following day a picnic was
held at. the borne of his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Li.sle,
Syracuse.
A clown cake, baked by Mrs. Li.sle,
was served with ice cream following

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eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
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HOME SALES
11oo E. Main
Pomeroy,Ohio
992-7034

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If you have a good imagination and an eye for color.
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Put a new Phone
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:l ElectiM al oftlcen.
i I PRECEPI'OR Beta Olapler. Beta
r1Sigma Pbl SCJrority lint meeting ~
; • the fall at 1:30 p.m. Tbunday at
l ·borne al'l'berela Swalzel wllb a pic-

1

more expensive maternity care,"
Kinneary said. "The state wiU

II

north. .

r.tE'niODIST Church hamecGmlng

: cbargealdlnner.

honor hill &lt;mtract that runs through
the spring of 1981. Lawyers took over
from there.
On TueO!day , NBC issued a
statement saying :
"NBC and Johnny Carson have
entered Into an agreement to obtain .
a determination of a legal question
&lt;mcerning the present contractual
arrangement between Carson and
NBC."
The statement did not explain
what the legal question was, but an
NBC memo written by an

LOS ANGElES .(AP) - After
months ol negotiatlOII, NBC and Its

Sunday. Sunday School and worship
service at Aguiar houn. Basket din'111UR8DAy
ner
12 noon to 1:,30 p.m. Attemoon
' WESTERN SQUARE dance,
aervice
2 p.m. Stnaen from Rock: Tbunday, 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. at
bridge.
' Royal Olk Parit recreation building.
DINNER Sunday fOI' Legion mem"' a..d JobniCJii, Soulb Point, caller.
ben
who wcrked paridng cars at the
Refreollmenll wiD be served and all
Fair
at Drew Weblter Poet Heme at
; w.r.em aquare dancers cordlally ·
1p.m.
; Invited.
.
L4NGSVJLLE Olrlltlan Olurcb
: JOYCE HOJMCK, interce.ory
annual
lmleccmlng &amp;mday with a
: prayer cllalrman, wiD be ljJUker
llaUet dinner at 12: ll p.ffi. ; af, wben flmeroy Ollpter Women's
l Aglow Fellonlllp meetl at 7 p.m. ternoon lervlce, 2 p.m., spectal
Public invited.
! ~ at MetgJ Inn for dinner alnglnc.
THOSE
WISHING to atop smoking
' and mee~~ns.
may attend the five-day plan to
.j PRECEPTOR BET A BET A 'tick the habit" It VeteriiiS
I Qlapler, Beta Sigma Pili Scrority,
' 8:30 potlndr dlnner .ll the borne al Memorial llolpftal, Plmervy, bqinning Sunday evening and cootinulng
i Mra. Teresa Swalzel, a-ter Road,
. : Tbunday nl&amp;hl Meinbm to takt through~· ll. The clinic beglllll at
. covered dlab. Social committee in 7::I) p.m. All pei"Qlll are welcome to

·! . SYRACUSE

provide for medically necessary
ones and abortion counseling unbl
further orders of the court,
according to the ACLU .
"The state has no economic
interest' in not supplying less
expensive abortions while supplying

Court to rule on Carson's contract

'I

Install the
woodburner
coal burner
electric heat.
All available
with stove
pipe and elbowL

amendment called Hunconstitutional"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The . reported to auUlerities.
state has been prohibited by a
Kinneary said the abortion
federal judge from enforcing restrictions showed ·probability of
1restrictioos oo use of public funds to "irreparable harm."
provide medically necessary
The Suit was filed against state
abortions fer the needy.
officials on Aug. 7 -six days after
U.S. District Judge Joseph P . the amendment became effective Kinneary issued a preliminary by American Civil liberties Union
injuilctioo Wednesday stopping the attorneys oo behalf of six state
state from enforcing an anti- Planned Parenthood agencies, a
abortioo provision of itli 1~ state rape victim counseling center, two
budget.
family planning agencies, a doctor
.
Kinneary said that there is a and counselor.
"strong and substantial likelihood"
No more actioo on the case has
Ulli the provisi011 violates federal
been scheduled yet by the court;
statutes.
with the injunction effective until
The1X'ovision had prohibited state Kinneary issues further orders. The
funding of abortions for persons on
state could appeal.
relief rolls except in cases wbere th.e
The decision does not free state
mother'slife is in danger, or of rape funds fer elective abort[ons , but will
and incest when the incident is

By Will Grimsley AP Correspondent

DetrOit 4, Cleveland 1
Chicago 11, California 5

AMERICA~

~:;

Sports World

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Baseball At A Glanc;e
By The American Press

~ ' ' Jiirih;'' ' ;~,;d''''' Il Restrictions prohibited

Today's

•••••

Brown&amp;
Black
Only

The beauty of real wood with elegantly styled uppers make up
today·s Woodworks by Thorn MeAn. A shoe that is designed for
today's fashions.

heritage house
OF SHOES
N. 2nd Ave., Middleport
Friday Til&amp; p.m.

�-· .,,

'

9- The Dilly SenUnel, Mlddleport..Ptmeroy' 0.' Thursday' SePt. 13; 1979

Three initiated into Eastern Star here
IIMIIS
IUIIIICOUI

FOil liDS Willi

CYme FIIIIOSIS.

Initiation was held for Mary Ann
Hoffman , Harry and Ella Roush at
the recent meeting of Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, Middleport. Mrs. Beatrice
Kuhn, associate matron, and Paul
Darnell, worthy patron, presided.
Protem officers were Naomi King,
associate matron ; Ettamay Norton,
associate conductress; Virginia
Buchanan, Ruth ; Euvetta Bechtle,
Esther, and Katherine Mitchell, sentinel. Doris Karshner and Linda Fitch were sunshine pages.
Communications were read from
Grand Chapter, from Robert Kuhn,
thanking the chapter for flowers and
card sent during the death of his
mother and his hospitalization ; an
invitation to a reception for Louise
Stewart at the district party on Oct.

Generation Rap
lly Hdo·n and

~,.,.

llnth·l

THE ERA VOTES ARE IN:

FUND DRIVE THlS WEEK - A fund drive is being conducted in
Pomeroy for cystic fibrosis this week by Meigs County Salon 710, Band 40.
Local co-Chairmen are Mary Martin and Ruby Marshall. Gabe Kaplan is
national chainnan.
·

SAD G~MAN SHEPHERDBEAGLE NEEDS HOME
This unusual Shepherd-Beagle combination is a medium sized, intelligent young female probably not a year old yet. She is not only very
pretty, but well behaved, and loves people. Anyone wanting to give this
nice homeless dog a good home please call the Humane Society 992-6260.

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer

VARNISH STRIPE.') ON PANTS
By Polly Cramer
f()LLY'SPROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - Last week I
washed my blue terry outfit for the
first time. The tag said not to tumble
dry but to lay it flat to dry . Unthinkingly, I spread it out on a chair only
to have it dry with yellow stripes on
the shorts. My problem is how do I
get those yellow varnish stripes off
blue terry cloth shorts? -JANELLE
DEAR JANELLE - Next time I
am sure you will protect the chair
before putting a damp suit on it. Rub
petroleum jelly into the varnish
stains and then soak in turpentine.
Rub stains ever so often and when
they soften and can be rubbed of£
wash and rinse the garment as
usual. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY- When writing letters to friends and relatives, I never
seal the envelopes until I am ready
to mail them as I often think of
something else to add.-EDNA ·
DEAR POLLY - l hope Ruth
realizes that the railroad spikes she
has are very collectible among antique buffs. l suggest that she use
fine sandpaper or some other
abrasive to brighten them and then

VALERIE MATSON
ENLISTS
WR!GfiT·PA'ITERSON, OH
Valerie Matson , daughter of Mr. and
Mrs . Kenneth Matson of Route I,
Rutland, enlisted in the U. S. Air
Force, according to T Sgt. Orene
Gabbard, Air Force Recruiter here.
Upon graduation from the Air Force 's six weeks baste milita ry
'training , Valer ie will receive
training in the Avioni cs Electronics
Warfare Career Field . Valerie is a
1979 graduate of Meigs High School.
Valerie will be earning credits
towards an Associa te Degree
through the Conununi ty College of
lhe Air Force while att&lt;.nding basic
and other Air Force technical
training schools .

clear plastic for a coating- no paint,
please. -MRS.W. G.
DEAR POLLY- and Ruth- We
have collected a considerable
number of railroad spikes. My husband polished them with an electric
drill that has a rotary steel pad dial
on it to remove the rust. We then
sprayed them with clear lacquer.
We bought miniature trains, about 3
to 4 inches long, and glued them onto
the spikes. Such trains are available
in some antique shops and shops that
specialize in miniatures. The name
of the railroad that the spikes
belonged to can be painted on. We
sold some of these ai our church
bazaar and gave others for gifts. CHARLOT!'E.
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you riewspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her
co lumn . Write
POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaper.

SUGHT MAJORITY FAVORS IT
BY HELEN AND SUE
BOTI'EL
Dear Helen and Sue :
A while back you asked young
people to send· in their votes on
whether or not they were for the
Equal Rights Amendment. Not
many responded, so you asked us to
prove we weren't apathetic and vote
again.
Maybe teenagers don't think much
about ERA because it doesn't really
concern them yet. But let a wellqualified woman compete with a
less.;;harp man for a job, and lose ;
let her miss out on advancements;
let her try to get credit; and she 11
realize we need an amendment to
make men stop paying mere lip service to equaltiy.
I'm in my early 20s and have
already seen discrimination. I boil
when I hear these anti-ERA people
spout off (on paid promotion tours).
Don't they realize that if it weren't
for the feminist movement, they
wouldn't be on national TV and
radio, but rather, "home where they
belong" (their words), caring for
husbands and children.
They confuse and blur the
meaning of equal rights until they
frighten women into thinking it will
force them into work they don't
want, give men all the advantages,
even unto rape. How ridiculous!
I hope more young people expressed opinions on ERA this time
around. How did the vote go? WIFE, MOTHER, CAREERIST
(not always in that order).
WMC :
We had considerably more response to the "ERA - Yes or No"
question this time. Several hundred
young people responded and 59 percent voted "Yes." Asurprising nwnber of pro-ERAs were male, and
many, many ''anti's'' were female.
Here are other good letters on the
subject:

HELEN AND SUE:
I'm not totally for or against ERA.
I work as the only male clerk in a
drug store. One young lady there is
very well assembled and excellent
at catching boxes &lt;I diapers from a
lt).foot drop, or unloading heavy supplies. She's not yelling "ERA." She
just feels, as I do, that if a woman
wants to do traditional ''man's
work " and can handle it, more
power to her.
But I can't help being traditionally
polite. If a woman goes for a cigarette, I dig for my lighter. I open doors
for her, seat her in restaurants . l
have been told by a few , "I'm not a .
cripple ... " "I can light a match ... "
"Don't wait on me ! " But then .some
of these folks aren '!female -they're
elders who also see etiquette as condesCension.
Let's have equal rights for
everyone! For men who choose
uwomen's jobs" and hope others

won 11augh or suspect gayhood. For'
women who would rather be con-·
struction engineers than
secretaries. For 65-year~lds who
want to continue working. And for
children who sometimes need
protection against bad parents or
guardians, and often aren't allowed

MEN &amp; BOYS'

SHIRTS
WRANGLER WESTERN SHIRTS
In Blue Chambray With
Pearl Button
In Flannel Poly -Cotton
Cotton Blends

'

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CORDUROY

MEN'S SHIRTS IN
VELOUR &amp; SUPER
SUEDE

6 at Racine High School.

Also read were invitations to the
grand visitation at New Richmond
and Westlake. M;os. Euvetta Bechtle
reported for the cheer committee
that a sympathy card bad been sent
to the Rev . Mr. Kuhn and flowers
had been sent to him during his

illness. A get.....,ell card wu sent to
Harry Olesher who Is now at hlllll!
and a than1t you note was read from
Lettie Roush for flowers sent to her.
Katherine Mitchell reported on the
ruromage sale and spoke ~ dinners
to be served. Meigs County combined Friends' Night was 81Vtounced

for Oct. 13 at 7:30 at the Middleport
Temple. It will be a c:omblilation
Friends' Night and 75111 anniversary
party. The receptlm for Lola
Pauley, deputy grand matron, wu
announced. Mrs. Namnl King, Mrs.
Kay Log~ and Maryln Wilcox served refreshments.

·Local CB club plans 'coffee break '
A variety of activities to take
place at the Sept. 23 coffee break of
the Big Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club on the Rock Springs fairgrounds were planned during the Tuesday ·
night meeting of the club members.
Mike Capehart had charge of the

Members welcomed
The Rev. Bob Robinson and the
Rev. Mark McClung were welcomed
into membership when the Meigs
County Ministerial Assn. met MOilday at the Seventh Day Adventist
Church in Pomeroy with tbe putor,
AI Dittes, the new president of the
association, as host.
Summer programs were revie..\.ed
and plans made for another active
year. A report on the successful
baseball program not only in team
inv!&gt;lvement but fellowship among
churches was given by the Rev. Bob
McGee.
REVIVALSTARTING
The Sifver Run Freewill Baptist
Church will have a revival from
Sept. 17 through Sept. 22 with BW
Price as evangelist. There will be
special singing for the services
which will start at 7:30 each
evening. Marvin Markum, the
putor, invites the public.
RU111LARKINS
HOSPITAUZED
Ruth Larkins is a medical patient
at Holzer Medical Center. Her room
number is 437.
-

tosu~.

Ladies: good luck! Gents: watch
that chauvinism. Equality: bere we
come! -A 20-YEAR.OLD MAN
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
"No" on ERA. I feel it is trying to
run women's lives. A man should do
hard work and support hls wife, not
vice versa. He should wear the hard
hat, she the apron. - RUFF~
AND LACE FOREVER
ERA could turn women into guncarryi ng lesbians . No!
SCHLAFLYFOREVER

tow11131 a jaws for life; and •100 to
meeting. The coffee break wW be
the
1amlly of Robert Steffel, a
held fl'()lll 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and it
deceased
C.B. 'er whoae handle was
was emphasized that everyone Is
Uncle
Bob.
welcome, whether or not they are a
A potluck dinner wu planned for
member of a citizens band radio
Sept.
~ at 1:30 p.m. at the norclub. There will be games for the
thbound
Route 33 Park for members
children With prizes, and over 190
and
their
familiell.
door prizes awarded in addition to a
A
gag
gift
was awarded to Betty
mystery prize, and cash awards
Wilson
for
aeWng
the lllOIIt tidleta
totaling $W.
for
the
break
and
she
was later aent
Member!l are to meet on Saturday,
another
gift.
Door
prizes
were won
Sept. 15 at I p.m. at the grange hall .
by
Margaret
WyaU
and
Denise
for a work detail, with a special
meeting ~ all members to be held on Wriston .
Cookies, coffee and soft drinks
Sept. 22.
were
served.
At the coffee break, food will be on
sale by the Cbester Fire Depart-'
ment. There will be a table for
homemade candles and cooties and
all memben are uked to donate.
Donati0111 of PB wu made toward
the purchase ol two unlflnllll for the
Stylette Baton Corps &lt;I New Haven;
~to the New Haven R.eacue Squad

WHY
PAY

MORE ·
FOR

Boosters
elect officers

CARPET

CLEANING !

Officers were elected at the
Tuesday night meeting ~ the
Eastern Band Boolters held In tbe
band room at Eastern Hi3b School.
Elected were Clw1otte Elberfeld,
president; · Ann Collins, vice
pre.!lident; JoAnnBawn, tre&amp;surer; ·
and Robert Elberfeld, reporter.
It wsa reported that the new band
unlflnllll are In and will be worn for
the first time at the game to be
played Friday night at Eastern.
Several fund-railing projects were
dlicuaaed along with band activities
for the year. The Farm Bureau
banquet to be held later this fall wu
a1ao dlacuued.
Band Booster meetings will be
be!d the aecond Tueeday at 7:30p.m.
of each month and parents are 1111ed
to attend the meetings.

HELEN AND SUE :
Women bave come a long way, but
I fear if ERA isn 't ratified, this will
begin a backlash that could cancel
out many of our advancements. Yes
on ERA! - STEINEM FOREVER

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Weekend At Meigs Inn

. Chairman says President becoming 'feisty'
"

WASHINGTON
(AP )
Democratic National Chairman
·- John C. White, after a day of
watching Jimmy Carter meet lhe
. , voters, thinks . the president has
become "a little feistier" since Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy began Inching
closer to a run for the White House.
White's assessment that he saw
new fire in Carter's approach to the
electorate came after " non.: political" appearances by the
- president
Wednesday
in
... Connecticut, -Pennsylvania West
Vll'ginia and Ohio.
'
., The presict.!ntial feistiness
.. apparently was sparked by

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Dayton lawmaker is working on a
new property tu reUef propo1111!
which may be aired next week in a
Senate committee.
Olalrman Neal F. Zinuners Jr. of
the Senate Ways and Means
Committee stressed Wednesday,
however, that aeveral ideas are
being dliCII8IIed and !hat no policy
decisions hav.e been reached.
He lllid his ccmunittee plans to
dbcuaa lhe overall problem of rising
real estate taxes at a meeting
Tuesday.
Lawmakers, back this week from
summer recess, say protests over
increuinC taxes, due to inflation,
are growilig, especially in counties
Which are undergoing reappralsal or
value "updates" UJIB year .
A group from CUyahoga County,
one of :U such counties, delivered
signatures of 27,000 dt.enchanted
taxpayers Tuesday to Senate
President Oliver Ocuek. Their bills
are ina-easing up to 30 percent this
year.
Ocasek assured that lhe problems
are going to be given thorollllh
study.
Zimmers, a Dayt&lt;lll Democrat, a.
mucll u said there Is no hope fer
approval by his cmunlttee of a
cmstltutiooal amendment, already
approved by the HoUle, under which
owners of fann and , residential
property would be better protected
:: · againlt Inflated taus.
· : The deadline (Aug. al for placing
:: the proposal oo the Nov . B ballot hu ' ·
•• puM&lt;I, and Zlmtners said that "It
wouldn't hefp anybody With !hill
"' year's tax bills anyway."
••.. Under the propoaed amendment,
;:: by Rep. Wllllam E. Hlnlg, O.New
: l'tllladelphia, real estate could be
., placed in different clallllflcallona for
:;: taxation purpoees.
..,
Hlnlg said fann and residenUal
tB!Ipayen currently bear the brunt
:t ~ inflation becaUJe their property
hu increased in value much more
sharply than induatrial and

3

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'$625
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ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

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for the Democratic nomination
would be "one of the classic
struggles of our political history."
And former President Richard M.
Nixon said Wednesday that "if the
Massachusetts boys go against the
Georgia boyS, it will be the battle of
the C~?ntury." Carter's h001e state Is
Georgia.
As fer Kennedy, White told a
group of reporters aboard Air Force
One on the flight back to
Washington; ''ltseems to me he has
mov~ from being an unannounced
candidate with an option to
announce to an announced candidate
with an option to Withdraw."

,- New property tax proposal
"airing scheduled next week

..•
.•
••.
.
.••
•
•.
.•.,
.•

Salad Bar
Ham Steak
Sweet Polatoes
Vegetable
Wine

Kennedy's statement that he has
"not foreclosed the possibility of
running" for the Democratic
presidential nomination next year.
After
Wednesday 's foray ,
presidential press secretary Jody
Powell said Carter would prefer to
wait until January to announce his
campaign plans, but might be
prompted to come forward sooner
because of Kennedy's actions.
Speculation about a Kennedy
candidacy has been rampant since
the Massachusetts Democrat said
last week that his famiiy had no
objections to his entering the race .
White said a Carter-Kennedy fight

The party chatnnll); who has been
aligned politically with Carter as lhe
incumbent president, loyally added
that "anyone who thinks the
president is going to play dead is
ril.istaken."
Carter himself seemed a bit

uncertain how to deal with
Kennedy's statement Tuesday that
he may ~~eek tbe nomination.
· Asked by a citizen along an airport
fence in Hartford, Conn., if he
thought be could beat Kennedy,
Carter responded, "I ff!!l confident

•

about the future ."
Landing in Pittsburgh before
driving through West Virginia's
panhandle to a "town hall meeting"
in Steubenville, Ohio, Carter was
less responsive when a television
reporter asked if, indeed, he thought
he could beat Kennedy .
"Nice day, isn 't it? " Carter
replied .
"You don 'I want to talk about it,
sir?" he reporter inquired.
~~uow'd you ever guess that ? the
president asked.
11

Squads kept busy
EXTEND~ FORECAST

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10
MENU

commercial land.
However, under Ohio's SCH:Blled
"uniform rule of taxation," all
classes of property must be taxed at
a uniform rate. Hinig's proposal
would permit taxation at rates
reflecting the effects of inflation
within each class.
Zimmers said he agrees With lhe
intent of Hinig's proposal, but fears
it would cause an "administrative
nightmare. "
·
Minnesota switched to a
classification system and wound up
with with a proliferation of about 50
different classes of property,
Zimmers' committee was told
earlier.
The Dayton Democrat said one
possible approach of the new
legiJiation would be placins a freeze
on the "in!ide millage." These are
the firlll 10 mills - a mlli is $1 per
$1,000 of the property's appraiaed
value for tal purposes - that are
levied without a popular vote.
Freezing those mills would mean
that despite property value
increases caused by inflatioo, lhe 10
mills could not yield more revenue
in one tax year !ban they did the
previous year .
In 1976, lhe LegiJiature placed a
virtual freeze oo the outside mills, or
lhoae aulherized by voters, fer such
things as school! and parks. .
The current problems with
SEEit 8UB8'11'nJTE

,

,

DRIVERS

The Eutem Loc.1 School Diltrict
Ia In need ~ ~lute bus driftn.
Allyvne willlln8 to make appllcatJon
can stop by the dflce the aupertntendent and pick up the applk:atioll.
The next recuW meeting ~ the
dlslrict'a bolnl ~ ecllli:ation hll
beenlelfcrSept.18,at 7 : ~p.m.

«

To day's

birthdays:

Former

Olympic liar J - Owens Ia 66.
Publllher Alfred Knopf Is 86.

The executrix ol the Estate of Rose Tracev..
dectased wilt off.,. al Public Auction on
Soturday, the lSII&gt; day of September, 1979 at 2115
MI. Vernon Ave ... Point Pleasant. W.Va. at 10:00
A.M. the personal effects of Rose Tracey,
dicta sed.
A PARTIAL LISTING INCLUDES :

Antique cut glass, crystal etched gloss, Theodore
Hovel and China, pewter, crystal silver lea
service, silver candelabra. luggage, luncheon
sets, tablecloths, napkins, portoble typewriter,
jewelry , rugs. Christmas Ornaments and
decorations, coffee maker, mantle sets, old lace
trimming, old buttons, deep freezer, old style
silverware, mixers. kerosene lamp. waterless
•cookers. brass candlesticks. card labtes and
chairs, antique framed pictures, antique crocl&gt;et
and tatting, punch bowl, electric knives, corn
popper, can opener, mixer, juicer and Ice

crusher, exercise equipment.

Furniture ond bed room sutte, beds, vantty
rocking chairs, platform rocker, rugs, end
tables, tamps, convelesant equipment lor
bathroom . Toots, work bench, shovels, new

weed eater, electric lawn mower, steamer trunk,
earthw•re crocks end other Items to numerous

lomentlon .
TERM: CASH
POSITIVE 1.0.
Belly Keeler, Executrix of the Estate of Rose
Tracey, deceased.

inflation primarily result from the
fact · that the inside · millage Is
permitted to inflate.
But Zinuners stressed that a
freeze on the inside mills "at this
point is only a possibility."

Hurricane
(Continued from page 1)
Two of lhe city's 22 emergency
shelters were unroofed, forcing
rellCUe cr""s to move 400 people to
other shelters as the storm raged.
More than 200 hoepital pallents
were moved to hallways as windows
llhattered and 130 occupants of a
nursing heme huddled in halls as
rain whipped throll8h llhattered
windows . The roof of the Jacluon
County courthoUJe sagged and split.
. As the eye of the twrrlcane
brought a temporary calm to the
town « 47,tnl, offldala of Inplll
Shipyard, Miaslaaippl'a largestsingle industry, reportt!d "extensive
damage, )\1st abl!olutely extmaive."
Meanwhile, 25 pollee omcen .who
were using a MobUe National Guard
Armory as a temporary precinct
houae escaped injury when the
storm knocked out a wall of the
building.
In Fairllope, Ala., on the eutem
shore of Mobile Bay, City
Councilman Jack Stipes reported
the winda were devutating.
"It's just pitiful, be said. "I look
out in the streeta md all I see Ill
twisted treea and metal. We've had
tr~endoua damage to hcmes and
businesses, liut we know of no
casualties and that's wllat we're
thanking God for."
Tornado wamlnga were issued for
parts of Florida, Georgia and
Alabama, and civil defenoe officials
said 17 people received minor,
injuriell when a tornado lmoc:ked

The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Route I, Oleshlre at
4:30p.m. Wednesday fer Marlin IUfe
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. On Wednesday
evening the wiit also was called to
the marina for Johnny Pope, 6, who
had received a laceration of the chin
in a bicycle accident. He was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Oles!er at 8:29 p.m.
Wednesday for Miss Lucille Smith
wbo had received a hack injury in a
fall. She was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. Earlier the unit
went to Peach Ferk for Le)a BaUey
who had also fallen. She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital where
she was admitted.

Weather
Rain and pollllible thunderstonns
tonight and Friday. Rain may be
heavy at times. Low tonight fr11n 60
to 85. 111gb Friday in the upper 60s to
low 7011. The chance of rain is near
100 percent tonight and Friday.

I
SPEAKER NAMED
The Rev. Eddie.Buffington will be
the guest speaker Sunday at 9 a.m .
at the Forest Run United Methodist
Olurch.

r

Meanwhile, a new ABC News
survey of state Democratic
chalrrnen found a sharp erosion of
sopport for the president among lhe
party's leadership. The network said
Wednesday its survey found 18 state
chairmen ·planning to back Carter,
down from 31 in a previous poll.
Kennedy's support rose from 4 to 19.
The survey also showed that twothirds of the state chainnen think
Kennedy will seek the nomination.
Asked about the poll results on
ABC-TV's
"Good
Morning,
America" program today, Carter
campaign manager Tim Kraft said
"the.'le things will change ... I think
we 'II get the support we need."

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-John Moon, Pomeroy;
Lela Bailey, Pomeroy; Robert Fife,
Middleport ; Marlin Rife, Cheshire;
James Blake, West Columbia, W.
Va .
Discharged--Willis Joseph,
Russell Little, Robert Van Meter.
MEETING MONDAY
The Candystipers of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will resume their
fall meetings Monday at .7 p.m. at,
the hospital. All girls interested in
belonging to the organization are
invited to attend.

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'1.09

A 4-year-old boy was killed when

and red lit the night sky u
transfcm~era bl"" out.
"It makes you feel like a little
bitty boy," said National Guard Lt.
Frank Hannon as he patrolled the
streets of Pensacola in the howling
wind, watching for downed !reel and
power Unea.
Abo~t 15,000 of Mobile's residents
took refuge in 20 Red Cro8s shelters
before lhe storm moved onto land
near here. Water swirled curb&lt;leep
in the city's darkened streets and
wind5 were clocked at 9? ~ .
Alabama Gov. Fob James said he
would seek federal diaaster
assistance today.
All of Alabama Power Co.'s
160,000 Mobile customers were
Without power early today as repair
crews stayed off the streets, ut!Uty
spokesman Bruce GUllland said.

''''''''''''''1'=''''''''',:,,,,,:,,,,,,,,,,,,;;;.:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,:,,,,,,

• !~!~ H~~r~

down a building in Gulfport, Miss.
'winds blew over his family's mobile
home In Grand Bay, Ala., four miletl
southwett of Mobile, accmllng to
deputy sherilf Georgia McCants,
who said there were two other
unconflnned deaths.
Four peracina were llllghUy injured
in one of the twelw twisters that
touched down in the Pensacola, Fla.,
area, where flallhes of green, blue

A chance of lhowen each day.
Lowa In the low to mid 5k Salur·
day, udftGm 45 to 58 Stlllday ud
Mollllay. HigJia from IIi to 70
Salllrday, nrmlDg lo the low to
mid 7t8 MODdaJ.

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MARlEnA, OHIO

BEVERAGES SOLD

Good Selection
For Men,
Both Long and Short Sleeve, Sport or
Dress, In Poly Knits, Cordumy, Velours,
Dacron and Cotton Blends. .

Excellent Selection Women's Blouses,

You must be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy, 0.

Knit Tops, Sweaters, Work Shirts
Slacks To Match . .

N. 2nd AVE.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
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271 N. 2nd AVE.

MIDDLEPORT

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 13, 1979

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vatK&gt;&lt;• .

Mobilt• Hume sail'S nnd Vt~ nl
sa ll•s ore a~·ct•pt ed unly wi th
l'ttslt with ordt•t' 25 cent lilllfHt'

for &lt;Hls t•arrymg hu.\ 'lumbt.·r In
Cn n · 11f The &amp;n l ind .
Tht'

Publi ~ Mr

reserves tht•'
tn a lit or reje('( any ad11

ri~ llt
dc t~m ed

ob jc l'l io na l.

The

Pubhstwr will 111:11 bt_. fl'SJJnnsi hll'
fnr mort&gt; than one int'OTrl't'l Inse rt am ,

Phon•• 992-21:.6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mmul;t\•

Noon on S&lt;llimlay
T\li'S! Iil\'

thru F'rlllu\'

4P .M .
t he dny be fort' pulllit'a lion
Sum.IH\'

41'.M:

Priday ilfl t• r n w

ll

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
Notice is hereby given

that on September 25th,
1979, allO AM a public sale
will be held at the offices Of
the Citizens Nationa l Bank,
MiQdleport, Ohio to sell tor

c ash
the
following
collateral to wit :
1969 Community Mobile
Home Serial No. 489.
The Citizens National
Bank , M iddleport, Ohlo,.
reserves the right to bid at
th e sal e.

(9) 13, 14, 15, Jtc

~Wl~~~FD~~~~~s~'i,M·

Case No. 22807

Meigs

County

MEIGS

COUNTY

HUMANE

SOCI ETY . 992-62 60 . Peh
avai lable for adop tion a nd in·
formation service.

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY 1
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB .
ABSOLUTELY no hunting on
my form . Freemon Williams ,
Ml nerslo'ile, OH .
TUPPERS PLAINS Church of
Chri!t rev ival, Sept . 10 thru
1-4. Specia l singing e'o'ery
ni'ght. Fred Wagner speaker
from Kent_ucky Christian Col·
lege. Randy Koehler . host
minister.

Lost and Found
LOST. Presumed stolen. 1
mole Wo lkef . 3 y&amp;cHs old, al l
wh ite, ton head and black
spot left si de . Tattooed
S.W.M. left ear. An swers to
""Ranger." Apple Grove area
M onday night. Call 992·3023
or 742·2214 . All informat ion
conf idential .
LOST On 143 toward Harrison·
vi lle, fema le beagle . Answers
to " Shorty". Humane Society,

992-6260.

me

Probate

Court, Case No. 22807, J.

William Brown, Rut land.
Ohio 45775, was appointed
Executor of the estate of
Pauline
M.
Markins.
deceased, 111te of Rutland,

Ohio 45775.

Robert E . Suck
Probate Judge·
Clerk

(9) 13, 20, 27, Jlc

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY ANO
APPRAISEMENT

The State of Ohio, Meigs
County Coun of Common
Pleas, Probate Division
To the Executor or Ad ·
ministrator of the es tate, to
such of the following as are
residents of the State of
Ohio, viz : -· the surviving
spouse, the next of k in, the
beneficiaries under the
will ; and to the attorney
and attorneys representing
any of the aforementioned
persons :
Thomas
A.
Clark ,
Syracuse, Ohio, Case No.

22744.

You are h~rebv notitled
that t he Inventory and Ap·
praisement of the estate of
the
aforementioned ,
deceased, late of said Coun ·
ty , were fi led i n th is Court .
Said I nventorv and Ap·
pra i sement will be for
h!:!'aring before th is court
on the 1st day of October,

1979, all :00 o'clock P.M .

Any person desiring to
file exceptions thereto
must file them at least five
days pr ior to the date set
for hear i ng .
Given under my hand
an d seal of said Court, this

lOth day of September 1979.

992-3161.

WANTED: JUNK . Batteries.
radiators , motors . auto. trans.
No Su,doy cal ls. 949-2563.

LARGE Several family ·yard
sole. Thru Sat. . Sept. 15.
Clothing , all sites, ieons , lop!.
dresses , sleepweor , leisure
suits. hot wa ter heater. old
furniture , old radio , bottles .
Tupperwore, and lots of other
things . On Old Rl. 33 ot and of
CR 19. Watch for sign s.
YARD SALE . Sept . 14-21.
Household goods , women's.
men's and children's cl o'thing,
misc . items . I mile from
langsville, CR 100. 9 ti l dark.
Phone 742-2668 .
THREE FAMILY yard sole. Sept .
U , 15, 9-5. ht trai ler on left
past Meigs Co. Fairgrounds on
CR 20. Baby ond Junior
clothes . 992-7738 .
GARAGE SALE . Jim May's
goroge . Turn at Chester onto
CR 25 . 1st house on left 5
families . Thurs . 13th and Fri·
day 14th. Watch for signs,
VARD SALE. Wed . 12th thru
Sun . 16. Walter Wilson
residence on CR 19 between 4
lone 33 and Old At . 33. First
ya rd sole ever. Boys' pants. 10
ond 12 hvsk~. 9 till ~ each day .
Rain cancels until fol lowing
week .
YARD SALE Main St . Rutland
Friday . Women 's and men's
clothing .

YARD SALE . Nice baby
dresses, shoes, pajamas,

etc .

Ch eap

clothes ,

maternity

ladies '

nice

dresses 16, 18, 20 . Rl . 33 .
. King 's trailer before the 4-

lane h ighway . Going north .
Friday-Saturday . 9 am to 4
pm .

By Caroly n G. Thomas

YARD SALE . Saturday, Sept .

(9) 13, 20, 21C

BIG YARD Sole . Plan o,
cloth i ng , boy!' clo thing ,
choirs, many misc. items . Sam
Arnold's residence , Water St.,
Syracuse. Sept . 12, 13,
14. -10.?
YARD SALE, rain or shine at
leona Stewart's, Mulberry
Hts . Friday , Sept. 1-4 from 9 to
5p. m.

------

YARD SALE , Friday , Sept. 14, 9
om to o4 pm . Corner Rt. 7 and
Flatwoods Rd. (Rive Points) .

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
large lots . Coli 992-7479.
3 AND 4 RM furnished and un·
furnished
opts .
Phone

IS. 1979. 9,JO.s,oo. Doyle T.
Hudson residence , SR 12.4
towards Rutland . One day on.
ly. Some garden tools .

SENIOR ClTIZENS, 1 bedroom

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1979
10:00 A.M.
143 North Front St., Middleport, Ohio
The property of the late Elmer and Hazel
Reed has been sold. The following
household furnishings will be sold :
Rosewood sola , Victorian chairs, several
cane bottom chairs, several 2 and 1
drawer night stands, Emperior chest,
cherry chest, walnut card tab le, round
waln ut table, Seth Thomas weight clock,
wicker and ca ne porch furniture, 3 day
beds, rocke r s, doors to corner cupboard,
several bedroom suites, spool bed, tilt-top
candle stand, 4 oriental throw rugs, 1
room size Chinese rug , pewter candle
sticks, som e glass and Haviland , dishes,
lamps, mirrors and pictures .
PLUS MUCH MORE THAN APPEARS
IN THIS AD.
Bring chair and sack lunch . Plan to spend
the day , Terms: Cash or ck . w/ Pos . 10.
Owner, Nancy Reed
C. E. Sheridan, Auct. Ph. 448·4263

614-698·3807 .

SALE PRICES

Help Wanted

sit in my home for one chi ld
that's two years old. Five days
o week . Contact Mrs. Gregory
Grover at 992-5620 after -4 .
CITY
LIMITS . Bartender
wonted. Evening shift. Must
be 21 . Apply In prson .

GiveAway
BEAUTIFUL block and wh ite
fema le medium size dog. long
haired fcce . HumO~ne Scciety .

SLEEPING ROOMS for rent in
Racine_. 9.49-2591 .
TRAILER SPACE . See Mrs ."'
Walter Hayes, 635 Mill St.,
M;ddleport .
FCUR ROOMS , both, furnish·

ed. No pets . 992- n06. After
4,30,
.FOUR ROOM house, garage,
real nice . 992-2502 .
'
ONE SMALL tra iler for I or 2
persons. m .7785 .

Auto Sales
1974 VEGA ·HATCH8ACK . call
303·675-1501 or 305·675·2488
or JQ..t-675-1553.

1974 DODGE CORONET A-door
Custom. 992·5858.

1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE. Ex·
ce llent condition . 29 ,000
mi les . $2-400. 992-3198.

1969 FORD BRONCO A-wheel
drive. Whi te spoke wheels, 3
speed
trans .
Ca ll

614-446-9595 .
1976 BUICK REGAL . white with
red racing stripe ond red vinyl
Interior, radio, V·8, auto ..
P.S., p.b.. $2950 . Four new oil
weather steel belted tires or
$2700 wi thout new tires .
985-3so.t after 5:30pm.
1975 MONZA . exce llent condi·
lion . law mileage . No rust .
1973 GRANO PRIX , good con dition, sun roof , tape . $1700.

992·5063.
1976 FORD VAN . b cy l. , auto.,
AM -FM cassette . 992·6137 .
197B (AMARO , 12,000 miles ,
305 engine, A .C., rear defog·
ger, e)(Cellent condition . Toke
over payments. 247 -3863.
1973 DODGE pickup , 318
engine. A. C. , white spoke
wheels, sliding bock glass .
good condition. 2-47-3863 .
1963 CADILLAC. excellen t
shape. 992·2205, or after 4
p.m. 992·73 15.
1972 BUICK SKYLARK . Auto ,
P8 , PS. AC. good cond iti on.
$1200. After 5 p. m. 949·2445.
1978 FORO 41x 4. 351 engine,.
custom point job and Inte rior.
15,000 miles . lots of oc·
cessories . $7500. Phone no.

992·2656
1976 MONTE CARLO , 350
f1flgine , air conditioning, AM·
FM radio, new radial tires,
35 ,000 miles . $2600. Phone

992·2656.
1975 CHEVROLET NOVA, 6
cyl. , std. shift , 4 new 10dials.
$995 . 992-3'06.

~

~ .

AND

wh i te

REAL ESTATE loons . Purchase
and ref inance. 30 year terms,
VA . No money down [eligible
'o'e tero ns) : FHA · As low as 3
per cent down {non-ve teran s) .
Ire land Mortgage Co .. 17 E.'
~ate . Athans. 614 -592·3051 .

NICE COMFORTABLE B room
home on opprol( . 2 acres of
l eo,~ello nd , with plen ty of shade
Rd .
trees.
o'n Rutland

985·3557.

Choreagropher
Located In Racine,

• Gutters and
Down Spouts
Free Estimates

(formerly

MONTGOMERY
TRAILER SALES
71310 Montgllmt&gt;ry Ad .
Langwl lle, Oh!o

SUPER

GO OSE

5TQCK

200 ACRE FARM between
Pomeroy ond Athens . 3
bedroom house ond good
born . $97 ,500. Only $25 .000
down. Owner wlll fi nance.

HOOF HOLLOW, English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness. Horses and ponies.
Ruth Reeves. 614 -698-m&lt;&gt;.
Barding &amp; Riding lessons and
Horse Core products .Western
boots , Children' s $15 .50.
Adults $29.00 .
RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

ding. Caii367-0m.
POODLE GROOMING . Judy

TWO BLOCKS from business
district in Middleport, out of
high water. 3 bedroom , eot· in
kitchen , pantry , dining room ,
li ving room ond bath . Natural
gas furnace . lull basement.
and attic, enclosed bock yard.
dryer ,
range .
w asher ,
refr'lgerotor, cu rtains and
carpeting included in purchos·
ing price. Call 992-3243 aher 6
p. m. for appointment .
HOUSE FOR sole on Brownell
Ave. 992·5204 .

REGISTERED BEAGLES. $25. 7

Purchase
and
Refinance
JO Y ear Term s
A- No money down
I eligible ve terans)
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non-veterans)

592-3051

CALL 992-7544

4·23 -1 mo .

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style center
--:::.:. Introduces'-

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

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

•New Home
*Add ons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates

Fe•turint :
women's

perms.
Call tor appt. or walk in.

'•

.!

'•

0

.

.

Sm~h

Nelson
Motors, Inc.

BR.-.OFORO , .-.uctionHr , Com plet• Service . Phon• 949-247
or 949-2000. Raci ne , Ohio,
Crill Brodfo~d .

ELWOOD BOWERS REP...IR -

gravel , calcium ch l,aride, fertili:zer, dog food , and all types
of self . Excelsior Salt Works,
Inc ., E. Main St., Pomeroy,

ft2.JJ2S
216 E. Second 5frtet

11 ROOMS -

1'/2 baths,
ca r pe t ing, knotting p i ne
kit., full basem ent, 2 car
garage, and storage
bldg . Only $17,500.
SIS, OOO.OO - Big 9 room
home, 11h baths, nllt.
gas heat, city Water, 2
ca r garage on corner
lot. Can be made into a

992-3891.
CANNING PEACHES now thru
Sapl. 1 I S. Bob' s Market ,
Mason, WV . Open 7 day s.
Phone 30-4 -773-5721 .

WINTER POTATOES . C.W. Proffitt fOrm, Portland , OH . $8 a
hundred and $5o hundred
PIGS, SEVEN weeks old, $20
each. Strow , $1 .25 a bale.

duplex.

POTATOES for winter. Cobbler, Kennebec and Superi or.
Phone 8-43·2491 . Tom Sayre,

NEW LISTING - New 3
bedroom ranch home.
D
ishwasher,
diSposal
Dbl
. sink, eat·in
kit,,,
copper plumbing over 1
acre . American Home
protected plan .· $46,250.
NEW LISTING - Coal
minerslookatthisone
that has 3 bedrooms,

SR 338 .

enc losed ceramic bath,

LARGE SIZE Frank lin fireplace.
New quilts. Wood cook sto'o'e.
1 base cobin•t. Mon\1 items.
Between Tuppers Plains and
Reedsv ille, on CR 50. Forrest
Adams , 378·6276 .

2 car garages, Ohio
Power heat, and over 1
acre for the chi ldren .

APPLES. Now picking Grimes
Golden . O ther varieties to
loUow . Fitzpatrick Orchards,
SR 689. Phone WiiMeso,~llle

669·3785 .

$45 ,250.

TWO 50 galien oil drums ond
stand. See ot 1047 S. 2nd Ave .,
Middleport .
1979 HONDA XL 500. Low
mileage. Excellent condition ,

99'1·5%9.
REGISTERED Appaloosa colts .
3 weonlings , I 17 mos. old .
Good blood lines , good#con.
formation , and g'ood blanket.

Call614·593-7390 .
FIREWOOD for sole . Now tak·
ing orders. Will deliver. Phone

742·2056 .
BIG BLUE manure spreader.
Zip seeder. Woods pull type
brush hog, S ft. Ford scraper.
AlA · like new condition .

992·5266.

- - -- -

1977 KAWASAKI 400. Only

NEW LISTING - c om ·
mercia I l ots East
Main Street , Pomeroy,
pric ed as land va l ue on ly , conta ins old . houses
that could be used . Call

tordel ar·ls .
BEAUTIFUL

NANCH

- Syracuse Elementary
La roe family roam

3
rooms ,
built · in kitchen, ex ·
cellent condition , ex .
ce llent location, many
features .
ONLY

$42,200.00.
POMEROY ELEMEN ·
TARY - Owner wants
quick sale and w i ll deal,
nice home with full
basement, large lot.

Brick Ph story on a
good street. Built·ln kif·
chen, J bedrooms, large

$15,500.
RIVER FRONT LOTS
- On the Ohio River .

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

We can also sell 5 acres
of wOOds for only S7,500 ,
on bla ck top road , near
water li ne .

farm, over 6 acres, nice
1'12 story home with new
addition. Woodburnlng
fireplace, c lose to the

WILL BARGAIN -

mines . $24,500.00 .

bedroom home above all
floods . Nat . gas furnace,
city water , bath , block
garage and 2 lots
over looking the river .

NEW LISTING - Large
older home in Pomeroy,
large lot. Needs some
interior repairs. ONLY
$6,000 .00.

Asking$17,500.
WANT
TO
REST
ASSURED YOUR HOT
WATER
HEATER,
ELECTRIC
AND
HEATING SYSTEMS
ARE PROTECTED

NEW LISTING
Beautiful brick and
fr ame ranch type home
about 7 years old. The
lot size is approximately
100 ' X400 '.
Three
bedrooms wllh double

Y0 UR

closets,

nice

dining

US, AND FOR
YEAR AFTER

carpeting, garage,
storage building . Priced

ONE
YOU

-Housing ·
Headquarters

room,

kitchen,

LISTING TIME WITH

utlllly,

aljust $37,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr.

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·2259
992-6191

MACHINE Ropalro .

s•rvlc•. all mokn, 992·2284.
Tke Fobrlc Skop, Pomeroy .
Authod i:ed Singer Sol•s and
Servic• . We sharpen Sci11on.
EXCAVATING . dozer. loader
ond backhoe work; dump
trucks on~ lo.boys for hire ,
w ill haul fill dirt, top soli .
limestone and gravel. Call Bob
or R-r Jofioro, day phapo
992·7089,
nigtlt
phone

l ,..._..;!i~~or~99~2~·5~m~._::.:_::._:

ll1~~~~~~~~ o!

one extra bu i lding ·on
large lot. Ci t y water
near
sto res .
Want

3

SEWING

POMEROY, O.

$19,900.00.
M 1 D ·D L E p o R T
ELEMENTARY

SELL CALL 992·3325.

;

y

608 E .
MAIN

NEW LISTING 3
bedroom.s, balh , front &amp;
back porches, storage,

0 URIN G

SR 248.

SwHpers, toos.ters , irons , all
small opplioncet. lawn mot~r ,
next to State Hi~hwoy Goroge
onRoute7. 985--3825.

EXCAVATING .
doz•r .
backhoe and dllcher , Chorl11
R. Hatfield . Black Ha. Service,
Rutland , Ohio. Pone142·2008.

PUL NS EXC•VATING C
u
,..
· om·
plete Service. Pilon• 99'2-2,.78.

Mobile Homes Sale's

IMJUNS ... WIIOE'I£R 'TWIIS
SHORE DISliKED ~ '
PORE FELlfR· "

NOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport-Poemroy oreo .
Call for free .. tlmote.

367-7101.
PAINTING AND oandblastlng.

99'1·5&lt;421.

WILL 00 baby sitting In my
home for o child from 3 to 9
years of O(llt . COli A lice

Williams. 949-2571.
NEW JANITORIAL Services
speclaliz.lng In offices, new or
remodeled homea and aport·
ments. Call Bunny, 698-6031 or

Judy 698-6794 . ·
REYNOLDS

Ati

RAY'S USED Furmture.
dison . 367·0636 . 4 oak, choirs ,
SIS eo . Chest of dra we rs , $20.
GE auto. washer . $65. Electric
range , $45 . Gas range, $-45,
Refrigerator, $65. Oi l heater,
$75. Ro~ki ng choir, $25. ,
Breakfast set $35. lamps , pot·
tery, glassware.
PIGS, seven weeks,. old , $20
each . Strd'w . $1. 25 bole .

Electric,

motors, rewind and repair.

992-2356. 651 Beech
Middleport, Ohio.

St.,

WILL DO house cleaning.
Houri to call 9 om to 6 pm

DOWNING - CHILDS

Phone 992·2342, Eve. 992-2449
Middleport, Ohio
Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr,

l SU~ AM GtAD '1QU
IT WAS A MATTEil OF NE SlOPPED IN lOWN SO We CESSITY, ALLEN! I "[}}iNt&lt;
COULD "tl!J&lt;e A 5HOWER
AN.,. ON!! OF US COUlD
~NO 6U"( SOME NEW
HAve SET ~ A SMOI&lt;E

9·7-1 mo.

DOC!

CLO'n-ISS,

:lOA· nJ-5&lt;422 err :JOA. 773-5069.
DEPENDABLE

BABY

oiltor

Monday thru Friday . 2
children. Coli Denise Wolfe.
949-23n ofter6p.m.

South

Pass
Pass
Paaa

2NT

Pass
Pau

3NT

4•

2•
Pass

lead : • Q

AI..AR:M JUST 15'&lt; WAI-I&lt;ING
8V IT !

the continuation .

Then he plays his ace of
trumps and gets the bad news.
Not at all daunted, he ruffs his
last spade in dummy, leads a
low dtamond and sticks in his

INSUR,.NCE

difficult play, but one that
would be made by a really
good East player of today.
East puts the king of spades
on his partner's queen at trick
one. If South ducks, a club
comes back and South will be
a dead duck. So South takes
his ace of spades rigbt away,
plays his ace of trumps, leads
a diamond, leis West's jack ,
hold the trick and now
watches West make the ~ril ·
liant lead of a low spade to

HOWERY ANO MAflTIN h ·
••ptlc

cavoting ,

systems ,

dazor . backhoe. Rl. 143.
Pkono 1 (614) 698-7331 or
702-259:1 .
IN

STOCK

Joel isn't
viol atinq dnt.~
cit4 codes!

for

immediate
deli~tery : ~rl ous siz., of pool
kIts . Do-lt· yourHlf Of let Ul
lnatall for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sol" . tl'l( . m .sn4 .

'Mll HAUL limestone ond
grovel. Also, lime houling and
spreodlng . Leo Morris TnJck·
lng, Phone742-2455 .
ANN'S CAI(E Decorating Supplift , 50116 Osborn Rd .,
Reedsvlll•. OH ~n:l. For In·
formation call . 667·645 . Will
b. open late if you need
something.

OHIO VALLEY Roofing . RoofIng, gutters and downspouts.
Fr" " tlmot11. All work
guorenteed. 20 yeors I)( ·
perience. Call Athens, collect,
Gerold Cloric 797..... 7 or Tam

Hotklno

is a leqal matter, Wallet!
Minch outside It can't be resolved
on the spur of
the citij lim
the """'""'"+
c

''
,.,

,,
• '" &lt;~

'!

'

I

'.

WlNNIF.
LIKE WHAT

•/JilL .I JUST 60T OUR MCK-

AN iPEA /IMYe&gt;E
WE COULD DO

SOMETH ING-

GROUNDS
ARE: 00 ... 00

DIFFERENT/

ro6£11(£R,I

79'H7~5 .

WE e&gt;OTH WOI'IKED
W I ~ OUR NANOS/
AN:::r YOU HAVE A
MECHAN ICAL MIND .. ·
A COLLEGE

DEGREE .•.

YEAH ... THERE
MUST BE SOME
SKILLS WE HAVE
"THAT ARE
" MARKETAB LE: ...
BUT WH,IIT??!!

(Do you have a question for
the exptJrts? Write "Ask the
ExpBrls, " care of this newspaper. Individual quesrtons will
bB answered if aCcompanied
by stamped, sell-addressed
envelopes. The most interesting questions will be used In
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

CHIMNEY CLEANED .
stov~ lnslallod. Reasonable
rate. Call the Chimney
sweep, 1·373-6057.

street

29 Anesthetic

UDonof

31 Tournwnent
tenn

ADswer
35 Can't

stomilch

37 Incensed
39 Laceowning
queen

40 Tidy
4.2 Tiny
bird
0 Church

34 Shoo!

21 Debate

Junction 8; Bionic Woman 13;

fixture

b-+-+--1-

33 But of

Must speak cl~arly and
be able to read well . Pay 1
hour plus liberal bonus
for production . Two
shifts available, 9 a. m .
to 330 p. m . and 4 p. m .
to 9 p, m . dally . High
school age OK . For
more Information call
992·5900, Do not · call
Jaycee~ concerning this
ad .
MEN, WOMEN, BDYS
OR GIRLS to do light,
temporary
delivery
work fOr Meigs Co.

J

a

y

c

e

e

34 Chinese
kingdom
30Contend
38 PBWd
t1 Furniture

mover

•BARNEY

qulr•ments, no eK .
perience
necessary .

0 - Bluff,

HOW

Ark.
44 Clothing

DUMB!!

~Sicilian

THAT BRIDGE

volcano

LOOKS

teTried

PLENTY
5AFE10

out
47 Stimulate

ME

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

.....

One letter sim~ly stands !or anoLher. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, eLc. Single letters.
aposLrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lellers are different.

•

Shop·A·Thon Program .
No edUcational re ·
qulrements, no age
limit, no experience
necessary. Must have
neat appearance, a
valid driver's license

and your own transportation . Must know Meigs
Co. area well . Earn up
to S50 per day. Work any
hours you like between 9
a. m . and 9 p.m . dallv .
High School age OK .
For more Information
call 99:1·5900. Do not call
the Jaycees concerning
thlsad.

AXVDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

lt

'

PF.ANUTS

CRYPTOQUOTES

, ~ERE 'S JOE COOL
.,
•,

',.
•'

"'·

'·
•.'·
'·

HAN61N6 AROUND THE
8ULLETIN 801\RP

TloiiS IS A GREAT WM
iO MEET SOME REALLI(
NEAT Clo!ICKS

OF COURSE , SOME OF
THEM THINK THE~'RE
PRETTI&lt; SMART...

OBUPYVE
YV

YQ

BAKDQ

•

15; Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hillbilli es a, Sesame Sl . 20.33 ;
Six Million Dollar Man 10; Tom
&amp; Jerry lJ; Spectreroan 17.
4:JQ-Lone Ranger 3; Petticoat

course
2S LADIES to dO tem ·
parary,
.telephone
surv•v work for Meigs
Co. Jove...' Shop-A·
Thon Program. No age
limit, no educational re -

i·

4 :QO-Mister Cartoon 3 ; Password

3%Hwy.

,, .
"

Movie

1:3D-As The World Turns 8, 10;
National Geographic 33 .
2 ,00-Doctors 3,15; One Lite to Live
6, 13; 2:25-News 17.
2:3Q-Anolher World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8, 10; Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .
3 :3Q-Mash B; Joker's Wild 10;
Flintstones l7 : Over Easy 20.

leiUiis
fame

, ..·:

17;

Res ll e.ss 8, 10.

publlahing

family
Z8 Cultivate

Hogan's
Acres

10 , 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6' Whew! B, 10; MacNeilL ehrer Report 33.
10 :5s-CBS News 8; House Call 10;
11: 00-High
Rollers
3, 15 ;
Laverne &amp; Shirley _6, 13; Pr ice is
Right B, 10.
11: 30-Wheel ol. Fortune 3.15;
Family Feud 6, 13 ; Sesame St .
33 ; 11 :55-News 11.
12 : 00- Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10, 13; Mindreaders 15; Love
American Style 17 .
12:3D-Ryan·s Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Not For Women
Only 15 ; Movie "Night in
Paradise" 17; E lee. Co. 33.
1,oo-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the

(NEWSPAPER ENTERP~ISE ASSN .)

with assiat
5 V .I.P. in your
painter
office
Ye~terday's
lC Woodsy : var. 1 Each
Z2 Notion
15 Designate
7 Sesame
Z3 "C'- Si Bon"
11 Function
8 Dilagree
Z5 Kind of
17 Swnmer : Fr. II State : Fr.
tag
18 At the stem 10 Frenclunan'8
21 111 love -/'
Ill Craw's cry
name
he said
Z2 Southern
11 Colorado
sheepishly
beauty
Indian
30 Venerate
U Di.tlntegrate 19 Londoo

Italian

Green

Morning Magazine 13;
" Moonlight Sonata " 17.

4 Ending

Z'7 Noted

10;

Mister . Rogers ' Neighborhood
Special 33.
10:00-Card Sharks ,3, 15; Edge of
Night 6;· Allin The Family 8,10;

THOM,t.S JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN
1 Shout
1 Overwhelming
&lt;i applauae
2 Concept
5 Beach
SOratorical
habltuee
attacks
11 Arab land
12 Drug
13 Spanish

6:3D-Dragnet 17; 6 : 45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 : so-Good Morning ,
West Virginia 13; 6 :5$-Chuck
White Reports 10 ; News 13.
7,00- Today 3, 15 ; Good Morning
America 6, 13; Friday Morning 8;
Salman 10; Three Slooges-Little
Rascals 17 ; 7: 1s-A.M . Weather
33.
7,3Q-Family Altair 10; 8:0Q-Capt .
Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It To

Heroes

by

"is shacJr. is

6 : 1G-News 17 ; 6: 25-Societies In
Transition 10 .

· 9 30-Bob Newharl B;

~tUa1·~~~
6~
9-13

13; 5: 55--Summer Semester 10.

6:00-700 Club 6,8; PTL Club · 15;

Friends 8; Love of Life 10; Lucy
Show 17; Mister Rogers 33 .

992·2143 .
E·C ELKTIII:ICAL Controctar
serving Ohio Volley r-elon .
Six days o week , 24 houra Mr·
vice. Emergency coils. Coli
882·2952 or 882-:!A"&lt;.

FRIDAY , SEPTI:MBER 14,1979
5:20-World ai Large 17 ; 5:45Farm Report 13 ; 5:5Q-PTL Club

Beaver 17 ; Sesame St. 33 .

Back comes a club and the
contract fails .

South ducks the lirst spade,

but wlM

1:00-

8,3Q-Romper Room 17.
9,00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Phil Donahue 13,15; Porky Pig &amp;

East's.

play.

be.n CorK•IIed? loti your
Phone
operators license?

BIG AUCTION every Wed .. 7

Services Offered

North Eaat

Today's hand was designed
by Mr. Sommerville to show
how declarer can bring home
a difficult game by careful

Al.l .f.Y OOP ..

RACINE, 0 .
Ht·274JDI"

Auctions
pm. Hartford Community
Center, Hartford, WV, 4 r'nil•s
above
Pomaroy· Mason
Bridge.

Wut

6,1 3;

Tom orrow 3; New~ 15.

It is an unusual and rather

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Soatag

V. C. YOUNG Ill

WV .

Fr" estlm.otes . Coll9o49-2686.

742-2233.

~LLERS "·

1'172 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3

PT .
PLEASANT .
304-675-4.24.

12: 40-Baretta

contract.

t A92

+ AQ

(FREE ESTIMATE)

742-23411 .

1000 miles, blue in color. l ike
new. Call after 5 p. m.

SOLID MA PLE bunk beds,
bookcase headboards with 5
drawer dresser , hutch. ,J96J
Va- Ko -shun -ette
camper,
sleeps six , Beorcot Ill scanner,
women ' s coot , si:ze 16.

O H, SURf ...
THAT, ANNIE, SEEMS ro
HAVE. SEEN ~E GENERAl HU~OOEDOR
SQ ... ALL DfAD
tOEA ... BUT OTHERS
NOW, PORE
KEPT 0~ TRYl~G '"

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

1'165 GlNERAL 60x12 , 2 bodr.

bedroom.
1970 Vlndole 12•63 with IX ·
panda, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moan 12x60 3 bedr.
1973 Skyline12~e55 2 bedroom.
1972 Bononzo 12•52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALlS,

, • AKQ75

Opening

19H U • 70 mobile home.
Good condltfon . 9'92-5858.

B' S MOBILE HOME SALES, PT.
PLEAS...NT . WV . 304-675-4424 .

News 33; Movie " The Prime of
Miss Jean Brodie" 10; Movie
"The Strange Love Of Martha
Ivers" 17.

This was just good dummy
play not difficult by today's
standards. Ho10ever, Sommer·
ville overlooked a defensive
play by East that would have
led to the defeat of the

• 1088
+ J Hl111

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: East

ADD ONS &amp;·
REMODELING

AUTOMOBILE

CAUCUS

dummy's diamonds.

--.

so~
t A 42

~

OHPHAN ANNIE-THEY WENT TIIA.T·A·WAY

fOtWS ~10 IT \o/&lt;15,

..

EAST
• K 10 8 7

• QJ 98
• J 9113
• QJ
+ K62

~------------ 9 ~_ ~3~~--~

U'ITI..E ORPHAN ANNIE

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning. Steam
cleaned . Free e1tlmote.
Reasonable rotea . Scot·
chguard .
99:Z · 6309
or

19?0Sylvo, 60x12, 2bedr .
19?0Costle. 60x12. 2 bedr.
1974 Mark line, 50.12, 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant, 12)(60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional. 12&gt;1:50, 2 beck

.I

~

Pomeroy

Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
L----~8 · 26 · 1 mo.

1·12

I

WEST

&lt;

.•'

.

992·2367

992·6011

sand,

WOOD DRY Oak and hickory .
Some gr19en wood. SIB pickup
load, will deliver. 985·3906.
21/t miles east of Chester on

&amp;
styling ,

GENDER

nine . West's toughest defense
is a second diamond . South
takes his ace, cashes the last
two high trumps, leads a
fourth round to West's jack
and is now able .to discard his ~
queen of clubs on one of

• 53
• 10 8 4 2
t K7543
f

men's

Book. Beat 33.
11: 3D-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Starsky
&amp; Hutch 6,13 ; Columbo B; ABC

Answer: What he got when he invited her to a barn

NORTH

•'

Ph . 992·2174

)"

(Answers lomorrow)

Jumbles: SLANT HELLO

+83

Pomeroy, 0 .

x(ldi I xxx xi

I

Pre~e~lews -33.
11 : 00- News 3, 6 , 8, 10, 13, 1S; New
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavett 20;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

·~

8·21 ·1 mo.

107 Sycamore &lt;RNrl

77 E . St~t e, Athens

form the surp'rise answer, as sug·

gested by ttre above canoon.

BRIDGE

Free Estimates

Hours9-1 M., w., F .
Other times by appoint·
ment.

10 ,00-20·20 6, 13; Bar naby Jones
8,10; Onedln Line 17; News 20.
10 :3Q-NBC News 3,15; HOCking
Valley B luegrass 20; Sneak

Now arrange ihe circled letters to

Tbursday, Sept. 13

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO.

I

0

Oam ien 33 .

dance- THE OLD STALL

Feder~l
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin. Lo.na.

For Sale

98S-4HM .

Ves!Ord ay's

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Real Estate Loans

Mswer. His "K

..

992·5304, 992·2238

4 30 ·tf c

Real Estate lor Sale

weeks old . J0.4·8a2·3242.

LIMESTONE ,

~YJ
ERBQIR·I
A

Caii 992·S266

Pets for Sale

COAL ,

WAT "THE MON51'ER
Vlf&gt;IIED HIS
Af&gt;TROLOISER FOR.

All MasonaiJ Wo~
Foundation,
Brick Laying,
Concrete Finishing.

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

TRllll E R NOW ll VllllA&amp;LIE:

I KEREC
til tJ

Services
OHered

J" mile off Rt. 7 by -pass
on St . Rt . 124 , toward
Rutland.

992 5871 .

' Lorge l ivi ng room , fireplace,
boy window, forma l dining
ro o m. kitchen , lot-s of
cabinets, 6 bedroom s, modern
both , cabinets, Iorge porch ,
patio off dining room . oak
woodwork, carpeted. garage,
nice yard . Acreage available,
coli louise Di x:on, 698-5211 or
Robe rt Clark , 742·2966 .

C1

.C·S·tfc

Garage

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 13. "19 .
7: JD-Hollywood Squares 3; Bonkers
6; Joker ' s Wild B; $100,000 Name
Thai Tune 10; Nashville on the ·
.Road 13; Ar chie Bampbell 15;
My Three Sons 17; MacNeil Lehrer Reporf 20,33.
8 : ~Holocaust 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Movie "Gator "
B, 10; National Geographic ,20,33;
Movie " Baby, the Rain Must
F~ll " 17.
8: 30- Benson 6,13; 9 : 00- Barney
M iller 6, 13; Black Man' s Land 20;

~""'~~- ........ =.- ....

949· 2862--949 · 2160

Roger Hysell

614 · U, · 41~ S E~t" ni11g ~

SALE .

o.

Weavers

Skiff Building)
Ph. 949· 2710 or 949·2150
8·29 ·1 mo

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

1 Mi l l'S EiHI Of Wt lacl!!&gt;\l'i ll l!

FOR

WASHINGTON STATE_
AND YOU'VE Gar A
DANGEROUS

N'ew, repair,
gutters and
down spout$ ..
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

tnstructor-

Television
Viewing

by Hen riArnol~an~ Boblee

Unscramble these four JI.Jmbles,
one letter to each square, to form rr~===~:::::::;;J
foi.Jr ordinary words.

H. L Writesel
Roofing

OPENINGSEPT.lHh
Clnses: Ballet
Tap&amp; Jan
Aves-4 and up
Shirley Carpenter

REAl ESTATE: I acre lot in Rig.
gscrest Manor, between. Tuppers Plains and Chester.
Phone 985-3929 and 9BS.41'J.f:l.

HOMt

SIX YEAR old border collie,
minds good, ex cellent watch
dog; B mo . old mole , part
block and ton coon hound .

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

e Repla_cemel'it
Windows

Real Estate for Sale

watch dog . 992-5992 .
LOOKING FOR a good home
for o brown and white fema le
terrier. 3 to 6 mo. old. Also
shepherd beagle, femal e,
very young, loves people,
frisky. Must see to appreciate.
Humane Society, 992·6260.

INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING
• Storm Windows

Phone 992 -2181

TWO PUPPIES, good with
children. 247·3863 .
BLACK

Announcing Opening Of

• StOrm Doors

Mgr.

SEVEN ROOMS and both. 2
acres . 992-2523 .
FOR SALE : 3 bedroom house.
We ll water . In Bradbury .

shepard, male dog, J years
old. Very gentle. E)(cellent

J&amp;L an&gt;WN

• Insulation

Jack W . Carsey

992-7255.

BEAGLE PUPS , wel l .,red,
trained and started beagles .
Rea.sonobly priced . Trade for
gun of equa l o,~o l ue .

LARGE Block building 40)(60,
for gorage or storage. Corner
Pomeroy ' 2nd St., Mason .
Phone 31J.4·8B2-2971 .

c:?.-.-.:::

992·6260.

99'1·7721 .

ONE MOBILE Home, un·
furnished . 21/t miles from M id·
dleport. Interested persons
coll 992·6305.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

I UNDERSTAND I'M A CIVILIAN, IN

Business Services

I

Sales &amp; Service

Taylor . 614 -367-7220.

992-5786.

ANTIQUE AUCTION

COUPLE WOULD like to rent
house or nice opt in Pomeroy·
Middleport
oreo .

opts . for
rnet. Rental
assistance
availab l e .
LARGE HOME in letart Fal ls
area. References . requ ired .
For information . co'ntoct Fred
W. Crow , evenings, 992 -2562
or 99'2·2692, days .

HOT POINT
and
GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances

REASONABLY PRICED country
house in Pomeroy area. Phone
965·-4366 evenings.

992·5434.
ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor. 992·7787.

YARD SALE. Friday and Satur·
day . Sept . 14·15. Something
for everyone. Clothes, toys ,
house plants , misc. items. 3rd
house on left on 684 in Hor·
risonvil le. Wa tch for signs.

Wanted to R e11t

YARD SALE. Friday only. 9-5. -!,. LIVE· IN HOUSEKEEPER wonted
Vic Brown's. Minerso,~ i lle .
In excl'tonge for home and
Swing set, boot. lawn mower.
security . 985--4392 or write ba )(
Baby' s. teenager and women's
no. 46898, long Bottom , OH.
clothing, misc .
CAR SALESMAN . Send resume
YARD SALE , Approx. 3 miles
fo 8011 743, POmeroy, OH
45769 . No e~:perien c e
above Fairgrounds on Old 33.
Ernest Cullums. Thurs .. Fri . necessary .
Sot. 9-ol .
RESPONSIBLE PERSON to baby

ANTIQUES . FURNITURE, glass,
ch ina , anything. See or call
Ruth Gosney , ontiqu~s . 26 N.
2nd ..
Middleport ,
OH .

Robert E . Buck
Judge
Deputy Clerk

YARD SALE Sept. 13 and 1~ .
Thurs . and Fri. 10·6. 308 Page
St. Middleport . Boys' clothing
si tes . 2 to 12. Girls' ond
women's cloth ing sizes 3·4 to
11. 12. Avon, Singer sawing
machine. comero and lots o~
misc.

TWO FAMILY Yard Sole.
Wanted to Buy
1
Clothea, household toys, hand
CHIP WOOD. Poles mox. tools and misc. Wed.- Fri. 9-~ .
diameter 10'' on largest and. 530 lou ref St .. corner of Beech
$12 per ton. Bundled slab ..$10 by elementary school ,
per ton. Deli vered to Ohio
Pollet Ca.·, At. 2, Pomeroy . GARAGE SALE . William
99'1-268'1 . .
Reeves residence on 681 at
OLD FURNITURE , ice boxes , Alfred. Sept. 13, 14, 15.
brass beds, Iron beds , desks . Truckload of new carpet, 50
etc.. complete households. ceram ic planters, dishes .
Write M .D. Miller, Rt. 4, cosmetics , lamps , books ,
clothes, old records, baby fur·
Pomeroy or co ll 992-7760.
niture , other new items.
OLD COINS , pocket watches,
clou rings, wedding bands,
diamonds. Gold or si l o,~er , Call LARGE YARD Sol&amp;. Nice clean
school clothes, all sizes, men's
J. A . Wom! ley, 742-2331 .
and women's, baby clothes
WANTED : SAW logs . Poyrhant and knick-knocks , something
• upon delivery to our yard. 7:30 for everyone . Sept . 13, 14, 15
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney at Mary layne's, ht house on
Hardwoods, SR 339 , Barlow, left after you cross railroad
OH. 678-2'190.
frocks at Cheshire.

Yard Sale

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
on Sept. 11, 1979, in

Yard Sale

GUN SHOOT . EVERY FRIDAY
7,JO PM RACINE GUN CLUB.
FACTORY CHOKE GUNS ON·
LY .

I5 Wortisor Under
ldlt)'
2days

Notices

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ·!

YXRNPYSNQ

NXKAQQ

VBA . PAOYDYAXV

OS IA

YXGAD, AXGAXV

RSBX

G.

ST

Z A·

YV.

-

PSOCATAKKAP ,
VBYPG
RINGS AND JEWEU! ARE NOT

Yesterday'• Cryptoquote:

JIFTS BU'l' APOLOGIES FOR GIFTS. THE ONLY TRUE
GIFT IS A PORTION OF mYSELF.- EMERSON
,. In ltn K lftt ' " " ' ' " " Syndlcltt, tnc .

Little Rasca ls 15; Gil ligan' s Is.
17 .
S:oo--Bonan za ,3; Sanfprd &amp; Son 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle 10; Abbott &amp;
Costello 15; My Three Sons 17.
5&lt;!0-News 6; Gomer Pyle 8; Elec.
Co. 20; Mary Tyler Moore 10;
Happy Hays Again 13 ; Lucy
Show 15; I Dream of Jeannie 17;
Doctor Who 33 .
6 :00-News 3,8,10,1 3,15; ABC News
6; Carol BurMtt 17; VIl la Alegre
20 ; Once Upon A Classic 33 .
6 ,3Q-NBC News3,15 ; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy
20,33.
7,00-Cross'·Wlts 3; Tic lac Dough
8; Newl ywed Game 6, 13; News
10; Love American Style 15;
Dick Cavett 20,33 .
· 7:3Q-Hollywood Squares 3; S1 .98
Beauty Show 6; Family Feud 10;
Pop Goes The Counlry 15, 13; My
Three Sons 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33.
8 ,oo-Diff' rent Strokes 3, 15; Fan·
tasy Is. 6, 13; Incredible H·ulk
B, lO ; Washington Week In
Review 20,33; Movie " Curse of
the Voodoo" 17.
B: 3G-· -Facls of Life 3.15 ; Wall Street
Week 20,33.
9,00-Movle " Not Above Suspicion"
J i Movie "The Bad News Bears
In Breaking Training" 6 , 13;
Rockford Files 15; Dukes of
Hazzard 8, 10; Buckeye Holiday
20: Money , News and Views 33.
9 , 30- l ssues
in World
Com munications 20 ; La Grande
Parade Du Jazz 33.
10 ,00- News 3, 20 ; Dallas 8, 10 ;
Baseball 17.
10 : 30 - Baseball
3;
Consumer
Survival Kit 20 ; Oavld Susskind
33 .
11 ,oo-- News 3. 6.8, 10. 13. 15; Two
Ronn les 20 .
11,3o--Ai an King Goes Nashville 6;
J ohnny C'arson lS; Movie " One
Deadly Owner" 8; ABC News 33;
Movie " TI •e Nanny " 10; Miss
Nalional Teen-Ager Pageant 13.
12 00- - Monly Python 's Flying
Circus 33 ; 12 :3D-Movle " Mr .

•.'

,.i
,
&lt;

'

•.

;
i

''
'
'

Ace " 1(
1 : 00- Midnight Special 3, IS ; Juke·
Box 8; Movie VThe lost Con·
l ine nt" 10; Ironside 13; 2:ooNews 13.

2: 25-- News 17; 2:3Q-News 3; 2: 45Niovie " The Pigeon That Took
Rorn e" 11; 4 ·. so-Dragnel 17 .
J

1.·

'

�12 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom.~e;;,;r,;;o11y,~000.;.,T00h•u•rsd-ay;,;,0S0e•p;.t•. l3....;.,1 • 9 7 • 9 - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ! " '

j

1
I
I

r---)(~~-~-][j~~;;~l;~-!
I

ELBERFELD$

I

EARL RICHMAN
Earl M. (Pappy ) Riclunan, 72, a
resident of Parkersburg and formerly a resident of the Gallipolis
area, died Wednesday in Marietta
Memorial Hospital. He was a retired
construction millwright.
He was born in Baltimore, Md.,
son of the late George A. and Katie
Mae Peer Richman. He was a member of the Lutheran church.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.
Evelyn Higgins Richman; three
daughters : Mrs. Norman (Sue) McDowell, Stow, Ohio; Mrs. Ralph
· (Rose) Phipps, Owensville, Ohio and
Mrs. Virgil (Carol) South,
.Kaiser lantern, Germany. Eight
grandchildren survive.
One brother and one sister
preceded hini in death.
Friends may call at the Leavitt
Fwleral Home in Parkersburg after
7:30p.tn. Thursday.
ANITA LYNN BALL
Anita Lynn Ball, 22, Minersville,
died Tuesday at the St. Joseph
Hospital in Parkersburg, w. Va.
Mrs. Ball attended the Minersville
United Methodist Church and was a
laboratory assistant at Veterans
Memorial Hospital . She was a 1975
graduate of Eastern High School.
Surviving are her husband,
Thomas E. Ball; a son, Christopher
· Ryan ; her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Rog er Buckley, Route 3, Pomeroy;
two brothers, Kevin and Bryce, and
a sister, Renee Buckley, and
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Bailey and Benjamin~' . Buckley , all
of Route 3, Pomeroy . Also surviving
are her great-grandmother, Mae
Reitmire, New Haven, W.Va .; a
sister-in -law , Diana Buckley,
Pomeroy, and several aunts, uncles
and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Harvey Koch
and th e· Rev. James Leach
officiating. Burial will he in the Mt.
Hermon Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funer al home anytime.

SPECIAL REDUCED PRICES FOR FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14th
and SATURDAY. SEPTEMBER 15th.
OPEN . FRIDAY NIGHT TIL
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE

5Uf=TE_R

COATS AND ClARKS

SAL~

*Cross Your Heart bras.
*Support Can Be Beautiful •'ras.
*Living bras.
*I Can't Believe It's A Girdle.

WOMEN'S
COAT SALE

Big selection of solid colors and variegated
colors. 3'12 ounce skeins, stock up now.

Junior 5/6 thru 15/16
Missy 6 thru 20
Extra sizes 12'12thru 24 112

Sizes up to
60 inches long.

, I

SAVE 25 PER CENT

TO

· ----·-~·-··--·--·----·--~----·--·--·-·------~~-·--·--~-·-4
DISCONTINUED

RUSSTEEN SPOR~EAR

STYLES AND COLORS

QUILTED
BEDSPREADS

Two racks of quality pre-teen
fashions.
Mix and match blouses,
sweaters, skirts, slacks,
jackets and tops .

The Editor:
Horray for Senator Frank Church
and the United States Senate! It's
about time we stop mollycoddling
the Russians and conceding to their
demands! Mr. Church :s statement
that the Senate will not ratify SALT
· U unless the Russians withdraw
their troops from Cuba is the best
news I've heard in awhile, and
hopefully the beginning of a new era
of much !inner dealings with our
enemy, the Soviet Union.
We must be sure, also, that SALT
U is designed in the best interests of
our national security, and not the
best interests of detente. Nikita
Khrushchev sald in 1960 "We will
bury you," and no matter what they
say in 1979, that is still their goal :
The conquering of the United States.
Witness the gradual buildup of
~ir navy, air force, and civil defen·
ae over the last 15 years.
The answer to this country's
problems lie not in seeking "detente" with our enemies, but in seeking
to follow the admonition · of God to
Solomon in Second Chronicles cha!&gt;'
ter 7:
"If my people, which are called
according to my name, shall humble
themselves, and pray, and seek my
face, and tum from their wicked
ways, then will I hear from heaven,
and forgive their sin, and heal their
land.''
Sincerely, Greg Hines, 42712 St.
Rt. 124, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

. COUPLES END MARRIAGES
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court Rhonda A. SmaU filed for
support und er the Reciprocal
Agreement Act against Raymond E.
Lyons, Jr .
Marriages dissolved were Wanda
Caruthers and Bernard Caruthers;
Stephen R. Pullen and Janel Sut
Pullen . Jan et Sue Pullen was
restored to her former name of
Janet Sue Slaven.
·
Julie Richmond was granted a
divorce from Larr y Richmond .

Reg. 112.00 ........... Sale '10.19

Full sizes, twins, kings
and
queen
slies .
Regular prices up to
$43.99. Limited quanti ·
ty,

Reg. 14.00 ........... Sale 11.89
1

1

Reg. '17.00 ........... Sale '14.49

1h PRICE

1

Reg. 22~00 ....... .: ... Sale 118.69
SALE

CHANNEL MASTER

WOMEN'S BLOUSES
Special two day sale prices on our
stylish wnd colorful lines of

women's blouses.

Regular slzes~Oto38

CB ANTENNAS
Power wings, gutter mount styles,
mirror mount styles and trunk

Reg. '13.00 ....... Sale 111.09

mount styles. Coaxial cable and

Reg. 1l6.00 ........ Sale 113.59

mounting hardware included.

Reg. 118.00 ......... Sale 115.29

REDUCED 20 PER CENT

MEETS FRIDAY
Mary Shrine 37, White Shrine of
Jerusalem, will meet Friday, Sept.
14, at 8 p.m. There will be potluck
refreshments .

Policies changed

denims, corduroys . 100 per cent

cotton twills and colton·poly
blends. Walot sizes 28 to ,j2,
lengths 30 to 36 Inches. Tremeri·
dOus 5election of styles. Save
now.
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans
Fashion Jeans

MIDDtf;TOWN, Ohio (AP I The Middletown Board of
Education reinstatated Thursday
night the school district 1s
program ol extra-eurricular activities, which was cut after
voten rejected an operating levy
this week.
School Superintendent Sam
Daltm and personnel director
Marion McEvoy BMOunced they
will take early retirement.
Dalton will leave Dec. 31, and
McEvoy next April! .
Also, board president Betty
Lou Nein and board member
James Shull sald they will withdraw .., candidates for reelection.
Announcement of the reversal
of 11\e earlier decision was
greeted by cheers from some 700
•.. people who jammed the meeting

$9.56
$11.96
$12-76
$13.56
$14.36
$15.96

MEN'S
WORK UNIFORMS
Another shipment just rece l v@d.
Complete selection of sizes In

'NOrk trousers from 29 to SO, all
lengths and shirts In sizes 14'h to
20. Solid color khaki, charcoal,
navv blue, dark olive or forest
green .

Trouser sizes 2f to ••

room.

$1.95

Trquser sizes.-. to so
Sf.f5
Matching Shirts Silts 14'h to
17
S7.f5
Matching Shirts SIIH 11 to

20

Incident no issue
WASHINGTON ( AP) - Sen.
Howard H. Baker Jr. sald Thur·
aday the Chappaqulddlck accident would not be a legitimate
laaue in the 1'*1 presidential
campaign lf Sen . Edward M.
Kennedy Is the Democratic

sus

Matchint Short 51"•• Shlrta
$6.95

nominee.

Baker, who Is campaigning for
the Republican nomination, said
that if he and Kennedy were the
majoc party presidential candidates "I would never mention
Chappaquiddick."
In July !969, a car 'driven by
Kennedy went off a bridge on
Chappaqulddlck IBland, which Is
part of Martha's Vineyard, oft
the Massachusetts coast. Mary
Jo Kopechne, who had worked for
Robert F . Kemedy , was a
passenger in the car and
drowned .
Baker called a news conference
to announce the support ol Sens.
William Cohen, R-Malne, and
Robert Stafford, R-Vt., for his
presidential bid.
But most of the questions concerned a potential KeMedy candidacy.

SAL£!
caPhar•tt
CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

WORK CLOTHES
Ideal for construction workers,
fermers, hunters and general Wear .
Complete 5eloctlon of styles and alzes.

Bib overall•, lined coveralls, lined
jackets, h00d5, coats and vests.

SALE PRICES

SALE

COSMETIC SALE

SWIVEL
ROCKERS

REVLDN

Reg. $189.00 to $259.00

Save 20 per cent on our entire stock
of Coty and Revlon cosmetics. Nail
polish, powder, moisturizers,
lipsticks', cologne, hair products,
mascara and eye shadow.

Famous Kroehler quail . ty in a large array of
colors, fabrics and
styles.

YOUR CHOICE

$158

88

Gowns, pajamas, sleepers, robes.
Takj' advantage of these sale
pr ices on quality sleepwear your

MEN'S AND YOUNG MEN'S

$16.95 BLUE DENIM

Driving rains from what was left
of Frederic - little more than a low
pressure system - swept north to
New York state today sending
streams over their banks in western
New York and backing up mocning
rush hour traffic in Buffalo.
The storm, which already had
pelted parts of Tennessee,
Kentucky , West Virginia an \I
western Pemsylvania with heavy
rains, had dumped more than 5
inches of rain on Buffalo, N.Y. , by 9
a.m., foccing the closing of all
schools in the state's second largest
city . Many suburban schools also
closed.
SoJ;JJe roads in Buffalo were
flooded. stacking up traffic jams
several miles long .
Heavy rains in northwestern
Pemsyivania this !Jlorning caved in
the roof of the municipal bus station
in Erie, Pa. No injuries were
reported but five buses were
damaged.
Earier the storm dumped as much
as 7 inches of rain on western and
central Kentucky and up to 6 inches
oo eastern Tenn-. Three inches
fell on Cincinnati and Erie as the
.Vstem moved north.

flood warnings posted.
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
F1ood warnings remained in effect

today in 17 counties across the state.
Central Ohio appeared to be
hardest hit by the rains. Schools
were closed in Co lumbus and
·several suburban districts as high
water made a nwnber of roads
impassable . The start of the
workday at state offi ces in
Columbus was delayed until 10 a.m.
because of the weather.
1n Akron, police said residents of
low~ying areas along the Cuyahoga
River were advised to leave their
homes and apartments because of
the threat of flooding. More than
three inches of rain feU overnight in
the Akron area, causing widespread
flooding of streets and basements.
Dozens of streets and roads were
dosed because of flooding in Akron
and Barberton. General Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. dosed its plant and
offices in Akron .
Some minoc evacuations were also
repocted in southwestern Ohio and
oorthern Kentucky .

MEN'S 113.95

Men's Western Shirts -

children will need This winter.
Sizes 4to6• and 71o 14.
Reg . $6.00 ........ Sale $4.79
Reg, $8.00 ........ Sale$6.39
~!it-"'" Reg. $11.00 ....... Sale$8.79
Reg. $16:oo ..... .. Sale 12.79

Saturday .

S}Q99

Long sleeve styles In size•
•moll, medium, large and
extra large. Chambray•.
flannels, gingham checks,
plald5, solid color suedes,
POlyester knits. Entire
stock on sole.
·
Men's $12.95
WESTERN SHIRTS
Mtn'S$1U5
WESTi!RN SHIRTS
Mtn'I$1U5

._,."".·"' WESTERN SHIRTS
Mtn'l $17.95

WESTERN SHIRTS

MARIJUANA DFSTROYED - The Meiga County Sheriff's Department Thursday destroyed 184 plants of marijuana that was confiscated
recently in Columbia Township. On hand for the burning were Sheriff

$10.30
$11.20
$13.50

f14 .40 .

ELBERFELD$ IN POME_·ROY
~

....

FRED TAYLOR, Rt. 2Bidwell, (Gallia County), center, and Vaughn
(right) who operate Valley View Dalry Fann - location of the 1979
Jackson Eltel18ion Area Dairy Day, Sept. 25. The "challenge feeder " pic·
tured shove wlll be one of the tour stops.

James Proffitt, Deputy Dave Ohlinger and sheriff investigator Gary
WoHe. The burning took place at the Meigs County Highway Department.

Ohio River traffic hitting bottleneck
Herald Dilpaltb
Another bottleneck occurred at
the Ga!Upo~ Locks and Dam 1'hursday .., barge tows waited in !smile-long Unes to get through the
Ohio River facliity.

And Thursday's scene up and
down the river could prevail for a
week or longer.
The reason: repairs are being

made to the upper gates in the main

Dr. Witherelljoins
Meigs Medical ·Center
The Ohio Valley Health Services
Foundation President, Dr. William
H. Allen, Jr., announced today the
addition of a second family practice
physician at the Meigs County
Medical Clinic in Pomeroy.
Dr. James Wetherell will begin his
practice on September 00 in the
same suite of offices currently oc. cupled by Dr. Wilma Mansfield.
Dr. Witherell, his wife Jeanie and
sons, Jason and Joshua, have moved
into their newly purchased home oil
Naylors Run. The Witherells recenUy moved to Pomeroy from
Tacoma, Washington where Dr.
WethereU, then a Major in the Army
Medical Corps, served oo the
Family Practice staff of Madigan
Army Medical Center for two years.
Prior to this, Dr. Witherell cmpleted a three year farnlly practice
residency at Tripier Army Medical
Center, Honolulu , Hawaii.
A diplomat ci the American

Academy of Family Practice, Dr.
Witherell, a 1974 graduate of the
Ohio State University School of
Medicine, will be providing much
needed health care for the community.
The Meigs County Medical Clinic,
located in the Medical Building ad·
jacent to Veterans · Memorial
HOIIJlital, is managed by the Ohio
Valley Health Services Foundation
in space leased from the ho8pital.
Scott LuC?as, Administrator of
Vetei'ans Memorial has indicated
the hospital is initiating plans to expand the patient treatment area in
the Medical Building. Lucas sald the
Board ci Trustees ci Veterans
Memorial feels that this expansion is
necessary to provide appropriate
treatment and examination
facilities to· meet the increasing
demand for primary health care services in the Pomeroy area.

Two persons injured
in four auto wrecks

100 per cent coHon denim, 5anlorlzed
shrunk. Wal•t sizes 27 to 50 lengths 29
t034.
,

FRIDAY &amp; smJRDAf SALE

14 ounce blue denim pre-washed,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1979

F1a .

BIB
OVERALLS

REPEAT SA LEI

Sizes 29 to 42 waist, 30 to 36 Inch
lengths - Choose boot flare or
straight leg style. Friday and

enttne

and Florida as disaster areas.
Presidential press secretary Jody
Powell said the recovery of the Gulf
Coast "is going to take years."
Frederic left six confinned dead
and two others .missing and
presumed dead on the Gulf Cst and
property damage so extensive
officials were reluctant to make
estimates.
But Florida Gov. Bob Graham
said he ieared the damage toll from
the latest tropical devastation might
surpass the $95 million racked up
David there.
The 300-year-&lt;Jld port city of
Mobile suffered the brunt of the
storm Thursday , along with
Pascagoula, Mi5,'! ., and Pensacola,

Lay-Away for
Chrlstmasl

DENIM JEANS
HOMECOM INGSERVlCES
The annual homecoming of the
Miners \' ill e United Methodist
Church will be held Sunday with
Sunday schoo l at 9 a.m. and morning
worship at 10 followed by a basket
dinner at noon. An aft ernoon
program will begin at 2 p.m. and
singers w1ll he prese nt from
Rockbrodge .

. ... in the world ·

Our entire 51ock on sale Including

M&amp;n's $11.95
Men's $14.95
Men's $15.95
Men's $16.95
Men's $17.95
Men's $19.95

..

_Today·(

Men's
Fashion Jeans

TWO
DAY'

Extra slzes40to .U,

Reg. 111.00 ........ Sale '9.39

$12.29
$13 .09
$16.39
$17.99

.

100 per cent cotton, white
with embroidered color trim.

$4500

some areas.
Cotting normal red tape, the White ·
House on Thursday designated 30
countie~ ravaged by Hurricane
Frederic in Mississippi, Alabama

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY SALE I

Dollies and Scarfs

Reg. $56.00 to $255.00

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Associated Press
President Carter 'new South today
to personally inspect the suffering
cities of the GuU Coast while the
remnants of Hurricane Frederic
dumped heavy rains west of the
Appalachians, causing flooding in

Regular •lze• 29 to 42 and extra ·
sizes 4.4to so. SOlidS and poHern•.
Most all are 100 per cent
polyester. You'll like this new
selection.

TWO DAY SALE

Our lovely new coats of the
season are at "Buy Now"
prices ... in a selection
that's not to be missed.

SALE

ON OUR
NEW FALL SELECTION

'
Men's $14.95 Slacks
Men's S15:95 Slacks
Men's $19.95 Slacks
Men's $21.95 Slacks

at y

•

Carter visits
storm damage

MEN'S
DRESS SLACKS

WINTUK
YARN

FINAL TWO DAYS

VOL XXVIII NO. 107

SAVE FRIDAY
AND SATURDAY

$149

SALE

Applauds church

.e

FRIDAY &amp;·sATURDAY SALE

PLAYTEX

•

Two per!lms were injured during
four accidents
investigated
Thursday by the Gallia,Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Officers investigated a one•vehicle
mishap on Haman Trace Rd., just
north of SR 790, at 6:45 p.m.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by David Mohler, 30,
Patriot Star Route, swerved to avoid
an oncoming unidentified vehicle.
The rear wheel of the Mohler auto
dropped off the right side of the
roadway and the birm gave way
overturning the vehicle . ·
Mohler was transported by a
relative to Holzer Medical Center for
treatment.
TI1e Mohler auto was demolished.
Officers investigated a twovehicle accident on U.S. 35, at the
junction of SR 7, at 4:30p.m .
The patrol reports that vehicles
driven by Luther Lemley, 57,
Gallipolis, and John Watkins, ' 69,
Gallipolis Ferry, collided.
A passenger in the Lemley auto,
Pearl Lemley, 79, Gallipolis,
claimed injury but was not
immediately treated.

Watkins was cited on a charge of
failure to yield while turning left.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage .
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident in Meigs
County on CR 24, just east of SR 7, at
4:36 p.in.
The patrol reports a north bound
auto operated by Edna Stewart,. 56,
Pomeroy, slid into a west bound
vehicle driven by J.C. Mulholand ,
34, Radcliff, 0., while attempting a
tum ooto CR 24.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Stewart was cited on a
charge of left of center.
Officers inv~stigated a twovehicle mishap on SR 7, four-tenths
of a mile south of TR 207, in Meigs
County, at 3:25p.m.
·
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Larry Tucker, 16,
Pomeroy, had stopped in traffic on 7.
A vehicle driven by Timothy Fry,
!8, Middleport, failed to stop and
struck the Tucker auto in the rear.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage . Fry was cited on a charge
of failure to maintain an assured
clear distance .

lock chamber,- forcing tows up to the locks has delays of more than
1,500 feet long to lock through a 36(). three hours because of the small
foot-long lockchamber, according to lock siz.es.
Jim Wheeler, chief of the lock and
The locks and dam project here
dam branch in the operations was completed in the 1930s and was
division of the U. S. Army Corps of built to serve for 50 years, said
Engineers:
Wheeler.
"Traffic is backed up because we
"It's evident that the structure ia
have to use the smaller chamber to . now outdated. The COIIUIIerclal
boats being used today are much
handle northbound and southbound
boats while ·repairs are being made larger than the locks and dam were
designed for," he said.
to the main chamber," said
''We have a self-help program for
Wheeler, who wasatthe site .
Late Thursday morning, 20 nor- situations like this. It 's a
thbound towboats were backed up
cooperative effort between in·
for 15 miles and 15 tows were waiting dustries and the Corps. Industries
apply additional boats and personnel
togo south.
Under present conditions and until to help in getting the boats through."
repairs to the 601J.loot-iong main lock
chamber are completed, the
average wai~ period for a single
boat to Jl88S through the smaller
chamber will be 54 hours, or two and
on~ourth days, Wheeler said.
Wheeler said that under normal
Three calls . were answered
conditions, every tow going through
Thursday evening and Friday
morning by the Middleport
Emergency Squad.
At 6:50p.m. the squad went to the
junior high foothall field where Bill
Blount was hurt during a practice
session. He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 6:37a.m., the unit went to an
,auto accident at Cheshire where
Miles Puckett, Salyers, Ky., had
'
received a possible broken leg and a
laceratiov. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital. At
CLEVELAND (AP) -Here are
7:04a.m. Friday, the squad went to
33 Coster St., for Martha Hwuiel who
lbe wiJmlD&amp; 1111111ben drawn
'lbursday Ia the Oblo Lottery:
had a high temperature and chest
pains. She, too, was taken to
Blue OM; Wblte 11; Gold 5;
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Wln..,·thon 13817.

Squad has
busy day

Man, 27, charged in
March 19 incident
p

A Middleport man , Phillip A.
Bradbury, '!7, has been charged in
connection with the March 19
vandalism of Kyger Creek High
School.
Appearing in Gallipolis Municipal
Court Wednesday on a charge of
criminal damaging, bOnd for
Bradbury was set at $5,000. A
preliminary hearing on the charge
was set for today .
According to a spokesman for the
Gallia County Sheriff's Department,
similar charges are pending against
two other Gallia County adults.
The spokesman emphasized that
the department 's investigation of

Weather
Clearing and cooler tonight. Low
in the low 5&amp;. Sunny, cooler and less
humid Saturday. High near 70. The
chance of rain is 20 percent tonight
and near zero percent Saturday.

the March 19 incident , during which
the building was forcibly entered
and school property damaged, has
revealed oo juvenile involvement.

Racine man wins $500
Paul Cleland, Racine, was presernted his second prize in the Ohio Lot·
tery - ,a check for $500 - at
Gloeckner's Cafe in Pomeroy Thur·
sday afternoon.
Cleland won the $000 in the weekly
50&lt;ent ticket play and was presen- ·
ted his prize at Gloeckner's where he
purchased his ticket.

Making the presentation wu Bill
Abdella, area representative Of the
Ohio Lottery.
Cleland's first prize came in
August, 1978, when .be was awarded
a new automobile as the result of a
drawing held to award prizes to lot·
tery ticket purchasers of non·
winning ticket holders.

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