<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15942" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/15942?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-15T20:50:13+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49066">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/c4370441b890b35947c1d1223392a07d.pdf</src>
      <authentication>55361ef8307cdaf702dca6253abaa8ce</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51042">
                  <text>8-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday,Sept.17, 1979

e

Dairy farmers getting boost
WASHINGTON lAP ) - It appears
tD Agriculture Department experts
that dairy farmers not only will get a
boost Oct. I of about 6.8 percent in
federal milk price supports but that
an additional raise of about 4.5
percent may be due by next spring. ·
·The Oct. I increase tentatively

was announced last week by the
department 's Commodity Credit
Corp., which is in charge of price
support programs. Effective then,
the
basic
support
for
manufacturing-grade milk of 3.5
percent fat will go up to $11.22 per
100 pounds from the current rate of

$10.51.
By law, USDAmust set milk price
supports each Oct. I - the beginning
of the dairy marketing year - at
between 75 percent and 00 percent of
parity, the indicatnr which at 100
.
percent would gtve
Ianners the'
buying power they had in 1911}.14,

Foseveral years, the Oct. I
adjustment has been at 80 percent of
parity . The tentative rare of $11.22
was estimated at the 80 percent level
beginning next month.
The law also requires a midyear
adjustment on April 1 to reflect
changes in production costs since
the support was set on Oct. 1.
For example, last Oct. 1 the
support was pegged at $9.64 per 100
pounds and adjusied upward six
months later to the current $10.51.
Actording to ba,ckground papers
.
r
considered by the CCC board last
Agencies (RESA) - the Ohio )'did·
week when it approved the increase
Eastern RESA and the South· for Oct. I, prodilctioo costs are
Central Ohio RESA.
expected to continue rising through
The project was submitted for the first six months of the new 1979approval by the Department of 80 dairy marketing year.
Economic
and
Community
Thus, the figures showed, next ·
Development's Appalachian
April 1 dairy farmers are likely to
Development Office ,
which see the support price raised again to
administers the ARC program in ar milk price supports may go up by
Ohio.
at least 11.5 percent from the
Ohio 's 1979
Appalachian
Development Plan and Project current rate.
Milk market prices have been
Investment Package contains higher then the support rates,
approximately . $8.4 million in
generally, for some time, and USDA
funding proposals for Ohio's 28
economists expect the trend to
Appalachian counties in area of
continue fairly steadily until
health, child development, energy,
production picks up seasonally next
education and natural resources.
spring.
ARC is a state-federal partnership
But the boosts in price supports do
which promotes the ecooomic and
provide a floor against precipitous
social development of the
tumbles in prices paid to dairy
Appalachian region of the United
farmers.
States.
The CCC reports said that in the
absence
of a support program "the
HOSPITAL NEWS
surpluses of milk above commercial
VETERANS MEMORIAL
demand ... could result in severely
Saturday AdJJJWions - Martha reduced prices" paid to dairy
Hunnel , · Middleport; William farmers.
Clonch, Racine; Richard Hudson,
"Faced by such depressed prices,
Syracuse; Dorothy Greathouse , producers would likely increase
Racine.
herd culling, thereby curtailing
Saturday Discharges--Billy
future productive capacity," the
Brewer, Betty Carpenter, Sharon
CCC papers said.
Smith, Francis Andrew, Belinda
"While downward adjustments to
Connolly, Faye Dunlavy , Mary
dairy cow numbers could be
Kiser.
achieved relatively rapidly ,
Sunday Admissions--Clarence rebuilding would take significantly
Norris, Racine; Virgil Saunders, longer -as much as several years
Pomeroy; Donald Covert, Pomeroy;
- resulting in sharp dislocations
Clifford Smith, Pomeroy; Mary Hill, throughout the industry as well as
Pomeroy.
higher prices at the retail level."
Sunday Discharges-Roger Athey,
Harry Swan, Evalena Pauley.
~--------------- ----------

VOL XXVIII NO. 109

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

enttne

at

Stewart's bond
set at $10,000

$40,000 grant okayed
.•

COLUMBUS - Gov. James A.
Rhodes, Saturday announced
approval of a $40,1100 grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commission
(ARC) to the Southeastern Ohio
Voluntary Education Cooperative
(SEOVEC) for the second-year
operating support of a computer
network within Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson , Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan , Perry , Vinton and
Washington counties. ·

SEOVEC, located in the city of
Athens,
provides
diverses
educational services tD local school
districts in its service area.
The grant will be supplemented
with $5,100 from state funds and
$14,900 from local sources.
SEOVEC's computer network will
be part of a consortium comprising,
in addition to SEOVEC , the
computer network of two adjacent
Regional Education Service

Eight escape East
Germany in balloon
NAILA , West Germany - Four
children and four adults bet their
lives on a hot air balloon made of
nylon and bedsheets and drifted
through the darkness of East
Germany, hitting the jackpot freedom across the border in West
Germany.
Peter Strelzek, an airplane
mechanic who designed the escape
craft, told reporters Sunday the 12mile, 21}.30 minute flight was his
second attempt to escape by balloon
from
his
communist-ruled
homeland.
" It was no longer possible for us to
lie to our children and put up with
the political cooditions in East
Germany,n he said.

He, his wife and two children,
along with stonemason Andreas
Wetzel , his wife and their two
children, got onto a gondola made of
an iron plate. Gas burners were
fired, filling the handsewn envelope
with hot air at a field near
Lobenstein and the balloon rose
aloft.
Borne toward the south by a good
breeze, the refugees flew over the
"death strip" border and put down
in this Bavarian town, far from the
border's electrified fences and
minefields. It was believed to be the
first time refugees had used a
balloon tD cross the border.
During the flight , the children
rode in the middle of the lll·squarefoot iron plate, and were huddled
around bottles of gas used to fuel the
fire that heated air in the 5,23()..
cubic-yard balloon . The adults rode
on four iron rods projecting laterally
irom the plate, each grabbing onto
inch-thick ropes attaching the
gondola to the balloon.
Strelzek said he designed the
balloon using principles he learned
from his work with airplanes.
The escape began about 1:30 a.m .,
Strelzek told reporters, and the
balloon climbed to 8,000 feet in the
moonless sky as the breeze pushed it
toward freedom.
As the balloon came down, it was
met by two West German police
officers who had raced to the landing
. site, thinking the floatin g object
might be a UFO.
"Are we in the West here ?" one of
the balloonists reportedly ask.ed.
"We were convinced that we were
in the West even before the police
officers came because we saw a
modem farm machine on the field
unlike anything we have," Strelzek
told a reporter.
He said his first attempt, during
the night of July 4, ended 220 yards

short of the border, but the
balloonists were undetected and
they returned home.
After their arrival in Naila, the
mayor reportedly offered the
families housing and jobs but the
group had not decided whether to
stay here.

President's health
reported excellent
CAMP DAVID, Md . (AP) Jimmy Carter's pePsonal physician
says
a
"comprehensive
examina lion" shows the president to
be in excellent health despite his
near-collapse in a weekend foot
race.
":r'he president's healtjl is
excellent and his strength i!l' fully
returned," White House deputy
press secretary Rex Granum said
after the Sunday examination by
Navy Rear Adm . William Luash.
"He feels fine."
The stress of running a difficult
6.2-mile course Saturday in the
Cawctin Mountain National Park
caused Carter to become
overheated, Granum said.
Thesident was treated for heat
exhaustion, Granum said, quoting
Lukash as saying arduous muscle
work demanded by the hilly course
brought oo the condition.
Carter became wobbly and nearly
collapsed ahout 4 miles into his first
competitive effort. He dropped out
of the race and returned
immediately to Camp David, just
100 yards away.
The president rested several hours
and then returned to the park for an
awards ceremony. where he told
reporters, "They had to drag me off.
I didn't want to stop."
Carter explained he was trying to
cut his own best time for the course,
which he said he run four times in
the past.
"Our best time was 50 minutes and
we were trying to cut that by ahout
four minutes today and didn't quite
make it,'' he said .

An avid jogger for almost a year,
Carter called it a "good race" and
urged his fellow runners to become
evangelists lor the sport.

TO MEET TONIGHT
There will be a special meeting of
the Meigs High School Band
Boosters Association torilght at 7:30
p.m. in the band room. Among the
items to be discussed will be the pur·
chase of band jackets.

New York will not accept
nurse examination results
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP ) - In a move
that could affect more than 100,1100
nursing candidates, New York
officials have decided not to honor
th e results of · a · nationwide
certification examination because of
reports of cheating .
The state Education Department
said Saturday it would not accept the
results of the test because the exam
may have been sold for as much as
$2,1100 to nursing candidates in at
least four states before the exam
dares .
"We began getting letters in mid·
July from candidates who said they
had either purchased the exam or
knew of people who had, " said
Thom as Sheldon, coordinator of
professional ed uca ti on for th e
department .
He said the letters promoted the
depa rtm ent to begin checkin g
failure rates.
"There was a dramatic drop in the
failure rare in some cases," he said.
"We noti~ that many people who
were taking the exam "s repeaters

showed
a
201}.400
point
improvement."
He said about 70 percent of
foreign-trained candidates failed the
July exam, instead of the usual 85
percent to 90 percent, while there
was a small change in the usual 10
percent failur e rate among
domesti cally
trained
nurse
candidates.
Sheldon said it.was not known yet
whether the security breach
occurred on a state or national level.
Arnold Bloom, a spokesman for
the department, said the state
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
and the National Council of State
Boards for
Nursing were
investigating the allegations.
Bloom said there were indications
that the question s were available in
Chicago, Philadelphia ,and Detroit
as well as in New York state.
"Not only will we not accept the
test r esults for the exam given in
New York state, but we will not
accept results from candidates who
took the exam in ot~er states,"
Bloom said.
•

! . Area Deaths !

)"oday ,
...
. in the world

To reduce costs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Zimmer nuclear plant near Cin·
cinnati will reduce fuel costll of
the Colwnbll! and louthern Ohio
Electric Co. by $61 million during
its first' three years of operation,
company officials say.
The company says the 80()..
megawatt nucler plant schedled
to begin operation in 1981 "offers
us, and in turn our customers,
ong-term operating economies
over an equivalent coal.fired
unit."
James P. Fenstermaker,
CXSOE senior vice · president,
told the Public UtUities Com·
mission of Ohio that Zinuner will
save his utUity and two others Cincinnati Gas 111 Electric Co.
and Dayton Power ~ Light Co. +
more than $130 million annually
compared with a coal.fired plant.

Benefits issue
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)-An ex·
tension of supplemenial unem·
ployment benefits for workers
laid off from the Frigidaire plant
In Dayton is the toughest issue
remaining on the bargaining
table between the International
. Union of Electrical Workers and
General Motors Corp., the
union's president says.
Under the current agreement,
the supplemental benefits for
thousands of former Frigidaire
workers will begin to expire next
spring. The IUE wants the pay,
which gives the workers about 95
percent of their regular after-tax
earnings, extended another year.

DWIGHT CLIFFORD OUVER
Dwight Clifford Oliver , 61 ,
&gt;ererans Memorial Hospital.
He was born Aug. 14, 1918, a son of
the late Charles and Harriett
Hamilton Oliver. He is survived by
his wife, Kathryn Roush Oliver; a
daughter, Karen Patton, Marietta ; a
son , David D. Oliver, Litchfield,
·Ky .; a brother, Myron E. Oliver,
Zanesville ; a stepson , Leon .Jordan,
Pataskala ; two granddaughters;
two
grandsons;
a
step·
granddaughter, and a step·
grandson.
Mr. Oliver was a member of the
Sanara United Methodist Church;
was a 32nd degree Mason, and
belonged to Malta Lodge 118,
Scottish Rite, and the Laurel
Chapter, Orde• of Eastern Star,
Norwich.
Private services will be held at the
Ewing Funeral Home. There are no
calling hours and friends are asked
tD cootribute to the Meigs Cancer
Society in lieu of flowers.

Middleport
(Continued from page I)
Funeral services will be held at I
· p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home and burial will be in Gilmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral horne anytime.

County Court Judge Charles
Knight (las set bond at $10,000 in the
case of Tom Matthew Stewart, 31,
Middleport, charged in the alleged
murder of his step-son, Keith Lan·
ders.
The action was taken Monday
during Stewart's initial court appearance.
PrQ'leCUting Attorney Rick Crow

ON STREETS- A bll! "Snoopy" of comic strip and cartoon fame and
a clown were on Pomeroy's streets Saturday afternoon distributing
balloons, candy, gum and leaflets to yQW!Pten. ''Snoopy" "as actually
Mike Zirkle of Middleport and the clown, Craig Dougan of Athelia. The
pair represented tbe Middleport United PenieccJetal Church.

Another teacher strike underway
NORTH CANTON, Ohio (AP ) Members of the North Canton
Education Association have gone on
strike, setting up picket lines at
schools and at the district's school
bus garage.
The walkout came after weekend
talks produced "no substantial
movement" m a new contract,
according to association President
Robert Sheldon.
About 240 reachers in the district
are seeking improvements in
salaries and fringe benefits. The
district serves about 4,500 students.
Current base pay is $10,000.
Tea chers are seeking an iilcrease to
$10,550 this year and $11,27~ next
year.
They have been working without a
contract since school opened Aug.
28.

· "Every effort will be made to run
the buses," said the president of the
school board, Jo Lindamood.
She said there were no plans to
shut down classes today and that
substitutes and others who are

Patrol cites one
driver after wreck
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident investigated
Saturday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Called tAl the scene in Meigs
County on TR 7, a\ 12:15 p.m.,
officers report a vehicle driven by
' Carlton Smallwood, 16, Albany,
backed from a private drive into the
path of} north bound auto operated
by Clyde Slone, 28, Albany.
There was moderate damage to
the Slone auto, slight damage to the
Smallwood vehicle.
Smallwood was cited oo a charge
of improper backing.

willing to work would be on hand .

Nearly 1,100 other Ohio .teacher&amp;
are on picket lines, affectillg some
21,500 other students across the
state.
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Saturday, Sept. tS,

1979

tC•Htel

1.,

FHder St..,rs l00·5110 87.50·115;
500·700 80·91 ; Choice 300-5110 75-88.50;
500·700 50·8t .75.
Feeder Heifers (-100·700 lbs.) 300·
500 Bt-!01.50; 5110·700 6t .50·8.5; Cholet
300·500 47-81; 5110·700 52·68.50.
F""der Bulls 300·5110 81.50·102 : 500·
700 74.50·86.50; ChOice 300·5110 68·90;
500·700 55·67.50.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1.000 lbs.)
50.50'63.
Bred CowHJ.75-60.50.
· .Slaughter Cows: Util ities &lt;16 .755:1.25.
cow and Calf Pairs 510·810; can ·
ne&lt;s and cuners ~ 1.25·&lt;46.50.
Veals (ChOice and Prfme l 8.5·115.
Baby Calves (by the head ) 37.50·
llt .
(HOIIS)

(No. 1, Barrows and Gills,
200·230 lbs.) 38.20 ·39. 10.
Sows 2SJO.J3.50.
Boars 25.2$'27 .85.
Pigs (by the head) 18·26.
IL•mbs)
Slaughter Lambs 6t .50·62.90.
HOIIS

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The
Third
Wednesday
H001emakers Club will meet at 10
a.m . Wednesday at the Municipal
Building in Syracuse.
All
homemakers are "elcome to attend.
Those attending are to take a t"o
liter plastic coke bottle for the
project. There will be a . potluck
dinner at noon .
ANKLE INJURY
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call tAl Cheshire at 5:33
p.m. Sunday for Bob Misner who had
a possible fractured ankle as the
result of a sand lot football game. He
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

IN 10·0%
DuPONT NYLON
VELVET
PROTECTED
WITH
SCOTCHGARD

Baby critical

EVERY ROCKER IN STOCK
VALUES TO 1259.00
REDUCED.
I

'

YOUR CHOICE $

1 5888

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

An outstanding selection of
velvet merry-go-rounders swivel chairs and rockers. all
sale priced for comfortable
buying and Infinite seating
pleasure. Elegant traditional
versatile contemporary, hale
and hearty Early American.
Perfect room accents for use
singly or In pairs. Select yours now.,

to life.
.
Knight also told Stewart that he
need not make any statements, that
he had a right to a preliminary
hearing and jury trial and that lf he .
could not afford an attorney, the
court would appoint one.
Stewart said he did not have funds
in which to secure counsel,
therefore, O'Brien was appointed.
Following his court appearance,
Stewart was remanded to the
custody of Sheriff James Proffitt's
department.
Stewart Is accused In the early
Sunday morning shooting death of
his ste~H~on, Keith Landers, 17, a
1979 graduate of Meigs High School.
According to Dr. John Ridgway,
assistant Meigs County Coroner,
Landers died of massive brain
damage due to a gunshot wound of
the head.
The incident occurred at the ·
Stewart residence, 23~ S. Fourth
Ave. at 12:30 a.m. Sunday.
I
Mrs. Stewart, who is separated
from her husband, had left the home
about IS minutes before the
shooting.
I.Jmders was lying on a bed wat·
ching TV when the shooting oc·
curred. He was struck in tbe face. It
was reported that he was knocked
from the bed by the bullet from a .38
calibre revolver.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
with assistance from BCI Agent Her·
man Henry are assistaing Mid·
dleport Police with the in·
vestigation.

did state he bas had the opportunity
BY BoB HOEFUCH
tAl meet with many staff members
A federal mediator secured to
and
indicated that the Staff is putting
mediate problems between the
forth
a lot of effort and concern.
Meigs Local Bolird of Education and
"It
can be a super year if we can
the Meigs Local Teachers
get
the
problems ironed out", he
Association rega,rding a new con·
death cf 0 . Keith i.Jmders~ 17, SWiday morning at the
E:NROUTE TO COURT - Tom Matthew Stewart,
commented.
.
tract was scheduled to arrive today
Stewart residence on Fourth St., Middleport. Stewart
31, who has been residing below Middleport, was taken
Besides
a
meeting
with the
to begin discussions with both
is escorted by Gary Wolfe, investigator for the sheriff's
. to . COWity court Monday on his initial appearance.
Supt.
federal
mediator
today,
groups.
department.
Stewart is being charged with murder in the shooting
Gleason
was
facing
a
hearing
earlier
This was announced Monday night
in the day before the Liquor Control
by Supt. David Gleason when tbe
Board regarding the establishment
board met in regwar session at the
of
a carry-out business at the border
Meigs Junior High School in Mid·
of
the Harrisonville Elementary
dieport.
School.
The hoard of education went
Supt. Gle~~S&gt;n indicated a big
on
record
last night as "strongly"
difference at the present time
opposing
the
opening of a carry-out
between the board and.the teachers
so
close
to
the
school and letters
is money.
from
the
staff
of
the
school as well as
"We can't come close to what
.
employe§.
were
also
presented
request of Village Solicitor.
· they're asking ", he commented. He
Gleasoo who will tum them over to
council's
review
Monday
night.
BY KATIE CROW
A portion of the contract stated
those in charge cf the hearing being
Web;;ter in rebuttal told council
Pomroy councilman Larry
that
the
engineer
will
not
be
held at Pome~oy Village Hall.
Wehrung, Mooday night voiced his that Mayor Clarence Andrews had
responsible
for
tbe
technical
Before conCluding the two and
drawn up a schedule and he
disappointment over the fact that
assistiutce
of
construction,
and
more
oo!Htalf
hour open session last night,
presented the schedule to council.
the light at the Pomeroy-Mason
particularly
11111
not
be
responsible
the
board
voted to move into
Webster added, he was abiding by
Bridge was not operated manually
for the contractor's failure to per·
Two drivers were cited following executive session to further dscuss
the
Mayor
's
request
regarding
the
one day last week, (Thursday )
form the construction work in ac·
two accidents investigated Monday negotiations with teachers of the
scman on vacation and another
during Monday 's regular council
cordance
with
the
contract
by the GalJia..Meigs Post, Highway
district .
attending school.
meeting.
documents. Fred W. Crow, village
DuriDII the opeD sesJIOD, DaD E.
Patrol.
Webster argued that he works
lllllicltor, 'W'8S not pleased with that
Council earlier had ordered that
Officers investigated a two· Morrill, director of curriculum 81111
eight hours a day and many times is
the traffic light at the bridge be
portion ot the !')~~tract.
vehicle accident iii Meigs County on llldustrl81 pngrama, pftRilted 8
called out at all hours. He
The coo tract also called for a cost
operated. manually from 4 p.m. to
Union Avenue, one-tenth of a mile letter teq~~eSiillllbat Ill)' dllculaion
maintained that working the light at
5:30 p.m. lo controU the heavy
of co.ldei'IIUOII Of 1ppo1Dtmnt, emeast of SR 7.
the bridge is over his eight hour da y. of $29,1100 plus $175 a day for an eight
Following a discussion with Dr·
hour day not to ezceed $14,000 and
traffic coming from West VirRinia.
Called to the scene at 10:40 a .m., ploymeat, premoUon, demotion or
Wehrung contended if no officer is
John
Parsons, State Department of
Control at the light had
possibly an additional $7,000.
the patrol reports a west bound auto compensatioll or 811)' bm!ltlgation
available it was the responsibility of
Education,
office of school
an electrical s hort and
An ordinace with the Colwnbia
operated by Clarence Molden, 27, ol cbarees or complaiata agaiDIIt
the chief tD do the work .
and
Paul Wood, area
management,
therefore
he
did
not
Pomeroy, had stopped for an animal blm be beld ID a pubUc meeting
Harold Brown, coWlCilman, said Gas of Ohio was given the three
.
coordinator,
the
Southern Local
operate the light on last
necessarY readings for passage. The
rather tileD ID execntive session.
on the roadway.
directives should be upheld, but
School
District
Board
of Educauon
Thursday, but had operated the light
ordinance calls for the addition of
A vehicle driven by John · Wriles,
added Webster does have problems
resolution
rescinded
an
earlier
the other days of the week . Webster
the gas cost recovery clause, Rule
Content of the letter was
27. Pomeroy, failed tD stop and
with the !acted orders to be carried
reducing
the
salary
index of
went on to explain that the short on
struck the Molden auto in the rear. incorporated into the board meeting 'teachers and returned the index to
out . In order tAl settle the issue,
28.
the light had been repaired , rut he
minutes and Supt. Gleason stated
Aransfer of a liquor license from
Both vehicles incurred slight
council will meet in special session
d
had no knowledge of this until later .
that any employe has this right of !M.
Richard A. Stnre, DBA Mulberry
damage . Wriles was cited on a
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
.
The reduction of the index ha
Wehrung also said Webster was to
public
discussion
in
comparison
to
Inn, Pomeroy, to Clarence Gans,
charge of failure tD maintain an
Webster said Andrews was h1s
been a point of contention between
make up a schedule of working
DBA Mulberry Inn, Pomeroy, was
executive session.
assured clear distance.
boss and the mayor presented the
the board and teacher~ of the
hours lor the police · force lor
passed on a 4 to 1 vote with Wehrung
The board employed Elizabeth
Officers investigated a two·
present schedule that "I will use
LaRue to replace Christine Garst at district.
vehicle mishap on SR 124, at the
unless wid otherwise."
abstaining .
The hoard accepted the
Council set Oct. 30, as "trick or junction of Welsh Town Rd., iii
the high school, pending proper
BIDS READ
resignation of Betty Wagner from
certification and a list of 10 tuition
treat" night from 6 to 7 p.m. The
Meigs County, at 1:10 p.m.
the board at the recent meeting and
The
patrol
reports
an
auto
siren
will
sound
tAl
begiil
and
end
the
Mary ,will wait a,required 10 days before
students was approved.
Two bids were read on repair to
Powell, John Blaettnar and Linda ·naming a replacement. The .next
·operated by Judy Krautter, 31,
the wall at Laurel Street. One was
activities.
Betty
Baronick,
council
won,
Yonker were authorized to attend
Minersville, had slowed to turn
from Ohio Bridge Corp. and the
regular meeting of the board will ~
other from the PIJilleroy Cement
reported that at a fmancial meeting right. A vehicle driven by Tamela
professional meetings .
The
at 7:30p.m. in the school cafeteria .
it was decided outstanding bills in Smith, 18, Portland, was unable to
resignation of Delores Surface as a
Block Co. The bid from the Ohio
Dr. Parsons and Wood discussed
the amount of $2,1100 be paid. Council stop and struck the Krautter auto in
bus driver was accepted and it was
Bridge was in the amount of $73,400
with the board a recent rmancial
also agreed to transfer $5,1100 to the the rear . .
voted to pay seven EMR students
with bulk concrete and $91,400ifthey
analysis made in the district by the
cemetery fund and $4,1100 to the
working in the cafeteria 50 cents an
A passenger in the Krautter
Meigs County Sheriff James J . use formed concrete. The bid from
state department of education
Proffitt reports the August 3 Pomeroy Cement Block was for con·
street fund since both funds are m vehicle , Betty Imboden, 55,
hour 1in addition to providing lunches
before the board returned the index
the red. The money was transferred Minersville, claimed Injury but was
breaking and entering of Gilbert's crete alone. It called for concrete at
for these students.
to !.by the stare department of
from the parking meter fund.
Texaco on SR 7 below Middleport $2 a cubic yard except for Sunday
The board released the three
not immediately treated.
'education
before the board returned
The meetiilg was opened by
children of Troy Hyatt to attend
has been solved with the arrest of 18· and holidays and the charge would
Both vehicles incurred moderate
~· index tD 1.80.
prayer by wu Osborne. Attending damage. Smith was cited on a
Alexander Schools, a continuation of
year old Michael A. MltcheU, Rt. 1, be $4 a cubic yard . The bids were
were Mayor Andrews, Osborne, charge of assured clear distance.
(Continued on page8)
RuUand.
tabled for additional study.
Wehrung, Brown, Bill Young and
Tools owned by Danny Bowers,
Contracts from Burgess and
Baron ick council members, Chief
employee at Gilbert's Texaco, have
Nlple, for extended sewage, were
Webster, Tom Werry and Jack
been recovered.
'
tabled for additional study and
Krautter.
Mitchell was arrested Sunday
opinions of other engineers at the
evening by Deputy Sheriff Lou
Osborne. Following questioning he
admitted to the breaking and en·
tering and theft of tools . Deputy
Osborne was acting on a tip received
The deck replacement on the bridge will be completed by the
Shadle Bridge Is still scheduled to be middle of October; however, a lot
from Middleport Police captain Sid
will depend on weather conditions
completed by mld·October, ac·
Little.
Mitchell was taken before the
cording to the word from Higgins because concrete has to have seven
emunon Pleas Court Monday on a
Erectors contractor Joe Gordon and days to set up. Therefore, if it is
rainy, they cannot pour the con·
Bill of lnfonnation. He entered a
Mason County Del. Jimmy Joe
crete."
guilty plea after waiving grand jury
Wedge.
Gordon notes, " We are currently
action.
working the grating down both sides
Judge Robert Buck, presiding in
the absence of Judge Bacon, ac·
and hope to pour JTIOre concrete next
cepted the guilty plea and ordered a
week ."
Commenting on the work, Wedge
pre..entence investigation to be con·
said,
"My understanding is the
dueled.
Mitchell was released from
The resignation of Councilman
custody after signing his own
Daytnn .Raynes was accepted by the
recpgnizance bond.
Mason Town Council when it met in
Deputies are continuing In· Cold front·· will push
regular session Monday evening.
vestigation of a breaking and en·
The Council will take various
tering at Eddie's Restaurant in sunny skies away today
persons into consideration for the
Letart Falls. The building was en·
position and appoint a council
By The Associated Press
tered early Sunday morning.
member
at the
next regular
A cold front dropping down from
Entry was made through a win·
meeting.
the upper Great Lakes was expected
dow on the north side of the building.
Trick or treat ha s been set for Oct.
w
push sunny skies out of Ohio by
Several Items were taken.
30,
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Slrens will
thisfternoon.
.
Deputies also Investigated an ac·
designate
the beginning and end of
The National Weather Service
cident at 2 a.m. Mooday. It occurred
the
event.
said that by Wednesday , however ,
at the intersecton of CR 34 and SR
On October 27, the Mason Com·
the front will be south of the Ohio
124atBowman'sRun.
munity
Activities Committee will
are 1to r, Beth Rtebel, Denise White, Debbie Eynon,
River and skies across the state will
An auto driven by James Grady,
NEW UNIFORMS - Eastern High School Band
a
Halloween
party and dance at
hold
Na~cy Sarno&amp; ahd Janet Mora. The new uniforms,
a~ain
be
sunny.
19, Racine, ~~me out of CR 34 and
Members and the Majorette Corps are sporting new
the fire slation.
The
forecast
called
for
overnight
worn
for the first time Friday ngiht, were provided
flshtaUed on SR 124 and ran off the .
uniforms this fall. The band unforms are the
The closing of the town park and
lows ranging from the low 40s tu the
through
the support of businesses and lndividuala.
roadway.
traditional green and white, while the majorette
tr nni' courts were discussed, and
low
50s
and
highs
on
Wednesdady
tn
Grady was cited to Meigs County
uniforms are gold and white. Modeling the uniforms
uoth will be closed on October I.
the 60s and low 70s.
Court for no operator's license.

Councilman W ehrung upset,
wants orders carried out

· Patrol cites
two motorists

Board returns
to 1.80 index

Rutland youth
pleads guilty
to B&amp;E, theft

Repair completion date set

Raynes resigns
council position

·I
'J

suggested bond be set in the amount
of $100,000 due to the animosity
toward other family members.
Atty. J . B. O'Brien was appointed
as Stewart's legal counsel.
Stewart was infonned concerning
the charges against him and given
his rights as a defendant by Judge
Knight. Kn!ght said a murder
charge carries a sentence of I~ years

Federal mediator
arriving today

SIGNATURE
CHAIRS

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- An in·
fant girl, delivered from her
lifeless · mother by paramedics
getting directions by radio from a
physician, was alive but in
critical condition Sunday at Com·
munity HOspital.
The full-term Infant was
delivered by Caesarian section
Saturday at the scene of the car·
train . accident that killed her
mother.
The woman, Angel L. Barton,
17, of Indianapolis, died of
massive head injuries after Am·
trak ' s National Limited
passenger train slanuned into a
car stalled on tracks on the city's
east side. Mrs. Barton, who was
in the back seat, was thrown out
of the car, which was spun across
the road and knocked into a gully.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1979

�.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1979

2 _ The DaLly Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy. 0 .•. Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1979

Pittsburgh
edges Expos

'

Senator Collins reports:· • •

e~gibilily ceiling from $7,431 to
Low-income elderly and disabled
$9,000, which would accommodate
Ohioans will continue receiving a
an additional 65,000 families, acreduction in their fuel bills this wincording to testimony presented
ter following the Senate passage of a
before the Senate Finance Combill authorizing permanent
mittee. The program is already funestablistunenl of the low income
ded with $92 million for the bienenergy credits program, Senator
niwn, Collins indicated.
Oakley C. Collins (R·Ironton) repor"Controversy on the measure had
ted from Columbus today .
primarily stemmed from difThe legislation, Sub. House Bill
ferences of opinion on whether the
657, passed the Senate by a vote of
legislation in its final fonn, should
~ and now goes to the House for
benefit more f~es by extending
concurrence in amendments, Collins
the income level even higher, or
said.
benefit those on the lowest end of the
The energy credit program, first
income spectrwn,'' Collins said.
created in 1977, has proven sucSupplementing the credits for
cessful enough that the bill's C&lt;&gt;households
with an annual income of
sponsots wanted to make it a per- ·
le!i,'!
than
$5,000
was finally settled
manent part ci Ohio law. Certain
and
those
fmailles
will receive a
on,
changes, however, were made in the ·
30
percent
credit
rather
than the 25
legislation as it moved through
percent
credit
!hat
those
in the
House and Senate . committee
$5,000-$9,000
incoli\e
categories
hearings .
receive. These credits will be adA major change in the legislature
ministered
through the Department
is an increase in the income

.'

I

Editorial opinions,
comments

Washington today
WASHINGTON I API - Economic
forecasting is a risky business,
unless you gel to make the rules
yourseU. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
has reserved that right with his
vague description of what would
deter or impel him to wage an all·&lt;&gt;Ut
challenge to President Carter next
year.
Kennedy says his decision· will
hinge on Carter's handling of the
economy, but he isn't saying what
would be good enough to keep him
out of the race, or bad enough to
make him a candidate.
"The real. question is the state of
the economy," he says. "That's the
issue that's going to be decisive next

year."

I

Not that he 's saying Carter must
reverse what is now a bleak outlook
on both unemployment and inflation .
"But he has to take steps which will
give people a sense of confidence
that it will gel better," the
Massachusetts senator said .
Kennedy also is saying he'll make
up his mind before the presidential
primaries, which means by the end
of a year that has 15 weeks
remaining . That amounts to a selffulfilling prophecy , because there's
no way the economy or attitudes
about it are going to turn around
before the end of the year.
That
suggests.
Kennedy 's
economic rationale is a matter more
of political convenience than of
substance. Like his late · brother
Robert, Edward Kennedy is in a
difficult position as he weighs a
challenge to an incumbent
Democratic president. Both faced
the prospect that they would be
accused of risking a split in the party
simply to serve their own ambitions .

For Robert Kennedy, t he
compelling issue was Lyndon B.
Johnson's war policy in Vietnam .
Edward Kennedy 's economic
concern pales by comparison, but at
least it is an issue on which to hang
his verdict.
In fact, the Kennedy decision
more likely hinges on the prospect
that Carter appears to be a weak
candidate who may get knocked
about in the primary elections
anyhow, and whose ticket could
dampen the prospects of Democrats
·running for the House and, particularly, the Senate.
Kennedy has said that a good
many colleagues want him to run .
He hasn't identified them, and they
haven 't marched forward to identify
tllemselves. Not that he isn 't getting
plenty of urging. But most of the
members of Congress ho want him
in the race are not anxious to stick
tlleir necks out until they are sure
they have a candidate.
With the economy slipping itlto
recession and inflation running in
double numbers, there's no way
slumping public confidence in the
economic future Is going to be
revived by the end of the year.
Every pollster reports that people
think things are going to get worse
economically before they get better .
If Kennedy runs on grounds that
Carter economics
are
not
satisfactory, he is going to have to
come up with a different formula to
improve the situation. It is one thing
to
say
that
the
current
administration has failed, and quite
another to say how a new
administration would succeed.
Once the glamor and the novelty of
a Kennedy campaign woain and
apparently he liked what he saw._ .

Capitol ideas
Ay DONALD M. ROTHBERG
Auoclaled Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., is the
talk of the Capitol and the inspiration for the latest political oneliner.
Sj!n. Bob Dole, the Kansas
Republican with presidential ambitions of his own, told a business
group : "I want to announce that my
wife and mother have no objection to
my running for president.''
"I .have a personal statement, "
Rep. Jim Wright of Texas, the House
democratic leader, told the
Women 's Democratic Club. "I'd like
to say that my mother and my wife
do not mind if I run for re-election. "
Later, Wright told reporters, "Of
course, my mother is dead, but she
wouldn't mind ."
And on it goes.
"I've talked to my wife and
mother and they don't object to my
running again," Rep . John
Brademas, D-Ind., told reporters

was making things difficult for
others.
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee, who's running hard for the
Republican presidential nomination,
called a news conference to announce the support of two of his
Senate colleagues.
But /most of the questions dealt
with Kennedy.
At one point, Sen. John Chafee, RR.I., said he thought Baker was " the
type of candidate who could carry
all the New England states."
Which prompted the inevitable
-··--question : ~---·
"Do you think Sen. Baker could
carry Massachusetts in a race
against Sen. Kennedy?"
"It would be touch and go,"
replied Chafee, drawing laughs from
everyone -including Baker.
In more than a half century in New
York , the G1 a nts only retired two
uniform numbers, Mel Ott's No. 4 and
Carl Hubbell 's No . .\! .

The question on everyone 's mind

is will Kennedy run for president or
woo't he: .
It's so much on the minds of Kennedy 's colleagues in C!!"gress that
ne~rly every da~ someo"!! else slips
- like Sen. Max Bauc~, 0-Mont.,
did last week .
.
Responding to Kennedy on the
Senate floor , Baucus said, "The
president is correct." Then after a
pause, "The senator is correct. "
And, Sen. Henry M. Jackson, DWash., replying to reporters said, " I
haven 't said I 'm s upporting
President Kennedy ."
Two reporters were standing in a
Capitol hallway, when Kennedy slip.
ped up behind them and fihispered :
"Hey, what do you heatl. Is he running?"
.

The preoccupation with Kennedy
0

-

I

TilE DAILY SENTINEL
I USPS 145-96Ul

~~......_
.......... , ~d.-.
~v
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Editor
PublJJbed diUy euept Saturday by The Ohio

VaUey Publlahing Compaoy - MuiUmcdia, loc.,
Ill Court 51., Pomrroy, Ohio 45715. Busln~s
Offlre Phone m USC. EdJWrlal Phooe
91%-2157.

Seeoad dan po1i.lgt ~ld atPumrroy, Ohio.
NaUooal tdvtrti.IIDI! rcprneu&amp;atlve, L.ndoo
Assodak &amp;, 3101 Eudld Ave., Cleveltod, Oblo
«US.
Subit'rlpllqn ra~§ : UfU\Iered by carrier
wllere al'a ll.ablt' 90 rrotl per week. By Muwr
Rook' ,.·h.:re carrier strvl« aotavalllble, Ooe
month,

s:uo.

Th4! Ovlly Stontinel, b)' maU In Ohio aDd West
Virginia. ont yea r S:LlOO; SLI: month&amp; $17.50;
lbn&gt;t moolhti 110.541. EIKWbere $38,00; sU
munlhll UUO ; Chree muoths $11.DO.
Tht' Altoc.lakil Press ill caclualvely eati lled
1o the U.lf for publkatlun of •llotws d.itpalches.
('retJited to tht new11paper anrl al1o the loca!
aews published hen•lo.

,

of Taxation.
An additional provision upping the
one.time . payments to housrholds
using alternative healing sources
s uch as bottled propane, fuel oil,
coal, wood or kerosene is also in the .
bill. In the new program, households
using these sources of heai will
receive a payment of $125, rather
than the previous $87.50. The biU
also eliminates the requirement that
the fuels used actually cost that
much.
Other features of the Iilli concern
two additional ]lrograms, the LowIncome Energy Assistance Program
(LEAP), which would assist low Income persons threatened with
discontinuance of heat during
December through April, and the
Weatherization Program, which
would provide state funding for
labor to be used in weatherizing Ohio
homes, Collins said.
The first program, LEAP, would
provide a one-time payment of up to
$250 on a utility bill forlh~ at the
income level of 125 percent of the
Federal Poverty Standard, when
non1J8yment of fuel bills threaten
citizens' heating service.
Weatherization of low-income
homes has been a federal program, .
Collins said, and this new legislation
seeks to incorporate all of Ohio's
energy usage programs into one
piece of legislation . The
Weatherization program currentiy
consists of U. S. Department of
Energy funding for weatherstripping, storm window installation
and other energy..saving repair
materials. Ohio's responsibility is to
pay for most of the labor costs of
repairs and installation Collins said,
Community action agencies will be
responsible for administration of the
Weatherization program.

Business
•
mirror·
NEW YORK (AP) - G. William
Miller has asked Congress to raise
the ceiling on the federal debt by $56
billion to $886 billion, a figure that
was destined, he knew, to .raise the
roof as well.
Treasury secretaries before
Miller have had the same
experience: Their requests have
been met with anger, debate,
promises and threats, but after the
noise has died they have been
granted , as expected.
And so the debt grows inexorably,
while attempts to put a lid on it are
as futile as trying to cap Mt. Etna.
The Tax Foundation estimates, for
example, thst interest payments
alone on the 1980 fiscal debt will be
about $57 billion, or only a bit less
than the entire 1940 national debt,
cities and states included.
The contrast can be spiced with
layers of comparisons. That $57
billion, notes the foundation, is 600
percent more than in 1960. And with
interest
rates
rising,
that
percentage is also bound to rise.
But now for the shocker: As a
per centage of gross national
product, or the total output of goods
and services , the federal debt has
been - are you ready - falling. Not
in actual dollars, but in percentages.
In 1960, the founda lion observes,
the federal government owed $290.9
billion, or 58.5 percent of that year's
gross output. It estimates the 1980
yearend debt will amount to 35.9
percent of that year's GNP.
But after accepting those figures
you must pause to realize what
inflalon can do. It is, for example,
included in gross national product
numbers . Absurd, unrealistic ,
misleading, you say. Yes, but true.
By using inflated GNP figures you
have the illusion of growth when
little exists. The economy might
grow very little,. or shrink, in 1979,
but the dollar figures won 't reveal it.
They're growing at 13 percent.
One of the reason we have such
inflation , claim some of the
monetary ''experts," is that the
federal government is running big
deficits and borrowing money to
finance it. That borrowing, they say,
inflates the GNP nwnbers, and
keeps the debt to GNP ratio from
rising .
,
AI . the same time, or so it is
argued, the high level of borrowing
forces up interest rates, including
those paid by Uncle Sam. And those
high interest rates, of course, can
worsen the already burdensome
debt.
There is no quick solution, and
Congress really is without much
choice in dealing with Miler 's
request. If it doesn 't approve, and .
quickly, the Treasury might have to ·
postpone the refinancing of its notes.
So let it postpone, you say. Fair
enough , but with interest rates still
headed higher, that could cost the
government even more money, It
happened last spring, said Ehner
Staats, the comptroller general.
There exists tlle possibility also
that the government wouldn't be
able to pay its workers and
suppliers, which would set off an
even bigge r controversy . To raise
the limit seems to be the only
possible move.

'---~~....

~ -·
·:w e· re ready .. . hit us with the latest poll s."

Antitrust charges dropped
WASHINGTON (AP) - Antitrust
charges against E. I. du Pont de
Nemours &amp; Co. were dismissed
Monday by a Federal Trade
Commission judge who praised the
industrial giant's business foresight.
FTC administrative law judge
Miles J. Brown dismissed charges
tllat Du Pont tried to monopolize the
domestic titanium dioxide pigment
market and that the company
engaged in unfair methods of
competition.
Although Brown found that Du
ront's growth in that market might
have served to exclude competitors,
he said: " I can find no conduct that.
can be considered 'unfair' within the
meaning of the Federal Trade
Commision Act."
Du Pont is the largest domestic
producer of titaniwn dioxide , a
pigment used in the production of
paints, inks, paper, synthetic · fibers
and other materials to make them
light and opaque . There is no
commercially satisfactory
substitute for litaniuln dioXide , the

judge said.
Du Pont's exclusively developed
ilmenite chloride process gave· it an
advantage over competitors in tile
titanium dioxide field because
increased costs and environmental
regulations made the processes used
by competitors more . expensive,
Brown said.
An FTC complaint April 5, 1978,
charged that Du Pont had tried -to
exploit its competitive advantage in
an attempt to monopolize the
market. Du Pont's strategy,
according to the commission's staff,
was an unfair methud of competition
and was evidence of tlle company 's
intent to monopolize:
Brown ruled that Du Pont did not
establish or control market prices
for titanium dioxide and said its
expansion plans were reasonable.
He found that Du Pont did not use an
anti-competitive strategy, as
asserted by the commission staff.
The judge said the company was
not required to be less than
aggressive in capitalizing on its

competitive cost advantage. He said
the advantage was gained as a
"result of business foresight,
intelligent planning, dedicated
technological application, the taking
of economic risk and its
competitors' choice" of production
facilities in the 1960s.
" I do not believe that Du Pont was
required to price its products high
enough to insure its less efficient
competitors sufficient revenue to
finance expansion, " Brown said.
He said any pro-competitive
effects of such a requirement would
be outweighed by "esorbitant
profits to Du Pont and greatly
increased costs to the conswner."
The FTC staff, which Cll!l appeal
the judge's actjon to the agency's
had
sought
commissioners ,
divestiture of two Du Pont plants
and an order allowing competitors
free use of Du Pont's know-bow in
producing titaniwn dioxide.
Co lombia
declared
independence in 1810.

its

APSports
Before starting against Montreal ,
Plttsburgh'sDon RObinson found an
autographed picture of Expos
slugger Tony Perez hanging from
his locker with the inscription : " See
you in September."
"I don 't know who put it there,"
said the 22-year-old pitcher. " I know
that Tony ha~ given me a lot of
trouble at the plate and I guess
someone wanted to remind me ."
Perez didn't give Robinson too
much trol!ble Monday night, tholigh .
As a matter of fact, neither did
many other of the other Montreal
hitters as tlle right-bander spun a
six-bit,:/,.! victory in the opening of a
key series between the National
League East leaders.
Robinson was pumped up not only
by the Perez needle, but by the ear- ·
splitting noise of the crowd, it
seemed.
" When they announced Montreal 's
starting lineup, I was warming up in
tlle bullpen and I couldn't hear
myseU think because of the roar of
the crowd," said Robinson . " Then,
before the nintll inning, they were
roaring again - but they just
seemed to get me up a little more. I
started to throw the ball a little
faster . " ·
The
performance was
a
vindication of sorts for the young
pitcher .
" I was hoping that I would prove
myself with \he game on the line
tonight because late in the season
last year, I had a chance to do a
similar job against Philadelphia and
I didn't pitch well ," he said .
Houston . meanwhile , chopped
Cincinnati 's NL West lead with a 1-{)
decision over San Diego while tlle
Reds were losing 7-1 to San
Francisco .
Elsewhere, LDs Angeles defeated
Atlanta 9-4 and Philadelphia turned
back St. Louis 7~ .
Dave Parker provided Robinson .
~. with the two rWlS he needed by
stroking run-scoring singles in \he
tllird and fillh innings against Steve
fulgers, 13-10.
Astros I, Padres 0
Cesar Cedeno hit a ninth-inning
sacrifice fly to give Joe Niekro his
19th victory of tlle year as Houston
defeated San Otego .

Rafael Landestoy opened the
irutillg with a triple, the first hit off
Bob Owchinko, 5-11, since Julio
Gonzalez' triple in the fifth inning .
Cedeno then hit his fly ball to give
Niekro, 19-10, his fifth victory this
year over the Padres. Niekro, who
allowed just six hits, recOC'ded his
fifth shutout of the year and 11th
complete game, a career high.
·
Giants ,7, Reds C
Roger Metzger's tw&lt;&gt;-fUR triple
capped a five-run firs inning that
carried San Francisco over
Cincinnati, The first four Giants
singled off Mike LaCoss, 14-7. Bill
North singled, took second on a balk
and went to third when shortstop
Dave Concepcion dropped LaCoss'
throw qn a pickoff attempt .
Arter Joe Strain singled, Mike !vie
hit an RBI single. Darrell Evans
followed with another RBI single
and !vie socred the inning's third
run on a wild pitch. After Larry
Herndon was walked intentionally,
Metzger cracked his seventh triple
of the season.
Vida Blue, 13-13, scattered II hits,
including Johnny Bench's 20th borne
nm in the second inning.
Dodgers 9, Braves4
Joe Ferguson hit two 1\ome runs
and Steve Garvey and Dusty Baker
had one apiece to lead Los Angeles
over Atlanta as the Braves' Phil
Niekro absorbed his IDth loss.
Ferguson hit his t9ih homer in the
second !nning whep the Dodgers
scored five runs, four of them
unearned . Bill Russell's bases-loade
double accounted for two of the runs .
Garvey, who needs 10 hils to reach
200 for the fifth time in his career, hit
his 26th homer leading off the fifth .
Baker hit his 23rd in the seventh, a
twwun shot, and Ferguson, had a
solo blast in the ninth .
Phillie• 7, Cardinals S
Manny Trillo raced home from
thtrd on third baseman Ken Reitz'
error with two out in the ninth inning
and Garry Maddox followed with a
run-scoring
single
as
the
Philadelphia Phillies rallied for
three rWlS to beat St. Louis.
Philadelphia left-bander Steve
Carlton , 16-11, gained the victory .
Tug McGraw pitched a scoreless
nintll inning to earn his 16th save .

Royals heading
toward top spot

working
for
you

"We'll do what it
takes to keep
the power
flowing."J,~~~~~~~~~~~f,~eman
Tom Hedman is a line m a n for Columhus and Southern .
I lc's one member of a hip:hly skill ed, carefully trained
team . I )ay in and d ay o ut he a nd his fellow workers arc
res pon sible for th e continuity of electric service you
need. The work is oft e n dan gemus , and always
demandi ng.
It 's no sma ll n •sponsibility. Gene Pyt el, General
~lana gcr of Di vision Operations , d escribes the challetlp;P. "Co lumbus and Soull•e rn serve s almost two
million p eople. Thi s involves some 1~.000 miles of
di stributi on lin&lt;', 750 miles of transmiss ion lines, about
70,000 tran sformers and probably half-a -millio n serviec
drops. Prot ectin g this investmen t, as well as th e
p roperty a nd lives of peop le, requires a tightly run
operation, and a moti vate d group of [J€ople."
It takes specia l p eople like T om Redman.
W e'd like lo introduce others and let the m explain
what's involved in meeting the need for power in
the communities we se rve.
A b e tt er understanding is important to us and to
you.

APSports
If the Kansas City Royals have
designs III their fourth straight
American League West title, they're
headed in the right direction .
The Royals moved within two
games of first-place CalifOC'nia by
bombing the Angels l&amp;-4 In Kansas
City Monday in the opener of a threegame series. It's the closest the
Royals have been to first place since
Sept . 3 and was precisely the way
they wanted to open the showdown .
" Winning th e first game big like
this might give us a psychological
edge ." said Dennis Leonard, 1:1-10,
who was supported by an 18-hit
attack against four Angels pitchers
and won for the seventll time in his
last nine decisions. "II was my most
important win of the year. "
Also winning a key contest
Monday was Minnesota, which
belted Chicago !G-3 to move within
three games of California .
Meanwhile, Baltimore reduced its
magic number for clinching the East
to three with a :1,.1 squeaker over
Detroit while Milwaukee rallied to
beat Seattle 7-6 ; Boston dropped out
of the East race after splitting a
doubleheader with Toronto,losing f&gt;4, then winning·5-3; Cleveland swept
two from New York, f&gt;-1 and ~. and
Texas topped Oakland 6-3.
Kansas City fashion~ its victory
behind an onslaught that saw every
starter get at least one hit. Darrell
Porter and AI Cowens each knocked
in four runs, Porter boosting hls
season RBI total to a career-high 102
with a tllree-run homer in the
seventh . Pete LaCock also homered
. for the Royals.

Twins lG, White Sos3
Minnesota scored five times in the
fifth with the benefit of just one hit, a
two..-un triple by Bombo Rivera . A
bases-loaded walk, a wild pitch and
a sacice fly knocked in the other
fWlS .

Ken Landreaux had
homer for the Twins.

Orioles %, Tigers I
Scott McGregor outpitched Milt
Wilcox while AI Bumbry and Ken
Singleton homered for the Orioles.
cGregor, 12-5, gave up eight hits and
the Tigers got their run in the ninth
III Lynn Jones' sacrifice fly .
Wilcox had a five-hitter but was
victimized by Bwnbry's sisth homer
in the eighth and Singleton 's 35th in
the ninth .
Brewers 7, Marinrs 8
Paul Molitor belted a three-run
homer with one out in the ninth to
boost Milwaukee to victory. A fiverun fifth for Seattle had given 1the
Mariners a 6-2 lead, but Gorman
Thomas' two-run single in the eighth
brought the Brewers into striking
range.
Blue Jays 5-3, Red Sox 4-5
Boston was mathematically
ellminated from the East race with
the split.
The Red Sox handed Toronto ' the
opener In the ninth Inning . One~ut
singles by Rick Bosetti and J .J .
CaMon precedeq a double off the
left-center field wall by Rick Cerone.
Cerone went too far rounding second
and Bston catcher Mike O'Berry
tried to throw him out . O'Berry's
peg sailed into center field and
Cerone scored the winning run .

John Sanders, Nor/hl\'('.11 /Jh·i.1ion Mrmti!U' r

tlw JI£'(] Jdt• (l/

"They're dl•;dh1g with vult a~es from as low as 120 up to 138,000
volts. Safety's uppcnn os t, a nd we're trying to keep the Cll.stomer
safe &lt;tlong with our ow n people."
Jim Bovle, Sajf'fy Sllpl' l'l'i.w r

Electr ic' Com Jltlli !J ore

tco rkin c

/1." !1m1.

"It takes hi ghly twined p eople to ge t electricity to our custome rs,
and we- tak e pridt• in getting it there."
Ed 1\u::ker, Crt'lr Sttpt·ni.w r

~

timely topic?

OHIO POWER COMPANY

Columbu.t

/oufhPran COLUMDU~

®

on a
We have a numher o f illumatcd talk s a nd
film prcscnr arions available wi t hour charge to
your club or organization. Jusr call our off)cc.
The number is 992-3786.

.,

AND

~OUIH£fl.N

their grid players of the week. This week's selections for C011layer of the
week award are Meigs Marauder grldders Dan TJxmaa and Roger
Kovalchik. Thomas, a senior quarterback and defensive b&amp;ck, tbrew for
one tou~own and an estra point in Meigs' ~ victorY tJVer Wabama
last Friday. 1be signal caller went sis for nine on the night through the
air for 115 yards and rushed nine times for 71 yards.
Kovalchik, a soplmlore nrnnlng back, scored three toucbdowns and
flnJshed the night with 83 yards in 24 carries. He also caught one paas for
nineyarda.

.

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
Butbalt AI A Gtontt
By Th ASSOCIItecl Press
NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. GB
Pittsburgh
89 58 .6C5
87 58 .600 t
Montreal
78 69 ,53t 11
51. Louis
Phltadetphlo
11 12 .St7 13
H 73 .503 t5
Chlcogo
New York
56 89 .386 32
WEST
85 65 .567
Cincinnati
83 66 .557 l'h
Houston
Los Angeles
12 18 .40 13
San Francisco
61 IU .&gt;144 .18 1h
San Diego
62 80 .4t3 23
59 89 .399 2.5
Atlanta
M-ay 's Gamos
Pittsburgh 2, Mmlreal t
PhilaMiphla 7, St. Louis S
Houston t, San Diego 0
Los Angeles 9, Atlanta 4
san Francisco 7, Cincinnati t
Only games scheduled
· Tllflllay'a Games
Chicago (Reuschel 11·t0 and
Caudill 0·7) at New York tSwan 12·12
ond Berenguer 0· t I, 2
Pittsburgh (Klson 10·1) ot Mon ·
treat (lee tS·10)
Philadelphia t Notes 9·3 or
Espinosa t~ · 11l at St. Louis
IVuckovlch 13·101
Houston tWiltloms 4-5 or Plodson
0-tll at San Diego !Rasmussen 4·9)
Atlanta tSolomon 6·12l at Los
Angeles tReusU·13 1
·
Cln&lt;:lnnotl (Bonham 8·61 ol San
Fronclsco (Whltson6·t01
Weclnosday's Games
Montreal at New York, 2
Pittsburgh at Phllad&lt;&gt;lphlo , 2
Chlcato at 51. LOUIS, 2
Atlanta at Houston
Cinclnnollat san Diego
san Francisco at Los Angeles

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
98 50 .662
Baltimore
88 62 .587
Milwaukee
83 65 .561
soston
8068 .5-4t
New York
80 70 .533
Detroit
76 74 .507
Cleveland
50100 .333
Toronto
WEST
Cotlfornio
81 69 , .540
Konsas City
19 71 .527
Minnesota
78 72 .520
Texas
7S 16 .497
Chicago
65 84 .436
Seattle
62 88 .417
Oakland
52 99 .3-44

· M.ay'aGmnes

GB
II
t5

t8
19
23
-49

2
3 ,
6'1•
15 1h
t8 1h
29 '1'

Toronto S·3, Boston 4·S
Clevetltnd 5·6, New York 1·S
Baltimore 2, Detroit!
Minnesota 10, Chicago 3
Kansas City 16, California~
Texas 6, Daktond 3
Milwaukee 7, Seattte6
Tu..Uy'sGames
Boston (Torrez 1~·12) at Toronto
(Huffman6·tS)
New York (Mirabella 0·31 at
Cleveland (Poxton 7·7)
Baltimore (Flanagan 22·7) at
Detroit (Petry H)
Minnesoto CGotlt 4·11&gt; ot Chicago
(Kravec 12·l3l
California (Frost 14·9) at Konsas
City tGate 9-9) .
Texas (Jenkins U ·1ll at Ooktand
(McCatty 11 ·9)
Milwaukee (Mitchell 3·7) at Seat·
tie CBranch0·1l
Wectneldoy•s Gomes
Minnesota at Chicago
Texas at Oakland
Boston at Toronto
New York at C1evetand
Bolli more at Detroit
California at Kansas City
Milwaukee at Seattle

Redskins rip Giants
WASHINGTON (AP) -It's a fair
bet that New York's Brian Kelley ·
and Washington Benny Malone
aren't high on each other's party
list.
'
In fact, if you're interested in
fireworks, it might not be a bad idea
to be in Giants Stadium in East
Rutherford, N.J. on Nov . 25, when
the Giants and Redskills ren their
rivalry.
In their first meeting Monday
night, the Redsldns gained at least a
touchdown from the confrontation
between Kelley and Malone en route
to a ?:/-{)thrashing of the Gilllits in an
NFC East game.'
According to the participants, it
all started early in the game.
However, the culmination came
when Kelley was penalized for
kicking the Redsldns' running back
in the head after a third down play
which
would
have
forced
Washington to punt.
Instead, Kelley's outburst gave
the Redskina -new life in a drive
which ended with Clarence
Harmon's reception of a 4-yard
touchdown
toss
from
Joe
Thiesmann .

" It's personal between me and
him, " said Kelley, who also was
charged earlier foc rwtning into the
puntr - another infraction which
kept a Washington drive alive. "He
knows what he did. It's personal and
it started on the second play of the
game. He said some things that you
don't want to hear."
Malone said, however, that the
mostly-bidden scuffle started with
the Giants' Gary Jeter early in the
game "and I was trying to protect
myseU. I'U never back down .
"It's going to stay personal. It
started the firs time I carried the
ball," he said.
!were assessed, the Redskins
dominated play, including a 31-yard
pass interception by defensive
tackle Karl Lorch which he turned
into a toUchdown.
"That's the only pass that I've
caught in at least 10 years," he said.
"The last one was in junior college."
Theismann also and ran 7 yards
for another score on what. he said
was a designed draw but appeared
to be a scramble.
Mark Moseley added field goals of
46 and 40 yards.

HEARING TESTS SET
For Pomeroy, Ohio

Odds long for Bill.Popfinger .
breathing. "
·
The only drivers to win back-t&lt;&gt;back in 33 previous Jugs wke John
Simpson Jr., with Noble Adios in
1956 and Torpid in !957; Stanley
Dancer, with Henry T. Adios in 1961
and Lehigh Hanover in 1962, and
. Billy Haughton, with Rum Customer
in 1968 and Laverne Hanover in 1969.
Herve Filion likes the chances of
Hot Hitter to foil Happy Motoring's
bid for the Triple Crown, especially
after a 1:55 4-5 trip Labor Day over
another half-mile track, Freehold in
New Jersev.

DELAWARE, Ohio (AP ) - Bill
Popfinger knows the odds are long
on his driving a second straight
Little Brown Jug winner Thursday
for two main reasons :
- The sudden emergence of Hot
Hitter, the even money favorite in 3year-old pacing 's Triple crown leg .
-The health of his own contender,
Happy Motoring, the winner of the
Cane Pace, the Triple Crown's first
leg in June.
"Hot Hitter has been real sharp
lately , in his last three or for races, "
said Popfinger, who drove Happy
Escort to victory in the 1978 classic
the
Delaware
(County )
at
Fairgrounds.
"Hopefully," said Popfinger, " my
horse can be a challenger if he can
get his act together. He came down
sick on me before the Jug Preview
(Sept . 6 at Scioto Downs ). He's had a
virus in the throat and had problems

O HIO £L£C 1f\IC COMPANY

.

I

i.

~·

•
'

Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASKETBALL
National

,.

Basketball Association

SA N DIEGO CLIPPERS-Signed
Elisha McSweeney , guard·forward,

'

to a free agent contract. Cut Larry
Fogle, Lionel Garrett
Williams, forwards .

and

Fly

.

HOCKEY
National Hockey League
CHICAGO BLACK HAWKS
Signed Tony Esposito, goalie.
EDMONTON OILERS

SPONSORS TOURNEY
The Middleport Youth League will
sponsor a men's open cl!lss slow pitch softball ASA sanctioned tournament on Sept. 22 and 23. The fee
for participation is $60 and two balls.
Thsoe wishing more information are
to call 9!l2-li064'

Acqu ired

Jim

Harrison,

•

center,

from the Chicago Black Hawks.
Signed Mark Messier, tell wing.
NEW YORK ISLANDERS Signed Mike Bossy, ri ght Wing, to a
multi -year contract.

,.

"
.,

ST. LOUIS BLUES - Si gned Ber·
nie Federko, center, and Brian Sut·

ter , l eft wing .

DAVID L. CARR, D. 0.
Announces The Relocation Of His Office
FOR
GENERAL PRACTICE

And

...,....
''·
·•

"'

ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
At

FAMILY CLINIC
2924 J~CKSON AVENUE
POINT PLEA SAN T , WEST VIRGIN I A 25550

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m . · 6 p.m.
Telepho.ne: Office 304-675-6971 - Home 675·6517

CHRISTMAS
COLOR SPECIAL!

(Back In time for CHRISTMAS)

6f1Ci..............
..__ _ _ _ The Saving Place _ _ _ _,.

SEPT. 19 ·

~.EPT

23.

.. .,

tf ;

WEDNESDAY • SUNDAY

..

2-Poses, 18 Color .Prints,
One Fantastic Kmart Price!

!'...
~·

",.'

That adds up to a Perfect Portrait Package

•'

• All aatl ~tlcome . • Groups $1.00 tiha per penon. • Compare
the nlue at len than 61 c a picture. • Scenic •nd creative backgrounds
.Jv.ailable. • Fast deli"erY. • Satisfaction Always or full deposit cheer·

...~·..,

fully refunded.
"Ask about our exciting Echo Portrait"
•
TM

2-8x10's
2-5x7's
10-wallet size ch..msnotindudedln
4-color charms p~ck•&amp;•••fa

·; ~

II"\

•

..upphotoo .

1i prints just

${0.96
plus tax

'II!'

f;~

.

.~

.~ •

~ oil!- ~

~.:
~~;

.

.·....

.'-.

,,
"&lt;

"'

~~~~~~~
••
. li
...••

BEL TONE Consultant Who Will Be At Meigs Inn,
Thursday, Sept. 20,9 a.m. to 12 NOon ..

:•
Anyone who has trouble heorlng Is welcome to hove o hearing test us·
ing modern electronic equipment to delermlne If his toss Is one which
· may be helped. Some of lhe causes of hearing loss will be explained
and diagrams of how the eor works will be •"own.
We Also Servlceond Rep.alr All Makes of Hearing Aids.
Batteries And Supplies For All Makes for Sale.
IF YOU CA NNOT COME IN CALL THE HOTEL FOR AHOME APPOINTMFNT .
PHONE "2·3629

oo l

'.

PHOTOGRAPHER HOURS:

Wed.-Sat. 10 to 1 - 2 to 6
Thurs.-Fri. 10 till -lto 5:30- 6·8
Sun.ltoS

785 UPPER RIVER RD., GALL/P LIS, OH.

1' .

2 15 N ff\~T ~I COLU MilU~ O HI O d.)21 1

•.

Will Be Given By
Mr. H . W . Mattingly

David C r()wder, Jonmt•y mtm Linl'IIIWI

ColllmiJI4S

assisted by other clubs of the county,
the day will feature numerous door
pri2es and fre~ lunches to all tho8e in
attendance. Yotu1gsters ol all ages
are invited and parents are welc~
to attend. Everything will be fur·
nished by the clubs.
Registrl!tion time is 9 a.m. and the
activities will begin at 9:30 !l.m . The
day will conclude with a drawing at
approximately 3 p.m .
·
There wiD be a prize given to the
youth club with the mMt members
in attendance with an adult leader.
The outdoor clubs of the county in·
vile everyone to come and discover
the fun and excitement to be found in
the great outdoors of hunting and
fishing.

CD-RECIPIENTS - The Meigs County Jaycees have announeed

HEARING TESTS

"It's exciting and it'~ lmportilnt, imt kn owing that I'm getti ng
th e clectrk tu cvc ryhody when tlu~y need it."

m1cl Stm llll·m Ohi11

ROGER KOVALCHIK

DAN THOMAS

:Den 'falk

· By Greg Bailey
National Hunting and Fishing Day
celebrations are scheduled this
Saturday all over the nation.
In Meigs County, area sportsmen's clubs will be baving
exhibitions at Royal Oak Park and
qualUied sportsmen will be demonstrating numerous outdoor
recreational activities.
The sports include fishing,
can~lng. trapshooting, trapping,
mii2Zleloading, archery, and many
others. In most of these activities,
youngsters will be allowed to try
their hands in supervised par·
ticipation .
Organized and spear-headed by
the lzaak Walton League and

ELECTRONIC

"It takes the lutcst equipment and knowledge to provide de·
pcndablc..servicc to our c ustomt:rs. It 's a hi.l! investment."

Sct:m clni} S a u:cck,
24 hours 11 dr!y,

his 14th

I

,,'

....-

I.

�..

~~--

5 - The Dally Sentinel, Middlejx,rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Sept.l8, 1979

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 18, 1979

Sorority members _meet Thursday
Precept« Beta Beta members of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority met Thursday night at the horne of Mrs. Teresa
Swatzel for a poUuck dinner. The
diMer was planned by the social
committee composed d Maidie
Mora, Leora . Young, Roberta
O'Brien, Mildred Karr, and Clarice

Baptist Assn. meets
Reporta on the Rio Grande Bap~
Association meeting held at the
Racine Church recently were
presented at a meeting of the
W&lt;men 's Missionary Society of the
P&lt;meroy Baptist Church Thursday
night.
.
Mrs. Maria Foster and Mrs.
Margaret Bailey attended the all·
day lleMion and gave reports on the
activiti!)S including the missionary
speakers, one from the Philipplnes
and the other from Nicaragua. At
the afternoon session for the
'w&lt;men 's association meeting Mrs.
Foster and Mrs. Bailey were jolned
by Mrs. Phyllis Skinner, Mrs.
Audrey YQWI8, and Mrs. Caryl
Cook.
The Lord's Prayer ln Wlison opened the meeting conducted by Mrs.
Skinner. Mrs. Betty Wiles, white
cross chainnan, reported on the
wbite cross quota. The · overlaild
materials will go to Mississippi and
the overseas to India. Mrs.
Margaret Bailey, love gift chairman, dedicated the love gift. The
name of the new scholarship student
to be sponsored by the Ohio Baptist
Association was announced.
The program by Mrs. Sklnnerwas
an lntroduction to the program study
book for the year, "All God's
Children", to carry out the theme International Year of the Chlld. Psalm
19, verse 14 ln unison closed the
meeting. Mrs. Georgia Watson and
Mrs. Cook served refreshments.
Others attending were Mrs. Burton
Smith and Mrs. Harriet Sterrett.

Soup dinner held

0

A soup dinner at the firehouse on
Election Day was plailned when the
Racine Firemen's Auxiliary met ln
the firehouse 81Ulez Tuesday night.
It was noted during the meeting
that the new kitchen cabinets have
arrived and have been installed and
that the curtains have been put up in
tbe kitchen. The birthdays of Mrs.
Enuna Lyons and Ms. Debbie Hoff
were celebrated. Mrs. Chris Shain
presided at the meeting which opened with the pledge to the flag. Mrs.
Gene Lyons led ln the Lord's Prayer.
Mrs. Ruth Shain gave the
secretary's report, and Mrs. Gene
Lyo1111, the treasurer's report·.
Refreshments were served by Mrs.
Ly01111 and Ms. Hoff to th011e named
and Chris Shaln, Mrs. Oretha
Snider, Miss Debbie Lyons, Mrs.
Mary Sloter, Mrs. Aggie Boggess,
Mrs. Donna Goode, Mrs. Elma Im·
boden, Mrs. Mae Cleland, Mrs. Jean
Johll!lon, Mrs. Emma Lyons, and
Mrs. Mulne ROlle.

and printing.
Krautter.
Mrs. Ann Rupe thankejl the
Mrs. Mliry Morris conducted the
members
for assisting at Heritage
meeting during which time plans
Sunday
and
the group discussed
were aMounced for a hayride in Oc· ·
making
flocked
frogs to sell during
tober. Mrs. Pearl Welker presented
Regatta
'80.
Mrs.
Rupe, Mrs. Mora
!lie program books on the theme
and
Mrs.
YOWlg
are
worklng with
"Around the World " noting that
the
Artists
and
L\!clurer's
Conunit·
Mrs. Young and Mrs. June Van
tee
of
Rio
Grange
Cooununlty
Col·
Vranken had lrelped with the design
lege and the group ·discussed pur·
chasing tickets for that.
•
The chapter sent get-well cards to
Mrs. Phyllis Mullen, a charter
member, and Mrs. Marcia Hobstet·
TUESDAY
ter, the sponsor. Mrs. O'Brien and
LAFAYE'ITE WhiteShrine, 7:30
Mrs. Eleanor Thomas will host the
p.m ., Leah Schoonover and Aileen
next meeting. Rick' Williamson,
Carter, hostesses.
chaPter's delegate to Buckeye Boys'
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH
State, will report at the next
Athletic Boosters, for all sports and
meeting.
cheerleaders, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at

~ -- Social Calendar

the junior high in Racine. All
boosters urged to attend.
XI GAMMA MU CHAPI'ER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Tuesday
night at the Columbia Gas Co. office.
Mrs. Carol McCullough and Mrs.
Phyllis BeMett to be hostesses.
SAUSBURY PTO 7:30 p.m . .
Tuesday with teachers and parents '
of new .students to be introduced.
Refreshments.
QUARTERLY BIRTHDAYS will
be observed when Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, meets at
8 p.m. Tuesday. Potluck refresh·
ments.
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
Boosters meeting, 7:30 p.m. ,
Tuesday, new in high school music
room; all interested parents and
band students invited.
WEDNESDAY
THIRD
WEDNESDAy
Homemakers Club Wednesday, 10
a .m. at Syracuse Municipal
Building. All homemakers welcome.
Those attending take a two liter
plastic coke bottle for project;
potluck at nqm.
TiruRSDAY
MAGNOUA CLUB Thursday at
home of Mrs. Albert Smith at 7:30
p.m. Ellen Couch assistant hostess
Edna Slusher devotions and E~
Jesse program.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday 1:15 p.m. at home of
Betty Conkle, Cheshire. Helen
Blackston program, Louise Bearhs
contest. Th011e who plan to attend to
meet at Rock Springs Methodist
Church at !2:30p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Tuberculosis
Board of Trustees meeting 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.
SATURDAY
SMORGASBORD Saturday fr&lt;m 5
to 8 p.m. at Wilkesville Pythian
Sisters hall; chil~, $1.25; adults,
$3. Proceeds will help pay for
building.
RETURNS HOME
Lewis (Duke) Talbott, 1017 Robin·
son st., Danville, Ill. 61832, former
residents of Raclne and son of Mrs.
Zella Taylor, Racine, has returned
home following a long hospital stay.
He also WJderwent major surgery.
Cards would be appreciated.

Eastern High band .sports new
uniforms, thanks contributors

Charles Knight, Attorney, Mrs. Rex
The Eastern High School hand ·thanks to a generous public - is spor- Bailey, carl Barnhill, Kathryn
ting new uniforms this fall, wearing Baum, Leolja Hensley, Sears
them for the first time last Friday catalog Merchant, Rich Valley
Dairy, Harry Richards, Mr. and
night.
The Eastern District Band Mrs. Floyd Stout, D. V. Weber Construction Co., and Mr. and Mrs.
Boollters and band members would
Virgil
Holsinger.
like to publicly thank the following
Mrs.
NelUe Parker, Shade River
businesses and citizens woo· ·made
Jaycees,
Mrs. Doris Koenig, Dr.
the new uniforms possible: ·
John
Ridgway,
Smith Nelson
Pomeroy National Barik, Roy1!1
Motors,
Karr and VanZandt Motors,
Crown Bottling Co., Mr. and Mrs.
Ohio Valley Plumbing and Heating,
Guy T. Hayman, Mr. and Mrs. KenK and C Jewelers, McClure and
neth Grover, Mr. and Mrs. ByrlGrif·
Sons,
Shammy's Drive In, Elliott
fln, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Elberfeld,
Appliances,
Carter Plumbing and
Mr, and Mrs. Grant Young, Jones
Heating,
Karr
Construction Co., Stif.
Boys Store, Long Bottom ComOer's, Douglas Uttle, Attotney,
·munity Club, B and R Discount Gas,
Sugar
Run Mill, Powell's, Avis HarRidenour Supply, Mr. and Mrs. ·
tley,
·
New
York Clothing, Mlck's
James Stout, Mr. and Mrs. David
Barber
Shop
, Riverfront
By Ht•lt•n a nd Sut• Built• I
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Collins,
Restaurant,
Eberhach
Hardware,
Pomeroy Wine Store, Meigs County
\,
Pomeroy
Grocery,
Pomeroy
Flower
Agricultural Society, Dr. R. R.
Shop, Motorist Mutual, Two's ComOLD WIVES' TALES
Pickens, Pomeroy Fabric Shop,
pany, Doug's Maine, Twin City
FRIGHTEN HER PREGNANT
Edison Hobstetter, Ewlng Funeral
Macine Shop, Ashland Oil, J and R
GRANDCHILD
Home, Legar Monument, Marion
Sport
Shop, Pomeroy Cement Block,
BY HELEN AND
Ebersbach, George Skinner,
P&lt;meroy
Home and Auto, F.ulton
SUEBO'ITEL
Citizens National Bank, ReuterThompson
Tractor Sales, Village
RAP:
Bragan Insurance, Mr. and Mrs.
Pharmacy,
Alberta Edwards, Earl
My grandmother comes from the ' Glen Stout, Mr. and Mrs. Leslie
Faudree,
Debbie
Durst, Virginia
South and she has a "cure" for Scarbrough, Francis Florist, Mr.
Walton,
Dolly
Reed,
Sue Reed,
everything - like kerosene mixed and Mrs. Harry Johnson, Mr. and
Margarei
C&amp;uthorn,
Dale
Barr, Paiwith honey for a sore throat.
Mrs. Dale Smith, Mr. and Mrs.
ty
Martin,
Ruth
Ann
Balderson,
I kind of avoided the worst of Woodrow Mora, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Grace Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Er·
these, but now I'm pregnant and Charles Weber, G and J Auto Parts,
nest Whiteheat and Lucille Smith.
Terry and I are living at her house Elberfelds Department Store, Dairy
Nell Wilson , Larry Barton, John
until we can afford a place of our Valley, Nevi Grimm, Clyde Morlan.
Henderson,
Norma Rockhold,
own.
She watches me like a hawk. H I
reach up to get somethlng on a high
shelf, she says I '11 pull the cord
around my baby's neck lmd strangle
him.
Amy Hill of the Dabble Shop near man, announced the next meeting
She told me not to eat
Racine
presented a program 011 for Sept. 25 at the Columbia Gas Co.
strawberries, or the baby might be
·
plastercraft
at a meeting of the Ohio office in Middleport.
horn with a strawberry mark. And
Eta
Phi
Chapter
of
Beta
Sigma
Phi
when I saw a woman with a hunch
back, she., pulled me away quick,
Sorority Tuesday night at the River·
boat Room ot the 1\.thens County
before I could "mark" my child.
Savings
and Loan Co.
She'd die if she knew terry and I
Mrs.
Cheryl
Crow introduced Mrs.
were having sex after the sixth mon·
Hill
who
explained
the process and
th, and she ~I should only take
displayed several pieces for the
• showers, not baths.
members to see. Mrs. Tonya Davis
It's ''terribly bad luck if I see a
presided at the meeting. Members
snake" (unless someone kills it) and
voted to "adopt" a needy family.
she said the other day that pregnant
It was decided not to donate to the
women who go to funerals will have
scholarship fund at this time. There
greedy kids. Then she produces
was a discussion on buying favors
''proofs" by telling about relatives '
for the Foimder's Day observance
gruesome experiences.
and a report on upcoming socials.
I know enough not to believe her,
but she worries me. Will worry af.
Mrs. Davis read a letter from carol
feet my baby?- LOUISE JANE
Ault requesting a leave fora year.
Mrs. Carol Crow gave the·
treasurer's report, and the ways and
LOUISE JANE:
means report was given by Kathy
' W:C-1-1, they say a happy mother
Doidge who thanked the members
produces a happy baby, but maybe
for their work at the Meigs County
that'san old wives' tale too.
Fair.
Laugh with Terry at these super·
It was noted that the rush psrly for
stitions, and you'll wln over worry. new pledges will be held on Sept. 27.
HELEN
Mrs. Susan Well, program chairLOUISE:
Just in case you aren 1 totally sure
these • o.w.t. 's are superstitions,
believe us (!Uid doctors) they are!
But don't hurt Grandma's feelings
by poking fun ln front of her. - SUE

Dorothy Cashdollar, Opal Randolph,
Mamie Buckley, Margaret
Ne$8elroad, Doyle Smales, P. R.
Randolphs, Lee Cowdery, C. H.
Kimes, Delbert Powell, Violet Satterfield, Eldon Blake, Jr., Eldon
Blake, Sr., John Helzer, Alvin Reed,
Mary Bise, Jack Wells, Leorta Ruth,
Dorhman Reed, Rose Th~s. Ellen
Hall, Helen Archer, The Nldays,
Sandy Cowdery' Frances Reed,

Charlotte Keen, Bmnie Richards,
Barb Masters, Clayton Johll!lon, Don
Putman, Warren Pickens, Opal
Johrison, Verna Rolle, Ben Bucltley,
Charles Hwnpbrey, Maye Hum·
phrey, Hazel Barton, Betty
Buchanan, Clinton Holsinger,
Howard Barber, D8IUiy Barber,
Melvln Reed, Suzie Kervin, Sheila
Fields and Ferra Lou Barringer.

Generation Rap

Contribution made
A S25 contribution to the Middleport Emergency Truck fund waa
made when the Sew-Rite-Sewing
Club met recenUy at the home .Of
Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel.
Mrs. Joni Hoffman presided at the ·
meeting with plans being made for a
Halloween dinner at Seddons 011 Oct.
24, 7 p.m. Members ot the club
residing on Llncoln Hill and Heights
will assist with the fund drive for
cystic fibrosUI.
Games were played with prizes
going to Lenora McKnight, Mrs.
Hoffman, Mrs. Betty Wehrung, and
Mrs. Martha Hoffman. Mrs. Jonl
Hoffman will be the next hostess.
others attending the meeting were
Mrs. Shirley Baity, Mrs. Flo
Strickland, Mrs. Barb Mullen, Mrs:
Evelyn Gilmore, and Mrs. Lucy.
White.

Amy Hill has craft program

October. All pre«:hoolers three and
one~ to six years old are
welcome.
Story hour will meet at I p.m. on
Mondays at Middleport Public
Ubrary and at 1 p.m. on Tuesdays at
Pomeroy Public Ubrary.
Please call the library to preregister: 99U713 for Middleport,
992-M13 for Pomeroy.

Cccnrnilteell for serving the aMual
banquet rl. the Homebullders C1aaa
were named at the Thursday night
meeting d the Philathea Women r1.
the Middleport Church of Clu1st.
The banquet will be served 011 Oct.
16 at the church. Named to the kit·

Attetids banquet
Mrs. Marie Hawkins was ln Colover the weekend to attend
the banquet and reception honoring
Fred Williams, supreme watchman
ot shepherda of the White Shrine of
Jerusalem. It waa held Saturday
evening at the Impertal House North
011 Morse Roa4. A program, enter·
taiDment and lntroductions was held
following the reception · for the
Williams'. Mrs. Hawkins visited
with relatives and friends while
there.
Mrs. Hawkins, a member of Mary
Shrine, Pomeroy, Ia serving on the
Supreme Obituary Committee this
year and is planning to attend the
Supreme Shrine Convention to be
held ln Oil1ahonia City in May. 1980.
~

Gospel Meeting
SEPI'EMBER 23 to 28, 1979
MAURICE BARNETT, Speaker

llullnnUI1111tf Main S tn•t'l

I'OMEHOY. OUIO

lh PRICE OF Nf.W
nRES WJ1H ANot

DAVIS-QUICKEL

AGENCY

Bill Quickel
" Across trom the
Courthause," Pomeroy, 0 .
992-6677

Pratt and Mrs. Nina Bland contributing. Benediction closed the
meeting. Attending besides lh08e
I)BIIIed were Mrs. Helen Reynolds,
Mrs. Mabel Walburn, Mrs. Mary
Bailey, Mrs. Margaret Lallance,
Mrs. Kathryn Ervln, Mrs. Betty
Melton, Mrs. Gertrude Miller,
Frances Roush, and Mrs. Nora Rice.

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
REMOVE IODINE STAINS
switch and receptacle plates.
By Polly Ci'amw
Remove the screws from the wall
POlLY'S PROBLEM
plate&amp; and then aoak the plates in hot
DEAR POlLY -Is there anything · water with any detergent powder.
I can use to remove iodine stains The paint will loosen up in a few
from a dress I belleve is cotton With mlnule8 and a vegetable brush will
polyester. I do not want it to l011e its help in removlng it. Do not loosen
color as it 's almoet like new. I did paint that is on the switch or recepnot notice the spot unW I got horne tacle unless the maJn circuit breaker
and it was dry. -MRS. J. S.
is turned off. Better leave well
DEAR MRS. J. S. - Fresh iodine enough alone unless replacing with
stains usually wash right out. One rl. new ones. -PAUL
the usual treatments for iodine is to
Polly will send you one of her llign·
sponge washable fabrics with ed thank-you newspaper coupon
alcohol or a solution of a few drops of clippers if she uses your favorite
ammonia ln half a cup of water. POinter, Peeve or Problem in her
Soak if necessary. Test first for ef. column . Write POLLY 'S
feet on your fabric's color. When POINTERS in care of this
stain bas disappered wash in warm newspaper.
suds and rilllle at least twice.
·POLLY
DEAR Rl:ADERS -Helen's letter
asking for a solution to ber problem
SA11JRDAY
ATTBEMO\'JES
with cats sleeping on top of her car
What do you do 011 Saturday afbrought all sorta of answers - many
Identical. Three of tbe most WIUSUBl ternoon? H you're in any grade from
remedies came fJ'WI Hawaii. Ann kindergarten through sixth, you can
said a neighbor's cat slept 011 top of spend "Saturday Afternoon at the
her convertible unW she started Movies" at Middleport Public
covering the top with old wet (not Ubrary FREE fJ'WI 2 to 3 p.m.,
dripping ) bath towels and starting October 6.
discovered cats do not like to sleep
on anything wet. Mary sprinkles
black pepper on top of her car and ATTEND
REUNION
George says cats will not even come
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Bahr and
close to his car· since he started children, Terri, Jim and Randy,
sprinkling curry powder on it.
Long Bottom, attended the 81Ulual
DEAR·POlLY - I have a better Bahr reunion on Sept. 2 at Forked
way for removlng paint from a wall Run State Park.

Plans for a wiener roast to be held
on Sept. 23 at the American Legion
Farm on Bailey Run Rnsd were
made when the Junior American
Legion Auxiliary of Feeney-Bennett
Post 128 met recently at the hall
The wiener roast will take place at
I p.m. and juniors are to take a
covered dish or other refreshments.
Plans were also made for a rummage and bake sale to be held Oct. 6,
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Legion hall in
Middleport. Anyone with rummage ·
to contribute may leave it at the hall
or contact Mrs. - BeckY Tyree,
992-3169, for pickup.
Attending the meeting were Mrs.
Tyree and Peggy eaton, advisors,
and eight juniors. The pledge ln
unison opened the meeting and
Sherri Fm: had prayer. · Officers'
reports were given. Reported ill
were Cindy Matheny, Edith
Spencer, Martha Hunnell. Get-well
carda have been sent to Mrs.
Spencer, Louise Hswklns, Bill lewis,
Avanell Baas, Don Geary, Clifford
Christy, Chales Gilkey, .Brnest Van
COURSE OFFERED
Would you like to be a better
parent? Would you llke to have free
babysittinl! service while you learn?
Ccme to John Brammer's mini·
series on parenting at Middleport
Publlc Ubrary, beginning October 6
at 2 p.m. and let your children watch
FREE Movies while you talk with

him.

Inwagen, and Archie McKinney.
Sympsthy cards were sent to Helen
Darst,• Alice Lemley , · Lelah
Wlnebr-r, and Eva Hartley. A
congratulation card was sent to Ken·
ny and Lisa Roush.
•
The juniors were urged to save
cancelled stamps and R. C. botUe
caps. The doqr: prize brought by Kim
Roush was won by Peggy eaton. Ice
cream and cookies were served.

"'

I
TO OBSERVE BIRTHDAY
Mrs. Edna Roush of Racine will
observe her 93rd birthday on
Wednesday. A card shower Ia 'being
planned.

LOREN WOLFE
HOSPITAI,IZED
Loren Clifford Wolfe is in Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Room 203.

TO MEET TONIGIJI'
The GirlS' Athletic Boosters at
Meigs High School will meet this
evening 7 p.m.in room 216.

Americans are eating more
cheese! In 1978, the per per!IOD con·
sumption rang the bell at 17.3 pounds, which is up from 16.4 pounds ln
1977. .Cheese consumption has
doubled since 1961!
. ~

.....

SHOP

MASON FURN"ITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon., Tues., Wed., Friday &amp; Sat.
8: 30 to 5:00 Thursday til112 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

Mason, w. Va.

773·5592

nRE
FREE

MEIGS.nRE CEN1ER. ~
·!92-2101

· itU:Iilalll

,..... .. ,r .

fREEf
.
·
. .0
·cnoiCE
j

MEAT

.1. ~~~-~I 3 9 ,.
TURKEY DRUM sTIcK 5..t.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.
.
.
12 OZ. PKG. 99 e
SUPERIORS FRANKIES....................................................
lPOUND 6·
9'
SPARE RIBS, , ...............................................••.••....•.........
RATH ROLL SAUSAGE ••••••••..............••.•.•••••••••••• ~.-:&lt;?.'!~~.. 79'
"'
.
'
12 OZ. PKG. 69'
C,O RN KING WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
!.• ••••

· .· norvt
·'

•

,

BIG STAR -

GALLON

2% MILK•••••••••••~IAS.Tlt '1 69

TOILET TISSUE................•.. ~.~?~.~~~.. 59~

VALLEY BELL

DISTILLED

VALLEY BELL

WATER. ................•..................
~~~~~•..7 9 ~
..

BROUGHTON

OYSTER STEW ...............•... !~~z. ~.:.~~ ..59~

BUTTERMILK.••••••• :!.~!·. 89~
FUDGE BARS. ••••• H.!~~•. 99~

CORNERSTONE
OF OUR
INSURANCE STORE

1% MILK .!.~!~~.G.A.~~~-··165 GRADE A SMALL

offe r~ poli cies thar provioe exce ll ent benefit s to man y people.

But here ar The Insurance Store we offer more.
\ \ 1' arc inde,,endenl agent'\. T ha t mea ns we are free to review
and fc~: o mm c nd the po li cies, ·coverage a nd serv ices of
many leadi11g companies ... like The Co ntin e ntalln sura n ~.:e
Co mpa nies. fo r example . So you have a better
dHITH.'C to get the insurance protection that exactl y fit s
yu ur o;; pecial r equ i re m en t ~ .

R•prosenting :
FEDER4l KE111PER
'INSUR4NCE COMP4NY

POMEROY, O.
992· 1130 or 992-5139

"YOU DON 'T BUY A PO'LJCY,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

·

EGGS ••••••••••• ~ ••~~~- 39~
BANANAS •••••••••• ~.~!~~.•1 00 ·

So me inm rance agents o ffer the policies of a single insurance
company. And rhat's okay. Every good in surance company

WE

JUST WHITE

7-UP, ORANGE CRUSH,
BARRELHEAD
ROOTBEER
'
.

'

8 PAK

SCOT LAD .

CRACKERS ............................~~~~:. ..49~

AMOCO OIL .............................~~~~!
. .. 69e
/

THURS. ONLY

IT WITH ATIGHT FIST.

" The telephone company d oes more than send b ill s. We get
them, too . And it's my job to make sure those bill s ore right.
Keep ing costs under contro l is o full -time job.
" Every penny I save here is a penny our customers won't
find on thei r phone bill s. And I'm olso helpi ng my co mpany
run o tight o nd effi cient bus iness .
"Thai's why I'm proud to be o ne of the peop le General
Telephone is talking about when th ey say
'We keef you t.cl king '."
( ...

I =I

'119

HILTON

PEOPLE TO

RC

FRIDAY ONLY
Velda Hoffman,
Accounting Cleric,
Marion Ohio
One of the
1

COLA

8 PAK

1

89'

8 PAK 16 OZ.

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO lO P.M.
SUNDAY.lO TO 10

100,000 G T~

pro fessionals who
ore working to
bring you belle(
a11d more efficienl
telephone service.

OR

DIET RITE

DR. PEPPER
We

Federal Food Starn

we

Ihe

BTLS. ~.

\I

'

99C

Plu$ Tax &amp; Depl

To Umit Quantities .

l

I

RECAP

--=(1) insurancefr~;~f~1r

=
i·-=

and treasurer's reporta, and Mrs.
Grace Hawley gave the flower and
card report. It was voted to dispense
with the July and August meetings
and to have a family picnic in Jtme
instead of August next year.
Refreshments were served by
Mrs. Stewart, Mrs. Evelyn Murray,
Mrs. McKinley, with Mrs. Grace

SEPTEMBER

nRE

All STAR DAIRY

without
sacrificing
~ protection
..,., for price.

..

~

chen committee which will also he
the telephone committee were Mrs.
Martha Chllda, Mrs . Regina Swift,
'Mnl. Kathy El'Win, and Mrs. Clyda
Allensworth. Other committees are
Mrs. Betty McKinley, Mrs. Louise
McElhiMy, Mrs. Sharon ~wart,
and Mrs. Ella Mae Daugherfy, din·
ing room; Mrs. Dorothy Jenkinson,
Mrs. Revs Beach, Mrs. Sharon
Stewart, and Mrs. Betty McKinley.
During the meeting presided over
by Mrs. McKinley, the Women voted
to cancel the OhriJtmas party and
joln with other classes for the combined church party. Mrs. Swift was
named to serve as representative for
the Middleport Church for the Meigs
County .Women 's Fellowship
meetings.
The women 's retreat to be held at
the Ohio Valley Christian Assembly
camp l!ite Frldsy was announced
with the Phllathes members to provide the · bedtime snack. The
Pbilau;;; &amp;Ong and the Lord's
· prayer opened the meeting. Mrs.
Bea Stewart had devotims pertain·
lng to love. Mrs. Dorothy Rnsch and
Mrs. Farie Cole gave the secretary

HIGH MILEAGE
RETREA'DS

STORY HOUR
Story hour begins the first week in

,jr==='==rv;;=;;=;= = '=;~~~t:,:,p'l:Z';;;7l'' ' ' 'i~

Philathea Women meet, choose committees

~.
'·I

�I

~1

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Tuesday, Sept. l8,1979

)'~our
WANT AD
CHARGES
ld&lt;ty
2 days
3 days
6days

IS W1.1nls ur Undu
Ce~:s h
rtmrgt•
1.00
125
l .;,o
1.90
I.M
2.1!1
:1.00
3 .7~

F.ach word uvrr lht• minimum
15 words is ~ L'rnls pt'r word per
Wiy . Ada runnin~: other thun t•ons.t!('UilVe dll}'S
tht&gt; 1 l\.11)' rHit•

~·1 11

bl! t' har~ t"&lt;l at

In memo11•. r ard of Tlumk.o;
and ObiiWirv · fi t•ents per ,.,nrU .
S:.lOO min inlllm. Qlsh in :ul·
\ 'liOl't' .

Best Buys Are ~~ound in tlte Sentinel Classifieds
Wanted to Buy

Pets for Sale

MEIGS COUNTY HUMAN E
SOCIElY . 992·6260 . Pots

CHIP W~O . Poles max .
diameter 10' ' on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled :slob. $10
per ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pal let Co .. Rt . 2, PomRroy.

HOOF HOLLOW, English ond
Western .
Sadd l es
and
hcrness. Horses. and ponies .
Ruth Reeves . 614 -698·3790.
Barding &amp; Riding Lessons and
Horse Core products .Western
boots . Chi ldren' s $15 .50 .
Adu lts Sn.OO.

available lor adoption and information service.

GUN SHOOT (VERY SUNDAY I
PM. FACTORY CHOKE ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB.
NO HUNTING on
Freeland's property .

George

Lost and Found
FOUND: Bu tternut A 'tlenue
a rea .
Poodle
Terrier ,
strawberry blond , mole .
Hu ~e Society , 992-6260 .

FOUND ME IGS High School

Mobilr Homt" 1\(! k-:i &lt;:md Va nl
sales 11rt a rt't~llkd only with
t'.llsh with onkr . 25 n~ nt dl.!lr~ t·

oreo : Female Irish SetTer, Red·
in color , red co llar. Humane
Socie ty . 992-6260 .

for ad::ll'llrryin.: Box Numbt:r In
Can• (If The Se,nlincl.
The Publi sht'r rt.'Str.'l'!i thl'
ri~ ht t u edit ur rejt&gt;d l! ny uds
deemed
ob jt&gt;dion.YI. Th t!
Publisher will not 1M' resJ)(msiblt&gt;

for mon• than ont&gt; ineorrel'l in·

_owrt itm

NOTICE
WANT-AD
A_DVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mondii''

Noon on SutUrday
Tuesda1·
thru Fri1i.11.1'
4 P.M.
the dHy before pob!i(';otion

Sunday

I P.M.

Help wanted
liVE-IN HOUSEKEEPER wanted
in exchange for home and
security . 985-&lt;4392 or write bo x
no . 46898 . long Bottom , OH .
RN OR LPN with , Pharmacology, full time . 3· 11 shift.
Shifting difterenlail. Pinecrest
Core C&amp;nter, Judy Barkus.

••6·7112 .
FARM COUPLE for port time
w ork on farm end homestead
near Coolville .. OH . Mobile
home. attractive setting, all
util ities e xcept telephone furnished , form eKperience
essent iGI , mechanics and
carpentry · co nstruction eKper ience helpful. For further
written deta il!. , write , P.O .
Bo x 30, Coolville, OH -45723.

' ''

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

OLD FURNITURE . ice boxes.
brass beds, iron beds. desks .
etc. . complete households.
Write M .D . . Miller, Rt. 4,
Pome.roy or call 992· 7760.

OH . 678·2980.
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE . glau.
chino , anYthing. See or co lt
Rurh Gosnev , antiques . 26 N.
2n d.,
Mi ddleport ,
OH .

992·3161.
WANTED: SAW logs. Payment
upon delivery to our yclrd .
7:30-3:30 weekdofs . Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barl ow,

OH 67B~ 2960 .

WANTED: JUNK, Batter ies ,
radiators , motors , auto. frons .
No Sunday coils . 949·2563 .

Yard Sale
NO HUNTING on
Freeland' s property .

YARD SALE . Monday , luesdo)' ,
Wednesday .
770
Sycamore St ., Middleport.

YARD

vilfeh Meigs Counlyl Slate

of 0 io, and being urther
described as follows :
Beir.g all of Lot Number 4
and Lot Number 15 of
Wilson and Irvin's Addition
to Harrisonville as recor in the records Of rhe Meigs
County Recorder's Office
and continaing 0. 137 acres
in Lot 14 and 0. 11&lt;4 acres in
A lso following described
tract between Luts No. 14

and 15.

function best today where you
are able to express your iniliati'tle
and independence. Be a leader
and not one who leans on others.
Find out more of what lies ahead
for you In the year following your
birthday by sending lor your
copy ol Astra-Graph Letter. Mail
$1 for each to Astra-Graph, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
date.

LJaRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 23) Self·
defeating thoughts are your
greatest enemy today. Don 't be
unreallsUcally optimistic, but do
be appreciative ot wn at you have
to offer.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-NoY. 22) The
types of friends you

are most

likely to en;oy today will be th ose
around whom you !eel you ca n
let your hair down and just be
yourself.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21l

For the next few days yo u will be
in a cycle where major goals can
be achieved with more facility
than UIUIII. Make your game pl an
accordingly.
CAPRICOAN (Doc. 22-Jen. 11l
Being too analytical today could
tnrow what you hope to achieve
oft schedule. Proceed at an
orderly pace, but 8\/0id getting
ott on tangents.
AQUARNI (Jan. 20-Feb. 19) It's
batt you don't poke yo ur nose
Into the confidential affairs ol a
frtend today . unless you 're tully
prepared to become involved
and uaume some ot the respon-

llbllltiet.
....CIS (Feb.21).Morch ZOl Too

much weighing and balancing
today will make you indecisive
and will contribute to contusion.
Once you make a decision, don' t
aHerlt.
. AJIIES (Ma!Ch 21 -April18) Svb -

Sept.

1&lt; ~ 21.

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY,
OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
4$769
CHARLES H. MORRISON
ANO
SARA
ANN
MORRISON, Route 2, BoK

Beginning at an iron pin
in the northwest corner of

said Lot No. 14 and the
easterly right of way line of
Church Street; thence N 22
· 30'·00" E along the
ex isting easterly right of
way line Of Church Street
7.46feet to an iron pin in the
southwest corner Of said

Lot No. 15; thence S 63 · 00'

· 00" E along the south line

of said Lot No. 15, 100.00
feet to an iron pin in the
southeast corner of said

Lot No. 15; thence S 22 · 30 '
~ 00" W along the east line

of the Plat of Harrisonvi lie
7.46 feet to an iron pin in the
northeast corner of said

Lot No. 14; thence N 63 ·

00" W a long the north line
of said Lot No. 14 a distance
of 100.00 feet to the p l a.c~ ot
beginning and contam1ng
0.017 acres.
, ,
Hearing on said Pet 1t1on ,
w ill be held on or after Oc ·

Iober 3. 1979.
Pauline Atkins Kenneth
Welsh, Claire Waggoner ,
Carl Vinc ent Gheen, Sr.,
and Dav id Riggs, Trustees,
Harrisonville Cumberland
Presbyter ian Church of
Harrisonv ille .
Steven L . Story ,
Attorney for Trustees

due lnclll'lations 11....... 1 •v be
overly crll~cal , fM!n II you feel
your remarks are juslllied. Wh at
you say cduld do more harm
than good.

TAURUS (April 211-Mor :1(1)' Try

not to lake yourself or others too
seriously today. lei you r sense
of humor prevail and you will
have smooth sailing.
GEMINI {MaJ 21·June 20)
Rather than bagin new projects
at this lime you'll be better orf to
complete what you·ve started.
This is especially true of tasks
around the house.
CANCER (June 21-JuiJ 22) Y.ou
are better equipped today to
handle. th6 meni 11l. as opposed

Today In History
By The Associated P ress
Today is Tuesday, Sept. 18, th e
26lst day of 1979. There are 104 days
left in the year.
Tqday's highlight in history :
On this date in 1793, President
George Washin gton laid th e
cornerstone of th e Capitol Building
in Washington .
On this date :
In 1759, the Frencl&gt; s urrendered
~ebec to the British .
In
1810,
Chile
d eclar ed
independence from Sp~in.
In 1~. the U.S. Congress passed
the
Fapan
bega n
military
occupation of Manchuria .
In 1961 , U.N. Secretary- CRASH
IN Northern Rhodesia .
In 1973, East Germany, Wes t
Germany and th e Bahamas were
admitted t o !be Uni ted Na ti ons.
Ten years ago : President Richard
Nixon addressed the U.N. General
Assembly in New York and urged
members to put diplomatic pressur e
on North Vietnam to begin serious
peac~ nogotiations .

REGISTERED CHOCOLATE poodle. S60. 992·6280.

1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . coil
303·67S· I SOl or 305· 675~2•88
or 304-675-1553.

1974 DODGE

CO~ONET 4·door

Custom. 992-5858.

1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE . Ex ·
ceJien t · condition . 29 ,000
miles. $2400. 992-3198.

1969 FORD BRONCO 4·wheel

CLLINS,

as

Treasurer of Meigs County,
Pomeroy, O~io
Defendants

case No. l7,170
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

Frank G . Weaver and
Nancy L. Weaver and
Michael L. Conley, whose
last known residence was

BOK 301 Waverly, W. Va .
26184, olherwlse the place
of residence of each of sa id
Defendants
be i ng

unknown, will tak e notice

1hat on May 2,

1979,~

Charles

H , Morrison and ::.ara Ann
Morrison filed a c~mplaint
in the Common Pleas Court

danfs, Frank G . Weaver
and Nancy L. Weaver and
Michael L. Conley, are

and solely liable to
l'ointly
he Plaintiffs in the sum of

$21.B29.B4 plus interest of 8
percent per annum from

February 12, 1978, and

fur ~

ther alleging tnat sa id
Plaintiffs nave a first mor·
tgage on
real estate
described in Mortgage

Book 137, Page 105, Meigs

County Mortgage Records.
Plaintiffs
demand
Ludgment
against the
Defendants In the amount
of $21 .829.84 plus interest at
8 percent per annum from
February 12, 197B, costs of
suit and further demand
the foreclosure of the real
estate described i n Mor·
tgage Book 137, Page 105 of
the Meigs County Mor ·
tgage Records and such
other re l ief as may be
Eac h of the Defendants
named above is requ i red to
answer on or before the ex·
piration of 28 days after
last publ icat ion of th is
notice which date will be

October 30, 1979.

Charles H , Morrison
Sara Ann Morrison

18) 28 19) 4, 11, 18 (10l 2, 51c

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASS~ . )

Five years ago : President Gerald
Ford, in a speech before the U.N .
Assembly, ca lled fo r a global
strategy for food and energy.
One year ago: Egyptian Foreign
Minist e r Ibra him Kamel and
Ambassador to the U.S. Ashraf
Ghorbal r esigned to protest the
Camp David agreement with Israel.
Today's birth days : Former film
star Greta Garbo is 74. Actor Robort
Blake is 46. Rep . Jolm Rhodes of
Arizo na is 63.
Thought for today : This job has
done wonder s for m y paranoia . Now
I rea lly ha ve e nemies - former
Secr etary of State Henry Kissinger .

Ever tried Tuna burgers ? Prepare
a tWJa filling with onion, celery ,
green pepper and sour c ream to
moisten . Here 's the switch : add onehalf cup cubed Cheddar cheese for
each seven ounces of tuna. Spoon into sandwich bun.s, wrap in alwninwn
foil and heat for 15 or 20 minu&lt;es in a
moderA!e &lt;350 deg. F . ) c ;·;.,

FOUR GRAY kittens
mother cot. 742·232,

'-!.
MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

and

YOUNG MAlE full grown St.
Bernard . To good l')ome . Good
natured , hea lthy . If no
answer , call again, 742 -2b51 .

perms.

LOOKING FOR Good; home for
2 miniature coll ies , Louie
ty pe, shots ond wormed .
Humane Society , 992 -6260 .

Main St.

men ' s &amp;
styling,

Fe1turing :

women ' s

Call for appt. or walk in .

1973 VW STATIONWAGON JO
mi. per gol. Auto ., trans ., im maculate . 378-6155 .

PICKUP . JIB

1972 PINTO RUNABOUT. 4·
speed . for parts, has 4 mog
wheels , $28 ea . new. 2 new
recapped tires , $150 . Al so.
slant six 1973 Dodge engi ne,
55,0Cl0 miles . Numerous new
ports, $150. Pop-up camper.
Sleeps 6, refrigerator and
sink , $450. leonard Bo ss ,
SyracUse. 992· 5006.

197-4 .14 x 70 mobile home.
Good condit ion . 992·5B58 .

1965 GENERAL60x l2 . 2 bedr.
1970 Syl&gt;~o . 60k 12, 2 bedr.
1970Costle, 60xl2, 2 bedr .
1974 Markline. 50KI2 , 2 bedr.
1969 Valiant, 12x60, 2 bedr.
1967 Notional. 12x50. 2 bedr .

\'t!ter~·

•15 Admm . Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

Pomeroy,

0.

~jl1t~:~s
~J

•

1972 LYN N HAVEN l4 x65 3

PT .
PlEASANT ,
304 -675·4424.

WV .

Real Estate for Sale
REAl ESTATE: I acre lot in Ri g·
gscrest Manor, between TUppen Plains ond Chester.
Phone 985-392~ and 985-4129.
SEVEN ROOMS and both. 2
acres . 992-2523 .
FOR SALE : 3 bedroom house.
Well water. In Bradbury.

992.5871.
40 ACRES LAND on Ba iley Run
Rood. Good hunting, timber.
all mineral r ights . $12 .000
742-2442.
CLARK RESIDENCE . Syrocus.e,
corn er of Cr ooks and Fourth.
Near swim club , boll Held,
tenn is co urts, proposed
marina, 6 rooms end both
frame . Lot 100 x 150' $.40,000.

Coli 992·3083 or 992· 2720.
TWO BLOCKS from bus ineu
district in Midd leporl, out of
high water , 3 bedroom , eot· in
ki tchen , pantry, dining room ,
living room ond bo th. Natural
gas furnace , full basement
and ollie . enclosed bock yard ,
wos.he r ,
dr ye r ,
range ,
refrigerator, cu rta ins, ond
carpeting incl uded in purchas·
ing price. Call 992-3243 oher
6pm for appointment.

WANTED TO lease: Cool p r~
perty for deep mine opera·
tion . Mus t be 48" in th ickn e$$.

367·7593.

667 ·6485. Will be OPen
late if you need
something.
9· 1&lt;4· 1 mo.

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING
•New Home
•Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992 ·6011
7·12

bedroom home with full

992·5434 .

basement and extra I
Walk to th e store .

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

$25,000.
22 ACRES - With water
and
e lectr ic ity
available . Good home
sites for A · Frames .

SENIOR CITIZENS , 1 bedroom
opts . lor
rent.
Renta l
a&gt;~oilabl e .
a ssis tan ce

992· 7721.

$9,500.
RENOVATED

12 x 60 2 bectroom mobile
home. Racine area . 992-5858.

2

bedroom home, nat. gas
furnace , ca rpeting, din·
ing area, 2 car garage

For Sale
COAl, LIMESTONE , sand ,
· grave l, calcium chlor ide, fer·
ti l iter, dog food , and oil types
of :soh. Excelsior Solt Works .
Inc .. E. Main St. , Pomeroy,
'192· 3891 .

WINTER POTATOES. C.W. Pro·
ff itt form , Portland . OH . $8 a
hundred and $5 a hundred .
APPLES. N ow picking Grimes
Golden. Other &gt;~Ori e t i es to
f ollow. Fitzpatridc Orchards,
SR 689 . Phone Wilkesvi lle
DUROC BOARS. Purebred.
Ree-d svi lle . 6 1-4·378·6311 .
21 FOOT OF wrought I ron roi 1.
lng. Beige carpet B:wlO. Pull
down cei ling light . Movie projector ond screen . After 5, cal l

and eKira lot. $25,000.
70 ACRES- Will sefl al
a Iittle over $200.00 per
acre.

NEW LISTING -

27

acres near F orked Run
Lake, Water and elec.

available . $15.000 . ·
STONE Nice one
bedroom

home

w ith

bath, na t. gas F .A. fur ·
n ace w ith ci t y water and
2 V:~ acres . Reduced to

$20,000.
NEW . : STING

2

le vel acres with large

shad e trees. 3 bedroom
home, ceram ic bath,
nat. gas F . A . furnace .
Garage with tool room .

Ideal for fa mily .

7 42·2020.

NEW LISTING - Clean

POTATOES, Red Pontiac , Kennebec, $8 per I OO .Ib. Small $4
per 100 lb. 3 m iles wes t of
Darwin between Gold Ridge
and CR 14 on TR 145. Cecil
Toben .

60 acre farm at Alfred ..
L ots of ~ buildings , good
fences, minerals and
f arm house. A real trac ·
tor farm .

1979 HONDA XL 500. l ow
mileage. Excellent condition .

992·5969.
FIREWOOD f or sole, now tak ing orders . Will del iver . Phone
742 ~ 2056 .

CLARK RESIDENCE . Syracu se.
Corner Crooks and 4th . 3
pi&amp;ee bedroom set , ki tchen
table , 4 choirs , 4 dining room
chairs, wall mirror, cold tobl e.
radio, 21omps , TV R.C.A. . Ca ll
992-3083 or 992-2720.

BUILOING LOTS -

In

Baum Subdivision , wil l
welcome off er. Others

al Syracuse, Rockspr ·
lngs. Rutland. Pomeroy
and near Rut land .

Call992·3325 or 992-3876

-Housing ·
Headquarters

FHA - AS

low as

•

Yesterday's

Racine. 0 .
Weavers

•
NORTH
• K 963

4-23 ·1 m o.

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways .

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
R e pair
Phone 992·5682
4 30 ·tfr

11110

608 E .
MAIN
POMEROV,O,

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE, 0 .
/

LISTING

Established business in

Pomeroy, " THE K fO·
DIE SHOPPE". Call for
details.
acres,

vacant

sec luded,

Of1

30

land ,

a

good

t ownship road . 7 acres
t il lable ,
balanc e
WOOdland . Has many

uses. ONLY $13,350.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap·
proximatelv 25 acres of
build ing sites, 4 lots
already
surveyed .
Water ,
electr l c
available, on a raod ad ·
iacent to good subdivi ·
sion . Call for f inancing

a vailable. $27,500.00.
LOVELY
Z· STORY
FRAME - • bedrooms,
kitchen,

2

baths, lots of carpeting
and paneling, N.G. fore ~
ed a ir heat, full base·
ment, garage, c arport,

patio. A low $28,500.00.
NICE
1 - FLOOR
FRAME - 3 bedrooms,
bath, N.G. heat, storms,
glass enclosed porch,

part basement, garage,
about 3 acres, fruits and
grapes
and others .

$25,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Love ·
ly home located In e)( ·
ce llent neighborhoOd,

brick

and

frame .

5

bedrooms, 11h baths,
ca rport, patio, fenced
yard. This you must see.

$59,500.00.
REALTORS
Hen.ry E . Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992 ~ 2259

SU P E'f
fi~AILE

' ~ I

Nelson
Motors, Inc.

Ph . 992 ·2174

New~ repair ~

gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cl e aning
Free' Estimates

992-6191

BRADFORD , A.uct ion . .r, Com.
plete Service. Phone 949·2487
or 949· 2000. Racine , Ohio.
Critt Bradford .

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweeper~ , toasters. irons , all
small appliances. lawn moer,
neK t to State Highway Goroge
on Route 7. 985-3825 .

SEWING MACHINE Repa irs,
service , oil makes, 992-2284 .
Tt-le Fabri c Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles cind
Se r'&lt;~ ic e . We sharpen Sciuors .

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone In
Middleport-Poemr oy area .
Coli for
free estimate.

367·7101 .

.•

HOUSEWORK Done in even·
ings on~ Sa tu rdays . . Call

742·3119 .
DOZER , END loader , brus h
hog. Will do basements,
ponds , brush, timber, land
dearing . Charles Butcher 1

.. . HE 1 LL

BE BACK 'ER

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
·We l l ;uilt older
bedrooms, 11h bath , hardwoJd f loors, out
V:lt er . P riced to sell $19 .500.()( 1

..

ROO~I~G

REMODEUNG
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

"A 12
t A 72
• 43 2
A Michigan reader asks
what we respond to partner's
one-spade opening bid .
We just raise to two spades,
but we sure hope that our
partner will find a rebid.

t 3

!NEWSPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)

(Do you have a question tor
the experts 7 Writs "Ask ·the
~xperts.

" care of this newspa-

per. Individual questions will
be answer9d if accompanied
.by stamped, seff-addressed ·
envelopes. The most interestIng questions will be used in ·
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)

.."tr

RUTLAND
742· 2328

EXCAVATING , darer , looder
ond bock hOff work : dump
trucks and lo-boys for hire ,
w ill hau l fil l dirt , top soil .
llmeslone ond grov•l. Coli Bob
or Roger Jeff•rs, doy phone
992 · 7089 ,
nig h t
ph one
992·:B25 or '192· 5232.

5 See vialtors

Someone will pay
for this!

!Gambol
I French river • Small finch
7 River into
11 Soften
tbe OlBe
1%Sea duck
13 Bewitch
I Poem
.15 French
I New, in comseason
blnaUons
11 "The auld
11 Marine

"'"

While theLI's at 1t
the4 kin pa4 fer
m4 chimle4, too~

PULLINS E)( CAVATING-. Complete Service . Phone 992-2•78 .

17 El1llsted

u

u

INSURAN CE

U Compulsloo

'rry hard

(to) 17 Uttle
Military
lady

address

•

1B Charles Gibson
1t Two prepoailions in ooe
2ll t.kelet
21 Cluue

Z5 Give

•

been ca ncel led ? lost your
operators
license? Phone
9'12~ 21&lt;3 .

shelter to
Zl Socred law
Ending
for lemoo
!t Aclor,
Gilbert -

za

•

systems ,
Rt , 143.

WHY e&gt;IRDIE YOU 'RE
NOT BITTER. A~OUT

• : \A So GLAD TijAT
!':&gt;ILL AND llJTU ARE
BECOMING- G-OOD
F!21END5 /

n.mJ E)E IN~ UN·
EMPLOYED ARE
YOU?

NO

~UT

WHAT

I HATE
WHAT ITS
DOING TO

TUTU USED TO ~E

50

::&gt;ovou

DRCJUD AND IN:/EPEN -

MEA'\J?

DENT. NOW HE'S NO-;EV!'N ~lNG TO
FINO WORK.

t"IM!

7&lt;2 ~ 2593 .

IN STOCK f or immediate
delivery: var iout si zet of pool
kits . Oo-lt.' yourself or let us
Install for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sales , Inc. 992-5724 .

of

stage

CAN FORM

A COFFEE

34 Workshop

".LATCH.

fly balls

ZZ Bustle
SC Word with
Z3 Regretted
watch or
Zl Detente's
Ught
predecessor 3&amp; Skin
Z'7 Every bit
problem
Zl Anagram
31 How soon?
dear
37 Joker
31 Old World
38 Wrath
· falcon
:It Spy Initials
32 lmportwte
40 Asian river

»Popular
musical
33Rumanlan
city

YEAH ,
~'AYBE THEY

Phone I (61&lt;l 698·7331 or

Yesterday's Alllwer

bitd

sod"

EXC AVATING ,
dozer ,
back hoe and dltcher , Charles R. Hatf ield . Block Hoe Service , -:
Rutlond , Ohio. Pone 747-2008. "'

b--t--+--1

Item
37 "Wizard of

n~;m.of~'b-4-+--+-+-

WILL HAUL li mestone and
grovel. Also, lime hau ling and
spraodlng. leo Morris Truck·
ing . Phone 741-2455.

the Ram

t!Peerlea
dMecha-

S &amp; G Carpet Cleani ng. Steam
cl eaned . Free esti mate.
Rea so nable rate s. Sco t ·
c hgua r d .
992 -6309
or

TIME FER 'lORE
BATH, HONEY ·POT!!

TH' ONLY WAY

7&lt;2 ~ 2348 .

TO GIT RID OF
TATER'S HICCUPS
IS TO SCARE
TH' DAYLIGHTS
OUT OF HIM

Pomeroy Landmark

nlsms
t4Age
DOWN
1 Promoo-

tory

! Touch on
3 Meat .
spread

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

'250

how to work

It :

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

II

One letter, ajmply standi for another. In this umple A Ia
used for the tl\ree L's, X for the twe O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the leneth · and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilrerent.
CKYHOQUOTES '

'(OU'VE SEEN
CALLED FOR
JURI{ DUW

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

DON'T WORR'( ... IT'S
VE~.'-1 SIMPLE ...

~­

~ ,

MAIN ST.
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .
PHONE 992:2181

,,

X

.,_18

ALL I{OU DO IS STAND
IN THE HALLWA~ FOR
THREE HOURS UNTil. THE!(
TELL ~OU THE TRIAL HA5
BEEN CANCEl.ED..THEN
~OU

60 HOME ...

I'M SURE ~OU
CAN 00 IT!

VRSDS'T

GQVRKGY

OSKGY . TPBSDKQD
YDPS

GQOKUKVC

TPBSDKQD

YQ

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, m•
6: 311-'NBC News3,15; ABC News13;
CArol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough B; Pulse 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13 ; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,JJ .
7:30-H ollywood Squares 3,t0;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; Sha Na Na 13; Countr.y Roacb
15; All ln The Family 17;
MacNeii ~ Lehrer
Report 20,33.
B:OO-Misadventures of Sherlll Lobo
3, 15; Happy Days 6, 13; Movle
"The Other Side of Midnight"
e,lO; Movie " The War Lord" 17;
Hotcakes 20; City Notebook 33.
8:30-Angle 6,13.
·
9 : 00- Movle " Sem i· Tough" 3.15 ;
Three' s Company 6,13; Mlrl'
nesota
Orchestra ' s
75th
Anniversary 33; Border Trattlc
20; 9:3D-Talil 6,13.
News 20.
10 :30-Baseball 17; Like lt ls 20 .
11 : 00- News 3,6,8 , 10,13, lS; D ic k
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33.
11: 30-Johnny Carson 3,1 5; Barney
Miller 6, 13; ABC News 33; Movie
" The Last Rebel" 10.
·12:0s-Movle "Three on a Date"
6, 13; 12 : 4D-Movle "A Sensitive,
Passionate Man" 8.
1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; Movie
"The Borgia Stick" 17.
2 : 10-News 13; 3 : 00- News 17;
3 : 20- Movle " King of the
Vikings" 17; ,_S: lD-Dragnet 17
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19,
1979
5:40=-World at Large 17 ; 5:oCSFarm Report 13; 5:.50-PTL Club
13 .
6:00-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10;
PTl Club 15; 6: 1D-News 17 .
6 : 3o..:..chrlst~pher Closeup 10;
Dragnet 17; 6 : ~5-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 :.50-GQO&lt;I Morning
West Vlrglnla13; 6: 55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3.15; Good Morning
America 6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Morning 8; Batman 10; Three
Stooges~ Little Rascals 17.
7: 15-A .M. Weather 33 ; 7:3DFamlly Affalr 10; 7:55-&lt;:huck
White Reports 10.
·
8 : ~apt . Kangaroo 8,10: Leave It
to Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17.
9:00-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Phil Donahue 13, 15; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8; One Day At A Time
10; Lucy Show 17 .
9:30-Bob Newhart B; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
lO : ~ard

Sharks 3, 15; Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8, 10;
· Morning Magazine 13: ~ovle
"The Long Dark Hall" 17.
10 : 3D-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8, 10.
10 :5s-&lt;:BS News B; House Call 10.
11 :00-High Rollers 3, 15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :3D-Wheel of Fortune 3,15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20,33; 11 :5s-News 17.
12 : 0D-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10,13; Mlndreaders 15; Love
American Style 17.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Health Fleld 15;
Movie "Spitfire" 17; Elec. Co.

20,33.

4 Greek letter

ACROSS

G ASCll.JNE ALLEY

9·1&lt; ·1Pd . l

CLEARANCE PRICED

9-111-B

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

CLEARANCE PRICED

DOWNING.CHILDS

You hold:

In ruboor bridge North will
respond with either three
spa des or two clubs. The final
contracl will be four spades
by South in either event .
Some match-point players
like to respond two diamonds.
They are heading fo r lltat
same four-spade contract, but
want to stop the diamond
lead.
·
As you can see the di a mond
lead holds South to I 0 tricks.
Without a diamond lead or a n

•
•

lf

Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br . Mgr.
P'lone 992·2342, Eve. 992· 2449

Pass

+ K 843

.AL TROMM
CON ST.

1 NEW FUEL OIL FURNAC.E

Asll tiM IXDCPIS

P~;~ss

S UPPfR ...

Y'WANT /'NY
MORE OF
1HESE FRENCH
FRIES, DOC ?'

1 USED FREEZER $7500
1 NEW ELECTRIC FURNACE

and

•

H l ~ SflF

Pass
Pass

1 EXCELLENT UNICO 16 CU. FT.
COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR

HOTPOINT

\

TAKE KfER 0'

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Son1ag

7&lt;2.2940.

LIKE NEW

Sou lit

•

8·21 · 1 mo.

coveting, septic
dozer, ba ck hoe.

2.,.

North East

Opening lead:

Free Estimates
992 · 5304, 992-2238

AUTO MOBILE

103

BUT O.LIE CAN

1.:

BB2·2952 or BB2·3&lt;S. . ,
HOWER Y AND MARTIN Ex·

DEPENDABLE Baby sitter Mon·
doy thr u Frida y. :2 children .
Call Deni se Wolfe. 949·2377
ofter6 p.m .

West

THEY WERE RIDING UP
INTO GOOSE · NECK
CIINYON ··· S' PO SIN'
THEY KNOW WHERE
THEY'RE GOiN' TQO ...
AND WHY.'

•

HOUSE WORK done !n even·
ings and Sa tu rdays . Call

9'12 ~ 5770 .

+K

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South

ORPHAN ANNIE--DEADLINE
r'l'l (l

E·C ELECTRICAL Contract or
se,....ing Ohio Volley region .
Six doys'O week , 2-4 hours service . Emergency calls. Coli

WILLING TO drive tractor ·
troller free for 2 1/J months in
exchange for experience on
the rood , 1 w ill poy my own
pers onal
e xpenses . Coli

.afcn
. ... •.

UTl'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

PAINTING AND sandblasting .
Free &amp;!ot lmotes . Coll949-2686.

7&lt;2·3119.

WEST
EAST
• 10 54
• 2
•10753
• A86 2
• Q 10 8 3
e AK974
• 76
• 9 52
SOUTH
• AQJ87
• QJ 9
• J 2

Concrete Finishing.

Pomeroy

H. L Writesel
Roofing

E

.._...__ .~

OHered
All Masonary Work
Foundation,
. Brick Laying,

Sm~h

.•

____..........____

Ad .

GO OSE
STOCK
Q NOW AVAILABLE

'----- ~

94. · 2862- 949 · 2160
4 5 tf c

NEW LISTING -

Montgom~r.,

L ano ~v ll l f' . Ohio
t l 4 H• ~14 i E vf! nt ng~
1 Mil l'\ EOUI Ol Wtlkf!5Vtll•

Real Estate for Sale

NEW

..•

TRAILER SALES

(FREE ESTIMATE)

949 ·2748 or

• 65

Television
Viewing

I 0 : 00- lazaru s Syndrome 6, 13 ;

DEFACE

ace or hearts lead followed by
a dia mond shift, South draws
trumps, discards his two dia·
moods on clubs and makes a
s lam .
For years, match-point
players have been bidding the
diamond sui t iii situa tions like
this.
Other players have grown
accustomed to this type of
action a nd such bids are like a
two-headed rattlesnake .• They
bite bo th ways'
This time the t wo·diamond
bid backfi red .. West would
probably have opened a di a·
mo nd in any event. He opened
the suit and South was held to
the minimum .

Hil-A

+ AQJB4

MONTGOMERY

mil e off At . 7 bV ·Pilss
on S1 . Rr . 174 toward
Rutland .

592-2158

of

through the roof - THIS PEN LEAKS

BLEACH

False bidding bites back

592-3051

t 1

ELEC{RfC
FURNACE.
new,
suitable for trail er or :srnol l
house. F.M . Guthrie, 33 Town .
send, Athen s. OH. Phone

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

What the convict said as the rain came

'

SPURN

BRIDGE

State, Arh ens

Skill Build ing)
Ph. 949·2710 or 949·2151
8·29 ·1 mo

I I II )

I Answer :

3%

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E .

Choreographer

rI

(Answers lomorrow)

Jumbles: CLOAK

down (non -veterans)

Garage

equiped

-

gested by tho above cartoon.

•

PrlntiJTiswerhere:

Services

Nearl y
2

u

Purchase
and
R efinance
30 Year T erm s
A - No mon ey down
( eligibl e veterans·)

Roger Hysell

216 E. Se cond Street
f ree .

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug .

'

• K4

J92.Jl2S

POMEROY -

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

Located in
(formerly

I I I

THAT'S WHAT EVERYON&amp;
A~IIIME~! ACnJA~LY HIS
CAR WENT OFF A MCLJNTAIN
ROAP INTO A PEEP LAI&lt;E-

Real Estate Loans

Shirley carpenter

For Rent

ma i ntenance

Announcing Opening of

Osborn
R~ . •
Reedsville, OH , 45772.
For information Call

~001&lt;! I DOt.I'T WANT'A 8!! TH&amp;
VOICEi OF HAR!IH ReA~ITY-- IIIJT
I THO UGHT YOUR O~D MAN WA5ICI,LEIJ IN A CII:A~H .• J

eGuttersand
DownSpouts
Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992 ·2772
8·17·1 mo .

Ages--4 and up

5071

KJ

[1 I

• Replacement
Windows

CALL 992 · 7544

Instructor-

ISTUE

• Storm Windows

Otner ri m t'· by appoint·
m ent.
'1'17 Sycamore I Rear)
Pomeroy, 0 ,

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

e&gt;,:=..coo-·-·¥..... __

elnsulation

'foo s9·· M.,W.,F .

OPENING SEPT. 18th
Classes : Ballet
·
Tap&amp; Jan

REAl ESTATE loans. Purchase
end refinance. 30 year rerms .
VA . No money down (el igible
vGterans). FHA · As low as 3 - '·
per cent down (non· veterans).
Ireland Mortgtlge Co .. 77 E.
State. Athens . 61A-592-3051 .

3 AND 4 RM furnished and un.
fu r nished
opts .
Ph one

L.THILG
I I I )

• Storm Doors

B·26·1 mo.

B' S MOBILE HOME SALES , PT.

Wanted to Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork ,
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy .
large lots. Coll992· 7479 .

t

~.

J&amp;l B(OWN
INSUlATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
J der al Hou sing &amp;

992· 2367

Mobile Homes Sale's

B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES,

669·3785.
to the physical. Do things where
you use mind more than
muscles.
LEO (Julr ~AUII. 221 For a per.
son who Is Qften generous to
others in the 'extreme, you may
go In the opposite direct ion
today . You should share.

SIX Lob pupp ies. 3 females . 3
moles . Very playfu l. Humane
~:_ietv . 992-6260.

1973 Chevrolet Camero Type
LT. 3.50. 8 cyl. Phone 992-6093 .

of Meigs County, Ohio,
alleging that 1he Defen·

Mick's
Barber&amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

GiveAway

1977 THUNDERBIRD. excellent
cond ition . Radials. AM· FM ,
air, PS , PB, recl ining seats. 2
new studded radial snow
tires . 247 -3594 after 5.

1970 T-BIRO, 2 door coupe .
new &lt;429 engine, -4 barrel , new
eKhoust, leu than 300 miles
on engine. PS , PB. Cru ise control , electric bucket seats w ith
console , rea r defogger, new
ti res, new exhaust. $1800.
7.. 2·2404 before 2 p.m . or
after S p. m.

I~

e

- Ma so n '' ·'--------------------------------------------~------~--------~
~r~c:ljle . _ Pomeroy
----~

bedroom .
·1970 Vindole 12x63 with e• ·
Pando, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bedr.
1973Skyline 12x552 bedroom .
·1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .

1963 FORD Pickup. Excellent
condi tion. Will trad e for good
running cor or cash . Al so.
freezer. 13 in. tires w ith
whee ls. 949-2Jn

IDlt

ltll\1~
ljl THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME
~ ~ ~~ s
byHtnrlAmoldandBoblee
Unscramble theM tour JumbiN.
one letter to each SQuare, to form
lour ordinary words.

abov e

PlEASANT , WV . JOJI-675-442-4 .

Address unknown

GEORGE

Busz·ness servzces
e.

'

pm . Hartford
Community
Center.
Hartlord. WV
, 4 miles :

drive. White spoke whPels, 3
speed
trans .
Call
614-446-9595.

1973 DODGE

I

~-----

engine, white spoke wheels,
sliding bock glass , good cond ition . $1800. 247-3863 .

vs
FRANK G . WEAVER and
NANCY L. WEAVERLand
MICHAEL L. CON EY ,

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .. 7

Auto Sales

130·A, Mineral Wells, West
Virginia 26150
Plaintiffs

proper .

(91 4, 11 , lB, 25 : 4tc

ding. Coll367·0292.
POOOLE GROOMING . Judy

1978 Camero, 12,000 mi les ,
305 engine , air conditioning ,
reor defogger. Excellent condition . 2&lt;47·3963.

LollS.

VIRCO (AUII. 23·Sopt. 22l You

SALE .

NOTICE

ded in Plat Book 21 Page 41,

September 19, t979
Through your own initiati'tle and
bright Ideas ~ou are likely to lind
ways thi s coming year to
enhanc,.-.~our financial base.
Don't t5e afraid to prospect in
areas you've ne'tler e~tplo red
before.
"

George

YARD SALE. 4 families . 112
Brick St., Pomeroy. Candy
striper uniforms, something
for everyone. 19th, 20th and
2ht . lOom to?

Notice is hereby given to
all whom it may concern,
that the
Tru s tees of
Harrisonville Cumberland
Presbyterian Chuirch of
Harrisonville have filed a
Petition in Case No. 1~262 ,
Meigs County, Ohio, LOrn ·
mon Pleas Court, pryalng
for authori ty to sell the real
estate
described
as

RISING STAR Ke nnel. Boor·

OLD COINS, pocket watches .
clos:s rings . wedd ing bond s. . Toy_lor . 614 -367-7220.
diamonds . Gold or silver. COli
HILLCREST KE NNELS. Boor· .
J. A. Womslev. 7-42·2331.
ding, all breeds . Clean indoor
WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
. outdoor locillties . Also AKC
upon del ivery to our yo rd . 7:30
re g is tered
Dobermans .
to 3:30 weekdays. Blaney
614·446-7795 .
Hardwoods, SR 339, Barlow,

Household goods, women's,
men's and children's clothing ,
misc. items . I mile from
langs ville. CR 10, 9 til dark
Phone 7&lt;42·2668,

THE FAMILY of Pau line
Morklns wishes to tkonk the
Walker Funeral Home, our
minister Brad Henderson,
Jane Wise , organist , those .
who served os pal lbearers,
those sending cords , tlowers,
and food , during the sickness
follows :
and death of our mother and
Lot Numbers 14, 15 and a
grandmother.
0.017 acre tract between
same.
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Brown and
Situated i n Section 14,
Daughters, Mr. and Mrs
Fraction 13, Tovmship 7 N ,
Millard Wildermuth.
Range 14 w, Scipio Town ship, Village of Harrison -

Wodnotder, Sep:.t:.:...;1.:.•:-::-

99~ · 2689 .

CAR SALESMAN . Send nnume
to Box 7&lt;43 , Pomeroy, · OH
45769 . No
experience
necessary .

Friday t~ ftt'rnuun

Card of Thanks

--

Notices

..

GQOUS
VQ

KT

KG

TQZSQGS .
KG

CQPD

OSKGY
NQDZSD

TSUN . · RKGAP
BDQFSDO
Yesterday's Cryploquote: NOWADAYS THE WATER ISN'T
'JSUAU..Y TROUBlED UNTIL AFTER SOMEONE POURS
OIL ON IT.-WIUJAM D. TAMMEUS
® 1979 KlnQ Fe1turn S.,ndlcet•i tnc.

1: 00-Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Children 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Restless 8,10.
I: 30-AS The World Turns 8, 10;
2:00-Doctors 3,15 ; One Life to
Live 6,13.
2: 2So-News 17; 2 :3D-Another World
3, 15; Guiding Llght 8, 10;
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; I Love Lucy 17.
3:30-&lt;&gt;ne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; Over
Easy 20.
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; · Tom &amp;
Jerry 13; Password 15; Merv
Griffin 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St. 20,33; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Spectreman 17.
Petticoat
4 : 3o.:..Bewitched 3;
Junction 8; Bionic Woman 13;
Little Rascals 15; Gilligan's Is.
17.
5:00-1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Abbott &amp; Costello 15;
My Three Sons 17.
,
5 :30-Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Gomer Pyle B; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; ·
Lucy Show 15; t Dream of
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6:00-News 3,8,10, 13, 15; ABC NeW$
6; Carol Burnett 17; VIlla Alagre
20.
6 :30-NBC.News3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS NeW$ 8,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Match Game PM 6;
News 10; Newlywed Game 13;
Love.Amerlcan Style 15; Sanford
&amp; Son 17; Dlck Cavett 20,33 .
7:30-Country Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6; Joker's Wild 8; The
Judge 10; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Family .
17; MacNeli· Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:00-Real People · 3,15; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Last Resort I , 10;
Up Close with Henry Aaron 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; Faces
of Communism 33.
B: 30-Struck by Lightning 8, 10;
Baseball 17.·
,
9 :00-Movle "Mrs. R's Daughter"
3, 15; Charlie's Angels •• 13;
Movie "Se• &amp; the Single Parent"
8, 10; Great Performances 33;
Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
. 10:00-Vagas 6, 13; News 20.
10:30- Best of Groucho 20: Irish
Treasures 33.

11 : OG-News 3,6,8, 10, 13, 15; New :
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavett 20;
Book Beat 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson . 3,15; Love
Boat 6, 13; Swltch 8; ABC News
33 ; Movle " Our Man Flint" 1~.·
Movie "The Cowboy &amp; the Lady"
17.
12 :4D-Baretta 6, 13; Hawaii Flvo-C
8; 1 :00-Tomorrow 3; News lS.
1 :30-Baseball 17; 1 :50-News 13;
4 :00-News 17; ~ : 20-Star Trek
17 .
J,

·I

�.

8-

T~

Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. l8, 1979

Federal mediator
,I

(Continued fr om page 1)
last year's policy and Lloyd Haggy
was hired as a substitute custodian.

It wa s voted to present a framed
commendat ion to The Fa rmers
Ba nk an d Savings Co . in
apprecialion for the nrw scor e board

facility provided for the football
field in Pomeroy. The presentation,
along with a game ball, will be don e
at a game and all board members
will sign the commendation .
Contributions of door prizes for the
general teachers meeting from
John Anderson, Mark Bl att, George
Carr. Larry Powell , Kermit Walton
and

Ralph

Werry

were

department

we~ s

present and asked

With the recommendation of his CO·
workers and the county office that
changes he made in existing policies
wluch permit a st udent to pass an
entire semester by making a grade
of C during one six weeks grading
period and functioning very little for
th e remainder of the semester. He
said changes should be made and
Vleshe r was asked to secure copies
of the policies of oU1er school
districts so that the problem can be
studied thoroughly and a solution
worked out.
A report was given on the
inspection of buildings by members
of th e board of education . While
SUpt. Gleason indieate!l that there
were encouraging aspects of the

acknowledged .
It 'was agreed to proceed with
plastering work at a numher of the
inspections it was also indicated
schools at a cost of $3272 if the funds
that most of the district's buildings\
can come out of the permanent
are in need of extensive work. A
improveme nt fu nd.
Florence
Barrett, a cook, was given a letter was read from Vernon Weber,
sent on behalf of Rutland Village
leave of absence, not to exceed one
Council, indicating that basement
year.
floodin g and Wl~anitary conditions
A certificate of appreciation was
presented from the Ohio Committee; in restr ooms of the Rutland
Elementary School should be
on Tornado Safety . Mrs. Jennifct
corrected. Sup!. Gleason indicated
Sheets and Carol Pierce were named
the problem is being studied.
delegate . and
alternate ,
A letter was read from Barbara
respectively, for the Ohio State
Knight, attorney, stating that the
Sehool Boards Assn. meeting in
health insurance of Roger Holman,
Columbus, Nov. 12, and Pierce
an
employe, was not property paid
indicated that he will attend the
and
as a result Holman's wife had no
Thursday regional meeting of the
maternity
benefits when they were
school boards to be held at
needed.
It
is alleged that John
University Inn at Athens.
Triplett,
clerk
of the board at the
Supt. Gleason and Dwight Goins,
time,
did
not
make payment for
administrative assistant, reported
Holman
as
well
as a teacher . Some
on work done at the high school
$4,000
in
benefits
were lost by the
building. Th e Greenlees Co.,
two
employes.
The
board will confer
Marietta. has compl eted work
with
the
insurance
company
and the
designed to correct structural
prosecuting
attorney
on
the
matter.
defects to the building and interior
work will be done to correct the It was the consensus of the board
inside of the academic wing that benefits should have beep there
damaged by bOwing walls. The for the. employes.
Dan Morris reported that Title VJ.
board will attempt to seek ·
B
funds for special education
expenditures for the interior and
students
in the amount of $27,571 for
exterior repair through the
this
school
year have been
architectural firm involved in the
approved,
a
marked
increase over
construction of the building. An
last
year.
Morris
said
a learning
Athens attorney has been lrlred in
disabilities
class
is
being
established
case litigation is necessary. The two
school officials also reported that at the high school for the first time
the installation of a new roof is this year with any money over to be
progressing by the Hackett Roofing spent on the remaining 13 special
Co., and it should be completed by education classes of the district.
Next year, even higher amounts of
Sept. 30.
money
are expected in the program,
Goin s also reported on the
Morris
said. An ouUine of the plan
expenditure of some $11,000 for new
is on file in the office of the
this
year
cafeteria equipment throughout the
superintendent
and can be viewed
district during the summer month.
by any interested person, Morris
Supt. Gleason indicated that there
might be some reduction in state reported.
Supt. Gleason said that a study
foundation funds during the last
had been made on the request for a
three months of this year and this
will cause a cash flow through school bus to run on the Darwin
trailer park road. He stated that it
problem in the district.
Tim
Flesher of the high school guidance would be unsafe in that moving the
1

'II

' I

'

..

•I

I

•I

.'

YOVCAN

AFFORD
IT!

HOLZER MEDICALCF.NTER ·
DISCHARGES SEPf. li
Jessie Able, Emerson Bennett,
Mr . James Bias and daughter, Mary
Blazer, Mrs. Leland Bungamer and
daughter, Brenda Collins, Katherine
K~hn, Virginia Hanson , Lewis
Hayburn, Carol Jell, Michael
Johnson , Ruth Larkins, Donald
Nichols, Stan Pettry; Christopher
Queen , Mrs. Robert Racer and
daughter, Mrs. Charles Rhea and
daughter, Darrell Schaffer, James
Sterns, Roy Wastier , Debra
Whiteley, Mary Young- ·
BIRTHS SEPf, 17
Mr . .and Mrs. Stephen Cochran,
son, Ashland ; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Perry, daughter , McArthur.

VETERANS MEMORIAL '
Admitted-Vicky Paul, Racine ;
Betty Carsey, Middleport ; Russell
Tucker, Racine; Thelma Miller,
Syracuse ; Angilynn Brunty,
Minersville ;
Kathy
Lehew,
Pomeroy; Ruth Larkins , Long
Bottom; Jimmy King, Minersville;
Shirley Smith, Rutland ; Marvin
Darst, Pomeroy.
Discharged--Martha Hunnel,
Richard Hudson, Donald Payne, and
James Blake.

F1JNDS DISTRffiUTED
State Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson reported the September
distribution of $8,513,881.18 in local
government fund money to Ohio's 88
counties and 408 cities and villages
levying local Income taxes. Meigs
County received $12,500of the total.

Ohio doctor believes _marijuana
use on increase in lower grades
WILLOUGHBY, Ohio (AP) - A
Willoughby
pediatrician
is
convinced "we a re a drug oriented
society" and that marijuana is a

dangerous drug that is being abused
in all segments of society, including
children.
Dr. In grid Lantner became
con cerned with mar ij uana use,
especially abuse among children
and teenagers, when 1 'a student who
knew a murder victim came to talk
Ill me about 1t," she said.
"He stayed until late at night, and
he obviously was very upset. His
talk kept coming back to how the
murder was tied up with drugs. That
set me to thinking ."
She began her own investigation of
marijuana use. She has spoken with

Oeveland police
officer is killed
NEW YORK ( AP) - A Cleveland.
Ohio police officer who arrived here
to transfer an inmate from a local
correctional facility to Cleveland,
was killed Ia te Monday by a
runaway driver near LaGuardia
Airport in Queens, police said.
The dead officer, whose name was
withheld pen&lt;ling notification of next
to kin, died shortly after he was
brought to Elmhurst · Hospital . . A
fellow officer from Cleveland who
accompanied him here was not

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight. Low In the
low 60s. Sunny Wednesday. High
about 70. The chance of rain is 10
percent today, 2ll percent tonight
and !Opercent Wednesday.

TRUSfEES MEETING SET
The Carleton College Board of
Trustees will meet Thursday, Sept.
20, at 7:30 p.m. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building .

bus . onto the highway from the
lvcation would be dangerous in fog
and snow.
SUITS AGAINST POPE
Two atheists who Claim the pope's
U.S. visit is a political move by the
Roman Catholic church say they
have flied suit to block a papal Mass
on public land in Washington, D.C.,
naming as a defendant "Karol
Wojtyla, alias John Paul II, a.k.a .
the Pope of Rome."
Madalyn Murray O'Hair and her
son, John Garth Murray, announced
Monday in Austtn, Texas, that they
had filed two lawsuits in U.S .
District Court in Washing!Qn to stop
the pope from celebrating Mass Oct.
7 on the mall between the
Washington monument and the
Capitol.
They said the Mass was ·
unconstitutional and would deprive
them of "atheistic civll libertarian
rights." The complaints, mailed
Thursday, asked for $10,001
damages.

thousands of students from
Cleveland to Ashtabufa and
elsewhere about marijuana. She
now believes marijuana use is
growing fastest among junior high
and grade school students.
A native of the Baltic' Republc of
Lithuania (now a part of the Soviet
Union), Dr. Lantner has practiced
pediatrics in Willoughby for more
than two decades. But her recent
crusade has brought her some
n"ational attention , including an
interview on network televiSion.
Although she has never used the
drug, she said she has talked to
enough users to have "a pretty good
idea of wha! a high sensation is
like." When she speaks to groups,
she tells them marijuana is
dangerous and addictive in the sense
that the body can develop a
dependency .
"The marijuana builds up in the
body. and it takes time for the body
to throw it off," she explained. " As
soon as someone starts smoking on
their own , that is a sure sign of

,.

Squad has
busy day

The Pcrneroy Emergency Squad
answered four calls Monday
evening, two to the Meigs Marauder
addiction.''
Stadiwn,
where a reserve game was
When Dr. Lantner visits schools,
being played.
she often asks students whether they
The unit went to Court St. at 5:31
use marijuana , when they started
p.m.
for Marvin Darst who was
and why they use it. The answers, aU
talien
to Veterans Memorial
written anonymously, provide some ·
Hospital. At 6:18 the unit went to the
current insights into marijuana use
Pomeroy field for Greg Thomas who
by young people .
had
received a fractured ann. He
"I do and I will continue," wrote a
was
taken
to Holzer Medical Ceoter .:
12-year-old. " It makes me forget my
At 7:15p.m. the squad went iO the·
troubles."
field again for Bill Powell, another.
Another wrote , "I party every
player in the reserve football garnet
day ' I started when I was six years
who
had a knee injury. He was aloo •
old. "
taken
to Holzer Medical Center. t
Dr. Lantner also said marijuana is
10:28
p.m,.
the unit went to ~gle
widely
used
by
affluent , .
Ridge
for
Mrs.
Kenneth Lawson who ·
sophisticated persons who set the
was
taken
to
HoiU!r
Medical Center.:
trend for others.

injured in the apparently
Wlprovoked mcident, police said.
Police said the shooting took place
outside the Skyway Motel near
LaGuardia Airport , sometime
before 9 p.m. The officers had just
returned from dinner at a nearby
restaurant, and the victim was shot
•
••
as he was getting out of the car,
according to police.
The gunman's car, which sped
away followin g the shooting, had ·
been parked in the same lot where
the two officers had left their vehicle
and apparenUy had followed the
Nobe I M. (Velma ) Rom pel;
AMY E. CHASE
policemen, police said .
Lakeside, two grandclj}dren and
Mrs. Amy E. Chase, 88, fonnerly
No immediate description of the
of Pomeroy and Athens, died Sunday · four great~dchlldren. She waa
car was available, but police said
in Columbus.
member of the Maple Grove United
there probably were three persons in
She was born In Pomeroy 0!1 June
Methodist Church and waa a put
the vehicle.
15, 1891, and was a daughter of the
matrim ol. Ptmeroy Chapter, Order
The two offieers had arrived in
late John and Anna M. Blaettnar
of Eastern Star.
New York recently to transfer a
Smith. She was the widow of the late
Funeral services will be held at 10
prisoner from the Bedford Hills
Delbert E. Chase and was also
a.m. Wednelday at the RuWord·
Correctional Facilty to Cleveland,
preceded in death by two sisters and
Corbin Funeral Heme, 515 Hl8h st.,
Ohio.
three brothers.
Worthington. Burial will be In Wella
No further
details
were
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Cemetery at Albany. Friends may
munediately available.
call at the funeral home.

.

1

Area Deaths

l

a

B~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Initial
hearings were scheduled IAlday in
the Houu Finance Committee on
Gov: James A. Rhodes' newly
introduced $784 million capital
Improvements \lill.
. Howle Speaker Vernal G. IUf!e
Jr., o.t-lew llallon, said he has not
given the CGI111lllttee a timetable.
But he said he ia hopeful of a Door
wte late thia week or early the next,
~~ending it on to the Senate,
The $764 miUion toial compares
with ca!Ual pro jecta which totaled

John Wayne Fleming, 47, Route I,
Long Boltom, free from a penal
institution pending an appeal,
apparently committed suicide
TuMday .everilrig, Sheriff James J .
Prolfltt reports.
Fleming was convicted of ·the
murder of WlUiam Middleewart in
December, lll'/7, and waa sentenced
to a term of 1&amp; yearJ to Ufe In the
state penal system.
He waa
ammltted to a penallnlltltutlon for
1everal monthl but po~ $30,000
bond and wu re1eeaed from the
penal inatltutloo pending the
outcome of the appeal.
.Lut week, judge~ of the Fourth
Appellate Diltrict Court upheld 'the
coo viction of Fleming 8lld he wu to
mender himself to authorities to
cootinue serving his sentence.
Fleming's body wu foWJd lying In
the driveway to the Hayman

·Mt11111whlle, leachen' atrilles
coolirlled Tuesdlly tn four other
dlltrlcta acro11 Ohio, alfecllnc
M,IIOO pupUa. The8e included
Eut Cleveland, L«aan, EHOVE
Joint Vocatlonal Sc:boollllld Ohio
Valley local IChool dlltrlct In
Adams County,
.

New signs posted
COWMBUS, Ohio (AP) Memben of the Central Ohio
GuoUne Dealers .UIOC!ation are
poatng a new type ol.lllgn at their

Illations.
The signs read "All Fuels (are)
Priced Within stupid, Unfair and
Anti-Competitive Federal

Regulations."
That

o'

With ·A Low Cost Auto loan
From Citizens National Bank.
"Tht&gt; FriPndly Rank"
Walk-up teller window
and iiUfo·telfer window
Open Friday Ellenings.5 to 7 p.m.

'

'•

Member F .D.I.C. Deposits Insvred to $40,000.00.

message

was

first

publlahed In a neW! magulni!

Tke euk i6 bU ·
eutd cbuutwlie .. ~
~ 6g

f!/Jee {j/)ee rJJJ,

Ioiii Soft Kidoro, wiln 1ne look ond feel of
Cashmere, is fashioned with sweeping elegance. Rust, camel, black, palomino. c.nf•rJ
Herringbone fleece so dramatic with high
collar, back flare and sweofer-knit gaunttet
cuffs. Tan, grey, taupe. r;ghiJ Plush Kldora
fashioned in tcday's favorite wrap. Black,
vicuna, yarn-dye grey, red, white.

Sizes 3 to 15; Talis 10 to 22.

The Latest Fall Fashions Now On
Sale All This Week.
Layaways Welcomed.

ELBERFELD$
IN POMEROY.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1979

about $500 million for 1971-1979- a
50 percent, boost in two years.
With the notable exception of Rep.
Robert E. Netzley, It-Laura, most
lawmakers, although obviously
awed by the size of Rhocles' spending
IXICkage, had casual reactioll8 to it.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, lor instance, said he had
not seen the package, and would
want to study it .
Netzley, one of the Legislature's
best known fiscal cooservatives,
spoke out bluntly about new

construction "goodies"· thaither
that, or there is going to have to be
&lt;me heck of a tax increase
-where down the road."
Budget Direcior William D. Kelp
said Tuesday, when tbe proposar
was announced, that many projects
In it are there on an "if come basis."
No funds will be released forgeneral
fund JX'ojects "unless sufficient
.revenues are available to pay for
them," he said. He e;&lt;plained that
Ohio's economic picture "will be
closely mooitored."

In other business Tuesday, the
Senate added its approval 27.0 to a
House bill wherebY Ohioall8 with
alcohol JX"Obhims could find help
from state-funded programs
financed by if)creased liquor permit
fees.
The proposal, by Rep. Francine
M. Panebal, D-Oeveland, would
raise $4.7 milllon by hiking pennlt
fees 25 per"""t and increasilig the
portion of tbo8e revenues that local
governments must. , pay into the
state's General Revenue Fund.

dlatrlbuted by the UIOCiatioo.
Tracy Stanton, president of the
grolip, said marly deale~ are
diagusted with the u.s. Depart·
ment of Energy.

Axle problem
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) - A
spokesman for the Chessle
System railroad said Tuelday
that a 2kar train derailment
near Delaware Monday was
callled by a broken axle.
But Wlllil Coot added that he
dld not know what caused the
axle of a freight car C!lrrylng iron
ore to malfunctloo. Twenty-one
can were destroyed In the ac·
cident, and about 1,'185 tons of
Iron ore spWed onto the lraclts.
No Injuries were reported.

Operating again
PORT CLINTON, Ohio (AP) -

Tbe Davis .Seuo nuclesr jJower
plant was bact In operation this
morning after being llhut down
automatically· Tuesday by new,

selllitive Bllfety Instruments,
Spokesmen for Toledo Edl8on
and Cleveland Electric
IDIU1llnatlng said the problem
wu minor and corrected by 5:54

a.m.

Cemetery, off Polk Road, In
Lebanon Township Tuesday
evening. The body wu fowd by two
neighbors who had been con·tacted.
by Mrs. Fleming and asked Ill loQk
for him wheil he falled to return to
his honte.
Meigs Sheriff Proffitt, Capt.
Robert Beegle, Investigator Gary
Wolfe, Deputies Manning Mohler
and Keith Wood along with Or. John
Ridgway, usistant coroner, were oo
the scene. The call was received by
officlala at 10:3&amp; p.m.
Dr, Rldpay said death wu due to
a wound In the mouth from a .22
callt..e rifle. The gun was lying
dose to the body. The body was
taken to Unlverl!ity Hospital in
Colwnbus where an autopsy wW be
performed.
Freda Middleswan, wife of the
late Wllliam Middleswart, waa alliO
cmvicted In the MeigJ Co1a1ty
Common Pleas Court in the
pollooing death of her husb'!nd and
Ia currently serving' a 15 years to life
sentence in the Marysville
Refonnatory for Women.
The Ewing Funeral Home will be
in charge of arrangements.

Jail escapees
being SOUght
CHIUJCOTIIE, OhiD ( AP) Five of silt men who escaped from
the Ross County Jail were 90ught
today by the state Highway Patrol
which described them as anned and
dangerous.
The lrunates escaped at about 3
a.m . ~.mong them was Robert
l'etermn, 22, chared in connection
with the wounding of state Trooper
Thomas Sc&lt;ttt Aug . 7, according to
the patrol.

The patrol said the jailer who was
hit on the head during the escape
wu treated at 8 local hospital.
Sheriff Thomas Hamman said'
roadbloclts were aet up on aU roads
leading Into the city.

Hamman said the jailer was
making nightly checlts when an
Inmate who had jimmied the
electrical lock on his cell escaped.
The jailer was then assaulted and
the other men in the cell block also
escaped, the llheriff said.
One of the men, Perry Stevens
who was being beld 011 two other
escape charges, was caught just

" As the state of Ohlois manifestly
one of the 'biggies' in the liquor
business, we have a jipecial obllgatin
to treat the problems related tQ and
product of the sale of alcohol," said
Sen. Ronald L, Nabakowski, !).
Lorain, the Senate floor sponsor.
Because most new liquor permits
will be purchased by tbe end of lhis
week, he offered an amendment
delaying the Increase until next
year.
But he said local agencies that will
Implement alcoholism edu cation

and rehabilitation JX'ograms could
bethey must pay the state from 25 to
20 percent.
Under the measure, which was
returned to the House for
consideration of the Senate changes,
the state Liquor Controi Department
will earmark 1.5 percent of Its 81"01111
sales for alcoholism educatioo and
rehabilitation. The funds will be
administered by the Department of
Health, with only 5 percent going for
administrative costs.

2 Gallia facilities
included in package

:F leming's death
apparent suicide

creues were oot met.

Band seeking help

enttne

,.

school offtclala.
But Robert Sheldon,
asaoclation pruident, said
~Y the teachen IIIII ex·
peeled to llllike today. About :1110
teachers walked off tbe Job when
their demands for salary In·

! ... ?/tt. ~:.eK

•

Capital improvement bill hearings·begin

w•

_Q _

. The Southern Local Band Boosters
are seeking the help of all local
residents in the school district,
whether they have a child involved
or not.
Over the past few years, the band
has gone through niany undesirable
situations, resulting In a big drop in
morale and pride. The marching
band has dropped to 15 high school
and four junior high members.
These members are improving
and learning about the methodology
of music and discipllne but they still
lac.k a certain degree of confidence
that only the public, classmates, and
former band members can insure,
and this comes by your support.
This. is your school, your band, let
us not be Indifferent to the struggles
of our school. When the way gels
tough, the tough get going.
Let us be elt8Illples to our children
by showing them what the words for·
titude and pride mean.
The Band B()(J6ters cordlnlly invite
all band parents, all band students,
and all concerned Individuals to a
meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the
high school music room. Any
questions you may have about the
·goals and objectives of the entire in:
strumental program or any
problems that may have Brisen will
be answered at this time .by the new
band instructor, Joseph Malesick,
Jr. -Betty Wagner.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Canton-Tbe North Canton
Education ABIIoclaUon, which haa
been onllrlke Iince Monday,
IICbeduled to meet tonight with

I
l.ft1fU of ..,1111..e 1r• '"•lcomf'&lt;d . Tilt- ~ s h&lt;&gt;~~ ld 1... l ~u
I w~ • •..-til 1n11 ~ IM &lt;YbJPrl tu rl'llarlloa b~ 1M •·d l111r 1
I ud II'IIIJII!il' 1i~ w.1th tiM' I I,Df1'5 11ddrru. N1mn ml)
I 111'1 lll'ilhh~ld upo1 ltUbllnllun. Hu• n n . till fnJU r~ t.
I n~mn •iLl W diKI.,.fll. l..,ll~n ~h()lll~ boo i n ~·!1&gt;11 C.i \0"".
~ wddr~UI IJIIbtu~l . nPipt"f!iODIIhift.

: .

VOL XXVIII NO. 110

Meeting slated

r-------------------------,

at y

e

•

After hearing Dr. Lantner speak
last spring, a group of parents from ·
Harpersfield Township in Ashtabula
County formed a group to fight dr\111
and alcohol abuse among young .
persons. The group calls itself :
Geneva Area Residents for Suita.ble ·
Social 'ActivitieS and wants to
provide youths with alternatives to
drug use.
But Dr. Lantner said she feels
alone in her crusade, even though
marijuana use appears to her to be
to be widespread.
"The danger is that if no one else,..
from the medical profession speaks ~
up, people will think since I am alone ~
I must be wrong,"_she said.

•

•

VOCAL INSTRUCI'OR - Ed barkless Ia the new vocal music teacher
of the Meigs Local School in the senlor and junior\ high school.!l and the
.~bury Elementary School.

Harkless, a native of Charleston, W. Va.,
aUended Marahall U~v~ty •.West Virginia Univepity and Morrill Har·
vey In Charleston. This ts his first year of teaching m a public school. He
replaces Mrs. Paige Hunt wbo Is oo a one year's leave of absence.

Teachers violate
judge's orders
As110eialed Press
pecial pollee picket patrols rounded
up Indianapolis teachers who
violated a judge's order, while a
mediator in the strike-bound Detroit
system reports " a classic
stalemate."
In the Jefferson Parish district in
suburban New Orleans, a citizen
group wants Louisiana Gov . Edwin
Edwards to step in and try to settle a
four-week dispute .
Generally, litUe progress was
reported Tuesday in strikes by more
than 34,000 teachers in 11 states. The
walkouts affect more than 672,000
poblic school pupils.
The
National
Education
Association in Washington •said
there have been 134 teacher strikes
in 18 states so far this year and
JX"edicted the number will lop last
year's total of 176.
Striking teachers have been jailed
in Paterson and Woodbridge, N.J .,
and Anchorage, Alaska, and fired
and rehired In Robinson, Ill., the
NEA reported.
In Indianapolis, the ranks of strlk
had said earlier he would not jail
teachers, fined the picketers $25
each but poltponed collection untU
after the next payday Qn Friday
Officials reported that about 2,400
of the system's 3,400 teachers
reportedforclassTue~y . That left .

Eimwooti'Park, a suburb of Chieago,
ended Tuesday , and in Robinson,
m., 85 teachers fired by the school
board last week were reinstated 'and
oock In classes.
Meanwhile, 115,000 pupils in San
Francisco remained out of school
and 1,400 teachers in Spokane,
Wash., stayed on picket lines.
Strikes also continued in Alabama,
New Jersey, New York and Ohio.

Weather
Clear and cooler lllnlght. LoW In
the low 50s. Increasing cloudiness
Thursday. High In the low to mid 7011.
Chance of rain is near zero tonight
and :11 percent Thursday.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Friday lbrougb SUnday: A
cbaDce of abowen Friday aDd
Salurdlly. Fair Sllllday. IUgbs In
tbe lvw to mid '1011 Friday war·
miDI to lbe low 88&amp; Sllllday. Lows
In tbe upper 401 aDd low 50s.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Following are the projects included
in Gov. James A. Rhodes' newly
introduced, $764 million capital
improvements bill :
Adjutant General
New
Philadelphia armory, $295,000;
Lakewood armory, $565,000;
Feljclty-Batavia annory, $560,000;
Youngstown armory enlargement,
$100,000; Camp Perry, $100,000;
Medina annory, $145,000; Marietta
and Middletown armory boiler
replacements, $110,000.
Administrative Services
Cincinnati state office tower
planning, $250,000; Brown County
courthouse renovation, $500,000;
Canton state office building
planning,
$125,000; · energy
conservation projects for state
facilities, $1 million; Ohio
Departments Building renovation,
$2 mill ion; improvements for
Statehouse, 4705,000, Public Square,
phase two, $3.5 million.
Commission on Aging - Senior
citizen centers, $5 million.
Agriculture
Laboratory
constructior and renovation , $1.7
million .

Special hours
announced for
county voters
In order to give all Meigs Coun·
tlans an opportunity to register to

vote in the November election,
special hours have been set up by the
county board of electiom beyond the
nonnal8:30 a.m. to 4:30p.m., Mon·
day through Friday schedule.
Deadline for registering ls 4 p.m.
on Oct. 6 and all persons who have
moved since the last election or who
have changed their name via
marriage since the last election
should also stop by the board of elec·
lions office located in the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
The additional hours for
registration Include: Friday, Sept.
21, 6 to 9 p.m.; Saturday, Sept. 22, 9
a.m. to 12 noon; Friday, Sept. 28, 6 to
9 p.m.; Saturday, Sept. 211, 9 a.m. to
12 noon; Friday, Oct. 5, I to 9 p.m.
and Saturday, Oct. 6, the deadline, 9
a.m. to 9 p.m.

Attorney General- Peace Officer
Training Academy improvement&amp;, .
$30;000.
Commerce - Fire academy
facilities and planning, $3.7 mUllon.
Economic and Community
Development - Industrial training
center pilot project, $3 million, Babe
Ruth baseball stadium at Newark,
$200,000.
Expositions Commission
Grandstand renovation, $1.8 mUllon,
Coliseum entrance, $2 million;
Lauscbe Building renovation, $1.3
million, and other improve, enta
!:ring tot alto $8.5 million.
Historical Society Ohio
Historical Ce'lter expansion,
$970,000; Paul Dunbar MUBelllll
construction, $875,000; Adena
rehabilitation, $1115,000.
Natural Resources - Statewide
land acquisition, ~ million; West
Branch State Park, $2.4 million;
Deer Creek, $942,567; State part
facilities statewide, ~.5 inlllion; ·
Cleveland Lakefront, $110,889;
boating facilities and access sites,
$5.5 million.
Rehabilitation and Correction Sewage plant improvements, $1
million; general repairs, $1.2
million; power plant r111ovations,
$6.9 million, water distribution
improvements, $1.9 mllli9n;
electrical system repairs, $1.8
million; EPA-mandated projects at
Fairfield School, $1.2 million, Pllase
I, northern Ohlo correctional
facilities plBMing, $5 million.
School for Blind - Utilities and
roof improvements, $355,350.
School lor Deaf - Roof and other
improvements, $545,5011.
Soldiers and Sailors Home Remodeling
and
sprinkler
installation, $1.5 millim.
Transportation ·
Airport
development, $3 million.
Veterans' Children's HomeEPA-mandated improvements and
electrical system renovation,
$430,000.
Youth Commission - Facility
replacement, $7.2 mllllon, and other
improvements bringing total to lion
- Athens Developmental Center,
$889,600; Cambridge Developmental
Center, $8. I million; Central Ohk~o&gt;
Adolescent Center, $140,000; Central
Ohio Psychiatric Hospital, $2.3
million; Cleveland Psychiatric
Institute, $716,000.
(Continued on page 14)

!lOUth of &lt;ltllUcothe shortly after the
escape.
The other escapees and the
charges against them are Tony
Mottet,~unauthodJ.ed l!M of a motor
about 2ll percent of the teachers on
vehicle; James ·PBge, - protNition ' , strike, tbe lowest figure since the
violation; Kim Selway, resisting
walkout in the 70,()()().pupU system
arrest, obstructing justice, fictitious
license tags and charges flied In
Montgonery County; David ::ilanks,
breaking
and
entering.
.:::;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::::::;:;:;:

Prime lending rate
goes to 13!14 percent
NEW YORK (AP) - Chemical

a

Balik, ac~tD«
dily after tbe
Fedenil Reserve moved to
tiplelll eredlt, teday raued 1111
prime ll!lldluc nile tQ a record

uv. percelll

'l1le lncreue from 13 percent
came after lbe Federal Reserve
Board railed lbe dlacoaac rate tile rate commerdal hlnb pay
011 flmda bonowul from 1be
Federal Reserve - to U percent
from 10~ percent.
·The prfine nile, which ls

cbal'led by banlla to lbelr most
credlty·worlby
corporate
borrowers, has been rlslq
rapidly In recent weea and went
Ill U percent last week.

be~=~~~k!· off Tuesday between

bargainers for 12,000 strikingDetroit
teachers and the school board,
sending a strike that has idled ·
189,000 pupils into its ninth day .
In Louisiana, leaders of the
Concerned Pnt's Organi~atlon
turned to the governor after
virtually no progress has been
reported in the teacher strike that
began Aug. 24.
• Less thlll] half of the district's
64,000 pupil)! have attended class
during the Strike.
In the latest walkouts , 315
teachers in the Upper Merion Area
district in suburban Philadelphia
voted Tuesday night to strike, and 70
teachers in a district near the
Southern Illinois town or Mounds set
~ picket lines.
A strike by 400 tea&lt;hers in
COMPUTER'S FAULT
Due to a foal-up In ~· Oblo Valley
Publlablnc Company's new oompuedlt equipment, several
typograpblcal erron appeared In
Tuesday's ediUon of 1be Dally Sentinel. We regret lbe lncoovealeoce tn
ourreadcn.

..
'"'

NEW VOCAL GROUP - Meigs High School has a
new vocal group under the direction of Ed Harkless,
the new vocal music teacher. The students are not
receiving credit for the work, It Is all done oo their
spare limo. The group Is hoping to perform. for
Thanksgivmg. They will be singing songs from the
Renaissance, pop tunes, show music, etc. The students
~

.

auditioned and these were ch011en,l tor, flnt rvttr, Lari
Kloea, Teresa Barret, Unrecka Johnson, Rocbelle McDaniel, Sheila Horky. Second row, Carla Smilb, J Horton, LyneUe Whittington, Vlcld Morrison, RA111q1
Kitchen, Linda Eason, Kathie Qulvey, Mr, Harldea
Third row, Jeff Nash, Robert Evans, Lee Lewla, Eric
Scites.

"

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="820">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11490">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51044">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51043">
              <text>September 18, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2133">
      <name>chase</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
