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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

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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
•
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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.

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Area Deaths

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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.

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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

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. 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.

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VOL XXVIII NO. 110

Meeting slated

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

at y

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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.

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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.

"

�2 _The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., W~esday , Sept. 19, 1979

'I

----·- -- -

In Washington

I
I

' I

'l

problem.
By Martha Angle and
And it is indeed true that a
Robert Wallen
recession this corning year will
WASHINGTON (NEA ) -One of
inevitably drive the deficit above the
these days, someone is . going to
$23 billion Congress projected last
rename Capitol Hill " Cravenheart
spring when first plarming the l!NQ
Crest" in recognition of the
budget. Even Muskie and his Budget
congressional penchant for grabbing
Committee colleagues concede that,
the shears whenever fish-&lt;lr-cut-bait
allowing for a $28 billion gap bettime arrives on the tough ones.
ween ouUays and revenues.
They're at it again up there, this
But $28 billion is still less than this
time over tile great balance-theyear's deficit, and it is movement in
budget issue which prompted so
the right direction. The deficit has
much repentant rhetoric just a lew
been shrinking, litUe by litUe, every
short months ago when the sting of
year since fiscal 1976 and a
the 1978 elections .was still sharp and
deliberate decision to reverse that
calls for a constitutional amendment
trend surely ought not be made
lltill clarion.
without a pretty compelling reason.
By the end of the month, both the
. For tbe fact remains that regarHouse and Senate must decide
dless of wbat the so-called experts
whether to stand by their previous
say, most Americans are absolutely
resolve to achieve a balanced budget
convinced that big federal deficits
within the next two years or abandon
are the prime cause of the inflation
the effort in favor of deficits-aswhich has ravaged ·the nation. And
uslllll.And guess which course they
they see no good reason to moderate
are virtually certain to choose?
their own wages and price demands,
Sen. EdmundS. Muskie, chairman
or their increasingly huge debt
of the Senate Budget Corrunlttee, is
loads, as long as the govenunent is
waging a valiant but lonely batUe to
so blithely spending money it hasn't
drain !WI'Ile of the red ink from the
got.
federal b11dget in fiscal 1980, which
Congress took heed of this senbegins Oct. I, rather than adding to
timent in adopting its first fiscal 1980
it.
budget resolution last spring - the
But the power barons who cbair
non-binding version. But now that
other Senate committees are
the deadline is here for the second,
furiously resisting pressure from the
Muskje panel to pare by $4 billion and binding, resolution nobody wants to play Scrooge.
various spending proposals they
In both the House and Senate, the
have already approved in order to
keep the l!NQ deficit below this spending committees are coming up
·. with all sorts of excuses about the
year's $29.9 billion.
rigidity of the budget resolution, the
And in the Hou..., not even the
Budget Committee itsell.seems very change in economic circumstan~
interested in living up to the earlier and the worthiness of the projects
they have so cheerfully approved.
promise to reduce the deficit next
What It all bolls down to, however
year and balance the budget the
is simple political cowardice. Spenyear after.
"Wbat's $4 billion here or there?" ding money is easy, a fine way to win
one House staffer asked. "No matter friends and influence votes. But cutwhat we do, the deficit will go up ting the budget takes guts, and a
willingness to offend the
~cause of inflation and the
deterioration of the economy. So beneficiaries of particular ledeal
programs that are put to the knife.
why pick fights?"
Since the political heat lor a balanWhy, indeed? A good many
ced
budget seems to bave subsided
reputable economists claim the
temporarily,
Congress applirenUy
deficits which have accompanied
ligures
no
one
will
care if the federal
every federal budget of the 1970s had
once
again
starts
climbing.
deficit
lltUe or nothing to do with inflation,
the economy's biggest single

Kennedy interview .••
WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy calls • the
nation's response to his potential
presidential candidacy heartening
and encouraging, and says a 198C
challenge to President Carter would
not be divisive because the
Democratic Party already is split.
In an Interview with The
Associated Press, Kennedy said he
decided to consider rWlning after
concluding that "the divisions that
existed in the party and the country
existed today ... and they would be .
there whether I was a candidate or
not. "
The Massachusetts · senator said
he ba&amp;~'l made up his mind yet, but
will by January.
He said a factor in his decision will
be t~support generated by his
statement that he is considering it.
"I must say that I've beeri
beat\ened and encouraged by the
r~ses to date," he said .
Carter supporters, led by
Democratic National Chairman
John c. White, have said a Kennedy
challenge would be so divisive as to
make the victor vulnerable to a
Republican In the faU election .
Kermedy disputed that.
He said past contests lor the
Democratic nomination "seemed to
in some sense energize the party,
Iring new people in. .. ."
Kennedy said his differences with
Carter on Ihe economy and other
issues are iess a matter of policy
than one of leadership style." .. . It's
back to whether the !JOOple .have the
sense of coofidence that he can deal
with these issues, I think that's the
matter of deepening and increasing
concern to people as we come to the
1980s," he said .

Kennedy was vague on alternative
proposals to deal with economic
woes . He said he might favor a tax
cut soon to deal witli increasing
unemployment, and more forceful
wage-price guidelines to combat
inflation .
While Kennedy said he has no time
frame lor a decision on 1980, he
added that as a candidate he would
expect to compete in the Democratic
caucuses in Iowa on Jan. 21. It would
take weeks, if not longer, to put
together a campaign there .
-Here is a partial transcript of the
interview :
Q: You had sa1d I bat you expected
Carter to be a candidate and
intended to support him. When did
'that cbange ?
A would say during the period of
mid-July to the early part.of August
I had an opportunity to talk to a
number of my colleagues here in the
Senate and lhe Congress as well as
· others, workmg peopl•, business
people, who urged me to give serious
consideration to be coming a
candidate. ... And then during the
monlh of Au gus t I had the

•

~-

Editorial opinions,
comments

Cl-lANG[ OUR
LIFE~.&gt;TYL£?

No guts, and no one cares

•I

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., W~esday , Sept.19, 1979

opportWlity to give a good deal of
reflection ... to my own deep
coocerns about the direction of the
nation, our ability to deal with many
of the problems that wfre facing
here in this country, about tbe mood
of the nation, and by Labor D_ay had
made up my mind that I at least
would not preclude the possibility of
candidacy.
·
Q: What were some of the
negative factors in your mind?
A: Well, clearly the family
responsibilities have always been a
major factor in any consideration.
Secondly,
wilh
the
new
responsibilities in the Senate, that
was an opportunity for very
considerable public service and so
that's obviously a factor . Third, I
think , is the concern I think about
what a candidacy would mean in
terms of the party itself., whether in
thinking through the questions of a
challenge, does this strengthen or
would this make more vulnerable
the party nominee. ... I became
convinced th,at the diviSions that
existed in the party and in the
country ... were very deep-seated
and they would be there whether I
was a candidate or not a candidate.
Q: Is there any one thing that you
think Carter has done wrong?
You've had a record of supporting
the president in the Senate, so it
would seem that you agree with the
programs.
A: ... My principal concern is
whether we're really addressing the
problems, coming to grips with
them, In ways which offer some
sense of hope for the American
people and a sense of coofidence in ·
the American people, in their ability
to deal with bad problems ....
I think it's difficult for people to
have a great deal of confidence in
their own future when they are
wondering about whether they can
afford the mortgage on their house,
the food bill or home heating bill,
tuition pa)menls for their children,
medical bills lor their parents. But if
we're able to come to grips with this
issue, I think they'li have a greater
sense· of kind of confidence. So I
don 't feel that It's a failure of the ,
spirit among the American people.
Q : Republicans are suggesting
that your candidacy would represent
more nostaig;a than substance . that
you're looking to the solutions of the
1960s.
A: ... We' ll be movmg into the '80s
as a new era. There will have to be
different and new approaches to the
problems. I think the problems will
demand practical solutions ... " That
defies sort of 811 ideological solution,
solutions that fit into labels, the
cliches of the past . ... I think ... being
able to broaden the constituencies ...
is the hope fort'Oming to grips with"
number of these problems .
\'

BuT WE Wr.RE::
JU§f §TARTJf't6 To
GET ONE..!

Pirates up lead in NL East race

Today's commentary
Re-aligning nonalignment

ByDouGrafl
irony and ~ or so will get·you a
barrel of Arabian crude these days,
l.o.b. the Persian Gulf.
As a negoti~ble commodity in the
real ' world, irony doesn't count for
much. Which is too bad in a way
because there are frequently rich
veins of it to be mined in the affairs
of nations, such as in t1)e current
carryings-&lt;ln in Havana.
· Thllt is the gathering place for the
leaders of nearly 100 sell-desctibed
nonaligned nations, who ironically
convened their triermial swmnit just
as an increase in Soviet combat
troops -to 5,000 -in CUba was confirmed.
What the troops are doing there
and how long they stay are matters
Washington and Moscow are likely
to be wrangling about for some time.
But whatever the explanations and
outcome, they seem a passing
strange honor guard for a gathering
of nations whose common interest is
Investors in homes, it is popularly .
supposedly the absence of combelieved, have made a fortune .
mitment to either of the great power
Statistics seem to document the
blocs .
claim. The median sale price of
Except to host Fidel Castro. To
existing single-family bomes in 1973
him, they are simply tangible exwas $2!1,900, according to records of
pression of the message he has lor ·
the)'lational Association of Realtors.
his conferees- that the Soviet Unioo
So far in 1979 it is $57,900.
is the "natur.a l" ally of the
H&lt;me buying, in fact, has to some
n01.aligned nations.
extent served as a substitute for
It's a message, however, that he
stock market investing. II is not
has been having no success in
merely coincidence, they say, that
delivering to his foremost listener,
individual participation in stocks fell
JosipBrozTito.
as interest In housing rose.
The Yugoslav president bas long
And, they continue, as the bloom
known au about Soviet troops. It was
fades from housing, some of those
prodigal investors will return. Some, a disinclination to have any, as allies
or under any other circumstances,
it ·is said, might c0111e back lade.n
on Yugoslav territory that conwith housing profits and an
tributed to his epochal break with
inclination toward stocks.
the Soviet Union 30 years ago. And
At any rate, say these wizened
that
contributed more than a litUe to
observers of trends, wbat goes up
the
establishment
of the nonaligned
rnmes down. Bubbles burst, whether
bloc,
of
which
he
was a founding
in housing, stocks or tulips.
father
along
with
India
's Jawaharlal
· There'S a big question, however , ,
Nehru
and
Egypt
's
Gamal
Alxlel
about wbat coostitules a bubble . Has
Nasser.
a house whose price rose from
Even back then, defining
. $29,900 in 1973 to $57,900 bubbled~
"nonaligned
" was tricky since the
Or, in terms of buying power , has it
25
members
ranged all over
initial
merely risen with inflation?
specthe
political
and
idological
·Prices of some hou,ses have indeed
trwns.
soared, even tripled, during the past
It is much more so today with a
six or seven years. Those who own
quadrupled membership that Inthem have bragged about their new
cludes such signed, sealed and·
role as capitalists. Millions more set
delivering
Soviet allies as Cuba and
· out to reach that status.
Vitnam. And also a few countries
What a marvelous new game.
whose nonalignment bas a distlncUy
That
became a
general
Westward tilt, such as currently
perception, but not the correct one.
The median price of existing singlefamily houses hasn't risen any
faster than prices In general.
Much of the attention seems due to
the facttbat houses are the biggest
purchases made by families.
Relative to other items, the price of
a house is enormous. And when it
grows, it grows more enormous. .
COLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - House
II is also durable . The price of
Finance
Chairma n Myrl H.
pork might double but there's
Shoemak
e
r , D-Bourneville,
nothing left after you use it, In
Introduced
Thursday
a bill giving
cootrast, a house can be sold, which
the
Legislature
more
time to
explains why so many people
consider
proposed
capital
cheered housing inflation and
improvements
aroWld
the
state.
damned food inflation.
His measure reappropriates funds
Regardless, that appreciation in
and
protects projects committed by
housing i&amp;~' all there to be used,
the
1977-197ll
capital improvements
such as for investing in stocks. Why'
bill.
They
would
lapse Oct. 1 without
Becaitse many families already
the legislation .
have refinanced their homeS&gt; and
Normally, · the reappropriations
used the mooey lor other things .
Included in the new capital
are
That, of course, would reduce the
improvements ·bill.
amount potentially available for
Shoemaker said he expects to
stocks, and for housing too . And a ,
receive
the new document Monday
recession quite likely will hurt some
sellers of homes who have notions of
getting loP dollar.
But if you talk about a bubble in
housing prices, a bubble that might
· burllt,-then in order to be consistent
you also consider viewing this entire
economy of ours as one vast, fragile
bubble.

Washington today
WASHINGTON (IDENTIAL
CAMPAIGN, THE POLITICAL
CENTER IS LIKE A MAGNET,
DRA~NG CANDIDATES FROM
THE LEFT AND FROM TilE
RIGIIT TOWARD l'HE MIDDLE,
WHERE THE VOTES ARE.
That's why most candidates - at
least tbe successful ones - resist the
labels of conservative or liberal, and
insist that they look for solutions to
fit the problem, not some
preconceived ideology.
And that is wbat Sen.M. Kennedy
is doing now. It is not a matter of
shifting positions, but of emphasis.
Kennedy says he is no big-5pe11ding
liberal, wedded to the solutions of
the 1960s. Nor, he says, is he less
concerned than the Carter
administration about deficits and,
inflation.
.
That doesn't undo his past
criticism of a federal budget he said
shortchanged social spending. But
he is not stressing that theme these
days, as he considers a challenge to
President Carter for the 1980
Democratic presidential
nomination.
"We cannot accept a policy that
cuts spending to tbe bone in areas
like jobs and health, but allows
billions of dollars in wasteful
spending for tax subsidies and adds
even greater fat and waste through
inflationary spending lor defense,"
be told Democrats at their mid-term
convention last Dec. 9.
Kennedy stm doesn't agree with
the administration's spending
priorities. But curiously, as he
comes closer to presidential
candidacy, he seems more cautious
in his cr.iticism of the man from
whom he would have to wrest the
nomination.
"I'm generally reluctant to get
into critical positions on the
administration," he said the other
day. He dido't seem so reluctant
when he was denouncing Carter's
budget priorities, or accusing the
administration of surrender to the
oil lobby, or calling the proposed
windfall profits tax "a transparent
fig leaf."
He says he wants to cooperate
with the Democratic White House.
"I would like to work with them, as I
Indicated to the president, shaping
the energy program, also in coming
to grips with some of these issues of
the economy," he said.
Kennedy said he is doing so now,
as chairman of the Senate Judiciary
Committee and in other areas as
well. He said "we have strong
with
the
workings · now "
administration on a new FBI charter
and an overhaul of tbe criminal
code.

"We're still working with HEW on
most of the legislation .. . " he said.
"I think we're linked up in the
energy area, on energy productivity
and conservation."
He also mentioned his support of
the Strategic Arms Limitation ·
Treaty with the Soviet Union.
"I think those lines are cootinujng
and on-going, and I want to keep
those efforts moving," he said.
That points to a campaign in
which Kennedy's side of the
Democratic debate would center
less on specific program differences
than oo the broader question of
leadership. That's the point on which
he faults Carter ·most harsbly,
questiooing whether the people have
confidence that the president can
deal with national problems.
n securities analysts, a very popular
topic these days is the "upcoming
deflation of the real estate bubble."
. Some are so convinced it will
occur that each fortnight in the past
two years they have so reminded
their clients, betting that while the
message might bore some it will
give encouragement to others.
Stock market averages, it should
be remembered, bave gone nowhere
i11 about 1~ year~ . despitr the best
effUI'Is of promoters. Meanwhile,

Egypt.
There was one tie stronger than
politics that long bound the
nonaligned -economiC!!. These were
once the ''have-not'' members of the
world community. But that also has
changed. After all, you can't be
more "bave" than an oil exporter
these days -and~ are members.
For all Its contraillctions and
anomalies, however, there Ia one
thing to be said lor the bloc and liB
periodic summits. They have
provided a forwn from wblch the
great powers are ~eluded, e1c:ept
as onlookers from the gallery, and in
which the smaller natlona are left to
themselves to argue out Interest.
and differences, and shape common
policies where pos~~lble.
But even that may be a thing rt the
past, at least as concerns the major
issue at Havana. And that Ia the conflict between Tio and Castro over the
bloc's future.
Tito and Castro have in ~on
guerrilla backgrounds. But once.
having achieved national power,
they have gone very different waya.
Tito, once a fiery revolutionary
and fiercely anti-Western, has
grQwn pragmatic with time and eaperience, particularly l!lpl!rience
with the great power . that Ia
Yugoslavia's near neigbbor.
Nonalignment Is an endurin3 concept that has provided smaller
nations with a stronger voice In
world affairs and helped Yugoelavla
avoid being drawn into the status rt
another Soviet satellite.
Castro gives no lndlcationa u yet
rt a similar mellowing. Nonalignment to him is a concept to be
manipulated for short-term purposes. He Ia chalnnan rt the bloc for
the next three years. Thalia the type
of honor In International
organizations that often gets
a
license lor irony with no cash down.
But a lot can happen in three
years, partictilarly In YugOilavla.
'Tito Is 117. And there are no
nonaligned giants ol bla own scale to
lake over from bim 88 a COWJter to
Casto.
Castro, with no rival in cbarlama •
and stature after Tito 's pusing,
might well be able to move the bloc
in the direction he- u "natural." .
And that would be more than
irony. It could prove a tragedy,
especially for truly nonaligned
states.

you

Capital ideas
from Gov. James A. Rhodes, and
hopes his committee can act on it
before the end of nert week .
Senate ~pproval still would be
required, but leaders of that
chamber have indicated a vote woo 't
come there until a scheduled
November session of the General
Assembly.
The governor's office bas not
divulged the cost of proposed new
projects at university, prison,
mental health and other facilities,
but it' is believed to be mere than
$526 mllllon, the total of the last
measure .

Berry's World

One liter of seawater may contain
as many as 10 mllllon diatoms - onecelled specks of algae tbat, through
pho~thesis, produce much of the
oxygen we breathe. ·

11IE DAILVSENTINEL

!USPS I&lt;Wtlli

~,~~·--'· DEV11rED TO 111E
INTERFSrOF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH

CltyEdJior

PubU.bed datJy esttptS.Citrday by Tbe Ohio
V.Uey PubbllliDC Comp~ay· Muldmedll, lac.,
111 Cou.rt St., PoiDH'Oy, ObJo G7G. Bu1ine81
Offl€!e Pboae tft. ZlM. Edllorifll Pbooe
11%·1157.
See.ad clan postage p.ld at Pomeroy, ObJo.
Natlouladvertill.q: repraea&amp;ative, Lalld011
AIIIIOCia&amp;H, JlDl Euclid Ave., Clnet.Dd, Ohio
NilS.
SubtltrlpUtnl ntH: DeUvertd by carrier
..-here av.U..1bl~ II real.l per weH.. By Mo&amp;or
Route wkre' carrier ~~lee oot nal.lable, Ooe
moniii,P.II,
The Dally SeaUDel, by mao I.D ObJo aod Wea~t
\llrglnil, o~~e yur PHI; stx moatha $17.50;
Lllrfe mootbl '10.541. Ellewbe~ PII.GO; ala
meathl $%0.00; tbrH mtlntlu Jll.OO. ·
Thl" Auocia&amp;ed Pret1 II udwh•ely l'IIUth:d
w the lilt for IMIMI~•Uon or all'"'"~ dJs,.tchea.
·~redlud lO the ...twlpapt!r and also tbt IIK'al
news publllhed herein.
.

"Outside of sex, money and In-laws, we have
no marital problems. "

APSports
Willie Stargell andthe rest of the
Pittsburgh Pirates put a damper on
the evening for the Mootreal Expos.
On a night when swimsuits and

scuba gear might have made more
sense !ban the standard baseball
garb, the Pirates spent six
waterlogged hours and 14 minutes
bealin~ the Expos 5-3 In 11 innings.

In other words, it rained a little bit
while the teams were struggling for
the National League East Division
lead. Tbe first delay halted action
for just five minutes, but the second

Ang~ls

regain composure,
defeat Royals, 6-4 Tuesday
Jim Fregosi doe&amp;~' think he has
anything to be nervous about. With a
few more performances like the one
his Calilocnia Angels turned in
Tuesda)· night, wbatev·er worries
Fregosi have should disappaear .

Alter losing five of their last six
and being born Qed 16-4 In the opener
of the four-game series with Kansas
City Monday night, dropping their
American League West lead to two
games qver the Royals; the Angels
seemed ripe for a fall. Instead they

.~
;·; I

•••
~ _i I·
~ •••
I

I

'

I
I
I

I
I
I

'--~

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
BueiNII At A Glonce
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
. W. L. Pet. GB
Bolli more
98 51 · ~
Milwaukee
89 ~2 .589 10
Boston
114 6.l .465 14
New York
110 69_ .537 18
O.,trolt
81 70 .536 18
Clevt!land
77 74 .510 22
Toronto
50 101 .331 49
WEST

Ca11fornia

82
7'1

69

Texas

76

76

Oa~land

66 114 .4'0 15'1&gt;
63 89 .414 19'12
51 100 342 30'h

Kansas City
Minnesota
Chlcogo
Seattle

6 '12

Tue5day's Games

Boston 8, Toromo 3
Cleveland 16, New York 3
Oetroil2, Baltimore 1
Chicago 1, Minnesota 0. 10 inning•

California 6, Kansas

WFSJ'

Cincinnati

Houston
Los Angeles

San Francisco

.,S.Q

72 .523 3
78 73 .517 •
.SOD

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet. Gil
Pittsburgh
90 58 .608
Montreal
87 59 .596 2
St. Louis
78 70 .S27 13
Philadelphia
78 72 .520 13
Chicago
76 73 .510 14'12
New York
56 91 .381 33 117

City~

Texas 9, oa~land 5
Milwaukee 7, Seattle 6
WedMICiay 's Ga mts

Minnesota IZaM 12 ·61 at Chicago
1Baumgarten 12-81
Texas {Alexander • ·7) at Oaklllnd

IKingman 7·51
Boston ISianle~ IS ·lOI at Toronto
IStieb 7·61
New Yor~ (John 18·91 at Cleveland
IBarker 6·51
Baltimore ID. M.!lrtinez 15·1A or
Stono1J.71 at Detroit 1Morrlsl4·71
California I Ryan 15·111 at I&lt; an..,•
City (Gura 11 · 111
Milwaukee (SOrensen 14·131 at
Seattle1Bannister9·141
Thurlclay•s GAmes
Boston at Toronto
Baltimore at Detroit

California at Kansas City
Only games scheduled

san Diego
Atlanta

85

66 .563

68

84

83 67 .553 1'11
• 73 78 .483 12

.«7

1711:2

6J 88 .417 22
59 90 .396 25

Tuesd•y 's G1mes

Pittsburgh s. Montreal 3, 11 in ·
nlngs
Chicago 2·2, New York 0·1, 2nd
game lllnnings

ntngs

San Diego •· Houston 0

Los Angeles 6, Atlanta I
San Francisco 3. Clncinnatr 1
Weclne~y's

G•mes

Montreal !Grimsley 8·9 and May
9·31 at New Yor~ (Swan 12·12 and
• Hausman 1·5), 2

Pittsburgh IBLyleven 1·5 and Bib·
by 10 · ~1 at Philadelphia !Espinosa
U·11and Larson HII 2
Chicago (McGlothen 11 ·13 and
Capllla 0·0) al St. Louis (Fulgham 9·
4 and vuckovlch 12-101 . 2
Atlanta (McWilliams 2·2) at
HOUston IK . Forsch 10-6)
Cincinnati !Bonham 8·61at San
Diego (Shirley 7·151
San Francisco (Halicki HI at Los
Angeles ISutcliHe1HI
Thyrscloy•s Gomtl

Pittsburgh at Philadelphia
Montreal Bt New YOf"k, 2

Chicago ot St. LOUIS
Atlanta at Houston

Cincinnati at San Diego
San Francisco at Los Angeles

Richarda ~7.
Troy Banta led Waverly with a 42,
Chrts Smith bad 45, Larry Gullion 46,
Chris Taylor 49, and Joe Moore 49.
For Wellston, Ted Wllllama had
40, Greg Henry 44, Eric Cavenaugh
54, Bruce Kunt% 54, and Jeff Divis

85.

Meiga is 1-3 inside the SEOAL and
their next match wu last night at
Riverside .Golf Course against
Warren and Wahama.
Meigs reserve scores from Mooday were Brian W1ll with a 53, and
Scott Harrism with a ~7.

Post season college
playoffs dead issue
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
A major college postseason football
playoff seems to be a dead issue ...for
now.
But Frank &amp;oyles, Arkans8s'
athiellc director and former foot hall
coach, stU! says such a playoff is
"inevitable."
Broyles was one of an outspoken
minority whose playoff proposal was
beaten down by the bowls.
"We didn't foresee thls much
ocganlzed opposition. We dido't
fooesee the bowls taking such a
strong stand, banding together and
rallying support," he says. "It was
their asserted opinion that the bowls
would be ruined if we had even a
four-team playoff."
The NCAA's Extra Events
Committee, of which Broyles is a
member and former chairman, had
recommended that such a playoff
proposal be brought before next
January's NCAA convention. But
the Division I Steering Committee
recommended to the all-powerful
. NCAA Council that the issue not
even come up for a vote. The Council
went along with that suggestion.
"It's somewhat of a dead issue at
this particular time," says Dave
strack, athletic director at the
University of Arizona and current
chairman of the Extra Events
Committee. ''Who can tell what the
future might hold, but we've decided
It would be beating a dead horse to
pursue it as a committee at this

v,, Orioles 1
Dan Petry . and Aurelio Lope2

Philadelphia S, St. LOUIS J, 10 In ·

Meigs golfers, place fourth
By Grq Bailey
The MelfJII golf team dropped to 2-3
on the year when they placed fourth
Monday evening In a quadrangular
match at Jackson at the Falrgreens
Country Club.
Athena wu first at 172, then came
Waverly with 182, Wellston was third
at 192, and Melgsflnlahed with a 196.
Meiga players and their scores
were Scott McKinney 45, Fred
YOUJ18 49, David Kennedy 49, J. R.
Wamaley 53, Tooy Jewell IKJ.
Athera scoren were Craig GoldsbeJTY 40, Randy Nogrady 41, Tim
Kerr 43, Brian Lawson 49, and Dave

erupted for four runs In the first
inning off Royals starter Rich Gale,
who lasted all of 24 pitches, and held
&lt;11 foc a 6-4 victory. With Minnesota
losing I~ in 10 innings to Chicago
and dropping lour games . back, it
was a profitable night foc Fregosi .
lng from Dave Frost, 15-9.
Kansas City, which stole five
bases, got its firllt run when George
Brett singled, stole secood and came
all the way around when Brian
Downini:.' s throw trying to nail him
oo the steal deflected into shallow
right field off Anderson's glove.
The Baltimoce Orioles didn 'I get
what they needed Tuesday, dropping
a 2-1 decisi&lt;11 to Detrolt'and leaving
their magic number at three.
Milwaukee, the only team stU! with a
chance to catch Baltimore, nipped
Seattle 7~. Boston beat Toronto lh'l,
aeveland mauled New York l&amp;-3
and Texas defeaied Oakland !h'i.
White Sox I, Twins 0
Ken Kravec pitched seven innings
of no-b it ball and wound up with a
three-hitter. The lone run scored
when Kevin Bell, Mike Squires and
Thad Bosley hit consecutive singles
with none out in the loth foc Chicago.
Roo Jackson's leadoff double in
the eighth broke up Kravec's no-hit
bid.

"The bowls feel they have served
college football very well and they
feel they're the best thing for college
football ," says Broyles. "They've
convinced many coaches that the
structure we bave now is better than
a playoff. They cite- the financial
aspects, the good -times, no
pressure ...things like that.
"Maybe our feeling supporting a
playoff is ahead of its time, like solar
energy. But it's inevitable that we
need a playoff, not foc the 20 or 25
schools who will succeed with soccer
or anything else. But what about the
other schools who are in flrlancial
straits? The economic factor will be
fell down the line.

e&lt;mbined on a folD'-hitter and Ron
LeFlore had a solo horner and an
RBI grounder for the Detroit runs .
Doug DeCinces homered for
Baltimore.
Brewen 7, MariDen I

'-..P

54 Padres.
minutes, and the sixth inning didn't
In the other NL games. the
begin Wltil midnight, local time.
Philadelphia Phillies topped the St.
Shortly thereafter , the Expos lied
LOu is Ca rdinals 5-3 in 10 innings, the
it :1-3 on an RBI single by Larry
Los Angeles Dodgers bested the
Parrish in the sixth. The Pirates,
Atlanta Braves 6-1, and the Chicago
who hadn't scord since the first,
Cubs swept a twi-nite double-header
didn't undo the tie until Stargell
from the New York Mets by ~ and
came to the plate with Mike Easler
2-1 scores with the nightcap going 11
on first in the lith .
· innings.
Meanwhile, the Cincinnati Reds
Padres 4, Astros 0
dropped a 3-1 decisioo to the San
Manager Bill Virdon wa5 singing
Francisco Giants but maintained
the same song after his Astros wer~.
their l'h -game West Division lead
held to six singles by Eri c
over Houston because the ~ros
Rasmussen . The Astros have three
were beaten 4-0 by the San Diego
games
remaining
again st
Cincinnati .
Phillies 5, Cardinals 3
Pinch-hitter Greg Gross delivered
Like dresaed-up baked beans?
a lOth-inning sacrifice fly to score
That means lidding chili sauce,
Manny Trlllo, then Garry Maddox
brown sugar and mustard. Top the
cracked an RBI single to lead
caaserole with thick onion slices,
Philadelphia to its 13th victory in 18
bake unW bubble, then top with games and pull the Phillies within a
about a cup (four ounces) of shred- game of the third-place Cardinals in
ded Cbeddar. cheeae for each two the East .
pounds of prepared beans and heat
Meanwhile, Pete Rose extended
his hitting sireak to 15 games and
lor five minutes more.

Afterthreeweeksofhard-nose
football, Hannan Trace, once the
doonnat in t11e Soathern Valley
Athletic ConferenCe, finds itself In
an unfamiliar position, first place in
non-league standings.
Coach Larry Cremeens' Wildcats
woo their third straight last Friday
night, I H over Huntington af Ross
County. That victory Ued tbe most
wins ever by a HT football squad.
Hannan Trace has begun this
season where it left off last fall.
During the last 11 quarters of 1978,
no team scored on the Wildcat defen-

threw a strike to Keith Payne for
another six-pointer.
Southwestern romped 36-12 over
Hannan, W. Va. The Highlanders of
Coach Bob Ashley were led offensively by the bard-running of
Shennan Potter.
Potter gained 115 yards in 18
carries while scoring two touchdowns anda two-point conversion.
Quarterback Jay Burleson also hit
Dale Newberry on a TD pass and
Ron Hammond ran back an interception 91 yards for the final TO.
Coach Jim Sprague's ·Kyger Creek
Bobcats stymied by their old
nemesis Alexander will try to get
back in the win colwnn against Oak
Hill.
In their fast meeting, Oak Hill
behind the churning legs of Marshall
University's Tim Williams, defeated
the Bobcats 11)..7 at Cheshire.
Kyger Creek won its first two
games, 00-0 over Federal Hocking
and 1~12 against Wahama, but
managed just a {).() tie against the
Spartans.
The snake-bitten Bobcats bad one
TO called back and another play at
the one nullied by penalties.

KING

TAKES THIRD PLACE
The Valley Lumber Softball team
took third place honors at a league
tournament held Saturday and Sun- ·
day at Ravenswood. Team members
extended thanks to the lwnber company for the sponsorship during the
past summer.

WOODBURN lNG

STOVE

DAVID L. ·.cARR, D. 0.
Announces The Relocation Of His Office
FOR
GENERAL PRACI'ICE

And

WITH BLOWER

ALLERGY AND DERMATOLOGY
At

FAMILY CLINIC
2.9ZA JA C KS O N

AVENUE

, 111 NT PLEASANT , WEST VIRGINIA

.t ~!) "'; . ,

Office Huurs: Monday-Friday 9 a.m. · 6 p.m.
TeleP.hone: Office 304-S75·6971 Home 675-65i.7.
•

pulled withlll nine hits of a major
league record lOth consei'UtiVe 200hit season.
I.Jodgers 6, Braves I
Jerry Reuss pitched a four-bitter
and Steve Garvey reached the 100RBI plateau for the third ,
coosecutive seasons as Los Angeles
beat Atlanta.
CUbs 2-2, Mets 0-1
Dave Kingman drove in the gamewinning rWl in each game and Bruce
Sutler picked up both saves in the
Chicago's double-header sweep of
New York . Kingman's two-run ,
third-inning single won the opener.
and his lith-inning single delivered
the winner in the nightcap boosting Kingman's RBI total to a
league~eading 110.
Sutter, meanwhile, had 37 saves - ,
tying the NL record he shares with
Clay Carroll of the 1972 Reds and
Hollie Fingers of the 1978 Padres.
The Mets have lost 21 of tbeit last
25. New York's Lee Mazzllll went
hitless in the nightcap and had his
l9iJame hitting streak halted.

Wildcats seek fourth
in row on Saturday

se.
Paul Molitor's single !lCOred Slxto
Led by three All.SVAC performers
Lezcano, who had doubled, foc the
and
aeven other lettennen, liT has
Brewers' decisive rwt in the eighth.
defeated
Symmes Valley, Hannan,
Milwaukee ov..-came a ~2 Seattle
W.
Va.
andlluotingtoo.
lead built mostly with a fiVH'IIIl
Pacing the aUack are running
second that Included Bruce Behle's
b&amp;cka,
Jay Bray, a 170 pound senior
two-run h0111er . Jim Gantner had a
fullback;
Todd Sibley, 185 pound
tw!&gt;o4'un sh« foc Milwauke.
senior
fullbitck;
Todd Sibley, 185
Red Sox I, llue Jays 3
.b pound junior halfback and Randy
Mike Torrez, whq broke a personal
Green, 140 pound senior halfback.
thri!Ci!ame loaing slide, threw a
Hannan Trace will try to keep its
seven-hitter and Dwight Evans
winning
llleU goq Saturday afcontributed a h0111e run for the Red
ternoon
agal"'* tile Southeastern
Sox.
Panthers
of Ross County.
lndiallllf. Yallkees 3
Southeastern
Is 2-1 after three
Former Yankee Cliff Johnson had
games.
The
Panthers
own a victory
two homers and five RBI and Toby
Southwestern,
but
were tdged
over
Harrah slarnJlled a pair of home
11)..14
by
North
Gallia
last
Friday
runs and four RBI In a 111-hlt attack.
night.
Ted Cox added a solo shot for
Following Saturday's contest,
Oeveland and Oscar Gamble
Hannan
Trace opens Its 1979 sv AC
homered foc the Yankees, who lost
season
at
Kyger Creek Sept. 28.
their fifth game in a row.
.
In
Friday
night's ga:mes, SouthRangen 9, A'a 5 AI Oliver had four
western
travels
to North Gallia in
hits and knocked in three runs,
.
the
only
league
affair
while Kyger
raising his batting average to .330 in
Creek
goes
to
Oak
Hill;
Eastern
a game played ¥ore ooly 750 fans,
Parkersburg
Catholic
. and
visits
the second smallest crowd at
Southern
hosts
Caldwell
in
nonOakland thls season. A game with
league
batUes.
·
Seattle on April 17 drew 653.
At Vintoo, Coach John Blake's
Pirates seek their third straight victory without a loss against bard. hitting Southwestern squad.
Marauder volleyball
Led by quarterback Donald
Shupe, the .Pirates defeated
squad posts, victory
Southeastern, 20-141ast week. Shupe
rushed lor two touchdowns and
By Greg Bailey
The Melga High Volleyl1all team
kept up its sl2zling pace and ratBed
its record to 6.(1 Monday evening 88
the gals defeated Nelsonville-York
and Alexander. ·
Meigs took both matches in two
straight games. They trinuned the
Buckeyes from Nelsonville-York 1~
7 and 15-8 and then trounced tbe
Alexan!)er Spartans !s-4 and !5-4.
The next scheduled action will be a
league match against visiting Logan
Thursday at 5:30 p.m.at MHS.

time."

J

looK a whopping two hours,

-'

Oak Hilll-0-1 this season upended
Vinton County 12.() Ia~ Friday. The
Oaks also own a 3-13 tie with Alexander.
Coach Joe Mitchem's Eastern ·
Eagles seek their second win in :
three games against Parkersburg
Catholic, a 13~ winner over
Southern last l"riday. Greg Wigal
ran for three touchdowns to lead
Eastern to a lopsided 30.() nonconference victory over miller.
Brian Bissell passed to Mark North and Dennis Durst went over from
'the live yard line for the other
Eastern scores.
At Southern, Coach John Dud·
ding's Tornadoes seek their second ·
win against Caldwell. Although
losing, 1~ to Parkersburg Catholic,
Southern hefense looked string In the
first ball before faltering to the
bigger West Virginia school.

TEAM

S\IAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES ONLY

Hannan Trace

North Gal l ia

Kyger creek

Eastern
Southwestern
Southern

P DP
3008720
2 0 0 42 21.
2 0 I 45 12
2 1 0 .67 34
2 1 0 52 34
0 2 I 12 65

W L T

THIS WEEK'S

SPECIAL

FISH SQUARE ••••••• 59e
WITH FRIES ·•••••••· gge
ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VAllEY
992-2556
570 w. Main
Pomerov, o.

�•
5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1979

Hot Hitter favorite in Little Brown
Jug
.

4- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday. Sept. 19, 1979
1

, Footbal! travels? It's a ro-c ky road!

Today's
'I •

Sports World
By Will Grimsley .-IP Correspondent
As tile world turns in baseball's

most intriguing real life drama the New York Yankees' version of
"Days of Our Lives" - questions
whet the appetite, · just as in an
afternoon soap opera on TV _
Is the honeymoon over between
owner George Steinbrenner and his
volatile super star, Reggie Jackson'
Will Reggie be tossed out of the
house like some muslachioed villain
at the insistence of his hated rival
for the owner's favor. Manager Billy
Martin?
When did the honeymoon began to
fray at the seams? Who done Reggie
in? Himself or some sinister outside
focces? Will he find happiness
elsewhere'
Tune in tomorrow and see .
When Reggie, shortly after
signing a five-year, $2.9 million
• . cootract with the Yankees, told a
magazine writer that he - not
Captain Thurman Munson, not
anybody else -was "the stick that
stirs the drink," he wasn't kidding.
Reggie never lets the waters get
calm.lfhe isn'lleading a September
surge for the pennant, blasting three
home runs to clinch a World Series
or provoking a rain of "Reggie!"
bars from the stands, he is feuding
with his manager or saying
uncomplimentary things about his
boss.
"Controversy follows me around
like a black cat," Jackson once said
sorrowfully.
The latest incident aro.$0 at the
"Goodbye to Catfish Hunter" day
last Sunday at the Stadium. Reggie
said he had this handsome golden

.,

.,

I

1

replica of the World Series trophy to
present to his longtime teammate
and Steinbrenner wouldn't let him
do it.
Steinbrenner insisted it wasn't so.
He d1dn 't even know about the
request, he said. He intimated
Reg !lie might be up to some . o)d
tricks - using other people to servv
his own purposes.
Jackson insists that he has lost
commumcation with Steinbrenner
and draws only "boos" from
strongly pro-Martin fans who once
cheered him . He says he wants out.
Steinbrenner's .patience 1s visibly
wearing thin : Martin is said to have
made two requests' within the past
week that the Yankees get rid of
their
controversia l,
clutchperforming super star.
Are the holes too big to patch' Ask
Dear Abby.
•
th~!al brought about tile schism,
It was an accumulation of things.

SteinbreMer is a proud, forceful
man who can't be pushed. Jackson is
Strong-willed With a king-sized ego.
It hasn 't been unusual for Reggie,
disdaining the warning that
familiarity breeds contempt, to
barge in.to the executive offices on
the slighr.,st whim. This happened
when Steinbrenner abruptly brought
Martin back as manager June 19.
Steinbrenner was outraged. That's
when he told Reggie to concentrate
on earning his fat salary and leave
decision-making to him . That's
when Reggie said he dido 't want to
be a Yankee any longer and the
Yankees started trying to oblige.

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Peerless Propbet
Egad, friends,this truly sh~uld be
dubbed "traveling week" for most of
the nation's collegiate gridders.
And their travels are going to provide you, my faithrul followers, with
some of the season's mmt interesting pigskin contests. Urn- '
kumph!
In big games, we find Minnesota
traveling to lA'I Angeles to meet the
Southern Cal Trojans, Alabama facing Baylor under the lights in BinDingham and Iowa State visiting
Texas.
In West Lafayette, Ind., Purdue
dN
an otre Dame wlll slug it out (for
the 5lsttime ). Michigan of the Big 10
willentertainKanasasoftheBig8in
Ann Arbor; Mich. In the East, PeM
State hosts the Texas A[M lads.
If, indeed, travel is broadening,
these collegians are in for ·some
enlightening experience- kaff.,....
~.. ••f '·
In two more contests between Pac
10 and Big· 10 foes, UCLA travels
eastward to engage the Wlsconsm
·

MC,Namara praiSeS
•
G an't s ; Wh··t
son
••

. .

SAN FRANCISCO ( AP) - Johr
McNamara,

manager

of

the

Cincinnati Reds, had every reason to
he angry. Instead, he had a sense of
relief.
McNamara 's Reds were 3-1losers
to the San Francisco Giants Tuesday
night, dropping the season series 612, but they maintained their 112
game lead in the National League
West because second-place Houston
was defeated at San Diego.
11
We've got to fee) fortunate,"
McNamara said. "That man (Ed
Whitson} pitched one helluva game.
We always knew he had a good arm .
Tonight he showed it."
Whitson, 7-10, had a four-hitter
entering the ninth and was gunning
for his first major league shutout.
But Johnny Bench belted a 3-1 pitch
for
his 21st homer with one out.
and Margie Hanunond of .New
After
Dan Driessen singled, Greg
Lexington.
Minton
look over and earned his
Much of the power will come from
third
save
when Ray Knight
a pair of sophomores and two freshgrounded
into
a
gam~nding double
men on the 1979 squad. 6'2" Kim
play
.
Knight, Waverly, and 5'7" Kim ·
"Ed pitched too well to lose,"
Clingman, Springfield, a major
explained
Giants Manager Dave
source of last season's offense, will
·
BristoL
"I
had to get him out of
be joined by 5'10" Janet Groves,
there.
·
Gallipolis, and 5'9" Cynthia Bowers,
You
learn
something
when you
H
Kenton. Both Groves · and Bowers
go
out
and
eyeball
a
pitcher.
I like
were first team league selections in
Ed
has
a
guys
with
guts
and
highschooL
bellyfull.
He
really
wimted
·to
stay
"Our defense won't make many
in."
mistakes either," said Lewis. "They
Whitson also has a live fastball,
never give up on any ball. Everyone
one
Giants ' catcher Dennis
wlll dive and hit the floor ."
Rounding out this year's squad are
Margaret Hackett, London; Robin
Haines and Paula Pittenger,
Chillicothe; Perri Martin, Cir(
.
cleville; and Cindy Buck, New
Lexington.

Does anyone

want Reggie??

Thompson may sta"1 Sunday
CINCINNATI· (AP) - Rookie
quarterback Jack Thompson isn't
concerning himself with what 's
wrong with the Cincinnati Bengals
even though he may get the nod to
put oo the brakes.
" It's just that I'm . too young lo
know about things like that," said
the 23-year-&lt;~ld out of Washingon
State.
If 9-year-veteran Ken Anderson's
back injury isn't better, Thompson
will start for Cincinnati against the
powerful Houston Oilers.
Anderson went out in the first
quarter last Sunday in the 2().14 loss
to the New England Patriots, their
third loss iii three games.
"It's a day-to-day thing," ·said
Anderson of the injury. He was
bopeful he would start but was
coofident that Thompson could fill

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Ruby
Chrisell won the $1,200 featured
claiming pace mile in the eighth
race at Lebanoo by two lengths
Tuesday night , covering the
distance in 2:06 1-0.
The winner paid $19, $11 .40 and
$8.60. Eda Time placed, paying
W!.40 and $7:00, and Curios Craig
was third to pay $7.60.
In the sixth race, Dolly's Great, a
00-1 shot, won to pay $137, $60 and
110.60.
The 4-ii double of RQcky Fork and
Nile Adios paid $47. The crowd of
1,3:12 wagered $116,932.

the bill, having directed the offense
against New England. He also
scored
both
Cincinnati's
touchdowns.
"We talk about offense and
reading the defense, things of that
nature," said Anderson. who works
closely with Thompson.
"I don't think we've talked any
more than w.e have in the past,' ' this
week, he added, however.
Thompson hasn 't made any
conclusions about the Beng:rts
problems. He's been too busy. ·
"I'm not a credible source," he

said. "You know what I mean? "I
haven 't been around long enough to
really make a eomment on things
like that.
"My basic philosophy is to do the
little things I have to do first in order
to beceme a good quarterback. Once
I can do that, then I can be more
open to commenting about those
other things. I have too many little
things to worry about before I can
start analyzing what other guys are
doing wi-ong," said Thompson.
His immediate problem is
preparing for the Oilers.
"They 're big ," he said, shaking
his head. "They're a learn that I'd
like to say is on a roll from last
season . They're definitely a team
that has to be reckoned with .
They've got that Bob Brazile and
guys like Earl Campbell. They 're
definitely not hurin g for personnel,' '
Thompson said.

lliSI-

I

Redwomen squad
strong, experienced
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
College and Community College
Redwomen Volleyball coach Diane
Lewis bas reason to be optimistic as
the 1979 season opens.
"The only limit to our success will
be the one we set ourselves."
Last season Lewis and her team of
mostly freshmen and sophomores
were fourth in the state small
college volleyball tournament and
compiled a 27-7 record against both
large and small schoolS. This
season, with all but one starter
returning, that record should only
improve.
"Experience under pressure and
'strong hitting wlll be a big plus for
us," said Lewis.
Tliree seniors will provide. the
leadership and "glue" for the Redwomen this year. They are Denise
Radcliffe, Athens ; Marsha Grigsby

Badgers and Washington State
journeys to ColumbllS to take on
Ohio State
·
From the Deep sou th , th e
..... 'ppt' State staJ -'· · t
'"""'
W8no&gt; )Bun up
to Maryland to test the Terps Anny
·
g- across country • meanwhile
.
, to

NEW YORK (AP) - Reggie
Jackson 's days as a New York
Yankee may be ntunbered ... if the
Yankees can find a team that will
take the slugging outfielder.
New York Manager Billy Martin
reportedly has twice urged General
Manager Cedric Tallis lo make a
trade for the hard-hilling right
· fielder .
~ 'we

have to get rid

or

him,"

Martin was quoted as saying . "He is
a disruptive force.',

Martin said in Cleveland Tuesday
night that Jackson's name has come
up "like any other player 's" in trade
talks

" beca use we're always

discussing possible trades ."
However ,'~ackson has a tradeapproval cla~se in the five-year $2.7
million contract he signed as a free
,
agent in November 1976.
Because of the clause, the .
Yankees are unable to trade or sell
Jackson without his censent.
"The Yankee management and I
have talked about trades, not just of
Jackson but of a number of
players, " Mart in said . "Tha t's
routine ."

Martin , whose return 10 midseason as manager reportedly upset
Jackson, also said he is "tired of
picking up ihe paper every day and
seeing a headline about this player
saying something about that player
or the owner."
" It's not the Yankee way,'\_said
Maitin, a former Yankee sec'lmd
baseman . " It's disruptive . I don't

Littlejohn said was "clo.cked at 92
mph - in the first and ninth
innings .~~

"I was going after their power
hitters with fastballs," Whitson said.
"I had it sinking real good . I'm in a
groove now. If I get three or four
runs, a lot of teams wlll be in
trouble."

The Giants jumped on loser Frank
Pastore, 4-7, for a I~ lead in the
first . Bill North walked, Joe Strain
sacrificed and Darrell Evans drllled
a tWO-&lt;IUt single.
·Nortli singled, raced all the way to
third on a' ground out and scorell on
Mike !vie's single in the third .
Evans' singled, Mu Venable
sacrificed and Johnnie LeMaster
-singled foc a 3-ll lead in the sixth.
The Giants "took advantage of
their opportunities," Reds catcher
Bench. said. "They had three
situations foc timely hils and they
got them . Whitson didn't give us that
chance. He had good heat and
control to go with it."
Tuesday's

Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL
National League
CINCINNATI REDS - Signed a
player development con tra ct to
place a m inor league team in Cedar
Rapids, Iowa Of the Class-A Midwest

League.

NEW YORK METS - Acquired
Ed Lynch, pitcher, from the Texas

Rangers to complete an earlier
trade which sent Willie Montanez to

Tex111s.

BASKETBALL

National
Basketball Association
BOSTON CELTICS Waived
curtis Rowe, forward .
LOS ANGELES LAKERS - Cut
Walter Dan iels, guard, and Oawan
Foott, forward -center .
NEW YORK KNICKS - Released
Wesley Co)(, forward, and Mo
Layton , guard .
PHOENIX SUNS Released
Duje Krstulovrc, forward .
PORTLAND TRAIL BLAZERS Acquired Kermit Washington, tor ·
ward ; Kevin Kunnert, center; Ran dy Smith, guard, and a 1980 first ·
round draft choice from the San
Diego Clippers as compensation tor
the signing of Bill Walton, center, by
San Diego; with an option for San
Diego to retain Smith by paying Por tland $350,000 and giving their 1982
first-round draft choice to the
Blazers. Acquired Jim Brewer, for ·
ward, fromthe Detroit Pistons tor an
undisclosed draft choice.
UTAH JAZZ Waived Wolf
Perry, guard.
SOCCER
North American

meet Staljford.
In an_interesting pair of nighttime
matchu~ in Forida, Georgia Tech
challenges the Florida Gators in
GainesviUe and Floride State battles
the Miami Hurricanes in
Tallahassee.
The IvY League also moves into
high gear with a full slate. Yale
hosts BroWII (their 84th contest);
Harvard invades Columbia; Cornell
meets Penn (their 86th) at
Philadelphia; and Dartmouth and
Princeton tangle (their 59th) at
Hanover, N.H.
Other ·contests worth your attmtion pit the .Utah Utes against the
TeMessee Vols, in Knoxville and the
VMI Keydets vs. the Virginia
Cavaliers (their 74th) in e latter's
Scott Stadium.
Jove! The collegiate game gels
more exciting and the contestants
more evenly matched each week.
Har-rurnph!
The Hoople eemputers - hak-kaff
- worked overtime in corning up
with the ultimate winners · in the
foregoing array of games.
For your pleasure here is bow we

·see 'ern:
Southern California - whose
record in four previous encounters
with the Gophers from Minnesota is
one victory, two defeats and one tie
- wlll even the won-!oos tally by lak'
ing a 28-13 decision in this week's
clash. '
In the Nabama-Baylor contest,
Bear Bryant's forces will out-miiSCle
the Bears, 26-14. And Texas and
Iowa State will stage a bruising affair with tbe Longborns winning,
24-18.
Notre Dame is playing probably
the most difficult schedule in the eellege ranks . Their opponents compiled an amazing record of 82 victories
33 defeats and 3 ties in 1978, including 4 wins and 2101lSCS in major
bowls. And this Saturday the Irtsh
meet one of their toughest
adversaries-Purdue.
The whole state of Indiana may
well shake, ra.ttle and roll 118 the
Irish and the Boilennakers hanuner
each other in Ross-Ade, Staitun. But
when the · p118hing and shoving and
belting is all over we see a Purdue
triwnph, 28-21.
• In Michigan, the Wolves will
pulverize the Kansas Jayhawks,
U-7, The Penn State-Texas A&amp;M affair will be up for grsbe all afternoon
with the Nlttany Lions finally taking
hold for a 21-18 victory.
UCLA will win a close contest with
Wisconsin by a 21-14 count. And
Washington State's jaunt to ColwnbiiS will go for naught as it loses to
the Bucll;eyes, 22-14.
The Maryland-Mississippi State
fray will go to the Terps, 27-16. The
valiant but undennanned Army
Cad.ets will succumb to
Stanford,35-10.
Watch for the Floride Gators to
surprise• one and all by taking the
Georgia Tech contingent for a ride,
winning JG-20. And in the battle
which may well settle the race for
the unofficial state championship,
the Hoople System gives Florida
Slate a JS-25 edge over Miami - kJ~ff­
kaff!
In the quartet of Ivy League encounters we cali 'em: Yale over
Brown, 7-4; Harvard over Columbia,
25-20; Cornell over PeM, 21-13, and
Dartmouth over Princetoo, »-17.
In Knoxville, the Utes will be no
match for the borne team as the Ten·

nessee Volunteers triwnph, JS-10.
The Virginia cavaliers will pull a
mild surprise as they lake the
Keydels of VMI, 10-7.
The Hoople ~r Special of
the week is host North Carolina to
upset a fine Pittsburgh Panther II.
We give it to the Tar Heels, 21-17.
Har-rumph!
·
Now go on with my forecast :
SEPT.!!
Alabama !I Blylor 14 (N) ·
ArizooaSI44Toledol4 (N)
ArbDiu S3 Okl•bom• St ZS (N
Aa bum !8 S MQIIalppl7
Ball Staten Keal Stale Z1
&amp;.loa CoUece !2 VlllaDoYIIlZ (N)
&amp;.loa u II New llamplblre 1
Callforala Z4 SaD J - 81 zz
Ceatral Mldl:li BowibiC Green !1
Colgate II LeblP ~
Colorado a Dnlke.l%
Coraell %1 PeDD U
Dartmoalb :It Prlllceloa 11
Delaware Z7 Temple It
ECanllall !8WueFanetM (N)

1f PARTICIPATE
Fourteen meinbers and guests
met Tuesday and participated in the
ladies' dey golf meet.
Followi~ a shotgun start the
seven twosomes completed nine
holes for prizes.
Winning prizes were Margaret
Follrod, Velma Rue, Elizabeth
Lohse, Pearl Welker and Elizabeth
Cutler.
Starting time for the fall season
will be 9:30.

FlorldaSI3S MlamJ (Fla) Z5 (N)
GeGqla !l Clemaeall

Harvard 25 ColumblllZI
Hawaii II New Mateo 15 (N)
Holy c._ !8 Rlaode lllud Zl
IWDolll!l Air Fon:e Zl
lad)wnM3S Kentucky !2
ll:aiiiU 8115 Orqua St U
lSU IORice:ZO (N)
Loulllvtll.e Z4Cillrtm.U21 (N)
Manlall!l Oblo U 5
MarylaDd 7 Mlallulppl Sill
MuucbuleltiZI Maine It
MempidJSII7WicbltaSI14 (N)
Mlchlpu a Ku&amp;u 7
Mlchlpa St 31 Miami (0) 14
MluGari3S Mlululppl t5 (N)
MualaDI St Z81dabo Sill (N}
N•vy 21 COIIlleCikallZ
Nebruu 3Iowa 14
N c.rollall 21 Pltll1
N c.rollall Sl 117 W \'irlblla Z7 N
Arlzeal Jl Moalaaa Z8 (N)
Oblo St ZZ WubJIIC1oll Sill
Oldalloma 451'11lsa 11
Pea St Zl Tesu AAM D
Pardae Z8 Notre Dame Zl
Rutcen 35 Baa.ell 7
SUDiego8133FresaoSIZS CN) .
S c.rollall Z4 Dake Zl (N)

established the m:Jrk of I :55 2-0 for 3year-&lt;~ld pacer~ on this same track ,
winning the first division of the 1978
Jug .
"Hot Hitter is the best colt in the
country now," said Filioo .
Hot Hitter, secood by a nose to
Happy Motoring in the Cane, carries
an eight-race winning streak into the
Jug. He's either finished first or
secend in all but two of his a) starts,
collecling4626,000, No. 1 in the sport
this year.
Bill Jacobs, the second trainer for
Blll Popfinger, warns not to write
Happy Motocing off. PopfingeJ: will
be bidding foc his secon straight Jug
triumph behind the Most Happy
Fells colt.
"I'd say he's as good as the Cane

now . He really came back. The few
extra feet (from the No. 8 position)
won't bother him. We'll make a run

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tuesday Triplicate
League
September 11, 1979
Standings
' Team
Friendly Tavern
No. 5
No. 1
Reuter ·Brogan Ins.
No. 2
Conrail Coa I
H igh indiv idual game ·· Pat
son 215 ; Betty Smith 183; Carla
ter 173.
H igh series .. Pat Carson 530;
ty Smith 515; Carla Carter 506.
Team high game ·- No. 1510.
• Team high series -- No. 1 U56.

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fCll'llllltion should

16
16

NEWFARMCLUB
CINCINN ATI (AP) The
Cincinnati Reds' Class A minor
league team will be in Cedar Rapidl,
Iowa, next 5\!ason, replacing the
Greensboro, N.C., franchise in the
West Carolina League.
The player development team wt11
play in the Class A Midwest League.
Jim Lett, who managed the Reds '
learn in Greensboro, will be
manager of the team in Ceder
Rapids.

Stot e u cept a.

OF

ball ASA sanctioned tournament wlll
be beld Saturday and Sunday under
the 8p011801'Ship ol the Middleport
Youth League. Fee ls S60 and two
balla. 'I'ho6e wilh.lng more in-

Pts.
18

at them (rom behind," said Jacobe.
The first four finishers in each .
division return for the raceoff. U no
horse has woo twice after the
raceoff.. the three winners wtll
return for a fourth heat.

Job Squad
Towels

lOOM 101 THI' SIGN
THIOUGHOUT lH(
JTOU IO I
IANU.JYIC $A ~I NG$
OHU(')(;.U tUND
PI OO\Il.H
IIUIO al lOW "'ll JU"
A fiW U.AMI'll\

GOlOCRHTORY ROASTED

like it. "

A beaming Haughtnn saia: "II
means a lot on a track like this with
the short stretches and round turns.
There's no way you can play a race
ahead of time,- but I'm sure Hot
Hitter will go for the lead. He can't
be more than three st,eps ahead of
me if I'm going to beat him."
General Star, driven by Keith
Waples, ranks as a 2.1 favorite in the
first division after drawing the No. 1
post position. Happy Motoring, the
winner of the ·Cane Pace, the
crown's first leg, is listed at 6-1
because of the No . 8 spot and a
recent strep throat.
Driver Herve Filion is so coofident
of Hot Hitter that he predicts the
Strike Out celt will shatter the world
record in the Jug. Falcen Almahurst

Florida 3t Geol'lla Tecllzt (N)
FlorldaA&amp;M31GI'IImhiJacll (N)

Soccer League
TORONTO BLIZZARD - Named
Clive Toye president and general
manager .
~

Haughtoo, a S!&gt;-year-&lt;1ld Hall of
Farner, relaxed in a folding chair in
front of his trailer, just a few feet
from where Set Point stood placidly
in his stall.
The sport's all-time money.,inning driver gazed toward the
Most Happy celt and predicted of the
6-1 shot : "He's got a chance. He's
beat Hot Hitter once ·so he can dt:i it
again. " .
Set Point came from behind in the
last eighth mile to nip Hot Hitter in
the $100,000 Battle of Saratoga in
July, doing I :56 4-5 on that half-mile
track.
Haughtoo puts a lot of stock in
drawing the rail in the tough eighthorse second division, where Hot
Hitter will leave from the No. 3 spot.

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
DELAWARE, Ohio (AP ) - Billy
Haughtoo makes no promises he can
win an unprecedented si•th Little
BroWII Jug with Set Point, but he
em cedes heavily favoced Hot Hitter
Uttle in the middle leg of l-year-&lt;1ld
pacing's Triple Crown.
No driver even has won five times
in this claSSic that has attracted 17
celts and created an all-time record
purse of-$226,455 Thursday over the
half-mile Delaware (Ohio ) County
Fairgrounds track.
Set Point has won ooly eight of 1fl
starts for $~,615 yearly earnings,
more than $400,000 behind the 1979
pace of Hot Hitter, the Jug's even
money favorite .

OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY 11 AM TIL 9 PM

NEW CROP

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U.S. 60 WEST

HUNTINGTON

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.."

29·
,,

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•'

�•
7 - 1'~ Daily Sen tint I, Mt(Jc.JI~f)(,rl+'umcn,y , (),,

Wednesday,

6- The Daily Sentinel,

IG-1101
filii(
Our Reg. 12.96

.,.

$f0

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Gentlemen's
Blue Jeans

f!7

Double-wrnpped S1zcs
' 8 Price · for most U.S ca rs.
SERVICES Ill LUDE:

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White and
Custom Tint Colors
at no Extra cost

1. Instill qualitr tro91 5. Repack l11ner and
brake path and outer bearin;s
br~ke linings on 6. Bleed hydraul ic
r11r Reels.
system and reli11
Z. Reurtau rotors 7. Inspect Maslf~r cy.
and turn drums.
Iinder
3 . Inspect
tronl8 . Adjust orates and

calipets

road test

4. Rebuild rear wheel
'llinders if possi ·

b.

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Actdlllonll p•rt• o r M rvlc u

88 Disc/Drum Job

68

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Price

Brake work don e
on most U.S. cars.

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6!~96-1 1.96
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l!•t••

Our 4.27, Double Flat/Fitted, 3.33
Our 6.47, Queen Flat/Fitted, 5.47
Our 9.37, King Flat/Fitted . . . 7.57
Our 2.67, Standard Cases, Pr. 1.97
Our 3.37, King Cases, Pr .... 2.77

8

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Interior Latex Paint

Reg. 24.88

Continental Pocket Camera

One-coal flat or low lustre ename l
9-y r. durability. Fade- resistant .

34~e
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ce
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Built in electronic flash .
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Gives be~ut i ful instant color shots.

67

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Girls
Sleepwear

897

Twin Flat
or F1t1ed
Our 3.37

Gowns
or
pajamas in
brushed ny lon. Lace or
yoke trim . 4 -14

3 ! !Reg
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Boys' Plaid
Flannel Shirt

Wrinkle -resistant polyester /cotton
w1th 130 threads per sq . in . W hite.

Gives a bright picture. Solid stale
reliability . Shop and Save at Kmart.

lnoi .,

Our Reg . 9.97

K mart • No-iron Sheets

Portable Color TV Set

of c.a.n ...

7

88

Our Reg.
9.57-9.96

Girls' Acrylic Cardigans
Cable-stitch with button-accented
convertible collar. Pockets, belt.

Our llrm Intention 11 to have ..iJy
1CIV1rttMd Item In stock on our ahetwes.
It 1n Mivfi\IMCIIt.m II not 1•11&amp;1be. far

purchne

due

to

1ny unlor9...n

, .. ton, K mtrt will lnue 1 R1ln Check

on rlfQUIII tor the merchendtse to be
purchiHd et the ule price whent-.r
IWI IItbM or will Mil you 1 compartble
QUIIIty ll.m 111 compar~ble reduction

In prl~ . Our pol~y Is to gift
cwstomer• " Nik.. c:tion 1tw1ys."

Ol,!l'i

Misses' Sizes
Our Reg . 7 97, 4x 15-mm 22
nfle ' scope with c rosshair~
Leather-look gun case. ·
Our 9.97, Scope Gun
.. . .... .......... 7.88

RIG .

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Misses· Sizes

SAVE 510
Our Reg . 54.88, XEL 12" electric chain
saw. Lightweight! Anti ·kickback .

go!~

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178•13 32 .76 1 24.76
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8.88

a,-,oz_. ·~itaris Pump,1.78

178&gt;14 37.7b 28.76
39.7b 30.76

oz· Sh ampoo.t.57
2-oz. • Tickle • 1.47
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11.77

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39.76

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Fall Pants

. 11'/z-oz
Ch ·.• Ba n • Roil-on In
OICI •• , • .. • 1.07
100 Excedrin · , 1.88
100
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All T1res Plus FE 1 Each

.22 Ammunition •, Box of 50 1 47

Bol of 25 Shotshetfs • ..... : 3:66

76

4 2 s~e J3 9s?v~
8

Our Reg. 25.76
A78x13
Plus F.E.T. 1.62 Each

Model 60 Boito ·
.22 Rifle · Shotgun· ~

4-ply Polyester Cord
Whitewalls

Semi-automatic Marlin Glenfield • fires 18
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without relo ading .
Hardwood . Save'

Ou r ·dependable ·KM 78' whitewall s are deSigned for today' s dnv1 ng needs . 4-full ply
polyester constru ctiOn . 7 multi -s1ped tread nbs.
Mounting lntluded - No Trade In ReqUired

Double -barrel shot gun.
Checkered b eaver- tail
forearm and stock. Available 1n 12-, 20gauge. Save at Krr{art

Woodchoppers' Helpers

~
"T""u

Our 12.97 214 lb. Axe ..... ..... : .... ........ 8.88
Our 14.97 31fz lb. Axe .......... ...... .. .. .. ~10.77

OurReg .
7.44

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4
Flannel

5 !!

Our 15.97 31fl lb. Axe .... ................. 11.77

Tough cotton denim.
ru gged and ready .
Popular Western . ut
w1th flared tegs. Save.

Our 9.57 8 lb. Hammer .. ............. ..... 6.97

Pointelle Acrylic
Tops
Knit Tops Knit
The newest look, in

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Finely knit cotton/polyester tops 1n
smart styles and,colors. Misses' sizes.

flannel shi rls in li vely
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Pair
Our Reg

6.57

6.96-7.96

5.96

Traditional
Shirts
Denim Jeans Soft.
warm cotton

Our 11.97 6·1b. MauL .................... 7.77

$
!~.
5
topsl Round collar,
front and back
shoulder

17.97

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Mens Texas Steer ' 6"
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for comfort and durab'lt
woGk
boot
bEtats
all
11y. oodyear welt ,
steel shank wra
Texon • innersol/~odlecush!o n insole and
·
IS 01 -res1stant.

1

FESTIVAL
DAYS Sept.
20-21-22

2~~eg347
Oil Filters

6 fo~~g

7t .ss

"6172" Battery

Maj or brands . Sp1n- on . Maintenance-free . Save .
Our
24 .88 , 6-am

[

8!~eg.l1.38
2 Gallon Picnic Jug
Urethan e
sutated.
Save.

in -

9 '!rReg.
14
19.97

20 Inch Fan
20" fan , 5 hard pl as ti c blades,
3 speed , carrying handle.

7 7 ' ! ach

·12" Mirror Tiles
'Gold Vein or 'Deep
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3

1
8x35 Binoculars

1988
o ! ! . SJ9.97

our
Reg .
22 .93

Electronic Rash.

For Kodak Color burst, and EK4,
E K6
Instant

Qujck focus, night
vision, adapted,
eyecups, case .

2For $3ourReg:
2.28

166

Photo Album Choice

Dry Roasted Peanuts

~Our
Men's Sweat Shirt

Men's Dress Socks

Conan /polyester.
Boys ',-$5 -

Stretch nylon. Rib or
cabled-design.

Reg . 6.46

f 7 70ur Reg . 2.27
3-pair Pkg.

,23~~
31
4~!
AMIFM Clock Radio
Toaster Oven
24-hr. wake-up syslem. Sleep switch.

Toasts. browns.
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12" Electric Skillet
durable
Ultra
Silverstone nol)·stick

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Sandwich Plate

:Swivel Casters

s~~Type

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Front Car Mats

Q-Beam • Super Spot ·•

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Our Reg . 6.88, Twin
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Mats . .. . .. . . . 4.44

200 ,000 candlepowe r illuminates one mile.

Our Reg . 8.88

17.88

4Days
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Ouat-helght Workmate
Work Bench
Leg s !Old fo al low 'wo wor king
heights. Vise jaws, swivel
gr ips, steel fram e. Save at
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t
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Reg . 1.38

Gla5S Plus

Glass, app liance
and
ca binet
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32 fl -. oz.

1

77

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Durable plastic in a
choice of colors.

68e

4~!eg.5.97 110~-)5.
4~
Pocket Calculator
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Timex - Quiet, ac curate, depen da'ble

Ruffles

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8 digit, full feature
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decimal
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7'12 oz.

48~Days
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58~Days
97~Days
K
mart · Toothpaste
Gleem " Toothpaste
With fluoride and
brightener. 7-oz.'

Soft; absorbent ray on . Bag of 300.

Fluorid e. Also in
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OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30
SUNDAY·l-6

'I

.'

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Click 'n' Clean can ·
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THE SAVING PLACE

'•

II

9 88

c:::::.* ........

I

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

'

22 8

I'

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 19, 1979

'Autumn Splendor' theme offall flower fare
'I

,,

"Autumn Splendor '' was the
theme ol the flower show held by the
Star Garden Club recently during a
meeting at the home of Mrs. Eugene
Atkins and Miss Ruby Diehl. Best of
show award for specimens and
arrangements judged by Mrs. Joe
Bolin, an accredited judge of the

Ohio Association of Garden Clubs
went to Miss Diehl.
Ribbons were awarded as follows :
"Covered Bridges" : Mrs. James
Nicholson, first.
"C ~untry
Church" : Mrs .
Nicholson, first ; Mrs. Virgil Atkins,
second, and Mrs. G. A. Radekln,

Health Review
By Lamar C. Miller,
D.O., CllDlcal Associate
Professor of Family
.
Medlclne
Oblo University College
of Osleopatblc Medicine
MUMPS VACCINE
FOR ADULTS?
QUESTION: When should adults
receive mumps immunlzations?
ANSWER: Everyone is suscep•
Uble to the mumps unless they have
either prevously had the disease or
the vaccine. The mumps vaccine offers lifetime protection with just one
shot. Today this vaccine is adminlatered as part of the im- ·
munlzation given to all babies or
younger children. Since mumps can
be caught at any age everyone who
did not hl!ve mumps as a child
should receive the shot.
QUESTION: I remember having
the mumps as a child and I don't
remember that'! was very sick. Are
mumps more serious at a certain
age?
ANSWER: Before puberty mumps
do not cause many problems. Mter
puberty (age 12 or 13) the complications really begin. The major
complication is an inflanunation of
the testicle (orchitis) or the ovary
(oophoritis), which sometimes
results In sterility. These organs
become involve\! in only 15 to 20 percent of the cases. However, the
sickness which resUlts makes a good
argument for every adult who has
not had the mumps to be immunized
against the disease. Ask an adult
victim. You'll get unanimous
agreement: "I wish I'd had the
shot!"
other complications Include inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis), of the brain (encephalitis) , of the kidney
(nephritis), and of the thyroid
(thyroiditis). These conditions are

Shakespeare heard
Works of Shakespeare were
presented by Mrs. Everett Hayes at
the Wednesday meeting of the Middleport Uterary Club held at the
home of Mrs. James Titus.
Mrs. ~yes stated that the 150 sonnets written by the author could
have ranked him among the immortals if he had written nothing
else. She quoted from Hamlet, the
Merchant of Venise, and As You
Like lt, and then was joined for a
discussion on Shakespeare by the
other members of the Uterary Club.
Mrs. Dwight Wallace presided at
the meeUng with Mrs. Bernard Fultz
leading in the club coUect. Mrs.
Robert Fisher will host the next
meeting. Mrs. Wilson Carpenter,
Mrs. Lee McComas, Mrs. Charles
Gaskill, and Mrs. John Kincaid were
introduced as guests.
Refreshments were served by the
' hostess with Mrs. Wallace at the coffee service.

aU Jess corrunon than the major
complications previously mentioned.
QUESTION : What are the long
tenn effects · when the mumps
"move down" in a man!'

ANSWER: There are probably as
many false ideas concerning this
problem as any in medicine.
Although this condition can produce
sterility, it will not affect future "sex
life." Sterility only means that the
ability of the testicle to produce
spenn has been interfered with.
Further, for a male · to become
totally sterile both testicles must be
affected. This happens In less than
25 percent of the cases of mumps
with testicular Involvement.
Sterility, moreover, does not mean
that the production of male honnone
is interfered with and the male loses
his virility. The sterile male cant
become a father, but can enjoy sex.
In other words, don 't confuse
sterility with virility!
QUESTION: Are there any people
who should not receive the vaccine?
'ANSWER: Very few. Thevccineis
effective and adverse reactions to it
are very rare. The vaccine may be
given to anyone over the age of one
year and even during an epidemic of
other infectious diseases. Administering the vaccine after exposure can do no hann, but probably
will not be fully effective since the
vaccine takes at least three or four
weeks to give maximum protection.

GARY PRIDDY
COMPLETES TRAINING
Navy Seman Recruit Gary L.
Priddy, son of Dale L. and Shirley J.
Priddy of Route 4, Pomeroy, has
completed recruit training at the

Naval Training Center, Great
Lakes, Ill.
· During the eight-week training
cycle, he studied general military
subjects designed to prepare him for
further academic and on-the-job
training in one ofthe Navy's 85 basic
occupational fields.
Included in his studies were
seamanship, close-«der drill, Naval
history and first aid. PersoMel who
complete this course of instruction
are eligible for three hours of coUege
credit in Physical Education and
Hygiene.
·
A 1979 graduate nf Meigs Illgh
School, he joined the Navy in June, .

third.
"Happy Days M e Here Again":
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, first ; Mrs. G. A.
Radekin, second.
"Utile Red Schoolhouse" : Mrs. G.
A. Radekin, first; Mrs; Nicholson,
second ; and Miss Diehl, third.
"Home Cooking and Mom's Apple

Pie": Mrs. Nictolson, first ; Mrs.
Virgil Atkins, second.
In the specimen elthibits the winners were:
Mrs. Henry Turner, ziMias, both
large and small, all ribbons to Mrs.
Henry Turner.
Mts. Virgil Atkins, firs t and

5'hanes host reunion
Mr. and Mrs: Bill Fox, Raci ,
hosted the Shane reunion at the

son, BiUy, Shirley Batey and
daughter, Julie, aU of Pomeroy.
home Sunday.
others attending were Mr. and
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Or- Mrs. Walter Shane and grandville Harpold, Mr. and Mrs. Larry . daughter, Lori Shane, all of
Riffle and daughter, Heather, Mr. GaUipolis; Mr, and Mrs. Bill Fox
and Mrs. Bruce Harpold, Mr. and
and son, David .
Mrs. Ray Whitlatch and children,
A potluck dinner was served at
Randy and Scott, Mrs. Jim Lanham
noon. The day was spent socializing
and daughter, all of Belpre; Dan
and playing games.
Shane of Racine; Ann Browning and

HM C sponsors '50.'s dance
The Recreation Conunittee 'of the
Holzer Medical Center will sponsor a
"Fifties and Sixties Dance" on
Saturday evening, September 22,
from 9 p.m. until1 p.m. at the Moose
Picnic Sbelter in Pt. Pleasant, W.
Va.
Providing tbe music for the
evening will be the well-lmown
WKEE Radio Dick Jcick~y. Jack
O'Shea, from Huntington, W. Va.
Everyone remembers how great the
music of the 50s and 60s was for dancing, so here's a chance to dance aU
evening to many of your favorites.
Chairing this special event for the
Employees • Recreabon Conunittee
at the hospital is Ron Jackson.
Tickets are $5 for a couple or $3
single. They may be purchased in
advance from Recreation ComJEFF MILLER
ARRIVES FOR DUTY
OXFORD, England- Ainnan First Class Jeffrey G. Miller, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Gall M. Miller of 566 Fourth St., Middleport, has arrived for
duty here at RAF Upper Heyford. •
Ainnan Miller, a recreation
specialist, was previously assigned
at Francis E. Warren Air Force
Base, Wyo., and i8 now serving with
a unit of the United States Air Forces in Europe.
He is a 1976 graduate of Meigs
High School, Rock Springs.

DALE THOENE
APPOINTED NCO
TACOMA, Waslt - Dale S.
Thoene, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence H. Thoene of Wynot, Neb,,
has been appointed a noncorrunissioned officer (NCO ) in the
U.S. Air Force.
He completed training in
management, leadership, human
relations and NCO responsibilities,

mittee members, or in the offices of
Transport, Home Health, Laundry,
Purchasing or the Library at the
hospital. They will also be available
at the dance, Jackson said.
Saturday evening will be a night to
jitterbug, twist and stroll to the
great music of 20 aod 30 years ago.
The ladies attending are urged to ~
wear their bobbi socks and saddle
oxfords, while penny loafers and peg
leg jeans are the order of the day for
the men.
For an evening of real fun arxl
probably a few memories, join the
Recreation Conunittee of the Holzer
Medical Center for their 50s and 60s
Dance at 9 o'clock Saturday night at
the Moose Picnic Shelter in Pt.
Pleasant.

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs. Russell W. Moore,.
Jr., Asheville, N.C., are announcing
the birth of a six pound, six ounce
daughter, Marie Nicole. Mr. and
Mrs. Moore have a son, Sean Allen,
10.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Moore, E ,
Main St. Pomeroy, are the grandparents and Mrs. Flora Ball of
Stumptown, W. Va. is the greatgrandmother.

•
before being awarded this status.
Sergeant Thoene is an aircraft l!rinament systems specialist at MeChord Air Force Base, here.
The sergeant is a 1!175 graduate of
Wynot Illgh School.
His wife, Nancy, is the daughter of
Edgar T. Greenlee of 120 Pleasant
Ridge, Pomeroy.

·Russell (Bill) Moore
receives promotion ·
RusseU William (Bill) Moore, Jr., Carolina.
Memorial Mission is a 500 bed
son of Mr. and Mrs. Russell W.
Moore , 1122 East Main St., hospital and was a featured segment
Pomeroy, has been pr1111oted to ad- d "Life Line" aired on nationwide
ministrative manager at the television,
Memorial Mission Hospital in
Moore and his wife, MicheUe, and
Asheville, N. C., according to Ralph their two children, Sean Allen and
E. Jennings, executive director of Maria Nicole, reside at 157
tbe hospital.
Castlerock Drive, Asheville, N. C. ·
Moore will be responsible for all
administrative matters of the areas
assigned to him which include the
departments of dietary, medlcal
The Men's Fellowhslp of the
records , physical therapy,
respiratory therapy, and social ser- Laurel Cliff Free Methodl8t Church
vices. Mr. Moore began his employ- will sponsor a student at the Uglt
ment with the hospital as blood bank and Life School at Loll Angeles, It
manager in 19T.i.
was decided at a meeting held
He is a 1967 graduate ol Pomeory Thursday night at the church.
J'110 Gilmore presided at the
High School holds a BS degree from
Ohio Northern University at Ada, meeting. Plans were made to pur and a MA degree in blood banking chase a new sweeper for the church
from Ohio State University, Columand to ·have the shrubbery at the
bus. He is presently ctmpleting re- church trimmed. Seldon Baker, Jr.
quirements for a MA degree in had the opeiling prayer and Gilmore
business administration at Western read ''The Love Motive. " Ed Van InCarolina University. He is the newly wagen gave the flnandal report.
elected president of the Blood Prayer to close the meeting was
Bankers Association of North given by Larry Clark.

To sponsor student

RUTLAND
DEPARTMI;NT
STORE
Phone 742-2100
Prices Effective Thru Sat., September 22nd
Eckrich

SMOKED SAUSAGE •••••••••••~~~ . s1.79
Homemade

HAM SALAD••••••••••••••••••••~~~. s1.19
.

• wr--..
_____ The Saving Place _ _ _ _,.

2-Poses, 18 Color Prints,
One Fantastic Kll'lart Price!
That adds up to a Perfect Portrait Package
• All ages welcome. • Groups $1 .00 extra per person. • Compare
the nlue at len than 61l a picture. • Scenic and creali\'e backgrounds
available. • Fast delivery. • Satisfactio n Alw~ys o r full deposit cl'leer-

fully refunded.
"As~

Cho•m•noOncludodin

p• t kila~s of

aroup photos.

Ii~ ~ IH~ IX I

OVER 1,000 COLORS!

ORANGE JUICE.••••••••••••••••••••••••

••

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~··

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WHOLE TOMATOES •••••••••••••. 2/97"
29 oz.

LIBBY'S PUMPKIN.••••••••••••••••• 69"
20 oz. Sweetbrier

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE••••••••••••• 69~
26 oz. Campbell's

TOMATO SOUP. ••••••••••••••••.Z/$1.09
"

9 oz. Solo

HOT or COLD CUPS •••••••••••••••. 59'
125 Count

Choose one or more from over a thousand colors

that look as fantasti c on the wall as they do in your

KLEENEX TISSUES .......... ~~?!:~ .. 53c

m ind .

Now, you can out do everyone with your creative
gen ius. Easy.to .apply . ea sy clean. up LU CITE Custorn
Color Wa ll Pa int make s vou an , .. ~ 1 " -1 .

12
~OTQG~,A.DH (:R

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

,_
79

14 '1zoz. Hunt's

plus tax

•• -

.

HOT CHILl BEANS ............... 2/59"

${0.96
~" ({ f\ 1\ 1\ ~· ·.

,,, . , \ 1' '

RED GRAPES .... ~.~:. 69'

15 oz. Bush's

about our exciting Echo Portrail" ,,.

2-8x10's
2-5x7's
10-wallet size
4-color charms
18 prints just

12 oz. Donald Duck

CABBAGL ... ~.~: ..2/29'

69~

MARGARINE·--~~:.

:ces

~ug.

lt!

)lththe poor relative.
"' In falrneM, I want to say that the

.:i!

Pnentation

•

•

...,...sesszon

set

Z sOUtheast Ohio Junior Mills, Inc.

;.mounced today the amual orienta-

lOlL meetlgg for all I!!gh school

'ienior girls of Meigs and Vinton
~tim Interested in entering the
~ Southeast Ohio Junior Miss
finals. The m!Jeting wW be held SunPY, September Zl, at the Meigs Inn
!anquet room heginningat Sp.m.
• If unable to attend the meeting
.00 you wish to enter the . Junior
)flss program, contact Southeast
:Ohio J!lnlor Miss, Inc., P .0 . Box 104,
~ro~eroy, Ohio, 45769. Be sure to
:live name, address and school at~nding.

::: The Junior Miss finals will be held
:l'ovember 17 at Meigs Junior High
:.lchool Auditorium, Middleport,
Jleglnning at 8:10 p.m. One Junior
Jliss will be selected fnm each
:COUOty to represent the two counties
t t the Ohio Junior Miss Finals
:tanuary 12 at Columbus.

.,.

Authoriled CATALOG
SALES ME.RCHANT

ISears I

•

N\ain St.

PomerOy,O.

:
•,

OWNED AND OPERATED
Jack r,.Judv Williams

BY

Open: N\on. tnru Wed. 9·5,
Thur. 9·12, Fri. 9~5, Sat. 9·2
Satlslacllon Guaranteed

I

equal."

Five score and twelve years later,
members of the U. S. Cmgreu,
seated in their comfortable chambers, conceived that they knew best,
thumbed their IIOile8 at liberty •.and
without the approval of or any COil·
sultation with the American people,
brought forth on the nation the
Metric Conversion Act.
Under Its tenns we have about
five years left In whlcb to swap our
customary way of meuuring
weightsl distancea, · volume, and
temperature to the metric sylltem.
Shot down by those who represent .
us, such old reliables as the mile, the
ton, the yard and the gallon wW be
laid to rest without ceremOIIY
ai!J~!Pide our present day thermometen, cookbooka, .scales and
framing aquares.. Come 1911$, such
adored tmpressions as, "It '~ a boun·
cing &amp;ww1d baby boy," will, SUpposedly, go out the window with the
bath water.
How·does a bouncing 3. 7 kilogram
baby boy grab you? And it 'a a little
difficult to imagine Howard Coeell
describing a Bengal lineman as
standing 205 centimeters in hia
socks. And how Ia the metric system
going to · affect the restauranl
bualneaa? IB Bili Mac's quarterpounder docimed? Surely, only an
8811 wuu1d request 10 milligrams ol
sugar in his coffee.

or Your Monev Back

Fairview
News Notes

News Notes

'I1Ie members ol the Joppa Oturcb
would like to announce tbat the
major repaln have been made to the
church, with juat a few llinor
ptojecla to ccmplete the job. They
wiab at thla time to thank each and
every one who dcnated IIIOIIeY or
helped In any way which wu very
much appreciated. A hymn sing will
be held at the cburcll Saturday, Sept.
15 at 7:30p.m. with revival .-vtcee
beginning Sunday. ~· 1&amp; with
James Sdwltz rl. Hoc:kinCport as the
evangelist. Every one will be very
welccme at thele .-vice. '
Mr. and Mn. Dive Hamiltoo and
Mr. and Mn. John Hamilton and
chUdml, Nita and JobMie ol Manllfield, villted recently With Mn.
OpaUiarrla and other relatives and
friends bere.
Mr. and Mn. Beryl Griffin spent a
day recently at the State Fair at
Columbus. Accompanying them wu
Mn. Lola Griffin ol Tuppers Plains
Who spent the day visiting ber li8ter,
GJ.clys PoweU of Fire Tower Road
is recuperating at home with a
broken wrilt.
Mrs. Metta Benedum ol Arcadia
Nursing Heme spent a weekend at
the home ol her 11011, Mr. and Ml'l!.
l.«en Benedum and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fortney have
retumed from vacationing In
Florida and Washington, D. C.
Mn. Gladys Dillon has returned
home after spending a few days as a
patient In VeterBnl Memorial

Mr. and Mn. James Severen11 of .
Mendon, Ohio spent the past
weekend with ber uncle, Mr. and
Mn. Herman GI'OIItllictle and
family.
Vi.slting Sunday with Mr. and Mn.
Harold Brannon were hia father, Mr.
and Mn. H. E. BriiiiiiCIII ol Phoenla,
Arizona , Earle and Jackie
Schoolcraft of Wheeling, W. Va.,
Mrs. Irene Miller Donworth,
Parkersburg, W. Va., Mrl. Mulne'
Miller ol Athens, Ohio, Mr. and Ml'l!.
James Brannon and family and Kenny Reed, local.
Mn. Elsie Founds of Chandlersville, Ohi? and Mrs. Effie San-

Louise Earnheart.
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Lucas and
family of Chesapeake were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Riffle and family.

BEAI INFLA liON
·wnH

recently.

SHOPPERS MART

POOUJCK PLANNED
Plans for the W1101e11'1 AsaoclaUon
potluck to be held on Thursday, Sept. ·
'!1, at 6:30p.m. were~ at a
meeting ol Group I beld recenUy at
the borne ol Mrs. Carol Harper. MrB.
Carol Adams gave devotions and
refresbmenta were aerved by the .
hoetesll. Others attending were Mn.
Marcella Coleman, Mn. Eleanor
McKelvey, Mrs. Carolyn Satterfield
and Gajl Kirkham. .

FLA TION FIGHTER

IN EFFECT NOW • POINT PLEASANT OR ~ASON

SEEK IJCENSES

;.\

A matr1age llcellle wu luued to

Jam Robert Jeffen, '!1, Rt. 1, Middleport, and Carol Jean Jacobe,

TERI
TOWELS

:a,

Rt.1, Middlepol't.

Prints
or
Solids
Colors
SAVE 23'

numlty Monday.
Mn. Betty Osborne has been hired
as cuatodlan ol Eastern High School.
+Mrs. Mlldred 0. Harris

PAD &amp;
COVER
I

A lot "Of
watch
for a
little
loot

~--

$1 00

Fits All

BASKET
SALE
Woven wicker baskets In dark
brown and colors. Several

It operates electronically,
never needs winding. It
tells time, day and date.
Right down to the second.

sizes and shapes. Use them for

rolls, bread , centerpieces ,
many other uses. Save up to
SOc on each one . We need

It's shock resistant and

space so you get basket

wa1er resistant. It has

Values To 'l.OO!·

Electrotlme.
What more could you went
for $59.9!i?

·/

-

FLOWER
IN GLASS

2FOR $100

DOZENS OF
NEW GIFT ITEMS'

GOESSLER
JEWELRY

silk flower
that floats
In
glass
.
For
table
or .
A

~HAVE

794

nament, gifts, ·
anywhere you

....,..ARRIVED!

Pomeroy,O.
I.
.

need color.

·

,

WASHABLE - REVERSrBLE

BRAIDED
RUG

BATHROOM TISSUE

-- -

Size 24X45
Multi-Color

The Soft One • Sale priced!

~

4

Rolls$}

ond
Dloc Potto&lt;no - gives you

I

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"

09

,,

REG.

,~ 1.99
. . .. . .. . . . .

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1

EVERYDAY LO.W PRICE

FABRICS
. a45" QUILTED FABRIC

Pomeroy, 0.

NEW! DELIGHTFUL

bargains!

Bulova's famous
aet-o-matlc feature.
It's a handsomely styled.
batlery operated, Caravello

FABRIC SHOP

66¢

&amp;BARS$279

It's a multi-featured watch.

.•45" CORDUROY
•60" SURALINE

38" Long
11.00 VALUE!

WICKER

Eight Buth·ln Fu/1/0fl

•54" FLEECE
•60" SUEDE CLOTH

.,

PLANTER
HANGER

BATH SIZE
SOAP

byBULOVA

to thread - simply slip thread Into the

..., 11/r

COAST

CARAVELLE®
ELECTROTIME

Slotted ~ver.

~ , ~~

6 BAR PACK

39~R.

Size

Self.Th,..dlnSJ T•k•Up lever- saves
time during machine threading. No ey.:,!et

f

SEA SHELL

WHITE CLOUD

eight varialions of stnch patterns.
Including true straight stitch.
EICIUIIYI "Touch &amp; Wind" Hand
Wheel - eliminates fumbling with hand
wtleet wnan winding bobbins.
Zonocl p.._ lor Control - allows
you to setect the proper setting for a
comolete ranRe of fabric weights .

'.

HAND MADE

One

.-

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;)NOWTHRU
WINTER SEEI

1st
Quality

4 Colors

Model534
Now Only

~

Regular 2.49
Fits All
54" Boards

WOMENS
PANTYHOSE

Court St.

·OUR
STORES ARE
BULGING
WITH GOOD

IRONING BOARD

" IT'§ IULOVA WATCH

"-xi.Stltch"

19.
Attending were Mrs. Edna &amp;ush,
Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Roberts, Leslie and Chad, Mr. and
Mrs. Walter McDade, &amp;y Wilson of
Troy, 0., Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. ·Roger Roush
and daughter, Kimberly, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Roush, Mike and John, Mr.
and Mrs. Greg Cundiff, Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Smith, Mr~ aild Mrs. Jim Connolly, Brian and Shelly.
others attending were Mr. and Mr
Gary Roush and three children, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Manuel, Angie and
Amy, Mr. and Mrs: Russell Roush,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis, Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Russell, Mandy and
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp,
Cindy Roush, Edward Roush, Kendra and . Corrinne Bass, and Ott
Boston.
The day was spent taking pictures
and playing ball.

The annual Roush reunion was
held recently at Portland Park. A
potluck dinner was served at noon.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Roush
presented the group with a cake
decorated with white icing with red
and green flowers with "Happy 1979
Roush Reunion" Inscribed in red.
A cake baked by Mrs. Roger
Roush was presentea to Mrs. Edna
Roush by Mr. and Mrs. Roger Ro.ush
and daughter, Kim and Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Rousb: The cake was
decorated with white Icing with pink
and blue Q,owers with "Happy Birthday Mom and Grandma." Mrs.
R.oush will be 93 years young Sept.

By Mn. Herbert a-It ·
Mr. and Mn. Ed Kane ol Summerfield, N. J., Mr. and Mrs . .HOyt
. Recent SUnday visitors ol Mr. and
1
Ferguson ol Point Pleasant vl8lted
Mrs. Fred Tuckennan were Mr. and
Mrs. Elba Warner.
Mn. Guy Tuctennan r1 Springfield·
· Wilda Lawson spent a week with ' and Mrs. ~Earnheart of ClumMr. and M\'1. Harold Lawson and
bus, Iva JOOnson, lOClil.
son at Letart, W. Va. 1111d attended
Lou1Je Earnheart and Iva Johnsoo
the Muon County Fair.
vlaltetl Mr. Uncoln RuNeU recently.
Mr. and Mrs. llulaell Rousb
Dale RulleU ol Columbus and Ray
vl8lted Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp • Ruseell ol Wlllbln&amp;ton C. 11. were
and Jere1111 a recent Sunday
recent Visitors ol Lincoln Ru.ueU.
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Doll Sayre and
Mr. and Mn. Ernest Busb villted
f.ami1y were recent guests of Mr. and
Mr. and Mn. Arnold Hupp a recent
Mrs. Cbarles Sayre.
Sunday at Portland.
Mr. and Mn. Gene Slack and
· Mn. Edith Manuel Ia a medical
family were recent villtan of Mr.
paUent at V etersns Memorial
and Mrs. Harley Johnson and
HOipital.
f.amily.
Mr. and Mrs. RWIItell Roush
Mn. Larry Barr, David and
vl8lted Mrs. Edna Roush a Sunday
Michelle at Rutland were recent
evening at Racine.
vl8ltors of Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Rousb
1boma and Ml'l!. Iva Johnson and
villted ott Bolttm at RaciDe recently.
Mr. and Mrs. Milo Ricbardson rl.
Pclrt Huron, Mich.; spent two weeki
at their heme and attended the
Hayman reunloo at Portland Patt

den, local, v181ted with Mrs. ()pal
HarTla and CICher friends in tbe CCIIII-

Joppa News

Roush reunion noted

Wolf Pen

:VINING

For Placemats, Robes and Quilts

Pliant Pn·2171
734 E.
,

equlvalenta herein were arrived at
with the unselfish help of two old
friends . One, a whiz in
mathematics; the other ... 1 wW not
answer. GueM 111 have to take the
fifth ... give or take a quarter ounce.
Standing 011 a bloody battlefield at
Gettysburg, President Lincoln uttered tbe immortal words : "Four
score and seven yeal'l! ago our
fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in
liberty and · dedicated to the
proposition, that all men ate created

H~ltal.

•.,

Can11ed Spam

VIENNA PORK •••••••••••••••••••• $1.19

, OH.

sure, however, metric

:iJ' no metric, we're going to be stuck

. 10 oz:

0

AL

Hormel

A fifth Ia a fifth ot a gallon, or 25.6
OUnces and is a meuumnent used
only by the liquor industry. It was inVented after World War ll due, I'm
told, to a abortage of " baro slliff." In
order to dlatribute the 8hort supply
fairly, the Industry got the federal
govenunent to approve the fifth as
the usual liquor measurement instead of the quart. •
•• Of course, the fifth which looked
~e a quart .to aU but the practiced
~ eye, was soon selling at a price for~rly demanded ft.- a quart. And
:.although tbe distilleries, operating
~r full llteam, !Were quickly bub~~ ovet again, II continiiJ!d to
around like a poor relative.
For tholte who enjoy wine, here 's
t.J!pw the magnum and ·haH.gallon
:J'IIck up against the three-liter jug.
, magnwn is two flftba or 51.2 oun' ces. The three-liter jug is 101.4 ounor nearly twice as big. A ha1f•tallon 18 64 oUDCell, a little lesa than
:two-thirds the volume ol a three.Uter

LUNCH MEAT. ••••••••••••••••••••• $1.39

110URS:

Wed. -Sat. 10to1 - 2to6
Thurs .-Fri. 10 till - 2 to S: 30 - 6-8
Sun. 1 to s

185 UPPER RIVER RD.,

oz.

dimension.

: One thing

New

l-Ib. Blue Bonnet
Quarters

SEPT. 19 - SEPT 23.
WEDNESDAY - SUNDAY

""lings

LETTUCE ......... ~~~-~. 39'

PRODUCE

~NGLfS CHCEESE 99~

' (Ed's Note - David H. Cumings,
• retired Pcmeroy mall carrier, occasionally over the years has taken
pen ln ·hand to come up with some
pretty amusing tongue-In-cheek
bumorous articles for this
. pubtication. Following 18 the latest
' in Dave's
8lld deals with the ·
mind boggling liter system).
By David H. Cumlop
·Speaking as one who imbibes in
more, aay, than an occasional hottoddy, I'm particularly disturbed
over the effect metrics Is having on
the beverage industry.
I believe it was Jefferson who
said, "A little rebellion now and then
Is a good thing and as necessary in
the political world as storms in the
physical." I couldn 'I agree more and
· here and now call on all drunks to
rise up and take umbrage at this
double-cross Congress has seen fit to
perpetrate against us brethrel! of the
bras&amp;raU.
Since Prohibition, we Yanks with
a taste for the barley have been
buying our hooch by the pint, fifth,
quart and half~ons. But, soon ali
of our scotch, boW'bon, gin and ·
vodka wiD be arriving in fractions of
liters, liters and multiples of liters.
If thai doesn 'I make your bead
swim, 111ten to this: With or without
the cooaent of Orson Welles, the
Paul Masson Wine Cunpany is introducing a new three-liter wine jug
which they promote as being more
ecooomical than four.ftfths.
Try and figure that one out! After
some mathematical agony, you11
find that t.hree titers 18 exactly one
ounoe less than four-fifths, so If the
price of a three-liter jug is more than
one percent 1e8l than four.{iftha,
then and only then is ita bargain !
Switching quarts to liters is tough
enough, but the fifth adds another

HEAD

DAIRY

8 oz. Krall

:Cumings' Corner

: Not being a wine connolaseur, the
::pbove ststistica took me by SUillrise.
~ assumed "magnum" denoted the
oilze of the waUop rather than the
ICallber of tbe jug.
;: To enhance an already bad
lituation, the government has now
:Jiven approval to a metric fifth. I
:phderstand It's to contain three:Jiuarlers of a liter or one-fourth oun11!!111 than p staJxlard fifth, so I'm
•t a totall0811 as to what It's a fifth

·sLICED BACON ................~~;. s1.29

CHRISTMAS
COLOR SPECIAL!

(Back In tlmo for CHRIIIMAI)

CREATE ANEW ROOM

.

1-lb. French City Vacuum packed

1979.

RECENT GUESTS
Guests of Mrs. Roy Snowden this
past week were Mr. and Mrs. Lester
Sheeler of Bunnell, Fla. Mrs.
Sheeler is the former Mildred
Snowden. Sunday guests were Mrs.
John Fields and daughter, Mrs.
Marilyn Yowler and daughter,
Laura, South Charleston, Mr. and
Mrs. Bruce May and Suzy
Carpenter, Rutland.

Mrs. Henry Turner presided at the
meeUng which opened with members giving the creed, collect and
prayer. For roll call members gave
types of flower arrangements. Mrs.
Bolin announced that the modem
design flower classes will be held at
the Middleport Library on Sept. 24.
The Meigs County Garden Clubs
Association meeting was announced
for0ct.15at Royal Oak Park.
Also announced was the Chester
Garden Club open meeting on Oct. 3
entiUed "AutWM Frolic." A guest
demonstrator will be featured.
The traveling prize donated by
Mrs. Orion Nelson was :won by Mrs.
G. A. Radekin. Mrs. Bolin won the
hostess gift. Refreshments were served.

second, and Mrs. Henry Turner,
third, in marigolds.
Mrs. Turner, large and small, in
Dahlias.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, first and
second, and Miss Ruby Diehl, third
in hybrid tea roses; Mrs. Levis, first
in floribunda; and Miss Diehl, all
awards in the class for open roses.
Miss Diehl, first and second, Blid
Mrs. Turner, third in hanging
baskets. Miss Diehl won aU the ribbons in the c!psses for African
violets, potted plants for a foliage
type.
The devotions, "God Is Never
Beyond Our Reach," were given by
Mrs. Eugene Atkins, ~nd Miss Diehl
presented, "Look on the Sunny
Side. "

9- The Dally 5er!Unel, Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.19,1979

WET MOP

(tsM[ .I~~
•.

•

'•

·.'

.
•

.
•

'

"

··:

..

0

. ~~·iPfP[EIZ~ .
99
••••+•••..·•$_1.;....•.•·,-·-··--·J··-'-O•I·-NT_P...L••E..
AS
• ..,A...N_T_O_R_M_A_s_o_N_ _.
COTTON YARN

_.. i

�-·
11- The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.l9, 1979

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.l9,1979

Since Carter's trip . .
·I .

'Delta Qt!een ' deluged ·by requests for trips
CINCINNATI (AP) - The Delta
Queen Steamboat Co. has been
swamped with requests for
information since President Carter
cruised down the Mississippi River
on the 5Q-year-old steamboat.
The attention focused on Carter
,, during his Aug. 17-24 trip from St.
Paul , Minn., to St. Louis rubbed off
on tl]e venerable river boat.
Prior to the president 's trip,
company officials 511id personal
inquiries from individuals about the
boat ran between 300 and 600 a week .

Smce Carter 's trip, they report the
number of personal ·inquiries has at
least quadrupled .
In addition, in the 2'h-weeks since
the trip, there has been a total of
29.000 responses to a newspaper
advertising campaign which began
just prior to the president's trip.
" It's certainly created an
awareness ," said Wi1liam R.
Kaufman , vice president of sales
and marketing. "Now our job is to
tum this interest into sales."
Old advertisements and notes

••
••
:r
••

•z
I

1

••
••
••
•••

. The Warner family reunion was
held Sept. 9 at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Herman Warner in Wolfpen.
A potluck dinner was served at
noon . The afternoon was spent
visiting . .Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Anderson, sons, Jamie and
Brian; Mr. and Mrs. Art Nease, Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Nease, son, Travis and
daughter, Jill, Mrs. Maxine C.
Nelson, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Kaldor, Renee and Rudy, Mr. and
Mrs. Ted Warner, Patty and Kim,

•
r

I L

•
'

VISIT OUR
CONVENIENT

••
••

•-·

Pat Young and Bill Powell, Mr. and
Mrs. Howard Curl, Irene Harpley
and son, Victor, Mr. and Mrs. Gene
Thompson, Cindy and Gena, Kevin
Betzing, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Warner,
Mr. and Ml'll. Manning Mohler,
Geneva Guthrie, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Warner and daughter, Erin,
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Warner, Mrs.
Louise Well ; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Hall and sons, Joe, Tim and Will,
Mr. and Mrs. Alan Pugh and Della,
MJss Connie Warner, Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Proffitt, Mr. and Mrs .. Herb
Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. John Warner,
Jaunita, Kim and John, Clifford
Cockier. Joan Kaldore and Louise
Well were named officers for the
i980 reunion .

DRIVE lHRU
CITY LIMITS

.-

~ · -·

"In many cases, we received

handwritten inquiries saying they
(people) weren't aware there were ·

.:,..warner
reunion
held
•
•
I J

have been pouring into the
company 's Cincinnati hc.adquarters
from as far away as Bogota,
Colombia ; Alberta, Canada and
Surrey, England.
"We would like to vacation the
,way the president did ," one couple
wrote .
"Since Jimmy Carter enjoyed a
trip on the Delta Queen, I have the
desire to do the same, but for a much
shorter trip," a York, Pa., woman
said.

To save energy, vitamins and
flavor, use only a small amount of
water when cooking any vegetable.
Vegetables do not have to be covered
with water as the steam will cook
them.

NEW YORK (AP) - ABC kicked
off its 1979-liO prime-time season a
week ahead of the competition, and
the early start -though a.strong one
- left some doubts about "the frontrwming network's new shows .
WEEK ENDING Sept. 16, only
"Benson," was among the 10

r---

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;
· ·
potluckatllOOil. TIIUR8DAY

OAPSE CHAPTER 453 Southern
High school Thursday 7:30 p.m.

~

"

One great sound.
Four great looks.
'•
•

.

~.
\

.'·..

l' """'·inl! llit•l,u•"""

Allegro Tuned Port Speaker System
and 8·Track Tape Recorder-Player

~====~~

...,• '

LR916PN

The Newberry
Early American Styling
Pine Fini sh

..•

SAVE
S60
LR915P
The San Marino
Mediterranean

Styling
Pecan Finish

SAVE
$70

• 2.5 wana min. RMS power per channel

Into 8 ohms with 1% or leu total
harmonic dlatortlon, 100- 10,000 Hz.
• Preclalon Autometlc Record Ctianger
wlth Cue COntrol

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lea turing B- lnch Woofera and 3-lnch

Tweeter•

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woOd-

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_7fllfiTN The qualify goes in before the name goe~ on•

--Audio..:rhe Flipside of Zenith;---- ·

INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWWLRY
106

N. 2ND

AVE.

~--..:9:;;:92;,;;·1;;;;635;;..._ _..;M;;,;IDii i iDi i iLEii.iPOioi R,;;,T•_.o
:

Proceeds from an a uction held at a
recent meeting of the Pomeroy
Chapter 186, Order of the Eastern
Star, have been sent to the OES
home maintenance fund.
Mrs. Ann Hemsley, worthy
matron, and Thomas Edwards, worthy P,.trori, presided at the meeting
with the pro tern officers being Pam
Massie, Adab; Mabel Goeglein,
Ruth ; Debbie Windon, Electa ; and
Mabel Moore, sentinel. Members
were reminded of the 89th birthday
of Mrs. Nellie Tracy.
The budget, trustee and audit
committees were reminded to submit their reports at the next
meeting. Dues are payable on Oct. 1,
and an election of new officers will
be held at .the October meeting. In·
vitations to various receptions and
grand visitations were read. Pauline
Hysell and Florence Well were
hostesses at the social hour. Pam
Massie was the sunsbine page .

WANTEO TO lease: Coal property for deep mine opera·
tlon . Must be
i n th ickness .

BIG AUCTION e very Wed ., 7

•e"

HOTPOINT
and

Cen ter , Hartfo rd , WV , .11 mi les

For Sale

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

COAL .

the president was joining us," oot
guest wrote, "but everything has
been great."
There was only one negative
remark about the presidenUal party
from the more than 100 evaluation
cards that were turned tn. That
person said the president and his
group created a ''turmoil."
In fact, most of 'those returning
evaluation cards never even
referred to the president . Tey
mentioned everything from small
soap dishes to their busboys, but not
Jimmy Carter.

LIMESTONE ,

sond.

WINTER POTATOES . C. W. ProHilt· form , Portland . OH. $8 0
hundred and SS o hundred .
APPLES. Now pick ing Gri mes
Golden. Other varie ties to
follow . Fitzpatr ick Orc hard s.
SR 689. Phone Wi lkesvi lle

669-3785 .

BOARS .

DUROC

Pu rebred

Reedsville . 614 -378-6311 .

·

21 FOOT Of wrought iron rai lBeige carpel 8x 10, Pu ll
down ceiling light. Movi e projector and screen . Alt er 5 ca l l

ing.

742·2020.

.

.

POTATOES. Red Pontiac, Ken·
nebec, $8 per 100 lb . sr•ll $4
per 100 lb. 3 mil es west of

V~

_Jack W. Carsey

~

...-... Phone992-2181
WESTIN G HO USE UPRI GHl
lreel er wi th qu ick freez e u ni t
Con bo seen in se.r vic&amp; of 12
lt~ Ave .. M 1ddlepo rt , O H.

i

! 9) 19. 20. 21 . 3tc

Pn ce $50.

BALDWIN PIANO, 1 year o ld .
Cell
cr8d lt d e pa r tm ent

6" ·5'12- 5122.

ASTRO·GRAPH

.

Bernice Bede Osol

BALDWIN orga n, 4 yeors o ld.
Coli
cred i t da p o rt me n t

614 -592-5122.

- - - - - -'

SHADE RIVER Lodge 453, F and
AM, Chester, Friday; 7 p.m. Work in
master mason degree. All master
masons invited.
SATIIRDAY
SMORGASBORD Saturday from 5
to 8 p.m. at Wilkesville PYthian
Sisters ball; children, $1.25; adults,
$3. Proceeds will help pay for
building.
KNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS, monthly
meeting, 6:30 p.m. Bring covered
dish, table service.

The framers of the Constitution of
the United States beUeved in the
right to Uve and work - free from
tyranny · of state or claim. The
Oaughters of the American
Revolution remind our citizens that
we must be vigilant to protect these
freedoms. Lost rights may never be
regained. Let us celebrate this Constitution Week by resolving to be bet·
ter informed, more alert citizens.
Read your Constitution.
A refrigerator works best when it
isn't overcrowded. There must be
room for air circulation inside otherwise the compressor will work
to hard to keep the ri ght
temperature.

means in an average prime-time
minute, 7ll.4 percent of the TV homes
in the country were tuned to ABC.
The rating for No. 1 "Otarlle's
Angels" was 28. Nielsen says that
means of all the h&lt;mes in the
country wtth TV, 28 percent saw at
least p&amp;rt oftbe show.
And it was a good week for
newsmagazines - ABC's "20-:ID"
was fourth in the ratings, while CBS'
" 60 Minutes" was the only non-ABC
show in tho Top 10, ninth .

m~o-®
NEW

1979 HONDA XL 500 . Low
mileage. Exce llen t condi t1on .

992-5'169.
FIREWOOD fo r sa le, now tok ·
ing orders. Will deliver . Ph one

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF HARRY 0
BOLINGER , DECEASED .

Caso No: 22801

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FUDICUARY

742-2056.
CLARK RESIDENCE , Syracuse .
Corner Crooks and 4th . 3
piece bedroom 5et. k i tchen
klble , 4 choirs, 4 dining room
d'IOirt, wall mirror , cord tabl e ,
radio. 21omps, TV R.C.A. . Co li

992-JOS:I or 992-2720.
ElECTRIC . FURNACE. new ,
suitable for trailer or small
house. F.M. Guthr ifl . 33 To w n ·
lend, Athens , OH . Phone

59:1-2158.

Tips on how to lose weight were
given by the members at the Tuesday night meeting ~ TOPS OH 1456
at Rutland.
Cindy Krautter presided at the
meeting which opened with the club
pledge and officers' reports. Mrs.
Myrvtlle Brown agreed to take care
ol the flower fund. Connie Cleland ·
was welcomed as a new member,
and It was noted that a new contest
will begin next week.
Members were reminded to take
in.their gifU to be auctioned off next
week. The possibility ol starting a
daytime club lor those who cannot
attend evening meetings was
discussed. Anyone interested is aaked to telephone Shorty Wright,
7~. The weight report given by
Nellie Haggy showed a net 10111 ol 11
pounds from the 7:/ who weighed in.
Queen of the week was Freda Davis, .
and Joyce Frye was the runnerup.
Calorie intake sheets were
distributed to members by the
leader.

Picnic held
Eleanor Circle of the Heath United
Metllodist Church, Middleport, held
a family picnic recently at Forest
Acres Park.
A short business meeting was held
and the group played ball following
the picnic. Attending were Mrs.
Pauline Horton, Paula, Jean Ann,
and David, Helen Byer, Mrs. Donna
Byer, Julie and Mary Teresa, Jeff
Grueser, Becky Fultz, Steve and
Vicky Houchins, Angie, Stephanie,
and Susari, Charles and Kitty
Cassell, Trey, Steve, Tim and Susie,
Mrs. Mary Wise; Jennifer, Suzanna,
Steve Harrison, Kim Fraley, and the
Rev. and Mrs. Bob Robinson.

On A!Jgust 29 th, 1979, in
the Me•gs County Probate

Court, . Case No. 22 801,
J ose.P h•ne L . Bolinger 110
Wo_lte
Drive,
Pam€ro y

O~•o wa s. appointed Ad :
m lnistra f rt )( of the estate of
Harry
0.
Bol i ng e r

de.;eased , la te ot 110 Wolfe
Dnve. Pomeroy, Ohio.
Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge
Clerk
( 9 ) s. 12, 19, Jtc

September 20, 1111
Although you'll move ca uliously
Uus coming year. your m1nd will
be C)(tremety receptive to new
and revolut ionary Ideas. What
you absorb will contribute to
yOur luture success .
VIRGO ( Aug. 23-S.pl. 22) ll' s
seldom that you are eve r any.
thing but a responsible individual
and TOday •s no e)(ceplion, but
you could Jet your Imaginat ion
lure you into thinking you 're a
sacrificial lam b _How to get along
with other signs is one of the
sec tions you'll enjoy in your new
Ast ro-Grap)l l elter Whk::h begins
With yOur birthday. Mall $ 1 tor
each to Astro· Graph . Box 489.
Rad10 C1ty Station. N.Y. 10019
Be sure to specify birth date
·

THUNDERBIRD

STORE SLICED

DUTCH LOAF............~·..~ } g
7

STORE SLICED

BOILED HAM............~~-..~ Jgg
SUPERIORS FRANKIES

WIENERS........... !~.~~.~~~~ .. 79~

19 Bu tternut

In Boy's &amp;
Girl's Sizes

WHOLE BARBECUED WITH OUR OWN
SPECIAL SEASONING

HARREY
SHOES
Middle of Upper
Block Pomeroy, 0.

PRODUCf

FRESH CRISP
PASCAL

9 l . m .·5 p.m . MOll .
t 111ru TIWrs. &amp; S.t.
9 1 .m .-1 p.m . Fri.
Closed suncsay

CELERY

ONIONS

3 BUNCHES

3 LB. BAG

59e
PRINGLE POTATO· CHIP$ •••• ~:~~ age.
1aoz. jar $119
PEANUT. BUTTER
CRISCO OIL. ••••••• ~ •••••••~a.~~.b.o::~:. $229

Jif .Creamy or Crunchy

Price Unless Condition &amp; Treatment Needed .
- FROHINGS, Reg. $20 .
NOW S18
HAIR CUT, BLOW DRY CONDITION
FOR GUYS &amp; GALS Reg. $8.50
NOW $7.50 &amp; $6.50

Duncan Hines

99'

]ge EACH
APPLES
3 LB. BAG

age

Twin Plk

. 1V4 oz •

Mister G Frozen

24 oz.

--

-.

F~R~EN~CH;:F:R:IE:S·::··:;···::··:···::··.IJ.::·!~=r;~.:a~.::·4=9~e

-----------------------------·
COUPONI
I

RC· or DIET RITE COLA

I

8 PAK 16 Ol BTL CTN

I

I
I

99e

COUPON

,.

I

I

TRIX or COCOA PUFFS
CEREAL
I
12

oz. sox

99~

Without Coupon Regular Price.

Valley Bell

-

GLAZED
DONUTS.'•• ~ •••• ;••• ~:~~:~:. _gge
Keebler Town House
CRACKERS
•••••••••••••••• ~ •••• ~b:.~:.. gge
Mister Bee
POTATO CHIPS •••••••••• zlunchpkg.. $loo

LMIT 2

PRINGLES

-

+

Betsy Ross

CALL 773·5404

LEITUCE

··

•

CAKE MIXES••••••••••••••• ::~:~~-.~::.7ge

Individual Styling &amp; Hair Care Where the Newest Looks
Are Yours.

SLICED

&amp;CHEESE

U. S. NO. 1
NEW CROP YEUOW

••••••••••••••••••

2LB.

$3

$}gg

CH ICKENS .•.............E:':~••..

UNIPERM Reg. $22.50 NOW $18.50
SENSOR CURLY Reg. $28.00 NOW $23.50
SENSOR BODY Reg. $30.00
NOW $27.50

CLOSED
~UN DAYS

25 LB,.

.1!2 PRICE

MEAr ............. .

GOLDEN DELICIOUS

.FOOD ·

COIN GLASS

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SEPT. 20-21~22, 1979

1M

SPfCIAL THIS MONTH

oadly Actopt Fod. l'ood Stamps
Monday lhru Friday
9:00lil7:00
Saturday 9:00-9:00

79

FOSTORIA

1 am pleased to have Connie Swisher joining lhe staff on
Thurs .. Sept. 20th.
·

PHEBE'S STORE

69'
49'

111

MASON, W.VA.

12 oz.

TOWELS

111

SUPER

JANEfS HAIR-GO-ROUND

BACON

Jumbo Roll

Racine Social Events

GLASSWARE

Baptismal announced
Liberty Ann King, infant daughter
oi Mr. and Mrs. Tim King, was baptized during worship service at St.
Paul Lutheran Church on Sept. 16.
Sponsors were Mr. and Mrs.
Malcolm Mees and Judi Mees
Liberty's maternal grandparen~
and aunt.
· Mr. and Mrs. King entertained
with a buffet style dinner at their
Bradbury home following the service. Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Malcolm Mees and Judi, the Rev.
William Middleswarth, and Mrs.
Kate- Mees, Pomeroy; Miss carolKing, Middleport; Mr. and Mrs.
Robert King and Mrs. Oleva Cotterill, Bradbury; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Erwin, Crown City, and Mr.
and Mrs. Tom King and Nick Colwnblls.
'

(Sopt. ,2l· Oct. 23) it
you re not careful , the early
morning " grumpies" could put
you in a bad mood tor the WhOle
day. Don't allow negative think·
lng to gain the upper hand.
SCOI!PIO (0.1. l!ol-No&gt;. 22)
When it c omes to finances, you
might lh.ic tuate between e)(treme
wastefulness and being tight·
li sted today. Balance yo ur
reasoning

IMPERIAL

Dorwin between Gold Ridge
and CR l-4 on TR 145 . Ce&lt;i l

15~ LB.

Bounty

P o me ro y· Mo ,on

1976 Ford Granada 2 Dr.
Sedan .. No. 6E82F 162223
The F armers Bank &amp;
Sa11ing s
Company
Pom ~ror, Oh io, reserveS
the rt gh to bid at this sale .

Mgr.

CABBAG£',,

We

Co mmun ity

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice is hereby gi ven
th ai on September 22nd,
1979, al10 :00 A.M. a public
sa le will be he ld a t 105
un.ion Avenue, Pomeroy,
Oh ro, to sell ' for cash the
following collateral to -w i t :
1971
Chevrolet
Monte
Carlo ·· No. 138571K 1«030

POMEROY
LANDMARk

·

!Jay weekend with her father, Marlui Wilcoxen and his mother tn New
Haven.
Mr . and Mrs. Price Wolfe of
By Mrs. Fraacls Morris
plcruc at ltle Kooert LeWIS camp at
Lexington,
Ohio spent a week with
Mrs. Addie Petrel accompanied , Great Bend.
Ius sister, Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
Mrs. Helen Slack and Mrs. Pearl
Hruce Beegle of Columbus spent "
Mr . and Mrs. ~· rank Ueland acWillis to Buckeye Lake recently to weekend with his parents, Mr. and
c'
O
mpanied Mr. and Mrs. Paul Knotvisit Mr . and Mrs. Raymond Mrs. Bob Beegle.
ts
and Aaron to Washington, D. C.
Warren .
Mrs. Tommy Hill has returned ·
SAGITTARIUS (Now. zt..Dec. 21)
and
spent over Labor Day weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Solon Butcher of from Holzer Medical Center after
Feelings of Insecurity could have
Mr.
and Mrs. Jerry Powell and
you trying too haro and OverSpencer, W. Va. spent a recent surgery.
steering the vehicle you 've choMr.
Oval
Diddle spent Labor Day
Mr. and Mrs . HertM)rt Sayre and
Mn to accomplish your purpose . weekend with Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
weekend
with
Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Keep loose and you'll stay on the
Mr. and Mrs. Critt Bradford, Jr. of Mr. aiid Mrs. Dave Sayre spent a
road.
Diddle
and
family
at Auxier, Ky.
Worthington spent a weekend with weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan
CAPRICORN (Dec. a2·Jon.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Waid
Foster and
Styer at Waterford.
Isolation is not ttle answer to
Mr. and Mrs. Critt Bradford, Sr.
sons
of
Columbus
spent
sevei:~~l days
solving a difficult problem today.
Mrs. Ura Morris spent ten days
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McKenzie and
Get out and mi x with as many
with Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hill.
with Mr. and. Mrs. Robert Swift in Jozie of Gallipolis spent a Sunday
people as possible. Someone out
Mr. and Mrs. Dale McGraw of
there will offer a quick solution.
Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Gould with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb.
Racine
spent an evening with Mr.
in Nelsonville, and Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Mr. and Mrs . Larry (Margie !
One of your draams may lack
and
Mrs.
Albert Hill.
realistic possibilities . Belon1
Lake and family, Athens.
Guthrie o{ Boners Ferry Idaho
applying all your energies toward
Mrs. Pearl Adams, Mr. and Mrs. visited her mother, Mrs.' Marie
this goal. first check on Its teasi·
bility.
Jolmson and Mrs. Roy Theiss and other relatives.
Douglas
PISCES (Fob. ....._
20) Do
Johnson and son spent a Sunday with
Caplain and Mrs. Max Brown and
only what is proper at all times
In 1477, King Edward IV olE!Igland
today and guard your reputat ion.
Mr, .and Mrs. Ralph Prater and Teddy of Fairborn, Wright Even cul e, harmless. ~toys could
outlawed
the sport of cricket.
Hamden.
family
at
Patterson A.F.B. spent over Labor
be misundefstoocl .
•
Mr.and Mrs. Paul Blosser and
ARIEl (-oh 21·......11 1t) You
have a tendency to mistake wish·
wri
of Flat Rock, Mlch. visited Mrs.
ful thinking for a bralnsiOfm
Mabel Brace and Mr. and Mrs .
today. Stick to the proven pracli·
cal route apd you 'll avoid trou- Douglas Jolmson a couple of days .
ble .
Mr, and Mrs. Calvert Allen and
TAURUS (April 20-Mor 20) An
opportunity to do something dlf·
granddaughter, Mary Elizabeth
ferent with pats could arise
Painter of Charleston, W. Va. visited
today. Just make certain that
AND
yoor common sense guldas you
recently with Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
at all times.
GEMINI llloy 21-.1- 20) ll 's Ueland.
gOOd .that you are loyal to your
Mr. and Mrs. Max Wolfe of Sanfamily, but don 't blindly accept a
dusky,
guests of his sister, Mrs.
concept a kinfolk has that you
know Ia wrong. Point out his Helen Simpson, celebrated their
error.
32nd wedding anniversary at Bob
NOW ON SALE
CANCER (JIIfMI 21-.luly 22) You
have a gooo head for getting dif·
Evans. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Beegle
ncutt chQres or mental work out
also attended the celebration and
or the way today . Don 't let early
morning doldrums delay your they also ~ited Mr. and Mrs. BUI
starting time.
Beegle at Gallipolis.
LEO 9uly U,Aug. 22) Betor•
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Simpson al'ld
plunking your hard-earned, mon~
fJ'( down on a glamOfous item . let
family of Baltimore spent Labor
experience guide you as to how
212 E. Main,
chen you m~h t use it. Think Day weekend with their parents
Instead of lantulztng.
Mrs. Helen Simpson and Mr. and
, Pomeroy, 0 .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Mrs. Ralph Badgley. All enjoyed ·a
Lle~A

Bridge.

Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

Inc. . E. Main St., Pomeroy·

Hartf o rd

above

Headquarters

grovel, calc ium chloride fer .
tilizer , dog food . and oil fypes
of solt. Exce lsio r Solt Work s

992-JMI.

pm .

TOPS gives tips

FRIDAY .

DANCE SLATED
Royal Oak Dance Uub will be
holding lts first dance party of the
season on Sept. 30, at Royal Oak
Park.
A steak barbecue will be held at 6
p.m. with a dance to follow from 7 to
11. Music by George Hall. Reservations must be made by Sept. 23 by
calling 992-2622.

• Solld-ttate AM /FM/Stereo FM TunerAmplifier with HI Filter &amp; Tuning Meter

ranked by the A.C. Nielsen Co., with
"Charlie's Angels" No. I followed by
"Love Boat" and " Three 's
Company."
NBC and CBS began their fall
programming, officially, the night of
Sept 17, but lloth sought to counter
ABC's early start with some
formidable ·shOWS.
For NBC, the effort was
something of a disappointment. The
network's three-hour "Bob Hope on
the Road to China" extravaganza
was third in the ratings in its _slot
Sunday night, 26th over-all. And the
rerun of ''Holocaust,'' tile prominent
four1&gt;art miniseries of last !leBSOn,
was only moderately successful in
the ratings - Part I in the repeat
was No. 31 in the ratings.
CBS did well, however, with a
Sunday ~ight made.f&lt;r-television
movie, ' 'The Tenth Mooth ,'' starring
Carol Burnett. It finlsbed the ' week
16th , ahead of NBC's Hope special
and the first netw&lt;rk broadcast of
Woody Allen's flim, "Annie Hall,"
on ABC, overall, registered a rating
for the week of 20.9, with CBS at 16.4
and NBC 15.4. The networks say that

highest-rated, No. 6, while
''Detective School" finished 30th,
"24~Robert " 32nd, "The Lazarus
Syndrome'' 34th and "Out of the
Blue" 57th.
On the other hand, it was hardly a
bad week for last season's No. I
network .ed 10 of the first 11 shows

Recent auction held

Social Calendar

••

•'
••
.,

Auctions

Tobon.

•'.

·'~·

Cola Bottling Co. of New York, lost
$326,000 last year, according to
company officials. They said it
should break even this year, adding
that Carter's trip would have little
effect on that forecast.
From the way the president's
fellow passengers evaluated their
trip, many of them want a return
trip with or without the fir st family.
One person who filled out an
evaluation fonn after the trip sald
he thought his luggage was better
handled because Carter was on
board.
"I was worried when I found out

For Sale

367· 759:1.

28% watch 'Angels 'fly into n·e·w season

MAGNOLiA CLUB Thursday at
home ol Mrs. Albert Smith at 7:30
p.m. Ellen Couch assistant hostess,
Edna Slusher devotions and Erna
Jesse program.
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday I : 15 p.m. at home of
Betty Conkle, Cheshire. Helen
Blackston program, Louise Bearhs
contest. Those who plan to attend to
meet at Rock Springs Methodist
Church at 12:30 p.m.
MEIGS COUNTY Tuberc!J]osis
Board oi Trustees meeting 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at Meigs lrm, Pomeroy .

DRIVE THRU
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

still people cruising the Mississippi
River," said Perry Moran, director
of marketing and special services
for the Delta Queen Co.
Company officials say that
because of a time lag between initial
contact and actual booking, it's still
too early to say how muCh of the
interest wUI turn in to sales.
Even if only a small portion of the
interest is converted to cash, that'
will average $1,000 a trip on either
the Delta Queen or its more modern
counterpart, the Mississippi Queen.
The company, owned by the Coca

Wanted to Rent

I
I

I
I

I

••••••••••llll.,lllli••1••••••••••1•1••1•••1
COUPON
I
COUPON

DOVE
LIQUID FOR DISHES

32 Ol Bn..

'119

1

GW SUGAR

I

.5 LB. BAG

1
I

I
I
I

With Purchase of 4, 60, 7S or
100 Watt Light Bulbs at
Regular Price
•·

�12- The Daily ~tinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Sept.l9, 1979

OJ~'Tit'ICT

Your Best Buys Are l"'ound in the Sentinel Classifieds !:i..
,------------------~~------------------------------~· ~
Yard Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES

VARD

l~W o rds orU nder

Cash

I day
2days

01art-:t&gt;

1.00
UO

ldlya:

6days

11!!
1.00

1.80

2.25

3.00

3.75

Each word over the minimum
I~

wonb is 4 l"enb per word per
Way, Ads running other th.tm con. sa·utlve days will bt&gt; Nutrged at

the l day rate.
In memory. Card tlf -rru.nks
Mnd Obi tua ry : &amp;cents per ~-{wd
l'UIO rninimum . Cash in ad:
vuoce.
Mobile Home

~It.'S ~nd

Yard

sales 1:1re Ul'l'epted only with
cash with ordt·r. 2S l'ent c har~t'
for adoJ currying Boll Numbt&gt;r Tn
Care of The Sentinel .
1'1le P\Jblisht'r reserves the

ri"ht to edit or reject any ads
deemed objfctianal. The
Publisher will nol be responsible
for mort than one incorrel't in·
~rtlon .

,

Phone 992 -21~

WANT-AD
IA_DVERTISING
DEADLINES

Sept.

14·21 .

Household goods , women' s,
m~n · s ~nd children's clothing,
m•s c. Items . 1 mila from
langsville. CR 10, 9 til dark .
Phone 7•2-2668.
VARO SALE . 4 families . 112
Brick St., Pomerov. Candy
striper un iforms , some th ing
lor everyone . 19th, 20th and
2l5L10amto?
Y1\BD SALE . Friday . Sep t. 71ot
31'4 Beech St .. M idd lepor t.
OH . Everything goes . S.IO
eoch.
YARD SAlE in progress . All
sizes
clothing . curta i ns
bedspreads . Ja·mps, sewi ng
machine, also CB. I mile west
of Dexter , on CR 4.

YARD SALE . Sept. 20 and 21.
300 Wright St., First street
past Pomeroy Elementary .
Watc_h for signs . Clothing ,
boby s and chi ldren's, bed s,
curtains, dishes and mi sc .
Held Rain _or shine.

YARD

NOTICE

SALE .

SALE.

Sept.

20·21.

Th urs . ond Fr i. 10-5. Children's
cl othing and adults. 7 poirs
pants, nice sizes 44 -46. A lot
of od ds ond ends, everything
cheap. Rt . 33 north between
Beaco n Gulf Station and Rose

Hill Rd.
GARAGE

SALE .

3

Tu esd~y

thru Fridav
4P.M .

Old Rt. 33. Phone 992·3564 .

the day beforepub lit·:~ t i on

Sunday
4P.M
Friday afternoon

Notices
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETV . 992·6260 . Pets
available for adoption and information service.

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAV 1
PM . FACTORV CHOKE. ONLY .
RACINE GUN CLUB .

Lost and Found
FOUND MEIGS Hi9n Scnool
orec : Female Irish Setter, Red
In color, red collar . Humane

Society. 992·6260.
LOST: BLACK ca&lt;ker spaniel in
Cherry Ridge-681 areo . Coli

992-6093.
FOUND RACINE area : Scnool

YARD SALE . Thursday only.
Bob Roy':; in Racine. Motorcvcle , hassock, electric ice
cr eam
f reeze r , antique
ph ono graph ,
Chri stmas
d~corotions , boby cor seot, appliances. used color TV, baby,
girls , boy s,
men' s and
women's clothing in excellent
condi tiQ n. Ra in cancels .
GARAGE SALE . Friday and
Saturday , 9-? Green house
beside State Highway Garage .
on Rt. 7 . Mi$C,

$12 per ton . Bundled slob. $10
par ton. Delivered to Ohio
Pollet Co., Rt. 2, Pomeroy .

9'12.2689 .
OLD FURNITUME , ice boxes ,
bra!S beds, iron beds. desks .
. ate., complete households .
Write M .D. Miller , Rt, 41 ,
Pomerov orcoll992-7760.
OLD COINS, pocket watches ,
clan rings , wedding bands ,
d iamonds . Gold or silver. Coli
J . A. Woms lev. 7_.2-2331 .
WANTED: SAW logs . Povmanl
upon delivery to ovr yard . 7:30
to 3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339 , Barlow ,

OH . 678-2980.
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE. gloss.
chino , anything. See or coli
Ruth Gosney, antiques . 26 N.

2nd ..
Midd lepo rt.
992·3161.

OH .

WANTED: SAW logs. Paymen t
upon delivery to our yard .
7:30-3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barlow ,

OH 678·2960.
WANTED: JUNK . Batteries ,
rodiotors . motors . auto. tra ns .
No Sunday calls . 9-49-2563.

HOOF HOLLOW , English and
Western .
Saddles
and
harness . Horses and ponies.
Ruth Rea"es. 61•· 698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding Lessons ond
Horse Cora pr:od ucts.Western
boots , Chi ldren' s $15 .50 ,

Adulls $29 .00.

YARD SALE . 4 family . First
time this year . Something for
everyone . Thursday , Sept . 20.
9-J. Approx. 5 miles out CR 32
(Turn at Memorial Gardens).
John Bentz residence. 1 day
only.

ding . Coll367·0292 .
POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS Boording, all breeds . Clean indoor
· outdoor loci lities . Al so AKC
registered
Oobermans .
61--'-446-7795 .

REGISTERED CHOCOLATE poodle . $60. 992·6280.

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

SENIOR CITIZENS. 1 bedroom
opts . for
rent . Rental
assistance
available .

REAL ESTATE loons . Pur chase
ond refinance . 30 year terms ,
VA . No money down (eli gible

veterans) . FHA - As low as 3
per cent down (non-veterans ).
Ireland Mortgage Co., 77 E.
State, Athens . 614 -592-3051 .

Real Estate for Sale
14 ROOM HOUSE und store.
Barn and outbf.lildings. 2 1/ ,
acres of ground. Pogeville,

OH . $35 ,000, 698-32'10.

Housing &amp;
Vt! fer~~· •S Admin . Luns.

PARK .FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
992-ll2S

1'1 x 60 2 bedroom mobile
home. Racine area . 992-5858.

ONE SMALL trailer , 1 or 2 per sons . 992-7785

.

GiveAway

SIX lob puppies . 3 females. 3
moles. Very playful. Humane
Society. 992-6260.
LOOKING FOR Good home for

2 minia ture

collies, lassie
type , shots and wormed ,
Humane Society, 992-6260.
TO GOOD home, two block
puppies. Will grow into Iorge

dog . Coii992-3SBO.
TO GOOD fiOME , 1 medium
Size brown and white dog.
Also, will gi ve dog house. Call

992-3580.

Mobile Homes Sale's
197• 1• x 70 mobile home.
Good condition . 992-5858.

1972 LVNN HAVEN 14x65 3
bedroom .
1970 Vindale 12:oc63 w ith expanda, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12xb03 bedr.

1973 Skyline 12x55 2 bedroom.
1972Bononza

12;~~52 ,

2bedr.

B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES,
PT.
PLEASANT , WV .
304675-4424 .

Real Estate for Sale
SEVEN ROOMS and batn. 2
FOR SALE : 3 bedroom house.
water. In Bradbury.

992·5871.

.

•o ACRES LAND on Bailey Run
Rood .~

Good hunting , timber ,
all mineral ri_ghts. $12,0CX&gt;.

742·2442.

216 E. SecQf1d Street

POMEROY 608 E . ..:.:.IQII.I..I
MAIN
• POMEROY,O.
NEW ' LISTING

Nearly

maintenance free . 2
bf!droom home with full
basement and extra lot.

Established business in

Walk to the store .
$25,000.
22 ACRES - With water

Pomeroy, "THE KIDDIE SHOPPE" . Call tor

available. Good home

details.

NEW LISTING -

30

acres, vacant land,
secluded, on a good
township road. 7 acres

tillable,
woodland .

balance
Has

many

uses. ONLY $13,350.00.
NEW LISTING - Ap-

and
sHes

electricity
for

A -Frl!mes .

$9,500.
RENOV4ji'ED

2

bedroom home, na t. gas
furnace, carpeting, dining area, 2 car garage

and extra lot. $25,000.
70 ACRES- Wi ll sell at
a lillie over $200.00 per

proximately 25 acres of

acre.

building silos,

NEW LISTING -

4 lots

already
surveyed .
Water,
electric
available, on a raod ad jacent to good subdivi ·
sion. Call for financing

available. $27,500.00.
LOVELY 2·STORY
FRAME - 4 bedrooms,
equiped kitchen . 2
baths, lots of carpeting
and paneling, N .G . fore ·
ed air heat, full base ment, garage, carport,

patio. A low $28,500.00.
NICE
I · FLOOR
FRAME .- 3 bedrooms,
bath, N.G. h~at, storms,
glass enclosed porch,
part basement, garage,
about 3 acres, fruits and

grapes and others .
$25,000.00.
Ml DDLEPORT- Love·
ly home located in excellent neighborhood

5

brick and frame .
bedrooms, 11J2 baths,
carport, patio, fenced
yard. This you must see.

$59,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992·22S9
992-619!

acres near Forked Run
Lake. Wafer and elec.
available . $15,000.

STONE Nice one
bedroom home with

bath, nat. gas F.A. fur nace with city water and
2112 acres. Reduced to

$20,000.
NEW LISTING

-

2

level acres with large
shade trees. 3 bedroom
home, ceramic bath ,
nat. gas F . A . furnace .
Garage with tool room .
Ideal tor fam i ly .

NEW LISTING- Clean
60 acre farm at Alfred·.
Lots of buildings, good

BUILOING LOTS -

at Syracuse, Rockspr ings, Rutl and, Pomeroy

and near Rutland .
Call 992·3325 or 992-3876

Housing
Headquarters

district in MiddlePort, out of
high water. 3 bedroom . eat-in
kitchen , pantry, dining room ,
living room and bath. Natural
gas furnace, lull bbsement
and attic, enclosed bock yard,
washer ,
drver,
rang e,
refrigerator , curtains. , ond
carpeting included in purchasing price. Coli 992-3243 after
(lpm for appointment.

1974 DODGE CORONET •-doo•
Custom . 992-5858.

1976 PLVMOUTH VOLARE . Excellent

condition .

29 000

miles . u•oo. 992-3198. .
1977 THUNDER81RD , excellent
co ndition. Radial s, AM-FM ,
air, PS, PB, reclining $eats, 2
new studded radial snow
tires . 247-3594 alter 5.

LT. 350. 8 cyl. Pnone 992·6093.
1970 T-BIRD , 2 door coupe ,
new 429 engine, -4 barrel. new
e)(houst, less than 30Q miles
on engine. PS , PB, Cruise control, electric bucket searS with
console, rear defogger, new
tires , new exhaust. $1800.
7•2-2_.04 before 2 p.m. or
after 5 p. m.

1973 VW STA TIONWAGON 30
mi. per gal. Auto ., trans ., immoculale. 378-6155.
1978 Camera. 12,000 miles,
305 engine. olr conditioning .
rear defogger. Excellent condition . 247-3863 .

1973 DODGE PICKUP. 318
engine , white spoke wheel s,
sllding bock gloss , good condi ti on. $1800. 247-3863 .
speed , for ports , has 4 mog
wheels , $28 eo . new . 2 new
recapped tires , $150. Also.
slant $i x 1973 Dodge engine,
55,000 miles . Numerous new
ports , $150. Pop-up camper.
Sleeps 6, refrigerator and
sink , S•SO. leonard Bos s
Svro cuse. 992-5006.
'

CAMERO

Type LT, 350, 8 cyl . Phone

992-6093 .

•

1971 FORO LTD , runs good,
body rough . -4 good tires
$1 25. 22 Beech St. , M id~
dlepor t.

1970 GMC CHURCH bus , 54
passenger in good shape,
ready to go . Con be seen ot
394 Beech St ., Middleport or
ca 11 992-5770 or 949-2208 .

AUCTION
2 Evening Sales, Fri., Sept. 21
Sat., Sept. 22, 7:00 P.M.
Warehouse Auction on Columbus Road , Athens, 0 .,
hAl moved to Key Mart (former Ziegler Grocery),

The Plolns, o .

For your convenience we moved to a larger
building w ith more parking space . Our F r iday nig ht
sale Is for consig nmen t s. Anyone having merchan dise to sel l , bring it in friday afternoon or early Fr i day evening . First Come, Firs t Sold .
Our regular Saturday evening s~le will be mostly
new merchand ise, a few pieces of used furniture .

All kinds of new tools, tool boxes, toys, furn iture,

stereos, Silverstone pans, auto and bike ac cessories, 8M sound mov ie camera , ca rpets , ap pliances, several loads coming in t oo lat e to l ist.

(Don'llorget to bring a chair .)
Not Responsible For Accidents
Terms of Sale : Cash or Check with Positive I. D .

AUCTIONEER BILL BROWN

1112 bath, living room with fireplace , dining room ,

kitchen and laundry room . Central heat and air con dition. Garage and workshop plus a pony barn . over
3 acres with split rail fence. Call for appointment.

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992·2342, Eve.992·2499
Middleport, 0 .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

outbuid ings, on 10 lots.

WE HAVE CONV.ENTlONAJ.. FINANC·
lNG FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW ASS% DOWN.

$18,900.
REEDSVILLE

NEW LISTING - 4 BR home , hardwood floors,
large LR. also family rm , yarage a nd good out·

home.

c arpeted, barn, plus 2
-

2

bdrm . trailer, 2 covered
porches, 3 c ar garage,

building, Many nice features , plen t y of fruit trees
and garden space. Ask ing $48,900. Just off Rt. 1 in

flat lot. $23,000 . owner
willing to talk .
REEDSVILLE- Home

$25,000 .
FORKED RUN AREA
on 1.50 acre. $21.500.
Call
Virginia Hayman
985-4197

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

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter
spouts,
work,

work,
walks

driveways.

and

·

!FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. ·YOUNG Ill
RACINE,O.
949 ·2741or

COUNTRY SPECIAL - Nice remodeled 2 bedroom
home on blacktop road . Mostly carpeted. F .A . nat.
gas furnace. A very attractive small home and1
acre land . Price'd for quick sale for $17,500.

U2,000.00 -

NEW LISTING- Total

Good 3 bedroom, all carpeted home

cl ose to Pom eroy &amp; Midd leport Located on good 1'1:2
acres of land .
·

electric, 3 bedroom
home . D ining room, k it ·chen, living room and

a~out

1,000 f~et of beautiful Ohio R iver fron tage.
Ntee recreatton spot, mineral s, too . Let's have an

beautiful home is brick
with a garage and full
basement . Call for your

offu. Price $57,000.

appt. today . $47.500.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS Nice lot in Arbaugh Ad dition
with
septic
system and water tap.
POMEROY - We have

Pomeroy .

LOTS OF LOTS -

From 1 to 75 acres, bordering

E.l(PERIENCED
Radiator·· . -.--,
Service

MIDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home approx. 10 yrs .
$35,000.
RACINE - 2 BR trail er on ni ce lot . Asking $11,500
20 WOODED ACRES -Can be divided . $22,000.

RUTLAND - Lovely 4
bedroom home. You

LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - on 3 Acres, 4 BR home,

f~lly carpeted, equipped kit., family room has nice
fireplace, farge ut ility room and plenty of storage
two -car garage has electric door opener One great

must see it to appreciate

it ' s
beauty . Only
$35,000.00.
LANGSVILLE- Nice 2

feature ~Iter another. Listed $75.500.
JUST

bedroom home on a lit·
tie over an ac re . Sell

·

LISTE~ + 6 year old home with 3 bedroom~

dtnmg a~d uttllty room, kitchen equipped with stov~
al')d retngerator . Most of the house newlv carpeted
Forced air gas furnace only 10 years old AlsO
garage . ~ complete trailer hook up with nat. g'as tap
and septtc can add Income to the home . over 2 acres

price $22,500.00.

WE
NEED
LISTINGS!!! If you are
thinking of selling give

Nattl•n 8 iiJ•'

JUST LISTED ___:_ Mini farm w / a beautiful bri ck bi level , w / 3 bedrooms &amp; full basement, large carport,

Cheryl Lemley
Associate

total elec. Not expensive, fully insulated, a ll hard r

wOOd floors. 31arge hothouses. You ca n have all this
with approximately 5 acres of land tor only $63,500.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US ACAU
CALL JIMMV DEEM , ASSOCIATE 949 -2JH8
OR NANCV JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949-26S4 or 949 ·2591

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

IRElAND .
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. Slote, Athens
592·3051

I
S~­

OUTOF
GAS .

Pomeroy

Sweepers, toosters , irons . all
small applio'!ces . lawn moer ,
ne11t to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 9BS-3825 .

SEWING MACHINE Repai" ·
service , all
The Fabric
Au thorized
Service. We

makes, 992-2284 .
Shop. Pomerov .
Singer Salas and
sharpen Scissors.

EXCAVATING , dozer, loader
and backhoe work ; dump
tru cks ond lo-- boys for hire,
will t-toul fill dirt , top soil.
lime stone and grovel. Coli Bob
or Roger J etters , day phone
992 -7089 .
night
phone

992·3525 or 992·5232.
EXC AVATING , doter .
backhoe and ditch•r , Charles
R. Hatf ield. Black Hoe Service,
Rutland, Oh io. Pane 742-:2008 .
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complata Service . Phonem-2..78.

AUTOMOBILE

INSURANCE

been cancelled? lost your
operators
license? Phone

882·2952 or 882·3•5• .
HOWERY AND MARTIN h·
covating , septic
dozer , backhoe.

systems ,
Rt. U3 .

Pnone 1 (61•) 698-7331 or
742-2593 .
IN STOCK for immediate
deli ve ry : various sizes of pool
ki ts. Do-it· yourself or let us
Install for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sales, Inc. 992-572• .
WILL HAUL limestone and
gro ve l. Al so, lime hauling and
spreading. leo Morris Trucking, Phone 742-2.55.
S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning. Steam
cleaned . Fr ee estimate .
Reasonable rates . Scot·
c hguo r d .
992 · 6309
or

742-23&lt;8 .

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limes tone in
Middl_eport -Poemroy area .
Call fo r free estimate.

. TRAILER SALES
Hl10Monltam.,-'r Ad .
l•ngiYillot , Otlio

•1•-•"·414S Evefllnti
"1 M!IU EiiSIOI Wtlln vi ll•

• ' 1 mo

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

RQOl:ING
REMODELING
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

AL TROMM
CON ST.
9' U ·(Pd .)

RN OR LPN with Phor·
roocology , full time, 3-ll ·shlft.
Sl1ifting differentail . Pinecrest
Core Center, Judy Barku s,
446-7112.
CAR SALESMAN . Send resume
to Box 743 . Pomef-oy, OH
45769 .
N o experience
necessary .

I

i

•

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

~

•
I .!TILE ORPHAN ANNIE
ORPHAN ANJIIE-HI8 HONE GROUNDS

• -:JO·tfc
~--~------~~~,

.,

Do&gt;V OR H16HT, 1&gt;4EI'I
MCM»-&amp;TAIHS DOI"l 1 T

•

New, repair.
gutters and
down .spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949·2862--949·2160

't'OU'VE GOT 11-!ERE,

!

e.

1COULD WALK

BlltWF&lt;li.DfD ...

WELL ...IW.. RIGHT!
LET'S Sf:E WI-IAT

i

~ S-ffc

· -

'

ALL.EY!

Mlck•s'
Barber &amp;
Style Cent
.. I ntroctuces'-- :

MARK MORA ~ ·

HAIR STYLIST
Fe•turlnl :

men'a

'

~!UM"r.t/

a"' r

slyllnt. :
perms.
C•lllor appt. or w•lk ln.

women's

992·2367

GASOUNE AllEY

M•ln St.
Pomeroy, 0 :
,___________:8~·2~6 -·1 mo.

Leastwa1.1s 1qot
m1..1 qarden plow'd
fer ne~·~.~ear!

•

'

.i

1 EXCEllENT UNICO 16 CU. FT.

z

COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR
LIKE NEW

'250

1 NEW ELECTRIC FURNACE
CLEARANCE PRICED

1 NEW FUEL OIL FURNACE
CLEARANCE PRICED
MAIN ST.
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR.
PHONE 992·2181

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A LITTLE
SAVE A LOT

A FELLER FROM
ONE OF THEM BIG
TIRE COMPANIES
CAME BV WHILE
YOU WUZ
GONE OFF,
PAW

RUBBERBACK CARPET

•4••
.,.5

AND UP

CASH &amp; CARRY

DID TH '
VARMINT WANT?
WHAT

HE CRAVES TO DRIVE SOME
CARS ACROST OUR FRONT liARD
FER R T.V. COMMERCIAL

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK

992·5770.

Help wanted

•

Rullond .

Pomeroy Landmark

7·2-3119 .

742·29•0.

_,

H. L Writesel
Roofing

AND UP
Installed an'd Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL
CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

,

I I I I H I I I)"

Poor contract, good play

14 mile off Rf. 7 by ·p•ss
on St . Rt. 1'24 tow•rd

RUTLAND
742·2328

HOUSE WO RK done in evenings and Soturdoys . Call

DOZER , END loader. brush
hog . Will do basements,
ponds, brush, timber, land
clearing. Charles Butc11er,

..'

7·12

Roger Hysell
liEge

ITERRAY I

BRIDGE

ot~HGE ...

Services
OHered

PAINTING AND sandblasting.
F.ree estimates . Coll9-49-2686.

WI LLING TO dri ve tractor ·
troller free f or 2'/, months in
e)(changa for experience on
. the rood . I will pay my own .
personal
expenses . Call

C. R. MASH 1:
VINYL &amp; ALUM~·.~..
SIDING
·~

MONTGOMERY

I VEDE8
()
I I

.Anawer~~ere: A "(

,.,

.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
6:oo-News 3,8,10,1~. 15 : ABC News
6; Carol Burnett 17; VIlla Alegre
__ _
20.
6: 30-NBC News 3,15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnet16; CBS News 8,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20.
7:QO-Three' s A Crowd 3; Tic Toe
H1
Dough 8; Match Game PM 6;
News 10; Newlywed Game 13;
Love American Sty le 15; Sanford
WHA"T iHE "TELE6R'A~H
8. Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20,j3.
COULD HAVE ~EEN
7 :30-Country Roads 3; Newlywed
WHEN li WA~ FIR5"T
Game 6; Joker' s Wild 8; The
INVENTED.
Judge 10; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Family
17; MacNeli .Lehrer Report 20,33.
Now 811'ange the circled letters 10
8:0Q-Real Pebple 3,15; Eight Is
form tha tiiJtpriN answer, as sug·
Enough 6,13; Last Resort 8,10;
gested by the above """"""·
Up Close with Henry Aaron 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; Faces
of Communism 33.
8 : 30- Struck by Lightning 8,10;
(AniWtrl tomoriOW)
Baseball 17 .
· 9: 0Q-Movle "Mrs. R' s Daughter"
Veslerday'sl Jumbles: LIGHT SUITE OUTLAW PELVIS
3,1 5; Charlie's Angels 6, 13 ;
Answer: Gellessllred lhe further lhey go- WHEELS
Movie " Sex 8. the Single Parent"
B. 10; Great Performances 33;
Wednesday, Sept. 19
Upstairs, Downstairs 20.
10:oo-Vegas 6,13; News 20.
10: 30- Best of Groucho 20; Irish
Treasures 33.
11 :00-News 3.6.8. 10. 13,15; New
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavell 20;
Book Beat 33.
.
11 :3D-Johnny ,Carson 3, 15; Love
Boat 6, 13; Switch B; ABC News
33; Movie "Our Man Flint" 10i
linger on might-have-beens.
Movie " The Cowboy 8. the Lady"
South won Ute opening
17.
spade lead with dummy's ace.
12 :4G-Baretta 6,13 ; Hawaii Flve-0
NORTH
!1-19
He knew the spade lead was a
8; 1 :oo-Tomorrow 3; News 15.
+A 86
singleton. He took a trump
1 :3D-Baseball 17: 1:so-News 13;
• &gt;3
finesse which lost to the king.
4:0Q-News 17; 4:2Q-Star Trek
+ K J 94
West returned a trump,
17.
+A 63 2
exposing the foul distribution
THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 20,1979
in that suit. It almost seemed
EAST
WEST
5:2Q-World at ·Large 17; 5:4s-hopeless for declarer. He had
+KJHIISI
+2
Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
three trump losers, a spade
• K 10 9 B 7 .6
13.
• 82
loser and minor suit finesses
• Q 10 7 3
6:0Q-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10;
• 7r. 4
to negotiate. Nevertheless,
+ K 108
PTL Club 15; 6: 11)-News 17.
through extremely skillful
SOUTH
6:30-For You .. Biack Woman 10;
play (and luck), declarer was
• Q3
Dragnet 17; 6: 45- Mornlng
able to make the contract.
•AQJ42
Report 3; 6:50-Good Morning
At trick four he played the
t A 65
West VIrginia 13; 6:5s--News 13.
queen of clubs, which was
• QJ 9
. 7 :0Q-Today 3,15 ; Good Morning
covered by the king and ace.
America 6, 13; Thursday Mar· .
Vulnerable: NortlJ..South
He played a diamond to his
nlnQ .8 :. Batman 10; Three
Dealer : North
ace, successfull{ finessed
Stooges Lillie Rascals 17; 7:1s-w..t North East South dummy's jack o diamonds,
A.M. Weather 33.
cashed lhe king,· and ruffed a
It
3+
4•
7:30-Famllv Affair 10; 7: 5s--Ghuck
diamond with. a low trump.
Pass Pass Pass
Wnlte Reports 10.
The stage was set for an
8:()0--(;apt. Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It
unusual end-play against
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
Opening lead: • 2
West . Declarer cashed his
8:30-Romper Room 17.
high trump and exited with
9:0Q-Bob Braun 3; Phil Donahue
his remaining low trump.
13,15; Big Bailey 6; Porky Pig &amp;
West had to win and eventual·
Friends 8; One Day At A Time
ly had to lead a club into
10; Lucy Show 17.
·
By Oswald Jaeoby
South's jack-nine.
9: 30-Bob Newhart 8; Love of Life
and Alan Sontag
Declarer had taken one
10; Green Acres 17.
spade trick, two high trumps,
10:oo-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
East's aggressive three· three diamonds, a diamond
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8,10;
spade preempt successfully ruff with a low trU\DP and
Morning Magazine 13: Movie
pushed North-South into a three club tricks.
"Tripoli" 17.
poor four· heart contract when !NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
10 :3D-Hollywood Squares 3, 15;
three notrump would have
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
been easy .
Griffith 6; Whew! 8, 10.
(For a copy of JACOBY
South groaned when he saw
10 :ss-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
MODERN.
S8nd
$1
!o:
"Win
at
the dummy. A penalty double
n:oo-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
would have been better than Bridge," care of this newspa·
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10.
per,
P.
0
.
Box
489,
Radio
City
playing a precarious game in
11
:
3D-Wheel
of Fortune 3,15;
hearts. Still, the problem was Station, New . York. N _Y.
Family
Feud
6, 13; Sesame St.
lo make the contract. not 100 19.}
20: Faces of Communism 33;
11 : 5s--News 17.
12 :0o-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10,13; Mlndreaders 15; Love
by THOMAS JOSEPH
American Style 17.
12:3Q-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search .for
39Tosca's
ACROSS
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15;
uvissi
d'
-"
Movie " The Mating Season" 17;
I "Planet
E lee. Co. 20,33.
of the_ .. 4tRemove
1:oo-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
all doubt
50odles and
Children 6,13; Young 8. the
USluiveled
oodles .
Restless 8, 10.
uoaunt
1:30-As The World Turns 8,10; ·
11 Pulsate
2: oo-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to
11 Faye's Phil 43 Caution
Live 6, 13; 2:2s--News 1i.
DOWN
U ll fattens
2 :30-Another World 3,15; Guiding
1Hwnble
the kitty
Light B, 10; Glgglesnort Hotel17.
Yesterday'• Alolwer
Of puni3hJ :OQ-General Hospital 6,13; Lilias
14 Rouse
11 Asian
zt Tune for
Yoga &amp; You 20; I Love Lucy 17.
menl
to action
3:»--ne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
coWitry : var.
two
3
Wolf
down
11 Cracker
Wild 10; Fllntstones 17; TurZl Weather
I Don't delete %2 Girl's name
17 Oddball
nabout 20.
23 Swindle :
w~rd
4:0D-Mister Cartoon ~; Tom &amp;
11 Yale alblete 5 "Mouse"
slang
38 Coutland
Jerry 13: Merv · Griffin 6;
I Bastinlidoed
11 Cannlne
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Sesame St.
7JeaMed'
zt
Actress
3Z
Bizarre
zt Krazy 20,33;
Six Million Dollar Man 10;
Vivian
33 Cornered .
8 Toot
Zl Tree
Spectreman 17.
Zi French
31 Casement 4: 30- Bewltched 3;
9Emplaee
Petticoat
knot
dramatist
38 Furrow
12
Parlor
piece
Junction B; Bionic Woman 13;
UQuote
Little Rascals 15; Gilligan'• h .
zt Stroke
17.
of luck
5:0Q-I Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford.
8. Son 8; Mister Rogers' Neighzt Bequest
borhood 20.33; Mary Tyler
recipient
Moore 10; Abbott &amp; Costello 15;·
Z7 Banklnll
My Three Sons 17.
service ·
5:3D-Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; !;lee. Co. 20;
Z1 TroUed
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13;
2t Powdered
Lucy Show 15; 1 Dream of
lava
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
38 Novel
6:oo-News 3.8.10,13,15; aBC News
about
6; Carol Burnett 17; Villa Alegre
20; Once Upon A Classic 33.
Ayesba
6:30-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
31Heavy
' Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
tippler
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy
K "Said20,33.
7:0Q-Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
myself
Dough 8; Baxters 6; ; News 10;
said .' ."
Newlywed Game 13; Love
15 Head·
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
strong
7: 30-Hollywood
Squares
3;
person
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
31 Not wide
B; $100,000 Name That Tune 10;
or broad
Nashville on the R0811 13; Archie
Camppell 15; All In The Family
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
17.
A.XYDLBAAXIl
a:oo-Movle "Buck Rogers" 3,15;
Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; Waltons
II LONGFELLOW
8,10; National Geographic 20,33;
One leiter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
We' re Number 1? 17 .
used for the three L's, X for the .two O' s, ete. Single letters.
&amp;: 3D-Benson ~.13; Baseball 17.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
9:0Q-Bar.ney 'M iller 6,13; Evening
hints. Each day the code letters are ditferent.
at Symphony 33; Black Man's
Land 20.
CllYPTOQUOTES
9 :3Q-Soap 6,13; 10 :oo-Qulncy 3,15;
20·20 6,13 ; News 20.
OWEUU ·
MGDK
OEU
OPCXOQM
10:Jo-Hocklng Valley Bluegrass.20;
Estampa Flamenca 33.
OML
YECUPZM - AKUJ
OVQU
11 :oo- News 3,6,8, 10,13. lS; New
Soupy Sales 17; Dick Cavett 20;
TOM M
AKUJ
HGUMACRPM ,
Book Beat 33.
PR
11 :3Q-Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
XOECOP
Wbman 6,13; Columbo 8; ABC
DECACDCMXM.
PR
News 33; Movie "The Idol" 10;
Movie
"These Three" 17.
U I 0 P M
(W U R E W U
U QC R A )
12 : 40-Baretta
6,13 ; · 1: 00Yesterdays Cryptoquote: THERE'S NOTIUNG NOBLE IN
Tomorrow 3; News 15.
'lEING SUPERIOR TO SOMEONE. TRUE NOBIUTY IS IN
I : 1D-Banacek 8; 1 :Jo-Bueball 17.
BEING SUPERIOR TO YOUR FORMER SELF. - HINDU
1: 50- News 13; • : OO-New• 17;
4: 2D-Star Trek 17.6.
PROVERB

IDREBIG
~
() .I I )

5071 Osborn
Rei.,
Reeclsvlllt, OH, 45772 • . For Information Cell •
U7_....5. Will bt OPirl \,
la!t II you nud --l
something.
.1
9· U · l mo. "'

**

Television
Viewing

· ~o:..._..,

)

•New Home
•Addons
Remoldlngs
FrH estimates
992-6011

PAm
I

1&lt;¥ ordinary wc.&lt;dt.

'

OJ 1mo.

Brick Laying,

· I

of land. All for $29,900. Call lor appointment .

us a calL

(eligibl.e veterans)

All Masonary Work
Foundation,

367·7101.

old, stove &amp; refrigerator , lg . storage bldg . Pric ed at

2 nice homes that are
real buys.

Refinance
30 Year Terms
A- No money down

9&gt;7 · 1 mo.

SHOULD liE SOLD - 70 acres, house 8. good barn ,

1 •;, baths . Carpet
throughout .
This

and

SUPE R
GOOSe
STOCM
TRAilE R NOWA VAilA ILIE

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region .
Six doys a week . 1A hours service . Emergencv calls. Call

HOME &amp; INCOME :--: Immediate possession, large ·
3 .bedroom home, llv•ng room &amp; family room, all
ntcely car-peted . Eat -in equipped kitchen , 2 full
baths, 1/ 2 basement, garage, nice ~;Jarden area In'
come from t r a i ler on property . Racine , $45,000. ·

PHONE 742-2003

Real Estate Loans
Purchase

down

some concrete

THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR -

Ohio. Asking only $54,000.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Broker, 992 -nl'i

Located In Racine, 0 .
(formerly
Weavers

992·2143.

FAMILY HOME - Lots of posslbiiities w llh !his
real nice 2 story home. Many features, like central
air, built -in appliances, all carpeted &amp; so forth . A
very good investment with several nice building
lots. On appro&gt;&lt;. 4112 acres in the center of Racine ,

- Neat sm . 6 rm . furnished summer house

Hobsletter, Jr., Broker

Instructor-

Chester.

14 acres of
nice roll ing land with a 1112 story hosue that sits back
off the roa_
d su~rounded with maple trees. Lg. pond
stocked ~1th f1sh . Nicely located in Morning Star
area . Pnc~ $33,900.

with 2 car garage and
nice business building
with
2
restrooms .

Ph. 742·2003
Velma Niclnsky
Associate
Ph. 742-3092
Hilton Wolle
Associate
GeorgeS .

OPENINGSEPT.IIIh
Classes : Bolle!
Tap&amp;J.,•
Ages-4 and up
Shirley Carpenter

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

FROST 7Sx15 ft .
Hocking River lot. All
flat and elec . ln. $3,500.
84 FT. OHIO RIVER
FRONT - 3.77 acre
with mobile home. 3
brm, It;, baths, expando
lv . rm _$16,000.
LONG BOTTOM - 6
older

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

BRADFORD , Auctioneer , Com·
plete Service . Phone 9-49-2487
or 9-49-2000. Racine , Ohio ,
Critt Bradford .

REALTY

rm.

Announcing Opening of

Ph . 1192-1174

ERA MERCER

elnsul•tlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Rcpl.comtnl
Windows
• Gutters •nd
Down spouts
Free Estlm•tes
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
8-17 -1 mo.

by HenriAmoldondBobl.ee

Unscrlll11ble theM tour Jumbiel,
ont - t o - n equ~te, to '"""

"i!

Smith Nelm
· Motors, Inc.

$39,900.00.

1973 Chevrole1 Camero Tvpe

CALL 992·7544

Rilldi ator

CUSTOM BUILT HOME just two years I on
Rt. UJ, only 2 miles from Rt . 7. Peaceful 3 bedroom,

•

J&amp;L BlOWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

In

Baum Subdivision, w il l
welcome offer . Others

Coll.992-3083 or 992:2120.
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK : call
303·675· 1501 or 305-675-2•88

o.

fences , m inerals and
farm house. A real trac tor f.lrm .

CLARK RESIDENCE, Syracuse,
corner of Crooks and Fourth .
Near sWim club . ball field,
tennis courh, proposed
marino, 6 10oms and bath
frame . lot 100 x 150' $40,000.
TWO BLOGKS from business

Hot,,·s9 - l M .. W., F .
Otner tim (&gt; • by appoint·
ment.
107 Sycamore ( Rear)
Pomeroy,

Choreographer
27

'

~--------~------------------------------------------------_J l
f- -. de ri l

REAl ESTATE: I acre lot in Rig·
gscresl Manor, between Tuppers Ploir s pnd Chester.
Phone 985-3929 end 98&gt;,4129.

.

~ ~ ~~·

. :'

Business Services

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING .

992 7721.

Auto Sales

1973 CHE VROLET

RISING STAR Kennel. Boor·

Phone

992·5•3• .

Well

1972 PINTO RUNABOUT. 4-

Pets for Sale

oph .

acres . 992-2523.

or 30•·675-1553.

CHIP WOOD. Poles ma x.
diameter 10" on largest end.

fu r nished

John Keck , Mulberry Hts.,
Pomeroy. Lots of real good
dresses and shoes . You mov
try them on . Also, misc . items .

FOUND : COLLIE dog on Kroger
parking lot . Friday evening.
Dog grieving for owner. Call

Wanted to Buy

3 AND 4 RM furnis11ad and un·

GARAGE SALE . Sept . 21 ·22 .

ring. Gold in color . 94(9-2122 .

992·5308.

COUN TR Y MOBILE Home Pork '
Route 33 . north of Pomerov :
Lorge lots . Coll992-7479.

fom ily

Goroga Sola. Saturday , Sept.
22. lasts all doy. Clothes ond
lots of mi sc. items. Dave
G r ~es e r
residence , beside
Salisbury El ementary SchooL

Monday
Noon on Sa tu rday

Real Estate for Sale

· For Rent

1Jf}~f.\,fliDft ~THAT~IWIIIUDWORDOAIIE

13- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday Sept. 19 lll'ill

'
,-,

,,

••

'l

,.

I

''
.'

'

\

RUTLAND FURNITURE . !

l

742·2211
ltutland, o .'i
l L.:,;;,;.;:;:;.;.:.
_ _ _~~--.:.;::;,;,::::.:::,;:
~;4·

WOODSTOCK ? HOW
ARE l(OU ? HOW'S
JURI( DUW ?

SEQUESTERED, HUH ?
WELL,HAVE A6000 NI~T

-y

1t7f K11'19 F.. t\lrn S,nd\ttte. tnc.

v

•

�--

•
••

·•
:

14- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday,Sept. 19,1979

Gold dealers nervous
LONDON (AP I - A bout· of
nerwusness hit the European gold
markets today as dealers quoted a
wide range of prices on either side of
$375 an ounce. The dollar was little
changed.
London ' s five major bullion
houses fixed the price for this
rnorning 'strading SI'ssion at $376, up
from $371 at the opening and $372 at
Tuesday 's close .
In Zurich, the metal wa.s quoted at
a median price of $373, with a wide
rang of bids on either side. Gold
closed in Zurich Tuesday at $373.50.
The dollar, meanwhile, showed
litUe movement. Here were the
quotes compared to Tuesday 's
closings :
Tokyo -223.675 yen, up from
223.60.
· Frankfurt- 1.6073 West German
marks, down from 1.8088.
Zurich-1.62S4 Swiss francs, down
from 1.6265.
Paris--4.2224 French francs, down
from 4.2250.
Uan-812.85 Italian lire , down
from 813.40.
Amsterdam-1.9866 Dut c h

Rt£ '57.99
;:::,

$4499

Too

CHAPMAN
SHOES
Next To Elberlelds In P t:- merov

guilders, down from 1.9870.
London --a pound cost $2.1395,
down from $2.16.
In the current gold rush , buyers
seem to be coming from everywhere
- "tlle United States, Europe, the
Arabs, Japan and some Martians,"
ooe gold dealer said.
Vincent Tese, a partner in James
Sinclair &amp; Co. a New York gold
advisory service, was exaggerating
ooly a little. Gold's $24.25-a n-&lt;:~unce
price increase Tuesday was a record
as was a closing price of $376 in New
York.
George Perala, manager of tlle
coin and metal division of Deak
Perera, a major coin dealer ,
described business as "very hectic."
Many small investors are entering

County Court
Thirteen defendants were fined
and 10 others forfeited bonds in
Meigs County Court Monday.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were James L. Jarvis, Rt. 1,
Langsville, $50 and costs, faj!ure !o
stop after accident; Carlos E . stepp,
Middleport, $150 and costs, 90 days
confinement, 00 days suspended,
driving while intoxicated, $150 and
costs, 90 days confinement, 00 days
suspended, hit-skip; Anthony
Morrison, Marietta, Gerald Pooler,
Reedsville, Doflllid Bennett, Reed·
sville, and Timothy Fry, Middleport,
$15 and costs each, speeding; Diana
Lynn Tillis, Rutland, $5 and costs,
unsafe vehicle; James R. Kinnison,
Rt. 3, Albany, $183, overload; Jackie
· Smith, Langsville, $150 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, driving while in·
toxicated; James Milliron, Racine,
$15 and costs, improper brakes;
LeOnard L. Schockey, Rt. I, Shade
and GeorgeS. Whited, Stewart, $175
and costs, overweight; John P. Rad·
cliffe, Athens, $250 and costs, over·
weight.
Forfeiting banda were Earl GrU·
fitll, RD, Reedsville, $37.55, disor·
derly; Tony Hutton, Rt. I,
Langsville, Steven 0 . Hill, Rt. 3,
Albany, Charles H. Plasterr, Logan,
W. Va., and Michael T. Gord,
Hopewell, Ohio, $35.50 each,
speeding; George F. Hn.char, Jr.,
$360.50, driving while intoxicated;
Karen Oesterle, Parkersburg,
$35.50, improper passing; Florence
Grueser, Rt. I, Shade, $35.50, lit·
tering; Paul David Milliron, Rt. 2,
Racine, $62.55, failure to stop after
accident; Leslie Whittington, Rt. I,
Middleport , $262.55, physical harm.

DU PONT
RADIATOR PRODUCTS

tlle market for the .first time, he
said, trying to get a piece of the goldboom action .
"We can tell tllat from the size of
U1e orders and the kinds of the
questions they ask," he said.
Gold cost $35 an ounce 12 years
ago - when tlle dollar was tied to its
value and before Americans were
allowed to buy it. Its price has risen
$160 in tlle last year - fSO In tlle,last
two. weeks.
'
It closed in Zurich, Switzerland,
Europe's largest bullion market, at
$373.50 an ounce on Tuesday - up
$20.50 from Monday . In London,
Europe's otller major market, it
closed at $372, up $18.50, after
settling back from a record $376.25
during tlle day.
September gold futures on New
York's Commodity Exchange rose
$22.90 to $382 an ounce.
One of the beneficiaries of tlle
latest gold rush was the U.S.
government. It had coincidentally
scheduled an auction of 750,000
ounces of its gold reserves for
Tuesday, and was able to sell the
gold lor an average price of $377.78
an ounce - for a total of $283.3 .
million. When .the government 1a·st
auctioned gold in August, tlle metal
averaged $301.08 an ounce.
Perola said the $100 Canadian
mapleleaf has been extremely
popular witll small investors since
tlle coin was issued two weeks ago,
though dealers take a. hefher
commission on the mapleleaf Ulan
on other coins because it is seen as a
collectors' item.
For that reason, Deak Perera tries
to steer investors from the gold
mapleleaf to other coins, like the
South African krugerrand, which
don't cmlmand such a premiwn.
"People are calling us and asking,
'What gold coin should we buy?"'
Perala said. '.'We're telling them:
buy the krugerrand or the Austrian
100 kroner or the Mexican SO peso."

continue aroWid Ohio
By The Associated Press
1 A large high pressure cenler
moving south out of the upper Great
Lakes was expected to continue
cl,ear skies and cooler temperatures
over most of Ohio today with some
partly cloudy skies in tlle northwest.
The National Weather Service
said the center would cootinue its
so11thward movement and be located
over Kentucky and Tennessee by
Thursday.
The forecast called for clear skies
tonight and low temperatures in tlle
40s to low SOs. Increasing cloudiness
ill expected in soutllern sections
Thursday with sunny skies
elsewhere over the state. The highs
Thursday wm be from 70 to 75.

YOUR CHOICE 96~
~

Removes - t':.~ ­
grease
and rust
quickly .
eas1ly

Helps
prevent
clogging,
rust, and
corrosion
in cooling
systems.
Sal c 'Ends Sep ternber 29. 1979

G&amp;J Auto Parts
~•

...,.

144 W. Second

St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

G&amp;J Auto Parts
Route JJ

Mason, w. va.

HOW ABOUT THIS?
PARIS (AP) - The leftist
newspaper Liberation tweaked tlle
nose of tlle gold-crazed financial
world today by coming out with a
gold-colored masthead and urging
readers to buy as many copies as
they could.
It claimed each gold-hued
"Liberation" contained 0.4 grams of
the precious metal, and tllat every
copy bought at tlle street price of 59
cents was actually worth $4.60.

"CALL US TODAY.
WE CAN CUT OUR NEW
ARS, OR USED CARS TO
PATTERN YOUR BUDGET
1977 AMC PACER ....•....•...•.•..•.•••••....'3695
1976 BUICK SKYLARK••..•.•......•.••....•3295
1976 CHEVROLET LUV.••.•................•2995
1976 PLYMOUTH VALIANT......•...•. '2695
1976 BUICK ~RE 4 DR-....••••.... •3695
1975 AMC MATADOR ....•...•.....••..... '1995
1974 PONTIAC LeMANS ..•.••••••••.... '2195
1974 CH'EVROLET NOVA ..•••...••.••..•.'1195

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO

Area Deaths
\'ELMACARLYLE

Mrs. Vebna Marcella Roberts
Carlyle, 84, Gallipolis Ferry, died
Tuesday at 10 a 111. in the Mercy
Medical Center at Springfield, Ohio
after a short illness.
She was born Dec. 22, 1894 at
Gallipolis Ferry, a daughter of the
late William Roberts and Annie
Sheline Roberts. Her husband, Earl
Carlyle, preceded her in death tn
1969. A son, ReJt, also preceded her
in death in 1952.
She was a member of Wyoma
Pentecostal Church at Gallipolis
Ferry. ·. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Evelyn Bush, Gallipoils Ferry, and
Mrs. Ella Seely, Uvingston, Calif.;
four sons, Branch Carlyle and Hillis
Carlyle, both of Colwnbus, Ohio,
Frank Carlyle, Treernont City, Ohio,
and Dennis Carlyle, Orient, Ohio; 21
grandchildren,
30
greatgrandchUdren and two great-greatgrandchildren.
Services will be beld Friday at
1:30 p.m . at the Wyoma
Pentenco!&gt;tal Church with the Rev.
Noah Callicoat officiating. Burial
will be in the Wyoma Cemetery.
The body will be taken to the
church ooe hour befare services.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home after 5 p.m.
Thursday.
~CHARLES GREENLEE

Funeral services for Charles Ray
Greenlee, 53, Point Pleasant Route
2, who died Tuesday morning in
Charleston Area Center following
open hear surgery, will be held
Thursday at 2 pm. at the Wilcoxen
Funeral H&lt;:lne with the Rev. John
Icenbower officiating.
Burial will follow in the Leon
Cemetery at Leon .
Mr. Greenlee, a 53 year resident of
Mason County, was a Master Mason
and an associate of the Good
Shepherd United Methodist Church.
He was 30 year employe of the
Valley Line Co., where he served as
a first mate .
He was born at Leoo April26, 1926,
a son of Dwight L. Greenlee and

·a

Perfect weather will

992·2174

·Mayor's court~

2 Gallia
(Cootinued from page 1)
Dayton Children's Psychiatric
Hospital, $750 1000; Daytoo Mental
Healtll' Center, $.3 millioo, Fairhill
Mental Health Center, $'137,975, and
Fallsview Psychiatric Center,
$457,000.
J..mgview State Hospital, $3.4
mUiloo; Massilloo State Hospital,
$4.7 million; Millcreek Psychiatric
Center ,
$58,000;
Rollman
Psychiatric Hospital, $140,959;
Sagamore Hills, $14G,959; Toldo
Mental Health Center, $5.3 million;
Wstern Reserve Center, $4 .3
million; Woodside Receiving
Hospital, $745,000, Apple Creek
Center, $1.9 million; Broadview
Center, $1.6 mUlioo, Butler Cowtty
Center, $576,000; Cincinnati
Developmental Center, $7.4 mUIIon,
Batavia Developmental Center,
$572,000.
Cleveland Developmental Center,
$200,000; CohunbUll Center, $4.6
mUiloo ; Dayton Center fer Mentally
Retarded, $692,000; Gallipolis
Center, $1.6mUlloo; Mount Vernon
Center, $1.7 million! Nelsonville
Center, $1.5 millioo; Ncrth.west Ohio
Center, $182,000; Orient Center, $5.3
million; Springview Center , $1
mUllan; Tiffin Center, $1.3 million ;
Warrensville Center, $169,000,
Youngstown Center, $588,200, and
Portsmouth Receiving Hospital,
$371,475.
Board of Regentl' - Technical
equipment and energy cooservation
projects, $16 million.
lnstitutloos of Higher Learning
Capital Projects - Bowling Green
State, $7.9 million; University of
Akron, $28.3 million ; Central State,
$7.6 million; Cleveland State
University, $58 million; University
of Cincinnati, $49.1 million; Kent
State, $6.5 million; Wright State
University, $20 million, Miami
University, $22.7 million, Ohio
University, $14.3 million; Ohio State
University, $83.3 million, University
of Toledo, $22.6million, Youngstown
State, $20 million .
Medical Schools - Northeast Ohio
Universities College of Medicine,
$3.2million; Medical ~allege of Ohio
at Toledo, $15 million .
Community Colleges - Southern
State, $5.9 million; Shawnee State,
$5 million; Rio Grande, $4.2 million;
Sinclair, $8.7 million, Cuyahoga, $9.5
million ; Lakeland, $3.6 million,
IAlrain , $1 .9 million ; Edison State,
$3.1 million.
Technical Colleges- Washington,
$2 million;. Marion, $1.8 million;
Cincinnati, $4 million, Muskingum, .
$665,000, Hocking, $2.2 million,
Terra, $12.6 mUlion, Agricultural
Technical Institute, $2.4 million,
North Central, $3.5 million; Lima,
$750,000 ; Columbus, $6.8 million,
Clark, $1.7 million, Jefferson, $1.8
million; Michael J . Owens , $4
million ;· Stark, $6.3 million .
Agricultural Research and
D&lt;Jvelopmer . Center - renovation
and museum, $3.5 million.
/

i

Pearl B. TOOmas Greenlee, Leon,
who survive .
Other survivors include his wife,
TrUba Kimberling Greenlee; one
daughter, Darla May Greenlee, at
home; two sons, Charles Larry
Greenlee, Gallipolis Ferry, and
Lyman Greenlee, Belleville, Ill.; ooe
sister, Mrs. VadaCottrill, Leoo; two
brothers, Millard Greenlee, Leon,
and Gene Greenlee, Hazard, Ky.;
three grandchildren, Charles Scott
and Nathan James Greenlee,
Belleville, Ill., and Miranda Gail
Greenlee, Gallipolis Ferry; and
several nieces and nephews.
Friends may call at the Wilcoxen
Funeral Home after 4 p.m. today.

Eleven defendants forfeited bonds
posted on speeding charges in the ~
couri of Mlddll!plll'l Mayor Fred4
Hoffman Tuellday night.
!
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
charges were: Helen Fif;lds, New;
Haven, P-5; llodney Wh•te,
Bottom, '29; Larry Bausell,2
Galllpolls, $24; Thunas D. Crow,=
Middleport, $23; Kathryn Obllnger,1•
Pomeroy, ~; James E. Taylor,=
Pomeroy, $Z3; Either L. lleMoes,.
Porneroy, $Z3; Aletlla J. W11111er,:
Ractne, $22; Brenda Hysell,i~
Pomeroy, $3$; Cha~mcey Franklin,
Q-olllll City, t22. Fined tJ.O IUld coat.
oo a speeding charge was Jeffrey=
Beaver, Racine.
~
. Al8o tn the court Tueslay night~
Sruwuy Utile, Mlddlepart W&amp;l1 fined~
a25 ani! CIIIU 1111 dilllrderly 11l1111141'=
char.lle; Everett Huffman, Jr., no~
addreall rec«ded,farfelted a ~
bond pollild 111 the same charge and~
Wayne Stswart, Muon, W. Va.,•
forfeited a $150 lmd poeted on
reckleaa operatlm charge IUld a $too;;
bond polled on a po-"11m o~
marijuana charge.
·
·:j

Long=

PHYlLIS A. MULlEN
Phyllis A. Mullen, 64, 605 First
Ave ., Middleport, died Tuesday at
Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Mullen was born Dec. 9, 1915,
tlle daughter of the late John and
Inna Hulbert Dillard. She was alao
•
preceded in death by her husband,
Three defendants forfeited bo~
Dr. CharlesJ. Mullen and one sister,
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor::
Frances Fleming.
Clanlnce
Andrews Tuelday night..
~e is survived by four sisters,
They
were
Theodore Woods;
Dorohy J . Morris, Middleport;
Mlddlepm,
$40
posted oo a speedlJC;:
Hartense Jobb, Miami ; Janet
charp;
Vlctarla
Slack, Middleport.;:
. Wurser, Centerville; and &lt;llarlene ·
$32,
speedlnc,
and
Gerald Pooler~
Stoldenhoff, Cos Cob, Coon.; .two
Pomeroy,
'1110,
leaving
the scene ~=
trothers, John H. Dillard of Orlando
an
acddent.
;_
·and Roger Dillard of Pomeroy, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
••
iZ
Friday at I pm. at Ewtng Chapel.
TO
END
IIWUUAGES
Burial wcemetery. The family
In Melp County Ccmmon Pleu'
requests in lieu of flowers dmatkins
Court
Stepben Maynard, Mid.l
be made to the cancer 80Ciety.
dleport,
and Rebecca Lyna
Friends may call at the funeral
Maynard,
Middleport, 111ec1 for
home Thursday from Zto 4 and 7 to 9.
dlasolullon rl. marriage.
•
Grlll&amp;ed divorces were Julie Ri~
monel from Larry IUclwond, and
Pamela R. INgell from Jllllllll R~
InpJa, Jr. Tile llllrriqe d. Duaai
B. Wolle and Maqpe Ann Wolfe~
diaolved.
The Tuppers Plains Area
Emergency Squad hal started a
fund drive tn the area It will aerve.
VE'I'ERANS MEMORIAL
Areas covered will be Olive IUld ~
Admitted-Brtan
Bufflngtoq,
Orange Tollll8blpe .lllld Ute IICX them
Pomeroy; Mary Derenberger,.
half rl. Chester Tolmlhlp.
Pomeroy;, Frances Whittington, ,
Mooey railed will be used fat a
Middleport ; . Nonnan Lehew-,,
building to boule the emergency
Portland;
Be sale
Barnhart,vehicle.
Pomeroy;
Mary
Wellman,
Plans are being made to have the
Pomeroy; Walter Jrt, Viet)' Paul;!
emergency unit tn operation by the
WUI!am Clonch.
end rl. thl.s year. AU donatiOO&amp; will be
greaUy appreciated. Further in·
IIEE'I'II THUII8DA y
•
formation can be received by con·
The Metp CowJty Democrat c-'
tactlng Rick Gilmore at 667-a:ie or
tral Comrn!Uee will 11*1 at 7:30!
Helen Newland at 667 .QO&amp;.
p.m. 'lbunday at tbe ClrJ)enten:
Hall on E. Main St., Pwiwoy ,
· :

t\ surprising move

U. S. House rejects .$548.6 billion budget
WASHINGTON (AP I A
suddenly rebellious House is for cing
'Democratic leaders to take a second
look at a $548.6 billion 1980 budget
that went down to surprising defeat.
rejected the spending package, 213192,
W~dnesday
nightsas
Republicans joined with som e
emservative and liberal Democrats
in an unusual coalition against the
budget.
· The votes sends the budget back to
committee, where it is expected to
be changed only slightly before
being returned to tlle floor next
week . The 1980 budget year begtns

Oct. I.
TI1e unexpect ed rejection came
just hours after the House refused to
join th e Senate in raising defense
spending. However, the budget's
defeat seemed to result from
dissatisfaction with overall spending·
levels, rather Ulan from the defense
issue .

On a 62-36 vote Wednesday , tlle
Senate approved its $546.3 billion
version of th e \980 budg et,
containing 3 percent growtll in 1960
defense spending over and above
inflation. The Senate also included
non-binding 5 perC&lt;Jnt "real growtll"

·a

defense increases for flSCall981 and
1982.
The House budget would increase
1960 defense spending by a bout I
percent· after inflation.
Defeat or tlle budget clearly
caught members . of tlle House
Budget Committee by surprise. The
Democratic leadship had prevailed
oo virtually every vote until final
pa ~~ge..

"We were blindsided, " said Rep .
Steph en J . Solarz, 0 -N.Y., a
committee member. Solarz said
"modest .changes" in the spending
levels should be enough to g"in

•

e
VOL. XXVIII

NO. 111

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

More than 100 attend third
annual advocacy conference
By Bob Hoefllcb
·
More than 100 residents of
Jackson , Gallia and Meigs Counties
attended the third annual Personal
Advocacy Conference held Tuesday
night at the Holiday IM near
Gallipolis.
The event was staged by the three
county, Community Mental Health
operation with Mrs. Mary Skinner,
Personal Advocacy Coordinator for
the counties of Gallia , Jacksori and
Meigs as general chairman.
Following dinner, Mrs. Skinner
who emceed the event&gt; spoke on the
value of the volWJteer to love and ex·
tend friendship in the Personal Ad·
vocacy Program .
"Without the volunteer, there
would be no program," Mrs. Skinner
corrunented. She introduced various
guests including Juli Ormsby, Gallia
County program coordinator and
Tom Clay, coordinator in Jackson
County , llothofwhomspokebriefly.
PRJNCJP AL SPEAKERS - Some of the principals
of the tlllrd annual Personal AdvOcacy Conference held
Tuesday night a! the Holiday IM near Gallipolis in·
elude, I to r, Fran Frazier, state coordinator ol rom·
munity awareness of the Ohio Division for Retarded
Citizens ; M.rs . Mary Skinner, Middleport, Personal Ad·

CONfERENCE BEING HEIJJ
Represe ntalives of th• Meigs
Local School District's · Board of
Education and Teachers A5sociatlon
ar• in Columb;,. ioday conferring
with Bill Lewis. fed eral mediator,
assigned to hear the contract
!leUlemenl differences between tllr
board and the teachers.
. . Lewis was in Middleport Tu..day
and a conlerene&lt; was held between
the two groups from 3 to U p.m. A
second coofereoee was scheduled
for today at the Federal Mediation
BuDding, Busch Blvd., Colurnbu•.
Supt. David Gleason Is ropresentlng
the board at the cooforence and
· three members of the teachers
ntgotlatlog team were eiQ)ecled to
be at tb e session.
::::;:;:;:::;:::;:;:::;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:::::::;:;:::::;:

$102,687 suit
filed in court

Just what you've always wanted ... jackets, vests, shirts,
skirts, pants . . . all proportioned for your special figure .
Great styles .. . great colors . . . great fabrics .. . great prices.
Come in today ... we have a big selection for little women.
SWEATERS
SHIRTS
PANTS

Petite Sizes S·M· L
Petite Sizes S·M· L
Petite Sizes 6·16

~lberfelds . In

$16.00
From $19,00
From $14.00

Pomeroy

Dr. Bernard Niehm director of
consultation and education, cited ad·
vacates as "special people " and
touched upon the attitudes of 25
years ago when it was believed that
all handicapped persons should be
institutionalized. .
Proteges, he said, are sometimes
lonely and confused, as all people
are, but many times they have no
one to turn to for help.
Twenty.five years ago, people
were placed in institutioos 'because
they displayed inapprQpriate
behavior, were considered
dangerous or contagious, helpless,
couldn 1 be trained or were tax consumers," Dr. Niehm said.
· The attitude, he said, was : " Let's
build some institutioos and hire
some people to take care of them. "
Some people sti.II feel this-way, Dr.
Niehm remarked, but he pointed out
that today people with opportunity
can grow and can become tax

I

; :;: ::;~::;:;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~::.::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:·:::;:.·::::.:::;:;:::·:

has Sportswear Separates for You! ·

Republicans joined with 67
Democrats at both extremes of the
political spectrum in opposing tlle
spe nding package . Only four
Republicans voted with 188
Democrats for tlle budget.
The . defeated House spending
package called (or a $29.3 · Qillion
deficit and made no room for a tax
cut that Republicans had supported.
The Senate-passed budget
contained a $31'.6 billion deficit,
higher than the expected $30 billion
deficit for fiscal 1979. The .Senate
also rejected proposed tax cuts.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1979

Squad sponsoring
fund raising drive

trlssl®

for a 5 percent increase in 1960
defense spending alter inflation is
discounted .
Several congressmen said the
votes rejecting higher defense
spending reflected a desire in the
House to hold tlle budget deficit
below $30 billion and to retain
bargaining room with tlle Senate
when the two versions of the budget
get to a conference canmittee.
"We need this as a bargaining
chip ," said Rep. Norman Y. Mineta,
0-Calif.
The budget was defeated when 146

en tine

at

.

Are you a Petite Miss?

passage of tlle budget next week.
However'; Rep . James R. Jones, 0.
Okla ., anotller committee member,
said the panel miglit have to cut
about $2 billion in spending before
the budget can be passed .
The House, on a 2Zl·l91 vote
Wednesday;
defeated
an
amendment proposed by Rep.
SamuelS. Strattoo , 0-N .Y., to boost
defense outlays by $413 million in
fiscal 1960.
And in a 43-20 unrecorded vote, tlle
House turned down an amendment
by Rep. Eldon Rudd . R-Arir.., calling

Asuit in the amount of $102,687 has
been filed in Meigs Count y Common
Pleas Co urt for inj uries and
damages as the result or an acciden_t
on July 2, 1976 on SR 7 near Five
Points Grill. ,
Filing !he suit were Andrew J .
Gibbs, Donna Gibbs, and Vickie
Gibbs by her next fried, Andrew J .
Gibbs, all of Rt. I, Letart, W. Va .,
against Robert Lagucki, North Field
Center, Ohios.
~
A suit in the amount of $16,210.43
was filed by the Citizens Ntional
Bank, Middleport, against James R.
Pooler and Beverly Marlene Pooler.
,Middleport and George W. Collins as
treasurer of Meigs County.

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy&lt; Emergency Squad
was called to Dutchtown at 2:30p.m .
Wednesday lor Marion (Hammer)
Hawk who was taken to Holzer
Medical Center. At 2: 3Sthe squad
went to Ebenezer St., Pomeroy , for
I.A!Cmard Van Meter who was also
taken to Holzer Medical Center.

DEADLINE Oct. 6
The deadline for registering in the
November election is 9 p.m. Oct. 6.
All persons who have moved since
the last election or who have
changed their name via marriage
since the last election should stop by
the board of elections office located
~~~Pomeroy Masonic Temple.

vocacy Coordinator for Gallia , Jackson and Meigs
Countt•; theRe¥ . WlW...M

07
•

, .

F.,,. .

- advocate for five years; Jull Ormsby, Gallia County
Personal Advocacy Coordinator, and Richard G···-.r,
a protege for five ye;~rs, who gave~ opening~ .

House expecfed
·
b
•11
n
ve
l
to· apr
-...-......

~

~0

I

I

.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio ( AP ) - House
approval was expected today of a
major capital improvements bill
which some lawmakers are
beginning to call "a wish book."
It cleared the House Finance
Committee on Wednesday; 14-4 , with
a lot of pork barrel amendments and
in an atmosphere that approached
custody within 16 hours, he said.
comedy.
Peterson had been sent to Green
One member likened it to "buying
Bay Correctional Institution in 1971
for yourwife one of everything in the
from Taylor County, Wis ., lor
Sears &amp; Roebuc k catalog ."
burglary and auto theft.
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, R-Laura,
But first he escaped from custody
added seriously, however, tllat he
in September, 1977, in Wausau , Will. ,
thinks half of the projects never will
where Sheriff Louis Gianoli of
be built. Either that, or a big tax
Marathon County said he had been
increase is on Uie way, he predicted.
arrested on a burglary charge.
Language in the document, which
"His lawyer took him out of the,. grew in cost Wednesday from $764
&lt;;ourtroom, and . officers wanted to
million to $770.3 million , due to
put handcuffs on him, but the at·
committee-added projects, says
tomey objected," Glanoli said.
funds may not be released unless
"Petetson took a powder .:•
state tax revenue estimates, on tlle
Peterson fled down a corridor, and
wane lately, ensure that the money
authorities hesitatt&lt;l to fire shots at
will be there .
·
him for fear ' of hitting bystanders,
Even tllen, GOP Gov . James A.
the sherUI said.
Rhodes and the seven-member
"They called him the spiderman
Cootrolling Board, which has a
becauSe he could crawl all over the
Democratic majority , would · set
place," Gianoli said.
priorities.
A month after the Wausau in·
Four Republicans on the
cident, Peterson was in custody
committee, including Netzley, not
again in Chippewa Falls, Will.
' only had doubts about future state
He escaped by leaping froma
inccme. They also deplored allowing
second-&amp;ory window on the Chip- ·a group of eight persons make
pewa CoWJty Cpurthouse ..
dec isions on behalf of all
lawmakers.
Rep. Waldo Bennett Rose , R·
Lima, ranking GOP memb er,
accused himse If and other
lawmakers of "abdicating our

Wisconsin convict :
•
remains at large
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (AP ) - A
yoWlg Wisconsin convict with' a
talent for taking a powder was
reported Wednesday to have logged
another escape, disappearing from
Ross County Jail with five other
prisoners after a guard was overpowered.
All were recaptured by Wed·
nesday night except Robert Wiley
Peterson, 22, of Cadott, Wis .
Peterson was waiting !rial on an
attempted murder charge . Police
say shots were fired.at an Ohio highway patrol trooper Aug. 7 in Colwn·
bu.s while Peterson was allegedly
driving a car reported stolen in Eau
Claire, Wis.
Authorities said Peterson had fled
May 29 from custody of prison of·
fidals in Green Bay, Wis., while
being readied for a hearing on a
January escape from a prison at Fox
Ulke, Will·.
After the Ohio shooting, Pete,rson
was captured Aug. 21 in Gaston
County, N. C., where he was accused
of assault with a deadly weapon trying to strike a deputy sheriff with
a car.
Gaston County authorities
claimed Peterson's car was involved
in a chase with speeds reaching lOS
miles an hour.
He also was charged with carrying
a concealed weapon, possessing a
stolen car, driving without a license
and speeding.
In Chillicothe, Sheriff Thomas
Hamman said a jailer received a
minor hel!d cut in the pre-da wn jail
break. Five of tlle fugitives were in

Weather
Rain tonight and Friday, oc·
casionally heavy. Low tonight in the
mid 50s. High Friday in the upper
60s to low 70s. Ch~n·e-1if rain is 90
percent ~~night and riday.
EXTENDE OUTLOOK
Saturday through Monday:
Showers possible early Saturday.
Fair Sunday and Monday. Highs
In the 60s Saturdily and tn the mid
to upper 70s by Monday. Over·
night lows In the 40s early Satur·
day and In the low 50s by early
Monday.
~~

Two persons hurt
in traffic mishap

responsibilities.''

The
sweeping
proposal,
Two persons were injured in a one·
.
introduced
just
Tuesday
on
behalf of
vehicle accident in.Meigs County on
Rhodes,
cleared
tlle
committee
after
CR 12, two and six-tenths of a mile
just one hearing .
south of SR 124.
Nearly tllree dozen amendments
Called to the scene at 1:30 p.m.,
were
added, many ·or tllem by
the Gallia·Meigs ·Post,. Highway
committee
members seeking
Patrol, reports a north bound
projects
in
their
home districts.,
vehicle operated by Joyce E . Mc·
Rose,
despite
his
no
vote on the bill,
Clellan, 18, went out of control when
added
$125,000
for
canal
projects in
a bee flew in the window and stung
his
area.
thedriver.
•
Another $7.2 million, removed
The auto passed off the right side
from
the bUI Wednesday, will be put
of the roadway and struck a tree.
back
when the Youth Commission
McClellan and a passenger, Ran·
decides
what it wants to build. That
doll North, 31, Northup, displayed
would
hike
tlle package to $777.5
visible signs of injury and were tran·
million
,
compared
to $500 million tn
sported by SEOEMS to Holzer
tlle
capital
improvements
bill two
Medical Center.
years
ago
.
McClellan was admitted for treat·
The committee added one. major
ment of a laceration to the right
amendment
that didn't involve
forehead, and is listed in good con·
spending.
dition.
Rep . C.J. ·McLin Jr., D-Oayton,
North was treated lor a contusion
inserted
language requiring t!Jat IS
to the right upper eyelid and right
percent ofw1 stat~ construction
elbow, and released.
contracts and purchases be .awarded
The vehicle was demolished.
,),

•

to minority contractors. McLin is
one of the Legislature ' s most
influential blacks.
Rep . Robert J . Boggs, . 0Jefferson, added $000,000 for a
juvenile detention center in his home
county of Ashtabula , contingent on
tlle raising of a $500,000 local share.
Rep. WU!iam L. Mallory, 0·
Cincinnati, got the committee to go
along with $500,000 more for a
renovation at Holmes Hospital in
Cincinnati.
Rep. Thomas R. Johnson , R·
Camtridge, successfully amended
the bill to get $300,000 for
Muskingum County Community
College.
·
And so it welit.
Committee Chairman Myrl H.
Shoemaker, O.Bourneville •.declined
to comment on Rose's commnt tllat
the bUIIooked like "a wish book," or
that the funding is questionable. ·
He did tell the committee, as it
was about to adjourn, that the
measure inade him feel "like the
little boy whose mother had not
(house) broken him · in properly."

Stolen
vehicle
located
A 1977 Chrysler Cordoba owned by
George Hackett reportedly taken
Wednesday from a parking space at
Meigs High School has · been
recovered.
·
Sheriff James Proffitt said no
arrests have been made tn the in·
cident. The vehicle was found 10
minutes after it was reported stolen.
SherUf Proffitt today-issued a war·
ning after his office received several
complaints from residents in the
Letart Falls area regarding out of
county Insurance salesmen. Apparently some agents have gone to
homes of senior citizenl! claiming
they represent l\ledicare.
Complaints have been aired that
some salesmen exert pressure on
residents to pay $360 as a fire year
premiwn for insurance for Medicare
coverage.
Residents are asked to check with
local inauraf!.ce agents on any lnsuranee matters. before paying any
money for insurance.

1\t

producers.
"We need to be concerned about
some~. We all ~ care and
help, Dr. N1ehm swd an cmcllllion
as he urged full community
awareness.
The Rev. Wllliam Mlddleswart,
pastor of St. Paul Lutheran Church
in Pomeroy, an advocate for five
years, stressed that the needs of the
handicapped are the same as any
other person's. They need someone
to care, listen !pid scrneone to answer- someone kind, loving, firm,
patient, thepastorconunented.
"Make them feel needed; they are
needed," Rev · Middleswart stated
advising that the handicapped with
proper consideration and training
can find their niche in life.
Fran Frazier, State Coordinator of
Conununity Awareness of the Ohio
Division for Retarded Citizens, in
her talk stated that becoming an ad·
vocateisthemostimportantthinga

pe~=~-~~~~

~iv~~~

sometimes do not meet die "norrriil"
established by some people.
She Pointed out that "It 15 not
positive" not to be attracUve by
these norms and cited the vast
amount of money spent pn cosmetics
alone by people who want.lalbe
attractive.
She stressed while Ute hall·
dicapped are more than~·
they are, first and f~ (Wla.
and while they need the suppc. .
others, they, in turn, have something
they can give the advocate.
Ms. Frazier urged that the outside
prepare for those who are "Inside"
and that the proper approaCh to con·
diti'!f'S be taken so that peaple csn
be accepted as individuals.
To stand up and say, "I believe in
myself and what I'm doing" is the
first step to community awareness,
Ms. Frazier conunented. Advocates,
sbe stated, have accepted another
person in their lives. She urged ac·
tion by more people so that they can
leave as much in the world when
they are no longer here as they were
given by God when they were born.
"The greatest thing you can do by
the things you do and your acts is to
help another person grow,' ' she concluded.
Rounding out the conference were
several short talks by volunteers
and their special friends. Floral
theme napkin holders made by the
handicapped along with pots of ar·
tificial flowers, given as door prizes,
were used oo the tables.

more

ATTENDS FAlL FESTI\'AL
- James F. Alexander, U8iltut
dl~tor of llpeCial projlnDII for
• the Ohio ColllllliuloD OD Aline.
will attend a fall feaUval Oct. 5 at
the Melp County SeDior CIU..
BulltliDC In Pomeroy. Tbe [ltlbllc
Is Invited to attead tbe festml
wblcb features a nmber af ac:Uvltlea iDcladiDg pm-, eal,rtaiDJDeat and bomemade
p~ele.
),,

.

..,

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