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1

U.S. turns over Panama .Canal early today
BALBOA, Paorma 1 AP I _ The
United Sta!eij' turn ed over the
Panama Ca!lal Zone to. Panama
early today amid the clamor of
church bells and a shower of
fireworks as hulldreds of thousands
of Panamanians prepared to march
into the territory .
The bells began pealing at
midnight Sunday as the 646-squaremlle zone officia lly be came
Panamanian propert9 after 76 years
of U.S. jurisdictiOn . The fireworks
erupted from atop 650-foot Ancon
Hill , where a 1~oot flagpole was
erected for the hoistin g of a giant
Panamanian flag today .
The flag , ._,hich will be floodlit at
night, will be visible for miles
including from ships waiting i~
Panama Bay to enter the canal .
Thousands of Panamanians spent

~unday

n1ght partying 1n the
downtown area of the capitaL They
included busloads brought in from
the provinces for the symbolic
march of possesswn mto the zone
today .
The country 's 1.8 million people
were told it was their " patriotic
duty" to participate in the march .
The capital 's streets were decorated
with posters exhort ing "Everyone to
the Zone ." About 250,000 marchers
were expected .
Many of the American civilians in
the zone, known locally as Zooians,
were worried about the march.
" My dad said we should stay
inside today and that we should get
everything off the patio," said 1().
year-old Matthew Haught.
Canal pilot J ack Waters, who lives
near the marchers' route, said he

wdSll ·t sure whether he would go to
work today
" I'm supposed to take a ship
through today . I'm worried about
my family . Ther., ·s no way you can
control a crowd like that," Wers
sa1d .
The marchers' were to enter the
zone by along Fourth of July
Avenue, which the Panamanians
call Avenue of the Martyrs because
24 Panamanians died in battles with
U.S. troops during anti-American
riots in 1964.
The rioting, triggered by
Panamanian unhappiness over the
1903 treaty that gave the United
States the ca nal zone " in
perpetuity," led President Jolv!son
later in 1964 to commit the United
States to negotiating new pacts with
Gen .
Omar
T?rrijos,
the

•

e
VOL XXVIII NO. 118

Panamaman strongman .
IJnder the ne N treaties which
President Carter and Torrijos
signed in 19n, the Canal Zone
government went out of existence at
midnight Sunday and the 35 ,000
Americans livin ~ in the zone are
subject to Panamanian laws .
Panama takes over most basic
services in the area, aloog with the
operation of the ports and railroads
arid becomes landlord f&lt;r 996 houses
in which canal company employees
live .
A new U.S. government agency,
the Panama Canal Commission, will
operate the canal until the year 2000.
The United States also retains five
military bases occupying 109 square
miles of the zone and manned by
· 10,000 troops until the year 2000. and
the headquarters of the U .S .

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Loss )\won
CLEVELAND (AP ) - Peace
Corps Director Ric hard F .
Celeste, who last year lost the
race for the governor's office to
James A. Rhodes, doesn, think
the defeat will hurt future
political opportunities .
" I still have very strong ties
here and if I shoose to run for
governor in 1982, there would be a
strong team of support ," said the
fonner lieutenant governor.
Celeste, who spoke to a
profeasional ethics seminar at
the Case Western Reserve
University law school Saturday ,
admitted he was disappointed at
losing the election !Jilt denied he
was bitter .

Area canvassed
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) +
Student volunteers from Ohio
Slate University canvassed the
area during the weekend in an effort to sign up Columbus residents for the Neighborhood Crime
Alert Project.
The project is designed to teach
citizens how to spot crime, identify suspects and how to properly
report a crime.
An estimated 700 residents
signed up for the program. The
university area has the highest
crime rate in the city .

Contract _ratified
DETROIT ( AP) - Rank and
file members of the United Auto
Workers union ratified by a 2-1
margin · their new three-year
national wage agreement with
General Motors Corp ., union officials said Sunday .
The final tally BMOWICed Sun day night was 129,374 favoring
the new agreement and 51 ,391
against, the officiala said .
U AW president Douglas Fr~r
and vice president Irvii\g
Bluestone said GM had been formally notified of the ratification .
Of 152local unions voting on the
three-year pact, only two had not
yet reported their vote, Bluestone
said .

Ohioans involved
OOLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) Several Ohioans are involved in
the visit of Pope John Paul D to
the United States even though the
pontiff woo, be setting foot in the

state.
Blahop Edward J . Hemnann ,
who heads the Columbus Catholic
Diocese, will visit Chicago
Friday for a meeting between the
pope and bishops. Auxiliary
Blahop George A. Fulcher will a c company Herrmann .

Forest fire
season begins
CHilliCOTHE - The Fall forest
fire season is at hand .
Beginning October I and continuing through November 30, the
seasonal burning pennit Ia w states
that anyone kindling a fire in the
open, within 200 feet of grass or
woodland, outside the city limits,
mustfirst obtain a fire permit.
Bu.r ning permits are issued
without charge and may be obtained
from local Forest Fire Wardens or
Division of Forestry Offices. Such
permits are issued in accordance
with regulations printed on the front
of the permit. Certain of these
regulations are : Burning only when
wind and other weather conditions
are safe; burning only after 4 p .m .
(unless special permit ls first obtained) ; keeping tools on hand to
control the fire should it escape;
constructing a safety fire line
around the material to be burned;
remaining with the fire until it is out
or safely covered.
Careless debris burning continues
to be the number one cause of woods
and grass fires in Ohio. These fires
are man-eaused, so it is up to each of
us to do our part to assist in the
prevention of forest fires and the
conservatioo of Ohio 's natural
resources .

until Tuesday. He t old 8n airp!lrt
crowd that included President
Aristides Royo :
"The Panama Canal has made a
profound mark on my counlz'y. It ..,
served as a vital link between the
east and west of the United Statal
since the early part of this oentUI'1.
" Now Panama , too, will no Ioncer
be a country divided. "
Souvenir sell did a brisk lulln•
selling Canal Zone memento•
Sunday . One-ounce bottles of canal
water, some containing an oily film,
sold for $1 ·and envelopes bearlaC
Canal Zone stamps that hlldbec
cancelled on the last day of iiiUe
went for $5 .
A T ~ reading "Rest in Peace,
Zoo ian , Oct. I, 1979." and ahowtn&amp;a
gravestone was a big seller. So wu
ooe reading " Zonian : Endan&amp;ered
Species." ·

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, OCTOBER l, 1979

Weekend death toll hits 24
By The As~ed Press
SANDUSKY
Danny W.
Four acciden~ early Sunday ,
Schwanger . 22, of Sandusky , in a
in cludin g a double fatality in
motorcycle accident on at West
Clermont County and two separate
Monroe street in the c ity .
fatalities near Zanesville, boosted
BATAVIA - Nelson B. Houchin ,
Ohio' s weekend traffic death toll to
18, and Ronald E. Hewitt, 17, both of
- Bethel, in a one&lt;ar crash on a
24, the Highway Patrol said .
Clermont County road .
The patrol counts highwa y
ZANESVILLE Nancy L .
fatalities from 6 p.m . Friday until .
Kavage,
19,
of
Shadyside,
in a threemidnight Sunday.
ca r acc ident on Ohio 60 in
The dead :
Muskingurn County .
SUNDAY
GEORGETOWN Wayne L.
WILLOUGHBY HILLS - J oseph
Hayden, 46, Felicity, in a tw&lt;H:Br
Debbenak, 32. of Euclid , byclist hit
accident on Ohio 125 in Brown
by auto on Ohio 6.
County .
ZANESVILLE -· Scott M. Bintz,
six months, of Zanesville, in a twoca r accident on a Mus kingum
County road .
LOGAN - Phyliss A. Sparks , 25 ,
of Col urn bus, one-car accident on
Ohio 93 in Hockin g County .

Southern Command will continue to
be located there.
The head of the command , Lt.
Gen . Dennis P . McAuliffe, was
relieved Sunday by Maj. Gen .
Wallace H. Nutting 011' Sunday, and
.McAuliffe retired after 35 years in
the army to bec(IJle the new Canal
Coounission 's chief administrator .
The last governor of the Canal
Zone, Harold Parfitt, presided over
an emotional ceremony at sundown
Sunday in which the American flag
was lowered from the pole of honor
at
the
Canal
Company
administration I:Aiilding . of
Americans who gathered on tht
grassy hillside below the building tc
watch Parfitt perform his last
official act as governor .
Vice President Walter Mondale
arrived Sunday afternoon for the
final ceremonies and planned to stay

SATURDAY
BUCYRUS - Btlly D. Eldridge , 35,
of Tiro, in a two&lt;ar accident on Ohio
96 in Crawford County.
CINCINNATI - Estella Gaither ,
46, of Cincinnati, a pedestrian.
WARREN - Cassity Kozak, 3, of
Warren, in a single-car accident on a
Warren street.
FRANKUN- Karl Linville, 21, of
Franklin in a one&lt;ar accident on a
Warren County road.
Cll\SINNATI - Roger Noble, 43,
of Cincinnati, in a one car crash on a
city street.
WARREN - Leroy F . Johnson
Jr ., 32, of Newcastle, Pa ., in a ooecar accident in Trumbull County .
PERRYSBURG - Frank Condon,
74, of Perrysburg, when struck by a
car in Perrysburg .
JEFFERSON
Tim
A.
McDonald, 18, of Springfield, Pa ., in
a one&lt;ar accident in Ashtabula
County .
BOWLING GREEN - David
Everman, 29, of Ashland, Ky ., in a
one-car smashup in Wood County .
TOLEDO PbUUp Jamea
Varwig, 18, of Toledo, motorcycle
accident oo a city street.
FRIDAY NIGHT
WELLSTON - Daniel M. Davis, 17,
of Wellstoo , Donna Moore, !6,
Wellston, in a two&lt;ar accident on
Ohio ·327 in Jackson County .
COSHOCTON - Kenneth Shearn ,
18, of Warsaw, in a two&lt;ar crash on
U.S . 36 in Coshocton.
CINCINNATI -Connie Willmann,
9, a pedestrian , struck while
crossing acity street.
NAPOLEON - Lewis R . Rhoda ,
39, of Napoleon, and Betty Mollohan ,
36, of Napoleon, two&lt;ar accident on
U.S. 24 in Henr y County.

BREAKS $400 BARRIER
.. LONDON (AP)- Gold broke the
$400 barrier ID both Zurlcb and
L.oodoo today, hitting $402.50 an
ounce bl the Swiss wslness center
and $f01.50 ID the Brltl8h capital to
establish new rerords ID Europe.
.. Gold reached tbe $400 level
previously bl Hong Kong and New
York, and the new prices In London
and Zurich came as 110 surprise to
some traders who predicted prices
will reach $425 by the end of the
year.

Negotiators
meet today

NOEL HONORED -

Herbert

E. Noel Is being booored for Z5
years of .ervice, General
Telepbooe Co. of Oblo &amp;DDOUDCed
today. He IJ an loltaller-npairer
ID the RutlaDd exchange. 1be
Lucuville oaUve started biJ
caMr with Geaeral at Waverly.
He moved to tbiJ area Ill 1J5B. He
..aW.wlh,PII,III ......
Rel1Jert D., allll I lflii&amp;lrter, Lllldll Kay. They reside oa SR 1%4,
Pomeroy.

a-.

Fire destroys
mohi\_e home
Fire of undetermined origin
destroyed a 1970 mobile home
located on Homer Hill, SR 143, Sunday at approximately 2:30a.m . Sunday according to the Meigs County
Sherifi's Department.
The home was engulfed in flames
when the fire from the Rutland and
Pomeroy fire departments arrived.
The trailer was owned by Larry
Eblin, Gallipolis and was occupied
by the Charles Ohlinger family . The
family was not home 11t the time of
the fire .
"
The sheriff's department also
reported that Mrs. Paul Lewis, Rt. 2,
Racine, informed the department
regarding her son's 24 inch Schwinn
bicycle which was stolen Saturday
afternoon.
The bike is yellow with a black
seat. Anyone seeing the bike is asked
to call the sheriff's department. The
incident is under investigation.

A meeting of the Meigs Local
School District's negotiating teams
dealing with the settlement of a
teachers strike in the district was
scheduled for 3:30 p.m. today in
Nelsonville .
District Supt. David Gleason said
he received verification of the
meeting this afternoon this morning
from Bill Lewis, federal mediator,
with whom teams of the district
have meet twice previously. Apparently, little has been accomplished in those two previous

sessions.
The meeting is scheduled to be
held at the Hocking Valley Motor
Lodge .
Meantime, this morning, Supt.
Gleason repeated that district
"CbDoll caatlnue to nmaiD apen. He
reported atu4ent attwclanoe baa In·

Donald M. Robinson, 291 Jackson Pike, Galllpolls, was named acting
general manager of Buckeye Rural Electric Coop., Inc., at a special meeting
of the Board of Trustees on Saturday, Sept . 29.
Robinson was previously employed by
the BuUer Rural Electric Coop., Inc.,
Hamilton, Ohio from 1947 to 1960 and the
Jay County R.E.M .C. in Portland, Indiana
from 1950 to 1961 before coming to the
Buckeye Rural Electric Coperative in 1961
giving him thirty -two (32) years of service
with the Rural Electric Cooperatives.
He started his career with the Rural
Electric Cooperatives as Acountant and in
1971 was promoted to office manager, a
position he held up to the present time.
A graduate of Lemon Township High
School in Butler County he attended
Hamilton Busineas College in Hamilton,
Ohio.
Robinson served 1 ~years in the U.S. Army in World War D, three yeal"ll of which
were spent in the South Pacific area as a
staff sargeant.
His wife, Alver a is a lunchroom supervisor for the Gallipolis City
Schools. He i.s the father of Dr. Donald E. Robinson of Tulaa, Oklahoma and
the late Mallonee Robinson.
A member of the Gallipolis Rotltry Club, Gallipolis Golf Club, he Is on the
bollrd of directors of Galco, Inc . .
Robinson succeeds Clyde M. Ran.say, who served as general manager of
Buckeye Rural Electric for 32 years before his retirement earlier this year,

•

cle=es .

The strike moved into itll second
week today.
There were no
negotiating sessions held over tbt
weekend and teachers were on tbt
picket lines at tbe varlo111 bulldlnp
of the district again tbiJ IDOI'IIiniFriday evening's football 181111
with Logan and the band sbow ,.....
cancelled and tbe band which bid
planned to take put in bud cam-

patUon an&amp;atwdaJ i111fdltnn.,.
not pennl\tal t.o do 10.

Helicopter crash
probe underway
CIN CINNATI ( AP ) The
wreckage of a giant Army skycrane
helicopter which crashed and killed
four people Saturday was being
assembled today for shipment to
Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in
Dayton .
Army Maj . Roy Hoffman , the air
safety officer in charge of the crash
investigation, said the $2 rnillJon, 61).
foot aircraft would be reassembled
by military investigators to find out
why it lost its rotor and crashed near
the home of real estate developer
Oak Surber near Miamiville, setting
the oouse afire .
"There seems to be no doubt that
there was a rotor blade lost in
flight ," Hoffman said .
However, he said he did not know
what caused the blade, one of six on
the aircraft, to come loose.
"He lost the main rotor in flight.
That set up a vibration which rolled
the helicopter upside down . It was
I:Airning when it hit," said Chief
Warrant Officer Ed Metcalfe, who

:-:-:-:-:- .... :::-&lt;y::::::::::-: &lt;:&gt;&gt;:&lt;:-:&gt;,:,::;,:::-:::-:-:-:-:-:::-:-:::

Buckeye names Robinson
acting general manager

creased some and that one bulldlnl
has a 100 percent staff of pa11011111l.
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, president Ill
the Meigs Local School Dlltrlet
Teachers Assn ., this morniJI&amp;
reiterated that meaningful
education is not taking place in U.
schools of the • district and urpd
parents not to send their chil~ to

Stewart pleads
not guilty today
Tom Mathew Stewart, 31 , of near Cheater, entered an innocent plea
to murder charges when he appeared in the Meigs County Court this
morning .
Stewart i.s charged with murder in the gunshot death of his stepeon,
Keith Landers, 17, on the mornlnc of Sept. 18 at the home of Landel"ll '
mother, Mrs. Tom Stewart.
·
During this morning's hearing Stewart waa bound to the grand jury
and bond was CQntinued at $10,000. Hearing tbe cue was Judge
Michael Brame cl tbe Vinton County Court. Meigs County Court
Judge Charles Knight has removed himlelf from the cue.
Landers died of massive brain damage due to a gwllhot wound to
the head according to the report of Dr. John Ridgway, assisting county
coroner . The Stewarts were separated at the time of the shooting .

President to address nation
WASHING'roN (AP)- President , David .
White House spokarnan Dale
Carter is putting the finishing
Lllibach said he did not belleve
touches oo a nationally broadcast
Carter had sununoned any speech
lddress tonight dealing . with a
writers to the presidential retreat,
trlgade of Soviet troopa in Cuba, a
Indicating he waa working on the
situation CUban -President Fidel
apeech alone with his wife.
Castro calls an "invented crtals."
But while Cdmlnllllration activity
carter was returning to the W!llte
Houae today, where he will deliver
related to the Soviet brigade
the speech .. t 9 p.m. EDT, after
continued In Washington.
apendlng the weekend at Camp
(Continued on page 8)

-

•

was flying a second helicopter In
formation with the one that crashed .
The victims were identified by Ill
Army National Guard spokesnan aa
Capt . James E . Capps, 40, of
Birmingham, Ala ., the pilot; SUff
Sgt. Waymon Nixon, 34, of
Birmingham ; Capt Paul F. Edgar
Jr ., 35, of Harrisburg, Pa ., and SUff
Sgt. Allan K . Piatt, 32, of
Hummelstown , Pa.
Three women in the Surber home
at the time of the crash were treated
for shock at a Cincinnati Hospital.
They were Identified as June &amp;lrber,
Stephanie Hall, and Janice Grallam.
The helicopter was one of 10 belllt
transferred from the Alabama
National Guard to the Pennsylvania
National Guard installation at Fort
Indiantown Gap, Pa. The other
helicopters were ordered grounded.
"Everything we had i.s gone," uid
Mrs. Surber . " I don't even have a
pair of shoes. But the moat
important things which are gone.are
not that valuable - things like the
children's pictures and the thlnp
from when they were growln&amp; up."
Following the crash, Surber said
he talked with an Air Force captain
about the possibility of filinl
damage claims. He valued the
house , whose exterior was of qed
chestnut wood, at $300,000. He said
the coo tents were valued at an equal
amount.
:;:::::::::;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::"(«::

EXTENDED FQRECAST
Partly cloudy Wednesday. A
chance of showers Thurlday and
Friday .
Little
change
Ill
temperatures with highs in the 801
and lows in the 408.
;: ; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;: ;:;:;:; :;: ;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:;:~:-~:~~~~:~:;:;$

Weather
Cloudy with a chance of ilbowaa
tonight . LDw ID the mid 501. A7
morning with partial clearlni ill tilt
afternoon. High in the mid to upper
8011. The chance of rain • ptlctal
today, 40 percent tonight anct •
percent Tuelday.

SQIJADCAU.m
The Mlddleport&amp;llerpDq,....

wu called to 10t7 S. Second Aft•, It
9:22 a.m. Monday for Robin ·a.
Lewia, a medlcal patilat •

:•
taken to Vetetana Memoriel
Hollpltal.

.

("

\

�3- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport -Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct . I, 1979
STATEMENT OF
OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMFNT
AND
CIRCULATION
Titl e of Publi ca1ion ·
Tne Daily Sent in el and Sun
day Times Sentine l.
1

Time~ · Sentonel

da v

A
Publ• cation No . 145 960 . 2.

Date of Filing, Oct . 1, 19/'li .
J. Frequency of ISsue :
Monday through Frid.:~v
and Sunday A . No . of
issues published annually
307 . B . Annual subscription
p rice Ohio and W . Va.
$33 .00 , Elsewhere S38 .00

..
"We've added a few new practical courses for those entenng the profession sock darn1ng, do-lt-yourself auto repair, soup bone cookery, jean patching,
strike s1gn letter1ng .... "

-4 . Location of Known Of
fice bf Publication : 111
Cou rt Street , Pomeroy ,
Meigs County, Ohio 45769
.S . Location
of
the
H ea dQuarters or General
Business Offi ces of fhe
Pub I is hers
111
Court
Street, Pomer-oy , Meigs
County, Ohio 4.5769 .
6. Names and Complete
Addresses Of Publisher,
Editor. and Managing
Edi tor : Robert L. Wingett,
Syracuse, Ohio , Managing
Editor : Robert Hoef lic h,
Pomeroy , Ohio.
7 Owner : Oh io Valley
Publish i ng
Co .
Multimedia , Inc.
7. Stockholders owni ng 1
percent or more of total
shares outstanding : Fran
ces P Bunnelle, SCN Bank

Mailteller

Box 750, Columbia, sc
29202; Frances P . Bun nelle, Mary P . Sterling and
Alfred F. Burgess, Tr . u-

W .. C. Peace , SCN Bank

Carter seeking reelection support
COLUMB US, Ohio 1AP 1
President Carter is seekillg a strong
base of re..,lection support wtth
Democratic leaders in Ohio's
General Assembly .
Consider that in the past SI'Veral
months. he has met separately ill
Washingtor With House Speaker
Vernal G Riffe Jr., D-New Boston,
and Senate President Oliver Ocasek,
0-Akron, along with the chaJTmen of
the finance committees of both
chambers, Sen . Harry Meshel, 0 Youngstown, and Rep . Myrl H.
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville .
Shoemaker was mvited to a gospel
sing on the White House lawn . He
stayed in the natwn 's capital
overnight on Saturday , and wound
up in the President 's Sunday schoo l
class the next morning .
The legislative leaders said thetr
sessions with Carter were not
necessarily political . but dealt with
domestic problems and issues.
However, the fact of the1r
invitations attaches polittcal
significance, since they come from a
state where polls have shown Carter

eo uld lose badly to Sen . Edward M.
Kennedy, O-Mass. tn a 1980 primary
battle
for
the
Demo crati c
nomination .
Ohio's Democratic lllairman, W
Paul Tipps of Cin c tnnatt , ha s
mamtamed close corl ta c t with
Ca rter ever since the 1976
mauguration, and has been invited
to state dinners.
Tipps says he thmks Carter could
defeat Kennedy in Ohio, although
Pat Leahy , the state parly' s
executive director, said earlier th1s
year he thillks Kennedy would
throttle the President in an Ohio
primary .
Riffe met with the president alter
receiVIng a personal telephone call
from hlfii , to talk about problems of
Ohio's c"al mdustry and electnc
utilities stemming from federal
EPA a1r quality standards .
The speaker urged the prestdent to
act toward easing the standards,
and warned him of unfavorable
poltticlll fallout If he did not act. A
few weeks later , the federal EPA did

granl exceptions for two major
utthties in northern Ohio .
However , the federal agency
reportedly is looking with disfavor
upon a a new set of less stringent ,
statewtde standards, proposed last
month by the OhiO EPA .
Shoemaker, a Bible scholar from
rural Ross County, seemed
1mpressed by Carter's Sunday
school lesson .
He sa1d Carter talked about Paul,
and how 500 Christians refused to
come to his aid in Jerusalem in the
22nd and 23rd Chapters of llle Book
of Acts, when his life threatened .
Th e president said the refusal of the
Christians to help Paul brought " the
end of llle Christian Church tn
Je rusalem."
Shoemaker indicated he did not
think Carter was comparing his own
problems and Situation with those of
Paul.
But he saJd "I checked my Bible
when I got home to see if he was
telling tt like tl was. He had it right .
on the nail. He was well prepared ."

James' ·Statehouse report.
COLUMBUS - State Representative Ror James I D-ProctorviUe)
has released the results of a survey
he made on the subject of regulation
of rural electric cooperatives in the
fifty states.
Representative James, the Chairman of the Ohio House of Represen tatives' Public Utilities ColTIII'Iittee,
has introduced House Bill 726, which
would bring the twenty..,ight rural
electric cooperatives in Ohio under
the authority of the Puolic Utilities
Commision of Ohio, the PUCO.
"The results of my survey show
basically that regulation of rural
electric cooperatives ill taken for
gr9.11ted in the majority of the fortysix ' states that have rural coops,"
said Representative James. The survey included letters of inquiry to llle
twenty-five state public utilities
COOIIJlissions that regulate rurals in
some way and random telephone
calls to the other states.
The two states with the largest
nwnber of cooperatives, Texas with
eighty coops, and Iowa with sixtyone coops, both responded that their
rural cooperatives are subject to the
same rate and service regulation by
the commission as any other electric
utility operating ii1 the state. The
Public Utility Commission of Te~
commented that the regulation of
rurals has presented no particular
problems. The Iowa State Commerce Commission indicated that
rural cooperatives have been
regulated in Iowa since July, 1976.
In Iowa, the rural coops actually
supported regulation of rates in exchange for territorial protection.
Rural electric rates in Iowa, as in
Ohio, are slightly higher thBII the
rates of investor owned utilities
because rurals have higher costs
than major utilities. However, rural
coops do not make profits and do not
pay stockholders as major utilities
do. According to the Iowa State
Commerce Conunlssion, regulation
did not add to the cost of rural coops,
because the cops already have
available the infonnati011 needed for

purposes.
"'lbe~arg~ent made by the Ohio

~tory

Rural Electric Cooperatives, Inc.
that regulation will add substantially to coop's cost Is certainly
not true' In the light of Iowa's
. recent
experience,"
accord1ng
to
Representative James.
Other1tates Indicating that their
Qmmlssiollll do have regulatory
authority over rural cooperatiyes Include Indl111111 with fortY-two coops,
KAnia&amp; ' with . thlrty-'Bix coops,
with twenty-eight coops,

.

CO

w\Ul fleVell!een coopS,

with :twenty coops,
with twenty.four coops,
I

Arizona and Wyoming , both with ten
coops, Michigan and Virginia, both
with fifteen aoops, and West
Vtrginia, New Jersey, New Hampshire, and Delaware all with only
one coop .
"From the reaction of the Ohio
Rural Electnc Cooperatives, Inc .
and with the great effort and expense this corporation ill undertaking to oppose House Bill 726.
you would think that regulation of
the coops would be a fate worse than
death . However, it is obvious that in
other states, coops have adjusted to
state regulations. In fact, from my
survey, I have learned that state
regulation works well ."
Representative James offered
these quotes as proof. According to
the Arizona Corporation Commission's Utilities Director, " We
have not had any great problems in
this regulation and receive excellent
cooperation from the cooperatives ."
Accardi ng to the Director of the Oflice of Electnc Operations of the
Michigan Department of Commerce, ' Regulation of rural electric
cooperatives in Michigan has been
very satisfactory and of benefit to

• •

Washington today
WASmNGTON (API
. Good
news for taxpayers : Congress wants
to save $15 million . Bad news for
G Is : It will come from the
Pentagon's budget for mess hall
chow.
But not to worry . The troops won 't
go hungry ; they 'll just be eating less
hamburger, roasts and steaks .
The
House
Appropriation s
Committee, which recommended
the $15 million cut, says the savings
are the result of a presidential order
earlier this year for a governmentwide reduction in purchases of
"scarce food items such as beef and
raisins ."
That order is being translated by
llle Pentagon to mean a 25 percent
cut in the 8J million pounds of beef
bought annualiy for the armed

services.
About half the cuts are to be made
up by adding soybean products to
hamburger , the committee says.
Other substitutes include cheese,
chicken and pork.
A Pentagor personnel specialist,
who asked not to be named, said
tests show up to 20 percent of
hamburger can be replaced " and
it's virtually impossible 1or anyooe
to tell we've done it."
He said llle substitutioo program
is now getting underway in mess

t

halls around the world. "There are
some people offended by it ," he said,
but others, particularly doctors,
approve of it because soy hamburgers have less fat and
cholesterol.
The grocery cost cutback was
pro posed
as
part
of
the
Appropriations Committee's
recommendations fll' $130 billion ln
Pentagon spending for weapons,
manpower,
operations
and

maintenance and other areas.
It's the biggest appropriation
considered by Congress each year,
and the committee's report is• an
encyclopedia of interesting facts and
figures that get lost in debates over
aircraft carriers, MX missiles and
the like.
Here are some items from the bill
lllat may go largely unnoticed by
Congress:
- The search for recruits in an allvolunteer force isn't cheap. For 1980
the Pentagon is asking $608.4 million
in recruiting and advertising fuods
to attract 3l7,000males with no prior
service. Th&amp;t Ireaks down to a little
less than $2,000 per recruit. The
committee recommended the
overall amount be cut $1H million.

120056-460,

Mailteller

AC

Box

Columb ia . SC

750,

29202; Rober-! Bunnelle, P.
0 . Box 2090, Asheville, NC
28802 ; Cede and Co ., 80)( 20
Bowling Green Sta ., New
Yor~. NY 10004 ; Gear and
Co., c ·o State Bank and
T rus I. P . 0 . Bm1 1;00,
N ewa rk , NJ 07101 ; Gerlach
and Co, c -o Fir-st Nat 'l.
Ci ty Bank , Box 1781, Grand
Central Sta., New York,
NY
10015 ; Marion L .
Harris, Rt . 8,111 Pinecrest
Dr., Greenwood, SC 29646;
Henry and Co., c -o S. C
National
Bank,
Trust
Operations. P . 0 . Box 168,
Columbia, sc 19202; James

E

Jolley,

161

lngleoak

Lane, Green\/ i lle, SC 2'9615;

Roberl A. Jol ley. Jr , 161
l ngleoak Lane, Greenville ,

sc 29615 ; Dorothy

P . Ram ·

saur, 1 Rockingham Rd .,
Greenville ,
SC
29607 ;
Dorothy P. Ramsaur. J .
Kelly Sisk and
A . F.
Burgess. Tr U ·W R. C.
Peace, Bankers Trust of S.
C • P. 0 . Box 448 , Colum bia, sc 29202; Genevieve
Leake Sakas, 201 Chapman
Rd ., Chanticleer, Green

ville, SC 79605 ; J . Kelly
Sisk, P. 0 . BOX 1688, Green
ville. SC '1960'1 ; Suydam
and co., c -o Mfrs . Hanover
Trust, 40 Wail St.. New
York, NY 10015.
8. Known bOndhOlders,
mortages.
and
other
security liOiders owning or
holding I percent or more
of total amunt of bondi,
mortgages
or
other
securities .
Wa c hovia
8ank and
Trust Co .,

The
Private
Council
( P I Cl
Balance of Sta te
announci ng plans

Industry
tor the
( BOS J is
tor an in·
for mal co nference to be
held i n Columbus on Oc tober 11th and l ?th at tl'le
State Office Tower Lobby
H earing Room . The pur ·
pose ot this conference is to
dissem 1nate information on
the private sector initiative
program
(PS I P 1 under
Title VII oi ttte Com
prehe nsive Employment

Acl of 1978 &lt;CETA) . The
P;IC t1a s been assigned tt1e
task of fulfi lli ng two basic
ecenomic goals : to secure
more permanent jobs in the
private
sector
tor
the
e c onomically
disad ·
vantaged, who face special
ditt iculties in entering tt1e
labor market ; to attract a
.h igher and more effective
leve l of pr ivate sector in volvement in the publicly
subsidized employment
and training systems which
will be set up under each
PSI P program - with the
ex.pectation that this will
result in more training and
job opportunities 1n the
private sector for par ·
ti c ipants . All opportuniTies
for
the
disadvantaged
unemployed will be made
a\/ailable without regard to
race, creed, color , national
origin . se)(, age. handicap,
politi ca l affiliation, or
beliefs . The geographic
area to be ser\/ed is the 56
rural counties known as 1he
Balance of State { 80S). All
funded proie cts will ter ·
minate on September 30,
1980 . The informational
conferen ce will provide in terest
app11cants w i th
program and proposal in ·
format ion and forms . The
meeting times are 10 . 30
a .m . or 1 : 30 p .m. for both
day s _ These proposals are
to be submitted to PIC on
or before October 26, 1979.
Add i tional
information
may be obtained from
Mark Uher, PIC Liaison,
Department
of
Ad
ministrative Service, 30

East Broad Streel, 28th
Floor ,

Columbus.

Ohio

43215 .
(101 . I , It t"

On September 15, 1979, in
the Me igs County Probate
C.ourt , Case No 1.4,274 . Ed
na F . Schoenleb, JJJ Lasley
Street.
Pomeroy, OhiO
457b9 was appointment Ad ·
ministratrix with the Will
Annexed of the estate of
Mary Miller deceased, late
of Pom eroy , Meigs county ,
Ohio .
Robert E . Buc k
P r obate Judge -Clerk

(101 , 8,1 5Jic

Asheville, N.C .; E . Wallonr·-===:::=';:·,:Oc:o:;'·~·_,==-==~
Staunton,

Va.

E. -

Thomas Boles, Jr., Tr . uw

ASTRO•GRAPH

Ohio :

BerniceBedeOsol

Ewing T . Boles, Columbus.

Frances

A.

Nussbaum , Moultrie, Ga .;
Mussbaum ,
M .
E.
Moultrie, Ga ; Erie Allen
Taylor, Moultrie , Ga .;
Helen N . Artz, Moultrie ,
Ga .; Patricia
N . Lies,

Meye&lt; 's Addition lo the

Village of Racine , Ohio.
which al ley runs from
Third Street to Fourth
Street in said VIII ape; and ,

WHEREAS said alley
has not been used by the

general public and in the
opinion Of the 1e9islative
authority there ts good
cause for vacating ~ i d
alley and such v~Jca1ton
will not be detrimef1'tel to
the general interest{ and,
WHEREAS the VII age C1f
Racine is the owner of Lots
7 and 10 of Meyer 's Ad ·
d itlon to the VIllage of
Racine, and Roger- Adams ,
aka Roger L . Adams , Is the
owner C1f Lots 8 and 9 of
Meyer's Addition to the
Village of Racine,' which
properties are al l of the
properties that abut that
portion of said alley to be
vacated · and,

WHEkEAS

the

so ld

Roger Adl!lms. aka Roger
L Adams. and his wife ,
N"ancy Adams , have given
their written consent to
such vacation which con sent is duly filed with the
legislative auth~rity of the
Village of Ractne; NOW

THEREFORE,
BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF RACINE ,
STATE OF OHIO :

sect ion 1: That the alley
tnat divides Lots 7 and 10
from Lots 8 and 9 ot
Meyer' s Addition to the
Village of Racine, and
which runs from Third
Str-eet to Four-th Street . be
and the same hereb~ i5
vacated .
Section II : That This Or
dinance be ~Jnd remain in
force from and after the
earliest period allowed by

law.
•·
Passed this 4Th day 0'1"
September, 1979 .
Albert Hill Jr
President

ATTEST
Moe Cleland
Clerk

Months :

"'

10. Extent and Nature of
C i r culation :
A . Total No . Copies Prin

ted : 6.150
B . Paid Cir-culation :
1 Sales Through Dealers
and Carriers. Street Ven ·
dors and Counter Sales :

4,876 .
2

Ma i l

Subscr-iptions :

1,083
C.

To,al
Pa id
Cir
c ulation : S,959 .
D . Free Distr i bution by
Ma il, Car rier or- Other
Means Samples,
Com plim entary , and
Other
Free Copies : 28 .
E
Total Distribution :

5,987 .
F
Copies
Not
Distributed .
I Offi ce Use . Left 0\/er,
Unaccounted, Spoiled After
Printing : 138 .
2. Returns From News

Agents : 25 .
G. Tolal : 6, 150.
Acluat No. Copies of
Single Issue
Published
Nearest to Filing Date:
10. Extent and Nature ot
Circulation : 6, 150.
A . Total No . Copies Prin

ted : 4,832 .

·

B . Paid Circulation
1. Sales Through Dealers
And Carriers, Street Ven
dors Anc:J Counter Sales :

4,832.

2. Mail
1,030
C.

Subscriptions :

Total

Paid

Cir ·

culation : 5.868 .
0 . Fre-e Distribution By
Mall, Carr-ier or Other
Means Samples,
Com plimentary, and · Other
Free Copies : 28.
E. To,al Distribution :

5,896.
F.
copies
Not
Distributed ·
t. Office Use, Left Over,
Unaccounted. Spoiled After
Printing : 229.
2. Returns From New..,
Agents : 25.

G. Total : 6,150.
I
cer-tify
that
t 1u
statements made by me
above are correct •nd com ·

plete.

Robert L. Wingett

Publisher

(10) 1. lfc
Thomas
Masaryk
resigned as president of
Cze~hoslova:. •~ in 1935
because of his a . -

,

BLACK and grey male ger man shepherd
wear ing
stud ded colla r- , lost in
Un•on Ave . ar-ea . Call 992
288V after 5.

LOST DOG , Sept . 24. Mid
dleport . Shepherd collie ,

Tampa remains only unbeaten NFL team

black, white, tan . Ha s
license . Male . Answers to
Ben . Human~ Society . 99'2 ·

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
The game plan , Coach John
McKay admits, wasn 't exactly to go
out and win the first five games of

6260.

the season .

FOUND :

Sept . 25 in
Chester area . Female Irish
Setter wearing flea collarand regular black collar .
Humane Society, 992 ·6260 .

LOST : MELALE red lick
coOn hound . Eagle R idge
Bashan ar-ea . Answers to
Annie. 949 2694.

FOUND : MALE

lerrier ·

poodle at Old Town Creek .
949 2322 .

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max
dittmeter 10" on largest
end . $11 p -er ton. Bundled
slab . S10 per ton . Oellverec:J

to Ohio Pallet Co ., Rl . 2,

That, ip fact, is as many games as
the Tampa Bay Bu ccaneers won all
last year with basicaUy the same
team .
At thill stage, however, the Bucs
look like the giant-killers of the
National Football League .
They are the only unbeaten team .
They beat the Chicago Bears 17-13
Sunday, while the other previously
unbeatens - the Cleveland Browns,
Pittsburgh Steelers and Miami
Dolohins - were losing.

Cen tr&lt;:tl D!vtSJOfl
Cleveland, meanwhile . found Itself

But McKay shouidn '( forget whal
happened to the Wa s hliigt on
Redskins last yea r , though. The
Redskins got off to a IHl start and
L"uldn't hold on long enough to make
the playoffs.
Young
quarterba ck
Doug
Williams engiaeered Tampa Bay's
latest victory ;•lhrowing an eightyard touchd own pass to Iss a c
Hagins with 5:08 left in the game,
erasing a 13-10 deficit .
The Bears had gone ahead when
Vin ce Evans connected with Walter
Payton on a screen pass that
Cllvered 65 yards for a touchdown .
The victory kept the Bucs atop the
National Football Conference's

m a U'm~e -way t1e wtth the Stet~ lcr s
and th e llou s lon Oiler s for the AF('
Ceniial lead after losin ~ :J J. JO Ill
Houstoo . Plllsburgh lost tts first
game m fi ve to the Phtladelphta
F.agles. 17- H , and the Dolphms got
wh•pped by the New York J ets 11-27
In other NFL games , U1 e Dall as
Cowboys clobbered the Cmcinna \1
Bengals 38-13. the Oakland Ratders
whipped the Denver Broncos 27·3,
the IJJs Angeles Rams blanked the
St . IJJuis Cardinals 21.0, the Kansas
O&lt;y Chie fs defeated the Seattle
Seahawks 24-6 , ' the San Otego
Dlargers routed the San Franci sco

.

r M~et the Eastern Eagles ...

Charles Pyles
Mayor

OLD

FURNITURE ,

OLD COINS, pockel

"}

742 ·2331 .
SAW

..,.

logs .

; , ..

.,..

Payment upon delivery to
our yard, 7 : 30 to 3 : 30 week days . Blaney Hardwoods,

an'(thing . See or call Ru1h
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .

ANTIQUE POCKET wal
ches . Willing to PllY top
dollar . Ca l l
1-591 -1973
evenings .

WANTED :

JUNK .

Bat

terie5 , radiators , motors.
auto. trans . No Sunday
calls . 9A9·256J .

Today is Monday , Oct. I, the 274th ·
day of 1979. There are 91 days left in
the year .
Today's highlight in history :
On this date in 1949, llle People's
Republic of China was proclaimed
by the Communist leader, Mao Tsetung .
Or this date :
In 1800, Spaill ceded Louisiana to
France in a secret treaty .
In 1890, Congress transferred the
Weather Bureau from the Anny to
the Department of Agricuiture .
In 1908, Henry Ford introduced hts
famous Model-T Ford.
In 1928, the Soviet Union
inaugurated its first five-year plan
to increase farm and illdustrial
production .

~~~~~~DEVOTFll TO THF.

lN'fEIIln or
MEIGS-MASON 4REA

ROBERT IIOEFUCH
Clly Edtlo&lt;

PubU.bnt .tan1 ~•r:ept Saturday b)' n.. OlD
Valley PublbbJ.D&amp; Comp..y· Multimedia, lM .,
Ill Court SL, POmtfO)", ObM Ui7e. &amp;llDNI
Olfict- P..._ tft- %151. EdUort..l PltoAe
IIIWISl.
SecoW dan Jl'llll&amp;alt: paJd at P.meroy, ObAD.
Natlonaladvertilt.Dc reptneallllh·e, La.._

Altotllltt, 1111 EudJd lhe ., CltnlaDII, Olllo
MUS.

Sut.aipU.a nta: DeUvtrM by carrtcr
wbut· tvaU.bie 10 (Uti prr week. By MINII"
Rouk -.-lJaT CIUT1U" ~rvk-r: aat anlla~, (Me
moadt, ttM
T.. DOlly S..tiD&lt;' by IIIOlllo OOIG ud W...

Vlrgill.la, ne yNr IU .• ; Sb moaSU UUe;
lhre&lt; ...... IIUI. Elo&lt;wber&gt; ...... , oh
mootha . ... ; ~ IDOIIU. tll.• .
fbt. A•od•k-11 Pns~ II ndulvely nUlled
so lbP ut lor publkaUoo o1 all .,.. dllpl~
cftdlted tD tt.e aewpaper aad alM cbe leal
IWWI publiabed berdl.

Berry's World

AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 11)

The price you 're wllliniJ to PiiiY lor
what ~ou want today could far
e•ceed the value ol that whiCh
you desire . Don 't let your extra&gt;~ ­
agant•mpulses rule you .
PISCES (Feb. 20-lbrch 20) lit tle 01 reat \l&amp;lue wlll be accom plished today II your actions !ail
to match your Ideas. Put muscle
1nto you't plans Be 11 doer as well

u a.ttllnker .
ARIES (M•rch 21-Aprll 11) Be
logical In your Involvements
today and don't put excessive
ta•th In Lad~ Luck She Is slightly
tiCkle and could lei you down .

TAUIIUI (AprN 20-lilar 20) T•y

not to use flattery today to
obtain favor! or have others do
your bidding. They wm see
through your ploy and resent it

GEMINI (Mor 21-Jyno 20)

You 're an achtever today, bu)let
IJttlert sing your praises. Sell proclaimed plaudits are likely to
cost you wetl-wlshers
CANCEIIII ~June 21-Jul1 22) In
business maners you are both
capable ana shrewd toda y,
allhough when 11 comes to managing )'O'Ir resource. you tend to
be ••tra11agant. Be pruc:ten1 In
both lf811 .

UIO (JYir 23-A"'I. 22) Should

"'Gosh, ws. refreshing to meet someone who is
so ms. - - ,tiVel "

(NEWSP.t.PER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

------

AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
L.

W.

FUR ·
china,

2nd, Middleporl . OH . 9'12
3161

Baseball At A Gt.ance
By Tl'le Associa,ed Press

x Baltimore
Milwauk ee
Bos ton
N ew York
De tr oit
C I eve land
Toronto

SR 339, Barlow, OH . 678·
2980 .
ANTIQUES ,
NITURE, g lass ,

•••••

•• ••
•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

WI ·

ches, class r-ings, wedding
bands. diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J A . Wamsley ,

WANTED :

pomts when Bob Griese found Nat
ard Wtlbert Mongto mer y and a 48Me in the end zone from 6 yards out
ya rd field goal by barefoo&lt; ktcker
on
the final play of llle game.
Ton} Franklin, then held on to hand
Tom
Newton had a pair of !-yard
Pltlsburgh its first loss .
scoring
runs for New York, and the
The Steelers ha d gone ahead in the
Jets
got
the first six points of the
first quarter on a 7-yard scor ing rWl
game
when
Donald Dykes blocked a
by Stdney Thornton, but two Ter r y
George
.Roberts
punt and Johnny
Bradshaw illtercep tions and a pair
Lynn
found
it
in
the
end zone willl
of los t fumb les he lped keep
less
than
two
minutes
gone .
Pittsburgh off llle scoreboard agaill
33,
Bengalsl3
Cowboys
ontJI late m the game.
Scott Laidlaw scored oo a pair of
Bradshaw capped an 8().yard, sixshort
runs and Roger Staubaeh
pla-y drive wtth a 37-yard scoring
threw two scoring passes as the
toss to John ~'tal l worth wtth just I : 12
Cowboys stayed in a three-way tie
left .
wtth Washillgll&gt;n and Philadelphia
Jets 33, Dofphins 27
for the lead in the NFC East.
Richard Todd threw a 71-yard
Safety Randy Hughes set up
S&lt;'ormg bomb to Wesley Walker w1th
2 21 left to pla y that gave the J ets . Laidlaw 's first TD with a 611-yard
illterceptton return, and CQrnerback
the cushton they needed to beat
Aaron Mitchell returned an
prev i o usly
unbeaten
Miamt.
interception 36 yards to set up
Walker's only reception of the day
Staubach's first TD pass.
gave New York a 33-20 lead , a nd
Tony Dorsett picked up 119 yards
Miami cut the fina l margin to six
on 20 ca rries for Dallas.
Raiders 27, Broncos 3
Oakland ended a three-game
losmg streak by holding Denver to
one field goal, a 19-yarder by Jim
Tomer in llle second quarter .
Raiders light end Dave casper,
returnillg to the starting lineup after
rrussmg part of preseason over a
contract dispute, made a couple of
key receptions. He caught one TD
NATIONAL LEAGUE
pass from Stabler, a ?JI.yarder, and
EAST
W . L. Pet .
GB
helped set up one of Jim Breech's
x Pittsburgh
98 64 .605
two field goals with a 42-yard
Montreal
95 65 594 2
reception in the fourth period .
St . Lou is
86 16 .53 1 12
Philadelph irJ
84 78 519 1-4
Rams 21, cards 0
Ct11CdQO
80 82 .494 18
Cullen Bryant and Wendell Tyler
New Yo rk
63 99 389 35
each scored on !-yard runs to give
WEH
th e Rams a 14..() halftime lead, and
x Ci nc .nnali
90 71
559
HYouston
89 73 5-49 1 '2
the Los Angeles defense held St.
Los Angeles
79 83 .488 11 .,
Louis to 82 yards rushing for its flfst
San Francisco
7l 91
438 19 / '2
shutout of the season.
San Diego
68 93 427 n
Atlanta
66 9-4 .413 23• ·-,
Vin ce Ferragamo, substituting
x clinc hed d ivision title
late
in the game for Rams starter
Saturday's Games
Pat
Haden , threw a 27-yard
Montreal 3, Ph il adelpt1ia 2
Chi cago 7, Pittsbu rgh 6, 13 •nnings
touchdown pass to Billy Waddy .
New York 8, St . Louis 7
ha den had in jured a finger in the
A t lanta 2, Cincinnati 0
fourth quarter . , B
Houston 3, Los Angeles 9
The Rams' dej.ense mtercepled St.
San Franc i sea 6, Sa n Dif'.&gt;go 5
sunday's Games
LJJuis quarler)&gt;!!ck J\IIl Hart three
Pittsburgh 5, Chicago 3
tlfiies before he left the game in the
Philadelph •a 2, Montreal 0
fourth penod with a bruised right
New Yor-k 4, Sf Louis '1
A tlanta 7, Cin cinnati 2
shoulder .

•••
•• ••
•••••

call 992·7760 .

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec: . 21)
The pace you set getting out of
the stan•ng blocks today will be
admirable But do tie careful not
to tire too early and leave hall finished what you ' ve begun
CAPRICORN (O.C . 22-Jan. 11)
In
areas
where
you ·re
knowledgeable . the resu lt s
should be pr ofitable tor you ~ -- -- -today. In s•tualions whe1e you
tack expert1se. the oppos• te
could be true

you have to negotiate an Impor tant matter today. be careful not
to glvt •~•Y the store. Deal fair ·
ty, but a110 reallstipally.
VIRGO (A "'I. 23-hf*. 22) T'Y
not to make lavii h promisas
today In which you oHer something far greater 1n the future tor
that which you 're asking another
to do at present.

the Hed sklns beat the
Atlanta Falcon s 16-7, the Mtnnesota
Vtkmgs c'&lt;.lgell the DetrOit IJons l:l10, the BuffaloVJills rumped over the
Baltimore Culls :IJ-13 a nd U1e New
Orleans Sam ts downed the New
York Gtants 2~ -14 .
Tont~ht . New England plays at
(;reen Bay
Oilers 31, Browns 10
r:arl Campbell ran for 76 yards,
but he made the most of that
ya rdage, scorillg three touchdowns .
Two uf those scores. both on twoyard runs, came in Houston's 24pomt first half. The Oilers also
scored late m the half when J .C.
Wilson tntercepted a Bnan Sipe pass
and returned tt 34 yards for a
touchdown .
F.agles 17. Stcelers 14
Ph 1l adelph1a moved w a 17-7 le ad
on 1-yard TD runs by Leroy Harns

ice

t USPSl~l

date
SCORPIO (Oet. 24-Nov. 22)
Every1mg wtll be doled ou t to you
today 1n •ts proper proport•on If
you do htlle. don 't expect to ge1
a large return

:n-9,

boxes, brass beds, Iron
beds, destts, etc ., complete
households . Write M .D .
Miller . Rt . 4. Pomeroy or

102
95

Pc1.

57

66
b9
7l
16
81 RO
53 109

91
89
85

GB

642
590 8
569 11 1 1
5SO l:l 1 1

518 18
503 22
327 50 1 1

WEST

W,JIO!bo.

5-5, 135lbo.

JunlorLB

Junior Back

Jeff Saunders
Junior Back

Pirates take NL East race
with big assist from Phils
ByFREDROTHENBERG
AP Sports Writer
Pittsburgh's
veterans
and.
Philadelphia'a cagiest pitcher sent
the Pirates to the National League
East DwisJon title and eliminated
the youthful Montreal Expos lifter a
marvelous chase on the final day of
the reguiar season .
The Pirates beat th e Chtcago Cubs
!'&gt;-3 on the heroic s of 3&amp;-year-old
WWie Stargell and 3&amp;-year-&lt;Jld Bill
Robirulon Sunday, but needed llle
three-hit magic of Steve carlton of
the Phillies ll&gt; finally force Montreal
to call it a season .

" Hey, we voted Carlton a full
playoff share, didn 't we •" ktdded
Pirate catcher Steve Ntcosia after
he learned that carlton and hiS
Philadelphta mates had blanked the
E 1tpos 2..() .
"This ts a thing of beauty . I'm so
proud 'of these guys ," saJd Stargell.
who slammed hts 32nd hom er of the
season and added a sacrifice fly one
da y after making a costly throwillg
error and striktng out three times in
a ll&gt;ugh loss to the Cuoo .
The Saturday loss put the Pirates
and Expos even in the loss.., co lumn .
U the Expos CQUld have won Sunday,

Reds had little pep
last two ball games

ntE DAfi.V SENTINF...I .

October 2, 1171
ThiS com1ng year lady Luck w•ll
QI&gt;IB you a hand m proJects and
m&gt;~ o l vemen ts that are quite large
1n scope Don·t be afra1d to tack le suable enterpnses
LIBRA (Sept. 2:3·0ct. 23) You
tlave splend•d IBadBrshlp quah t•es today Unfortunately, you
may not call on your full poten 11&amp;1. Wh ere a l1rm hand IS called
for don 't ust1 a loose IJrlp Find
out more of what hes anead tor
you •n the year following your
birthday by send •ng lor your
copy of Astra -Graph letter Mall
S 1 lor ach to Astra-Graph . Box
489 . Aad•o C1ty StaliOn. N Y
10019 Be sure to specify birth

~!k·"

Pomer-oy 992 -2689.

fish aquarium w i 'h or
without filter . Call 992 ·3690

APPROVED :

Dothan, Ala .
Average No. Copies Each
Issue During Preceding 11

Lost and Found

WANTE 0 TO buy : us,ed

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Springfield, Mass .; First
Union
National
Bank ,
Opie,

Whereas, there has been
laid out In lhe pial C1f the
Village C1f Rac ine, Ohio, an
alley dividing Lots 7 and 10
trom Lon 8 and 9 C1f

110), I, 8, 15, 31c

Benjamin
Disraeli,
Englillh statesman and
Ashe\/ille, N . C.; Mass . man of letters, was born tn
Mutual Life Insurance Co. 1804 .

the cooperatives and their members."
Representative James com·
mented that he had introduced
House Bill 7~ in order to benefit the
rurals and their members. He noted
that at this time in Ohio, no state
agency
regulates the
rural
cooperaties' rates or service . "H a
member of a coop, who is basically a
consumer of the cop, has a grievance or even a question about rates or
service, he or she has no place to
turn outside the cooperative itself.
If the coops really worked so that
member-a&gt;nswners had a dominant
role in governing policy, I would say
this is sufficient, but unfortWJately,
this is not the case. Only state
regulation can effectively limit the
abtlity of a utility to take advantage
of the conswners i.n its service area .
Most of the olller states with rural
cooperatives have recognized that a
utilJty serving a particular area is
far too important and far too powerful to be left alone to regulate itself
without some killd of limit and
sujpervillion ," concluded Representative James .

ACI2114H57,

REQUESTS FOR
PROPOSALS
PRIVATE SECTOR
INITIATIVE PROGRAM
PRIVATE INDUHRY
COUNCIL

VILLAGE OF
RACINE
tiACINE, OHIO
OtiDINANCE
NO. US
TO VACATE THE ALLEY
THAT DIVIOES LOTS 7
AND 10 AND LOTS I AND9
OF MEYER'S ADDITION
TO THE VILLAGE OF
RACINE,
BETWEEN
THIRD STREET AND
FOURTH STREET .

CINCINNATI ( AP) - CinciMatt
Reds ouUielder George Foster says
the Reds didn't have much pep for
their last two games With the
Atlanta Braves , after clinching the
National League 's Western Division .
Knuckleball pttcher Phil Niekro,
21-20, set the Reds down 7-2 Sunday
while giving up home runs to Foster
and Rick Auerbach . They lost 2-0
Saturday,
" When we had games tO try to
clinch, I think we had more
adrenalin flowing ," said Foster.
"There was more mcentive to go out
there because we knew we needed
the game in the past co uple of
weeks.
"These last couple of games we
were going through the motions to
get them over with ."
The Reds, after clillching their
sixth division title in 10 years, were
looking forward to the opening
National League playoff game
Tuesday . The Pittsburgh Pirates
clinched the eastern division
Sunday, beating the Montreal
Expos.
Third baseman Ray Knight
insisted on playing the final games
despite sore knees and ankles. "I
wanted to play . I had 711 runs balled
in and I wanted to try for 80, and I
wanted to keep myself sharp ." ·
He didn't meet his goal of 80 .
Knight said there was no doubt the
Reds "let down."
"There is no doubt in my mind
we'll get back up," he added.
Foster said he J&gt;refers playing
Pittsburgh instead of Mootreal The
Reds hold an IH season edge over
the Pirates but SJ&gt;ht IHi with the
EIPQS .
"We've had success the last
CQuple of years againSt Pittsburgh
and the travel won 't be as much
compared to having to go to
Montreal. We'll be staying within
• the United States, we don't have to
:. go out of the country. I think we 'II
:..have· more confidence against
~' Pittsburgh than Montreal," Foster
'said.
" I think we 'll be pretty even,'' said
Knight . " We may have a lltUe better
defense ."
Fir.st year Manager John
McNamara looked back on the

season wtth pride .
" When I first ~ot to spring
training, I was impressed with the
way
everybody
worked, "
McN amara said . " I knew we were
going to surprise a few people and
this team really worked hard, ever
since the beginning of s pring
training ."

The city is throwing a pre-playoff
party for the Reds tonight , wiU1 a
parade .
f

FOOTBALL
National Football League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
American Conference
East
W. L. Pet . PF PA

Miami
New England
Buffalo
NY Jets
Baltimore

t
J I
J 2
2 J
4

0 .800 113
a . 750 116
0 .600 154
0 .400 120
0 5 .000 62

78
54
104
16-d
104

Centraw
Cle.,-eland
Houston
Pittsburgh
Cincinnat i

•

~an bii!90

4

1 0

4

I 0
t 0
0 5 0
West
4

Denver
Kansas City

Oakland
Seattle

I
J 2
J 2
2 J
I 4

0
0
0
0
0

.800 101 94
.800 117 108
.800 109 71
000 78 149
.800 142 81
.600 79 91
600 103 60

.400 78 11 2
.200 93 12 3

National conference
West

93
72
0
0 .800 114 67
0 .200 76 98
0 .000 58 118

Dallas

•

1 0

Philadelphia
Washington
St Loui~
NY Giants

4
4

1
I
4

I

0 5

.800 \12
.800 93

Central

Tampa Bay

1.00
600
.400
. 2.50
. 200

119
87
81
62
84

71
106
82

.600

S.t

78

Minnesota
Chicago
Green Bay
Detroit

l 0 0
J 2 0
2 J 0
1 J 0
1 • 0

LOS Angeles

3 1 0

Atlanta

2 3 0 .400 101 104

7J

125

West

they would have then made up two
games agmnst AUanta today . Nuw
the onlv one whose season will
con tinu~ 1s Pittsburgh, whtch begms
tts NL champtonship sene s Tuesday
rught against the Cinrillnalt Reds.
The la st t\IIlr the Ptrates won the
Nl. East, m 1975, they succumbed to
the Reds in three straight games.
"I' m very hapPy . 1 thank the good
Lord But now our work really
start:!." said Robi.nson , whose tworun single cemented the Plfates·
98th triumph of the season .
" We ' re good . Ci nc innati 1s
good ... If we get the pttching, we'll
wm tt ," &lt;;aid Pittsburgh Manager
Chuck Tanner .
He' s c ertainly got th e r elief
pttchillg mlanky Kent Tekulve, who
nailed down the VICtory for hiS 31st
save , tying the team record he set a
year ago . It was a lso hi s 93rd
appearan ce. two more than the
previous Pirate record he set last

season .
The Expos, the surprise leaders In
the dmsion much of the season, had
never finished better than fourth
place . This year, they fell two games
short of the top SJ&gt;Ot .
Greg Gross cracked a run -scorillg
double and Bake McBride h1t a
sacrifice fly for th e Phtlltes' runs .
Elsewhere m the Nl. , the San
U1ego Padres flfed thetr manager,
Ro ger Cratg, then beat San
Francisco &gt;-3 in 10 trmmgs; the New
York Mets downed S&lt; Low s 4-2 to
avotd 100 defeats; Houston edged
Los Ange les :&gt;-2 and Atlanta wpped
Cincinnati 7-2, wtth Joe and Phil
Niekro, respectively , each wmmng
hts 21st g ame .
A&lt;tros 3, Dodgers 2
Joe N1ekro. 21 -11, kept pace w1th
bs older brother when rookie Dan
Heep's sacnfice fly in the etghth
scored Jeff Leonard and broke a 2-2
lie .
HoustDn ended the Sl'ason m
second plaC1' with a w.&gt;-73 record.
best in the cl ub's hL&lt;tory . Los
Angeles, 79-83, suffered it first Ios1ng
season since 1968.
Mets 4, Cards 2
The Mets, winners of four straight
over St . Louis, remained at 99 losses.
F.lliott Maddox singled in a run wtth
two out in the ninth and circled the
bases on a three-base throwin g error
by catcher Terry Kennedy .
Padres 5, Giants 3
Gene Tenace 's 20th homer , a tworun shot in U1e lOth inning, carried
San Otego past San Francisco . The
Padres have sc heduled a news
Cllnference for today to announce a
new man&lt;:tger.

54)
)( Cali torn 1a
BH 7-4
Kansas. Citv
85 77 525 J
512 5
T ex as
83 79
M i nnesoti'\
82 80
506 6
73 87 . 456 14
Ct1icago
Seattle
67 95 . 414 21
Oakland
54 108 .JJ3 )4
x c linc hed d i vision t itle .
Saturday ' s Games
M ilwaukee 11, Minn esot a 8
N ew York 9 , T oron to -4
C l e&gt;~eland 4 , Balt imore 1
B os ton 8, Detr o1 1 5
Sea ttle 9, Chicago 2
Kansas City 6, Oakland 2
Texas 6, Calttorn 1a 3
Sunday 's. Games
Detro•t S, Boston 1
New York 9, Toronto 2
Cleve lan d 6. Balt 1mor e S, 11 1n
ni ngs
Ch1 cago 6 , Seattl e 1
M 1nne sota 5. Milwa u ket O
Oak land b. Kansas C•ty 5
Californirt ll . Te xa s 5

ENOOF REGULAR SEASON

1

Houston 3. Los Angeles 'l
San Diego 5, San Francisco 3, lO
1nnings

PREVENTION
IS lliE
BEST POLICY

END REGULAR SEASON
Quinn Buckner of the Milwaukee
!lucks was the ca ptam of the U .S.
Olympic basketball team that won
the 1976 gold m\)dal at Montreal.

Sports briefs:' . .
By Tht• Associatl"d Press

BASEBALL
PITTSBURGH 1AP I The
Pittsburgh Pirates. led by Willi e
Stargell and Bill Robinson ·s two
run s batted m apiece, clmched the
NatiOnal League East titl e by
beat tng the Chicago Cubs o-.J III the
regular season final e .
The Pirates' 98th Vlcto ry of the
season. coupled with seCil nd-place
Monueal 's ~ lc.ss to Philadelphia ,
sends the Pirate,; illW the best-&lt;Jfftve Natio'l"l Lea gue playoffs
Tuesda)' ill bncmnat t agamst the
West Dtvts lon cham piOn Reds .
The Expos' chaUenge ended in
Montreal where Steve Car lto n
handcuffed them on three htts . Greg
Gross cracked a run-scormg double
and Bake McBride added a sacrifi ce
fly off Expos are Steve Kogers.
SAN FRANCISCO I API - The
San Diego Padres fir ed Manager
Roger Crru g on the final day of th e
season and called a ne ws confer ence
for Monday to announ ce hts

succes31 r
In h1 s first season as Padres
manager in 1978, Crrug guided the
club to a fourthiJlace firiish in the
Nattonal League West and a 84-78
r ecord. Its best ever This sea son ,
the Padres finished fifth wtth a 68-93

mark .
NE W YORK 1AP I
R9y
Hartsfteld, manager of llle Toronto
Blue Jays since lllelf illception into
the major leagues in 1977, was fired
following llle last game of llle

S€ason .
The lllue Javs finiShed m last
pla ce in the Anierican League East
m each of the past three seasons.
The cl ub did not immediately

name a successor.
TENNIS
MARBELLA, Spaill t AP I - Bjorn
Borg of Sweden won the maug ural
$200,000 European Open Ten ni s
Tournament by defeating Italy 's
Adriano Panatta &amp;-2, &amp;-2, 7-5 .
In the doubles, Romarua 's Ilie
Nastase and Switzerland's Heinz
Gunthardt beat Borg and Manuel
Santana of Spaill &amp;-2, &gt;-7 .

As an Independent \nsurenc.e
aQencv, our- primary tunct\on \1
10 provide- poncl~ wnlcn efi&lt;H"d
fln rtncia l protect ion in case of
lOSS

But, we a lso have a v i tal In ·
re resr in l oss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caution and safety
preventive measures which can
keep th at ca r accident from hap·
pen1ng, that building fire from
starting , that home burglary
from oeing committed.
Prevention saves life . limb and
property ... and helps contr-ol In ·
surance costs and premiums .
When losses do occ ur, our
pol icy holders can cou nt on pro ·
le&lt;:ting and serving in time and
need But we st 11l say - pre\/en t•on is thebes t pol icy .

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
9'12-2143
101 W. Main
Pomeroy

SAVE
MONEY.

Cut heating and cooling costs

BEULAH RF~&lt;;ULTS
GROVE CITY , Ohw t AP !
Peppermmt and rider Harold Welch
won th e S7.000 9th race at Beulah
Park Sunday by &lt;wo lengths on a
slow track .
Pepperm tnt . owned by Ellen
Pavlish and tra med by W.N. Hennig ,
was always near th e leaders, th en
went wide entering the stretch and
wor going away . The winnmg time
was 1:10:2.
Peppermmt pa1d 11 f:BO . s;J.60, and
$3 .20. Capll!m's Rose placed second
and paid $J and $2.40, while B.F .'s
1AJunge placed third paying $2.60 .
The lOth race trifecta of 11.-2-4 paid
$1,562.10 .
Attendance was 5, 7i5 . The handle
was $667. 810 .

up to 30% with Certain-teed
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Come m now VYe"ll show
YO'J how to do the JOb
qu1ck.ly and eas1ty
Ban ~ 6"" lr1 •c lo. 15\.1" w•de and
'16" •ong cove• 48 SQ It
Ban s oerlor a1eo at 2:r lor
use Oelween 16'" or ?4- lrammg

NewQrleans 2 3 0 . AOO 1:11 119
San Francisco 0 5 o .000 89 137
Sunday's Games
New York Jets 33 , Mi~mi 27
Minnesota 13, Detr o i t 10
New Orteans 2-4, New York Giants

14

Phllade&lt;phi.a 17, Piltsburgh 14
Washing1on 16, A11anta 7

Buffalo 3J, Balli more ll
Houston 31. Cleveland 10

CEMENT BLOCK CO.

Tampla Bay 17, Chicago 13

Dallas 38. Cincinnatl13

MAIN ST.

Oakland 27 , Denver- J

Kansas City 24, Seattle 6

The Department Store ot Building Since 1915

Los Angeles 21, St . Loui~ 0

San Diego 31 , San Francisco9
Monday '' Games

'

" New England al Green Bay , (n 1

I '

I '

I
I

�~-The Dally Senlinel , Middleport -Pomeroy . u ., Oct. 1. 1979

r--- I Social Calendar

Birthdays

MONDAY
LETART EI.EMENTAHY PTO
Monday 7:30p.m . at sc hool.
OWNERS OF LOTS in Wells
Cemetery asked to attend a meeting
Monday at 7 p.m . at Pageville Town

Hall.
REVTV AL will be held at the
Asbury United Methodist Church,
Syracuse, Monday through Sunday.
The Rev. Jack Corn will be guest
speaker. Services are 7:30 p .m .
nightly .
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 170, E1ght
and Forty, Monday, 7:30p.m . at the
IUverboat Room , Athens County
Savings and Loan.
LA LECHE LEAGUE of Point
Pleasant to have meeting at the
home of Mrrs . Sarah Walters , 7:30
p.m . For more information, call
Mrs. Betsy Crank at 675-2n6 .

Brent Cubh

Missionary to speak

. I

I

I

I

MlDDLEPORT - The Rev . Brent
Cobb, a missionary to Korej', a.loog
with is wife, will speak at the Middleport Church of the Nazarene at 7
p . m. Wednesday .
The Rev . and Mrs. Cobb are now
home on furlough and are holdm~
services in chur;ches across the
United States and in Canada .
The Rev. Mr. Cobb has served for
the past four years as the
mission~~ry Dector of the Church of
Nazarene m the Republic of
Korea. He has traveled widely
amoog the ISO churches in Korea,
preaching and helping start new
churches. The REv . Mr. Cobb has
also taught classes at Korea
Nazarene Bible College and has
spoken on national radio daily for
several months .

me··

Mrs . Cobb has worked with
numerous women's groups and has
spoken at varioUB conventions and
seminars. She received her AB
degree from Asbury College in
WiLmore, Ky .
The Rev . Mr . Cobb received his
AB degree from Asbury College also
and then received his Master of
Divinit)· degree from the N82Brene
Theological Seminary. He also has
attended Yonsei University in Seoul,
Korea and graduated from the
Korean Lar~ge Institute of that
university.
The Cobbs have one son , Daniel
Jonathan and a daughter, Sarah
Jennifer. The service will include
slides narrated with taped voices.
music and sound effects . The public
IS invited

i

Health Review
By lamar C. MillM,D.O.
CIIDelal Alaoclate Professor
of Family Medicine
OWo Ulllwnlt, C.Ueco
of 01-...thkMedkb
MOREON AlLERGY
Question: Who or what type of person 118Ually suffers from allergies ?
Answer : As was mentioned in last
week's column, allergies have a
·prominent history of family
predominance. When the parents or
sibling:! have an allergy of any lund ,
the patient can be suspected of also
having an allergy. Only the strong
tendency to be allergic to something
is inherited, nd the specific allergy
For ellUilple, patient. may suspect
that they are allergic to penicillin
because their mother cr father was
allergic to that medicine . This is nd
always true. However, we would be
more cautious if other family members were also allergic to penicillin.
The question &lt;i "allergic personality" has often come up In
professional circles. A definite personality has never been associated
with allergic persons. Many theories
have been advanced by researchers
in attempts to pigeonhole allergy
people into certain personality
types, but no definite proof has been
established. Asthma sufferers have
often been classified as being
emotionally unstable, but this also
has never been established. We db
know, though, that there is such a
thing as psycogenic or emotionally
induced asthma .
Queston: I seem to have allergy
problems in the spring and then am
free of symptoms untU August or
September. What are the most common offending pollens at theM

times '
Answer: Trees . gra,..es, and
ragweed are .the most common offending inhalants in the temperate
zones ol the Midwest and the Northeastern part of our country. Tree
allergy usually begins in April and
ends in early June . Most grasses
begin to pollinate in late April or
early May and tenninate by midJuly. whereas ragweed begins to affect allergic persons tn mid-August
and the irritation ends either by the
first frost or sometime early 10 October . Skin tests are frequently
required to specifically identify the
pollen resonsible for causing the
particular difficulty . Unfortunately.
the agent.• which we have jlL'll
discussed are difficult to avoid, and,
therefore. specific medication is
required to make the individual
comfortable
Question : Have there been any
new developments m treatment in
recent years for allergy sufferers '
Answer : Not really . We are more
aware of the specific diagnosis with
the new RAST test, but so far there
have been no large steps forward in
the treatment of allergies. The first
line of defense still remains avoidance of the offending allergen (or
agent such as ragweed) . If this is not
possible or practical, then we resort
to medication such as an tihistamines or various cortlsones.
More complicated allergy problems
which do not repsond to tiM! above
treatment are then subjected to skin
te&lt;~tin~ and followed by regular injections to desensitize the individual
to the specific allergen to which he
or she is reacting .

Annual Halloween fare planned
POMEROY - The annual community Halloween party to be held
on Oct. '!I at the Rock Spring:!
Grllll8e hall was planned during a
meeting of the Rock Springs Better
Health Club Thursday at the home of
Mrs. BettJ Conkle.
Named to the committee to comPAULRUPE .

RECEIVES BADGE
FORT BENNING, Ga. - Pvt.
Paul B. Rupe, whose wife, Patricia,
lives in Pcmeroy, recently received
a Parachutist Badge upon completion of the three-week airborne
course at the U. S. Army Infantry
School, Fort Benning, Ga.
During the first week of trainlng,
students undergo a rigorous
physical training program and
receive instruction In the theory of
parachuting. The second week they
receive practical training by jumping from 34-foot and 250-loot
tewers. The final week Includes five
statlc.UO. parachute jwnps.
Rope'S father, Floyd J. Rope,
lives on Route I, Rutland . .

plete arrangements were Mrs. Martha King , Mrs. Diane Bartels an!¥
Mrs . Judy Humphreys . The Mg
salute and prayer with devotions by
Mrs. U.ttie Leonard opened the
meeting . Fourteen members and
three children were present at the
meeting .
Mrs. Helen Blackston had the
program using an article on the
Heimlick manuever along with
"Leukemia Cure" by Teresa Abbott; "Little League Elbow," Ethel
Grueser; ·'Outdated Thennometer''
by Mrs. U.ttie Leonard; "How to
Survive a Heart Attack" by Mrs.
King , Mrs. Humprheys and Sandy
Folmer. There was a humoroW!
reading by Beuna Grueser. The contest conducted by Mrs. Louise
Bearhs was won by Mrs. Nancy
Morris and Mrs. Lottie Leonard .

Thouf!t for today: It's the trade of
lawyers to · question everything,
yield nothing and talk by the hour President Thomas Jefferson, 17431826.

Charlie Brewer Jr., son of Mr . and
Mrs. Cllarlie (Diana) Brewer, Long
Quillen as an Arab, and Rhonda Conde in a space outBottom, celebrated his 4th birthday,
OOSTUME WTNNERS - These are the costume
fit Theme of the affairw'as "Around the World With
winners at the annual rush party of Beta Sigma Phi
Sept.IO,athishome.
~ta Sigma Phi" . Pledges are Vicki Ault, Darla
Charlie received many mce gifts,
Sorority, Ohio Eta Phi Chapter, held Thursday night at
Thomas, Nancy Clark, Joyce Quillen, Jenny Smith,
including a school bus cake .
Grace Episcopal Parish House in Pomeroy. From the
Pat Circle, Linda Faulk, Rhonda Conde and Lor1 WarRefreshments of cake, ice cream,
left are Kathy Cumins as a passport; Pat Circle in a
Scottish outfit; U.ri Warner, South America; Joyce
potato chips were served and games
ner .
were played
Those attending were his parents,
Mr . and Mrs. Charlie Brewer; grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor E . .
Young Jr , and Mr . and Mrs . James
presented the installing officer and
POMEROY - Several activities,
a local senior citizen , to be rememGoodrich;
great-grandmother
the new officers with gifts.
bered on their birthdays, Christmas
including participation in the post
Audrey Young; Bill, Vickie and MinHobin Campbell was appointed
contest for National Education
and other occasions .
dy Harris, Timothy and Kimberly
Americanism chairman. It was
It was noted that the junors
Week, were planned and officers for
Deem' Kathy, Chuckie, Julia and
noted that the Dominican Republic
the 1979-110 year were installed at (he
headed a drive to secure a dress
Brian Young; David, Paula , Angie
is the foreign relations country tO be
Wednesday night meeting of ~
parade flag for Scout Troop 249, and
and Susan Brewer; Brad Young,
studied
this year and the junlon~ will
Junior American Legion Auxiliary
a flag for the Meigs County court
Jani c e Young, John Brewer ,
be
collecting
pennies for the CARE
of Drew Webster Post 39, held at the
room.
Richard Warner , Ray, Dottie, Scotty home of Mrs. Veda Davis, advisor .
program there. Cards were signed
Installed by Ms . Pam Powers ,
and Heather JUBtls. Those sending
for Mica Jones and Billy Anderson.
past department jumor v1ce
The posters to carry out the
g1fts were his great uncle, Don
Robin Campbell reported that her
president, were Annie Wiles ,
slogan, "Teach All Children ," will
Young and Mrs. Warner .
scrapbook had received first place
be judged at the October meeting of
president; Barbara Wells, vice
in the Central Divi.'lioo, and that she
the senior Auxiliary and then will be
president ;
Robin
Campbell,
CHERVLPAPE
had received a stuffed beaver from
displayed in downtown windows for
secretary-treasurer;
Jennife r
Cheryl Pape celebrated her 6th National Education Week, Nov. 11the national convention .
Couch, sergeant-at-arms; Li»a
b1rt.hday on Sept. 11 with a family 17.
Mrs. Davis assisted by Annie
Wells, chaplain, and Charlotte
party . She was presented a Holly
W~es served potato chips, dip and
The Juniors "adopted" Bill Rovl.ehew, historian .
Hobbie cake baked by her grand- nak at Arcadia Nursing Home, Mi'-'
Kool-aid . Kim Patterson was a
Rhonda Reuter will be presented
mother, Mrs. Virginia Salser. Dorothy Leifheit, Orient State
guest
. Next meeting will be oo Nov .
her past president's pin on her first
Refreshmehts were served .
trip home from college. Mrs. Da,~s
Hospital , and Mrs . Eulalie Webster,
6.
Attending were her parents, Jim
and Judy Pape, her sister. Kristen ,
great-grandfather, r"'rl Autherson,
grandmother, Elva Oatley, grandparents, Mr . and Mrs . Nial Salser,
A challenge was given by the Rev .
Church of the NBUU'ene with the
The Meigs Area Holiness
John. Pat, John Jr ., Allen and Usa
Jim Broome, president, from II Cor.
Rev . Jim Broome, speaker.
Association held its annual fall kick Pape .
Tuesday. Jan . 22, Micldleport
7: I to hold the holiness banner high
off service Tuesday evening at the
Chery I also shared her birthday
in the corning year .
Church of the Nazarene with the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church .
celebration by distributing favors to
The rally preaching services
Rev . Uoyd Grirrun, speaker .
There were 160 persons in ather first grade class at Syracuse tendance at the semce which
scheduled were as follows : Tuesday,
The indoor camp meeting wa.s
Elementary-School.
Oct. 23, Danville Wesleyan Church
scheduled for reb. HO at the
opened with a time of singing in
with the Rev . John Coffman as the
which each church represented parllutland Church of the Nazare""
ticipated
.
speaker.
with
the Rev . and Mrs. Lassell a.s
Memorkii service IJe/d
Tuesday, Nov . 'l:l , Pomeroy ChurThe Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
evangelists .
Church won the attendance banner
ch of the Nazarene with the Rev . R
Revivals of the individual chura/ .w mn·fl' meeting
D. Brown as the speaker .
with the percentage banner going to
ches announced were :
the Pomeroy Church of the
Wednesday, Dec. 26, Syracuse
Chester Church of the Nazarene,
A candleiJght service for Mrs. Phil
Nazare:w.
Oct . 1-14, with the Rev . Richard
Mullen, a charter member, and Mrs
James of Mt. Vernon as the
Marcia Hobstetter, sponsor, as held
evangelist.
at the Thursday night meeting of the
Middleport Church of the
Preceptor Beta Beta Chapter of
N82Brene, Oct. 1().21 , with the Rev.
Beta Si!\!Tla Ph1 held in the RiverEdna West, Colorado Springa , Colo .,
The Athens County Museum Cor Her Athens Seminar wlU be held in
boat ROOm of the Athens County
as
evangelist.
poration is sponsoring an Antiques
the Fellowship Hall of the First
Savings and Loan Co., Pomeroy ofSyracuse
Church ol the Naz.arene,
Seminar with Mrs . Orva HeissenChristian Church Wednsday, Oct. 17
fice.
Oct . 1&amp;-21, with the Rev . Gene
at 11 a .m . to 3:30p.m. and 7:30p.m .
buttel as its speaker.
Mrs . Mary Morris read the
Oarke, Findlay , evangelist.
to 9:30 p.m . Her topic will be "Quilts
Mrs.
Heissenbuttel
is
a
native
of
memorial meditation . It was voted
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Olurand Coverlets." On Thursday, Oct.
Southeastern
Ohio
but
now
resides
in
to make contributions to the Meigs
ch,
Oct. 24-21!, With the Rev . James
16,
se'"ions
on
"Glass
of
All
Types
Washir)gton , D.C. She is an author
County Unit of the Ame rican Cancer
Mason.
Canton, evangelist.
and
Kinds
"
will
be
held
from
9:30
and lecturer of note and is highly
Society in their honor .
Rutland
Church of the Nazarene,
until noon and from I to 3 p.m .
recommended .
Present at the meeting was Rick
Oct
.
30-Nov
. 4. Rev . Gene Clarke,
Participants may take two items
Williamson whb reported on
Findlay,
evangelist.
for identification, discussion or
Buckeye Boys' State. He was sponexhibition. The fee is $.1 for one
sored by the chapter. Accompanying
session or $10 for all four sessions .
RACJNE
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jim
him to the meeting was his mother,
HOW'S YOUR
Those attending too Thursday
Alley , racine, announce the birth of
Mrs . Donna WiU1arnson .
sessions
are
asked
to
take
a
sack
a daughter, Angela Ranee, born
HOSPIIALIZATION?
The chapter voted to purchase a
lunch .
'!I,
at
Holzer
Medical
Center
.
Sept.
ticket for the Rio Grande College ArCALLMIIllliJI.C'\
Furlher information may be obThe infant weighed seven pounds
ts and Lectures Series. Mrs . Maidie
tained
from
Miss
Florence
Brewer.
and one and one-half ounces and
Mora reported on a hayride planned
finance chairman for the Athens
measured 19 inches inengt.h.
for Oct. 7 at 7 p.m ., and Mrs . Ann
County Museum Corporation, 21
Maternal grandparents are Mr.
Rupe, ways and means committee,
~J!!-e;··
Grand
Park Blvd ., Athens, Ohio
and
Mrs
.
Joseph
Bowers,
Reednoted the cookbook sale . She said
r.regg 1blis
45701.
sville.
Paternal
grandparents
are
that the books are on display at the
991-3443
Mr . and Mrs . James Alley, Racine.
New York Clothing Store and orders
are now being taken .
Mrs . Roberta O'Brien and Mrs .

National Education Week activities planned

XI GAMMA MU Sorority will have
a barbecue Tuesday at 7:30 p . at the
home of Cathy Johnson .
TIJESDAY
RUSS AND GOSPEL TONES will
be singing at North Bethel United
Methodist Church Tuesday at 7:30

Next meeting will be hosted by Mrs .
Pearl Welker and Mrs . Margaret
Follrod . Mrs . Pat Mill will present
the program on Russia .

RUMMAGE SALE SLATED
There will be a rummage sale
Wednesday frcm 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . at
St. Paul Lutheran Church.

TROPICAL PLANTS

meonspicuous spot before diving in .
Perhaps the s uggested remedy for
By Polly Cramer
heat marks on lacquer would solve
POLLY'S CORNER
your
problem . Mil powdere d
DEAR POLLY - I used to keep a
pumice and linseed oil and rub the
vase on my Chinese black lacquer
mark.s --:- always rubbing with -the
table but it left a ring I cannot
grain
of the wood . - F'OLL Y
remove . I have tried using mayon.
DEAR
POLLY - I store ice cubes
n~~ise, petroleum jelly, etc ., on it but
in
my
freezer
in brown paper
nothing has helped . - ESTELLE
grocery
baga
.
The
cubes stay
DEAR ESTELLE - Do proceed
separated
and
one
or
all
can be used
with ca uti•111 and test anything on an
.'
VASE LEFT ITS MARK

WEDNESDAY
SOUTHEAST 01-UO Garden Tractor Club Wednesday , 7:30 p.m . in
scout building located behind the
firehouse in ell ester. All interested
persons are invited to attend.

1

OPTOMETRIST

l

I

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
ON THURS . ) ~ EAST COURT ST., POMEROY .

I
1

I

.
------·
li. -------------------~-----

..

BRAUNSCHWEIGER.............~~-. 59~

Whole lb. '1.39

TAVERN HAMS·············Half lb.

'1.49
Sliced lb. '1.89

WE DO CUSTOM MEAT CUTTING

U. S. NO. 1

20 LB

POT ATOES·····························

ON IONS ............................:.L.8:.. 49~
GOLD DELICIOUS
bushel $299
A PPL.'1..;£5 ...................................
.
1/2

DEL

GOLD DE LIClOUS

SALE DATES OCTOBER 1ST THRU OCTOBER 6TH, 1979

VAUGHAN'S

ardinal

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

OEl MONTE

FRUIT COCKTAIL., .... -- .... , •••.,., ..... ,,.

lltNIEA,.PLl/GftAPEfA\Jil PINEAPPU / Oi:IANGE P INK PIII.IEAPPLE

PUDDIIG CUPS... ........... .................. 4 .~,

5th st., New Haven. W.va.

ANNOUNCES ARRIVAL OF INFANTS &amp; TODDLERS
SHIRTS, PANTS AND 1WO PIECE OUTFITS
PRICED •3" TO '1 095

VEOETABLE

......

ALSO LOVELY GIRLS DRESSES
1\RICED FROM '4 75 . TO '9 95
Now Open Monday Evenings Tll7:30
Tues., Wed., Fri. &amp; Sat .• 10:30 to · - Closed Thurs.

•

Coffee ____-.__ -___ .___.---.~ ?_ -~~... s445

~

WHOLE OR ASSORTED

PUFFS FACIAL TISSUE •••••••••••••••..• ~.~; •.59
TRASH BAGS.••••••••••••••••••••~~.st~ .............. 99
NUSOFT
33 ct
FABRIC
SOFTENER...............................
. 89~

$}

~ 16-oz.$IOO

~Cans -

..
~

u--

d

5

z

~

Cl

I.Jrftj j -

'""'

•

~

0

01217100

•

3can

YELLOW CliNG SliCED OR HALVES

29-oz.

d

0

11-oa

JIF PEANUT BUnER-- .-- .-- -. -.. -... -.-- ------ .-. --- ---.-. __ .. .. .....

99'!

'I M

~

0

J ..

~

, •. 79&lt;

13 '1'1 ·oz.7ftt

MunER BUnER COOKIES --.- --- ·-·- -· ----- --- · --· -- ·-· · --·--- ··- · -... -,"'" '1" Gollon
12Jt
HARDIN APPLE CIDER .. ____ ._ .. -.-.. -......... -..... _._a~:;:
Juu
lb.

s

00

MARGARINE ........................... 2 ern. 1

WOLFE'S GREENHOUSE

HOURS 9-5 MON .-SAT.
SR 124, If• mile past Southern High School on the right.

COTTAGE CHEESE ••••••••••••••••. .1.6.~-~t.n. 79
Cardinal ·

$ S9

1

MILK ••••••••••••••••••••.••••.••.•••...••••g~: .. 1
gal

2% MILK •••••••••·•••••••••••.••••••• ~.
Borden

$

ALL NATURAL

ICE CREAM. .................. .'~c?n"

1

AU. WEEK

4

s169

.,
1

TAB, SPRITE OR

COKE
Valley Bell

ICE CREAM

8

16 oz.
bottles

••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ;~.~~~. $}49 -

ORE-IDA REG. OR CRINKLE CUT

FRENCH FRIES············
-.

5

~

CAROI~Al \IS"

z

SMOOTH OR CRUNCMY

Blue Bonnet _

5' ~79(~
00 20 06 :;;

lb.

Valley Bell

89'

Maull House

NABISCO IlLLA WAFERS .... -.-..-- .. -------- -----··---- --- .. --. ----"'•

-5' to 6' Rubber Trees
-5' to 6' Scheffelery Trees
&lt;Umbrella Tree)
-Yucca canes
- Massangeana Tips
(Those are in 4 ga I. tubs)
-Dieffenbachia (DumbOne)
-10" Hanging Ferns
--6" Tropical Plants
-Gra fted.C::acti

Con

KEEBLER

Borden Fresh
882-3410

VARIITIU

01

79(
59(

Club Crackers._ ....... __....... -~~..~ .....

CHICKEN BARBECUE

WATERMELON PATCH

Con
q

DEL MOITE JUICES •- ••-- •·--., --., ,.,, ,.. ,,••.
Oil MONTI &amp;IIORTID

30-ot

Nestea Instant ....................~.~..~ '2-

\-

QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

•Sweet Peaa

ALSO VARIETY APPLES IN HALF BUSHELS AND BUSHELS

Ubby's Pumpkin_--------·----·--... ·-·-·. __~- ~- ~.. 59'
w

e&lt;:ut Green Been•
ewhole Kernel Corn
•French Style Green Boon•
e&lt;:roem Style Corn

APPLES .............................~~~~~~.$4 t9

Greal Northern 8eans ........................ 2 jarlb. 794
Del Monte, Tomatoes ......................~~. ~.:.~~. 4~
Del Monte
Z16 oz. 9'
Stewed Tomatoes ................. ---·--·------ cans 8 _

Can

SETSATIJRDAY
The New Haven Volunteer Fire
Department Auxiliary will have a
chicken barbecue on Saturday at the
fire station. Serving will begin at 11
a .m . and continue until all the
chicken is sold. Also on the menu
will be hot dogs, potato salad and
baked beans.

$1 39

YELLOW

NABISCO

PLANS WILL BE MADE
Plans for a receptiOn honoring
Louise Stewart, district president ,
will be made at a meeting of Racine
Chapter 124, Order of ihe Eastern
Star, tonight at 7:30p.m. The reception will be held on Oct. 6 at Southern
High &amp;hool. Officers will be elected
and dues are payable to tonight's
meeting .

~,

---------------------------1
~--~N. W. COMPTON, O.D. l

SUPERIORS

12 oz. 89"
CHICKEN WIENERS...........................
,.
_

DEAR POLLY - When making
potato salad I peel · and wash the
potatoes, cut them into cubes and
th&lt;!n cook. 'l'his avoids having to handle hot potatoes and they cook in half
the lime . The potatoes also cool .
quicker and this helps JPCed up the
final preparations . - MARILYN
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer. Peeve or Problem in her
column

BACON ........................ ~~-~~-.. 79¢

TYSON

.f?.;...

EJeanor Thomas were hostesses .

Polly Cramer

FRYERS ..................................

suPERIORs

at any time . - BETTY
DEAR BETTY - This has long
been tiM! way my sister-in4aw stores
extra 1ce cubes . She, too, likes it better than any other way sbe has tried .
- POLLt

POLLY·s POINTERS

LB.

WHOLE OR BUDGET PAK

Antiques seminar slated

#Omilhil~

POMEHUY LliAMI:lEH of COJh merce Tuesday at noon at Me igs
Inn .
RACINE VIllAGE COUNCIL
Tuesday at 7 p. m . at Racine Fire
Station. Fall festival plans to be
made . Any non-profit organization
of the Hacine area who WlSh to partici pate in the festival are as ked to
attend .
MIDDI.EF'ORT Garden Cl ub, harvest dinner Tuesday at 6 :30p.m at
the fire house in Middleport. Mrs.
Dorothy Roller will be hostess . Mrs.
Jean ne Bowen will talk on
"Corn "and show some crafts .
POMEROY Chapter 1116 OES , 7:45
Tuesday night at the Mas onic Temple. Election of officers. Dues are
payable.
WEDNESDAY
UNITED Methodist Women,
Letart F~lls Church, to meet Wed nesday at 7:30p.m. at the home of
Mrs. Bert Grimm . All members are
urged to attend to make plans for the
new year.

HOMEMAKERs uNuMnEn
Cl.ub Tuesday 7:30p.m . at Athens
Cowlty Savmgs and Loan . Program
on dried nuwer arrangements .
Public inviled .
POHTLAND PTO Tuesday 7:30
p.m . J ohn Constamo w11l be
speak in g during the parent
awareness session . Plans for fall
carnival will be finalized Everyone
welcome to attend .
RUSS AND THE Gospel Tones
Sunday at 7: 30 p .. at No rth l:lethel
United Methodist Church .
SUTI'ON TOWNSHIP TrUBtees
Tuesday 8 p .m. at Syracuse
Memorial Building .

Meigs Area Holiness Assn. holds fall meeting

Announce birth

r.m

TIJESDAY

lb.
't&gt;o SlO~ES

�•

6- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Oct. I , l!i79

•

7- The Dally Sentinel , Middleport -Pom er oy

Your Best Buys Are Found In the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES
Hi Words or Under

Chao-t•

CaM

l &lt;Uy

1.00

1.:.
1 110

uo

%d..ys
Jdays

2.2~

UIO
3.00

tdays

3.75

EAch word over tht rrunimum
words ill 4 cent.. per •ord per
day . Ada~ other~ consecutive dlyt Will bt chlrged at

Mobile Homes - Sale

Giveaway

HOU SE TRA I LER , 10X55, 1

TO GIVE away to OOOd
homes . Black puppies. 992
3.180 .

bedr .. good shape . Fu r
nished , $2200 . Unfurn i shed ,
SIBOO. 141 2.04 before 2 p m
or after 5 pm .
1974 U)(70 mobile home .
Good condi t ion . 992·5888 .
Pr ice redu ced , must sell
Sc\, 000 .

the I day rtlt.
In memory . Card of 1banU
and ObHu.ry . 8 ce~tJ per •on:!,
~too rrwumwn. CUh Ln ad vance .

Mobile Hoole s&amp;lf'l and Yard
sales are accepted onJy 'lrith
cash with order . 25 cent charge
for ad5 carT)'\rl@ Bo1.. Number In
Care uf 1'he Srntinel

The PublWler ruervu ~
right to edit or ~ject any ads
deemed objectional
The
Publ.isher lrill not be re!lpOIL'Iible
for more than one J.ncorTtoct in -

'""''"'

PhoQe992-21S6

NOTICE

Monday
N oon oo S.turd.l y

the day before pubilcaliOO
Sunday
41' M
F'n da y aft ernoon

Card of Thanks

to
thank
everyone for the love and
WISH
in

breaking

lo~

our

of An i ta . To

class

of

pallbearers,

SALE S, PT . PLEASANT ,
304 ·675·.U24.

' 75 ,

Veterans

Memorial Hospital and to

YARD SALE Oct. l, 2nd . 2
miles out on FlatwOOds Rd .
Storm doors, Old Franklin
stmre , c lothes, collectors
1tems , dishes, new baby
strol ler , books and jewelry .
991 1669.

GARAGE SALE . OCt . 1 5
from 10 ·5. Located off Rt . 7
Bypass on Old Rt . 143.
South of Jack ' s c lub . Babv
buggy , guitar, new items
and mu ch more

SALE .

CARPORT SALE . Fri . Del .
5. Clothing , twin
bed
spr i ngs, bedspreads. floor
t i le, trumpet , misc . Turn
north, first road left past
Chester F i re House .

Notices
NO. HUNTING on George
Freel and ' s Property .

ME JGS
COUNTY
HUMANE 50C l ETY . 991
6260 . Pets available tor
adop1ion and information
service .

GUN
SHOOT EVERY
Sll NDAY I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RAClNE
GUN CL U B.
classes

starting this week . Call
Carousel Confectionnery to
register . 992 ·63-42 .

HUNTlNG ,

no

trespassmg w ith no e)( ·
ceptions on my property
Judy McGraw Self

FOR

1980

are

~yable

from Oct . 1 to Dec.
31, 1979 Ten dollars , Ra c ine
Gun Club

HOOF !"OLLOW, EngH sh

Adulls S29 .00 .

YARD

SALE .

5 FAMll Y YARD

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33 . north of
Pomerov . Laroe lots .Call

'19'1 ·1479.

apts .
Contact Village Manor, 992 ·
7787 .

HlLLCREST

KENNELS .

Boarding , all breeds . C lean
indoor -outdoor facil i ties .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans . 614 4-46 7795

REGISTERED CHOCOLA
TE poodle . $6Cl. '19'1 ·6280 .
Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed ,
7 pm . Hartford Community
Center , Hartford, WV , .c
mites above Pomerov Mason Bridge .

SAlE

For Sale
HOGS, READY to bu!Cher .
2614 .

RUMMAGE SALE . Oct . 5 ·
6. Fr iday and Saturday , 10
a .m . 4
p .m .
Gra c e
Episcopal Church, 326 E .
Main s r ., Pomeroy, OH .
L ot of c lothing, household
items .
1

Auto Sales
1916

EMERGENCY

PLYMOUTH

buy WlNPOWER . Call513
188·2589.

- - - - - -- ALTO SAXAPHONE , used

---

GE refrigerator, babv bed
complete
1976
Buick
Regal Racine . 91119 ·2001.

kid nannies tor ~It or
trade for calf . 9916134 Of"
99115711

sole TV. sweeper-

LUI--•

Mgr.
Phone H2·2111

XS

stereo stl!lnd . 98.5 ·3501 .

1&lt; IN. TRACTOR plow, 8 hp
tiller , .22 pistol. Heavy duty
post hole digger tor tractor .
Antique iron whee-l wagon .
Ca"le rack tor 8 tt . truck .
Also, want to buy good used
utility cabinet 7-41 ·1776.
JNCH

FR lG lOAlRE

electric range . Gold co lor
Electroclean oven, $250 .

'19'1 ·11&gt;42 or 991 ·5180 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS
$125.00
1100.00

150 Auto

_
R elriterator, like new,

Hom elite
1125.00
XK 12 Homellte $115.00
kL400 Homellte $200.00

Remington
Y11trdmuter
Aemingron

175.00

Super754

$100.00

Sears
XL Hom elite

S100.00
S7.S.OO

1250
1 New Electr-ic Furnact 1
ctearance priced
1 new Fuel Oil Furnace,
clear-ance priclcl

1 GOOd Coldspot
Refrigerator

1973

FAIRLANE

LlNCOLN
fully

Con ·

equipPf!-d .

sas.oo

MAIN ST .
Jack

w. C•rsey

~""r .

.,._....

Ph . 12·2111

OWNER
MOVEO
to
Oklahoma , must sell . 3
year old registered quarter

1975 CHEVROLET Monzo,
11·8, auto., radial tires, also
2 new snow tires . S2100. 949 ·
2516or 1143 -2514 .

with 2 acres of real estate .
Owner will sell onland con ·
tract . $5,000 down payment
lind owner will finance
balance .
Real
estate
located in Letart Falls, OH ,
near Ohio River . Out of
flood . For details, call
days, Fred W. Cr'/1', 991 ·
2691 .

horse geldlng, very gentle,
well broke, $.100 . 992 ·6162 .

woring farm, 2 stocked
ponds, 30 acres tillable
-4.5 ac res pasture fen ced ,
barn . large garage ,
other buildings, plus a 7
yellr old ranch type
home
with
full
basement. large family
room , built -in kitchen,
large living room with
woodburnlng fireplace
plus
a wood -burning
stove
downstairs . J
bedrooms and bath .

Real nice $76,350.
NEW LISTING Appro• .
98
acres
vacant
woodland,
several
building
sites near
Rutland, all minerals .
Won ' t
last tong at

$34,300 .00
NO
LONGER

A

DREAM Now you can
own your own new ran ch type- home with 1117
acres of most wOOded
land . Laroe master
bedroom, nursery and
CJUest room , 7 full baths,
built -in equipped kit
chen , dining area, large
plush living room with
w .b .f .p ., large garage,

good quality home good
location . S-4-4,800 .00.

BUSINESS
PORTUNITY

OP ·
Nice

clean business with ex
cellent track record .

" THE KIDDIE SHOP
PE " includes all equip ·
ment necessary - don 't
call , come in for details .

1/.A .

APPROIIED

-

Nice

home, large tot,
Syr~cuse , lO IJ, Pet . in.t .

JO year term , $182 .95
month , P&amp; . BUyer Only

Needs C losng Costs. I m
mediate

Posse$sion .

Good
Va l ue
At
S20,000 .00 .
HANDYMAN'S SPEC! ·
AL - Everyone needs a
rental. $6,000 .00.
tie 2 bedroom home.
great starter in good
location . $16,200 .00 .

WE
HAllE MANY
OTHER PROPERTlES
- CALL TODAY ,
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland,. Sr .
Henry 1;, Clel•nd, Jr.

DAVENPORT AND choir.
E.

engine, extras. Good con -'

B .T.U . · LP gas floor fur ·

carpet wall to wall, com ·

dillon. Best offer.

nace with thermostat .
Lavatory
w i th H .W . D .

plete

Upright plano. C. Barnhill,

washer ,
dl spoul
and
breal&lt;.fast
bar,
wood ·

-.

Tuppers Pia ips, Phone 667 ·
~'

TWO WHEEL trailer, IS"
1973
CHEVROLET
MALIBU FST . Added lots
of new parts but still needs
work, 1300. '19'1-2969 or see
at BeHy's carryout,

tires and

whP.els,

heavy

constructed, handles good .
In good , shape . Robert
Jacks, Rt. 1, Long Bottom,
OH. 915-,(1.13,

RUTLAND
742 -2328

CALL 992-7544

9·14 ·(Pd .l

Jr .

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

Purchase
and
Refinance
JO Year Terms
A - No money down
(eligible veterans)
FHA - AS low as 3%
down f non ·veterans J

IRE!,AND
MORTGAGE
CO.
E.
77

THREE BEDROOM home ,
Main

Basement

St .,

and

kitchen,

Pomerov .

carpOrt,
cabinets,

range, refrigerator, dish ·
burning fireplace, concrete

drive . Will

sell with or

without adjacent A-frame

business building. Shown
by appointmt!nt . Phon\! 992 ·

3921.
42 AC~E FARM. 985-&lt;328.

Mash 10; Happy Days Again JJ ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17.

6 oo-New s 3,8, 10, 13,15 : Zoom 20;
Carol Burnett 17 .

o 3()-NBC

5EE THAT DUDE
OVER. THER!: t .. .HEC

OUR W}O &lt;UGITlVES
F~OM THo MA&lt;'IA LAND
AT TH&amp; PARIS AlRPO~r
-· TO 8EGllll THElR
SEARCH FOR. FL0Hi'5
&lt;'ATH6R ...

KE PT EYElN&lt;' ME

AL L T4E WH I
WERE 6011116 THlOO!JGH..j

LOOK! LET'S NOT GET PARANO ID'
KID DO! YOW'~E A C WT E T R I( K .. A
LOTTA GIRL· WATCHERS PR0 8 'LV
C H6CK YOW OUT-. NOTH llllG UN·
USUA l- AB O UT THAT!

CV!'&gt;TOM$!

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO
OPENING SEPT . lith
Cl~nes : B11tet
Tap &amp; Jan
Ages-.4 and up
Shirley Carpenter
Instructor-

Ctloreogr•pher
Located In R•clne, 0.
Cformerlv
Weavers

Skiff Building)
Ph. 949·2710 or 949-21 so
8 ·19 1 mo

•

Saturday s

Fraturing : men ' s &amp;
women ' s
Hyling,
perms
Call for appt. or Wllk ln .

4 23 1 mo

Pom•roy, 0 .
8 16 I mo.

Radiator,,_-....,
Service
From the 11r9~~•
8ulldour
llld1U0r
\ m~Uto sl H'•'•' C•r-e

Smith Nelson
Motors, Inc.
lfii"ii. l~ 1it ANN'S
1~).1-'J¥liiiiilli~P--;
~--"" CAl( E

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

RACINE, 0.
9&lt;9 ·2148 or

Osborn

Rd .,

RHdsville, OH, '5772.
For

Information

Call

Ul-6-415. Will be OPen
late
if
you
need
something .

216.E . S.cond StrMI

9·14·1 mo .

9 7·1 mo .

Roger ~I
Garage

~SOB ~ "Jl1E; Fa&lt;fUIJ6-lRL8R TOLD
M~

I 'M iJOT l..OIJ0 FOR

DID Sfif SA'{ It- I'Ll..
, ....__66 1\CQI.HTitD 7

-mr;

a 3 bedroom rental and
extra lot on Rt . 124.
Start your own thing
and
live
upstairs .

S21,500.
MIDDLEPORT

2

lo1s, 4 bedroom older
home, Jlh ba t hs . nat .
gas heat . One lot has 2
tra i ler hookups . Asking

-

Brick

ranch
home of
3
bedrooms , 2 baths ,
dining ,
ni c e
k 1t . ,
covered pa t io, A lots , oneon the river $.45,000 .

POMEROY

3

bedrooms. aluminum
sid i ng, bath , basement ,
nat . gas furnace- and fr .
porch . Walk to stores .

Sl8,500
NEW

'

~d

17l70 Montvoml!'r'l'

$35,000 .
BUSINESS BLDG . Plus

$11,500 .
SYRACUSE

TRAILER SALES

LISTING

J

bedroom!. with bath ,
ci ty water , nat . gas heat
and 1 acre for only

$8,500 .
WANTED 5 acres on the
water line

BUILOlNG LOTS
BAUMS ,
5 PTS . ,
RACING, POMEROY,
SYRACUSE, REED S\IILLE,
FORKED
RUN,
RUTLAND,
ROCK SPRINGS, AND
BOWMANS RUN .

Housing
Headquarters

• l• u• • H ~ E ~e n•I'HJ i

l Molt·~ E u t ol Wd-I!'S&gt;,. IIf'
~U Pf~

GO O SE

~TO C K

fiiAH. EII NO W AVAILABLE

S&amp;G Carpet Cleaning
Steam
cleaned
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates
Scotchgullrd . 992

6309 , or H2 ·2348.
PAI~l ~ : NG
AND sand ·
blasting . Free estimates

Call 949 ·11&gt;86.
DOZER ,

END

Loader ,

brush
hog
Will
do
basements, ponds, brush ,
timber , land clearing .

Charles Butcher. 142·2'1-10
ROOM , BOARD , care f0&lt;
elderly only .
Private
sleep ing room or share .
Your
preferen c e .
Reasonable 992 ·6022

SEWING

MACHINE

Repairs,
service ,
all
makes .
992 · 228A .
The
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singe-r Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors .

EXCAVATJNG,
dozer,
loader and backhoe work:
dump trucks and IO· bOys
for hire , will haul fifl dirt ,
top soil. limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger

Jeffers, day phone 992 ·7089,
night phone 992 ·3525 or 991 ·
S232 ..

7JJ I or 142·1593.

IN STOCK for i mmedil!lt'e
delivery : various sizes of
p&lt;XJI kits . Do-it -yourself or
let us install tor you . D .
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.

992 5724 .

t 63
•

+

3752 .
BRADFORD, Auctioneer,
Complete Service . Phone
949 ·21687 or 949 ·2000. racine,
Ohio, Critr Bradford .

BOWERS

REPAIR
Sweepers.,
toasters, irons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower.
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 98S

•

IJTILF. ORPHAN ANNI E

BUT WHEN

vP TH IS HfRE CAN YO N . i HEY FI ND
JEST Lf AVJN ME. llED
YOU 601
LOOSE ··
OVER THE T ROO&lt; ···
THEN WHAT &gt;
MAKE 11 LOO K LIKE

.VH¥. THEN wE

GEl OURS ··
PER MAN E NT .. .

TO Pomeroy

WILL CARE for

on
11 11-, acres, house, S rCM;)ms
and bath , basement. wood
and coal furnace, fruit
trees . 2 mil~ from Rt . 7 on
good road . School bus and
mail route a1 door . S23,000.

985 43Hor 985·3590.

WE HAVE PROSPECTS!
WE ARRANGE FINANCING!
If YOU WANT TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY GIVE US
A CALL 992-2342

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
MIDDLE_PORT, OHIO
·OFFICE 992-2342
EtfENING 992·2449

50

Pa ss

South
30
Pass

TUNlNG .

New s Spec ial 8; ABC News 33;
Mo vie " Love is a Many Spl endored Thing " 10; Movie
"S falag 17" 17.
12 CO - Har r y 0 8; News 6,13;

12 J()- FBl 6: Charlie' s Angels
13

\\&lt;"es t ho ld s tht• k lflR of heart s
H(· wtl l sco re a surpn se trt ck
wtth 1l . bu t "'·on "t be a bk tu
gt't t wo "P-"dt' lrJCks Suu lh
wtll gt"! to d 1sc.a rd ( Jn f' spod e
o n th e qu ef·n of hearts 11nd
lose JU St o ne s pad e trwk ·

1 oo-- To mor row 3; News 15 ; 1 . lj)M cM i lla n &amp; Wife 8; 1·40--News
IJ
2 00- N ews 17 . 2 20--Star Trek 17 ;
3 20-{)pen Up 17.

evl 'nl th at f::: as t held t he ace of
s pa des (Jr West the k 1ng uf
hearts . but whdt "s an ft vc r t fl (' k wh en co mpared wtth
m&lt;Jk tng a gam t' con Lra ct ·

+

·M ost

•

SALE ON ALL
CARPET
IN STOCK

GASOLINE AIJ.F.Y

Get up
Mr. Pert
wli I

and walk,
l.jOU Idiot I .

JACOBY

Box 48 9. Rad10 C1 t&gt;
Ne w

York .

NY

1Qp 19 J

WINNIE

M Gangplank's

~~EGOIIVG
tl'ffl} "11.51/VESS
ro6'ETHE~/

neighbor
II Fulda
tributary

film star
3e French

19 Benchley 's
"The -"
%%Bring

5 Moiled
6 Refuge

river
34 African
nation
3&amp; "Ain't Shame '' :

lo tight
1 Hindu title
%3 Come a bout
8 Worthy
11 "Gasino - " : UBaptwng
%5 Collision
1967 film

23 Ire
%5 Swiss city

c

%7 Jeremiad
%9 "Glgi"

14 India's

song

name
ANO 7ZJ7'J HAVe GOC.~ V.5''.'5
WINNIE A VO /3"?.7

Yeotenboy'• Anower

Woman" :
Strelsand

20 Drop
the bait
21 Lack
22 Horror.film

195:i song

J7 Legwne

1-o--+---f-+--

relative

%7 Fishennan's h-+-

1-+-

it.em
28 Luau

baking pit
%9 Tourist's

item
31 Girl's
nickname

32 Electrical

t..nn
33 Actor
Morrow

"IJARN E Y
I F 'IO'RE LOOKri\J'
fER PAW , HE WENT
UP ON BUZZARD S
ROOST TO WATCH TH'

S UN GO

HECK, FIRE!!
THAT

OL' SUN BALL

WON.T GO DOWN FER
TWO -THREE
HOURS

'lET

Fine Guns - In Stock Now!"

PAW LI KES
TO G il HIM
R FRONT ROW

SEAT

35 Wllole
37 Stuff and

nonsense !
38 Progreoo

39 Sicilian
city

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE Is

Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXII
LONGFELLOW

II:

One letter s1mpl y 5tands f or another. In this _sample A i•
u sed f or t h{' thr ~e L "s, X forth ~? tw o 0'!-., C'l c Smgle letten.,
apo st r oph es, thP l e ng t h and formal 1on o l the words are all
hints Each day the code letter s are dlfter ent

CRY PTOQUOTES
PEANUTS

WHAT WE'RE WORKING
TOWARD, 5ALL'( 15
EQLIALIT&amp;( !=OR WOMEN
IN SPORTS ...

8 L

T~AT'S

AGOOD CAU5E.

DON'T '{OU THINK ?
--· ~ ·
-...._

SUB
ZUNW

ORL

I ZL

NZIVFL

o ·R L

HDTSE

R I M· L

R IS V D

8 R U D L

ZUNWLV

UHZ

v u-1 o

R L IV D
-

ou

BTFAI

R LTV L
Yutenboy'o Cryploqaote: NO MAN NEEDS A VACATION w
MUCH AS mE MAN WHO HAS JUST HAD ONE,- ELBERT

ONUOO

HUBBARD

TUESDAY , OCTOBER 2,1979
S 2()- World al Large 17 ; S : ~PTL
Club IJ : 6 :0D-IOO Club 6,8; PTL
Club 15; Health Field 10.
6: 1Q-News 17 ; 6: Jo--Concerns &amp;
Comment s 10; Love American
Style 17.
\o
6 45-Morning RF!'port 3; 6 · ~I)-Good
Morning West Virginia 13, 6 . 55N ew s 13.
oo-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
A mer ic a 6, 13; Tuesday Morning
8: Batman 10; Three Stooges.
Li t11e Rascals 17 .
15- A M Wea t her 33 ; 7 . 30Fami ly Affair 10 ; 7· 55-Chuck
White Reports 10.
8 00-C apt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17 , Sesame St 33.
8 JO-Romper Room 17; 9:0G-Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; One Day
At A Ti me 10 ; Porky Pig &amp;
Fr 1ends 8. Phil Donahue 13,\5;
L ucy Show 17 .
9 . 30---B ob Newhart 8. Love of Llie
10; Green A.cres 17 .
\Q oQO--(:rad Sharks J,\5; Edge ol
N ight 6: Beat the Clock 8, 10;
M orning Magazine 13; Movie
" My Favorite Brunette" 17 .
10 · 30 ~ Hollywood Squares 3, lS:
l20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew I 8. 10; 10 : 55CBS News 8. House Call 10.
1 ()()--High Rollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Sh irley 6,1 3; Price is_. Right 8,10 .
11 JO- Wheel of Fortune 3,15 :
Family Feud 6. 13; Sesame St .
20 , Know Your Schools JJ;
11 : 55--News l l .
11 llO-Pope John Paul 11 at the UN
Special 3,6,8,1 0, 13 . 15 ; Love
Ameri can Style 17 .
12 31)-Movie " Panic in tHe City'' 17 ;
Elec Co 20.33 .
oo-Oaysof0urL ives3,1 5; All My
Chi ldren 6, 1J; Young &amp; the
RE stless 8, 10.
1 JO---A s The World Turns 8, 10;
2. Cl0-Doctors 3, 15 ; One Life to
1.. i ve 6, 13. 2 25-News 17.
1 J()-Anofher World J, i5 ; Guiding
L ight 8,10: Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
J·oo-General Hospllal 6,13: I Love
L ucy 17; Potdark 20 .
J · 30---0ne Day at a Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10; Flintstones 17
4 OQ-Mister Cartoon 3; Tom &amp;
J erry 13 : Merv Grlffln 6 ;
Razzmalazz 8; Sesame St . 20,33 ;
Si x Mill ion Dollar Man 10;
Spec;treman l7 .
3;
Petticoat
4 30 - Bewitched
Junction 8. Bionic Woman 13;
Merv Griffin IS ; Gilligan 's Is . 17 .
5 oo- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8, Mister Rogers Neigh
borhood 20,JJ ; My Three Sons 17.
5 3()-Carol Burnett J; News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6 ·oo-News 3,8, 10, IJ, 15 ; ABC News
6: Zoom 20; Carol Burnett 17 .
6 · 3()-NBC News3, 1S ; ABC News 13 ;
CBS News~, 10; Bob Newhart 17 ;
Over Easy 10 .
7 :1Xl-Three's A Crowd J; Pulse 6;
Tic Tac Dough 8; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13;
Love
Amer ican Style 15; Dick Cavett
10, 33 ; Sanford &amp; Son 17.
JO - Hollywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; Hollywood Squares 10; Sha Na
Na lJ ; Country Roads 15; All In
The Family 17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 10,33 .
8·1l0-Baseball Play-Off 3, IS: Happy
Days 6, IJ ; California Fever 8, 10;
Nova 20,33; Movie "The Tin
Star" 17.
8 JO- Angie 6,13; 9;0Cl-&gt;-Tnree's
Company 6, IJ; Movie "Portrait
ol a Stripper" 8,10.
9 JO - Ta•l 6, 13; 10 : 00-Lazarus
Syndrome 6, 13; News 20; Sl•
Wives of Henry IIIII 17: City
Notebook J3 .
11 : OQ-News 3,6 ,8,10, 13, 15; Dick
Cavett 20; Carry On Laughing 33.
11 JO-Johnny Carson 3,15; Barney
Mlller 6,13 ; ABC News 33;,
Barnaby Jones 8; Movie "Stalag
17" 10; Movie "SabriAa" 17.
12 : 0~Movle "Having Babies Ill"
6,13 ; 12 : 40-Movle "In the
Matter of Kllren Ann Qu1nlanH 8.
l :llO-Tomorrow 3; News15; 1:30News 13.
..
2 ;()(}-News 17; 2: 20-MoVIfl "The
Road to Denver" 17; 4:20-Ster
Trek 1,7.
1

4 " You -

18 Not manifest

andup

Pomeroy,O,

per. P 0

Mennonites
3 Qualifying

11 caustic

\

00

Jeff Morris

o,

I study I

name

6'x12'to 12'x16'

RAINBOW INN

copy

S t a/Jon .

z .;ect of

Goodman
recording
IS Before t..e
I&amp; Second

GOOD REMNANT
SELECTION

Browning BT99 -l2", Full, 12 gauge
Browning BT99-l4", Full, 12 gauge
Browning BLR, 22 caL Grade 11, Rille
Browning Citori, 12 gauge-28" F/M
lthlca SKB Century Trap· l2", Full, 12
gauge
Charles Daily, Superior Grade, 30", Full,
12 gauge
J.P. Sour Drilling (16lCih7.?)
Remington Field Guns- Knives
Will Take Orders For Any New
Guns, 1 Week to Deliver·
Ammo- Hunting License- Deer Permits

a

40 Bombastic
I " Oh, My - " :
talk
1%3 song
t1 Like
fine wines
5 "Jaws" star
9 Persian poet
DOWN
10 Stratwn
1 - over
1% Acclivity
13 Benny

I nstolledwfth Pod Free

o.

/For

MODERN, send $1 to · " Win at
Bndge ·· care of th1s newspa -

ACROSS

~ndup

RUllAND
FURNITIJRE

~ -... t-. \\ ;&gt;. 1 '-\ I 'IO:H ~-::--; n: HI 'H I ~ t-: AS~\,

JOS~PH

by

'9'5 '

Call 742·2211

A C;.n ol1na l" ('d1.kr ~~ k ~ If
th (' hand warnnt~ an o pl'fllng
1wo -d1&lt;uno nd btd
T ht.' &lt;tnsw ('r 1s ··y._. .,

~'DTHOMAS

~ and up

&amp; Carry

i\KY )l2
A K(,/ 6 4

decl a r er s

declarer would g1v e hlm!-ielf
an extra chance At t rt c k tw o
he would cas h d ummy·s ac e of
heart s Then he would lead a

Lane

'4"

Rutland,

11 3()-NB C News Special 3,15 ; CBS

Y ou ho l d

At some stage of t he pl ay th ey
would lose the hea r t hnessf•.

official l4

$38

be

Alk tiM I!XPCPII

at the five -diamond contract

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

light housewrk . 992·S556.

187 Mulberry Ave.

Pass

F.ast

would w1nd up one tnck shurt

DOWN

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!

3.

Ea:-. 1 would

3,8.1 0, 13 , 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20 . Fawlty Towers 33 .

(' t' rl &lt;ltn t o d u&lt;·k.
wlu!n·u pun So uth ,..,·ould sco r e
h1 ~ J&lt;w k dml w 1nll up wnh h1 s
con lral" t ··
lh w.Jid "Th1 s swmdl e 1s a
good· l'Xi l!npk of lh e ·ex tr a
c h~nt 'l'
p lay S uppos~ t hat

Or&gt;e ninK lead : + K

ALLEY OOP

SAVE ON :CARPET
DRIVE AtiTnE
SAVE A' LOt

el~rly

WILL HAUL limestone and
grl!lvel. Also, lime hauling
and spreading . Leo Morris
Trucking Phone 742 1455 .

Db I.

Pa s s

UNLES S ···

INJU"-1 5 DO NE IT ..

start

person,live In, cooking and

.

North

I+

East would shool ba ck a spade
and West would toke has a&lt;"e
and queen. ··
· Alan : ~. A really alert

Daniels. New phone num
ber : 7-41 ·1951 Service to
schools and homes since

382S .

tuoe private lot , 12x60
mobile home, 2 bedroom .
1112 baths, new carpetinQ
throughout, new gas fur nace, washer and dryer . 6
months free rent on lot . 992 ·
6398 .

W~sJ

New s 20

11 DO- New s

Alan ··Th e pla y would ha ve
&lt;"ost So ut h an overtn ck tn th t.•

6 52

Vulnerable : East -We st
Dealer : We st

ORPHAN ANNIE-A PRACTICAL GIFT

Oswald

FrM Estlm•tes

Real Estate for Sale
CLOSE

K 5

By Oswald Jaeob1
and Alan Sonta~

JAMES KEESEE
Phon• m -2772
8111 mo.

Cash
A&amp;H Upholstering , across
from the Texa co Station in
Syraucse . 992 ·37-43 or 992 ·

9 4 3

• .12
+ A II 9 15 2

DownSpouts

ELECTRIC

ELWOOD

• ··--

+QJ

A K 10 8 7

SOUTH

WindOW$

Motors, rewind and repair
9911356, 561 Beec h St.,
Middleport, Ohio .

- -~-

• 8

lN

991 ·11.0

EAST
• 10 ) :1 2
• K 10 B 4

+A Q 9

• Gutters and

PlANO

8. 10, NFL Football 6, 13 ; Movie
"' Be loved Inf idel " 17.
9 30--WKRP in Cincinnati 8, 10;
Ma r k Ru ssell 20,33.
10 oo-Lou Grant 8,10 : Poldark 33:

• 8

1965 .

c an ·
c elled?
Lost
your
operator 's l icense? Phone

REYNOLD'S

•

•Insulation
• Storm Doors
esrorm Windows
• Repl•c•mant

I 1 mo .

HOWERY AND MARTlN

10-1 -A

J 8 fi 4

• 965

INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

• 30 lfc

AUTOMOBlLE
SU RANCE
been

NORTH

WEST

J&amp;L BlOWN

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

Excavating ,
septic
systems, dozer, backhoe .
R.t 1.0 . Phone 1 161•1 698

Mus i ca l Comedy 20,33; Falcon
Football 17
q 00- John n y Carson 3, 15; Mash

~! m o~t

•AQ J:I
0 K(,/ .181

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

FOR YOUR
NEW HOME OR
EXTENSIVE
HOM!;_
REMODELING
Also Masonry
Work
992·7S83, or "2 -2282

• ~ 1 mo

low lll'&lt;.trt
•

CONSTRUCTION

mile off Rt. 7 bv -pass.
en St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland .

J,I S: 140-RoberiiJ ; Edward the
K ,ng 6; White ,Shadow 8, 10;

'Extra chance' play pays

ROUSH

14

New lywl!'d Game 6; Joker' s Wild
8 ; F am ily Feud 10,13; Allin The
Fa m ily l l ; Nashville On The
Road 15
8 00- L ittle House on the Prairie

I I l J: H XI I I )

----

BORN LOSEH

NEW LJSTING - Ni ce 2
bedroom tr~iler , gas
furnace,
furnisned ,
stocked fish pond and
11/:lacreon Rt . 143. want
only Sl2,000.

JO- T hai NashvHie Music 3;;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

YEP ··· AI M TO CLEA N

5071

I

*

Pomeroy

Now arrange the c1rd ed leners to
torm the surprise answer, as sug gested by the abo ve cartoon

BRIDGE --=-- - -

( '.lJa&lt;.LD ...

•New Home
•Addons
Remoldlngs
*Free estimates
992-6011
7 11

Show 6 ; T ic Ta c Dough 8 ; News
10 · N ewlywed Game 13; Love
Ameri can Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17, Dic k Cavet1 20.33 .

HA 'R, NO DOuen.

- A PAIN IN ThE NECK ING

-

E)j;PERIENCED

Ph . 991 -2174

___ _

Mil in St.

...__

7 oo-T hr ees A Crowd 3; Muppel

IJSED ON WIICHES'

(Answers tomorrow 1
Jumbles H ENN A KN OWN CIPHER GUIT AR
Answer What s h e go t e v er~ t1 me he tned l o k1ss her

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

992-2367

592-3051

Announcing Opening of

V. C. YOUNG Ill

solid older home with
good opportunity tor a
family
busines s.
A
bedrooms, l 1' 2 bath s,
furnace ,
firepla c e ,
dining, equipped kit .,
and
2 car garage .

rxJ
CEADARt~
\. r x J . rJ

News 3,1S; Carol Burnell

6 . C BS News 8, 10; Bob Ne...,har·.
11 . Over Easy 10

\RANCOBI

State, Athens

949·2861-94~ · 2160
4 5 tf c

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

Good

tour ordmary words

Printanswerllere (

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
. work,
walks
~nd
driveways.

Asking S1S.OOO.
RUTLAND

Unscramble these tour Jumbles.
one lener 10 ea ch SQuare. to torm

5 J(}-( arol Burnett J ; News 6 ;
G om er P y le 8; E lee . Co . 20;

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
.. I ntr.cluces'-

Real Estate Loans

Television
Viewing

by Henri Arnold andBobL.ee

MONDAY , OCTOBER 1,1979

Al TROMM
CONST.

Holi ,.S9· 1 M .. W., F .
Otner time · by appointment
107 Syco~more (R:eiir)
Pomeroy , 0 .

9·28 I mo. Pd.

NTIL T H E'N. I CAN S HOW
Y()U AROUNf' . ' •

RootiNG
REMO'OtliNG
• RWM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

MIVDLEPORT Cute J;t .

1973 DODGE PICKUP. JIB

1976 SIERRA GRANDE, 'h
ton plckup, P.B ., P.S.,
A .C., radio, $3200. John
I hie, Rt. 1, Racine.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ -

Phone 949 ·25119

114. Three bedrooms ,
bath . L .C. water . St .
windows, and 2 acres .

:JJ gal. cabinet type electric
water heater . 19" Admiral
color television . 70.000

1~7 · l8l&gt;J .

797 -2/H.

.1s Admin . La.ns .

1fft\Jrul ~1}

. '

George 5. Hobstetter- ,

LARGE HOUSE, together

Magn~vox

4338 before 5 p.m .

tinental,

We need homes in Mid ·
dleport and Pomeroy . If
you are thinking of
selling give us a call.
Our buyers are wiating.
Chervl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742 ·2003
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Phone 742 ·309J
Hilton Welte, Assoc .

Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts.
Free
Estimates.
AU
work
guaranteed . 20 vears e• ·
perience. Call Athens,
collect, Gerald Clark
797-.48S7 or Tom Hoskins

(FREE ESTIMATE)

1100

1 E•cellent Unlco 16 cu.
ft .
Coppertone

$200. 992 ·1194.

POMEROY Nice 2
bedroo m
ho m e
on
MonkeY Run . Forced a ir
gas furna ce and i n side
has been remod e led an d
it 's beautiful . ONLY

hp Mer cury engine . Ski ' s,
accessories and trailer
Excellent condition . 99"2 ·
5111 .

TWO PIECE couch , TV ,

19 77

condition .

nly 55,000.00 .

VIP HP15 bass boat with 50

Stereo

SUBURBAN , front
and
r ear
a1r co nd i t i oning ,
cr ui se tilt wheel,
.C5A
engine, trailer and special
package , silver. rodeo
deluxe interior , AM · FM
radio 8·track tape , bumper
guards. overheltd
c~b
lights, power rear window ,
equipped for ca . luggage
rack , tog lights. Call 742 ·
2211 before .5 p .m . or 98.5 ·

running

100' x200' lot in Arbaugh
Addition . Has septi c
ystem and water tap .

Broker 992 ·.5739

NEW LISTING 84 acre

Mas-10
Remington l4

FORO

TUPPERS PLAINS -

PONTlAC POTATOES, 3
miles west of Darwin. Ceci l
Toban .

CAMPER, $150 . Sleeps 6
Roger Stobart , 992 ·6190.

1973 FORD F 100, 8 cy l..
std . sh ;ft , SI.IOO . 741 ·1978

GOOd

11e over seven acres
with 7 bed r oom home on
H ysell Run . Th ere ' s two
rural water taps and
more . call for more in
fo . Sale pr ice S23.500 .00 .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
F- de .- al
Hou 'i ing •
V~ter ...

ROOFING

COUNTRY HOME West of Rutland on Rt .

McCulloch Pro
Moe 55
McCulloch

32 ,000

ter . ONLY $3 7, 50000
NEW LISTING - A lit

$39 ,900 .00 .

608 E. ·....,."'IIIW..I
MAIN
POMEROY,O .

9911656 .

985·3577 .

On Page 2)

POMEROY
LANDMARK

stand . 985 ·3501

1916 MONTE CARLO . 350

rltdials,

home w i th 3 bedrooms, 1
baths . t i vi ng room ,
util i ty , k i t chen with
1sla nd range and d i ning
area . This home is total
elec tr ic ~nd is situated
on ten acres just 11;,
miles out ot Salem Cef ·

Real Estate for Sale
GE WASHER and dryer .

1913
VW
STATlON
WAGON , 30 mi . per Qal.

1977 HONDA ACCORD, 5

25'•54 '

season . like new .
Reasonable, 991 S565 .

-~---·

C HEVROLET

BER R 1NG TON

OHIO VALLEY

one

992 3198

PART ·TIME EMPLOYEE

More Classifieds

Htadquilr1ers
Appliances
Sales-. Service

POWER

alternators ·own the best

JO

VO L AR E Excellent con
dition 29 ,000 miles. S2400 .

1965

--

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

sale .

Now taking orders . Will
deliver, 742 -2056 .

carpeting, etc.

UNLIMITED HIGH ear nings opportunity . Top
company for 50 years. Ex ·
perience In sales and ser vice. Neat appearance,
transportation needed .
Phone 30~ -675 · 195~ or apply
In person. ~1 Main St ., Pt.
Pleasant .

FOR

F l REWOOO

PHONE 742-2003

4
bedroom home w i th
1iving room , dinin g
room , kitchen and bath .
Si tuated on .75 of a n
acr e . Rural wat er an d
gas tor ced a ir furna ce
A ll c arpet and drapes
stay . Sells for S35,000.00 .
NICE 3 bedroom home
on Bash an Road , F vet
oil furnace and full
ba!&gt;t"ment Situated on
61 ~
dcres
Sell s for

color console. John L yoos,
Thurs . and Fri ., oct . A and
5 Approx 3 miles out of
Rutland up New Lima Rd .
at Joan (Tom) Stewart's .
W at c h for signs . Rain can ·
eels .

REALTY

Oct 1 1979

J.LL BE TEACHI N G AN EN r-. LI S I-1
CLASS TH IS AFTERNOON ... ''

Business Services

HOBSTETTER

$16,500.00 .
EXCELLENT

GRAVELY
TRACTOR
Phone 992 ·7S37 .

991251•

Nova, "6 cyl. , auto., P .S .•
air . rlldials , See to ap ·
preciate . $2500
L i ttle
Hocking , 989·2-464

for applications.

S1800 .

Jack, W. Caney

FOUR FAMlLY Yard Sale .

Building) . Frlday, Sept . 28 ,

ro read water meters. con tact City Hall, Pomeroy,

for

9916303 .

9491182 .

Rd. 9911531.

miles. sharp, $.1150. 1976

BAR HELP needed . '19'1 ·
3860 between 8 and 10 mor ·
nings .

ew:cellent condition

FOR TRADE : two lots in
Pomeroy . for motor home

197" YAMAHA
SJOOO. Also new

King's

l"lelp wanted

SHELL

pickup truck . 7-47·28.52, An ·
drew cross, Letart Falls.

after&lt; : JO. 304 ·113-5211.

TWO PIECE couch. Con·

Middleport

box springs and mattress,

C.W . Proffitt farm , Por
tland , OH . S8 a hundred and
$5 a hundred .

and

TWO FAMILY YarCI Sale .
Oct . , thru 6. 9 am -S pm .
Winter c lothes, furniture ,
m i sc .
C harles
Kuhlres i dence , JA289 FlatwOOds

speed ,

7 p .m . New merchandise
including new wood heater .

POTATOES .

HOTPOINT

ONE NANNY \l(lat and 2

OHIO RlVER Auction
reopening on SR I , south of
(Old

LIMESTONE ,

sand , gravel, calcium
chlor i de, fertilizer,
dog
fOOd , and all types Of salt.
Excelsior S~lt Works . Inc.,
E . Main St ., Pomeroy , 9'92 ·

FOR SALE·or rent Nice l
bedroom , modular located
in Portland are~ . Set up on
lot or can be moved . Call

engine , low mileage . $2600 .

POODLE
GROOMlNG
Judy Taylor . 614 3017110.

COAl ,

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

Kenn el.

Boarding . Call 367 ·0m .

Cal

1978 HONDA ISO K, extras,

BEDROOM

ONE

Auto . tran s., i mmac ulate .

STAR

Aqua

catamaran sail boat. ·and
trailer , SBOO. Call '19'1 ·3419 .

CAMPER

lAND -4 RM furnished and
unfurnished apts . Phone

JIB 61S5 .•
RlS l NG

FOOT

WlNTER

To y!&gt; adults ond chddren ·s
clothe!&gt; plonh curtain!&gt;
Mo nday . lues . Wed . 10
111 A Coli Cordone r&amp;s ldenc• , 6th St , Rocine
"'·----

Pets for Sale
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Hor~es
and
ponies . Ruth Reeves . 614
698 · 3290 . Bard i ng and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care products. WMtern
boots
Children 's S15 SO

I&lt;

Have been corn fed . 2-47 ·

LARGE

DUE S

old . Wormed , 985 ·3961 .

Tom

Grueser residence . L i ncoln
Hts ., Pomeroy Good selec ·
tion boy! ', girls ' , women 's
and men 's clothing . Winter
c oats . Some furniture and
lots of misc. items . Mon .,
Tues , Wed , Oct 1, 1, and
3.
---~- - ---"-"'"- YARD SALE . four family .
Tuesday , Oct 1 thru ? 10
am Spm . Bradbury CR 5,
from Middleport , Ath house
past the school on the right .

Meigs ·Gallia line . RAin
c anc els till followino sunny
weather . Mon ., Tues ., Wed .

NO

SEVEN 1tJ Irish Setter and
sheep dog puppies . 7 weeks

For Rent

H&amp;N Day old or started
leghorn pullets, both floor
or cage grown available .
Poultry
Housing
and
Avtomat1on ,
Modern
Poultry , 399 W. Main ,
Pomer o y . Phone 992 -216-t.

CANDY

PUT A Coll ie in vour life .
Miniature , perky , female .
Humane Soc iety , 992 ·6260.

Yard Sale

all those who sent food ,
flowers , cards and per
sana I gifts, to all who shed
a tear and said a praver
and helped us in anv other
way , we are very grateful
Parents. Mr . and Mrs.
Roger
Bu c l(ley
and
Family ;
Husband, To m
Ba ll and all grandparents

FREE

COCKER

Spaniel and 3 pups. Call
m -7.57-4 after 5. 30 .

1910 GMC CHURCH BU S.
ready to go. In good con
dition . Can be seen at 39A
Beech St , Middleport or
call 992 5770 or 949·11011 .

3891.

heart

the
ministers ,
Ewing
Funeral Home. to her high

schol

1970 Vindale l2x63 w i th e x
panoo, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 11x60 3 bd r
1973
Skyl i ne
12x55 2
bedroom
1972 BonanZa 12)(52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME

YARD

TuMlia)'
thnJ Fndi y
tP.M

concern

bedroom

wv

9916260 .

992 S434 .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

WE

1971 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3

perial dishwasher . Harvest
gold. 3 vear! old. Excellent .
condi1ion . After -4 pm , ~2

o

' .,

A M P CHAPARRAL IS A
i=IR S T. A N D A CAMP 5ECOND -

. Real Estate for Sale

5348 .
CHIH LI AHUA ,
c reamy
brown ttnd white . Male .
Year old . Humane Societv ,

REGJSTERED

15

For Sale
WHIRL POOL Custom 1m

DTCKffiM"'Y

.

�-

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0., Oct . I, !979
•

Study ~ays coal-based
system more efficient
nmg, and William K. Coleman,
place in the energy mix, " he added.
A coal-based electric system is
director,
residential
and
com
"This country must explore every
more efficient in providing residen mercial
services,
both
of
AEP.
possible
avenue of energy supply
tial energy requireme nts than a synmad•
this
observation
·
and
development
for use now and In
thetic gas system using a coal"
While
the
Lurgi
Process
coal
the
years
ahead
ipto the 21st cengasification process,
gasification
system
currently
being
tury
.
study released today .
1
considered does not use coal resour" All we are saying right now Ia
Details of the study
ces
as effectively now as the electric that, when you take all the avalldle
the American Electric Pn••Pt_.
power system for residential ser- independent data and measure It
vice Corporation were explained at a
vice, research of this and other coal- carefully for meeting residential
news conference in Washington, D.
gasifi cation tec hnologies should be energy needs, the electric system Ia
C. 1be Service Corpordtion and Oh1o
actively pursued and encouraged ."
more efficient. Our conclusion t.
Power Company are affiliates of the
White also stressed the AEP was that the research on coalAmerican Electric Power System .
not advocating abandonment of the gasification should proceed apace 110
W. S. White, Jr ., chairman of the
c oa l-gasification process .
that this system can hopefully
board and chief executive officer of
·'What this study proves is that all
become a valuable aid sometime In
AEP, which serves 6-million people
energy
sources
and
fuel
use
systems
the
future ."
in seven states from Michigan to
need
to
be
studied
to
determine
their
Tennessee, said the "study c'
significant because it utilizes inHOSPITAL '\EWS
dependent data as the basis for the
assumptions and conclusiOns."
cy Williamson, Dickley Wolford,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
He noted that the study should
Walter Yates.
Discharges, Sept. Zl
prove valuable in the current
Birtll!l, Sept. za
Mrs . Stephen Adkins and
discussions over enactment of
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
BiD Angell, son, Roddaughter , Nancy Altizer, Ray Angel,
legislation to fund research and
ney; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen We.t,
Sadie Baker, Mrs. Walter Booth and
development projects invol ving
son, Gary Bryant, Larry Burnett ,
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and Mrtl.
gasification and liquefaction of coal.
Mural Black, daughter, Wellston;
Rodney Butcher, Irene Clagg, John
The report polnted out that the
Mr . and Mrs . Gary Acres, son , MldClifford III, Ada Couch, Thomas
coal~asification systems now un Deck, James Eggars, Martha
dleort .
dergoing examination have not been
Elkins, Emily Finney, Thelia
tested oo a commercial scale .
Ga iner, Thelma Goff, Karen GonDlschargeo, Sept. %9
However, the report added , the
zales, Edmund Kegley, Daisy Ken\,
Mark Addis, Karen Alien, Linda
available data from many sources,
Sharon Lewis, Bernice Martindill ,
Bledsoe, Mrs. Mary Balles and
including the government, indi cate
Fred Ma cCumber , Twila Mcdaughter, Mary Bradbury, Debra
the superior efficiency of coal-based
Daniels. Dana Mink , Stephen
Davis, Weltha Dillenger, Romaine
electric generation systems .
Powell , Herley Pyles, Lisa Ratcliff,
AI the same time , the report· s
Frederick, Charles Greer Jr., Sara
Minnie Riffle , Mary Rawlins, mavis
Hawk, Stephen Hood, ' Ronnie John·
authors, Blatr A. Ross , vtce
Saylor. Russell Sheets, Uge Shields,
son Jr., Robert Lee, Mrs . ChadeB
president, energy resources planAllen Stag em, Scotty Whobrey , NanLegar and daughter, Glade
Maloney, Mrs. KeMeth McCoy and
son, Carol Moody, William Mulllna,
Helen Nicely, Mrs. James Owe111
Custom full upper &amp; lower
and son, Mary Shlltz, Anna
Spaulding , Lyronda Stone , James
Vogt, Jack Wheatley , Roy WUliams.
Blrtllll, Sept. %9
Mr. aod Mrs. Deanta McCormlcl,
daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mn.
Jeffrey Pallln, oon, Letart;

Mr. ud

Mn. George Joaeo, son, Henderson.

Ctlll todu jo,.
1'0t'' FrH

of Dr

cop I'

R l trlrn' 'l

U1ftv'"QII"f'
brodut~

Dlscbargeo, Sepl. 30
Mrs. James Adldns and son, Barbara Broyles , Robert Davis, Mary
Grinun, Bonnie Hq)ely, Richard Jeffers, Esta Johnsoh, Lilly Kaylor,
BMan MUJl)hy, Nicole Newell,
Josephine Stanley, Mrs. Clifford
Young and son .
Bll1ba, Sept. at
Mr . and Mn. Richerd Whltteldnd,
son, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Olarles
Moody, daughter, Cheshire.

Dr. Riviere poyslor the call!

RiYicrc Center
Or ao .. td f . Rl•kn
\i iilrhh • D • G J """''b~~ ~ h • Do &lt; \lo !k;~~ l
'4 lJ 1\ onlh• ll • 11r J l 'l" 'f'~' • 0 • ~ C:,1ul11
i &gt;• ' \l. .,_Jim ' • llr {, .0, 'V h&gt;&lt;.H&lt;
o\ I

f .. U•I"Ptoll 1\ • •

i

·olumbu \ , Oh10

~JlO'

V\e~

when
the Meigs County population
was around 28,ooo.
I

I

s
y

e

Fs

Farmers

Bank

Pomeroy, Ohio

Membtr FDIC

at

•

enttne

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

•
.,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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

Levy passage
being pushed

Spectators lining streets
BOSTON t AP 1 - Despite a
chilling mist and the threat of steady
rain, scores of sp ecta tors, the
vanguard of an estimated 2 million
people, kept an all-night vigil near
the Boston Common , waiting for a
spot to see Pope John Paul II at the
start of his tour of six U.S. cities.
Officials predicted the pope's visit
would more than double Boston's
population as special trains and
buses carried m pilgrims. Much of
th e city - g roomed a nd draped with
papal flag s - was closed la te
Sunday to most traffic.
Teams of police and National
Guardsmen began clearing th e

•

specially-marked motorcade roUte
earlier in the weekend .
An afternoon papal Mass at the
downtown park, once the spot where
Puritans pilloried and hanged
Quake rs, was expected to attract
between 400,000 and I million people
- a nd at least one demonstration to t his city of 640,000. Another I
millton people were expected to line
th e 2ll-mile route of the pope's
motorcade
Cold , rainy weather did not deter
many who waited through the night
for the Common , roped off by police
Sunday , to re-&lt;&gt;pen at 7 am .
" We wanted to ha ve the

BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monda y night
emphasiZed the importa nce of
passlng the city income tax in the
November Genera l election .
Harold Brown, councilman, said
the village of Pomeroy is not an
inexpensive town to control. It was
noted that the tax will effect the
worlung pubUc only, not retired persons or persons receiving disabi lity
pensions or social securi ty.
Council agreed it must sell the tax
and scheduled a public meeting to be
held on Oct. 16. The location and
time of the meetilll( will be a nnounced later.
Rod Karr , councilman. has spoken
to lhe senior citizens, Legion mem~
bers and the libraries rega rding the
tax and Bill Young, counc ilman , ha s
spoken to the Jaycees .
George Mora , branch manager of
an engineering firm li1 Athens.
presented council copies of contracts on the extension of U&gt;e sewage
system from the Kroger store on
East Main Street to Kerrs Run .
Council has recetved a $432,000

experience
fir st hand .
It's
so mething you can 'I grasp on
television," said Wayne Bates , 19,
who with Jim Standring, 17, set up
camp oo a street comer withjn sight
of the red carpeted altar .
Standring and Bate s arrived
equipped with sleeping bags,
doughnuts and frult jUice. They
planned to stay awake until the
Common opened.
"We'll sleep when we get the spot
we want," said Standrin~

HOSPITAL PATIENT
Herbert RA&gt;ush, Route 2, Racine , is

Area Deaths
WILUAM C, PECK
William C. Peck, 79, Route 3,
Albany, a long-time educator in
Athens, Trumbell and Meigs Countie9, died Saturday evening at the
Kimes Convalescent Center in
Athens.
He was born in West Virginia, a
son of the late George Benjamin McClellan and Margaret See Peck . He
received degrees from Rio Grande
College, Ohio University , Athens ,
and Ohio State University, Columbus. He began his teaching career in
the one room Buzzard School which
was located in Columbia Townshi .'
of Meigs County. He was employed
during his career for a short period
wltl'l the Internal Revenue Service.
Mr . Peck was a member of the Temple United Methodist Church. He
served with the U. S. Army during
World War IT both m the European
and Pacific Theatres.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Edgar (Kizzee) Crabtree, Annada,
Mich., and Mrs . Enzie (Elsie 1
Davis, Parkersburg : two nephews,
Harold (Max) Crabtree of Armada,
Mich ., and Arthur Crabtree,
Albany ; five nieces, Marguerita
Crabtree Scott, Albany; Virginia
Vlnsoh Townsend, Columbus;
Madge Jackson Blackwood, Route 4,
Pomeroy; Kathryn Davis Fetty,
Parkersburg , and Mary Davis
LUzano, Charleston .
Preceding him in death were two
brothers, Paul L. Peck and Charles
0 . Peck; three sisters, Mrs . Corilda
Vinson, Mrs .Georgeanna Crabtree
and Mrs. Rebecca Jackson, and his
parenlll.
· · Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Tuesday at the Temple United
Methodist Church with the Rev . Ray
Price officiating. Burial will be in
the Temple Cemetery . Friends may
call at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p .m .
'today .

Belpre; Ruth Wolfe, Apple Grove,
and Everal Pearson, North
Carolina.
Several nleces and
nephews also survive.
Mrs. Grinun was a member of the
women's group of the Letart United
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing FWJeral
Home with the Rev. David Harris officiating . Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7 to 9 this
evening .
ROBERT LEE MOREHEAD
Graveside services for Robert Lee
Morehead, 77, Portland , who died
Sept. Tl at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, were held at I p.m . Saturday at the Ravenswood , W. Va .,
cemetery .
Surviving Mr. Morehead are his
wile, Mildred, and several nieces
and. !l~hews. He was a son of the
late' 'Charles and Margaret Garren
Morehead. The Ewing Funeral
Home was in charge of services_

President
i Contlnued from page I I
Secretary of State Cyrus R . Vance
and Sovtet Ambassador Anatoly
Dobrymn held an unsc hedu led
meeting at the State Department
Sunday afternoon .
However, the administration
maintained its virtual silence on the
enti re Cu ban issue with State
Department spokesman Davtd Nail
declining to give any indication of
the purpose of the&lt;f4-minute meeting
or even which side had instigated it .
Later , Vance met at the White
House for three hours with other top
administration officials including
Secretary of Defense Harold Brown
and presidential natiooal security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski .
l,eibach said that meeting had
been scheduled previously to discuss
the president's speech and was not
specifically related to the Vane~
Dobrynm meeting.
(\s Carter a nd administration
officials worked oo their response to
what U.S. offic ials insist are Soviet
com ba t troops in Cuba, .. ·castro
"challenged" Carter to tell the truth
about what the Cuban leader
portrayed as ·• an invented crisis"
and "a comedv ."

a patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant, W. Va .
Cards may be sent to Room 143 .
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F XAM, will
hold a regular meeting at 7:30p.m .
Wedneaday at the temple.
Ali
Master Masons are invited.

SUSAN F. WHALEY
Groveside Mtes for Susan Fay
Whaley, infant daughter of Paul and
Carolyn Price Whaley, Route I,
Long Bottom, wbo died Sunday at
Camden-Clark Hospital in Parker sburg, W. Va ., will be held at 2 p .m .
Tuesday at the Mt. Olive Cemetery .

VASim M. GRIMM
Mrs. Vashti M. Grinun, 83, Letart
Falls, died Saturday at the Chri.!t
Hospitalln Cincinnati.
Mrs. Grimm was born May 5, !896,
a daughter of the late Josephus and
Etta L . Smith Plckerut .
Also
preceding her in death were a son,
William C. Grimm, and her
husband, Ernest Grimm .
Surviving are a daughter~n -law ,
Edith Grimm, Kenton ; two granddaughters, Patricia Tarr, Cuyahoga
Falbi, and Barbara Brutvan, Cin·
clnnati ; four great~randchlldren ;
four slster. , Wilma McClintock,
Point Pleasant ; Virglnla Quillen,

·.a·

~,.o.
·d
.
. l:·l .:

A marriage license was issued to
Lawrence J . McGraw, 33, Gallipolis,
and Jo Ann McLaughlin, 33, ll!l· 3,
Pomeroy.

~., · •I_ • •·

.

MEE ll! nJESDAY

The Middleport Garden Club will
meet Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at the fire
house. A harvest dinner will be served . Hostesse!l are Mrs. Dcrothy
Roller, Mrs. James Arnold and Mrs .
Judy Arnold .

VETERANS MEMORIAL

NEW SHIPMENT

CREST
UNIFORMS
AND

PANT SUITS
JUN lOR SIZES

3 to 15
MISSES SIZES

6 to 20
HALF SIZES

to 26th

Stop In on the 2nd floor - •••

all the new styl1s and
matnlals. Select wt'lat you
need.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

'

, ·• ~·.
' '

.

LEBANON, Ohi o 1AP1
Village Manager Forester Gross
said he hopes residents wtll be
able to stop boiling their drinking
water by the end of the week.
The village water system has
been con lamina ted s ince Sept . 14
when the flooding little Miami
River covered the Warren Count y
·city 's two water wells.
Gross said tests showed acceptable amounts of bacteria m
most of the system this week .

suit for dlvo~ against Bonney L.
Shaffer, Pomeroy. Ephriam Von
Herdman , Rt. 2, Pomeroy , and
Gloria Jean Herdman, Pomeroy,
filed for dissolution of marriage .

Saturday Admisslons-Leona Hubbard, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges-Herschel
LeMaster, Anna liter, Nancy
Manley, Billy Brewer, Matthew Van
Vranken, Mildred Bissell , Ellene
Smith, Clarence Norria, Nola Bradshaw, Willlam Weaver, Jr., Earl
Clark, Alicia Evans.
Sunday
Admlsslons-Blanche
Bral'i/, Rutland; Elwyn Yost, Middleport; Brian Wlllis, Pcmeroy ;
William
Donahue ,
Pomeroy;
Th&lt;mU Sayre, Portland; Kenneth
Reed, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-Oara Pullins,
Mary WeUman, Julia Pennell, Una
McDaniel, Donald Lovett, Audrfa
Swick, Bonnie Walker, Wesley
Cochrn, Wendell Barrett.

.

:-;:;;~':

Must boil water

Couri.
Lula V.Shaffer, Pomeroy, filed

HOMECOMING PARADE SET
Soutllem Local High School will
stage illl homecoming parade on
FMday, Oct . 12, leaving the high
school at 2 p .m .
Any group or organization wishing
to participate Ia asked to contact
Cindy Warden, 94~Z7211 ; Crista
Beegle, 949-2001, or Meg Amberger ,
992-6115 before Wednesday, Oct . 10.

,,

"y: ,,

-~ ;

. .. . in the wotld ·:.

TO END MARRIAGES
A suit for divorce and an actioo for
disaolutlon of marriage have been
filed 1n Meigs County Common Pleas

ELBERFELDS

W 12

~{

SEEK IJCENSE

WOMEN'S

Serving the area's banking need$ since •904·

NU II ~

VOL XXVIII

ADA VICKERS
Mrs . Ada Vickers, 89, Route 3,
Pomeroy, died Sunday at the Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville .
She was born July 10, 1890, a
daughter of the late Wllliam and
Sefronla Smith Jobes. Besides her
parenl8 she waa preceded in death
by her husband, Roy Vickers ; five
sisters and a brother. Several nieces
and nephews survive.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Fwteral Home with burial to be in
Beech Grove Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytlmeafter4p .m . Tuesday.

h was in 1904.

•

/

an get.., 18 years

A

COVINGTON. Ky . 1AP1 Howard D Kelly, 2!1. was se ntenced to a total of 18 years in
federal prison a fte r pleadtng
guilty to the $3 70,1XXJ robbery of a
Wells Fargo m oney truck June 18
tn Newport, Ky.
Howard T . Kalsbe ck . 49 ,
Kelly's the fa ther. had been given
the same sentence earlier and
will be eligible for parole in three
years, accordUlg to U.S. District
Judge Eugene Siler Jr .
However. Kelly. who uses his
mother's maiden name. will not
be eligible for six yea rs. Siler
noted Kelley 's previous felon y
conviction in Rochester. N.Y.
The patr was arrested by
federal and state officers in
Rochester . All the cash was
recovered .

Trip cut short
SPENCERVIIJ.E . Ohio !AP I
Thunderheads and snow
caused the c rew of the DaVinci
Trans-America to cut short thetr
effort to make the first tran scontinental balloon flight at
around midnight Monday .
The four crewmembers were
taken to St . Rita's Medical Center
m nearby Lima where Ver•
Simons , the onl y woman aboard ,
was admitted for treatment of a
broken leg . Hospital officials said
she was the only one treated for
injuries . She was listed in fair
condition.
The cr ew descended near this
western Ohio city inside the 100foot high balloon 's gondola .
The crewmembers, in addition
to Ms . Simons of McLean, Va .,
were Fred Hyde, an eye surgeon
from Prairie Vllage Kan . :
Rudolph Engelmann of Boulder.
Colo. and NBC-TV cameraman
Randy Birch.

Plane crash ian
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPl - A
twin-i!ngine Rockwell Aerocommander ail;llane crash-landed in
a soybean field in dense fog and
caught fire about 600 feet short ol
a runway at Den Scott Airport in
Columbus Monday morning .
The pilot, Robert Dearing, 50,
of Louisville, Ky ., the only person
aboard the pl1111e, was not Injured, the Ohio Highway P~trol
said.

HUD gran t to extend the se wage
system . Council wtll study the con tracts before any decisions will be

made ~

Also meeting with · council was
Hank C land, local realtor . Cleland
informed councU that he had an out
of town buyer interested in property
on East Main Street and asked if the
sewage line would go up as far as the
traffic light at the mtersec tion of
Nye Ave. and East Main.
Counc il does not know as yet how
far the line will go With the funds
available. It is felt , however, that
the line will possibly go as far as the
traffic Ught.
Counci l.
und er emergen cy
legislation, passed an ordinance
which authorizes the Board of Public
Affai rs to enter into an agreement
with the Ohio Power Co. to provide
electric energy to operate the
municipal sewa!(e system of
Pomeroy Village.
GraVel that was placed on the upper parking Jot by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Comme r ce was
discussed by council. Council agreed
tha t tf the gravel is not moved by
Od. 15, it will be moved by the city .
Larry Wehrung , councilman, announced that pe rso ns having
problems with cable TV are to con tact PoinTView Cable by phone . The
cable company has a 992 number
and it is listed in the phone directory.
The Board of Public Affairs was
granted pennission to advertise for
a truck chassis.
The report of the Chief of P olice
showed that the department collected $1,551.50 from the parking
meters, investigated 2:J accidents.
made 24 arrests and drove 4,757
miles .
Council voiced disappointment m
the report feeling that co llec~ons
and arrests were ver y low .
Council voted to purchase two
trucks of salt and agreed that the
streets in 'he downtown section will
be cleaned once a week .
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Lou Osborne . Attendmg
were Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Ja ne Walton, c lerk, Os borne.
Wehrung , Brown , Karr. Young, and
Betty Baronick, council members ,
Chie f Jed Webster, and Dennie
Ward .

Patron s encouraged
to attend session
Mei gs Local Sc hool patrons are
encouraged to attend a talented and
gtfted conference Friday, Oct . 19,
7:30p .m . and Saturday, Oct. 20, 8 : 4~
a .m . to 12 noon a t Ohio Uruverstly
Inn. Athens .
Dan E . Morris, director of
curriculum and instruction and
federal programs . sa1d today the
c onfe r e nce theme wi ll ~ e
" llecomU!g Aw r re of the Talented
and Gifted Children " wtth Dr .
Dcrothy Stsk, fot.ner dire ·tor of
H.E .W. Office of Education, Gifted
and Talented Office as the spea ker .
Saturday's program will featur e
TAG programs establis hed in
Marietta and Upper Arlington . A
new TAG film. "It's Cool to be
Smart" will be shown on Saturday .
The program L5 made posst ble m
part by the Ohio Program in the
HUITUlllibes under a grant from The
National Endowment for the
Hwnanlties. Morris indi ca ted that
plans are underway for the
esta blishment of a local co uncil for
talented and gifted st udents .

Gold soars again
LONDON 1 AP i - 'Gold soared to a
re(:ord $440 an ounce Ln IJJ ndon
tod ay and $436ln Zunch. The dollar
dropped .
The !JJndon ju mp of S21i . 75 from
Monday's lat e pnce was the b1ggest
one-day rise seen li1 the bullion
market here.
Market men described the tradmg
, as fran tic turmoil
One dealer predicted the prt ce Will
soon reach $50(f' an ounce " bee a~
everyone wants to buy and no one
wants to seU." .
Gold also r&lt;lf" in Ron g Kong.
jumping $24.86 to $419 .24 from
$394.38 Monday .

COURTDATECHANGED
All county court CJlSes scheduled
for Monday, Oct. 6, will be heard
Wednesday , Oct.. IO, due to the courthouse being closed Columbus Day .

•

FAI,L FESTIVAl . ENTERTAINMENT - Francis Andrews, standing wtth violin , left, and his group w1Jl be featured as part of the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center fall fcsltval en tertaUlffient rriday from II a.m to 8

p.m. in Pomeroy Other activities will include a country store, games,
plenty of good food , applebutter making and a cake decorating contest.
Another attraction will be Kenneth Ward of Bidwell, right, who will
provide additional entertairunent. The public is mvited .

Carter's alternatives fail to
untie knot, critics say
WA SHI NGTON
1API
Cong ressional cnllcs say Pres ident
Carter's Cart bbean UlttJatives have
failed to untie the knot hnk ing the
SALT
treaty w1th tile Soviet brn
Cuba '
in hts speech to the nalton Monday
mght . the pr.,;1dent outhn L'&lt;l plans to
Increa se U .S ~ urvt!illanc e of
rrulitary actlvtttes Ul Cuba , bolster
the U.S Nava l and mtlttary
presence m the area and speed m or ~
atd to those Latin American natwn s
wh1ch feel threatened by the SovietCuban al liance .
At the same tune h e repm1cd that
h~ has been gl\'en "assuran ct~S from
the htghest levels of the SoVJet
gov~ nunent " that the bn~ade of
Russtans are mdeed engaged only'"
trammg and that they will not be
used to lhreat t&gt;n an vu m•

\1

Board

Rut the Carter speech d1d little to
sway e n tics of the admin istration 's
foretgn polic y, many of whom
comp lamed that the presiden t failed
to keep hts pledge to change the
status quo m Cuba by n egotiatin g
withdrawal or dtsma ntlmg of the
br igade .
"No. we are not gomg to push
forward w1th SALT unlil the SoVIet
troop question IS resolved, " s aid
Se n. Roben Dole : R-Kan ., one of
se veral
GOP
prc s tdenttal
eonte nde r s who comm~nted .
Sen Char le s McC Matil1as. RMd ,
referrtng
to
th e
admintstratton 's early h a ndling of
the Cuban nap, said the president
spent most of the spe€ c "trymg to
deal wtth a self-inflicted wound ."
Sen . Cha rles H Percy, R-ll l. sa 1d

optimistic~

The Meigs Local School District
teachers strike moved into its seventh day Tuesday morning with a mixture of pessimistic and optimistic at titudes following a meeting of
negotiating teams ln Nelsonville
Monday night.
The attitude of the administration
reflected by Davtd G leason, superin tendent of the district , appeared optimistic Tuesday m orning although
he did state that no significant
progress was made at the Monday
mght meeting The statemen t of
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, president of U1e
Metgs Local Teachers Assoc iation.
this morning re fl ected a gloomy piCture follow ing the Nelsonvi lle
meetmg
Gleason had this t o say this mor ning
" Last m!lht at 4:30p.m., the nine
members of the negotiations team of
the teachers · associa tion and the
Jx·.rd 's team met in Nelsonvi lle .
The overall atmosphere seem ed
positi ve even though no significan t
progress can be reported .
" We have another negotiations
session set for Wednesday afternoon
at 3:30p.m . We are oplirntsttc that
some progress can be made at this
meeting which can be taken back to
the association's voting body .
" Again our schools are open . We
do have qua lifi ed personnel in every
building . We have several parents
who have volunteered in va rious
buildings and they are domg an out-

Formt•r H io proft·...... or

filt·.., -. uit i 11 l'ou rl
Chargmg he was dtsrntssed for
crtt tr breach of con tract
Sa1d M. Karara. who coordinated
the college's mmmg technology
program, ~- laims the colle~e · s dean
tennmated hts $21,279 contract for
the !971!-79 academic year beca use
he criticized promotion polt ctcs by
the school admuustratwn
Named 1n the su 1l as code fendants are college dean Ronald
V. Easley , college President Paul C.
Hay es and college PI'O\'OSI Clyde
(:;vans .
The complaint states that m
August 1978. Karara criticized dean
Easley 's " raptd promotion from
teacher to associate dean to dean
wtthout compliance with alfirmat1 ve
actton gutde lines."
Ka ra ra wa s d ismissed in
November . The suit charges he
rece1ved no due process heanng
prior to his dtsmissal .
Karar a is seekmg reinstatement
and $100,000 in damages .

that what he sees as the president's
mabtl ity to change th e status quo
"will cau~ me to be mor e secure m
my vote agamst th e SALT treaty ."
" I thmk thts leave s us right where
we were ," said Sen . Jake Garn, RUtah . a prmcipal SALT II opponen t.
But a senior administration
offtctal
who has be-en closely
rnvolved m mtense negotiations with
the Soviets on the troop tSS Ut:! said
the status quo has in fact been
changed by the presidential order s
m creas m g the C .S. m tlt lary
prese nce near Cuba and by SoVlet
assurances that their troops in Cu ba
·wtll not be a th reat to the Untted
States or to any other nation · ·
Sen . !'rank Chur ch. D-ldaho .
cha trman of the Senate Foreign
Relal!ons Comm ittee , ca lled the

Soviet assurances, said to have
come persona lly from Soviet
Pres1dent
Leontd
Brezhnev ,
·· welcome bu t insufficient."
"I continue 10 believe that before
the treaty fTiay take effect the
&amp;nate will lllSISI on an affinnation
by the president. backed up by our
own intelligence , that Soviet combat
for ces are no longer deployed in
Cu ba ,' ' l'h urch satd.
The president said the Cuban
controve rsy must be kept in
perspective He maintained it is no
reason for a rebi.rth of the co ld war.
And he satd tf it led to tlle
destruction of the SALT II treaty,
the Umted States would be forced to
ltve li1 a world " in which every
cot1 frontatton or dispute could carry
the seeds of a nuclear confl1ct."

teachers pessimistic

standing job. We woul d like to commend all those people for their
tremendous effort . We urge you to
send your children to sch ool and we
also urge you to volunteer to help in
this time of need .
" As we have mentioned before, we
do not want you to get down on our
teac hers . F.ducation today takes all
of us - par ents, teachers, adrrunistrators and kids - to overcome
the extreme hardships and
pressures of our complex societ y.
We must look a head to when this
cn sts is ove r . 1And 1t Will be over
sometime. 1 Let's be positi ve and
let 's not forget that we are gotng to
need a lot of help tn making our
school system the kind of system
that meets the need of all our
kids - help from you. from me, from
U1e board and from ~ur teachers "
TEACHERS SIDE
Mrs . Ftsher had the followmg
statement this monun~ :

Juveniles charged
in two B&amp;E cases
Two br eaking and ente ring offenses were solved in one hour after
they were discovered Monday afternoon by the Middieport Pol1ce
Department.
Po~ce Chief J J Cremeans satd tl
was discovered after 12 nooo Mon day tha t the Hackett storage
building on Pear l St ., and the Ford
storage building, also on Pearl St .
had been illegally entered . Tools
estunated to he worth between $400
and s:;oo were 'ta ken from the
Hackett_ building and vehicle keys
and other ite'1 from the Ford
building .
"'¥
Charges Will be filed against two
juveniles All of the items taken
were recovered Chief Cremeans
Said .

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the fire station at II : 12
p.m . Monday for Delbert Lawson,
Minersville, who had been taken to
the station apparently suffering
from a heart attack . He was taken
to Holzer Medical Center by the
·squad .
At 6:12p.m. Monday the unit went
to Mechanic St. for Paula Derenberger who had fallen . She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was treated and
released .

'1'oday is the seventh day of the
teachers ' strike and everything ts
status quo .
" Ninety-nine percent of the
students in the district are not in
schools. Contrary to the superinte ndent 's r eport, attEndance is not
on the rise as both Monday and
Tuesday there was a stigh t dectine Ul
attendance . Seven non-members are
staffing two schools by crossing
picket lines and two oul-&lt;&gt;f-count y
s ubstitutes are in a building with approximately 20 students.
Till s
buildmg is one that ha' three nonmember teachers.
·'Teachers are being harassed
datly by administration, board
members a nd the Parkersburgbased security guard
"Negotiations are at a standstill
After Monday 's m eeting, all
unresolved items remain that way .

No end is in sight for the strllle . The
Metgs Local Teachers AMociatlon
would like to state again that the
schools should be closed until thJs
situation is resolved .
"The association would like to
po int out that the Meigs Local Board
of Educatioo is virtually nonetistent . The five elected and appointed members have turned over
our schools to a stranger who does
not even live in our county.
Desp1te repeated attempts to contact the board. the public has had little or no access to the members. No
pubUc board meeting has been held
st nce the first day of the strike .
·We would like to urge citizens of
:'oletgs Local District to can their
board members and provide them
with their opinions. The board main ·
tains they have received no contact
from the local citizens ."

Middletown strike ends
The Associated Pnss
Middi etown teachers ended a nineday strike Mooday after approving a
tw&lt;&gt;-year contract offer Sunday .
Settlement of the Middletown
walkout leaves more than 1,1 00
teachers off the job in three other
Ohio districts . About 22,1ll0 students
are affected by the walkoul8 .
The
Middletown
Tea chers
Association sai d 1t had won a 4 percent salary increase sta rting Jan . I,
and that salaries would go up
another 10 percent, depending on
passage of a tax levy .

doth i 11g, fum it ure
The Charles Ohlinger fami ly i:; in
need of c lothing . They lost all their
personal belongings when the trailer
home they wre living in was
destroyed by fire Sunday morning.
The home was located on SR 143,
Homer Hill .
~- "The family of six, four children,
needs the following clothing : boys'
pants, si2e 12 to 14; shirts, size 14 ;
and size 3 and one-llalf shoes : boys'
pants , 29 waist and 32 length ; shirts,
sile 18 ; size 7 and one-half in shoes ;
boys'pants, size 7; shirts, 6to 8; size
12 in shoes; girls' clothing , slacks,
size 14 ; blouses, ,size 14 ; size 6 in
s hoes; mother, 9-!ll-12 in slacks; 32
or small in blouses; size 6 and onehalf in shoes; father, panl8, 38 waist
and 30 length ; large in shirts ; size 11
inshoes .
.
Those wishing to donate clothing
are asked to call 992.JS37 .

..

The strike kept 640 teachers off the
job since Sept. 2! . Schools had been
closed in the 11,000-pupil district since last Tuesday . Contract talks had
been going on for four months.
Meanwhile, strike!! continued in
the Ohio Valley Local, Meigs l..ocal
and Lorain school districts .
Teachers in the Ohio Valley
district turned down a contract
proposal over the weekend. The
strike by about~ teachers is now in
its sixth week.
'l;eacher spokesman Richard
Frankhouser said the latest proposal
was turned down by a vote of !Bfl.-6.
The teachers are under a court order
to continue negotiations until a contract agreement Ls reached. Six
thousand pupils in Adams and parts
of Highland and Brown counties are
affected by the walkout.
No progress was reported ln the
strike by 140 teachers in the 28,000pupil Meigs Local School District,
headquartered in PoJperoy. the
walkout moved into its second week

·~:?-~r.,.:.,·:·:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:':·:· :::'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,,,,,:
EXTENDED FORECAST

Partly cloudy 'lbnnday, fair
Friday and Satnnlay. ()aly mluor

dally varladooa In temperatura
with blgba arODDd 10 aad Iowa In
the 401.
::: : : :: ::;:::::::: ::::::::::::: ::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :~~;;.:x:x:::::::

Weather

Partly cloudy tonight wtui lowllln
the low iiCM. Variable cloo"''DNI
Wednesday with highs In the mid to
upper 80s. The chance ol rain Ill per.
cent tonight and Wedneaday.

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