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8-The Daily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Oct . 2, 1979

Marketbaskets show effects of inflation
,COLUMBUS, Ohio I AI' 1 - The
Associated
Press
Ohio
Mllrketbasket list continues to show
the effects of inflation . The total cost
of the items on the hst IIIchcd up
fractionally at the end of Septemb&lt;r .
Prices in the sampliiig of 17
standard grocery items at selected
stores in 18 cities totaled an average
of $21.48 III the latest check, That

figure was up Jl9 perc ent from the

nme others anu the cost at

"verage of $21.29 at the enu of
August . The same items checked in
Uw same cities a year ago CO!:I1 an
average of $19 79 , with the new
f1gures representtg an 8.5 ~rcent
lilcre.a~ over the year .
The cost of seven items on the list
went down. whtle pnres went up on

pound

saL·k

of

d

five.

store-brand

gr"nulated sugar remained at $1 .19.
The same bag of sugar cost $1.08 a
year ago and $1.{)4 at the enol
September 1976.
Higher-priced 1tems in the
September survey IIICiuded a pound
of hamburger, upfrom$1.41to $1.44 ;
a fX)Wld of name-brand baC'o.n . up

Pope's arrival cheered today
NEWYORK t AP1 - New Yorkers
cheered the arnval of Pope J ohn
Paul II today with bann.rs flymg
from \he Bronx to the Battery and
thousands lining the streelS Wlder
gray slues. many m ethm c Polish
costume .
The

scoreboard

at

Yankt.'~

histone address . Mayor 1-:dward
Koch had promised a "b igger and
better " receptiOn than thr pope
rece1ved in h1s natJVt' Poland .
Mary Jo Mullally , who saw the
pontiff at the begmnmg of h1s
pilgrm1age m her home of Dublm ,
flew here

w1th

a

L'UUSiJJ

to see him

Stadium was Itt up with a g1ant
"Welcome. " At Shea StadiWlllt was
"Shalom ." Tilt' top of the Rmp1re
State Buliding wa' ablaze wtth w1U1
white and yellow lights, tht• Vatican
colors .

a gam

''I'm really amazed at tht' passiOn
this event has generatt!d,'' sa1d

world . that when you see a holy man
yo u want as much of him as you

Marife Hernandez , chief of protocol
for the United States m New York .
Thousands wavmg banner s.
permants and balloons stood behmd
police barricades along ctty streelS
as the pontiff landed at LaGuardia
Airport 1n "Shepherd I ." h 1s
specially marked TWA 727. and
drove to the United !';allon s for an
lustonc address. Mayor Edward
Koch had promised a " b1gger and
better" reception than the pope
received m his native Poland .
Mary Jo Mullally . who saw the
pontiff at the b&lt;gmnmg of h1s
pilgrimage m her home of Dublm,
flew here with a cousin to see hun
agam .
" We shook his hand We follow
turn jlll&gt;'l like people follow Elvis, "
she said, refernng to the late rock
'n' roll star E!Vls Presley
1
' There are so many smners Ln the
world, that when you see" holy man
you want as much of hun as you
can." sa1d her cousm. Suzzane .
Others on hand for the welcommg
Ct!remony, along with Mayor Koch,
included Govs. Hugh Carey of New
Yith banners flying from the Bronx
to the Battery and thousands linmg
the streets under gray sk1es, many
in ethnic Polish costume
The scoreboard at Yankee
Stadium was lit up with a giant
" Welcome ." At Shea Stad1wn it was
" Shalom ." The top of the Emp1re
Stae Buildmg was ablaze with w1th
white and yellow ltghts, the Vatican
colors.
"I'm really amazed at the passion
this event has generated," sa1d
Marife Hernandez, chief of protocol
for the United States in New York .
Thousands waving banners,
permants and balloons stood b&lt;hmd
police bamcades along c1ty streets
as the pontiff landed at LaGuardia
Airport 1n " Shepherd I," h1s
specially marked TWA 727. and
drove to the Umted Nation s for an

can,' · sa1d her cousin, Suzzant! .
Other s on hand for the welcoming

" We shook hts hand . We follow
hun just hke people follow Elvts,"
sht&gt; sa id , referrmg to the late rock
·n · roll star EIV1s Presley .
"There are so many stn ncrs 10 the

ceremony , along with Mayor Kw

here wtth a cousin to~ him again .
" We shook his hand . We follow
hun Just hke people follow Elvis. "
stw sa1d , referring to the late rock

'n · roll star ElVIS Presley .
.. Then are so many sinners 1n the
world.that when you see a holy man
you want as much of him as you
can,'' said her cousin, Suzzane .
Otliers on hand for the welcoming
ceremony, along wtth Mayor Koch,
mcluded \,ovs Hugh Carey of New
York and Brendan Byrne of New
Jersey , Cardinal Terence Cooke of
tbe New York Archdiocese and
Bishops Franc1s J . Mugavero of the
Brooklyn Diocese
At United Nations headquarters m
mid-Manhattan, diplomats had
assembled unpress1ve guest hsts for
two receptions and Pope John Paul's
major speech

to

the

General

Assembly.
The guests ranged from Jcquehne
Ot'lass1s and her daughter, Caroline
Kennedy, to the preSldents of Cyprus
and Gabon and the prime ministers
of Portugal and Mauritius .
" [ can hardly wa1t ," said Mayor
Edward Koch, who intends to trail
the :;~year-&lt;&gt;ld pope through most of
his tightly packed New York
schedule .
Koch ·s Joyful antlcipatwn was not
dampened by the cost of deploying
more U1a11 11,000 pohcem~n - half
the city for ce - for $2.5 mtllion m
overtime .
Pohce estimated 5 mtllion people
wuuld turn out along the pope's
route, whatever the weather - and
ram was fort~ast .
That figure would
rival the crowd
( '
that gathereQ•· under sWlny July
skies for the tall ships of the
Bicentennial "Op Sall " celebratiOn .
An estimated 70,000 persons were
expected to ja m into Yankee

Hoofs and Paws
By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - Rememb&lt;r J told
you not long ago about U1e busy time
we had of it in August.
Well , September was a h u ndinger, let me tell you . We ,, ade so
many fWl8 to come to the aid of
animals that there wasn 's much
time left over for a personal life .
Even the Thrift Shoppe m Mid dleport didn t do too badly considering all the yard sales going on
in the swnmer. The five women who
work down there were kept
reasonably busy and the proceeds
helped pay for , some of the gasoline
used on ambulance and placement

runs .
1bis writer, Major Miller and Ollf
president, Dorthea Fisher, spent
some time working with Humane
Society Inspectors who visited the
Gallia County Pound, met with the
conunissioners down there, and stnce have talked several times w1th
the woman who is spearheading the
development of a Gallia County
Hwnane Society.
That brings us to the lljlimals
themselves and most of tbe news
about them, although each started in
abandonment 28 ended up being
placed in good homes - four were
euthanized - three because they
were in bad health and one very
pregnant Beagle type.
. Here is the picture of what the
Hwnane Society did during September:
Nul,sance Call (barking dog)
Rutland , 1, Referred to Police-

Sheriff.
Pick-up of abandoned animals: 10.
Delivery of newly adopted

animal : 1.

run

Ambulance
to vet : 6.
Pick-up of animal in distress : 2.
First aid nm of animals being
housed temporarily : 3. 1

F:utharul.allon of rntically 1ll or inJUred animals : 6
Pi ck-up of supplieS for animals : 2.
Wild goose chase of reported
strays-aba ndoned animals - not
there : 2
Physical exam at vet for new
stray : 4.
Investigation of negl.-ct : 2
To vet for dog'&lt;'at med1c trainin~ :
2.
Animals reclauned by owners : 4.
Notice the 1lem above, "Pick-up of
supplies for animals ." Well, let me
tell you about a phone call we got on
Thursday .
A truck drtver ca lled from
Coolville asking where he could
deliver sometbing like 3,000 flea and
tick collars. l couldn 1 believe my
ears - but he said he had them and
that the slupment was prepaid - so
what would you say ?
l said. ' 'I'll meet you at our Thrift
Shoppe in Middleport ." So that's
what l did and that is why we offer a
free collar to each person who adopts one of our kittens, cats, puppies or
dogs .
Major Miller in the second request
to Sergean!B asked for J6 dozen more
coUars than were shipped originally
and they must have cleaned out their
warehouse for us . We sure do appreciate it - as l know the new pet
owners do that accept animals from
us.
You see each year quality companies like Sergeant make improvements on their merchandise
and what they have left over from
the previous year is donated to nonprofit organizations dealing with
animals, like ours to "giVe" to pet

owners.
They profit on their income tax
and our animalB profit by being
''flea promed"prlor to being offered
for adoption. Needless to say there
wtll be a nice letter of thanks sent to
Sergeant Company .

Stad1 um tomght a s the pope
cele brate s Ma ss With Cardinal
Ter ence Cooke, archbishop of New
York , and Catholic bishops of the
art&gt; a.
And about one mlllion persons
were expected for a major address
Wednesday morning at Battery
Park on Manhattan 's southern tip, a
crowd so huge city offlctals d.-c1ded
to close down the nearby Staten
Is land ferry slips for two hours .
The 53 rntles of parkWays and c1 ty
streets along the pope's route were
ordt•rpd closed a half -hnur in

~

from $174to $1.L7. and whole frymg
chicken , up from 59 to 62 cenL' per
pound .lostalg1a buffs might note
that hamburger sold for BO cents a
pound III September 1976, but the
averagt&gt; cos t for whol e frymg

chicken, even tllen , was 59 cents per
pound in cities hsted m the survey .
The rost of chuck roast averaged

advance of Ius amval at each pomt.
and transportation chiefs brared for
an all.Jay rush hour, pleadmg wiU1
drivers to leave thetr cars at home .

But rro one doubted that for t wu
days, the c1ty would see not only one
of the most im~rtant visitors m 1ts
history , but some of the worst trafftr
jams of all time .
The second Homan Cathohc
pontiff to vis1t the c1ty , Pope John
Paulll will spend IWlre as lung here
as Pope Paul VI d1d on Oct . 4, 1965,
and w1ll get much closer to New
York's ordlnary citize ns than Pr1ul

did durmg hts wtrirlwmd tour of Uw
United Nattons, the World' s Fa1r
and Yankee Stadium

r-------------------------1
Letters of opinion an· \u·lromed. They should be less
than 300 v.urds lun!( 1or subjeet tu reduction by the editor 1
and must be signed with the st~nee ·s addr.-ss. "'ames may
be v.ithheld upon puhlication . Huwenr. on request ,
names will bt· dis!'losed. Lettns shnuld bt• in l(ood tastr ,
addressing issues. not personal it it's .

The other side. ..
September 30, 1979
Dear Editor,
Usually l would deign to refer to a
letter to the Editor of the Sentinel
writtn by someone apparently
biased as ts Linda L. Shul17,
however, her rema rks should not go
unchallenged.
She states that ''meardngful
education" is taking place in
Harrisonville in her room . How can
anyone so oblivious to the economic
situation of our country today
pretend to teach effectively •
'!'his
Shultz person
asks,
" Whatever happened to the $3,000 a
year teacher who truly TAUGHT the
great scholars (sic I of the world'"
Those teachers have vanished
with the five-eent candy bar, the
twenty-nine cent per gallon gasoline,
tbe seven-cent per gallon fuel oil, the
ten-cent cup of coffee, and the tencent loaf of bread.
U Unda L. Shultz truly thinks so
highly of the" $.1 ,000.00 a year
teacher", why does she then write,
" I'd like a raise , sure"' She should
obtain the facts about the amount of
money alloted to Meigs Local School
System by the state and its
disposition .
Nonga F .' Hoberts
Hetired Teacher, Meigs
J.ocal School District

Hlanu·~

hoard, Supt.

Dear Editor,
Who does Mr . Gleason tlunk he is
coming in to run the school eli strict. I
say if they have enough money to
pay a lawyer 70 dollars an hour for
JUSt sitting on Ius can, and pay guards $7 an hour to guard an almost empty school then they got enough to
pay the teachers what they are
asking . Mr . Gleason, we have news
for you, Meigs JCoWlty mothers Jove
their kids and we wil not let our kids
be the strike breaker 1 It is not fBJr of
you to say if our ktds don~ go to
school, they are counted absent. I
will fight and protest this till you
know what freezes over. The truth Is
we know you don 1 pay the teachers
enough . l wouldn't walk into that
classroom to teach a bunch of those
luds for under $150 dollars a day . It's
not the teachers' fault about the
schools falling down . It's not tbe1r
fault thert 's not enough books or
Help

they are outdated
l 'd SBY the school board and the
superintendent is to the fault. You
all knew this was coming all summer . Why didn't you all slop it
b&lt;fore it started? U we have some
kid in the future whose a 6th grade
dtopeout become president of U. S.
feel proud Mr . Gleason you helped
put him there . You've got a few good
teachers. Try to keep them . I
wouldn 1 blame them if they went
elsewhere !

Mrs. William Fink,
246 Sycamore St.
Middleport , Oluo

Decision upsetting
Dear Editor,
l would like as a parent to express
my feelings on tbe Meigs Local
School situation.
l do not know Mr. Gleason, but
what he did to our band kid5 was all
uncalled for. They had looked for ward to their first contest at
Wellston . We parent.&gt;; got them out
there to practice and back all week .
The ktds had it all worked out to
get there in cars . Then late Friday
thi:i great man called and told them
not to let the band on the field .
Now, l ask you , is that a way to do
the kids' They can't have school,
now he has taken the ball games and
band from them . What have they
done to be punished for that is what
they are doing. What lund of a school
board do we have' :'&lt;one at all. Do
we parents have to sit by and watch
our luds be in~ hurt ' There must be
sometlung we can do.
Rosemary Hysell
698 Laurel Street
Middleport, Oluo 45760

dropped from $1 to !M3 cents while a
10-jx&gt;Wld sack of Idaho potatoes fell
from $165 to $1.59.
Tomato prices increased from 58
to 64 cents per pound 011 average,
wh1k the average price of a head of
lettuce went to 68 cents, up 10 Ct!nts
from the previous month .
The average prices of other Items
surveyed included: center cut pork
chops at $190, down from $2 .02 a
month ago ; a gallon of store-brand
whole milk at $179 , up from $1.77 ;
and a pound of margarine in
quarter-pound sticks at 68 cents, up
from 67 cents.
Following are average totals for
Items on the Marketbasket list from
reportmg cities, witb September
prices first and August prices
second:
Athens, $22.31, $21.44 ; Canton,
$19 .34, $!8.36; Cincinnati, $22.14,
$22 .10; Cleveland, $21.63; $22.44 ;
Dllwnbus, $22.58, $22.32; Conneaut,
$21.41, $22 .36; Findlay, $22 .65,
$22 .26 ; Fremont, $22 .&gt;9, $21.10;
Kent-Ravenna, $21 .26, $20 .93;
Marietta, $21.48, $21.30; Massillon,
$19.96, $19.40; Painesville, $21.65,
$22 .13; Portsmouth, $21.10, $21.80;
Salem, $22.01, 121.48; Steubenville,
$22 .66, $2194; Toledo , $19 .30, $19;
Van
Wert,
$22 . 18 ,
$22 .37;
Youngstown, $20.43, $20 .56 .

11 65 pt:r ~JO W'ld m tht.&gt; latest price
d.• · l· ~.. up .·.4 percent from the endo f -Au gu ~~ orin~. A dozen gradt! A
htrg l.' ··~g::.; cost an awrage of 77

cents at the end of September, down
Sl'Vc n cen ts per OOzen from a month

ago .
The cost of an llklunce jar of
peanut butter fell from $1.21 to $1.19
tn the CitieS checked .
. The a . . ·crage pnce of a one-pound
c e~n

of name-brand co £fee increased

Six

cents - from $2 .99

w $3 .05

'Illc cost of a 103 .. -ounce can of
tomato soup dropped fractionally to
22 .9 cents. while the price of a 13ounce P"ck of chocolate chip cookies
rose 3 percent ·to an average of
$!.1 6' ' · The price of a 12-&lt;&gt;unce ran
of froze n orange jUice concentrate

Truck drive fund
at $10,200 mark
A publtr fund drive by the Middleport Fire Department to ra1se
113,000 for a heavy duty rescue van
has reached $10,200.
The department is hoping to wrap
up the final $2800 in the near future .
Those wtsh\flg to contribute may
send contributions to the department in Middleport noting that the
donation is for tbe new truck .
Latest contributors were Denver
Nelson , Mrs. John Kincaid , Silver
Hun Free Will Baptist Churc h, Betty
Lou Kerns, Adolph Saelens, Home
Bwlders Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ, Hearthstone Class
of the Middeport First Baptist Church, Cynthia Gori ng , Doroth y
Ycauger, Mirl Ratliff. Leo Rupp,
Clara Bell Smith, Margaret VanCooney, Mr . and Mrs . R. L. Miller,
Mr . and Mrs. William E. Lewts,
Dorothy Young, Mr . and Mrs .
Waller Housh, Robert Goodall, Mr .
and Mrs . Ted Riley, Sr .. Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bachner , Bnan Mullen
and Feeney-Rennet! Post 128,

--------------------------

! Are:-a De:-aths
I

BLANCHE M. BRALEY
Mrs . Blanche M. Braley, 79, North
Main St, Rutland, died Monday
evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs . Braley was born Sept. 18,1900
in Rutland Townslup, a daughter of
the late Edwin M. and AnM Sisson
Taylor. A homemaker most of her
life, she was married on May 24,
1919, to Victor H. Braley , who survives . Other survivors are a
daughter, Mrs. David (Dorothy 1
Tillis, Chillicothe; four grandcluldren, DaV1d Tillis , Jr.. Dearfield , 01; Robert Tillis, Greenfield;
Mrs. Robert IRoseanna 1 Grooms
and Mrs . Michael 1Pamela 1 Thompson , both of Chillicothe, and three
great-grandchildren, Cindy James
and Robert B. Tillis, both of Greenfield, and Jennifer Th!IIlpson of
Chillicothe.
Several nieces ,
nephews and cousins also survive .
Mrs. Braley was a member of the
Hutland Church of Cllrist for :&gt;4
years. She was a Sunday school
teacher and church treasurer there
for several years.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p .m . "Thursday at the Rutland Church of Christ with Mr . Brad Henderson officiating. Burial wiU be in
Miles Cemetery . Friends may call
at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland after 2 pm . Wednesday Wltil 12 noon on Thursday when the
body will be taken to the church to
lie in state . The family will receive
friends at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday .

American Legion.

MANTOUX PREFERRED
The Board of the Meigs County
T uberculosis Association has
decided that the Mantoux skin te.t
would be the preferred method for
admintstenng skin testmg 1n the
schools .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-David Smith, Reedsville ; Gladys Shwnway, Pomeroy ;
Kenneth Matson, HuUand; Robert
Lewis, Middleport ; Hobert Carnahan, HW1ttngton , W. Va .; Edna
Kennedy. Middleport.
Discharged-Mary Jane Pugh,
EllZBbeth Carpenter, Mary Pierce,
Huth Larkins , H.ichard DeMoss, Edna Bush

RUMMAGE SALE
The Harrisonville Senior Gtizens
will hold a rummage and bake sale
at the Hamson ville Town Hall Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to
3p .m .

·····.-GOOD TIIS SP£aAI.-.

••

13" PIUA •
Your choice of ony •

.one topptng .' l " l
Reg . $3 55

I

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were 1ssued to
Jeffrey William Marcinko, 20, Tuppers Plains and Peggy June Johnson, 18, Tuppers Plains; Hanry
Edgar Stewart. 24, HI . 2, Cheshire,
and Debbie Kay Lemley , 22, Rt. 2,
Cheshi r e.

l """ Oily

liltictsi
-. •••.••1

meetmg, an Ht.!euuvc sesswn for
the must part, lasted until a bout
11 30 p.m . durmg whtt· h the progress
of negotiations was reviewed
Two parents Wt&gt;re present for the
meetmg before it was mov~d into

word of thes~ canceHutwns . Late
Tuesday afternoon , board m ~ru l&gt;t:1"S
were notified that a spec1a l sesswn

towards lht.: setllcme nt uf lht.· stnke
li:iter loday was evllJ ~ nt from
C lt.·ason lhts mornm~ .

would be held last m~ht. It was
reported that the two parents who

exe&lt;· utlve session .

session started were not advised
that the meetmg was to be held, but
comc identally went to the bu 1ldmg to
ask thetr questions 1f the m cetm g
were held .
Dan E . Morris, dt rector uf in':'
strruction and curriculum. reported
he was not notified that the m ce tmg
would take place .

(;Ieason said that the f&lt;&gt;&lt;Jtball
team will be penn1tted to pra\'tlt'e
this cvcmng in preparatwn fur the
Wellston game Fnda y. However, 1!
the strike 1s not settled, the same
s1tuCjtion will exist fur Friday's
game that existed last Friday .
meamng. the band actiVIties and
game will not be held uiJJess the

The media was not not1hed that a
meeting would be held
·
Although special sessions have
bt!en set for each night stnce the
strike began last Monday , the
sessiOns through Friday were all
cancelled . There were no meetings
un Saturday , Sunday or Monday
evenings and the media received no

HALlOWEEN
IS
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER 31

VOL. XXVIII

NO 120

By KBtle Crow
The positive and negative s1des of
the B1g Bend Hegatta were ouUmed
when the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce met in regular scss10n
Tuesday at the Me1gs Inn .
Bill QUickel, c&lt;Khatnnan of thiS
year's Hegatta , presented the
positive and ne~ at1ve Issues .
The chamber los t more than $4,000
on this year's Hegatta , Qutckel's
comments were to assist in changing
the picture for next year. however,
when Qu1ckel concl uded , Fred Crow
and Paul Stmon did not agree with
some of the plans Quickel had
outlined .
On the good side. Qu1c kel liSted ,
worthwlule event.&gt;; were tenms mat ches, c once sston s tan ds, two
parade• . a large attendance of

for many years except this year ,
should be in charge of the rides, Jim
Frecker the parade , and others in
charge of other events .
Regardi ng Quickel's remarks
Crow said, " You're trying to do too
much, one person can oniy do so
much ." You went hog wild on expenses," Crow said to Quirke!.
Quickel further added that grant
money is available and the chamber
should try to secure some of the funds for the Regatta .
Simon reported that tbe stage on
the upper parlung lot should be completed within the next two weeks . He
also sa1d that Mayor Clarence An drews had indicated that parking
meters should not be moved from
thetr present locallon to across the
street where additional pavmg was

qu~ns ,

done .

out~f-tnwn

VIsitors ,

Lt.!

talent show. boat races, Herttage
Sunday, P . A. Denny and art s how .
On the other hand. bad features mduded rainy weather, the cam1val,
tbe Jeannte C. H1ley show, the fact
that tbc stage was not co mpleted.
teen dance whtch was cancelled,
parade route changed , and Jack of
infonnation , and a broken copy
machine.
Changes Quickel suggested were
better promotion , budget
established, develop a master plan,
include other activities such as a
long distance marathon race. and
for comnuttee members to attend
area festivals to gather 1deas for the
Regatta .
Paul Simon. president. noted that
the program~ were not out until two
days before Regatta . He also sa•d he
felt the president of the chamb&lt;r
should be general chatnnan stnce
the result of the Regatta falls on the
president's shoulder . He further
commented that the fact that the
copying maclune m the chamber offlee broke just a few days b&lt;fore the
event had no be ann~ on the Hega tta .
Fred Crow emphas ized that there
are far too many actlvtties and the
chambers does not have the manpower or tbe money to handle .
Crow ~he felt one person
rge of one eve nt.
should be in
Crow fell
t Bill Grueser , who
Ra.s been in ctiarge of the cam1val

Sunon observed tbat the merchant.&gt;; had paid for the paving with
the 1dea in mind that the meters
wuld be moved .
Bob Miller infonned members of
tbe upcoming golf tourament for
chamber members scheduled at
Hi verside in Mason Oct. 11.
There W!ll be an entry fee of $5
paid to the chamber Wlth each per son paying their own green fees p4jB
cart. Lunch w!U be served beginning
at noon and the tee off will be at 1
p.m. with a shotgun start
There will be troohies presented to
1Continued on page 14 1

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday: A
chance of showers in the northwest._,two-tblrds of the slate
Friday and across the stale
Saturday and Sunday. Highs In
the 6&amp; , lows ln the 408 .

Weather
Variable cloudiness tonight w1th"
chance of showers . Low 45 to 50 . Par tly sunny Thursday Wlth the lugh in
the low 60s . The chance of ram 30
percent tonight and lO percent Thursday .

ON THE FIRST FLOOR

MASKS AND COSTUMES
HAllOWEEN CANDY
Autumn MiJI: .

to read water meters Con

Halloween Cards · Streamers
Decorations
Tlble Covers

tact Cih' Hal l, Pomero y ,
tor applications.

of

Hallmark

Plat@s · Napkins - Cups.

ear
Top

company for 50 years . Ex
pertence in sales and ser
vice . Neat appearance,
transportat i on
needed .
Phone JQ.4 ·675 1954 or apply
in person , 601 Main St ., .Pt .
Pleasant .
WAITRESS WANTED . Ap ·
pi y
in person , Craw's
Family RestauranL
EXPERIENCED
SER
VICE mechanic Carter 's
Plumbing and Heating . 992 ·
6282 .

" Toda y our schools a r e all open .
" Last mght the beard of ed ucotion
m et at 7 :30p. m . 1n a specta l sess ion
whi ch had been scheduled . The
board first answered qu estions fr om
parents who were 1n attendance Af te r the ques tions wer e answered tht!

beard moved mto executive session
to discuss negotiations.
"This morning we are very opturusttc about a settlement at our
next negotiations meeting scheduled
this evening at 3:30 p.m . at a
Pomeroy church.
" If a tentative settlement would
occur , it would require a ratification
by all teachers in a general meeting.
We sincere ly hope this can and does
occur tonight.
" Aga m' remember most of our
teachers are extremely capable and
dedicated people who want the best
rOmtinued on page 14)

entine

at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WllJNlSDAY . DCI08E. R 3. 19/9

is listed in salisfactory c·onditton at Veterans Memorial Hospital where be
was admitted for treatment of numerous inj uries. Luckily , no one was
lulled .

CAR DEMOUSHED - Three persons were injured, one required
hospitahzatwn tn a four-vehicle accident Tuesday morning at the Junction of SR 7 and SR 124 in Meigs County . Hi chard Glasgow , :&gt;4, Gallipolis,

Three injured in four-vehicle smashup
Four persons were injured during
Tuesday "ccidents investigated by
the Ga llia - Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Three persons were injured during
a four-vehicle accident in Meigs
County on SR 7, at the junction of SH
124 .
Called to the scene at II :55 a . m .,
officers report a northbound auto
operated by Richard Glasgow . 54.
Gallipolis, had stopped at the in -

tersectton .
A northbound vehicle driven by
Hi chard Shook, 48, Belpre, stopped
b&lt;hind tbe Glasgow auto . A third
northboWld vehicle operated by
Ra lph L . Kessler , 28, Sturgeon, Pa .,
was unable to stop and attempted to
pass .

The Kessler auto and a southbeund vehicle driven by Betty J .
Foster . 24, Minersvtlle . collided

Commissioners table
communications bid
Also meeting w1th the board was

Wesley Buehl, county engineer.
Buehl discussed the opera tions of
the county highway departrnW. -~
Bueh l rep o rt e d
work
is
progressing on county road 18 and
that work would b&lt;gin next week on

headon . ·The Kessler auto then
struck the rear of the Shook veh•cle,
the left side of the Glasgow auto . and
overturned on the roadway .
Kessler and Glasgow diSplayed
visible signs of injury and were transported by the Middleport Emergency Squad to Veteran.s \l el!lorial
Hospital for treatment .
A passenger in the Shook IThlcle .

MAN CHARGF:ll
HAMILTON, Ohiu ,,,p, - Thre&lt;•
c·nunts of murder han· htTn Jodgt.·d
ctgainsl a Hamiltun man in
ronneftiun \4-'ith tht· dt·ath!! uf lhrt'('
persons in an On•rpt•rk ar('~l trailt•r.
Rirhard Sa,y lm . 27 , \o\a :-. wldt·r
police gua.rd Tut-sday in tJ hospital
undergoing tnatmt.· ut for stab

"''Sods. wrrr
.

d

John l.russu, li, and

RaJ · Wright Jr .. 31. whu liH-d in
tht• trailrr, and (~ah- :\Tilt , lM. uf
nt.·arb}' Libt-rt)' Town ~hip .

Gladys Shook, Belpre, claimed injury but was not inunediately
treated .
The Kessler ad Glasgow velucles
were demolished . There was minor
damage to the Foster and Shook
autos.
Kessler was cited on a charge of
failure to maintain an assured clear
di!; lance.

One person clai med injury
following a two-vehicle mishap on
SH 7 at CH 20, in Gallia County.
Called to the scene at 10 :3() a .m .,
the patrol reports a southboWld auto
operated by David L. Taliaferro, 31,
Belpre, had slowed in traffic.
A southbound velucle driven by
Robert L. Plullips, 24, Bidwell,
failed to stop and struck the
Taliaferro auto tn the rear .
Phillips was cited on a charge of
assured clear distance.
Taliaferro claimed inJury, but was
not immediately treated.
There was minor damage to the
Phillips vehicle, heavy damage ~ "
the Ta~alerro auto .

county road 25.

Also dtscussed was a ditclung
problem on county road 24 near the
Eb~n property and a water problem
on Oak Grove road . Buehi reported
that these problems would be taken

care of at once .
It was reported that a dedica tion
cerernoney for the

new nursmg

home 1s tenatively scheduled for
Sunday aftemoon on Oct 14 .
Permission was granted to Janet
Morns to attend a d1stnct club conventi on 1n
Oct. 4

~elsonville

on Thursday,

Parent filing deadline set

Plus bo)(ed candv and Trick or Treat Bags.

selection

the program

•

present contract there is to be no
charge for the headquarters
allocations.

Spook costumes

Fine

optuni sm

$l ,865.1n.
It was pointed out that under the

CraJy Rubber F~ces - Hands · Feet - Pretty Faces
. vampire Blood - Plus children's and ,adults'

PART TIME EMPLOYEE

of the

The Me1gs County Conuniss1oners
Tuesday night received one l&amp;id for
the Meigs Emergency Medical Ser vices Communications system from
tbe Motorola Corrununirations in the
amount of $6:&gt;. 750.93.
The bid was tabled and referred to
the EMS Board of Trustees for
•
stud y.
Meeting with the board were Bob
Bailey, EMS coordmator,and Bob
Fisher, president of the EMS Board
of trustees . They . discussed the
SEOEMS billings . A review 0! July
and August billings were made and
authorization was given to pay the
amount billed' less the headquarters
allocations charges in the amount of

'

HAU.MARK HALlOWEEN

reDection

1n

and the students arc m classes thi s
week .
In reference to the meetmg la st

night . Gleason saJ d there wa~ appan:ntly a mi.sWlderst.andin g and as
a resu lt , Lhe med1a was not advtsed .
The media would not have been per nutted to sit in on the Ion~ exec utt ve
sesswn, however . tn accordan ce
w1th law .
Gleason h~d thJs tu ~ay th iS mor mng -:

Chamber ponders
•
Regatta Issues

SElECTIONS

nings

A

teachers involved

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

SEE OUR HAU.OWEEN

-

asked questions before the execut.Ivt·

e

Scarf Pops · Caramels · Party Paks · Candy Corn

BAR HELP needed . 9'12
3860 be tween 8 and 10 mor

UNLIM I TED H I GH
ninos oPPortunity .

BY BOB HOU' LKH

Optimism towa rds the settlement
of a teachers stnke 1n the Me1gs
Local School Distnrt, possiblv ttus
evening, ran hi~h Uus m o rmn~ with
Meigs l.ocal Supt . Uav1d Gleason .
Gl ea~on announced a negotiations
sess1on bet ween the teams of the
Meige Board of f:d ucalion and the
Meigs L.ocal Teac hers Ao;sociation
will take place at 3:30 this afternoon
at a Pomeroy Ch urch .
The optimism followed a lengthy
meeting by the Mc1gs Local Board of
EducatiOn at UlP juni or htgh school
in Middleport Tuesday ni'!'Stt. The

ELBERFELD$

By Fanny Famrer and Brach -

wanted

Supt. Gleason optimistic about s~ttlement

HAND WORK ITEMS - Margaret Johnson is pictured with B'Small
part of thehandmade items and other merchandise to be featured at the
country store'~hich will be a part of Friday's fall festival at the Meigs
Senior (,'itizens Center in Pomeroy . 'The festival, from 11 a . m . to 8 p . m .,
Is open to the public .

'There has been a change in the
rules and regulations governing the
release of student directory mfonnation by schools. Under current
federal and state law directory in formation held about c urrent and
fanner public schol pupils by an
educational agency or insl1tut10n
may be released to any group or person tor use in a non'{lrofi t-making
plan or activity .
Directory information is defined
as a pupil's nome. address,
telephone listing, date and place of
birth . maJOr field of study, par -·
ticipation in officially recogniZed activities and sports, weight and
height of members of athletic learns ,

•

dates of attendance and date of
g raduation and awards r ecetved .

Such release of mformation is permitted unless expresly forbidden by
a student's parent or a ''ludent who
is of age
In accordance with this rule,
Southern Loca l School District has
established the period of Octob&lt;r 4 to
October 12 as the period during
which parents or eligible student.&gt;;
may file to refuse to penni! the
release of directory information.
Such s tatements s hould be subznitted in wrillng to the principal of
the building in which tht! student at tends .

EXTENSIVE DAMAGES - Two Middleport firemen were injured
and damage was extens1 vr toctay in a fire at 8:35a.m. at the fonner Reed
residence , 143 N. Front Sl \1 ,ddl epo11 T't• ltume, recently purchased by
Mr. and Mrs . Allen I .Ct' 1\,.,g 11 as not OCt'Upl ed. The blaze was discovered
by a neighbor who saw smoke coming from the kitchen area. There was
heavy smoke damage . Two fire fighters were injured, one had a burn on
the hand and the other a foreign object in his eye. They were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for treatment. It was believed the blaze as
caused from faulty wiring . There was no insurance and no monetary
figure was placed on the loss .
•

•

�•
2-'The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pom eroy. 0 ., Wednesday, O&lt;·t 3. 1979

3- The Da1iv Senunel. Middleport -Pomeroy . 0 .. Wednesday , Oct 3, 1979
I

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
VAT .. . to m~t it means a large
tub or barrel used for holding
liquids . To tax lawyers and tax
revisionists it means a value-addedtax. In the months ahead many more
of you will become fanullar with the
latter meaning of VAT, for 11 has

become an increasing ly popular
proposal in the legislative halls of
our NatiOn's Capital. fn fa ct . a long
and protracted debate over restructuring the U.S. tax system 1s ex pected to get Wlden.·ay this month
when the House Ways and Means
Comm.ittee opens heanngs on
proposals for the enactment of a
value-added-tax .
Championing the cause of VAT are
two powerful and mfluentlal members of Congress. Senator Hussell
Long of Louisiana, Chamnan of the
Senate Finance Corruru ttee. and
Congressman AI Ullman of Oregon .
Chainnan of the House Ways and
Means Comrmttee . The comrm ttees
they c ha1r are the tax wntwg commitees for the U.S Congress . With
their strong bar km g a VAT b1ll has
an excellent chance of b&lt;.&gt;commg
law .
Do we want 1t to' It 1s too early to
say . Advoca tes mamtam that a
value-added-tax will permit a
rollback tn the scheduled mcreases
tn social security taxes, tha t it will
pernut mcentives to buswess and in dJvid ual Investors to sp ur cap1tal
formatiOn . that 11 will abolish doubl e
taxation of corporate dividends, and
with respect to personal income
taxes, w!U allow a reducti on in the
maximum ra te from 70 percent to 50
percent, and will provide additional
tax relief for low tncome workers .
Supporters also contend that a value
added tax w1ll proVJde a boost for
U.S. trade , in that U.S . goods shipped overseas will be m or e competitive because the \'alue added tax
on them would be rebated . According to its s ponsor s. VAT is to b&lt;.&gt;

substitute for eXIsting ta.xe.s, not a
new tax on top of existmg taxes .
What prectsely is a value-added tax' It is a tax levied on the value

co nne ction s

be tw ee n

seemingly unconnected events Or to
create connections if such can be
made to demonstrate a point. Ar tifice for the sake of articulatiOn, so
to speak.
This tram of thought 1s prompted
by several current events . startmg
with the qw c kening tempo m defec. lions by Soviet ballet dancers
First there was Nureyev . then
came Makarova a nd Baryshnikov .
And now we are suddenly awash in
Russians c hoosing art1stic freedom .
American s tyle . We have amon~ us
Aleksandr Gudonov. Leonid and
Valentina Koslov and there might
have been another had not . according to report, , none other than
Koslov played the fink before h1s
own defection and revealed that the
travel plans of fellow Bolshoi sol01st
Ludmilkla Semenyka did not mrlude
· a return to the Soviet Umon fro m the
: comp;any's U.S. tOIJr
It all makes a good story, one that
is particularly illustrative of defects
in the Soviet system . The emigre
. dancers for the most part have
: changed allegiances for purposes
: not of political but of artiStic
· freedom. They have rebelled at the
; tyrany of direction . the absence of
; creative challenge and the denia l of
; opportunities for individual ex: pressior. with their own ballet
; organizations, rated though they are
• among the world 's greatest.
Maybe , however, it is too mu ch of
a good story by now . With
' familiaMty has come a lessening of
interest, or at least duration of interest, and possibly of enthusiasm in
' receiving later arrivals into the
Western dance fold.
There are only so many dancers,
, even 8li produced by the superb
' . schools of the Bolshoi and Kirov
~ ballets , of the caliber of a
:· Baryshnikov.
· And there are limitations in the
,: capacity of the West - and that
•· means essentially the United States,
·: which is where ballet is really at
: currently - to absorb new stars. It
~ produces plenty of its own_ And
~

while companies are nwnerous .

:i

finances are a continuing problem
~ for all but a select few_
~
Nevertheless, the newcomers
F. would appear to face no employment
:~ problems. AJJ an American im' pressarlo observed of the Koslovs,
~ they may not be the top of the Soviet
~-,ballet line but they should find plenj,) ty of bookings with smaller companies that can't afford the top.

,.

VJHV DON'T you DO WHAT I DO, '

By Martha Angle and Robert
Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA ) - Now
that federal prosec utors have abandoned their attempt to suppress
publication of a magazine article
about the hydrogen bomb, Congress
ought to re-..xamine the law that inspi red the ill -&lt;:onceived court
c ballenge .
Teh statute is totally antitheti cal
to the fundamental tenents of
democracy because it severely
restricts personal thought and commwtication . It is, in short, a
misguided effort to impose thought
control on the nation's citizenry.
The law applies to any individual
who "lawfully or unlawfully (has)
possession of, access to, control over
or (is I entrusted with any document
... or information involving or in ·
corporating Restricted Data."
U that person "communicates ,
transmits or discloses the same to
any individual ... with reason to
believe such dsta will be utilized to
injure the United States or to secure
an advantage to any foreign nat10n ."
the alleged offender is subject to
c riminal prosecution .
The law's applicabiUty becomes
even more sweeping 8li a result of a
definition of " Restricted Data" that
is not limited to documents, photos.
designs or other materials that are
officially classified.
Instead, "Restricted Data means
~II
data J&gt;Qn c erning design,
manufacture or utilization of atomic
weapons ; the production of special
nuclear material; or the use of
special nuclear matertal tn the
production of energy.' '
In other words, if any reader of
this .column has a brainstorm embrasing one of the countless for bidden "secrets" of nuclear power
and describes that inspiration to a
colleague, virtually all the edlements of a criminal act are involved .
There remains only (he need for
prosecutors to show that the secret
was divulged by someone who had
"reason to believe .. the information
would harm lhls country or help

that the tax wuuJd pronde a lot more
stability to our el·ono nur .s ystt•m

than the present structun• and woul d
be relati vely free of loopholes .
IllS ltus last pcnnt that many uf the
proposal's rritles art&gt; concerned
a bout. They antll'lpate that demands
for special tax treatment In lht• fom1
of exemptiOns w1ll be too numerous
bt&gt;ing

IS

men t can ra1se additional monies .
Congressman Barber Cona ble. the
rankmg minonty member of the
House Ways and Means Comrmttee.
s uggests that the Congress take a
long hard look at the v alu e-&lt;~dded ­
tax . In his judgme nt 1t would bt- in-

flationary,

regressiv~.

would ac-

celerate the centralization of government in Was hmgton . and would
raise the rlsk of a sharp tncreas e in
federal spending .

I share many of these concerns.
but at the same tunc I wa nt to g1ve
thiS s ubJ e&lt;'t a fa1r hea nng . E urope
has used the va lue-added-tax extensively and successfully and man)
fee l 1t coul d work equally well he r e
u1the Uni ted States .

The attention accorded to and the

secure futur es of the dancers are m
pamful contrast to the lot of deft'Ctors from another tyranny - the
hundreds of thousands of In dochinese for whom poss1ble death
on the open sea and ln border
minefielils has b&lt;.&gt;en prefera ble to
the life they knew a t home .
The boat people . of course, news a b1g and contlnwng sto r y . But
collectively . Ind ividually they are
largely tnvisthle , personal ago ni e s

submerged 111 the mass llllsery .
There

has

been

much

han -

dwringmg tn the West over thetr
plight. but the respo nse has yet to
meas ure up to the colossal need .
Som e 350.000 are estun.atrd to be 1n
camp..., in Southeast A&lt;;ia , awaittng

an opportunity to beg1o livmg agam
some where tn thl' world Tht• In ternational r ornmumty 's bill for
emergency a1d and re.settlement Js
some $10 mill10 n monthly a nd nsmg
Their ~ght would appear to have
no conn ection wtlh the pcrc-nmal In terest m a pos._"iible reunwn of a

m us1c group that probably has
rece1 ved more attentwn dunn~ the
past two decades than any s1ngle nr
several individ uals in the ~·urld.
"1th teh poss1ble excepu on uf
Jacqueline Kennedy Onass1s .
But it is in the boat people's cause
that the Beatles are now be mg urged
to come together again . One
prom ote r W1Se 1n the wa ys of makin~
rock relebnty pay and pay a nd pay
estimates that a series of three
Beatles concerts would re~Uzp an
estimated half billion dollars from
live audiences and tel eviSion rig hts .
The primary interest of the contributors t o that prospective take
would not be refugees. of In dochinese or a ny other variety . But
that isn 1 important. The money ts
That and possibly a pomt demonstrated : Wha t hwnamtarian instincts alone can't achieve 1n the
disorde rly course of human events ,
a little show business often can .
A point tha t would not be li ke ly to
meet with argument among the
ballet defectors.

Washington today
After
t'lgh t m on th a s a l .S. sl! nator, with
no me&lt;i s urable legislative r ecord
and
no
oth er
particular
.accomplishmen ts on the national

Inc umb ents, including Pressler's
oppone nt, the ir jobs.
He ran against the advice of many
GOP professiona ls in South Dakota
who sa1d he wa s too yo WJg and

h.' \"el. I ,arry Pressler believes he 1s
n'ady tD bt&gt; p residen t
W1th little money and less
or_gruH zatJon . tht:' Ti-ye.ar-old Sou Ul

mexperienced .

W ASHINGTOJI;

1AP 1

-

r~bu u t

ll"kotan ha s uec1dc&gt;d he IS the new
fa('t' the Kepub!J cans need to bea t
Jmu ny Cartt&gt;r or Sen ~dward M .
Ken ned~ .

H1 s

pnnr 1pal q uali fications
•~ppear
to be an Impress ive
e~ c ad e nllc fL'C:Ord. an attra c tiv t&gt;
ap pearance and two politi cal upset
n c t onr s
Hl
ru fal, s parsely
populated South Dakota
f'rt:' ss ler . a cunvlv lal
and
h;w ci"&gt;Drne b:w helor who ts a. r egular
on Washi.Il,i..,rtnn ·s soe~a l ctrc ui t, has
rnadt· 11u stgmhcant mar k wtth hts
lt.• gtslat l \ "t' r t&gt;cord. an d ts tdentified

nn p&lt;nil cu lar 1s.sue b.!fore the
Congn• s.-.; .~ .
"\'el Ill~ lllt'ft' presence in the
.';·n&lt;-th· h~ s g n'en hJs ambitions
\'IStb llll y m H ye.:1r of Wlde-Dpen
H•·pubhran pres1denttal pol lti('S .
Press ler 's eandJdaey provides a
further clue tha i the Wa tergate
s..:a ndals wh1ch drovt&gt; Richard M.
Nixon from tile presidency may
ha a ' a direct 1mpact on Amencan
JXllit1 cs for a lon j.! time .
Press ler wet s ftr st elected to
Congres..'i a s a House member m
1974. ;\JXon had reSigned a fe""
months twfo rt· nn d a ··throw the
ra-;c al s out .. llll'ntallty cost m a ny
WJ t h

('()LCMRUS. OhiO ' .~P I - Eggs
- Pnct's pa lll to coun tr y pii cking
planls for eggs dt•llvered to major
Ohi o c l tl t'S c a!'l t' .S Included consumer
~; ra cl t·~

lJlcl u dm g

~o:rades,

US .

lll lfm num ~0 l"tiSt' lots .
l"&lt;trton l.i!rgt· A 5Q....6.4 , Med1um A
S4...J8. Smcdl A JJ-.42 .
Selie:-; to reliHlt'r s m major Oh10
cartun~ ddl\' t.&gt;fl&gt;d :

Cl tlt.'S

l..drge A

whJtl' 70- 19, mostly 70-72, rn t-dtum 647:!. nH ,stly fi4-61i , hght typ t' too few to
rt'))( l rt

Tru ckl c,t trrtd Ht ~ &lt;tt Clevt'land on
fryer ~

35-36 1 1 .

:q -.1fi , f"H u:umau
l'oultr y p rt ct ·~ .: 1t Uh10 farm s . too
fl'W l.I J repnrl

HOG RE PORT

l'OI. UMFlUS . Oluo 1 AP 1

-

Direct

ho ~s 1 Fed ..Stalt' l: Barrows and gllt.-;

'1eady . O.,rnand moderate. U.S. 1-2.
200-Z:lO lbs countr y potnts. 36 .W:Jii i5. few al :!7, plants. 37-37 .50. U.S.
1-3,2.10-250 lbs . country po1nts. 35.7536.50 . plan ts. :!6 .25-Ji .Z:i
Ht·ce Jpt s :.Iunday 10.900 , toda) 's
estww te s 7. :&gt;00

Dutch Clark . who dropklcked extra
points, led the National Football
League m sconng in 1932 while
playin~ !01 Portsmouth and again m
1935 and 1936 for the Detroit Lions .

TiiE HAIJ .'r' St-:NTINF.l.
II "S:PS 14&gt;110 1

nr\·trrt-:u TtJTHt:

''

YARD SALE . Wed
GARAGE SALE . Ocl. I 5 Thurs, Fri Ra lph Laven
from 10 5. Loca t ed off Rt 7 der residence, end oi 2nd

Bypass on Old Rf
UJ .
Sou th of Ja ck's club . Ba by
buggy, guitar , n ew i tems
a nd much more .

Sf , Syr ac use Hospi tal bed ,
cl oth ing, odds and ends
992 5888

TWO FAMILY Yard Sa le
Oc l 1 thru 6 9 am 5 pm
W1n t er c lothes, lurniture,
m i se
Ch arl es
KuPll
residence, 34289 F latwoods
Ro 992 7537

Sa tur a ay , Sunday
and
Monday Har old Brewer .
Long Bonom , OH

F OUR FA MI LY Yard Sale
Thurs . and Fr i ., Oc t .

.4

and

5 Approx . 3 m i les o ut of
RuTland up New Li ma Rd .
al Joan ( Tom ) Stew a rt 's
Watc h tor s1gns . Ra1 n ca n
ee ls

RUMMAG E

SALE

Oc

faber 56 Fr 1dny and Sa fur ·
day , 10 am . 4 p m Gra ce
Episcopal Chur c h , 326 E
Main St , Pomer oy , OH
L ot of clot h ing, nousenold
1tems

CAR PORT

SALE .

Wed

and Thurs ., Oct . 3 and 4 at
31 1 Wrig ht Sf .. Pomeroy ,
10 4 Rain or shine

Avi'

, l'lf'Vf'llod, (»aJ&amp;.

Subtif'rlplloo
whrrc availaDir

lk'llnrPd by e•rrt.r
('rtJtli ptor •Rk. Ry Motor

1"111r!i .

~

Ruul.f' wheN' t'lrrlrr lrf'\'l(·r oot tvlllablr, Ow

m .oo;

Ulrt~

moalhl JIO .iO.

ElMw~

138.• ; 1lJ:

munthzi s:t.OO ; lhrH montm Sll .to.
Th1 • Auo.:·iatrd Prnr; ill t&gt;1rlusl~rl y t'DtJtlt&gt;d
tu tht&gt; IIJPior publ lu llun of aiiDt&gt;..-·!i d.l,;p.lr het
t· r~ltfod (11 tht&gt; orwspaprr 1Dd al&amp;&amp; ttw local
IH"WJ

Jl'lbll,.hecl hrrelo.

cel'l
YARD SA LE . Friday, Oct.
5. House at end o f lane
besi d e
~ tate
H 1ghwa'f'
Garagt-, Rt 7 M 1sc. i te ms ,
adu l t
a nd
c hildren 's
c lothing , set ot k. i tchen
chair backs ~tnd seats
YA RD SALE Friday , Oct
House ar end ot lane
beside
Sta te H i ghway
Garage. Rt . 7. M isc . items,
adulT
and
c hildren 's
clothing , set of k i tchen
cha ir backs and ~e ats .

Oct . 6. Small appl i ances ,
pans, c lothing , etc . Turn at
c hur ct1
at
Rac i ne
Hydroelectric Pl~nf on Rf
338 and follow si gns

F I VE FAMI LY B asem en t
Sale . Oc l. 3, 4, .5 on Bone

Hollow Rd . off Rt . 7 Bypass
near Bradbur y . Dressers,
o i l stove . lots o1 mi!K:

THR EE ' FAMILY
Yard
Sale . Wednesda.,. and Thur
sd ay , 678 Oliver St ., M id ·
'd leport . Men ' s. wom en ' s
and oaoy c!otnes.

GA RA GE

YARD

SA LE . Saturday.

BI G THREE family Back
Por ch Sate . CR 25, p ; ,
miles west of Chester Oct
4 and · 5. Bedspreads ,
jewelry , Timex wat ch ,
c lothes, al l sizes, c ar ram
ps , garden t iller , motor
cycle , m ise

GARAGE SALE . Del . 5. 9
to 5. Oct . 6, 9 to 11. CR 25, 3

SE VEN

FAMILY

Ed Riffle
5-11, ISO lbs.
Sophomore E:od

Yard

Sale . Rain or shine 870 Ash
Sf ., M iddleporf .Frida y and
Saturday All sizes and kin
ds of c lothes, hou!,ehold
i tem S, fvrn 1 ure , bOat and
trailer .

OctoMr 1, 18711
Good 1t11ngs are •n the offing tor
you th1 s c·ommg year where your
work or career 15 concerneCl Do
a gooa JOb and be a producer
Yoor efforts w111 rece•..-e tt1e1r JUS t

rewards

LIBRA (hpt . ZH)ct. 23) It's
nice to be labonng at your suJe
today You "II go out of you1 way
10 be kinO and helpful to cowork ·
ers who are In need o l a lil lie
com110 erat1011 FinO out m ore o l
wtlal lies ahead tor you '" the
year l ollowmg your birthday by
send1ng tor your cop y or Astr aGraph Letter . Mall S 1 tor eacn t o
Astr o-Graph . Box 4B9 . RadiO
City Station . NY 10019 Be lure
to specity b•rth dale
SCORPIO (Oct 24-NoY . !2)
B!llancirlQ ·Oul your day between
tun and work will pul you In a
more posi11..-e frame o f m ind. Get
done what neeos doing , bvt also
take t1me to en toy yourself
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23--0ec: . 21)
OUiel salitfa ct•on co uld be
den~o&lt;ed today from act1Yit1es
r"e~o&lt;olvlng around the tamily Gen .
ter your attention on fho&amp;e w1th
whom you share you r hearth
CAPAICORtll (Dec. 22·Jen. 18)
Awareness of other s · needs
makes you a compaaalonat e per .
son to be around tOday . Wnen ''
comes to declaion·mak lng, you 'll

l leb~

day

PISCEI (Feb. 20-March 20) YO\J
nave 1 ltrong tente ol aell ·
awareneas tOdey and lhis 11

good

Howe~o&lt;er . take care nol 10
be too sell - aer~o&lt; i ng , ioo.._ out lor

Olhera aa well
ARIES (March 21 - AprU 11)
vou·re extremely ImpreSSIOnable
today . whtch 11n"t all bad 11 the
peopl@ wHh who m you choose t o
aatoeiate are worth y Ol 1mil a\ lon
Selec t your company wisely

1n1tead of wondering what to Oo

wllh your Hme be ot MfVice to

Friday. othert You'll

Saturday . 9·4 ar 238 Condor
St .. back of L andmark. in
Pomeroy .
Y~D

SALE Oct .

4

find wceeu

for

routtetla•weu

CANCIII

tJu.. 21-July 22)

W llhtul . think ing mutt not be
allowed to cloud ,our tudgment

today Focua oo realltHC facts If
ar&gt;d 5. you flnel yourMif deydrMmlng.

CR 32 at Memrory Gardens
Cem ., approx . 51/;o&gt; mi les .

LIO (""" D-Aug. 22) II wOUIO
be ~ euy to d.Ce!Y~e yourMif
tO&lt;IIy

concet"n•no

rnatter-1

of

Durst.

Coach John Duddtng's Southern
Tornadoes will see k their first wtn
th1s year agatnst th e hot P1r ates of
Coach John Blake .
Southern. 1dle last week. has an Q:1-1 record but the Tornadoes ha ve
shown .:Jm e S&lt;'oring pWlc h of late .
North Gallla led by seruor runnmg
ba ck Tim Howell defeated Sy rrunes
Val ley , 20-0 la st Vnday nigh t.
!lowell had qmte a mght sconng
three touchdo wns and the two extra
pomts . No rth Gallla owns oth er
Vlctont's over Huntington of Ross ,
Southwestern a nd Southeastern of
Ross County.
A v1ctory would push NG's league
mark to 2-0 and would set up a b1g
clash the followmg week at Hann an
Tra"".
Speaking of Hannan Trace. Coach
Larry Cremeens' Wildcats are st1ll
savoring last Friday's 13-6 win over
'Kyge r Creek. It was the Wildca ts'
fifth straight this season, seventh m
it ro w over a two-year period and
ftrst ever over a Kyger Cr eek
va rsity gr id squad .
The wm ended a io n~ 22 year
losmg Jmx In th e Bobcat s datmg

Wahama . KC'soffcnsc has b&lt;.&gt;en non exlstant.

The Bob cat offenst' has

fa iled UJ score a smgle po1nt 111 the
last three games
Lust wel'k's onl) SIX pumL.;; c &lt;ml~

GOMEZ NAMED MANAGER
CHICAGO

tA P !

Prest on

Gomez. form e r manager of the San
Diego Padres and the Houston
A.st.ros, today was named m ii JW gt:r
of the Oucago Cubs.
_
Gomez , 56, has bt-en m orgamu•d
baseball for 35 year s the last three
as a coach With the l.os Angeles
Dtxigt:rs
and rt"pl aces mtcrun
Mana ge r Joe Amll lflla no, wh o
ptloted the Cubs durmg the !mal
week of the 1979 season after
Herman Frank s res1gned
A na ttve uf OnerLtt', Cuba, Gomez
managed the Padres from 1969 to
1972 and the Houston Astros 1n t974
and 1975. Before taking over te
managerial re!gns for the t\stros.
Gomez coadwd for Houston Ill t 973

A9SN I

back

to

wh en

the

league

4

0 0
I

l 2
1 3

I
0

Sou Tner n

0

3

I

1

o o

SVAC ONLY
Ha nnan Trace
Nort h Ga l l1a
Eastern
Sou t hern
Sou thw estern
Kyger Cr eek

14

0 105

Southwestern

Fr.&lt;lnk.s,

5t

who r~:s1gned last week

alter pli ot mg the Cu bs for three

hvl d1 ng down .&lt;l good job
~ood

a

H1s r ecord a s a
CHH.l a s (;I
front...uffi cc

rn aiiage r
L'Xecu tJv e With the New York Mt&gt;ts IS
ex n~ll t·n t

· I a Ln pl full r espos1b11lty for th e
dl'L"ISiun ... Burke sa1d Tue.sdt~y
M (Jll ll'rll'i ~fore . a pale, shak en

He n1.1g hiid em erged from Burk~ 's
tu t•· ll waHmg newsmen ,
" 'Jlw y ·n.· nut g01 ng to r enew rny

office
( "I

Jfl lf ;l('(

•

· lJn l;, t unt" w1H teU whether I was
ngh t or

\o\Tun g" sa 1d Burke . " I

the fa n.-; w 111 disagre e beca use
tlll'y don 't knuw thc rea SlJII S wh y I
d1d tt And the r easons. I wil l not
k.r 111 W

di ~C ll'i S .

Burk l..'

~~

un e

t1f

the

• •

/~ ''il

•

I

13" PIUA •
one topping .• I 9t
Reg $3 .55

I

Yovr choice of any •

l hyl

o..t,

E&amp;1nO'
s
i
-..AILiAii .I

und t·r s t Gi nd! n g With the Winte r
L...·o g Ul'. wht c h wtl l allow any
piC!} l!r s to JX:trt l l'lp.&lt;ltt' m wmt.er tJ&lt;:jli
1n tile Canbbea11 . Commisswner
Bow1t&gt; Kuhn announ ced.

Gomez mana~ed the Padres to
three Sixth-pla ce finiShed in the
Nat ional Leag ue West Division from
1969 UJ early tn the 1972 season,
gu1 ded the Astros to fourth-place 1n
1974 a nd was dismissed late m the
197&gt; sea3ln.
NEW YORK I AP 1 Texas
Han ger s bullpen specialist JIIU Kern
won the Hnla 1ds Rebel ~ an Award
a&lt;i th e Arnencan L eague 's top relief
pitcher
Kern , a n ght-hander wh o
appeared m 71 games and hurled 143
mnmgs, was IJ-:l. With 29 saves and

29
34

39

70 5b .
26 107

0

13
11

0 0
0

0
0

o

B
0

0

0

an earned run average of 1. 57. He

0

1

0

8

12

0

1 0

6

13

figured m more than ha lf of the
thtrd-p la ce Kanger s 83 v1ctones

b

SPECIAL

FIBER ED
ALUMINUM
COATING
FOR TRAILER &amp; METAL ROOFS

,_.

5 Gal. No. 50 Bright

Before you gel outdoors,
gel into Wolverine.
E ve rywh er e y o u l oo k th ese d a ys . mo re un ci m o re
p eo ple ar e g et t tn g JJll o th e gr ea t o u td oor s A nd
W ol verm e boo ts are a g rea t wa y to get th ere

HOGG

&amp;

th e wild e r ness th e y were b o rn to w a nder Bu 1 1h .....
Jll Side sto ry IS o ne o f co m f ort Dee p -c u s hi o n ed
I nsole s Leath e r l m mg s. So m e With tn s ulot 1on
Som e w1th padded coll ar s And a ll I he o the t gte al
feature s y o u'd e xpe c t fr o m W olv e rme

ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

Before yo u get o utdoo r s thI S year . ge t 1nt o a p c 1r o f

FISH-N-CHIPS

-'

••

YUKK ' AP 1 - ProfessiOnal
ha st&gt; h&lt;1ll
ha s
rea c hed
an

g e num e Wolverme b oo ts Yo u "]] fe e l what we mean .

g,

.-CQOD TIMES SP£CW..

:;r-:w

All S1zes Available

was

. ......

1\Y rn \~ t11 , w1m thl' p1Jl llt system by
n1n e uvn \11ke Mars hall of
Mm nt·sota. JOi ns Br uce Sutter of the
OHc&lt;1gu Cubs. who won the National
l.ea ~-:u~..· Hl·lwf lttle . With a record of
fr-(i and Ti :-cn ·e s for 80 pomt s, Sutte r
t&lt;lged Kent Tek ulve of Pittsburgh ,
whOSl' J()....R m a rk r~nd 31 saves wa s
worth i 4 pmnts .

BOOTS &amp; SHOES

estab lish ed m 1958.
ln postmg th t' VICtor y, Hannan
Trace relied on the b1g yardage
ga mt'!l by 1ts two matn ball earners.
se mor Jay Bray and jWJior Todd
S1b ley . Bra y had a noth er fin e outing
rushmg for 134 yards m 26 carri es .
He also sco red on e touchdown and
an ext ra poinL&lt; S1b ley, who had 01!
yards rushlilg scored tl1 e other six po mts .

m os l

I"IIUf1 t'tJU!-, , L:l'n te e l rrit' n m base ball .

COMPLETE SELECTION
OF WOLVERINE

SPECIAl

· Tm pos itive that's my stolen
ca r . Officer, but don 't make an
arres t until he !Ills the ~nk ...

org an i zation

~ oiii i' Y. ht·rl'

Hut thiS hasn 't quelled constant
cnti ctsm from media and fans for
failure to l~nd the two or three key
player s the team 's needed to reach
the Ulp .
" It ' s easy for people to criticize
who don 't know the fac ts, " said
Burke . " I know that by not saying
why 1 did tt, I'm openm g myself
wide open for a ton of criticism . But ,
I'm not going to do anything to hurt
Whit ey Herzog , the playe r• or the
organization . I 'll take the brunt of
the attack "
Burke 1ns1sted there " was no
for ced pressW"e from own~rship . "
But few players even believe this .
The stramc&gt;d relationship between
the t wo has become common
knowledg e, primanly because
Kauffman seemed to want it that
way . Several times the past two
years the self -made millwnatre has
upbraided Herzog in the presence of
others. And on e of Kauffman's chief
~npes IS supposed UJ be
the
manager's tendency to c riti cize
players publicl y.

season s.

1 0

o

l.~t'

The Sport Boot.

THIS WEEK'S

1,

~ t:J$':

'

Uuubt
w 1th

O n th e ou 1s 1de. Wo lve nn e boo rs are as ruyqed as

1~~1
i

BASEBALl.
CHI CAGO 1 AP J - Preston Gomel ,
who had flutgs a t rnanagmg the Son
01ego Padres and the Houston
A.';tros. was namcd manager of lhl'
Chicago Cubs for 1960.
In additiOn , Cub General Manage r
Bob Kennedy sa 1d all of the Ch1cago
coaches except Peanuts L-owrey .
who 1s r etiring, wtll be retained
Gomez. 56, and a nattve of Oriente .
Cuba . ha s been a coach wtth the l.os
Angeles Dodgers the past thr ee
seasons . He suc ceed s Herman

SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
Team
WLT
POP
Hann an Trace
5 0 0 109 33
Nort h Ga II ia
Eastern
Kyger Cr eek

\ ttt'nLiann' pl ununl' ts and Burk e
(Jff &lt;:~ s d bun ~ hng nulquet oa st.
f kr w g 1n tlw rnetl ntunt! , will no

C IJit W ~

Sports shorts.

l" ttl e IS known about the lronUJn
St. J oe Flyers except that they are
coa ched by J oe Bokovttz. former
hear! football coa ch at Symmes
Valley . Bokovitz 's son is one of h1s
best ball players.
Coach Bob Ashl ey 's So uthwestern
Highlanders. a ha rd -lur k overtune
loser to Wahama last Frida y w1lltr y
to get back into U1e wmnin g wa y
r'nday agamst the Vi kin gs.
The Highlanders a re 2-3 overa ll
while Symmes Valley 1s 0-5 .

LAFF - A - DAY

HARTLEY'S SHOES INC.

84e

Ph. 773-5554

••lllli'II'Middlle Upper Block Pomeroy "
VISA '

,,

9 a.m . 5 p.m . Mon .
fhru Thurs . &amp; Sat .
9a .m .·8p . m . F ri .
Closed Sunday

-'

ADOLPH'S

Mason, W. Va.

DAIRY
VAllEY
992 -2556

Anne Boleyn, second wife
of Henry VIII and mother
of Queen Elizabeth I, had
an etrtl!ll finger on her loft

570 W . Main
Pomeroy , 0 .

hand .

lei th1s guide you
AQUAI't:IUI (Jan. 20--Feb. 11)
Your mttlnctt pertain in g to
material things are very aslute
today 11 you let yOUf 1nner vo1ce
Clirect you , th11 should be a prol ·

Trace of .Hoss County .
The Eagles have been led by the
hard-runnmg of semor quarterba ck
Bnan Bissell. Junior runnmg back
Greg Wi gal, and senior Dennis

unpres.s t ve openm~ VlClorJes th1 s

dull~ with other• today . yov
could have 1 1enoency to o. 1 bl1
too ~o&lt;at lll atlng and leave tMm
confuM&lt;l aboi..Jt your •ntenl ._,.,._
trutt COUIO r"ult
ENTERP~ISE

games followin g a setback to Zd ne

St'ason over F ede ral Hot"kmg a nd

retourcea
YIIIQO tAUfl. D-8epl. Z2) Wheo

(NEWSPA.PER

on a blocked punt recJJVered tn the
end zone
Eastern . meanwhile. has a 4- 1
record havmg won il" last two

Jeague affair s are on tap t.h 1s wet•k 1n
th e Southern Va lley Ath leti c
Coo ference .
In leag ue battles , Eastern \ ISits
Kyger Cr ee k and Southern pl ay s al
North Gallla . Non -league !Jlts fmu s
Ironton St . Joe at Hannan 1'rilce and
Symmes VaUey 1s at ~uthwestern
At Cheshtre, Coa ch Jlffi Sprague' s
Wlpred ictabl e Ky~er Creek Bobcats
will host th e 1976 defending SVAC
champion Eastern F.agles .
Kyger Creek IS hoping to bounce
back a fter a I~ loss to WJbeaten
Hannan Tr aee.
The Bobca ts have been somew hat
of a m yste r y lately . AftEr two

flnanc.• S. e~ 1 a1 ty careful 11
hanc3tlng anotl'let"t lunda or

Bermce Bede Osol

John Beaver
5-4, 135 lbs .
Sophomore Back

Mike Bissell
5-11 , 160 lbs.
Sophomore End

Two league games and two n(!n -

Oct. c

ASTRO•GRAPH

Or could he' That's bad th~n g 'lo
2. For Joe Burke' s S&lt;Jke , th e Ho yals
better not waste any tune rcga t m n~
U1 e Aml'rJ('an I.t~ ttgu ... Wt• st title th l'y
ju st y1eld.ed by thrl"'C ganws to
Cahforn.a
If they don 't wm next year , 1t wtll
be common ly ac cepted that Hcr w~
was h red bt~rau.o;t• owner Ew1n~;
Kauffman just d1d n 't l1kP lum

Eastern visits Kyger Creek
•
m key 'SV AC contesf Friday

SpecJ!ically citing the 19M law, the
c&lt;rnmittee noted, " However well intentioned, however loosely or in telligently enforced , such a law i3 a
latent danger to the life of this
democracy ."
More than two decades later, the
danger has become quite real produc ing an
unprecedented
abridgment of the F inrt Amendment
rights of a free press. It 's time to
revise the sta lute to prevent a
recurrence of that shameful event.

miles tram Five Poin ts
Wat ch tor signs . Curta i ns
t~~nd rods Men 's. women 's, TAURUS (APIII :111-Mey :til)
HumanJtartan 1mpu!SOM d~rect
children 's. all sizes. Boots ,
your actlvlt!M loda y vou ·u be
shoes, dresers. ~ hest of look•ng to occupy your l ime with
drawers .
Humidi1ier . what you &lt;teem to be worthwhile
Gar age door . Poo~ table . cautet
Set
of
ency c lopedias . QE- (Mey 21-.lufte :10) n you
Motorcycle , m1sc . items .
dorH have 1 deflnlle goal ioday .

THURSDAY .

monlh.I:I ,IO.

Tht' Oally St-DiiDPI, hy mall in Ob.la and w...t
\'lrglnil, onr yt'ar
Sti meothl U l .it ;

YARD ALE Oc l 5th . 9
a .m to 4 p .m . 2nd house
above Fran cis Fl orist. 36-4
E
Ma i n St . Al l SI Ze
,c lothing ,
swi n g
se t ,
01cy c le , tr ac tors Rain can

PORCH SALE Oc t . 3 and
1 mile tram Ches ter
Bf'ldge on Rt . 2.48 . Couch
and c ha ir, sewing machine.
h1gh chair , toy s, books .
coa ts , boots. f ishing gear.
ooos a nd enos , c lo th ing
4

YARD SALE U nti l Oct . 8.
Guns ,
bow,
bi c yc l es.
motorcyc le 625 Oli ve r St .,
Middleport

l&lt;: ut lid

of an article by author Howard
Morland would cause such hann.
In the Progressive case, the government never alleged that there W8li
any breach of security, improper
availability of classified documents
or unauthorized access to secret
facilities .
Instead, the federal prosecutors
cited tbe chilling concept of information that was "clil,ssified at
birth " or "born classified" - Instantly restricted ' and classified
from teh moment the idea was formed in Morland's mind.
" We have learned, " says the
American Civil Liberties Union,
"that we dare not to trust the government to decide what the public
needs to know and tlla t we dare n~
accept at face value either government claims of d"*r or govern ment assurances of Siiety. "
But the law in question, the
Atomic Energy Act of 19$4, gives the
· government precisely that power, to
control forever lnformation relating
not ony to nuclear weapons but also
to nucleariJOwered commercial
generating stations.
The statute may have been appropriate to a period when the
United States sought to cling to its
monopoly on nuclear technology .
Although that era has ended, "the
tight statutory regime over information related to atomic
weaponry has never been relaxed , "
the government admits .
Four years after the law was
passed, the House Select Committee
on Astronautics and Space Exploration acknowledged " legitimate
secwity precautions are of the
essence. as long as the Soviet
menace exists," but warned that "at
times ttus official vtgilance has been
earned to dsngerous etrtremes ."

Fr;dav.

SALE . Wed ..
Thurs.. Fr i 34281 Flat ·
woods Rd ., Five Points .
Lots of good items.

ROHt: RT HOEf'LJCH
l"lty Edltllr
PuDU11hd d.Uy t' lrt·pt S.b&amp;rdey Dy Tbt Obi.,
\"11\lr,- PliDihlhi.D.« fum~D)' · Multllllf'dla, Ill&lt;'.,
Ill fourt SL , Po~Mf'O) , Oht.! U"71!. 8u11Df'11
Oflll'r PboOt' tf%. %151. F...diLorilll Pbow

'-411 S.

SA LE

YARD SALE 409 S. 5th 51 . ,
M1ddleport
Tues
and
Wed . and Thurs L ots of
lad,es' larger sire!!

IVTF: RES'T OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

Sn·u11d daM1&gt; pulllal(r ~IJ 11 Pomrnl)', Ohio
Natlona l ld \" t' r1Uin~ rt&gt;pl't'IIPDl8UYf', Lllod•

PORCH

s

FOUR FAM IL Y Y ard Sa le
Oct 3, .t, 5 fr(l&gt;m 9 :30 ti l 5 at
6AO G ra nt St. Middl eport.

AuOl'lai.n. Jill

In the case of Progressive
magazine , the object of the govern ment's harassment, that was handled by merely writing a letter to the
magazine , claiming that publication

Thur~J .

HEPOH T

F.(;f;

another nation .

KAh SAS CITY , Mu &lt;AI' &lt;
refu sm g t o say why h e flr ed \Vh ll t'Y
Htrwg , the mt st s ucr essful iind
popular managl!r m the 11 -yea r

Herwg 's sm s havt:: bc~n .., Surely , nc1
manager who w1ns 410 gam~ s and
thret&gt; &lt;.li vlsJon c hampionships m 4 1~
years whtle bulldtng Imm t' nSt'
popularity amu ng players, fcm.s and
med ia co uld be released on il wh tm

Yard Sale

Yard Sale

tt2 -ZI$7.

The n . ·Wld-buildmg termites of
the tropics a re onl y one of the 2,000
termite s pec ies that infest the world .
These termites are less destruc tive
than their Atnerican cousins. wh o
live in colontes in the so1l a nd are the
most damaging of th e earthdwelling species . The tErmites of
Africa enrich the soil, takin g the
place of earthworms t hat are never
found m the soli in that country .

Pressler Ignored the advice then
and again in 1976 when he went after
the Sen ate seat vacated by
O.,mocrat James Abourezk . Again ,
he
successfull y
defied
the
conventional political wtsdom .
Now, Pressler Ls hearing the sam~
sentiments from skeptics of his
presidential run . His reaction :
" We" lllet the chips fall where they
m ay .
A oecond Watergate legacy is the
like It, od that Pressler's run for the
White lou se will be financed
partially .1y taxpayer funds .
In reactiOn to camprugn abuses mamly in NIXon's 1972 re-election
campa1gn - Con gress est a bUshed in
1974 a system of matching federal
funds for presidential campaigns.
If Pressler, a former Rhodes
scholar and a Harvard Law School
g raduate, ca n raise $5.000 in
campa1gn contributions in each of 20
states, the government will match
that dollar for dollar .
Pressler said he hopes to raise the
$100,000 necessary to qualify for
matc hing funds by January .
Some politic al observers say
Pressler's candidacy may mdJcate it
has become too easy to run for
presiuent. It re main s to b&lt;.&gt; seen
whether Amencans will take hiS
candidacy senously

Herzog axed by Kansas City
histor y of the Kan sas City Hoya ls .
Joe Hurke dots two thm gs. both bad
He mvttes speculiitlon and wild
rwnor . Jlow dark and hideous cuuld

Democrat's latent danger

across-the-board levy tha t co uld btlnc or poratt'd In to Lhe e:tJstmg
bookkeeplllg system with only s light
mcxhficat10ns . It 1.s h1.s contt&gt;nt10n

to name . Already Congress

I

In Washington

[N6A6EMENT~?

House Ways and Means Cha 1rman

asked to con.s1der whether the tax
should b&lt;.&gt; ap plied to such products
and services as foods, medicines.
med1cal care. financial IJ\Stitut10ns .
and schools and coll eges And I 'm
sure the liSt will grow much longer
as the hearings on a value--addd-tax
progress .
The main unde r lying concern
many legtslator s have w1th the bill,
myself included, is the end use to
wluch 1t will b&lt;.&gt; put. W1ll1t really serve as a revenue substitu te fo r the
va n ~t y of c urrent taxes m entioned
earli er . or will it be billed a, a s ubstitute only t o end up as yet a nother
tax fr om whi ch the federa l govern-

Meet
the
Eastern
Eagles
•••
r

AND INVE&amp;T IN §ToC K'tJ AND
boND2;&gt; . L'iN D gpMF ~Pt:AK lNG

Ullman visualizes 1t is a Simple

Beatles, ballet, boat people

dis cern

l

Editorial opinions,
comments

ON fuOCJAL §ECUR ITY. Go~~' I
HAVt: TROUBLE otJ MV &amp;\LARY.

added to goods and serv1res of ea c h
level of p r odudion and d1s t nbutwn
proct!s.s from the proce ss1 11;: of the
raw matenal to the ftnal retai l sale .

Today's
commentary
..
By Don Graff
The course of human even ts ts
inherently disorderly .
Humans nevertheless persist'" attempting to see order 1n the chaos. to

, / tuRt:,i~Tcu~r~

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For
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for
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Suitable for only 1 work i ng
person . can after 5:30. 991 ·
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PR08ATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY OHIO
ESTATE OF BERTHA C
CANADAY, DECEASED .

Cue No. 2lltl

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

Pomeroy ,

'149

PHEBE 'S STC1RE

coin H i ll, Pomerov. Ohio
45769.

Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge Clerk
t9) 26, !101 J , lO,ltc

•

lib.

9 :00tit7 : 00
Saturday 9: 00-9:00

LB.

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CELERY
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On September 19, t97'1, In
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Street,

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�•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Oct . 3, 1979

Hoople picks Colorado over Oklaho

Angels' pitchers
ready for Birds
BALTIMORE 1AP1
The
California Angel s. With the 1r
pitch i ng s taff s trengthe ned a nd
armed with a scouting report tha i
even decn!Jt,s the Baltimor e crowd s,
face the favored Onoles w1t h
renewed conf 1dence m \h e opener of
the Amen can LeaKue p la yo ff s
tonight.
" We Just got our p1tch mg back to
where It was when we left sprmg
training , .. California Manager Jun
Fregosi said pnor to the 'tart of the
besl-of-5 senes that sh1fls to th e
West Coast Fnday for the tturd
game and any m ore that are
necessary .
Fregosi sa1d Nolan Rya n , Dave
Frost and Frank Tanana . who will
start the first three games in that
order, missed close to 60 starts
during the regular season for the
Western Divisioo champs, who arc
making their first appearan ce m
postseason play .
" We lost about 30 games when we
scored fiv~ runs or more," Fregost
said, "and six when we scored at
least 10 runs . We scored more than
100 more runs than the Orioles. but
they kept thetr ptlchmg mtact all
year ."
Baltimore had trouble for alllll~
starter s, too , wtth Scot t McGregor
out for a month and Jim Pa~ner , U1e
first game starter, m1sstng about 14
starts !Jt,cause of vanous elbow .
shoulder and back ailments .
The Or1oles held a commandtng 93 edge over the Angels m the season
series, but Fregosi sa1d : · 1 doo 't
think they can take three of those
and wm the playoffs We 're gmn g 1n
0-0."
California ·s potent attack ts led by
Don Baylor , a former Onole who
drove in 139 runs wh~e totting 36
home runs . Bobby Grich , another
former Or1o le. and Dan Ford each

TH"E

had 101 Kl:H .
" Wht:&gt; n we trctded Fra nk Robmson
m !972 to m ake room for Ba ylor ,"
sa1d Wea w r . " We kne w he would be
a sta r and had the ingredJ enls to
become the Must Valuable Play er 1n
the league ...
Baylor was traded to Oakland m
1976. un a deal for Regg1e Ja ckson ,
and jutned the Angels the followmg
y~ar m U~e re ~ntr y draft .
ln an effc.-t to stop tilt&gt; An gels,
Baltunore Manager Ea rl Wt•aver
bypa sse d 23 -g ame Winner '1•ke
Flanagan and opted for Palmer . the
three-tune Cy Young Award wtnner
w:., post ed a 1()..6 record m 1979.
Fregos1 nommated Ryan, 16-H .
who ha s lost h1s last s1x dectsions to
Baltunor e and has a 5-13 ltfetune
mt-trk agamS1 the Onoles .
At pra ctic e Tuesday , Fre gos1
revealed that h1s sco utmg report on
the Onoles mc luded a St'ction on the
re&lt;.'Urd crowd.s that many observers
tllought played a major role m
helpmg them to thelr first diviSIOn
title m rivt: years .

"Th e crowd probably will be the
of the year, " tilt&gt; report saJd .
" A guy Wi th a full beard and a wlute
hat w~l have 52,000 people spelhng
out 'Onoles' the whole g ame . It w1ll
be a wild and enthusiastic c rowd , so
be ready ..
w~des t

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON. Otuo IAPI - OK.
Move won the $1,000 featured pace
mile tn leh eig hth race Tuesday
night at Lebaron and paid $5 .20,
$2.80and $2 .40 .
Monll placed, $4 .20 and $3.20 and
Gedda Check,tturd , $4.80.
The 2-1 double of John The Merchant and Rosetime Gal returned
$43.80 and the crowd of 1,133 bet
$100,162.

FALL SALE

STYLIST
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By Major Amos B. Hooplt•
Upset Specialist
Egad . fn ends , th1s IS the game
Chuck Fairbanks and tus batte r edbul-&lt;tnbuwed Colorado Buffal oes
have bee n potnlmg to all season
Are you ready fur lh1s ? The
Hoople Sy stem cal c ulations clea r ly
tndJ cate the Buffaloes Will pull the
" upset of the year " as they triwnph
over the host OkJahoma Sooners tn a
Btg 8 showdo,.n . Har-rumph '
The battle on the turf at the
Sooners' Owen F ield ma y well be
ove rs hadowed by the cere br al battle

Tuesday 's Sports Transact•ons
By The A&lt;osociated Press

BASEBALL
American League
K A N SAS CI TY ROYA LS

F1red

Wh ll ey He uog , manage r
National League
C H ICAG O
CUB S

Nam ed

Pr eston Gome z. manager
C IN C INN A TI R E D S -- R e m o v ed
Bil l Bonh a m , P•t cher , f ro m t h (• •r
playoff
ros t er
P l ac ed
Ch a rl ie
- L e •bran d t . pi tc her, o n the•r playoff

roster
N E W Y ORK MET S - Si gnea Joe
Torr e, m a nager , to a contra c t fro th
1980 sea son w i th the provi s•on tha t
the co nt rac t m ay be ex t en d t&gt; d at
m1 d se a so n 1n 1980

BASKETBALL
National Basketball Associat,on
A T LANTA HAWKS - Waive d An
d r e M cC art e r and Don Marsh , gu a r
d s. and Sylve ster Cu y ler , forwar d
CHICAGO BULL S Re leased
Tom B oe r wi n kl e, c enter
NEW J ER SEY NET S
Tra ded
Be rnad
K1ng , forward ;
Jo h n
G •anell1 , ce nter , an d J•m Bylan ,
guard, to the Utah Jan in €')( Chang e
tor Ri c h Kelley , c en ter and an un
di sc lased amount of c ash

FOOTBALL
Nat ional Football League
MI A M I D O LPHINS -- R esi g ned
J eff G r ot h , w •de r ece 1ver . P la ced
Charl •e Babb. saft:&gt; t y , on !he in1 urE'CI
r e serve li s t
NEW YORK G IANT S - Cut AI
Di)(on , t1 gh t end . S1gned Loair d M e
Creary , l ight end .
NEW YORK JETS - Cut Joe
Pellegrin i. def en si ve ta c kl e. Re
si gned John Sull ivan . li nebrt c k e r

HOCKEY
Nation a I Hockey League
COLORADO ROCKIES
s ;g ned
Bob Attwell and Peter Sturgeon ,
right w1ngs , t o mu lt i year c ontra c t s .
A ssignt:&gt;d Joe Conlin •. Mike Dwyer ,
M1ke Gil l is and Stan Gulutzan. le ft
winger s. Rey Comeau , Larry Sk1n
ner and Gary D 1l lon . c ente rs, Bob
Attwe ll , Ra n dy 1rv1ng and Paul
Mes sie r .
r 1g ht w1nger s.
N ic k
Be v e r l e y ,
Mar• o
G i alto n ard o.
M ic he l Utc hance , John M c Ca hill
and Pet er M c Nam ee , def enserne n .
and
B il l
M c K e nzH~
and
T 1m
Thom11n son . goaltenders . to the F ort
Wortn Te xa ns of I he Centr a l Hock e y
L eague
EDMONTON OILER S - A SS ig n ed
Apell o s of the Cent r al HocKey
League as an a~~ i stant coa ch . Sen t
John Bednars~ i. detensema n. to lhe
Ci n c .nnatl St1nger s ot the CHL Sent
Hannu Kamppurl, goa11e ; Mike
Boyd and Charles Huddy , deien
se man . and Ca l Roadhouse, Mik e
Teal, Ma)( Kos tovi ch, Dean Mag ee .
Mar~ Mdle r and Ron Carer , f or
wards . to Houston of the CHL .
TORONT O MAPLE LEAF S
Sent Bruc e B oudreau . c enter , Rt&gt;g
Th oma s, left wmg , and Bob Neely ,
dei en seman , t o th e New B r un swi c k
Hawks o f tne American Hoc Key
League Re lea sed Jim Dorey , de f en
&amp;em an .

COLLEGE
CA L IF O RN I A A T SAN DIEGO Named Ron Cart er h ead ba sk e tball
coac h

•60" WOOL •60" BOUCLE' •60" DENIM

on the Sldelmes where two of
"Oklahoma ·s.. greatest coa chmg
ge:1i uses wtll ma•ch wits .
Ma st e rm1nd1ng the mvading
Colorado club wiU be "Chuck Fair ·
banks who directed the Sooners to an
amazmg 52 vittories and 15 defeats
tn s tx seasons before he departed 1n
1973 for the pro ranks .
Across the field, Barry Switzer
who succeeded Fairbanks, has an
even more astonishing record than
tus one-tlme mentor . In his first SIX
years at the helm, Switzer compiled
the astronomical record of 62 wins , 6
losses and 2 ti es. Jove ' That must be
an all-time record .
Colorado has had rough going ttus
year, but that will all end as they
upend OkJahoma by a 17-14 count .
Um-l&lt;umph '
The lop game in the East matches
Perm Slate and Maryland . And
would you believe the Terps will
wm ? Yes, dear readers, all signs
point to a Maryland triumph, 27-'!1.
lJke Colorado, Jerry Oa1rborne's
men will be ready for this one .
In 24 previous meetings the Terps
have managed to defeat the Nittany
Jjons just one lime, so 'twtU be a
joyous celebra tion at Maryland 's
Byrd Stadi urn come s undown on
Saturday .
Several of th e confernce races
beg in to heat up t4l,is week. There are
many games on dip in the Pac 10, the
Big 10, the Southwest and
Southeastern conferences. Here is

Sports
briefs. •

•

Ry Th• Associated Press
PRO FOOTBALL
NEW YORK 1API - fulymond
L1ayborn , defensive back of the New
England Patriot s, has been fined
S2.000 by Nationa l Football League
Commiss ioner Pt.&gt;te Ro zelle for
· ·condurt tnvol ving members of the
ne ws me di a." includmg his Sept. 9
lockl'r room fight with Boston Globe
"Tiler Will McDonough .
Oayborn threatened and then
poked McDonough tn the eye after
the Patriots defeated th e New York
Jets 56-3 McDonough responded by
pun ch mg Oayhorn, and the two
scuffl ed briefly before other ,.Titers
and players mtcrceded.
The previous Monday night, after
the Patriots ' season--openmg 16-13
overtime . loss to Pittsburgh ,
Clayborn verbally threatened Bruce
Lowitl of The Associated Press, who
was trying to ask hlm a question '"
the locker room .

•60" VELOUR •60" CORDUROY •45" VELVETEEN

8.

In

the

Bi g 10, Michigan's
and the Michigan State
Spartans will stage their annual donnybrook with the Wolves prevailifl!l,
28-21; Purdue will take Minmesota.
35-21 ; the Otuo Stale Bucks should
have hllle \rouble with Northwestern as tl{ey romp home a 33-12
wtnner, and lnd1ana Wi ll pull a mild
surprise as they upset fav ored
Wisconsin, 21·18
The Southwest conference ca rd
will find Texas defeating Rice, 42-17;
Houston a 24-10 winner over Baylor;
Arkansas over TCU, 19-9, and Texas
Tech beating Texas A&gt;&lt; M, 31-14.
A trio of good games i.s slated for
the Southeastern loop where l.SU
will take the measure of an improving Florida club. 26-1:1 ;
Mississippi will slip past Georgia,
21-20; and Tennessee will defeat
Mississippi State. 29-14 .
Elsewhere arou nd the country
North Ca rolina Sta le Wlll slide past
Auburn. 27-25; Notre Dame will
whip Georgia Tech, 30-15; Alabama
wiU tune up for 1ts conference
clashes by trouncmg W1chita State,
38~. and
Clemson will beat
resurgent Virginia, 21-15.
Now go on wtlh my forecast
Wolverine~

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE ~

GREAT SELECTION

NOW .. .Diamonds with the Full Carat Look

Pomeroy, 0 .

wtuch won th e rJpening gamt:' of Ull'
Nation al League playoff s .
Starg ell 's shut \ (J deep ng ht -l·t•ntt•r
fte ld m the llth tnnmg Tuesday mght
boosted U1e f'I ttsb urKh P~r a le s to a
::-.. 2 VlCtor y over tht.' C ln nnnt~t l Rt'lis
an d ga w the P 1rates t he early l'd ge
m the1 r hest-of-f1 ve St: rt es.
" ThoSt&gt; ~tar s cos t aboul 25 cents

apll't.'e. · Stargell sa1d , cxplatmng
why he wouldn 't awa rd hun self one .
'' At the rate I'm g1vmg th e m o ut,
th ey' re gomg Ill bank r upt me ."
·nw Reds sent roo kie Frank
Prt stort.&gt; to the mound m today 's
second gR im a Kom st Jun B1 bby of
th e Ptr a tes. Stdrgell. as us uHI , wa s
expected to be at ftrst ba o;e, t&gt;&lt;tltmg
c lea nup for P1tlsburgh
P• tts bur gh Ma nag e r Chuck
Ta nrer usually lets the :li\.ft'ar-&lt;Jld
St ar gel! lake tht• da y off fullu wmg a
mght ga me , but thdt wun 't bt• the
l'a St.' tn the champtonshlp sen es
· ·stargdl 's ~mn g to rlil y the re st
oflheway. "Tanrm er Sd ld . " He's the
Most Valuable Pla ver In U1e lea gu e.
ln

my optmon .' ·
Stargdl's hom er l'~Hlll' off loSl' r

Tom Hurne af ter Tun Foil i:l n&lt;J Da ve
Parker had Sin gled to upen the lith
1nnmg

· If I hadn't done ll , sornl'i~&gt;dl' else

would h cl\'L' ... :-;targe!J s a1d " I was
just co nn· ntra ltn g on sta ymg down .
Bo b Skwner told me I'd bee n pullmg
out on the ball .
" So when I d1dn't see the bunt
Sign , I Just closed my eyes and
s wun g," Stargell joke'&lt;! . " The next
thm ~ I krew , the ball was going out
of U1e pru·k "
n. e 1-,rates .&lt;;cored twice in the
th ird mnm g as Phil Garner hit a
leadoff homer lD right field and
Omar Moreno tnpled , scoring on
F oil's sa cnflcc fly
Moreno 's speed ·~ he was the
Nat1onal League leader in stolen
bases wt lh 77 thts season - mdu ced
nght fi eld•r Dave Collins to try to
mak e a shoeslring catch of Moreno' s
smktn g liner . But the ball bounced 1n
front of Collins and g ot through him
for a tnple .
·'Our game . plan was lD keep
Moreno oflthe bases ," Coll ins srud .
" I ~ambled on the play and 11 hurt
us, but I don 't think it cost us the
baUgame.
" I d1d the same thing four innings
later on a ball Dave Parker hit, and I
mad e a good play on 11. ..
Th e Reds got those two runs back
111 the fourth inning when Dave
Con cepciOn led off With a smg le and
Georg e Fosler followed with a
to wering home run to the second
deck behmd left-ce:ller fiel d.
Cincmnat1 starter Tom Seaver
allowed just two more singles ~fore
leaving the game for a pinch hitter .

CREATE ANEW ROOM

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t ha t loo k as fnn t as. t 1&lt; on ttw w all as t hey d o 1 , your
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W3ll Pa1n t m ~tkes you i:Hl ex pert

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loss and beat Pitt..::hur ~ h in It &lt;.: hn m••

ser-ies

Pe:flormance not very surprising
CINCINNATI l AP 1 John
Candelaria may have surprised
some people with tus performance in
lbe opening game of the National
League playoffs, but not h1 s
teammates .
" He's played all year not fee ling
100 percent, and aU he does IS get
smarter and better," concludl'd
shortstop Tlm Foli after Candelana,
who )lad not started since Sept 15
because of an injury tD his left s ide,
pitched seven innmgs of Tuesday
night's game.
A quartet of Pirate relief pitcher s
then he ld the Ctncinnati Reds
scorel ess unlll Willie Stargell
· homered to giv e Pittsburgh a 5-2,
lith inning vic!Dry.
" He's a money pit cher, " Tanner
said of Candelana, who a llowed two
runs and five hits. He held the Heds

CINCINNATI I API - A man who
said he was a co unty commisstoner
in West Virgmta, two bellhops, a
doorman a nd several colleg e
students had one thing tn common
Tuesda y night before the opening of
the National League Championship
Series between the Cincinnati Reds
and the Pittsburgh Pirat es .
They were all arrested on charges
of ticket scalpmg
Bill Dunfee, 47, Hun ting ton,
W.Va ., told police he was a
comrmsstone r m Cabell County,
W.Va
Police said Dunfee offered to se ll
14 llckets to the game lD a plain
clothes officer. Police said they were
offered $8 tickets for $25 each and
$12 seats for $&amp;1 .
Vice squad officers also arrested
two bellmen at tlle Netherland
Hilton and a doorman at Stouffer's
Inn , b&lt;th in the down!Dwn area .
" We were working the prostitution
detail but we couldn 't get through
th ese guys to the girls. I couldn 't
believe it, they were working rtght
out in lb e open," said an arrestmg
officer .

w1thout a lut U1ruugh tlle fifth, SIXth
and seventh innmgs . "If it's a b1 g
game , he'll ge t 1t for you"
P~rate s catcher Ed Ott sa1d
Candelana was feelin g his a ches
and pains .
" lie was grunlm g and groaning
out there on the mound from the first
mnmg,' · Ott sa1d
The Pirates were t-qually
rhapsodic about their bullpen, which
shut down Heds thr eats tn the e1ghth
and lith 111 ning s.
" That 's the kmd of p1tcht&gt; rs we
have, " Foli satd . " When the gom g
gets tough , they all want the ball "
The victory wa.-; swet!t revenge for
lbe Ptrates, who lost tD the Rc'ds tn
playoff compelJtJon tn 1970, 1972 and
1975 .
" It 's like a bully who 1s constantly
bealmg up on you and you say , 'hey ,
I belong here too,"' Sl&lt;l rgeU said .
Stargell and several othe r players
satd th ey were upset by an art1cle m
a local newspaper the day of the
game, which compared the two
teams.
The article , which Stargell fell
was oot flattering enough to his club,
was placed on the Pirates' bulletm
board before the game
For th e Reds, and parllcularly
third baseman Ray Knight, it was an
unhappy night.
Kn ig h t, who so su c cessfully
replaced Pete Rose at third base,
went ~for-5 at the pla te and struck
out with the bases loaded in the last
mning. He also hit in!D two double
plays.
"Tonight I cons1der myself the
goat, but tomorrow I mi~hl be the
hero," Knight concluded .
" It wasn't a good night for m e, but

I guess I've had to have had a lot of
good mghts to be where I am ."
Knight admitted he was ttunkm~
of being a hero when he camt' up m
the bot!Dm of tlle lith mning .
" I guess yo u fanta s iz ~ t h1s
situation aU your life . I wasn 't
nervous . I felt really good and
wanted tD be tn that situatwn "
" We were 10 games back and
cam~ rn to win the division ," satd
Reds outfielder Dave C:ollm s. " Now ,
we ,re rn e game back and I'm s ure
we can l'Ome back again .''
·'Well , It 's down to a four-game
season fnr o c: n0w ," Manager John

"It's

McNamara
con cluded .
deftn tlely not over.

--···· - lMS SPECIAL--.

•

•

•

I

13" PIUA · •

Your choice of any •

one topp;ng

Rea . $3 55

·~··1

3 Dol" Ooly

i6:1nfisiI

· ··-·-· ·
II

ALL LOCA TJONS

~~$59~~\I)IDI' C: I.\~SRIXCI
I'Ll'S fltEI:; ( :nnU\1 n:.\Tl"Rl:S!
lh·l'l i~n

yuur uwn du:-;e ri~

tllt l'\t.I'\TII I " \[![II !, ~ I Tlli "" !ll-"t- ~ 11\\IIL\
\H I oHta.H
H "'11.\ lll \ \11ll"'t .

,,!1

JOHN ROBERTS ........ ".. ""' . ....
C~ASS

RI NGS

~eflel~r'"'i!l:}l",;

E . MAIN · POMEROY

.J

LB.
LB.

73'
89'

88 California

ORANGES
I lb . Bag Cello

CARROTS

2/39'

2

oz . Hi lion

ROYAL OALMEAL

lS•;, oz . Armour

$8950

a'ld u p

exc l us 1vtly by

G E:'I.I · ART

On Tractor
with Blade

AUTHORIZED CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

OWNED AND OPERATED BY

..

Pomeroy

Jack &amp; Judy Williams

Ooen : Mon . thru Wed . 9·S, Thur. 9·12, Friday 9·S, Sat . 9·2.

ALARM CLOCI'-- -,.

~

.,.

.• ' • '

.... ..

•1~

,.

~

j' " (
1'

".·

because sp ec1al ly c ut ;m a tte r d1amonds ar e cl u stere o t ogether by
an ell:cluSI\1{' mount1 n g process Qual1ty d1amond s
newe st dt!

le kt wt Hte o r '{elt o w gold r1ng; Abo ..,e al l , th e wo nd e r ful
look of f ul l cara t d •am on d r.ngs a t f! r cep t •onally low pr •ces

CONVENIENT BUDGET TERMS

CANDrS ClASSIC COllECTIONS
IN
,
INGElS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
N. 2ND AVE .

Two 1n One Store

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

JOe Off

Oral 010Baby
Mfg. List SI.S9

..,

·p•.,~~to . ~
. ~ 2\ • I
12

";:

ss

l~ I

8

1

Hyper-Chec Home
Monitor Kit by Bard
Mfg. List 524 .95

l&gt;1; s rn dn 1S

59'

VICKS SINEX

l &lt;)(

.5

APPLE SAUCE············ 2179'

oz .
liiiii~

1! r1 '"'iln nl '~d var 1n Rey ~s1 ar
CnHet? o r on a ta r o t S d 'vdf 'P

CORNED BEEF ••••••••••••••• H

.PURE JUICES .••••••••••••••• S}~

[)e,...,....-Jflf)

')r 1 t ,

i' u1

271 N. 2ND AVl

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

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1

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Sl -3610

SIR
35°
··•

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greattast,ng Sa van r Regular

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VILLAGE PHARMACY

r---------------------~

-l e s • es0&lt;"&gt;~ ', :1- •· 1 · ·, r

'idVIr'l q '( 0 lJ 35C ()'1 [r p ;&gt;r ( ,P

l n •.,'r~rl

Orange, Grapefruit, or Apple
6 Pack Carton Tropica

ac, 1 t'p

E_ .. ~ qen t e '

'1V1k 1nq Sa ;3r1r \tJC! o1q ·• :..tl

49

42 oz .

'l QWf •

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F1

' I.J r) u ~ cul lel !
•ies d 'SO ·esoonr-;.DII" ' r

Mfg . List $2.05

oz . Armour

&lt;t:

na One

NASAL SPRAY

16oz. Sweet Brier

12

BLOOD PRESSURE KIT

~
~~
88(

1

~ :J I

200 Count

s1gns

l24 E . Ma;n St.

THERMOMETER
..... .....

••••••••••••••••••••

Mfg . List 99c

$ 27

INSTANT NESTEA ••••••••••. s2 39

KLEENEX

RIGHT QUARD
BRONZE
DEODORANT
SOl.

,

G1ve your~el f -- or I
one you love - a d1 am ond r 1n g w 1t h the look
o f a on e. t~ o . or t hree carat d1 a m ond But pay m u c h less than full
ca rat cos t All l l1 1s b 1g be au t y- so rea~o nab l y p r 1c ed - 1s PO SS1 ble

in ·

J oz .

PANCAKE MIX •••••••••••••• 89'

Clawn deck must be r,.m nvtari wtwa.M n!l.ina ~now blade)

• Shpplngextra • Prices are c•t•lov prlc•s
eAsk •bout Sears credit pl•ns
• Now on sale in our " P " uta log supplement

COOKIES

Creme filled,
dividually
Box of 10. =-..-:

Asst .
Colors .
Mfg . List 79c ea .

CHill WITH BEANS ········ 73'

2 lb . Aunt Jemima

OTHER SNOW REMOVAL ATTACHMENTS
--..
ARE AVAILABLE

hiiSIICtion Gu•r•nteed
or Your Money auk

McNamara sa1d.
John Candelaria

game s,

OYSTER STEW REG .•.••.•• 69'

Features 36 -ln. side -discharge mower
deck . 3 speeds forward , 1 reverse .
Medium-back seat .

w. va. 773-9577

t hree

Knight to e nd the game .
" When I was in the on -&lt;leek circle,
I was thinking how great it would be
•f John got on and I came up with the
bases loaded, " Knight said .
" I guess you fantastze this
situation aU your life. I waSl't
nervous. I felt really good and I
wanted tD t,., in that situation ."
Knight and his teammates had ooe
more chance to even things at bome
today before moving OQ to
Pittsburgh for the remainder of lbe

BUFFET SUPPERS

10- H P Electric Start
Lawn Tractor

Ohio 992-2178

win

park .
· Tt"s ballcl ub has gut tD sho w
&lt;.;Omebody so mcth mg. cumm g fr om
10 games be lund on J ul y Hu wm the
Western 0J V1S IOfl, ,, McNamara smd.
" Th ey tried to do 1t 1n the lith
1nrmg. They didn 't thn"' 1n the
to we l even Wi th two outs "
~
ConcepCiul started a la st-gasp
rall y wllh two o ut m the lith ,
Sin glin g to n g ht f1e ld Foster
followed w1th a walk and Robmson
rame Ul to p1tch to J ohnny Ben ch.
Bench walked to load the bases ,
bu t then Hobmson strul'k ou t Ray

2lb . Banquet

TRACTOR NOW
IN STOCK

)Sears J

to

Pittsburgh bul left afte r seven
tnnm g,s be&lt;: ause h1s S id~ started
lJoth erm g hun . Tan n ~ r used fl vt•
pll L·hers aJ l,OJ:;eth~r , w1th rdiever
Gran t J ac kso n ~etllng th e VICto r y
and Don Robmson the sa v• Tan ner
Was prepared to use mor e hurl er s If
he needed th em .
" We had ever ybod y warmmg up ,"
Tannner sa1d . " We would have used
i lleM i Blyleven •f we ha u lD to w1 n
tlle ba llg am e ."
McNamar a sa1d the Reds ha ve the
character to come back from the

PRODUCE

REGULAR KOOL-AID ••.•• G/69'

SAVE '185

has

r hargcd with scalping

.023 oz .

CUT '150

" Tom felt he could go on , but 1l
was the last half ollht&gt; e~ghth inn in~
and w~ needed ooe run ." satd
C1nc annali
Manage r
J uhn
Mc Namara " We had Torn Horne ,
who has done the job for us all
year ."
McNamara sa1d lostn g the
openlng game of the series rnendy
meant that " it's down to a fourgame serie s for us."
" It 's definitely not over One team

Commi ssio ner Dunfee

Prices Effective Thru Sat., October 6th

cti[£$E'ed

ALE!

_ Authorized Cata.log O&lt;)
Sales M e-rc hant '~

plays, but he decl med to ~ 1 v e
hun~ If ont.&gt; for h1s thr ee-run ho mer

Phone 742-2100

8 oz . Krall Pimi e nto

-Sears

CIN CINI'&gt;ATI ' AI' 1
St ar g~ll says he's gJ\Tn uut near ly
6, 000 gol d st&lt;Jr s tu h1~ tt·an Hn &lt;:Hes fo.r
ga m t:-Wlnmng h1t.-, or ou L~tan dmg

HAM &amp; CHEESE LOAF .•••••••••~~-. sp7

FABRIC SHOP
w. 2nd Ave.

how the Hoople System calls 'em :
In the Pac 10, the Southern California Trojans will ro ll ov e r
Washington State, 35-&lt;i; UCLA will
edge the Stanford Cardinals, 28-22;
California's Golden Bears will edge
Oregon, 16-14; and Washington's
HuskJes will thump Oregon State, 33-

Alabama 38 Wlehlta St. 8
,.
ArkanaBBI9TCU 9 IN!
Annyr, ...,..eiO
BowiiDg Green 18 Toledo 7
Caillornla II Oregon 14
Ceotral Michigan !7 Oblo U. 12
Oe111.1on Zl VlrgiDJa U
Colorado 17 Oklahoma 14
Columbia II Pean 14
CorueU 27 Bucknell 8
Darlmoulb :13 Holy Croas 15
Florida St. 28 Louisville Zl ( N 1
Harvard 18 Booton U. 14
HOO.ton 24 Baylor 10 IN)
Dllnoill ZZ Iowa 7
lndlooa %1 Willcollll!n 18
Iowa Slate 21 Willcollll!n 18
Kentucky 28 West Vlrglola 14
lliU Z8 F1orida 13
Miami IF) 28 Florida A&amp;:M%&gt;1
Miami I0) 3S Marshall 7
Maryland 27 Pean St. Z2
Mlcblgao 28 Michigan St. Zl
Georgia 21 Mlssl88lppl 20
Navy 30 AJr Foree 8
NebrBBkB 35 New Mnleo St. 14
New Mexico 16 Sao Diego St. 15
N. Carolina St. Z7 Auburn %5
N. Carolina Z4 Clndooati 14
Notre Dame 30 Georgia Te.:b IS
Oblo St. 33 Northwestern lZ
Pl11 38 Booton CoUege 7
Princeton Z4 Brown %1
Purdue 35 Minnesota 21
Rutgel'll %1 Temple 7
San Jose St. 28 Fullerton St. 14 IN I
S. Carolina Z2 Oklahoma St. 17 IN 1
Syracuse 35 Kanllas 19
Teanessee %9 Mississippi St. 14
Teus 4% Rice 17 IN)
Teus Tech 31 TelUIB A&amp;M 14 lSi
Tulsa 15 Kansas St. 13
Tulane %9 VanderbUt 20 IN I
UCLA 28 Stanford Z%
USC 35 Washlngton St . 6
Utah Z2 Colorado St. 14
Utab St. 28 LoBI! Beach St. %0
Wake Forestl7 VIrginia Tecb 14
Waohlagtoo 38 Oregon Sl. 8
Wyomllll! Z4 UTEP 13
Yale 18 Colgate 14
IN I night game
EGAD! Hoople '• bot. the old boy
bad a wtnnllll! percentage of .838 for
Sept. ZZ - based on 52 correct
cbolees, 10 losaes and 3 Ilea . ID·
eluded iD tbe Major's plclu! wao the
North Carolina UJI8"l of Pill . And
Purdue 's 23-Z% wtn over Notre
Dame. IOnly In that ooe tbe Major
bad predicted a total of %1 po!nls for
lbe losiDg lrlab.i

Eckrich

Christmas Layaway

115

Stargell 's blast gives Pirates, 5-2 victory

ocr. s

r
The Dallas Cowboys downed th e
· Sa n r' ranCISCO 49ers Ill a 1972 !\Fl.
playoff gam~ by o\'errommg a 28-\.1
deficit with l i pomt s m tlle la st
quarter

5- The Dally Set11le •l M1ddl• pon -Pomeroy , o , Wednesday , Oct. 3, 1979

r 1..,\J ~n tc the store

1t wo uld be a c11me noJt o
take advanlage ol th 1s or•e r

HJI&amp;! I1IT!I8 UYWI

'•~1~·:

:d' '"' ·

·•u •~c. ~ n•r•

. ; ·, ,&lt;J· ~~r"

I
I

\1011 '" brn ~r• · .,. !It•", · ~·. ~· ~ ··~1 ·•'•· ' ;·\'''~"' , t ~~~
""'' ~•nd·~ ~ C,\ ~ "1...:1 ,'Q IIC C.OU;l ''"\ " lt&lt;· •l'IJttfll!'ll
1\il l
l
&amp; (A, lr&gt;.- P•lo'&gt;oiiJM
~ 1 L /6~
bflll1tll 1o! ( 011001' De' 011' r.a ~

I Sf

Ta ke lh1 s coupon lo

~our s tore .

31'J

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

�6- The l)a!Jy Senttnel. Middleport-Pomeroy , U.. Wednesday, (kt 3. I9i ~

Ghost hunters to haunt Rio Grande
I

RTO GRANDE - Two people who
have faced "The Amityville Horror "
will visit the Rio Grande College and
CommWlity College campus Oct . 4
at 8:30p.m.
Ed and Lorraine Warren. ca lled
by many " America ·s Top Ghost
Hunters," wtll appear , opemng the
1979 "Starda te." Artist and Lecture
Series in the college's cafeteria .
The Warrens became involved
with ' the horror" in 1976, less than
two months after George Lutz and
h1s family left the~r home in
Amityville, Long Island , claiming to

Season tickets for the ent1re "Star·
dates ' senes wtll also be on sale at
the flrst performance .
[)oris Ross, chaif'Jl"rson of the Ar tist and Lecture Corrunittee, pointed
out substantial savings for season
holders.
"An individuaJ can see aU SIX performances for $15 . one.flatf the
regular cost. " said Ross .
Other season ticket costs are $20
fur couples and $25 for families .
" A farruly of four could save
almost a hundred dollars off in·
dividual llcket purchases. " she aliJed .
The Warrens are followed in two
weeks by · the second "Stardates"
performer. Josh White Jr. Th1s
l&lt;ilented musician visits Rio Grande
lktober t8at8 :30p.m.
Gil Eagles comes to Rio Grande oo
Dec . 11, also at 8:30 p.m . Eagles
brings his abilities with psychic
powers and hypnosis for an en·
tertallling evening
On Jan . 9 the silent movies come
w life with piano accompaniment by
Bob Verbeck.
Another night of movies follows on
March 10. The original "A Star is
Born," Laurel and Hardy in "Way
Out West" and "The Red Shoes" w1ll
be shown .
Closing out the senes on April 10
will be the former senator and chairman of the Watergate hearings. Sam
J. Ervin .Jr.

haVe Witnessed fnghtemn~ demomc
visions .
Ed Warren would ventually have
the horror appear to him more than
fifty miles frum the house on Long
Island . "This IS one of the worse
cases that I have ever worked vn 111
my 32 years of investigating haun·
tmgs," said Ed Warren .
A priest and other invesugators all
claim to have been threa tened by
"the horror. "
" Stardates" performances are
open to the public . Tickets are $5 per
person .

Missionary to
appear at three
Meigs churches
.
•

'

The Rev. and Mrs. Brent Cobb.
missionaries to Korea now home on
furlough, will be appearing at three
Meigs County Churches of the
Nazarene within the next few days.
On Friday they will be at the
Racine Church of the N~
· rene at
7:30 p.m .; at 7:30 p.m . Saturday
they will be at the Chester
ch of
the Nazarene, and at 10 30 a .m .·sunday. they will be at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene .
The Rev Mr. Cobb has served for
the past four years as the rrussion
director of the Church of the
Nazarene in the Republic of Korea .
He has traveled wtdely among th~
150 churches in Korea, preaching
and helping to start new churches .
The Rev. Mr . Cobb has also taught
classes at the Korean Nazarene
Bible College and has spoken on
natinal radio daily for several years .
Mrs. Cobb has worked with
numerous women's groups and has
spoken at various conventions and
seminars. Mrs . Cobb received her
A.B. degree from Asbllry College in
Wilmore. Ky .
The Rev . Cobb received Ius A.B.
degree from Asbury College and
then rece1 ved Ius Masters of
Divinity from the Nazarene
Theological Seminary . He has attended also Yonsei University m
Seoul and graduated from the
Korean language 1nst1tute of that
university.
The serv1ees will mclude slides
narrated with taped voices, music
and sound effects. THe public is in ·
vited to all of the services .

The Poet's
Corner
OUR FAMILY
In eighteen hundred nmety -three.
I was born one wlntry day,
And at the age of sweet sixteen,
Jesus washed my sins away .
At seventeen. I fell in Jove,
Stx years later we w~re wed .
I kept on trusting in the Lord,
In the way that I was led .
At twenty-four . son Willard came,
And he was our pride and JOY.
Aimost two years till Annie came.
As a playmate for our boy .
One wintry rught came Sina May.
Nmeteen twenty was the year.
Three children then were in our
horne .
And we loved them all so dear. '

7- The Daily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 . Wednesday, Oct. 3, 1979

'"-·hool ,
And wt• lnl•d tu tee:tch them right ,

Oh ' may they all believe and find
Jesus Christ. the shimng tight .
Composod 10 1!179. By Mrs . Hiley
Plgnlt , Long Rottom . Ohio 45743.

ANNIVERSARY BANQUET PLANNED
The 41lth anniversary ci the
Homebulders Class of the Mid·
dleport Church of Christ will be observed WJih a banquet on Oct. 16, at
6:30p.m . at the church .
Th program will include
recognition of past presidents .
Reservations are to be made with
Mrs. Colleen Van Meter at 992-28116,
or Dorothy Roch, 992..J297 by Oel. 10.

Veterans Memorial
Auxiliary meets,
elects officers

Pomeroy
Personal Notes
Mrs. Alfred smlth and granddaughter, Lin~a. Huntington, W
Va ., were recent guests of Mrs .
Genevieve Meinhart and Mlss Em111
Smith. Whlle here they joined Mrs
Virginia Thoren and Mrs . Elva Col·
terill for a dinner .
Jack Smith of Lancaster wa.. the
recent overnight guest of his aunts,
Miss Erma Smith and Mrs .
Genevieve .

Officers were elected and committees named at the recent meeting
of the Auxiliary of Veterans
Memorial Hospital .
the officers are Mrs . J.ouise Bears
president; Mrs . Janice Daniels, vic~
prestdent; Mrs. Clara Burns .
secretary; Mrs. Ethel Grueser
correspondmg secretary. and Mrs'
Emogene Simms. treasurer.
On committees are Carrie Kennedy, Betty Templeton. Ethel Hatfield, Clara Burris, Mildred Fry , Et ·
ta Will, Alma Newt&lt;Jn, Reva Beach
and Mildred Withee, ways and
me":""; Jessie White, gift shop
chairman; Katheryn Metzger.
Jaruce Daniels and Frances Smart
program; Katie Anthony and Mrs'
Smart, volunteer chairmen ; Mrs .
Daniels, GHda Baxter, Shorty
Wright, Mrs . Fry and Mrs . Templeton, membership; Mrs. Wright
'
health chairman .

The seore of a forfeited baseball
game is~.

E•RE HERE WHEN YOU NEED US

In nineteen hundred twenty-four,
Our son Donald came along ,

The next to come was our Eileen,

y, HI n· "'P''Ill ,t ]til r rl I IIIli"
.nul I H r• rH"\ - p1r ktHL; ont I lw

And we named her from a song ;
She was the first to have brown eyes.
All the rest h;!d eyes of blue,
We lived in Egypt at that tune,
And both joy and grief we knew .
The next to come was our Lucille,
She was sweet but very small.
Then one more child to bring us joy.
Lorena came. the last of all.
Our children grew and went w

, , r n 11 nnw n ·•al

111 ~ ~~ rann·

llh•lllk 1\tii!Wlh, lllllt 't' l "

Jfi (" 111'\'d"&gt; J\11\.\.
itl .... LLI,IIII'I'III

\'IIIII" ... , JI'(

~1 ' 11]11'
lll.tlt

\\/t··n· twn· wlwn yoll rH't•d
for tllJJhilt• homt• m
&lt;·ouw to llw pro
,, . ..,._i,Hml..,ltH tlw .,pec ·ial
11 ...

~&gt;l lr; uH ., ..

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\\\·II ('1 1\ ' t'l lli'W or ll"'t' d
rnrrhi lt·!Hmw-. . Your ·an
t ' \ r l l 1.!1'1 .. , ..~ .. ~mal . n ·ntiil

policy to ftt your

~I'W(_' ili c

'

...... ··---

A layette shower was held recently honoring Christy Ramsburg with
Vicki Hoffman as hostess.
The color scheme of orange and
yellow was carried out Games were
played with the prizes going to J.inda
Guinther and Pauline Hoffman .
Judy Radford won the door prize .
Cake, nuts. mints and punch were
served after Miss Ramsburg opened
her gifts.
Others attending were Helene
Goeglein, Nancy and Sally Radford,
Grace Abbott, Sherry Abbott and
Jason. TamJ Buck. Peggy Moore.

'

OPEN DAILY 9:30·9:30, SUNDAY,_.

WED., THURS., FRI., SU.

Put some
green
•
m your
life!

•

'''

.''
...

Smiths host reunion

·.

Mr . and Mrs . James Smith and
children, Marsha. Melissa and Marty, Baltimore , were hosts Sunday for
the 15th annual reWJion of the family
of the late Mart and Lowse Crary .
Going from Pomeroy were Mrs.
Bob Wamsley and son, J . R. Mr.
and Mrs. Gerald Wildermuth and
Mrs. Pearl Mora .
Others attendmg were Mr. and
Mrs . Norman Fisher, Senecaville;
Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Fisher. Larry
and Laura. Cambndge; Mr. and
Mr.; . David Jone. and Christy, Mr.
and Mrs . Donald Fink, Dale and

.,
'
.,

.

.
t •,.
...•
'

j ':

•,

Handy Planl Sp&lt;ayer
Pt.~ &lt;..,ltr

DROP POSTERS
ATKROGERS
Meigs students who are participating in the " Haunted HoUS€"
poster contest are advised to drp off
their posters at Kroger Store 10
Pomeroy, Vaughan's Cardinal in
Middleport and Rutland Furniture
in Rutland anytime Friday.

IHlt ' nll',r r "

~~na . ~dM~JuneAnnW= ·

'·

·:,

sley, Columbus; Mr . and Mrs .
Delbert Kob1nson and Deanne.
Somerset. and Mr . and Mrs . Pete
N1bert and Todd, Gallipolis .

Aerosol Leaf Shine
S n•· •'' l l n r ll',h 'l " , '

1 r; '

Aerosol lnsecl Spray

Interlibrary
loans begin

I '

'

' ·-..• J•

On October 1, public libraries in
southeastern Ohio will begin agam
an areawide cooperallve 1n·
terlibrary Joan system
"One of the frustrations of
working in a small library." explained Ellen Bell. Meigs County
Ubrarian, "is that we do not have
enough money to buy everything our
patrons want and we do not have
enough space to store all the things
we have bought or been given in the
past. Sharing our books with other
libraries in OVAL (the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries l is an experiment we
tried this summer which showed
that we can get many of the books
our patrons want by asking other
OV AL J libraries if !OCy own the
books. Since they also ask us, and we
share what we have, our people gain
too ,I I
Pomeroy and Middleport Public
Libraries and the Bookmobile have
an agreement with Ohio University
which enables them to borrow books
for Meigs County patrons from the
university library. However, many
times the university does not own
the books either. In that case, the
libraries have tried to borrow the ·
books from other libraries. But
many libraries will not lend recent
books to other libraries:
"1bis Areawide Sharing Network
will mean that we can get new but
not wildely popular books from other
libraries for Meigs Countians," Mrs.
Bell conunented. "In our test this
summer, we found that we were able
to answer more requests more
frequently through the network . We
are looking forward to seeing it back
' In operation ."

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Fruth ~ ·euowshlp ol OhiO 1s sponsoring a meet1n":: at Faith
Fellowship Campgrounds. Vmcen t .
Oct. ~ . The Rev Robert Thom will
be guest speaker at p . m . on Friday ,
Oct. S, and at 10 a . m., 2 p. m . ~d 7
p . m . on Saturday. Ort. 6.
Location of the meeting IS the
same a&lt; that of JestL&lt; 79. The
program will inL'!ude a song and
praise session. and the public is invited to attend . Campers and tents
are welcome . There will beno food
sold on the ~rounds, although soft
drinks wtU be available .
Those attending are encouraged to
take lawnchairs or blankeL&lt;. Free
will offerings will be taken at the
senrices.
The Rev. Mr. Thorn is author of
several books, including "The New
Wine Is Better·' which is being made
into a movie. He appears on the 700
Club as a guest frequently and has
traveled throughout America and
several foreign countries preaching
and teaching.
For more informatiOn, telephone
614-989-2024 .

'

Large Plants
'I ,. '

nf'w year .

Plans were made for a bake sale to
be held Oct 19 at Kroger's beginning
at 9:30 a .m . Proceeds will be used
for hospital equipment. A report was
given on the cookbooks .
A thank you note was read from
Debbie
Danner,
scholarship
recipient.
Mrs . Ethel Grueser. Mrs . Bertha
Parker. Mrs. Lucille Leifheit, and
Mrs Leona Karr Will be hostesses
lor the nert meeting .
Games were played with Mrs .
Grueser winning a prize . Mr. . Hat·
field won the door prize . An autumn
motif was carried out in the refreshment table decoratiOns. Pumpkn pie
and coffee . was served by the
executive board, Mrs . Louise
Bearhs, Mrs . Burris. Mrs. Daniels,
Mrs. Anthony. Mrs . Grueser, Mrs .
White, Mrs. Kennedy. Mrs. Simms
and Mrs. Metzger.

Heidi Ewing, Thelma Fisher and
Gail, Pauline Hysell and Susie Abbott. Sending gifts were Mary
Powell, Betty Milhoan. Mary
Grueser. Helen Blackston,. Sara and
Gmger Cullums, Betty Faulk, Elsie
Hines and Genevieve Burdette.

SOUTHEAST OHIO Garden Trac wr Club Wednesday, 7:30 p .m. in
scout building located behind the
firehouse in Chester. All interested
persons are invited to attend .
TifURSDAY
SOUTHERN Band Boosters. 7:30
p.m . Thursday at the high school.
BAKE AND RUMMAGE Sale
Wednesday and Thursday at
Harrisonville Town Hall from 9 a.m .
to 3 p.m. Sponsored by Harrisonville
Senior Citizens .
1WTN CITY SHRINETIES Thursday at home of Mary Stewart,
Chester .
FRIDAY
HAPPY HARVESTERS Class ,
Trinity Church, I :30 p .m . Friday in
th social room of the church. Mrs .
John Terrell, Mrs. Arthur Slusher
and Mrs. Archie Swartz will be
hostesses.
SUNDAY
FELLOWSHIP DINNER at
Trinity Church, immediately
following the worship service Sunday. Meat and beverage to be furnished.
MONDAY
MEIGS County Pomona Grange,
Monday, 8 p.m. to ,nisi! the Vinton
County Pomona Grange, Com·
munity Hall north of McArthur .

SO:'II!' IUIIJUMil

Haunted house poster
contest set to begin

ON SI'E(')AJ. RUN
Hock1ng Valley Scen1c
Railroad wlll be reserwd on &lt;J&lt;:tober
~for the 4 p. m . run for " s penal
·country Tracks Speci"l " spon sored by WOUR-91Ffll.
The Hockin g Valley Scemc
Railroad nc&gt;tled 111 the lulls of
southeastern Ohi o wul futtow Its
usual schedule the earlier part of the
day with a run at 12 noon and 2 p. m.
The " Country Tracks Special" 1s
tn celebration of WOUB·FM's 30th
birthday . The train wtll depart al 4
p . m . from Nelsonville Midway
through the ride passenger s will
disembark for a pi cnic and a mmi
concert of bluegrass rnu~1c
Passengers will then board again
and fin1sh the trip

The

The Me1g.s Cuu11ty JC!ycee-ettes
sponsonng a haunted house
poster contest open to students in
grades one through six in ·Southern,
Eastern and Me1gs Schol Districts .
Childreu should complete their
posters and give to their teachers on
the mornmg of Oct. 5. The posters
may be any color but must be on
standard poster paper.
The pastel'S will be JUdged at the
schools on Oct. 5. and will be placed
1n store wtndows to advertise "the
haunted house The posters will not
IJ&lt;O returned tu the students .
There wtll be priZes awarded in
two classes . There will be a first,
second and third lace in grades one
through three and the same for
grades four through SIX
, PriZes are a~ follows . first pla ce.

free admission to the haunted house·
second place, coupon for a free
and candy bar ; third, coupons for 25
cents off the admission price . •
. Posters must have the following
information on the front: Time, 7
p .m . to 11 p.m .; date, October 18
though 31, 1979; where, Pomeroy
Seruor High School; admission, $1;
sponsored by , Meigs County
Jaycees; concession stand spon·
sored by Meigs County Jaycee-ettes.
Posters must have the following
on the back, child's name, grade,
school and name of teacher.
U Meigs is not in session by Oct. 5,
pick-up points will be announcd later
for the children of the district. For
additional information, call Vicki
Williams at 992-3496 or Nancy Burns
at 992-5664.

an~

Reservations for this spenal run
of the Hock ing Valley S('emc
Rallroad can be made by calliug 61459H091.

TO UNDERGO SURGERY
Mrs. Dorothy Ritchie will undergo
open heart surgery at Mt. Carmel
Hospital in Colwnbus on Oct. 15. The
surgery, onginally scheduled for
Monday, was postponed due to other
complications . Mrs . Ritchie is now
at home and expects to re-enter the
hospital on Oct. 14. Her son , Robert.
Jr., of Houston, Texas, returned to
his home Monday and then will come
back to Ohio when his mother has
the surgery .

c!rink

George (;ernn of tlH.' San Antonw
Spurs, the l\BA sconng champwn
for 1977-78 and 19 71!-79. 1s nicknamed
"The Iceman "

Donation noted
A Chnstmas donation to the
MeX!eo Children's Home was made
at a meeting of the Young Adult
Class Monday night at the Bradford
Church of Christ .
Mrs. Janice Haggy presided at the
meeting which opened with prayer
by Larry Pickens and devotions by
Mrs. Nancy Morris. Mrs. Morris
read "Trust in a Must" and " In His
Footsteps." A hayride for the entire
church was announced for Oct . 'J:I,
with those planning to attend to be at
the church at 6:30p.m . There was a
discussiOn on continuing with the
young adult class teaching books .
Next meeting will be on Nov . 5 at 7
p.m. at the church .
Refre.hrnents of cider. donuts and
tea were served by Bonnie Pickens,
to Larry Pickens, Steve and Dreama
Pickens . Becky Painter. Kathryn
Hussell. Janice Jlaggy and Nancy
Morris

Faitb Fellowship
plans meeting

Potted Plants
. CELEBRATE BIRTIIDA Y
REEDSVILLE - The Rev . Elden
Blake, pastor of the Eden United
Brethren Church. will be celebrating
his 83rd birthday on Oct. II Friends
may send cards to hun at Route I,
Reedsville .

Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
UNITED Methodist Wome n.
Letart Falls Church. to meet Wed ·
nesday at 7:30p.m . at the h&lt;~me of
Mrs. Bert Gnmm . All members are
urged to'attend to make plans for the

Expectant mother honored

MIDDLEPORT 0.'

992-2342

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FOR CHRISTMAS!

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Don Hutson, one of the aU-time
great pass receivers. played some
defensive end for the Green Bay
Packers at 170 pounds.

GOESSLER
JEWELRY

Court St.

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�1' 8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct . 3, 1979

Ada Holter hosts Wildwood Garden Club
New officers were installed and a
program on peonies and their
pr obleiilB was pr esented at the
recent meeting of the Winding Wildwood Garden Cl ub held at the home
of Mrs. Ada Holter.
Installed by Mrs. Dorothy Smith,
outgoing president, were Mrs Marcia Arnold , p resident; Mrs. Betty
Milhoan, vice president ; Mrs. Peggy
Moore, secretary; a nd Mrs. Jane
Hanis, treasurer.
Mrs. Arnold presented the
program on peonies pointing to the
many proble!Tl8 which afflict the
plants . She said if the plants have
not bloom ed for four or five years,
they should be d!scarded. If they are
turning brown and drymg up before
opening , then they have blight, a
disease which can be caused by wet
wea ther, or they have too much

shade.
For peonies to do their best, Mrs .
Arnold sa1d that plants should be in
sun or semi-shade which wlll give
longer lasting blooms and better
color . Plants too deep in the ground
many times receive too mueh
nitrogen from the soil causing
blooming problems. For d!seased
plants, the stocks should be cut back
in the fall and all of ihe stocks and
foliage burned. Then the peony bed
should be drenched with bordeaW&lt;
mixture, daptan, or zineb, or benlate
mixed one tablespoon to a gallon of

water.
Mrs. Arnold also suggested using
the microwave oven 1to dry flowers .
She said they dry faster, look
fresher, and keep their natural color
better than those dried in a conventional way . For those having

trouble rooting a pineapple tnp , she
suggested dipping the base mto
honey and then settmg It mto a pot of
soil. t'me mesh poultry wire around
a bird feeder was suggested by Mrs .
Arnold as a way to keep the squirrels
from eating the bird feed .
"School Bells Ring" was the
theme of the nower arrangements
on dlsplay by Mrs . Kat hryn Miller
who used yellow and brown
marigolds with large crayons, and
Mrs. Evel}1l Hollon who used
chrysanthemums and yew along
wtth a ruler, pencil and apple on a
wooden base. Mrs. Hollon also
dlsplayed a specimen of mad1era
vi ne. Mrs Ada Holter showed two
specimens of petti~.;oat fern, and all
received blue ribbons.
The meeting opened wtth Mrs
Doris Grucser giving a po€m,

" Nobody Walks Alone ", and a
readmg, " When You're 80 years
old . " The Lord's Prayer was given
in UniSOn .

Mrs Grace Fisher gave timely
garden tips noting that the grass
should be cut, tha t gladioli and other
bulbs should be taken from lfh
ground, that peonies should be transplanted, and that as soon as the
frost comes, the dahlias should be
cut five inchs from the ground, dug a
couple of weeks later, and after
drymg, stored at about 45 degrees.
She also saJd that it 1s time to plant
allium bulbs, winter Olllon sets,
tulips and daffodil bulbs.
Mrs . Smith read a lett er announcmg the " Autumn Froll c" to be
held tomght at the Chester
Methodist Church . Pauline Collett
wtll be the guest demonstrat or . For

AOVERfiSEO ITEM POL ICY
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A~ONOALEMACAIONII

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Saltines

PINT RETUIINAILE
DAD'S IIOOT IHR .

HOLLy FARMS . U.S.D.A . OOPEc'TED

8

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IEEF CHUCK ARM

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IDDITIONAli'IIICHASE IEIClUDtNC THI S tllll 1

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Plastic Ctn_

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• (lcept Hinton , White Sulphur&amp;. 7th .h e nue Cherleston

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'AN1AH IC U. Vt"fG S
ON KIOCII llANO

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STATE PARK
DENVER (AP) - Roxborough
State Park , a 765-&lt;Icre park of native
red roc ks located southwest of here,
opened this year.
The hogbac k rim on Ute park's
east side and the pine-&lt;wered ridge
of Pike Na tional For est on the west
provide a protective encla ve for the
park, which sup ports iL• own microclimate - not necessarily the same
as the surrounding environment.

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HOURS
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roll caU those attendmg wiU exTI1e dmner and meeting are $4 Mrs.
change bul bs.
' Evelyn Hollon reported on t&gt;
The fall regional meeting was annower demonstration held at Roval
Oak Park on Sept. 8 by Mrs. Ire11e
nounaed for 0&lt;.1. '1:1 at the Marietta
Baptist Church. Reservations are to
Jackson .
be made wiUt Mrs. Donald Bloom .
Amelita Taylor of Ma,,.and was a
guest. HefreshmenL'i were served by
the hostess .

3RD Ill WEEK liTH 1111

LtSUO INl O W Alii JUST
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tL) c ustmner~

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pallles severe-d

Colwnbi a ~.sttmates the cost of
maintaining ca thoodi c protection on
me ld] pipe runs about three to four
cents a foo t ann uaU y. Considenng
the rru les and miles of p1 pe renewl'ed

milhon Llolhtrs a

}"t'iif

In fa ct , L'unservatlve t.'Sllfnates of
IJHJustry-w1de

resulting

sewings

fro m use of plas ta· ptPf' an· set at
$150 ,000, 000
'
~a s diSl_n but1on 1ndus try first

·n,e

R UMMAGE SALE ON FRIDAY
A rummage sale will I&gt;&lt; held
Friday at the Amen can I A.'gion
Hallin Middlepon by the jlln1 nrs of
the AUXJUary of feent•y-Flenn&lt;•ll
Post 128. On Saturday the S&lt;l]e will
continue along with a bake sale The
sa le wiU begin a t q a .Ill tJ!l both
da ys .

~~

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In a soc1ety often ac·c u:wd uf bt.'I Jig
plastic, the natural ~as 1ndustrv Increasingly JS fitting the m old
That's not a bad thing though
Col umbia Gas of Oh10 r_, lullalt•s that

FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
September gasoliQe t·xu .-; t • tax
checks l&lt;&gt;taling 110,060, 257 we re
distnbuted by State Auditor Tho111as
E Ferguson's office to Ohw •·owl lies, townshi ps, cities and Villages
Ferguson· .said t•ach county
received $.15 ,000 and the townships
each rece ived $1 200
1\mounLs
received by Me igs Co unty vil lages
included
Middleport,
$2.179:
Pomeroy , $2,322 : l(dcme, $020:
Hutland, $550 and Syracus e . $715

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ln a l!J71

\Fl. pld~off ~-: ;tJJl L'.

;.,1 1an1 1 driet1ted K ;n1sa~ C1ty . D-24 .
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consunung one h11ur . :!2 mtn u\1.: . . . ;md
10 .St' l'Ond s of p bt_\ mg lllllL'

turned to plastic tn the face of metal
shortages broug ht on hy World War
II and su bsequent dramatic tn lTcascs iu material and construc tion
costs for metal pipe 1n the fJftJes .
Colum bia began evaluating plastics
for pipeline ust&gt; in 1954.
l!ulia l studi es revealed potential
cost savings that wre compdlmg _
In 1962. Co lu mb ia began
" renewmg" service lines - making
uld, wum out metal pipe sen11cea ble
again by msertin~ plast ic pipe mlo
the wom Jron a nd s teel.
The nrocedure offers severa l cost
advantages.
Because plasti c line ca n be Inse rted 1nto eXJshng pipel ines, use of
plastic elerninates the costl y process
of djggi11g up and renewm~ old
systems .
In addllJon, Since plaslic pipe does
not corrode, 1t does not requ tre
coating or ca thodic protection - the
methods used to prvent corrosion on
metal pipe .
( 'o rm~lOn protedwn operating expenses elirnmaled by using plastic
pipe han netted savings of more
than half a rmllwn dollars in the last
st·n.•n yea rs

2 lllliliun feel uf plasl1c pipe last
year . A comparable aJ now1t of steel
pipe would have cost $1 ,296,568

P&lt;:K h ye ar, those cents add up to sub-

pqa~ llne
renewa l wurk . Its
nexJbillly, and weight advantage in
larger sizes make U1St.allation less
costly because it can be ac ·
comphshed with fewer men and less
eqUipment.

stantial annual savings
Today plast ic pipe IS belnK uscrl
for new mstallations as well as fur

In .'illlalle r s1zes, plast1e (.'Un tm ues
to offer s ul.Jstantial matertal costs
sav1ngs. Colum bia bought m or e than

struCt ion material for Columb ia ,
and a pproJUmately 95 percent of all
pipeline purchased IS plas ti c .
Twelve percent of Columbia 's
distributi on lines now are plastic .
Jndustr y-w1de use of p las li c
m1rrors
L'olumb la·s
use
of
polyethylene . More than 300 com panies are llsing plastic pipe and 11
percent of the nation 's 935,000-mile

Cub Scouts presented awards
Awards were present ed ol the
rece nt meeting of Syracu.se Cuu
Sco ut Pack 242 held at the school.
The meetmg opened wtth the
pledge to the flag and the Lord's
Prayer led by Todd I Jsle and St_·ott
McPhail . Advancem ent beads were
presented to Jerry Aleslure. Scott
McPhail, and Chris Stout. Heceiving
arrows were Chris Stout. Todd 1Js le
a nd Scott Mc Phail.
Hibbons for partic1pat10n in the
c ub olympics went to a ll the boys
wi th second and third pla ce nbbons
to Christ Stout and a second place
ribbon to Brian Weaver. E~ ch one
a ls o received a ribbon for the bike
rodeo in August.
The bears each read a paper on
" Why I Love America ". a nd the
wolves sang " I Have A Do~" and
· Good Night, Cub Scouts ". The
meeting closed wit h the l1ving ci rcle.
Atte nd ing were Mr s _ Jerry
Aleshire and Jerry, Mrs. Hoge r

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HOGG HOLLOW
DABBLE SHOP
Fine Line of ' Piaslercrafl ' It ems
For You to Mak e or Give As Gifts

OPEN
Tuesday -Frtda')l 1.00 10 · 00
Satu rda y l . OO · S 00
C lo sed Sunday and Monday

I nte,-e~ted In Cla sses
C.alll -614 ·949 · 2682

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Baby Gifts

Animals - lg . &amp; Sm .

Christmas Decor

LEAN

SLAB BACON ...~~?~_E.. ~~~.. ~~-- 69(

PRODUCE
U. S. NO. 1

;ITALIAN BREAD........~~:.~~~~ ... 59¢ WHITE POTATOES ............... 79e
ARCHWAY
49
9 TOKAY GRAPES .............l.~·
69e
COOKIES .................~~~.~~.~:~ 1 &amp;s1s
RED

....•..

LONG CRISP TENDER

CRACKERS .....................;.L.~ ~~···· 69¢ CARROTS......................... ~..~~~.: ........sl
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COUPON
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10 lB. BAG

KEEBLER SALTINE

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Mirrors
Plaques

Halloween Decor .

HEINER'S FRESH

NEW SIZE

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CHUCK ROAST.. ...............ts.. sl 19 GROUND BEEF.. .......... ~-~ -... ~1 49

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'COME ON UP AND
DABBLE AROUND'

CLU B MEETS
Mrs. J om HuHman hosted a
rneellng uf the Sew-Kite Sewing Club
at her Middleport horne Wedn esday
n1g ht. Games we re played with
pnzes ~o ing LO Mrs. Shirley Baity
cmd M~. Le nora McKnight. Mr s.
Martha Hoffman Will have the next
meetlng. A desse rt course was se r ·
ved . others attendmg were Mrs .
Ann Rr owning, treasurer ; Mrs .
F:vely n Gilmore, secr etary: Mrs .
Belly Wehrung , Mrs. FloStnck land ,
Mrs . Pandora Collins, Mrs. Nettie
Boyer . Mrs Caro lyn McDa ni el and
M" l. ul·y Wh ile.

BONELESS
" ENGLISH ROAST
CHUCK ROAST
BEEF STEW

JNn GIUOG NO G101 GNY J.n0 nfW

INI1 GI.UOG NO G10• GNY 1n0 11n11

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MAKE GATEWAY YOUR HEADQUARTERS
FOR FREEZER BEEF

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Polyrthylenr pip€ tho rugh sixmch size

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER 4, 5, 6, 1979

...

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Gnndley and Chn s, Sham Simpson ,
Mr and Mrs. J ohn Lisle, Todd , Sco tt
and TraVIS, Mrs. Dave Stout, Chr is
and Hobin, Bnan Wea ver, 'Irs. Joh"
Grueser, Kevin Grueser, Mr. ano
Mrs . Hu~h McPhai l, Scott and
Hea ther .

more .

d&gt;slributJ on network is now
polyethylene . Most was installed in
the last 10 years, when costs have increased steadily in every sector.
Plastic pipe related savings have
a llowed the mdustry to hold down
distn bution costs at a nearly constant Ieve l.
With excellent results so far, and
research continuing , even greater
savings and efficiencies should be
possible in the future .
Plastic pipe is sure to continue as
one of many factors that make
natural gas the best buy on the
ene rgy market.

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WITHOUT COUPON REGULAR PRICE

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12- The Datly Sentinel, Mtddlepori -Pomeroy , 0, Wednesday , Oct . J, t979

t~()Untl

Your Best Buys Are

.

:3 --:~""f\ .. ; I •.

DTI"II

In the Sentinel Classifieds

11 ' \ r-v

I M dJ
I .epurt -Polln '"'&gt; , 0, Wednesday , Oct. 3, 1!179

C)pnto

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For Sale,
Rent or Trade

wanted to Buy

WANT AD
CHARGES
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h&gt;rw'&gt; r fld trll!H.., ffh)l(lr '),
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Auto Sales
1916MO N1 E CARLO JSO
enll •n e low rtiiiP d Yl' ~?~00
"Nt }6)6

Each wo rd ovt-r Uw n ullii !Hll n
I~ words l.'i ~ t·erll.'l per word pt"r
t!Hy Ad:i runntt\g ulht&gt;r th.i:t n, un
.K'Cllllv~ day s wriJ ~- dltlr~·'l.l ct !

t.hr Ill.!!} n tte
lrt rnemory. l ~rd u! rtu.rrll.'
and Obr h..Lar~· 6 ct&gt;nl.'l po•r "'"rd
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P ets &lt;J·.-a &lt;~ ,ltl · • ' ··r
ado p t 1on dllU ,nt or·,, 11 011
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EVERY

SUNDAY 1 PM FA( TOF&lt;' ,.
CHOKE ONLY
Rt. C1 NI::_

G UN CLUB
NO

H U N TIN G
PO
tr esp ass ,nq w •f h no ,,,.
c epttons on rn .. or no•·r '"
Judy M cG raw ":.t&gt; l l
DUES fo r 11180 are P&lt;ltcl hl"
tromO cr lt o Dec 31 1'1 1 9
TEn dOIInrs , Ra c•n (• C ~ un
Club
8At&lt; E R 5
8USY
B1·t ·
Ceramr co; dt'noun&lt; •' '&gt; 1 ,~ 1
hours rue:,da( 10 J l tu
W e dnesaa ·r 7 10 f h ur•:, IJ
3. 7 10 1r ·s 11me to tc~rt
rn ose c nr ,srma s g , tt ., Cnll
M7 325/ t or 1n formrttror

R

HUNN ELL

RESIDENCE .

BAPTIST

co.-. L

LI M ES fONE .
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lY 19 Y AMA H /\ XS 1100
'!o l i, )L .. ,, · ''""' "// ,)q n;wo -,
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SET
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CLOTH ES

SEVERA L ITE '-' S CROM

C/•"v'·P[ h'

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BARBER

SH OP now OP!'II ltr I 1 P
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Lost and Found

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$.'100 IJC') 6)6)

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F flm~ l e n1.=~r k ()n o
r us t D o b £'rmdn W' 'clr .nq
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__Help want ed
PART TIME [ MP LOY EE
ro r ead wat e r fTleter &lt;. Con
ta c t (t ty Ha ll, P om(·ro.,.
for appi 1Cdf 10n &lt;;

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6282
BAR H ELP n ei'C1P d HOnf' c, t
depend able . r f' f rr··n r r&lt;.
F1ve P01 n t s Gr1ll

C HIP WO OD Pole s max
d 1ameter 10 '' on ldr~lt"~'
e n d S12 p e r ton B undlf'd
slao _$.1 0 per ton 0P IIvl:'rt•(J
t o Ohio P a l let Co . R'
Pom£&gt;rov 992 268Q
OLD
FUnNIT URF
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b oxes, bra ss bed s
1ron
beds, de s k s. et r . rom plf'lt-'
h ouseho l ds . Wril e
M _D
M i ll er Rt 4, Pomero·r or
ca ll 992 7760
OLD COl N S, pock e t wt
ches., class rings . wedd1nQ
bands, diamonds . Gold or
silver . Ca l l J . A . Wam sley.

7•2 ·2331.

•f

' ,,.\'"''1;.,

1.1 · ·'

A "
!o ·

I,

I 1)''

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. - ,~.,~ r,

f

,,.
,r

\

; 1 ,"

;"

00

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'-J 'I .

I'

1t

• ··',I Pt

I'

i -!-: ,

• .'V'

SAW

OoagP
Dt-,0 "'' ?9')

l 't !O

FOR I) A L C
19 !] POII I otH
'--i' M, pl&lt;, P &lt;.,
P B
.lulo
!r ,ttl':. ..i l l I SO I 8 PngiiH '
rn,HI whf•• 'l ~ ('l •r &lt;,hQf I&gt;; &lt;, ,
t1]00 Cel li ~Q} 7 ~ l b rl l'pr b
IJ P' or .1n( t ,...~ . H' Wf'l' k •''1

'"
7 .HP

[lf VV I N C,d t•f•D
wel l purnt) M~
1 I I ( v t ~ IP
PIDt' rl nd ' ' r 1 ,,. ' tH1 ~ -i.l\1
•

·

/00~

2'180.
ANTIQUE S ,

FUR

NITURE .
g tass,
china ,
·anything . See or catt Ruth
Gosney , an ti ques, 26 N .
2nd, M iddl e por t , OH . 992

3161.
ANTIQUE

POCKET wat

ches . Willing to pay

Call

rop

1· 592 2973

Mobil e

Home ~ -

MI NI
FARM
la
.1r rt•&lt;. 3 bPdrm
hou'&gt;f'
lt r f•pln r P
Vl'ry
to,(• r tudr'cl C a s h or ro n
vf•nt ton n l ltn.=~n c f' on I f
~ n . &gt;OO ~rau l lnrnp Rrt
Brlr k. a t Ch r·«,lt·r
84 FT OH IO RIVER
FRONT
11l ntr• ·
wolfl moh rlt'
nome
t1r m
I
bath &lt;;,
ro lt:
PclrldO I V rm $16 .000

Sale

LONG

BOTTOM

SIB .'/00
REEOIVILLE
bdrrr trailer . i

HOTPOINT
a nd

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarlers
Appl1ances
Sales &amp; Ser¥'1Ce

POMEROY
LANDMARK

S"?n _ Jack W. Caney
L::::'J Mgr.
~-· Phone 992 ·2181

~

t

REA_J.TY

NEW LISTING 84 a cre
wor 1ny la r rn . '} ~loc k ed
ponds 30 a cres t dl abl £'
45 nr f l''i Prl'SlurP lt&gt;nl ed .
bcH r1
Iorge
g arage ,
Ofhf'r b uild1n q&lt;, plus.=~ 7
·r e d r olcl riln r h type
hornt~
w1th
full
DnSN'I• en t . laryf' 1arnrly
room builT 1n k1l r hen.
I&lt;H9 l ' IIVtnQ r oom WiTh
woodburn,ng t ,rf'pldf e
plu s
tl
wood burn1ng
s l o ve
downsf&lt;'tlrs
J
be drooms
and
bdTh
Real n1 cc \76 .350
NEW LISTIN G Appr ox
98
a r rcs
~a c an t
woodlan d
s everal
budd•ng
stf£'s
ne ar
Rutland . aH m1nerals
Won ' t
la s t
to nq at

300 00
LONGER

A

DREAM Now you l illl
own your o ...vn new ra n
d 1 ty p e hO!lll' Wilh 1' ;&gt;
.lU('':. ot rn os l woodl:'d
l nncl
Ln ry e
master
b('Oroom nursery ,1nd
que'&gt; I room . 2 l ull on ltl&lt;:. .
bUilt 1n equ, pp ed k1T
r hc n cl1n1ng area , l ar !Jl'
plu Stl l1v1ng roorr w lh
w b I p , IMgf' C/Mc!Ql'.
~oOd qual• t Y homn qood
locr.l10n 144 .800 00

BU SI NESS

OP

PORTUNITY
N1 c P
Cledn I)US•nC'SS Wrlh (')(
r ellen t
t rr~r k
reco r d
" THE KIDDIE SHOP
PE
ln &lt;lu(IC'S r1 11 equr p
mc nt neri:'SSil ry
don ' t
c ,JII , co me ,n ! o r d c trltls
V . A . APPROVED
N1 re horne. larq e lol ,
S yrn (u~e
10' :~ P e t ml
30 yf'ar te rm . t18i 9)
rnont11. P&amp; AuyP r O r1ly
Needs C losng Costs lm
lllC'd1 i'l 1('
PO "&gt;'Sf''S'S I.Oil
Good
V a l ue
At

\20 .000 ()()
HANDYMAN 'S SPEC I
AL
E 'IN ,..one nf't'd&lt;:. a
rl'ntal . M .OOO OU
MIDDLEPORT Culr-l1 t
tiC' I
b('droofT' horne .
Qrcn l Sf MtC' r tn good
IQ(d l tOn \16 ,700 00
WE
H AVE
MANY
OlHER PROPERTIES
- CALL TODA Y
REAL TORS
H enry E Cle l and , Sr
H enry E Cle l and , Jr .

~ . 000

&gt;1 9 900

W/ 5H)l::l

Ca ll V 1rg tn1i!

H .t~yman

Ph . 9854197

Real E state for Sale

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANC ING FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN .
NEW LIST IN G - 4 F3R t1 om •' hnrawood !l ou rs
1a r gp L ,..( . ()I So !amdy 'm . qarnqe dnd good out
build1ng M i-ln.,. nt CP l ea ture s. pll:'nty of tr ud trees
dnd QMdf'n SPii CI:' A&lt;,k1ng \48 .900 Jusl o ft Rt 7 1n
Che st e r
THIS I S WHAT YOU ASKED FOR
1-l aues of
n1 ce roll,ng lrtnd wrt 'l n 1' 1 s ta r 1 ho sueltlaT ~ · ts bd Ck
off th e r o ad sur round ed .,..dh mupl{' tree s Lg pond
stoc k ed W1lh l1 &lt;;h N1 (f' t IOCrl l t•d tn M orn.nq STar
ar Pa Pr ,ce ~JJ , 900
FAMILY HOME
r p,11 n .c (· J &lt;;, l or; hOI'l1f Man f t ea t ures. lt k e cpn lrd l
&lt;'llr t1 u&gt;l 1 ,n aDDI •r. n(t'"&gt; nil c nrpe Ted &amp; so !or~/'
vt.•ry qooa .nv t·st rnenl Wtth seve rn l ntce bud 1ng
I O I ~ 0r'l iiPDr O ~
J , a c r1·') tn lhf' &lt;en l ('r o f Rrl C th _
Oil tO A&lt;; k 1ng only S5J 000
HOME &amp; INCOME
ltnmi'•d• i!Tt· PO':.':.P\&lt;, ron . IMQf'
:,•·· :• i&lt;,n1 h0r'11i l•v •nll f00 f ll &amp; !nrrli."'f ror1m rlll
n, ,., '
,,rpr&gt;tdJ f ,_~ J n Pqu •PPI'd lu '&lt; r f•n 1 l ull
bd TI",
. L&lt;l'·•· tn• ·r t q,lrdQt', noct' Qnrdcn n r e"' In •
co ·w· tr orn ., ,,,lp r un pr opert y Ra ct nP , ~45 . ()0()
COUNTRY SPEC I AL
N1 r f' rPmodeled 'l bPd r oom
home on b i(K I&lt;.Iop r oad Mo s tly ca rpe l ed F A naf
qn:, lurna r e f, Vf? " Y a lt rn c t1ve smnll h ome and1
acre l ana Pr, c('d l or qu• ck sale l or ~17 , 500

RUTLAND

742 -'2328

94~ - 2862 - 949 - 2160

AL TROMM
CON !iT.
9 14 ( Pd

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gulter
work , down
spou ts, so m e concrete
wo,-k ,
walks
and
d riveways.

(FREE ESTIMATE I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE,O .
949 2748 or

TRAILER SALES

JJ15

Scco~d Str e-et

NEWLISTIN G
N il('}
b('dr oom
tr.=~ ,J pr
Qa '&gt;
lu r nar P.
t urn1&lt;,rH~d
sTo&lt; ked f •') h pond and
1' 1 acre• on RT 143 WC~n!
only 5.17 .000
COUNTRY HOME
Wc&lt;;, t ol Ru t ltHld an Rl
11.1
Trlrt •r• br&gt;rJ r oom&lt;,
b ,)th . L C w n t r r . ~ ~
Wlf1 (!0W'&gt; . d'ld I .1rrr•&lt;,
fl.')k•nq 1!.?~ . 000
~UTLANO
Gooa
c,Qitd t..• ICtc-r h OrTl(' W&lt;fh
yooa opportuntTi to r n
fa m1l '{
bUS•nL' ":.'.&gt;
4
IJ('(!ro o rn'l . 1 . bntno:. ,
fur n il {' ('
f•r£'plocc .
dllllfllj, t'QUtPIJ('d k.tl ,
.1nd
'}
r r1 •
Qc)r~HlC

$)1, 000
BUS IN ESS BLD G . P1u"l
rl 3 twd r oorn rl'n rnl a na
e)( tra lo t on R T 174
Sl rtrl 'fOUr own Th i ng
and
IIV('
UP Sld 1r &lt;;
\17.100
MIDDLEPORT
I
lot\ J ht_•Oroom' e lder
home. 1 1 , hrJ th o;,. nell
ga s 'lCil l O rw Jot ha s 7
lr a, lcr hook u p s ASk tng
$17 , 5()0
SYRACUSE
B r t(k
r~n rh
tlorf'P
of
)
bedroom &lt;,.
7
baths ,
d ! ntn q ,
111 1 1·
k •T ,
ro v ercd pnt tO .1 lo t s . one
on thf' r•vl'r $4 5 000
POMEROY
3
ht ·tiro o n~&lt;.
.rl urn, nurn
C.iCJ,n(l bii Hl U.l',•· rnr&gt;nt ,
nit T Qil ':&gt; lw n rH ~ · nn d fr
por c h Walk t o :, tar es
11A , \OO
N E W
LISTING
bf'drooms
wilh
bath.
&lt; rty· water . n .=~ l Qil S hC'a t
o nd I Mre f or 011 1y

\ !JI'r,...

RUTLAND ,

B OWMANS RUN .

-Housing ·H~dquarters

Roo hng , gutters. and
down spo ut!.
Free
-~mate5 .
All
work
guaranteed . 10 yean B ·
pen ence . Ca ll Athens .
1 co ll ec t . Gera ld Cl ark
I 797 4857 or Tom Ho skm s
797 1745 .

HOBSTEITER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
BERRI N GTON 2S'xS4 '
horr&gt; 1· .n •tr1 J txdrooms.?
ll vtnU
roor-rr
ki l Chi •t'l
w.tt1
•'&gt; ' dnn r&lt;'!I'Qt• diKl rl 1n1nu
&lt;~n•n
1 'l1 &lt;.:. h orr.l' •S l o t ell
t·l•·r tr •C and ,.., &lt;,du;,tt ·rl
on l r·n o~ r r('&lt;., ltJ', I 1 •
rr&gt; .lL''o ou t of &lt;) .tii' TTI Ce l
lr·r 0 N ~.- Y S3 l )00 00
NEW L I STING
A 111
II•· o vf·r &lt;, t•vt•n ,) CrP S
w llr } U(•U r oorn hom t • on
Hy•,t· ll !Jvn rnN(''&lt;, two
rurnl Ndl• ·r
an n
rro rl' (,111 t or mo re .n
fu ).:.I t&gt; pr1 r t ' ~ 73 ~00 00

'·'P"

TUPPERS

PLAINS

lO&lt;b:?OO ' lot n Arbnugh
Ar1d,'•Or
Ha s sep t 1\
&lt;,ys t e n--· an d w ntf'r lao
Only $5 .000 00
POM EROY
Nt rL· 'l
bL·d r oo rT'
horne
on
M onkt-• y Run F or c ed r.1r
ga o:. ! urn a(!." dnd ,ns1de
hn "&gt; twen r t&gt;mode l£'d i'-lnd
,t'&lt;,
beaut•tul
O NLY
~16 . 'i00 (){)
EXCELLEN T
4
ht•cl r won1
homl·
W1l n
·1 y onq
r oo rn . &lt;l r ntng
, non~ k , , , ht· n dnd b i-llh
o., lu .l i P(l on
15 ot an
.r• rr • Rurd l o .ll•·• n nd
1 iC, 1Qr f (•(! .t •r l t! f llr) (('
f•ll 1 arp r·t .r nu u rnpes.
s tay Se ' l &lt;, tor SJ~ . 000 00
NI CE J bedroom hom e
on BclS h an Road Fuel
oil f u rna c e and fu ll
bol&lt;,('m('nT
Srlui-llf'd on
6 1 aue!&gt;
Se ll;,
for

7BRtra,IPr onn 1&lt;.1?lo r AsK,ng$11 .500

J~ST LIS TEO + 6 year old home with J bed,.,. . \sO
dm1ng and urrltty roo m , k1t c t1en equi"' ...;,- old R-ove
~nd refrigerator M ost of thO'fl~'V \ 'f ~ ,.Y c arPE'ft?d
F orced a1r .flas turna re w• ,, y 10 years old Als-o
garage A comple t e t railer hook up w i th nat gas tap
and septi c ca n ttdd 1ncome t o ft1e home Over 2 acre!.
of land All for $29.900 . Cal! for appointment

JUST LISTED
M tn• farm w ,- fl beaut · t·;l or c k b i
l evel. w 3 bPdroom&lt;, &amp; full basemen t la rqP c r+rport
f ot.'ll clf'C N o l ex pf'n\I VC' . f ully tllSu alcd ,l l l hMd
wood ll oo r "&gt; J l,lfgP hot !l ou ses You can havf' r:tlllhiS
'tilth appro ~ tmately 5 i'lcres of l ana lor on ly S.63,500

WANT TO SELL! -

Gl~l

US A t;AU

C ALL JIMMY DEEM , ASSOCIATE 9&lt;9 JJ88
OR NANCY JASPERS , ASSOCIATE
949 -2654 or 949 -2591

.d

30 tf (

REAL ESTATE
F ' NANCING
de · .11
._.ou r;, ing
&amp;
Vt:1er . IS Adm10 . Loans _

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVIC£S, INC.
Yot ·s9 M ., W .,J: .
0''ler ·rmt by appo1nt
,nt' Ot .
17 Sycamore ( Re a r )
Pomeroy , 0 .

C.&lt;.LL 992 -7544
WI L L HAULI1mestoneand
gravel Als.o , lime hau ling
i'-lnd !.pread i ng Leo M or r is
l rue king Ph o n e 742 24.55

)II
'

±)

~=r
ILEN(
......._.... .__
._

77 E . State , Athe n s

PAINTING
AND
sand
b !asr,ng
Free e',; l1mates
Call Y49 7686

DOZER.

E ND

b r ush
hog
Wtll
do
basemen t s. ponds, brush .
litnd
c lear1n g
11m ber .
Charles BuT c hN 742 1940

Pets for Sale
HOOF HO LLOW , E n g i1S h
and Western Saddles and
hnrnPss
Hor ses
and
pon1es. Ruth Reeves 6 14
698 3290
Barding
and
R1d1ng Lessons a nd Horse
Ca r e p r odu c t s
western
boo Ts
Chilaren 's S15 .50
Adu lt s 129 00

YOU IA!AN WE" LL ~TAI&gt;. T
FROM ?CRATCH AND E3U Y

WE C AN 'T

J U!i'T KEE P
WEARI"-.16 WHA T'!"-

OUI&lt;5ELVf;~ A "--f;W

WARDROBE?

0~ OUR 8A C KS,
~

8E!i'IDE!&gt; .. WE'LL NE£ r LU136 AGE
WHEI-J WE? CHECK. 1"-1 AT A HO TE- L!
JU 5&gt; T DOf.J'T GE:1 C ARRit:D AWAY. •
~UNO~ A.llE LIMITF- 0, Kt000 ~

'

4-7J 1 mo

M',IE'U AND
MAM ' ZHlE,

AREc ( AHEM )
TRAVE'liiJG

'"

RISI N G
S TAR
Kennel
Board1ng Call 367 0292

POOOLE

GROO MIN G

J udy Taylor 6 14 367 7210

H IL LCRE ST

KENNELS

Board mg . all breed s . Clean
•ndoor outdoor
facilities.
Also
AKC
reg1ster('d
Dobermans 614 446 77Q5

C HAMPION

SI RED AKC

Go ld pn ReTr iever puppies
6 week s o l d B e autiful a nd
hea lthy
Sl50
698 6228
(A l bany .1

POMEROY
LANDMARK
GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS
McCulloch Pro

Mac 5S

St 5&amp;.00

McCulloch
Mu · 10

5125.00
5100.00

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

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992·2342
~VENING 992-2449

1'SO Auto

Homellte

5125.00
XK12 Homelite 5115.00
KL400 Homelitt 5200.00
Rem ington
Yardm•ster
57S.OO
Remington
Super 154
$100 .00

Sears

-- SO MAl&lt; I!' IT

Now arra r'l ge the wcled letter! 10
torm the surpnse answer. as sug gested by the above cartoon

5-E'PARATE

ROOM!&gt;:

2

,litefrtgerator, IUct new ,
5250
1 New Electric Furnace,

clearance priced

I new Fuel Oil Furnac•.
clearance pricect

Refrigerator

18.5 .00

MAIN ST .
J•ck W. C•rsey
~"'r .

I

'M

Jumbles BUXOM

Ye sterd av s

Ph. 12 ·2111

H I:.F IY

PEHMtT

BROKE R

What to do l or a whilf' w hf!n you break your
leg •n twu ~la r es - KEEP OVT O F THE M

Ans wer

33
IIJ~Johnny

BORN LOSF.R

~ 00 YOU M6N.l1 I'MSTlJP\Dl

\WI.\ \S Ru~ AND l

DB~D
ANA~'{!

Finding safest approach

B 17 1 mq.

ddr· .•I•·( J Ill! · I'(Jntrcu·t
but
\\ , ..., 1 t1.nJ n&lt;) u.·;. v qf re-a llilng
th1 -. li t· !I'd frrHn hts strong
" fXldt · l1!rld1ng .tnd Srmt h WC:IS
1n 1·•Hl l rnl
H• ·f rt rt · plJ_\ tng to trt('k two.
dt ·• l.trt•r n ·,Jl l wd t hat h1s club
ltJ w r t·rnild tw Llt&lt;.,cHded o n
r liHn rn~ '&gt; fqur\h
ht'd t 1 ami
th il\ h tt. -. J_J&lt;~dt · ]o&gt;,t·r ('Q Uid bt&gt;
trtHi l JWfJ 1n dummv
Ttw trtlrn• ·d Jdl.l' problem
'.'.d '&gt; l111w t1• piJy tht· trump

1r1 :1

IHTt-1

"'i~

• 85

ROUSH

• J 10 ? :1
t K ti :1
• A 5 :1 2

CON;)TRUCTION
FOR YOUR
NEW HOME OR
EXTENSIVE
HOME
REMODELING
Also Masonry
Work
992-7583, or 992 -2282
I I mO:

WEST
+ f.J_ .1 HI 7

EAST

• 8fi
tQ 'JR
+ K 10 7 4

· ~5 4 2

+

9 6 :l '!.

t lO"
• 1.J R 11

SOUT H
• ,, K ·I
• -~ K Q

I.ITTLF. ORPHA'I AN;-;11--

TRACK 5 .. WELL,
'0 LLOW 'fM ·
CAN 'T GO ~AR ·
WE GOT HI"'
TI?APPED

MAC HIN E

serv1ce,
all
make~
992 2284
The
F abr i c
Sho p ,
Pomeroy
Aul horized S1nger
Sale&lt;..
and serv1ce We s-harpen

DO N' T 5HCOT f M
· WE 'Ll G lr Et&gt;JI
A LIVE
fi-!E N Wf'LL
~I X 'f M

~c,rm ;_dJv

Vulnerable Both
Dealer South
West

North

East

South

Pass

:I t

Pass

:J ~ T

Pas s

~•

1-' as.s

Pct ~s

)•

Pa ~.s

PC:t ss

Pa o.,...,

P£1~.'.

:! t

Openm~ le&lt;Jd : •

·I•
,,.

WELL, MEBBE \0/E'D
BE r f'E R FI ND OUT! _;---~

HE TALKI"'G
ABOUT , ALICE ?

Q

HOW~

HOWERY AND MARriN
Excava t,n g ,
sep t 1c
~ys tems . dozer . b ac k hoe
Rt 1"'3 Phone 1 16 14 ) 698

South IS ;.m,·m~ lht • rn1nr m t:•

TI-IAT S HOULDN'T BE TCXJ HARD..
WE'LL JU ST FOLLOW oH' RABBIT!

of tournJJHl'nl

C Qt.t1E Qto.J .1

'.'.htl

p l t.~yl•r &lt;.,

sti ll t·mploy tht· strong \Wf! ·
b td a s opposed tn lht• wt·ak
two-b1d P er h a p s Wl sd y so
Most ex perts would probd -

l33 1 or 74? ?593

bly open wtth two notrurnp
tho ugh

thf'

dub:-.

d.rt'

wealr: South ..., t "'o -diJ!lltrnd
b td stru('k guld
A club leC:td would havE&gt;

IN
c an

SU RANCE
been
ce lled')
Lost
y 6 ur
o perator 's l!ce-ns.e? Ptl()(lP

~ uch

a holding
trump fmess e
l)t•t · l ~ n·r s ~v.- hr JWPVN that H
tht· fme s:-.e l•J:-.1 &lt;:~nd a club Was
n· tu r·m·d ht· WtJuld not be able
\i J make th L· contract becatl.se
o f thl' hl o('k 1n the heart suit
Dt•( ·J:.:t r rr ftlu nd o much bet\l'r p l&lt;:~ y By cJ:,..hmg t he a('e
.~nd k1n~ ll f d tJ.mnnds . as.s.um ln K trump s b ro k e 3· 2
6A
f1Nn·nt po~ :-.&gt;1 b1l1l ~, dS o pposed
t• J th ~ · ~ 0 pt·rct·n t po ss ibility o f
,I ~ u· · ~ · e ..,~ ful f1m•sst• r. the con .
tr ~1 r t wa ~ d"' un·d
T r ump d1d bn·ak 3+2
I&gt;t-c!Jrt •r play•·d h1 s l:lee, kin g
.1nd qUI'I'rl 1,[ ht•drts 1n0l C'a r
lflK II thP ma :-. tt·r trum p ruffed
101 . ru f fr·rl ;, ~p;1df' 1n dumm y
&lt;.~n d plt('ht·d hts club loser on
lht• J&lt;Wk of tw ~Jrb
'\!- \1."1 ''\ I ' UI 1-. 'H.H I'HI :-. E ASSN '

ta

By O&lt;i wald .l al'o b\
and Alan Sont&lt;.~l{ ·
WHAT 'TRIAL W'A.S

13
6 ()(}--700 Club 6,8 Health F•eld 10 ;
PTL Club 15. 6 10 N ews 17
6 JO-For You Black. Woman 10 ·
Love American Sty le 17 , 6 · 45-Morning Report 3 . 6 so--Good
M orn ing W es t Virginia 13 ; 6 55New s. 13
7 oo-Today 3. 15 . Good Morning
America 6, 13 . Thursday Mor
ning 8 . Batman 10 . T hree
Stooges Lillie Rascals 17
15- A . M
Weather 33 . 7 30 F amily Afla1r 10 . 7 SS--(huck
Wh i t e Reports 10
8 oo-Ca p 1 Kangaroo 8. 10 , Leave It
To Bea ve r 17, Sesame Sl 33 .
8 Jo- R ompe r Room 17
9 ()()-Bob Braun 3. Ph1 I Donahue
15 , 1) , B1g Va l ley 6 . Porky Pig &amp;
Friends S. One Day At A Time
10 , Lucy Show 17
9 30 - Bob N ewhart 8 . Love of Life
10 . Green Acres 17

&lt;i

r t·qulr l':-.

6000 1

Scts~ r s.

THURSDAY , OCTOBER 4, 1979
5 4Q- Wo rl d at L arqe 11 . 5 : 4~
Farm Repo rt 1J . 5 so-PTL Club

" \Ill

• .1\.17~~~
• J :J

R ep airs ,

EXCAVATI N G .
dozer .
loader and oaci(hoe won&lt;
dump lrucks and Ia bo';' ~
t or h1 r e . will haul t 1ll d1rt .
to p so 1L l1mestone dnd
gravel Ca l l Bob or Rog e r
Jefl f'rs. dny phone 992 7089.
n1gn t phone 997 3575 or rlfn
513?

Carson 3,15; Love
Boat 6.13 Swi t ch 8 ; ABC News
33 . Mov1e " The World of Su 1ie
Wong "
10
Movie
" Union
Station
17
11 4()-B aretta 6. 13 Hawaii Five 0
8 . 1 00- Tomorrow ) , News 15 .
to- Movie " The L&lt;~dy Takes a
Sailor " 17 . I So- News t3 .
10- N ew s
11
3 30 - Movie
" M onfana Belle " 17 , 5 10--Rat
P a t rol 17

_ _O
_ swald }(lc~~y_a nd Al an Sontag

Phone Hl· 2772

10 00 - Card Sh arks 3. 15 .

IN STOCK f or 1m med 1ate
del ,very va r 1ous ~,zes oi
poo l k 1 f ~ Do 1t yourself o r
let us ,nsTall !or you D
Bumgardner Sales.
IN
997 577 4

(For a copy o r JACOBY
M OOER N. send $I TO Win ar
Br rd ge, · c are o f th1s newspaper . P 0 Bo x 489. Ra&lt;1/o City
Sra t JOn , New
Yor k . N . Y
100 79 )

REYNOLD ' ~

CASOI.IW AI .I PY
by THOMAS JOSEPH

A1n't hear
nuth1n' fal l '

E LEC1 RI C

Motor ~. r cwrnd and repa,r
9971356 . 561
Bl•ec h St
Middleport , Oh 10

contour

DOWN

aid

12 Police

mfonner :

BRADF ORD , Au c t 1oneer .
Com pl ete Se r v,ce Phone
'il -49 748 7 o r 94q 2000 rc1 c ine .
Oh1 0, Cr1 t1 B rad f ord

slang

13 Confused
14 Hot roof
material
15 Aida 's "0
Patna - ··
16 "- Tu '",

BOWER S

WJ N:&gt;o: IF:

•:::J SUI?E

AZO:

3815.

.\:. '\JT T2

\ /:J 'j '( ;.'Z,....,,...Q: IT

5

A.:= T -...:3 J r

A:5i\' " ."
W ILL CARE for elder ly
pe r son , l ive i n , cook1 ng and
li gnl house wrk 99?. 5S56

r;

PIAN O
TUNING
L ane
Dani e ls . New Phone num
ber
742 2951
Serv ice t o
sc hools and homes S.1nce

.

1965

3 00

!Use
3 Dltldren 's
book award
Cr Bntam
4 B&lt;!nevolent

Genera! H os pltd l 6 .13
Love
Lucy I !
Mas1erp1e-ce Theatre
20 . N at1onal Geographic 33
3 )()-One Day At A T1me 8 . Joker' s
W1ld 10 Fl 1ntston es 17
4 00- M en. Gri fl1n b
Beve r ly
Hillb illie s 8 . Ses ame Sl 20,33 .
Si :-: Million Dollar Man 10, Tom
&amp; Jerry lJ , Spectreman 17
4 30- Pett, coa t J unct1on 8 . Bionic
Woman \3 . Gil li gan ' s. Is. 17
oo-Scmford &amp; )on 8 ,
Mister
Rogers 70 .33 . Mary Tyler Moore
10 . My Th ree Sons 17
Jo-New s6 . Elec Co 10 . Mash 10;
Happy Day s Agatn 13. I Dream
o f Jeannie 17 Doctor Who )3

5 Lambasted
6 Alon~

operati c

aria

tn years

17 Component
19 W orld 's

v .. terday'o Aillwer
9 Branch out !6 Htgh voice
11 Blessed one :!8 Bait
:!9 President

15 Card-

kaiser,

playmg

or

tenn

for
example

l8 Vtsage
Zl So ~ta ry
Z2 Ship of

:10 Animal
tra~

old

7 Bn tis h

35 "-

hero' s award 23 Greek
8 Famous
~• Wtnd
high spot
tnstrumenl

beverage

ms

Girl New"
36 North Pole

expott

I

~Denoting

SAVE ON .::ARPET
DRIVE A umE
SAVE A LOT
RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4!!.,p

JJ .

tender
years

l

za Mi cr&lt;&gt;scopic

'Z7 Tree
t8 Short-

'lAR'IF.Y

AG' IN

Campbell 11. All In The Family

3% Suffix

11 : Mac Neil L eh rer R eport 20.33
8 oo-Buck Rogers. 3. 15, Laverne &amp;

in chemistry

Cash &amp; carry

33 La ce rate
34 Doctor.

SALE ON ALL
CARPET
IN STOCK

36 Down's
name
37 Turn on

h-----t- +-

6'x12' to 12'x 16'

S3800

and up

RUTlAND
FURNITIJRE
RuTland,

o.

lo

TO 61LLIE

KING !

1
'

1-JOW CAN L{OU SA'f'
BILLIE JEAN !&lt;.lNG. MAlt'

I PRESENT MARCIE? "
WI-lEN L{OU DON'T KNOW
61Lt.IE JEAN KING i

ASK HER A !-lARD
QI)E5TION.MAAM ~SHE 'S
DRIVING ME CRAZ'r' ~

da~

~ X Y 0 J_ 8 A ~ X R
1.0:-IGFF.l.I. OW

10 ' 30 - Civilisation 17 ;
Wal le y Bl uegrass 20

or

the rod(' letters an• dlfferl·nt

&lt; R\'I'TOQ! ' OTES

WIDSRWB
VLGGRM C

FRM C

Cl

CI

I ADM W

S LV F,

LC

ZLVF

IV

Hockin'

11 : uQ-News 3 ,6,8 . 10 .1 3 . 15. Dl c l
C•vetl 20 ; Fall B.
Rise o
Reginald P err in 33.
11: 30-Johnny Carson J, 15 ; Pollet
Nom an 6, 13 , Columbo 8 ; ABC
News 33; M ovie " The Bridge m

17.
12 . 4Q- Baretta
Tomorrow 3:
: 20- Banacek

,~·..-.

NMMUWI

iesterday 's CrYVtoquote : HUSBANDS ARE LIKE F
r,o OUT IF UNAITENDED. - ZSAZSA GABOJf.

ThreE

the R iver Kwai "
10; Movl·
" Miss Grant Ta k es Ri c hmond'

R WD' IO·

1

MVLWUM . - SMWVP

Ca mera

20. 33 .

One lc·tter s1mp b st &lt;uHts f r1 r another !n tht s s amp le A 15
u sed f ur th (' t hre(' 1. ·.., X f u r lh(: t~A· o (r ~. l'lc St ng le lett.er s,
apOSirnphPS, the }pn g t h anJ f o r ll\; ttl iln
the v.o rds ah:.aiJ

h1nt s Earh

9 . 00- Quincy

10.33
9 · 30 - So ap 6 , 1) ,

OAILY (' HYPTO&lt;!I 0TE - H e re's ho-.. to work it :

'{OU DON'T EVEN KNOW
BILLIE JEANkiNG, SIR

B. 10 .

] , 15; Barney Miller 6 ,. 13 ; Hawai i
Flve.Q 8, 10 ; Sneak
Preview~
I

IF L{OU DON'T HELP ME
WORk FOR WOMEN IN
SPOIIT5, MARCIE, I'LL
NEVER INTRODUCE 't'OU

Waltons

B 30- B enson 61 3.

1

?F. ANUTS

6, 13 .

Evening at Sy mphony 20; Movh
"S ma sh Up " 17 ; Food Tax
Re-I ief or Burden? 33

romanllcally 1--L-.1--L-..1...-

lnstalledwith Pilei Free

GOOD REMNANT
SELECTION

S hirley

inlonnally

·9~~dup

A Crow d 3 . T i c Tac
Dough 8. Ba)(ters 6 ; News 10 ;
N ew l ywed Game 13.
L ove
American Sty l e 15 ; San f ord &amp;
Son 17 : Di ck Cavett 20,33.
7 JO- Holl ywood Squares J ;
N ew lywed Game 6, Joker 's Wild
N ash'l i ll e on the Road 13 ; Archie

31 Foamy drink

II

oo- Threes

8; \100 .000 Nam e that Tu ne 10;

comings

THEM SMART-ALECKY
REVENQOERS
ZAPPED ME

3, 15 .

6 . Carol Burnell 17 . Zoom 20 ;
Li f e Aro un d Us 33
6 3o--NBC N ews 3. 15 . ABC News 13,
Caro l Burnett 6. CBS News. 8. 10 ;
Bob Newhart 17 . Over Easy 20

21 Hold out
Z% Took fright
Zf Long swt

''•. &lt;

Ba seball

6 ()(}-- News 3 .8. 10 .13.1 5. ABC News

ZO Female hog

... ~,...v I
~vI v' '

Play 011

t Card game

group
m ember

No . I

-I

00-0aysol Ou,. ._,ves J 15 All My
Children 6 13
Young &amp; the
Re stle&lt;,s 8 10
JG-- A s The World Turns 8. 10
2 QO----Do&lt;tors 3 l S One L1 fe to
L1ve 6.13 7 2S N ews 17
30 - Gu1d 1nq
L1 gh t
8. 10
G 1ggles. no r t Hole l 17

40 French
n ve r

... 11 Digesltve

315?

REPA IR
Sweeper s. .
roast e r s. 1ron s. , all small
app l iances La wn mower
Nex t to Star e H 1gn"''.iY
Garage on Route 7. 915

E le e Co ?0.33

ACROSS
l8 European
1 Fragrant spice
capital
5 Four-bagger
:r.J Type of
10 St.adiwn
race

A&amp;H Upholster rng , acros!&gt;
fr om ThP TPxaco Stal1on m
Syraucs.e WI 374.3 o r 9'9 7

Edge ot

N1 g ht 6 Maga2me B. 10 . Morning
Magazine 13 . Movie " The Lives
of Jenny Dolan · 17
10 30 - Holly..-.ood Squares 3.15 .
S20 .000 Pyram 1d
13 .
Andy
Gr i llith 6 . 10 55-CBS News 8 ;
House Call 10
11 :00-High Ro l lers 1, lS ; Laverne &amp;
hirtey 6. 13 . Pr ic e i s Right 8. 10
11 JO - Wh eel of Fo r tune 3. 15 .
Family Feud 6.1 3. Sesame St
10 . M eeting of M ind s 33. II 55N ews 17
I 7 00- N ew&lt;,c.enter
3
News
6 .8 . 10. 13 M ·ndreaders IS LO'IE'
Amer1cil n ) 'yi E' 17
I ] JO- Q •fan s Hooe 6 13 Search lor
Tomar roY'.· B 0 Health F 1e ld 15 .
Mo vrP Bad tor Ea ch Other ' 17

9'11 ) 143

Call742·2211

1 Gooo Coldspot

l X}( I I XA)

Print answer here (

SIOO .OO

XL Homelite
175.00
1 Excellent Unico 16 cu .
tt .
Coppertone

K1ngdom 15 . All In The Family
17, Ma c Neil Lehre r Repor t 20,33
8 oo-Baseball P iny Ofl 3.15; Eight
1S Enough 6,13. Last Resor t 8, 10 ;
Grea t Perfo r mances 20.33 ;
Movie "C harade" 17
8 30-Slruck by L 1ghlning 8.10;
9 CO - Charlie's Angels 6 , 13 ,
M ov1e " The Gol den Gate Mur
ders " 8. 10
9 3D- Sitcom 70.33;
10 OQ--Vegas
6 , lJ . Ne ws 70 Connec ti on s JJ
10 30 Upstatrs, Downstairs 17 ;
B est of Groucho 20 .
11 00 - New s 3,6 . 8 , 10 , 13 ,1 5 ; Oicl&lt;
C avell 20 . Wodehouse Playhouse

WE ' ~E DOl~(;

I Answe rs tomCHTow 1

JAMES KEESEE

AU T OMOBI L E

Judge 10 : Famdy Feud 13; Wild

, AND THAT 'S

T06 E'ZZAIR.

'

G I ~LS
IN 5 W EAIER~

WHAI SOM E

MAKE.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULA I ION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM !iiOING

ELWOOD

Remington l4

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!

Lo ad e r .

t

t SAUTLE

CAI'TAJ'I F.ASY

592·3051

fnsutiltion
Storm Doors
Storm Windows
Replacement
Windows
• Gutters 1nd
Down Spouts
Free Estimates

6 . Ca r ol Burnetl 17, Zoom 20 .
6 30- N BC New s 3, 15. ABC N ews 13 ;
Carol Burnett 6 CBS News 8, 10 ;
Bob N ew h art 17. Over Easy 20 .
00-Three ·s A Crowd 3 , T ic Tac
Do ug h 8 . Matc h Game PM 6;
N ews 10 . Ne wlywed Game 13 :
Love Amer ic an Sty l e 15 . Sanford
&amp;. Son 11
31)-- C ounlr y Roads J . Newlywed
Game 6. Joker ' s Wild 8 . The

~

r J -'--t--r.r:--::1J

1

CAI\J W'E

•
•
•
•

___ ,.....,

WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER 3. 1979
6 00 - News 3.8.10.13, 15 . ABC News

I CAWAM

even
S&amp; G
Carp(' t
Clean i ng
St eam
rlf'dned
Free
e!&gt; t •rn af e
Reasonable
rates
Sr ol c hyuard
992
6JOQ, or 742 2348

C.. dn be d• v1rlt'd \'11 .000

LARGE SPLIT LEVEL
o n 3 Acr1·~ 4 BR home.
fu l ly c a r pe l ed, equ1pped k1T, f am, ly room hno;, n1 ce
f 1replrtCt:&gt;, l arge ulilily room and pl en ty at s torage ,
'two car garage has electr,c door opener One g real
f eature after another Lis t ed S75 .500

mii P o ff Rt 1 b y ·pa ss
St Rt 174 toward

Auto &amp; Truck
R epair
Also Transmi ss ion
Repair
Phon e 992 -5682

ROOFING

ROCK SPRiNGS . AND

PTS ,

Rd .,

R uflilnd

OHIO VALLEY

LOTS OF LOTS

RUN ,

5

IRELAND
MORTGAGE CO.

lE WlNG

RACING . POMEROY ,
SYRACUSE , REED
SVILLE .
FORKED

20 WO O DE 0 ACRES -

on

'

BAUMS ,

LOTS

Pur-chase
and
R'etinance
30 Year Terms,
A - No money
down
fe llg 1bl e veterans.)
FHA - AS low as J %
down (non -veterans)

Roger Hysell
Garage

\lOCK

GOO~f

SHOULD BE SOLO
70 &lt;iUE&gt;S . hou se &amp; g()()(l IJMn .
clDOul I 000 f f'r&gt;l ot beou l.tul Oh10 R1vf'r frontage
N llt' rr&gt;o r r,lf oo n spo t . m•nf•rdi S, too Let c. have rJn
ott er Pr o((' ~ 57 . 00 0

;JI ,:JO()

...._1(_~"\ ( ~ j·

Real Estate Loans

9 14 1 mo .

Jj;&gt;llli FR N O WfiV(IILAfllE

We need hom es 10 Mtd ·
dl eporf and P omeroy It
yo u ar e
thrnking of
se l ling g1ve u s .1 cal l .
Ou r b uyers a r e Wlat1ng .
Che r yl L e mley . A Hoc.
Phone 742 ·200 3
V e1ma Nrc 1n sk y , Ass oc.
Phon e 742 1092
H ilton Wolfe, Assoc.
Ph on e 949 2589
G eo rgeS . Ho bsf etf e r .
k
Broker- 992 Hl9

BUILDING

Osborn

Reedsville , OH , 45712 .
For inform~tion Call
667 ·6485 . W i ll be OPen
late
d
you
need
something .

; '170 M o ntqomM' Q ('l
I olnq• ~·lit• O~,r)
o • • 6e&lt;~ ., 1 ~ '! r ,. ,., .. ,Q \
I I\"''' '' E ,nt nt W &lt;&gt; ~ f'\.o iiP

Real Estate for Sal e
99]

,

5071

9 ?f:l I mo Pd

116. £

~-~ ~

ANN'S
~ ~L
.....l-? CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

1,

WANTED S iiUf' S on lhl'
w.:l,er l 1nc

MIDDLEPORT
VOOII j sq homf' apo r o )( 10 .,. r &lt;_,
tli&gt;' •,IOw l ' &amp; rl' 1l lJI'f.t l o r lg &lt;,lor i-I Q I! bl dy Pr I(Pd ..11

I ,~

MONTGOMERY

i.32 .000 00
r .ood J bl'&lt;lroorn dll ca rpp ff'd twr '1,-.
1 IO&lt;;t• to P o rnf•r u( &amp; M rCd lt·por t ' L oca1ea o n good 1' .'
,lf r(' &lt;, ol I.J nc1

Po·neroy

•-

Television
Viewing

Unser arnble these taus Jumbles
one le!1er 10 each square to lorm
four ordmary words

I

'3 9' \/()(} 00

From 1 to J ~ a( rec:. . bordpnny

t:,f...,\...• 1.-.. t-

jli))t

·~~-·

J .., " '

'il 7 1 rno

~8 . 500

'

H. L Writesel
Roofing
New, repair ,
gutTers and
down spt&gt;uts .
Window cl ea ning
Gutt er cleaning
Free EsTimaTes

1

BOATERS
Li lli e
R • Y(' r ! ro n
H or k •nq
I&lt;'H /~' . t or DOi'll aoc-. &lt;t na
S·l •nMIT' 1nu
pluc, home
bu •l d•r1lJ spot t Jl a c r(' s

h om(·
Pr rrP

ROOFING
REMO.UtLING
KuJM AOOITIO!'IS
HOUSES BUILT

rov n~ll

S71 .000

I

- ~ ,. --- -

Business Services

PUMEROY , 0 .

NO

I.

;L~8ND _1_

608 E
MAI N

~3·

_L__ _

' '-'"'' STUPID CAR

~

o

po r r hes . J c ar qora ge .
I I ill lo t H3 .000 Ownt· r
will ong l o ta lk
REEDSVILLE
Home
wdh 7 c ar g ,)rn gP &lt;)nd
ntf (' bu:,onf'&gt;&lt;,S hu •ldrnq
woth
7
r('&lt;,. lroo m&lt;,

~~ -~'~·t_''_·_·

\'\) &lt;C,"' . \ f-

~E

rrn
o l cl e r homP, ra r
Pf'l{' C, hMn ol u&lt;, 7 nu t
buold1n(:i&lt;, , On IC IOI&lt;;.

197} LY NN Y .f i.VE N l.!x6S 3
t1r•nroom
IIJ/0 V1n d nle 17x63 w 1th c)(
on n(JO I t lt 'd r
1910 N e w Moo n lix60 3 bd r
1973
Skyl tne
lh:.SS
1
be droom
197] l)onr~nln 1h~7 7 hr·n r
G &amp; S MOBI L E HOM~
r, /I..LES PT
P \ FfiSA N T
v'V V )0 ~ 675 ~- 1 /J
J&lt;.,i7.J ' 4:.-70 MObl li'
i , Doc1
( ond t on
rr-ou&lt; f':::l rnu&lt;,t &lt;,r&gt;ll

ERA MERCER
REALTY

HOUSE TR/I.I L ER IO)( .S5 I
''''(!r
uouo \ flil pr • F ,; r
n• &lt;,hf'Cl , ~ }10() U nfurn .&lt;, hi'C
~I HO O ?Jl !JO J or·t orL'; p m
•"J r ,11 11•r ~ Drr&gt;

RACI~E

S IX MON r Hold pl uS il r ed
f l oral
Sr hw etO Pr
lrvtng
room s u,t t&gt;, I mat c h1ng
SWPi e l roc kers . 7 t ree l am
ps, $699 Cal l Inge l s Fur
ntture . 992 2635 . nfter 5. c all

logs

Payment upon delivery to
our yard , 7 : 30 to J : JO week.
days . Blane y Ha r dwood s,
SR JJ9, B arlow, OH . 678

'

uoor:
r : • r ! '1•
I I • r
l r d&gt;i &gt;'l
I&lt; •toO
•• I •&lt;! l &gt;tJ il
'i&gt;J r{i
._rtr r•· • (J'&lt;. ' ~ , J(l•on

304 887 1032

WANTED :

evenings.

' IOOl l
~ tl il ' f I

•

•· '

FOR Sl'l. _ L
P•ckup
~ ~ )~
7360

_ _::
W:_:ant ed to Buy

dollor .

t

l l r ·, l;~ {

•,

: •· •

U') f D F-trrn1 l ur••
.·.~, u~c:,on
l6r' 06Jl f- U('' c.t
11 t ' d I t• r
r , l 'l(jr•r,, l r r
1&lt;. of ( ho·n
( ,&lt; IJI!l f' l
I 11\JC l1
tH'rfrtJO !r-,
&lt;,o..~• l r
pl;~ ll n r P '
r o ~~~r .
,) u t o Wrt'&gt;ht " dr y•·r • h•·&lt;. t
uPi'lChlrd
!) r•·a k.t ,t •, t '·•'...'
r 111n,l r r'tl •n r·t 'j:J,O tl• •ry nnrl

d 1

EXPERI E N CED
':.:&gt; IR
VICE me(hC.n tf
(il..- l• ·r ·,
P l umiJi!l U awl Hi' ..il tnt_; 'f4 }

1 "

h'C.Y S

WAITR E SS WAI'.J T f D t.o
ply
,n
per~on
c.-ow .,
Famtly Restnur.:1n 1

1 1 1 AC RE S. . hOUS(' 'l roon1&lt;,
and bnlh . bnseme,nl. w ood
an d CO &lt;ll t urna&lt;f' . f ruo l
tre('S 1 tn1I('S trom Rl 1 on
qood roild Sc hool bus an d
mn1 ! rou te al (joor ~73 . 00 0
985 433 J or 985 3590

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

,•,' , ,

n n•. '• u· ' ·· ·
1'

FOU N D C tu•&lt;,t. ~ ,, ,.,, ()· 1
?
Poodtc l••rr ,. ,
'd)•
c urly br o w n &lt;ll'fl •.Jill&lt;~ t ,; ,
male H un1anf' ~or •f' l, '~n

'~I'

H ' ·

r H R E E ROOM tlO J':&gt; f' , batn
llnO u ld1ly roofYJ , Qi'l'&gt; f ur
11&lt;:-I Cl' Clo&lt;;e I U ':ol II OO I 9Q ')
3542 il l l cr ! p m

l W f•('()h'

r "" 0 V\ H r
tor r·•,

FIVE M O NTH Old 01ow
ooo p u p py
Ha s hac! itll
·-, hn t"&gt; N f' l 'r."' qoou llOfnf'
Pr(•l('r som0o ne w t ltlo ut
c, /l l d lll h tiO f L'Il 99'} Je J I

S.'SO

THE GEOR GE STOBAR T

AUCTION

CLOS E T O P om('roy on
large or1vate l oT, 17xb0
mob ile home . 2 bedroom .
1' ;- oa th s npw c arppt ,nq
th rouohout . new ons f ur
n&lt;H P wa sher and dry('r 6
mon th s frN' ren t on to• 991
b398

FE MA LE .
c oi i •P IJO '((•r ,
mlh 1J fur c. loo..._ s i-1 1 ro ll I '
Humanr· SOCi f'l t 99;1 b!bO

o t 'l

BESIDE

CHURCH . AN

T \ Q UITY
F U RN 11 U F&lt;'FA P PL IA N ( E S
/, 1'.
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byHen ri Arnold and Boblee

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News 15 .
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1 : 25- Movl

" Sliver Clly" 17.

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3 : 25- News 17
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J : •~Movle " The Cheaters"

THEY

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Sentinel, Midd leport-P omeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Ot'l . 3, 1979
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Pope joins childreri
with songs, prayer
NEW YOI\ K 1AP I - P ope J ohn
Pa ul II jotned tn pra yer wtth
r~~ ~~ ~ J o u s pro ft&gt;ss10 nal~ a nd 1n song
wtlh school rl uldren today, • tel lin~
both the adults and the ;·oungsters
tha i tn l'hn st the) can fm d love .
The popt• sta rted h1 s th1rd da y m
th ~ Umt ctJ .Sta tes w1th a rnornmg

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p ray er

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~1adi SO JI

.; cr \' !Ct', lhen went t o
Squart' C; 1rd~ ·n fnr a

son~o&gt;i est with 19,000 students '111-om
Roma n Ca tholic sc hools .
He told the m ore than 2.500 nUlls,
pnests and church work er s who
J&gt;acked ~1 . Pa tn ck's Catl1edral for a
mornmg pra ye r service of about 40
n11nute s that they should em br ace
the wor 1 d m "love, m serv1 ce. m
hea lm g and 111 re conciliation "

than 1,000 youths attending the conference from all
parts of Otuo played the part of a college student for
one day and heard mini lectures .on a wtde variety of
topics that focused upon basic principles of science and
the challen~e of c hange . Southern High School
de legates attending the Youth and Science Conference
1n ColumbLL' were, left to rtght. Charlotte Pickens ,
Pam Holcomb 1host 1, and Peggy Bush.

•

Middleport woman receives award
Holzer Cliruc U d
prt·sentt-J
ac htc vement a wards to two M ed ll' ~d
Laboratory Tec hn olog~ stud ents.
Debbte Taylor . Middleport . and \'til ·
dy Bateman , Logan . who rect&gt;n ! l ~

graduated from Hi o Crandl' Cum-

MAYOR"S\OCRT
One defendant was ftned and thn'&lt;'
others forfeited bonds'" the c ourt of
Middleport May or Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Fined was Hoy Boggs, Mtd dl eport .
$50 and costs , crirrunaltrespass
Fotieiting bonds wf" rf' Theodoras
AdartS, Brooklyn , ~ - Y . S22, :10
rruJes '" 20 mile school zone ; Da1·t d
Snodgrass , Hactne . $27 . spe&lt;'d tng .
April Jo Wise , Mtddlcpo rt . $2;.
speedmg .

lltun• ly College 's two-year M LT
I•rogram
Tht· a wa rdsd were presented to
.\1 1ss Tay lor and Miss Bateman as
th&lt;• ~ rad ua lt ng students with the
luglll' s l a c ademic grade-po int
avera~e . lluth students had identical
;Jve ra ges and were presented idtm ttcal $100 awards .
The l{i o Grande MI .T Program ts
a tw o-y·ear a ss ociate degr e e
program m whi ch studento; receive
tlH.: tr form al class room instructton

Olamher
l ( 'ontJnu t.-"d from page 1 J

at Hi o Grande and their practical
tramtng in the Holzer Medi cal Cen ter Laboratory .
J . A. del.amerens, M.D ., Director
of the Laboratory at the Holzer
Medt cal Ce nter, commented .
"Holzer Clinic l.ld . " pleased to illable to r ~eognize s uch outstandmg
a chievement in the allied health
profession of medtcal laboratory
tl'&lt;'hnology and we look forward to
offenn~ thi s award in lhefuture "

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions -('.-arol Wines , Shade ;
Oyde Sa yre, Racine ; Cheryl Fry,
Midd le port ; Hichard Gla s gow ,
Gallpolts ; Sharon Hatley , Mid dleport ; Elizabeth Gtles, Mid dleport .
Discharges - Aaron Zahl, June
Mayes , Hobert Carnaha n . Hobert
I .ewL, , Charlotte Eakins .

Uw three gol fe rs closest to the pin ,
$t4 g tft ce rttl1 cate to fir.;t place. SIO
to St'l 'onrl pla ce a nrl $6 to third place .
.l ulll&lt;i Ar nott , se cretary , reported
Three def enda nb forfettt&gt;d b11 nd.'i
a Chns tm.as dance cruise is being ofin the court of Pumeru:r ~•by( w
f,. m l on tlt c t;a te way Clipper tf the
Clarence Andre ws Tuesda y mg ht
chmn tw&gt; r 1.s Interes ted . She aU;o
Forfeiting bonds were lltll a rd
staled that the (ialeway Otpper can\ . _
Biscamp , Lufkm . Texas. $.'\:JO . DWl .
l&gt;e obt.a me d for c ruises durtng the
•
Ralph Radcliffe, Syra l'LL,e, $.1(), left
Kcg atta next year . Simon an of center; J ohn Thom as . Mtd Twenty-&lt;1ne defendants were fmed
nowlced a new president will be
dleport, $50, squealing tires .
and nine others forfeited bonds in
elected in the near future.
Meigs County Court Monday
Att ending were Simon. Crow,
F ined by Judge Charles Kni~ht
Qut ckel. J tm F rec ker . Dale Warner .
SQCAD f AIJ.ED
were Teddy R . Osborne. Reedsville ,
!tlly .J oe .SJk•ncer , Da ve Jenkins ,
Th e Pomt·rny F. H Squetd wa ~
$30 and co,o;;L~. reckless operation ;
Hil l \1ay&lt;•r . P h tl Ke lly , Leo
called ttus m ur·m ng at B W c1 m f()r
Diane Smith, Pomeroy, Gene Hood ,
\' .tu ~ han . Pat u·Bn e n, Kyle Allen .
Lens Hawle y. a med tL' &lt;tl p&lt;t t lt' llt 1.4 !1" \1•·rr t Ault . Hank ( 1elanrl . Mark Ar Mtddleport, Ro wena Vaughan,
was take n to Holze r \'l t'rl lcal t · ~· n!!'l
Pomeroy, Mtchael Marcum, Midnott, \11lh•r , .1 ohn AnUt&gt;rson, Ted
dleport,
Hi cky J . Law. Langsville,
f {i't'i l. J &lt;Jot· Young , Bill Grueser . N.
1
$15
and
cosL'
each, speeding; Torn 'IA Cu mpton . Walt e r Cirueser and
my Lane, Hactnc, $25 and costs,
SEEKS tll\lllll' E
H(l!H.·rt (; rrt vt'.'i
possessing property of wi ldltfe ;
In Meigs County Comm nn Ph,; ~,-,
Court S us an
.J e~n
H(1btn su n.
H.onald It Jeffers , Rl. 2, Pomeroy,
$48 and costs , overload; Donald
Syrac use, filed suit fqr dJ \'Hrr e
!&gt;"lobar\, Pomeroy, $150 and costs,
agamst Dav 1d l .ynn HtJ h m.son .
drivmg will ie li cense sLLSpended ;
Shade .
, Continued from page l l
Gary Jones, Point Pleasant, Sl50
for nur k1ds . We are sure they want
and costs. DWl ; Steven Mooney,
to ill• bae k to wo rk .
Crown Oty , $10 and costs, stop s1gn
{ .'on !-[rulllfilt ;,, " ·'
" You can help ; we all can help . If
violation , Marvin Satterfield,
CITY LIMIT
eltch ltnd everyone of us would say a
MinersVIlle, $5 and costs, no eye
sll~ n t prayer toda y, rn your own worSOFTBALL TEAM
protection ; Daniel Housh, Rutland ,
d' and in yo ur own way , It will help ...
Who finished 2nd tn R .S .
$10 and costs, unassured clear
Ther e was no statement th.1s mor Tournament .
distance; Clifford Whittington , Rl. 4,
ning fr om the Me1g s Local Teachers
Pomeroy, $100 and costs, driving un Ax•.;oc· Ja t wn.
der sLLSpension, $200 and costs, eight
Supt Gl eason satd that if a tendays confinement, license suspen tativ e ag reement lS reached during
ded 30 days , DWJ; Hobert K. Kent he negoti a ti ons sessions this
nedy, Rutland , $30 and cosL,,
e ve ntn~
that teac her• will be
148 N. Second St .
reckless operation, $.'10 and costs .
tl'lephoned t o meet tn s pec tal ses.,ion
Middl eport , 0 .
fleemg an officer, 30 days conto a pprove the agreement.
finement , 25 days suspended , no
op e rators license ; Lesley H.
Hayman, Middleport , $15 and costs ,
no brakes ; Geraldine Holsinger, Ht.
I, Reedsville, $10 and costs, improper starting and backmg; Marjorie Leonard, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, $50
and costs , speeding; Dennis Tolley,
HI . t Pomeroy, $25 and costs . no
operators license; Henry Dewar ,
Am""ville, S15 and costs, defective
muffler ; John E . Hankla, Rutland,
$15 and costs, no headlights .
Forfeiting bonds were Merle
Kiggins , Gallipolis Ferry , $35.50, insecure load; Charles Gloeckner,
Pomeroy, Wendell Johnston, Logan,
Marvin K . Gardner , Ewington ,
William B. Ryan, Belpre, $35.50
each , speeding ; Dale Boswell,
Pomeroy, Calvin Imboden, Jr .,
Minersville, $360 50 each, OWl;
Darrell I.. Krautter, Rt. I, Minersville, s;J:i.50 , drivtng wrong way;
Hoard E . Searles, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
to 6' Rubber Trees
$35.50,
unsafe velude .
-S' to 6' Scheffelery Trees

County

c0 urt

Supt. Gleason

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU

TROPICAL PLANTS

t;ARL P. WILLIAMS
Carl P . Willtams , 75 , former ly of
Meigs County , a long time teacher
and a fanner superintendent of Fairport Harbor Schools , died Sept . 20 at
his horne at 300 Chestnut St., Fairport .
Bron near Shade, Mr. Wtlliams
was reared in Meigs County . On
Sept. 19. he attended hiS last meetmg
of the Fairport Publi c Ubrary
Board on wluch he had served for
several years . He had also been a ctive in the Fairport CongregatiOnal
Church . the Lake r.ounty Credit
Union and Lake County Hetired
Teachers Association .
The late edu cator as born March 3,
1001. He went to Fairport Harbor tn
1931 a s a bookkeeping and soctolo~y
teache r at H1ghing High School. He
became principal in June, 1946 and
served as s uperintendent from 1952
tol957.
Dunng his superintendency, the
Elijah H. Brown Memonal Gymnasium was dedicated in memory of
the preceding superintendent .
Mr . Williams missed classroom
lea ctung and m 1957 requested he be
returned to his forme r position on
the sc hool fa culty . He taught social
studies at Harding High until the
time of hts rettrement at the cl ose of
the 1965 school year .
His wife, the former Helen
Mcl.auflin, also relired . was supervisor of vocal music in the Fairport
schools for many years .
Also surviving ~r. Wtlliams are
two daughters , Mrs. John Carter of
Concord and Nancy Wtltiams of
Forest Hflls, N.Y.; a Sister, Effie
Whitney of Pasco, Wash . ; three
brothers , Don of Three Forks ,
Mont. ; Ira of Laurel , Mont., and
Sam of Shade and six grandchildre n.
His first "1fc, Lucy (;oddard
Williams ; a daughter , Mary Ave ni!.
and a g randson, Carry Ave nll ,
preceded him in death
Funeral servtces were he ld Se pt
22 at the Nixon Funeral Horlll' 1n
Paine!-iville. Hunal was 1n Perrv
Ce m ete ry .

He said tha t through prayer it is
possible to share with Christ the
tra vatl and hopes of all humanity .
Through Hun , the pope said, we can
bnng " with
the anguish and
hopes , the joys and sorrows of all our
brothers and sisters in the world ."
J ohn Paul told the children that
Catholtc educatton means "to know
Olris t as a friend, as someone who
cares about you and the person next
to you and all the people here and
ever where .. . Only in .Christ do we
find rea l love and the fullness of life .
" When you wonder about the
myste ry of yourself, look to Christ
who g1ves you the meaning of life .
Whe n yo u wonder what it means to
be a mature person, look to Olri&gt;1,
who gtves yo u the meaning of life .' '
r.,e prayer service marked the
start of another grueling and hectic
day 1or th e pope - a day that wtll
e nd m Phtladelphta, the third of six
U .S. cities he is visitlng . The day's
schedule also included a ticker.tjlpe ,
parade down Broadway, en route to
Battery Park on the southern lip of
Manhattan for a major address.
The pope be~an th e servtce on tl1e
front steps of St. Patrick's , leading
an estimated 8,000 people gathered
on Fifth Avenue : " In the name of the
Fath er, the Son and the Holy Spirit.
God come to m y asststance .· · He
ended the St'r VICt' outdoor s as well,
with a blessmg in Latin and praise " Very mce! ., - for th e crowd's

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Area Deaths
SCIENCE CONFERENCE - Southern and Meigs
High Schools were am ong some 4!&gt;0 htg h schools "'
Oluo partt ctpatung m the Hth Annual Youth and Scwn ce Conference held at the Mershon Audt tonum on The
Oluo Stale Univers ity campus, Sat urda y, September
29 . Those attending from Met gs t 'uunl y wen • Charlotte
Pickens, Pam Holcomb • host •, a nd l' eggv Bush fr om
Southern; a nd Tim Gort•, Kt•\' 111 ( ;t bbs a nJ Mrs
Dorothy Gore 1host 1 from M e ti-! S l1 1L! h ~ · h nol \1 nre

I

BERTHA T. LASHER
Mrs . Bertha T . Lasher , 95,
Rutland, died Tuesday aftemoon at
Vete r a ns
Memorial
Hospital
following a long illness .
Mrs. Lasher was born May 25 ,
1111!4 , a daughter of the late George
and EJecta Van Zandl Titus . She
was a homemaker for most of her
life . Shew"' married to Dr. George
Lasher , a veterinarian, who died in
1949.
Mrs. Lasher was a member of the
Hutland United MethodiSt Church
for 65 years . She was an associate
member of the Middleport Ulery
C1ub and was a member of the
Rutland Garden Club and of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughter.;
of the Amertcan Hevolution .
Survivtn~ are two sisters-in-law,
Mrs . Judy Titus, Route I, Rutland,
and Mrs . Frances Titus, DetrOit,
Mtrh .; four nephews, H.obert E .·
Titus, Detroit; Jay Titus, Guan1;
James Titus, Botkins, and Frank
Goeble . Coolville . Several great
nephews and col.lSins also survive .
Besides her parents, Mr.; . Lasher
was preceded in death by three
brothers and a sister .
·
Funeral servi ces wiU be held at
10:30 a .m . F'rtday at the Walker
F'uneral Home tn Rutland with the
Hev. Wilbur Hilt officiating . Burial
will be in Miles Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home after 2
p.m . Thursday until the lime of servi ces The family will receive fri en ·
ds from 2 to .l and from 7 to 9 p .m.
Thursday .

A steady drtzzle fell as the pope
entered the church, but had eased by
the time he left . He was greeted by
crtes of : "Long live the pope!"
wluch prompted the pontiff to grin
and reply : " He does ."
In a whirlwina hrst day in New
York , the pope met and praye-d and
sang with New York's poorest and
pro udes t. Again and a gain he
pleaded : Share the wealth with
those m nt&gt;ed .
" You must never be content to
lea ve til em just the LTumbs from the
feast, " he de cl are-d Tuesday night to
more than 75 ,00 0 worshippers
packed u1to Yankee Stadium for a
pontifi cal Mass.

MAJESTIC COLOR STUDIOS
11"•14" Family Portrait in lifelike color, artistically
mounted on a distinctively unique decaplogue .

ALL FOR ONLY '6.95
A $29.95 Retail Value

CALL 992-2502 or 992-7825
For Coupons Now Available
(No p1ctures without coupons)
DATES : FR 1., OCT . 12 - 3 P.M. Tl L 1 : ~?P . M .
SAT ., OCT . 13- 10 A.M . TIL 7:30P .M .
Pictures Will Be Taken In The
Church Basement_
Sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary

UNITED PENTECOSTAL CHURCH

.stat10n .
Hostesses are Patty Kloes , IJnda
Broderi ck and Grace Pratt .

S. 3rd Ave., Middleport, 0.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
FURNITURE DEPARTMENT, 3RD FLOOR

Dining Room Furniture in Golden Oak
For today. from yesterday.
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WOLFE'S· GREENHOUSE
HOURS 9-5 MON .-S AT .
SR 124, 11• mile past Southern High School on the right.

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POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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. in the world. ·

&amp;uncing death
New YOFU&lt; I AP 1 - A woman
who was boUllcing on the bed of a
New York City hotel plunged to
her death from the 20th
when she bounced out the willdow, her husband told police .
Police saJd Sylvia Maninirios,
of Montevideo, Uraguay, was
found dead early today on the
sidewalk outside the Taft Hotel m
midtown
Manhattan .
Her
husband, Bruno, 29 . explamed
she had been bouncing on the
hotel room bed and accid e ntally
bounced nght though the window,
poltce satd
Manin1nos wa s held fo r
quest1omng , pol 1ce ~I d.
F'urther infurmatJUn was nut
llllffiedJalely availa ble.

Troops big i..'i:me
WASHINGTON IAPt A
divided Senate wrangled over the
signifi cance of the SoVIet troo~
in Cuba on Wednesday as West
Gennany's defense mini s ter
cautioned that rejection of the
SALT ll treaty would create a
"real crisis" for European allies.
A band of senators, most of
them Democrats, held the Senate
floor for more than an hour,
demanding that the strategi c arms limitation treaty with the
Soviet Union be considered on its
own rnents and not be linked to
the pre..,nce of Hussian troops in
Cuba .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

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$60,610

Lengthy sesszon
fails to provide
strike settlement

grant
okayed
A $60,610 grant request to provide
prunary health care delivery services to the citizens of Meigs and
Vinton Counties has been approved
by the Department of Health,
Education and Welfare, according to
an announcement today by Dr .
William H. Allen, Jr . Pr""ident of
the Oluo Valley Health Services
FoWldatlnn, Inc .
Appalachian Regional Com mission fundtng totaling $105,788
was received for administratiOn of
the OVHSF program to develop,
n111nage and staff rural health care
fa ctltttes In Southeast Oluo
L1inJcs are now bemg managed by
the foundation m the Metgs-Vinton
Co unty area include Vinton County
Health Uim c, McArthur , staffed by
Hwk Oark, D 0 ; The Meigs County
MedJcal C1unic in Pomeroy, s taffed
by Wilma Mansfield, M.D. and
James Witherell , M.D., and the
lldcine Dental Clinic , Rac ine, staf fed by Margie Lawson, D. D.S .
Tturd year funding was also approved in the amount of $10,811 for
the Morgan County Dental Service
in McConnelsville .

Weather
Cloudy with showers or thund erstorms likely tonight. l.ow
torught in the low to mid 40s . Mostly
cloudy with a chance of showers
Friday . High near 60. The chance of
ram 60 percent tomght and 40 percent Friday

BY BOB HOEFLICH

r

FOHTUNE TELLER - This mysti c fortune teller wtll read the
future for those attending the fall festival at the Meti;s County Sentor
Olizens Center from II a .m. to 8 p.m . Fnday . The fo rtune teller whose
tdentity was not disdosed will be knowr as - would you believe ' - " Ber tha" dunng the festival at the cente r tn Pom eroy .

ADC FUNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thomas E .
Ferguson 's office announced toda y
the October, 1!!79. d tstributiun of

$38 .n 4,721 1n Aiu to Dependent
0 1ildren to 4&gt;4,663 rec1p tents '"
Ohw 's 88 counties .
Me1gs County received $105,788 for
1.276 recipi ents

Although opltmisrn towards the
settlement of a teachers strike m the
Meigs Local School District ran high
Wednesday on the part of Supt.
David Gleason , a lengthy
negotiating sesston Wednesday
night failed to produce results .
Negotiating teams met with Bill
Lewis , federal medial&lt;&gt;r, for a long
session Wednesday ntght. The
meetmg was held a t a Pomeroy
c hurch .
Mrs Bonnie F1sher . president of
the \1(' igs Lo ca l Tea r her s
Associati on . satd that the meettng ,
sc heduled for 3:30 p.m . wa s postponed unttl 4:30 due to the late
arrival of Lewi s . She sa id
negotia tions wt-re the n delayed m
startin g until abo ut 7 p .m . This
delay . she saJd , was due to Gleason 's
ronf ernng with an attorney . Mrs .
F is her reported that neg ottat1 ons .
after starting, started . did last un til
around 12· 30 a .m . Thursday
E ight 1ssues Invol ved tn the
negotiati ons remained WlSO)vrd
foUowtng the length y sess ton . Mrs
F 1sher reports .
Meantune, this morning tea chers
were on the picket tines at the
various schools and there are no fur ther negotiati on sesstons set at this
time. Mrs . Fisher said , however ,
that the teachers association is
ready to conttnue negotiations at
a nytune .
Members of the assoctaOon wtll

,meet at 4 p.m . today at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds to receive a
progress report on negotiations,
Mrs . Fisher said.
Two more teachers-one regular
teacher and a substitute- cr• """
the teachers picket llneo this morning to make a l&lt;ltal of nine teachers
now in the buildingo r:l the dlstrlct,
Mrs . Fisher said :• She stated that
few students are in the classrooms.
The teachers association has
asked that schools be closed of.
fi ctally Ulltil the strike IS resolved.
Mrs . Ftsher said that no mearunful
educaU on 1s taking place at this
tlme .

Sup t. Gleason has maintained that
district schools wtll remain open .
He was VISiting the schools this mor·
nmg and was not availble for com·
rnenl on the present status of
negotiations and the failure of last
mght's rneetmg to bring results.
Meanlune, Mrs. Warren Perrine
of Middleport : staled a parents rally
will be held at 6 p .m . this everung at
the Pomeroy American Legion
Home . Teachers and board mem·
bers will be asked to be present for
the meeting, Mrs. Perrine ssaid.
The status of the football game
and band show Friday appeared to
be " up in the air at this lime".
However, the policy of the board last
week was that the game and band
show would not take place Wlless
teachers and students involv..d were
1Contmued on page 7 I

Annual Wahama homecoming festivities scheduled Friday

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TKS SPEaAI.W

13" PIUA •
You_r choice of any •

.one topping .,
Reg . $9 .55

:n

per cent jump in October 1974, the
year m wh1ch the nation's previous
Inflation record was set.
'111e w.. olesale prices for energy.
goods chmbed 6.8 percent las!
month, up one percentage point
from the previOus month.
Food items were up 1.8 percent
la&gt;1 month , compared with 1.2
pe rcent m August . From April
th ro ugh July , food pnces had shown
no change or had declined.
" Beef and veal prices rose sharply
m September following four montho
of declme," the report said . "Prices
for pork rose for the second
l'onsecutive month following five
con~ c utive decreases .''
Non -fo od items were up 1.3
percent , a bout the same as in
AugLL' l.
The mdex tn September stood at
2211 4, meaning that goods that cost
IContmued on page 7 I

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•

WHAT'S THAT SMELL? 1 - Approtimat'ely 71 marijuana plants and
bags of crushed marijuana confiscated by the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department recently was burned Tuesday afterllO{)n by Meigs County

( 1 .1 •

-

-Yucca Canes
- Massangeana Tips
(Those are in 4 ga I. tubs)
-Dieffen bachia !Dumb One)
- 10" Hanging Ferns
I
-6" Tropical Plants
-Grafted Cacti

...

noor

MEETS TONIGHT
The Indies Auxiliary of the Mid dleport Ftre Department wtll meet
this evening at i :30 p.m . at Uu~ fire

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('"...... .

VOL. XXVIII NO. 121

September
wholesale
•
prices surge

WA.':iHI NGTO'I 1 AP 1 - Wholesal e
pn ces surged ahead 1.4 percent 1n
September , the lar ge st monthl y
mcrea se tn nearly fiv e year s, the
govt!mment said tod;;~y
Th e
r 1se
1n
th e
L&lt;:tbor
Ut partnlt'nt 's Pr odu cer Pn ce
• Index , the wor st so far thls vear was
blamed on conttnumg mc~eas~ s 1n
fue l costs and a new boost in food'
prtces. partt cularly bee f and veal.
The 1ndex ts watched closely
be f.:ause mcreases tn the wholt!sal ~::
level usua lly t:~re r e flect~ m ~
month or two at retail stores.
C'.ons um e rs alrea dy an: paymg
prrt l'S a1 r etail nearly 12 percent
hi gher than a yea r ;.tgo , and the new
wholt:sall' f1gures s ug gest that mor e
m fl t:~tJon I S hkely
The
Se ptemb er
who le sale
m crca ~ wa s tilt' third consecutiv e
Sheriff James Proffitt, left , and two deputies , Dave Ohlinger and Terry
monthl y nse of mori&gt; th a n 1 percent.
Russell. The marijuana wa• found in a strip mining area '"Scipio Twp. It
I(· et lso wa s the larg est smce a 2
had a street value of $2V,OOO. Paul Gerard photo.

respoose

·-s'

!Umbrella Tree)

.

detail is authentic
Every
much so, it set anct genuine . So
dreaming of Tiff~ Your mind to
Tracing Patterns otny chandeliers .
bered . With a rtch a _time remem oak finish.
And ltVely, 90iden
drawers and b!o k
serpentine
porcelain hardwa' res . Brass and
leaded glass . Ali h : S1lk ·screen
bacl&lt;roads of YOur s . lfttng on the

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i&amp;lftO'
S
i
~~.Aiiiii·l
"

The crowntn~ of the Homecommg
queen and king Friday eventng
during halftime at the football gam e
will highlight the a ctivities of
Homecoming week at Wahama High
School, which is now being observed.
Three senior girls are competing
for the title of queen, while three
semor boy s are vying for the king
litle
.Senior candidates include Annette
Campbell, daughter of Rev . and
Mrs. John Campbell, New Haven ;
Terri Johnson, daughter of Mr . and
Mrs . Gene Johnson, Letart ; Lisa
Hayes, daughter of Billie J U/le
Hayes, New Haven, and Robert
Hayes, Gua na, Africa : Steve Peters,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Peters,
Oifton ; Jeff Lathey, Letart , son of
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Lathey ; and
Terry Angel. son of Mr . and Mrs.
· Larry Angel, New Haven .
Attendants and escorts to the new
queen and king will be Audrey
Fields, junior attendant, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Fields, Mason,
who will be escorted by Mlke Buzzard, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leon
Buuard , New Haven; Lisa Russell,
daughter of Mr . and Mr.. Lewis
Young, Letart, sophomore, ' 1lnd
escort Jim Powell, son of William
Powell, Hartford, and Nan cy
Powell . New Haven ; freshman
attendant Kristy Tucker , daughter

,.

of Mr. and Mrs. Rav Tucker. Maso n.
and her escort Damon Gtbbs . son ol
Mr . and Mrs. James Gibbs ; Mary
Grimm , daughter of Mr . and Mrs.
George Grimm, Letart, eighth grade
attendant, who will be escorted by
Chns Humphreys, son of Mr. and
Mrs Oale Hun1phreys, New Ha ven ;
and Jan Riggs , seventh grade,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
G. Riggs. West Columbia, and escort
Jeff Frishette , son of Mr. a nd Mrs.
Bill -Frishetle, New Haven .
The peak of the homecoming
activities will be the football game
Friday evemng when the White
F'alcons meet the Winfield Generals
at 7:30p.m .
Following the game . a dance
sponsored by the seniors will be held
in the gymnasium .
Activities ha ve been going on
during thiS week at the ~chool
A pep rally wa s held Monday
morning, with activities for th e week
bein~ announced. The day was
observed as '50's Day· · and ~II
students were urged to wear clothes
styled in the 50's tradition .
Tuesday was '' hat da y' ' and the
" Pretty Legs Contest" . Students
wore red and while hats to class with
spirit slogans written on them. The
cheerleaders sponsored the "Pretty
Le~s Contest" and students voteJ
for the football pla yer the y f,·lt had

·~e " pretttest" leg s. Wtnners wtll be
announc ed during the Bonf tr e ctnd
Pep Hally Thur sday evening
Today is bemg observed as poster
day and jersey day. Stud ents are to
wear red and while jer se y-type
shirts . Each class made th ree
posters depicting th e hom eco ming
spirit and post e d them in the
cafeteria . Winner s are to be announced.

Thursday will be " Banner Day"
and " Red . and White Day " F:a ch
rlas.s will make ~ banner to be hung
m the cafeteria a nd will be judged
Students are asked to wear red and
whtte slac ks. shirts , sktrts or
dresses. The highlight of the day will
be at 6 p.m . when a bonfire and pep
rall y will take plac e on the foolball
field . The c heerleaders. football
players, band . attendants and queen
a nd king candidates will be present
to lead the evening event. The
winners of the " Pretty Legs Contesj " and Spirit Week will be annofmced The evening will be capped
by the burning in effi gy of a Winfield
rrenera l.
Fnday afternoon a parad e Will be
held , beginning at I p.m . in New
Haven. The parade will proceed
through New Hav en. Hartford and
Mason. before ending the rout,e at
the hig h school

HOME COMING CANDIDATES AND AITENDANTS - Three senior girls at
High
are
•·om pcttng for the title of Homecoming queen, and three senior boys for the King title, which will be announced
durmg halft im e activities at the Wahama-Wtnfield football game Friday evening. Shown,. front raw, senior can- .
didates, left to nght . Annette Campbell, Steve Peters, Terri Johnson, Jeff Lalhey, Lisa Hayes, and Terry Angel.
Second row, )eft to right, Damon Gibbs and Kristy Tucker, freshmen attendants; Jim Powell and Lisa RUBSell,
sophomore attendants ; and Mike Buzzard and Audrey Fields, junior attendants. Thlrd row, left to right, Mary
Grimm an I Chris Humphre ys, eighth grade attendants ; and Jan Riggs and Jeff Frishette, seventh grade at,
tendants .
•

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