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18- The Dally Sent mel , Pomeroy-Middleport , 0 ., Wedne;day , Oct. 10, 1 ~7S

Area Deaths
Ut-:LBI-:KT C. BECKER
Delbert C. 1Deb I Becker, 76, well
known Middleport barber, died
unexpectedly Tuesday afternoon
wtule at tus sbop on N. Second Ave.,
in Middleport.
Mr. Becker was dead upon the
arrival of the Middleport Emergency Squad. He was a barber lor 62
years and was still actively engaged
in his professioo.
He was born Oct. 12, 1902 in
Dayton, a son of tbe late August and
Bessie Louden Becker.
SurviVIng are tus wile, Theresa E .
Henry Becker; a son, Don of Middleport; a daughter, Mrs. Bettie
Gladwell of Columbus; three
cousins, Paul and Wayne Davis,
Middleport, and Mrs. Ruth Gardner,
Huntington, W. Va., sill grand-

••

LAST KUN - Ttus picture showing the last run of the street car to
Racine in 1927 is one of the many types of pictures to be used in a Meigs

.

- --

~-· ...

Mayor's Court

County tustoncal slide presentation. with sound, being prepared by Mr.
and Mrs. Don Adleta, Pomeroy, lor the 75th anniversary of the Fanners
Bank and Savings Co.

Old photographs sought by local bank
A few years ago. the Iynes of a
popular song urged you to "get out
those old records , those old
phonograph records.··
Today the Fanners Bank and
Savmgs Co. 1s urging citizens to participate in its 75th anniversary by
"getting out those old photographs .··
The photographs will becom e a
part of a historical slide presentation, complete with sound , to help
mark the bank 's anniversary .
Preparing the presentation for the
bank are Mr. and Mrs . Don Adleta of

p~--·

• PIUAchooceBREAD
•
any •
•

Your

of

.one lopping .
Rog . $1.20

I

89

••

1 Ooyt Ooly

I

=&amp;Rds=
•••••••
•

AU LOCATIONS

•

Pomeroy. The Adletas are making
regular appearances at the bank to
meet w1th res1dents wtstung to bring
the1r photos to the establishment to
have the slides made.
The Adletas held a meeting at
U1e1r home Tuesday afternoon at

which time slides were shown un the

progress made to dale . The project
was outlined and a sampling of the
music , to be done by area artists,
was presented.

Mr . and Mrs. Adleta have set their
next visit to the bank for 9 a.m. to 3
p.m. Oct. 23 and invite residents to
bring in not only old pictures, black
and wtute, but possibly updated
farruly things.
The old pictures may show about
any phase of We in Meigs County .
The slides will be made from the piclures and the slides will be tinted so
that the entire presentation - expected to last about 10 minutes when
1t gets down to 1ls final editing -will
appear to he in color
Short statements , now being
recorded by Mr . and Mrs . Adleta.

Democrats divided
on spending issue
a consensus on how t.o cut G&lt;&gt;v .

James A. Rhodes ' $775 million
capital improvements bill.
Senate Prestdcnt Oliver Ocasek,
D-Akron, sa1d Tuesday h1s membef'
told him they think the spending
total1s too high, but are divided over
wh1ch portions of the two-year
construction plan should gel the ax .
Ocasek had planned to brmg the
House-approved bill to a floor vote
l.oday , but it became obv1ous as

contractors .

Best known among several black
witnesses who urged retentiOn of the
language was Oscar Robertson,
former eollege and professional
ba sketball star who IS now a building
contrad or in ancinnati.
Robertson told the committee, " It
seems a si~nificant amount of state
construction work lEnds to be dooe
over and over by the same

weekend

recess that too many controversies
were unresolved .
There now 1s a possibility it will
have tu be carried over Wltil a
legis lative sess1on planned lor
November. said Senate Fmance
Chairman Harry Meshel, D-

Eckrich

JUMBO
BOLOGNA
•......•....
:.~- . S1.69
French city
BOILED HAM •..••....•.•..... ~'.~~~. S1.19
Homemad e

HAM SALAD ••....•.•••••••••••..LL s1.19
. DAmV

MARGARINE ...~~- .

Meanwhile, Meshel's committee,
which is hearing the bill, continued
under pressure from construction
industry, higher education and other
lobbyists seeking t.o guard their
areas of the governor's proposal.
The panel heard testimony
Tuesday ntght on a side issue which
also has stirred major controversy .
It involves a s.ction of language
setting aside 15 percent of the state's
eon tracts over the next two years for
black and
ot her
minority

By ROBERT E. MU..LER
Associated Press Writer
COLUMBUS , Ohio 1AP )
Majority Senate Democrats called a
cauc us today to see if they could get

senators returned from

1 lb . Parkay

tation wtuch portray the entire county and not just Pomeroy and Middleport.
The slides are made from the pictures immediately when they are
taken to the bank and the contributor may take tus pictures back
home with lnm.

will be used along with the presentation . The statements by local
cesidents are now being recorded by
'.:he couple and several of these were
presented at Tuesday's meeting.
Mr. and Mrs . Adleta emphasize
they want pictures in the presen -

PRODUCE

79¢

6 oz. Kraft American
or Pimiento Sliced

CHEESE .......... ..79

¢

NEW CABBAGE 2 LB 2gt
6 oz . Cello

RED RADISHES

2;2gt

White

SWEET POTATOES

CARIBOU CATFISH ••••••••••.. ~~~.sl.89
•.
26 oz. Campbells
TOMATO SOUP. .••••••••.••...•...•.•.59'
20 oz. Sweetbrier

CRUSHED PINEAPPLE.••..•-....•••.69'
15 oz. Chli

HOT BEANS.••....•...•.•••••.•.... 2/59'
4 Roll Charm in

TOILET TISSUE .•••••.•••.•••••••.. s1.09
!12 oz. Ocean Spray Cran

PRUNE JUICE •••••••••.•••••• .••••••. 99'
48 Count lipton

TEA BAGS•••••..••.•••••••••••.••••. s1.29
2 lb. Pops Rite Yellow

POP CORN ............................ 69'
2 lb. Fireside

.FIG BARS .••••••••••••••.••••••••••••.. 99'
15'12 oz. Whitney

PINK SALMON ••.••••••••••••••••• }l.89

coostruction companif!s. ''

He conceded that many black
contractors have difficulty meeting
bonding and other requirements,
and that there may not be enough of
thetn to handle the more than $100
million in contracts the btll could

y oun~ stu wn .

Federal. • •

generate.

' Continued !rum page 11
the schools during the strike and
that meaningful educatiOn is not
taking place in the Meigs Local
District.
Mrs . Fisher reported the State
Department of Education has indicated it will investigate the
situatiOn promptly.
Even though the Thursday
meeting with Lewis is set up, Mrs .
Fisher indicated that the MLTA
team i.&lt; willing to negotiate "at any
place and at any lime".
Supt. Gleason has also indicated
the wiUingness of the board's team
to negotiate anytime .
Meantime, Middleport Police are
investigating an incident in Middleport Tuesday afternoon when an
informational pick line was set up by
the teachers near the second story
offices of Dr. Keith !tiggs, a member
of the Meigs Local Board of
Education.
According to report&amp; Dr, Riggs
and John W. Blaettnar, a member of
the teacben group, got Into an altercatJoo. Blaettnar received a bead
laceratJon and was tnated at the offlee of a Middleport physician.
Dr. lUi!&amp;• was takeu to VeteraDB
Memorial Hospital for examlnatJon
lor a ,.,..thle broken hand.
Statements were not Issued by
ellber the teachers association or
the board of edueaUon on the lneldeot.

But Robertson said the 15 percent
would serve as "a guidepost
con sistent with the principle of equal
opportunit y."
He said minurity con tractors

received less than 3 percent of the
slate 's capita l improvement
contracts m the last biennium .
Allen Carter Jr ., a partner m a
minonty-&lt;&gt;wned construction and
home

improvement

firm

in

Massillon, said he has not received a
public contract in the 18 months his
company has been in business. It has
offered six bids, he said .
Carter is also president of the Ohio
Republican Council , the black
affiliate of the state Republican
Party . He said its members are
concerned about conlinumg patterns
of discrimination, and hinted they
would watch how members vote and
be ready to retalial£ politically if the
proposal is defeated.
Lewis Smoot Jr. of Columbus,
head of one of the state's most
successful black construction firms,
said his company received 85
percent of those awards in the last
biennium that went to minority
contractors.

Oh1o's majority contractors are
opposed to the provision which they
claun , among other things, would be
impossible to administer .

Ten persons forfeited bonds posted
on speeding charges and one other
was fined on a speeding charge in
the court of Middjeport Mayor Fred
Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds oo speeding
charges were Marsha Terry, Route
I, Middleport, $27; Frances Whittington, Route I, Middleport, $27;
Linda De Lusca, Dexter, $25; Tommy Walters, Middleport, $27;
Gilbert M. Craig, Gallipolis, $27;
Cynthia L. McMillin, Vinton, $35;
Roger H. Reynolds, Middleport , $30;
John E. Lonsway, Route 3, Clinton,
Ky., $27; Robert C. File, Middleport,
$27, and Myra Martin, Pomeroy, $32.
Fined $15 and costs on a speeding
charge was Gregory Chasteen, Middleport.
In other court action Tuesday
night Larry Eakins, Route 2,
Racine, was lined $10 and costs, no
exhaust; Sammy Morrison, Middleport, $100 and costs, assault;
Sammy Uttle, Middleport, $25 and
costs, disorderly manner, and $100
and costs, destruction of property,
and Don Lovett, Middleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly manner.
Six defendants forfeited bonds and
a seventh was fined in the court ol
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Joseph
Shepard, Mason, $3(), posted on a
charge of running a red light; Alpha
Russell, Pomeroy, $30, failure to
yield the right of way ; Michael
Woolard, Pomeroy, $30, assured
clear distance; Daniel Rairden,
Hartford, $350, driving wlule intoxicated; Rogber Estep, Mason.
$50, squealing tires, and Ann Frank,
Racine, $30,1ailure to yield the right
of way.
stephen Pullen, Mt. Alto, W. Va.,
was fined $250 and costs on a
reckless operation charge.

Speeding arrests
popuillr illst month
Speeding arrests were the most
common made by the Mi""leport
Police Department dunllil Sef}tember, according to the monthly
report of Police Chief J . J.
Cremeans.
Of the total 59 arrests mad• during
the month, 30 were for spe..'&lt;ling.
There were 10 arrB'!ts on disorderly
manner charges and tbere were
three arrests for failure to pay
parking tickets and two oo charges
of spinnmg tires. There was ooe
arrest each for destruction &lt;1
property, driving while intoxicated,
parking on a yellow line, resisting
arrest,
menacing
threats ,
trespassing, unsafe vehicle, reckless
operation, possessioo of marijuana,
racing motor, driving under suspension, failure to stop following accident, reckless operating and
fleeing an officer.
Parking meter collectlom for the
mooth totaled $339 and the police
cruiser was driven 3,~ miles
during the mooth.

c hildren ana two grea.
grandctuldren. Mr. Becker attendee
the St. Paul Lutheran Church ir
Pomeroy.
Funeral services will be beld at l
p.m . Friday at the Rawlings-Coat&gt;
Funeral Home with the Rev. George
Hoschar officiating. Bulial 'will be
in the Kirkland Memory Gardens at
Point Pleasant. Friends may call at
the funeral home lr&lt;XTI 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. Thursdav.

HO~PITAL ~EWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Pricy
Tackett,
Ewingtoo; Maxine Hobbs, Dexter.
Discharged--Clyde Sayre, Eva
Diehl .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES ocr. 9
Ernest At wood, Marie Boulton,
Brandon Coleman, Megan Davis,
Laura Gleason, Sadie Hardesty ,
Herbert Henderson, Hazel Hughes,
KAtherine
K~enon,
Annette
LAmbert, Betty Leiving, Leonard
Maynard, MArgaret McClung ,
Karen
Meadows,
Robert
Moodispaugh, Debbie Murray, Marc
Pierce, Barbara Pratt, Mrs. Terry
Stanley and daughter, Mrs. Graham
Stanley and daughter, Mary Waugh ,
Lewis Wears, Ray Wears, Larry
Wickline, Eric Wolford .
BIRTIIS OCT. 9
Mr. and Mrs . Thomas Delaney ,
son, Jackson; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Shaffer, son, Gallipolis; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Williams, son, Shade;
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Toops, son,
Gallipolis; Mr . and Mrs . James
Mulford, daughter. Cheshire.

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of sbowen Friday
tbrougb Sunday, poulbly miied
wltb snow at tlml!ll at nlgbt. Cold
but wllb a gnc1aa1 warm1Jq
trmd. Hlgba In tbe low to mid 501
Friday, warmlog to tbe mid to
upper 5011 by Sunday. Overolpt
lows lD tile upper 30s to lower 40s
early Friday, In tbe upper ZOII to
lower 30o early Saturday and low
to mid 40s Sunday mol'1linl!.
ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
Nand K. Lambha, 36, Middleport,
and Usha Kohli, 30, Detroit, Mich.:
Dwaine Eugene Allen, 25, P001eroy,
and Sonia Jean Justice, 21, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy .

TO END MARRIAGE
Keith D. Phalln, Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
and Annette Phalin, same address,
filed for dissolutioo of marriage in ·
Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Terry Goheen was granted a
divorce from Donald Keith Goheen,
Sr .

ADULT DANCE SLATED
Parents Without Partners Club
will sponsor an adult dance Friday,
Oct. 12, fr&lt;XTI 8:30p.m. to I a.m. at
the Shade River Coon Hunters Lodge
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds.

YARD-IIAKE SALE
A yard and bake sale will be held
Saturday, Oct. 13, from 9 a.m . to 5
p.m. at Ann Borders residence, 1111
Second Ave ., Gallipolis. The event is
being sponsored by Parents Without
Partners Club.
SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered two calls early Wednesday morning. At 1:27 a.m., the
unit went to Brownell Ave ., for Martha Burns and at 1: 27 a.m. the unit
went tD 107 Park St. for Barbara
Smith. Both were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

ELBERFELD$
115th ANNIVERSARY SALE
CONTINUES All THIS WEEK
COATS and ClARK

We'd love to Shoot You!!!
We'll aim our cameras to "shoot" vou good. Call us for
information or to make an appointment for :
.--SENIOR CLASS PORTRAITS
.--WEDDING CANDIDS
'•
.--CHRISTMAS PICTURES
.-- ANNIVE RSAR 1es
""PASSPORTS ·

THE PHOTO PLACE
(992-5292)
Charlene and Bob Hoeflicn
109 High St.
Pomuoy

Eastern, Southern homeco1ning festivities Friday night

s149 WINTUK
KNITTING YARN
'1 09 ASKEIN
SAVE THIS ANNIVERSARY
on manv Items of wearlna aDaarel
for you and your family and .
furnlshl
tor
home.

I

i

l

EASTERN HOMECOMING CANDIDATES AND
ATTENDANTS - A homecoming queen will he
crowned Friday mght during halftime activities at
Eastern High School. All three ~andtdates are mem -

bers of the senior class. Pictured, front row, 1-r, queen
candidates, Nancy Samos, Shelia White and Roberta
Larkins; back row the attendants, Carla Ctuchester,
jumor, Denise Gaddis, sophomore, Synthia White,
freshman . Eastern plays Southwestern at 8 p.m.

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

NO 126

Knight, daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Arthur Knight; and
Carrie Guinther , daughter of Mr. and Mrs . James
Guinther. The queen will be crowned during halftime
activities Friday night. Southern laces Kyger Creek in
the homecoming contest at 8 p.m .

•

•

e
VOL. XXVIII

SOUTHEHN HOMf:COM!NG CANDIDATES 1979 homecoming queen candidates for Southern High
School are,lefl to right, Cindy Warden, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. Bob Warden; Rosemary Hubbard, daughter
of Mrs . Roger Holter and Larry Hubbard ; Karen

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY. OCTOB ER II. 1979
.. .. ..... -.- ..·.··.:.:.;.;.;.;.:.::.·

Ca'lm hits Meigs teacher strike issue
There appeared to be an "all
quiet" on the strike front today in
the Meigs Local School District .
This afternoon at 3:30 p.m . a
session was scheduled fur the
negotiations teams of the Meigs
Local Teachers Association and the
Meigs Local Board of Education
with tederal Mediator Billl.ewis.
Neither the administration nor the
teachers assoctation illsuej fonnal
statements today in reference to the

stnke wtuch moved into il'l 14th day .
However, the teachers association

Wednesday set up an informational
booth m Pomeroy at which questions
are to be answered for school
patrons and from where literature
pertaining to aspecl'l of the strike IS
be in~ distributed.
The booth was moved to Mid dleport Thursday morning and to
Kutiand Thursday afternoon. It will
be returned to Pomeroy Friday.

lnformatiooal sheets on financing
and other aspects of the teachers'
side of the strike are printed on the
Information a I sheets being
distributed.
Today, Supt. Gleason reported
that schools remain officiaUy open
and that attendance was up slightly
in the district . He said the same
po~cy as in previous weeks on
games and band performances still
is in effect. II students and teachers

tnvolved in the activities are not in
the classrooms then the events can not take place. The Friday game is
with Ironton.
Supt. Gleason said he has an optimistic attitude towards today 's
negotiations sessiOn and Don Dixon
of the teachers' association team
said that he is not optimistic but is
hopeful that problems can be ironed
out.
A meelmg of the Middleport P'f A

was scheduled for this evening at
which Gleason was to be present to
answer questions dunng a
discussion on the strike . However,
the meeting is subject to cancellation due to the negotiating
session .

The district's board of educatiOn
has had special sessions ""l up fdr
each everun~ this week but has not
met since Sunday since there has
been no progress in the negotiations .

Students of the Meigs Local High
School were to rally today at the
Middleport Park. A spokesman for
the group said that she was unable to
secure permission to hold the rally
in Pomeroy so the event was moved
to Middleport.
The spokesman said the rally was
to be maintained in a neutral
lastuon.
"We don1 care who wins. We just
want to get back into school" , she
commented .

Two given 2-15 years terms
Six persons indicted
.Today i for drug related offenses
... . in the world ·
by Meigs Grand Jury
·. ~l'

Political voyage
WASHINGTON l AP !
President Carter began a twe&gt;day Western trip Wednesday that
will have senous political overtones in a region where tus support has been weak .
The trip launched a period of
stepped-up travel for Carte~ . who
plans to visit six stales in 16 days .
On Wednesday night, Carter
was to take part in a conference
with II Western governors +
members of the Western Governors Policy Offi ce . They
represent a region where Carter
has not been enjoying enthusiastic support recently .
Though the president's appearances before governors in
New Mexico and labor officials in
Calllornia will likely locus on
energy and economic policies.
they also will involve efforts to
boost his political standing.

First suit filed
OOVINGTON, Ky. IAPI - The
attorney who filed a $3 mllion
wrongful death suit in U.S.
District Court in connection with
Monday's Comair commuter
plane crash in which eight died,
said he wanted to be in on the
beginning of the investigatioo.
Attorney Richard Gangwish
explained that the early filing
will give his investigator access
tD the current investigtion of the
crash.
The suit named as defendants
Coolair Inc. and Comair Services
Inc., opeators of the conunuter
air service. It was fUed on behalf
&lt;t Florence Oatts, wife of
Thorna9 J . Oatts, 52, Loveland ,
Ohio.

Ballonists killed
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. lAP )
- Ahot air baUoon w"" engulfed
in names after crashing in the
Sandia Mountainl! east of here,
and two California balloonists
aboard were killed, officials said .
"It was such a helpless
feeling, " George Welsh of
Albuquerque, a chase crew mem·
ber said of Wednesday's crash.
"~ne broughtalitUt lire exlinl!uisher, but there wasn 'l
anythiing they could do.

Me1gs County Prose&lt;·uting At- Manley is not eligible for parole until
torney, Fred W. Cr ow, Ill, an- , he has actually been incarcerated
nounced today that two subjecl'l who for two years.
Bailey J. Dugan pled guilty to
were arrested as a result of a
Bureau of Criminal Investigati on aiding and abetting Manley and was
and Department of Uquor Control sentenced to 2 to 15 years , with two
undercover mvestigallon of the Cen- yea~ actual incarceration be( ore
tury Bar, have pled guilty to senous becoming eilgi ble lor parole.
Dugan also pled guilty to sewlling
drug offenses .
marijuana
to an undercover agent of
Tony Manley , Middleport, pled
the
Department
of Uquor Control
guilty to traff1ckmg in drugs ,
wherein he sold :IIi tablet• to an un- and was sentenced to an additional
dercover B.C.I. agent on Feb. 2, term of SIX months to live years for
1979. Manley was sentenced to two to this Felony IV crime. In addition, a
15 years confmemenl m the proper tturd count of aiding and abetting
penal institution . Prosecutor Crow another subJect in conunitting a
adv1S&lt;.'&lt;l that under current Ohto law

drug sale was charged agamst

Dugan for which he received a sentence of one to 10 years confinement
in a state institution.
Prosecutor Crow adviseds that the
trial of the above menlloned subjecl
will be heard shortly .
As the result of B.C.! . and Department of Liquor Control's undercover
work in early Feb . two juveniles
were sentenced to the maximum
tewm pennitled by law by Judgew
Robert Buck, judge of the probate
and juverule court. Tlus was done af.
ter Judge Buck denied Prosecutor
Craw 's motions to have the juveniles
tried as adults

Commissioners. . accept
gets $75,050
communications hid

Hocking Tech

The September term of the Meigs County Grand Jury Wednesday return&lt;..l
six indictments after examiniing 18 witnesses called by Prosecuting Attorney fred W. Crow liJ .
Indictments were returned against Thomas M. Stewart, charged with
aggravated murder; Wayne Marvin Satterfield, charged with aggravated
vehicular homicide ; Herbedrt Farms and Robert Riffle, each charged with
receiving stolen goods : Paul Stewinmetz, charged with felonious assault and
Joe Walkins charged with forgery .
During its Wednesday session the grand jury visited the county jail and
found no violations

ABSENTEE BAlLOTING
Meigs Countla118 can now cast
ab..,nlte ballots lor the Nov. 6
generai election at the Meigs
County Board of ElectJoos office
located lD the Masonic Temple ,
Mulberry Ave. , Pomeroy. The offlee ls open from 8:30a.m . to 4:30
p.m. Monday tbrougb Friday
eacb week for the convenience ol
such

ARC funding
COLUMBUS - Gov . ~antes A.
Rhodes today announced approval
of a $75,060 grant from the Appalachian Regional Commission
(ARC) to the Hocking Technical
CoUege on behalf of the South
Eastern Technical Education Con sortium ISEOTECH ) to establish a
Production Agriculture Program.
The grant will be supplemented
with $5,1100 from local sources.
The project will serve the residents of a Ilkounty area including
Athens, Belmont, Gallia, Guernsey,
Harrison, Hocking, Jackson, Jef ferson, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan.
Muskingwn, Noble, Perry, Vintoo
and Washiingtor counties .
The project was submitted lor approval by the Department o{
Economic and Community Development's Appalachian Development
Office, which administers the AH C
program in Otuo.
Ohio's 1979 Appalachian Development Plan and Project Investment
Package contains approximately
$8.4 million in funding proposals for
Ohio ·s 28 Appalachian counties in
areas of h.lalth, child development,
energy, education and natural
resources.
ARC is a stat!Hederal partnership
which promotes the economic and
social development of the Appalactuan region of the Unite&lt;!
Stales.

Acting upon the reconuncndation
of Bob Fisher and Bob Bailey Meigs
County Commissioners Tuesday accepted the bid of Motorola Corp. for
a communications system for the
county EMS. The $65,750.93 bid had
been recommended by the EMS
Board of Trustees.
Bailey was advised to contact the
local banks to compare the rates of
interest to finance the purchase as
compared to financing through
Motorola .
The commissioners reviewed the
Housmg Reha bilitatioo program in
detail and noted that several projects have been }completed and the
program should be completed by the
end of November .
County Engineer Wesley Buehl
discussed highway department
operations. Buehl reported work is
progressing on county road 18 and
ditctung be being done on county
road 24.
Buehl suggested conunissioners
purchase a machine to copy the
maps . The conunissioners stated
they would try to work the purchase
into the 1980 budget.
It was reported that a driver is
needed for the landfill truck as of the
first of November . Persons qualified
and interested in the position are
asked to contacxt the ofli~-e of the
commissioners.
a review of each county office
holder's 1979 budgets was made to
determine the status of county finan·
ces to date

vot~n-

Deadline for casting

aboentee ballots Is 12 uooo on
Nov.3.

It was noted that there are very
limited amount. left in each budget
and that measures would have to be
taken to control spending through
the remainder of the year .
Attending were !tichard Jones ,
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
Wells, corrunissioners, and Mary
Hobstetter ,clerk.

Middleport's

Three persons

parade Nov. 26

hurt in wrecks
Three persons were injured during
two

Wednesday

accid ents

investigated by the Galha-Me1gs
Post . Highway Patrol.
Officers investigat ed a t wovehicle collision oo SR 7 at the
entrance to the ramp t.o U.S. 35, at
4:30 .m.
The patroll"eports a north bound
auto operated by James Hanlon , 61 ,
Letart, W.Va ., turned into the path
of a south bound vehicle driven by
Linda Moore, 29, Henderson, W.Va .
A passenger m the Hanlon vetucle,
Marjorie Hanlon , 52, Letart,
displayed visible signs of injury and
was transported to Pleasant Valley
Hospital for treatment.
Moore and a passenger, Alicia
Moore, 10, claimed injury , but were
not immediately treated .
·
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage . Ha olon was ctted on a
1Continued on page 9l

Christmas
Christmas promotion plans were
outined during a recent meeting of
the Middleport Chamber of Commerce .

A parade and moonlight sale will
kickoff the prornotiooal sa.son on
Monday, Nov . 26. Candy Ingles has
charge of the parade wlule Mrs. Edna Wilson will handle the treat.
During the business session
presided over by Cash Bahr, it was
reported that trash receptacles had
been received for the village.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Cash
Bahr. Mr. and Mrs. Edison Baker,
Mrs. Audrey Davenport, Mrs . Edna
Wilson, Miss IngelB, Mr . and) Mrs.
John Werner, Mr. and Mrs . Bob
King, and Mr . and Mrs. Richard
Owen.
CLOSED FRIDAY
The Kacine Senior Nutritional
Satellite will be closed Friday
because senior citluns will be attending the Bob Evans Farm
Festival.

Trio facing
court hearing
0

Charge&lt;; of criminal damaging
have been filed against three per·
sons as a result of an incident at
Me1gs High School September 28,
when the windshield, side glass and
glass on the instrument panel was
broken .
Charges were filed against
19- year old Pat Owens, IH- year
old Mike Tripplett and 19-year old
Robert A. Vanoy . According to
Sheriff James J . Proffin the three
wiU appear in court on Oct. 29.
The truck is owned by Don Fry, st .
Albans , and was being used during
the roof repair at the tugh school.
The sheriff's department also invesitgaled an accident in which a
deer was killed.
According to the report Robert L.
Kichmond, Rt. 1, Middleport, was
traveling west on county road lour In
Salem Township at II : 20 p.m.
Tuesday when the deer ran into the
path of his car.

Weather
Cloucty with a chance of shoers
tonight and Friday. The low tonight
In the mid 408. The high Friday in
teh low to mid 60s. The chance of
rain 40 percent tonight and Friday.

EXTENDED FORECAST
A cbaDce of sbowen Salllrday
through Monday. Sbowen
pouJbly mixed wltb · - at
nlgbt. u - b l y coe1. ~~~~l­
ID tbe 4tl Salllrday 111111 aper till
to mid 501 Sullday 111111 Meaday.
Overnight lo'll'l In tbe upper . . to
mld381.

•

:: ::::::::: ::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::::::::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::

�3- The Daily Sent10el , • ' tddleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday , Oct. 11, 1979

2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P omeroy, 0 ., ThurSday, Oct. 11 , 1979

TA~.£

Conally

is ~the

NORTH CONWAY, N.H. (NEA) It's certainly appropriate that most
of the superlatives in the contest for
next year's Republican presidential
OOIJlination invariably are applied to
the TeXllll entry in the race, John B.

Connally.

Coonally is the most charismatic
figure in the crowded field of GOP
hopefuLs , exuding the panache, style
and verve unique to successful
business leaders. He is the most confident, self-a&amp;'lured and glamorous
candidate in the contest.
Coonally also is the most disliked,
least trusted and most elitist contender in the race . And he is the candidate most closely identified with
banks, oil companies and other
generally unpopular big-money interests .
All of the assets and liabilities
were on display when the
f1oresville, Texas, rancher- lawyer
. businessman · politician recently
took a tw&lt;Hiay whirlwind tour of the
state that will host the first presiden tial primary election of 1980.
Arriving in a garnillh purple. pink
and white corporate jet, Connally
brimmed with self..:onfidence while
being ferried by helicopter and auto
to a series of carefully orchestrated
appearancs throughout New Ham-

pshire.
"I didn t get in this race for practice," Connally boomed to one
audience in resounding tooes, "I'm
62 years old and I don't need a
rehearsal."

AND
ASK I(IM 10 SEND M£

During an interview with reporters, he confidently proclaimed : "I
can get out of the pack better than
anyone else. "
Everywhere Connally went, the
crowds - generous if not overwhelming in site -·were awed by his
raptd.fire perorations and gift for
phrase making matched by few
politicians .
But behind that facade is an array
of problems that even " Big John"
Connally may not be able to surmount. Many of those difficulties are
illustrated in a detailed poll of voter
attitudes now bemg privately circulated within the state .
Conducted by the Manchester,
N H., survey research firm of Blake
and Dickinson , the poll shows that
strung dislike of Connally among
New Hampshire Republicans is far
higher than the rejection rate for
any other candidate .
That rejectioo rate ranges from 1
to 8 percent for other contenders , but
stands at 19 percent in Connally's
case .
Although the survey doesn 1 identify the causes of that dislike , the underlymg reasons have been apparent all across the nalion lor
several years.
Voters seldom mention the subject
in Connally's presence and jour·
nalists speak elliptically of his
"image problem" or of the "excess
baggage " he carries. But the brutal
characterizations - "slippery
~hony
wheeler-dealer "

But so far, that hasn't worked
since Canadtan nurses are forced t o
take thell' certification exam again
to practice m the Untted States, sh e
sa1d . And nursing salaries are fairly
Similar in both nat1ons, providing no
mcenliv e for Canadtan nurses to
leave their homeland , she added .
"Hospitals should put the money
th ey spend recruiting in Canada mto
convincing people m this co untry to
go mto nursing , and make it
attractive foc them to do so ,'' she
said .
t"or those dectding to remain in
the prufesswn, however, many are
optmg for four-year college degrees ,
Ms . ZlfTIITlerman said . She predicts
another level of nurses during the
upcommg de;:ades will be those
graduahng from associate degree
programs and two.year community
colleges
Man y of those nurses s•;eking
hJgher edueatJons aren't necessarily
a1ming for high e~dministration
position s, Ms. Zimmerman srud.
Instead , they're hopmg to r ecctvc
specializatiOn for use in patient
care, she satd .
"They I nu rses 1 are getting
additional educatiOn 10 areas like
cardiac ca r e, burn treatment and

newborn care, so they can work
better m that specific area," sh e
sat d.
Specialization also makes nurses
more cr edible 10 health ca r e,
enablin g doctors to view them as
colleag ues rather than just as
aSSistants, Ms. Zimmerman said .
"Nurses don't want to ~ mim·
doctors. " she sa1d . " They want to
care for paltents ."

Berry's World

"Never mind Uncle Harry, he's gor ·gold fever '
agsln."

•

•

The press

TI-lE FRONT PAGE AND

-mE CLASSIFIEDS!

/

prepares

most

'Ohio perspective'
COLUMBUS. Ohio 1AP I - As
more women enter previously maledominated fields and strive for
advanced degrees. traditional
nursing roles are changing . says a
former official of the American
Nurses ' Association .
" Nursrng has always been a
WOOlan's profession , but now they
( women l have the freedom to
investigate other career choices ,"
said Anne Zirrunennan, the group 's
unmedtate past president now
residing in Chicago. She was in
Colun1bus recently to address the
Ohio
Nurses
Asso c ialton
Coovention .
Those additional job choices have
resulted in a current shortage of
nurses a c ross the nation, Ms .
Zimmerman said. And unless
nurses ' salaries and benefit s
improve , that shortage ts here to
stay, she added .
"Nursing IS not an easy
profession ." she said . " With a
background in nursing , yo u can get
Into other service professwns, like
social work where you can have a
more normal life ."
Many nurses alr~ady have
abandoned their careers, whil e
potential nursmg candidates have
opted for other profession s, Ms .
Zinunerrnan sa1d. Because of the
lack of trained regtstered nurses ,
hospitals ar e in c reasing th e1r
patient loads on existing staffs resulting in overworked and
coosequently unhappy nurses, sh e
said.
To remedy the situation, man y
hospitals have -begun recrwtmg
nurses
from
Canada ,
Ms .
Zirrunerman said .

lHE SPOilTS SECnON

0Vf~TOI20NALOO

In Washington

Errors aid Orioles' 5-4 win over Pirates

Today's
Commentary

YOU'R NEWSPAPER. ••

Editorial opinions,
comments

By DoD Graff
In last year's celebrated con-

I

\

SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE
inevitably surface when voter attitudes are pro bled in every state .
Some of that distruct relates to his
tenure as a senior White House adviser in the discredited administation of President Richard M.
Nixon .
Connally also ts occasionally
questioned (although he says the
issue now is being raised frequently)
about his indictment - and subsequent acquittal - on federal
bribery , perjury and conspiracy
charges .
Whatever the cause , a sitable portion of the electorate continues to
embrace nagging doubts about Coonlllly's integrity .
The Blake and Dickinson survey
also places Connally to the left of all
other RepubUcan candidates on a
ideological scale, an indication that
many GOP loyalists have neighter
forgiven nor forgotten him as a
"lilelong Democrat - and a protege
of President Lyndon B. Johnson until he switched parties in 1!!73 .

Newspaper welcomes
'Letters to editor'
By U..OYD SVEEN

Execulfve Editor
Tbe Forum, Fargo, N.D.
Since newspapers first were
published, letters to the editor have
been an important part of weekly
and daily publications.
Most editors welccme and en.
courage such expressions of opiruon
by their readers. Letters provide a
good cross section of opinion in the
l'Otrununity, they give readers an op.
portunity to express themselves to a
large audience - and they are
ntE DAILY SENTlNEL
IUSP816MI

'

Finally , Conally 's political base is
a narrow one, generally limited to
wealthy, well-educated nd middleaged people, many of them
presumably fellow businessmen .
The candidate is unusually defensive on that point, claiming that until
now he has only "tried to target my
efforts toward a limited nwnber of
people ." But there's considerable
doubt whether he'll ever emerge as
' 'the people's choice."

PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF LUCILLE C.
STORY, DECEASFn
case 'No. 22826
rcu liLt: OF

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On Oct . 4, 1979, in th e
Meigs County Probate
Court, Case No. 22826, Leo
R Story, Al441 Kingsb u ry
Road·, Pomeroy , Ohio 45769
was appointed E'l&lt;ecu tor of
the estate of Lucille C.

Story . deceased. late of

41441
Kingsbury . Road,
Pomeroy, Ohio A5169
Robert E Buc k
Probate Judge
Clerk

I 10 1 11. 18, 25 , Jtc

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT,
JUVENILE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY ,

OHIO

IN THE MATTER OF IN

FA NT MALE WIL T
ALLEGED DEPENDEN T
CHILD
Case No. 22150
Unknown father of infant
mate W i lf, who cannot be
tound or his post off ice ad

dress ascertained and who

is the father of infant mal e
Wi It.
heretofore 1· udged
depend ent child, wi 1 tak e
notice thaT a mot 10n has
been tiled in the Juven ii C'

NATIONAL NEWSPAPER
WEEK OCT . 7·13. 1979

~, ~~ ~

...-

DEVOTED TO 11IE

INTEIIE9T OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBF.RT HOEFLICH
Cit)' EdJtor
Pllblllllecl diUy eK&lt;!epi S.turdll)' by 'l'boe OltJw
\'aUey hbUiblq Compuy- MaiUmedla, liH: .,

Ill Cturt St. Pomtrvy, ObJo 45'7tt. BulDal
Offk? Pbour 1ft- tl.M . FAUCorial Pbolw
.W:IS7.
Set-oDd dau poiCiilf paJd II Ptmeroy, OIUo.
Nadoul adverUilq ~pre~e~~tltin, La_,_
._..,..,, SIJl Eoelld""··

~OW.,

MlU.
OeUvr~ by carrkr
N!IILI ~r wrek . Ry Mo...-

Sut.aipdoo rates :

wbert naU.blt 10
Reu.'* ·~~ ca~ ~otnrtcf DOC avallabke, 01»
moa:Lb., Q,ll.
Tlw Da'l!y Seatlael, by ID&amp;lllDOGie aDd We.t

Vlrctaia,

1t11t

lbree moaU.

year $D.M; Sb m..dM S17.M;
SlUt. E~ 131.• , all:

moothiPI.M; 1hrft moalba tli.M.
Tlw AJtoriattd Prt!ll II es:dutwly e.dtkcl
lo tbe ue ler publk:IUoa of aU a.wt clilpatebet
cmUkd \o Ute ~~per aad aiM &amp;he local
bf'WI pubUibftl btn:la.

Court of Me igs County.
Ohio by the Meigs County
Welfare
Department
requesting an order of the
court that infant ma le Wilt
be com mitted ro the per ·
manent cus tody of said
Meigs County
Welfare
Department . The
said
unknown father of infant
Male Wi It is hereby notified
that if the motion for per manent c ustody is granted ,
he will be permanently
divested of all parental
rights and privileges in
respec t to the child and the
child may then be pl aced
for adoption without his
consent .
Said motion will be heard
on the 13th day of Novem

ber, 1979, al 10 :00 o'clock,
A .M . at th e Juven i le Court

of Meigs County Court
H ouse . Flomeroy , Ohio .
W itness my hand and th e
sea t of th 1s Court th is 5th
day of O&lt;: lober , 1979.
Robert E . Buc k
Judge and ex ·off ici o
Clerk of lhe

Juvenile court,

Meigs County, Oh io

110111, 11

Jimmy"s Whitehouse
WASHINGTON l AP ) - Jimmy
Carter is renowned in Plains, Ga., as
a softball pitcher. but World Series
time reminds us he 's the first
president in decades who has not
attended a single big league baseball
game .
Carter has not totally neglected
the "national pasttime ," although
paying obeisance to baseball hasn 't
always been easy .
As an example, take his tribute to
the two big leaguers, Lou Brock of
the St. Louis Cardinals and Carl
Yastrremskl of the Boston Red Sox,
who collected their 3,00Xh career
hits this season .
Carter was quick to send off
congratulatory messages to both
men . Then House Speaker Thomas
P.
O'Neill
told
reporters
Yastrremskl would be invited to the
White House to meet the president.
Since Brock's 3,000Ul hit had come
first, the Cardinals outfiel&lt;jer was
hurt . When a sportswriter told him
he also would be invited to meet with
Carter, Brock said, " I wouldn't
accept it if he asked me now ."
In time, hurt feelings were
mended and Brock preceded
Yastrwnski to the Oval Office.
What's more, Brock proclaimed the
visit a " real treat" and said he was

"deeply hooored ."
Neither man talked politics with
the president, although paying
tribute to baseball is an enshrined
part of the nation 's political rites even if massaging the egos of
ballplayers , as Carter learned, can
be eve ry bit as taxing as dealing
with politicians .
O'Neill, a pasSionate Red Sox fan,
confided recently that Yastrremski ,
a Roman Catholic of Polish descent,
had his own feelings hurt last year
when Carter did not name him to the
official U.S. delegation that went t o
the Vatican for the coronatioo of the
Polish pope , John Paul II .
When the president hosted a White
House reception for the pope last
Saturday, Vastrremski was there .
When country singer Dolly Parton
visited the White House last week ,
she kissed Carter smack on the lips

- or was it vice versa1
In any case, she told news
photographers, "My husband wants
,a picture of this, too ."
" ll's the wrong lime to bring up
your husband ," joked Carter, whose
wife was at his elbow looking not at
all displea&amp; J .

among the best-read items in any
newspaper .
Except for a few extra-&lt;lensibve
persons, editors also print letters
violently disagreeing with posilfons
taken by the newspaper. But even
these enlightened editors do not
publish all the letters they receive.
And few letters are published
without editing.
Since editors invite readers to express their opinions, why don't they
publish all letters as written 1 They
want other sides to be heard - that's
part of what an editorial page is all
about to stimulate public
discussion and debate, to provide a
wide range of opiruon and in·
formation. Why, then reject or
change some letters'
What editors hope for is reasoned
opiruon, not rambling attacks . There
are a dozen or more candidates for
every inch of room on every
editorial page, and more than
enough writers, colwnnist.s and cartoons to fil the page.
This is true of the entire
newspaper . Staff reporters have
their copy edited, ccrrected and
trimmed to fit available space, or
sent back for more facts when in·
complete . Wire service copy in datly
newspapers undergoes the same
treatment. Similarly, if the editors C.
to give as many reader-writers as
possible a chance to reach the
newspaper audience with their
views he cannot allow one or two
long-winded writers to take up all
the space .
Since all newspaper copy is edited,
why shouldn't letters to the editor as
well '
Professional writers expect and
want editors to read and correct
their copy for grammatical and
spelling errors, to straighten out
clumsy construction. But many let-

ter writers cry "censorship'' when
their cop/Is edited even though a
poorly-written letter might subject
them to ridicule if publsihed as written .
Basic editing is simply conunon
decency, just as weeding out the
libelous and tasteless is basic selfprotection .
The solution? Letter writers
should obseve a few siJnple rules:
Keep the letter short but complete.
Stick to the point .
Don 1 repeat it.
Don l try to blanket the state by
having your letter copied and mailed
to more than one newspaper .
Editorial pages are not vehicles for
mass dissemination - that smacks
of propaganda . Write an original
and different letter to each editor .
Sign your name and give your ad dress . If there are genuine reasons
to fear retaliation, explain in a
covering letter requesting that your
name be withheld. Since editors are
legally responsible for everything
published, they must know the
authorship of letters.
Don't demand thai ·your letter be
published on a certain day. It may
be delayed in the mail and not arrive
by deadline and it would be out-&lt;Jfdate if held for a week. Your letter
will be well read on any day if it is intersting and on a topic of broad ap-

peal.
Finally - and this is not as
frivolous as it may sound: Write
legibly or type , prferably double
spae to allow for editing . And write
oo ooly ooe side of the paper, please.
U you want to tell the editor he's a
bum for writing a stupid editorial,
fine . TeD him why you think his
editorial was wrong - and you don 1
have to begin by saying "You
probably dont have the guts to print
this, bul..." His skin is thicker than
most and he has had plenty of experience with differencs of opinion.
Your disagreement will be nothing
new.

frootation between The New York
Times and a New Jersey court
demanding surrender of a reporter's
notes pertaining lo a murder case,
the Times paid a total of $285,000 in
civil and criminal contempt fines
alone.
Attorney fees and other legal costs
raised to much more the total bill for
the case, which ended when the contempt citation was suspended with
the !lefendant'sacquittal.
The Times, however, gave every
indication of being prepared in woot
was widely regarded as a critical
test of First Amendment press
rights to contest the Issue - and go ·
on paying - indefinitely. And there
is no question thai as one ri the most
well-heeled media opeations, it
could afford to do so for some time at
least.
Bul questions were raised al the
time as to the consequences for a
smaller newspaper finding itself in a
similar situatioo. Incapable ri
sustaining such a financial penalty.
its alternatives would be to forego
principle and comply with a
questionably constitutional court
request or go under itself.
The press, or precisely the
American Newspaper Publishers
Association, is now moving to answer that question. It is establishing
an insurance program to assist in·
dividual newspapers in meeting the
legal costs of First Amendment

cases.
Under the projected plan,
coverage would be provided up to a
maximwn of $1 million per case, a
significant assistance to many
publications with limited resources
that otherwise mi~ht count the cost
of standing up for press freedoms
too great.jt would, the words of
Jack C. ~u. director of the
Reporters Conunittee for Freedom
of lbe Press, '·guarantee that
smaller papers won't have to hock
their preoses lo their law firms ."
What it comes down to is putting
government as reprsented by the
Judicial branch somewhat in the
category of earthquakes, hurrcanes
and other natural disastersu an insured risk .
And when you stop to consider,
that may not be entirely inappropriate .
More like war games
Insurance of another kind iB being
taken out for the upcoming Winter
Olympics.
The organizers ol the 19M events
at lAke Placid, N.Y ., have asked for
and are getting
millioo worth of
assistance fromh U. S. military to
guard against anything resembling
the Palestinian guerrilla assault oo
the 1972 Munich Olympics in which
lllsraeli athletes ere murdered .
Equipment and services to be
provided include ground radar,
seismic sensors and night vision
devices to protect the Olympic
Village, a medical support group
complete with ambulances and
evacuation helicopters and - just in
the worst possible CBSI' - :m body
bags .
The army declined a request for a
1,50().man counteNerrorist strike
...ce. but It is throwing In an armored personnel carrier .
And they call them games.
Thieves' barbor
11 Jlnuny Carter had been aware ri
the situation before his paddlewheeler cruise oo the Mississippi, he
might have hesitated focusing !10
much attention on water transportation.
Boat theft!l, statistics reveal, have
taken a sharp rise. From 1973 to
1978, repored thefts processed by the
FBI's Natiooal Crime Inlonnatim
Center jwnped fr~m~ 5,000 tiM~
toU,500.
And that, according to a report in
The Journal of Insurance, may be
only the tip of the iceberg. Conservative lnduatry estimates art
that actual but largely unreported
annual l~s are running to 90 000
'
boats valued nth multi-milllCIIS.
Owners are adviaed to tab
several elementary precautionary
measures, such as not leavlnl! keya
aboard, reinforcing mooring lines
and having ample ldenttfyina

sao

BALTIMORE t AP 1 - AU season
long, the Baltimore Ortoles have
been typed as a club lackmg
superstars but a club that has the
knack of domg just what it takes tu
wm .
That's exactly what the American
league champions did in Wc'&lt;lnesday
night's first game of the World
Series as they beat the National
League's' Pittsburgh PJr ates f&gt;-4 .
The Orioles , of course, didn 't know
it at the time. But they neede&lt;j a
World Series opening~ame record
of five runs in the first lnning to win .
And that 's just what they got.
11 was just enough to hold off the
usual late charge of the Pirates. who
had won 25 games in the regular
season in the ninth inning.
The key play and big tut came tn
that Ortoles first inning, almost
before a crowd of 53,735 co uld get
comfortable oo a 41-&lt;legree n1ght.
The rain and snow th at made the
field spongy and th e game doubtful
for a good part of Wednesday , took
its toll on the Pittsburgh defense in
the first .
Al Bumbry opened for Baltimore
with a single on the ftrst pitch from
Pirates right-hander Bruce Klson .
Th en , Kloon. who had difficulty w1th
his breakmg ball , walked .167 h1tter
Mark Belanger .
The runner s moved t o second and
thll'd on an mfield out. and f-ddie
Murray walked loa ding the bas.&gt;s .
Then, came THE play .
John Lowenstem bounced what
appeared to be an innmg..,ndmg
doublep lay to sure-handed Phil
Garner at second . Gamer , however ,
wheeled and thre w the bailmto left
field , two runs scormg.
The ball was soaking wet, Garner
said . It was like a bar of soap .
KJson. a September hero with a 4-0
record m the Pirates' drive to the NL
East Iitle. was gooe befc.-e the
IIUiing ended . He threw a wild pitch
that allowed Murra y to score. and
finall y delivered a :J..l pitch tha t
Doug DeCinces slanuned for a t w o.
run homer .
The Ptrates could have died right
th ere , but that wasn't the way they
got to the 76th Wor ld Senes. Slowly
but sur e ly th ey c rawled ha ck
a2ainsl left-hander Mike flanagan .

I

SILVERPLATE
CUPS FROM
$9.95 .

the baggt!st winner m the maJor
lea~ues iliis season with 23 victones
Four Piltsburgh reltever s held the
Ortoles to just one hit through the
last 61·3·mmngs .
But the damage was done .
DeC in c~s· game wumUl g homer
made him the 15th player to htt a
home run m his fll'st World Senes at
bat.
DeC1nces, th e Ono les thtrd
baseman who made only 13 errors
all season, set another record. one
he'd ltke to forget. He was charged
with two errors in one mning _
That tied a record set in 1910 by
Harry Steinfeldt of the Clucago
Cubs.
Steinfeldt is thP answer to one of
baseba ll 's most famous tr ivia
questions . Who was the thtrd
bsseman 10 the Cu bs' mft eld that
con tamed the Joe Tinker to Johnny
Evers to Frank ChaJJt·e double play

comblnatwn ') ·
Pittsburgh Manager Chuck
Ta nner admitted that the first game
was important. but he 'd se ttle for a
split b.y winning tomght's second
game in the best of seven Series .
"Then we'll be gomg hom e for
th ree iames," Tanner said .
Tanner said the Pirates were no
way in a state of shoc k after the
Orioles ' big fll'st mrun g.
"We've been behind by five runs
before and come back. " satd the
Pittsburgh field boss, who ts in his
first World Series.
What troubled Tanner was that the
Or ioles hit on ly two bails well off
K1son . But the Pirates nght.IJander
threw 27 pitches m his one-third of
an ummg, 16 out of the stnke wne
and 11 m .
K1son said It was a mtserable
mght to p lay base ball for both clubs
He said the ball fel t ve ry slt ck , and
he didn 't have a ny sensll tvit y or
feelmg .
" However , ! seemed to be the only
ooe who had problems. The gro und
ba ll to me 10 the first mmng should
have been a double play. " he said .
He was referrmg to a Ken Smgleton
topper to wa rd the mound, a possJblt•
do uble play ball whic h turned mto
)ust an out at fll' st .
Pirates capta10 Willie Stargcll
UlSISted everyone for get the weather
condttJon s.
" Flanagan ha d a darn good
fastball ald a good slow curve ," SBJd
Starge ll . In the mnth 10n01g, with the
tymg run at second , Stargell popped
out to end the game .
" If 1 didn 't gel under 1t," Stargell
soid . " it mtght have been another
home run ·'
The Pll'ates · comeback started tn
the fourth on singles by Tun Foh and
Dave Parker, who had four hits . The
run scor ed on a Stargell groundout.
In the sixth, Parker and Bill
Hobtn so n s tn g led. and Ga rner

SCHLIOITER f1ITH
INFANTS' FEEDING SET

FROM

'4.00

INFANTS' BRUSH 8o COMB "
Sll.SO

GOESSLER

COLU MBUS, Ohw • AP 1 - Ohto
State quarterback Art Schltcht er,
the na twn 's leadmg maJor college
passer la st week, has dropped to
fifth in this week's statistics .
Schlt c hter ·s e ffici ency rating
dropped from 161.1 to 148.4 Th e
sophomore fr om Bloomtngburg,
Ohio, ('Ompleted just five of 16
passes for 77 yards and one
touchdown and had on e throw
intercepted 10 the Buckeyes' 1().7

victory over Northwestern on
Saturday .
Purdue's Mark Herrmann , who
was second on the national passing
list last week, dropped to ninth,
whil e Tim Clifford of Indiana , who
mat ches arms with Schlichter on
Saturday m Col wnbus, fell from
fifth to eighth

Winter Coughtime
is here!

t&gt;\'t' nluHII~ drovt;&gt; them hoi!IL' w1U1 a
b&lt;t~ s- lu atleO Single

Stargell made 1t 5-4 10 the e1ghth
With a prod1gouS homt' run over ttll'
nght f1eld wall . Parker stngl&lt;'&lt;l tn
the nu 1th , a nd after bt&gt;m g pi cked off
f1rst by F·lanagan. slid 111lo s.&gt;cond

Mark Bel£Hlger ·~ g lovt: for &lt;HI t•rror

wante d to go w1th It beca use they art'

But Rotm1 su n &lt;.Jnd .\ \(lrt;, ·ll
l'O Uhl rd I;!L'I hun hHit l t '
Flanal;!nn satd ht• won thl' K&lt;t H W
wlth h1s change uv aml S!dt· &lt;mn

Cl

l;oslball "
Flctnagan s~u J tht&gt; P1rates sho t
J u wr 1 Lh t· ldty-ll·lt y th eory ·· Tiw·;
run li ke Kansas C1t y nnd ha vt• t.hl'

I'U f Vt't),fJJI

" 1 tho ught J had a pr .. ttv gwd
Fla na gan Srlid ·· !

d l an }!t· up .·

and knocked the ball out of shortstop

powt •r !J kt"" \1 dw&lt;:nlkt't&gt;

COI.UM BLS, Oh to 1 AP 1
Hamilton Badin, the 1978 l1ass AA
playoff runner·up to Brookfield , wa s
among seven uew leaders ttus wet&gt;k
m lhe Ohw Righ School Ath let ic
Assoc1atJon 's computertzed rt•gaonal
football r ankings.
&amp; din , seco nd last week , rnu vcd
into the lead in Regwn 8 with 46 40
pomts while Wheelersburg, fir st a
week ago, fell to s~rond place wtth
37.50 points .
The other new front~unner s wen·
Oa)10n 1\orthmont . Parma Padua
and We stervtlle North tn Class AAA .
Fostona m C1ass AA a nd Blbomda le
F:lrnwood and St . Henry 10 Class A.

The htggest shock. howevtr. wa s
thn"'t!-tune playoff kmg Cmcmmt tJ
Mot·llt•r 's surrender of tht' Reg 1on -t
lead to :-.iurt hmun t Moeller , 1dl e la st
Wl't'k, dropped tu St'('Ond place w1th
t-)5 OU pumlo; tu 66 .25 po1nts for th e
( 1a~1on t t•t'lm
Othl' r Sl'hUUb wh1 ctl dropped out
of last week 's I ~· Cjd s werl' Cleveland

St .Joseph and Cro\'t•port 1n Class

"
The c lly of Calgary
mcorporated in 1893.

was

m Class AA and T1ffm C&lt;:~lve rt and
Purtsmo ulh Notre Dame m Class A
Th e OHSAA uses th e rattn~s.
wtuch a re i)&lt;jsed on tht• str ength of a
team ·s s&lt;.·hedule and tho.st&gt; of 1ts
uooonenb. to dt&gt;lam mt: Its playuff

Local bowling
Col umb1~

Pomeroy B ow ling Lanes
Tn -County Le.agu e
Se pl . Jl. 197q

Nnf1onal Life"
?7
F 1r es t o ne
]5
Sm1fh 's Body Shop
1?
Team N o 6
0
H1 gh team game
Eagle~ C lu b
B55, Team No J 850 , cotumb1a
Nat 1onal L1 te 825
Te am h1gh s.er ,es
F 1reston e
?471 . Ea q l e~ Club 746 3 T e a m N o J
)397
H 1q h 1nd 1VJdual qume
Bdl Rad
l o r a 1 17 . Jer ry Van1nwage n 10 1.
John T yr ee 197
H 1 Q~1 1nd 1V1Ciual ':.1-'r lf:''&gt;
Bill Rad
f ord 57J . John Tyree 539 J ~l ( k WMd

T e.a m
Pts .
E.1g les Club
25
P omer oy C ~:&gt; rnPnl A IO&lt;" k
70
F1res1onc
20
Col um bl d Nat Jon al L if e
19
~md h 'c, Body Shop
l/
H ;gh team s e r 1e~
F::aqle-:. ClutJ
J~ 4 U , Col umbia Nat .on al L 1l e 1499
Pome.-oy Cemen l Block ?JR9
H1qn team game
Eaqles Club
H~6 641 , Col um b1a N alfo n at L1 f e 843
H•Q h 1nd 1V• dua1 game
Larry
D~Qan 218 , Don N elson il -l Bl a 1nc
ca ner 'l l 3
H 1qh 1nd1V1dUitl ser11''S
Larr of
Ouyan 587 . Darr el l Dugan 548.
Bl ,l,ne CC'lr i er 547

LEBANON RESULTS

l.EBANON. OhiO 1AP 1- Lamar's
Me Too won tht• $1 ,200 featured pace
mile at Lebanon by a noSt: tn a photo
hm sh Wednesda y mght and patd
$22. 80 , $:1.40 and S4 .20 .
Show Time Vtcki placeu. paym~
$5.60 and $3 .40, wnl Al v10 York ,
th1rd, returned S4
The 3-3 double of Double Sha dow
and Nella Dee pa1d $.11.20 and the
crowd of 1,135 bet $112,334 .

110
Pomeroy Bow1 1ng L anes
Tues day Tripli cate
Leagu e
October 1. 1979
Stand i ng s.

Tn County Lea g ue
Oct 2, 19 79
Team
E rtgles Clu h
ff'a m No J

Tea m
R oya l Crow n Cola
Me1gs Inn
Fr1endly Tavern
Reuter Brogan Ins
No 2

PI&gt;
18

19

Sports briefs
By The Associated Press
RAl.TIMORF: 1 AP 1 Doug
DeCi.nces smashed a t wo-nm hum~r,
ca pptn~ a ftve.run
Balt im ore
upriSing 10 the fll' st mmng. "nd the
(Jnoles defeated the Ptllsburgh
Pirates ~ in til e Opt!ni.ng game of
the 1979 World Senes .
Ballimore starter Mike F la n"gan
rode an early 5-0 lea d to victor y Th e
Birds barely held off the P Jrales ,
who butlt a comeback around a
record-tymg Scnes four htts bv
Dave Parke r and a solo homer by
Wulie StargeU .
BALTIMORE 1APJ - Huuslon
Astros shortstop lra tg He)7tolds
was chosen th e wtnner of the 1979
Danny Thompson Memona l Award
for exemplary CllristJCm spu-it m the

Ji
3:1

18
16
12

H 1gh lfldiVJllual gnme
Prt l Car
son 220 l 1nu COllins 192 . Mehnta
Barnet 180
H 1Qh SNIPS
Pat (a rson 556·, Met

i:ll\lSHAt&gt;E. Australia ' AP 1
\1at t M1tcheU upset Geoff Master s of
Au strah&lt;:t 7-{), G-2 m st•cond-round
actwn at thl' Suutil Pal'lfll' T eruw,
(lrlSS l l'.

In olher
mat c hes.
Mark
Ed:mo ndsor1 beat Kerry Hoct:Jvt:rt fj.
l, 6-7, 7~; local fa\'O Tllc C11ns
Lt.·t cher upset Fram:tsco Gonzalez 76. 2-6. 6-2 : Tom Gorman defeated
Austral ta 's Joh n .J unes/-{}, 1-G, r1nd
Ken HoSt:' wall uf Australia t.lu wn~J ·
cuun tqman C rt•g Whlte crus..-; G-4 , 63.

MI&lt;I.BOUR\ t: . Australia 1M' 1
L'.S Open Champ1on John \1cFnrot:
Sl.:ur etl t:J 7..6, ~2 \'lclory un·r

Austra lta ·s Gwllem 10 Vila s and
Vtta!!'Gerulatlls sto pped Allan Stone
of Au stra lia 6-1, &amp;.4 m the Super
(.'hallt?nge Tenn1s Tournanlt•nt
BARCF:LONA. Spam 1AP 1 - Jtn
Hrebec of Czechoslovakia upset topseeded Spamard Jose H1guera.s 6-1.
&amp;-2m tht• st'cond round of tht· $175 .000
Co unt of Godu teruus tournament
I.n oth er matches, Angd Gm1ent•z
of Spam beat defendmg champum
Be la7.s T"r&lt;K'ZY of Hungary. 2-6. ().2.
6- 2: Harold Solomon downed Jan
Kodes of Czechoslorakta 6-4 . 6-2:
Vtctor Pec ci of Paraguay beat Hemz
Kan of Switzerland ().2 , 6-2 : F:dd1e
Dtbbs defeat;,d Paul Mcl\amt'e ().2 ,
6-J. Manuel Oran tes uf Spain got by
cuuntrvm&lt;tn Gabne l Urp1 6-1, H. ().
2. and Adnano Pa natta downed
J a1ro Vt:lasco of Colombia 7~. fr3
TF:I. AVIV. Israel IAPI ,\ ustraha ·s Culm Dtbkey upset lOP·
seeded lit e Nastase of Romanta 7-6.
). ; and Tom Okker of i he
!\ctilerland s b~at Isra e li Ha11n
Arlosoroff 6-2 , 6-2 "' a Gra nd Pnx

AUTO RACING
PARfS 1AP I - New Cra nd Pn x
auto races will be helU next ye~r lfl
Me&lt;tco Oty and l.&lt;Js Veg as, rnakmg
an 111-race 10lernat10nal season for
the world drivers championsl1)p . llle
lJilemalional Auto Sport Fe&lt;)~rai10n
announ ced .
TENNIS
PHO F:N LX , Anz . f AP t - Martina
Nov ratil ova
whipped
Te rry
Holladay 6-3. 6-3 and Chn s !::vert
Lloyd defeated Yvonne V&lt;'ermaak of
South Afnca ().J. 6-1 m a ft rst-cound
match of the $100 .000 Ph ot•n tx
Classi c tennis tournament.
1n other actton , D1anne Fromho ltz
of Australia beat Tanya Harford of
South Af ri ca 6·2 , 6· 1: Renee
Richards downed Sy lvia Hantka of
We st Germ~ny 6-3, 6·4 ; Kate
Latham bea t Renata Toma nova of
Czechoslovakia 6-1, 1-6. 7-6, and
Anne Smith defeated Bettin a Bunge

J.t~

Conr1Ch (OJ I

of Peru 6-4 , 6--:l.

major leagues .

Pt!. .

to urnament .

B&lt;1r nel! 481 T 1nn Coll,ns 480 .
r cam h 1gll score Me 1gs Inn 556
TPnm h1gh 5er 1t:."&gt; M e1Q'S Inn l 49 l

World Senes At A Glance
By Th e A~'i&gt;OCialed P re!.~
Bc sl -of ·Seven Ser1es
Tu esda-y ·., Gam e
P• t1 sb urgh at Halt, more, ppd ,
Wedne~d.ay · s

'&gt; .

B.=tlf1mo rf'

•

Game

Pill~burgh

B.'lllimor e leads '&gt;N•ec, 1 0
Thursday '!. Gam e
p,rtsburgh
I B\yleven
11 S!
A&lt;Ill more ( Palmer 10 6 ) (n 1
Saturday · ~ Gam e
Bi111'mor e at P 1Us bur qh
Sund ay's Gil m e
Ball•mvrf' at Plftsburgh ,

4,

at

COLUMBUS. OhiO lAPI - The
Ohoo
Htgh
Sc hool
Athletic
Association's eomputerized regional
football leaders this week :
CLASSAAA
HF:G ION 3 - 1, Youngstown
Mwney 56.00. 2, Dover 55.00. 3,
H&lt;oardinan 54.50. 4, Akron Buchtel
5:175. 5 1t1e 1, Massillon and North
Canton Hoover 53.00. 7, Stow Walsh
Jesuit 52 .50 . 8, Zanesville 52.00 . 9,
Medma 49 .60 . 10, Ma cedonia
Nordoma 49.25.
CLASS AA
HF:GIO!'i 7 - 1, Canal Fulton
Northwes1 55 .00 . 2, Canton Centra l
Catholic 39.60. 3, Navarre Fairless
:J:t 511. 4. Coa l Grove 31.33. 5,
J oh ns town 30. 50 . 6. Thornville
Shendan 29.00. 7, Ironton 'li.'/IJ . 8,
Marlins Ferry 26.25. 9, Steubenville
Cathu hc Central 25.43 . 10. Zanesville
Maysvt!le 25 .00.
ltEG ION 8 - 1. Hamilton Badin
4ti40 2, Wheelersbu rg 37.50. 3,
Ver s aille s 36 .00 . 4. Cincinnati
c;re enh ill s 35.00 . 5. C\Oc\Onati
McN tc holas 32 .50 6. Ctrclev ille
32 .00 . 7. Hamilton Ross 31.00. 8 (lie ),
Spnngfteld Kenton Ridge and
P ortsm ou th West 30.00 . 10 .
Cmcmnat1 F1nnrylri'WT1 29.00

CLASS A
REGJO\ 11- 1. Crooksv ille 37.00.
2. ~ew"rk L"lholi c 28 .50 . 3, Beverly
Fort Frye 26 OCt t , Canal Winchester
25 .75 5. Brilliart Buckeye North
25 .00 . 6. Woodsfield 22.75. 7. Bergholz
Sprmg!teld 18.50 . 8. Crown City
Hannan Tra 1·•• 18 24 9, Strasburg
17 .50 . 10. Howard East Knox 17 .00 .
HF:G 101\ 12 -- t , St. Henry 28 .50. 2
1tte 1. Cedarville and Mana Stem
Marwn 27 .50 . 4. Portsmouth Notre
Dame 'li~O 5. Covin gton 'l/ .25 . 6,
West J effer,.,n 25 .75. 7, Chillicothe
Zan e Trace 25.50. 8. Waynesville
24 .50 . 9 . Waynesfie ld-Goshen 21.50.
10. BataVIa 20 .75

d

rl('f P'i'iClf y

Tu esday , ocr . 10
P 1fl 'itlurgh df Ball 1more. 1nl, 1f
nece'is ary
Wednesda';' . Oct . 17
Piltsburqh a1 Ba lt ,mon•. • n !. 1f

nec essary
Hall

uf F ;nnt' IIUtftt.'ider
\~ ii"

W;u1er
whtlt•

rctlkd

ril-l~ 1111-'.

for

the

Prwl

PIJJson ··

·· H1 g

PltL'ibUr~h

l~r ~lt t'S Il l~ teamr r1&lt;:~l t' and ~uun~L·r
!Jruth t:.•r . Ll uy d, was knuU-Tl a~ i.Jttle

P tHSOfl .

Casey Kasem
WMPO
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Canada sold Russia 228 millioo'
bushels of wheat and flour wortb
$500 million 10 1963
;

held The regular season ratings
leader s tn the
12 r eg ions
automatJcaUv fill the state semifinal
~
berth s.

AAA, Per rysburg and Whee lersbur~

•CARPETON

rnrkinga.

an.
uP

Pa r kt•r was

Hamilton Baden computer leader

.

It's a sltuallon In which the fuel
Jhortage could tum out to have
advantage. U It geu much WOI'34r.
merely keeping the oars locked
might pravlde the l1lOIIt effective
security.

unprt•:-;s lvt· I d1dn ' t make the
p1t ch t•s on hJm . They were down the
uuddte f was trymg to go in and out
un htm ," t' lanagan said.
In today ·s second game, righthander fltort Blyleven , 1~ . goes for
lht• P tr ates against Jim Palmer, 1~
fi. a !so a ng~-hander .

pr·l'!ty good fi:t :-ilLtdl hitting dub
I Wi:l :-. Jrr l pr· t'~~t·U lht· W;.J~ they hit lht!

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•

�5- The Dally Senti nel. \1 illdlepnn -P um eruy . () . Thursday, Oct. 11 , 1979

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Oct. 11 , 1979

Hoople picks Texans over Okies
Egad, friends, there are so many
fantastic matchups on this week 's
card, your Fearless Forecaster
hardly knows where to start - kaff·
kaff!
Highlightin g
the
Saturday
fe.iivities will be the contest pitting
the Oklahoma Sooners, pride of the
Big 8, against the Texas Longhorns,
the pride of the Southwestern
Conference, in neutral I' 1 Dallas
Getting together for the 74th time ,
it will be the Sooner offense, led by
HeL'!lilan Award winner Billy Sims,
against the swarming defense of the
Longhorns.
The Hoople nod goes to the
defensive stalwarts of Texas. In a
down·te&gt;-the-last-whistle affair we
confidently predict a Texas triumph ,
23-22 . Harrumph 1
Now how about some of these
'
'
other classic pairings:
Southern California hostin g
Stanford in their &gt;8th renewal :
Nebraska entertaming Kansas at
Lincoln, Ne b., the 86th repeat In this
Big 8 series; Alabama at Flonda,
the
19th
contest
in
their
Southeastern loop rivalry; and

Oh1o State vs. Indiana, also a B1g 10
fray
Then what abo ut North Carolina
State vs Maryland and North
Carolina vs. Wake Forest' All of 'em
battlin~ for the top spot 1n the tough
Atlantic Coast Conference.
And &gt;1ill some others of more than
passmg interest find Notre Dame
mvading the nest - heh·heh - of the
Air Froce Falcons; the Arizona
State Sun Devils entertaining
Washington in a Pac 10 hoedown ;
and rugged l.SU taking on Georg1a .
Jove: This Will be a Saturday to
reme mber ~

Forecast
Houston vs Texas A&amp;M and
Arkansas vs . Texas Tech in a pair of

sure- fin• crowd pleasers in

the

SouthwPstrrn Conference
Other highly rated co ntests :
rlonda State vs. MisSISsippi State;
Missouri vs Okla homa State in
a nother Big 8 meeting; Michigan vs.
Minnesota in a Big 10 affair ; and

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He re is how the Hoople system
sees 'em _
The USC Trojans will vanqwsh
Stanford. 28·7 . The h1gh·scoring
Nebraska Cornhuskers will ro ll over
Kansas. 49· 14 . Alabama, another
potent offensive aggregation, will
romp over F lorida, 44·12 .
Frank Kush's Sun Devils are now
back on track after a couple of
disappointing efforts and will pull a
mild surprise as they defeat
Washington. 3:&gt;·24 . And l.SU, which
nearly pulled the upset of the year
against S~uthern Cal. will add to the
Georgia woes as they whip the
Bulldog s, 36·14'
Now go on with my forecast:
OCT. 13
Alabama 44 Florida 12
Arizona St. 35 Washington 24
Arkansas 33 Texas Tech 16
Auburn 21 Vanderbilt 0
Boston College 16 West Virginia 10
Bowling Green 39 Kent State 20
Bngham Young 37 Utah St 20
Brown 39 Penn 6
Ruc knell 18 Lafayette 7
Californ ia 26 Oregon St 7
Clemson 23 Virgima Tech 14
Colorado St21 UTF.P 17 1N1
Cornell 17 Harvard 14
Duke 20 Ridunond 13
E Caro lina 38 C1tadel 9
Flonda A&amp;M 40 MorriS Brown 12
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CHAPMAN SHOES
Expi res0ct . 17, 1979

CHAPMAN SHOES

t\ I

Flond" St 38 MISsissippi St 21 INI
Gramblmg 29 Miss Valley St 10
Hawaii 22 Santa Cla ra 12 INI
Hoi) f'ross 29 Colgate 15
Houston 21 Texa s A&amp;M 18
Iowa 27 Nort hwestern 13
Io wa St 35 Kansas St 8
l.SU 36 Gcorg1a 14
Louisville 16 Tulsa 15
Massac husetts 36 Boston U 6
Memphis St 21 NE Louisiana 14 IN I
Miami 10 I 38 Ohio U 27
Michigan 27 Minnesota 12
Michigan St 37 Wisconsin 13
Miss1ssipp1 21 Kentucky 6
Missouri 35 Oklahoma SUO
Navy 32 William &amp; Mary 14
Nebraska 49 Kansas 14

Next to Elberfelds in Pomeroy

Eat a Twinkie, rob a bank.

TodJJy's

Notre Dame 42 Air Force 14
New Mexico 17 Ncv- La s Vegas 10
INI
North Carolioa 28 Wake Forest 21
N Carolina St 17 Maryland 14
Ohio State 21 Indiana 20
Oregon 24 Arizona 20
Penn St 27 Army 16
Pitt 23 Ci ncinnati 17
Princeton 15 Co lumbia 13
Purdue 42 Illino iS 24
Rice 28 TCU 6 1N1
Rutgers 27 Conn 21
San Jose St 19 Fresno St 9 1 N 1
San Deigo St 25 Miami IF I 12 IN I
Southern Cal 28 Stanford 7
SMU 21 Baylor 14 IN l
S Miss iss ippi 38 Tulane 21 1N I
Syra cuse 42 Temple 12 1 N 1
Tennessee 27 Georgia Tech 20
Texas 28 Oklahoma 22
Villa.wva 22 Delaware 14
Yale 24 Dartmouth 21
1 N 1 night game

Turner gets
opportunity to

show speed
CINCINNATI ! AP I The
Cincinnati Bengals have shown a
willingness to try daring plays
occasionally, such as a fake field
goal or a flea-mcker pass on fourth
down, despite a usually predictable
offense .
And with the Bengals winless in
SIX National Football League games
th1s season, they just m1ght give the
ball to prodigal runmng ba ck
Deacon Turner this Sunday against
the Pittsburgh Steelers.
"He's what I call a long ball
hiller ," Bengal Coach Homer R1ce
said of Turner. " He's capable of
breakmg the lon g ones."
Rice calls Turner a " slashtng-type

runner" who possesses "great
quickness and a way to maneuver
and gel yards when ill a hole I might
not be there ."
The second-year player from San
D1ego i&gt;'tate has been used sparingly
thiS year by the Ben gals. Turner has
earned the ball 13 times for 43
yards, most of that c0111ing in the
second half last Sunday against the
Kansas City Chiefs when he also
caught a pass for e1gh t yards .

Sports
World
By Will GrimsiPy
BALTIMORE tAP!· The World
Scncs ' What World Series' Dave
Parker' What 's that , a fountmn
pen? Earl Weaver ? Weave a ('Ouple
of Texas and Oklahoma pennants for
us , pleaSe .
.
Such is the tenor in Dallas th1s
week..,nd where U!e Longhorns and
Sooners stage their 74th game in one
of football 's keenest rivalries .
Batten down the hatches . Board
up the windows. Nail down
everything that moves. The "B ig D"

becomes a disaster area when the
"Hook 'em Horns" and "Smack 'em
Sooners'' hit town .
This is the big one, but it 's U1e
same everywhere - New Haven,
Knoxville, Culwnbus and Berkeley
Last week 's score : 32-18, .640.
Sea!lln : 187.,2. 751.
Texas 20, Oklahoma 17 : The
l.onghorn defense , led by Steve
Mc Michael, keeps Billy Sims under

reasonable restraint.
Southern California 37, Stanford
14 : No . I remams No .I a~ainst a
sieadlly improvmg Pac· ID foe .
Alabama 43, Florida 7 It's hard to
find a stallstical category in wh1ch
the Crimson Tide 1sn 'ton or near th e
wp .
Mich1gan 25. Minnesota 14 : The
Wolverines, looking like Rose Bowl
material, s hould counter th e
Gophers ' Mark Carl!lln .
Penn State 40, Army 7 Agam
Curt1s Warner helps make thi s a
mismatch.
Temple 25, Syracuse 20 : The Owls,
feasting on tough meat , have

an

msauable

appet1te

Ill

sho~11

early

games.
Ohio State 30, lmJ1ana 14 : The
NCAA stax boys, &gt;n the back room s.
rate Art Schlichter's pass1ng
proficiency tDps .
Texas A&amp;Nl 25, Houston 21 · A
Southwest l&lt;Jughie . When in doubt Ill
U!at league, p1ck U!e home team .
Washington '1:1, Anrona State 19
The Huskies don't let the new kid on
U!e block get too feisty .
Tennessee '1:1, Georg ia Tech 14 :
The Volunteers bounce back and the
Yellow Jackets left most of the1r

sting m Irish hides .
Yale 20, Dartmouth 13 : The
feature in the Ivy League- patnl the
scoreboard blue .
Auburn 42, Vanderbilt 7: The
Plamsmen are probably the second
best team in Dixie .
Nebraska 37, Kansas 12 : What can
vou say about a learn that averages
~lose to 3:&gt;0 yards a game on the
groWld:
Notre Dame 39, Air Force 7: The
Fightin g Irish open U!e gates of
mercy and rest their stars for the
USC g ame.
Arkansas 21, T exas Tech 18: It 's
by no means a cinch, but you have to
stay with the Rd7.orbacks until they
stumble .
North carolina State 19, Maryland
15 Were the Terrapms plotting
something when they lost U!e last
two " Maybe
EAST
Princeton 14. Co lwnbia 7; Brown 22,
Penn 6; Roston College 23, West Va .
14 ; Hutgers 21. Connecticut 7;
Cornell H , Harvard 7; Holy Cross 19,
Colgate 12; P1ll 27. Cmcmnal1 14;
Ot•laware 25. Villanova 20 .
SOL'Til
Clemson 15. Va . Tec h 13; Georg1a
14 Louis1ana St. 7; Flonda St 21l,
M;ss . St. 6: Kentucky 19, MISSissippi
14: l.oUisville 17. Tulsa 14 : Duke 19,
Richmon d 14 ; Tulane 23, SouU!ern
ML'i.&lt; . 14 ; Navy 20, Wrn . and Mary 6.
MIDWEST
Iowa Z:l. Northwestern 7; Mi chigan
St . 23, WJsco nsm 7: Purdue 36 ,
lllm01 s 12; ~ ISsoun 11, Oklahoma
St 7: Kansas St 20 . Iowa St. 17;
~1arn1 I) 14. Oh10 U. 7; Purdue 36,
nhn01 S 7: Toledo 19, W. MI Chiga n 14 .
SOLTHWEST
Southern \lelhod1st 20, Baylor 14;
R1ce 22. Texas Chnst1an 17 : N .
Texa s St 15, ~ew MeXIl'U St. 7
F ,\R WEST
UCLA 28. Wa"ungton St. 6 ;
Cahforn1a 40, Oregon St. 21; 'lew
Mex acr1 25. !.as Vegas 14: M1arm ,
r'la 17, San D1ego St. 14 ; Color ado
St . 22. r:l Paso 14 : Utah 24. Wyommg
19; Utah St. 31 , Bngharn Young 24

DAYTI JN. Uh10 1 AP 1 Alnandt•r
Sdlctuss beltt'\'t' S th,· road tJJ &lt;Tlrl ll '
rn&lt;Jy bl· pet\'l'll wtlh JUnk f(•od .
&amp; ·hauss. whu fwcul s lh t· Instttult•
of Bwsoqal Ht'St'iirch a t St·~lltlt• Ctt\
College tn W ctslHilJ.,'1 on . hos tw•·; t
ht"re for Uw IH st Ulrt~ .Uay s to
partl l' l(&gt;&lt;l h ' m &lt;t senun;tr on ·Hod}
Llw rmstr y &lt;md Uffenlil'r Heht-t\· tor "
" Poverty and dornt·stt(' prob l etn~
and lostng a job etrt' obvw 11sly
tmp orta nt fCj&lt;"tor s tn crtrntnal
behaviOr, but so an• tilt' thtn gs Wt'
ea t and bn·otiw ... satd S('hauss. wh u
ts a ·form er parolt· ufftl't•r and
correc tions offt ctal.
" It 's not as sunplt· a ~ sa y m~ that
what

.Vf1U

l'CI!

•BIB OVERAU.S
•VESTS •COATS
•PANTS •JACKETS
•INSUlATED COVERAUS

•MEN'S
•WOMEN'S
•GIRLS'
•BOYS'

&lt;lfl'.

Announce birth
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth D. McCoy
are announcmg the birth of the1r f•r·
st child. a son. born on Sept 2!i •I
Holzer Med1cal Center Hospita l. He
weighed lllllC pounds. fi ve ounces
and was 20 inches long . He has U.•cn
named Shawn William .
Grandparenl'i are Mr t:~nd Mrs
W1ll 1e I J e,·m~. Letart, W Va , and
Mr . and Mrs . W11l1am MC"I'oy ,
(;alhpohs Ferry , W Va .
Great-grandparents are Mr and
Mrs Lee Clark, Mrs Letha l.Je\'lllg ,
Letart , W Va ; Mr Asbury See .
Wmter Haven. Fla .; Mr and Mrs
F:arl McCoy uf Hu~sell. W. Va
Mrs. McCoy ts the fanner Tarrume
Dtane l.ieving

lTI.'O!t•

tH I

t'IJJUtiUn&lt;tll)l

st~bJt•

f&gt;t.:rsun ." Sc hall'&gt;S addt-'tl
Hut h t• scud mort' r.~nd mort•
.';l wnltflt · ..,1udtes an· shuwmg Lhal
pour d tet 1':1n (' au se bt•ha\'IO r
pr obll' m s whtch can tw (1J rreett~d b~
pnMW r n utntwn
Schauss sa 1d a random stud y uf :m
)U\Tmle d ~ hnqut"nts and :10 other
~·f1Uths

wtlh nun-&lt;-Timmal behavior

nrobh-'ms fuw1d tha t both ~ro up s

·Junk ood causing
high crime rate???

consillTtt:''(.l far more sugar than tht'

n;H!onal averagt:! .
Th e delmquenl group cunswned
the equtv&lt;tlcnt of 50 teaspoons of

Trick or Treat
bags given to
Tnck ·n treat bags for the 14
veterans at Arcadia Nursing Home
were mad e by the juniors of the
American egion AUXJ~ary of Drew
Webster Post 39, Pomeroy, during a
workshop held at the home of Mrs .
Harry ])aviS , advisor
A birthday gift for Bill Kovnak .
"ad opted " veteran of the junior un it,
was wrapped and plans were made
fur U!e juruors to prov1de a birthday
cake for hun to share with the other
veteran.-; co nfined there. A birthday
card was s1gned for tum a long with
ll;dloween car ds fur Dorothy
Le1fhe1l, Billy Anderson, and Kov ·
nak .
Laura.Smi lh, Kt. 2, Pomeroy , was
welcomed as a new member. Members ere reminded that the National
Education Week posters will be
Judged at the Oct. 23 meeting of the
sc ni ur unit.
For the program , Mrs Davis
t;Jlked on safety She read a hiStory
of bicycles noting that the first one
was made m France and was called
"c~lensere ." She described it was a
far cry from today 's 10 speeds and
sa1d that it was not until 1890thal the
bicycle became popular in Amenca .
She satd that Americans are now
~~~rning a lesson Europeans have
kn own for years - peddle power L'
une way to beat the h1gh cost of
petroleum The rules of the road
were sturl1ed along with an article
enliUed " Thanks For Putting Me in
the Dn ver's Seat" w1th a number of
safety rules bemg reviewed
Mrs . DaviS assiSted by Annie
Wiles . served dups. d1p, and Kool·
Ald .

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOfl THE BEST DEALS IN THE

carhartt

WRANGLER

,\'UU

-

FOR

FOR

wh a t

llwuan tA·havtor ts tuu eompl~x lu
s1rnpltf y 11 down t o th:-~t, and eatmg
!Jw n ght fc~Jds 1n 1t ~dl w1ll not

Arcadia veterans

HEADQUARTERS

HEADQUARTERS

I~

•

TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon ., Tues., W ed., Fflday &amp; Sat .
a: 30 to s: 00 Thursday till 12 Noon

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va .

773 -5592

sug&lt;tr e:ts 1ts iliuly dVcragt: . w~ull' thl'
other group avera!-!.t:"d 37 tea spoons
dally. Jno stl .~ fr·u111 jw1k f1;od s and

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
ANTS WON'T TAKE ffiNT
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAH POLLY - I have moved in·
to a new home and the cupboards
are invaded with ants . Spraying has
not fazed them. What can I put 1n my
cupboards to drive the ants away' F .B.
DEAH F. B. - Plan to have
cucumbers in some form for dinner
tonigh t. Save the skins aod put them
all around m your cupboards and
leave until they are very dry. Then
replace. The odor is nice and fresh
and I have found the ants will stay
away . Some people sprinkle cin·
namon or cloves on their shelves. POLLY
DEAH POLLY - A reader had
black ants all over her house and
could not gel rid of them . She should
buy some tobacco dust Isold at most
garden or hardware stores 1 and
sprinkle it all around the ouls1de
foundatiOn of the house . 1llis has
been the only sure-fire solution I
have ever found and after using 11 I
have never seen another ant. SARAH.
DEAH POLLY - Like Mrs. B. C.
M. ants invaded my kitchen - they
seemed to be everywhere. I made
small lines of borax just outside my
back door and U!en along the sink
and thts effective ly discouraged
them. They disappeared and never
returned so after a week I removed
the borax. There is just my dog and
men the house and I tried the borax
lrt•tead of a poison because of my pet
and it worked . - RONAlD .
DEAR POLLY - To remove the
smell of mothballs from clothes or
blankets I put U! em in the clothes
dryer, with a fabnc softener sheet,
and leave for a few minutes. nus
removes the odor and does not hann
U!e fabric if 1t is dry I have done this
with coats and my husband 's su1ts.
- TO!'&lt;l
DEAH POIJ. Y - Die your dingy
white bras in strong hOt tea and then
sWish them 1n cold water. The result
will be a nice ecru color . It is good
for new bras , too . - MAHY
DEAR POU.Y - You had some
doubts but Stanley is right about
bloWing cigar smoke on house plan·
ts . I am now 73 and remember my
dad doing just that, e&lt;cepl that he
smoked a pipe . Mom's fuschlas were
always free of bugs. as were her
other planL&lt; . - M.M

Polly will send you one of her
signed thank -you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pmnler, Peeve or Problem m her
col umn . Write Polly's Pmnters m
care of this newspaper .

PTA TO MEET
A meeting ol the Middleport PTA
will be held at 7 p.m . lurughl at the
Meigs Junior High School. Supt.
David Gleason and board members
have been invited to discuss the
teachers' strike With interested
parenls and tea chers

AITEND MEETING
AT LOGAN
Mrs . Farie Kennedy and Mrs.
Marie Hawkins of Mary Shrine 37,
Order of the White Shrine &lt;i
Jerusalem, Pomeroy, attended the
MI. Pleasant Shrine 57 at Logan
recently. The Supreme Worthy H1gh
Priestess, Mrs . Josilee Street of
Sand Sprin~s , Oklahoma, held the
inspection . Fred Williams of Colum·

bus, the s upreme watdunan
shepherds, was also present.

Large selection of House
Plants
and
Hanging
Baskets .

HUBBARQIS
GREENHOUSE

V -6 engine, 4 speed trans . ,
radial !ires, wire wheel
covers.

$5995
1978 AMC
GREMLIN
Six

cy linder,

automati c

trans., good gas economy .

Economy
Plus ,
roomieness, slant, 6 cv l.
eng , p.s ., a c.

2,500 miles, local owner,
sold il new , six cy lin ·
der .
Low Miles , Low Price

1976 CHEVY
CHEVETTE

992-2157

4 cylinder eng .. automatic
trans ., local owner, wire
wheel covers.

4 cy linder eng., automatic,
p .s . , am ·fm radio, radial
I ires .

Special

BElWEEN

8:30 &amp; 5:00

NEW STYLING
MORE FUEL
EFFICIENCY

OVERDRIVE TRANS.
MORE STANDARD
EQUIPMENT

.

THE FIRST NEW TRUCKS OF THE 80's.

1979 FORD
MUSTANG

$5495

1976 OLDS
STARFIRE
4 cvl ., 4 speed trans ..
silver metalli c paint .

$145 95

ONLY

GAS MODELS
30 GALLON

40 GALLON
95

$121 95 $134

EBERSBACH
HARDWARE
Phone 992·2811
llOW.Main Pomeroy,O.

SYLVANIA

POLAROID
FLASH BAR FILM

REG.
'1.92

10

FLASHES

BAYER ASPIRIN

$}79

$109

EVEREADY
9 VOLT
TRANSISTOR
BATIERY
NO. Zl6

REG. '3.73

REG. 89'

Cotton

1975 DODGE
DART SPORT

$3495

ELECTRIC
WATER HEATER

ONLY

TYPE 108
TYPE 88

ROBITUSSIN

OM
6-8 HOUR
COUGH
CONTROL
4 oz.
ONLY S} 39
REG. 12.38

2oz . Reg . 89c
ONLY 64~
CREAM DEODORANT••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
•••
Whitman 's Chocolale Covered
,
149
9oz . Reg . • 2 . 00
ONLY $
DOUBLE DIP MINTS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

·~ ·

we

Extra clean, extra sharp,
six cylinder .

52 GAL GlASS LINED

Tussy

~]mJp2JmWTI5)

1976 PLYMOUTH
VOlARE WAGON

MOR-FLO

HOWER OF VA LUES

ONLY

Blf!ck with con trasting red
pinstripe and red cloth •n ·
ter ior . Loaded

BEST

Syracuse, Ohio

992·5776

$199

1979 JEEP
CJ-5

dcl&gt;nq uent group got more than half
their daily calorie supply from milk.
Schauss said U!at members of the
delinquent group may have loaded
U!e1r systems wiU! Jreservatives in
the milk which are known to cause
behav1or ills, and may have cut their
hod1es' s upply of magnesium, which
he sa1d 1s vital w muscle and
nervous ~yslem development.
ln general, Schauss said, behavior
problems can be caused by too much
of almost any food , and U!e best way
to co WJlerat'l U1e problems is with a
balanced d1et.

YOU

30 Gal. Elec. S119.95
52 Gal . Elec. S137.95

6 oz.

1978 OLDS
STARFIRE

th.:tt heavy sugar

{·u ns umpttun c&lt;Just:s be havior
pro blt:: m s not only beC' dU.se of 1t.s
uut1alm jt:ctlon tJf qw t·k energy, but
::a lso becau se the body then
overreacts w1th l/lsulm secretwns
anU tJrups lht' bluuU .-, u~&lt;tr !~vel tuu
low , causw g los~ 1Jf {'unc~nlra llon ,
lrnta b1 hty . letharg~ r1nd nn tll&lt;lbllit y
t.o adc:lpt wuJer stri!SS .
The same study also showed that
tlll' ddmqut' nl group clrr~nk far mort&gt;
IIHlk than U!e other group of youths
11!HJ that some members of the

GW' POT
$1.()() each or 6/$500

COUGH MIXTURE

1979 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

~: haus.s sr~ 1d

HARDY MUMS

VICKS
FORMULA 44 ~""

COME ON IN

of

soda pup . ht' semi

RADIAL TIRES
STANDARD

NEW
ACRODYNAM IC ·
DESIGN
MORE
PAY LOAD
CAPACITY

AU NEW
ROOMY CAB
;

-------1

Better Ideas for the 80S. FORD......
.

PAT HILL FORD, INC.
FOR A FRIENDLY DEAL SEE ROCKY HUPP, DARREL DODDRIL OR PAT HILL GEN. MGR.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
992 .2196
3RD AVE.

100 's Reg . Sl .29

ONLY

73~'
,.

COSMETIC BALLS•••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••••• ••••• ••••••
Becton Dickinson
Oral or Rectal Reg. 52.79
ONLY $139
FEVER THERMOMETER •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
YardlevMusk

•,oz.

ONLY

43~

AFTER SHAVE LOTION ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •••••••

HANDKERCHIEFS ••••••••• ~ ••• •••• ••••••••••••••••••••••• ••• 99~
Men ' s

White-4 Pack

ONLY

$

$

A

A

v
E

K·· nn• ·th M cCu llouqh . R Ph
Ch~~es Riffle R . Ph
RCin .tld Het!H lln q . R
Mon th r uS.l t 8 VO rl m to9p m
)u nd.&gt;y I D JO to t 7 JOandlto9p m
PH
PRf '&gt;C RIPTl O N S
·
Fnendly Sen.tlre
Pome,.oy 0 .

0

"llqht &gt; toll

Q

v
E

�-

/
7- The Daily Sentln€1, Midd leport -Pomeroy. 0 . Thursday . Oct. 11 . 1979

&amp;-The Daily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 _Thursday . Oct . 11 . JY79

Sore throat may cause child 's heart disease

Husted, Smith report on travels to AA UW
A program on the travels of two
members, Martha Husted and Helen
Smith, followed a carry-in dinner of
tlie Middleport Pomeroy Area Branch of the American Association of
Univeristy Women held recenUy m
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co .
The two presented highlights of
their recent trip to England and
displayed some souvenirs . Mrs .
Husted told of the siX days aboard
the Queen Elizabeth II, lan ding at
Southampton, flying to Brussels.

Bcl..:tuH: where they met .::tnd s pent
tune at the home of a pen fl'll of Mrs
Husted . She descri~ the t•t ty , the
tram ride to see the Cliffs of Dove r .
the boat ndes, taXJs, coac h tnps.
delays, as well as the good food.
fnend!) people. and mud ern hotels
She said she especially enjoyed
some of the theatre plays and tour of
Shakespearean mterests
Miss Smllh told of rrJOilllng the 35
people of the1r tour group in I ,ongon .
uf the stghtseemg 1n Greater !,ondon
w1th a gutde. the changmg of the

g ut:.~rds at Hl Hk1ngham Pal&lt;:t ~"l', thL•
Tower of !.omJon , Windsor ("•asUt•,
Wesley Chapel , Wesley's Home
Museum . Jane Austln 's II oust• . and
Sahsbury Cathed ra l and of attending the Kuya l Guard':i Church on
Sunday .
M t~s S11 11 lh abo talked about thl'
tnp northward tv Bri stol to see
exhtbil• and the Paddlllglon Bear
statul' , and the boundary of Wales
when• tht.· tounst£ were invtted tnto
homes fo r teo . She told or Nm1h
Walt' s tJy lh&lt;· ln sh Sea, 1:1 su numT

Bookmobile in Pomeroy over weekend
The Meigs County Bookmobile w•ll
be on the upper parking lot •n
Pomeroy on Friday from 4 to 8 p.m .
and on Saturday morning , Oct. 13

fr om 9 a .m . lo 1 p .m .
Me1gs Cou nt1ans are inv ited to get
011 b&lt;&gt;ard and take a look at the man y
kinds of free materials and serv~t·es
offered by their bookmobile these
days .

ALL SWEATERS
WINTER JACKETS,
COATS
AND

FLANNEL SHIRTS
.I

10% OFF

Some or these ktnds of nuttendls
and servt ces are home tnaintenance
and car repair informatiOn . holiday
and gift ideas , and lots of we~tcms,
romances. mysteri es and c urrent
best ~Uers An inter-library Juan
system offers Me1gs Coun ty patrons
inforrlilltlon and books unavai lable
on the bookmobJie . All the patron
needs to do is ask for the information
or book he or she wants . The Book mobtlc s taff can then obtain the
malenal through Ohw Univers1ly
and mail it Lliredly to the pelt ron
Applicatwns for free talkmg book
machines for the visua ll y and
physi cally impaired are a\'ailable un
the bookmobi le Other Jtl' lHS the
bookmobile has on hand for the en JOyment of Me1g s County reSJdc nL'
are records, paperbacks anrl t1
va riet y of t:urrent JTU:igazines
"Your Bookmobile is a sen·1ce of
U1e Pomeroy -Middleport i.Jbranes
and the Ohio Valley Area I Jbrarics
tOVA I. I,", says Jeanne Hobatma.
libranan .

Birthday noted

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
Kerm 's Korner

126 E. Main

reso rt and locHtion of Woodwor1h's
htnm•.., &lt;:tllll the l'ar lt.slt' hotels , not
now so mode rn , With the Cathedral
grounds . She also talked about Edinburg. Scotland. the statue ol
I Jvmg.ston 's dog ilnd the first statue
of l.uwoln outs1de the United States.
Mrs . Husted had a recording of the
Scottish Pipers to play allhe dumer.
Mrs . Dorothy Woodard , preSident.

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

l

I

Social Calendar

THI :HSIMY
WINIHNG THAI!. Carden Cl ub , 8
p 111 '11n1r sddy ~tt thl' hu!lll' of !\1r!'.
MarJt!l"ll' Walburn . Pr og r a m on
macrantt'

I.AUKEL CLIFf' Better Health
Club, 6:30p .m . potluck dinner at the
Metgs County Infirmary. The club's
anmversary to be celebrated . Suns hine Sister exchange.
JiliGULA!{ METING, Easlen
Band Boosters. 7:30p.m. Tuesday in
the high school band room. A
treasurer will be elected and plans
made for serv mg the F'arm Bureau
Banquet a t the Chesler Elementary
Sc·hool Parents of a ll band members
urged to attend .
I{ACINE LOUGE 461 F and AM
Thursday at 7. 30 p.m. for purpose of
observing past mas ters mght.
Speaker will be past grand ITJasler
James Harbage . Hefreshrnenl' All
mdster masons invited.
GAIJJA COUNTY Sa lon 612,
E1g ht and Forty. home of Mrs . Ellen
DeWeese. Point Pleasant, W. Va ,
i::lOp.m . Thursday.
MEI GS COUNTY Humane
Soc iety. 7:30 Thursday at the Thrift
Shop.
PHA YEH SEIWICE for persons
involved in both Sides of Meigs Local
school slnke, 7 to 9 p.m . Thursday at
Pomeroy United Methodist Church .
Sponsored by Meigs County
Mi ntsteria l Assn ; those attending
can come and gu as they wish during
SIJDES ON their tnp to Alaska
will be shown by Mr. and Mrs . Hoy
Gr ueser at 7: :ro p.m. Thursday when
Hock Sprmgs Grange meets in
regular session .
PHE CEPTOH BETA BETA
Soron ty Thursday 7:4&gt; p .m . H1ver
Boat room at Athens County Savmgs
and l.oan . Pal Mtlls wJII speak on
Hussta .

-,

&gt;'

lS

29 attend luncheon
Twenty-nine were m attendan ce at
Tueday 's rove red dish luncheon of
the Ladies Auxiliary of the United .
Pente&lt;:ostal Ch urch, Middleport.
1
held at the c hurch .
1
During the business meeting tt
was noted that 1980 towel calendars
are for sale for $1.7&gt; and Christmas
wrapping paper is for sale for 52 a
package . To place orders resident•
are inv ited lo call 992-2502 or 9923507 .
Games were played with prizes
going to Mrs . Carol Craft and Miss
Patty Lambert . Mrs Virginia
Vila toe spoke on " Women's Place in
God's Work ."

STOREWIDE SALE
ON All NEW WINTER MERCHANDISE

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

l:n;l1} hn·ndc. !J!lrlieme

INCLUDES ALL: Billy The Kid Jeans,
Bryan Dresses,
Carters Sleepwear,
Cinderella Dresses,
Andy's Things Skirts &amp; Blouses,
Playland and Kaper Jac
Winter Coats, Jackets and Snowsuits,
Rob Roy Shirts
ALSO A SPECIAL SELECTION OF
BOYS WINTER SHIRTS
40~o OFF

THE REV. Gene Clark, l'indlay, will conduct re\;vai services at the
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene at 7 p.m. each even ing from Oct. 16
through Oct . 21. The Hev . Dale Bass, pastor, invites the public _

STILL HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF
WINDBREAKERS AND LIGHTWEIGHT JACKETS

AT 40% OFF

the ser\ice.

Pomeroy, Ohio

receivtng names of those interested in becoming members of
the group . Dues are payable to Mrs.
Kathryn Knight. The president
asked members to read the
publication, "Graduate Women ",
September-October issue for review
of the convention held in
Albuquerque last June . She also
spoke of the AA UW Day of Learning
to be held Oc1 . 20 in Columbus.
Next meeting will be held in the
K1verboat !{oom on oct: 23, 7:30
p.m . with the program focus under
the leadership of S.tsy Horky. A
s1 lent auction will be held for the
purpose of the Education Foundation Fund .

se rved as hos te~ for the dinner and
u.'it.."d ~reen and orange color
scheme Mrs . Kate Jarrell greeted
those attending and gave each one a
leaf name tag . Mrs . l'ay Sau~ had
table grace .
Mrs Sauer. program development, discussed and distributed the
program books . She listed the new
topics of study as "Managing
Hesources for Tomorrow" and
" Families Facing Change ," The
areas of interests are conununity,
cultural interests. education. tn ternat.wnal relations, and women.
Each member will serve on a committee.
Miss Kosalic Story noted that she

ELEANOR Cl HCLE. Heath
United Methodist Ch urch, 7:30pm
with Mrs . Jean Ann Bradbury, Mrs.
Mary O'Brien, and Mrs. Scotty Sim ·
pson, hostesses .

Many adults feel that heart
disease is related to old age - but
sume parents know otherwtse . About
25,000 bab1es are born each year
with congenital heart defects and
100,000 childr en s uffer rheumatic
heart disease, according to the
American Heart Association, Cen-

Hours :
9: 30 to 5 : 00
Mon . thru Sat .
9 : 30 toB : OO
Friday

...-

COMPLETES TRAINlNG Pvt. E-t Robert ~~r. son of
Argyle ~~r and F1orenre
Deeter, Racine, bas eompleled
basic training ID the U. S. Army
IUid graduated from the military
poUce acboo1 at Fort McCieilan,
Ablflama . He qualified llll e1pert
with the Ml&amp;Al rifl e and band
greoadea. He will now be
Uliped to a pennaoeot duty
station with lbe mtUtary pollee at
Frankfurt, Germany.

VIS4'

Near Stiftler 's in Pomeroy
2nd Street
992 -3586
Pomeroy, 0.

___......---...).)

Personals from
the bend.

you're riQht
on course with a
RACINE BANK

savlnQs plan

The second btrthday ot Jay
Patri ck McKel vey was celebrated
w1th a party at hLS home recently .
The Haggedy Ann and Andy theme
was camed out m the cakes baked
by hJS mother He 1s the son of \lr .
a nd Mr s M&lt;:trvin McKelvt•y,
SyracuS&lt;'.
Attending the party were Jay's
brother. M1chael. ~randparents. \lr .
and Mrs . William McKelvey and \lr .
and Mrs . George Schneider. hts
g rea t -g randmother . Mrs
Anna
Hilldore, Mr and Mrs _Don J olm;un,
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Kloes and son,
Michael. Mrs . Gladys !{obson . and
M1ss Eleanor llobson . Sending g1fts
were Mr and Mrs . Wayne
Brubaker . Hon and Carol, Mr. and
Mrs Char les Duckworth . Mrs.
I.aDorma LewiS , Bnan and Bruce
Johnson, Mr . and Mrs John Scivinsky , Mr . and Mr s. Hon Halley, Honda and Henee

-

Mrs. Helen Martin, Pittisburgh,
Pa., ill here for a viSit w1th her
brother-in-law and siorter, Mr and
Mrs . James Criswell, Middleport .
Mrs. Dale K. Housh and daughter.
Kathy, Apple Creek. were recent
visitors of her parents, Mr. and Mrs
Bon Turner.
Mr and Mrs . Nonnan Yeauger of
Melbourne, Fla. are here for a vtsil
with her mother, Mrs. !{eva S.ach,
Mr . and Mrs . Denver Hice , other
relatives and friends .
: Mr. and . Mrs. Richard Leifheit of
Springfield, spent several days here
visiting Mr . and Mrs. Harry Davis .
: Mrs . S.rnice Bruley of Detroi t,
Mich., is here visiting her aunt, Mrs .
: Louise Hawkins.

FINE SELECTION OF

\

CAR COATS, DRESS COATS,

\.

AND ALL WEATHER COATS.
SHOP NOW.

BAHR
CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Open house held
A fall open house was held at the
recent meeting of Chester Cub Scout
Pack~ at the seoul hall in Chester.
Cubs and their parents were on
hand for the presentation of awards
earned during the past month . The
pack was presented a check from
the Isaac Walton League as a pnze
for being the group with the most
members present at the National
Hunting and Fishing Day
celebration held at Royal Oak Park .
!Ubbons were awarded to all cubs
and their families who took part m
the two r ecent parades. Brian
, Beeler and Leonard Will re&lt;:eived
: bobcat patches . The arrow rJ. light,
· highest award in cub scouting, was
, presented to Dana Eynon and Brent

-

WEEKLY SUPER SAVER
Put your mon.-y where it does the
most for you. We have savings accounts thai earn the hi ghest in terest allowed by law! Get facts!

SUBURBAN
•

WOOD/COAL
BURNER
*AUTOMATIC THERMOSTAT
HEAVY DUTY FIRE BAR
* EASY TO INSTALl

*

Meig.~

County

1-'eople

ONLY

- Norton

•34900

HOMECOMING SERVICE
The annual home&lt;:onning of the St.
1
Paul United Methodiort Chureh m
Tuppers Plains will be held this SW1 day .
Church school will begin at_9 a .m
followed by a mornin&amp;worship at 10
, a .m . with the pastor , f{jchard
ThomaS. speaking.
There will be a fellowship dinner
, In the church basement at !NO p.m.
·lnd an afternoon program -MU begJn
. 11 2 p.m . with special mus•c by the
Angelaires from Sugar Grove . The
public ill invited .

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
Racine, Ohio

.

l

Tim Ht·id
t ·ompldt ·~

Members and guests of Preceptor
Bta S.ta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Soronly enjoyed a haynde and bar becue Sunday evening at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Mora. Mrs .
Mora and Mrs . Leola Young , social
chairmen , planned the outing.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Hugh Custer, Mrs. Mildred Karr,
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Krautter , Mrs .
!Jilian More , Mrs. Arm Hupe, Mr .
and Mrs . Mora, Mr. and Mrs .
George Morris. Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Hue, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thomas, and
Mr and Mrs. Heid Young. Other
guests were Mr . and Mrs . David
Mora. Mark Mora, Mary Mora. and
J eff Elick.
!'ARM MUSEUM
DINNER SUNDAY
The Mason County Farm Museum
is holding its second annual covered
dish picnic dirmer on Sunday, Oct.
14, at 1 p .m . All members of the
Farm Museum and their families
are urged to attend . There will be
plenty of old time music throughout
the day. Alter the dinner all
buildings will be open for visitors
Mrs. Hazel Smith, Mrs . Velma
Bussis, Mrs. Delores Taylor, Mrs.
Jane Johnso n and Mrs. Willmarine
Hill are members of the committee
to nnake arrangments for the picni c.

tral Ohio Heart Chapter .
The Heart Association's report,
"Heart Facts." states that uve r
13,000 child ren ~ied as a result of
rheumatic heart disease in 1976, the
last year for which governmental
health statistics are available.
Hheumat1c fever usually strikes
children between the ages of five
and 15. It is always preceded by a
streptococcal infection in the form of
a strep throat, scarlet fever or an in fection of the nuddle ear .
Not every sore throat is a strep
throat. However, the Amen can
Heart Association advises parents to
seck medical attention 1f their
child's sore throat comes on suddenly, hurts most when he swallows
or if he has swollen glands in his
neck . A fever of 101 to 104 degrees
usually indicates a strep infection _
Headaches or nausea are oth warning symptoms. Penicillin or oth er
antibiotics can cure a strep mfection
before rheumatic fever develops _
Congenital heart defects are
another major type of childhood cardiovascular disease . Each year
about 25,000 infants are born with
defective hearts. In most cases.
researchers still do not know what
makes the heart develop abnormalldy before a baby is born .
However, they do know that German
measles (rubella 1. if contracted
d unng the fist three months of
pregnancy. can intertere w1th the
nom~al de velopment of an infant 's
heart.
German measles can be controlled

by vaccinating school-age children
lf everyone is urununized during
childhood, German measles will no
longer ·pose a threat to pregnant
women adn their unborn children
Hardening of the artens and high
blood pressure are two other fonn.•
of heart and blood vessel disease
that have been d1agnosed m
c hildren . Heart-healthy habits for med early in life can help prevent
these diSease s.
Parents who refrain fro m

smokJnt . serve nutntional meals
low 1n saturated fats and
cholesterola and encourage their
famili s to participate in regular
exercise activlly pave the way
toward a healthy adult life for their
children .
For further information on
childhood heart disease , contact the
Ce ntral Ohio Heart C'hapter of the
Amencan Heart Association, 200 E .
f{jch St. P 0 Thox 739, Colwnbus,
Ohio 43216 .

Up, up and away in

Armadillos
Get a "Free" Flying Saucer
with any pair of Morgan Quinn ·
casuals for guys and gals.

,...., ' ...r.'...' . . .
r:·
-r·. ..I·
. ' i\.
. -'
- -· ,,

WHILE

f . •

)

_... 't'"
•'

I(.J
'--'

QUANTITIES

'·

'

,.," . .
.

. ; · ··~

LAST

()Worgan Quimt
MARGUERITE'S SHOES
POMEROY, OHIO ·-

102 E. MAIN

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

MENU
Tomato .lui&lt;·~·
\\hill· Fi,.h
Bakt'd l'olalo
J), .

..,,.,.rt

Roll

traiuiug

Marme P\1 . Tum M \\etd. son of
CeCil Ke1d of !{t. 1. McArthur. has
completL--d rl"Crwt tramlng at the
Mar me Corps O.,pot. San Diego.
Dunng the 10 and one-half week
tramtng cycle, Ke1d learned basi cs
of batllt·fidd .s urvival.
He was
mtrodun-d to U1e typical daily
ro utult~ that he will expenence
durmg hJS enlistment and studied
personal and professional standards
traditionally exhibited by Mannes .
A 1979 gra duate of Vintoo High
School. he jOJnc-d the Manne Corps
1n February . 1979
Today in Histor y
By The Asso&lt;'iatrd Press
Today JS Thursday, Oct 1t, the
284lll day of 1979. There are 81 days
left 1n the year
Today' s highlight m hJstory :
On thiS date m 1811 , \he f1rst steam
ferry wall put into operation by
mventor John Stevens between 1\ew
York C'1ty and Hoboken . N.J .
OthJS dale
ln 1779, a Revolutionary War hero,
the Poltsh nobleman Cas1mi r
Pulas ki. was killed m flghttng for
Amen r an lndependt'nce at the
Batt le of Savannah.
In 1863, Thomas Ed1son filed
papers for his first mvcnt10n. an
electrical vote recorder to rapidly
tabulate votes in Congress. Congress
rejected 1t.
In 1932, the Democratic National
Com.mittee sponsored a television
program from New York - the first
political telecast m the Umted
States.
In 1962, Pope John XJI opened the
second Vatican Council of the
Roman Cathol ic Church .

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL A 'Ill ER !CAN
Meets
eOhio duilding Codes
eAFHA&amp;VA
our lot model today .

s....

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
1100 E. Maon
Porn eroy, Ohio

992 -7034

Cofft•t&gt; or i\1 ilk

\'IHY
PAY

MORE
FOR
CARPET

CLEANING
Gel profess ional
resul1s a1 a
lrac1ion of 1he cost

ENTERTAINMENT
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

\\) \\\ 'l.
ALL LEGAL

America's No. 1
Home Carpet

CROWD
PLEASERS
3 PC. GROUP
FROM ZANESVILLE, 0.

C/ean1ng

S "'5tem

BEVERAGES SOLD

,--------------'

I RENT
S}OO
I
I FOR
PER ~OUR I
_____________
(4 -Hou r M inimum ) JI
I.... ONLY

STAR SUPPLY CO.

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

THE MEIGS INN
l'onwro~,

Phone 992-:MJ29

0.

anli:s houselieeper slipped aa:identally
-~~~- And was htJSpitalized consequently.
·-. It, Whe11 the hospital hill
CaTTle /tJ Hanli he got ill.
Did he nee(/ J#Jrliers C(Jmp?
Evidently.
·
Oh10 law reQuires 1hat you have Worke r 's Compensation
coverage tf you pay more than $160 total wages in any
calendar quarter
That .ncludes your babysitter. the kid who cu1s your grass .
the coll ege student who paints your h ouse . What's more . your
homeowner's insurance may not protect you .
Should you be cov ered? If you 're not sure. call your
lawyer• Sound lega l advice can cost a lot less than you think.
And i1 can keep you out of troub le .

ohio state bar association
WhaiiJOU don~ /mow abouJ the law could cost you.

•

•If 'JI"'ll do11 1know a Iawver. call the Lawver Ae lerral Sennce in Ohio 1-B(X}- 282 -13500

�rnt&gt;l' h.;.m t~

reaches $1.,500 mark
TUPPEHS PLAINS ~ The Tup pers Plain.s Area Emergency Squad
has st.a rted tt.s drive tu est.abltsh fun ·
ds to budd a building to home the1r
e mergency vehicle
The squad plans to be III operation
by the ftrsl of the year .
Ni of today $1:;()() of a goal of
$6 ,000 , has b&lt;een rec1ved
All
donations arr a pprecia ted and rna..,.

be sent to tht&gt; Pt&gt;m eroy :-.allon~l
Bank , Tupp&lt;:rs !'la ms Branch or

Kiven to any squad member

Canvassmg for addi~onal funds
w1l l b&lt;e held 011 S.ttunla)·- Oct 13. tn
thl' Olln·, ! lr dTl~t·. anrl northem
Cht'stt'r Townshtp areas .
IndJ vtdua l s and tJusJ nc.sse!'i that
ltavt• Junalt•d su far an· llslt"1:l below .
Agnes Htll , :.-:1ta Jean H.1h:lm·.
Tony Jont's. II A. l'ule . JHll Bailev .
!.cuT~ Yn ung, Ina ~asst• r . J t;ll
Stout, Carl Hcm1 h lll, Evl' !Yn Sum-

merfteld. !'lycte Headlc-1', l{av
Larkul.'i , fW.y l'rr1ft . (~ary \iu rph~:.
Kt'tth '11tlkr . HubL·rt r:dwanls. J\11\
Ro yd .John Arbcm~h. Oscar H.ab~
cock , ].drr~ \1 tllhonL'. Lulu Huff man . LuL·~ YPung . Duns and !sa c
J al'ksun. JaJIIL'~ H.l dl'nour. Mrs Ed ward \1 urph~. DIXIl' Sun·I. Wtl h e~m

M Wells , Gary Mc Donald, H.ay
Hullms .

Nnnna

Arbaugh ,

Man e

"Jhcewell, Jamus LaComb, Clifford
Wood, Raymond Saucer , H.alph
Blue . Charles Hatf ie ld , Co ra
F:mnck , Junior Kennedy, Donald
Landon . David Murphy, Lola Gnffl n Grace Kuhn . Everett Schilz
Waneta Bowm.rm. Hubert Maison .
Marv 1n Murphy , Ted Connolly,
Koger ~·ort11ey G and G Used Ca~
1A,t. Vernon Milhone , Clav Green
Mrs . Lamp , Lodwick's · Market '
~uss.ell Mollohan , Beulah Maxey:
Stella Adktns , E:dtlh Harper, David
amJ J ea rme Baker, IJnda Bowen .
Homer Bowen, Dale Welch. 1£Wl s
'111 ller . .Iorden Ridenour. Chster
Carson. Host&gt; Tuckers, Charles
l'&lt;m. Florence and HJ chard Spen cer. J oyce 1-i.ltc hu~, Norma Newland
Hoy Keed. Mike ~'arrell, Dana Hoff~
man , Eddle Pyle , Robe rt Fortney,
! ~Mar Lyons. Guy Spencer. Mrs . H .
T Dutson. Floren ce Balser, Lucy
Chesser . '11ary Alerrson. Marv&gt;n
and Mma Walker . H.oland Torre ncr
Mr and Mrs . Vernon Max ey:
Ma:une Chapman . W C Blake. Sam
Ba1os , MaxJ ne Chapman. and W1lma
'11cM1Ui on .

HEW conducts
dental survey
The Metgs Count y llealth Depart ment wtshl's tu lllii kl' resldL·nl"i
a ware of a new and unportant sur vey bemg condu(·te&lt;l by IIF.W .
A rnaj or l1eld study to detem11ne
the prevalenl'l' of dental dtsease
among Anwm ' e~n children a the
treatmenL"i rweded

has Ueen an -

nounced by llf.W 's i'&lt;aliona l In stitute nr l~nt;tl Ht'_'iearch . Tooth
decay IS the most co nunon childhood
ct1sease
Mor e than 40 ,00J students 1n
classes

rangm~ f rom kmderga.rten

through lugh sc hol. wtll partll'lfl&lt;J IR
m the .study
The study " to i&gt;e completed IJv
·
J une 198().
Dr Da v1d B ~·ott . d1redor uf the
Natto nal Institute ol Dental Kesea r eh satd "Th ere havt' been prr\·wus
stm.hes of the n:tent of tooth dt•ca\
but 1tt1~ one w1ll tnclude a mu~·h
larger "&gt;(-tmpif· () f schc'HJl c·hlldren
dr&lt;JI4": l frtiJ!I tht• f ull rangP uf 111rnme

leYt&gt;l.s ;wd rl'p rt•st•nt.a!t\'l' of bot h
mrt-t l and urban k:! rou~
· \ ow th;d n H'thuJ. s t u pre\·ent
tooth Jl'cay rm: being wJdt•ly used,
wr must haYc a r el wbh' reft:ren('e
a~au1st whi ch t11 me.asure public
health effecL&gt;. "-' wpll as to tdt•nlily
segmrnL'\ of the populHl111 n that need
spenal he I~ ..
Wf.STA T Inc
uf Huc kvill&lt;' .
Marylrmcl , wtll co nd uct the ~ Ur\' t'\
under contnH"t w1th tiw Irl'\lltull' 1;1
at least 1,820 L'lass roum.'i 1n publ1 c.
privalt:' . tt nd parochial sc hols 1n
seven geograp tll (' reglorl.') of tlrt· con-

li nen tal Uni!Rd States .
The survey team of e&gt;ght dentists
attended a three-day training course
conducted by the Institute in Jul y
•nd started visiting schools in Sep tember to conduct the dental

cxarruna twns.
All the children wtll have &gt;den ti cal
examma tions :
t i l A check for tooth decay ur
fill mgs on the surface of every
prunary and perman ent tooth. or for
ntlssiiig teeth .
2 J An t&gt;xarrunallo11 to record the
de~ree and loeat1on of gum UI Oammalton and the need for in ~tructi o n in pesonal ur.al hygiene or
professt onal tooth cleaning .
t 3 1. F o llowing
&lt;·ategor~es
estabhshed by the World Health
Organ11.ati on, detemuna~on of the
treatments ne-eded to correct or
res lore each cluld 's de ntal health .
; 41 A notation of previous or
current orthc~Jun tl c treatment
On foml.S granling permiss ion for
ea ch child ·s participatiOn . parents
Will be asked to suppl y tnformalwn
on age. sex, race, and fami l y In·
come.
The llls tttute , ustng the pres.en t
study as a baselille, plans to repeat
the survey at mlervals to detect
L' hanges m tile 1nc 1dence of tooth
Lll'Ci:I,Y in any regio n, to tar1::et
apee~al emphaSis prograrn.s lrwarrl
h1gh-nsk age grou ps, and to
measure how efective ly new preven ti ve meas ures ha ve reduced dental
decay

SGT. FREDERICK J SMITH
JR ., will arrive this
for a JC}
day leave. He had been highl)'
commended for e:xf'dlent JWrfunnanct&gt; during his fivt' years in
tile service. He and his famil y
will be with hls lather , 510 s.
Second Ave ., Middl&lt;•port, during
the leavr .

..,,.,:k

Sgt. Smith
respected

by superiors
By Bob Huenich
As a duck takes to water so has
Frederi ck J . Sllll th , .Jr , a 1972
gradua te of Me tgs High S&lt;:hool taken
to service in the U. S. Anny .
Sgt . Sm1 th, who 1s seheduled to
arn ve in Middlepo rt this week
a long With his wife and daugh ter, o~
a leave, has been .st.rtlioned in the
Berlin area ul Germany for the pa't
four years.

He and hLS fami ly will be sta ytng
wtth Ius faU1er who retired from th
U. S. Anny w1th 2t years of scrvt ce
While a specialbt m ve hicle maintenance . Sgt Stm th has extended
himself to other ft e lds s uc h as
becoming an anns ex pert , and has
attended speeia l co urses on race
relations. hwnan relattuns and cou nselor traming anrt has been particularly acll\'(' tn a runnmg sports
program .
He has received a Presidential
Sports Award from President J tmmy Carter 1n recognition of ht s runnmg a s wrll a.s awards for ta ktng
part 1n the Usareur cr oss country
champ1on.sh1p &gt;n Kaltenbrwm and
holds ce rtifi cates of awards fur ru nnmg 1,000 miles . He has been com~e nded sever al ~mes by Rn g
(.reneral Wil liam C. Moore fur his
parttclpallon m nmous cross country runs .
On en.l1 sted t'valuat10n reports,
Sgt . Smith ha s rece ived the highest
Krodes possible frum h1s superior offl eers . Followl!l g arl' s ome of t he
complunentary remarks of hLS
s upenors placed 1n h t.s persona l ftle .
" Sgt. Smtllt ts ttw most qualtf&gt;ed
llldl\odual l have seen in aU aspects
of hiS MOS In addttton to he&lt;

~b1ilt~ ,

hl' het s demon :-.lratet.J u ut.s t.onl11n~ supervLSUI'}
l•·a dt•rshtp a bt ll ty, and ha s demunstra.tet.l eJ~: ccpttunal urgamzatwnal
aut lily when left 1n charge of equal
~ nd lower grodc personnel. Sg t
Snuth alTepb res ptUt'5 tblilty and actually seth tlte o~ptJrtu mt y to lea d
H1s J)(' rsonal ('O nduct , moral s tan dards and Ulip&lt;:ecab le m1lttary appearanct&gt; tn h1s umfonn clearly
de monstrates . h1s pnde 10 being a
soldler and brtngs credit, nol onlv to
htm.•ieU. but to his sedton. tus ~nit
and the U. S. Anny."
Another wrote · "Sgt . Smith 15 a
truly untque asse t to thts balta lion .
For the past five months he has ser·
~ed as battaliOn motor sergeant.
l111s not only requ1red hL' managing
the perso!lnel as S&lt;!!&gt; of his platoon
but also he held the key pos&gt;llon ill a .
ne wly r ev1sed maintenan c e
program .
Hls perfonnance as a battali on
m ot or se r ~ean t and platoon
sergeant must bt! rated as outstanding It L' often tunes diffi cult to
remember that he IS three gr ades
below the authomed grade and
many yea rs junior to hi s coumter
parts
Hls work is a lways ol the caliber of
a senior NCO wtth at least 15 years
ofservtce. His rest attnbutes are his
willingness lo accept challenges,
tmllaltve and dedi catiOn both to his
job and Ius men . He is not a yes man
or a foll ower . He is an opinionated
leader who can be counted upon in
all sJtuatwns ." He ha s been commended several tunes by battalion
motor officers for his work "well
do ne".
Mrs . Smith IS a native of Germany . Their daughter is Jasmin .
SgL Smtth and Ius farruly Wlll go to
the Ktleen, Tex ., area followmg his
leave where he wtll be enroll ed in
Central Texa s College .
dl

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy ' 0 ' Thu rsd ay
· , Oct. 11, 1979

SEO residents must
"keep the heat on~

overnight and brought Wlth him the
Anny Commendallon Medal, the
lug hest g1ven in peace lime . The accompanying cil&lt;ilton lo him reads :
" For meritorious service while
servmg con.secutt ve ly as whee led
vehicle mechanic, senior wheeled
vehicle mechamc and shop foreman
maintenance platoon , headquarte r~
and headquarters company , 3d Bn .,
6th Infantry, Berlin Brigade during
lhe period , Feb , 1975 , to0ct .. l979 .
" Throughout his assigrunent , Sgt .
Srmth demonstrated exceptiOnal
professiOnalism, leadershtp ability
and dedJ callon to duty .
HIS
willingness to accept additional
respon.s&gt;btlies and ability to master
uew teclmiq ues were major con·
lnbuting fa ctors to the outstanding

l·onnectt.'d With tlle l'Oal
ha\'l' ~n f1ghllng tll 1s

battle

for

yea rs...

he

satd

Decision disastrous for
potential home buye~s ·

at

'1\it"Sday 's m eet m~ .

Steubenville Ma yor Wtll1am
l'raiJbe predicted that Ins ctty would
I•• devastated If coal -related JObs
are elumnated
"The EPA and t he Wlttle HouS&lt;!
ha v.: to ha ve much more po·essure
put on them ," he s a1d
Pr~ s1d ent Carter . m a vtsit to
Ste ubenville last month, called for
mcreased use o f !'oal , but sa id he
would not mterft'rt' w1th tJw actions
of the EPA
Neal Tos tenson. pres 1den t ol the
OhiO MHll llg and Reclamation
A.'i!DCiation . askt&gt;d area res1 dents to
send pt&gt;rsonal lt'!t ers to thr Whitl'

ByGLENNRriT
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON ( AP 1 _ Mortgage
rates could skyrocket to 14 percent
by early next year. but it won 't
matter f&lt;r people in nearl y half the
states because home loans won't be
available to them at any price
housmg officials say.
'
Moreover, the Federal Res.erve
Board's
lresh
anti-inflation
initiatives will severely depress the
housmg coostruction industry , thes.e
experts say .

He no ted th"t the Ohw EPA and
sta!.t' Alt.Drnt•y (;eneral Wtlliam J .
Brown sai d they lll;,ty fiJe a lawsuit
uver the fl'&lt;leral E:PA ·s refusal la st
Wt..'t.'k to app ro n~ a rn'lsed OhiO
~llut1un control plan .
"Trymg to get anvl111ng out of the
F.PA 1s likt• pullm ~ a tooth out of a
hog ," he sa~d
Marttns Fern· :11HI'Or John Laslo
srud that school l'h lidr en 1n fl.elmont
and Monroe cu untlt..'S ht.l\'l' alre;,tdy
wnttcn letter s str es...'i mg the net..&gt;d for
a str~ble coal l'('ttrlornv 1n thl' Oh 1o
Valley area U&gt; (':tr ter.

EDITH E. NASH
Mnl. Edith Elizabeth Gerlach
Nash, 70, Plwn St., Middleport, dled
Wednesday at the Pinec rest Nursing
Center in Gallipolis.
Mrs. Nash was born Dec. 31 , 1908
at Millwood , W. Va., a daughter ol
the late Frederick and Zenna Parsons Gerlach . Besides her parents,
she was preceded ill death by her
husband, Henry Joseph Jackson
Nash, in 19411, twin grandsons lour
sisters and two brothers.
'
Surviving are two daughters, Mrs.
Ralph (Betty J o) Martm , Mid·
dleport, and Mrs . Scott (Ethel !
Shank, Pomeroy ; two sons, George
W. Nash, Pomeroy , and Johnni e H.
Nash, Middleport; two sisters, Mrs.
Beulah Knapp, Point Pleasant , and
Mrs. Addo Audrey Barr, Mt. Alto,
W. Va .; a brother, Carl Gerlach
Poillt Pleasant, nine grandchildre~
and four great~eandchildren .
Mrs. Nash was a member of the
Ga llipolis Christian Church .
Funeral services will be held al 2

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charge or lailure to yield.
Th e patrol mvestigated a oneveh icle acctdent on SR 554 , one and
!our-tenths ol a nule east of CR 4 at
12:10 p.m.
'
Oflicers report a west bound a uto
oper aled by Michael Shriver 18
Bidwell, went out or control 'ill ~
curve, passed through a guardrail
and struck a tree.
There was severe damage to the
auw . Shri ve r was uninJured .
TIIREE SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered three calls Wednesday
evemng. The unit went to 118 l.aurel
St. at 5 :18 p .m. lor Lillian Gardner
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital .
Al 6:33 p.m ., lhe unit went to
Peoples Terrace for Mrs. Louise
Rosenbaum who had fallen , and al
9:54pm. the squad went to Ann St.
lor James Aubry, who had aiso
fallen. Mrs . Rosenbawn and Aubry
were both taken tD Veteran~
Memorial Hospital.

JlEVIVALSLATED
A revival will be held at the
Syracuse Church of God beginning
Monday, Oct . 15 , through Saturday,
Oct. ~.at 7:30p.m. nightiy _
Speaker will be evangelist Charl81
Curtis of Charlestoo. George Oiler,
pastor. invites the public tD attend .

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Your Servant! Your Teacher!
Prepares You for Tomorrow!

Pomeroy . Tbe Albelu County
Savings and Lout filed suit in the
IIDIJWlt of $12,332.39 against Thomas
E. Smltb. Syracuae, Cynthia L.
Smltb, Pomeroy and the Racine
Home National Bank.

:,.

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1be Fanners Bal* IDII Savings
Co., filed suit ID lbe amount of
f4,943.411 aga!Dit a-t. R. Mash ,
m, and Janice K. Mull, Rt. 2,

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A marriage license was issued !D
Bobby G. Rupe, m, POOleroy, and
8arllan A. 1belll,19, Ptmeroy .

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:
OPEN
! WEEKDAYS TIU
~
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8,00 P.M.
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SHOW ER SLATEU TONIGHT
A rmscellancou!'i .shower will be
held Wlllght at 7 p.m. at the RuUand
1\rnencan Leg1on hall lor Mr . and
1rs James P terce and family, who
lust ever )'thing recednlly in a fire .
1\datt ves, fnend s and neighbors are

. iililiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiillii

!****************~
HOMECOMING SET
A homecoming will be held at the
Garleton Church, Kingsbury Road ,
Sunday, Oct. 14. Sunday School at
9:30a.m . basket dinner at noon . The
afternoon program is at 2 p.m . The
public is illvtted to attend .

Democrats that there would not 1&gt;&lt;e
general fund money
t:tvaJlabh: m the next tw o years to
funJ more than abo ut 45 percent of
the projel'ls.

t•n ough

lifiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii
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Btg Savtngs Buys an Btg Savings Ptckupsl

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NEW BLAZER PICKUPS

Open

Three persons

First New Truck of the 80's.

YOUR INVITATION
TO VISIT US

992-2126

Grandsons who will be servillg as
pallbearers are Brian and Jell
Shank , Mic hael Heck, J effrey Nash ,
and Brent and Brian Cobum .

decisio~

Wednesday after two stormy week s
of hearmgs by the Sena te Fmance
Cornmtttee
He sa1d that the panel will
cootinue its deliberallon s and that
he now hopes to bring the Houseapproved prOJX!sal to a Senate noor
vote when the Le~islature returns on
Nov . 13 from a fall break .
Senators headed home to begtn
thetr recess late Wednesday . The
House met only in skeleton sess ion
lhi s week and would have
reconvened only il th e Senate had
acted on the big spendrng bill .
Most ol the SenaU.'s problems on
the. two-year constru ctiO n plan ,
whtch wa s s ubmitted to the
lawmakers by GOP lrtlv Jam es A.

ptere , equrppe:J ' •"':·uoc-s .J,........ c·~~~) .'-- :,'

: '-

CHEVETTE
4 DOOR

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Adlllitted-John West, Colwnbus .
Irene Hanning, Middleport . Ma~
Burns, Middleport ; Barba;a Smith
Middleport ; Wanda Sellers, Por:
tland; Callie Metheney, Ewington;
Frances Hawley, Albany ; Mary
Gtlkey, Pomeroy ; Eura Largent ,
Syrac use ; Lillian Gardner
Pomeroy; Martin Johnsoo , Mid :
dleport; Edward Hayes, Pomeroy _
Dtscharged--Minme Johnson
Harold Stobart, William Morris '
Diana Arnott, Denny Karr, Hele~
Blanlanann, Tirruny Smith

p.m. Saturday at the kawtingsCoats Funeral Home with Mr. Danny Coburn officiating. Burial will be
in Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytime after 4 p.m . Friday.

D-Akron , announced the

Hhode s,
r~· sul tt.&gt;d
fr urn
it
de termmatwn by Ocasek and others
that lh t' state ('oulrl n llt affurd tht..'
lung hst uf " lml'ks and rnort:-tr"
projects.
Late la st w ~ek. when tht' Senatl'
leader c on firm ed that rnaJunty
Democrat s we re loukm J..( (jt lll:1JOr
cuts m tht' propu!:i&lt;tl. th e Stakhuuse
he canw floodl'd With luhby1st s
representing untn.' r s lt tes. "itd !t&gt;
&lt;igenctes, ::md r·untr c\l'tor ~
Hll
seektng t..o prated t he1r rtrlw:.
Oca~k met w1th h 1 ~ m;1jl1fi1 Y
caucus on Wed nesdo'.ly and lalt:r !-Xtld
that the ca u&lt;.:u.s wuuld like to S•· t cuts
totalmg $100 nulhon-$1:&gt;0 uuliJU n
How~ver . a!-. n llght bt..· ·~xpt..&gt;&lt;.: ted,
members of th e ruucus cuuld nut
agree on wher e tht · r~x should t~ll
Ocasek IJil.ill'CJteJ that nu unL' ""&lt;I nted
to relmqutsh lmpnJ\'errwnL'i 111 Ill s
own bailiWI Ck
Ocasek sa1d Wtlham U Kt:'lp , the
gov~:mor 's d1rectur uf budgt!t and
managem ent.
agreed
w llh

\ \ \'
.,

~ v-

"While the I Federal Res erve
Board 's) light -money approa ch
llllght reduce speculation in th e
commodllies and slow inOalion in
other sec!Drs of the economy , the
policy &gt;s disastrous for JX&gt;tenttal
home buyers and small builders "
Vondal S Gravlee, president of llie

As;sodation of Home
Builders, said Wedne!llay .
Many Amertcans · wi ll be
completely shut out of lhe housing
market beginnillg ill Jal\uary , said
economists for the thrift institutions .
Twenty-lour states will be hit
hardest because they have laws
limttillg mortgage rates to about 12
. perc ent or less, making it
unprolitable for the illstitulioos to
lend because they must pay even
higher interest rates to borrow .
Thomas Parliament , an economist
for the U.S. League of Savings
Association s, pinpointed Arkansas,
Georgia, Illinois , Iowa , Kansas,
Missouri, Nebraska, New Jersey ,
New York and Texas as very
mortgage-dry "com e the lirst part
of the year ."
Five percent and 10 percent
downpayments, he satd, will become
virt uaUy exlillct. "Twenty percent
downpayments will have to become
th e rule .
" Moreover , banks won 't let
famili es assume mortgages if th eir
carrymg costs stretch excessively
beyond 25 percent of their lncome, 11
said Parliament .
Gravlee said he foresees
mortgage rates reac hing 13 percent
ve r y ll&gt;On . " The difference between
an 11 percen t and 13 percent rate on
a 3()-year, $60,000 mortgage ts 192 a
mooth," he said.
The dramatic mortgage crunch is
the direct result or the Federal
Res.erve Board illcreaSing its bank
lending rate from 11 percent to 12
percent and alterillg the way it
controls the availability or mon ey
and credtt .
The chan ges led to tmmediate
upsurges in other short-term
mterest r ates, with many large
banks mcrea.•in g interest charged
thetr best customers - the "prim e
rat e" - to an unprecedented 14.5
percent.
NatiOnal

COLUMBUS, Ohto I API - State
senator s ha ve abandon~d their
effcrts to gain October passage of a
coolroversial $775 million capital
1111pruvemen\S btl!.
Senate President Oliver Ucasek

Hush Puppies
:.· ! .• ..

-~~..Y~

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HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES OCT . 10
Mrs . Brenda Alcorn and daughter .
Margaret Bailey, Luthe r Bowles
Virginia Brooks, Sylvia Burnett :
Campbe ll ,
Teresa
Rac he l
Canterbury, Melvill Carter , Stephen
Celmons Jr. Carrie Deem, Jane
Ficke, Tony Htll, Ethe l J ohn ,
Herman Jordan , Rebecca Martin
Mrs . William Mrogan and son , Je,..;
Mullins , Jana Myers , Travis
Newsome, Benjamin Pop&lt;' , Mrs .
Sandy Roberts a nd daughter ,
Willvene Rutt, Regina Thomas,
Kunberl y Wares, Kathy Woods .
BIRTIIS OCT, 10
Mr . and Mrs. David Wallace,
daughter , Oak Htll; Mr . a nd Mrs .
Denrus Arthur. llln, Wellston; Mr .
an d Mrs . David Moore , son, Oak
Hill ; Mr. and Mrs . Ricky CLark ,
daugh!Rr, Pomeroy .

The Rogue"

CHEVROLET SHOWING

m~itutions .

Area Deaths

11

i

Housmg starts w11l plununet as
much as 25 percent nut year,
warned Jay Janis, chairman or the
Federal Home !nan Bank Board,
which regulates the nation 's thrift

Hou~.· .

manner in which the maintenance
platoon s upported the battalion on a
daily basis. As a squad leader, he
received numerous commendable
ratings on many command in ·
speetion.s and in his additional duly
as company fi eld sarutation team
chief , he received comme ndab le
ratings on two annual general tn s pectton.s. Sgt . Smith's performance
of \luty has been ill keeping with the
fmest of milttary tradition.s a nd
reflects great credlt upon himse lf ,
the Berlm Brigade and the Uruted
Stale Anny ."
The award ts signed by the
Secretary of the Anny .

Sgt. Srruth arrived in Middleport

mdustr~

oth ers

NE W PBII.ADEI.PHlA , Ohtu
1 AI', OffiCials Ut southeast Oh 1o
say that residents must " keep the
heat on" the While HouSt' and the
ft&gt;deral Envtromnental Prutet·twn
Agt&gt;m:y to savt&gt; th e regwn· s coal
Industry
Mayors, coal tndustry and Un1 ted
MLne Workers ft1Jresent.atives and
chamber of commerce members
met th1s week to d1scus.s last...-lltch
efforts to get the F.PA to postpone
the pendiiig Oct. 19 unplemL•ntatton
or a lc'dera l c lean atr plan
They say that ' Uie plan would
Jestro y th e reg ton 's coa l mdustry
because Oh io ultlities would switch
to dt.'an~urning West ern cual m
or der to meet clean air standards.
Ohto coa l has a lugh sullur content
which would requlre utilities t~
mstall costly scrubb&lt;ers if they wish
t.o reduce sulfur dtoxtde emiss10n s.
Sen . R Ktn sey Milleson DFreeport, wid the group that h~ wa s
_pl eased to see those not connecte&lt;l
wtth t he coal in dus tr y finally
"gettmg off thetr duffs."
" Th e coal mmers. operator s and

Senators abandon efforts
to pass improvement bill

".ES MI\ Y VARY AT IND IVIDUAL STORES

�10-The Daily Senllnel, Mid&lt;lleport-Pomcro}. 0 .. 'J'hursday , Oct. 11 , 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WANT AD
CHARGES

the Bo,ar d of Meigs County

Commissioners will v •ew
the proposed vacation of
Sutton Township Road No
the

Grt.&gt;enwood

Cemete r y, and said Board
will hold a final hearing on

the proposed vaca t ion of
Sutton Township Road N o

217 on th e 23rd dav of Oc
tober , 1979 , at 6 · 30 P .M at
me oftt ce· at the Me •gs
Coun t y
Comm•ssioners,
Court House . Pomeroy.
Oh io .
Th e purpose of
the
aforesaid
v•ew1ng
and
hear i ng will bf' to dete r
mine whether or not th e

vaca t ion of Su tton Town
shio Road N o. 217, as
described in the Petition
presented to the Board of
County tommiss•oners . is
for
th e
publ ic's co n
Yenience and welfare
The P et ition to vacate
pitrt ot Sutton Townst'Hp
Road N o
217 may be
viewed and copied at the
Commiss1oners
Office,
Me1g s CounT y Co urT House,
Pomeroy . Oh1o
MEIGS COUNTY
COMMISSI ONER S
Mary Hobstetter
Clerk
Oct4 , 11,2tc

Friday , Oc t. 12

1~

URGENTLY NEEDED

l"ash
ldav

I 'har~~

2daY.!

100
!:ill

190

Jtl&lt;i}'S

]II)

2. ~

6dbys

JOO

Ji5

12::":1

Each word mrer the nun llnwn
1;, word.'! L!i 4 cent!. pet word ~r
da y Ads~ other th.an l'on ·
~.-utJ\It days Will be ehar~ed Bt
tht- I day rate

MOOllt' HCMTW )Utlf!S tmd Yan.l
s.aJes art' B('('t"pted only with
cash wtth order l!l cent c ha.r~~:e
for ads u. rf)·m~ &amp;11 Nwnbt-r lu
C11re uf 11¥' S.ntmt'l
Tht• Publl!iht"r

re:~erv~s

Pets lor Sale

M EIGS
COU NTY
HUMANE SOCIETY W~
6'160
Pets rtvdddble for
adopt1on ~nd rn tor mat1on
servt ce

HOOF H OLLOW , Eng l1 sh
and Wester n Saddles and
harness
Horses
and
pon1es . Ruth Reeves 614
698 3290
Bordtng and
Rtdtng Lessons and H orse
Care product s
Wes tern
boo t s
Children ·s S15 50
Adu lt s S:19 00

lhe

nl(ht \.o edtt or rt'"jt'"("t any ad11
deemed objediunal
The
PuOIJSht'r wlll not tJto responstbl e
for more than ont&gt; mcorrt'f1 Ill ·
Phone99'2-21!!6

NO'I'ICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
~.8)"

Monday

t.hr"u F'nday
&lt;PM

U1e d.H) l:lt-forf' pubiKKtllJil
SUlldiiy
i p M
Fr1da~·

ATJEITIOI

Notic es

vance

Bernice Bede Osol

GET

BETWEEN 8:30 ' and 5.

In tnt"mory. U.rd of Thanks
and Obt tuary 6 eenU pt&gt;r word,
SJ .OO nununwn La-'ih tn ad -

Noon on Saturd&amp;}·

!NEWSPAPER EN TERPRISE ASSN 1

DAILY SENTINEL CARRIER
IN THE
MIDDLEPORT AREA.
CALL 992-2156

Word.s oc Unlkr

ASTRO·GRAPH

October 12. 1979
Alhes wh o haoyoe pr oven heiplul to
you m the pas t Wi ll be there
agam lhts co mmg vea r to help
you turther vou1 amb1!1ons
SoltOtfy these tnenash1ps and be
supportive ol them when you
can
LIBAA ~Sept . 23 -0c:t. 23) Per ·
sons who want to be 1n your corner could become reluctant sup porters today 11 they teel you are
too egocentnc Share. ms tead ol
betng sell -serv1ng How to get
along w1th other s1gns 1s one of
the sec t1 ons you "ll entOY m your
new Astr o-Gu1ph Le tter whiCh
beg1ns w1th your birthday Mall
$ 1 lor each to Astra -Graph . Box
489 RaC11 0 C1ty Stat1on N Y
tOO t9 Be sure to speCII) b1rth
da te
SCOAPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) Your
btggest enemy loda)' cou ld be
you r lack ol behet m your capa brlt f tes
Worry1ng needlessly
about lhtngs wt11cll may ne\ler
happen rs counterp r oduCtive
SAGITTARIUS (No~ . 23-0.C. 21)
Mucn can be ach te"Y"ed today
through organ1 zed elton ana
1ngenu1ty If you hoped to squeal&lt;
by on your charm and good
looks. you may be d1sappo1nted
CAPRICORN II&gt;K. 2:1 -Jon . 1i)ll
you can avo1CI 11 today. aon·t put
vour sell rnto a posrt1on where
you permrl others to make
rmponant decr510ns tor you
Th~:ur tudgment may not be as
good as you rs
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 1i)
Today there IS a posstb•hty tnat
you rnay spend more t1me tal k.1ng
about what you want to do ramer
than dotng 1t Act ltr st Leave the
con"Y"ersatton lrll la ter
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) In
busrness matters today t a~ e
care no t to 1ump to conctus1ons
Study 8\lerythrng very care fully
Dtg beneath the surface to oe
cena1n you nave all the fac ts
ARIES (Me&lt;ch 21 - April 11) Be
prepated m rmportan t one-toone relattonsh1p s today to make
some co mpromrse or conceSSI On
rn order to marn tatn harmony
You must gtve m order to get
TAURUS ( Aprii20--May 20) Man ·
age ttl ose tn you r charoe today
with a gentle hand They wtll
resp ond tn ktnd to the way you
treat the m Be co ns1derat e. not
co ndem ntng
GEMINI (lloloy 21 · J"n• 20)
Ins tead o t Cleplettng your
resourc&amp;S today .-ou would be
lar w1 se to work. on ways to add
to them Don ·! let e~~: t rava ga nt
whtms ga1n tile upper hand
CANCEA {June 21 ·July 22)
Someone who ca res for you
could fee l a bit a11enatect today tl
he thmk s you are playmg falt"or tles Tak e e~~:tra patns to treat
everyone equally
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) In S IIUfl ·
t1ons tocl ay where con tr ol 1s 1n
the hands of others. don "! do
anyth1ng errat iC that could JeOP ·
ard1ze your pos1 tton or deprt'Y'e
you ol potent1al beneftts
VIRGO (Aug . :13-Sept. :!2) No, .
mally you have the abil tty to S1re
up situations at tnen real wort h
However . vtewmg the world
through rose-co lored gtasses
today could cloud your tudg ment

afternoon

GUN
SHOO T EVERY
SU NDAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RAC INE
GU N CLUB
NO
HUNTING .
no
trespassing w1th no ex
ceo t ions on mv property
Judy M cG raw Se lf
EO BURKETT BARBER
SHOP now open lull t tme tn
M idd leport
GUN
SHOOT
Rac i ne
Vo l unteer
F 1re
Dept
Every Sa turday 6 30 p .m
At the1r ouild1nQ1n Bashan
Factor ·( c hoke guns only
MEIGS COU N TY Ftsh and
Game
regular
club
mee t .n g at Shade Vallpy
Club H ouse Saturday, Oc t
13 at 7 p m Refreshm en t s
and supper Brtng a fr 1end

-Auctions
- - - -BIGAUCT ION ever vW ed,
7 pm Hartf or d Communi t y
Cenle-r . Hartfor d . W V. 4
mrles above Pomeroy
Mason Brtdge

Wanted to Rent
WANT TO r ent ~bedroom.
unfurn1s hed hou se rn Metgs
County 997 2946
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY .
OHIO
Be tty Francis Dunn1n g.
Plountiff ,

Lost
and Found
-

--

LOST OCT 4. M1ddleport
Doberman
1r1st1
Se ifer
Black w rth whtfe spot on
c he st. female Answe r -s to
He1d 1 H umane Soc1etv ,
9fl7 6260
LOST
Mrddleporl,
Shepherd
Co ll1 e,
bla ck.
wt11te a nd tan . ma le An
swers to Ben W1ll pt ck up
H umane Soc 1ety . 997. 6260
LOST · Mulberry
Ave ,
Ch1huahua . brown
wrth
spars. f emale Answers to
T dndy
Humane SOIH~ty ,
991 6160
F OU N D B lack Doberman
Pin c her type dog Found at
Jack Ward ' s N 1te Club 991
S416 or 992 3793 between 8
&lt;lm and 4 )0 pm
FOU ND 1n Pomeroy Oct
9. a Ge rman Shepherd .
black ana cre am wtth
cho k er
chain . fema l e
Humr~ne Soc1el y , 992 6260
FOUND
Bla c k Great
Dane wtth cho ke colla r
Rutland ctrt:&gt;a Near F or t
M e1gs 7412316

_

He I.e_Wan t_e&lt;l___ _

DEPE N DABLE BABY SI
TTE R wanted 1n mv home
Oentse Wolte, 949 'JJ77
RU TLAND FUEL Co 15
tak tng appl1 cai10ns for· full
t tme empl oyee, some etc:
ppri ence 1n work.rng w1th
natural gas want ed but not
necessa ry Apply by mad .
PO Box 1536 . Hun t1ng ton.
wv 25716
APPLICATIONS ARE now
be•n g
acepted
for
a
cooperaftve e:. tension ser
v1re pr ogram assts la n t to
ass1SI area ex t ens1on agen t
wi th commun1 ty re so ur ce
development program~
Min i mum ot a Bachelor 's
degree. Mas ter ·s Degree
preferre d
Automobile
requir('d
Con ta ct (harle s
Knott-s or Sam Crawf or d ,
Box 32 . Jac k son. O H
Ph one 286 ? 177
WAN TED
PERSO N or
couple to stay day and
night wtth el derly man who
tS. a st rokP v 1C iimbut 15 am
outa tory Catt 773 5706 or
'191 3653

RISI N G STAR
Kennel
Boardrng Call 307 0'192
POODLE
GROOMING
Juoy Taylor 614367 72"20
HI LLCREST
KENNEL S
Boarding, all breeds Clt:&gt;an
rndoor outdoor
f acr l rt1 t'S
Also
AKC
reg 1stered
Dober mans 614 446 7795
ONE SI L VE R mate Teacup
pood le wit hout rf'gistrat1on
papers, S150 1 black and
apr. cot tiny toy . $75 Both 8
wt&gt;ek so ld ~7 39 15

Auto Sales
1976 M ON TE CARLO. 350
eng1ne low mileage S1600
'192 26&gt;6
1974 CJ 5 JEEP For more
inlor ma 11 on. tall 7411503
1977 THUNDERBIRD . p s ,
p b . a c . am fm rad10,
rad ia l ttr e-s.
r ecttn1ng
seats E )( cellen t cond1 l 1on
$4300 Musr sell 247 J594
1966 F OR O PI CKUP. 6 c yl
Ru st y bu t ru ns good S250
or make offer 696 1735
1972 N OVA, mag wheels .
new
t ir e s,
377
H1
perf ormance headers Lots
ol
new H i pertorma n(('
parts $900 9-4 9 2691
1968 (AMARO 327 enQtne .
4 speed. AM F M cassette
tape player . new oa1n t 10 b
plu s othe r extras 992 7768
or 997 567 1

For
·--- -Rent
COU NTRY MOBI LE Hoj'\1'
Park , Route 33, north of
Pomeroy La r ge lots Ca ll
9n 7479
RO OM
AND
board ,
work1ng persons or re f 1red
S16 5 month , S.45 week l y
991 6021
3 A f'o. ~ 4 RM fur n1 shed ap
rs Phone 992 543 4

UnscrafT1ble these tour Jumbles
one 1e11er !0 eacn !~Quare to torr1
lout ord mary words

_____ q ~veaway

BEAGLE COLLIE. blac&lt;.
· VS ·
brown and Whit€' , shot s
Gerc11d Wayn e Dunntng ,
Collre type , brown and
Defen dant .
bla c k , female , I bOrder
No. 17271
NOTICE BY
co1 11e , b lack and w h1te
PU BLI CATION
female
Coc k er Span1el ,
TO : Gerald Wayn e Dun - black ana fan . fema le
n.nq , whose address rs.
Good w1th k1Cis . shots , war
unknown :
n
med ) to 4 mo o ld Sf Ber
You are hereby not1f+ ed
nar as. b lac k and wh1t e
th at you h&lt;JY e been nam ed
a defendant 1n a legal at
female . brown and black
tion en t itled Be tty Franc1s
male and fema le Shor t
Dunni n g,
Pl a tn T1ff.
v~
haired Ge rman Pornter ,
Gerald Wayne Dunn1ng . wh i te w•tn brown . female .
De tc ndant This ac11on ha -s
shots . b•rd dog K l!tens, a ll
been assigne d Case No
Humane
17771 and IS pend 1ng 1n the shapes. , S.II('S
SOCif'ly . 992 6160
Court of Common Pteas of
M e1gs Coun ty , Pomeroy .
Oh10. 4~769
GERMAN -S H ORT harrt:&gt;d
The oht Pc t of the com
p larn l IS the Obfain 1ng ot a po1nft:&gt;r . fema l e. wh1te and
brown with b r own head ,
d1vorcc
and
th e t e-r
rn1natron of a marr1etge rare dog Coc~er Span1e1,
co ntract between the par
b l ack and tan female . good
ttes , the setflement ot t he W1th k1dS , shot s and wor
property rrg nts of the par
I 1(&gt;S, and the custod.- o f the med H umane Socie ty , 992
6160
m1nor c htld
You are requ1 r ed to an
swer th e com p 1a1n t with tn
28 days alter t he ldst
Mobile Hom es - Sale
publtca t 1on of t hts not1 ce.
wh1 ch w tll be publiShed on
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 J
ce each week tor six su e
bedroom
Th e last
cess tYe w eeks
1970 V 1ndal e 17x6J w1th etc:
publ1cat 1on w dl be made on
panda , 'l t&gt;ed r
October ~5 . 1979 . .Jnd t he 18
19 70 New Moon I h60 3 bd r
dd'fS tor rtnswer wd l com
menc (&gt; on tnat Clate
1973
Skyl 1ne
12x55
1
1n cas(&gt; ot your l.filure to
bed r oom
dnswer
or
o th e-rwise
1972 Bonanza I'll( 52,"} bed r
re~pona i'l\ requ1 rt&gt;d by the
B
&amp; S MOBILE HOME
Oh1o
Rules
of
C tv1 l
SALES, Pl PLEA SA NT .
Procedu'""
the
f 1na1
w v 304 675 4424
ne.tr.ng on lhr s matter w ill
bf' he -f aftt'"f the f'•P~trtl r on
of 19 ..Jf'\ aftpr the last aay
CLOSE TO Pomeroy on
of puot ·&lt; ~' · on of Th+s not ,ce
la rg e pr1vate tot. lhbO
or &lt;'IS soon thNeclller as Cdn
mobile home. 1 bedroom .
bf' &lt;:.&lt;hf."&lt;Ju lf&gt;d t:ly the Cour t
11 1 bath s. new cttrpeting
Larry Spence r .
tnrougnout . new gas fu r
Cte rk of Court
nace, washer and dr.-er . 6
ol Metgs Cou tn)" .
months fr~ ren t on lot ~2
Ohto
6398
&lt;91 10.
&lt;10) 4. " · 18, '15 ,
6fc

AMERICA N HERITAGE
hou se. built 1813, !l room
br1ck r es 1denc e. I mile
from R u tl and on Bee(h
Gr ove Rd Cr:tll 513 5)9 7439
or wrlle M Ferl et , 146 W1 n
stan Lane . M onr ow , OH
4505Q

.yantec:l_t~

Bu_y

(HI P WOOD Pol es ma)(
d1ameter 10 " on largest
end S12 per ton Bundled
slab S10 per ton Oel1vered
to Ohio Pallet Co . R1 7.
Pomeroy 992 1689
OLD
FURNITUR E. t(e
bo)(es. brass beds. 1ron
beas . desks. eTc . co mple te
household s
Wrtte M o
Miller Rt 4, Pomeroy or
call 9&lt;{1 7760
OL D CO IN S. poc k et wt
c hes, class nngs , weddtng
bands . diamonds Gold o r
silve r Ca ll J A. Wamsl ey,
74') ~331

PRO.Bi.. TE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF DELBERT
LUCKAOOO, DECEASED
Case No. 22835
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 5th , 1979, in
the Mei gs County Proba te
Cour!, Case No. 22835, Cur
tis Lookadoo , Ru tl and ,
Ohio 45775, was appoi nted
Administrator of the estate
of
D e lbert
Lookadoo,
deceased, tate of Rutland "\
Township, M eigs County ,
Oh io 4577 5.
Robert E. Buc k
Probate Judge
Clerk
(10111. IS, 25, 3!c

F 1REWOOD FOR sale
Now t~k1ng orders Wdl
del1ver , !4"2 "}056
EMERGENCY
POWER
alterna tors own fht&gt; be., I
. buy WIN POW ER Cd ll 513
lRB 75RQ

A NTIQ UES.
FUR
NtlURE . g l ass, Ch1na ,
anyth 1ng Sf'e or ( rill Ru th
Gosney, ant1ques . 26 N
7nd , M1ddleport . OH 997
3!61
A N fiQUE POCKET Wdl
ches Will 1ny to pny top
dollar
Call
1 S9i 297)
even1ng!&gt;

TWO BEDR OOM mobde
home , parfl v fu rnished
M id df e aged or
elder l y
people pr eferred No Pt•ts.
no c hi ldren Deposit 992
'J7 4q

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
FOR SALE or rent . N ice J
bedroom , modular loca ted
in Portland area . Se t up on
lot or ca n be m oved. Call
after 4 : 30. 304 773 5772 .
FOR SALE Of"" rent, h ous~
in
H arrisonville .
2
be.droom , large l t ving
room. kitchen and batn .
Cal ll'il2f:! 44 17

WANTED
J U NK
Belt
tertes , rad ta tors . moto r s.
auto
trans N o Sunday
calls 9.49 "2563

Yard Sale
BASEME NT SALE
550
Broadway St, M 1dd leport.
9 S Thursday and Fr1day . q
1.11 12 Saturday
YARD SALE . Thursdr~v.
Oct 11 and Fr 1day, 0Lt 17
10 am till 6 pm Clott1 rng,
whit e uniform s and m1 sc .
items . 2nd !lou se above
Sa li sbur y Grade Sc hoo l
YARD
SALE
Alfre d
Un ited Met hodtst Church .
Friday and Satu r day 10 til
4 from Tupper s Pla1ns,
west on SR 68q

ROOFING
Roofing , gutter s, and
downspo u ts .
Free
Es t• ·n at es.
AU
wort(
I.J Uar an tee d . 10 years ex ,J ert L· nce . Ce~lt Athen s,
Ollt!Cf, Gerald Clark
!97 4857 or Tom Hoskins
797 ·17 45 .

MONTGOMERY

APPLES
C' DER
HONF.:Y
F•tzpafrtCk 01
chard, St a te Route 689
Ptlone Wilkesville . 669
3785

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
Walks
and
driveways.
(FREE EST(IO!ATEI

TRAILER SALES
~ •no M an f~Cim t'r 'J Rd
l (111\j\

V!llf'

Orlr (l

e 1 I 66~ 0 4~ I ~ f'n iiHI \

1 N'olf'l [,ld ()I W dio ('\Y dl t'
~I I Pf""t:l

l

t:IAIL r

R

GOO~F
STOC IC
NOW AVAI LABL E

O NE USEDWOODburn1ng
~love , \700 949 1450
14 tN turntng pl ow Buna v
!lute and case. exce llent
co na1110n 949 n1s
FR I G ID A IR E ELECTRIC
rang e,
Harvest
Gold
Fr1g1dc1ire portable d tSh
washer. hr~rv es t gold I I ft
M oun ta1ne er tr u c k cam
per
Lu dw1 g d rum set
Phon e days. 985 3341 A fter
5p rn . 992 7519
DELUXE
MAYTAG
wringrr wa sher w1th elec
tr1 r pump 2(ar ra ce tr ack
Steel 55 gal drums w1th
l 1ds l1ke new 949 1803
CAS T I RON wood stove .
flrPbO&gt; 1-&lt;~x"27 , ]l1dsontop
'}'} " g1r1s b1 &lt;y &lt; Ie . l1ke new
9RS 1941
POTATOES. J mdps wes t
of Darwrn Cecil Toban
SIGLER FUEL oil stove
150 gallon tank \100 991
7653
LARGE s1ze daven port.
brown uphols Tery Sw1vet
roc kr Wdt sell chea p 949
H61

TAPPAN GAS COOk stove
G 1bson
f rost
free
r e tr rge r a 10 r
Maytag
washer L1v1ng room suite
wtthout cha!f D tnett e se t
with 4 cha irs 742 1802

ROOFING
REMOUtLirtt;
llvJM IIUOifiC''IS
HOUSES BUILf

Al TROMM
,

U&gt;N~T.
RUTLAI'&lt;D
742· 2328
9 14 ! P cl J

Real Estate lor Sale
CE N TURY 21 Pug Pepper
and Co Tup pers Pla1ns
Beaut1ful 3 bedroom b r 1ck .
famil y room WI Th wood
burn1ng fln• pla ce. '1 ra r
garage , 2 11 oaths on 4
beautiful
ac re s
Call
Forr es t Cass ady , 42 3 5050.
Tuppers Pt.ain&lt;. Owner has
bee n 1r a nsferred a ndhas
pr! Cl'd
lh15
IOV(" I y
3
bed r oom home to sel l For
mal dtn1ng room. kitchen ,
fre e s t and 1n g
firepla ce
1n11ving room . garage on 1
acre lo t , SJ2 .900 Cdll Ellen
Knots. 413 8110
IHREE
BEDROOM.
6
roo m t10use . w 1lh balh 591
Pear l
St
Middleport
Remode l ed, al l new tnstde
and ou t Phone 747 7405 or
q&lt;/') 779~

FOR SALE 1n Cheste r , O H
6room house wtltl bath , big
beau t iful lot \ 1,500 Call
Ul 3082

GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS

1250
I New Electric Furnace,
clea,.-ance pf""iCed
1 new Fuel 011 Furnace .
clearance pri ced
1 Good Colds. pot
Refr i gerator

s.as.oo

MAIN ST.
Jack W. Carsey

"" · r .

Ph . 12-2Hil

~ H P Demmtngdeepwell
pump , as ff of f lexib le p tpe
and storage lank 949 ~008

5WEET POTATOES, red .
whllp dnU ye l lOW Rt 2,
Ra c1ne R w Lew1s 843
~ 4 37

JOHN DEERE , dteset. "2010
dozer
oulstde
moun ted
tJiade . gooa conor Tion
11.000 7•2 2819

Real Eslate lor Sale

ll

•

RACINE , 0 .
949 ·1748 or

'~4

' N
l';..E S .O&lt;:=:
SAID 'TO HE I&lt;:~E '-F
A5 SHE WAS
APPROACHED 6Y l'HE
NE'ER -DO-WELL..

NOW O::.K 1P T THE 8 0TlC'I\~
WHAT'S THE 61B
IDEA FOL LO WifJ 6 1 CIAT
YC li~G LADY AROUNP ~

IlL COME CLEAfJ IF YOU L!'T
ME El\PLA I ~ 10 HER -If.! PER~ON!

LI~E :

Now arrange the c1 rc1ed leners to
form the surpr1se answer as sug
gestect by the abOve cartoon

+, mil(&gt; off Rt . 7 b y -pa ss
on St R t 174 toward
R u tlrwd .

elnsulatlon
eStorm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• Gutters and
Down Spouh
Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone m -2772
8· 17 1 m o .

Auto &amp; Truck
Re pair
Also Transmission
R e pair
Phon e 992 ·5682

:1

16 E. Second Street

NEW LISTING - 14 33
acres 1n Ol1ve Townsh1P
near Forked Run La k. e
\5 ,000
HAND Y MAN
9 room
tra me sui tabl e for a 2
l amil ·( deal 11~ bath s.
nat . gas , C1 f y wat er, cor
ner _lot R,n"1 will he lp
pay 1t off ( 15.000
MODERN TYPE
3
bedroom home, bath ,
nat . gas F A f urnace,
ci t y
watPr ,
full
basement on sma ll lot
110.000
MEIGS
SCHOOL
Good 4 bedroom fram e
wtth I ' 1 baths. F A fur
nace , f u ll baseme nt and
5 acres of la nd ASking
SJO,OOO 00 but
BUSINESS BLDG .
24x80 tile const ru ction ,
ci t·; w~fer and gas Two
e)C tr a r oo ms and bath
Will tak e $11,000
WE HAVE ALL KIN ·
OS OF PROPERTIES
FOR SALE . DROP IN
FOR INTERVIEW OR
CALL 992· 3325 or 992
3876 .

Housing
Headquarters
SIX
ROO M S .
bath .
bas"ment , outbulldt n gs
and gr~rden at LetM t , O H
Se(ond house pas t tdltng
s tat1on

REAL ESTATE
F ' NANCING
de -11
Yo u r. i ng &amp;
Vt"ler . ts Admtn . loans .

I Answers tomorrow 1
Jumoles GU IDE

CLEF I HELPER rAISON
Ho w to rema1 f' !JOUr PRE 1END TO BE RICH

Answer

Thursda) , I )d . II

BRIDGE
__ Oswal_&lt;i Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BORN LOSER

. :A.~D \3RlJTLJS SHlDS
f.\ Is Lmt:: ~ 'fl;{f I lvi/W-f&gt;, .

Trump coup routs defense
(

!' ~RK FINANCIAL
SER JIClS, INC.
!.iOI

s 9 ...., ., W .,

J= _

ANN'S
--·-•-r-ev CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

0 · 1er ·m( by appotnt m ent .
17 Sycamore ' Rear)
Pom eroy , 0 .

--·.----- ------

Real
lor Sale
- - · -Estale
-F I NANCIN G VA FHA LO
A N S LO W OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PURC HA SE
OR
R EF INANCE
IRELAND M O RT G AGE .
71 E
STATE. AT HEN S
614 597 305 1

60 8 E .
MAIN
POMEROY , O.
PH . 992 ~ 2259
NEW
LISTING
Chester area . over 25
acres. n1 cel y refT1ode led
home , equ1 ppec1 kit chen,
porches and pat1o, sma l l
barn,
t tmbe r
and
pasture S3R ,950 00
NEW LISTING
M 'd
d lepor t . 2 story frame , J
bedrooms, na tural gas
furnace . equr pped kit
ch en.
carpe t ing and
panel1ng , $18 ,700
RANCH TYPE - Bri(k.
and fram e. 1 love ly
acre. abou t6 years old J
oearooms , dintng room ,
ut ili ty , pat io, cha in te n
ced yard, lar ge garage
137.500 00
ABOUT 20 ACRES Nea r Ches ter , 1 sTory
frame
h ouse.
-4
bedrooms, bath , own
wa ter . f r ee gas. car
pet ing
and pa nel in g,
large
c arport , co ld
room S.JO, soo 00
BUI L DING SITE
Rut la nd , about 1J acre .
wttter . l tgh fs, a nd gas
LoYely si te . S. 2.400 .
BEAUTIFUL REMOD
ELE D
2 · STORY
FRAME - 3 bed rooms .
all
ca rpeled
w i th
close ts , lovely eq u i ppe d
k rtc hen .
i nsu l ation,
storm doors a nd win
dow s, fu II base menr
Thts you must see l
$40,000 .
NEW LISTING - Ap
prO&gt;dmately 72 1'1 acres
vacant
lan d
near
Ruflana
on
H a ppy
Ho l l o w
Road ,
a ll
mi neral s, S'l5, 375 .00.
HANDYMAN 'S SPECI ·
Al - Live in or ren t . )
bedroom s., bath. lr:. it
c hen ,
liv i ng
ro om .
OwflE."r wants S6 ..SOO .OO .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland , Sr .
Res . 992 ·2561
Hen,.-y E . Cleland , Jr .
R es . 992-6 191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dotti e- Turner
Res . 742 -2&lt;174

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!
WE HAVE PROSPECTS!

SEVE N
ROOM house ,
b ath , furna ce a nd gds ,
garage, on one and one
twen ty seventh acres off
N ew l i ma Rd 74'1 3090 beT
ween 8 11 ~rn and 7 5 o .m

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2342
EVENING 992-2449

·~ ­

Rd
4S772 .
Call
OPen
need

+2

HOWERY A ND MARTIN
Etc: c avating,
septt c
systems . dozt&gt;r . backhoe
Rt 143 Phone 1 16 1&lt; ) 698
7331 or 7&lt;1 1593

ORPHAN AMMIE-WATER SHORTAGE
&amp;.JT WE LISfD ALL
WA.TFR IN TH AT
( AHtff~
ri HO !HE
CJ\HG TOOK 1HE ~E S T

ISN'T THERE
t DON' T THIN~ ? I
WEL L , l
SC&gt;f\.1E WAY VJE
SO, J\.LK E 1 EVEN
THEN \HE'{ WAll
O'W GE T 1HAT
lF l B OOSTE D 1 \ ../HAT ARE 1\ MINI In- 1
KEV?
YOu UP ON MY \ WE GOING
SHOULDERS. Y''J rll L \
TO
REN:'H 11 1 •

.. IF THERE'S
A~ BEHIN{)
THIS l lJ\HAI N .

POMEROY
LANDMARK
,

Jock W. C.rMy
Mgr.
• .."" . Pttone m -2111

3+
3 NT

Pass
Pa ss

Pass
Pass

6+

1+

l ea d :

•&gt;

Rill y E1 sf' nbf:·rg knew tha t
hi s JUm p 1n th rt•e dubs had
been a sl!ght o~ e rh1d Tl"wr f' fore. he s1gne&lt;f off at th ree
notrump
Edd y Kantt.• r s fo ur -spad ~
call wa s ont• of th o~e all -pur ·
pose cue hads tn 1nv1te a sl am
and acted lik e a red rag to a
bu ll Billy JUmped lo SIX clubs
The hea r t lea d was nght up

ACRO&amp;'i
nic lmame

GASOLINE ALLEY

Miss Melba'
He's qo inq to ~€€D
MLJ chile hood
wal~1nq till pr ices ~ewton! sweetheart '

Wh4 is 4ou
crawlin' 1n
th' qut ter?

qo

Craw lin' count
same

a~

wall&lt;.in''

.......,

WTNNlE
-'..\\:: \2U 3',/ ':S

A\:' _,:)0'"\ ....'....-

A-L "'E fR:"-""- C
PAS:'&gt;·N:J BY 1
1

:"-.! . _. , NAME
·..,~NTUr.:E

~~:: ~ ::::~:;

::2 r:(

tcur.::

'r::;T?

I

'·

5 Ml1.'IC ular
II Omsumer
12 " I'd go from
rags t o 13 Word with
sa ddle
or step

)

roo you h8\l€ a questron fo r
th e e}(per ts ? Wn te ·· Ask rhe
E}(perts . ·· care o f th1s new spaper lnOrvrOua/ ques f10ns w11/
b€ answered rf accompameo
by stampeC. self-addressed
envelopes The most m terest mg questions w1/l be used m
tn1s column and w1JI rece1ve
cop&lt;es of JA COBY M ODERN J

47 Spirit lamp
OOWN
l Police
arrest : sl.
1 Map giant
3 Stage
comedi es

4 Poelic
preposition
Yewterday 's AD.Iwer
5 Sound from
14 Duds
12 Scottish
35 Part of
Mr Ed
15 Pav i n~
name preft.t
6 Ceremonies
H.O.M.E .S
substance
7 J oin the cast 23 Angi&lt;&gt;Sa•on 37 Jaunty
16 New York city g Shocked :
cash
39 Oil-rich
17 Craggy lull
scared
25 Slup's
land
18 Unclose : poel . 9 Literary
40 Compu"'r
dtary
2tl Poker "'nn
W oUe
fodder
28 " Lafay ette ,
2% Mellla or
10 French nver
we - here' ' 4%Ending
Marianne
with
11 Dr . Waller
%II - of leal'll
24 Song
lemon
32 Consumer
ref ram
43 Ursula
19 Primp
advocate
27 Ready
Andres5
21 Suppress
:W Ready for a
for battle
film
or orrUt
hairptece
23 Helmet
I
Jl I'
feature
I' I"
2ll Bistro
jl1
I
30 Old saying
31 Sally 111
I"
Howes
il
·Y 1/
l3 Musician
;" I"
Paul
110
r·..
"
:U Jujube
36 Movie plane t
I"
I" I"'

~

......

-

- ., ·--- .

primale

14:"1 . ""~••~ /~' ·,
.\ fl:&gt;lu/-~

38 Ducked awa
41 Arched
43

M'l DRDBURN
NOSE IS ABOUT
TO ITCH
OFF

y ,,

gallery

tilARNEY

THAT'S A
SHORE S IGN
I' M f'IXJN'
TOG IT

"

"

&gt;:

in Firenu

45 Preliminary
race

46 Leave
behind

I~

!!' I"

..,

141

.... llD

ll2

I"

Evening,

44 German
art !IOilgs

COMPANY

"

"

lF

I"

Ill

1'1

l"

~
10·

IJAII.Y ('f{Y I'TO&lt;!l'OTE - !! ere's ho" t o work it :

AXYDl B A AXR
Is

L 0 :-i (; F E I , I. 0 W

O,.qc le tt l'f samply ~ tand s f or ano th er In thi s s ample A is
u s&lt;"d f or th e thn•e I.'s. X f or thf' two O' s. etc S1ng!e letters.
apostro ph es. th(· l ength and f ormatiOn o f the words are all
hin lo;; Eafh day t he co de h-ttr r" an• daffc&gt;r{'nt

PE ANUTS

l'RYPTOQ UOTES

SOR~'

MAAM .. I Ctl.N'T
.
RAISE M'f HEAD..

M!WBE IF lf'OU WALKED
VYTM
wu J Q
M K L
E
Q XU
AROUN(;' TO THE SIDE OF
KSZGBUYQ
' K y
TH~ ROO.~\ AND STOOC'
MEY
TA
QT
THERE JUST A LITTLE To
WL
WUEYZ
J Q K SQ
QT
LEFT OF -:-HE RADIATOR .. E J
R T ·s I
E y
S E; Z X Q
Q X U

--·

FRIDAY , OCTOBER 12,1979
Report 13 : 5: 50-PTL
Cl ub 13.
6 00--700 C lu b 6,8; PTL Club 15;
Hea lth F;eld 10 , 6 : 0 ~ W orld at
Large 17
6 30-Ktd swor ld 10; News 17; 6 :4&gt;Morning Report 3: 6:5G-Good
Morning . West Vi rginia 13;
6 5.s-N ews 13
oo- Today 3, 15, Fr iday M orning 8 ;
Batm an 10; Three Stooges-Little
Ra sca ls 17
1J - A M . W eather 33. 7 : 30F ami ly Affair 10 . 7 . 55-Chuck
Whi te Reports 10
8 00-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave it
to Beaver l7 , Sesame St 33 .
8 30-- Romper Room 17 .
9 00--Bob Braun 3; Btg Valley 6 ;
Phil Donah ue 15.\3; One Day At
A T ime 10 ; Lucy Show 17
9 30--Bob Newhart 8. Love of L ife
10 . Gr~n Ac r es 17.
10 oo- Card Sharks 3, 15; Beaf !he
Cloc k 8,10 ; Edge ol Nigh t 6;
Movie " 1 Want You " 17.
10 30 - H o 11yw ood Squares 3, 15 ,
~20.000
Pyramid 13 . Andy
Gd lt;lh 6 ; Wh ew ' 8. 10 ; 10 : 5~
CBS N ews 8; House Ca ll 10.
11 QO--High Ro llers 3.1 5 ; L aYerne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13 . Pr ice Is Ri ght 8, 10,
E lee . Co . 10 ·
11 30 - Wheel ot Fortune 3 , 15 ;
Sesa me St ~0 . 33 , 11 :55- News
17
12 oo- Newscent er ) ; Mindreaders
15. L ove American Style 17 .
1"2 30--Rya n's Hope 6. 13, Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Fi eld 15;
Mov ie " Three tor the Show" 17;
Elec Co JJ
:OQ-Oays of Our Lives J, 15; All My
Ctlildren 6. 13, Yo ung &amp; the
Res tl ess 8, 10.
1 30--As The Wor ld Turn s 8. 10
7 QO-Doctors 3.15. One life to Live
6,13 . 2 2~ N ews 17.
"} 30--Another World 3, 15; Guiding
L tght 8, 10 ; Gigg lesnort H otel 17 .
3 00--GP.n eral Hoso ital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17, Ups tairs, Downstairs
20
3 J()--{)ne Dav AI A T ime 8; J oker ' s
W i ld 10. Flln t stones 17
4 QO-M1s l er Cartoon J; Tom &amp;
Jerry 13 . Mer v G riffin 6 ;
Beverly Hillbill ies 8: Sesa me St
2~ .33 . Six Million Dolla r Mlln 10 .
Spectreman 17
4 30 - B ewitched
3;
Pe tticoat
J unct ton 8; B ion ic Woman 13;
M erv G r iffin 1.5 ; Gilligan ' s Is. 17.
s oo-- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3, S.antord
&amp; Son B. Mister Rogers' Neigh bor h ood 20 .33 : Mary Tyler
Moore 10. My Thr ee Son s 17 .
5 30-Carol B ur nett 3; News 6;
Gom er P yle 8; E tee. Co. 20;
Mash 10 . Happy Day s Again 13 ; I
Dream of Jeann ie 17; Doctor
Who 33
6 00-- News 3.8.10. 13, 15; ABC News
6. Zoom 20 . Car ol Burnett 11 ;
Lite Around Us 3J .
6 3G--NBC News 3, 15; AB C News IJ
Carol Burne It 6. CBS News 8, 10;
B ob N ewhar t 17; Over Easy
10.33.
7:()()-3's A Crowd 3,6; Tic Ta c
Dough 8 : News 10; Newlywed
Game 13 ; Love Amedcan Style
1.5. Sanford &amp; Son 17 . Dick
Cavett 20,33.
7 3G--Prlce is Right 3; New lywed
G ame 6 ; Family Feud 10 ;
J oker 's Wi ld 8; Pop Goes the
Country 13, 15; Al l lh The Family
17 ; MacNei l -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8. 0Q-- D IIf ' rent Strokes 3,15; World
Series 6, 13. Yabbo Dabba Doo II
8.1 0; Wa shington Week In
Review
20 ,33 ;
Movie
"F ran kenste in's Daughter" 11 .
8 30--Hello, Larry 3, 15; Wall Street
Week 20.33.
9 oo-Rock ford F i les 3.t5 ; Dukes of
Hazzard 8.10 ; Scarlet Letter 20 ;
Money , News &amp; VIews 33 .
9 .3G--Ray Charles at Montreu• 33.
lO .OQ--Dallas 8,10; Wlnsloh Churchill 17 ; News 20.
10 3G--Up Close Wlfh 17: Lock.
Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 : OQ--News 3,8, 10, 15; ; Last of the
Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20 .
11 : 15- News 6 , 13; 11 : 30- Johnhy
Carson 3,15 ; Movie " If It' s A
MM Hahg Up" 8; ABC News 33
Movie "C:ount Yorga, Vampire"
10; Mpvle "The ,Terror " 17.
11 : 4&gt;--Charlle's Angels 6; Movie
" Th' Jlrlde.oi.Franken&amp;te!n!"-la~ -. Monty Python' s Flying Circus~ .·
12 : 55- FBI
6 ; 1:00-Midnlgl)t'
Specla.l 3, 1~; Juke-_Box 8; Moi'fe

s 4~F arm

THOMAS JOSEPH

1 Oliver Hardy's

HOTPOINT

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY

Pass

Pa:;s
Pass

by

TRUCK and auto repa ir .
Ca ll'l'/2 ·6323.

He•dquarters
Applloncts
Soln &amp; $ervlce

So uth

vt·rv gmJtJ mdt•ed lit• IC'd a
~ p &lt;id•· In rlumm _v·s k1ng .
rtt u r ned a spad e Lo h1 s ace .
ru ff ed hts Jark of spa drs. led a
dub to hts ace. rontmued Wit h
lht• ktn~ an d paus(l d f or study
after West failed to f olluw
How wa~ Rill y gotn~ to
avOid th P loss of both a ('lub
Jnd a dia m ond'' Ea~y for
B1 lly H{" n('l'dcd a trump
co up
He led a he;ut w dummy"s
ace. ru ffed Cj heart . l ed a d ia mond to dumm v ·s ace . ruffed
dumm v ·s last hPart and led
hts sma l l d iamond
It made no dtff er ence w h o
won that diamond trtck Btll y
w a~ l eft w1th tht• q uce n· ntnf.
of cl ub ~ poor East held t he
Jack · su and since he had w
play to that trtck bef ore Adly .
t h£~ slam ca m e home
T o save ro rr espond ence
W1t huut a heart lead t he slam
w ould no t have m ad f'

~--~t¥

HAVE ROOM and board ,
la undry, for elderly on ly
In walking distan ce ot
Senior
Citizens
Reasonable . '192 60 22

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

East

Pa ss

THEN THERE M IG H1
BE tW()T H ER !XJOR l!E ·

-----

Wld

North

West

AIJ.EY OOP

BRADFORD , Au ctione-er ,
Com pl ete Se rvi ce Phon e
9A9 1487 or 9~9 · 2000 . ra cine,
Ohio . Critt Bradford

WILL CAti!E f or elderlv ;n
our ho m e . Also , room a nd
board avai lable. 992 ·73 14

+KQ

By Oswa ld Ja&lt;'ohy
and Alan Santa~

A&amp; H Upholster ing , acros!l
from t he T e•a co Station 1n
Sy ra ucse 992 3743 or 992
3752.

Services Offered

EAST
+Q8 7l:l
• 86

Openin g

REYNOLD 'S ELECTRIC
Mot or s, r ewind and repa 1r
992 ·2356, 561 Beech St.
M idd leport , Oh io

ELWOO D
BOWER S
REPAIR
Swee pers ,
toast ers . irons , all ~ma ll
appliances. Lawn mower
Next lo Sta te Hi g hway
Ga rag e on Route 7. ~8.5
3112 5

10 7

Vuln erabl e: Net ther
Dealer : South

rH

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SU RANCE
been
c an
ce lled'
Los t
your
ope r a ror ·s l1ccnse? Ph one
9'12 214.1
lN STOCK for 1mme&lt;Jtate
· deli very various size-s of
pool krt s. D o i t you r self or
let us ins t all •or vou D
Bu mgardner Sales, In c
9'12 572 4

•

hiS chdO( "('S for SU &lt;Tl'SS W('r('

J 6 5:!
SOUT H
• A .J 5
• Qi
• 87
+ AKQiil

UITLE ORPHAN ANNI E

PAINTING A ND
sand
bla st ing F ree est1mate~
Ca ll 949 2686.

EXCAVA TIN G,
dozer ,
loader dnd bac khoe work
dump tru cks and to boys
f or h ir e. wt l l naul f i ll dirt,
Top soi l. ltmestone and
gravel Call Bob o r Roger
Je-ffer s, day phone 991 7089.
n1gh t phone 9'9 2 3.52 5 or 99'1
5232

/\10!".1 4 ~

+

ID- 11

O ' THF CMIE Er-1 5

SE WIN G
MACHINE
R epa1rs,
se rvt ce,
al l
md ke s
991 11BA .
The
Fabric
Shop, P onnero.Sates
A uthor •led Singer
and Servtce We shMpen
Sc tssor ~

.

• 10 9 6
• KJH Z&gt; 4
• J 6 5 :t

1m o

DOZ ER,
E ND Loader .
h og
W ill
do
b rush
ba seme nts. ponds. brush.
timber , land c1ea r 1ng
Charles B ut( her 7-47 29 40

K 2

WEST

S&amp;G carpet
C tean1ng
Sl e dm
cle aned
Fre e
es.ttmate
RC'asonabte
ra tes
Scotchguard
9&lt;{1
6309. or 7&lt;2 2348

IF YOU WANT TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY GIVE US
A CALL 992-2342

•

R!ll y ~ a lley Ht.' p layl·d low
d.nd af11·r Etist failed to pn• ·
duce \h{' ktng . Rilly.' saw that

lO..l l

• .~ 10:! 2

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel AlSO , l tme hault ng
and sp re ading Leo Morr ts
Tru ck i ng Phone 742 2.oi 55

WE ARRANGE FINANCING!

FIVE ROOM h ouo;e, all
ca rpeted, mOdern kitchen
an d bdth. gt~rage and ca r
por t . In Bradbury Ca l1997 ·
53 10

.I

5071
Osborn
Reedsville, OH,
For information
667 -6481. Will be
la te
if
you
s-omething .
/
9 U

Ct.LL 992 7544
PIANO
TUN IN G
Lane
Dan1els . N ew phone num
ber
74'1 2q.51
Se r vi ce to
sc hool s and homes si nce
1965

+

r,~J c '.:"',ll

)'

33
9 GO---Quincy 3. 15; Barney M i ller
6. 13. Haw aii Five .O 8, 10; Sneak
Previews 20.33
9 30 ~ Soa p 6, 13 ; Camera Three
20,33 .
10 ·00'-NBC News 3, 15; ABC News
Closeup Special 6. 13; Barnaby
Jones 8.1 0: News 20. David
Susskind 33 .
10 JO ~ Civilisa tion 17 , H ock ing
Va lley Bluegrass 20 .
II 00- News 3,6 , 8,1 0. 13 . 15. Dick
Cavett 10 , Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33 .
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 15; Police
Woman 6, 13 ; Columbo 8; ABC
News 33 . Movie " Macken na ' s
Go l d "
10 ;
M o vie
" The
President's Lady" 17.
12 40- Bare lt a
6 .13;
1: 00Tomorrow 3. News 15; I 15Banace k 8 .
1 30-- News 17 : 1 3.5---Movle " The
Red head &amp; t he Cowboy" 17 :
1 5{}- -N ews 13.
3 10-Mov i e " Bride of Vengeance"
17. 5 05-Siar Trek 17.

I I I I ] MY ( XX1 X]

Answer NOT(

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYl AND
ALUMINUM !IIDING

Roger Hysell

THURSDAY , OCTOBER 11, 197t
I 00--3's A Crowd 3; T ic Tac Doug~
8, Ba)(ters 6; New s 10; Pollcital
Ta lk 13 : Love American Style
15; San lord &amp; ~on 11 ; l.JIL:"
Ca vell 20.33
r 30- Hall ywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Ga me 6; Joker's Wild
8. S100 ,000 Na me That Tune 10;
Nashville On The Road 13;
Counlry Roads 15 ; All In The
Fa'mi ly 17.
8 00-Buck Rogers 3, 15; Laye rne &amp;
Shir l ey 6 , 13 , Wa1tons 8 , 10 ;
Even i ng at Sy mphony 20; NHL
Hockey 17 ; Community In the
Kev ol D 33 .
8. 30 - Benson 6 , 13 ; Spor1s C lose-Up

L'

T rJ

.. S tfc

9 7 1 mo .

(

[ WHISS

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

V. C. YOUNG Ill

DOG HOUSE . large new
Cd ll 949 ~471
BUNK
BE DS.
mtsc
household rtems 1nc ludmg
an t i que
rocker
and
gla:;s ware .
personal
c lo th ing Bu1c k au t o f or
parts or who le N o call
Thursday and Friday, 446
t¥:176. 169 Jac k son Pike,
GallipOliS . OH

.

- .1"

NO U TI I

POMEROY
LANDMARK
McCulloch Pro
Mac 55
1150 .00
McCulloch
Mas · 10
s 125 .00
Remington 34
1100.00
lSOAuto
Home lite
1125.00
XK 12 Hom elite 1185.00
Kl400 Homelite 1200.00
Remington
Yardmaster
175.00
Remtngton
Super 754
1100.00
Sears
1100.00
XL H omelite
175 .00
1 Excellent Unico 16 cu .
ft.
Coppertone
Refrigerator , like new,

"

·.-.- ~

I

...,__ 'f',.

N "e w ~

4 30 tf (
MAJESTIC WOOD burner ,
36"' W1de , ltke new, $1'15
SPe at 59 1 Broadway St .
M1ddlcport

--1 0

H. L Writesel
Roofing .

Garage

PURE DUROC BOAR. lop
qual1ty Reeosv1 ll e, 614 378
63 11
TWO AXLE backhoe
tra 11er Phone Gal l ipoltS,
446 &lt;1 781

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODEllftG

9 28 1 mo. Pd .

OL D WALNUT
y rand
ldfher ·s c lock lnqu1re at
thp Wooel Stw d on Broad
way 1n Rac1ne

IMID--·

WANT ED
SAW
togs
P avmen t upon clel1verv to
our ya r d, 7 30 to J JO week
dars Blaney Har dwoods.
SR JJq , Bartow . O H 618
1980

OHIO VALLEY

~~

[ KIREP
•

WINTER
POTATOES
Prottt rt ! arm, Por
II and , OH SB it hundrf'd and
S5 a hundrea

Television
Viewing

/'-

Business Services

cw

-

MO
::.:b::.:i.:.o
le:..cH
..:.o
::cm
c:.:.=e S_·_R~_1'1 t

Siltu,..day , October 13
8 : 00P .M .
Gallia County
Jr. Fairgrounds
4 miles
west
of
Gallipolis, 0 . on U.S . Rt .
35 .
Outstanding
Calves
Will Be Sold
"This sale is designed
espcially for 4-H and
FFA Members looking
for
Steer
Feeding
Projects ."
Auctioneer
Tommy Joe Stewart
(614 1 446· 722 or 446·9760
Sponsor
Gallia county
Extension
Beet Com·m itfee
(614) 446·4612 E&lt;t . 2

COAL
LIMESTONE
sand . grav('l
ca l ( rum
(tltor1de . lertdtler . doy
•OOd . ana al l types of sa lf
E:.( els1or Salt Works. tnc .
E Ma1n Sl . Pomt&gt;roy 99'1
3891

HOU SE
TRAILER .
Che ster area 1 bedroom
Ulil1 t• es not pa1d , S100 mo .
re leren Le
and
aep osll
requ1red Call 304 663 5161

n,

CLUB CALF
SALE

.

ANYWHERE - You
NOT ABANDON us,

For Sale

tobe r , 1979 , at 6 :00 PM .,

at

.

WE ARE MILES FROM

PUBLIC NOTI CE
Noti ce is he r eby given
that on the 16th day of Oc

217,

11- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday Od I I, 1979

DICK I HA rv

·' -·-

"Tr~"

'.

•

101 NeWS

u . .·

...

•

·

j.

'

�12- The Daily Sen ttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct . 11, 1979

Quick settlement sought

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Board-teacher negotiating teams changed

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12th, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 13th

LAST TWO DAYS

115TH ANNIVERSARY SALE

BY BOB HOEFLICH
•
There was some optimism Friday moming on a settlement of the Meigs
Local School Teachers Association strike in the announcement that new
negotiating teams will meet Saturday morning .
Both Mrs . Bonnie Fisher, president of the Meigs Local Teachers
Association, and Supt. David G IeaSon announced the Saturday meeting with
the change tn personnel on the negotiation teams after a negotia ling sesswn
tn Pomeroy Thursday night apparently brought little results towards setUmg the 15 day strike.
Mrs. Fisher said negotiating teams of. both groups met at Trinity Church
Thursday night from 3:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. The new teams wtll start
negotiatwn sessions at 11 a.m. Saturday .
The board of education team will for the first tune have board members on
it. They Wlll he Carol Pierce, board president; Mrs . Jenmfer Sheets, vtce
president , and John Mora , princtpal of the Meigs Junior High School. The
teachers team will be composed of teachers only.
_"The Meigs Local Teachers Association is hopeful that this arrangement
will brtng a speedy solution to the situation" , Mrs. Ftsher commented .
. Judge Robert Buck, probate a nd juvenile judge, has vol unteered to be an
unparttal party and help in any way . The assoctatton has accepted this offer
a nd hopes that he can be in attendance at the sesswn , Mrs. F tsher said .
Mrs. Fisher annoWlced there will be a dinner rall y for members of the
association at 6 30 p.m. Sw1da y at the American Legton Hall in Pomeroy.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
SAVE 20%

caPilaPtt

WORK CLOTHES

A·NNIVERSARY SALE

Complete se le c t to n of sizes
in
ovralls, quilt
lined
covera ll s, jackets, h oods,
vests Buy what you need
now and save 15 pe r cent .

PRE-TEEN
By H arbo r Be ll e a nd Russ T ee n

BOYS'
WINTER
JACKETS

SAVE 20%

AND

SAVE!
MEN'S AND BOYS '1.39

Corduroy
Velours
Warm -up Suits Blouses
P ile- lin ed Vests .

SAVE! RED HEART

$1 WINTUK YARN
49

TUBE SOCKS

ro ra uroy

quilff·d 1M k£'f S

11ned

vests

Boys S14 .95
Boys $16.95
Boys$18.95
aoys $29 .95

Jackets
Jackets
Jack e ts
Jack e ts

3';, oz . Ske in s - famo us quality o rion
ya rn . Big se lectio n o f co lor s.

Sleepe r s, gowns , robes and
p ajamas. Months sizes thru 7
to 14 .

FROM
ONlY

Sizes 28 to 42 waist . Most are
pre washed denim s . straight
leg and fl are s t y les Save

DENIM
DENIM
DENIM
DENIM

JEANS '11.29
JEANS '11.99
JEANS '12.79
JEANS '13.49

----------·-·-·-·-·-1
:

ANNIVERSARY SAL

E

WOMEN'S
SPORTSWEAR
Mi ssy and extra size coe r
dinate s
Quality in the
late s t fall fashions

.. -

LINGERIE
SALE

. . v·
';

-,-,
•,

·'

' I

·-

'

~-,,

, l

1

ki

~~
·

!'~ '' \'
·, I '

CHAIR SALE
20% OFF

'8.95 KNIT SHIRTS ... .... ......... '7.16
'10.95 KNIT SHIRTS ....... ...... . '8.76
'14.95 KNIT SHIRTS ............. '11.96
'19.95 KNIT SHIRTS ............. '15.96

Specia l pri ces on rec l iner s,
swivel
roc k ers.
rock o
lounger s, wall aways and
occas10na1 chc11 r s

ANNIVERSARY SALE
WOMEN 'S

COAT
SALE

ANNIVERSAR Y SALE

WOMEN'S
SWEATERS
'.

·~
SALE!

• ; . CANNON
BATH
TOWELS

'3.99 BATH SIZE............ ........ .. . '3.29
'2.99 HAND TOWEL ................... '2.49
1.49 WASH CLOTH .... ....... ..........'1.19

1

rt&gt;versed

I'd like it better ." said one local
party offi cta l after Mrndale met
With about 175 people at a $20!H! h ea d fund -r ais in K rece pti on tn
Oeveland .

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

Pullov ers and c oat s t yles
in regular sizes S ·M L and
extra sizes 34 thru 52 .

,,

GIRLS'
DRESSES
Spec ial sa le pri ces on our ent1re
stoc k of girls ' dresses , svds and
i umper s. Sizes 1 to 4. 4 to 6)( , 1 to
14 .

Sale Prices Start at Only

&amp;yle sentenced

SALE

;

~

$54.~1)% OFF

Sale
Sale 564 .00

Sales8l.OO
Sale$105.00 •

$399

Sa le prices include upholstered ben ·
c h es . lay -away for Christmas!

IN_

~I

-

'

Al va T Boncla , slB tt · chatrrnan of
the Cane r -Mundall' President ial

sen d fund- rai Sing
Ohto have been slow.

though

I IIOIJW ntum

IS

Hn

even tougher tune if Sen

Kennedy , D-Ma ss.,

(Continued on page 10)

Netther tCennedy nor Carter has
en te r ed the
1980
off ic ta ll y
prestdenttal rae'\! . Carter forces say
the president will declar e hJ s
candtdacy 1n early O.,C.,mber

FIREME N RE-{;EHTIFIED - Eighteen Chester firefighters wer e
re.,e rttfied after com pletmg 36 hours of instruction in fire traUUfl!! . Individual cards were presented to each person completing the training. A
department certiftcate was presented to Hoy Christy, c hi ef, by Charles
W. Legar , Sr .. the instructor . The certificates and cards as well as the in s truct iona l material were authorized a nd made availab le by the Trade
and lndustnal Service, Divtsion of Vocational Education of the State

i\EW YOKK ' :\P 1 - Ftdt&gt;l Castru,
sluelded by 2,000 J.&gt;Oitce offtcers """
dozens of his 0 \'.11 g u~ rds. spent hts
flr t&gt;1 cia~· m ~- ew York C'1ty m 19
years apparently holt"d up 1n the

Cuban rnJsswn m CJ ." iiot-begnnwd,

13-stor y bed
brll·k butl dt ng
prep.1nng ht s spl't'('h to lht' L'111teU
~;t{]l)fl .&lt;.,

CLEVELAND I AP 1 - Here are
the winning numbers drawn
Thursday In this week's Ohio Lot·
tery game:
Blue 917 ; white 77: gold 9:
winathon 78111.
···-.··.·.----:·:-·

CURFEW ENACI'ED
A curfew will go lni&lt;J effect Immediately In the village of Syracuse
Mayor Eber Plckellli announced
today.
Due to the numerous acts of va•

. daUsm yo uths must be off the streets
by 8:30p.m. nnless accompanied by
their parenl.8 or parent. The slren
will sound each evening. The curfew
will be In effect the month of OcI&lt;Jber.

y

Frtci ay

Gener~l

nwrn tng,

IS

to

Assembly lctte
w&lt;.~s

secunty men, tn:1ve ls to the Umted
~at to n s' riverSide head quarters m

c lad in

\l anhattan from th e fortress-like
Cuban ~vhsston on East 38th street
where he hao;; rem ained m secluston
ever smre arrt\'lflJ; m ;-.Jew York
early Thursrla~
Dunng Castrll·\ ~~ heduled 41 :!

s urrounding streets, where pro-and

hour

the nver to head off any mcidents
su mlar to tht&gt; 1964 attack on Ernesto

The C'ublln prestd en t. guardt•d
ruunrl-the-&lt; luck b;. i-1 llli-lSSlH' net of

Ylt•du..·al Center for tre;-11Inent.

'111ursday by the (;a iiia-Me tgs Post.
Highwa y Patrol.
Off Jeer s lnve-st 1gated a one-vt! hJ cle

the \'ehtcle . Dav1 ~ v.as nh•tl on a
vhargl' of hit-ski p .
Urw dnvt r was Cited followtng a

m1shap on CR 7. one-tenth of a m1le

IW\1·\l'hicle

west of SR lf&gt;O, at 12 :.10 p rn
Till' patrol reports •• Wl'st ho und

tent.hs o f a mtll' north of U.S . .15. at

There was moderah•

dama~e

tu

au·tdent on SR 160, two-

:! · 4&gt; p.m
Offlcl:'r'-i rt'f:XJr1 ;m au to

Dal'!s dtsp layed VISible stgns of

opt"rated
01 Cath) Sounders . 2.1. Btdwell , had
o1opped tn Jrafftc . A vehtc le drtven
by Ct.&gt;rn Betts. \6, Btdwdl, fali~d to
stop ami struck t.hl• Saunders e~uto w
Lhl' l"l'Or .

and wa.o;; transported to Holzer

T1wr P wa-" moderate damagt• to

a uto ort'rr!lt··d b~ .J~\Il H.' O;n IS, lf),
Vtnlun. r2n off tht• It·([ SHit- ot lt1l'

roadway.

struck a utility pole.
ba c ked up. stru ck a mailbox, and
left llll'
UlJUT)'

SCt'nt'

the Betts autn . slight damage to the
Sctunders n :•htcle . Bett s was c1ted on
a char ge of failure to rnamtatn an

IVING

Amenca. Cuban and Un ited Nations
stcunty men wtll blank et th e East
Rn·er head quar t ers and the

fanuila r green fat1 gues and had a
ngar atilt 1n h1s mouth as ht• arnved
m prt.•-da\.\11 hours Thur sday un et jet
01ght from Ha ntna

Om.• person was Injured Uurmg
fou r
aC('ldents
tn~·estJI:!ated

iiS ~ Urt.'d

clear dJstan C'e

Kathy
A.
Whttlatrh.
17 ,
J(,-.:dsvtlle. was c llt&gt;d on a char~e of
faliurt• to ,Yi t'lrl followmg a m1shap

on TR 287 .jUS1 west of Sit 7, in Metgs
Collllt:

Ca!ll-&gt;d tn the scPnt• at 6 10 p _m .
offtcers report \·etudes operated by

Wh ttl"tch "nd RoJOe A Marcm ko,
24 . n.. edsvtllt•. rolltded Bo th

U.;-..i

\ 'l S I!.

hun dr L•ds

uf

-- che · Guevara, Cast ro's industry
mtn"ter As Guevara addressed the
(~eneral

vehtcles
lncurrt•d
m o dL·ratP
damO:&amp;ge
The patrol lfl\'t:' ~i l~Cited a two-

vehicle acc tdent on SH 160,

antt-Castro groups are e&gt;&lt;pected to
gether . U.N grounds wiU be closed
to the public today .
\ew York police boat.s will patrol

fl\'t'~

t.t•nths of t1 mtle south ll f lJ .S :35. at
7 40 p .m .
Ufflecrs rt&gt;port an autu operated
b) Arthur Brown. ll. r;aiiipohs.
pulll'&lt;.l mto 1JH· ~1 Lh 11f ;t 11nrth bound
\·eh Jclc dnn_·n h~ .l ~._, rn \1c:vlams.
l l. (;alltpults.
Both v~h 1 cles mcurrt:'d moderate
damal-(e . Brown was Cited on a

c harge of fatlurc· Ul 'teld .
CANCELLED
The Bloodmobile scheduled for
Monda y has been canceUed Vernon
Nease, chauman, reported that date
and time of a new sched ule wtll be

Assembly , a nti·Castro

l'ubans fired a bazooka at the U.N.
complex from across the water . The
sh ell fell short and s plashed
tllim1lessly tnto the water . G uevara

wa;

lulled

m 1967 leading

a

revolutionar y band 1n Bo li via
! Con ttnued

on page

10 )

EXTENDED FORECASf
Fair and cold Sunday wtlb
highs In tbe 40s and ovemlgbt
lows In tbe low I&lt;J mid :W.. War·
mer Monday and Tuesday wtlb a
chance of rain by Tuesday . Highs
both days In the SO.. Lows Monday and Tuesday olgbl!l In lbe
mid 30o I&lt;J low 40s .

announ ced .

DRIVERS NEEDED
The Eastem Local School Distnct
IS tn need of subs!ttuU, bus drivers .
Those needing furthe r information
may conta ct the super intendent's of. flee at Eastern Local or phone 992·
4292 .

Weather
Partly cloudy and colder tonight
and Saturday. Low tonight in the
mid 30s . High Saturday around 50.
The chance of precipitation 10 percent tonight and near zero Saturday.

Settlement would he appreciated

All ot our Westerns i ncl uded s
M, L and XL . Ftann@IS, coit00

poly blends , suedes, polyflter
knits . You ' lllove the S@lection

Shirts
Shirts
Shirts
Shirts

Tlw Cuban prest dent. who
addres...;; tht.•

One hurt in four accidents

MEN'S
WESTERN SHIRTS
Western
western
Western
western

Department of Educati on, in cooperation with Tri.COunty Joint
Vocati onal School Pictured are , front , i1 , Bruce A. Myers, John ·
Wickam, Vtrgil Taylor, Hobart Newell, Roy Christy, chief. and Charles
Legar ; hack, Pearl Edwards, Bruce Myers and Harold Newell.
Heceiving cards but not pictured were Kirk Chevalier, Larry Cleland,
Davtd Ga ul , Leonard Myers, John Ridenour, Lowell Ridenour, Marvin
Taylor . Bryan Teaford , Russ Well, and Hobert Wood .

Fidel Castro addressing U. N. tonight

ANNIVERSARY
SAVINGS

Men 's $11.95
Men 's $12 .95
Men 's $16 .95
Men 's $18 .95

' l '"'

•

- Save 20% on any living room suite in
stock.
-choose sofas and love seats
- Two and three piece suites
- Modern, Contemporary and Early
American styles.

;.

···---·-o.·)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

..

SUITES

KIMBALL
PIANOS
Reg . $1450 .00
P eca n or Cherry Spinet ..• Sa le $1149 .00
Reg . $1490 .00
Pine Spinet ......... , . ..... Sa le $1189 .00
Reg . $1590 .00
Walnut Console ............ Sa le $1289 .00

~

ROOM

SALE

....

MEDIA , Pa . !API - W. A
"Tony" Boyle, who once headed
the powerful Untied Min e
Workers union, has bt-en sentenced to three consecutive life
proon terms for munlers committed by three hired assassins.
Before his appearance in court
Thursday, the 7&amp;-year-old Boyle
had been convicted twice of
arranging the Dec. 31, 1969 murders of Joseph " Jock " Yablonski ,
Yablonski's wife and daughter as
they slept in their Oarksville
home in the western Pennsylvania soft coal region .
"I am innocent of the crimes of

ANNIVERSARY

ANNIVERSARY

Reg . $7 .00 ........ Sal e $5 .59
Reg . S4 .oo ....... sale 511.19
Reg . $21.00 ...... Sale 516. 79
Reg , S28.oo ...... Sale 522 . 39
Reg . $36 .00.. , .. . Sale 528 . 79

AUSTIN, Texas (AP l - Lady
Bird Johnson was awakened and
rousted from herfifth-&lt;ltory penthouse apartmenl early today alter fire broke out in the thtrd noor faciliti es of a teleVIsion
station once owned by the Johnson family .
Secret service agents escorted
Mrs . John son , widow of
President Lyn don B. Johnson .
safely out of the building , which
houses KTBC-TV , a CBS affiliate,
in downtown Austin .

SAVE 20%

'64.00 .... ..... SALE '54.00
'80.00 ........ SALE '64.00
'95.00 ......... SALE '81.00
'124.00....... SALE '105.00

I

Ladybird safe

Regu l ar and ex tra l arg e sizes.
Corduroys
denims quilted
nylons leathers . B ig se le&lt;: t ion
of si zes .

•

FR IDAY. OCTOBER 12. 1979

arnmt::,1.ratwn has dont· for Ule state .
But the mood Withtn the Ohto
DemocraliC Party dot.•s not eippe&lt;:~r
to bt." as optinustiC.

deCides to enter the ra ce.

JACKETS
AND VESTS

Reg. 564.00
Reg. sso.oo
Reg . $95.00
Reg. 5124.00

""""'.en t 1n e

to ra ll y a ro und th e Ca rt er campa1gn
they
real i ze what the

Ed ward M

MEN ' S WINTER

.

at

(J nc e

have

SHIRTS .. ................... '4.76
SHIRTS .................... '5.56
SHIRTS ................. .... '7.16
SHIRTS .......... ...... .... '7.96

.

•

butld .
But Bonrla predtcted the effort wtll

Sizes B to 20 . All of our flan
n e l s hirts · knit s hirts
western s hirts inc luded .

'5.95
'6.95
'8.95
'9.95

During the rally, one spokesman for the students stresSed tlJat during the
three week teac hers stnke, tt appears students have become secondary In
consideration when they should be the primary concem of both the boanl
cmd the b:acher~
The game and band appearance--at home this evening against Ironton - has been cancelled and an appearance by the hand at a competition
on Saturday has also been ca nceUed . The cancellations, which have taken
place for the past U1ree weeks, are in accordance with a poli cy of the board
stati ng that unless teac hers and students involved m these activities are In
the classrooms durtng the week then the activities cannot take place .
The Metgs County Ministerial Association staged a two-hour prayer
session a t the Pomeroy Umted Methodist Church Thursday night to ask
prayer for those tnv olved on both sides of the strike . The service was held
from 7 to 9 p.m and was the type service at which res ident.&lt; could s top by for
only a few rrunutes tf they wtshed . Only a handful of persons were in attendance shortly after the se rvtce got underway

be~tn nmg Ul

BOYS'
SHIRTS

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Solid color jacquard pattern towel en semble at Anni ver sary Sale Savings

Wt~ re

l'\'t:'fl

BOYS'
BOYS'
BOYS'
BOYS'

strike .

The vtet&gt; presu.lent tult.l a new s

i1CtJ\'JtJes m

Missy and extra sizes in
warm ca r
coa t s,
a ll
weath e r coats a nd fur
co llar s .

\.

•

con fen•nce prtor to the reception
thdt there ts no lat·k of conft de nce
"''llhUl the admimstr atJ.on regardmg
Ca rter ·s chan ces of bemg re-&lt;!lected .
And he satd he expects Ohto voters

Co mmittee .

SAVE 20%

MEN'S '99.95 SUITS SAlE '74.96

4.25
5 4.95
s 7.65
s 9.35
S11.90

" I wtsh the ti cket

Ski coa ts , dress coats, fur
trimmed .

ANNIVERSARY SALE

, \

l,

CLEVELAND, Ohto 1AP 1 - Vtce
President
Walter
Munda le,
campatgning in Ohto Thursd ay for
Jlrnmy Carter, ge nerated more
enthusiasm for himstlf th a n he dtd
for tile troubled pr ~sident

JUNIOR
COATS

t~
MEN'S '59.95 SPORT COATS ...... .. '44.96
~...-:';;~
, '!,)
i r·-.:;;:::;~:::~-----~:-:'~-:-"
/

administrator. The teachers will be represt:'nled by three teachers",
Gleason reported .
Supt. Gleason reported a major breakthrough 1n t1ltt·ndance alone school
in the dtstoct Fnda y mormng . S..vt•ral parents tlllt&gt;ated a telephone campatgn on Th ursday which produced as1oundmg results, Gleason reports . As a
result over 50 additional students were bused Frtday to schoo l.
Sinu lar effort.&lt;; could be made tn other a reas, l~t&lt; satd, and urged parent.s to
dn their part tn helping to pruvtde education for the students
" If parents wish to conduct such campaigns, aU they have to do is let u.s
i&lt;now where the kids are located and we work hard to get buses to the
,locations to ptck them up fur school". Gleason said .
The picket lin e at the Harnsonville Elementary School where the ad·
dJtional stud ents were 1n clas.scs Fnday morning,was heavy but there was no
problem mvolved tn getttng the students into the school, Gleason satd.
Security guards and the shenff's department were at the school to be helpful
if needed .
Gleason said he rode on !he school bu,; pick.mg up additional children

Mondale's visit
very enthusiastic

ANNIVERSARY SALE

MEN'S '69.95 SPORT COATS .........'52.46

MEN'S '89.95 SUITS SAlE '67.46

'

1•

ss.oo ... . .. . ..... 5

,•

1
I

'

'

Waltz le n gth gown s, robes
and e n se mbl es, nylon and
p e rman en t
pr ess . Sizes
Petit e thru XXL .

57.00 ., ..........
$9.00 ............
511 .00 .... , ......
$14.00 ...... . ....

I•

l '

S ize s 36 to 46 in regular s and
lo ng s . Cord uroy s inc Iuded

-

-r '

5,{

.

MEN'S 3 PIECE
VESTED SUITS

i~'\..
~ _;

I\

the makeup nf the lea.rrLS will occur for one special negotiation sesSIOn Saturday morning . The board team w1U constst or two bfldrd member s and one

Friday rnumtng . Earlier, he said , he missed a curve whil e traveling to
school tn his pnvate car and his car ended up in a field. The accident was in
no way related to the s trike, Gleason stressed.
Meantime . Supt. Gleason corrunended high school students for a wellmanaged rally whieh the students held a t the Middleport Park Thursday afternoon . He satd that the orderly rally was an indication of the quality of the
students who stressed dunn~ the rally that they want a settlement of the

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

FLANNEL SHIRTS ....... '10.39
FLANNEL SHIRTS ........ '11.19
FLANNEL SHIRTS ........ '11.99
FLANNEL SHIRTS ....... '12.79

MEN'S '79.95 SPORT COATS ........ '59.96

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

20% OFF
ANNIVERSARY SALE

J·-' .

tu t.i:tke a coveretl dtsh and table serviee, Mrs . FISher sa1d .

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SPECIAL SALE!

Sale on our enti r e s toc k of "'-~
m e n 's
knits
including
'-.
ve lours. S, M , l , XL a nd
. ;r,•.• 00 , •. ,.,
XXL sizes. An excellent
' tc .- .' ,.
selection of styles , pat ·
'&lt;,
terns , c olors .

MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN'S
MEN 'S

NO. 127

Poly es ters and 100% wools
in s olid co lors and pat ·
tern s. Siz e 36 to 46 .

MEN'S
KNIT
SHIRTS

25°1o .

MEN'S '14.95 FASHION
MF,N'S '15.95 FASHION
MEN'S '16.95 FASHION
MEN'S '17.95 FASHION

MEN'S
SPORT
COATS

CHILDREN'S
SLEEPWEAR

MEN'S
BLUE DENIM
FASHION JEANS

~.

VOl. XXVIII

Al l sizes S, M . Land XL plus tall s
a no extra si zes . Plaids and soli d
co lors
Alas kan flanne l s in
eluded

MEN'S '12.95
MEN'S '13.95
MEN'S '14.95
MEN'S '15.95

/ Vests ... .. . $13 . 26
/ Ves ts ...... 514.76
1 Vests ....... 523 .36

ANNIVERSARY SALE

lS

Family members ar~ tnvtted .
Supt . Gleason commented Frtday morning that ltttle progress was made
l&gt;etween the two teams Thursday ntght
" However . one irn(XIrtant thing did come out of the session . A change in

e

MEN'S
FLANNEL
WORK SHIRTS

1 Vests ...... 511.66

SAVE FRIDAY and
SATURDAY

Eac h member

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

SALE 20% OFF

Boy s sizes 7 to 11 , men's 9 to 15. Whil e
with colo r tops Made by S pringf oo t .

Reg.
Reg,
Reg.
Reg .
Reg .

SAVE

r u ur St' l t '( ! 1o ns now d nd ~dVf' s~;ec, Bto 70

Ocnuns

Good

SPORTSWEAR

Sk irts, ja cke ts , ves ts, s lacks,
blouses and sweaters.

VESTS

;'I

S•Ye Fridily and Saturdily -

JUNIOR
COORDINATE

SPORTSWEAR

SPECIAL SALE

~....
~

SPECIAL SALE PRICES

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Selection .

SALE PRICES

Mdk !·

Dutch
Flower
Bulb

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ON OUR
ENTIRE STOCK OF TABLE COVERS

BROWN DUCK

\

5 9.95
510.36
513 ..56

rally held by Meigs High School students at the Mid AND THE BAND PLAYED ON - A number of the
&lt;tJeport Community P a rk Thursday afternoon. lively
Meiga High School band members, majorette and flag
corpe members and the rifle j!)'oup were on hand at a • selections by the musicians kept the orderl y rally
llltlVing .

I

By Bob Hoeflich
"Two, four , six, eight, what would
we apprectate 7 A se ttlement, a settlement."
This was the cheer that went up
from well over 100 students a te nding
" middle-of-the-road rally at the
Middleport r,ommu nity Park Thursday afternoon as a side~g ht of a
teachers strike in the Meigs Local
School District.
The band was on hand to present
selections cJring the live ly , orderly

raUy designed to urge a settlement
in the strike which moved into its
loth day today .
jjnda -Eason 111!roduced ·student
speakers who represented various
activiti es at the school including
band, athletics, academic work and
the student council.
Speakers all took a neutral approach in thelr talks urging that
teachers aM tne Doanl of educatiOn
get together to settle the strike.
Some students carried signs of a

neutral nature, but did urge settlement of the strike. A poem written
hy students urging settlement was
read.
Several motorcades moved
through the community following
the rally with signs being displayed
again urging settlement of the
strike. Individuals attending were
urged to talk to tbeir friends asking
tkm to use their influence In
bringing about a settlement.
More than 30 parents and teachen
were also on hand for the raUy,

'

'4

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