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D-12-TheSunday Times-Sentinel , Sunday , Oct. 14 , 1979
IH'l'l• d big ,J.,:Jtl . . . l V.t'l'k :-.
!:l!: •lol ,. I 'TH ~ ..... nflt•admg :-.lot·k :-. Wl'rl'
11.11. ,·

Hoofs and Paws
By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - Every job, I don 't
care what it is, has its good and bad
points. Right' Well , the good when
you are a working member of the
Hwnane Society IS placing dogs and
cats in loving homes - when otherwi,;e they would be either running at
large or dying an early death .
The bad ts having to deal wtth
irresponsible pet owners and too uf·
ten that is one time when the end
result should be happiness for
everyone concerned . The fa ct 1s that
when we deli ver a lost pet intu tht'
hands of tl.s uwner or the owner
shows up to claim his or her Jl&lt;'l it ts
too often an unpleasant st tuat ton.
Personally , I think that the owners
have such guilty con.sciences that
they were careless enough to lose
their pets to begin with , that they
will take Jt out on anyone -even the
very organization or person that
rescues their pet and returns tt .
To better explain to eaeh of you
what happens when we end up with a
pet that is "not " dropped but just
strayed away from his or her home is to tell yo u our procedure
First of all. we do not ~o nut
looking for strays' Citizens call and
alert us about them and hold them
until we ca n pick them up : or they
take care of them until the three da y
holding period 'Ohio State I"' w 1 IS
over and we can place them tn new
places.
Durmg the tune that we hold
them, inasmuch as Mt' tgs County
has no shelter, we have no ch01 cc but
to bring them onto uur property or
into our pri vate homes to rrungle
with our own a nima ls
This means precautions must be
taken to prole&lt;?! our pets. l&gt;ogs are
immediately checked for signs of
distemper, disease, mange. fl eas,
lice, tic ks, ear mites , wonn.s and
then are bathed and groomed This
takes time and money . These san1l'
animals are fed and given mmor fl r st aid as well a.s given thetr tmttal
shots and some ammals are tak en to
the vet for a detenninatton uf ht·alth
status.
None of this is free - tl costs th e
members and contributors to thr
Humane Society ; and whallhey g1ve
is for the homeless antmals- not for
pets that are privately owned .
If we don't charge owners who
claim their pels then we are doing a
big injustice to our membership and
to the animals that money IS taken
from .
As for myself , I would beso ti&lt;'klerl
to get my pet back that I would du
anything to show my appreciatiOn
Not so with some pet owners who
claim their pels after they have been
gone awhil e. They say "bad dug" ;
t~ey blame us; they blame those
who call us; they blame everyone
but the one person who ts solely to
blame - themselves It is againsl the
law to let any animal run loose - yet
almost everyone who loses anunals
did just this. It ts against the law not
to license a dog .
Everyone who is guilty of tgnonng
these two laws eventually pays- but
sorry to say that mostly it is lhe
animal who pays either through
losing his life in traffic or endtng up
in some other unhappy env1rorunent.
The dog that ends up wtth the
Humane Society is the lucktest of alL
We make every effort t o reunite the
owner with h1 s dog and tf that
doesn 't work then we make every ef .
fort to place it in a good home .
A few weeks ago a cute long hatred
dog was reported to us for two weeks
solid as running loose . No one could
catch it but finally one family did
and called us. An ad wa.s run in the
paper . No reply . The owne r made no
attempt whatsoever to find the
animal other than to look around the
neighborhood . They did not call the
dog warden. WMPO or us nor dtd
they call the newspaper even tho ugh
all of this effort is free . Well, anyway
the dog got away again and another
neighbor restrained it this lime until

Great. .

up!lltll :-.llt

t'\' t'r~

!o wawr, hut kL•pt afloat
Th en on \\'L·d n~sday . ()('(. 23. It fd l
.&lt;J1;1rpl~·

Sht:trt•s on tht' Nt•w York
S!ut"k 1-: xchrtngl' lust S4 billton Ill

c;_.llis went ou t from
bn1kt·r~ by tJw hundr eds : small
:-. pt '\' UI;-llor '- wh u h;Hl bnrrO \o\ eJ
l!!llfl t ·~ 111 hu~ :-.t~ · k Wt'I"L' tuld to put
up tnurt- 1 a:-..lt l!r t hL·lr stuek wuuld bl'
.-,(1ld 1 1\1 \ ' " 1 .,v er Uw bru ka ":&gt; loan .
Thur:-.tl, ~ . tl( ·t 24. 1929 _ Prices
\\t ·n · .'-.lt·;u!~ w ht•rt tlte rne:trkt&gt;t
npt.·nt.·d tJt 10 it .JIL, but t radmg W&lt;J S
ht'&lt; I\' Y Tht.· sto r ks uf margm buyers
UIICJblt· to cun:· t· Wednesday 's losses
wt·rt· durnpt·d on t ht• markt:t
l l ndnulJtt'&lt;ll~.
·shurt St! ller s··
spt•(·u lat()r s who borrow stock , se l11t
;111d hl•pt· tu buy It back at (l lower
prtn·
iH ideJ lu the sellwg
pr t•:-.sun · B:- I;J!t' murmng pam c
"'l &gt;l"l':Jd tl1rnugh Uw l'J\"t&gt;rnous :\~w
Yt1rk Sluck 1-:xdli:lllgL' .
Shortl:; nf1 t·r noon , a rUitJur : the
llankt·r~ &lt;H t' !lltt'tlng a t J .P .
Vlur~an ·s avross the str eet. Pri ces
"ead ted . AI 1.:10. Htchard Whtln••y .
\"l&lt;"t' pn•stdt.•nt of the l'Xchangt: and
tl11.' Murga11 broker. st rode up to t.ht•
hnrSt.'ShOt•-sllapt.'d post when• U.S
Stt:l'l 11'11 .'" !r;H!t•d and bought 10 .000
sh;H'L':O. ;II $:2n:J. lh t· n nutved un tu a
dtJ/t'rl · ~tlll'r posts. lluymg . Tht'
IJ.:mkt·rs &lt;1n• s upportln~ thl, rnarkt•t'
Prt l't':-; rallied
In five hour s. 12 9 111dliun shares
r- hangL·d h&lt;:~nd s Ftve nullwn wouJd

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INFINITY, NO

If you are a househun t er , no doubt you already b.=. ve

&lt;;ornP

pre( on

ceived noti ons about th e fundam en t al req ut r emcnts of your new home.

•

plann ing .

e

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.

.

.

•

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•

•

3
•
e

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Don't Imagine that your ta sk is to find a home m wht ch you w• 11 1•ve
happily. all the rest of your days . A home is not forever. For perfec tly II
sounded reasons, such as advanc ing age, chan gmg career prospects, e
chanolno family size and requirem ents, peopl e tend to move on, oft ~n
in less th;n ten vears . So plan for- the foreseeabl e futur e - not for 11 1·
finitv .
~
1

·e
e
te
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consider the stage of your f amil y litE', and now 11 snould change
within the next five or ten years . As vour fam ily numbe.r s decease by
means of vocation, campus living , and marriage , so w111 your space

requirements.

••
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e
If

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.~

;urd q due :-. (,fl t.ht' Nr•w York
h;mgt· tumbled an I..'St l fll ijtc d $9

POMEHOY
A pre-service
schoo l bus driver training program
for Meigs County will begin Monday
at 7 p.m . a t the Eastern High School,
J ohn D. H.iebel , Sr., regional instructor , annow1eed Saturday.
The program is for any person
who is interste d in leanung to drive
a school bus or any person now
driving as a substitute.
Inte rested persons need to be
recommended by the superintendent
of the school district for which they
wish to drtve a school bus.
Monday's session will last from 7
to 10 p.m. and additional sessions
will be scheduled a t the first
meeting . Those wishing additional
information may contact Bob by
Ord, Southern Superintendent , AI·
chi e Hose at Eastern High, or
Dwtght Goms at Meigs l .oca l.
The course consist.s of 12 hours of
classroom work and a pproximately
eight hours of on the bus driving in ·

hliltun 'I11L' (; reat Bull M&lt;JrkL•l , till'
Ho&lt;-tnng Twt•nlles, thl' 1'\ t•w l·:riJ
WL·re dust .
Til t' tnarkct wouJJ ease down unttl
Nov 1:! , then recover m ee~rl y 1930,
tht•n res wnt• tls sl1de . ln .July, 19:i2,
lht• Dow .JonL'S mdustria l 3\'t•r&lt;tgt•
would n•ach 41. 22. down from 1ts
J~l2tJ pt·ak ()f :m 1 17.
ll)' 19:1:1 , n•·&lt;trly 13 nulhon pe ople
Wt'fL' nut uf work . No S0&lt;.·1a l Securit y,
no
wt•lfare burt•aurracy, no
tutelnp loy ml'nt Insur ance . No firm
l&lt;ka m Wclshmg ton. tn tht• ~gtnnmg
at le.ast . that government co uld or
should Llo sunwthmg m a big way.
All buffers today agatnst a
rl-'(" Urrenet• .

Tlw

long aftennat h of lllac k

Tu esd ay brought a wdter of reforms
&lt;md not a few ree rimi natwns .
Joe Kenn~dy , who kn~w as w~ll os

anyone how the ga me wa s playL·d.
was bro ught to WashmKton as
L·hatrman of the new Secunt ies and
Exc ha ngl! Comm tssion to regulate
stoe k tradmg
In New York, journalist Wa lte r
Ltpp!!litrm presclt'n tly wrote t.h a t thl'

c-o untry Wrt!-. ··1 11 the m1d.st. nu t of an
ordtnc• r y lradl' depression. bur of
o1w of tlw great upht•avals and
rl':n lju!"ltlnL'Ilts of nwdPrn histon·. "

struction . Entrance qualifications
include meeting medical standards,
submitting to a local and national
criminal record check, submitting to
a loca l a nd national driver check in
additin to being recommended by a
s uperintendent.
Upon completion of the course, the
individual wtll have passed the
school bus driver's test conducted by
the State Highway Patrol ; will
receive a certificate of completion
issued by the State Department of
Education; wtll receive a certificate
of completion of a pre...,rvice school
bus driver training course, and will
be qualified to operate a bus with
pupils on board .

DEMANDS REFUSED

COI.UMB US, Ohio 1 API - Ohio
Department uf Mental Health and
Mental Reta rdation offi cials refused
to agre€ to demands of around-theclock talks a fter meetmg Friday
with umon negotiators who are
angered over prog ress in bargaining
sessions.

'

If there is anything we can do t o !,up nJU I' *hl' !te lcj of rev! es, ,,,
tnsephoneordropinitLEAOINGHAMR EALESTATE,SJJSP r •nrl
·~vt .. G•llipolis. Phone 446-7699 . We 're here to help.

:t
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VOL XXVIII

NO Jn

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at

enttne

POME ROY-MIDDL EPORT, OHIO
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

President
announces
new office
KANSAS CITY , Mo . 1 i\Pt Quoting the pope an d pra tsing
Roman ~thol 1c· chant y workers .
Pr esident tarte r today declart'1.1 U1e
American famil y "m trouble" and
said he is taking sleps to help tl.
ln rema rks prepared for tht•
Na!Jonal Conference of Cathoill'
Charities, Ccn1er &lt;mnounced he IS
forming a new " Offict&gt; for F&lt;:~mJites "
within the Department of Hea lth.
Educallon and Welfare.
He said he also is ordering the
government to cooperah• with the
objectives of a plannc&gt;d " Whil e
House Conferem·t.• on Fam 1hcs."
which he satd will be held 111 lhree
separa t.e segments next summer m
Baltimore , Minneapolis and Los
Angeles.

Actor stallle

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BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS

Bring

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Her e's a though t to consider which may help far tl tfate the tmage o f
your new home 's ·• ma ster plan " as well as your tong ra nge ttnan c•al

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t' Xt

DECORATOR INDUSTRIES
l
AND CORTLEY
DRAPERIES

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e

"
lt '\r' l lru l ;r ppr oa dwda ~cun Ull l ll E~B

30% ON

:e

Realtor

FlffiJRE, YES

16 .4

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERY SALE
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SAVE
?Ia))

\1ar~llt

Willis T. Leadingham

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Tut·stl;:~y ,

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Aftt• r I ..&lt;dJur Oay. l92&lt;J, tht• rnat kt•t

By

e

Blrtck

s!iijfe ht:

l.~t•gan

\·ahw

: 11~11

rtli tg a7.lrlt' tn! t'r\' tt"W bul

qutl'll _\ !wg ar 1 ~·llu1g
h;uJ

off

r In

Bus driver training
program set Monday

•

Today

•

lll i llll lll sh:1n•sof slol'k Wt'rt· sn ld

we could pic k it up . Other than betng
t·:tcophorl~· uf s1gh.s and llloarts Uutt
fiea mfested I fieas have been par·
--ounded to a :\r·w York Ti!llt'S
tieularly bad this year 1 it was in
I t'!H•rlt·r &lt;II t!Jt· :-.n._'rlt ' likt• ··;1 dtortJ
unusually good condttion which tn·
lrtJl ll ;t prUJIJtl\"l' l"l'lJUlL'lll
dicated to me that someone.
On Fnde~~ and Saturday lhl'
somewhere was probably missing
tnr~rkd cah rwd Hoover issut."d an
this nice am maL
opt Jill lSI I t s latenwnl Optun1 sl tc
I spent one whole afternoon trying
11\Hrkt•t lt'tlt'r :"' went ou t from
to "deflea" it so I cuuld bring it into
bru kl'r s 1u t"lL"Iurrwrs
my own home - another half day
Mund;n . 011. ,8, 19 79 . With
eal hng every vet w1thin a fifty mtlc
Sunda~
tu thmk It u\'er, most
radtus trymg to tdenlify a rabies tag
l'\'L'I"~onL· had lurn~.:d b.:ansh . And
that was hangmg on I he dog's collar .
bro kns had fuund t1me to prepart:
Nat urally there was no Meigs Co Wl ·
rl L' "" lll arg trl L·a ll s Today , the
ty lt cense on the ammal.
h '(il'ral HL·se r \'l' set~ mar~m levt.•ls .
If there had been, we could have
·nw\ haw rlst•n a s ht!;;h as 100
returned U1e animal withln hours of
pen.·ent stnct• 1929 and now are at 50
1Ls disappearance. Makes me won·
(Wrcenl ThL· low m~:~rgtn s of the '20s
der tf people really want their
a utumatJca lly tnggL•n"ll contmumg
anuna ls returned -and that's why
Wfln•s of se lling as _
the market
they neglect thts law What do you
slwnpt.•d, rnakmg It even worse .
th tnk '
T1Kia \"the st •x k t.•xrhangt.• wat ches
Anyway. we had this young male
fur p~· 1 ce lllet nlpu latwn with
from Sunday through the following
sopht sttcate&lt;J electcomc gadgetry .
Fnday . The owner never did make
·niL' t•xc hcmge doesn't hesitate to
any real effort lo get the dog- it was
t1a lt tradmg HI a stoc k 1f thmgs get
one of the veterinarian 's offi ce
uut of hanll . T ht• governm,e nt
workers that, Instead of calling us as
req Uircs detculed mfon natton on a ny
she had been directed to do if she
('Ompany whose stoc k IS traded to
fo und out who owned the animal,
help buyers art mteUtgentl y .
called the owner. It 's a good thing
" Thl're was a lot of uninformt."ll
we held the dog more than three
spt•culat ion ," West says, "an d at
days or there would have been two
som e Jlllint the suppl y of fool s shrank
n wner~ f1ghling over the ani.rrutl.
sufftctently so that one faced the
So the owner showed up and was
problt.•m . lo whom do I selJ it now?"
S&lt;l abusive as ou r thanks for taking
'11•al day. the nallon 's stoc k
good care of her pet that if it hadn ~
rnarkL•ts lus t an estimated $14
been fo r the fact tha t it was a child's
htiiiO/l .
pel the antmal would not have been
' J ' ucsda~ . Od . 29 , 1929. " Th e sound
ret urned . Maybe they will take bet·
w;-ts onunotL'l . It was dea de ning,"
ter care to assure their pet stays at
"'Y' i':~ ner llloch, a yo un g trader
horne now that they have him back. I
then whu sttll wurks on th e exchange
certainly hope so. Please, pet
fl oor toda~ . · 'Wt&gt; 're attuned to
o"'Tlers, take ca re of yo ur animals!
so und I L'an come un th e floor and I
And tf. th rough yo ur own
,·an tell yu u by the sound whether the
ce~ re l essness you lose une and we
lllilrket 's up or down Thai day yo u
return it - re member who was
couldn "t ht&gt;lp realiz:e ever ythin g was
uutta Uy to blame for Its absence,
falling on It s fact&gt; ."
O.K.''
Nobu•Jy wanted stocks anymore
Does anyone want a mce dog, pupThe bankers' pool wa s submerged
py , cat or kttten' if so, please do ca ll
ilr the ttdc . AT&amp;T dropped $28.
us for a descrtptton at 9'J'l-62W.
Allt,·d ('h,·m, ·al fell $35. More than
thrt'L' uu lltun sh ares were traded 1n
tlw ftrsl half-hour alone. a full day's
work month ~ before . Tht• little
lfl\"t'St&lt;Jr s hi-ld long stnct' been wtped
Continued from A-1
ou! !Snw Uw rt ch were takmg it .
ll i dlt't' :-. uf mdustr·I(J] &lt;-td tv lly !UI·ned
In ProvHlt.'ll C't.'. H. I., DavJd Korn, a
d(lv.:n . tnn kw 1\(!tH'L'd . PresJden!
t·oal I'Ufl l iHln y u\\ner . dropped dead
llc&gt;~l\" t•r frvt!t•d pnv&lt;Jte ly about thl'
at the glit ss.Jumetl tick er lJl h1s
:-pv 1·ulat11JII 111 stU&lt; k." and told the
brukt.f s uff1 ce . In New J e r sey,
1-'t'lkral Hesern· tu De rea d y It
Jll!lll'&lt;' ftsht•d a body out of th•·
tn t.·ekh a s kt.•d tht· banks Lo stop
Hudson Hi vt•r . The ITli-ln 's wallet
lcrnJm~ nwnt·y for speculation but
con tamed notlct&gt;s from his broker to
the plea WCIS 1gnor cd . Hcrnard
put up mo r e cash. The sta tistics
Ranwh . a b ll! spt&gt;e ulato r . gave an
lion't show an mcrease in suicides

Cf:state :

:e

l.cH ·h'dr · &lt;;.~.-.. dow11 $~fj SO ..A.uburn
\utl!. dowrr $25
:\1 tht• ( ID:-.Iltg gon~ ~~~ :l p .m . calllt'
;r .&gt;.~lt&gt;f l &lt;'l',lht•rl a rn.r1r , tlwn a seeoml

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"············
~
--~al
;
:

r1ff $ill to $:!0 ;1 .;; h; ln · IBM . down S25.

· !·· · 1 ,11 11rt :tllil/.!t' uf lhl' f lrl&lt;llrt lt'r
II• r;11l..., ],·,,pl'rL:. fr11 111 till• wuulnw hn:-.
urd •nlth-d ll ...,t'lt nr UH' pupuJ ;r r

PASADENA, Calif. 1 AP 1- Ac·
tor Frank Bonner. who play s
sa les manager Herb T"rlek un
CBS·TV 's " WKH P 111 Ct n·
cinnati ," was 111 stable condition
early today after a parachute a,·.
cident In the desert 50 nulcs nor theast of Los Angeles .
Bonner, 37, fell about 20 fee t
when the
"asce ndan cy
parachu te " from which he was
hanging collapsed in a freak wind
llllnday at El Mirage Dry La ke
Hecreational Area, said MTM
Producti ons spokes woman Josie
Wtlliams.
Bonner was being towed by a
four-wheel drive vehicle when the
acciden t occurred, she sat d .
Doctors at Vtctor Valley sa td
the actor may have suffered back
and internal injunes. Further
tests w~l be conducted today at
St. Luke 's, Ms. Williams sat d.

Youngsters participate.

Caner repealedly quoted Pope
John Paul II and sa td hts recent
meetmg Wit.h tht• pope "was ant• of
the /;:!real 1 Jrivilege s uf my
presidency"

He sa td he share'&lt;! the pon ltff' s
l'Oncern for the family . "Today,
whal Pope John Paul ca ll ed ·the fir st
and e!'ise ntial cell of hwnan soctety'
ts in trouble," Carter said .
··Many familie s have been
stru med w the breaking [Xllllt by
soc 1al and t'Conomk forces beyond
their control. Some indeed have
been broken . The tr agtc res ults are
all aroWld us - m a lcoholism, in
drug abuse, in social alienation."
The prest dent praised the effort s
of Catho ltc Chan tie s, sa )1ng tha t
Withnut such volun tary action "we
would live m a soc 1ety without a
sou l. ''
Carter said the new famili es offi ce
will he the first of tls kind , and "wil l
provtde the for al point for the
il,.v,· lopmenl of federal polictes and
progr ams affecling fami lies .'
He said the new offi ce wtll hel p
tran s late
into
action
th e
rt•cornmendations of the upco m mg
\\1ute House conference , wh1ch he
prormsed "will not stmply produce
another one of thnSt~ government
rt&gt;ports wh1 eh e:tU too often go
tgnured .' ·
Carter·s nmarks were the k1 r koff

of a two-&lt;la y tnp that wtl l also take·
hun to Chtcago lo help ra ise funds
fur Dem()(Tatic Mayor Jane Byrne .
The president ts travelmg mor e
oft en than h1s &lt;"hid spokesma n had
predt c ted
He
will
leaves
Washm gt on once more this wee k to
\'isil MassachtLSetts
After an overnig ht sta y in
Chtcago, the president will hold a
·· to"'n meetmg" Tuesday mornang
tn s uburban Dolton , then return to
tln~ White HouSl'
After &amp;&gt;n. Edward M. Ken nedy,
D-Mass , move'(] elose w an open
cha llenge to Cart er for the 19110
De mo cra t tc
prcs td entle:tl
nomtnat10n . Whtte H ouse press
Sl!cretary Jody Po we II smd he
ex.pccted no stepup 1n Carter 's
tra~'t' l bdort' November

Olallenge coming
NEWARK . Ohto I APt
Property owners who expect to
recetve a 2.5 percent tax rollback
approved ttus sununcr by the
General Assembly may be disappointed .
Several eounty a uditors, in·
el uding l.ickmg County Auditor
George
Buchanan,
are
challenging the cons tituti onali ty
of the rollback and pian to
disallow it.
Buchanan points to a court
ruling several years ago that
declared uncons titutional a taw
which permitted agncult ural
land to be valued. for tax pu rposes, a t a lower percentage rate
of real value than othe r rea l
estate.

WARNING ISSUED
Middl eport Police Chief J . J .
Cremeans today warned parents
that egg thro,.ing and other arl&lt; of
vandalism are taking place ln pre·
Halloween pranks In Middleport .
Parents will be held responsible
and youth raught will be held at
villHge hall until parents report to
the hall to post bonds, Chief
Crem eans warned .

Weather
Partly cl oudy tonight and
Tuesday . Low tonight in the upper
IDs .· High Tuesday in the low 70s .
Chance of ra in is 10 percent tnnigrt
and 20 percent Tuesday .

••t., _!!;

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• "'

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CtrrE COUPLE - Particpating tn the Eastern homecoming
festivities last Friday night were juni or attendants Angie Murphy,
left , daughter of Mr . and Mrs. r:ary Murphy, HeedsviUe, and Aaron
Wilson. son of Mr a nd '11rs. Bery l Wilson, Ht. I.Heedsvt lle

15-hour session-fails to end walkout
BY BOB HOEFUCH
Fifteen ho urs of negotiations by
two new teams representing the
board of education and the teachers
assoc iati on fa iled to come up with a
settlem ent of a 16 day teachers
strike ove r the weekend .
In fact , according to Mrs . J ennifer
Sheets, vice prestdent of the board of
education who served on the new
negotiating team of the board, tl appears that the board and the
teachers are furtber away from settlement than they were when the
negotiations began .
Mrs . Sheets, Carol Pierce , board
prestdent, and John Mora made up a
new negotiating team for the board
whtl e Ed Bartels , Htta Slav tn and
David Bowen made up the new
ncgottating group for the teachers
association
The negotiating
groups started sesswns at II a.m .
Saturday a nd went until 10 :30 p.rrt
The groups were empowered for
on ly one meeti ng so Sa turday night

they recessed , ra ther than ad·
JOurned, to meet again on Su nday
from 2 to 5:30 p.m . The sessions
were held at a Pomeroy ch urch
Mr s Sheets indicated both the
board and the teachers stated their
postllOns Saturday at the begtnning
of the first sesston . She said the
board team had expected movement
from the teache rs toward a set·
Uement and the board also went into
the session prepared lor movement
toward a setUement. The positions
given were the same presented
dunng negotiations last Thursday.
Mrs . Sheets said money a ppears to
be the pro blem m .s&lt; ttlemen t of the
s trike .
Meanwhi le leacher spokesman,
Mrs. Bonnie Ftsher had indicated
U•a t there are eighltlem.s to be setti ed between the board and the
teachers, aU but about one-half hour
nf the weekend negollations dealt
ssde ly w1lh money
.Mrs . Sheets satd thai the two

groups d id discuss- for one-half
hou r ur less - dunng the long
sess10ns 1a1r rusmLSsal but tilts wa.s
discussed tn theory only
Mrs. Sheet.s reported the board ·s
post bon Saturday morning wa.s for a
base salary of $9900 for tea chers , no
make up days for strik e time, and
reopemng negotiat ions next September . This offer would cost the
district S2,038,000 Mrs. Sheets said.
The teachers were reported to be
seeking a base salary of $10,000 and
• make up all days of the strike , a ccording to Mrs. Sheets
This
proposal, Mrs. Sheets said. would
cost the dtstricl S2,250,oo:J.
District schools are offtctally open
and teachers and members of the
non-certified emp loyes group a re
not bemg paid for st rike time . The
teachers have as ked for make up
days for wtuch they would be pat rl "·'
would the non-certified employes .
Mrs. Sheet&lt;; satd she felt that the
two negotiating teams went Into lht&gt;

20 killed on Ohio highways
B) Th t·

,\ .~sor ia tt•d

l'rl's.s

( .l llHll .\

lost their lt vt·~ nn
Ohw h1ghwt1ys !his WL-'t!kend , Uw
H1ghway Patrol s&lt;:ud t•arly Mond(;ly
'11lc•tol lt nel udt•d four duuble-f ala Itty

At least

20peopl~

Ttll.EIXJ Enc \' Elscht·n. 12. of
H etHI Ht.·ach d JJa~sl'ngt•r tn one uf
tw(1 car s wh1ch collldt'd una l.uca s
County road .
.\ IJ DUI.t:TOW\
lltchard
\tln•ks , 33, of Mtddletuwn, mit Ulll'c;tr ;JtT ldt.&gt;nt on a rtty

:..tccldents.

The patr ol co unt s we l' kt•n d
fatalittes .from 6 p.m Fnday unti l
nudm ght Sunday .
l11e dead :
St.;\DA Y
IJ\ NCAST ER - Dona ld A Ett "r"
20. of Columbus, pedest r tan hit hy et
car on D Hoc king County road just
sou th of the Fatrfteld Counly !tnt·
IJJ :IJ\WA HJ·: - Khaltfa .\1 \ltlild
Z:l. uf I)elaware, 111 a twu-&lt;:ar tTasll
un U.S. Hout~ 23 m Delawan·

~tn&gt;t•t .

SATURDAY
11 ·\\"JU\ - Max L ~uran . :14. •nd
Sh;trun ~1 o ran . 33. both of Da~1un. 1n
:1 1wo-ea r crash on l:l c1ty strl"t't
t J.t:VEJ.A\D - Chark s W
IJ&lt;tns. :l7. rtnd pasSt'nger Ht·ssl t' I.
I);n·ts, G2. buth uf Clen·lcmtl. Ill ;1
!V.:I)--{'iil" crash at an tntt.·rst'L'lwn Ill
Ull· (' I( )'

TIJ IJ~ [)t)
ll llt:&lt;·r Fena"''. z:t.
;md H1 cky A Hill. 23. of Toll'do, 111 an
;.w('JCknt un Intcr st8tt' IJ 111 TolL'du

BUWI.I:\f; c;REr:.\ - Larry W
l.t:WIS, :32, of Weslon . In &lt;J I wu~:e:tr
(I.CC !dt•nl un OhHJ 105lfl Wood CoWl!y

WOOSTJ-:H - Kath1 A. Shankltrl,
aC&lt;'Jdent
on a Waynt• Cuunty ro&lt;td
l'l:\('1\ \ ,\TJ - Emn (;alilble.
26. of CulctmJCJll, pedestnan strut ·k
b~ &lt;l car on &lt;1 nty strl'et.
WAHHr:\ - Hobert I. Htnl). 20.
uf Farr ndalt·. tn a one-&lt;.:ar &lt;tl THJen!
on a 1'rwnbull County rodd
\1 l' AHT!1t.:H
l) r un,·
'fllompson , :\ 4, uf .\t•wark. 1n n onecar &lt;'H.'I'Hknt on o \'mton Cuunty
~0 . uf Wooster . 1n et two-car

WAH HE\
Barb&lt;Jra Srott . 29,
;md Ralph Greathoust', 30, both of
W(irren . m &lt;Jn &lt;HT !dt•nt on o Warren
nty strel' t
HA~II.TO\
Wanda S. li&lt;JIIun,
:i4. uf Hcunllton , on a &lt;'Ollilty ruad 1n
ButlL•r County

.

I

'

'

Save 30% on Custom Draperies for Your Home or OHice
LCirge Selection of Fabr!cs and Colors
• Botlom and s ide sea m s are b~n d s t itched - no visible
sti tchi n g to mar dn-a per y's beauty .
• Covered weights sewn in t o eac h corner-Qra p eries ha ng
graceful ly, evenl y .
• Ge n erous S·inch bottom hems-9iving the luxurious
dec or look .
eD rape r'ies are
nea tly
fan ·fold ed and
carefully
box e d - draperies arrive r ea dy to hang .

SAVE 30% ON CUSTOM MADE BEDSPREADS

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

FRIDAY~tr.HT

'~

BEGINS MONDAy OCTOBER 15th
ENDS SATURDAY, OCT. 27th

ll' llli

a fJf'rf!'l'/ f11ll d;1y 111 lloiJ l~' l'im .~ F11r111.~ oul.• id .. of Rio (;rmult' .r.;u nd&lt;l,\'
of,.;,,;,,,.,, fmm u/1

tll 'l'r

U't'rt'

on

'"J

IJTTLE FOLKS taking part in the homecoming activities at
Southern High School Friday ntght were Tammy Buckley,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Kenny Buckley , Syracuse, and Kevin
Grady, son of Mr . and Mrs . Paul Grady, HD, Racine.

road

/1

:; : :

Meigs strike continues

In Your
Window
Measurements

• 4·inch lops are doubl ed and buckram h eaded - tops wlll
not buckle or sag .
eHand ·sel butterfly pl e ats a re triole ~ ta cked - pl ea t s
hand uniformly and will not pull apart .
• Si d e hems are doubled -adds " body" to drapery to hang
s moothly and evenly .
eSeams are hidden behind pleats-no lines or fabri cs fa ce
to mar !he drapery 's beauty .

• •

lumtl Ji•r ji1ll furm ji•.,lil'ill

i/,,

tlwu.,;m.J,,

ill'lit·itit'! ..

'

t'IHCJ.t:V II J.F - f)ougla s A
Bnght, 22. uf Colwnbus. lit a two-·ear
;I&lt;"C"Idt:nt on e:t Pl ckav.a y Co Wlt y
road

('INC I:\\ATI - Wtllian t fl C"'" ·
111 a une-&lt;.:ctr &lt;Jcctdent
on ;1 Hamilton County road
ll:!. of M(Jfrow,

Fair \\ t•atlll'r

t'OIII111g

By The Associated Press
Fatr wea ther and h tg her
t~mperatur~s are finally headed for
UHo, avcording to the National
Weather &amp;&gt;rVJce. The center of a
rna.&lt;;stve area of tugh pressure that
&lt;'Overed the eastern United States
early Monday was expected to move
off Ule middle Atlantic Coast by
tontght.
This means su utherly breezes for
Oluo, a good deal of sunshin e, a nd
temperatures in the low to mid 60s,
the Weather Service said. Despite
more cloudiness on Tues day,
te mperat ur es should r each the
upper 60s or even the low 70s over
much of the state.
i

weekend sessions with open minds
and really listened to each other as
the meetings moved along.
Mrs Sheets stated she believes
uther matters between the board
and teachers could be settled a.s she
stressed that money wa.s practically
the entire subject of the weekend
sessions
It was stated that the teachers

team was given copies of retirement
payments and bills and the board
team presented figures showing lncrea.sed c""t.s which have affected
the district's operating costs.
Saturday evening, the board made
another proposal to the teachers , acl'O rdJng to Mrs. Sheets . This would
have provided a base salary of $9900
for te&lt;ichers for the remainder of
thts year. effective last Sept. 1 and a
ratse to SIO,oo:J on Jan. I, 1900.
Agatn the board's proposal said
there would be no makeup days.
This proposal would have cost the
dts trict S2,067 .000. Mrs . Sheets
reported .
The tea chers· team then made a
counter proposal. Mrs. Sheets said
tea chers as ked for a $10,000 base as
uf Sept. I, thiS year, with a 1.88 index-the curre nt mdex bein g 1.7, five
11~ak e up days and dental insurance.
'l'his proposal would cost the dis(rict
S2.400.oo:J for the year Mrs . Sheets
reported . Mrs . Sheet.s pointed out
the proposal wuu ld cost $150,000
more than the positiOn of the
teachers sta ted at the start of the
nl'go tiat1ons session .

Followtng the recessed session
both teams met again on Sunday and
a third proposal, Mrs. Sheets said ,
was prPSented by the teachers.
This proposal was for a base
salary of $10,500 as of Sept. I, 1979, on
the present 1.7 tndex, make up of all
da vs lost tn the strike: a raise to
Slli.600 for the 1980-81 school year
1Contm ued on page 10 I
f'tl/111'1"11_\' S£JUC1rf .~l'l'h'.~

/mining

&lt;lfJp (it ·;w l.~

The Pomeroy Volunteer Emergency Squad is seeking applica nts for
EMT ·A training to be conducted at
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
Applicants must be 18 years of
age, high school graduates or hold a
GED certifica te, have valid Ohio
driver's license and be physically
able to perlorm duties of an
em er gency medical technician .
Those persons who successfully
complete the course will be utilized
to served with the squad.
Women or men who can serve on
daytime squad coverage are urged
to partici pate .
"The ability to perlonn this vital
task in yo ur community is very
rewarding knowing you can help
soneome in time of distress is a worthwhile experience," Joe Struble,
squad chief, sll!led .
Ap plications 'can be obtained at
Pomeroy Flower Shop, Meigs EMS,
located behind Veterans Memorial
Hospital or contact Struble.
SQUAD RUN
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Third St. at 8:10 p.m .
Sunday for Craig Fife who was taken
to Hol7.Pr MF&gt;rli ,..., J ,,. .........

·•

�3- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Monday , Oct. IS, 1979

2- The Dally Sentinel , Pomeroy-Middleport . 0 , Monday , Oct. 15. 1979
r--------------------------------~-- - --------------~

Editorial opinions,
comments

In Washington
Carter's unsolid South
By Martha Angle aud
Robert Walters
NEW ORLEANS (NEAl
President Carter's popularity has
deteriorated among both polillcal
leadel'll and rank-and-file voters m
the South, his native region and the
one area of the country that has
provided his most solid base of support.
Equally striking IS the lack of
strong opposilion among Democrats
in the regioo to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass ., likely to pose the
most serious threat to Carter m the
president's bid for renominaton next
year .
After three decades of profound
political, social and cconorruc
change all across the South, the Kennedy name and the family's real or
imagined "ultra -liberal " political
views are no longer anathema to the

region
When the Southern Governors'
Association held its annual meetmg
here recently , v1rtuaUy aU of the
Democratic chief executives said
they would welcome a KennedyCarter primary contest in th eir
respective states .
They unanimously rejected the
notion, bemg aggressively promoted
by Cart er's leading politi cal
operatives, that a bitter light between the two men would irrevocably
divide the party and make the South
susce pllbl e
to
Hepubl1 c an
domination .
Even staunch Carter supporters
were unwiUmg publicly to criti cize
Kennedy . In most cases, the governol'll - apparently seeking to
maximize the political option.s
available to them next year - offered measured praise for the
senator .
Kentucky Gov . Julian M. Carroll,
one of Carter 's earliest backers lour
years ago, proclaimed continuing
support for the president but sa1d he
won't necessarily "Slick with lum ."
Added Carroll , " l can support Ted
Kennedy . He 's a good , deciSIVe
leader ."
Oklahoma Gov . George N1gh
declined to state a preference , but
offered an .ominous forecast for the
president : " He didn ' t car r y
!Oklahoma in 1976 1 and he 's not in
as strong a positiCJn as he was then ."
Arkansas Gov . Bill Ci.Jnton , one of
Carter's most loyal backers in the
region, was not at the conference but

said in a telephone interv1ew : " They
both have strong grass-mots support
here . I think 11 would be a good
race
Another Carter loyalist. Florida
Gov. D. Hobert Graham, predicted
Carter would wm the highly
publicized primary in Ius state, but
described Kennedy as · ·a formidable
opponent"' who enjoys "s1gmlicant
support" in the state .
Undoubtedly the most zealous
Kennedy enthusiast among the
southern governol'll IS I .&lt;luisiana
Gov . Edwin W. Edwards, whose
hostility toward Carter led him to
make a seconding speech on behalf
of California Gov. Edmund G.
!Jerry) Brown Jr . at the 1976
Democratic National Convention .
Many political observers identify
!.&lt;lUJ.Siana, with il.'i high proportion
of black and French Catholic voters,
as one of several southern states
where Kennedy could run a strong
race .
A region~y-region analysis of a
national political survey conducted
m ea rly September by the Gallup
Orga nization indicates that the
South is second only to the Northeast
in terms of grass-roots support enjoyed by Kennedy .
In trial heats against two likely
Republican presidential nominees.
Gerald H. Ford and Ronald W.
Reagan, Kennedy actually fares
slightly better in the South than in
the nationwide results. Although
Carter also led both potential GOP
ca ndidate in the poll , his margin was
far slimmer than Kennedy's in the
South .
The Darden Research Corp ., an
Atlanta-based survey research linn ,
polled voters m 10 southern states in
late June and early July, then concluded that the backbone of Carter 's
support - the South - had been
broken.
Among Democrallc voters , Ca rter
trailed Kennedy by a margin of 5Q.9
percent to 4().1 percent. Qaibourne
Darden, the company's president ,
said subsequent surveys indicated
that the gap had Widened in recent
months .
Referring to the governors ' apparent
ambivalence,
Darden
s uggested : " Any tune you have that
much fence-&lt;;lraddlingwith an in cumbent president involved, it's an
indica tion of possible change ."

Washington today
WASHINGTON !AP I - Cuban
tenSions and the coming poiJtical
campa1gn aren't the only problems

in gove rnmen t. At any g1ven
moment , the tssues on the Potomac
can range from a smkmg Wlute
House t o madequate tornado
warnings and troubles wtth the
census.
For example, lollowmg extensive
study, the chief of the Vertica l
Network Branch believes that the
White House should be carefully
monitored in the com ln g years .
While many pohll c1ans and
reporters will be domg just tha t.
their efforts aren't what Charles T.
Whalen has in mind.
Whalen, you see, works lor the
National Geodetic Survey and he
reports that at least a portion of the
White House seems w be sinktng.
A study team began work two
years ago to check out benchmarks
placed when the White House wa s
reconstructed 27 years ago .
And now it reports that while the
north wall remams firm. there has
been some s inking - about the
thickness of two dunes - in the
southwest corner of the executive
mansion .
As minor as that sounds, Whalen
terms it '"statistically significant"
and urges that the bwldmg be
monitored to determine if any
structural damage may occur .
But President Carter and his
successors apparently needn ' t
worry for a while. Whalen says that
at the current rate it will take 89
years for that corner w sink an inch .
Census Bureau officials are facmg
a problem posed by the changmg
American lifestyle .
It used to be that thousands of
housewives were recr uited for
temporary work as enwnerators
every 10 years. It brought in some
extra money and they weren 't tied
down to a pennanent job.
But the recent increase in working
women may make it difficult to find
Ute 275,000 temporary employees
needed, even wi.t h most of the census
forms going through the mail, and
consideration is being given to
recruiting students to help.
President Carter has signed a
regulation exempting census
workers from civil service

co verage . a move so me have
cntictzed as a return to political

patronage m such jobs.
How eve r .
as
America n
~rnographtcs magazine recently
noted, the c1vil service system is not
des igne d 10 mobilize and then
dtsband an army of canvassers .
Local
Oemocrat1 c
Party
est abhshments are .
Morl'Over. the magazine quotes
one C'Cnsus official as commenting
that enumerators fa ce such difficult
and uru·e wardmg work that after the
census th ey are hardly like ly to form
re-dect1on workers lor the party .
Than ks to storm -generated
tornadoe s
that
st r uck
the
Wa s h! ngto n-area la s t month ,
Amencans across U1e cuWltry may
get mor e emphas1s on Ulrnado
warntn gs.
Tornadoes are often possible in
ma jor stor m s such as tropical storm
David, but the Nallonal Weather
Servtce has played down notification
of tornadoes that are part of a larger
serious weather system .
Now that poli cy 1s be m g
reconsidered .

RECoGNiZE TI-lE P.L.o.?

Wf1AT'D

THEY 'RE A BuNC~ OF
MVRD£RER&amp;, THUG~,

TI-1AT NOla£~

A~~A§§)IN~! T~EY
tXI~T FoR ViOLENCE

AND TERROR!
THAT'~ TH[
Bt..§T WAY T O
G[T ATTENTION
FoR A CAU~ E!

I

View from Statehouse
BY:STATEREPRESENTATIVE
RON JAMES
Although the House of Representatives met in skeleton session last
week, the full Senate continued to
deliberate . The Senate Commerce
and Labor Conunittee is considering
a proposal which would radically affect decisions by large Ohio com·
panies to close or move a plant.
Senate Bm 188 is designed to
respond to the significant economic
and social impact caused by the
clos1ng, relocation and reduction in
operations by large business
establislunents . Entitled the Community Readjustment Act of 1979,
the legislation would financially
penalize large Ohio companies that
close down or move to other states .
Under the bill, only businesses
that have been in Ohio lor five years
or more and that have 100 or more
employees would be affected. Employers, wtth some exceptions like
bankruptcy and fire, would be
required to give the Secretary of
State, employees and their labor
organization, as well as, the com·
munity in which the establislunent is
located at least two yea"' notice in
advance of a closing or transfer of
operations .
The bill provides for severance
pay to employees based upon
scn iori ty and longevil)' c on ·
siderations, because it is par·
tlcularly dillicult lor older, longIIITle employees to make the
necessary change. Those employees
that own another establishment
would be required to offer suitable
employment at Utetr other facility to
as many employees "as possible" if
applications lor employment are
being taken at the other establishment .
Moreover, the bill establishes
County Readjustment Funds , which
would be used for administrative expenses of local councils and readjustinent granl.'i to communities affected by economic dislocation :
plant c losing, relocation or
operational reduction . The Employee and Community Headjustinent Administration, under the
direction of the Secretary of State,
along with the County Employee and
Communi ty Readjustment Councils
would work togethe r to stabilize
communities from the impact of lost
reven ue .
Fines or other penalties could be
assessed on companies that fa il to
abide by such legislation if it is enacted into law.

Pirates bounce back with 7-1

The taxflatioTt story
By Don Grall
If you want to see real inflation
power, take your eyes off the gas
pwnp meters and supermarket cash
tegisters lor a moment and study
yo ur tax statements .
Taxes - federal, state and local ,
the whole bundle -have been gOing
up at a rate now approaching twice
that of consumer prices. The comparative ligures for 1978 were taxes
up 13.2 percent, prices as measured
by the Consumer Price Index up 7.6
percent. In the 1968-78 period, the
tax take swelled by 155.3 percent
while price tnflatlon was 87 .5 per. cent.
And if that bottom line is bad
news. some of the statistical detaiis
as laid out by Industry Week
magazine are even worse .
Three major expendtures - food ,
housing and clothing - traditionally
get the largest of consumer budgets
But as a consequence of taxflation ,
Americans are now shelling out
more 10 taxes than they do for the
three basics - $1)24.3 billion as compared to$575.1 biUion last year.
The difference was $49.2 bUli on,
about triple what it was only two
years ago .
Tax growth while general, is
uneven . State and local levies have
increased more rapidly than federal
- 187 .5 percent during the past
decade compared to Uncle Sam's
139.9 percent. But while they may be
gairung, state and local government
still take in only about half of what
Washington extracts from the
economy every year.
The fastest growing tax category
is social msurance. Up 249 percent 111
lO years, Social Security and kindred progr8III5 accounted lor 26.3
percent of the total tax load in 1978.
On an individual basis, as Industry
Week figures it, each American contributed $1,814 to the federal and
$1 ,()43 to state and local govern·
ments last year lor a total tax
payment of $2.857, which represented 57 percent of the per capita income from wages and salaries of

Supporters of thJ bill, including
labor unions, religious, conswner
and senior citizen groups, feel that
the need lor legislation protecting
workers and communities from the
effects of plant closing is clear .
Plant closings and other economic
dislocation.s extract a heavy price
from working people, families and
communities throughout Oh10.
Beyond economic hardship, when
dislocation.s occur, the incidence of
stress-related health and
psychological disorders mcrease,
ranging from heart disease to
alcoholism, divorce and even
suicide. This misery and an.uety is
compounded by the fact that writers
victimized by economic dislocations
lose their employer -pr ovided
medical insurance coverage.
Additionally, communities lose
tax revenues at a time when social
services are most nt'eded. Local
merchants and suppliers are hurt as
well when the rippling effed
penetrates that local economy.
The social and economic ha rrn
ca used by these closings, relocations
COLUMBUS, Ohio !API - Ohio's
and reductions in operations is
business
community ca n be
aggravated by the lack of adequate
expected to light tooth and cia w a
advance notice of such corporate
new Senate bill that raises their
decisions , which (Fevents emtaxes
and provides property tax
ployees and communities from
re
lief
for
low and middl~ incomt!
seeking alternatives or otherwise
families
.
preparing for transition . The ComI. John Reimers. lobbyiSt lor the
munity Headjustmenl Act of 1979
Ohio
Chamber of Commerce, took
provides lor sufficient advance
the
opening
pot shots last week as
notice to allow workers to prepare
the
btll
was
voted out of the th e
lor the transitioo from their lost emSenate
Ways
and
Means Committee
ployment to new means of support.
fi-.1
However, business and manufacHe said the chamber, wtuch has
turing organizations believe this biU
member-busmesses
throughout Ute
to be a damaging piece of antistate.
has
no
objection
to the bill's
business legislation . The): say that it
"circutt
breaker"
concept,
that is,
confronts free enterprise by restricting the free movement of industry . c;- giving cred its on the state mcome
tax based on e•cess1ve property tax
Heferred to as the "Industrial Ranpayments
.
som" bill, opponents feel that inBut
it
obJects
strongly , he said, 10
dustries already in Ohio would be
that
part
of
the
bill that mcreases
held hostage.
the
cor
porate
franchise
tax 0.5
Moreover , they argue that if a biU
percent to make up revenues lost in
like this were ever passed inw law , it
providing real estate tax relief.
would put Oluo Ill a competitive
Sounding much like he was
disadvantage 111 drawing industry
makmg a GOP Gov. James A.
and jobs into the state . Industry
Rhodes' Industrial development
would be scared off from locating in
pitch, Reimers sa1d it is wrong to
Ohio . Some impediments to Ohio inmcrease business taxes at a time
dustrial development have already
when the siate's mdustrial tax
!Jeen credited to the introduction of
abatement effort s are Just begmning
the bill .
w pay off .
Beyond this, opponents point to the
He apparently referred Ul new
unrealistic requirements in the biU .
Ford and Honda plants, along with
They believe that the two-year
oth er new fa c ilitie s Oh10 has
notice is absolutely impossible to
acqui red in recent years, although
cal c ulate. Company movement
many say they cante to the state for
depends nn exigencies that may
other reasons.
Ohio's business taxes still are
h1 gher than 111 other states
com peting for new industry, the

$5,()47.
And as a final measure of taxnation , the 1978 tax total of $1&gt;24 .3
billion was larger than the entire
Gross National Product had been !5
years earlier .
Of course, to be completely fair
and accurate the figures would have
to be adjusted for changes in the
value of the dollar, that of 1978 being
worth considera bly less than that of
1963 as a result of inflation.
But then, that's what we're talking
about , isn't!!'

Son of Proposltloa 13
Taxflation is only part &lt;i the story ,
however. Still with us is the tax
revolt which has gooe national since
California's
precedent -setting
Proposition 13 last year .
And as it so happens, Californians
are resuming the batUe with a
measure on this November's ballot
that might be tei'Tl)ed son of 13.
Proposition 4 would follow up 13's
rollback of tax rates by tying future
mcreases ut state and local budgel.'i
to the inflation rate and population
fluctuations .
It is one of two tax-limiting
measu~es bemg voted on this year the other is in Washington State and
would link tax increases to rises in
personal income.
Eight other states - Florida,
Massachusetts, Montana, Nebraska,
Oregon, Rhode Island, South
Carolina and Utah - have already
adopted similar policies this year
via the legislative route .
Curbing spending authority by
statute or referendum gives indications , in fact, of becoming the
preferred means of trirruning the
tax load. According to the National
Tax !.imitation Committee, a
private group claiming a quartermillion members, the legislatures of
about half the remaining states are
considering measures .
Well, it's certainly worth a try .
But history is not encouraging in the
long run . Tax revolts may come and
go, but the taxman goes on forever .

Berry's World

develop over short periods of time .
Fwthennore, employers are unable
to predict what the union's demands
will be over a two-year period, let
alone the economic situation as a
whole.
Hearings on S.B. 188 will continue
in the Senate Conunerce and Labor
Committee during the coming
weeks.

'l , 11

" Pretty soon we 'II have Kennedy wllere we
want him. When he becomes clearly the front runner. he 'll be VULNERABLE
_ _ _ _j

In 1976, the Food and Drug
Administration proposed a ban on
all
non-essential
uses
of
fluorocarbon Jropellants.
Ten years ago: The Vietnam
Moratoriwn , started as a student
anti-war protest, was joined by
thousands
of
homemakers,
businessmen . and workers.
Five years ago : In the Watergate
trial, John Erlichman's lawyers
blamed the cover-up on former
Preside nt Richard Nixon.
One year ago : The 95th Congress
ended its business by approving a
compromise energy package and an
$18.7 billion tax cut.
Today·s birthdays : Historian and
former presidential aide Arthur
Schlesmger Jr . is 62. Another former
pre s idential adviser, eco nomtst
John Kenneth Galbraith , is 71. And
baseball player Mitchell Page is 28.

veteran lobbyist said .
Rather than making Ohio less
competitive, the Legislature should
be enacting tax laws making it more
attractive, he said.
" The best way Ul get tax relief for
residential property IS to bring in
new businesses to help share the
mc reasing costs of government and
schoo ls," Reimers asserted .
The chamber spokesman did not
go unrebutted .
Sen . Mar c us A. Roberto, D·
Ravenna, said the state's business
community should not r egard the
Cll'CUII breaker bill as a tax
mcrease .
Roberto pointed out tha t business
and mdustry, unlike homeowners
and occupa nts of farm land, have
not had their tax~s increased
signifi cantly as a result of inflation .
Inflationary Increases in the
va lues of residential property
caused tax bills to rise as much as 30
percent this year in Cuyahoga
County . It IS one of two dozen
counties undergoing reappraisals or
value updates this year, it was
pointed out.
Reimers satd he has not seen a
statewide repor t showing how
business property values have been
affected by tnflation .
He said taxpayers in the Cleveland
area had to bear most of the brunt
because of its many " aging
industries, whose values are
decreasing ."
He said busmess property values
in the Colunobus area, especially
growing areas around the freeways,
are increasing, and that they will be
hit by inflation.
The pending bill, by Sen. Jerome
P. Stano, D-Panna, was opposed by
all three Republicans on tbe Senate
panel.
Sen . Paul E . Gillinor, R-Port
Clinton, said they could not go along
with the tax hikes which he said
would mean a boost of 12 percent for
small businesses earning less than
$25,000.

fiJJiiPIIU..l

him.
The Pirates talooed the Orioles 7-1
to stay alive in the beest-ol-~~even
Series to force it back to Baltimore
for a sixth game tomorrow night
and, they hope, a seventh one Wednesday night. The National League
champions now trail the American
League champs three games to two.
" This is the first World Senes
game they 've seen the real Pittsburgh Pirates," said Foli , wbo
drove in three runs with a single and
a triple . ''This is the first ball game
we played our type of baseball . We
got here by being an all-Bround club ,
making the double play when we had
to, getting the man in from third
when we had to. Then it just turned
on u.s .··

CLEVELAND
(AP)
Washington Redskins quarterback
Joe Theismann said he doesn't like
to face a ''prevent defense with 80
yards to go and us losing." But he
did and drove his club to a comefrom-behind 13-9 upset of the
Oeveland Browns Sunday .
Theillmann, a six-year veteran out
of Notre Dame, hit Clarence Harmon with 27 seconds left in the game
to steal the victory lor the Redsltins .
The score capped on eight1Jlay, 8().
yard drive.
"!threw the ball into the shadows,
just over a linebacker's head. Either
Hannon caught it or we would go into avertime," Tbeismann said,
nothing that his dub was in good
field-goal range at that time .
Browns quarterback Brian Sipe,
who watched the Redskins final
drive in frustration on the sidelinffi,
termed Theismann 's perfonnance
in the waning seconds d the game
brilliant.
"I tip my hat to Joe Theismann,"
he said. ·'Their last drive was
brilliant but the game should not
have been that close for that drive to
be the difference."
Just before Washington 's winning
drive, Qeveland's DOn Cockroft

FOOTBALL
NFL
AMERICAN CONFERENCE

Eut
W

L

5

Miam 1
New Engldnd
Buffalo
NY Jets
Baltimore

2

Pittsburgh
Houston

Cleve la nd
Cincinna ti

San Die9o
Denver
K.an~as

City
Oakland

T PF
0 133

5 2 0 181

PA

98
105

161 128
2 • 0 128 174
16088140

3

•

Central
W L

0

T

PF

PA

520170140
5 2 0
162 148
• 3 0 165 158
1 6 0 119 169
West
W
5
5
•
•

Seattle

2 0 162

PA
98

2
3
3

101
91
13A

L

T

0
0
0

PF
100
123
Hl

2 5 0 138m167

NATIONAL CONFERENCE
East
W L T PF PA
6 1 0 145 109
Philadelphia
Dallas
Washinoton
Sf . LOUiS
NY Gia nts

6 1 0
5 2 0
2 5 0
2 5 0

Tampa Bay

Central
W L T PF
5 2 0 U7

178
1..
120
107

Yesterday, it turned back .
Bill Madlock drilled four singles
while Foli and Dave Parker drove 1n
the important runs to turn a close
game into a romp .
"The lour hits were nice, because
we won ," said Madlock , who
became the third player of this
Series to have four hits in a single
game. " If we hadn't won, they
wouldn't have meant anything ."
Foli thought he knew why the
Pirates hadn't been winning much in
this Series. The Pirates shortstop
called it bad baseball .
" We're fortunate ," he said. "We
played lour bad gaunes, and we're
only down 3-2."
Now, the Pirates target is the sixth
game, the one they must win to keep
their Series chances going. Parker
had an observation about that one .
" If we win Tuesday night," he
said, "you 're goMa see a shootout in
Baltimore Wednesday ."
The Pirates had hoped to start

3

&amp;rt Blyleven in Game Six, but that
plan was changed when Manager
Chuck Tanner brought him out of the
bullpen yesterday lor his first relief
appearance since 1972. Blyleven
allowed three hits over the final four
mnings to complete a six-hitter . Jim
Hooker had pitched the first live innings and left the game trailing 1-&lt;l.
The Pirates came up with two-run
mnings in the sixth and seventh to
turn the game around . The catalysts
in both rallies were the slap-hitting
Foli and slugger Parker.
Then Pittsburgh sealed the victory
with a three-run eighth built around
Madlock 's fourth single of the gaune
and a bases-loaded, two-out two-run
single by Foli .
Mike Flanagan, winner of Game
One in this Series, had the Pirates
shut out over the first live innings
and was leading H on a run the
Orioles scratched off Rooker in the
fifth .
Foli opened the Pittsburgh sixth

148
PA
130

3 •
1 6

W

Los Ange les
Atlanta
New Orleans
San

Fran c i~o

N BA BASKETBALL
Eastern Conference
Atlo~n1ic Diwision

wtth a walk on a 3-1 ptkh . Pa rker ,
who had struck 01 :t m each of his fir st two at-bats yesterday, followed
with a single to center .
With the three H.ivers Stadium
crowd of 50,920 chanting " Let's Go
Bucs!" Tanner had cleanup batter
Bill Robinson bunt the runners
along . It was an interesting strategy
move because earlier in the Series
Baltimore Manager Earl Weaver
had suggested that bunting might
not be such a good idea because it
means your team is playing for a
s mgle run .
But the Pirates got two this time.
Willie Stargell lifted one of his
patented rainbow fly balls to center
held . AI Bumbry settled under it
easily but Foh scored after the catch, tying the game 1-1 . Parker
moved to third on the play and came
home a moment later when Madlock
muscled his tlurd of four singles in
the game- this one into center field .
With the Pirates in front,

Ph i ladelpl"lia
2 0
New Jersey
1 0
New York
t 1
Washington
0 2
central Division

T

PF

PA

4 3 o 125
3 4 0 145
5 • 0 180

125
161
178

San Antonio

Green Bay 24. Detroit 16
San Diego 20. Seattle 10

Dallas 30, Los Angeles 6
MONDAY '5 GAME
M i nnesota af New York Jets , 9
p .m .
SUNDAY, Oct. 21
Cincinnat i at Cleveland , t p.m .
Baltimore at Buffalo, 1 p .m .

Green Bay at Tampa Bay , 1p .m.
Miami at New England. 1 p.m .
Oakland at N. Y. Jets, 1 p.m
Ph i ladelphia ,

p.m
Chi caoo at M innesote , 2 P.m .
Detroit at New Orleans, 2 p.m
St Louis at Dallas. 2 p .m .
Atlanta at San Francisco, .c p.m .
Houston at Seattle,_. p.m .
N . Y . Giants at Kansas City , .c p .m

Son Diego at Los Angeles, • p .m .
MONDAY , OCT. 22

Denver !!It Pittsburgh , 9 p .m .
THURSDAY , OCT . 25
San Oieoo at Oakland , 9 p .m .

1.000
1.000

.000

1 ;:~

1

.000 1

2 0 1.000
I 1 .000 1

lndi~na

1
0

Cleveland

1 .500
1 000

0 2

000

0 2

Houston

000

1
111::2
2

2

Western Conference
Midwest Division

COLUMBUS, Ga . iAP i - Tom
Weis kopf won't forget Sunday 's final
round of the $200,000 Southern Open
Golf Tournament easily . Neither
will Ed Fiori - but lor very different
reasons.
Fiori, a 26-year~ld in only h1s
second year on the tour, knocked in a
13-foot birdie putt oo the second
playoff hole to capture the SJii.OOO
first prize , but only after the
t.wM-nament-t ough Weiskopf had
blown a 3-loot putt for par on the
first overtime hole wh1ch would
have given him the victory

L:Jiah

1 1
0 1

.500
.000

0 1

000

Jlh

1
1

o 1 000
a

Los Angeles

1

I
1.000
1 o 1.000

Seattle
San Diego
Golden
Stat ,

0

0

.000

0 0 .000
0 2 .000

GREEN

BAY

PACKERS

Signed Sammy Johnson, running
back . Placed Barty Smith , fullbac k ,
on the injured reserve list
M I AMI DOLPH INS - ActivateC:
Eri c Laakso, lineman . Waived Jeff
Groth, wide receiver .

YORK

JETS -

Signed

Richie Su1ro, placeki cker , to a one
year contract . Placed Pat Leahy,
pla cekicker , on the injured reserve
1ist . Act ivated Bobby J ones , wide

re&lt;:ePJer
HOCKEY
National Hockey League

Pacific Division
Phoenix
Portland

Weekend Sports Transaction s
By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
National Football Le&lt;~gue

NEW

I 0 1.000
1 0 1.000

Chicago
Kansas City
Milwaukee
Denyer

EDMONTON OILERS - Assigned
112
112

1
1•

Saturday's G•mes

York 12S, Washington lUI, of
Philadelphia 113, Hovston 105

New

Cockroft , who had a field goal
blocked earlier m the game, hit a 37yard ktck with 28 seconds left in the
tlurd quarter .
The Browns' defense rose on a
crucial third quarter goal line stand
that forced the Hedskins to settle for
a 17-yard field goal by Moseley
earlier in the period. Washington
had received the second hall kickoff
and Theismann hit John McDaniel
on a 62-yard pass that took the ball to
the aeveland one.
But the Browns stopped John
Higgins on three straight plunges
over the middle, with linebacker
Hobert Jackson making the key
tackle on third down.
Waslungton IS now 5-J in the NFC
E:astem Division while the Browns
drop w 4-3 in the AFC Central
Division .
Neither team could score in the
first quarter on a cold, blustery day
at Municipal Stadium. Moseley
opened the scoring early in the
second quarter with a :!&amp;-yard field
goal but Oeveland responded on the
next series as Sipe led his club on an
eight-jJlay, 74-yard drive ending with
Hill's'J'Drun.
Cockroft's extra-point try was
blocked by defensive end Coy Bacon
and the score stood at 6-3 in
Qeveland 's favor .
Later in the second quarter ,
Washington cornerba ck Lemar
Parrish picked off a Sipe pass and
returned 11 to the Oeveland nine .
But Browns' safety Them Darden in·
tercepted Theismann on the next
play to give the ball to the Browns .
Late in the first half Qeveland
mounted another drive that ended in
a blocked field goal, with linebacker
Monte Coleman deflecting the ball .

•
WID

Sunday

Baltimore tried to play catch-iip
baseball, an Onoles specialty all
season. But th e Bu cs wer en't
yielding.
After Blyleven retired the first two
hitters in the seventh , pepper-pot
catcher Hick Dempsey hustled a
routine hit into a double.
Now Weaver went to his bench ,
wtuch has been so successful
throughout the Series . Pat Kelly was ~
sent up to bat lor Flanagan and
Blyleven responded by striking him
out oo a 2-2 pitch .
Quickly, the Bucs went about the
work of adding to their lead in the
seventh . Garner opened with a boun cer to shortstop that took a huge hop
off the artificial surface infield and
went for a single.
Blyleven tried to sacrifice, but for ced Garner at second. Then shortstop Kiko Garcia made a brilliant
stop on Omar Moreno's shot up the
middle and turned it into another
force play .
Now Moreno began a cat..andmouse game wtth relief pikher Tim
Stoddard, who was obviously concerned about the first Pirate's
speed. stoddard threw over to first
base three times while working to
Foli. The fourth throw, however , got
a way and Moreno reached second on
the pitcher 's error .
That was the break the Pirates
needed . Foli rified the next pitch up
the gap in right-center field, scoring
Moreno to make it 3-1. Lelt-hander
Tippy Martinez relieved lor
Baltimore and Parker upset that
strategy with a double lor another
Pirates run .
Pittsburgh added to il.'i cushioo in
the eighth inning after Stargell and
Madlock opened with singles . It was
Madlock's fourth hit of the game,
making him the third player in this
Series to tie that single-game record
and the 39th in the 7&amp;-year history of
the Series to do it.
After Steve Nicosia fouled out ,
Garner drilled an HBI single to left.
It was Garner's second hit of the
game and nineh of the Series, and
kept his batting average at .500 for
live games .
Blyleven bunted the runners up
and Moreno got an intentional walk,
loading the bases. That brought up
Foli and, with the crowd chanting
his name, he bounced a single up the
middle to drive in two more runs and
turn the game into a rout .
Hooker, the 37-year-old lefthander
who had spent e1ght weeks on the
disabled list this season , pitched
brilliantly at the start, matching
Flanagan inning lor inning . He
retired the first 10 Onoles and did
not allow a hit until the fifth .
But Baltimore got on the
scoreboard in that inning when Gary
Hoonicke opened with a double and
Doug DeCinces followed with a
single, sending Roenicke to third .
The Pirates played their infield
back, conceding the run to get the
double play .
H.ich Dauer obliged with the

grounder Pittsburgh needed lor the
double play as Roenlcke scored the
game's first run . It also turned out to
be Baltimore's last one .
The Pirates have named John
Candelaria, 14-!l during the season,
to start the sixth game while the
Orioles will counter with Jim
Palmer, who was 10-3. Palmer started Game Two of the series, while
Candelaria opened Game Three and
was the loser .
The game began on a somber note
with a moment of silence in memory
of two members of the Pittsburgh
family who died over the weekend .
Anne Tanner, mother of Pirates
Manager Chuck Tanner, died yesterday morning at age 70. Edgar Speer,
a director of the club and fanner
board chairman of United States
steel, passed away Saturday.
It ended in a burst of fireworks as
hundreds of fans flocked over the
field, celebrating the victory that
kept their team's chances going in
this Series. The fans milled around,
junoping and cheering as the loudspeaker system pumped out the
team's theme song, " We Are
Family ."
The jubilant display calmed a blt
as the speakers feU silent, but many
Pirates fans- reluctant to leave the
field of action- clustered arowtd the
National League champions'
bullpen .
Other groups formed around home
plate, the pitcher's mount and Ute infi eld . Many or' th1m sported the
Ptrates' black-Bnd-goldcolors.
As the crowd began to fllter off the
field some 10 minutes after the game
ended, a group of loyalists engaged
in a tug-of -war with stadium employees over the huge Baltimore
banner that had been atop their
dugout. The banner was ripped up
by the fans and police came by,
collecting some of the pieces.
However, it did oat appear as If
Ute officers would try to still the enthusiastic demonstration of support
lor the ball club. For the most p11rt,
the police just stood by and watched
the celebration.

PREVENTION

IS lliE
BEST POLICY
As an independenT insurance
agenc y . our primary function is
To provide polic ies which afford
financ ial protection in case of

lo"

But, we also nave a Yital in in loss prevention , as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caution and safety ...
preventive mea~ures which can
keep tn at car accident trom nap J)e'ning . that building tire from
sTart 1ng , thaT home burglary
from being committe-d .
PrevenTion saves life, limb and
property ... and helps control in ·
su rance costs and premiums.
When losses do occur, our
poli cy holders can count on pro tec t ing and serving in ti me and
n~d B ut we s til l Sdy preven ·
lion 1!. the best policy

terest

Weiskopf blows three-foot putt

Pet. GB
2 0 1.000

Oetroll
Atlanta

L

14 times and showed a 234 plus over
his opponents.
Final slats also reveal Aaron Jef·
fers totaled l,rotl strokes for a 4() .0
average . Jeffers won 31, lost 16 and
tied six. He was low man lour times
31ld high once and had an 113-plus
over his opponents .
Mark Allen placed third with a
1,221 stroke total, good lor a 4()_7
average . Allen was 34-17·2 and was
low man once and high man once . He
had a 221-jJlus.
Brad Rodgers finished with I ,251
strokes, or a 41.7 average . He was
U-3-3 on the year, low man once and
high six times with a 312-plus.
Tim Skidmore wound up with a
1,331 total, good for a 43.8 average .
He was 31-1~ on the year, was low
man once and high man 10 times
with a 196 plus.
As a team, GAHS totaled 6,126
;rtrokes for a 162.9 average . Opponents totaled 13,188 strokes lor an
average ol175.8.

W L

Boston

173

Oakland 50, Atlanta 19

at

Coach John Milhoan 's Gallipolis
Blue Devil golfers finished eighth in
the 1979 Chillicothe Invitational held
on Veterans Course in Chillicothe
Saturday afternoon.
Eleven Class AAA teams, four of
which will take part in state competition this week, participated, including Lancaster, Cuyahoga Falls,
Mt . Vernon and Chillicothe.
Lancaster captW'ed top honors
with 319. Cuyahoga Falis was second
with 324, followed by Mt. Vernon
with 328; Westerville SouUt 329 ;
Gahanna 329; Westland 331 ;
Reynoldsburg 340; Gallipolis 346;
Groveport 350; Athens 360 and
ChiUlicothe' 363.
Par was 71. A I.an~r player
shot a 75 for medalist honors.
For Gallipolis, which finished the
year with a 3!1-14 record, J. D. Jones
had a 46-39 - 79; Mark Allen 44-44 88; Brad Rodge"' &lt;~&gt;+! - 89; Tim
Skidmore 44-46 - 90 and Aaron Jeffers 45-46-91.
The Blue Devil! were second in
Southeastern Ohio League play and
third in the Qass AA Sectional Tournament this fail .
JoMA Team Meda!W
J . D. Jones will receive tbe team's
Most Valuable Player Award during
the annual poot-6e&amp;SOII banquet next
monUt .
Jones captured the Blue Devils'
1979 medalist honors with the
following statistics:
ln 30 rounds of golf, Jones totaled
1,123 strokffi for an average of 37.4.
That average set a new school
record, bettering Chns Roderick's
1966 mark of 37.9.
Jones won 37, lost 13 and tied three
with his opponents. He was low man

117

0 7 0 12'9 704
SUNDAY ' S GAMES
Wash ington 13, Cl eveland 9
Cincinnat i :M, Pinsburgh 10
Miami 17, BuHalo 7
.
New Orleans 42, Tampa Ba-y 1•
Phili!idelphia 24. St.Louis 20
New York Giants 32, san Fran ·
cisco 16
New England 27, Chicago 7
Houston 28, Baltimore 16
Denver 2-t, Kansas City 10

Washington

•
m
Chillicothe match

0

West

minutes left after Calvin Hill scored
one touchdown and Cockroft kicked
a 37-yard field goal.
Hill , the veteran running back who
may be playing his last season in the
NFL, bul'llt over the middle from the
one midway through the second
period lor Celveland's only 'I'D but
the extra point was missed. The
score was set up by Brian Sipe's 37yard pass to Dave Logan.

G AHS golfers eighth

139

142
0
95 109
0 120 128

•

missed a crucial 32-yard field goal
attempt with 1:59left.
" I didn't feel good when I kicked
it. The last time I had this bad a
streak was backin 1971 ," Cockroft
said.
Washington's other scoring was
provided by Mark Moseley's two
field goals in the second and third
quarters.
The Browns led ~ with two

119
104

3 3 0 107

Minnesota
Chi cago
Green Bay
Detroit

..
1111!: D41L ~ SI!NTINEL

ABBoclaled Press
PIITSBURGH - It wasn~ just
winning, explained Tim Foli . It was
the way Pittsbufl!h won yesterday's
fifth game of the lir/9 World Series
against Baltimore that impressed

Redskins upset Browns,13-9

'Ohio Perspective' 1

Today in Histury

By The Assorialed Pres s
Today IS Monday , Oct . 15, the
2881h day of 1979. There are 77 days
left m the year .
Today' s highlight in lustory :
On th1s date m 1964, the Russ1an
government
announced
that
Premier Nikita Krushchev had been
ousted .
On th1s date :
In 191 7, famed German spy Mata
Hari was executed in France .
In 1946 , Hermann Goermg,
Hitler 's second-in -&lt;:Ommand and a
convicted Naz1 war cnm tnal.
committed suicide in jail . He was to
have been executed the next day.
In 1966, President Lyndon Johnson
signed the bill creating the federal
Department of Transportation .
In 1968, Moscow and Prague
signed a treaty allowing Soviet
troops w remain in Czechoslovakia
where a mor~ Hberal eommunist
government had been toppled .
In 1972, the United States reported
that nearly 400 American fighterbombers struck at North Vietnam in
a single day .

Today"s commentary

wayne Bianchin, leff wing , to
Houston of the Central H oc k ey
League .
COLLEGE
ARIZONA STATE - F ired Frank
Kush, head footbal l coac h

" I thought I lost the tournament
nght there," said F1orl . "Tom
Weiskopf doesn't miss putts like that
very often . I d1d not watch the putt
because I didn't want to see it go in ."
Given another chance, however ,
after both players bogeyed the hrst
playoff hole, lhe 1977 All-American
from Houston qwckly capitalized,
kn ocking in the wmning putt after
Weiskopf missed a ~loot b1rdte
attempt by mches .
" When you have a chance w win
and you don 't, you don't remember
tht.&gt; fir st four rounds ," said
Weiskopf , who received $21,600 .
· When the tournament was given to
me and I didn't take advanlag e of 11
- you don't forget tt. "
The extra .!Joles drama was set up
when leader Mike Retd bogeyed
three of the last four holes, allowmg
F'10ri and Weiskopf to charge past
hiiTl w tie for the top spot . Both
fin1shed the regulatwn 72 holes at
274, &amp;-under-par over the 6,71ll-yard
Green Island Country Q~b co urse .
Flori had a steady 68 Sunday,
mcludmg a birdie on 17 while
Weiskopf , the !:&gt;-year veteran who
has earned more than $1.7 million
durmg his career , needed a 12-foo t
bll'die on 18 for a 70 w lie the
youngster .
Calvin Peete, the leader entenng
the final round, fell Ul a 72 and
fin1shed m a three-way tie for third
place with Re1d and Artte McNickle .
He1d closed with a 71 and McN ickle
had a 69.

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

Defending champwn Jerr y Pate,
auning for h1s third strai ghl triumph
here . also knocked himseU out of
cootent1on on t he fina l mne holes,
bogeyrng three m a row to hmsh With ·
a 74 for 278 .

991·1143
102 W . Main
Pomeroy

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MON.EY.

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Take a jay o r le ss t o nstall
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cOOler 1n summer too
Come m now We II show
YO'J hOw 10 c:Jo the lOb
ou1ckly and eas•ly
Bans 6"

t h•c~

15l.&lt;t" w•cle ana

co... er 48 sq ~
Ban ! perlora teo a1 2J 'or
46" IC"Q
cr~e

between 16" or 24" tram'"'Q

•C•-"'
.,...,

Boston 139 , Cleveland 117
DetroiT 112, San Antonio 110

lndiena 115, Atlanta 101
Milwaukee 125. Denver 96

Chicago 102. Golden State 96, ot

r;;;.;n,.
AUTO RACING
HICKORY , N.C. !API - Jack
Ingram of Asheville , N.C., woo the
$35,000 B&lt;&gt;bby Isaac 400 NASCAR
evenl. beating Sam Ard by one lap .
Ingram took the lead on the 1117th
lap when then leader Bob Pressley
blew a tire .
Ingram averaged 62.358 mph in
the track's first 400-lap race .

~

POMEROY

CEMENT BLOCK CO.

-

MAIN ST.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

._,

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Monday , Oel. 15, 1979

5 - The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Monday . Oct. 15, 1979

NFL wrapup

Locd,l Legion Auxiliaries meet for fall fare

•

Eagles remazn on top with 24-20 victory
ST. LOUlS - Billy Campfreld ran
prevtous 17 games , got TD passes of
11 yards for a touchdown with 2:54
13 and 11 yards from SinlS, thetr frrst
left and Wilbert Montgomery, who
round draft choice . to Gray, thetr
rushed for 117 yards in 25 cames,
second round pick. New York also
scored on a 5-yard run in the thtrd
seored second period touchdowns on
quarter Sunday to lead the
a 17-yard scramble by Simms and
) Philadelphia Eagles to a 24-20 vicDoug Kolar 's one-yard plunge
' tory over the St. Lou t.s Cardinals.
Oilers ZS, Cubs 16
The Eagles are now 6-1 and
BALTIMORE - Earl Campbell
remain atop the Nattonal Football
rushed for 149 yards and three touchConference 's Eastern Dtviston by a
downs to lead the Houston Oilers to a
one-haH game over Dallas, which
28-16 win over the Baltimore Colts
played Los Angeles Sunday night,
and a share of the AFC's Central
while the Cardinals dropped to 2--5.
Division lead.
Giants 32, 49ers 16
Campbell earned 22 times and
EAST RUTHERFORD, N. J . scored on runs of 7, 20 and two yards
The rookie passing combination of
before sitting out the entire fourth
Phil Simms to Earnest Gray dazzled
quarter. Houston also scored on
San Francisco for 148 yards and two
defensive end Jesse Baker's 20-yard
touchdowns in a 27-pornt second
run with a funnble m the opening
quarter, lifting the New York Giants
minutes of the game.
to a 32-16 vit1ory over the winiess .
The wtn, coupled with Pit49ers.
tsburgh 's loss to Cinctrtnali , left the
The Giants. who hadn 1 surpassed Stelers and the Oilers tied for the
the 17-point mark in any of their

division lead wtth !i-2 records.
Patrioto 27, Bears 7
CHl CAGO - Steve Grogan threw
three touchd own passes, including
two after Chicago fumbles in the fir st quarter, to lead the New England
Patrio~' to a 27-7 vrctory over the
Bears.
Grogan con1pleted 21 of 35 passes
for 244 yards to lead the Patriots to
I herr fifth victory in seven games .
Broncos 24, Chiefs 10
KANSAS CJTY, Mo . -Denver big
play ar!Jst Bill Thompson scored a
brzarre touchdown on a two-yard
funnble return in the waning seconds
of the first haH to send the Brom-os
off to a 24-10 victory over the Kansas
City Chiefs.
.
With less than 30 seconds left in
the half and Kansas City in
possession at its own 15, Tony Reed
fwnbles a handoff tnto the arms of
linebacker Bob Swenson at the Chief

II . Swenson then lateraled to cornerback Louis Wright, who fumbled
the ba II forward to the two, where
Thompson scooped it up to grve the
Broncos a !().() lead w1th 17 seconds
remaining m the half.
Packers 24, Uoos 16
MILWAUKEE - Dav1d Whitehurst threw scoring passes of 13 and 55
yards and ra~ one yard for another
TO to lead the Green Bay Packers to
a 24-16 victory over the Detroit

company, was called the Holly Farm~

400.

Waltrip wrecked 9() laps from the
fl msh after he and Allison banged
together. Waltrip got back onto the
track a few laps later and although
he was out of ~on tent ion for winning
the race, he contin ued to run tn
Allison's shadow.

tnuchdown .

The Packers also scored on a ~2yard field goal by Chester Marco!
and got 121 yards tn 19 carries by
reserve ruMing back Nate Simpson
to boost their record toJ--4 .
Dolph!D!i 17, Bills 7
MIAMI - Larry Csonka battered
his way to one touchdown and roolue
Tony Nathan returned a punt 86 yards for another to send the Miami
Dolphins to their NFI. record 20th

In racing reminiscent of old dirttrack days, Waltrip kep on Allison
lap after lap on the ~18-mile paved
oval.
During the final caution period of
the race, Waltrip pulled in front of
Allison under the yellow flag , prompting NASCA R offictals to ca ll him

Parsons, who had not led until
Waltrip 's wreck, had to ward off a
charging Allison in the final 10 laps
as Allison repeatedly tned to slip
past.
Parsons, a native of Wilkes County, earned $12,225 in his first win of
the season with an average speed of
in for a consu ltation.
97,192 mph. The race, originally
scheduled for Sept. 30. was delayed
by rain on its original date.
Parsons sard Allison was running
strong in the final lap. "! was
primarily concerned about not
before. We needed a day like this . 1 making any dumb mistakes," Parsons said.
knew it would come. I never doubted
this group."
"I was surprised really, that he
Howie Kurnick scooped up one of
I Allison ) ran as well as he did right
Pittsburgh's fumbles and returned it
there at the end because he might
12 yards for a touchdown, and Jim
have been a httle bent up, " Parsons
said.
LeClarr snatched another loose baU
and ran 11 'n yards for a TD.
Allison's Pord finished second
"You've got to be up to play the
behind Parsons ' Chevrolet with
world champions and today we
Richard Petty third and Dale Earwere , .. Kumick said . "We took it to
nhardt fourth .
them ."
·'IJ ~
Waltrip , who started the race on
"We were aggreSSive and did a lot
the second row, slipped past poleof gang tackling," he added. "We
winner Dale Earnhardt about!O laps
forced several of those funnbles with
into the race to take the lead for the
first time.
our hard play. We really handled
them- that's the big thing ."
Waltri led for 100 laps and was
Conceded Pittsburgh coach Chuck
dueling Allison for another shot at
Noll. "We aided and abetted them
the lead when he crashed 90 laps
considerably
from the finish.
"They forced the mistakes and we
Allison was leading as Waltrip
didn't. I don 'I know what the
pulled up beside him and began
problem was, but I don 'I care what
edging away by inches down the
the reasons were , just as long as we
front stretch. But the two cars
strarghten them out."
scapred and Waltnp went spinning
Pittsburgh's nine funnbles and
down the stretch and tnto the wall on
seven fumbles lost were the most
the first turn, knocking him out of
ever by a CinciMati opponent. The
contention .
Bengals turned three of them into
Allison pitted under the ensuing
touchdowns within less than two
caution flag, opening the way for
minutes of the second quarter .
Parsons to take the lead.
It was the most fumbling by a PitWaltrip managed to get what was
tsburgh team in the II years that
left of his car back onto the tra ck 25
Chuck Noll has coached the club but
laps later after franti c rpairs by his
crew.
not a Steelers' record for mlscues.
Back in 1943 game, the Steelers lost
Although he was 25 laps down,
10 funnbl es.
Waltrip continued to challenge
Pittsburgh, besides funnbling
Allison in close competition as
away the ball seven limes. also had
Allison ran second to Parsons .
two of Terry Bradshaw's passes inEarlier, Cale Yarborough crashed
tercepted by a total of nine turinto the wall in tum three while he
novers .
was leading the pack. His wreck ocPittsburgh's three costliest fumcurred as a caution flag came out
bles came in rapid-fire order mid- because of oil on the track.
way through the second penod when
Yarborough was running by himthe Bengals· extended a 7-3 lead into
self when he apparently hit some of
a commanding 'll-3 advantage.
the oil and smacked the concrete
wall on lap 268.
The Bengal fireworks began when
Ken Riley recovered John StallworEarnhardt led at the first of the
th's fumble and a few plays later,
race but fell off the pace set by
Pete Johnson scored a touchdown
Waltrip, Allison and Yarborough .
from the one .
The chase wa• slowed in its early
stages by four caution flags in the
first 40 laps. But the restarts after
the cautions kept the leaders packed
tightly together and gave drivers
chances to make adjustments on
therr cars during early pit •'lops .

Emotional Bengals bomb Steelers
CINCJNN ATl - "We needed an
emotional outburst and we certainly
got one today," Cinciru1ati Coach
Homer Rice said with a smile
yesterday .
After all, !lice's previously
winless Bengals recovered seven of
nine Pittsburgh fumbles to upset the
defending world champion Steelers .

Local
Early Sunday Mixed
League

Pts .

n

Waldn•g T ru c k•ng Co
Sarah Gibbs .
Deputy Reg•strar
Royal Crown

32
24
22
20

3i n0ne
Pi cke ns Hardware
Jack's Dairy Ba r
!A
High ser1es
Bob H ens ley 563 ,
Helen Phelps 501 . John Tyree 532 ,
Stepha nie Rought 495
H igh game
B ob Hensley 244 ,
Helen Phelps 196. Darrell Duga n
103, Marlene Wilson 18 7
Team series Royal Crown 1936
Team gam e Royal Crown 689

Tr. -Counfy League
Oct. 9, 1979

Team
Columbia Nat1onal
Team No . 3
Eagles Club
Firestone
Smi tn "s Body snop
Team No 6

PIS

ute

35
]4
JO
79
16
0

Sports
briefs. •

•

BASEBALL
PITTSBURGH 1 AP I - Bert
Blyleven , making his hrst relief
appearence sunce 1972, combmed
with starter Jim Rooker on a sixhiller a• the Pittsburgh Pirates
defeated the Baltimore Orioles, 7-1
in the fifth game of th e 1979 World
Series.
The Orioles lead the Seri es. three
games to two. with the action
shifting to Baltimore for the sixth
game Tuesday night .
Rooker left after pitchmg five
innings, with the Orioles leadtng 1~ .
Blyleven relieved and pitched threehit ball the rest of the way , as the
Pirates exploded for seven runs tn
the last three innings to seal the
victory.
Bill Madlock collected four luts for
the Pirates, while shortstop Tim Fait
drove home three runs with a double
and sing le.
GOLF
PORTSMOUTH , Va . (AP l - Amy
Alcott made an easy two-putt par on
the final hole and won the $100,000
LPGA tournament at the Elizabeth
Manor course when Susie McAllister
missed a four-footer and took a
bogey~ .

Alcoct shot a 1-&lt;&gt;ver-par 73 in the
final round for a 72-llole score of 286
and earned $15,000 for first place.
McAllister shot a 72 for 287 and a
second place finish .
VIRGINIA WATER, England
( AP) - BW Rogers of the United
states defeated !sao Aoki of Japan ,
the defending champion , 1-up to win
the World Match Play Golf
Championship.
- TENNIS
PERTH, Australia I AP) - .John
McEnroe made a clean sweep of the
Super Challenge tennis tournament.
beating Argetina's Guillermo Vilas
&amp;-2, 6-4 and earned himself a top
prize of more thim $175,000.

,.

probably wiU take big plays for us
today, .. satd !lice. "We were hitting
like our defense has never hit befor'l'
We jarred the ball loose several
tune.~ because we were playing
aggresstve football .
" We just haven 'I been aggressive

howl~g

Pomerov Bowling Lanes

Sept . 30 , 1979
Team

34-10.
"I told the squad yesterday it

Team h1gh game
Colum b•a
Nar. onal Life 865 . Eaql es Club 857
Team No 3 849
Team h19h ser1e5
Team No 3
2499 . Cotumb•a N al•onal Lif e 248:1 .
Eagles 1419
H igh mo game
Don Nelson /4&lt;1
J ohn Tyree 212 : Don Nel~n 202
H1gh 1nd . series
Don Ne lson 614 .
John Tvree 608 ; Dale Davis 5.S3

Team

No

Morning Glories
Oct. 9, 1979
Ph .

I

13

Karr and VanZ a n dt
11
No 1
18
V;,ug ha n'5 C arrl1ndl
16
No 6
11
No 5
6
H1gh 1nd Qame
Clara M e lntyrP
188 . Le nor a M c N1 g nt 187
H 1gh 1nd J games
Cl ara M r tn
t yre .4 7.S. Lenora M c K n1g hl 435
H1gn fea m Jdm e N o 1781
H 1g nteamJgames No ?1197

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday Mixed
League
Oct 7 . 1979

Team
Pis .
Sarah G 1bbs .
Deputy Req 1strar
38
Wa ldn 1g Tru r k 1ng Co
34
P1c ken s H ardwar e
18
J1nO n e
24
RoyaiCrown
24
Ja c k 's Oa1ry Bar
20
H1gh se r1es
Larry Dugan .S31 .
Deb1 Hawl ey S':./1 , Bill Car swell506 .
Helen P he lp5 510
H 1gh ga me
B1ll Ca r swell 133 .
Betty Smith 190. Larry Duga n 194,
Stephan 1e Rought 186
Team series
Ja ck 's Da1ry Bar
1920
T eam game
Saran
Deputy Reg1strar 691

Bills, 17-7.
The Dolphms took a I Hl lead into
the second half on Nathan's return rn
the first quarter. Csonka 's 6-yard
blast up the nuddle in the second and
Uwe von Schamann 's 29-yard field
goa l.
Buffal o made it 17-7 in the third
quarter when Boland Hooks crrcled
right end and lunged into the comer
of the end zone for a three -yard

I .ions.

Parsons wins Holly Farms400 Sunday
NOHTH WILKESBOHO, N. C.
i AP) -Benny Parsons, who slipped
into the lead 90 laps from the finish
when Darrell Waltrip and Bobby
Allison tangled on front stretch, held
off Allison to win yesterday's IB8,150
NASCAR Grand National race at the
North Wilkesboro Speedway
The race. sponsored by a poultry

straight victorY over the Buffalo

The record 20 stratghl wms extends ba ck to Oct . IB, 1970, during
Dolphin Coach Don Shula 's first
·. year with Miami and covers nearly
an entire decade . Miami defeated
Buffalo 9-7 in the season opener this
year .

The Dolphlns assured themselves
at least a tie for the AFC Eastern
Division lead by breaking a twogame losing streak and improving
their record to ~-2. Buffalo dropped
to 3-4.
Nathan's score came with 5:04 left
tn the first quarter and just before a
steady rain began to fall He took
Husty Jackson's 42 yard punt on ht.s
11, juked out of one tackle and found
his way to the left sidelines. The former Alabama star sped down the
si delines guarded by a wall of
blockers until he reached the Buffalo
20, where he cut back toward the
middle, slipped another tackle and
scored
Saints 42, Buccaneers 14
TAMPA, Fla - Archie Manning
ran for one touchdown and passed
for another as the New Orleans Sarnts blew open a tight game with three
third period scored and went on to
crush the Tampa Bay Buccaneers
42-14.

Manning scored on a two-yard run
after Tampa Bay had broken a
scoreless tie three plays into the
third period and hit tight end Henry
Childs wrth a 15-yard TD pass in the
closing two minutes .
Tony Galbreath scored on a sixyard run in the third period and
bolted 20 yards for a score in the
final period and Mike Strachan
seared on runs of one and seven yards tn the final quarter to tum the
garne into a rout
Haid'en 511, Falcoll!l 19
OAKLAND - Mark Van Eeghen
scored three touchdowns and Ken

Members of the American Legion
Auxiliaries ol Middleport, Pomeroy
and Racine were in Lithopolis Thursday for the district fall conference
held at the Walker-Hecox-Hicks Poot
Home677.
Mrs. James Knapp, president of
the host unit, wel comed the
Auxiliary members and guests .
There was a processional of the offleers, advancement of the colors
and the pledge and invocation b;
Mrs. Charles Milos. Mrs . Hubert
Handshey of the host unit gave the
welcome with Mrs . Edward Marshall, a past Eighth District
president giving the response Mrs .
Knapp introduced the Eighth
District President, Mrs . Samuel

Stabler threw for two more in
leadlng the Oakland Raiders to a 5().
19 rout of the Atlanta Falcons .
The victory was Oakland's third
straight , improved the Raiders'
record to 4--3 and moved them into
second place in the AFC West. The
Falcons, who lost three fwnbles and
saw the Raiders pickoff three passes
by Steve Bartkowski, suffered their
third loss compared to four victories
in a game in which they trailed from
start to finish.
The 50 points represented the
highest total for the Raiders in 10
years and missed the club record set
rn 1963 by only two.
Chargeno !0, Seahawks 10
SAN DIEGO - Dan Fouts completed a team record 28 passes, incl uding two touchdown passes to
John Jefferson and a third to Lydell
Mitchell , and the San Diego
Chargers held off a late Seattle rally
to beat the Seahawks 21HO.
Fouls completed 28-of-35 passes
for JIB yards, breaking the old mark
of 'r/ completions set by Jack Kemp
agaUJst Houston in 1960. Jefferson
had rune receptions for 137 yards.
The Chargers, 5-2, remained in a
tie for the AFC West lead while Seattle dropped to 2-5.
Fouts connected with Mitchell on a
20-yard TD pass at 8:04 of the first
period to make the score 7-{) and
Fouts hit Jefferson with a nine-yard
scoring pass at 3:11 of the third
quarter to make it 14-{). The
Chargers added their third TO with
a 4~yard pass to Jefferson with 4:34
left to play.
San Dikego had a 14-10 lead when
Fouts enguneered a three-play, :i-1yard drive, capping it with the
second TO pass to Jefferson and the
last of the game. Fouts got the pass
off despite a heavy Seattle blitz .

Chester-News Notes
By Clarice ADen
The ladies auxiliary of the fire
department met Wednesday evenung
at the fire house with president
Erma Cleland, presiding . The
meeting opened with the Lord's
Prayer, followed by roll call. Each
member answered roll call by giving
a reading. The secretary's report
was read by Clarice Allen. Due to
the absence of the treasurer, the
rep&lt;rt was read by Opal Wickham .
Plans for serving food at the Price
sale on Oct. 13, were discussed .
Members were to make pies and to
help with the sale. Committee
reports were given. Get-well cards
were signed for several W people in
the community. Members present
were Erma Ueland, Clarice Allen,
Margaret Christy, Betty Newell,
Opal Wickham, Clara Conroy and
KarlB Chevalier. The next meeting
will be held Nov. 7.
Mr . and Mrs . Clayton Allen
attended the reception for Mr . and
Mrs . Gary Stimmel, given by Mr .
and Mrs. John Benson, Sunday
afternoon at the Columbus Country
Club. Dr. and Mrs. Billy Robert
Allen, Westerville, joined them at
the reception. They were guests for
a buffet supper at the home of Mr .
and Mrs . Benson aftger the
recepti&lt;n.
Mrs. Opal Hollon spent a few days
in Columbus with Mr . and Mrs .
Gerald Hollon and family .

The Reedsville U.M.W. met with
Mrs. Vema Rose for the October
meetung. Mrs . Sandy Cowdery led
the devotions using the topic
"Hemember I Am With You
Always'' Sue Reed sang and played
the guitar. Meeting closed with
prayer by Mrs. Vivian HumJilrey .
During the business session
conducted by the president, Mrs.
Hwnphrey, the group voced to pay
$200 for the church awning. Several
meetings were announced. Cards
were signed for several friends in
the community. Plans were made to
visit a nursing h001e and the county
home at a later date. Same officers
were retained for the coming year.
President Mrs. Vivian Hwnphrey ,
Vice President, Mrs . Dolly Reed,
Secretary Mrs . Pat Martin,
Treasur..- Mrs . Lorraine Wigal, and
program leader Mrs . Sandy
Cowdery. Thirt~-{WO shut~n calls
were reported. Mrs. Vickie Keller
became
a
new
member .
Rmeshments were served to these

ll.:tr
baih can seod
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focotlege.

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" It 's the new look. th e new

!Ill&gt;,"

(

RACINE PTO Monday, 7 p.m. at
Elementary School in Racine .

MEIGS COUNTY Garden Clubs
Association, fall meeting, 7:30 Monday night at the Middleport Library.
Qu-istmas Dower show to be
dlscuBsed with cluils demonstrating
arrangement classeS.
nJESDAY
ALPHA DELTA KAPPA, ALpha
Epsllon Olapter, will have dinner
meeting at the Meigs Inn, 6:30p.m.
Tuesday evening.

center , was sidelined once again, but
1-rt s replact!ment, Swen Nater,

ptcked up the sla ~ k ~ater scored
only six points, but he grabbed 16
rebounds and blocked four shots.
In other NBA games Sunday night ,
1t was Phoenix 112. Chicago 102, and
Porl la nd 109, Denver 93 .
Suns 112, Bulls 102
Truck Robrnson had 11 points and
7 rebounds m the third penod as the
Suns ra&lt;·ed to a 24-pmnt lead and
then coasted to victory . ChtcaKO
center Artis Gilmore picked up hts
fifth personal foul at 4: IB of the thtrd
quarter and was not a factor m the
game, scoring only eight potnts.
Walter Davis led Phoenix wtlh 20
points and Robinson fintshed with 16.
Hookie forward David Greenwood
led the Bulls with 19 points.
Blazers 109, Nuggels 93
Center Tom Owens scored 10
pomts in the first five minutes as
Portland jumped in front 2()-5, and
Denver never caught up. Owens
fmished with 27 points for the
Blazers and Ron Brewer had 25
while Charhe Scott topped Denver
Wtth 19.

........... _.

....,.. ... ...,.....
·-·~:"--.

--~

THE PLACE YOU WAIT

GROUP TWO ct the First United
Presbyterian Olurch, Mlddleort,
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the home ct
Mrs. Lewis Sauer with Elizabeth
Burkett as co-bostess. Ruth
Woodard will have devotions.

Or 1ou cJ n choo\C lt&gt;ur ltr'l Juty
~ tat1on

. ...........
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- -.. ~ :: ...;~::_ ,.~ ·-...w.

Social Calendar

MONDAY
REVIVAL at First (burch of God,
Syracuse, beginning Monday
through Saturday, Oct. 20, 7:30p.m .
nightly. Evangelist Charles Curtis of
Olarleston will be the speaker .
George Oiler, pastor, invites the
publlctoattend.

• Walton 1 gets back ..
Walton . the Qippers ' $1 million

crowed Uoyd Free.
Tile Prince of M1d-Atr had just
dtscovered the joy of defense .
Free hadn't neglected hts scorrng
- he had 35 points as the San Orego
Cltppers
beat
!he
Seat tle
SuperSooics 98-93 Sunday nrght ,
spoiling the defendmg Nattonal
Basketball Assoctalion champiOns'
season debut.
But Free, he NB .~ 's secondleading scorer last season , wa s more
anxwus tD talk about his other
'"ntr ibutions, which included fiv e
rebounds. four assists and four
steals .
" I'm trying to be a complete all around player," said Free. who had
a brilliant 46-point effort Friday
night when the Clippers bowed to
Los Angeles IOJ-102 in their season
opener . " I was always an offensive
player. Tiwy don 'I realize I can play
defense . Everybody is looking at me
to be a shooter. Now they are
noticing other things .
"I'm not ~oing for the leadtng
scorer title," he added , despite his
early 40 . ~ average . "We're jus ~
trying to hold together until BtU

or !&lt;lf1CUflt unn

l 'hr :\rmv h," f1&lt;"b 1hrough -

...

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The he&gt;~
- -..._---"t.,--. ~way 10 get what ~
~-"'--.....- ,
yuu wJm out ol the Army
··• •.:;· ,._
''to get guaramccs going in . With
·• •• ~
the Army's Delayed Emry Program , y·ou can

..

THE Wl.l YOU WAIT
The Army has hundreds of slulb to ch&lt;• '"'
!rom. And the Delayed Entry Program kh
you choose Ihe lr•ining chat make' the rnn't
ol your lJUalificalions and interest~ .
You get a written guarantce'that a &gt;pac-e will
he rc~crvcd for you . Then, you can r;rke ur
to a year to rq&gt;on for duty .

PUI ffi l l \[

u! thr ( ClfliJflCnla]

l 'nrtrJ Sl:tl c' . 111 :\l" 'ka.
ll "wau. P"nJm a. K&lt;~rc a anJ , ol
c our~c.:. Europe I! there\ .Jn opcnm~.
yt~u l -, lll gc: t .J guar;.m tt'C.

XI GAMMA MU CHAPTER, Beta
Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m .

Sigma

Tuesday at the Colwnbla Gu Co. offlees. Hostea•ea will be Betty Jean
Krawsczyn, Mrs. Donna Byer, and
Mrs. Sandy Sargent.

PEACE DF MilD
lr ·, ll tcc ro know wha llhc future I111IJ,
And the l kiaycJ 1-.ntrv Program let; mu
lin l'l h ~ou r \l'n Jnr \ "L',.H m h1gh ~c.:hool ,
kilo\\' \IlK thai ~· our !utun.: ~ ~ guaranlced .
T o i111J out more ahout Ihe Delay-ed
1-.ntry Prugram, call 1·our local .'\ rmy
Rcc rUit l' r

Mr. and Mrs . Virgil Wood,
Springfield, spent a weekend with
Mrs. Letha Wood .
Mr. and Mrs. B. K. Ridenour
attended the Ridenour reunron in
Hagerstown, Md .
Mrs. Opal Eichinger, Laura Jean,
Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. Doo Eichinger
and Dave Weber spent the weekend
in Columbus with Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Eichinger and Suzie. They
went especially to attend a football
game of the Mifflin High School.
Charles is an offensive back coach
for the Mifflin team.
Mrs. Erma Cleland and Mrs . Opal
Hollon visited Munday afternoon at
the Holzer hospital with several
patients from the community.
Mrs. Bernice Keebaugh Hubbard,
Columbus , spent a couple of days
with her cousrn, Letha Wood.
Mrs . Elizabeth Wickham and
children, Richmond, called on
relative~ her.e, Saturday, and were
guests for lunch at the home of Mr.
and Mrs . B. K . Ridenour .
Mrs . Opal Hollon spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ricky
Hollon and sons, Parkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Buel Ridenour and
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight enjoyed a
Triple A weekend trip to Nashville,
Tenn .
Mr . and Mrs. Clayton Allen called
at the Holzer hospital Friday
afternoon to vtstt relallvcs.

Reedsville News Notes

C!ippers edge
Sonics, 98-93
By ALEX SA CHAR F.
AP Sports Wrih·r

Snyder, Lancaster, and her
husband, James Knapp, a past commander .of Post 677, who brought
greetings.
Americanism chalrman, Mrs .
Clifford Atkins of Crooksville, asked
for support of Americanism
programs including the bus trip to
Washington, D. C. She talked on
presenting flags to boy scout troops
and other organizations. It was also
noted that Buckeye Girls State will
be held this year at Ashland College.
Mrs. James Gatwood, children
and youth chairman, talked on the
Ohio Sandusky Home and the Xenia
Home and announced an open house
to be held there next year . At Xenia
there are 225 children she reported

WEDNESDAY
UNITED Methodlst Women,
Racine Wesleyan Church, will meet
Wedne"day at home of Mrs. Robert
Hill to make apple butter 81! a
,project. Apple butter is $2.50 per
quart plus clean jar. Orden! may be
placed at 9f9-2013, 949-2372 or 9f9:1116.

593-3022 in ATHENS
446·3393 in GAUIPOLIS

I

guests: Mrs. Virginia Walton, Mrs .
Mary Alrce Bise, Mrs . Sue Reed,
Angte Heed, Mrs. Marlen Putman,
Beverly Wigal and Mrs. Vickie
Keller. Members · Mrs . Mamie
Buckley, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal, Mrs.
Dolly Reed , Mrs . Pat Martin, Mrs.
May Humphrey, Mrs . Vivian
Humphrey, Mrs . Sandy Cowdery,
and Mrs. Lillian Pickens. Door
prizes were given to ,Mrs. May
Humphrey, Angle Reed, and Dolly
Reed. A dooation of $50 was given to
a needy family . The next meeting
will be at the home of Mrs. May
Humphrey .
Reed•vUle Peroonab
Visiting with Mr . and Mrs. Ernest
Ruth and Mrs. Verna Rose recently
were Mr. and Mrs. Bob Yost of New
Galilee, Pa .
Mr . and Mrs . Denver Weber and
family, Mr. and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead and Mr . and Mrs. Warren
Pickens attended a family dinner at
the h&lt;Ille of Mr . and Mrs. Bill
Meredith Sunday at Beverly . The
occasion was to celebrate the second
birthday of their granddaughter.
Teresa Meredith.
Mr. and Mrs . Bill Dietz of
Columbus were h&lt;nored with a
birthday dinner at the Williams Balderson home Sunday. Attending
were Mr . and Mrs. Paul Koblentz
and Donnie and Mrs. Al Wildermuth
of Columbus, Mrs. Kathryn Dietz,
Bob Day and Chris and Paul Day of
Belpre, Mr . and Mrs . Warren
Pickens, local, and Kay Balder!lln,
student at Ohio University, Athens .
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson spent a
few days with Mr . and Mrs. Robert
Sams at Weston, W. Va .

Ohio Garden Clubs

ar.d a Chnstmas party will be held
on Dec. 23 . Auxiliary members were
also asked to get behind the special
OlympiC5.
Mrs . Virgil Parsons, junior activities chainnan, Middleport, announced the junior conference to be
held on April 29 at Pomeroy with the
state conference to be on May 'r/ at
Veterans Memorial Auditorium in
Colwnbus. She talked on the handwork which the juniors do and the
need for giving the juniors
something to do as they move into
the senior unit .
Mrs . Nelson Mowery, veterans affairs chairman, talked on the Carville Star, the poppy program, and
urged better support of the veterans
in hospitals and nursing homes, as
well as assistance when they come
back into the community.
Community services was

veterans there , can send a package

or money to her and she wtll take
eare of it .
At the aftemoon session , Mrs .
Mary Martun of the Pomeroy Urut
39, gave a report on the national convention of the American Legion ,
held at Houston , Texas. She presented gifts to Mrs. Florence llichards
of Middleport, last year's district
president, Mrs. Snyder, and the

Senior Citizens ' Scenes
FALL FESTIVAL
POMEROY-Thank you 's go to all
the senior citizens and other
interested persons whose dedication
and efforts made the Center's Fall
Festival a successful venture.
Appreciation is extended to the
many individuals who peeled apples,
made crafts, carried kettles and
water, stirred apple butter and soup
beans, donated items for the country,
store and kitchen, worked at the
"attractions," and helped with the
many, many tasks that have to be
accomplished to hold such an event
as the Fall Festival.
Special thanks go to the groups
who provided great entertainment
throughout the day and to the Meigs
County businesses who donated to
the Festival. The businesses
Crafty
Ladies
included :
Handicrafts,
Burger
Chef,
Elberfelds, Kiddie Shoppe, Powell's
Super Valu, Pomeroy Flower Shop,
Pomeroy Pastry Shop, Stiffler's
Stores Inc .. Fabric Shop, K. and C.
Jewelers, Marguerite Shoe Shop,
Craw's Steak House, Quality Print
Shop, Ace Hardware Store, Valley
Lumber, Rutland Furniture Co.,
Vaughan's
Cardinal
Foods,
McClure 's 3 in One, Royal Crown
Bottling Co., Middleport Book Store,
Village Phannacy, Dutton Drug Co.,
Nelson's Drug, The J&lt;nes ,Boys,
Carpenter's Pennzoil, Broughton
Dairy Product.&gt;; (Walter Crooks),
and Carousel Confectionary Cake
and Candy Craft Shoppe .
Proceeds from the Fall Festival
will he used for the continuation of
the senior citizens programs in
Me;gs County.
COLUMBUS DINNER
PLAYHOUSE
Two dates are being planned to
attend the Country Dinner
Playhouse in Columbus to see The
Sound of Music The dates are
Saturday, Dec. I and Wednesday ,
Dec. 12. Each dale has openings for
2:i persons. The cost will be $15 per
which
includes
person

Mrs. Hobstetter
remembered at
ThursckJy meeting
The charter was draped in
memory of Mrs. Marcia Hobstetter

at the Thursday night meeting of the
Rock Springs Grange at the hall on
the fairgrounds .
Sympathy cards were sent to
Edison Hobstetter, the Blackston
family and the Shaeffer family with
a get-well card to William Grueser.
Thank you notes were read from Mr .
and Mrs . Tracy Whaley and the
Citizens Band Radio Qub.
Contributions were made to the
Ohio Lung Associati&lt;n and for prizes
for the conununity Halloween party
to be held Saturday, Oct. 'll, at the
Rock Springs grange hall .
Mrs. Barbara Fry, CW A chairman, thanked those who helped with
the food co-q&gt; of the Me~
MinisUies at the grange hall.
Mr. and Mrs. !loy Grueser showed
slides of their trip to Alaska. Mrs .
Nancy Mon-ls and Mrs. Barbara Fry
served refreshments . Donuts, cider
and coffee were served.

to meet October 2 7
Fal-l meeting of Region II, Ohio
Association ct Garden Oubs will be
held Oct . 'r/ in Marietta at the Baptist Church on Putnam and Fourth
Streets, Mrs. t"at Holter, regional
director, aMOUnced .
Registration will begin at 9 a . m.
with the business le&amp;'lion to be conduction at 10 a. m. At 1: 1~ p.m. the
afternoon program will begin with
Mrs. · Dwight DeVoss · giving a
demonstrati&lt;n on "Decorating For
the Holidays."
Reservations for the luncheon are
f-1 each and should be made with
Mrs. Donald Blue, 613 Seventh St.,
Marietta, 45750 by Oct. 19. The afternoon program registration fee is
f2 and is payable at the door . Each
garden club member is being asked
to take an Item for the sales table .
The Marietta Garden Qub is
hosting the meeting .

dlscusscd by Mrs. Fr•nces H.obert.&gt;;
of llacme Post 60c urut. She .spoke of
health dn ves. of commumty
beautifi cation , of books which can be
donated to libraries, and the Lions
Club program of providing glasses
to the needy .
Mrs. Bernard Cooley of the Athens
unit talked on the Athens Mental
Health Center nd the Auxiliary's
work there . She said that anyone
wanttng to have a party for the few

Band Boosters meet,
plan 3 banquets
Plans for serving three banquets
were made during a meeting
Tuesday night of the Eastern Band
Boo6ters held in the band room ol
Eastern High School.
Mrs . Charlotte Elberfeld,
president, conducted the meeting.
The Fann Bureau banquet on Oct.
23, the Tractor Pullers banquet on
Nov . 3, and the Soil and Water Conservation banquet on Nov. 15 will all
be prepared and served by the Band
Boosters. Betty Newell wW have
charge ol all banquets.
Mrs . Bernard (Pat) Shrivers was
elected treasurer. The auditing committee appointed consists of Elste
Foler, Donna GMffln and Carolyn
Teaford.

transportation costs, dinner costs
and admission to the play .
TI1e Sound of Music is a tale of
love, adventure, and !ruth .. . the true
story of the famed Von Trapp
Family Singers, an Austrian family
who defied the Nazi terror on the eve
of World War II. In addition to the
joyous title song, the inspirational
hymn, Qimb Ev'ry Mountatn , and
the enchanting Oo-Re-Mi , the
mustcal has been famed for such
songs as My Favonte Thtngs,
Edelwetss, and the cha rming
Sixteen Going On Seventeen.
The music is by Richard Rogers.
Iynes by Oscar Hammerstem II,
book by Howard Lindsay and
Russell Crouse, suggested by "The
Trapp Family Singers" by Maria
Augusta Trapp.
A deposit of $5 is required by Nov.
1 wrth full payment due by Dec. I ,
1979. You may make your
reservations in the RSVP office ..
ACfJVITIES
Tuesday, Oct . I~ at II: 15 a.m.,
Ellen Bell. Pomeroy - Middleport
l..lbrary, will present a slide show
presentation on " Adult Education."
Adult Education classes are held
at the Pomeroy and Middleport
l..lbraries and are free to anyone
interested. You can improve your
readlng skills, your math skills, your
English skills and prepare for the
high school equivalency (G.E.D .)
Examination.
U you know of anyone that might
benefit from these educatlon
classes, invite them to attend Ellen's
talk.
Have a nice week.

guest speaker, Mrs . Delores
Kilgore, Mansfield.
Greetings were brought by James
Waggonseller of Lancaster , past
national commander, and Gene
Sturm, Bremen, Eighth Dlstrrct
commander .
Mrs Kilgore spoke on the
pr·ograrn of the Auxiliary and called
for support of all programs. She also
talked &lt;n membership and encouraged a goal early this year.
Mrs . Mabel Brown of Gallipolis :
Mrs . Lula Hampton of Mtddleport

Unit 263, and Mrs. Qarita Rhodes of
Unit 371 served on the resolutions
conunittee.
Going fr&lt;Ill Meigs County were
Mrs. Martin, Mrs . Pearl Knapp,
Mrs. Veda Davis, and Mrs .
Catherine Welsh, Pomeroy Unit 39 ;
Mrs. Frances Roberts, Racine Unit
602; Mrs. Parsons, Mrs. Peggy
Caton, Mrs . Erma Hendricks, Mrs .
Etta Will, and Mrs . Sonia Parsons,
Middleport Unit 128; and Mrs.
llichards, Mrs. Hampton, and Mrs.
Ernest Bowles, Middleport Unit 263.

Mrs. Mariflnna Mitchell
conducts demonstration on
dough baskets, flowers
Mrs . Marianne Mitchell conducted
a demonstration workshop on dough
baskets and flowers when the Shade
Valley Council of Floral Arts met at
the home of Mrs. Pat Holter.
Using flour and salt mixed with
water, all of the members made the
dough baskets which were .then
baked in an oven.
Miniature arrangements were on
display and judged orally with Mrs .
Holter taking first; Mrs. Carol Erwin, second, and Mrs. Jackie Frost,
third. Mrs . Maida Long was
welcomed as a new member. It was

Auxiliary meets
NEW HAVEN - The American
Legion Auxiliary Unit No. 140 met
Monday recently at 7:ll p.m. at
Legion home .
The meeting opened and closed in
regular form with Ella Housh,
president, presiding .
Ella Roush gave a report on a fall
conference that was held at PI
Pleasant recently .
All members were urged to pay
their dues .
Plans were made for the Founders
Day program, which was to be Oc.
13.

Those present were Thelma
Capehart, Ella Roush, Alita Weaver,
Francis Ohlinger, !.aura Blake, ,Jo
Ann Taylor, Helen Knapp, Sadie
Warth and Mary (Bill) Roush .

..

dectded to send a thank you note to
Mrs. Irene Jackson for her program
at Royal Oak Park and also to make
her an honorary member of the club.
It was noted that the Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden Clubs,
will meet on Oct. 'nat Marietta. The
program will be on holiday
decorations. The open meeting of tbe
Chester Garden Club was noted and
bulils for the OAGC bulb sale were
distributed by Mrs. Bwmy Kuhl .
A meeting of the club will be held
tomorrow night at 7:30 at the first
house in Chester. Everyone is to
take a still life using vegetables or
!rwt and candles . For roll call members are to name an arrangement
item they would like to find or buy.
All members are to take bulbs.
There will be an oral judging on the
stilllife exhibits.

·-···.-GOOD TIIS SPECIAl--.
• BAKED LASAGNA •
•

•

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Oinn•r witt1

1

golden brown

bvt~

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$'l

1J9

on

TO GO ONlY

I
•

lMysellly

EG1tiiSi
;..A.liAiii·l

,~------~---------~--~----------,

:

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

:

\

OPTOMETRIST

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OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON

~

[_ON!~~~~~~~~~~~~~T!~:~~M!!~~~----~

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport , 0 ., Monday . Oct. I&gt;. 1!179

1- Thl' Dall) St·nl 1m·l. Pmm• ru~ ·.'V1H.klll'port..U, M o n d a~ . Od 15. l97Y

National Business Women 's· Week begins today
Celebration of the National
Business Women's Week will begin
tonight at a meeting of the Middleport Business and Professional
Women 's Club.
Members will have a dinner at the
Middleport Masonic Temple at 6 :15
p.m. and from there will go to the
Columbia Gas Co. offices for the
regular meeting at 7: 30 p.m. The
program will feature the nanning of
tbe "Woman of the Week" and the
"Woman of the Year" along with
honoring the charter members .
National Business Women's Week
was first celebrated in 1928 with the
announced purpose of dramatizing
the contributions of women to the
business and professional life of the
country. Past National President
Lena M. Phillips wrote : " Women's
Week should strike a response from

Sermonette
MY CUP RUNNETH OVER

As we enter into the fall season, we
have reason to utter the words of the
23rd Psalm, " My cup runneth over ."
Goodness and mercy are nune from
God and his wonderful creation. We
all need to pause and remember how
good the year has been to us. As we
look at each month we can find
beauty, happiness, JOY, friendship
and God's grace . With such a
wealth, how can we not say the Lord
is good to me . Autwnn brings cool
nighls and swmy days. A time for
remembering and the season of apples with all the goodness that ca n
touch us. Apple pie, applesauce ,
Cider. plain good eating and of course, giving. How can we forget an apple lor the teacher or cool autwnn
nighls with chilled apples to be eaten
with hot popcorn' Memories of
school days, football games, falling
leaves, new clothes and the warmth
of a fire at home and family
coziness. How is it we look around
and look back in time for this year or
many years and still say. the Lord
has not been good to me ... more than
I deserve. I must say " My cup run neth over . "
So many joys, privileges, fnends
and beauty all around that I must
certainly feel good and happy no
matter what my station in life IS .
Rich man. poor man, all can enjoy
the autumn beauty and bounty that
is ours in God's kingdom . A church
in which to worship God , family and
friends. home and God certainly fill
my cup to over flowing .
There is a crispness in the autwnn
air that clears my head and thoughts
and lets me remember last winter ,
the beautiful spring and the swnmertirne . This has been good as now
!look back. My cup indeed runneth
over. Goodness is everywhere if only
I take the time to look. l can see I
have a duty and a responsibility to
share these great gifts God has
given me m this wonderful land
called America. This is wbat our
schools need to teach the youth of
today . Teachers of yesteryear did a
good job of it. Whether the instructors and teachers of today are
doing this we can't tell until the next
generation.
If we only look around in this
autwnn time of year we can truly
see God's blessed us in so many ays .
All we need do is look around. We se
the orchards full, our cellars full,
our grass all green. fall flowers
bright, the trees in their lovely hues ,
our friends and family around us
and so our hearts must be attuned to
God's great gifts to us . Everywhere
we look . we can see our cup runneth
o.er. No one dare say God has not
blessed us in many ways. Autwnn
has certainly got to be a time of
remembering and of thanksgiving
for all that we have . God has blessed
us ... he has filled our cups to overflowing . Bless we the Lord.
Rev . William Midleswarth
St. Paul Lutheran Church
Pomeroy, Ohio

~~~[S?u~s~!es wh~

were in an automobile accident recenUy are both recovering at home .
Recent guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Olarles King, Susan and Charlie,
were Mrs . Raymond King and
daughter, Dee, of Chancey.
Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
John Dean were Mr. and Mrs .
Garold Gilkey, Tanuny and Amber
of Athens.

VISIT SHARON, PA.
Mr. and Mrs. William Roush, Mr .
and Mrs. Joey Roush, Mr. and Mrs .
Harry J . RDush and Eleanor RDush
of New Haven, motoredc to Sharon,
Pal., to help celebrate the 70th birthday of James McArdle, tbe
brother of Mrs. WilliamRoush .
A delicious diMer was served to
those attending from the area and
aJao fifteen close friends of Mr .
McArdle of Sharon. His
daughter,EIIa Hill, a son-in-law, and
a granddaughter of Cold Springs,
Ky., also attended the diMer . The
group returned home Sunday.

the heart and effort of every loyal
federation . Herl! ts jj chance to
reveal and to interpret the values of
club life and work to our neighbors .
in neighbors , indeed to all citizens of

eemmunities.· ·
Women's Week has grown to be a
nationwide recognition of Business
and Professional Women '5 con tribution as eitizens today and of the

Ice Capades jeatured
in one-time appearance
HUNTINGTON - lee Capades, ts and young men hold a llvely early
the biggest ice show in the world, 1s American revivaL
bnnging 1ts spectacular 40th AnIn "Dreams For Sale" a young
niversary Show to the Huntington girl meets a dream&lt;~elling cam1val
Ovic Center, Wedresday, Novem - ·braker who makes her wishes come
ber 7 through Sunday, November IL
true, first as a Keystope cop and
This will be the only West Virginia then in an elegant ballroom set lin~,
appearance .
dancing out her dreams in threeTh.- theme of this special edition
quarter tune .
spans centuries - from the days of
Ice Capades IS proud to presen t
knighls in armour to today's lively
former Bntish Pairs Chan1pion
generatiOn. with something to please
Colin and Erika. This exciting pair
every member of the family .
were members of tbe British 1976
The show opens 1n a Camelot-like
Olympic Team and are making their
court with ladies-m-waiting and
professional debut this season with
their gentlemen, wandering minice Capades.
'trel• and court jesters, providing a
Also headlining the show are the
regal setting as the days of ctuvalry
dynamic U.S. Junior Men's Chamcome alive in "A Royal Welcome" .
plan , Richard Ewell, Julie Johnson,
Children of every age wiU find
freestyle skater Jim Szabo, Theresa
their special dreams come true in
Foy, Greg Welch, and Sharon
"The Flintstone Frolics ." Yogi
Burley .
Bear, Scooby Doo, Fred Flintstone
The antics of Biddy and Baddy,
and Barne)· Hubble are joined on the
along with Brad Doud add a spec1al
1ce with storybood characters Botouch of comedy, and David Lee the
Peep and her lost sheep. D1sco ducks
skating juggler and John Thorne are
and haU-a-&lt;lozen Hwnpty Dumpties
tremendous .
Sitting on a wall.
The grand finale, w1th the
" An Oriental Fantasy" of love and
precisiOn number . "Make A Wish ,"
jealousy is enacted with skaters in
and the entire cast on~ce i.s a speckimonos and Smaurai warriors .
tacular close to this special 40th An Adagio skaters Randy and Debby
niversary Edition of Ice Capades.
portray a young couple Ill love, with
Tickets are on sale at the Hun Richard EweU as the evi l War Lord,
tington Civic Center, Sears in Hunand Sharon Burley as the jealous
bngton and Charleston, and in
favorite .
Ashland at Zwick's.
From the tranqwl old-world
Tickets may be charged by phone
feeling, the show moves to a
on VISA or Master Charge by calling
Southern plantalioo setting where
Huntington 696-4400.
turban·dad girls in wide cotton skir-

~
,.'

HEALTH

- =11 -----L_a_w_re_n_c_e__E_.L_a_m
__b_.M
__.D_.___________
SHOUU&gt; OOCTORS ADVERTISE .
By Karen Blaker, Ph. D.
DEAR DR BLAKER - It was bad
enough when 4'wyers started to advertise their services. But last week
I saw something even worse.
Two doctors opened an office in
our town and bought adve1tising m
the dally paper. Most people were
very offended and decided not to
g1ve them any business.
Don't you agree that advertising
takes away from a professional's
stature'
DEAR READER - No . And that 's
the majority opinion, according to a
survey by Prevention magazine .
Readers of the magazine were
asked their reaction to this makebelieve radio commercial from a
new physician in town :
"This ts Dr. John Doe . A llttle
more than a year ago, l finished by
residency in family practice, which
means I'm an old-fashioned G.P.
wtth a modem educat1on
"During the last year, I was attending physician at John Doe
College and also attended patients at
two nursing homes .
"How good a doctor am I' There 's
no way anything l say here can help
you decide . You can only make that
decision after seeingme - just as
with any other doctor .
" But I will say this about my approach to medicine : I like to think
twice before prescribing drugs
because it's lao easy to do that for a
condition that will go away by itself
in a week or two. If you do need a
prescnption, chances are it will be
given generically, which means you
may save substantial money at the
pha11l1Bcy .
"Because l 'm new in town and
trying to get started, my office-visit
fee is only $8. U you pay at the office
instead of making me bill you, the

Laurel Cliff
News Nou~s
Attendance Aug . 26 at the Free
Methodist Church was 110. Choir
members presr,t was 10.
Mrs. Tina Jacobs has been returned home from Veterans Memonal
Hospital .
Mrs . Bertha Parker was on sick
list the past week .
Mrs. Nellie Tracy will celebrate
her ~ birthday September 7. She
is staying at Kimes Convalescent
Home, Athens.
Mrs. Gerald Pullins was returned
to her home from Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
Mr. Ernest Powell remains on the
sick list
Attendance at the evening services at the local church was ~6.
Mr. and Mrs . Floyd Shook recen
tty visited 'relatives in Pennsylvania .

ll't.~der s~11p

lht.·y Hrt&gt; providing tn the

economy, social. cultural, business
and professional life of these United
Sta les.
The local club was organized in
t!l4ll by the Gallipolis Club. The charter IS dated July I , \!14ll . Mrs . Sylvia
Burford was the first local president
and there were 64 members. The
hve charter members of the club
now are Mrs . F.'iSie f{ussell , Mrs .
Hose Reynolds, Mr. . Pearl
f{eynolds, Mrs . Edith Forrest, and
Miss Freddie Hoodashelt . Mrs .
Pearl Heynolds served as district
d1rector at one time .

As a serv1ce dub, the M1ddlepu•·t
Business and Professional Women 's
l1ub has as projects : hosp1l&lt;JI local
center w1th SICk room supplies ;
scholarship fund for nurses training

course at the Holzer School of Nur ·
sing ; and in civie affairs has con·
dueled the heart fund drive for 29
years and assisted with the cancer
fund and cystic f1brosis fund drives
•n Middleport. The club has also supported Veterans Memorial Hospital ,
participated m sponsoring a girl to
Ruckeye Girls' Slate, the WHAP
programs, as well as participating
m local parades .

The four graduate nurses sent to
school on BPW scholarships mclude
Paulme Zirkle, Betsy Cunningham,
Debbie Wood and Mary Krawsczyn .
Teresa Meadows is the current nur se tn trainlng .
The Club has been active in the
Young Careens\ program with Suzy
Carpenter, Karen Goins, Jan Hill
and Rhonda Dailey participating in
district activities.
The club officers this year are
Frances Louise Davis, president;
Eva Robson, VJce president; MarJOrie Goett, secretary, and Donna
Davi dson, treasurer.

UM W elects-1980 officers
Officers for the 1979-ao year we~·e
elected at the Tuesday night
meeting of the United Methodist
Women of the Asbury Church held at
the parsonage home of the Rev . and
Mrs. Harvey Koch . Mrs . Mary Cun diff was co-hostess for the meeling .
Elected were Mrs . Cundiff ,
president; Mrs. Helen Teaford , vice
president: Mrs . April Harmon ,
secrel&lt;Jry; Mrs . Ann Sauvage,
treasurer;

Mrs.

Grace

Weese.

assistant treasurer ; Mrs . Bemice
Winebrenner, program resources;
Mrs. Rose Ann Jenkins, Chnst1an
personhood: Mrs. Nora Houda.•helt .
supportive commumty : Mrs .
Margaret Eichinger, Christian
global concerns: Mrs . Opal Kloes ,
spiritual life closmg : and Mrs.
Margaret Eichinger. Mrs . Kloes and
Mrs. Mary I.isl~ . nominating comffifttee.

Members inducted
Ten new members were taken into
the Middleport Slinderella Diet
program at last week's meeting . Lee
Hendrix lost the most weight for the
week Wlth Dixie Sayre as the runnerup . At the Mason Class, Brenda
Hussell was the biggest weight loser
with a tie for runner-i.lp between
Cheryl Kaylor and Pearl Phalin .
Patsy Ross receive-d a 35 pound
ribbon, and Unda Wamsley a 50
pound ribbon at the Pain! Pleasant
etas.,. l Jnda was the week 's beat
loser with !.orella Wamsley the run ner -up .

fee is just $7.
"For the convenience of working
people, my office is open until II p.
m. every Monday and Thursday
SOUP SUPPER
night. I'm located at 000 Main Street.
SET
SATURDAY
My office is fully equipped w1th
A
soup
supper
will be held at the
everything - except patienls 1 "
HuUand
United
MethodiSt Church
Ninety-five percent of the
Saturday
with
serving
to begin at
magazine's readers found this ad Innoon
and
continue
through
the
teresting and useful, while 1 pereent
evenmg.
In
addition
to
vegetable
was not impressed and anotl1er 1
soup, sloppy joes, pie , cake and cofpercent found it offensive.
fe&lt;&gt; will iJe served.
Those who approved said they
thought such advertismg would help
them evaluate a doctor's credentials
and experience. They could find out
about his or her area of upertise
and could compare pnces and offi ce
hours with those of the competition .
One respondent said that advertising nught help her better
determine how broad-minded an obstetrician was about natural child birth, fathers in delivery rooms and
home birth. She would have to pay
$30 on a first vis• t.
All in all, the study shows there 1s
geat hunger for more information
about the availability of physicians
with special interests as well as information about doctors· experience
and credentials.
Kick the telev1s1on habit. Write for
Dr . BLaker's newsletter "Taming jl
the TV Beast." Send 50 cents pius a
stamped, self-addressed envelope to
Dr . Blaker 1n care of this
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 475, Radio
Oty Station, New York, NY 10019.
Write to Dr. Blaker at the above
address. Volume of mail prohibits
personal replies, but questions or
general interest will be discussed 111
future columns.

Dunng the meeting 45 vis1ts to the
siek and shut-in were reported . Mrs.
Kioes gave devotions using " Heflcctions Upon Your Seed'' a' her
theme . It was voted to raise the

Carnival pltmned
Ftnal plans for thP Sl'hool rarnival
ttl f{iverview wen~ made at the
recent PTO meeting held at the
schooL
The membership committee
reported 253 members for the year
thus far .
The pledge to the flag was led by
Michael Martin , third grade student,
followed by Pat Mart1n reading
devotions.
Meet{he-('.andi date rughl'l was observed with all candidates to be
voted on for Eastern Local Board of
Education. Each candidate ultroduced himself and presented a
brief review of their platform.
Mr . Chadwell's room, with highest
percentage of parents 10 attenda nee .
received the attendance banner and
eash award.
Kefreshments were served .

pledge to $231.&gt;3 for !980.
Missionary birthday cards were
ent to Elizabeth Russle, Buenos
Aires . Letters were read concemin~
the Day on the District and from
UNJCEF.
Mrs Harmon gave the program
entitled " Wake Us Up, Lord ." Mrs.
Teaford assisted with the program
which included the poems, "]jfe Is
Worth [j ving," and "This is All I
Ask ." The spiritual life closing by
Mrs. Kioes was "Nobody Ever Asks
J ohn ." The Lord 's Prayer closed the
meeting .

--···.-GOOD TM:S SPEaAL-.

•

BAKED LASAGNA ••

I
]. ,

•

Dtnner wtth
g olden brown

•

bun

I

TO GO ONlY

.,79

1._ \ 1U

LongBottom
News Notes
The local );enior Citizens Club held
its ail day meeting at tbe church
basement reeenUy . Several from
here attended the county fair and
State Fair recently.
Callers at the Paul Hauber home
have been Mr. and Mrs. Robert J.
Hawk and RDbbie, Pomeroy, Mrs
Ora Sinclair, Sumner Road,
Pomeroy, Pearl Powell, Mr . and
Mrs. Douglas Hauber, Tim and Kim ,
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Adams, Mrs.
Pat Thomas, Cindy and Melissa
Thomas, all local, Mr. and Mrs
Lawrence Johnston , Jr, and
Jeremy, Portland.
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Larkins have been Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Larkins and Eric from
Maryland .

11wught for today : In !hi.'-i YIHrld.
~'OU must bt' a b1t too km u 111 onh- r to
br kmU e no ugh - Pierre CciriL'I de

Chamberlain de Marivaux 11688176:1,

tn. ·,r v~t•w&lt;,. 111 wrdu1q no
lnlt•r rh,Hl JO onys ~ffer I he

NOTICE OJ:
APPLICATION OF

IRJ~ g~~Oc. ~~COUP
'"'

hr.,, dale o t pvb l •(a f ton of

FIRSIB/~o N CG ROUP

SAGITTARIUS ( NOIII 23 -0ec. 21)

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

BANK ,

110 1s n . nc

POMEROY , OHIO

D'Your
~&lt;:Birthday

Nofr r(' •5 hrrPb •f ~IVI'n
Dur surtrll In ".flr Tof\ n
)(i!!()lo f t!u•B&lt;lnk H Od1 ny
Com pdn y
tl.. rt
,1nd
r1•yu ldt1ons o t th e Bor~ro ot
Gove rno r s o t lht· F f'd t' r rl l
R ese r ve
Syslt•rn
F 1r&lt;, t
Ban e Group o f Oh1u . 1111 . &lt;l
bank
hold1n~
rom pdny

!h al .

OcloM&gt;r 18, 1e79

h inll ng 1h p r rn rr pa t p l,l f('
buo:.tne ss nt 100 E rl ~ l

of

Br o ad Str ee t , Col umbu'&gt;
QhtO 43'71 5 wdl &lt;lPPiy to lh1&gt;
Board o f Governors o f th r
F Pderol RP&lt;;PrvP 5y&lt;; 1{'m
to r pr 1or appr ovnl by th e
Board o f th e arqu1s •I 10n of
b&lt;'!lli-1.
~ hlH es
ot
T tw
P o mer oy Nr'lfronnl Bnn k 1n
P o meroy ,
01110
!:i t
ac qu1rltlg the S I1MPS Ol f h('
P:Jmeroy N n t1 o n ,l l Br1TTk
F tr&lt;, l B ane G r oup of Oh·o:
ln r proposes to pnqrll&lt;P 111
bu'll ness n l thp o f I r "'&gt; Of
The
PomPr uy
N ,llton,ll
Brmk toe a t ed tn Pom1· r o·r ,
R utl nnd ,
nnd
Tuppp r ~
Pl&lt;l1 ns Per so ns W1Sh1nq t o
ro mmen t
on
lh 1&lt;;
rlD
o ltc at10n
should
"&gt;ullmt T

NOTICE OF
APPOlf'lTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
O n SPp l ember 15, 1Q79, 1n
Ill£' M e rgs Coun t y Proba t e
C.ou rt . Cnse No 14 ,27 4. Ed
·1,1 F=

Sc hoe nleb , 333 Lasley

':. f ree ! ,
P o m e ro ·,.. ,
Oh10
45 769 Wc1S a pporn tm e nt Ad
1l• 1nt':l lralr 1)( wt lh the Will
ArnJt&gt;:w:Pd o t th C' est ate ot
1
•V1J r ·f Millf'r deceased. la te
of Pn trll' r oy. Me1gs Counly ,

0 1110
Robe rtE

Bu c k

Prob ~l!(' JudgP Cl e rk
! 10 1 H 1S ] I I

PrOJects you may prev1ously
have constdered too large 1n
scope to handle w111 be eas•ly
accomplished thts commg year
due 10 several SP6(:tal people
wt1o befnend you
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl.23) An
une~~:pecl&amp;d b1 t or luck IS on 115
way lo r yo u toda'r' It wtll dump
someth1ng QUite nrce tnlo your
lap Th1s 1r111e presen t IS meant
JUST l or you Ftnd out m o re about
yourselt by sendmg l or your co py
o f Astro-G raph letler wh 1c h
beg 1ns w1th your btrlhday Mall
$1 tor eac11 t o Astra-Graph . Bo•
469 . Radto C 1ty Station . NY
t OO 19 Be sure t o spec1ty brrth
date
SCORPIO (Oct. 2•-Now. 22) If
you don ' ! t1ave any pla ns. make
some lo get o ut where the act 10n
15 today SomeH1mg very pleasant awarl s 'f'Ou Don' t oe a loner

99 e
BA co N...................................L~; 89
STORE SLICED

••

BIGGEST SAVINGS IN TOWN!

• l)t (, J ' 'o mhluJn • D&lt; 1

~\111141 [ . Lh' ....... ""'•

~
~fc &gt;&lt;JT (

• 01

RC COLA
V.

Kc1l
'ill.ol!l

Cnt.mllu,. Ohio 4UO'"'

hard

consultants
for
you•11 be

McElroy of 7JuJJ, Il l :-tnd thl'l"'('
young men from Zton who nwde up
til€ smg1ng group, The lmpresswns.
While here Hev. "nd Mrs. McElroy
and son, f\Jcha rd, along w1th smging
group, wer~ guests Uf Mr . and Mrs.
Vir~il Klnl!
CUOCER ( , _ 21-.luly 22) Lady
Luctc. COUkS have a hand lodliy In
gettiflU you logett.- wUh someone yoo·--. btMn wanting 10 ...
"

w111

.,.

•

pteMant

e~.- .

guesb uf Mrs Ne"v.a Kt11 g
v.t' rT Mr anLl Mr~ . Halph C~se of
Hl·ynol dsbur):; who also VISit ed 3t
tlh·tr farm here .

t ;n ·~ t

LEO ( - ....... Ill Somoono
wtlh whom pou hn'8 a 11rong
emotlonlll tae coutd be tnstrumentll tn 1J111tinQ you something
today that you'l delm a wrndfall
VIRGO
Z2)

I.... .........

I)wk Jf ;

lk1 ·t ·nt

no

Being a General Telephone Communications Consultant IS a full -time
JOb. It means taking as much time as
needed to survey, plan and discuss all
details of a business customer's
nhnn&lt;&gt; installation.
But they don't stop
there. They are also
busy looking for ways
to show customers how
to use their phones
more effi ciently. Sometimes they can show
how to save money and maybe even how
to mak e money.
Sound hk e good people
to know? They'll be happy to meet you anytime
make a survey of
telephonE&gt; reqlllremt&gt;nts. Call your
local Gene ml TelPphone business
office and make an a ppointment today. And remember there's never an
ch'""P for their services.

campsite at

th~.:1r

1"!'1't'ntly w1th Mr L1yde Harrison at

\11ddleport
Wesley Young , who was a patient
at Holzer Medi cal Center, has returnt•d home.

--···.-cooo TIMES SPEaALII
•

HOW'S YOUR
HOSPITALIZATION?

BAKED LASAGNA •

Oon11er ..,.,lh

•

~okle11 brown
bun R•11 ~1 0~

•

$

179

10 GO ONLY

I

cALLMutmJI C"'\

I
•

J d11ys DAly

liltiO'
s
E
;. il'lfii .1

~ilhil~;

Chtlrm. humor *'d tKt will be
the toots you 1M IIUitulty today
to wm othen CI'IIIW 10 your way of
!hulki ng Wld 10 bf1ng about
!.u mt~thing qutte turtun.te

at

rn~

Bend over the weekend .
Mr and Mrs K.alph Carl visited

Mr and Mrs. H.obert Held "'"'
.. . ons, Hubert , Jr ., ahd Charles had a ~
a n•l'ent vtsitur her mother , Mr s. ( ·
.Johnson of Colwnbu s.
Mr . and Mrs. John Dean . Mr. and
M rs. Hobert R1ed . ((obert, .Jr and
( 'harles, Mr and M rs Kennelh
:,1arkl11S, Ractne . Mr . and Mrs

aocau

f'NIIolp.., c• c.-1 H.
Gregg Gibbs ·
f 9n3443

69

$

WHOLE ...........L.~.•

59~
HALF ••••••••••••~~~.6 9~

SLAB
BACON

SUPERIORS BULK

LB.

99e WIENERS

CRISPY. GREEN

CUCUMBERS .... , ........... 5

GOLDEN RIPE

LBS.
FOR

BANANAS ........... .. ............ 5

FOR

RED,PGOlpD,JOLNATHEANS,
WINESAP 3- LB. BAG

LARGE GREEN BELL

PEPPERS """'""""""""" 5

A

FOR

SALE DATES
OCT. 15-20, 1979
QUANTITY RIGHTS
RESERVED

BU.

1
/1

BU. BOX

1

11 !~11~~~-~lllll l ll llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll l llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll llllll lllll

TIIESE OCTOBER

IS

8

16

8

PAK
16 oz.

Pkg.

....... ·····SIDES 11.29
CUT, WRAPPED AND FROZEN FOR YOUR FREEZERu::::::::: ............ HINDS s1.49

oz.

With Purcha ses

RC COLA

CRisco ....................... ~:l.B:.:~~--'·1 99
MONARCH WIDE OR EXTRA WIDE

.

NOODLES ............. .I.6.~-~-~~~·•• 49e
FAYGO ASST. REGULAR FLAVORS

POP

6

P

~:·:.~~:. ~·;:.=·

....

89

~

.

1.2 ')·0.r:

~

...

~

z
0
~

11

oz.

TARTS.................~~~--

Jllttli]Jt]:J

-~\~ '-,."l) ~f l) • l ~ HOI "lA I f 00DS 1 01l!S
PILLSBURY PLUS
-- -

..z

VEGETABLE SALE

.

. . . . '"-· 2

CAKE MIX
l,, .. , , ..... ... l!fo~.,

v~• &lt;OuP'&gt;n ot• .. rnuo,

',."

55¢

• - ---

•

1 B ' ; Ol
80A8S

hDI•n 10, 16 17!1
Gnod or C o!(\&lt;ntl

~o.ol

Rlu•

S•.,• ••
(;&gt;

00 4J 05

C ~HOIN~l i\5

Cans
•
•
•
•

SOFT PLY

11 Rf ~ •

13 -oz Cut Green Beans
12 -oz Whole Kernel Corn
14 1fl · OZ . Cream Style Corn
14 1h ·oz Sweet Peas
• 14·oz Shced Carrots
• 1 6 -oz Vea · AII Mixed Veoetables

lFREEZER VALUES I

[ ~A Oi fo;A

Hill '''. '

lAf~

PILLSBURY

,,

Iei•IIJ ;.le]~l

- - - - - ---

FLOUR

?

TOILET TISSUE -~-- ..~-~~~L.!.K.~.• 7 5 e

~ ..

101 1 611 9

Good tl Ca •d•,• l Ao ,ol

\

p

~ ....,_

Btu•

Sl &lt;&gt;• u

00100~

" .

....

&amp;'

( AADINA I 1'0

DAIRY VALUES

ore · ida Reg . or Crinkle Cut

FRENCH FRIES .............. . 5

Lloyd J . Harriss

J3•li)iJ"e]:J

" OAfS

DELUXE GRAHAM$ ~

$100
sns_

REYNOLDS WRAP............
79'
GLAD
30 CT.
$189
GARBAGE BAGS ...........................
KEOLLOPGGS ASSORTED FLAVORS

KJ;~,B:E~~~&lt; o~ ~r&gt;! ~l'd

160L

3!~~.~q·.~·....

keec vuu talking.

a

Tlllll

POTATOES ................... ..2~..~B.-..... $159

1na

ALL WEEK
l( "'' hll • D&lt; .' C. \ll urptn
1)1 " V. '\~1011 • ll ' (, A,

h.otd

Ht• v

or

and Mr s. Hussell
H &lt;H"t1 1ll , ~t· w Jf&lt;JV£'11 , W. Vet . were all
wf·t ·k ~ ·n d gul' sl.\ ,,f Mr . and Mrs.

S. NO. 1

•

firr~t· lru r~

'oru ~"'

w i th

Hodney

iHHl

-------------------PRODUCE------------------u.

VAUGHAN'S

mjo rmot111~

(J

l 'hur&lt;"h

Hte d

/(q fwrt

I'Lit;••, k;d &lt;J , Mr

THURSDAY ONLY

1~ 78

I,,.,

I

f" t' \'1\'H.I

BOLOGNALs.

of Or R111"" ".s

A.

Th1• &lt;"&lt;.~rldun
Wl'l ' k \' fld

STORE SLICED

FREE

(all r()fja ~ for
,11ou~
rop v

lh

ARIE$ (M•rch 21 · April 1t,
There can be exceptiooalty large
reward5 today It you work on
pro tects that may De considered
more labors of love than chores
TAURUS (April 20-Mor :Ill) Yoo
have won t o your coiOfs a very
helptul all)· today as eviden&lt;:;ed
by wi1 !1noness to cooper11te wtth
you just when you need thll
person
GEMINI (M•y 21-Jun. 20) Don 't
nagiACI any pro)ttels today that
could enhance o r benefit your
hte The resulls oblatned lrom
any such etf or1 could be enor mou s

POLISH SAUSAGE ............. ~~~ .. .

FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN!

0• V.

tastmo

News Notes

EltLdl~th

11f rv1 r&lt;..;.

Mr.. , Kcnen Murre~ y,
I ;ll'j.( and Tmet , ur Sandyvtllr ·, w. Vd
rmLl Mr ond Mrs. Wllltaon Murrety
ot lld son of Heynoldsburg . .
IA.l'l"t'

SMOKED

OCUST &amp; PEARL STREETS
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Ou1ilde Ohio Call Fr&lt;e

Valuable 1n lormatton wt !l be
yarmad today !hrougt1 111e kmd ·
ness o l on e you may k now ces u ·
ally Wtlh these new la&lt;.. I S yo u
c an make so melh on g 1mpor1ant
happen l or )'OU
AQUARIUS (J•n . 20 -hb. 1t)
Someone born under me sogn 01
Vtrgo could have a very upll11mp
e ffect on you today althougt1 rt
may be mamtesled sublly
P18CES (F.-b. 2Q....M.,ch 20) A
dec1ston you ma._,e today could
have lar m ore valuable enects
!Plan you may realize 11 this lime
HOW6'161 . the reaulll will be 1000

~ut·...,l'&gt;

H•·1 t·ut
.\l urT~• .'&gt;

PORK CHOPS ................:~·... 1 .
SMOKED
LB $1 89
PICNIC ......~.. ~·.69e HAM
SLICES
........................
~.
SUPERIORS SMOKED
e

•••••• •

1-800-282-6410

,, ,.,nap s
e ... en O&lt;t --.omt: ~et.rel de'\ortyou ve btien hilr lJuriiHJ luda)
lhP pnze has you r narnf' on 1 &lt;Jnd
ts r eaay to be won

SMOKED

AlllOCATIONS

For Complele !!\formation Call

King~ bury

Se t .. nw '&gt;•g tlt &lt;&gt; t.tgt1

CAPRICORN (D.c. l2-J•n . lt)

OF OH IO, IN (

lilt\O'SiI
•

T od 0 1 1e
ue .Y. c

Ill•':. n0 11re t o The Fed 1•r,l1
Rt&gt; &lt;;prvr'
Oank
ot
(l!' vl·l,1nd ( lt'V"IIIIHI O t11rJ
HID I

TOACQUIRE
OWNERSHIP OR
CONTROL OF THE
SHARESOFTHE
POMEROY NATIONA L

Mly

When~see

•

F

Lb.
Bag

$}69

26 -0Z.

KRAFT

19

AMERICAN . PIMENTO or SWISS

SIIIOLES ••.••....•.••,~k~z.
g~

PUMPKIN PIE ................. :.~:·.•• 9

1!
EGGO WAFFLES ••••••••••••••• ·~· •• V

2% MILK.................G.A.: ... ..

9

¢

BUTTERMILK ........................ :!.~~~... 89~
BORDEN

24

,....

~2
lamll ~

15-oz
Cans
......10/ lt/19

VALLEY BHL

11 OL

~ oupon

Go&lt;&gt;d at Caod&lt;nal Auur Blue Sturet

$}79

BORDEN

Um&lt;l ,.,..., w•tl&gt;

ont

OZ.

COTTAGE CHEESE ..... •..... •••• ••• •••·• •••· s1

19

00 11106

CtiROINAI \

#

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Monday , Oct. 15, 1979

•

Your Best Buys Are Found
WANT AD
CHARGES

COUNTRY MOBILE Horne
Park. , Route 33, north ot
Pomeroy L Mge lots Ca ll

'1'17 1419
l~

WIJrd:-1 ur Under
Dlar~r

t:.a.,n
lday
2day!l
J da ys

100

11!1
J!iiO

J:;(l

'l~
375

I SO
300

6days

Ead1 word over ~ muumwn
cents per word per
day Ad! runru~ other than Nlf1·
I~ ~ L!l f

~tlvto

days W1ll be

chug~

HOU SE

In memory . Card of 11w.nk.s
11.nll Oblh.IHry 6 n•ul.s pt&gt;r word.
S3 00 rmrumwn l "..llsh lil ad ·
V.ll/1(.~

In Mem or y of Patric1a
Eb lin Phillips , who leH
tt c omforts me when 1
r ecal l
,
that 1 wi l l never d1e ,
And though my body
wi II decease
The bOOy is not 1

Weary from l1te ttu s
flesh , 1 know ,
Back to earth returns ,
But

I,

rE&gt;It:&gt;ased ,

shall

H~nc ~~~

Mobtl r

and Yard

ft("l't'pted only w1lh
l"tl.''lh w1U1 unlrr Z!lt"t'ttt ehargr
ft)( ad:t carrym~o: &amp;n ~umbt'r In
CArt' vf ll'ot' Serttlllt-1
~ l e:t

us 2 yea r s ago

1\I"l'

~'\lblt.sher

lb&gt;

reserves thfo
any ad.s
ob)rf t Jona l
Tht'

to edtt or

n~ht

~ J tx"!

deemed
Puhh.•her w1J1 nut t.. ~'ipurUI.Iblr
for fTlOf"E' than one IIJ('OfTt"('t 1!1 ·
st"rtmn
Phont' m -2Ifl6

soar ro GOd
Who for mv presence

TRAILER .

Chester area 1 bedroom
Utilr ti es not paid , SI OO mo _,
referen c e ana deposit
required Call 304 863 5162

AMERICAN

H ER I TAGE

45{)50

2651.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

you to this

"Dea th is not death but
birth ·

.'ot unday

Nor should fr 1e nd s ever
thin I&lt; of me
A .... h1 1r ied in a tomb
Chr i st vows that 1' II be
h~mew•th H 1 m
Sa f e •n the Father ·s

~•.oon

SHEPHERD

dog to good home . Sp ayed
3 years old . healthy 742

NOTICE

And you ' ll do wrong to
weep bes1de
My fre sh dug mou nd of
earth
If tears vov shed bl1no

on Saturda:r

Tue:Kiay

thru Fnday
4p M
Uw day bt&gt;fore pubiH'atwn

FEMALE

G 'ERMAN

Shepherd,
b la c k
and
c r eam, gOOd w rtn chi ld r e n ,
shots . Sma ll per ky fe mal e
beagle coll ie, blac k , brown
~ ,.a n d white, shots and w ar
med . 'l co llie type female
puppies, bla c k and brown
and black and wh it e, good
with
ch il dren . Humane
Society, 992 2610

room .
Sunday
4P M
Frtd.H) aftt&gt;moo11

For Christians r an not
be con lined
tn vaults of earthen

MALE IRIS H SP fter . 1 year
old . 992 77'&gt;6.

When 1 de c ease I'l l LctkP
my f l•ght
BacK to the Goc.J wt1u

gave
So let nor1e c. I ny to

lnl~e

be l •efs
Wh ic h payan~ \I • II Pill
bra ce
N o! knowing Chr1&lt;;.f put
death to death
And plared Ide 1n
death 's pla ce
And rf when I depart onP
says,
" Sh e's dead .
She ' s
burred . Good bye! ..
Please say of me , " She
11ves! She l ives!
And dwells w i th God on
high . '"
Loved
forever
by
Mother &amp; FathN . Bar
bara &amp; La...vr enre Ebl.n ,
Dauonter
T&lt;l O•t na .
Srsters , Pennv
r1nd &amp;
Darlene . Aunt &amp; un c le
Marmte &amp;
Claren c e
Swauge r

Notice-_
s __
M E IGS

COUNTY

HUMANE SOCIET Y 991
6260 P et s ava tlable f or
ildopfron and 1ntor matron
ser'"ce

GU N SH OO T EVERY
SU N DAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONL Y RACINE
GU N CLU B
NO

HUNT ING ,

no
ex

!respa ssrn g witf1 no
ceptrons on my property
Judy M cG raw Se lf

ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP now open lul l time in
Mrddleporl
SH OOf
Rarrne
Volunteer
Fr r e
Dept
Every Sa tu rday 6 30 p m
AI therr bu i ldrng .n Basha n
Factory choke guns only

GU N

RED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP now open full t1me in
Middleport

Card of Thanks
h u mbly and sincer el y
want t o rnank my fri ends.
neighbors , relatives. for
the pra ye rs . ca rd s, le tt ers ,
visits and ca lls dur1ng my
rllness &lt;tnd while
wa s rn
Un1 vers•ty
Hosp ital
t or
surgery
Thanks t o m y
ne1ghbors for th e lr tllf'
chores t11ey drd
..1m
grafetul to each ot you
T hanks a heap
Now all a lonq Ide 's bum
py paths ,
The r e arc so many tear"
1

1

andl~ughs .

That tn the corners , God
tucked lrrends .
So when you ' re gorng
round the bends ,
·
You get a l rlt . perchance
a smile .
They ' re lr rt le tn.ngs
but help a ptle
And God hunts people
1u sl like you ,
To f rl l th ose t"le nd s and
QUrdc t ol k. s throu gh
Mrs /wery ( Hele r"~e 1
Goeq i Ptn

ABSOLUTELY no hunting
da y or ni g ht on the followng
farms : Viola tor s w i ll be
prosecuted
Char les S
Baker ,
Alma
Peterson
New Lrma Rd , Rutla nd,

OH
AB SOL U T E L Y N O Hun
lrng dny or nrgh t on the
tolt owtng t arms Cha r les S
Be ll er .
A l m!3
Peterson .
New Lima Rd , Rutland ,
OH
Vrola l ors will oe
prose c uted

TWO LOST Be~g l e dogs ,
male and fema le . M ulberr y
Hts . area nea r cemetery
Ca ll B ob Stone 9Y1. 9933 o r

997 5269
L OST
9 mon th old tan
m .1l e puppy ...Vtfh whde
bi~J c I .i re m Rutlnnd ar ea
( Cll l /47 7491

BIG AUCTIO N every Wed ,
7 pm . Hartford Commvn 1ty
Center, Hartf ord . WV . 4
mites above
Pomeroy
Mason B ridge .

BI G SELECTION of pre
owned 10 , 12 and 14 f oot
wrde
moblle
homes
Kanauga
M00 11e Home
Sales 446 9662
APT , Sl 25 , \50 deposr t
Furnished N o c hrldren. no
pe t s 307 Spring Ave

For Sale ,
R en! or Trade
FOR SALE or rent Nu e 3
bedroom . modular located
1n Por tl and rtrf'n Se t up on
lo t or c an be r ·10ved Cal l
alter 4 30 304 773 5272

Third

Street

to

Fourth

WHEREAS

said

WHEREAS the VIllage ol

Racine is the owner of Lot s
7 and 10 of Meyer 's Ad ·
dition to the Village of
Ra c ine, and Roger Adams ,
aka Rooer L . Adams , is the
owner of Lots 8 and 9 of
Mever's Addition to the

Village of Racine, which
properties are all of the
properties that abut that
portion of said alley to be
vacated · and,

WHEREAS

the

saij

Roger Adams, aka R~er
L . Adams, and his wffe,
Nancy Adams, have given

their written

consent to

such vacation which con sent is duly filed with the
leg islative authority of the
Village of Racine ; NOW

THEREFORE,
BE IT ORDAINED BY
THE COUNCIL OF THE
VILLAGE OF RACINE ,
STATE OF OHIO :
Section 1: That the aile~
that divides Lots 7 and 10
from Lots 8 and 9 of
Meyer's Addition to the
Vilfage

of

Racine, ~ a_nd

new
Spe cial
ordered
Double i nsulated . Best
paneling
throughout
trailer . 2x4's instead of
2x2's . 2 bedroom . Kitchen ,
hand p~ i nted Dutch style
Full y c arpeted . Total e tec
tric, A.C. Asking Sl 2,.SOO
Must see t o a ppr ecia te

T WO BEDROOM mobile
home, partly furni shed
M 1dd leaged o r elde rly
people pr ef e rr ed No pet s,
flO chi ldren Depo sit 997

2749 .

RUBBERMAID par t y pla n
neE.&gt;ds demonstrators . N o
collec t rng, no pa c king , no
dE&gt;I i veringt
T op
~om
mrssions . Ca ll
W2 5082
Carol yn M cC oy

wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD

Poles ma x .

d i ameter 10 " on largest
end . $12 p er ton . Bundled
stab . S10 per ton . Del iver ed
to Ohio Pallet Co. Rt . 2,
Pome r oy 992 ·2689
OLD FURNITURE . tce
boxes . brass bed~ . rron
beds , de sk s, etc . comp l ete
household s
Wril e M D
Mr l ler R 1 4, Pomeroy or
c al l 99 2 7760
OLD CO IN S, pocket wt
ches , c lass rings , wedding
bands . diamonds Gold or
silver Call J A Wamsley,
7-42 233 1
WANTED
SAW
l ogs .
Payment upon de l ivery to
ou r ya rd , 7: 30 to 3: 30 week
da.,.-s . Slaney H ardwoods,
SR 339, Barl ow . OH 678

ANfiQU ES.
FUR
NITURE . glass . c hrna.
anylh 1ng Se-e or c all Rutn
Gosney. antiques. 26 N
2nd, M rddlepor1 , OH . 99'1

NE W

1979

FORD

ANT I QUE
do llar

Ca ll

top

I 592 29 73

evenings .

R I SIN G
STA R Kennel
Boa r d rng Call 367 0292 .

WANTED .

JU NK

Bat

992 5752

WANT ED

STAND ING

frmber , \100 d thou sand
9Y2 63 19

For Sale

for Sale
REDUC E SAFE and last
wittl Go Bese Tabl et s a nd
E Vap
" water
pills ".
Nelson Drug s.
wnich runs from H11ra
Street to Fourth Street, be
a nd the same herebv is
vacated .
Section II : That this Or ·
dinance be and remain in
force from and after the

earliest periOd aflowed by

law.

Passed thi s 4th day of

Sept ember . 1979
Albert H i ll Jr .
President

Mae C leland
Clerk

APPROVED:
Charles Pyles
Mayor

110), I ,B,I 5. 3tc

1976 FORD F 150 Call W2
7719

COMMERCIAL FLOOR
tile , 421 sq . ft . 5 gallon glue.
good on

concre te

floors .

S95 949 2288 .
19 72
C HRYS L ER
NEWPORT Custom , iac
tory wheels , $1200. Antique
doll made i n Germany bet ·
ween 191 5 and 1925, S235

SIZE 7·8 ta ll wedding yown
with veil and trai n . Antique
white , Vi c tor ian style , &amp;225
new, best offer 992·3618

Mm11qomrrJ

JAMES KEESE I!
Phone "2·2712
1·171 mo .

rP

COAL.

POODLE

LIMESTONE .

H ILLCRES T

CH AM PIONED

N O W tl Y AILABl£

SI RED

Al TROMM
OON~T.

1976 MONTE CARLO. 350

\

-

-

~

---·--

---~---

1966 FORD PI CK UP, 6 cy l
Rusty but runs good . S250
or m ake offer 696 1235

511!.00
XK12 Homellte S18l.OO
KL400 Homelite 5200 .00
Homelltt

SJS.OO

5100.00

1973

PON TIAC

CATALINA . Chevy

tr uck

bed 992 2701.

XL Homelite
57.5 .00
1 Excellent Unico 16 cu .
ft.
Coppertone

new,

Good c ondif ion 9&lt;!2 5624
1976 FORD VAN CB. AM
F M cassete, 6 c yl , ca p
fai n's cha1 r s 992 613 7

52l0

I New Electric Furnace.
clearance priced
1 new Fuel Oil Furn11ce,
c_learance price-d

1973 CHE VY CUSTOM 10
Runs good, $900. 985 4133
1973

C HEVRO LET

SUBURB A N , 350 engine,
crui se, AM ·CB radio , PS,
PB, a ir , above average
cond ition . 592 ·2883 after 6
P.m .

1 GOOd Coldspot
S8S. OO

MAIN ST.
Jack

u.a...,..•

w. Carsey

"" ~r.
Ph . 12 -2181

FOR

E MERGEN CY

sa le
Will

POWER

alternators -own the

H AVE ROOM ana board ,
lnun d ry, lor elder l -y onl y
In walking distan ce ol
Senior
C itiz ens
Reasonabl e 992 60n

OLD
WALNUT
grand
father's cl ock . 1nqu1r e at
the Wood Shed on Broad
way in Rae •nc

CIDER

H O N EY
Fi t zpntr t r ~
Or
c hard , Stat e Route 689
Phone Wilk esvi ll e, M9

3785

and auto repa1r

Ca ll 092 6323

HOTPOINT
and

~sf

buy WINPOWE R Call 513
788 2589

APPLES

Services Offered

TRUCK

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headqut~rter5

Appliances
Sale s &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack

w. Carsey

Phone t92 -2181

TWO AXLE backhoe
trailer Phon e Gallipol is .
446 &lt;182

Real Estate for Sale

lAIN . turn ing plow Bundy
flute and case, excel lent
condition 949 2225 .

range ,
Harvest
Gold
Fr1g1dairP portable drsh
washer . harve-s t gold 11 tt
Mountainee-r tru c k r am
per . Ludwrg d rum se t .
Phone day!t. , 985 3J.t1 Alter

5pm , 9921519
SI GLER FUEL Oi l ~ t ove .
SJOO 992

150 g all on tank
7653 .

white and ye ll ow . Rt 2.
Rac i ne R W Lewis. 8.43 ·

2432
JOHN DEERE , d1esel , 70 10
dozer . outsrde
moun ted
blade . good
c ond 1t 1o n
15 .00{) 7&lt;7 7819

PROJECTION
lu el a rl
s pa ce
hea t er.
f l..l ly
automati c wrth wa l l th e.r
mosta1
55.000 t o 65. 000
BTU , l rke new , used I('SS
th a n a yea r 775 gal tank
with approx . UO gat of oi l .
Sell as a unit , pr iced after
i nspec tion . 66 7 3368 or
eve n i ngs 6i17 3~93 . Tuppers
Plains, OH

APP LES

ROME Beauty

PHONE 742-2003
LISTING

5',

acres on St Rout e 143
with 1969 New Moon
trail er
2 bedroom s.
living room . bath, kit
chen and 6'x 16 ' add on
Cal l for more 1nt o tOday
We won't have th is one
long at only . $15 ,()(() .00

POMEROY -

PRICE

REDUCED!!
The
owners want to re loca te
so the y say sell th is ni ce
home _ Modern kitchen ,
bafh .
I rving
room .
u f iltty . 3 or 4 bedrooms .
OU i bUtldrnq , tru •1 lref:'S
and
beaut.tul
tlower
garden s
On l y
S75.500 00
RUTLAND Beaut t1ul ')
st or y, 4 bedroom home
wl!h d inr ng r oom , lrv1ng
room , krt c hen , balll and
more Asking S35.000 DO

HYSELL

608 E .
:AI
MAI N
POMEROY . D.

TUNING

Lane

Daniels . N ew phone num
ber
742 2951. Se r vice t o
schools and homes sin ce

1965 .

0

WILL HAUL lrmestone and
gravel. Also , l ime hauling
and spr eadrng . Leo M orr is
Truc k rng Phone 74'1 24.55

.
-

Real Eslate for Sale

N E WLI ST ING
3vear
old
rnnrh
w•th
basement m Syracu!.e . 3
beo rooms . equippe-d kit
chen, la rg e rec r oom.
all new . a ll elec tri c, nice
level lot •n an excel lent
IO&lt;at10n W ,OOO 00

FI NAN CIN G VA FHA LO
ANS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PUR CHA SE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORT GAGE .
77 E STATE, AT HEN S.
614592 3051.

-----

--

LISTING

-

$35.000 00
NEW LilTING

-

U'ITLE ORPHAN Atf.\I!E

34
9t1lJH

E Second

~ 1~

7. 20 r30 new
0 1{)(1( bU1I Cl1 ng plu!:l a
mobtl e homp l u lrve rn
Sl7 ,900 00
MIDDLE PORT - N rce
home wilh 2 c ar garage
and work~hop on it good
st ree t S1B.900 00
RUTLAND - S•te for
tr ailer or home , water
and electrr c tty on si tP
Priced
r educe d
lo
$1.400 00
STATELY - 2 Sl ory ,
full base m en ! . wood
tJurner 111 l r~m•ly room,
up to 4 be d r oo ms . n•cP
yi'lrd , yarnge , Ql h e r
te&lt;~tur rs. should v A or

Str~t

BEDROOMS
A
ho me . l 11 baths.

S

Phone 742 ·3092
Hilton Wolfe, A~ 5 o c
Phone '49 · 2S8~
GeorgeS . Ho5teter Jr
Broker , Phone ~92 · S7J9

FOUR

ROOM

house

'1'12 22&amp;6

lo t S75.000
FRESH AIR
- New 3
bedroor'l,
d rshwasher.
r oppi•'
plumbrng
garage, Oruo power and
nnp IMge .:. e r e of n rce
lay•ng land , t ence-d
COZY
3 be-droom
fr ame w1 th nat. gas F .A
furnace . city ufrlities
nea r Krogers . S15,500

EASY WALK -

To the

stor e J bedrooms . ba th ,
nat ga s furnace. c ity
water and garage with
view of r ive r ASking

BUILDNG

In M 1dd lePo r1, 2
busi n£: ss rooms down , 2
apar t ments up Call for
details \3 3,500 00

Sl7 ,500
NOW IS THE TfME TO
BUY OR SELL WHILE
PEOPLE ARE EAR ·
NEST , BEFORE WIN ·
TER

Henr y E . Cleland , Sr
Res . 992 1568
Henry E . Cleland , Jr
Res . 992 ·6191

Housing
Headquarters

ASSOCIATES
Rog er &amp; Dott• e Turner
Re !l. 742 -2474

THREE

BEDROOM
double wide, 2 baths, wood
FOR SALE
In Chester.
OH , 6 room house wifh
ba th . Big , bea ut iful
lo t
SUOO. Call 667 3082.

burning firepla ce, equip ·
o:ed k1t c he~ . sun deck, set ·
t•ng on 2 nverfront acres .
Bu ye r may pur ch ase e•tra
lot and rental tra i ler . ~'1

2891

6

room hOu5e wr th bath . 592
Pear l Sf , Mrddleport
Remodel ed. all new rn si de
and out Phom· 742 2405 or
99') 2729

one

has two
one t o

clear the diamonds the second
to bring them in."
Alan : '· Had South Simply
led a low diamond from dum my LO his queen . East could
duck and South would wind up

,.

East

with just one diamond trick

South

Pass

1•

Pass

3 NT

mstead of the four he scored ."

AslltiMI!XMPis

Pass

+3
• A

• K Q 8 7
• A 4 2

+AQJ 75

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

A!J.EYOOP
I'LL TRV T'HQLD

Oswald : " The Bnllsh Popu lar Bndge runs a play problem contest each month . The
problem involves linding the
sal est play for t he contra ct ..
Alan " The bidding IS also
designed to get to Lhe problem

HEt&gt;.D FOR THAT
GLOW OVER TI-IERE'
IT MAY BE A. WAY

EXCAVATING.

dorer ,
loader and ba c khoe work ·

OUT OF HERE.'

contract. I

see that

sur..thing

play

You open With
Partner responds

one dub

with one
dtamond. A Wisconsin reader

asks if this hand is worth a
two-hea rt re-bid
It certam l y ts worth it.
t N to: WSPAP~R ENTJ..:RPRISE ASSN 1

ther e is a

f or

t hree

(For B copy of JA COBY
MODERN, send $1 to: "' Win at
Bridgf!l, '· care of this newspa per, P_0. Box 489. Radio GUy
SIB/Ion . New York. NY 100 19)

notrum ."

Oswa~d:

" This time the
sure-thing play i s brillianl but
'lD&lt; lhai any good rubber -

--

..

more. South

entries to dummy -

You hol d

systems, doier , bac khoeo .
Rt 143. Phone 1 1614) 6911·

733 1 or 142 2593

FIVE ROOM house, all
c arpe ted . modern k:it cl1en
and bat h, garage and ca r
pori In Bradbury Call 9'92

53 10

IN ·

092 2143

by fHOMAS JOSEPH

Lo~ lil&lt;.e Newton's

movtn' in on 4er

IN SToQCK tor immediato
delivery : var ious sizes of

pool k 1h . Do i t yourself cw
let us in~all for you . 0 .
Bumgardner Sales, Inc.
992 5724..
•

qir l,

Don't mean

ACROSS

nuthin:
Joel~

Rufu s '

ELECTR~

REYNOLD 'S

Motors. rew i nd and re-pair .,

092 ·7356,

561

Beech

St .,

Middleport, Ohio .

18 lma~med
20 Teacher's

A&amp;H Upholstering , across
from the Texa co Station In
Sy rau c se . 992 -3743 or 9'91·

37 52 .
BRADFORD . Auctioneer,

PAW S
AR.n4RITI 5
15 ACTIN
UP/

Complete service . Phone
949 2487 or 9~9 - '1000 . rac ine-,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

YEA&gt;' "W 5 Dc"CE
IS ' = 3'0 FO'&lt;
....: ~ '

J

sc v.:;: nw uG ~T

i .\E.C :" &gt;GN , ~
0\. Erz -o vo:.;

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWERS
Sweepers,
toasters , irons , all smatl

a ppliances. Lawn mower.
Ne x t 1o State Highway

Garage on Route 7, 9ttS
3825

SAVE Ofil CARPET
DRIVE A LITlU
SAVE A' LOt
RUBBER BACK
CARPET

'4"

and

' :!1;..~-- ~- .__ , __

part in

Yesterday's Anlwer

6 Lug~ed
7 Hgt .
8 Slim

26 German
shelter
river
22 Invent
29 External
23 Oberon's
30 Rarin'
spouse
to go
24 llr~ak bread 35 Mature
2S One kind
36 " Happiness
of study
- Warm
26 Aqueous
Puppy "
19 Toward

chance

9 M osl

season

- - -- · - - -

LET'S CLEAR OFF
TH' TABLE I

33 Noted Vietnamese cit y
34 Restlessness

YOU G IT TH' DISHES
AN' I'LL G IT PAW

3ti Wlut
37 Horsesh oe

JUGHAID

lllrow

up

3S Rushed

311 Sloppy Joe's
place, e.g
40 Elllereal

GOOD REMNANT
SELECTION
6'~ 12' to 12'~

16'

S3800

andup

Call

742-2211

RURAND
, FURNilURE
Rutland,

o.
•

1:;;;+-t-+-+--+-

JlAfLY t ' RYPTOljUOTE -

Here's how
AXY D L BA A XR

Ia

to work

it :

I . 0 N t; F E I . L 0 W

One letter s1mp ly stands f nr another _ In this sample A ia
U'i ed fur th t' lhrl'f' I. 's. X f ur tht• t wo
d e Si n g le l etters.
apostrophe s. the l ength and formatt n n of th e wnrds are all
'imts Each ria&gt; th&lt;' r odl' INters a r e differe nt

tnstolledwitll Pod Fr"

Br. Mgr.

s Took

31 Cap
32 French

'&lt;

·9~~up

8111,

2 Jud~c·s lllle
3 AI home ;
at ease
4 Write

~Beinnee dot~-+--+--4~

IN STOCK

Phone '192 -2342, Eve. 9'12-2449
Middleport, Ohio

I Word with
fast or sti 11

deg ree
unea rthl y
21 Emulated
10 L1ves
a basein fea r or
steal er
16 Noted
22 Arm y meal
Ugandan
23 Adolescent
24 Gossip
25 Shade
of green
26 Sneak y Pete '
drinker
27 Had a snack

WTNN!F

SALE ON ALL

Rl . 143, only 2 m i les from
. 7. Peace ful 3 be&lt;!r·ooin :
I
bath . l ivi ng r oom w ith f irep la ce. dining room ,
M.rtchen and l aund r y room Ce-ntral heat and air con
dit •on G ar aqe and worM. shop Plus d pony barn Over
3 acre ~ wtlh spirt ra il tence Ca ll tor appo1ntmen t ,

DOWN

l Word wtlll ahoy
5 Prearranged
ll Mood
12 CrY for help
• 13 Qwte soon
14 Garb
l:i Sine qua 16 Verb tn the
Beati tudes
17 Third Mrs.
Smatra

Cash &amp; Carry

Rodney, Broker

1•
3•
Pass

f1nd

and leads a spad e. South plays
t he nine to West's ja ck ..
Oswald " The defense has
two tricks in but can only get

• 95
• A J 65
• QJ 62

Opening l ead :

Sc1s~ r s

SU RANCE
been
can ·
cel l ed?
Lo st
y our
op era t or 's l1cense? Phono

DOWNING - CHILDS

Syracuse on 2rdj St . $.6,000.

• ) 6;

North

could

he wins the .sec-ond d1amond

M A CHINE

Repairs.
service.
all
makes
992 2:184 .
The
Fabri c
Shop,
Pomf"foy
Authorized SingPr
Sales
and Servi ce We sharpen

AUTOMOB I LE

$39.900 .00 .

in

EAST

o·,.

PEANtJTS

NO. MA'At.\ I DON'T
KNOW TH£ LOCATION
OF SVALBARr...

BUT I KNOW A GREAT
REC IPE FOR NOODLES

WITH SOUR CREAM .

7

EVER'f'THING

t 'RYPTOfUOTES

I KNOW

I KNOW AT HlE
WRON6 TIME I

E D

ABC D
HBJDKF
GBH

F G D
HMK

PDOEH

NOJF

H!JDKLBL

N B F G

0 J J

RMJJ - LOSSJBKA
NGBFEOK

Yesterday'• l-ryptoqaote: £XPERIENcE TEACHES THAT A
.TRONG MEMORY IS GENERALLY JOINED TO A WEAK

JUDGMENT. - MICHEL DE MONTAIGNE

King 6 ; White Shadow B, 10 ; Live
From L incoln Center 20,33 ;

Falcon Football 17.
9 00--Movie "The Flame Is Love"

3. 15: NFL Football 6, 13 ; Mash
6. 10, Movie " Flaming Star" 17.
J Jo--WKRP In
Ci ncinnati 8, 10;

Cavell 20; ABC News 33 .
17 00-- News 6, 13; 12 :30--FBI

Alan " AI tnck t wo. dedar·
er must l ead the king of dia ·
munds from dummy. East' s
besl defense is to duck . Then

K 7 6

3.15; 240 Robert 13; Edward thP

Si r anger " 10: Mov, ;;; " They Died
with Their Boots On" 17, Dick

mstantly "

-------

na t
gas
f ur na ce,
paneled k •l , Plush car
pet1ng ,
and
2 car
garage . !tl7 ,500
GARDEN - Renova ted
2 bedroom home, nice
k:ilchen
with di n 1ng
a rea Ltvrng rm 17x17
wtfh
wood burnrng
fire pla ce, ~asement , 2
r ar garage and extra

Call and discuss our
listing cont~ct . w~ will

velma Nic i nsky , ABo c.

Pass

Loader ,

lam ~ ly

WE NEED LISTINGS .

689

Pass
Pass

b rush
hog .
Will
do
basem ents, ponds , brush ,
rim b e r , land c lear i ng
Charles Butc her . 742 1940

---··--~

Almost ei g h t acres wit h
a 2 be-droom home .
There 's two water taps
and two septi c systems.
SE lli ng pr ice 523 .500 .00 .

be glad to help .
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc .
Phone ) 42 ·2003

West

SOON BE A S PEER IT,
TOO , IF HE DOESN'T
HAVE DRI HKtt'f WATAH
,.. FOllOW ME ...

p l ayer

Repor t 20, 33.
DO-Littl e House On The Prairie

10 00--Lou Grant 8, 10 .
10 30-- Po ldark 33 ; News 20.
II oo-- News 3,8,10, 15: las I o/ the
Wild 17; Coping with Kids 20 .
11 3(}-Johnny Ca rson 3, 15; Harry 0
8: Movie " Phone Call from a

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavating,
Hptlc

Rt

BEDROOM .

sand

5232.

sc hoo l d•c:,tr •( I , c lose t o

THREE

10-l~A

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : South

m

ncrrc:, lr1fl (l 1r1 E as t ern
St

bndge

SOUTH
• A 10 9;
• A J 43
• Q
+A 8 74

Clvmp trucks and IO ·bOYS
for hire . will haul fill dirt .
top s.oil, limestone anCI
gravel. Call Bob or Rooer
JeHer5 , d ay phone7089,
night phone 99 2 3525 or 992

Beautdul 2 st or y home
wi t h r iver
view
in
Pomeroy , 3 bedroom!.,
ba sement _ new car
p e t rng .
aluminum
sidtng . 1' 1 ba t hs very
good
co ndd1on

NORTH

WEST
•QJ6 32
• Q 10 8 2
• 32
• 10 9

Pl1 11mates.

END

(Answers 1omorrow 1
IUHNI P PO E1RY

·~V•f ,. d0(;5 evtry trm~ he IJlll&lt;., Ill'&gt;
S TEPS O N IT

VJI ur t ,.,
1, Jl J •N'l

•K111 874

Call 949 2686.

SE WING

~

PH 997 1159

NEW

Fr~

I HUNY

+ KS3

PORE OLD LEM 'tL
b last i ng .

I ) "[ I I I ) "

':ontest problem examined
•

'1'12 -7544
AND

r XI

'o

PARK FINANCIAL
SER~ICES, INC.

PA I NT I NG

Nashville Music 3;
Newlywed Game 6: Joker's Wild
8. Fami ly Feud 10, 13; All In The
Fam il y 17 ; Ma cNeil - Lehrer

No,. arrange the crrcled 1eners to
'orrn the surpnse answer . as sug·
gested by the above canaan

• K

'101 • 9· '&gt;1 .. w., " .
0 ' 'ler ·;m, by appointment.
'17 SyCirnore I RNr)
Pomeroy , 0.

30- Thal

ACTOR:.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

J de al
t-tou"-ing
&amp;
Vt-ter. 11 Admin . LGiftS .

DOZER .

RUN

apples at$~ per b u . Best tor
apple buff er . Call 669 3785.
Fitzpatr ick Orc h ard . SR

TWO
G78x IS
oe lted
F1restone l •r es. good con
dition, \10 each Upnght
H oover swee pe r wr th a t
tach ments . good cond it ion,
$10 each . Upright Hoover
sweeper with attachments,
good codition , S25 . 742 ·2514.

./"'~
l. ClFI AI n I

REALTORS

REAlTY

NEW

_El '

BUSINES S

HOBSTETTER

FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC

.

F H A $/B .900 00
MINI FARM
l n Coun
try
6 &lt;'ll res , nr ce
hom e. larg e l tvrng room
wt th W B F P
large
newer
kit c he n,
J
bedr ooms.
part
basement, rn good con
dr t ion \24 .500 00

Mgr .
~----

PIANO

Real Estate for Sale

TY

197S DODGE COLT, $1800

'10C.OO

Refrigerator

BORN LOSER

REAL ESTATE
F 1 NANCING

s ti c

WH AT THEY C.ALLED
:HE WOL..FI5H
SHAKE SPEAREAN

BRIDGE

992 16'&gt;6.

1l0 Auto

Refrigerator, like

J

10 ·1 5

'oloodov . Oct. Is

4 30 tf c

CALL

'

Jumbles r 1-il'/:.

Answe,

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

949 ·2862-949 -2160

9 14 { Pd l

engtne, low mileage $2600.

$121.00
5100 .00

Sears

New, repair,
gutters and
down spOuts.
Window cleaning
Gutler cleaning
Fre e E s limates

742 -2328

S1l0.00

Super 7S4

Roofing .

RUTLAr.D

CHAIN SAWS

Remington
Yardmaster
Remington

H. L Writesel

t100ITIC 'IS
HOUSES BUILT

Auto Sales

GOOD USED

Remington 14

'm

tt~.JM

142 7336

McCulloch Pro
Moe ll
McCulloch
Mos ·IO

S TOCK

REMO.UtLII1G

AKC r egis t e r ed German
Shepherd p u pp ies, 4 weeks
Old, r ea d')! in 1 weeks . S125

POMEROY
lANDMARK

1011
Osborn
Rd .,
Reedsville , OH , 45771 .
For information C~ll
667 ·648S. Will be OPen
late
it
you
need
something .
9 1-4 1 mo

0

Pflnl answer here
&gt;;,t lurday s

6 oo--News 3,8,10,13, IS; ABC News
6; Zoom 20; Carol Burnett 17 .
6· 30-- NB C News 3, 15; ABC News
~ . 13 ; CBS News 8, 10 ; Bob
Newhart 17 ; Over Easy 20.
7 00-----J's A Crowd J ; T ic Tac Dough
B. Muppel Show 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13; Best of
Don n y &amp; Marie IS ; Sanford&amp; Son
17; Dick Cave tt 20,33.

'

J

1(

1 1 mile off Rt. 7 by -p.IU
on S1 . Rf . 124 toward
Rutland .

ROO~ lNG

POTA TOES

C W . Pr oft rtt farm , Por
tland , O H \8 a h undred and
S5 a hundred .

NOT~

Television
Viewing
MDNDAV , OCTOBER 15,1979

LJ__l-1 LU
l TINSEV_]+-~:
D JLJ

)

KENNELS .

Board i ng, all bre-eds . Clean
i ndoor -outdoor fa ci l it ies.
A lso
AKC
reg i stered
Oobermans . 614 446 ·7795 .

3891.

f

5HY !

GROO M ING

Judy T ay tor 614 367 n10

sand , gravel,
calc i um
chloride, fertilizer,
dog
food , and all types ot salt
E•celsior Sa lt Work s, Inc ,
E . Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 99'1

~HY! A FLAP· MOUTH ED . 7 EA&lt;;Y.
CO' ARTI&lt;;T LI KE YOU HA5 WILL 'IOU \
THE COL055AL GALL TO /KI~DL'i i!&gt;UTT
CAlC HIM&lt;?ELF '~!&gt;
HY"~i'OUT OF THIS '
THE GENTLE ·
MAN '5 TALK
IN(; TO IME'..

Roger Hysell
Garage

'"'""'Q'

lr:IAII

OH . YE? ~ v BUT [COULDN'T JU5 T
i!&gt;EL IEVE COME FO~WARD AND
ME- ~
SAY 50! 1 K~Ow IT
.J-'4-_,;;;:::J ~OUND~ RIDICUL 0U5.
E'oUT I'M TOO -- WELL ·
FRANKL'&gt;: TOO

Free Estimates

9 7 1 mo .

~ 1 I MV I ) J\ r
I ~)do •\ r ,o· I o ! IN .I~t"l"''lf'

(.Q O~f

CAfP!'AIN EASY

• Replacement
Windows
• Guners and

-'

~ PANPHE L

• Storm DoorI

e Storm Windows

. '. ' ....

'~

I KELLN
OJ

Down Spouh

Ht1

1'

'1'12 3342 .
1H 990 mower condition , 9'
Good condition 98 5 3989

11110

For Sale

SWEET POTATOES . red,

LTD

Cou ntry
SQuJr e sta t ion
wagon Low m ileage , lot s
ot extra s Wdl St'lcri tr cP

ATTEST :

POCKET wa!

c hes . Will i ng t o pa y

RACINE, 0 .
949 2748or

TRAILER SALES

C. ii P F"'

Now taking o rd er s
deliver. 742 2056 .

teries. rad ia tors. motors.
auto
trans
No Su nda y
ca l l s 9.tt;l256J

Auto Sales

'

5509

FIR E WODO

Help wanted

alley

has not oeen use-d by the
general pub I ic and in the
opinion of the leCjJislative
author ity thet·e 1!1. gCX&gt;d
cause for va ca t ing ~aid
alley and such vacation
will not be detrimental to
the general interes1, and ,

1915 14 x l0
WINDSOR
MOB ILE HOME Sl8,000

3161

laid out in the plot of the

Street In said Village ; and ,

SALES, PT . PLEA SA NT .
wv 304 675 4424

7980

Whereas , there has been

Village of Racine, Ohio, an
alley dividing Lots 7 and 10
from Lots 8 and 9 of
Meyer 's Addi non to the
Village of Rllcine, Ohio,
which alley runs from

bedroom
1970 Vinda l e I 2::.:63 with ex
pand o, 2 bedr
1970 New M oon 12x60 3 bdr
19lJ
Skyline
12x55
'l
bedroom
1972 Bonanza l'l x52, 2 bedr
B 8. S M OBILE HOM E

NEEDED

Call between 9 and 5 997

on e lener to each square to form
lour ord 1nary words

[ l ._-ITJ
. .....

elnsu11tion

HOOF HOLLOW , Engi&gt;Sh
a nd Wes te rn _ Sad dles and
harness
Horses
and
!X)nies . Ruth Rf&gt;'f'ves . 614
698 32 90
Barding
and
Riding Lessons and H or se
Care produ c t s
western
boots
Chi ld r en's S15 50
Adu lts $19 .00 .

wv 25716

shapes,all sizes . Put a cold
nose
in your
future .
Humane Society, 991 6260.

1972 LY NN HAVEN l4x65J

V. C. YOUNG Ill

by Henn Arnold and Bob Lee

._

Unscr amble these lour JumOies

I GREE~,&lt;:'r""'1

INSULA liON
Wlfm AND
ALUMINUM :iiOING

_ __._P_.,e ts for Sale

taki ng appli cati on s tor f ull
t im e employe-e, some e::.
perlence in working w ith
natural gas wanted but not
necess ary . Appl-; by mr!!l il.
PO Bo x 1538, Huntington ,

BARPERSON

E COUL..D THEY BE?"

J&amp;L BL'OWN

MONTGOMERY

KI TTEN S, KITTENS . All

Mobile Homes - Sale

!FREE ESTIMATE)

9 IB I mo . Pd

BETWEEN 8:30 and S.

MIXED BR EE D 1':; grown
puppies, gray color . Hou se
brok en . 992 5401 .

Los I and Found

Nottces

VILLAGE OF
RACINE
RACINE, OHIO
ORDINANCE
NO . 211
TO VACATE THE ALLEY
THAT DIVIDES LOTS 7
AND 10 AND LOTS 8 AND 9
OF MEYER'S ADDITION
TO THE VILLAGE OF
RACINE,
BETWEEN
THIRD STREET AND
FOURTH STREET .

old 742 2300

Gutter work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
1nd
· driveways.

R oo fing , guners . and
downsp o u h .
Free
I::: Sf r ·1ates.
All
work
quar rt ntl'cd . 20 yean ew:J err ~· nce
Call Athens ,
oll cc t , Gert~ld Clark
197 ·4857 or Tom Hoskins
797 2745 .

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

Mobile Homes - Rent

Auctions

---

TWO
PUPS ,
Ger m an
Shepherd mother 8 weeks

ROOFING

URGENTLY NEEDED

W I NTER

grave .

ADDONS &amp;
REMODELING

OHIO VALLEY

RUTLAND FUEL Co. 's
Giveaway

JtJt\11.\fl \li)'\l 1.; THATSCR AMBLEDWORDGAMt

~ ~ ~ ]~ ~~

'

091 3653

house . buill 1823. 8 room
br1ck residen ce, 1 mile
from Rutland on Beech
Grove Rd . Ca ll 513 539 -7439
or write M . Fer let , 146 Win
stan Lane . Monrow, OH

GERMA N

yearns

TTER wanted in my hOme
Denise Wolfe . 949 2377

~p

Porueroy -Middleport , 0 . Monday, Oct. 15. 1979

Business Services

WANTED · PER&lt;iON or
couple t o stay day a nd
night wrth e lderly man who
rs a stroke VI Cirmbut is am
bulatory Cal l 773 5706 or

BABY SI

'1'12 6022
J AN0' 4 RM fur nrshed
~~ - Phone 99'1 5434

DD'TRJ\L'Y

_ Help 'll/a~l.e5! ~- _

R.OOM
AND
b o ard .
workrng persons or ret rred
$165 month , \45 weekly

at

lhe 1 day rate

DEPENDABLE

the Sentinel Classifieds

Ill

Help W,an~e~

For Rent

In Memory

9- The Dailv SentinPI

6;

Char l ie's Angels 13.
12 40- McMillan &amp; Wife 8 ; 1·00-Tomor row 3; N ews 15 .
40 - News IJ . 2 · 30- News 17;
2 15-- Star Trek 17 ; 3 35-Love.
American Style 17, 4 :0.l--Open

Up 17
TUESDAY , OCTOBER 16,1979
5 4l--Fa r m Repor t 13. 5 : SG-PTL
Club 13.
6 ·1Xl--700 Club 6,8 ; PTL Club 15;
Hea lth F 'eld 10 ; 6:05-World at
Large 17
-~
6 30--Concerns &amp; Comments 10 ;
N ews 17; 6 :45--Morning Report
3; 6 50--Good Morning, West
Virg in ia 13.
6 55- News 13 ; 1:0()--Today 3,15 :
Good Morning Americll 6, 13 ;
Tuesday Morning 8; Batman 10 ;
Three Stooges Little Rascals II.
7 I S- A M . Weather 33 ; 1 : 30Fami ly Affair 10; 7 55-Chuck
White Reports 10.
8 00---Ca pt Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17 : Sesame St . 33 .
8 JO--Rompe r Roo m 17 ; 9 : ~Bob
Braun 3, Big Valley 6; One Day
At A T ime 10; ..,hil Donahue 13;
Lucy Show 17
9 30---Bob Newhart 8; Love of Llfe
10, Green A cres 17
10 oo--Ca rd Sharks 3, IS : Edge of
Night 6: Beat lhe Clock 8, 10 ;
M orn ing Magiuine 13; Movie
"So Ends Our Nigh! " 17
10 . 30-Hollywood Squares 3, 15 :
s2o.ooo Pyramid 13 : Andy
Griffith 6. Whew 8. 10 .
10 :5&gt;--CBS News 8; House Coli 10 .
11 :CJO.-----High Rollers 3. 15; Laverne &amp;
Shi rley 6.1:L P r ice Is. Right 8, lO.
11 : 30- Wheel of Fortune 3, 15 ;
Fam ily Feud 6, 13; Sesame St
20 ; K now Yo ur School5 33.
12 00- Newscente r
3.
News
6.8, 10, 13; Mindreaders 15 .
.2 51}--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 ; Health
Field 15; Search for Tomorrow
8.10; Movie " Oh. Men! Oh.
Women! " 17; E lec Co. 20,33.
·OO--DaysofOur Lives3,15; All My
Chi ldren 6,13 . Young &amp; the
Restless 8. 10.
3()--As The Wor ld Turns 8, 10 ;
2 00--Doctors" J, 15; One Life to
Live 6 , 13 . 2· 25---News 17
1 3Q--Ano!her World 3.15 ; Guiding
Light 8. 10; Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .
3 00--General H ospital 6, 13; I Love
L ucy 17; P oldark 20.
3 3()--()ne Day AI A Time 8. Joker' s
W i ld 10, F lintstones 17.
4 00----Mis ter Ca rtoon 3: Password
Plus 15: Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hillbi llies B. Sesame St . 20.33 :
Six M i llion Dollar Man 10; Real
M cCoys 13 ; Spectreman 17.
1 30- Bewilched
J;
Petticoat
Junc t ion 8 ; To m &amp;. J&amp;rry 13:
Merv Gri ffin 15 ; Gilligan's Is. 17.
5 00 I Dream o f Je annie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8: M ister Rogers' Neigh.
borhoo d 20 .33 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10 . My Th ree Sons 17 .
5 3D--Carol B urne tt 3; News 6 ;
Gomer Pyle 8; E lec. Co . 20;
Mash 10: Happy Days Aga in 13; I
Dream of Jea nn ie 17: Ooc1or
Who 33
6 00 News 3, 8, 10, 13, 15 ; ABC News
6 ; Zoom 10 : Carol Burnett 17.
6 3Q--N BC News 3, 15 : ABC News 13 ;
Ca rol Burnett 6; CBS News 8.10 :
Bob Newhart 17 : Over Easy 20.
I 00--3'S A Crowd 3: Tic Tac Dough
8. Pulse 6: News 10 ; Newlywed
G ame 13. Love, Amer ican Style
15; Sanford 8. Son 17: Dick
Cave tt 20,33 .
30 - Ho llywood
Squares
3;
New l ywed Game 6; Joker 's Wild
8; Sha Na Na 13 . Hollywood
Squares 10; TV Honor St&gt;ciety 15 ;
Ali In The Family I I ; MacNeil ·
Lehrer ReJXIrf 20, 33.
8 ·1J0--Misadven!ures of Sheriff lobo
3,1S;
Happy
Days
6,13 ;
Cal fiornia Fever 8, 10; Nova
20,33 ; Movie " Junior Bonner" 17.
8 30 - Angie 6, 13 : 9: 00- Counlry
Superstars of lhe Sevenlles 3, 15;
Three's Company 6,13: Movie
" F lesh 8. Blood " 8,10; World
70.33.
30- Taxi 6. 13 ; 10 : 00- lararus
Syndrome 6, 13 ; Six Wives of
Henry VIII 17; News 20; City
Notebook 33 .
10 :»--Like II i s 20 ; Another Voice
33 .
11 : 00- News 3,6,8, 10,1 3, 15 ; Dick
Cavell20; Carry On Laughing 33.
11 :»--Johnny Carson 3,15: Barney
Miller 6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8;
ABC News 33: Movie "The
Virgin Queen" 10; Movie "Dive
Bomber" 17.
12 : 05- Movle " Scenes from a
Murder" 6, 13; 12 :40--Medlcal
Story 8.
1:oo-Tomorrow 3; News IS: 2 :05News 13.
2:30-News 17 : 2 :35-Movle "The
Siege at Red River" 17.
4 35-Love American Style 17;
5:05-Stor Tr~k 17.

�I

~
·'J,.,

10- The Oaily Sentinel , Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 15 , 1979

...

.... ·.·,· .- .- •

I

1:
'

'•

Area Deaths

I

BERNARD R. HIGLEY
Bernard R. Higley, 86, formerly of
Rutland, 1009 Grandview Ave .
Columbus, died Saturday at University HOI!Ipital in Columbus.
He owned a large farm in the
Rulland area and was a retired
psychologist at the Allred Wilson
~ildrPn 's (',nl€r in O:olwnbus . He
was a past president of the Ohlo
Polygraph Association and a past
president and a member of the
Scientific Detection of Crime
organization . He was a member of
the Broad St. Presbytenan Church
in Columbus. A veterar of World
War!, Mr Higley was a graduate of
Ohio State University and received
his master 's degree from the
Umvers1ty of Southern California

nesday at t p.m . at the farmly
cemetery near Kutland .
WILLIS B. BOY&lt;.:E
Willis 1Bill 1 Boyce , 73, died at his
residence at 3137 Westerville Road
'
Sunday
Mr.Boyce was a member of the St.
Augustine ca tholic Church, Lost
Cord Club, a vel€ran of World War
l l , and a retired employe a t the
Hi vers1de Hospital
He is surnved by his wife,
Marguerite Russell Boyce, formerly
of Me1gs County, two daughters,
Myrta Lucille Lemley, Galloway.
Otuo. and Dons Johnson , Columbus,
nme grandchildren and nine great
grandctuldren and severa l nieces
and COUSlOS .
Graveside side services will be
held Wednesday at 11:30 a .m . a t
Gravel Hill Cemetery, Cheshire .
Friends may call at the Shoemaker
Funeral Home ,2830 Cleveland Ave .,
Co lumbus , Tuesday from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9.

Surviving are tu.swtfe, Bernice,

and a sister , Gladys H. Heidergott,
CBiilorrua.
Funeral semres w1ll be held at 3
p.m . Tuesday at the 0 H Woodyard
Chapel, 255 E . State St.. Columbus .
Graveside services w11l be held Wed ·

Amendn1ent offered for low,
moderate income families
for the home Utrt.'t' or four tuu ~s over
tn 2.5 years "
If approved. tht• o ml'ndment
would al low the sta te to burrow
mon t:' y &lt;-tl low mterest rdt t•s and
chon nel tt through vanous kndm~
m.&lt;-.1Jtutwn~ to help j:X)tt'ntJal home

COLUMBUS. Ohi o AI' 1
An
amendment 1s bem~ pr t•p; trt•'ll to
allow

the

state to

f'h annel

lo w·

interest hous Jng l uan~ to low -;HJd
mod era te ~1 ncumt• f e1 11 Ill It'S
Governor .lei lilt'~ r\ Rhodt• s IS~ lll'd
a statement Sunda~ that h1s J,·g;.ll
staff was prt•p&lt;mng a n·sulutJ u fl tu
put the propost•d an ~t_·ntinwnt un Uw

bu~· er s

In addttton. tht&gt; ..:on•rnor hopt•s to
st tmul(:ltl' housmg construcllOn. help

June . 1980 ballot
"Now, every low cmd mudt:rate
income family ha' a difficult tum•
buymg a house and the• ehan c" of
passin g tllJs measure wtll be much
greater, ·· accordmg t u the Hhodes
statement ·' All we are domg IS wh::~t
other statt•s hnvt• bt"1.'n dowg ngl1l
along "
The mam puq)J se (I f til t· pr ug r &lt;HJ J
is to provJ de hl'ip to ~oun~ &lt;"ou ple.'i
who utht•rwlse W(l uJd fili i tw ;d Jk tu
afford to buy a hotJ l t'
··w1th honw Juan lrl\t•rPst r etll' .'i
now at 11 ur 12 per rt•rtt or t' \'t•n
higher. most of our yowl~ fmniltes
cannot even thtnk about buymg U1e1r
own homt' s, ·• salJ Rhude~ . ··At ralt·~
of mterest that h1gh. they Wlll P"Y

battle ttw current recesswn 1n the
L'onstructwn industry and provide

JObs for members of the bulidmg
Ln.tdes .
·' This entire program ,'' said tht•
gu \Trnor , -- ~q\1 bt.· carried out at no
cost to ta xpayers . All we are dmng IS
usml-! thL' borruwmg power of lht•
~Lilt• to ht•lp our nltzt•ns ··

Carte:&gt;r has lead
MIAMI 1AP 1- President Car ter holds a statewide lead in
Flonda 's Democratic caucuses,
but after all U1e hard work,
hoopla and money, the tallymg
stilllsri·t over . In one counly, the
contest has come do,.11 to the luck
of the draw .

--···---TillS SPlCIALlil
• BAKED LASAGNA •
•

Dinner w1th
golden brown

•

b oo

I

•1l9

'•• 1&gt;0&gt;

TO GO ONL Y

I
•

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Mechani c St . at 3. 30
p .m . Saturday for Pauline Derenberger who had fallen . She was

l deys only

E&amp;1tidsi
I. illiAii 1l

taken

to

Veterans

Memonal

Hospital. At 8:09p.m. Saturday, the
unit went to Mulberry Ave . for Clyde
Brookover who had a back problem .
He was also taken to Veterans
Memonal Hospital.

EXTENDEDOUTU)()K
Wednesday through Friday, a
chance of showen Wednesday
and again Friday. Fair Thousday. Highs in the 70. Wednesday
and in the SO. Thousday and
Friday. Lows in the 40s .
....... ·.·.----&gt;.

Federal regulations -begin Oct •. 19
OHHVII.I.E, Uh10 I API
Member s of the Ohio coe:tl uu.lustry
han~ l'irclcd Oet
19 on their
cC:Jien!lars because ll \.:) tllc day new
fccll-ral regulations that wlll prohibit
Ute bumLllg uf the state's h1gh-suirur

•

15 hour SeSSIOn
IContinued from page 1)
and reopemng of negotiations if a
levy passes . This proposal would
cost the district $2,360,000, Mrs .
Sheets said .
The board team made a proposal
too .
Mrs . Sheets said,it was for a $9900
base salary as of Sept. I, this year;
an tncrease to $10,100 base as of Jan .
I, 1980, and a ra1se to $10,300 on Sept.
I. 1980 and reopening of negotiations
if a levy passes .
- Again the board proposal stated
there would be no make up days.
This proposal would have cost the
d1stnct $2,080,000 for the year , a
movement of almost $30,000 increase on the part of the board, Mrs .
Sheets reported, in comparison to
the starting position of the board
Saturday.
Sunday evening, the teachers
team presented a fourth proposal
wtuch was the final of the two day
session. This propo.sal was for a
$10,500 base salary as of Sept. I, ttus
year, 13 make up days as a resul t of
the strike and a raise to $10,600 at the
base in September, 1980. Ttus
proposal would cost the district
$2,3:ro,OOO for the yea r, an increase of
about $110,000 over the position of the
teachers when the meeting started
on Saturday, Mrs . Sheets reports.
The final session ended Sunday
evening with no progress made apparently toward the settlement.
Meantinne, this morning Mrs . Bonnie Fisher , president of the Meigs
Local Teachers Association, reported that the weekend negotiations
between the MLTA neg91iatmg team
and the Me1gs Local Board of
Education were "a rarct! aJld a
sham"
The board showed up at the table
unprepared to negotiate and
unaware of the positions a t the table,
accordmg
to Mrs . Fisher's
statement.
At the board's insistence a great
deal of dialogue a t the table revolved
aro und the financial s1tuat1on of the
district, Mrs . Fisher charged. Even
though the district is saving $1~.000 a
day in salaries, any request by the
MLTA to make up the days the
students are missing is interpreted
as an additional demand or payment
for being on strike, Mrs . Fisher said.
" With an average of 50 stud ents
per day , it lS rid!culous for the board
of ed ucation to clai m that
meaningful education is going on. It
is the beli ef of the association that
Supt. Gleason 's motive for such
Irresponsible decisiOns is simply to
pumsh the teachers for the stand

they have taken and to break their
union", Mrs . Fisher said .
·• Jt is obv10usly educationally unsound and smacks of immaturity .
The MLTA feels~hat it is time that
the board of education lives up to its
responsiblity of representing the
people who elected them", Mrs
Fisher continued .
Further commenting , Mrs. Fisher
stated •
" The Meigs Local Teachers
Association at the table Saturday offered the board a very sinnple way to
solve the financial d!spute .
It reads as foUows : 'Dr . Hoger
Lulow , assistant state superinl€ndent of schools, Columbus, ol'uo.
Dear Sir : It is agreed that both
parties are requesting your department determine the amount of new
revenues received by the Meigs
Local Board of Education and-or
certified to be rece1ved smce Jan I,
1979. In light of the present teachers '
strike"'now in it. 16th day, we would
urge you toexpedite thi s in vestigation .' "
It was reported by th e
association's leaderstup the same offer was made by Dr. Lulow, s uperintendent, and was rejected by the
board .
Mrs . Fisher further said:
"The associatiOn feet. that there
are a couple of questions that should
be answered. Why has Meigs Local
become a training group for inex perienced superintendents?
The prior superintendent was an
elementa ry principaL Supt . Gleason
was a j unior tugh school principal.
As a result of continued administration ine:ttperie nce, the
d!strict has been plagued with work
stoppages. Under Gleason. there
have been two strikes since August.
"Who stands to gain from this
strike going on a nd on a nd on. It is
not the teachers who are losmg $50 a
day.
It must be the board of
education which is add!ng $15,000 a
day to 1ts pocket."
Supt. Gleason again today urged
parents to organize and get their
students into the classrooms; to
volunteer for service to the district
and to call him any suggestions
which they might have.
Meantinne, the d!strict ·s board of
education ts scheduled to meet in
regular session tonight.
David Bowen of the teachers
group is to get in touch with Supt.
Gleason following that session to
inquire about further ne gotia tioJ
Sunda y evening , teachers held a
covered dis h dinner rally at the
Americar Legion Home in Pomeroy .
The event was also for families and
was announced Friday before the
weekend negotiations took place.

IIO~I'IT\L

'-1-:\\

~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday
admissions --- Ida
Young,Rutland;
Margaret
Houdashelt , Racine; Lillie Adams,
Long Bottom; Eunice Nutter, JleedsviUe; Ross Kent, Addison; Glen
Stone, Clifton : Marv Derenber~er.
Pomeroy ;
Cloyd
Brookover,
Kutland
Sa turday discharges - Edward
Hayes, EliZabeth Giles, Adrma
French, Wanda Sellers.
Sund ay
a dmissions---Lester
Wolfe , Racine ; Wilbur Hilt,
Rutland;
Diana
Herdman,
Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges--{; len Stone .

We were around
when a fancy suit
of mens' clothes

&lt;'021 take effect.
The federal
Envtronmental
Protection Agency has ordered that
mdustries in the state reduce sulfur
d!oxide emissions at their plants.
Rather than install costly
smokestack scrubbing systems to
t·omply with the order, many
industnes have already begun to
purchase low.sulfur coal from the
We$tern part of the ('OUntiy .
An Orrville couple which operates
a small mining operation in Wayne
and Holmes counties predicts that
the EPA regulations wlll create a
crisis ln the coal industry.
They and others forecast
widespread layoffs in the coal fields,
as well as the closmg of many
businesses ln the eastern portion of
the stat€ and the loss of hundreds of
millions of dollars in revenue .
Sondra Downend and her husband,
Art, said it ha s been several weeks
since they were able to se ll any coal.
The Downends, like other mine
owners, have begged the EPA to
extend the dead line. Mrs . Downend
even had the opportunity to make
such a plea in person .
~e was among a group of local
residents who spoke iJl President

carter when he attended a wwn
meeting in Steubenville last month.
Two days later, at tile mvitation of
the president, she went to
Washington for a meeting with
congressmen and energy officials to
d!scuss tile problems facing the coal
mdustry .
However, Mrs. Downend sa1d she
was dismayed by the results of the
meeting and carne out ''feeling as
though we accomplished nothing ."
The EPA estinnates that 2.~
persons will ultinnately lose their
jobs in mining and related
mdustnes, such as trucking
operations that depend on coal
deliveries, because of the ban on
burning high-audfur coal.
The Downends said the EPA has
"g rossly underestimated " the
number of jobs that will be lost after
next Friday's deadline.
Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, 00hio, pred!cts the loss of 15,000 jobs
and more than $400 million in
revenue to Ohio as a result of the
new rules.
Although tbe EPA has refused to
e&lt;tend the deadline, it has granted
permission for a few industries to
burn Ohio coal oo a limited basis .

BCI assisting
with bus probe
The BCJ has been ca lled to assist
Meigs Coun ty sheriff deputies in an
investigation involving vandalism of
a Meigs Local school bus.
Bill Thornton, Danville, the bus
driver, said the vehicle's radiator
a nd oil par had hol es punctured In
them.
Deputies are mvestigating a hitskip that occun-red Saturday at 5:30
p.m . on county road 14, Wolfe Pen
Road .
Accord!ng to the report a yet
unidentified pickup truck ~raveled
south on county road 14 and pulled
into the driveway at the Charles
Sayre residence . When it backed out
of the driveway it stuck a parked
vehicle owned by Darrell D. DrenDISCHARGES OCT. 14
Krrug Airmgton. Harry !lass,
Tma Burton, Christina Clarkson, Jo
Anna Darley, Robert Denney Jr .,
Ger aid Estep, Jaret Hall, Rlcky
Kearns, Barbara Magneson , Mrs .
George Markins and son, Zelia
Pullin, Ruth Sayre
BIRTIJSOCT. 14
Mr. and Mrs. Grant Barker. son,
Ravenswood; Mr . and Mrs . Tony
Milhoan , daughter, Long Bottom ;
Mr. and Mrs . Lawrence Seymour,
son. Middleport.

ner , Fl. Myers, F1a ..
The pickup was described as light
green with a wooden bed.
Deputies are investigating the
theft and vandelillm w political election signs of Hugh Martin , Reedsville.
According to Martin Saturday at
9:45 p.m. two men in a late model
red pickup truck · were seen taking
signs and posts in Reedsville and
Tuppers Plains area. Seven signs
and posts were taken. Anyooe with
information is asked to notify the
sheriff's department.

EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohio l AP ! - Eggs
- Prices paid to country packing
plant. for eggs delivered to major
Oh1o citi es cases included consumer
grades including U.S . grades,
mmimum 50 case lots .
Cartoo Large A 62--63, Medi urn A
~3 .... -56, Small A 3&amp;-43.
Sales to retailers in major Ohlo
clties, cartons deli vered : Large A
white 69-78, mostly 6ll--71 . medium 6271, mostly 62-04
Truck lot prices of read y to cook
broilers and fryers: Qncinnatl 3339...,; Cleveland 33-390,.,.

ELBERFELD$
SAVE 20% NOW
HOWARD MILLER
GRANDFATHER CLOCKS

It has three glass sides,
becausethere~ntore

to see than
~~~just the
time.

'lnu ~d the n~ ht tL mt·
!rom dm !hw,·ard ~1 d kr

m.tl lt•r nt

f '&gt; l'

t. quull,· Hnpnrt.ml

cost $9.00.
•

(It was In

Serving the area's banking needs since 1904.

Farmers
Bank

,~ ~ .1

( l0l 1-..
l (Ill

Member FDIC

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES OCT. 12
John Atkins, Kcntworth Butler,
Christina Clar kson, Treva Clutter,
Mrs. Thomas Delaney and son,
Ervin Fellure, ully Fulks, Betty
Harbor , Jason Hogan, Edna
Holcomb . Darla Lambert, Joshua
l.ewis , Eve Mahone, Beverly
Matrne y, Dona ld McCarty, Mrs.
James Mulford and son, Ferrell
N1day, Mr s. R1chard Purdue and
son. Michelle Randolph, Connie
Sexton, William Sexton, Mrs. Jerry
~afffer
and son, Harvey Van
Vranken, Omar Vanfossan
BffiTIISOCT.12
Mr . and Mrs . Jolin Ord, daughter,
Letart; Mr . and Mrs. Stephen
Morse, daughter, Pomt Pleasant.
DISCHARGES OCJ' 13
Earl Clark, Martha Clark, Marie
Edelblute, Daisy Exline, Mary Hall,
Della Ker:ns. Asa Jordan . Dorothy
l.aw son , Greg Lloyd. Eudora
McFal l, Caroline Miller, William
Miller, Mrs. Dav1d Moore and son,
Jody Plymale, Terry R1ggs, Victoria
Rood, Mrs. Jerry Toops and son .
Frank Valentine , Mrs . Otn: td
Wallace and daughter , Robin Whole,
Larrv Wickline II .
BIRTIIS OCT. 13
Mr and Mrs. John Whetsel,
da ughter , Jackson; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Burns, da~hter , Clif!Jln;
Mr . and '"rs. Dono ld Wt• lls ,
da ughcer. Nortoup

the ~ lint o f thl"
rrndulum und th e br~
bra ~., v-..·t·r~ht~ . In fa ct,

vou t"n!O)'

y ou

1

Jn ~ l'l' th em from

thrt•t· J1n·t !ton.,

Al3o

ct~!cu lated to

plt-J'&gt;t· the l')'t' are the tall
7-t 1 _, "o Jk cac,f:' , ca r red
hy .1 hnnm•t to p anJ

I l 'lll pm Fu~tt d 1d l
fhr \ Vl'3lmrn5tr-r
lllt)Vt-nwnt c h1 mes on tht·
qu.trll'r JnJ r ounb o n
tht · hou r
Yo u r nJme t'ngrJ v t•d

I ret• \ln d sohd b ra~ .. rla!t·.
( Jn start d tJmliy tradl taln w1th th 1~ Ho ward
l\1dlt: r WJndf.llht'r. Ask

tor

till'

Oakmont ,

#610·190

Howard Miller
Clock Co.
x· Reg. Price '625

Start a f.tmily tr,v.litit 111 with a Huwanl Mil.ler cbck.
USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN
Stop in the Furniture Department . Sele-ct the dock you want . S.ve 20%
and lay it away tor delivery at Chrhtm•s time.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Lyons named acting Pomeroy police chief
BY KATIE CRIJW
Harry l.yons was na111ed act1 n ~

Pomeroy Pollee Ctuef al Munday ·s
lengthy session of Pomeroy VIllage
Council .
Accord!"'( to Mayor Clarence An ·
drews, Chief Jed Webster is unable
to work due to illness. Mayor An ·
drews read a letter from Dr. Gene
Ables stating that Chief Webster is
under doctor 's care and will be
unable to work until further notice .
Council also hired Elmer Althouse
as a regular police officer . Ch ief
Lyons and Althouse will assume
their duties today .
Hod Karr, COUIICl~nan , told coun cil lack of money was the village's
main problem . Karr stated that the
three aveQUP..s for reven ue were
fines from the Mayor, parking
meters and the police deparinnent
Karr said he had discussed the

matter wtth some of the police of ~
fl eers. He added that he felt Har tenbach wa~ doing a fine job, but the
problem accurdi n~ to Ka IT 1~ l.:ullt"'l··
t10n of fmes .
• Karr also satd no loading zones
are betng abused. It was brought out
that no revenut&gt; is received from the
loadmg and unloi:ldmg zunes. Karr
s uggested meters be placed on every
vacan t pole .
Karr also pointed out that c1 ty employes are parking free of charge . If
a city employe receives a ticket 1t is
voided . He also mentioned that two
mel€rs are hooded for village
vehicles . Karr s uggested that
parking spaces be made available
for c1ty vehicle' but take the meters
off the hooded area and place the
meters where they can bring u 1
revenue .
It was noted that businesses who

•

e

'

(USPS 145960)
VOL XXVIII

h~vc hoods for meters ctn..• char)~t·d
Sl fur the hoocl and 80 cenl'i l:l (;d) fu1
the meter _ When they return tlw
hood the $1 dt!pos1t is returned .
It was su~es ted that all hoods tx:
picked up. Karr told counr 1l that
~rl Hysell was willing to repair the
r&gt;uncan meters
PARKING METER DISCUSSION
Meeting with council were Paul
Simon. president of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce , John AII derson and JU11 F'recker regarding
the movmg of parkmg meters from
their present location across tlw
street to the newly paved portwn uf
Main Street.
Simon suggested that perhaps the
present meters. next to the
sidewalk , could be left and add 1tunal
meters placed on the new portion of
highway . It was also suggested that
a time limit be placed on the meters

NO 129

TUESDAY. OCTOBER 16. 1979

schools
officially closed

,, ,'/
~-

~T.od a·y _~;
.

.

'

.

. .. . in the world ·

Strike imminent
COLUMBUS. Ohlo I AP 1 - The
executive director of the Ohio
Civil Service Employees
Association issued a statement
late Monday warrung that "a
work stoppage was Imminent" by
employees of the Department of
Mental Health and Mental Retar dation .
The contract between the
union's 3,500 members and the
state agency will expire next Sun day , Oct . 21. Urn on officials say
another bargaining session was
scheduled lor Tuesday.
"The department can ill-afford
a job action at this tune ," accord!ng to a statement by the
association Executive Director
John W. Farris. " Their failure to
negotiate in good faith seems to
be just one more example of a in credibly ml8nlanaged state agency .' '

Gay dismissal
POPE AIR FORCE BASE,
N.C. (API - Capt. Robert
Coronado,
an
avowed
homosexual who was convicted of
conduct unbecoming a n officer,
was dismissed from the Air Force on Monday .
The dismissal , equivalent to a
dishonorable discharge for an
enlisted man , will be
automaticaUy appealed.
Coronado, 32, of San Diego ,
Calif., W8llconvicted on Saturday
cl. conduct un becoming an officer
for committing a homosexual
act. Besides dismissal, he could
have been sentenced to five years
at hard labor by the jury of five
Air Force officers.
1be case automatically goes to
the 21st Air Force headquarters
for review. It will then go to the
Court of Military Review and the
Court of Military Appeals .
During the appea!O process,
Coronado may remain on the job
and collect his regular pay or
may go on unpa id leave .

Teachers Associa tlori. reported that
the association i' pleased that by
clO&gt;ing the 'chools, the board of
education has taken positive action
toward resolving the crtsls Situation ,
now in lls fourth week .
·· we hope negotiations can now
take place with the federal med iator
so that a fatr and eqmtable "t·
tlement can be reached ", M.,; .
Fisher remarked
Schools of the distnct have been
offiCially open for the first 16 days of
the strike and l€achers and noncertified employes who have supported that strike have not been paid
for those 16 days
STANDING ROOM ONLY
It was a standing room only
situation Monday night when the
Meigs l.oca l Board of Education met
ln regular session in the cafeteria of
the Meigs Junior High School in Middleport .
Some IOU parents, teachers and a
few students were on hand for the
session and those attending were
given at least an hour and a half to
discuss aspect. of the strike with
Supt. G Ieason and members of the
board of education.
The orderly crowd discussed
problems mtelligently Wlth the
board and Gleason . The session
brou~ht out some excellent points
Dr . Keith Riggs and Mrs. Je1mifer
Sheets . board members, fielded
some o!&gt; the quest1ons along with
Supt. r.leason .
One point brought out by Mrs.
Sheets and Dr. Riggs was that the
stnke action really was a sufprise to
the board . She sa1d the board understood that there had been an extension on negotiating to :--iov. 20-ne.t month actuall y.
It was reported that Ted Bibler,
field representative for the teachers
association, had proposed in June
that a ll negotiating be ca lled off until
November because he would be gone
for the entire month of July . Any
pay increases accord!ng to the
report were to be retroactive to Sept.
I and the existing contract was to
continue until November
. A letter written to Bibler and acceptmg thls plan was read . The letter was written by Dermis Whalen,
an attorney for the board, and was
wr1tten only after the entire board
had been polled and agreed to the
plan, Mrs. Sheets said . The letter
was written June 25 and Dr . Higgs
offered the letter to the pub~c at
anytime so that patrons could see
what the understanding of the board
was in the negotiation situation . The
commumcation md!cated that 1t
would be October 20 - still sever a I
days away - before a federal
mediator would be called in .
Supt. Gleason sa1d that apparently
the plan of the teachers cha nged
because he was notified on Aug . 20
that they wanted to negotiate .
Mrs. F isher . president of the
teachers group, said the association
felt in June that Whalen was not
.authorized to negotiate for the
board , that the association had no
legislative bill and the dtstrtct was
without a superintendent .
Mrs . Sheets conunented Whalen
was authorized to act for the board
wittun certain limitations and again
stressed all board members were
contacted by Whalen before he
notified Bi bier that the extension of
negotiations into November would
be satisfactory with the board.
Several parents said they could
not understand the board policy in
not allowing the athletic programs
and the band activities to prore&lt;:d
1Contin ued on page 81

•

G&lt;!orge More of an engineermg firm
from Athens also met with council.
The two firms earlier had subrrutted contracts on the extension of
the sewage system from the Kroger
store to Kerrs Hun .
They were advised to contact the
villlige so~citor, Fred Crow , regarding the contracts.Crow's opinion
will be accepted by council.
The Mayor's report which showed
receipts in the amow1t of $2,731 for
the month of September was accepted. Donnie Ward announced
that he lS donating a banking board
and basketball hoop to the Jaycees .
The meetmg was opened by prayer
by Mayor Andrews
Attend!ng were Mayor Andrews ,
Jane Walton , clerk , Larry Wehrung,
Karr, Harold Brown, Betty Baronick
and Bill Young, council members,
Ward, Randall carpenter and Harry
l.yons.

enttne

Meigs~

BY BOB HOEF1JCH
For the first time sin&lt;'e a teachers
strike began in the Meigs l.ocal
School District 17 days ago, schools
of the distnct were off icially closed
today
Actwn to close the schools came
late last night at the conclusion of an
open meeUng of the distri ct's board
of education and an exe&lt;.·utive
session of the board wlth Me•gs
County Sheriff James Proffitt and
Metgs County Prosecutmg Attorney
Hick Crow .
Announcing the temporary clos1ng
of the schools effectJve today, Supt.
David Gleason said the dosing wa s
agreed upon by the board to
facilitate the negotiations process
between the board and the stri king
teacher.~ and was a measure of good
faith.
ntis morning Mrs . llonnie Fisher,
president of the Meigs l.ocal

from the HUlJ grant uf $4J2.000 .
Balance uf the grant will be used to
extend the sewage system frum
KctTs Hun to the Kruger st ore .
Wesley BuehJ, county cngtneer . Will
s upervtse the project at a CG.'&gt; t not to
exceed $500 .
Mayor llarcncc Andrews repor ted that the v1llage 's radar has been
tn for repair fur several weeks . He
told council that a new unit co uld be
purcha,ed with trade m for $1 ,125
The new radar will fundion whether
the cruiser is moving or nuL-Gou,ncd
voted to purchase the new unit .i
\..u uncil. again stre!Joied the. Importance of the passage of the 1 I
Pomeroy Village income tax .
Council agreed to hold a publoc
meeting at the f1re house on Oct. 24 .
at 7:30p.m
H.epresentives of the e ngmeenng
finn of Burgess and Niple and

•

at

··POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

llt_-Xllo the parktng lul
II was ftnally lt-rtth:d not ttl do
anythtng until nl'w polt•s t'ould bt_- or dt-rt•d and the IW.:lers nt:xt ttw
s tdewa lk.s would tht&gt;n be m oved to
the other s1de of the street as wa.s
ortgt n&lt;Jily planned .
RIO RECEIVED
Ct1Unnl rece ived one Utd on &lt;t
dJdssts for the wat~r department
truck . The bid wa s from tht•
Pome-roy Motor Co ., 111 the amount
of $7 ,900
L pun the reeonunendati on of the
water department council accepted
the b1d.
Council , in other bustne.ss, agreed
tu award the bid to re pair the wall at
Laurel Street to the Ohlo Bndgc Co .,
Cambr idge at a cost between $62 .400
to $91,400 depending upon the type of
materia l used.
Funds for the repair wlll come

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Job training funds
allocated by board

WOMAN OF THE VEAl\ - Mrs. Marjorie Goett , " Woman ol the
Year" for the Middleport Business and Professional Women's Club . See
story on page 5.

Deputies probe
minor complaints
A single car an·ident was in ~
vestigated by the Me 1gs County
Sheriff's Oepartment Monda y at
7:40 a .m m I-larrsionvtlle No mjunes were reported
Accord!ng to the report , Sarah C.

Security guard.-; '
cars vanffillized
Veh1cles owned by employees of
the company providing secunty at
the Meigs County Schools during the
cWTent teachers strike were van ·
daiJZed early today .
Accordmg to a report filed Wlth
Gallipolts Clty Pol1 ce by captain
Charles Byres of Statewide Secunty,
Parkersburg, four vetucles were
vandalized between 2 and 3 a .m .
today, while parked at the Wilh am
Ann Motel, Gallipolis .
Tires on autos owned by Harold
Moon, Charleston. and Tom Fisher.
VIenna, were reportedly punctu red
with a s harp instrument . Tile tires of
an a uto owned by the company were
similarly damaged .
The department further reports
the radiator of a truck owned by employee Albert Williams of Lowell , 0 ..
was punctured .

Weather
Good chance of s howers tonight
and Wednesday. Highs Wednesday
in the mid to upper 60s. Low tonight
near 50 . Chance of rain ls 50 percent
tomght and Wedhesday .
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Thursday through Saturday,
partly cloody Tblltllday with a
chance of sbowen Friday and
Satouday. Highs In the &amp;08. Lows
In the 40s ea•ly ThUI1lday and In
tbe upper 308 and low 40s eu l·
Satouday.

MEETS THURSDAY
The Meigs County Democrat Central Committee will m ...t at 7 30
p.m . Thursday at the Carpe nter 's
I fall in Pomeroy .

Welsh , 29 , Ht. 4, Pomeroy was cited
to Meigs Coun ty Court for fa 1hng to
maintain assured clear distance .
Her ca r allegedly turned off SH 143
onto the parking lot at the Ham,onvJ llc School and siruck an auto
owned by Mark A. Hichmund, RD .
Pomeroy . There was slight property
damage.
The deparinnent IS Investigating a
vandalism mmplatn t a t SouU1ern
High SchooL
Principal James Adams told
deputieS that sornetune after I a .m
Saturday unknown persons shut out
f1ve windows with a 22 cal. guo The
windows were m the study hall a t t.he
high school.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt urges area motorists to be
on the alert for itellll&gt; placed m the
highways by Hall oween pranksters
Oeputies were caUed out twice
Monday evenmg to Letart Falls area
to remove i terns from the roadway
Sheriff Proffitt advtses parents to inform their children as to the danger
of placing items on the hi ghway .

COLU\1BUS, Oh10 1AP 1 - Oluo
soon may be usmg federal funds to
tram machtmsts and oth~r sklllt""&lt;J
workers at two dozl.:!n ur more of its
colleges. um vt~ rstttes, and techmccd
sc hools.
Th e
s n ·en- member
stat e
Controllmg Board voted 7-{) Monda\'
w let the Educat10n O.partment
enter mto contracts that could total
up to $7 .2 mtllton wtth the schuols
Herht&gt;rl
D
Brum ,
tht:
department's fin&lt;::tnce dlfector. satd
tht&gt; Sthoo Js wlll lram workers ror
s killed Job s under the fcd.-ra I
C o mprehensive
Ernploymt•nt
Trainm~ Act.
'l'11e schools Wil l be picked by
··prune sponsors,· usually mayor s·
off ices and co unty comrmsswnt_-rs.
under the Ct:T A program, and the
tramees will be identified by th e
Oh10 Rurt•au of Employment
Services .
Brurn satd the Education
Department has applications at
present from Z7 prtme sponsors of
CE TA programs. He sald the
dep;lrtment will help establish and
(.OOfd.inate the program~ , and do on·
site momtormg of th e u-ammg
He sa1d he IS unccrtam how man y
ptrson s wtll bt: helpt'd. s tnc t· the )"l'l·
tiJ~bt'-t."nacteJ fl~dcraJ budget docs
nu t currently spec tfy ::1 ftgure for
OhiO . Howeve r , he satd the
department anticipates a nd has
mdurle&lt;l $7 2 million 10 spend1ng
aut.hont y m 1ts own budget.
In other a c ti on . tht• board
postponed untll tJc:t. l9 actwn on a
request to transft•r $! _] milhon to the
Offl CL' of Budget and Managemt&gt;nt to
STRIKE FUND BEGINS
CHARLESTON, W.Va. IAPi
Delegates to the Unlted Mlnr
Workers con.'ltitutional rooveotion in
December In Denver will be asked to
set up a strike fund for the union,
UMW President Arnold Miller says .
The union has been wlthoul a
strike fund and often undertakes
lengthy strikes durtng contrart
negotiations .
ln an intervie"· Monday , Miller
also said he ''wouldn't be surprised"
If U.S. Steel withdraws from thr
Bituminous Coal Operators
Association , tht• luduslr;y 's
bargaining arm .

pay rent for a state museum m the
newly constructed statt! office

bmldtng m Cleveland .
Senate Fmance Chal!'man Harry
Meshel. D- Youngstown , and others
on tht' tx:.ard sa id they wanted more
mformatwn

about

t he

musewn,

mcl udmg Jls status, and whether it is
ready to occupy 1ts part of the new
bUilding . The proposed Sl.3 million
would pay the rent for the flrst two
\"l'ars.

Pete Rose , represe nting the
budget office. sa1d he was unable to
answer questions about the status of
the museum , but agreed to tring a
spokesman from the Ohio Historical
Society. wh1ch 1s sponsoring the
prOJL~t. to the Oct. 29 met!tmg .

Two persons hurt
in two accidents
Two persons were injured during
two accidents mvestigaled Monday
by the Galha-Melgs Post, Highway
P&lt;itrol
Off teers were called to the scene of
a twll-\lt!h!cle accident in Me1gs
Co unty on U.S. 33 at ~ : 25 p.m .
TI1e- patrol reports a north bound
•ow operated by !;teven Pullms, 16,
Pornero v. slid mto a south boWld
vehicle Operated by Paul Imboden ,
26. Svracuse. while passmg on 33 .
Pull~s was clted on a charge of
uuproper passtng .
Imboden cl auned injury and was
transported by the Pomeroy
Emergency Squad to Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal for ireatment.
Officers mve•t1gated a pedestnan
arndent on SH )54, five-tenths of a
lillie west of SR 160, at 6: 1~ p.m.
The patrol reports five year old
John A . Doss, no address available,
ran mto the path of an east bound
au!Jl operated by Preston Jarrell, 17,
Bidwell
J)Qss tllSplayed v1sible signs of
lllJUTY, but was nut unmediately
treated .

CAAMETING
The Galli a-Meigs Community Action Agency Board of Trustees wiU
meet at 7 p.m. Thursday at the
village cou ncil chambers in
Cheshire .

Burning permits must be obtained
Since the fore st flre season opened
Oct . I, Meigs County reSidents must
obtain a bunung permit before domg
any open burning until Nov . 30,
forest olficial reports .
Open burning hours are restri&lt;ied
and no burning wlU be pennitted
before 4 p.m . and aU burnmg must
be completed by 6 a.m. the following
day .
Other restnctons In volving open
burning are : Someone must be
present, with a burrung penrut.
whlfe the fire is burning; Burning is
prohibited when winds are in excess
of 10 miles per hour ; All local , state
and federal fire regulations must be
obeyed and Violations of the permit
laws can involve fines of $20 w $100.
Further information about forest
fire season and burning pennits can
be obtamed by contacting J . M.
Mllhron at Shade River State
Forest, 52537 Joppa Rd ., R'!edsville,
Ohio 4~772 378-6116 or The Ohio
Division of Forestry District N Office, JliO Eas1 State Strc,t , Atl:cus,
Ohio 45101. phon o 593-3341.

Following is a list of local forest
fire wardens in the Shade Kiver
Ranger Dlstnct . A free burmng per nut can be obtained from any of
these fire wardens .
VtNTON COUNTY - Wilk e-sv ilte
Township, Dean Burn s. Stat e Route
124 . Wilkesville, Ohio 45695, 669 &lt;1234.

MEIGS
Township

COU NT Y
Bedford
Fred Burson . State

Route 33, Shade , Oh'o 45776, 696 1028 .
Chester
Township
Jo hn
Ridenour , R1denour 's Supply (S . R .
148 an d Co 36 ), Chester . Oh10 45720 ,
985 3308 : Ralph Trussell , Bashan
(Co Rd 28 ), Long Bottom, Ohio

4514J , 949 4609

Columbia Township
Ree d Jet
te rs , Route 2 (Co . Rd 10 ) . Albany,

Ohio 45710 . 698·2588

Lebanon Township

Gordon Prof·
I itt, Proffitt's Grocery (St Rt _ 124).
Por tland , Ohio 45770, 843·2900 .
Letart Township · Randall Rober
ts, Letar t Falls, Route 1, Box 196,
R-acine, Ohio 45771.
Olive Township · J . M . Milliron,
Shade River State Forest, 52537 Jop ·
pa Road (St . Rt . 681 and Co . Rd . 43),

Reedsville, Ohio 45772, 378·6116; D.
N Smales, Forked Run St ate Pilrk,

P 0 . Bo• 127. Reedsville, Ohio 45772,
378·6206 .

Orange

Township

Dorothy

Rob1nson, Alfred ( S.R . 6Bl and Co.
Rd . 41 J. Route 2, Coolville, Ohio

45123. 985 3892 ; Robert Tripp, Box 14
( Sf Rt 7 and

co.

Rd . 46 ). Tuppers

Plains, Ohio 45783 . 61&gt;7 3941.
Rutland Township
Rose Carson,
35352 Litus Road (Co . Rd 12 and Co.
Rd . 13). Rutland, Ohio 45760, 742 -

4573

Sa le1m
Township
Terry
M cGuire , Route l, Bo&gt;&lt; 46A. Salem
Center. V F D .. Vinton, Ohio 45686,
742 -2437 ; Harl ey Grate, Route 1
iS R. 114 and Twp Rd . 331 .
Langsville, O hi o, 669·3848 .
Eugene Holliday , Twp . Rd. 3, Dex -

ter , Ohio,

698 · 380~ .

S&amp;lisbvry

Township

Nathan

Biggs , 38960 St. Rt. 12~. Route 4,
Pome roy, Ohio 45769, 9'1Z.S913 ;
Howard Daily , 570 Gra nt Street,

Middleport, Ohio 45760.

Scipio Township -· Myrtle Stanley,

Snowville (St. Rt. 6811. Route 2.
Albany, Ohio 45710, 698 ·~499.
Sutton Township -- George Cum ·
mins, Box 232, Racine, Ohio ~771,

vernon Nease, Nease Set·
tlement (Co. Rd. 30 and Co. Rd . 4) ,
Minersville, Ohio, 949&lt;1661.
GALLIA COUNTY - Morgan
949 · 2~70 ;

Township

--

Kenneth

Ward,

Up

Creek (Co. Rd . 191. RFD, Bidwell,
Ohio, 388·85-42 .

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