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~
·'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 .

�2- The Datly Sent mel Middleport P&lt;&gt;mll ,, 0 1 uesdav Oct

~k Jioh 1'1::-..,.._,

1 ~ fllW l'M NUT

lt

I~ .1

Capitol
Ideas

Of '\Wqfl\111 1-{;1 T MV'.I GFI 11\I'JUII

1'1\~ &lt;..HE\ I

3- The Daily Sentinel Middl eport Pumeruc 0
'

1111\r IT' 1-HWD ru 1\IIN"

GUJU llll.UJH I' I \ffi I !Ill \ ' ttjA 10~
NAMtD "H~N\ I l\' Tt1E l..WNI~"/1-1\Yi &lt;
Al-b\11 1-liM.' 1:\ I'M\\\ ' ""tc &lt;,ll...\...
\II ' ~ Hf'INO«JM\ '-() k\!1'1'\.\N\ k
"-&gt; INI...~IH&gt;L ' su

WASIIINGl ON

Business mirror
it

1 AP 1

Presadt:ntJa l tampaJKns are too
Jon g l'reSJdent Carter says A lot o f

Amertcans would agree
I don t think It s tn the 1ntere'1 o f
our courtry to start su early satd
tarter "110 started hi s cam paign
for the 1976 Democraltc nommatwn
"' 1974
Not

so

many

years

ago

no

r and1dale would ha1 e thought of

announc tng for prestdent before
Jan I of the presldenl!al elecllon
year Ill Jan I 1980 tl s likely that
every maJor contender for the
DemocratiC
and
Republican
nommatwns Will have formally

entered the race

Quote and unquote
By Don Graff
You ve got to hand tl to Jurun)
Carter for putttng the Cuban
sttuatton tn proper perspec!Ive
Poltltcs and nuclear arsenaLs do
he has dectded after a
not nux
closer exammat10n of the stall" quo
that so recent!) was unat ceptable
We must not play poltttcs wtth
SA! T II
What now makes the sttuatton ac
ceptable - well lets sav tolerable
- IS that one combat bngadc
present. no dtrect threat Bestdes
the Sovtets have not been persuaded
to remove 1t tn response to U S
representations stoppmg carefull)
short of repeatmg the eyeball-to
eyeball Cuban confrontatiOn of 1962
And who would want that?
A confrontatiOn mtght be
emottonally sattsfymg for a few
days or weeks for some people but It
would be destructtve to the natonal
mterest and the se&lt; unty of the
Untied SUites
It s on I) a guess of co use but 1t s
JUSt posstble that observation wa s
deltvered wtth some spectftc peopl&lt;
m mmd Such as severa l members of
that h1ghly pollt1cal body the Un1ted
States Senate
Sen Henry M Jackson D-W ash
for one has been reading Cuba as
an 1ssue made to order for a

,.,u

demonstrat ton of preSidential
leadership Only II ts leadershtp of
the order that would compet the
&amp;!VIet;; to pull out not only thetr com
bat bngade but submannes planes
and vtrtuallv everyt hmg else
stattoned on the tsland short of em
bassy guar&lt;l.s m Havana
There ts none of this m the ne"
Cuban perspechve But the national
securtl) " b) no means tgnored
what Wlth stepped up survetllance of
So\let forces on the tsland
establishment of a ne" Canbbean
Task Force expanded rruiiU!ry
maneuvers 10 the regton and for
good measure a remforced U S
naval presence In the Indtan Ocean
And JUSt COinCidentally l( has been
announced that Secretary or Defeo
se Harold!{' Brown IS gomg to Olina
to d1scuss m1litary matters rever
stng a poli() of avoidi ng the touchy
lopt c with the SO\ tets touch test
ne1ghbor
But nothing belligerent 111 thiS
rnmd }ou Siner the bngade tssue ts
certaml) no reason fur a return to
tl1&lt; cold war
Meanwhile back In the Senate a
powerful member L'5 ha\i mg som e
dJfftcult) keepmg poltttcs and ar
senals separate Frank Church D
Ida
chatrman of the Foretgn
Kelatwns Commmttee turned an tn

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Wafters
NASHUA N H I NEA I - Desp1te
all the brave tail&lt; about grass root.
drarts or presidential candidates a
successful wnte tn campatgn on
behalf or any candJdate Wlll be a d tf
flcult U!sk &lt;n next years ftrst
pnmary electwn
One c1llzen group m New Ham
pshire already has mounted an
elaborate campatgn to draft Sen
Edward
M
Kennedy
of
Massachusetts m the Democrattc
pnmary and another ts fonrung to
promote former Prestdent Gera ld H
Ford 10 the Republican pnmary
Kennedy probably will make a
public commitment pnor to Dec 'l:l
the last day to ftle for a postllon on
the offtclal ballot But Ford curren
tly appears to be watltng for an out
pourmg of grass-roots support to
carry him mto the race
Wrtte-111 enthusiasts regularly ctte
the techniques two notable su&lt;
cesses m recent New Hampshire
prunanes - the Vlctones o~ Am
haSSJ!dor Henry Cabot Lodge 1n the
1964 Hepubltcan contest and
Prestdent I yndon B Johnson m the
1968 Democrallc race
In those days, New Hampshtre
relied heavtly on paper ballots that
made tt easy to wnte m the name of
an undeclared candidate But times
have changed, and neJ&lt;t year ap
proxunalely 40 percent of the states
precmcts wlll be usmg voting
machines
That mcludes the state s four
btggest cthes Manchester
Nashua, Concord and Portsmouth as well as the towns or Exeter and
Hudson
Olstmg a wnte-m vote on a
machine IS a complex process m
volvmg sliding Wllldows pulting
levers and vartous other maneuvers
And unifonn mstructton sheets are
useless because the SIX communtl!es
have different types of machines
some mechamcal and others computer-based

PRIMARYSRO
Although the new~ llllllion Hilton
Hotel m the small oonunuruty of
Merrimac N H , doesn 1 offlaally
open unttl this month, contenders m
the 1!180 prestdentlal campaign have
1

teUtgence leak on the SoVIet bngade
Into a publ!ctty nver back m August
Now he welcomes SoVIet assurances
that there wtll be no bu1ld up of the
bngade Rut something more
be necessary if the SA! T II treaty
IS not to be reJected b) the Senate
That something may be for
theommg although not from the
Husstans
Agam cotnCJdentally, the Wh1te
House has dectded to approve con
structwn of a new nuclear-powered

been 1ockeymg for weeks to reserve
the ballroom on the ntght of New
Hampshire s Feb 26 first m the
nation prunary
In m1d-8eptember supporters of
Sen
F.dward M
Kennedy
D - Mass placed the first cla!ffi on
the ballroom and two dozen guest
rooms tn the hotel located m1dwa)
between Manchester and Nashua
Ten days later, campa1gn offlctals
representmg both Prestdenl Carter
and former Olltfornta Gov Honald
Heagan made surular request. but
were told by Michael Fairweather
the hotel s sales Slrector that Ken
nedy s backers had the ftrst clatm
In the commurul) or Bedford
etght rrules to the north every room
m the Sheraton Wayfarer Hotel has
long been reserved ror the entire two
weeks pnor tu the prunary ac
eording to Susan Greenberger the
hotel s sales dtrector
Many of those rooms will be oc
cupted by lelevJston network em
ployees NBC News ts plannmg to
broadcast the Today show live rrom
the hotel and CBS probably wtll
ong-mHte 1ts evemng news program
from there
The hotel sold out a llt ts rooms ror
the 1900 preiJnmary penod way
back m February 1976 That s when
the net works were tn New Ham
pshire for the last pres1dentJal
prtmaf)

PROS FOR FORD
If fomier P·es1dent Gerald H
Ford dectdes to make a b1d for the
Hepubltcan prestdenUal norrunat10n
a team of highly respected
professiOnal adviSers ts available to
manage his campatgn
1
That group mel udes Doug!liS
Bailey a partner tn the Washmgton
consulting hrm of Batley Dear
dourff and
Associates , the
orgaruzal!on that produced Ford s
televtston conunerc1al.s m the 1976
prestdenl!al race
Also expected to JOIIl Ford s semor
campatgn staff if he dectdes to make
the run ts Stuart Spencer, a Olllrorrua consultant who was a partner .n
the two-man management finn that
launched Ronald Reagan's pohttca'
career

supercarner Thts

LS

lhe earner the

Navy and congressiOnal leaders
wanted mcluded m the new budget
but which was re1ected as a waste of
resources
The pres1dent at budget-wntmg
tune could not seem to rmd a smgle
advtser who told me that we ought to
go ahead wtlh a nuclear-powered
a1rcraft earner
Fresh adVIce tt ts reported, found
the earner a means of securmg
Senate support for contm ued
econonul sanctiOns against Zlffi
babwe Hhodesta
Offhand there would seem to be
no log1cal cmmechon between a
nuclear ramer and Zimbabwe
Hhodesta although there rrught be
wtth a nuclear weapons treaty But
then the deaiiSn t a matter of logtc
but of pohttcs
Pollt1cs that ts as m playmg Or
as the late great and pollhcally
astute labor leader Stdney Hillman
put Il
Poll tics IS the sCJeree of how who
gets what, when and why
You certamly do have to hand 1t to
J tnuny Carter

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Adrrutted-Goos1e Grant Vmton,
Ollhenne Hoach Middleport Carol
Gardner, New Haven, Norma
Evans Portland Wtlltam Taylor
Pomeroy Reatnce Blake, Hac me,
Shirley Ables, Racme IJnda Lute
Pomero)
Discharged-Mary Derenberger
!JUte Adams Carol Wmes

PISCES

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernrce Bede Osol

Rep Philip Crane or IIJtnOIS
announced hts candtdac} for the
Hepubltcan preSJdenltal nommatwn
Aug 1 1978 Others have been
campatgn"'g roc at least as long
A lesson that may have been lost
oo those who lust for the White
House IS that the leadmg contenders
for Doth maJor party nommatwn s
an the unannounced candtdates Pres1dent Carter and Sen Edward
\1 Kennedy among the Democrats
and Ronald Reagan among the
Hepubiica ns
The 1980 campa1gn has been gotng
on so long no one ts cert.am wht-n at
began
Some poiitJcal histortans would
date tl to the first speakmg lrtp Sen
Bob Dole H Kan made arter the
last vote was counted m the 1976
election
Dole was the vtce prestdenllal
cand1date on the losmg Republican
ttcket and he lost no tune 1n takmg
so undmgs ror a race for the top spot
oo the 1980 ticket
A few rev1ston1st h1stonans mtght
go so far as to date the start of the
1980 campatgn to the tune, maybe 20
or more years ago when Harold
Stassen percetved that 1980 m1ght be
a good year for one more try at the
Wlut e House
Whatever date IS agreed upon as
the start of the 1980 campaign the
trend
ts clear
pres1dentaal
cand1dates soon may start to

announct more than four years
ahead of time

new Prt!mler Alexei Kosygm was

One car was heavtly damaged and
tts driver was ctted to mayors court
as the result of an acctdenl on W
Mam St Pomeroy at 2 55 am
Tuesday
Pomeroy Police sa1d a car driven
by Mtchael Conley, Salyersvtlle
Ky went out of control and struck a
utility pole
Conley told police he fell asleep at
the wheel He was Cited on reckless
operation charges He did escape m
JUry

(Feb

20~M•r

20)

assocrate cklar the matter uD as
qutckly as possible Differences
should not be permrtted to take

ARIES fMar~h 21 April 11) tt s

rmpor1ant to take your responsi
btl t1es serrously today and not
allow w1shlui think ng to cloud
your JUdgment Do your fOb and
e'lerylh ng etse will take care or
fA,nl

20-May

20)

Th1s com 1ng year a cham ot
small unusual happenings could
NotiCe ot Elect ton
ltnk somettung worthwhrkl ano
on Ta• le~y '"
rewarOmo Don I desprse the
excess ot the Ten
•ntluence of lillie tt11ngs
Mtll Llmttaton
LleRA (lop! 23-0ct 23) You
NOTICE 1S hereby grven
may be much too hard on your
that tn pursuance of a
self tOday and thrs could actua
Resolutron of th e Board of
ly contnbute to the nsgatrve role
Trustees of the Townshrp of
you are env1s1omng Be as kind OIJVe Mergs County Of"lro
to yourself as you would t&gt;e lo passed on me 2nd day of
Aprtl 1979 there wrll be
others Find out mcxe of what
subm rtted to a ~ate of the
lies ahead lor you m the ')'ear tot
towmg your brrthday by sendmg people of sad Townshtp at
dGenera l ELECTION to be
tOr your copy of Astra Graph
held rn the Townshtp of
Letter Malt S 1 tor each to Aatro
Grapt1 Bo.1. 489 Radro City Oltve Ot'1ro at the r~ular
Station NY 10019 Be sura to pla ces of vottng therern on
Tuesday the 6th day of
speci fy Drrth date
19 79
th e
SCORPIO (Oct 24 Nov 22) II Nov e mber
y&lt;ru h&amp;'le to put on 11us to teet questron of evyrng rn ex
cess of
the ten mtll
com fortable wrth people today
lrmrtatton for t he benet 1 of
you re wtth the wrong Crowd
Olr ve Townshrp for the pur
Select pals who are your equala
0: prov rdtno emd
SAOITTAIIIU8 (No¥ 23-Doc 211 pose
m~tnfarn t no
ftr e
ap
Your chances for ach ev1ng what
appf1ances
you go after 1oOay are very paraatus
butldrngs or s tes therefor
promuung The one fly •n the
or sources of wafer supply
orntment however coutO be a
and mater rals therefor or
tackadarslcal attrtude
the
es1abl shment and
CAPRICORN (Dec 22 J~ 1t) m~rntenance of lrnes off re
Dea only rn realttles today Be alarm
telegraph or the
wary ol playrno hunches Your payment
of permanent
logrc rs cnsp and sharp but you
part trme
or
volunteer
nturtrve perceptrons co u ld firemen or frr e ftghttng
mislead you
companres to operi!!lte the
AQUARIUS (Jan ~F.t» 1t) II same or to pur chas.e am
you are manaorng som8th no bulance equtpment or to
where monfty rs rnvotved tor provtde
ambulance or
another tooay be sure t o keep emergency medrc al ser
accurate record s so there won 1 V1ces operated by a frre
be an., mtsundf'rstand nas ta ter
department or trre ftghtrng

company
Sa rd fax berng an ad
d rttonal tax at O.S mill •a
run tor Ftve (S) years at a
rate not eKceedtng 0 S m1tls
PROBATE COURT OF
for each one dollar of
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
~aluattan
whrch amounts
ESTATE OF BERTHA T lo ftve ce nts for each one
LASHER DECEASED
hundred
dollars
at
NOTICE OF
valua fron tort ve years
APPOINTMENT
The Polls tor sa td Ele&lt;:
OF FIDUCIARY
I ron wtll open at 6 JO
On Oc Iober 9th 1979 rn o c loc k A M and remain
th e Mergs County Probatp open unttl 6 30 o clock PM
Court
Case No
22840 Eastern Slandard Ttme ot
Margaret Ttfus
R o
sa rd day
Rutland
Ohro
was ap
By order of the Board of
potnfed J:xecutrrx of the E lee t tons of Metgs County
estate o~rgaret Trtus
OhtO
deceased late of Rutland
Ernest A Wrngett
Townshtp Mergs County
Cha•rman
Of'ltO
Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
Dated October 12 1979
IIO J 16 13 30 ( 11 15 o!!tc

""

post Krushchev

The Senate Rules
Committee
announced
that
conftrmallon hearmgs for Vtce
Prestdent
des tgnate
Nelson
Rockefeller would reconvene after
the CongressiOnal elections
One year ~go Car..J nal Karol
Woitvla was elected Pope m a
conclave m the Vatican and took the
name John Paul ll
Toda) s birthdays
Hettred
Supreme Court Justice Wtlllam
Douglas ts 81 Sen C11fford Hansen
of \1 yommg " 67 Actress Angela
l.ansbun 1s 54
Thought for loda) How vast a
memor} has Love 1 - Alexander
Pope 1168&amp;-17441

Someone rn your SOCillrl wcie
would have you lhm k I hal dorng
what yoo know to be correct
could work against you It a not
true Sitek to your pr nciplea
GEMINI (May 21-Ju,.. 20) Be
reatlatic concern ng !hose you
deal with today Trying !o con
vlnce yourself that :K&gt;meone has
more to oNer than htt or she
does could lay 111 heavy buroen

""'""
CANCER

(June

21 July

22)

Some

necessary thtnga may
have to be sad today so don t

try to trdettep !he Issues by pre
tend•ng you re too busy to go
rnto the matter at this time

LEO (July 23-Aug 22) Walch
your spending loday It could be
very easy to sell your&amp;eff on the
dea you need somethrng you
truly don 1

VIRGO

(Aug

23

Sept

22)

Unleu the efforts you expend ror
others tOday are made because
you really want to you 11 inwardly
resent them Don t be phony to
yourllell or to them
(N[WSP ... PER UHERPR15t: "'SSN

Nottce of Election
on Tix Levy tn
excess of the Ten
Mill L•m•tatton
NOTICE 15 hereby gr~en
that tn pursuan ce of a
Resolutron of the Board of
Trustees of I he Townshrp of
Chester tn M etgs County
Ohro passed on the lOth
day of July 1979 there w&lt;ll
be submttted to a .tote of
the people of sard Towns h p
at a General ELECTION to
be held tn the Townstup ot
Chester
Ohto
at the
regular places of votmg
therem on Tuesda.,. the
6th day of November 1979
the questton ot le vy ng rn
excess of the ten mrfl
llmrtaton for the benefrt of
Chester Townshrp for the
purpose o f pro~o~rdmg and
ma rnlatntng
ftre
ap
paratus
appl1an ces
but ldtngs or srtes therefor
or sources of water supply
and mater &lt;als therefor or
the establ shment and
ma ntenance of l rnes Of frre
alarm telegraph or the
pa.,.ment ol permanent
part t tm e
or
vo funt t"er
firemen or ftre frghtrng
companres to operate the
s.ame or to purchase am
bulance equtpment or to
provrde
ambulan ce or
emergency medrcal ser
vrces operated by a f re
department or trre frghlrng
companv
Sa1d laK be ng a renewal
of an e'XtSflng tax ot 0 4 mrll
to run for Ftve (5) year~ af
a rate nor e'Xceearng 0 4
mills for each one doHar ol
valuatron whtch amounts
to tour ce nts for each one
hundred
dollars
of
vatuat ron for F rve years
The Polls for sad Elec
t•on wtll open at 6 30
o'clock A M and remarn
open untf 6 30 a clock P M
Ea~tern Standard Ttme at
sa1d day
By order of the Board of
E lecftons of Mergs County
Ohro
Ernest A Wtngelt
Cha rman

held tn the Townshtp of
Orange
Oh10
at the
regular place of vottng
theret n on Tuesday the
6th day of November 1979
the questton of levytng '"
eKcess of the ten mtll
llm1tat10n for the benef1t o1
Orange Townsh1p for the
purpose of provtdrng and
marntalntng
ftre
ap
paratus
appltances
bUIIdtngs or stfes therefor
or sources of water supp ly
and m~terrals therefor or
the establrshment and
marntenance of ltnes ot t~re
alarm telegraph or the
payment of permanent
part ttme
or
volunteer
firemen or f1re ftghttng
compan tes to operate t he
same or to purchase am
butance equtpment or to
provrde ambulance or
emergency med1cal ser
~o~tces operated by a ftre
department or f1re frghttng
company
Satd tax be1ng a renewal
of an extst1n~ tax of 0 8 mtll
to run for ft\/e years at a
rate not eKceedrng 0 8 mtlls
for each one doffar Of
valua t•on whtch amounts
to etght ce nts for each one
hundred
dollars
of
va1uat1on for F1ve years
The Poll~ for sard Elec
tron w II open at 6 lO
o clock AM and rema•n
~n untl 6 30 o c lock P M
Eastern Standard Ttme of
s.a1d day
By order of the Board of
E teet ons of Me1gs County
Oh o
Ernest A Wrngett
Chatrman

Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
Dated October 12 1979

Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
Dated Oct 12 1979

&lt;IOJr613 30 ( 11 ) 5 4t c

r-------------------------

1

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mo&lt;IT"
~-lo!t.or.
I N • *• ot &lt;~ oat "~b,..
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I &amp;Mm ~ 1r.. ~-·IIILJ~o • .,... •&amp;~~•• • \am"''
I .,.. • •~t. 1&lt;1 .. _
,..t&gt;l ••~"' u ~ .
,. ._,

'

1

I ..........

1

I

r 1\ e ) ears ago

October 17 1171

Robert E Buck
Probate Judg e
Clerk
IIO)r613 30 3rc

a

go\emmcnt

Should a mrsunclerstandlng ansa
today between }IOU and a cloSft

rtsetr
TAURUS

Todav In History
The Associated Press
foday ts Tuesday Oct 16 the
289th dav of 1979 There are 76 days
left m the year
Today s htghllght m history
On lhts date m 1964 Chma became
Ule ftfth world nuclear power
announcmg lhaltt had tested tls hrst
(jtom 1c weapon
On thts date
In 17911 the fltstnct of Col umbia
was established as the permanent
captlal of the Untted States
In 1793 French Queen Mane
Anlmnette was beheaded
lo 1940 as world hostlhlle s
mcreased the Unltt'!l States banned
hirther steel and scrap tron sales to
Japan
~~ 1941, the Germans captured the
f!usSian Cit) of Odessa
In 1970 Anwar Sadat became
prestdent of Egypt succeedJng the
late Gamal Abdul Nasser
In 1973 the Nobe l Peace Pnze was
awarded to the men who concluded
the V1etnam cease-ru-e agreement
Secretary of State Henrv Ktssmger
and North VIetnamese ncgottator Le
Due Tho
I en years ago Tht&gt; Sovu~t Unton s
B)

furnun~

root

A
'Your
~'Birthday

dWtk odor., and ts IS summed up m

a smgle queslton that people may be
afraid to ask even themselves Wtll
h"1or) repeat ttself"
~or those who went through the
October 1929 slot~ market collapse
and the Great Depression of the
1930s the memones are bemg
revtved For those born smce the
unagmatton 1s bemg roused almost
as VIVIdly
!'he thoughts accompany them to
work to football games Warnes
reveal themseJves 1n barroom
arguments A number of people
octually are heedmg the adVIce of
alarmtsts to stach away canned
goods
Amenca ts observmg the :;oth
anntversar) In a way that tt seldom
does for tts great defeal' and the
deft!at of Jls economic system was at
least as destructtve as a huge

Notrce of E lectton
on Tax Levy •n
Excess of the Ten
M•ll Ltmttaflon
NOTICE ts hereby g1ven
that rn pursuance of a
Resolulon of the Board of
Trustees of the Townshtp of
Orange
Metgs County
Ohro passed on the 2nd day
of J uf y 1979 there wrll be
submt tf ed to a vote of the
people of satd Townsrup at

a General ELECTION to be

I rQ J 16 13 J{) CrJ I

5 •tc

I t.o-

&lt;l!wl-o&lt;~ lrrr

1 -r.. •••••..,.••
I

PI' - •1

k- ~"' • r ... o&lt;!..,

:

1
1

I

1

Wants settlement
I think the strike should be settled
The students are ITWISIIlg out on
everything and they just keep gJvmg
us excuses They could bend or
change the rules but tt doean ~even
seem like they care
I know education IS lffiportant but
don 1 you think we look back on whal
we have accomphshed m our ac
tiVJties
Well this year we can look back and
see nothing because we were
depn ved of our chance
They want us to make up these
days but, why should we' We 1&lt;&gt;~1 out
on our activities and there IS no way
to make those up' You hear people
say all activities should be stopped
Why don't they put themselves m
ow- shoes and see how they would
feel? NOT VERY HAPPY• - Kellie
Rough!, 158 !Jncoln Hill, Pomeroy

Councilman ft'~'&gt;ponds
Dear Editor
I am wnting

In rebuttal to Mr
Roger Davidson s
Dear Mr
Editor" article recently pubhched m
Sunday 's paper
The article was headlined Still
Against Levy" and stgned Sincerely
It seems Mr DaVIdson's political
candidate doesn't know'any of the
facts about the levy or he wouldn'
have wntten the letter and how
could he be smcere when he doesn't
take the tune to fmd out'
All he did was wnte a letter trying
to get voter support usmg an unportant tax tsBue as his crutch
The facts have prevtoUBiy been
available to anyone who wants
them If Mr Davtdscn was sincere
he would have attended the publi~
meetmg held earlier this and Carla
Otlchester, juruors, Tom Harrtsand
Nancy Samos, seruors, Eddie Holter
wtth Queen Sheila, seniors, Blair
Wmdon and Roberta Larkms
seruon~ and Deron Jewett and
thia White, freslunen At the front
are tiny attendants Angle Murphy
and Aaron Wl!oon

Syn:

·-···SPmAL-.
BAKEDLWGIIA •

- - - TIIS
•

•

I

I
,..,....,

golden brow"
bun ... lttS

1

I 7f

•

TO GO ONLY

i&amp;ltiiSi
IAiiiAiii 11
~~

I P ( orrP~fJotHif!n t
BALTIMORE I AP 1
As the
World Senes wmds down let s take
time out to present the Abner
Doubleday Awards for umqu e and
transcendental performances
The Babe Huth Baseball Is Fun
Award W1ll1e Stargell Ptrates who
bumps and carnes on a dialogue
With every enem} batsman who
VISits hun at ftrst base
The
Cmcmnau Reds complamed to the
league orhce and I gut a
repnmand
says the 38-year-old
Pittsburgh captam and mottvatOJ
I told them to Jum p ut the lake I
pla,y for fun
The
Htch
Allen I m
Misunderstood
Award
Bill
Madlock
Ptrates
labeled a
clul&gt;'louse lawyer and troublemaker
With both the Chtcago Cubs and San
Franctsco Giants emer~ as the
popular and se lf-dfacuJ~tar or the
Nallonal League Champtons Wtth
rune h1ts m 18 at bats the last hve m
a row) he IS the prune candidate for

MYP
The Bobbv Ftscher Computer
Bram Award
Manager Earl
Weaver Onoles The little held
general s chess mo\es pte king the
nght ptnch-lutter and the proper
reller pitcher at the nght tlffie has
astounded experts Half-luck) and
half gemus perhaps but let s face tl
- guys make the1r own luck
The Manassa Mauler ,\ward for
dJamond pugtiisrn Rtck Dempse)
Onoles catcher &amp;-feet and 184
pounds of pore fury He throws hts
body m front of wtld p ttches digs
errant balls out of the dtrt feuds
wtth hts ptlchers and when
something goes wrong destroys the
water cooler a nd starts helmets and
bats flymg The Ortoles have
learned to duck
The Wtll1run Shakespeare ;\ward
for PretentiOus and Ponttftcal
Rhetortc
The TV and radt o
announcers who contmue to try to
unpress us wtth high.falutm words
like veloctt} and locatton when
they mean a fast ball low and on
the outstde corner Th~&gt; despite the
gentle rebuke by ColumniSt Russell
Raker of the New York Times
The
D1zzy Dean flaHtness

A"ard Don SU!nhouse 1 SU! n the
Man Unusual 1 Ortoles r e lief
Pilcher Although hts World Senes
perfocmance didn t measure up to
that m the playoffs hiS Harpo Marx
hatr style stuffed gortlla and ghb
commentary sttll added com tc rehef
to an aggra\atmg week of raw
s now
bttler cold and general
frustratiOn
The Jack Arm s trong Wtthout
Blem1sh Award Chuck Tanner
manager of the Pirates No All
Arnen ca n bov, but an All Amen can
man
gractous
frtendly
constderate 111 face of the severest
stram Class w1th a capita l C
The
Aw Shucks' Modes ty
Award K1ko Garcta Baltimore
shortstop m the rUJU1mg for MVP
who says Thev should gtve the car
to e1ther The Bird who represents
all of us or make tt a 25 passenger
bus It s been a team JOb
!'he
Why Watch The-Dame'
Award Wild BtU Hagy the human
alphabet who delights Onolcs fan s
from the top of the dugout better
than most of the Moppets "ho have
'"' aded baseball - Baitlffiore s The
Rtrd The Ptrate Parrot The
Chtck&lt;n Ph1l11e Phanattc and
Atlanta s Bleacher Creature et c
l'&lt;owadays the game appears
undressed tf 11 doesn t have a clown
Pmch Me-Qwck Before-!
The
Wake Up Award Tun Stoddard
Or1oles &amp;-7, 235-iJound rel!er pitcher
and fug1t1ve from the basketball
court who got the first and only htt
of hiS ftve.year professtonal career
m Saturday s stx1un e1ghth mnmg
I forgot what a spm nmg baseball
looked hke he sa1d
The Teddy Roosevelt Carry a
B1g.St1ck Award Dave Parker
Piratesnght fielder a &amp;-5 230-pound
monster highest pa1d player m
baseball at n•arly $1 m1lllon a year
who has all the mgredlents or
llfeatness - speed fme ann power
at the plate ded1catwn and
confidence
I am the best sa)s
B1g Dave wtth a com plete candor
I should wm the Tnple Crown
1 battmg average home runs RBI 1
every year

I

I

Otnner w;th

Sports World

I

! ···~=-n
e5i! i

•

Od 16 1'17~

TodJJy's

n11lltary loss It ca rvwt forget
Newspapers are !tiled wtth
recollections w1th compansons
between then and now, w1th
assurances warnmgs and roreeasts
f, vangehsts of survtval have made
the best-seller lists No depressiOn
for them
What about the question? To begm
wtth we are assured that things
today are not as they were m 1929
Stock market credit, fer example
1s more reslnct1ve, Since 1974, a
buyer must put up at least 5U percent
of the purchase pnce In the 1920s
some buyers pyramided twy
In&gt; estrnents mto huge portrohos
You cant do that today, say the
optumsts But others continue to see
s tmtlartlles
Julian
Snyder
publisher
of
Internattonal
Moneyhne
an
econom1c
newsletter suggests we hav e
merely changed credit styles
Today, you can do the same thmg
1speculate 1 With the recently
"'traduced put and call opttons and
you can buy a $1 nulhon Treasw-y
Btll futures contracts m Ch1cago for
as little as $800
BeSides Snyder observes stock
debt IS but a part or the picture
In dust nal countries are borroWJng
btlllons to rmance energy Imports
And advanced nations such as the
Umted States are lendmg billions to
less developed nations - money that
mtght never be repaid
Housmg debt IS also a b1gger
factor today than m the 192lls Until
recently tt was posSible to borrow 90
percent of the purchase price and
pay the rest over 30 years at less
than the prun~ mterest rate
Those who publicly promise that
history won t repeat ttself probably
have left themselves a prtvate
mental hedge, It bemg that htstory
woo t repeat Itself ll1 prectsely the
manner of r" e decades ago
That however leaves much
unsatd and that area 1f filled With
speculation by the those who believe
econom tes fluctuate m olf-) ear
waves The latest crest they warn
ts about w SJnash oo the rocks
But the only fu lly truthful
statement that can be made about
the who)e mess and economtsts
general mncede that the world
economy 1s tn a mess ts that nobody
knows what the future holds

NEW YOHK I API - There ts a
forebodtng an angst that dmgs hke

Tuesday

Garvey calls NFL
survey a fraud ...
NEW YOKK 1AP I- The NatiOnal
FootbaU L.eague owners have come
up wtth another survey showmg how
well rree agency works but Ed
(rarve; executive director of the
NFI Players Association angnly
denounced It
It s a fra ud a total fraud sa1d
Garvey when told of the survey
Tilt:~ system lS nut workutg ond tt
has never "or ked - absolutely not
The NFI Management Counctl
released Monday the results of a
sw-vey It had cmducted showmg
that the 93 pla)ers who became free
agents on ~ eb I 1979 and s1gned
1979 NFI contracts receiVed an
average salary tncTease of 'l:/9
percent According to the owners
group these players salartes rose
from $58,41lm 1978 to $74 623 m 1979
an mcrease of $16,312
For the second strrught year
salary hgures show conclustvely
that the NFI s free agent system ts
workmg
well
satd
Paul
Sonnabend executive director of the
NFLMC
Our free agent system provtdes
veteran rree agents the opportunity
to test thetr market value wtth other
teams Through this system free
agents are rec e1vmg stgntflcant
salary mcreases he said
But that s not the way Garve) sees
ll

Not a Single player swttched
teams under the free agent system
he sa td from hts oHtce 111
Washmgton
Very few or the 93
received any offers at all and
whenever a player received an oFfer

tt was matched by his old teaJII
Why don t teams btd for veterans
who become free agents')
II s all due to tillS consptracy
among the owners
Garvey
charged Wh} sho uld they btd for
anyont&gt;') The ownen are m a
post tlon v. here the} are making so
much money one or two free agents
doesn t make any mrference
lrok at a guy ltke Too Tall
Jones added Garvey referrmg to
the former Dallas star who rellred
from football this summer to pursue
a career m bonng
Clearly the
Washmgton Re&lt;l.skins can use hun
Rut they make S5 9 million from TV
and r adw and another $5 mtlllon or
more rrom ticket sa les so why
should they bother to sign him '
There s no mcent1ve ~ the; ve
achteve-d total SOCiali sm among Ule
owners
Garvey pomted out that m the
thn.&gt;e years the current system has
been m effect 240 players became
free agents 17 rece1ved offers from
other teams and only one swttched
clubs - derens1ve back Norm
Thompson who went from St 1..ou1s
to Baltunore
It s all due to one thmg - the
owners agreed among themselves
that the opt1on c la11se was renewable
for hve years l the duratwn of the
agreement wtth the NFLPA) sa1d
Garvev Ow- poSition 1s that Jt Is
renewable fer only one year after
whtch a player becomes totally
free
Heanngs un tlus mat~r begm next
Monday before arbttrator Bert
1 us kin

High school grid ratings
COLUMBUS Ohto (AP)
How a
starewtde panel of sports wrtters
and broad~asters ra tes Ohto hrgh
school football teams thrs week for
The Assoc tated Press ( 10 potnts for
ftr~t to 1 po&lt;nt tor 10th)

CLASS AAA
I Ctncrnnatt Moeller 6 0 286 potn

"2 MaSSillOn 6 0 227

J Youngstown Mooney I 0 194
• Sandusky 7 0 r16

5 WestervtlleNorth 70111
6 {Tte) Clnctnnatr Pr1n ce ton 51
and Dover 7 0 105
8 Parma Padua 6 1 S8
9 Etyna 60 &lt;7
10 Zanesville 6 1 4A
Other schools r-ecer~rng 10 or me
pornrs 11 Canton Met&lt; nley 3.c 12
North C8nton Hoover 27 1J Clavton
Northmont 26 lA YoungstOwn Soulh
23
15
Upper Arllnglon 19
r6
Ma cedonta Nordonta 18 1l Oregon
Clay 17 18 Akron Buchtel 15 19
(tiel
B od rdman
and
West
Carrollton 13 21 Fremont Ross Li

'12 Ravenna 11 ?J Cen ter vrlle 10
CLASS AA
r 51 Marvs 7 0 119

Weaver~

Tan11er different strategists

BAI liMO!{!
\1 I
Ill&lt;
I I
S(rll S wn lll.'r sttllt s 111 cloubt
but UFil lhtng IS 1bVIUU S lhP
ilidfiH.: ttt Lall) OI-JIXJSttl IJoe rsur~td tlt l:-i
and bltSt:'ball ps\&lt; holog\ uf th~ lw 1
tilt II pulltn ~ tht: st 1tngs from lht
ben&lt; h
I arl Weaver mana ~ ~:r uf lh L
Amt.: rt t on
I eague
t hampwn
B.altunore Onoles IS an unorthoUu x
strategtst dt&gt; t ach~:d from hts
players subtly sa rcastic supremely
confident He s patJent waits for U1e
oppostlton to makt&gt; a rmstake
Chuck Tanner rteld boss of lh&lt;
NatiOnal League Ptttsburgh Ptrales
rs a perenmal optumst He must
have been born wtth a srrule frozen
on hts face He rarely cntlctzes hts
plavers He manages by the book
He s one of the boys &lt;Jmong hts
players
At the moment Weaver has tht
edge H1s Onoles lead the Sene&gt; i 2
wtUt the stxth game scheduled for
Baltimore s Memonal Stadtum
tomght a seventh here Wednesda y tf
necessar) Tht&gt; opposmg pll ch~; r s tn
Game Stx are Jun Palmer for
Baltunore and John Candelarta for
Pittsburgh
Weaver who got hts f1rst maJOr
league managenal JOb \oi,Jth tht
Ortoles tn 1968 has the credentwls to
back hts approach w the game lk
has won five Amertcan Lt~ agut:
pennants s1x East Dtvtslon tttles
and one World Sertes He has bc&gt;en
first or second 10 tunes m 12 seasons
Tanner began managmg wtth the
Y.. &lt;rhJ

WI

( lr1

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I\

x 11 I J l
tr Tit lrltt t

Sc

t

tpp1trttl l t ~ lup

drttt

pl&lt;:t}'IJi g

sltnl&lt;i \\llh Mllwaukt t

tl

11d

1\lt!lnl

111

th

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( ubs l1tvt'lalltJ and tl' ( rlrf
Wht~t

Ang t:l -. lk htld tht

tr

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r111 t

Sox jOb

tJIIOUgli 1'1 75 thtll taktn g I \ l r tlh
t )&lt;Jk l;md fl. s for orH s.!ason
llh Ptratt: s trdtlcd 1 CJt(_ t t r McHlll\
Son gull len nnd $.100 000 It tht A ~ t n

thur !IICHl&lt;J~ tr Ill
Ol'l t of b&lt;:J St'balJ S ITlOrL \UlUSUdi
dtctls lllts ~ear ht' won hts ftr st
Nattunol l..t:i:lgUt' tttll' :-..l &lt;JW ht s
frH t"(l wtth ' om mg bat k f1u111 n ~ 1
dt ftut tn C::l World SHit:~ 1 f~.io~l
au.ompl1shed tn C::l st \ l' lt gai!Jt
&amp; nes b~ JU St U1n: t lt:: ams
1anner talks about mo llt'Jltwn
and playm g tht game b) Llll hook
Ht brags that he lul s the ~ st 2!) man
roster tn bas.t:ball l-It: pr eat ht: s
tDgethemess a&lt;i an tngred tent m
wmn1ng Ht works on tht: t:mottonal
fot.:lor not too ht~h when yo u "1n
not too low when you loSt! IJunng
tht: ~amt ht: s a stotr
fanner IS the ma~1~r of lht c lu hl'
Ht: lctlks about no tomm ruw ~ lxl cks
w the wall the wtll of tile man
upstair s never qutt w1n ont.: gamt.:
c1t o tunt etc H1s office even bt fan:
a World Str tes gamt IS opt'n to
fru.: nds The) bnng hun vdn ~: and
chtc_ kcn s He rewards th..:m .,.,1th
Ptratt s hats o (.'heerful YHkUIIll
and don t forget to cumt la.dLk
goudb&gt; e
Wcavtr h£Js that S&lt;ilt\ rather than
&lt;Ountr) bo) dpproa ch II&lt; s ""
c bL.:t tn

f cmnt.t &lt;:t s

Jll " r , "' IJ~ f 111 n ganu H1 s offu' IS
! li! l ! l n '
t IH \.
ttld\ In -,otJJt
~ ! \ 1.., pt ph (or&lt; l t nt.:Ll v. th tht
h 1 tH
! Itt\ \ ilk .tb JU\ tJ t JUb tll
I 111 d
\ \
(1 \1 1
i' J:'\ts tht ltr lt up t11~.:n
Irk " '"lll(lttt t nlrul Hf tht K dlllt:
lit -.. t" rllf\UU'-.dS&lt;il£\tttJ ISt JIJ\ &lt;I
bt~ d Jg
S tr!Ilt tlrll t.'S 111
I Ullal
-..ttu 111ort s IH (0'-Lr s hts t~t:s or
~ dk -. 11 1 tht: tunn-.:: J lt Hdlng to lh . :
&lt;

Jubhuu~

Jlln\llg b \ Lh t.: pt.:rt u ta gt s 1s
J!ht r W&lt;:t\ tht'st&gt; ftdd bo sses
dtfft r rlt book ts 1 a IIH r s ( rL&gt;Uo
Wl H t r I &lt;Jug! S &lt;Jt il
I nt H I read tht: book
Wt d'-l:l
S&lt;:lld co rlt~.:r
m th e Sen t'S
II s
Pt oplt' s Jud~rnPnt what tht hook
should bt I do what I tlunk ts thl
lo~J(CJI thml( to do at th e tlmL
Pa lmer who hod arm troub lt
dunn~ tht' regu lar seraSIJO anll
ftmshtd wtlh a 1()..6 1ero1 d started
Ull S(&gt;t ond gaml' uf tht StIll s &lt;Hld
v. a~l I 1m ol\ ed m a dt&lt; lS Ion n:-.
Pll tsburgh .... un ~ 2 Ht .,.,tnt ~vtn
11\fl lll L.:S I:::CI\t UIJ tl gh! lttls t1lld t.,., u
lllll s Ill s U\trall Stnt: s IL"lon J ts ~I
( anJtl&lt;H 1a dso h&lt;1d sur n~ ar tt
pr obl~.:m s tu go wtth ht s chrontl ba l k
LOn chtwr and was 14 9tn lht Ptrclt~: s
irt\tlotht \1 I i1Sttltlt: He V.Ctsnt
1/l\Oh· t'{J Ill d dl'LISIOil Ill tht !tagUl
It 1/ l ljJ IOil ~htp Sertt S fl lld Wil ~ till
'-'lurt~r ctnd lose r m th e thtrd g um~.: of
Ult St:rtl' S Hl .,.,tnt just th ree
tnr mgs g~\ t up stx runs a uLl t.lghth
d ll

1 iii\Jier 1/l SI SLS th&lt;:Jt ( &lt;:tll delilrttl

IS

Jets defeat Vikings, 14-7

Top Twenty
The AP Top Twenty

By The AS!oOCrCifed Press
The lop Twen fy teams n The
Assocraled Press college footba l l
poll w1th f rrsr place vo tes rn par en
theses records and fata l pornts
Po nts based on 20 l Y 18 ll lb 15 14
13 12 lr 10 9 8 7 6 5 43 1 I
l A labama
( 42) jSOO J 13)1
1 Texas
1161 14 0 01 I 313
3 Nebraska
(50 OJ I 204
4 So Calrf
(5 0 1) I 108
5 Houston
15 0 OJ 1 01 1
6 OhoState
(600) 1010
7 Flonda State
(6 0 OJ 894
8 Oklahoma
( 4 1 OJ 883
9 Notre Dame
(4 1 0) 810
10 Arkansas
( 5 a OJ 803
11 M1chrgan
(5 1 0)
746
11 washrngton
15 1 OJ 577
IJ Brrgham Young
(50 0) 497
14 Auburn
14 I OJ 370
15 NO Carolrna Sf
( 5 I 0 ) 359
16 Purdue
! 4101 7?9
17 Prttsburgt'1
(4 I 0) 147
16 Tennes~e
14 I OJ 141
19 North Carol rna
( 4 I OJ 139
1Q Nav,
ISOOI 117

Monday s Sports Transacttons
By The Assonated Pre;;

BASEBALL
Amencan League

CALIFORNIA ANGELS - S gned
Brtan Downtng ca tcher to a multt
year contra ct
CH I CAGO WHITE SOX
Srgned
To m Johnson prtcher and assrgned
h&lt; m to Iowa of the Amen can
ASSOc ratron

HOCKEY
Na t10 na I Hockey League

NEW

s gned

YORK

ISLANDERS

Br ya n Trottrer center
mult year contra c t Recalled
ders Kallur and Yvan vautour
wards from 1nd1anapolrs of the
trat. Hockey League

to a
An
tor
Cen

CLASS A
1 Newark Catholic 7 0 198
2 Ar lrngt on 7 0 161
J Cardrngton 7 0 147
4 Mogadore 1 0 134
5 Bergholz Sprrngfreld 7 0 130
6 Portsmouth Notre Dame 6 1 97
7 Cedarvdle 7 0 84
8 crooksv lie 6 1 52
9 51 Henry 7 0 38
10 Franklrn Furna ce Green 6 1 35
Other sc hools recervrng I Oor more
pornts 11 Brrllrant Buckeye Nor th
34 12 West Jefferson 31 13 M e
Donald 19 1~
(fre) Sugarcreek
Gar away and Covrngton 26 16 ( I e J
Columbus Academy and Leeton a
2-4 18 Lorarn Clearvtew 13 19 ( I e l
Chrllrcothe
Zane
Tra ce
and
Strasburg IS 21 New Phtlade(ph•a
Tuscarawas Central CathOir c 11 22
T rfftn Calvert 15
23
G.=trfteld
Herc:~ht; Trrnrfy 14 24 Ada lJ 15 Or
well Grand Valley 11 26 Bloomdrtle
Elmwood 11
27 Mrllor d Cen ter
Fa•rt&gt;anks 10

rorelllan s 1 ~ard touchdown run
With 8 24 w play Bruce Harper or
Ne" \ ork fumbled ,,nd Hobert
M1ller recove rt&gt;-d for tht' Vtkt11 gs
I ne\er heard a whtstle Grant
satd There was no whistle But
the) ne\ cr called 11 a fumble
Best des that he satd I d Manon
t tht ht&gt;rtd hn~; sman t v.a sL w smg at
our bench I m sure It was a tJAo WC:I\
street but tht ofhuals an supposed
to bt above that Sooner or later
vou H gd to comt:' to Krtps "'1th tht s
prublern
Still (,rant couldn t den) that all
tilt.: turno\~.:rs did m the V1ktng~
droppmg them to ~ ami keepmg
U1ern t ~o games behmd ftrstiJiau :•
lampa Bay tn the l'&lt;at10nal
Conferences ~ntral Dlvtslon
We g« a lot of yardage but we
d1dn t get many pcnnts he sa1d
reflectmg on Tommy Kramer s 270
}ards possmg &lt;:~gcnnst Ua leHgue s
worst pass defense
It was the brunt of the Mtnnesota
offense Kramer a thtrd year pro tn
hts f1rst season as a starter threw 48
passes - most of them short - and
completed 28 The VIktngs runnmg
game was hmtted to ;&gt;4 yards on 23
&lt;ames wtth Hlcke) Young gammg
11 yards and Foreman JUS! 13
TI1e J~ts meanwhtle rem tJn~ ball
down Mtnnesota s throats The)
gatned 183 'ards on 4 t carnes 78
)ardsb) K&lt;\10 l ro~and 54bl Cl ark
Gettnes Htd1ard Todd tilt: tar ~~ I of

Mumesola

Weave r rt.&gt;tetved some dtsturbmg
ne ws Monda) ))on Sl&lt;tnhouse h1s
fctvortlt rehe ver ts done for tile
~nes \.\ tth a ba ck ailment
fanner "hose 71l-year-old mother
Anne dted Sunday arnved Ill
Baltunore w1th the team Monday
He \\as to rt turn home m trme for
her fllilt:ral I'hw-sdav
As for the weather 10 one of the
co lde s t Senes on record the
foreca st IS for temperatures m the
lOW 40s With !Jtt[e chance or
prectptlatJOn

l"he key w t he Sertes rrom a
llalumore standpomt 1s pttchmg
"ood enough to silence the potent
l&gt;trate s baLs Pittsburgh a lthough
tJ a thn g three games to two has 61
htts Ill 180 at lxlts Baltimore has 43
fur 171
Se&lt;ond baseman Phil (,amer and
th trd base mao Bill Madlock each
" ' &lt; l11ttm g &gt;OO and outfielder Dave
Parker 429 For the Ortoles
shortstop K.Jko t.;arcta ts at 429
oulfl&lt;'lder Keo Smgleton and catcher
H1ck Dempse) each at 333

h1ts

ph\stu :t lh nad\ tu pitlh Ht: II ha\t

NF.W YORK 1AP 1 - Coach Bud
Grant dtdn I come nght out and sa)
tt but the unpllcatton was clear the
off tclatmg hurl the Minne so ta
Vtkmgs Monday rught almost as
m uch as thetr seven turn ov..:rs did
I don t think the officials did a
good JOb (,rant said arter three
fumb les and four 1nte ce pt10n S
helped the New York Jet;; post a 14 7
National Football League 11ctor)
!'he btggest problem he sa1d was
that on the k1ckoff arter Chuck

to bt agarnst a Baltunore team that
was 5!&gt;-24 at home and 34-19 vs left
hc1nder s But Ta nner wtll have all hts
p1tdter s nad\ and flgUrt:!S to reheve
carl) tf the Candyman gets Ill
troubl&lt; 1 anner used Bert Blyleven
11 1 r tl1d Sunday the ftrst tune
Bl} It'\ t n rdteved stnL~ 1972 at

CIJ

We can show
you ways to
save money
on your auto

c
=
8
CIJ

msurance-

U1t tan s wraU1 for what tht'\ tt l!
\'.as hts la l k of leadership earltu
thts \ear passed only U tHnt s complettng runt for 72 &gt;ar&lt;l.s
I udd scored Ne" York s ftrsl
lou(hduwn on a 3} ard rolluut JU.St
~ 56 tnto Lh+= game f1ve pia\ s aft~r
f 1m \1 o r ~:s t o rt tOH·red punt
returrllr Jtmnn Ed.., a rds fumhlt
fllt '.I.Jnntll~ putnl s l aJilt' wtt h J 15
ltft ln tht' tht rd penod when
Kraml'r u\erthrew f oreman on a
bustt.:d pass patttrn and stron~
saf~.:t\ ShCiftr Suggs mlertepted lht
h&lt;ill emU ran lt bdtk l2) aJ ds for hts
f 1r ~t pr(J touchdo'" n
r o r t lll~[) S touchdown hiS !J2nd C::I S
" Vtkmg I ted Btl! IJro\\n s club
reeurd It ca rne at the ~nd of a 7 \..
\ard.
18 p i a~ drtve C:tldt:d
unmeeisw-abl} b) unt.' penalt}
!"hat came when Donald Dykes
ran mto punter Greg Coleman to
knp Ult drtH ai TH' F IJ;!ht da\ S
ta rltt'r 0\ke~ ran tn to BaltJmort
punter Buck\ 01lls co~1 mg the Jets
a dumu• tu beat the Coils m U1e
closmg mrnutes
\1 tth the S&lt; ore 14-D l told them
1101 to do that
sa1d Coach Walt
!\11(hrt~ls of tht r. L"
Hut Donald
v.omts lo Jo tl nght cm d I tan I
condemn tht k1l1 for \HIIltmg to do (t
nght

w1thout
sac nfJcmg
protect1on
for pnce

~-

-c

DAVIS-QUICKEL
AGENCY
B!ll QUickel

Across from the
cour1house Pomeroy 0
992 4477

R&lt;pre&lt;entlnil
FEDERAL KEMPER

INSURANCE COMPANY

World Serie."i
facts, figures
world Senes
At A Glance
BY The Assooated Pre~ s
Brest-of Se't'en senes
F 1rst Game
Batt more 5 p tt~burgh 4
second Game
Pt tlsburgh 3 Ballrmore 2
Thtrd Game
Ba!Tr nore 8 p ltsburgh 4
Fourth Game
sa l!rmore 9 Prttsourgh 6
F1ffh Game
P ttsburgh
7
Baltrm ore
B a it more teads ser res J 7.
Tuesday s Game
P ttsburgh tCandetar s 1A9 l
sa 1rmore ( Palmer 10 6 ) n
wednesday s Ge~me
P ttsburQh at Ba(t more n
necessary

at

Our
Insurance Store
Motto.

.-cooo
--···TIIS SPECIAl-.

•
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BAKED LASACIA •

Otnner

wtfh

gold•n bro...,n
bun

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hrm~.:' 'ltr

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J4..,s..t,

i61n«tSi
I. illi•ii .1

t'

•u , urancc needs to The In surance Store
r !.J~1ng_ t ht: Lhan tc thai any one company
ha' all I he a n &lt;; \\Cr ~

Hc rt 11 I hL fn ,ttr lnu.: Slutc \\t.: a rc mdrpenden1 a~ents
\\ c rLrrc &lt;.. Ull a nu tnf!c 1 l) l f1ne tn'IUTCr '; - llke The Conltnenta l
In ' uanu: ( onr 111 l'' fur nample That mean5 "'e can
tnJI\ n \Oilr rr..: lJ ttrt.:men1-. anJ -.e leu the best m surance
prulu.lH.Hl lot \Ot ! ro m ma m a\aii&lt;Jble alternatl'-CS

2 Wheelersburg 6 0 165

J Hamilton Badrn 6 0 138
4 Crrcle~ r lle 6 0 128

5 Akron Sf V tncent Sf Mary 6 1
111
6 Warren Kennedy 7 0 102
1 Trenton Edgewood 6 0 92
8 Canal Fulton Northwest 7 0 82
9 Columbus Grandvtew 6 0 I 55
10 Navarre Farrless 6 1 51
Other school~ recetvtng 10 or more
pornts
11 Fostorra 25 12 (fre J
Elyr111 Catholrc Coal Grove and
Martrns Ferry 24 15 Stevben~o~•lle
2'2 16 Movnt Sterlrng Madison
Pla1ns 19 17 (fteJ Cleve land Centra l
Cathol c
Perrysburg and West
Lafayette Rrdgewood 18 10 Cadiz
15 21 (tre) Medrna Hrghland ar d
Medtnd Buckeye 13
23
( tte)
Wauseon ?lnd
Urban a
12
25
Spnngboro 11 26 (flel Ironton ano
Bridgeport 10

Br ... au..,t.: l \( Jiaq: tht " t hOtLe 10 11 are likel} to get more for
\ P 11 m Hll '
tn&lt;...u r 'llt l u 1' nage 1hat fits and ts affo rdable

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

(

l 1Hllt 't.:t.:

u' I t.:t U\ rC\ te"' and update I he pro!et.:t1on
lOU rte\ent[) have

I

Mon , Tues , Wed , Fnday &amp; Sat
8 30 to 5 00 Thursday ttl I 12 Noon

)
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) OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate

772 5592

Mason, W Va

' POMEROY, 0 _

2U E MAIN ST

t92 SUtor t92-51Jf
"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

•

�4- The Dailv Sent mel. M1ddleport-Pon.eruy , 0 . Tuesday , Oct. lb 1~7Y

•

Local child has birthday

MEIGS 4-H members who have reeei ved awards for creative art; are
l tor . Allee H1tch• e. Kenee Kaylor and KeU 1 Wh1Uatch .

.

SPECIAl. AWARDS - .Meigs 4-H members winning spec1al awards
are Usa Collins, left, 1n gardening, and Kristin Anderson . nght, for her
work with horses.

4-H Weed theme ''Expanding Horizons '

Patm·•a I.e&lt;' Housh , daughte r of
Mr . and Mrs . Thomas Housh . Middleport, celebrated her second birthday on Sept. 4 at her home . A
Mickey Mouse theme cake provided
by Gwenda Ferguson was served
with 1ce c ream . potato chips and
Kooi-Aid .
Attending were her gra ndparents,
Mr and Mrs. Denzil Proctor , Mrs .
Delmar Hawley , Mr . and Mrs . Tom
Housh , Misti and Konda Stewart,
Charles Whittington, Marty and H&lt;ly
Ferguson , Terry Ferguson, ijnda ,
Danny , H&lt;lchel and Sara Proctor ;
Bob, Sara, Willie , Sherry and Bobbie
Johnson, Sharon, Hicky, Jimmy and
Dorothy Older, Judy and Cathy
l.audermilt, Conme. Donna and
Junior Manley. Tina and Kelly
Smith, Carolyn, Usa, Teresa and
Cassie Lynn Stewart ; Debbie ,
H&lt;lchel and Ryan Hawley , Geni
Rought, Susan Houchins, Leslie and
Jessica MiUer, Darla, Hick and
Brenda Hawley, Georgie Turner ,
Toni and Bob Untalon, Khonda and
Cindy Little, _ Stacey and Kelly
Tyree, Adam and Erin Krawsczyn,
Teresa Littl e, Ronme Powell.
Stacey, William and Tammy Hayes,

TilE 0.\ILl' SF..NTINEL
I USPS lti-MO )

By Jl·~ _u S~·n&lt;·t• r
Asslslllnt 4-ll .~gt·nt
MeigS t'Hunty
TillS past week . to ber 7-13. was
N;,ll onal 4-H Wt•t•k Tile Nationa14- H
Wr ck theme
" Expanding
Honzons ." II d1ollo· nged all 4-H
me rn~rs to dn·t·l op 1 0 their full es t
potential for the bt•!' . n nent of club .
comrnur11ty, natwn . , 1d world
Dunng N.al!nnal ·1 -1-l Wt!t•k . mon•
Uwn J_2 mtlilun
.fl Jtlt'llJbers
rededieated the1r heads to clearer
thinkmg . their hearts t o greater
loya lty , their hands to larger seJ"Vlce
and their health to better liVUl~ .
AI this time we. the Me1gs County

o..

w'"

r

Extcnson Office staff. would like to
thank all volunteer leaders. parents,
a nd local groups and businesses for
the1r contributions th roughout tha
year to the development of youth
a nd to the bettem1ept of the community
4-H 1s umque m several ways It IS
th&lt; large st you UH&gt;er\lng program
Ln the United States . It involves
young people in projects and a cllVlll es that are relevant to everyday
llvtng .
4-H LS an informal, learn-by-doing
program for boys and girls. 9 t o 19
years of age . In our rapidly
changing world , •t IS mcreasingl y

Health Review
By Lamar C Millt•r. D.O.
( 'Hnh'al ASSIH ' ialt' Proft-"NSor
of Family Mt·didm •

Ohio L nivusily College
of Osteopathic Mc-dlclne
BEE AND INSECT BITES
QUESTION : Are severe react iOns
to bee stings conunon '
ANSWER · Bee slings are a rrl'uf'h
m nre sPrJOus problem trutn must

pt·&lt; •ple r&lt;'ailze In fact. for the past
"''vera} yea rs deaths from bee stmg s
llave exceeded those from poiSonous
snake bites. If we look at figures for
dea ths ' from all insect b1tes,' Ill eluding spiders, fire ants and
mosquitoes. the numbers are ev en
higher . I'loney bees. however , are
the most frequent " biters· as well !15
bem ~ responsible for most of the
severe reactions . YeUow JackeL&gt;
and hornets run a close second and
third .
Fire ants also infUct very painful
Stings and are responSible for a
si gnifi cant number of deat hs
because of a common allergic reacUon to the venom. These ants. which
were previously conlin\'(l t o South
America amd Central Ameri ca, are
011 the move north and have become
a menace in the southeastern United
States . There are also reports of fire
ant; being found in parts ot the Mid-

west.

-"'"

QUESTION :
Are
th e r e
precautions which a person who is
allergic to any of these insect; can

ALL-OCCASION
GIFT IDEAS

!&lt;ike to avo1d being stung '
ANSWEH : There are several
steps you can take to decrease the
chance of being stung . F1rst of all
avo id wearing flashy clothmg and
shiny jewelry wh1ch attracts bees
and other flying insert; . Also, don't
""" perfumes and scented soaps and
lotions when you are ~OIIlj( to be ex posed to the outdoors. One very obvwus precautJOn is to avoid gmng
barefoot or wearing open toed shoes
when walking in the gr!I.Ss. You
should mmuruze your e&lt;posure to
the out-&lt;Jf-doors from May to Oc tober and from 8 a .m . to late afternoon, stnce bees. wasps and hor-

nets are more abillldant at these
tunes . Do not place too much cotffld e nce 111 insect repellenls stnce
they are usually not effective
QUESTION : I am very sensitive
to in sec t
biles . Are there
medJcatiOriij avaUable that l can
carry in my purse in case of a
serious reaction?
ANSWER : There are two kits
which are available that I know
about One is from Hollister.Steir
l.aboratones in Spokane, Wllllh . and
th e other is from Center
l.aboratones in Port Washington , N
Y. Smce both these kits contain
prescription type medications you
wiU need to have the cooperation ot
your family physi cian to obtain one .
He or she also can advise you on the
proper use of the kit. Eac h kit contams a syringe or adrenaline, an an tihistamine tablet . a tourniquet , a
barbiturate and occasionally a
medication to counteract shock .
Although. mrection sheet is also in side the k1t , a consultation with your
physician is really needed to prevent
misuse . Persons who have a history
or serious reactions to inse&lt;:t bites
should carry one of these kits with
them at all times . This precautwn is
especially IITlportant if you work out door's or plan to go on a camping tn p
a long way from an emergency

important that young people learn
life skills, prepare for meaningful
careers, and assume citizenship and

r--- --

:

-------~

Social Calendar

TUESDAY
ALPHA DELTA KAPPA . Alphu
Epsilon Chapter. will have dinner
rneeti~ at the Meigs lnlj. 6:30 p.m .
Tuesday even mg .
GROUP TWO of the First United
Presbyterian Church, Middleort.
Tuesday at 7:30p.m. at the horne of
Mrs. Lewis Sauer with Elizabeth
Burkett as co-hostess . Ruth
Woodard will have devotiorc•.
XI G AMMA MU CHAPTEK, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday at the Columbia Gas Co. offi ces . Hostesses will be Betty Jean
Krawsezyn, Mrs . Donna Byer. and
Mrs . Sandy Sargent
WEDNESDAY
UNITED MethodiSt Women
H&lt;lcine Wesleyan Church, will meet
Wednesday at horne of Mrs . Robert
Hill to make apple butter as a
project Apple butter IS $2.50 per
quan pi us clean jar . Orders may be
placed at 949-2013, 949-2372 or 949~16 .

MEIGS - GALIJA - MASON Life
Underwriters Association Wednesday at noon at Me~gs Inn . All
area li.(e and health agents invited to
attend .
THIRD
WEDN ESD AY
Homemakers Club, 10 a .m. Wednesday at Syracuse Municipal
building . There wiU be a potluck dinn~r at noon . Members are to take
decoration for yardstick holders , a
one-dish recipe, and cents off
coupons.
TifURSDAY
MIDDI.EPOHT
Chil d
Con ser;a tion League , 7:30 p .m . Thursday at the Hiverboat Hoom of the
Atherc• County Savings and l .oa n Co.
Mrs. Susie Soulsby t o have
devotions, Mrs. Sus1e Abbott to
provide the traveling pnze . Members are to take botUe caps Amy
Hill will have the program
BAZAAH AND BAKF. SAl.E Tilursday . 10 30 a .m . at home of Mildred
Spencer, Antiquity . Sponsored by
WiUing Hands Ladies Group of tne
Antiqully Baphst Church .
HEVIV Al . at old De&gt;&lt;ter Church
Thursday, Friday and Saturday .
Worship service followiRR Sunday

room.

HEARING TESTS SET
For Meigs County,
Ohio '
ELECTRONIC

HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
. Mr. H. W. Mattingly
ne -S IOp

t! !
li lt'

ShOpJl lllrJ f1)l IIJ(l ! j)t.' rff&gt; C I

We hrtvP a ~ ll l' o11 s t--l t""l . l Ton ol
JI:!We l f y

Thil l Wt l l pii' ,J!--.1;;' CVP r y

Hearing Aid Specialist

&amp;s te . Su p e rb 9111 lh• .o.P ::. ,,,, hlflPil
Cnn1f'

,,, SLliHI'

Use our Lay -Away Plan
Free Engraving

~09'
~JneleN

212 1._Mlln, l'omeroy

I

BEL TONE Consultant Who Wtll Be At :
MEIGS ll'jN , POMEROY , OHIO THURSDAY OCT . 18
Anyone who ha s troubl e hearing is wel come to have a hec1 r 1nq tC's l
using modern elec l ronl ( eQuipm ent to determ1ne 1f h1 s loss ~ ~ onf&gt;
whi ch may be helped Some of !he ca uses o f hearing loss wt!l be ('x
pla ined and diagrams of how the ea r work s wtll be shown
We Also Service and Repair All Makes of Hearing Aids .
Baj'teries And Supplies For All Makes For Sale .
IF YOU CANNOT COME IN -

CAL L THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOI NTMENT
PHONE 992 ·36?9

leaders hip respons1 bi li ties .
U you are interested in becoming a
4-H member or 4-H volunteer leader,
contact the Meigs Collnty Extension
Office, Mulberry Heights , Pomeroy,
or phone 992~96 .

~'b

Cll:m~ .........._.._..._ , ~d ·­

q,v

DEVOTED TO THE
lNTF.kEST UF
MEIGS-MASON .f.REA
RUBF.RT HOEFI.Ulf
City Ed.ll.ur
Publb:t..d daUy nrrpt S..IJ.mby by Tbr Obl1

Vallry PublishJn8 Cornpan)·· Multtm~ . Ia&lt;'.,
Ill Court St. , Ponwrvy, Ohio 4570 . Ruahtt"ff~&gt;

TO SPEAK F"RIDA Y
Euthopia affiliated eva ngelis t of
the Faith Mission, Carrie Boyer, wiU
be guest speaker at the Pomeroy
Wesleyan Holiness Church, SH 143,
on Friday, Oct. 19, at 7:30p.m . The
Hev . Dewey King, pastor, mvites the
publ1c to attend.
TO MEET TIIURSDA Y
The executive meeting of the
Meigs Unit of the American Cancer
Soc1ety w1U meet Thursday, Oct. 18,
at 8 p.m . in the east-west dining
room at Veterans Memor~al
Hospital. The public IS invited .
School. Speaking will be the Rev .
H&lt;llph SJ11lth. pastor and the Rev.
Willard Butcher . Messenger Quartet
on Thursday evening . Public inVIted .
HOCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday home of Sandy
Folmer at I : t5 p.m . Betty Conkle m
charge ot program and Hele n
Blackston in charge of contest.
Secret pals wiU be revealed.

Dwayne. Tommy, Lorena, Aaron .
Corey and M1nday Seymour. Bobb~e ,
Can d1 , Dcnm s and Sue ljttle, Jeanme Koush and Rus ty.

Offlrf' PhoM 9ft. ~IS&amp;. •AtUoria.l Phor1r
992-!150 .
&amp;nmd rlau pu!ll.lli:l' paklat Pomf'roy . tlhln.
Nattuoal ad\'l'rtlling rppnvnlaU\lf', Landoo
AAIDt'ial6. 3101 Euclld14.1o't' ., Uf'\'f'land , Ohlc..
4411S.

Sub8&lt;'r1ptJon fllle l:

DdJvu~d

moolh. lil_.ld.
Ttl# Da'1ly Stotlnel., by m.tJ lA ObJo •od W•st
VlrsJilla, oae y~r Pl.OO ; Sb: muoths $1 7.50 ;
lbr?t moo &amp;hi $lUG. Elwwbert W .DO ; •LI
mootb.ltze.oe; ~ mootbllli.DI.
TiM- .\aorljk'd Prn.~ II f''lf'IU1Inly t'Dtltlf"d
to tbf' uu lor publlutioo of •U onn dUpai,(-Mt

cl'ftlllfod 1o t1w oews~~r .ad •llo 1M local
IWWI pubU..bf"d bt'n!l.n.

BAKER
FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.
Open Every Week
Day 9 a.m. til 5 p . m.
Open even mgs by
Appoingment 992 -3307

16 . l!l/!1

Woman o the Year selected last night

Selection of the " Wum&lt;J n of tht•
Year " and the " Woman of the
Week," along with recognitwn IJf
charter members. highlighted the
Monday night meelln~ of the Mid dleport Business and Prufcs.&lt;~ona l
Women 's Club.
Club members met a t the Mid dleport Masonic Temple for ;l d1nner
ser;ed by Evangeline Clw pte r 172,
Order of the Eastem Sta r , udure
going to the Columbia Gas Co . uff~t·e
for the meet in ~
A special guest at tht· meeting was
Mrs. l.oretlll Jon es of J ackso n, s La te
recordmg secretary . She wa s accompanied to the rnee tmg by Nan&lt;'y
Williams, vice pres ident of the
Jackson Club .
Selected as 'Woman of the Year "
was Mrs . Marjorie Goe tt. while Mrs.
Donna Davidson was selected as
" Woman of the Week ." Recog nized
and present e d bud va se
arrangements were charter members, Mrs. Edith Forrest and Mrs
Hose Reynolds . The other tilree
charter members. Mrs. Pearl
Keynolds, Mrs. Es.'le Hussell w1d
Miss Freddie Houdas helt wiU
receive either nuwers or gifts from
the club .
The ce lebratwn la st night served
as a k•ck-off fur the observance of
National BusmeS-'i Women 's Week ,
Oct . 22-27

by canirr

wbt-re available ,. ceul.l prr wr-ek . By Mutor
Rouk' wbt:rt" carrlt'r nrvkl' oolnall•blr, 001'

a- The Da1ly Senttncl . M1ddlqwrt -Po1m'• o~ . u . Tul·sdaj . ( h't

The origma l c harter of the cha pte r
dated Jul y 1, 1946 a nd the clu b's firs t
yearbook were on diSplay as wen•
servcral certtf1cates and trophies
won by the dub for BPW projects as
well as avic and commumty
programs.
Mrs . Alwllda Werner, past
president of the club , read the hst of
chaner members .

BAKE SALE SATURDAY
The Lad1es Auxiliary of Veteraos
Memorial Hos p1tal will hold a bake
sale a t Kroger's Sa turday . The sale
will begin at 9 a .m . Proceeds Will be
used for the purchase of new
hospital equipment

J
'

~

'

1
I

u-.., .

'

'

~~· ~
CHAHTEH MEMBEHS Mrs Edith Forrest, left,
a11d Mrs. Rose Heynolds we re presented bud vase
arrangements at the Monda y night meeting of the Mid dleport llus tne" and ProfessiOnal Women's Cl ub . Tht

two are pictured with Mrs. Janet Korn, chairman for
the observance of National Business Women's Week,
Oct. 22-27. who dJsplays the local club's charter dated
July I . 1946.

Club reviews T urnball novel
Mrs. Nan Moure r eV H' Wt.'&lt;f " Tht:
ll1Shop 's Mantle" by Agne s Tom ball
at the Wednesday afte rnoon meeting
uf the Middleport! Jte rary Llub held
a t the home of Mrs. Forrest Bachtel
Mrs . Dwight 1\'aUace opened the
meeting by leading ,members in the
dub coUert. Members and guesLs
were welcomed .

Mrs . Moore's book revtew dealt
with the story of a Protestant
Episcopal faJ11lly where the grandfather was a bishop Hi.-; influence on
the li ves of his desee ndanLs a nd the
l!lantle of protect iOn wh1 ch seemed
thr own ove r th e m preva iled
throughout the boo k, Mrs. Moore
noted . She spoke of the bi shop's
grandsons, Hillary , a young

cl ergyman. devout and ded1&lt;:ttted .
and his brother . Di ck . oppos1te 111 attitude and chara cter , and of Lex
Cooley, an upper class lady . who
mamed Hillary . F ollowing Mrs .
Moore's review the book was
discussed .
Next meeting wlil be at the home
of Mrs . Bert Grimm on Oct . 24 with
Mrs . Forrest Bachtel to g1ve the
book rcv~ew . Kefreshments were
servt"d

P1r&lt;1te s held Wlc ht:'f:ked ru le of the
Hah&lt;1mas

1704

If\

di sso luti on

of

all

i:jfte r

the

organ11. ed

~O \'t' nunent.

STATE OFFICER - Mrs. Loretta Jones, Jackson, state recording
secretary, was a guest at last night's kick-off meeting for the obser;ance
of National Business Women's Week, Oct. 22-27 . She is pictured receiving
the 1979-80 program book fr om Mrs. Frances l.ouise Davis, president.

"NO-GAIN"
WEEK NOTED
A no-gain week was reported by
the Holland TOPS (Take Off Pounds
Sens ibly 1 morning club held
Tuesday at the EMS buUding in
Hutland.
Six members recorded a weight
loss and one recorded no change .
Sandy Peyton was "queen" of the
week with Nellie Haggy as runnerup . A dollar was presented to the
queen and members sang in her
honor . linda Adkins was welcomed
as a new member. Officers reports
were given. Fund raising Wllll
dJscussed.
The contest wa' explained to new
members and there was a discussion
on earning jewelry for losers . Plans
were made for a blke-a-ihon.

SURPRISE PARTY HEW
Lavlnia Simpson was s urpri sed
with a diMer party g1ven in her
honor at the Ra cine Umted
Methodist Church Thursday .
Attending were Ellen Arnott .
Jessie Palmer, Beulah Bradford,
Donna Hayman, Ann Coe, Grace
Holter, Grace Krider, Ruth Wolfe ,
Mattie Circle, Roberta Tha&gt;&lt;ton.
Dorothy McKenzie, Rev . David
Harris, June Harris, Nathan Harris ,
Ruth Simpson, and the guest of
honor . After the dinner a reading
was given by Mrs . Holter and the
!lev . Mr . Harris and his wife, June ,
sang several songs.

ALMA JANE PULLINS

HOSPITAUZED
Mrs. Alma Jane PuUins is a stroke
and heart patient at the Camden
Clark Hospital in Parkersburg, W.
Va . She is on the first floor cardiac
unit.

·-···.-GOOD nlllS SPECIAL-.

•
•

•

bo "

I

Gasolme ratiomng began Ln t.h~
Umted States 1n 1942.

BAKED LASAGNA ••

Dinne• w1fh
golden b1own

f179

,,. " "

TO GO ONLY
J 4eyl .... ,

E61nO'
S
i
;..AIIiAiill

$

$

00

A

v
E

ers

ere

MEATS

SUPERIORS

SAUSAGE • •••••••••••••• 99~

POLISH

LB.

SUPERIORS CHUNK

I

A

v
E

BOILED HAM ••• -••.•••.•••...•.• ~~- ••~ 1 99

BOLOGNA ••••.•••••....••••.••.•L!·. 79~ TURKEY DRUMSTICKS •••••••• ~s••49e
MINUTE STEAKS •••.••••••..• :~-.~ 1

99

FRANK IES ••••••.•••••••••••••••~; .o~ ••99 e
8 PAK

ALL WEEK

KING SIZE TIDE .................... :.~~~~.9?~~.~x.. 1 2.39
PRODUCE

PEPSI COLA ..............•................ 16 oz. sns..'1.29

"

BANANAS

GALLON
2 oYo MILK ......................................................
.

COCA-COLA

ALL STAR DAIRY

CHOCOLATE DRINK ........................... ~~.~?~... ~.1
REO &amp; GOLDEN DELICIOUS
AND JONATliON

4LBS.

VALLEY BELL

ORANGE SHERBET

6

PAK

PUSH UPS ..................................................... .

APPLES

$100

ALL WEEK

$169

VALLEY BELL DAIRY

BROUGHTON DAIRY
Vz GALLON
BUTTERMILK .........................................•.•......

KLEENEX

8 PAK

29

16

99 C

F

'129

PARTY ICE

89 C

HOLSUM KING SIZE

oz.

10 lB.
BAG

e

PAPER TOWELS ..•..••.••.•••... !~~P.q.R.qL.L. 59e BREAD•••••....•...•.•.••.•••••••••••.••• !-••~ ••• 39
PRESTONE II WINTER &amp; SUMMER
S
LUX
9
4
SOAP..~~~-~~~= •• ~!~; .. .~.~~~ •••••~~ -2 e
ANTI FREEZE ••.•..••••.•..•.•.•..•9~~~~~. 3. 99 BEAUTY
NESTLE
·
TUNA~.~~~~. ~~~.H·T· •••••••••••••••••••• ~~z. ~!. .. 89e HOT COCOAMIX •. .•...• .•• .• .. .••...••••• .$129
DAWN
48 OZ. $1 79
DISHWASHING
LIQUID.................
.
0

Plain or Marshmallow

12PKENV.

THURS. ONLY

RC OR
DIET RITE
COLA

FRIDAY ONLY

DR. PEPPER
8 PAK 16 oz. btls.

8 PAK 16 OZ.

SATURDAY ONLY

RC or DIET RITE
8 PAK

$1 09

16 OZ. BTLS.

We

SUPER MARKET OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M...
SUNDAY 10 ro lu
Federal Food

ne Kesene

In"

To Umit

99c

BTLS.
Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

�6 - The Da ily Sentmel. M lddleport -Po11w ruJ. 0 . T uesda v. Oc:t 16. 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found i11 the Sentinel Classifieds

I I'

applia nces .

buildings, or s• fes th erefor ,
or sour ces of water suopl y
and mater i al s t her ef or . or

M EIGS

CHARGES

H UM A NE SOC I ETY

(_ 'har~e

ldi:ll

2 d~t)·s

1 00
1~

1 25
IW

Jda}~

l llll

'! 2::1

6d11 ys

300

J7~

J oh ns l on
C lf' rK
Da ted Oc t ob e r 17 1979
( 10 ) 16 , 2J. 30 ( 11 J S, 41 r

Not1 ce o f E l ec tion
on Ta x L e vy in
Excess of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOiTI C E is he reb y Q1ven
that •n pursuan c e o f a
Resolutton of the Board ol
Trustees of the Townsh i p
Sc i p io , Me i g s County ,
O H ro , pa ssed on the 3r d day
of August , 1979 there wi l l be
subm• ft ed to a \o'Ote of the
peop le of ~aid Town sh 1p at
a Gen er a l ELECT ION to be
tleld in the Towns h 1p of
Sci pio, Ohio, .a t the re~ular
pla ces of votmg th ere m . on
Tuesday, the 6th day of
Nov ember ,
1979,
th e
quest ion of levying , in e_&gt;c
c ess of
the
ten
mil l
limi t ation , for th e benefi t of
Scipio Township t or the
purpose _ ~~ p rovi.ding and
mamtamtng
f1r e
ap
par a tu s ,
applian c e s,
buildings , or si tes th ere f or .
or sourc es of wa ter suppl y
and m at eri als fherPfor , or
th e estCJ bli s. h men f
and
main t en an ce of lines of fire
a larm t elegraph o r rne
payment of permanent,
parf -t i m e,
or
volunteer
firemen or fire fighti ng
companies to opera te the
sa m e or to purchase am
butance e q ~ tpm ent or 10
provi d e
ah1bul~nce
or
emerge ncv med1 ca1 s~r
vices operated b v a f1r e
department or fire fighting
company ;
Satd tax being : a renewa l
o f an exist i ng tax ot 0.7 mill
to run for f i ve years, at a
rat e nott!':w;ceeding 0 .7 m i l ls
lor each one doltar oi
va luation , which a m ounts
to Seven cen t s for ea c h 011 e
hun dre d
dollars
of
va luation, for five years .
The Poll s tor said Elec ·
ti on will open at 6 : 30
o 'cloc k A .M . and remain
open untii6 .JOo' c lock P .M .
Eastern Stand ard Time o f
said day .
By order o f the Board of
Elec ti on s, of M e igs county ,
O hi o .

H U N TI N G
1' 0
trespass 1ng wt th no P:.
r Ppt •on s on m y p r ope rf y
Ju d y M rGraw Sell

E D BURK ETT

BA RB ER

NOTICE

1\ B SOLUTELY N O H un
f •ng day or n•Q hl on t h e
fo ll o w •n g tann s Ch arl es S
Al m.1
Pe t er son .
Be ll er ,
N ew L1r11 n Rd . R u tl an d .
OH
Vro l a t ors
wdl
be
pr os ecuted

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

G UN SHOOT eve r y Su nd ay
12 00 Fa c t ory c hok e only
Cr o n H o ll o w G un Club .
R u tl a nd Proc eed s dona le d
t o B oy Seou l Tr oop 749

l'hone 992-2 136

~ on d ay

PU BLIC NOT I CE

:--;,..,,non Sa turlhi1

Tue:t&lt;ht )
lhru f' ndll \'
4 PM

.

Uw da ) l&gt;t' fort- I&gt;Ublwat 1u11
Sund .t~ )

4 PM
Fn rbt ~ aft t' rnoun

Card of Thanks
TH f
fn m lly ot Blanc h e
B r a le y wt sh es to thank the
re ldl•v es.
fru:&gt; nd s and
ne rg hb o r s
f or
fhf'1 r
pra ·; er -:. k i n d n ess and s y m
p ath y au r 1ng the pa ss rng of
our w de _m ottw r . an d g r an
drnother A l so . a ll wh o sen t
flow ers. fooc1 , c ara o:.. ere
T h ey
W(&gt;re
muc h ap
pr ect dled
W f' es per •atty
wa nt to thc:lnk th e R utl a nd
Emergen cy
SQu dd.
and
D r s Tellt&gt; R 1dgway ana
Ptrkcns
at
Ve t erans
M emor ,at H osp tla l, and all
rtle nu r ses 1hn t wo rk ed so
dl1 1gen11y W e also w ould
l rk e to th a nk Walker 's
F un era l Hom e f or lhc1 r c f
f tCIC nl se r vtCE' nnd co n
'io ldc rat,on to us all Also
Rev Bra d H e n aers on for
h1 s ro nsott ng w ord s, J ane
W 1se l or
th e
bPaut d u t
mu stc an d th e pa ll bea re r s
t or th e, r k 1n d n ess rtndhP I p
V1 r tor Br ale y
Da u gh te r
and
Gra n d
chil d ren

WE WI SH to e x pr ess our
!:!•nrerc
and
h edrtf el t
than k s torela f •ves , fr •Pnas
n n d ne1ghbor s f or thet r k rn
dness . bea uttf u l flo r a l
Etr r angempn ts . food an d
Sym p athy du r 1n g thf' deat n
o f our dea r hus b a nd, '~ther
a nd
g rnn d lath e r
We
f' S. per 1ally w •sti t o t hank thp
Em ergenc y
M •d dl ep o rt
Sq uad.
R ev
Ge o r ge
H osc h ar . R a w l 1ngs Codl s
Funer a l Home and all wh o
were so k tnd and help f u: n
a n y wa r
The Fam1ly o f Df' tber l
B ec ~ f-f

Help Wa~l ed
DEPE NDAB LE

BAB YSI

T he
Sou th eas t
O tl 1o
Emer genc y M Cd i(fl l 5e r
vrces., Inc tSE O E M S,, w h
c •h •S a pr 1va te non pr o fit
co rporat •on . •nl ends to sub
mil an appl rca t ton fo r a
c apdn l gra n t u nder fh e
prov ' s•on of Sec t .on 16 ( b )
111 of ltle u r ban M ass
Tran sporfat. on A ct of 1964.
as &lt;'!mPnded , t o pr o v rae
n on e merg e n c y
1n\lctl1d
fran sponnt ion se rv• re f o r
ttl e eld e rly
an d
han
d• c apped within Athens.
Hoc kmg , Jac k son , L awr en
re. Me,gs nn d V •nton Coun
t1es The grant appi 1Cdl 1on
w 1tl r e qu e~ t four standar d
pa s se nger
va ns
wtlh
wh eel cha rr ramp s, eq u •p
ped t or th e t r an sp or t o f
wh eelcha i r and stret c h er
bo un d pa sseng er s
It rs pr o1er ted tha t I 400 •n
v al •d pe r sons will use th e
serv1ce seven d a y~ pt.•r
wf:'ek tor tra nsp o rtnl ton to
hos pilal s, nu r s,ng hom es.
pt1 ys•&lt;1a n s off 1ces. ot he r
rncd 1C dl
la c ltl•e s.
an d
residen ces
Th e
So u t r, e a s r
O tl1o
Enw rg en cy Me-d• c al Se r
v• r es, In c
1nvi t es co m
ments and or
Prop osa l s
fr o m all in ter es t ed publ1 c.
orivale ana paratran s •t
operators i n c lud• n g tax•
operator s .
tor
th e
p rov•d•ng o f tr an soortatro n
servr c e fo r I he el derl y and
nandicapped w1thin our
serv• ce a r ea
Operator s wh o ar c 1n
t e r es .l ed
1n
o lt e r . n g
p r opo sal s ro p r o vtde se r
v 1re shou ld conta c t Dr .
D an
Ll oyd ,
D1r ec tor ,

5EOEM S.

BA R P ERSO N

P0

Box 804 ,

Ga ll •poli S, Onr o, t o obta1n
full d etail s on th e type of
lrdnSporTat1 on serv ,r e that
1S
n eeded ,
p r 1or
to
prepa r ing a propos a l
Written c omment s an d or
propo sals us t b e subm .tt ed
w •lh•n lh •rly OO J day s t o
thf' agen c y a t th e abOve ad
d r ess w rt h a ro py t o the
Oh ro D epartm ent of lran
sp o rt at •on .
Bur eau
of
Pu bl 1r Transporrat •on . 25
South Str eet , Columbu s.
Oh 10 432 15
Aft enT •on
Gra n t s A d mr n 1s tr a t or

TTE R w an ted tn m y hom e
Dentse Woll e . 9 49 7371

WA N TED
P ERSO N or
c ou p le to st ay da y and
n tg ht wlfh elder l y man w ho
tS a o;; t ro ke vr r trmbul tS ilm
bu la l orv Cn ll /l) 57()() or
9'92 3653

Lost and Found
LOS T
9 m onth Old t an
ma le puppy W1f h wh ,f p
bla ze la c e, 1n R u tl a nd a r ea
Call 7 4 ] ]49 1

Yard Sal e
PO R C H
SALE
Sldrt s
Wed . ru n s l tl l a ll sold , O ut
S•de
C hr •s t m a s
der orat. on s. bro w n v~ lv e t
pr rtu r cs a nd m1sc rt emS
Karl K loes . College St .
Sy r acuse . OH 991 301 4

N EE DED

5509

r-------~--.....,

EVERYBODY
Shops the

1916 M ONTE CAR LO . 350

WANT AD WAY

\--------~--__.

Clerk

Dated Oct . 12, 1919

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
Pub li c Noti c e is herPby
given
th a t
Grey ho unr-4
Lines, I nc has filed witli
the P ubl ic Utililies Com
mi~sion of Ohio an ap
plication to amend Cer
tif •ca te ot Pu b li c Con ·
venien ce and Nec essi ty No
1750
Bus
c ontaming
author i t y to transport per
sons , th e•r baggage and e)(
press
ma tt er
1n
th e
lo l lowi ng respec ts :
To aba ndon route bet ·
ween Kanauq111 11nd Belpre
over Ohio H1ghway 7 and
U .S H ig hway 50 .
I nteres ted parTie s may
ob t ai n furth er info rma t ion
by ad d re ss ing th e Publ ic
Util i ti es Comm1 ssi on of
Ohio .
111
North H1gh
Street.
Colum bu s,
Ohio

43215 .
GREY HOUND LINES,
INC .

110) 9, 16, 23, 3tc

(10 ) 16, 23. 30 ( ll ) 5, 4tc

6]19

W A NTED Used amp s Ca ll
K elt y Thoma s 742 ] 1]9 or
John Va n Meter . 747 7006

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW , En g l •sn
and Western . Saddl es and
h~r n Pss
Hor s es
a nd
ponies . Ruth Ree ves 614
698 3290
Bord • ng
an a
R •d mg L esson s a nd Horse
Car p produ c t s
Western
boats
Ch il dr en 's $LS 50

Ad ull s 129 00

COMMER CI A L

1913

PO N T lAC

CAT A LI N A

ChPvy

t r uc k

bed 991 120 I

PO O D L E

LE A V IN G TOWN
On P
wa ~ h t ng
K e nmor e
m ar h• n e. les s th ,l n a month
o ld. $ 100
1 cha i n saw ,
P•onee r used very little .
$125 I l awn mower , used
one summer . $50 . 1 desk ,
sa l•d wood S700 1 17 ' Star
cr aff
a lum.num
ca n oe.

AP T , Sl 25. S50 di! POSi t
Furn 1shed No chil dren . no
pe t s 30/ Spnn g A vf'

SM AL L

EF F EC I E N CY

apartment su •la b le f or one
work•ng or r er.r ed pe r
son Calt {jq] 5738 alter 6

pm

For Sal e,
R en I or Trade

AP PL ES . Red and '( ell ow
11
Bu,
bu .
del 1c •ou s
perks, a n d 4 l b b as ke ts
P umpk. •n s S 75 an d up
Leon a rdBa ss,
Rt
l1 d.
Syr ac u se 99 2 5006

HOTPOINT
and

For Sale
L IME ST O N E.

3891

WIN T ER
POTATO E S
C W P ro tt il t far m. Par

FIR E W OOD
FOR
No w ta k rn g or de r s
de 11 ve r . 742 ]()56

EMER GE NCY

sa le
Wil l

PO W E R

Run s good. S900 98 5 41)]

188 2589

1913

Ol~ D

pm

WA L N U T gr a nd
lath er' s rl oc ~-:
tnqu• r t&gt; at
the Wood Sh ed on Broad
way i n Ra c1 ne

APPLE S

NEW 19 79 F ord l TO Coun
ty Squire st at ron wagon
Low mileage , tots of e•
fras . W i ll sacrifi ce. 991
5151.

cng .ne . auto
p s., p b ,
whit e spok e wh ee l s, $ 1150

992 1641
19 15

COMET .

go o d

condition . 9.49 :2417

1913 CH EVROLET
PALA $4 15 . 1411146

IM

CIDER

HONEY
F ilzpatr •r k Gr
ch ar d , State Rout P 689
Ph onP W i lkesvill e, 669

3785

TWO

AXLE
Phone

ba ckh oe
Gallipoli S,

4464782 .

5 p m ., 9911519 .

GOOSE

FIN A N C IN G VA F HA LO

A NS LO W OR NO DOWN
P AYME N T
PU RCHAS E
REFI N A NC E
OR
;RELA N D M OR TGAG E .
II E STATE. A TH E N S

SfOCk

FOP:GIVf ME FOR f&gt;IOT
I~TP:OPUC lr.JG MYSELFEAIUIEP:~ I 'M JEFF
PA~/CEI( .• OF 'ilt'UX
CITY,

GWH 5: TH I5 l'i Ml'i5 MAR Y 5 ',',1~~ )
OF WAL L A WA L L A .- A~ D l 'M ...~
bR tl ~\IJ OF KAL rlMAZ O O~
-'

I OWA~

~ 1\J D ~VOW II= ¥0 •. -' 'LL E;l. C L'3- ~ U5 , WE'VE:
GOT TO GST BA CK TO OUR HOTEL ... .
TO MEET A M IHER
THEO{)ORE BEAR!

))

F IV E; R OO M h ou se. all
r a rpe ted, mode rn kil chen
and br1ttl, ga ra g(' a n d ra r
p o r t In Bradbu r y Cnlt 99 7

53 10

Mgr .
........_.. Phon e t92 -2181

H A VE ROOM and boar d
la u ndry , for etdprly onl y
In walk •ng d•stance of
Se nt er
Crt • z er •s
Reasona b l e 9Y2 6022
and au l a r ppatr

Ca II '1'17 632 3

.Givea~ay_
MIX E D BRE E D 1 J gro w n
ou pp •es, g r a y co l or House
bro ken ~7 5401

K ITTE N S, K I TTENS

THRE E

B EDROOM

ao ubt e w •de , 2 bath s, wOOd
b u rn• n g l •n :o pl ace. €'QU •P
p ed k iTch en. sun dec k , se t
t •ng on 2 r t ver l ronl a cr es
Buyer ma y purc h ase extra
to t and r en t al t rader 997

FOR SALE
In Ches ter ,
6 room hou se w 1lh
OH
bath
Big beaut• f ut lo t

$11 ,500 Call661 3061
BEAUTIFUL

WOODED

tot . I 16 acres C1ty water
Close t o sc hools . near Roc k
Spnng s After 5, c a ll 30-t
27J 2276

991 2106
T HR EE
B E OR OOM , 6
r oo m h Ou~e wrth ba th 592
P eM I
Sf
M ld dl e p o n
Re m oae tc d , n il new •n s1de
ana out P honP /d 7 / 40 5 o r
992 2719
H O U SE COAL , lum p or
st o k er , writ d el ,vcr
7d2

2183

Mobile Homes · Sale
1977 LYNN HAVEN l4x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vind a le l h6J with ex
pa nda , 2 bedr
1970 N ew Moon 12x b0 J ba r
1973 Skyl i ne
l'lx5 5 ]
bed r OOm
1972 Bonanza 1h .52 . 'l bed r
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME

PLEA SANT.

wv

30 4 615 44 74

19 75

14 x 70

MOBI L E

W I ND SO R

HOM E

$18,0()()

n ew
Sp ec tal
o rd e r ed
Doubl e
insu taled
Bes t
oan e l 1n g
thr o u g hout
tr ailer
2x4 ' S •ns tead of
2x 7's 2 bedroom . K.t chen
hand painted Du t c h style
Fully c arpe t ed To t al e lec
lr1 r , A C A sK•ng S12 ,500
Mu st SPe t o apprec1ate

LISTING

S35.000 00
NEW LISTING -

M2 .JJ25

SH EPHERD ,

6160

NEW LISTING
3 year
old
ran c h
wlfh
basement 1n Syrac use J
bedroom s. equippe&lt;:t k•t
ch en . large r ec room ,
all !"lew . all el ec tr •c, n•c.e
re v el lot 1n an e xc ellent
location ~41 .000 00

Beaut i ful 7 st ory nome
w •th
rr v er
v 1ew in
Pomero y J bPdroorn~ .
b as em e nt
ne w
ca r
pcting ,
aluminum
s•ding , 11 1 Oaths . Very
good
c o ndit ion

All

bla ck a n d cr ea m . f e m ale,
shots Bor d er co ll• e beagl e
t ype, bla c k , brown and
whd e. f e m a le. sho t s. ver y
1
ro t l,e
1ntell•g en t
shepher d, b l &lt;H k. nn d brown
pup . f em a le
do b e rman
col l •e s, 1 ma le . 1 f e male.
sho rt ha i r ed , lOng hatred ,
br •nd le co l or . c am P from
small co ll 1e, !.hot s a nd wor
med H um an e Sofre ty , {jq )

608 E .
MAIN . .WII. .iolo..l
POMEI!OY , O.
PH . 9n22l9

NEW

SIX Mo m nle E nglr sh Set
ter , wh• l e wrlh orang e
f1 CI&lt;.S 84 3 7954

SA LES, PT

I BLIRME

V"" J

~

5

16 E Second S tr~NI

BEDROOMS

A

family ho m e, 1' J bath s.
n at
ga s
fu r n ace,
p a neled k t! . plu sh c ar
p e t •ng.
an d
\
c ar
garage Sl 7,500
GARDEN - Ren ov ated
2 bedroo m home. n1 ce
kil c h en
wlfh
d •n•ng
area L t v tng r m 17xl7
w rl h
w ood bu rntng
f rr epl ac e. base m ent , 7
ca r gara ge and e xtra

lol. S25 ,000
FRESH AIR - New 3
bedroom ,
d• shwa sh er ,
plumbing
c opper
garag e, Oh io power and
o ne large acre of ni c e
l a y i ng land , fence d

COZY

3

bedroom
fram e w •th n a t g as F .A.
f u rna ce . cit y u til i t ies
nearK rog er s S15 ,500

EASY WALK -

To the

store J bea r oom s, bath ,
nat g as furna ce, c ity
wate r and gar age w1th
v iew of r1ve r A Skmg

s 11,500.
NOW I S THE TIME TO
BUY OR SELL WHILE
PEOPLE ARE EAR ·
NEST , BEFORE WIN TER .

Housing
Headquarters

3&lt;
acres la nd 1n East ern
school dis tri c t. close to
Sf
Rt
l. :10)(30 new
block building p lus a
mobi l e home to live in

Sl/ ,900.00
MIDDLEPORT - N ice
home wi th '1 car garage
and w o rk shop on a good
st r eet . S18,900.00.
RUTLAND - S.r e for
t r ai ler or home, water
and elec tr ic i ty on si t e
Pr ic ed
redu c ed
to

Sl,-100 00
STATELY

-

2 story ,
basemenl , wOOd

full
burner in family room ,
up t o 4 bedrooms. ni ce
yard,
ga r ag e, o th e r
f ea tu res. shou ld V .A . or

F H A . $28,900.00
MINI FARM - In Coun tr y 6 acres, n ice
home, large living room
with W . B . F . P ., l arge
newer
ki t chen ,
]
bedrooms ,
Part
baseme nt , 1n good con
d i f 1on $:24,500 .00 .

BUSINESS

_J,

Jumotes M[llGE
Answ e•

KNELL
KING

Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Res . 742 -2474

KiJOW...

--

", BUT IT LL MAKf A~ INTI'RB$Tl!J0
CHAPTER WHEll I WRITE. M'(

.

+ Q104 3

-- --

• 65

WEST
• J 967
• K Q 10 7 5

gutters.

EAST
• 6
• A96:J 2
• 7 :!
. J 9874

tU

• Q 10

are. lead a small spade to
and ft nesse the 10
spot. This play would C&lt;lS1 him
the conlrac t 1f Eas t produ ced
the jack of spades and was
ab le to give hi s partner a diamond ruff. but that would
only happen If d iamonds were
br eakmg 4-0.
After the pl ay of the spade
10 South makes seven since
W~st holds the Jack . If South
had played quee n, the hand
would have C&lt;l llapsed and he
dummy

SOUTH

+A K S 2
• J 6 4

• J 10
+ AK 32

ORPHAN ANNIE-IF YOU RE-MEM·BAH

N01 M UC H

Vulnerable : Eas t-We st
Dea l er : North

WA NDrR I D AWAY

YOU SEE , I BEEN 'ROU ND
THESE P&lt;IHTS FU R SO NIA~Y
YfAR S ·

--

BEDROOM mobile

H?OM THE GANG --.
~ N D fHfY OtDN' l S TOP

I

Nortb East
1.
Pa ss

To LOO K FOR HIM

OOH ' T I.(NO W -

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

PAIN T ING AND sand
bla sting Free esti mates
Call 949 26a6

would be down at least two.

Pa~

3•
4•
5.

AslkiMI!ucrts

Pass
Pa ss
Pass

Pa ss

We have been asked several
t1mes what a splinter bid 1s.
A splinter bid ts an unnec-es sary jump in an unbid su1L. It

Of&gt;€n i ng l ead : • K

DOZER .
E ND
Loaaer ,
brush
hog
Wi II
do
basements , po n ds, brush,
ltmber ,
land
clearing
Charles Butcher 142 2940

Auctions
----------B I G AUCT I O N e very We d,
l pm Hartford Commun11y
Cent er , Hartford , WV . 4
mi les abov . Pomero r
Mason A,. •dge

MACHINE,

1N t!:V. S PAP ~~ R t!:NH: APR! S t-~

.&amp;.S.o;;, N ,•

hand from cur Bntish fri ends.
The bidding is poor but fancy .

North "s jump to th ree hearts
is one of those splinter buis
designed to show spa de support and not mor P than one
heart.

EXCAVATING ,
dozer .
loader and backhoe work ·
dump t ru c ks and to boys
f or h1rP, will haul lilt airt ,
top soil , limestone and
gravel Call Bob o r Roger
Jett er s, day phone 997 7089,
n1g ht phone 997 -3525 or 9'92

Sou th

ruffs

the

ope nmg

heart lead in dummy. n ot es
that seven spades or seven

diajnonds

wrre

both

very

(Do you have a questron for
the experts? Write "A s~ the
Experrs. " care or th1s newspaper Individual questions will
be answered if accampamed
by stamped. self-addressed
envelopes. rhe most mterest mg questions will be used in
this column and wifl receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN/

~

5132

by THOMAS JOSEPH

HOWERY A ND MARTIN
E x c avat i ng ,
sept •c
sy stems , aozer , ba c khoe
Rt 143 P h one 1 (614 ) 698
7]]1 or 742 259]

A U TOMOB I LE
&gt;URANCE
been

IN
Cdn

fe lled?
LOS!
y ou r
operat Gr 's l •cens.e? Phone
99? 21•3

You

Yo u jes' wasti n' ,s lilo\e al l

4er st
Miss
Melba'

,---,~".}

t h' rest.
Rufus'

'io tA don appreciate
what a f1ne thin'
Newton is doin' 1

. so's"do ·ntAthins" l1he
LjOu 1&gt;\ 1n
a better
l,fe I

REYNOLD 'S ELECTI11C

A&amp;H Uphol ster ing . across
from the Texa co Station 1n
Syravcse 992 3743 or 992

WINNI E

p

---

-~­

YOL&lt;
·:.J../J ::- ?E.= '·
·:r=_A

-=

~ 1 '\!

Ai'JOU' ~

3152

s~A ':&lt;S&gt;.

( nr

TUNING

(.

.
(

1.

=-------

I
c;::.:::

·--- --':Z.

'

Lane

Danie ls New phone num
be r
7412951
Servi c e to
school s and homes smce

1965

23 Golf hazard
2' 60 grains
29 Rllby ,
lor one
31 Elephant
group
33 Sighl.'!eers'

waist ornamenta ti on
Z Shoulder
orname nt
3 GoUer Gene
t Tennis
poinl
5 Italian
city
6 Ste no's aid
7 Cr ossed oul
forte

Yf'!iittrday's Answer
9 Ritual
table
10 Board
20 - Admiral.
noted

JU Indiana and
32
33

ra cehorse
~Mature

34

Z5 Remain
resolule
n Rile
28 Union ship

35
38
43

Ohio river
IJke t issue ,
perhaps
One kin d
of duty
San Antonio
shrine
Italian c1 t y
Backbone
Make l ace

GOOD USED

CHAIN SAWS
McCulloch Pro
Moe 55
McCulloch
Mu-10
Remington J4
150 Auto

!JAIL Y CRYPTO(lUOTE -

Supens.
Stors
XL Hom elite

used for the t h ret! l.'s, X f or th&lt;' two o ·s, etc _ Si nglE" lett er s,
apoatrop h es. the length and formation of t he wonl! are all
hin ts. Earh day th e code l~ tt ers are di ffe ren t.

Copportono

Ia

I New E lectr•c F'urnact

BOUGHT
'I'OU ANEw

R efrla•rator

sas.oo

MAIN ST.
JOCk W. CorMy
-.

P~ .

M"r .

· l-2111 ,

L 0 N G F E I. I, 0 W

CRVPTOQ UOTES

HERE, I

l GOOd CoidSPOt

It:

One letler simply standa for anot her In this sample A i1

Atfriver1ror, Ukt new,

clearance prlctcl
'
I new Fuel 011 Furn•ce
cle•rance prked
•

Here '• how to work

AXYDLBAAXR

BOOK

THIS 15 ONE l
HADN'T i.j EARC' OF

~I

11

THE HOUND OF Tf.!E
BEA6LEVIU.E S '

A

8

E F G

CD

BH!C

DFJBKDL

~----,

J F'-

New s 13
00 - Today 3,15 : Good Morning
A.meri c a 6 , IJ : Batman 10 :
Wednesday Morning 8 : 7 · 15--

A ~ VVeather 33
7·30-Fami \y Affair 10; 7 5s--Chuck
White Reports 10 .
s ·oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10 ; Leave It
To Beever 17; Sesame St . 33 .

8 30-Romper Room 11; 9:DO--Bob
Braun 3. B;g Va lley 6. Porky Pig
&amp; Friend!. 8 . One Day At A Time
10. Lucy Show 12 , Phil Donohue

13, 15
9 30-Bob N ewhart 8 ; Love of Ute
10 , Green Acres l7

10 00-Card Sharks 3,15: E dge of
Night 6; Beat the Ctock 8, 10;
Morning Magazine 13. Mo\lle
" D ecep tion " 17
1o: JO- Holl ywood Sq uares 3, 15;
$20, 000 Pyramid 13 ; Andy

Gri ffith 6; VVhew 6,10
J0 . 5.s--c:Bs News 8; H ouse Ca ll 10.
11 00-Hi g h Roller s J, 15 : La\lerne &amp;
Shirley 6, 1J . Pri ce i s Right 8. 10 .
11 30- Wheel of For tune 3.15;
Family Feud 6, 13, Sesame St .

Elec . Co. 20.33
oo--O ays ot Our L ives 3, 15; All My
Chi ldren 6, 13; Young &amp; the
REs11ess 8, 10
3D-As The VVorld Tur ns 6, 10;
2 00- Doctors 3. 15; One Life to
Live 6, 1J ; 2 . 25-N ews 17 .
1 3D--Another World J, 15 , Gui ding

Lighl 6. \0; Gigg lesnort Hotel 17.
3 oo--General Hospital 6, 13, I Love
Lucy 17 . Connections 20.
3 30--Cne Day At A T im e 8: Joker's
Wild 10 ; Flintstones 17
4 oo-Mister Cartoon 3, Password
Plus 15, Merv Gr iffl n 6 : Beverly
Hillbil l ies 8: Sesame St 20.33 .
Si x M ill ion Dollar Man 10: Real
M cCoys 13; Spec t r eman 17 .
4 30 - Bewilched
3:
Petticoat
Junc li on 8; Tom &amp; Je rr y 13 ;
Merv Griffin 15 : G i lligan' s I s. 17 .
5 :()()--1 Dream of Jeannie 3. Sanford
&amp; Son 8, M ist er Rogers ' Neigh

20 .33 :

Mary

Tyler

10; Happy Days Again 13 ; I
Doctor

Zoom 20 .

America n Style IS ; Sanford &amp;

1125.00
$115.00
K L4t0 Homtlitt $200.00
Rtmlnvton
Yardmau.,.
171.00
5100 .00
$100.00
57 5, 00

WEDNESDAY , OCTOBER 12,1979
5 •s- Farm Report 13 : 5 5(}--PT L
Club 13 .
6 D0- 700 Club 6 ,8 ; Hea l th Field 10 ;
PT L Club 15
6os- Wor ld at Lorge 12 ; 6.3!fChristopher Closeup 10 ; News 17 .
6 50-- Good M orni ng West Virginia
13: 6 · S ~ Thoug ht tor Today 6 ;

6: Caro l Burnett 17 ;

I

Hamel itt

J; News 15 ; 2 .osN ew s 1]
'} 3G- New s 17 . 2 35--Mov ie " The
Siege at Red River " 17 .
4 35 - Lo\le American Sty l e 17 :
s 05- Star T r ek 11 .

6 :3Q-NBC New s3.15 : ABC News 13:
Corol Burnett 6; CBS News 8. 10;
Bob Newhart 12 ; Over Easy 20
oo--J's A Crowd 3; T ic Ta c Dough
8; Match Game PM 6; News 10;
N ew 1ywed Game I 3: Love

toe or top
41 Mi!S Harper,~-;-;-t-+-­
t o friends
42 Make like
R1ch Utile

$125.00
1100.00

Slory 6.

oo-- Tomorrow

VVho 33
6 ()()--News 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News

4ll Word with

JlSO.OC

Virgin Queen " 10: Mo vie " D ive
Bomber " 17
17 05- Movie .,'scenes from a
Mu r der" 6, 13. 11 40--Medical

~ash

' 39Dh

ASLEEP, I' LL HI DE MY
BUTTER AN' EGG MONEY

6. 13 ;

10,33
9 30- T a x i 6 , 1] . 10 · OO- Lazarus
Syndrom e 6, 13; Six Wives of
Hen r y VI II 17. News 20: City
Noteboo&lt; 33

Dream of Jeannie 17 ,

Sentimental Mood "
38 A.!ian river

NOW THAT PAW 'S S OUND

Days

Moore 10 , My Three Sons 17
5 J()---(arol Burnett 3; News 6 ;
Go m er Pyle 8 ; Elec . Co . 20 ;

37 " ~AR NF:Y

Happy

borhood

k--l-- 1--+--+-+--+-

equipment

POMEROY
lANDMARK

3,1 5;

Ca1tiornia Fever 8,10 : Nova
10,33 . Movie " Junior Bonner" l7
8 30- Angie 6, 13 . 9 : 00- Country
Superstars of the Se\lent ies 3, 15 ;
Thr~ · s Company 6, 13; Movie
" F lesh &amp; Bl ood " 8.10: World

20,33.

I Wearing

21 Ruby's
last name
22 Cartoonist
Gardner

Squares 10 , TV Honor Society 15;
Al l I n The Familv 17; Mac Nei l ·
L ehrer Report 20.33
8 00 - Misadventures o f Sheriff Lobo

12 00- Newscenter
3.
News
6,8, 10, 13 ; Mindreaders 15 .
12 30--Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13 , Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field l.S ;
M ovie " Run tor the Su n" 17 ;

8 Rubinstein 's

movie

:. ...:: :..:· ...

BRADFORD. Auc t ioneer ,
Comple t e Servi ce Phone
94974B7 or 949 ·'1000 ra c ine,
Ohio. (rift Bradford

PIA NO

diner
12 Ailing

44 " - Little
Teapot "
45 DC. VI P
46 One kind
of ga m e
47 Wobbling
OOWN

15 Tomb name.
for short
16 Ending
for trea t
11 One of
the Bobbsey
twins
18lt ain 't 'eaven
19 Dunaway Holden

992 5724.

Motors, rewind and repa1r
992 2356, 56 1 BePch SI ,
M iddleport . Ohio

ACROSS
I Tardy
8 Soft f ood
I I Fastid.Jous

13 oDe kind
of pass
14 One - time

IN STOCK lor 1mmed1ate
delivery various sizes o f
POOl k its Do i 1 yoursel t Of'
let us •nstall for vou 0
BwmgM~.,~..
Sales . Inc

l250

Phone 992 · 2342, Eve. 992 · 2449
Middleport, Ohio
Broker

splinter suit

Her e IS another pr obl em

Repa rrs ,
serv rce.
a lf
makes .
992 77841
The
Fabri c
Shop,
Pomeroy
Au thor ized Singer Sa l es
and Service . We Sharpen
Scissors .

ft.

DOWNING-CHILDS

shows strong support for
partne r 's bid suit a nd either a
singleton or vo1d tn the

By Oswald Jacob y
and Alan Son1ag

I E•cellent Unico "cu.

home . partly furn•shed
M 1d dl eaged
or
e lder l y
peop le preferred No pet s,
no childr en De posit 997
7749

-

After the hear 1 ruff. the
safety play for SIX IS for
declarer 10 play a spade to h1s

t AKQ9!4!

WlL L HAUL limest one and
gravel. A lso , lime nau ting
and spreadi ng Leo Morris
Tru ck i ng Phone 7~ 2 2455

~·

good contracts and then stops
to figure out how to pla y saf e
ror s ix spades.

}(). 16

JO- Ho ll ywood
Squares
3:
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild

33
II 00- New s 3,6,8, I 0. 13, I 5. Dick
Cavett 20 : Ca rry On Laughing 33 .
11 30-Johnny Carson 3, 15; Barney
Miller 6. 13 : Barnaby J ones 8;
ABC News 33 , Movie " The

Fancifully poor bidding
NORTH

Dick

tO· 30- Like lt l s 20 ; Anoth er Vo ice

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Remington

Mobile Homes · Rent

LE ~ R

1

XK12 Hom elite

9662

1 NVE ~l

Shakespeate dn

BRIDGE
I 'M OOT R£ALLY A lH Ub~You

II ;

6: Sha Na Na 13 ; Hollywood

Tuesday, (let . 16

9 28 I mo. Pd

REALTORS
Re\. 992·2168
He nry E . Cleland, Jr .
Res . 99HI91
ASSOCIATES

HAPPEN

th~ y C diiPO I h e w rJ ll •'&gt;t'i

Wl r,;t
d U',' '

and
do wnspo uts .
Free
Esf r nates . All
work
gua ra nt eed . 20 years e• ~e n ..: nc e
Call Athens ,
otl ec t , Gerald Clark
f97 -48S7 or Tom Holkins
797 -2745 .

BUILONG

BI G SE L EC fiON o f pr e
owned 10. 17 , dnd 14 ' w ide
mobfl (' h o m es . Kanauga
Mob i le H o m e S aiP~ 446

---·

_l __ ___.___

· '' ,le•day s

ROOFING

In Midd lepOrt , 2
bus i ne~s rooms down , 2
apartments up . Ca ll for
details . ~3 . 500 . 00
Henry E . Cleland, Sr.

'"

N ow arra,ge lhc crrcled lett e·s 10
lorm the surpr1se answe1 a~ S11g
g esled by rh e abOve cartoon

r -·

OHIO VAUEY

SEWING

15: Sanford &amp; Son
Cavell 20,33 .

!Answers romorr ow1

9 14 ( Pd .

(..,LL 992 7544

F OUR R OOM house tn
Sy r aruse on ]nd1 St $6 .000

shapf' s.a ll ~~ Les Put a ro ld
nose
•ny our
f ut u rp
H u manP SOCiel y , 992 6 1b0

GE RMAN

_J

Answer here

742 · 2328

~o of ing .

Carol Burnell 6: CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17 ; Over Easy 20 .
1 OQ--J'S A Crowd]; T ic Tac Dough
a: Pulse 6; News 10; New lywed
Game 13 , Love, American Sto; le

R.EH EAR.SA ;_ S.

i ""--'----" -

RUTLA"'D

'-iot s 9 M .. W ., r. .
C ·rer ·m, by appoint m, ·nf .
17 Sy camore Rear)
Pom eroy . 0.

381 5

o 3(}- NB C News3,1S ; ABC News 13 ;

"'

(;()N~T.

FINANCIAL
SER'JIC£ S, 1riC.

BOWER S

.L-._L__ j

AL TROMM

~ .~RK

REP A IR
Sw eep er s.
t oaste r s. •ron s. dll smal l
appli an c es Lawn mowe r
N e x t to Slat e H tghwa y
G ara qe on Rout e 7, 9B5

.L.
I -

NHAI A NEDC?1'. 6

HOUSES BUILT

REAl ESTATE
F NANCING
d(' ~ ~
'-tot · ·n ~
&amp;

Real Estate for Sale

~

T RU C K

-

Television
v;ewing
TUESDAY, OCJOBER 16, 1919
6 00 - N ew s 3, 8. 10. 13, 1S. ABC News
6. Zoom 20 , Cara t Burnett 17 .

l LAFAT
l L1 ____L__li__jl

ROOFING
REMOUtLII'fti

4 JO tl r

FRI G IDA I RE E L EC TR IC
rang e,
Harv e st
Go l d
Frigi d aire portabl e di sh
w ash er , harvest go ld II If
MounldineN tru c k c a m
per
Ludw •g drum se t
PhonP dii'( S, 985 3341 Alter

i
'
-1-i
T

• ~ \ mo

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
A Iso Transmis s ion
Repair
Phone 992 -5682

ELWOOD

'

I

6 1"' S97 305 1

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Q...., _ Jack W . Carsey

TWO
tr a il er

1914 CH E VY PICKUP, 350

-------

Ju~tJ !es

TIXYS

JUS T CALL ME " WIN DY"..

R ea l Estate for Sale

l n€'

c;qudrf' 10 fo rm
ord1nar,. wuros

~

TJlAILELit NOW AVAilABlE

' 1 m1IP olf Rt 7 by -pass
on St Rt D4 toward
Ru tl i! nd

94~ · 2862-949-2160

z

FOR SA L E or re n t Nr ce J
be d r oom . modular IOC dtPd
m Por tl an d are a Se t up on
lot or c an b€ m ove d C.~ll
al 1~30 304 273 5172

(J ·~~

llvJM t!LIOITI(1~jS

Services Offered

t s Phone {jq7 5434

SUPER

Garage

.1 '-, tt (

For Rent

J A ND 4 RM f u rn 1s hea ao

l M,l ('\ [oJ ~ I ol W ollt f!' \ V! II f

Roger Hysell

1891

altern a tors ow n t he b Pst
buy WIN POW E R Ca ll S13

SUBURBAN . 350 eng 1ne.
cru 1se. AM CB rad•o , P S,
PB , a ir, abo v e average
c ondit ion 59:2 2883 a ft er 6

N e w , repa1r
gutters a nd
down s poul s.
Window cleaning
Gutt er c l ea ning
Fr ee Estimates

$300 C a II 992 530 I

AKC reg ister ed German
Shepherd pupp ie s, 4 wee k s
ol d , ready 1n 2 wee Jo.. s. Sl75
742 2336

ROOM
AND
board ,
work1ng per son s or ret1re d
S165 monlh , S4 5 w eekly
'I'll 60 ])

l.anq 1vd l11 . Ohr o
• • 4 U9 ~ 1•S f vcmn• ~

\ der . '' kJm111 . Loans .

Roofing

•

J IJ70Mnn t~om ~r' lld

Phone 992 ·2772
8· 17 1 mo.

H. L Writesel

I'J

Jne let1et ro e ,!... tl
I:Ju r

BIC0f&lt;APHY

SIZE l a fall wedd1ng gown
W1!ll ve il and train A n f• que
Wh1te . Vi ct or •an St yle, $215
new , bes t oil er 992 361 R

SI R ED

Park , Route 33. n onh of
Pomeroy Larg e lol o:. Cnll
9'V7 7479

_, .

fHf TR it: r-~L

Unsc•arno le !hese I:Ju•

Go od co n a '' 'on 985 3989

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

1913 CHEVY CUS TOM 10

CHE V R OL ET

&gt;071
O sbo rn
Rd
Reed s\li lle, OH. 4S77 2.
For information Call
b67 -64 8 S Will be OPen
tate
If
vou
need
s.omething .
9 14 I mo

I H 990 mower r ond111on . 9'

Board•ng all b r eed s Cle a n
fa c ilities
1ndoor out door
Also
AKC
regi s t e r ed
Oobermans 6 1.4 446 7795

191 5 DODGE COL r . Sl800

FM ca sse t e. 6 \ yl . r ap
613 7

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

C HRY SLER

KENNEL S

COUNTRY MOBIL E Hom e

~ ~( ~

l-ILL

1-r.l THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
j\ fJt)lf.\:f [ "3"
~~
Dy Her•1 Arnola Jnct Buu

~ ~ ~ 1~

TRAILER SALES

• Storm Doors
• Storm Window s
• Replacement
WindOW5
• Gutters and
Down Spouh
Free Estimate§

r·
:i'ID ANN'S
(~ CAKE

FL OOR

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

CH A MPIO NE D

WII'E,
MY Fh'lfN [) V!TAt.\tN

T

L1

MONTGOMERY

etnsut~tion

9 7 1 mo

991 3342

Judy Ta ylor 614 36 7 72 10

HI LL CR ES T

or

J&amp;L BLOWN
IN!&gt;ULAIIUN
VINIL ANU
IILUM INUM !&gt;IUING

JAMES KEESEE

NEWPORT Custom , f ar
tor ·,- wnec ls, $1200 . An l rque
doll made 1n Ge rmany bet
w een 1915 an d 1925. Si3 5

G R OOMIN G

flan d. OH Sa a hu n d r ed and
S5 a hundr ed

1916 FO RD VA N , CB. AM

949 174B

S95 . 949 7188

R ISI N G STAR
K enn e l
Boar a m g Cat! 367 0/ 97

sand , grai/P I
c al c ium
r hl or •de , t erftl tler , dog
toad, and all types of ~ air
E xr el st or Sa lt Work s. Inc .
E Ma •n Sl . Pom er oy , 997

"
•

W A NTEO
ST A ND I N G
! •m b er , SIOO a l h ou sn nd

992 1656

ta i n 'sch a~r s 992

Greyhound Tower
Phoeni:w;, Arizona
85011

Doro thv M . Johnston

WA NTED
JUNK
Ba l
ter ,es, r ad1at o r s. m otor s.
aut o
tran s
No Sund ay
ra l ls 94Y 7)6J

COAL ,

Good r on a ,r. on 99 '} 567 4

Chairman

ches WilluHJ t o p ay top
d o llar
Call
l 597. 2973
ev e n.ng s

en g 1ne. low mrl eag e S2oOO

1966 F O RD PI C K UP, 6 c y l
Ru st y bu t ru ns goOd S250
o r m a~ e otfpr 690 1]35

RACINE, 0 .

t ile, .4 21 sq fl . S gt'lllon glue,
good on con c r e t e fl oors.

1912

ANTIQUE POCKE T wal

and

V. C. YOUNG Ill

FUR

316 l

down

work ,
w~tks
driveways .

1WO
G78xl5
tlt• ll e d
F•re s t one tires, good con
d 1I10n , $10 eac h Upri g ht
Hoover sweeper w 1th at
ra c hm e nts, good c ondi t •on .
SIO e.:t c h Upr rght Hoover
sweeper with atta c hmPnt s,
good cod ilion . $25 742 75?4

NIT U RE . gla ss . rh 1na.
an y th i ng See or c all R u th
Gosn e y , ant1ques . ]6 N
'ln d , M tdd lep ort . O H 992

work,

(FREE ESTIMATE)

Auto Sales

RUBB E RMAID Pdrfy plan
nee d s d c m o n ~ tra tors N o
c ollec t mg, no p a ck •n g, no
d el• ve r tng 1
Top
com
mi s s.on s
Ca ll
9915087
Caroty M cCo y

Gutter

spouts , some co ncrete

19 76 FOR 0 F 150 Call 99 2
77 19

A NT I QU ES .

9q]

ADO ONS &amp; ·
REMODELING

669

2980

L AR G E HOU SE t or r enl•n
eas1Prn part of c ounly Fo r
Inf ormatiO n, cn l t Fr ed W
Crow Ill . dav . 99 ] ] 69 ] o r
n •g ht 9'9 2 7511

Call be tw een 9 nnd S, 992

Ernest A . Wi ngett

Q[)'L.L f'JFE[

( ['l L i h E
Tu CALL THE
S TAI E &gt;--'ATF-ICJL.

1

·-~--------------------------------------------------~

APP L ES
ROM E Beaut y
appl es a t S4 p er bu Ors t for
appl e b u ltf'r Ca ll 669 J18.": ,
F' •flp a tr 1r ~ O r c hard , SR

W A NTED
SA W to g s
Pay m pnf upon det •ve ry t o
o u ry r~rd ,7 · 30t o 3 JOweek
aa y s BlanPy H a rdwoods.
SR 3]9, Bar lo w . OH 678

GU N
SH OO T
Rc1CtnE'
V ol un t ee r
F 1re
Dep t
Eve r y Sat u ra ay 6 30 p rn
At th eir bud d•ng.n Bash a n
Fa c to r y cho ke gun~ o nl y

TtJt&gt; Publt!lh.tr r,..~·rv es tllenghl to e'di l or f'ej ("(' t an y .ad.'!
dt&gt;enJt•d ub)t-t· t• onal
The
1"\ibh.:dwr w1!1 nut bt- rt'..~pon~ rble
/U( mort' tturn o nt&gt; IOC'nfTt"(, tn -

JO H N DE E R F . d1 Pset , 10 IO
do 1e r . ou ts•de
moun leU
b ldde . Qood
r on&lt;l 111 on
\ 5,000 141181 9

OL D CO IN S, p oc k et wl
r hes r la s5 rm gs wed d1ng
bdnd s. d1amon d s Go ld or
sil v er Call J A W am s!Py .
74 ] 73 31

SH O P no w oper1 l u ll t •mc 1n
M• d dl eport

or dt'r 25 ~~ nt d lHrg e
for .ad~ urry mg &amp;n Numbt&gt;r In
c~ rt' of Tiw Sfontmt&gt;l

RU T LA ND FUEL Co 1s
lak•ng app l 1c a t• o n s tor full
t•m c cmpl o r ee . sorr,p e-.:
p er1en ce •n w or k•n g WITh
n a t ura l gas w an t ed bu.t not
nerPs.s ar y A ppl y by ma d
PO Bo • 1538. H u nt tng ton ,
wv 75710

Do r o thy M

RACI N E

rr..)lt-

Business Seroices

w tlr l e and yPIIOw R! { ,
Rar rn(' R W LC'Wt ~ 8-t ]
').13'/

OL D F URNI TURE . •Ce
bOxes. brass beds, •ro n
beds . desk s, el r . ro m p le l e
ho u se h olds
Wrl! e M D
M1 l ler R t 4. Pomt'r oy o r
( at I 9Y7 7760

NO

Yllllt't'

Ooro l ht· M

1

EVERY

G UN CLU B

1!1 men wr;, , t ·&lt;&amp; rd uf fll.arWl
a.nd OOt tw. r~ 6 q·nL'! j)t"r won1
$.1 00 nu nur ruu r C.a!ih rn ad·

E rnes r A W •nqel!
Chd•rman

N ot1ce o f Elect•on
on Tax Levy m
Excess of the Ten
Mtll Llm•tat•on
N O TICE i s he re b y g •ven
tha t in pur su an ce o f a
Resol ul •on of th e Co unc il of
thp V •ll age of Sy ra c u se,
Sy r ac u se , Oh •o . passed on
me l]fh d a y of Augus t , 1979
th er e w il I be su bm i tted to tt
vo te of the people ot sa1d
Vil lage at a Gene ra l E L E C
T tO N to oe netd 1n th e
V il lage o f S·,-r ac use , O h •o.
a 1 the r eg ular pl ace ol
vott ng l h eret n , on Tu esday ,
the 6fh day o f N ov e mbe r ,
1979,
thf'
que s fton
of
le vy ng. •n e xr ess ot th p te n
m111 l 1md a t ,on . fo r the
bene t1l o f Syra c u se Vdl nge
tor
th e
Purpo s e
of
prov1d 1n g an d mamta i n •ng
hr e apparat us appt ,an ces,
bu1 1a•n gs , o r st tes the r e for .
or so urc es o f wat er 5uPP i y
and mat er .at s ther ef or or
th e establi shment
ane1
mc11n tena n ce of l m es oi t ire
alarm tl:' leyr aph or t he
p ay m ent o f permane nt.
part ttm e ,
or
volun teer
f ir em en or fir e h ght•n g
comp an •es t o operat e lhP
same or to pur c ha se a rn
bulttn ce Pqu•p m ent or To
pr ov 1de
am bula nce
or
emer ge ncy med• r a l ser
v ic es oper a t ed b y a fr re
dep a rtm ent or f1r e h q hl tny
company .
Scud tax b e ing a ren ewal
of an exi s fing tax of 2 3
milt s t o run t or fiv e y ear s
a r a rat e no t exc ee d •ng 7 J
mills for e ac h one dollar of
va luat ron . wh •c h am oun t s
to twe n ty Three c ent &lt;;. for
each one hundred dollar s of
v aluat ion , tor f •ve y ear s
The Pol ls t o r said E lec
lion wdl open at 6 30 o 'r loc k
A M and rPm c11n open unt il
6 30 o 'c l oc k. PM E as tern
St andar d T rm e of sa 1d da y
B y ord er o f the Board o f
E lec t •ons o f M er g s Count y ,
Oh io
Ernest A W 1n ge t1
Ch d1r man

CHOKE ON LY

Mtlt:lllt• Horrlt' scdes and Y11rd
lltTt-pted un1 y Wlth

Johnston
(I prJ..
Dnrer10r l ober 11.19/9

SH OOT

SU ND AY 1 PM FACTORY

F.c~t·h wor d '" t'r lht- num m w n
15 word~ t.'l i n:nL\ pt-r word p.&gt;r
da) Ads rwuung olht&gt;r than eonW.: ' Ul l\lt' ll.a ys wi ll bt&gt; l' har~t'd at
tht• J day r.att•

Oh•O

I I OJ 16, 23 , 30 ( 11 • 5. 4t r

GU N

1'-ll.le!l art'
U!~ wrth

th e es t a bl i shment a nd
matntf"na n t e of l inf"s ot f1 r (&gt;
r~larm
te legraph or the
paym ent o f pN m a ne nt .
parr t 1m e.
or
vol unteer
fi re me n o r fi r e f 1gh t1ng
compan1 es to operat e t he
Sd m e or To p u r ch ase am
bu l an ce eq ut p men t or to
pro v 1d e
am b u l a nre or
em (&gt;rge nc y med 1c al ser
v•c es o pera t ed by rt f1r1•
departm ent or !1 r f' l 1yh l 1rwJ
r om p a n-,. .
Sai d ra-.: be 1ng d rpnew at
ot an ex1S I •n g t a .. o f 1 1
rn ii iS to run t Or f •vc years.
a t a rat e no t e )( cee d 1ng 1 .'
"nd ls f or ea c h one do llar o f
Vfl l u at ,on . wh1 c l1 a mou n ts
to se ve nt een re nt s t or ear h
on e huna red do ll a r s ot
valua l •on , t or li vE' r ears
f hc P oll s f or sa 1d Eler
I ron w dl op en n t 6 30
o ' cloc ~ A M
d nd rema1n
open Uf11116 ]QO 'C IOCk P M
Eas t(&gt;rn St andard l1me of
sa10 aa y
B y or der of tne Board ot
Eler t •ori~ of Me 1Q" Countv .

992

I

For Sale
SW Et: r PO I A J OES . r •·u

CHIP WOO D Pu lt'!:. max
d•ame ter 10 ' · on I&lt;Jrges t
end S1 2 pe r ton Bun d lt&gt;d
s. la b S10 per fOri D" ' 'ver ed
to Oh •o Pa lle t Co R t 2.
Pompr oy 991 LbB9

COU NT Y

6760
Pt&gt;f&lt;... ava il able f or
adopt .on and rntormalton
serv rr f.'

15 Word;, or Under
t -~~h

Wanted to Buv

Notices

WANT AD

Ten Mill

paratu s,

T L- HN li'_, E YO! Jk

i-'Yi..1 "1F

Not ice of Elect•on
on Tax Levy
in Excess of t he
Limitation
N O TI C E i s hereby 9•ven
fh;,t in pursuance of a
Resotuf •on of the Cou nctl of
the V illage of Ra e m e . Oh •o .
pa ssed on the 2nd d ay ctay
of July . 1979, th er e will oe
submitted to a vo te of the
peoplto of sa •d V ill age a t a
Gener al EL EC TI O N t o be
hel d •n t h e Vi l l a ge ot
Racine.
Oh io . ar the
re gular place of vot .ng
the re in. on Tuesday , t he
6th day of Nove m be r , 1979,
t he questi on of le v y .ng , .n
ex ces s o f the ten mil l
l•mitat •on, for the benel11 of
Ra c ine Vdlage for the pur
p ose o f providin g f i r e ap

I~

M H E,

NBHOPCM

MHE

DFJBKDL .

NHP C Q
NFPJFD
Yederday'o Cryptequote: GIVE MEntE SPlENDID SILENT
rUN , WITH ALL HIS BEAMS FULL-DAZZLING! - WALT
WHITMAN

Son 17 ; Di ck Cavett 20,33 .
7 .3Q-Cou ntry Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6. Joker' s Wild 8: The
J udge 10 : Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Family
17 : MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20.33 .
8 oo--Real People 3, 15; E lghl Is
Enough 6, 13 , The Body Human
B, 10: Great Performances 20,33;
NBA Basketboll 12 .
9 ·oo--Movle " Better Late Th1111
Never " 3, 15; Charlie's Angels
6, 13: M ovie " The Concr@fe
Cowboys " ·8, 10.
10 ·oo--Vegas 6, 13; News 20; Con nections 33.
10 30-Upstalrs Downstairs II; 8@sf
of Groucho 20.
11 00- News 3, 6,8, 10, 13 , 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20: Wodehouse PlayhoU1e
33.
11: 30-Joltnny Carson 3, 15; Love
Boat 6,1 3: Switch 8: ABC News
33; ~ovle "Old Acquaintance"
10; Movie " Dodge City" 17.
11 : 40-Baretto 6, 13; Hawaii Flve-0
8.

1 :oo--Tomorrow 3; News 15; l :3s-News 11.
1 :4!f-N'BA Bosketba ll 17; 1 : ~
N ews 13. 4· 10- Movle " The
Bonnie Parker Story" 17 .

•

�8- The Daily Senttne I, Mtddlep&lt;~rt -Pomeroy . 0 ., Tuesday . Oct. 16, 1979

County Court
'·

Seven men were found guilty of
violating game laws in the cou •1 uf
Meigs County .Judge r harlt•S Km ght
Monday .
Two of the seven, Thomas G Edwards of Mason. W Va .. and
Michael S. Layne , l{oute l. Heed sville , were found guilty of
spotlighting from a motor vehi cle
wtth hWJting implements . a gun a nd
a bow and arrows, in the car atl0 :20
p.m. on Sept. 9 on the (jckskillet
l{oad in Meigs County . Th e arrest
was made by Andy Lyles. game
protector .
They were ftned $75 a nd costs,
each; sentenced to :10 days 111 th&lt;·
county jail. 25 days s uspended : w•·n·
ordered to forfeit the gun , bnw and
arrows, spotlight and huntmg kmfe
to the State of Ohio and had all hun ting and hshmg nghts tn Oil1 o
suspended for two ye.ars
Five other men wen.&gt; found gudty
, of spotlighting deer from a motor
vehicle with ftr earrns 1n their
possession . They wen? arre!'ited at
1:10 a .m . Oct. 14 on Parker's l{un
Road in Meigs County by Ohio State
Game Protectors , James Splete and
George Ledbetter
The men were l{ay G. Burl eson,
James A. Burleson. Delbert H.
Alling, Jr ., all of Canton : Kenneth J
Ailing, Minerva. and Hobe11 J Barnete , Plano, !II . They were fmed $2!JO
each, thetr hunting nghts in Ohi o
were suspended for two years and a
~un. four hunting kru ves and a
spoUight were forfe ited to the Sta te
of Ohi o.

REVIVALSLATF.Ll
There will be a re,wal at the uld
Dexter Church, Oct. 18. 19 and 20. On
Sunday. folloWing Sunday School.
worship ser;ices will be held by the
l{ev. l{alph Smith, pastor, assi.sted
by the Rev. Willard Butcher.
The Messenger Quartet wtll be
featured on Thursday evening The
public is mvited to attend .

.~----~----------------------~

Area Deaths
l'AUl. A. SIMPSON
Paul A. Sunpson, 59, ltose l-lill ,
Poml'roy. died eHrly tlus morning at
Hul1.t&gt; r Mt•dica l C't&gt;nter.
Mr . Simpson was bam Sept . 16,
t92U a t Freedom , PH ., the son of the
late Kyle and HHrriett MitcheU Stmpsun He was also preceded in death
by une grandson , ttu·ee brothers and
vne sister
lie was a member of The Service
Umted Presb)~e nan Church. Pa ..
and was ct boiler operator .
He is survtvc'&lt;l by his Wlfe, Jane
Ktto;;on Simpson : four sons, Paul A.

J, . C:ary Lee, and H.andall H Simpson of Pomeroy; one sister , Mrs .
Johr 1 Huth 1 Taylor . Monaca. Pa ..
and one brother, Orrie 1.. Simpson .
MonacH: five grand children and
seve ral ntC L'€ S and nephews.
Funeral services wtll be held
Thursday a! I p.m . at the l{awtingsOJats Funeral Home ~ot h the Rev.
James Corbitt officiating. Burial
will be 1n \I•·Igs Memory Gardens .
Friends mav ca ll at the funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9.

NON EGOTIATIONS SET
f.ven though schools of the Meigs
l~1ea t School Llistrict were officially
closed today and both the board ol
education and the teachers
a."oclation have indicated lhal this
is an encouraging factor towards
st•ttlement of a 17 day teacher.;
strikt·. no negotiations sessions have
bt-f"n .'it&gt;l.
Supt. Llavid Gleason said
he
notified the association that sc hools
would be closed today and lhat be is
available to negotiate. He oald that
he was questioned on whether he cun
now offer more money and when he
said he could not, be was told there is
uothlng w talk about.
However, Gleason did report that
the association representative to
whom he talk Indicated that the
a'"ociatlon will ··get back to him" .

ALBERT ELMER HEILMAN
Albert Elmer 1-!eilman, 87, l{t. 4.
Pomeroy. died Monday at his
residence .
Mr . Heilman was born March 30,
1892 the son of the late Phillip and
Hannah Kalb Heilman . l-Ie was also
preceded in death by hi.s wife, Edna,
two sisters, Maggie Smith and Lydia
Wyersmiller.
He is sur;ived by one brother ,
Walter Heilman , three sisters, Add1e
Hetiman, Florence Hedilinan and
Felicia Grueser, all of Pomeroy .
Mr. Heilman was a veteran of
World War I.
Funeral ser;ices will be held
Thursday at 1 p_m _at Ewing Chapel
with the l{ev . W. H. Perrin offic iating . Burial will be in Bunker
Hill Cemetery . Friends may call at
the funeral home after I p.m . on
Wednesday .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES OCT 15
Correne Deluse, Gladys Foul,
James Halley. Gail Herrmann,
Richard lssacs, Helen Keyes ,
Dianne LeMasters, Paul Martin ,
Timi McClellan, Mrs . Stephen
Mor se and daughter , Michelle
Ousley . John Peters. Correna
Stevens Janice Stewart, Martha
Stewart: Michael Swigger, Marsha
Walker. Mrs. Clarence Williams and
son. Arbour Yingst.
BIRTHS OCT IS
Mr . and Mrs . Conrad Fulton ,
Daughter. Jackson; Mr . and Mrs .
Joel Adkms. daughter . C.'rown Oty;
Mr. and Mrs. James Doss, daughter.
Letart.

HOMECOMlNG SUNDAY
The Morning Star United
Methodist Church will have its
homecoming Sunday beginning with
worship at 9 :45 a .m . followed by
Sunday school at 10 :45 a.m. A carry m dinner will be ser;edat 12 30 p.m .
An afternoon ser;ice will be held at 2
p.m. The pastor, Florence Smith, extends a welcome to the public .

UNDERWRITERS ASSN.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
The Meigs-&lt;Jallia-Mason Ufe Underwriters Associaton will hold a
noon luncheon meeting at Meigs Inn
on Wednesday, Oct. 17. All area life
and health agents are invited to attend .

9e ready to winter,

JESTIE MOLDEN

get where you want

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs . Jestie Molden of Rutland is a
s urgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis. Cards
may be sent to room 214.

to m safely with a
gootl set of snow tires.

NIGIIT SET
Rutland Village trick or treat
night has been set for Oct . 30 from 6
to 7p.m .

Meigs" schools
1l'ontmued from page II
dunng the strike.
Supt. Gleason . on behalf of the
board , expressed concern that the
programs have not gone on, but
stated the board must take an
overall view of the situation in that
the jondergarrten student. the
atbegra student and others cannot
go ahead with their studies so the
students in band and athletics can\
either.
Gleason spoke wt~h pnde of the
booster groups in the district and
their work and with pride of the
athletic programs . Some parents
charged that the band is falling
apart and there was concern about
not only football but the girls
· volleyball team which had stood a
good chance of coming up with a
state championship this year .
He pointed out that he knew the
band had worked hard to prepare for
competitions. However, he main·
tained that the board does have to
look at the overall picture for all
students. not just those involved in
special programs .
At this point, the discussion
brought out up&lt;~n questioning by
parents, that teachers are still
receiving fringe benefits such as in·
surance coverage even though they
are on strike.
Several parents indicated that
they feel these benefits should be
taken away .
" If things are _.Qeing taken away
from the stlllienl.., then things
should also b€ taken away from the
teachers 't a parent commented .
DISfRICf TEARlNG APART
Joy Bentley . women's athletic
director, brought up the point that
the Ohio High School Athletic
Association does not require school
attendance for participation in the
regular athletic events. She charged
that the lack of the athletic program
is tearing the district apart .
Gleason countered that it w.., the
strike vote that was tearing the
dtstnct apartment.
The board was questioned on
whether teachers had actually asked
for $SO a day for each day they have
been on stnke. This was dented.
Howeve!"', Gleason said this was

stated at a pubilc meeting held
recently at the American Legion
l-lall m Pomeroy .
Mrs . Fisher said that had been a
private meeting. Gleason countered
saying that Bibler had placed on the
negotiating table at one point a
proposal that teachers receive a
$10,000 base pay plus $SO a day for
each day they had been on strike.
Upon questionil\ll by Mrs. Pat Kitchen, Supt. Gleason reviewed the
demands of the teacher for a new
contract. He took each Item
separately and told of solutions
which the board had been able to of·
fer . Some of the requests of the
association such as class size, plan ning periods, etc., are not negotiable
Items but are problems for !Gleason
said
He brought out that teachers want
more time off . l-Ie said they receive
15 days a year sick leave, two
busmess leave days, one emergency
day plus the hve calarrudy days
which invaribly occur each year. He
p&lt;~inted out that they work only 182
days a year and commented that he
didn't really see how they could have
more time off.
Several parents indicated they
would like to see make up days take
place for the good of their children.
Dr . l{iggs corrunented that make up
days which include Saturday school
and extension at the end of the
school year never seem to be very
well attended .

schools - at the repairs that are
needed. textbook shortages and
other situations all of which take
money and there are no funds there .
To a question raised by Ed Kitchen, Supt. Gleason ~id that the
lack of attendance over the strike
period does not affect that amount of
state funds received by the district .
A question came up on whether
teachers would be replaced . It was
stressed by Mrs. Sheets that there is
no plan at this time to attempt to
replace the teachers . The primary
concern is to settle the stnke, she
commented .
Gleason read the state law dealing
with the failure of a board to renew
the contract of a teacher. The
possiblity of bind arbitratioo was
discussed but he stated this get.s into
a lot of ramifications and problems
for all concerned. Other comment.s
dealt with harassment that has
taken place during the strike and the
feelillll of some parents that students
were being used to break the strike .
All members of the board who in·
dude Dr. l{iggs, Mrs. Sheets, C..rol
Pierce, president; Virgil King and
Larry Powell were on hand for the
open meeting which was followed by
a lengthy executive session with the
sheriff and prosecuting attorney .

You've known us for many years as the
Citizens Nat ional Bank

But our name

has cha nged to The Central Trust Com
pany, N_A_, Southern Ohio Division .
We've been wa :c hing Meigs County
grow . And as it grew, we realized th e day
would come when we would need to tak e a
bold step to keep pace with that growth

new Central Trust Company, we're ready
to help build your future . With all the ser vices and financial resources you'll need .
Stop in and say hello . You'll find all the
same friendly faces in the same con ·
venient places . There's just one new
name to remember . The central Trust
company, N .A -. Southern Ohio Division .
But you can call us Central Trust .

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

,...n.:··

.\ 1idtllcport, 0.

Ucolll'll
laneotDUI'IIill

(lf&gt;Ct. . Ut 1111111

MEMBER · FD IC

really looked forward to the eighth
grade football team activities thi.s
yea r slnce his son is a member and
the team had promised to be one of
the best in years. He used this point
to stress that even board members
are hurt by the policy of not per·
milling band and athletic events to
continue during the strike.
After Supt. Gleason had reviewed
the demands of the teache111 for a
settlement, Mrs . Fisher told those
attending that they had just been
presented a distored view or
bargaining issues and they she
deplored public presentations of
these issues . She indicated teachers
are willing to negotiate at anytime .
M111 . Sheets responded saying she
had made eve!) effort to be police
during the strike . She said she has
made no rerna rks about any
teachers and feels the district has
good teachers . However, she com·
mented she felt It absolutely
necessa '1 to bring out points made
last night to let the public know what
the board has encountered .
At the opening of the session. Supt.
Gleason told the group the board has
cut aU expenditures to a minimum to
come up to a $9700 base salal) . The
additional money that has been of.
fered since has been made possible
only through funds which have not
been expended in salanes since the
strike began, he stated. He said the
board 's expenditures many times
are fixed and others are ~n the in·
crease and that salary requests
made would mean that the board
could not !"'Y its bills_ He cr~ed
those attending to look around their

Seven candidates seeking election
for three vacancies on the Eastern
Local School Board were speake111
at the regular meeting of the Tuppers Plains Booster Association Oct.

8.

-:-:-:-:-:-: ·.·:-:-:-:-:-:·-·

··. ·.·.·.··.·.·.

~g-t. Chamlwr~ ~t'rws

a~

PR -:24

Norma Arbaugh, president, in·
traduced the seven candidates . Each
gave a reswne of their qualifications
and reason for wishing to be elected
to the board.
Candidates are Roger Gaul, B. N.
Rinehart, Sandra Sheets, Victor
Gaul, Bernard Shrivers, Hugh Mar·
tin and Jim Caldwell.
r1 the candidates are write~n
candidates and the procedure for
write-ins was explained . The
procedure is to indicate the office
and name of person for whom you
wish to vote on paper provided by
the election board . The election is
Nov.6.
The president thanked all those
who had helped make this year's
carnival such a success especially
the chainnan, Carolyn Ritchie, Sally
Caldwell, Joyce Ritchie and Ann
Collins.
Room attendance prize was awarded to Barbara Tripp, second grade.
The membership drive is still in
progress and will clnse Nov . 1. The
winning class will receive a cash
prize .
All parents, teachers and in·
terested persons are welcome to join
the Boosters. Open house at the
school will be held Nov . 2 during the
regular meeting.
The proposed projects for this
year were discussed and acted upon .
It was decided that the association
buy indoor play equipment and a
committee was named to fonnulate
plans for the playground area of the
schooL
School corrunittees are Uoyd
Blackburn, chainnan, Linda and
Beryl Wilson , Wilma Parker, Bar·
bara Tripp and Sandy Savoy.
Refrestunents were ser;ed by
mothers of the sixth grade class.

Six

REVTV AL SLATED
A revival will be beld at the
Salvation Anny, 115 Butternut Ave.,
beginning this evening at ·7: 15 p.m .
through Sunday.
The Rev. Larry Lewis, Mason and
associate will be the evangellllli and
WPSM Eloise Adams aud Bob
EBtewp wUI be the song leadel'!l. The
pubUc Is Invited_

in~lrudor

Sgt . Richard E. Chambe111 of the
Middleport Police Department ser·
ved as Pl{-24 instructor at the 13th
regional police self defense in·
structor 's seminar held Oct. 11 -12 at
the Northern Virginia Criminal
Justice Academy. Fairfax, Va.
The seminar was authorized by
U1e Law Enforeement Liaison U
Division of the United States Karate
Assn .
The even t was condu&lt;;ted by Of.
ficer Wayne Murray and was the fir·
st regional seminar to utilize the In·
tegrated team approach to the in·
struction of defensive tactics for
police recruits.
The instruction. in handcuffing,
searching, coping with stress, PR-24
and empty handed defensive tactics
utilized the principles and concepts
of the Japanese martial art, aikido,
as the instructional basis,
The team, coordinated by Officer
Murray, including Lt. Mike Beckley
of the Nassau County, N. Y., Police
Department; Richard Rood of the
Baltimore Aikido Institute and in·
structo r for the U. S. Bureau of
Poisons . and Sgt. Chambers
repr esenti ng the
PR-24 In ·
ternational Institute of Boston,
Mass .

Campaign organizers turn anger into action
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

s1 1l \'t ng tnflctlton are net.&gt;ded . nut louktng for S l'd.pego&lt;:~ts, ··the sl.ii tcnt ent set td .

The organizers of today's Campaign For Lower Energy Pnn,; an· try mg
to tum anger into action, urging Americans to let the oil mduslr} &lt;:~nd Uw
government know they are fed up with rising costs.
The agenda for the day included the usual rallies, demo nstration,, lllarches and teach -ins .
The sponsors included the Gray Panthers. Consumers Opposed to Inflation
in Necessities, the Episcopal Urban Bishop 's Conference, the Alne nca ns fu r
Democratic Action and a variety of unions.
A major effort was the distribution of millions of red . whi tc and blue postcards headed : " Big oil discredit cards.· · The cards urge Congress to put a IIll
on oil and gas prices, appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the oil in dustry and create a publicly owned energy corporation .
Oil company offices were targets of demonstrations even before the official day of protest. About 30 peop le picketed the headquarters of the Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) on Tuesday , chanting slogans like : "Suluo , 'tuv pumping
WI dry."

The company, which closed off the entrances to the building and stalioned
guar.ds nearby , said in a prepared statement. that It understood the
frustrations that lead to demonstrations. " But fundament al answers on

NO _130

Winpls!llger also is also heading an effort to draft &amp;n . Edward M. Kenned y for the l!JIJO Demonat•c presidential nonunation . l-Ie brok e wtth
!'resident rAi rter last year over the issue of whether to decontcol energy
pnces Congress already has approved the phasmg out of controls on natural
gas and is cons1derin~ an end to cunlrols on petroleum. Price controLs un
heat111g oil and diesel fuel were ended during the Ford AdministrHtion .
Carter's re~IPcfion headquarters in Cone ord , N.H .. wa!i the focus of a

planned afternoon march. Sponsors S1lld they would tl) to telephone UJeir
demands to Carter; if they get no response, they said , they will urge
every one drivin g by to honk horn s in protes t .
An Associated Pres;, spot check mdiCH ted s upport for the prote st seemed
strongest i.n stat es where wmter heating bil ls are expected to be a serious

•

e

(USPS 145960)
VOL XXVIII

In St I .outS, r&gt;on Owen~ . tiJl' head of resear c h and pllblit· r ei&lt;Jtlon."i fnr
llts lnd 9 of the lnt~rnat JOn&lt;:~ l Assonalt•m of Machmists. one of tht• .-; punsors
llf a rJud-Oety demonstrati on, .sa ttl : " Wl' 'rl' hold t n ~ this rally because wt· ·rl'
.'.tc k and ttred of a nati onal e nergy p olt cy that rub~ the worktng!Tla n and
g1ves tu the multi -nati onal oil curporat iuns ."
Wtlliarn Win pi singer , president of the Inte rnational As.')Ol'lalt on uf
Mach1nisl\i and tht• c hatrrnan of lhe coalltton coo rdinating tht&gt; events,
desc ribt&gt;d the protest as a "'nati onal grassn){Jts organizing effort ."

a1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17 . 1979

~:---,/

_ ...

---~ ~~~. ~-·

...,.. .

CONTRACT RENEWED

Monday night. the school board

HEREOCT-!e
The Meigs County Bloodmobile
will be held Friday. Qct_ 211. at the
Pomeroy Elementary School, Ver non Nease, chainnan aMounced
today .

--···- - - MS SPECIAL----.

•
•

•

I

BAKED LASAGNA ••
Oinn•r wirh
golde11 brow"
bu• ... " "

tt7t

TOGO ONlY

u •.,......

I

E&amp;1niSi
-. •••.••1
~

* MADE TO lAST

BUTCHER BLOCK
BASE
Mexlmum C.OPI!clty•Colo,..

FIRST Pl.ACE HONORS - The rtfle and flag corps of the Wahama
White Falcon Marchillll Band both received first place honors for their
perfonnance this past weekend in the Tri.state Marching Band Fesllval
held in Huntington . The auxiliary corps competed in Class B which included bands with 50 to 80 playil\ll members from several high sc hools m
.·.......... ·

Oluo and West Virginia . Mason OJunty was also represented by the Big
Blacks of Pl. Pleasant. J eff lluell , director of the Wahama White Fal con
Man·hing Band, and all the band members wish to compliment Gary
Stewart, director. and the PI Pleasant Big Blacks for a performance well
done . The Wahama Band will be conducting their annual tag day on
Saturday, O.:·tober 20

....... ::-:-·.·.·.· .·.·.·.·.·· ...... ·.·-·.·.··:-··:-·

OPEN HOUSE NOV.Jl
Amerlcare Corporallon of Columbwi, owner aDd operator of the
Pomtroy Heallb Care Center, anDOUDces tbal dedlcation and ribbon
culliog ceremooJea of the new cen·
ter, near Pomeroy, aloag wilb a
pubUc open bouse at lbe facility will
be held from 1 to 5 p.m. on Nov. 11.
Ronald E. Zldlan, admlnlltrator of
the new faclllty oaJd that delalled
planJ lor lbe ceremooies and open
bouse will be aooounced later_

Willow Island report coming soon
CHAHI.l·:STO\ . W V" ' AI' 1

A

federal re p ort o 1J tht• scaff oltll ng
collapse at Wtll uw Island will bt.·

relea sed onn· &lt;"l\" 11 actwn H~atn~t
contractors h~.&lt;. b,•en completed .
sa1d US Labor SecretaC\ lVI\·
Marshall .
" We'll conttnue to pursut&gt; lht' nvll
c itati on~. hut aflt'r thctt, 1f the flh·~
are r elea st&gt;d by the .Jll s t l l" t

Department . we'd bo: glad to turn
them OVt'r t o tht· state." "'ar ~a II
TI1e Governor's Cornnusswn rm

Willow lsiHnd ha s bt·en seeking UJL·
report .
prepa re d
b1
tht ·

16 injured
SOUTH POINT, Ohio rAPI
Sixteen elementary school
students were injured, none
seriously, Tuesday when a school
bus overturned in this community near Ironton .
Ten students were taken for
treatment to Lawrence General
Hospital in Ironton but none were
admitted. Six of the 49 students
aboard were treated at the scene
and the other 33 were taken on to
school aboard another bus.
The Ohio Highway Patrol is in vestigating the accident and iden·
tified the driver as Julia E.
Moore, 38, South Point. She had
no explanation for the accident
other than that she lost control of
the bus while en route to South
Point Elementary School No . 2.

Leaves prison

2 lockl • extra wide

meeting in regular session, voted to
close schools temporarily begiruting
on Tuesday morning . Some parents
attending the meeting indicated they
felt closing the schools would bring ·
about a speed up in negotiations.
The board of education and the
teachers association both indicated
that they believed closing the
schooL• would be helpful towards a
settlement of tlle strike.
Meantime , Gleason reported that
pi c kets from the teachers
association were on picket lines at
the schools of the district today and
secunty guards, hired by the board,
are still in the distnct.

announce

*AU STEEL

DOUBLE SHELF
CLOSET

There have been no negotiatiOn
sessions between the Meigs Local
Schoool District Board of Education
and the Meigs Local School District
Teachers Association set to end the
18 day teachers strike.
As of Wednesday morning, Supt.
Llavid Gleason reported that no additional negotiations have been set
for the teams of the two groups .
Supt. Gleason said he notified the
..,sociati on early Tuesday morning
that he IS available for negotiations
but has had no reply from any
association representative .

renewed a fire cootract for 19M with
the Racine Fire Department for fire
protection. l{acine Village officials,

NEW ,..,HIPME:NT

Sturdy•Decorator colo,..

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

No negotiations
slated in strike

QUALITY STORAGE CABINETS

'LARGE' CAPACITY
PANTRY

'Here 1n OJnnedJcut, the rally will focus on low and middle-income
fa rmlies already aff ected by cash-on-&lt;lem,.nd payments for heatillll oil,"
sa1d Lou Kiefer, labor co-c ha1nnan of the coalition sponsoring todliy's
derr 10nstrations .
The protest follows on the heels of announcements of price tncreases by
IJ \Jya and Iran , two of the world's major oil exporters. Carter has blamed
pn ce mcreases by the Organization of Petroleum Exp&lt;~rting Countnes for
U1e high rate of inflation in the United States . The oil industry says its price
h1kes ar e due to the OPEC boosts
Ftgures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that from December
1978 through August 1979, the heating ml component of the Conswner Price
Index went up 46 percent , the gasoline section went up 42 percent and the
natural gas part went up 12 percent. In the same period , the overall index
rose 9 percent.
Another aspect of energy wtll be in the spoWght on Thursday . Nuclear
Energy Women, a group found ed by women who work in the nuclear in·
dustry . has organized informal discussions and special events which, it says,
are designed to educate the public about nuclear energy . NEW is sponsored
by the Atomic Industrial Forum, Inc ., an international assoctation which
wants to develop the peaceful use of nu clear power.

enttne

Onupat10nal Safety and

Ht•a ltli

1\dnnnt stratton. on the Apnl 19 7R
rhsas!t"r 1n wh1 rh :&gt; I runstructlun
work e r s d ted. ThL' Lfl mmisswn lS
chargt-&gt;d with r rv t t: wm~ OSI-t :\ ·s

mn·sttgatwn of the rtfT Jdr-nt
OSHA has reftu&gt;eLl tu relcast' ttw
rt&gt;port , sayin~ part of the reas4Jn fo r
U1 e delav was that the J ustice
De partment was mvt'"stigrJtin g tht•
;wl"ldL·nt But U.S. Attornt'y Stepher1
.Jory sa td rece ntl y that a federal

grand JUr)· co uld find no ev id en ce of
cnnuna l misconduct by rontr rH.· tors
OS HA has also ci ted thrct•
("(l lllpan Jes, Including Re se&lt;:JrC" h Co\\relt of !lound Rrook . \ ..I .. t11r
prtn c tpa..J contra.c tor, fur nvll
\" IOJ::i!IOO S of federal sa fety ltJW S
Tlwse ci tations are bemg lJppt·O:tk•d
Marshall was Ln Ctu-trl estun tu
Hddress the West V•rguua AFI A' IO
con ventmn tudcty

sa"l 'liwsday rught

.,

probl em .

•

Letart Township Trustees have

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Dr. Riggs pointed out he had

That's just what we ' ve done . As the

Board candidates
speak at meeting

--

CHINA UNIT

Decorator COlon

MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

AVON PARK, Fla . (AP) - Dr.
Carl Coppolino left pr;son a free
man ror the first time in I2t years
Tuesday, saying he want.s to
clear his name and sit down to a
western omlette.
As he left Avon Park Correctional lnsitute, the Brooklyn-born
anesthesiologist vowed to clear
his name of the 1967 conviction in
the drug-overdose murder of his
fir.t wife, Cannela. 32. also a
physician .

Contract
ratified
•

$50,000 action filed
A s u•t 111 the amount of $SO.OOO was
ftl ed in Meigs County Common Plea'
Court by Mart e Watson , Pomeroy
agat nst Conn ie Fi elds , New Ha ven .
The suit charges that the plamtiff .
Wa tson. was walkmg at the iflterscetwn of Butternut and F ourth
Street when the defendant drove her
car into the plaintiff. The accident
occurred on :-lov . 7, 1977.

The contract between the
Southern Local &amp;hool Board and
member.; of the OAPSE was ralifled
when the board met Tuesday night
A $12,6.11 judgment action has
The contract calls for an increase
been
filed m Meigs County Corrunon
in salaries, based on the teHcher's
Pleas
Court for material and labor
salaries; longevity pay , $100 a year
to
renovate
and unprove a r estdence
after the 12th year , $200 a year after
1
n
Chester
Twp.
the 18th year and $300 a year after
Da vid Bwngardner, HI. l, Midthe 24th yeHr. The non-eertified were
dl
eport
, filed the action agamst Fray
also offered , if they choose. $2,500
ancl Fran ces Reut er . HI. 3.
term insurance to be paid by the
Pomeroy .
board .
Four other suits )la ve been filed in
Meeting with the board was Frank
Judge
J ohn Bacon's court.
W. Porter. Pomeroy Attorney and a
H.
S.
Parker. etal. trustees of
resident of the Southern Local
·
Carleton
College , a non-profit legal
School District.
entity
has
brought suit •gamst the
Porter, in a statement to the
Ohw
Attorney
General's Office .
board, talked about some of the
er
seeks
to sell property for
Park
·proble!Tl.'l in the distri ct such as the
$25,000
which
will
be deposi ted m the
football program , baseball
Fanners
Bank
and
Savings Comprogrwn , coaches, clas.."i assign pany
under
the
car
leton College
ments and bus scheduling .
Trust
Account
for
use
as a school
Porter suggested that the board
training
fa
ciuty
for
the
mentally
and
institute a program that would instUI
retarded
pride and respect in the students . He
A s uit for cancellation of conalso discussed the band program
veyance
of real estate was filed by
and the conflict over the ball field at
Will1
an1
S.
Long, Rt. I. Long Botton1 ,
the junior high . Porter s uggested
G. Long and Shirle y
against
Eugene
that the problems he outlmed be
M. Lo n~. Ht. I, Long Bottom . The
taken under consideration it was
suit charges that the defendants
reported.
In --other business, the board ac- promised to care for the well being
cepted three tuition students and ap- of plaintiff. Willian1 S. Long. The
defendants breached their promises
proved changes in the marching
and
have failed to ca re for and
band book . A large crowd wa s in atproperly
take care of William S.
tendance . The boad r ecessed anrl
I
&lt;&gt;ng
will meet again on Tuesday at 7: 30
A suit for partition of real esta te
p.m .

was fi led by Joilr Pi ckens. Ht. i.
Portland, and Samantha Pickens,
Ht l, Portland, against lJllian
Hhodes . Keithville . LouisiHna. et a!.

Gallia-Meigs board
•
recezves
$62,905.88
COLUMBUS - Eighty&lt;lix counties ser;ing mentally retarded persons today were sent checks totaling
$11,965,000, the Oluo Department of
Mental Health and Mental l{etar dston has announced.
The funds represent the annual
state reimbursement operating subsidy sent to County 1169 1 Boards of
Menta l l{etardation and fi gu res out
to about 87 percent of their
requested reimbursement .
The programs had ..,ked for

Weather
Co nsidera ble cloudiness torught
Wlth a good chance of showers . Low
in the upper ~ to low 50s Cloudy
Thursday mornmg, becoming partly
s unny in the afternoon . High in the
mtd to low 6(1&lt;; . The chance of rain .W
percent tomght and 20 percent Thursday
EXTENDED FORECAST
A cbance of showers Friday
and Saturday . Fair Sunday . Mild
through the period w1th highs In
the mid 60s to low 70s and lows in
the 40s.

SEEKS DEVELOPMENT - During a recent
Washington meeting with E nergy Department officials , l{epresentative Clarence Miller, right,
discussed with DOE's Director of Fossil Energy,
George Fumich, seated, the importance of stepping up
consideration ct Conoco 's Noble County goal
gasification projecl. Congressman Miller expressed
urgency in DOE's seleetion of !he Noble County site for
a $6()U m illion conversion plant that would convert !ugh

$13,008,870 (based upon serving
22,328 ~rsons ), however legislatve
restrictions in the Department's
fiscal year 1979 budget keeps it from
dispensing the state s ubsidy at the
statuto!) authorized ceilihgs. ThOBe
limits are presently set at $700 for
each adult and $500 for each child in
county programs.
The Department is currently
negotiating to gam approval to use
other funds to make up the dif.
terence between the legislation appropriation and the counties'
request.
Of the 22,328 enrollees in county
programs, 10,351 are preschool,
school age and under 21 years of age
in activity centers and workshops;
9.294 are adu lts working in
workshops and training centers; and
2,683 receive home-based ser;ices .
Only t!6 counties receive state
reimbursement since mentally
retarded persons in Meigs County
are enrolled in Gallia County
pr ograms . and Noble County
enroll ees are in Guernsey County
programs . The Gallia.Jackson·
Metgs board recei ved $62,905.88 .

sulfur coal into synthetic pipeline gas. Conoco's Mike
Ware,left, and DOE's AI Uoyd also attended the conference during which Miller emphasized that the
energy shortage, the protection of jobs, and Increased
coal production and use, dictate an "aU out ~
program type push" oo coal gasUicatlon teclllology.
DOE is presenlly evaluating demonstration plant
design proposals from both Conoco and the llllnola Ccal
Gasification Group_

•

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