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                  <text>Checks received for toy projects
GAJ.IJPOI.!S - Loca l support has
agam been g1ven tu tht' ll ulll' r
Medical Cente r Pcd1atm Telc1'"l&lt;l"
and Pediatric To} Ftwds to provrdt ·
free televis ion as well as toy s &lt;Jild
games for the children who ar1·
hospitalized un the h us p1 w I· s
Pediatric Umt Junng lht• rnunlh of
October , ttu-ough tht' l·ontu rurng ~·f­
loris of Earl Neff
For the seventh consecutlvtt yt•ar· .
the Gallipolis Lodge 'io . 107 of till'

F t:rlll
Thi s )'t:ar 's
!&lt;xalll'd Hukr , Osror ll .'::ikphl'nson
prest•utt·d tlw L· ht·ck for tht' Octobt•r
fund to :-ll'ff
A lll'W sptmsur hH· thl' Pt•dwtnc
T11\ F und was wd L'Oillt'd lo ttM.·
gn .IW\IIg gruup u( trl le resteJ l ll d i \ ' idU&lt;iJ S,
lJU !)I lll'SS
amJ CIV Il'
Hf'l..!i1ll tZ&lt;IllnllS Stw IS Dtanna Bog~s.
Tt · ll'\ 1:11\lfl

the tlw ner

,,f

Dt 's Candy, Cak e a nd

l'r&lt;tfb Suppl1·. loca t"l Ill the Spnng
Valky Plena Sht• has just n'n•nll~

addl'd a nafl"i sect!lln .so that
ruJtt•na ls are easr ly availa l'le for
the numt.'rt iUS arts and crafts clas.se!l

now bemg sc hed u led at he r shop
.Oc:tube r marks the begtnnm~s of
Lht• e 1gh th year of the Pl'Cilatnc
Television Fund, Initia ted by Neff as
a spe&lt;·1al proJeCt m October, 1972.
The To' Fund began. also under Ius
thrediUn, 111lktober, 1!176 . Both funds have been extremelv su&lt;"cessful

(U SPS 145 960)

meantn~ful to th e chlldre n
who are hos pitalized All ercdtt fur
th1 s ongo mg proJeCt belo11gs to f'a rl
Neff . The hosp1ta l. the patients and
their famili es are most grateful to
tum for his constant dedication to
tlu s program .
Anymw tn lere ~1eU m partll'l pattng
1n e1ther fund should contact Neff at
111 2 Teudora Avenue , (;allipolis,
Otu u 4563 1

and very

VOL XXVIII

1

B.P .O. Elk..s has made tht·rr i:irl/IU.ctl
to tilt' P1 •d ratrH

co ntribut ron

Court news
GAl. JJPOl.IS

(lilt '

l· a:-. l'

\Lt ~

eon t.m ut.-d tn l;al!1po!ls l\1un1 r 1pa l
Cou rt Fnda)
Charged w1th phy 'i[( a l h.ann \to
pro pe r1y . t tw ~'&lt;iSl' ag&lt;:~msl

\1 ur rl'

.J.

Bl azer Jr , C&lt;JIIIf)lllt s. plt•;!th'(! r11 •t

~

gu1l.1 .

·~

Four otht'r

m Judgl'
J a lllL':-.

ra:-.t· ~

.1&lt;-JJm·~

wert' h"rllllll&lt;lkd

A Ht·nnt'll ·, t·u ur1

P HatilllluiHi . . .
~ullt\

hs tl'd, plc;-Hkd
1·a rr ylllg

&lt;:1

was fmt&gt;tl

r1·J

addrl",:-,

\()a dla !"l!t' 11 f

COrlll'd]t'lj \\\'etp~ll l
$:10

plu :-

~~

..., 1:o.

;1!1•1

riH•fll 1 l

susp t•rJ dt'&lt;l q -•rJ!t.•nt't'
Vnt ~·rUII-! &lt;J

p;, .,l uf fl (t nHl ll' S~ tu "
uf DWI Bdl~ .J llarn n~h•r :_
27. H1d wdl . wa.-. fuurnl g udt~ ;md
fmetl $..100 plu .~o, ;.~ SIX rnunlh s..·ntt·n· ·,..
a il but }() di::tyS SIL')pl'IHkd
Art hur W lkow n. ~\. ( ~ ~dhp,]l.,_
fu rfe1tt•d $:lO on &lt;i l'han~ , , t•f fa li un· I t •
)lt: ld
char~t·

SEVENTH CONTIUBUTIONI - Oscar G. Stephenson , Exalted Ruler
of the (; ollipolis Elks Lodge No . 107, presents their seventh annual contnbulloll to the P edJatric Tele,ision Fund tu Earl Neff , right

F (lrfi'IT.tnl.! $:\n dl. ;t dwn:t· , •I
iL&lt;.;sun·d l lt· &lt;•r Ji....,Ltlll , ..... .~_-. 1\_,,I M rt

J.

l .t: r nlt·~

~:.!.

,\ \t·: W S I ~ J \SUH for tht• lwsp1tal's Pe&lt;ilatnc Toy
I· und. Plarllli-1 H1•1-!F!~. left. uwne r of Dt's Ca ndy . Cake

flillttt•r••\

SU.TESSF\'1. YEAH
NEW YOI(K. \ Y
Chm~ ·, iiil
Indu~tne ~. Inc Sa turday .o~nrw tHWi'l.l
resu lts of the most suen•s.sful ~ l '; Jr 111
Its hiStory (.IS t ht' ('Olll p&lt;HI! rll'hlt'\'' •d
n·co rd rev('nu~::s £tnd rlt't tl!t "t!I IH' fm
IL5 fiscal .n •;rr t'!Hlt'il Augu :-.1 :ll
U~rat1ng n·vt'llllt'-" qf $1115.:4;_ r-•l

wt rr up 22 pt.·r-vent

fn tll l

l;r .-, f 't·;rr ·-.

$86 ,395,000 and rw l tll + '+lr~w , t
$i.932,1XM1 wa.-. up J~· f!l' rt't•r:' f r ~·,
las t yeor 's $t).ljj;)tl.I M~ l \\ hid t:,, ·'· :~·d
i:l n t•x:t ra nrd!ri&lt;Jr~ .~. u . ,,. :$.' 111 . · •~ ·
Net mcrm w pPr shan· rt '-"' ' .J • p+ ·r .
cent to $2J}J f ron 1 la.c;t _\ t '.t r " $1 ~~~

whJ ch uwludcd tilt' ntr·;r••rdirl.:r 1
~a tn uf 16ct'nb
Per share earn1n~ ~ 111 197~~ u1
c r eHsed d!sproportwn;Jitly to rwt Ill·
come dut· to a dt'~'Tt ' a s t· 1n till'
aver age nurnlxor uf lPI!Ull un st10:1 re~
outstan dtn~ . Roth years· pt.'r slwn·
amounts refle...t.-; thP :1 f}{'fl'l'nt r·nm mon s toek dJ\'Jdend pa)ali k +II•
No,ember 26, 1979

and Crafts Supply in Spnng Valley Plaza. g1ves he r
dona llon to Carl Neff for the month of October.

Administrative pay hikes approved
FA!;T 'vH·~ fr;s - Pas tern 's Local
Honnl of Education at its October
lllL't'llllg last wee k approved adJIIIllJStral!n· nn·ws for ~upe rtn ­
lt •n dt·nt Hw h;rrd Hobe r ts, ht s
' ' 't.TPl; tr~ .
board ciPrk-treas urt•r
and II H· itS ~ I st:wt trl· ~tsurcr .
l rt 11tlwr rn&lt;llhT \_ sevt·ral pt•rsutl\
\ \ l'["t' l'! l i]ll+ l_\ ('tl
(~.lit· I ~ 11: th tt t ~· a:-- named choral

d

1 t' + t,•t

. Suv Thornpsu n.

~t· ntor

t'l,L'i:"-1 &lt;td\'t.'&gt;~tr . \1r\

\1 &lt;-i rth cl Durst.
.'-I :IJs t tu tf' :-; f'•Tt't.:t r ·~. cook. study
l!t i J!lllor. Mrs . .Judy Buckl ey.
sub.'1t ttU!l' :-;t,.'ITt't.ary ; ~rs _ G rac('

h;dl

( 'h t•\·a\ J('r. su h:~ t 1tutt·
c ustodian :
\1rs . Y1:onne S1ssun, substitute
sc'{.: r el&lt;.lry; Mr s. Darlene Casstdy.
-,ubsti tu tr bus drrver, Mrs _ Luul.S
Tyson . Wilham Huhmette . substitute

til&lt; d1str1ct W1lll&gt;e a!Jie to 1s.s ue con duet grades .
The Jayr~s were g1ven per rm.ss lon tu hold a square dance at the
Cheste r build ing on Nov. 24. Per nussiorJ was gi ve n for placement of
L'uUed 1on boxes Ill the sc hoo l-; for
('hnstrnas donation.s of toys fur the
needy .
The board app roved a contract
w1th the Ja ckson Oty Board of
Edu ta tl on for renewal of tran s portatJO n for a student to a special

Little Chad Green buried Saturd11Y
HASTI'\GS, Nt·b . 1 AP 1 - Chad
Gr ee n 's p a r e nt s. wh o flt&gt;d the
country to seek treatm ent for tllt.'lr

tt•acht:r

.-\ number of tnd.t\lduals commented on laktng ;Htlon on conduct
gr·c-lf lt·~ hetng tssu ed by bus dnv ers.
It "a.-. '&gt;l l'l'.'-·' ''d th;t! rw b us dn\·er m

J&gt;oli('e ('ife driver
followinM ;wcident

HAM &amp; SWISS
on RYE

1

tlt •d

filll l'" lilt.;

d

IW (J- n'h l c l t•

&lt;HTtdt•nl F rtdi--1~ on tht.· 400 block of
'll11rd t\\t·nut·

with

."&gt;&gt;:' t'lll' t-it 8 2J d . JTl . ,
Jl4dlcl' rt'p&lt;&gt;rt ~north
tJ"t i!J · ' &lt;ILl+• opn81l'd
by EIIP
, J.- Jr]~ l! dl . 1tl (; ;dlipolt s . :-;tnwk tJw
··1 1 tt •!ll! ,,f ;1 \ t'lttcll' Lirt\"L'Il h~
_...,,ti t' I' \ I I+ l'fJh(lwt·r. :ln. Le!art.

{ 'nllt'd

FRIES

)II

!ht•

Call!pOli~ ( 'll~

''I

I

J....."""':~~-~~w~w..-..---.-.-J

MONDAY-FRIDAY
OCTOBER 22-26

McCLURE'S

JS4E . Malll
Pom eroy, 0
992 ·6 292

II \ "
Tl tt' r t· v.-;1 :-; rwt dt ·r-rile d;-Htl;j~l' tu
L" •t h ' ··ttw lt·s t;idtllll~m wa s citt'd on
;, ··h; l!'l.!t' •1f ldt of CL'rttt•r
In furtht ·r i-H'!ltln . SI X ptT Suns wt•rt·
•·tt t·d l:rldti~ on 'hcrrgl's u f
P- ISSi 'S-"'illn ,,f opt•n fvnWJnt• rS In

public ll.st' art&gt; &lt;-J~
1 '1 tt-d Wt·re
Phll I . lliilrti . 20.
L;-tllip+dt ....
C'iirl H Dray. 20,
· .. :lq,,!:~ \Ltll~· r I WaL"iUn II. 22.
· ,;d!q:"l.'
,I&lt;Jiiil l ).,1dlltk. 24.
\ ;;dltpol:....
.lt'rr} Stg!llon . .14,
C;illip11l1~. and, Sl.&lt;infor d ()
C'ox,
(;; tlllpult.~

school.
The tractor pulling club was given
perrniss1on to have a banquet at the
Chest er bu ildJng on Nov . 3 and
F:astern F' uture Farmers were given
pem11SSion to attend a s ta te con ~
ferenre 111 Colum bu s, 0&lt;1 . 31. Nnv . I
a nd 2.
The boa r d pur chased spa c&lt;·
heat ers for the bus garage a11d h&lt;ard
three grievanct•s hrought by mem bers of the Eas tern Loca l Teache rs
Assoc1atton .

JOI~S

STAFF - J&lt;•ff Slatter)

ha.'i juined tht· HudLing Tt&gt;chnieal
Collt·~t·

sl&lt;lff as a health educator
in tht· Community Health
Edu&lt;·a tion Centt-r's hyperten.~ion
program , annuunC'ed CHEC eoor dit~ator Kath y Dansky . Slattery
"'as previously employed by the
Suutht-"ast Ohio Emergency
M edit'al St· rvkt•s , serving as
•·hie! of tile Coolville EMS
station . An f' ml'fgenry medical
tt•dmir-ian - paramedic. Slattery
is
Hl!w a &lt;'t•rtiUed
rardiopulmllll.l;lry n·susdtation in·
strudor-lrain e r and has taught
first aid d.usst·s throughout thr
n·~ion .

NOW IN STOCK
4-1979 Buicks
Factory Officials Automobiles
3-ElECTRA 4 DR PARK AVENUES
1-ElECTRA 225, 4 DR SEDAN
BIG SAVINGS ON THESE 4 MODELS NOW

leukem ia-stric ken son . buri t"d th e
bu y Saturday Ul th e to wn where he
w as bor n just three years ago .

H1s mother , D1ana l;reen, 26, left
th e graves1te c lutch mg a f uzzy whJte
tc'Cidy bear. She was jmned by her
hus band , Gerald . 29, and a sma ll
g r o up of fam1 ly fnend s and
reporter s
TI1e Rev . Nalhan Wood, a Bapt iSt
minister fr om Sc ituat e, Ma ss ..
when~ th e &lt;;r ee ns had lrved for 18
month s, offu.' tatt·d lit tht• b uriiil He
said . "Chad was not a sy mbol. Chad
was not a ca uSt.'. he wa s a umque
ere&lt;:~ lion of God ."
Se rvices were conducted undt•r a
s wm y a utumn sky. A bnsk fall
breeze r ustled U1rough the trees,
pounng leaves over th e site where
Uu~ small wh1te casket wa s lowered
mto tL'i grave .
A small ston e bca nng Chad 's
n a m e, an e ngravmg of Chn s t
holdwg a lam b am.l the words
"From beg mnln g to be~inmng "
bt·neath thl' elate s of h1s b trth and
Je(tth , will mark tlle tmy g ra ve.
It was the cl use uf anoth er cha pter
1.11 tht• saga that thrust the ]-yea r..Qid
buy to natiO na l attentiOn after his
parents took h un to Mt&gt;x 1ro so th a t
his &lt;.'a nt:e r cuulU Ue treatl'l1 w1 th
Laetr ile . The parenLc; say the1 r legal
battles ove r Uw tr eatment involved
not just Lae tnl e but tht· prm rl plt• of
freedom of chorce .

NO. 133

•

•

e

D-12- The Sund ay Tune:-. ....'\Pnlllll'l. S u nda~ . O('t 11, 197fl

at

enttne

POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONUAY. OC lOBER 22. 1~19

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

0DNR outlines Meigs reclamation project
By Carol A. Krotj e
Ohio Department of
Natural Resources
Since strip rUining began on a
large scale in OhiO tn 1914, there
has been Lhe quest1on • is it good
or bad for Ohio ' Are we ruming
the land for profit : Yet , can we
survive econorrucally without
s urface mining ';I
It is ne ve r an easy task to bring
two opposing viewpoints a little
closer together, but the Ohio
Department of Natural Reso urces tODNR) owns a relati ve ly
small piece of land m southeast
Oluo where it is be1ng done
The 81\.acre area in northwest
Meigs County 1s a part of an ex periment in land reclamation.
The lush green fie lds and gently
rolling hills have become a model
of what can be done With land
badly damaged from surface
mining • land that had no use but
to remain idle
" People come to us and want to
know il returning the land to ' ~'

natural &gt;tate a fter strip mimng
for coal can really be acco mplished." satd
Dave
Buchanan, geologist with ODNK 's Division of Reclamation,
the ofltce res ponsibl e for
managmg the Me1gs County
Heclama tion Area. "We s how
them Lhe Meigs area and they 're
gene rally convinced ."
The picturesque. long, na r row
strip of land provides a sharp
contrast to the surr ounding
barren hills which were heavily
mined for coal in the 1941f; and
'50s.
Suriac'€ miners' large shovels
foil owed the natural contour of
the land , stnpping 1ts vegetation
and soil to remove the coal. When
the coal was gone, so were the
shovels .
" At that tune , there were not
Lhe strict laws there are today
requiring coal mine operators to
recl aim the land afte r the

mineral

IS

removed,"

said

Buchanan . "Coal mine operators

were i.n the bustness of minmg
coal. It was not economically
fea sible for them to put the top~
soil back and re-esl&lt;lbl ish the
vegetation ."
He exp lained that early efforts
towa rds reclaiming the land
mostly failed because of im proper methods and po or
management. There was not the
total commitment U1at was made
with the Meigs project.
According to
Buc hanan ,
ca reful planning and continual
management have resulted in the
success ul the Meigs County
Reclam ation Area .
It is the first project of its lund,
funded totally by the state and
authorized under Otuo 's Mined
l.and Reclamation Program
Funding came from a severance
tax paid by Ohio's coal rrune
operators and addJtionall&lt;lxcs on

damag e the accumulation of
eroded sedJment was dotng to the
plain of the Shade Ri ver .
The flood plalll was no longer
working because 11 had filled With
sediment washed down from the

other

area .

natural

resources

ex·

tracted 1n the state .
Ironi cally , il it were not for the
continual mining for coal. the re

would not be the funds for til&lt;
reclamation of abandoned surface mined lands.
'The ar ea had no grass, nu
tr ees and no fe rtil e sot!,"
Buchanan sa1d . " It was one of the
best examples uf sevt:re eroswn
we could find .''
Accordin g to Bu chanan , the

erosion problems are wor st tn
this part of Ohio beca use of the
easi ly weath e red sands tone
above the coal.
" In fa ct , the erosion was so
bad , the area had gullles mor e
than 2tJ feet deep ," he added .
The Divis ion of Heclamati on 's

main concern was the severe

nooct

The actual reclamation was
completed during the s urrune r of
1!178 by a pnvate contractor,

a lthough ODNR funded and
designed the project and super vised the work .
Buchanan descnbe'CI the stepby,'l!ep process of reclaunmg the
a r ea . Fir-it the uneven ground
a nd deep gulli es we re leve led by
buUdollng. Topsoil fr om a nearby
area was ha ul ed in and spread
uver Lhe area to a depth of eight
tu 10 inches.
" We borrowed topsOil from one
acre of offs ite la nd for eve r y
e1ght tu 10 acres ul m111ed land
r ecl aimed ,·· Buchanan said.
The next step involved plantmg
new vegeta.tton which would
prevent further erosion a nd once
again restore the YJability of the
a rea and unprov e the sol i
ca pabil ity . " The type uf
vegetati on planted was a very
trnportant cons iderat10n because
11 had to be hardy enough to grow
in Lhe soil wluch was still
somewhat toxic as a result of th e
mining ," Buchanan sa1d .
He expla ined the toXIcitY wa s

the result of sandstone and low
quallty coal fr om the upper and
lowe r fe w inches of the coal seam
left on the ground s urface alter
numng . Coal seams usually are
about two to four feet thick in this

area .
The Meigs area was planted
l'ith several kinds of clover and
grasses wluch grow well in such
a dv erse cond itions.
To further prevent sediment
runoff into the Shade River, two
tel11(JOrary ponds were built adjacent to the mined area. They
hold excess water from the area
and provide a place for the
sed1me nts to settle . Water in the
pond 1s slowl y released tnt&lt;&gt; the
nver .
The Youth Conservation Corps
uf Ohio, a swruner conservatlon
work program for tugh school
s tude n~&gt;. also helped with the
project Th ey constructed small

slick darr15 on the areas where
&lt;Contmued on page 101

Second annual show Nov. 6
CHESTER-The second annual arts and crafts s how of th€ Useful

F nends Organization of the Silver
ll1dge Cornmumty has been set for
Nov . 6 beginning at 10 a .m.
The
show will be held on the Conunons
ac ross from the Chester F'1 rc
Stat ion . weather permitting. In case
uf Inc le m e nt weather , the event will
be he ld a t til&lt; Masonic Hal l. behind

KEX r;crr THE WORD
I.CHBIJCK, Te xas 1 AP 1 - Hea d
fi-1\ IJ;ll\ ('(J(H"h Ht•x Oot·kt•ry of Tt•xa s
Tt ·ch laughs wtwn he reca ll s h1 s
tll'hul as ~~ coach tn September of
1~1/8 Hts ll'Clln journeyed to Los
:\n)..(t'les t11 pltjy Southern Cah fo rm a
rmd chl'cke d tnt o the I. .A. Culis.eum
f+ll' d workout tlw day befOrt' tht.&gt;
~ arm•.

" Wt: we r en 't s upposed to be too

the post office .
Hegistratrion IS requested but not
required . However , in case of rain,
those registered will be given first
conside ration .
Hobbyists wislung to !Bke part are
to write I.Ha Van Meter, Box 26,
Chester . 45720, or call her at 98:i.J951
or Jane Coa tes a t 965-4327 .

0'
·'

~ood

and en~ryon e knows about ti'le
trad1t1on of the Trojans."
O.&lt;ker y S&lt;tld . ·' There was an eldt•rly
~uar d statwned at the ramp which
it'ltn Lhe hel d and our players went
by hun w1th the coaches bnnging up
tht• n.:iir . As we passed him. he
shrugged and muttered • ·Js that a ll
you'vt• goP'"
Southern cal won the game Lhe
nt•x:t day, 17..(1 _
~r ea l

BEFORE - Dave Buchanan, geologist with lhe
Oluo Department of Natural Hesources !ODNR I, s~r­
veys the badly eroded soil at an abandoned strip mine
area in northwest Meigs County . The dark sub61&lt;1nce

on the ground surface is tox1 c, low quality coal which
prevents vegel&lt;ltion ·from growing . (Photo by Herb
Hott, Otuo Department of Natural Resources . 1

AFTER - Less than two years ago, this gently
rolling field had no grass and no fertile soil. This is the
Meigs Co Wlty Reclamation Area , a model of what can
be done with land badly damaged from surface mirung .
It is the f1rst project of il• kind , funded tota lly by the

Ohio Department of Natural Resources !OONR) and
authorized under Ohi o's Mined Land Reclamation
~ram . 1Photo by Herb Hott, Otuo Department of
Jli!l~ al Hesources . 1

Vow to stay until settlement

News
briefs.

••
Bishop executed
CARSON CITY , !'&lt;ev . 1AP 1 J esse Bi shop, tht• tou g h-t a lkm g
murderer who sn eer ed ~t attempL'l
to save him from the Nevadn ga!i
chamber , wa s executed ea rl y toda y,
Lhe t h1rd man put to d eath '" Lhe
Umted States tn the past 12 years .
Bishop shook his head and sa1d
nolhl!lg . Cyan1de pellets fe ll 111to an
act d bat h . unlcashm g de ad ly ga s.
B1shop marle what appeared to b&lt; a
thwnbs-down sign, wrink led h1s
nose , seemed to se arch Lh e room and
br eathed deeply several times.

ELBERFELD IN POMEROY

SAVE 30%

CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERY
SALE
DECORATOR INDUSTRIES
AND CORnEY
Choose from our big se le c t io n of
pattern s and c ol o r s and Sa ve 30%
now d u ring this sa le . You 'll like
the way these d rap e ri es ' a re made
and the way they' ll improve any
r oom in your hom e. Ex ce llent ,
too , tor your office , for c hur c hes .
Bring in \K)Ur measurements le t us quote you our sale pr ice o n
what you selec t .

Save 30%, too , during this sale

on custom made bedspreads .

SALE ENDS OOOBER 27th

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Dayan resigns
JER USA l EM 1AP I Prime
Menach e m
Hcgin 's
government was reeling today Wlder
two surpnse blows - the resignatlon
of Foreign Minister Moshe Da yan
and a Supreme Co urt order Lhat
Jews must g1ve up a controversia l
West Bank settlement.
Dayan had cited h1s opposi tiOn to
the Elon Moreh settlement as one of
reasons for his resignatlo n Sunda y.
But his c htef grtpc was his lack of
influe nce over Lh e four&lt;nonlh.old
negotiation s wi th Egypt and Lhe
United States on autonomy for
Palestm1ans on t he occupied Wes!
Bank of Lhe J ordan River a nd in Lhe
Gaza Strip .
Mim s t e r

Body located
BELLEFONTAINE . OhiO I AP ) The body of 56-year-&lt;&gt;ld Arthur
Snuth , a Rink' s Departnwnl Stor e
manager who had been m tssmg for
nine day s, was found at abo ut 5 p.m .
Sunday in weeds off a township road
in Logan Ca Wlty . The ca use of dealh
was not immediately dJsclosed .
County Sheriff M1lt Watts sa1d Lhat
tile area where Lhe body was foWld
had ~n combed by authorities last
Tuesday and the body was not there
at that time. The area IS the slle of
an old bulk oil plant.

t

Administrative offices hit by teacher 'sit-in"
Approximately 50 strilung Meigs
Local Sc hool Distnct teachers
~a thered
at the district's administrative offices in the Me1gs
Junior High School Ia~ Monday
morning apparently to push for a
settlement of the strike which
moved Into 1ts 21st clay .
The teachers apparently on a s it

down strike action in occupying the
offi ces of Supt. David Gleason and
adrnmlStrallve olftces of Dwight
Goins and Dan E. Morris were also
in an ullice occupied by the
sec retaries of U1e dJstri ct. They
vowed to stay m the offices until the
stdke is settled
The new action came at a time

Deputies recover
stolen vehicle
Meigs County sheriff's d eputies
th1s weekend recovered a stolen
vetucle which had been taken from
Hilton Wolfe's Body Shop in Hacine .
She riff James Profitt reports Sgt.
Handy Forbes and Special Deputy
Sam Shain wtule on a routine patrol
recovered the vehlcle
AccordJng to Sgt . Forbes· report, a
1!174 vehicle owned by Nancy Griffith , lincoln Heights, Pomeroy , was
located at the Kingsbury Mobile
Home Accessory Sales Shop at
Minersville at !.51! a.m . Sunday .
The vehicle 's dd'er was apparently
traveling west on Route 124 when he
ran off the road and struck a stone
wall near some storage tanks . The
right front fen&lt;'er of the car was
damaged along with a tire.
According to the report when of ficers arrived at the scene the
vetucle was on a jack but no one was
around. The owner said the vehicle
was to ha ve undergone body work ar
the shop and was not supposed to be
in operati on .
M1ke K Harrison. 22, Haute I.
l(uu te I, Middleport, has been cited
to Meigs County Court on a hitskip
charge folloWing an accident on
County Hoad 3 approximately 1.5
miles off State Route 7 at 3:30a.m.
Saturday . According to the report,
Harrison was traveling west on the
road in his pickup truck which ran
off the road strilung and breaking off
a Columbus and South&lt;rn Ohi.Q..Eiec-

•

tric pol e.
Lines carrying some 7500 volts
were knocked down and se nous InJUry could have resulted . Harrison.
according to the report, got a tractor
and pulled the vetucle to hi&gt; residen ·
ce about one-half mile away.
The truck was heavil y dama~ed
but he was not injured
Richard caruthers. Jr .. 20. Ht. 2.
Pomeroy , was cited to CoWltY Co urt
on a reckless operation charge
folloWing an accident at 12•27a.m.
SWlday on Route 33, .1 of a mile north
of Pomeroy .
AccordJng to the report , caruthers
was northbound on Route 33 when he
lost control c4 Ius car . The vetucle
went left of center and of[ the left
Side of the roadway going up an embankment and overturning onto its
top 10 the southbound lane. The
ve hicle was demoli s hed but
Caruthers escaped injury .
Deputies are also attempting to
!Continued on page 10 )

FIRE RUNS
The Middleport Fire Deparlnnent
was called to the junction of Routes
124 and 7 at II a .m. SWiday morning
to s!Bnd by while two old houses ,
owned by Handy McDaniel, were
burned . The department returned to
the location at 2: 27 p .m . when the
burning spread into brush near the
homes.

when Supt Gleason is in Nelsonville
where he IS meeting with Bill Lew 1s,
federal mediator in the strik e, and
representatives of the tea chers
asso ci ation in an attempt to reach a
settlement 1n the strike .
Schools were officially closed in
the di''tnct last Tuesday and
remained officially dosed today .
Mrs . Bonme Fisher , president uf
the Me ig s Loc a l Teachers
Association . issued the followtng
statement Lh lS morning •
" The Meigs Local Teac her s
Association feels that a s the strike
agaii"1 the Meigs Loc al School
system e nters into its 21st day , very
little effort has been made on the
part of the Me1gs l,ocal Board uf
Education
lo
r eso l ve
the

negotiation s.

"Statem e nts have been mad e that
the tea chers assoc1atto n
1s
unavailable for negotiations &lt;:tnd
tha t you have nut been contacted for
negollations .
" To dem onstra~ our ava 1l a bihty
for negoti a tion~t , we a re go tng to
remain m yo ur offi ce until the st nke
IS resolved. We fee l Lhat our conttn ual negotiations can and w1ll
resolve our difference~ "
Sunday ni ght, the dJstnct's board
of education met at the JWll or h1gh
bwldmg with seve ral pomts being
brought mto the open as the board
discussed the strike Wllh some 30
parenLS on hand .
Ourm g the rn eehng It was repor ·
ted tha t ne~ottatwns betwee n thl'

teachers a nd the board wtth the
federal med 1ator . Le wis, have been
talung place. The report was given
by Gleason who said that the
t ea chers association had asked that
t he negotiations remai n secret.
&lt;Con tmued on page 10 I

Weather
Partly cloudy. very warm and
breezy today w1th the rugh lil til&lt; low
to mid !lOs. Cloudy and breezy
to~ht With a chance of showers and
thunder&gt;torms, the low in the lower
60s . Showers and thunderstonns
l1kel) Tuesday, the hig h in the lower
70s . Chance uf raii1 10 percent today,
40 percent tonight and 70 percent
Tuesday

West Columbia man shooting victim
A West Columbia man is dead th1s
m ornin g foll o wing &lt;::trl in c ident

Sunda1· evenmg, 6 •08 p.m outside of
the .Jone s· Place private clu b on
Route 62 nca r West f'o lum b1a
Dead 1s Johnny Ray Hoschar . 25
Rt 1. West Col umbia, who riled th "
mornmg from a t 2~guage s hotgun
wou nd of the lower nght r hest. and
multiple internal injurie~
According to the Ma son Co unt y
Shenff's Department, detalis of the
Incident are sketchy. When t he law
enfo rce m ent a ge ncies arrived at the
sce ne. Hosr·ha r had a lready been
tran s port e d t o Pl easant Va lley
fl osp11&lt;1 1 by the Ma son Rescue
Squad , where he unde rw ent
eme rgenc y s urger y. accordtn g to
Or. John Gru bb.
He d ied at approximatel y 7•45
a .m . this morning from th e injuries.
Also injured at the scene wa s
Charles Samuel Wheeler, 54 . West
Columbia . Wheeler was treated at
Vet e ran s Me morial Hospital.
Pomeroy. Ohio, for an eye injury,
according to hospital authorities .
No arrests have been made, and
the in cide nt is still under the investigation of the Mason County
Sheiff' s Depa rtment and the P oint

P le asant Detachment of the State
Pnlu:c

At the sl'f· ne were .\1 ason Poil c('

PUBLIC MEETING
A publtc meetmg to discuss the upcoming incom e tax to be voted upon
10 Pomero y in the November elec·
ti un has been set for 7 · 30 p.m . Wednesday at the Pomeroy Fire Station .
All mtercsted people are invited to
attend
OHIOAN Kn.LED
PLAITSMOUTH, Neb . I AP I
Plattsmou th pollee sa1d E th el
Trego, 13, of Circleville, Ohio, was
lulled Saturday when Lhe rnotor ycle
on whi ch she was a passenger was in
coll ision with a p1ckup truck.
Police Sgt. Robert Vencil said
Mrs. Trego was on a motorcycle
driven by her son, Harold Haddox,
22, of Offutt Air Force Base . Haddox
was take n to Ehrling Bergquist
Hospital.
Vencil said the acctdent occured
on the east edge of Plattsmouth .
He said the driver of the pickup
truck was Pe~r S. Swihart of
Pacific Junction, Iowa .

•

Ch1ef John Pearson. P oint Pleasant
P oli ce S~t. J D Sallaz. Mason
CoWl!\ Sheriff's Deputies J M .
W 1 th c~ s. J . R. McCoy, and G. M.
K&lt;·a rn s. and State Police Troopers
"'' s Sm1th and F . A. Ba ckus.
Funeral
arrangements
for
Hoschar will be announced by the
Foglesong Funeral Hom e in Mason.

EXTENDED FORECAST

By The Asssoclated Press
Wednesday through Friday
Partly clo udy Wednesday . A chance
of showers Thursday and Friday.
Highs in th e !lOs. Lows at night in the
upper 30s to mid 40s early
Wednesday and in the 40s Thursday
and Fr iday.

SQUAD CAU.ED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad

ans_.ed a call to Unloo Ave., at
8:45 a .m . Sunday for Mrs. Edna
Hart. Mrs. Hart was dead upon the
squad's arrival. At .9:44a.m. Monday the unit took Victor Leifheit to
Veterans Memorial Hn&lt;~pltal.
·

�2 -The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Monday, Oct. 22, 1979

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Monday, Oct . 22. 1979

Washington Todayz10N1§M
By R. GREGORY NOKES
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON 1AP) - The
recent economic policy actions of
the Carter administration and the
Federal Reserve Board poml up the
growing
influence
of
the
International Monetary Fund over
the nation's economic policy .
, It's an influence American policy makers want the IMF to have . since
they look to the 138-nati on
ocganization to coordinate econonue
policies of al11ts member nations for
thetr common good.
The decision by the Federal
Reserve Board on Cl&lt;:L 6 to tighwn
the screws on the U.S . money
supply. through a dramatic full
pereentage increase in its discount
rate. carne on the heels of a new
recommendatiOn by the IMF that
money growth has to be curbed in
many nations befoce inflation can be
brought under control .
A year ago. the IMF had
recommended that major natwns
attempt to pursue policies to
gradually slow inflation . But 1t
conceded the failure of th1s
approach ln 1ts annual report this
year.
"GradualiSm as an approach to
the redu c twn of Inflation and
Ulf!ationary expec!&lt;lhons has been
too gradual - 10 many countries to
the point of no reduction at a ll. .. it
said . While it didn't name the Umted
States, no one had to be told that the
U.S . inflation rate IS one of the
worst .
U.S. officials. mrludU&gt;g board
Chairm•n Paul A. Volcker and
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller. came under fire at the IMF's
annual meetin~ in Bel_grad1·.

Yugoslavta, earlier this month , lo
some new o.ctions to chec k the
soarmg U.S. mflation rate and ha lt
the panic m mternat10nal finan cw l
markets that had depressed Lhe
dollar anew and pushed the pnce of
gold to $440 an ounce.
Saudi Arabta 's finance minister .
Sheik
Mohamed
Abalkhail .
pomtedly warned the United States
that his ro untry would take action to
push up oil prices agam if steps
weren ' t taken to prevent "a
continuous erosion" of the dollar .
Another IMF -developed theme
that IS findmg its way into U.S .
economic policy is that the latest
i.ncrea~s in tht:&gt; price of oil and other
Items must be allowed to work their
way through the world 's economies
without becomtng part of the
WJderlying mfl•tim• rate .
That means workers a nd
consumers WJII need to absorb the
higher pr1ces b)' reducmg the&gt;r
standards f living , rather than seek
to offset them thr ough rising
mcomes.
Volcker made the point durmg an
appearance before a congressional
co mmittee on Oct. 17, say in g
Amencans "can't escape" from
lower living standards because of
higher oil pnces. "The standard of
living of the average American has
to decline ."
The Umted Stat.&gt;s, as the IMF's
most powerful member. obviously
mfluences its policies to a major
degree . But there IS a genuine
willingness by U.S. officials to
mcrease the IMF's authority in
hopes Lhal it can lead the world out
of the general economic disarray 1t
ts now in.
t.ak~

In Washington
Too much "reform'?
By Martha Angle and

Robert Walters
(First of Two Related
CollliDB8)
WASHINGTON ( NEAl- If nunor
tiUlkering with the hideously complex federal regulatory process has
been fairly succes«ful, then a major
overhaul would be even better .
Right?

Wrong. There can be too much of H
good thing, and a couple of the most
talked-about regulatory "refonn"
proposals now floating around
Washington easily could do m ore
hann than the red-tape mess they
would supposedly untangle.
The two with the m05t surface appeal also have the greatest potential
. for mischief - to wit, the legislative
veto so beloved by the House of
Representatives and a new
presidential-intervention authority
proposed by a corrunission of the
American Bar Association .
Both are intended to insure that
elected officials who are directl y accountable to the voters have the final
say on major federal regulations
rather than leaving such decisions to
the folks George Wallace used t o call
" pointy-headed bureaucrats ."
That 's a beguiling notion, of course. Nobody likes to 'think of some
ivory-tower technocrat dictating
rules with the force of law about ca r
safety o.- pollution control or energy
conservation or what have you.
especially when those rules may add
to product costs and hence fan the
flames of inflation .
The alternatives , however, may
be worse . Leave aside for another
colwnn the notion of letting the
president modify regulations
proposed by govenunent agencies
and commissions and consider just
the wisdom, or lack thereof, of the
so-called legislative veto.
This is a device that the House
tries to write into all kinds rl.laws I(\
make federal regulations subject to
a veto by one or both houses of
Congress. In theory, it allows elected representatives to prevent the
bureaucrats from inflicting Wtwise
or unnecessary regulation upon the
populace .
In practice, however . th e
legislative veto offers an open invitation for special-interest lobbyists to descent upon Capitol Hill en
1'II88Sf any time they don't like the
scope or content of a proposed
regulation.
It is true the normal federal rulemaking process is both slow and
cumbersome. But it is also fair .
Agencies and commissions must
follow procedures that guarantee
that all interested parties have a
chance to be heard, that no one gets
a private crack at the decision
makers and that the final determination is based on factors spelled
out by law.
No such safeguards exist on
Capitol Hill. Lobbyists can and do
meet privately with legislators to
plead their cases, with no notice to
the opposing side that theY. are doing
so. campaign contributions can
open doors. Carefully orchestrated
phone calls and letters from influential constituents can help sway
a congressman's opinion.
1-

The beneficiaries of any proposed
regulaton tend to be only faintl y
aware, if at all, of the blesstngs they
will reap whereas the targets of the
rule are always acutely conscious of
its inconvenience and~r cost. Car
buyers , for example, won't storm
Congress over proposed bwnpersafety standards - but bumper
manufacturers most assuredly will
(and have ).
Federal regulatory officiais, for
all their supposed failings , are
nowhere near as susceptible to
special-interest pressures as the
Congress is .
Congress has no one to blame but
itself if regulatory agencies and Uldependent commissions occasionally seem to be overreaching .
For years now. Congress has passed
laws mandating sweepmg government action 1cleaning up the
nation's rivers and streams, ridding
the workplace of safety and health
hazards, etc. I without spell;ng out
how these objectives should be attained .
The details have been left to the
agencies to deal with through
regulation, but when the politicians
don't like the rules that resu It from
this proces« , they turn around and
scream bloody murder .
Instead of trying to second-guess
the regulators through a leg&gt;slative
veto, Congress would be well advised to do a better job of writing its
laws in the first place . That would
give the rule makers firmer policy
guidaUlce without providing specialinterest lobbyists a chance to
achieve through concentrated
political pressure what they cannot
win on the merits.

Today In History
By The Associated Press
Today is Monday, Oct. 22. the
295th day of 1979. There are 70 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight "' history :
On this date in 1962, President
John Kennedy ordered " Naval
quarantine of Cuba in an effort to
for ce Russta to wtthdraw 118 nuclear
mis«iles from the island nation .
On this date :
In I721, Peter th e Great took the
title of Czar of all Russia .

-nu: o•n. vSFJmNEL
IUSPSl.._..l

~, ~-~ ...

-

I§ kACi~M!

You

DIDN'T
Tf.JINK T~AT
\"-!1-i[N ZJONI§TC)
MAR0-l[D ARM
IN AR N WITH
BLACK~ IN

ALABAMA

THAT WA~
THE §&gt;rXTIE~.
WHAT HAVE

You

~

I

Editorial opinions,
comments

OR Wm.N ZIONJ~T§
PouRED MoNEY
IN To THt: N.AA.C.P.'

Today~s

Unlucky Jimmy

DoNE

FoR US
LATELY?

By [)on Graff
The luck of the Democrats is running out on Jimmy Carter .
Ever since 1932 when the Great
Depression swept Franklin Delano
..:; H.o05evelt into the White House and
in the process turned the modern
Democratic Party from a Southernbased als&lt;&gt;-ran into the national
political establishment, econo!lllc
trends have worked in their favor.
The recovery of the Thirties
(although the extent to which New
Deal programs actually contributed
remains a point for some debate )
helped keep them in office through
the next four elections. And then it
L--~----------- took an authentic war hero to
dislodge them.
But not for long. The second
E isenhower
administra lion's
decline into recession gave John F .
Kennedy a party-perfect issue for
rally;ng the troops. And the postpercent credit off their monthly
election upturn that followed aputility bills during the months of
plication of some of the Keynesian
November through March.
remedies beloved by Democrats imThis amount is increased to 30 perparted momentum through the
c-ent off the monthly fuel bill if the
Johnson administration.
qualifying individual ha5 an income
But after almost half a century uf
of $5.000 or less. Those people who
Democrats riding the crests of the
qualify for the energy credits
econom1c waves, the tide may now
program, and heat their homes with
be running out. The economy is slipeither fuel oil, propane, coal, wood
ping into recession not WJder a
or kerosene, will receive a one-time
Republican administration, but as
payment of $125. People who share a
the election races up on Jimmy Carmeter, or who pay for heat which is
ter . More than slipping - it is being
included as a part of their rent, will
nudged along by agencies and
also receive a one-time payment of
policies of the very Democratic ad$125 .
ministration he heads.
The energy credits discount
The high-interest, tight-money
program is administered by the Ohio
measures invoked by the Federal
Department of Taxation. The Tax
Reserve are, of course, directed
Commissiooer will notify all aptoward returning the economy to
plicants on or before December 15 of
health by curing it of its inflatiooary
this year if they are eligible to parfever . But no economist worth his
ticipate in the energy credits
statistics would bet a Susan B. Andiscount program.
thony dollar on chances of subIt is also importaUlt to remember
stantial beneficial effects becoming
that if a person is denied parapparent during the year remaining
ticipation in the energy credits
before elechon day . Long in
program, they may appeal the
developing, economic trends are not
decision of the Tax Corrunissioner.
quickly reversed. Instead of
This appeal must be made within 2{)
recovery, the worst sympt&lt;lTIS of
days after the Tax Commissioner
reces«ion may be most apparent just
has notified them that they do not
as the voters go to the polls .
qualify for the program .
If the economy is TilE issue today.
The Ohio Department of Taxation
it will be more so as the •lection aphas provided a toll-free number in
proaches . As far as the public is coocase you would have questions concerned, spell that " inflation ."
cerning the program. That toll-free
In a recent Gallup Poll, the
number is : I~282-4130 .
If you are WJable to obtain an application for the energy credits
discount program. please contact
my office . We do have application
forms avatlable, and I would be hapNEW YORK I AP) - The prices of
PY to send you one . You can contact
existing single-family dwellings, 1t is
my office through the Legislative InSBid, have inflated wa y beyond
formati on Office toll-free number,
reason and so are bound to drop
which is : 1~282-m53 .
s harpl y, leaving owner s w1t h
mortgages larger t han market
values .
You ' ve pr obably heard the
argument, especially if you read the
views of certain stock market
analysts who believe that Ameri ca's
interest in housing has, to a degree ,
been at the expense of stock prices .
Housing, they say, has become a
consi deratiOn m the Senat.&gt; Finance
craze, and prices have become
Commi tte e, mandates that 15
c razy , because people
who
percent of the state construction be
ordinarilly would have been buying
set as1de for firms owned by blacks
shares of Gen-ral Motor s or ffiM
and women .
" It looks like we might get enough
listings to print the gu&gt;de for
To find out more information
women, " Clodfclder sa id .
about the proposed guide , Ms .
If not . all of the newly gathered
McCreary said women should call
Information on female -ow ned
the
economic
develo pment
business will be Ulcluded in the next
department toll free at t-800-282mmority busmess guide, he sai d.
1085.

\

,

Collins' report
COLUMBUS- According t o State
Senator Oakley C. Collins (H·
f ron ton l the application deadline for
the energy credits program is Nov .
30, 1979. Earlier this year the Ohi o
Legislature passed, and the Governor signed into law . House Bill 637
which perman ently establishes
Ohi o's energy credits program .
The energy credits program was
mlttated in 1977, and is designed to
provide financial assistance to the
e lderly and the disabled, in meeting
the ir home heating bills during the
Winter months .
If you are : ( I) head of the
household ; (2! either 65 years of age
or older during 1979, OR you are
tota lly and permanently disabled:
and 131 your total annual income
will not exceed $9,000, you may
qualify for , the energy credits
program .
Applica tions may be picked up at
many local places : Post Office.
banks, savmgs and loans. all state
and local government offices.
libraries , and your utility company
will also have applica tions
available. The applications must be
completed and returned to the Ohio
Department of TaXBtion, 30 East
Broad Street, Colwnbus, Ohio 43215 ,
by the November 30 deadline . Those
people who have participated in the
program in the past miD&gt;1 re-apply
each year. Past "participants in the
e nergy c red its program wil l
automatically rece ive an application form in the mail.
The energy credit program
provides two m ethods of assistance
for the payment of honne heating
bills for the elderly, and permanently and totally disabled.
Qualifying tndividuals who heat
their homes with either electricity,
gas or natural gas. will receive a 25

soaring cost rl.living was cited by 50
percent of respondents as the
foremost national problem. Desptte
recent memones of gas lines and approaching winter fuel bills, the issue
that has so preoccupied Carter energy - ran a very poor second as a
cause of public concern.
Energy is unquestionably a
problem and a primary contributor
to inflation . But it is essentially one
within the larger problem of the
econ 001y, which the Carter administration is belatedly
recognizing.
Its response to date IS WJeven and
often contradictory, however . A:l are
Carter's own statements on the subject. He assured a recent press conference that he backed the Fed's
tight-money policy even if it should
hurt him in the primaries.
But within days, he was also
assuring labor that be would not
fight inflation with measures that
cost jobs. If he manages to keep that
promise, he may very well add an
important chapter to the textbook on
practical application of economic
theory .
What is more likely as the effects
of cred1t restriction and reduced
monetary growth are felt is a
general business retrenctunent. At
best, this means no growth and no
new jobs. At worst, it means layoffs
and more unemployment.
If it's any consolaton to him, this
inflationary dilemma is not of Carter's making. Its origins are in the
Sixties when, after decades of price
increases in the gradual and acceptable 2-3 percent aMual range,
an administration made two far reaching decisions. It opted to fight
a war without paying for it at the
time. but at the same time implementing an ambitwus and
Inadequately funded demesti c
welfare program . An Wlenthusiastic
experiment with controls early in
the Nixon administration briefly
contained but provided no cure for
an inflation that was by then
building itself into the economy .
What we are eq~erienclng now. in
fact, might well be called the Lyndon Baines Johnson Memorial Inflation . Just Jimmy Carter 's luck
that it should be the legacy of a
Democratic predecessor .

Business mirror

'Ohio Perspective'
CO LUMBUS, Ohio 1API - Tite
Oh 1o Department of Eronomic and
Connmuntty Development IS looktng
for women-owned firm s for inclusiOn
tn a fre~ gwde for compa nies and
governmental agencies dealing with
minority enterprises .
Wiley H. Clodfe lder . director of
the department's minority business
development off1 ce. said some !inns
owned by women are already
mcluded m a business guide of all
minor ities .
" We have a ma ilmg list of abou t
3,000 pnvat.&gt; l!ldustry a nd local.
"ate and federal governmental
agencies that we send the guide to
ann118lly," Clodfelder sa1d .
But the department wants to
single out finn s in which women own
at least 51 percent interest for a
second guide . he said .
Stephanie McCreary, the project's
coordinator . said the response from
busm esswomen th ro ughout the state
improved after the proposed gu1de
was mentioned in the Ohio Women's
Information Center newsletter.
"We've been averaging about
eight calls a day asking for
questionnaires," Ms . McC reary
said.
There are an estunated 1.100
female-&lt;lwned bustnesses m Ohio ,
and at least 500 will have to respond
before a separate directory will be
eco nomically
feaSible,
Ms
McCreary SBld .
"It's a free marketing tool for
them," she said. " There's no fee .
and it's great exposure ..
Many
mdustries
and
governmental agencies must deal
with minority-&lt;lwned firms because
of certain state and federal laws and
regulations .
In Ohio, t he last capital
improvements budget required that
10 percent of the t otal be gtven to
black and women-&lt;lwned businesses .
The
current
$775
million
bill.
under
improvements

commentary

Berry's World

' ' . . •.1

h

.. 'hank you for takmg my mmd off of in flation. ..

•

have instead been buying homes .
Ther e is no limit to the examples
c1ted : the speculative surge in parts
of California, the tripling m three
years of some New York Cit y rondo
prices. the enormous demand for
leisure-time units.
But e xcluding Lhe exceptions, has
there really been an unsustainable
surge in housing pnces? Have
people really bec ome " paper
wealthy" in a few years? Are they
likely to lose their asset.s just as
quickly '
First, the "surge.., Does a
doubling of existing single-fanuly
home prices sinced 1973 ro nstitute a
surge? The median pnce of such a
home was $29,900 in the earlier year.
This su mm er the median was
$57,900.
Th e implicit price deflator of the
gross national product, thought to be
one of the most reliable inflation
indicators , stood at just over 100
early in 1m. By July d this year
11 was close to 165 .
If the median price of the existing
single-family home rose at the same
rate as did prices in general it would
now sell for about $48,000. The actual
median price has, therefore, risen
faster than Other prices.
Whether IX' not this constitutes a
dangerous surge may depend on the
mdividual owner. but many
economic analysts would not so
con strue it. Still, it does suggest
room for price deflation .
The greater risk obviousily exists
with properties that have had
exceptional increases, as in the
current category of 1100,000 to
$250,000 ronventional and rondo
Wlits, and in million oollar estates .
For those whose properties are
close to the median price there
seems much less risk, much less
reason fCI" concern.
Nobody can say whether housing
prices will decline radically, but
they can point to market factors that
appear to be a prop under prices.
Uemogaphics, for ooe. During the
early part of the 1980s there will be
strong growth in the h&lt;me-buying
ages of the population .
Houses also are unlike stocks in
Important ways. Shares of stock are
not necessities; houses are. Along
with food and clothing, people will
always need them .

NFL roundup

Meet Southern Tornadoes

San Francisco posts
first victory Sunday
By BRUCE LOWITT
AP Sports Writer
... and then there was none .
With the San Francisco 49ers'
victory Sunday, the last of the gooseeggs under the "W" column
vanished from the National Football
League standings and Tampa Bay's
record remained safe for one more
season.
"We felt sure we were going to win
this, from the kickoff to the final
gun," quarterback Steve De Berg
said after guiding the 49ers 70 yards
in the fowth quarter to their winning
touchdown in the 2(}.15 victory over
AllWlta . Paul Hofer scored it with
S'iz minutes to go, his se&lt;:ond TD of
the game.
"We've been workmg too hard and
losing too many close ones to let this
one get away," added DeBerg, who
completed all six passes he threw m
the WlrUllflg march .
Elsewhere in the NFL Tampa Bay
beat Green Bay 21-J, Dallas defeated
St. Louis 22-13, Minnesota edged
Cllicago JG.Z7, Baltimore nipped
Buffalo 14-13, Cleveland nosed out
Cincinnati 23-27, San Diego bombed
Los Angeles 41H6, Seattle ripped
Houston 34-14, Washington shaded
Philadelphia 17-7, New England beat
Miami 23-13, New Orleans downed
Detroit 17-7, the New York Jets
upset Oakland 2!1-19 and the New
York Giants stWJg Kansas City 21-17 .
"I'm trying to be casual about
this," Francisco's rookie head
roach, Bill Walsh, said after getting
victory No.1 in game No .B. "It was
great to win but I knew sooner or
later this would happen."
Like De Berg, 49ers tight end Ken
McAfee figured this would be the
day the drought ended. " We all knew
this would be the game," he said.
Freddie Solomon scampered 56
yards on a reverse while Hofer
scored on runs of 2 and 3 yards . The
latter rWI wiped out the Falcons'
lead built on Rolland Lawrence's 41yard m run with a blocked punt
earlier in the fourth quarter. " We
knew before the game were were
going to score - and we knew after
Lawrence's run that we were go ing
to score again," said DeBerg.
Buca %1, Pacllen 3
Tampa Bay . which set an NFL
record by losing all14 of its games in
1976 and had lost its last two after
winnmg 1ts first five of 1979, beat
back the Packers with Ricky Bell
gaining a club-record 261 yards
rushing and Doug Williams tossing
two m passes and running for a
third score .
" Regardless of everything you
read," Coach John McKay said,
taking a swtpe at some recent
criticism of his Sues, " we are 6-2
and on top of the division''
" As you can see, the Sues have
returned to their true fonn, " added
Green Bay Coach Bart Starr .
Cowboys%%, Cardinals 13
Roger Staubach tossed 1~yard TD
pa...,s to Billy Joe DuPree and Tony
Hill and Tony Dorsett gained lll
yards, his fourth straight 100-yard
game, as the Cowboys beat St . Lows
and raised their record to 7-1, the
best in the league .
"We've got a much better record

than I thought we would 1n the hrst
half of the season because we
us ua lly start slow." sa&gt;d Cowboys
Coach Tonn LWldry " We'r e seldom
7-1 at the halfway mark."
The game's biggest play was by
Cards rookie Roy Green, an NFLrecord !OB.-yard touchdown kickoff
return.

Vikings 30, Bears 27
Tommy Kramer's fourth TD pass,
a 5-yarder to Rickey Young with 13
seconds to play . vaulted the Vikings
past Chicago. Earlier , Krame r
found Young on a 17-yarder .
Walter Payton, who rushed for I ll
yards, was Ulvolved in all three
Chicago TDs - a 2--yard run. a 2-yard pass from Bob Avellini and an
option pass play to Brian
Baschnagel covering 54 yards.
Colts II, BUis 13
Bert Jon es, in his first start since
being sidelined by a shoulder injury
in Baltimore's season opener, ran
for one TO and passed 4 yards to
Mack lSTON FOR ONE IN THE
Colts ' victory over Buffalo.
Browns 28, Bengals 27
Charlie Hall of Oeveland blocked
a Cincinnati ex tra po int , the
difference betwe e n victory and
overtune for the Browns . Brian Sipe
passed for all four Oeveland TDs,
one a S().yard play with fullba ck
Mike Pruitt.
Chargers tO, Ram• 16
Dan Fouts, passing for more than
300 yards for the third straight
game , connected on TD passes of 65
yards to John Jefferson and 6 yards

to Bob Klein while Hank Bauer ran
Ul from the !-yard line twice to lead
San Diego past the Rams.
Seahawi&lt;s 34, Oilers 14
Houston's offense sputtered wtth
Earl Cam pbell hobbled by a
severely brwsed thigh . The Oilers'
running back carried the ball just
three times fur 4 yards . Seattle's
Jim Zorn, meanwhile, passed for
three touchdowns, mcludmg bombs
of 45 and 55 yards to SU&gt;ve Largent.
Redskins 17, Eagles 7
Washington , stung by Wilbert
Montgomery 's 1Z7 yards rushing
and four TDs two weeks ago, limited
him to 33 yards and, for good
measure , s ac ked P hiladelphia
quarterback Ron Jaworski seven
lime s. Benny Ma lone and Jo e
Theismann ran "' the touchdowns
for the 'Skins'

FOOTBALL
National Football League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
American Conference

East
W. L.T . Pet . PF PA
N ew Eng
6 2 0 .750 209 118
Miami
5 l 0 .625 140 126
4 4 0 .500 170 200
N . Y . Jets
Buffalo
l 5 0 .l75 174 U 2
2 6 0 . 250 102 153
Baltimore
Central
P i ttsburgh
5 2 0 714 170 140
Cleveland
5 3 0 .625 173 185
Houston
5 3 0 625 176 182
Cinci nna ti
I 7 0 . 125 140 197
West
Sa n Di ego
6 2 0 .750 202 114
Denver
5 2 0 . 714 II 0 10 1
4 4 0 .500 140 11 2
Kan . City
4 0
500 160 162
OaKland
3 5 0 .375 172 181
Sea ttle
National Conference

.

•

East
7
6
6

I 0
2 0
2 0
3 5 0
2 6 0
central
Tampa Bav 6 2 0
4
0
Minnewta
Chicago
l 5 0
3 5 0
Gr~n Ba y
I 7 0
Detroit
West
LOS AngeleS 4 .ol 0
New Orleans 4 4 0
Atlanta
3 5 0
San Fran
I 7 0

Dallas
Philade l phia
Washington
N . Y . Giants
St . Louis

•

Birmingham Bulls
defeat Stingers
CINCINNATI ( AP)
Jtm
MacRae and Earl Ingarfield scored
three goals apiece for the
Birmingham Bulls in an S-3 Central
Hockey League victory over the
Cincinnati Stingers Sunday night.
Cincinnati dominated the first
period, but the Bulls erupted for five
goals m the ftrst nine minutes of the
serond period.
Don Kozak, Jamie Masters and
Doug Patey scored a goal apiece for
Cincinnati,
which
outsh ot
Birmingham :lS-23. Paul Henderson
and Dale IA!wis added second-pertod
goals for the Bulls.
Birmingham remains the only
undefeated team in the Central
Hockey League with a W r ecord .
Cin em na ti IS t -4.

Ohio
Sportlight
By George Strode
·Some will say that people are not
COLUMHUS, Ohio ( AP) - At age
meant
to look like this," he said.
37 Frank Zane remains a giant
"But
people
are meant to look
~ong the world's body builders .
however
they
want to look . Your
The 1~Wld Pemsylvani811 has
sell-image
dictates
the way you
won both the Mr . American and Mr .
look.
Olympia tiUes three times apiece .
"If you want to think of yourself as
His latest Mr. Olympia contest
fat and WIHnractive, you'll be fat
VICtory came in Colwnbus earlier
and unattractive. You can change
this month and was worth $20,000 .
the way you look.
His chest is 55 inches aroWJd and
" We're no. advocating that
his waist is 30 inches. Zane trains
everyone train the way we do. Some
four hours daily to keep his body in
people just can't build themselves
world-das« shape and his annual
up
the way we oo . They just don't
income in six figures.
have
the body chemistry . But if you
He gorges on high-protein food and
work
at it for an hour a week, you'll
does not eat carbohydrates .
be
in
better shape than you are
Zane explained, "The body is a
now.'
'
machine. There are people driving
Zane admits that he has taken
1932 Fords in mint condition because
steroids
, which are syntheti c
they took care of them , but there are
hormones
to
help
muscle
people with new cars that need new
developme
nt
and
definition
.
engines . lt 's all in how you take care
However
,
he
emphasizes
that
he
of yourself.
"I've been body building for 19 does it Wider a physician 's c are .
" I oon't see any reason why people
years and every year I've gotten
·
shouldn't
take them if a doctor says
better ."
it's
OK
for
them ," Zane said . But he
Zane disagrees with a popular
added
that
younger men , who still
notillfl that weighillfters or body
are
not
tully
grown, should not take
builders have distorted bodies .
steroids .

875
. 750
.750
.l75
.250

200
152
16 1
128
I ll

132
126
Il l
165
16 1

.750
.l75
.375
. 125

168
144
122
113
114

I ll
183
139
149
190

.500

UJ

165

.500

.500 197
.3 75 16Q
. 125 149
Sunday's Games
Baltimore 14, Buffalo 13
Cleveland 28, Cincinnati 27
Ta mpa Bay 21. Green Ba v J
New York Jets 28. Oakland 19
wash i ngton 17, Philade lph ia 7
New England 28, M iam i 13
M innesota JO. Ch ica go 27
New Orleans 17, Detroit 7
Do llos 22. St.Lou is ll
San Francisco10, Atlanta IS
Seat11e J.( , Houston 14
San Diego 40, LOS Angeles 16
New York Giants 21, Kansas
17

,
•• 1.

Jeff Sopher
6-4, 1651bs.
Junior Back

Scott Nea•e
5--!1, Ito tbs.
Junior End

Mistakes costly as Bengals
drop 28-27 game to Browns
CLEVELAND ! API - Brian
Sipe immediately drove th e
Browns 80 yards for a touchdown
S&gt;pe's nght arm, Mtke Pruitt's fee t
and Charlie Hall's left hand we re the
and , on th e first play of their next
difference in the Cleveland Brown s '
possession , found Prwtt all alone
28-27 Na tional Football League
five yards over the middle . The swift
VICtory over th e Cincin nati Bengals
fullba ck took the throw m stride and
Sunday.
went all the way untouched . Don
Sipe threw fo.- four !Duchdowns,
Cockroft added the extr• point for a
Pruitt turned a short pass into a :;().
21-20 Cleveland lead after 35 seeonds
yard score and rushed for 135 yards,
of the fourth quarter.
and Hall's deflection of a Chris Bahr
Browns Coach Sam Rutigliano
extra point kick turned out to be th e
srud. " Mike Pruitt IS becomUlg more
margin of vic !Dry .
and more of an instinctive foot ball
Oeveland, 5-J, ended a tl&gt;ree game
player . first he goes over 100 yards,
losin g string, while the Bengals
then he catch es that short pass,
slipped tD 1-7 despite a strong
turns it into a touchdown and brings
passing p ~ rf or rnanc e by Ken
us over the top ."
Cleve land owner Art Modell,
Anderson .
The Cincmnati quarterback hit on
relishUlg the victory , added . " I think
2{) of 34 passing attempts for 318 . the organization wasted two or three
yards and two tnuchdowns. But the of his t Prwtt 's) years by not gtving
error-plagued Bengals were ca lled
hun a chance to play .··
for 14 penalties totaling 118 yards
Pruitt, a fourth-year pro from
and gave Cleveland two fumbles.
Purdue. agreed w1th his bosses.
Alter the first half ended in a 7-7
saying, ·· The first two years were
tie, Cincinnati built a 13-pomt lead
frustratin g for me . f sat on the bench
w1th a pair of th&gt;rd-quarter
and had to watch . Now that I'm
touchdowns. The blocked extra point
playing ,
I'm
ge ttin g more
ca me after the last of those sco r ~s
con fidence. 1'm glad the coaches
and gave Cleveland a spark of life .

SaturdJJy 's high
school grid scores
By The Associated Press

Saturd•y 's Results
Akron E . 13, Akron S. 0
Arca num 38, National Trail 0
Ayersville 41. Wayne Trace 1,.
Bata~o~ia 22, Batavia Nor theas tern

18 5
18 1
2 19
B

Boardman 6. Yo ungstown Mooney

l

C1 t y

Monday 's Game
Denver at Pittsburgh
Thursday 's Gam e
San Die90 at Oaklan d

Sunday, Oct. ~8

Dallas at Pittsburgh
New Orleans at Wa shi ngton
New York Jets at Houston
Buffalo at Detro it
Cleveland at St. Louis
New England at Balti more
Tampa Sav at Minnesota
Chi ca go at san Franc isco
Gree n Bay at Miam i
Kansas City at Den ver
New York Giants at L os Angeles
Ph il adel phia at Cincinna ti
Monday . Oct . lf
sea ttle at Atlanta

Terry Clark
6-4, 160 lbs.
Junior End

Brookfield 20, Poland 7
Buckeye N . 3-4. Un1on Local 3
Bulfalo, N Y N ichols ?0, Univer
sity Sc hool o
Canton
McK inley 41. Cant on
Timken 14
Fostor ia 34, Sylvania Northv iew 1
Garfi eld
Trinity 22 , Bedford
Chane I 17
HamilTon Ross 45, K ings 8
Hawken 16, R ichmond Hts. 7
Ke rrering Alter 20 . Day Belmont 0
Lima Cat holic 41. Patri ck Henry 6
M1ssissinawa va ttey 8, Preble
Shawnee 0
N ew Boston 15, Franklin Furna ce
Gre-en 14
Port smo uth Notre Dame 38. Mm
ford 12
Rocky Rive r 17 . Bay Vil lage 0
Sout hington 41 , Jefferson 0
s reuoenvilleo Ceonl ral 24. Young E
0
Strasburg 21. Indian Valley North

15

Tol Sowsher20. Tol. 51 Franc 1s8
Tol 51. John 7, Tol. Waite 0
Tal Start 9. Tol Scott 0
Warren Kennedy 27. Struft"lers l

W. Carrollton 34 , Te-cumseh 70
Western Reserve Academv 7. Pit
tsbu rg h Sn~9Y Side 0
Weekend Sports Transaction s
BV The As·soc i atecl Press
BASKETBALL
National
Basketball Association
INDI A N A PACERS - Signed Joe
Hasset, gu ard
Act1vated Jonn
Kuester . guard . Placed To ny Zeno,
forwar d, on the in turcd l1st Wa1v ed
Bract Dav is. gua r d .

feel that way. too."
Stpe completed 18 of 34 passes for
197 yards , mcluding to uchdown
throws of s1x ya rds to Reggie
Hucker , two yar ds to Ricky
Feacher, and the clincher , a Z7yarder to Ozzie Newsome .
"We weren't as bad as we looked
at the beginnUlg," explained Sipe. "I
threw three interceptions (in the
fir" half 1. but I wasn't that far off
and I didn't want anybody to panic.
Thetr secondary was playing real
well and 1l took us unW the third
quarter before we could throw no
matter what they did."
Jun LeCiatr, Cincinnati 's veteran
mtddle linebacker. said, " Their
fulloock gained a lot of yards, but
what beat us was Uteir throwing the
ball . We knew they would pass a lot
and 1l still worked for them .
" Our own mistakes didn't help ...
penalties, and when you score 27
pomt s, you should win ."
" We beat ourselves," added
cornerback Ken Riley "Too many
mental mistakes . It has to do with

maturity, whict-1 we

ha ve to

establish "
Bengals Coa ch Homer Rice,
no tun~ U1at penalties allowed the ·
Browns to keep possession on three
scormg drives, sa1d, " l still think
we· ve turned the corner. We played
well eno ugh to win."

GM4tNooo!f-.
P
-•
•
Baked
•

s!,!'~•,!_fi

•

Rog. S2.f5

•

.,.
79 I
I
•

~";

l D•y s 011ly

:611\0's:

····-··
•

AlllOCATIONS

MACHINIST

Permanent position tor individual with
job shop experience. Must be able to do
own set -up on conventional and horizon tal mills, lathes, and grinders.
Respond to Personnel Department , Ap palachian Power Co . , Mountaineer Plant
Operations, Post Offic e Box 398 , New
Haven , W . Va . 25265 - Are;i)C od e 304 BB22151.
W e are an Equa l Opportunity Employer

carejree old spirit na111ed Bill
Passed ontvithout UJriting a tvill.
His liin batt/eel on
·rilhisfortune tvas gone.
leaving nothing but
dust in the till.
No ! havtng a wi ll cou ld leave your loved ones up to thetr necks
1n costly lega l hassles Even 1f you ·re s tngle or yo ung . the effecls
c ould be devastating
And more t han your possesston s are at s take . Because probate
c ourt may have different ideas than you do about who Wi ll ra tse
your c hildren Or who wil l get your property .
If you don ·t have a will. ca ll your lawyer" Wnt tn g a will can be
a si mple matte r and in most cases costs very litt le But most
tmportanll y, 1t protects th e ones you love

ohio state bar association
WIWIIJOII dt110 know a/Jotd tile /0111 aJII/d COSIIJOII.
· tf Y'"'t: dOn t know a lawyer call the Lawyef Referral Servrce rn Ohro 1-800-2B2-6!Kl0

•

�4- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Monday, Oct . 22 , 1!1711

Razorhacks drop Texas, 17-14

Today's

Sports

World
By Will Grimsley
NEW YORK ! API - It was a
shootout at g,ea between a couple of
the Bear's boys.
There was the old~eather-tough,
knowledgeable Ken Stabler of the
Oakland Raiders, a HI-year pro
veteran , a man who has seen the
football 's summit I the Super Bowl I
and conquered 1t. Then there was the
kid - Richard Todd of the New York
Jets, a relative rookie, injured most
of last season, a second-&lt;rtringer at
the start of this one , still s eeking
recognition .
One can visualize Bear Bryant,
the legendary coa c h of the
University of Alabama C"runoon
Tide, ensconce d in hi s swank
headquarters in Bryant Manor in
Tuscaloosa , Ala., stealing a few
rrunutes from h1s film -viewmg of
Saturday 's tough game with
Tennessee to see how a couple of his
proteges were doing up North .
He must have been runrung over
with pride - especiall y over the
maturing of the new k1d on the block ,
Todd .
The 2:&gt;-year-old Todd completed
nine of 18 passes f&lt;r 161 yards and
hit his target for three of the
touchdowns in the Jets ' 28-19
victory . After a slow first half. he
directed his team marvelously . The
old man , Stabler , 33, was a veritable
w&lt;rkhorse, throwing the ball 47
times. Despite three tnterceptions,
he accounted for 360 yards and two
TDs .
Stabler and Todd, almost a decade
apart tn age, are just two of the
National
Basketball Assoctat•on
At A Glance

Bv The Associated Press

Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

W. L. Pet . GB
5 0 1.000
4 1 800 1
New York.
3 J .SOO 21' 2
Washington
2 3 400 3
New Jersey
1 3 2SO 3 1 1
Central Di\'ision
Detroi 1
3 3 . SOO
Indiana
3 3 .500
San Antoni o
2 2 . 500
Houston
2 3 .«&gt;0
At lanta
1 ..- . JJJ
Cleve-land
2 "' . 333
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee
5 1 833
Kansas City
J 1 750 1
Ch icago
1 A
l33 3
Utah
0 4 000 4
Denver
0 5 000 .4A 1 1
Pacific Division
Portland
601000
Los Angeles
3 2 .600 2 1
Golden Slate
3 3
5003
Phoeni )(
3 3 500 3
San Diego
'l 3 AOO 3 1 ' 1
Sea ttle
1 3 400 3 1 }
Philadelphia
Boston

1

Saturdav's Games
Ph i ladelphia 136, New York 11 1
Ind i ana 131 , Boston 128, ot
Washington 117. Detroi t 106
Chi cago 116, Phoeni x lO~
San Antonio 129, Clevelan d 117
Houston 107, Atlanta 101
Golden State 101. Utah 96
sundav 's Games
Milwaukf:!'e 113, Ch icago 111
Kansas City 122, Phoeni &gt;c 85
L os Angeles 1~. Seattle 9l
Portland 91. Golden State 7.4
Monday's Game
San Oi~o at Utah
Tuesday ' s Games
I ndiana at New York.
Atlanta at Cleveland
Boston at San Antonio
New Jersey at Chi c a go
Milwaukee at Phoen ix
Denver at San Diego
Kansas c it y at PorTland
Utah at Los Angeles

Philadelphia
Atlanta

0

6

3 0 .4
Washington
1 4 0 4
Smvth4! Division
Chicago
1 1 2 6

vancouver
St . Louis
Edmonton

2

25

19

17
11

F1ber Glass Attic Insulation

Boston
Toronto

Buffalo
Minnesota

Take a oay or tess to 1nstall

15
30

Cena1n-1eeo F 1ber GtaSS

An te lnsu tatton between
fhe 101515 1n yQU f an te fi (X)r

13

Its the most econom1cal

way to sa ve biQ money on
t hose stc yrocket •ng heat•ng
and coo11nQ costs You II
be warmer 1n w. nte r and

5 20 19
2 4 0 4 11 21

15

11

Adams Division

Quebec

Cut heating and cooling costs
UP. to 30% with Certain-teed

1 3

I 3 1 3
Wales Conference

4 1 0
• 1 0
3 1 1

8 18
8 11

And early this year , Rodgers
again appeared unbeatable . In
retaming his title at Boston, he set
the American record of 2 hours, 9
minutes, 27 seconds.
But then he started losing, and the
cTilics began running him down .
Sunday, Rodgers answered them.
After staymg off the early pace,
Rodgers began a relentless pursuit
and finally sped past front-running
KJ.rk Pfeffer, an unheralded 21-yearold from Boulder , Colo ., just past the
22-mile mark .
" Pfeffer is a talented runner, "
said Rodg e rs . who finished in
2: I I :42 , " but bemg a little
inexperienced, he got caught up in a
r fast 1 pace ."
N&lt;rway's Grete Waitz also is an
mexperienced marathoner , but she
had no trouble winning the woman's
division and breaking the world
record for the second year in a row.
In finish mg tn 2 27:33, she clipped

SAVE
MONEY.

17
2 3 2 6 20 21
2 2 I 5 15 17
1

11
16

7 13 17
31171310
1 3 0 4 15 16
Norris Division

PittSburgh
3 1 1 7 13 IS
Montreal
3 1 I 7 19 15
Los Angeles
1 3 I l 17 30
Detroit
1 2 1 4 16 18
Hartford
1 3 1 4 15 11
Saturdly's Games
Boston 5, Los Angeles 4
Philadelphia 7, Detroit 3
Chicago 1, Atlanta1, tie
Montreal S. New York Rangers 4

-Aitlc

. . I

tkJft

.. _

fiHI

---

coole1 1n summer too

Come tn now VVe II show
VO'J hoW to do the tob
Qu1cktyo and eastly
B1ns

tr

•e- IOI"IQ

15'-'" w •Cie an(!
co . . e• -4 8 SQ ~

!h •c •

B11n s perlOfated at 23'" to•
ust belweer Hi" o• ;?_.- I•Jm•ng

·c..-·

New York Islanders 6, Hartford 1

Pittsburgh 5, Washington 1
Toronto 2. Vancouver 0

St. Louis 3, Butalo 2
Colorado~. Winnipeg 1
Sunday's Games
Vancouver 3, Buffalo 3, tie

Montreal6, Philadelphia 6, tie
New York Rangers 6, Pittsburgh 3
Quebec 3, Chicago 0
Minnesota S, Edmonton S, lie
Monday's Games
No games scheduled
TueSday's Games
Edmonton at New York Islanders

Montreal at Atlanta
Boston at 51 . Louis
Los Angeles at Colorado

Kenny Bro wn rusl1ed lor Ill yar ds
th e fir st Ne bras ka wtn ~ bac k to
reach the 100-yard plateau - as the
Cornhu s kers t ro un&lt;·ed Okla homa
Stat e. Jar vis Redwine , who
apparentl y has ousted I.M . Hipp as
the st arttng tailback , added 104
ra rds and scored twice while Hipp
;na naged 54 ya rds a nd st&gt;t a school
fL'f.&lt;lrd With 2,7 19.
Ho ust on quarte rba ck De lr ic k
Brown highlighted a 29-point fir st
quarter with a 7-yard touc hdown
run . a 9-yard pass to Terald Clark
and a 62-yard pass to Lon ell P hea to
set up the first of Kenny Hatfield's
two field goals a s the Cougars
defeated SMU.
Yeoman wa s n ' t ha ppy , e ven
though the scoreboard sa1d it was a
on e-s1ded contest.
"They probably thought a bout
Arkansas too much tooight ," he
sa1d . " We have to get tougher
men tally ... tougher m the head . The
whole se ason we haven't been tough
enough . By that, I mean not scoring
when we get mside the five-yard
lme . It 's a tone. a• edge , a frame of
rnmd . Som ething is missin g. and
whate ver is missing, we need to get

the ir secon d consecutive setbark
RY U's Wil9? n se t a WAC singlegame record with 33 completions as
th e Cougars crushed Wyoming and
J ames Brooks rushed for 17$ yards
and two touchdowns to pace Aubw-n
over Geor gia Tech .
Doug Paschal , who moved from
fullback t o tailback to replace tl)e
mjured Amos Lawrence, scored
three times and Matt K14&gt;ec threw
two touchdown passes to tie Cbarlie
"C hoo Ch oo" Justice's career
record of 25 as North Carolina
defeated N.C. State .
Wa yne
Smith's
42-yard
mterception return helped Purdue
turn back Michigan State while
Navy edged Virgtnia on Bob Powers'
&amp;-vard run with 1:12 left to play .

LAFF- A- OA Y_

--~

nearly five minutes off the mark of
2:32 :30 she had establi s hed m
winning the 1978 New York City
Marathon .
Last year's triumph came m her
first marathon. Sunday's rac e wa s
her second marathon .
Nobody knew anythin g about
Waitz last year because she was a
late entrant, deciding to run about
two weeks before the race, and did
not make the official f"Ograrn.

FRYER

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Art Schlichter passed for two
to uch downs and scored a patr to lead
Ohio State over Wiscon sin and
Oklahoma quarterbacks J .C. Watts
and Kell y Phelps each scored twice
as the Sooners rallied from a &amp;-3
halftime de fiCit to beat Kansas
State .
Butch Woolfolk scored three times
as Michigan broke awa y from a
sc or eless halftime tie t o beat
nlinois . N; usual, th e Wolverines
and Ohio State are tied for the Big
Ten lead .
Randy McMillan scored twice and
P1tt t ook advantage of s J&lt;
Washington turnovers - thre e'
Inter cept iO ns and three fumbl e
recoveries - to hand the Huskies

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Being a General Telephone Communications Consultant is a full-time
job. It means taking as much time as
ne&lt;:!&lt;JE~ to survey, plan and discuss all
the details of a business customer's
n\,,,..,n,, installation.
But they don't stop
there. They are also
busy looking for ways
to show customers how
to use their phones
more -efficiently. Sometimes they can show
how to save money and maybe even how
to make money.
Sound like good people
to know? They'll be happy to meet you anytime
make a survey of
requirements. Call your
local General Telephone business
office and make an appointment t&lt;&gt;day. And remember there's never an
rh,,.rorp for their services.

k2eD -~talking.

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Colorado

NEW YORK I API - After Bill
Rodge rs woo the Boston Marathon
for the third time in April, he went
into a slwnp , losing six raees in a
row, and skepti cs began to
downgrade him .
The red-llalfed running machine
reasserted
h1mself
Sunday ,
capturing the New York City
Marathon for the fourth strrught
year .
" When I started to lose a few
races, people though t it was all over
for m e," said the level-headed
Rod ge r s, who wa s be aten a t
distan ces from 10,000 meters to the
26-tnile , 385-yard marathoo . " Bu t
they sho uldn 't start knocking you
down because yo u lose a few road
Irumcally , the reason Rodger s
was betng criticized was because he
was expected to wm aU the time .
Last year . he was the king of the
roads , winning 22 consecutive races.

W.L.T . PIS . GF GA
4 1 1 9 30 15
3 1

Wy o rn1n g 54 -14 behmd Marc
Wilson 's 448 p~in g yards and fr~ur
TO tosses , No .14 Auburn pa st ed
Georg1a Tech ~14 , No .l6 Purdu&lt;'
mpped Midugan State 14-7 and
No.2() Navy t urned bar k Virgini a 1710.
Te•a s look a 7~ le ad over
Arkansas on Jam Jon es ' 37-yard
dash m the openmg period . But the
Kazorbacks went ahead 17-7 on Gary
Ander s on' s 28-yard run, Dar r y l
Mason 's tumblmg catch of a 7-yard
pass from Kevin Scanlon and Ish
Ordonez ' 31-yard field .
Texas made it close on Donnie
Little's 3!&gt;-yard pass to Lawrence
Sampleton with 5:01 remaining but
John Goodson miSSed a 51-yard fi eld
goal attempt wtth 1:29 left - " I
can 't tell you 1f it was blocked ; I was
afraid to look," said Holtz - and
Arkansas had its first triumph over
Te&lt;as since 1971.
'' It was a great victory because we
beat a great football team ," Holtz
said .
Alabama
rallied
again s t
Tennessee on a 33-yard pass from
Steadman Shealy to Tim Trav1s tn
the second period, sconng runs of I
and 6 yards by Major Ogilvie in the
third quarter and Don Jacobs ' 13yard run in the final penod . The
com eback enabled Barna to tie the
record
of
20
consec utive
Southeastern Conference victories .
Southern Cal and Notre Dame
combined for 1,126 yards in total
offense in their wild exhibition .
White's 44 carries were the mo st
ever against a Notre Dame team
and he had able assistance from
Paul McDonald, who completed 21 of
32 yards for 311 yards, includin~ 12yard touchdown to!lses to Dan
Garcia and Kevin Williams .
"Tired 7 No , I'm ready to go home
and party, " White quipped .
White and Notre Dame 's Vagas
Ferguson staged ooe of coll ege
football 's greates t indiv idual
ground-gaining duels . Ferg uso n
carried 25 times for 185 yards - all
in the first three periods - and
became the all-tune Irish rushing
leader with 2,647 . White , meanwhile ,
moved into third place on the all time rushing list with 4,796 yards ,
tncluding 1,001 this season .
"Records aren't worth a damn 1f
you don't win," Ferguson said.

Rodgers captures third marathon

races .··

Pro Hockey
At A Gliince
By The Associated Press
National Hockey League
c~mpbell Conference
Patrick Division
NY Rangers

remarkable field generals who have
rolled uff the Bear's relentless
assembly line .
George Blanda and Babe Parilli
emerged from Bryant's flock at the
Uru versity of Kentucky , the former
destined to set records for longevity
and place-k1cktng profictency .
Th er e has been a succession of
great quarterbacks spawned in th e
Bear 's pressure-«JJker a t Alabama
- Joe Narnath perhap s the most
celebrated , followed by Stabler ,
Scott Hunter , Steve Sloan and Jeff
Rutledge, who went on to make
marks in the pro game .
Yet none of tbem was as
impr e ssive
as
were
th e ir
performances in the collegiate
game . None ever woo the Heisman
Trophy ,
the
symbol
of
undergraduate football greatness .
" The Bear coocentrates on team
play . No one man tS gtven priority
over another . It 's the unit that
counts - no t the individual .
Naturally, players such as Namath,
Stabler , Sloan and Todd suffer in the
battle for national attention . But the
teams keep on winning, "says on~
Bear watcher.
No ooe can dispute that. There 's
not a coach in the country - pro or
college - who has built a more
impressive monument of success .
Cootrary to popular belief, Bryant
tS no genius at recruiting . He is a
building geniUs - that 's the reaoon
he's never gone pro . His red-6hirted
legions look scrubby and underfed
when measured by the behemoths of
Southern Cal , Oklahoma and Notre
Dame .
He has no Charles Whites on hts
roster. no Billy Suns or Vaga s
Fergusons .
He just has a bunch of tough kids
who win and Wtn .
At last look, they were No .I. Can
you name their quarterback '

By HERSCHELNffiSENSON
AP Sports Writer
It ·s out of the frying pan and into
th e fire for the Arkan sas
Razor backs . Or , as Coach Lou Holtz
put it Satw-da y after his lllth-.-anked
Razorbacks knocked off No .2 Texas
17-14 , " This was not a pardon , th is
was m erely a reprieve."
What does Holtz mean ? Take it
away , Lou .
"Next week we have to play the
Houston Cougars, and I don 't have to
tell you about them ."
Fifth -rank e d Houston ran it s
rel'Ord to IHl - the Cougars and
Razo rbac ks are two of th e
remaining II major college teams
with perfect rel'Ords - by trouncing
Southern Methodist 37-10, setting up
another battle of unbeatens next
Saturday in Fayetteville, Ark.
The psychological warfare has
alread y begun .
" We are not a great team ," said
Hol tz.
" Can we beat Arkansas 7 "
wondered Houston Coa c h Bill
Yeoman . " Naw, not as tender as we
are on offense ."
Meanwhile, Bear Bryant was
finally convtnced that Alabama is a
gre at team after his No.l;anked
Crimson Tide wiped out a 17~
second-&lt;juarter deficit and defeated
No. IS Tennessee 27-17 .
" I think Alabama is a champion
now ," Bryant satd . " If we c an come
back and beat them with all the
people we had on the bench who
couldn't play and the others who
dtdn 't dress , I think we can beat
anybody ."
Meanwhile,
third-ranked
Nebraska whipped Oklahoma State
36-() and fourth-ranked Southern
California outslugged No.9 Notre
Dame 42-23 behind All-American
01arles White's career-high 261
yards and four second-half
touchdowns .
Rounding out the Top Ten , No .6
Ohio State swamped Wisconsin 59-0
a nd eighth -ranked Oklahoma
trunmed Kansas State 38-ii . Seventhranked Florida State was idle .
In the Second Ten, No .l7 Pitt upset
No. l2 Washtngton ~14 while No.l9
North Carolina beat No. l5 North
Carolina State ~21. Elsewhere,
No .ll Michigan downed Illinois '!1-7,
No .l3 Brigham Young buried

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct 22 , 1 ~79

Holiday activities
planned by group here
Holiday activities were planned at
the Wednesday night meeting of the
Past Presidents' Parley of the
American Legion Auxiliary, Drew
Webster Post 39, held at the home of
Mn . Veda Davis.
The annual Christmas party was
set for Dec. ro at 6:30p.m. at Crow's
Steak House with a party to follow in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savmgs and Loan Co ..
Pomeroy office There will be a g•ft
exchange.
A Christmas gift will be sent to
Joan Harris at the Athens Mental
Health Center, and flowers to the
female veterans at the Kimes Convalescent Center, Athens . A
donation wW also be made to
Miller's Cottage at the Dayton V. A.
Hospital.
For devotions, Mrs. Mary Martin
read from The Daily Word with her

selections including "Love," "God's
Love Lights Up My Day." " Not My
Will But Thine Be Done, " and " Day
of Kindness ." The pledge was given
to the flag and there was a silent
tribute for deceased veterans .
In the absence of Miss Erma
Smith, secretary , Mrs . Davis read
the minutes of the last meeting . Mrs .
Fay Wildermuth gave the
treasurer's report . Games were
played with prizes goin8 to Mrs. Iva
Powell and Mrs . Catherine Welsh . A
b•rthday cake was served in
celebration of the birthdays of Mrs .
Pearl Knopp and Mrs . Welsh, with
ice cream , coffee and coke to three
named and Marjorie Goett, Mrs.
Lucille Bruley, Detroit, Mich., a
guest. Mrs . Davis and Mrs. Ellen
Couch were hostesses . Napkins,
favors and nutcups carried out the
Halloween theme . There will be no
meeting in November .

POLLY'S POl NTERS
Polly Cramer
c-

POPCORN STAYS FRESH
By Polly Cramer
POU..Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POU .Y - I hope somebody
can tell me how to store popcorn so it
will retain the proper moisture level
for good popping. I keep popcorn
that is to be used sooo in the lrePZer
and find it pops much better.
A t6-&lt;&gt;unce juice can is great to use
for holding yam when kmtting
crocheting . - PEGGY
DEAR PEGGY - A wholesale
dealer in popcorn told me that small
quantities of popcorn should be kept
in plastic or rubberized containers
with tight.fitting lids . The popcorn
can be stored in a cupboard at room
temperature but never in a
basement or such place that might
be damp. Stored this way the corn
should stay in good shape lor a
minimwn of two to three months . POLLY
DEAR POIJ,Y - My vacuum

PREVENnON
IS lHE

BEST POLICY
As an independent insurt~nce
agency , our primary f unction is
to provide pol1cies which afford
finan cia l protection in case ot

loss .
But , we also have a vital in
in loss prevention . as

ten~·st

should our clients We encourage

care ,

caution

and

safety

preventive measures which c an

keep that car accident from hap
pening, that bui lding fire fr om
start ing , that home burglary
from being committed .
Pre-vention saves l ife . l i mb and
property .. . and helps contro l in

surance cost s and prem iums
When

losses

do

occur ,

our

policyholders can count on pro
tecfing and serving in time and

need . But we still say - pr even
tion is the best policy ,

DALE C. WARNER

INS.
992 ·2143

102 w. Main
Pomer-oy

sweeper would not pick up the dog
hairs that covered my sculptured
rug . In desperation, l put on my
corrugated rubber soled shoes,
scraped my loot along the rung and
the hairs came up by the handfuls .-MHS. M.D.
DEAR POLLY - When my dog
had an ear infection he had to take
pills three times a day. AS we all
know some dogs are very finicky
about pills, as mine is , so I hit on the
idea of pushing a capsule in the middle of a teaspoon of ice cream. He
gulped lt down quickly and the ice
cream coated the capsule so it slid
down easily. Hope this helps other
frantic dog lovers . - JEAN1E
DEAR POLLY - When putting
adhesive - backed decorator plastic
on kitchen cupboard shelves allow
an extra mch at each side and the
back so that it will come up and
cover the cracks. Food particles can
then be wiped off easily instead of
havmg to dig them out of the cracks .
- FRANIUE
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problemin her
colwnn . Write POlLY'S POINTERS m care of this newspaper .

!-;111 .!estlz'a/ Fnday
.
RACINE - An old fashiooed fall
festival will be held Friday frotn
6:30 to midnight on the streets of the
vlllage of HBcme.
The festival is bemg sponsored by
various non·profit community
organizations . Various food booths,
country stores, games , fortune
telling, guessing games, pwnpkin
decorating contests, a queen contest. cake walk, costume judging
will be conducted throughout the
evening .
A square dance will be held on the
street beginrung at 9 p.m. The public
is invited to attend. Further information may be obtained from
Charlotte Wamsley, 949-2028; Unda
Diddle , 94~25.1.1. or Beli!lB Johnson,
949-2794 .

_7- The Daily Sentinel , M1ddlepcrt -Pomer ny . o . Monday , Oct. 22. 1979

b; "l T~:~~~~.:e:z:,

Mission. Su~da; to
0 bserved at chu rc h

:-:·

).

~~:v=rt~ first birthday recently

::;:

Others attending were his grandparents, Mn . Emma Wilson, Mrs .
Charles Keitmire, Chuckle, Jerry,
Todd, Steven and April, Mr. and
Mrs. Earl Wi16on, Diana Van Meter,
Mrs. Virgil Lee, Jay and Greg,
Kelly, Gina and Autwnn Grilfith .
Cake, ice cream and Kool-Aid were
served.

&lt;::

The Evangeline Missionary
Soctety of the Pomeroy Church of
Christ planned the ollservance of
Mission Sunday when members met
Tuesday at the home ol Mrs . Thelma
Osborne .
Mission Sunday will be observed
on Nov. 4 at 7:30p.m. and the public
is invited to attend. Mrs. ' Evelyn
Smith presided over the meeting in
the absence of the president, Mrs .
Betty Spencer. Reports were given
by LaDonna aark, treasurer and
banquet fund for Mrs . Eileen
Bowers. Final plans were made for a
Thanksgiving dinner and the Christmas meeting was discussed.
Naomi Ohlinger gave a report on
the sunshine boxes . Mrs . Clark gave

AIRLINE INVESTMENT
WASHINGTON !API - The
nation's scheduled airlines- if they
are to accorrunodate traffic growth
with the most productive technology
available - will have to invest $90
billion in new aircraft between 1979
and 1990, accordmg to a study by the
Air Transport Associa Uon.
The study says the mdustry's
major capital-investment needs
coosist of $80 billion roc passenger
aircraft to be deUvered in the 1980s,
$7 billion lor freighter aircraft and
$3 billion lor passenger aircraft to be
dehvered in 1979.

the nower fund report. Readings included " No Days Lost"and "Words
Not to live By" by Mrs . Osborne
and Mrs . Smith. Mrs. Clark read
"Pray , Dont Find Fault"and then
gave devotions using scriptures on
self-control. The hostess served a
dessert course and coffee. Others attending were Mrs. Pauline Kennedy
and Mrs . Gertrude Bass. The
Thanksgiving dinner will be held at
the Smith home. Neil Proudfoot
joined the group lor refreshments .

; CHESTER - Annual inspection of
'Chester Council 323, Daughters of
America, was held Tuesday night by
· Faye Hoselton, state associate coun. cilor , Belpre.

-•

: Gent·ration Rap
••

"

llailm1 Jeen }are planned
Members of the Sew-Rite-Sewing
Club will hold a Halloween dinner
party at Seddons on the Mall Wednesday night, 7 p.m.
Meeting recently at the home of
Mrs. Mildred Walls, the members
played games with prizes going to
Browning and Lenora
Ann
McKnight. Mrs . Joni Hoffman
presided at the meeting with Mrs .
Browning giving the treasurer's
report, and Mrs . Evelyn Gilmore,
the secretary's report. Mrs.
Browning will be the next regular
club hostess. Others attending the
meeting were Mrs. Martba Hoffman, Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs. Barbara Mullen, Mrs . Betty Wehrung,
Mrs. Pandora Collins, Mrs. Flo
Strickland, Mrs. Shirley Baity, Mrs .
Nettie Boyer, and Mn. Carolyn McDaniel.

New Zealand attained Dominion
status u1 1907.
SERVICE CONTRACTS
LOS ANGELES! AP I - The cost of
automotive repairs has resulted in
an increase in the sales of vehicle

contracts. reports a
in the industry .
Jerrv Farrar, prestdent of
American Warranty Corp., says that
during the first six months of 1979, 16
percent of all new car purchasers
took out vehicle service contracts,
as opposed to 8 percent in 1978.
Farrar says industry sales of
these service contracts were an
estimated 1.93 million contracts in
1978 lor a dollar value of $392
million . In 1973, he says, there were
200,000 of the contracts in effect lor a
dollar value of about $40 milhon.

:Chester Council 323 annual inspection held

and Mrs. Max Wayne Wilson, Sr.,

·: ·:

service

c~n~pany

Max Wilson

••

!,
Samuel de Champlain led the
Hurons against the Iroquois at the
Battle ·or Onondaga in 1615.

'

Why drive all over town? Do your gift shopping the easy way through the full -color
Supe ramerica House gift catalog . You 'll save time and
gas. and everything is fully guaranteed

GIVE QUALITY SUPEAAMERICA HOUSE
SURPRISES THIS YEAR .
You'll flnd cheeses. nuts . candy, frU&lt;ts . serving trays, spe·
c•al glassware and dinnerware . Plus maple syrup from
Wiscons•n. honey, fancy preserves , an o ld fa s h•oned
coffee gnnder, picmc sets. luggage . And for the l•ttle
people, Klaus the cuddly mouse .

SUPERAMERICA®
JIM£h nwrr tluln u gus $UJ/Y!

(GOT A PROBLEM' Or a subject
fur discussion, two generation style'
Direct your questions to either S..e
or Helen Bottel - or both, if you
want a combination mother ·
da u~hter answer - in care of th lS
newspaper. I

NOTICE!
MOTOR ROUTE
CARRIER
NEEDED

·-------,

r---Social Calendar

MONDAY
BETHEL 62, International Order
of Job 's Daughters, 7:30 Mooday
night at the Middleport Masonic
Temple.
TIJESDAY
POMEROY PAST MATRONS, Order of the Eastern Star, wiU meet at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple, 7:30
p.m. Tuesday .
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXIUARY, Drew Wellster Post
39, 7:30p .m. Tuesday at the hall .
Mrs . Fay Wildermuth 14 have a
program on educatioo and scholarship .

FOR THE

CALL 992-2156
BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

Birthdays

POMEROY - Kelh Hubbard,
daughter of Jun and Carol Hubbard,
Pomeroy, recently observed her fir·
st birthday w•th a party.
A Holl y Hobby cake was presented
to her and served with ice cream ,
chips, Kool-Aid and coffee .
Attending were Jaimey Hubbard,
Kathy, Lori , Usa, Mikie , and Misty
Pierce, Christy , Jr., Susan , Rose ,
Debble . Wendy and Adam Triplett,
Debb1e , Christy, Buly, Joe, Debb•e
Halley, and Wilma Gilkey .
Sending gifts were Doris and Basil
Haynes, Mary Kerns, Bill Hubbard,
Jeff, Melissa and Scott Hubbard .

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
[jons aub Wednesday at Meigs Inn .
SPECIAL SERVICES Wednesday
through Sunday at the l.ailrel Free
Methodist Church with the Rev .
James L. Mason, Canton, as guest
speaker, and the special music each
evening .

GET YOUR FREE CATALOG AT THESE LOCATIONS

SECOND AND PINE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
- - -- -- -

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

© 1979 S..peramenca. D1vlsion of Ashland Otl Co.. Inc.

-

--~-

·-

MIDDI.EPORT Uterary Oub, 2
p.m . Wednesday at the ho~e r:l Mrs .
Bert Grimm. Program will be on
" Robert Frost -the Critical Rece!)'
tion" by Mn. Forest Bachtel. Mem bers to respond with a favorite Frost

. ...poem.

Mrs . Hoselton at the Chester hall on
Oct. 28, 1:30 p.m . and membcrs are
to contact Mrs. Erma Cleland about
what they are to take . The Dl stnct 12
annual friendship meeting was set

·.·

,•.·

Shrinettes

·::::• · host dinner
·.·
·.·

The Twm-Clty Shnnettcs hosted a
di1mer Tuesday rught at the Middleport Masonic Temple honoring
the high priestess and her court ,
Thea Court No. ~ . Orienl&lt;!l Shrine of
North Amenca , Columbus .
Prayer preceding the dinner was
by Mrs . Mary Hughes . Mrs . Cora
Beegle, president. extended a
welcome to Thea Court and members of the Twin.{;ity Shrmettes
Mrs. Beegle presented Evelyn
Bollou. hlgh priestess, and she was
g•ven a corsage and table
arrangement made by Mrs . Vera
Van Meter.
Mrs. Ballou gave her annual
message . She told of the umt meet
held in Toledo where five state units
performed. Thirty units participated
with the parade taking about three
hours. She noted that the grand high
pnestess was there . An invitation to
the fall ce remonial to be held Nov . 10
In Columbus was extended .
The high priestess presented her
officers, Louise Watters, first
ceremomal lady; Ethel DeVore,
past high pnestess; Louise Welch,
usher umt ; Ann Fillmore. assoclate
princess; Mary Alice Wharton, prin·
cess; and Opal Ford, fez chairman;
Joan Agnew, recorder; and Frieda
Jay, treasurer. Also presented was
Rosalie McAtee, past high priestess .
Mrs. Beegle introduced members of
the Twin my Shnnettes.
A silen t prayer was given in
memory of Hertha Compton . It was
reported that a corsage had been
pinned on Mrs. Compton and that a
donation of $5 has been made to the
Burns Hosital by Thea Court in her

memory.
It was also noted that Mrs. Emma
Clat worthy is home from the
hospital.
Mrs . Beegle thanked her committee, Mrs. Edna Slusher, Mrs .
Gertrude Mitchell , Mrs. Vera Van
Meter, and Mrs . Hughes and womfn
of the Evangeline Chapter who served the dmner.
Members attending besides those
named above were Mrs . Clara
Adams. Mrs . Barbara Dugan and
daughter, Dixie, Mrs. Erma Yoho,
Mrs. Jean Moore, Mrs. Florence
Willis, Mrs. Lora Byers, Mrs . Edna
Slusher, Miss Shirley Beegle, and
Mrs . Beulah Ewing.

Announce birth
Rich and Nancy Clark, Lincoln
Heights. Pomeroy, are announcing
the birth of a daughter. Jesica
Renee, Oct. 10 at the Holzer Medical
Center
The baby weighed seven pounds,
14 ounces and was 21 inches long .
Maternal grandparents are Mr . and
Mrs . Cecil St. Marie, Cadiz; and the
paternal grandparents are Harry E .
Clark, Athens, and Joann Clark,
Pomeroy . Great1:randparents are
Mrs Etollla Cassell, Middleport,
and Mrs. Evelyn Spencer, Pomeroy.
Mrs . Bessie Quillen of Middleport is
a ~real-great-grandmother.

DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm corrunenting on the letter from
Gina and Glll about having an only
child .
1 am one, and let me tell you I'm
not a mlSflt or lonely, spoiled, etc.,
and my parents don't regret having
only one - me .
They raised me 1\ith lots of love
and wisdom and we are one happy
family' - JOHN FROM MIN·
NESOTA

In 1928, Ras Talan became Negus
of Ethiop1a, later taking the name
Ha1le Selass1e , emperor

DAI LV SENTINEL

•

ARE 'ONLYCHIWREN'
SPOILED OR DEPRIVED?
•
By Helen and Sue Hottel
:::. DEAR HELEN :
~ This is in response to the letters
~ncerning "To have or not to have
iin only child'"
;.~ I have four brothers and three
~ters. I guess I don 't need to say
tllat I am never lonely . We all love
one another very much and are like
best friends .
First there's Harry : Any time you
need something or just someone to
talk to, Harry is there . He is very un·
derstanding and has terrific advice .
You can count on him when the
going gets rough'
Then there 's Jim: Jim and l have
all the same friends. Everytime any
of our friends arc domg something
neat, Jim and I join them together.
He is like my best pal and we get
along great.
Next comes Jack : He 's the family
clown, always doing his best to keep
us laughing. He has a serious side,
too . When you need help, he 's on
hand .
And Karen: She and I can talk
about anything. If she has a question
abo ut boys of whatever, she knows
I'm there to help, and the same goes
for me .
And Laurie : Another comedian .
She finds the funny side of
everything. She enjoys herself and
likes to make the rest of us as crazy
as she is - and that 's pure fun . She
cracks me up.
Then there are Nicole and Richie :
They 're the youngest and very close
m age . We all help m thetr upbringing and we love them like they
were our children. They learn so
much from us, and it shows more
and more every day . They bring us
lots of happiness
Well, that's all seven . I guess Mom
sornetunes has her hands ruu. but
with eight kids, they aren t as full as
one rrught think. The only thing her
hands are really full of is love !
I thank God and thank my parents
that none of us ever was an "only
child ."
If you 're wondering where I lit in,
1'm in between, all of them . CATHY
DEAR CATHY :
Your letter is like a nver picnic
and homemade ice cream on an Indian Surruner day : the nicest thing
that could happen to coiuJTUlists who
don't hear the happy stde of life .
If we're ever in your town in Pennsylvanie~, may we stop in to visit
Harry, Jim, Cathy, Jack, Karen,
l.aune, Nicole, Richie, and Mom
and Dad' You're a temfic family!
- HELEN AND SUE
P . S. But only-children enjoy life,
too Read on

Mrs. Hose lton ga ve the council a
grad e of "good' ' and spoke of the excellent work presented by the Coun c il. Mrs . Le ona Hensl ey , councilor ,
prestded at th e meeting attended by
31 members and two gues ts It was
noted that Mf' . Dorothy Lawson is
home from the hosp11&lt;!l and that
Dorothy Ritchie underwent open
heart surgery at MI. Cam1el
Hospital, 793 W Sl&lt;!te St , Columbus
Mrs . Esther Ridenour, imtiatlon
captain pro tern, held initiation lor
one candJdate, Da•sy canter , Chauncey . Flag bearers escorted Mrs
Hoselton and Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes
to the altar and Mrs. Mary K.
Holter, on behalf of the c ouncil ,
presented gifts to them .
It was announced that Belle
Prairie Council inspection will be on
Oct. 22 at 7 :30 p.m. and Chester
Council was extended an invitation .
District I2 is holdJng a reception for

Jason Aian Parker celcbrateil his
birthday on Oct. 2 with a party
given by his mother, Mrs. Carl
Parker.
A Winnie the Pooh cake was served with ice cream and punch .
Those attending were Mary Parker,
his grandmother, Pam Parker, and
daughter, Leslie; Carolyn White and
daughters, Cindy and Diana, Jim
Bob Parker, Terri Cline and son,
Jeremy and daughter, Jeannie.
Sending gifts were Mr . and Mrs .
Theodore Conna lly and son ,
Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Everett
Schultz, great"flrandparents; Mr.
and Mrs. William Connolly. greatgandparents, and Enna Jean ; Lola
'Griffin, great great-grandmother;
Mr. and Mrs . Rodney King and son,
David, and Mr. and Mrs . Halph
Parker.
~1rst

PUMPKIN THIEVES
MAIDENHEAD, England I API Thieves recently stole two large
pumpkin s from a garde n here.
However, tru,y lgnored an even
larger pumpkin because, says a
policeman, "they obviously dldn 'I
have a carria~e . "
STAMPS DESTROYED
LONDON 1API - Some 20 million
postage stamps have had to be
destroyed by the post office because
they were pnnted with the wrong
postal rates .
A spokesman says the stamps had
been ordered beloce new postal
rates came into effect.
ACCIDENTAL DEATHS
WASHINGTON I API An
estimated lo:i,OOO Americar\S died as
a result of acodents in 1978, an
mcrease of 1,000 from a year earlier ,
say s the Amencan Council of Life
Insurance .

lor Nov 8 wllh a potluck supper dt
6:30 p.m at the Chester hail Tl•·
d1stnct will furnish the pcta toes ,
meat. bcvcrag es and rolls. II was
noted that Mrs . Ada Morris will ob-

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern•ce Be de O so l

0

cyour
'Birthday

October 23. 1979
1 h1S com ong ye ar 1S an excell ent
t1me to acQui re new k nowledg e
and eJp and y0 u 1 c re at Po1 t y
bec ause wnen yo u do lu c k y
thtngs w•ll b egm happemng I O
you Don t be atra1d to test your
me Hie
LIBRA (S•pt _ 23-0ct . 23) Be
su1e you lOOk at you r pro otems
today as they real!·,- are and no t
th1 ough rose ·co!or6d glasse s
11 It d o you mOl t! harm !han good
10 k1 d yo ur se lf Fi'lld out m ore
abou t your sell by send mg to r out
cop y o1 A s tr o~G raph Le tt er
wh•ch beg ms w 1th y:&gt;ur b1rthda y
Mall $1 lor eac h to Astr u -GraiJI •
80 J 489 Ra d •o C oty Stat• on N Y
100 19 Be su re to speCify b •rt h
da te

SCORPIO (Oct. 24·Nov. 22) !1 s
a sheer wa s te ot t •me. enP.rgy
and money to ovf3nndutge 1n
order 10 tr y to h ave a good t1me
Ha ppmess can not be bought It
can only be w on
SAGITTARIUS (Nov . 23-0.e. 21)
Pu t ymJf personal des•r es on the
b ac k burner toda y Lu c k IS n o t
sup pon mg '( Ou as yo u t1ot1
hoped ot would Wa 1t un 111a more
auspiCIOu s t •me
CAPRICORN (Cec. 22 -Jin. 19)
Don t be!1e"€ ev e1ythmg y o u
near H&gt;day Other peoples e •a g .
get at10ns could pul ~ o u m a
depressed m ood !or no hones t
1e aso n
AQUARIUS (Jan_ 20-hb. 19) t!
you trust unw1sety toda y you
could place your sell 1fl a vutn eru
tJie pos•t1on Do n t co mpl ·f w1t n
1ust anvb o dy w no ha pppns
alon g
PISCES (Feb. 20-March :0) Yo u
stand a good cn ance ol be•ng
dtsappOJnted today becHu se y ou
have a tendenc y to expec t mor e
!rom o t her s than you should
Rel y only on your sell
ARIES (March 21-April 11) P..
ph1to sopn y tnat sut ts so meo ne
else perfectl y may not necess an 1) llt you r reQuirement s Test
thmgs out before putttnQ the m to
wor~ lor you
TAUAUB (April 20·May :ZO) Be
as Qraclous as you poSSibly ca n
m your socta l activ1t1es today
Bad manner! or poor taste won ' t
readily be for given or 1orgot1en

GEMINI

(May

2:1·June

20)

Somethtr'K,;l you do t odey co u ld
tn conven1ence another
eve n
though th 16 pertof'l may not be
l n'I OI'19d 1n yOur diC IS IOilm&amp;klllQ Th m k of the other guy
CANCIEA (Junl 21-July 22)
US IIlQ flli CfiSSI \;' 6 !tattery 10 Win
so meone O\ler wtll ha~· e an e!tec t
opposite to what you noped lo r
Set the nghl e:.;amole and yo u It
nave a chance
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You tend
to be somewhat wasteful w nere
mo ne~ rs co n cer ned lo day T a"-e

serve her b1rthda y on Oct . 21 , and
Mrs Ada Ne utzhng, Oct 19.
Helen Wolf wa s plan ist and
refreshments were served by t he kll·
chen conun ittee.

carP tna t you don t ~IJ€ 1ld r~e t:d
tessty to mak e an 1mprP&lt;;&lt;;tnn
VIAGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) 't' ou
may thrnk '( OU d eserve to De hn;t
t oda~
tout an ,. effort to p ta&lt;.P
you rset l 1n ltl l'&gt; p U;, 1t 1o n w tl l be
t n t P •fjre t ~-" d &lt;&gt;S settt sh
" I -. •,P AI ' f &lt;• I '&lt;I F '-&lt;P'-'•'· 1 ~ ',C. "

POSITIVE PUMP
DI·:AI\BORN . M1ch . 1 AP l
Sylvanus F. Bowser of Vorl Wa yne,
Ind ., dehw red the fir st Amen canmad e g&lt;:tso lm e pump to J &lt;-~ ke
Gwnpcr u1 1885, but the Arnen can
moton st soo n learned to mastru st
th e deVIce The pump , whlc h had
marbll' vahn·s a nd woodt:' n plungers.
was Tl&lt;J t known for deh verm!:i t&gt;xart
m easure to motora sts .
It was :10 years lakr tha t th e fir st
" vlsiblP-dPi tver y gtlsolin e sU:i twn ."
now m Llw tnms por tatwn cull ec tJun
of tlw Henry Ford Museum~ hen:,
a ctually let the customer set' LllL'
~allon of ga s flow from the pwl.lp.
ass unn ~ hun he wa s gettJn g h 1 ~
money's wor t h.

In 1935, the Lea~e of r\a t1 ons
cond emned Ita ly for r~ sortm g t&lt;J
war m Ethiopia .

SERMONETTE
ARE YOU USING All.
YOURSTRENGTH"
I Peter 5:1-11
One day a small boy was trying to
lift a heavy stone, but he conldn 't
budge ll. His father , passing by,
s topped to watch his efforts . Finally
he said to his son : ·Are you us mg all
your strength" ..
· Yes , I am ," the boy c ned .
exa sperated .
"No." the lather sa ld caimly,
" You're not. You have not as ked me
to help you ."
Often we like the little boy are
trying to lift some pretty heavy
stones m life by ourselves and we
are unable to budge them . We like
the little boy often fail to realize that
we are not using all the strength tha t
we have. because we have failed to
go tD the greatest source of strength
there is
In l Peter &gt;:7 Peter te lls those to
whom he IS writing to cast their
cares upon the Lord and that He Will
care for them
And He will care for us today ! ~!~!
James Corbett

Attending besides those named
were Emma AShley, Goldie Wolfe ,
F:thel Orr, Betty Roush , Ada Morris ,
F:n n a Cleland , Goldie Frederic k,
Alt a Ba ll a rd , Ada Neutzling ,
Marga ret Tuttl e, Julie Rose , Ada
BlSsell, Mae McPeek, Thelma
White, lnzy Newell , Charlotte Grant ,
Ni na Windle , Jean Kresge, Thelma
Mc Mann is, Ihla Fae Kimes, Mae
Sp encer , Ze lda Weber, Jean
Freden ck, Opal Hollon , Carolyn
Holley , and a guest, Iva Shutts , BeU e
Pra tTle Cou ncil , Belpre .

Wedding
annzversary
noted
•

The 32nd wed dlng anmversary of
Mr "nd \1 rs Dwi ght Logan wa s
ce lebrated recentl y with a party
he ld "t Hidde n Lakes, attended by
campers there , and hosted by Mr .
and Mrs. Ma nning Roush, owners.
The cmni ve rsary cake wa s
pr ovided by Mr. and Mrs . Sklp
Logan of Mystic . Conn ., who JOined
the group for the celebratwn .
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Logan and
Mr. and Mrs . Skip Logan then went
on a camping trip at Fort Flreiands
near Port Clinton . The men fished in
Lake Ene and Canada, while Ka y
" "d Barba ra Logan visited Mr. and
Mrs. Cha r les Griffin and Mrs. Polly
Wlllia m:; at Sandusky
ASTHMA CLINIC
MOSCOW ! AP 1- A c ave is the Slle
of a new as thma clinic Ulat wa s
o pt:'n~d rt&gt; cen tly tn the Sov iet
Ht.&gt; pubhc of Azerbaijan.
Doctors sa} the const ant
te mpera t ur e. hum tdtty and a tr
pn~s."i un• , t he s&lt;ilt vapor s and th e
&lt;:tbse 1tc e

uf

ha rmfu l

mt c ro -

or g am sm~

un prove the hea lth of
asthma sufferers m 8 to 10 da ys .

P~!.!'l
•
•

Baked

s~~~~ti

•
•

.
.
.
.
.
1.79 I
1
•

Rog. SH5
J

~,,

•

01dy

:611\0's:
; ••.••• .~

�9- The Dally Sentinel , Middleport -l'omero)·. () Mondav ""t 22 1979

ffiCI: I RAC"Y

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Monday, Oct 22, 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found
WANT AD

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Each word

OYI!!I'"

the

LZ.
1.110

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15 wc:nb Is 4 ~nts per •ord per
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Ill memory. CKrd of ThanU
and Obituary fi eenu per word,
$3 .00 mlnunwn . Cash Ill ad1vance.
H~me sa..let~

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and Yard

sa1es are accepted oob' w1 th
cuh with order 25 !'Pnt charge
for ads carrying Bc:a Nwnber I n
~ of The Senttnel

The Pub&amp;her reserve:~ lht
right to edit or reject any acb
deemed objectiOnal
The
Publisher liri1J not bl' respomtblt&gt;
lor more than o~ tnC'OfTect III!ert.lon

Notices

For R en!

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMAN E SOCIETY 9'12
6260 . Pets ava i lable for
adopt1on and information

CO INTRY MOBILE Hom e
Park . Rout e 33 . north of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
9'11 7479

~rv ic e

GUN
SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ON L Y RACINE
GUN C L UB
NO
HUNTING .
no
trespass1ng w1th no ex
ceplions on my property
Judy M c Graw Self
GUN
SHOOT
Rac 1ne
Volunteer
Fir e
Dept
Every Saturday 6 30 p m
At I heir buddmgin Bashan
Fa ctory r noke guns only

NOTICE

11 00 Fa ctory c hoke only
corn Hol low Gun Club .
Rut land Proceeds donated
to Boy Sc out Troop 249

ANYONE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING

DEADUNES

WHO

has

had

rtny problems with spray or

towelett e
type
insect
repellent . send
all
111
to r mat1on to
Box
475.
Ra r me , OH

ED
BURKETT
Barber
Shop now open fu l l time 10
M1ddlepor1

M&lt;llday

Noon un Saturday
Tuesday

t.hn1 fo' nday
&lt;p M

tht' day brfure pubilc alJOfl
Sund.Hy
&lt;PM

rm18} afternoon

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION OF
Fl RST BANC GROUP
OF OHIO , INC.
TO ACQUIRE
OWNERSHIP OR
CONTROL OF THE
SHARES OF THE
POMEROY NATIONAL
BANK .
POMEROY , OHIO
Notice i s hereby given
that. oursuant To SPc tinn
J(a) ())of the Bank Hold•ng
c ompany
ACT
and
regulations oi th e Board of
Gover-nors of the Feder~ I
Reserve Syslem , F1rs1
Bane Group of Onio, Inc , a
bank
hol ding company
hrtving 1fS prin c 1pal pla ce
of business at 100 Ea&lt;st
Broad Str eet. Col umbus ,
Ohio 43215 will app l y to the
Board of Go&gt;w"ernors of the
Federal Reserve Sys tem
for prior appr-ova_l by the
Board of th e acqu1Sit1on of
bani&lt;.
snare s
of ~
ThP
Pomeroy NaTional Sank in
Pomeroy ,
Oh10
By
ac quiring the shares oi The
Pomeroy Nationrtl Bank .
F~r s f Bane Group o f Oh 10 ,
Inc proposes to engage in
bus1ness at tne offices of
The
Pomeroy
National
Bank located 1n Pomeroy ,
Rutland , and
Tuppers
Plains . Persons wish1ng to
comment on
I his
ap
Ol1 cat10n shou ld submit
their views in writing no
later than 30 days after the
fi rst date of publ ica tion of
this noti ce to The Federal
Reserve
Bank
of
Cleveland, Cleveland . Oh10
4410l
FIRST BANC GROUP
OF OHIO, IN C
(10 15.
2tc

n

PUBLIC NOTICE
The an nual election of
th e
Meigs
County
Agrkultural Society D in~·&lt;
tors will be he l d Monda y ,
November 19, 1979 in tne
secretary office at the Fa i r
Grounds at Rock Springs ,
Ohio from 5 to 9 P.m
Qualifications for direc
tors are that they must be a
qualified voter of Meigs
CounTy and must have a
membership ticket in sa1d
society of 1979 .
Candidates
petitio ns
must be filed with the
Sec retary no later than 5
p .m Monday , November
12.
1979
Only persons
holding
membership
t ic kets at the close ot the
1979 County Fair or at least
(15) c alendar days befor e
the date of election are
qualified to -vote .
The Meigs Agricultural
Society By : Mrs Wallace
Bradford. Secretary .

GET MARKET VALUE tor
your gol d and silver r o1ns
Wr1te or
c onta c t
Ed
Burkett Barber Shop M1d
dl eport

·--~UI&lt;l__S:..:a"-l:e:_:S:__
1976 MONTE CARLO. 350
engine, low mileage . S2b00
9'12 2656.
1973 MERCURY MON
TEGO MX, 56 ,000 miles,
good condit1on . Drop leaf
table Also . firewood for
sa le H ICkory and oak Will
deliver 843 7703
1957 CHEVROLET one ton
f lat bed truc k . 30 gallon
electr 1c hot water heater .
S15 V 4 c y11ndtlr W1scons 1n
mo tor 843 170 I

1977 THUNDERB I RD. AM
FM, A (, rad1als , ~.000
Must sell '"147 35'14 before 'l
pm
1973 CAMERO, body good,
runs ex ce ll ent Can be seen
10 7 Locust St , Pomeroy
(Monkey Run )
E)(CELLENT Dodge Dart ,
air , gOOd f 1r es. good body ,
snow t 1res w1th extra r i ms .
Actual mileage . iusl over
30,000. us.es regular gas .
great mileage Comb _gold
black , power
steering
S1400 Bob Hoef l 1c h. 992
52'12
1'157 FORD TRUCK , J11
ton. new motor. new t 1re s.
17 ft flat bed S750 992
7B76

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN l4x65 J
bedroom
1970 V1ndale 12x63 wilh ex
pando . 2 bedr
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr
1973
Sky11ne
l2:ll.55
')
bedroom
1971 Bonanza 12x51. 1 bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALE S. PT PLEASANT ,
wv 304 675 4424
BIG SELECTION of pre
owned 10, 17 . and 14 ' wide
mobile homes
Kanauga
Mobile Home Sa le!:&gt; 446
9662

Pets for Sa Ie
POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7'210

110)22.29 ( 1l )S,Jtc
SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
80)( !76

RACINE, OHIO 4S171
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO : BIDDERS
SUBJECT : Purchase of
School Buses
FOR: The Board of the
Southern
Local School
District, Box 176, Racine ,
Ohio,
45771 .
sealed proposals will be
rece i ved by the Board of
Education of the soumern
Local School District of
Racine ,
Ohio
at
the
treasurer 's office until
12 : 00 o'clock noon on
November 15 , 1979 and at
that time opened by the
treasurer of said board as
provided by law for two (2)
school buses, one (l J being
a 65 passenger and one ( 1)
bein9 a 71 passenger, accordmg to specif ic ations of
said Board of Education .
Separate
and
in ·
dependent bids will be
received with respect to the
chassis and bOdy type and
will state that the bus when
assembled and prior to
delivery compiy with all
schoo l
district
specif ications, all safety
regulations and current
Ohio Minimum Standards
for
School
Bus Con
struction of the Depart ·
ment of Education adopted
by and with the consent of
the Director of Highway
Safety pursuant to section
&lt;1.111 .76 of the Revised Cooe
and all other pf"rti nent
provisions of law .
SPecifications and in
structions to bidders are on
file in the office of the
Treasurer, Rac i ne , Ohio .
The Board of Education
reserves the right ro reject
any and all bids .
By Order of the Board of
Education .
Nancy Carnahan ,
Treasurer
Southern Loca 1
School District
Racine. Ohio 45771
110) 22,29111) 5, 11 , 4tC

APT .. $125 . $50 depos1 t
Furnished No children . no
pet~ 307 Spr1ng Ave
LARGE HOUSE tor rent 1n
eastern part of r ounty For
1n tormat1on , call Fred w
Crow , Ill , day , ~7 269'1 or
nlgt'lt9927511

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding , all breeds Clean
1ndoor outdoor
fa c ilities
A l so
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 4-46 7795
TWO BLUE ti c k COOfl dogs
Atfer 5. call 991 5705

Help Wanted

Giveaway
HOUSEBROKEN female
c h i huahua ,
c hocolate
brown, to specia l home
Humane Society , 992 6760
GERMAN
SHEPHER D
coll1e , male, black and tan .
wormed, s hots Male and
temale part Doberman and
part co llie , brindl e co lor .
good w1th chi ldren , war
med .
shots
Hum ane
Soc 1ety . 992 6260 .
PERKY
GERMAN
Shepherd collie , male .
bla c k and tan . wormeo and
shots . German Shepherd .
large , male , black and
brown , shot s and wormed
H u mane Soc 1ety , 992 6760

__ wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Pol es max
d1ameter 10 " on large st
en a . s 12 per ton Bundled
slab SlOper ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt 'J.
Pomeroy rw2 2689 .

OLD FURNITURE , 'cc
boxes . br.:tss beds , iron
beds , desks , etc . complete
households
Write M 0
Miller Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
C CIII~'} 7760
OLD COINS. pocket w1
cnes , class rings , wedd1ng
bands . d1amonds Gold or
s11ver Call J A Wamsley ,
741 2331
WANTED
SAW log s
Payment upon oe11very to
our vard. 7 30 to 3 30 week
days . Blaney Hardwoods.
SR 339 , Barlow . OH 67B
2'180
ANTIQUES .
FUR
NITURE . glass. c h1na.
anything See or c all Ruth
Gosney . antiques, 26 N
2nd , M1dd leporl , OH 9ff7
3161
A N TIQUE POCKEl wat
ches W i lling to pay top
dollar .. Call
1 592 297!
even1ngs

JUNK
WANTED
Bat
ter 1es. radiators. motors.
auto
trans No Sunday
ra ll s 949 2563 .

Pets for sale
HOOF HOLL DW . Enghsh
and Western Saddles and
harness
Horses
and
ponips Ruth Reeves 614
698 3290
Bord1ng
and
R1ding Lessons and H orSt&gt;
Care produ cts
Western
boots
Children · ~
\15 50
Adults\19 00

The Gallia Meig~ Community Action Agency •s ac cepting applications until October 24, 1979, for the
following positions to be filled by Nove-mber 1, 1979 .
ESTIMATOR / INSPECTOR - Assess and estimate
homes to be weatherized to determine the most c ost
effective and efficient work that can be done
Position also requ i res super'w'ision of field c rew
Other duties include working w 1th applicant on
procedures and work to be done , preparing work or
ders, listing materials . cos tmg of iob , and com
p1eting forms and records . Other relevant duties as
assigned by super-visor .
FIELD SUPERVISOR (2) - Responsible tor day to
day weatherization and home repa ir activities in
e luding su~rvision of weatherization personnel
Other duties include job scheduling, maintaining in
ventory records, tool control , safety, quality con
trol , and vehicle and tool maintenance . Other
relevant duties as assigned by'supervisor Two (2)
Supervisors needed . one for each county .
Qualifications for the above positions include : High
School Diploma or Equivalent. two years ex perience related to housing construction or
weatherization, supervisory experience in housing
trades, sensitive to needs of low -i ncome and elderly .
Must have dependable trnsportation and valid
driver's license . R~te of pay is 54.81 per hour.
Fringe benefits include paid hospitalization . Ap·
plications are available from the C .A.A. central Of fice or the OBES OfJices. Further information can
be obtained from Mr . Ron Crawford at 367 -7341 or
992 ·7000, or by writing P.O. Box 272, Cheshire, Ohio
45620.
Equal Opportunitv -Affirmative Action Empfoyer .

Yard
- - -Sale
-----

PORCH
SALE
Start s
Wed ., runs 1111 all sold, Out
side
Christmas
Jec orat1ons , brown velvet
pi c tures and misr i tPms
Karl Kloes, College 51 ,
Syrac use . OH 992 3014

--~-----

c.~

B I G AUCTION every Wed .,
7 pm . H artford Commun 1ty
Center , Ha rtfo rd , WV . 4
mil e s above
Pomeroy
Mason Bridge

- - -------Real Eslate for Sale

F INAN C IN G VA FHA LO
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYME NT
PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE.
77 E . STA TE . ATHENS
614 592 3051

FOR sa le
FIREWOOD
Now taking orders Wi! l
deliver. 742 2056
EMERGENCY
POWER
alternators -own the be st
buy WINPOWER Call SlJ
7BB 15B9

SUPPLIES
Osborn
A:d . ,
OH , .4577~ .
For information Call
647 -6485 . Will be OPen
late
tf
you
need
something.
9 14 · 1 mo .

•

rT~ANO

608 E . .

OHIO VAllEY
ROOFING
Ro rJ fing ,

r

and
dO\d\SPOUf!io .
Free
.: sr1 1ates. All
work
quar .an t eed . 20 vears ex erl nee Call Athens,
ollt·ct, Gerald Clark
!9 1·4851 or Tom Hoskins
797 ·27 45.
9 28 1 mo . Pd .

HOU SE COAL . lump or
stoker . will del1ver 7-42
21BJ .
corn

ANTIQUE
VICTOR IAN
s1de cha ir , marb le book '
case , bed . fu l l s1ze . 9x 12
blue tweed rug with new
rubber pad . redwoOd picni c
I ab le Call 9B5 JBOS

REAl JY

992 · 236 7
Pomeroy , 0 .
10191mo.
EXCAVATI N G ,
dozer .
loader and backhoe work
dump truc ks and Ia boys
tor h1r e, wd l haul 1111 &lt;J 1rt ,
top soil . 11me slone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffer s, clrty phone 9'11 7089 .
night ph one 992 3525 or W2
5232

HOWERY AND MARTIN
s eptic
Ex c av a t1ng.
"iystem s. dozer. ba c khoe
Rt 143 Phone 1 (6 14 ) 698
733 1 or 747 2593 .

FIREWOOD 247JB61
HIDE A BEO.
needs
upnolslering, S20 992 2683,
1308 Powell
51
Mid
dleport
USED
TOPPER ,
S40
lnqu1re at 400 Las ley St ..
Pomeroy . OH

GOOD USED

CHAIN SAWS
Ma~ · 10

115() .00

ll2S.OO
1100.00
lt2S.OO
llU.OO
1200 .00
17S .OO

k~h,.ngton

Super 7S4
1100.00
Sears
S100 .00
XL Hom elite
S7S. DO
1 Excellent Unico 16 cu .
ft .
Coppertone
Refrigerator , like new,
,25()
I New Electric Furnace,
clearance priced
1 new Fuel Oil Furnace,
clearance priced
1 Good Coldspol
Refrigerator

S8S .OO

MAIN ST .
Jack w. Carsey
M" r.
Ph . • 1· 2111

-

REDUCE SAFE and fasl
with GoBese T ao1ets and
" water
pills "
E Vap
Nelson Drugs
HOUSE COAL , lump or
stoker . Will deliver 1J.'l
218)

H TPOINT
and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquar1ers
ApplilllnCtS
1 1es &amp; servi• .:

s

POMEROY
LANDMARK

-

Jack W . Carsey
Mgr .
Pl&gt;one 992 ·2111

Rd
lanqHillt Ohto

6 14 _..

..
"

L

1 YR .OLD
Ran c h
type home at quality, 3
bedrooms . 2 baths,
w .b .f p, built in ex
cellent condi t 1on. large
garage,
many other
features, must be seen
to
be
appreciated
S.U.BOO .
30 ACRES
VACANT
LAND - Building sites,
7 t illabl e acres. fen c1ng
Clo&lt;se to mines - A steal
a! S1J.JSO .OO
84 ACRES OF NICE
LAYING ~ARM LAND
All c lea r ed and 1n
pasture and
tillable
ground , barns and other
buildings , f enring and
ponds , pi us a newer
lar ge ranch type home
with tult
basement ,
w b f _p, many featur es
Pri ced f or
sa l e ·S76.325 00
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK - Good
home, good locat ~ on ,
good lot , full basement,
equipped ki tc hen, air
co ndit ion1ng , Forced air
heat
A
Steal
$19 ,900 00
OVER 60
PROPER ·
TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Donie Turner
Re~ .

742 -2474

REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland. Sr .
Res . n2 · 2S68
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .
R:es . 992 -6191
BEAUTIFUL
WOOOEO
lot , 1.18 acres City water .
Close to schools, near RocK
Spr ings After 5, call 304
77] 2276
THREE
BEDROOM
HOU SE . 6 ac re s. in Chester
Townsh 1p
Aluminum
sidi ng , storm
windows.
c arpeted , insulated 70 pet
baement
Clayton Sha r
t iger \35 ,000 . 985 356J
HOUSE ON
large
Racine . 9-49 2340 .

OWN E ~WILL sell 4() ac.res
or ore with 1978 HOI!ypark
mobile home 1.4x70with ex ·
pando, plus l.t)(J6 fam i ly
room attac hed . fu11y car peted, rural waer , some
pasture, fence , standing
timber, some walnut, sun
deck front
and back .
Located on New Lima Rd .
Cal l Jam es lngpls 61-4 742
2182
FIVE ROOM house, all
carpe ted, modern kitchen
and bath, garage and car
port . In Bradt Jry Call 99'1
53 10.

~H' Evenonq~

E&lt;l\1 Of Wlllllf" ~ YII III'

\UPEJl
GOOSE
POCK
TRAILED ,..OW AVAILABLE
d

I I ,.,.. ,-

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlA liON
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• Gutters ~nd
Down Spouts
Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992 ·2 772
817lmo .

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N'e w, repair .
gutters and
down spouts.
Win,dow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Frel! Estimates
14~·2862--949 -21 60
4

5 1f &lt;.

Television
Viewing

JurT,ble~

lou·

ADD ONS &amp;
Gutter work ,
down
spouts , some concrete
; WOrk ,
WilkS
1nd
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CAPTAIN EASY
OF ALL THE LOW·DOWioJ TRICKY

!J

THEN 150 AHEAD A&gt;JO CALL.

LITHE DIN6flAT$ .. ACCUSIN6 ME )
Of' GETTING FRESH WITH VOU'!

IF AN¥0NE
OU"HTA CALL.
A COP-.IT'!]o

RACIN~, O .

94nl48 or

WHAT, THE

HIM .. I DAII:E YOU: f.IE'll..
7EE WHICH OloJE OF U5
HE ~ELIEVE5~

NO! CLIS.SI,I.,/6 MY-

CHICKENI&gt;JG
OUTo

\

ME!

PAW"'BROKERS
L.IVE.

SELF OUT.. FOil: NO~
WI~IN6 UP THE' FIR~T
TIME YOU MADE A
SAP OUTA ME:

f,lATTE~ ~

- ))

Now arrange the CirCled letters 10
form the surpnse cmswer , as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

Answer:

XXI

o FF TH e " (

Roger Hysell
Garage
l ,

mtle oH Jlt . 7 b'r ·pass

on St . ~t
Rutland .

114 toward

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -5682
)0 H r

viRGILB SR . 1.
_-. .. .....,

WIL L HAU L l1meston (&gt; and
gravel Also . l if!le hau11ng
nnd spread1nQ Leo Morr1S
Truck1ng PhOne 7471 455

'W2 .Jl1S

216 E Second Street
REDUCED Nice 3
bedroom home 1n good
1ocaf 1on Total elecl r 1c
wtlh drilled well Ha s
fu11 basement and 71:1
a c res
N ice
ou l
bu i ld1ng !:.. too Now on l y
SJJ,SOO
NEW
HOME
J
b edrooms.
c eram ic
bath , copper plumb ing .
carpet1ng , on1o Power ,
1 car gara ges etnd I n1ce
acre ot land .
2 TRAILER LOTS One tr ailer in c luded in
sa le
Leading
CreeK
water. over 4 acres on
R1 124 West Want on l.,$12,500
COUNTRY
A
reasonable
o l der
J
bedroom home with ea t
1n k1t c hen . mOOern bath ,
central heating , tull
basement , and large lot .
Just \25 .000 .
POMEROY L 1ncotn
Ht
has 3 bedrooms,
bath w im showN. birch
k itchen . fu l l basement
and l arge lot Going for
S1B.500
NEW LISTING - Fur
nished
1972 Midland
mobile nomp 1n the
c oun t ry
Ha s
3
bedrooms and 'l baths
Land has rura l wafer
and fee natural gas .
Sl6.SOO
NEW LISTING - Hun
ting land near Forked
Run Lake Over 27 acres
of wild l and . Good place
for
cabin
or
travel
!ra iler . want $15,000 .
NEW LISTING 3
acres 1n Df'er cou ntry on
good schoo l bus and
mail routes . Only SS.SOO .
WE
ADVERTISE
EVEY
DAY .
LIST
WITH US. CALL 992lllS or 992 ·1176.

1

Housing
Headquarters

Real Estate for Sale

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
.ATTENTION and lotsoi
fender 1ov1ng care 1s
what this home nas had
4 bedrooms ,
l1V 1ng
room , din i ng room. Oath
and basement . Gas tor
ced ~ir furnace Call tor
al l
ae tail s
Onty
S35.000 00
CHOICE LOT 1n Ar
baugh
Addition
100 'x100' with wat er tap
and
septic
sys t em
Selling Price SS,OOO 00
RACINE AREA
6' ''
acres on Bashan Road
Lovely 3 bedroom home ,
ca rpet throughout Full
basement with f am il 'r
room and laundry room
Ni ce barn and lot s of
room for the kid s
Asking only $39,900 .00
POMEROY - We have
two homes that are good
values
on
today's
market Call for more
info
HYSELL
RUN
Almost eight a c res with
2 bedroom nom e . use
your imagination with
th is
pla ce . Lot s Of
pos sibili ti es .
Onlv
$23,500.00.
NEW LISTING
1
bedroom homp on Union
Avenue . Extra
l ot.
ready to put trailer on .
Call - we won't have
th is one long at a price
of
$20,500 .00 .
EX
CELLENT BUYl ~
WE NEED LISTINGS!!
Cheryllemley, As~oc.
Pllone 742 ·2003
Velma Nicinsky
Phone 742 -3092
GeorgeS . Hobstetter Jr .
Broker. Phone 9'2 · S7l9

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Win

&lt;~A~.&lt;;-.,~ (THIS LOVW{ PIE:Cf'

Free Estimate

Some things never change

HOJ.i CDN\'i- .. M'fh
A PA'iAtleNF

') ~'5 BALK b llJ'-"." /

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

::\..__XN
-~-----

10· 19 1 mo

nPr g1ves you thas smgle r&lt;JIS('
as to add one pOint fur t&gt;aC'h
s1ngletun or voJd and unt•

NORTH
+~J Y /J

p(llnl for eal'h trump ovN

• K864
• 73
+' 8-'\ 2

REAL ESTATE
F ! NANCING

WEST

•v 10 :~

+ An

+Q.I \4

+A I,J i

+KJ9 5 3

PARK FINANCIAl
SERVICES, INC.

Alan

tl

SOt iTH
+ AK86 ~2

GFT

ou r, "'11-.' .

BA C K~

10

21

Oswald "The value of the

'
I

) 1~' 1\V\ 1 r tR

""'ITH YO U , 1--l.I'IN IF

HI LL '

'I OU u ONr

" WI tiD Y. ,

'(00 "A '

'

Ee~st · Wcst

Dealer So11th

WHA\

l OOK

'?

West

:\'orth

E:t'il

Pa ss
Pa ss

2•

l'..1 ,;s

LOLO-;;

SE:f IH ' .

I HIHU S 7

,

great that lhese hand would
produce four spades eve n 1f
North held four smell! s pades
1nst ea d of queen and three
small . It also would produce
f1 ve od d 1f Easl held the are of
da&lt;:~monds inste:o~ d of West "

,.

"iuulh

4•

1~

You hold

1

HOUSES BUIU

q 14 ( Pd .l

1

BEAT THE high cost of
heating your home thi s
winter by 1nsu!ating now
Call J1m Johnson, whO is
e•perienced in
blow -in
su lat 10n services . For free
home evaluation . cetll and
make an appointment now
773 ·2064.
Ravenswood
References available upon
request

+ w;

A Mtsstsstppl reader wants

AI.LEYOOP

Oswald ·· The stngle ra1se of
AH. IH~TS
~OR: J'\1E TJ
I...NVo-\ ~ND

'10u S4Y ONE 5 IDE
~~ MUSH~ WILL

MAk.E US TAU. , At.JD
ONE SIC'E WILL MAk.E
US ~1..\LL?

'10U TO
j:" I ~O

\\E:~.- :.. ..}.T L E.:..ST TELL.
US w~EI&lt;E T'"i "T'R'1.)..L 'S

BE 11\i.::; 1-iE.LD

./ ---

~

DuL'~ S...o:;s: S~E
I&lt;..N&lt;._.""'l\,.J...5 .~

F;)f&lt;'

,:: .)..--rSAKE :

-rHE

7 r--~

v

OUT·

to know what we respond to
pctrlnt'r's one-dub opemng
We respond one hearl If

partner" s maJor suit upenmg
bid ha s rhanged very ilule 1n
the ftfty yea r s ol contract
play . It shows a weakiSh hand
With 7 t o 9. or ma ybe 10 or ll.

petrtner holds four hea rt s he
wtll ratse us !f he holds four
spades. ht' can btd one spade
1:'-lt-:WSI ' AI't-:H t-:"'irt-:Hl'HI "'i': ASS "l •

su ppo rt ing pomts "

Alan "The rat se 1s a weak
bid that is also c nro uragtng
since o pener can usual!~

( For a copy or JA COBY
M ODERN . send $1 ro .. Wm at
Bndge." care of tfl1s newspa -

revalue his hand upward due
to the potential (II "
Oswald " The Simple way to
revalue your hand after pari ·

per. P 0 Box 489. Rad10 City
S tat1 on .

New

York .

N. Y

10079)

~-'61'4
by THOMAS JOSEPH

A&amp;H Upholster 1ng , across
from the Texaco Slat ion in
Syrau&lt;"se 992 37&lt;~3 o r 9'12
3752

PIANO TUNING . Lane
Daniels . New phone num
ber
742 -2951 . Service to
schools and homes since
1965

H

., K R; 4
• fi .J
4

By Oswald Jaroh)
and Alan Sontag

REYNOLD ' S ELECTRI~
Molars. rew1nd and repair .
99'1 1356. S61 Beech ST .,
M1ddleport. Ohio

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers.
toaster'S. . 1rons, all small
appl1dnces Lawn mower
Next to Slate Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3825

lll22

+ K H7 4

L - - -- - - -- - - - '

IN STOCK lor 1mmediate
del1very var1ous s1zes of
pool Kits . Do i t vour~lf or
let us install for you D.
Bumgardner Sales. Inc.
9'12 572 • .

BRADFORD , Auctioneer ,
Complete Serv 1ce Phone
'tA'I 1487 or '1.4'1 :?000 ra c ine .
Oh10 , Cr111 Bradford

TUESDAY. OCTOBER 23, 1919

5 45-Farm Report 13; 5:~PTL

Ask tiM I!XJMPts

II"JM tlDOITIC~S

RUTLAND
742 -2328

h&lt;tnd

good trump f1t 1s actuclily so

+

Vulnerable

South

and sho uld b1d game ..

., A 2
• K IU ti 2
10

1111'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

" The

s tarts With 14 hag h-card po1nt s
plus 3 distributional po mt ~ or
!7 The reuse entitles h1m to
arld ont? more fo r ttw :-. 1x1h
trum p and one more for tht
s1 ngleton to tomr to 19. 19
plu s 7 eq uals 26
Soulh " ""

• 10 4

., H 7 5

F- de~at
Houc.oing &amp;
Vt!feL u Admtn . Loans.

f I Vt:' .

EAST

+J

CALL 992 -7544

-~-

- - -

80RNLOSER

Al TROMM
CON ST.

SH OULD

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ACROSS

You jes· fake

l has
succeed '

Th1s letter from
4er papa
saLi
Fiqb4's
Picil,les
is down

tired so's iiOU
could paw me'

L

\f~
" ~~

( ').

l--&lt;'J!J~

.

~I

J

(

J

'

'

WINNIE
I I&lt;ECA LL'_.lh/5 !,5

'~,VN!E

ANC .'3 /LL RE!\~ i V'5 C5
A.BOUT TriE o,.o t&lt;0~1E S,-EA

/l&amp;!o ,
Wt&lt;ER£' THEIR RfiVK YDINK. C. , 3 -

f&lt;QUSE .57=0/' SAYS 31~

W,' e&gt;R O'-E~ PE R'&lt;Y WAS
K~ E~

,_, ,Gf-i TO A 3ZA55 YQPD:': I(, W UE 'J YO.J
3EGA 'i ;;&gt;AT ,N6 .V E ~-r;,;:;w:::;r;:;:;w~

L

•

"TLCSE. . .-.: 75
'- .:&gt;:. - A .t:=_
./
J&lt;.:: '- C/f

,"&gt;. _-

.=--·. .

n-- ::: ~.z

:::-..\, '

tO Jezebel's

1 Arena receipts

5 canllr)''s kin
10 Shootmg or
curling 11 "Young

home

DOWN
I - of gab
2 french city
3 Opposite of
an easy
mark
4 Chang's

Doctor - "

Once popular dance
13 Hint at
14 Kids' game
15 Actress
Ullmann
16 Sheep
alflictior
17 Sacred
place
19 Actor
Holbrook
20 fop 's prop
21 Curse
22 Thick slice
24 Simple
organism

12

')

f69(
Newt!

0

Vesterdlly 's Answer

twin

5 Healing
product
6 Building

II famou.s

part
7 Most of
President
Taylor's

IS Connection
18 Blu.ster
21 - up I study&gt;
22 He defeated

Amer -

1ca n ship

/

Spartacus
23 Admired
one
24 Chess tem1

nickname
to

8 Where

find Gary
9 Heckled

Zli One
kind
of tale
28 The ones
here
!9 Not on
your life !
33 Airway
35 Publica·
tton : sl.

36 Hire

l:-1:-+---1-+-

25 Take a breakl:-:-+--t-t---1" ~.,..-+--+-+---+-1--1
26 -

du

Lac, Wis .
27 Writer
Buchwald
28 Travelers'

PAINTING AND sand ·
blasting Free estimates .
Call 949 2686.

SAVE ON CARPET

DRIVE A llm.E
SAVE A lOr
RUBBER BACK
CARPET

BAjtNEY

MY MAN
MY COUSIN VERNIE
SNUffY PUTS
PUTS ALL HIS
MONEY IN GOLD
ALL HIS MONEY
IN DIAMONDS ·

'4"

-- AN' HEARTS
AN' CLUBS
AN ' SPADES

3% Clever
convict : sl.
~ Boil gently
36 Pompeii
pollutior
37 Restless
31

Blessed

l=-+--+-1f-+--

spot

lt Blazer

and up
Cash &amp; Carry

Iabrie

DAILY CRYPTOQUCTE- Here's how to work It :

IN STOCK

·9~!up

lnstalledwith P111d Free

GOOD REMNANT
SELECTION
6'1112'to 12'kl6'

Phone 992-2342, Eve. 992-2449
Midclll!port, Ohio
Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.

BRIDGE

- - -- · - - -

II

DOWNING • CHILDS

N I:: M-lL y

Mooday , (lfot 22

INSULATION

ROOHNG
REMOUt.LING

NA VA L

Wild I rw t I V d o, .vtu-•n ')fl ~ .v a n15 TU IP it lll I n
nr1vf-' Ill" 1 ar
S l£u-. u IN H E R WAY

Ans wer

J&amp;L BLOWN

~Ol ~ s9 · : M ., W ., F .
01.,er ri m(· by appointment .
'f) J Sycamore (Re.lr)
Pomeroy , 0 .

I I I)

{Answers Tomorrow )

SALE ON ALL

bri ck stately home on Mulberry Ave. In Pomeroy .
They just don't build them like this anymoJe . Cen ·
tral h~at and air ·cond itioning . You 've got t~PP. fhls
hOme 10 appreciate . Call for appointment. - 54 ,00U.

J"oFTHeK

9·7·1 mo.

elnsuliltion
eStorm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement
dows

MONDAY. OCJOJIER" ' 0 ' "
5 30--Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co . 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13: I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6 OQ-News J.B. 10. 13. 15; ABC News
6: Zoom 20; Carol Burnett 17 .
6 3()-N BC News 3, lS&gt; ABC Nev•s 13;
Carol Burnett 6: Bob Newhart
17; CBS News B.lO ; Over Easy
20.
7 CI0--3 ' 5 a Crowd J; Tic lac Dough
B. Muppet Show 6 ; News 10;
Political Ta lk 13; Love American
Style 15 ; Sanford 1!. Son 17; Dick
Cavett 20,33 .
. JO- That Nashville Music 3
Newlywed Game 6 ; Joker's Wild
8; Family Feud 10, 13 ; Nashville
On The Road 15; All In The
Family 17. MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,JJ
8 oo---L 1ttle House On The Prairie
3. 15 ; Edward the King 6 ;
Peanuts B.lO; Song by Song
20.33 ; Focus on Education 13;
Falcon Football 17 .
B J()-Fal Albert 8, 10 ; 9 ·0Q-Movle
" And Baby Makes Six" 3, 15;
NFL Football 6, lJ ; Mash 8, 10;
Movie · ·Running Fence" 20,33;
Movie "Splendor in the Grass"
17
9 : J()-WKRP In Cincinnati B. 10 .
10 ;0Q-Lou Grant B,lO; Poldark II
33 ; New s 20; 10 ·30--Coplng with
Kids 20
11 DO-News 3,8, 10, 15 ; Dick Cavett
20. Fawlty Towers 33.
11 30--Johnny Carson 3, 15; Harry 0
8. Movie " How to Commit
Marriage" 10.
11 35--Movie ·· E Iizabeth the Queen"
17 , 12 : 00--News 6 ,13
12 J()-FBI 6. Charlie's Angels lJ:
12 4()--McMillan 1!. Wife B.
1 oo- Tomorrow 3 , News 15 ; 1 : 4QNews 13 .
SO - New s
17,
1 55 - Movie
" Bailout at 43.000" 17; 3:3()--Star
Trek 17 . 4 Jlf-Open Up 17.

(]

I tl

LOOK OUT'

IN
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
be e n
c an
celled?
L ost
YO ur
operator ' s license? Phone
9'111143.

lot

MODERN FIVE year o ld J
or 4 bedroom home on 2 1'1
a c res
of
land ,
full
basemen I , drilled well. car
peted, storm
windows.
fully insulaled Also. 16x32
building . Would cons1der
VA or FHA loan \33 ,500
742 JOn

1 M1 l f'\

4

~8 . 900 . 00

LANDMARK

uno Monlgomt&gt;r y

Mick'S
Barber &amp;
..., 1 Style Center
.._;Introduces -

Featuring :
men 's &amp;
women 's stvling, per ·
ms .
C.lll for appt . or walk in .

NEW LISTING - Close
to nature on a 6 acre
mini tarm .
Garden
space.
')
s torag e
buildings, secluded. but
c lose to Pomeroy, nice
1
story
remodeled
1
home inc luding a new
equipped k1t c hen . a1r
conditioning , 3 or 4
bedrooms,
ONLY
S29.500 .00 .
NEW LISTING ·- Han
dy Metn's Spec 1al. good
loca tion in M iddleport .
large liv1nQ room, 3
bedrooms. family room .
level lot. 1 11 story
ONLY ~B.OOO 00
LARGE
STATELY
BRICK HOME - A true
landmark in Pomeroy ,
home ha s the c haracter
and charm of the early
1900' s and was buill by
one of our most respH
ted
businessmen
Pr1 ced Far Below Fa i r
Market
Value
at

LEAVING TOWN . One
Kenmore
washing
machine , less thetn a month
old. \200
1 cha 1n saw ,
Pioneer used very l itt le.
$125 I lawn mower , used
one summer . S.SO 1 desk .
sol1d wood , \200 . 1 17 ' Star
c raft a l uminum c anoe.
SJIJO . Ca ll 992 5301

gutters.

MARK MORA
HAIR STYliST

MAIN
POMEROY, 0 .
PH 992 ·2259

APPLES
ROME Beauty
apples at $.4 per bu . Best for
apple buffer Call 669 ·3785.
Fitzpatri c k O r chard, SR
689

Remington 14
1SO Auto
Hom elite
XK 1~ Hom elite
KL400 Homelite
Remington
Yudmast@r

tnes ~

Sat ur day 5 I Jum oles TWill

~-;;;a..~

SWEET POTATOES . red,
wh1Te and yellow Rt 2.
Racine R W . Lewis 8-43
2432

19FT CAMPER , self c on
ta ined Sleep\ 6 SB50 992
7BIO

TRAILER SALES

5071

FOR SALE
In Ches ter ,
OH 6 room house with
balh . B ig beautiful tot .
$11.500 Call 667 JOB2

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY
Fitzpatr1 r k Or
rhard . State Route 689
Phone Wilkesv i lle , 669
JIBS

McCulloch Pro
Mac 5S
McCulloch

Unscramole

one le tter to each 5qutue l o torm
tour or d1nary w orll~

l FLUTA

REMODELING

CAKE

DECORATING

Auctions

WINTER
POTATOES
C W Proffitt larm . Par
fl and , OH $8 a nundred a no
S5 n hundred .

MAYTAG
WRINGER
washer tor sale Good con
d it1on SSO Phone 9?2 5247

MONTGOMERY

I'Jc ~- ~ 1 ~ ANN'S

Reed~ville,

COAL .
LIMESTONE .
sand , grave l,
calcium
chloride. fertilizer . dog
fOOd , an d a II types ot salt
Excelsior Salt Works. Inc .
E . Mam 51 , Pom eroy , 997
3B91

POMEROY

FARM COUPLE lor pari
lime work on farm and
homestead near Coolville,
OH Mobile nome and at
tract1'w'e seHing and all
utlltties eHept t elephone
furn1~hed
Farm
ex
pertence necessary
and
me&lt;hani c al and carpentry
constru c t1on experien c e
helpful For furtner written
deall s. write PO Box 30 .
Coolville . OH 45723

--

For Sale

RISING
STAR
Kennel
Board1ng Cetll 367 0797

OFFICE
HELP needed .
part time and full t ime
general office work Must
be aole to type and take
shorlhand . Send referen
ces , tra1ning and
ex
per1en ce to Bo x 7'J&lt;J L . c o
the
Daily
Sentine l.
Pomeroy , O H 45769

S EWING
MACHINE
Repa1r s ,
se rv1ce ,
all
mak es
992 2284
The
Fabr ic Shop .
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Serv1 ce We sharpen
Sc issors

BEAU T IFUL MATCHED
r1g
1975
Plymouth
voyager ..-an . 24 ' Terry
Travel
frailer
Self
contained . Equai1I er h1t ch
Both loaded
S790J 992
7680

SHEET
METAL
men
needed Good benefits and
setlary 446 4066or 446 2716

A S TOLEN C AR.
A BANDONED BY
BONY AN D
C LAUDINtr , WAS
FOUND NOT FAR
FROM kERE -

Business Services

DOZER , END Load e r ,
brush
hog .
Will
do
basements, ponds , brush .
timber . land
clearing
Charles But r her 742 2940

Ca mpllli£q_u 'P_I!'I_en t

_ _ti!ljl Wanl_ed

JOE SAMPSON THINK S
TESS AND V ITAMIN
MAY HAV E BEEN
AB D UCTED-

- · "' · ·

-Business
- - - - Services

FOR SALE or rent Ni ce 3
bedroom , modular located
1n Portland area Set up on
lo t or r &lt;ln be moved . Cal l
after 4. 30 30-4 1! 3 5172

GOOD YELLOW
S2 .50 bu 742 2359

the Sentinel Classifieds

Ill

For Sale,
Renl or Trade

HOUSE
Fo r
a1
commodation of 3 ro n
struc tion m en Call after 4,
99') 779 1

GUN SHOOT every Sunday

NO HUNTIN G on t he Gene
Humphrey property on Rt
143 o r the Andy Grover
pr operty on Bail{&gt;y Run Rd .

Phone 99'2-21)6

J AND 4 RM furn iShed ap
ts Phone 992 5-434

•

·

S]800and up

an

CRYPTOQUOTES

I WONDEI( WHAT WOULD
HAPPEN IF I WALKED
OVER TO THAT LITTLE
RED-HAIRED GIRL, AND

GAVE f!ER A 616 HUG...

ABCDEFABGH

GPFK

-··' .

BK

0 f

K

IJKLBLGL

ADLL

MEDFG

ODFA

f

MBNBKM

BK

II

RUlLAND
Rutland, 0.

One l etter s1mply stands for another In this sample A la
u sed f or the three L's, X ror the lwo O's, etc Single letters.
apostrophes . the l~ngth and f o rmati on of the words are
hinlli. Each day the code letters arc different.

. PEANUTS

Call 742 · 2211

FURNITURE

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFEI.I. .OW

MBQGL
0

D

RDAA
A

f

GBSDO

C E T H DE D

Yesterday'• Cryptoquole: FANATI\.:ISM CONSISTS IN
REOOUBUNG YOUR EFFORTS WHEN YOU HAVE
FORGOTTEN YOUR AIM. - GEORGE SANTAYANA

Club 13 .
6 . 0Q-BOO ClubB; Health Field 10 .
6 · 3Q-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17 ; 6 :4S---Mornlng Repor t
J: 6· ~Good Morning West
Virginia 13: 6 : 5s--News 13 .
7 :0Q-Today 3,1 5; Good Morning
America 6 , 13 ; Tuesday Morning
8 ; B&lt;Jtman 10 ; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17 ; 7: 15-A.M .
Weather 33 .
30------Family Affair 10; 7 :5s--Chuck
White Reports 10
8 GO--Captain Kangaroo 8. 10; Leave
It to Beaver 17. Sesame St . 33.
8 30--Romper Room 17 .
9 00---Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6:
Phil Donahue 13.15. One Day at a
Time 10; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;
Lucy Show 17.
9 · 30--Bob Newhart 8; Love of Life
10: Green Acres 17
IO .OQ-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge ot
N ight 6; Beat the Clock 8,10 ;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"You ng ett Heart " 17 .
10 JO- Hollywood Squares 3, 15 ;
Andy Griffith 6; Whew 8, 10.
10 :5S---CBS News 8 ; House Call 10.
11 oo-High Rollers 3.15; Laverne&amp;
Shirley 6,13 ; Price is R ight 8,10 .
11 30- Whee l of Fortune 3.15;
Family Feud 6, 13 , Sesame St .
10. Know Your schools 33.
12 · 00- Newscenter
3;
News
6.8.10.13; Mindreaders 15.
' 2 30--Ryan's Hope 6. 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10 : Health Field lS;
Movie ' 'Man in the Shadow" 17;
E lee. Co 10,JJ .
DO-Women Like Us 3, 15 , Al l My
Chi ldr en 6. 13 . Yovng &amp; the
Res I less 8,1 0
30- As The World Turns 8, 10;
2 oo--Ooctors 3, 15 ; One Life to
Live 6, 13 , 2. 25--News 17 .
2 JO-A nother World 3, 15 ; Guiding
Lighl 8, 10; Gigglesnort Hotel 17 .
3 oo-General Hospitai6,1J ; I Love
Lucy 17; Poldark 20 .
J 3if-One Day At A Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10. Flintstones 17 .
~ oo--Special Treat 3. 15 ;
Mer'w'
Griff in 6: Beverly Hillbill ies 8,
Sesame St. 20.33, Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Real McCoys l J;
Spec treman 17 .
4 JQ-Petticoat Junction 8. Tom &amp;
Jerry 13; Gilligan ' s Is _ 17 .
s oo--1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers 20,JJ ;
Marv Tyler Moore 10; Merv
GrHf in 15 ; My Three Sons 17 .
5 3Q-(drol Burnett 3; News 6 ;
Gomer Pyle 8; E lee . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again IJ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33 .
6 OQ-New&gt; 3.8. 10. 13, 15 ; ABC New&gt;
6 : Zoom 20; Carol Burnett 17
6 J()-NBC NewsJ,l5, ABC News lJ ,
CBS News8, 10; Bob Newhllrf 17,
Over Easy 20 .
7 OQ-3's A Crowd J; Pulse 6 ; Tic
Tac
Dough 8 ;
News 10 ;
New ly wed Game 13; Love .
American Style 15 ; Sanford &amp;
Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
7 : JO- Hollywood Squares J, 10 ;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker ' s Wild
B; Sha Na Na 13; TV Honor
Society 15; Allin lhe Family 17 ;
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 33.
B:OQ-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
J, 15;
Happy
Days
6, 13 ;
California Fever 8.10 ; No-va
20.33; NBA Basketball 17.
8 : 30-Angle 6,13.
9 :00-Movie "Undercover with the
KKK " 3, lS; Three's Company
6.13 ; Movie "Mind over Murder"
8, 10; World 20,33 .
9 : 30-Taxi 6, IJ.
10 OQ-Hart to Hart 6, 13 ; News 20:
City Notebook 33 .
10 : 3()-Six Wives of Henry VIII 17;
Like II Is 20; Another Voice 33.
11 : 00-News 3,6,8, 10, 13,1 S; Dick
Cavett 20; Carry On Lallllhlna 33.
11 : JO-Johnny Canon 3, 15; Barnaby
Jones B; ABC News 33; Movie
"The Seven little F9ys" 10.
12 : 0Q-Movle "Dark ~Clary" 17;
12:05- -Dog &amp; Cat 6.Y!t.
12 : •!)-.fv'":ie "Dillinger" 8; l:QOTom -. row 3; News 15.
1 : •5-N•..NS 13; 2:05-News 17:
2: 11)--NBA Basketball 17.
4 :40-Star Trek 17; 5 :40-Love.
American ~tvle 17 .

�IO- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Moi1day, Oct. 22. 1979

Administrative

Area Deaths

tron tinued from J.l"ge I I
II was reported that the first
secret negolialions sesston had
taken place in Columbus Friday
with representatives of the teachers .
Gleason and Lewis in attendance .
The second meeting is in Nelsonville
today .
The fact that the meetings were
being held, reportedly asked to be
kept a secret by the association,
Gleason said, was dlsclosed because
the meetings were announced Saturday afternoon when a parents rally
was held at a roadside park on Route
3J
A teacher had told of the
meetings, 1! was reported .
Brought out Sunday night at the
board's meeting "ith the pu bhc also
was the status of the insurance
benefits proVIded by the board for
teachers ard non-certtfied employes.
Last week several parents atlendlng a meeting with the board indicated that they felt the benefits for
the teachers should be taken away .
At Sunday night's meeting, it was
diSclosed that letters have been
prepared to send teachers and noncertified employes that the insurance benefits will be discon linuPd . All employes will be given
adequate time to make other insurance arrangements, it was reported. and the letters have not yet been
mailed Insurance benefits for some
46 certified and non&lt;ertified employes s till working will be conlmued . 1t was reported.
Two representatives of the noncertified employes organization

Vn'ited Methodist Church and the
Me1gs County Sem ur Citizens Group_
She was a lifelong resident of Meigs
County .
Surviving are four daughters.
Mrs . Holand ITressie 1 Stethem and
Mrs . Herald I Josephine) Osbome ,
both of Long Bottom; Mrs . Berdell
t Hubyi Dunn. Midland. Pa ., and
Mrs . Emerson t Leota 1 Johnson,
PoriUJad ; two sons, Dorsel and
Hobert Larkins. both of Long Bottom ; a stster. Mrs .Mabel Fletcher,
Hacine. 20 grandchildren and 16
great~randchildren
She was
preceded tn death by her husband,
Dell. in 1957, and four children .
Gilbert, Juanita. Charles and an In fant son, five brothers and a sister.
funeral services wtll be held at I
p.m . Thursday al the Long Bottom
Umled Methodist Church with the
Hev . Freeland Norris officiating .
Burial Wlll be in Sand Hill Cemetery
at Long Bottom. Frtcnds may call at
the While Funeral Home at
Coolville. after 4 p .m. Tuesday . The
body will lie m state at the church
one hour prior to the service.

EDNAS. HART
Mrs . Edna S. Hart, 73. rued Sunday at her home at 22ll Unton Ave ..
Pomeroy .
,
She was a daughter of the late
Harvey A. and Rosa 01ck Gerlach .
She was also preceded in death by
her husband , Stanley Hart, a
sisterand three brothers.
Surviving are five sons. James E .
Barnett, Walhondmg. Ohio ; Halph
L. Snyder , Stockton, Calif.; Floyd K.
Snyder, Letart. W. Va.; Earl F
Snyder, Pomeroy, and Eugene
Snyder, Stockton. caltf.: a daughter.
Mrs . Genevieve Harvey, Athens; 14
grandchildren and 14 great·
grandchildren. Also survtving are
two brothers, Oyde Gerlach . Letart .
W. Va ., and Benny G&lt;&gt;rlach, Fairplain, W . Va.,and several ruece.samJ
nephews .
There wtll be gravestde nics al 3
p.m. Tuesday al the Ml Flower
Cemetery al Leon, W. Va . There will
be no visitation at the Ewm~
Funeral Home which is tn e harge of

arrangements .

IIO"I'IT\1.

JOSEPHINE BAOCOCK
Mrs . Jooephme Balx·oc·k. 78, Tuppers Plains, formerly of Long Bol·
tom, died Saturday evening at the
Marietta Convalescent Ce nter
following an extended tllness .
Mrs . Babcock was bum ut Me1gs
County. a daughter of the late Ar thur and Carne Petty Coleman . She
was a lifelong member of the Long
Bottom Christian Church and had
been a resident of Metgs Coun ty for
her entire life . Her only surv1vors
are a niece and nephew, M r _ anJ
Mrs . William Kramer, Co lumbus.
and a brother-m-law and sister -In law, Mr and Mrs . Oscar Babcock.
Tuppers Plams She was preceded
in death by her husband, Thursman
Babcock m 1973 and by two brothers.
Haymond and Hobert Coleman .
Funeral services will be held al 2
p.m . Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville w1th the He,·
Hobert Wyatt offi ciating Bunal will
be in Sand Hill Cemetery at I Alii ~
Bottom . Fnends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to ~
p.m . loda)

'1-. \\~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
AdmiSSIOns --Edward
Martin ,
Pomeroy F:ula Welker . Columbus:
Hortense Humphrey. Pomeroy :
DaVId Jenkins, Pomeroy : Pearl
Ash. Pomeroy; Esta DeLong, Middleport : Glenora Swatzel, Pomeroy;

Fram:es Hewetson , Pomeroy : Anna
Gnm, Middleport : Haymond Littl e.
Pomeroy. Jeremy Morris, Cheshire .
DJScharged-Aretha Sruder. Samuel
McKinney, Alice C1ark. !jJhan Gardner. James Miller .Karen Phalin .
!Jnda Dye, Lucille Cundiff , Sandra
Windbreenner.
Holzer Mf'dlcal Center
Discharges Oct. 19
Joel Adkms and daughter. Johtn
Armstrong, K.-in Barton , Hobert
Bratton. Bessie Bums. Georgin1a
Burton, Noah Cahcoal, Kimberly
Cante rbury .. Huth Cham ber s.
Forr"&lt;t Pc,her, .James Fowler, Mrs .
Kenneth Hayduk and son, Keith
Hesson, Pauline Howell, Edwa!'d
Jackson. Ken Kmg. Melarue Lyons,
James Neal. Jodt Plymale, Flora~
Smtih , Andrew Toler , Sandra
Wallers. Chnstme Ward. Geoffrey
Ward. Lee Western, !Jay . Wheeler .
Mrs . John Wetzel and daughter.
Mary Wi seman, Mary Wolfe,
Michael Wolfe. Terry Wolfe. Edtth
Womeldorf.
Births Ol'l. 19
Mr . and Mrs. Stephen Rice, son,
Pomeroy : Mr. and Mrs. HusscU
lthodes. son . Northup.

Discharges Oct. 20
WtUJam Adams. Brenda Allie ,
Virgima Arbaugh, James Aubrey,
Mrs. Tim Baker and son, Addie
Brown, Albert Collins, Eugenia
Crabtree, Alma Dement, Paul
Dingess . Hay Duhl, Chloe Fellure,
Linda Fulton, Barry Gardener, Mrs .
Jack Hall and daughter, Jonah
Hafield , Olfford Hayes, Dwayne
Hickes , Sarah Jerrell , Gayle Johnson, Charles Karr, Jr., John Kelley,
Mamie Mann. Nicole Newell, David
Hade tiff . Mrs . Robert Hams burg
and daughter, LouiSe Rosenbaum,
Dora Grunion. Charles Shirley, Barbara Sffilth. Terry Ward, Della
Wickline, Doris Wood, Berni ce

Woolum .

Births, Oct. 20
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas Pierson.
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr . and
Mrs. Michael Nichols, daughter.
Gallipolis.
Discharges, Oct. 21
Chad Barger, Kevin Barr, Mrs .
David Blevins and son, Jeffrey
Oarke. Mrs. Samuel Hale and son,
William Hicks, Mrs. William !1nton
and daughter, Charles McGrayer ,
,~------~------------~----------, Angela McGrath, David Moore ,
Stephen Williams .
Births, Oct. 21
OPTOMETRIST
1
Mr . and Mrs Larry Walker, son,
OFFICE HOURS : 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
: Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . David SexON THURS.! ~ EAST COURT ST., POMEROY.
I ton. twtn sons, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Beaver, son. Gallipolis .
------------------------------~

ETHEL LARKINS
Mrs. Ethel Larkins. 84. Long Bot ·
tom, died unexpectedly Sunday a fternoon at the .home of a daughter.
Mrs . Holand Stethem.
Mrs . Larlons was born in Metgs
County. a daughter of the late Isaa c
and Ann McMurray Taylor . She was
a member of the I A&gt;ng Bottom

:

l

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

:

Patriot man in intensive care
unit following SaturiUJy mishap
A Patnot man, Dav1d F Whitt, 21,
hsted in stetble conditwn in the
mtensive care Wlit of Holzer Medica!
Center followmg a Saturday
acCident oo SR 141.
Called to the scene just east of
mtlepost 18 at 6:50pm, the Gallia MeJgs Post, Highway Patrol, reports
an cast bourd auto operated by
Whitt passed off the nghl side off the
roadway , came back across the
pavement and slid left of center
;trt kmg west bound vehicle driven
by Jerry Miller, 24, Gallipolis,
broadside .
Both drivers displayed VISible
stgns of injury and were transported
by the Ga llia Emergency Service to
HMC .
Whitt was admitted for treatment
or a contusion of the chest and deep
laceral10n s of the head and arm.
Miller was treated for an injury to
the right hand , and released .
Both vehicles were demolished .
IS

which has supported the teachers
strike voiced a complaint that
disconttnuance of their insurance
was unfair because they have a contract. However, il was pointed out
that the insurance dlscontinuance
will affect both certified and noncertified employes who are not
working during the strike.
Supt. Gleason eJ&lt;plained that the
board 's policies and budget IS open
to public inspection . He again stated
!hal the board had eut all expenditures to the minimum in order
to try lo come up with enough money
to meet the salary requests of
teachers . The only money the board
has to deal wtth now as far as
benefits are concerned is the money
being saved from the money wluch
would have been paid employes had
they been working . One person attending the meeting said this money
should not be offered the teachers
but should be used for expenses such
as textbooks and building repairs .
A question was raised on why the
board had turned down the offer of
Rep . Ron James to help settle the
strike . It was offered by several
board memhers that the strike
should not become political.
Quest10ns were raised about the
band taking part in competitiOn.
The policy of the board against th1s
was again g1ven parents interested
in that phase of the strike.
The hiring of stcurity guards was
questioned by a patron who said he
understood fnm $10,000 to $12,000 a
week IS being spent on guards.
Gleason said the bill ran $4100 for
seven days and has since been cut.
One school patron commented she
felt the guards are needed because
of the incidents which have been
taking place
Board members in answer to a
questiOn InVolving the stnke told
parenl' and school patrons that they
have a right to be involved in the settlement of the strike.
Parents met with the board for
about one hour after wh1ch time an
approXJirulle hour and one-half
exeeutive session was held to
discuss negotiahons.

Deputies.

We were around
when a fancy suit
of mens' clothes

reckless o~ration .
One person was injured during
three oth er weekend accidents
tnvest igated by tlle patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a mctorcycle accident on CR 25, one
and tw&lt;Kenths of a mile north of SR
160, Sunday at 9 :!i() p.m .
The patrol reports a north bound
cycle operated by Terri Plants, 23 ,
Gallipolis Ferry. passed off the left
side ·or the roadway and struck a
tree.

SF.RVICESTIJESDAY
The Holiness Association Rally
Preachers Service will be held at
7: 3V p.m . Tuesday at the Danville
Wesleyan Church with the Rev . John
Coffman preaching . The Rev. R. D.
Brown is the host pastor.

SQUAD RUNS
Four emergency runs were made
by the Middleport Emergency
Squad on Sunday.
Alll :56 a .m ., the squad repored to
the fire station for Oretha Snider,
Hacine, who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital. At I : 36 p.m ., Roxie
Oiler, Ash St., was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and at 2:56 p.m.
Jerry Cheatham, Oliver St., from
taken from village hall to the office
of Dr. Dayo for treatment.
At 4: 42 p.m. , Mildred Riley was
taken from her home at 240 Mill St .,
to the Holzer Medical Center .

Higher rates
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPI - Gov.
James A. Rhodes says that newly
implemented federal air pollution
regulattons will mean higher
electric rates but not cleaner air .
Rhodes said 111 a statement issued
Sunday that consumers could end up
spending $50 mtllion a year or more
tn h1gher rates without the benefit of
better air quality .
"Given the present attitude of the
federal EPA." the governor sa1 d ,
" this figure could easily go to $100
mJ!hon a month or a hall-billion
dollars uver the next five years .,.

ODNR.
•

1Contin ued

Ill

Serving the area's banking needs since 1904-.

Farmers
Bank

Mamber FDIC

POMEROY, OHIO

from page 11

surface water was still eroding
the soil despite the vegetation.
" These temporary stick dams
are working, but the area needs
lo be carefully monitored t o ensure other problems do not
anse," Buchanan said. "Even
though it was retumed to its
natural state over a year ago, the
area is delicate . It can not
w1 thatand heavy use. "
He said people are diScouraged
from using the area . " It will take
at least five more years until we
can consider letting people drive
any vehicles on the land or permilling la~e numbers of visitors
to use the area . It is that fragile ."
Until that tune, Meigs County
1\eclamation Area will. continue
to be closely wat&lt;:hed. As more
and more of these scarred areas
undergo a fa ce lift, and as coal
plays an increasingly greater
role in Ohio's econonnic wellbeing, there may no longer be the
need to ask i" strip rrurung is good
or bad for Ohio.

(USPS 145 960)
VOL XXVIII NO. 134

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

numstrGtl!On 1n Middleport wa :i n
d1rect contrast t u what the te&lt;:~rht·r . .,
~ay tn that negutitttluns were IX!1ng
held Monday wlule they occuplc'li the
off1ces and mdlcated that they wan·
ted to ncgotiattons .
He said avenues are be1ng pursued
nn what can be done e:tbout tlw Ol" ·
cu~ancy of the offices .
Office personnel remw ned m
their jobs dunng the occupancv on
Monday . However . they were n ~,t ttl
thecr posts today .
A spokesman for the teachers ot cupylng the offtces sa1d there wa s
not reason why the employe:-~ cnuld
not l:w working tn the offices . He
satd Ute teachers were not tn-

tedernng wtth thP wurk of the staff.
ll was reported that Mtddleport
Pultt'e Ch1ef J. J. Cremeans spoke to

the teac her s Monday and pernutted
them lo stay but advtsed them not 10
do any destru ctiOn
At B a .m.
Tuesday, Dan E. Morn s, director of
curneulwn of thE' d t.strtd . re·a d a

Weather

MOiilly cloudy and cooler Wilh a
c hcHlL'l' uf ~howers tomght. L()W nea r
40 V(:lrtablr c!uudmess lJnd cool
WL,Jnesday . Htgh m the upper 40s to
luw :;()s. The chann:' of ram 30 percent tun1ght and 10 percent Wednesday

leller to the t.eachers occupying the ·
offices "respectfully requesting"
them to leave the offices. It was
beUeved that the letter was read at
the req uesl of the board &lt;l
education .
However, they did not leave and at
11 a .m . were shU occupying the offlees and were waiting for the
su perintendent to appear, a
spokesman of the teachers said.
Pickets were at the schools of the
district again today . Schools have
been ofltcially closed since la.!ll
Tuesday mommg.
There have been no further
negotiation sessions set, it was
reported tod ay .

en tine
TUESDAY. OC108ER 23. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Cong. Miller speaker for
Rio dedication Saturday

THE E . E Davi s Career Cente r rece1ves fmol touches before dedic&lt;.ttion .

Planning commission
approves agreement
Marines critical
SAN ANTOI\'!0, Texas I AP 1 Two Marines from Ohio were
listed in crittcal condi!ion at the
Brooke Anny Medtcal Center
here Monday followmg a freak
fire at their J apanese base.
Pte . G&lt;&gt;orge S. Dye. 20. of
Columbus. Ohio . and Lance Cpl.
Sleven H Tumer, 22. of l'ipp
City, Ohio, are among 37 Mannes
who were severely burned 1n the
blaze and were airlifted ba ck to
the United States .
One Marine was pro nounced
dead on arriva l Sunday mghl at
Brooke as a result of the blaze .
He was identified as Pvt . Thomas
J Breunig, 19, of St. Paul. Mu111 .

Coach charged
BEIJ.AJHE. Oh1o 1 API - The
women's basketball coaeh at
Wheeling College was among ·
three persons charged with
aggravated drug trafft ckin g
Monday , accordlng to Bellai re
police .
Police charged 29-year-&lt;Jid
Isaiah Wilson in connection with
a drug raid . J ohn Happard, 23,
and Roger Childers, 29, both of
WhceUng, W.Va.. also were
charged 1n connectiOn with the
raid.
PoUce allege the three were
selltng thousands of dollars worth
of cocaine . 'll!ey were jailed in
lieu of $10,000 bond each .

Treatment sought

tion

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adjull$

EXTENDED FORECAST
t'air Thursday through Saturday with a warming trend . Highs
&lt;in the 50s Thun~day . warming lo
the mld 60s to low 70s Saturday .
Overnight lows mainly in the low
to mld 30s early Thursday, warming to the low to mid 40s Saturday.

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negotiations".
Supt Gleason added that tak1ng
over the offt ces of the ad -

._

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upright.

teachers tn Uw adnuntstra t1ve of fices ··cJues put ii damper Oil

•• __ ••

ANNOUNCING THE BIGGEST
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•Combines canistf!'r sue ·
power with buting,
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CuJJied the offtces, negotiations were
being held in Nel, onvllle Monday
with represcntativ e.'l of the teams of
the board of ' educt:~tiun and the
te.c~chers meetiug with B1JI Lewis,
feu era! media lor .
Supt. David Gleason satd this mormng that a pa ckage was oflered
teachers at the Monday negotiating
session and he had been promised
tllal Ted Bibler. fteld representative
of the teachers. would take the
package to the teac:hers for a vote .
This had not been done alii a.m. this
morning, Gleason sta ted. He i.n dicated that the failure to Bibler to
take the offer to the teachers for a
vote anrl the occu oancv uf the

CARIJ sHuWER
A card shower is planned for Mrs.
Eula Wolfe, Racine, on Wednesday
on the occasion of her 80th birthday .

EUREKA
SALE

• •

• •

Plants was transported to HMC,
treated for abrasions of the upper
left arm, and released .
Tile motorcycle was demolished_
Plants was cited on a charge or
reckless operation.
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident Saturday in
Metgs County on Pooler Rd ., just
north of CR 82.
Called to the scene at 3:45 p .m.,
tlle patrol reports that a west bound
auto operated by Glenn as Hoffman ,
04. Pomeroy, and an east bound
vehicle driven by Hazel Wiener, 36,
Tuppers Plains, collided at a
hillcrest .
A passenger in the Wiener auto,
Kimberly Wiener, 12, claimed
injury, but was not immediately
treated.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Wiener was cited on a
charge of left of center.
Officers investigated a twovehiele mishap Sunday at noon on
U.S . 35, at the junction of SR 7.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Irene Newlon , 70,
Pt. Pleasant, had stopped in traffic.
A south bound vehicle driven by
James Rothwell, 36, Columbus,
failed lo stop and struck the Newlon
auto in the rear . Rothwell was cited
oo a charge of assured dear
distance .
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage.

BY BOB HOEFI.ICfl
Some 40 Meigs Local Sc hool
Distnct striking teachers occupit'&lt;.l
the admmistrative offin' of the
district at the Meigs Junwr f11g h
School in Middleport overrughl Monday .
ApproXImately 50 tea chers moved
into the administrative offices Mon day morning with sleeping bags and
vowed that they will occupy the offices until a settlement in the 22-dayold strike is rea ched . Food was
being brought in lo the tea chers who
stayed in the offices throughout the
night.
While the teachers indi cated their
wi!Ungness to negotiate and oc-

ELBERFELDS

1Continued from page 1 1
locate two women who allegedly
took a while poodle at Ponland
Saturday afternoon . The women
reportedly were driVIng a white
Ford Granada when they picked up
the dog.
Deputies are also searching for a
red 2IJ inch, 10 speed bike stolen from
the Hoff residence in Racine about
noon Saturday. Anyone having any
infonnat10n IS asked to contact the
sheriff's office.
Deputies are also investigating
damages to the mailbox of Walter
Voss, near Hacine. The box had
been struck with an instrument
similar to a ball bat, deputies repor- .
led .

cost $9.00.
~twas

Wl11tt was ntt.'(l on a charge of

40 teachers occupy superintendent's office

NEW YORK I AP 1 - TI1e Shah
of Iran arrived in New York late
Monday, pohce said. and the
State Department reported he
had come to the United States to
seek treatment for an undisclooed il~1ess.
Shah Mohammad Heza Pahla vi
arrived al LaGuard ia Airport
about 10 p.m .. police sa1d. The
Gulfstream twtn-engine plane
carrying him landed at a remote
section of the airport, and he was
IITUllediately taken away .
ll was not known whPre he went
in New York , and police said they
had been informed of the trip only
a short time before the .l!ah 's
arrival.

Life term given
LOS ANGElES &lt; AP 1 - Ke nneth Bianchi, quiet and cain1,
was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty on Monday to
five slayings in the " Htllside
IContinued on p..ge 1U1

A comprehensive plannmg contract With economic development to
be stressed a long w1th housing was
awarded
James
Jennings
Associates, Colum bus, by the Meigs
C&lt;lunty Hegwnal Planmng Commission Monday afternoon
Jennings a nd hi s son, John,
discussed at length planning which
Will be done through a SIO,OOO Farmers Home Administratiung:rant
winch will include $7500 m cash and
$2500 match1ng, m kmd .
The group dlscussed econom1 c
development . water supply, waste
disposal and housing w1th economic
developme nt being g1ven the top
pnonly. Some phases of housing
Will be covered mlhe study because
the dlscusswn brought out that there
ts a shortage of good housing tn
Me1gs Courly .
Accorillng lu a report giverJ, 14
percent uf the housing IS good, 52 1s
fmr and one-third of the housmg ts
poor . Some of those attendmg felt
tbat Meigs County would have
rece1 ved more new residents employed at the mines if the c ountv had
had adequate housing .
'
Some expr essed opinions new
housmg is needed to attract new in dustry while others stated that
housing should be upgraded for the
benefit of people already living here
Jeff Burt of the Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Planning
Commission presented popu lation
growth projectiOns whtth indicate
that Meigs county. with a populatiou
of 21,600 in 1976 will have 22,467
people in 1980 and 24,315 people tn
1980.
Hank Oeland questioned the value
of the new ;tudy when it is completed . He said other studies on
Me1gs County have been done . but
little has happened
C. E . Blakeslee, executi ve director of the cornmisston, sai d local tn lcrest must be aroused so that the
ne('e."sary follow--up work needeJ on
reports such as a recent industrtal
site study wlll t _,carried out. The ex tenswn scrv1ee ha' offered lo help
with a local committe on the sJte
study and chambers of conunerce,
asked earlier to help, w~l be conta cted again .
Blakeslee 1nd1cated that he
believes they will see signs of im proved housing in Meigs County
without the efforts of the planrung
corrurussion . Another meeting was
set for November to discuss again
"ith Jennings the study, what is to
be emphqsized and the information
wh1ch the commission expects the
report to contain.
Blakeslee was authorized to
secure secretarial nelp when it is
needed and he reported that Howaru
rrank. county auditor. has agreed to

receive the $7500 FHA money lor the
grant am.! will maintain records on
the grant month . Plans were made
lor expanding the commission's advisory committee later on.
Clearing house review items approved by the group included an
areawide action program prepared
by the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
group; a community opportunity
program for $57,000 prepared by the
Meigs County Cou ncil on Agtng; an
econoffilc community development
program for ~.000 for Southeastern
Oh.Jo c.:onUl1uJlities, and an application for a grant by Syracuse
Village for $51.000 which would
provide a boat launching facility to
be operated 111 conjunction wtth the
town·s recreational program .
Thereon Johnson. preSident. was
tn charge of the meeling

Frye given
4-25 years
Me1gs County Prosecuting At·
lorney, Fred W. Crow lil, reports
that on Monday John Hay Frye, Jeffre y. W. Va., was taken before the
Metgs County Corrunon Pleas Court
on a charged of a!l!iravated robbery
and was sentended to a tenn of four
lo 25 years for the Dec . 8, 1978 robbery of the Jones Boys Store "'
Pomeroy
frye entered the store where with
a handgun , he robbed the main office of a large amount of cash and
several thousand dollars in c hecks.
Prosecutor Cro w said Frye has
agreed to ass1sl in the recovery of
the checks and has agreed to take
the sheriff's investigator. Gary
Wolfe. to the place where l he checks
are buried.
ln vesti gator Wolfe while 111vesltgaling the armed robbery of the
store. came across information conceming a similar mc1de nt tn Kenlucky .
Upon lea rning that thesl' two
crimes had similar aspects, Wolfe
went to West Virgtma lo contmue his
mvestigalton . Deputy Wolfe found
that the descriptions of the suspects
in both robbenes were the same .
Wolfe. together with Sheriff James
J Proffitt. went lo Huntington , W.
Va ., where a lineup was conducted
and two eye witnesses identified the
suspect. Wolfe then presented his Investigation pac kage to Prosecutor

HIO GHANDF:
U
S.
C&lt;lng ressman Clarence Mill er. lOth
Di.stnd , will prov1de the dedJ cl:lturv
remarks ali{Jo Grande College and
Community College ·s Career Center
ded tcatwn .
The center will be dedicated the F:
E . Dav1s Carc&gt;er Center, !Jet. 27, II
a .m ., in memury of Edward E
Davis .
..
Davis was an indtLStrial leader 1n
the firebrick and banking induslrtes
and a philanthropist He offered eontmuous and generous s upport to
educa tion throughout Southeastern
Ohw.
Dav1s. who died at age 7:1 on !Jec.
22. 197l. was deeply tnvolved 111 stat e
anrl rommunity orgamzat1ons He
Wl:IS a member of the Ohw Boord of

f{q~l'n t s du nn~

thf· ttnll~ whl' rt tht:
uf Utl' Hto r;ramk
ColteJ..!f' &lt;Jnd Communi t y Colll'gl' P&lt;H tntrshlp \\a:-&gt; bt·1nF: debated
lit• served as preSid ent of both tilt'
Southe&lt;:~stern Oh10 Heg1unal Council
a nd the Oh10 Valley Health Servi ces
tn addil ton to memberships 111 the
Oak llill Chamber of Commerce .
Jackson H.otary Club and the Holzer
Medical Ce n~er Board of Trustees .
Mrs F: . F: . DaVIs 1\111 attend and
pGtrt tr lpatt' m the dcJJcatwn
&lt;·en: nlUn tes
Tht&gt; new E. F: Oa\·J s Caree r Center h o use~ thl' co lle~ e·s two-year
tt• t· hnwal prog ram s 1nclud1ng
~.;skiiJitstunl'rtt

m a gnculture . accuu Jtl tng. se~._-retanal .sc tencc , fuod
se r VIL-e
rnanHKement. nwd1 ca\

council honored

WOMAN L"JURED
A ca r was heavily damaged ami
its driver was citt.--d to mayor 's court
as the resull of an acctdent on West
Main St., Pomeroy. at 12:45 a.m
Tuesday .
Pomeroy Pol1ce sa1J tht' ca r
dnven by Darlene Moomaw , 19.
Hutiand, was tra ve~nK west when tt
struck a utility pole Ms . Moomaw
who has been charged with reckless
operalton was taken to Veteran.s
Memonill Hospital by the P ome ro1
Emergency Squad .

."ilwotinr:

.~till

probed

tt'chn11l r ,g1~S

Mayor Hoffman,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
and village officials were honored
when they met in regular sesston
Monday ntghl.
John Hood . president of the Middleport Youth l.ea~ue . attended the
meeting and presented an eng ra ved
trophy to Mayor Hoffman and other
officials in appreciation for the
VIllage cooperation and help 1n the
operation of the Mtddlcpon Communtt y Park . Accompanying Hood

li:i bura tury , mafl Uiactunng, mining,
cmd electronics .
!J1 addlt ton to Hepresentative
\111ler's anr:l Mrs . Davis' remarks a
hnef program , includlng key givi~g
ce remomes . techntcal faculty introduclions. and lours of the facility
w1lltake place .
Construction on the $2.25 million
.structure began m February of 1978.
Actual operation of the building
began lh1s fall while outside lancbca ping was hemg completed .

to counctJ for the presentation wa s
Edd1e Kitchen .
Mayor Hoffman h1~hly cornmended Hood for Jus work as head or
the youth orgallizatwn at the park
fur the sunun er . Other offic ial s termed the prese ntation us a ··fmc
gesture ·,
In a short. routi ne meetmg, council gave a th1 rd read mg to an or·
dwance tncrea.'ilng the s.alarv of the
park and pool dJ rector by $40. a mon·
lh I rom May 15through Sept 15, th"
year .
Mayor Huffman satd he w1U eonWet the co unty auditor tn rt:ferenn'
to the town's allotments from the
cuunty budg~t L'OIIUllJS.."ilon He also
annoUilced Ulat a te('hfllcal as.s!stance works hop for towns wh1ch htive
obtmned block gr"nts from HUD
will be held :-;ov. I and 1 1n Colwn bus. Attendance ts not requm:'(J
Attending the m ee tin g were
~ayor Hnffrrum . Clerk-tr~e~ s urer
Gem· r;rctt~ . and ('O Une J!ntl'll \llarvtn
Kelly , Carl Horkr. Dewey Horton
and Williarn Wa lte rs

~o arrest ha s yet been made in the
shoo ting dea th of Johnny Ray
Hosrhar. 25. West Columbia Route I,
acl·ording to a spokesman for the
Mason County Sheriff's &gt;Department .
Hos char died Monday mornllJg In
l'leasant Valley Hospital where he
underwent emergency surgery for a
12 gauge shotgWI wound ol the lower
right chest. He was shot during an
In olden! Sunday at 6:08p.m. outsldt
Jones Place. a private club on
Route 62 near West Columbia.
As a result of the same lucideot,
anolher man. Charles Samuel
Wheeler. 54. West Coiumblu , was
takf'n to \ 'e trrans Memorial
Hospital (n Pomeroy, where atlendanls reported he had sustained
an L'Yt' injur~· . It was later learned,
howner. that Wh eeler also had two
pellet&gt; Judged In his chest.

Cohl 11ir t'llfltinuing
By Th e Associated Press

A m id flow of air from the west
and northwt&gt;st wtl l continue through
Wt'dnes day
caus mg
lower
lemperatures across Ohio.
Show~;:rs ~ere expected across tile
~1 atl::' today: and over most of the
state tontKht, w1tll the possibility of
11Iunder.-,1orm.s over northeast Ohio
near Lake Ene. The National
Wea ther Serv1ce said some showers
mrty lmger over the northea!)1
W t'(j nc sda y .
I.&lt;Jw temperatures lomght will be
m the n11d :Ills to low 40s and highs
Wt•dm·sdily wlil be m the mid 40s to
low &gt;Os

Crow

Since Frye was sentenced to a
penal institution m the State of Kenlu c ky.
the
Metgs
County
Prosecutor's Office made application for Frye's return to the
State of Ohio under the laws of interstate detention.

NEW FRONT - Workers are installing a new front
at 106 Cocrt St., Pomeroy . The building is owned by
Dale Warner and connects a West Main St. structure

housing his insurance agency. The building on Court
St. will continue to house the taxi office, Warner repurts .
.

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