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                  <text>Village races highlight November election
haAll f1v e

M~..· ~ g , 1
· uun t)

\t ll e~ges

ve r aces fol Vi lh:l gt• posLo.; tn the
November 6t&gt;IL'f'l tmt

In Rutland

v1udge , tfwre

ts a racl'
for th e ma }'o r 's pttst With J uhn I
Miller and Worthy Edwa ,·d Sl&lt;l nle)
Sr • seeking lhe JXtS ilJon 11le re a r~

no council C;JndJdates a lt houg h thf'
tenns of two coun(_ tl mem b.Prs e )( ~
plre Vernon L Web.rr IS the IJn lj
candidate for ( lrrk . treas urer
In Ha('tne V tl l a~e the n • arr fCH 'es

(U SPS 145 960)

VOL XXVIII ~JO 136
NEW MFMBEH.S
Nt"-' F &lt;~ rm Rweau nH•ru be rs
m attenda nn• ,1 t thl' .tnJJual !!IL't' tlng T uesda~ ntght
were . from ldt to n c ht \1 r .wd \1r" Ch.t rl t·" Barrt'tl

and three children Mr and Mrs Chester We lls Mr
a nd Mrs Charl es Kmght , Mr and Mr-; Kirk Che~ahcr
c~nd daughte r. Mr and Mrs Oon Snllth and three son.'\
dnd Gar) Wolf

earn er
She WdS et nw rn Uer tl f lht• l l1un lr
of Chnst 1n Ch n ~ ttct n Lfn1on i:l nd h.HJ
attended Sulll.l &lt;i) sd1o ul f&lt;rllhf t.lh
for 22 yea rs
She was the daugh tt•r o f Uw ldll'
J ohn D and Ida (,n,~· r (,r t't' nk r
He r h u.'i b.a nd P&lt;~J ' ! I Srn 1th ,j , , ..j

\larch 22. 1 ~ 5(]
She v. ' " p reee d t~d 111 deetth b) a
Sll/1 &lt;ll&lt;-trles F.
Sonm Sm 1th . who
d lt'd I ll 19/ri r11ld t)\ ! Y. O SISltT 'i cmd

thn •t• IJr 11tl a• rs
S1~n l\&lt;~f'-' IIH

!Ul lt· a :-;on. 1\ nli E

SJu,th . l' u1nt Pl easant ,

S1 1• 1ok•

. .,1 :-. t.: r,dHh hli rlrt•JI ond tv. o ,!.! rl'at•' r . n l d t hildr en
FunL'retl st•n ll' L' ~ will be held
J· n dcn dl J 30 p Ill at lht• Wdcoxen
I· u rwr al Hornt•. P(lln1 Pleasan t , wlth
Uw lk ~ .f d lllL' S I. Bun n and I all v
H&lt;-Hlll.! off p l&lt;i tln g Hurta ! Wi ll be 1~
th1· Sl !H !'l'S I CP rtlt' t l' r} ~ Pm nt
I 1h 'd.S&lt;:illl r l lend."i lll r:! ) Cdll ... t the
funt.•r;.t l hllllll' f hur"d(n · fr nm 1-4
p m dnd~- qpm

Hospital costs
ARC~s big topic
11111

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t tw nt.·~ ft ·f k rc~ l
ro-chatrm an tJf tht• Al{(
'fll e 1-igt·nn ha s had a11 &lt;.l('t 1ng t 11
chairman Wilh a111 I' \ liJ, r..., ... al, t
Ma ) . wlwn f11 rll 11 r '\ 'ill 11 ( .tr •d, •.,
Gov Robtrl ~,,ttrl...,lli t·d f 11!l1 ,1 ,1. 1
a c n tlcdl r 1•\ ll'H I if Ill' \~ ' 1 K In .J
Senate COJJHl l ltlt't'
Ann Andel ~ n a S!Jkc.s " 1Jilli111 ftl r
the AH l LOnftrnwd tha t Srm tt"
would ath•nd \\'t· dnt ''\d, l\ . ., "''"s l ~ 111

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ru ~ h t With a k!! ) HO\l' sp l'cch b: Sen
I ),tnl t'l PHtJ tl k Mo\ ruhan . D \ \
1

Cl'iU!\ N,\ri 1 ~l ' 1 - Cmc mrall
st huul hua rU atto! ne} Ju hn I Jo;d
sa_\ " h t• p lan~ to appt.•a l on h1s own to
Uw ft•dt'r al co urts to for( t' th t' sl at e
to cO\'l 'f tJw d1 stn ct 's $7 i rrllllwn
dl'f H ll
l 11 1 nut g01ng to send a n d :xJ(h A
hill Tlw lx!ard has ill'en Lllll r 1zed
for sp t:nd mg rn on n for lt·g.tl fpes I
don t " ant to rnakc an tss ue o f tht s
We st1,ntld ck1 11. · I.ID! d s.:Ud
f1wi ' In t l!lll &lt;-1 1! Rua rd of Eduta twrl
" !I'd \I 'n dc~ \ h• c hJ s~· "' h!1uls
1 ,1\L• 1 lll .U I , H 1 l' )J1 Uw 1 (ifldll!t Jn..., uf
&lt;~
• t. 1t,·
lu .t; l
Ill dll l'ffort !(J
dJ d ll ld ii Zl' 1ht• dJ stnLt 's ftnan n al
pli ght ltJ ~ olt · r s
l~1drd lllt'lll lw r s clal not kn u\\ o f
l .l ~t \ d s p l&lt;J ns. t nl \ satd Tu ~s da )
T ll 1· ~i r~)l~p u p l l S&lt; hool s \ ste rn \Hll
.,J &gt;JI :~ , ,\ ! 1 f l &gt;[ t ) ll t't' \H'l'k ~ dt !ht• t'Jid
1! ' ,,...,..,, ,~ un :\ (1 \ 11 Su pl'n ntendenl
la1nes .bu ob" Si-lld ttw state s
ton d 1t1on s for a..1 l' lll Pr gt: ncy lo;.u1
" oul d h,l\' t' rt·qu1red the closing of 10
sd 10ol s a nd tJ H~ hnng of H6 peopk ,
1ncludllll:! B4 h'n('hl'rs
S.&lt;;.nd t ht· b o~• rrl \.loa s d1 \1c\ed un
[.J o\ J '

dt I IS[II! I

~ J IIIl '

peup lt

llll ~ht

UH nk

thi S IS

wt ha d 111 II IUHJ a ll alo ng, sauJ
Hul'. ft·d rlfl g .t n un t\' rtetm r eac_ lion
ho m \ot t· r s \o\ hfi l l'J e&lt;ted t wo It' \ It'S
th iS \ 1' ;1!
11(1\d \\h i l lp--..1 !ht " ti'lt \ . .
whd t

Eula Wolfe, Houle 2, R.ac1ne, was
named alternate . 1\lJ resol ullons on
the local. state and nat10nal level
we re approved
FolloWlng dinner served by the
Eastern Band Boosters, Mrs Maidie
Mora, prestdent , gave a welcome
Sy lvia M1dk1ff present e d the
senetal] 's re port and Jac k W Car-

iipprm al

T'ueslict) ,

til L' prl'std ent can order rattonmg

am tl m t' thtTt' IS a shorta ge of 20
pe ru ·n t m grtsui ll ll' ur dl l'SL' i f ut'l
suppil t:&gt;s 1n Uw Un1ted St atL'S
Hlt· lloUSI' and St'ndt e w1ll gt't a
&lt;- ra t k Ci t reJectm g v,hate\ er detw led
rat 10r1 111 g
p lan
lht
C.,t r lt•r

sy st em of rundlll )!, S&lt; houl s Ill !W(J
co urt dl' C'Is wn s. lust his L,ls e 111 th e

Oh w Sup r em l' ( ourt
H t~ S&lt;J td he .... 11 1 t.~ s k the t ; S
IJlstnct l o ur1HI Columbus tu d~J ) for
an lllJu nct wn &lt;W,i:l lnst Llw sl.alt· an d to
onler tlw sta ll' tu m a kl' up t.he

dl'fi l tt
We r e ~u 1n g tu sh u ~ th at the
board has tw u dltl'r natl ves
e tthl'r
closl' sL huul :-, fu r th rt.' l' V.Pt ' k s
prod u &lt;1n~ a b-;v lu tl' t•du&lt; ;.~ttOnal
clt.: p rt\ ;;~ tuHl. 11 1
d t' f 1m a tl'
t hl
~·d u ( a!JI)rt. tl ••ff t ' rlfl!.~" 11 f th L' '&gt;t h(nll
di stnct furt ht'! .... tH l h t l' pr l'st• nt s .tr
tnterl s lfi L(jiJ un uf th e lne q u.ilit!
bt&gt;t\\t.&gt;Cn th t• edu c ~ U&lt;Jn offe red our
ch 1ldr en ~tnd the t'd lll ~JtiO n offer ed
ch tldr en m (lff\ upnt U t stn &lt;: L~. " I Jo: J
sa1d
\1l'~lfl\-.·hill' Si ho ul admuu strator s
pl an to C'{Jfl tt nul' u:llk.._o.; \\lth (It)
uff1 uals to opt•n rl't fL'Ct tl on frJ&lt; tl lt lt'S
and pruv tde thl' schools' fr et.' lunch es
for 1XJOr c htldr t' n
S..•mo r c l a~s presH.it·n b from se\en
h1 gh s( h oo ls for m L'd a ru al 1t ton and
pla n \ U JUII I I L' ctt h L•r s Ul &lt;I
dL·Ht u n o.., t t d ! Jo JI
Fn da\

lll ~I S S I \

t

T h t ·~

culllpl &lt;i iTit'rJ !lit · ~ \Hrt' not 1 on s uited
abuut tiw d os mg
Ttw~ re not
tnvo l\ tn F: u;, 111
am tllmg and v. t.• wa nt to he
lm Ohl'd sa ul (; a li Sn utll , semor
l L1~" pre'-' Hh 'I I •1f 11u ~hc s llt l.!h

adm1mstrat1on con cocl'l before th e
stand b) p lan goes ·on the sh elf" for
po ss1ble future use
More()ve r , eltht~ r h()use would
hav e the optiOn of blocking a ctual
unplemenlatiOn of rallon1ng at the
tUlll' th e prt!SH.il•nt !ned to put !l mto
eff L'{1
Ho•p J ohn Dm ~ell D-M1ch . a
pnn u pal a uthor of tile co rnpromtse
bill approv ed :101 -11 2 b) th e House
Tuesd a)- stud eund1liUfiS requ anng
~a su ltn c ra twnmg ·could occ ur at
an) 1tfllt_' "
lin d St• n Hen r) M Jac kson. DWash
dH:11rman of th e Senate
Energy Com rnttlt.&gt;e , said t he fragtle
U S oil suppl y Ime from the Middle
F ast couJd bt· cut off at an) llme
W1thout contingency planmng, the
r oun lr ) would he brought to Its
kill't' s " Ja ckson satd
it 1s that con tmgenc; planmng
"h1ch Enl' rg) Dt-partmenl ana I) st
lind) Fan g sa' s will tak e llme
11wrt• IS no standby plan at the
rn oml' nl becau st• the En e rgy
IJepart nwnt euuld not prepa re one
w1tll Curq. .! n •ss spelled o ut what 11
would tn stst un h.dt.mg 111 tt And
f' an~ S.t! d 11 l'f1UJ J bP !Y. O ) t•ar s Or
m ore befor e a rattunmg plan ts
read~ for practica l opera tion
Gasu lull' ra tronm g IS not here
tomor ro Y. . ' he smd m an mterv1ew
Fa ng a progrCJ m anal;st m t.tw
Offti

t

11f

Pl ,mmn~

H egu latlon s and En~r~J'
~ mel

1t ma) ta kt• St' Vcral
wel'ks to lh aft a plan , wh1 ch then
would be opened up for public
comment
That pro cess could mean 1t will be
month s before a fmal phm IS sent to
(:Ungress for what couJd be a tlmel' f iii S Umtn~ revieW
r .t ng s,:m l p lanner s believe that.
prBct 1ca lly speakmg, 1t would take
18 to 24 months from the tune a plan
gets the l Oilgi esswnal g o-ahead to
tun e 1t read} to work

sey, the treasurer's report
Martha Gearhart. state trustee,
presented stale and natiOnal membership awards to Mrs Mora and
awards for excellence In membership went to Tom Hanun and
Hobert Burdette Dorm Cheatwood
explamed state legislative and other
beneflt.s
Howard Frank, county
auditor , e xplamed the ne w real
estate lax redutt1on Hobert Bur·
dette and Tom Hamm presented the
membership awards to new members extending over the years to 61
year membership
Mrs Paul
Gearhart ga ve the state trustee
report

MEETINGS NOTED
Meelmg s have been announced for
the Me1gs Head Start Parent Committee They mclude Oct 26 at the
Me1gs Center , No v 2 at the center
and Nov 9 at the center 1111
meetmgs begw at 1 p m Activities
Incl ude workshops and a parents
mc etmg
Those needmg tran ·
s portaUon should caU Me~gs Head
Start Center, 949-2096

REVIVAL IN PROGRF.SS
A revival 1s Ill progress t:t l 7 30
ca1 h e vemng through Oct 28 at the
Carlet on OIUrch on the Kmgsbury
Hoad On Fnday everung , the
Gospel Tones "ill be smgmg John
Lame r IS the evangelist Gar} King ,
pastor , extends an tnVIt.atwn to the
pub lie

PIIRTY SLATED
Hemlock Grange and Modern
Woodmen of 1\nienc a will stage a
Halloween party at 7 30 p m Thur·
sday at the grange hall There Will
be costume pmes and the pu bh c IS
mvtted Grange members are to
take cook1es for refrestunents

SEEKS DIVORCE
lin a c tiOn for divorce has been
flied Ill the Me 1gs County Common
Pleas Court by Hel len Blake , Houle
I, Heeds vllle , agamst Eldon Blake
Jr , same address The plamtuf
charges gross neglect of duty and
e xtreme c ruelty and asks cuslod) of
one mtnor child

rHl ~lt.l ~'l 'AMEll
'i l· W YIJHI\ ll' 1 1\rc ndan !,ill
and Wllfn ·d P ( IJ/I l·n hc:IVL' bet·n
. lfl P 'Jtnll' d It• tt w bod rd 11 f lr lL5tees of
11 1•' \\'l.i11! t \ \t u ~ ' ll ll l u f r\ nwrt r an
Ill
( ~d l ,~ \1.1111 r a nd 1 ,Jnln hu t(Jr 111
J1ll' :\t' \~ \ or ke r IS l ht.• .!Uthur of } (1
boo ks ::tnd pi t~ \ ' ( ohL'Il , rete ntl }
rl'tlred tJI Jr.t rd ( h.tlrma n of .l ose ph H
( ohen &amp; Son s I" an :1r1 coli L'( tor .md
ph 1Lwt ilruplst

111l&gt;ert 1Hed 1 KPl'lon IS c onfin ed to
Huln•r "oledlt&lt;ll Cl•nte r foli owmg
n li:IJur ~ u r ger ) (';J r(l\i may be sent
to Hoom 2.11i

MEETS Tin.;RSD/1 Y
Pome roy I.odge 164 , F Y A.\1 , WI U
mt•t.•t 111 spt'( 1al sesston a t 7 p m
TI1ur sday
The Master Mason~
deg ree \.I. Ill he confened All master
m a sons (:j f C Invited

FREE CLOTIIING
Th e free clothing da y of the
Salvatum 1\nn y, 115 Butternut live,
P omeroy, WlU be held flam 10 am
to 12 n!Km I uesday
1111 area
resu.lei!L'i a rc welcomt·

W.ll 11 Ut llr lh , 1 1~ l lll st r ) ll'" ' he r
l.tnd;i FuY. il'r l1ke uth er te.:t L hl'r ~
t\Hsn 1 tutd &lt;1 rc-HSl' Ill two }t'afS As
a c h~m tst · sh e sa 1d. ·t a m lookmg
elsewh t:r l'
· Tiw ~ r~ s k . Wha t ever ha ppened
to dt""&lt;i tl a ll'd tec~ th t· rs" I t hmk tht•\
al l st &lt;Jned tu lil'dt h
M a~(l r Bu !Jbl ' ' Stt&gt;r n t· ur ged
CdUl lOO

\1 , ~rta1 nl ) 1 ~ an up heava l to
dt scon llnli L' s ehoul, b ut ""e do
disc on ttnul' sc hool ew q spnn g and
we lm H' all sw1 H1wr lon g to deal
v.\th It I n•a ll\ Uun't a nt1 u pate tJ1e
kJ!l d of t•nunnu us pro ble ms th ut
som e other peo plt.• a pparentl y ha H'
been Lun cernt-d with , · sh e sa id
Sc hool offiC 1al s sa 1d th e lost da) s
will be madt' u p m Junl' However .
tlw $1 7 m tlil on dt'f!Cit Will then bt'
ad dt.'(l to m ·xt \ t.•ar' s $4 rn li ho n
pn 1)t'l ll'd dt f II It

Mayor's Court
Three bonds were forfe 1ted and a
fourth ' "a~ fmeU m the court of
P om ero) Mayo r ('Ia r em e Andrews
Tuesda } mght
Forfe1tmg bonds of $5(1 each were
J eff Proffitt , Portland , posted on a
diS()rder ly c harge , John Mitc he ll,
Pomeroy, open n ask , and Eddie
F1fe. P ome ro}. disorderly . Fined
$50 and cost." was honnu~ Pearson .
Pomer u~ HI .o eh... rgt"d With havmg
i-ln oper, flas k

I .owe Dalf' I r t ts uppos uag H I ·
1 um bt·nt 111ayor , Cha r les Pyl es. and
fi ve candi dates are runnm~ for the
t\\o se&lt;tl'\ on LOunul
They are l.o1 s J eanetle Lcn-..rence.
Wanda I. Lyons. Ben Petrel . Cressa
Ma r Sha m a nd Wilha m Micha el
l .a wson
Mae U e land IS unopposed fm
reelectiOn as clerk . trea su re r . and

a1

ter fwllJ uppu:mtg Ca r l J Hork y and
Wtl lmm G W a lter~ . 1m wn bents
Tht·n · 1s nu c lt·rk - t reasu rer l anWda lt', Inc um bent Gt•ne Grate
ha v1ng not fli ed for reeled wn to the
pos1t1on W1th t wu seals on the boa rd
of public affair' to be h Ued . the re
are lM candida tes . Thoma s H /In
ti er son and Fredd1e HoL1 dashelt
P omer oy villetge has une race U11 ~
fal l and thJs IS for the mayor 's
po~n twu CanWdi:! tes a re Hoge r Manrung Davld&lt;:;un a nd Hol!tt&gt; F. (;r f•en ,

who will be on the ballot, and incum bent ma)or , Clarence Andrews
has filed for reelection as a write-in
candida te .lane Walton is unopposed for reelection as clerktreasurer
Two council members, both incumbents , are unopposed for reelection They are Harold D Brown and
Hodney C Karr E F . Robul!lon, in' um bent , has no opposition for
reelectiOn to the board of pubhc affcllrs

en tine

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Settlemen t of the Me1gs Local
School OIStnct teachers stnke ap
peared to be further a"a) tod;; y
than when 1l began 24 da ys ago
There " no negot1a tm g takm g
pla c e brlw een lhe boaru of
edu cat.wn a n d the teachers Som e 30
teachers eontmued thei r occupancy
of the a drmmstr a l1ve off ~t·es of the
district located a t the Me1 gs Ju ruor
H1gh School m M1ddl e port a nd
marked 72 hcurs there toda )
They report lhe1r ocr upiinL~ there
LS an md1catwn that tilt..' } "'a nt tu
negotiate Mea ntime , none of the
adrrumstrat1 ve staff h.aJ been tn the
offices smce the Sit m began Monday
morrung
Boorne F1s her, pres ide nt of the
Meigs Local Te a c hers Ao;soc1at1on
had the followmg to say today
·As usual, Mr Gleason ·s news

Trip ,.,till on
CHAHLESTON. W \Ia rIll' 1 Refusal b) the Kanawha Count\
Comrruss1 on to aut ho rtz e $1.636 1n
overtune to protect Sen Edward
M Kenned) d unng a VIS it here
next month will in no wa y Jenpar ·
d1ze
lhe
Ma ss a ch u ,e tt s
Democrat 's safety, the Secret
Serv1ce sa 1d Wednesda y
The conuruss ton voted 2-1 on
Tuesday a~amst appropnatmg
the money to pay for 23 shenff's
depul.Ies to he lp Cll) , s late and
federal author1t1es g u•rd Kennedy dunng a Nov 2 VISit He IS
coiTUng to addr ess the 'tine
Oemocratt r Party's annual Jefferson-Ja ckson Da y diniier
The count) hi stoncal h has
spectal respons1bt!Jt y f or . gua rding dlgmtane.'
upon thr1r
amval at the au-po rt wh1 ch 1s
operated by a count) aut hc ntv

LATH/1M , Kan ' liP 1 -· An e xpl oSion npped throug h th1s lin)
s outhea s te rn Kan s a s town .
killmg at lca&gt;t tw o people. 1n·
JUrmg f1ve elde r!) pe rsons and
reducmg half the downtown C:Jrea
Loa pile of srnokmg ru bble
The expl osiOn We dn esday
leveled three buildings hous111g a
cafe , the post offi ce . and a
Masomc Lod ge
Debns was
hurled mto farm fl el!ls nearl y a
nule awa y, and doze ns of volunteers worked pastnudmghl , searc hing through the debns for more
VJctiiTlS

relea se of Wednesday, Oct 23 fail s
to face the fa c ts as they e XJst u1 the
s1tuat10n
" Fact 1- The entry of tea c he rs mt o the adJmru strat1ve off tet!S was not
·forced m a n} wa y 1111 doors except
tile outer one were open teachers
walked m, asked for Mr Gleas on,
a nd when told he was not there sa1d
lhr} would watt
'
· Fact 2- The occ upatiOn began at
11 i:l m Monday and negotJat tons
were not scheduled to Oeb~n until
3 :10 that day Ill Nel.sonv1U e
So
m uc h for a 'ploy '
Fact 3- The office dmly routme·
contmued as long as the se cret.anes
we1eon duty , but the y did not return
on Tuesday
" Fact 4 - M. far as ·cons ideratiOn
for our diStrict, our .kids . g oes. the
board has s hown little conSideratiOn
f01 our ilis tmt or kids by ca ncellmg
e,;tra c urn eular aetJvtt tes and nol:
rneetmg w1 th tea cher negoha tors
un til after the s tnke s tarted
· Fact 5- The ·farce ' vote on the
p.lt cka ge consisted of one-t(H)ne cxplanatwns m eases where q ues!Jons
\H'rt· as ked
VciC't 6- Ail open sess1 on ts not

fHURSlJA Y OCTOBE R 25 1979

necessal] to get a vote of the
assoc1at10n MI. Til d""s not attempt
to tell Mr Gleason how to c onduct
board meehngs, and expects the
same courtesy from him
" Fact 7- The supenntendent must
now deal with the negotiating team
wh1ch represe nts all of the Meigs
Local tea chers, not w1lh IndiVIdual
teachers 'wishing to establiSh a
negotiatiOns se ssion through Mr
Pierce
Again, the MI.TII WIShes to em pha size that they are ready to
negollate anywhere, a t anytune ··
Teachers of the distnct tumed
do"11 by a 71\.21 vote a package of.
fered by the board of educat1on Monday evemng and Tuesday Among
other 1tems, the package offered a
base salary of $10,000 as of Sept 1.
1979, with a $10,400 base effect1ve
Sept 1, 1960
Supt
David G leason t oday
charged that U&lt;'Cupancy of the ad·
numstrat1ve offic es by the tea chers
had put a damper on any
negouatwns and settlement of the
stnke
He had tlus to sa y thi s mormng
The board of educ atiOn 1s con -

Carter promises
• •
•
punitive action
II) J AME.'i GERSTE:-.IZ,\1'.0.
A ~ sor· latt•d Press Wrttcr
WASHl:\GTO \ 1Al' 1 P re!:i ldt·nt
( ;u1e r th n •d tenl"&lt;l tod a} to purSUl'
un, pcu flt'tJ proposals tha t c oul d be
quil l' pum t n~ to tht• olltndllStr) · 1f
( unJ,!,r l· ss dot• s not
pa ss a
. .,a1tsfaf ton wuu lfall prnf1ts ' tox
( :tf1l'T also saaJ th e s urgL' of
pr uf1t s pu:-. tl'd tJ ~ fll ilJO r oil
( mr1pan1t:"S 111 the thtrd quar ter
\ t ~ Ld. ly dl'r no nstriite th e twed for Ci
JllaJur portion of uneorne d profit s
fn Hn tl ll' od L'UffiJ&gt;Cl fl les to go mto ttw
l! ~'llL r c:~l st'f\ In' of the Amert c&lt;tn
fl'-'11Ple '
l'h 1·
pr l'Sid e r. t
1/la c!e
l11 s
' ~ JIIItn e n t s
thl' first on the u1l
uHl ustr ;. ':.. ne" f tn anu tt l report s, m a
spn'&lt; h to a u ttzens cu alll1un havml=!
hrt ·dkf.-J st .t 1 th l· \\111lt' House beforl'
\ISitl og Capllol H1ll to pusll fur
lk! SSa~t' uf Cru1 er s tilx pl a n
It "o uld tttx ud Lurn pcm; re v ~nue s
~l e numng frur 11 thl' pn•s tdentwl
du iSl(Jil f ( J fl'fll(i \ t.' prt ll' c ' mt ro l s on
oil
Ci-t r1 er vo wt•d tha t 1f ht' fi:I Ib to
brt ng t h l· Se net t e i:lruu nd tu
supflOrtl ng " il1ll stronge r th•n thai
IJtfore
th e Se na te
Flll i:l lll l'
( omrntttt'L',
\\l'
"-ill shtft uur
lomba t 7AJI1 t' · IH tht• House..Sena tt'
('U ilf eren (c th at wtll wor k out
c_hffe renc t:" bet Wt'en the Se na te bill
and a bill 111ure to CC:Jrt er 's hkmg
that the House approved

If the fmalrnea sure dt't' S n~Jt rnt't't
h1 s i1ppr0\a l, we 'll rllO\'l' toward
·Hid tt JOn al proposal s to tht• Cong ress
v.tuch &lt;-Ould bt• qu1te pumtl\ t' to tl 1e
oil mdu.~·try . · th e president told tht:·
\dttona1 ( ttl7ens C'oailt10n for tht·
Wmdfall Pruflts Tax
I Will not hesita te to d o that 1f
neLeSs&lt;H} "
h e sa ul , ""llh uu l
"-pt.·llmg out an; spec ificS
Hl'f L•rrtn f;! tu th e c oal1t10n 's
IIII S~I On a nd hiS ~Jtef lJ1at the
St.• nct te btll ts Jnddequa te . Carter
S&lt;J id · I th mk th e a ro u.st.•d VOILt'S of
th t.• t\Inl:'fl( an publt c led by ) ou IS the
bt•st po ssibl e \HI} ~e can med tll t&gt;
trl'rn l' nduus mflut•nc e of the ull
lobb) 1sts 011 Capit ol Hill ·
l·. nl' r g ~ et nd pu ltll&lt;'S WL'fl' the fCI&lt;' US
of Car te r s pubhl i::l( tl \ l t l l' S
tiHuughoul tl1t.· den Hl' was fl) tn g to
:-.;l" Jl' f St' ~ 111 thP a fternL,on tu
address an l'n t·rg \ furu/11 1n \" e.,.,
Bru ns Y¥ trk and t hen tu &lt;:ttl end
fumh a tst·r s fo r De mu Lratl ( Part ~
lt.:J,!, lslati\ t' l dn d 1dat es

tn

Ea s t

Hutherfor1l
Jlous.t· .Spt_
•aker Thomas P 0'!\l·tll
'.ti le d t he oil 1n du st r) pr oftt s
;mnounu·d th 1s "- l'L'k ' i:l di ~ I at e to
til l' net t1 on It s JU.'-!1 on absolutL' and
utt er Utsgr &lt;H t: ·
Among the th trd quart t: r pr ofit s
v, as f xxun ~ s ur~t· of liB pe rcent. to
;1 nl!t lfl ( 0111 e uf Sl l lJiil w n Conocu's
proft t:i wer e up l34 per cl'n t a nd
( ~uJf ~

UI-J

~; ~w rlent

20-year-old "oman

EVERYTHING FOr

cited for neglect

HALLOWEEN

-YOUTH COSTUMES
-MASKS
- ADULT COSTUMES
-TRICK-OR-TREAT CANDY
-PARTY SUPPLIES
-HALLMARK CARDS
-CANDLES

t

"1..'· 1\.." 11r1 vdi C::Igt' .:uunu l '!he r~· a rl'
no' tHld!dates fur Lhe board of p ubl 1 ~
a ff111r.J &lt;i llhoug h the ten ns of tw o
IIH:mUe r .s ex p1re lh1s ye.:l r
Two races (:I re up In Mtddleport
lh1&lt; fall . w1lh Ed,.ard M Blake, Jr
&lt;Htemptmg to unseat Incumbent.
Ma yo r F red Hoffman fo r the
v lilagt•'s to p post There are three
camhdates for tw o sed l'l on VIllage
t:ouncll
Seekm~ elt-dlon a re J ack Sat-

•

e

•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Bobbte E Hoy IS the only cand tdatt•
for two scats on the board of publl r
affa1rs
Sy rac use Village '-' well st oc· ked
w1th ca nd1datcs for the mayors
pos1t1on F our ca ndidHtes fur the
pos1t10n are mcuml&gt;ent E l&gt;er 0
Pi ckens. and II J ean Hall, Jurun y
Joe Hemsle y. and Terry D Moore
Jan1c e Lawson 1s the only can&lt;lid.ate fo r c lerk a nd Kathryn H
Crow ts the onlv candidate for two

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Strike settlement appears far away

Explosion kill.., 2

S\ hO&lt;iJ

HOSPIT ALIZEJ)
HOLZF.R MEDICAL CENTER
IJ ISC II A'{f;F$ OCT 23
\ t·lnw \dcu n::;nn , 0 1 Rurd ctt t.•
J,dll\ H url~ It· f&gt;k 11 C'.11 n p \l.nuk
~ ~~~ ~ ·r!l .tll
ltr r ' C11ll t.· ~ .J r. Pegl-(•
( 't 111 1 H n: ll l .t Hogg . !lope lmbuden
\ n d !t'd
I ci l11 t'l
P e ru I L1tl lL•.
l'a1 r 111a :\1 \J ttn , .kss1e Ml·Goon.
!-- r t~rH t· ~ Mt Cn ~ Albt•r t Mos.sbargl'r
\ 1' " IA ' W I" ~1 UL' : h•r and d r~ u g ht er ,
\ lr , \\ tlii.Jill :\llhols df!d d aught er .
lu llliLt Pu•r so11 \ 1r s
Russ t·ll
Hh~ dt'" .111d &lt;.:on. \ll r &lt;. :Steplwn Rt fl'
and son. ( ~,1rnet Smeltzer. Barbara
S1111 til. Ma r) Sn11t h, Sw iS he r
St arc her . [;oldie Terry . Belly Wilt
BIRTIIS OCT 2.1
\1r
and M"
Joh n Conn .
d r~ u gh ter
Ray, \f r and Mr s
!\1 :( h&lt;H' l \ t l d t:' r ~ull SO il
Potn ,
P le as C:J nt

con g rr&gt;SSIWlill

Cincinnati attorney
appealing decision

.t [lrJi i ll' l • I d

1

Ltvestoe k Coop e r atl ~ l' AsSlJLia llon.

{

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c1 hrtl kgr lJWH I t ht ( k
bet.'!l (_ () l ll p ll'tt.•d (:If](\

.~p p••l !lt l!lr'll t

if

llit

Cattle - Market stc·iid ) to I 50
higher. Slaughter Stee rs c ho1ce r.:1·
70, good 59Al6.50 Cows - Marke t
uneven, 2.1ower to 3 h1gher Bul ls Marke t steady to 2 lower , all bull s
67. down Veal c alves, 2 lo\\er
Choice and prune 85 an d do\\n
Sheep and lan1bs 1-3 75 lllg il&lt;'r Old
sheep , 25 . and down .

(I

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COLUMBUS, Oh 1o 1 AI' 1 Dirt'&lt; I
hogs {Fed..State Barro ws ctnd gdts
$1 .25-1 50 lower Dt•11 1&lt; 11Hi ~ «HI I s
1·2. 200-230 lb s countr-. potn t:- t~ /:)33.25, few a \ 13 50 pl« nl'. n 25-ll
few earl} 34 2!i U S 1-.1 , 2:11).200 lbs
country pomts .)2 ·l:l. plants. :l2 50.
33.75
Receipts Tu esda 1 B.B~J lod m s
estimate s B,500
Cattle , fr om Coi W1lhu s l 1 rudu( ers
Ltvestock Cooper all \ t ' 1\sSOLi atlilll
Cattle - \1a1 ket s tt•rnh to 1 30
higher Slaul(htrr St&lt;' &lt;'l s l' hOI C&lt;' h.l
70, g ood 59 -66 50 Cows - Merkt•l
uneven . 2 lower to 3 h1gher Bul ls
Markel stead) to 2 lo,. c r . ii ll bul b
67 . do""rr1 Veal cal vt&gt;s , 2 ltnH'r &lt;1 ttlt•
fr om
Columl.Ju s
l jr ud ucl'r ...

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have tog.11 n fur1ih 'l fr"t: kra l &lt;t l t 1on t11
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prt'St' rt!t'd Wed ne:- day

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pl l'&lt;-ht twn s fn 11 n con gressnwn th at
~aso luw r at1 u11 m ~ ru uld be m•edL-'li
ctt . trl\ tun e &lt;~n l·.rll'r g \ Dt·partment
.Hid 1\ s1 s ~l\ !-. 1t could l i:! k L' a l ouplt· of
\1•ars 1u \\hi p c1 V!llrk able pl._m 1nt u
~h . lpt'

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11

Selected as trustes for three ye"'
terms we re Gary M1cha el, Mmer'"ll e. d1stn cl I. 1\ndrcw Cross,
Houle 2. Hacme, diSlnct 2; Hobert
Burd ette . Houte 2. diSlrlr t 3. and
l.arr)
\1ontg omer} . Ho ule I ,
l.ang svlilc• , d1s tnct 4 Norman W1ll,
Route 1, Hutland , "'a ~ nrJmed
delega tL' to the st.:l te l o ll\ en twn and

Gas rationing plan far away

I I jl lllf

.1

1974-71 Ul L' (''Ost uf I!! it •ld \ ~ tl usptt.tl
sta} 1n ~ l·" Y11r k rr ...,,, 1J\ ~H per 1 t'lll
For t ht:&gt; ll'i!IOil , 1J l • · f 1~ ur ~· "a"' J.l

pt•rc t·n1

u\J 1111!

\l.t

A pcinPJ d l !'i( ll.\ ... \!111 I 'l ,l l rt •d ]1\ I )f

( ;v\

Selcct1on of trustees. delegates to
the 1980 ~ tate cunvent1 on, mem bcrs hl p re c og n1t1 o n an d cn tertamm('nt by a~ ourv; vocal and mstrullle ntal group,
He } K1ds ·
hi g hl ig ht ed the annua l dtnne r
rm'l' lmg of the Me1gs Count)' Farm
Bu reau held Tuesday mght a t the
( 11l~ S t l'r E lc rnentl:l ry School

1

\ II
I:I I NI .II A\1TIJ'- '- Y , \ I'
Appal al hlrtll H q.~ l (Jflo~ l l i !lllllll "" i ,I TI
eon f ererH ~· ~o t und L· r "- .1\
1t·r~
Tuesda~ wnh ta lk hf ho 'A lu ii!Jp h
~l' "'
York s l. 11 t_' ... lto spl l&lt;il t~ ' " '
t on tcu n rr l l'rl t prul.! r d ill \11 U1e ot f i t ' I 12

Story, Charles Chaffee , Roy and Pat Holter, all 35
years, and Mr and Mr-; Homer Willard, 2!i )ears

Trustees, delegates chosen for event

Area Deaths
FLORI\ SMITII
Mrs fl ora M F lo Srm tl /1 17
VLa nd St , Pmnt Plt&gt;&lt;-J son t. ' l l , ,d &lt;~t
5 05 p m a t H!l'l l on t·ue,da 1
Mrs Sm1th "- UI ked fo r till Pu111 t
Pl easant H e ~IS t(• r fu r fi ~ \fdl , ~~~t
started .ts d Imot} pt· npt'rclt t 1 111
191 7. where .slw ~ or kl"tl fur J5 \ t', ll s
unlll the hnot) pe \\as di:i l ont1 nu t'd
more r ecent} ) , s h~ b td wurk t•d d s &lt;-1
copy reader and unoffl\ td l rn ntl

2!i.J5 YEAH MEMBERS - Twenty-five and thirtyfl w ye ar members honored by the Me1gs County Farm
Burea u Tuesday n1ght mcl ude , left to r1ght Leo H

f t!l n Jo\ oi &lt;:~s "' e ll as for vt ll ugl'
eu UIH' 1I

GETI1NG HEADY FOR TRICK OR TREAT - Tnna Bachtel, a
second grader at Pomeroy Elementary , Is ~ndermg over a mask at
Elberlelds m preparation for Lnc k or treat mght . Tr1ck or treat mght will
take place on Tuesday from 6 p m to 7 p m m moot Me igs County towns
Tr1na IS the daughte r of D1a ne Bac htel

II ~year -old Middleport mother ,
Patnc1a Ha y , has been charge'&lt;! "'th
l'ontnbutmg to the neglect of a three
a nd one-half month old child Depen derlt) c· har~ es ha ve a lso been filed
aecordmg to Ca rl Hyse ll . .Iuven1ie
Proba tion Offic er for the Meigs
Ju veml e Court
Those charg es
r esult ed from the mother leavmg
her ch~d w1th a rune -) ea r-&lt;Jld
babys itter The Me1gs County
Children's Services 1\geiiQ has
lal!en :.emporary custod y of the
ch1ld
In other acUon , four Rutland
youths have been questioned regardmg a B x E Oct 9 at Salem Street
Market Ul Hutland llpproxunatel y
$40 worth of cand y and c1garett es
was taken
Ju venil e Court offlter HyseU also
reported there have been numerous
reports of vandahsm throughout
Me1gs County during recent wee ks
Hyse ll md1cates parents "'U be he ld
responsible for the a cts of their
c hildre n

cc rn ed about th e d1 sg us l1n g
behaviOr
d"p layed
by
our
professional st.alf We arc appalled
by the1r total la ck of ethics
· Howev er , the board and admtmstratiOn ts conllnumg to do
~verytlung po.'istbl e to resolve Uus
s ttuatwn
Al the Ume of the se1ge on the adm.tru,!,"trattve offtces . the tredsurer ,
the superintendent and members of
lh~ neKOltatmg team were m Culwn ·
bus confernng w1th the State Depar ·
lmenl of Education , off1ce of finance
and marutgement
.. in a bnef reVIew of the fman c1al
p1cture of the distnct by the clepa1t·
mcnt of finance and manage ment It
wa s found t ha t a balance could be
realiZed 1n the d1stnct provided
only - If there 1s no mc reased cost on
any ~ne Items and onl} w1th lhe fuU
understanding that. the board and
adrmrustratwn would hold aU ex·
penilitures
not spendin~ an y
moneyh on any tlem:-~
This means that the rc-.nues
and expenilitu res of the distric t ar e
such that li we do not fiX broken Win ·
dows and tom down water spouts at
Holland, Harnsonviiie, Salem Cen·
ter and the JUniOr high bu1ldmgs - 1f
we don't buy any textbooks at all for
our }oungsters- If we don't f1x any
of the pla)ground eqwpmenl - lf we
don't have any buses break down - If
we don't fix the leaky water
faucets - If we don't get runmng
water mto several restrooms 1n our
clementaq· bU\ldmgs - lf we don't
have any InCreased costs tn gasoline
and for ever nsmg utilities and u we
don t hav e an} other absolute
emergenc ies , we cou ld ha ve a balan·
ce m the general fund at the end of
the year
Therefore, the board's pre-stnkc
offer was more than appropnate un de r the cond1t1011s the school di stn ct
lind - the last offe r turned
IS In
down b) the teachers was a~a1n
qu1le adequate unde r these con
d1t1 ons ·
Gleason a lso countered ( Otn plamt.s from tea chers on the d1scon ·
llnuance of extra curn cular et C·
l1v1t1es durm g the stnke He sa1d
the adrmmstrat1 on and the board
members all feel S} mpathy fur the
student.s affected but agam s tated
that the board had lo look at the
ov~rall ptcture m the d1stnct , not
JUSt extra curricular a cll vllles
Gleasun mdl cated teachers we re as
muc h Ia blame 1n t hat they did vote
to strtke anrl were aware dJ.Scontm.ante of lhe&lt;ie attl vlt.J. es t ould take
plm e

SPECIAL HOURS SET
Special hours lo areommodale
absentee voters for tht&gt; upcoming
Nov 6 election have been set b}·
lhe Meigs Count) llaard nf Elec ·
tious .
The board office . h&gt;&lt;'alt'd In lhr
Masonic Ttmpl~ at Pomeruv
will be open !his Saturday from.
a.m. to 12 noon and on Saturday ,
No" 3, from 9 a .m to [)000. Thedeadline for casting absentee
ballols lor the ele&lt;tlon ., Nnv l .
So far, 95 r01iieots ha•e •oted vta
the absenlere ballot .

9

EVENT CANCEU.EO
lin 1\mencan Hed Cr oss bloodmobile scheduled for Fnda ) a t the
Pomeroy Elemental] St hool has
been cancelled

EXTENDED FORECAST
Frur Saturday . A chancr of
showers Sunda) and Monday .
Hlgbs In lhe mid 50s 1o the mid
SO. Low• In the mid and upper
30s Saturday and m lhr 40s Sunda} and Monday .

Weather
F reeze warmng tomght Cleanng
tomght Low 20 lo 30 Sunn} Fnda v
w1th a hi g h around ~ The chance~
precipitation 10 percent tomght and
near ze : .J Fnda)

DOCI'OH l'iiiMED - Dr \'i llma o\nn Mansf1eld, Pomeroy has been
named a iliplomate of the llme n can Board of Family Practi~ 11\BFP !
as a result of pa» mg a ce rtifi catiOn examinatiOn offered by the IIBFP
She IS now cerUf1ed mthe m ed 1cal spee~a it) of fanuly prac tice The 10 .
tens1ve 2-&lt;l.ay wntten exanunaU un 1s deSI!(lled to prove the candidate's
abli1ly m the a l.eas.of Internal m ed1c me. surger} . obsletncs , gynecology ,
pediatriCS , ps) c hiatr) and corrunumt ) medic ine To qualify for the
exarrunatmo a physician must ha ve successfuU) eornpeleted three years
of res1de ncy tra1mng Ul farrul } practiCe 111ere are S()ll!e 37~ such traliiUlg
program' Ul teaclu ng hosp1t.al s a nd un 1vers1t} med ical ee nte rs acroos the
Umted Slates

Commission okays
road improvement
Me1gs Count \ commJ SS Inne rs
Tuesda) m ght follo wing a pu blic
hean n~ vott•d to \'a ca te 'n of et rrul e
of county road 217 In Suttnn T"P
fr om the east tu the west Uounda q .
ltne of the Gree nwood Cemeter )
\1r a n d M,-,; F: A Wmgett
free holde r s 1n the v1 n nm of the
propU'ied 1m prmernent te.':i t ifl ed 1n
support of the doSIIJg
Winget t sa 1d he fe lt that keep 1ng
th1s portion of the roa d upen w a~ IJIIpracllcal an d too expe ns 1ve for th e
trustees to rnatntaiil \1r.i W1nge tt
s lated that as member of H.etL' In e
Village Council she would a~rc· c· that
the road sh ould be valated
II noti ce from the Ohio Depart ·
ment of I Jquor Control wa ~ rt•t t'l\t·rl
slatmg that a request for ('.} d iH.l ( '-2
pem11t had bee n r l'!.'CI\'t'U from
Donald Ha ) anJd Ka lhen ne Desk Ills.
DB~ . Kath ) ·s ( a rr) out r ht• , om·
ITilSSitJ!le r s \1.111 ree t&gt;l\1' a n~ ob·
JCLllutL'i tu the ls."i uam t' flf tl11 . ., pt_' r *
nut unt1l !\o' 11
The c um mlssluner'\ re&lt; essed
Tu esda\ ntght and met on Wed
ne.sda } "' 1t h i:l la rge delt'.l::atl on fr om
ttx• Mc1gs Cou nt~ HwTliine Suu et}
The group di SCUSsed r eCOin·
mend a tl on~ to upg radt• the ' oun t:
dog pound a nd va n ous other matters
that would aS..'iiSt 111 prov1dmg bt: t!er
dog umtrolmlht• t ounty
lluroth) F L&lt; he r . preside nt of thr
loca l "'('J r t \ rtnd Sa nd\ H o ~ la nd ,

l\1inor eomplaints
being investigated
Me~gs

Count) Shenff Deputi es a re
1nvest1gatmg the theft of mne so cks
of eom a nd pos.s1bly 200 pound of
potatoes from the J,ew~.&lt; M1Ue r fa rm
on SH 681 JUS! e ast of Tuppers
P laulS The theft occulTed some time
Tuc&gt;sday evemng
Deputi es are al' o mvest1gatmg the
breakmg of a glass out uf storm door
at the Jumor Holllmger resldenee .Hl I, ReedsviUe The door was
e1ther Jerked opened by a person or
"'"d caught the door pu!IJng It open
Deputi es are also mvesligahng a
complamt lodged by 111me Weaver ,
lffic me
Mrs
Weaver reported that
sometime Tuesday mght or early
Wednesday mornmg unknown persons tore off an outside light on the
bmldmg at her beauty shop The mCidenlls under mvestlgat10n .

Great Lakes Keg1ona1 IJirector li
tho' U S Human Son et} slated the
do~ p ound now a ppears to Oe In
sat!'f a ctory shape
Howe ve r. lhe) urged that the comII USSI One rs act to prov1de some t)pe
of heali ng S)Slem at thue pound to
pH Jt el't u-1e dogs d unng the wmter
Otht ·r rerommendaltoflfl made
w&lt;• re that the count} discontinue 1!.'1
contr;;et With Ki.ser l.ake Kennels

and IILStea d htre a vetermanan to
perform euthamzalion of anunals
"'ht:n ne&lt; es..~ary ratslJlg of dog
l1 cense fees from $2 to $4 , stricter
enforcement of llce nsmg of dogs;
the poss 1bdil)· of allowing dog hcen' " to be sold by the dog warden,
huma n sot·lrh e:tnd other al!enCIP"
The r·ornmis.c;; wners were also
urged to explore different federal
ctgene1es 111 ord er to try to obtam a
grant fu r constructmg an aruma)
shelte r
!lick I eSS) Fairfield County Dog
Ward en,
a cco mparned
t he
de lega ti o n and outlmed the
proredures used m Fairf1eld County
for control Tess~ e.pla1ned that
lhere are SIX fuU..tune ass1stants
work.Jng out of th~ dog warden's offl ees In Fairfield County mcludmg
three CET II worke rs
It was also stated there are three
trucks and an operating budget of
$58,000
Comnuss 10n ers pointed out that
the annual revenue 1n the Meigs
County Dog Kennel fund IS approximate!} $0.000 a year and to tmplemenl the recornunendatwns made
would cost approxunately $25,000
and that some other county program
would have to be dropped if they wer
to act on the recommendations Attending the meetmg Wednesday afternoon were Mrs . FIBher, Sandy
Howland, Tessy , Charles Hysell, dog
warden, E Joyce Mtller and Marion
Crawford. The commissioners
recessed and met agam Wednesday
evemng .
Ill the Wednesday mght meeting a
large delegation of residents on
county road 25 were present to offer
their protests on the rece')!_Ioad
repa rr to county road 2!i.
They stated patching and paving
work that has been done is uneven
and causes dangerous driving condibons and that the road was in wor·
se condition now that it was before
the county highway department
(Continued on page 7)

�2- The Da•ly Sentinel, Mlddlcpurt -P ollleroy, 0 ., Thur:;day , Ol'l l!i,

1~7U

In Washington:
By Martha Aagle

&amp;Dd
Robert Waltero
WASHINGTON
(NEA)
President Carter insisl3 be tJii.sn 't
sought to revive the memol'}' ' of
Olappaquiddick among Democratic
voters, but that doesn 1 mean his
campaign strategists are
necessarily planning to ignore the
issue.
No less an authoMty than Carter
pollster Patrick H. Caddell predicts
that Chappaquiddick will "of course" be an issue, in one guise or
another, many pMmary contest bet ween tbe president and Sen . Edward
M. Kennedy, D- Mass .
It 's an integral part of the
" character" issue that consistently
has been one of Carter's greatest
political assets, and Caddell believes
there's no reason not to capitalize on
that strength.
Furthennore, Caddell says he
agrees with the assessment of

The "ch~acte~
quotient - I

another prominent expert on publi c ·
opinion research, Peter D. Hart ,
that polls often underestimate Ken nedy 's Cahppaqu•ddick - re lated
liabilitJes .
tJart told a press senunar held
here recently that he is wary of poll
results that indicate voters no longer
care much about the 1969 inctdent Ul
which a young woman drowned after
an accident in Kennedy's car.
Questions about Chappaqqui ck, as
well as other sensiltve or emotional
ISSues that people aren't willing to
discuss freely with a pollster, need
to be phrased obliquely to produce
meaningful results, Hart says .
In other words , some voters might
respnd "no" if asked whether
they 'd vote agamst Kennedy
because of Chappaqquick Bul tf
thooe same people were asked in direct questions about whether Kennedy has the "character " to be
president, the results might be
strikingly different.

Editorial opinions,
comments

.,
,.
,.

"'
I
1"

E

- president ·s luxur wus yet rustac

..

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~

hideaway .
The Camp David stoves will be
hooked up next week and the Wlute
House stoves Will be mstalled, w1th
appropnate fanfar e, by mtd November.
Technically. the Ce Will be U1e
property of the General SerVIces
Administration . the one m the study
will belong to the Nat1onal Park
Service, and the Camp Davtd st oves
will be Navy property .

When Carter made hts first
appearan"" as president at a maJ Or
league baseball game, at last week' s
deciding contest of the World Senes
in Baltimore, bedlam erupted as he
made his way mto the locker room of
the winning Pittsburgh Pirates .
So mary fans jammed around the
entrance from the playing field to
the dressing room that a besieged
~rter
bodyguard picked up a
baseball bat and, simply by lookmg
menacing, kept the throng a t
bay . - The trip to the game was not
without a mishap . In a brief hut

hectic m otorcade that took Carter to

a homeward-bound helicopter , a van
r arr;1ng White Houst' rt"porter.s and

photographers crashed mtv the rear
of a sta tton wagon filled wtth Secret
SerVIce agent s.
Only reported inJury A Wlute
House a1de suffered a brUised and
swollen knet• .

TodRy in history '
Ry Tht• A.ssociah·d Pnss
Toda y " ·nll~rsday , Oct. 25, U1 e
298th da y of 1979 . There are 67 days
left tn th e year
Today' s h1~hhgh t m lustory
On th1 s date tn t971, Communtst
d e le~ate s repla c ed ~at10nnh s t
dcle~al.es 1n the Chmest' sea t m thL'
Urutt.•U Nat10ns

On thts date :
In 1701. colonta l Ph1ladelphta was

charit&gt;r
In 18!J4 . Bnt1sh fo rl'e.s conductl'&lt;.l
tht' C'har~t.' of the l.1~h t Bngade 1n
~rctntt~d

&lt;t r 1t~·

HussJa m tll e Crunean War .
In 19:16. the AXIs was formed
Uetwt."t'n C ~erm.any and Italy .
In I9:&gt;4,1or the first time, a sesston
of the U.S Cabmet wa s tclev ts..'ll.
In 1962, the Cuban MISsile CriSIS
neared 1ts clunax as the \\'tute
House relea sed an lnte ll !gt'nce
report shuwmg a rapid Russian
bu1ldup m Cuba

In 1973. Amencan force s arowH.l
the world were put on alert armd
fear s that S&lt;lvtet troops m1ght be
sent to th e tro ubled Mldeast
Ten years ago· The Umtt&gt;d States
and Sotlet Uruon anno unced that
tht·y would soon open Strateg tc
Arms I Jm1tat10n Talks
F1vc vears ago : Secretary of Stat~
K1 ss• ng e r and Sov tel leader
Br ezhnev discussed new strateg1 c
Hrrns lum tHt!On mea s ure s 1n
Mosco w
One year agu President Carter
named Allred Kahn w head h1s anll lnflalton effort.
Today 's b~rthdays Singer Helen
Reddy •s 311 . CoWJtry MuSJ c star
Mtnnte Pearl is 67. Relln&gt;d baseball
player Bobby Thomson IS :&gt;6
Thought for the day It IS no use to
bl ame the lookmg-gla ss 1f yo ur face
ts awry .. N1 kola• Gogol i l809-1852 t.

Berry's World
~

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·--

--- - - - - -

" Miss Abbotr, when you sa1d there was a
headhunter to see me, I thought .

ouR 1NTE~€'5T RA'TE':I? O.K, THINK OF
A NUMBER BETWEEN FIVE ANt&gt; TEN· ..
MULTIPLY B'l' Tl-\i&lt;:EE ... SU8TRRCT FOUR ...
APP YOUR AGE, .. DIY I DE B'l' TWO" ·

Moeller regains
top spot again

Connally seeks to
peak~twlce

Republican prestdential hopeful
John B. Connally is about to launch
an expenstve and unusuall y ea rly
television campaign built around a
series of half-hour programs, ea c h
specially designed for broadcast m a
different reg ton of the country . ·
Although the timing appears to be
premature, Conna lly and his ad visers believe that Ronald Reagan.
the putative leader in the contest for
the GOP presidential nomination, is
a "paper tiger" whose campa1gn
will be among the first to collapse .
If Cmmally is highly vtsible when
Heagan falters. he could be perceived as the " g1ant killer " and the
nghtlul he~r to U1e pooition of frontrunner .
In add!lton, the re's a highly
c redible theory that holds that Con nally must " peak" twi ce - once late
thiS year to attract and then diffuse
c ntt ctsm of Ius c haracter, then

again next year to win the requisite
prunary elections .
The $1 mil~ on televiston campatgn
ts seen by some observers as part of
the strategy to encourage voters'
doubts about Connally's " wheeler ·
dealer" image to surface and be
favorab ly resolved in 1!!79 ra the r
than in 1980.

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASHINGTON ' AP 1 PreSident
Carter is outdom~ htm s elf '"
delivering on a pro mtse t o
dramatize the search fur alternative
energy sour""s by mstalling a woodburning stove tn the White House .
Mter making the prom1se a few
months ago , Carter was swamJX&gt;d
With manufacturers' offer s of free
stoves for hiS use . Result F1ve
stoves are being accepted , each
from a different maker .
Carter, who had solar heating
IIIS!alled for the West Wm~ water
system earlier in the year, 1s go in~
to put two wood stoves tn the Whtte
House and three at Camp Da\1d.
Md .
One stove will be mthe president 's
study in the White House IJVIng
quarters . Another wtll be mstalled m
the Cabinet Room .
But banish any thought of Carter
and his Cabinet discussing affatrs of
state around a potbellied stove . The
stove destined lor the Cabinet Room
will slip, rather unoblrustvely, 11110
an existing ftrepla"" .
One of the stoves at r..amp DaVId
will be installed m Aspen l.odge, tl1e

3- The lla1!) S.,lltlllel, Mlddle purt -l'ullleruv, 0 , Thursday, t)&lt;·t :!!&gt;. t !li~

wnh rm &amp;.• w~-1ll'r mstead of

lt•tt 1n g the tap run .

Business
•
mirror
NEW YORK 1AP 1- Life tns urer s
arc funous about a rec ent
government study of their indu:-.1ry
that the)
call
a " recklt•ss
mtsrepresentallon " of the fact s a nd
a dcl tberate attempt to mts lead
insurance buyers.
Tiu~y seem to have a case too, and
they may have won sympathy for It
at a congresstonal hearmg last week
m wh1ch they also called the report,
by the Federal Trade Commtsston,
.:btaS&lt;.&gt;d." "flawed," " dtstortl&gt;d ."
But th~re i.s another remarkable
aspt!Ct of ll t,o, on~ that uwolv~s a
distortton affectmg the fortunes of
many millions ol Americans , one
about whwh very little IS likely to be
sa1d in any future hearings .
Thts, bnefly, ts what happened :
In December 1976. th e F'TC
authorized its staff to investigat e
whether adequate cost informatton
was bemg prov tded to pro spective
purchasers of life msurance . That
report was made public July 10.
In tt, the FTC staff mterpreted
whole ltfe ms urance. whtch is often
ca lled cash value msuranre, to be a
hybrJd of term insuranct.:! and a
savmgs account that , in 1977, ytelded
a return of only 1.3 per"" nt Stnce
then the FTC has stood by 1ts staff
report.
That ftgure, said the Amencan
Counctl of Ltfe Insurance, wa s a
di st ortiO n produced by 1n va lid
assump tion s
and
s lopp y
calculations . The correct ftgure, til e
counctl saJd , was :&gt;.9 percent.
Bad a s that was . the counci l was
outraged by the assumption that
whole hie ts a hybrid of term and
s avtn~ s .
" It ts wholly li fe
m s uranrt&gt; .' · sa1d John F 1ler .
cha1nnan of Aetna Life &amp; Casualty .
He explained that the cash value
a cc umulate s tn order that th e
msurer ran guarantee a benefit at
death . It IS a n asset that, together
with a co mpany 's investments,
pern11ts tt to guarantee that death
payment.
U a person purchased term, he
conttn ued, the rates would become
so htgh as the risk increased with
age that few people could afford to
be ms ured
In whole l1fe poltc tes. however. the
company has the use of the c ash
valul' to mvest . and thus can assure
tile purchaser of a fixed premium
rate for life . regardless of age or any
detenoralton in health .
1'h1s being so, how could such an
e normous
misunderstanding
develop ' How ts tt that millions of
Amertcans still believe that whole
lift.:! msurance is a eom bination of
msurance and a savings a ceo wits ?
Who spread such nonsense ? Co uld
tl have been the insuran"" agent '
In an interVIew the day after
test ifying in Washington , James
Marttn, chairman of Massac husetts
Mutual Life, was asked those
quest •OLJ s.
Yes, he conceded , the agents
spread the misinform alton. " All of
us dJd 1t ," he said . It was a simple
easy way to describe
the
complexities . But it was an
oversimplification and it was dead
wrong."
It was, he said. · A primary case of
mi s und erstanding
our
own
product. "

.

I JUST CAN'TSTANP
TO 61\IE IT TO THEM
STRAIGHT AN'1'

ARE 'IOV t&gt;OIN6,FILMORE?
TI-\IS IS A SANK, NOT
SESAME ST~E.E. T I

MORE ...

r-------------------------11I'
1
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· ·
of opmwn

·· I
T ht'V s h ou ld b~ 1ess

I "ttt·rs
an· Wl'l('oml'd .
than :100 words long I ur subj~t·t to rPdUI'tion by th~ ~ditor 1
and must lw sigm·d with tht• signt&gt;l''s addrt·ss . "'ames may
bt· withheld upon publil'atioh. Huwt'Hr, on request.
namt·s will bt· disdost·d . L~·ttt'rs should bt· in good taslt',
A

•

•

addr~ssing issues. not pt·rsunalitit·s .

I .B~J~
II ••• ?Jtt. UU:~:

on hot-water bills . fill H
fl'"Jfl - or t.h.: utlwr I~ if of a do uh lt•
TH S8\"l'

s111 k

WHAT IN \-lEAVEN'S NAME

COLUMB US. Ohiu 11\ 1' 1
Cmcmnat1 Mueller rtnt.l Dovt•r art'
tll e only· ne w leadt.·rs thi s week 111 Ull'
12 Oh10 H1 gh Schoo l Athletic
Association footbal l reg ions.
The assonatum uses tht&gt; ftn&lt;.~l
ratmgs of the regular St&gt;ason t o
determme It s JX.ISl-Sl'f.:ISOn playoff
berths . A team Uw t wms 1ts reg 1un
automatically qualifH'S for a
semtfinal spot
t.
Moeill•r , !\o 1 st&lt;~te wiCit• 1n Tht•
As soc tated Pr ess po ll , fmall y
ove rhauled Clayton t\u rtlu nu nt .
Moeller h&lt;-~d been runn1n ~ seco nd to
North mont much of the season 111 tht'
ratmgs complied by a Columbus
firm for th e OllSAA
Moeller , the playoff vtctor tn 197;,
1976 and t977, now has IO'J .90 pOints
to 99 .25 for Nortlunont. &lt;;t'cond U11s
week m Rt&gt;gion 4.
Dover replact•d Mass tllon &lt;~S Lhe
top school in Cia" AAA Hcg 1on :1 .
Dever, second a w~k agtJ. earned
109 16 p01nLs Ul M&lt;~sslilon 's 10:1 00 .
El.st&gt;where IIl Class A/\A , Pmm!:l
Padua ag atn p&lt;~eL'll lleg1on I w1lh
111 .00 po1nLs and Wesle r vli le '&lt;orth
m Reg1on 2 w1lh 106.50 .
In Class AA, Medma Htghlancl had
85.50 pomts m Heg10 n 5, 1-'oston a
100.00 m Reg1on 6, Canal Fu lton
Northwest 75 :;o 1n Ileg ton 7 a nd
Ham1lton Badtn 7878 1n Hegton 8.
In Class A, Mogadore 's 79 00
po1nls lerl Reg1on 9. 1iffm Ca lvert
acco unted for ~2 . 25 m Hl•gwn 10,
Croo ksvtlle Wppc'll Reg 1on II wtth
66.00 and Cov m gt un's 55 75 paced
Reg1on 12

If ( ;od wt·nt on strikt•
DearS~r :

The follo";ng poem was gtve n to
me recently by a friend and I felt in
view of all the "~oings on" of the
pabt 4'&gt; weeks, it was very appropnate at this time .
I would like to share it with you
now . It was published in a September issue of the Ohl o Farmer
rn.agaz1ne .
IF GOD WOULD STRIKE
It's just a good thing that God above
Has never gone on stnke
Because He wasn't treated fair
For things He d1dn 't hke .
If He had ever on"" sat down
And satd, "That's tl, I'm throu gh'
I've had enough of those"" earth
So this is what I'll do .
I'll give my orders to the sun
Cut off your heat supply ,
And to the moon , give no more light
And run the ocean dry ;
Then just to really make iI tough
And put the pressure ur1 .
Turn off the a ir and oxygen
Till every breath is done.
Do you know He 'd be JUSttfted
If fatrness was the game,
For no one has been more abused
Or treated with disdain
Than God ... and yet He carrtes on
Supplying you and me
With all the favors of His grace
And everything for I ree .
Many say they want a better deal ;
And so on stnke they go ;
But what a deal we 've given God
To whom eve rything we owe .

Wr. don 't care whom we hurt or
hann
To gain the things we ltke,
But what a mess we'd be tn
If God would go on stMke.
- Anonymous .
THINK ABO liT IT ! ! ! - Carolyn
Thomas, a concerned parent.

.lobs will be lost
Dear Editor·
Issue No 1 ""the November ballot
will foree the payment of depooits on
beverages and will mean the loss of
hundreds of jobs of workers in the
glass and steel industries in Ohio
Glass workers who would be af.
fected are employed in Brockway
Glass Company tn Zanesville , Chattanooga Glass Company'i'n Mt. Vernon and Owens-Illinois in Toledo and
Cincimati.
This proposed law which requires
a 10 cents deposit on every bottle or
car r ·soft drinks or beer whtch is

I

nff: [)A.JI .Y SF..NTINEL
1USPS IU....I

~1~~ ~~-D[VOTF...O TO nf[
INTERE8TOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA

ROBERT HOEFUCH

Cll} [.cUlM

PubUabed dally nrept S.taniay by Tbr&lt;Mak
VaUP)' Plllbl.llhlq CemJ~Uy- MllltlD»cU.., 1~..
lll Ceur1 Sl., Ponwr.y , OhJo 45711 . BatiDNI
Offk't PboDP fl2· ZlM. E..d.ltorilll Pbooe

•-tu7.

Setoad cillu P"&amp;alr pUd al Pemf'ruJ . Ohio.

rrilaUoaaladvertiiiAC tepruet~\lld,..t. La.tm~
Aae«&amp;.ln . :1111 EurUd, -,(n _, Clrvdaad. Ob~
MUS..
Sut.cr1ptkl• NtH: DeUwnd by Cln1er
wlae~ avai.Lible il C'ftiU per wtd.. B)' M.ol.or
RCNit wkft eanitr .ervk'-t' Mt II VII liable, 0or

moalh,D.M.

The O.Dy Seatl.Dl'l. b)· mall iD Obio •ad wen
\' lrJJ.II..I.., 1111r )'l'ar SS:UM ; Sb: mftllthl UHI ;
thrN- moaU. Sit.:iG. EU..~ $311 .• ; tis
moDUli ta.•: tbrM montbl Sll-• .
TM AtiHM.'bted Pres11 !a P•tl•dnly tatJdrd
\o tht ue IM" p·•bllt·aCI.,o of all aew1 dltpekhH
cndheit to tb.. ot1nlp.ptr and aiM tbr 101121
1 .... Pl·::.lbbed bf&gt;r!"ln.

Throughout the duration of the
present stMke in the Meigs Local
School Distrtcl , teachers have
followed the instructions of Bill
Lewis, the federal medtator, and
have not negot tated tn pub!Jc or
through the press .
The same advice has been less strictly followed by the board 's
negotiating team as eVIdenced tn the
frequent statements and news
releases from the superintendent.
Although publicly stating his
wiUingness to negotiate, the superintendent has, in fact, been less U1an
e ager to meet with the teachers ·
team.
Now , in frustration the teachers
have gone public in a challenge to
the superintendent to back up his
words and meet with us. We intend
to remam in his offtce until a setLiement IS reached; we are willing •nil available - twenty-four hours a

jay .
By not meeting with the sit~n
teachers, he is, perhaps, showing his
true colors at last - and admitting
pub~ ely that settling the strtke is not
his true goal.
Instead, legal action or the threat
of it, and cutting off tolephones and
uti~ties to the building seem to be
his tactics.
At this point, is fighting the answer' Yet throughout the strike, the
attitude of board members and the
supeMntendent seems to have been
to " punish " the teachers for the
strike vote, to "show them" they
can't get away with this - ratber
than honestly trying to resolve differences either through binding arbitration or thorugh intervention of a
third party - whether it 1:-e Hoger
Lui ow, assistant supenntendent of

or Representative Ron James .
The
are
in, nor
bote~~chers
d
be not locked
th
·

are

ar mem

rs or

e superm -

I
I

ten dent locked out. The doors are
open at any time for meaningful ,
honest negotiations.
JohnW . Blaettnar,
Teac her , MetgsHighSchool

I
lI

Silent speaks out

I
I
I
I

sold ts self-tlefeatmg and ineffecllve
as t1 wlil not accomplish the ends
which 11 seeks. All the containers for
non.,-eturnable beverages only comprise 5 percent of the total daily
amount of solid waste . Tht s
proposed law totally ignores the
other 95 per""nt of soltd waste
discarded every day which is compooed mainly of newspapers, card board, food wastes and other garIJage . It would boost inflation by increasmg beverages pnces .
The alternative 1s House BtU No.
361 now in Ohto legislature wluch
provtdes for a tax on all materials
which go into garbage whi ch is
produced every day . The proceeds
from this fair taJ&lt; on all manufacturers whose products make up 100
percent of solid waste would be used
for litter cootrol and recyclmg .
Recovery of our natural resources
through recycling is the correct wa y
to deal with the problems of the envi rorunent . The Environmental
Protection Agency estimated that tf
all the cities tn the United States converted iL• garbage through recycling
we could produ"" enough energy to
replace almost half of the oil we import from the Middle East.
Unioo members want to see our
environment improved and believe
it can be done fatrly without the loss
of jobs. We, therefore, urge a vote
a gainst Issue No . 1 which provides
for for""d depostts and urge that the
public ask their legtslators to support HB 361 which provides for a fair
tax on aU tlems thatgointogarbage .
Sincerely,
Charles Forker, President
Glass Bottle Blowers Assoc .
Loca l No . 105

Doors are open

schools in Ohio, Judge Robert Buck, -

Dear Sir .
A:; a tea cher who voted against the
strike but now find myself suportmg
it , I feel I can speak to the long· suffering "silent majority" of parents
who have tried to remam neutral
and objective during the Meigs
Local teac hers stMke .
Since I am neither negotiator nor
officer for the MLTA. I am free to
reply to some of the public statemen ts I have found objectionable during
the past frustrating twenty · two
days .
First , much has been made of the
closeness of the teachers' strike vote
on Sunday, September 23. but little
has been sa1d about the only other
vote taken that afternoon .
Just before the stn ke -vote,
teachers voted t o accept or reject
the contract tenns offered by the
Meigs Local Board of Educatton at
that potnt. Only 17 teacben voted to
accept the package .
At that time the board's offer Included a $9700 minimum salary . One
board member told me personally
that the supenntendent had been
strongly urged to raise that to at
least $9600 - which, given the
teac hers' natural sentiment against
stMktng , m1ght have changed the

thwest 7J.OO . 2, Canton Central
Catholic 57 .67 . 3, Iron ton :&gt;4 .60 . 4,
Coal Grove :&gt;4 .00. 5, Martins Ferry
53.66. 6, Navarre Fatrless 52 .50 . 7,
Johnstown 51.00 . 8, Steubenville
49 .00 . 9, Uniontown Lake .S .OO . 10,
Warsaw !U ve r Vie w 45.00 .

CLASS A
REGION II - I, Crooksville 66 .00.
2, Newark Catholic 44 .50. 3, Bergholz
Springfield 39.00 . 4, Columbus
Academy 38.50 . 5, Beverly Fort Frye
38.00. 6, Bril~art Buckeye North
33.50. 7, C&lt;~nal Winchester 33.00. 6,
Sugarcreek Garaway 31.00 . 9, Crown
Oty Hannan Tra ce 30 .&amp;&gt;. 10, Woodsfte ld ~.75 .

CLASSAA

REGION 7 - I. Canal Fulton No r -

flvt: year s of m in or league
experience , has bL&gt;en acqUired by
Lh~ Cincmnat1 Heel s from the Dt•troit
Ttgers.
Tht' ac4uts1t!O n completes a deal
1n wh1ch outfielder Champ Summers
went to Detroit la st ~lay .
Burnstde . 24, was 1-1 1n 10 games
w1th th e Tigers but spent m ost of the
se ason w1th tht• Heds' Indianapolt s
farm d u~ " ' the C.1 ass AAA
Arnenc&lt;m Assoctatlon, where he
wa s 6-4 w1th a 3.00 earned run
ave ragt' 1n :J9 appeorances .

HOHSESHUW
I.A NDOVEH, Mel 1AP 1 - Dcnn1s
iJ

12-yeHr-

old chestnut geldtng, to wtn tile
$1,001) second Rmgmaster Cha llen ge
Trophy for th e serond consecutive
year
at
tht•
Wa sh1ng,ton
Internationa l Horse Show .
Th e U.S. le ad s the team
compeltl ton wtth 28 potnts. followerl
by Sw!llerlanrl w1th 22. Canada w1th
15 ~nd Great Bntam w1tll 13.

.J"

(.'()LUMRUS, Ohio 1AP I - Ohio
State quarterback Art Sehltc hter
has moved up to thtrd this Wt'Ck
among the natton 's maj or college
football passers and has helped the
undefeated Buckeyes into the No. 9
ran king in !Altai offense .
Schlichter , a sophomore from
Bloommgburg, Ohw , who ranked
fourth nationally a week at4o, has
completed 59 ' ol 107 passe s for 988
yards and ntne touchdowns. He ha s

tllrown only two interceptions m
Ohio State' s seven straight
triwnphs .
Schlichter also rank s 12th
nattonally and second in the R1g Ten
behtnd Mmnesota quarterback
Mark Carlson in tota l offense. He' s
averaging 192. 1 U&gt;tal yards tn ~II
games and 179.9 yards .
Mea nwhile, the Buckeyes, rank
ninth in total offense 14!5 .().yard
average), nintll in sconng offense
132.9 points! and No . II tn rushmg
attacks t 272.0 yards 1 among the
national powers.
Ohio State, tted for the league lead
with Michtgan , leads the l:lig Ten '"
!Alta! offense and scormg and .&lt;;&lt;-oring
defense for conference games onl y.
The Buckeyes are averaging 434 .4
yards and 3:&gt;. 7 points and yteld!ng
but 7.5 pomts m four B1g Ten
Vl ctories.
1'11e Buckeyes play the1r fourth
stratg ht home game Saturday
agambt M1 chtgan State .

like centerfield
CINC!l\l'&gt;ATI 1 AP 1 - Veteran
Ken Griffey has tossed away h1 s
crutches and ts set to battle wtth
Dave Colltns for the starting n gh t

f1eld spot on th~ Cmcmnat1 Red~ m
1980.
Grtffey underwe nt knL't! surgery
wtth 66 games left m the 1979 season
and Collm s replaced hm1 Co lhn s
wound up th e year httttng .318 and
knoclung tn 35 runs m the Rc'lls
dr tve to the champtonsh1p tn the
Nat1onaJ Leagu~ West .
Culhns vowed that he would qull tf
benched agam next seaso n
Grtffey sa 1d he IS not tn lerested 1n
playmg center field .
" No , I don 'I want I play center
field . I pla yed there the last couple
of weeks tn '78 and dtd an adequate
job, and J played there a few games
this yea r when 1Ces ar J Gt' ronu no
was hurt or stopped httt111g or
whatever .
"But then, m the seventh, e •ghth
or mnth innnmg.s, I was back ln right
fi eld. I'm not gotng for that. They
canaskme , begme , whatever .. but
the on ly position I' ll play n g hl now IS
right field ," Griffey sa 1d .
Collins slightly bettered Grtffey's
marks tn the second hall of ~
sea.!fln , outh1tll ttin~ hun by ont
percentage pomt and battm g 1n
three more runs.
Grtlfey elected for surgery on hts

WEATHERMASTER

400

by COOPER
HAVE THEM
INSTALLED
TODAY

MOST SIZES AVAILABLE

around . "

I'll agree that our school distnct
has been turned around ; I feel it will
never again be as good and strong as
before, regardless of how this crisis
is resolved. Teachers who have
given their tune and effort lor the
district may not be so willing to do so

again .
Teach ers who can leave teaching
or find employment elsewhere wUI
surely do so.
Now our school system is being
wrecked - and everyone knows who
gels hurt the most- I agree with the
student who said tbey were tbe ones
being killed; students should never
have been used on tbe battlefield at
aU .
Our fall extra - curMcular activities - tbe football team, band, '·
and volleyball team - have been
destroyed; the class time lost is
ahnost impoosible to make up this
school year. So what are the issues

ENJOY
FRESH FARM COOKING

Dana Swift
165 lbs .
Senior Tackle

Rruf~

~10,

•
WID

By BARRY WILNER
AP Sports Writer
The Pluladelph1a 76ers finally
have learned to do thtngs the easy
way . And the y' re rnalung it awfully
hard on the oppositiOn .
The uulJe e~ten i 6ers won theu- SIXth
game of the Nattonal Basketba ll
A ss oc w tJon s eas on W~dn es dC~ y
mg ht . a IJZ-110 verd1ct over lndtana

Wednesday's Sports
Transactions
By The Associated Pre!i.s
BASEBALL
American League
CLEVELAND
IND I ANS
Wa tved Paul Reusc hel , pit cher . for
the pu r pose of giving h im htS vn
conditional re lease P lace d Way r,e
Cage, f i rst ba~man , on th e-t r
Tacoma roste r ot the Pa cific Coas t
Lea gue
KANSAS
CIT Y
ROYALS
N a med Jtm Frey to manage the
ream 1n 1980.
MILWAUKEE
BREWER S
Traded Lan ce Rautznan . pitcher , to
the Kansas Cih' Royals in ex ch an ge
for Ke1.1in Gillen. ou1fielder
TORONTO BLUE JAY S
Named
Denis Menke . a coa c h So ld Dyar
Mtller , pit ch er , to the Montr eal Ex
po s
National League
ACQUi r ed

Sheldon Burnside, Pttcher . fro m
De tr otl to co mplete a .1 earlier o ea

1

wn 1c h

sent Champ Summer -:, to the

T tger-:.
PHILAD EL PHI A

PHIL LI E S
St gned Bob Boone . crtl r her . to tou r
yea r conrrac r
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Assoc1 af1 on
LOS ANGELES
LAKERS
Traded Kenny Carr , forwa r d, to
Cleveland for th e Ca1.1dl1er s ~co n ct
round draft pi cks 1n 19BO and 1981
NEW JERSEY NET S -- Ac l t\lo:t ted
Bob ElliOtt. center forward , fr om
fh e 1n1ured list Placed Cl iff Rob1n
')O n . fo r w a rd ,

on

the tn1u rea

Ea '"'lJ
nut

(!1t.; lfl

fr est1 tuoel n tl IL'S id u r an1 PlCH s I
' qll! J llile far m
t · p· q

A t Bc t"J E'-- an s S du S{Fdi_·; ~ r ~u r.;
rp•t Ut ' i i(IO U S far ms ;e ~ · ei:) II H.J '.;

There is only one : Will the
superintendent and Board be
allowed to continue '1uming the
distMct around" - until the teachers
also end like the rest of our school
system - in chaos'
·
Dorothy J. Oliver
213 Union Ave., Pomeroy

·, · f.H ! l l
( Jt

d

Pa eers CoiJCh

S ~le S

ct

1

patnful left knee because he wa s
looktng fo rwar d W playmg the 19&amp;&gt;

season
" If I had walle d unu l theend of the
season. hke they 1 Reds 1 wanted m e
to. there's no way I wou1d\·t: bt.-en
walkmg already
" I fe lt helpless. I also knew tf I
kept pla ytng, I co uld 've been nnned
for lt le. I know I dtd the nght th1ng ,"
Gnffey sa1d .
" If I had walled unttl after t11 e
se a son, I wouldn't have started
walkm!:: until the ~nd of January ."
Gnffey IS spendm g tht' wmter
exe r r 1s1ng , l1ft1n~ w ~ 1ght s a nd
stretchmg the knee He be ileves h e
wlll ht' m playmg cond1l 10n when
sprmg traHung upens.

and
bnDdtng materials

NEW SHIPMENT

!

CARTER'S

JUST ARRIVED IN AN

LAYETTE

GOWNS
KIMONOS
SLEEP&amp; PLAY SETS
RECEIVING BLANKETS
SHEETS
TOWELS &amp; WASH CLOTHS
GIFT SETS

a:rn r rC)

\) 11

WE DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DON'T DO IT;

BU !LDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US l;nHT AND COMPARE OUR
MATERIAL AT REASONABLE PI&gt; ICES .

CASH &amp; CARRY
PRICES

PRICES .

ec~~9

ALSO

QUALITY

WE
DELIVER

~A .. MS1t

SAUSAGE SHOP.
R O tJte 3 5 · Rto G re~n&lt;le Oht o

Hours :
9 :30 to S:OO
Mon. lhru Sat .
9 :30 to 8:00
Friday

CORPORATION

923 5. Jrd Ave .

992 -2709

or 992 ·6611

••

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Middleport, 0 .

Open : 7:00 to S:OO Mon . thru Fri .
7:00tol.OOSalurdav

DIAPER BAGS
THERMAL UNDERWEAR
PANTIES &amp; UNDERSHIRTS
BRIEFS &amp; T-SHIRTS

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY

6vMW

ALL NEW PATTERN

COVERALLS

•11 ,

l'r t' ;1r1, j t-l ('n ri l / S f'f \;' l r~c t o r J c~ "NI\~ 1 '' ' f''l

e1ght 1n the overtime. to pace the
Suns . Hobert Par ish had 27 points
a11d 25 reboun ds for Golden State.

ItS I

Y'"Ji lf ld. '"J f

hu 1 y O LJ (_Je t \r uL: ! t-H'I l

"Thm defensive play down the
st retch took us out of the game,"
sa1d Albec k. " They took the ball off
tile boards and put tt m the basket at
key times . Roundfield and Drew
took over the game ."
Roundfield finally was satisfied
w1th one of his performances. He
had 13 rebounds and six blocked
shots along with the 31 pomts.
Ct' ltics 100, Rockets 99
Boston edged Houston when
Cedm MaKWell made two free
throws w1th SIX seconds to play.
Maxwell, who led the Celtics with 20
pOints. was fouled by Tom
He nderson as he drove to the basket.
Pistons 104, Bullets 103
Bob Lanier's short jumper with
e 1ght seconds l•ft li fted Detroit to
\1Ctory . Pistons guard Jim McElroy
led a II s&lt;:orer s with 33 pomts.
S&lt;lnics tOS, Kings 92
Gus Will tams had 18 points and 10
asststs a nd Jack Stkma also scored
18 to pace Sea ttle . R11l llobinzine led
Kansa s C1ty w1th 20 .
SwiS 110. Warriors 108, OT
Paul
Westphal scored 37 pomts, mduding

Philadelphia
Cu&lt;:~t · h
Hilly
Cunnmgharn appt:.c ! &lt;:~t.e s hJs team s
elf orts.
" Tlle dJ.fference bet wet•n th1.s year
and last IS that last yt&gt;ar Wl' were
wu11nng games early 1n the see~son
but we were wmmng them m tllt.' la st
ft:w seconds." sal d Cun mnghHm
" The y w~rt&gt; rln~ fi ght.s ~uw wt.• are
wmmng games undt'r cuntrol and 1n
th e last few mmutes th e ge~ mes don 't
mean anytllm~ slnce we have put the
other team away ''
The S1xers put tlw Pt-l l'ers &lt;iway II!
th e first pertod , grabbtng a 34-21
lea d and eoastm ~ a s Julius ~~ r v mg
1z:; pmnts 1, Steve MIX • 2:11. Doug
Col lins 1 221 and Bub by J ones 1 201
led the wa y.
Th e Portland Tr a1l Blozer s, who
are 1!-{1. edged Denver ~Ji\.1~ 7 . The
~ u g geL'\ are at tht' olht&gt;r t'n d of the
speclrwu w1th an ~ ~ lllark.
K ermit Washm ~ton·s two foul
shots wtth 17 seconds left prov1ded
th e vl\t.ory margm [)em. t•r 's Tom
&amp;tswell coul!nltted t.he fuul a s
Wash mgton snared a rebound of a
r1u ss by Georgt· !\ kCmm s
DenHr Coach Donn lt' Wal sh W&lt;t S
upset w1th tht' rdl.'ret'Ul~. t.:Spt.·na..lly
on that loul call
.EISt' '-'"hert 1n th t• \HA . It wa s
Atlanta 1211. Clewland 118: ll&lt;"ton
110 . Ho u~ton 99. Dt't ru lt 104 .
Wash ml(tor 103: Seattle 105. Kansas
Ci ty 92, ond Phot•n" l iU, (;olden
State 108 Jn o vt:&gt;rt 1m~
Ha"b 128. ('.a\ alit'r'! 118
John Drew "nd Don Houndf1eld
each scored 31 f}()lflts . tJut tt wa s
t.h.:1r play at tht· othn end of th e
euurt that unprt' .\.'-'t'd C"lt'\ l'iand
Coac h St;m Alb"·k

l( .tl f'' l

i OLJ n&lt; d

H11b Lennard

calletl " an old-fashi oned wh1pp1ng ·

C J! 111q

&lt;::),J l.r. H ~ 1nu r ~ r d s rfl the cd r ar 1d r Jr .f:
)__.t&gt; r "-/Vf' t ~t) l) f&gt; In &lt;:, t)f• ,1 n u soon

...

tlle~t

Sophomore Center

sixth game

JO·&gt; t.l I; Hill coo k ,ng •S a lwar s g rf'ill
S s:;rnt ~ t l l!fl~ SPt!C·;11 JbOIII

~.175lbs .

Sophomore Guard

76ers

CINC I NNATI RED S -

c. T . Chapman

Swift

5-6, USlbs.

RIGHT AT THE FARM.

now?

"

•
•
zn
passzng

Griffey doesn't

outcome .
The total cost to the Board of an
addi ttofllll SIOO at the base IS about
$22.000 - much cheaper and less
trawnatic than a stMke . Were we
forced into that vote '
The entire "sad situation" is a
'talemate - and neither "side" is
entirely right or wrong . On one stde
are 140 plus teachers who must
defend their union and establish for
yet another superintendent land the
Board, again) their determination to
be bargained with in good faith . On
the other side we have the superintendent who was "right for Meigs
Local " when he was hired , and who
promised to '1um the school distMct

HALLOWEEN PARTY ANNOUNCED
A halloween party will be beld at
the Letart Fallll community building
on Tuesday, Oct. Jl at 6:30p.m. Tbe
party · is sponsored by the Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 and ill for all
children in Letart Township . Prizes
will be awarded and refrealunents
served .

OSU ace third

REDS ACQUIRE LEFTY
CINC INNATI 1APt - Sheldon
Burnside , a left-handt'll p1tc her with

Murphy rode Tus..:aloosa ,

CLASSAAA
REGION 3 - 1. Dover 109.16. 2,
Massillon 103.00 . 3, Roardman 99 .50 .
4, Macedonia Nordonia 62 .75 . 5,
Wadsworth 62 .00 . 6, Youngstown
Mooney 61.00. 7. ZanesvtUe 7u9 .70. 8.
Stow Walsh J esuit 78.50 . 9, Medma
72.78. !0, Ravenna 72.50 .

r Meet Southern Tornadoes

•

~=====-~~-====~~' ~

Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy
2nd Street
992·3586
Pomeroy, 0 .

�4- The Datly Sentmel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 20. 1979

i5'0''P~';S~,;~~~itend reception for Mr. Smith

Four more former Rio athletes to be
inducted into hall of fame Saturday

•

TocbJy's

Sports

Approxunately 150 persons attended an open reception held Sunday at Ute Mt. Moriah Baptist Church in Middleport tn celebration of the

World

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly Cramer
IU llYU's versatile Marc Wilson 1s
headtng toward the 2,()()()..yanJ rr1ark .

111ostly by a1r
Pllts burgh 19, Kavy 6: Pllt's
rugged defendt•rs bwld a trap for
Mikt• Sh~rlot·k etnd spod !\j&lt;t\"y'S
LmiJieinlslit:'tl rerurd
Auburn 28, W&lt;.tke ForL~~ t 14 .Jut·
{'rtl&gt;b."5, t\uburn 's stron~. phantom ·
luppL'd tailback. should • dd to ills
S('ormg laurels
:'\ utre Damt· ~.South Cuolma 19 :
\'t•n•r &lt;.1 letup fur tht• 'wt•ary lnsh .
Th l·( ;cum•coCkscuuld ~tough tf tl1e
lnsh snooze
:'\urtt1 Carulma 27, lo~ ast Carol!na
ltl A .L:&lt;K&gt;U mcttC'hup bt•twl'en Nc·s
Arnos Letwrenct&gt; and F ("s Anthon}
( "ollms
J&gt;urtlul' 37. Nurthwl'Stt:&gt;rn o ·nll'
Wlid c&lt;.tts
have
scort·U
h~·u
touchdu'A-TIS 111 tht•lr last fDur gar nt's
·nw fan11ne coJJtHJues .
Wash mgt on l 7. UCLA l4 lli•·
s lLUubt·nn~ giant awakens after t~·1;
~ai ling st&gt;thnck s
The other s. onct· un·r l!~htly :
EAST
1-\· ·rm St 28. Wt•st V&lt;i 7: Bostur1
l'olk~t· H. Anny 10 : ( 'ol~utt' 17.
Col umbia i Cornt· ll H. ]);trtiih&gt;u!.h
7; Pnncetun 2V, Han·ard I; Bruwn
22, Holy Cfoss 19; Yale :m. Pt•nn 7:
SyracuS&lt; 2[. Mtaiill •l,. la . 1 Ill :
O..•laware :12. Wm . &amp; Man H .
SOt.:TH
Man· land 2.1, Dukt' II,

(;t•or~la

27 ,

Kentu :·kv J:l. Flonda 22. Tulsa JO.
Mi sstsstPpl 28, Vanderbilt 7; Tulane
Z:J. (;t'Or!,'lo Tech 17: \lt ss. St . 20. S.
Mtss H: ( 'kmsun 19. :\ . U.rohna St.
15. ('Jti!del 20. W&lt;,fford I. Mt··mphl~
S1 2]. ~ Tt•xa s St. Ii
MIOWEST
,'\1J ssoun 28. Kcm sas S t 1:
\1mnt•sut&lt;:~

:n.

successor.
For
Frey,
no
doubt
a
knowledgeable baseball man .
Wednesday saw the fulfillrncnl of a
tifelong dream he almost gave up on
a time or two .
"This is sometiling I've thought
about. I guess, stnce I was a ktd, " he
said . "Anybody who grows up
wanting to be a ballplayer and then
staying in professiooal baseball as
long as I have would lt ke to thmk

Getting the coke our

~:1.

Toledo H , Kan sas 24. ( &gt;klahu111a

~~

20; Ball St 26, Bowling

(~n~t.'n

ROBERT McNULTY

JAMES KNOX

JACK FINCH

I'LARK BAKER

IUO GHANDE - Three dtffercnt
d&lt;•rades of Rio Grande athletes w1ll
be remembered when this year 's in·
rluclres into the Hall of Fame are introduced at hall-ume of the Kto
Grande Homecorrung basketball
game Saturday
Two lllembers of the 1920's
athletic teams, a war year player
and a 1974 graduate are this year's
sei&lt;'f'led honorees. Clark J . Baker,
James F:lrncr Knox, Charles Rubert
McKulty, and Jack Fmch will join
the :14 prevtously inducted Hall of
f&lt;'&lt;:~me membt•rs .
Baker represented Rio Grande m
football. basketba ll, and baseball
dunng the 1920's. The college yearbook "The Gra nd ion .. speaks of hiS
" nerve and headwork " on the fool-

ball fteld. "Bake", played huv r.- 1n
end runmng and deadly tackling ."
James Knox IS the second inductee
from the 20's. Klw&lt; played two sports for three consecutive years. 26
through 29. He captained the '27·'28
basketball team and played halfba ck on the football squad.
Kno&lt; as the recipient of the Btng
S&lt;'holarstup 1n 1927 for hi s S&lt;•lel'lion
il.S HJ u (;rnadl•'s oubtanding athletr .
He was kn own throughout loca l
bas ketball ctrcles as a long shot arttst. A Wilm[ngton, Oluu, paper of
tune cred tts Knox wtth having made
eight shot&gt; in one season from pas1
center court.
Charl es Robert McNulty tran sferred to Rio Grande from Alfred
Holbrook College m 1941 and Im mediately became a ~tandout in Hio

Grande Athlellcs .
Ill; a football player, McNu lty was
named to the Assoctated Press .~11 0hJO College Football Team . In itself
such a selection is an honor , but eve n
more amazing is that McN ulty won
the hdonor the year 1{1 o Grande
scored ordy 12 points in etght games.
lostng one contest 104-D . Rut tlw
game was not an indicatton of Hw ':-.
football sptnt as the Mon•lt&lt;•&lt;Jd
~tuden t paper (following t~w g&lt;Hflt.' 1
indica ted - · Playing the L'llltrc
game with only two substitutes , f Ht u
Grande) presented a n example of
('ourage, sporl"Srnanship, and plain
old fashioned guts never equalled HI
Jayne Stadtum."
McNulty also played basketball
fur Rio Grande and was later named
the college's out~tanfhn~ &lt;tlhl!' l t' uf

1941-42 .
.Jat·k Ftm·h was the first in what
ha.'i proven to be a tradition of excellent Kw Grande dJstance runners
from 1970-74 . F10ch ran tra ck and
c rus.."'i .....uuJitry for H..io Grande,
quallfymg for !he na tiona ls in both
sport.s . HIS ltrne of 4:05.6 earned hun
a fourth place rwllonal finish in 1974.
F1r1 ch \-\ets the rec1p1ent of the
~ewt (Jillw Trophy m 1974 wtuch
syllliJoi!Zt"i tht:: co !lege's uutstanding
et l hlell'.'i
All f,.u r of these ge ntlemen
represent the !Jest of Rio Grande
athlelll'S Those who layed With or
mav hate l]eard about their exploits
wm; ·1 want to ITllSS the Hall of fame
&lt;T renwntes Oct. 'll a! halfttrne of the
Ito, basketball game

i 1-'lttsbur~h 1. ·

EJ :

"But we 'rl' not tn'Ul~ t o figure out
thtngs that far ahead. Sunday ts all
the farther I wanllo look . Too ma11y
1Jungs ca n happt•n ."
The Brown s st1ll fact~ anutlw r
ro und of mtradn'lsi onal rn::~trht&gt;s
wtlh Hou s ton. P tll sb ur gh and
Cincmnat1 as well as cltLI\tws w1th Sl.
Louis, Philadelphia, Sea ttle , \lta llll
and Oakland .
" What we 've got to do 1s eonlmut'
to grow and stay fret' elf ftJrth t'r
mjunes. If we do, we ha\'e il ch&lt;Hil't'
to be a good team, a Vt1 r)' good
learn." Rullgltano satd.
Good enough for the playuffs '~
"'1'here you go again ," tht• St"c.:on dvear l'Oach replied

Nat10nal Bonketball Assoc•at•on
At A Glance
By The A!isociated PreH
Eastern Conference
Atlant1c Div•s•on
W . L. Pel .

liit ~· \or

27. Tt•xe~.'i ( 'hn:-:.i I all 14 ,
Texi:l:-. A&amp;M .1:!, Hi l'l' 10: Ark;.HL&lt;.&gt;as

St 10. l.iinw.r 7
FAR WF'.~T
Aflli.Jf1CI St 25, Utah St . 14 :
('olo rad u .St . 20, A1r For et' i:
Stanford :l8. Oregon St. 12 : Hawa ii

2o. El P"so 14. tlregun 25.
Was!HII Klon St. 2\l: Utah H. '""
1&gt;1ego St :

they have tht&gt; a btlity to m cma~t! :1
ma;or h.::a~e lt:am .
.. And gmng beyond that. to ~et an
oppurturnty tu manage il good cl ub ,
&lt;J wtnnm~ cl ub . IS t'\"t'n mort.' th:m
Rrly&lt;&gt;nt' could expecl ..
Fo r tht• Roy;.t\s , Wednt• s day' s
dcllon ma\' be !.ht• bt~u; est gamble
they ever. took . For one tlltn~ .
ne1iher owner t: wm g Kauffman nur
c;t'nt&gt;ral Mr~na~t&gt;r .lot· Hurke ht~ s
t•ver ~ 1d why Ht.• rwg, who gwdt•d
the tl!am to thret• d1 VISIOn
champ10n~1ps m four years. was
fJrt•d But 111ust obSt'rVl'rs agret' 1t
was bet"ause of s tdtl:'rnents ht•
O&lt;.Tasionally made that wert' e rJtical
of the club's failun· to brtn.~=: tn flt'W
ple~ yt•rs

saJd Hullglian,.) un

PhdodPIPh•a
Bos ton
NewYork

6
5
4

0 I 000
1 71 4
3 571

wastlmgTon

7
I

4

333

New Jers.ey
11
Central 01 Y ISIOO
San Anton •o
3 2
Detro•t
4 3
Aflan tn
4
lnd•nna
3

100

375

H ous ton

')

.t

333

Clc&gt;wland

')

6

]50

GB
I '~

2 1 ••

4
41,

bOO
57 1

SOO

We-:.tern Conference

:1

1

1 1 :~

1' '

2' '

MldW€5f 01VI5100

1

MilwoukeP
Kansas (dy

6

J

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(hi(dQO

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4

851
500
4]9

utatl

1 S

Denver

0

7

167
000

'J ' J
3
41 7
6

8

0 l 000

4

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St•nllle

4
3

Go lden Statf'
San D•eyu

3
3

Wednesday 's

4
4

667

3

500
500

4

~79

4
41

479

4
1

WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

SEEKS DIVORCE
In Meigs County Cummon Pleas
Court Shirley Yvonne Turner. Ray
Ohio , filed sui t for divorce fromOair
Arthur Turner, Rt. !,Rutland.
Alice faye Gardner fiJed sutt
against Michael Vertin Gardner for
•upport under the Reciproca I
Agreement AM

A nice
thing to do

PaCifiC OIVt S IOO

PorTland
LO'&gt; Angei(&gt;S
Phoen 1x

Casey Kasem

;

1

Game~

A tl dn tn 1'lB. Cl eve land 118
Ph• ladeiPh•n 1]7 , lnd•ana 11 0
Detro •! 104. Wa st1 1ng ton 103

Boston 100 . Hou s ton 99
Port1Mll1 88 Denver Bl
Phoen•)( 11 0. Golden Sla te 1rl8 . OT
~f'n tl e 105 , K.:HlSas Ctfy 91
Thursday 's Games

MINING
TECHNOLOGY

Ch•ra go dl Utah
M•lwaukee af San D•ego

To soften palTll brushes and rollers
after dean111g , put a small amoun t
of fabrt c softener on them and tiley
dry ~ke new .

-/ ..,
.

orgamzt-~tiDn

man ·

N ew York at Ph dadelph•a

San Anton• oat Oetro• f
Wash•ngton at Indiana

RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

,..

AND

TUNE-UP $469s
SIX CYliNDER ENGINE

Kansas Clfy at Los Angeles
Ch1Utgo at P ortland
Ph opn, x a I ~ea ftl e

COMMUNITY COLLEGE
245 ·5353

When
kicks1het

GIVE

it all

t.r...

AVOID WINTER STARTING PROBLEMS AND

446-9800

2 PIECE
SNOW SUITS
Nylon Taffe ta , water repe llanl.
po lyes ter fib er fill , knit waste ,
collar and cuf fs, b ib front pant
w ith concea led elas ti c legging ,
suspenders with buck le snap
fasten er .

GIRLS .... _......... 39.95
LADIES' .. _... _......148.95
1

RIO GRANDE - The second a nnual Rio Grande College Fatr wtll be
held 111 the college's cafetena. Oct.
30, 7-9p.m.
Over 30 bu s 1ne sses and
organizat ions are scheduled to participate in the informational, open
forum.
Larry Landaker, a 1973 graduate
of Rio Grande with a B.S. degreein
Communications, and now an account executtve for TV -2 tn Da)1on.
wtU provide the keynote address .
Landaker, since gr&lt;:~duation, has
been an instructor of Radi o,
Television and Ftlrn at Mtarru
Umverstty, Oxford , and manager of
promotion and development for the
Miami University telev1s1on swtion

~;

SJ .'\ tem

P~

OF SHOES

LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS

~

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Man thr 1J S.1t 8 OOf1 m toqp m
')u 11d.1y 10 JO to l i JO ~1 n c1 S to Q p rn

1'1./f \( RIPTION S

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Home Carpet
Clftaning
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Ron .1 ld H,1nn1ng . R Ph

heritage house

20% OFF ALL MERCHANDISE

~

Pharmacy

m

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLY

II

RENT
FOR
1 ONLY

S}OO P ER HOUR II
(~ · Hour Minimum)

L.-------------

PH 91779;1

STAR SUPPLY CO.

Middleport

I .

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MARGUERITE SHOES
102 E . Main

Pomeroy, Ohio

Insurance Company; Ohio Bureau of
Empl oyment Services;'Ohio Department of Adrrunistralive Services;
Ohio Educatwnal Television Nework
Curnnussion ; Ohio Valley Bank;
Pleasant Valley Hospital; Southern
Otuo Correct tonal Faclity ; and
Stauffer Chemical.

with any interested persons," satd
Thomas .
Companies ttnd urgaruz.atwns pa rticipating in thts year 's event are :
A.shland Oil: Austin Powder Company , Bob Evans Farms . Inc .;
Buckeye Conm1unity SerVIces: Central Operating Co .- Phtlip Sporn
Plant ; Federal Mogul : Foote
Mineral Company; Galha County
Welfare Department ; Gallia.
Jackson, Meigs County Menl&lt;ll
Health Center; Goodyear Tire and
Hubber Company; Holzer Medica l
Center; Internal Revenue Servic..:e;
J . C. Penney; Landmark; Uck ing
Memortal Hosptl&lt;ll: McNally Co .:
Marines : M.B.A. program , Wright
State University : Metropolitan I jfe

His topic will be "The H1o Grande
Grduate - How Prepared to Meet
Success."
l'eg
Thomas, dtre ctur
of
placement service!i for H10 Grande.
explained the purpuse of the fatr as
three-fold .
"Ftrst ," said Thomas, "area
studenl,, both htgh sc hool and
cull e~e, can sit d.uwn with the company representatiVes and discuss
educatJOnal directions the students
should persue to increase their employment potential in that particular
field ...
"Secondly . company representallves become belter acquainted
w1til the personal resources of this
area for actual JOb recruitment ,"
she sa td .
"And finally, 11 pruvtdes, in
somewhat of an Informal setting, a
chance for students lo expcnence
some of the aspects of future em ployment interviews.··
Thomas stressed the tn ·
formallonal aspects of the ca reer
fatr.
" The fair ts not he ld for actual JOb
placement. Representatives wil l be
seated at ;ndivtdual tabl es
dtscussing educational d1 rect ions

r-v~~-exr;:a-;--ooct.-r--l

1
I

~

1

1
1

I
I
I
I

t=lnrist Since 19S7

&lt;:2

fo~
FLORIST

I
I

PH. 992-2644

352 E. Main, Pomeroy
t __ Y~FTI2_~~i~--J

AT

VILLAGE PHARMACY
WE HONOR AlL 3RD PARTY

PAYMENTS
TliOSE 1NCWDED ARE MEDIMENT,
OHIO MEDICAID, W. VA. MEDICAID,
OHIO COMPENSATION, V.M.W., VA, H.E.W.,

AND NOW TWO NEW ONES PAID PRESCRIPTIONS PLAN
AND
p.c.s.

VILLAGE PHARMACY
271 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.! EARN EXTRA MONEYI

,.*********************************************************t...

.•• A
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-: N

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:

ROUTES

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!

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:
•••
:
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FOR

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•

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••

APPLICATIONS

CARRIER

.

$

..

NOW ACCEPTING

••• R
: I
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: E
•
!5
••
!T

.

STOREWIDE SALE

t\

SWISHER LOHSE

RAND

'i.

Hutchison, Colwnbus, nieces; Miles
Manley and Herman Mayo, nephes.
Colwnbus; and Mary Saunders,
COlumbus, a sister.
Also attending were tile Rev . and
Mrs . Henry Key , Jenny and David,
Co lumbus; Mrs . Mae Bunch ,
Detroit, Mich . ; Carl Stevens,
Marysville ; Gladys Stevens, Jane
Strickland, Brenda Strickland, and
Warren Win•ton, Canton; and Rollin
Mayo, Ironton .

WMUB.

•
·o

OUR TRICK IS YOUR TREAT

Get professional
results at a
fraction of the cost.

chocolates &amp; confections

SAVE GASOliNE
Good Thru Nov . 23, 1979
Please Call In Advance For Appointments

MAE CRAWFORD
Mrs . Mae Crawford, New
Brighton, Pa., d 1ed Wednesday . She
ts survived by one son, Gerald,
several grandchildren and two gre.at
grandchildren .
Graveside servtces Will be held at
I .etart Falls Cemet~ry Saturday at 2
p.m . with the Rev . Earl Shuler offlctattng .

HALLOWEEN
TRICK OR TREAT SALE

CLEANING

ALL PARTS AND LABOR IS GUARANTEED
Set Engine Dwell
Replace PCV Valve
Adjust Timing
Replace Condenser

they were led through a haunted
house. Pizza, cokes, chips, and min ts were served. The ·group sa ng
" Happy Birthday" lo the honored
guest as she opened her gifts . Th e
rest of the evening as spe nt dancing
Attending were Ktm Kush, Lois
Rush, Steve Bunch. Barb Thomas.
Dorsel Thomas, Darlene Dunn, !.in den Dunn, Jonathan Dunn. Paula
Curmingharn, Mtke .Thomas. H&lt;1ndy
Bunce, Donnie Bunce , Mr . and Mrs .
Larry Bunt-e, Mr . and Mrs . Don
Rea , and the hosts .

A Halloween carnival wtll be held
Saturday from 5 to 9 p .m .
There Wlll be a supper with
homemade soup, pies, ca kes, and
hot dogs with servtng to begtn at 5
p.m . frames , h.ayr1des, country
store, and swee t s hop.-; will open at 5
p.m . and at 6:45 p.m. costume
judging will take place 1n four
categones, pre_,;chool, grades one
through three, grades four through
six, and ~rades seven to adult.
Costwnes will be judges for prettiest, ugliest , funniest, and most
original
At 7: 15p.m . the games will open
and these wiJI mclude ftsh ponds .
pwnpkm ptckup , bal loon dart . clown
toss, dish throw, pumpkin face toss,
jewe lry booth, TV game, fortune
tellers, and balloon sales.
DraWing for door prizes wtll take
place at B 30 p.rn.

decorated w1th a bouquet of fall
nowers. Cards for the honoree were
placed tn a basket decorated with
rtbbons m fall colors . The Rev .
Henry Key, former pastor, opened ·
the reception with the in vocation .
In addition to guests fr om
Pomeroy, Middleport, Kutland, Bidwell , Gallipolis, Cente r Pomt and
other netghboring l'Ornmunities,
others attending included Mrs .
Stallworth of New York, and Ruby

Second Rio Grande career fair set

!

\'IHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
CARPET

Plus Tax

•
•
•
•

came in costume . After arriving

iJ/11/U/1/Ic'Ui

the punl'h !JuwJ: Mrs . Erv1n
Hwngardncr at the eoffet' s~rnn..
and Mrs . Anwld Richards served
ca ke , and Mrs . Ernest Bowles and
Mrs . Julia Will iams the ice cream .
Others assisting were Mrs . Becky
F:nglish, Mrs . Hobart Guggms, and
Mrs . Elizabeth Milton .
The refreshment Ulble fetured a
ca ke decorated in fall colors and inscnbed " Happy IOOth Blr'thday ,
Charli e." Another ("ake was

..._

*V-8's AT SPECIAL PRICES ALSO

• Replace Points
• Replace Plugs
eSet Timing
e Rela~e FrJel Filter
eReplace Air Filler

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Thomas &lt;i
Bailey Run Road, honored thetr
daughter. Metinda , With a party in
celebration of her 16th birthday.
A Halloween theme was carrted
out in the decorations and the guest.s

ri/

MASONS TO MEET
Middleport Masomc Lodge will
observe past ma•ter's night at 7
p.m and wtll l'Onfer the master
masun degree alw htghlighting lhe
meeting will be the presentalton of
~year wards.

}Q.Jwant

RIVERSIDE AMC JEEP
FALL SERVICE SPECIAL

(,I /'Ill/

AT

Frtday 's Games
All an t a at Nrw Jer5ey

In tllat light, 11 was mtercst1n~
U1at ot least threl' UJnl'ti durmg h1s
u1truduc twn to tilt' Kan.sa s City
11 \t•llia, Frt'y referred tu hull.st'lf a:-.
'"an

right out of my reach , I use my
husband's old handerchicfs for
wiping off excess make-up and blotting tipslick . The handkerchiefs can
be washed over and over and the[r
softness seems extra kmd to my
skin.
Also many worn bath towels have
a still usable section large enough w
make kitchen aproos . I re-hern the
ptece and simply string a cord
around the top hem fo r a tie SOPHIE
DEAR POLLY - When making a
casserole or other dish that cas! Is for
cracker crumbs try using cheese
crackers. They give the dish a s ubtle
flavor that enhances the taste . CATHHYN
OEAR POLLY - When stored
from one holiday sason to another
large ribbon bows often get
squashed flat. Stuff each loop of a
bow with crushed tissue paper .
When removed the bow will be full
and pretty as new - MARY
Polly will send you one of her
stgned thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers iJ she uses your favortte
Pomter, Peeve or Problem in her
co lumn . Write POLLY'S POIN TERS in care of this newspaper

Holiday projects were diScussed
al lhe recent meeting uf the Lad ies
Auxiliary of the Big Bend Ottzens
Bend Radi o Oub, Inc. held at the
home of Mrs . Leona Krautter .
Plans were made to g1ve to the
Veterans Memonal Hosptl&lt;ll toy
fund ai'Ong with the Children ·s horne
111 Gallpoils . Door prizes were
donated by Patty Capehart and won
by Kate White . MemiJers were
reminded of the Halloween party
and potluck dinner to be held Frtday
night at the Grange Hall, 7 p.m.
Each family is to take a meat dish
and a covered dish or desse rt. There
will be a hsh pond for the children, a
cake walk, and costume pnz.es wtll
be awarded .
Next meeting will be on Nov . I at
the home of Mrs . White wtth Shirley
Gibbs and F:lhel Drake as hostesses .
Coffee, tea, homemade vegetable
soup and crackers were se rved by
Marlene Wtlson and Margaret
Wyatt.

Birthday fare held

Malena!• to make Chmtmas
stockings for chi ldren confined to
Veterans Memorial Hospttal were
distributed at tile Tiwrsday meeting
of the Bradbury Vanety Cl ub held at
the horne of Mn. Ca rolyn Searles
The stock.Jn~s are to be completed
by the next meeting at which time
~hey Wlll be stuffed with coloring
boolu; and crayons Members will
also work at that time on mak.Jilj(
favor.; for the hospttal.
Devotions by Mn Searles opened
the meeting with Mrs . Berni ce Wirm
giving the treasurer's and
secretary's report. For roll call
members named a good deed they
had done the mooth before . Potluck
was llerved following a grace 1n
unison.
Prayer closed the meeting Attending were Rose Carson, Dixie
Sayre, Lynn Sayre, Bernice Wtnn,
Sharon Wright , Carolyn Searles,
Amy Searles, and Vtrginia Whitlatch .

Tuesd"l

14
SOL:THWEST

Bradbury
club meets

Browns' coach mum
on playoff chances

H1 chmon d 2(), Cmnnnat1 1:•. Iowa 22.
WtSt·on sl JI 20; W. \11dllgan 18 , Oh ll)

u

DEAR POLLY - What am I doing
wrong in getting angel fa&amp;! cake out
of the pan? I make mine from scratch and they are S&lt;l good and I would
like to know tf there is a way to
ernove them without spoling the
loo!u; of the cakes. - MRS. D.!.
DEAR MRS. D.l. - I do not know
how you are removtng your cakes
from the pans. The following method
works periectly for me so you might
try it. Alter removng the cake from
the oven I immediately invert the
pan 1wilh cake in it) and lei it hang
in the pan Wltil completely cool,
which ts usually about an hour.
Then loosen the cake from tbe pan
by sltpping a long lhin spatula down
close against the pan, pull it ou1 and
repeal until it is loose all around . Do
same aroW!d the center tube . Shake
inverted pan •harply as you hold
your hard under it to ca tch the cake
when it drops out, then tum nght onto a cake platter - POLLY
DEAR POIJ.Y - Now tilat the
cost of facial tissues has priced them

·-

Illmoi s 12. \1IanH 0

Oriole coach new
KC Royal manager
KANSAS CITY, Mo. 1 API Frey's the name - as m fry .as m
"out of the frying pan and mto U1e
fire ."
The Kansas City Royals had to run
for cover Jim Frey . an obscun·
gentlemen who labored 14 years in
tile rrunor leagues and patd 16 years
wortil of dues as a scout . coach and
minor league manager tn the
Baltimore Oriule urgamzallon, was
introduced Wednesday as Herwg 's

Wllh Mrs . Virgima Stallwmth ,.f
New York , regiStering the guests
Mr:s . C.&lt;lrnpbell Ha11'er presided at

Projects discussed

By Will Grimslt&gt;y
Down in th~ football -mad
Southwest, l'Owboy l'Ountry, they
play a little game called "Gel the
Top Gun." It's swcidal. Somebody
knocks off the btg guy and the
becomes
the
knocker-&lt;Jffer
unmedtate target for every brash
kid who walks miD the saloon .
Texas beats a power -pa c ked
Oklahoma The U&gt;nghorns , lTl turn .
gel blown out the wmdow by
underdog Arkansas . Now Arkansas
has to face up to a tough and fe tsly
Houston . It's the week 's colleg&lt;•
football spectal, matchm g the
l'Ountry's No. 4 and No . 6 rank&lt;~!
elevens.
flonda State ts the only other Tup
Ten team ltkely m trouble . faCing
Lmtisiana State m the becUa111 of
Bawn Rouge .
Last week's wily : a career htgh uf
4&amp;-9, .827, including the Arkansa '
upset. Season : 266-80. 756
Houston 17, Arkansas 10 : If Coach
Lou Holtz sa)'S hts Rawrbac ks are
ovflll'rated, wt:&gt; 'll havt• to lakl' has
word for Jt.
Alabama 42 , Vtrgmta Tl~· h H ~''
1. how sweet 1t smdls . Thl' Cnmsun
l'ide turns up !L'i nose at less .
Nebraska 38, Colorado 6 Jarv1s
Redwine, averagmg close to seven
yards a carry, adds to Chuck
Fairbanks' miseries
Southern Cal43, Caltforma 14 : Tiw
TroJanS are btg and deep enough not
w allow a letdown after the
emotional Notre Dame game .
Ohio State 32, Michigan Swte 20 :
Sophomore Art Schlichter fill s tht•
&lt;ur w1th footba11 s - a new Buckeyt•
lr a demark .
Oklahoma 45, Iowa State 7 The•
Sooner s' speed and power buys rw1
their optiOns beh111d a !me that
averages better than 25Q pow1d s.
Lowstana State 25. Flonda State
20 . The Bayou Bengals. who almost
knocked off USC, should shak&lt;• up
tile standtngs wtth thts one .
Texas 28. Southern Methodtst 14
With SMU's Mtke Ford hors dt'
combat. tile Longhorns h~vl' a bt g
quarterback edge wtth Donnte
Little .
Mtchtgan 33. Ind1ana 14 Tiw
Wolverines s hould ha1.•e sumt•
trouble wttil the Hoosiers' Ttm
Oir!ord, a near 60 percent pass
e&lt;mpleter .
Brtgham Young 31. New Me:m·o

IOOth bi,1hday uf C. 1.. !Charli e 1
Smith
The reception was hosted by Uw
Missiooary Society of the Chur ch

MIDDLEPORT
AND
POMEROY

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PHONE

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992-2156 ...~..
OR

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992-2157 ~

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BETWEEN

It

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8:30 &amp; 5:00

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�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . , Thursday. Oet 25, 1979

G«:&gt;m·ration Rap
II~

ll• ·lt·n and 'itw Bun..!

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BEST
OR LEAS!' - IN THE OPPOSITE

SEX

RAP :
The September issue of Co-Ed
magazine printed a hst of thmgs
girls (guys) like least about the opposite sex .
Some of them were : obscene
language; insincere "lines ": wild
styles; people who try ID change you
into their ideal instead of accepting
you as you are ; girls who light up
and then ask if you rrund 1f they
smoke . Then there are "equality "
things : many girls said they resen ted it when guys ask them to mend
or iron their clothes: and fellows
were unhappy With girls who leave
aU the decisions to ihem .
High on my own li;1 of dislikes are
boys with really bad table manners :
and know-1t-alls .
Why don't you ask your rea ders
what turns them off most m other
teen-agers ' The ir an!lwers mighr
help . ljke I asked my boyfnend
what bugged him about me , and he
said , " The way you put your hand to
your chm when you talk ." I d1dn 't
realize I did that , but now I un derstand 1t's beca use I'm try1ng to
hide a slight double chin I've always
been seU-('oneJOus about. 1 He says
he likes it, so that 's that 1- J UST A
SUGGESTION
DEARJAS
Fine idea :
Readers AJI. !low about sendmg
us your " fav onte lrnlat1ons " about
the opposite sex' Ha bi l';, man nensrns. atlltudes - whateve r turn'i
you off should ma ke n ~ ood turnedon colwm1tn Decembe r - HE I.E\!
DEAH HEADERS
Le t 's don 't stop at tun\-offs'
Please also rnemon the thinKS yo u
like best m boyfnends or girlfnends.
As m. " What IS m y Ideal man '"
''What is my Ideal women ')'·

Okay ' - SUE
PEH SON AI. TO " 12 AI'D
HEAJDY '' i.l5ten to Knsty Me··
Nichol who ays, .. GroWing up too son
stunts your groW1h '.. - HEJ £1'
AND SUE
DEAR HEJE;.J AND SUE ·
Tw o yers ago I ran away from
home My parents went through a Jut
to get me back, and I'm really surf)·
I caused all that trouble and did the
Uungs I did . I've chan~ed a lot smce
I was a dumb 14 . I s how it 1n
everything I do .
But Mom and Dad don t 1(1 ve me
achance to earn !he rr trust They
check on me all the tune . lean '! date
or even sleep over at a girUn end 's
housed
If I ask for just a l1ttle brt of
freedom, they renund me how I blew
It once . Whtcan I do ' - !Jii CHAJ;.JS
DEAH II\ CHAJNS :
If you've really become a different
person, then let 's hope your mother
and father read this column . Our
word to them IS :
Dear Pamels of "!. C." : If, after
two years, you can 't let up on an obviously changed daughter . then
maybe she had a reason to run away
at age 14. For Pete's sake , leam a
Uttle trust before you lose her enl!rely . HElEN AND SUE

DENNIS KARR HOSPIT ALIZ EO
Dennis !Putt) Karr, Jr ., formerly
of Racine, is senously ill at Uruver sity Hospital , Columbus. Cards may
be sent to him there, Room 1008.

NAK
C.B. and ELECTRONIC
EQUIPMENT

moved to a new
IOCjltion, 604 2nd 51 ., St . Rl .
33 in Mason, W . Va. Will
Reopen Sat ., Oct. 27th.

Plans for party at
Athens Mental Health
Center made by group
Plans for ~ party for th~ 29 women
at the Athens Mental Hea lth Ce nter
on Oct. 29 were made when the Eleeta Circle of the B H Sanborn
MISSIOnar)' Sudety ' Middleport r'rr ·
st Baptist Church, met recently at
the hom e of Mrs Sarah D. Owen .
Gtft.s Yt1ll be taken for e1::1ch one 1::1 t
the party by the members . AJ&gt;u
planned was a party t o be held at U&gt;t•
Pinecr est l'ursrng Home, Gallrpolis,
next month. Mrs . F reda Hood and
Mrs . Franres Smart wlll h&lt;:~ve
charge of the party wrth Mrs . Owen
to have the devolions .
World Corrun umty Day was an -

4-H news
POMEROY - The Mergs Count)
Jwuur Leaderstup 4-H Clu b \I ll'!
Sept. 18 and Od 10 at U1e Me&gt;g.&lt;
County Exten."ilon Offill' It~nL')
diS&lt;:ussed and a p~r O\cd Included,
meetmgs would be held on t h•·
second Wednesda)· of ever~ rn nnU1 .
Awa r ds N1~ht whi ch wou ld be he ld
O&lt;·t. 2 at Hoyal Oak Park
New offi cers e lected were Tam llll c
Starcher . presrdent , K II"
Young. vtce pres1dent, and Apnl
Parker. n ew~ report er. Stl('lfl~ ~~
movJe was planned for No\' 18 A
special Chnstmas party 1s be1ng
planned for the children of low.
mcome families 1n Mei~s Count y.
Hefreshments were se rved by J ean
Spencer . The next meetmg wrll !,.,
Nov . 14 , 7: 3() p.nL at the Me1gs County ExtensiOn Off&gt;re, at thi s t m1c
fina l plans Will be nwde for the
Chri,tmas party

nou nced lor Nuv . 2 at the Mrddleport
F1rst Bapli&gt;1 C.1lun·h . Coolu es will be
provided by the hos1 rllUrch with
Mrs_ Owen. Mrs Smart and Mrs .
l:knlll't' Bakt~r.ch.almMn tu Utke till'
cookr es , and Mrs Fn&gt;Ua Hood and
Mrs . Kathf'ryn M t~tzJ,!e r to as.':it8 t 111
th•: ser.·mg
The EIL"l.'ta Ctrc le wlll hLive tht.•
pro~ralll at the &amp;an iJurn So&lt;.· Jcty
meetln~ at wh 1rh tune the pro!=! rum
W11 1 be on bread!; of the world . Till'
L'lrc lt• wi ll ~kt• M,·xw.:-tn bmarl
M~ . Owen giive devutwro Then•
was a ea rd from Mrs Glyn da Hr ce.
l:lapli st S&lt;: holarshr p s tudent. read by
\irs Metzger . {lnd Mrs . .Baker
wt•lcomed Mr~ Ht'va Smuns &lt;ux.l
Mrs . 8('[1)' Dermy t o the meN rng
Members were re nu nded to take
,·etre e~ nd .shi-irP cH1I cl es tu the next
mt•etJng. A Lh.s(·ussion as hl'ld on th(•
overl.:wd proJect
A l'CJ rd wa'i signed for Mr.s (iwtn ·
n1e \\'1li te and lhl' program by Mr.s
HPlen Bodun er as entitled "All
(;oct's Ouldren Need F:duea ti on ...
Other.; ottendmg werl' Mrs E\'a
!lartil'y , \Irs Ethel Hughe s, Mrs
IJII1an Demoskey. and Mr s. Pari
Hoffman .

fOMML!IIITY DA \'
TO BE CELEBRATED
Plans for the obse rva nce of World
( ·ommunrty !Jay un Nov 2 "I thl'
Middleport First Bapt rs l Church Will
I~ rrlalic at a meeting of key wom en
~' nday at 1.30 p .m . at the Mid ·
dle p,-, rt Church . Mrs (A ~rclc lia Ben tz. preSi dent. asks that a ll ke1
women plan to attend th e lll C{'ltng ~
that arrangemenLs can be completed for tht' s en1c~

Person to Person
By
John A. Malarus, Ph .U.
Dirf"c tor nf
Rio Grandr Comm unit~~
Educational
Counseling Cenlt'r
Recently, I attended d uue-da y
cv nfer ence on ·Youth and Counseling" sponsored by the Gallia ·
Jackson - Mergs Mental Health Center and "648" Board 1n eonjun&lt;·tlon
With the area clergy . Those a t·
ten di ng were co unselor s.
psychologisls. social workers. nurses, mimsters, and a panel of tugh
school and college student.s from thi s
area . The day was spent di sc ussm~
the needs of our youth and what wt•
can do , as a community , to solve
some of the problems they fa ce as
they struggle for matunly a nd
adulthood .
There were several un ro rtant
pomts mentioned that are worth
repeatmg .
I. Somethlllg ad u! Ls &lt;parenLS,
teachers, etc . 1 mus t do IS listen tu
our youth . Most adults are not goc&lt;l
listeners . Inste.a.d of tf)'ll1g tu un·
derstand what has been sal(! many
are too anxwus to g1 ve ai1.Swcrs a nd
moralize about what rs nght and
wrong .
2. The fallllly and home life of our
youth remam as critical factor s m
!herr lives. A famil y structureoJ
around love, canng, w1de rsta ndm g,
religious faith . and conU11um cat10n
IS equipped to handle mo.st pro blems
which artSe
3. As adu lts, we cannot begm
prepanng adolescenLs for adulthood

Friday sermonette

Costume
party
Saturday

Llunng tttL' aduksn'nt !Jt'f!Od a lo11e
We must begi n dunng Infancy and
v1cw the sea rch fo r rnc1tunt y as ~l
llft• -long process
4. Dunng adolescen('t', mctny
yo ung peopl e go throug h a iJ&lt;riOLl uf
eonfil ct emU rebelli on. AlthfJU gh 1\ 1s
extremely d iff icul t to handle tim
conflict . it IS important to \"ll'W 1t dS
essential to the proces.&lt;J of gro w t n~

up . In.ste.rtd of ~!way s he mg told
what ts right or wrong or good or
bad . adolescents need to search f or
thc1 r own ans wers. ()ftcn tht•y eH'ntually reali ze that thetr uY.TI an SI4T r :-.
are simllar to the ir parents, but
what IS drfferent IS that the) have
th scovered them on the1r own
5_ We must al low our yo uth to

WHERE ARE WE TODAY ?
We live m a world that proml5cs
rapid change. One day is but closing
when the habit ~ some is to begin
Ute next. Because of the uncertainty

in our own lives we are easily in·
fluenced and persuaded . The threat
to our personal world is very real
Whether it be our job, transportation, family , c hurch ,
education or freedom , we are In cluded . The world we are trying to
survive ln is change rapidly .
We are a people who need to find
something stable, something that is
sound and unchangable . The rain bow is a physical reminder of one

A cost ume party will be held at the
Mason Fire Station Saturday
t'Veniug beginning at 7 p.m .
The age division for Judging will
bt• preschool through kindergarten;
first through third grades; fourth
throug h sixth grades, and seventh
U1roug h adult.
AdmiSSIOO IS free and a U parenls
arc welcome . There wiU be instructwn on Halloween safe ty . The
actrv1ties wUI be concluded With a
d1sco dance to Starstup Sound and
refreslunenls served by the Ladies
Auxiliary uf Stewart-Johnson VFW
Post 9926 . There will be a parade at
10 a .m . and the PTA carn ival from
10 a .m . to 4 p_m

Social Notes
Weekend guests of Hilah Jones,
109 S . Third Ave ., Middleport , were
Charles Jones, McKees Hock, Pa .;
Marian Greenlee, Dunbar, W. Va .;
and Louise Sayler and Guy Bur dette , Leon, W. Va .
Mr . and Mrs Hoger Quisenberry
of Sarasota, Fla. visited Roger's
father, Ben Quisenberry at
Syracuse , Mrs . Dorothy Roller, Mid dleport, and Mr. and Mrs. George
Freeland , Syracuse.

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

:

Soc1al Calendar

l

THURSDAY
PH.ECEPTOH BETA BETA Chapter, !:leta Sigma Phi Sorority , 7:45
p.m. at the .~Thens County Savings
and Loan Co. Guest speaker ~&gt;ill be
Mrs . Gerruna Casc i. Mrs. Huby Baer
a nd Mrs. Betty Ohlinger will be
hostesses
MUSIC BY Hu ss and the
Gospeltones at Laurel C1iff Free
Methodist Church revival, 7: 30p.m .
Thursday With Hev . James Mason
.spea king
C HHI STIAN
WOME:'&gt; 'S
Fellowship, 7 30 p.m . Thursday at
1\u!land Church of Chnst with Kathy
Tay lor speaking

SQUARE DANCE SLATED
A Western square dance will be
held at the Royal Oak Park
recreal!on bwlding Friday , from 8 to
II p.m . The caller will be Eddie
Powell of Reynoldsbur g . Al l
Western dancers are inVIted .

MONTHLY MEETING, Southem
IIIII s DIStrict, Ohio Nurses Assn ..
; 30 p .m . Thursday a t Parks Hall on
Oh ru Un1versrty's West Green.
FRIDAY
WESTEHN SQUARE dance at
1\oya I Oak Park recreation building.
8 to t I p.m .. Frrday wrth Eddie
!'owe! I. Heynoldsbu rg , calling; all
Western dancers inv ited . Refresh·
ment s will be served .
SA11!RDAY
WE:STEHN BOOT C. B. Club
Hall oween party at clubhouse Saturday, 7 p.m . ~&lt;1th costume priZes for
c hildren and adult cost um es; club
'1-'illl provide refreshments

dlSCUS.'IIOri

COilUliUillt y

uf what
tu

Wl' C8 Jl

HSstst uur

do as

th ."
And again we hear these words of
encouragement from Psalm 18 :30
" This God - His way is perfect ; the
promise of the Lord proves true; he
is a shield for all thl&lt;le who take
refuge in him ."
Is your life uncerain as to what to
do next' Where shal you turn next'
Remember the words are to all who
take refuge in Him 1
Harvey Koch
Syracuse charge,
United Mehodist Church

The

~ HSabrina"

fi by
Hush
Puppies·

Soft Silky Pigskin Colors
will accent your casual
fall wardrobe in
Spectacular Fashion.

MRS. RITCHIE UNDERGOES
SURGERY
Mrs . Dorothy Hitch1e who underwent open heart surgery at Mt
Cannel West in Columbus, is reportedly progressmg satisfactonly .
Cards may be sent ID her a t the
hospital, Room 557 .

\.,
''
'

SY HM'USE PTO fall halloween
can11val. 7 p.m . Saturda y, at the
Syracuse Elementary School.
Costu me JUdgmg to begi n a t 7 p.m .
Games . food, and cntertauuncnt
Pubhc mv1ted .

KNIGHTS of Pyttuas. monthly
dinner. 6 ·30 p .rn Bnng covered
Jr s h, table ser\'l ce . Members,
farmll es welcome .

Belts , Bells, Bells, shiney,
slinky, sexy, in gold &amp;
silver .
1 111
Prit:es from 13111

Colors
Black
Brown
Porto Wtne
- Matching Bags -

THE
SHOE BOX

to 8

TWO'S COMPANY
DRESS SHOP
118 E . Main
Pomero

992 -2347

Middleport, Ohio

0.

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
HAM DINNER SA Tt:RDA Y
A ham dinner will be served m the
c hu rch annex of the Hacine
Meth &lt;xhst Church on Saturday , Nov .
3. 5 to ; p.m . Charge will be $3 for
adu iLs , and $1.50 for chi ldren
·nckets are avarlable from any churc h mem ber or residents may call
949-2764 . All proceeds Will go into the
church build mg fund . There will be a
program and musi c foUowing the
J mner

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
~OPEN

Mon ., Tues . , Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30 to 5 : 00 Thursday till 12 Noon

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
M~~nn ,

773 -5592

(:1

yuung

pt;ople Ont• good tde£1 wa:o; to
t!S tabltsh a J umor Ch am Ue r uf Cunlmerce or d You th Cmwmssion
Whot erer happens . I wo;o; exctlt."fl to
be a part of a group of pt·oplt• whu
really Uelie\·e ·uu r futun• l1rs With
our yo uth

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

Has

Sale on Bases &amp; Mobile
C. B.'s and Power Mikes .
1 Week Only

PH. 773-5241

MODULAR
HOMES
By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets

KING

COAL &amp; WOOD HEATERS

MENU

Cofft•t• or Milk

or Soft Drink

fax

THE MEIGS ·INN
l'ho 111,• l1lJ:l-:i629

Va .

tried to reparr it.
The delegation stated " what they
have done is a waste of taxpayers
money and if they could not do a better job they should have left rt
alone."
By complaining they hoped the
county enginer would repair the
road in a satisfactory manner.
The commissioners indicated that
they would discuss the rrcat~.&lt;r with
Wesley Buehl at an early date .
Quotes were received from the
Pomeroy National Bank , Fanners
Bank and Savings Co., and the Central Trust Co. , (Citizens National
Bank) lor a loan of up to $65,750.93
for communications equipment for
the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services .
The low quote of the Central Trust
Co ., for a three year simple interest
loan at 7.9!&gt; percent was accepted by
the board .
The commissione rs wiU meet
again in regular session on Wednesday , Oct. 31 , rather that Tuesday
in order to attend the seni-annual
general policy council meeting of the
Buckeye Hills Hoc king Valley
Regional Dtstrict to be held in
Manetta.
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells and Chester
Wells, commissioners and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk .

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10 til 2
1100 E . Matn
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

W

Sixteen defendants forfeited bon M, all posted on speeding charges,
in the court ~ Middleport Mayor
Freq Hoffman Tuesday night.
They include Samuel A. Smith,
Bidwell, $29 ; Michael Wayne Vance ,
Clleshire, $21!; John Ed Thomas,
Route I, Middleport, $31; William T
Klttel. Middleport, $38 ; Glen D.
Clark ,
Proctorville,
2t Terry Wallace, Gallipolis,' $27 ;
Sleven Max Yoder, Midland, Mich .,
Sf/: Frank W. Tabor, Middleport,
$29 ; Jeffrey E . Daniels, Middleport,
S%7; James E . Ferrell, Gallipolis,
$27; Paul E . Thomas, AShland, Ky.,
S29 ; Xylpho Saunders, Gallipolis,
$27; Robert Caruthers, Pomeroy,
$30 ; Lonnie Taylor , Middleport, $30;
William D. Stewart, Rutland , $28;
1\fichael H. Ohlinger , Forest Park ,
Ga ., $33 .
Others forferting bonds in the
court were Dale Hennann, Middleort, $50 each posted on a char ge
a! LSSuing menacing threats and
disorderly
manner;
Richard
Thomas Spurlock. Kenwood, Mich ..
$25, failure ID yield the right~ way .
Fined in the court were Dennis W.
Stanley, Rutland, speeding, $15 and
cost.s; Gerald E. Green, Sandy
Hook, Ky ., $225 and costs and three
days in jail on a charge of drivmg
while intoxicated and $100 and costs,
driving under suspension ; Jerry
()]eaton, Middleport , $100 and costs,
leaving the scene of an ac'Ci dent and
$225 and costs and three days in jail
on charges of driving wile intoxicated, and Larry Neff, Middleport, $50 and cools, disorderly

Commissioners

~~orKl®9

CARRIER
NEEDED

H oil.
Tt·a,

ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHT

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

PEARL H. MORA
Pearl Henry Mora, Ill, Chester
Road, Pomeroy, died Wednesday afternoon at his residence .
Mr . Mora was born Sept. 20, 1899.
He was a son of the late Henry and
Mary Yost Mora. He was also
preceded in death by two sisters,
Freda Young and Edith Kautz.
Sllrvlving are Ius wife, Maye
Crary Mora ; a son and daughter-inlaw, Don and Maidie Hayes Mora,
Chester Road; five grandchildren,
David Mora and Ius wife , Chester
Road; Mark Mora, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
James (Sally ) Andrews , Athens ;
Mrs. Harry ( Rhea)
Slawter,
Delaware, and Mary Mora, Chester
Road. Also surviving are three
greati!randchildren, Brian Ingels,
Amy Slawter and Ay Mora; an uncle, Christy B.aer, Pomeroy, and
several rueces and nephews.
Mr. Mora was a member of the
Meigs County Fann Bureau and of
Trinity Church in Pomeroy .
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home w1th the Rev . W. H. Perrin officiating . Burial will be in Pine
Grove Cemetery . Friends may call
at the funeral horne anytime after 7
this evening .

274, Order of Eastern Star, a fanner
member of the Hebeckah Lodge and
had over 6,000 hours service as a
grey lady with the American Hed
Cross at the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital since Worlil War II. She
was active with the Coolville Senior
Ci tizens Group .
Surviving are a son, Jack E .
White, a sister, Mrs Kathleen
Justice, a grandson , Larry White ,
four step grandchi ldren , fr ve step
great-grandchildren and three meces, all of Coolville .
Preceding her in death were her
husband, Clyde L. White in 1935 and
a son, Clyde L. White, Jr.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p .m . Saturday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with the Rev .
Timothy Snyder officiating Burial
will be In the CoolVIlle Cemetery.
Friend.• may call at the funeral
home anytime after noon on Friday .

MOTOR ROUTE

Spa/.!lwlli
" .\II 'ott l'all t•al
\\ irtt• &amp;
(;arlit· Brt·ad
:-ialad

• Ohio Building Codes
eAFHA&amp; VA
See our lot model today .

MAE CRAWFORD
Mrs . Mae Crawford
New
Brighton , Pa ., died Wednesrlay . She
is survived by one son Gerald
several grandchildren and,two greai
grandchildren .
Graveside serv1ces will be held at
Letart Falls Cemetery Saturday at 2
p.m . with the Rev . Earl Shuler officiating .

Mayor's Court

The "In" Accessory

~ .:~:=;;~

Area Deaths

PAULETA WHITE
Mrs . Pauleta White, 84, Coolville,
died unexpectedly Wednesday morning at her residence.
ShewasborninSpencer, W. Va ., a
daughter of the late Edward and
Rachel Hardman Harpold. She was
a member of the Coolville United
Methodist Church, Minear Chapter

1

FESTlVL SLATED
A fall festival wiU be held at the
Letart Elementary School Saturday
evening . Creamed baked chicken
and ham dinners will be served
begmnmg at 5 p .m . Games wiU
begm at 6 :3() p.m .

nl.3ke mistakes Parent.&lt;; nePd to
learn how and when and ~·hen not t o

let go Totl n1itny res tnM ions and ex pec~tiUrL'i
wlll .sm utht•r young
people. wh ile I&lt;&gt;O mu ch freedom fail s
to ~ 1 ve th em the gUJdt·lme.s and
strurturr the y need
6. Ailu!Ls need to remembrr who !
r!'s like to be " teenager and the
en ti ca l d!sco\Tnr...s t ha t take pb.ll'l'a uwquc Jdenttty, personal 111 ·
dep+..&gt;ndenct', sati sf ying rt•l::Jtl onships, emotwnal controL va lu e !den ·
tt flcat1 on. and personal competence
The L·u nferen ct" t·u rt du dPd wtth &lt;:1

who off ers Just a foundation . Genesis
9:16. 17 says, " When the bow IS in the
clouds, I will look upon It and
remember the everlasting convenant between God and every
living creative of all flesh that is
upon the earth." God said to Noah,
" Tius is the sign of the convenant
which I have established between
me and aU flesh that is upon the ear-

7- The Daily Sent met , Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, 0&lt;1 . 25 , 197~

FOR THE

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BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

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A great mult &lt;-pu rpose speal&lt;e r 5"
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RADIO SHA

Reg .

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HAS OVER 7000 STORES AND DEALERS IN THE USA AND CANADA! Mn" ,.m,

Silver Bridge Plaza
A 1AIIool0 "" CO~ PO ~ATI U N COMPANY

l uuk l or thrs

'&gt;tgn

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. ._ _ _ _ _ _•

ll. T I

�'

8- The D&lt;Hly Sentlllel , Mlddlepurt - Pull~t' r U), 0 ., Thursday , Ot t. z:i, 1979

9- TheDaiiy Sentlne!

Your Best Buys Are Found
N O H U N TI N G on th e Gene
H umpn r ey pro pe rl t o n Rl

Card of Thanks
I WI SH

to t hank .=t i l my
fr tend s to r Tne tr c ard s a nd

143 o r l hf' And y Grover
p r o p er t y on B ail ey Run Rd

pr avers Dr T et te . ltle n u r

ses, and a •d es l or the tr
l o ving ~ are and all o tn e r s
who

h e lp ed

in

dnv

way

A N YO N E

WH O ha s

t ow ete tt e

t voe

r e p e llen t .

send

Hosp i t a l Y ou a r e o;J I I w o n
de rfut
pf' p le
Ma y Goa

f or mrtlton

lo

Ra rt nt• O H

ED

t n sec t
all

Bo K

B U RK E TT

tn

B a rb e r

M •rldlf' p ort

Not 1ces

ser v tce
G UN
S H OOT
EVE R Y
S UNDAY IPM F AC TORY
C HOKE O N L Y R AC INE
G UN C LUB
NO
H U NTIN G
no
trespu ssrng wt t h n o p x
( eptr ons on my pr oper t y
J u d y M cG raw St.·II
G UN
SH OOT
R ar tn (•
Vo lunt eer
F t r f'
DPJll
Eve r y SaT urday 6 JO p rn
At l t1etr bu tl r!t nqt n O,t &lt;.ltrHl
F a c t o r y r h o k c qur1 ., onl y

GU N SH OO f Pvf'r v Su ndny
f'l 00 Fan or ( { hO k 1' on l y
Corn H oll o w C.un Clu tJ
Rutland Pr o&lt; re o ~, dOn&lt;'llf'ct
to B uy Sr uu t Tr oo p } 4 \J

GET MA RK ET VALUE f o r
y our QOI CI and sil v er c o rn s
Wrlf e o r
( o n ta rt
Ed
B u rk p tt Garb er Sho p , Mr d
d l e por t

J A N ICE O AV I~ tS no w em
p l oyed a t Hatr By L tl a
Be a u ty Sal on . sp a&lt; tdlrst tn
mt•n s and boy s h at r c ut s
Open
e v e n, n q &lt;:,
bv
ap
po tn tmen t
Mr ': &gt;
K IO't th
R tO l'nOu r ow nf' r
CE RA M ICCL A SSES M a n
t.lclt n nd Thur sday . 7 9 o m
St a rt tn g Th u r so a y , Ol l 15
OrPhr&gt;l 'c, (C'rnmt r-5 ')9 N
?no M td cti C' po r t O H 997
556()

H elp Wanted
SO ME O N E TO ao t rght
IJOu &lt;:.e l..ceo ,n y n f ew h ou r s
on Fr tday 1n M rdd te p o rt
'Y9 7 57 09 n l lt'r 5 30 D m

MACHINIST
Permanent po s1t1on for 1nd1v1dual W1th
shop ex pene nc e . Mu st be abl e to do
own set up on convenl1onal and honron tal mills, lathes, and gr1nd ers .
R espond to Person n el Department, Ap palachian Power Co .. Mounta1neer Plant
Operations, Post Offi ce Bo x 398. New
H aven , W Va 25265 - Area Code 304 882 10b

s

21 1
W e ar e an Equ a l Opportun1Ty Emp lo yer

PUBLIC AUCTION
2 DAY SALE
S.aturday . Oct 11 &amp; SunO.:ty . Oct 18 storl rng each
day at 1 I o ' clock AM on Sf Rt 377 . Pen&lt;.vtll e . OhiO
10 Morgan County
Ant .que Fur n rfur e . GldS'&gt;Wdrl' . Ch.na . T lftan y
Shades . Carnl'... al It em s, Manual &amp; Elec Slot &amp;
Game Mach • nee, . Old Items . Car s &amp; E rc
Tak e St . Rt 60 south o u t of Ztuwsvtlle to Me
Connet sv tl le ~ or t ake Sl Rt . bO north out of Martel
l.l to McConnel&lt;,vll le , acros s r.ver th roug h Malta on
Sf . R r. 78 west tor 2 m lies . s 1a y te fdf at top of h 111 on
to St Rt . 377 to Pennsville at th e Btl l Jan es Farms
30 mtle s northea st of Athens . Oh10
ANTIQUE FURNITURE TO BE SOLO BOTH
DAYS
( h(' fr ( Em o tre r h i'~ l w r11rlv mn pi P
U rdw('r ~
' h !'Uf I IW&lt;;T W ll g i, l ',', PU l iS . N Jinu l
{ h (&gt; !l l w Q IO v •· b O • t ' &lt;, wn l nut E m p tr P r rw &lt;, t ..v nl n u t
htCJ ilbo 1 o ,~ k r,~ f l m tr r o r w t· n r rn 1 k r o~...na Oitk
t rltJIP w J t u r rwu '''ll !&gt; wa lnu t m,v!)l(• t op na c k. bar
., . rr11 rr o r
V rc t or •nn nt Qh t sta nd p l a n k. !)O tt om
( ttt td c, ror k e r r ou no o a t.:, Ti!D i f' oak ha t bo • w 1
d rnwf' r 5 unusu" l Dil k, { il\h rPQ t&lt;; ler stan d w lo t s
d r i!wf'r &lt;:. 4 r u r'&gt;~ t' d ql&lt;l':.S r ht n cJ c up boa r d':&gt; t 1 w
l f'dll t'r t l u ~ J w n1 11 ut "'&lt;l r arooP w tJ r a N e r c, w t r k e t
1\•,1 r ar t w Ql itS&lt;, top &amp;. sp o k e 1/\'t"' p p l&lt;, O&lt;lk '&gt;e rpen t ne
ar {'t. &lt;,t•r ""' m trro r .-. 1 boo k. r d &lt;;." c,Prr f' f&lt;H tC'S Dtano
w .-.too l
w a ln ut VtC!Oi td n lov " '&gt;t&gt;itl w ma tc h t n g
r ock('r ( g r een v f'l v e t • Wil lnu t 1/ tr to r ton IO '&gt;~ P 5P rtl
· ~ old tto wer P.d
v elvf' TJ. 1 &lt;,ni1 11.f' r r o( t.:, ers w
':. l c n ( tlf'd ba c k s pr(' S5ed b ac k r oc k. f' r s se t 6 mat
r n ,unq V tn o r a n c hatr t, 3 ma pl e shaker st r hatr S
4 t rpe Sl fl n dng wh r~ t n ot c. n PI'&gt;If"'':&gt; 3 ~ ~~~ l t('rt r abt ne t o;
w t tou r b •ns . t oo t s t ools o &lt;1k h tQh oo v d r es e r w
rn trr o r
':&gt;mOk trHJ s l ana
18 w ooden tf P rre .=t m
( ha tr 'S me ta l •C (' r ream c ha tr&lt;, round Otlk &lt;;l an d
i o l a rnC,J desk c eor~ c nPs t s . k nee ha lf' de &lt;,k d r f'')S• nQ
l&lt;lb l p&lt;; odd &lt;; I 1 hr1tr &lt;, w d ln u t &lt;;,tr "- be d tro n oe d s
.some w b r ,~c; s l Itt d Ss t sm ;l ll s t .1 nd&lt;:. o ak c h at r S
wrn {J IJ n( k ( hd tf w 1 lnw ! pe t w n lnu t to ve sea t
M tSsron o ak r o( ker &amp; r ha rr M tS':&gt; ton O&lt;lk love &lt;:.Pa l
w &lt; h.1 tr V• fl ort nn m .:trb iP l op l db iP O un r ,ln P h yt e
c oflf'f' l r~ hlf'
or t o qf' n dnd 1.1b l+ • J pr
DIOndP
bed r oom su t tf' Em ptr e Stdrb oa rct V •' torto'l n r or
ne r r upbo n r c ljt ns 5 t o p &amp; Doll om &lt;:.Oi td m a noq .'ln v
ht g h bo y c he'i t df'Sk w r ln w fppt
ma hogany
s rd eboM d . o ver &lt;; l u UPd r h .'l tr m,1h0q .1 n y d r o p le ctl
lnb l e . w a l n u l p t.:tll orm r or lu ·r 3 p r oea r oom Su t f e
sec l ron a l boolc. r nse
w a lnu t StOP ln biP
r oom
drv•d e r s b ull e t Vtr t or •nn r o r k cr &amp; \ tOe r h at r
mahogany boo k ca se . hnnd r ar ved ChtnPse r hP s t
ant
E ng t tsh o ab y b ugq y bf' l on g ed to R o yally
r herr y r o r nf'r r up boar rl w q 1Ft ss Ddn e 1e o rap e t r
GLASSWARE &amp; CHINA TO BE SOLO BOTH
DAYS : L g set B n vnr ,a n ( h tn a w blue t tow ers ban
ded tn a nt g o l d . l g nss t H n v il &lt;l nd r h tna pdf l ral set
NOrlfake . set c roo k &lt;:.vil l f' c h tno c a ~t c r sr t ~ q l a 'SS
ba '!. ke s . mtlk , &lt;; r~trn r uby t.Jtnn. a rn p rnf &lt;; l pre ss Pd
&amp; c ut , r arn1va1 . d e p r('S StOn Br ts to l &lt;rrl nbf' rr y- o td
Fen tcvr . a n d o thf&gt;r gla &lt;:.'i rovc r e&gt;a nonC' .,. d tSh c n k e
lo l &lt;.:. t,... mm pa qls &lt;, H f' r&lt;, f't &amp;
stan ds . SO d PSton~·
H e rsey Or rd s
rnu st arne (u p s
sh a v tn Q muQs
W e ller p ott er y lo t Cam hr trlge as t na nd blo wn
water pil c h e r s (sorn(' p a tnt cd ) . tC'a tea t . . o pp e r
lustre . German Au str tan B .l v ilr ta n . &amp; En gl tS h
Moss Rose . l ot o ld g l ass sh ildf' s "&gt;&gt; nt uf' s &amp;. f tgur"nes
salt pepper c o llect to n r uby hilnd blow n PPf' r Qne~
w glass pr i s ms a g ood &lt;" Sf o t r ol orf u l T tl l .=t n y t y p €'
hang tn g shad es et r

CARNIVAL ITEMS TO BE SOLO ON SUNOAY , 2
merry go roun d ho r ses ( 1 w gi rl s·.., f'Yf' '&gt;l
tan r ..,
wooden hand patn 1Pd g a m e wh ee l s . pen n,. str e nqth
testing m rKh tn f' s .=t 'i&lt;., t gJm P &amp; Nov e l l tes useo 1n
Carn1vats
ANT . COIN OPERATEO MACHINES TO BE SOLO
ON SUNDAY : 3 £')(1ra n rc e w oden r a se d s l o t
ma c htnes talt 1n worktny r on d l o rnr P li n d lo ver
20 pi nbttll &amp; can so Ie mod e I 'e le c r 01n opera ted game
ma c hns around 1930 per tod so m e were mnde by J
H Kenney &amp; Co and Bally Mig Co
MISC. OLD ITEMS , ETC. TO BE SOLO BOTH
DAYS : Asst ad lamps , :.umP st emmed &amp; so mP
finger . mtnrnture ad lru n p s o, tlo~er war e . seve ral
woven bask e t s . (O k P lr rly S Or ilsS ou r ket s &amp;. sprt
toons ; beet s tgn s c l ec trrw 1 r o ttf'P g rtn oers . a l ot
s t one ja rs , tug s, c roc k s. PI &lt; 1so me sr gned tn otu e /.
model T Ford lamps l ot hand h amm ered c opper
i tems ,
R R
1tem s .
st oneware
pr t c hers ,
spongeware ; o ld s1ore or I lamp w pain ted fount &amp;
milk glass sh ad e . unusuttl table l ttmp w mold e d
g lass base &amp; sh ade , both hand pa.nted . slag gla s s
tamps ; lg . asst. brass •ferns . lot P• fc her bowl set s.
quad . silver p l at e : lg por ce l alll leopard &amp; other
figurines , b1sque sta t ues &amp; figurine s ; tabl e tamps ;
stereosc o pe w r ards . rndman y other m• sc it e m~
not listed. This •s on l y a part•alll st •ng ot th ts larg e 2
day sale of extra hi gh qual tty merrhandise Plan
now to a tt end . Sa l e he l d ra•n or shtne 10 the new
large auc t 1on hou se a1 1he B i ll Janes Farm s •n Pen
nsvil l e. Ohio
CARS . 19 J7 Ood q c V.l n w ,1tr 19!1 F o rd L T O .
l o a dt'd 1975 Cact tlliK 4 d r ~l' rlan TO B E &lt;, Ot D
S UNOAY
Self confarned c arnpN space ava tl ,1b l e Lu n r h on
pr e m•ses . Plen t y parkin g
Terms-cash or Che c k w -p0S1t1 ve ID eac h day of
sale . Not r esponsible for accidenh .
Bill Janes in c harge of sale.
Auctione ers - B•II Jan-es, Randy Newsom
&amp; As sociat es - Phone 1· 614 ·SS7 -341 _1

3 A ND 4 RM t urnr shed ap
I&lt;, Ptl o ne 99 2 5434

415.

Sh op no N o pe n ful l l tme tn

MEI GS
COU N TY
HUMAN E SO C I ETY 991
6260
P et s .=tvalla ble for
ddop tt on a nd •n f orm at •on

COU NTR Y M O BI LE H o m e
Park , Ro u t e JJ . nor t h o f
Pomer o y La rg e lo t s C a ll
99 2 7479

a ny pro b lems wtth spray o r

durtn g my recent s tay at
V e t era n s
M emort d l
Bl ess you
Wayne t-1 Ct tase

h ad

For R en!

APT
\1 15 . SSO depO!. t l
F urn ,shed N o d1tldren . no
p e l '&gt; 307 sor tng Av e

CO MP LE T EL Y
FUR
N tS HEO
h ous. l'
w r th
"&gt;IN' Ptnq r oo ms . w ttab le
tor ro n s tr ur t ton worke rs
F ul l y eQ u rP Ded k tl ( llen ,
a n ct
dry e r
w as h e r
Sh o we rs
O fl
str ee t
prtrk• nQ Ltnens turn rsh ed
d rld
r te a nrny
w E' ~k ly
U t d t! t('S pa rd Call 992 23 6 2
(I l l e r 4

Pets for Safe
HOO F HOLLOW , Engl rs h
and We s t ern Sa ddles and
harn e s s
H o r s es
and
PO n teS Ruth Ret&gt;vf"&lt;; 614
698 3190
Bo r dr ng
an d
R rdt ny L e~ so n s and Hor s{'
Car (' p r odu r t s
Wes t ern
boo t s
cn rt d r en 's \1 5 50
A du l ts S79 00
R I SING
S TAR
KPnnf'l
Bo ard rng Ca l l 367 0797

P OO DLE
G R O OMIN G
Ju d y Ta y l or 614 36 7 7770
HIL L CRE ST
KENNEL S
BoMd rn g , all h re eu~ Clean
tndoor outdoor
t a c tl tl re s
Als o
AK C
re g rstered
Do berman s 6 14 446 7795
THR E E SI AME SE ktlt e n s
1 ma le . 2 femal e 667 3305
IN THE
CO MMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
B e tt y Franc• s Ounn.ng .
PlatMflff .

-v•

Gerald Wayn e Ounn•ng ,
D e fendant .
No 17271
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO
Gera l d Wayne Dun
n.na . who &lt;;.e address 1S
unknown
n
Y ou arr nereb y nottl ted
lh ctt
hav e bef'n namt•d
a d e endant rn a legal a c
tt on e nt rtl eod B e tty F"run c ,s
Du nn tng
P l a ,nt d t ,
vs
Ge ro'l ld Wiiyn e Dunnrn y .
Def en d dnl Thr s ac tron hil S
bee n ClS Stgn e d Case N o
17'}71 and tS p e ndtng rn th e
Court of Comrnon Pleas o f
M e,q s Coun t y
Pom er o y ,
Oh to 457 69
r n(' oh 1N r of I hi! c om
p l,'l •nl t\ th e Obla rn rng ot a
dtvo r c r
~1 nd
the
ter
m .n(JI on o f rl mMrtrtge
c ont 1 a ct IJt•tween the par
ft c&lt;:. tn f' se nlemen t at the
pr o p e r! f rtQ hts of the /'ar
t,,, .. .1nd lhf' c us tody o the
m n o r c h lla
Y o u ar c r eQut r ed 10 an
sw e r the co mplatn1 wtfhtn
iR day 'S allt-r 1t1e la st
OUb lt Cd liOO Of lht S no t •ce.
wh tc h wtll be p uD i ts hed on
ce ea ch wer&gt; k lor Stx sue
c esSt '&gt;~e
wePk s
Th e l a s t
p u bl tca t ro n w tl l b e ma de on
Octo ber 75 . 19 79, a nd the 7B
day s lor nn swr&gt;r will com
rn e n c e on I h il l d.;~te
In c ase ot y ou r tatlure to
d ns w e r
or
o therw 1se
rf'spond d':&gt; ( f? Q U ITI!O b y the
O h tO
Rut es
Of
( t vtl
Pr oce dur e.
lhf'
lt nat
hc ilr tn g on 1ht S rrl i111 f' r will
be liPid after the etf.tratton
o t 78 day s atter !he a&lt;c. l d a y
ot p u b l tca tton at lh •s no t tc C'
or &lt;'I S soon t hereafl e r a &lt;. ca n
bt' '&gt;C h ed uled by m e Cou rt

r.ou

(Q )

L ar r y Spf' nC N .
C lt:.&gt; rk at Court
o t M e tg s Coutny .
Oht O
70. ]/ , ( 10) 4. 11. 18 , 15 .

61 '
PR&lt;-- -• CE COURT

LEGAL NOTICE
ORDINANCE No 1086·79
A n Ordtnan re t o su p
p1ern ent the PMk an d P oo l
O t r ec t or s Salitry for 19 79
Be rt o rd a •n ed b y th e
Co unr tl o f the Vtl!ag e o f
Mtddteport a s follow s
Se( I That the salary of
th(' PMk a n d P oo l Otrl."r tor
Sh all be su pp l(' m enfed by
rt n •nr r ea se o f S.40 00 per
mon th t or th e Pay per ro ds
at May 15 , 1919 to S.e p
' e mber I S 1919. tn(lusrv£'
Sec ! 1 T hr s Ordrnan r c
Sh dtl lalo. P f'fl er t and be rn
l Or ((' t rom an d aftN th e
e a r l te&lt;:. t per tOO all ow t.&gt; d by
law
P n sse d th e lind d ay ot
Oc t ober 1979
A t i C's ! Gene G rat e
(INk
M L K e lly
Pre s rdent of Coun c rl
( 1 0125 .( 11 ~ l , ?t c
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF LUCILLE C .
STORY . DECEA S~D
case No. 22826
I'IUIILt:: UF

APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Oct 4. 19 79, in the
M e •g s County
Probat e
Cou rt. C(1se N o 22876, Leo
R Story , 41441 Krngsbury
Road . Pomer o y , Oh io 45769
wa s appo1nfed Execu t or ot
th e esta t e of Lucille C
Story , deceased , late of
.4144l
Kingsbury
Road ,
P omeroy , Ohro-45769
Rober1 E Bu c k
Probcle Judge
Clerk
110 ) 11, 18, 15 , ]I C

•

OL D
FURN I T U R E .
1ce
bol{es. bra s ~ bed s. rron
be ds , de sks . et ( , compl e te
ho usehold s
Wrtte
M D
Mil ler Rt 4 Pomeroy or
c all 9'97 77 b0
O LD

CO l N S. pocket wt
t hf.""&gt; , r ld SS. r1n g s, WPddrng
bands , dtarnonds Go l d or
srlver Ca ll J A Wam sl e,. ,
742 ]JJ1
WANT ED
S AW
log s
Paym e nt u po n deltvery to
our y a rd . l 30 to 3 30 week
days Blaney Ha rdwoods .
SR 3J9 , Barlow . OH 678
2980

ANT I QU ES .
F UR
NITURE . glass , c hrna .
anyth1ng See or c all Ru th
Gosn e y . an t rQues . 76 N
lnd . Mtddlepo n . OH 991
J 161
ANTIQUE POCKET wat
r hes Wtllrng to pay top
dollar
Call
1 592 1973
Pv entng s
WANTED
JU NK
Bat
ferH~ s . ra d rn to rs . motor s.
auto
tr an s
No Sunday
( diiS 949 756]
WANTED
PARTS to Itt
11
1973
Ch e vrol e t
to n
pt &lt; kup 991 3992
USED

Yard Sale
PORCH
S ALE
Starl5
w~a . run s ttl I all sold , Out
St de
Chrr s fmas
dec orat ton s . brown ve l vet
pt c fures an d m1sc item s
Karl Ktoes . College St .
Syrac use O H 992 3014

Lost and Found
LO S T . SAT U RDAY ntQht
Farrvrew
area
F e male
Walker pup A b ou l 6 mon
lhs o ld 147 2618 .

INTERNAT IONA L
C UB
Cadet
1450. automat• c
hydraulr r
lrlt
44
rn c h
mowE'r
snow b l adl? , tan
dt&gt; m
disc s . turn
p l ow .
c u111vator ,
dump
bed
lrntler . c harns . S2SOO 1969
Ch e v y
Maltbu ,
S150
Yamaha gurtars , 12 str tng ,
$ I SO Cl assrra l . $75 Phone
991 5&lt;30

1968 CAMARO 317 eng rne . 4
speed . o t her extras . E)(
c ellenr c ondrlron 992 7768
o r 992 5671

GOOD HOM E . mal e g r ey
1tger k ttren Cute Ra ( rne
9.49 2093
OAVENPOR r 992 5247

FRE E P U PPIE S S mall
d ll d m earu m d ogs Call 9'91
7211
GERMA N S H EP H ERD .
spayed To good hom e 3
year s . f em al e 741 2651
IRI S H
SETTER
pup ,
ff'mttle . r e d .good
wrth
c h rtd ren
3 b l ue hecte-r
pup s 5 t o 6 week s old . one
femat e . 1 m ale s. 1 bla c k . 'l
wh t t e w rlh blue H um.1n e
Soc te ty 997 6760

FEMAL E BEAGLE and 5
p u p s 7 w eek s old Good
r a b br f aog 991 349 1
C OL D
N OS E
tn
yo u r
futurf'') Adopt a c; pf' c• al
bo r d er typ(' Young f emal e .
v e ry
rntel ! rgent
and
l o ve a bl e . sho t s Humane
So( 1ety 99'} 6160

LO VEABLE
G ERMA N
Shephercl
r ollrl'
male .
bla c k and tan. wormed and
shots Kittens . k tften s , 1&lt;11
t e n s . a ll sr 1e s . alt shapes
Humane SO(tf' f y 991 6UIJ

Auto Sales
1976 MONTE CARL O . 150
engr nt' . low rntleagt&gt; S1600
9?2 2656
1975 VW BEETLE . outo .
•gOOd condit• on 992 3-401
1978 4x4 351 engrne , cu st o m
paint iob and interror E)(
Phont&gt;
c e ll enl condi t ton
9?2 2656
1967 PONTIAC , $.175 or
trade lor small Honda road
b ' ke 991 7580

197 1
M E R C URY
M A RQUI S Wtlh atr
E :w.
reiiPn l condi t ron S700 9•n
5391
PLYMOUTH
P 5, PB A C
A 1 s hape C n II 84.1 76A4

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
10 19 1 mo

FIREWOOD
FOR
Now l&lt;'tk tng ordPr s
del •v e r 742 1056

sa l e
Will

EM E RGENCY
POWER
allernat or s own !he be st
buy WINPOWER Call 513
1~8 1589
APPLE S
C IDE R
HON EY
F ttzpatrrc K Or
c h.1rd . State Route 689
Pho n e
Wtlk e svtl te . 669
)785
SWEET POTATOES, red.
whrte and yetlow Rf 2.
Ra ct ne R w Lew ts 843
'l43l
AP ROM E Beauty app l e s
a t !.-4 per bu BPst for app l e
butte-r C a ll 669 3!85 . Ft f z
pdtr rc k Or c hard , SR 689

HOU SE COAL . lump or
stoker
Writ del tver
742
118 3
JOHN DEERE dteSe l 20 10
do1er
Ou!Stde mounted
b lade tS.DOO 741 28 19

ELE C TRIC FURNA CE tor
m a ntle home G ood r o n
dttton 997 5S09

F I REWOOO . all
wood C a It 991 5449

hard

OIL HEAT E R . 300 gallon
tank GOO d condttron 147
36 15
GOLD G A S range , like
new . 2 y e a r s old , GE , S100
Cab o v er ( rtmoer top , 8 11 .
b lue and wnrte . 3 years ol&lt;1 ,
rf'as o nable
For
tn
t orma t ton 949 1775

1954 ALLIS CHALMERS
tr ar t or AC model Mowt ng
mrtclltn e . hydrautr c drsc.
front end l oa der Sl BOO 742
1301

N EW FRENCH Provtn c ral
anftQU e wh tte d rn 1ng room
su i t e \900 98 5 4170
O NE USED Myers shallow
well pu mp . Good cnOdrtron
949 2678
WOOD STOVES by Betft&gt;r
N Bens, Glassview , Le;den
Hparth , O td T•mer. Fire
vtew
Suburban
mobtle
home wOOd heaters, UL ap
pro-Jed . and Suburbttn f ur
nacemas t ers
Ou t do o r
Equrpment Sales . J(t Rts
7 and JS , GalltPQI IS. OH
Phone 446 36 70
QUA SA R CO L OR TV c on
sole E I( C" ellent co nd i ti on .
1972 H onaa SL 350 Par
f tally rebuilt Fxtra eng•ne
and o th er mtsc outs Af
ter 5 , 99'1 1967

H

TPOINT
and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
AppliiiMCeS
Sales &amp; Servtce

POMEROY

LANDMARK
Jack

w. C~rsev

,,~:

---- I

........... Phone~

Main St .

\RI\ FINANCIAL
SEIUIC£S, I r:C.

--tot

C 1er

s9

m•

r .
by appo tnt ·

'w'\ . , W . ,

"'' nt .
17 s...,camore Rear)
u om e r oy , 0 .

992 -7544

Pomeroy, 0 .
10 19 1 m o

Roger Hysell
Garage

de il
'-tot · 1n~
&amp;
\ ... rer 15 AJm111. Loans .

(=

~ ~

FOUR

A f-! E

GA"T E S .TR ACY.''

HUNDREDS
A MILLION

S AYS S A M P SUN. ''AtJ [l
R O A DS. AND NE'ARLY

- ITS
GATES

A C HE S OF K'ESE:-RVAT IU N .''

' , mil e off Rt 7 by pass
on St . Rt 17&lt;1 . t oward
Rutland

Auto &amp; Truck
R epair
Al so Transmission
R epair
Phon e 992 -5682

Mobile Homes - Sale
1977 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3
be droom
1970 V i ndale 12)(63 wrnt ex
panda . 7 bedr
1970 New Moon 17 1(60 3 bdr
1973
Skylr n f'
17x55
1.
bedr oo m
1971 Bonan1a 11:w: 51. l bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
5A L E 5, PT PLEA S ANT ,
wv 304 675 447.4
SE L ECTION o t pr e
owned 10 11 . and 14' w rde
mobile no mes
K a n a uga
Mobtl~
H o rne Sales 4.40
9&amp;62
BIG

Mobile Homes
-Rent
--TWO
BEDROOM parly
l u r nrsh e d . prefer mr ddle
aged or elderly c ouple No
pet s. no c hrdlren 997 2749

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
FOR SALE o r rent Nt ce J
bedroom . modular lo(ated
rn Portland area Se t up on
tot or r an be m oved Call
af te r 4 30 304 273 5272

WILL H AUL l i m es tone and
g ra vel Also . lrm e hau l rng
and spread ing Le-o Mor r•s
T ru c king Phone 742 7455

Real Estate for Sale
MODERN F I V E ye a r o ld 3
o r 4 be droo m ho m e on 7' ,
a r res
of
la nd ,
t u ll
basement drtli (' d w e ll . r nr
p e ted .
storm
w1ndows
fully rnsulafed Al so . 16 x32
butld•ng
Woul d co nstde r
V A or FHA loan S33 .500
74'} 3074
OWNER WILLsell40acre'5
o r ore w•th 1978 Holtypark
rnobtle home 1&lt;ix70 With e x
pando . plu s lh36 fa m tly
room attached. fully ca r
pe ted . r ura l wa e r
'!.Oin t!
pasture . tcn re. stand tn g
trmber . some w a lnuT su n
d ec k
fr on t
and
bM ~
L oc ated on New Ltma R d
Ca ll James Ingel s 614 7-4 '1
l HU or 985 4107
FIVE ROOM ho u se. a ll
t tlrpefed , mode r n ~&lt;.ttchen
and bath . garagt&gt; and C df
pon I n Bradbur y C dll 997
5] 10

Real
Estate for Sale
----~---

FI N A N CI N G VA FHA LO
ANS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYM E Nl
P U RCHASE
OR
REFINA N CE
IRELAND
MORTGAGE .
77 E S TA T E ATH E NS
614 592 3051
HOUSE
ON
tarq e
Ra&lt; tne 9.49 2340

-.,..

NEW LISTING
Ctose
to nature on a 6 acr e
m1n 1 frlrm
Garden
spa ce ,
2
s t o rage
burldrn g s . sec l uded , but
r lose t o P om e r o y , nr re
1 ~
stor y
r e m od e&gt; le a
hom e rnc l udtng a new
equrpp e d ktt c hen . a1r
condti!Ont n g . 3 or
4
bedr o orn s .
O NLY
~19 , 500 ,00
NEW LISTING
Han
dy Man ·s Sp ec 1at g ood
l oc atton tn Midd leport
l arge lrvtng room. J
bedrooms , famtl y r oo m .
l eve l
lot . 11 7
st ory
ON L Y $8 ,000 00
LARGE
STATELY
BRICK HOME - A I rue
l andmark in Pomeroy ,
home has the c harac ter
a nd ch arm o f the earty
1900 ' ~ and was b ut l 1 by
o ne of o ur m os t re spe c
ted
bu s •n ess men
Prr ced Far Below Fatr
Market
varve
at
$58 .900 00
1 YR .OLD
Ran c h
type ho me of qua l rty , 3
bedr o om s,
2
baths .
wbtp , burlttn
ex
r e!lt.•nt con drf ton . lar gf.&gt;
garage
many
other
feature s. mu~t be seen
to
be
appr ec •at e d
$4-4 ,800
30 ACRES
VACA NT
LAND
8uildtng Sites,
1 !•lia b le acre~ . f e n c •ng
Close to mt ne s - A steal
a l SIJ . 350 00
114 ACRES OF NICE
LAYING FARM LAND
All r leared and rn
pa sture
and
lt l tabt e
ground . barn s a nd oth{'r
bui l dtng s . ten c in g and
ponds, plus a newer
large ranch type home
with
t u ll
basement,
w b .f p . many f e atu r e s
Pri ce d
for
sat e
576, 325 00
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK
Good
home
good
loca tron .
good lot , full ba sement .
equipped k1tr hen. air
cond•tton, ng . For ce-d air
h e at
A
S l e at

$19.900 00
OVER
60
PROPER
TIES
TO
C HOOSE
FROM
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Ooltt e Turner
Res . 741 -1474
REALTORS
Res . 991 · 25'1
H enry E . Cleland , Jr .

R es . 992 -6191

216 E Second Str~t

REDUCED
b('aroom no mf' 1n good
l ortltton Tottll f' IPc tr tf
wtth drtll ed w e l l
Ha s
f ull basement a n d ] 1 "
a c res
N tre
o ut
build•ngs , too N o w o n 1y
SJ3, ){)0
NEW
HOME
b e droom ~.
( e ramr c
bath . co ppe r pl um br ng .
c arpe11ng , Oh tO P o w er .
2 r ar gara g es and 1 n 11 e
au e of tand
l TRAILER LOTS
One tratler tn c tu a ed 111
sat e
Leadtn g
creeK
wate r , ov t&gt; r 4 nr rf" S on
Rl 124 W est W a nt o nty
17 500
COUNTRY
A
reasonable
ot a er
J
be d room home wrth eat
rn k rtc hcn . modern Oath ,
healrng .
ful l
c entra l
ba sement. and l arg e lot
Ju st S.25 ,000
POMEROY
L rnco ln
Ht
has J bedrooms .
bath Wt!h shower . b1r c n
k ttc hen . full b ase m en t
and targ e tor Gotng t or
s 18 100
NEW LISTING
Fur
ntshed
1972 Mrdland
mobile
hom e 1n
the
co untry
Ha ~
3
bedroom s and 1 bnth s
Land ha s rural wa ter
and tee natural ga s
S16 , 500
NEW LISTING
H un
t rng land ne ar F o rked
Run Lake Over 77 a c re s
of wildland Good place
t or
c abin
or
tr avel
tr ailer Want $ 15 .000
NEW LISTING
3
arres rn Deer c ountry on
good sr h ool bus and
mail ro u tes . Onty S5,500
WE
AOVERTISE
EVEY
DAY .
LIST
WITH US, CALL 992 l31S or 991 ·3876 .

s

Housing
I Headquarters

.,:::,. ; ~ .'-"-.

L WECIN

.

-

IF- IT COMES TO
TttAL HOW C AIJ
WE BE SURE
T~EY DI D N T 7POT
OUR AD A&gt;JD
C LUE - IN&gt;

&lt;SO - BETWE EN:

949 ·2862--949 -2160

-~FOR

I GINOW

4 5 tt c

/

//
•.

r .l -"' ,' -

v

'· ·.1

.

- ~I

(.'.' '
~·

:

1 - - - 1- , - ,

li
'~
HOW IHE 1310A '.'.I? I
LO V ED.

I

ALL 7 TttAT 'S Rl6ttT~
WE KN O W,
- -I T COULD:
THI5 COULD
RECKON IT
BE FROM THEALL C OME-S
MAFIA~ / DO W~ TO J UST
__./
HOW 6ADLY

( J "\,..r_;,,
(•
I .1J.

'

CAf'r AIN F:ASY
ASS UM ING HE'S BEEN
S CARED EN OUGH O F THE
MAFIA TO PLAY DE- '\P -HE'D NATUR AL LY USE 1\

f-

. , .0
(~""1 ' I
"'lllllll
&lt; '),..______, , _

I•

Ln

GU ~ CNV WE i
TltUST THIS LETTER .
I?ASY' IT'S NOT EVE&gt;!
IN DADDY·s HANDWR-IT ING t:

'

j , ·~ "1. •.

I

QUIETY

r1

I : ] _,

~ VOU

WAN T TO
f'I ND YOUR
FATHER.
~055 Y~

N ow arrange tne Ct!Ctea 1en er s to

lorl'1 me s urpr tse a ns "" e ' as SJ\;
ges1ec by tne aoo11 e can oon

!
L-......_ _ _ j

"[X I l" [ t: XI J

Pnnt answer here

(Answ ers IOmOr' ow l

MONTGOMERY

JuMDi es TO PA Z

U',u Hv

/... ~ U- I,' ,'fl."

'/Jrt 'f :, rtf• tn ..t •J•· " "J'&gt;t
WA S A SfJU P r-lt. t ~ rJ

Ans we1

...,, ,11,·

H~ U ri• ... C
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,,,, .

11 110
L

Mon rg omPr ' Rd
Oh• o

•nq 1~ oll~

BRIDGE

BORN I.OSF: ll

A'~ "' 41•\ f v~ '" .,9 '
) M do·~ E of\ I() ! W&lt; l~e ~

•tile

GOO\f

\II Pf~
T~llH

STOCM

FR l&gt;oiOtNA V AilllSLE

HOW C-all:' I ALWAYS (£T
STUCK WITH

~
t·

iC.

1T/\n~

;_~/1.1,

l'L L FUP 'IOJ FG1Z

IT . ~f-ADS. 'bJ T/\KE
HE.ROLIT, TI'-.I LL.., l

HER

OJ T .!

~

-

lJ-IAT'S ~ Lli&lt;£ IT
l CW'TMIWAS
L000 A'=&gt;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

--

··--

:'\ OH Til

ma y he a [tJ :-i t·r If ht· ,s" pl&lt;J;. ·
tng m a duplw clft· g o nH hr · ( dll
ask North If tht•rt• wa." an \
:;peCial :--; J~nlfll" t.Jn t " L' to t lw
three l' lub b1d

• K H.I

• .)Y"

+Ji

ROOFING
and
Free
..:: st la1'-' " ·
All
Work
' IU.l 1nfe ed . 70 vears E'l( ·
err nee C.lll At h ens,
ol!• c t . Gerald Clark
191 4857 or Tom Hoskms
797 nu

:'Juv. J,,ok J l 1lll' Wpq h.m&lt;.l
ll l' ha ~ d tou~li ll•&lt;Jd Atl \ it'd d

IIJ 2 ,

• w~ 1 l

OHIO VALLEY
RO •l f1ng .

- - - ------- -

Forcing bid muddies play

I, DOIJ' I.

.A
E.\ST

WEST
• R :J

•n1

gutters .

do . t1S1-J 'l Ut s

• Ill ti ~ ~
• K h ~
• l tJ ll 4 .1 1

t Al,11 112
+ K !Hi ~

SO\ Til
. K J ' tib J ~

I ''I'J'l.E ORPHAN ANNI F:

• A \) 7
• k i

ORPHAN ANNIE- DON'T SAY

4&gt; A&lt;./
9 'l.S 1 mo Pd

:, )' wrw · o~ 1-1r
A S f 1.. RE- r I riG GfR ,
teo,

PAINliNG
AND
sand
bl as t ,ng
Fr ee estrmates
Cal t 9od 9 26S6

\ "ulm· r ahll' :\ l' lther
Deal er South

Tu KFFP I r

1 '~ .\!­

l'a''

DO ZER .

E ND
L oad e r ,
b r us h
hog
W oll
do
b a&gt; em e nt s. pond s. brush.
ltmber
lan d
r tearrng
( h'-r l e s B u t r he r 7.47 2940

SE W ING
MACHINE
qe p a ,rs .
servt c e .
art
ITldke "&gt;
997 12 84
The
Fllbrt &lt;
Shop ,
Pomeroy
Autnor rzed
Sr nger Sales
"nd Serv t(e W e sharpen
Sr tsso rs

l ' d-.s

~ ~--- E

•:5

~""lt".1E

..,E.:;:

~E

C\Jo..- -'ESS

..._"""1 H
1 :3
,... E .;: r-.r._1 u :S"E

• . . I~ "1'l-&lt; •S · ~

~'LJ S E.

..l.. LL

(

'""'c..1 \\

~

._~ .:a. '\.

....

:::-...; --.

1\t 't ..;o.:-r f\1 !:-SS~ S&gt;-1E ._· E c;:: .
1 .1 1 "---l !..'l C\..,E S "" T BE l..'E\ E ' 1\,j
....., •(' •NO ~E: '&lt;: SE L t:- :...~ N r!':" ~
.). ~- ...._
[\_1 E.S 5 1-1E- ;:.

......._f. I&lt;:: E .

It may be a prelu de to slam

lead

GASOI.INF: AI.I.EY

Weren·t that

by

about w· time
Newton stop
walhin' ?

I N STO C K lor rm m edr &lt;"le
ael rvery
va r .ous Stzes of
poo l k1f s Do, , yo urself or
let us tns ta l l f or you D
Bumgardn e r
Sales
Inc
992 \724

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Valuable

thmg
6 Show
pleasure
II Arbor
12 DISCUSSIOn
Kroup
13 Roasted

R E YNO L D S E L EC T RIC
M o to rs . r ewrnd and reparr
Cf92 1356. 561 Beech Sl ,
MrddlePQrt . Ohro

in a wa}'

15 Ne1ghbor

of Ire
16 Angry
17 r ail

WTNNIF:

from pow er
~ ~ -::..--.:-.-....

::',..:., ~ =

BRADFORD . Au r t•oneer ,
Complele Ser v rce Ph one
9od9 2487 or 949 1000 rar•ne
Oh tO. Crttf Bradf ord
'

·2 . . !

:-~ _: · :

-...'Q..J . . . ~-.;~
'.' A ~ ("=~

.::;.._. .....

~ · ~ 0,_~-z

-- :- &lt;=-

;:. Z ST

:-::; ,_:~::=-:;

7 ( Q p r. ! ,7 1·
r :::'~

.' .'=f~T

- ~T~ ~_ :-

.:.· .:- -s .-.- ::7...:: : .-. .; ·- . '.
.. ....:.
.- . . . . -7- , :_

=' '

-=- ~': =: :-~-=-\..
\ ~..:: :)u &lt;..
\. :...

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPA I R
Swe ep e rs .
totl ster s. rr o n s . ril l smal l
app l 1ances L awn mower
Ne)(t t o Star e HtghwayG a r age on R outP 7. 985
) 815

:. I

I

'

-'

" 1)

.- ~~--

~ ·I'1

~ ~ I--~
'
\.'

PIA NO
TUNING
Lane
Daniels New phone num
ber
742 2951
Serv tre to
school s and ho m es Stn ce
1965
BEAT THE htgh co st of
heat.ng your hom p thr s
winter by tnsut a t rng now
Ca ll J•m Johnso n . who IS
ex peri enced
rn
b l ow tn
sulafi on servi ces For tr ee
home evaluatr on . c all and
make an app o1n1me nt now
273 2064 ,
Rnven sw o od
R ef eren c es av ar labt e upon
request

1' . 1 \~

I 'a''

In ..,csuga twn . a mere game
tr y or stm ply an e)(tra b1d
made to con fuse the man l)n

AUTOM O B I L E
IN
been
c an
SURAN C E
c elled '
Los t
y our
opern t or · ~ lt ce n se') Phone
99'} 11.(..]

A&amp;H U ph o lsfer tny acr oss
tr om th e T e xa co Stat ton tn
S yrau c ~t.&gt; 99 ] 3743 or 992
]752

! 'ass

Th£'re has b(•(.•n praetreall y
no c: hange 1n t hr s 1ngle rai st·
day~
of
Si n ce the f1r s t
co ntrac t There h&lt;t ~ been (o nstd erable th ou g h t g J'Jf' n t o t hf'
rebtd to three of a new su1t
That btd ts a lwa y s a ont ·
round force

E X C AVATING .
dozer .
loader and bar Kh oe work
dump tru r k s r~nd 10 boys
t o r h tr e . wdl hau l ftll d•rt.
top soil . l rmestone and
gravel Calt Bob or Roger
Jeff ers, day ph~Sne 992 7089.
nrght phone ~1 3575 or 992
5111

HOWERY AND MART IN
E )l r a v a lr ng ,
sep1 1r
s vstems d o Jer . bac khoe
R r 143 Phone 1 16 14 ) 6~8
733 1 or 74 ? 7593

12•.

._.... ._.

._.""'\ = R

'?~ t-Il" .

1-. a~l

B} Oswald Ja e ob}
and Alan SonlaK

AIJ.F:Y CKJP
I

~orlh

22 Subse-

6 MISS

Muffet' s
VISitor
7 " Mr. Tam-

of Cadmus

wood
18 Old-hat
19 F:uropean

Yestt&gt;rday 's Answer

Z2 Mmus
Z3 Poker sta k&lt;•
24 Row

35 Cul tl\·ated
36 Art JSI

2!/IJncoln
portrayer
JU Play ground

37

Warhol
ScottiSh
compose r

38

Re~ret

rle m
quentl}
32
- klnKdOITI
25 One of
nver
come
the media
211 Kmd
34 One kmd
26 M1ss Bagnold
of colla r
of br ead
27 Encamp
21 Memo
28 Blow off 30 Kous.seVItzk y
~1"C1 ---j--t---r---t31 Notched
33 Haggard

SwnmH Fr
40 F:ndm~ for
llrunk or
' cow
4l F:as; as
39

r

novel
34 Onenl&lt;l l
37

42
43
44

BA!{NF:Y

WATCH OUTWIF
THAT NEEDLE,

45

DOC~~

tea
Hash house
B1z.arre
Freshened
Lanky :
ungamly
Peter 's
fnend

DOWN
1 French

pnest
2 Presently
3 Deep gulp
4 Fish
5 Quiver

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it :
II

PF:ANUTS

I CAN UNDERSTAND
WH'T' SOME PEOPLE LIKE
MIODL
I
ltving room . dining r oom , t amrly r oom , kit c h en tl nd
break fa st nook , with 11, bath downstai r s. be au tl u
hardwood fl oors , aluminum srding . Sl9,5()(),

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br . Mgr _
Phone 992 -2342, Eve. 992 ·2449
Middleport, Oh .

TO LIVE B'( THE OCEAN

T~E SOUND OF THE
WAVES AT NIGHT CAN
BE YER~- SOOTHING

THE SAME SORT OF
THIN G SOMETIMES
HELPS ME

I'M LULLEC' TO SLEEP 13~
SOUNC' OF THE WAVES
LAi'PIN.S ~GAI NS T THE
SIDE OF ,\\1{ WATER DISH

AXVDLBAAXR
LONGFI!LLOVl

One letter simply stands f or another In this sample A is
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, et c Sin g l e lellers ,
apoatrophes. the length and formation of the w o rds are all
hinta. Each day lhe rode letters are different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
ABCDEFGHI
HNOADF

F J A

· · · .--··-·-

Television
THURSDAY , OCTOBER 2l, 1979
30- H o llywood Squares 3; lssut.
O ne The Bottle Bil l 6 . Joker 's
W ild 8. $100,000 Name That Tune
10. Nashville on lhe Road 13.
Coun t ry Roads l.S : All In The
Fam1ly 17 ; Ma c N eil Lehrer
R e por t 20 ,JJ
8 00 B uc k Rogers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Sh r rley 6 , 13 ; Waltons 8, 10 .
E ve ning at Symphony 20: M ovie
" The Great Lover" 17: Sl a te
We ' re In 33
8 JO- Benson 6. 13 . Sports C lose Up
33
9 (}()--&gt;Q u in c y J , 15 . NFL Football
6, I 3 . Hawatt F 1ve 0 8, 10 ; Sneak
Pr e v 1ews 20,33
9 30-- C amera Three 20,33
10 00 - Kate the Detect1ve 3. 15 :
Barnaby Jones 8 ,
Julie &amp;
Sammy
10 .
Btlly
G raham
Cr u &lt;;;tde 17 . News 20 : David
Suss k1nd 33
10 30- Hock1ng Valley Bluegrass 20 .
11
News 3, 8, 10, 15 . Last of the
Wild 17 . OiLk Cavett 20 , Fall &amp;
Rrse of Reginald Perrm 33
11 30· Johnny Carson 3, 15 ; Co lumbo
B, ABC News 33 . Movie " The
Private N nvy of Sgt O'Farrell"
10 . Mov1e " A Stolen Life" 17
12 00 New' 6 , 11. 12 , ]0- FBI 6 '
Emergenc y O ne 1J
00-· Tomorrow 3 ; News 15, 1 l&gt;Bana celo: 8
J(}-Adam 11 13; 1 : 4&gt;-News 17
50 - Mo v• e " T h e Fast &amp; the
F u r tollS " l7 2 ~ Ne ws 1.1
FRIOAY . OCTOBERl6, 1979
5 AS- Farm R ~port 1.1. 5 So-P TL
C lub 13
o oo- 700 C lub 6.8 PTL Club 15 ,

lU

9 Wreath
10 I louse

17 Fragrant

. . . ..

oo-

OOurine

Horse, e g

- ·

H ealth F teld 10 . 6 . 0&gt;-Worl d at
Large 17
6 30 K 1dswor td 10 News 17 . 6 45-North m ;1~ rt · pl~·
It
Morning Report 3: 6 50--Good
~ h uwl·d
:; s hort " lllt
It
Morn1ng
W est V•rg t n•a lJ.
~ howed .; tn•ngth
11 Js kt•d
6
S&gt;News
13
for hPlp · Or whd t t:. n : r y
00-- Toda y 3 15
Good Morning
ltkt· l v 'It 1.., a [ tJl dl h · no n dt' ~ ·
A
mer•
c
a
6.
13
.
Fr
i
day Morntng 8;
rr1pt"frJr&lt; 1ngb1rl
·
Batman 10. Three Slooges Lttfle
At lhl '-i slagf' uf tht • prot t·t·d
Ra sc als 17
tngs Wf'st IS hkd _,.. to&lt; r1mt· to
15 A M
Weather 33
7 30t he ('ondu o.; Hm that So uth b1d
F am tly Alta1r 10 . 7 55-Chuck.
lhn.'e clubs m qrdn 1•1 s \ttp a
Wh 1te Report s 10
rlub k&lt;Jd Sn Wt·s t ''Pt'n:-. d
B
00- C apt Kangaroo 8. 10 , Leave I
f"lub and now South wr .:t ps up
To Beaver 17 . Sesame St 33
h1 s four -sp&lt;Hh• &lt;'Untrdct WJ th
8
30-- Rompt'r Room 17
anv otht•r lt&gt;ad South W( &gt;Uld
q GO-Bob Braun 3 . Btg Valley 6;
h&lt;l~· l' \IJ t .:.~ kt• tht• dull ftm' S'-1'
Ph rl Donahu e 15 . Porky P1g &amp;
and go on(· d rtwn
F r i ends 8; One Day At A Time
Th 1s ttl! .., (tund ... f ,ilht·r
tO . Phil D onah ue 13. L u cy Show
unllkt&gt;h· vt't lht s thr ee-( !uh
17
h1d wit :-; ·rnadt• hv tht• !d\1 '
9 JG- Bob Newhart a Love ol Life
Sherman S t&lt;' drn ~ In thl' J n R
10 . G reen A c r es 17
4
Llf(' ~a s ll' r p&lt;.~ 1 r s WP st d1 Ll
10 00-Ca rd Shark s 3,15 Edge of
d(•ude th;; t ShHman Wd ~
N rgh t 6. Bea t the Clock 8. 10,
trvtn~ to q np a club !c&lt;td Hf'
Mornmg Magaztne 13. Mov1e " A
dtd opt•n &lt;t dub dOd the f(' Su!
B l uepr~nt for Murder " 17
tdnt top ~wlp&lt;·d Stt•arm. am.!
10 JO- Ho ll ywood Squares 3.15 ·
hi ' pctrtm•r \1orr~ Ell ~ w111 thl'
J u n •o r
Pyramtd
13 .
Andy
l'Ven \
G r 11t1lh !l . Whew 1 8. 10
· ~f- V. -, 1 ' -'.I "f- H t-.'\Tt- HI ' HI -, t '1 '\:&gt;.'\ .
10 SS- C B S New s 8. House Call 10
11 OO- H 1gh R o ll e r s 3 1S. L iwerne &amp;
100 ;·ou have a qu es /! o n fo r
Sh1rley 6. 13 Prt ce 1s R1ght 8.10 .
the experrs ? Wnte
A sk lh t
E tec Co 20
Expert s. care o f th1s ne wspa
11 30 Whee l o f Fortune 3. 15 ,
p eF ln dtvld ual que Sti Ons w l/1
F a m •l y Feud b. 13 . Sesame St
be ans wered d acc o mpameo
10 .33 . II 5.5- New s 17
b y s tamped. self -a odresse d
12 00 New sc enter
3.
N e ws
envel opes The mos f rnrere!&gt;f b, 8, 10 , 13 . Mrndreaders 15 . Love
mg ques /l ons will l.Je used m
A mertcan Style 17
lhrs c olvm n and .,.,.,// recerve
12 JO--Ryan ' s Hope 6. 13 SeMch for
comes o l JA COB Y M ODERN 1
Tomorrow 8. 10. H ealft1 F re id 15,
M ovi e " Lad 1es Co urageous " 17 .
El ec Co J3
00- 0ay5 of Our L tves 3, IS . All My
Children 6.1 3. Young &amp; the
R es tless 8. 10
30-- As The W or l d T u rns 8, 10 ;
2 00-0octor s 3 I S. One L1fe to
L1 ve 6.13 . 2 25-- News 17
3o- Another World J.1S . Gu1d ing
L1ghl 8 10 . G1ggt e snort Hote l 17
3
G eneral Hosprtal 6, 13 ; I Love
Luc y 17 . Upsta1r s. Dow n stairs

S Daughter

add1t10n
14 Shasta or
Hungry

. . . . ,~

oo-

~. H(

Thursday, O&lt;·t 2:&gt;

TRAILER SALES

"~J

Viewin~

"
.
\

•

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N'e w, repair .
gutters and
do.~n splluts_
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Fre~ Est1mates

by Hemt Arno ta a.nQ Boo Lee

U,..'&gt;{ ' d"'tJt e lhe'o.e •o u' JumDies
'"''"'!! Il l" tn par ll &lt;,qu.t te !t ' Ufm
•J ' VOt '18f) words

OF

W2H1S

lo t

MAIN
POMEROY . 0 .
PH 991 -1159

H enry E . Cleland , Sr.

VIRGil B SR . ._.._~

~!HAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAME

1&lt;-1~~~ .

[J~j

4 10 11

LOOKING FOR a respon
Stbl e party tn the Pomeroy
area IO assum€ paym e nts
on a p ra no Ca l l ro llerr 592
5112
RAY ' S USED Furniture.
Addrson ,
367 0637
Rf'lrrge r ator . $i15 Break.
la st se t . SJO L•v•ng room
suite . S45 Fuel oil heater ,
$45 GE dryer. $75. GE
automatt c
wash er,
s.b5
Meta l rab rnel , $10 Old krt
c hen c ab•net w1th flour brn,
S-.45 Platform rocker . S20
K•t c hen c abrnet . glas se d 1n
doors . !.35

Featurin
men ' ~
&amp;
women's styling, p er ms _
Calt tor appf . or walk m .

REAL ESTATE
F NANCING

c .. LL
WIN T ER
POTATO ES
C W
Profitt! f arm , Por
!land , OH S8 a hundred and
SS a hundred

MAR MORA
HAIR STYliST

992 -2367

~

Auctions

Giveaway _

Win -

Free Estimate

For Sale

USED
T OPPE R .
S4 0
1nqu 1re a t 400 La sley St .
Pomer o y O H

AUCTION . FR I DAY 7 p m
Frankt rn ftr e p l a ce stov e .
rron lard k e ttle . depr essron
g l ass . tot s of new mer
r handtse
tn f lud rng
c ar
petmg at Ohro Rrver A u r
11on , SR 7. sou t h of Mtd
dleport ,
OH
Howard
Beasley . au r t rone r

eln5olation
eStorm Doors
e~torm Window s
• Replacement
dows

----

C OA L ,
LIMES T ONE .
s an d . gravel , cal ciu m
r ht o r•de .
lerfrltz e r.
dog
food , and a ll t ypes of sa lt
Ex r elsror Sa lt Work s. tn r
E Ma 1n Sf , Pomeroy , qq7
3891

Mick 's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
I troduces -

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Sidinq

NOV A MA G wneels .
new ttres . a i r shoc ks . 150 2
bbl . head e rs and 4 speed .
S600 9.49 2691

HOU SE COA L , l u m p or
stoker . Wtll deltver
747
1183

AUCT IO N . FRIDAY 7 p m
Frankltn ftrept ce stove .
,ron l ard kettle . depressron
glass . lots of new mer
c ha n d rse rn r ludtng
c ar
pettng at Ohro Rr11e r Au r
fr an , SR 7. so uth ot M td
dt e porr ,
OH
Howard
B e asley. aurt toner

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

a

11 j t \ f~t;} ~ 11

MQS T () !== IT IS
CLO S ED T O 'H E
PUBLIC

'

19 71

L O ST ON Mulberry Ave
8th grade 1973 g roup sc h oo l
pr e lure . Sug a r f".( un Srhool
Call 9'12 2592

BIG AUCTION ev e ry W e d .
7 pm Harflord Commu n tty
Ce nter. Hartford . wv
4
mt l es
above
Pom e r o y
Mason Br rd ge

9

Business Services

1 1
1977
Ton
Ch ev r o let
p rr kup truc k W1tt1 p s , p b .,
a c , good fif eS Retail
prt c:e S3265 . sal e prt ce
S'l.SOO
Ingels
Furn i ture .
M•dd lepon

---

l !t?

GUARDED!

c ub

s( o ut untl o r ms 985 3867

I 977
VOLAR E

() . Thu rsJCJ~ . Ort 25

Auto Safes

C H t P WOOD Pol es m a l(
d ta m e ter 10 .. on larg es t
end S.1 2 p er t on Bundled
stab SI O pe r r on Delivered
to Oh10 P;tl lpf (o , Rt 2,
Pom er oy 99'} 2689

WANTED

M tddlt&gt;oo rt -POJ1a·rr 1y.

the Sentinel Classifieds

In

_ Wa__n__!ed to Buy

OF MEIGS

COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF DELBERT
LUCKADOO,OECEASED
Ca&lt;;.e N o. 228J5
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Octobe r 5Th, 1979 , rn
me Merg5. Coun ty Probate
Co urt . Case No 171335 . Cur
t rs
L ook.ad oo . Rulland
O h to 45775 . wa s appO tnted
A dmr n tstr ator of the estate
ot
Del b ert
L ookadoo .
ae r Pa'iPd . lat e of quftand
Town shrp Merg e; Coun t y
O h tO 4577 5
R oberl E Bu c k
P r o bate J udg e
C IN k
( t0 1 I l , 18. :?5. 3t c

DICit TT1 A''Y

•

J E K

LHM

LHMPEFGHI

GFK

HL

DJEMEDFAM . - JAMNAMF
KQAIDAM
VHterday 'o Cryploquote: HAVE A CARE WHEN TIIERE IS
MORE SAIL THAN BALLAST. - WIWAM PEI\'N

J 30.-Qne Day At A T1me 8. Joker ' s
Wild 10 . Ft•ntstones 17 .4 00 M 1sl er Cartoon 3 Password
P l us 15 . Merv Gflffln 6 . Be11erly
H d lbilhes B. Sesdme Sl 70. J3 :
Sr.. Mill1on D o l lar Mdn 10 . Real
M c Coy s 13 . Spe c treman · 17
4 JO- Bewltched
3.
Pett•coat
Junc llon 8 . To m &amp; Jerry 13 .
M erv G rtff in 15. Gilligan ' s I s. 17
5 00 - I Dream o f Jea nni e J . Sa n ford
&amp; Son 8. M•ster Roge r s ' N eigh
b orhood 20 . 33
Mary Tyler
Moore 10 My Three Sons 1T
30----C arol Burnell 3 . News 6 .
Gomer P yle 8. E lee Co 20 .
Ma sh 10 . Happy Days Aga1n ' l , I
Dr eam o f J e annie 17. Doc tor
who 33
6 oo- News 3,8. 10 , 13.15. ABC News
6 . Zoom 20 , Carol Burnett 17 ,
Freesty le 3.1
6 30 NBC New s 3. 15 . ABC News I J .
Carol B u rne l l6 , C BS News 8.10 .
Bob Newhart 17 . Ove r E a sy
20 . JJ
7 QO-- · J' s A Crowd 3 . T1 c Tac Dough
B, News 10; N ewlywed Game 13 ;
Love Amer ican Style 15 , San ford
&amp; Son 17 . Die&lt; Covett 20,JJ .
30-- Pri ce IS Right J; New lywed
G ame 6 . Family F e ud 10 .
Joker ' s Wrld 8. Pop Goes The
Country 13 , 15 . MacNeil Le hrer
Report 20. JJ . Al l In T he Fam ily
17
8 00 - Shtr ley 3,15 : Mov 1e " Th e
B•b lc " 0 , 13 , In cred ib le Hulk.
8 . 10 . Wash 1ngton
Week in
Rev iew 20.33 : NBA Basketball
17
8 JO-- W al l S lreel Wee&lt; 20 .JJ
9 ()()--Rockfor d F lies 3,15: Oul..es of
Hazzard 8.10 ; Scarle t L e tter 10,
Money News &amp; V iews 33 .
9 . ]()-UN Day Concerl 1979 JJ .
10 .QO--EISChled 3, 15 : Dallas 8, 10;
N ews 20 .
10 30---Bil l y Gra ham Crusade 17;
Loc&lt; Stock &amp; Barrel 20.
11 00 - New s 3,6,8, 10, 13 . 1S ; Dick
Cave tt 20 ; Monty Pylhon '~
Flying Circus 33 .
11 30 - Johnny
Ca rson
3. 15 ;
Charlie's Angels 6; M ovie " A
Place to Di e" 8 ; Mo vie
" Nightmare l n Wax " 10 ; Movie
"Fly ing Misllts " 13 ; Movie
" Journey to the Center of the
earth " 17.
11 :40--ABC News 33 ; 12 :40-- FBI 6 .
&lt;»--Midnight ~peclal 3, 15: Juke Box 8 ; Movie " The Hypnotic
Eye" 10: l ' ~N ews 13.
17;
2 · 05- NBA
2 : 00- Ne ws
Basketball 17; 2 : 31}--- News 3;
4 : 35-SI•r Trek 17.

�10--The Daily St•ntnwl. Mtddit'p, • 11 - Po1 !1 t'nt~ , 0 . Th ursd.a} . Od 1!1, 197Y

•

HO~I.IT\1. \1-:\\~
\

VETERANS MEMORIAL

Admitted -·How &lt;nd
Ho u s h .
~ine ; Mary Enwstrnt• Tyler ,
Shade; James Blake, HartforJ .
Discharged-Hos~ Kent. Frances
Oldaker, Ricky Walker . De Iores
Donohue, Hilda Davi• , Ve~11 a Par sons, Wilma Anderson. Betty J o
Crites, David Jenkms .

HL'lml .'il:lks tax. rt'L't 't pl!:i for Sep tember . 19'i'Y, Wf' rt ' up by 15] per('t' rtt l'ompart&gt;d to September , 1978,
m·eordtng to the r eport of Mrs . Ger trude Donahey . s tatt&gt; tr easurer

81r c hf te ld .

Kt.•bt' (Ti-l

Brinbcker , V10let Canery . V1olL't
Carter,

DeHir.fi

Cl n rk

1\·a rl

Co leman, Opal Co llr ns. Tt•rr r
Crabtree . Lucmda 1Jav1s. Pt.' ~gy
Ellis , Jillian E\·a ns, Hutf1 Exlmt'.
Ruth F'low~r s, Mrs. Wrll"un Jlati L'rl
and son. H1chard .J nmt•.&lt;.: , l.&gt;un ;dd
.Jan·is . He1d1 Ju ne s, Albt' rt Kt· llt.·r·.
Mrs . Charle s Lmtn t.•r ctnd son . Huh~
Lucas , Slt.•ph ~Hll t' \-1 ar b. l'h;tr ll':-.
Mc(~n . Gt.'Or gt.• McC uon. J :l lllt.'."
Norman . Treeman ( )wl' n.'i. Tanl!n ~
Penn1n g t un. Sharo11 S;-!und t·r ~.
Dallas Swl mt&gt; . Hi.! _
\ \\i 1lfurd . St n r l~·~
Woolwtne

NO. 137

SQLAIJ Rl:NS

WASHING "l'Of\i 1.' P 1- Pushed by
higher pn ces for food, fuel and
houstng , eon swner prices increased
Ll percerrt rn September as tnfla llon
continued above a 1~ percent annual
rale, the government said today .
At the same tUlle, rt reported that
the pur c ha~mg JX!wer of workers '
paycheck s declrned a noth er 0.7
percent dunn~ tiw month and wa s
down by 14 percent from a year
earlier .
There was nothmg 1n the
September prt ce report til tndJcate

wa~ cdllt•d to Hysell St. at 7·45 p .m

Wt.'tint •sday for Hazel Board wtlo
Wt:is Wkt•n tu Holzt.•r M ed1cal Ct•n ter .

GIH J.~ KEPOHT FRIDAY
All grrb of Mergs Hlgh School who

a rc· rntt·rested 111 pwymg basket ball
should re port to pr&lt;tettce at 5 p .m .
Fnd; t_\ at tlle luKh sc hool.

any unprovt:rnent m the nation's

MEN'S
SPORT,

highly dr.turbrng rate of rnOation. It
matched August ·s 1.1 percent

9---, .....
"-j
...

t· .

'~ . 'J
"1

\

,£3.-t::::;.-:..;' ·:.

DRESS
SHIRTS

~.

~

For The
Style consc 1ou s
M an .

/

mcrease and was the ninth month

this year that pn~s have mcreased
by about 1 1)t'rcent.
Overall food prrces, rncluding
re s taurant meals , c limbed 0.9
pe r cent durmg. Septembe r , the
btggest rncrca'*' m ftve months, a nd
grocer y ~"to r e pnces were up 1.1
percent. Food prices had shown
littl e or no mcrease m the previous
three months.
.. C·(

~

•MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

;-,"

'~Joday .,

In v e lour s. co rd uroy , kn it s. tl a n c ls. e tc

•MEN'S DRESS SHIRTS

... .in the world ·

S11 es • ' . to 19 S l~eve lenq th 37 " 35 "

USE OUR CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY!
-- ~~ .......... ---.·.·----- .................... ~
---~---,

Overcharge noted

~

and the Atlantic Richfreld Co .

)
.

~

GOOD SELECTION OF LEV I'S
CASUAL JEANS SIZES 28-42

BAHR CLOTHIERS

WASHINGTON (APt - Texaco

$484

Middleport, 0 .

N. 2nd Ave.

c·uRRENT
SAVING
RATES

Reg . 513.00
Reg. $15 .00
Reg. $20 .00
Reg . 525 .00
Reg . 548.00

,,

Skirt ............. . . Sale $9 . 09
Blouse .. ..... ..... Sale $10.49
Vest ........ .. . ... ..... $13.99
Slacks ............ Sale 517.49
Blazer ............ Sale 533 .59

overcharged customef8 by
almost $:m million after the Ara b
oil boyc-ott of 1973-74 sent fuel
prices soaring , the government
said Thuroday .
The accusations by the Energy
Department brought to $5 .2
billion the amount of pricing
irregUiartUes charged against
the nation 's 15 largest oU com·
panies.
That swn is the equivalent of a
Xent per gaUon increase in the
price of aU the gasoline sold in
this country in a year .
So far', with most of the charges
under appeal, restitution of only
$150 million has been ordered, ac·
cording to Paul L. Bloom, the
Energy Department's special
counsel in charge of a special
audit of the pricing actions or the
country's 15 largest refin&lt;&gt;f8 .

Gold auction

PASSBOOK

Compovndod Daily

5 lf4 %

90 DAY CERTIAr.ATE ......':'.'~:~~~~-':~~...... 51Jz%
I YEAR CERTIFICATE ..... ~~~~.':'~.~-~~-~:~ ....... 6%

71Jz%
8 YEAR CERTIFICATE .....~~~:~.~~.~::~.~ ...... 7~%
4 YEAR MONEY CERTIACATE
MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
•11,100 mlnlmum . Interest r 1te equel to the rete
..,.. r•te. AI determinl!'d •t wHkly auction .

LONDON i APJ - The U.S .
Treasury's ~urprise an·
nouncement Lhat it wUI auction
off SU!i million ounces of gold on
Nov. 1 sent the price of bullion
plummeting by as much as $17 .50
in Europe today The dollar rose .
" People were expecting there
wouldn't be any auctions for a
while, and now we have more
gold coming onto the market, "
said a dealer at Samuel Montagu
Ltd., one of the big five London
bullion merchants.
Gold opened in London at
$374 .50 an ounce, down $17.~
from $392.00 Thursday . In Zurich ,
the opening price was $376.50,
down $15.50.

$30 million given

Mltllmum Sl.OOO.DO. lnternt r•te of PI•% under the •veregt 4 year
yield of Treasury SecuriiiH .

of 112

d•v trutury

Current rate 12 .651°•o effect iv e October 25 · 31. 1979 . Sub ·
stantial penalty required for ear ly withdrawaL

enttne

at

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

fRIUA Y OCIOBER 26 197CJ

Fud prlct!s rose sharply og(:IIIJ
during the mont h . wrth home
heatrng oil up 56 per cent and
gasoline prices advanc1ng 3. 1
percent to a na ttonal average of [1') .8
cents a ga Bon for all types .
The overall cost of housmg rose
another L2 percent , with horne
mortgage finan cing up 1.8 perc~nt,
partly the result of government
efforts to slow t.lw e('Onomy by
mcrea sing mterest rates. ·
However . even larger Lncreascs m
mortgage costs probably lie ahead,
because the latest actrons by the
Federal Reserve Board til pllSh
rnterest ralrs to record levels will
not show up in the Conswner Price
lndex for another mon th or two, sa1d
Patrrck Ja ckma n,
a Labor
Department analyst .
Jackman scud conswner prices
have rn crea'*'d at a 13.2 percent
annual r ate durin g th e first nirl"e
mon ths of 1979, rneanrng that rf the
same trend cont inu es thr ough
December , that would be the total
rncrcase for the yea r .
It would be the hrghest 1nflatron
for any year srnce !946, when prices
were up 18.2 percent a fter th e
~ov~ rrunent hft ~d wartlm~ price
controls.
The Labor Department said it'
Omsurner Price Index stood rn
September at 223. 4 of the 1967
average of 100, meaning that good s
and scrvrces prtced at $100 rn 1967

had n St&gt; n 111 cost to S22:l 40 lost
month

Pr1ces ha d lncrt.•ased 12. 1 pl'rcent
the 12-month pt'fltld endu1 ~ In
September.
Jackman sa 1d th t' w u r .~ nlll ~ ul
food prict:' S again followLHg four
l-uonth s of Improvement l"iu ud~ 1Jw
outlook for an easm g of ln fl&lt;JtlCJn 1:1
coming months.
The Carter ad rn !n1 s t rat1 on
ongmally had for t'(· ~1 em l.'asmg of
conswner pnces to be low d 10
percent rate by the end of Ua.- ) ec1r .
" It 's not a ver y pleasant furl'£'a st
... I don't see us gettmg w on~:. b ut Jt
loo ks like we ' ll ht&gt; stay1 ng n ght
arow1d wher t' we &lt;lrL', With tht·
highest rate of mflatwn S ln ('L' Worl d
War I I," .Ja&lt;" kman sa1 d
Earlier Hl th t.• week , Ch r!es L
Sehultz. th e c ha rrman of t he·
president's Counu ..l uf El'unurn J('
Adv rsers. had s ard he L'Xpected th e·
rate of tnlt-t tlfHl to bt! sln~ htl y Wlder
13 percent
Stt•ad..llv wor semng mfl atwn 111 Ul t·
e&lt;·u nOlll): (" dU sed t he Fed e ral
Heser \'e Board to tak e drastic
actwn s on Oct 6 to slow gm't'tth of
tJH.• rnoney supply and boo st mten •sl
rates to he lp con ta m Ul e upwarJ
pn ce sp1ral .
Schultze said the go\'ernment 's
antl -inflcl.l l on pr ogram , whtc h
mcludes wa gt.• cmd pnce gUJdeilne~
and restraint on fedt"ra1 spe nd m~. ~ ~
i Conttnued on page I 0 1
lfl

Cash flow plan
expected today
...111rrc wtll bt· enough cash. ·· he
sard . "Th rs wtll be a ccomplished by

COLU MBU S, Ohro I AP 1 - A plar
to solve Ohio's cash-flow problem by
shrfting stat£ expenditures will be
announced today , the governor's
executive assistant says .
Robert F. Howarth sard the plan
wrl! mvolve shrfts rn payments rnto
state pensron fund s and other
expenditures so there will be enough
money t o meet obliga tiOns tlus yt..•ar

shiftin g sorn~ pt!nston fund s and
other fund s tn other area s wht· rL'
pa ymenl"i do not ha ve tu bL• ma d l'

rmrnedrat ely ..
Simpl y s tated. the t" as tl -flo\\
problem means the state does nut
expect to eolle ct cn o u ~ h m ta~ es th is
calendar year to pay Its obllg&lt;.d1on s
These revenues will p1ck up a fter
Jan . I
The probl em has been d.J sr usst&lt;d a t
vano us t1rn es dunng tht..• yt'ar as
nt&gt;w revenut' prOJt'CtJOn s wert• made .
Talk aOOut it was rem•wed la.'it wt"t'k
when Rhodes s wnmoned kgi slativt~
leaders uf both part ie S ~:t nd stiih '
r:durHtiOn De partmen t offlf letls tu
h1s office
At that rnL~t mg, t.I1e pro:;pprt uf a
caslt defr crt of $.\U mrllr on to !iO
mdhon ~tw e-en now a nd Jnn 1 wa s
rats.d .
Howt'\"er . th t• adllllfli Strn twn· s
bud~et expert.'i warnt.·d tl1a t tht.'
defter! could be as hrgh as $!00

Tentative
agreement
announced
PT. PLEASANT - A tentative
contract agreement between the
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Com·
pany's Pt Pleasant Plant and Local
644, of the United Rubber Workers
was joinUy announced this morning
by members of the negotiating com ·
mittees .
The new agreement will provide
for a general wage increase, an un·
proved vacation policy, and ad·
ditional benefits for approximately
450 employees when ratified by the
local union .
Ratification votes are scheduled to
be held in the Carpenters Hall in Pt .
Pleasant on Monday , Oct 29, at 7
p.m. and Tuesday, Oct. 30, at 9a.rn .
When ratified, the new agreement
will become effective Nov . 4, 1979,
and extend for three years .

mdilon .

Hecau se su bs idi es to publi c
sc hools eumpns.e s uch H largt·
portiOn of the ~tate 's expl.'ndltures.
Lh e possibili ty uf tnmnung s ubs Hli e~
to each dJstn ct by 5 pt.'rn~nt for
October, November and Decernl&gt;t'r
was diSCLL'ised . That rnont'Y would be
restored early tn 1980 when tax
revenue s cat ch un w1th state
10bliga t1ons .
ln a recent mlerV1ew . hu wt.•vt·r .
Rhodes sard school s ubsr ur es would
not be redu c ed . In stt.•a d . hl'
slll(gested till' possrbrhty of del ollll g
pa yment on other st..Hh· bill s

STT-fN CON"nNUES - Some of the 30 l£achers
staging a sit-in at the adrriinistra tive office. of Ute
Meigs Juruor High School rn Middleport as a part of a
~y-old teachers strike are prctured with a srgn
which they are using to mark the hours of the srt-in .

Today was the 25 th day of a
teac hers· strike in the Meigs Local
School Distri ct with no settlement in
srght
,
Mei[!S County Judge Charles
Knight reported ttus morning he rs
offenng the facilities of the county
court office in the courthollSe as a
negotlatto ns location for the
negotiating teams of the board of
ed ucation and the teachers
a.'i5QCLation .

Kru!\hl indicated tha t the tea chers
had accepted the location this mor·
rung Supt. David Gleason said that
the location rs one of several neutral
locations wtu ch has been offered for
negotiations
Kmght, an attorney , rndicated
today that rf the negotiations do not
take place - and he rndtcated they
should start by noon torlay- !hat he
wrll probabl y fr! e a court actiOn
whi ch would throw the negotia tions
problem into the lap of the Mergs
County Board of Education . Kni~ht
said that should the county board
refuse to take up the probl em then it
will be&lt;.·ornea matter for the probate
court . Robert Buck ts the county
pro bate court judge
Meantune, about 30 teac hers of
the distnct contmued theJr oc cupancy of central offi ces of the
distnct located rn !he junior high
school at Middleport The teachers

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL

BANK
Racrne. Ohio

'

are staying tn the building 24 ho ur s a
day and had been there for 96 hours
as of II a.m. this morning . They vow
to rernam in the building until the
strike is settled .
However . Supt. Gleason rndicates
that the occupancy has put a damper
on negotiations . The office staff has
not been in the building since the
close of the day's activities on Monday when the building was occupied.
Supt. Gleason had the foUowing to
say today in regard to the s ituation :
" We have found several neutral
sites for negotiations, one of which is
the pollee station in Middleport and
another irt the county courthouse rn
Pomeroy . We certainly apprecJatt'
efforts made by many people to
locate these neutral Sites.
'· However . we still have a group of
peopl e occupr mg the adrrunistrallon
building rn Middleport ThJS rllega l
occupation has put a sen ous damper
on the negottatton process. If the
teat' hers are as seri ous about set-

tling this stnke as they say they are.
they l'-1ll vacate the prerruses so wr
may continue our dutJes and od-

~AlifF: CLAR!FlED
It was Raymond Mi chael that ente red a guilty pl ea when he was
a~raigned before Judg e John C.
Bacon rn the Mergs County Comm on
Pleas Court on a charge of traf fi cking tn drugs not R&lt;Jnd y H.
Mrchael. Hys ell Hun Ho ad .
Pomeroy

rrurustrative functions in a proper
atmos phere .
· At ttus point, central office per·
sonne! are not working in the
bwldmg . Yesterday , the treasurer
dtd prepare the payroll for all em·
p! oyes who have earned wages
during the past several weeks .
" It has been brought to my at·
tent1on that many people do not un·
derstand what the teachers are
really doing and the corrununity
beheve.• the teachers are on strike
agamst the conununi ty and actually
are tr}1 ng to force the conununity to
vote new taxes . Many people have
expressed the opinion 'that it isn,
right to give in to the teachers
~emands just because the y figure
thev can get rt fr om the taxpayers .'
rs unfortunate and definitely
"1ll not help the tea chers· position .
.. The community •hould realize
Lhat rt " aiso very hard for us to un·
derstand what Lhe teacher s are
trytng to do .
· The State Department of
Edu cation comments made to us at
Monday's meeting were : 'If you con·
tmue to operate on your present
austenty program 1of no textbooks,
no fix rt expenditures , etc ), you
could probably have a balance (hope
nottung breaks down I at the end of
Lhe year', pornts out that rt is so ob,, ous we do not have the kind of
money to bend to the teachers'

Ttu:,

dema nds .''

Schoois of the district have been
offrc1ally closed srnce Tuesday mor·
ru ng. Oc1.16.

Patrol checks two accidents

1

Winning numbers :
Blue 253; Whlte %; Gold J:
Winatbon 99504.

WASHINGTON (API - The
House approved $30 million for
international relief for starving
Cambodians Thursday . The
money is part of 169 million in aid
pledged by President Carter .
The House approved the $30
million 362-10 after a brief
debate.
Carter pledged the 169 million
U.S. contribution Wednesday to
avert what he said could be "a
tragedy of genocidal proportion"
in Cambodia.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
filln@ deadline for applying for
the state's 8.'1Sistance plan for
fuel bills is Nov. 30.
The Energy Credit Program of·
fers the elderly and disabled par·
tlal payment of fuel bills.
Persons must be 65 or older or
permanenUy and totally disabled
to qualify . They must be head of
household or spouse , with an in·
come of $9.000 or less .
For applications and further in·
fonnation caU the Ohio Energy
Credit. Program toU free at 1·
1100-282-1310.

The group had put ut 76 hours occ upying the offices
when this picture was taken Thursday afternoon. The
teachers have vowed they'll stay in Lhe central offices
of the district until the strike is settled and indicate
that the sit·in demonstrates their willingness to
negollate

Neutral negotiating site
offered by Judge Knight

T\Jo·u ac('Jdcn ts Wt'ft ' 1/l\"t•st uu;tt-d
Th un.d a~ U~ thl' (;allla -\f t•tg:. Poc-;t .
H1g hwoy PrJtrol
Officer s Wt•rt' r ailed tu! :lt' 'icent• of
~~ t w u- ~· ehl dt• rnl !'il&lt;!p 11n I "H 2.), twu
and lhrt&gt;e-knths of a rnJit· norttl of
SH 218. al l p 111
Th t:

pa t r ol

re po rt s

ar.

~uto

upt•r a ted hy .Juantla Cali . 22.
c;aJitpoiJ s. b(-j t ked onto t he roadway
from H pnvHt e drirl' and was st ruck
b.\ ;;:t veh tde Unven by (;il'/Ul
c;raham. ZJ , Callrpohs, whrch came
nvt'r a hill cr est and wa s unahh• to
st up .

Ca ll d amwd 11l J Ur~ . but wa.s not
•·

·.·.·.·.·.·.·· .. ·.·.··: -:-·

....

lrntllt'&lt;hak h treated .

·n,e Call · auto was demolished.
·n ,ere wa s modera te damage to the
(; rahcnn \"t•hJcle . No c1ta tion was
ISSUPci .

An au to mr-urr ed severe damage
a lln t'· \"t~htclt' accident in
\1t·rgs Count y on CH 50, jUst east of
SH (;81 . at 111 . 411 a.m .
The patrol reports ao east bound
vehrc le dnven by James Rucker Jr .,
20. Reedsville. went out of control in
gravel ran off the left side of the
ro adway. went up an embankment,
struck a tree and overturned on its
ng ht sr de .
No n tatwn was Jssued.

dunn~

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chanee of 1bowe111 dally Sun·
day tbrougb Tuet~day . Hlgb tern·
peratureo warming from tbe mld
50o to lOw SO. Swtday to lbe 601! oo
Monday and Tuet~day . Lowri
ruing from the upper 30o lo lbe
low lOri Sunday 1o tbe lOr! oo

Deadline Nov. 30

A FULL
SERVICE ,
' BANK/ •

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Consumer prices rise
as inflation continues

Ttw :'vl rdJieport En!l•rgency Squ ad

RJHTIIS on . 21
Mr . and Mr s Mark J)llit'!ll!t'r . so1 1

Ja c ks on : Mr t:tnd ~1r s \ Ltrk
Cremt•ans. tv.. m SWl:i. (;alliptl lt :--..
Mr . and \1r s Har(Jl d Humk.• '-~'' '
Gallipoli s.

VOL XXVIII

HecerpL' for 1979 totaled $67,&lt;W6.01
compared to recerpts of $58,457.82
fur Septrmher , 1978, an IJlnease uf
$8 ,948.19
Motor vetuel e taJI rece rpts for Scp·
tcm~r . 1979, were down 4.35 per ce nt arcurd mg to M~ Don.ahry 's
report Hecerpts fur September ,
1979, totaled $81 ,2:!7.07 compared to
rrn•rpL' of $84 .9'J4 .82 fo r Septembe r .
1978. a Jenea se of $3,697.75

HOLZER MEDICAL CEI':TEH
DISCHARGES ocr. 24
Verna

(USPS 145 960)

e

•

Tuet~day .

Weather
READY FOR WINTER - Equipment at the Meigs
County State Highway Garage went under annual win·
ter inspectloo Thursday morning . Bernard Gilkey,
superintendent. shown with the equipment, reports

everything is in order. During last year's severe winter
county roads were salted, bladed and cleared as much
as possible .

Clear and cvld tur.ch ht with a chance of frost Low in the low 30s. Increasing cloudiness l!fld milder
Saturday. High in the mid to urper
50s. The chance of precipitation near
zero tonight and 20 perce~t Satur·
day.

r

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