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                  <text>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

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Friday , Oct~ . 1979

MANY OF 11\E Nf\110N'S
LEAVING ECONOMISTS ARE
AGREEP 1HA1 THEY '5EE
AN END TO DOUBLE PI61T
INfLATION- ..

~
~,

OOE~

iHA'T ME.F\N WE.
SHOULD E~PECT SINGlE

Moratorium could be answer
HY ASSOCIATEU PKES.S

\)1'"
..

A moratonum on new rnort~.a~t·
loan d ppht·a tJOn s t hroughuutthl·
~ te~ lt• rua y be the savmgs and Joan
·•
tnuustry ·s answer to ris1n~ mterest
nttes wh1ch are havmg a stgmfa:aQt

DIGIT INflATION, OR
1RIPLf V161T INfLATION?

c:

)

Lmpa r t on their cost of money
P~opl~'s Savmgs Assoc iation of

Toledo said it will not accept any
.
·
1 f
h
ne w app I oc at1 ons " unto
urt e r
noli ce ."
F. .O. Knowles , People's pres1dent ,
said the decision ?!as made as a
res ult of Tuesday 's action by several
· US b k
h h h k th
maJor . . an s w 1c 1 ed e1r
1 -•·
J 5
prl!l1e en uwg rate to a recorr I
percent; another factor invo\ ved In
tilt:~ dension was the interest rates on
U.S . Treasury bills and $10,000
money-market Ct'rtificates rising to

12.6 pen·ent.
All hough tht· mstltutJOn 's l!lDVl'
'o"SJ' 1 't app~ar to hav e tnggered ~~
u'"
tre nd
t oward
111vokm g
a
uwr Hton um ,
one
econumt st
mdrcalt_•d th e action co uld become
tllore wiUt!~;prea d
" It wouldn 't surpnse me tf It
would beg l!l to happen a little
.
more ,''sa id Dr . Alan Winger , VlCe
prestdent of research services 1or
the F.,_,
.,.era 1 Horne 1,oan Bank of
CUJ ctnnah .
The Federal Home Loan Bank
fulfills a function similar to that of
the Federal Reserve system by

aclm~ as the central banking system

for sa vm ~s and loan tn stitutio ns in
Ohw .

" I have no f~ds to let me know

r------------------------1
I

'd

I · ·t

II

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I
I
I
Carter strategists ready. • •
I
I

WASHINGTON
t AP!
Strategists in the Carter presidential
campa ign are ready to mount an
attack on Sen . Edward M.
Kennedy's r ecord for honng
mmority workers .'
Sources close to the Cartt&gt;r
campaign believe lht&gt; pr...sid~nt 's
record IS so s uperior to Kennedy's
that th1s issue could decode wh1ch
man gets the traditional black vote
that both camps consid... r c ruc ia l to
winntng the 1980 Demo c r at ic
presidential nommatton .
But while there are opportumti es,
there are also pitfalls for the Carter
camp in such a strategy, since
blacks are hard to fmd among
Carter's closest adv1sers .
Further , Kennedy 's a1des d1spute
th e case .
" You 'd thl!lk that they could come
up with better point..s to makt•," says
Kennedy
s poke smO:HI
Tom
Southwick . "I don't thtnk anyone has
a stronger c1vll rights record over
the past 17 years than Kennedy ."
But ooe black O.,mocrat , a state
party official allied with Carter.

"Ohio

argues that htrl!lg records "Will be a
b1g 1s.sue m th e black commWlity ."
In his vlt&gt;W , Carter and Kennedy
.1rl' so close on JSSUt!S of L'O ncern to
bla cks that black O.,mocrats m1gh t
dec!dt' between the two on the basis
of h1n ng r~eords .
"Cart er has CJ n•eurd on black
appomtmcnts m top admm 1strat1on
JObs that goes beyond rhetonc,"
says th e Carte r partisan, who
declined to be Identified . "Kennedy
starts strong w1th blacks because of
h1 s family and the 1960s, but once the
campe:ugn begms, he's going to h~ve
to justify h1s horrible record on tl11s
over 17 yea r s in the Senate ."
Another sourCt'. fanultar with the
ttunklflg of Ca rte r c amp;;ngn
str at€g 1sts, srud, " Kennedy ha s
spoken all the right words , but he's
never had a black 1n a position of any
poli cy responsibility or among h1 s
bram trust of informal adviser s."
Southw1c k. Kennedy' s spokesman,
demurs .
Of mformal i:l d vis~r s, hl' said ·
" Till' senator !S very close to Vernon

Perspective~

COLUMBUS. Oh10 I AP 1 - Ohw
employers wh o Withhold medical
records fr om thetr employees or
former employees now fac e a SIOO
fine under a new state law .
The statute, wh1ch became
effective last week, IS auned at a few
employers who refuse to prov ide th e
medical in fo rmation to the1r
worker s, says Rep . Eugene
Branstool, D-Utica, it s sponsor .
" Ther e are companies that have
been reluctant to ma ke th e
information availC::Ible ," Branstoul
said . "This IS s1mp\y a law thai says
the worker ha s a nght to know the
state of h1s or her hea lth "
The law prohibits any employer ,
or any health ca re professwnal.
hospital or laboratory under
contract to provide medlcal data
about workers to that employer ,
from refusmg a wrillen request for
cop1es of medJcal reports . The
request may come from a r urrent
employee, former employee or a
designated representative .
If a physiCian determmes thai
serious medical hann could res ult

!Tom directly re\·ealm ~ the rnnte nts
of a medic~! report to Lhe e1nployee ,
th e statutl' authon zes the report to
be goven to a thtrd person c hosen by
the employee .
Bran~tool ca lled the statute a
"nght to know law ."
" Most co mpanieS have a poli cy
wh~reby tJw~ want employee s t o
know ti1e1r medical mformation ,"
th e Ct1ca O.,mocrat satd.
But so me e mployers, particularly
orw fiberglass company, cont;nually
ha\'l' reftLSed to allow worker s to
know the res ults of regu lar medica l
exams , he sa1d
" Thl! l 'OIIIpany annually requ 1red
em ployt.-es to take a physi cal, t.hen
when th t· cmployl·cs would ask to set&gt;
thl•m . tht' ('O m pa ny refu sed ."
Brc:mstool sa1d .
l11e new law app\oes to all
empiO)W S subjed to the Workers
Compen sation l..(lw . 1ncludmg puhlw
en1pluyers.
The Industnal Comnusswn of
Oh1o will enfor ct' the statute "s
pro\·1s wns. and tht' $100 f1 ne will bt.·
:-~pplled to eC:Ich nolatwn

Profits big surprise
NEW YORK I API - Repor ts of
big profits by the big oil compames .
which haveoutragedsome member s
of Congress, arc coml!lg as a
surprise to the experts who keep an
eye oo the industry for mvestors .
"The big surge in thlrd-quarter
earnings
IS
ca usJng
an
embarrassment to the oil compames
and the oil analytical fraternit y,"
said one member of that fratermty ,
Sanford Margoshes of Shearson
Hayden Stone .
Phillips Petroleum Co ., the
nation 's 11th largest oil company,
111E DAILY SENTINL.L

!USPSIIWtli

today reported a 62 percent mcrease
m profits for tht· quarter. an
mcrease 1t attnbuted prunanly to
IJlc reased d1emlt'al l!ammgs and to
profits from over~as oil operation s
Ph~\ops sat d Its profits lor the
quarter ro se to $19~ 0 ;milo on, or
$1.25 a share, from $\18 .8 1111llion or
77 cents a sh are tn the same quarter
last year . Kev enues rose from $1.75
b11l ion In $2 50 b1111on .
Phillips sa1d
S2.50 b1lloon
Ashland Oil, rankc'&lt;l 15th In th e
l!ldustry, buc ked U1e trenu today and
reported a 14 .5 percent decltne 111
operating ea rnl!lgs for the latest
quarter . l11e company attributed the
downt urn largely to reduced
earnmgs from its coal and
construction O\,. crations.
Ashland sa1d it• operatmg 1ncome
for the latest quarter can1e to $5~
nulhon, or $1.66 a share , agamst $62
million. or SUO a share in the year earlier quarter . It had II m1\ilon
fewer shares outstandmg in the
latest period . Revenues rose to $1.96
billion from $1.51 billion a year
earlier.

Today's birthday : the deposed
Shah of Iran is 6V.
l110ught ior toda,· It is well that
war is so terrible, or we should get
too fond of it . - Robert E . Lee 118011870 )

•

Jordan of the Urban League . And
nghl now. he 's meelmg w1th Mrs.
I Caretta Scott 1 King and 'Daddy '
King on legislation tht&gt; senator is
sponsormg that corcems them : the
Dostnct of Columbia voting rights
amt:ndment , a measurt&gt; to make
Martin Luther King's birthday a
national holiday and hwnan services
legislation ."
The day before , Dr . \!arlin Luther
King Sr ., father of th~ slain CJvil
nghts leader, had endorsed Car ter
The Carter ca mpa1gn plans to
wave K~nnedy's hiring record in the
senator's face . " Kennedy controls
over 100 jobs in the Seryate among
va nous comm1ttees. and he keeps
one token black around , Peter
Parham ," said a source close to
Carter strawgists, who also as ked
not to be named .

Business
•
mirror
NEW YORK 1AP t - We are now
observing the week that was , that
final fuJI week of October 1929 when
the stock market fell apart despit~
all the assuran ces of the
establishment that tunes were very
good .
The con te mporar y assessments of
soclal-t&gt;conom ic conditions 50 years
a ~ u &lt;Jre now bemg resurrected m
countle ss artic les and books .
V1ewmg them tn the spotlight of
h~nd s q;h t, rl•ader s shudder and
wonder .
About the awar~ncss of a man
s uch as Walter Chrysler . for
t&gt;xample ... l can se~ noth ing but good
s1gns along the road of busoness for
the pre se nt yea r. " s aid th e
chatrman and president of the
Chr ysle r Corp .
Toda y, fighting econom ic c haos tn
1979, we havl! are own as~ssments .
Will they too be frozt~n 1n time , then
stared at by ai1oth~:r ~erJ ... rC:Ition ?
What will they think of our analyses,
our assessments .
01, for example , the slatemenl by
Ia· A. lacocca, Chrysler Corp.
chcurman, m seeking approval of a
liouse subcommitte e for a S7&gt;0
nulllon loan guarantee for h1s failmg
co1npany :

··1 am a stron g advocate of Lhe
f rt't' entcrpnse system . 1 grew up m
1t and slugged my way through 1t for
over J3 years ...
" H'Jwever , gtven tlw alternatives
fanng thos corporation, and the
worker~ who depend on Chrysler for
l'mployment, w e have rm choice
but to seek assistance unlil we can
agam be profitable ... "
Con .s 1der the.~st' for possible
t'nlluat\On 50 ye&lt;:~r s from now :
- " I ju st fall to see how th~ pubhc
" bemg go ugt'&lt;l by us." Hy Ulyesse
l,d;range , Exxon Corp. controller .
Q,Jotcd 1n th e Wa\1 Street Journal
aftN ~: xxon reported a 118 percent
th~rd-quarter profit jump.
- " lt does appear
that the
respom.lents were dec1d~ly in favor
of d~ c ontrolling oil price s. A
preference wa s ond lcated for
1mm ed1ate decontrol without a
wmdfall profits tax ... " From a
report on the econom1cout\ook of the
Na11onal Association of Bus iness
Economists.
· - " ~ile the country has become
less happy since 1957, happiness is
more evenly distributed and in this
sense our soc iety has become more
just." By ·Prof. Angus Campbe\1 of
the UniverSity of Mich1gan .
- " The o nly thing today's
pohltc1an dreads more than rising
prwes IS falling prices - at least
those that imply income losses for
his constituents." J .B. Burnham,
v1ce president, Mellon Bank,
Ptttsburgh .
- " They're gomg to pay off ." By
J unm y Carlt:r, pres id~n t, 1n
defending has economic polic te" at a
townmet•tmg '"Dolton, Il l , Oc l . 1fi

Lt•ttt·rs of opinion ar~ w~kom~d . They should be II'SS
than 300 words lung 1or subj~d to n·duction by the editor I
and must be signed with the sigm·e 's address. 'lames may
bt- withht'ld upon publif'ation . However, on requ~st,
names w·ill bt- disrlosed. L!'ltt•rs should bt- in gond taste,
addressing issues, not pt•rsonalitit·s.

I

Go in~ ha&lt;'k to 1970~
Before the Meigs Local Teachers
Association was recongized in 1973
as the bargaining agent for the
Meigs Local teachers, teachers had
no grievance procedure policy, were
a! the state minimum in salary with
a 1.62 index, paid their own insurance benefiw, and had no
severance pay .
Transfers and assignments were
made at the superintendent's
dJscretion and inequalities in supplemental contract wages eristed .
By 1979, MLTA had bargained for
and obtained a grievance procedure
with binding arbitration, a salary
schedule $500 above the state
minimum, a 1.70 index, 100 pereent
payment by the Board for health and
major medical insurance, and thirty
days of severance pay
A poli cy concerning transfers and
assignmenw has been established
and supp\ementa I contract wages
are more equal - thanks in part to
Tille IX.
None of these benefits have come
easily - as the frequent teacher
strikes in the district show . Most
have been wrested from the Board
following a show of strength and
unity - not peacefully agreed upon
at the negotiatmg table during good
faith bargaining .
Most laborers in this area have
fringe benefits similar to those of the
teachers' union included in their
contracts with employers, and some
unions have even more - including
dental l!lSurance and holidays with
pay .
Teachers resent having Lo resort
to power struggles - or begging for fringe benefits which the Board
can afford .
No teac her wanl-' Lo financially
break the school district which pays
him; neither do teachers want to be
the last coru;ideralion of the Board .
Improved teac hing conditions,
better pay, and increased fringe
benefits should 1ru&lt;ure that good
tea chers come into the district and
tl1aL good teachers stay . Surely this
should be of prime importance to the
Board of Education that runs our
school dJstrict.
A parent remarked recently in a
public meeting that perhaps the
teachers should loose their benefil-'
during this strike las students have
definitely lost theirs 1, and to this I
reply that lf the s uperintendent Board are successful in their present
\me of attack on the wachers' union,
teachers surely will lose their
benefits - and we ca n all tum our
clocks back Lo 1970.
Respeetfully,
John L. Amott,
Unioo Ave., Pomeroy

to go to school on Saturday to make
these days up . Well, if they don't
they 11 fail or the parents will be
prosecuted . Why don't they
prosecute the teachers then the
parents and children won't have to
suffer! - Signed, Mrs. Barbara
Stahl.

TeRchers underpaid
Dear Sir:
I am writing this letter in regards
to the teachers ' strike here in Meigs
County. I have sat by and watched
this go on for some time now, but it
has reached a point where I cannot
sit by and watch any more .
Teachers are, beyond a doubt,
some of the most important members of our society. They are the
ones who bring up our children of
today to become the leaders of
tomorrow but they are some of the
lowest paid professionals in our
society. These two things do not match up at all.
If it was not for these people I
would be pwnping gas or on welfare
but because of them I am doing
fairly well today and I have the
chance to do better in the future .
There is one good thing to say
about the teachers sit-in at Supt.
Gleason's office . Maybe Mr .
Gleason will get tired of seeing the
teachers and decide
get them ·
back in the class room teaching
again.- Name withheld on request.

w

Hazardous driving
Letter to the Editor :
I 'd like to address this letter to the
public and Parents of the Me1gs
Local School District.
In answer to Mrs. Sarah Welsh's
letter about bel!lg concerned about
the language that the school
teachers use, and the coneem for the
children, I would Like to say this -on
October 15 at the Harrisonville
Elementary School , my son Mark
had a Oat tire, he turned into the
driveway of the school to change his
tire.
A deputy sheriff informed my son
that he would have to move his car
out of the driveway, and showed him
where to park , so my son dJd as the
deputy requested, and proceeded to
change the Oat tire, leaVlllg the
driveway open for traffic .
Mrs . Sarah Welsh ran into the
back of my son 's car knocking it off
the jack, and continued pushing the
car until it hit the back of a pickup
truck doing approximately $l!OO worth of damage to my son's car.
Mrs. Sarah WeWt had some small

wha t a\. of those moneylenders
throug.huut th.e state are dotng , .but tt
th t th
th
rk)t'Sll t surpnse rn~ a
ere ts e
1 hat
d t be
begmnmg now o w
use o
c·a ll " ' th" 'avatlabtJity affect .' In
t="U
"oth•r words , mstitutions can't lend
...
mone v th~y don't have ," Winger

s a1d . Lend in"o

institutions
, he
.

emphasized , have been trYIIlg to
continue making loans to cover thelr
l!l
. creased costs of obtaining funds .
The availabill'ty of money will
determin e whether loan windows
WI.II remain open, said Robert

Loan League.
"We 've been through this before
and surv ived ," he added, indJcating
events could Lake a turn for the
belwr next year.
The eco nomic situation, explained
Schmitz , has shbwn a tendency to
improve during presidential election
years .
"So far . the solutioos have been
temporary ; It's been boom or bust.
Most economistS that I've heard are
predJcting a tum around the second
or third quarter of next year," he
said .
Wllen the dust does dear from the
current penod of econom ic tunnoil ,
Schm1tz focesees the interest rate
leveltng off to aoout 10 percent.
" There has been what economists
have called a 'political business,'"
Wmger agreed . " Every time we get
to an election )'ear, certa in things
hapJl"n ." The Sit uation, however,
could be dJfferent this coming
electiOn year, he caut1oned.
"Wha t IS more omportant," said
Wmger, "IS how the politicians
perce1 ve of the public''s view of our
curr en t problems ."
O.,spite recent unprovements in
e c onon~ i c
tndicators. Winger
beh evcs the country 1s sinkmg lill O
rect!ssion .
children in her ca r , endangering the
children, as well as my son, while he
was attempting w change the tire . I
do not call these actions being coocerned about children or anyone
else. - Robert Richmond.

U"lwre ·,. th1•

ju.~tin•:;

Dear Editor :
There was a line I thought we all
would remember from our Constitution, " With Liberty 811d Justice
For All ."
I really think the authorities of
Meigs County have forgotten the
constitutional rights of each dtlten
of this coWJty. They have let our
liberties be talten away . I
haven't seen any justice dwing this
entire school strike .
" Striking teachers have forced
children from their schooill, lives
and homes have been threatened,
businesses have been disrupted for
weird pleasures of middle-aged
juvenile dell!lquenu, finally a sit-in
at superintendent's. office in the
Meigs Junior High .
Ask the teachers to cross the
picket lines
teach our children,
they l.a ugh at us . Who asked them
cross it to show stupidity, when supposedly educa ted people sit around
on the floor, knitting andd gaffing
when they have something so
precious to give young minds who
W8/1t so badly to learn.
Parents,
taxpayers,
and
seemingly so, important VOTERS of
Meigs CoWlty', I beg you w loot at
our law enforcement agency, our
teachers, and our village leaders,
and a!ik " ~ere is our liberty and
justice for all ?"
Please don 1 let these people talte
away one of the moot important
things that our children dellerve to
have out of life. " A Better Education
For a Better Tomorrow." - A Concerned Parent, Susan King, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio.

•=

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w
c •ilqD,,.f~

,

Sctuni tz , exet·utive v1ce president of
the Columbus-ba""d Savings and

Childish beluwior
Dear Ediwr :
We read in last night's paper
where the Meigs Local Teachers
went into Powell 's Super Valu,
loaded carts to the brim then walked
out and left them sitting.
My goodness, the teachers that
are supposed to be well educated
people, that teach our children and
grandchildren are really getting
childish, aren't they?
We would just prefer if such
people or !ll)&lt;!alled teachers would
stay on strike, and let us dwnb
mothers and grandmothers teach
them. At lell9t we teacb them not
go in a grocery store and act like
they yanked up the hlllr of the bead!
If one of our children would do
such a thing, they would be arrested .
Just how far and how much dirty
work is going to be done before
someone gets the nerve to step forward and stop them ' We 'd really
like to know where all thi• stupidity
is going to stop .
When S&lt;'hvol finally does start, I
g uess our child•en will be required

Oakland dumps
hot Chargers

Meet Southern Tornadoes

sa1 d.
Savings have been re 1atively
w•ak , but have held up reasonably
~
well compared to previous years, he

Berry's World
-~-·--

3-The Daily Sentme\, Moddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Friday, Oct. 21i, 1979

'&lt;

~~

"Dear, what would you think about going out
tonight and boogiemg until we drop? "

OeWayueOill

S-t. 1451111.
Sopbomore Guard

HarryLyona

Dale Teaford

1-0, 150 !btl.

6-0, 1115tbtl,

Junior End

JunlorQB

OAKLAND 'A P 1 ~ The lasl 11111e
the San D1ego Chargers beat Lhe
Oakland Raaders twJl't' m a seasun
was tn 1965. It's liable to h.· " whJ!,.
longer 1f Thursd a) night's goJJil' 1~
any md1ca t10n .
The Cha rg ers ca ml' mto lhl·
Oak land Co li seum leading !he
National
Foo tba ll
Lt:·agu ,~ ·s
A.m ... ncan Cou£erence West. Aftl•r &lt;-1
nattona\Jy tel ev ised 45-22 ro ut , tile)
are sttll \eadtng, but not by ,.,.,.)
much
" You can't bea t the Ha1der s m
Oa kland ." sa1d defen stve bark
Lester Haye s, who picked off "
crucial first-half mter£'ept!on and
ge neral ly made hfe m1 se rabl t· fur
San Diego qua rterback Dan F outs
Although Fouts thn•w for" record
fourth strrught 300 yards passong . h"
team trailed almost from t he out.st"l

.
Bruce worried about rankl

malu1 1unl \ IWIII IIT CI.S JUn !:i seeJJu.:d un
tJ1t

think I have ways to keep their mind
on the game at hand ."
This may be Michigan State' s big
opporturuty to erase the b1tter.
injury-marred memories of early
games this season .
The Spartans, defending Big Ten
e&lt;H:hamp1ons w1th Mlchigan and
considered a serious challenger
again, have dropped four straight
starts after averaging 4001&gt;\us yards
lil three opening victories.
" At one tune or another, we have
lost 16 of our top 33 players. But
there's nothing you can do about it ,"
said Michigan State Coach Darryl
Rogers.
The Spartans' coach dnlted back
to 1978 and recalled : " We oo ly had
two injuries all year . So some years
th is just occurs. It's just one of those
thl!lgs ."
One of the key losses was
quarterba ck Bert Vaughn , who
lllJured tus kidney early lil the

Area standings
OllER All STANDINGS
(AS of Oct . 20 )
TEAM
W. l . T. Ph . Opp.
P t P leasant
8 0 0 1271n41
7 0 I 153
H Tr&lt;"Ce
6 0 I 153 '/9
North Gal! ta
Ironton
5 1 0 140 35
)9
Jllckson
5 1 0
Wells1on
2 1 155 16
Belpre
5 2 0 130
84
Mtller
5 2 I
96 60
K C re'e'k
45
2 1 98
Eas tern
5 3 0 141
80
Trimble
0 105 129
J 3 0
L OQan
52 108
Ga llipol is
3
0 95 64
Nel York
3
95 93
0
Waverly
3
0
91 151
Vinton co .
J
76
77
0
MeiQS
I 2 0
48
I
Ate.:ancJer
2 19 146
Wahama
2 6 0 85 102
I 6 0 53 138
warren

••

••

•

•

••
••
••
•

..

1 6 0 33 138
0 6 1 H 204
Fed . HockinQ
0 6 I l3 152
SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
ATHlETIC lEAGUE
W. l . T. Pis . Opp.
TEAM
Ironton
3 0 0 99
14
Jackson
59 21
l 0 0
Git ll ipolis
2 2 0 67 36
1 2 0 45 ll
Wellston
1 2 0 20 81
lOQan
waver ly
1 J 0 )4 81
Athen5
1 J 0 31
85
IJ·
Me1QS
0 0 0
0
SOUTHERN \/AllEY
ATHLETIC CONFERENCE
W. l . T. Pis. Opp.
TEAM
N Galtia
2 0 I
48
8
H . Trace
39 11
2 0 1
19
K . Creek
2 1 0 53
I 2 0 42 39
Sou thwestern
I 2 0 36 46
Eastern
SOuthern
Yl
0 3 0
8

Athens
5ovthern

Toledo risks perfect
loop record at Miami
By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
League-leading Central Michigan
and Toledo, the only unbeaten teams
111 Mid-American football, hit the
road Saturday in key conference
games with the surpriswg Rockets
facl!lg the stiffer assignment.
Toledo will rtsk its :;..o league
recurd at Miami , an expected strong
title contender thts fall that has
struggled to a 2-2 Mid-American
perf&lt;rmance
Central M•rhigan, ~.should have
an easier time at Ken! State, mired
111 an e1ghth-place tie with Western
Michigan at 1-1.
Other Mid-American games
Saturday have Bowling Green ( 3-31
at B 1-31 and Weswrn Michigan I 1-4 1
at Ohio University ( 3-21 . Northern
D\inois faces rival Southern Illinois
lil a non &lt;onferene&lt;&gt; dal€ . Eastern
Michigarl' IS odie .
The team that can generate some
offense should win the Toledo-Miami
match up .
"Defens ovely, " Toledo Coach
Gluck Stobart said of the Redskins,
" they've played very, very well all
year . And we were not happy with
our offensove performance last
week ."
Still, the Rockel-' , picked to lifli!!h
in the second divisioo , established
themselves as bonafide title threats
with a 21-13 regionally televised
troumph over Ohio.
Because of Toledo's performance,
Miami Coach Tom Reed maintains
the Rockets should be favored
Saturday .
" We're just not a very good team
at all nght now," said Reed . " We've
got an awfully long way to go. Our
total offense at Bowling Green was
188 yards ."
With its v1ctory al Ball State,
Central Moch•gan ran its winmn"
streak to 13 games and became th
first Mid-American member to whi1

all nl!le opponents since the league
expanded to 10 schools in 1975 . The
Ol1ppewas' wmnmg spell 1s the
second longest in the nation to topranked Alabama .
Ron Blackledge , Kent State 's
coach, realizes the odds are stacked
high agamst the Flashes of pulling
the upset of the Mid-American
season . " They (the Chippewas 1 are
just a very, very good team in every
phase of the game. Thelr defense is
so quick . It's going to be a b1g task,"
he said.

season and ha s been inconsistent
since his return. The 6-loot-4 Vaughn
has completed only 44.5 percent of
his passes 157-&lt;&gt; f-128 ) for four
touchdowns.
Meanwhile, another sophomore,
Bryan Clar k, has hit on 33 of his 61
passes and performed well in a 14-7
loss to Purdue last week . So Rogers
IS in a quandary over who to start
aga mst Ohio State.
In contrast, Art Schliehter, the
Bu ckeyes' bnlliant sophomore
quarterback, ranks thlrd nationally
in passing and second in total
offense in the Big Ten . He' s the main
reason Ohio State leads the league 1n
total offense t 434 .2 yards a game 1
and st·oring ( 35.7 points per con test 1.
Schl ichter pitched a school record
21 ml€rceptions last vear, but shows
only two mterceolions on 107
attempts this time . His 59
completions have been good for 988
yards and nine touchdowns .
Ohio State, &lt;HJ m the league to
Mich1gan State's 1,1 mark, will be
playmg before its 69th consecutive

How they rate
TEAM

TEAMS RANK EO
OFFENSI\IELY
Pis. (G) Ave .

I ron ton

1.&amp;0 16)

23 3

Wellsloo

155111

22.1

N Ga ll ia
H Trace

15317)
153 (8)

21 9
19. 1

Belpre

130 111

186

Southwes tern
Eastern

148 ( 8)
141 (8)

18.5
11 .6

Meigs
PI P lea.

127181

15.9

.as tJJ

16.0

Jackwn

9.4161

17 7

K Creek

98 171

14.0

Miller

96 (7)

13 7

Gall;polis

95 !71

13.6

Trimble

105 (8)

Waverly

91 (7)

13 . 1
13.0

Nei .· York
Vinton Co .

91 (7)
76 ( 7 J

13 0
10 .9

Wahama
Logan
Warren
Southe rn

85 (8 )

10 .6

l2t6 1

8.7

53(7 )
J-4 (7)

7.6
.4 .9

33 !11
JJ (7 )

4.7

Fed . Hocking

Alexander

19 (])

27

Athens

f1r ~1. tune. wath Oakland
ahc·a d 14~ 1. F outs tossed the ball up
fur ~rabs 1n tht· t·nd w n e and Hayt.::s
p1cked It off ( &gt;aklaml went on to
raJ St' 1t s lear! tu 21...() before S;.:tn

!Jl t'gl, ('ould S('Ure .
·1 .l11hn 1 ~1atu s?. ak wa.s s1ttmg m
J);m 's fcH·t· and ht· Wdn't Sl.-&gt;t:' m e,"
I!Ci yl'~ s:ud !!f Uw flfst-quartt•r
lfih•rce ptwn ·· Dan JUSt tl"u'Pw 1t and

I wa s lhl'n' ··
FtJub r.lld ('unnt&gt;d

w1t.h John
.ldfl'r son for a 57-~ ani touchdown m
llw Sl·t ·und qu;;~rter , but the Ch8rge rs
st ill tnul;·d ~4-fi et l h1:1lftune Th l'J c ut
11Jfl l tu 2 ~ - 1~ t·ar ly lfl the third
qu&lt;trtt ·r un a f1elU ~o &lt;~ l and TU l:l fter
:11 1 on sJdt• kl (' k, but then c·;,unl! Ira

A9 (8)

6 I

K . Creek
Jackson
Niller
Gallipol i !i.
Eastern

-4517)

6.4

3916)
10111
l&gt;&lt; t1i
eo 181
77 171
OitBI
a. 171
10'l l81
9317l

65
8.6

Belpre

Wah am a
Nel York
Meigs
Tr imble

home sellout More tha n 87,000 wtli
jam into Ohio Stad 1wn to see th e•
Bu ckeyes bad for Lhetr fourth \1ctory
m the last fivt&gt; met· tmKs w1th tht:"
Spartans.
Meanwhile, tn Ohoo college actiOn
Saturday , Toledo nsks 1ts unbea ten
Mid -Amencan n~c onJ r 5-0 l at
dangerous Miami and Kent State
braCt's for \eague-\eadl!lg Central
Michigan ' ~l.
In other Mid-American games,
Bowling Gree n goes to Ball State
and Ohoo Umversoty entertaon s
Western Michigan
Cincinnati, 1-5 th1s season , plays
only 1ts second home game, ta km g
on winless Richmond. The Bear cats
trunmed Villanova in thetr only
other home appeanL1ce .
In the Ohio Con! eren ce, Red
Davision frontrunner Ohio Northern
1~ I
must play at 197B na toona l
champ1on Baldw111-Wallace 12-11 A
Polar Bear defeat. coupled witl1 a
Demson triumph over Mount Un1on.
would creal€ a three-way Lie for the
lead with one week left
Wittenberg and Ott€ri.Jt,111, \led for
the Blue DiV1s1on lead at ~ . fa ce
what should be easy h ome
assignments . Muskingum VISit s
Wittenberg and Manetta goe s to
Otterbein .
In
th e
Ho osoe r -Bu c k e ye
Co nference, Fmdlay fq~ ur e s u,
frOtect ilS SOle lead With lt!'i .S IX th
st raigh..\ lee~gue tn umph on•r
V1Sittng Taylor , last w1th an ll-5
record wtlh Earlham

.\1t-lttiiL'W:-,

frr •!JI

W1sco ns 1n

;-------------~

rii'L'P 11 ·J WIupI L'nd
wne Hut he
tiw
s!dl!llne.
( 'C\Ilh ' I"IH1/"In~..;

b~tc

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:
1

n~ht

&lt;t ).!.ii l n st

thl·

MEIGS
EQUIPMENT CO.

1

h ;~

~r am

&lt;.tnd
kwku ff return 1n

1 Pomeroy, 0.

scored t1Jl' lu i J).;t.'.\1
team hlstun
Th e runb.;ck tuuk the stl•am IJ U! r1 f
tht' ('har g t· r ~ and t'\·en though Fuub
lhn.•w fur m un · th&lt;in :~00 ya rds agam.

Ph . 992-2176

Hours : 8-SMon .-Fri .

1

8 ·12Sat .
Closed Sundav

1

147

Alexander
waverly
Fed . Hocking
Sou thern

lOA t7l

LARGE LOT

ACME &amp; DINGO
WESTERN BOOTS

30%
DISCOUNT
MODERN SUPPLY
w . Main

Street
992 -2164
Pomeroy, 0.
The Stor e With " All Kinds of Sluff"
For Pets - Stables - Large and Small Animals. Lawns
rdens .

Our

best- selling tirer

20 .9

21 .6
21.7
'/9 1

Reg. Price
$22
A7R - I~

Bla('kwall

DOG FOOD HEADQUARTERS

I' ·•

-'1·rib tread

•

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BURRI'•••

llmlted time

oflert

SUGAR RUN FLOUR MILLS
1~~

MULBERRY AVE.

POMEROY, ,HIO

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO
606 E. MAIN

992-2094
FRONT END ALIGNMENTS

I

!
t

Equipment F

Polyester c:ord
Deluxe Champion·

13 .3

I
I
t

New Idea

WE'VE CLEANED OFF OUR SHELVES

399

l

______________ .

I

I International
._.
1 Harvester

J'trestone

12.8

16 I
18 .0
19.7
19.7

AThens

r110 kll'

Th~

11 0
12 .0
120

.. (3)

L09an

The loss left San Diego with a 6-3
mark , half a game ahead of Denver
&lt;Uid a fu\1 game ahead of the Ra iders
111 th e AIT West.

PRICES
REDUCED!

9. I
10 .0

129 18)
108 (61
138 171
138 t11
146 I 11
15lt11
Ill I 71

Warren

lost

4.7

H Tra ce

Vinton Co

he was outplayed by Oakland 's Ken
Stabler .
" Kenny cal led his game,"
Oakland 's Gene Upshaw said. " He
d1dn't get tnto a pa ssmg duel with
Fouts ''
Stabler was 13 of 11 for 212 yards,
une touchdown and no interceptions .
Fouts was 21 of 37 for 303 with two
Interception s and the same number
uf TDs .
lromcallv i.J1 two of the four
games m ~hich Fouts has thrown for
1110re th an 300 ya rd5, h1s team has

tilt~

ba£'k In

ng :~;:,~ai~~:i 1 ~~~~:~c:ln~:~~:J~~· /~~1n1;~~~~~

TEAMS RANKED
DEFENSIVELY
TEAM
Pls . !Gi Avg .
29(11
4.1
N . Gallia
Pt . Plea s.
AliBI
5.1
3l (61
5.8
Ironton

s.oumwestern

g~lt!ng

ga tr ll'
'!111-

! 'U l

By GEORGE STRODE
AP Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio I API - The
days of sneakl!lg up on opponents is
over for Ohio State, now ranked
among the nation's top five ,
unbeaten and tied for the Big Ten
football lead with Mich1gan .
" It worroes me," sa1d Earle
Brue&lt;&gt;, preparing his fourth-rated
Bu~keyes for invadl!lg Michigan
State Saturday.
Ohio Stat€ started the season
unranked , but gradually has
crawled up the poll ladder with
seven consecutive victories under
Bcuce , 1ts new coach.
" But I'll say thiS . I had no trouble
w1th th e team last week afwr we 'd
beaten IndJana bec.ause we really
worked them . We had a great
practice Wednesday . The players
were bushed, but It paid off ."
Bruce then wrinkled his nose ,
grinned and sa1d of this week, " I

Yl..'rge of

POMEROY

�4-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., F rida y, Oct. 26. 1979

Farm Bureau resolutions passed by
attending Bureau members Tuesday

~

'

Rose C.o . arrived in Pomeroy , Wednesday with the new
spring line of fashions on a large van . Although winter
is not yet upon us, Mr!J. Maxine Washington is shown on
the van with Spinelli purchasing the new spring
fashions for Elberfelds .

THINGS CHANGE - Merchants no longer have to
go to city style centers to purchase their merchandise
-the style centers are coming t o them . Lou Spinelli.
New Martinsville . W Va . representative of the Betty

TilE READERS ALWAYS
WRITE: TAKE 'CAINE 'S '
NAME IN VAIN
BY HELEN BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN •
"Caine" listed disadvantages t o
being a man, as compared with
women's "good life ." Your answer
was great. But let's add :
ln most cases women who have
the llllme work load or responsibility
make less money than men.
It's still harder for a woman to get
a loan, buy a house, get credit 1even
!hough laws "guarantee equality " 1
Women are put down if they stop
for a drink after work , as men have
always done .
And a sleep-around woman is
"cheap and easy " but a get-around
man is a "popular ba chelor. ··
A.s for the medical problems men
supp!Jiledly have more of than
women (heart attacks, ulcers, etc. 1.
well, it's not our fault men can 't han dle pressure .
Men may light the wars, but. as
you said, Helen, women have the
babies. And speaking of parenthood .
women almost always grt thr brunt
of child reanng - which is lhe har dest job of all . - HAPPY TO BE A
WOMAN ANYWAY
DEAR HAPPY :

Here's another oWrvatJon :
A male TV commentator can grow
old in the business and still keep hl s
ratings. While Barbara Walters
made it, few televisiOll sUttions or
national broadcasting compani es
would hire a woman newsra."ltl'r who
looks over 35.- H.
DEAR HELE N:
I disagree wholehearted!) With
your reply to "Caine .. on men·
women equality . He's n ghl men
have always had !Jfe harde r
physically than women and I r ese nt
you throwing in the old "childbirth "
routine. If a man had no choice 1 as
women don 't if the y want children '
they would and could go through
childbirth just fine .
Why do we always resort to tha t
phrase, ·· set you couldn 't tak t•
having a baby ," when no man ha.&lt;
ever had the chance Lo prove tum self. -AREAUST
DEAR HELEN :
Another thing that burns me abou t
thia female inequality thing : I eam
as much as my husband does , yet
when we bought mutual funds "1th
our combined money , we were listed
on the records as " John Jones" !first) then " Mary Jones, Jwtior
Tenant." And when we sign pr01ti es
where there is space for both names ,
guess who insists on putting Ius
name first! - MRS. J . TEN .
DEAR MRS. J . T.:
Correction : that isn't Jwtior
Tenant; it's Joint Tenant. IBut I 'll
admit, the man's name always
comes first ... 1 - H .
DEAR HELEN :
In response to " Widow of Another
Mr. Hyde, " I was in a similar
situation : my deceased husband was
a doset scoundrel, but highly
respected in his home town . I
couldn't take the continu1 ng
eulogies, so I moved far away and
went back to my maiden name
(which is legal I. Changing documents was a hassle but worth It ! I'm free
at la.t 1 -JUDY

~POLLY·s
POINTERS
\:1
Polly Cramer

'
V t.aegar on wrin.kles

By Polly Cram.r
POLLY'S PROBLEMS
DEAR POIJ.Y - l accidentally
washed my sheer curtains in hot
water . The result IS that they are full
of wrinkle s Can you help me ' NANCY
DEAR POLLY - I let down the
hem in a s klrt and the crease shows .
even though I dampened It with
water befo re pressing Do you have
any sugges tions ' - MRS. J . K.
DEAR NANCY AND MRS J K. I think th e same answer will solve
both your problems Wring a
pressing cloth out of a sol utwn of
one-half WHTTF. vinega r a nd onehall water . Place this over a
wnnkled area and press With a
rather hot Iron. disconnect iron and
when il c ools lo the req wreJ temperature fo r the fabn c bem~ Ironed
pres.&lt;dry
The sheer curtain fabri c may
seem very flimsy after the pres.smg
cloth stag e bul when ironed dry it
should be a s rnsp as when new. If
th1s docs n ol remove all the wrinkles
try a second tin1e and use full
strength WHl TF. vmegar . Always
test lor e ffect of nnegar on your
fabn r - P ()J.J.Y

DEAR POLLY - We had baked in
wrinkles in our polyester waitress
untform from the dryer being too
hot. A friend suggested using liquid
spray starch on the wrinkles and
then pressing with the iron set at the
proper temperature for the
material. It worked.- VIRGINIA
DEAR POLLY - My Pointer is
for those who sleep alone during the
cold weather Fold a blanket in half,
then in half again and then open the
side up at the foot of the bed under
the covers and slip your feet and legs
down in the folds . Also roll another
blanket up and place it in the middle
of the bed, under the covers, and
snuggle your back up to it.
Place it rather high up on the bed
so there is no draft on your neck .
You will be warm and comfortable.- E . P.
DEAR POIJ&gt;Y - Masking tape
works well on disposable diapers
when the tabs pull loose. Other tapes
will not stick and masking tape L• so
mexpensive and tears easily without
usmg the scissors. - JACQUE
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank -you newspaper coupon
clippers ii she uses your favorite
Pointer , Peeve or Problem in her
column . Write POLLY 'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper .

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

:

Social Calendar

\\'J :sn : H~

I

8 In 11 p .111. r'nd" y w1th Eddie
l' owrll. H.eyn olrl, bur~. calling ; aU
Wt·stl'rn Janeer~ mvtted Hef res hlllt'nts wli I ])(&gt;served .
SATURDAY
WESTF: H~ BOOT C. B . Club
H &lt;illu ~&lt; ,.en [Jarty at cl ubhouse SaturdCi y. i run . With costume priZes for

&lt;'iuldren a nd adult ~tum es; club
wt ll prn\·tde r drt&gt;shmenls.
S\ 1\MTS F. PTU f" ll ha lloween
s~ f'i1CU .... l'

~

Gardeners to meet

FHIDAY

SQUAI\F. dan ce at
Ho.\:d O&lt;:Jk Par k rl'c r eatlon buildmg .

C:Ofl!l \ '(tl

.')atunid y . a t tlle
EleJJwntar:- Sehou l .

p 111

('o ...,tl! ll lt ' JUd ging

(;,:mws. fuo&lt;J.

tt J

d!ld

~The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Friclay , Oct. 26, 1979

twg1n at i p.m .

entrrtil tru nrnt.

Pu bilL' mn te·d

K:\ li; HTS ,,r 1')111Ias m onthly
d1nner . () 10 p m Br mg c overed
d tsh. tdble :.. en·tct• Members,
farntli t•s wt:lt·or ne

The Rutland Garden Club will
meet Monday, Oct. 29at 7:30p .m . at
at home of Mrs . Roy Snowden. Cohostess will be Mrs. Robert
Canaday .
Devotions will be given by Mrs .
Snowden with Mrs . James Nicholson
as the installing officer.
" Dahlia of Cui t ure" talk and slide
presenUttion will be given by Francis Shaffer, a member of the
National Fahliah Society and rerlified judge .
Mrs. Carl Dennison will present
Ideas for Nov . Demonstration of
flower from Htdge apples will be
given by Mr.1 . Virgil Atkins. A bulb
shower for the Rutland Garden Club
will be held by members of the c1 ub
to be used in planter.&lt; in the village
of Rutland.

A number of resolullons for 1979-al
ranging from tittering and drugs on
the local level to a concept of equal
exchange of grain for crude oil were
passed Tuesday night at the annual
meeting of the Meigs County Farm
Bureau.
The resolutions include :
COUNTY : BE IT RESOLVED
that we urge more stringent enforcement of trespassing laws and
bigger penalties for unauthorized
vehicles trespassing on private
property .
BE IT RESOLVED that the Meigs
County Conunissioners and County
Engineer establish pMori ties for
repair to improve roads and bridges
on a more permanent basis .
BE IT RESOLVED that the
seriousness of the drug situation in
Meigs County be fully realized and
that a uthorities he encouraged to
take immediate and forceful action.
BE IT RESOLVED that we favor
stnngent laws on littering and the
enforcement thereof, and also urge
that a deposit be compulsory on all
beverage containers .
BE IT RESOLVED that the Farm
Bureau help members understand
ways in which they can control costs
for settling estates.
BE IT RESOL YEO that due to the
extensive crop damage caused by
the increased deer population, that
an open season be made available on

VISITORS NOTED
HACINF. + Herbert Roush,
Racin~. Route 2, was returned to his
home Tuesday after being confined
to Pleasant Valley Hosp1Utl at Point
Pleasant for three weeks due to a
heart attack .
ThOS€ visitmg him n the hospiUtl
and after he returned hom e
mcluchl :
Mrs . Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs .
Rog er Housh and daughter,
Kunberly, Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mr .
and Mrs . Lester Roush, Mr . and
Mr s. Russell Roush, Cmdy Roush,
Edward Roush, Da&gt;1d Roush, Mr .
and Mrs . Howard Housh, Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Parsons, Faye Roush,
Hev . David Harris , Herbert shields,
Hev . and Mrs. 0 . G. McKinney, Mr .
and Mr s. Russell Jones. Mr . and
Mr s Manford Bauer of P oint
Pl easant.
Others vi siting were Mr . and Mrs .
Dana Lewis of Cltfton . Mr . and Mrs .
Rona ld Russe ll, Mrs . Charlotte
I AeWIS, Harold Lawson of Letart, W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Bauer,
Mrs. Henry Hunt of L..,on, W. Va .;
Mrs. Vesta Nichols, Kenny Kiser,
c'&lt;lward Kiser, Don H1chard Hill,
Rev . Loman, Mr. and Mrs. Walter
McDade of Troy, 0.; Hev. Freeland
Norns, Mr and Mrs . Char les
Michael, Becky Michael, Louie
Pickett, Mr . Canter of Syracuse;
Raymond Canter . Mr . and Mrs .
Brycil Knapp , Joan Burdette, Mrs .
Etta Mae Hill, Lee Otis Hussell, Guy
Russell , Mr . and Mrs . Dallas HJ!l,
Mr . and Mrs. Darrell Norns and
son . Rya n , Joey Roush , Darla and
Deanna White, Mr . a nd Mrs . Roger
Boggess, Dale Hitne. Kyle Wickline,
Mrs. Iv a Orr. Mrs . Edna Roush,
Mrs . Florence Sm ith , and Arthur
Wilson of ManetUt

TO MEET TifURSDA Y
The membership conunittee of
Mary Shrine 17 will meet at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple Thursday , Nov . I , at 2 p.m . All members
are urged to atte nd .

Su ....OA Y
RF.VlV AI. underwa y at Laurel
C1iff Free Methodist Church, 7:30
ea ch eve njnK with Rev James
Mason , evangelist. Friday , special
music by local choir and Keith Ken ned y singers of Hutl&amp;nd ; Saturday,
sperial music by local ch01r and the
Rev . J ames Broome, pastor of the
Oturch o f the Nazarene at Middleport ; S unda y rught , spec tal music
by loca l c hoir and ladies quartet.
MEIGS
COUNTY
GENEAI ..oGICAI. Society Sunday , 2
p.m . at Meigs County Museum .
There will be an exchange of family
hi s tor y
E veryone wel c ome
especially those needing help .
MONDAY
RUTLAND GARDEN CLUB Monday at 7 30 p .n .. at the home of Mrs .
!Wy S1 c• · • den Co-hostess. Mrs .
Robert Ca naday.

I~J

IJIJ(..~ r(.r: ')

drlr j

E

Sou:r•·rr 1

'h e Oper alrr,n u i

Birthday noted

Fu t&gt; l

Adru &lt;, tme nt C l a us•~ .

Cost
diHj

1~

, ,.

,J:•"J 'T1dll .. r~

The first birthday of Jennifer An ·
ne Garey , daughter of Mr . and Mrs .
James Garey was celebrated at the
home of her grandparents, Mr . and
Mrs. Clair Might. A clown cake, ice
cream, and punch were served.
Attending were Jennifer's greatgrandmother, Anna Mohler, Mr. and
Mrs. James Mohler, daughter, Anna
Mane, Mr . and Mrs. Carl Fmdling,
Randy and Amy Might. Sending gifts but unable to attend were Mr. and
Mrs . Bernard Might, Pam Barber
and Betty Williams .

Tn r ~

r, \ cn,.d u ·~rl t o !)"

tw.tr n y

qrn 11 9 30 a rn on Octo

79. \979 . &lt;~ I the Co m rn , ~~ron's Ott.c .. ~ . ,180 East
t)e r

Br oad

S tll 'f: !

Coi Lrmb"~

Qh,J432 1 5

t on rnav tJ" •J!Jl.J•flf·d by
•r1"

Cornrnr s

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TH E PUBLIC UTI LIT I ES
C0'.1'.1 1SS f J'J loF OHIO

8,
S·'1..' • · t&lt;~t,

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Returns home

Po 1k

,-------------------------- ----,
I N. w. COMPTON. O.D
I

:

OPTOMETRIST

:

I

uFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLO::.~ AT NOON

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The Alfred United Methodist Olurch recently organized a youth
fellowship. The Rev . Richard
Thornao and Mrs. Thelma Henderson were the organizers.
PwJl08e ri the group will be to
llave a worllhip service for the youth,
a Ume of fellowship and social acUvities. Officers named were Kevin
Brooka. president; Nicky Avis, vice
president; U!a Windon, secretary;
Bob Broolts, treasurer; Lori Roblnaon, song leader ; and Jim BrookB,
reporter.
Adult leaders will be June Avis,
leader, and Rutb Brooks. Next
meeting will be on SWiday with a
Halloween party from 6:30 to 8 p.m .

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Mrs . Herman Michael, Laurel
Cliff Rd . , Pomeroy, has returned
hocne after a 10 clay trip to Parris
Island, S. C. with her aon, Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Michael, Galion. They
went especially for the graduation of
Larry Michael, Jr ., from the Marine
Corps there.
.
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lewis Hlllte, Norfolk, Va., and while
there Mrs . Michael was at the
location where the televi!lion show,
"Death at Ocean View Park" was
being filmed. It was aired on Oct. 19.
From there they went to Georgia.
Mrs. Michael returned to Galion
with the family of her son,
remaining several clays before
returning home. Larry Michael, Jr.
accompanied the family home from
the Marine base.

UM W organnes yvutb

(l

ALL NEW AT

CANDY'S CLASSIC COUECTIONS

When Bob Feller of Cleveland
pitched a no-hitter against the New
York Yankees m 1946, his center
fielder was Bob Lemon , who years
later pitched a oo-hitter himself .

IN

INGEL'S FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY
" TWO IN ONE STO!ItE"

N. IND AVE

cooperation which calls for the
OVAL area 1which, of course , includes Meigs C&lt;iunty ) to give up
about llalf of its current public
library funding and share what's left
with 70+ groups Iinstead of the
current II groups) . In addition, as
the plan is written , it is quite
possible for school districts to gain a
majority vote in each system and
then construct the system programs
so they benefit mostly the schools.
Athens County Commissioner
Karen Harvey spoke I or everyone in
our area when she told the Committee members and the State
Ubrary consultants last rught that
they cannot reasonably expect any
public library from the OVAL area
to support the plan unless it is
rewritten to guaranee that we will
retain our current level of funding .
I was very pleased to see that at
least one Meigs County school
district cared enough to send a
representative to learn more about
ORUS. Cooperating with all the
Ubraries in our area is important. I
just wish we had the money to
strengthen each library so that each
one had a contribution to make .
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell,
Meigs County Librarian
Serving aU of Meigs County

·------------------

1
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Girl Scout Diary

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GIRL SCOUT DIARY
Meigs County Cadette Scouts
recently joined other troops at Camp
Sandy Bend near Elizabeth, W. Va .
I or a "Cadette Event."
Going from here were Kathy
Parker, Susan Jett, Shari Cogar ,
Carolyn Casto, Donette Norris . Mandy Reeves, and Melinda Mankin,
along with leaders, Mr . and Mrs .
Harold Norris, Patty Capehart, Gertrude Casto, and Shirley Cogar.
There from Huntington, W. Va .
were the Green Berets who worked
with the cadettes on making rope
bridges, using a compass, and surviving in the out of doors. A helicoJ&gt;ter came in from Charleston, W.Va .
to show the girls how one operates .
The scouts enjoyed skits, treasure
hunts and rope work. Girls from
over Ohio and West Virginia attended.
CHESTER JUNIOR TROOP
1049
A corsage was made by each of the
juniors at this week's meeting of
Troop 1049. Larissa Long led in the
pledge to the flag, and Betty Jo Hunt

Festival
Queen to
be crowned

TOPS QUEEN
l..i.nda At.kirul was queen for the
week with Ellen Rife as runner-up at
the morning meeting of the Rutland
TOPS held in the EMS building.
When the roll was taken there were
four TOPS, two turtles, and gainers
with one new members . The queen
was presented a dollar and a song
was sung in her honor . Mrs. Berruce
W~breMer was welcomed as a
new member. A fund raising project
was discussed.

Queen of the Racine Fall Festival
will be crowned at 8 p .m . Friday in
front of the Racine Home-National
Bank .
CandJdates are Mandy Hill ,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . George A.
Hill, Letart; Tammy Adkms ,
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Eugene
Adklns, Portland; Kenda Rizer,
daughter of Glenn Rizer. Racine,
and Mrs . Hila Boggess, Letart. and
Becky Housh, daughter of Judy and
Greg Roush, Syracuse .
II decorated pumpkin contest for
all age categones wtll be held w1th
an entry fee of &gt;0 cents and it will
al so be held In front of the bank .
There will also be a pwnpkln weight
guessing Contest as a part of the
Racine Emergency Squad's activities . Other groups will be sUtging
other events.

GRAB BAG
SPECIAL
6 til 8
FRIDAY NIGHT
MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
99 MILl ST.

NOTICE!
MOTOR ROUTE
CARRIER
NEEDED
FOR THE

All Cluldren ." She presented silver
dollars to those malting posters
which will be disJ&gt;layed in Pomeroy
bllSiness houses durmg Educati on
Week, Nov . 11-17 .
The posters were made by Anna
Wiles, Jennifer Couch , Robm CamJ&gt;beU and Laura Smith. Mrs. Wildermuth will order nine " Need a Uft"
booklets to be placed in high schools
and local libraries and on the bockmobile . It was also noted that the
Ohio Digest IS to be put in the
schools . Several new juniors attending the meeting were
recognized as a part of the program

led m the pro!TU-"e. Melissa Barker
gave the minutes of the last meeting ,
and Trina Barker took up the dues.
The importance of wearing a girl
scout Wliform was discussed by the
scouts . Candies are being sold by the
troop and the leader asked that the
money be brought in so that a
skating party can be held.
Larissa Long served refreshments
to the 13 girLs attending and the
leaders, Shirley Gibbs and Betty
Barker.
SYRACUSE TROOP 11%0
Hallloween sp1d&lt;;rs were made
when the Syracuse junior scouts met
at the school this week. Christy
Brumfield led in the promise, Mica
Jones , the pledge to the nag, and
Shelli e Connolly , the prayer. There
was group singing , and refreshments were served by Mi chelle
Harris and Shellie Connolly .
SAUSRUR Y TROOP 1100
A bake sale was planned for Nov . 3
at Krogers at 9:30 a.m. when the
troop met at the Meigs Museum in
Pomeroy.
Camping at Kiashuta was
discussed and it was announced that
the halloween party will be held
Wednesday, 6 to 8 p.m. at the
Museum . Costuming will be judged.
Cleaning up the Rock Springs fair
grounds and planting tulip bulbs
there was discussed . The scouts
made holiday decorations. Refreshments were served to the 15 members, four advisors and three
viSitors attending .
SYRACUSE JUNIOR
TROOP 1204
Meeting at the Syracuse elemen tary school, the junior scouts
displayed toys and decided abcut
their projects for the toymakers patch .
Sherrie Sisson led m the pledge,
Jane Jett, the prayer, and Kelly
Mullen, the promise . The 14 attending answered roll call by
naming their favorite holiday .
Kim Cogar and Wendy Fry served
refreslunents.

on education and scholarsfup
Mrs . Marjorie .Goett presided at
the meeting with Miss Erma Smith
gi ving a program report on
Ameri canism . She told of the nags
presented this past month . A thank
you note was read from Carl Hysell,
juvenile offi cer for the nag given to
Juverule Court .
Mrs . Veda Davis reported on the
birthday party held at Arcadia Nurs ing Home for Bill Rovnak .
Halloween treats were taken for all
the veterans along with gifts from
the jwtior and senior wtits and cake
for Rovnak. The veterans affam&gt;
and rehabilitation conunittee noted
that a gift of candy had been taken to
an ill veteran and that fruit will also
be taken to him. Mrs. Pearl Knapp
and Mrs . Mary Martin of that committee also attended the party at Arcadia.
It was noted that an electric
roaster has been ordered and will be
presented to the Legion. The bulletin
from the Eighth District president
was read along with thank you notes
from Mrs . Genevieve Wells and MrsFrances Reuter .
A report was given on the fall conference held at Uthopolis and Mrs .
Pratt reporting for Mrs . Ruth
Powers, children and youth chair man, read two letters from boys at
the Xenia home acknowledging cards and money which they received

for their birthdays.
The reception for Mrs. Lorene
Snyder, Eighth District president,
was noted with several members attending . A gift will be sent to her
along with the Department of Ohio
Auxiliary president .
Present at the meeting to eltend
appreciation was a member of a
family given a helping hand by the
Auxiliary . A report was given on the
cystic fibrosis drive. It was reported
that Mrs . Frances Bearhs is a
patient at the Marietta Memorial
Hospital.
The veterans party at the
Chilicothe hospital will be held on
Dec . 13. At the Dec . 10 meeting of the
Auxiliary there will be a holiday
potluck and a $2 gift exchange . Mrs.
Knapp and Mrs. Martin will have the
program on rehabilitation with a
speaker. Dues are payable now with
the unit reporting 153 paid and a goal
of ISO.
For all your home entertainment
and appliance needs .

DOXOL SERVICE

RIDENOUR'S
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE
Chester , 0 .

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let a brilliant diamond
expresl!i the radlanee
,~-. . ·-- or your love
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112 E. M4IIn, Pomeroy

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EARN EXTRA MONEY!

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NOW ACCEPTING

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APPLICATIONS
FOR

,....

MIDDLEPORT
AND
POMEROY

......
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CARRIER
ROUTES

PHONE

992-2156
OR

~lt U

CARAVEllE .
by BULOVA

Ohio

~ I.~ I \

CARNIVAL SLATED
A hallloween carnival will be held
at the Olester Elementary School on
Saturday from 5 to 9 p.m. The carnival sponsored by the Olester PTO
will begin with a soup supper at 5
p.m. with some games, hayrides,
country store and sweet shop to
openat 6 p .m . The costume judging
wW be held at6:45p.m.

Jennifer Garc1'

c Cr_•rnuan -1

I•Cir

conl.;~C!1rg

tha t doesn 'Tcos t mu:::h ill
Caravelle Oy Bv o va

99Z-n42 or 992 -3344

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UNDAATIUNS

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Thrs g rit se ason be gcnerc:,., ,•,
Grve the cosily 1ook1ng ..,. ..:~ •

Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
Dear Don,
I'm sorry you were not feeling well
enough to attend the Ohio Regional
Ubrary and Informational System
(ORUS) meeting in Athens with us.
It was very Informative .
I know you have read the ORUS
Proposal; but since we are sharing
thia letter with the rest ri Meigs
CoWlty, lt won't hurt to go over it
briefly.
ln essence, the conu;nittee which
proposed the plan believes that in
the future all types of libraries
(public, school, academic, inatitutjonal, and special) will have to
cooperate and share their resources.
And that is a very fine idea.
The problem is that we are being
asked to support a plan for

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a wa tch 10 pl e ase €•!·r)
partr c ular taste

~ilt

Don Mullen
East Second St.

CJSI' No

n•·dr rr• g

232 EL

CounT o n Buoov;-J ID q ;t_• {') u
the bestval ul? ·'l ar:c_.r ;ilo&gt; • .. ,.
keep1ng Lrke l'"~ese nrg rr
lashron . o re c~sr o11 ,r:~. e PrJ
Ca ravelle warcnes f rJ r..., '" d'
w o me n All at S39 9'J 1r "
~ ,, " ' erf' 'i
var1ety Ol styles

~ido leport,

Oct. 2!&gt;, 1979

rn \l ror· u f Uhru has ~l't for

bf! ltiV P 1 ,.Jn IJppor:ur•·lY ro
tw rlr! drd F u r'.'lf·r •'l lorma

\$39

R. C. BOTTLING CO.

Leuers

The P utJ I' l Ut d rt res Co m
puiJi rC

Posters promoting American
Education Week were on display at a
meeting of the ~rican Legion
Auxiliary of Drew Wclister Post 39.
Pomeroy, Tuesday night at the hall .
Mrs . Fay Wildermuth, education
and scholarship chairman, had
charge of the program and spoke on
education and the slogan . "Teach

1"•'

LlGAL NUfiC E

All .r· t;•rP ', !• '' ~ ll •" S~ns .rv rl l

95

SAVE YOUR R.C •. NEHI, UPPER 10. DII:.T RITE 1
DAD'S ROOT BEER BOffiE CAPS FOR CHARITY

Library

season for all deer .
NATIONAL : BE IT RESOLVED
that we very thoroughly study all
proposed legislation relative to land
use as it would pertain to fanners.
BE IT RESOLVED that we oppose
the legalization ri marijuana.
BE IT RESOLVED that we urge
that Grain Purity Standards for
sales overseas meet pre-detennined
standards and consideration be
given to esta bli.slunent of an export
facility for this purpose which would
be owned and controlled by fanners.
BE IT RESOLVED that we support a supply and demand concept
and oppose importations of beef and
other farm products to the detriments of American farmers.
BE IT RESOLVED that due to
erosion which has occurred along
the Ohio !Uver we favor a reevaluation of this land to detennine
the true acreage and also how many
acres have since washed away and
also that there be an equitable way
to reimburse the owner for hi&amp;l088.
BE IT RESOLVED that we
monitor all foreign land investments
in the United States and an immediate study to detennine an
equitable limit as to what this invesunent should be .
BE IT RESOLVED that Ohio
Utilities be allowed to bum Ohio
Coal until such time as research
produces a method to eliminate
sulphur from the coal.
BE IT RESOLVED that we support the proposed checkoff lor beef
as promoted by the Ohio Beef
Marketing Conunittee and the
National Uvestock and Meat Board,
to provide promotion for beef
research and educal!on.
BE IT RESOLVED that we support the concept of equal exchange
of grain for crude oil .

doe and an extended season on all
deer .
STATE : BE IT RESOLVED that
we urge more stringent enforcement
of trespassing laws and bigger
penalties for unauthorized vehicles
trespassing on private property.
BE IT RESOLVED that we very
thoroughly study all proposed
legislation relative to land use as it
would pertain to fanners .
BE IT RESOLVED that our goverrunent not spend more money than
the incoming revenues justify.
BE IT RESOLVED that State and
Federal money be made available
for restoration of off~ide strip
rnirung not presently C{)vered by
restoration programs.
BE IT RESOLVED that we support the enactment of a State
Severance Tax in Ohio on extracted
natural resources with the revenue
returned to the county of origin .
BE IT RESOLVED that any ablebodied recipient of welfare be
required to work at some designated
job and all recipients be investigated
before being approved. We also
believe welfare recipients should be
allowed to work to supplement theiJ"
income .
BE IT RESOLVED that we oppose
the legalization of marijuana .
BE IT RESOLVED that we urge
that Grain Purity Standards for
sales overseas meet pre.ctetennined
standards and consideration be
given to establislunent of an export
facility for this purpose which would
be owned and controlled by farmers
BE IT RESOLVED that Ohio
Utilities be allowed to burn Ohio
Coal until such time as research
produces a method to eluninate
sulphur from the coal.
BE IT RESOLVED that we
monitor all foreign land investments.
BE IT RESOLVED that before
any nuclear energy plants be located
in our area that a detailed environmental plan on the plant and Its
waste and its products be presented
and approved by the people m the
immediate ar~.
BE IT RESOL YEO that we support and encourage the Ohio Farm
Bureau Federaton in their research
of gasohol.
BE IT RESOLVED that we favor
stringent laws on littermg and the
enforcement thereof, and also urge
that a deposit be compulsory on all
beverage containers.
BE IT RESOLVED THAT due to
the extensive crop damage caused
by the increased deer populauon ,
that an open season be made
available on doe and extended

Legion members view education poste~s

MIDDLEPOJitT, 0 .

Also We Clrry A Complete Lint of SeikO W•tches

The " Big Gr""n Monster" at
Fenway Park , Boston , IS 60 feet
high , 37 feet of wall and topped by a
Zl-foot screen.

DAILY SENTINEL

992-2157

CALL 992-2156

BElWEEN

BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

8:30 &amp; 5:00

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�7- Tilt DHrly SentrneJ ,]l/HJdl o•port-Polne ro) 0 Frrday . Oct ~ 1979

S---The Datly Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Fnday, Oct 26, 1979
MIDDLEPORt CLUSTER

CHURCH
NEWS

HEATH Church School 9 30 am W or
sh1p 10 30 a m UMVF b p m Robe r !

fRINITY CHURCH Rev W H Perr n
pastor Bob Buck Sunday s.chool \upt
Church School 9 15 o m worsh•p ser
'~t.=• 10 30om Cho1r reheor\ol Tuasdoy
7 JO p m under dlr&amp;ctlon of A"c• N&amp;ose
POMEROY CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Corner Unton ond Mulberry Re" Clyde V
po1tor Su ndoy sc hooi q JO
0 m Glen McClung sup! morn ong wo r
ship 10 30 am ev•mmg !UH"\IK&amp; 7 30
m•d w . .k serv•ce Wednesday 7 30 p m

Henderaon

GRACE CHURCH [EPISCOPAL )
Motn St

Groves

Pomeroy

The Re v

Rector Su nday

310

E

Robert 8

5er ... •ce

at 10 30

0 m With Holy Co mmumo n o n 1he h r 51
Sunday of ea ch month and co mb, ned w 1th
Mornmg Pr aye1 on the thnd Sunday Mar
n1ng Prayer and Serm on o n all o ther Sun
days of the month C hu rc h Scho o l and nu r
sery core prov1ded Coffee hour n 1he
Pansh Hall 1mmed •ately fo llo w ngthe ser
VIC8

POMEROY CHURCH Of CHRIST 111 W
Ma1n Netl Proudf oo t pos Ter 8 tble scho l
~ JO am
morn1ng w o rh ~ h , p 10 30om
Youth rneetmg~ 6 30 p 111 ttvtt nHlQ .,. or
!&gt;hip
7 30 Wednesday n 1ght prayer
meeting and B1ble st~~Y 7
THE SALVATION ARMY ' 15 ButternuT
Ava Pomeroy Env o y and Mrs Roy W1n
1ng otf•c&amp;rs 1n charge Sunday hol,neu
meeting 10 a m Sunday School 10 30
am Sunday school leader YPSM El o1se
Adams 7 30 p m
salvat ton mettltng
vonous speakers and mus1c spectals
Thursday - 10 am to 2 p m lod1es Home
league all women 1nv1 1ed 7 30 p m
prayer m"t1n9 and B1ble study Bob
htep
leodttr
Rev
Noel
Hermon
teacher
BURLINGTON
SOUTHERN
BAPTI ST
CHAPEl Route I ShadePostm Bobby
Elk1ns Sunday school 5 p m
~ v ndoy
worshtp 5 45 p m
Wednesday prayer
serv1ce 7 30 p m
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRIST 100 W Mom St
Jeri)' Pau l
mtntsl&amp;r phon&amp;
76bh Con!UHva!IVIJ
non mstrumental Sunday worsh1p 10
o m 81ble study II o m worsh1p 6
p m Wednesday B1ble study 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBlE CHRISliAN CHURCH
R-... Rolph Sm1th pastor Sunday school
&lt;il 30
o m
Mrs
Worlgy
franc1 s
supenntendent Preochmg ser"1ces fn~t 8
thtrd Sundays toHow1ng Sunday School
GRAHAM
UNITED
METHODIST
Preoctung 'il JO a m l1rsl and second Sun
days of each month Thud and fourth Sun
doys each month worsh1p sennce at 7 30
p m Wednesday 8\1801ngs ol 7 JQ Prayer
and B1ble Study
Mulber')'
SEVEN TH DAV ADVENTIST
He1ghts Rood PomefOY Pastor Albert
'()mes Sabbath School Supenn tenden 1
R1ta Wh1te Sabbath School Solurday
afternoon 01 2 00 w1th Worsh1p Serv• ce
IDI Iow.ng ot 3 15
RUTLAND FIRST BAPT IST CHUR CH
Sup! Sunday
Stste r Hornef! Worner
School q )0 am m o rn1ng w o rship 10 -45

?9"'

m

Robmson Pmlfor
RUTLAND Chu rc t'l School q lO a m
Wonh1p 10 30om W1lbu• Hilt Pasto r
SALEM CENTER Wo r s. h•p 9 o m Church
Sc hool 9 _.5 o m
SYRACUSe CLUSHR
Re-.. Harvey K&lt;K h Jr
FORESI RUN W o rshp q am Chu rch
Schooi i O om
MINERS V ILLE Chu rch Sc hoo l q o m
Worsh1p 10 a m
ASBURY Church Sd10ol'il 50 a m wo,
sh1p 11 o m B1ble Study 7 30 p m fhurs
day UMW list l uesda y
SOUTHERN CLU STER
Rev Da v 1d Horn !&gt;
Rev Mark Flynn
Fl oren ce Sm 11h
Hilt o n Wol le
BETHANY (Do rca s) Wo rsh•p q 00 om
C hurch School lO 00 am
CARMEl Chruch School q 30om War
sh1p 10 30om 2nd and 41h Sundays
APPLE GROVE Sunday Sct1ool 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 7 30 p m I s1 and 3rd Sundays
Prayer meet1ng Wednesday 7 30 p m
Fellowsh1p supper hrst Saturday 6 p m
UMW 2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST lETART Chru ch Schoo l 9 om
Worsh1p serv 1ce 10 om Praye r meet1ng
7 JO p m Wednesday UMW second Tues
day 7 JO p m
RACINE WESLEYAN
Sunday schoaiiO
a m
worshtp I I o m ChoH pract ce
Thursday 8 p m
lETART FAllS~ W or5h•p !&gt;ttr vt ce q am
C hurch SchooiiO am
MORNING STAR Wo rshrp 9 30 a m
Church
School
10 30 a m
Yovlh
Tue!&gt;days. 7 p m
MORSE CHAPEL Churc h School q JO
a m Worshtp 11 o rn
PORTlAND Chur ch School 9 30 a m
Worsh1p 11 a m
SUTTON Church School q 30om Wa r
shtp 1st and 3rd Sundays 10 30 a m

HAZEl COMMUNITY CHURCH

Neo'

MIDDlEPORT

PENTECOSTAl

Th"d

Ave
the Rev William Kntttel pastor
Thomas Kelly Sunday School Supt Sun
doy school 10 o m C Iones f or oil ages
•venrng utrvrcH
1 30
Btble study
Wednesday 7 30 p m
youth serv•ces
Frtday 7 30 p m
MIDDLEPORT FREEWill BAPTIST Corner
Ash and Plum Noel Herrman pastor
Saturday evening service 7 30 p m Sun
doy Sckool 10 30 o m

MEIGS
COOPERA TTVE PARISH
METHODIST CHURCH

Rrchord W Thomos Director

POMEROY CLUSTER
Re¥ Robert MeG . .
Rev James Corbitt
POMEROY Sunday School 9 15 a m
Worshrp service 10 30 o m Chelf rehear
sol Wednesday . 7 p m
Re" Robert
McGee, pauor
ENTERPRISE Worsh 1p 9 a m Church

School lOam
ROCK SPRINGS Sunday School 9 15
a m , worsh1p 1ervrce 10 a f'['

FlATWOODS. Chu"h School TO am
Worthip 11 a m

WIN TER

.'

MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC

\i
1

MIDDLEPORT BOOK STORE
( hilfr h

&amp;

John F Fulf1 Mqr
Ph 9911 101
Pomt&gt;ror

Qll 11 1 'liiPJJIH
C. IF F.

NEW YORK
'•·
CLOTHING HOUSE

~

~

l&lt;t.RMil 'S II.ORNER

(For A Real Auctton Call
The Real McCoy)
1 0 (Mac McCoy
985

Locust &amp;

Pomer oy Oh10

Middleport

CompWit•
Automotive
5(-r.,rce

.,., '"1

Pr@ \ Cflptron s
99 1 29SS

Pomeroy

RIGGS USED CARS, INC

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

91~

HEMlOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN R"'l" '
Watson pastor Mtldred Z1egler Sunday
school supt Mornmg wonhtp &lt;il 30 a m
Sundayschool 10 J0 a m
even1ng ser
VICe 7 30
MT UNION BAPTIST
Cec1l Cox
mmrster
Joe Sayre
Sunday School
Supeontenent Sunday school &lt;il "5 o m
evenrng worship
7 30 p m
Prayer
meet•ng 7 30 p m Wednesday
TUPPERS PlAINS CHURCH OF CHftiST
Randy Koehler past or Denn1s Newland
Sundoy school super ntendent Sunday
marnrng church s ~r
School 9 30 a m
viCe 10 30 om
Sunday even ng B•ble
study 7 p m
lETAfH FALlS UNITED BRETHREN RP v

1

EL ECTRIC FURNACE for

CIDE R

mobile home
d tron ~92 5509

F •t zpatr1 c k Or
St a le Ro ut e 689
Wilk esvil l e
66'f

P h one

1185

Salfl '-r~•c• A&lt;~uorles
M.•n St
H1 711J

Th• Store

W•ttl A Hurt

tllW

RAY ' S USED
Refr~gerator

,,

StON 11Wi

~•n

'"

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

..

_Jack W Carsey

FIR EWOOD

....•

•' '))'t •ltt
,~IJo.I"''

,en
J ~'t·

-.lth '

·n(' ulj&lt;ltrt ,•m t c w

Thi ... "'unda\'.
VIRGii B.
TEAFORD SR .

I~•
...,_J'

t.~·u

,

t.._, z~ ...._.,,~ 11}1.~ tn ,'1nrn~"'
P"'"" .._{ t"""'"' t :T&amp;_'!1 &amp;k' tbe
t Itt ~tfl
i (~,n~ ul~ I, lt.uMp:&gt;t! t ...u.Jt'\11 utl. &lt;lf'l....(bt·t '"-.,.tl

Insurance
SeTVICe5

·1 !~ ..HI~~

214 E Matn
.,, SlJO Pomeroy

,'&gt;t u ll1•1

"

~~.I! ~~~~~(\ · 11L..tt

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

t:...~l."t- 'f

Pomeroy

Gen•nl MerchllndrM
RaCIM ,., ]~SO

,p_-4u

j,

u

1 1, " Crepe

N

D

Men's Shaw
All Leather

Jlllrtt.'t i&lt;ll ....,.,k\

o..lu!h."-'' ·

j.'Ut .-t&amp;·•

ti t

·~

-n·

" '-.._

~at

H1ll Ford, Inc.

BOOTS, LOAFERS,
OXFORDS

m black &amp; brown

a1 s nurd Mlddtepon

m

11"

I

Anend The Church
Of Your Choir1•

Stuu

If .. ,

1. t"''""" ·f

lb.

'K. •..t~ \\' . . . .'

.·f s;.x'

IbM

,\'un~ ~

This Sunday

MIKE SWIGER
STATI FARM

"; j ' 1,1 \
HP"l"
..j 1

INSURANCE

'f&gt; ,

1t

M r nJ&lt;ly
M a1 ~
I 1) 1 j 2{'

..

l lli '\ i,lY
lt; lq

\7 7 0

Eat In or
C•rry Out
116E M.1•n
"1 6]04
pomeroy

Chotlt.-r 0

1 hursday

F wla )'

RIJ h

G ,•n{'5'S

Jot1n

1 16 17

6 4 y

Saluroa y
P:,a1ms

] 16 38

t.J .-• ' '&gt;"c. '::&gt;• •" '

PIZZA SHACK
S.~•n of
Good Brud

Wednt:.day

1 ') 1 ~

. ,,.._

BROWN'S
FIRE &amp; SAFm

~ ··

Equrpment
Wlei »rv•c.
Frre Exhi"'Ou•lllert
F1rt Otpt Equip
Rutland 1~i 2177

Attend

' iJ

The Church

~-

SLEEPING ACCM
weekly
rates
K1t c hen
pr•v11eges M1ddlepon 446

1788

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF MARTHA C
MAYS, DECEASED
Case No 22,847

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On O c tober 16, 1979 •n
the Me•gs County Probate
c o urt , Case No
22847 .
Albert Qu1vey
Route 1
Box 194 Strasbu rg , Ohro
44680
was
appo 1nted
Exec utor ot the estate of
Martha C Mays deceased ,
late of Route 3, Albany
OhiO 45710
John C Bacon
A c 11ng Probate Judge
Clerk

apples at $.4 per bu Best for
apple butter CaH 669 3785,
F 1 tzpalr~ck
Orchard, SR

,eo;;;-"'=fiaict~to

of 'I our Choice

FUR

m

ROME Beauty

1101 19 26 IT 11 2, Jt c

Howery, lots, Page:JVille-&amp;tpio
Elberfeld RA!alty Co to James H
Frecker ,lots, Pomeroy
Carl E Landon to Carl E Snuth
Inc, nght of way, Olive
'
Robert E Sanders, Nma J Sanders to Carl E Smtth, Inc , nght of
way, Olive
Raymond C Blake, Nela F Blake
to Carl E Smith, Inc , right of wa),
Olive
Darrel A Landon , Esther B Landon to Carl E Smith Inc , nght of
way, Olive
E D Parker, Veda E Parker to
Carl E Smtth, Inc , nght of way,
Olive
Addie Baker to Carl E Smtth,
Inc , nght of way, Olive
Gary I. Durst Huth G Durst to
Carl E Snuth, Inc , rrght of way,
Olive
WrU1am Fred Smith. Sr , Beatnce
E Srmth to Sigle Chaftn, CArman
Chaftn, ".acre, Salisbury
Wallace Bradford, Munel Bradford, Wtlllam Bruce Bradf&lt;&gt;rd,
Carolyn M Bradford to Williillll
Bruce Bradford, Carolyn M Bradford, Parcels, Orange
Fred Tuckerman, Gladys Tuckerman to Fred Tuckerman, Gladys
Tuckennan, 19 90 acres, Salisbury
Raymond L Furbee, Grace E
Furbee to Roger Adams, dba Adams
Dnlling Co, Right of Way, Lebanon
Archie H Stegall, Lupe Stegall to
Hoger Adams, Right of Way, Bed-

Debb1c Kay Young to Edward
AJlen Young 30 acre, Salisbury
W M1chael Oswal d, Deborah K
Oswald to BtsWU)It Ganguly, lla
.)
Ganguly, 24acre,Sutton
John Hansen, Leone Hansen to
James Potter, Gale Potter, parcels.
Bedforrl
Albert H Dangelo, Wilma
Dangelo lo Thomas Hayman, Sue
Hayman. 2 ll2B7 acres Ol1ve
Gary E Ja ckson, Sandra Jackson
to Danrel D Norns, Susan L Norns,
parcels, Ol1ve
Oarence Jordan, Mae Jordan to
I .ewt.5 Wesley Harper, Linda M
Harper,
three-fourths
a cre,
Salis buT)
George P Celaru. J oAnn Celam to
Ed .. ard Frecker. 3 5acres, Chester
Worley ltife , Paula H.tfe to
Buckeye Hural Elec Coop , Inc ,
easement Hutland
Peavley, Janet K
Jack F.
Peavley to Buckeye Hural Elcc
Coop , Inc , easement, Bedford
Cathenne Althouse, Elmer J
AJthouse , by a tty In fact, Cstherme

Sole .
Reg . S2S.9S

H11US

•
·' la.·u
,. ,._.rt.l • Ill"~ v."'.Xt
1:&gt; lbt.~v
, I'tjt, b.Htf'•' to('
,. u.o\..'tlL
·~
,d,'l..ll &lt;l 11\dll jt.'111 'I'lu utdb' ....-t)lYot'
( (\.,,fl(.{~ '"''!"''-'"\ ,' )Jl . .dtht .... .'ll(&lt;lt.: t'uJt, &lt;.~rk' 1 \,..f.n ~~tf'
! t nhj, t..-..U~ l.,_ lf.11 ltuH:
~~~ t!At' rt :·&lt;u,,._,,._
'-'"' i lt 1.1

Groc•n•~~o ­

8" FLEECE
LINED BOOT

w

1U• SKond

.v.·tl' /fo.J,M\~ ~ut..l , &lt;.l,fk" ;'!..'"

t:'"i 1-..1 'l. l ~~~ .:u~ ·I t~.'lt· ~t....u!

·.1jtt

Men 's or Women's

716 E M.l1f1

\\J,.._.
1Af~1f cl ..t~'t~ ' :JtM, lb: tc-' cl tc&lt;lf
,'\, t 1l'lU4 u o.h It~ 'WI 1... wuh"{J tb..at Munui:tteA .'Ru~,
~~·r.,~ t1 ....\_..,~ Ill ...."td!,n , u t...;J ""'tet rnu.~ f~t.M &amp;h~
"-''"db..~ t.. \t.l~ u n~" ~rt ......, &amp;,.,.,, C-eM t.' o\ol~ t4

NI S HEO
house
wtth
s.ieep1ng rooms
SU i tab le
tor c onstruct1on workers
Fully equ1pped
lc.ttchen
washer
and
drver
S howers
Off
street
park•ng L tnens furntshed
and
cleantng
weekly
Utlltftes patd Call
1362
after 4

Meigs
Property
Transfers

_

tlt·nd tlw Ch ureh
of 'I our ( hoi&lt;'P

COMPLE TELY

2967

Hodney
Cremeans,

Thi~ Sunda~

r.OTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY AND
APPRAISEMENT

deposol

Furn1shed No children . no
pets )07 Spnng Ave

689

County
&amp; Loan _,..,
Co.

Athens

J.th, t.

hard

' I

H•honwrde Ins Co
of Columbus, 0
liM W Mo. In
'n::J 1Jll Pomeroy

O'Wet

all

$SO

195' ALLI S CHALMERS

ler 5 992

C all992 544q

WOOd

$125

t r ac tor AC model Mow1ng
ma c htne, hydrauliC dtsc
fr ont end loader S1BOO 741
230 I

APPLES

~
Mgr
u.o~•
Phone 99i i181

APT

so le Excellent cond ttton
1n2 Honda SL 350 Par
f1ally rebutlt Extra engtne
and other mtsc parts At

automaftc
washer
$.65
Mefa l c abmet $10 Old krt
c he n c ab•nef wrth flour bm
S.t5 Platform rocker $20
K1frhen cab1nel gla ss ed 1n
doo r s S35

B1d der 3 shal t not e Th .:H
t he P r evall •n9 wag e RalC'~
publi sh ed by t he Oeoarf
me nf
at
tnctvs t r , dl
Rela t 1ons ~rP to hr ro m
Pllf'tJ w11 h ll•ro• ,n nu • lll1"&gt;
prup •r t

1s Phone 992 5434

QUASAR COLOR TV con

GE dryer , S75, GE

~5

POMEROY
LANDMARK
V~

$65

Break
la s t set $30 Ltv •ng room
su1t e. S45 Fuel orl heater

Headquarter~

·

Furn1ture

FOR SA L E or rent N ICe 3
bedr oom m od ula r loca•ed
1n Portlan d area Set up on
lo r or can be moved Call
after -4 30 304 17l 51 71

3 AND 4 RM furnrshed ap

WOOD STOVES bY Belter

367 0637

Addtson

Park Rbute 33 , north of
Pomero y L arge tot s C al l

GOLD GAS range
ltke
new , 2 years Old , GE . $100
Cab over c amper top B ft
b lue and Wf'ttte , 3 year s old
r eas o nable
Fo r
'"
format 1on 9.t~ 177 5

N Bens, Glassvrew, Leyden
Hearth, O l d Ttmer , Ftre
v1ew
Suburban
mob1le
home wOOd heaters, u L ap
proved, and Suburban fur
nacemaster~
Outdoor
Equ1pment Sa tes , Jet Rts
J and 35, Ga ll opo iiS OH
Phone 446 3670

51 12

Appliances
Sales &amp; Servtee

FRENCH'S
SUNOCO
SERVICE
,CENTERS

con

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

99'2 ] 479

ONE USED Myers shallow
we ll pump Good cnod1tton
949 2678

L OOKING FOR a respon
Sibl e party m the Pomeroy
area to assume payment s
on a p ta no Call collect 592

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

no E

Good

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

]6 15

NEW FRENCH Provtnc1al
ant.que wh1fe d•nmg room
~Ui f € $90() ~85 4270

mount ed

APPLES
H O NEY

APPUANCE II

Ovt s•de

blade Sl 000 742 2819

and

Rev R:tchard W Thomas
Duane Sydens t ncker Sr
John W Doug las
Cha rles Dom•gon
JOPPA
Worsh1p q 00 a m
Church
SthooiiO OOo m
CHESTER
Worlhtp 9 om
Church
School 10 a rn Cho11 Rehear sol 7 p m
Wednesday B1 ble Study
Wednesdays
7 30pm
LONG BO f iOM Sunday School ot q 30
o m Evemng Worshrp at 7 30 p m Thu r s
day Btble Study 7 30 p m
REEDSVIl l E Sunday School 9 JO o m
Morn ng Wonh 1p 10 30om E"enmg Wor
shp 7 30 p m B•ble Sludy Wednesday~ at
730pm
AlFRED Sunday School at 'il -45 om
Mornmg Worsh•p at I I om Wttdnesday
N1ght Prayer Meet1ng 7 )() p m
ST PAUL (Tuppers Plo1ns ) Sunday
School 9 00 o m Morn1n9 Wonh 1p ot
10 00 o m Monday N1ght 6 1b le Study 7 30

EDEN UNiffD BRETHREN IN CHRIST
Elden R Bloke po5tor Sunday School 10
a m
Robert Reed supt
Morn•ng ser
mon
11 o m
Sunday mght serv1 ces
Chnst1on Endeavor 7 30 p m Song ser
viCe
B pm
Preoch.ng 6 30 p m
M1dw&amp;ek Prayer mee t1ng Wednesday 1
p m Roy Adams loy leader
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST Locot&amp;d at
Rut land on New l1mo Rood next to Forest
A cre Pork Re" Roy Rouse pastor Robert
Mussar
Sunday School sup! Sunday
school T0 30 a m worst-up 7 30 p m 81
ble Study Wednesday 7 30 p m Sotur
doy mght prayer ser.~•ce 7 30 p m

JO HN OEERE doesel 1010
do ze r

HOTPOINT

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

COAL
l u mp o r
W 1l l d ell ver
7 47

788 1189

•'lara

A100

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL

$40

Jl8J

Chester
Ph

H OUSE

s tol\e r

R1Q9S

Sl Rl 1

TOPPE R

lnqu• r e at 400 L a sl ey St
Pome r o t , O H

salf'
W 1l l

·Now 1akJ r&lt;(J c •d(~r~
de l 1ver 74 / JU'&gt;6

FURNITURE &amp; HARDWARE
Homehte S.w\

0---.
Roiy

USED

:ol t ern(1 lo rs ow n 1he b e st
buy W I NPOWE R Cal l 513

We Ftl l Our !Gr ~

0

FOR

COAL
lu mp o r
742
w II d ei 1Vt:&gt;r

7183

EMER oJf NCY PO WER

&amp; LOHSE
PHARMACY

~

HOUSE
sl ol(.er

POTATOE S

~F I R E WO O O

OIL H EA T E R 300 gallon
tan k GOOd CO Od 1t1 0n 2A7

wh !to and yellow R 1 1
Rd c.1 ne R W Lew's A43
1437

C W P ro ffiJf tarm
Por
tland OH ss a nvndred and
55 a hundred

McCOY
AUCTION SERVICE

EUIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

\ WEET POTA TOES , ed

s an d
gra ve l
ci'I I Ciurn
ch lor1de
f ert d, zt r
dog
fOOd and all t y p,s of snit
Exn•I SIOr S!l ll wprk 5 Inc
E Ma1 n St Po mer oy 9'97
.3 891

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

NORTHEAST CLUSTER

pm
SOUTH BETHEl (Srlver R1dge} Sunday
School q 00 a m Morn1ng Wosh1p 10 00
o m Wsdnesdoy Bible Study 7 30 p m
KENO CHUR CH Of CHRI ST ser,..,ces
eoch Sunday q 30 a m Geor ge P1ckens
pastor w1th preoch•ng o n hrst and lh1rd
am
Sunday ol month O lt ve r Sworn Supt
THE HILAND CHAPEL George Casto
HOBSON CHRISliA.N UNION Rev J&lt;e,th
pen tor Sunday School q 30 o m even1ng
Eb hn pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m
""orshtp 7 30 Thursday evenmg prayer
Lttonord Gdmore I rst ttldtt r evenmg ~e r
\llrVICfl 7 3Q p m
v•ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday prayer
POMEROY FIRST BAPIIST Dov 1d Mann
meet1ng 7 JQ p m
m•n ster Will om Watson Sunday uhool
BEARWALlOW RIDGE CHURC H or
supt Sunday school 9 30 o m morn ng
CHfii ST Duane Worden mm1ster B1b1
worsh•p 10 30a m
doss q 30 am mor mng worsh1p 10 ](
FIRST SOUTHERN BAP TISf 282 Mulberry
o m
&amp;venrng
wor5hlp
6 30 p m
Ave Pomttr oy Hers hel McC lure Sunday
Wednesday B1ble study 6 30 p m
sc hool supe rmlendent ~undoy ,chol 9 30
NEW
SltVERSVIllE
COMMUNITY
o m
m o rn, ng w o rshp 10 30 ev8n tn g
Ch ur ch Sunday School $erv 1ce 9 45 a m
worsh•p 7 p m M tdwel prayer ser ~•c e '
W or\hip ser.~ • &lt;• I 0 30 Evangelist1c Ser
pm
v1ce
7 30 p m
Wednesday
Prayer
meetmg 7 30
MIDWA 'i COMMUNITY CENTER Oe)Cter
ZION CHU RCH OF CHRIST Pomttroy
Rd longsvdle Oh1o Rev Clyde Ferrell
Harr1sonvtlte Rd Robert Purtell pastor
Past or Sunday Scho ol I I a m )ahJrdoy
Brll McElroy Sunday "hool sup! Sunday
pr80ch•ng HH V ce1. 7 30 p m Wednesday
H hool 9 30 a m morn1ng worsh1p and
even 1ng B1ble study at 7 30 p m
communron 10 30 a m Sunday ... orsh1p
FAI TH TABERNAClE CHURCH Badf!y
seorv• ce
7 pm
Wednesday even•ng
Run Rood Rev Emmett Rowson postor
prayer rneet 1ng and B•ble ~tudy 7 p m
Handley Dunn supt Sunday Hhool 10
Sl JOHN LUTHERAN CHU RCH P1ne
o m Sunday even1ng s•rv oce 7 30 81ble
Grove The Rev Wtll.om Middlesworth
1eoch1ng 7 30 p m Thursday
Po,tor Church ser v 1ces 9 30 o m Surldoy
DYESV IllE COMMUNITY CHURCH
S(hool 10 30 a rn
Roger C Turner pastor Sunday schoo l
BRADBURY CHURCH Of CHRIST Edward
q lO a m
Sunday morn ng ... onh •p
Fryman posto~unday ~~o c hool q 30 am
10 JO Sunday 8\/Bntng serv 1ce 7 lO
.,. o r ship se rv1 ce 10 )() o m Sunday ser
MIDDlEPORT CHUR CH OF CHRIST IN
v • c e~ 7 30 p m
youth group Wednes
CHRISTIAN UNION
Lowranc e Manley
day 7 p rn
pastor
M rs Rusutll Young
Sunday
ANT IOUIT'I BAPTIST Rev Earl Sh u l~tr
School Sup! Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m
po $tO• Sunday ~c hool q 30 o m Chur ch
Even1ng worshtp 7 30 Wttdne~doy praye r
7 p m
youTh meermg
b
serv1ce
meeting 7 30 p m
p m Tuesday B1ble Study 7 p m
MT
MORIAH CHUR CH OF GOD
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE
Ro ctn&amp; - Rev W H l yl. ,ns pO!&gt;I or Morn
Rev John A Collman pastor Fronl.l,n
1ng worsh1p 9 A5 o m Sunday school
Imboden cha 11 ma n of the Boord ol ( hr ~
10 "5 o m evttn1 ng w o ,t-llp 7 Tuesday
11an l fe Sunday Schoo l q 30 o m m or n
7 30
p m
lod•es prayer
meeting
mg w o rsh•p 10 30 Sunday e ven•ng wor
Wednesday 7 30 p m VP E
sh1p 7 30 p m Prayer me~t1 n g Wednes
MIDDLEPORT FIR ST BAPTIS T Corne r
day 7 30 p m
S1xth and Palmer the Rev Mark M cC lung
RA CINE FIR ST BAPTI ST Don l Walker
Don W1lson
Sunday school 9 15 am
Po\lor
Ronnte Sol\er Sunday ~ c h oo l
sup4tr1ntendent lacy Borton out ~upt
svpl Sunday school q 30 o m morn1ng
Mornmg Worshtp 10 1~ am 8 ble study
.,.Or\hip 10 40 am Sunday even ng ... or
10 30om at chur ch Youth meel1ng 7 30
sh1p 7 30 Wednesday even1ng 61ble
p m Wednesday Wednesday n1ght B1ble
study 7 JQ
study and prayer se rv1 c&amp; 7 30 p m
DANVILLE WESLEYAN
Rev
R D
CHURCH OF CHRIST M1ddleport 5th
Brow n past or Su nday Sc hool q 30 o m
ond Ma1n Bob Melton m•n•ster M'~"
morn1ng wo rsh1p 10 .45 yovth HH v1( 8
Gerlach supenntende n t Ttt r ry Yanl.ey
6 45 p m IIV&amp;ntng w or!&gt;h•p 7 30 p m
youth m1n111er B1ble sc hool q 30 o m
prayer and pro1se Wednesday 7 30 p m
morn1ng 'I'I'Or$htp I 0 30 a m
eventng
SilVER RUN FR EE BAPTIST Rtt v Mar-.. n
worsh•p 7 .30 prayer serv1ce 7 p m
Morlo.1n poslor Stevel,ttle Sunday !.Choo l
Wednesday
\up! Sunday Hhool 10 om mormng
MIDDLEP ORT
C HUR CH
OF
THE
worsh1p II o m Sunday even1ng .;v or
NAZARENE Rev J1m Broorne pastor Bill
,h,p 7 30 Proy8r meettng and 8 ble
Whtte
Sunday school sup!
Su nday
$1udy Thu r sday 7 JO p m youth \8fV ICe
school 9 30 a m morm ng wo rsh1p I 0 30 ..
6 p m Sunday
om Sunday evonge i1 St 1&lt; meet1ng 7 00
CHESTER CH UR CH Of GOO Rev R E
p m Proy&amp;r mvet1ng Wttdne~doy 7 p m
Rob,ns o n pos1or Sunday school q 30
UNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINIS TRY OF
o m w o rsh1p 5tt rvl&lt;e 11 a m even•ng
MEIG S COUN TY Dw1ght L Zov11l d1rec
,er viC e 7 00 youth serv1 ce Wednesday
lo'
700p m
HARRISON VIllE PRESBYTERIAN Rev
CHRISTIAN
CHURCH
LANGSVILLE
Ernest Str1cklm pastor Sunday chur ch
Robert Musser po,tor Sunday Hhoo l
school &lt;il 30 o m Mrs Homer lee sup!
q 30 o m
Roy S1gmo n sup!
mor n ng
morn.ng ""orsh•p I 0 30
worsh1p 10 30 Su nday e"en1ng serv• ctt
MIDDlEPORT Sunday school q 30 a m
7 30 m•d week serv1c e Wednesday 7
Rrchord Vaughan supr Mornmg worthtp
pm
TO 30
SYRACUSE CHURCH Of THE NAZARENE
SYRACUSE Mornmg wor5h1p q a m
Rev
Do le T Bou
pa"or Norman
Sunday school I 0 a m Mrs Samps o n
Presley Sunday school supertntendent
Hall supt
Sunday school q lO o m
mor n1ng wm
RUTlAND CHURCH OF GOD Rev Bob
shtp
10 .45 even1ng worsh1p 7 p m
by Porter pastor Sunday school 10 am
Wednesday even,ng w o rsh1p 7 Yoong
Sunday worsh•p II a m Sunday evenmg
p41oples soCiety
Wednesday
7 p m
servrce 7 p m Wedne~doy Fom1 ly Trot
NY I pres1dent Paul Imboden M •s
mg Hour 7 p m Wednesday worshtp ser
~10nory Sa&lt;uty
SIKond Wednesday 7
p m soc1ety pres•dent Ehrobelh Cundtft
¥ICe 7 30 p m
long Bottom Edsel Hart pastor Sunday
school 10 a m Church 7 30 p m prayer
meetrng 7 30 p m Thursday

These Messages Of Our Religious Heritage

For Sale
COAL
LIM Fst:i NE

Barbara

Attend The Church

The State of OhtO, Me1g5
County, Court of Common
Pleas. Probate Otvtston
To fhe E•ec ulor or Ad
m1n1strator of the estate fo
such of the fOIIOw1ng as are
res1dents of the State of
Oh10 V I Z
I he sur'VIV n g
spouS(&gt; the next of k. 1n the
bene11Ctartes
under
Tf'te
will and to I he attorney or
attorneys represen r.ng any
of the aforem ent.oned per

sons

Phyll 1a A Mullen ( Case
No
12833) , 605
F1rst
Avenue, Mtddleport Oh1o
You are hereby not1hed
that t he ln'Ventory and Ap
rarsement of the estate of
he
aforementtoned
deceased late of sa1d Coun
ty, were fil f&gt;d tn thts Court
Scud Inventory and Ap
pra1sement will be for
hear1ng before thiS Court
on fhe 14th day of October

f

1979 at t 30 o'c lock P M

Any person des1r1ng to
f1le
excepf1ons thereto
must file them at least f1ve
days prtor to the date set
for hear 1ng
Gtven under my hand
and seal of sa1d Court , fhrs
24fh day of O c tober 1979
Rober t E Buck
Judge
By Carolyn G Thomas
Deputy C lerk

110i16(11)111C

MH 165
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

f ro m Dav•cl c_ ~~ .,, r ' "
13 1 W(•Sl S1n li
S1re-e t A th ens Oh o 45701
(61.t '
59156 15 upon f h~
deposil w 1t h them ot "SO 00
Ill ( rt Sh Or ( tu•r K I OI (',l! h
&lt;:.el
of
drawrn g •
,:uH1
sp err f ,c a l •ons
The lu ll \ 50 00 depos 1t on
sets of d r a w 1ngs and
sp ecd ,ral o n s
w 11 1 be
r e 1urned to b 1dde r s u pon
r e tur n ot d ra w,ngs and
SP('Cif, c a t ons. n g ood c. on
di tr on w •l h n ten ( 10) dCtY&gt;
after b 1d op f'n1ng dale
B td S.
f or
1h e
above
descr,bed N Or k must be
m a de on b l an k •, t o b (' l ur
n 1sh ed by t h t Ar ch tert
Eng 1neer
hr&gt;retnbf' IO rP
name d
81d s mus t be addr t&gt;ssed
t o me Gal l1a cou n tf Com
m• ss, oner s of G a l1po l 's
Ohto and endors ed on o u f
Stde of envelope fh e 1t em s
of w ork b1d upon
E ac h b1d mu s t con t am
th e lull name of eve ry p er
son or co mpan y m t er es ted
1n
fh€'
sam e
sh alt
o:;epar ate l y st at e t he p r 1c e
f o r l a bo r an d ma t er , al and
mus t be acromo a n ed b y il
b d bon d or a ce rl f1f'd
r her k 1n su m e solv ent ban k
1n a n am o unt o t no t less
than liv e per ren f (5 0 )
n
s pec1 f 1c amo un ts ot dollar&lt;;
and cent s of t hf' t ola l o t th e
ba se b •d and all ad d a1 1er
n ate b 1d s a"&gt; a gua r a n l ee
that f fh e b1d 1S ac ce pt ed a
contra c t w il l be en ler ed ,n
fo a n a
t 'i. p f' rf o r m dnr e
properly se c ured
Th e su cce ssful b1d de r s
upon rece 1pf of a cc e-ptan ce
of tf'te1r propos al s m u sl
lurn1 sh l00°1oP Prf o r m a nce
Bond an d 100°oLabor and
Mate r 1al Paym eM Bon d 10
th e Own e r
( h l PrtS

Of Your Choice This Sunday
fre81ond N or r1s p0~ 1 o r f l oyrl N or r \
w ol S. u ndov Hhool q 30 :~ rn
morn•nq
Htr mon
1030 orn
Pra ye r ~ e 1 o c e
Wednesday 7 )() p m
CHF STER CHUR CH O F THE NAZA R EN ~
Re v Herber ! G ro re po !&gt;to r W o rsh 1p ~er
"&lt; 9 I I a m on d 7 30 p m Su nday
~&lt; hoo l
9 30 a m Charle&lt;.. B1Bell ~up l
Proyer meet ng W edne sday 7 30 p m
lAUREl
( LIH
F=REE
METH OD I ST
CHURCH Rev Fl oyd F ShooM po s1nr
Ltoyd Wflght Svndoy School Sup! M orn
) undo~ School
ng W orsh1p 9 30 o m
10 10o m Wedne~d o y Proytt r an d B bl9
) rudy I 30 p m Sunday &amp;venrng w o r ~ h p
1 30 J:. m Cho H Proct 1&lt; e f hu rsday 7 p m
DEX TE R CHURCH O F CHRIST Chor le!.
RuBel l Sr
rnH11!&gt;1e r RIC!. Maco mbe r
~ upt Sunday sch ool 9 JO a m
w o r ~ h1p
~ervrciH 10 30 o m B1ble STudy TusH.Iay
l 30 p m
REORGANIZf D CHUR CH OF JF') US
CHRI ST OF lATTI:.R DAY SAINT S Po1t lond
Ra {o ne Rood
W ilh a m Rous h pa stor
Ph yl l1s Stoborl Sun d ay Schoo! Su p! Sun
day Sc hool q 30 a m M ornmg w or sh1p
10 30 a m Sunday fl ven,n g 5e rv1c e 7 p m
Wednesday 9v9 n,ng prayer ser v 1 c~ ' 1 30

pm
BETH LEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl Shv le r
po'tor Worshtp •ervKe 9 30 o m Sun day
~~o c h oo l 10 30 am B•ble Study and pray8r
ser v1ce lhur!&gt;day 7 30 p m
CARLE TON CHUR CH fl:. 1ng5bu ry Rood
Gory Ktng poslo r Sunday schoo l 9 30
om Rolph Car l supenntendenl even1n g
7 30 p m
Prayer mee t ,ng
worsh1p
Wednesday 7 JO p m
lONG BOTTOM CHRIS T\AN G t&gt;o r gt~ F
P1ckens
pastor
Wal lace Damewood
5upt B1ble School 9 45 o m Pr eudm1g
'er\11Ce 10 45 a m
lor st and th rd Sun
days 7 p m ~~oecond and f ourth Su nd a y ~
B1ble study 8 p m Tuesdoys
HYSELl RUN FREE ME THODIST CHURCH
Rev Okey Cart po• tor Mor n 1ng serv tce
10 lOom Sunday e\len mg and T hur~doy
eventnfl 5erv 1C8$ at 7 J0 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEl M ISSION o1 Bo ld
Knob Rev lawrence Gluesencom p Sr
pasror Rog9r Willford Sr Su nday sc. hool
svpt Sunday school 9 30 o even •ng ... o r
sh1p 7 30 p m Prayer m8etmg Wedne\
day 7 30 p m Youth meetmg Svn da y
5 lO p m w1th Don a nd MorThQ Meado w ~
m charge
WHITES CHAPEL Coolv•tltt RD R9 v Roy
De•ter pastor Sunday schoo l &lt;il 30 a m
worsh rp •ervt ce 10 30 o m 81ble st ud y
orld proyer serv1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRISl Brad
Henderson posto 1 Herb Ell ,o tt Su nda y
$Cheal sup! Su nday school q 30 a m
mornrng ... or ~ htp an d ( Qmun•on 10 JO

om
MASON ASSEMBlY OF GO D Oudd1ng
lane Mason W Vo Re v Rolln 1e B

~

Rr ~P
M '
•

r ('

P n~

9

or

') J"do y Slhool 9 4 S o m

W or~ h·p I I 0 rn E ~ e n1n g Ser
I 10 {) .,
Wedn e ~ d oy M 1n1S I1 e~

pratse serv1ce Wednesday 7 30 p m
~UllAND
APOS TOll( CHURCH O f
JESUS CHRIS T Elder James Miller B,b le
study Wednesday 7 30 p m
Sun day
School 10 o m Su nd ay n1gh t ~ervt c e 7 30

" r•P! no o • d Jlr orPr 10o m Wl'!-d n @~doy
P•oy P• ~er.•c t 'JOp rn
RU IL A t W BIBL ( Ml THQ DIS I CHUR CH
pm
lo •me ly Rvtlond Cornmun' ' Y Chu rch
POMEROY WESLEYAN HOLINESS
A rn o ~ r 11 ,., pas to r Donn y T II s Sun do(
Harr~sonvtl l e Rood Dewey l(mg pmt ar
Hlnn l ~"J1 P r r tend enl Sund ay ~c h oo
.Ed1s0n W&amp;av9r OH~Stont Ht!llfY Eb l 1n
Q JO fl n
~undo y e , .. n ng w o r~h 1 p 7 3C
Jr Sunday Hhoo l sup! Sunday schoo l
p .,
1/iMPO 10d•O pro gram ea ch Sun
q 30 o m mornmg wor~~oh1p II o m Sun
rlnv 'Tl :Jin ng 7 45 0 m
day
even1ng
serv1 C0
7 30
praye r
lo ll,~ pm.IO r Don ny ld l1!. ~umdoy School
~up ! Sunday Sc hool 9 30 om
fol lowed meet my Thursday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH Of GOD
by rnorn 1ng wor'&gt;hi p Sunday eventng se1
"'ce 7 30 p m Pra ye r meetmg Wedne s Not Pentecostal Rev George O tl er
pastor Worsh1p sef'lt Cfl Sunday q 45
day 7 30 p m WMP O Rodto brO&lt;Jd cm t
a m
Sunday school 11 o m
.,.orsh 1p
Svn doy morn ng 7 .4 5
7 30 p m
Thu rsday prayer
ser\IICIII
~lUll AND CHUR CH OF THE NAZARENE
Rev lloyd 0 C,fl m m Jr pastor Sunday meetrng 7 30 p m
MT HERMON Untted Brethren Chul{h
~c h oo l q JO o m
N Qrshtp serv1ce I 0 30
a 111 81oodc a st l1v0 over WMPO yovng Sunday School 9 30 am Wonh1p ser,.. ,ce
10 45 am Preoch•ng :terv1ce~ every Sun
people~ §e r v1c e 7 p m Evongei1St1c s9r
v1c t! 7 30 p m Wedne~doy ~erv1ce 7 30 day alternotmg wtth C E W&amp;dnesdoy
prayer meel1ng 7 30 p m Rev James
p m
Fl~ ST SOU THERr~ BA.PTIST Corner
of SNond and A. nJer&lt;..o n Mason Pmlor leach postor Qo.... •d Holter lay l•ader
JEHOVAH S WITNESSES I mrle eas t ol
F ran ~ Lo wther Sun day school q 45 am
Rutlond tuncl•on of Rovte 124 and N oble
w o r~ h1 p ~ er -..1c e
11 o m and 7 30 p m
Week ly B1bl e Study Wednesday 7 30 Summ1t Rood T 174 ) Sunday B1ble lee
ture 9 30 o
Watchtower study 10 30
pm
om
Tuesday Brble !tudy 7 and 8 15
MA SON CHURCH OF CHRISf Miller St
p m
Thursdoy theocrot1 c school 7 30
Mo,on W Yo A u r 1c e Mtek post or Sun
p m serv•ce rn . . t,ng 8 30 p m
do r 81 b le St udy I 0 a m Worsh •p II a m
RUTlAND FREEWill BAP TI ST Chur ch
and 7 p m B1ble Stu dy Wedne!idoy 7 p m
Lelond Holey pos 1or Sunday schoo l 10
Voca l mus •t
evemnv ~~oervl(e 7 30 p m Prayer
MA SO N ASSEMBL Y O F GOO Dudd1ng 0 m
meeflng Wednesday 7 30 p m
la ne Ma son W Vo Chester Tennanr
CHU RCH OF GOO of Prophecy I&lt;X atttd
Po5t o•
Su nday
Sc hool 9 45
a m
on the 0 J Wh11e Rood oft h1ghway 160
Ch ,ldren ~ Chur ch 6 45 p m Young Peo
Sunday School I 0 o m Supenntendent
pies Ser..-1&lt;e 6 A5 p m EvangeliStiC S~t r
John Loveday Ftrst Wednesday n1ght of
v•c e 7 30 p m W omen s M1U1onory Covn
month CPMA S8f'IIC&amp;S \econd Wednes
ctl l Oo m l1r!l.l and thlfd Tue~doys Prayer
day WMB meeting th rd through I 1Ith
and 61 b le Study Wednesday 7 30 p m
HARlfORD CHURCH Of CHRIST IN you th sorv 1ce George Croyle pasto r
570Gront 5 t
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl
CHRIS TIAN UNION
The Re"
W '1am
Campbel l po~tor Sunday School
JO Middleport Re\1 Don Bloke pastor Sun
doy school 9 30 o m mornmg w o f\ h1p
o m Ja mes Hughes iupl eventng t er
10 30 am
e\lemng w orth•p 7 p m
v •&lt;e
1 30 p m
Wednesday even1 19
Wednesday even ng B1ble study and
p1oyer rllttehng 7 30 p m Vouth proye•
pr ayer meet 1ng 7 p m Aftd101&amp;d w11h
5er .. ce e-a ch Tue!.doy
Soulhern BaptiST Convent1on
FAIRVIEW 61Blf CHURCH letart W
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST
Yo
Rt
I
Rev
Charles Hargraves
Eugen• Underwood po5t01 Harry Hen
pa~t or '(r' orsh1p serv•c4!s 9 30 am Sun
dr1cks super•nt•ndent Sunday sch oo l
evenmg worsh•p
day sc hool II a rn
7 30 p m f u esdoy co llage prayer mee tmg q 30 om rnorn1ng w o r11'·11p 10 30 am
&amp;ven•ng wors.-Hp 7 p m Wedn•sdoy B1ble
and B1ble study 'il JO om Worsh1p ser
study 7 p m
vl&lt; fl Wed n e~da y 7 30 p m
JUBILEE CHRIS TI AN CENTH
George 1
CAL V ARY SteL E CHURCH now located
( reek Rood Rev C J Lem l ey postm
011 Pomer oy Pd•.e County Rood 15 near
John Fe llure
supenntenden1
Chur ch
I lot.,..,.oods Pcv Hl ockwaod pastor Ser
v l tt ~ on Sund a y at 10 30 am ontl 7 30
Hhool 9 30 o m
morn1ng worsh1p
p m wllh Sunda y ~c hool q 30 o m 81b le 10 lO even•nv serv .ce 7 p m Youth
~ tudy Wedne~doy 7 lOp m
mttehng Sundoy 6 p m &amp;rble 1tudy '"
depth Wedn•sday 7 p m Clones lor o i l
INDEPENDENT HOliNESS CHURCH INC
Pea rl St
M 1ddleport Re¥ ODell og•s Nursery pro vrded l o r worsh1p 1er
vtce
M on loy po s o r Sonny Huds o n Sunday
,rhool ~u ol Su&lt;•doy school 9 30 a m
ST PA Ul LUTHERAN CHUR ':H Co•ner
(.· ~en ng wor sh1p 7 30 p m Pray er and
of Sycamore ond Se&lt; ond Sts Po mero.,.

61~~
&lt;trsenal
i I - (ret

pm
HOUSE OF PRAYU AND PR"'ISE lrbarf)'
Ave post Bu r ger Chllf Pomer oy Eugene
Anspoh past o r Sundoy ~Chool 10 0 m
mor n1ng warship 11 o m Even 1 ng war
shp Sunday Tuesday and frtdoy 1 )()
pm
BURLINGHAM SOUTHERN BAPTIST
CHURCH Route I Shade Pastor Don
Block Afftltated w1th Southern Bapt1st
Conven110n Sunday Hhool I ;J() p m
Sunday worshtp 2 30 p m
Tl'lvtldo
even1ng B•ble ~~oTudy 7 p m
y
PENTECOSTAl
ASSEMBLY
Rac 1ne
Route 12• Wilham Hoback PD•tor Sun·
day school 10 a m Sunday e\lening ser
vtce 6 30 p m Wednesday "n1ng ••r
vrce 7
CARPENTER BAPTIST Rev Fr-land
1
Norm pcntor Don Chteodl• Supt Sundo.,. Sc hool 9 30 o m Morning Wanhtp
10 30om Prayer SeN ic e ohernot• Sunday•

Ev~

,J ..

Yt•sterda)' s Art.;wer

riSlwt•

~ Ana~r~n1

s

ZI

Po~rt

uf art

forest name
15 ALJI.\USt
17 Femmme

IH

10

4 Pre'\l'nt
5 (l ass ~
61 hrow

husband
13 What Is
to S.t)

om

FAllH BAPTIST Chur ch Mason m-1 ot
Umted Steel Workers Un•on Hall Rodroad
Street Mason Pastor Rev Joy M 1tchetl
Morn~ng
wor•h•p q 45 a m
Sunday
Sc hool
10 30 o m
Prayer m•et •ng
Wednesday 7 30 p m
FOREST RUN 6APTI5T
R•" Nyle
Borden
pastor
Cornel1us Bun ch
supe11n1endent Sunday s&lt;hool q 30om
,e&lt;ond and fourth Sundays w 0 r,h 1p ••r
v1ceo12 30 p m
Ml MORIAH BAPTISl
Fourlh and
Mom St Middleport R•" Ca lvm Mtnn 1s
po5tor Mrs Elv1n Bumgardner supt Sun
day Hhool q JO 0 m w o rth1p S8f"VI C8
10 .. 5o m
NORTH
BETHEL
Untted
Method1it
C hurch 1\ev Charles Dom1gon pastor
Sunday Schoo l 9 30 o m Worsh 1p S•r
vKe 10 4S om Sunday 61ble Study 1 00
p m
W.clnesdoy prayer meehng 7 30

OklahrJffict

12

14

I-I ERE 5 J '
HANGiN&amp;
THE 0

to nununt
3 Pt~rt uf

I I I .uq s frrend
~ edda "

VICTORY BAPTIST
O n the Route 7
bypass Jame,!:. K9esee pas tor Sunday
!&gt;Chea l 10 a m
mo1n1ng worsh•p 1 1
o rn even1ng ser v 1ce 7
TRINITY Chra 110n Anembly Coolvtlle
Gilbert Spen&lt;et
past or
Sunday
!&gt;c hool q JO o m
mor n 1ng wor•htp I 1
o m Svndoy eve n,ng serv1 ce 7 )() p m
m •dweek prayer servtce Wednesday 7 30

suffur.
(,od

M(

of

urnrnca I

20 Sporu
pala ct'
t2 f'rucl
!4 Wtlhout

S[X'fl

h

34

she

2! { 00l(' rll l 01;!

25 1rt w up
9 IA:~al• l aln t 2ti Wht r P pqr
I~ Oesoli:tL.:
pms "-t're
~t

With (U'A
Ill Twofold
19 Anu•rl( an

rboter1

2t! I O'' lhf'd
:JO { arson s
onhe slr.t

pia\ "n).! hl

~~

32 Subju~ated

ch ~s tli

16 Sufftx

llallan

\
(!
F

Cremeans to Max fayl or, Esta Mae
Taylor, Ease , Sc1p10
Marron J Easterday Afftdavtt,
Sutton
Mary V1rgm1a Easterday, Aff•davtt, Sutton
Elwood B1ruon PatrtcLa B1mon to
Benme Rose, Conlllle l:{ose, 79 61
acres, Salem
John Gruescr, Mae Grueser to
Hobert L Cunnmgham, Sharon l
Cunningham, I 02 acres, Suttoo
Carol J l,orenzom, Julio J Lorenzorn to Roger Adnan, Pillllela
Adnan, ..., acre, Sc1ptu - Harnsonvtlle
Jelllllfcr L Sheets, James H
Sheels to Roger Adams, H~ghl of
Way, Rutland
Andy Dozct, Jr Charlene Doc:z1 to
Hoger Adams, H1ght of Way,
Rutland
Trustees, Hamsonv1lle Cumberland Presb)1erran Church, lo
Charles Patterson, Betty Pallerson,
Lots 14, 15, Sctplo -Harrrsom ilJc
Jaymar Coal Co to Jay Hall Jr
Tnt5 , Oil and Gas, Rutland
James G Mourmng, Carol A
Mournmg lo Truman D Hall, Lols,
Pomeroy

I{ c~tlc r

b l ow~ '

102 cab to axle

PERSONNEL CHANGES

INDIANAPOUS I API
Th e
L'incmnatt Heels have assrgned the
contracts of three baseball pla)ers
to therr lndLanapolts farm team and
have recalled the contracts of four
others
The lndranapolts Indians or th e
Amencan Assoctatwn announced
toda) that the contracts of pitchers
Dan Dumoulm, Dav1d Moure and
Angel Torres have been asstgned to
th~

mmor league team lndtanapoh s

second-baseman Rand) Davtd.son
has been released to accept a
coachmg asstgnment "'th the Reds
The four players whose contracls
were asstgned to the Reds from the
Indtans

" ere outfielder Duane

Walker, pitchers B1ll Scherrer and
Scott Brown and shortstop Tom
F'ole)

'4895

(thbr

1975 CHEVY VAN

Unscramole lht
one 'e"e to ea c
' ou• o•01'l a') we

L EMZII
-LC

l6 Took pro~ r 1-crl-+--1~
measures

l8 l .ad1es

rters

[ TARA!

40 1100&lt;1 s
momker
43 &lt;.ranntfled

-~

ho~

lo work

11

AXVDI. 8AAXR
IO!'IGFEILOW

Is

One- lt•11 er stmpl v ~l a nd s f or ;t nother In 1h 1 ~ s&lt;r mp lf' ' I!
used f or thf' three I 5 X for 1ht' two 0 s el r Srn glE' l r 1lt' n
apoatrophet th e len gt h and f ornu t10n o f tht \\o o rd s art: all
hrnu EJrh d.a y the rode l e1t ers are rhfferpnt

NYFLC
Answer

I HE

AXYBZCD

XVI1AEDEIJ
NO

E Z

EZ

F X Y A

HAK
O, E M B

(; F

Xy

CYGLKMFK

1972

vw

Wagon bus told down seat, 1c e
box clf&gt;an tnter,or fable good
t1res

'2295
Good t.res, 8 alum topper . 3.50 v
8 automatiC power steertng &amp;.
power brakes.
Runs good

Chevette
models

.. . , 4 lrld•••

MUD &amp; SNOW

RETREADS

1971 CHEVY C10
Cf'teyenne

c ab

---

&amp; other popular Cnevy

' 2 &amp;1 wheel
' ;• Ton Models
&amp; "wheel

co.

"Your Chevy Dealer"
992-2 126
Pomeroy
' Open Evenmgs Until 8
~~~;;;-fl~ol
p M
t•om J11mtJID •..,;..;;•
,;,;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

1

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
SAYS
NO TRICKS
"ALL TREATS"
1979 OLDSMOBILE ROYALE CPE.

'910S.l5

NOW '7175
NOW '12,000

NEW I 979 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY SED. DEMO.
'11 532

NOW '8950

NEW 1979 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY S£0. DEMO.
'll,924.60
'9200
USED
1977 CADILLAC CPE. DEVILLE ....................... '7295
1977 MERCURY COUGAR XR7 CPE ........ .......... '4195
1977 BUICK LeSABRE CPE. .................. .......... '3895
1973 CADILLAC CPE DeVILLE ............................ '895
1973 OLDSMOBILE CUT. SUP. S£0........ .. .. ......... '995
1972 OLDSMOBILE 98 SED, ............................. '895
1975 OLDSMOBILE CUT. SUP. SED..................... '1795

1973 BUICK REGAL CPE.. ... ----- ... -.. -.. -_. --. __ ..... '1295

~ C POMEROY MOTOR

( Rl PTHQt 10TES

PH. 773-5241

'2295

IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
LUV l WHEEL DRIVE

'"

Has moved to a new
localton, 604 2nd St., St. Rt .
JJ rn Mason, w. va. Wrll
Reopen Sal, Oct. 27th.
Sale on Bases &amp; Mobtle
C.B.'s and Power M1kes.
1 Week Only

1975 CHEVROLET MONTE CARL0 ....................... '2795

'1295

DAILY&lt; RYPTOll liOTE - litre's

C.B. and ELECTRONIC
EQUIPMENT

°

c yl•nder ,
standard
tran
sm•SS•on
R &amp; H partra l con
vers1on. 1nt c arpet bed skyroof
a1r vent

J.,..-f- +--1--l----

Thtrsttn~o:

a

1975 FORD COUNTRY SOLO£ WAGON ................ 'l995

6

l.f. Powertul
nutuds

BXLGB

M1n1 home , atr on chassrs &amp; body
less than 25 000 miles full equ1p
ment

42 Pulptllalk

ll I nnte
l3 Ret room

-

1976 CHEVY 20' TEC

292 engtne 2 speed axle, 825 ttres

';-;;-i!--J-- t--1'-----fi!filrf;-;.--f---+- + - 1-...j

Jl

'3995

1976 CHEVY C60

pert enter
!II Hoodwinked 1'
!!I D1rty look
30 Strrp

44i

Fleets 1de
JSO engtne
automat1 c power sreert n g and
power brakes s!td1ng R gla ss
local owner &amp; low mtles.

rlog
Ji l.amb s
JX'O name
39 Vall' name
11 I( e or Stone

'l1 Ten

44 lhnt of color
.f.S
transtl

1977 CHEVY o/c T
6

l 'l'lu !'an

15

rcpetrlJOn

QWI

'5695

NOTICE
A s r equ,red by Federal
Re venu e Shar•ng (FRS)
reg ulatton
31CFR
51 12
and Ant1 Re ces sron F1s c a1
Ass 1s tan ce regulatron
Jl
CF R 5 1 13 a report of th e
use of th ese funds for th e
Fts(al Y ea r of 1978 W1 l l b e
av ai lab l e for publi C tn
sp ecr1 o n at lf'te Mayors Of
f1 ce 237 Ra c e Street, M1d
d leport , Ohto from
AM
to 4 P M dally for suc h
p er tod a s requ~red by taw
Gene Grate,
C ler k Treasurer
VIllage o t
Middleport 0
( 10) 16 li e

NAK

'14,550.00

350 v 8 eng1ne , 15,000 NO 1 speed
lrkt&gt; new 825 f1res 108 ' c ab to

1101 11 19 26 111 12

NEW 1979 CADILLAC CPE DEVILLE

1977 CHEVY 1:-60
d)(IC

2 Bel~uw

Jealou.s
1947 song

p m

MOUNT OliVE Comm un1 ty church _
lowren&lt; e Bu!&gt; h po!T or M o ~ Folm 1n Sr
~ uper1ntende n t Sunday Hhool and mor
n1ng worhs1p q 3Q om Sunday even1ng
~ er v 1 c e 7 You1h meet ng and B1ble study
Wednesday 7 p m

J f c1 l1Tf
SPf ~ ( f H

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
tJOWN
I Secre t
I That r r

lhe Rev W1 1110m IJ•dd le\wo r th Pa\t or
Sunday School 01 q A5 o m a nd Chur ch
Serv1 ces II om
SA CIHO HEART Re v Fa ther Paul 0
Welt on past or Pho ntt '192 2825 ~aturdoy
even1 ng Mass 7 30 Svndoy Mon 8 and
10 o m
ConleB ton ~at u r d ay 7 7 .)Q

·~

tra c t
Separate b1 ds shall be
rec e tved for
1) General
constru c tton , 2) Plumb1ng,
JJ H e attn9, Venttlatton and
A1 r Co nd 1tton1ng .t ) Ele c
l r 1&lt; a I
Ap pr o v ed as to form
Joseph Ca1n
G all1a County
Prose c uttng Att orney
September 30 1979

Sea led
b•ds will
be
rece1ved by the Board of
Covnly Comm ss1oners of
Ga ll•a Cou nty OhiO at the
Off 1ce o f the Gall1a County
Comm 1SS10ners until 10 00
A M on November 7, 1979
and opened 1mmed•ately
thereafter for lurn1shrng
the ne c essary tabor and
mater•als
IOOis
mach1nery and appl•anccs
requ1red f or the Anne)( to
Gall,polrs
commun1ly
Mental Health Center, 412
V1nfon
P1ke,
Gal l tpOII S,
Ohto .45631 acc ord1ng t o the
draw.ngs
and
spectf,cations on fde 1n tht&gt;
ofl.ce of the A r ch1tect
Coplt"~ of satd draw1ngs
and spe c tf• c ar1ons may be
obtamed by pr1me b1dders

IN POMEROY
Yt'stt"rda)

B1 dder s sn a i l al s.o n ot e
l ha t
fh e
Rul es
a nd
Reg ulatiOn s on E qual Em
ptoymen t Oppon un ,t y shal l
il1' fl l dtJP n pa r i of t h• s con
rr an
N o b1.QJer m~r wilhd r aw
h s t110' w1 fhtn s x fy l 60 )
d(Jf S af1 er th e ac tu a l da te
ol f he o pe n tn g th ereof
I f 1n r he o p 1n o n of th e
Own er an d tf'tc D~r ec t o r ot
lhe Dcparl me nt of M en t al
He a l th CJn d M eni al Re rar
da lt on or hi S d el ega t ed
r epr ese nlat •ve
th e ac
cep1 ance o l the lowest b1d
15 n ot m f he bes t 1nt erests
ot all concern ed the Owner
m t=~y ac.-- epl
w1ftJ th e c on
r ur re nce of rn e D• r ec tor of
ll1S delega ted
r epr esen _....
1a t ve a n oth er propos ~ I .;.n
op e n ed
or
r e1e c 1 all
propo sa l s n n d adv er f 1se f or
olhe r b• ds T he O wne r w 1t h
co ncurrenc e of tf'te 01rec
t or ot t he D epartm ent of
M e ntal He alth a nd M e ntal
R f' tardat ,o n
r es erv es
'thenghl to wa1v e any tn
f ormalitieS
Should any b1d be re1ec
fed
suc h c he c k wilt be
r etu rn ed to th e b idder and
should a n y b•d be a cc epted
su ch c hec k w111 oe ret urned
upon the proper e xec ut•on
and serur1n Q of th e con

$1895

WITH
EXCHANGE
CASINGS

FREEl
MOUNTING &amp; BALANCING

E!SNEaAL

TIRE SALl:S
N. 2ND AVE.
MIOr&gt;LEPORT, OHIO

1975 OLDSMOBILE 98 LS. -.. -- .. -... -_.. _.. __ .. _.... , '2795
1974 CADILLAC SED. DeVILLE .......................... '1295
1976 OLDSMOBILE ROYALE CP£.. ... __ .. __ . __ , __ .. __ . '3495
1976 FORD GRANADA CPE ............................ 13195
1977 CHEVROLET CAPRIC£ S£0 .. .... ..................'4195
DRIVE HOME A, WINNER
See one of the courteous salesmen:
Pete Burris , Marvin Keebaugh or George Harris

Karr &amp; Van Zandt
"You'll Like Our Quality

~~'!ay

of Dotng Business"

G .M.A. C. Financing
992 -5342-Pomeroy
Open Evenings Until 6: 00-'til 5 P.M. Sat.

�-:.

8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Friday, Oct. 26, 1979

blCK

Your Best Buys Are f,ound

•

Ill

the Sentinel Classifieds

TRACY. THf YAK IMA
TRIBAL POLICE

LL NEED AN A,Mf' U I AN f- ~ -. ••• ,
'' MY VVI~f 1 ~

~Y. ~' ~ AYS ""TR.::H.:v

GOOD -

AHE

WANT AD
CHARGES
JS Word3 or Under
Cuh
Charge
I d&amp;y

1.00

Zdil.1a:
J diiys
8dMya:

1~
1 8IJ
J 00

I 2!'1
1.!10
2.2!&gt;

Real Estate for Sale

MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMANE SOC IETY . 9'12
6260
Pets available tor
adoption and intormation
service

CHI P WOOD . Pates max
d iameter 10" on li"lrgest
end $12 p -er ton . Bundled
slab StO per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co .. Rt 2.
Pomeroy ~2 2689

FINA N CI N G VA FHA LO
A N S . LO W OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHA SE
OR
REFINANCE
I RELAND
MORTGAGE .
11 E
STATE. ATHENS
6 14 S92 30Sl.

GUN
S HOOT
EVERY
SU NDAY 1 PM FACTORY
C HOKE ONLY RAC INE
GU N CLUB

3 . 7~

Each word over the nummw-n

I[I word.!J ill 4 cenl.1 ~r wunJ ~r
day_Alb~ other than con ~utive day!! wtll bl! duir~ed at
!.he I day rate

NO
HUNTING ,
no
trespassing w ith no ex
ce plions on my property
Judy M cGraw Se lf

ln memory, Can.l uf Thanlu
ltlld Obitu.ary 6 Ct' lll.:l ~r wun.J.
$3 .00 lfllmmum Ca~ tn ad-

SHOOT .
Raci n e
Volunteer
Fire
Dept
Every Sat urday . 6 JO p .m .
At their buildingin Bashan .
Factory choke gu n s on l y

GU N

1vance

Mobile H!Ine sales and Yan:l

saJes are aa:epted onl)· wtth
cash wilh order . 2!1 cent chMKe
foc alb carrying Box Number In
Ckre o( 11le Sentinel .

GUN SHOOT every Sun day
11 00 . Factory choke only .
Corn H oll ow Gun Club,
Rutland . Proceeds don a t ed
to Boy Scout T roop 249

1be Pubil.sher reserves the
right to edit or reject 8lly ad:!
deemed ob jectiona l
Tht&gt;
Publbhrr lriJJ uut be respoo.sibll'
foc more than ont&gt; i.nrorrN't tn ~rt.ion .

Phone 992-21~

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday

Noon on Saturday

tuesday
Uu-ut'nility
4p M
tht&gt; dB)' before publ ication

Sundiiy

4p M
}'' rub y Hfteomoon

IN MEMORY of mother ,
Ann a Foreman M c Haffie ,
who passed away Oct . 26,

NO HUNTING on the Gene
Humphrey property on Rf .
143 or the Andy Grover
proper ty on Bailey Run Rd .
ED
BURKETT
Barber
Shop now op en full ti me 1n
Middleport

GET MARKET VAL UE for
your gold and silver c oins
Wr i te
or
con t ac t
Ed
Burken Barber Shop , Mid
dleport
JANICE DAVIS is now em
played at Hair By Lila
Beauty Salon , spacialis f in
men 's and boy 's hair cuts
Open evenings by
ap
po1nlment
Mrs . Keith
Ridenour , owner

CERA MI C CLASSES, Mon
day and Thursday . 7 9 p .m
St a rting Thur sday, Oct . ~5 .
Orehel's Cer amics . 59 N .
2nd, Mi dd leport , OH . 992

S560

197 8

Lost and Found

In memory we hold her

nea r
Al though she is no longer
here
Loved by family , fnends
and n€'ighb ors
So dear
She helped i n SICkness ,
neartac hes and la bors
We miss her presence , but
remembe r her love
Each one that needed a
push, she gave t h e shove
And looked for a ll her
str eng th above
And so in m emory , mother,
to otrlers w e offer kind
ness.
fr ie nd s h i p ,
and
brotherly love

I N MEMORY ot our mom ,
Rubv Carter . who lett us
Oc t 26. 197S
Her lo" ing face I hope to
see aga 1n
Though the davs hav~
passed away
Sl eep on , dear mom , and
take your re st
T hev miss you most who
loved you best
Sad ly m i ssed by c h i ld ren

LOS T : ON Mu lberry Ave ,
8th grade 1923 group school
p 1c ture , Sugar Run Sc hool .
Call 9'12 2597
LOST . BEAGLE answers
ro Berl . German Sh epherd
Shor t hair pointer , answe rs
to Ringo Missing 2 days
Con fac t Ben Ewing, 992
1121

WE , THE family of Keitn
Landers, would like to
thank. Rhonda Wilson . me
M id dl ep ort
mayor .
emerge n cy squa d. Mid
dlepor t
p olice.
She r i ff
James
Proff iT,
Ew1ng
Funeral Home and anyone
who helped dur i ng the
death of our beloved son
an d oro t her Or vii te Ketth
Landers . Many thanks to
the friends and ne ighbors
who sent flowers and food
Special thank s to the Rev
Wm . Knittel and the Rev
James Broome, Albert and
Eunice
Duff ,
the
pallbearers ,
for
th e
praye rs, and anyone else
who helped in any way
May God Bl ess you all
Mother .
Judy
Landers .
Brothers
Rabb le
and
Char lie Landers . Matt and
sist er Tammy La nders and
thanks to Sandy c'tnd Noel
Miller. and to my co
workers from Robbin s and
Myers .

SO MEONE TO do lig h t
housekeeping a few hour s
on Friday in Middleport
992·S709alter S : 30p m .

OLD COINS, pocket wt
ches, class rings, wedding
bands , diamonds. Gold or
si lver Cat I J A . Wamsley.
742 2331
WANT EO : SAW
logs .
Payment upon delivery t o
ou r yard, 7:JOto3 : JOweek
days . Blaney Hardwoods.
S R 3~. Barlow, OH 678
2980
- - - ··- A NTIQUE S ,
FUR
NITURE , g lass,
chin a,
anyfh 1ng . See or c a!l Ruth
Gos ney . antiques , 26 N .
2nd, Middleport, OH 99'2
3161

---

AN TIQU E PO CKE T wat
ches Willing r o pay top
dol la r . Call
I S92 ·2973
e vening s.
- - · -WANTED : JUNK . Bat ·
teries, radiator s, motors,
auto
trans
No Su nda y
calls 949 256J
WANTED : PARTS to fif
11 ton
1973 Chevrolet
pi c kup . 992·3992.

WAN TE D : USED cu b
scout uniforms . 985 3867

Yard Sale
PORCH
SALE . S1arts
Wed ., runs t i ll all sold, Out
side
Christmas
decorations , brown vet~o~et
p ic tures and misc . items
Karl Kloes, College St ,
Syracuse, OH . 9'12 3()14.
T HREE FAMILY Ga rage
Salt&gt;
109 Uni on
Ave .
Pomeroy . Mon . and Tues.
N ice
c loth i ng .
10 5
firepl ce s, blower
grate .
toys, toy OOx , b lender . et c

Auto Sales

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW . Enolish
and w est er n . 5addles and
harness .
Horses
and
pon ies. Ruth Reeves . 614
698 3290
Barding and
R1di ng Lessons and H or se
Care prOducts . Western
boots . Ch il dren ' s \15 . 50
AdullsS2'&gt; 00
RISING
STA R
Kennel
Boarding Cal l 367 0292

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Tay lor . 614 367 ·7220.
HILLCREST
KENNELS .
Boarding, al l breeds. Clei"ln
1n aoor ou ta oor
facilities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dooermans 614 4.-46 ·7795 .
THREE SIAMESE kittens
I male , ') female M7 J305
UKC RE G. tree1 n g walker
rlUpp1eS
J females , 2
ma tes Have N 11e Ch .Ch
Griffi n s rock , N ile ( h
b la1rs Banta Babe , N ite Ch
Wor ld Ch .
197] ACHA
Beanolossom Buck, 1970
AC HA World Ch Nile Ch,
Gann·s Fin1sh er and other
Cha mpions
in
3
generations Finley River
breeding both sides 150
e1 ther sex w ith reg papers
Have been wormed and
w111 have 4 way shot s Call
741 214 or ~2 3020 and
!eave name and number

1978 Ax4 351 en gine. c ustom
paint jOb and interior Ex
ce llent cond iti on
Phone
992 2656

1967 PONTIAC . S17S or
t rade for sma l l H onda road
bike 992 ·7580 .
1977
PLYMO U TH
VOLARE P .S, P . B , A. C..
A 1 shape Caii843 ·268A
111
1977
Ton
Chevrolet
pickup truck witr'l p .s, p .b ,
a .c , good tires . Retail
price SJ265, sale pri ce
S2500
Ingels Furniture ,
Middleport .

INTERNATIONAL
CUB
C adet
1450, automatic
hydraulic
lift , 44 inch
mower
sr.ow blade , ta n
dem discs . t urn
plow.
c ultivator ,
d ump
bed
trailer , chains , $2500 . 1969
Chevy
Mal ibu,
S1SO
Yamaha guitars . 12 st r i ng,
S150 . Classical , SIS . Phone
1&gt;925630

MACHINIST
Permanent position for individual with
job shop experience. Must be able to do
own set -up on conventional and horizon tal mills, lathes, and grinders .
Respond to Personnel Department, Ap palachian Power Co ., Mountaineer Plant
Operations, Post Offi.ce Box 398, New
Haven, w. va . 25265 - Area Code 304 882·
2151.
we are an Equal Opportun ity Employer.

ATTENTION BOYS &amp;GIRLS...
Earn Spending
money and
win valuable

prizes.
The Daily Sentinel
has an immediate
carrier route opening
on Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy .
For Details, Phone or Stop by.· ·

THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 court St., Pomeroy

Ph . 992·2154\

F I VE ROOM house, all
carpe te-d . modern k itchen
and bath , gara ge and car
port . tn Bradbur y Call 992
S310 .
SMALL FIVE room hous.e ,
al u mi num siding , 1 ac r e
lots . a ll util i t ies Rt 681 ,
Reedsville 510 ,000 or best
offer 378 6347

19S4 TRUCK. good con
d1tion, air co m pressor 1965
Ford Mustang , 4 speed .
9'17 5741 .
OLDER
HOM E,
parl ly
r edone, approved sep ti c
sys tem , wood and e lectric
hea t , ci ty water soon, 93ft .
front on 331 in Ml Alto For
intormat 1on, see J1m Ri t
lei

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
ATTENTION and lot s ol
tender lovi ng c are is
what this home has h ad .
4 bedrooms ,
l 1ving
room , d i n ing r oom . bath
and basement Gas for
ced air f urna ce Cit l l for
all
defails
Only
S3S.OOO .OO
CHOICE LOT 1n Ar
baugh
Add1t io n
IOO ' x200 ' w1 th wafer rap
and
sepi1C
system
Sell 1ng Pr ice S5,000 .00 .
RACINE AREA - 6' ' '
acres on Basnan Road
Lovely J bedroom h ome ,
ca rpet thr oughout . Ful l
basement w ith fa r'ni ly
room and l aundr y room
N ice barn a n d lot s at
for
the
ki ds
r oom
Asking only S39 ,900 00
POMEROY - We have
two homes f h at are good
'Ja lu es
on
foday ' s
market Call for more
in fo .
RUN
HYSELL
Almost e1ght ncr~ s w1 t h
2 bedroom nome . use
your imagination wi th
1hiS
p lace . LO t S Of
poss i bili t ies
Only
S2l,500 .00
NEW LISTING
7
bearoom home on Union
Ave nu e.
E x tra
to t.
r ea dy fo put trail er on
Call - we won ' t have
thi s o ne long at a pri ce
of
S10,SOO .OO
EX
CELLENT BUY!!
WE NEED LISTINGS!!
Cheryl Lemley , Assoc
Phone 74nOOl
Velma Ni c in sky
Phone 7nl092
Geof"ge S. Hobstett er Jr
Broker , Phone 992 ·5739

HER

1971 DOD GE
POLARA .
P .S ., P . B ., CB rad io . Very
good condit ion . Good gas
mdeaoe . Phone 99'2 3775 or
9'12· S271

Mobile Homes · Rent
TWO BEDROOM part y
furn ished, preter midd le
age-d or e lderly coup le N o
pets, no c h idlren 9'92 17~9

BIG AUCTION every Wed ,
7 pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hartford , WV , 4
m il es above
Pomeroy
Mason Bridge
AUCTION , FRIDAY lp .m
Franklin fir epl ce stove,
iron lard kettle , depression
glass, tots of new mer
chandise
including ca r
pering at Oh10 River Auc
tion , S R 7. sou th of Mid
dle porr ,
OH
Howar d
Beasley , auctioner .
AUCTION , FRIDAY lp. m
Franklin fireplace stove ,
iron lard kettle , depress ion
glass, tots of new mer ·
chandise i nc luding car ·
peting at Ohio River Auc tion , SR 7, south of Mid ·
dleport,
OH .
Howard
Beasley , aucttoner .

Real Estate tor Sale
THREE BUILDING lots,
appro)( . I acre each, in
Pomeroy
Village near
elementary school . City
water , sewage . Call 992 6279.

s19' 900 00
OVER 60
PROPER ·
TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Res . 742 ·2474
REALTORS
Hen r y E . Cleland , Sr.
Res 992 -2568
He nry E. Cl eland , Jr .
1\i!es. 99 2·6191

e.

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

Featur i ng : men 's
&amp;
women ' s styling, per -

ms.
Call for appt. or walk in .

992 -2367
Main Sr .

Pomeroy , 0 .
10 19lmo .

9192 -3325

216 E . Second Street

REDUCED N 'co 3
bedroom home 1n good
loca t ion Total electn c
wilh d r i lled well Has
tull basement ana 1 11
a c r es
N ice
out
buildings, foe . N ow o n ly
S33.500
NEW
HOME
3
bedrooms.
ce rami c
bath , co ppe r plumbing ,
c arpeting, Ohio Power.
2 car ga rag es and 1 n1ce
acre of la nd .
l TRAILER LOTS One tr a i ler in c l uded in
sa le
Leading Creek
water , over 4 ac res on
Rt . 124 West . W an t o nl y
12.500
COUNTRY
A
reaso n able
Older
3
bei:lroom home w i t h ee~t
in kitchen, mOdern bath ,
cen tr a l healing , full
basement , and large lot
Just S25.000
POMEROY Lincoln
Ht
h as J bedrooms ,
bath with shower , birch
kitchen , full basement
and la rge lot Going for
Sl8.500 .
NEW LISTING
Fur
nished
1972 M1dland
m obile home 1n the
country
H as
3
bedrooms and 2 baths
Land has rura l wa t er
and f ee natura l gas
16,500
NEW LISTING - Hun
ting land n ear Forked
Run Lake. Over 27 acres
of wildland . GOOd place
for
c abin
or
travel
trailer . Want SIS,OOO .
NEW LISTING
3
acres in Deer cou n try on
good school bus and
m ai l route:; . Onl y S5, 500
WE
ADVERTISE
EVEY
DAY .
LIST
WITH US, CALL 997·
lllS or 992 -3876 .

s

... -;.,Oiis,,;g ...
I HeadquartB'S

H. L Writesel
Roofing

mil e off Rt . 7 bv ·pa ss
on St Iii! I l7&lt;l toward
Rutland .

' 'h

.j

MINI
FARM
acres. J bedrm

14
house,
t~repta c. e
Ve r y
secluded Cas h or con
ve n tional f ina nce on ly .
$21.SOO Scou t Camp Rd
Ba ck o f Chester
84 FT . OHIO RIVER
FRONT 3.77 acre
wtfh mobile home . 3
brm .. 111 ba th s, px
panda t v . rm . Sl6,000 .
LONG BOTTOM 6
rm . older hom e, car
peted . barn, plus 2 out
building s, on 10 tots .
$18.900 .
REEDSVILLE
2
bd rm trailer . 2 co vred
por che s. 3 ca r ga r age ,
flat lot i2J,OOO Owner
Willi ng IO tall(
REEDSVIlLE
Home
with 1 c ar garage and
n1 ce bus1ness building
with
2
res t rooms
$25, 000
BOATERS
Li t11 e
HOCk 1ng
R1ve r tron
tage , for boa t rJo c k a nd
sw1 mm 1ng , plus home
bu ilding spot 1 A 1 acr es
S19,900
Call Vi r grn1c1 Hayman
Ph . 98S ·4197

I AM~

I'I

../

FOR SOMETHI"-16

~

:

.V.A'l' Ot.JE 1"-JQ UI RE
WHAT IT WA5- ·
M.A,M' ZE LL E?

AH.OUI~ I~

THAT
CAl"!' I HAVE
SOMETHI~6

1NrERE5TIN6

~..0 5-T ~

TO $HOW

YOU'

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING
Ro o fing .

TRAILER SALES
uno Monlgom tr' Rd
L•" glvltl ll' 01'11o
614 " ' 474S fvell'"9\
1 Mill'~ E,HI ol Wrlkl',vrllt

SU PER
TRAIL ER

GOOSE
NOW

Ll'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

gutten. .

and
Free
Est 1 1ates. All
work
qua r anteed. 20 years ex er. ~ nce . Call Athens ,
olll-ct, Gerald Clark
197 -4357 or Tom Hoskins
797 2745.

do~o·,nspouts .

STOCI-:

ORPHAN ANNIE-HERE AGAIN •.. GONE AGAIN

~

I

' ';,~~~;n~&gt;~M ~~,: 1, ~

(0\J 0101'1 '' riO M&lt;JJ.'f 'N l &gt;lr lt(") W\f- IHI( J
&gt;lOW '!0\.J Fl !"11 1 ()l( f • ,&lt;.Jr D liP 1r1 1F R
\n Hf R ")1"'1P1
v,i H(IW 1 ' HtiNK

rc., s rr

A

wrq YOU 'Rf

ll:UU\..a\""'

for

WILL HAUL l i mestone an d
gravel. Also, lime hauling
and spreadi ng . Leo Morris
Trucking Phone H2 2-455 .

PAI NTIN G
AND sa nd
blasting . Free es ti ma t es .
Call 949 2686
DOZER ,
END Loader ,
bru s h
h og
W i II
do
basements , ponds, brush ,
fimber,
land c learing .
Charles Bur c her . 742 1940

F r PF&lt;'" rY1f

WH(N

,1-, ', ,f F

~ntin~

~[

-.5!.- ..,,E

Pw ...,E_,S

E"-...:USE ME

,., •··u2rl ..."' NE IS

-n-

~u..._'HE:~--

...._".lo,N '1t)U "TELL .:.0 HL........

DuC HE ~S;

l ! Sui&lt;:!:
,_IUS '

( .l,o.;
::'il.l,'.

1

\

Win ·

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
10 19 1 mo

SEWING
MA CH INE
Repeirs .
service ,
~II
ma1&lt;es .
992 · 2284 .
The
Fabric
Shop, Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Sci ssors .
EXCAVATING ,
do1er.
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo · OOys
tor hire, will hau l fill di rt ,
top soil, li mestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Rooer
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089.
night phone 992 ·352.5 or 992
S132

HOWERY AND MAR T IN
E)l c ava1 i ng ,
se pt ic
systems, dozer, backhoe
Rt . UJ . Phone I 16 1A ) 698
7331 or 7•2 2S93 .

'

~

Giveaway
FEMALE BE AG LE and S
pups 7 weeks old . GOOd
raobit aog
3491

m

COLD NO SE
m
your
future? Adopt a spe&lt;iat
bOrder type. Young female,
very
intelligent
and
loveab le, shot s Humane
Society 9'92 62f:AJ

l.lOU

- --

q1ve

-- ·-.

a hand, Walt'

LOVEABLE
GE RMAN
Shep h e rd collie ,
male,
black and tan, w ormed and
shots Kittens. kittens , k i t
tens, al l sizes , all snape-s
Humane Socie t y 991 ·6160
HAND SO ME
GER MAN
She pHerd collie,
male,
bl ack and tan , wo rm~ and
shots .
Laroe
German
shepherd, male, brown and
black, looking tor a s.peocial
country home, shOts and
wormed
White
terr ier
type , female , gOOd with
children,
wormed
and
shots . Female blue heeler
kettle dog to good country
home, wh1te ana Olue. shah
Ua. •"\Jtt€ '\.-.. tt ....."- ... "'"

Thi~

~-.

Could

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A£WAY.5 3=

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..; ~ --..... : ::·.......... \ ~:-' •.;_;::_:;:_; .....
~:: 2 ·-"'~ '2 ~ ·, ~ ... ·- ..~ :- ·

.'

'

YOU MEAN WENOY
WGW T LIVE WITH

TT,l)llj

US?

'· ./

I

\

' I

'

I-

I,
'

Sunday

' i'J

. _,,.,
'

,gh the generosity of
:k load of pwnpkins
I Meigs Local School
MJ of Meigs wtth the
und for the teachers

The pumpkins were trall.'lported from Circleville to
Middl eport by Kenny Elbin . The pumpkins were pur·
chased by Dick and Ruby Vaughan of Vaughan's Cardinal.

Church

RO CK SPRINGS ·- N ear Me igs H 1
ni c e littl e sta rte r h ome. 2 b ed
d 1n 1ng rm ., kitchen , fu lly eQ u i pped, b.,
furn 1tu re goes , too . Just $25,000 .00 .

beiru!

ALLEYOOP

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

m~ aamwstrauve offtces are

n - 1Lf G"

J&amp;LBLOWN
INSULAnON

neutral

Continued on A-7

9 28 I mo . Pd

Business Services

three

~· 1'

AVA ILA BLE

"" ~"""" " '' ·,- ·~-

This Sunday

pro"&amp; ~erv1ce . Wednesdoy 7 30 p m .
RUTLAND APO ST OliC CH UR CH Of
JE SUS CHRIST . Elder James Miller B1ble
sT vdy . Wednesday . 7 30 p m
Sunday
School. 10 am Sunday n1gh l ~erv1ce 7 30
p. m

POMER OY WESlEY AN HOLINESS
Horr lsonvd le Rood: Dewey K1ng pcalor

·Ed 1s0n Weover OU1stonl Henry Ebt1 n
Jr , Sunday sc hool supl Sunday school
9 30 a. m . . morn1ng worship , l l a . m Sun
doy .... enmg serv 1ca. 7 30
prayer
m&amp;eflnQ . Thunday . 7 30 p.m
SYRACU SE FIR ST CHURCH O F GOO
Not Pente&lt;: os tol Rev George Oiler
poslor Wo r!.hip ser-v1ce Sunday 9 45
a.m. , Sunday school . II o. m . w orsh1p
ser .... tce . 7 30 p. m
Thu rsday prayer
mee ting , 7·30 p .m.
MT. HERMON United Brelhren Church
Sundoy Sc hool q .30 om . Worship serv1ca
10 45 o.m . Preaching sennces e"ery Sun·
day alternotmg w1th C. E Wednesday
prayer meeting 7:30 p.m . Re .... . Ja mes
FAMILY HOME - LOtS Of PDSS101I leach . pastor . David Holter loy leader
JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES . 1 mile easT of
n ice '1 story . Manor f eat ures, cen tral a
pl 1ances, all ca rpeted, good inves1me• RuTiond . 1unction of Route 174 and Nabla
n ice build1nq lots . On appr ox 4'·' acn Summ1f Rood (T · 17 4). Sunday 81ble lee·
ture . q JO o . Wol chtawer study 10 JO
ot Ra cine Asking $.5.4,000
om .. Tuesdoy . Bible sludy . 7 and 8 15
COUNT~ Y SPECIAL Rem ode lea
p.m . Thu rsday . theocrati c school 7 30
b l acktop road Mostly car peted . F .A
nace , att ract 1ve small home and 1 a cn p m.: serv1ce mHt1ng . 8 JO p m
RUTlAND FREEWILL BAPTIST Church
for quick sa le, \17.500 .
$.12 ,000.00 ~Good 3 BR , all carpe ted 1 leland Hafey . past or . Sunday school 10
Pomeroy &amp; M i ddleport Located on 11 ~ am. e"ening service 7·30 p m Preyer
meeting, W.dnesday . 7 30 p m
FA~M --ove r 70 acres bordering Pan
CHURCH OF GOD of Prophecy l ocated
tra large barna and o ld farm house,
on
!he 0 . J. White Rood o ff h1ghwo y 160
pas t ur e and some f a rm grou nd . priced
LOTS OF LOTS
From 1 to 75 acr Sunday School 10 a .m . SvperinTenden t
John Loveday . First Wednesday n1ghr of
Pomeroy .
MIDDLEPORT -- 3 BR hom e appro&gt; month CPMA services s&amp;eond Wed nes·
s tuve &amp;. refr igerdlor . \g stora ge bl( day WMB meet1ng. third rhrou gh f1hh
yourh •or v1ce . George Croy le . pastor
~3S . OOO
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEl - 570 G ra nt St ,
RACINE - 'l BR trailer on ni ce lot AstJ
20 WOOOED ACRES --ca n be div i ded Middleport . Rev . Don Bloke . potlor Sun·
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - 3 Acres. 4 B doy sc hool . 9 30 o m . mor mng worsh1p.
evenmg wou~·up . 7 p m ,
c arpeted, equip p ed kit ., fa m room ha s 10 30 o m
utility rm .. plenty of storag e, two car Wedne•doy evenmg Bible ltvdy and
prayer meetmg , 7 p m Alt1 ltoted w11h
door opener . Listed \75 ,500.
JUST LISTED
6 Yr old home , 3 B Sou thern Bap tist Convention .
8RADFOAD CHURCH OF CH RISl
util ity r oom , kit . equipped w ·st o'Je
Mostly c arpeted . f or ced air gas turn .: Eugene Underwood. pastor. Harry Hen
Garage, il comp l e te t r ai ler hook up • dnclu . superintendent Sunday S(hoo l
tap and sept ic can add income 0 9 30 a m , morning worsh1p 10 30 o m ..
even1 ng worsh1p 7 p m Wednesday 81ble
$29,900 Ca ll to r appointment .
JUST LISTED - M ini farm W·beaut : slud y, 7 p m
JUBilEE CHRISTIA N CE NTER
Gear~ l
leveL w 3 BR &amp; f ull basement, 1g c
e tec, 1nsu l atct . c111 hardwOOd fl oors . 31 I Creek Road . Re v C J Lemley pos ror
John Fellure. super1ntendent
Church
W1fh aoorol( 5 ac res $63 .500
morn1ng worsh1p ,
school . ~ . JO a .m.
10 30. evening tervoce . 7 p m Vaulh
1
mo• ~ong Sundoy . 6 p m a ,ble lludy ;n
CALL JIMI.n DEEM , ASSOCI AT depth, Wednesday . 7 p.m Clones for all
0 NANCY JASPERS , ASSOI o~es . Nursery prov1ded lor worship ser v•ce
'49-2654 or ,4,·2!91
5T PAUL lUTHERAN CHUA':H Cc.1ner
of Sycamore ond Second Srs . Pomeroy

WANT TQ SEll, - G'IV[ US

A? A MArT ER 7
OF FA(1, l · lV EBEEN LOO I&lt;.I"-J G

Ci.LL 992 -7544

IN STOCK for 1mmediate
delivery various si1es of
pool kits . Do · it·vourself or
let us inst a ll lor you D

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FIN t
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS
DOWN .
NEW LISTING
Real n1ce J BR ho
large 11v1ng r oom , equipped k it chen . 11
full basemen t. wdh central air Lar
1ead1ng to extra la rge garage T hi s '
house has many ex tr as and sever al frt
feren t varieties . &amp; nice Qa rd en See
Very n1 ce tocat10n 1n lower Sy ra cu
$63.900
CHESTER ·- 4 BR home , hardwood
LR, f ami l y rm, ga r age, outb uilding, t
garden s- pace AsKi ng $.48,900
THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR ·- 1
1 11 st ory home, si t s back oft road .sur
map le tr ees Lg pond , located 1n r
area Pr1 ce SJ3.900

1.. -LOO k.. l ~ G

AM l

FO R SOME THI"-.16?
. OH ER-YE5.' /

.t '} 11 (

1&gt;92 2143

CENTRAL REALTI

WHERe·; EA? Y "L HE 5 AI O HE'D
K EE P ME lt.J 516HT EYER'! M!IJUTE!

"'iOI s9 · ~ .• W . , ~ .
o· , er lml by appoint m l'nt.
' 7 Sycamore (Rear)
P omeroy , 0 .

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been
can
celled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Phone

FOR SALE.

&amp;

P~RK FINANCIAL
SER'JIClS, INC.

N·e w, repair
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cl eaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949·2862-949 -2160

30 fl(

ERA MERCER
REALTY

'

vtrer . rs AJmrn . Le&gt;an s.

11

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

rr,
1"J

1

\...)

REAL ES1ATE
F ' NANCING
de ~ ~ "tou ( t•g

Roger Hysell
Garage

Rodney , Broker
B~
Phone 992-2342, Eve .99;
Middleport, o.

s

Auctions

NEW LISTING - Close
t o nature on a 6 ac re
m1 n1
farm
Garden
s pa c e,
1
s torage
buildings. sec luded, but
c- tose t o Pomeroy , ni ce
1,
s t ory
remodeled
home 1nrtudiny a new
equipped k1t c hen, a1r
condlftOn1 ng, 3 or 4
bedrooms ,
O N LY
$29.500 00
NEW LISTING
H an
dy Man 's Spec ial. goocl
tO&lt;"atton in Middleport ,
large l iv1ng room, J
bedrooms , t am 11y room ,
le ve l lot.
1' 1 story .
O N LY SS .OOO 00
LARGE
STATELY
BRICK HOME ·- A I rue
I andmar k in Pomeroy .
1"1ome has the ch arac ter
a nd charm ol the ea rl y
l q()O's a nd was buill by
o ne ol ou r most respe c
bus.1ne ssme n
t ed
Pr1 ce d Far Be low Fair
Market
Value
at
S58,900 .00
1 Y R .OLD Ranch
type home ot qualify , 3
b e drooms . 2 baths,
w .b t .p , bui ll 1n
ex
cellen t condition. large
garage . many other
feature s, m u st be seen
to
be
appre c iated .
$44 .800 .
30
ACRES
VACANT
LAND -- Bu1lding sites ,
7 Tillab le anes, fenc ing
Close to mines
A s t e~11
at $13 .350 00
84 ACRES OF NICE
LAYING FAI\i!M LAND
All c lea r ed and 1n
pa s tur e ftnd
tillab le
g r ound. barns and other
buildings, fenc 1ng and
ponds , plus a newer
large ranch type home
with
full
basement ,
w b .f .p ., many f ea ture s
P r1 ce d tor
sale
S76. 31S .OO .
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK - Good
home , good loc ation .
Qood lot . full basement.
equ1ppeo k.llcnen . a~r
c ond it10n 1nQ, For ce d a1r
h e at
A
Sleal

Mick'S
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

, .... ...

EIGHTH MONTH''

Business Services
608 E .
MAI N
POMEROY.O .
PH . n 1 - 22S~

-:

V ITAI\\IN = STOP~·.
'l I
·
-

A DOZEN U

DOWNING-CHI~e

1968 CAMARO 327 engine , 4
spPed . othPr extras Ex
cellen f co ndition 992 7768
o r 997 5671

_

CARRIER WANTED tor
l i ncol n H ill in Pomeroy
Ca ll th e Dai ly Sentinel, m
1156 betwee n 8 :3() and S 00
p .m

OWNER WILL sell 40 acres
or ore with 1978 Hollypark
mobile home l4x70 with ex
panda. plus 14xJ6 fam il y
room anached, full y ca r
peted, rural waer , some
pasfure. f ence, standing
timber , some walnut , sun
deck front
and
back
Located on New Lima Rd .
Cal l James In ge ls 614 742
2182 or 98S 4107

1972 NOVA MA G wheels,
new tires, a 1r shocks, 350 2·
bbl , headers and 4·speed ,
S600. 9A9 2691

195.4 TR U CK. good con ·
di tion , a i r co mpressor . 1965
F ord Mustang , 4·speed .
1&gt;92 SIAl.
_ ~Wanted

Help Wanted

OLD FURNITURE , ice
boxes, brass beds , iron
beds , desks, ere., co mplete
hou!teholds . Write M . O
Miller . Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
ca ll 9'12 771/.J

1976 MONTE CA RL O, 35()
engine, low mileage S2600
992 2656

Card of Thanks

-

Wanted to Buy

-

I'HAri 'V

AND T HE STATE
PAT~OL. S S EN D ING

Notices

-~

The Re ... Wd l 10m M1Cldleswor th Poslor
Sun day School 01 Q A5 am and Church
Sen11 ces 11 o m
SAC RE D HEAR T, !lev fa ther Paul 0
Welton . post er Phone 992 -28'25 Saturday
evan1ng Mou 7 30 Sundoy Man 8 end
10 om
Con less1on Solurdoy 7 -7l0
pm
VICTORY BAPTIST
On the Roole 7
bypass Jom&amp;s E Kaesee pastor Sunday
~chool
10 a m
morn1n9 worsh1p . II
a m evemng serv1ce 7
TR INHY Ch r~st1o n Assembly Coolv1lle
pasT or
Sunday
Gi lbe rt Spencer
school 9 30 o m morn1ng .... ors h1p . II
a rn Sunday evvn1ng HtrJI(&amp; 7 30 p m
m•dweel&gt;l prayer serv1 ce Wednesday . 7 30

o.m .
MOUNT OLIVE Commun,ty church lawrence Bu sh po51or Mol Folmer . Sr
!oupeflnlondenl Sunday school and mor n1ng worhsrp 9 30 o m Sunday even1ng
ser vrce 7 Vouth mMhng and Bib le study
Wed n e~day 7 p m
FAITH BAP TIST Church Mason . rnHt at
Umted Steel Workers Un1on Holt Railroad
StreeT . Mason Pastor . Rev Joy Mitchell .
Mornmg w orsh1p 9 45 a m . Sun day
Sc hool 10 30 o .m
Prayer
meehng
Wednesday . 7 30 p m
FORE ST RUN BAPTIST Rev Ny le
Borde n
pa stor
Cor nel,us
Bunch.
supenntendent . Sundoy "hool q 30 o.m .
second and fourlh Sundays worship ••r ·
VIC80I2J0pm
MT MORIAH BAPTIST - Fourth and
Mo1n 51 Mtddleport Rev Colv1 n Mtnn1s .
poslor Mrs . El .... in Bumgardner . supt . Sunday sc hool 9 lO a m wonh1p aerv•c• .
10 -4 5o .m.
. NOPTH BETHEl
Un it.d Method11 t
Chur&lt; h. 1\ev Che rie• Dom1gon . po1tor
Sun day School 9 30 o m Worship Ser ·
v_
•ce 10 45 a m Sunday 81ble Study, 7 00
p m Wednesday prayer meermg. 7 30
p .m

HOUSE OF PRAYER AND PRAISE llt&gt;.•ty
Ave . pos 1 Burger Chef Pomer oy Eugene
Anspoh pastor Sunday •chool . 10om .
morn1ng worsh1p 11 o m Evening wor·
shp . Svndoy T~esdoy and friday . 7 lO

Yfsterday's Cr yplmJuote: EDUCA TIUf\i HA.) FOH ITS OHJELT THE FOK.\1MJON OF Cll AHACTF:R - HF. Hili·: HT
Si'ENCFH

br THOMAS JOSEPH

arsenal

14

15
II
18

Ukl-&lt;~hom&lt;~

6 Throw

UO
NPN '&gt;
Brl shlb.JI I

Yt·sluday '!l A.WIWf'r

Fnsbee

ll

:!OSports

28 Hoodwm kC'd
Z9 D1rty look
30 Strtp
31 InCite

HERE'S ,IOE COO~
HANGING AROUN:7
THE OCR ,\\
.

4 Present
S ( ·!&lt;tssy

7 Ana~ran 1
Eve ·s
of Hr1
"forest'" name !I i'urruneal
Au~ust
des.o;t.'rt
Femmme
91..egttl dit un
suff11t
10 IX:solatl:
t;od ·
16 Suffix
lla han
Wit h LOW

pala C'e
U Cruel
Z4 W1thoul
repet1t10n
21 Tenper&lt;·en ter

I! Twofold
19 Anwn n r n
piit! wnght

21 1·\:trt
nf spt·nh
23 ( •OQt't'rTIIIlK

25 f ;1q• up
26 Whl'rl' pippins

w~rl'

\·1·rboten
ZIS TI.J"lhftl
lO ( :arso n 's
on·hestra
lea der

:12 SubjuKatt•d
34 .. sht.·
hlo ws 1 "
35 l'ct('r P ;ul' '
dog

37 Lamb 's
pen name
~Yale

name

41 tee or St one
42 Pulpit talk
abbr

"

RING RING
RUfG RING

JOE COCLONL I \
ANSWERS THE PH!:JNE
IF HE ~NOWS iT'S
FOR HI/.\
..::

~N'c,~~J

1- '!:&gt;", ,-(v.

'

1

11'11~~

m11

~ THAT SCRAMBLE D WORD GA ME

~ ~ JJ\1~~ ,

by Henrt Arnolcl a.,o Boo Lee

Unscramole these lou• Jumbles
one rene• TOeac" SQua·e 10 1orr-1
'ou• O&lt;cl1nan,- words

33 Rec room

34 Powerful
lli T&lt;&gt;&lt;.&gt; k proper l;o+--1--t--measures
l8 Lad1es '
qu.arters
40 flood 's
momkt&gt;r
U CiranrrifJPd
U Hmt o( co lor 17:-t- i---lr-t--

CUTI I N~ RE MA~I(5

W A-5 .

flAlLY CRYPTOilU OTE - litre's h ow to w or k il :
A X Y 0 I. 8 A A X R
I. OSGFEI. LOW

One )('tie r s1mp ly stands f or another I n thTs s01mp le :\ u
u~d t or ' t hl' thref' I .'~. X fur !he two O's. t·tr Sm gle lf'ller ~.
apollrophes . tht' lengch an d formatwn of the 14ords :ort• all
hin ts E"C'h day t he r ntle l etlcr5 arc rld1'ert'nl

No.,., arra nge tr.e c.rcted 1 ene• ~ T:·
tor,., the surp11s.e answe1 as s... q
ge51ed by the abOve cartoon

MSWer . "' I

! I

&lt; RVPTOQIIOTF.5

-

BXLGB

NO

EZ

F X Y B

HAK
O. t: M B

0

•••••

'

••••

0

•

••

••••••

•••

•••••

D-1

D-6-

to

XYHAEPI'!IJ

roday. ..

••••

~0~:5 ' "'
WHO MADE 1'10SE

E Z

morning .

:,ATU RDAY . Ot TOB E R 27 , 19 79
s ;o War la ar L.ar ge 17 b 00Soc 1el 1es 1n Transii 10n 10
Human Olmf'n\IOn 17
6 JO ~,)' ur day
1-! ep ort 3
(l d&lt;;o&lt;, r oom B. U ~ F&lt;trm ~eporl
10 , Ken!uc\( y At reid !) I ! s You r
Bu&lt;,1ness 17
1 00 Uncle Waldo J. Porky P1g S.
Fr 1ends 8 . It' s Your Bu s 1n es~ 10
,).n1mal&lt;, Ar'lmnl&lt;,. An1mn1~ 13 NED - Friday, Gary Wolfe. left , inr hree Stoooe s l 1lll e Rasca ls 11 Sheriff's Department, turned over Bj)J 10 LiT Tie R~'&gt;C il !'&gt; )
B&lt;H ( dv
:en during an aggravated robbery of the
~oiCe rs 15 N at lor Women On ly
oec. 8, 1978, to Larry Arthur, manager of
0 O:,cooby &amp; Scrappy Doo I 3
8 00 D atty Duck J .l5. Supe rlr 1ena~ were found buried in Jeffrey, W. Va .
6 !J Mu;~ht.,.. Mouse Hec lo. le &amp;
Jec k le a. 10. Ul !rd Man lJ
B JO Plfg r 1mag e to Me ccct I I
Crtsper ) . l S
9 00 Fred &amp; Barney J 15 Plas11c
Mdn 0 13
Bug~
Bunnv Road
Runner 8. 10 Mil venc i&lt; I '
..••.• . .•..•..•...........• A-3
10 OQ Su per Globelroi T er~ J lS
Mov1e 'Wulhen nq He1gh 1&lt;; 11 • • • • 0 • • • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
10 JO New Sh m oa ) l':t ~~ o ... •C'
•• • • • • • 0 0 ••• 0 0 • • • • 0 •• 0 ••• 0
VPngea nce Vow 10 Pop.;'Vf' A
I I DO F la:.h Gor don ) I) ':; p1der
B-1-12
Wo m c'tfl 1] Tt1~ 1~ TTw ~ Fl t
A-2-8
11 JO Godl dla J 15 GrgQil.'~'1Cr T
Hotel 6 Fat Albert 8 AcT10n
C-1-8
News tor K 1ds 13
1? 00 Jonn y Oues T J IS Weekend
'-. pec1al e 1J
J;t&lt;,on o! ~ TiH
•••• 0 ••••••• •
• •••• • 0 •• 0 •
0 ••
Commr~ nd 8 MO'ollf!
Trog · 11
17 JO Jetsons 3 1~ C.otlege Fool
ball Today 6 13 Torrctn Suppr 7
8 Hogans Heroes 10 CrockeTT s
Vr&lt;:lor y Garden]]
instruetor~;
11 J ') Col lege FooTbal l e 13
I 00 8 •g 8 lue Mdfble J In The
tile city's 146 schools.
Know 10 PTL Club rs West 11
He said officials were Ullable to
V•rq rnl d Ou Tdoors]]
h
1 10
30 M ~nu tes
8 10
Old d
enter 37 buildings be ca use of
Hou'Se-Nor ks JJ
d
jammed locks on doors.
I 00 V1ewpo1nt 8 Mov1e " Don ·!
Mediator Harold Gold entered the
G1ve Up Tne StHp 10 . M ovi~ d
Fr'&lt;C' Gol d en Draqon~
11 .
negotiations Thursday, and met with
•••••••••••••••••••

WK,tl.l THE

AXYB ZCD

7 OS NBA
N ew&lt;, ) .

1 }(}

......................
. .... ...... .............. .

U - tnrnsi t
ti 1lurs tJn~t:

lo

17
''

POMEROY
Ap~o~~W
$16,000 in stolen checks, taken from
the Jones Boys in Pomeroy, on Dec.
8, 1978, were recovered and returned
to the manager of Jones Boys Friday

D-5-11
D-3-4

lnitial"i

X

I=RtO.OY , OCTOBER 26,1919
11 JO Johnny
( ar&lt;,on
J . l5
ChMI1e '&gt; Angels 6 .~" av 1 e 'A
Pla c.e
IO 01!'
8
N1q hl mMe 1n 'W ;n · IC ,
Fl111nq M I'&gt; ~IT ~ " 13
Jour ney lo Ti'e Lenler
''rH lh
17
IT JO ABC N eN~ ]J 17 ~ 0
I 00 Mldnlqhl SPt'Ci di ) I~
Ho ' 1:1 .M ov 1e The Hypno11c
f fe 10 I ..:S N f •w &lt;, I )

[)OWN

1 That Jo 'r
2 Bel)l;I&lt;Hl
conunull l'
J P;1 r1 uf

6 " ! - (Jet
Jealous·· .
1947 song
II Lucy·s fnend
IZ ~edda's
husba nd
13 ·· What Is
- to Say ""

pm

BURliNGHAM SOUTHERN
BAPTIST
CHURCH Root e 1 Shade Poslor DOn
Block Af1111oled w 1th Southern Baptist
Convenhan Sundoy school . 1 30 p.m ..
Sunday worshtp , 2 Xl p m Thursday
even1ng Bib!• study 7 p m
PENTECOSTAL A S~EM&amp; lV .
Racine 1
Roule 12.. Wilham Hoboc~ . pallor . Sunday school , 10om., Sunday evening ser·
v1ce 6:30 p m Wednesday Mnl~ ••r·
VICe , 7
CARPENTE R BAP TIST Rev Fr . . land
Norns . pos tor Don O~dle . Sup t . Sun·
doy School. 9 .30 a.m . Morning Worsl\lp. 1
10 30om Proy •' S•rv1ce alter note Sun·
doy•

Television

~~'l(}td
ACROSS
I SecTet

Recover
stolen
checks

G F

X y

C'I'GLKMfK

J••"l018!.
Ans..,.er

rI

WIN(~

H (J W l h~

!

OF THE [

1I I

r)

1Answers TomorrowI
OWI NG lOCAL{ EOUi fY
tJ•QafT!SI IQ vPrt
TWO Will

;;triking

a

i

I

•{I
IA1

1\,'

,1

.' Ouv" .'

W re~tl."'l g

8
H1rl'll Hrlnd 1
Ups tair s Down
r , ~tl1n q

f• ('

I ~.

Gun

st air s 33
.s 00--Co llege l=ooTbatc 6. 13 : Sport
sworld 1S . Nash vi lle On The
Road CO . K¥ate 17 . Wh~n The
Bo.1' ( ,~n~~ In •J
"10 l lor-,tO"R it t•raR P n ui~O&gt; -. lhe

0
r

t

1

'f

representatives of the 5,00Q.meml'&lt;'r
Cleveland Teachers Union oro
Friday.
The teachers struck Ohio's largest·
public school system m Oct. 18 and
are seeking a 14 percent pay hike.
The debt-f'ldden school board has
offered a 6 percent raise . •

The checks were recovered in Jef.
frey , W. Va ., Gary Wolfe, investigator for the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported .
On Oct . 22, Meigs County
Prosecuting Attorney, Fred W.
Crow, III, advised that John Ray
Frye of Jeffrey , was taken before
the eonunon pleas court on the
charge of aggravated robbery and
..as sentenced to a tenn of 4-25 years
for the robbery .

Frye went into the Jones Boys
store, where with a handgun, he roi).
bed the main office of a large quantity of cash and the checks.
Investigator Wolfe, while lnv...,tigating the anned robbery of the
store came acrlli!S infonnatim conce~ a similar incident in Kentucky.
Upon learning that these two
crimes had many similar aspectll,
Wolfe went to West VIrginia to continue his investigation. Deputy
Wolfe detennined that the descriptions of the suspecta In both robIY ries were the same.
Wolfe, together with Sberlff Prcl·
fitt, went to Huntington, where 1
lineup was conducted and two
eyewitnesses Identified the auapect.
Wolfe then prsented his 'In•
vestl ~ation package to Prosecutol'
Crow

Since Frye W8!l sentenced tAl a
penallnatltutloo in the State of l(jllltucky, the pl'OIII!Clllllr '• office IIIIICiil
application for Frye's retum tAl tilt
State of Oblo under the law of 1ft.

terstate dententlorr ·

•

'

1

�)

10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fr iday, Oct. 26, 1979

Teachers, supporters march
in~cinnati this morning
CINCINNATI (A P I - More than
2,000 teachers and their supporters
marched through the street• of
downtown Cincmnali at rush hour
this morning to demonstrate the
financial plight of the schoo ls
The teachers' chant of '"no ra1ses
in 1,000 da ys" was met by the
honking of hundreds of motorists
locked in traffic jams caused by the
demonstration .
The fin ancially-str appe d school
system is sc heduled to close at the
end of classes Nov. 9 unti l D&lt;&gt;c. 2
because of a la ck of funds.

children. some carrymg the ir pets,
several displaying the banners of
their schoo ls. The demonstra tion
began at c1ty hall and stretched for
se veral bloc ks .
·' We're here to let the public know
sa1d . Ht.&gt; s&lt;:nd th e t eachers haven 't .

Uoyd , filing un behalf of the school
board as well as parents and
children m the district, asked the
U.S. District Court to for ce the
superintendent of public instruction
to disperse enough money to enable
the schools to stay open .
Uoyd aloo asked for an order
requiring the disbursement of such

had ra1ses 1n two and a half years.
The teachers' contract expires
D&lt;&gt;c. 3\ They say they won't
con tmu e to work indefinitely witiwut
wagt: mcr cases.

Th e m orning dem onstration was

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M(¥lday

Noon on Saturda y
TUf•_...:lln·

ED

LJOIIO: J

BURKE TT

"U III'&lt;Q .

Barbe r

Sh o p n ow op e n f u ll t im e i n
Mi d dl eport

GE T MARKET VALUE for
your gol d and si lver coins .
Wr ite or
co nta c t
Ed
B urke Tt Barbe r Shop , Mid ·
d le porf

thruFnday

JANI C E DAV IS is now em ·

4P M

pl ayed at Hair By Lila
Bf'auty Salon , spa c ialist in
m en 's and boy 's ha 1r cuts
Open evenings by
ap ·
poi ntm e nt
Mrs . Keith
Ri de nour , owner

the day before publication

Sund ll y
4P M

F n day afternoon

~ IIU ,

316 1

ANT IQUE POC KE

ches . Willing to p
dollar . Call
1·51
even1ngs

WANTED

IN MEMORY ot mother,
Anna Foreman McHaffie,

who p assed away Oc t . 26,
1918 .
In memory we hold her

near
Althou gh she is no longer

here
L oved by f amily , f ri ends
and ne i g hbors
So dear
She helped in s1ck. ness.
heartac hes and labor s
We miss her pre senc e , b ut
remember her love
Each one tha t needed a
push , she gave the shove
And looked for all her
strengTh above
And so in memory . mother ,
to other s we offer k ind
ne ss ,
f riendsh 1p ,
and
br othe r ly love.

IN MEMORY ot our mom ,
Rub y Carter . who left us
Oc t 26 , 1975

Her lov ing face I hope t o
see ag ai n
Though the days h ave
passed aw ay
Slee p on . deetr mom . and
take y our r eST
They miss vou m ost who
loved you be sf .
Sadly m i ssed by c hildren

Card of Thanks
WE , THE family of Ke 1th
L anders , would like to
thank Rhonda Wil son . th e
M i dd le port
mayo r .
emergenc y squad . Mid
d lepo rT p 011ce.
Sher1 H
J ame s
P r off i t , Ew1ng
Funeral Hom e and anyone
w ho he lped du r 1n g the
death of our belo ved son
and orothe r Or ville Kei tn
Landers. Man y tha nks to
the friend s an d nei ghbOrs
who sent f lower s and food
Spec i al Thanks to th e Re v
Wm Kn i tte l and the Re v
James Broome , A lbert and
Eunice
Duff ,
the
pallbearers , for
th e
prayers , and an yone el se
who he l ped in anv way
May G od Bless you al l
Mother . Judy
Landers.
Broth e r s
Robb i e
and
Charli e La nders . M ct H ctnrt
sister Tamm y Landers and
thank s t o Sandy ttnd NoPI
Mill er , and to my co
workers from Robbi ns and
Myers .

Help Wanted
SOMEONE TO dO 1;ghl
housekeeping a few ho urs
on Friday in Middl eport
992 ·5709 after S 30 p .m .

day and Thursday , 7 9 P .m
Start i ng Thursday, Oc1. 25 .
Drehel ' s Ceramics . 59 N
2nd , Middlepor, , OH . 992
5560 .

Lost and Found
LOST ON Mulberry Ave ..
8th grade 1923 group school
p icture . Sugar Run School

Call 9'12 2592.

LO ST : BEAGLE answer s
to Bert German Shepherd
Short hair pointer , answers
to R ingo. M i ssing 2 days .
Contact Ben Ew ing , 992
ll11

JUNK

terie s, radiat or s, r
auto . tra ns
No '

ca lls 949 2563.
----

WANTED . PARTS
1973

Chevrolet

1

p; ckup. 9'12 3992
WANTED :

USEr

scout uniforms . 985·

CERAMI C CLA SS ES , Mon
In Memory

A joint effort by the board 's Public
Affairs Committee and the City
Council 's lnlergovemment Affa1rs
Committee is worlnng up a report on
how to handle the pupils during tlie
closlllgs.
Church. recreational and civi c
groups have offered to set up
fa cilities to enable the schools to
provide free lu.nches to 22,000
mdigent children in the system .
The committees, along with other
civic groups, were to report on
efforts later today.
Local newspapers announced
plans to publish events and activities
for children to attend during tlie
closing between Nov . 13 and De&lt;: . 2.
Tom Mooney , preSident of the
Cincinnati Federation of Teachers,
asked the board to close schools for
four weeks mstead of three.
Teachers can collect only two week'
unemployment compensation under
state regulations durlllg a threeweek closing, Mooney said .
Mooney said they could collect the
entire amount if closed for four .
Superintendant James .la cohs
said he wanted to keep the closing to
a mmimum for the benefit of the
children.
Ja cobs also said the three weeks
lost would be made up in June. This
means school will last until nearly
July and seniors will graduate late.
Jacobs al so said th e Ohio
Auditor's final report on the deficit
was overdue . He said this may
reqUire changing the dates of the
closing .

Q'

rvl i UOlepQn ,

Yard Sale
PORCH

SALE

Wed. , runs till all so
side
Chri
decorations , brown
pictures and misc.
Karl Kloes, Calles

Syracuse. DH . 992 30
THREE FAMILY

&lt;

Sale . 109
Union
Pomeroy Mon and
10 5 .
Ni c e
c lo'
fireplces , blower
toys, toy box , Olender

Auto Sales
1976 MONTE CARL•
engine , low m il eage
9922656

Pets for Sale
HDOF HOLLOW , English
and Western . Sadd les and
harness .
Horses
and
pon ies Ruth Re-eves . 614
698 3290 . Bording and
Ridi ng Lesson s and Horse
Ca r e produc ts . western
boo1 s
Children 's \15 .50
Adu lt s \2q 00

1978 4x4 351 engine . Cl
paint job and interior
cetlent condiTion F

m

Consumer.
••
(Continued from page

trade for small Honda

I)

boke 992 7580 .

R IS IN G ST A R Kenn e l
Board ing Call 367 02q2

chiefly alfned at keepmg rughcr
1977
PLYMOl energy prices from becoming a
VOLARE P .S.. P.B...
A 1 shape Call 843 268• permanent part of the nation's rale
of mnation .

POOO LE

1977

GROOMING .

Jud y Taylor . 614 3tJ 7·7220 .

HI LLCRE ST

KENNELS .

Boa rding , all breeds . Clean
,ndoor outd oor faciliti es .
Al~ o
AKC
registere d
Dober m ans 614 446 7795

THREE SIA ME SE k;t1 ens
1 mate , ] f emale 66 7 330 5
UKC R EG. treei ng walk e r
pupp ,es
3 femal es. 2
ma les Have Nite Ch .Ch
Griffin s rock . Nite Ch
blairs Banjo Babe , Nite Ch
1973 ACHA
Worl d Ch
Beanbl ossom BucK , 1970
AC HA World Ch . Nile Ch .
Ga nn 's Finisher and other
C hampions
in
3
gene rations . Finley R iver
br eed ing bOTh sides . $.50
e1t her sex w i th reg . paper s
H av e been wormed and
wil l have 4 way shot s. Cttll
742 21 4 o r 99 2 30 20 and
leave nam e and numbe r

WINNERS NAMED - WiiUlers of a poster contest
staged by the Ladies Auxiliary of Drew Webster POll!
39, American Legion, in conjunction with National
Education Week to be observed Nov . 11-17, have been
chosen. All are members of the auxiliary 's unit. From
the left are Mrs . Faye Wildermuth . chairmAn of the

1

Ton

1/J

Chevr

Even if the program is succ essful ,

p;cKup trucK with p.s.. I Schultze said the best tha.t can be
a c . good t. res. Rt
d .
. fl ti.
t f 8
pri ce

S2500

S3265, sate p expe:cte
Ingels Furnit percent

M;ddleport
INTERNAT IONAL

Cadet

lASO .

IS. an m a on ra e. a

to 9 percent, which

Will

be

much more difficult to reduce . But
an effort must be made, he sa1d
( .,
. .

autom.
ntt , 4• i

We need a long-run objective of
how lo reduce the 8 to 9 percent thal

hydraulic
mower . sr.ow blade . IS probably the underlylllg rate, " .
dem _ diScs.
turn PI Schultze
told
an
econom1 c
c utt1vator ,
dump
trailer , chains. S2SOO . symposium of th~ Washington
Chevy Malibu, $ Forum on Thursday . He said the
Yamaha g~ i ters , 11 str sharp slowdown in producti vity
Sl50. Classo cal , S75 Pt
wlh .
k
f t
. th
992 · 5630
gro
lS a
ey ar or m
e
~- worsenlllg underlying rate .

1971 NOVA MAG wht

Until fairly recently , he said , the

new tires, air shoc Ks , 3: Wlderlying rate o£ inflation was
bbl . headers and 4·sp
S600. 9 49 2691
between 6 percent and 6 . ~ percent .
-~--__ ·-- _ The underlying rate IS mflation after
1968 CAMAR O 377 engir discoWJting unusual i.ncreases , s uch
speed , ol her e:x: t r ~ s
as higher energy costs.
eel lent co n ~ •ti on . 992 ·
To that Schultze added 4 percent
or991 5671
.
'
.
- --· _ ~ ~ _
mflal1on from higher energy pnces

1954 TRUCK .

good

Schedule
announced
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
today armounced the following
schedule for the pickup of leaves in
the village, begirmUJg Monday, Oct.
29 :
Monday, first ward ; Tuesday,
second ward; Wednesday, third
ward; Thursday, fourth ward . '!'his
schedule will be continued each
week until all leaves have been
picked up .
Residents are asked to rake their
leaves into piles along the curbs and
they will be picked up free of charge
as soon as possible by the village.

UGIITSTICKS FOR SALE
The Meigs Unit of the American
Cancer Society are selling cyalume
lightsticks for a donation of $1.5().
The cyalume lightsticks may be
used in the home, camping-fishing,
boating, bicycling and on the road .
When light is needed you simply flex
the plastic tube slightly, breaking
the thin vial inside, shake the tube,
and presto, you have aluminous
yellow-green light that wiil last for 8
to 10 hours.
The lightsticks are nontoxic ,
nameless, cool, windproof, waterproof , noncorrosive, lightweight and
compact. '!bey may be stored in undamaged wrapper, under normal
conditions up to four years .
They may be purchased at the
Racine Elementary School Monday
and Tuesday, Oct. 29 and 30, Jaycees
Haunted House and the American
Cancer Society office in the ""nior
citizens building.

and about 2.5 percent from higher

d ition . a ir compressor . housin g cost s , including hom e
Ford Mustang , ~ sp mortgages, to arrive at the current
991 5741

Help wanted
CA RR IER WANTED tor
l in co ln Hil l in Pomeroy .
Call the D ai l y senti nel, m
2156 be tween 8 . 30 and 5 00

pm

MACHINIST
Permanent position for individual with
job shop experience. Must be able to do
own set -up on conventional and horizon tal mills, lathes, and grinders .
Respond to Personnel Department, Ap ·
pa Iachian Power Co., Mountaineer Plant
Operations, Post Office Box 398, New
Haven, w. va. 25265 · Area Code 304 882·
2151.
we are an Equal Opportunity Employ e r .

ATTENTION BOYS &amp;GIRLS•.•
Earn Spending
money and
win valuable
priz~.
The Daily Sentinel
has an immediate
carrier route opening
on Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy .
For Details, Phone or Stop by .. .

THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 court 51., Pomeroy

Ph. 992-215'

1971 DODGE POLJil
P.S, P.B., CB rad; o. '
good cond;t; on Good
~~~~~f, Phone '1'12 37 ;
Mobile Homes· Re
TWO BEDROOM P&lt;

13 percent lllflation rate .
After discounting energy and
housin g. Schultze said th e current
mflat.on rate would be abo ut 7
percent to 7.5 percent.
TO END MARRIAGES

Two suits for dissolution of
furni shed . prefer mic marriage and one action for divorce
age-d or e l de rl y couple . have been filed in Meigs County
pets , noch idlren 992·27·
Conunon Pleas Court.
Filing for diasolution of marriage
Diana S. Mills, Syracuse, and
were
Auctions
Homer Mills, Jr., Syracuse; Edward
BIG AUCTION every V
7 pm . Hartford Comm&lt; L. Savage, Rt. 2, Albany, and AmanCenTer, Hartford, W da 0 . Savage, !AIIle address.
m i les abov~ Pomt
Kelly Mullins, Rt. I, Cheshire,
Mason Bri doe .
CUed suit for divorce against Alice
AUCT ION , FRIDAY 7 M. Mullins, same address
Franklin fireplce s
iron l ard kettle , depr~·
glass, lots of new

BOOSTERS MEETING
The
Southern Local District
chandise inclUding
Athletic Boosters will meet at 7:3V
peting at Ohio River
t;on , SR 7. soutn 01 p.m . Monday at the high school. All
d l epor f.
OH . HO\' parenl.! &lt;I football players are asked
Beasley , auct ioner .
to attend to help plan parents night
and
the annual footbail banquet.
AUCTION , FRIDAY 7
Franklin

fireplace s

iron lard kettle, depr~
glass. lots of new
chandise inchlqllli!
peting at Ohio River
tlon , SR 7. soutn ot
dleport , OH. HO\
Beasley , auct ioner.

Real Estate f~r Sl
THREE BUILDING
approx . 1 acre eact
&lt;&gt;omeroy VllltVe
elementery

im£ {ot a {!(, , liZ':]£· • -

l

Ohio cities cases includt&gt;&lt;l conswner

grad es •ncluding U.S grad es ,
mmlfnum :,0 case lots.
Ca rton l.&lt;~rge A 63-65, Med own A
!&gt;4-58 , Small A 4M8 .
Sales to retailers m ma jor Oh10
Cities, cartons delivered : Large A
while 74-83, mostly 74-76, medium fi&amp;.
75, mostly 6&amp;-&lt;;8.
Poultry pri ces at Oh1o fa nns, 9. :,0
to 10, mostly 9.50.
Truck lot pri ces of ready Ill roo k
and fryers . Cincinna ti 34·

DENNIE W. KARR
Dennie W. Karr, Jr., 51, Columbus, died Wednesday afternoon at
University Hoopital, Columbus.
Mr. Karr was born Oct. 26, 1927 in
Pomeroy, the son of the late Dennie
and Lelah Rose Karr .
Mr. Karr was a meat cutter for the
Ohio Packing Company, Columbus
He is survived by two daughters,
Pamela faye Karr and Mrs . Charles
(Kim Denise) Conkel both of Cir·
deville: one son, Oarmy Robert
Karr, Circleville; four grandsons ;
two brothers, John Karr, Erie, Pa.,
and Bob Karr, Columbus; three
sisters, Mrs. Ruth Sellers, Portland;
Mrs . June TitUe, Chillicothe, and
Mrs. Kathryn Hendricks, Columbus.
Funeral services will be held Sun·
day at I p.m . at the Wellman
Funeral Home, 1455 N. Court St..
Circleville with the Rev. Alvin Cox
officiating. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery at Racine . Frienda
may call at the funeral home
anytime after 7 p.m. this evening.

House-to-house
canvassing Sunday
Merle and Mona Johnson,
Rutland, announced that some si.l
beUringer workers will conduct a
house to house drive in Rutland Sunday collecting for mental health.
Patty Dugan IS the bellringer
chairperson for the drive which
benefits the Mental Health
Association of Ohio.
As a volunteer citizens advocacy
organization, MHA works to
promote mental health and prevent
mental illness through public
education and research, while
working on behalf of the mentally ill
and their families through
legislation, volunteer services and
social action . The Association is not
a state agency and so must be supported entirely by private contributions such as funds collected in
the beilringer drive.

VETERANS MEMORIAl..
Admitted--Doris Williams,
Racine; Ross Kent, Addison; Henry
Werry, Pomeroy ; Ricky McKnight,
Middleport; Virginia King,
Pomeroky ; Sarah Roush, Letart, W.
Va .
Discharged-None.
HOLZER MEDEICALCENTER

tLIC:T

'RCUJe't If(. 'Oatdd&amp;M
o11.a!Jot

o{ c..:Pom£W!}

.-SUN.--

DAWN OF THE DEAD
&amp;
THE NEW HOUSE

ON THE LEFT

DRIVE-IN CLOSES MON.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
.SHOP TONIGHT UNTIL 8:00

AND All DAY SATURDAY
SAVE ON:
-OPEN STOCK BEDROOM FURNITURE
-WOMEN'S SCUFFS
-ALUMINUM COOKWARE

36 ; Cleveland 35-36.50.

-MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS

SQUAD CALLED
1 ne Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to 50 Riverview Drive at
9:In p.m. Thursday for Kim Smith
who was choking. Smith was treated
on the scene by squadmen.

-BOYS' JEANS

SPECIAL MEETING
Eastern Athletic Boosters will
hold a special meeting Monday, Oct.
29, at 7: 3() p.m . Plans for the fall
sports banquet will be completed.

.

.

BY BOB HOEFUCH
POMEROY -Pomeroy Attorney
Charles H. Knight Saturday morning took steps to put tbe problems
of the Meigs Local School District into the Lap of the Meigs County Board
of Education.
A teachers' strike in the Meigs
Local District has been underway
for the past five weeks and during
the past week has seen some 3()
teachers of tbe district occupying
tbe administrative office. of the
district, located in the junior high
building at Middleport.
In his action Saturday, Knight
delivered to the county board of
education in Pomeroy, letters to be
sent to each member of the j:Qunty

board requesting that board to act
on the problems of the Meigs Local
District.
Knight's letter to each of the county board members reads :
.. I am requesting on behalf of concerned parents and taxpayers of the
Meigs Local School District that you
call a special meeting of the Meigs
County Board of Education.
"Under Section 3313.85 of the Ohio
Revised Code, it states :
" 'If the board of any local school
district fails to perfonn the duties
imposed upon it .. .the county board
of education in which such a district
is located, upon being advised and
1 satisfied of such failure , shall act as
such board and perfonn all duties

impooed upon such board ....
"The Meigs Local Board of
Education has failed to perfonn its
primary duty of providing
meaningful education in the district
and having its schools open for instruction with pupils in attendance.
"At this juncture, tbe Meigs Local
Board of Education has refused to
negotiate this problem with the
bargaining agent for the certified
employes of the district, the Meigs
Local Teachers Association .
"Facilities for this negotiation
have been offered to the board and
the association . The association has
accepted that offer. However , the
board has declined .

•

un:ba
VOL. 13 NO. 39

"' It is not the position of my clien·
ts , parents and taxpayers of the
district, that the fault lies solely in
either sJde; but rather that both
sides have stron g and weak
arguments .
"However, as the schools are not
open and meaningful education is
not being provided, my clients insist
that the Meigs County Board assume
the duties of the Meigs Local Board
of Education and perform the duties
of that board.
"Thi s letter constitutes notice un·
der Section 3313.85 of the failure to
the Board of Education of Meigs
Local to perfonn their duties ...
A member of the approxinnate 30

Toledo 24, Miami, Ohio 21
W. Michigan 20, Ohio U. 6
Houston 13, Arkansas 10
Ball St. 38, Bowling Green 23 ~

GALLI POLIS- POINT PLEASANT

teach ers occ upying the adnunistrative offices of the district in·
dicated Saturday morning that the
st t-in teachers will continue oc·
cupying the offices on a shift basis
over the weekend . The teachers
have been in the building on a 24hour basis since Monda y at \ \ a.m.
A member of the group did report
Saturday that Supt . David Gleason
visited the bwoding lor the fi rst tlfne
Fnday afternoon . He picked up
some papers from his office and did
converse with some of the teacher s,
it was reported .
Both the teachers and the board of
educa tion have mdi cated apprecia ti on

fo r

th ree

ne utral

locations in which negotiations could
be held to settle the strike. The
locations include the Middleport
police station, the former Meigs
Jaycee headquarters building in
Middleport and the county cow1
facilities at the county courthouse.
Friday morning , County Court
Judge Charles H. Knight said that
his facilities would be available on a
24 hour basis for negotiations.
The teachers group accepted the
location but it was turned down by
the board of education.
Supt. Gleason said Saturday morning it is the feeling of the board that
negotiations should not be held while
the administrative office. are bein~
Continued on A -7

tmts

tntint

SUNDAY. OCTOBER 28. 1979

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

PRICE 35 CENTS

$2.5 million E. E. Davis
Career Center dedicated
RIO GRANDE- Several hundred
persons were on hand Saturday morning for dedication ceremonies of
Rio Grande CoUege-Community
College's $2.5 million E . E. Davis
Career Center.
Mr. Davis, Oak Hill, was an in·
dustrlal leader In the firebrick and
banking industries and a philan·
thropfst. He offered generous support to education throughout
Southeastern Ohio.
When he died at the age of 73 on
Dec. 22, 1974, Mr. Davill was deeply
Involved In state and community
arganlzaUoM. He was a member of

L ··•

~
I

-MEN'S DRESS SOCKS
-DUTCH FLOWER BULBS
-BOYS' SHIRTS
-MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
-DRAPERIES
-WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR
-MEN'S DRESS SLACKS

-CHILDREN'S SNOWSUITS
-BEDSPREADS
-BLANKETS

the time when the estabu.tunent of
the Rio Grande College and CommWIIty College partnership was
being debated.
Saturday's event, held In conjunction with homecoming week actlvlties, took place In the lobby of the
new structure.
DedlcaUoo highlights included
remarks by Cong. Clarence E .
Miller; Judge L . Beckley, Chair·
man, Board of Trustees, Rio Grande
c.nmunity College; Dr. Keith R.
Biandeberry, President, Board of
Trustees, Rio Grande College and
presentation of a Memotial Plaque
by Rio Grande President Dr. Paul C.
Hayes to the E. E . Davis family and
presentation and acceptance of the
key by Dennis Greene r1 Trott and
Bean Associates, architects by
Judge Beckley.
· After welcoming remarks by
President Hayes, Dr. Herman L.
Koby Introduced architects and con·
tractors.
Musical niDllbers were presented
by the Rio Grande CollegeCanmunity College Choir .
Dr. Charles A. Weed gave the
dedication prayer and the hymn
dedication, the Rio Alma Mater, was
led by Merlyn Ross.
Dr. Hayes remarked :
"The dedication of the Rio Grande
Canmunity College E. E. Davis
Career Center marks the accomplishment of a significant of·
jectlve of the Master Plan for Cam·
pus Fadllty and Program Development, committed by the Board of
Trustees of the Conununity College
to tbe voters r1 the Corrununity
College District : Gallla, Jackson,
Meigs, and Vinton Counties, and to
the-Board of Regents of the State of
Ohio.
"lbe concept of a community
college to meet the needs of trained
people for this area cannot be
separated from the need for
specialized space and equipment for
thla purpose.
~ · Aa early as 1970, technical
education was made available by
the Private College In the In·
troduction of the Medical
Laboratory Technology Program, a
joint effort of Rio Grande College
and the Holzer Medical Center. This
program was accredited by the
Natiooal Accrediting Agency for
QJnlcal Laboratory Sciences in 1974.
It was the lim technical program
approved by tbe Ohio Board of
Regenta for the Associate of Arts
Degree.

" This successful technical
educaton venture was followed by
the introduction of additiona l
curricular offerings as follows:
.. (llml -Accounting Technology
Program and the Secretarial
Technology Program; &lt;i97~ l ~ectrolllCS recMology l'rogram ;
(1976 )
Mining Technology

)I t'

--

I\

..)

I

FCR SAL
-£LM T·:
.,, ,."'- [ .; (.J'J/ IC

the Olllo Board r1 Regents during

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

water, sewage. j;att

6279 .

VMI 21, Furman 20
Cincinnati 17,Richmond 14
Michigan 27, Indiana 21
Ohio State 42, Michigan St. 0

DISCHARGES OCT . Z5

Della Bachtel, Helen Bailey , Mrs.
Larry Beaver and son , Mrs . Richard
Cruthers and son, Arnold Dean,
Tame Ia Dodson, Patsy Fillmger,
Anthony Grate, Bewulah Haslnns,
James Hemsler, Anita Hill, Joyce
Knotts, Kathleen Lawless, Joshua
Lawless, Danny Mitchell, Tammi ·
Murphy , Garland Nibert, Rebecca
Oiler, Jason Phalen, Chloe Ramer,
Lawrence Reed, Josephine Rice,
Orion Roush, Asa Rucker , Garnet
Sanders, Charles Scarbery, Jean
Stri ckland , Inez Stumbo, April
Thomas , Kay Walker , Robert
Warren , Floren ce Well , Keith
Wiloon Jr ., Jerry Yeager .
BIR'IliS OCT. Z5
Mr . and Mrs . Robert Eubanks,
son, Jackoon; Mr . and Mrs . Joel
Atha , daughter, Northup; Mr . and
Mrs . Gary Fisk, daughte r ,
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs . Carl
Simpkms, daughter. Point Pleasant.

-WOMEN'S SOCKS

schOOl.

-~. fo -

EGG REPORT
COLUMBUS, Ohto 1AP 1 - F:ggs
- Prices pa id to coun try packmg
plan ts for eggs delivered to major

broilers

National Education Week observance rJ tbe unit; Anna
Wiles, president of the junior unit; Laura Smith, and
Robin Campbell, president of the Eighth District
Junior Auxiliary. At the front is Jennifer Couch. The
posters will be displayed in business windows.

Area Deaths

CLARENCE R. GILKEY
L1arence R. Gilkey , 69, RD,
Pomeroy, died this morning at Camden-Clark Hospital, Parkersburg .
Funeral arrangements will be announced by Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home.

2656.

1967 PONT IAC , $17

•

Georgia 20, Kentucky 6
Maryland 27, Duke 0
N.C. St.16, Clemson 13
Villanova 24, Marshall 14

Meigs County Board getting strike problem

mon ey to grant a wage mcrease
which would prevent a possi ble
teachers strike Ill 1980.

would be dosed today.
Teachers and lugh school students
said th ey wantt&gt;d to demonstrate the
net'&lt;.l s of the sch ools which are
closmg because uf a projected $7.7
nu llion defi cit m th e &gt;6 ,000-pupil

Pittsburgh 24, Navy 7
Syracuse 25, Miami, Fla. 16
Yale 24, Penn 6
Alabama 31, Virginia Tech 7

hav e

ope n in Cincmnati .

la~t wt&gt;ek wh en 1t announced schools

NOTICE

tw ice t hls ye a r

we can·t con ti nue wi thout raises ," C

because of the planned ma rch .
Superintendent James Jacobs said It
would dramatize the si tua tion m t.h e
schools.
Teachers were grouped together
by school as they ma rched thro ugh
the str eets, many w1th the 1r
• r ._,,,

V o t ers

Teachers President Tom Moo ney

backt&gt;d by the Buard of Education

IJ'V......_,

system .

r ejected a 6.9-mill operatin g levy .
Sc hool At torn ey John Lloy d
Thursda y asked a federal co urt In
Columbus to .. reverse the status
quo" and keep the public sc hools

Classt!s we re can cele d today

Boston College 29, Army 16
Colgate 24, Columbia 14
Cornell 21, Dartmouth 10
"' Penn St. 31, W. Virgbi..ia 6

.

TEACHERS AIDED - Through the generosity of
the teachers of Circleville a truck load of pumpkins
were donated to the teachers of Meigs Local School
District to be sold by the teachers of Meigs with the
proceeds to be placed in a strike fund for the teachers .

MRS. E . E . Davis, Oak Hill, is presented Memorial Plaque by
President Paul C. Hayes during Saturday's dedication ceremonies of the
new $2. ~million E . E . Davis Career Center.

(

..

'

The pumpklllS were transported from Circleville to
Middleport by Kenny Elbin. The pumpkins were pur·
chased by Dick and Ruby Vaughan of Vaughan's Car·
dina!.

Recover
stolen
checks

I

~

POMEROY
Approximately
116,000 in stolen checks, taken from
the Jones Boys in Pomeroy, on Dec.
8, 1978, were recovered and returned
to the manager of Jones Boys Frtday
morning .
The checks were recovered in Jef.
frey , W. Va. , Gary Wolfe, in·
vestigator for the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department reported.

STOLEN CHECKS RETURNED - Friday, Gary Wolfe. left, in·
vestigator for the Meigs County Sheriff's Department, turned over approximately $16,000 in checks taken during an aggravated robbery of the
Jones Boys store, Pomeroy, on Dec . 8, 1978, to Larry Arthur, manager of
the Jones Boys store. The checks were found buried in Jeffrey , W. Va .

TENTII District Cong. Oarence E . Miller delivered the main address
during Saturday's dedication ceremonies of the $2.5 million E. E. Davis
Career Center at Rio Grande College-Community College.

Program; (1977) - Manufacturing
Teclmology Program; (1978) - Food
Service Management and (1979) Business ~;anagement and
Agricultural Production.
.. Future programs that are in the
process of development are :
Automotive-Diesel Technology,
Design-Drafting Technology , Broad·
casting Technology, and Nursing
Teclmology.
" The expressed needs of the in·
dustrial and business leaders rJ the
area led the Ohio Board of Regents
to approve a capital appropriation
for the cOMtruction of this modern
technical education facility.
" The Rio Grande Cooununity
College E. E . Davis Career Center
has become the pivot for the
delivery of technical education to
meet trained manpower needs for
the presen\ and continued develop-

men! of this Sou!bern Ohio region . ''
Following ceremonies, a tour of
the new facility was conducted by
the sisters of the Lambda OmJcron
Psi Sorotity. Art display was coor·
dina ted by Leo Hill.

Inside today.

• •

Area deaths .. . . .. .. .. ... . ........ . .. ..... .. .... ..... A-3
Classified ads ..... .. ..... ........ . ..... ...... ..... D-5-11
Farm news .... . . .. ..... .... .. . .. .. . ... . .. . . , . . . . . . D-3-4
Ufestyle ........ . .. . .. . ..... . .. . . ...... .. . .... .. . . B-1-12
news . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . A-2-8
Sports . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C-1-8
State and National . . .. ..... . .... . ... . ... . . . ... . .. . .. . D-1
TV" log . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . D-6'
~al

MPdiatur mt•Pts with striking instru!'tors
EXTENDED FORECAST
A cllaoc:e of abowen dally MoDday tbroagb Wed td1y. HJcbo In
lbe Ill MCJDdlly ud 'J'aetdly,
cooling IUCb&amp;ly Wedlletcllly to lbe
upper 5Giudlow ... LDwa In lbe
4411 eacb day.

COMMISSION TO MEET
GAI..UPOUS - The Gallipolis
City Commission wlll meet in
special session Tuesday at 8 p.m. in
the Municipal Court Room .

CLEVELAND (API - A federal
mediat or

was

to

meet

with

negotiators fer striking Oeveland
tea chers and the city 's school board
again Saturday as effcrts continued
to resolve a Hklay-&lt;&gt;ld walkout in a
contract dispute .
.Only t28 of Oeveland's 92,000
public school pupils rep&lt;rted for
class Friday, according to assistant
superintendent James Misch.
Misch said 181 teachers crossed
picket lines and that there were
instructional p:'ograms at seven of

.

Uie city 's loW schools .
He said officials were unable to
enter 37 buildings because of
jammed locks on doors.
Mediator Harold Gold entered the
negotiations Thursday , and met with
representati ves of the S,IJOO.rnemlwr
Cleveland Te ach ers Union ""
Friday.
The teachers struck Ohio's largest'
public school system on Oct. 18 and
are seeking a 14 percent pay hike.
The debt.f'idden school board has
offered a 6 percent raise.

On Oct. 22, Me igs County
Prosecuting Attorney, Fred W.
Crow, III, advised that John Ray
frye of Jeffrey, was taken before
the corrunon pleas court on the
charge of aggravated robbery and
.vas sentenced to a tenn of 4-25 yeal'!l
for the robbery .
frye went into the Jones Boys
store, where with a handgun, he robbed the main office of a Large quantity of cash and the checks.
Investigator Wolfe, while Investigating the armed robbery rA the
store, came across infonnatioo con·
ceming a similar incident In Kentucky .
Upon learning that these two
crimes had many similar aspecta,
Wolfe went to West Virginia to continue his investlgati&lt;*l. Deputy
Wolfe detennlned that the ~
lions of the suspects in both robIY ries were the same.
Wolfe, together with Sheriff Prof.
fitt, went to Huntington, Where I
lineup was conducted and two
eyewitnesses Identified the llllped.
Wolfe then praented his In·
w otwation package t o Prosecutor
Cr uw

Since Frye wa.s sentenced to a
penal Institution In tbe Stale of KIIDtucky, tbe proeecul«'s oftlce IDide
application for Frye's return to tbl
State c:1 Ohio Willer tbe lawa of Interstate dententioy . .

,
.

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