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                  <text>12- The Daily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Monday . Nov . 5, 11179

FBI probing civil rights violations
GHEENSBORO, N.C. I AP I - 1rw
FBI looked for possible ciVJI nghts
violations and the mayor promised
an Internal inquiry on poli c e
handling of an anti-Klan rally that
ended with four dead an~ 10
wounded . But civil r;ghts groups
have
demanded
an
out s ide
investigation of police ac tion s .
Two more suspects were arrested
Su nday
and
charged
with
conspiracy to commit murder in
connection with the shootmg at a
" Death to the Klan" rally Saturday .
Twelve per:som; were arrestt&gt;d
shortly after the shooting and were
each charged wtth four co unts of
f1rst degree murder and one count of
consptracy to comrrut murder . First
degree murder carries a possible
death sentence m North Carolma.
The 14 men . all from nearby
co mmunities , were being he ld
without bail pending a preliminary
hearing today .
Police said some of the suspects
had declared they were members of
the Ku Klux Klan, but local Klan
leaders dented thelJ' facttons had
anythmg to do with the shootings At

least one suspect said he was a
leader of the National Socialist
Pam· of Amertca. the :-iaztS .
Th~ agent m charge of the FB I's

Greensboro office. Andrew Pel c.-za r .

$7,000 suit filed
A swt m the annount of $7,000 ha s
~n filed in Meigs County Common

Pleas Court by Louis Chnstian and
F:xa Mae Chnstian. Hutland . agam &gt;'l Clifford Whittinljton, Rt. 4,
Pomeroy .
The suit is for injunes and
damage.• a' the result of an accident
on March 16, 1979 on SR 143 in M ei~s
County
DEADLJNE NOV. 30
Senior citizens and disabled persons in Meigs County have until Nov
30 to mat! thetr energy discount applications . The applications may be
pt cked up at banks and poot off tees
in the c ounty, at Ute Meigs Senior
Cttiz.ens Center . the libraries and the
Veteran.s Service Office

NOON CLOSING
The Meigs County Courthouse wtll
close at noon Tuesday due to the
general election , officials said this
monung .

Ask me about
Ufe Insurance
for'IOdays
Families
I o ffer ll tO!ll l program In help
protect your fl!lmil')-' ,5 way cJ hvirtg
and b uild financial se curity lor your
retlrern~n! ve41s ColJI me fo r Qetails

MIKE SWIGER
Middleport, 0.

992 -6685 .

)ta1e Farm lffl! and
Acc1 dent AS!'J ur ancl!
Compa ny

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srud Ute bureau was trymg to
det.ermme whether there were any
Civil rights violations . FBI Diret1or
William Webster "has taken a very
personal tnterest tn this case," he
said .
The most seriously injured among
the wo und ed was Pau l Carl
Bermanwhn , leader of the anti -Klan

co mmunist Workers

a brandishing of weapons on both
sides but no shots were fired and no
ooe was injured .
Greensboro Mayor Jim Melvin
and City Manager Tom Osborne
defended police actions at a news
conference, but said quest10ns about
a police response must await an
intemal investigation .
Poltce C'hief William Swing srud
his men did all they eould to handle
Ute situation when carloads of
whites, some armed with automatic
weapons. drove intD Ute rally s1te at
a predominantly black public
housing project. Gunfire broke out
a ft e r words were exchanged
between Ute two ~roups. All the

V·ie wpoin t

Organization Bermanwhn . 30, was
in
critica l
condition
after
undergoin~ brain surgery . Three
others remained hospttahzed
Bermanzohn's group confronted
Klansmen in August at a KU.n rally
m

China

GroVe ,

so uth

of

(;reensboro . There was shouting and

lower than anyont&gt;

would

have

predicted a few months ago . And
em ployment mcrca:.ed by 305,1100. a
business survey showed .
lll e economy, in fact, is looking

downright robust .
"It's the case of the m1ssmg
recession . It 's out there somewhere.
but nobody can find it," says Charles
1. . Schultze. chairman of the
President's Council of Economic
Advisers
" The ecoromy is simply not
behaving in response to economic
weakness as it used to," Lyle E .
Gramiley. a council member. said in
an interview Friday .
Gramley said one reason for
continued growth is that consumers
are spendmg much more in relation
to their income than they used to, the
resul t of " being motivated b y
inflationary expectations."
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller . who declared in September
that tht ne:ttion was in a recession,
and that tt was half over, says the

Meigs •.•
1Continued from page I I
take over Ute functions of Ute Meigs
Loca l Board because it failed to fun ction , passed a resolution in support
of the Meigs Local District Board
Judge Robert Buck of the Meigs
County Probate Court acting up
another request filed by Attorney
Kntght to the effect that the Metgs
Local Board IS not carrying out its
funcltons and asking that the court
take over the functions of the board
Saturday set a heanng for the boo rd .
Each boord member was ordered
to report to a hearing at 9 a.m .
Tuesday before Judge Buck to show
ca use why the court should not find
that the board has failed to perform
the duties impooed upon it.
Supt. Gleason reported this morntng that telephone lines into most of
the sc hool buildings of the district
ha&lt;l been cut over the weekend
disruptitng semce and that the
school bus garage in Rutland had
been entered and vandalized and
that buses also had been vandalized .
The car of a security guard was
&gt;'jlrayed painted, Supt. Gleason
reported. He said that charges will
be filed against persons colllf'1itting
such acts .

&lt;Continued from page I I
Ohio's coal industry has said it
IS suffering because federal atr
regulations are forcmg utiUties
and indu;tnes tn Ohio to buy lowsulfur coal from other states.

Another strike
CINCINNATI
l AP I
Teachers went on strike today in
the suburban Mount Hea !thy
sc hool district, but ad ministration officials said they
hoped to continue classes for the
system's 6,050 pupils.
" There are pickets up at each
of our schools," said Superintendent Dean Horton.
Horton said there had been
problems reported with some
staff being able to get mto schooL•
and Utere had been some nonteaching employees who had not
reported for work.
Most bus drivers reported for
Utm datly runs. Ute s uperintendent noted .

We were around when

the 1913 flood reached 68.8 feet.

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participants at the rally, auU1orities
said
Swing conceded that police knew
suspiciOus vehicles were heading
tDward the crowd . He said at the
time of the shootings the nearest
officers were a block away .
Police arrested the 12 men who
are fa cmg murder charges about a
block from the scene of the shooting ,
and officers confiscated a yellow
Ford van which con tamed an array
of weapons .
But officials were unable to
explain how two other cars believed
to have been carrying gunmen
slipped out of the area .

economy is giving off " false
signals ." But he has retrac ted his
half-over statement.
Miller wasn 't the only one who was
fooled . A sizable 2.4 percent increase
in the nation 's gross national
product m Ute Uttrd quarter caught
nearly everyone off guard. including
most private focecasters .
George Perry, an economist at the
Brookings Institution who al so
thought a recession was underway ,
said the most surprising economic
statistics were the September homebuilding figures. whtch showed
housing starts at an annual rate of
1.9 million during the month .
" Everybody
underestimated
housing and how strong tt would be
even witi1 the htgh interest rates of
sununer,' ' he said in an interview .
He satd " one had to wonder"
whether interest rates were high
enough .
It is generally accepted that the
nation 's GNP, the value of total
output of goods and services in the
economy , including housing, must
decline f&lt;r at least two consecutive
quarters for a recession to occur .
The GNP had declined at a 2.3
percent rate in the second quarter ,
and just about everyone else had
taken it as a foregone conduston
that the third quarter GNP would
dec line as well.
MEETS TIJF.SDA Y
The Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce wtll meet Tuesday at noon at
the Meigs Inn .
.
Plans for the Christmas promo~ on
and parade will be discussed . All
members and non-members are invited to attend.
SQUADCAU£D
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Herrilock Grove at 8:57
a .m . Sunday for Clara Paulsen who
was iU . She was taken to Veterans
Memonal Hospital where she was
admitted
t'RlDA Y MEETING
Return
Jonathan
Chapter,
Daughters of the Amertcan
Revolution. will meet at 1:30 p .m .
Friday at Ute home of Mrs . A.. R.
Knight. Speaker will. be John Rice,
Meigs County Extenston Agent, who
will use "Our Feathered Friends .. as
his topic .

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exercise your freedom

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at

POMEROYMIDDLEPORT. OHIO

vote

enttne
TUE SDA Y. NOV EMB ER 6 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Are teacher-board negotiations being held?
COPPERHEADS K.IU£D - Meigs CoWJty is with fewer copperhe~d
snakes - thanks to Harry Calaway, caretaker of the Elberfeld Fann m
Tuppers Plains. Pictured is a c opperhead killed recently by Calaway on
the farm. On the white paper are well over 20 baby snakes which met the
same fate as their mother.

Area Deaths
t:MMETT R. FERRELL
Emmett R. Ferrell , 78 , Kerr, died
at l :30 a .m . Saturday in HM C.
He had been a Gallia CoWJty
restdent for 10 years .
Mr . Ferrell was born July 4. 1901 .
in Bommer , W. VA .. son of the late
Joseph Richard and Blenda Slack
Ferrell .
He was a retired coal mmer .
He maried Hazel Canterbury, who
survives. as do 13 ch ildren . Herman
FerreU , Middleport ; Ray t'errell ,
Belpre:
Leroy
Ferrell.
Parkersburg, Charles Ferrell
Kerr; Samie Ferrell, Kerr; Lou
Ratliff . Kerr ; Rosie Ashley,
Smithers. W Va . : Ruby Ferrell.
Fayetteville. W Va .' Elizabeth
Frye, Gallipolis ; Mary Shaffer,
Greer, S.C . ; Julia Owen, Rodney ;
Barbara Ferrell, Kerr; and Virgtnia
Ferrell, Belpre
Fifty-three grandchildren and 17
great-grandchildren survive .
Four sisters survtve : Hell Spence ,
Cedargrove. W. Va. : Lula Brooks ,
Dixte, W. Va . ; Helen Hodge ,
Pow elto n, W. Va .: and Goldie
Harman. Cedargrove, W. Va .
One brother, Manuel Ferrell.
Dixie. W. Va , also sur\~ves.
Funeral services will be 2 p .m.
Tuesday at the D.C . Hooper Funeral

IIO~I'IT

\L '\E\\ ~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday
Admissions-Floyd
Brookover.
Pomeroy:
Mary
Gilmore, Pomeroy .
.
Saturday
Discharges-Shetla
Haley, Dale Proffitt, Dale Bing,
Timothy Jarrell, Alma Miller
Sunday Admissions-Kathryn
Miller . Minersville; Phyllis Harris ,
Racine: George Morris, Pomeroy ;
Harold Lawson, LeUirt. W. Va . : Eric
Shoults. Racme; Clara PauL•en ,
Hemlock Grove; Conme Casey , Middleport ; Sally Lambert . Middleport .
Sunday Discharges - Kimberly
Petrie, Donna Persinger .

Home, Montgomery, W. Va ., with
Ute Rev . Alfred Holley officiating .
Burial will be in Cedargrove
Cemetery, Cedargrove, W. Va.
Friends may call from 7-9 p .m .
today m Montgomery.
There is no visitation in Gallipolis.
Arrangements under the direction
of Cremeens Funeral Home .
CLOSED NOV. 7-8
Sarah Gibbs, deputy Register of
Motor Vehicles for Meigs County,
aMounced that the license bureau in
Pomeroy, will be closed Nov. 7 and
8 in order that staff members may
attend " seminar in Columbus.

BY BOB HOEFUCH
Are negotiations between the
teachers and the boord of the Meigs
Local School District taking place ?
That appeared to be Ute $64
question Tue:&lt;day morning as a
strike by the teachers moved along
in its seventh week without a settlement.
A hearing was scheduled for 9
a.m. t.h.i8 morning in the Meigs County Probate Court as the result of a
request filed last week by Pomeroy
Attorney Charles Knight. Kniglli
asked that the court determine if the
Meigs Local Board of Education is
carrying out its fWlctions and that
the court take over the functions of
the board.
Knight earlier had requested that
the Meigs County Board of
Education make the sarre deter·
mination and take over the functions
of the Meigs Local Board . However.
Friday night the county board of
education issued a resolution supporting the Meigs Local Board of
Education.
Members of the Meigs Local
Board of Education had been subpoenaed to appear before Judge
Robert Buck in the Meigs County

HOSPITAL PATIENT

Clifford R. Hayes,Rt. I, Long Bottom, is a surgical patient at Holzer
Medical Center. His room number is

SERVING TIJESDA Y
A soup dinner will be served
Tuesday, election day, at the Forest
RWl United Methodist Church from 9
a .m . to 6 p.m .
The menu includes bean and
vegeU!ble soup, sandwiches, pie,
cake and beverage .

SEF..X UCENSES
Marriage licenses were tssued to
Lester Ray Richard, :.!, Long Bot·
tom, and Iva Renee Wilson, 18, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy: Jerry Clyde t'erguson, 40,
Middleport, and Edna Maxine Dorst, !iO, Middleport ; Carl Steven
Manley, 18, Middleport, and Dorcas
A,nn Light, 18, Decatur,lnd .

HARMONY
AND ENCORE

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Folk Guitar W/Case ....................... Only s119.95
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Member FDIC

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

" It was further agreed by aU par ties Utat negotiations would continue
as they have in Ute past.
Fur thennore, all parties agreed that at
Utis time, in Ute best interest of
negotiations, that the time. location
and parties involved in these
negotiations shall not be released ."
The statement lTiticizing Supt.
Gleason regarding
negotiations

Weather
Mostly cloudy tonight . Low tn the
mid to upper Jfu. Partial clearing
Wednesday High near 50. The
chance of precipitation 20 percent
tonight and 10 percent Wednesay .

issued this morning by the Me1gs
Local Teachers Association reads :
" Fabrication and deception are
the only ways to describe Supt
Gleason ' s latest approach to
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EXTENDED FORECAST
Fair Thursday, a chance of
sbowe" Friday and fair again on
Saturday. HJgbs In tbe upper 40s
and upper SO. Thursday and f'rl.
day, warming to tbe mid SO. to
mid 60s Saturday. Lows In the low
to mid 30s Thursday, rising to the
low to mid 40s Friday and Saturday.
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bargruning . Oesptte a media re lea'"
yesterday afternoon in wluch Supt.
Gleason annowtced et 2 p.m.
bargaining session , the Meigs Loca l
Teachers Assoctatwn rece1 ved no
aU.
" It is evident that Supt. Gleason ts
either feigning coneern to resolve
the cnsts, or has lost complete touch
wtth realtty . Tlus marks the second
time that so called negotiations have
~n ·set up' by Supt Gleason but
have not Ulken place.
"This open deceptton wtlh the
public by Supt Gleason doe' nothUlg
to end the strike The realtty of the
situation is that the school board and
representatives of the Metg s Local

ca 11 oo such a session.
The brief statement issued by
Judge Buck from the probate court
this mommg reads :
" By agreement of all concerned
parties of intere;t, the heanng
scheduled for 9 a.m. Tuesday, Nov .
6, was contmued upon the motion of
the 1Meigs) County Board through
its atlomey .

charged

Local nursing

ty

Rebates coming
DETROIT (API - C'hrysler
Corp., dealt another financial setback in October when ita sales
fell almost 40 percent, says it
again will offer rebates to encourage motorists to buy its cars .
Other U.S. canr.akers reported
Monday that sales were off 20
percent from a year ago during
the month when the big U.S.
automakers introduce their 1980
models.
Chrysler revealed a new rebate
program of $300 a car just before
tl announced its sales results

Handles 40.2 pet.
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPJ Residential property taxes accounted for 40.2 percent of the
total school operatitng property
UII collected this year, according
to the Ohio Public Expenditure
Council.
The COWlCil reports that total
real estate, public utility and
tangible personal property taxes
for school operating purposes for
the year amounted to
$1,824,500,000.
Residential
property ta~~payers accounted for
$734,100,00J of this.

Probe expanded
GREENSBORO, N.C. IAP I -

The U.S. Justice Department, acting WJder orders from President
Carter, is e~~panding its investigation
of
Saturday's
slaughter at an anti-Klan rally as
organizers of the demonstration
prepare to mourn their dead.
Police continued to search for
at least one more suspect and a
white Ford compact, which was
seen in a video tape of the
shooting.
Meanwhile, 14 men charged in
the shootings were ordered held
without bond after a judge termed
them
"imminently
dangerous to others in the commWlity.''

Objectives are to identify moUters
and children in high rtsk categories.
to provide nursing services through
home visits to families m which
mothers and-or children are considered high risk. This involves preand post natal care of high risk infants and handicapped children .
A public health nurse will be
visiting the families of all new born.s
in the county within two weeks of
delivery.
She will proVIde follow-ups of
clients who have been identified in
the health department clmics and
programs who have need for con tinued support in the home .
The public health nurse will
provide coWlSeling tn the home t o
help clients desire and attain optimum "will ness" . Tlus will be ac ·
complished by providing literature
and leadmg discussions which include such topics as ; normal fetal
development, normal child development, child safety, nutri lion .
discipline. toilet tratning. sex ·
education. and emotional needs of
parents and children .
She will be assisting fannilies in
providing continuity of care and
assisting them in understanding the
needs for physician care or other
needed service. She wtU collaborate
with other soctal and heaiUt agencies in the community.
Nanna Torres , R.N., BSN, for merly the project nurse for the
Bureau of Crippled Childrens Services Program in Meigs County will
be the Public Health Nurse
providing services to the high risk
mothers and children of Meigs County
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FAVORS ANNEXATION
Racine Vfllage Council Monday
o.igbt voted unaoimoUBiy In favor of
tbe annexation of additional land 1o
Racine Village . The aooexatloo was
earlier approved by the Meigs County Commissioners. The annexation
will add about $400,000 ta• value to
Racine Village and approximately
zso pe"ons to the ceosw; of the
village.

Teachers Association will sit down,
e xchange proposals, bargain, and
reach a negotiated agreement-not
fantasy ."
Although Judge John C. Bacon last
week tssued a temporary
restrairung order which among
other pomts forbid teachers to picket
the buildings of the district, the
teachers association indicated
p icketing has ~n even stronger
s ince the isswng of the restraining
order However, there were no
ptckets vtsible at two of the schools
at 2 p.m . Monday . The association
had no ptckets at the schools today
because 1! had agreed to withdraw
them due to the fact that several
schools are used as locations for
voting in the district

Gallians

The Ohi o Department of Health,
Division of Nursing ts funding a
program to provide Public Health
Nursing Services to high risk
mothers and children in Metgs Cowl-

SOUP DINNER PLANNED
The Ra cine t'ire Department
Auxiliary will hold a soup dinner
tomorrow at the Racine Firehouse
Annex . Serving will start at II a .m.
wiUt vegetable and bean soup, cornbread, sandwiches, pie, coffee and
soft drinks to be available.

Probate Court at 9 a.m . tlus mor ning . Teachers yesterday indicated
they also were to have a meeting
with Judge Buck tiltS moming .
However, this morning 's hearing
before Jud~e Buck did not take
place. the hearing beill!! continued
upon the motion of the Meigs County
Board of Education through its aJlorney. A statement released by the
probate court this morning sUites
that it was agreed by ALL PARnES
that negotiations "would continue as
they have in the past". This was a
point of tnterest since the teachers
association tlus morrung issued a
statement criticizing Supt. David
Gleason for reporting a bargaining
session was scheduled Monday . but
that the association had recetved no

project funded

231 A

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POMEROY, OHIO

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VOL. XXVIII NO. 143

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

Bank

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IToday's Election Day

VI c tims were from among the 100

What happened to the recession??
Wi\SHINGTON 1 AP 1 - Whatever
happened to the 1979 recession '
WeU. tt dtdn 't happen in 1979, at
least not vel. Evidence eontinues to
accumula"te that the economy is
turning up, not d0\\11 , as tht! year
draws to a close .
The index of e&lt;:onomic indicators
tl1at came uut last week was up by
0.8 percent, the btgge;t advance in
tl months . Factocy orders for
Se ptember . also reported last week.
rose 3.9 percent, the most in a year .
'111e g rowth in the economy has
fru strated efforts to c urb inflation .
Wholesale prices mcreased another
1 per cent in Oc tober . the
government satd Thursday .
Unemploymen t rose slightly last
month . to G percent . but was sttll

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SIGNS IN - Donnie Ward, Pomeroy, signs the poll
book at precinct 2-A, Pomeroy Fire St;;tion, Tuesday
morning It was later found that Ward was to vote at

Pomeroy Elementary School thus he was directed
there . With Ward are precinct workers. Mary Kun zelman. and Rose Sisson Polls are open until 7 :30 p m

30 minute parking allowed,
street condition discussed
Begtnning today 30 minute
parking will be allowed on the newly
paved portion on Pomeroy's Main
Street. This was announced when
Pomeroy Council met Monday night.
Mayor Clarence Andrews said
cow1cil was acting upon the recommendation ol the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce in allowing the
parkmg since the Chamber paid for
the pavill!! .
The parking will be allowed free
for 30 nunutes until meters are
placed in the area .
Meeting with eoWJcil was Grover
Arnold, Rt. 4, Pomeroy. who presented a bill for the loss of two tires and
two rims on his truck.
Arnold said Richard E . Stone,
Pomeroy, was driving his truck out
Mulberry Ave . when he hit a hole in
the street ruining two tires and rirriS
on the passenger side. Arnold con tended that the area was not marked
to be dangerous and an officer was
called to the scene at the tune of the
accident.
Council agreed to get the opinion
of the village solicitor as to whether
they could pay the bill or not.
Also meeting with council was Don
McKenzie, regarding the condition
of Pleasant Ridge . McKenzie in formed council that if the road was

not repaired unmediately tt would
have as a similar problem like
Laurel Street.
Council agreed to have rock
placed in the area today until they
can ftx the road permanently .
Mayor Andrews said plans called
to move the rock from Laurel Street
and place it on Pleasant Ridge
However, the Ohio Bridge Co , will
not begin work on Laurel until next
week.
Mayor Andrews and council members extended their thanks to the
children of the viUage for their fine
behavior during the Halloween

parkmg meters .
William Young, councilman, extended congratulations to the poli ce
department for the excellent c ontrol
of traffic at the Pomeroy- Mason
Brtdge .
The meeting was opened bv
prayer by Mayor Andrews . Attending were Mayor Ardrews . Jane
Walton , clerk. Betty Baroruck .
Brown, Larry Wehrung , Rod Karr.
and Young coWJcil members. Chief
Lyons, and Donnie Ward .

A W-year old Gallia County man
and two Gallia County juveniles
have been c harged with burglary in
coru1ection with a B x E last Saturday of the Herbert Elliott residence,
Rutland .
The two juveniles are in custody in
Gallia County while W-year old Roy
Jarrell, Rt. I, Bidwell, ts being held
in Meigs County Jail and will appear
later m Metgs County Court.
Sheriff James Prolfit, Gary Wolfe,
mvestigator, and Ca.-1 Hysell,
juvenile offtcer, spent Monday aftemoon and evenmg m Gallia County inveS'tigattng the incident.
Several Ga!lia Go uty officers and
Gallipolis Police officers assisted
with the investigation.
All Utree signed confessions adrrutting the burglary pus admitting
to burglaries in Point Pleasant and
Huntington .
A Browning bow and arrow,
pistoL~ and wristwatch have been
recovered
In other action, deputies are investigatmg the breaking and en tenng of the Meigs Local Bus
Uarage at Rutland. The mcident occurred sometime over ti1e past
weekend.
Notlung was taken however . spark
plug wires on several of the spare
buses were damaged and air was let
out of several tires. Two windows in
the bui lding were broken to gain entry .
Deputies are also investigating the
reported theft of tlems from taken
fr om several vehicles at Riggs Used
Car IA&gt;t at Chesler .
Ken Grover reported that
sumettrne after 11 p.m . Saturday
and I0:30 a.m. Sunday two tires
were taken from a stallon wagon, a
hattery from a pickup truck and an
a1r deane r from another pickup .
Mrs . Evelyn Well, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,
notified the shenff's office that
sometime during the past week
someone broke the lock from Ute out' Contmued on page 8 1

season .
Council also agreed to notify the
Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce
that uriless work on Ute permanent
stage on the upper parking lot starts
by Monday the village will move the
sand pile that is in the area .
Named to the Firemen's Dependency Board were Harold Brown .
William Young, secretilry, Olarles
Legar, chairman, Jim Sisson and
Kermit Walton.
Actmg Chief of Police Harry
Lyons subrrutted a report for the
month of Oct. The department made
30 arrests, issued 1,051 tickets, drove
4,566 miles. answered 264 complaints and coUected $3,058 from the

Ohio coal being used at power plants
"Not one Ohio coal miner has lost
his job due to envirorunenUII constraints imposed upon Ohio Power

,ffi 1978 and, based on our nine~nonth

Company," Charles A. Heller ,
uecutive vice president and chief
operating officer, said.
"The fact is that by developing
three new deep mines in
southeastern Ohio, we have created
about 2,000 new mining jobs in the
past few years," Heller said .
He added that Ohio Power conlinuea to use more and more Ohio
coal at Its three power plantalocated
in Ohio.

experience so far this year, we expect to receive about 10 miUion tons
of Ohio coal in Iil79 and continued
use of 10 million tons in 19110." he
said.
"Ohio Power has lL'Ied some low sulphur western coal wtth Ohio coal
at Gavin Plant near Cheshire since 1t
went Into service in the mld-1971ls, ..
he explained . " This westem coal
was wed to permit us to comply with
air aualitv rel(ulations proposed at

"

" We took delivery of 7.7 millton

tons olOhio coal at those Ohio plants

that time Those regullltions stnce
have modified ."
Heller said, " We now are in the
process of phasing out our use of
western coal at Gavin and that
phase-out IS expected to be completed in the early 1980s. In the
meantime we are increasing the output of our own three mines near
Gavin and are arranging for ad dittonal coal from area suppliers."
He ~ointed out that in 1979, Ohio
Power will increase its use of Ohio
cMI at Gavin by almost 2 million

Ions over !a ~t year .

" Ohio Power continues to be the
state 's largest user of O!uo coal, corswning about20 per cent of the total
c oal production,' ' Miller said .
.. It seems strange that so often
sUi tements made by politicians often shift the responsibility for their
acttons oo to the people and
organizations affected by those ac·
lions, " Heller said . "The uncertain
conditions that have existed for Ute
past few years have been due to the
unnecessarily stringent regulations
issued earlier by the U.S. En viron:nental Prot(l('tiOn r\gency ..

/

BREAKING AND ENTERING- The K&amp;C Jewelry Store located on
Pomeroy's East Main Street received extensive damage at ap.
proximately 2:30 a.m. today when two juveniles allegedly threw a brick
through the window and took seven watches. The juveniles have been ap.
prehended by Pomeroy Police. Six of the watches were recovered.

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�3--- The Daily Sen tmel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . 6, 1979
2-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . 6, 1979

Editorial opinions,
comments

In Washington
Reagan takes
By Martha Angle
and Robert Wallen

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WASHINGTON !NEAl - Before
this year is over, two very different
candidates are going to make President Carter wish he'd never heard
the word · ·malaise ," let alone mentioned it. One of them is Edward M
Kennedy and the other is Ronald
Reagan.
Kennedy has already taken issue
once with Carter's diagnosis that the
country ts suflermg a severe cas. of
malaise, and he will almost certainly do so again . But he won 't be alone .
Reagan, who is fmally about to announce his candidacy for the
Republican presidential nomlnation,
intends to build much of Ills campaign aroWJd a rebuttal of Carter's

pessimistic

assessment and

a

prescription of positive action lor
the future .
And wtille his tire initially will be
aimed largely at Carter, the GOP
front-numer is carefully crafting Ius
pitch to blame the entire
Democratic Party (mcluding Kennedy I for creating the mess we're in .
Tbe new Reagan theme · a sort of
can-do catalog for the 'Ills ' will be
sketched in broad strokes in his formal announcement speech Nov. 13, a
half-hour oration to be televised in
prime time on scores of sta lions
across the nation from which the
Reagan camp has purchased air

time .
(Reagan had sought to buy 30
minutes of network time, but all
three networks turned him down just as they turned down a surular
request from Carter for his Dec . 4
announcement. Carter 's campaign
is now trying to get the Federal
Conununications CommissiOn to
force the networks to sell them time .
but Reagan's staff simply went out
and bought it themselves , station by
station.)
Tile former California governor
will explicitly reject the notion that
Americans are suffering some
nebulous "crisis of confidence," that
we are entering a new " age of
Umlta" or that we must adjust to a
lower standanl of living .
It is still possible, he will insist , to
expand the economic pie enough so
that no one must settle for a smaller
slice . But for now, he will offer few

•

specifics .
Gone from The Speech 1Reagan
aJ ways uses one baste te•t with
minor variations to suit each audtence I will be his old trademark , a
snappy line of anti-Washington pat ter . As campaign manager John
Sears recenUy oooerved, Jimmy
CeC:er's performance m office has
given outsiders a bad name and
created a new premium on e• perience .
Missing as well will be any
acknow ledgment that the GOP
nomination is not already in the bag .
Reagan plans to run agairu.t the
Democrats, simply ignoring the
half-dozen other Repub li cans
generally ranked as serious contenders for the honor .
Most of his primary opponents
ha ve been campaigning furiously for
months now, but even after his for mal entry, Reagan will not go flatout until the first of the year . He
plans a four-day coast-to-&lt;:oast barn storming tour right after his annoWJcement and "a couple of trips "
later on , but that 's about it until
January. He has no desire to " peak "
too soon, always a danger for the
front -runner .
From the outaet, Reagan's principai vulnerability has been his age
- he will be 69 next year and if
elected would be the oldest person
ever to assume the presidency. His
stra tegisis insist the press worries
more about his age than the voters
do, and note wryly they can't very
well change it in any event.
What they will do, however. is to
seek to refute any implication.• of
flaggmg energy , poor health or the
like by putting Reagan through a
fairly rigorous schedule when he
does camp111gn and by utilizing his
extraordinarily outhful television
image to the tillt. " When he's on that
tube , the last impresston you get is
of an old man, " one aJde satd.
The other GOP candidates Howard Baker, John Connally,
G&lt;!orge Bush, Robert Dole, Ptulip
Crane, John Anderson, etc - have
felt all along that Reasan 's huge poll
lead will melt away when he gets on
the griddle with the rest of them .
Starting Nov . 13, they - and
everybody else - can begin testing
that assurnptton .

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Capitol ideas
WASHINGTON 1AP I - Howard
Henry Baker Jr .. who ts off and
running for president . likes to tell
the story of when he was a young
lawyer in private pra c ti ce in
Tennessee 2JJ years ago and he
agreed to help his father-in -law
campaign for Richard M. Ni•on .
Nixon, then vice president, was
running for president agamst Sen .
John F . Kennedy of Massachusetts
Baker's father-in-law , Sen .
Everett McKinley Dirksen of
illinois, was Republican leader of
the Senate , a job Baker now holds
Despite the fact that both his
father and stepmotller had served in
Congress, Baker seemed happy
practicing law _ He was a veteran of
World War II and, like Kennedy, had
served on a PT boat in the Pacific .
As Baker now recalls it, his job in
the 1960 campaign was to drive
Dirksen aroWJd Illinois and listen to
the senator make speeches praising
thl'
Republican
presidential
nominee and would add a nice word
about Kennedy.
A nlce yoWJg man, Dirksen would
·say of Kennedy, but his only visible
qud to be that he had served on a PT
boat in the Pacific.
''I have a son-In-law who served on
a PT boat in the Pacific, " Dirksen

would add. .. And as far as l know
nobody has ever suggested electing
him to anything ."

J
nil!: DAR.V SENTINEL
(USPS I~)

A.'ID HE N£VER HAD

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Farm income will
fall sharply • • •
WASHINGTON (AP I - Farm
inr&lt;m e in 1980 is expected to fall
sharply after two boom years, the
Agnculture Department 's top
forecasters say
They predtcted a drop of perhaps
20 percent in net farm income, from
this year 's expected $30 billion to tlle
mid-$20 bUlion range .
At tlle same time , the forecasters
said , consumer food prices could
ris. a nother 7 perce nt to II percent
and farm e&lt;ports - the mainstay of
producers' prices - could clunb 19
percent to $38 billion .
In 1978, farm income jumped by 40
percent from the depressed leve ls of
1977. This year, net income is
e&lt;pected to be up by 7 percent to 14
per ce nt
despite
double-digit
inflation in farmers' expenses.
The new estimates show that
USDA expects demand for tlle raw
food tllat farmers supply to remain
strong . But the forecasters said
there are apt to be only small gains
in cash receipts for c rops and
livestock
Those gams will be swamped by
further price increases for fuel
fertilizer and other farm produc tio~
expenses. they said in speeches at
the department ·s annua l outlook

conference.
In a summary of tlle agricultural

The Senate for eign Rela tions
Committee sessions on the SALT II
treaty have proven frustrating for
Sen . Jesse Helms, R-N .C., a hardline opponent of the agreement .
Recently. wtille tlle committee has
been considering various proposals
walter the treat y or add language to
1t. Helms has rarely taken part .
" We 've got a one-way street gomg
here in the presentation of thts
treaty and tllat's why I've got no
part of it." tlle senator explained tlle
other da y.
He lms was parti cularly upset by
tlle fa ct that U oyd Cutler, the White

finan ce picture for the opening
sess10n. t he Economics . Statisti cs
and Cooperative Service put it
gentl y:
"The financial con dition of the
nation 's farmer s has shown record
Imp rove ment this year. but a
leveling ma y occur ne&lt;t year ... In
1980, net farm ineome could declin e
sharp ly ."
.. Although a ny forecast now is
ve ry tentative, small gains 1n gross
farm receipts coupled with arl&lt;ltller
big rise in production expenses could
mean a substantial declinf iJi net
income. perhaps by :rfifth, " the
s urrunary continued .
"Off-farm mcame may be slightly
lugher but not nearly enough to
offset any Significant drop in farm

House counse l, attends the sessions

income. Howeve r . asset values are

and defends the administration
position, while opponents have no
comparable person to support their
side .
When Helms voiced his complaint
at a recent session, Sen . Joseph
Biden , D-Del. , a treaty supporter,
said the North Carolinia n seemed to
be suggesting that Senate opponents
couldn't hold tlleir own against
Cutler.
" I'd be offended, Sen . -I Richard )
Lugar , if I were you," conunented
Biden to the Indiana Republican,
who has played a leading role in
urgmg SUBstantive changes tn the
arms control pact .
That set Helms' temper flaring .
" ll you want to get personal about
this ." he snapped at Biden. "we can
do it here or in the hall ."
Biden never took up the challenge .

also likely to show same gain
I Bull the uptrend in th e overall
finan cial condition of the farminb
sector may be mterrupted tn 1980 ."
It concluded .
A year ago . USDA predicted net
returns this yea r at about the same
level as in 1978 - rather than the $2
billion to $4 btllion gam that has
occ urred in th e face of record crops
a nd
near-r ecord
liv es to c k
production .
Th e eco nomiSts noled that
[anner s generall y are repa yi.n~
debts on sc hedul e . Credit IS
"e xpected l o con ttnu e to be
generall y adequate durin g 1980. The
amount of money farmers borrow IS

not expected to be affected very
much by the higher interest rates ."
WA SilfNG TON

1AP1

-

US

Food prices will increase in 1980
WASHING'; ON ( AP) - The
Agriculture Department Monday
forecast increases of up to II percent
in_ food prices next year, coupled
With a sharp decline in farmers'
incomes .
U food prices rose that much for
the second straight year, consumers
in 1980 would be paying more than
twice what they paid for groceries
and restaurant meals a decade
before .
Net farm income was forecast to
fall by "perhaps a fifth " after two
years of strong increases .
A projected 11 percent hike in
overall production costs is
responsible for the gloomy outlook
for farmers , whose financial
condition " has sholo"n record

impr oveme nt tht s year." the
department's Economics. Sta tistics
and Coopera ti ves Serv1ce said .
TI1e detai ls of the first offi cia l
food-pri ce estimates for tlle new
year were betng held unti l Tuesday 's
sessions of the department's annual
outlook co nference .
But a sununary of the prospects
for agriculture said, "Retail food
prices in 1980 should rise 7 to 11
percent. "
" Most of the rises will be caused
by mcreases of about 10 percent for
labor and packaging and eontinued
sharp increases for energy used in
proces;ing and marketing, " it said .
"Transportation costs also will be
sign ifican tl y higher."

exports of farm products this fiscal
year could be val ued anywhere
between $35 billion and $4Q billion
but are officially forecast for now at
$38 billion .
The $38 billion figure would be a
gain of roughly 2JJ percent over the
almost $32 billion shipped in the
fiscal year that ended Sept. 30. An
export total anywhere m that range
would set a record for the lltll ·
consec uti ve year .
The 1979-80 predictions from th e
opening session of the annual
Agriculture Department outlook
conference Monday included $5 .3
billion in e•ports to Japan and
record grain sales to the So viet
Union of about $4 billion .
Agricultural imports are expec ted
w increase less rapidl y, leaving a
farm-trade surplus of about $20
billion . The 197S-79 balance was
about $15 8 billion, partially
offs.tting a deficit in other trade of
about $40 billion, officials said .
Ou tlook board chairman J .
Dawson Ahalt said exports will
reach the $38 billion mark " unless
domestic transportation problems
overwhelm us " as shippers try to
move an unprecedented 16 per cent
more grain, oilseeds and other
commodities .
Most of the growth will come from
e.ports of 15 million to 20 million
wns more of grain s, shipped at
higher prices, said Thomas R.
Saylor. associate administrator of
th e Foretgn Agricultural Servi ce .
The board said that 1979-80 exports
will be closer to $35 billion " if the
slowing in economic activit y tn
major importing countries is more
severe than anticipated, lf grain and
oilseed crops are larg er than
expec ted
in
the
Southern
HemiSphe re and if an unusually
severe winter or other difficulties
disrupt
part
of
the
U .S .
transportation system ."
If India. South America , Australia
and other major gram producer s
ha ve s mall crops and the
tndustrtalized economies perk up,
exports will be closer to $40 billion, il
said .
But that would require the U.S.
transportation network "to function
at a sustained high-perfcrmance
level, which could be difficult," the
board said .
Ahalt satd the European Common
Market will continue to be the
lar gest market for U.S . farm
exports, taking about $7.7 billion
worth . compared with $7 .4 billion
last year .
Figures released later by the
department showed that Japan last
year retained its position as the No . 1
buyer of American farm goods, with
purchases wortll $5 .1 billion .
The 1979-80 totals fer Japan and
oth er key customers were revised
over the weekend . As late as Friday ,
for exampJe , tentative calculations
put Japan 's at $5 .06 billion ,
compared with an Aug . 17 forecast
of $4 .9 billion .
Shipments of farm products to tlle
Soviet Union last year were valued
at about $2 .22 btllion, up from $1.87
billion in 1977-78. Earlier projections
had predicted exports of abo ut r.u
billion last year .
The boost tn Russian purchases is
due to its sharply l9wer grain c rop .
"The final level of ( 1979-80 ) Soviet
in1ports ... and how much the Soviets
ooy from other sources ... is still to
be determined by the Soviets
themselves and by the effective
limits
of
their
internal
transportation," Saylor said .
Farm exports to Western Europe
totaled about $9.71 billion last year.
up from $8.6 billion in 1977-78 but
short of the $9 .8 billion projected 1n
.~ugust .

Today's commentary
Three Mile Island revisited
By DonGralf
There may be some question as to
what the commission investigating
the Tlree Mile Island actually accomplished, but none whatsoever as
to what it did not do :
Detennine the role nuclear power
is to play in our energy future .
That failure- if failure it is- may
be attributable to the inadequacy of
commission , or it may be a consequence of the complexity of the sul:&gt;ject.
The 12-man panel of scientists and
informed la)men took six montha to
wade through voluminous statistics
and analyses of the Pennsylvania
accident, inform itself to the extent
possible of the current state of the
art of reactor construction and study
existing government regulatory procedures .
The conclusion it came t o wa.• that
under the existing circwnstances,
''an accident like Three Mile Island
was eventually inevitable ." Further. even should the commission's
recommendations be adopted in
toto, there can be "no guarantee that
there will be no serious future
nuclear accidents ."
These recommendations' other
than the proposal tllat the present
five - man federal Nuclear
Regulatory Conurussion be replaced
by a new e&lt;ecutive agency with a
single director, are nothing more
than common sense precautions the
public should have had every right
to expect were being p~m&gt;ued before
Three Mile Island. They include
tighter safety procedures, better
training for reactor operators and
greater care in approving siting and
construction of nuclear plants .
The commission's six-month ef·
fort might appear to have brought us
right back where we started wondering where we go from here in
the development or not of nuclear
energy .
Maybe and maybe not. lf we
haven 't been given any .answers.
some questiOns have at least been
posed that may sharpen the focus of
public debate on nuclear power and
guide it toward an eventual consensus we can live with - no macabre
pun intended .
The commission is receivmg som e
criticism for allegedly letting the
nuclear mdustry off the hook by
passing no judgment on the hardware and techniques presently

employed in power generation, emphasizing instead the human factor
of the Three MUe Is land acc ident. It
sees errors on the part of reactor
operators, compounded by the
follow-up . performance of the
Nuclear Regulatory Commission, as
having escalated an essentially
minor malfunction into a crisis.
But the human factor in a larger
sense may be precisely where the
emphasis should be placed if the
uncertainties about nuclear power
are ever to be resolved. Hardware
and techniq ues do not create
themselves . Rather than being
castigated, if the industry is spurred
to return to the drawing boards to
significantly improve both the Three
Mile Island story may have a constructive ending . The benefits of an
accident which did not become a
lethal disaster may turn out to have
been cheap at the estimated $1
billion or more clean-up, repairs and
damages may cost.
It is a quarter of a century since
nuclear power became a reality It
has not as yet delivered the wonders
its more enthusiastic proponents
predicted from it. But 11 has come
much farther than the skeptical
back then might have expected .
Some 13 percent of the national
electric power supply is now nuclear
generated . That is a substantial proportion , the loss of which would
cause severe problems . There are at
present 72 operational power reactors and another 90 are in various
stages of construction ..
The commission gave som e
thought to a moratorium on new
plants - a majority, in fact, is
reported to have been in favor . But
agreement could not be reached on
wording .
That may be an indic'lment of the
panel's divisi ons, but it might also
be taken as an appropriate renectton of those in public opinion on the
l.'lSUe of nuclear power at present.
Resolving them is going to take
some doing , but 1t must and will be
done. Three Mile Island has made
the public conscious of the issue as
never before . The real debate L~ just
warming up .
To put it tn a Churchillian context ,
the end or even the beginning of the
end are not yet in sight. But we may
now be seeing, m the momentum
provided by Three Mile !..land, the
end of the beginning .

Oiler lockerroom burglarized during 9-6 victory
MIAMI I AP 1 - The Houston
Oilers' coaches were yelling angrily
m the post ~ame locker room but
the Miami Dolphins' locker ;oom
was quiet - an a ngr y quiet.
Three field goals by Toni Fritsch
and some costly Dolphln turnovers
enabled the Oilers to escape tlle
Orange Bowl with a ~ victory
Monday night.
" We played good when we had to,"
Coach Bum Phillips said af ter the
game .
Suddenly , one-by-one, Philltps'
assistants began shouting as they
diseovered tll eir lockers had been
stripped of watches, wallets and
rings during the gaJne.
"I've heard of poor losers but that
beats everything," Phillips said .
The victor y m arked the fourth
time this season a Fritsch field goal
provided Houston 's winning margin .
He tied th e game with a 4&amp;-yarder to

open the second quarter, broke th e
tie with a 411-yarder with 5:05 left in
the third quarter , then opened a 9-3
lead with a 39-yarder just before the
quarter ended .
"Toni , I think, Is the best kicker in
the league ," Phillips said of the 34year-old Austrian who has hit 15 of 17
field goals this season .
Rookie Uwe von Schamann belted
field goals of 32 and 51 yards and was
warming up for a potential gametier with two minutes left and the
Dolphins at the Houstoo :aJ. But on
second-and-7, linebacker Gregg
Bingham picked off a Bob Griese
pass at the 15 and returned it :&gt;4
yards to clinch the game.
Griese, under fire through most of
what's been one of tlle worst slumps
of his 13-year career , said : "Of
course, that 's the worst thing in the
world that could have happened in
that situation . I didn't plan it that

way . Bingham just made a g reat
play ."
Houston
quarterback
Dan
Pastorini , no stranger to cr iti cism .
agreed.
" It was one of those th!ng s : he had
tlle guy open and made the throw.
But.Blngham gambled and made tlle
interception . Knowing Bob Griese.
he could make the same throw 100
times and it would not happen
again ," Pastorini said .
Griese's teammates weren't as
quick to defend .
" We just choked up We didn 't
challenge them with our play
calling . We played a contender and
we choked up . We played
conservative instead of taking the
challenge to them," said wide
receiver Durie! Harris .
Harris set club records the
previous week witlllO receptions for
180 yards but didn't catch a pass

Monda y wh ile fellow w1de re&lt;:t:lver

Nat Moore had just two receptions .
" 1 on ly got the ball thrown to me
twtce all night," Harris sa1d . " I
know what I can dow help this team ,
but if I don't get the ball I can't help .
It 's frustrating w work hard all
week in practice for !Ius ."
" We took what the y gave us - the
short stuff to the backs . They we re
do ubl e
covenng
the
wide
receivers," an armoyed Griese said .
' 'I'm getting tt red of he arin g
grumbling from my own team ."
Gary Davis, in the sta rtin g lmeup
while halfback Delvin Williams
recovers from two broken ribs ,
fumbled twice : at the Houston 15 in
the second quarter and at tlle

Top Twenty
The A P Top Twenty
By The Assoc•ated Press
The Top Twenty te d m s •n T ne
Assoc iated Press col lege football
poll , w i th f irst place vo tes 1n paren
theses, records and t otal po •nt s
Points
ba $ed
on
20191817161514131111 109 8 7 6
5 43 2 1
1 Alabama ( 461 8 0 0
1,29()
7. . Nebraska ( .4 ) a 0 0
I, 190
J Ohio State (81 9 0 0
I, 154
.4 . So Cal1tornia (7) 8 0 1
1. 15 I
5 Houston (1 ) 8 0 0
1,093
6 Oklahoma 7 I 0
911
7 Flor ida Stat eBOO
B97
8 Texas6 1 o
857
q A rkansa s 7 1 0
BIB
10 . M i chigan 8 1 o
746
II Brigham Young 8 0 0
676
12 Pi ttsburgh 7 1 0
573
13 Notre DAme 6 'l 0
536
14 Pu rdue 7 2 0
432
15 Washing ton 7 2 0
400
16 A uburn 6 2 0
17 Baylor 6 'l 0
155
18 Cle m son 6-'1 0
139
19 . So uth Carolma 6 2 0
10'1
20 . Wak e F ores! 7 2 0
73

Oakland sale rumored again
NEW YORK 1AP I - The sale of
the Oakland A's to oil mogul Marvm
Davis - a transac tim that would
Iring major league baseball to
Denver for the 1980 season - ts in
the works , The Associated Press has
learned .
In 1978. A's owner Charles Finley
attempted to sell the club to Davis,
but a number of obstacles arose and
the
deal
fe ll
through . A
knowledgeable baseball source said
Monday tllo.'le obstacles had been
eased and the sale is virtually
certain to be completed thts time .
Indications were that Davis has
begun assembling a management
team for the club and that AI Rosen,
former preSident of the New York
Yankees, would leave his current
post with an Atlantic City casino
hotel w head the operation .
"I am flattered that anyone would
consider me for an executi ve job in
baseball," said Rosen
A published report said Cedric
Tallis, former general manager of
the Yankees. would join Rosen in

management of the Denver dub.
The source sa id negotiations
should be wrapped up some time tllis
month, allowing the deal to be
presented to the American League
in December during the annual
baseball meetings in Toronto .
Davis was reported in CaWornia
and unavailable for comment.
Finle y was asked twice for
reaction to tlle prospective sale
Monday .
The first time , he said : "No

conunent. The club is for sA le .
That's all I can say ."
Later. he said : " I wish I could tell
you it (the reported sale) was true,
but there's no truth to tlle rumor
whatsoever. There's nothing to that.
I don 't know where it originated ."
"Alii can tell you is, yes, I talked
to Marvin
Davis and
his
representatives some time ago and
tlle entire situation depends on tlle
possibility of working something out
with tlle Oakland Coliseum with
regard to the eight years remaining
on the 1 A's) lease ."

Jack Mal tester, a member of tlle
Coliseum board, said he hadn't
heard anything about a sale .
In 1978 baseball apparenUy had
reached a $3.25 millioo settlement
with
Oakland
Colise um
management, freeing tlle A's for
sale to Davis and movement to
Denver . Part of the arrangement
called for the neighbocing San
Francisco Giants to play a portion of
their home schedule - as many as
40 of the 81 home games - in
Oakland .
The agreement fell through when
Finley refused to accept certam
clauses which baseball insisted be
included in the settlement, includmg
a waiver of his right to sue tlle
commissioner .
All of Finley 's law suits have since
been settled or dismissed .
The A's, however, have continued
to falter at tlle gate . While baseball
was attracting a record attendance
of 43 million last season, the Oakland
club drew just 306, 71\.l

Houston 48 m the ftnal quarter .
"There 's no excuse for the way I
played . It really bothers me thai I
didn 't do the job wh en I had a chance
w," Davis said.
Ironically , Davis was the trainmg
camp roommate this yea r of i
fullback Leroy Hams unW Harris
was traded to Philadelphia . Harris
fumbled twice in the Dolphins' 17-9
loss to Houston in a wild-&lt;:ard playoff
game here last season .
Formidable Ear l Camp bell ,
slowed to 41 yards tlle prev1ous two
weeks as he recovered from a tll igh
bruise. gained 121 yards on 32
carnes to become the fir st runnmg
hack to break 100 yards agamst the
Dolpluns this season .
But overall, Mianu 's defense was
solid, holding Pastorini to z:; yards
passing and three tim es stoppmg the
Oilers without a first do wn m the
thrilling fourth quarter .
"Our defense played tll eir guts
out. getting the held position many ,
man y times for the offense to scor e
some points," sa1d Coach Don Shula .
"But we rea lly hurt ourselves with
fumble s and tnter ceptions . The
mterce ption at tlle end was tll e on ly
thmg we couldn 't lei happen and we

n'

Monday ' s Sports Transact•om
By The Associated P ress

BASEBALL
American league
TO RONTO BLUE JAYS - A c
qu1red oom1ngo Ramos , 1nh el der ,
from the Texas Ranger5. for an u n
disc losed amount of cas h Se-nt DAve
McKay , in f ie lder , 1o Syu1 c use of t h e
International Leagur;

National league
LO S AN GEL E S DODGERS
Named Danny Ozark third base

did ."
The victory kept the 7-3 OUers tied
with Cleveland, one game OOhind
Pittsburgh in the AFC CentraL The
Dolphins, 6-1, fell a game behind
New England in tlle AFC East .
Miami has yet to beat a team wltb
a winning record.
"To get to where we want to go at
the end of tlle seasoo, we have to
start beating some winning teams.
Ton ight was a good time to start,"
SIIUla said .

HAVE YOU HEARD

BAKER'S

RADIO

Local
howling
Th ursday Sw H'Yt&gt;ro:,. League Stand
1ngs tor Nov I. 1979 or e as tal low s
Team
Won LM1
M E Jonnson Su pe,..mk 1
S-4
18
H&amp; C Plant F ood
48
24
Jonnsons Market
38
34
Hoc k enberry Pharm
JS
37
C&amp;N Parts
23
.49
Pr esc ript ion Shoppe
'1'1
50
High Ga m e and Ser1es M E
Johnson Supermarket . Ooal Cas to
219 525. H&amp;C Plant Food . Luc il le
H 1cke nman
183 452
Johnson ' s
Marke t,
Vond d Jo rd an 164 452
Hockenber ry
Pharma ci es,
Joan
Chasse 175 4.45 C&amp;N Part s, Ra c he l
Whit eh air
156 370
Pre c r 1pt ion
Sh oppe , F lo An ne Ri ffl e 143 . Sh1rley
snooe 390
SPI1 ts Converted
Opal
Ca sto
"7 9 10, Flo Anne R1llle 7 9, Bon n1 e
German 5 10. Golda Pian and
Luci lle Hickman 3 10

AUCTION
Wed., 2:15P.M.
WMP0 -1 390
On Your Dial!
Buy a1 your price
Chairs - Tables

Lamps

- Mirors

Clothes Hampers
Wall Plaques - Mat-

tresses - Rugs - Card
Tables · Step Stools Radios

Tape

Recorders - Pillows Lawn Furniture Book Shell - Toy
Chests
Desks .

These are a few of
the items we h.-ve
sold on the Radio
Auction .

BAlCER
FURNITURE
Ml DOLE PORT, 0 .

Business mirror
NEW YORK 1AP 1 - Because of
your failure to cooperate. the
recession has been delayed . But it
will come, and with a vengeance .
Your penalty for otlst1118ncy is a
deeper downturn than was origmally
e&lt;pected .
That sums up tlle attitude of many
economists who are a bit chagrinec
at having forecast a recession for
right now Some even went further
saying the recession had come. and
now they cannot erase the verdict.
What actually has happened to tlle
economy this year is a mixed bag of
advance and retreat, expansion and
contraction . Consistency has been
tlle absent factor in the economy
and. you might say, in forecasts too .
In a report to top corporate
customers two months ago, tlle
Chase Manhattan F:conomics Group
commented: "It is now clear tllat
tlle U.S. economy finally turned
down some time in the first half of
1979."
f.e1 f Olsen, chief Citibank
eco nomist, went on record in May
With the opinion he wouldn 't be
surprised if a recession hadn 't
already begun . Albert Co x
pr es ide nt of Merrill
Lyn ch
Economics , said in August that "a
recession began to unfold right aher

last Christmas ."
Most embarassed of all is tlle
Carter administration , which m July
forecast both double-digtt tnflation
and a r ecession for tlle year and
then , in August, re vised and
dee pen ed it s gloomy reces ston
outloo k.
Those who have made su ch
for ecasts aren't defenseless . Just
what is a r ecession isn 't clear and
probably never will be , and so it is
entirely possible for somebody to
maintain and defend his or her own
defmition .
In fa ct. if there is such a thing as a
one -quarter
recess ion
the ir
correctness might be conceded,
because total output of goods and
services shrank by eight-tenth a
percent in the second quarter .
Whatever , those forecasts or
estimates were made Sll.'lpect by
figures showing a decided expansion
m the third quarter . In September
alone tlle index of leading economic
indicators rose almost a full point.
Shorty alter the tllird-&lt;juarter
numbers were anno unced the
National Bureau of Eco~omi c
Re search , arbiter of when a

downtWil is or is not a recession
cancelled a November 7 meetln!i
with the media .

Berry's World

CHUCK

SUPERIORS

ARM ROAST. ...... JP:.'1 39

FRANKIES ....... Jt9b.. 99e
BLADE CUT

CHUCK ROASI ... ~; ..'l

19

BONELESS

CHUCK ROASI ....~·..'1

49

GROUND

PORK STEAK ......~~:.'1

19

PORK ROAST. .....~~:.•1

°9

14 y,
ZAGNUT and
1 MIDLAND
0
1
DOG
&amp;
CAT
FOOD
...
A~
.5
/$1
°
CLARK BARS ........~.~~~-~~~·-~ ~~~-- 69tp iI TRAIL BLAZER
HEFTY
10 BAGS, FITS UP
I
99
25
I DOG FOOD ................. • ••L~~ •• $3
TRASH BAGS........~~-~~-A.~.C!:~~ ..99'P I
2

I
I
I
I
I

HI-DRI

ARGO PEAS &amp;

1 $100
PAPER TOWELS................... 49'P DEL MONTE WHOLE CORN. 3 cans
DAIRY

PRODUCE

-

DAIRY

-

DAIRY

2 o;. MILK..~~.':':~.~ . ~~~................... G.~~~~ .. -~~- .79
1
BUmRMILK ..~~.~~~.~!~~..............~2•• ~.~~~~•••• 89c

BANANAS

ICE CREAM.~~-~~~~~~- !~~9~~~ !:. ~~ ~~~~~ '1.39
2% MILK .....~!+..~!~~-.~~~.~~..~~~!1~ .~.~~~~.•• '1.69
EGGS ... .....VALLE.~ . fA~f!1.~. ~~~~.~. ~.. ~.~~.~ ..~~~~ .. 69'
1

4 LBS.

..

..

PEPSI
COLA
89e

2LITER

TIDE
49

oz.

-

--

RC OR
DIET RITE
COLA

FRIDAY ONLY

DR. PEPPER
~

8 PAK
SAT. &amp; SUN. ONLY

COKE
8 PAK
" Guess wh o 1s the ftrst hid on h1s block to purchase western foo twea r? "

99~

SUPER MMKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUMCAY .9 iu iu
Federal Food )tamps- we

KeseM

8 PAK 16 OL • .,,
Bli..S.
. Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

me Right To Limit Quantities

·-

-09.

�&gt;- The Daily Senttnel. Milddleport-Pomero) . lJ ., Tuesday . Nov

4-The Daily Sentin el, Middleport-Pumer&lt;J} . lJ., Tuesday . Nov 6. 197q

fi , 1!YI~

World Community Day service observed here
" Causeway ' : This Corrununity ,
USA " was the theme of the World
Conununily Day serviC'!' ce lebrated
by Church Women United of Meigs
County Friday afternoon at the Middleport First 8apti.&lt;t Church.
Speaker lor the service wa s Mrs.
Letha Proffitt, outreach coordJnator
of Community Action Agency . Introduced by Mrs . Thomas, president
of Church Women United, Mrs. Proffitt explained that the Community
Action Agency is a federally funded,
private nonprofit corporation with
the philosophy of eradicating the
paradox of "poverty amidst plenty ."
She mentioned some of the pro ·
grams available to the poor such as

food s t am p outreal'h, Pmt•rgcuq '
er wrgy HSSJstanc e. ht•(i d sl£trt proJ:! riJJH.'-1. wPathenz et tJon uf homes·
lian.spnrat1un . l'iothmg bank. and
rt'vl ewed somt! of tht• elJ g:l blilt y
glJidelmes .
Mrs . Proffitt reported tha t dunng
1978, outreRrh stall tr" veled 53,920
miles transporllng or assisttng 3,941
e&lt;:onomically disadvantaged persons 1n Gallta and Meigs Cou nty .
Free clothing was issued to 2,582
persons through the clothing bank .
The speaker noted that transportation seems to be a major problem for

Ole poor of

the two cowtties,
e;perially those in rural areas .
Mrs . Willis Anthony and Mrs. Paul

Snkjrt rcgJ.&lt;;tered the guest'&gt; fur the
worship ~rvwc It'd Uy MisS IUlcJ&lt;la
Hal l. Ernphast':i of the progn:un w&lt;1..s
on rel'ogruzing respon.-; ibl!1t y to Dr mg about justice and peace 1n the
global neighborhood through pray mg and shanng . There was group
Si ngtng of " Ttu s Is My Father's
World "
Taking part in the servu.:e were
Mrs . Joseph Cook, Miss Hall, Mrs .
Jame5 CnsweU, Mrs. William
Grueser , Mrs . EdJth Sisson . Mtss
Emk! Smith, Mrs . Amold Richards .
Mrs . Ervin Baumgardner . Mrs
~ark
McClung, Mrs. Everett
Thomas, Mrs . Dwight Wallace, Mrs
George Skinner , Mrs. Allen Hamp-

tDn .

Mr~-

Speaker set

/Jon Huruwl, Mrs Wllli ctlll

() )WJIII.',

Mrs .

Ptulllp

Metnlkl rt

FulluwJng a l.ttC~n y of Confesswu .
Uw group sang
· Amenc~ , tht:

HeautJ ful " and " Count Your BlessIngs , w1th the offerin g bemg taken
by Mrs Virguua Thore n. Mrs.
Millton Hood, Mrs . John Werne r . and
Mrs . Karl Kloes
Durmg the concludJng dedication
serv l£'e, tht&gt; ushers se rved br~ad to
the congregation as a symbol of
cmrunitment to look to the welfare of
others. The approXJlTUl tel y 6~ attendJng contnbuted $66 .13 whJch w1U be
used in the intercuntlllental mission
work of Ch urch Women United .
The B H. Sanborn MJsstonary

!Jelures K!lhcart , Akron , will be
when the third aru11versary
of the Pomeroy Chapte r of Women 's
Aglow r'eUowshtp "' he ld Thursd"y
at th e Meig.s Inn
Mrs KiU1cart '-" a nat1ve of North
Ca rolina , and she will relate her experie nc-es in the field of rellgwn
Reservations may be made by
caUmg 992-371 8; 992.,';859 ; 67:&gt;-3273 :
949-2.1~ or 446-7444 evenings . Dtnner
is $3 .50 a person . The doors will open
at 6 p .m . with dJnner betng se rved at
7p .m
~ peake r

Society of -the host ch urch served
cooktes and coffee followtng the service .

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

I
FLAG PRESE NTATIOI'-For the pa.&lt;t several
years th€ Winding Tra!l Garden Club ha &gt; ha d a CIVIC
planting on the Meigs County lnflfmary ~rounds .
Recently the Metgs Count y l'ormrus:noners erected a
nag pole in the center of the planting . and Monday the
American Legion AUXIIJary .Jwuor Untt , Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, prese nt&lt;"! a large Amen ra n nag .
Participating in the ceremony were from the left .

Rl chard Jones. Me1gs County Corrunissioner; Edgar
Van lnwagen , American Legion . Pomeroy; Jenni
!'ouch . .a junwr AUXJ!atry member : Auxiliary Mrs .
Allee Thompson . member of the Winding Tra1! Garden
(lob : Mrs . Margaret Parke r . garden club president.
!.aura Srruth. juru or .~uxill a ry member, and Harry
Da v 1 ~.

FLAG RAISING-Pictured with Edgar Van lnwagen of Dre w Webster Post 39, American Legion,
Pomeroy, a&lt; he raised the American nag at the Meigs
Cow1ty Infirmary Monday afternoon are left to right ,
Miss F.nna Srruth, Americarusm chairman for the
Auxiliary ; Patty Parker. Addalou Lewis, Wilma Ter-

a leKionncurc .

Turns one
SY RAC US I·&gt; -J e r emy
Dav t d
Busk.Jrk, son of Mr . and Mrs . Da vtd
Busktrk, Rustic Hills, SyracUS(' ,
C'!'lebrated tus ftr.,t btrthday on &lt;kt
24.
A buffet dJnner was ;erw d to Mr
and Mrs . Donald Hartiey , :'lew

Haven . W Va ., Jeremy·_.., maternal
grandparents;
Mr.s . Sherman
Husk1rk, Middleport . Jeremy 's
pa ternal grandmother . Mr . and
Mrs . Ma rtin Broder1ck . hts aunt end
uncle, Mr . and Mrs . Mike Busk1rk .
another aunt and uncle; Beth and
Ryan Busklfk . cousins. and Mr. and
Mrs . :-iorbert Neutzbn~. Mr and
Mrs . Clarence Hill. Mrs . John Hobbs

Anniversary gathering
honors the Roushes

"nd Jodi, Mr and Mr.! . Steve
Ha lstead. Letart, W. Va .; Mr . and
Mrs . Chet Young, l'ew Have n. W.
Va : Ms. Connie Gilland, Ma•on . W
V" .; Lewis Hall , Ma;;on, W. Va .; J oe
Muc k. Nitro , W. Va .: and Jeremy 's
great aunt . Dymple Cockrell ,
Ele" nor , W Va .
.Je remy was presented a Winnie
the Pooh cake baked by Sharon
Stewart . SendJing glf(.&gt;; were .Jay
Bus kirk, a coi!Sin, Mrs . Ruby Harmon. Titusville, F1i:j., his great~ reat-aunt. and hJ s Grandfather
Bus kirk .
Jeremy was also the guest of
honor at a party that aftl'rnoon at
the home of Mr . and Mrs . Norbert
:'letuzling, Middleport. Those attencbng were Valerie Connoily , Missy
and David Neuulmg, Michael Van
Metl'r. and Beth and Ryan Husk.Jrk .

Mr. and Mrs . Albert Roush were
honoring recently on th€ occasion of
their 43rd weddJing anniversary with
a family gathering and party
Present for the observance were
the1r four daughters and three sons
wiU1 their familie5. A daughter,
Kathy, died in 197~. Jeff Matheny,
stationed with the U. S. Air Force in
the Philippines , and Curt Matheny ,
Jacksonville, N.C. , grandsons, were
unable to attend as was one great grandchild . Bonita Maria Matheny
of North Car olina who was one year
old on Mr. and Mrs . Roush's anniversary, Oct . 12.
Cindy Matheny and Lisa Roush
baked the anniversary cake wtuch
was served foil owing a buffet &lt;lin-

The perf .,ct w ay to s how your love
~~~~~

2 } ·) ''-I) - ~ .;·. c ~ ~
3-" / · ~e~ 0/ l
2· .;!·}
.;l. -. ~
j

5

··· &amp;.

~~~~~

'

A Ke ep sake d 1amon d ~ n yagement nng 1&lt;;
the p e rf ect way to sr o w yu ur love
K ee p sake qurt r etnt ees t-ach ct~ nt e r d 1a rno n cJ
for ftn e w h tle co lor perlf~ct cf a r lt~· and co rre c t
modern c ut
K eepsrt k P. Wh~r1 11 ~ l o r ke ep s

CHRISTMAS
LAYAWAY

&amp;e~ake
H.•'1t''''' n.J [)l,llll&lt;&gt;ml

H,n"'

91!~
)1, E

MAIN

....

POMEROY

'

~~EDOM

IIUJOF

CHOICE

CORNERSTONE
OF OUR
INSURANCE STORE
Some insura n~..· c a~e rn ' nfl r r t hl' polt L' tn of :1 ... mgle 1w-.u ran '-t.'
comran y. And that \ n ~a ~ L v~_.· ry good lil "ura nct: (.·om ran~
o ffrr~ pohuc' that p rrn •de n:n· ll cnt hcne f ih tn man ~ pnlrlc .

But here

Jl

rhe

lll \ LHa rK C "I CI Il' \\ (."

nl fer

rell , and AI.Jce ThomP"on of the Winding Trail Garden
Club. The nag was presented by the Junior American
Legion Auxiliary unit of Pomeroy to the Winding Trail
Garden Club which for several year.! has maintained a
plantmg on the infirmary front lawn .

nl t)rt'

Final bazaar plans made

Holiday
projects
planned

1\1 rs. Hes.1ic K in.r:

Named deputy
grand matron

Holiday projects and re membrances we re plannoo at the
Wednesday night meeting of the
Am e ncan Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney -Fle nnett Post 128, Mid dleport .
Dunng the meellng conducted by
Mrs Erma Hendricks , president,
the group decided to remember the
19 veterans at the Arcadia Nursing
Home at Chnstmas. The urut wUl
donate SJO to each veterans hospital
in Ohio lor Christmas candy , and
will also send $10 to the Huntington .
W. Va . veterans hooptlal.
It was noted that all packages for
the hospitals should be mailed by
Nov 1~ . Toboggans. gloves and
scarves were requested for the
Crulli cothe hoopital and eye glasses
and cases are to be sent to the Eyes
to the Needy .
Plans were made to make loot
IJags for the Da)1on Hospital. A
report was given on the Eighth
DL'ltrJct fall conference held on Oct.
II 1n lithopolis by Mrs . Gerry Parsons and Mrs . Etta Will .
Unit members will assist the
Hutland Post with their Veterans
I lay dinner on Nov II A luncheo11
WllJ be prepared for the roundup
tram Jegionna~res on Sat. Nov 10 at
the Milddleport post home .
The ve te rans party at the Athens
Mental Health Cen tt'r was announced for Nov. 1~. with the Ctullicothe
hospital btrthday party to be held on
Dec . 6.
Mrs. Velsia Roush had charge of
purchasing gifts for the E ighth
Distnct president lor the reception
held Sunday in Lancaster . Chaplain
Peggy Caton dosed the meeting .
Mrs . Roush provided the door prize
which was won by Soma Par.lons . A
cornbread .and bean dinne r wa s
se rved to the AUJ&lt;.iiiary and
Legionaires precedmg the meeting
S)111path_v cards we re sent to Mrs .
Goldie Gilmore, Mrs Martha Hun nell , Mrs. Martha Hanel . a~d Jane
and Judy Gilkey .

V..'e are independent &lt;~gen t '- 'I hat tll C'a n ' \'-f:' are fr ee to rL'\'IC'"and rrcommend the [11..\ li '-' IC'-. '"'O\l' ragc a nd ~en· I LC\ o f
many leading comranies . . . likt.· The Co nt1ner11ctl ln . , ura ncc
Companr t''i , for C'ta rnpk . So yo u ha\(· a bet ter
chance to g_L't thl· lll'-urance pr01ertion that nartly fih
\ 'Ou r o;peria l requirement '&gt; .

ner . Attending were '&gt;1r. and Mrs.
Virgil (Geraldine I Pa.-~ns. Kim
and Lois Roush , Pomeroj; Mr. and
Mrs . Bill rJoan 1 Hudsor. and Cindy
Matheny , Jacksonville, N. C. ; Mr .
and Mrs. Larry (judy) Flowers,
Pickerington, Mr. and Mrs. Dale
Roush, Sherrie and David, St.
Albans; Mr. and Mr.; . Roger Rouah,
Doug, Susie . and Roger II, Grove City; Mr . and Mr.!. Lanny (Becky)
Tyree. Lanny, Jr ., Jenny, and
Charlie, Pomeroy : Mr . and Mn.
Kenny Roush and Jason , Pomeroy :
Kevm and ~ Srruth, Pomeroy ;
Mr . and Mrs . Leonard Miller and
Aaron . Leon, W. Va . : and Mn.
Gamet Herdman Leon, W Va

Mr.! . Bessie King , Bradbury Road,
Middleport, a past matron of
Evangeline Chapter, has received
the appointment of deputy grand
matron to District 2&gt;, Order of the
Eastern Star .
Doris Conley, worthy grand
matron of the Graod Chaptl'r of
Ohio. announced the appointment at
the annual Grand Chapter session
held in Cleveland on Nov. I.
. District 25 of this Grand jurisdiction is composed of four counties ,
Athens, Meigs, Morgan , and
Washington, and involves 22 Eastern
Star chapter.! .
Mrs. King is the wife of Robert
King, a member of the Bradbury
Church of Christ. the Meigs Chapter
Order of DeMoley Mothers Club and
the Middleport Chamber of Com-

merce .
She works wtth her husband and
son, Tim, in King Builders Supply .
Mr. and Mrs. King also have another
son , Tom, Columbus, and a
daughter. Carol. Middleport, along
with two grandchildren, Nicholas
and Liberty Ann King.
Mr.; . King announces the litUe
school of Instruction for the line rf.
fi cers only to be held on Nov. 1! at 2
p .m . at the Middleport Mason1c
Temple.

Final plans were made lor the
bazaar to be held Thursday night at
the church and several donations
were made when the Catholic
Women Club of Sacrect Heart Church
met Thursday night at the church .
Mrs. Elsie Sutherland reported on
progre58 for the bazaar and It was
noted that serving wUI begin at 4 : 30
p.m . with the charge being $3 for
adults and $1.50 for chJidren, and the
games will get underway at 6 p.m .
Donations were made to the St
John Villa Diocesian Orphanage ,
$75; and to the Propagation of the
Faith program, $25. Mrs. Cathenne
Welsh preSided at the meeting which
followed the 7. 30 p.m. Mas.s and an
opening prayer by the Rev . Fr. Paul
Welton .
Officers ' report.s were given and it
was noted that cards had been sent
to John Mitch and Bumadette
Anderson. Mr . and Mrs . Anderson
have a son . Thank you notes were
read from Paul Andrews and also
read was a note from Katie Biron
with a donation toward the bazaar .
The int.emational affairs conunission chainnan presented a film,
'·sigaboy ", a small village on the
Philippine Island of Mindanao . The
film was regardJing the efforts of

greater measure r:i control over
their land and find a new solution to
their problems .
A report on the ewe deanery
meeting held at Burr Oak by Mrs.
Barbara Mullen and Mrs. Welsh . A
weekend retroot is being planned for
steubenville
The Nativity of Mary deanery
poUuck dinner meeting will be held
on Dec . 2 at 2 p .m . at St . Paul's
Catholic Church in Athens . Each
person is to take a covered dish and
pastor.! are invited to attend. Those
needling transportatioo are to conlact either Mrs. Welsh, 992-2226, or
Mrs . Gerruna Casci, 992-3173. Mrs .
Mullen will purchase the door prize
for the occasion.
The annual Cluistmas party was
scheduled lor Dec . 6 at6 :30 p .m . at
the Meigs Inn wi lh a turkey dinner .
Hcmemade gtft.s will be exchanged .
Reservations are to be made by Dec.
I with either Mrs . Welsh or Mrs.
~

Casci .

Barbara Horak reported that
there is a religious program on
WMPO at 6 am. from Steubenville
and she urged the members to listen .
Refreshment.. were served by
Mrs. Mary Morrow, Mrs. Mary
Kunzelman, Mrs.
Anna Bla

f!A

lo

. • .~ ....

~-'

SOl.JI'HEAST Ohio Garden Tractor Club Wednesday 7:30p .m. in the
scout building behind the firehouse
in Cl-.ester. All interested per.!ons in VIted to attend .
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, 7: JO p .m . Wednesday at the
home of Mrs . Sibley Slack . Mrs .
Harold Sauer to review' ' My MotherMysell", and Mrs . Carl Horky to
revtew "Evergreen ." For roll call
members are to gJve a memory of
mother.
11WRSOAV
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE at the
hall, Thursday, 7:30p.m .
STAR GARDEN CLUB, I p.m .
Thursday at the h!Ille of Mrs . Ann
OgdJin. Article on bird migration by
Martha Chapman. Christmas
decorations from nature by Lula
Levis, and tour slides by Mrs. OgdJin .
ANNUAL SACRED HEART
CATHOUC WOMEN'S'S CLUB annual bazaar with serving to begin at
4 :30p.m. and games at 6 p .m . Thursday Adults, $3; children. $1.&gt;0.

YARD SALE SET
The Rutland Church of God is
sponsonng a yard sale at the Robert
Eads restdence on Salem Street in
Rutland on Thursday and Friday .
Clothes, rugs, c urtains, bedspreads,
appliances, chiJdrens· clothes , grab
bags, shoes, Christmas decorations,
and stereo record albwns will be
sold
Now wt can cover your
insur.1nce ttrritory better

than evrr, bec1use now we

HUMANE SOCIETY
TO MEET
The Metgs County Humane
Soctety will hold its regular November meetmg, Thursday at 7:30p.m.
The ml'f'ting will be held at the
Thrift Shuppe in M tddleport.

c•n provide you wUh fine
prodLICtS from 1he Kemper
Insurance Compintes . We'll

Meigs Tire
Center Inc.
Will Stud
Recapped and

New rns
According
and Wut
Stat" l..aw
eriod for
·[l!!l start

Mon ., Tues .• Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30to5:00Thursdavtii112Noon

\OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
773-5592

!'-.

NOW.

MASON FURNITURE

H2 -SilO or m -su•

'&lt;I • "• '

WITH US

MASON FURNITURE
"YOU DON'T BUY A POLICY ,
YOU HIRE AN AGENT"

• &gt;'

IS RIDING

TRISTATE AREA

POMEROY , O

11JESDAY
SUTTON Township Trustees
meeting Bp.m Tuesday at Syr"cuse
Municipal BuildJing .
ELECTION DAV Soup Dinner, 9
a . m . to 6 p.m . by women of F'orest
Run United Methodist church at the
church. Sandwiches, beverages, etc .
HOMEMADE VEGETABLE beef
supper Tuesday lO a.m. to 4 p.m. at
Harrisonville Town Hall . Sponsored
by senior citizens. Bring contamer s
for carry -()lit orders of soup.
ELECTION DAY Dinner and fall
bazaar in social rooms of Chester
Methodist Church Tuesday . Dinner
served from II a.m. to I p .m . Bazaar
from 9a .m. to 7 p .m.
OYSTER STEW dinner at
Pomeroy American Legion follow ing regular meeting Tuesday at B
p.m. Membership roundup .
RUMMAGE SALE, Masonic Hall,
Chester, sponsored by U.F .O. of
Silver Ridge Community .
ARTS AND CRAFTS Fair Tuesday across from Chestl'r Fire House ,
sponsored by U.FO . of Silver Ridge
Conununity .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY LODGE 1&amp;1, F . and A.
M.. regular meeting, Wednesday ,
7 30 p .m. All master masons are Invited. SA 11JRDAY
HARTFORD PTO , annual fall
bazaar, Hartfo rd Elementary
School. Food, games, prizes, 3 to 9
p.m .
UNITED METHODIST WOMEN ,
Letart Falls Church, 7 :30 p.m .
Wednesday at the home of Mrs. Inez
Hill . lns!Bllation of officers to be
held. Short Program will be given.

THE CAVALRY

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE

214 E . MAIN ST.

I

ranners and mi.ss.ions to win a

SHOP

)

Social Calendar

Mason , W. Va .

to C.oio
Virtin
th~: ... ,_,
studd.ed
Nov. 1,

1979.

MEIGS r.,TIRE
CENTER INC.
John F. Fultz

992

find rile rigtu •uto,
homeownt!'rs, busineis •nd
othf"f' insurance coverages

to meet your needs .

DAVI~ICKLE

INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel
"Across from the

Courthouse in Pomeroy"
992-6677

Country fres menthol.
Mild, smo oth and.refreshing.

Re~-~n~ ·

FEDER4l

~Es~'l..\cE

COMP4NY

Warnmg Th e Su rgeon General Ha s Oe1ermmed
That C1gare11e Smok1ng Is Dang ero us to Your Health

KING 15 rnq · ,, .. t l rng lliCOII" .

' ~0 s

19 rnq "tar". 13 mg ntcot1ne. av. per c1garene. FTC Report MAY '78.

�•
6--- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday , Nov . 6, 1!179

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
and
Found
-Lost
------·--

WANT AD
CHARGES
Word! or- Under
Cash
Charge
1 00
1 1:1
l 50
l !10
l.IJ
2.Z:,
3 00
J. 7 ~

I~

! dAy
2 dl:ys
3days

I daya

EAch word oyer thP rrurumwn
1 ~ .-orda u 4 ~nl.ll per word per
day . Ada~ othe r than C'OOsecuUve di ys W'lll be r harKed at
the 1 day rale
In memory , card of nww
and ObJtu.ary 8 cents per word ,

$3.00 marumwn

ClUh In ad -

1vance
M obilt&gt; HOOle !~ale~~ and Yxn.l
II&amp;Jes are &amp;cCf1lle&lt;l ooly ..,th
cuh wtlh order ~ cent c harijl!
for ada carryt!lf! Bo1 Nwn be r In

Cart of The Sentl.nd
'I1V' Publlsh@r reserv~ thfo
righ t to edJt or rt' )et"l an y ad!!i
deem ed

obj ectiO n al

Th e

Publahcr 'lrlll not be respon51ble
for more than ()l'k tncorrm tn ·

I N L OV IN G memor y of our
deM i y b e loved husband ,
r a m er and gr andfather ,
Pau l L M cD anieL Sr , who
passed a wa y 6 m onths a go
t oday . N o vembe r 6, 1979
GOd . t orgtv e a sudden tear
A silen t WISh that you w ere
her e
Othe r s are taken w e kno w
Bu t he wa s ou r s and w e
loved him so
r a h1s r esting pl ac e we
w a n der
And f low Prs we placeo wi t h
c ar e
Bu t no on e rea ll y k nows th e
hea rt ac he
As w e tu r n a nd leav e h i m
th er e
m 1SS y ou dear ly and
Wi ll love yo u al wa ys
Sitdly m 1ssed b y wife ,
M a r gare t , Da ugtH er , Joyce
Jac k s i"l nd Fdmi ly an d Son ,
Pdul L M e Dan 1el, Jr a nd
F amily

w.e

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Ml(lda. y
.'loon on Saturday

ru..day

Uu-u F nda)

•p"'

thf- day bPfor l!' pubJIC8IIOO

LO ST SET o f keys . R tng
h as
Flagsh1 p
Bank
Rew ar d Cfq2 S515, as k f or

THE FAM IL Y of W l"
Burrough s, Sr , w1shes t o
e xprps s t he ir appreciat 1o n
a nd gratitude to the tnen
ds . relat ive s and neighbor s
tor th ei r prayers , flowers ,
f ood , ca rd s, wor ds of en
cou rageme nt and Chri st 1an
l ove , that h as been shown
d ur 1ng the t tme o f our
-wr r ow
Mdy God Bl ess
ea ch and ever y one f or the
g lory of Jf"s u s Chri st

LOST M ALE bl ac k an d
bro wn c ol tte Bas ti an Rd .
about 1 m ile tr am Rac .ne
A nsw e r s
to
Sparky
Reward 843 761S or ~4 9

) 455
LO ST tt ger c a t , neutered
mat e , fl ea c o tlar. ans w er s
of
To m my
to
n am e
Rew ard ~ 1 535 -t

Wanted to Buy _

OL D FU RNITUR E , 1Ce
box es, bra ss beds . iron
bees. desk s, et c , co m p le te
Write MD
hou seholds
Mill er . R 1 .t . Pom eroy or
c a l lm 77 f:IJ

OL D CO IN S, pock et

wt
c hes, c lass r •ngs . wed di ng
ba nd s, d 1am ond s Go ld or
si lvt&gt;r Call J A Wa m s ley .

74) 2331
SA W

logs

Pa ym ent upon d f&gt; l 111ery t o
our y ard , 7 · JO to 3 30 w ee k
day s B I an e y H ardwood s.
SR 339, B a rlow , O H 678

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Oso l

'-Your
'Birthday
NovemtMr T. 19'79
Fn endsr)op.:, .tnd d ~:OlX:•.:H •c"''· w otl
pl ay d m i!J O&lt; &lt;Oif' tho~ cotnontJ
¥e&lt;tr

n1 t 1elpu •y ?'OIJ l tt.t ll lP yo1n

qo al s Ma ny c on tacts , ou 11
COIJi d b e la b elecl s.h eer

SCORPIO

(Ocl.

M E IG S
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCI E TY '1'12
6260
Pet s ava1tabt e for
ad opt ion a n d mtormat• on
5e r v1(e

GU N SH OO T EVE RY
SUNOA Y I PM F AC TORY
CHO K E ONLY RAC I N E
G U N CLUB
NO
H U N TI N G ,
no
tres oass1n g w •th no ex
&lt;eP1•on s on m y propert y
Judy M cG r aw Se-lf

•nd ~ t&gt;

,,, c, ~

24-No't'

22 1

lnr g t&gt; n rHl ~' • Da n
s•ve 1erm s tud av l&lt;Hh
I uO&lt;
wan ts to tJ r 1nq about h• c; n1u&gt;q~
and w •ll l1 nC yo ur shc,ul d e• I&lt; "&gt;rl
D a • e t o lh111k

2960

Notices

111

GU N
SH OO T
Ra c in e
vo ru nt ee r
F •r e
Dep T
Every Saturd ay 6 30 P m
At their buildingin Bashan
Fac t or y choke guns on l y

o n rl vu u II bt: b OI{1 .tnl1 o r mll ~ri

Fo n d ou t mo oe n t wh ;;ll , , ., ~
ahead to r you w t he fe ar l o lto v.
Tl'vfl

ong yo ur

bn t hd ay b y

o;endi&lt;UJ

1w

1..0 ~ ~ or A sH o-G rri p r&gt; L£' 11 ~&gt;&lt;
Ma.11 $1 101 eac lll o A SH O Graph
Bo - 4 8 9 R a d•O C•ty S t &lt;1 t oon N ~

you r

G UN SHOOT e ve r y Sunday
12 DO Fa c t ory choke only
Cor n Hol l ow Gun Club ,
R u tlan d P r oc eeds donated
to Boy Sc ou t Troop 249

ANT I QUE S.

FUR

NITURE . gl ass,
Chin a,
anything . See or c a l l Ruth
Gosney , antiqu es. 26 N

2nd , M;ddl eport , OH
3161

99 2

SAGITTARIUS (Nov _ 23-0k . 21t
Do rn be nesotant aoo ut doong a
11tlle hOrse l radmq t o d a ~ 'r ou II
l 1nd o t her s to bf' verv tou ver d
11ve You cou111 en a up w it h the
be st o t the o a rga1r1
CAPRICORN (OK . 22 - J•n. 19)
Any agreement s wor ked ou t
tr.Kl Hy w1 1t benel rt b01h you and
the o ther p ar11e s "'~ o lv e d N eg o
!1fl le w rlh an e ye toward mut ual

gatn
AQUARIUS

(J•n

COUl d

h &lt;i vli'

'YOu

20-Feb.
a

,11

rl ilrlleiOUS

o p p o rt un• l y l oda) to stren g t hen
yOu r POSIII Qfl rfl d S11 U ii i i (H1 ltl it l
has an m ll uence on your ,.. o r ~ or
career Be r e ad~ to pr oduce
PISCES (Feb . 20-M•rch 20) You
coul d tu c k ·Ou l tooa ~ and lo m or
row thr o u gn tnends ano co n ta c t ~
you k now soo an,. Acce p t any
and all lnlf tla t•ons
ARIES (March 21 - Aprll 19) Sotro
tounaat •ons u m Doe ta•d to day 1n
ar ea s con t rr b ulrng lo 1o ur Nell ·
betng Your con sl ructrv f' eff ort!&gt;
will be amp!¥ re waroeo
TAURUS (A.pnt 20-M•y 101
You tt be luck,. to day '" s1tua
Iro ns rnlt" o lvrng ert her .- er ba l or
wntten c ommuniU lfl on No w ~ ~
the ume l o e r p ress an,.! h1 n g !ha l
you teet need s l obe sa rd
GEMINI {M•y 21 -June 20) Keep
all avenues to r g am w1d~ optm
today You s1and a good c nance
t o pr o ht mal er. all y and gel
som ethmg vou 11e been want1ng
CANCER (June 21 - July 22 )
There ·s a st rong poss•b• l•t y tna t
the ph o n e call or good new s
you "" e t&gt;een hop1ng to re&lt;"-eo11 e
w i ll ar nve today Don 1 lear t o
leave the n o u se You wo n 1 m oss
getllng rt
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) O ! llet s
w1lllreat yo u w1l h tu trn cnnsld e r auon at thiS 11me. ma ktng some
very n.c e th1ng s happen l o t 'Y OU
Ask to r a favor 11 you need one
VIRGO (Auv. 23--Sept . 22) 1 h ts 1s
not the lime to d ally wtt h your
smaller mterest s
You r bes l
chanc.es ot succ ess w1 ll c o m e
!rom major protects keyed to tile
tuture
LIIIAA CS.,t. 23-0ct . 23) H ave
talth in your self and what you re
IOoktng to att am You ·re go•ng to
De getting a lew break s !hal w •tl
make lh1ngs eas1er
~,.. EW SP .. P£fl

ED
BURKE T T Barbe r
Shop now ope-n lull t i me 10
M1 ddl e-port

CER AMI C CLA SS ES , Mon
day and Thursday , 7 9 p .m .
STart i ng T hursday , OCt . 25
Drehel's Ceram ics . 59 N .
2nd , M iddleport , OH Wl

5560
SE RVING
BREAKFA ST
a t Five Points 5 30 am to
l Oam . Biscuits and gravy ,
sa usage , ba c on - comp let e
br eakfast menu

N O HUN T ING on George
Fre e l and "s
Svrac u~ .

p r opert y ,

OH

G ET TOOAY 'S M A RKET
V ALUE
FOR DYOUR
GOL D O R SI L VER CON
TACT
ED
BURKETT
BA RBER
SHOP , MID
OLE PO RT

Auctions
B IG AUC TI O N every Wed ,
7 p m Ha rtf or d Commu ni t y
Center , Ha r tf ord , WV , 4
m 1lcs a bove Pom er oy
M ason Br •dge

A NTIQUE P OC KET w a t
c hes W i l ling t o pa y t op
dollar
C al l
I 59 2 2 ~73
ev en1 ng s

WA NTE D

J UNK

Ba t

t er.es. . r ad 1at ors . motor s.
au t o
t ran s
No Sunday
c all s 9.t9 256 J

Yard Sale

---'-'

POR C H
SAL E
S lttrl s
Wed , run s till a ll sold , Ou t
si de
C hr r s tma s
dec orati ons , brown v e lvet
pi c ture s and mi se items
Ka r t Kl oes . Col lege St ,
Syrttcuse . OH ~7 3014

G A RA G E

CLEARAN CE
Sale Thurs. .. Nov . 1 onl y
:M2B5 Flatwoods Rd . '1'1 2
7331 9 5

YARD SALE 3 mi tes south
of Tupper !, Plain s on Rt 7,
turn on C R 28 . 1 ~ mile , wa1
ch
for
s ign s .
N ice
children ' s winter c toltle s,
dishes and mi se Rain or
shine 8 30 am .. t o .t . OO
p .m Nov 8 and 9 Sc hul
residen ce . 614 6f:J 7 J336
YARD SALE , N o v . 6 , 7, 8th
at the Bruntv 's re si den c e i n
Pine Gro ve area F o ll ow
sign from Five Points Old
78
re co r ds ,
ant i qu e
phonoora :')h , 'd ishes , S&amp;P
s.et . mise 10 t ilt dark.

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLL OW, Engh sh
and Western Sad dltos and
harness .
Hor s es
and
ponies Ruth Reeves 614
698 ·3290
Barding
an d
Riding Lesson s etnd Horse
Care produ c ts
W e~tern
boots
Children ' s S.15 50
A du l ts S29 00
RI SI N G
ST AR
K e nn e l
Boar d 1ng C a ll 36 7 07 9?

P OO OL E

AKC
CHAMPION
sired
re g • s t er ed
Ge rm a n
Shepherd puppitos Worm e-d
and snot s started 7 wee ks
o l d l 75 742 23 36 .

b y Roger Bollen

197 6 L T D . good shape , 2 e)(
t ra
sn o w
t i r es ,
low
Ta k e
0 11 e r
m il e ag e
pay m en t s 98 5 -4 18S .

1973

OF A DOLLAf;?, WHY CO YOll

I'M ASt::1N0 FOR lWE'tlJY?

PONTIAC

G RANO

VI L LE .A door hardtop , e)(
ce llen t co nd i ti on Lodded
w1th e xtras 7-42 2880
1973 NOV A 350 -4 speed
P . B .• good c ondit10n After

6, 965 3541

\

1979 FORD F 150, 4 wheel
drive , fa c tory
topper
Auto _, P S , P B
$.6800

Phone 985 ·4339.

'i

,

.
!

1

-•

1971 FOR 0 L T 0 wagon ,
good co ndition , new t irtos
and ShOCkS . 5650. 992 6248 .

---·---1973 CHEVY IMPALA , new
tires, air conditioning , air
shocks , power steering and
brakes . Good cond i t i on
1966 Mustang , " speed , AM
FM 8 trac k . Cllrgars , c an
dy apple red 992 3493 or

'1'11 3391

~--

S/900 'I'll 1680

w Proffi t t f ar m , Pa r
tl and , O H S8 a hun d r ed a nd
S5 a hundre d

1914 TRAVEL TRAIL E R,
35 t t w itt1 o4 X6 expdnd o
S4750 30 4 BB2 2421

- - - -For
- -Renl
---Pom er oy
99 2 7479

POTATO ES

C

Large lot s Cal l

F I RE WOOD
F OR
No w l dk1ng or ders
del 1ver , 742 2056

EM E R G E N C Y

sa l e
W i ll

PO W E R

work , down
spouts , some concrete
work ,
walks
And
driewavs .

A PP LE S

H ON E Y
Fi flpatr ic k Or
ch a r d , Sf at e Route 68 9
P hone W il k esv il le, 669

5dJ 4

~1

TWO

B E DR OO M

mobil e h ome near R ac •ne
997 58 58 .
THRE E R OOM f urn1sl,ed
ho us e A du lt s onl y 997

lS9B

V. C. YOUNG Ill

GLA5TRO N BOAT 15 m o
o ld Good c on di t ion Has
m a ny e)(tr as SJ850. 949

2371
FUR

FI V E KITTEN S, 1 ca l •co, J
tabby , I orange rPd , 5 to 6
week s
old
P e rk y
Pomeranian colli e, fem al e.
bl ac k and t a n , good w 1th
c hildren , w o r m ed a n d
Shots . Bord er c oll •e t err1 er
type , 3 to 4 m o . al l b ldc k ,
wormed , shots Lo v eab le
husky
sheph e rd , small
fe male , c hec ked b y ve t .
spayed . all shots Colli , r ed ,
good with c h1lden Mat e
husky , tan , brown , bld Ck .
whlf e, sh o t s,
w orm ed
Short haired co ll ie ty pe
mal e, white and blon d ,
good with c t1 i ld r en . shot &lt;:, ,
wormed
c oc k er Sp an• el
b lond , I yea r ol d . ma le .
gooo with ch i ldren White
Gerham Shepherd fema le.
good w ith t hildren , all
shots Be agle t err ier type.
spayed , al l shots , good w1th
ch i ldren zlndoo r ca t . all
white, long ha i red 1 bl ue
ye
and l
green ey e
Fema le
Spayed . shots .
Humane Soc ie1y, 99 2 62f:IJ

G I VE

AWAY

Call for IPPf . or walk in .

949- 27-48 or

992·2367
Main St .

DEL I C IO U S A PP LE bu t
t er S2 50 pe r q u art
'19 2 6095 or 9 .t9 23 55

Ca ll

1971 vw VA N c amper , ex
c el l enl
conditi on
New
engi ne and parts , good
mil eage , c on s1der trade on
sm all c ar Ca ll 992 5236 a f
ter 4 J O p m

FOR SALE
XL Homehte
560 .00
1·MC(UIIOCh
$125 .00
l · Rem1 Yardmaster
"5 .00
1 New Fuel Oil Furnace
1 Good Used +&lt;elvinator
Refrigerator
58's.oo
1 Good Kelvinator
Electric Range sn.OO
New GEneral Electric
B&amp;WTV Only $99 .9S

POMEROY
LANDMARK
w . Carsey
Mgr .
Pone 992 -2181

Jack

~-·

iWOFING
Ro fin ~
gutten . and
cto .. 1 S. ... ·J Uh .
Free
~ st 1afl·s..
All work
IU.l · Jntf.'e- d . 20ye.arsex er• ,,c(' Call Athens,
oil ' : t, Genld Clark
97 -... 857 or Tom Hoskins
797 -2 74S .

BUILDING LOT S. I acre
eac h , Leading Creek Rd ., 3
mil es off Rt 7 Bypass
Signs VitatOE .
L ARGE
street
s.e wa ge
re li a bl e
99 2 5786

L OT on dead end
w ith
water
and
W i ll f inance to
couple at 9 Pe t .
No realtor s

SIX R OOM S etnd bath , on
Ch err y St , Syrac ue, OH
99 2 5989
ON E
AN D
three -fourth
ac r es , 5 room s and bath .
T a~e o ver payment5 985·

3590
ON E

LOT

150x200

1n

Syra c use 992 5044

L ARGE HOURS w;fh l arge
lot on Rt 124 in Syracuse .
Tom Clark Realty . S.W,OOO.
O' Brien and Crow Realfy .
992 7120 .

P LEASAN T,

304 6 75 4-424

For Sale
19 75

INTERNA T I O NA L

H EAV Y duty 1 ~ t on p ic k u p
fo r sale . 35 .000 m iles
Phon e 992-2176

sn.so

JOHN DEERE d 1ese l 2010
do zer
Outs ide m oun ted
bla de \ 5,000 742 2819
Sl x a wE"f&gt;k o ld pigs . sn ea
or a ll 6 to r S70 ea 61-4 b67

349 3
HOM E MAD E

QU I L T S

S20 , SJO an d UO Halt ~·zes .
full size and Qu ef' n size

742 2964
SIX

H OL STEI N s t eer
c a l ves Avg w1 400 l b 991

JQ7 4 HOND A C IVI C. 4 n ew
t1res , new paint iob , n e w
e xhau st sy" t em ".149 5 Ca ll
742 ·2211 , a ft er !'i, 7.t 2 220 1.

WO MEN ' S

CLOT H E S,

s1 zes 10 an d 14 Curr ent
dr es.sy st yles w orn onl y I or
2 t1m es 992 3283
JA E GE R 365 a •r com
pressor. S3,000 Sm a ll trt
a x le
equ1pme nt f r a il er .
S. 1500
15 Qd lion c herr v
pi c ker , S9500 38 ft flat
trailer . Sl500 U sed under
ground
st o rag e tank s,
s.uitable for c ulverts , 18 '
and 2-4 ' teng1h S Good 3.000
gal lon st orage t ank , S600
992 735.4 aft er 6 p m
U SE D

BE D ROO M

TRAILIR SALES
71110 Mont9om•r'f Rd
L '"c;I 1V III f

Oho o

61 ~ U9 41 H f ·~ "'"' \
1 Mol t-1 Eu! ~;~1 Wol~t l wdlf
~ UPE~

dozer . bll c khoe
Rf . l4J . Phone I (614) 696
7331 or 742 2593

A U TOMOBIL E

IN

SURANCE
be e n
c •n
y o ur
c e l l e d?
Lo s t
operlltor ·s l ice n se ? Phon e

'1'12 21'43 .
IN STOCK f or 1mmed1at e
delivery : variou s size s of
pool kits Do i t your self or
let us install for you 0
Bumgardner Sate s, In&lt;
992 S7l4 .

REYNOLD 'S

E L ECTRI C

Motors , rewind and repa1 r
992 7356. 561 Beech St .
Middlepor1 , Oh io
A&amp;H Upho tst er•no . a cro ss
from the Te .. aco Stat ion ,n
s vraucs.e . 992 374J or 9'91

BRADFORD . Au c tionee r,
Complete Servi c e Phone
949 ·2.S7 or 9491000 rac in e,
Ohio, (rift Bradford

POMERO.Y .O.

116 E. Second Stre.: .

S8, SOQ - 3 bedr oom s ,
b a th . nal u r et l gas , c rty
wat e r and 1 acr e l or
g ar d en or pl ay
THE WILD
Deer and
g ame land neetr For~ed
Ru n Lake Over l4ac re s
t o roa m ar ound on On I y
'&gt;.5 ,000
BARGAIN - A 9 room 2
s tory hom e that c an
make vour payment s.
t or y ou whtl e you live
ther e Why R en t?
MODERN
3
bedrooms , b ath , n1ce
kit ch en , f 1r epta c e 10 the
l 1v 1ng rt nd ful l ba se
me nt
AS k 1ng
jus t
S20.000
FAMILY HOME 4
bedrooms . 1, 1 bat h , 0 11
f urna ce , T P wa ter and
almost 5 acr es Wa n t
~o . ooo

STARTER

74x80

thr ee roo m
bu si ness
b u i l di ng with b ath ,
n afura l ga s, and c ity
water for on I y Sll .000

SYRAC.l,JSE

I 17

and
4 or
5
bE-droom hou s.e, bath ,
mode rn kit chen . natural
ga s for ced a~r hea1 , and
b a sement
~cres

S% DOWN WILL BUY
OU A HOME . V .A .
NOTHING
DOWN .
CALL
9!l · lll5
or
991 ·1116.

Hiiusing ·
Headquarters

PH . 'f4fi. - I.I.Y't

NEW

LISTING

Rutland , 1 st.(l.Q'_jrllme
and bri c k , .. bedrooms, 2
baths , 2 fi r eplaces ,
N .G . F .A, over l't1acre

S26 ,88 1. 00.
MIDDLEPORT - Love ·
ly tocation , 2 storv brick
and frame , S bedrooms , ·
patio, fenced yard, 1''1
baths, spiral stairc ase ,
many ,
many
extra
features .
RUTLAND MObile
home , 12' )(60 ', all under
pinning , freezer , air
c onditioner , lot can be
rented f9r SJ5 a month .
Sl, 900 .00 .
POMEROY Ranch
type home , J bedrooms ,
beautiful kitchen and
d i nino. storm windows
and doors , new s.w imm
;ng pool. 139,500.
10 ACRE FARM - Near
Long Bottom , newer
home, barn and otner
buildings, river fran ·
rage SJJ,SOO .OO .
ONE THING IS TRUE ,
WHEN YOU WANT
FIRST · RATE
SERVICE
IN
REAL
ESTATE. COME TO
CLELANDS ' REALTY .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr .

Rf l . 992-2 S41
Henry E . Clel•nd, Jr .
Ru . 992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Rn . 741·2414

FOR SALE

ELWOOD
REPA I R

• 1nsul~tion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
eReplacement

IF '{JU ca

n CARS

3825 .
S &amp; G Carpet C tean tng
Steam
c le a n e d
Free
es1imllte
Re aso n ab l e
r~tes
sc ot chguard
992
6309or 747 -1348

PROPER IN SU L ATION;,
chellper rnan heating oil.
Take advantage of a good
investment . Call 9'9 2 32 88
for more information

HORSE

SHOEIN G

'192 3288. ask
McClanahan

t or

C•ll

Darre ll

Mobile Homes · Rent
TWO

BEDROOM

pa r tly

furnished . Prefer middl e
aged or eldertv couple N o
pets , no childen 9'91 27-49

I

rAW N Y

U t VOUH

A lnnely guy rob b ed a

PAUPER
&lt;:&gt;r) tlE' cv uld tee !

b an~-&gt;

W AN TED

Fa&lt; IT, YOU MAY
B€ rXC.USW.

.,
. l.J

- - =1

I

Win ·

dows

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

·..,,,, ,1 ,
I 'I

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RUN , vo lJ

• •, 4

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I

DOZER . END
Lo a d er .
brush
hOQ
W•ll
do
basements. ponds . bru sh.
11mber , land c tear1ng
Charles But c her 742 2940

S EW I NG

I

I

HOLD IT RIGHT

Repa i rs ,
ser vtc e,
a ll
makes
992 228-4
The
Fabri&lt; Shop .
Pomero y
Authorized
Si nger Sa te- s
and Ser v ic e . We sharpen
Stissors.

'-

H\

THERE, MY GOOD

\\ , . ..., ,

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WEDNESDAY , NOVEMBER 7,1979
5 a_s.- Farm -R eporl lJ ; 5 so- PTL
Cl ub 13
6 IXJ-700 Club 6,6, PTL Club IS ;

jlli \ &lt;'d

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by THOMAS JOSEPH

It's been a lonq

39 Talk show

ACROSS
I Opposite

ti rne since I had a
chec14up ' A year
ma4be or two 1

rnediwn
41 T oday 's
42 Poem

6 To ttus pomt
11 Marketplace
f or Xenophoo
12 Plac e for
tugh Cs

14 Appears
IS Football
holder
16 Rite words
18 C'harlte

Chan's

WINNIE

nwnber

5 New Jersey

17 Coz y spot
20 K1nd of and
Zl F r ench n ver

6

Spam

~' a1r

to

CO !lib

32

var .

middling

~ Monk 's title

7 L a y bare :

23 H ea t source

poet.
8 I s humil ·

zs l 1t erar y b ots
27 &amp; rv&gt; r ed
food needs

1ated

Z8 I J! e :
for m

10 Demolish

n ver

son
19Get A · 1
treatment
21 Sebas tian ,

Yt'sterda}"s Answer
9 Native
of Y erev an

4 " Butterflies
- Free"

on~

HELP WANTED

SENIOR BOOKKEEPER

fcat urt'
33 A lo~· t&gt;l~
Tuesday
35 Endure
36 Sou th

Afncan
3Jl Bo rn
40 Pnm a t e

su 1te ,

and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
He•dquarten
Apptiances
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
11.ANDMARK
J~ck

w . Carsey

Mgr .
Phone 11'11 ·1111

ROCK SPRINGS
N ear M e1 gs ..WJn ::,cr.~"~· : - nice l ittl p sta r t er horne, '1 bedrooms. l iving room ,
dining r rn ' kl 1chen , tu l ly e-quipped , ba1h , basement,
f urn •tur e goes , t oo Jus t $25,000.00 .

6 . Ca r ol B urn e tt

Game 6 : JoKer 's Wild 8; The
Judge 10: Family Feud 13 ; Wtld

K,ngdom 15, All In The Family
17; Ma cN e i1 Lehrer Report 20,33 .
B oo-R eal Peop le 3, 15; Eight Is :
E no ugh
6. 13 ,
Great
f o rm d n ces
20 , 33 :

SubSide

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney , Broker
Bill, Br . Mgr.
Phone 992 ·2342, Eve .992 ·2499
Middleport, 0 .

Apply at
Two Rivers Ford Inc.,
Rt. 62 N., Point Pleasant
Ask tor David Moore

Is

Tf.l;.\T REMINDS
1\-\E ... I DIDN'T
GET ONE CANO&lt;,I
CANE FOR.
CHRISTMAS
LASTt&lt;~

f

(;

''&gt;

''
,.

c:~
l

. .'

.&gt;.... ~'\

---~-'_l
"J

AXYDLBAAXR
I . 0 :\ G F E L L 0 W

One leltrr stmp ty :-. land s f or another. In thi s sampl e A i.!i
u sed f o r the thr ee L "s. X for th e two o·s. e t c Sing le l ett er s,
apostro phes. th e l ength and format~on of 1h e w ord s ar e all
hint "' F.ach day th r:- code l r tter s are differ ent

AB C D

E DDF

GH

9 oo-Ditf'ren t Strokes 3, 1S; Movie
' Th e Su i c ide ' s Wife " 8 , 10;
E l iz rtbe t h Cady Stanton in

Kansas 20,33.
9· 30- Hel lo, Larry 3, 15 ; IO ,ro-Best
of Salurday N ight Live 3, 1S;
Charlie' s Angels 6, 13 ; News 20;
Connec ti ons 33. ·

10 · 30- Upst airs . Downotarlo 17;
Best of Groucho 20 .

11 00- New s 1 ,6 , 8, 10, 13 , 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20 : Wodehouse Playhouse

CRYPTOQUOTES

X

Per NBA

Bask et ball 17

37 Do J&gt;enance L-..1.-'---'---L-

TillS IS A BARBER SHOP!
WE RODE ALL THI S WA~
TO SEE ABARBER S~OP ?!

17; Zoom 20 .

B. Son II . DICk Cavell 20.33 .
J()-Countr y Roads 3; Newlywed .

JJ t;rre f

THIS MUST 8E WHERE
OUR FIELD TRIP Bt&lt;:•IN~
EVERI{ONE'S GETTING

Doctor

Bob N ewhart 17 , O ver Easy 20.
7 00 3' s A Crowd 3; T i c Tac Dough
B; M atch Game PM 6; News 10;
Lo ve Ame r i can Slyle IS; Sanford

32 Chrl stiaan

15 THE
BUS STOPPING?

Ty ler

6 J()- NB C N ews3. 15. ABC News 13;
Caro l B urn ett 6. CB S News 8. 10;

31 Detao1

W ~'f

Mary

6 IXJ- New s 3,6, 10, 13,15: AB C News

for topt.'
or me lrtr

PEANlri'S

20,33 .

Dream o f Jeannie 17 :
Who 33

DAILY CRYPT011l 10Tt: - Here' s how to work it :

Experienced auto or truck
mechanic. Must have own tools,
hourly rate, numerous fringe
benefits, salary negotiable, depending on experience.

5

M ash 10. Happy Days Again 13, I

30 Prefi x

34

4

slang

lor Chela

HELP WANTED

.\

an arrest

Z8 Snack

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, OH 45769
An Equal Opportunity Employer

Andy

oo-- Da ysof Our Li ves 3, 15 · A ll My
Chi ldre n 6, 1J
Young &amp; the
R es tless B. 10
3Q- A s \he World T u r ns 8. 10.
00 Doctor s 3, 15 : One Lif e t o Li ve
6. 13 . '1 25- N ews 17
10 Ano th er World 3. IS; Guiding
L 1ght 8, 10 ; G igglesnort Hotel 17
oo- Gen eral Hospital 6, 13 ; I L ove
Lucy 17 Co nne ct ion s 20
3o- One Day At A T ime 8 . J o ker ' s
W il d 10 Fli nt stone s 17 .
00 M 1st e r Ca rt oon 3: P ass word
P l us 15 . Mer v Gr i ff i n 6; B ev erly
H •llb 1ll• es B. Sesa me Sf 20,33;
Si)l M 1l l ion Dol lar Ma n 10 . Real
M cCo ys 13, Sp ec trem an 17.
30 - Be w itc hed
J
P et ti c oat
Junc tion B
Tom &amp;. J erry 13;
M erv G r i f ft n I S. G ill igan ' s Is 17 .
Q0.- 1 Dr ea m of Jeann ie 3: Sanford
&amp; Son 8 . Mi ster Roger s ' Ne igh .

bor h oo d

ney r ol e
Z8 Arab
land

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

13 ,

Moore 10. M y Three Son s l7
30-C dro l B urnett 3: Ne w s 6;
Gom er Pyle 8. Elec. Co. 20;

27 Juruny Cag-

Accepting Applications for an in charge
bookkeeper with experience in General
Ledger. Acounts Payable, Payroll and
Billing Procedures .
-Salary Open-

3

Doo rw&lt;J~

22 Jane of son g r--r~"-,-:;-f&lt;""T
24 Map giant
26 Made

Help Wanted

Py r am 1d

G r l f1i1h 6. Wh ew ! 8, 10 .
10 s.s-~ C BS N ews 8; Hous e Call 10 .
11 DO- H •gh Roller s 3, 15. Laverne &amp;
Sh ir le y 6, 13 . Pri ce is Right 8, 10
11 JO- Wh eel o f F o rtun e 3, 1.5 ;
Fami l y Feud 6 , 13; Sesam e St .
10 .33 . 11 55- New 5 17
12 00 -- N ew s ce n te r
J.
N e ws
6,8. 10, 13. M in dreade r s 15 . l ove,
Am en c a n Sly te 17
t2 Jo- R y an ' s H ope 6, 13 ; Sear c h for
Tomor ro w 8 .10 . Healt h F ie ld 15 ,
Mo v i e " Ba nyan" 17 : El ec . Co.

lO.JJ

1 Gasp
2Type
of molding
3 E at
humble pie

courant

120. 000

1

43 Engender
44 P ostpone
DOWN

13 More au

Office Help Needed
By local Pomeroy
Business

mn

Beat I he Clock B, 10;

M or ning Maga zi ne 13 ; Mov ie
"' Ta ke H er. She"s M ine .. 17
tO 30 - H ollywood Squares 3 , 15 ;

1

&lt;• •: II ""''- ·'/.J 4 C()f-{\ '\1 [1 ;1(11 •\ ' •

]I I I I •1• 1.1 ' p. l d 1"'--

N•ghl 6,

, \1/1

\\ 11 1Jid

rf , ·

H ea lth F ield 10 ; 6· ro---World a t
L arg e 17
6 10--C hr is toph er Closeup 10: News
17 , 6 : 45- Morni ng Re por t 3 ;
6 SO Goo d
Mor ni ng
West
Vi r ginia 13 ; 6 55- News 13 .
7 00-Tod a y 3. 15. Go od M orning
A m er ic a
6. 13 ,
Wednesday
Mor n ing 8. Batm a n 10. Three
Stooges L1 1tle Ra sc al s 17 . 7: l.sA M Weather 33
7 30- Family Affa ir 10. 7 55--C huck
Whit e R e port s 10
8 00--Ca pt Kangaroo 8, 10 ; Leave It
To Beave r 17. Sesame St 33 .
8 30- Rompe r Room 17
Q OQ---- Bob Bra un 3. Big Vall ey 6;
P h 1l Don ahue 13, 15, Porky Pig &amp;
Friend s 8 One D ay At A T i m e
10 . L uc y Sho w 17
9 JQ--- Bob N ewha r t 8 : Goi ng Pl a ces
Spectal 10 . Gree n ac r es 17 .
10 oo-Ca rd Shark s 3. 15 : Edge of

"•

~C(Hd'

GASOLINE ALlEY

--- ~

•

,. ,, , ' • : • '' ''

d f, l t tl• dld
r ·ltrTh · ·r '-l lll h -.1 1• 1\ ~· ·· 1 l tl ! l i
11 1.11 i1 '- l i. t il l ·' \\ ll td d til" ~II III

52 31

Must ~ good , accurate
typist, shor-thand
re quired , good hours , 900d
fringe
benefits .
If
employed,
prestnt
employer won ' t be con .
tacted without permis sion, interview will be
arranged . Write 8011:
406, Pomeroy , Oh10
4S76f, giving complete
qualifications and in ·
formation .

il id

II II • ,: Til'-

.Jrl t •I IH· r II UIIif'

ladder and ba c k.hoe wor~&gt;~
dump trucks and Ia boy !,
f o r hire , will haul f il l Oi rt .
top S.Oil , limestone an d
grave l Cal l Bob or Roge r
J etf e rs , day phon e 997 7089.
ntght phone ~2 3525 or 99 2

NEEDED NUR SE S tor 11
7 shi ft Po m e r oy H ea lth
Care Center Confli c t Mr
Z l cJ i an , Ad mi n istrator 9'9 2
IHJO.

...:" '

~ D O - Three ' s

Begas Lady " B
00-- Tom orrow 3, New s IS; . 40N ew s 13 : 2 00--New s 17
2 Os- NBA Bas ketball 17. 4 . 3; M ov ie .. Iro n Angel " 17

llo.oj" l t . • I" 11 "II• )., .111
·.1 •·,1 I I I I·. , j I 11

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d•·tt ·n -.. .·

do r er .

Help wanted

Cl ... v. ; t l l1 .1.t t ·tol-n

.tnd \Lin

MAN!

70.33
B 30- Angte 6. 13 .

1

I"

MA C HIN E

EX C A V ATIN G,

'·

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PAINTIN G
AND !.dn d
bla sttng Free est1maf es
Ca l l 949 2636

II

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r oo L! THAI
EAl ll F · IIX ( A N
5 H !H rH ' DARK

I •I

.1~ ~..-d

'1 .:111 1

• K ] l• !r ~

Ga m e 13 ; L o ve A mer ican Style
15 , Sanf or d &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cave tt 33 ,20
30 - Th a i N ashvi ll e M us i c 3 ;
New lywed G ame 6: J oker ' s Wild
8; H o ll ywood Squares 10 ; Sha Na
Na 13 ; TV Honor Society 15;
NB A Baske tball 17. Mac Neil .
Le hr er R ep ort 20, 33.
8 00- Sher i fl Lob o 3. 1.5; Happy Days
6 , 13 . Califor ni a F ev er 8, 10; Nova

D ic k
Cav ett 20 . Carry On Laughing 33 .
11 30- J oh nny Ca rson 3, 15, Barney
M ille r 6 , 13 . Barnaby J ones 8;
ABC News 33; Mo vi e .. Arsenic &amp;
O ld Late .. 17 .
I? 05- M o vie
" B ed u liful
but
Dead i( ' 6,1J; 12 . 41)----Movie " Las

I I 1I I •

I I "' f I ; , . I' I IIl i.; "

sr 11 'lll

W I LL HAUL l imest one and
gravel Also , lime t1aul ing
and spreading _ L eo Morr is
Tr uc k 1ng Phone 7-4 2 2-4.5.5

I "I I ) 11

I)

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:t

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·1,.) ~ 4

LJITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

\1' •J 1 •

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· ·\ .1 4
ti,.) H7

Free Estimate

rlwr 11 1" l 11 "
rwh .o\&lt; lh Jl ", \

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11 ij ~ l i

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Doctor

11 00-- N e w s J, 6, 8, 10 , 13, 15 :

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JJ

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Com p any 6. 13 ; M ov i e " 11th
\lict im ·· 8. 10 , World 20, 33 .
9 30- Ta.-i 6,1 3
10 00- Cci"tldid Came ra 3, 15, Hart to
H art 6. 13. St)( W •v es of Henry
V II I 17 . N ews 20: Ci t y Notebook
J3
10 30- L 1k e I t Is 70. Another Vo ice

Smuts

HOTPOINT

r.r••--

Jumbles FEIN!

I I J

Operation Kill succeeds

'1'11 5335

I

rI

of

8 ; Pul se 6 , N ews 10; Newlywed

Oswii ld J cH: nhy a nd Al a n So n t&lt;~q

'----v~

6;

6, CB S New s B. l o, Bob Newhart
t7. Ove r Easy 20
00- J's A Crowd 3. T i c lac Dough

BRIDGE

~

News

6. Zoom 20 ; Caro l Burnet1 17.
6 JO-N BC N ew s 3. IS; Ca ro l Burnett

BORN LOSER

- -

BOW E R S
Sw eeper s.

toasters , i ron s. all s m~JII
appliances . L awn m ower
Ne)d to State H1 g t1wa y
Garage on R ou te 7, 985

·:J &lt;!;.

N o w arran g e !he ClrC'e O 1er t-1S tc;
rorm the surpr 1sc answe1 as sug
ge sted by the above ca1oon

10 19 1 mo

~ystems ,

, s~,

JIJmble Book No. 13, containing 110 puutes , Is a¥•ilable t or $1 T!) poatpald
hom Jumblt ,clothlsnewsp•:rer , Bo x 34, Norwood , N .J. 07 648 Incl ude your
name . addren . [l p code an ma~e checks p•yab le t o Ne wspaperboo h

MOTitSR. IIJSISTS liiAT
'(OU TAK£ A "00
1\WJK 'Ot!" TASTE' .

];

W ho 33
6 00 News 3.8.10,13,15 : ABC News

B ECAUSE HE
LACK? I H IS .

tt11!&gt; -

INSUlATION

T~AilER NO~ A V AI L A8 L f

HOWERY AND MART IN
se p t 1c
Ex&lt;avattng ,

D r eam

\ \ \. ·y";-1

A ~ K ELEIO N
NEY ER F I6H1'5 B ACK

, Answer

J&amp;l BLOWN

~ TO ( K

GOO SE

\

/ -;.

THE ;;AME IS UY WAS
THERE TH IS MORioJIN(;
•• AND IJOW THERE'S
AN OTHER TORPEDO
5TAKED OUT ON rH&amp;
OPPOSI TE CORHE:R

Yest t:fd ay s

B urne tt

Gom er Py le B: Elec . Co . 20 :
Mash 10 : Happ y Days Again 13; I

Prmt answer here

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

3152 .

MAIN

SEE THAT HARP · LOO KIIoJ'
DUDE' I&gt;JUR!olo.J ' A Dli!lloJI&lt;.AT
THE SIDEWALK CA FE~

4 30 ft c

Real Estate for Sale
FINAN CI NG VA FHA LO
AN S. LOW OR NO DOWN
PA YMEN T
PURCHASE
OR
R EF INANCE .
IR E LAND MORTGAGE ,
7) E . STATE , A THENS .
614 591 305 1

) JO Ca r ol

·...-· - ·~

1 .1

MONrGOMERY

3942

wv

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

C;.LL 992 -7544

CAPTAIN EASY

Roger Hysell
Garage

'"iOI S9 - · M ., W.,F ,
o · 'lf!r •mt by appoint·
mt:nt.
11 Sycamore !Rear)
Pomeroy , 0 .

TU ESOAY , NOVEMBER 6, 1979

~ISTEB
L 1 KJ

4 5 Tt C

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

~rJ..,_

. ~

1 KJ-+-....,-,

.

mile aft Rt . 7 by -pass
on St Rt
124 toward
Rutland .

9 2a 1 mo . Pd

queen s•ze m a ltress . 985

SA L E S, PT

Pomeroy , 0 .
10 19 1 mo

...

L ALGIE

049·21142-949·2160

de al
Hou c; ing &amp;
Vt:ler . tS Admtn . Loan1.

22 . 41 ACRE S tn Chester
Twp W 1 6140 after 5 p .m

Mobile Homes· Sale

l- . . n.. . .

New, repaor,
gutters and
down spCJuts ..
WindotV cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Frel!' Estimates

REAL ESTATE
F I NANCING

U&gt;ed

1972 LYNN H AV EN Ux6 5 3
bedroom
1970 V •ndale 12x 63 wi th ex
pan da , 2bedr .
1Y70 New Moon 12x 60 3 Odr
197 3 Skyl i n e
12x55
7
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x 52, 2 be dr
B &amp;. S MOBIL E HOM E

ms .

RACINE.O .

H OU SE COA L, lump or
st o ke r , will de li ver
742

U P ST AIR S AP T 5 r oo m s
and bat h , P o m er oy 992
5621 after 5 · 30

NI S HED
h ouse
w ith
sl eeping r oo ms, w 1trtb le
f or c on stru c t• o n work ers
Ful l y eQuipped kil chen.
washer
and
d r y er
Showers
Off
s tr ee t
parking .Linen s furni sh ed'
and
cl e aning
w ee ktv
Utilities paid Call 99 2 2367
after .t

Featuring : men ' s &amp;
women's styling, per ·

Television
Viewing

by Henrr A rno·d and Bob Lee

~UTEC ~

I

f

F O U R BEDROOM house 1n
Ra c i n e Dep o sit r eQui r ed
N o pet s 949 2253

CO M P L E TE L Y

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

OHIO VAUH

JI BS

W OO D STO VES by Bet Te r
N B en s, G la ssv iew , L e yd en
H e dr th , Old Ti mer , Fi re
&gt;~• e w
Suburban
mobile
home wood hl"aters. UL ap
p r o v ed , and Suburban fur
nac ema s te rs
Outd oo r
Eq uipmen t Sal es, Jet Rt s
7 a n d 35, Gat I ipoli s, OH
Ph one 446 3670

SMA LL
H O U SE
'n
Harnsonv 111 e , d Cross t ra m
station S1 25 p er mont h
Cat l 614 918 44 17

e.

C IDER

2183

MINUTES-"'

H. L Writesel
RoOfing

Mick ' S
Barber &amp;
Style Center
1ntroduces -

(FREE ESTIMATE)

11'12· 7)14
111 (Pd .)

t s Phone

TO

Gutter

a lt er na tors o wn fh e bes t
b u y WI NPO W ER Ca ll 513

3 A ND 4 RM fu rn ished ao

11&gt;60

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

~ THA T SCRAMBL ED WORD GAME

Unscram ble the se lour Jumble s
one lcM er to eacr1 sq u ar e 10 f01 m
lo u r oro rna ry WOlds

T R ACY - WE 'LL E&lt;E

-

7BB 2569

58 58

Auto Sales

5U&lt;E I KNOW lHE VALUE
THINK

KENNE LS

Board 1ng , al l br eed s C lean
1ndoor out door
fa c ilities
Al so
AK C
re g is tered
Oober mans 61-4 -U6 7795

E,.. TEAPAIS£ " 55P; '

FUNNY BUSINE SS

G R OO MIN G

H ILLC RE ST

Counci l (S P SC J Will hold a
m ee ting on November 1-4,
1979, at 10 00 A.M . at the
Ca rr ou se l I nn . located at
.4900 Sinc la ir Road , Colum
ov s, Ohio
Nov 5

s and . y rav e l , c al ci um
c htor•de. 1er t ii1Zer , d og
food . and al l t ype'S. of sa l t
E•ce ts ,or Sal t Wo rk s, I n c ,
E Ma•n St , Pomer oy . 99 ?
31:191

W I N TE R

\,l Jf\jf.\{1 ~\1

~ ~ ~~U;l~ .

Business Services

LIM ES TO N E .

rr g
1975
Plymou t h
Voyage r
van
I 55 ,000
m il es)
Cus t om
made
equ alize r h 1t c h H II ferry
t rd v el
f r il l i er
(low
m il ea ge) Completely ~e ll
con t a ined Sleeps so, B oth
loaOed Pa c kage sel ls t or

b08 E . '

J udy Tay lor 61.4 36 7 7120

LEGAL NOTICE
The State Prime Sponsor

For Sale
CO A L.

IUeSday , Nov 6, 1!179

YAI'&lt; IMA T~ l BAL PQLI C E
PATR O L C AH - J UST A
&lt;'E W

Giveaway

1001 9 Bf' sure to 5pecrtv IJ~rlh
d ate

MATCH ED

COU NTR Y M O BIL E Hom e
Park. , Rout e JJ. norlh o f

W A NTE D ·

Wedneedar , Nov 7

B EAUT I FUL

Don

CH I P W OOD Pol es m a x
d tameter 10" on la rges t
en d Sl 2 p er ton B u n d led
sla b S10 pe r t on De l ivered
t o Oh io Pallet Co . Rt ] ,
Po m er oy 99 2 2689

Card_c&gt;f Thai!~

NOTICE

LO ST FEMALE bl ue t1 Ck
and f e-m a le W al k er c oon
Tue s day
h ound , s1n c e
n 1gh t B lue T 1ck h as p1e ce
torn ou t of r 1g ht ear In Ap
p te G r o11e a r ea 2-4 7 26 18

Cam_ping Equip'!'enr

Dailv ~entonel. Mtd&lt;IJ eoorH' omeruy, u
DICK TRACY

7- The

E AXJ E

33.
11 J()-J ohnny Carson 3,15 ; Black
Sheep Squadron 8: ABC News 33;
Movie " These Thou~nd Hilts"

EBXH

HXYD

EKBF'E

BEHDDJ

ZBLD E
DHM G N
OHDPYDM
Yesterday' s !:ryploquote : LIFE IS REAL! LIFE IS EARNEST !
AND THE GRAVE IS NOT ITS GOAL. - HENRY WAD-

SWORTH I.UNt :F E LLOW

10; Movie "Night &amp; Doy" 17.
1? · 40- Baretta
6, 13;
1: 00TQITlorrow J ; News 15.

, so - News 13 : 2' 15-News 17;
7: 20-N,'3A Basketball 17: 4 , ~,
f .'.. ·vi e " Man from Utah " 17.

l
I

�..

Powell, Riggs, Vaughan, Snowden elected to Meigs board

R- '!be Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, u ., Tuesday, Nov . 6, 1979

Demonstrators threaten to execute hostages
By Tbe Associated Press
Iranian demonstrators today
threatened to execute about 60
Americans held hostage at the U.S.
Embassy In Tehran If the U.S.
government tried to rescue them.
Meanwhile, Iranian Prime Minister
Mehdi Bazargan resigned and
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini told
his Revolutionary CoWicil to take
over the government.
White House press secretary .Jody
Powell said at mid-morning that the
administratioo still did not Intend to
W!e military force to free the embassy ho.&lt;~tages .
Powell would say only that
President Carter held an unscheduled meeting on the crl,is wtth
his senior foreign policy advisers at
the White House beginning at Ba.m.
EST.
Asked about the death threa t.
State Department officials had no officlal comment. "You're dea hng
with a mob . It's not SUf1lrising that
some of them would say that ... one
uff1dal said .
"Any

military

or

non-militar~

attempt by the U S. or liS agents 1n
Iran to free the American sp1cs held
as hostages m thel.l' embassy will
cause their irrunediate executiun ,"

the demonstrators sa td In a
broadcast message .
A West German radio broadcast
from

Tehra n also

said

othe r

Americans, employed by private

U.S. firms tn !ran, were being
rounded up by anned Iranians and
taken to the U.S . Embassy grounds .
The U.S. government had ruled
out anv military intervention .
fearing . tlus would endanger the
hostages .
Amenca 's chtef represenalive

Ln

Iran , Charge d'Affaires L. Bruce
Laingen had been ne~otiating with
Bazargan 's gover nmen t at the
Foreign Ministry since Sunday when
the

demonstrators

seized

the

embassy and demanded th e
ex tr a dition of ousted Shah
Moharrunad Reza Pahlavi, now
hospitalized In New York The U.S .
government refused to meet the
demand .
1l1e demonstrators a t the embassy
also thre atened Lainge n today ,

teUtng him to come out ··from your
hiding place" and surrender as soon
as possible "because your secret
1

wtreless J contacts with Washingtnn

the gbly tn state that In pursuance of
frequent explanations offered mthe
past and (because of) interference,
instances of obstacles being created ,
of opposition and of differences of

Flazargan, who has headed the
guvenu;wnt smce the successful
conduston of the Iranian r evolution
la.':it February, resig ned because of
Khotn{'tnJ·s
escalati ng
a nt i·

Amen can campaign . He ci ted
"deve lopments over the past few
days as we ll as

1 Baza rga n 's

I

ph I'Slcal tiredness ."
Tehran 1\adto quoted Bazargan 's
letter to Khomeini as say mR: "With

ATTENTION

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.
CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

Between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:30 p.m.
1-614-992-2156

By The Associated Press
Rain fell through much of the stale
til is morning as voters wt!nt to the
polls to dectde on a statewide antilitter 1ssuc and hundreds of local
is.•mes and races .
Hamilton County Board of
F. lections officials in Cincinnati
blamed scattered showers for a slow
turnout in the first two hours of
voting .
In Colwnbus, Franklin County
election officials said they had no
early Indications of the turnout.
A light rain feU In Cleveland ,

Have A Pile of Cash
Instead of A Pile Bills ...

where
Republican
mayoral
candidate George V. Volnovich and
Demo cratl ~ Incumbent Dennis
Kuclnlch cast their ballots shortly
after th e polls opened.
Secretary of State Anthony J.
Ce lebrezze Jr . set his turnout
projection at 2,950,000, or about &gt;4
percent of the state's 5,426,000
registered voters .
He said the flgw-e is low , even for
an off -year election, but that he
hoped th e turnout will be greater.
Polls were to be open from 6:30a .m .
to 7:30p.m.

Administration
appears helpless
WAS HI NGTON (AP I - Th e
Carter administration appears aU
but help less as It works to protect
the Hves of an estimated 60
Ameri can officials held hostage by a
mob of Iranian students in Tehran .
Administ ration offic ia ls are
talking w1th th e government of Iran,
with other governments and with
themselves In an effort to find a way
to get the Americans out of th e
embassy tn safety.
But as long as the United States'
overriding objective remains the
safety of the hostages, the offlclals
have few options .
Milltarv strikes are impossible.
"Since w~ doo 't have the Shadow or
Superman. even tn discuss the
military option is a sure way to get
their throats cut ," one official, who
asked oot to be named, said of th e
hostages.
Diplomatic

m eans

are

not

promising . The government In Iran,
whic h ts subordmate to the
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomelni and
Ius followers, Is supporting the
students ' demands for the return of
the ousted Shah Mohammed Reza
Pahlavl .
The Iranians have offered only ooe
solution : Return the shah to Iran,
where Ius wealth can be confiscated
and he can be put on trial for his
aUeged crimes against the people of
Iran during Ius 31-year retgn .
The administration has rejected
that proposal, stick In~ to its position

CLOSED MONDAY
The Meigs County Coorthouse In
Pomeroy will close at all Monday In
ol::o;ervance of Veterans Day .

DINNER POSTPONED
The annual turkey dinner of the
Rutland Fire Department, normally
held at the Rutland School on the
Saturday preceding Thanksgivmg ,
has been postponed.

NEXT CHRISTMAS

d
salveUo n of the _country an
brtngmg the revolution to fruition
cannot be achieved without unity of
expression and of manag~ent, I
hereby tender my resignation so
that all affairs may be brought

under the command of the
leadershi In any manner deemed
.~
that volunteers
approprl8 e or ~ ti
may ~
n"::rio f'::. a :o:~ment."
g

;!

Light rain greets some state voters

wtll be of no help ."
Ha"•n Tabatabat. an official of
the fX'Cm ler's offi ce m Tehran said

·
·
· ·
·
VIews (makmg I Itlrnposstble for me
and my colleagues to carry out their
duties and continue to shoulder
respoosibility,_ and sin c. . In these
cructal and htstoric conditions the

Gallia •..
1Continued from page I I
bilding at the Silver Ridge Church
and stole two lawn mowers .

The sheriff's offic. received a caU
from James Drehel, Leading Creek
Road that sometime Sunday a brown
and wlute cow disappeared from his
property. Anyhone having any information are aksed to call the
sheriff 's office or Drehel at 742-2085
The department reported that a
1979 Ford Thunderbird owned by Ernest Howard, Rt. 4, Lexington, Ky .,
was destroyed by fire Sunday
evening at Hobson . Deputies were
Wl8 We to contact the owner and no
one was aroWJd the vhelcle when offleers arri ved. The Middleport Fire
Department was called to the scene.
The incident Is Wider investigation.

that the shah can stay In the United
States while he needs medical
treatment , but will have to leave
when that treatment ends.
Admi nlslr all on spokesmen
vehemently denied reports Monday
that they had offered to discuss the
shah 's future with Iran in return for
the release of the hostages .

Youths apprehended
following incident
Two Pomeroy area youths were
apprehended by Pomeroy Police offleers Elmer Althouse and Randall
Crpenter at approximately 2:30a.m .
today after one of the youths threw a
brick breaking a show window mthe
K x C Jewelry Store on Main Street,
Pomeroy. Seven watches were taken
and all but one has been recovered.
Both youths were charged with
curfew violation and consuming
alcohol. One of the youths had additional charges of breaking and entering the jewelry store and theft of
a bottle of wbi.skey from tbe Old
Liberty Bar. The second youth was
also charged on two counts m thef
from
S!lfflers Store approllimatewly two weeks ago when
tennis shoes and two jackets were
taken .
Juvenile officer Carl R. Hyesell is
asslting police In the Incidents and
expects charges to be filed later on a
15-year old girl for receiving stolen
property and a female adult for
receiving stolen property and
possible contributing charges.

Uriwr citt&gt;d for U WI
Wayne 0 . Cobb, 42, Pomeroy, was
charged with DWI following a one velucle accident at II :52 p.m. Monday on SR 71n Gallia Coonty.
The Gallla-Meigs Post State Highway Patrol said Cobb, traveling north , lost control of his vehicle which
ran off the right side of the highway
striking a tree . There was moderate
damage . Cobb was not Injured.
FRIENDSHIP NIGHT
Friendship night will be observed
when District 13, Daughters of
America, meet Thursday , Nov . 8, at
Chester Lodge Hall.
Potluck supper will be held at 6:30
p.m. with the meeting to follow .
Members are to bring their own
table service.
TIIURSDA Y DINNER
Preceptor Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will have dinner at 6
p.m . Thursday at the Sacred Heart
Church and following dinner will go
to the Riverboat Room of the Meigs
Branch, Athens County Savings and
l.Dan, for a meeting.

SEEKUCENSE
A marriage license was issued to
Eugene Guy Long , 44, Rt. I, U&gt;ng
Bottom, and VIola Virginia Fitch, 34,
Rt. I, Long Bottan.

Ballot Issue I, which would
reqebrezze Jr . set his turnout
pro jectlon at 2,9SO,OOO, or about &gt;4
percent of the state's 5,426,000
regtstered voters.
He said tbe figure is low, even for
an off-year election, but that he
hoped the turnout will be greater.
Polls were to he open from 6 :'1!.'
A.M. TO 7.W :30 p.m.
Ballot Issue 1, which would
require a 10 cent deposit on
beverage containers and outlaw
snap-tab cans, was the ooly question
to be decided statewide. However ,
2,153 local questions and candJclate
races were to be decided in Ohio's
12,9!H poUing places.
Issue I, opposed by an WJusual
coalition of big business and big
labor , was assailed In a massive,
$1.6 million campaign as a proposal
that would cost jobs in the can-and
bottle-making Industries and drive
up the price of beer and soft drink! .
The group also cootended it would
take care of only bottles and cans,

FLORA WIUJAM8

Mrs. Flora Elizabeth Willl81ll8, 79,
Letart, died Sunday evening In the
Pleasant Valley Hospital following a
long illness.
Born Feb. 24, 1900, In Elmwood,
W.Va., she was tbe daughter of the
late Thomas Sayre and Ellen Sayre.
She was a member of the Old Arbuckle Church and a fanner resident
of Arbuckle .
Her husband, Mark G. Williams ,
preceded her In death In 1971, as did
three sons, one brother and one
sister.
Surviving are folD' swrs, Mrs.
Kate Cossin, Leon, Mni. Grace
Gasto, Rodn.x, Ohio, Mni. Dale Hazdlett, Rock Hill, North Carolina,
Mrs. Edna Gray, Greenfield, Ohio;
five granddaughters, Linda Griffith,
Charleston, Patricia Plumley,
Letart, Anna Jam.. , Canton, Ohio ,
Pam Bentley, Ow-leston, and Connie Flowers, Mason ; one grandaon,
Thomas G. Wllllams, with whom she
made her home; and one greatgreat-grandchild.
Funeral services will be Wednesday at I :30 p.m . at the WUcoaen
Funeral Home with the Rev. Don
Shaffer officiating. Bwial will follow
In the Kimberling Cemetery at Ar·
buckle.
Friend&gt; may call after 6 p.m.
Tuesday at the ftmeral home .

BOARD CANDIDATE
Jerry W. Colmer, 3Ui Wright St., is
a candidate for the Meigs Local
School District and not Larry W. Colmer as reported earlier.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Mae Price, U&gt;ng Bottom ; Charles Cockcroft, Mason , W.
Va .
Discharged...Stacie Coon, Cloyd
Brookover.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV. 5
Jeri Barnett, Cannan Barnitz,
Walter Bartrum , David Bryan, Mrs .
David Collins and daughter, Karen
Finnicum, Mrs. richard Forcier and
daughter, Delpha Hammak, Ella
Johnson , William Johnson, Mrs.
Darrell McPherson and daughter,
Donald Meal, Mrs. WUllam RU88Cll
and daughter, Cella Spires, Warren
White.
BIRTIIS NOV . 5
Mr . and Mrs. Ernest Blair,
daughter, Albany ; Mr . and Mrs .
Jeffrey Miller, son , Oak Hill.

which it said make up ooly 20
perCEilt of Ohio's litter.
Ohio
AIHance
for
The
Returnables , more meagerly
flnanc.d but backed by about a
dozen newspaper endorsements and
environmental groups, said Issue I
is needed to halt waste of
unrepleni.shable natural resources .
It raised and spent $89,700.
The alllance denied there would be
any appreciable loss of jot.;, or at
least Insisted such a claim never
was documented by the oppositloo .
It also said cans and bottles
comprise as much as 40 percent of
Ohio's litter , based on Michigan 's
experience with a similar Ia w.
Mayoral races were in Cleveland,
Columbus, Toledo, Akron, Canton
and Youngstown, as well as several
&lt;AAer cities.
In Cleveland, Incumbent Mayor
Dennis J . Kuclnlch faced U . Gov .
George V. Volnovlch in a race that
has attracted national attention .
Incumbent Republican mayors
Tom Moody of Columbus and
Stanley Cmich of Canton and
Toledo 's Democratic Incumbent,
Douglas DeGood, also are trying for
new terms.
Akron voters faced a slate of five
candidates to succeed retiring
Mayor John Ballard , while In
Youngstown, Democratic City
Council Qerk George Vukovich is
running unopposed for the office
being vacated by Mayor J . Phillip
Richley .
Local questions deal with a wide
range of subjects, including more
than 1,700 tax questions , Celelrezze
said.
Items being proposed In tax levies
and bond Issues Include both
constructioo and operating lunda for
schools. Others call for new jails,
sports stadiwn renovation, park

WASHINGTON (AP I - The
deposed Shah of Iran 's complicated
medical condition would make it
very difficult, but not imposs!We, for
lum to get adequate treatment
outside the United States, say
medical experts.
1ilah Mohammad Reza Pahl.avi ls
being treated for lymphatic cancer
and a blle duct problem at New York
Hospltal-Qlrnell Medical Center In
New York City, where he ls
recovering from gallbladder
sw-gery .
The Carter Adimlnistr atioo on
Monday rejected new Iranian
demands to expel the shah, who has
been given pennission to remain In
the United States as Ioog as he need&gt;
medical
treatment.
The
administration has refused to grant
the fii'Jller ruler permanent 115)'lwn.
Spokesmen for the shah and the
hospital said Monday that an
additional stone has been found In
the deposed monarch's coounon bile
duct, the passage between the liver
and the !llllaU Intestine.
This complication means that the
shah may have to spend another four
to five weeks In the hospital, and
may require further surgery, the
statement said.
In addition, chemotherapy
scheduled to begin next week for the
lymphatic cancer will have to be
postpmed and doctors will begin
radiatloo treatments lhill week for a
growing lymph gland twnor In the
neck, the statement continued .

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ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Hobert F. Snowden, Ru !land . a fonner board member
Snowden rt"'&lt;' IVed 1,486 votes to defeat 1ncU1nbent board member. VIrgil ! ·
King, who rece1ved 852 votes and Ruby Vaughan, Midd leport. with 849 vows
Charles F. Pyles , who was reelected mayor ri Racme, also led the way
among four candidates seeking seats on the Soothern Local School DL,ln ct
Boord ri Education tn Tuesday 's electi on .
Pyles received 626 votes while Don P. Snuth was second with 608 votes They
will hll two seats on the boanl beglnrung in January .
Donald A. Dudding received 420 votes and O..vid Lynn Shuler , 208 Shuler
Issued a stateme nt Monday asking that he not be give n votes since he would be
unable to se rve on the board . Shuler is moving oot ri the distrwt

•

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•

at

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

For the Meigs Coonty Boord of Education, with two vacancies to he filled, the
two mcumbents. unopposed, were ree lected. They are Harold Roush, Route 3,
Hacme. who received 3,25 1 votes Oris Smith, Route I, Long Botlool, who
received 2,748.
Tt.,re was only one cam!Jdate f..- the Eastern Local School Boord In
Tuesday's election. He was Jlnuny C. Caldwell, Route I, Reedsville, who
rece 1ved 702 votes. There werw sl.x write-In candidates, however. with three
vacancies to be hUed .
P.lected besldes Caldwell were Roger Gaul wbo received 433 write-in votes
and Berlli!rd Shrivers who received received 328 write-In votes.
Write -in votes received by others Included Victor Gaul, 82; Hugh Martin, 318;
Benrue Rinehart, 65, and Sandra Sheets, 79.

enttne
WEllNI:. SDAY, NOVEMBER /. I 979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gleason
removal
sought
AI a teacher strike In the Meigs
Local School District moved aloog In
Its seventh week Wednesday, apparently little was happening In the
way &lt;t settlement of the problem.
The Meigs Local Teachers
Allsoclation In a statement this morning called for Supt David Gleason
"to step down" .
The statement issued by Bonnie
&lt;lareDCe Alldrews
Fisher, associ&amp; tlon president, said:
"With only one member·' &lt;t the
Meigs Local School Board
remaining wbo supported employment d Supt David GIeason, It
Is time for the man who hall brooght
turmoil and cha01 to our conununity
By Bob Hoeflich
tostepdown .
Pomeroy voters elected via a
"Scliools remain &lt;tficially clOied.
write-In r~. Clarence Andrews,
MakeupdayswillrwllKleratlojaat:!l
~blican, to serve a nother foor
by the end &lt;t tJU week . Thousarxis
iJiir tenn but !Ia Uy turned down an
d taxpayer dollars are being spe_pt- •-- tncru_ne propmal evolVIng from his
on attorney fees f!r figl!JI_rig . .-.tdministration when l'ley went to
teachers, and out d state hired
tbe polls Tuesday · .
.
strikebreakers are supposedly
Mayor Andrews dtd not hie for
protecting empty buildings.
reelection to his po.&lt;~t, but be came a n
"The Meip Local Teachers
annoonced wnte-m candtdate to run
Alloclatloo was pleased to learn d
agal111t Hollie Green , who was the
tbe election d teacher-backed caDdidate, Robert Snowden.
He tOii: an active role in solvilll!
teacher«bool board problems In
the put, and hia election Ia a atrq
Races for township pmts In a U
Indication U.t !tis time for a clllnge
Meigs County towns~. but one,
in the board's attitude toward
Oralll!e,
faced voters at the polls
bargaining.
Tuesday.
There was one trustee and
"Judge Robert Buck's efforts to
tbe clerk elected in each &lt;t the towDget bs rgalnilll! reopened is a step In
ships.
the right direcUm. The association
In Bedford Township, Stanford
hopea hia leadership will help bring
received 155 votes for
Stockton
a negotiated agreement ani an end
trustee to defeat Robert G. Pick ett,
to the eckteation criais."
129, and James W. Clifford, 49.
There was no statement made to
Unopposed for cleri&lt;, Helen Swartz
The Daily Sentinel today from &amp;!pt.
received 248 votes .
Gleason !r tbe Meigs Local Board r1
Ge&lt;rge Alfred Wolfe was unopEducatioo.
polled for the Chester Townslup
Voters of tbe district did oo
trustee post ani received 408 votes.
Tuesday return to office two &lt;t the
John D. Riebel Sr., defeated Elmer
three incumbents woo had aougtt
G. Yoong , Sr., for the clerk 's p(l'lt,
reelection to the board. They are
241-226. In Columbia Townslup,
Larry PoweU and Dr. Keith Riggs,
Ronald A. Whittington was elected
both d P~meroy . The third Intrustee with I 42 votes with his opcumbent was not reelected. He is
ponent William Stout rece1vlng 101.
Virgil King, tbe veteran member &lt;t
Unopposed, Gloria Hutton was electbehosrd .
ted clerk with 196 votes .
Joe Proffitt defeated P.L&lt;lon
Dailey, 92~1. for tbe trustee p(l'l! 1n
Lebanon Township, and Slurley A.

Fred Hoffman

Eber Piekellll

Charles Pyles

:J

Jobn L. Mlller

Incumbent mayors reelected, tax issues beaten

'·

'

'.

..

RepubHcan nominee from the
primary election, and Roger M.
Davidson who filed for the may or 's
p(l'lt as a n independent
A:; a result of his write-in campaign, not an easy path to follow In
ge tting elected, Andrews rece ived
304 vo tes Tuesda y. Davidson
received 229 and Green, 196
Pomeroy voters were quit e
dec1s1 ve in their recep tion to a
vlUage 1ncome tax . They voted 560 to

189 against the prop&lt;fled 1.1 percent
tax wluxh was to have provided additional operating monies for the
village.
In Pomeroy VIllage there were no
other raees .
Jane Waltnn received 551 votes to
be reelected clerk-treasurer, and
Harold D. Brown with 438 votes and
Rodney C. Karr with 419 votes were
returned to viUage cooncll. being
unopp(l'led . E . F . Robmson wa s

Johnson was elected clerk defeating
Vlrgirua S. Pickens , IO:\&lt;i3.
Letart Township voters elected
Harry Hill as trustee over Donald W.
Manuel, 109-32, and Darrell E .
Norns was Wloppu.ed to be elected
clerk , 149 votes.
Out ria Held ci. five candidates for
trustee ri Oilve Townslup, Francis
H. Andrew led the way w1th 200
votes. He defeated Elza Bartimu.s ,
30 Wllllam A. ConnoUy, 129 : Henry
H~nsley , 98, and James Starcher, 14 .
Ada BlsseU, unopp(l'led for clerk .
rece ived 303 votes .
In the non-race township cJ
Orange, Edgar Pullins rec.1ved 180
votes for trustee and Nilli! R. Hobm son received 177 for clerk.
Rutland Township had a five-way
race for the trustee pttil. Winnin~
was J.eo Morris with 130 votes He
defe&lt;~ted David W. Haggy, 72:
Chrles E Rife, 11 1: WllliBm J
Smi th, 103. and Robert G Swick . 89 .
Edna M. Swick , unoppased for clerk ,

received 393 votes .
J olm F. ColweU received !53 votes
to be elected trustee In Salem Township over R. Keith Oller who
received 65 votes . Debbie L .
McGuire received 118 votes to be
named clerk over John C Welsh who
recei ved 00 .
Charles H. f\artels was elected
trustee tn Salisbury Townshtp
rece1ving 671 votes. His opponents
were Denver G. Hysell, 610, and
Albert Rrush . 565. Wanda L. Ebltn

unoppmed fora seat oo the Board of
Public Affairs alld received 578
votes .

Hoffman Reelected
Fred L. Hellman, R., Incumbent
mayor ri Middleport, was returned
to another foor years In his p(l'lt by
Midd leport voters Tuesday
receiving 522 votes while his opponent Edward M. Blake, Jr.,
received 2Ql votes. Blake was an independent candidate . There was no

COLUMBUS. Oluo 1 AP 1 - A teachers · urn on has asked the federal
court here to fort-e the Meigs Local School Dc•trict Boanl of Education
to resume paying 100 percent ol its teachers' health insurnnc.
premmms.
The boord stopped paying the prenuums last Friday 2 for only the
teachers who struck In Septe mbe r in a contact dispute. All dlSlrlct
sc hools were clttied on0cl l6 by the school boord.
In a request for a tempora ry restr'dlnlng order hied Tuesday, the
Meigs Local Teaching A-!socUlhon said the board cooldnot selecovely
pay benefits for tbe minority o( teachers whod1d not strike.
The action violates the equal protection ol the law clause of the 14th
Ame ndment to the U.S . Consti tution. the complaint said.
The association also asked for a permanent Injunction forbidding
the boonl from se lectively c-d ncelbng medical benefits.

Pomeroy's Christmas
parade set Nov. 24
Two killed
ClEVELAND (API - A car
being challed by police killed two
persons and Injured a third on an
East Side street Tuesday, police
reported.

Kliled were Tlmo~ Hairston,
23, and Patricia Marbley, 32.
Patrolman Robert Miller said
he was pursuing the ear and saw
the bodles &lt;t tbe victims go 11.1.1'tling through the air. He said the
car was g!Xng about 66 miles an
hour when it slammed Into the
pedestrians.

WNDON l AP)
Two
wealtl'(y, attractive, 39-year~ld
women were murdered by
shotgun blasts as they lay bound,
gagged and naked in seJlllrate
beds In a quiet English country
maMioo, police said.
Detective Superintendent Tom
Brooks, leadilll! 100 policemen In
the inquiry, said: "It was a brutal
and macabre rrwnler and we
don'tknow the motive."
The viclirns were discovered
by a relative late Monday in a
16th ce ntury house near
Coogleton in Cheshire Coo nty

BYKATIECROW
Tbe anmJBI parade kicking &lt;tf the
Christmas shopping season in
Pomeroy wlll be held Saturday, Nov .
24, beginnlng at I p.m. This was
decided during Tuesday's monthly
luncheon of the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce.
The parade wlll mark the arrival
of Santa Claus. The chamber al&lt;io
agreed to go ahead with the annual
"Gold Star" Christmas produ ction .
In the Christmas promotion, merchants In order to participate, wlU
pay ~ and give three $10 gift ce rtificates. Drawings wlll be held
every day In December at which
time three gift certificates wiU be
given away . No purchase Is
necessary to participate in the
program.
Paul Simon, preslden~ named
John Aixiersoo and Betty Ohlinger
to a committee to prepore a
sc hedule of Santa's visits in
Pomeroy.
Simon also reported that work on
tbe stage will get underway by next
week. It will be completed withi n a
few days .
A date of Nov . 28 was tentatively
set to honor Dr. Ralston Russell,
Columbus, a former resident ri
Pomeroy , at the recorruner&lt;lation ol
Fred W. Crow.
Crow sa1d Russell 3 !92Jl ~raduiit•
cJ Pomeroy Hlgh ~ l ow! " IO!J6 '"
ceramic engineen nb. d ~ w, ~! ri an
IJ'ilslanding a thl c!J.• .1. I ' d!. •. :

Crow added that Russe 11 has had I I0
articles published a n1 L' the holder
of several patents
S1mon announced an open house
wlU be observed at the new Pomeroy
Hea Ith Care Center Sunday from 3 to
Sp.m.
Mayor Clarenc-e Andrews reported that free 30 minute parktng will
be permi tted on the newly paved
area on Pomeroy 's Ma in Street unW
parking meters can be placed 1n the
area .
Scott Lucas Introduced a new doctor at Veterans Memorial Hasp! tal ,
Dr.\James Witherell.
Dr . WlthereU, a native Oluoan. IS a
gradu.ate ri O.S.U. and served hi•
residency while with the U. S.
Military . His offK-e Is located opP"' ite the ho!l pi ta I.
Introduced as new mernbel&gt;i and
guests were Betty Ohlinger. Minrue
Rizer, Danny Cr.,. , Dr. Withere ll
and Roger Turner
Attending were Simon. Jlnna Ar nott, sec retary , J im Frecker, May or
Aixirews, Ferman Moore , Minnie
Rizer, Betty Ohlinger , Dal\I\)1 Crow,
Hank Cleland , Kyle Allen. B1U
Qui ckel, Wesley Buehl. Blll Mayer,
Archie Stegal, Bobby Joe Spenc-er .
Phil Kellv. Dave Jenkins , Fred
Cr,JW. E. K Bla kes lee. Scott Lucas.
p-,( O'Brien, N. W. Comp ton, Donna
\e•se . M ar~e Hoffner, Dr
W!there-11. H·HH'r Tu rner, Jon .\ndt:'r"'nn, J01.• Yrung . ard Rev . Holx' rt
(; r;n ·•·..;

defeated Ri chard Bailey for cleri&lt;,
1001-1132.
In Scipio Township , Donald
We&lt;~ver was elected tnJstee over
Melvin C. Morris, 139 to Bl , and
Glenn E. Jewell was unoppll'led for
clerk receiving 169 votes .
In Su tton Township, Delbert A.
Snuth received 630 votes to be
named trustee over his opponent
Ons A. Hubbard, 2&gt;4. Paul Moore
was unopp(l'led and elected clerk
~&lt;1 th681 votes .

Meigs teachers seek
federal court action

'
)·

Women ·
murdered

$1.00........................... $50.00

Ovr Orw Low Pric• . No HilWa
for C.ulo"' F111l upp•r &amp; fwtl lo .,..r

VOL. XXVIII NO. 145

K111g, Houle 3, Pomeroy, 99:i, and F:U~n Ja11t' Huught, Pon1eroy . 702
D1stri et voters had one unt&gt;Kplred tern·, to fill on the board and tlu.'y st'lt·clt.'d

Tuesday's trustee, clerk race results given

RECEIVE

$2.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $100.00
$5.00 ••••••••••••••••••
$250,00
$10.00 •••••••••••••••••••••••••• $500.00
$20.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1,000.00

(U SPS 145 960)

Shah's medical
condition said
•complicated'

Custom full upper &amp; iower

INVEST

By BobHoeRicb
Voters of the Meigs Local School District. fac'Cd with a teachers s trike for
the past seven weeks , returned to &lt;thee two of the three i nc11mbent boord d
educa lion members seeking reelecton.
Reelected to the boonl were Larry C. PoweU and Dr. Keith Rtggs, both
seeking tbe full term &lt;t four years . Powell rec.lved 1,607 votes wlule Dr Riggs
received 1,210.
Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, another incumbent, had earlier filed for reelection, but
withlrew ber petition.
With three members to be elected to full tenns on the board , voters gave
Richard W. Vaughan of Middleport 1,788 votes electing him to the thlrd seat.
Vaughan led the seven ca ndidates seeking the full term. Warren L. Perrine,
Middleport, received 1,189 votes ; Jerry W. Colmer, Pomeroy , 666 ; C. Arland

Gallians may have been
taken in by con artists
Area

residents

wh o

took

advantage of a spec ial offer by
purhaslng cookware, at a greatly
reduced price. fr om the back of a
lruck which was alleged ly disabl ed
m Gallipolis earlier this year ma y bl·

for an unpleasa nt surprise-the
ro&lt;&gt;kware explodes.
1n

This spring a com pany advertised
over the radio that one of it's truc ks

had broken down in Ga lhpohs and
that tt was forced to se ll $89 .50 sets of
cookware for $20 The merchand ise
was sold from the back of a truck
parked along SR 7, nea r the
Highway Truck Stop. The cookware
bt~ l u~ ved to e xplode when a radi cal
tcmperat urt? change is enco unt ered .
ACcording to a dispatch received
today hi' the Ga llia County Sheriff's

1s

according to the dispatch, is not
listed by the New York Corporation
Commission . Anc hor-Hocking was
cont a cted and state d that the
rookv.·are was not theirs.

The Attorney Genera l warns the
company " very mobile and Is very
hard to locate. Once they know they
are bemg mvestigated they pack up
and leave

EXTENDED FURECAli'T
A chanre of obowers daUy
Friday through Sullday. Highs In
lhe mid 4011 to mld 501 Friday and
Sunday and In tbe mid 501 to low

60s Saturday. Lowll for tbt period
in lhe upper 38a to low tOs.

Department from Ari zona Attorney
C";erwr&lt;il'.lii OHace. that compan y has

been pulli11g a sinular scam a ll
an und lht: l'uu ntry .
llll' Compan y. which uses :-; t·veral
F:nterm01 mt.a 1n and
Ent('rcountaln Houscw ar ·: -, . , ...
s uppo ~ed t'• !~t •
nam~s m c ludin~

WATER WILL BE OFF
The Pome roy VIUage Water
Department has annoonced that
water , ,•rvtce north of the Corner
f~u on E Main St . will be r1f for a
penod ol from two to three hoors
T~ursday morning .

ca niida te for the cleri&lt; -treasurer
pmt In Middleport.
Incumbent cooncilmen, Carl J .
Horky and William G. Walters
rec.lved 411 and 455 votes, respectively, and were returned to tbelr
seats on cruocll defeating Jack Satterfield who received 320 votes.
Middleport voters again turned
down a permissive auto license tax
ri $5 with 41 7 voting against the
measure and 301 In favor. The tax
was voted upon throogh a referendum action.
In Rutland VIllage, John L. Miller
roceived 138 votes to become tbe
new mayor &lt;t the t&lt;M'n defeating
Wortl(y Edward Stanley, Sr., lrho
received 36 votes . Vernon L. Weber
received 106 votes to be reelected
cleri&lt;-treasurer. He was unopposed.
There were no council candidates .
Pickens Wins
Eber 0 . Pickem defeated three
opponents to be named to continue
serving as mayor ul SyracWie
VU!age, a position he assumed
following the resignation ri Herman
London from the mayor's job.
Pickell! received 150 votes. His opponents and their vote count were A.
Jean Hall, 40; Jimmy Joe Hemsley ,
79, and Terry D. Moore. 13.
Janic. Lawson was unoppased for
clerk and received 200 votes .
Kathryn H. Crow was unoppl!led for
cooncil , receiving 231 votes. There
were no candidates for the community's board r1 public affairs.
ftilcine Mayor Charles F. Pyles
won in his bid for reelection
recelv1ng 121 votes with his opponert
Looie Dale Lee receiving 95 votes.
Mae Cleland was unopposed for tbe
clerk-treasurer's pmt and received
171 votes .
Five candidates sooght the two
cruncH p(l'lls In Racine and leadilll!
the way was Lots Jeanette
Lawrec.nt with 117 votes . Second
were Ben Petrel and Cressa Mae
Shain, both with 91. William MiciBel
Lawson received 74 and Wanda L
Lyons, 23.

Five renewal
levies okayed
Voters In five sub-divisions approved renewals ri tax levies at
Tuesday's election, but a new tax In
a sl.xth sub-division was turned
down.
In Olive Township a new -~ mill
lax was asked for flre protection.
Voters turned It down 240 to 209.
Results d levies up for renewal
were :
Chester Towmhlp, .4 mill, renewal
forflre protectioo, 359 for ; !34against.
Orange Township, .7 mill, renewal
for fire protectioo, 209 for, 38 against.
Scipio Towmhip, 1.7 mill, renewal
for flre protection, l!3 for ; 100 against
Racine Village, 1.7 mill5, renewal
for fire protection, 151 for; 58 against.
Syracuse Vlllage, 2.3 mills,
renewal for current expenses, 190
'or; Tl against
In Rutland Township, a local opo
tion and the sale d beer by CorD
P""'tlts were turned down, 213-129.

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