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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

•

e

•

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.

�2-The Dai ly Sentmel, Mlddleport -Poc r••ruy . 0 . Wednesday , Nov 7, 1979

Washington
By &lt;..:larenee
Report .\tiller
There is an old anny adage that
goes "ten percent never get the
Word ." When this adage is applled to
offic ia l Washington it is apparent
that the Federal Trade CommissiOn.
the F .T.C., is part of that ten percent . With the country reeling wtder
the stra tn of excesSive re~ula ti on.
with a President prorrustng to prov ide m uch needed rcltef tn th1s
regard, one wonder.-i huw an ageuc)

such as the F .j T C. ca nn ut "'""'e the
mood of those it IS tntended to ser\'e
Inst ead of pulling ba ck from tts
regulat ory rule-malung autl1on t) 11
is expanding such authont) . Wh1le
most of offi cial Washington appears
increasingly congruzant uf the
burden unposed by federal regula tion, the FTC . appears oblmous
What will1t la ke for tht• CornrrlL"-"on
to get the message ··
Cong ress thi nks it m1ght haw tlw
answer - a legisla tive veto . A b1 U
presently before the House w"uld
allow Cong ress, with the c orH:ur·
renee of both chambers. to k11l any
Feder a l Trade Conurussion rule
within 00 days after 11 is ISSued . ·n,c
House s upported such a propu.&lt;&gt;rl
last yea r but was unable tu gt•t ' t
through the Sen ate . (;iven the .. ur rent displeasure on the part of boll!
bodies with the F.T C.. the ltke hh,.,d
of passa ge is m uch greater th1' ttme
around
Wh y is the FT.C. the object nf
eve ryone's critiCism ·' Why has rt

become everyone '.s (a ~;·on te dart
The comm on complamt.'i .:.Jre

board '~

that the F.T.C. is on regulator,
rampa ge , tha t 1t has grea tl y exceed ed its CongresstonHI manda te, that 11
has used a scatter gun a pproa ch to
problems , when a well a1med nfle
was in order . Ma ny feel the F T ('
has set 1tseU up as JUdge and Jury fi
eve rything tha t goes on rn tht•
marke t place, tha t only they know
what i.s best for the Amfrwan publ!1
Wha t actually ts thP F T (' ·,

charter ? By definition it IS a rather
bro&lt;Jli one . THe CommissiOn shar es
with teh Just1ce Department's Antitrust DlvLson the power to pr~
set·ute antitrust cases . It also has
general authori ty to tssue tndus try
wuJe trade reg ulation r ules p rolubrllng unfarr or decepti ve acts a nd
pracllces . It '-' the latter author ity
wluch must feel the F .T.C. has
greatly exL-ceded.
The h1ghly nmtroversial efforts by
the F T .C rn 1978 to res tnet broad cast adverUsrng auned a t children,

on

tht'

bas1s

thHt

yo ungsters are

defensdess aga inst many of the promotJon5 dJn·c ted at them, was
perhaps the rallying potnt for t he
current wave of f . T.C. oppos iti on .
F or rt Illustrated to m oot tha t the
present Chairma n , Michael Pert schuk, was bent on a course of acllvtsm for the age ncy
Also at q u ~sti nn is the increasing
prac t rce on the part of the Corrunisston to pr ovide fina ncial a 1d to
f..'T'Oops to part1c1pate in f.T.C . r u lemakrng proceedings. Many com plain tha t the Comm ission has giv en
most of s uch a1d to supporte rs of
rej;tula tion a nd s hould be m ore
even-handed in the distribution of
such funds . Others , m yself included,
feel that 1n no 1snta nce should w payers · money ever bt spent fo r
such purposes .
I have no qua lm, w1th the basiC
nruss10n of the F .T.C. that ofpolic m g
the market place to ensure the

Uu.•uness condur t'5 itself in a fair and
honest m a nne r . But when an agency

go"' beyond tha t mandate and a ttempts to impose 1L~ highl y controversia l phtlosophy on the orde r of
t1ngs 111 teh mar ket place I think it 's
t1me to say whoa . I think it 's lime to
put a halt to such prac trces. If the o nly way to accomplt."ih thi s is by giv·
1ng Con~rl"S."i a veto over suc h
r&lt;'gulatory rule-ma ktn g, so be rt.

Business mirror
NJ:: W YORK , AP ' - You may
disagre-e w1th tile followm~ 1dc&lt;-t s.

propo sals and ftndmgs, but liW)
represen t tile thlfl k1ng of some of til e
inchv 1dual ~

most mfluencial

and

institu tions m the natwn .
- F rom
a
cunstr\all\' f'

eco nomist ·
Jnte r esl ra te!i are "too low ,'·
acording to Milton f'n edman . th&lt;•
Nobel laureate economist And ht·
m eans wha t he ~ys. even though
almost all ra tes art• mt o h1stoncally
high t e rritor)
Friedman explaine d hts pos1t1on a

couple of weeks ago to an a lumni
gro up a t Stanford L'm n: rslty

-

There IS s tlJl a gap between the

rates of infl;;Jtlon tjnd mtcrest . ht·
explai ned .

In

m&lt;J ny

inflation rates are

mstann_' s

tu~ t'r .

When tlla t ~ap IS ta ken mt u
accoun t, F'nedrnan sa1d. people wh u
borrow now are t,.•ing pa1d L
percent for the pr1\·dege ." Such &lt;I
state m e nt would ;j ss ume , fr, r
example. an I I percent loan and J:l
percent inflation

Consumer lxlrr owtn~ ratrs m mo st
areas of tll e country art&gt; now hl;:twr
than II percent. except in states wttll
low us ury ceili ngs, but the thrust uf
Friedman's a rgwnent, that it pa~·s
to borrow, ma y be rorrcct.
Nrowers repay in c heaper dollars
but th ey ea rn tax deduellons !J w
Therefore, according to h1s tht.·s 1s.

ratC' s an• still tDo low.
- From l ' ttlr.en ·s Ll101ce. a self.
de~('rtbed
··nationa l grass-n)()ls
orgam7atton.'' closely allied with
thP \'.S. Chamber of Commerce :
Sky ru r kl't iOJ:: tax es. def1 c it
s pt&gt;n dtng etnU a rl etrn orat 1r.g
rclatwnsh1p between th e t.ax:paye r
and the I nternal Revenue Service
dl•rnand that inlffidia te measures to
n•sulve Utese problems be taken
Ulll·rest

now

Th en.•fore. a com mi ss iOn to
tnl·est igate the rela u onsh1p bet ween
tile fRS and tndlvtdua ls will conduct
OiltwnwidP htari.n gs, d uri n ~ whic h
qu e.s twn~ .such a s these will be pu t to
llw public
" Sh ould the adviCe whlch fH.S
f'mplrJyees gn t&gt; to t.axpayrrs bt•
gua ranteed , so tha t lf a l 9xpayer
follows 11 he wtll no t be pe nalized

Joter IJy anot hf' r

rt~ent 's

rulmg?
'Shou ld Uw IH.S elim tnate the
l&gt;&gt; ,mty pard 1D taxpaye rs who turn rn
Uw n:tme of fellow cit izens ror a
Sfl" l'ta I IHS au rill "
'Should t he l f\.S be requtred to

In Washington
By Martha Angle
aDd Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON !NEA l · Althoug h
the presidential campaig n wiU be
the stellar attraction in the center
ring r1 next year's political ci rcus,
the struggle for control !I many
s taiR legislatlll'1!s wiU provide a
fascinating s ideshow .
The duel between Republicam am
Democrats wiU be a crucial one
because the legislators elected next
year wiU be entrusted with the
politicaUy s e mitive task !I reshaping congressional distric ts for the
next decade on the basis ci the 1980
cemus !I population.
Although blatant gerrymaooering
- the comtruction !I geographically
dis tended dis tricts for partisan
benefit ·has been prohibited by court
rulings, the party in control !I a
legislatllre still can exercise cons iderable control over that state's
reapportionment process.
The Democrats currently enjoy
majorities in both hooses !I the
legislatnre in 30 states, compared
with only 11 states for the
Republica!'E . Nebraska has a nonpartisan unicameral legislatnre,
am control is dividEd between the
two parties in the remaining eight
states.
The RepubliCBns have targeted
more than two dtllen Jegisla tnres
where a shift !I relatively few sea Ill
might give the GOP the control it
seeks - and the party is seeking to
raise rnilliom !I dolla!'ll to finance
that efforl
Republican strategislll have identifiEd the lower houses rJ. the
legislatnre in Delaware, !Uinois aoo
Washington as well as New Hampshire's senate as chambers where
they neEd a switch !I only one seat to
gain a majority .
Other targeted states include
Ohio, Maine, Oregon, Alaska' Montana, New Mexico, Nevada, Calilornia , Tennessee, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania , Missoori aoo ConnecticuL
Although the Democrats lad&lt; the
money aoo manpower to moont a
s imilar effort, s&lt;me OOserve!'ll
believe that Republican str'ength in
maey legislatures may have peakEd
last year. In addition, the GOP could
I&lt;Be the slim margin ci control it
now hokl&lt;t in scme legislatures.

Cartt•r admits
inol't'Uratt- info
P resident CArter has quieUy but
ca ndidly admitted that he playEd
fast and loose with the facts about
military manpower during a 1975
campaign speech brio"' the CtiTl ·
munication Wori&lt;el'll !I America mtional convention.
To illustrate his criticism !I a topheavy defense establishment,
Carter claimed four yea I'll ago that
the Navy had more admirals than
s hillJ and the Air Force had more
colonels than planes .
When he appeared before the CWA
convention this year, Carter was
a sked by a union member from La!
Angel.,; if the s itnation had improv ed. The president said he didn 't have
current figures but promised a pers onal reply Ia ter .
Carter followed up with a hamwritten note, explaining that there
actually are two shillJ for every admiral in the Navy am 1.8 plallE5 for

rt.' Jmburse t.axpcJye r s fo r tht· money

the v spend to defend themselves
ri u nn~ IRS a udits whf'n tiH:' ~xp.ay er
•~ .s u s t~1m-d ""

t 1ttz&lt;·n ·s Cho tec calls 1ts effort .. a
l ll&lt;ISS l\ '('
unde rtak JnJ&lt;: of ntal
unrnrl anq• tu the futu re o f

Berry's World

rPla t10ns . · ·

Today In History
Ry The Associated Press
Toda y is Wednesday, Nov . 7, the
31 lth da y of 1979. There are f&gt;4 days
left in the year
Today's highlight in history :
On th is date tn l917 . Nikolai Lenin
and his Bolsheviks overthrew the
Ker ensky regime in Russia .
On tllis d a te .
In 1811 , the Shawnee Indians were
defea ted Ln the Battle of Tippecanoe
in lnd1ana .
In 1939. Belgium and Holland
a pproache d Britain , advocating
peace with Nazi Germany .
In 1942. the Allies invaded North
Afri ca .
In 1944
Preside nt Franklin
Roosevelt 'became the CllliY. fourterm chref e xe cutive.
In I 956, the British and French
decla red a cease.fire in the Suez
War .
In 1964 . 41 people died in a building
collapse in Rio de Janeiro.
ntE OA lLl' SEN'rorfEt
t US PSI~-1

OEVt:rrm TO 111E
INTEIU!8T OF
IIEIG8-IWION AII£A

ROBERT HOEFUDI
City r.lller
PobiJoloedllaOJ ...,.,.

s._,., n.

000.

v.u., ............,c_,. ....- . .....

Ill Court St., PCJ~Deny , 0... 11'711• . . _
Offlco 1'"- ,.._ lUI. BdiWW -

112-ZU"'.

8eftM . . . . . . .t ...... p_,..,., C'MIM.
NadQaal ldYU11abac ~•aw., ......_
Aued•&amp;e.. Jill F.-cUd A~t ., O.u ' "",OW.
oNUS.
·
SUt.erlpUoD l'll&amp;el: .DeUnred .,. earrler
wbn't •nlllble .. eatl ptf weft. a, MNr
~if derc c:.nter lloH'Yice .., nallable, 0..
mCJDIIt. SUI.
n. !loll' s..a...l, bJ
oar. oar!,.. .
Vlr&amp;lail, at year PJ.•; SlJ: ...U.. .17.• ;
..... -IU IIUI. .,.,.,..,. .... ; oh

...a,.

And here 's som e good news
11 , ·1ay he
that MINI SKIRTS a ·e cormng back ..

...........
. ;...-..-u..,u
..
Tht
Prat il cu...

obtod11ed
lvel)' nUlled
Ullbe .-for l*blk:aU. fll aU - - . .... t.rlw
crl!dlted Ill the Df'. .peptr 1..t •leo " ' t.elil
IW'WI

publbbed herela.

every colonel in the Air F orce
Although those figu"'s reflec t
some manpower reduc tions in n·
centyea!'ll , the president said he was
wrong in 19T.i. "The Pentagon s ta tes
that my (earUer) informa tion was
ootaccurate ," he admitted.

Nt•w and rl' vivt•d
T~

ral'i s m

Justice Department's Com-

GOP seeks strategic seats
m unity Rela tiorn Serv ice has some

dis nl!l yrng ne ws abou t revived
racism · In the fisca l yea r ended
Sept. 30. the CRS hand led 4-1 cases
mvolving Ku Klu x Klan ac tivities
compared with only eig ht s uc h case;
in the previoos year .
Although Kla n-related cases occurred throug hoot the nati on, they
were conce ntra ted in the S ootheast
and ge ne raily tad&lt; the form ci cross
burnin~s. a nned ra llies . fi re-

bombing,. , open c hallenges to
and harassment fi blaci&lt;B
minorities.
The CRS has more had news
a bout an unprecedented form
racial strife. In the jusk:clllcllude
fiscal year ' the agency ~~t:!:~
cases involving disputes
Vietnamese refugees aoo whites
members !I minoriiY groupe.
we re no suc h cases in the 11111orn.,,.
yea r .

Judgment SiJJ . J.S plus ac
lega t ees , ad m tnis tr ators,
PUBLIC NOTICE
c rued t a)(es, ass.essments,
executors, and / o r assigns
T he
f o ll o wln
pe nal t ies and cos rs of ac
of Li nn ie B r agg, deceased .
1976 L TO, g OOd sh a pe , 1 ex
documents were
!ton
t ra
s now
tir es,
l ow
Si tu a t ed in Or ange T own
ed or p repa r ed by
Case No . 79 ·DL T · 23 , Par
ship. Meigs Coun ty , Ohi o,
m i leage
Tak e
over
Ohio
En viro n m e nt a
eel No 04 029 -017 , Seria l
pay m (&gt;nts . 985 .4185.
Sect ion 6, Town 4, R ange
Protec ti on Agen c y dur
No 79 DL T 23 , It t ied in the
11 , Village of
Tu ppe r s
ing the pre~o~ious w eek .
name of Jacob Wa lters , if
Pla•ns,
co ntain1ng
1 1
The eff ~c tive date
1973 PO N TIAC G R A ND
l1vi ng, w hose add r ess 15
&lt;lCres
Refe r enc e Deed ,
each fi na l
VIL LE 4 door hard to p, ex
unknow n . if de-ceas.ed , the
Vol 15!l , Page 153, Me•gs
stated
The
ce llen t cond i t i on . L oaded
un k nown spouse , •f any , of
County
Deed
Reco r ·
date of e ac h
w ith ex tras . 7.4 2 2880
Jac o b
Wal t e r s .
the
ds Jud g m(&gt;nt $249 .60 p lus
ac ti on i s
- - - -un known heirs, dev 1sees ,
ac crued t axes . as.sessmen
ag gr iev ed or adverset
1973 NO VA 350 ' sp eed
lega t ees., admin1&lt;;.trators ,
ts , penalt•es , and cost s of
affec ted by a f i nal ac
P . B., good cond ition A fter
exec utor s and / or ass•gns of
ac tion
ti on t o issue, den y ,
6. 985 354!
Jacob Wal ter s. if deceased
m odify ,
revoke ,
Any per son own ing o r
Si t ua t ed
in
Le b a n on
claimtng an y rig h t, titl e or
renew a permit , li cense ,
(Eas t e r n)
T ownshi p ,
1979 FORD F ·l 50, .ol whee l
in t er es t in , or l 1en u po n , an y
or varianc e : or to ap
Mei gs Count y, Oh to , Sec
drive , facto r y
t opp er
par ce l of rea l es tate above
prove or
disapprove
1
1
t ion J.d, N . '1o f S E .o~o f S
Auto , P .S , P B $6800
lis t ed m ay fi le an a n sw er in
plans and
spec if ic i't
w 1... co ntai n i ng :zo acres sucn ac ti on sert i ng tortn
Phone 985 ·4339
rions, may file an appeal
Re fer ence D eed: Vo l 67,
with the Environmental
th e n atur e and a m ount of
Page 51.:1, M e igs Coun ty
Board of Revi-ew, Suite
in t er es t OIN ned or c ta im eod
1972 FORD L TO wagon ,
Deed Reco rd s . Judgme nt
a nd any defense or ob
305, 395 E . Broad 51. .
good c ond i tion , new tir es
S ll4 13 plus accrued taxes,
jec tion to th e f or ec losur e
Columbus, Ohio 4.3216,
and shocks. S650 . 992 6248 .
assess m ents, pena lt ies and
within thirty (JO) da n
Suc h an sw er mus t be f il ed
c os.ts. of action .
of the effec tive datE!',
in the off ice of t he un
1973 CHEVY IMPA LA , new
Cast No. 79· Dl T -24, Pa r
pursuant to Ohio Revi s
dersig ned Clerk of Cour t
ti r es, air c ond i tioning , ai r
ee l No. ORT ·02 , Se r ial N o
and a c op y ! her eof served
ed Code Sec tion 3745.07,
shocks, power steer i ng and
790LT 24, ti tl ed in t he
on the Cou nty P rosec utor
of the R evised Code .
brakes. Good condition .
na m e of Quin ce Cole, If
notice of t he fil i ng o1 the
on or before the 121 h d ay of
1966 Mustang , 4 speed , AM
l iving , wh ose a ddr ess is
appeal shall be fil ed
Decem ber , 1979 .
FM 8 trac k , Cargars, can
unkn ow n :
Nell ie Cole ,
lf no ans w er is f iled on or
with the D i rec tor of t he
dy app le r e d . 992 3493 or
spouse of Quin ce Cole , i f
Oh io
Env i ronment al
be f or e t he da te spec ified as
992 ·3391
l iving , whos.e add r ess 1S R t
th e las t d ay f or f di n g an an
Pr otec tion Aenc y , 361 E
2, L ong Bott om. Oh io,
SW(&gt;r ,
a
judgme nt of
Br oad Street , Co lu m
F r ank Col e, brot her of
1974 HONDA CIVI C. 4 new
b us, Ohi o 432 16, witt1 in
forecl osure wi ll be f a k en b y
Q ui nce Col e,
if lt vi ng,
t ires , new pa i nt jOb, new
trtree ( 3 ) days after t he
de f au lt as to a n y pa r ce l
whose address is Rt . J,
ex haust system . $1~95 . Ca ll
appea l is fi led with the
list ed i n th e co m p la int as t o
LonQ Bottom , Oh io, E uni ce
742 ·2211 , after 5, 742 2201.
wh ic h no answ er ha s been
Environmental Board of
We a ver, s. isl er of Quin ce
fil ed
Any pa rcel a s to
Review , all suc h finr!l
Co le, if li y ing , whose l a st
wh •c h a for ec losure •s
ac tions are so Identifi ed .
!973 DELTA 88 OldsmObile
~ n own
addr ess •S G l• p
ta ken by d efault shall be
Such persons may r e
Call 992 70'94 or c an be seen
svi tl e, Ohi o, Lucy M on
sol d t or fh (&gt; satisfac ti on of
quest 1n adjudication
at 913 Broadwa y, M id
tgo m ery , sis t er of Qu i n ce
th e t axes, as sess ments,
hea ri ng before the Ohi o
dlepor t.
Cole, if l• ving, whose l ast
penal t ies, c harges,
and
E PA on a proposed ac
k nown ad d r ess is Stew a r t ,
cosfs i nc urr ed
in
t he
ti on t o i ssue , d ~ ny,
Ohi o; the un k nown hei r s,
1978
OLDSMOBI L E
for ec losu r e tha t ar e due
mod ify ,
revoke , or
devi s(&gt;eS , IPga t ees. , ad
DELTA 88 4 ·door , 8300
and un pa•d
re new a perm i t , li cense .
minis tr at or s,
execu t ors,
m iles , A. C.. 55,000. 992 5368
At any ti me prio r to the
or va r ian ce , or to ap
or 992 ·252 1
an d / or ass.igns of Qumce
f d1ng of an ent ry of co n
pr ove or
d i sapprove
Cole , if dece a sed ,
t he
firmat i on of sa te , an y
p la ns an d
spec if 1c a
unknow n he i rs , dPv•sees. .
owne r or lienho lde r of a
1973 NOVA 35(1 4 ·5 peed,
t i on ~. w i th in thi r ty O Ol
lega
t
ees
.
admin
.s.t
r
at
o
rs
.
parcel liste-d 1n fh e com
P . B., gOOd cond i f1 on A fter '
days o f t ht&gt; i ssuan ce
e xecu tor s and 1 or ass.1gnc.. of
pl a int may red eem such
6. 985 354 1
date. OR C 37ol5 07 do..~
Nel l ie Cole, it deceased .
par cel by t en der i ng to th e
not prov ide f or
ad
t he
unknown
hf'tr'!.
County
Treas ur e r
t he
iudic at ion hearing re
1979 MERCURY BOBC A T,
dev•sees . legat er-s
ad
amoun t
of
t axes
q uest s or appeal s fr om
.o1 cyt.
23cc. 3- door na t
m onis t rators . (&gt;xecutor"\,
as5essme nt s, pen alt ies.
or der s, ve rifi ed com
c hba c k, a uto , P . S .. AM
a nd ; or as.sig n s ot Elt a s
~nd c ha r ges due and un
lai nts. o r enforc em ent
FM , rear window defogge r ,
Co le, il de&lt;eas.(&gt;d . t ne
pa•d
o
n
suc
h
p
a
r
ce
l
.
co
mpl i an c e sc hedul e
less than 1500 mil es . Ph one
u n known heirs, dev•sees,
t oget her w itt1 a ll cos t s
lett(&gt;r s, with i n 30 da ys ot
949 7820 .
le-ga tees . adm int sl gralor s.
wh1 c h have been i ncu rr ed
Publi cation
in
a
exe-cut or s, l egatees . ad
1n an y pr oceedi n g
1n
new spaper in t ne at
m1nis t rato r s,
executors ,
5t 1tu ted aga•nst suc h par
fec t ed co unty , an v De,.
Notice of Foreclosur e
and / or as.s igns of Eun1ce
eel under Sec t ton 5721. 18 Of
'SOn rna y al so ( 1 J sub
In the Common Pleas
Weave r , •f deceased . the
th(&gt; Rev•sed Code UPOn the
mi t w r itten co mm ent~
Court of Meigs County,
unknown heirs, devisees ,
fd 1ng of any entry of con
re l at i ng to ac ti ons, pr o
Ohio
lega t ees . ad m i n is tra t ors,
f i r ma t ion of sale, t here
posed
ac t io ns, ve r if ied
NOTICE OF
exec utor '5, and / or ass igns
sh a l l be no f urt her eq ut ty of
c ompL111int s,
f!nforc @
FORECLOSURE OF
of 1..ucy Mon f gomery , If
redem pt ion
A n y per son
ment
ca mp i i an ce
LIENSFOA
deceased
therea ft er claiming an y
sch edul e
lett e r s o r
DELINQUENT LAND
S•lua ted in Or ange Town
ngh t. t i tle and .n t e r est tn ,
p r elimi nar y
s t all
TAXES , BY ACTION IN
shi p , M eigs Cou nty , Oh i o .
or l 1('n upon , any such pa r
de terinat •on s on per
REM , BY COUNTY
Senion 18. Town A, Range
eel , ... nai l be foreve r b arr ed
mi ts to install , (2 ) re
TREASURER OF
, 0 C P . cont.aintng 32 50
and fo r ec los&lt;"d o1 any such
o ues t a publi c mH&lt;t• ng
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
acres
Ref er ence Deed
rtght , t it le, in ter es. t i n , lien
r egard i ng proposed ac
Pub li c notic e is her eb y
Vol 125. Pa ge 478 , Me igs
upon , a nd an y equ it y of
l •on s or on pr e limint~r y
g i ven that o n I he 5th da y of
Cou nt y
Deed
Records
redem pt ton in, s.uc h pa r ce l
staff determinations on
~e ptember , 1979, th e Coun
Judg m en t ~ 195 32 plu3 ac
LARRY E S P E NCE R
permits t o install . and
ty Trea surer of M eigs
cr ued ta xes, assessmen t s,
C lerk of Court of
or (JJ request nori ce of
County , Oh• o, filed a com
pena lt ies , and cos t s of a c
Com m on Pl ea~
further actions or pr o
plaint in the Court of Com
t10n
110131. ( I I) 7. l .oi ,Jt c
ceedi ngs . A l l reques t s
mon Pleas of M e igs Coun
Case NO . 79 · DLT ·15, Par
f or ad j ud icat ion hea r
ty , Ohi o. at Pomeroy , Ohio,
eel N o 04 0270 11, St•rl&lt;J I
1n g s
and
pub lic
for the f oreclosure ot l iens
N o 79 DL T 15. ti tl ed tn t h e
m (&gt;etings , and other
for
de l i nquent
tax es,
namf" o f Rebecca Wallen. ,
co mmun ic ti ons' cancer
a ssessm ent s,
pe na lt ies ,
•f li\nng , whose addres.3 1S
LEGAL NOTICE
n i ng pu b li c meetings ,
and charges aga ins t ce r
unk no w n . •f deceased the
PUBLIC SALE
adj ud ic a t ion hear i ngs,
fa in re al pro pert y si t u at e-d
unknow n spouse , if an ·; . of
The fo l low tng descr1bed
ve rif ied c om p l aint s. and
i n such c oun ty as desc r ibed
coll a ter al w i l l be w i d f o r
RebeCC it Wa lters ; the
r egulation s. should be
i n sa id compla in1.
unk nown hetrs , dev •sees.
casn at a pu b lic sa le a t 9 .40
ad dressed to th e L t"9al
The ob jec t of th e ac tion is
IP.Qa t ees . admints trato r s.
rl m on Novembe r 10 . 19 79
RE'Co rds Sec tion , Ohio
to obta in I rom the c our t of
e..-ecu t or es. , and / or i'I SS1g ns
at smi t h N elson Mot or s.
EP A, P 0 . Bo• 1049 ,
a judgment for ecl os ing the
of Retx&gt; cc a Wal ter o,.
1f
Inc , 500 E
M ain St ,
Co
lumbus , OHio 4.3216,
ta x liens again s t suc h re a l
dPceased
Pomeroy, Ohio
W ri tten
161• l 4666037 . Un le &gt;s
es tate and orderin g the
Si t ua t ed
1n
Lf'hanon
bids may be s.u b m ifted to
otherwise '5tated in par
sale of suc h r eal es tate f or
Towns hip, Me1gs Coun t y ,
GMAC a t 318 M ain Street,
ti c ul ar not ic es, all other
the sati sla c tion of t he ta x
Ohio, Sec ti on 32. Town 3,
Belpr e, Oh io T he se ll er
co mmunication s
in
liens the r eon .
Ra nge 11, OC. P , co n
rese r ves th(&gt; r i ght to b id
e luding comment s on
Such ac t ior. i s brough f
ra.ning 40 acres . Ref erence
197 4 P l ym outh . D us. t e r
p roposed act ions should
ag ain st the r e a l propert y
Deed : Vo l 87, age .476,
S"VL19G 4B4697 l8 Accoun t
be addre s$ed e ither to
o nly
and
no pers on a l
M e igs Count y D e(&gt;d Recor
No 132 1925 883•0
tne
Div is ion
of
judg me nt s.ha l l be en t er ed
d s Judgmen t S269 87 plus
GENERAL MOTORS
A
uthor
ization
&amp;
Com
therei n
accrued taxes, assessmen
ACCEPTANCE
p l ianc e ( Air ) or Perm i t
Th e permanent parce l
ts , pena lt ies . a nd cos t s at
CORPORATION
and Appr ov al Sec tion
nu mbe r ot eac h par cel i n
iK ttOn .
t t t I 1. li e
CWater ), wh icheve r i~
eluded in s.uc h ac t ion. l he
Case No . 79 ·0L T · 26 , Par
a ppropr iat ed,
at th e
tun stree t a ddress of the
ee l N o OR T 03, Se r .a l No
Oh io E PA , P 0
Box
par cel , if .avail abl e, a
79· 0L T 26 , t itl ed 1n the
10-49,
Col
u
m
b
us,
Oh
io
desc r ip ti on of th e par ce l , a
name of W . W Bragg , 11
43 216.
sta teme nt of the d moun t o f
liv1ng , whose last known
Issuance of NPO ES
t a )Ces,
a ss- ess me nt s ,
address. is 137J St dfler
Perm it
pena lties an d ch arges. due
Drive, F l . Mye r s, Flo r ida .
Jay Mar Co al Co .
ano unpa i d o n such parce l ,
the
unkno w n
he•rs,
One &amp; one half mi le E
and the na me a nd a dd r ess.
devis.ees. leGatees . ad
of Cheshire
o f the last know n owne-r
m1nis tr at ors , exe c utors . Bern1 ce Bede O so l
Chesh ire , Oh .
ther eof. as su ch appea r on
and / or assigns of W w
Recei vi ng
Water s ·
the gt&gt;neral tax l •st, all as
B ra gg, if deceased ; Hobar t
Oh
io
Ri
ve
r
Mile
Point
more fully set forth in th e
W hi t eside, if li vin g. w nose
25&lt;1 .3
c ompliint , are as tallows :
l as t Known ad d r ess is 1177
Permit N o . L025· AD
Ca•e No. 79-0L T -21. Par
L yn n Stree t . Park e r sbu r g,
Thi
s final action not
eel No . OV T 03 , Seri a l No
w v : the unknown heirs ,
pr ec eded by proposed
79 DL T 21, t i t led &gt;n the
devisees, l eg a t ees, ad
ac t ion and i s appealabl e
name ot Sa r ah A Pow ell , if
mi n is tr at ors,
execu t or s,
to EBR .
livin g , w hose ad dr ess is.
and / or assigns of Hobart
E ff ec tive Da te 10 29 79
Nonmber B. 19 7~
unknow n , if decea sed, th e
Wh 1teside , If
dece ased .
111 1 7, lt c
Yuu•
v•'&gt;i
l
&lt;,
w1
11
tw
grPa
t
l)'
unknown spou se, if a ny , of
Clara Adam s. if I1Ying,
Sara h A
P ow el l :
t he
w hose l ast kno w n address e • p;~n a ea !nos commg ~Pa• It "
lol&lt;.t&gt;l) you 11 gt~! on .. oh·ed ou r&gt;1an r
u nknown he i r s, devise-es,
1S 707 8th St ree t , Parker
tn !o ·• .. SI •ng d CII ~ o l o~ S yO~r ve ne~
l ~ at ee s ,
ad minis. tr ator s,
s.b u rg , W V : the unknown t' r eope ru•nce&lt;l t&gt;el or e t et your
exec utors , a na / or assig ns
hei r s, dev•sees, lega t ees . allvf'r rl u ro u s &lt;; pnot p re~ a••
of Sarah A
Pow eH , if
admin is trators , e)((&gt;Cutors, SC ORPI O !Oc t. 24 · No v 22)
oecea sea
an d / or ass1gns of Cl dril M ,l lf'Hdlly th•S C(JUI(I he ft ·~d
Si tuat(&gt;d in O l ive Tow n
Adams,
d
d eceas(&gt; &lt;J . le tl t"r d av lo r vou of fO\J brony lht'
sh i p, Meigs Cou n t y , On •o,
F r a nk ie Ptcke ns, if l tYing , l ull tcorrE' n l your k nowledge and
Sect i on 35, T ow n 3. Ra nge
who5e las t kno w n add r ess e • pe••PncP •nlo y ou r commer Ci al
the belter somet hmg a tl ecllng a
11 , 0 .C. P, N E OfNW 1.-,
is Ree dsvi l le. Oh10 ; the dealong s J:ond o ut rn o re o t wh a t
person you re dettply lana o t Let
loe ~ ,,h ead l o r )' Ou on tile year l u i
c ontain i n g
30
a c r es
unknown heirs. , dev 1sees,
yo ur r:n mp asston gUide you
IOWifltj yfJU I lJIIItHJil 't' I))" SendlfiQ
Referen ce O ~ d . Vol . 82 ,
TAURUS {Aprtl 20-M•y 20)
lega t ees, ad m •nts t r at or s.
tor ·rour lOP) O f A ~ tr o . G raph
There IS somethtnQ capt1 va tmg
Page 366, M eig s Cou n ty
exec u tor s, a nd / or ass igns
Le iter !J a11 $1 to r e ach 10 Ast• o
i)boul your pe r son al it y t May
Deed ~ ec ord s Judgment of F r an k •e P ic k e ns, if G• aph Bo • 489 RMt• o Crty
~Nh1ch puts Ol her s a t ease You
$193 .86 Pl us acc r ued t axes,
deceased . Es t a Will iams . S t&lt;1 'oo n N 'I 100 t9 8~ o:.u rt-' 10
mak e them !eel wan ted
~rwc o tv Do lin da te
assessment s. penalt ies and
if l i ving, w hose l ast known
GEMINI (M•y fhfune 20) A r*-r ·
SAGilT ARIUS (Nov . 23· Dec . 21)
costs ot ac t •on
address 15 5313 Holmt&gt;r
son w1th whom you havt~ a hLJ!ll ·
Beonq
n
goo
d
guy
us
uall-,
pay
s
C1se No. 79·Dl T ·22 , P ar
Stree t , Kans as C it y 10 ,
ness rela l! onsh1p cou l d
be
o
tt
ana
,,
m1
Qh
!
lUSt
do
t
ha
t
l
or
eel No. 04·01 .. -05-4, Serial
M •ssour 1,
the
un known
•nstrumen tal !Oday 1n lunung you
you l o &lt;l ;h &lt;;nm ec,n ~&gt; .... nu i'IL-I)re
N o. 79 -D L T 21, t itl ed in th e heirs, dev•sees , lt&gt;gatees ,
o n 10 somet hmg p r oht a t»e Keoeo
(tAfF&gt;(1 ,our pas t thoughllulness
n ame at Mili a A . Wa t son ,
'fOUr ears open
adm1nistra tor s. , e•ecutor'5 , ma) - n~ o l e !'0\.1 ont o ~o met h ollQ
aka M i l lie A Wat son , if
CANCER (Jwne 2t ·July 22) You
and; o r assigns a t Esta
pr or•H:&lt;.ong I hey ha ve goong
are capa ble o l 5elllnQ the type o l
living, wh ose aadr ess is
Gu ll lia m e, i f dece&lt;"sed ,
C,loPRt COAN ( O.C 22 -J•n 1i)
e~:amp le today th at wtll wm you
unknown , if d ecea sed, th e
Cora Soulier , if liv 1ng ,
T oa a~ s ~:&gt;ven ts SI10•JIO ple a sf'
admuerf. and cause o t hets to
unk now n spou se , if an y , of
yov ,et Su•~ r •s •ng ly ar 1• ben('
w hose l as t known add r ess
emulate your ac ltons UTilize you•
l ot s y(,u dero~t" wrll c.ome roo t fr om
M il !a A . Watson . aka M illie
•s
12 11 woo d s Dr 1ve .
Qlft!l Wl&amp;ely
A Watson ; tne unknown
TalmaQe .
O h io ,
the you• .. ttoo t::a but h om lnt' e •er
LEO (July ll--Aug, 22) Foi.Jow
110n&lt;&gt;
(rl11hJSI'
wOrking
1()1"
you
hei rs , devi sees , legatees ,
un k now n he ir s, dev •sees . AQUARIUS (J•n. 20-Feb. 1i)
y our nobler lnS t•nc l s rn d eali ng
administrators , exec ut ors,
w1t h others Somet htng qutl l!t
leQa t ees, ad mi nistr at or s ,
ll1ong s c.on torwe to lOOk pr o m1 s
and / or ass ians of M i ll 111 A
Jove!)' could result Kindness
execu tors. and / or assigns
rng •ega•01ng your career Th1S 1S
yields large rPtur n~ tOday
Wat son , ak a M11! 1e A w ar
Of
Cora
Sou li er .
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and / or assi gns o f Wilma
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today WhiCh COuld Denefit )'Oll
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7- The Deily Sentinel , Middleport-Porner= 0 wednesday Nov 7 1!17 9

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Old rivalries will be renewed this weekend

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Second place " at stake Friday
rught as the 1979 football season
comes to a close for two old rivaries
N&lt;rth Gallia and Kyger Creek
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holders of second place in the SV AC
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COLUMBUS. Ohio 1AP)
Massillon' s Mike Currence bids to
extend his coaching mastery over
host Canton McKinley Saturday in
me of the two oldest rivalries in Ohio
high school football history.
. Currence guided the Tigers to
VJctory m all three of his seasons at
Massillon, giving them a 46-32-0 edge
m the series that began in 1894 .
Also at stake for Massillon is an
undefeated regular season of !(}-()-{)
a possible Associated Press poli
champiooship and a berth in the
state playoffs . McKinley carries a 71-1 record.
Elyria and Lorain. which play
Friday night at Lorain, also began
their rivalry in 1894 . Lorain leads
that series 47-34-4.
Around Ohio • Will St. Marys
running star Jeff Cisco follow his
dad, Galen. to an Ohio State career '
" I don't know," replied the senior
who scored 232 points and ru.shed for
1,784 yards, an average of 11.7 per
carry this fall . " I've had a lot of
offers . My father doesn 't put a lot of
pressure on me to go there as people
think he does " Young Cisco
wrapped up his jrep career with a
school record 290 yards and five
touchdowns last week.
Cisco and his senior teammates
lost their first game "" eighth

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COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP) - Ls Joe
Altobelli nut in line in the New York
Yllllkees' musical chair game with
their managers?
The 47-year-old Altobelli, fired in
September as the San Francisco
Giants' skipper, )omed the Yankee
organ ization Tuesday as the
manager of their top minor league
affiliate, the Class AAA Columbu s
Clippers
"There are no strings attached to
this job ," insisted George Sisler Jr .,
general
manager
of
the
lntemational League franohise, one
of the most successful lil the minor
leagues.
Sisler added that neither the
Yankees nor the Clippers could
make any promises that Altobelli
might be considered for the big
managing job . Altobelli makes it no
secret that his goal is to return to the
maj&lt;r leagues .
" I'd like to go back to the big
leagues," said Altobelli, introduced
by Yankee Vice President Jack
Butterfield at a news conference . "I
feel! can contribuU, , bui as long as I
am here in Columbus, I'm going to
do the best job I can .
'Hopefully, through those efforts, I
can win another big league job. "
W"" Altobelli thinking of the
Yankees' post when he signed for an
estimated $30,000 t.o manage the
Clippers this season'
"No," he replied . " First things
first. The Clippers are my first
priority . Next year will take care of
itseU."
The Yankees now have their third
manager, Dick Howser, in two
seasons. He is coming off the Florida
State University campus to replace
the fiery Billy Martin, fu-ed after
succeeding
Bob
Lemon
in
midse....,n .
" Joe was our No. 1 choice . We
never did seriously consider anyooe
else . He's a proven winner, a great
motivator
for his
people,"
Butterfield said of Altobelli, who
mce managed Rochester to IL
pennants four times lil six years.
Why did Co lumbus look so
attractive to the 1978 National
League Manager of the Year after
guiding the Giants foc two se._..,ns'
·' When you manage in front of a lot
of people, that's important . Working
with the Yankees has to be
Important to me . The whole ball of
wu makes me very happy, " he
said .
The Clippers. playing in a park
that was renovated for $6 million
three years ago, drew the top paid
attendance of 570,000 in the minor
leagues in 1979. They won both the IL
pennant and playoff championship
under fu-s-year pilot Gene Michael,
now the Yankees' general manager .

graders and had 43 straight regular
season victories , 10 this fall .
Ray Atkinson 's first field goal of
the season kept Trenton Edgewood
unbeaten wtth a ~ decision over
Lakota, for cing losing Coach Stu
Eversole to say • "We aU died a little
bit tonight.'"
Keith Anna of Wooster Triway
made all nine of his field goaLs and 24
of 26 extra point attempts for 51
points this year . Zanesville's senior
quarterback Bruce Gillard finished
with 1,835 total yards , 723 of them on
the ground .
School records - Ed Hairston' s
1,335 ru.shing yards in one season nt
Mansfield Malabar . .John Price 's
1,0001Jius yards for a single season
ground mark at Frederickto\\11,
Todd LeMaster I ,143 yards rushing
at Cedarville and Jim Lindsey the
first Mount Vernon rusher in 20
years ";th 1,000 yards rushing .
Turnarounds - Mc Donald {).9-1 to
9-1-&lt;l under Coach Andy Golubec,
Jackson 1-9-{) to 7-H under Terry
Adsit. Chillicothe Zane Trace &gt;Hi in
1976 to 9-1 in 1979 and Springfield
South &gt;-3-1 under rookie Coach
Mickey Hann on, South's fir s t
winning season m five years.
Bests - Hannan Trace's ~1. the
Gallia County school's first winning
season in history and also a first
league title, the Southern Valley
Cooference crown Larry Cremeans
coaches Hannan Trace .
Add bests - Ced&amp;rville's 10-0-0
mark unprecedented in its history,
topping a 940 record in 1972, and
No . 4 state ranking in Class A under
Jm Villinger and West Lafayette
Ridgewood, at I (HI.{), first unbeaten
tesm in O&gt;shocton County history .
Streaks broken
Newark
Catholic's run of 13 straight league
championships and 19 regular
season triwnphs, IZ-7 by Johnstown.
Streaks continued Miami
Trace's six straight South«ntra l
Ohio League titles, eight of the last
ntne Southern Ohio Conference
crowns for Coach Ed Miller and
three of the last four Centra l
Buckeye Conference championships
for Urbana , led by freshman Jeff
Rogan 's 1,067 rushing yards .

Kyger Creek goes into Fnda y's
contes t with a &amp;-2-1 record while
Coach John Blake 's Pirates are &amp;-1-1

overall .
Inside the loop , KC has a 3~ record
while NGHS is 2-1-1.
On paper ,the two squads are pre tty evenly matched.
Kyger Creek is led by sophomore
quarterback Rob Waugh and runnmg backs Paul Lasseter, Ed
Moure, and BUI Ross . North Gallia
relies on the ball handling of junior
quarterback Donnie Shupe, the hard
running of senior tailback Tim
Howell and the reL'eiving of junior
Keith Payne .
Kyger Creek lost 13-li to Hannan
Trace, but defeated Eastern, !&gt;Hi.
North Gallia battled the Wildcats to
a 0-0 tie, but lost to Eastern,~ Both teams defeated South western, however , the Bobcats held
the better score advantage .

f .ast season , North Gallia ended 22
frustrating years with an 18-6 victory at Ches hire .
Saturday night , another ri valry is
renewed wtth the annual EasternSouthern clash . Th1s on e is
scheduled at Ea &gt;t ern . The Eagles of
Coac h Joe Mitchem were dethroned
from thetr league champions hip last

latonia results
FLOREN CF:. Ky. I AP I
Lake water L'huck . a longshot . won
th e S\ .000 featured pace mil e
Tuesda y night at Latonia and paid
$8260, $11 .40 and $4 .80.
Steady K placed , paymg S4.40 and
$3 .20. and Kim 's Flash was third t o
pay $3.40
Mtss Delaware Ntte and Kim Song
combined 1-7 in the double for
$336.20. The crowd of 1,053 bet
S\30,019.

week by the surpnsin~ Ha nnan
Trace Wildcats .
Eastern has a 5-3 season record
and 2-2 slate in the SVAC while
Southern is still seeking its first victory this season .
The Tornadoes are ()..3- J overall
and 1)..4.{) in the league.
Head coach John Dudding will be
coaching his l""t game . He has
already resigned but will remam on
the school's teaching staff.
Hannan Trace , this yea r's lea gue
champion , finished its season last
week with an impressiv e 9-&lt;l-1
record , the best lil the school' s
history .
Southwestern closed out its season
with a &gt;Hi record a nd 1-4 record in
the league.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

Team

76'ers storm from behind,
•
•
edge Milwaukee In overtime
Ry ALEX SACHARE
AP Sports Writer
Mllwaukee led Philadelphia by
four pomts with 16 seconds to play,
but Brian Winters wasn't fooled.
"That means nothing in thts
league," said the Bucks' all-star
guard . " Twenty points
can
sometimes mean nothing.''
The 71iers wiped out Milwaukee's
margin on baskets by Julius Erving
and Doug Collins , then went on the
beat the Bucks IIS-117 in overtime
Tuesday night in a matchup of
National Basketball AS&gt; oc iati on
division leaders.
" You know there is always a
chance," said O&gt;lhns. ' In pro ball
the clock stops after each basket and
you get the ball at hallco urt on a
timeout. You can never give up ."
In other NBA games, the Seattle
SuperSonics beat the Chicago Bulls
114-97 , the Cleveland Cavalier s
outscored the lni:liana Pacers 134117, the Phoenix Suns topped the
'Utah Jazz 120-107, the Atlanta
Hawks edged the New York Kni cks
93-96, the San Antonio Spurs beat the
New Jersey Nets 108-95 and the Los
Angeles Lakers defeated the San
Diego Clippers 127-112.
Erving scored Philadelphia ' s final
seven points in overtime, enough to
offset a pair of desperation threepoint field goals by Winters. Erving
finished with a game-high 34 pomts
for Philadelphia, which leads the
Atlantic Division with a 1().2 record .
Mtlwaukee remains at op the
Midwest at llhl .

Sanks 114. Bulls 97
Seattle got eight straight points four each by Lonn ie Shelton a nd
Jack Sikrna - to take a 63-51 lead m
the third period en route to tt s fifth
consecutive victory . Dennis Johnson
led the Sanies with JO point s. Sikma
finished with 14 points and 16
rebounds and Shelton had 12 point'
and 14 rebounds .
L'hica go has lost se ven in a row
and eight of 10 games since cente r
Artis Gilmor e got hurt .
Ca valie&lt;s 134, Pacers 117

Kenny Carr . a reserve forward
acquirf"d recently from l.os Angeles,
scored 19 uf his 21 points in the fourth
quarter to lead the Cavalie r s to their
third consecutive victory . Center
James Erlwerds of Ind iana led all
scorer~

con serutive vi f'lory and seve nth m
the la&gt;1 e ight outings .J oh n Drew
shot l ().for - 1~ for 2.1 potn ts anrl Dan
Roundfteld contrtbuted 18 p&lt;Jt nts. 13
rebounds and six assi sts.
Spur• 108, "'ets 95
San Antonio pulled a way fro m
New Jersey with a 39-point fow·t:&gt;

possible sale of the Oakland A's \0 a
Denver oilman and the upcoming
negotiations with the players' union
were scheduled to be major topics of
discussion today in a meeting of
maj&lt;r league baseball owners.
A spokesman said the meetings
would begin at 2 pm., CST, and all
major league clubs would be
represented. American League
owners were scheduled to meet
""perately to discuss the possibility
of the sale of the Oakland franchise ,
which drew only about 300,000 fans
last season, to Denve r oilman
Marvin Davis
But American League President
Lee MacPhail indicated no
immediate action was likely .
"It could be weeks , it could be
months or nothing may happen ,"
MacPhail said . " Nothing is going to
happen at this meeting . We are just

going to update the clubs on what th e
situation is at this time''
The A's have eight years
remaming on a lease with the
Oakland Coliseum , appare ntly the
only problem blocking the sale .
The Assoc iated Press learned
earlier that a sale was in the works
that could brin g major league
baseball to Denver for the 1980

season.
" We 've been working at this for
three years," Ma c Phail satd. "so I
can 't tell you it is going to fall in
place at this time . We are having a
player relations me eting and ,
because aU of our people will be
together, we decided to review the
Oakland situation.
"There are two big pieces that
have to come together." MacPhail
said, adding that one is A's owner
Charles 0 . Finley and " the other is
the Oakland Coliseum Board . We do

Suns 12U, Jazzl07
Walter DaVls and Paul Westphal
combined for 2:&gt; fJJint s in the fourth
quarter foc Phoenil&lt;. whic h played

without flu -stricken center Alvan

S ~11rP &lt;,

Pw Su"

WE'P I&lt;

DaY is

scor~d

seven

C r~k

at North

Saturday -

Southern at Eastern

Transactions
By The Associated Press
BASEBALL

Amer-ican league
NEW YORK YANKEES - !'famed
Joe A ltobelli manager of the ir Col um bu s c lub i n the International
League .
TORONTO B L UE JAYS - Named
J immy Wil liams to their coaching
staff .
BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
U TAH J AZZ
Wa ived Greg
De ane , guard
Signed
Andre
W aKefi eld , guard .
FOOTBALL
National Football league
ATLANTA FALCON S - Signed
Jerom e K 1ng, cornerback .
CHICAGO
BEARS Signed
Har r y Wa sh ington, wide re ceiver.
ST LOUIS CARDINAL S - Placed
Thom as L on , r unning bac k , on the
•n1 ured re serve lis f.
HOCKEY
National Hockey League
N H L - An nounced the resignation
o1 Bob Ca ey, d i rec tor of public rela tions so he may 1oin the Hartford
Wha ler:. ,n ,1 similar cap aci ty .
COLLEGE
AD E LPHI UNIVERSITY - Nam
ed Dav e Ferri s swimming coach.

won their seventh home game m
eight starts . Los Angele s. wh ich shot
58 percent from the fiel rl. opened a
16-point lead mthe tlur d ~uar11·r

""d

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56

62 86

T his week ' s games:

Friday

George Ge r vin top ped the Sp ur~
With 24 pomts . seven of U1em in the
final period
Lakers 127. (1Jpl"'rs 112
Karee m Abdui -J ahba r had 28
pomts and ll rebounds as the La ke"

not have an agreement wtth th e
Coliseum Board ."
Ewing Kauffman, owner of th e
Kansas City Ro yals and a member
of the AI, Planmng Co mmtttee.
talked
optimis ti call;
a bo ut
resolving the Oakland pro blem
" I think it will be worked out, " he
told the Kansas City Star . "The only
stumbling block is the Oakland
Coliseum Commission . There is a lot
of politics involved, but from a
fmancial standpoint . accepting a
settlement is the sensible thmg for
them t.o do."

week.
• Star!&lt;, bnghter
&lt;., ldy'l br 1gh:er : hrtr
the 1ead1n!:; prem•urr

"=

P OP
115 44
81 19
56 28

point Phoenix run that put the game
away .
Wetsphal finished With 31 points .
Len "Truck" Roblilson had 22 and
Davis 21 while Adrian Dantiey and
Pete Maravich each scored 29 for
Utah. whose Z-10 record is the worst
lil the NBA.
Hawks 98, Knlcks 96
Steve Hawes came off th e benc h to
score 11 of his 15 points in a span of
5 34 m the sec-ond hall to help
Atlanta trim New York for its fourth

Nil' •

S•mnr·l /

SVACONLY
Team
W L T
x Hannan Tra ce
.4 0 I
K yger Creek
3 1 0
North Galli a
2 1 1
Eastern
2 2 0
Southwestern
1 4 0
Southern
0 .4 0
x - League c hampion .

Adams . 'l'he Jazz led 100-98 before

PEOPLE
• W n trr~/{

Southern

coasted home .

with 33 points.

/\"'PROFESSIONAL
PARTS

G&amp;J

6 3 0 161 81!
4 6 0 168 152
0 8 I -46 295

So uthwe ~ t ern

quartPr in whirh re~·rve forw ard
Kevin Restani ~ur ed eight pLHnb

A's sale, negotiations on agenda
KANSAS CITY. Mo . IAP l - The

W L T
POP
9 0 1 22 0 69
b I I 16 1 -4 9
6 i
1 151 -4 5

Hannan Trace
North Galli a
K ·,- ger Cr eek

Eastern

A Sheet

-----~-----------.-----------------------------1

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN MATERIALSMASON,
CO.W. VA.

173-5554

�8-Tbe Dllily Sentllle~ Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 7, 1979

9-Tbe Daily Sen tine~ Mlddleport-POOJeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 7, 1979

Hoople says, 'Favor the fa vorites'
By Major Amoo B. Hoople
The Wizard of Odds
Egad, friends, this is the week to
get evep for the season.
, A careful perusal of all pertinent
data avaitable to the Hoople
. Forecasting Team indicates the
. favored elevens will prevail on prac,.!ically a ll fronts. Um-llwnph 1
, Principal interest will center on
teh major conference races nearing
the climactic stage . Here is how we
.. size them up :
:. In the SEC, Alabama, driving for
, its eighth crown in the last nine
years, will meet 1ts stiffest competi_.tion of tbe year in the LSU Fighting
, Tigers.
The Louisiana State lads gave
'Southern California its biggest scare
:of the year before falllng to the l'r&lt;&gt;jans in the closing minutes . So Bear
Bryant's !lama forces had bette r be
ready for this 0ne.
Our Alabama correspondent , Jack
•Mobile, assures us the Crimson Tide
;jg ready to poll and - kaff -kaff ':Will sink Tigers . 28-15 .

The Georgia Bulldogs, also in the
running for the SEC title, s hould

have UtUe trouble dis pooing of punchless Florida, 36-7. Auburn figures
to take Mississiwi State , 22-14. And
Kentucky will squeeze past Vande rbilt. 1().7.
In the SWC, some interes ing matchups are headed by the TexasHouston clash m the A:strodome .
In the fiv e previous meetings rJ.
these two clubs , the record reads
2-2-1. Which - heh-heh - almost
tempts your correspondent to pick a
tie , to make the rec ord three deuces .
Howeve r , we see Texas triumplung
in somewhat of a mild surprise- but
not by much. Make it : Texas 28.
Houston 24 .
Arkansas . sllll a fa ctor m the SWC
title chase, will defeat Bay lor , 2+20,
and Texas Tech will subdue TCU,
3!&gt;- 17.
In the Paclf1 c 10, Southern Callfornia, looking forward to its seasonendm~ battle with hometown ri va l
UCLA . will have its hands full tlus

Sports briefs
By The Associated Pres•
TENNIS
STUTTGART, West Germany I AP I
- Top-&lt;ieeded Martina Navratilova
overcame Sylvia Hani.ka of West
Germany !i-7, 7-f&gt; , &amp;-2 in first-r ound
action at a $100,000 Grand Pru
Tournament.
In other matches, Kerry Rei d of
Austra lia beat Pam Teeguarde n &amp;-4 ,
&amp;-2 and Ta nya Harford of Soutil
Af rica defeated Betsy Nagelsen 7-f&gt;,

7-ii.
HONG KONG ! AP I - Roscoe
Tanner roulal Jim Delaney fl..O . &amp;-1
in tile first round of tile
U.S.Hong Kong Classic
In other actio n, AustraUa 's Ken
Rosewall beat Mike Cahill 7-6 , &amp;-3,
Joh n Newcombe of Aus trali a
defeated Matt Mitchell &amp;-2, 6-J ;
Butch Walts edged Aust .-alia 's Rod
Frawley 6-4, 3-6, 6-J ; Joon Sadri bea t
John Marks of Aust r alia 6-J , 2-6 , &amp;-3;
Bob Lutz defeated Tim Ste voux of
Belgium 6-2, &amp;-2, Australian Mark
Edmondson beat Chris Lewiis &amp;-2, 7-5
and Tim Wilkison beat Fran cisco
Gonzales 6-4, 7-4&gt; .
SfOCKHOLM , Sweden ! AP I John McEnroe outlasted Schlom o
Glickstein of Israel !Hl, 3-6 . 6-J in tile
opening r ou nd of th e $210,000
St.ockholm Open .
In othe r ma tches, Harold Solomon
beat Sweden ' s Stefan Svensson !Hl,
7-f&gt; ; Brian Gottfried overcame Gilles
Mocetton of France &amp;-7, 6-J , &amp;-4 ;
Gene Ma yer ousted Gianni Ocleppo
of Italy t&gt;-3, 6-4; Stan Smith whipped
Ove Bengtson of Sweden &amp;-1. &amp;-2,
Nic k Sav ia no e limina t ed K je ll
Johansson of Sweden t&gt;-3 , 6-4 and
George Hardie upset Yannick Noah
of France !i-7, 6-4, 7-f&gt; .
GOLF
YOKAHOMA, Japan I AP 1 - A
United Sta tes team, led by Amy
Alcott and Donna C. Young , grabbed
a 11ktroke lead over Japan in a dual
women 's golf match .
The U.S ., r ep resen ted by eight
m embers of the LPGA. compiled a
21-under-par 271 total .
Alc ott, You ng and Japan' s
Tatsuko Ohsako each shot !&gt;-underpar 69 to share the individua l lead .
Yuko Moriguchi of Japan had a 70
and was followed by Americans
Hollis Sta cy and Pat Bradley,
Canadian Sandra Post and Ayako

m.ooo

• • •

Oka hom oto and Ats kuko Hikage of
J a pan at 71.
BASEBALL
T OKYO I AP I - F ormer American
maj cr lea guer f:ha r ley Manuel of
tile Kintetsu Buffa loes, who led the
t1lrcuit wtth 37 home runs, was
named the Japanese l .eagu e's Most
Va lua ble Play er for 1979.
Felix Millan, a former Atlanta
Brave and New Yor k Met, won the
battl!lg crown with a .346 aver age .
BOWLING
SYRACUSE , N. Y. I API - Vet eran
Mike Durbin of Chagrin Falls. Ohio.
rolled a pair of 235 games and won
the $75,000 SyTacuse Open, his first
PBA victor y in seven years.
Durbin topped Alvrn Lou of El
Ca jrn , Calif., and Mark Roth of
North Arlington , N.J .

Saturday with the Washington
HlLSkies . In our opinioo the Trojans
have too much powe r for the HlLSkies
and will take home a 3!&gt;-20 victory.
Some othe rs in the Pac 10 wi 11 find
Stanford trirruning Oregon , 32- 16 ;
Arizona SIBle 's Sun Dev ils , now
play l!lg up to their pre-&lt;Jeason
potenia l, will dwn p UCLA, 22-18 ,
and
Californa will knock &lt;if
Washington Sta te in a hig h-&lt;Jcorilll(
affair , 42-24. .
In the B1g 8, Nebraska and
Oklahoma , pointing for thetr annual
blood-letting on Nov . 24, Will score

TodJJy 's

Sports World

Chicago's Sutter Cy Young Award winner

'I

NEW YORK ( AP)-Chicago Cub
reliever Bruce Sutter , who tied the
Natlooal League rec ord fer saves
with 37 last season, today was
named winner of the NL Cy Young
Award for 1979.
Sutter, who came within one save
of tbe ~ajoc league record set by
J ohn Hiller of the Detroit Tigers in
1973, n81Towly defeated 21'f!&amp;me
Wl!lller Joe Nlekro of the Houston
Ast ros m voting by the Baseball
Writers AssoclaUon of America.
The forkba lll ng right-hander
earned 10 of the 24 first-pla ce ballots
to become the second NL reliever
~d the third in baseba ll history to
Wlll the pnze . Mike Marsha ll won it
for the los Angeles Dodgers in 1974
and Sparky Lyle of the New York
Yankees took the American l.eBI(ue

I

'

ll:y U"i/1 Grimslt&gt;:y AP Correspondent

impreS:J ivc VIctori es over Kansas
foes .
The Nebaska Cornhuskers will
trip up Kansas State 42-10. An d
Oklahoma , with the twinkle toes hak-kaff -of Billy Sim' showm~ the
way , will bury Kansas 3!&gt;-6.
In the Big 10, headed towa rd t he
seeffilllgly mevitable Oh10 Sta teMlchigan clash for the leag ue t1tle . it
will be Ohio State trouncing Iowa ,
3!&gt;-17, tlus week, and Mlclugan scormg a ha rd-won 33-28 wm over Purdue .
The s urpising Indiana and illinois
elevens . wh1ch have shown fla shes
of brilliance tlus fall , will battle
down to the wire before t he Hoosiers
take charge for a 21 ·14 triumph . Nor thwestern will wih one of 1ts rar e VICtories 1n the Big 10, whi ppmg
Wiscons in, 24-15. And remember ,
yo u read tha t predictiOn in Hoople har-rumph '
In the Ivy League , it looks like this
to Newt Have n, our Northeaste rn
correspondent • the Yale Bulldogs
will prevail ove r Prin ceton , 21-14 ;
Brown will take Dartmouth, 24·13;
Cornell will beat Colwn bia , ZS-7; and
Harvard will get s traightened out in
defeating Penn, 2!1-10.
In the ACC, two good games are on
tap . Watch for Wa ke Forest , the real
surprise (earn of 1979, to vanq u1sh
the D uke Blue Devils, 42-14 , and the
North CaroUna Tar Heels to score a
close win overtough Clemson . 24-18 .
On the independent front. the re
a re these crowd pleasers : F lorida
State wiill top the excelle nt SouU1
Ca ro li na
Gam ec oc ks.
21- 19 ;
Brigham Young "i ll score a t will in
a ~20 win over Long Beach Stale ;
and Notre Dame will win !another
close one I agamst Tennessee, 24-17 .
Also among the independe nl.5 look
for Penn State to bea t No rtl.
Car olina State. 24-14 ; Nav y to defeat
Syracuse, 27-21 , and Virginia to v·in
a real bam-bWTier from intra -slc:lte
ri val Virginia Tech , 17-15.
Now go on w1th m y foe ca st
NOV . 10
Alabama US LSU 15 1N I
Appa la chian St 32 Wm &amp; Mary 10

Arizona 24 San Diego St 21
Arizona St 22 UCLA 18
Arkansas 24 Baylor 20
Au burn 22 Mississippi St 14
BYU 40Long Beach St . 20 IN I
Brown 24 Dartmouth 13
California 42 Washington St. 24
Centra l Mlchigan 33 E. Mi clu~an
13
Cincinati 32 Ohio U 7
Colgate 24 Bucknelll4
Colorado 14 Ok lahoma St. 13
E . carolina 33 Riclun ond 71 N I
Florida St. 21 South Carolina 19
INI
Georgia 36 F lorida 7
Georgia Tech 36 Air F orce lB
Harvard 20 Penn 10
Indiana 21 Illinois 14
Kentucky 18 Vanderbil t 14
l.ouisville 28 Memplus St . 20
Mlami 10 127 Kent St. 17
Michi gan 33 Purdue 28
Michi ga n St. 27 Minnesota 12
Mlssiss1ppi 14'l'ulane7 1NI
Missouri 22 lowa St 12
Navy 27 Syracuse 21
Nebraska 42 Kansas St 10
North Ca rolina 24 Clemson 18
Northwestern 24 Wisconsin 1:;
Notre Dame 24 Tennessee 21
Ohi o State35 Iowa 17
Okla homa 35 Kansas 6
Penn St 28 N Carolina State 14
Pittsburgh 3() West Virginia 17
Rutgers 37 Army 13
S Mississippi 28 Bowling Green 12
SMU 19 Wicluta St 13
SIBrlford 32 Oregon 18
Temple 42 Akron 21
Texas 28 Houston 24 1N 1
Texas Tech 35 TCO 17
Tulsa 26 New MeXJco St 13 1N 1
USC 35 Washington 20
Utah 35 UTE P 8
Vir ginia 17 VIrginia Tech 15
VMJ 21 Marshal ll 4
Wake Forest 42 Duke 12
Wyoming 3() Arkansas St 21
Yale 21 Pri nceton 14

J uli us " Dr . J " E rving is more
am used than chagrined at som e of
tile dcme aning barbs , largel y racial ,
amwd a t th e e ntertaining aspects of
professional basketball .
One of tile most widely circ ulated
goes like this : Pro basketball IS 10
black men leaping for a ball eve ry 24
semnds . Another is that if you tune
in on a garhe in the last 10 minutes ,
yo u don't miss a thing .
New York newspapers have
publicly explored the SU!&gt;!&gt;estion
th a t d ec lini ng atte ndan c e at
Madison Square Garden may be
a ttributable to the fa ct that the
Knicks are all bla c k, with no Bill
Bradley or Da ve DeBussc he r e
woven into the ranks .
"Ridiculous, " retorts Dr. J , one of
th e sport 's premier talents, now with
til e Philade lphia 76ers . "The game

P la\f·rs uf

COL UMB US, O hio I AP I
Bowling G r een ta ilbac k Ke vin
Folkes an d Toledo safety Mlke
Ken nedy are t he Player s of th e
Week in Mid -Americ an Con ference
foot ball .
Folkes. a sophomor e from Detroit ,
ru'ihed for a caree r high 122 yards in
17 carries and scored one touchdown
in the Falcons' 2().14 loss at
Kentu cky Saturday .
Kennedy, a junior from Toledo ,
recove red one fwnble an d for ced
another one . bloc ked a punt a nd was
lll on six ta ckles again st Cen tra l
Michiga n. He was named P layer of
the Gam e in the Rockets ' 7-7
reg ionall y televised t ie with the
Chippewas
Also receiving st rong recogmtion
wa s Ce ntr a l Mi c hi gan 's Dav e
Mrun e, who blocked a punt and
made 11 tackles aga mst Toledo, and
F:nc Manns , credit ed wi th 16 tackles
in Weslem Mirhr gan 's 24-3 verdict
ove r Miami .

transcends color . When the ba ll
drops into the net from 20 feet out,
nobody thinks of the color of the man
who tossed it .
Articulate, poised, sans h:tn ~up '
and crusading tendend c c. J:rvinf
ca me to New York earlie r thl " wet: k
not to indulge in or esp u•J &gt;&lt;' the
m erits of his p rofession but to kick
off a new movie in which he has a
starrmg role, "The Fish Th at .';IJVcd
Pittsburgh ."
It opened Tuesday ni gh t a t a &lt;"ha in
of theaters.
" It 's a delightful musicHI cm rlt'dy
- colorful , witt y, youU1 ·•r i••nted
with a basketball theme, " tl1c· ·o&lt;"r s'
star said . " The mu sic 1" f'r-!l'h y
Others in the cast are Jt ~~01 th an
Winters, Flip Wilson , Jan :• · Bond
III and Meadowlark !J&gt;mc.n llr:"·e a
serious role with a love inter• ·st. Jt ' s
all built around a tea m on "1 k h
every member was horn ~~n J '! r Uw
ast rolog ical sign of pist·es r f!Sh J. "
It is easy to un der"" " \ wh y
Lorimar Productioo s cl, .. .,.. [ ' r .I
He radiates the kind of chari"' '" ' olll
of which stars a re born
A product of Roo sev e ~ t. Lon g
Island, he att ended th e Uni V f" " ,; 1~· of
Massachusetts and in 1971 ,., · ' · ~~
joined the Virg inia Squire•: ul Lhf' f,\ l
American Basketball A~ ..·;. ,c·,a tJI Il l

Ucl'l of

NEW YORK IAPI -

LA·Z·BOYr"chairs
are on SALE now

Prev;ous

w i nne rs of ~he National League Cy
Y oung Award a s pr esented bv the
Bas.eb al l Writers
Assoc i ation of
Am er ic a :
19S6- Don Newc ombe, Brook ly n
1957- Warrewn Spahn , M i l w a u ~ee
1960- vern Law , P ittsburgh
1962- San d y Koufa x . L os A nge les
1965- Sand y Koufax , Los A ng e l e~
1966 - Sandy Kou f a K. Los A ng eles
1967- M ike M cC or m 1ck , San F r an
c i sco
1968 - Bob Gi bson , Sf LOU IS
1969 - Tom Se av er , New Yor k
197 0 - Bob Gibson, St . Lou i~
1971 - Ferg uson J e n kin~ , Ctli c ago
1972 - Steve Car lton , Phil ade lphi a
1973 - Tom Seaver , New York
l 'n.t- M i ke Marsha ll , Los Ang e les
19 75-- Tom Se av er , New York
1976- Randy Jones , San Dieg o
1977 - Stev e Car l ton , Philad e lph ia
1978- Gaylord Perry , San Die go
1979- Br uce Su t te r , Chic cl gO
N ote Un t i l 1967, one aw a r d w as
give n c ov eri ng bo t h league s

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BYCITIZE

J unior Dave Parlin was Rio's top
finis he r. He cracked the top ten with
a ninth place finish and a time rJ.
26 :0'7 for the five mile course.
Following Pa rlin for Rio Grande
were freslunen Joe Ramey 13th. ,
26 :52; Dale Winehart 18th. , 27 :11;
Uirry McNickle 21llt, ZH3 ; and
Mark M oyer~th .. 28 :52.

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and RioG randeBB.
"We'll bounce back" said Willey.
"The team is mootly freshmen and
with a nother recruiting year this
coold be the foondation d a great
Rio cr&lt;IIS-country tea m."
T he cra!B-country nmners bave
ooe meet left, this weekend's NAJA
Oisbict 22 Champio01hips. Any run·
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"I c~ldn 't beUeve, " said Willey,

not run. "
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Willey . " Ma lone College , the perennial conference champion, knew
they would be in a four team
s t ruggle this year, and our
youngste,., have run very well."
Ben Junk, ooe of the team's few
upperclass runners . apparently
ch~
a personal commitment
rather than run in the conference

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DAIRY

._I

RIO GRANDE, crippled by the absence ci its second strongest runner ,
the Rio Gra nde College and Community college Cl'alS-country team
finished a d isappointing fou rth in
this past weeke nd 's Mid-Ohio conference crC~~S-&lt;:ountry meet a t
Cedarville .
Rio Coach Bob Willey bad hoped to
challenge for the conference leadership with a very young team
"I really thought we had a shot at
the runner-up spot Ulls year ," said

Tile team's scores for the meet
were Malone College 31, Walsh
College 47, Cedarville College 86,

.,_

.• •

/

Rio runners place fourth in conference

........., h aoilt*t. r~1ng lhe..,. -.v""Q' or • •......cl&gt;« lo
""""'ch r i
10 pu.tc:t._ 1'- ldYerl_ , •1.... I I lflol

J

HAM SALAD••.••••••..•.•••••••L.~ ~ 1.19
·-,

~

in 1978.
Sutter also had 10 saves in 32
games during the 1976 campaign Ius first in the major leagues giving him 104 saves in j ust Wider
3\2 seasons with the Cubs.

~~ "'-8d "-dti'UI'(Mgf .... ~­
lllnl ....... oft• o;ou 'f(lo.JI c ~ of t t~.,._ olem

Phone 742-2100

Cy Young winners

~

~ ...,.....,.. fOI . . ,.. -=. h Kroger S lor t

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Prices Effective Thru Sat., Nov. 10th

2.71
In 1977, Sutter amassed 31 saves to
Ue the club record set by Ted
Abe rnathy in 1965 and his 1.3:i ERA
led NL hurlers wbo pitched 100
innings or more . He added 27 saves

BETTE

ll""''

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT

Phil , led the NL in victories . He had
a 21-11 reco rd in 3ll starts with 11
complete games and a 3.00 E RA .
Richard led the NL in strikeouts
witil 31 3 while buildin g an 111-13
record and finishin g with an F:R A of

IR

For til e next six years he bt·c .!Jt w th l

pressure. Iwant tobr my r_ ,,lr J !)( :~ • .~

the Cy Young . Ferguson JenJ?ns
won it for Olicago lll 1971.
Joe Niekro earned nine first-place
votes and Richa~d garnered four ,
with Tekulve collecting the other.
Joe Niekro , a ion ~ w!til broth er

PRICE••

cenU,r of franchise IJ a ·.i e'. ancl
mult imillior dollar sui b u tvol •; in ~
the Squires, At lanta
and
Milwa ukee Bucks .
Finally he landed w1 t ~ :.h •· 'i~w
York Nets, who su bseq1 wnth tr,rlN!
him to the 76ers in " 12 ·, " 1111 ion
deal.
Dr . J , no looger weari n~ !•r • ~~·· ·-. or '
his fragile knees , h ~ .... c ... • .1
timetable for his reti ro •n .·
"'
1982 atthe conclusion of l
· ••·
eontraL1 . He will be 32
" I have been preparin p + t,. &lt;r: .•,~
portfolio," he said . " I t.li'"' l 'rt rl
about going into Uw r:J,,, .~ ..; or
becoming a 1V c omrrl" ll t;, to r.

honor m 1977
Sutter also reeeived six second·
place votes and four tlurd-place
votes foc a total of 72 points, witil
five points awarded f&lt;¥" first-place
mentioo, three points f&lt;r second and
rne for third .
·
Niekro was second with 66 points.
Strikeout champion J .R . Richard of
the Houstor Ast ros was third with 41
points, followed by Tom Seaver of
the Cincinnati Reds (20 points) ,
Pittsburgh Pirates reliever Kent
Tekulve ( 14 points) and Phil Niekro
of the Atla nta Braves, who was sixtil
with three points .
Sutter appea red in 62 games for
Olicago, compiling a !Hi record and
a 2.23 earned r un average in 101
innings. He str uck out liO batters
and walked only 32 in becoming the
second mem ber of the Cubs to win

Florida
0 ranges .... .........

-lb.

aag

.......

hctpt Clo1elf Satwrd.y MHWght nit• S11d1J
hctpt Hinton, Wltlte w,lill', 7TH An- Clllrlem.

�11- The Dolly Sentinel, MidldleJlori-Pon

10-The Doily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, NOll . 7,19711

Nov. 7 1979

Pro standings
Pro Hockey At A Gl•nce
By Tho Assoclatecl Preu
N•tlon•l Hockey Le•gue
Ciimpbell Conference

Patrick Division
Philadelphia
Atlanta
~Y Islanders
NY Ranoers
Washington

W L
9
6
S

T Pis
GF GA
1 1 19 Sl 36
4 3 15 51 37
4 3 13 o13 37
6 1 11 49 411
3 B 2 8 38 4S

s

Store Hours:

Smythe Divlson

s

Vancouver
4 4
13 44 42
St. LO&lt;Jis
4 S 3 11 31 37
Winnipeg
4 6 3 11 26 34
Chicago
J 6 J
9 2S 34
Edmonton
2 6 4 8 41 54
Colorado
2 8 2 6 32 44
W•les Conference
Ad•ms Divis' on
Minnesota
7 J 2 16
40
BUffalo
1 ~ 2 16 42 32
Boston
6 2 J 15 311 29
Quebec
4 s 2 10 JJ 35
Toronto
4 1 1 9 J7 oil
Norris Division
Montreal
8 J 2 18' 51 38
Los Angeles
7 5 2 16 61 S9
Harlford
4 4 4 12 36 JS
Pittsburgh
4 ~ 2 10 38 38
Detroit
36283236
TueSCI•v's Games
New York iSiilnders -4, Los Arl9ele61
A llanta 8, Winnipeg o
Hartford 7, Colorado 2
Mlni"M!SOta 7, Vancouver7, tie

ss

Mor1.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE TiiRU SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1979

Wednesav's ~mes
Los Anoeles at New York Rangers
Edmonton at Detroit
Montreal at Pl111burgh
Wlnnlpeo at Wa!ohington
Philadelphia at Quebec

Toronto at St. Louis
Thursdly's Games

Edmonton at Boston
Chicago at Buffalo

Ground Chuck .... ;s;.~.l

N•tionll Basketb11ll Association
AI A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eillstern Conference

Atlantic Division

The spirit of Marlboro in a low tar cigarette.
"

W. L. Pel.
Philadelphia
10 1 .833
Boston
B 2 .800
NewYork
7 6 .538
Washington
3 6 .333
New Jersey
4 9 .308
Central Division
Atlanta
9 5 .6ol3
San Antonio
7 S .SIJ
Cleveland
6 8 .429
Detroit
.c 7 .36.4
Indiana
S 9 .3S7
HouSion
3 1 .300
Western Conference

GB
1
JV2

S'l7
6 1!1

6 11l

Chicago

71; ,

.214

CHUCK ROAST.....~8~

1
3
3'12
•
4

Midwest Division
Milwaukee
10 3 .769
Kansas City
S 8 .38.1
Denver
J 9 .250
3 11

59

s

Utah

2 10 .167 7'h
Pacific Division
Portland
11 2 .846
LosAnveles
9 J .750 l'h
Phoenix
8 s .61S 3
Seanie
8 5 .61S J
Golden State
6 S .SotS •
San Diego
5 9 .357 61h

Tuesd•y 's G•mes
Allanla98, New York 96
Cleveland 13-4, Indiana 117
Phladelphlal18, Milwaukee 117, ot

san Antonio 101, New Jersey 9S
Seattlel14, Chicago 97
Phoenix 120, U lah 107
L.os Angeles127. San Diego 112
Wednesday's Game•

San Antonio at Beaton
Kansas City at Philadelphia
Allanfa at Detroit
Portland at Indiana

New Jersey at HO&lt;Jslon
Seattle at Denver
San Diego at Phoenix
L.os Angeles at Golden State

Thursda v •s Games
Portland at M i lwaukee
Denver at Utah

$

CENTER CUT RIB

39

PORK CHOPS ......'!••• 1
CRISPY SERVE

Slab Bacon...... !~· . 59~

g~

BACON...................L~~
FRYER PARTS..... ~8~ 4
MIXED

••

9~

••

Racine
Social Events
By Mn. Fnmcll Morris
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Shain, Mrs.
Mlldred Spencer and Mrs. Gamel
Ervine went to Flemingsburg, Ky.
recenUy to visit Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Carpenter and at the
cemetery.
Mrs. Mildred Swift rt ColwnbliS
and Mrs. &lt;llri8tine Goold of NelsonviDe visited their mother, Mrs.
Francis MorTis, recenUy.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beegle spent
a weekend with his brother, Mr. and
Mrs. Dick Beegle at Barberton. Mills

Vera Beegle,

.

.•

.
Ul

t""~

'
,)

'. .·'

·- ·

. ...

·; " '• I , ,

....

.

-;. ,, .

~

..

; ' -~

:_:_~ - .j,.-.;.·.·~.·

_,,. ,_(-_:·.~~-~-~~·~,..; -~--r ......
~. _;' .....,·.·.:.·, .·.. .·.. ~--- -- ..-:·,·:... . .

Kings : 12 mg.. tar: · 0 8 mg nrcotine av per crgarette , FTC Report May '7 8 100 ·s: 12 mq .. tar: · 0 8 mg n' cotin• av per c"rarene Dy FTC Mer hod

-~

• -'

.'·.-.-:·

'.

Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determine d
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Healt h.

:'_, . _.-.

.

. ,..·. . ~ . ..
'.-...;~:t _r.__'.' ·•}:·r. ·' ..
' •.:

··,1 .
J

&lt; I

3LB.

Onions ••••••••••••••••••

who accompanied

them, spent the weekend with her
sister, Mrs. Clara Roush and Mr.
and Mrs. Kyle Stwnp at Akron.
Mr. and Mrs. Willlam Mitchell and
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Robinson
and baby of ColwnbliS were
weekend guests of Mrs. Bertha
Robinson.
Mrs. Facie Hayman is W at her
heme on Racine Route.
Mrs. Bertha Roblnsm spent a
week at Evana, W. Va. vialting her
sister-in-taw, Mrs. Focle Stover.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Riffle spent a
day in Gallipolia with Mr. and Mrs.
Bill McKenzie and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Ball and
children &lt;:1St. Albans, W.Va.; Mrs.
Gladys Turley and son, Eddie rt
Gallipolia; Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Turley and son, Kirk, of Letart
Falls ; Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
RusseU, Jr., of Mason, W. Va ., spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Turley and 110011, Kenny and Kevin .
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Brace and Jim·
my &lt;:1 Crown City spent Tuesday
with his mother, Mrs. Mabel Brace.
Mrs. Gretta Slmpeon returned
heme after spending two week.! vial!
with her son, Mr. and Mrs. Bud
Slmp8on at Seymour, Ind.
Mrs. Dora Turner and Mrs. Edith
Walker riTulaa, Okla. are guests of
their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Wallace.
Mrs. Paul Adams &lt;:1 Letart Fall8
spent Sunday artemoon with Mrs.
Helen Slmpeon.
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Butcber of
Calvin, W. Va. were over :tlght
guesta of Mr. and Mrs. James
Autherson Wednesday .

•

YELLOW
BAG

KRAFT

•

$

129
Orange Ju1ce... ...
6:.o~

ARGO

$

FLAVORITE

$ 09

LIBBY'S

$

FLAVORITE

6g~

PUMPKI N.......1~!~.2 /
COUPON

COUPON

CRISCO
3 LB .
CAN

1 PIZZAS............ !;~ ..
- ·

L

CO L&gt;PON

'

DUNCAN HINES

TYSON FROZEN

CAKE MIXES

FRIED CHICKEN
32 OL $}79

18%

oz.

Limit

3/$200.
1

Per Customer

Good Only at Powell's
Ex
Nov . 10, 1979_

Lim it 1 Per Cu5tomer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expire5 Nov. 10,

'!!

~-- ~!

·

'

CO Ur"I ON

·~-"= ·

1

J

DOMINO SUGAR
CONF., LT. or OK. BROWN

LB.

3/$1

Limit 1 Per Cu5tomer
Good Only at Powell's
, Offer E
res Nov. 10,

.

�13- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-PomeroY, 0 ., Wednesday , Nov . 7, 1979
12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomerov. 0 .. Wednesday . Nov . 7, 1979

Mr., Mrs. Kuhn named.worthy patron, matron
Mr. and Mrs . Robert Kuhn were
elected worthy matron and worthy
patroo ci Evangeltne Chapter 172.
Onler ci lhe Eastern Star, at a recent meeting .
Other cificers elected were Mrs
Betty VanMatre, associate matron;
Paul Darnell, associate patroo ;
Doris Karschner, sec:·retary ; Euvetta Bechtle, treasurer , Del ores
Sayre, conductress; Audrey K1nzel.

associate conductress; and Ann
Thoma s. trustee .
lr1Sta l1HlJOnwill take place on Nov .
loal 7 30p m. at the Temp le .
Twenty -f1ve year pins were
presented to Allen Hughes, Lena
AdklllS, and Ulhan Sllll th. A commumcabon was read from Lois

Pauley. deputy gm nd matron, the
Ea ster Seal Society, Grn nd Chapter
and the OES Hoopita l Circle. The

trustee . audit, and budget reports
were read and approved, and Mrs .
Bess ie King reviewed the cllapter
history .

A report was given on ways and
means activities arxt it was noted

that several diiUlers have been served. It was also reported that get-well
canis and religious books have been
sent to Erruna K. Clatworthy and
Nonna Jean Slivers, card ci con-

Three local children have birthdays recently

••

WilkesvUle .

•
L

.. .

n, .

'

.'

~~~~

I

,m,/

l '&lt;~l n,J.

. \ :/..1
Pa~ ~

The fir!'lt btrthday. of

l..t·cum

Ae1kt-&gt;r .

grt:(l l ·

grandparent.s. Mrs E!Jw I'OIH II
and Mrs . Leona Roach; Mrs Shlf it'l
Gibbs, Gma and Khonda . 71-! r.; . l'a tt1·
Capehart. Tarruny . Michelle. ond
Tim Tom. Mrs . Keltna Wtutlateh
and Kelly, Mr and Mrs . Cordon
Aeiker, Todd . Shel11 and l .o r.:. .

p&lt;-trt~

A Halloween theme was carried

out w1th a jark-&lt;J-lantem cake baked
hy Ius mother. Attending were Del&gt;bie and Amanda Mus.•er, Beth and
!l-1 e~an C1ark , Melinda and Heather
McClame. Judy and Cindy Musser.

Kt; I'U KNS HOME
.\1rs. Allen Hdmpton has returned
&lt;.t \'l~ lt

m Detroit , Mich . with

her rous1n . Mrs. Claude Martin .
Vvl-ule ther(' she went un a tour of

Helle Isle . and over into Windsor.
('anada . gomg over v1a the tunnel
and returmng by the bri dge . Before
hulll~.

Frank Newsome, Terry and Hodm·) .

retunuru,;

Austm Newsome, Shamwn Hr&lt;•tt.
and Autumn Grtffith.

\1 !"" Ll'on Tatum .

Mr.s

Hampton

I'ISilt•d m Co lumbus With her sister .

CHOICES
Karen Blaker Ph.D.

If o parent is
an alcoholic
DEAR DR. BLAKER - In your
colulJUlS about alcoholics you
seldom menti on lhe1r children .
Maybe it's because there aren't
many &lt;ius in that situallon.
U we are of suffiCient number to
be important, please print some
ideas that would he lp a rnther s hy
1!&gt;-year-&lt;&gt;ld girl cope wtth an
alcoholic mother.
DEAR READER - An estimated
90,000 children in this country l1vc
with a parent who has a drinking
problem. I'm surpr""'d. the ref ore .
that your letter L&lt; the f1 rst lD ask fur
this kind ci advice .
These suggestiofl; w11l not maki'
living with an alcoholic pa rt•nt "
pleasant experie~. but they rru Kht
help you gain a litUe peace &lt;i rrund .
I. Involve yourseU in rewardlfll(
after-ochool activities such as sport'
or a paying job That will he lp Ket
your mioo cit what lS happemng at
home.
2. Wail for sober bme; to talk tu
your mother. Early mornings

&lt;Ht'

usually best.
:;. When you plan to bnng a fner&lt;l
home, call first to st"e how tru ng.s
are. You ca n tell a lot over the
phone .
4. Stay out of your parent'
arguments . You cannot solve the
problems they ha ve with or.;
another.
5. Find a specia l place 10 you r
house where you can get away fr om
everyone.
6. Talk to your brolhers and ststers
a boot the problem. They are suffer ing, too, and you can su pport each
olher.
7. Staying overnight with a fri eoo
can bring relief from the tensions
and argumentsathome.
8. II yoo are hit, knocked down or
sexually assaulted by a drunk en
parent, you shruld take s tep&lt;~ to pr~
teet yourself. Yoo may need to in·
valve Ule police, a school principal
or a family doctor.
9. LOOI for someone to Ialk to
about your problems. Alcoholics
Anonymous has an Ala teen program
that you can find out about by contacting your nearest AA group . At
Alateen you will be able to talk to
other kids who have lhe same pmblems and who have found some
answers.
You also might want to get help
from a school counselor , a
clergyman or a family doctor.
If yru are too shy t., talk to any on,·

•

'

about your horne si tuation, get !h.
bOO&lt;. "Livmg with a Parent who
Dnnks Too Much" by Judith Seiltas
' Green W1llow Books, New York,
1979) Ms . Seixas discusses in detail
these suggestions and olhers that 1
don't have the space to mention
here
I n summa r y, 1t is best to wi Uiiraw

as much as you ca n from the aspects
of fomdy life that mclude the
al co holl&lt;' porent. I know that is dif.
fl cull for a teen..ager who still has
many needs that must be met w1thin
the farru fy. but because of lhe pr~
hiems lit your household you have lD
grow up faster than m~t ri your
fnends
Jl nw should you res pond to sui cide
lhr•·at'' Find oot Ln Dr. Blaker's
r~t·wslettPr

· · w~n a

Laved

0~

Threowns Suictde ... Send 5(J cents
plus a stamped. self-address ed
envelope to Dr Blaker in ca re &lt;i this
'"'"" paper, P 0 . Box 475, Radio City
Sl&lt;llion. New York, NY 10019.
Wnt. to Or. Blaker a t the above
addn· .~' Volume &lt;i mail prohibits
personal replies , but questi ons of
generdl Interest will be diSCUSSed 10
futu re columns.

Reedsville
News Notes
KI\'ERVJt:WGARDEN CLUB
BJ' Mn.. Lyle Baldenon
!'A embe rs of the nverview Garden

Cl ub ale out Thursday evening for
their October meeting . They dined
at Poor Richard ·s Restaurant at
V~erma . W. Va . They also attended a
cheese tasting party at Hickory
farm Store in the Mall. A prize was
presented to Mrs . Denver Weber for
the largest purchase Mrs . Thomas
Spencer received a cheese baU and

cracke1·s for ..he door prize. Attending was a guest, Mrs. Gerald
Johnson, and the foll owing members : Mrs . Clermont Harris, Mrs.
Herman Groosnickle, Mrs . Gene
Wilson. Mrs. Walter Brown , Mrs.
Thomas Spencer , Mrs Roy Hannum , Mrs . frank Bise, Mrs. Denver
Weber, Mrs. Okey Connolly, Mrs.
Ray Young, Mrs. Donald Putman,
Mrs. Gene Young, Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery, Mrs . Ronald Osborne ,
Mrs. Harliss frank, Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead, and Mrs. Lyle Balrterson. Interesting program books
were given to those present by Mrs .
Frank.
Reedsville Personals
Visiting Sunday Wllh Mr . and Mrs .
Jla leSmi th and fam ily were Mr . a nJ

•

,. t'

4
.

and !l-1rs. Jeffrey Patterson , observ ,.J Iu s flf st birthday on Oct. 28 with a

from

~~

.jennifer

Arw Owen Patterson , son of Mr.

and Patrick IAJren At•lkl'r . and tl••
fourth birthday of Penn y I "'rra lllt'
Aeiker , children of Mr . and Mrs l'at
Aeiker , wa.s celebrateJ w1th a party
at their home on Halloween Day
Refreshments of a cake for em·h
child, ice cream , candy. potato
chips, and pop were served .
Attendmg were grandparents. M r
and Mrs . Clarence Jordan and Ke1th
Delores

i'&lt;~llc n u ll

. I 111

fJcnn 1. /Y,, /1 1

and

gratulations on twmgrnnddaughters
to Mr. and Mrs . Kuhn, gel well canl
to Lesta Gothanl, aoo sympathy
ca rd to Genevieve Cheshire on the
l~s ci her brolher.
At a special meeting of lhe chapter
initiation was held for Andy and
Charlene Do&lt;2i, aoo at Ttrursday
night's meeting, letters were read
fr&lt;J11 the Ohio Lung Association
along with installation invitations to
Marietta , Pomeroy, Macksburg,
Glouster, Harrisonville, Canton,
New Marshfield, Belpre, Guysville ,
Lowell, Albany, Stockport, New
Matamora s,
Reinersvill e,
Gallipolis, Grove City, McConnelsville , V1nt on. and

l-t!Wrence

Jennifer Lawrence, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs . James Lawrence,
ce lebrated her second birthday on
Oct. 30 With a party at her home in
Sy racUS€.
following "trick or treat" Jennifer was presented gifts . Ice cream
and cake were served. Her cake baked by her mother was a cookie
monster. Besides Jennifer 's parents
and her brother, Jason , guests included her grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Clarenc-e U!wrence, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Johnson, Jeremy
Lawrence, and Mrs. Robert Hysell.
She received gifts from Bryan
Lawrence, Patricia Crooks , and her
grandparents, Mr . and Mrs . John
Crooks of Columbus.

1/ulidi! I' llcliz ·itics set

A $5 contribution was made to the
Ohio Lung A5Sociaton. Mrs. Kathryn
Mitchell reported that the next dinner will be held on Nov. 'n . Mrs .
Euvetta Bechtel reported for lhe
cheer committee noting thaI lhe
bod! had been sent to Judy Miller,
and that Mrs. Cia !worthy aoo Harry
Cheshire are improving . Mrs .
Thcmas reported that Mrs. King has
been named District25deputy graoo
matron. A little school of imtruction
will be held at !he temple, Sunday, 2
p.m.
Mrs. Ann Hemsley gave her
farewell address thanking the
chapter for the opportunity to serve.
A potluck dinner was held in the dining area fter lhe meeting .

Marriage
announced
Mr. and Mrs . Thmlas Collins,
Racine, are announcing the approaching marriage of their
daughter, Sonya, to Thomas Fitch,
son ci Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Fitch,
Long Bottom.
The wedding will be an event of
Satunlay, Nov . 10 at the residen&lt;r ci
Mr. and Mrs. Collins in Ra cine. The
Rev . freelaoo Norris will perform
lhe double ring ceremony. The c ou ·
pie will re5lde In Portland.

Holiday activities were planned
during a meeting ci lhe Uldies Auxiliary &lt;i lhe Big Beoo Citizens Baoo
Radio Club held at the home ci Mrs .
Kathryn White .
Members were asked ID turn In lhe
names &lt;i families and children who
' hould be remembered during the
season The a!Ulllal Christmas party
ri the A111iliary was aMounced for
Dec. 5 at the Meigs Inn, with a gift
exchange &lt;i not more than$5.
The Club Christmas dinner aoo
party was set for Dec. 16 at the hall
and there will also be a gift exchange then. Also discussed was the
Thanksgiving dinner to be held on
Nov . 18 at !he Grnnge Hall at 2 p.m
with the club to furnish meat aoo
drinks, and lhe dinner to be poUuck
with everyone to take a covered dish
and their own table service.
Mrs . Patty Caephart will have lhe
next meeting on Nov . 15 wiUt Mn .
Max1r.; Jordan to be C(}-hootess.
Mrs . White donated the door pl"il'£
which was won by Mrs . Elhel Drake.
Mrs . Etta Will was reported ill.
Refreshments were served by Mrs .
Drake a nd Mrs. Shirley Gibbs .
Mrs. John Burns and Lori of Logan ;
Mr . and Mrs. Melvin Smith of
Pomeroy, and George Smith and
children, Kim and Steve, of Columbus.
Recent visitors of Mrs . Vema
Rose were Mrs. Grace Baker and
son, Jim, of Jacksonville , Fla ., Mr.
and Mrs. Clay Cochran, of Par~er ·
sb urg. W. Va ., Mr . and Mrs. Cart
Cochran of Belleville, W. Va ., Mr.
and Mrs . G. G. Reed of Coolville,
Mr . and Mrs . Ernest Ruth and Ben
Buckley.
Mr . and Mrs. Jim Henry of
Fleming visited with Mr. and Mrs .
Ernest Ruth and Mr . and Mrs .
Warren Pickens.
Mrs . Vema Rose visited Sunday
with her daughter and family, Mr .
and Mrs. Dana Van Meter at Belpre .
Mr. and M111. Ed Hensch of
CuyallOf!a Falls and Mr. and Mrs.'
Ernest Whitehead spent a few days
With Mr . and Mrs. Isaac frydrnan
and daughter. Sarah, at Buffalo
Grove, IU . The birthday of Mrs . Hensch was celebrated while visiting at
the Frydman home .
Mrs . Bess Webster of Tuppers
Plains visited Wednesday wiUt Mrs .
Gladys Williams.
Mrs. David A. Smith and Diana
spent the weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Tom Drake and daughter , An·
ne, Columbus.
Mr . and Mrs. t'rank Bise visited
with Mr . and Mrs . Jeff Foster and
family to celebrate lhe birthday of
their grandson , Scott, at their home
in Belpre.
lbe Community Builders Club
held its monthly meeting a 1 lhe
home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown.
Couples enjoying the social hour and
refreshments were Mr . and Mrs .
Denver Weber , Mr . and Mrs . Ernest
Whitehead and Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Pickens . The next meeting wUI be at
the Donald Myers home.
David G. Smith of Caldwell visited
Mrs. David A Smith Thursday.

......

Former local has 'hair-raising ' reputation

,.

Health Review
Questwn : How many peonle use
marijuana in t./lli; countf) "
Answer : Ac-cording tu !!It: Department ci Health and Huma n : ervices
martjuana is used most ~~te n by
young people between the ages of IB
and 25. 1n this college-aged gnJJp, 53
percent have smoked a reeler
1manjuana cigarette I at least once,
but only half that many are still
using pot. Public school student.
between the ages ci 12 aoo 17 are the
secooo mall frequent "users" --40
percent have tried pol and 20 per·
cent still get "high" on it.
While a third ci thooe 26 to 35 have
experimented with pot, less than 12
percent are rurrenl users. The number rJ users drop&lt;~ off drdmatically
in the over 35 age group where only 5
percent have even tried the substance aoo about J percent continue
to use it.
Question: I've heanl that pot is no
more habit-forming or addicting
than alcohol or tobacco. Is this true?
Answer : In order to answer this
question. we muslfirstdefine " habit
fonning" and "addicting." Any
medica llon can be habit fonning.
Because even over-eating is habit
forming, this phrase has a less
precise meaning than addiction.
Medically, addiction means that on·
ce on a drug , you are unable to stop
using it wiUtoutsevere side effects.
Marijuana has no such withdrawal
symptoms. Also, addictive drugs are
usually ones lor which users develop
tolerance- meaning you need
gradually increasing amounts lD get
the same effect. Barbitura""' aoo
amphetamines are examples ci
drugs that humans develop toleran-

ce to. Marijuana does not appear
be a substance for which we develop
a tolerance, a!Utrugh some poorlycontrolled studies have reported
olherwise.
Marijuana , !hen, is nOIHiddicling
because it has neilher witMrawal
side effects nor tolerance build up.
Pot is, however, as habit forming 88
alcohol or tobacco and can cause intoxication which dangerously
lessons the ability to drive a car or
ny an airplane . Studies ID support
this are fairly reliable .
Question; What are some of the
harmful effects of t./lli; dntg?
Answer:Several studies have supported the fact that marijuana af.
feels the lungs in a manner very
similar to cigaret""'. Injury to the
lungs has been reported in silt to
eight weeks. As mentioned before,
reaction lime is slowed and memory
impaired. There also iB data that
strongly suggests marijuana use can
lesson the body's ability to fight
disease aoo perhapa cause some
c hromosomal changes . Unfortunately, these studies are not ci
an experimental nature aoo are,
therefore, suspect II is known,
though, that marijuana use cauaes
rapid heart rate (tacbycanlia 1 am
decreases lhe ability ci the heart
muscle to pump blood (myocardial
contractility).
One &lt;i the biggest deterrenl!l to
studies on humans is that they have
always been done on young, healthy
adults free ci disease or potential
defects . While increased heart rate
aoo decreased myocardial contractility may be ham1less to this
group, it may be fatal to a person
with heart disease .
Question : Do you think maMjuana
should be legalized•:·
Answer : No. This substance is
much more complex than alcohol.
We do not really know all &lt;i its ef.
feels on human tissue . Until the
scientific evidence points more
clearly to its safety, I would not want
it sold over lhe counter. Lad! at the
harm people do to themselves with
cigarettes, and we didn't know
tobacco's dangers when it was first
sold.

SCOUT WORKSHOP
FOR ADULTS
Tri-State Area Council. Boy Scouts
of America , is holding a speci al
training workshop for all volunteer
adults involved in the Cub Scout
progra m. This Cub Scout Pow Wow
is being held a I the Johnson
Memorial United Methodist Church,
513 Tenth Street, Huntington. Nov .
10, 8:30 a.m.-4 p.m. Cost ts $2 per
person .

BY BARBARA MURPHY
SENTINEL STAFFER
II used to be with men, " hair
.•. today, gone tomorrow" .
However, lhe day ci the toupee
which, everyone knew was a toopee,
has gone aoo today 's male CBn CBJ&gt;. lure realllttic aoo natura I " hair "
.. with a hairpiece.
Jan Hauck, formerly of Mid·
dleport, now living in Columbus, has
established quite a reputation fer
himself 1n the fte ld ci hairpiece sa les
aoo recently was lhe subject of a
.. feature in the Columhus DL•pa tch

111ERE'S NOTHING SACRED
FROM HUSBAND 'S JUNK ART!
By Helen Bottel
· DEAR HE LEN :
My husband got so good at his junk
ert and metal sculpture hobbies that
he 's started selling his originals.
Now, nothing 's sacred '
My kitchen silv er becomes surrealtsltc birds. He turned my only
antique kettle into a lamp I was sav·
lng mismatched earrings for a dif·
ferent kind of bracelet , but he beat
me to them -they're 1n a "creation"
on someone else's wall.
He uses ~iraws from my broom
until I must buy another one, but the
last straw was when I found five
spokes from my bike missing .
They 'd gone into wheels for an oldfashioned Stutz Bearcat or some
auch. (He meant to replace them
before I took the bike out agam 1
What do you do with a mad ~enius
who sees 'beauty" In unlikely
places and turns household items into junk so he can make "a rt " of
them ? -LOCKING UP MY GOOD
SILVER
DEARLUMGS :
All you 'II gel from me U; com. miseratloo : the metal sculpture hol&gt;byist I marned Just turned my shish
kebab

~ k ewers

into a miniature

· velocipede ! - H.
.. DEAR HELE N:
.. Can't anything be done a hout a
snorer • My husl&gt;and is the world 's
prize ! Don't say sleep in another
room: I can hear him aU over the
house . Does anyone have a cure for
him ? -SLEEPLESS

comfortable than a fingertap on the
shoulder."
This constant reminder has il
Pavlovian effect on the sleeper, conditioning him or her lD turn off the
noise before it starts.
Inquire at specialty stores. -- H.

k

liking to work w:th people, a hair
replacement specialist must be
'willing to face prohlems, ' according
to Hauck.
Some persol\'l expect a hairpiece
ID trans! orm !hem into Robert Redford, but it's UBually far fnrn a
panacea .
" 'People think about themselves
about 95 percent &lt;i the lime . Some
think that if they get hair, people will
notice them and all &lt;i their problems
wlll disappear . That usually doesn't
happen, "' he asserted.

DEAR HELEN •
I read that a certain we II·
promoted charity raised over $50
million this year for a disease that
isn't nearly so prevalent as cancer.
How can we find out where the
money goes and if it is betng used
judiciously ? Seems to me that if a
big organization actually found the
cure for its particular " bafflil1g"

Rive rboat Room d lhe Athens County Savings and Loan Co. planned for
a holiday dinner ID be held at Point
Pleasant, Dec. 3.
Members are to meet at the h001e
&lt;i Mrs . Mary Martin at. 5 p.m. for
the trip down river. Mrs. Pearl
Knapp presided at !he meeting durIng which time the December
pouvior was aMounced for Dec. 8
and 9 at the Neil House in Columbus.
The breakfast will be $5 aoo reservatiorn are to be sent to Linda Ed·
mundson. There will be a $1 gift ex change , either homemade or
tumorous.
Mrs . Ruby Marshall children and
youth chairman , reported that,II03
from the cystic fibr~is dMve had
been mailed to the Centrnl Ohio
Chapter in Columbus. She ttrlnked
everyone for their help aoo reported
130 hours on lhe drive .
It was also noted that three plaques at $100 each for pediatric equipment had been sent to lhe National
Jewish H'"'Pital and Asthmatic
Center in Denver, Colo. A contribution &lt;i $W was sent to Children's
H'"'Pital, and $18 in donatioos made
on lhe Denver bed.
A letter was read from the Cystic
Fibroois foundation acknowledging
receipt &lt;i the fund drive proceeds .
Certificates will be sent to Ute
worke111. Pearl Knapp, nurses
scholarship, held a drawing for lhe
lund with Julia Hysell winning lhe
door prize. Donations were made to
lhe children aoo youth fund . It was

disease, it would do itself out of
business.
Am I overly suspicious when I
question whelher it is really working
hanlto eliminate lhe problem or just
fooling around with various moneygobbling research theories?
ROLAND
DEAR ROLAND :
Why not direct your questions to
the National Information Bureau.
[nc . 419 Park Avenue South, New
YorkN .Y.l0016.
This not-for-profit organization of·
fers an impartial advisory service
reporting on hundreds ci organiza·
lions that solicit contributioos nationally from lhe general public. II
publishes a Wise Giving Guide monthly, and single copies are available
free on request . Also available are
in-&lt;lepth reports on specific charity
associations . - H.
Got a problem? An adult subject
for discussion? You can talk it over
in 1.er column if you write to Helen
Bolte!, care of this newspaper .

Seve111l Meigs County American
L.egioo Auxiliary members were in
Ulncaster Sunday lor the reception
honoring Mrs . Lorain Snyder,
Eighth District president
Going from the Pomeroy unit were
Marjorie Goett, Iva Powell, Pearl
Knapp aoo Mary Martin, lr001 the
Racine unit Wl , F111nees Roberts,
and fr&lt;J11 the Middleport unit, Mrs.
Gerry Parsons. Mrs . Roberts aoo
Mrs . Parsons are both district &lt;illcers and joined Mrs. Snyder in the
receiving line .
A COIIIIOOnity Halloween party
was held at Apple Grove Tuesday
Fall flowers decorated the
evening, Oct. 30.
American Legtoo hall where the
reception was held. Anchor Hocking
The group went to homes and
provided for each one attending a
received treats and returned to the
glass turtle replica caooy dish. ApApple Grove United MeUtodistCIJJrpralima tely 100 a !tended lhe recep- · ch where refreshments &lt;i hot dogs ,
bon
potato chip&lt;~ , hot chocolate, cod&lt;.ies
and Kool-Aid were served.
Attending were Ryan and Tracy
Norris, Jason Quillen, Dolly aoo
THURSDAY
Michael Hill, Justin aoo Aimee Hill,
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter, Beta
Becky Michael, Klmberly Roush,
Sigma Phi Sorcrity trip to fenton
Maooy and Michael Russell, Tracy
Glass Co., Thursday; members be at
Pickell, Bradley and Bryant Yoong,
lhe upper parking lot in Pomeroy no
tyson aoo Travis Mug rage, Teresa ,
later than6 p.m
Brenda and Brian Hunt, Scotty,
PRECEPTOR CHAPI'ER, Beta
Thunney, John John aoo Elna BarSigma Phi Soriiity, eat at Sacred
ton, Todd aoo Mickey Mugrage,
Heart Church, 6 p.m. Tlursday then
Joey aoo Shannoo Pierce, Keith and
go to Riverboat Room, Meigs BranKevin White, Cluck Michael aoo
ch Ather~~ Count,y Savings and Loan
Joey
Roush.
for meeting_

r---

Social Calendar

FRIENDSHIP NIGHT ci District
13, Daughters ci Amenca, Thursday
at Chester Lodge hail. Potluck supper 6;30 p.m. followed by meeting.
Bring table service.
FRIDAY
CHESTER TOWNSHIP Trustees
meeting, 7 p.m. Friday at Chester
Town HalL
RETURN JONATHAN Meigs
Chapter, Daughters of the American
Revolution, I:30 p.m. friday at the
home of Mrs. A.R. Knight with John
Rice , county extension agent,
speaking on "Our Feathered Frien-

h tl!

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tr rr l.t ~

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!t l).!t' !lwr h 1 111 . tk t "II·, .

]JJt •] ~ ltpp ]\

.I I Hllw, pt 'tJp lt · al'l tl

till'

Exclusive " Magic " Button-Fitting
Buttonholer - button hole tool

in SOLID 14K GOLD
We •e IJO t o Ou r ea r .:. •n 14 I' ar&lt;tT (.iOid

"ork

nu o ,es

t ''l j WII'd\'C' :111d

Pomeroy, 0 .

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jlt'Oplt-l1l (__'

PICNIC
HAMS

I " k I 1" ·I
\\ ,:d l1l•· ln IJII/IldiJt ·t · to! ],, r' .t !HI I t'!tlw l n P\pl.tin
'' 1.. 11 \ 1111 11h ,-,1 111 111 1 ' 1 '11 1L '..!, 1!11 · l l t 't ' t l l «lf' po n l ' l' i ll the
( '1 •11 !11111 111 1 1&lt; ~ " t ' \1 ' ] \ t '

.\ l wtl t 1 11 u d

1' t.11 H hu l! I \ irn po 11.t lll t o 11 \

,

1n

tht s sewmg

mach1ne

replaces more than 350 movtng parts
Exclusive Individual Preference
Panel - touch lhe coni rots and aOJUSI
stitch length and W&lt;dth for any fabrr c

FABRIC SHOP
115 W. 2nd AVe .

Pomeroy

SAUSAGE
1 LB. ROU '149

,],, l t lt ll~ . llt], , · lt-.~ ~ tp ll~' lhlc co . , t
,111 d
1 , ·\ I ·• 11 ' ] , • 1111 I d t ·• ' l1 1ptll { ·111 1, ' ,, w '' .1 \ · t, 1 gl't t !wrt · "
Filtd l tl l.:; th, · "''1 "t dfi cJt 'Jit llll'an ~ to meet todar ''
I

th e Ctrcwtry

Pomeroy, 0 .

FLORIDA ORANGES

ECKRICH

l t• j llto\ .1111

ll,ti], · 1J ~I ''-. l.t~l '\ kTJIJ \ ', lt ·d:_:l , Jhl t•

qenu+nt' Sa o

oftt •n

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tlu 11 1 I '. t il l 1111 ' ~'- l tl JII IJIP I\ t ' tl l ll dlit l t'lll'\ . ()nr ~odl j o;;

(

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IJI'H ~II\ t ' rllllll ' llt.I]J 1'1 jiiiiTIIll ' flf&lt;; ht '(..'OIIH'

1

makes all the proper setttngs
Exclusive Solid-State Circuitry -

Emeralds o• Ooa 1s

I'C)..~ Il l. tli t l!l'

\ \ I Itt•]

Da,nt)

ma ny w 1lh

91!..~

570 W. Main

Lower than
nationally advertised.
• 60" Boulce
• 52 " Quina
• 60" Velour
• 60" Suede
• 60" Wools
• 60" Lightweight
knits
• Qu ited Velvets

- select a patter n. tou ch one button
and the electroniC " bra m 1n stantty

CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY

DAIRY
VAllEY
997 -2556

l11t1 1rr

o]

a wh+SPCI o t COlO rf ul E. name!
Oh tre s

ADOLPH'S

\l.ill ' f

tl ut tJ,, . t:iJ Jtlp.uJ~ · !Ja . ., a n ·l1ah lt•
~ I I III' l ll ' t 'd ' ! I H t•Jt. c fr!t' ~l'l"\ ll' C,

.111 t 'J, \ o l l l l l' lt', l \ t ' d!IIIPO' III u ll
1 ' \t t'\'&lt; J\ I'

FABRICS FOR
YOUR HOLIDAY
FASHIONS

ana sews the exact sr zed buttonhole
Exclusive Electron ic Stitch Selection

from our collection lor pierced ears

WITH FRIES ........ "'84c

.

j.wk \pt It Ol t•-i dtor, Jt·, ,·,t rcll .111d dt' n·lopJneu t
11 11 P' OJ t . t 11 t ft 1 t I w ( r 1111!) .11 1~ - «· ~ pc·c 1.illy n .~e 11 t ia I i 11

' ' 1'

$650

NOW

HAMBURGER ••.•.••• 54c

]11 ll ll ' t ' l

JJOI \ .t11tl 111

Athena
2000

thl· Clll tlp.tny

tic,tl, \\ ifll t 'll \ 111'11111 1 IJ t. tltll l lll 'lll '- . lliiJII (' l t ':\ 11
!,1 lltiJllm

tomorro"N .

meeting 7p. m . at !he hall .

SPECIAL

!Jr .'-., ;d 1\w lll'.l r t n! 111 ,111\
,!till SrJrltlll' rn

with a memorial card. TJus card
carries the name of the person in
whose memory lhe funds have been
given and the name of the person
who made the gift . An
acknowledgement also goes to Ule
contrtbutor with an official receipt
for tJu purposes.
Memorial gtfts may be sent ID Ute
Meigs County Unit, P.O. Box 692,
Pomeroy . Contributions should be
accompanted by the full name ri Ule
deceased, the name and address of
lhe family member to whom the
memorial canl should be sent and
the donor 's fuli name and address . A
gift today may spare others

au lomat1cally measures your b utt on

Ape!

1111.; ( 'olllrtthtl\

" A memorial gift to the
MetgsCounty Unit of the American
Cancer Society is a thoughtful
gift +a living memorial and a trtbute
to someone loved means others are
helped," Sharon Michael, public information chatrman, stated.
Every gift provides material aid
to the cancer research programs in
laboratories and hospitals, help&lt;~
educate the public concerning the
importance of detecllng cancer in
time, and supports ser vice
programs for cancer patients and
their families.
When a memorial gift is made , the
family of the deceased is llOtified

SATIJRDAY
DAN HAYMAN and Country Hymntimers will sing Saturday, 7:30
p.m. at lhe Murray City Methodist
Church.
PUBUC INVITED to ''Guest
Day" at Pomeroy Sevent!Hiay Adventist Ctrurch, Saturday 2 p.m.
Special music and a fellowship supper will follow lhe w&lt;nhip service.

GALUA CO. Uldies Auxiliary
VFW Post 44&amp;1 will meet for regular

Contributing treats to the group
were Me . and Mrs. MUoRichanlsoo,
Mr. aoo Mrs. Russell Rilush, Mr.
aoo M111. Bob Rhodes, Mr. and Mrs.
Marshall Roush, Mr. aoo Mrs.
Darrell Norris, Mrs . Milxly Hill, Mr.
aoo Mrs. Louis Pickett, Mr. am
Mrs . Russell Filxlley, Mr . and Mrs.
Roger Roush, Mr. and Mrs. James
Alley, Mr. aoo Mrs. James Hunt,
Mrs . Anna Wheeler, Mr. and Mrs.
James Young, Mrs . Fl&lt;relta Barton,
Mrs . Dolly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas Hill, Mr. aooMrs. Bob Smith,
Mr . and Mrs. Dean Hill, Mr. am
Mrs . Bob Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Dean
Hil~ Mr. aoo Mrs . Dorsey Pa111o111,
Mr . aoo Mrs . Jack Ables, Mr. and
Mrs . Orville Jarrell Mr. aoo Mrs .
Cluck Mugrng, Mr. aoo Mrs. Ron
Russel~ Mr. and Mrs. Max Hill.

Memorial gifts appreciated

dB ''.

spa r kl1ng tn l r' gUing It! lie 1e we 1s
.I

customers . He operates a retail
operntion at 1425 E. Dublin·
Granvi lle Rd. aoo sells through a
network ci dealers.
"It goes from whelher a hairpiece
is needed, to acceptance ci their new
lad!. Sometimes a hairpiece can do
a lot for someone's self image,"
Hauck eiplained .
U Hauck had l'4s way, he's like to
get away from it all by sailing In a
30'foot boat down the Ohio River,
ultimately arriving in Florida's
inlaoo waterways for a leisurely
cruise .
"A former Rio Graooe College
student, Hauck is active in the
Beechwold Church ci Christ where
he serves as an elder aoo on lhe
youth corrunittee and the general
boanl.
"He also belongs to the University
Lodge ci Masons .
"Hauck aoo his wife &lt;i 19 years,
Bonnie, ltive two children, Brent,l7,
aoo Brenda, 15."

Halloween party held recently

WEDNE&lt;IDAY
POMEROY LODGE 164, F. and A.
M., regular meeting, Wednesday,
7; 30 p.m. AIIIII8Bter masons are in·
viled. SATURDAY
HARTFORD PTO, aiUlual fall
bazaar, Hartford Elementary
School. Food, games, prizes, 3 to !
p.m.
UNITED METIIODISI' WOMEN,
Letart Falls Church, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday at the home of Mrs . Inez
Hill. Installation of officers to be
held. Short Program will be given .
SOIJ'I'HEAST Ohio Garden Tractor Club Wednesday 7:30p.m. in the
scout building behind the firehouse
in Chester. All interested persons invited to attend .
MIDDLEPORT LITERARY
CLUB, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Sibley Slack. Mrs.
Harold Sauer to review "My M&lt;ther·
Myself", and Mrs. Carl Horky to
review "Evergreen." For roll call
members are to give a memory of
mother .
THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS GRANGE at the
hall , Thursdliy, 7:30p.m.
SfAR GARDEN CLUB, I p.m.
Thursday at lhe home of Mrs. Ann
Ogdin. Article on bird migration by
Martha Chapman, Christmas
decorations from nature by Lula
Levis, and tour slides by Mrs. Ogdin .
ANNUAL SACRED HEART
CATIIOUC WOMEN'S'S CLUB annual bazaar with !!erving to begin at
4;30 p.m. and games at 6p.m. Thursday. Adul~, $3; children, $1.50.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30p.m.
Thursday at the church with Mrs.
Cherole Bunlette, Mrs. Nancy Cale,
and Mrs. Kitty Cassell as hostesseB.
A bazaar workshop will be held.
Each member is to make a $' donation.

THIS WEEK'S

\ 'r(T/'rn idt·llt . fn r ir0 nmr,lfrz/

l.tl.' k \prl \ Jrdr i-..

"I was never a world renowned
sty list in the first place. And I like
sales work . I went to an iooustrial
psychologist who wid me I should
definitely be in sales because that's
where my abilities are ", he said.
"Beyond the financial rewa rds- Hauck ranked third among 97
distributors in sales nationally in
1978 aoo 1979, be likes seeing the
changes hairpieces can brin2 In

Attend reception

date bOOts aoo tote bags are still being sold. Canis will be sent to
shutins, George am Rhoda Hackett,
Gladys Mowery, Dollie Hayes,
Dorothy Jer*im, and Edith Fe.

i

In dealing with uncertain
customers, phraseology is allimportant.
"Our biggest hunlle is getting
them 1lhe cuslmlers) over the rug
or toupee line ci thinking . We call it
hatr replacement at first and then it
becomes ' 'your hair", he said.
"A year after Hauck joined the
firm he became a distributor,
respor~~lb1e for 26 Ohio counties aoo
14 tn West Virginia .
"He gave up his own hairstyling
salon because 'it wasn 't a cha llenge
anymore.'

candy,

a minor discha rge " no more un-

"Research
and development
isakeyto
keeping rates
down:•J.

"A fcrmer hairstylist who joined
Artalr seven years ago as a
salesman, Hauck said many
customers who come into his cifice
wanting a hairpiece aren't
emotionally convinced d it. They do
know, however, that a receeding
hairline is psychologically
trdumalic.
"They know they want hair
replacement, but they're not con·
vinced &lt;i it In !heir own mim. That's
wbere salesmanship and patience
come in," Hauck said.
"IN ADDmON to potience and

HPien Hdp tzght &amp; Forty meets Monday
Meigs Coonty Salon 710, Eight aoo
noted that lhe candy drive has
U~, , , 1\1 ll•·lo ·n 1\ ..tto-1 forty,
meeting Moroay night at the
brought in over $500 and that

DEAR SLEEPLESS :
According to colwnnnist LM .
Boyd (who has tested it) an electronic collar can do the trick. The
slightest snore triggers its tiny
recet ver , which thereupon releases

working
for
you

Jan, his wife Ute lormer Bonnie
VanCooney is a native ci Middleport
too, is the son &lt;i Mr . and Mrs.
Richa rd Pickens, Cheshire, aoo the
late Charles Hauck ci Pomeroy.
Following is the rna terial written
on Jan :
" We've gone beyond the wig aoo
toupee stages," lhe Middleport,
native said. "Our hairpieces are
made of longer lasting synthetic
fibe111. We try to think in terms ci
hair replacement pieces that
become port of the person ."

POLISH

CHUCK
ROAST

PINK

SAUSAGE

89c

.md

LB.

White Homegrown

POTATOES

to von
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Chicken Noodle

Kellogg's

3/89~ POP TARTS

Cottonelle

TOILET TISSUE
' I

BRAUNSCHWEIGER

FRANKIE$

rr·" ·, tnh

tl llo'.'' I ll to ll[ l lh\ n l!\( ' f &lt;,.

f ir • l nr (' ,.,r pmrrttU•
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6Pak

$} 59

19

69~LB.

LB.

25 lb .

SUPERIOR

BOLOGNA
2 LB. SliCED

Midland

Several
varieties

Champ

DOG FOOD

'1.19

5 lb . Size 8. 75

DOG FOOD

$3

S9

15oz . Cans

6/$}00

Pride Saltine

CRACKERS

1 lb .

'1 69

'6.00
FRESH APPLES
&amp; CIDER
50 lb.

BLUE BONNET

QUARTERS

MARGARINE

LB.

�15- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Nov . 7, 197!1

14-The Dllll,y Sentinel, Mlddlej,ort-Porneroy , 0 ., Wednesday, NO\·. ; , 1979

Long Bottom .Community Assoc.
80 million viewers see 'jaws' . has Halloween fare on October 31

The great shark shake-up ..
NEW YORK (AP) - CBS' attempt
to make !I two in a row as primetime television's No. I network was
sidetracked by ABC, or, more
properly, "Jaws," figures from the
A.C. Nielsen Co. f&lt;r the week ending
Nov. 4 show .
CBS listed five of the week's 10
hlghest·1'8ted programs, but more
people tuned In f&lt;r "Jaws " than for
any other previous motion picture
brought to televlsioo except "Gone
With the Wind," which aired for the
first time In November 1976.
About 80 million people saw all or
part of " Jaws," ABC 's research
department estimated, or an
average of 29.8 mlltion households
per minute . "Gooe With the Wind"
was seen In an average of 33 .9
million homes a minute .
~C ' s rating for the week was
21.3, with CBS second at 18.8 and
NBC third at 16.5. The netwccks say
that means in an average primetime minute during the week , 21.3
percent of the homes in the country
with television were watching ABC .
It was NBC's third straight week
in last place after a strong

September and early October .
The rating f&lt;r the three-hour
"Jaws " broadcast, meanwhile, was
39. Nielsen says that means of nil the
homes in the country with television ,
39 percent saw at least part of the
movie . Of sets in use 8:3().11 : 15 p.m .
Sunday, 57 percent were tuned to
"Jaws," Nielsen figures show
CBS' best for the week was "60
Minutes ," in third place, while
NBC's top;ated show was " Little
House on the Prairie ," tied for sixth
"Little House " was NBC's only show
in the week 's Top 20.
November is the cnonth for the
networks' fall ratings sweeps, by
which national spot advertising
rates are set, and viewers can
anticipate more blockbusters like
"Jaws" m the nel&lt;l several weeks
" Freedom
Road ,"
the
controversial two.part hist o r ical
drama starring f&lt;rmer heavyweight
boxing champion Muhammad Ali,
was also
so mething
or
a
disappointment for NBC, fintshutg
33rd and 55L~ in the ratings. At least
one 1\ BC aff1l1ate . 1n Boston.
canceled "Fret&gt;OOm Road ,'· ff'.aring

POLLY'S POINTERS
Polly Cramer
SHELL STILL SMElLS
By PoUy Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - My brother
brought back from the Cape a
beautiful coliCh shell but it smeU..
terrible. I have soaked it In ammonia and all sorts of fluids but the
pungent fish odor remains. If I do
not get help I am afraid It will go to
waste. - SAD SHELLER
DEAR SAD SHELLER - Perhaps
the animal is still in tlw shell . Soak it
in liquid bleach fcc several days and
during that time swish the shell
around to be sure the bleach gets all
the way down inside. When removed
rinse well with clear water and put
outdoors to thoroughly dry in the air.
Check for effect of the bleach on the
color of the shell.
Another remedy is to soak for a
few days in full strength rubbing
alcobol and then Oush it out well
with clearwater. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Water stains on
draperil'.'l disappear by following
these directions. Make a paste of
baking soda and WHITE vineRa r

and spread on the stains. Hang out m
the sun and then wash in suds to
remove the stains . - GRACE
DEAR READERS - 1 am sure
many of you will welcome this
suggestion as we have been asked
this question so many times and I
did not have a satisfactory solution .
Grace wrote that the paste dries
very quickly so if there are many
stains to cover it is better to mix
several small batches than too much
at onetime . - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I wonder if
N.G .T. who had mildew spots on a
beaded movie screen has ever tned
using a comme rcial mildew
remover . Spray it on and when it IS
dry the mildew vanishes . I do hope it
works as well for ber i or him) as it
has for me . It is also great to use on
grout around the bathtub. - FW
Polly will send you one of ber
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
. clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem 1n her
column. Write POLLY'S PROBLEM
in care of this newspaper.

Creative writers meet at library
TIE Frleros &lt;I the Ubrary spoosored a meetilll! r:l people interested
In crea live wri tlng at the Pomeroy
PubUc Library recenUy .
Attending the meeting were Ellen
Bell, librarian; Don Salmons,
Friendo r:l the Library president ;
Dorothy Oliver, vice president ;
Robin Bumem, Peggy Bush, and
Melinda Salmons, students at
Sruthern High School; J~IUJ Clark,
Charles Blakeslee, Margaret
Parter, and Myriam Rothchild,
Pomeroy,
and Nan
Mykel ,

JENNI RICHMOND

Celebrates birthday
"enni Lyn IUchmond, daughter of
Ms. Julfe Lyn Richmond, celebrated
her first birthday recently at the
home of her BWll and uncle, Mr. and
Mrs. Eddie Lee Russell, Mason.
A Halloween theme was carried
throughout the party, and cake, ic.,.
cream and punch were served to the

guests.

.

Games were played with prizes
being won by Boose, Sean and Swmi
Meadows.
Th08e attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Marty Johnson and Jodi
Miquel, Mr . and Mrs. Johnny
Johnson, Boose, Sean and Sunni
Meadows.
Sending gifts were Kelly and Keith
Johnson, Donna Boyd, Goldie Ingles
and Jennl's great-grandmother, Ada
Carson.
Jennl Lyn also won third place in
the Pretty Baby Contest in her
catagory at the Mason County Fair
lhl8 year.

Gallipolis.
Poetry of thetr own was read by
Robin Burnem, Peggy Bush, Mr.;
Clarlt, Mrs. Ruthchild, Salmon., ,
Mrs . Oliver, and Mrs . Parker.
Another meeting was set for Morr
day, Nov . 7£, at 7 p.m. at the Pomery
Library . Consideration will lxe given
to forming a group interested tn all
forms ri crea tiv ity , includ ing
published local writers, and to putting a collection ci crea tive works in
the library . Short stories and more
poetry will be read at the November
meeting. A name for the group will
be ch&lt;!len at that time. Any person
mten,.ted in the creative arts i.'
welcome aoo invited to attend either
liB a participant or an audience.

GIVF..S THANKS
The Fraternal Order of Archon
and Rio Grande College would like to
thank the folloWlng merchants for
their su ppo rt tn Archon' s
s wimathon : Dale C. Warner In ·
surance, Fanners Bank. Fabnc
Shop,Davis !Jl1lurance, Meigs County Branch of the Athens County
Savings and Loan, and Ewmg
Funeral Home . The men of Archon
swam liOO lengtns of the pool and
donated money to the capital campaign . This money is generally used
for building new structures on the
camplLIJ .

DINNER SLATED
There will be a ham and turkey
diMer at the Southern High School
cafeteria on Sunday, Nov . 11, starting at noon . The price will be $2.50
for adults and $1.50 for children under 12. The dinner is sponsored by
the Racine PTO.

it might stir racial tensions in the
already troubled city .
CBS' b&lt;d foc a second straight No .
l finish was damaged at the bottom
of the ratings list . Two "CBS
Reports" presentations , "Teddy "
and "The Baby Makers," were 62nd
and 63rd in the ratings, followed by
ABC's "Detective School," a pro
football carry-over Sunday eventng
on CBS, and Part II of NBC 's
" MacArt hur ."
Here are the week's Top 10
programs :
Movie-"Jaws, " with a rating of 39
representing 29 .8 million homes, and
"Three's Compa ny ," 28 .6 or 21.8
million, both ABC; "60 Minutes ,"
28 .3 or 21.6 million. "M-A~-H." 27.4
or 20.9 million , and " Dallas, " 25 .9 or
19.8 million. all CBS; " Mork and
Mindy, " ABC, and " Little House on
the Praine, " NBC, both 24 .8 or 18.9
million; "Taxi," 24 .6 or 18.8 million,
ABC. "nd ·'WKRP in Cincinnati,"
24.3 o: 18.5 million and " Dukes of
Hazzard ," 23.6 or 18 million, both
CBS

A H.allaween theme WIIB carried
out when the Long Bottom Community Association met Oct 31 in
the comnumity building.
Costumes were judged with prizes
gcing to Anita Neutzling, the wetti&lt;"St ; Dora Crispin, the ugliest;
Juanita Wells, the m&lt;l!lt original;
Bud and Lilly Adams, Phyllis
Larld.ns, Marjorie Brewer and Jenny Newlun, the m&lt;!lt surprising ;
Ernestine Hayman and Melody
Roberts, the mcst unusual.
.
All ri the children partici~ting
were given prizes.
Mrs . Leona Hensley conducted the
busines'l meeting which 'l"'ned with
the pledge to the £lag and a reading
from 1 John. Mrs. Mae McPeek gave

Chrisbnas. ''

.

RIO GRANDE The Jackson
Crunty Senior Citizens Center,
Mrund Street. Jackson, will host a
two-day
workshop entitled
"RehabiliU.twn Nurstng", December 5 and 6.
Thi• program, sponsored by the
Area Ageney on Aging District 7
'lursmg Home Training Program, is
oJCing ctfered for R.N.'s, L.P.N.'s,
Nurse Aides and others worlting in
the area ci rehabilitation.
Nanna Clanin, R.N. , B.S.N., Coordinator of the Rehabtlitation
Through Nursing Wonshop, Dodd
Hall, Ohio State Univenti!y, Columbus, will conduc t the workshop. Sbe
will discuss bowe I and b!Edder
programs, skin care , s troke
rehabilitation and aging. The films
" Peege" ard P~siological AJJpects
ri Agmg " will be shown depicting
the social isolation encountered by
thOfle who are institutionalized .
The fee for the workshop is $5 .
Participants will be responsible for
obtaining their own lunches .
Applications for eooorsement
from the Ohio Nurses Association
and the Licensed Practical Nurses
AJJsoclalion ci Ohio are being
processed.
Participants completing the tw&lt;&gt;day workshop will be awarded 1.2
CEU's from Rio Grande College and
Community College .
For further irtonnalion, contact
JoyceSbng, 614-~, or Barbara
Steele, R.N. at614-~. ext 228 .

GOSPEL MEETING
WESTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST
NOV. 12 lliRU 16 NIGHltY 7:30
Comer of Main &amp; Butternut
Pomeroy, Ohio
Speaker: Paul Keller - Paragould, Ark.
Come-Hear the Truth Proclaimed

A flower and card fund was
established with $25 In donations
with Mrs. McPeek to IBndle iL A
bazaar and bBke sale wiD be held in
the near fu lure with the date to be
aMrunced. Miss Pearl Powell aoo
Francis Andrew entertained with
songs and also lad a sing-fl-long.
Dowts1 cider, ccifee aoo cupcakes
were served.
HOfltesses for the next meeting,
Nov . :IJI, 7 p.m. will be Jenny
Newlun, Sadie Uirldns, Ernestine
Hayman.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs .
Harold Brewer, Janie Fitch,

The doors are open this week at
the Pomeroy Seventh-day Adventist
Church for Community Guest Day,
according to Rita White, Sabbath
School superintendent. The date is
Nov. 10.
Not that they're not open the rest
of the year, says Mrs. White, but this
Saturday afternoon the welpllne will
be espacially big for non-members.
The leadership is planning a service
for 2 p.m. that will feature several
special items including a report on
our mission work and special music .
"Our Sabbath School spends about
half of the hour-long service in a formal setting, listening to speakers
and music. Then we break up Into
small discussion groups to explore

Mrs. Pat Holter, new regional
director, was guest demonstrator at
the Monday night meeting (j the
Pomeroy Garden Club held at the
home ri Mrs . Margaret Blaettnar.
Mr.&lt;. Holter talked about the county Christmas nower show to be held
Dec. l and 2 and explained the
vari&lt;J.l!l classes. The show is
scheduled to be beld at the Pomeroy
Ele mentary School and has as its
theme, "I 'm Dreaming ci a White

course .

report

Ernestine Hayman, Mr. and Mnl.
Paul Hauber, Leom Hemley, Mae
McPeak, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsal
La r1diii, Mr . and Mrs. Stanley
Wells, JeiiiiY Newhm, Travis and
Tracy, Mr . d Mrs. Tt:m Haymao,
Ginger, and Beth, Mr. and Mr$.
Francia Andrew, Mr. and Mrs. ~ ­
Landns, Mr. and Mrs. Harlan
Ballard, Mr. and Mn . Pat Neutzllng
ami Jay, Mary Andrews, Mr. and
Mrs. J(lleph Bluell, Mr. and Mn.
Bud Adams, Dont Cr1spln, Pearl
Powell, Hazel CurUs, Mr. and Mrs.
John Brewer, Usa WW!on, Tereae
Dalley and nephew, Mr. and Mn .
Kenneth Hensley and daughter, and
Melody Roberts.

Community Guest Day this weeA

Pat Holter
guest speaker

Five arrangements were made by
the demonstrator who used ''looian
Summer" as the theme for one using
feathers and driftwood; "Snow in
April" featuring the white branches ,
a dried mass arrangement ; an arrangement using nl!ies, and one with
pheasant feathers and nowers made
from wood .
Guest rught was observed at tiE
meeting, and the guests were Mrs .
Nancy Cale, Mrs. Jean Coates, Mrs.
Carol Adams, and Mrs. Pea ria
Averi on.
For roll call members named a
good bod&lt; for the garden club. Mrs .
Geneva Nolan gave readings on
garden iderut and proj..,ts ard a
poem on friendship bringing out how
gardeners exchanging bulbs and
flawers become friends.
Mrs . Blaettnar presented dev&lt;&gt;tioll'! on the theme that the harvest
ri the spirit is love, joy, pea ce, pati e n ce, kindness , goodness,
gentleness, and self-eontrol.
A friendship card was stgned by
these attendmg for Mrs. J 0.
Roedel, a cha rter member, now llvmg in Chilli cothe .
During the concluding SOC !Ill hou r,
Mrs . Blaettnar served a dessert

the secretary's report, Mrs .
Ernestine Hayman, the treasurer 's

COMPLETES TRAINING + &amp;bert Dale Haggy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Uoyd Haggy, Pomeroy, has completed basic and AIT training at Fort
Dlx, New Jersey. He graduated
from AIT training,at Belvoir, Va .
Sc hoo l of Engineering with a 98.9
agerage. He IS now at home .

TICKi:I'S AVAILABLE
Area card groups are remiooed

tillt a few tickets are still available
for the Tot Finders Salad Luncheoo
sponsored by Welcome Wagon Club
on Friday, Nov. 9, altbe Cooununity
Menial Health Center.
The buffet will be at 12 nooo,
followed by games until 3: 30 p.m .
Prizes for winners have generously
been donated by the Welcome
Wagon sponsors, including Fruth's
PhamlBcy and Haffelt Brothers
Custom Carpet.
Phone Teresa Blhl at +16-1937 to
purchase tickets or to reserve
tickets to pick up at the door. Tickets
are also available at Carl's Family
Shoe Store and from any c lub member.

Kingsbury
The descendants of William and
Roma IStAnley) Ileal held their
reunion at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Marrtln Swart and daughter , Roma
Sue at Reynoldsburg. Those attending were Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Hicks of Bristol, Tenn .; Mr. and
Mrs . Paul Hicks, Jr . of Virginia; Mr.
and Mrs. Noel Young, Mr . and Mrs .
Galen Young, Mr. and Mrs . Bradley
Young, Mr . and Mrs . Wesley Young,
all of Dayton; Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
Beal and daughter, Patti and grandson of Cleveland ; Mr. and Mrs .
Wayne Bean, Mr. and Mrs . Roger
Young, Yvette and Wesley,
Pomeroy ; Mrs . Linda Well and
Heather of Chester ; Mrs. Karla
Chevalier and Jessica, all of
Chester ; Mrs . John !Sandra) Perdas . Mary a nd Lisa of Chambersburg, Pa . A basket lunch was
enjoyed at noon . Tile day was spent
vis! ling .

TO VISIT
FENTON GLASS
Members of Ohio Era Phi Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
travel to the Fenton Glass Co. Thursday . Those making the trip are to
meet at the upper parking lot in
Pomeroy, across from Nelson 's
Drug Store, no later than 6 p.m .
TIJRN IN TICKETS
Students with Meigs Band Booster
tickets and money are asked to tum
in whatever they have to either the
band director or Mrs. Maxine
Goeglein this week . Those with candy money still out are also asked to
turn itin.

OMISSION NOTED
Mrs . Flo Strickland and Lynda
Black were among those presenting
gifts to the twin daughters of Mr.
and Mrs. Michael Gilmore at a recent shower. Their names were
unintentionally emitted from a
listing ri guests at the shower.
CWBTOMEET
The Star Garden Club will meet at
I p.m . Thursday at the home ci Mrs .
Anna Ogdin. "Wonders of Birds '
Migration " will be given by Mrs .
Martha Chapman. Mrs. Lui a Levis
will talk on Olristmas decoratims
fran nature, and Mrs. Ogdin will
show tour slides. There will also be a
quiz by the program chainnan, Mrs .
Stella Atkins.

the subject of the lesson," repoi'U
Mrs. White .
The church is located on Mulberry
Heights Road, around the hlll from
Veterans Memorial H08pital.
"Of course after Sabbath School
everyone is invited to stay fcc the
main workshop service at 3:15," added Mrs. White.
A fellowship supper will be held In
the church basement at the con ch•llinn ci the services .

Birth announced
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Wright ri Hoole
4, Prmeroy, are aMouncing the
birth ci a daughter, J1!91Jlca Dawn,
on Nov. I at O'Blene&amp;B Memorial
H(llpltal In Athe111. The Infant
weighed four pouros, 10 ounces.
Maternal grandperenlll are Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Eblin, Pomeroy,
and the maternal greatgrBndperenlll lin! Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Leach, CIBrleston, W. Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wright are the
pali!mBI graoo~rentl!, and 112
~lerna! great,.gnuxl~rents are
Mr. and Mrs. WUIIam Oehler, Lancaster, and Mrs. Thelma Wright,
Southgate, Calif.

CHARLES GRIFFIN
ASSIGNED TO KY.
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky.+Sgt.
Charles L. Griffin, whose wife ,
Diana, lives in Gallipolis, reCently
WIIB assigned as a squad leader with
the J27th In!an try at Fort ~
bell ,Ky.
His parents , Mr . and Mrs. Marvin
T. Griffin, live at l715 &lt;llestnut St.

ERNEST MUNDELL
PROM&lt;JI'ED
VICI'ORVILLE, Calif. +Ernest P.
Mundell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Patrick Mundell Jr., rJ. Route 1, Bldwell.has been promoted to the rant
of airman first class in the U.S. Air
Force .
AinnanMundeU is an aei'08p8ce
ground equipment mechaniwith a
unit of the Tactical Air Conunand at
George Air Force Base, bere.
The airman is a 1'¥18 graduate of
Buckeye Hills Career Center .

It All Depends on You!
Your family and friends would love your portrait for Christmas but only you can arrange it.
We'll_be glad to help, however. Our holiday
deadlines are approaching fast.

Give us a call.

THE PHOTO PLACE
(992-5292)
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich
109 High St.
Pomeroy

r-------------------------1 Kucinich, Is1ue I big losers Tuesday
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Letters of opinion art' \H'knmt•d . They s hould bt' less
than 300 words long 1or subjt't·tto rt•ductinu by the editor I
and must he sigut&gt;d with tht· signt•t&gt; 's address. Names may
bt' withht'ld upon publi .. alwh. Hnwt·ver, on rt&gt;qut·st.
names will bt' disrlnsl'd. Lt'lll'rs should he in good tastl'.
addressing issues, not per,onal itit•s.

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Tired of yellers
I get so tired of people putting
teachers down. They have children,
homes aoo biU.. to ~Y - They are
lmnan. Some teachers could qua illy
' for Food Stamps and free lunches.
These people who always yell that
they only make $3.3:i an hrur as if it
is Ute teacher's fault No one twisted
their anns. Why didn 't they get an
education for a profession' This is
America, if you really want to better
yourself, you worlt! !
M08t teachers worlted their way
through school and got loons which
rna ny still pay on.
Teachers used to be respected and
lOO!ed up to, nowadays they are put
down. Many people in this country
thirit teachers should teach and
worlt for nothing. Does yrur Doctor,
your U!wyer, or anyone else who
provides a service? No! t
Who said, " It is the children's,
God given right to go to school ?" Did
God'
Many children in this world not
only don't go to schoo~ they don't
eat. Is God just for the United States
and not the world'
Oh yes, 1 don't get mad, 1 get
angry .
MRS. RAY WILLIAMS

Rt4
Pomeroy , OH

Students losers • . .
Dear Editor,
We are students ri Meigs local
school District aoo we woold lilte to
put a pc:lnt across to the Meigs local
teachers and B&lt;llrd &lt;I Education.
TIBt all students ci Meigs are
laiing more !IBn the l!()ard of
Education aoo teachers. First cif we
are be~ affected by the strike in
the following l1ll tters .
I. A!l teachers what kind r:l an
eumple are they setting to us, the
students &lt;I Meigs Camty .If we were
to act as varoslsas in the sense as to
drstroy, destruct, aoo finally put to
death the school system.
WlB t kind r:l punislunent would we
be faced with• Certainly, not
laug!Ed at or overlcx*ed, but ra !her
ridiculed aoo severely punished .
can someone aii!Wer 112 question.
WIBI ever happened to the judicial
li)'S~m in Meigs County? Why hasn't
a judge sent the.~hers back to
worlt while negotiations an: gcing
on' w~ IBsn'Nt.e supennteooent
stepped in as a leader ins_a! (j
trying to be a "comedia~n
anyone answer these questiCiW? U
so then why isn't anything being
done'
2. Not only does tlU lll8 t1e r 1-at rt
the l!lljority r:lstudentB in a fashion
r:1 making up days, ](lling education
and respect for their teachers, but
also what aboot activities aoo spor-

"'

· Activities play a big ~rt in any
students life; clubs, dances, and
social organizatiOIIll help keep
~tudents elf the streets, and help
tiulld a better perspective towards
fife and the future. Sports has many
benefits.
. It helps contribute to ctmpetition,
liullds spirit aoo in many cases gives
tcholarahipa for the rutBtarding ~r­
tlcipantB.
Many students 1001 f&lt;rward and
wons very hard for their event they
irish to take psrt in. ill it fair to take
thtse tq&gt;es away from the students
who have given so IIIllCh ci themselvl'.'l in past years? 1
· Cl&lt;11ing we would lilte to say this
~ gone far enrugh, and for a
ehange how a bout taking into consideration the students. For without
.students there would be no school.
Two unhappy students

Wants settlement
Dear Sir :
I'm a student who's listened to
: jlolh sides r:l the story r:l the Meigs
· Local Teachers Strike.
· Well, like mOflt people, I just
. wished it wwld get settled.
: The students, te&amp;chera aoo the
school b~rd can't afford this strike
· any longer. Not only are the
)eachers feeling cheated, but the
Jltudent booy as a whole, has been
totally deab"oyed for the remainder
'd the year.
,
We've !Oflt a good football team, a
j~reat baoo, also our volleyball team,
plus many more sports that the
students Iodl forward to every year.
The biggest ]OfiS has been several
weeks ci (hopefully) educational in'atrucUon. So what abool this year'
· WIBt do we have to lodl forward
I
ito?
Jual about eve rythi ng we 've
forward to has been taken
:

We Are Having A Going Out of Business Sale!

EVERYTHING IN STOCK
IS DRASTICALLY REDUCED I
STOP IN AND SEE _US TODAY

Wed

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from us and demolished.
Like many other young people 1
was always taught to respect my
elders. But now how can I when
some ri the actions brought on by
the strike are on a juvenile
ideliJxluentl level. AJJ a juvenile,
thooe same actions would have
caused the juvenile to go to court.
I am sure if the student body
staged a sit-In, there wruld be strong
reprimands and-or suspereion from
the schooL What 's happerung to the
teachers'
So take lime for a settlement, for
everyone's sake'
- Lori Faulkner , I:IJI Lincoln Hill,
Meigs HighSchool.

Mayor~s

Court

Two defendants were fined ard
three others forfeited bonds in the
court ri Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews.
Fined were Roberl Johnson, Jr.,
Racine, $50 and c&lt;Ets, squealing
tires; Ronnie Pearson, Pomeroy,
$100 and C&lt;l!lts, inlolication, $50 ard
C(llts, disorderly marmer.
Forteiting bonds were Laura
Krebs, Albany, $29, speeding;
Darlene Moomaw, Rutland, $250,
reckless ""'ration; Randy Frierd,
Long Bottcrn, $30, assured clear
distance.
One defendant was fined aoo 11
others forleited bonds in the coort ri
Middleport Mayor Fred Hrifman
Ttiesday night.
Fined $19 and C&lt;l!lls oo a speeding
charge was Betty Caldwell, Route 1,
Middleport.
Forfeiting bonds were Terry
Albright, MIIBon, $50, disorderly
marmer; Dennis Lavendar, Middleport, $25, following to cl(llely;
Celia See, Bidwell, $25 on an expired
driver 's license charge aoo $28 on a
speeilingcharge; B. F . Worthington,
Columbus, $50, disorderly marmer,
aoo Linda Carpenter, Route 1, Middleport, $27; RhOR!a C. Dempsey,
Syracuse , $27; Hennan FeJTell,
Dixie, W. Va ., $29; Gregory Grover,
Route 2, Pomeroy, $32 ; Roger
Pickem, Clifton, $28; David C.
Smith, The Plains, $27, and Frances
Whittington, Rrute 1, Middleport,
$30, all on speeding charges.

ON CKA1TERBOX PROGRAM
The three high schools in Meigs
County will be represented over
WJEH "c latter box " Tl"atrsday
from 10:30 to 11 a.m .
Th&lt;Ee who will be heard will be
Scott Hill from Eastern High School,
Rcsemary Hubbard, Southern High
School and Danny Thllfl'llls from
Meigs High SchooL The group will
Bpt!3k on the great American
smokeouttobeiE!donNov.l5.

MEi:I'S MONDA V
Syracuse PTO will meet Monday
at 7:30 p.m. at the school Mrs.
Shirley Huston will present a display
ri crafts.

Ry Tb~ As~odah&gt;d Pn·s~
The biggest losers Tuesday were
Ballot Issue l and Cleveland Mayor
Denms .I Kucin ich as Ohioans voted
on a statewide anti-litter proposal
and a host of local questwns .
Issue 1, whi ch would have
required a 10-cent deposit on
beverage containers and barred
cans wtth detachable snap tabs. was
defeated by nearly a :l-1 mar!lin .
With 90 percent of the vote
counted. the office of Secretary of
State Anthony J . Celebrezze Jr .
showed lssue 1, the only statewide
propos1t1on on Tuesday's ballot, with
681 ,529 vo tes or 27 .6 percent,
compared to l ,790, 494 or 72.4 percent
aga tnst it.

The
Ohto
Alliance
for
Returnable s. whi ch circulated
petitions to put tl)e mea'\urt&gt; on th e
ballot, blamed the defeat on the
s up erior finan cing and media
campaign mounted by a coalition of
big laba campaign mounted by a
coalition of btg labor and big
industry opposed to the measure .
The coalition raised and spent $1 .6
million , more than 16 times the
$89,200 that loosely organized
proponents could muster .
Tite slick media campaign by
Ohioan s for a Practical Litter Law
mcludcd claims that mandatory
deposits would drive up prices of soft
drinks and beer by as much as $1 a
case .

Mount Healthy voters
reject school levy
By The Associated Pr.. s
Voters m the strike-bound Mount
He a lthy school district outside
Cin ci nnati rejected a ninth
consecutive operating levy Tuesday,
a result an official of the striking
teachers union said it was expected.
[n C.1eveland, schools in the 92,000pupil district were ordered stopped
IOOay because of lack of attendance
and the inability of the system to
maintain education during the strike
that began Oct . 18, officials said .
Meanwhile, teachers strikes
continued in Meigs County and
Norton, m Sununit County .
" We would have welcomed the
levy," said a disappointed Mount
Healthy school board president,
David Switzer. " I hate to say it but It
looks like the strike had a negative
effect ."
Switzer, who was defeated in his
re-election bid, said he wants to
reopen negotiations with the 331
teachers. " But I don 't want to cut
the JX'Ogram ."
"We never really said anything
abo ut the levy ," said teachers union

'

JEAN TRUSSELL

New associates

president Tom Wick . ·'They never
seem to pass anyway . The money is
there. We feel the program doesn't
have to be cut to pay th e teacher s,"
Wick said .
Voters rejected the 4.5 mill levy
4,254-3,244. Both sides said they were
intere•ted in reopening talks today .
However , a hearing was scheduled
today in Hamilton County Common
Pleas Court where the school board
has asked that the sti'ikers be
ordered back to work.
A court hearing was scheduled
today also in the Meigs County
strike .
Cleveland Schools Superintendant
Peter carlin and school board
president John Gallagher ordered
the schools closed after a second day
of hearings in CUyahoga County
Common Pleas Court where the
5,000-rnember teachers union had
filed sult to close the schools. The
teachers sought the shutdown to
require an extensioo of the school
year once the strike ends.
Gallagher said talks had reached
an impasse and " 1t is now
impossible to maintain a safe and
secure educational atmosphere for
students and staff members."
Only 131 pupils reported to class
Tuesday in the state's largest school
system.
Cleveland
teachers
are
demanding a 14 percent ratse above
their average pay of $16 ,466 and
starting salary of $9 ,928. The board's
6 percent offer was rejected .

" Wtth high mflation and talk of a
recession, I think the people simply
were concerned about anything that
nul\h&lt; rruse th e cost of anythmg they
buy," satd Kent B. McGough ,
former Ohio Rpublican chairman
and ch tef campaign consultant to the
ant1*Iss ue 1 group .

Voters in Maine and Washington
state w~re also voting on deTXJSit

laws . ln Maine , a 22-month-&lt;Jid bottle
law was retatned b) more than a 6-1
margin, but 1n Wa sh ingto n, a
rneasw-e requi ring a 5-cent deposit

on cans and bottles was trailing in

early retw-ns.
Th e dramatic raL'&lt; for Cleveland's
top post highlighted mayoral
elections Ln slx major Ohio r·1Ues,
Including Columbus, Toledo, Akron.
Ca nton and Youngstown .
Mood y, 49 , gathered 83,522 votes
or 58. percent, to 6(),091 or 42 percent
for Boyland in the fmal unofhoal
res ults m Columbus.
Moody became mayor in 1'¥12 after
serving two yea rs as a ~ranklin
Count y Common Pleas Court judge
and six years as a Municipal Court
judge . He also was a member of city
council for ooe year.
Toledo's Democratic incumbent
Mayor Doug D€Good saJd he was
"gr eatly relieved" a fte r emerging
with a resounding victory over
Republican
challenger
John
Mcllhargey .
DeGood, 32, won hiS second fouryear term in the state 's fourthlar gest city with an unofficial 64
percent of the vote. to Mcllhargcy 's
36 percent. Mcllhargey, who has
never held public office , tallied
31,948 votes, to 56,383 for DeGood.
Said Mcllhargey, also a loser in a
1978 bid for state representative,
"Concession ts depressing ."
Another incumbent, Republican
Stanley Crruch, 6J, won a strong
victory in his heated duel Wlth
Democrat Sam Purses , 39, for

Enjoy:Sunrise
And.save

Mrs. Jean Trussell has jcined the
Clelaoo Realty Col11pllny as a sales
associate. she has complete a 30
hour course in real estate practices,
a 30 hour course in real estate law,
and has passed the license
elUjmination required by tiE Ohio
Real Esla te Conunission.
Mrs . Trussell, IEr husband ,
Ralph, their four children, and their
granddaughter live in Bashan, Ohio.
She is active in the Bashan Fire
Department Auxilary ard t~ Sutton
Methodist Church.

ATTENTION

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

Between 8:30 a.m.

and 5:00p.m.
1-614-992-2156

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Better natured. Not bitter:

mayor of Canton.
Unofficial final results supplied by
the Stark County Board of Elections
showed Cmich with 16,381 votes, to
Purses' 12,860.
C.'rnich, mayor of the northeastern
Ohio ctty for 16 years, said he was
"elated with the confidence of the
people of Canton f..- another four
years" and promised " a very
exciting four years" for th e city.
Purses is the city 's income tax
director and assistan t city
treasurer .
In Akron. voting tabulation was
slowed by computer ·problems. But
un the basis of partial returns,
Democratic City Council President
Ray Kapper conceded to Republican
Hoy Ray, 40, city finance director.
The post ts being vacated by
retiring Republican Mayor John
Ballard.
With about 80 percent of the Akron
vote counted, Ray had 24,471 yotes to
Kapper ' s 17 ,999. Three ottier
candidates trailed by large margins.
In Youngstown, Democratic City
Council Clerk George Vukovich ran
unopposed and was elected to
replace retiring Mayor J. Phillip
Richley .
Voters also decided 204 school
tssues m 186 districts, as well as 328
wning and charter changes and 334
local optwn liquor questions.

Authoriled CATALOG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears)
Phone 992 -2178
134 E . Main St.
Pomeroy, 0 .
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
Jack &amp; Judy Williams

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Thur . 9-12, Fri . 9-S, Sa f . 9-2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money sack

�16-The DBily Sentinel, Middleport-Pcmeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov . 7, 1979

Mayor-elect Voinovich has hope for new
CLEVELAISD 1.AP 1 - Mayor ·
elect George V. Voinovich expressed
hope
for
a new
er a
of
" understanding and cooperation "
far differen t from the braw ling sty le
of incumbent Dennis J . Kucinich ,
whom he defeated in Tuesday 's
election.
Voinovich, 43 , will resign his post
as Ohio 's lie utenant governor and
take the reigns of the stale 's largest
city on Monday .
In unofficial returns in Tuesday 's
election. the former state- legislator
and Cuyahoga County auditor and
commissioner defeated Kucinich

94,407 to 73,505 With all of the city's
64~ voting prectncts reportmg.
Voinovich told a jubilant crowd at
the Oeveland Plaza Hotel that the
time for confrontation politics 1s
over m aeveland .
" I'm con f ident we have the
resources in this cmnmunity

to

become a great city again ...
Voinovich sa id " I look upon the JOb
as on e to unite black and white , rich
and poor , young and uld, everyone

who make sup thec1ty of Cleveland ."
Kucinich, 33. a battler throughout
tus two years as mayor. narrowly
survived a reC'aU election and took
on the city's banks and big business
interest s even as C1eveland suffered
two muructpal defaults .
Th€ rna verick Democrat conceded

only two hours after the polls closed ,
bu t UJld his ardent ba ckers he will be
back.
" You c an't defeat a person's sp tnt
if he won't le l yo u. and yo u can 't

defeat a person ·s 1deas 1f he won't let
you .
Clevela nd
became
a
battleground, not because I wanted
tu hght. but beca use I refused lo
surrender .
" We protected the mtegr it y of
government by refusing to ca ve Ul to
an urunoral bank thal forced us into
default. We stood up for the people
against th e corporatwns that are
attackmg th e consumers every day .
And we stood up against their media
allies .
" I did nothmg more than stand up
for your righ15 ." he told his subdued

\ Marshall's column

• • •

-:-:

Mr. Darrel Jenks is a patient m
the mtensive care unit at Pleasant
Valley Hospital
Mrs. Norma Quen of Mason 1s a
surgical patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital .
Mrs. Alfred 1Catherine 1Slew art is
a surgical patient at Holzer Medical
Center and wil be there several
days. For anyone who would like to
send her a get-well card her room
nwnber is 330.
Erruna Forth VISited all last week
with her aunt, Mrs. Gail Muth of Col·
urnbus , Ohio. She also visited wilh
Mr. and Mrs . Leslie White of Athens.
Ohio.
Stella Mae Krebs visited Friday
evening with Mr . and Mrs . J . Robert
Roach and sons, Larry and Roger .
Those visiting with them Sunday
were Dav id Rauch . Larry
Hargraves and Robert Moosman,
Jr .
Those visitng over the weekend m
the home of Mr . and Mrs. Lawrence
Lewis were Mrs . Sharon Martin and
children , Kip and Robtn Martin of

County Court
Thirty defendants were lined and
23 others forfeited bonds in Meigs
County Court Mondsy.
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Hazel Wiener, Tuppers Plains,
$10. arxl ca.ts, left cl center; Dennis
Pedings, Long Bottom, Paul
Milliron, Racine, Loretta Holsinger,
Racine , Carl Hubbard, Syracuse,
Gary Basham, Jr., Coolville, Winfred Christopher, Washington, W.
Va ., Michael Mathers, The Plains,
Karen Haines, Syracuse, Daniel
Wallace , Stockport, Mervin Smith,
Rt. 2. Pomeroy, Jeffrey W. Ohlinger,
Pomeroy , and Roy Vauangan, Rt I,
Langsville, $15. and ca.ts each,
speeding; Michael Wolf, Reedsville,
s:;. arxl ca.ts, defective exhaust
system; Clifford Cormolly, Rt I,
Portland, $150. and ca.ts, three days
confinement, license susperxled 30
days, DWJ ; Ralston D. Hemsley , Rt
2, Pomeroy, $50. and costs,
speeding; Terry L. Combs,
Wellston, $1~ and coots, unsafe
vehicle ; Steve Hill, Racine , $35. and
ca.ts, restitution, destruction of
pr~rty ; Johnny Pridemore, St.
Paul , Minn. , $40. arxl ca.ts , reckless
operation ; James J. Jef fers,
Pomeroy, Wendell Jeffers,
Pomeroy , Lawrence DBrst, RL 3.
Pomeroy, Russell Wooten, RL 4,
Pomeroy, Jeffrey Haning, Albany,
Patricia Hunter, Cheshire, Bernard
Hunter, Cheshire, and Russell Will,
Rt. I, Long Bottom, $50. and C08ls
each, spotlighting; George Stobart,
Jr ., Racine, $15. and ca.ts, stop sign
violation, $10. and coots, no cycle e ndorsement, and costs, ooly , no
registration plates.
Forfeiting bonds were David A.
Griffith, Rt. I, Long Bott&lt;m, $35.50,
expired operators lice!fie; Danny
Tillis, Rutland, Paul Reitrnire , Middleport, John Bachman, Sardinia,
Jane Applegate, Columbus, $35.50
each, speeding; Jeffrey S. Stevenson, Ceredo, $35.SC, illegal pa ssing :
Dennis L. Richards, Rt. 2, racine,
arxl Jeffrey Bable, Rl 2, Racine,
$60.50 each, speedillf!; Gabriel J .
Prete, Gallipolis, $35.5C, stop sign;
Bruce E . Cottrill, SyraCUlle, $35.50,
no cycle endorsement; Randall L.
Butcher, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, $35.50, no
registration ; Eugene Adkins,
Syracu.se, $35.50, stop sign ; Richard
Caruthers, Rt 2, Pomeroy, $62.55,
reckless ~ration; Robert Veron ,
Marietta, $35.50, illegal parkmg at
pam ; Harry E . Arter, Mason, $37 &gt;a,
trespassing;
Ty
Strick Ia nd,
Charleston, $262.50, obstructing r:tficlal business ; Richard P. Dugan,
Rt. 2, Racine, and George W. Kuhn ,
New Lexington, $360.50 each, DWI ;
Joseph Thompson, Cheshire, $60.50,
drag racing; hmes M. Murray ,
South Point, Sheila S. Tu1.1er.
Columbus and David L. Ram&lt;'J . 11~&gt;•
Grande, $35.50 eP"h. ~ pe,'&lt;' : n~

Sandyville, W. Va . Also Mr . and
Mrs . Gerald Stewart of Colwnbus ,
Ohio .
Members of the Wahama Band
Boosters met recently at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Capehart and
made 271 quart• of applebutter.
Anyone wanting to buy some may
call Bill and Jean Yoho at New
Haven or Mr . Capehart's phone
number , 773-5566. The Band
Boosters hold th eir monthly
meetings the fi rst Tuesday of each
mon th at the band room at Wahama
High School at 7:30 pm .
Mr . and Mrs . Johnn y Jefferies and
son. Lynn a nd daughter, Melanie,
visited Friday , Saturday and Sunday in Tertnesee with their parents,
Mrs. Lucille Allen and Mrs. Grace
Jefferies and ststers, Mn Reva
Hamblin a nd Danna Blue _
OAK GROVE NEWS
The third Sunday of October Rev .
Robert Fulton took the text from
Gen , third chapter , conserving sin
is a chain reaction leaving the question, "Where Art Thou ?".
On Sunday, Oct. 28 , the
Superintendent of the Oak Groe
United Methodist Church, Glen
Icenhower . recognized the mothersin-law and had the congregation sing
Faith of Our Mothers. Sunday evening, Nov . 4, Rev . Fulton took his text
fr om John 4 : :i-15, the theme of her
sennon was the wall that people
build is stronger and harder than b
brick wall . A business meeting was
held alter the service and there will
be a monthly business meeting starting the first Sunday evening of
December following the regular
preaching servtce, which starts at
6:30 p.m . The nomination corrunittee are Naoma Yeager, Alice Ran·
dolph and Lucyh Cullen. They are lo
meet to select names for the Sunday
School officers. Election will be held
the first Sunday of December folowmg Sunday School.
The Oak Grove Church will have a
Thanksgiving Fellowship dinner
SlL~day , Nov . 18 following the Sunday school and morning preaching
serv1ce. Lucy Collins, Hollice
Thompson and !'Iorence Love are on
the table committee
The Union Charge Thanksgiving
service will be held at the Uruon
Church Wednesday Nov . 21 at 7:30
p.m .

supporters _ " In every case J have

&gt;'lood up f&lt;K you. the people of
Cleveland . I don 't want to see any
tears

Ill

anyone's eyes here . We've

been strong enough lo wm , so we
have tAl be strong enough tu lose ."
Voinovich, with his wife, Janet,
and his three suriviving children
standing behind hun, opened his
VICtory speech with a poignant
reference lAJ his ~year-old daughter,
Molly. killed in a traffi c accident
Oc t. 8.
" We mtss the presence tonight of
our little girl Molly , but we know
she's here with us in spir it - and we
know that she has with aimtghty God

Harrisonville
Social News
Mr . Ben Caster, Charleston. W.
Va ., spent a week with his niece, Mr.
and Mrs . Roy Wiseman Other
callers were their son, Rev . David
Wiseman and family of Uma , 0.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson and
daughter, Columbus and Ray Alkire,
Athens, were Sunday dinner guests
of Mr . and Mrs. Bob Alkire.
Mr . and Mrs. Clinton G1lkey spe nt
a week in Denver , Colo. visiting his
uncle , Vern Blizzard and cousin, Mr.
and Mrs . Robert Day Blizzard.
Mr . and Mrs. Jess Carroll moved
to Ga llipolis .
Mr. and Mrs . Mike Epple went to
thetr da ught er 's, Mrs. Gerry
Benrendsen in Sandusky , Friday .
She accompanied them for a visit to
Mr . and Mrs. Larry Godby in Atlanti c. Pa. Saturday. The Epples visited
their children m Lanesville before
returning home on Tuesday.
Rosella Birchfield is staying at her
mother's, Ne!Ue Borgan, after having maJor surgery.
Mrs . Frashier Dowden and
daughter and son-in-law of Fort
Ashby , w. Va .. visited Mrs . Nellie
Brogan for a week . Other callers
over the weekend were Mr . and Mrs .
J ames Borgan, Lancaster .
Mr . and Mrs . Earl McGrath were
Sunday dinner guests of their son,
Mr . and Mrs. Larry McGrath and
family , Coolville .
Ida White, who had open heart
surgery in Co lumbu s, is
rec uperating at the home of her
daughter, Mrs. Elmer Bowles .
Mrs Adrienne French is slowly
improving after surgery at Holzer
Hoospital.
Chuck Ball and fri end of Colwnbus
spent Saturday afternoon with his
aunt, Mrs. Frances YoWJg .

Fairview
News Notes

Kiven us the strength weve needed
endure the last seven weeks .
" We'll take the love we have for
her and the love she has for us and
reach out and do something for our
fellow man . I want w thank all of you
for the opport unity to serve yo u as
yo ur mayor and this extraordinary
opportunity to reach out and help
our fellow man ."
Kucmich, who gave up his attack
on Voinovich's alleged big business
··fa t rat" support for several weeks
after Molly's death, offered his
support in person, showing up a the
winner's ele ctton headquarters
momenl5 after Voinovich's victory
speech
" I want
to
offer
you
congratulatio ns from Sandy (his
wile 1and I, and let you know that we
will do any thing we can to help you
in yow- task as mayor of Cleveland ,"
Kucinich told Voinovich as many in
the crowd booed and hooted their
va nquished opponent.
Voinovich and Kucmich were the
sur vivors of a noniJanisan primary
election tAJ se lect th e two candidates
lor the m ayo ral runoff. Th e
challe nger led that vote by a large
margm, and Kucinich knew from
that lime that he was an underdo in
the race.
an
Kucmich,
known
as
accomplished campaigner , received
lAJ

backi ng from such diverse
supporters as consumer advocate
Ralph Nader ; for mer politlcal
enemy Ca rl Stoke!!, who served as
Oeveland mayor and now is NBC
newsman in New York; singer Helen
Reddy, and much of Cleveland's
organized labor .
" A few days ago we were 30
1percentage) points behind 1in the
polls)," Kucinich said Tuesda y
rught. " We cut that to 10 points, but
there jUllt wasn't enough tune . Now I
want to aslo that all the people oi
Qeveland give him ( Voinovich ) the
help he'll need in the days ahead. "
Kucmich said he would hold a
news cmference today to talk about
his plans for the future .
Kucmich's younger brother Gary
also was defeated in his bid for reelection to the City Council.
Democ rat Joseph M. Hudak
unseated him by 37 votes, according
tn the unofficial count.
Voinovich said he felt he beat
Kucinich because " I think the people
tn this city are looking for new
leadership . I think they understood
that the current administration
co uldn't get the bread and butter
things done for the city.
"But this wasn't an easy
campaign . It was a hard campaign .
There was an army from City Hall
we had lo coo front going out into the

er~

...
'

neighborhoods, and we did it with
volunte ers and kept the campatgn 00
a high level.
,
.
. "I believe th~t I m the first ~6~r
Since l~ that s gomg lAl ente
Y
Hall without having had to resort to
racism as a camprugn ISSUe . I want
w thank those _of you who put _the
wellbeing of th~ ctly above pohttcal
coostderatwns_. _
.
Vomovtch will gtv e up h':" $30,000a-year_ post as the states No. ;
poh ticta n when he assumes th
$50,000-a-year Oeveland post .

HOLEMAN TAKES
PART lN EXERCISE
U.S. FORCES, Korea+Spec. 4
James E . Holman, whose wife ,
Denise, lives in Portland, recently
participated in a yearly tank gun·
nery qualification test with the 2nd
Wan try Division in Korea .
During the tests, tank crewmen
wtdergo extensive day and night
qualifying runs on the range to
detennine their individual and crew
efficiency.
Holman , a tracked-vehicle
mechanic with the 2nd Infantry
Division at Camp Casey, Korea, en·
tered the Anny in April1977.
He is a 1976 graduate of Southern 1
Local High School, Racine .
His mother, Mrs. C.A. Holman ,
lives in Racine .

• Machme wash warm
tumble dry medium
permanent preu fobri (

By Mr s. Herberl Roush
Visiting Mrs . Etha Warner Sunda y
were Mr . and Mrs . Arthur Warner
and Mr . and Mrs . Oarence Roy of
Racine.
Wilda Lawson is assisting in the
care of her sJster-tn-law, Mrs.
Harold Lawson at her horne at
Letart, W. Va . Mrs . Lawson has
been a surgical pal!ent at Pleasant
Valley Hospttal in Pmnt Pleasant.
Mr . and Mrs. Gary Miller and
children, Amy and Jason , Bellvue.
W. Va ., were recent weekend guesl.5
of her parenl.5 , Mr . and Mrs Harry
Roush , Mr and Mrs . Lewis Hudson
at Minersvi lle Sunday afternoon .

CLEVELAND ( API The
Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) says it may
have violated oil price-eontrol
regulations by overcharging $3
cleveland-based company called "a
groos diotortlon ," allegations
Tuesday by the Energy Department
that SOOio may have overcharged
eusloolers by •179 millim between
Dec. I, 1974, and 1917.
" Ilm't be mlaled by DOE's big
nwnbers, we think It's mostly
smoke, " sald Charles H. King ,
Sohio 's senior vice president for
marketing and refining.
The DOE sald "notices of probable
violation" were lasued to nine oU
companies, including Sohlo, alleging
the cm~panles rna have tried to
recover a total of nearly .5 billion
from rusttmers In violation of
federal regulations .
The allegationa are not conclusive
findings and the companies have the
opportunity to reopond to the
charges arxl cmtest them In court.
King told reporters that "perhaps
$3 milllon of the alleged overcharges
are valid as a result of clerical and
computational ernrs. We elqM!Cl
that when all the fact&amp; are In, Sohio
will be found to be in compliance
with the bulk of the rest of the
regula lions. "
King said that the allegatims were
related to overcharges for expenses
related to the production of gasoline.
The DOE said such costs normally
account for about 12 percent of the
cost of a gallon of gasoline .
King said the DOE maeport public
while ita atdllll were yet to be
ampleted on some of the charges,

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Volen! In the Gallla County Local
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percentma rgln.
Puaage d U.t millage ellmlna tell
the need by the local bcllrd d
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JIDIO
G •"e your mann g• ft h e c an dDDJe c •a te- all year lon g Ou r 1-!o r s t'l etfll
sh o es ,u e peil ec t stoc lo. tng sl ufter :; Th e y featur e st yl e Qu al tty dnd
cu m l tl rl An rJ 'H:'

l n em

'a m

~

p

o t ynt u thoug h tfulness f"Y e r y I t me he

..., t" d 'S

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
m MtJn

l ht u llt ur~ !1.5.-i !

• d ill

lll h~nlo.

iiP!Il Ft .

~ \t• d SlJnd&lt;~_
v_

r .~

d r11e o t U PP C' ' B ·r'

_

~V/5.&gt;4[!1!!11
... '

..

Our
Reg.
4.97

Pack
of 3

Briefs and
Athletic Shirts

3
IN

PACK
FOR

King.

A $50 mitlion dispute involves how
much Sohio charges Itself lor fuel it
use• to operate \Is refineries .
Another $20 mitlim Issue Is whether
the company should use its actual
May 1973 maintenance costs at a
Lima , Ohio, refinery as a bsse for
later maintenance charges . In that
monh, the refinery underwent
e:rpsed a different accounting
method to establish a balll! flgure for
maintenance.
King said the disputed $179 mitlion
equal to about one cent a gallon for
the fuel sold by Sohio during the
period In questim.
Sohio said the practices that are
being challenged are the ones the
ampany has always used
"The whole mess may well take
years to be resolved, as did earlier
issues with DOE . We Intend to hang
in there because we believe we are
right," King said.

In Indianapolis and Margaret Hance
in Phoenix, Ariz ., were returned to
office.
Ted Wll3on , a Democi'at, won reelectim easily In Salt Lake City .
Richard Hatcher, who was the
first black elected mayor of a major
city, easily won a third term in
Gary, Ind.
Incumbent Democrats Doug
Deoledo, Ohio, Maurice Ferre in
Miami and Lewis Murphy in TuCliOn ,
Ariz. , also wm.
Rizw in Philadelphia, Gov . Julian
Carroll In Kentucky and Gov . Cliff
Finch in Mississippi all were bsrred
by law from seeking re-election,
although Rizzo tried unsuccesafuly
last year for a city charter revision
that would have allowed him a third
term .
The national Republican Party
had banked heavily on Mississippi,

contributing mo,ooo to millionaire
Gil
automobile
sa lesman
Car michael. Presidential
candidates Ronald Reagan and John
Coally also campaigned foc the
Mississippi ticket.
With over two-thirds of the vote
counted, Winter had 27 4.~ to
Carmichael's 184,244.
Fonner Republican Gov . Louis
Nurm put up a stiff fight in
Kentucky, but lost decisively to
Brown after a bitter campaign. With
virtually all the precincts counted,
Brown had 553,077 votes; Nunn,
379,932.
Nurm, announcing his retirement
from politics late Tuesday , told
supporters, "The voters have done
my family and me a personal fa vor.
What they have done for themselves
bas yet tn be detennined. ·•

Brown, who made a fortune in the
fast-food business , is married to
former Miss America and TV
personality Phyllis George.
Noting Nunn 's campaign attacks
on his jet~ lifestyle, Brown told
supporters, "There was a lot in this
that
was
an
campaign
embarrassment to this state (but)
truth always wins out. It' s obvious
that the mud didn't stick."
Green ,
41 ,
represented
Philadelphia for six terms in the
U.S. House and had lost to Rizzo in
1971 .
Marston, one of best known
Republican
candidates
in
Philadelphia in recent years, won
national attention when he resisted
unsuccessfully
the
Carte r
administration 's moves to replace
him as the city's U.S . attorney while
he was investigating several

Democratic congressmen.
In racially-troubled Boston, White
noted that he had won In every
neighborhood and said "this 18 the
first tune in 12 years that thla dty
has not been divided."
Green echoed those commenlll,
saying, "We set out to end the
bitterness, the divisiveness in this
city. It ends tnnight . Philadelphia is
whole again."
Fraser had served Minneapolis as
congressman for 16 years but gave
up hill safe seat last year only to lose
in a primary race for the Senate. His
party, which had dominated
Minnesota politics under the
leadership of the late Hubert H.
Humphrey , lost the statehouse and
both Senaw seats in last fall'•
general election, and Tuesday's
contest was viewed by many as a door-die turning point.

THE FINAL 5 DAYS OF OUR SAVING
SAVE 50%

KOVBM·a·&amp;.ea

SALE

PlENTY
OF
FREE. I'AR~ING

DECORATOR OIL.
LAMPS

OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT

E NTIRE
STOCK
JN
~~~ .. LE
Values to SA 49

NEW REDUCED ITEMS
"BEAUTY SILK" FLORAL

300
SHE ETS

FRENCH POODLE

NEW FAL L STYLES

WOMENS
SKIRTS

REGULAR '3.99

Mens · Boys

$200

They bend to d esired s hape . Pink ,
white , yellow or blue . Decorate

ORLON
KNIT

your bedroom 1 li vi ng room, bath
or kitchen . Also a perfect gift _

NOTEBOOK
PAPER

MENS SUPOVER

SWEATERS

Easy care polo;ester in the
wanted tall colors . Sites 10 to
18. Come see, you'll save!

SAlE t.NDS· SUNDAY

REgular $1 .39

$500

From regular STOCK . Tur ·
tie or V-necks . American
made .

$}00

Values
To
s12.99

OTHERS
TO $3.29

PORCELAIN BISK
MINI VASES
J %" high
white
bisk .
decorilted
with
colorful
flowers . Perfect for gift e• ch•nges or fOr collectors_

ARTIFICIAL POLY
HOLIDAY FLOWERS

JUMBO lOG ROll .

CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP
35
SQUARE gg~

$} 00
WOMENS
BRUSHED

,..oinsettias , Pick s,
Greenry . A complete
selection is now in

our stock .

Don't Wait Too Long

FEET r

NYLON
GOWNS

WARM ORlON

SKI MASKS

YOU'VE BHN ASKING
THEY HAVE ARRIVED

Full over The
Neck Styles!

Not a handful! , but a
big array of styles .
Including holiday red

and new colors . Reg .

ADULT
GAG GIFTS

$249 .

and X .L . sites .

A

HUGE SELECTION

Choose

And $3.49 1'

from

dozens

of cute novelties, most

are bo)Ced . Several are

'£..1m.,~ TM

permanent pre"
fabric for be tter
launderability

adding , "I can only speculate that it
is politically motivated. The
administration is Interested in
mustering all the emotions it can lor
llll windfall profit tax plan ."
In 1974 the Federal Energy
Adminlstratim accused Sohio of
overcharging cust&lt;IDers $10 million,
and in 1976 it charged the Cleveland·
based company with a $70 rnitlion
overcharge. Federal courts later
upheld Sohio in both cases, saying
the company's accounting practices
were correct and accurate .
"There are so many regulations
here that no one ca keep up with
them . Not even the government
attorneys and accowttants," said

Gallia County voters
approve 2.6 tax levy

All garments conlo111

Comfor1 and fit
pre· determined by
an eHhJsive
laboratory test
device at the
manufacturer to
auure you of
superior
performance

Green wW succeed flamboyant,lawand«der Mayor !'rank Rizzo .
In Minneapolis, Ilmald Fraser
scored a comeback for the
Democratic-F ARMER+Labor
Party with hill electim as mayor of
the city he served as cmgreMman
for 16 years.
'
San Francisco Mayor Dianne
Feinstein, appointed after Mayor
George Moscone was slain last year,
apparently faced a Dec. 11 runoff
with secood-place finisher Quentin
Kopp, a city supervisor . Wlth 119.7
percent of the vote cunted in the II).
person race, Ms . !'einstein held a
narrow lead with 80,914 votes to
n,643ftr Kopp.
Another runoff is in store in
Houston, where Democratic Mayor
Jim McCmn finished first but will
have to battle Councilman Louis
Macey, his chief critic in city
government, on Nov. 21l.
Democrat
WilHam
Donald
Schaefer woo a third term in
Baltimore . Republicans T&lt;ID Moody
in Colwnbus, Ohio, William Hudnut

Sohio may have
violated prices

To,-re&lt;t collar
and 1houlde r 1e om'
for extra •trength

• Seamleu bode.
for smooth fit

John Y. Brown elected Kentucky governor
By DON McLEOD
AP Political writer
Oeveland Myor Dennll Kuclnich
Ls out after two years of baWlng the
city's bank!l's and his own party
eatabllahment. But Democrots
retained control of &lt;iher big-dty
governments and withatood spirited
!ltatehouae challenges In MLssissipp!
and Kentucky .
Kuclnich, who had survived last
year'• recall vote and two defaults
oo the city's debts, lost decisively to
Republican lieutenant governor.
Even In defeat, Kuclnich wa05 for
Kucinich, who told his subdued
supporters, "We stood up for the
people against t cprporatioos that
are attacking the cmsumers every
day."
Political novice John Y. Brown
' 88 elected governor oi Kentucky,
.. hUe political veteran Wllliam
Winter captured the MlssiSII!ppl
otatehouae.
Democrat
Kla ,
former
Democratic U.S. Rep . Willlarn J.

WED., THURS., FRI., SAT.

OPEN DAilY 9:30-9:30, SUNDAY 1-6

7
1 -The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleoort-PomerO)', 0 ., Wednesday , Nov. 7. 11179

Our

Reg.
5.97

Pack
of 3

Tee Shirts and
Vee-Neck Shirts

p,, 1 ,. ~ K mar1 s ·Best ll rst thmg 1n lh e rnorn1ng
lor com fort all day . S uperb flat
"' • ,.,;, 1., t ~br~ c 1n ~ lo ng -wea nng lu.ury blend . Mens S- M·L-XL .

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS
I

percent r:t the proposals, cOOlpll red
to42.7 percent last year.
"In addition to new ~rating
levies, 90.9 percent cl all the renewal
levies were approved arxl 1110 per·
cent cl the combined - new a rxl
renewal levies - passed," Lulow added.
Voters passed 113.1 percent cl the
capital ilq)ravement, or building
fund, levies arxl 34.7 percent cl the
bond !.!sues.

By a 1,11112 to I ,392 (unolflclal)
lllllrgin, voters In 12 cl the district'•
18 preclncta (see tabulation
elaewhere) voted in favor cl the addlticn.l tax, which will qualify the
system for partlclpetionln the State
VFI'ERANS MEMORIAL
Fwndation Program
AdmiMiom-Dorolby
Derrutllkey,
Rea~ to tlllt vote, SupertnMiddleport;
Oretha
Dunt,
Porll!ndent Gary Toothaker, PhD., said
tland;
Ruth
LartiJE,
Llllg
Botlool;
be would be rernlndlni! the Ohio
calvin Phelps, Albany.
Department d. EducaUoo tbiB mor·
Discharges-Glenora Swatzel,
nine d. ill Clllllimllment to conFranlr
Holter, Eric Schwltl, Sally
tribute In euea~~ d $'150,000 in !runAnn
t.mbert
~ Clz rold La ~non.
dation funds to the local dlatrlct for
the remainder d tills academic
year.
"We lllve to rmke suno that we
bsve enwgh to get through tbiB
HOU...... dll' •·!CAL CEt. l'ER
year," Toothaker said, "!he state's
IIIKbarlee, Nov. I
pranlft rt reveooes slwld help
Ernestine B01111ess, Ralph Burtd.fset the $2112,1100 dt!lldt we were
:her, Elsie Callahan, Heidi
factJc in 1979."
- Cl'uthers, Georgla Clark, Robert
"A lot r1 people wcned very, very Clam, Paul~-. Martha Elklm,
lllrd," Toothaker conllmed, "arxl Bett;y Foley, Patricia Goodwin,
the achool dlslrtcl thanU them."
l:&gt;cris Healer, Sally Hildie oct
Stat&amp;-wlde voters followed nsrl,y Wllllam Jenkins, Greg t.yman,
the same pattern u last year by
lames Malt.hen, Mrt!. Charles Me·
puling allghtly leu lllln half the
.:mulct and daughter, Adam Meek,
school-related ta:r Issues in Ellls Miller, Roger Randolph,
Tueeday 'a general election.
rodred Riley, Misty Summers,
Roller Lu)Oif d the Ohio Depert- ilrginia Thompson, Carolyn
mentdEducationsaidlhill morning Walker, Ethel Wella, Rebecca
U.tlll r1 the IJ6lsales on the ._ll~
White, Wanda Workman.
In various districts acnu the state
Bltbl, NO\' . I
werupproved.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Fizer,
'"!'be 45.8 pe~cent approval com- · Jaughtter, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mrs.
J*nB to tU pe~c:ent lutyear," be Elwin Potter, scm, Oak Hill; Mr. and
l8ld.
Mn. Robert Saunde!l, daughter,
n. same pattern wu follOW"ed or GaiiiP'IIII ; Mr. and Mrt!. James
new luuea, with voten passing 43.1 Goody, daughter, Gallipolis.

naughty . Gifh
want to~
fun
Hu rry on m

VISIT .
PIECE CERAMIC

SWAN CONSOLE

OUR TOYLAND

BAITERY OPERATED

WE'LL SAVE YOU
TIME AND MONEY I

STYLER

SET

=~~!~:

you ' ll · t1m e. \

$499

lAY IT AWAr ,

HNGER NAIL
REG . $6.99
Sh. •pes , files , cleans ,
poli she s or
buffs .
Portable .
Unique

$422

CJift .

THIS YEAR WE HAVE DOZENS OF "DIFFERENT"GIFTSI
REG. $1.00

THANKS
FOR YOUR
KIND REMARKS
ABOUT OUR

5 DAYS OF THIS SUPER SPECIAL!

WOMENS LONG SLEEVE TOPS
BLOUSES- SHIRTS CHENILLE LOOKS

DEPARTMENT

2 pairs~ 100

Yep, 10 new lay -aways
days .
We've
tr• e d
achieve ill new look to
Pleasant. Dozens of
gift items, prices to fit
budget . Seefo,-you,.Mif _

GO GET 'EM

BIG BLACKS
'WE'RE PROU D
OF YOUl

- CHOSE FROM HUNDREDS

Entire stock o n sale . ReguLar
S-4 .99 to S 1 1.99 _ All tht&gt; new fash ion
looks and colors - Now al a b1 g
savings pn ce . Sorry , no la yaways .

NEW GIFT
ORLON
SOCKS

POLYESTER TOPS

REDUCED

in 2
to
Pt.

new • ' L"""
1nv
'_::~~
. ....

30%
USE OUR LAY-AWAY PLAN!!
MASON
or
POINT
PLEASANT

�II-'!'be Dlli1Y SenUne.l, MlddleporW&gt;omeroy, 0., Wednesday, Nov. 7. 1979

IV-'I'IIe Dally Sentlne~ Middleport.-Pocneroy , 0 ., Wednesday , Nov . 7, 1979
DH.XTRACY

•

Your Best Buys Are Found In the Sentinel Classifieds
WANJI'AD
CHARGES

Yard Sale
YARD SALE . Rain or
shine .
364
E.
Main ,
Pomeroy , 2nd house above

16 Wont. or Undar
Cull
Owp
1.00
L»
l.lO
1.10

1.00

Ui

3.00

3.75

Frances Florist. Lots Of
clothing, cheap. 9:30·• ,oo.
Thursday .
F I \IE FAMILY Yord Sale .
Thursday, Nov . 8. One day
only at 522 Grant St .. M id ·
dleport. \/an Cooney 's. 103.
Good children's clothes,
sizes 2 to 6. Something for
all. Rain cancels.

Eldl nrd over the rnlnimum

u -.lola 4 C&lt;nta por wont per
&lt;II, . .... runnlno olhor Ulan """"'"" daYI wlil be chorpd .,
t.be 1 day raie.

Obi.....,.'

Ill - · 8Card
&amp;lid
.,., ..&lt;JperThuW
.......
D.l» minimwn. c..h in ad:

Pets for Sale

1 -·

HOOF HOLLOW, English
and Western . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies . Ruth Reeves. 614 ·
698 ·3290 . Bording and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care produc~ . Western
boots. Children 's $15 .50 .
Adults S29 .00

Mobile Heme .tal• aDd Yard
Illes 11t1 ICcepted cnly with
eU1 with order. 1$ charge
for adl carryin,K Bo.r. Nwnber In

Cone &lt;J n.. Sentlnel.

Tbe Publilber l"CCef'Ttl the
rtcht to edit or reject any 8lb
deemed objeetioul. The
l'llllllaber will""' be .............
b n'lDr'!' than one lncorTect in-

.nlan.

RISING STAR Kennel.
Boarding . Call 367-om .

Phone 19&gt;-21501

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor 61067-7220 .

NOTICE

HILLCREST KENNELS .
Boarding, all breeds . Clean
indoor -outdoor fac i lities .
Also
AKC
reglslered
Dober mans. 61.4 4.46 7795 .

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
M&lt;f.day

Auctions

N0011 on S.tw-dly

BIG AUCTION every Wed,
7 pm . Hartford Community
Center , HarH ord , WV, •
Pomeroy
m i les e~bove
Mason Bridge

ru-tay
thru Frtday
4P.M .
~ &lt;U.y before publication

SUndoy
4P.M

Friday allernc&gt;oo

Notices
.· ---'===---

MEIGS
COUNTY
·.HUMANE SOCIETY . 992 ·
6260. Pen a-.llable foc
Jdoptlon and Information

service.
GUN SHOOT
EllERY
SUNDAY I PM . FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB .

.~-------------NO
HUNTING .
no
trespass ing with no ex
ceptions on my property .
"Judy McGraw Self.
'GUN
SHOOT
Racine
Volunteer
Fire
Dept
Every saturday . 6:30pm
At their buildlngin Bashan
factory choke guns only .
GUN SHOOT every Sunday

1'2 :00 . Factory choke only .
C:orn Hollow Gun Club,
'Rutland . Proceeds donoted
to Boy scout Troop 2•9 .

'
ED

BURKETT Barber
Shop now open full time in
Middlepor1 .
CERAMIC CLASSES. Mon
day, ThurSday , 7·9 p.m .
Tue5day and Friday from
5·7 p .m . Starting ThurSday ,
Oct. 25. Orehl!!l's Ceramics
f'l N. 2nd, Middleport, OH
t'/2 ·5560
NO HUNTING on Geor~e
Fre&amp;land ' s
property ,
Syracuse, OH .
GET TOOAY 'S MARKET
VALUE FOR DYOUR
GOLD OR SILliER . CON ·
JACT
ED
BURKETT
BARBER SHOP . MID
DLEPORT .
Lost and Found

BIG
AUCTION
Sale .
Friday , Nov . 9. 7 p .m .
Regular truckload Of gift
items and
mise
from
Columbus . At Ohio River
Auction, SR 7, 2 miles south
of Middleport, OH .

WOOD STOVES by Better
N Bens, Glass"View, Leyden
Hearth, Old T i mer, Fire
v iew . Suburban
mobile
home wOCid heaters, U L ap
proved, and Sub urban fur ·
nacemasters
Outdoor
EQuipment Sales, Je t. Rts .
7 and 35 , GallipoliS, OH .
Phone 446 3670 .

to

name of
Tommy
Reward. 992 ·535-1.

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD. Poles max .
diameter 10" on largest
end . $12 p ·er ton . Bundled
slab. $10 per ton . Delivered
to Ohio Pallet Co., Rt. 2.
Pomeroy 992 ·2689.
OLD

FURNITURE, ice
boxes~ brass beds, iron
~s,

desks, etc ., complete

households. Write M .D .
Miller. Rt. •· Pomeroy or
call992·n60.
OLD COl NS. pocket wl ·
ches, class rings, wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
sliver . Call J. A . WamSley ,
7-42·2331 .
WANTED : SAW lo~s .
Payment upon delivery to
our yard, 7:30 to 3:30 week ·
days. Blaney Hardwoods,
SR 33'1, Barlow, OH. 678 ·

2980.
ANTIQUES ,
FUR ·
NITURE, glass, china,
anything . See or call Ruth
GOSneY. antiques, 26 N.
2nd, Middleport, OH . 992 ·
3161.
ANTIQUE POCKET wat ·
ches. Willing to pay top
dollar. Call 1·592 ·2973

evenings.

WANTED:

JUNK.

Bat·

terfn, radiators, motors,
auto. trans. No
calls. 949 ·~.

Sunday

SIX HOLSTE I N steer
calves. Avg . wt . -400 lb . 992
5858 .

WOMEN ' S
CLOTHES ,
sizes 10 and 1-4 . Cur rent
dressy styles worn only I or
2 times. 992 ·3283 .
JAEGER 365 air com pressor, $3,000 . Small tri a.:le equipment trailer,
$1500 . 25 ~allon cherry
picker, S9500. 38 ft. flat
frailer, $1.500 . Used under
ground storage tanks ,
suitable tor c ui"Verts, 18 '
and 24 ' lengths . Good 3,000
gallon storage tank, $600.
992 -7354 after 6 p .m .

USED BEDROOM su i te,
99n335 .
THREE men ' s suits, sizes
41 and 42 . L ike new Phone
992 ·7331.
1968 HO 3 Allis Chalmers
dozer, blade and wench ,
$6 ,000. 1966 Ford two ton
flat bed, 16 ' bed . $1750. J B
O'Brien, m -2720 Of' 991
3589 .

RUTLAND

HARDWARE .
Heating , Elec
frical and Auto Sup lie. 822
Main 51 ., Rutland, OH .
Plastic sewer and drain
pipe, 250ft . coil. $90. Cut in
any lengtns, 37c a fl . 20,000
BTU
circulating
gas
heater, $2011 . King 0 Heal
five room coal heater,
$226 .95 . Bond Tile auto
repair
kits
with
in ·
structions . Also Bond -Tite
body putty, S9 a gal Rapid
repair,
$11 . 99
gal .
Businesses
cal l
for
wholesale prices .
Plumbin«~L

CLEARANCE SALE
Component systems in
matched sets of mix and
match . Speakers for home
entertainment
center,
radios, automobiles and
patios . Combination AM·
FM stereos and tape deck.
cassette c.- 8 -track, CB
base stations and mobile
units . ~orteble AM ·FM
radios witn tape player and
recorder. Digital AM ·FM
clock radios and compac t
AM ·FM pocket radios. Por ·
table recorder . Televisions
Portable and console
mOdels. Regency scanners .
Antennas and
mastlng .
Many optional accessories
and oenerlll electrnlc sup
plies. France TV end Elec tronics. 39260 Bradbury
Rd ., Middleport, OH . 45760 .
992 ·2276.

H

Yard Sale

GARAGE SALE. 2 mites
tram Eastern School on
Sitwr Ridge. Call985-3590.
\1

'POiNT

GENERAL

YARD SAt.E. 3 miles south

of Tuppers Plains on Rt. 7,
turn on CR 28, lf• mite, wat ·
en
for
signs .
NIce
children's winter clothes,
dishes and misc. Rain or
shine. 8:30 a.m. to 4:00
p.m . Nov. 8 and 9. Schul
residence. 614-667·3336.

WINTER
POTATOES .
C.W. Proffitt farm , Por tland, OH . S8 a hundred and
S5 a hundred .
F I REWOOD FOR sale .
Now taking orders. W ill
deliver, 742 ·2056 .
EMERGENCY
POWER
alternators -own th e best
buy WINPOWER Co ll513 ·
788 ·2589.
APPLES
CIDER
HONEY . Fitzpatrick Or
ch ard , State Route 689.
Phone W i lkes¥i lie , 669 3785 .
HOUSE COAL lump or
stoker, will deliver . 742 ·
21 83

ELECTRIC
He•dquarters
Appliances
sales &amp; Servoce

POMEROY
LANOMAIK _
·~
·
0 Jack w. Carsey
I

·

o

Mgr.
Pllona m -2111

197• TRAVEL TRAILER .
35 ft. with •x6 expando.
S..C7SO . JO..c -882 ·2427 .

FINANCING·IIA ·FHA LO ·
ANS. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE , ATHENS .
b1. ~ 592 · 3o.ll .

MAYTAG DRYER 2
years old . Excelent con
dition . Call992 7789 .

FOR SALE
l · XL Homelite

$60.00

! ·McCulloch
1125.00
1· Remi Yardmaster
l75 .DO
1 r\ · Fuel Oil Furnace
1 G .. _ Jsed Kelvinator
lil eff"igerator
s.e).OO
1 Good Kelvinator
Electric Range S75. 00
New GEneral Electric
B&amp;W TV Only $99.95

POMEROY

LANDMARK
(\(""'_Jack W . Carsey
~
Mgr .
uuoo--.

Pone 992 ·2181

W2 -ll25

216 E. Second Street
Wl,soo 3 bedrooms,
bath , natural gas , ci ty
water and 1 acre tor
garden or play .
THE WtLD - Deer and
game land near Forked
Run Lake. Over l..C acres
to roam around on . Only
lS .OOO
BARGAIN - A 9 room 2
story home that can
make your payments
for you while- you li"Ve
there . Why Rent ?
MODERN
3
bedrooms, bath , nice
~itche-n , firepla ce in the
l iving and full base
ment .
Asking
just
S20,000
FAMILY HOME 4
bedrooms . 1111 bath , oil
furnace, T . P. water and
almost 5 acres . Want
SJO.OOO
STARTER
2'X80
three room
business
bui ldi ng
with bath ,
natura l gas, and city
water tor only $11 ,000.
SYRACUSE
1. 17
acres and
4 or 5
be-droom house , bath,
modern kitcnen , natural
gas forced air heat , and
basement .
5% DOWN WILL BUY
OU A HOME . V .A .
NOTHING
DOWI; .
CALL
992 · 3325
or
992·3176.

bOB

E.
1111

MAIN
. -POMERQ.Y . 0 .
PH . " l·ilS9
NEW
LISTING
Rutland, 2 story frame
-and brick , 4 bedrooms, 2
baths , 2 firepla ces.
N .G . F .A ., over Ph acre .
$26,8HOO .
MIDDLEPORT - Love·
ly location, 2 story brick
and frame , S bedrooms, '
patio, fenced yard , 11/1
baths , spiral staircase ,
many,
many
e)(tra
features .
RUTLAND Mobile
home , 12'x 60', all under ·
pinning , freezer , air
conditioner, lot c an be
ren1ed f9r $35 a month .
$7,'100 .00 .
POMEROY Ranch
type home , 3 bedrooms,
beautiful kitchen and
dining, storm windows
and doors, new swimm ing pool . $39.500.
70ACRE FARM - Near
Long
Bottom, newer
home. barn and other
buildings, river fron ·
toge . $33,500.00 .
ONE THING IS TRUE ,
WHEN YOU WANT
FIRST · RATE
SER ·
VICE
IN
REAL
ESTATE, COME TO
CLELANDS' REALTY .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland, Sr .
Res . 992· 2548
Henry E. Cleland, Jr .
Res. 992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Do"ie Turner
Res. 742·2•7•

Real Estate tor Sale
ONE LOT 150x200
Syracuse . 992 ·504.4.

in

LARGE HOURS with large
lot on Rf . 124 i n Syracuse .
Tom Clark Really .
O'Brien and Crow Realty ,
992-2720.

s-o.ooo.

22.41 ACRES in Chester
Twp . 992 ·6140 after 5 p.m .
NICE FIVE room house on
acre, oil furnace, city
water or well water . Only
S8 ,000 . See Luther Bartee,
Long Bottom, OH .
1,1~

BUILDING LOTS, 1 acre
each, Leading Creek Rd ., 3
miles off Rf. 7 Bypass .
Signs. Vita toe .
LARGE LOT on dead end
street with water and
seweoe . Wi l l finance t o
rel iable couple a1 9 Pet .
992 · 5786 . No rea I tors
ONE
AND 1hree ·fourth
acres, 5 roo ms and batn .
Take over payments . 985 ·

3590.

APPLES
ROME beauty
apples at s.. per bu . Best for
apple buller . Call 669 ·3785,
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR
689 .

197 1 VW VAN c amper, ex
cellent condition . New
engine and parts, good
mileage, consider trade on
small car . Call 992 ·5236 af
ter.C : 30p .m

JOHN DEERE diesel 2010
dozer . Outside mounted
blade lS.OOO . 7•22819 .

Camping Equipment

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

t.OST ' tiger cal. neutered

male, flea collar, answers

For Sale
C.OAL.
LIMESTONE .
sand, gravel,
ca l cium
chloride, ter111 1zer, dog
food , and all types of •alt.
EKcelsior Salt Works, tnc ,
E. Main St., Pomeroy , 992 ·
31191.

ERA MERCER
REALTY
TWO HOUSES In
Middleport . Live in one,
rent the other
B01h
houses remodeled in ·
side . One has 3 bdrms .,
the other has 1 bedrm .
Located o n Powel l Sf df
lower end of town .
MODERN HOUSE with
3 plus flat acres and
Ohio River frontage .
Th 1s house is well built
and nice ly kept S-42 ,600.
HOUSE WITH business
building in Reedsville .
Garden spot plus 2 car
gar age
Hause has 2
bdrms . Asking S25,000 .
t.ODKING FOR a house
you like in your pri ce
range . Why not bu i ld to
suit yourself on one of
the 1.50 ac re lot s on R t 7
near
Eastern
High
School? Each lot SO,OOO
34 ACRES Sl i'V er
Ridge Rd . acr oss frorn
Eastern
High . Many
building si tes SPII part
or all .
$.16,000 - 3 bedrm 11 1
bath trai ler , E)(pando
living rm , underpinned ,
well water, Oh10 R i ver
fr ontage on Rt 124 at
Long Bo11om .
$2,000
One acre
bu i lding site or 1nstall
tra i ler
City
waf er
ava ilable . Just off 6a1
near ~e-edsville . 0
Phone
Virginia Hayman
985 -4197

-~

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
PHONE 742-2003

I

e
.

I

New, repatr,
gutters and
down sptmts .
Wif\11¥ cleaning
Gutter cleaning
FrP'Ii'Estimates

Featuring : men ' s &amp;
women's styling, per .
ms .
C•ll for appt. or walk in.
992·2367
Main St .
Pomeroy, o.
10· 19 1 mo .

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
f- t' deral Housing &amp;
Vetero..:tls Admin . Loans.

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

-

•

s.

Servtces Offered

Giveaway

~-\

LINCOLN HILL IN POMEROY bedroom, I bath frame home . Con"Venient loc•t;,.,
Large living room with f ireplace, d i ning room , eat in kitchen, full basement , new gas furnace .
125.000 00

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992·2342, Eve. 992 · 2449
Middleport, 0.

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN .
JUST LISTING - Beauty Sa lon - Fully equipped
and ready togo . includes two working stations and 5
rooms and bath . Cold drink machine, etc . A money
maker in good loc . in Racine . Pri ced at$25,000.
MINI FARM Beautiful brick bi -le-vel with 3
bedrm . , Iaroe living room with fireplace . Total elec ·
tric and fully insulated . All hardwoOd floors . Base
ment could be finished for extra living quarters . At·
1ached garage . 3 la rge hot houses and many e)(tras
on 5 acres. LOC . c lose to Racine . Asking S63,.SOO
NEW LISTING
Rea l ni c e 3 BR home with extra
large living roorn , equ i pped ~ i t c hen , washer, dryer ,
full basement, w i th central air Large breezeway
leading to extrd large garage This well ca red for
house has many ext ras and several fruit trees of dif ·
ferent varietiPS , &amp; nice garden . See to apreciate .
Very ni ce location i n lower Sy racuse on St. Rt. 12-4.
pr iced at $63 ,'100
CHESTER - 4 BR home , harowooo floo rs , large
LR , fam i l y rm ., garage , outbui lding , lruit trees and
garden space . Asking $.48 , 900 .
THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR
1• acres with a
1111 story home , sits ba c k off road surrounded with
mapl e trees Lo . pond , located in Morning Star
area . Pri ce S.33,900 .
FAMILY HOME - Lot s of pos stbilil 1es with thiS
nice 1 stor y . Ma ny features, central a ir, built in a p ·
pliances , all carpeted. good in"Veslment with seve ral
ni ce building lots. On approx -1 117 ac r es n the center
of Ra cine . Askin g $54,000 .
$32,000 .00
Good 3 BR . a ll carpeted home c lose to
Pomeroy &amp; M iddleport Locd t ed on 11 1 acres .
FARM --over 70 arrf's borderi ng Pomeroy w1th ex ·
tra large barna and o ld farm house , but plenty ot
pasture and some fa rm ground . priced Only $49,000 .
LOTS OF LOTS - From l to 75 acres. bordering
Pomeroy .
RACINE - 2 BR trailer on nice lot . Asking $11.500 .
20WOODED ACRES -c an be diVIded . S22 ,000.
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - 3 Acres , • BR home. fully
carpeted , equipped kit ., fam . room has f irep lace, lg
uti lity rm ., plenty of storage, two -car garage , elec .
door opener . Listed $75 ,500.
6 YEAR OLD HOME, 3 BR. dining and utility room,
kll . equipped w ·stove and refrlg. Mostly carpeted,
f CJr .ed air gas furn ce, 1 yr. old . Garage, a complete
trdiler hook ·up with nat . gas tap and septic can add
Income Over 2 ac res . $29.900 . Call for appolntmen1.
Just off Rt . 7 below Middleport .

WANT TO SELL? - 1:.1~E US A CALL
CALL JIMMY DI:EM, ASSOCIATE 949·2381
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCIATE
949·2U4 or 949·2591

7

FIIIE KITTENS, I colico, 3
tabby , 1 orange red, 5 to 6
weeks
old
Perky
Pomeranian co llie, temale,
black and tan, good w i th
children, wormed
and
shots. Border coll ie terrie r
type , 3 to .c mo., all black,
wormed, shots Lovea ble
tlusky shepherd , small
female , checked by vet ,
spayed , all shots . Co lli , re-d ,
good with childen Male
husky , tan, brown, black,
white . shots , wormed .
Short ha ired collie type ,
male , white and blond,
gOOd with children, shots,
wormed . Cocker Spaniel
blond, 1 year old, male,
good wllh children . White
Gerham Shepherd female ,
good wllh children, all
shots . Beagle terrier type,
spayed, t~ll shots, good with
children . zlndoor ca1, all
white , long haired . 1 blue
ye and 1 green eye .
Female . Spayed,
shots.
Humane Society , 992 6260 .
TO GIVE AWAY .
TENS . 992 7689 .

KIT

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN 1•x65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr .
1973 Skyline
12xss 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASAN T,
wv . 304 675·«2• .
Mobile Homes - Rent
TWO BEDROOM partly
furnished . Prefer middle
aged or elderly couple . No
pets, no c hilden . 992 ·2749 .

Help Wanted

Rio Grande Collete is
seeking 2 Accounting
Clerks, accounts and
notes
receivable .
Minimum qualification
is high school educa1ion
or
equivalent
with
business courses ttlat in ·
elude
typing
and
element1ry 1ccountlng.
Preference will be given
to
applicant
with
background of •ccoun ting (receivables) pro·
cenea.
per hour
entry rate, run fringe
benefit' after successful
completion ol 90 day
probationary period.
Deadline for application
Nov . t•, 1979. Request
position specification,
application in procedur e
from Co-Ordinator of
Personnel. Rio Grande
College, Rio Gr•nde ,
OH. 45674.
An Equal Opportunity
Affirmative
Action
Employer .

u .•o

.

.'". .'".' , ...___

~-"'"._~"

AGELL
J · -t---r.r~)

rx

[ STONEX I
~
rn~---r-1

ROOFING
Roofing , gut te r ~. and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates.
All work
guaranteed. 70 years e11:.
perience . Ca 11 Athe-ns,
• ollect, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797·27.5.

s ff c

t

LtfOUTY
tX' . J

x

CAPTAIN EASY
ANY Si~N
WI!'RI! BI!ING
FOLLOWE'D,

EASY!'

NOT

~0

FAR! ...

!lUT THAT DOESN'T
MIM~

A THING!

I SHOULI'A CHECI&lt;E;D THI~ CAR
!EFORE WI! !ITAilTEO._ TO MAKE
!lURE NO ONE PLANTED A 6EEPER

NEXT TIME l STOP
FDR .. HOW YOU SAYI'
.." ESSENCE~-I WILL
HAVE ze GAI!AGE
MAN INSPECT IT
&lt;::ARE FULLY!

Oflol IT ~

949-2862-?~9·2160_'
4

byHennArnoldandBoblee

lour ordtnary wor ds

OHIO VAlLEY

.RoOfing·

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

BABYSITTING In my
home dur ing the da y 992
7789 .

I

H. L Writesel

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces-

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

lJ'1SCfa1"'1ble these lour JumOies .
one l et1er to earr. sQuart~ to form

Business Services

GOOD! I'Ve ...

THE VE6ETAR'IAN
WAS LOOKIN6 FO~
A &lt;SIUY WITH THIS.

GOTA ~UN~Y ,

Fllt:LIN6 I'IE'RE'
IN FO!'l A SUR·

~ !-:&gt;w arrange the c1r cled let1ers to
torm the surpnse an s wer . as sug
gestea by tne above c artoor~

PFtiSE--~OT

Nece!JSARILY
PLeASANT!

9 ·18 I mo. Pd

Answer

KXI I ] OF 'TI XI I I Xr

(Answers tomorrow )

I

NEW LISTING - Ex ·
ecutive home in Mid·
dleport. 5 bedrooms, liv ing room , dining room,
family room, k itchen
and laundry . Full base Hours 9· 1 M ., w .• F .
ment and natural gas .
Other time · by appoint ·
Two baths. furnace .
ment.
Quality
carpet
107 Sycamore CRear)
ftlroughout . Call for
Pomeroy, 0 .
your showing . By ap ·
pointment only .
CALL 992-7544
I;EW LISTING
On
Union
A"Venue in
Pomeroy '1 bEodrooms,
liv ing room , kitchen and
For Rent
bath . Attic space and
ce llar . would make
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
great investment pro·
Park, Route 33 , north of
perty at only S8.500.00
Pomeroy Large lots Call
Furnished!!
9927479 .
CHOtc:E LOT - In Ar
baugh Addition, Tup ·
3 AND 4 RM furnished ap ·
pers Plains . IOO'x200 '
ts . Phone 992 ·5434 .
with water and septic
sys tem .
Asking
12x60 TWO BEDROOM
ss.ooo.oo .
HYSELL RUN - A ittle
mobile home near Racine .
O'Ver 7 acres with 2
'192 ·5858 .
bedroom home . 2 septic
sys tem and 2 water
SMALL
HOU SE
in
t aps . Use your imagina
Harrisonville, across from
t 1on with this one! Sells
station . $125 per month
for $23 ,.500.00 .
Caii61•·928 ·.U17 .
FARM - 80 acres about
-5 miles from Pomeroy
FOUR BEDROOM house in
'n Cheste r Township .
Racine . Depos i t required
Approximately 40 acres
No pets 9•9 ·1253.
tillab le and 40 acres
pasture . BiQ 10 room
I arm house w ith barn
COMPLETELY
FUR
and several sheds . N ice
N ISH ED house
with
rolling land for farming
sleeping room s, suitable
or subdi"Viding . Sell
for construction workers .
pri ce $80,000 .00 .
Fully equipped kitchen,
We Need listin9s
wasner
and
dryer .
Ctleryllemley, Assoc .
. Showers
Olf
street
Phone 742· 2003
parking . Linens furnished
Velma Nicinsk-;. Assoc .
ond
cleaning
weekly .
Phone 742 ·3092
Utilit ies paid . Call 992 -2361
George
Hobstetter ,
after .c.
Jr .
Broker, Phone 992 -5739

.._

'ilf}\IN"f \li)\l

~ ~ &lt;,$~~ .,

MONlGOMERY

Jurnbles l. H Ul E AGI LE BI S ECT QUARRY
Answer /J. ::,K(•tc ton ne ver l rqht&lt;; ba c ~ because he

· estl::'r'1 il y.:,

l a&lt;- k::. thrs - GUTS

mile off Rt . 7 by -pass
on St . Rt. 12.C toward
Rutland.

I Jumble Book No . 11. co ntaining liOpuules.ls available lor $1 .75 po1tpald

I rom Jumble. clo I his newspaper . Bo•l• .Norwood , N_J.071).4.3 .1ncf\Jd• your
n11me . address, lip code and m•to:• c hecks p•yableto Newsp•perbooke.

J,.

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

TRAILER SAl J:l;:
27120 Mor1f911•"" • ., P d

L•n,sv•1 h· ,-:&lt;! , o

BORN LOSER

" . .. . . 4245 ( "l"" " ll q ~

1 Mile-1 E •tl o;,t Wotk t' h'iHI'

5UPER

GOO ~ F

S T C C~

€~PRESS

'b.JRS!:'L..F
f'RDP5Rl...Y THE FIRST

TRAILER Ptr40'1'V .o-..·:\ H A r\ f

IJEVE:i&lt;: RE+'r:,A.T YOUR.&lt;SU.F ..
TH AT'S A Si01J 01= STUI1D1TY

r

60'{.

• 30 tt c

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSUlATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding
elnsuh•tion
e Storm Doors
eStorm Windows
• Replacement
Win ·
dews
Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
10·19-1 mo .

IN STOCK for immediate
delivery: various sizes of
pool kits . Do-it -yourself or
let us install for you . D .
Bumgardner Sales , 1nc
992 572 • .

REYNOLD ' S ELECTR IC
Motors, rewind and repair .
99223 56, 561 Beech St ..
Middleport , Ohi o
A&amp;H Upholstering, across
tram me Texaco Stat ion in
Sy raucse 992 ·37.0 or 992 ·
3751 .
BRADFORD, Auct ioneer ,
Complete Service Phone
9.C9 ·2487 or 949 ·7000. racine ,
Ohio, Critt Bradford .

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPA I R
Sweepers,
toasters, irons. all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
Next to . State H ig hway
Garage on Route 7, 985·
3825.
s &amp; G Carpef Cleantno .
Steam
c leaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard . 992 ·
6309 Or/ •2 2348.

PROPER INSULATION is
c heaper than heating oil.
Take advantage Of a gOOd
investment. Call 99'1·3288
for more informlltion .
HORSE SHOEING . Ca ll
99'2 3288 , ask for Darrell
McClanahan

.

Gutter
work , (jown
spouts, some c- o r ~t:rete
work,
w alk~
and
drleways .
!FREE ESTIM II TE I

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE . u
949· 17•8 or
t92 ·7JI4
11 I ( Pd )

'
'

lJTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

- ·- --

Will rtAUL limt•S'' 'X' ar .d
gra"Vel. Also, I '11e hilul1 • -J
and sprea d ing U· t· /.l.or r s
Trvckino . Pt1o' ·. ' ' .' ~ .t55
PAINTING P ' lO
'!.an r1
bh1stlno. Frc" &lt;'~ t,m are
Call949 ·2686

~·

l-~·

SEWING
M t, 1 ! ·l t&gt;l
Repairs ,
5~r , ,, ....
.• 1
makes .
991 n ao~
11,..
Fabric Shop, r •n ero,
Authorized C)inqr·•
S,, ,, 'i
and Servic e V.'r- ~ h .1 rp&lt;.. 1
Scissors .

EXCAVATING .
do l•• .
IOllder and bacr hOI:' work
dump trucks and to boy s
for tllre, will hil u l f i ll dirt .
top soil, llm Htone an·J
gravel. Call Bn'J or R~e r
Jeffers, dey ph one 991 ?i.lH~,
night phone 991 - ) 5) 'i n-r 99
5232 ..
HOWERY AN O ' I'· .P I
Ex cava t i n Q
~· ,. n ! :
systems, dozer "" r •llry
Rt . l-43 . Phone 1 t! .d 1 6'-olt
7331 or 7•2 259J

SAVE ON CARPET

DRIVE A'tlffiE
SAVE A" LOT
RUBBER BACK

GASOLINE AUEY

lt went
S/1m,

if .

awa4t

l.JOL.lr

fine 1

tooth
aches.

I'm

You can't i&lt;.1d me' Clovia.
It's ach inq riqht
cut
now, 1sn't .t?
that
out~

should

go to
the
dentist.'

·4~ U D

WINNIE

IN STOCK

r DO 'JTEC: 'THAT
OUT '"":) c&lt;l \A I)UT

A'-J:J .v... ,:;.,-r c..:..
OPPOSE f.&lt; lf\1\?

Ho5 A7AivVI'.;T
A'lD lM CAUGHT
IN "Tl&lt;!:: V\I JDLE .'

I M OLD ::CNOU &amp;H
TC W\KE \ \') OWN
~=::: 1 51C'N~ ')CU

·9~~dup
~tltt:TI ON
l .t A. I C

$3800

a ndup

FURNITURE
Rutland,

0.

BARNEY
IT MAKES ME MAD

AS A HORNET WHEN
THEY START RUNNIN'
MY MAN SNUFFY
DOWN!!

Help Wan_ted

HELP WANTED
Expenenced autG or truck
mechanic. Must have own t o ols,
hourly rate, numerous fringe
benefits, salary negotiable, depen ding on experience.
Apply at
Two Rivers Ford Inc.,
Rt. 62 N ., Point Pleasant
Ask for David Moore

-- ----·

I''"'

J

~

'

GOuu KtiYl hllll t

.RURANO

I

".\JOW I

lnslalledwilh P..d Fr..,

Must be good, accurate
typist, shorthand re quired, good hours, good
fringe
benefits .
If
employed,
present
employer won 't be con t•cted without permis ·
sion, interview will be
arranged, Write Box
•o6, Pomeroy, Ohio
45769, giving complete
qualific•tions and information .

I on/L.J have a toothache
because L.JOU /l,eep rem·,ndinq
me I have a
toothache'

40U

CARPET

6'X12'f0

.
. ".!

,.

DOZER,
E'l ll Load • r .
brush
ho g
W1 11 oo
basements , po1· t• bru!l '•,
timber,
lnnd ·. ··· arin ·
Ctlarles B u t chf' • 1 • ' ?940

PEANl.TI'S

'5PECIALL'i WHEN
IT'S SHERIFF TAIT

WEDNESDAY , NOVEMBER 7, 1979
U )(l--- J's A Crowd 3; T ic Tac Dough
8: Match Game PM 6: News 10:
love American Style 15 ; Sanford
&amp; Son 17 : Dick Cavett 20.33 .
3()-Country Roads 3: Newlywed
Game 6; Joker ' s Wild 8: The
J udge 10 ; Family Feud 13; W i ld
Kingdom 15 . All In The Fol'nlly
17; MacNe il Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 oo-Rea l People 3.15 : Eight Is
Enough 6 , 13 ;
Great
Per formances
20.33 :
NBA
Basketball 17 .
9 QO---Oiff'rent St rokes 3, 15 ; Mo'v'ie
" The Suicide's Wife" 8,10 ;
El , zabeth Cady Stanton In
Kansas 20,33
9 3()-Hello , Larry 3,15; 10:00--Best
of Saturday Night li11e 3,15;
Charlie's Angels 6. 13 ; News 20;
Connections 33 .
10 JO ~ Upstairs , Downstaris 17 ;
Best of Groucho 20
11 00- News 3,6,8 . 10.1 3. 15 ' Dick
Cavet120 ; Wodehouse Playhouse
33.
ll 30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Black
Sheep Squodron 8: ABC News 33:
Movie " These Thousand Hills"
10 ; Movie " Night &amp; Day " 17 .
11 40 - Baretta
6, 13 ;
1: 00Tomorrow 3, News 15 .
50- News 13; 2 IS- News 17;
2 2()-NBA Basketball 17 : 4 :50- .
Movie " Man from Utah " 17 .

THURSDAY , NOVEMBER8,1979 ,
5..5-F arm Reporl 13; 5·50-PTL
Club 13.
6 00--700 Club 6 : PTL Club 15; 700
Club 8; Heallh Field 10.
6· 1o--World at Large 17 ; 6: 3(}-For
r
- -You .. Black Woman 10; News 17.
. \1 1+"1
ll\1' I IIWI \H ig \t ·: td
6 -4 5- Morning Report J ; 6 : ~
'"I ilii
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2 25 ·- News 17 ; 2 3()-Anolher World
3.1 5. Guidin g Light 8,10;
Gigglesnort Ho te l 17.
by THOMAS JOSEPH
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17 Kmghtly
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33 Katharin e ol 1;-;--t-- -r8: SIOO,OOO Name That Tune 10;
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36 Managed
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37 Girl's name
Family 17 . MacNeil -Lehrer '
Repoct 20,33 .
38 t' lwd loss
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40 Hire
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41 Woodlands
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42 Colonng
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20.33.
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Reginald Perrin 33.
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Woman 6,13: Columbo 8; ABC .r
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2:00-Movle "Operation Bikini" 17;
LIKE SWANS ASL.EEP . - JAMES ELROY FLECKER
3: •()-Movie "Apache Woman" -il .

•

u

Help Wanted

Office Help Needed
By Local Pomeroy
Business

BRIDGE

1

Hasty hijinks sinks slam

ADD ONS &amp;
REMOOEUNG

Cash &amp; ~" . ,

NEEDED : NURSES for 11 ·
7 shift. Pomeroy Health
Care Center . Contact Mr .
Zldian, Admini$trator . 992 ·
6606.

~"u\.JDRE.D 11ME5

Oswald Jacoby and Ala n Sontag

' - - - -- ·
AUTOMOBILE
IN ·
SU RANCE
been
c an
cel le d?
Lost
you r
operator- ' s li ce nse? Phone
992 2143 .

I IF I'VE TOL.D YOU 11-115
0\.lL.f,
I'Ve: Tct.D 'i'OU II
')

Television
Viewing

�.
:ll-Tbe Dally SentiDel, Mlddleport-f'omeray,O., Wednesday, Nov . 7, 1979

~

I~~~.?~i!~way op-=~~~~-~~~~~.~~

Area deaths
Rtrl'll 8. ADAMS
Ruth Stra11111 Ada11111, 62, Delray
Belch, Fla., died at her htme TIIU'Iday, Nov. 1.
Mn. Adams wu bam in Pomeroy
~ daughter m the late Valentine
and Anna Hobstetter Strausa. She
wu also preceded In death by two
sisters, Mn. Ag11e11 Neutzllng and
Mn. Mildred Grindley and one
brother, Edward J. Strausa.
She II survived by her lllsband,
Juoo Adams, tlree brothers, Hernan Strauss, Athens, Charles and
Donald StraWIS, both ri Pomeroy,
and aeveral nlecee and nephews.
Funeral services were held at
Delray Beach, Fla., on Monday,
Nov.5.
LEX&gt;N MD J .ER
Leon Miller . 66, Route I, Cheshire,
died Tuesday evening at the Holzer
Medical Center.
Mr. Miller was born April 24, 1913
In Bradbury where he resided only a
short time. He was reared near
Gallipolls. He was a son rl. the Ia te
Harry and Malilda Kinsen Miller.
Also preceding him In death were
two brothera, Earl and Denver
Miller, and two sisters, Mrs.
Theodcre ( Dessie) Motta and Mrs .
Minnie Brown.
SurvMng are biB wife, Deloris Little Miller ; four S&lt;llll, Larry, Long
Boltlm; Tcm, Pomeroy ; Phil,
Rutland, aoo Chris ri Middleport; a
daughter, Mra. Robert (Susie)
Sigrmn, Bidwell; two brothera,
Harry Miller, Anchorage, Alaska,
aoo Hubert Miller, Lebancn, Tenn.;
two slslem, Mrs. Walter (Pearl)
Bunce, Cheshire, and Miss Gladys
Miller, Middleport, aoo seven grandchildren.
Mr. Miller wu a veteran cl. World
War 11. H~ attended the Freewill
Baptist Church at Kyger and was
employed by the Fanner Silo Construction Co.
Funeral servia!$ will be held at I
p.m Friday at the Old Kyger
Freewill Baptist Cburch with the
Rev. Bill Price aoo the Rev . Don
Price rl.ficiating. Burial will be in
Meigs Memory Ganle111. Friends
lillY call at the Rawli~oats
Funeral Home In Middleport from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday and until noon oo Friday when the body will
be taken to the cburch.

Tuesday night dlacuued
highway department oper&amp;UOIB
with Meigs Crunzy CC11111li881Clnl!rs
Buehl said he Is Cattempla ting
placing a fence around the storage
area at the counw garage to prevert
people from stealing pipe.
Buehl also dlsc111111ed the design ri
the new access I"()Bd to the Multi·
Purpcee Health Cenll!r. The board
requested that Buehl revise the fins!
design to conform with the
requlremenbl needed on the entrance fr001 Union Ave.
Rlcbardll Blessing will serve as
dog warden from Nov. 12, tbrmgh
the 23 while Charles HyseB is on
vacation. Blessing may be reached

ELLIS R. MD..LER
Ellis Reeves Miller, 94, a resident
of Rt. 1, Langsville, died at 8:50 a .
m. Tuesday in Holzer Medical
Center following a short Wn. Miller
was lxrn Aug . 26, 1885, In Ash
County,N. C., son of the late WWlam
and Mandy Sheets Miller .
He moved to Ohio In 1916, and
resided near Waterloo foc several
years where he was a farmer and
saw mill operator .
He spent several years ln Kansas
and had resided in Langsville since
1973.
Mr. Miller is survived by his wife,
Sallie Carrie Severt Miller, whom he
married on Dec. 18, 1908. Six
children survive: Arthur, Garden
City , Kansas : Carl, Emporia,
Kansas; Bart , Waterloo ; Mrs .
Joncie Miller, Americus, Kansas ;
Hazel Duncan, Emporia; Nellie
Myers. Langsville . Three children
preceded him in death. Twenty nine
grandchildren and a number of
great gandchildren survive.
One brother . Dalton Miller ,
Waterloo , survives along with three
sisters: Mrs . Gennle Roach ,
Waterloo ; Gussie Miller, Americus
and Mrs. Lettie Miller, Patriot.
FUneral services will be held I p.
m . Friday at the McDaniels
Crossroads Church with Rev . Roy D.
Brown and Damon Stapleton
officiating. Burial will be in Flag
Springs Cemetery. Friends may call
at the Phillips Funeral Home in
Ironton on Thursday from 6 until 10
p.m. The body will lie in state at the
church one hour piior tD the

a.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
in Point Pleasant with the Rev . Tally
Hanna officiating . Burial will follow
in the Beale O!apel Cemetery at
Apple Grove.
Friends may call at the ftmeral
oome Thursday from 7 to 9 p .m.
EARLP.WEBB
Earl (Pap) Webb, 94, Coolville,
died Tuesdl!y afternoon at Arcadia
Nuraing Home following and e:t·
lended illness.
Mr.Webb was borninGallia CmnWthe son rl. the late Mr. aoo Mra.
William Webb. He wss preceded in
death by his wife, Lottie Colegrove
Webb In 1939. He was also preceded
in death by me son, Arthur and one
dl!ughter, Mm. Grace Lucas.
Mr. Webb atteooed the Baptist
Church, was an employe m the
Detroit, Toledo aoo Irooton Railr011d
before moving to Coolville in 1939.
He was a prominent fanner f&lt;r
many years in the Coolville a l'1!ll
before his retirement.
He is survived by foor sons, Paul
E. Webb, Springfield, Va.; Orville
Webb, J onesbOI'o, Ga.; Gleooon
Webb, Coolville, aoo Everett Webb,
Upper MarlbOI'O, Md., eight grandchildren, and several great graoochildren.
Funeral services will be held
Friday at II a .m. at the White
Funeral HOOle In Coolville with the
Rev. Roy Deeter cificiating. Burial
will be in Fairmont Cemetery,
Jackson, Ohio. Graveside rites will
be coooucted at 2 p.m. Friends may
call at the funeral hon1e after noon
on Tlllrsday.

services.

NANCY PROPP
Mrs . Nancy Marie Frederick
Propp, M, Apple Grove, died this
morning at 12:15 in Holzer Medical
Center following a long illness.
She was born Sept. 31, 1895 at
Bidwell, Ohio . Her husband , Jack
Propp, preceded her in death on
Feb. 16, 1979, and one son, Jack
Propp, was killed in World War 11 .
Sun1vors include one dl!ughter,
Mrs . Wendell (Mary) Brewer,
Atwater, Ohio; one son, Fred Propp,
Zanesville, Ohio; one brother,
Delmar Frederick, Medford,
Oregan; six grandchildren and six
great~andchildren.

Services will be held Friday at 11

The commissioners reviewed
minutes fl. a Schematic Design conference held In Columbus on Del 30

Wella, cOIIIDiisll&lt;llelll and Mary·

Hobltetter, clelil;.

Iranian oil _flow shut offboycott, "strike suspected
NEW YORK (APl - Spot market
oil prices jumped amid a reported
halt in deliveries at Iran's main
Persian Gull port, and U.S. officials
waited to see if the Interruption was
a boycott against the United States
or a ptentially more disruptive
general shutdown.
" Iran appears w be shut off, " said
one oil company executive, who
asked not to be quoted by name.
Administration and congressional
sources said Tuesday the Central
Intelligence Agency bad determined
U.S. tankers have been barred. A
State Department official said the
Kharg Island port has been closed to
all customers by what may be a
strike.
But a White House aide said the
reports bad been received but "not
confirmed" Reports of a shutdown
also were received in Japan, said
officials there.
Iran's Oil Minister Ali Akbar
Mo'Infar said Monday that
shipments to the United "States

..

would be shut off if that nation 's
ruler , the Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomelni, ordered the action.
Khomeini has been orchestrating
an anti-America campaign in recent
days, and some of his followers have

been holding about eo Americana ~
the U.s. Embaally In Tehran ·since
Sunday. They have demanded the
return of the deposed Shah of Iran,.
who 1s hOBPita!ir.ed In New Yark a~&gt;;
with cancer.

F'ISHmYSAnJRDAY
A fish fry will be held at the Middleport Fire Slation on Saturday,
Nov.IO, beglnnlngatll .m.

8QUADC,411m
Mabel Hylall, Mlddlepor1, N
taken to the Holler Med'cal Cenllei
at 9:Z7 a.m. Wecll8clly at the~
dleport Emergency 9qll8d. MW.
HywU wu found IIIICOIIIciCIII neat
her heme at Wllllamlland Flfthsta;:
At 3: 57 p.m. 'l'ue8day, ~ aquad 1Q:
Hubert Stewart, Middleport, to
Pleasant VaHey HCBpitaL

MEFI' nruHSDA Y
Syracll8e Village Council will
meet Tburaday, Nov. 8, at 7:30p.m

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va . (APJ dangerous." saorl Cpl .J G Watson
Seven prisoners, described by
of the 'West Virg UJia State Police .
authorities as "anned and really
Several were serving senten('es
dangerous, " remained at large
for first~egree murder. accordmK
today after a pril!On break by 15 . toJerne llracken. penitentiary
Inmates that left an off~uty state
spokeswoman.
trooper and one of the pril!Oner s
State police Capt. I..J Trupo saod
dead, officials said.
" When they came out the door
A three-state manhunt was urder
apparently they seatte r ed lik e
way for the remaining inmates, who
sheep ."
escaped from the West Virginia
Four irunates, all Wlanned , we n
Penitentiary at 8:10 p.m. EST
ca ught within walking distance of
Wednesday after overpowering two
lbe penitentiary, just hours a fter th e
guards.
breakout. Watson said .
Several escapees were believed to
They were identified as William
be armed with automatic weapons ..
Ellsworth Wayne , Thomas l,ee
authorities said .
Richardson , David EffUJgham and
"They are armed and really
Wesley ll. Scott

NO. 146

-.-....
-

.-c.
ID

.. OSTING DINNER
The Middleport Auxil.ia ry will h&lt;11t
a dinner this evening at the Mid·
dleport Fire Station for members rl.
the RuUaoo Fire Department
Auxiliary. Membera fl. both groups
are to meet at the Middleport Fire
Slationat8 p .m.
SESSION PLANNED
The regular meeting cl. the Twin
Qty Shrine Club will be held Monday, Nov. l2. All memberd are urged
to attend tbP '"c.IJlOrtant session.

_

~~...
;:,0~
IIIU
c

iClJ

z

=

0

All other securi ties • • • . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . 30.000 ·00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreeJDertts to resell.. . . • • • . • • • • • • . • • • . . • • . • • . . . • . . • . . • • . . • . • • • • . • • 1,000,000.00
Loans, Total (e:~cludlng unearned Income~ ......................... 7,826,000 00
Less : Allowance for possible loan losses .............................. 70,000.00
L.oans,Net •.••••••••.••...•••••.•..••..••..••.•••.••..•...••...••..••.•• 7,756,000.00
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and other
assets representing bank premises .......................................... . r.l,OOO.OO
All other assets .. · · · · .......... · .. · .. · .. · · ...... · · · .... · .. · · · · · · ........ · .. · 111,000.00
TOTAL ASSETS............................................... .. .. .... , .. 14 1402 1000.00 _ __

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

•• 0

•

0

••

•

0

•

•

•

•

Common stock
a. No. shares authorized 2,000
b. No. shares mtstandlngs 2,000 (par value )............................... 100,000.00
Surplus • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • •• • • • • . • • . . • • • . . • . • • . • 900,000.00
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
and other capital reserves ........... · · .. · · · · · · · · · · · · .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·.. 689,000.00

'rc&gt;1'AL EQtJin- CAPITAL . •••..•••. ••..•• , , •••••••••..••..• , •• • , , •• , . • • • 1,689.000.00
TOTAL UABILITIES AND EQUITY CAP!TAL. ............... · ............ 141402,000.00
Amount&amp; outstanding as of report date :

Time certificates r:l. depoBit in denminations ri

0

••••••••••••••••• 0

•••••••• 0

0

•

~

1, Manning Kloes, VIce President and Cashier of the aboviH1BIIled bank do hereby
declare that this Report of Condition is true and correct to the best ri my knowledge and

~

belief.

Ill

Manning Kloes
Octal;,!' '11, 1979

We the wtderslgned dlrectora attest the correctness ri this statement of re.ll: .u-ces and
llabWti;., We declare that It bas been examined by us, and to the best of our knowledge and
belief Ia true and correct.
RoseS. Reynolds
Harold E . Hubbard - Directors
Rodney Downine

of Moundsvolle. according Jo state
pohce l 'pi D.l. . Taylor .' Collins
apparently had been shot, Taylor
sa id

Sizes

s.

at

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'39.95 WAIST LENGTll
CORDUROY OR DENIM
JACKET

'49.95 LONGER LENGTll
DENIM JACKET

•31 18

•3411

'22.95 DENIM OR
CORDUROY VEST

'24.95 SUEDE LOOK
VEST

•17..

'1911

rdnd Opening

POMEROY HEALTH
CARE CENTER
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

DEDICATION CEREMONY
By Invitation 1: 00 P.M.

PUBLIC
OPEN HOUSE
AND REFRESHMENTS

3:00P.M. to 5:00P.M.
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1979

asked to be allowed onto the prison
command center to store his
barber 's tools Once ins1de, he pulled
a _gun on Sgt Jerry Baff and a
second

tnmate

entered

the

command center and held a knife to
Baff 's throat.
The two mmates removed Baff's
key s and let themse lves UJto a
corridor leading tD th e prison 's
wruting room . They then ca ptured a
second guard, J T Villers, ·and

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

1

ln:-.pt'ctlon 11f the Shadle Bridge

\A.r1

&lt;~l'tl'!"l !~t·dtl'd &lt;..trmgers 1connfi'cti'nJ;;
l w~illl " ! ll t!d~r ltH· n&lt; JOI" of the bridge

tht· &lt;.., {;JJlf l&lt;Jrd and safp method of
&lt;..,t wh Utc-,es. This findm ~
r!ISfH·I[.-., rf'(' t'Jit fWliOfS that the work
I)(_·Jn!.! dfiiH ' (Ill thP bridge stnngers
r1olatr ~ ~ af1•t_v n:guJat ions .
1\(•p .li!!J!IIY .lot· Wedge, unr of
~C\'t'r.d iiJca l l'itcted officials who
hd d hr·&lt;trd r('ports and expressed
t' t1n1·ern &lt;J bnut i.he saftey of repairs
br1m: rnarlt·. met on the bridge with
in spt·ctiJr..., Karl Kahl and Fred
IS

I" I'~Jalr 111

Fra rw1osp late li::ist week and is
s a u s(1ed th tit the 'll.ork IS bein g done
properly ond sa fely " The state has
msrwct 1·d th t· bn tl~t· and it IS the
opunon r1f tht • Dep&lt;:~rtrn{'nt of Hi ghwa:.·.. ., tli&lt;tt it ts ,...,£:t fe These guys r the
in Spt·(·trJr .., 1 &lt;trc tht· engi neer s, I 'm
nnt : 1f thr .\ ft·L· l the work lS being

PLANT AT 21l PERCENT MARK._Nearing the 20
percent mark in construction is the Racine Hydro
Plant along the Ohio River . Working to a deplb ri 110

feet , workers are dmng irutial worl&lt; on what will be the
power house . The first unit is scheduled for operation
by spring 1981, with the second unit to be in use 10 monU..Iater .

Veterans Day observance set

....

I

WASHINGTON tAP)
President Carter on Wedneadl!y
sent his wife Rosa lynn oo a fourdl!y mission to Thailand's
refugee camps "to obse!"Vl' at first baUJd the CO!l'lequences ri the
horrible tragedy that is occurring
there ."
Mrs . Carter and a delegation ri
aides, Including the U.5. surgeon
general, left Andrews Air Force
Base, Md., with a request from
the president to assess the 00.
steeles to delivery cl. food aoo
medical supplies to Cambodill
and ita coon~n who have fled
into Tha.iland.

Upholds appeal

OF

Aecoriling to Ms . Bracken, the
escape occurred when an inmate

demanded that the penitentiary 's
outer gates be opened, she said.
The two inmates were then joined
by 13 others who awarently had
been hiding nearby .
Once outside the prison. the
escapees demanded transportation .
When they were told that a vehicle
was not available, they shoved Baff
in the path of lbe car driven by
Kesner . When Kesner stopped his
car. he wa s pulled from the vehicle
and shot, she saod.
A few months ago, two inmates
escaped from the prison by
tunneling under its wall . They were
captured a few hours later.

THUR SDAY NOVLM8ER 8. 1979

Wc·~t V1rgmia Ue[KJ.rtment of
lli gll\~;r!'i txarTllner.s has deter·
ll l l! l f' rj
thi1t
the splicing
of

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

is pleased to announce

up roadblocks throughout the regwn
and searc:hed the area near the
pnson .

en tine

M, Land XL sizes.

AMERICARE CORP.
TilE

sr:wd uff 1n Kf'srwr's car. while the
Hlht:r') !lt-d rm foot mto Moundsville ,
a &lt;"ll) of 1:1.560 that surrourds the
pnson . vff1c 1a ls SOld
Tht· pnsun. lucated in the state 's
\iorUwrn Panhandle , is only a f~w
rml t&gt;:-; fru Jn
the
Ohio
and
Penn sy lvarna bvrdcrs and lS about
Jll rnllt•s ~Juthwt·st of Pittsburgh
:vlort· U1Ml 100 polict• officers set

•

suede look.

$100 000 or more. . . •. . . . . . . • ••. . • . . • . . . . •. . • • . • •• •• . . . . . . . • . . • . . . . • . . • . . . . 350,000.00

Averai!e for 30 calendar dl!ys (or calendar month) ending with report date :
d~lta ••
• .. ... .................. .. 12,355,000.00
Total \MO't"'D''

lhe slain trooper's car near
Wayneshw·g, Pa ., a few miles east

Sherpa lined blue denim or
corduroy jackets in waist
or longer length style plus sherpa lined vests in
blue denim, corduroy or

36759 ROCKSPRINGS ROAD

--

McMeehen.
The body, of another prisoner ,
.James !.ester CoiiUJs , was found in

AND VESTS

Statement of Resources and Liabilities

0

by c1 ty police an

SALE! MEN'S

Ob!r:.c:~s:::~~~~~s ... .. ........ ........................ . .... 1,946,000.00

Ill

was captllied

ELBERFELDS

Cash and due from depository institutions .................................. . 1,401,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities ... ·................ . ................ .. .............. 2,078,000.00

Ill

a

An

Touring camps

Demand deposits of individuals , prtnshps .,
and corps ............................................. , .. , . . ............ 2,294,000.00
nme and savings depooits of Individuals
prtnsbps., and corps ..................... ................................. 8,904,000.00
Deposits of United States Govenunent . . .. . . . . . . .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. . .. .. . .. . ..
7,000.00
Deposits mStates and political
subdivisions In the United States .......................................... 1,290,000.00
All otller deJ)OSits • • • • • • • • • • • • • . . • • • • • • • • • • . • • . • • . .
5, 000.00
c;ert:ified and officers' checks ......••••..... . .....•...•.........•.. · .•. • .. · ·
45,000.00
Total Deposits•••• •.••.•.••...•.••••••• •••• ..•..•..•••.• • ••••••••.. .•••• •• 12,M5,(X)O.OO
Total demand depoolts . ... ... ....•..••..•..... ..... .. .. ... . . .... 3,229,000.00
Total time and savings deposits. . . • . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9, 316, 000.00
All other liabilities.. .... ... .. .. .. .. . • • .. .. .. .. .. . . .. .. .. . .. . . . .. .. . .. .. .. .. . 166,000.00
TOTALUABILITIES (excluding subordinated
notes and debentures) •••. •••.. •••.••.••. . ••..•..•• •.••• . ••.••...••..••.• 12,713,000.00 - - - -

behind

by

of Middleport in the state of Ohio, at the clooe of business on September 30, 1979 published in
respcnse to call made by Comptroller of the Currency , under title 12, Unitro States Code,
Section 161.
01arter number 8441
National Bank Region Number 4

---r-

clearing

Moundsville high school by the
Mars hall
Co unt y
sheriff 's
department. state police said.
Another . .John, Arthur Keenan.

Tht trou~J• · r . 23-year-&lt;J id Philip
K~·~r1•·r
was 1r1v1ng by th e
Innxunun1 S....l'un ty prtson with his
~A&gt;' Ift· c~mstan ce. when they were
!)topped and dragged from th elr ca r
Kesnt·r wa s. shut , sa1d Watson . Mrs .
K•·sner wa.&lt;.; not mjured .
'111rl'L' to f1vr uf the Inmates th en

•

Inspectors say bridge

CITIZENS NATIONAL BANK

--.,-

s wampy

e

(USPS 145 960)
VOL. XXVIII

Two other escapees. Shirley

llobert Adkms a nd DaVld Worley.
were fourd after daybreak on a

WRANGLER JACKETS ·

TOUR SLATED
Members ri Ohio Eta Phi Chapter
r1. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will go to
the Fenton Glass Co., WWlamstown,
w. Va . ThursdaY evening. Membera
are to meet on the upper p!lrking lot
lnP&lt;meroy nolatertban6p.m

REPORT OF CONDffiON
Consolidating domestic subsidiaries ri the

Mental RetardaUonTraJ.nin8Center
and Woriulhop.
·
Attending were Richard Jonea .

Seven West Virginia escapees still sought

CINCINNATI ( AP) -+ The
Firat District Ohio Court of Appeals Wednesday overtumed the
aggravated murder conviction ri
Larry Ralston in coMection with
the death ri Nancy Grigsby ri
Wltbamsville .
The appeals coort noted tba l
outside ri a conf"SBion by
Ralston, there was nothing indicating the cause ri death might
lllve been the result ria criminal
act.
The appeals court, in a
WIBnlrnlllll decision, sald Ohio
law insisted that there must be
prom that a death resulted from a
criminal act before a confession
is admissible.

Faces two counts
CLEVELAND ( AP )
Cleveland
police charged
Tb&lt;m88 Sims Jr ., 53, with two
counts ri aggravated vehicular
homicide in the deati!J Tuesday
ri two pedestrians.
A Municipal Cmrt healing WI'S
·a etforSims today .
:
Sims also was charged with
driving while Intoxicated, fleeing
o'¥1 eluding police, driving the
· ~r'l'U! ·"'~i "" a one-way street,
U&amp;"!W11( 1," './ tH:..r, hit-6J&lt;ip,
dr1 ·ong Wlli; ~t-ense plates listed
to • .other automobile and
drivi •.• .. ithmt a I!Blid operator 's
pennit.

Meigs County American Legion
Pmts wiU ob6erve Veterans Day
Sunday at the Rutland Memonal
Pari&lt; beginning alll a .m.
Guest speaker for the observance
will be Representative Ron James ,
Ohio Legislature . Other guests are
expected from the distric t and state
American Legion.
Pools taking part m the observance will be Drew Wel:t;ter P&lt;&gt;~t
39, Pomeruy: Feeney-Bennett Post

Additional
crimes solved
The recent arrests , earlier this
week , of two ju veniles and one adult
have resulted in so!Vlng a lola! ci
so~ recent breakmg and enlerings. a
spokesman for the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department said today .
lAst Friday two homes located on
Clarl&lt; Chapel Road were forcibly en·
tered and a number ri items .
primarily cash, were removed .
Thooe breaking and enterings repor·
tedly led to an extensive weekend Ul·
vestigation by Gallia Deputies Alva
Sullivan and Raymond Pope .
Arrested Monday and charged
with burglary was Ray E. Jarrell
Jr., 20, Bidwell . Jarrell , who was
c harged along with two male Bod·
well juveniles, IS being held in the
Meigs Crunty jail, where he has
been implicated in a Saturday
breaking and entcrmg . The two
juveniles are incarcerated in the
Ga Ilia County jail.
The Gallia department reports
that m&lt;&gt;Jl of the otems allegedly
stolen. mcluding cash, appliaoce;
and gw-L'l, during the su breaking
and enterings - three in Ga!Ua, one
in Cabel County, one on Mason County, and one in Meigs (',()Unty - ha ve
been recovered as a result of the mvestigation.
In addition. the Ga llia deparbnenl
reports that three checks allegedly
removed from mailbuxes by the tno
at the Pari&lt; Lane Mobile Home Court
have also been recovered.
The Gallia departrr..nt reports it
received assistance in the in ·
vestigation fr&lt;m the Meogs and
Mason Crunty Sheriff's Depart·
ments.

..
VOTER REGISJ'~T&lt;•'II
If you missed . out ,,.. I • ~Y 's
election b&lt;jc!luse '
t a
registered W! "!r, t:":
.tiunty
Board rl. Electiw·
.,ca ted in
the Masonic Temple ....-i'omeroy, is
ready to help ym get signed up so
yru 'II be ready next year The board
office is open from 8:30 a m. to 4 3~
p.m . Monday ohrrugh Fnday

128, Middleport : RAcine Pool 602,
and the Eli Dem.;o.&lt; P&lt;61 4f7 .
Rutland . A luncheon will be served

to all Legionaires aoo their guests at
12 noon immediately following the
ceremoruesl. The luncheon will be
held at the EU Denison Prnt F'ann on
Beech Grove Rood.
In the event ri bad weather, the
ecremonies will be held ondoors at
the Eli Denison Pool Farm
Due to the leache~&gt; strike m the
Meogs Local School DIS trict, there
will not be a band available so a
scheduled parade will not be held

EXTENDED FORECAST
A cbaoce of rain Saturday. Tur·
nlng rolder but clearing Suoday
and Mooday. IUgbs in tbe &gt;Oti
Saturday, eooUng to the mid 40.
to around 50 Sunday and Moooay .
Lows In the 40s Saturday and In
the 30. Sunday aoo Mooday .

Postmaster
soliciting
•

assistance
During the winter months . ot ;_,
particularly important that the
cooperation of road authoroties and
customers on Meogs Coonty be
solicited to keep roads passable and
appr0&lt;1ches to mall boxes clear ct
snow, vehicles aoo other obstacles.
Pomeroy
Postmaster James
Sou is by said today
Although, every effort will be
made by rural carriers to serve as
many cuswmers a s possoble. thest"
carriers art' not reqUJred or ex-

pected to dismrunt to prllVide servocc on foot when roods or approaches to bOJ&lt;es are not passable,
Soulsby pointed rut .
In areas where sen.·1ce i.s provided
over roads not maintaoned by road
authorities the customer "' respon·
so!Jie for keeping the rOild passable.
Customers are solely responsoble
for seem~ that appraoches to boxes
are free from snow or other ob·
stac les .
The pa;l rlfice woll at,empllD contact trus lloes when ne&lt;.' essa ry cont"erning lmJJ3,'8able roads but ot os
suggested that lhooe cu,tome" af.
fe-c:tt-d by such l·undJtlwl" tllllt.H' t tllt'

proper authorRf.u!S .
When suchW conditions ex"t the
customer may make armngements
for rere:vmg mail by ha\1nK it
delivered to another b()X rm a temporary Llasc.

.,

done uwkr thl' approved saftcy
standJrd ~. t111·n I' l l have to be
s at1 s f1ed 1\l~h that "
T1w rHtTI•Jrat ton m the conTit' l't ln~ ht·~H II S \~as discovered when
deck n: pt 11r s cur rently nearing
CO!Ilpietlll !l

\q•rt•

lnS{l('(tPd

Jt

is

st;uHI.t.tnl ;u·oce dW" I:' then. dccordln~
to r;an Chernenko, DOH pubhc
:rrfn .... qrt1nn 0ff il'Cr ror the "ltate to
go

a head and do whllt work needs to

be done while the rontractors are
sti ll 01 1 t ht· job Theaditional work to
repcu1 the s trin~ers. however .

In re sponse to a Hcg1ster q uer y,
r'he rnenko ... aid. · ''flle')(l 1 the beams
be i n ~ repaired 1 are !:&gt;tnn~er s. not
mam beams. Som~: are ~cthng new
ends. som e a r e bemg spl iced, some
are okay ~:ts IS and some are being

strengthened with angles
" What lS bemg done lS the approved method for makong these
repa1rs." he added.

The splocmg of the defective
strin gers. instead of replacong th em
with new stee l. has caused mu ch
publi c concern for the span 's sa fety
and 1nit iated an investigation into
the matter. After examining the
detenora ted stringers, Kahl sa od .
" We want to make this br idge safe
and reinforcing the stringers will do
the job. We can't guarentee that
addotional work on the bridge won't
be necessary in five or six years
becausi' this is an old bridge
requirmg contmued rnaintenence.

llut at this time we are domg what
needs to be don e ...
Kahl added that one-way traffoc
must Ue maintained while the
repa1rs are made becausr. "These
repaors woll be made under th e deck

lS

safe

and . althou~h the workers are not
neccssanly vosoble to passers-by. it
os essent ial that weight be kept off
the s1de the) are working on."
Chc rn enko supported Kahl's
O!"n ion that the bridge repatrs are
be ing done correctly and safely .
:-Jotm~ the sensitiv ity of people,
especiall y m thi s area. in regard to
bridges. he saod. " If there was a
quesuon of safely. rather than do
mCJkeshift repa1rs. we would close

the bndg e down ." In fact, according
to Chernenko, the DOH would tend to
"over-repaor rather than under·
repair "

In addition to the question of
safety. there also have been reports
that the work on the Shadle Bridge lS
of a temporary nature and is not

ontended to last but a few yea r s.
To thos. Chernenko responded,
" We are doing full renovation work.
This os not a band-aid job." While the
DOH spokesman said he did not
foresee any maJor problems with the
deck m five or six years. he said that
ot lS the standard procedure of the
DOH to do additional work as the
nel:'d an ses.

Six girls vying
for Junior Miss

pu sh e' th e co mpletion date to
sornet;Jne at the end of December or
thC' fir . ., t of Januar y r~:tther than thi :,
rnonth ;..tS W:JS pr('\' lously: annow1ced.

Strike front
quiet today
There was an "a ll quoet" on the
strike fron t in the \leogs Local
Sc hool Distncllhis morrung .
For the forst time s mce the stnke
b&lt;!ga n almost seven weeks ago
neither sode had a statement abrut
the siluabon to release to the media .
The Meigs Local Board of
Education did meet on execubve
seS'l ion Wecnesday night but there
was no report issued on lhat
meeting .
It is believed that representatives
ci the teachers anrl the boord r:i
education are rnee!Jng today at the
Mei~s
County
Courth ouse.
Representatives of both grou1J5 were
seen entering the crurthouse tlus
monung .
It is also believed that Probate
Court Judge Robert Buck os Involved
m the meeting since on Tuesday he
ca lled elf-at least temporarily - a
hearing scheduled for lbe Meogs
Local Boord of Education . The
heanng had been set origmally at
the request ci Pomeroy Attorney
Charles Knight and at the hearing
the Meigs Local Boord members
were to show wtzy the functions ci
the board shruld not be assumed by
the Meigs Crunty Probate Court.
ft was speculated also today that
the influence ci Judge Buck might
be nesporn ible for the lad&lt; · of
statements from eother sode on the
strike problems .
Last week Judge Buck had a&lt;ked a
representative cl. the news media as
to the srurce &lt;i origination of
statements being published in the
newspaper. He indicated that he
might encrurage the discontinuation
d statements to the medoa .
Tcarhers r:i the district remamed
on thl'ir picket lines at the schools rl
the dostrict today Last week Meigs
Coonty Common Pleas Court Judge
John C. Ba con Issued a temporary
restrainin g order agamsl the
tea chers forbidding them to picket
the schools during normal school
hours on \H&gt;ek days .

Southeast Ohio Junior MISS, Inc.,
announced today \balfour girls from
Meogs County and three from Vinton
County will be competing for the
Junior Miss titles of the two counti es.
The event woll take pla ce on Nov .
17 at the Meigs Juni or High School
AudJtorium unless the foCJI!ly L'i not
available due to the teadwrs stnke.
Competing for the Me ogs Crunty
title are :
Julie Mane Giboo. daughter ri
Mr . and Mrs . Gary Gooo . Roote 2.
Racme . She is a seruor at Southem
High School and will danee for her
talent She IS spornored by the
Racine Home National Bank
Kathie Qwvey , daughtEr ri Mr.
and Mrs . Jame s Quivey , Root.. 1,
Shade A seruor at Meogs H~gh
School, she will present a vocal nwnber for her talent. She is sponsored
by Ingels F'urruture ri Moddleport.
Amy Lyn Souder. daughtEr ri Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence r.roggel, Ross
Road, Portland. She os a senior at
Soothern High and woll present a
dance for her talent. She os spon·
sored by the Racine Home National
Bank
Lynetta Jo Whittington, daughter
ci Mrs. Jennie M. Grinstead,
Pomeroy Cliffs, Pomeroy A senior
at Meogs High School, she will
present a vocal for her talent. She Is
sponsored by Franus FloriSt,
Pomeroy .

Competing for the Vinton County
!ltle will be :
Dana Waldron, daughter ri Mr.
and Mr.. . Chari.,; Waldron, Roote 2,
McArthur She is a seruor at the Vinton County High School and will
present a dance for her talent. She is
sponsored by Karr and Van Zandl
Motor Co , Pomeroy .
Michele Rishel, dl!ughter ri Mr .
and Mrs . James Rishel, Route 2.
McArthur. who IS a sent or at the Vin·
ton County High School. She will
dance for her talent. She is sponsored by Elliott Appliance II,
Pomeroy.
Sherry Mace, daughter ri Phyllis
Mace, McArthur, and Roger Ma ce,
Zaleski, a seruor at the Vinton Crunty High School. She was present a
piano solo. She is spornored by
Reuter AccrunlUJg, Middleport .
Advance tickets may be purchased at 75 cents for students and
$150 for adults . At the door the
prices wiU be $1 and $2, respectively.
The wiMers from Meigs and Vinton Counties will compete for the

Ohio Juni&lt;r Miss tiUe on Jan .12 at
Veterans Memorial Auditorium in
Columbus.

\
WALT BUESCHER

Buescher
banquet
speaker
Wall Buescher will be the principal speaker at a meeting ri the
Meigs Soil &amp; Water Conservation
District November 15 at 7:15p.m. in
the Chester Elementary School.
A native rl. Indiana, Buescher Is
Cl'tired from a more than threedecade career in the fann equipment industry. Combining humor
with a serious message, he will
discuss some ri the major contributions being made to the
American way rl. life by agriculture
aoo industry. His visit is sponsored
by Sperry New Holland.
In 1974, Buescher was named
Marl&lt;eting Man-Of-The-Year by the
National
Agri-Marketing
A"sociation.

For the past quarter ria century,
he has been in continuous demand as
a public speaker thrmgbout the
'J nited States and Canada. Few
speakers outside ri the poUtical
world have addressed more farm
a••d'enres over that period.

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    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51434">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51433">
              <text>November 7, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="328">
      <name>adams</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2215">
      <name>frederick</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="79">
      <name>miller</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7719">
      <name>propp</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2033">
      <name>strauss</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1902">
      <name>webb</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
