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                  <text>•
D-10-The Sunday Times&amp;nti nel, Sunday, Nov . II, 1979

Open House held Sunday at Meigs" new nursing center

Dr. Moritz attends annual board meeting
JACKSON - The Gallia · Jacksoo
• Meiga C&lt;innwnity MenU.! Hea lth
and ·~ " Board held its Anrwa l
Meeting October 30 at the Fairgreen
Country Club here.
Ml'!l. Earl Levine, boo rd cha ir·
man, commented on the ra pid
growth &lt;1 mental health services &lt;1·
fered to the people &lt;i Jackson ·
Jackson · Meigs counties. Mrs.
Levine said the boo rd wou ld con·
tinue to plan, furd a rd moni lor a ll
mental health servic-es in the area
funded by the board.
The boord funds 14 agencies, inc luding the Center for Human
Devel~ment, Ohio University for
the mental health services they
pr ovide Ga llia · J acks on · Me igs
counties.
Mrs. Levine also said the boord
has IS members, all volunteer a

ma ny boo rd members a re also ser·
ving on va rious conunittees at the
State level to insure that rural areas
are considered m legislative affairs.
These volunteers wori&lt; many
hours to a ccomplish the goo I which
they a re s triving fir - the· best
possible menU. ! hea lth ca re fo r all
the citizens. Good mental health
allows us to fee l pooitively a nd ex·
press ourselves crea lively in our
daily living experiences, stated Mrs.
Levine.
Mrs . Levine intr oduced tw o
gue.•'-' · Dr Ti mothy Mori tz, Director, The Ohi o Depa rtment of MenU.!
Health ard Menta l Retardation and
Dr. Levester Ca nnon, Commissioner
ri the Dept ri Menta I Reta rda tion ri
Ohio.
Maxi ne S. Plununer prese nted the
Annua I Report to the board .

,&gt;Irs. Plununer said ma ny changes
ha ve been brought about by
dedicated · ~ " Board members,
not only lor the past year, bull or the
past several years .
Mrs. Plummer reviewed some r1
the board a ccomplishment.o; which
included :
" The Mountains ard Valleys a re
Mine," s ponsored by the board and

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Lrtters of opinion are wekomed. They should be less
I than 300 words long 1or sub jed to redu ction hy the editor I
I and must he signed with the signee's address. Names may
I be withheld upon puhlil'atioh. However, on request,
I names will be disrlosed. Lt•ttHs should t-e in good taste,
I addressing issues, not personalitit's.

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,~~1• ••••••: ~F~J~=:~~~;er~::
anything? It see!Tl.'l to me that the
only thing they have done is when

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the board would raisetheiroffer. the
teachers would raise their demards .
Parents, you have kid&lt;! going to
school when they are open, just stop
for a few minutes and look back over
the teachers ' demands and think,
can you afford to have your taxes
raised enough to cover their deman·
d&lt;1 and repair our schools until they

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=~~?decent enough for our kid&lt;! to

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No! I don 't think you can. Neither

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T 0 da v

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By
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Wo ll i' T. Leadongham
~ e altor

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MIDOlfPORT. OHIO

CEstate .

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Dear Editor ,
I am a parent that has a child
going to the Meigs Local School and
I had one graduate last spring from
Meigs High School. As far as the
teachers are concerned, I think they
are the ones who should be back in
school to learn a litUe better
language than they have been han·
dling while they were on the picket
tines at some cl the schools.
Also there are a lot of questions I
think the teachers should be an·
s wering such as, What are they

TIRE SALES
N. 2ND AV£.

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YOUR NEXT HOME NOW!!!
If you_k new •n teres t rates would drop lO.U 1n one tear would d pay
you to wa •ta y ear tobuyahome?No!!•W hy ?
Suppose you buy a $70,000 home and gel a 30 year , 10 • , ., mor
tgnge. with 20% (or $1 4,000 ) down You r mon thly payment c omes t o
$.512 .-401or princ ipal ano in ter es t.
Ass ume tha t af ter one vear , •nterest r a Tes drop down to 9 11 ~ a nd
you wa nt to ref i nance Even th ough your home will probab l y ap
pr eciare in va l ue
by say 15~ toS80 .500 - you are ref ina nci ng baseod
upon your or• g• na l $.56 ,000 mortgag e. THe apprec tafi onon the home is
gra vy . Assum tng a p,.-epayment pena l ty of $2 ,500 , your new pr incipal
bala nce w ould be $58 ,2 18 ISo me s ta te havenoprepa ·ymc-ntpen a ltteS )
At9 111% you r mon th l y pa rm e nts woul d then b~ S4aq 61
IL howeve ,.. , you elec r to w ai t a year to buy the sa me home w t t h a
9 1 '• ~ mortg age , vou h rst of all r""Jee d a larger dO\N n pa yrn ent - s 16, 100
inste ad of s 14,000 Yo ur mortgage wtll now be 1.6-4 , 400 a r""Jd at 9 1e+0 b oils
d O'N n to S54 l 60 per m on th
an annual tnnt· rt &lt;of' of S3)(1 40 Tt te mora l
is ~ _
i t' s the c ost oi thl' hou&lt;:.e , not me ,n rr res t r a te, th,lt m,11&lt;es the btg
gest tmpact on monthly paymen ts

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If ther e is an Vthm g we ca n do t o help yo u '" the ft eld of ,.- eal es t at•
please phone or drop in a t LEA Dl N G HAM R E A LEST AT E , 51 1 Sec ond ,
A,..e ., Gallipoti s. P hon e 446 769'9 . We ' re here t o help .

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Children have helped pick up
nails that someone had

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roofing

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Ulrown on the P8 . g lots to cause
ustohaveflattires,evenstoopedso
low as to try to follow us home and
put roofing nails in our driveways at

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home. Who slashed the Security
Guards' tires at Gallipolis?
A fu
· 'd 11 ould
nny U1Cl en w
say.
No one knows who did these things
but it happened to the parents of
children at tbe HarrisonviUe School.
The Security Guard&lt;! whOBe tires
were slashed were the ones that
were oo duty at Harrisonville also . I
would call that a very, very funny incident, wouldn 't you think so, paren·

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BRAND NEW

PONTIAC CATALINA SAFARI

PONTIAC LeMAN$ SAFARI
Fully equ ipped wit h f ac tor y air ,
AM ·FM radio and economical V ·6
eng . Full 12 mo ., 12,000 mi. war ·
ranty .
List S6857 .64

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Pnc e

rkin

MODEL FINAL
CLEARANCE

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$5778

Is ?
Another question, Why are so
many flat tires being found on buses
s itting parked also distributor caps
missing ' There are so many little innocent angels flying around since
this strike began.
I wonder why someone doesn't see
them ? Parents, s~ ard think . Are
the strikers worth what they are
asking for or not? It is a shame and a
disgrace to listen to the language
they use loud enough for the whole
neighhorhood to hear.
As one parent I would like s&lt;me
straight answers from the teachers .
What do they want? What exactly
are their demand&lt;! ? Let the public
know what they want ard then let
the public see where their money is
going.
Mrs. Fisher, let 's tell the truth to
the public instead of trying to blame
everything onto our school board
and the superintendent .
You can sign my name to this letter because I am one parent who is
not afraid fi their threats &lt;i being
burned out and my famil y
threatened by the anonymous phone
calls.
Yours truly. - Neal White , Rt . 4,
Pomeroy , Ohio .

can 1·

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1979

sy~iwn.

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Te.llchers at fault

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s taff held at Ohio Uruvenn ty in July
which has rtc"eived nationwide
recognition and the results &lt;i the
sympooium have been s hared with
the
Ame rican
Psychiat r ic
Allsocia lion and the Associa lion for
the first time in its history would
have a committee on rural mental
health based on the result.o; fi the

Good col or and equ ipped right.
Shop &amp; co mpare.
Clearance Pr ice

liSt$8431.15

Giles, Research and Evaluation for
the Mental Health Center.
High levels of community
awareness ard acceptance ci: the
mental health services rl the cent«
are Indicated by the survey, stated
Mrs. Plummer. Three-{OW'tlll of the
respmden!l have beard rl the center and 61 percent knew the location,
79 percent were favmbly impressed and 83 percent woold recommend the center services to a cloee
friend nperlenclng personal
problems.
The data will enable us to better
understand wr current service
delivery patterns and to cOOI'dlnate
our efforts to reduce some of the
barriers to service utlllzation .
Mra. Plwruner said 34,000 mental
health units &lt;i services were
provided this year by the Mental
Health Center, one unit cl 11ervlce
being one hour .
Mrs. Plununer stated that the
Ohio General Aaaembly made
available the largest dollar percent
increase for Community Mental
Health services In the State's
history, but she stated the increase
will be given to boarda baaed on
population. Therefore, the smaller
counties such as Gallia • Jackson Meiga will receive ooly a !IDlalJ percent Increase.
Dr. M!rit:z coounented that as he
has stated many times, Gallia ·
Jacksoo . Meigs has cootlnued to be
one ol the leaders in providing community mental health services, not
only in the State, but also in the
nation.
Mrs. Plwruner stated that the
challenges for the new year will be
to have all mental health services In
place for acute ard chronically ill
patients In the coiiiiilWiity and a
stronger program on mental health
prevention.

The board was funded for a Forensic Psychiatric Center to serve not
only Gallia · Jackson • Meigs, but
also Athena, Hocking and Vinton
counties; the construction fi the
Community Mental Health Center In
Meiga County ard the plans lor the
ems !ruction ci: a new Mental Health
Center In Jackson county.
The board has cc:mpleted a "Community Health Needs Assessment"
survey. The data provided by the
survey can assist In gauging public
awareness cl the Conununlty Mental
Health Center's services and
provide the board infonnation useful
for mental health planning. The survey was implemented by consultant,
Dr. B. A. Husatni, from Termesaee
SUite Universty ard Dr. Steven

rnander was added.
We also have planned family a ctivities, vacations, ard outings
arourd the Freshman Band Camp in
June &lt;i their Freshman Year, and
August Band Camps that year and
each year thereafter.
We have shared the ten weeks
each fall when Friday night meant,
we're cif to the football game, and in
aU probabilities two or three Satur·
days during these ten weeks we were
&lt;if to a Band Contest or Festival.
Also, we have known that for the fir·
st ten weeks
school the band
would be practicing each evening af.
terschool.
They have been good years, they
have been years when the band has
wori&lt;ed hard, and looked good, ard
made us, as parents very proud.
Years when the community also
could be pleased with the representation by our GAHS Marching
Band !!
WE SALUI'E YOU THE 37
SENIORS (largest number ol bard
seniors ever at GAHSI ci: the GARS
1979 MARCHING BAND! !' ! You
have been deprived cl " your night."
We will miBs the time honored
tradition r1 the culmination ci: mar·
ching band season with each Bard
Senor being named and then the unfurling of their message to the fans.
Wonder what the Seniors r1 the 1979
GAHS Marching Band would have
had on their banner?? ? - Sincerely,
An Alumni ci: G AHS (name withheld
on request 1.

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VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted .. Ethel
Evana,
Pomeroy ; Willard Russell ,
P&lt;meroy; Otis Ca.oto, Long BoU&lt;m;
Diane Tillla, Rutland ; Richard
WinebreMer, P&lt;meroy; John Jef·
fel'll, S)'t1lcuse; Bessie Athey, Mlddl,eport ; Doug Clelland, P~meroy .
Discharged- Kathryn Miller.

CHOOSE FROM THREE
Tan, Blue or Maroon

'79 PONTIAC L.eMANS SAFARI-AT LOW '79 PRICES

UP TO s1100. DISCOUNT!!
1979 BUICK
ELECTRA SEDAN

1979 BONNEVILLE
BROUGHAM COUPE
In the sh owroom - L as t c hance for
savings lik e th1 s .
BRAND NEW

s1100 Discount
1- RIVIERA
2-REGALS
1- LeSABRE
1- BONNEVILLE

B lue w ith white v inyl t op .

BRAND NEW

Harland Wood
Gene Johnson
Bob Brickles
Smith

sssoo
1980 MODEL
BUICK' LIMITED
DIESELS
IN STOCK

Jones, Henry Wells and James
Roush . The two Wells and Jones are
present county commissioners while
Roush was a conunissloner when
construction began . During the
event , an engraved plaque was
presented to the cornrnissioo ers.

FLAG PRESENTATION +
Ronald
E.
Zidian ,
left,
administrator of the new Pomeroy
Health Care Center, was presented

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1979

DUE TO
THE FIRE
IS TEMPORARILY
CLOSED
But The Good News Is - -

-

TliE MERCHANDISE WAS SAVED
AND WE HOPE TO BE OPENED
BY EARLY NEXT WEEK!
POSSIBLY BY MONDAY
Formerly
TliE UNIFORM CENTER
Gallipolis

Second Ave. at State St.

.

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Americans gathered as usual on
the 11th day ol the 11th month to
honor the nation's combat veterans ,
but traditional activities were over·
shadawed by recent events in Iran.
The bitterN!llll of many Vietnam
veterans, urderscored by a recent
poll st-ing more than half their
countrymen belle"" they were
"sucaen" to take part in that conflict, lllao caat a pall over some ob-

Gold up today
Tokyo toclly, then opened mlaed
on EUJ'IIIH!Illl fcnlgn exchanges,
Gold na up p to f4 an ounce In
EIIIWI!.
The dollar c1ooed in Tokyo at
:M7 .25 ;yen, up more than 5 yen
frml Friday's closing of :142.10.
Dealers said the Bank of Japan
sold between Sll&gt;O mlllloo ard
$2110 mlnloo In an attempt to halt
the yen'• slide, but it still sank to
Its lowest level lllnce Nov . 10,

11171 .

Area evacuated
MISSISSAUGA, Ontario (AP I
- Blazing tanker cars from a
derailed train sent sickening
fumes anl deadly chorine gas
over MiMissauga Sunday and
240,000 residents were urged to
Iesve the area .
The evacuation directive,
lsllued by the Ontario MlniJtry cl
the Envirorunent, also said
several thousand residenll ol the
Toronto suburb of Etoblcoke
were told to a bandon their homes
as shilling winds spread the
!lllloke and fumes.
No deaths or injurie&lt;J were
reported as one of the biggest
peace-time evacuations in
history continued In this city 10
mile!! west of Toronto.

Remain in jail

Cassette
Stereo

~, System

!IT. PAUL, Minn . (API - Four
Iranian students fr&lt;m Mankato
State University remained In the
Ramsey County JaU Sunday '
booked on charges &lt;i conspiracy
to kidnap M!Mesota Gov. AI
Quie.
The fifth student who was
arrested Friday, a Sudanese, was
relea!ed Saturday on orders from
Aaalstant County Attorney Paul

Lindbobn.
Lindholm said there was " no
evidence whatsoever" to suggest
that AdAJUn Stamboolleh, 25, a
Mankato State •tudent fr&lt;m
Sudan, was Involved in the
allepld plot.

Tank cars bum

Supe.. Sta..
SOund!
•

1-\~ lliTI"'hl ~~hl\ \(flilll\!

,,.. , " r r

$28995

hr\

1•11!

\ .\,I'-\

'"pull

t'l &lt;!,, !A n!

IIA I I'&gt;I'll \ll lfh ll&lt;ltUf' IU n &gt; ll'11\f"

•

I'IJin ' J.I uotdr: k t &lt;\&lt;&gt;U m~ •.r

!"''', ""

qtlliT II l .ll' r ' \t r•m phonrr rll 11rl w
e

i\ '&gt; Jt

AUf• •ITUi r•

, JT I 1 1 d~~

LAY-AWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS

k !"A&lt;

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lrT•rt.l • hAiltlrT ;&lt;. o! h . r·;rn·,

J nd .ltHil " nd II\ hi\

ll '" •d!o' p·•'l&lt;··l • ['&lt;".l ~rr •~\lf"ll&gt;

'tli i U(]l " I I'

\\11 1 ~1J PUHORMAN&lt;t '

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Iran situation
overshadows day

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MOLINO,

Legion , Middleport . The center ill
the first facility of its type f&lt;r Melea
County and will be operated by
Americare, Inc., Columbus.

enttne

at

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an American Flag Sunday afternoon
when official dedication ceremonies
were held. Making the presentation
was Waller Bunce, representing
Feeney -Bennett Post 128, American

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UlNDON (API - The U.S.
dollar dolled at a two-year high In

season.
The scheduled game for November 9, has been cancelled for some
time . "Someone" should have
known that another game had not
been scheduled, which would have
made the October 19 game the last
home game, at which time the activities scheduled for November 9
could and should have taken place .
In the future, whatever the stats
should come out for the season. may
we some way schedule a game with
another team. Simeone out there
has to have had an open night too.
May this never happen again to a
group of GAHS Bard Seniors or
Football Seniors.
To the parents of these Senior
Band Members and also to the
parent.o; of the other band members :
We share with you the disappointment ci: this "Senior Bard
Night" being cancelled. We, along
with you and the band members ,
have shared the thrill of victory
when " our team " won. We have also
been concerned about them playing
in the rain, or sitting out ln the cold ,
or practicing in the ninety degree
plus temperatures in the s ununer
these past four years.
The trips to the away games, the
trips to band concerts, especially
their Freslunan Year when they
came away with number ones, and
thei r Senior Year when we knew this
was their last three contests.
The new look of the band their
.Junior Year when the Flag Corps
. ,. as added, another new look their
::..:nior Year when the Fi elrl Com-

(USPS 145-960)
JOL. XXVIII NO. 148

administrator , introduced numerous
local officials durlng the deducation
festivities. Refreshments wer e
served
following
tours.
Participating in Ule ribboo cutting
ceremony were left to right, Chester
Wells, Ralph E . Hazelbaker ,
president of Americare ; Richard

'&lt;

Uisappuinted hoo!oiler
November 8, 1979
T'OWHOM IT MAY CONCERN :
Friday, November 9, 1979 was a
night anticipated with mixed
emotions for the GAHS Bard
Seniors. This was to have heen
"your night " as has been traditional
lor as many years as the writer of
this letter can remember.
Due to unfortunate cirewnstances
they will not have a "Senior Band
Show," neither will the members cl
the 1979 GAHS Football team he
allowed to show honor to their paren'-' at " Parents ' Night, " another
G AHS tradition.
To the 1979 GAHS Football Seniors
and the rest of the team ,
CONGRATULATIONS, to a line
group of young men. You have spent
many long hours practicing and
playing in all kind&lt;! of weather. We
have shared with you the thrill of
your victories, the disappointments
of the games lost. We are sorry that
you will not be allowed to have a full
schedule of games this season, and
that due to this you will not be
allowed to honor your parents at
parents' night activities . Your
parents have shared with you the ten
weeks each fall and also the year
round c ondtitioning that goe&lt; along
with preparing for thase ten weeks
ard the ups and downs cl a football

AMERICARE , IN C. ,
COLUMBUS, rolled out its red
carpet to hundreds of Meigs
Countians Surday at a dedication
and open house for the new 100 bed
Pomeroy Health Care Center which
will be opened for patients next
month .
Ronald
E.
Zidian ,

Fla .

(AP I

Derailed propane tank can bur·
ned and aploded whUe officials
considered whether to use explosives or a mWtary air strike to
destroy the cars In a wreclted
Loulavllle x Naahvllle train.
Oftlciall decided Sunday night
ID let the pro[)IIIIIHaden cars in
. the mii~Img train burn. They anIIOUIICed that an Army team fr&lt;m
Atlanta woold make a decision
today on bow to handle the blaze
~~everal miie3 south of this tiny
rural communit y nea r the
Alabama border .

servances.

REP. RON JAMES, center,
spoke on the importance of
obser ving Veterans Day at a
Veterans Day program held Sunday
at II am . at the RuUand Community
Park . All local American Leg ion

Posts were involved . Participating
with James were, left to right, Joe
Zwilling,
commander ,
Drew
Webster Post 39, P&lt;meroy ; Elmer
Pickens , past commander , Racine
Post 602 ; Don Laudermilt , second

vice president ; RuUand Post 467,
and Fred Hanel, first vice
commander, Feeney-Bennett Post
128, Middleport. Robert Snowden ,
chaplain of the Rutland Post, was
emcee . A luncheon was held lor post
ll]embers at the RuUand Post Farm .

•

14 elderly persons perish m
Sunday nursing home fire
P IONEER , Ohio I AP I - A
sprinkler system could have saved
the lives of H persons who perished
in a blaze that engulfed a home lor
the elderly and mentally retarded ,
says Ule mayor of this northwestern
Ohio town .
But the owner of the home, Gladis
Coats, apparently could not afford
such safety measures, even though
she was dedicated to her boarders .
She proved her dedication during
the Surday morning fire, which
officials say may have been caused
by a 4-year-old boy .
Mrs. Coata, In her early 64ls, had
escaped the blaze , but returned to
the burning building and saved two
boarders.
She again returned, and her body
later was found at the bottom of a
flight of stairs, her arms wrapped
around a female boarder w was
trying to carTy out, said Pollee Chief
David Norris, Mrs . Coats' aon-ln·
law.
Mayor R. Bruce Kidston said of
Mrs. Coats , ''When firefighters were
beaten back by the flames," she
"escaped from us, got bs ck In the

ENTERS EIGtrrH WEEK
. . A strlk~ by teacben of the Mel&amp;•
!..&lt;&gt;Cal School Dtatrld moved IDio Its
eighth week today. 'lbere were no
statements luued aga!D today by
either the teacher• aa110&lt;fatlon or
the Meigs )..&lt;&gt;Cal Baard ol Education .
However, II was bdltved that
n eg otiatlnn !l
b e tw ee n
repr....,otatlws ol the two groups
are takin g p:ac• toda y.

building ."
Kidstoo said Sunday afternoon the
fire was started by a 4-year-&lt;Jld
youth who lived In an apartment
connected to the two-st&lt;ry brick and
wood boarding h&lt;me . But later
Sunday . Norris said , " We ma y have
been too hasty" m blaming the youth
for the fire .
He said he reached that conclusion
because of a frantic caU from Mrs.
Coats , who he said told him the
youth set a couch oo fire .
Kids! on said Ule youth was playing
with either matches or a cigarette
lighter on the couch . Norris said
another p ossibility was that
electrical and heating coMections
behind the couch caused Ule fire .
The state fire marshall's office,
health department and highway
patrol were investigating on ocders
from Gov. James A. Rhodes.
The fire marshall's office was
expected to give a report today .
There were 28 persons living in the
building, Including 22 in the
boarding home, Mr•. Coats and her
husband. Gene, and the mother of
the 4-year -&lt;Jid and her two other
children, who were not identified .
Those who survived the blaze we re
unin jured .
Mrs . Coats ' husband ha.~ heart
pr oble ms a nd wa s hos pitalized

Weather
ParUy cloudy tonight. Low ln Ule
low :!&amp;. Mostly cloudy Tuesday .
High in the upper ~. The chance of
precipitati91' 10 percent tonight and
20 per cen( Tuesdcy
\

Sunday f&lt;r shoc k, Norris said .
Kidstoo, a waterw&lt;rks contractor ,
said of a sprinkler system, " It would
have saved lives, everything ." He
said he presumed the Co ats '
"couldn't afford the $30,000 to $50,000
cost of a sprinkler system ."
The home , called Coats Nursing
Home, became a boarding house
after state laws were changed in Ule
mid-l970s to require sprinkler
systems in nursing homes, said Dr .
John H. Ackerman, head of the state
Health Departm ent .
There are many such boarding
houses around the state , he said.
Asked if he expe&lt;:ted laws governing
Ulem to be beefed up , he said,
referring to the fire. · 'Thi8 is the way
new Ia ws usually come about. "
Mrs. Coats daughter-ln~aw, Carol
Coats, said Mrs. Coats was short on
mooey . " My mother4n-law got rock
bottom money" from the boarders,
she said, and added that "She
wouldn't ask for more money ''
Dr. John Moats, Williams County
coroner , said the victims were
burned severely. but that they
probably were overcome by smoke
durmg the first minutes of the lire.

DRUG STORE HIT
Swish er and Lohse Drug Store
and the Century Bar. Pomeroy .
were reported broken into over the
weekend but no report was availa ble
as to what was taken a nd how entry
gained .

" We've been thrown in the dwnp
like an old pair cl shoes," Marine
Sgt Raymord Puller, 39, said at the
Veterans AdminiBtratloo H011pital in
Washington, where he is recovering
from the 3Sth operation on a leg shal·
tered during his third day in Vietnam in 1971. " Ard to think I
enlisted''
The VA commissioned the recent
Louis Harris and Associates poU
that Indicated only 20 percent of the
American public believes sending
U.S. troops to Vietnam was the right
thing to have done . Nearly twothirds fi those polled beUeved U.S.
involvement in that conflict was a
mistake, whUe the remainder had no
opinion or were uncerta ln.
However, most of th011e surveyed
expressed pooitive feelings about
Vietnam veterans - ard the survey
showed increased sympathy for
their plight. In 1971, til percent of
those polled felt Vietnam veterans
were treated w&lt;rse than other
veterans, compared to ~ perce nt
now .
StilL band&lt;! pla yed, fla gs flew a nd
wreaths were placed on graves
arourd the natioo as they have been
since Armistice Day mari&lt;ed the end
of World War I. The holiday later
was renamed "Veterans Day" to
honor veterans d. aU conftiru in
which American lives were }(Ill.
VA Administrator Max Clelanda Vietnam veteran who loot both legs
and one ann In cunbat - plac ed a
wreath at the TOOJb of the Unknown
Soldier in Wuhlngton.
In Philadelphia , about 200
veterans gathered in the rain at
Waalllngton Square, displaying the
flag ard saluting as the Police and
Fireman's Band played the national

anthem. Politicians and military olficel'll addressed the crowd, expressing relief that oo Americanl
now are on the batUefield.
Veteran Bill Wlbble reminded the
crowd that all is not well, oowevu,
with a sign saying, "Iran can ieep
the oil but can't keep tbe
Amer\cana. II
About 110 Americana bave ' held since Nov. 4 at the U.S. Embusy In Tehran by inlnlan.l dlmandlng the reCum rl tbe ousted llliiL
The crlsl.s In Iran allo ~)»riled •
demonstratloo at the Iranian coosulate ln San Francisco, where li
persCRI - 11108Uy veterana - bul'o
ned an Iranian flag and carried
signs with such slogans as "Deport
all stinking Iraniana."
In Nashville, Tenn., veteraJW and
VA hospital patients jw.ed clOWIII,
Boy Scouts, a higiHichool band and
majorettes In a parade, Korean War
veteran and country singer Jolinn)'
Cash was grand marshal, llllll.lted
by his father, Ray, an 83-year-old
veteran cl World War 1.
In Hawaii, civilians and military
personnel joined forces ln a parade
near Oahu ard a massing of the
colors ceremooy was held at tbe
Natiooal Memorial Cemetery ol tbe
Pacific.

Fire destroys
trailer home
The Floyd Barnhouse traller
home, located on old U. S. 33, wu
destroyed by fire Sunday.
P omeroy Fire Chief ,CharieR
Legar , reported the fire department
was summoned at 8:16p.m . Sunday.
The fire is believe to have started In
a bedroom .
A son of Barnhouse was asleep In
~J~• end of the trailer when the fire
started. His parents were not at
home. The son escaped without
Injury.
Cause of the fire and tbe amount of
the loss is undetermined . Tbe
property was insured , however.

�.

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday , Nov . 12, 1979
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov . 12. 1979

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Misdirected mission
WASHINGTON (NEAl · The nation ha.s a new Department fi
Education with 17,000 employees
and a $14 .2 billion aMual budget.
Needed now are a rational mission
for those people and sensible
priorities for spending that money.
Even if we accept the highly q uestionable asswnption that fed era I intervention in the educational prc&gt;cess is a justifiable govenunental
exercise, there remains the problem
ci structuring and administering
those programs.
The record to date is a sorry one,
the product ci combining the least
appealing features ri political exp&amp;diency, academic pendantry and
governmental bureaucracy to fritter
away billions of dollars on projects
ri dubio\19 value .
Past perfonnance probably is a
reliable guide to future expectations
in this case, because the new depart·
ment will be controlled by the same
career civil servants, members ri
Congress and interest group I~
byists who heavily influenced the
govenunent 's meddling in education
when it came under the purview of
the Department of Health. Education and Welfare.
HEW's well-intentioned but unfocused priorities are best il·
lustrated by the stream of grant an·
nouncements from its Office of
Education. Some examples:
Almost $2.3 mlllion "to improve
education concerning environmental issues," another $750,000 "for
projects that will bring arts
awareness and experience in
creative arts to students" and $3.5
million "lor programs that enable
public schools to serve the needs of
their entire communi tie~. 11
More than $18 million "to enable
public radio and television stations
to purchase . . . equipment," almost
$4.5 million "to support graduate
programs in domestic mining" and
$3.1 million "to teach consumers
how to get the most for their
lilOrley . ,,

Although many of those projects
embrace noble goals, they all shrink
to insignificance when compared
with the country's m!Et profound

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Letters of opinion an• weleomed . They should 1M&gt; less
than 300 words long (or subjt&gt;('t to reduction by the r ditor I
and must he signed with the signee's address . Names may
be withheld upon publio·ation . However, on request.
names will 1M&gt; disclosed . Ll'tters should bt&gt; in good taste.
addressing issues, not personalities .

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education problem - illiteracy .
One recent book, " Adult Illiteracy
in the United States," a report to the
Ford Foundation by Carman St.
Jolm Hunter and David Harman,
estimates that as many as :;o to 60
million adults may be functionally illiterate today .
The appalling illiteracy rate in
this country is three times that of the
Soviet Union. One out ci every five
Americans carmot read well enough
to understand directions for the use
of household articles. Colleges and
universities complain that as many
as one out of I our incoming
freshmen requires remedial help in
reading and writing.
Buried with the Office of Education are two programs purportedly
established to 85(113\ those who lack
the fundamental reading, writing
and computational skills necessary
to perform basic daily tasks.
They are the Right to Read prc&gt;gram, which began operation in 1971
with the armounced goal ci conquering illiteracy within 10 years, and
the Adult Basic Education program,
administered by the Office of Education since 1966.
Both of those efforts have been
misdirected, maladministered and
underfunded - an inescapable conclusion advanced subtly in the Ford
Foundation study and bluntly in an
analysis prepared last autumn by
Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, D-S. D.
"Federal efforts to stem the tide ri
functional incompetence have been
inadequate and ineffective," said
McGovern. "Exorbitant public ex·
penditures for treatment programs
have brought insignificant gains ."
If the Department d. Education is
seeking a better reputation than its
discredited predecessor agencies, it
ought to consider spending less time
and money on creative arts, mining
education and television equipment.
The department's money. talent
and time could instead be more
usefully concentrated on assisting
those who carmot address an
envelope, count their change at the
cash register or read a newspaper
advertisement .

Washington Today
WASHINGTON (API- RobertS .
Strauss leaves his job as President
Carter's special Middle East
mediat&lt;r with the quest ((J" an ArabIsraeli settlement lagging but not
lost.
Strauss is returning to politics as
manager of the Carter campaign
and in a farewell assessment of
Middle East diplomacy, he said he
had not achieved ·· an iota of an
agreement."
Actually. there has been some
headway during Strauss' six months
as a diplomat, "AD Ohio Penpectlve
COLUMBUS. Ohio (API - Ohio
State University is putting up $27 ,!iOO
of a $110,000 gamble to see if the
state can again play a viable role in
Japan's cultured pearl industry
Specifically, the money is being
spent to learn if the mussel industry
m the Musklngum River - from
Coshocton to Marietta - has
rejuvenated itself enough from a
maj(J" kill in 1971-74 to permit
commercial harvesting .
If so, mussel shells from the river
will again be cut into tiny beads,
shipped to Japan, and plsnted in
pearl-producing marine clams.
which fonn cultured pearls around
the beads.
The initial phase of the

r-------------------------1

investigation began tllis year WJder
a $34,000 federal-elate grant. The
State Controlling Board released
$8,500 to the OSU Museum of Zoology
to start the probe . The federal
govenunent put up $25 ,500 of the
$34 ,000 needed to carry the work
through Dec. 31.
The remaining $19,000 in state
funds and $82,500 of federal funds is
expected to come from 1980 a1.d 1981
federal and state budgets. The probe
is to he finished in June , 1981.
Because of inflation and other
economic factors, state officials say
that mussel harvesting, a $63,000
annual business when it died in 1974,
could come back as a 1800,000-a-year
industry .
Allen Cannon , federal aid
coordinator in the Ohio Division of
Wildlife , visualizes Muskingum
fishennen harvestingup to 1,000 tDns
of mussels a year that may be
valued up to 1800 per IDn . That
compares to a 6li0-tons per year
harvest a decade ago when prices
ran about $100 per ton .
Early-day settlers found Ohio
Indians depended heavily on
mussels for food and some are still
eaten though they are nm as tasty as
tlleir first cousins, commonly known
a.s clams. In the late 19th and early

I

Letter applauded
A-2 V&gt;llage Green Apartments
Pomeroy , OH 45769
November e. 1979
Dear Editor,
I applaud L:Jri Faulkner and " two
unhappy students" for their letter&gt;
published (n the November 7
Sentinel.
Striking teachers, these students
believe , have participated in acts for
which students would be severely
punished .
Their
comments
demonstrate thoughtfulness and
maturity, qualities which some
members of Ule MLTA seem to lack .
On September 'n, the fourth day of
tlle strike, two teachers left the
picket line and approached the
Wllldow of the room in which I was
teachng.
When I acknowledged their
presence by waving, one made an
obscene gesture. I wonder what that
teacher would do if one of Ule
students who witnessed his
disgusting behavior directed the
same gesture at him .
On October 15,1 taught 10 children
at Pomeroy Elementary. Twice
during the morning, two MLTA
members left the picket line and
went to the window of the room we
were occupying . When the teachers
began banging on the glass and
shouting, I instructed the children to
ignore them. This harrassment of
tlle children and me continued for
several minutes.
One of these disrupdve teachers
threatened me . saying, "Just you
wait, Melanir 1 You'll get yours! "
That night, all of my tires were
punctured f(J" the second time. Since
then, my tires have been flattened a
tllird time.
THe MLTA is conducting an
illegal strike. How will the striking
teachers be able tD justify punishing
students ((J" violating school rules
when the teachers are blatant
lawbreakers?
W e r t •
Melanie
8th grade special education
Meigs Junior Hight

20th century, Ohio mussel shells
were used to make buttons but glass
and plastic buttons killed that
business ofi. The Industry was
revived in the 1960s when It was
found the shells could be used by the
Japanese cultured pearl industry .
The Ohio Department of Natural
Resources won a landmark case in
1975 after shutting down the mussel
business the previous year . The
state sued Gould, Inc ., of Cleveland,
for $3 .1 million, claiming industrial.
waste from its McCoonellsville plant
killed more than 17 million
freshwater bivalves in the river
during 1971-74.
A Cuya hoga County Common
P leas Court jury awarded the
department $250,000 in the first trial
judgment ever awarded the agency
f&lt;r destruction of wildlife . It still
stands as one of the largest awards
ever for a wildlife kill .
Researchers working in smaU
boats dredged samples of bivalves
from the river fr&lt;rn June untll about
Nov . I . The number of mussels taken
tn different areas indicates the
bivalve population . The samples
were sent eitller to Marietta College
&lt;r to the OSU museum for analysis
a.s to type and size .
Representative shells will be
evaluated f(J" cmunercial quality by
a commercial shell-buyer engaged
a.s a consultant to the project .

U. S. now in corner
Portland . Ohio
November 9, t979

Dear Editor,
Friday Iranian college and
university students, invited guests of
this country, staged protest marches
against our form of government.
This is being done by permission
and at least in one case tlle mayor of
ooe city granted a permit against
the wishes and directions of the
President of the U. S. The mayor
didn 't want to violate the
constitutiona l rights of thes e
Iranians .
What constitutional right do th ey
have? It seems to me you need a
microscope to find them. To let them
vilify our f(J"m of government and
carry on in the street is only
encouragement tD the students back
in Iran .
The c orner we have backed
ourselveinto in Iran is of our own
doing . We clobbered Ule C.I.A. to
death and then blamed it for lack of
intelligence on the conditions in Iran
leading to tlle fall of the Shah.
. We are so weak and mixed up a
nation in the eyes of the world tllat
every pipsqueak is pointing his
finger at us .
We paid money to give away the
Panama Canal because we were
afraid of the Panamanians. We
rationalized tlle Russian troops in
Cuba . We got insulted in Mexico. We
got our ambassador murdered in
Afghanistan . We don't know who our
Secretary of State is Jesse
Jackson, Andrew Young or Mr.
Vance.
Gayle Price

Scripture answers
November 8, 1979
Dear Sir,
I would like In reply to Ellen
Showalter's criticism to my recent
letter in which I discussed our
government's subjugation to fear
and my refusal to pay income taxes .
Ma. Showalter referred to the first
seven verses of Ram . ll . I have
studied those seven verses very
intensely . ! confess; I'm not entirely
comf(J"Iable with them . Verse ,
says, "The powers that be are
&lt;rdained of God ...
If God at one time set our
government in order; it's gone far.
far astray .
Rom. 12 :20 says, " If thine enemy
hunger , feed him ; if he thrists . give
him drink" . But, it is our nation's
policy to threaten our enemies witll
nuclear annihilation, hardl y a
Christian stance . Jesus told us to

ET-rA ~W02!'11!11l&gt;\~-~...e~... ,

1-\Ul.ME

turn the other ctwek; Lo not r~stst
e\t.tl But our courts dun 't encourage
people ID forgive
Instead they gnnd out a ·· justice "
that tries to fit the punishment to tlle
erune. They try ID d&gt;scem what lS
trul y an eye for an eye, or a tooth for
a !Doth .
The 2nd verse of Rom . 13 says,
·· Whosoever therefore resiste th tlle

EXTENDED FORECAST
By the Associated Press
Cold Wednesday and Thursday .
Wanner Friday. A chance of rain
possibly mixed with sno "· east half
We-d nesday. Overnight low In the 20s
tD low 30s early Wednesday and
Thursday 811d In the 30. Friday .
Highs In the tO!i Wednesday and
Thursday and lo the SO. Friday.

power , resisteth the ordinance of

God " . Do we forget that our country
was born in rebellion against tlle
well estab ~shed power -of King
Goerge 0 It gets a little confusing :
either our forefathers were resisting
the ordina nce of God in Uleir
rebellion, or God set aside Rom . 13 :2
in deference to the revolution .
If God blessed on rebellion , who is
ID say He might not bless another ? If
God didn 't bless our revolution, Ulen
are we out of God's will by not
paying taxes to England' I confess.
1 have considerable trouble getting
it all straight tn my mind.
I find relief from my confusion in
the 8th verse of Rom . 13; "Owe no
many anything but ID love one
anOther: for he that loveth another
hath fulfilled the law ". Ifind the lOth
y,erse instructive : "love worketh no
iit to his neighbor ." It is clear to me
that working to support an
organization that threatens nuclear
war and builds prison s is not in
harmony with Rom . 13· 10.
Ms. Showalter claimed that Jesus
said we are tD pay taxes. In the
scriptures s he
referred
to
concerning his teaching on taxes
( Mat . 22:21. Mk . 12 :17, and i.J&lt; .
20 · 251 we see that Christ was
approached by deceitfu I Pharisees
and Herodians who sought to tra p
Him with a trick question : " Is it
lawful ID g&gt;ve tribute ID Caesar, or
not ') "
The P harisees were super pious
m en who would have cried, heresy,
if our Lord had said yes . The
Herodians were legalists who would
have cried teason , if He had said no .
They both marveled at his craft in
answering , "Render Ulerefor unto
Caesar the things that are Caesar 's,
and un to God the things that are
God's ."
What can we leam from tllis
answer ' When Jesus spoke He held
up a coin which bore Caesar's
Image . Clearly the image was
Caesar's. Bul the gold, the real
substance of the coin ; to whom did It
belong' Has any man ever " made ··
a single ounce of gold? Surely . all
the gold there is, was placed tn th e
earth by the Creator. Ought it not be
used f(J" His purposes • What is
\..ad 's purpose ' When Christ was
asked what was the greates t

FREECLINICSET
A free blood pressure clinic will be
held at the Harrisonville Town Hall
from 10 a. m. to r p. m. Tuesday
under the sponsorship of the Harrisonvme Senior Citizens. The public
is invited.

SCOUTING INVffATJON
Youngsters interested in joilll! the
Pomeroy Cub Scouts are asked to
contact George Wright at 992-2139.

MEETS mDRSDAV
The Magnolia Club will meet at
7: ll p.m . Thursday at the home of
Cora Beegle in Racine . Margaret
Rose will conduct the devotional
period and members are to present
readings on a Thanksgivmg theme.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad was
called Sunday at 8: 44 p.m . to Lasley
Street for Earl Snider who was taken
tD Veterans Memorial Hospital.

DEER KILLED
A deer was killed Sunday at 7 : 10
p.m .th e Meigs Co unty She riff' s
Department rep&lt;rted when it ran
into the path of a vehicle dn ven by
Vir~in ia Rees , Rt . 2, Racin e. Th e
accident occurred on SR 124. There
was moderate property damage .
The driver was not injured .

SQUAD RUN
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Route 1. Cheshire, a t
3:22 p.m . Sunday for Marlin fuf e
who was treated on the scene. At
4. 30 p .m . Sunday , the sq uad
transported
Myrtle
Haye s.
Pomeroy . from Veterans Memorial
Hospita l to the Holzer Me&lt;:hcal
Center .

nn: DAIL \' Sf:NTINt:l .
1USPS IU.- 1

DEVO'I'm TO mE
D&lt;T1':IlF..'IT or

C(Xl1Jilandment, He said we are to

love God completely and love our
neighbor as ourself .
Does it fulfill God 's purpose when
we support our government with iL•
vast arsenals of nuclear tipped
missiles aimed at our enemies ? Is &gt;t
God 's purpose that we build Jails and
gas chambers'
"Let every man be full y
persuaded in his own mind ."
Emy Dav1es .
Langsv lli e

ME.Ifb.HASON AILEA
ROBERT HOUUat
Clly Edt I«

s...,.,

Pab&amp;bed diDy nl"'qJC
by 11w OIUo
Val~ PubUab.tll( Cumpuy· MaiUmed.l.r. , t . .,
I ll Court SL . Pom~IJ)'. Ohio~. ~
Oftll:"e PIM!ot fit. !Ill. F..dtwtal PUM

m-zm.

~

paid.,

U!U
Subtcrtpdou rattc : ()eUvft"ftt .,- eanter
IVIII.Iab&amp;e • ('d&amp;l pet Wttl. By Mftor
Rouk wbrtf' a~rT"M-r te1"'V'k.-f IIO iavaD.~ . 0 .
..tier~

moa.lb. a .•

.

Tbr Dally Stalinfol, b y maJI g OIUo aDd Wftlt
VlrCnia, ow year PJ.• : Sb m•U. 117.11 ;
t.llrH mo~~Uui llUf. E~t AS .• ; .&amp;.1
!DOll~

OBSERVING 91&gt;1
Jim Fugate, Pomeroy, w&gt;ll be 91
on Nov . 16, not 95 as was reported .

w.

poetaa~
Pomeny , Oldo .
NatkGal lldnrUIUac reprt:Mta&amp;aUn, ........_
Auod.1W.:. , 1111 F.urUd An., CWnlud, OIUo

S:zt.OI; lhrH moodY Ill .• .

Tbr A..od1kd P'reN b ndulvtiJ n~lldf.d
t.o tbr a.r lor pllblkt.dml of alliM'WI dl&amp;J-~Ms
l"rtdllf'd to tbf IWWIJIIIP'f'' ud alao lk !oral
~ publlahed llenl,ll.

At Ohio Power~ we
people who show.~u

,h~~"~~! ~~'~"'~~ctriCity.
And we mea n exr*1-t.s .lf ~ou

kno" three IHi~ s to san· 0 11 hot "HtPL th n .-au silo" ""I 1'11'11111011'.
They ca n give you plen l ~ of idPas 011 ho~&gt; to uso" ~- '" " ' rpfr ·i~tP rH tur II ton· dficiP11!h . h u~&gt; to
sa ve electricity whe 11 roo k i Ill( a 11d "a~ s ~ ou .-an savP r iP&lt; · tri f' it~· 11iw11 "ash illl[. dryi "ll· I i ~t h t i111[. Ill'a t i"ll
a nd rooling. ThP~-'11 Pvr n sho" ~ou IHlll to bu~ u ppliam't"s th u t &lt;n~f 1&lt;''-' to II" '·

Some of thPir

tips ~ou a lr1•ad~

NFL kickers enjoy another good Sunday
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Alex Karras wouldn't have appreciated the goings-on in the
National Football League Sunday .
Karras was the mo.-..trous Detroit
defensive tackle who frowned on
place kickers trotting on the field at
the last moment with clean, fresh
uniforms to decide the outcome of
games.
But those kickers turned around
three
NFL games Sunday .
Washington's Mark M!Eeley and
Mike Woods of San Diego booted
last-minute field goals to secure vic-tories, the Redskin'! edging St. Louis
36-28 and the Chargers topping Cirr
cinnati 26-24 . But Toni Unbar!
missed two us ually routine extra
points and that was the d:fference in
the New York Jets' 14-12loss to Buf·
falo.
In Sunday 's other games, it was
Houston 31, l.)ak!Bnd 14 ; Seattle 29,

Cleveland 21; Miami 19, Baltimore
0; Tampa Bay 16, Detroit 14; Pittsburgh ll, Kansas City 3; Chicago
V, Los Angeles 23 ; New Orleans 31,
San Francisco 20; Green Bay 19,
Mirmesota 7, New York Giants 24,
Atlsnta 3; and Denver 45, New
England 10.
Philadelphia p!Bys at Dallss
tonight.
Redsklno 30, Canlhall %8
SL Louis erased a Zl-7 deficit with
three fourth-quarter TDs, oot
Moseley's 3~yard field goal with~
seconds to play salvaged the victory
for Washington.
The winning three-pointer came
despite a bad snap from center
which was salvaged by holder Joe
Theismarm.
Cbargen %11, Bengali Zt
San Diego hung oo to its share ci
the American Conference West lead

Pro standings
Nationa l Football League
At A Glance
By The A ssoci ated Press

American Confere nc e
East
W. L. Pel . PF
New EnQiand
7 4 0 .b3b 271
Miami
7
0 b:ll&gt; 198
N . Y . Je ts
5 6 0 .455 233
Butt ale
5 6 0 4.15 21•

'

Baltimore

7 0 .36-1
' Central

Pittsburgh

9

Houston
Clevelan d
Cinc i nnati

8
7

1

2
]

'

9

.818
727
0 636
0 181
0

0

171

PA

200
1•2
263
19 7

294 160
243 229
259 253
235 274

J
3

8
8

Oakland
Seal!le

6

5

5

6

110
191

o
0

7'l7
727

0

4.15 232 257

o 54.1 245 225

Kan . City
.t
7 o 36.4 160
National Conference
Ecnt
Dallas
8 2 0 .800 219
Wash ington 7 4 0 .636 208
Phila .
6 ' 0 600 18•
N . Y . Giants I 6 0 .455 186
Sf Lou is
3 8 0 .273 218
Centra I
Tampa Bay ag 3 0 727 110
Chicago
6 5 0 5• 5 112
Gre-e n Bay
4 7 0
364 168
Minneso ta
"' 7 0 36-o 168
De t ro it
1 10 0 09 1 162
West
New Orlea ns 6 5 0 S-45 245
Los Angeles 5 6 0
45 5 202
Atlanta
7 0
36.4 208
S.!tn F=r an
10 0 .091 206
Sunday 's Games
M iami 19 , Bal t imore 0
Buffal o 14, New York Je t s 10
Pittsburg h 30, Kansas C1ty 3
Houston 31. Oakland l7
Wash ington 30. S t . Louis 28
Sa n Diego 26 , Ci nc innati 14
Ta mpa Bar 16, Detroil1 4
Seatt le 29 , C leveland H
Chicago 27 , Los Ange les 23
Greoen Ba y 19, M in nesota 7
New Orleans 31 , S11n F=ranc isco
Nf:"w York Gia n ts 14, AtlanTa 3
Denver 45 , New England 10
Mond.1y ' s Gam e
Philadel phia ar Da llas
National
BasketN II Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
All Tim es EST
Eastern Conference
Atlantic DiviSIOn
W . l. Pet .
12 ) 800
Philade lp,., ia
10 ) .769
Boston
7 7 .500
New York
7 .3...
Washingt on
New Jers.e y
.
' 10 286
CentrA-l Divi sion
II s .688
AtlanTa
8 7 533
San Anton iO
7 9 438
India na
5 7 .. 7
Hou~to n
10 .375
Cleve la nd
5 9 357
De t roit
We-s tern Con f er~nc~
Midwe~t Divisi on
12 3 .800
Mi lwaukee
5 II .3I3
Denver
S II .31)
Ka n. City
• 12 .250
Chicago
2 12 . 143
UTah
Pacific Division
Porlland
IJ 4 .765
LOS Angel~
11 4 733
Phoeni &gt;c
10 6 625
Se attl ~
9 6
600
Golde n State
J 6
S38

•

•

San Diego

197
159

6 II

.353

Saturday 's Games
Atla nt a 109. Wdshington 105
San Antonio 123, New York 119
Philade lphia 96 , Boston94
Portland 94, Chicago 90
M i lwauk ee 133, San D iego 104
H ouston 11 2, DetroiT 104

18 2

160
191
187
198
236
17•

196
251
251
26 1
2'15
212
250
301

games back of Pittsburgh and one
behind Houston .
DolpbiiiS 19, Collri 0
Miami moved into a first place tie
with New England m the AFC East,
bottling up Baltimore while Bob
Griese tossed TD passes of 18 and 14
yard&lt;! to Nat Moore.
The Dolphins sacked Colt quarterback Greg Landry seven times
with Vern Den Herder recording
four of the sacks. " We've always
been steady," Herder said. "T oday,
we were spectacular.··
Brone!E ~.Patriots 10
Denver rolled to a ~-7 halftime
lead and just coasted against New
England. The victory kept the Broncos tied with San Diego for first
place in the AFC West and dropped
New England mto a first-piBce tie
with Miami in the AFC East.
Craig Morton passed for two TDs
and Denver turned two Patriots
fumbles and a blocked punt mto
three other scores .

" We didn't play well. but we won,"
said Bu cs Coach John McKay.
Oilers 31, Raiden 14
Earl Campbell became the first
runner in AFC history to rush for
more than 1,000 yards in each of his
first two season. The Houston star
canied 32 times for lUI yards,
pushing his season 's totais to 213 for
1,039.
Dan Pastorini combined on TD
passes fi 56 and 35 yards with Ken
Burrough to hold second-place
behind Pittsburgh In the AFC Cen·
traL
Steelen 30, Cblefa 3
Terry Bradshaw threw three ID
passes and Malt Bahr kicked three
field goals as Pittsburgh won it.
fourth straight game.
"I just didn 't have a good day,"
Bradshaw said. " ... I threw more
ducks and bad passes today than I
have all year."
Seabawirr Zll, BI'OWIIII Z4
Seattle, limited to minus seven
yards in total offense a week ago,
erased that memory with a 427-yard
game against Cleveland as Sherman
Smith rnshed for three TDs.
The loss dropped Cleveland into
third place in the AFC CentraL two

TO THE VOTERS OF OLIVE TOWNSHIP

-THANKS~
FOR YOUR SUPPORT

~

FRANCIS ANDREW

I
I

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

:

OPTOMETRIST

1

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
ON THURS . ) - EAST COURT ST., POMEROY.

l

I

( Pd . Pol . Adv .)

·---------------~---------------·

Sea ttle 88. Utah 87

Salntrr 31, 49en 28
New Orleans took over first place
m the NFC Wes~ rolling past San
Francisco as Chuck Muncie nrshed
for 118 yards and three touchdowns.
Archie Manning hit 15 ci 21 passes
for 153 yards for the Saints.
Bean %7, Ramrr %3
Virgil Livers intercepted rookie
Jell Rutledge's pass, setting up
Walter Payton's winning touchdown, a 2-yard nm with I: 12 left, as
Chicago overhauled Los Angeles,
which led liHlearly
Pack en 19, Vlk.lngs 7
Terdell Middleton rushed for 135
yards a nd David Whitehurst passed
for a pair of 'Ills in Green Bay's victory over Minnesota . II was the
Vikings· first loss to the Packers since 1974.
Giants Zt, Fak0111 3
Terry Jackson returned a blocked
pW1t47 yards forthe game 'sfirstiD
and New York won its filth game in
the IBst sill weeks, beating Atlanta.

,------------------------------~

I

22 b

Wes f

Sa n Dieg o
Denver

by overcoming an early IW deficit
to overhaul the Bengals. Woods
kicked field goals of 22 , 42, 34 and 32
yards, the last one with 19 seconds
left, for the Chargers' victory .
The four field goals was a San
Diego club record and Woods now
ha.s a string of six straight since his
release by St. Louis.
Bllll 14, Jelll%
Linhart, cut earlier by Baltimore
after missing some short field goal
tries, cast the Jets dearly against
Buffalo. Both teams scored two TDs,
but the Bills' got the game's only extra points from Nic:. Mike-Mayer.
"II finally comes down to Buffalo's kicker made Ilia two and our
kicker didn't," said Jets Coach Walt
Michaels.
Bucal8, Uo1111 14
Tampa Bay stayed two games in
front of Chicago in the NFC Central,
rallying in the final 3t minutes to
erase a I~ deficit.
First Neil O'Donoghue kicked Ilia
third field goal ri the game, a 28yanler, and then Doug Williams
threw a 23-yard m pass to Larry
Mucker following Dana Nafzinger's
recovered fwnble for the deciding
points.

I ndiana 10_., Golden Stat~ 101
Sunday's Gtlmes
Portland 112, Kansas City 109
Phoenix 116, Denver91

La. Angeles 1&lt;0, Cleveland 12b
Monday's Game
India na at Utah, 2 :JOp.m .
Tueday's Games
Wa shi ngton at New York , 7 :35

pm .

Atlanta at New J~rswy , 8: OS p.m .
Hovston at Chicago, 8:35p. m .
Philadelphia at Kansas City , 8 :35
P.m .

Golden StaTe at San Antonio, 8 :35
p .m .
Cleveland at Denver , 9 : 35p .m .
Los Angeles at San D ieg o, 10 : 35

pm

Milwaukee at Portland, 11 p. m .
N.ationat Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

Campbell Conlerence
Patrick Division

W. L. T. Pis . GF GA
12 I I 25 t.S -15
7 5 3 17 59 ~~

Ph ila
At la nta
NY Rangers
NY Islanders
20

7

5

Washington
A 9 2 10
Smythe Division
Vancouver
5 5 .S 15
Chicago
4 6 s lJ

A1

64

SO
37

4

~I

.u
51

Winn i peg

5 7 3 13
4 8 J 11

ll

58

Edmonlon

2 9 •

St . Louis

• 111

6
7 111

Why drive all over town? Do your g&gt;ll s hopping the easy way through the lull- color
Superamerica House g&gt;ll catalog . You"ll save t&gt; m e and
gas. and everylh&gt;ng &gt;S fully g ua ranteed

GIVE QUALITY SUPERAMERICA HOUSE
SURPRISES THIS YEAR

8 •9 69

3 9 2 8 42 53
Wales Conference
Adams Division
9 2 3 21 .s.o 35
Boslon
Minnesota
8 3 3 19 67 51
8 5 3 19 53 .oJ
Buffalo
Toronto
7 7 I IS 58 .S.O
5 7 2 12 « -15
QuebeC
Norris Conference
~entreat
B 4 3 19 57 ~
LOS Ang .
7 6 3 17 71 73
Harllord
~ 5 S IJ
.oJ «
Pilsburgh
5 5 3 13 ,jl&gt; 48
De troit
A 7 2 10 38 .n
Colorado

GB

I 15 6) 60
3 13 ~1 ~7

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t.

You ·fl find cheeses, nuts , candy. fru ils. serv1ng trays. special glassware and dinnerware . Plu s maple syrup from
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SUPERAMEAICAOO
Much I1WIY tluln a gas srorc!

Saturday's Games

2 1'1
4
4

5

5

New York. Rangers s, Quebec 4
va ncouver 3, Detroit 1
Buffa tos, washington 3
Philadelphia 5, New York ls lan
ders 2
St L ouis 5, Montre~l J

Ba.ton6, Pli!Sburgh 1
Toronto e. W innipeg~

7 I '1
7 111

8 1h
9 1f~

2 1' 1
3
4

7

Minnesota 6, Los Angeles 6 , tie

Sunday's Games

Toronto6, EdmontonJ
Phil,edelphia 5, vancouver 4

ea. ton t.. Allanla 3
Color adoS, Bvlfalo3
Pit1Sburgn 4, New York Rangers I
HarHord 5, ChicaooS, tie
Quebec~ .

St . LOUiS I

Monday ' s Games
games
scheduled
No
Tuesday ' s G•mes
Edmonton at washington
vancouver at Atlanta
New York Rangers at New York
I slanders
Montreal at St . Louis
Colorado at LM Angeles

k""''·'"""' l&lt;&gt;tt 'll k id , ~ '"" "· If lor nul tl tillhil tll a l•11&lt;l. a11d

sornf' may even surpriSI-' ~o1r.
Our Cuslollll'l' ~ .. ~ ., - i&lt;&gt;•s I""P'" ''illl•·l"'l'l'~ to Hll'\\l'r ' "'" . qu,.sliolt,_ . llu·~ :1!"1 l1a11· " "'~~'
.\ .-1.1.1-:. h•tklo•L' that ,.; lu&gt;11 \IJII """ ~&lt;Il l '"" " """ &lt;'111'1 "/l\ a1ull., ·or111' part of"'" ·' ·,, .,. lll ll'f"l&lt;"ll'
JtlfllllfJ{e fiii'I"!J_I' J'mgT:Illl. ~l&lt;&gt;jl f11 f111 \lll ll . l"lljllf 'S .llll'l .ll' a h solllt&gt; •fl fr" ' ·
,,.
At Ohio

1\"" 'r. "''

''""I '"" lo 1[1'! tlw II los t olli of ~our •·l"·ll ·i.- "'''"' ir ·•·.

M.E.A. 79

~tr
built can send
~,Jr.

--·-

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U.S. ARMY
RECRUITING

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r,, .. , ,~·i&gt; lotHI Iitl tr l'"rl · ln• 111l lr .l ·• l n ll r·r ~ l•·r l'"rl-m•.orll&gt; ll rohArd t,dolwr l '• · rt~rll, u lh
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\\or ·king tow•tllf'r is tlw niii:V wH y.
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•

�r

4-TheDallySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov. I~ 111'/9

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0. Monday , Nov . 12. 1979

Legion Auxiliary studies Dominican Republic

Eagles bomb Southern, 61-0
By Greg Bailey

WIGAL ON THE GO + Eastern's
Greg Wigal ( 23 ) enjoyed a fine night
Saturday again st the Sout hern

Tornadoes . Wigal threw three
touchdown passes and had 19 solo
tackles mleading the Eagles to a 61 0 romp . With the win . Eastern

1979 ALL ·SEOAL FOOTBALL TEAM
PLAYER - SC HOOL

HT . WT .

6 3 185 Sr

Fred Ross, Athens
A lan Me ye r , A tnens
Dan Stagg s. GallipoliS
ROO Goble . Gallipol iS
Greg Ha rr1ngton . Galllooi1S
Tim Hodges, tren t on
Joe Fletche r . 1ron ton
Gabr iel Lewis , 1ren ton
Terry R oyaL I ro n ton

6 3

Joe H acker , 1ron ton
Adam A ins w orf h, Iron ton
Darw in Conwell, tre nton
Br ian L andru m . Jackson
Mar~ Je n1&lt;.1ns, Jackson
Dav e Fouty , Ja ck son
Mark Hamm ond . J ackson
Chuck Reis i nger , Jac k son
Dave Sc hm i tter . Logan
Mark Ruggles , Logan
Kelly Adam s. Logan
M ark Rhoads, Wav erly
Rick Conley . Waverly
Je rry Patton, Wellston
Jeff M ontgome ry , W e ll s t o n
M ike Massie , We llston

YR .

19 7

Sr

6 3 240
6 1 210
5 B 160
62 190
6 2 200
5 10 170
58 155
6 3 215
511175

Sr
Sr
Sr
Sr .
Sr
Sr
Jr
Sr
Sr

59

175

Jr

5 10 166

Sr

5 11 185 Sr .
60 170 Jr .
5 10 JllO Jr .
60 180 Sr
6 4

195

Sr .

6 2 175 Sr .
156

Jr .

5 8 1SO
H
!SO
5 10 170
5 11 lSS
63 190

Sr .

5 ·8

SPECIAL MENT!ON

Jr .

Sr .
Sr.
Sr.

59 155 Sr .

Duane Ar r owood , Wav er ly

HONORABLE MENT!ON

AT HEN S - Ron K v i e and (li nt W 1tham
GALLI PO LIS - M ike Hemphil l and M ike Rowan
1RON TON - Brt .l l W ilcoxon and Joh n Mor 1t1
JACK SO N - M ark Fen 1ck. and Dobie Wyant
LOGAN
Roger Barber and Tim Myers
WAVERLY
Steve W il l ia m s and Brian Ec hard
WEL LS TON
Ti m Roberts and Mike De Stephen

MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
Bn an Landru m

Ja ckson

COACH OF THE YEAR
Terry Adsit

Jack so n

Ironton to battle
Hamilton Badin in
Class AA playoffs
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1 API - Cin cinnati Moeller earned a chance
today to capture its fourth state
playoff title in the last five years
when the Otuo Hi gh School Athletic
Association

announced

illi

1979

semifinahsts
The Crusaders. mow1ng down 10
straight opponents tlus season, will
go against Toledo Whitmer, !I-HI, lil
one of the Class AAA serrufinals
Saturday rught In Dayton 's Welcome
Stadium.
Dove r , with 10 consecuti ve triumphs this fall, and Panna Padua
Franciscan. 9-HJ, square off in the
other big school semifinal Saturday
night in the Rubber Bowl In Akron
In the Class AA semifinals Friday
night, Ironton, 11-0-1 , takes on 1978
runnerup Hamilton Badin, !f-1~ . at
Groveport while Fostoria , !14-1. goes
against Akron St. Vince nt,~!. Ma ry.
11-1-1, at a si te to be determined.
In the Class A semifinals Fnday
night, top-ranked Mogadore, 10-1Hl,
playS Crooksville, 11-2-&lt;1, at Dov er

and Tiffin ca lve rt , 11-1-1 , faces
Covington, !14-1, at Lima Shawnee.
New champions are assured in all
divisions since 1978 winners Cincinnati Pnnceton, Brookfield and
Newark catholic failed to qualify as
regional leaders in the final OHSAA
ratin~ s released todav.
Sta1e Semifinal Pairings
Parma Padua Fran c is&lt;an 9 1 0 vs .
Mass i llon 10·0 0
Saturday, 7 : 30
p.m ., aT A kr on ' s Rubber Bow 1
Toledo Wh1fme r 9 1 0 vs (i n
ci nnat1 M oel ler 10 0 0 Saturday ,
7 30 p m . at Dayton 's Wel com e
Stad 1um
Cha mp ionship, Saturday , N ov 24,
1 30 p .m, Rubber BCJINI.

CLASS AA

Hamilton Bade n 9 1 vs Ir onton 8
10 Fr iday,7 30pm atGrovepon .
Fos toria 9 0 1 vs . Akron St Vin
c ent St . Mar y 8 1 I, Friday , 7 · 30
p m ., a t si te to be determined
Cham pi onship, Fr i day , N ov . 23 , 4
p m . Rubber Bowl

CLASS A
Mogadore 10 0 ·0 vs . Crooksville 9

01

Fr1day , 7 30 pm , at
Lima
Sha wnee
Champ1onsh ip , Fr iday, N ov n ,
11 30 p.m ., Rubber Bowl

Sports briefs.
TENNIS

STOCKHOLM, Sweden I AP 1 ·John McEnroe defeated Wojtek
Fibak of Poland &amp;-4 , 7~ and reached
the finals of the $210,000 Stockholm
Open.

McEnroe will meet Gene Ma yer,
who advanced after Brian Gottlr1ed
retired because of a bad back.
Mayer had won the first set &amp;-1 .
HONG KONG ( AP 1 - Top-seeded
Jimmy Connors beat Pat DuPre 7~.
(h'l, &amp;-1 and woo the $75,000 Hong
Kong Tennis Classic.
DuPre teamed with fell ow
American Bob Lutz to beat Steve
Denton and Mark Turpin (h'l, 6-1 in
the doubles final.
STUTTGART. West Gennany
(AP ) - Tra cy A!L'ltin won the
Stu~•rt women's
tennis tournament for the second straight year,
whipping two-time Wimbledon

Ironton dominates
All-SEOAL squad
Champion Iron ton and runner-up
Jackson dominated the 1979 edition
of the All.SEOAL football team by
placing a total 12 players on the
team selected Sumday in Jackson .
Meeting at Jolly Lanes members
of the SEO Sportswriters and Broadcasters
and
Broad cast e rs
Association, aided by the head
coaches, named Brian Landrum of
Jackson as Most Valuable Player
and his mentor, Coach Terry Adsit,
as coach of the year .
Landrum won MVP honors over
Ironton's Tim Hodges in a very close
vote while Adsit was p1cked over
perennial winner, Coach Bob Lutz,
and Logan's rookie coach, Dave
Snipes.
A 25-man team was chosen due to
15 backs and 10 Linemen , but four of
the offensive backs also performed
as defensive linemen during the sixgame league season .
Six players were repeaters fr om
the 1978 team and include Greg
Harrington of Gallipolis, Jerry Patton of Wellston, Brian Landrum of
Jackson, and three from the title
winning Tigers, Joe Fletcher.
Gabriel Lewis, and Terry Royal.
Only eight ol the 2!i were named on
all 14 ballots cast and include Fred
Ross. Athens; Dan Sta ggs,
Gallipolis ; Tim Hodges, Joe Fletcher, and Gabriel Lewis, Ironton;
Brian Landrum. Jackson; and Jerry
Patton and Jeff Montgomeroy rl
Wellston .
The team is made up of 19 seniors
and six juniors, with many of the
seniors already beseiged by offers
£rom severa l universities.
It was noted by one veteran scribe
that this year's seruors represent the
finest potential for collegiate
rna terial to come out of the league in
its 55 year history .
The team of2!i was selected from a
group of 30 players that were recommended by the head coaches ln a ttendance .
Head coacheo aiding in the selections included Bill Trent, Ga llipolis ;
final-round 72 to win the Au,:;tralian
PG AGolf Championship.
Ginn flnished with a 72-hole total
of 221-4, three strokes better than Bob
Shearer of AIL'ltralia and Bob
Charles of New Zealand.

• •

champion Martina Navratilova 6-2,
6-0 .
In the doubles final , Billie Jean
King and Navratilova teamed to
beat Wendy Turnbull and Betty
Stove &amp;-3, (h'l .
GQLF
ATilENS, Greece ( AP) - Hale Irwin and John Mahaffey helped the
United States win the team and individual trophies for the second consecutive year at the 27th World Cup
Golf Championship.
Irwin shot a 69 for a final total of
285 and won the individual title by
two strokes over Scotland's Sandy
Lyle and West Gennany's Bernard
Langer. Mahaffey scored a par-72
and finished at 290.
The U.S. won the team title by five
strokes over Scotland, 5~.
MELBOURNE
( AP )
Australia 's Stewart Ginn fired a

-THANKS

fin ished in third place in the SV AC
standings behind Hannan Trace and
Kyger Creek.

Mark Norton and Brian Bissell
each scored four touchdowns Saturday night at Racine as the visiting
Eastern Eagles romped Southern,
61-0, in their annual grid victory .
Quarterbeck Greg Wigal threw
three touchdown passes. While on
defense he had 19 solo tackle. to do
his part in allowing Eastern to finish
its seasooat a respectable 7-3.
The Tornadoes held the Eagles of
Coach Joe Mitchem to si.l points in
the first period on a three-yard run
by Bissell.
But then the high-flying Eagles
rmped Ior 28 points in the second
canto for an insunnountable 34-G
halftime lead.
In that S.Jeond period, Norton
scored three of the touchdoWII8, on a
one-yant run. and pas.es &lt;i II and
lour yards. Bissell tallied the other
ID on a 55-yant punt return.
In the third return, Norton broke
loose on a &gt;4-yanl jaunt, and Bissell
ran over from four yards out.
Rounding out the night's scoring in

Terry Adsit, Jackson; Dave Snipe5,
Logan; Rocky Natoli, Waverly; and
Paul Blankenship of Wellston .
Coach John Murray of Athens was
unable to attend due to an illness in
his family, Coach Bob Lutz of Ironton was away getting scouting reports on Hamilton Badi.n, the team his
Tigers must face Friday night in the
first round of the state football
playoffs, and Coach Charlie Chancey of Meigs did not attend because
of the strike at Meigs which wiped
out the SEOAL season for his team .
Terry Adsit won coach of the year
honors lor a tremendous effort in
bringing Jackson from a dismal 1-9
season in 1978 to a scrappy team that
lost only to powerful Wheelersburg
111-7 and in Friday's championship
game to Ironton by a 7.{1 score.
The 33-year old mentor came to
Jackson in 1978 from Germantown
high school, near Daytoo, where he
had previously earned coach of the
yea r honors.
Most Valuable Player Brian Landrum was a standout two-way
player for Jackson as he carried the
ball 194 times for 9'13 yards, scored
10 touchdoWII8, was the second
leading receiver on the team, returned kickoffs, and played linebacker
on defense.
One special mention selection was
added to the team and involved
Waverly's Duane Arrowood, a 155
pound senior, who suffered a broken
hand in the 20-6 victory over Athens .
He was unable to play any more
football but would probably have
been a strong cardidate for the allleague team had he not been injured.

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the last period was Bissell on a 6().
yant pass from Wigal and John
Beaver on a one-yard gallop.
Placekicker Mike Hauber booted
five extra points on the evening.
W~gal completed seven of 13
aerials and threw no interceptions.
Ohio High School

FooTball
By The Associated Press

Saturday 's Results
Akron St . V incent 13, Lakewood

ST. Edward 12
Cle ve l and Hts . 14, Parma 0
Day . Chaminade -Julienne

u ,

Alter 11

19

Lora in Southview 28, Lorain Ca fh .
Massill on 2 ... Canton Mel&lt; i nley o
Niles
McKinley
9,
Warren

Howland .6
Oreoon Stritch 1.(, Ta l. St. John 's 6
Poland 13, Ca nfield 7
Reedsv i lle Eastern 61. Racine
Southern 0

Sa lem 21 , WesT Branch 0

S

Shaker Hts . 15, Parma Normand y
7
Steubenville 7, Steubenville Cath .

Tol Bowsher 9, Tol. ROQers 7

Tol. Scoll 24, Tol. Dev ilbiss 8
Tuscarawas Cath. 12, Tuscarawas
Valley 7
Univ. Sc h ool 16, Western Res .
Acad . o

Wa rre n W. Reserve 16, Warren

Harding 7
Young Mooney 37 , Young Chaney

SOCCER

North Americcm
Soccer Leiigue

CHICAGO ST ING - Named Mik e
Grbic an assistant coac h.

COLLEGE
CHAPMAN COLLEGE -

An ·

nounced r esi g nation of Re)( Ressl er ,
track and fi el d coach .

A study of the Domuucan Republic
to&lt;* place at the recent meeting rl
the Junior American Legion Autillary of Drew Weblter Post 39,
Pomeroy, held at the home of Mn.
Harry Davis, advisor.
It W8ll noted that Christopher Columbus Is commemorated ln Santo
Domingo , where Columbus
established Isabelle, the second

Bisse II caught four of those passes
for rn yards and Nortoo caught two
for ID's. Bissell was the big groundgainer for the Eaglell, picking up 101
yants in 20 carries.
The Eagles had a belanced ground
attack as Norton ran seven times
and got a big 97 yar&lt;b, Denn!JI Durst
carried eight times for 79 yards in
four trieo. Bissell also rounded out
his fine night with 91 yards on three
punt returns. On defense, Greg
Hayman had 12 solo tacklell.
Eastern chalked up 348 yards on
the ground and 106 in the air for a
whopping 454 total yants. Southern
was held to 57 yards on the ground
and 32 via the aerial route. Darmy
Talbott WBS the leading rusher for
Southern with 36 total yards.
Southern lost all three of its fwnbles while Eastern recovered its
lone miscue .
4

19

Yds. Rush
Yds. Pass.
ToTa l Yds.
Passes All

57

J.4t!

)2
89

106
45&lt;1

3
1

7
o

3·3

1·0

9

Fumbles -lost

Pen. Yds .

Social Calendar

MONDAY
SYRACUSE PrO M&lt;nlay 7:30
p.m. at school. Craftll display by
Mn. Shirley Huston.
TWIN CITY SHRINE Club Mar.
day. All members urged to attend .
PORTLAND Pl'O Mooday 7:30
p.m. Plans for ChriBtmas bazaar
and soup supper wiU be made. Gueot
speaker at parent awareness se811ion
will be Sheriff James Prolfitt. Pr&lt;ifiU will spealt oo ~ and your
children. Public invited.
GRANGE OOUNTY OFFICERS
cooference, 7:30p.m. Monday at the
Rock Springs Grange hall.

E

First downs

Passes Comp
Had 1nter

r---

13

4-&gt;15 12·100

ter : N orton, 1 yd . ru n , Bi~ll from
W igal extras . Bis!.ell, S5 yd . punt
return , Mike Hauber k ic k . Norton,
11 yd . pass from W igal , kick failed .
Norton , A yd . pass from Wigal.

Hauber kick . Third quarter : Norton ,
5.4 yd . run, Hauber k ic k . Bissel L "'
yd . run , Hauber kick . Fourth quar ·
ter : B isse ll , 60 yd . pass from Wigal,
Hauber ki c k . Beaver , 1 yd . ru n, kick
fa i led
E
6 28 14 13- ·61

0 0 0 o.. 0

INGELS APPLIANCE

-SALENO FREE TURKEY, NO FREE HAM
JUST THE BEST PRICE IN TOWN

rs-o·--cOuPONI---$501
I

1

SAVE '50

I
I

I

00

$50

Sr ..

FOR YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT IN THE
NOV. 6 ELECTION FOR

You are hereby notified
that you have ~n named
a defendant In a . lega l ac ·
tion entitled Carolyn Sue
Reynolds, Plaintiff. ~Js .

Ronald Frankl in Reynolds,
Sr., Oelendonl. This action
has been anigned Case No.
17l35 and is pending In lhe
courT of common Pleas of

$50 II

---------------•
n$

Melg! County ,

Ohio45769
The oblecl

CHARLES (Chuck) BARTELS
( Pd . Pol . AdV . )

I w . e

12 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR

propeny rlghls of The par

ties, and the ~estocatioo of
plaintiff's matden name .
You 111re required to an ·
swer the complaint within
211 days after ,the !_ast
publi ca tion of th1s not1 ce,

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

which will be published on -

ce each week for six sue ·
cess ive weeks. The last
publi cat ion w i ll be made on

December 17 . 1979. and The

28 days for answer will
commence on that date .
tn elise at your failure to
answer
or
otherw i se

respond as requ ired by .'he

Co mpany

1-614-992-2156

•

Pomeroy,

of lhe com
plaint Is fhe obtair. r.g of a
d i vorce and the ter ·
mlnatlon of a marr i age
con tract between the par ·
tie~. t~ settlement of the

OhiO Rules
of
c.'" II
Procedure ,
t he
f1na l
hearing on this matter wil l
be held after the expiration

110.-rte Qlll(t

.._.., ,flV' O""' W
I ••1•,

Between 8:30 a.m.
and 5:00 p.m.

TRUSTEE OF SALISBURY TWP.

Del-on!.

dress Is unknown :

o111 days otter The lost day
of publication of This noti ce
or as soon thereafter as ca n
be scheduled by lhe CourT.
Larry Spencer
Clerk of court
of Meigs county.
Oh iO
(111 11, 19, 25 (12) 3. 10. 17.
6tc

ATTENTION

-

'1

Cou No. 17JJ5
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO : Ronald Fr•nklin
Reynolds, Sr., whose ad -

1

G;~d~~ov~-19th, 1979

t

Ron1td Fr1n1111in Reynolds,

II

ON ANY APPLIANCE IN STOCK
MUST BRING COUPON
Good at Ingels Fumrture

•

'

p aintltt .

992 -6685 ·

CALL THE
DAILY SENTINEL
COLLECT

C l&lt;j/9FI J l'l{n&lt;j OllJS l!l k iH COCO

-VS ·

hrm Life and
AcCHient Auurance

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
CLIFTON, W. Va.

Pd . Pol . Adv .

Carolln Sue Reynolds ,

I

~ la!e

:::&gt; .

Laity Sunday was celebrated Sunday at the church with the theme being "God's People called to
Witness. " Bible study night has been
changed from Monday to Tuesday
nights at 7:30p.m.
On Nov. 4, conununion was
c-elebrated and the Rev. Richanl
Thomas used as his sennon topic,
·'The Lon! of Harvest. ••

THANK YOU
FOR THE SUPPORT GIVEN ME
IN THE RECENT ELECTION
KEITH RIGGS

MEIG -- ' TIRED TEACHERS
ASSOC.L" . _.,, Meigs lm, Saturday noon luncheon. Mn. Patrick
Lochary to give a book review.
Reaervation!l to be made by Thlll'&amp;day at 992-6123 or 992-6345.
!NTHE
COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS,
MEIGS COUNTY.
OHIO

MIKE SWIGEP

. .......... (!

A Thanksgiving dinner will be held
at 6 p.m. Tuesday night at the St.
Paul
United
Me thodist
Church in Tuppers Plains.
Wednesday at the church the St.
Paul United Methodist Women will
meet at 1:30 p.m and on Nov. 26 the
United Methodist Men will meet at
the church. Nov . 27 Is the deadline
for the December contest.

WEDNESDAY
f...EGULAR MEETING, Pomeroy
Chapter Ill. Royal Arch Masons, 7 :30
p.m Wednesday ; regular meeting
of Banoorth Council 46, R and SM,
8:30 p.m All c&lt;mpanims ur11ed to
attend .
SA11JRDAY

and bu1ld ftnandal security for your!
ll:!'tlrernem vean CaJJ m~ fO( Qltalll

lhofl Ul•

Thanksgiving fare Tuesday

OHIO ETA PHI CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7: 30Tuesday in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.
Cultural report, Sherry Abbott,
hosteMea, cathy Cummings, and
Nancy Hill

I oHer a total program to help
protec t your fe.mily '~ way of llvtnsJ

, Middleoort. 0 .

celebrates the coming of Columb""
with a pageant. The body of Columbus Lies in the C8thedral of Santa
Maria Ia Menora under an altar
placed there ln 1541.
The study also revealed that the
govenunent spends more money on
education than any other sector of
the economy. The juniors will be studying the country and two scrapbooks and two essays will be entered
at the conference.
Anna Wiles, president, conducted
the meeting which opened in
ritualistic lonn with Laura Smith
giving prayer. The pledge to the flag
and the preamble were repeated in
unison. Unda Eason and Anita

domingo. The study revealed that
Columbus · castle still stands and is
being restored, and that the second
Monday in October, the country

Denture cups were decorated and
will be sent to the Chillicothe
Veterans HospitaL A get-well card
was signed fot Caddie Wickham in a
nursing home in Colwnbus.
Relreslunents of pU:za and KoolAid were served.

TIJESDAY
EASTERN Band Boosters
Tuesday 7:30p.m ln bend room at
high school.
FREE BLOOD Pressure clinic, 10
a.m . to I p.m Tuesday at the
Harrisonville Town Hall sponsored
by Harrisonville Senior Citlzens;
public invited.
REGULAR MEETING rl Racine
Lodge 461 , F and AM; election &lt;i &lt;ificers. All members asked to ttend .

scori ng : First quarter . Bls5ell , 3
yd . run , extras ta i led . second quar

s

Spanish settlement in the New World
in 1494. After two years of fighting
the Indians, Isabelle was abandoned
and later re-e~tabl.ished as Santo

Smith were wel comed as new
members .
A report on the flag presents tion
at the Meigs County lnfinnary was
given. Mrs. Davis outlined the programs for the competition at the
district junior conference in April .

PREVENTION

Model RT012
A G1bson soec 1al Soec1al
Bra7 11ian Ros.e wooiJ exter1 o r
st yl 1ng . spec 1a l fact or y-m statled
Ice Ma ster Pl u s 3 SII\ -POS ifiOn
adJ ustable gl1de·ou t shelves 2
g l1de-out cr1spe r s S ilver L10 1ng
1nsulahon and convertiblereve r sible do0rs

Price
Discount
Coupon

S369. 95
$20.00

ssoo.oo

~~;ie··;2·gg95
•

IS lHE
BEST POLICY

..

As an independent ins ura nce

agency, our primary func ti on is
to provide polic ies which afford
finan cia l protecti on in case of

toss.

-T HIS IS JUST ONE BUY ALL APPLIANCES

But, we also have a vi t a l in·
terest in l oss pre\lention , as
should our ctlen ts . We encourage
care, caution and sa fety ...
preven ti ve mea sures whi c h can
keep that car accident from hap ·
pening , that bui ldi ng fire fr om
starting , that home burg l ary
from being comm itted .
Prevention saves li fe, l i mb and
proper ty . and helps control in
sUrance cost s and premiums
When losses do occur , our
poli cyhO lders can coun l on pro ·
tecti ng and serving in time and
need . But we st ill say - preven
tion is the best policy .

RANGES - MICROWAVE OVENS - FREEZERS
REFRIGERATORS - WASHERS _DRYERS.

............................
OON1 MISS THIS SAL£
............................
AU. IN STOCK NOWIII
LA YA
Y FOR CHRISTMASI

INGELS FURNITURE
&amp; JEWELRY

DALE C. WARNER
INS.

"Two In One Store"

106 N. 2nd Ave.

991 ·114)
101 W . 1-A;. •fl

Country fresh menthol.
Mild, s01ooth and refreshing.
Warnmg The Surgeo n General Has Oeterm.ned
That C1garette Smok.ng Is Dangerous 10 Your Health
KING 16 mg "lar" . 1.1 mg. mco11ne. 1DO's 19 mg "1ar". 13 mg. nicollne. av. per c1garene. FTC Repon MAY '78.

Pom nrov

Middleport, 0 .

•

•

�.

·-ffii7;wF;'jj~"'wship observes 3rd anniversary
POMEROY -- The
Pomeroy
Olapter ol the Women 's Aglow
Fellowship observed its third an-

niversary Thursday night at a dinner meetlng held at the Meigs Inn .
Delores Kithcard r1 Akron was

·
·
speaker at the aruuversary
meeting
and gave her testimony of the saving
grace r1 Jesus Chrtst The speaker
told of her husband 's salvation, of
her own conversion, and of her work
.
·
ol faith. 001
.
· The p
eroy Chapter IS a part of

.
Women ·s Aglow Fe 11 ow~ h lp
Fellowship lntemati~l whi~~
mterdenommaltonal wor WI e
orgamzation of Christian women
who meet together mloeal groups to
hi
·
nd I rif God
wors p, prs.lSe, _a . g
y the .
The orgaruzatwn IS
er
pro-

IS.:"

~

Alfred Social Notes
Sunday School attendance Oct. 211
was 50. Preaching followed with
REv . Richard Thomlls . The youth
choir sang a special song .
The people in the Alfred Communty had a potluck supper at the
church for Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Woode. There was around 75 attending . Everyone enjoyed the evening
of fellowship and singing .
Mrs. Grce Swartz spent the eventng of Oct. 25 with Mr . and Mrs. Vernon Swartz and family in observance of Vernon's birthday.
Calliru! on Grace Swartz Tuesday

afternoon was Mrs. Sandy Wright
and son and Mrs . Nancy Swartz and
son.
Alma Jane PultirLS has returned
home from C&amp;nden Clark Hospital.
The Alfred Church is having a
paper drive . Anyone wishing to
donate nesparers mlly contact Mrs.
Floyd Brooks.
The Alfred Youth Group is planning a pancake and saus.age supper
Nov . 17.
The church has purchased a new
table and some chairs with proceeds
from its yard sale.

tective
counsel of leaders
man denominatlons
and the from
local
adv~rs for the Pomeroy Chapter
Edgar Abbott William Hobeck
a~ La
F '
anThe wrence ::etheman. ··•··ti .
purpose "'
org~uuo 0111!
to bring women together to work for
spiritual unity among all Chrutl.an

Women'sincorporated
Aglow Fellowship
r1ficially
on Novwu
. 9,
1972. At the present tlme there are
1200 chapters around the world
Officers of the local chapter are
J ki ~'""''e president · Joa.n Edac e .c.u ou ,
•
.
wards, vice president ; Dom
Snowden, recording secretary; Un-

believers, to foster fellowship
among women, to encourage WOOlen
to be members r1 and partlcipate in
activities ol local churches, and to
sponsor different kinds r1 ministries
to women through vtsitatlon.

da Butcher , corres ponding
secretary; and Betty Wagner,
treasurer.
Meetings, open to aU women , are
held on the second ThUl'llday of each
month at the Me1gs Inn.

i- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Nov . 12, 1979

ARMOUR GRADE "A" BASTED TOM

17 LB
AND UP

Tavern or Sugardale Holiday Boneless

WHOLE HAMS •••••••••••••••••• ~~~ $1 49
SUPERIORS

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TtnRD ANNIVERSARY of the Pomeroy Chapter of Women's Aglow
Fellowship was observed at Thursday's night meeting at the Me1gs Inn.
Advisors of the chapter , pit1ured here w1th Jack1e Zirkle, prestden~ are
Edgar Abbott, left, and William Hoback . Lawrence Foreman LS also an
advisor for the chapter.

10 lb•

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8
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TURKEY BREASTS .........~~-. '1 49
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Sale Dates
Nov. 12-19,

1979

••

BTLS.

$}09

MR. BEE

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POTATO CHIPS

Quantity
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""~ &lt; "" ll 0" n. facrollv

Cans

'

I

TOPPING MIX
09 ~
....

$

CHICKEN BROTH ....... 2· ~~":· 69'
MAIIDARIN ORANCIS ..... c. " 55'

EC-219 by Radio Sllllck

Pllrolman"'

.t:._ -

• 14 ' , 01 Cream Style Co rn
• 12 or Whole t( erne! Corn

::0'\J &lt;; l i) Rl S • [ 1),1101~H&gt;. t 1 00D~1 0Rt ~ ....:"!':'I"''I"'!"!'':T'"
DREAM WHIP

,;;;J

$299

VEGETABLE SALE
• 1 J 0 1 Cut Green Beans

Calculator with 4-Key Memory

f'!

Sine~

J

f RlSH U KE

'JICTQRY

6-Band Portable Radio

REG . DRIP OR ELECT . PERK

COFFEE ....................... ~;~·

CARDINAL BROWN &amp; SERVE

fi ''"'•C • rs•-.- .....ae a"r:

Building

2

SWEET POT ATOES .. ,

From the handsome front panel to the precision "fluid fee l" tuning
control , the STA-95 is a solid buy! Co mplete tapmg faCilities let you
control up to three tape deck s . 45 watts per c hannel , mm1mum RMS at
8 ohms from 20-20,000 Hz . w1th no more than 0 .08% total harmomc
distonion . Genuine wa lnut veneer case . 31-2012

cooler rn summer too
Come rn now \file II shO\N
yQ•J how to ao tr.e 100
aurckly and eas1ly

,.,f

FOLGERS

Fresh Like

/AYlORll o l S'fRUP 1B o' VA C PA C

High Power! Superb Sound!

A nrc 1nsulat10n bei"Yveen
rt1e 1o• sts .n your an •c floor
Its the most economrcal
way to save brg money on
those s~ yrock etrng heatrng
and coolrng costs You II
oe warmer rn w.nter and

The Department S!or•

59'
69•

PEAS &amp; CARROTS .. 2 ~:~:

"Take a day or less to 'nstall
Cer1arn-teed F1ber Glass

sa

01

FR(SHUI(l

Cut heating and cooling costs
up to 30% with Certain-teed
Fiber Glass Attic Insulation

O"Q co ~e· ~ 8

7

CROUTEnES ... .... .... •••

Center. :;aoo Forest Hills Blvd., Columbus, Ohio43229.
Pauline HyseU, associate matron,
gave a report on attending Grand
Chapter and the Jegislallon passed
at the time. She noted that Bessie
King, Evangeline Chapter is the 1980
deputy grand matron for the
district .
A practice for installation was announced for Nov. 26 at 7:30 for both
the retiring and incoming Jfficers .
An invitallon was extended to the
members to attend the 25th wedding
anniversary celebration for Mr. and
Mrs. Ri chard Vaughan on Nov . Tl . It
was noted that Martha Muse of
Stockport Chapter, was elected vice
president of the State District Officers Club at their August meeting .

Ban~

~.~~.IIBE~~!. SAUCE '~;~·

Bo•

..:HLOOGS

SAVE
MONEY.

46'

.

OCEAN SPRAY w"o" o• ""''

.,

..........

Plans for the installation of new &lt;1ficers on Nov. 30 at 7:30p.m were
made when Pomeroy Chapter,
Order r1 the Eastern Star. met Tuesday night at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
Ann Hemsley, worthy matron, and
Tilomas Edwards, worthy patron,·
beck after an absence due to illness ,
presided at the meeting . Pro tern officers for the meeting were Debra
Windon. EJecta; Mabel Goeglein,
wrader ; Sue Soulsby, sentinel; Ella
Smith, chaplain_Sunshine fund was
collected by Judith Morris .
A donation was made to the Ohio
Lung Association. Dorothy Ritchie ,
Russell Brown, and Ca ddi e
Wickham were remembered with
get-well cards. Mrs. Wickham's address iB Friendshi Villa e Health

s

BROWN BERRY STUFFING MIX .............. ~~~ '1.09

WOMEN'S AGLOW FEU.OWStnP, Pomeroy Chapter officers are left
to right, Mrs. Jackie Zirkle , president ; Joan Edwards , VIce pres1dent;
Doris Snowden, recording secretary; and Betty Wagner, treasurer. Llnda Butcher, corresponding secretary, was not present for the picture.

89( ~

~
~

0

!Utf" 11117/7t
00011 a1

• • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

Cardin~!+

flo"+ lau. ltor"
00-10-06

~

.n
~#

�r

8- 'Ille Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday , Nov . 12, 1979

Your Best Buys Are
111 Me '!for~ __

WANT AD
CHARGES
IS Wonb or Under
Cuh
Charge
!day
100
17!1
3 days

2day!l

1:'10
I .ll:l

2.1:1

6 days

3.00

:\ 7S

b1 memory , Card of ThaW
and Obttuary 6 et'nb per word ,
$3.00 rlllrurnum Cuh Ul lid ·
vance

1

MOOiJe

H~ne

IN LOVI N G mernur y of
my
brother ,
Ler oy
Holmes. wh o
passed
away N ov . 1937 Sadly
m1s.sea Oy s•s t er , Al1 ce
Freel and

___"!_o-'-t"'
i c""e""s' - -ME IGS
COU NTY
HUMA NE SOCIETY 992
6260
Pe l s availab le f or
adopt•on and 1ntormation
serv1ce

G UN
SHO OT
EVERY
SU N OAY 1 PM FACTORY
CH OKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLU B

sales and Y an:l

are acc-ept@d onJy Wltil
cuh wtlh order 25 ~nl c har~ t'
tor ads carry~ng &amp;n NwuOer In
Care 11f l1lt' ~ntmel
sale!!

Tilt! Publuher reserves tht!
right 1.o edit or re Jecl an y ads
deemed object10nal
The
Publi:!her will not be- re3porutble
for rnrn--e lliiin

For Sale

100

Each word over the rrununum
15 word.!ll.!l t C't!ll~ per word per
day Ad.'i ~ lither than con ·
Mll"utive days W1 II tlt' charged 111
~ l day rate

m~

tm·nrrH"t

NO
HUNTING ,
no
rrespasst ng w• th no ex
ce pt i ons on my prope rty
Judy M c Graw Se lf

FREE GRINDING

In -

"'""'"

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
MQr~dH}'

Noon on Saturday

•r

M

t.ht&gt; day be fort' publ wn l wn

Stlllda)
4p M
~-n da y afte-rnoon

SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
BOX 176

RACINE , OH 10 45771
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO , BIDDERS
SUBJECT . Purchase of

School Buses

FOR : The Board ot fhe
Southern
Local
Schoo l

Oistncf, Sox 176, RaC1n e,

Ohio ,
45771
Sealed pr op osals wilt bf'
received by t hf' Board of
Edu c ati on o f rne Sou th ern
Local Sc hoo l D1str•ct of
Rac1ne . Oh i O at
th e
tr e a sure r ' s off 1ce unl il
12 00 o'c tocto;
noon
on
NovembE&gt;r 15, 1979 ana 11
tna t t1me opened by th e
treasurer at sa1d board as
provided oy law for two ( 2 J
sc hool buses. one ( 11 bP1ng
a 65 pas spnger and one 1I )
bein9 a 71 passenger , ac
c ord1ng to spe c d1cat 1on s o f
said Board of E duca t•on
Separate
a nd
,n
dependent b• ds w d 1 be
re r eived w it h respefl t o th e
chassis a no body typ e and
w•ll state that th e- bus wh en
assembled and pr1 or to
delivery c omp l y w i th all
s c hool
d 1s tr1 ct
spec ifi c ations . all safe ty
regulation s and current
Ohio Min imum Stan dards
for
School
Bus Con
struction of the Depctrt
ment of Educat ion adopted
by and with the c onsent of
the Director of H i ghway
Safety pursuant to Sect ion
..S11 .76 of the Rev ised COde
and al l ot h er pert.nent
provisions of law
Specifi cations and
10
structions to bidders ar e on
fi te in the Oft •ce o f th e
Treasurer , Racine. OhiO
The Board of Educrlti Clll
reserves the r ig hl to re1ect
any and all bids
By Order of the Board at
Edu cat,o n
Nan c y Carnahan ,
Treasurl:'r
Southern Local
5(t1001 OISTr i( I
Ra cine , Oh •o 45771

tlOl 22 , 19 (lll 5. 11. 4t c

ASTRO·GRAPH

Nov•mMr 13. 1979
Your popularity and prestige are
aSCftndmg You "ll have a str ong
1nt1uence on yow peers lh1S
coming 't'&amp;Br Many new acqua•n
lances w111 come and go . but
sevttral w1ll beco me las11ng

matler whal we ha._.e. !here •s
always someone who has more
It we perm11 tn1s 10 Dolhe' us we
only hurt our selves. so don t let 1!
worry you Ieday F1nd out more
about yourself by Sf!nd~ng !or
your copy ot As!ro-Graph Lener
wh1Ch begm s w•th your b•rthd ay
Ma11 $1 tor each to Astr o-Grap ll
Box 489 . Aadr o C1ty St at• on N Y
tOO 19 . BE! sure 10 specll)' Onln
date

SAGITTARIUS (Noy. 23-0ec. 21)
You m1ght teel that "6omeone
prevemed you from gellrng rec ognition you r~ghtluny dese rve
Even II this IS so. keep your feel ·
1ngs to yourself. The truth w1l l
COfllfl oul
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22·Jan. 11)
Your pensive mood today could
c;Buse you to th ink that every·
thing is against you. Wait unti l
tomo rrow . you "ll see now wrong
you were
AQUARIUS (Jen. 20-Feb. 19) 11
you discover today thst someone
you though! to be yow tneno
really isn "l , don ·! fret fhe loss 1S
theirs , not )'Ours
PISCES (Feb . 20· March 20)
Something could happen l oday
that might cause you to fear ''
will affect your reputat ,on Every thing wlll blow over 1f you don t
panic
ARIES (Merch 21 · Aprit 18) tt s
good to set high goals and want
nice things. but don't kid yoursell as to what can practically
and realistically be done.
T AUIIUI (Ap&lt;ll 20-Mor 20) ThiS
Ia ene or those days where atl
may not be what it appears to
be . lnvesllgate thoroughly before
accepting anything important at
face value
GEMINI (May 21·Jun• 20) Peo ·
pte don"! generally mean to be
unkind , but sometimes theH
small, selfish desires lead them
astray. Don"t judge too hershl)'
loved ones who might fall prey to
this .

CANCER

(~uno

21·Julr

22)

Stick to your own w&amp;.y of domg
things today II you want to be

POTATOES

C W Proif i ft farm , Por
Tiano, OH $8 a hundred and
S5 a hundred .

FIREWOOD

FO R

sale

Now 1ak•ng orders
dei•Ye r, 742 2056

EMERGENCY

Will

POWER

alternators own the best
buy WINPOWE R Ca ll 513

788 2589
APPLE 5

37 85

N Bens . Glass.,.,ew, Le vden
Hearth , Old T1mer , Fire
view
Suburban
mobile
home woOd heaters , U L ap
prove d. and Suburban fur
nacema5ters
Outdoor
Equipment Sale s. Je t Rts
7 a nd 35 , Gall•pol is. OH
Phonf' 44tl 367 0

MILE OPEN

8: 10til 5 M ·F
8 : 30 hiS Sat .
Jack W . Caney
Mgr .
,... a-• Phone 992 ·2181

&amp;

GU N S HOOT every Sun day
11 00 F actor y c hoke onl y
Corn
Holl ow Gun Club,
Rutl and Proceeds donated
to Boy Sc out TrOOP 249

ED

BURKETT

Barbe r

Shop now open full time i n
M• ddtep orl

CERAM IC CLASSES. Moo
day , Thursday , 7 9 p m
Tuesday iHXI Fnda y rr om
57 p m S! art i ng ThurSl.lay ,
Oct 25 Orehel 's ceram1cs
59 N 7nd . Middleport . O H

992 55¢0
GET TO DAY S MARKET
VALUE FOR
DYOUR
GOLDORSILVE R CO N
TACT
ED
BURK E TT
BARBER SHOP . MIO
OLE PORT
FRE E

CANDY

demon

5l ra t •on every Si'ffurd ay at
l p m a t the Ca rousel Cn
tec t• onery , 317 N 1nd Ave .
Middlepo rt

Lost and Found
LOST t 1ger c at , neutered
male , flea collar , answers
to
name o f
Tomm y
Reward 991 5354

- - · - ·-

Giveaway
BEAUTIFUL WHITE w i th
blond ear5 ca t Male . .... ery
clean
Humane
Soc1ety .

991 6260
PUT A CO LD no!.e in your
l•le Adorable g r e y k1tten
Hum a ne Soc,e ty , 99"2 ·6260

FEMALE .

HU S KY

Spayed . I yea r o ld Terr ie r
l t&gt;male. spayed , I year old ,
Terr1er . male, 3 m o old
Pomer an1an
Border Col
l•e. 1 J years old Adult
wh •te c at lwo black and
wh 1fe k.illens
Dogs , all
shots
and
wormed
Huma ne Society . 9f/1 0160

Auto Sales
1973
N OVA 350 &lt;speed
p B ' gOOd condition Aft er

• . 98 5 3S.1

1979 F OR D F 150, 4 whe-el
la c t ory
toppe r
d r111 e,
Au to , P.S . P B S6800

Phone 985 &lt;339

WOOD STOVES by Be tter

JA EGER 365 air co m
pressor , $3, 000 sma ll tr.
a-xlt- equ tpme-nt
f r ailer .
~1500
25 gatt on che r ry
or ck e r , S9500 38 ll . flat
trailer , S1500 used un d er
ground s torag e tank s,
su,table t or culverts. 18 "
and 24 ' lengths Good 3,000
gallon storage t an k . S600
992 735-4 after 6 p m

USED BEDROOM
992 5335

1972

FORD L TD wagon ,
c ondition , new fifes

and shocks . $650 . 99262.18 .
1't74 HONDA C I VIC, 4 new
tire s. new pa i nt job, new
exhaus t system . S:1495 . Call
Ui 1?11. after 5 , 7~2 7101

1973 DEL TA88 Oldsmobile
Ca ll 9'Y2 7094 or canoe seen
at 9 13 Broadwa ·r , Mid
Cllepo,-1

su, te,

THREE m en ·s suits, si zes
41 and 42 Like new Phone

1968 HD 3 Allis Chalmers
dozer , blade and wenc h,
S-6 .000 1966 F ord two ton
flO! bed. 16 ' bed , SI 750 J . B
O' Br 1en, W2 '1710 or 991

3589
HARDWAR E .

Plumbing , Heat i ng . E le-e
tr• cal and Auto Supties
Main 51 , Rutland . OH
Plasti c sewer and dra1n
pi pe, 250ft . co d, S90 Cut .n
any length5 , 37 c a It 20 ,000
BTU
ci r c ulating
gas
heater , S208 K i ng 0 Heat
f •ve roo m co al heater .
S116 95
Bond Tite
auto
r e pair
k i ts
with
in
structions . Also Bond Tire
body putty , S9 a oat Rap•d
repa i r,
S1 1 . 99
gal
Businesses
call
for
wholesale price'l . '

en

APPLES -

miles. , A C . $5 .000 992 5J.6.8
or 992 :2521.

1977

THUNDERBIRD .

radials , P.S.• P . B., air ,
AM FM stereo, tw"o stud ·
ded snow tires . $.3800 . Must
sell. 2.-47 3594

689
MAYTAG

DRYE~

1

years old Exce le nt con
ddion Call 992 77 89

PERFECTION

SOL I D FUEL heaters by
Su burban
Woo dmaster
rad•ant
heaters ,
list

1239 .00 .

sale

In my

home during the day . 992

77 89
DO

Ml NOR

and

major mechan1cal work
Ca r s, truck s, and farm
ma c h1nery . Roger Holman ,
Leo Morris 742 2(55

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

wi th topper S360&lt;1 992 2897
MU S T

SELL

19 79

Chevrolet 4x.4 , s hort bed ,

350 auto . P. S., P B.. AM
radio,

3,000

1199 .95

Coalmaster auto. cabinet
coa l and wood heater with
grate and ash pan, l ist

1452 .25 , sa le $339 .95 . UL ap
proved
Furnd c f'maste-r
auto. suppl emental c om
bin.at•on wcx:i and coal fur
nace (no bl ower needed )
I1st Sh79 45. s r~le S619 4.5
Mag 1c
llea t s.
S.S9 95
Grcwe!y Trnctor Sn les. 204
Condor Sl , Pomer oy , O H

997 297 5

' \ (.... _Jack W. Carsey
~
Mgr .
~--· Phone 992 ·2181
BABYS I TTER
1n
my
home . Five days a week .
Two c hildren Referencesa
must
Contac t ·
Deni 5e
Wolfe at 949 1377 after 5 JO

CH IP WOOD. Pol es max .
diameter 10 " on largest
end . s 1J p er ton . Bundled
slab . $ 10 per ton De l ivere d
to Ohi o Pallet Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 99'2 ·2689 .

FURNITURE ,

'ce

boxes, brass beds , iron
beds, desks, et~ , comp lete
households . Write
M D
Miller . Rt. 4, Pomeroy or
c a 11 9q2 · 77 6lJ

0 N E SE T oi root t rcs~es
D 'scounl pn ce. 6 1? P•tch
11x28 fl budd1ng 15 PI CCC'S
at $20 ea Will del •vt&gt;r 74/

MEN "S USED work undor
ms. pant s S 1 49. sh1rts
Sl .25 , 1acke iS $.6 88 N ew
hooded sweat sh trts '-4 88

BAI' LEY '5 STORE . Mia
dleport .
17 PIG S We ight from 30 to
90 lbs 'LH! U.S dPpend •ng on

2980.
FUR

EARL Y AMERICAN sof a
~nd c ha•r G{)(XJ cond1t1on .

Si ll 304 8811958
TWO RADIA L snOIN f1res
onr i m s 75x 14 9921060

TWO 1966 Dodge Darts .
Both for $225 . Aftor8p .m ..
30• ·773·515•.

GOLF
produ Ct ive Well-mea•' I'1Y p e1 sons could mess you uP w1th
lhe ~r suggesti ons
LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) II you re
not careful loday you cou ld gel
cau gn t up 1n !he tool,!lh pursUi t
of trymg tc keep up wit h lhe
Joneses Spend on ly ,...h81 you
ha ve and to• what you need
VIRGO {Aug. 23~S•p1 . 22) A
~ense
of well -be1ng at home
tod ay w•th the tamtty can be
11ch1eved d you don "t let on e
member s sn•vel•ng fllln yow
mood Tunelh r .~ p , · ' '"~ Ou l
1

HARDWOOD

for e

wood , SJO triJCkload . 12gas
doub le barrel oun, s 100
Phone 741 2359 .

PRESENT&gt;

for

Christmas
Bag s, balls .
etc Speci al lad•es · putters
John Teaford, 6 14 98 5 396 1

WAN'rED ·

JUNK

Bat

ter1es , radiators. motors,
auto
t rans. No Sunday
calls 949 ·2563 .

TO

BUY

Band

sa w 7.t1 2409

-·----

Real Estate for Safe

CHAMPION SIRED AK C
registered
Ger man
Shephe rd puppies . 7 weeks
old, WOf""rtte-d a ncl shots star

t•d . S75 ea 741 l336

FINANCING VA FHA LO
AN S. LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYME NT
PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE .
I RELAND MORTGAGE,
77 E . STATE . ATHENS .
6" 592 3051.
LARGE LOT on dea o end
street with wat er
and
s.ewage . W il l fi na n ce to
r el ia ble couple at 9 Pet
992 ·5786. No realt or s

Pets tor Sale
HOOF HOLLOW . Eng l i5 h
and We!i te rn Saddl es and
harness
Ho r ses
and
ponies Ruth Reeves 61.698 3290
Bord• no
and
R i ding Lessons and H orse
Care p rod uc ts
Western
boots
Children 's Sl5 SO

AdultsS29 .00 .
~ISING

STA~

Kennel
BO!Irdino . Call367 ·u?92
POOD L E

GROOMING

Judy Tay lor 614 36 7 7220

KENNE L5

7 pm . Hartford Commun ity
Center , Hartford, wv , 4
mites above
Pom~rov
Mason Bridge .

Real Estate for Sale

W2l32S

216 E. Second Street
11 ROOMS Large
frame w i th. gas furnace .
11,, ba ths, pane lf'd kit
c hen, and 2 ca r garage .

lots S25.000
NEW HOME
3
bed r ooms ,
ceram rc
tJatn , carpeting , n1ce
eat in kitchen , tully in ·
suta ted . oarage, and
large f!nced lot
IN TOWN ..___ 6 rooms, 3
bed rooms , bath, natu ral
gas lurna ce , and 3 lots
w1th atl ci ty u l ili f• es

9 28 1 mo . Pd

ELWOOD
REPAIR

BOWER S
Sweepers,

CAPTAIN EASY
J. VU N I J_!KE:
TC TALK ABOUT

AT A&gt;.JY TIM!' 5H5'5 APT TO
GO EMOTIONALLY Bell"'Eill&lt;!
AND WHEN THE ATTACK$ COMe
ON, THE 'I CAN Bl!' FATAl..!

TH E POI NT 1$ .. 5HE'$ 5UFFERIN6
FR OM A GHA5-TLY P15-EA5-e CALLE D
'--·~MENTO · YOYO · LITI$!

CALL f92·7H4

H. L Writesel
Roofing·

I

J

[j

KJ

RCJIIt ffJsell
G.~&amp;e
Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992 -S682

Union
Avenue
In
Pomeroy 2 bedrooms,
i1vin g roorP 1'ifchen and
b at h A· · ~ .;ace and
cellar ~ ;;ld make a
qrca t
.vestment pro
per ty at only $8,500 .00
Furnished!!
CHOICE LOT
In Ar
baugh A ddi t1 on. Tu p
pers Plain s
100·.-100 '
w•th water and -.eptic
sys t t;"m
Ask.1 ng
HYSELL RUN
A 11tl e
over 7 acres w 1t h 1
bedroom home i sept ic
sys tem an d 2 wate r
taps . U se your ima gina·
tion with th• s one! Sells

for 113..500 00
FARM - 80 ac r es abOut
5 miles fro m Pomeroy
1n Chester Township
Approximat e ly 40 acres
liltaot e and 40 acres
PdS tur e 8 •9 10 room
! a rm hou se wllh oarn
an d St'YNcl l Sh t'dS Ni ce
ro lting land t or f arming
or
subd1V1ding
Sell
pr 1cesao, ooo oo
We Need lisfmg:s
Cheryl Leml ey, A ssoc .

Phone 742 ·2003
vetma Nicir'tsky , Assoc .

Phone 742 ·30'1 1
G@Orge

S.

Hobstetter,

Jr.
Brok•r. Phone 991 •5739

2 41 acres in Che-ster Twp.
~1 6 140 after 5 p m

Eat your meals as you
wat ch the traffi c go by .
3 bedrooms , nat . gas
furna ce ana above alt

floods 517 ,500 .
WE HAVE
A ONE
YEAR PROTECTION
PLAN IF YOU WANT .
CALL
992 · 2325
or
992-3870 for I NFORMA ·
TION .

·-

- - ·- .·
-' -Housing
: Hsadquarten; .
COMM ERCIAL BU ILDIN
G o n 13? fl lot at lbOO N ye

TWO BEAGLE pups
2S.S.

Ave, Pome-royd. OH . W ill
finance at 9 Pe t to reliable
c ouple , No realtors . 992 ·

"OHHI

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

.]

limestone and

Sli()I:(:E ~ tU lU 5 FIGG Fl?£ D
HF"f N I HIT IT RICH

YEP' ROUNDfD UP

3825

blasting

o· lH'

t J:!

Lf ANfR DAYS
Wf ' Rf
ALL POON ERS NO W

L

WHAT I

MfA~?

• \18 1
t AJ9 H J2

t AK
tQ
Dealer Ea st

f:ree estlmates .

Call 949 2616 .
Loader.

West

r--.:orth

Pass

l'ass

3. 4.
East

Charlesllutcher . 742 ·19•0

Opemng

South

l' ~s~

brush
hog
Wilt
do
basements. ponds, brush,
timber ,
lend clearing .

lrdrl

+H

SEWING
Fabric

Shop,

Authorized

TH IS CALLS FOR ,
A CELEBRATION.'
WA!&lt;EU~

rhe

PomE&gt;r o'( .

Singer

and Seor\llce
S&lt;:isson .

- - - - -:--:--

all

991 228•

makes .

Sales

... POUR SOME

TEA FOR EVERY·
ONE, MY FRIEND.'

onRMCHJS~!

We sharpen

By Oswald Jaroby

Os wa ld "'Th e nat1ona l c har -

dour ,

Ity game o f th e Al'flL w1il be
played Tuesday. .'&lt; ov
20

loeder and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo·boys

for hire. will haul f i ll d irt,
soli, 11m11tone and
orevel . Cell Bob or Roger
Jeffers, dey phone 991 7089,
night Phont 9f'I ·3$2S or 992 ·
5232 ..

These games

ta,

Excavati -ng,

99? · 2259

MIDDLEPORT -

systems, dozer , backnoe .

Very

n1ce 1 floor plan, 2
bedrooms , bath , some
carpeting .
large
lot

50x260 . JU ST 116,200
SYRACUSE Laroe
brick d upleK , live in
~rt. rent PiH1 nd have
an income . 518 ,000 .00 .

POMEROY

Ex
cellent 2 sTory frame, all
renovated , J bedrooms. ,
1';, beths, tovely kif ·
chen,

full

basement,

utility . s.oo,ooo.oo.
ALMOST NEW ·- L ove ·
ly bri ck &amp; frame, 3

bedrooms , nice kitchen ,
utility , storage bldg .,
chain f ence yard About
1 level ac re . $.37 ,500 .00 .

NEAR

septic

CAN'T
BE
BEAT
$38,950.00.
LOVELY
FAMILY
HOME - Overlooks the
river , 3 bedroom, equip ·
ped kitchen, rec . rooms .

LOADS of remodeling .
A MERE $35,000 .00.
WE HAVE 56 PROE R·
TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM STOP IN .
REAL ESTATE IS OUR
BUSINESS (NOT
A
SIDELINE! .
ACT
QUICK ON THESE GE ·
NUINE BARGAINS .
REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Sr .

992·2561
Henry E . Cleland Jr .

•

9f'l-61Jl
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottl• Turner
742·2J74
Jean Trussell

90· 2660
Office 992 -2259

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!
WE HAVE PROSPECTS!
~ARRANGE FINANCING!
IF YOU WANT TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY GIVE US
A CALL 992-2342

DOWNING.QtiWS AGENCY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2342

"'ININO ·992-2449

---..-.. \He·~ , Iha-rd-14)

Vou·re throuqh
drill inq 1

IN ·
can
ce lled?
Lest
your
aperetor 's llctnse? Phone

9~ · 2143 .

let us Install for YO\J . D.
Inc .

992-572 • .

I

REYI'IDLD'S

ELECTRIC

'--,I

/

- .......:\ ll

I thouqht
it would
be awful'

You

ma~

let qo of mLJ

hand

Qhl

Sorr11'

;:- ~~

~

)

\

Motors, r!Wind and repair .

992 ·2356, 561 Beech
Mlddlepoct, Ohio .

\ felt it ' /

l

IN STOCK for Immediate
"tllvery : various $1Zes of
pool k.it5 . Do· It your!ttlf rx

Sf .,

CHESTER

N icely
r e modeled 7
bedroom home . bu i lt in
kitchen ,
c arpeting,
basement, and about 25
acres with J springs .

GASOUNE AU..EY

AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been

Setes,

WINNIE
A&amp; H Uphol"oring , acrou
from the Texaco Station in

Syra ucse . 992 ·3743 or

m·

3752 .

OKAY SvEI&lt;Y30DY LE"S
A LL (;C ':&gt;ACK TO 11-IE:
VviNKLE: HO~ \E5TE:A::'

1.

AN:J TR&gt; ~c
BRADFORD,

Auct lo,..,r,

SHOEING.
ask for

CHeEK?

movement

btd

and

A.S..;;;"ol ,

" ~

Yesterday's Arulwer
12 St George 2.5 Actres.'i ,
Lynn -

to that
dragon

27 Globe, orb
30 - Haute,

16 Contend

19 Spools
of film
20 Brtlish

Ind .

31 Aquat1 c
ammal

weight
33 Czec h nver
Concerning 36 Dean Martm
mail
film
Z4 Narcotics 37 After Nov .

23

Slupwonn
26 Semi·

DRIVE AllmE

SAYE.KLOT

27 Hourglass

RUBBER BACK
CARPET
_ !_4 ! ! u p
Caah &amp; Carry

BALLS 0' FIRE!!

matenal

OL DOC PRITCHA RT'S
GOT TH' LOUDEST

MUFFLER I EVER
HE ERED '!

26 Pulptl

·· AN ' TH'
LOUDEST
MUFFLER
I EVER
SEEN"

toptc;

29 Mag1r1an 's
word

h

6'X12'10

12'xl 6 '

s3B-andup
Call7~2 · 2211

RUM NO

FURNITURE
Rutlano, o .

I. 0 !II G F E I . L 0 '1'1'

.

GOOD REMNANT
;v\::..AM 14AVE '{OV EVER
NOTiCED HOW THE
Al1105PHERE IN Ol!R ROOM
CflA~GE5 WHEN IT'S
RA I
Ol!T51DE 7

LLIITH THE Ll61-iT5 ON
IN ~ERE AND THE RAif.l
AND li'..\R~NE55 OUTSIDE
THERE'S SOI&lt;T OF A
:'v\EOIEVAL An\OSPHERE ...

NO MA'AAI I DON 'T
KNOW WHAT THE .::APiiAL
OF NORWA• I5 ...

SO MVCH FOR

ATMOSPHERE

71)()-Today

Virginia

3, 15: Good

13 ;

Morning

America 6, 13 , Tuesday Mornino
8: Batman 10 ; Three StoogesL i ttle Rascak 17

7 15- A M . Weother 33 : 7 30 Fam i ly Aflair 10 ; 7: 5&gt;-Chuck
White Reports 10.
a ·oo-capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; LeaYe It
To Beaver 17. Sesame 51 . 33 .

8 3D--Romper Room 17 .
9 oo-Bob Braun 3; Big Valley 6;
Phi l Donahue 15: Porky Pig 8
One Day At A Time 10, Lucy

Show 17
9 Jo- Bob N ewhart B; Love of Life
1O; Green Acres 17 .

10 oo-Card Sharks 3.15; Edge of
N igh t 6 Beol the Clock 8. 10;
Morning Magazine 13 ; Movie
" Portrait i n Black" 17.
10 30- Hollywood Squares 3.15 ;

120 .000

Pyromid

13;

Andy

Grlttlth 6; Whew! 8. 10 .
10 · 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10 .
11 oo-High Rollers], 15 : Laverne &amp;

Shirley 6 , 13 ; Pr ice is Right 8, 10.
11 . 3o-Wheel of Fortune J, 1S ;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
70. Know Your Schools 33 .
17 · 00 - Newscenter
3:
News
6.8. 10, 13 ,
Mlndreaders
15;
Pearls 33 .
11 · 3Q--Ryan's Hope 6. 13; Search for
Tom or row 8, 10 ; Health F leld 15 ;
Movie " The Big Gamble" 17 ;
00--Day:s o f Our lives 3. 15: All My
Children 6, 13 ; Young &amp; Re-stless
8, 13 : Young &amp; the Restless 8, 10.
1 JO-As The World Turns 8, 10;
i 00-Doctors 3. 15 . One Life to
Live 6, 13.
2 2.&gt;- N ews 17: 1: 3Q-Anot her World
3, 15 :
Guiding
L i ght
8 . 10;
Gigglesnort Hotel 17
3 oo-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love

L ucy 17 . Poldark II 20 .
3 3o-0ne Day At A Time B: Joker's
Wild 10: Ffintstones 17
4 OQ-Mister Cartoon 3. Password
Plus 15 , Merv Griffin 6 ; Beverly
Htllbi l lies 8 ; Sesame St . 20.33 ;
S1x M i llion Dollar Man 10 ; Real
M cC oys I 3. Speclreman 17
4 30- Bewitched
3;
Pett i coat
Juncl 1on 8: Tom &amp; Jerry 13;
Mer..,. Gr i ffin 15: Gi l ligan ' s Is . 17.
5 oo-1 Dream of Jeannie 3: San ford
a nd Son 8, Misler Rogers ' Neigh ·

20 ,33 ;

Mary

Tyler

MacNei l -

JJVHJX,

E G

UIWOXKX

Oirtwa ter

Fox"

3, 15;

Three's

World 20 ; Wise Parents Know
Their Children 33 .
9 3Q- TaKi 6, 13 .
IO .DO--Hart to Har1 6, 13: News 20;

City Nolebook 33 .
10.3Q--Eiizabeth R 17; Like It Is 20;
Another Voice 33.

CRYPTI)QUOTES

Q Z S 0 S Q V X 0.

\' Z X

Morning . West
6 55--News 13.

Company 6, 13; GE Theater 8, 10;

One h' ttN ~ • mp l y ~tan ds f or anolher In t his sample A is
U'-C'd f nr thf t h rPc l ."s, X f o r \h(' t1.1.·u O' s, etr Si ngh• letters .
.:l JHJS tr ophes, the l ength and (n rrnallllll or the wnrrl!J are all
h1 n ts f ;~ ,· h 1\ay l lw r ode l ct!HS a rc dafferent

Frh

SELECtiON

Carefree
A X V D I. 8 A A X R

··~~dup
lla&lt;i

lnstalledwlth

6 •&gt;-Morning Report 3; 6 : 50--Good

8 oo-Sheriff Lobo 3. 15 . Calflronla
Fever 8. 10. Nova 20.33; NBA
Basketball 17
8 JI}-Angle 6, 13.
q oo- M ovie "The Duchess &amp; the

IUILY ! ' RY£'TOQlJOTE - Here•s how to work It :

IN STOCk

Health Fiefd 10; 6 : Is---World at
Large 17
6 3Q-Concerns &amp; Comments 10;
News 17 .

tn The Family 17 ;
Lehrer Report 20,33 .

34 C1amm;
35

TUESDAY , NOVEMBER 13,1979
5 •&gt;- Farm Report 13 ; 5: 5Q--PTL
Club 13 .
6 1)()-700 Club 6,8. PTL Club 15;

Hollywood Squares 10 ; Sha Na
Na 13; TV Honor Society 15 ; All

32 l:letwecn
tK and toe
33 Stttchbtrd

SALE ON ALL

17;

Bob N ewhart 17 ; Over Easy 20 .
OQ--3's A Crowd 3. Tic Tac Dough
B: Pulse 6 . News 10 . Newlywed
Game 13 ; Love American Style
15 . Sanford &amp; Son 17; Dick
Cavett 70 ,33 .
JO - Hollywood
Squares
3 ;;
Politi cal Talk 6: Joker 's W i ld 8;

stone

BARNEY

Sty le

6 31}-NBC News3.15 ' ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6 , CBS N ews 8, 10;

~

precious

American

6 OQ--News 3,8 , 10, 13, 15 ; aBC News
6 , loom 10: Carol Burnell 17

item

SAVE ON CARPET

1·00-

M•sh 10. Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17 : Doctor
Who 33.

23 Fireplace

!k.Cienahen.

6;

Moore 10, My Three Sons 17.
5 30----Ca rol Burnett 3; News 6:
Gomer Pyle 8: E lee Co 20 :

22 Carry

Call

1? , 3Q--FBI

4 15--Dpen Up 17

borhood

.--,.,..-,.,-..,.,-

need

Darrell

6, 13;

E lee Co 20 ,33

Zl Spring
fa mung

r---....., .-.... ... ..- -::::-

Ohio, Crltt Bradford .
HORSE

" Four

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send$ 1 to ··win at
Bndge. c are of th1s new spa per. P 0 Bo&gt;4 489, Rad10 City
Srat1on . New York , N . Y
10019 )

by THOMAS JOSEPH
37 Gossip
ACROSS
:US
Chtef
I Wlute House
~To
be : Fr .
dog
40 Intense look
5 Shapmg
41 Once a Bono
mac hint&gt;
OOWN
10 Plane
1
Fimshing
designer
word
Sikorsky
2 Booking or
11 Lofty
U.lent concepts
J
Disapprove of
13 Gaudy s1gn
4
Prmce
14 Captam of
Valiant's
the comics
son
15 Printer's
5 Drew
need
6 · An apple
16 Some
17 Girl rescued
by Uncle Tom 7 Thrice :
IS Want
prefix
for fare
8 Argue
ZO Sammy Kaye 9 Buoy

0UR5 E: L\ 'cS UP I

Compleh! Service Phone
949 ·1.487 or P&lt;t9 ·2000. racine ,

992 ·3288,

ttn·m-

~~~·CfH:J(/

Rt. 143. Phone 1 161. ) 698
7331 Of' 742 ·2593 .

Bumgardneor

ust&gt; r omputer -

dealt hands and are played

HOWERY ANO MARTIN
~H .

to

1 "'1-: \A, ~ I'A I ' t-: H. 1- :~ n: HI ' H.I S I-~

and Alan Sontag

Real Estate for Sale

prev tous

made Will Oe above avNage
hecaust• many pa1rs w111 gel
to five hearts an d go down one
t o more than compensate f or
lhe few luck y ones who sco r e
t he uvertnck ·

MACH I NE
teno'lce ,

··Left

Oswald

PROPER IN SULAT ION iS
R:epafrs ,

a

three·club
m onkey
wrench
1nto th eir ma&lt;·h tner y. they
should sttll reach that easv
four· hea rt cont ra ct ··
·
Alan .. ~a s t wtll take h1 s
ace of dubs at tnck o n e (f he
lead s t he sut t back . South w 11l
ge t to dt sea rd ht s deuce of
spade s and make an over ·
trH'k If he shifts and Wes t IS
smart enough t o gra b his ace
u f twarts the ftrst tt m e the
" lilt ts Jed . South wtll be held
t o fou r ·

V ulner abl e Norlh ·Soulh

sand

fr om

Oswald

·K ~ IU9 ; 62

I AIN 1 T AlONE ,. . K/'fOW

J .4 5- Love

selves most patrs Will reach
four hearts If Ea st thr ow s a

SOL 'T•I
t A K2

WAL, I AIN'T SO DUMEJ,
EITHfR ... I'VE KNOWfD
FEllERS AS TRIED TO HOG
IT All · DAIC&gt; NOW .. BUT Mf .. .

SO 'O MY FRIENDS . .·

PAlS d MY

pl r one
game ·

EAST

+ 37

4· 30 · tl r

ENO

tl 12

10~:11

• Q 10 6 4
.,A8 14
• 6 54

10 1)()-Lou Grant 8.10: News 20;
10 , 3D--Copi ng with Kids 20.

40 - N ews 13, 1: 50 - News 17;
1 5&gt;-Mov le " I llegal " 17.

o.; Jmultaneou slv 1n hundrPd s of
"t lt· s ·
Alan ·The h;wd s ar e nor·
rnall y Jpalt a nd no a\ tempt ts
m.:td t• to mak f' thf'm tn lnetsl ·
tng or unusual Herr IS a Slm -

• K 10 6

WEST

" Roustabou t" 17 .
3Q-WKRP in Cincinnati 8, 10 .

Char li e' s Angels 13 .
12 40- McMillan &amp; Wife B:
Tomorrow 3: New s 15.

-

• J
tJ

~

12 oo-News

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
- - -- - ---·

• 9 3i 5

OlD BoYS

Ex

On

BRIDGE

l~ mile off lit . 7 by · p•n
on St . Rt . 114 toward
RutiSnd .

DOZER .

20,33 ; F.alcon Football 17.

9 1)()-Movie " The Omen " 3,15: NFL
Football 6, 13; Ma sh 8. 10; Jane.
Fonda
20,33 ;
Movi e

' Round the Flag, Boys! " 10;
Movie " The Comancheros" 17 .

Computerized games again

and spreading. Lt!&lt;&gt; Morris
Trucking. Phone 742 ·2455

742-~003

home ,n M id
d ie port 5 bt&gt;drooms, 1iv
ing room , dining r oom ,
fami ly room . kitc hen
a nd l aundry Full oase
ment and na t ural gas
Two b arn s . f urn ace
Qual i t y
c arpet
mrougnout
Call
to ··
yo u r sh ow 1ng BY ap
po•ntment onl y

p

MacNeil - Lehrer

11. 3Q--Tonighf 3.15 ; Harry·O 8;
ABC News JJ : Movie "R ally

*

CX.D!

17 ;

Report 20, 33
8 oo-Litt le House On The Prolrle
J.IS ' 2020 13; Edward the King
6 : White Shadow 8, 10; World

11 DO--News 3,8, 10, 15; Dick Caveu
20 . Fawlty Towers 3]
11 1Q----Love American Styl e 17 ;

Q.IIL.OOJ.J'T
6€~11-tAlJ 10

toasters , irons . all smc111
appliances. Lawn mOW"er
Next to Sta re Highway
Garage on Route 7 , 985

cheaper than heating oil.
Take advantage of a OOOd
i nYesfment
Call 992 3188
tor more informat ion .

NEW LISTING

000D ~IJ~~.

QUtlf A PA SS EL

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
c leaned .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . ScotchguMd
99'2 ·

Wha l some so 'c a lled hot 1dea s. a'e -

Monda)· , ~o\ . 12

BORN LOSER

&lt;1 ·5 tf c

AND

j

(Answers 1omorrow)
FORBID BE LIEF

naml, adCJrna. zip code and m1k1 c hiCks pa)'ablfl 10 Newtplperbooka

949·2162--949·2160

PAINTING

O AKEN

I H1I I

Family

Jumbll Book No . t2 . conlalnlnv 110puulel.llnailablelorSt .7Spostpa!d
from Jumble, cJo this newspa~r . Bcll4. Norwood, N .J 07643. tncl ud•your.

Fre~Estlmates

HAU~

Answer

Love

New l ywed Game 6; Joker' s Wild

HALF·BAKE D

N~w. repair,
gutters and
down sptluts.
Wii\IIOfY cleaning
Gutter cleaning

WILL

Jumbles LAU GH

I

13 ;

8: Family Feud 10,13; Noshvllle
On The Road 15; All In The

Now arrange the arded leMers to
form the surpnse answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

r 1 X1 l

Game

American Slyle 15; Sanford &amp;
Son II; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
7 30 - That Nashville Music 3;

WHAT THEYTH~OW
AT $0ME "SWELL "
W EDDINISS.

.J. __D

tFERPER

Saturaay s

gravel. Also. l!me hl!lul ing

1

f ull
basement a nd IMge lot
160x 160 t or on t y S14 ,000

5786 .

Roofing , gutten , and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates .
All
work
guaranteed . 20 years •• perience . Call Arhens ,
colle&lt;t, Gerald Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins
797 ·2745 .

~c utive

Board , ng , a ll breeds . Clean
1ndoor ou tdoor fa cili t1e\
Al so
AKC
r egis t e r ecl
Dobe r mans 614 4A6 7795

7•1

Newlywed

L........L&gt;....r
JL___J_I

THI,; I&gt;J FRO~T OF
GWENDOLYN. E'oUT-

Pomeroy, o .

OHIO VALUY
ROOFING

991 2710

NEW LISTING -

BIG AUCTION every Wed .,

RIVE~

ment.
1075yumore (Rear

4 I 1 rn r.

6309 or 7•2 2348 .

PHONE

Call Joe Young
At
992·2133

VIEW OF

HACING

Hours f·l M., W., F.
ot,.r llnlll by lppolnl·

STQCI(

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

X 56
Can Be
Purchased with
Low Down
Payment

ba tt1,

PARK RNANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

EXCAVATING ,

3 BR, 14

bedrooms .

GOOSE

L ARGE HO USE w ith large
lot on R t 124 in Syrac use .
Tom Clark Realty 5-40,000 .
O'Brien and Crow Ret~ltv .

NI CE FIVE room house on
11 ac re , oi l fur nace, ci ty
Witter or well waler Only
S8 .0CXl . See Luther Bar toe,
Long Bottom , OH

Newly Decorated
1975 SKYLINE

111,500
MILLFIELD

6 :oo-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC. New•
6; Carol Burnett 17; Zoom 20.
6 · JQ--NBC News3 ,15; ABC News13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhar t 17; Over Easy 20 .
7 ·oo-J's A Crowd J; Tic Tac Dough
8; M uppet Show 6 ; News 10;

Y~'S

FO UR RO OM S and bath .
Deoosit req u1 r ed 99'} 3090 .

bedrooms, ilnd large lot
o nRt 7 AskingS18.500
RENOVATED - Nice 1
Oeclrooms , nat . ga5 f ur
na c e. c arpe t ing, base
ment, 2 ca r garage and 1

HIL LC RE ST

Pets for Sale
--·- -- -·-·--------

~UPfR

3 AND 4 RM furn ished ap ·
ts Phone 997 5434

3161

ches W dl1ng to p ay 1op
dollar
Call
1 592 1973
even1 ngs

"d

TRAIL E"R NOW AYAtlABLE

Pomeroy . Large l ot s.Ca ll

117 ,500
UPPERS PLAINS One
fl oor
5 room
bunga low wit~ bath , 7.

ANTIQUE POCK ET wat

Montgomery

61~ 6611 ~1• , E ~erHnqt
1 M•lr ~ Ea~l ol WllloU~•If.e

992 7479 .

NtTURE . glas~.
c hina .
anything See or c all Ruin
G~ney.
antiques, 26 N
2nd , Midd leport. OH 991

WANT

!

11310

Win -

$5.000 ()(}

WANT ED
SA W
logs
Payment upon deliver y l o
our yard, 7 . 30to3 · 30week.
days. Blaney Hardwoods ,
SR 339 , Barlow , OH . 678

MONDAY. NOVEMBER 12, 1979

FINANCING

Pomeroy, 0 .
10 · 19 ·1 mo .

TRAILER SAl£S

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33, n orth of

OLD COIN S. pocket wt
c hes, cl as s rings, w edd• ng
ban d s, d•a monds Gol d or
silver Call J A Wam sley ,

ANTIQUES,

Viewin~

Foderol H~uslng &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

For Rent

B &amp; S MOBILE HOM E
SALES. PT . PLEASAN l.

Wanted to Buy

Main St .

10 191mo .

For Sale

POMEROY
LANDMARK

OLD

Television

REAL I!STATE

MONTGOMERY

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

H ARD WARE .

an Ma' n St . Rulla nd , O H
Late model
NCR cash
r eQ •s ter , 4 dept., 1 refund
keys_. , amoant tendered and
c hange Key , $A50 . NCR
pri ce labeling ma ch , ne ,
needs
work .
110 0
7
Bu r r oug h s
ad d 1ng
ma c h•ne s with
Ol ll,n g
c arriage , S.45 ea

DRY

992 ·2367

Free Estimate

7d1133 1

miles .

16500 . 992 5396 anytime .

949·2748 or

elnsu-'ation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

1971 LYNN HAVEN l 4X65 3
bed room
197 0 Vindale- 17x63 wtth ex
pa ndo, 2 bedr
19 70 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr
1973
Skyline
12x55
1
bedr oom
1972 Bonanza 12)(52. 2 bedr

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

ms.
Call for appt . or walk in .

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

1970 PMC 12x60 3 bedroorr
mob de home. S.5,000 Call
667 3401

and

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

INSULATION

wv . 304 ·675 ·4.424

HOTPOINT

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

J&amp;L BLOWN

Mobile Homes · Sale

CHEVRO LE

PICK UP fruck . Hea\ly
duty , 6 cy l , auto. trans ,

FM

BABYSITTING -

byHennArnoldandBobl&amp;e

unscramt.le these four Jumbles .
one tener to each square. to form
lour Ofdmary wCYd5

Prinlanswerhere

NIGHT ASSISTANT
Part f 1mc to r C h ild r en 's
Res iden t ial Trea tment Center T hi s Ind ivid ual mu st
be re spons1b te, ma tur e, a nd a lcr t . and mu!. l be able
to comple te an inspt?'(lion log THe pos•tion requ~r es
part1C 1pat ion 1n an bu i lding and p er s onal 5afety
traintng Hours are from 11 00 p m until 7 00 a rn ,
on an alternat1ng schedu le at three n1ghts one week
and four nights the next week
An EEO! Affirmafive Action Employer . if in ·
teres1ed , se-nd resume to · Juanita Atha , Personnel
Aclministrator, G ·J ·M community M ental Heaun
Center, Inc. , 412 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis , Ohio 4S631 ,
or call 614 -446 -5500 .

Services Offered

e.

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

RACINE, 0 .
992· 1314
II 1 I Pd .)

TEACHER' · COUNSELOR:
For
Chi ldren ' s
Res•dent•al Treatment Center . Thi s position re
quires a Vdlid Ohio Teet c h in g Certification and ap
propr~ate teat1Cing experience of at least tvvo vears ,
or equivalent experien ce tn addition, expe r ience
w1th a be hav 1orat intervention system , and skills in
1ndiv idual and group counselling and r ec r ea t ion are
necessary This person is re sponsible primarily f or
ac ademi c remediation , behavioral ass essment and
Jntervent•on, a n d some •nd•vidual and group
counselling, all with in the c ontext of the Children 's
Ce nter

FUEL oi l

heater
Excellent co n
dd1on Automat1 c co ntr ols
$125 Phone614 6-6 7 3368

Sll(' 949 2798

19 77

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Two positions open i n the Children's Re-sident i al
Treatment Center to work with behaviorally disord
e-d adolescents . Prefer
Mas t er's
Degree in
Psyc hology or equivalent area , or eq u 1v aten t tr a•n
1ng and experience. i n addi t ion to a knowledgf' of
and experience w rt h behavioral in terven t iOn pro
ce dures . Job duties inc lude behav ioral asses sment
•ntervent ton, and consultation i n a variety of
na tural environment settings, as w el l as co ll ecf•on
rmd ufil i zation at psychometric and edumetri c data
Sk il ls a nd experience in individual. group. and
f amily therapy are also necessary

ROME beauty

apples at S-4 per bu Best tor
apple butter Call 669 3785 .
Fitzpatrick Orchard, SR

1409
19 78
OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88 • door , 8300

CR:ISISLINE WORKER
UniQUe
ind tVi dual
wanted for part 11me dut• es M •n •mum 20 hours per
week. Must possess typing , l i lnlg, general olf•ce du
ty skills . Knowledge at c r1 S1S i nterven t ion w ork
helpfu l. but not nece ssMy We wil l trai n Des•re to
njelp others a mu s t

WILL

RUTLAND

Gutter
work,
down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
w~lks
and
dru,!ways .

(FREE ESTIMATE)

991 7331

RU TLAND

good

RECREATION SPACIALIST - Oppor tun ity lor a n
enterprising and innovative ind,vid ual to develop
recreational componen t of a Part ial H D!&gt;P•tallzat1on
Program Seek individual W1th B A or M A tn
re creat ion or phyS ICal educ at• on , or equ1valent
iE'duc at.on and ex pe.rienc e

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

COMMUNITY INTERVENTION SPECIALIST -

CIDER

HONEY
F1rzpatr• c k Or
c hard , Sta te R oute 689
Phone Wrlk.esvllle . 669

DICK TRACY

Business Services

GALLIA- JACKSON - MEIGS
Communrty Mental Health Center, Inc.
positions :

WINTER

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ~

_H elp wanted

is currently accepting ipplications tor the following

celebrating
40
years of service to
the farmers .

tnenCJs

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) No

3891

2183 .

Bernice Bede Osol

'-Your
CJJirthday

sand . gravel ,
c al ci um
c hloride . fer t il•zer . dog
food , and all types ot salt
E xc elSIOr Salt W ork s, tnc. ,
E Ma in St ., Pomeroy , 992

LANDMARK
This
week

GU N
SHOO T
Rac 1ne
Vo l unteer
F 1re
De pt
Every So:1lur day 6 30 p m
At thei r buildtng•n Ba shan
Factory choke guns on l y

·

Help Wanted

W

1} Jt\INr fii)1f

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, Nov . 12, 1979

the Sentinel Classifieds

LIMESTO N E.

HOUS E COAL . lump or
s toker . will del1ve r
741

Tue.!ldll.)

thru F nd.s1

COAL .

Special No Limit

AT POMEROY

NOTICE

~,ound Ill
•

F. G

KSGGXO

sJ

VZEGFU

J

XPQXJJXGQX

F.U
UEKWJEQEVR - JNGFMXJJNH
v ..tenlay'o CryplOqiiOCe: GOO ONLY, WHO MADE US RICH,
CAN MAKE US POOR.
EUZABETH BARRETI
BROWNING

10 5&gt;-Polltlcal Talk 8,10
11 · 00- New5 3,6, 8. 10 , 13, 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20 : Carry On Laughing
JJ; Barney Miller 6,; 3: Barnaby
Jones 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie
"' From the Terrace " 10.

12 :1)()-Movle " The Sea Chase" 17;
12 ,0&gt;-Movie "Crescendo" 6,13 .
12 ,40- Movie " I Will, I Wlll. .. lor
Now"

8;

· 4)- N~w~

1:oo-Tomorrow 3,1S.
13 : 2 : 30-News 17;

2: 3&gt;-NBA Baskelball 17; 5 ,os-Untouchables 17 .

�10 -lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Nov. 12, 1979

HOSPITAL-....:\\ s
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions--Charles
Aelker, Pomeroy; Edwin Cozart,
Racine .
Sa turday Disc harges--Morris
Neutzling, Anna Grimm , Ca lvin
Phelps.
Sunday Admissions--Henry
Lemley, Portland ; Peebles Clark,
Cheshire; Thelma McCully , Vinton ;
Freda Fields, Syracuse ; Joseph
Stanley, Pomeroy; Ervin Smith ,
Reedsville ; Roy Parker, Pomeroy;
Earl Snyder, Pomeroy ; Charles
Griffin, Guysville.
Sunday Discharges--Eloise Eblin,
Robin Fortune, Pearl Ash , Martha
Searls, Joceryn Zerkle .

WANT COOPERATION
These students of Meigs County high
schools are asking their fellow
students, teachers and parents to lay
aside their cigarets all day on

1nursaay wnen Ule tJ.reat American

Smokeout is observed in Meigs
County . All smokers through the
Meigs Chapter of the American
Cancer Society are bemg asked to go

Area deaths
VERNA F . HARRIS
Mrs. Verna F . Harris , 72, Lancaster,former Pomeroy resident,
died Saturday at the LancasterFairfield County Hospital .
Mrs. Harris is survived by a
daughter, Mrs. Paul (Leda) Cheatwood. Lancaster; a son, William T.
Harris, Jr., Lancaster ; seven grandcli.ldren; two great-grandchildren ;
two sisters, Mrs. Victor (Gladys)
Harbrecht, Pomeroy, and Mrs . Ed
(Mary) Parfait, Pome roy ; a
br~r. Dana Terrill, Inverness.
Fla., and a number of nieces and
nephews.
Fwleral services will be held at
10 :30 p.m. Tuesday at the chapel of
the Frank E. Smith Funeral Home in
Lancaster with the Rev . Phillip
Baker officiating. Burial will be in
the Forest Rose Cemetery. Friends
may call at the chapel from 2 to 4
and7 to9 p.m. today .
BESSIE ATilEY
Funeral service.s for Mrs. Bessie

Waugh AtheJ·, 87, S. Second Ave ,
Middleport. who died Saturday at
Veterans Memonal Hospital , were
held at 2 p.m . today at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home with Mr .
Jeffrey Downin officiating .
Mrs. Athey was a daughter of the
late Quin ten and La ura Small
Waugh. Besides her parents she was
preceded in death by her husband ,
Walter L. Athey, in 1966. She was
born in Gallia County, April 24, 181l2.
She was a member of the Middleport
Fll'st Ba pti st Church

Surviving are sever a l nieces,
nephews and cousins .
Burial was in Sugar
Cemetery at Guyan .

Cr eek

MARY E . GRIMM
Mrs. Mary E Gr imm, :&gt;!, Main
St., Rutland , died early Monday
morning at th e Holzer Medica l
CenU,r following a llngering illn
Mrs. Grimm was born April 23 ,
1925 in Lancaster, a daughter of
Mrs. Anna Cox, Lancaster . and the

-THANKSFor Your Vote and Support In

Electing Me
Cl~.trk of Salisbury Twp.

WANDA L. EBLIN
Pd . Po l . Adv.

without smoking all day Thursday .
Students involved in the program
include front , I to r, Charlene
Goegleln, Julie Gibbs. Rosemary
Hubbard ; back, Dan Thomas, Brian
Bissell and Scott Hill .
late Stanley Cox . She married the
Rev . Uoyd D. Grimm, pastor of the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene, at
Lancaster on Jan. 5, 1945.
Surviving besides her mother and
her husband, are two sons, John D.
Grimm , Reynoldsburg , and Robert
1Bob) Grimm, Pomeroy ; five
gra ndchildren: four brothers ,
Stanley Cox, Colwnbus ; Emil Cox ,
Athens; James Cox, New Jersey,
and William Cox, Colwnbus; a
sister. Mrs . Bill (Martha) Stephens ,
Baltimore, Ohio. Besides her father ,
she was preceded in death by two
sisters .
Funeral services will be held at 2
p.m. Thursday at the Rutland
Church of the Nazarene with Dr .
Terrell C. Sanders, Jr ., officiating .
Friends may call at the Walker
Funeral Home in Rutland anytime
after 2 p.m . on Wednesday until 12
noon on Thursday when the body will
be taken to the church . The family
will receive friends from 2 to 4 and 7
to 9 p.m . Wednesday . In lieu of
flowers, friends are asked to make
donations to the Gideon Memorial
Bible organization . Burial will be In
Gravel Hili Cemetery at Cheshire.
DONALD E. MILLER
Donald E. (Bud) Miller , 43 ,
Tuppers Plains, died Saturday at St.
Jospeh Hospital, Parkersburg .
Mr . Miller is survived by his
parents ., Lewis and Ruby Marr
Miller , Tuppers Plains .
Mr . Miller enlisted in the U. S. Air
r' orce in 1954 and contracted poplic
while in Korea and has been
paralyzed the past 22 years . He was
a member of the D. A. V.
Funeral service.s will be held
Tuesday at 1 pm . at Ewing Chapel
with the Rev .F'reeland Norris
officia ting . Burial will be in Letart

We were around
when the price of steak
was 10~ a pound.

It was around 1904.
Serving the area's banking needs since •904·

Farmers
Bank

Member FDIC

I Hoofs and Paws I
By MarloD

c. Crawford

MeltiC-ty
Rnma110 Scdely
POMEROY - On the way to
Gallipolis this past week I p!ISSed
two adult dop and two cats lying
dead along the road. On the way
back I pa!ll!ed two puppil!ll ' bodlm
that couldn't have been mon! than a
few weeb old at the time they died.
Wednesday at 8:15 a .m . a very
small female dog, about three or
four years old, was hit by a car and
left to suffer and die.
At 9 a.m. a call came to the
Hwnane Society informing us cl. the
dog. Two d. us went right away to
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
find the poor animal able only to
Dl~~tbarg .. Nov. I
thrust about on ita llWe back Bobby Bays II, Andn!w Beattie ll, frothing at the mouth- moaning.
Rooald Blevins, Danny Buffington,
Maryanne Smallwood and I had
Robert Carman, Elva Davis , brought a large ad.t carpet with us
Thomas Drosos, Judith Eblin,
and we gently lifted the IIWe animal
Margaret Ehrman , Harrl.!on Ellis , up and wrapped it to keep it WBrm.
Jason Evans, Mrs. Bobby Fizer and She held the animal while I headed
daughter, Sharon Folmer , Adrtan
for the closest vet.
French, Mary Grueser, Joe
How many people passed this poor
Hammond Sr., Dylan Handley,
suffering animal on the road and did
Linda Harmon, Hershell Henry , nothing? Are then! only four or five
Geneva Howell, Darlene Johnson,
c1. us in Meigs County who know
Octavio Mallamaci, Frank Miller,
where the vets an!? Well, In a world
Mrs . Jeffrey Miller and son,
when! people are killed and lay
Caroline Rhodes, Laura SlmpSQII ,
dying on the street - why not
Carolyn Slats, Catherine Stewai~k) animals? It's some world we live ln.
Carolyn Turner, Patricia Wiliams:
Another cute young pup was found
Blrtha Nov. 9
in a cardboard box WBiting p!ltiently
Mr . and Mrs. Carl Jeffers, son,
for "whoever" dropped her to come
Mallln; Mr . and Mrs. Jackie Jones , back and get her.
daughter, Langsville; Mr . and Mrs.
She was cold, wet, and shivering .
Robert Colcyn, son, Gallipolis; Mr . This goes on day in and day out and
and Mrs . Bert Browning , son ,
the few who really can! an! going
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. John
crazy trying to figun! out how to put
Carmichael, daughter, Bidwell .
a stop to it all. The complete lack c:l
Dl~~tharges Nov. 10
compassion for animals with really
Brandi Angel, Karen Arthur ,
a minority d. people -cause so much
James Austin, Carrie Buckle, James
heartache, pain and suffering that it
Canaday Jr., Calvin Carter, Stacy
is unbelievable.
Clark, Teresa Collins, Leland
Tbe taking cl. puppies into homes
Dalton, Virginia DotS!)Il, Cliristine
and caring and loving it until it
Eblin , George Fisher, Frank Fitch,
outgrows ita puppy stage and then
James Good Mrs. and daughter,
tosal.ng it out to be replaced by
Alelic Higgenbotham , Harvey
another puppy - an endless, hearHuttchins, Oulrles Kuhn, Sheila
tless habit repeats itself time and
Lanham , Gloria Legorreta, Jeff
time again in too many hlmes.
Lewis, Johnny Marcwn, Charles
Childn!n see their p&amp;n!nts reacting
Moreno, Alice Mossman, Ernest
to animals In this irresponsible way
Newsome, Robert O'Conner, Dennis
and think it to be the WBY it should be
Palmer, Mrs. Elwin Potter and son ,
- and thus another future lrri!IIJlOI~
Douglas Rees , Mrs . Robert sible person Is created.
Saunders and daughter, Billy
Recently someone objected to the
Tackett, Kenneth Vititoe, Rudy
Commi&amp;'lioners of Meil!ll County
Wallace 1!, Patricia Willis .
about our request for heat in the
Births Nov. 10
pound this winter to prevent-animai!J
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Howard,
from freezing to death aa they have
son , Oak Hill ; Mr . and Mrs . Douglas
in the past. Another pel'8011 stated,
Davis, daughter, Oak Hill; Mr . and
''It is ridiculous to heat a kennel."
Mrs. Charles Childers , daughter,
I wlah that ail c:l the people of
Oak Hill ; Mr . and Mrs . Rodney
Meigll County (and Gallla too) who
Frecker, son, Middleport .
C&lt;IITiplaln about the crunty can! d.
Births Nov. 11
animala would not call us, we know
Mr . and Mrs. Mario Rocchi, son.
better than anyone what is going on
Gallipolis.
at both pounds ), call thoee who Bn!
responsible - the Commissioners then perhap11 the one or two who
have no real use for animals other
MEETS WEDNESDAY
than
to exploit them. would not
Third
Wednesday
The
make
such lasting impressions on
Homemakers Club will meet at the
our
elected
officials.
Syracuse Municipal BuUding at 10
after
all, must listen to each
They,
a.m . Wednesday. There will be a
and
every
inten!St
group - not just
Those
potluck dinner at noon .
one.
Some
animals
do
not need heat,
attending are to take two pounds of
they were raised outside and have
powdered sugar and eight ounces of
always
had to tolerate the changes
Philadelphia cream c heese for
their
hair and hides adjust
so
making mints .
automatically as the weather
changes. But, then! an! other
animals for instance, puppies n!cenFalls Cemetery . Friends may call at
tly taken from their mothers and
the funeral home anytlnne .
others from the day they wen! born
that 81'1! kept inaJ de, i.e. , IIW8t
Poodles, Chihuahuas, some
MARVV . PIERCE
Terriers, most of your toys and nonMary Virginia Pierce, 75, Long
sporting breeds.
Bottcm, died Saturday at the home
Some cl. those that the dog warden
of a granddaughter in Long Bottom . and we pick up have not always been
Mrs . Pierce was the daughter of
outside, some have just been cast
the late Jake and Maude Brewer
aside such as I mentioned above, or
VanMeter . She was also preceded in
got loose fnm yards when! they
death by three brothers, one sister
wen! just put out into long enough to
and one son .
do their "duty" and became
She was a member of the Long
Bottcm Christian Church and the
Long Bottom Senior Citize~ .
She Is survived by one daughter ,
lnzy Newell; one son, Denver
Curtiss, seven grandchildren and 14
great grandchildren; four brothers,
Millard VanMeter, Pomeroy;
Forest VanMeter, Racine; Russell
VanMeter , Portland and Richard
VanMeter , Bev...ly; two sisters,
COMPLETE II
PC8. CLEANING
Esther Dalley, Portland, and Susie
Cooley , Stubenville .
TOOLSET
Funeral services will be held
INCWDEDI
Tuesday at 3 pm . at Ewing Chapel
the Rev . Bob Wyatt officiating .
Burial will be In Sand Hill Cemetery ,
Long Bottom . Friends may call at
the funeral h001 e anytlnne .
RALPH D. KELLER
Ralph Danie Keller , 75, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, died Saturday at
Pinecrest Nursing Center.
Mr . Keller was preceded in death
by hill parents, Albert and Bertha
Turben Keller .
He is survived by his wife, Marcia
Weber Keller, daughter and son-inlaw ,
Don
and
Jeannette
Wliliam s,Columbus;
son and
dau gh ter-in -law ,
Roger
and
Rosemary Keller; grandchildren,
Randy, Rodney and Russell Keller
David and Deanna Williams ;
Deborah Williams Grubbs and
Donna Williams s ;ckler .
Funeral services will be held
today at 2 p.m . at the Ewing Funeral
H001e with the Rev .Richard Thomas
officiating. Burial will be in Meigs
Memory Gardens.

Iranian leaders want international probe

diBoriented and loet. We do not aall
that the pound be heated to 6S
degree8 - just to about 50 where the
• outside animal would not be uncomfortable and the more sensitive
animal could survive.
We doo't feel that ill uilni! too
much - but you humanltarianll had
beBt not remain the "silent
majority " or t.blngll wW never
change and on those days and nlghU
when the temperature drops, don't
call the Hwnane Society with your
worries about the anlmala Uke happens each and every winter - caU .
those who can do something about it,
the coounissioners. You elected
them and they work for you.

Wben an animal gets cold and
frostbitten it involves the destruc-.
tion d. l:I.Mue caWII!d by eJI)OSW'e tosevere cold. Tbe parts cl. the body ·
l'llOSt often frostbitten are the nose,
toea, tips d. the ears, and tip d. the
tail.
In mild cases, the skin becomes
cold and white; lOBS d. hair around
the affected pal't:!l then occurs. In
seven! cases, there ill a loas cl. hair,
followed by n!dness and localized .
pain.
In other cases, the area remaina
sore, sensitive to the toucb, swella,
then shrlvela. Finally, the skin
around the affected area slouglls
away, leaving an open weeping surface. Thale who don't die eventually
an! euthanlzed at the pound - but
why sbruJd they be allowed to suffer
their last days on earth just to save a
buck or two?
Think cl. your own pet - what If It
got looee and ended up In that pound
and when you finally found It,
because d. the cold, it Is In a terrible
condition with even poasible a.mputations that must be done to save
the animal We leave it up to you.
Your Humane Society haa
repeatedly wed that some ,aor1 of
heat be provided.at the pound- now
It Ia your tum - all ol you readen
who claim to love anlmala.
Another 1'1!&amp;5011 fOI' keeping your
animala under control and In slgbt at
all tlmea : Sunday night a report
came In to the HWil8111! Society that
then! waa a COOIM!og caught In •
atee1 trap near the Letart Falla
Cemetery. One of our members went
then! and re!ICUed the dog and Ud it
to the vet when! it remained for
three days. Tbe sheriff's office and
wildllfe ~le wen! informed of the
unidentified trap that led to the hunter's dog being injured.
In clOilng and naming the anlmall
available for adoptioo I would Uke to
""Y that we no longer have
anywhen! for cats and kltleno to be
temporarily boarded.
While aeeklng a very clean and
well managed location for tbese
moet clean d all anlmala given to 111
by God, we ask that you C8n! for any
that you find until you or we can aeell
homes for them. The only three we
have being cared for at the time are
an adult abort hair white female,
and we have two cute little blaclt and
white kittens. In dogs we have 1
sweet, beButlful Huatey female who
has been spayed. She loves to romp
and play and needs !IOillt!()llO to love
her and care for her.
We have a c'ute youn&amp;
POII'll!l'llnian-Border Collie who Ia
small and lovable, a couple ol cute
young male pup!! -one shy Shetland
type about three months old, and a
real nice Beagle-Terrier type as well
as a male coon-hound; a female
Collie type who is red, blaclt and
white, young and we have a cute little curly haired fluffy puppy who
will be a small to medium dog. U you
Bn! Interested In any of uanimala, please call99U260.

By Tbe Associated Pn!s•
Iranian leaders said today the
American Embassy hostages in
Tehran might be freed if the United
States acknowledges that the shah is
a criminal, allows an international
investigation of the deposed monarch and hands over his U.S. property ,
it was reported from the 1ranian
capital.
The State Department said it al"
peered to n!present a softening of
the Iranian p&lt;~~ition in the Hklay-{)ld
crisis.
At the same time, however,
Iranian Foreign Mini s t e r
Abolhassan Bani Sadr accused
Washington of creating a "war
climate " and called for a meeting of
the U.N. Security Council, the
Kuwait news agency n!ported from
Tehran.
The agency said Bani Sadr today

reiterated the key demand of the
student militants holding the embassy and 98 hostages - that the
United States surrender Shah
Moharrunad Reza Pahlavi to Iran
for trial. He is currenlly hos pitalized
in New York for cancer treatment.
But Bani Sadr added. " The United
States should at least acknowledge
the shah is guilty." the report said .
Another member of Ayatollah
Ruhoilah Khomeini 's Revolutionary
Council, Sadeqh Gotbzadeh, set out
more detailed conditions, said Iran
was not retreating from its demand
for the shah 's extradition, but added
that the Iranians were ready "to end
the occupation of the U.S. Embassy
before the extraditiOn of the shah for
hwnanitarian reasons and the interests of the hostage.s, " the Kuwait
news agency reported from Tehran.

I' ,

1.,.-J

1

Middleport Village Council voted
to advertise for a new dwnp truck
and a new pickup truck at a n!gular
session held Monday night.
Mayor Fred Hoffman said both of
the present village vehicles are in
had shape and n!ported that he
doubts If the dump truck is even in
condition to push a snow plow. The
dump truck alone will cost an
estimated $18,000 , the mayor said.
He suggested that the dump truck
could be purchased on a leasepurchase pian or through federal
revenue sharing funds expected
over the next two years. He stated
then! is no way the village can get by
without the new dump truck.
Council took the action to advertise for bids on the two vehicles
with speclficatlo~ to be drawn up

.. ·.
·'.
·~f'
4/

•

,l

by the street committee.
Council also passed a resolution to
be sent to Ohio legislators favoring a
suggested increase of $10 in auto
Council members
license fees .
stated the legislatUn! currently is
plannmg either for an increase tax
on gasoline on the increase of $10 on
license plates. They indicated that
the license plate increase would be
given to the villages accordmg to
pn!sent plans of the legislature .
Several councilmen were critical
of Middleport residents for turning
down the $5 permissive auto ticeMe
fee at the November 6 eleetion after
Mayor Hoffman reported that salt
for snow and ice control is now $40 a
ton and difficult to obtain .
Councilmen said citizens had
brought the s ituation on themsealves by not supporting the per-

miss.ive tax measure.

\.

Wants suit filed
COLUMBUS. Ohio (AP J State Auditor Thomas Ferguson
has asked Ohio Attorney General
William Brown to file suit to stop
collection of sales taxes on
deposits d returnable soft drink
bottles .
Tax Conuniasioner Edgar Lindley ruled last week that the tax
must be collected by stores when
bottles are taken from the store.
Ferguson said Lindley 's
motivation was political and an
attempt to defeat a statewide
issue which was on the ballot last
Tuesday that would have
required a !!kent deposit collected on aU soft drink containers .

Mayor Hoffman indicated that cinders will have to be used for snow
and ice control. He did point out that
it is the respo~ibitity c:l the village
to do its best to maintain streets
during winter weather in spite d. the
fact that the tax measure was turned
down by residents.
Clerk-TreasUn!r Gene Grate read
two letters from Ashland Oil which
announced a total mcrease of three
cents per gallon on all grades of
gasoline. Council approved the October report of Mayor Hoffman

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP ) - State
liquor profits, which now total about
$80 million a year, would be used as
" seed money" for a new economic
development program proposed
Tuesday by Gov. James A. Rhod es.
Rhodes said the program is
designed to make Ohio mon! competitive In mdustrial development
and could crea!A' thousands of new
jobs a year lll the state.

WITH ATTACHMENTS
Dlal ·A ·

Nap adjusts to clean all
carpets
• Brilliant headlight
• Edge Kleener cleans up to
baseboards
• Lifetime lubricated motor

Reg. 5109.90 with Tools

5
~

""-' orHf,. CMPf 71•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

rl!llolved until the United States
takes S hah Mohammad Reza
Pahlavi from the New York hospital
where he Is being 11-eated for cancer
and extradites him to Iran to stalll
trial as a war crimlnal.
The Carter administration has
refused to enradlte the shah. But
the State ))epllrtment said Monday,
" We've always said he is here for
medical tn!atment. It was ass umed
that at the time that treatment was
completed he would be leaving."
The CBS correspondent said tile
young MMlem militants holding !he·
62 Americans and 36 others In the
embaiiBY were preparing for a long
siege. The students began a five-day
hunger strike Monday tu demonstrate their determination. and
RBdio Tehran said thousands all
over the country joined the fast.

PRICE FIFTEEN r.FNTS

TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 13. 1979

which showed a collection of $4530.80
In flne.s and fee.s and SUII in merchant police collectiOns for a total of
~8 .80.

Council adopted the allocations of
the Meigs County Budget Commission which earlier had been
tables. The allocation of local government money for Middleport is
$17,564 .50 and the rate of taxation
will be I. 70 mills inside the 10 mill
limitation and 4.5 milia outside that
limitation .
Mayor Hcl.fman said that plans
should be made to meet with the
budget commission . before 1981
allocations are made.
Grate said village books are being
audited by the State Auditor 's office
through Jan . 1, 1979.
The state auditor has suggested
that separate funds be established
on a three mill levy in effect in the
community for street lighting and
street maintaina""" by contract.
Grate said.
The fire department was
authorized to advertise for bids on
equipment for the new fire truck so
that the organization can take advantage of this year's prices.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Hoffman. Clerk-Treasun!r
Grate and council members, Dewey
Horton, William Waiters, Carl
Horky, Charles Mullen and Marvin
Kelly.

Rhodes' new proposal
uses liquor profits

1978 DEWXE UPRIGHT

Cleans Shag

Stat e Departm ent spo kesman

.Jack Tuohey said the report must
fir&gt;t be confirmed as authoritative
and that If 1! IS 'the Um ted Stat.,;
would show gre.~t interest in any
change in the position.... rr true this
would appear to be a Softe~g of
their position .. . Any movement is
welccme as long as it's upward."
The revolutionary regrme responded Monday tc l· res1dent Carter•s
ban on U.S. imports of Ira nian oil
with the announcement that the
Revolutionary Council &amp;h·eady had
dended to cut off exports to the
United States. Radio Tehran reported early today that workers at the
Kharg island termina l in the Persian Gulf stopped loading a tanker,
the 125,582-ton Northern Uon, that
was taking on oil for the United

States.
It appeared unlikely , however.
that the new action reported UJ the
offing was in retaliation for Carter's .
ban . Radio Tehran reported Munday
before the president's an ·
nouncement that the Rev olutionary
Council was going to dJscll'IS "a
proposa l concerning the American
Embassy ."
The SeLurity Council appealed to
lrdn last Friday for the immediate
release of the 98 hostages held
priSoner by Iranian students in the
Amencan Embassy since Nov. 4.
Iran 's charge d'affai res at the
United NatiOns, Jamal Shenunm,
met with Secretary.{;eneral Kurt
Waldheun in New York Monday and
said his government had no n!RIY to
the council appeal yet But he told
reporters the issue will not be

Middleport council approves
purchase of two new trucks

SAVE "39.95 -

• Exclusive 6 way

ficial pos11.Jun.

en tine

at

POMEROY -MIOOLEPORT. OHIO

ELBERFELDS
E REKA SALE
N

•

e

(USPS 145-960)
VOL. XXVIII NO. 149

" We will get the shah sooner or
later ." he was quoted as saying .
He sa1d the hostages "may be
freed if the United States
acknowledges that the shah IS
gwlty " and agrees to an International inquiry " to investigate
his crirn.,," the Kuwait agency
reported .
The Yugoslav news agency Tanjug reported that Gotbzadeh said the
United States must also agree to
return all of the shah's U.S. property
to the Iranian government.
Gotbzadeh, who is director
!ra man radio and television, said he
was speaking only in his own name
and not for the Council . Bani Sadr
has emerged as the leadi ng
s pokesman for the Khomein i
n!girne, however, and his statements were believed to re present the of.

ANNUAL PROGRAM - Carrying out their annual program, members of Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, will be moving from
house to house in Pomeroy Thursday evening deliverilll&lt; loaves of bread
to homes. In ezchange for the bread , post members will accept contributions to the " Gifts for the Yanks Who Gave" progrdm which
provides funds to remembrances for hospitalized veterans . Pictured
makiJ ,g plans for the promolion an! Jack Ambrose, manager of Kroger's
which will be proVhlintl the loaves of bread . and l.eona nl Jewell . act1ve
post member.

He outlined the proposed
legislation in letters to Senate
President Oliv er Ocasek, D·
Northfield, and other legislative
leaders.
The program would use profits
from liquor sales, not taxes on the
sales. to back reven ue bonds issued
by the state.
Money raised by the bond sales
would be pledged to secure low·
interest loans or loan guarantees to
business and Industry .
It would also finance land
acquisition, equipment purchases
and buildings to be leased or sold to
private en!A'rprise.
Rhodes said the pian calls for 50
percent of all repayments by industry to the sta!A' to be funneled
directly into a supplemental
education fund to provide additional
state aid for public schools .
Only finns with Ohio operations as
of January 1980 would be able to
qualify for the program.
Projects fillBnced under the pian
would have to be located in "local
ecomomic needs areas," according
to a memorandum sent to legislative
leaders.
Such an!as are counues, cities,
villages or townships which have or
are about to experience dramatic
job losses . economic stagnation or
decllne, or centra l c11.Jes in counties
with dis proport ionately large
welfare rolls.
The scope and cost of the program
would be controlled by the
Legislature.
Eligible projects would be determined by the department of
Economic and Community Devel~
men! with the a pprova l of a new
five-mem ber Developmen t Advisory
Board
The state Controlling Boa rd would
have final authority to approve a ll
projects a nd would control the
release of money or Joan guarani..,
C OrnJT'I itrnl'fll&lt;i

VETERANS DAY OII8ERVED- Anml8l v -..
day services wen! conducted Monday by Drew Webster Post 39, American Legion, In front of the courthouse at 11 a.m. Commander of the po6\ is Joe

z...t11in1! and In chup of U.. f1ri118 *!....i -

BllpE
Vanlnwagen. A welcome was given by Pomeroy
Mayor Clan!nce Andrews. Speaker was Gene Sturm,
Eighth District Corrunander.

Teachers present package

No strike settlement seen
BY BOB HOEFUCH
The eight-week ol d teachers
strike L~ the Meigs Local School
Distriet appan!ntly is no closer to
settlement than when it started.
For the first time in several days,
th e Meig s Loca l Teachers
Association lifted the cloak of silence which had been covering attempts to negotiate tenns of a settlement by issumg a statement.
Neither the teachers nor the board
had made any comments for several
days but it was reliably rep(&gt;rted
that negotiations were takmg place
in the Meigs County Probate Court .
The court had been petitioned
n!Centiy to take over the functions of
the Meigs Local Board.
The statement issued by the
teachers association today n!ports
that a meeting set for last night
could have ended the strike but that
meeting did not take place because
it was not attended by three board
•members. The other two board
members could not be reached,it
was n!ported.
The teachers statement today
says :
" In an effort to bring an end to the
now eight-week-{)id strike in the
Meigs Local School Olstriet, the
Meigs Local Teachers Association
attempted to present an offer to settle.
The package was to have been
presented at a meeting arra nged
between MLTA representatives and
board members. Larry Powell,
Virgil King and Keith Riggs . State
Representative Ronald James, who
offered to help the parties work
toward an agreement, was also
present The meeting was to be held
in Judge Robe rt E. Buck'soffice.
" The board members refused to
attend the meeting .
" The pa ckage Incorpora tes
basi cally ail major concerns expressed by the school board More
important, it i.s de.signed to bring
labor peace to Meigs Local Schools
for at least thn!e years. With the
school board turning deaf ears, the
proposal must now be made public.
"The Association has agreed to
the boa rd's originally proposed
$10,000 beginning salary. MLTA
proposes the addition of a year's
step on each 'lane' of the schedule.
During the second and third years of
tlw ,..., '1~!'a rt. teac hers would re~ i ve

for salary, retin!ment, an&lt;h&gt;r fringe
benefits, 60 percent of any additional
income ccming to the distriet. The
'60 percent formula' is used in the
Athens City School District.
" A dental pian proposed by the
school board has also been accepted

Miller
hospital
•
patient
CHARLESTON . W.Va . IAPI United Mine Worke rs P resident
Arnold Miller was adnutted to the
coronary care unit of a Charleston
hospital late Monday. ccm plammg
of chest palllS . a hospital spokesman
said tnday
Miller was listed tn fair condition,
S81d John Brown of the Memorial
Division of Charleston Area Medical
Center. Tests were to be r un on
Miller tnday , Brown said .
It was the !lard time tn two months
that Miller has been hospitalized .
The

pr evious

two

times ,

he

ccrnplained of stcrnach pains .
Miller. 56, suffered a stro ke and a
heart a tta ck last year, shortly after
the en d of a lltklay nationwide
strike by his union .
Miller said several weeks ago that
he was thinking of re tiring because
of his health . He later said he would
not quit and would run for a third
tenn in 1982. He has been presiden t
of th e uruon since 1972.

Check mishap
The Gallia-Meil!ll Post Highway
Patrol investigated an accident
Monday on TR 174N, one mile north
of SR 124 .
Called to the scene at 9:45p.m., of.
ricers n!port the accelerator on a
vehicle operated by Boanl B. Ferris,
22, Middleport, stuck while backing
from a private drive.
Tht&gt; Ferris vehicle crossed the
townshl p road and struck a parked
auto owned by Ida Smedley, Middleport.
Both ·•ehicies incurred slight
damage . No citation was issued .

I

by the teachers.
"The 'fair dismissed' provjaion,
an adamant point of oppooition by
the school board, has been removed
a nd replaced by a provision deallng .
with 'discipline procedlln!S'. In addition, the association elfers to settle calls for clasa size limitations in
line with state law. A new elementary preparation period proposal
now coincides with time available to
special teachers.
"Teachers have agreed to boanl
proposals dealing with: personal
leave, sick leave, teaching assignments, pay dates, supplemental pay,
mileage and severance pay.
Orga nizational issues and ll()o
reprual have been agreed to
previously .
"ML TA has moved on every
position in this crisis. The offer to
settle In no way places the district in
financial jeopardy- particularly
in light of what teachers have lost In
pay .
·'Our main concern is that the turmoil and crisis that has almost
yearly faced the citizens of Meigs
Local Schools come to an ~pd. The
school board 's refusal to attend a
meeting to n!view this offer clearly
establishes the issue as the survival
of teacher ccllective bargaining in
general and the Meigs Local
Teachers Association in particular.
"The association's offer to set. tie-and its public release should
have been the beginning ol the end d.
the crisis for Meil!ll Local Schools."
At 10:45 a .m. this morning then!
had been no statement issued by the
Meigs Local Board of Education aa
to why members did not attend the
meeting.
It is betieved that the lack of
statements from both sides over the
past few days had been upon the
result of suggestions by Probate
Court Judge Robert E . Buck.

HONORED RECENTLY
N. W. Compton, Pomeroy was
honored n!cently by the Ohio Council
of Retail Merchants, Colwnbus, for
h."·;ng a r eU.il store in the family for
HXJ

\'ca rs or more.

C~mpton was presented a certificate for the recognition. Compton, owner &lt;1. Goeasler Jewelry
Stcre, wAs one of 110 retail stores
honored.

�3- The D• liy Sentm el, M1dd.l epon-Pome r oy, 0 , Tuesday, Nov 13, 1979

2- The Daily Sentwel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 ., Tuesday, Nov 13, 1979

~-- ---

!--( v , " ,•

f'\1 ,..

IN WASHINGTON

Nu...

NlA

a

-- - - --

----

IT'LL
DRI V[ THE
[NV I R ON M E NTAlJ §f~

Capitol ideas
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Congress
has widely missed its Oct. 15 adjournment target and sill! has much
to do before quitting ror the year.
But that doesn 't stop members rrom
reflecting endlessly on presidentia I
politics.
It's time for choosing sides. And
some lawmakers concede openly
that they have ulterior motives ror
picking a particular candidate.
Like Sen. Paul Tsongas, D-Mass.,
who wants Sen. Edward M. Kennedy
to go the rull distance to the White
HoUBe.
"I'm pleased by the notion I rrught
be the senior senator from
Massachusetts , " the rirst-term
senator expiBtned .
"It's not very pleasant being the
junior senator, " he added, noting
that when he and Kennedy walk
throogh an airport , people inevitably mistake him ror a Kennedy
aide.
"It happens every time, " he grumbled.
For Senate Majority Leader
Robert Byrd of West Virginia, Kennedy 's candidacy may bring back
memones of the only election dereat
ever suffered by the youngest Kennedy brother . It was in 1971 when
Byrd upset Kennedy ror the job of
assistant Senate majority leader .
Kennedy doesn't rorget that election either .
"U I hadn 't lost I might be Senate
majority leader today ," he told a
Democratic rally after betng introduced by Byrd. " And Bob Byrd
would be out runrung for prestdent."

NUT&amp; ~

Washington ts t ull ot press
secretaries and public relations
types who used to be reporters.
Some are superb at what they do,
performing their advocaey roles
skillfully and effectively without
compromising their own integrity.
Othe rs are little more than shills .
Some became "flacks" because
they needed more money than they
could earn as journalists, others
beca use they were conswned by the
eunos 1ty I mentioned earUer to see
what the " inside" view is like.
Until now, I have never been the
sli ghtest bit tempted to join their
ranks. and even as I prepare to do so
I rema1n deeply ambivalent a bout
the move I [eel a little as though I
am surrendermg my virtue; I am
edgy and hypersensitive about the
rauuf1cati ons of becoming "a
spokeswoman roc Senator Kennedy . .. Fortunately , my new boss
understands.
" I won't lie ror you," l declared
rather belligerently when offered
the job. ··or course not," Kennedy
replied gently. " I would never ask
you to." I believe he means it H he
doesn't. I '11 be back on these pages
sooner rather than later.
During the past decade , I have
covered nearly aU the major
Democratic and Republican candidates now seeking the presidency.
Some I know better than others ;
some I like better than others. None
is perfect by a long shot, including
Ted Kennedy, but none is stupid or
evll etther . The country will be
periectly sare no matter who wins.

•••

Meanwhlle, President Carter may
sometimes give the impression of
reeling a little Iert oul The other day
he warmly thanked a group of appla uding congressmen who had accepted his invitatioo to come to the
White HOUllefor dinner .
"Kennedy's an the cover of Time ,
Rosalynn's on the cover of
Newsweek. It 's nice to know S()meone wants to see me," he qwpped.
When Sen. Charles Percy's turn
came to speak on the SALT n treaty
before the Senate Foreign Relations
Conunittee , he had little new to
fer .
So the illinois Republican praised
colleagues who's gone before ror
having "succulently and conciSely
condensed all the arguments ... "
There was laughter . Percy looked
puzzled.
· 'What'd l say' " he asked.
An aide whispered . Percy joined
the lJl ughter - and corrected " succulently" to "succinctly" before going on w1th his speech.

or-

When the frames of his glasses
broke the other day, Rep. Guy
Vander Jagbt, R-Mich., didn't paruc
Instead, he gave some unusual in~
stru cti ons to his staft.
A HOuse or Representatives electrician was surrunoned .
Why an electrician?
The glasses had metal rrames and
.. I reasoned the electrician would
have some solder," Vander Jagt explJlined .

Berry's World
-- - \

I

Collins' report
COLUMBUS - The Ohlo SeMle
and the Ohlo Hou:;e of Representatives will return to full session this
week . Still remaining on the
legislators' agenda are the capital
improvements budget and the
Department of Transportation
budget for this bienn1wn.
With the bienniwn already three
and one-half months old, the
l.€gislature should be taking swift
action to complete these budget
bills.
The Ohlo Public Expenditure
Council recently released some
reports concerning education costs,
and municipal income taxes levied
by Ohlo cities.
The council's report shows that
aimost 70 percent of the total
operating cost for an Ohlo public
school goes to pay salaries and
wages ror the school district's
teaclung and non-teaching employees . In addition to these costs ror
salaries, an additioMI 10 to 25 percent of the total operating costs goes
ror employee rringe benefits, such as
retirement, life insurance and
hospitalization .
In the area of school rinancing, the
Ohio Public Expenditure Council
reports that the total real estate,
public utility, and tangible personal
property taxes ror school operating
purposes in 1979 amounted to $1.824
billion . Of this total, residential
property taxpayers paid $734.1
rrulh on . This means that residential
property taxpayers paid a total of
4{) 2 percent, on a statewide average,
or a total sc hool distnct 's operating
revenues.
Switching to munic1pal incomr

BY JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Hwdness AnalY"I
lliEW YORK I AP 1 - One of the
most errective restramt.s on mflat10n
L' self-sacnfice. Or the Willingness or
mdiv1duals and groups to live with
less. It 's guaranteed to cut into innation.
Hut . as il IS Wllh so many or the
solutions. the dirti c ullies begin with
the execution .
Domg with less might sound good
to people who feel that need for selfdiScl plme . But who goes first? Th•
While !louse ' Congress' Business ?
Labor '"~ Fanners? Consumers? I..andl ortls or tenanls, big business or
small ')
Perhaps the United Steelworkers
o[ !\merica . At least that union's
wage policy committee has issued a
doc. . UJncnt that takes a more comprehensi ve v1ew of conditions than is
r ustoma ry Ul union-management
relatJOn"' .
11'&lt;' 36-page report rind that wage
and benefit levels won by the union
1n earlier contract' have put some
employers "at a serious competitive
clisadvanl&lt;ige " and " eost literally
many thousands .. of jobs.
The re port doesn' t advocate that

nu: OA II.\' SF.NTINEI.
i i .' SpS J6-M01

DEVOTm TOniE
lHTER&amp;'IT OF

MEIGI&gt;MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFUOf
City Edit.
PvblidM!d dilly ts~S.tu.rdly by 1'bt Oblo

Valley Pabl.lllirlll&amp; Compuy· Mv.ltfmed&amp;., t.e.,
lH ~o.art St., P.mn-oy , Ohio tS7• . Bublall
Offl« ~ tft.. U)t. EcM&amp;.orial Pb.,_1117.
SeroDd tll• po~~taJr: .-Nt at Po~rey. Olllo.
NatloullldwrtUIAg l'elftlelltltlvt, Ludaa
Asa« .. &amp;el, lltl Eutlld .he., Clt~, &lt;*to
4Clli.
SUblertpUob ra~ : l:k-UYerf'd b) carrier
'tt'lwft ..... u.blf 90 t-eat~ per week.
MokH"
Roak wiwrt tai"Tkr arrvke 1101. .wadable, ODe

a,

"Mine is a wheeler-d e ilt'' h'(] '~flt'!ldP' .n, age
kind of like a Connfl lly; Ken nPnl
" ·

L __
,

.

~Dally Sentinel, by maJIID C*Ae•ad Weet

-

taxes levied by Ohlo 's cities, the
Ohlo Public Expenditure Council indicates that the total municipal income lac&lt; collection ror 19n amounted to $627 .8 million. That was a
record mcrease of $75.7 million over
the amount collected in 1976. Of
course, a major portion of the increase can be directly attribu ted to
the high rates or inflation at this
lime . It is estimated that the
municipal income tax collection ror
1978 will amount to about $716
million .
Toledo was the first municipality
to levy an income lac&lt; back in 1946 .
Use &lt;I the local income lac&lt; since
that time has grown rrom 5
municipalities in 1949 to 72
municipalities by 1959 ; 261
municipalities levied the income tax
by 1969; and 424 muniCipallties now
levy an income tax as of July, 1979.
Thls leaves only 10 Ohlo cities that
do not impose a municipal income
tax .
It IS interesting to note that Ohlo 1s
only one
ten states In which local
income taxes are levied. Muructpal
mcome wes in Ohlo produced more
revenue in the 197&amp;-77 tax year than
the state imposed l&lt;ixes 1n 29 other
states . Breaking the total municipal
1ncome taxes collected in 1m of
$627 .8 million down into a per capite
figure , Ohioans paid approximately
$89 per capil&lt;i in municipal income
taxes. It would have requtred an
average real property lac&lt; rate or
$16.20 per$1 ,000 or taxable valuation
to produce an equal amount or
revenue as generated by the
muruc 1pal tncome taxes in 1977.

or

Business mirror

mou&amp;b, N.•

Ke r ry Our'&gt;. Hannrtn Trace

NV CL [AR PLAtH I

CUriosity and commitment
By Martha Angle
WASHINGTON INEA 1 . At one
time or another, every JOurn" lc't
who covers national politics fo r a \Jv ~
ing harbors a gnawing curi ~'ll )
about the view rrom the other Side or
the renee .
No matter how diligent we a re as
reporters, or how skilled, we never
learn more than a fraction rJ what
goes on ' inside the White House, the
Congress, or the campaign organizations of those who seek such otrices.
We know tha~ . and we are forever
wondering what we are missing.
This year' I am going to rind out.
By the end of this month, I wiU be
working the other side of the fence
as deputy press secretary in the
presidential campaign or Sen. Edward M. Kennedy . This IS my final
column, ror months ir not years, and
it is exceedingly painful to write .
I have been a journalist ror 16
years, my entire professional We.
and I have relished every minute of
it. A press card is an admission
ticket to the great public dramas of
our tunes, events few people ever
have the chance to witness in person, and the thrill or knowing "I wa s
there" never wears off .
We in the press ' 'pay" ror our
tickets with our reports to you on
what we see and hear rrom our
privileged vantage point. but the
truth is there is never space or tune
enough to share everything we have
learned. No matter how hard I have
worked over the years, I have
always felt that I gained more than I
gavP .

19!\J All SVAC Football Team
PLAYER - SCHOOL

Gi=:TZ Mm, Y
ou've ouTDoNE
1
'{ouR2;[LF A ~OL A R- HErin: D

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

,VIrBt.U. , ODt year PJ.M: Sb moatbl 81'1.51:
thret mona. m .M. EIMwlwt $11.01; 1b

moatlu PO.OO; Uaret moatbi tn.•.
Thf' .\asi'N'Ialed Prna Is ntlulvtly eUiUed

to the u.: for pubUt•thm of all ann dU.-tt:~
eM&amp;~ to the Dt'n.-pa-r nd at.o the loea~l
otws publldlf'd h!'rrin .

negotiators go easy on the steel companie.•. but it does suggest that the
Wlion restrict the rate of wage increases at some plants to permit
them to remam m business.
A small beginning, and maybe one
made mainly ror reasons of sellinterest, but it exceeds the accompllshments or certain other
groups, including, some would say,
the executive branch or the government.
The latter is criticized by inflation
righters ror reneging on its promise
to balanc-e the budget and instead
continuing to maintain big deficits,
whlch economists maintain have
helped to worsen infla t10n .
Other groups also have been
criticized, rairly or unjustly : Banks
for not holding back interest rates
even at the expense of shareholders ;
oil companies for similar reasons ;
the rarmer and " middleman .. ror
allegedly taking too great a share;
the consumer ror piling up debts.
But there also have been scatter&lt;'d
examples of restraint similar to that
or the steelworkers
Earli er this month the U. S.
League
Savings Associations
declared its support ror the Federal
Reserve' s anti-inflJltion policy of
monetary restraint, " even though 1!
Will adversely arred OUr earnings . "
Citibank said it refrained rrom
ra1sing 1ts prime interest rate to 16
percent last week. although • rormula it had rollowed earlier in the
year. based on money costs , indicated s uch a move was called ror.
Retailers thrughout the country
have held the liJJe on selected items ,
eve n lowered prices on them .

or

The cosmetics indus try thrived in
Egypt thousands of years ago. According to the National Geographlc,
ladies painted their eyelids Wllh
green malachlte ur gray galena .
their toenails and finge rnails With
henM and their lips and cheeks with
red ocher.

•

Sibley paced Wildcat team
to first SVAC championship

-~

Ar ch ie Meadow~. Han nan Trace
T tm Wr tg hl , Han na n T ra ce
T tm Bett ve r , H annan Tr ace
Jay B r ay, H an na n Tr a ce
Todd Si bl ev. H an nan Tra ce
Paul Lasseter, Kyge r Creek
Ch r is El li ott , Kyge-r C r eek
Vtc tor VanStckle , K vger creek

COMMENTARY
r,.. Donald F. Graff
1&lt; ...,

Greg Smt t h, Kygt.&gt; r C r eek

M ike Shoemake r , Kyge r Creek
Greg H aym a n. E dster n
Br ian B isse l l, Eastern

Khomeini vs. the Ayatollah
By Don Graff
While there is nothing IX"ilive to
be read into the seizure of the U.S.
embassy in Tehran, there may be
one least-negative COJ1lleQUence.
The outrage has simplified the
political silUHtion in Iran . It has
compelled Prime Minister Mehdi
Bazargan to make good on his
repeated threats to resign .
Now de JUre and de facto
authorities in Iran are one and the
same. Who else but that man of the
year - any year in the 13th or 14th
centuries -the Ayatollah Khomeini'
In fact, there is some reason to
beUeve that the attack on the et:.
bassy was instigated in part for
precisely this purpose. It has enabled the religious extremists within
the rragmented revolutionary ranks
to neutralize the few pragmatic
political figures who have had the erfrontery to attempt to act like a
government and to deal on civilized
terms with other governments.
The issue &lt;I the ailing shah's
presence in the United States may
be a superbly convenient pretext
serving this end and in the process
propelling thls country once more into the domestic political iruighting of
yet another erstwhlle ally.
The embassy seizure may be
news, but there is certainly nothing
new in that basic sitUHtion. Nor in
the violation of diplomatic turf to
whlch Western governments and
press are reacting so strongly.
That has been going on as long as
potentates have been exchanging envoys, a practice that goes back a
long, long time. There were Hittites
in the capitals of the pharaohs and
Greeks at the courts rJ the shah's
and ayatollah 's unperial Persian
predecessors.
Modern diplomatic niceties such
as inunuruty or person and property

are, however, essentiaUy a Eur&lt;&gt;pean rerinement of recent centuries,
imposed upon the rest of the world
whether it liked them or not. And it
is to the West's recurring surprise
that portions of that world rrom time
to time suddenly decide not to play
by the rules.
At one time the penalty could be
swift and irresistible. China 's Boxer
Rebellion on 1900 sent an ei@htnalion international army marching
to the relief of bP.1eiged eJ1lbassies in
Peking .
But in a contemporary world
wh~re the distribution and application or power are more complex
matters, that sort of response is out
of ravor. For one thing, it can be seUdef ea ling, strengthening popular
support ror the very violators being
punished
Not that the ayatollah would appear to be weak in that area at present. But situaboru; can change
rapidly , particularly revolutionary
sttuaboru;, as he himseU ke"!&gt;'
demonstrating. He may have rid
tumselr cJ inconvenient political
frontmen in this latest escapade, but
he has also very likely added
moderate politicians to a growing
opposition that already includes leftists, rebellious Arabo and Kurds
and a c hunk the armed forces.
What else he has accomplished is
difficult to say. He has proved again
that a mob can seize a rew unarmed
foreigners, but he has not been able
to rorce hls will upon another
goverrunent. He has shown his
power to inflame the pubUc but has
not brought public order to Iran, only continuing turmoil and rule by
terror rather than law .
Hls is the sort rJ authoritarian,
destructive perionnance that not only gives revolution a bad name, but
in the end may well prove hun to
have been hls own worst enemy .

or

Carter's action
•
wzns high praise
WASHINGTON I AP I - President
..- Carter 's move to halt purchases of
Iranian oil won wide bipartisan
praise Mooday from congressional
and politica l leaders, including even
nval preSidential candidates.
" He's dead right ," said Howard
Baker, Senate rnll1ority leader •nd
candidate ror the Republican
pres idential nomination. wh1l c
campaigning in Pennsy lvania
However, se veral conservatives in
Congress claimed that the prestdent
hadn 't gone rar enough - and should
have considered using military
mi~ht to free the 6(1 Amencans who
have been held hostage in the U.S.
Embassy Ul Tehran ror eight days .
Aessional
leaders,
while
applauding Carter's move, were
openly skeptical on whether it would
have any effect or the emba.sy
stalemate .
Former President Gerald R . Ford
said in Los Angeles that he was
" totall y supportive" or Carter 's
move . calling it a " defin itive action ''
toward rreeing the u.s. hostages .
" It was the ooly move the
preSident could make under the
circwnstanes ," said Senate Energy
Committee Chairman Henry M.
Jackson, D-Wash . " ft 's not going to
have much imoact on Iran. The

unpact ,.;u be here, in the United
States ...
.Jackson iilio said he was a little
rea rrul or the psy chologial effect or
the eutor! ... 1 suspect the number of
cars gmng to the pwnps to top off
their tanks wlll increase ." Jackson
"'I d.
Rep He nr y Re uss , D-W1s .,
chrurman of the House Banking
Committee , noted that "the Iranians
undoubtedly be a ble to sell their oil
to F:urop e and Japan :· but said
some focm of rallon1118 would be
needed to prevent "endless lines" at
ga s stations Ul lhis COWl try .
Se n. Lowell We1 cker . R-Conn , a
member of the Senate Energy
Committee. also predicted rationing
would be nece !!SBI'y And Gov .
Edmund G Brown Jr., who is
r unnm g for the Democrati C
rrrsidential nomination. said he was
reimposi n~ odd.e ven gas saleo in
Caltforma next Sunday to support

6 0
5 II
5 10
59

Ma r k Nort on . Eastern

WT . YR .
190 Sr
155 Sr
115 Sr
175 Sr

160 Sr .
175

165
250
195
115
165
185

Jr
Sr .

Sr

165
165

Jr .

Sr .
Sr .

Sr .

Greg W tg al , Easrer n
145 Jr .
T i m H owe It , N ort h Gallta
160 Sr .
J im
B arnes
N or t h
Gallta
61
17 5 Sr
Jim Ca i nes, N or t h G ~ l l i a
6 1
175 Sr
Sco tt Russe l l. Sou m wes ter n
5 I 165 Jr
Sherman P ott er , Sou t hw este rn
59
195 Sr fll.
Da le Teaf ord , Southern
60
175 Jr
Da nn y T a lbo tt , Sou therry
59
135 Jr
'HONORABLE MENTION
H A NN A N T R ACEY; Randy Green and Jon Sa.under s
K YG ER C RE E K
Rob Wa u g h and E d M oor e
EAS TERN
De n is Dur s t and Ray Wer r y
N O RTH G A LLI A - J eff Gard ne r a nd Bi l l Ha sh.
SOUT HW ESTER N
Jo hn Ki ng and Rnni e H~ m m om1
SOUT H ER N
Tl'r r y M c N ic kl e
MOST VALUABLE BACK
Todd Sibley , Hannan Tra ce
MOST VALUABLE LINEMAN
1
' 1S't eg H ay man, Ea stern
Ji m Barnes, Nor t h Gall ia

HT dominates
All-SVAC squad
Todd Sibley, talented JUnior runnmg back who establi•hed a school
year 's record this rail at Hannan
T r• ce, was c hosen Monday night a s
the SVAC's Most Valuable Back .
Sibley scored 90 points while rushing
ror 1,069 yards in 119 carries. Sibley
a lso caught rive passes ror 8() yards
and had rour InterceptiOns from hi'
d efensive safety position.
The lea~ue's Mo;-t Valuabl e
Lineman award will be shared betWt&lt;en North Gallia 's Jun Barnes. a&amp;i . 175 pound semor ta ckle-linebacker
and Ea stern' s G reg Hayman, a :&gt;-11,
185 pound s enior middle guard.
Ha yman 's brother, Mik e, won the
a ward last rai L
By virtue or the r1nal standings ,
Hannan Tra ce ea rned six hrst pla ce
playe rs on the all-league squad
selected Monday night at Kyger
Creek . The seeond place Bobcats
placed rive players on the team ;
Eastern. rour : North Gallia. three ;
Southwes tern, two and Southern,
two. There were mne repeaters from
last year' s squad .
Honored a gam for their out·
standing team contributions were
Kerry Ours , Jay Bray and Sibley ,
Hannan Trace; Paul LaBseter,
K y ~er Creek ; Barnes and Tim
Howell, North Gallia; Bnan BISSell.
Eastern ; and Shennan Potter,
Southwestern .
Malting the selectioru; were rootball coaches , Larry Cremeens, Hannan Trace; Jim Sprague. Kyger
Creek : Joe Mitchem. Eastern; Jotm
Bl•ke, North Gallia; Bob Ashley ,
Southwestern and Jotm Dudding ,
Southern . During the bu:;iness
session, the league voted to purchase a trophy for the Kyger Creek
Girls' Volleyba ll Squads, wmners or
the SVA C volleyball charrpJOnShip.
The next lea gue meeting will be
held the hrst Munday rulluwing the

However . Fred H•rtley , chairman
or the Unioo Oil Co . of California .
and Rawletgh Warner Jr .. chairman
or Mobil Corp ., said they expected
the sale of Iranian oil to oth•r
countries would rree other oil for
unport to th e United States.

Tudd Sibley , Hannan Trace's
talent junior runrung back led his
te2 mmates in scoring with 90 points
m pacing the Wilde&gt;Jts to their best
re&lt;:o rd in the school's hlstory, 9-().1.
Coach Larry Crem eens' Wildcats
dethroned derendmg cbampion
Eastern to capture the 1979 SVAC
champwnshlp .
Other offensive stars were Jay

Sr .

Sr.

"'

last league team's elimination rrom
post-season basketball competillon .
Attending were Joe Mitchem and
Jotm Boston, Eastern; Paige Sheets
and Bob Ashley , Southwestern; Ted
Lehe w and J otm Blake, North
Gallia ; Jotm Dudding and Carl
Wolle . Southern; Jim Sprague,
Keith Carter, Mike Mulrord, Sharon
Venoy and Tom Weaver, Kyger
Creek and Larry Cremeens and
President Don Saunders, Hannon
Tral.'e.
FINALSVAC
STANDINGS
AU. GAMES
TEAM
W.L. T.P
Hannan Trace
9 0 I 220
Kyge r Creek
7 2 0 174
Eastern
7 3 0 222
NorthGallia
6 2 1 161
Southwestern
4 6 0 168
Southern
0 9 I 4j)
FINAL3VAC
TEAM
W.L.T.P.
Hannan Trace
4 0 i 115
Kyger Creek
! 1 0 103
Eastern
3 2 0 117
2 2 1 56
North Gallia
1 4 0 62
Southwestern
0 ~ 0
8
Southern

OP
69
45
88
71
152
376
OP
44
19
~

50
88
191

Pl.A YERS OF YEAR
CINCINNATI lAP) - Nancy
Lopez and Tom Watson have again
been named Players or the Year by
the Golf Writers As.soci.ation or
America .
It was the third consecutive time
for Watson and the second ror Lopez .
MISS Lopez finished well ahead or
Jenlyn Britz, Pat Bradley, Sandra
Post, Sally Little and Lori CasliUo in
the balloting .
Watson won over Larry Nelson.
Hale Irwin . John Cook. Steve
Balle s teros , Be n Crens h aw and
David Graham .

Ball 51

3 4 o

5 5 0

Ohio U
W . Mi c h

3
.t

0
0

5
5

Bowlino Green
M iami, Ohio

3 "' 0

-4

N. 111.

4

'
~

0

2 2 1

o4

By The Associated Press
TENNIS
STOCKHOLM, Sweden ( AP !
Defending champion John McE.nroe
fought off a brisk challenge from
Gene Mayer and won the men's
singles title In the S210,000
Open
Tennis
Sto ckholm
Charnpiooships &amp;-7, 6-3, 6-3.
The top.;;eeded McEnroe became
the rirst player ever to win two
straight titles in this tournament.
McEnroe's lOth singles title or the
year - including the Masters, the
WCT rinals and the U.S . Open earned him $25 ,000.
Mayer, whose brother Sandy won
here two years ago, got $12.500.
TAIPEI, Taiwan I AP) - Thirdseeded Bill Scanlon scored a &amp;-2, 7.;,
viftory over New Zealand 's Chr is
Gunmng m th e opening round or the
$75 .000 Taip ei Open Tenni s
Tournament .
In othe r mat ches, etghth,seeded
John Sadri dereated Australian John
Marks &amp;-1 , 7~ ; Sweden's Steran
Simonsson downed Australian Ahin
Gardiner 7~. 6-1; sixth .;;ceded Tim

o

o4

l

E M ;c h
I 5 I
2 I I
Kent St .
1 7 0
1 9 0
I(
C Iinched championship
Ohio Conference
Red Division
League All Games
W. L. T .
W. L. T.
Baldw i n Wallace 4 1 0
8 1 0
Denison
4 1 0
7 2 0
Mount Union
3 2 0
7 2 0
Oh i o Northern
3 2 0
5 3 1
Ohio wesleyan
1 4 0
1 8 0
Hei delberg
0 5 0
I 8 0
Blue Division

League All Games
W . L.T .
5 0 0
A 1 o

Witf enbe rg
onerbe in

Woo•te r

W. L.T .
9 0 0
6 3 o

3 2 0

6 3 0

Capita I
2 3 0
5 4 0
Mu sk1 ngum
I 4 o
1 7 o
Mar1et1a
0 5 0
2 7 0
Hoos1er -Buckeye cont .

7 I 0

7 I

1 1 0
62 0
5 30
3 50
3 50

7 20
7 20
540
360
360

4

0

4 5 0

I

0

I

8

0

0

0

9

0

0
Others

I

WF:IGHT WATCHER
MI N:\I·: APOI.IS 1API - It took th e
eqw va lent or 500 eng meers workmg
a full year to design the laser
gyrosc op~ tl1 al will contro l and
naviga te the late st generation or
passeng er planes .
The Honeyw ell gyro calculates a
plane 's loc ati on and speed by
mea suring the c hanges in two laser
beams . The manuracturer says It is
so sensitive thalli detects the weight
change made by a stewardess when
she walks aft With your dinner tray .

W. L. T .

10 0 0

Young s St at e
Dayt on
Akron
Hiram
Central Stat e
Ash land
Case Wester n
Cincin nat i
Oberlin
John Carroll
Kenyon

IliaD

HUFFY

9

I

8

2

I

4

4

0

4 '

0
0

5 '
3
J
1
3
3

6
6
7
6
6
2 7

0

0
0
0
0
0

0

BASTION OF
FREEDOM OF CHOICE

FOR DETAILS

liere; al The Insurance Store.
"c ' n- rree lu sell ~ou whuf ~ou reall~ nt'ed!

SIGN UP
TODAYIIJ

BIGGEST SAV

\n rllL 111 \l lf cl llll" :.tgl'llh o tt er t h t' pOli L I L'~ o! a \1!1)!./f' ll1 \ IH 3 11 LC
\.·o1 np .t ll\ -\ nd 1h.1 t \ o k a~ 1 ·. \l'r~ gu~)J l fl "- ura n~.:e compan ~
o tll: t ~ p,li~&lt;..IL'"' th,ll rr·tl\ HJL' l'\LI..' ill'n t ht'nef 1t ' 10 man y people' .

IN

But
\\ r

VAUGHAN~s

•

hL· TL'

;Jt I

IlL'

ret:ords.
Vermeil sa1d F'r•nklin ·s wwering
59-ya rd er was the product of a
•·ommntee " Tony told me he could
make ll , so !told him okay, so g o do
It "

Stunned by a Dalla s w uchdown in
th e opening 61 seconds, th e Eagles
didn't pl"Y fa vorites m comm g ba ck
to Win
Oalla s stunned the E:agles, using
JU St three plays to get on the
seorelX!ard with th e payoH coming
on a !S.ya rd Roger Stauba ch pass to
Ton y Hill. Philadelphla quarterba ck
Ron Jawor ski evened ttungs up after
Trny Dorse tt fumbled the ball awa y
~' the F:agle s .
.Jaworski spotted g1ant tight end
Harold Carmichael in the end wne
ror a JZ-yard touchdown that tied the
S&lt;.·ore .
A rew plays before, Carmichael
had gathered in a third~ow" pass to
mark the 107th straight game in
which he has caught a pass,
extending his own record.
" I was happy about breaking the
record," Carmichael said . " I guess
ll Wlll end when I quit rootball ."
The Jaworski -Carmi c hael
combination was a familiar one to
Eagle wa tc he rs, but It wasn 't the

Sports briefs.

0
6 0
5 5 0

Oh 10 State

SEE RC
COLA DISPLAY

I

IRV ING. Texas !API - Looking
at Tony r;•lfhldin , you wouldn 'I thmk
he and 'J his Philadelphia Eagle
tearrunates had just beaten Dallas
ror the rirst time since 1974.
And you sure wouldn't think
Franklin had booted a mooster field
goal of 59 yards, second longest in
~ati ona l f'oolbaU l.€ague history, on
the way to the 31-21 victory.
Hc1 head hanging amid the handsl a ppin ~. shouting jubilation or th e
locker room, Franklin said : " Poor .
·lllal' s all I can say . I made one I
wasn 't supposed to and missed tw o
t11at I was ."
While Franklin was being sullen,
Philadelphia Coach Dick Vermeil
was enjoying his first victory over
Co wboy Coach Tom Landry and th e
~a me ball his player s awarded him .
" This 1the game ball) is the most
mcan1ng£u l thing that ever
happened to me, " Vermeil said.
" You see, this didn't just happen
overnight "
Holding court from a perch on top
or an equ ipment box, Vermeil said
his team " realistically is going ror a
wild .card spot. "
The Eagles and the Washington
Redskins trail Dallas in the National
F ootball Conrerence Eastern
DivisiOn by ore game with 7-4

Ohio College Football
By The Associated Press
Mid -American Conf .
League All Games
W.L.T.
W. L.T .
x C Mi c h
2 0 l
8 0 1
T aledo
6 1 l
6 3 1

Fin dlay
Han over
Ander so n
Wilm1ngton
Bluffton
Def1an ce
Mi'lnc hes ter
T ayl or
Ear lha m

BIKE

The
Amencan
Automobile
Ass oc iation re commended that
motorists
reduce
gasoline
consumption by one or two gallons a
week to make up the difference. The
AAA also urged greater use of mass
transit , car pools and observance of
the &gt;5 mph speed limit.
Jay
Vivari ,
an
Energy
Department spokesman , said
Carter 's action , at the minimum,
will mean a cutoff of the estimated
400,000 barrels or crude oll daily that
is bought directly from Iran.
If the administration also moves
w cut off indirect shipments Iranian oil shipped first to
Caribbe a n rerineries, and then
brought into the United States In the
form or rerined products - it could
boost the total cutoff ID as much as
800,000 barrels a day, according to
the latest Energy Department
rigures.
That amounts ID about 10 percent
or all U .S. oil imports, or about 4.25
percent of total use .

J

Pairings ror the annUHl SVAC
Cage Preview kicking orr the start of
the 1979-80 season were made Monday during a meeting of league orficials at Kyger Creek High SchooL
Action will begin at 6 p.m. Saturday , Nov. 24, on the tartan floor at
Paul R . l.yne Ce nter , Rio Grande
College, with the reserve teams of
Kyger Creek and Southwestern
meeting in the Hrst tilt.
The varsity squad will roUow .
At 7: :W p.m . Eastern's reserves
will tangle with Southern. The varSity game followmg that matchup .
In the rinale at 9 p.m . , Hannan
Trace's reserves meet North Gallia .
The varsity tilt will close out the
evening.
Mel Carter has charge of gettmg
oHlcials ror the preview while Southwestern High School will print
programs.
Proceed• will go toward the all
league sporu banquet held each
spring .

l

point average, in tO games while
permitting 69 points, a 6.9 average.
Sibley set a school record with 1,0110
yards in 119 carries, an 8.9 yard
average.
Bray bad 726 yards rushing;
Green, 386 ; Meaddws, 197; Brumrield , IOl and Webb, 59.
Passing-wise, Meadows connected
on 20 or 59 aerials ror 332 yards and
£1ve touchdowns. Saunders was the
c':t
£1ve passes for 80 yards.
Defensively, Craig Chapman, 5-9,

Preview
• •
prurmgs
released

3
4

Bray , senior rullba ck, with 56 points; Randy Green, seruor halfba ck . 24
points; junior quarterback Arc hie
Meadows and s ophomore runninb
back Danny Brumfield had 18 points
each whil e Tim Beaver, and J on
Saunders each had a touchdown and
Greg Webb added a tw ~point conversi on
Hannan T r"ce had 220 points. a 2:!

E agl es en d Cow boy ~:!info:el~~iv;~r:.thSi~l~t
•znx,
•
31 -21

TODD SIBLEY

league All Games
W . L.T .
W. L.T .

Carter 's move .

Policy effect
not known yet
WASHINGTON !API - Energy
policymalters are uncertain how
President Carter's decision to halt
purchases or Iranian oil wiU atrert
American conswners, but they say 11
IS possible oil supplies will decline
by about 4 percent to 8 percent.
That could be enough to trigger
loog gasoline lines again . However .
it would be rar short of the 20 percent
shortage that would trigger gasoline
rationing under recently passed
legislatioc1 .
Adm ini s tration orri cia ls wh o
asked not to be named .' said
Amricans can compensate lor the
cutorr in 1ranian oil by reducing
U1eir average automobile travel by
three miles dail y.
Whether pnces rise or gasolin e
lines reappear on the American
scene . they said, depends on the
su,.eess or conservation efforts . With
proper conservation , " there should
be no cause fer concern , there
shoi&lt;ld br nn ca use ror panic," the
offi cia ls sa1d .

HT .
60
5 10
60
6 I
5 10
5 11
5 10
63
5 11
5 10
5 7
5 II

lm ura nLl' ')!Orl' \~ e o fl er m ure .
I hat lliL' an " \\ ('arc fr ee to rev1ew

• •

Wilkison ousted Mike Machette 7 ~ .
6- 1 and seventh -seeded K 1m
Warwick or Austral1a ddeated
Wolfgang Popp or West Germany &amp;3, 6-4 .

BASEBALL

TOKOROZAWA, Japan lAP) Willie Wilson or th e Kansas City
fWyals sing led home the wmmng
rur in the bottom of the ninth inning ,
giving the American League AllStars a 6- ~ come-from-behind
\ictory over the Natiooal l.€ague .
It was the AL 's secood victory
against on e defeat and one lie m a

nine-game Japan tour.
GOLF
CIN CINNATI 1 AP I - :'&gt;laney
Lope-z and Tom WatsOn won the 1979
Golf Write rs Assoctation of Am erica
Player of th e Year a wa rds .
The winner s were a repeat of la st
year ·s se lec tions and It was the tturd
consec uti ve year that Wat son has
received th e honor
IIOWLI"'G
DEEIU' IELD , Ill 1 AP I - Ed
Hessler rmi.shed With a rirst..-ound
total of 1,975 ptn s to ~ rab the lead m
the $l:W,OOO MemorUll World Open . a
Pro fe.~ional Bowl er s A.-'is.H: lati on
tourname nt .
\latt Surma IS se con d w1Ul 1.93J
wtule Marshall Holman IS lhtrd ,., th
1,92! , Joe Hutchinson fourth with
1.no and Lou1e \l oor r fi rth " 1Ul
1.81!9

160 pound junior, 1"\1 the team In
tackles with 73, assists, 43, be was
credited with three sacks.
Other defenBive slandouts were
senior Kerry Ours with 49 tackles; 22
assists and two sacks; Bruce
Waugh, junior linebacker, had 40
tackles, 24 assists and three saells;
Tim Wright, senior tackle, had 38
tackles; 25 assists, and four saclls;
Randy Green, had 33 tackles, 13
assists and one sack while Jon Saunders was credited with 31 tackles, 15
assists and five sacks.
Green had four interceptions and
returned one to the end zone. Sibley
also had rour interception return
runs; Chapman, two; Webb and
Meadows , one each. Saunden1, the
team's punter, punted 28 times ror
1,015 yards, a 31i.2 ave.
TEAM RECORD
H T 27 Symmes Valley B
H T 46 Hannan, W . Va 6
HT 14 Huntington 6
HT 9 Southeastern 7
H T 13 Kyger Creek 6
H T 18 St. Joe 0
HT 0 North Galli a 0
HT 26 Eastern 16
HT 3.4 Southwestern 20
HT 33 Southern 0

onl y game in town . Jaworski
depaned late in the secmd period
~1th a wrist sprain but was to return
in the se cood half .
In the meantime, backup John
Walton managed to stretch the
Philadelphia lead with a ~yard
touchdown pass to Charlie Smith,
who recorded his rirst TD reception
or the year.
Franklin's club record 39-yarder
rollowed to make the score 17-7 at
haUtime .
Dallas Coach Tom Landry said the
field goal took a lot out of his team.
"That took the juice out rl&amp;ht
betore the half.:• Llullk7 --'4..
"Franldln Julll maGe a _ _..
In the third quaner, Philadelphia
~en up its ground game behind
Wilbert Montgomery, who became
the first Eagle rtUlller to record
consecutive 1,000-yard seasons.
Mootg&lt;n1ery finished the night with
127 yards and one !Duchdown on 25

carries.
MootgOOJery's rushing led the
E"!l les to · a 13-yard TD from
Jaworski to Carmichael.
The Cowboys closed the gap as
Sta ubac h agam hooked up with Hill,
th 1s tim e foc a 7:&gt;-yard touchdown .
r ighting U1e clock as well as the
Eagles, Stauba ch man"!led to strike
for a nother score on a :&gt;-yard pass to
Billy Joe Dupree that brought the
Cowbo)·s to within three points at 2421.
An ooside kick failed and the
Ea gle s faced a third-and-two
situation at the Dallas 37..
Mrntgomery slid along the jammed
cente r or th e line and broke off the
left sid e ror a touchdown, sealing the
WIJl for Philadelphia .
Jaworski swnrned up the victory :
" We pla y a s a team .and we win as a
team ."

ATTENTION

CARRIER
NEEDED IN
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a rL· rndt'flt"idt' nr ci~l"llh

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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�'

Buckeye coach sees low sco
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP 1 - Earle
Bruce, the coach of undefeated Ohio
State, predicts a low-ocoring game
Saturday when the Buckeyes travel
to Michigan to settle the Big Ten
football title and Rose &amp;wl berth .
" I would expect il to be a very
defensive football game, " said
Bruce .
Ohio State has not scored a
touchdown in dropping the last three
games of the rivalry to the
Wolverines . Michigan has prevailed
22-0, 1~ and 14-3 to represent the
Big Ten in the Rose &amp;wl all three
years.
"If we falter this week, it won't be
beCause
of
our
effort
or
enthusiasm," said Bruce . " I hope
it 's close and I hope Ohio State

looking fur a team lhat cuuld be
upset or beaten .
"Can you get too emotional? l
would think the first five or six plays
we'll be overly emotional , t.Jt good
hitting will bring you right down to a
level where you can perform ."
Bruce is (urbiding interviews and
closing practice in prepanng for the
nationally televised showdown
1 ABC-TV , 12 :50 pm. EST I. He

want s total co ncentration on
Mwhigan .
" I've never been afraid of leaving
our best game on the practice field,"
he said of the highly explosive
workouts this week . "What counts is
how you perform and what you do on
Saturday afternoon "
Someone woodered if Bruce had
thought about being No. 1 nationally
in his first season as Woody Hayes'

wins .' '

Bruce, facing Michigan for the
first time as a head roach, is
unconcerned that his players might
be too high .
"I much prefer an enthusiastic
and emotiooal young man than one
who is lethargic or won't be ready to
play . If you have a team like that
and it is not responding, you're
1928 POMEROY BASKETBAU" TEAM - Member&gt; are shown
above. They were, fin;t row, 1-r, Max Beany Dye, deceased; Wid Ashworth, Red Wiggins and Harlan Eiselstein: second row, Junrny Fontana,
deceased, Shep Walkf r~,deceased, Nappy Stobart, deceased, and Ralph
Welker ; third row, Ernie Ward, coach, Ralston Russell, Horace Karr,
deceased, Fred Gear&gt;, manager, deceased . RusseU will be honored by
the Pomeroy Chamber of Corrunert·e Nov . 28 .

World
lh \\ ilJ Grimsln
r&gt;f:W YOHK ' AP ' -

Tenn1s
hea\·ywe1ght s afl'n't playing a catand-mouse game as do theu- boxing
co unterparts. UlSlsls lljorn Borg they'n· JUSt gruhbing for the sport's
moth~r lode
" I don't purposely duck John
:\1 cEn r1Jt.'. .Ji rnmy Connor.'i or
_,anybody e lS&lt;•. and I am SW"C they
rlon 't dodge me ... sa1d the Golden
Swede, the world 's recogmzed 1\o I
play er. " It's just the way our
schedules fall ."
The 23-year&lt;Jid Horg was 1n New
York briefly Monday tu accept
another truph1 and a $10.000 check

EUREKA
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MODEL 1458

w / TOOLS FREE'!!
• Olspoubla dust bag
660 cu . ln . cap1clty .

ha~

huge

• Four easy roll wheels can't m1r

floors . Rides

et~slly

as tht• men's tennis winner in tile
Se1·e n Crowns of Sports competition .
It marks the tttird tune he has won
It
The competition is spoosore~; by
Seagrams.
/
Horg IS in good company~ong
others hooored are Tom W tson in
golf, Fred Lynn in baseba , Walter
Payton in pro football j nd Guy
Lafleur in hockey .
Borg, en route from a Pacific tour
to his rome in Monte Carlo, paused
long enough to answer those critics
who l'Ontend that men's tennis
suffers because the sta r performers
- principally the "Big Three" of
Borg, McEnroe and Ccnnors rare ly meet. except in major
champiOnsh ips .
As t-t ca'ie in point, while Borg was
hcadmg for the Mediterranean,
Co nnor s was wmding up a
wumarnent li1 Hong Kong and
' Mc F:nroe was bea tmg fellow
American
Gene
Mayer
1n
Stockholm .

over dHp

p ile rugs .
• Low profile 11nables cleaning
In hard -lo -re1ch areaa .

wr would faN' each other more
often," the yuw1g Swede explained.
" Rut with promoters willing to put
up S!J much money. and as long as
the} msist oo name players, you
naturally are KOln~ to see the tllp
players split up .
" It's more practical for the
'I&gt;Onsurs It's financially better for
lh e players But we don't work it out
an1on~ ourselves . lndiV1dually. we
just make out our schedules and let
lhern happen ."
TI1e n&lt;•xt confrontatioo of the king
and h1s eluef challengers probably
wtll be 1n the Grand Prix Masters at
Madison Square Garden m Jaj1uary ,
Then there wtll be the early surruner
WCT Final in Dallas. followed by
Wimbledon and the U.S . Open It 's a
mad cir cle
"There ma)· beo a few other
tournaments where two of us met•t .
or maybe all thret:'," Bjorn said .
Borg has a 3-2 lead this year over
theW-year-old McEnroe 1they are :~
J for their careersl , and 4..0 over
Connors. havmg given Ji.rmny ;,~
straight -se t laci ng re cen tly In

theme.· 'White C'hristmas'

CLASS AA
I. Sf Marys, 100. 177.
1. Akron St . Vincent -St . Mary , 7 1
I. 148.
3. Wheelersburg , 10 ·0, 135.
4 . Warren Kennedy, 10-0.135 .
5. Hamilton Badin, 9-1.73.
6. Columbus Grandview, 9· ·0 · 1, 6B
7. Trenton Edgewood, 9 ·0· 1, 58 .
8. Fostoria, 9·0 ·1. 58 .
9. Cadiz, 80 2, "&lt;&lt;.
Other schools receiving 10 or more
poinh :
11 .
West
Lahyette
RidgewOOd 38 . 12. Medina Buck eye
JJ . 13. Elyria Catholic 32 . 14.
Navarre Fairless 31 . IS . Steubenville
29. 16. Canal Fulton Northwes t 25 . 17.
( fie ) Johnstown and Medina
Highland 24 . 19. Martins Ferry 21
20. Cortland Lakeview 16 11 ( t1e),
Jackson,
Urbana and Ravenna
Sou theast 14 . 2.4. Perrysburg 14
CLASS A
1. Mogadore, 10·0, 120.
2. Arlington, 10 0, 154.
3. Bergholz Springfield, 9 0 1, 138.
4. Newark Catholic, 9·1. 112
5. Cedarville, 10·0, 111
6. Covington, 9 0 1, 93
7. McDonald, 9· 1, 79 .
B. Crooks-ille, 8 2. 73.
9. Tiffin Calvert, 8·· 1 1, 59
10. Portsmouth Notre Dame, 8·2, «
Other schools receiving 10 or more
points : 11. Leetonia J7 . 12 Lorain
Clearview 21 13 ( t ie). Brilliant
Buckeye North and Chillicot he Zane
Trace 19 . 15 . (tie), Gar1ield Heights
Trinity and Rittman 18 17 . Crown
City Hannan Trac e 15. 18. Orwell
Gra nd Valley l-' . 19 . ( tie L Beverly
Fort Frye and Southington Chalker
13. 21 . Maria Stein Marion 12 '1'1
Sugarcreek Garaway 11. 23. (tie),
Ga tes Mills Hawken and Milford
Center Fairbanks 10

IS RIDING
WITH US
NOW.

'Cavalcade ' to appear in concert Thursday
Ten uniquely talented coUege-age
singer&gt; and technic1ans will present
their nationally acclaimed rnulll dimensional sight and soWld concert
at Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church, Thursday, Nov. I, at 7:30p.m.

TAKES SEVEN POINT BUCK - Dermis Hart, Rt. I, Racine, brought
down a 200 poWld buck deer with a compound bow and arrow recently .

Christmas Open House

Transactions

WHITE

SOX

Acquired Luis Guzman, pitcher ,
from
Iowa of
th e American
Association. Released Gilbert Ron
don, pitcher .

BASKETBALL
National
Basketball Association
HOUSTON ROCKETS - Waived
Jacky Dorsey, forward

FOOTBALL
National Footballleo1gue
MIAMI DOLPHINS Signed
Dwight
Harri son, cornerback
Placed Glenn Blackwood, safety, on
th e iniured reserve list

HOCKEY
National Hockey League

COLORADO

ROCKIES

Acquired Bobby Sheehan, center,
from the New York Rangers to com
plete an ear li er deal. Lonned Denni s
Ow char , defenseman , and Larry
Skinner, ce nter, to New Haven of the
American Hockey League subi ect to
recall

MONTREAL

CANADIENS

Recalled Richard Sevigny , goalie ,
f ro m Nova Sco tia of the Ameri c an
Hockey League.

NE W YORK RANGERS -

Calleo

up Rav Markham , center, from New
Haven of the American H ockey
Le ague .
British League

BRIGHTON, -

So ld Nei er Ward:

NOVEMBER 25, 1979

COLLEGE

BASEBALL
American League

CHICAGO

SUNDAY,

forward , t o Nott 1ngham Forest for
1 2 million

Monday's Sports Transactions
By Th~ Associated Press

ARIZONA STATE - Announced
that Judy Whitehouse , women's golf
coach , will resign effec live Dec 31

Top Twenty

Now we can cove r your
msuran ce terr.tory better
than ever, beciluse now we
can prov•dt"'fOU wt.l h fine
products from 1he Kemper
Insurance Cump.an1e~ . We'll

fmd
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty team s in The
Assoc 1ated Press coll ege football
poll, with first place votes in ptlren
theses . records and total po1nts .
Points based on 20 19 18 17
16
15 l.oi 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 ..

3 3 I
1 Alabama

(34) 900 1,267
(14) 10 0 0 1.218
(5)900 1.209
4 So. California
(1 2)9011.164
5 Florida State
9 0 0 983
6 Texas
(1317 10 981
7. Oklahoma
960
8 I0
8. Arkansas
113 181Q
859
9 Houston
]13 ) 81
lllll
10 Brigham Young
9 0 OJ
705
11 Pittsburgh
810
661
12 Purdue
8 20
61&lt;
13 Michiga n
820
464
I-' . Clemson
7 2 0 359
15 . Auburn
720338
16. washington
7 3 0 295
17 . Wake Forest
8 20
11-4
18 . Temple
8 I 0 162
19 Tennessee
5J 0
123
10 . Bay lor
630
9'1
ti e Tulane
820
9'1

2 Ohio Sta te
3 Nebraska

o·

ttw&gt;

nght

~uto ,

hom~owners , bus•ness

i!nd

ot h~r •nsur.anc~ covero~ges

to

~et your

BEL TONE Consultant Who Will Be At :
Anyone who has troub le hearing is welcome 10 have a hearing test us ·
in g modern ele-ctronic equi pment to determine if his loss is one which
m,=,y be helped Some Of the causes of hearing loss will be eKplained
(lnd cl ,agr ams of how the ear works will be shown.
We Also Ser'¥1ce and Rep•lr All Makes of Hearing Aids. .
Batteril~s. And Supplies For All Makes For Sate.

L--------------------~

•

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
MRS . MILLARD VANMETER
PHONE 992 -2039
106 BUTTERNUT AVE.
992-5721
POMEROY, 0 .
We

· r· ' 1 A It

Major Cred1 t Cards and W e W i re Flowers E\lerywhere .

nHds .

mer, all integrated with the finest
audio and lighting equipment.
Founded during the Bicentenrual
... CAVALCADE was chosen as the
specia l fea ture for the 200th Annive...ary National Salute to the U.
S. Army Chaplaincy at Fort McClellan, Ala ., and the Fourth of July
Celebration at Fort McHenry,
Balhmore, Birthplace of the StarSpangled Banner.
Annually, the team travels an
average of 40,000 miles in the United
States and Canada presenting over
300 feature concerts ... In civtc
auditoriwns, schools and coUeges,
military bases and academies, shoppmg malls, churches, prisons and
town squares .. . Including Calvary
Baptist Church. Hazel Park ,
Michigan ; The Peoples Church ,
Torooto, Canada; Central Assembly, Springfield, Missouri; The
Chicagoland Sunday School Convention: Okoboji Lakes Bible and
Missionary Conference (Iowa); on
the daily Canadian Christian " 100

O'er the White and l&gt;nfllflg Snow",
an interpretive destgn; and
" ChristmaS Where Snow Peaks
Stand Solemn and Wlute" , a traditional mas. design .
Classes which are open to the
public for exhibit are "Thy Snow
Capped Peaks I love to See", a tall
line arrangement ; "The Snowdrop",
a small design, eight mches overall;
" In the Lane, Snow 18 Gl!stenmg", a
modern concept to be show under
blacklight: and "To Hear Sleigh
Bells m the Snow", a modern des1gn
with a trapunto backgroWld .
For the junior&gt; the class is "Tills
Uttle Fellow's Afraid of the Snow",
to include a pony or hon;e figurine .
There is also a special class li1 the
artistic arrangements classes for
those who have never won a blue ribbon. It is "When I Marry Mr . Snow"
from Rogers and Hammerstein , and
18 a favorite design usmg one or

more candles.
The artistic arrangement classes

open to Meigs County Garden Club
members only are "The First
Snowfall" containing a minimum of
plant material; "Snowbound", a
still life, an interpretive flower
design ; "April Snow" ( poem by
Robert Frost I featuring white
painted branches; "I Found Her Little Footprints in the Snow" using
two similar containers; "Let it
Snow, Let it Snow, Let it Snow" containing three flowers with white
petals; "Snow Bird", showmg mer
lion ; "Frosty, the Snowman", just
for fun ; "Whiter than Snow, Lord",
with a religious aura , including a
Christmas madonna.
The show will also include nine
classes in the horticulture division
as well as several educational
displays, competitive ; and several
non-competive displays , along with
a craft display , a display from the
Crafty Ladies Shop, and a book
display by Ellen Bell of the public
libraries .

SALE CONTINUES
ON

MUD &amp; SNOW

The Statue of Liberty, a gift of the
people of France to the United
States, was UJ1Veiled in 1886 on
Bedloe Island in New York harbor
with ceremonies attended by
President Grover Cleveland and the
sculptor, Auguste Barthold.i

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

HU11Uey Street" network ; and on
many television and radio stations
acrO&amp;'l the country .
There is no admission charge and.
the public is cordially invited.

John Fultz , Mgr .

Next to Krogers
in Pomeroy, OH.

992-2101

DAVISQUICKEL
INSURANCE AGENCY
Bill Quickel
" Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy"
992 -6677
R!J1&lt;-i"' ·
HDERAL
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Chopped Ham ........... :~~c:: ..s499
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con be l1ke salv1ng a three·dimenStonol pgsow puzzle
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"And thai helps keep your phone bdl down That s why I m
proud to be one of the people Generol Telephone is tolking
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ctj i #J

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Field Engineer,
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One of 'he 100,000
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BANANAS

For Meigs County, Ohio ·

MEIGS INN - POMEROY, OHIO-THURSDAY , NOll . IS

.

REMEMBER OUR

HEARING TESTS SET

Hearing Aid Specialist

Team members come from seven
slates and are selected by natiOnal
audition. The production employs
three large rear-projection screens,
seven projectors, three dissolve
units and an electronic program-

CORRECTION

Tokyo .
The blond Vilung acknowledges
tl1at the fiercely eompetiti ve and
maturely pmsed McEnroe poses the
greatest current threat to his No .I
ranking,
but
he
disdains
comparison s
Horg said his top priority for 1900
is Ill win the U.S. Open, a title that
has escaped him although he has
won four straight Wimbledons .
A Swedish paper reported that
Borg already had earned $13 million
from his tennis and outside activities
and would add $30 million if he
stayed healthy .
" ! wish it were oo - why didn't
th~y say $100 millioo '" he said .

ELECTRONIC
HEARING TESTS
Will Be Given By
Mr. H. 'W. Mattingly

"I'm Dreammg of a White
Chnstmas" will be the theme of the
1979 holiday flower show of the
Meigs County Association of Garden
Clubs to be staged Dec. I and 2 at the
Pomeroy Elementary School.
The show will not only include a
number of horticulture displays and,
artistic designs m arrangements using madonnas, candles, baubles and
things, but also corsages, gilt wraps,
and a w1de range of Christmas
crafL&lt;
S1x special awards will be given
for exhibits -the best of show for the
winner ln the artistic arrangement
division; the reserve best of show,
I or the second best design; the horticulture sweepstakes for the exhibitor accumulating the most ribbon points for exhibits; the creativity award for the most creative and
origtnal design in the interpretive
classes; the junior best of show,
something selected by the judge,
and the junior horticulture award,
based on ribbon points.
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis is
general chainnan for the show
which will be held at the Chester
Elementary School in the event that
teachers m the Meigs Local DIStrict
are still on strike .
In the artistic arrangements
classes, there are two classes
specifically for senior citizens, 60
and over. They are "The Hon~e
Knows the Way to Carry the Sleigh,

C;1 \11\U,;\f)l:

How

1. Cincinna t i Moeller, 10 0, 127
points .
2. Massillon , 10 ·0, 211
J . westerville North, 10 ·0, 123
-4 . (tie), Dover , 10·0, and Elyria,
10 -0, 115 .
6. Parma Padua, 9 · I, 101
7. Cincinnati Princeton, 9· 1, 59 .
8. Youngstown Mooney , 9·1, 59
9 . Youngstown South, 10 ·0, 58 .
10 . ToledoWhitmer,9· L -47 .
Otner schools receiving 10 or more
points :
11.
Zanesville J5 . 11
Macedonia Nordon ia 31. 13. Raven
na 19. 14 . Akron Buchtel16 . 15. Boar
dman 15 . 16. (Tie), Lora in Senior
and North Canton Hoover 13. 18.
Centerville 12 19 . Greensburg Green
10

IF YOU CA NNOT COME IN CALL THE HOTEL FOR A HOME APPOINTMENT .
PHONE 992 -3629

1979 holiday show slated,

su&lt;·cesoo•r . Hayes was ooly 7--4-1 and
finished fourth in the Big Ten in his
final Ohio State season in 1978.
"I can 't say f ever thought about
bemg No. 1." he said. "I have
thought about being 10-0. 1 never
thought about being !l-10 . I am going
to have to let those things I Rose
Bowl and national title I coo cern
themselves after we play our lith
game ."
.
.
Bruce is not revealing his strategy
rn going for a possible tie . That's all
the Buckeyes need to wrap up the
Rose Bowl spot, probably against
Southern California .
Bruce has had no ties in his eight
years of college coaching and said:
" I'll have to measure that during the
course of the game, what comes to
mind. 1 never, ever thought about
tying . I have looked at a tie like that
old expression: it's like k18S111g your
sister."
Bruce paused and then said, " It
would be difficult for me Ill go for the
tie ~ but I probably could do that ,
,
you know what 1 mean .

THE CAVALRY

CLASS AAA

Sports

game

5- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Nov 13, 1979

~

grid ratings
statewide panel of sportswr i ters and
broad cas ters rates Ohio high school
football teams this week for The
Associated Press ( 10 points for fir.st
to 1 point for 10th) :

Today's

•

.

High school
COLUMBUS, Ohio lA P )

I

$!!~CAY

Food

.9 iV lu

ne

Meserve

BTLS.
Plus Tax &amp; Dept

•;ne~Righ~t~To=Lim:;it~~=L---..::::!

�r-------- 1

Daughters of America have friendship fare

Social Calendar

11JESDAY
EASTERN Ba n d Boos ters
Tuesday 7:30p.m in band room at
high school.
FREE BlOOD Prt!SSure clinic, 10
a.m. lo I p.m Tuesday at the
Harrisonville Town Hall spon!~ored.
by HarriaonviUe Senior Citi2eM ;
public invited.
REGULAR MEETING d Racine
Lodge 461 , F and AM ; election riafleers . All members asked to !tend.
OHIO ETA PHI rnAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:30 Tuesday in
the Riverboat Room of the Athens
County Savings and Loan Co.
Cultural report. Sherry Abbott,
hostesses, Cathy Cummings, and
· Nancy Hill.
WINDING TRAIL GARDEN
C1.UB' 7:30 Tuesday night at the
home d Mrs . Jackie Brickles. Pr&lt;&gt;gram books to be distributed.
VETE RANS Day dinner by Meigs
Chapter :i'l D.A.V. at 6 p.m Tuesday
at chapter home, Butternut Ave.,
P&lt;meroy, for members and wives .
Women to take covered dish;
meeting to follow dinner.
WEDNESDAY

4Stb ANNIVERSARY - Mr. and M111 . Lester Ru .. ell, SprtnR Avenue,
Pomeroy, wUI celebrate their 45dl wedding anniversary on Nov. 16. The
couple were marrted at ClHton_ W.Va . by !!It' Rev. Gerhart in 1934. Tbey
hae two children, Mrs. Betty Reid ol We&lt;terviU~ . and John H. RusseU of
Rocluiprings, Wyoming. Tbey also hllve si• grandchildren and four greutgra ndc blldreo.

POMEROY - Middleport Lion.s
C1ubs regular meetiflll Wednesday
noon, Meigs hm .
ROSE GARDEN Club meeting
7: 30 p .m . Wednesday at home of
Doris Koenig, Tuppers Plains.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN CLUB,

CHESTER- The annWil friendship
meeting of District 13, Daughters of
Americ a, was held at the Chester
hall recently beginniJlll with a 6: 30
p.m. potluck s upper.
Mrs. Ada Mortis had grace
precediflll the dmner which was
served at tables decors ted with
vases of fall flowers . Mrs. ThelmB
White, district associate councilor,
presided at the meeting attended by

WEDNESDAY
REGULAR MEETING , P&lt;meroy
Chapter Ill, Royal Arch Mas om, 7 :30
p.m. Wednesday ; regular meeliflll
d B~worth Council 46, R and SM,
8:30 p.m. AU c&lt;mponions urged to
attend.
lHURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT CHILD CONSERVATION LEAGUE, 6 p.m. with
members 1o meet on the upper parking lot in Pomeroy across from
Nelson 's. The group will leave from
there for Williamstown, W. Va. and
a tour d the Fenton Glass Co. Mrs.
Susie Abbott will provide the travelillll pri2e, and Mrs. Jeanette Duffy
will gtve devotion!~.
FRIDAY
PAST MATRONS CLUB,
Evangeline Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, 7: 30 Friday at the
home of Mrs. Marie Hawkins, with
Mrs . Beulah Hayes, assisting
hostess.

8 p.m. Wednesday a t the home of
Mrs. Walter Crooks. Middleport
Garden Club members to be guests.
Guest night will be observed. Mrs.
Roy Holter, regional director, and
Mrs. Charles Lewis, chairman of the
Christmas flower show wiU also be
guests.

_

SATIJRDAY

MEIGS RETIRED TEACHERS
ASSOCIATION, Meigs Inn, Saturday noon luncheon. Mrs . Patrick
Lochary to give a book review.
Re5erva lion!~ to be made by Thursday at 99Z,.,i23 or 992-:i345 .

49 person!~. Mrs. Esther Ridenour,
past district deputy, was the pro tern
officer for Mrs. Dorothy IUtchie,
district deputy . A n:port on the !978
friendship meeting and the 1979 rally
was given by Mrs. Erma Cleland,
district secretary. Mrs . Opal Hollon,
district treasurer, gave her report.
It was decided that each council in
the district will have money -making
projects with the proceeds to go to
the district for the 19110 rally to be
beld at Logan. Mrs. Ridenour appointed Vera Householder, Perry
Council 283, Charlotte Grant,
Chester Council 323 ; and Louise
Roberts, Golden Gleam Council 254,
as the ISM district nominating committee .
Mrs. Lina McVay, Golden Gleam
COWtcil, reported that the district
Past Councilors' Club and the
Deputies Club will have a Christmas
dinner and party on Dec. 2 at I p.m.
at the University Inn, Athens. Any
lodge member is welcome to attend .
There will be $2 gift exchafllle.
Mrs. Ridenour introduced her five
deputies pre5ent : Bea Moyers,
Golden Gleam 254, Marietta ;
Elizabeth Hayes, Chester 323; Jean
Hall, Guiding Star 12t, Syracuse ;
Helen Bauer, Perry Council 283 ,
New Lexington; and Essa Varner,
Belle Prairie 269, Belpre. Each
member attending stood at and introduced herself.
Mrs. Ridenour thanked the
members for attending . Keith
Ashley was pianist .
Others attending were Mary
Moose, Betty Wolfe, Anna M. Kitchen, Vera Householder, New Lexington ; Louise Roberts, Jesse Ryan ,
Marietta; Iva Shutts, Edith Berry ,
Elizabeth Chaffin, Faye Hoselton,

7-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov . 13, 1979

Agnes Shaffer, Clara Wilson, Bethal
Laird, Belpre ; Eileen Clark, Esther
Harden , Mar garet Etchinger,
Janice Lawson, Syracuse.
Zelda Weber, Margaret Tuttle,
Ada Neutzliflll, Doris Grueser,
Charlotte Grant, Mary ll Holter ,
Marcia Keller, Goldie Wolfe, Julie
Ra.e, Betty Roush , Eileen Martin,
Daisy Canter, ThelmB
• McMannis, Nina Windle, Fae
Kimes, Goldie Fredertck, Emma
Ashley, Alta Ballard, Jean
Frederi ck, Pauline Ridenour ,
Chester.

HAVE YOU HEARD

BAKER'S
RADIO
AUCTION
Wed., 8 :45A.M .
WMP0 -1390
On Your Dial!
Buy at your price- -

Chairs

Tables

Lamps - Mirors
Clothes Hampers

-

Wall Plaques - Mat tresses · Rugs - Card

Tables - Step Stool!. Radios
Tap e
Recorders - Pillows Lawn
Furniture Book Shelf - Toy
Chests
Desks .
These ar e a few of
the items we have
sold on the Radio
Auction .

BAKER
FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT , 0 .

Parts Plus
G&amp;J Auto Parts Co. -~• cn.atnstnrca
••GO'' WITH THE
~

DOES SHE WOK AS
THOUGH SHE'S BEGGING?
Thts young, prbably year old Huskey , is begging . She wants someone
to come and g1ve her a good home, preferably with someone who has a
nice big fenced in yan:I·cause she loves tu run a nd run and run. (She does a
gnat figure eil!)lt) . A member of the Humane Soclety has already paid
{..,the -y\11&amp; of thla animal- she il! lully recuperated now , and is ready
for a permanent home . "Suzy" is really a sweet animal and L• also well
mar ked - a pretty dog. Anyone mterested tn thi&gt; J ug, please caU the
Humane Society at992-6260 .

BRAND NAMES YOU
KNOW!
MAINTENANCE-FREE
DELCO BATIERIES ...

""''"

ll~

SERIES

A low ta~ s\im cigarette
all your own_
Regular or Menthol.

as low as

$49 95

VIRGIN I

With Trade -in

•Never ~ weterunder norrnel drtvlng
condition•
•Help• ellmlnet1 power
robbing col'f'Oelon

I

'1r-

•M•Jdmum cold
cr•nklng power
•E•y lnapectlon lor
extended llle
•Av•U•ble In llDI to
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While
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-- -.·
.

Power Plus Starters
and Alternators

All-TEMPERATURE STARTING

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RUGGED , HIGH OUTPUT BOOSTER "n"'"'H:t1

A::
YOUTII STUDY BIBLE - The you th class of the Portl&lt;!nd Uruted
Methodist Church ts stud ying the life of Jesus through Bible costumes. a
movie and study of the scri ptu re . They will put what thev leam Into a
make-believe newspaper from the time of Jes us . Sundnv-Sc·hool for aU
ages i:l hetd at the church each Sunday at 6::lO p.m .
·

New arrival

t 'mhark on tour

Mr. and Mrs. Larry Walker. Route

3, Pomeroy , are

annuum: m~

the

birth of a son, Bradley Shane, Oct. 21
at the Holzer Medica l Center . The
baby was eight pounds. two ounces ,
and 19 inches long. Mr. a nd Mrs .
Walker have another son, Brian
Richard, three.
Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs .
Roy Howell, Route 2, Pomeroy; and
Mrs . James Walker, Route 3,
P&lt;meroy . Great-grandparents are
Mrs . Emma Fox, Route 2, Pomeroy ;
Mrs . Edna Walker, Middleport ' and
Vernon Howell, Canton .

A tr1p tcJ Fenton (~lass Co. at
Wt llwms town. W. Va _ was tctken
Tuesda y ni ght b) m e mbers of Xl

Gamma Mu Cha pter of Beta Stgma
Pht Sorority.
[)urmg a brief business meetmg . a
thank you note was read from I Jnda
King for a rose sent her dunng her
hospitalization. Mrs. Ruth Riffle
reported on a ska ting party, and the
ways and means conunittee noted a
d&lt;&gt;-your-&lt;&gt;wn-thing a uction to be held
on Nov. 20 . Mrs. Anrue Chapman
presented the cultural report.
A stop at the Pizza Hut concluded
the evening .

DUPONT
STARTING
FLUID

FOR MOST FORD
and G.M. CARS

'2960

121t. "TANGLE-PROOF"',
10 gauage all copper
duc tors. Alligator cia
In sturdy storage box

Flex ib le to .50o (F).

No. 1400

MASON FURNITURE

In the new crush-proof
purse pack.

BATTERY POST
PROTeCTOR

69¢

• Helps prolong battery li fe
Chem1cally treated to prevent
Will not dry out

7

LOW TAR • FILTER

Only 9 mg tar

EXCHANGE

.. .... I
SHOP

lJ)W TAR • MENTHOL

Reg. '1558.22

rmcn&lt; •.-.n ,

9 mg' 'taCO 8 mg nicotine av. per ctgarette by FTC Method.

FOR THE BEST DEALS f N THE
TRl STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS CO.

Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., F r1day &amp; Sat
B:30to5 : 00Thur sday till 12 Noon

~

I OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
H er-man GrCltP

1

773 -55?2

Mason,

Warning: The Surgeon General Ha s Determined
That Cigarette Smoking Is Dan ge rous to Your Health.

w. va .

"Over 50 Years of Service"

W. 2ND

PHONE 992-2138

POMEROY, OHIO

I

,.

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Nov 13, 19'79

Your Best Buys Are t,ound
WANT AD
CHARGES
l:i Wonhl or L'ndt&gt;r
Ca.'th
( 'harge
ldiiy
100
125
:.!d!ly~
I :,(]
I \NJ

Jd11ys
&amp;dllp

3.7:i

In mrmory . l'anl of 11wnb

IJ

{(I

•·~&gt;nl...'l

pt•r word .

( -&lt;t~h

11111\llliU/ll

Ill

t! d -

JI'I:Io/111'

GU N
SHOOT .
Racine
Volunfeer
F r re
Dept .
Eve ry Sa turday 6 : 30p .m .
AI the i r buildrngin Bashan
Fd c t ory cho k e guns only .

Mobrlt lhwnr :u:~lt'!! and Yard
~ l t'.~ an· ftn'efJll"'l Olli)' with
ca .~h

25 cenl (' har~t·
fur Jt (ls &lt; ilrrylrljol Hu ll ~tun~Jt&gt;r ln
( ~n· t.~ f Tht' St•ntuwl
wrttr

Cl~r

rt·~·rves

Tho.· 1'\JIJlL.'tho:•r
n~ht

CHIP WOOD Pole~ max
dramefer 10
on l &lt;trgest
end S17 p cr ton Bundl ed
slab S10 per fan De li vered
to Oh10 Pall et Co . Rl ] ,
Pomer o v 997 7b89

NO
HUN TI N G ,
no
lrespassr ng Wt ftl no ex
ce pttons on my property
Judy M cG r aw Sel f

Uw I dll } rate
6

MEIG S
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIETY . ~92
6260
Pets avdildble tor
adop f ion and rntormation
se rv 1ce
GU N
SHOO T
EVERY
SUNDAY 1 PM FACTORY
C HOKE ONLY RACINE
GU N CLUB

~~rh word ove r tht- numJr rum
!J lfrlnb L~ 4 r'PflL~ jlPr word ~r
da) Ad! ru.ruun~ udwr than eon
!lt'l'll ilvt' dJl ys o,q~JJ bto ··haro:t"d at

and ( )brtua~

wanted to Buy

•

2~

l lll
]00

Notices

GU N SHOOT every Sunday
11 00. Fa c tory c hoke only
Corn Hol low Gun Club,
1-?ulland Proceeds donated
to Boy Scout Troop 749

tnt&gt;

Lu nl1t ur ft'Jt'l't Ill\)' Htl~

dt&gt;t'lllt' tl
olbjet tlonal
Th t&gt;
Pubhsher wt!l nut !.It' resporu.1b \P
lor mort• t han u rw tncom·ct 1ll
:~ot' rt10n

Phuth·

9'.:1'2 -21 ~

ED BURKETT
BarbEr
snap now open full fime in
M tddle port

NOTICE

GE l lODAY ' S MARKET
VALUE
FOR
DYOUR
GOL D OR S ILVER CON
fA CT
ED
BURKETT
BARBER
S H OP , MIO
OLE PORT

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADllNES
\ol r uJdll _~

FREE
CANDY
dEmon
strd t ton ever ·; Safurday at
1 n rn iii the Ca rouse l Cn
I N I onN 'r' 317 N . 7nd Ave ,
M tr1r1 1t' p or1

:-..r-JrrurJ ~tunla\
TUI:'!-1(11-n

ttu-u t' r11i&lt;1,
~ I' \f .
Uwd~t}

CE RAM IC CLASSES . Mon
day . fhursday . 79 pm ,
Tu esda ·r and Frrday 14
Jnd 5 7 pm
DreOel "s
Ce rdmt CS. 59 N 7nd Ave,
Mrddleporf . O H W'l 775 1

~

I' \t

~·nt l&lt;l• Hftt·rnooOn

ASTRO·GRAPH

ANYONE HAVIN G bougnt
baby furntfu re at 1 prr ce on
Nov 12 af D• c k waever ·s
res1den ce. pl ease conta c t
9C/1 3502 rmmediarely

Bern1ce Bede Osol

- -- -

- --- - - -

~()'our

~~'Birthday
14, Hl79

No~temb4r

'tour mvolvPmf'tll'&gt; wrlrl gr Pup'i
,lrld org anr;aroons shO\t ld · ·rtJ
duce m;'ln) lr nr ge ht!nc l rl s tt"!•

comrng ~ear Be (.lur e ~ tv &lt;~ Cfl"'t.l
any rnv r lal ro rl~ I'!IIPfl"' vou C ol"l
1"\€ ~ ~:&gt;P OPI~

thmq )I(IU ' f' h op •ng lo r •S w•llltn
)'Our raac t1 rl tOu II loke I he loqo

cal

CERAMIC C L AS SES star
trnq N ovC'm ber 17 eac h
Sdl urddy , 6 30 9 30 p m
Beg tnnrn Q and adva nced
c E'rarn 1c '&gt;
D rehe l ' s
Ce ra m•cs , 59 N 7nd Ave ,
M rddleporL O H Phone 997
1791

Lost and Found

SCORPIO (Oct. 24 · No~t 22) Uo;;e
yuur prac lr ca l1ly lodav :o brr ng
yuu r dr ea rn:. 11 1 hurlror r Scr rnfo!-

LOST trgt&gt;r c at. neutered
ma le, tle a co ll ar. answers
to
name
of
Tommy .
Reward 997 5354

~ ~~p ~ · o •II t1•e"t&gt; 1t

IP()If' ll f

Wil d t

r 111d ll ul
d fledtJ 'tH , Ill!

lit"

111 1/W )' t ) .'ll I QI If) WIIl § ynur Olf\h
Jay t··~ sef1donq lvr ·1our t V ~h ol
l\&lt;J tr o·G raph l ••l!f•r ~.Ail 'I S 1 fo r

Tack.le srtuat• o ns wrncn shou l e
be better or 9anrzed w•th the ~e"
ousness tney deser~P. t ooa .1

NOTICE OF
HEARING ON
PETITION FOR
ADOPTION
The St,ate at Ohio, Meig~
count-t. Court of Common
Ple~~. Probate Division
In ttte Maner ot the adoption of Terry Lee Lyons
NOTICE OF
HEARING AND
EXAMINATION
Case No . 22880
To Walter R . A.gin , whose
l&lt;~st
known address was
Ianesv1lle ,
Ohro
You are here by nofil 1e0
that on the 9th day of
Novembe r . 1979. Russel1
Roy
W tlli am
Lyons ,
res1d1ng at 559 Broadway
Street , Middleport. Ohio
lr!ea rn th1s Court a Pefition
t or le ave to adopt Terry
Sh.nrp, a c h il d . age 6 years
&lt;tn d tor a cha nge at the
name of said c h i ld to Terry
Lee
Lyons ,
and thai
he d ring of said Pel i l ron and
!he e-x am i nation, under
oet fh , of all I he parties in in
terest who may be present
and to whom lawful notic e
has been gtven. Will be held
before said
Court at
Pomeroy, Ohio on the Uth
day of Dec ember , 1979. at
10 · 00o' c iO&lt;KA M
WITNE SS my signature
and the setl l ot sa id Court ,
th 1s 9th day o1 November
A D 19 79
Rober t E Bu c k
Judge

Ordertoness w111 make ever ylh •"1Q
eas1er
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) In your

By J anet E Morr 1s
Ch ref Deputy Clerk

e acll 10 A&lt;;tr o-Gr &lt;tph Bu • 489
R&lt;HJIO (.o ry S l:l ltf\11 N ~
10019
Be sure to spoctly b•rth dale
SAQWU.RIUS (MoY . 23-0.C. 21)
l'ou have a tew pluse~ gorng lor
you today in com pel rl rve 5•t ualrons One •S ~ou r pRrs rc:, l~ nc,.
ct ncl tile o t tuor · ~
se&lt;r ell y l o• f Ou

IJ+~r r rrw w ctr ~&lt; r ng

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jan . 19 )
Ther e s no reas on to cto~..ot
toda~ !hal .- ou c &lt;~ n t.rf' ~uu. e~ s ! u
1n ;my srruatr nn wner e .-ou rH1~e
ex per enced ~,oo c ! or v 1r the past
Duptrcate y our p•t"v1ou s acr. ors
AQUARIUS (Jen . 20-Feb. Hi) Bl"
.:~ tart IOdtly Nfllw lrn arrtr.JI opp(;r
tunt!ISS cou ld de~· elu~ .: i'lr .. flr .
w• S€ fh., o ll o rt s u f an ol'rer rn c1 1

ope n tre crop,•r dranr,eh
PISC£5

(Fab

20- MIIrct'l

20)

"Ou •e to rl urla lfl f (,t~ rll
r T'&gt;::JI
you tr• nd ! (&gt; tJcn PI ~ ' •n rn , o ur
partnt•r.:;hop el f' il'~qemf-'nl&lt;,
r' . ru
lliiVf' ... t,IU IH II ,t il to•&lt;, WI f, ' .t r I&gt;·

relted upon

ARIES (Merct121 -Aprtl19 ) " ' •u'
enrn ong POI Pnhal '"' .. , t"J•I•nn,tll .

(l00!1 10IIcly OW1n;_; !11 y ·'' r'tl ,•,
tro ous at t olude /Pr n r,
OI gr (• ,ttest

·~ard

TAURUS

(April

'' · ,J •·' l '-

:?O· Me1

20)

Qp p o rtUfllllfl S C0UI11 il t r&lt;;l' I 01J a~
10 tu r1t1er ent1anceo an o d ~ s lab ­
lrstled reiAti OnSilt D fJ'- dear ly
•alu e Utilrze these possrtort t•es
GEMINI (Mey 21 -June 2n) 'litsu-

911le me way you would l•lo.e to
see a trytng srtua tr0"1 you ve
been

111VOI~ed

rn end and dtrect
ttlat goal It

etlon s to.... a rd
courd oe oone ro aay
~our

CANCE~

OLD FURNI TURE , •ce
boxes, bra ss beds . rron
beds , desks, et c . &lt;om plete
housf'holds
Wrrt e M 0
Mil ler . Rt . 4 , Pomer oy or
c a 11992 776lJ
OLD COINS, po c ~et wt
c nes, class rings , wedding
bands, diamonds Gold or
si lver . Call J . A W a msley,
742 2331

WANTED
SAW
lo g s
Pdyment upon delivery to
our yard , 7 30 to 3 :30 week
days Sidney Hardwoods,
SR 339 . Barlow , OH . 678
1980
ANTIQUES ,
FUR
NITURE ,
glass, china,
anvthing . See or c all Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N
2nd , Middleport. O H 992
3 161.
ANTIQUE POCKET wdl
ches . Willing t o pay Top
dollar
Cal l
1 592 2973
evenings .

WANTED
JUNK
Baf
teries . radiator s, mo tors,
auto
trans
No Sunday
c alls . 949 2563

bt·fun·puiJIIt'li\ IUfl

..;..mJ:t l

meel

For Sale

( Jun•

21-July

22)

commerc1 111 deahng s t o day you
could come off &gt;NIIh a belle'

rndebted to you o! h 18 or her
Your Cl" 8f1 C.8S of get ling ttlat ' s :~wea you ~re prom ls-

oblrQ81ion

•no

!NEW SP • PEP £ .. 'EQ~CI

S £

•S!&gt;••

BASEMENT
SALE
IS!
house on left on Lincoln
Hill . Dishes , w i nter coats
and dresses size 16. Lars of
curfains, 8 place silver
ware set in chest , ladies
shot&gt;s, some fools , Nov . 14 ,
15, 16. 992 -5385. Mrs Harry
Osborne .
CARPORT SALE,
Blvd _, Racine , OH
sday , 9 fil?

T yree
Thur

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, Engl ,s h
dnd Wester n _ Saddle!. and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies . Ruth Reeves 614
698 3290
Barding and
R iding Lessons and Hor se
Care produ cts
W es tern
boots
Ch i ld ren's. S15 SO
A dulls S29 00
RISI NG
STAR
Kennel.
BoMding Call 367 ·0292

POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor . 614 367 7120 .
HILLCREST
KENNELS .
Board1ng, all br eeds . Clean
.ndoor outdoor
facilift es
Als.o
AKC
reg•sfered
Dobermans . 614 446 7795

CHAMPIO N S l RED AKC
regtstered
German
Shep herd PlJPPi es . 7 weeks
o ld , wormed and sho t s slar
led S75 ea . "2 2336 .

Auto Sales
1973 NOVA 350 4 !apet!d
P B .. good con d ition Al l er
6 . 985 3541

1979 FORD F 150. 4 wheel
drive,
la ctory
topper
Aufo .. P S . P B
~00 .
P hone 985 4339
1973 DELTA Ba O l dsmobile
Call992 7094 or c an be s.een
at 913 Broddway. M id
dleport .

1978
OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88 4 door . 8300
miles, A C., $5 ,000 997 5308
or 997 7521
1977
T HUNOERB IRO.
radials, P .S .. P B , arr ,
AM F M stereo, two !du d
ded snow tires . S3800. Mus t
sell . 247 359.0 .

I II I 13. li e

p11ce '' you don 1 appear t o be
too eager Beq~ar n a w11

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept . 22) Not
onty are you a QOOd aaa person
today but you alsO k. now how to
rmplement your pl ans respon sibly Put your gt'IS to us~;~
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl. 23) T1'115 IS
e good day t o rem1nd sc.meone

Yard Sale

Sargasso Sea 1s
a boot tw&lt;&gt;-lhirds the size ci
The

the con tiguous Umted
States and completely
surrounds Bennuda, the
only i&lt;lnd it tou ches, says
NationHI Geographic

1977
CHEVROLET
PICKUP
truck
Hea vy
du ty, 6 cyl , au to trans ,
with topper S3600 9&lt;/'11892
MUST
SELL
1979
Chevrolet 4x4 , sn arl bN1,
350 auto ., P S , P B . AM
FM radio , 3.000 miles.
S6500 _992 5396 any t •mf'
1976 GMC J~ t on p r r ~ up
P 5 _, P B . AM ~ M rad10
23 ,000 mrle s \3 .000 'N7
705S

FUNNY BU SINESS

by R oger Bollen

--~-

-

SMAL L FARM w tfh hou se
or 1railer 99? 579A

S0MEeODY' S
GOIN.s To
0CT Tt-\E A;)( !

For Rent
COU NTRY M O BILE H0'11tP nr~ . Rou tt&gt; 11
north ot
Pom ero y L M CW lot s (,111
997 7 479

I
tN Cf!6E.

[gq

or= F'li&lt;E

~~

J AND 4 RM lurn1'i.hed

&lt;lP

ts . Phone 99] 5434
TRAILER LO T for
Call 747 3177

W ILL DO Ml NOR and
ma 1or mt"c hanic &lt;'II work .
Car s, tru c k s. and tarm
rnach1 n ery Roger Holmdn.
Leo M o rr 1s 747 2-ISS .

WOOO STOVES by Belter
N Bens . Glassview, Leyden
Hea rth, Old Timer, Fire
view .
Su burban
mobile
home wOOd heaters, UL ap proved . and Suburban fur
nacemasters .
Ou tdoo r
Equipment Sales. Jet Rts
7 and 35, Gallipolis, OH .
Phone ,.46 3670
THREE men's sui ts . sizes
41 and 42 Like new . Phone
992 73 31

1968 H D J Allis Chalmers
dozer . b lade and wencn,
S6,000 . 1966 Ford two ton
flalbed , 16 ' bed , $1750 J . B
O'Brie n, 992 -2770 or 992
3S89
RUTLAND HARDWARE ,
P lumbing , Heating, E lec
trical and Auto Sup l ies 822
Main St ., Rufland , OH .
Plasti c sewer and drai n
pipe, 250ft . c oil , S90 Cu t i n
ctny lengths , 37c a II. 20.000
BTU
circulafing
gas
heater, S208 King -0 Heat
five room coal heater ,
$276 .95 .
Bond Tite auto
repair
kits
wltrt
1n
structions Also Bond ·Tite
body puffy, $9 a gal. Rapid
repair,
$11 99
gal .
Businesses
call
for
wholesale pr ices
APPLES - ROME beaufy
apples at $.4 per bu . Best tor
apple buller Coli 609 3785 .
Filzpatrick Orc h ard . SR
689 .
MAYTAG DRYER
2
years old E xcelent con
dition . Call992 -7789
SO LID FUEL hearers by
Sub urban . Woodma s ter
radiant
heaters ,
11st
S239 00,
sale
$199 95 .
Coalmaster · auto . cabine t
coal and wood heater with
grate and ash pan, lisf
~5225. sale S339.95 . UL ao
proved
Furnacema ster
auto supplemental com
binat ron wod and c oal tur
nace Cno blower needed)
lisf $679 .45, sale $619 45 .
Magic
heats ,
S8 9 95 .
Gr~vely Tractor Sales. 104
Condor St ., Pomeroy , OH

9911975

re n t

For Sale
COAL .
LIMESTONE ,
sand . g ravel.
ca lcium
c hloride,
fertil izer . dog
food , and all types o f salt
E x celstor Sa lt Wor~s . In c ,
E MJrn St , Pomeroy, 997
3891

RUTLAND HARDWARE .
821 Main Sf, RuTland, OH .
Late model
NCR cash
register, 4 dept . , 1 refund
key s, amount tendered and
c hange Key, $450
N CR
prtce labeling machtne ,
need s
worK ,
$100
]
Burrou g h!:.
addrng
rnachrnes
w i 1h b •ll•ng
c arrtage , S-45 ea
ONE SE T ot roof fresses
Dis coun1 pr ice . 6 11 prtcn
2 1x28 tt . budding IS prec es
af S10 ea W i ll deliver 74L
1409
MEN ' S USED work unl l or
ms, Pdnts Sl 49. sl1 rrts
S1 15 , iackets it&gt; 1:18 New
hOOded sweat sh+rts 14 B8
BAILEY'S STORE. M•d
d lepor1.
EARLY AMERI CA N sof&lt;l
and chair Good cona rtron .
$Il l 304 887 7958
TWO RADIAL snow tt re s
on rrm~ 75x14 992 2060
COAL. df'IIVf'rPd
S39 per ton 'N'J

MUST SELL Have many
baby ttems left . c onsole
s tereo . sewi n g mac h ,ne
P 1ease c a II 997 3502

HOTPOINT
and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Hea&lt;lquar1ers
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

LANDMA~K
~-·

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr .
Phone 992 -2181

Auctions
BIG AU( T ION every Wed

-.

- ,I

-

- 1rf&gt;-!1~\

-- - -

WINTER
POTATO E S
c. w. Proff iff farm , Par
tlarid , OH . S8 ri h ·ndred ilnd
:!5 a hund red
1

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

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST
men ' s &amp;
sty ling, per ·

Fe&lt;~luring :

ms.

Giveaway
PUT lt... COLD n ose in your
l tfe Adorable grey ktlten .
H umane Society , 992 6160

Calrtor appt . or walk in .

992 -2367
Main St .

COLLIE TY PE femal e . 7
Pomeran ran
type s,
female . 1 male. 2 Hu~k 1es . 7
fema le, 1 spayed
Long
hili red Ch ihuahua . femllle .
4 short haired te rrr er s, J
mdle, 1 female. spayed
1rish Sener . tem a te Shots.
end
wo r med
Huma n e
soc ie ty . 992 6160
TWO BLA CK and wnite ~it
tens, 1 whit e with b lon d
ea rs , male . Tige r k rften,
vellow and gold, lemale
Hurnane Sociefy , 9916160

l pm Hartf ord Communr ty

Center . Hartford, WV . 4
miles above
Pom e r oy
Mason BndgP

13 1979

I UNDEFI.STAND
YO U PFI.OV IDE'P
5 AFETY P IN S,

Television
Viewing

I THANK YOU FOFI. THAT.
THOUGH I CAN "T CONDON E
YOUFI. ACTIONS OTHERWIS

AND AS FOR YOUFI.
BOYFRI~:

OTHER

........ .

TUESDAY , NO\/ EMBER 13,1979

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING
Federal
Housing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
Hours ljl -1 M., W ., F .
Other timts by appoin1 ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

Pomeroy, 0 .
10 19 1 m o

MONTGOMERY

el niullrtion
eStorm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

H l70

Mon lr.~om l' r'f

Jld

Oh10

~11 ~~9 IH~ I "~ ''""q'
1

"" 'I'''

r ·"' o'

~U f'fR

w.r_p, ., 1tl~

G OO ~ f

~TOCI&lt;

1 t.'A 1t f R N O W fi Vtl. tlll BL£

'

'

...

.{ .

••

'NH A"" BE.._ c._Y

CAPTAIN EASY
Win ·

JAMES KEESEE
PH- 992-2772

1 DO N'T GE:T IT! IF GWE-PoJDOL..., t-J
SUFFERS AN Y MORE ATTACKS
OF THIS MENTO · YOYO · LITI~, HCW
D THEY 3E FATAL TO 'fOVr ·

t..lKE

?A I\; CE~5 s-A'-J::;;&gt;

ee&lt;t LAST !&gt;OY FRIEND'S STILL
IN SfiTC HE!i&gt; Fll:OM THE TJMf:
SHE W!ONT BERSERK lloJ A
CHINA SHOP A_,D f&gt;EA"'eP
HIM WITH A PRICELES!&gt;
M1N6 VME' ~

t ?AY •.

IIHEJ-J 5 HE THF&lt;OWS
A FIT SHE GOES WlLO~
RE-ALLY COMES
U N 6L UE0~ __ ~-__,_

~~~::.:(

10 -19 1 mo .

AR0U"&lt;:7 AND' DO.

[ EXDU. LEI

r J r x~·_J ._

(Answers tomorr ow,
Answer

Real Estate lor Sale

1971 LYNN HAVEN l4x65 3
bedroom
1970 V ind a le 111&lt;63 with ex
pa ndo. 7 bedr
1970 N ew Moon 12x60 3 bdr
1973
Sky l1 n e
17x5 _~
'}
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 1Jx57 , 2 t)edr
B &amp; S MOBIL E HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT.
wv 304 675 442.4

FI N A N CI N G VA FHA LO
A NS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYME N T
PURCHASE
OR
REFI N A NCE
1R.E L A NO MOR TG AGE ,
77 E SlATE. AT HEN S
614 592 305 1

1970 PMC 17x60 3 bedroom
mobrle home $5.000 . Cr:tll
607 3402

Mobile Home
For Sale
Newly Decorated
1975 SKYLINE
3 BR, 14 x 56
Can Be
Purchased with
Low Down
Payment
Call Joe Young
AI

L ARGE LOT on dead end
stree1 with water and
sewage . Will finan ce to
reliab le couple a r 9 Pet
997 5786 No r ealtors .
NIC E F IVE room house on
1 '] acre, 011 t urnace . C1 fy
water or we l l water Only
\..8 ,000 S.ee Lu tn('r BartoP,
Long Bo ttom . OH

CO MMERC IAL BU IL DIN
G on 131 f 1 lot o l l bOO Nye
Ave, Pomer oyd, OH W+ll
f i nance at9 Pel t o relrable
c ouple No r ea ltors 992
578l&gt;
2.41 acres in Chester Twp
6140 after 5 p .rn

~2

HOU SE FOR SALE behind
Jones Boy s . SS500 Call 304
273 5019 Sharon Stark

Real Estate for Sale
bOB E . '
MAIN
POMEROY , 0 .
PH 991 · 225~

W1-ll15
116 E. Second Strfft

II ROOMS Large
frame with gas fu rnace.
1•; , baths , pan eled k i t
hen . and 2 car garage .

7,500 .
TUPPERS PLAINS One
floor
5 room
bungaiO'N with bath, 2
bedrooms, and large lo1
on Rf . 7. AsKingSl8,SOO.
RENOVATED - Ni ce 2
bf"droom s, nal gas fur
nace , c arpettng , base
ment '1 ca r garage a nd 7
lots S7 5, 000
NEW
HOME
3
bedrooms,
ceramrc
bdlh . carpetin g , nr ce
eat in kit ch en, ful ly .n
sula fed , garage, and
large fenced lot
IN TOWN - 6 r ooms , 3
~drooms , bath, natural
gas furnace. and 3 lots
w ith all ci ty utilities .
$15.500
MILLFIELD
2
bedrooms, bath,
full
baseme nt and large tot
160x 160 for only s 14,000 .
VIEW OF RIVER Eat your meals as you
wat c h the rraH 1c go by
3 bedrooms. na t gas
t urnace and aoove a 11
t l oOd ~ i 17, 500
WE HAVE
A ONE
YEAR
PROTECTION
PLAN IF YOU WANT
CALL
992 -232!
or
992-3876 to.- INFORMA TION .

Housing
Headquarters

MIDDLEPORT - Very
nice 1 floor pl&lt;3n , 2
bedrooms , bath, some
car pet i ng,
ldrge
lof
50x160. JUST ~16 , 200
SYRACUSE
Large
br 1c k du pl ex , l tve 1n
part , re n t part nd have
an i ncome . $18 ,000 00.
POMEROY
Ex
cellenr 2 sto ry frame , all
renolo'ated , 3 bedrooms ,
l 112 baths , lovely kit
chen,
full
basement ,
utility $40,000.00 .
ALMOST NEW - Love
ly bricK &amp; frame , J
bedrooms, nice kitchen,
utility, storage bldg.,
chai n fence yard . About
1 level ac re $37 ,500 .00 .
NEAR CHESTER
N tCely
r e model ed
1
bedroom h ome, bu i lt in
kit Che n.
ca rpef1ng ,
ba!:.emen f , and about 75
acres w r th 3 spnngs.
CAN ' T
BE
BEAT
~38 , ~50 . 00

LOVELY
FAMILY
HOME - Over looks the
river, 3 bedroom, equip ped Kitchen , rec . rooms .
LOADS of remodeling.
A MERE $35 ,000 00
WE HAVE 56 PROER TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM STOP IN .
REAL ESTATE IS OUR
BUSINESS !NOT A
S' IDELINE J
ACT
QUICK ON THESE GE
NUINE BARGAINS

REALTORS
Henry E . Cleland Sr
992 · 2S68
Ht-nry E . Cleland Jr
992 ·6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742 ·2474
Jun Trussell
949 21&gt;60
Ott lee t92 -11l9

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!
WE HAVE PROSPECTS!
WE ARRANGE FINANCING!
IF YOU WANT TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY GIV! US
A CALL 992-2342

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2342
EVENING 992-2449

VJtra t

U fH ~ r

Roofing.

gut1erl,

ALHING PR E FE_f--1
'&gt; ·-.J f!ll' S Wf• l l
i-' UI I EU Hll.E

lt H· , • . ,,

tw rl r)or .o / ,

.

New, repa1r,
gutters and
down spOuts.
WinD'¥' cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Fre'lrEslimates
949-2862- 949 -2160

D,- the aoo~e cartoor

gec;reo

Jumble'io f- UlJl d

lt

N

and

downspouts.
Free
Estimates.
All work
guara"teed. 20 years n ·
perience . Call Athens~
collect, Gerald Cl&lt;~rk
797-41S7 or Tom Hoskins
797 -2745.

BRIDGE
WT''? 1\1EO IXJ'ST L-UVICRDJS

, G::ARE3L.S I'Vf

9 28 -1 mo _Pd .

00\.LY, UW-lKS, I 1l101Je:oHT
MP..'iB£5 I'D Bl..OJJ IT.

eveR~~

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

---

S ti c

Scoring high game points

~
Mobile
Homes
-------- -- Sale
-

N0 w a1· ange the ctrcl ed lerters tO
lrwro the surpr se answer a s S·JQ

r-

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

Rooting
TRAILER SALES

' .

·~·

J

Free Estimate

H. L Writesel
I

' -::::'!
..
·"- ·~
~i~~
"
',,,
...

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Sidin!l

CALL 992-7544

4

AT POMEROY
LANDMARK
This
week

Q,....., .:_

.

00 I Dream of Jea nn ie 3. San for d

women's

FREE GRINDING

MILE OPEN
8 : 30 til S M -F
a , Jo fils Sal .
Jack W . Carsey
~
Mgr .
....,.__ •
Phone 99~ - ~181

Tuesday Nov

Business Services

BABY SITTER
rn
my
home Frve dd'f'~ a week
Twoch!ldrt•n Re-fere nces a
musr
Conta c t
Denrr.e
Woll e at94Q 1377 affer 5 30

Special No Limit

celebrating
40
years of service to
the farmers.

.

G

L~I"IO I• •I I r

POMEROY

;

'.

EMERGENC¥
P O WER
alternators own the best
buy WINPOWER Cal l51 3
788 15 8~

HOUSE COAL, lump or
sroker, wil l del iv er 742
2 183

mCKTRACY

Services Offered
BABYSITTI N G
In my
nome dur mg fhe day W1
7789

A PPLES
C I DER
HONEY
Fitzpatrick Or
c ha rd , Stal e Roufe 689
Phone
W rl kesviiiE" , 669
37 85

9- The Daily Sentmel. Middleport-Pomeroy . 0

the Sentinel Classifieds

FOR &gt;o le
Now tak ing orrtPr '&gt;
W t!t
deliver , 742 2056

FIREWOOD

LU MP
loc ally
7116

--Wanted
to Rent
-- ------:-:-::--·

•
Ill

'

11 ·1 ~

Roger Hysell
Garage
mtle off Rt . 7 by -pa ss
on Sf Rt . 114 toward
Rutland .
1 .1

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

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

+

ORPHAro ANNIE-AIN'T SEEN NOTHIN' YET!

Business Services

HORSE SHOEING . Call
992 3288, ask for Derrell
M cC lanahan

LOT o· UNPfACFFUL
PISTOl FIGHiER S

l f GAL · AND • su c.t'EN w
~l'fT~ t1FRE · · WAl .. Hf "l L
HAND LE ANY RIHRAFF
"-'5 Gr TS ID EES

'i' IG HT

GEE, BUT

s

&amp;: G carpet Clecmino .
c leaned
Free
S1eam
cs t 1mate
Rea~onable
ri1tes
ScotchQu.ard . 992
630'1 or 7.02 13-18

UP A BIT -- ·

... AND

YOUR NEW

a r ou nd to lead1ng

Dealer. East
West

~orth

Db I

1

Pass
Pass

Pa ~s

+

x

I 'a ss

s p"d c le"d at tnck two held
dl'darer to etght tncks and
wNe plu s 100 aga1n st four

\1u st Wests wh o found the

Pass

hear ts. plu s 50 agatn~ l t hree
and mtnus 110 agam sl those
whet only got t o t\-1.'0
A!! tn ;J]I. &lt;~n y pl us ..;r•nre
Pt tfwr w av \',&lt;I S ahoH· ilVf'r ·

+K

Ct.~ I'

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

r"

\

B"· Os"'·atd Jacob\

fill N [ G UESS THE
TEA PARTY'S OVER'
IN W~I C H CASE, WE 'D
BEST BE Of'F !

arid Alan Sontag ·
In tht s chanty -game hand.
1n

(Do you ha-ve a ouesr,on lor
1t1e experts ? Wnte " Ask tne
E~ perts ... care or th1s newspaper lndJv!dua/ questions wlfl
De answered ! 1 accompamed
by s ta mpea
c.eff-addressP.d

South will wind up play1 ng

\

two . three or fou r hearts The
h 1ddmg m the box 'i how s n n f'
wav to get to four
All Wesis will o pen w 1th lh1•

envelopes The most ,nreresrrng questwns w tll b e used m

kmg of dtamonds and pmba bl y shift to a club at tnck 1w u
So-uth Will wm lecuJ h1 s Jack of
d1amonds and ~&lt;&gt;t lo d1:-;ct..rd

....

It's baclo;' 1 felt
a terrible
stabbinq
. I

Toothache's qone '
feel f,ne '

pc:un ~~' ·, ,
~ 'J I'
(.

Vou have a safetLJ pin
stid1inq out of 4our
jacitJet'

'

'

It 1
\/

PIANO
TUNING . Lllne
Daniels . New phone num ·
ber, 7..t1 '}q51
Service to
~hools and
home since
1965

I
WINNIE

l

is currently acc~pting applications for the followint
positions :

39 Czech n ver
ACROSS
I Invited
40 Secret
5 H1ghway
a~enls
tragedy
4t Alford
10 Indian c1 ty
DOWN
ll Samls'
l Fw1damcnta l
headgea r
2 Socrate'
t3 Go skyward
shoppmg
14 Empower
cen ter
15 Ja c kie 's
3 Drank
12
late mate
heartily
16
16 Hawaiian
4 Sound
receiver
Kame
17 Bwlding wing &gt;Gladsome
19
18 One kind
6 Arrested
of jaw
22
7 Wing
20 Caddoan
23
8 Totally
Ind ian
24
abstinent
9 Greek
11 We~rd
22 Judge's
' 2 J I•
bench
23 Airport
"
sentmel
•J
2!i Attack
"
2t N.T book
15
. lb
i '
17 Bibli ca l
lq
.e
wedding
Sile
·-,,&gt;
II
2SI , Ger
29 Manual
23 14
labor , e.g .
lb
32Get 1t '
3J " Beastlv
28
2'l

rece1ve

.
I

•'
I ~~
I.....
.'. ,,

I·/

···~ v~

:

craft
34

tree
35 Sheathe
37 li!Juce·s

X

:16

35
38

dau~hter

~rowtll of

25 Part
of a tre&lt;'

in Lausanne
Afternoon
parties
Yield a bil
Elevates

27 Tender
touch
Z9 Dis patch
30 AllClent
31 Defy; oppose
36 Blackbird
37 F1sh

Sp&lt;ech

patterns
•5

7

b

9

B

2

'4

17

I

'"

I

WEDNESDAY , NOVEMBER 14,1979
1979
5 · 4; - Farm Reporl 13, 5 · 5(}-PTL
Club 13
6 0()-700 Club 6.8 . Heal t h F ield 10 ;
6 05- World a t L arge 17
6 3D-Chr istopher Clos eup 10; News
17 , 6 -15--Mornlng Report 13 ;
6 50 - Goo d
Morning ,
West
Virginia 13 . 6 55--News 13 .
7 00- Today 3.15, Good Morning
Amer1ca
6, 13
Wednesday
Morning 8. Batman 10 ; Three
Stooges Li1tle Rascals 17 .
7 15 - A M
Weather 33 ; 7 : 30 Fami l y Affarr 10 7 55-Chuck
Wht fe Reports. 10
8 CXJ-La pt Kangaroo 8, 10 ; Leave it
io Beaver 17 . Sesame St. Jl.
8 .30-Romper Room 17 . 9: 00-Bob
Braun 3; 8\g \la\\ey 6 ; Ph\\
00f'lahue 13 ,1 S; Lucy Show l7 .
9 ) (}-Love o1 Ltfe 10 . Green Acres
I7
10 oo-Car d Sh ark s 3. 15. Edge of
N ight 6. Beat t he Clock 8, 10 .
Morning Magazine 13 ; Movie
" Up the Down Staricase " 17
10 30 - H ollywood Squares 3,15 ;
120, 000 Pyramid IJ. Andy
Griffith 6 . Whew B, 10 ; 10 . 55---CBS N ews 8. House Ca ll 10 .
11 00-High Roller s 3.1 5, Price is
Righl8 .1 0
11 JO - Whe el of Fortune J , 15 ;
Family Fflu d 6. 1J Se same St
70.33
12 00-- N e w sce nter
J
News
6.8. 10 . 13 M rndreaders 15
12 30--- Ryan ·s Hope 6, 13 . Se arch for
Tomorrow 8. 10 . Health Field 1.5;
Movre "I nc iden t 1n San Fran .
Cl!:.co" 17 E lee Co . 20 ,33 .
1 oo-Days of Our L rves 3,1 S. All My
Chil dren 6.1 3. Young &amp; the
Restless B. 10
3o-As I he World Turns 8, 10.
2
Doctors 3, 15. One Life to
Live 6. 13
7 2:r-- Po! 1tical Talk 8. 10. News 17.
2 30- Another Wor ld 3, 15, Guiding
L rght8. 10 , Gigglesnort Hotel17
oo-- Ge neral Hospita l 6,1 3: I Love
Luc y \7 Connections 20 .
) )(). Ont:' Day AI A Time 8. Joker 's
W tld 10 Fl1 nl~tones 17
.t 00 M r~ t e r Cartoon 3: Password
P l u~ I S
Bever ly Hillblll 1es 8,
Se&gt;ame St 10 33, St :w Million
D ol lar M rm 10 . Srw-ctrem an 17
J 30
Bewrtche d
3.
Petticoat
Junctton 8. M erv G r1fl 1n 15 .
GriiiQan c; Is l7

oo--

vu

'

20

6

15
6

11

30

33

,,
-

3•

a.

J-1

39
4 ',

l

'

•

8

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;II ' OTE - Here's how to work it :
TEACHER -COUNSELOR
For
Children '!
Re si dential Treatment Center . Th rs position rf'
qu1res a valid Ohio TeachinQ Cen rfica t ion and ap ·
p ropriafe teahcing experience of at lea~H two years,
or eourva lent experi~nce . In addition , experience
w i th a behavioral in1ervention system , and skills In
individual and group counselling and recreation are
recess.ary . Ttlls person is responsible primarily for
academic remediation. be-havioral asM'Ssment and
i ntervenfion, and some Individual and group
covn!te l ling, all within the context of the Children's
Center
NIGHT ASSISTANT Part -time for Children's
Residential Treatmen1 Center This Individual must
be responsible . mature , and alert, and must be able
to co.~ple~e an_i nsPe-&lt;:fton log THe position requires
parttc1pat1on rn all building and personal $afety
trarn1ng Hours are from 11 00 p m _ unfit 7· 00 a .m .,
on an a1ternaf1ng S.C hl"dv le Of fhree night!:. one week
a nd four ntg h ts the nc x t week .
An EEO t Affirmative Action Employer. if in teres_ted, send resume 1o: Juanlt• Ath1, PersonMI
Admmistrator, G· J·M Community Mental Hearm
Center, ,Inc ., 411 Vinton Pike, Glllipoll~, Ohio 4S6l1,
orc.all614 -446 5500.
~------__J

A X V D I. B A A X R
ts

I. 0 N G F E I . L 0 W

a

c)n e letter "-lmp ly s! ;w ds r or another I n !hrs sample A is
U \ t ·d for tht· lhr~· r I '· \
{ol r th r two ()'!-. , &lt;'If· Stn gl r letter ~.
apost rophe s, !h&lt;' l ! ·n ~!h ,, nit fr, rm a!lnn of the "'orrls are all
htnts E ach da:- tlu• cflr\ (• \t·ll!' r .., ;lrt• U1 fferf:' nl

&lt;'R \' PT&lt; I&lt;II 'UTES

PEANUTS

MAAM i THIN" THE
CEILING IS LEAk iNG.

't'ES W\AM, R16t1T
UP 7HERE,., SEE ~

I TOLD HER

THANKS

I,

MARCIL

II

ABOUT IT SIR

~

- -~

_,. ........ ,

I
~

I DON 'T
LIKE TC
" BE T~E

KIND WHO
COMPL-\IN5

\ zQ

Q

lJ I.

ll M I

I.

D U ..\ \l .1 II A Y E N

l.V MTI.
DUI'

r: -; X E K

V \I

E C MYV

I. ,, F Q

\ l i ll(J

1 Or cc1 m of J eannie 3. Mash
l~ap py Dayo; Ag ain 13.
I
Dre&lt;1m ol J'-'dnnte 17 . Doctor
Who 33
00 r-.. (' w S 3 B. 10 . 13.15 ABC News
6 Carol Bu rn ell 17 . Zoom 20
JO NB C N ews3 , 15 . A B C New s 13 ;
Carol Burne tt 6. C BS News 8.10 ;
Bob N Pwh a rt 17 Over Easy 20
oo-Js A Crowd 3. 1 ic Tac Dough
Mat ch Ga me PM 6; News 10;
N ew l y w ed Ga q1 e 13 :
Love
Amer1 can Style 15 . San ford &amp;
Son 17 D1ck Cavet t 20 ,33 .
30-Cau nlry Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6. Joker ' s Wild 8; The
Judge 10 , Family Feud 13 ; Wild
Ki ngdom 15 . All In The Family
17. M ac Ne i l L eh rer Report 20.33.
oo- R eal Peop le 3, 15 . E ight is
E nough 6,13 Hall o f F&lt;Jme 8, 10;
Ma nima ls. 20 JJ
Movte " If
S!arted in N apl f'o;, " 11
30-Live tram Linc oln Center
20.33
OJ - Diff "renl
S trokes
3, 15 ;
Charlie' s Angels 13 . The Seekers
o

22

I

f"C _j'

3t1 Hmders the

Exclus1ve
Tille

b. '

J]

Me&lt;~ ca n

Yt"sterday's Answer

. '·

"

RECREATION SPACIALIST - Qppor!un •ty for on
enterprising end innovl!tlve individual ro develop
re-creational component of a Partial Hospi tal i zation
Program . Seek Individual with B .A. or M .A. in
recreation or physical education, or equivalent
education and experience .

COMMUNITY INTEI!VENTION SPECIALIST Two positions open in the Ch i ldren 's Res idenria !
Treatment Center to work with behaviorally disord ·
ed adolescents . PrefH Master 's Degree in
Psychology or equivalent area, or equivalent train
ing and experience. i n addition to a k.n&lt;M'Iedge ot
and experience w i th behavioral Intervention pro·
cedures . Job dut ies lncludf' behavioral assessment
intervention, and consultation In a variety ot
natural env i ronment settings, as well as colltKtion
and utilization of psychometri c and edumetric dllta .
Skil ls and experience in individual, group, and
I am rly therapy are a I so ne&lt;essa ry .

rhrs column and Will

cop•es o f JACOBY MODERN J

by THOMAS JOSEPH

GASOLINE ALI..EY

CRISIILINE WORKER Unique in&lt;li v idual
wanted for part -time duties . Minimum 20 hours per
week . Must possess typing, filing , general office du
fy skills Knowledge of crisi s 1ntervention work.
helpful , but not necessar y We wil l train. Desire to
rtjelp others a must

and

f tnessr

••

Pass

Dbl

x

took the mn e- spot

So uth
I.

ALLEYOOP
DID ) I Si\ID, !Hio~E
YO U SAV ,
1$ NO MORE TEA '
IT'S ALL GONE'
\
S E E -'

trumps th ey

dec1ded 1he doubler held K 10
E.as1
f-lass

Opcmng lead

WHAT

few South players get top

by making four he arts
douhled · Th t&gt;y dHi not get thP
s pade sh1fl. a nd when they gol

Vulnerable Ea st -West

CLOTHES .. ·

PROPER INSULATION is
c heaper than heating oi l .
Take advanrage ot a good
rn vestment Call 992 3288
for more rnt ormation

GALLIA- JACKSON-MEIGS
Community Mental Health Center, Inc.

.~

have t(1

S(' OrL•s

.K 6

OH -· JUST SPRUCED
~01 TO
liVE uP TD MY NEW
R'S PON 5181liTIE9·- ·

LEM .1 YOOR.

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters , irons, all small
~pplian c e~
Lawn mower .
Ne,.,t t o State Highway
GaraQe on Route 7, 985

3815

f1m·ss e the jack will
loSl' twn heart tn cks

tJ 9
W~ISI'(fRS

QUIET ~

:.,

Sf)liTH
• .H
· A~J902

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

m

AUTOMOB I LE
IN
SURANCE
been
c an
celled?
Lost
your
operator's l icense? Phone
992 2143 .

~"

¥ K 10 i
• 3 6' :1
• 832

.'I J54

'!'UP· · TH' .J EOOE HfRE HA S
GOT US PEFHECTED , • ·

In ;til f'ast·s Sou th will grt to
ko d thl' s m gil'ton heart fr om
cl umnw A few Will f1ne ss l' lh l'
ntrw J0d wmd up losing JUSt
mw hPart trrck Those whn

EAST

"R
t A K72
HEH ~ I KNOW YOU
SH ORE MADf A AWJ=UL

yi

]ft

.K R .1 2

•

w t LL H AUL limes tone and
gravel Also, lime hauling .. 1N STOCK for rm mediate
del.very var1ovs si zes of
and spreacJing Leo Morr 1s
pool loc tts Do il yourse lf or
Truc king Phone 742 7*55
let us install for you D.
Bumgardner Sales. 1nc
PAINTING ANO •and
991 571.0 .
blasting . Fr~ estimares.
Ca II 949 2686 .
REYNOLD ' S ELECTRIC
Motors , rewind and repair
OOZER , END Loader.
992 2356, 561 Beec n S l .
brush
hog .
Will
do
Middleport . Oh 10
basements , ponds, brush,
timber.
land
clearing .
A&amp;H Upholstering , acros.s
Charles Butche r 7•2 -1940
from the Texaco Sta 11on tn
Sy rau c ~e 9C/1 3743 or
SEWI NG
MACHIN E
3751
Repairs.
servi ce ,
all
makes .
991 2-284 .
T he
BRADF O RD . Auction~r .
Fabric Shop , Pomeroy
Complefe Service . Phone
Authorized Singer Sales..
949 14.87 or 949 2000 . racine ,
and Servi ce . We sharpen
Ohio. C r r tt B r adford
Sc issors .

,,

\\' EST

I l l (Pd .)

-=
eu-s7
in
_e
_s_s~
Se~
rv
~,~
. c~e~s­

HOWERY ANO MARTIN
Excavating,
sepr . c
sys tems , dmer. bac kh oe
Rf . 1.0. Phone 1 1614 ) 698
7331 or 7.02 2593

•

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RACINE, 0 .
949·2 741 or
t92-7JI4

.

• t,J 10 4

work,
down
Gutrer
spouh, some concrete
walk~
and
work ,
drieways .
(FREE ESTIMATE I

4 30 He

EXCAVATING ,
dozer .
loader and backhoe work
dump truck.s and to-boys
for hire, will haul fill dirt.
top soil. lim~fone ano
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, dav phone 992 ·7089 ,
n•ght phone 991 3525 or 992
5132 ..

""

Ins losr ng sp;:.dl" r&gt;n tht• dra tlllln d qLJt·cn
Th ose Wc·s t pldycrs who
nl il kt• th&lt;' ... up•·rrur s h1f t to a
-. padr w 11l f'ol h·&lt;·t a s padP
trwk JnrJ thl'Jr tu p d1amomh.

I I 11

.\ OHTII
J IU i 11 :-r

and Son 8 . Mt s ter Rogers' Neigh bor hood 10.33, Mary Ty l er
Moiire 10 My Three Sons 17 .
5 30..- Carol Bu r nett 3, News 6;
Gomer Pyle B, E lee . Co. 20 ;
Ma s.h 10; Happy Days A qain 13 ; I
Ore am of Jeannie 17. Doctor
Who 33
6 lXI- Ne w s 3. 8 10, 13.15 ; aBC New•
6. Zoom 20. Ca rol Burnett 17 .
6 30- N BC N ews 3.15. ABC News 13; r
Caro l Burnett 6, CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17 . Over Easy 10
00 J's A Crowd 3, Ttc Tac Dough
8. P ulse 6. News 10 , Newlywed
Game 13 . Love Arnerican Sty le
15 . Sa nford &amp; Son 17. Dick
Cavell 20.33
7 30 H o llywood
Squares
3; ;
Polrtrc al Ta l k 6. J oker ' s Wild 8;
Hollywood Squares 10 , Sha No
Na 13 . TV Honor Soc ie ty 15; All
In The Family 17. Mac Neil
Lehr er R ep ort 10 ,33
B 00- Sheriff Lobo 3.15. Calfironla
Fever B.10 . N ova 20.33. NBA
Basketball 17
8 30-- Angte 6,13
9 00- M ovie " The Duchess &amp; the
Dirlwater Fo"" 3.15. Three 's
Company 6, 13 . GE Theater 8.10 ;
Wor ld 20 . W1 se Parents Know
Tne1r Ch ildren J3
·
9 30- l.=tx! 6,1)
10 oo-- Harl to Hart 6. 13. News 20;
(r 1y N ot ebook JJ
10 30-- Elr!abeth R 17 . Like II I s 20 .
Another Voice 33
10 ~5 Pol iltcal Talk B. IO
11 00 N ews 3,6.8, 10 . 13, 15; Dick
C ~vefl 20 . C arry On Laughing
33 Barney M oi ler 6. 13. Barnaby
Janes 8. AB C New s 33 . Movie
" From th e lerra ce'' 10
17 00-- M ov1e "T he Se a Chase" 1.7 ;
12 OS--- Movie " Crescendo" 6. 13.
12 4G-Movie ' ' I Will. \ Will .. for
Now" 8.
DO- Tomorrow 3.15.
A5 - N e ....,s IJ . 2 30 - News 17 ;
'3S- NB A Basketball 17: 5 :0.&gt;Untouchables \7

Z M T Q

X Z M
VZDUP -

HI-: VZQ IU UQ

1\MPEU

Yesterday 's Cryptoquote : I;&gt;; CHAI\Al"TEI(, I~ MAI';&gt;;ER. IN
STYLE . II\ ALI. THINGS , THE .LI'Hr:\1E t·~XCE LI .E l' C E IS
SIM PLICITY .- ~ I ,(JNG FEI ,i JJW

9

6

9 30- Best of Saturday N ight Live
3. 15. 10 OQ-Veqas 13 ; Upstaris,
Downs ta irs 17 .
10 30- News 20 , Connections 33 .
11 00- News 3.6,8. 10 . 13, 15; Dick
Ca'"ll 20
11 3()-- Tonighl 3, 15 ; Love Boal 6, I];
Bla ck Sheep Squadron 8: ABC
New s 33 Movie
Hnrper" 10 ;
Mov 1e '' Rf'd River " 11. Best of
Grou c ho 20.
12 :4Q-Baretta 6,13 ; Hawaii Five -0
8; 1 : ~Tomorrow 3; News 15.
, so- News 13 , 2 15- News 17 ;
2: 20-Mov ie " You're a Big Boy
Now " 17
4· 20---Mov ie " Behave Yourself!" 17 .

�!()-The Daily Sen~l.

Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday. Nov . 13, 1979

Fire probe
PIONEER. OhiO 1 API - It may
he the end of the week before
mvestigators pinpoint the cause of a
boarding house fire that killed 14
wcxnen.
A team from the state ftre
marshal 's office continued to s1ft
through the wreckage Monday , and
Pioneer Fire Chief Paul Loomis said
they were expected to ftnish work at
the site today .
The informati on gathered by
investigators will be reviewed by
experts from the state agency,
which will then issue a ruling on the
cause of Sunday's blaze at the Coa ts
Boarding House , he smd. Initially.
authorities said the fir e began when
a 4-year.&lt;Jid chUd accidentally set
fire to a couch in a ground-noor
apartment . But they later said a
faulty heating or elertncal system
might have cdused the ftre
Inves tigators
on
Monday
questiOned the boy and his mother .
Julie Camper , who was pres('nt at

the lime the fire began .
The two-story structure, onginally
built as a one-family home tn the late
\BOOs, had been remodeled mto
about 10 apartments, said Poh re
Chief David Norris, son-in -law of tJw
owners. He said 28 people were tn
the house when the fir e broke out .
most of them aged or retarded
residents of the boarding house .
Multiple gas heaters wer e used tn
the building, Loomis said .
It was called tlw C'.oats ~urs1ng
HOOle until 1973, but its owners
decided to conv ert it tnto a boarding
house , partly be calL"' nrw ly enacted
state laws governing nursm g homes
would have required tilem to mstall
a costly sprinkler and fir e alarm
system .
Mavor R. BruCie Kidstun smd

continu~s

sprrnklers could have kep t the fire
from spreading as raptdly as it did,
saving the lives of the victinns.
The village has no local fire
ordinances, said Loomis, adding
that he did not Ulink Uley would be
feasible in a smaU village like
Ptoneer because of the cost and
manpower needed to enfocce them .

State law requires sprinklers in
apartments and condominiums only
Lf the buildmg is more than 75 feet
taU . This requirement also applies to
nursing homes and certain other

ms11tutional buildings.
But Ule Coats Boardin~ House ,

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admissions---Leola
Keck
Pomeroy; William Easterday:
Racine; Paul Nease, Pomeroy ; Allie
Simon. Pomeroy: Clara Conroy,
I .on~ Bottom: Hurley Hutton,
Rutland ; Harold Walker, Racine :
W1lburWhaley, Shade.
Disc harges-Bernard Rairden,
Re•trice Rairden , Clara Paulsen
'
Cllildes Aiker, Henry Lemley.

CLOSING STREET
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence An·
drews annoonced today that Nye
Street will be closed to traffic for two
hours Wednesday beginning at 9
a .m.

MONEY SUIT F'ILED
A suit in the amount of $7,968 was
file;) u1Me1gs Coooty Common Pleas
Court by Racine Home National
Bank against Angela Sue Hubbard
Bowman . New Lima Road, Rutland .
The marriage of Viola V. Fitch
and Thomas fitch was dissolved.
BASKETBALL MEETING
F1fth and sl.Xth grade girls in
Southern Local Sc hool Dtstrict interested rn playing basketball are to
meet Saturday, Nov . 10, at 9 a.m. at
Racmt• J unior High .

CHR~TMAS

rns

be111g sponsored by the Middleport
Chamber of Commerce. Santa will
arriVe rn Middleport the evening of
the parade.
Those interested in taking part are
asked to fill out the fonn below and
mall it to Mi:!s Ingels. Merchants
wiU stage a "moonlight" sale
foUowing the parade .

...

ADDRESS ..

1YPE OF GROUP .
HOW MANY IN GROUP .
MAIL TO CANDY ING ELS, IN CA RF. OF' IN GELS fURNITURE, MIDDLEPORT, OillO 45760 OR CALL 9\12-26.'!5

JOE STANLEY
J oe Stanley. 76, Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
died Sunday at Veterallll Memorial
Hospital.
Mr. Stanley was the son of the late
William and Adelaide Brickles
StarUey, Jr . He was also preceded in
death by two brother.~ , James and
JohnStarUey .
He is survived by his wLfe, Lovey
Welch Stanley; one son, Joesph J.
Stanley, Rt. I, Shade; two grandchildren, William Stephen Stanley,
Ada, Ohio, and Nancy Elizabeth
Stamey, Shade; two sisters, Mae
Mason, Harrisonville and Amanda
Morri&gt;, Rt . 4, Pomeroy ; one
brother, Glenn Stanley, Rt 2.
Albany, and several nieces and
newphews .
Funeral services will be held
Friday at I p.m. at Ewing Chapel

•10 DIFFERENT STYLES

•BABY BOrn.£ WARMER
Operates in Car Lighter

OF BABY BEDS
IN STOCK
•CHILD ROCKERS
•YOUTli BEDS

'•

Wilma Mansfield, the medical profession; Grace
Pratt, Middleport BILSiness and Professional Women's
Club ; Gary Ellis, fire departments of the county; back,
I to r, the Rev . Robert McGee, the miniBtry; Larry
Brogan, Pomeroy-Middleport Uons Club: Greg
Gatrell. Meigs Jaycees ; Hank Cleland, MiddleportPomeroy Rotary Club. and Captain Robert E. Beegle,
sheriff's department, law and order.

WANTS DAY OBSERVED - This group of Meigs
County organizational representative is urging all
Meigs Countians to put away their cigarets all day on
Thursday m cooperation with the Great American
Smokeout being conducted by the Meigs Unit of the
American Cancer Society in cooperation with a
national program . The group includes, front. I to r.
Candy Ingels, Middleport Chamber of Commerce: Dr.

they were down for items that they
had not requested from the Ohio
Board of Regents.
Senate Finance Chairman Harry
Meshel, D-Youngstown. also said he
was less than satisfied with response
of some universities to his request
that they place prioriti"" on projects
proposed for their illlltitutions.
Meshel's comnuttee plans to
resume formal hearings on the bill
tonight, perhaps to start carrying
out whatever caucus decisions are
forthcoming.
Meanwhile , pressures continued
to build Monday for the Legislat=
to enact a small hike in the state
gasoline tax to finance critically
needed highway and bridge improvements .
In advance of this week's
deliberations, the Ohio Conference
of the American Automobile
Association called on legislative
leaders to approve an increase. The
AAA also advocated final approval
of a proposa l, already approved by
the Senate, to double the $10 state
auto registration fee to provide transportation funds for local govern-

ments .
William G. Se lsam , AAA state
director, said, "If additional fundlng
at moderate levels is not proVIded
today, significantly greater funding
will be required in the near future to
replace those portions of Ohio's
highway system which w1ll
deteriorate beyond the point of
repair."
Rep . Frederick H. Deering, !).
Monroeville, chairman of a joint
conference committee considering
the transportation's budget bill, said
an agreement may be possible on a
flat two-eents-a-gallon boost in the

existing severH:ent tax. However.
Deering said he would not reconvene
the sill-member panel "oottl we get
a sense of direction "
The commi ttee adjourned in what
appeared to be a deadlock five
weeks ago after the Senate refused
to yield to House insistence on a gas
tax hike.
In the mterirn, Deering and Sen.
Sam Speck. R-New Concord, said
they have seen results of polls
showi ng enough support in both
chamber.~ for the flat tw&lt;Kent tax.
with all of it earmarked for state
highways .

Reg. '4.59 SALE

'3.00

TOMMEE TIPPEE
FOOD GRINDER
Reg_ '6.49 SALE '4.25
HIGH CHAIR
Reg. '27.95 SALE '19.95
REGULAR 19.95

Hanes

Dollar dips again

Comfort Colors · "
Fashion Wear

LONDON (AP) - The dollar
fell sharply and gold rallied today
in reaction to Iran's decision to
withdraw all S\2 billioo in Iranian
government deposits In U.S.
banks In a bid to get the shah extradited from America.
In Franldurt, the dollar fell 2
pfennlgs against the West Ger'
man mark to I. 775() marks from
l.N73 earlier in the morning .
In London, the pound sterling
gained one cent to $2.1000 after
operung at 2.0965.
The dollar sank to 1.6530 Sw1ss

N ew H .:m es Comfo rt Co lu ,~' fc~ ~ h r
lH \!i(-' IW t:..ri r r&lt;., hc·r
Bolc1 l ash ron cOkJrs and &lt;;htH o &lt;&gt; ty l rnq rnelk t . '{' &gt;: r 11 .,.. d nu
f

loo k q o od all un d, 'r Pc&gt;rf r&gt;r.f frtlr ng 1-';-. turl&lt;:,
Bn("IS (!n(j B rk Hlr&lt;; 100 c • _, lt ~: n ;n 1r1 b iP tV h

with the Rev . Cecil Cox officiating .
Burial will be in Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after I p.m. on Thursda y.

TA r ) ~

f o n&lt;;

'1318

WEDNlSlJA'T NOVfMBER 14 1979

.

"

~

n~

selection of styll's •nd color\ on dit.pl•r lst floor

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

By...

SURVIVORS USTED
Survivors of Mrs . Vema f . Harris,
72, Lancaster, fonner Pomeroy
resident, who died Saturday are two
sisters, Mrs . Victor (Mary) Harbrecht, and Mrs. Ed (G ladys ! Parfitt, both of Pomeroy.

SQUALl CAlLED
The Pomeroy ER Squad was
ca lled Monday at 3:43p.m. to Elberfe:ds Warehouse for Harold Walker
who was taken to Veteran '
Mem"'rin! Hospital.

Thinking ahead really pays off in our
Christmas Club! Start now
get a\..
big check yext year!
~

INVEST

I

ROOF BEING REPLACED- - Replacing the roof on
the attractive Sacred Heart Church in Pomeroy is not
an easy task as this network of scaffolding up the side

the

crisis

I

I

"The Friendly Bonk"

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

_.., __
C ;:..•

Miller may be forced
to take sick leave . ..
CHARLESTON , W Va
Members of th e

I

1

gove rnrng body, the International
E•eculiv e Board, sched ul ed Friday
tn Washtngton . D.C .
Un10n Vice President Sam Church
and Secretary-Treasur e r Bill
Esselstynsaid the primary reason
for the board meeting IS to discuss
plans for the un10n 's constit utiona l
convention O.c. 10-20 Ln O.nver. But
ea ch also said the matter of a forced
sick leave for Miller also may come
up .

AP ' -

Un 1tt.' d

~fine

Worker s gov erning board ma y
discuss a proposal Friday to force
union President Arnold Mil ler to
take a sick lea ve, union uffi L'Htl s say .
Miller , who has suffered a hea rt
atta ck. was hsted m fa1r condition
today in the coronar y r are unit of the

l'harleston Area Medica l Cent er.
hospital spokesman John Brown
said. Mtller entered the hospital
Monday mgh t. complaintng of rhest
pains .
Brown said Tuesday rught . " I
spoke w1th Mr . Miller 's doctor this

" Anyonr wh o rules

extent of that damage is not kno~&lt;'fl . "
lt IS not known how soon Miller. :&gt;6,
will be released from the hospital.
but he apparently will not be ab le to

bt•en the unaun·s t·h ief since 1972.
tak&lt;' tht• sirk lt&gt;a\'('

attend a meeung uf tht· wuun ' s

$50,000

Fairboard
election
Nov. 19th

spent on

20 homes
Lauren

Hof m a n .

houstng

rehabilitation program director,
Tuesday ni ght told Meigs County

Sax ra ndadales are stockin g ftve
thrrt·-ycitr terms on tht: MetKS County Fatrboard _ Tht• ct iUlU.lll c le rtJon

Comnmioners that approxrrnatel\o·
~. ()(K) was spent i£Jst )' l'lJ r f nr t h~·

rehafilltat10n

of

20

Will ix• held Nov 19

hullll's

Candidates mduJt• mc umbt·nt
mt•mbers. Adda lou Lrwts. Jcwws

throughout tht• cow1ty Tht• program

terminate'(/ as of Nuv. 9, 1!179
Hob Ba1ley, EMS euu rdJnatur, ml'l
to diSl'IL" SF:UEMS latt•st billi ngs
und to req ut·~ l that

i:i

l'a rnahan . Benny

Slawtt'r . Bill

l&gt;owntt&gt; . and John HOSt' . and
rtt'Wt '' •mer I )or~· y JunJan
Tht• t' lt·dron will be ht•ld &lt;~t tht.·
scnl'lar&gt;'::, ofhct' on tht• Hr11.:k

CETA workt•r

I•• h1red in hiS off! ct•

e

ou t the

possibility of Lord-know s- what
coming up is a fool, " Esselstyn said.
A member of the board , who asked
nut to be 1dentlhed. said he also
believed the possibility of Miller
steppmg aside might come up.
Church would be co me a ctmg
pres1denl should M1ller. who has

afternoon and he said that tests
showed some heart d~mage The

the job.
t e

negotiations were concluded for the
week on Friday night and were set
again for Monday morning .
However ,something apparently
happened - the judge said he knows
not what- and on Monday morning
only the negotiating team from the
board of education showed up for the
meeting with the team from the
teachers association not being on
hand .
Jud~e Buck sa1d he was contacted

Negotiations between the striking
Meigs Local School District
Teachers Association and the Meigs
Local Board uf EducatiOn have completely broken down, Meigs Probate
CoiLrt Judge Robert E . Buck reported this morning .
Judge Buck said negotiations were
underway each day la st week in his
offices between the two groups to
work out a sol ution to the e1ght week
old strike. The judge sa1d that

nwnbe ~ uf Hepu()llctut"i st.-e~ m~
' "(.

of the chiLfch indicates. The Murray Sheet Metal Co.,
Parkersburg, has the contract for the extensive
project.

Board-teacher negotiations
now broken off completely

NEW YORK tAP! - Fonner
California Gov . Ronald Reagan is
kicking off his presnlential campaign by advocating statehood
for Puerto Ric" and calling for
the transfer of many federal fun ctions to s tate and local governments.
Reagan made the proposals ,
part of what he called his " new
agenda" for the 1980s. tn a speech
Tuesday night formally declarin~
his cand1dacy fur thl' 19110
Hcpubllean norrunauon.
Rea~an ·se ntry brmgs to 10 the

You make 4Y prompt payments,
we make !he 50th.

e

on

bread

Kicks off race

RECEIVE

$1;00••• •••••••••••••••••••••••• $50.00
$2.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $100.00
$5.00. e •• e e. e e. e a a. e e e e e e. a e. e $250,00
$10.00 •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • $500.00
$20.00 ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1,000.00

•:&lt; '·' l •f "

session

represented a softerung of the
Iranian position , told Tehran Radi o:
" No. our position remains unchanged ," meaning the hostages

and

water

sentew.:~

as

previously planned .
Lawrence Coooty JuvenUe Judge
U oyd Burwell sentenced Moore and
his wife, Eva, to a bread and water
diet last week after they were convicted of neglecting and abusing
thet r four -year~ld adopted son.
However. the Moores remained free
on bond pending an appeal and the
judge sought another opinion as to
the legality of bread and water
The Moores withdrew the1r appeal
Tuesday afternoon . Meanwhile ,
Randy Lambert, the cou nty's
assistant prosecutor, said Tuesday
he had advtsed Burwell tha t the

UPPER DARBY . Pa . rAP! A fire s pread dense smoke
through a smgle-car commuter
train at rush hour Tuesday, injuring more than 50 passengers,
pollee said.
The injured - suffering from
burns and smoke inhalation were taken to three area
hospitals .
~ fire broke out after two
small explosions, the first like an
electrtcal spark, and then a
larger explosion. The lights on
the train went out with the second
explosion, and the ca r began
filling with smoke.
Passengers left the above ground ca r from the back door as
the driver urged them not to
panic.

DON'T MISS IN '80
...JOIN UP TODAY!

••.. -·

Council

would remain until the shah is extrawled.
But the Yugoslav news agency
Tanjug said Bani Sadr also told
reporter.~ that hostages who - in
Tanjug 's words - were foWJd to be
innocent would be released in two or
three days. The Iranian militants
who setzed the embassy II days ago
accuse all their hostages of being
"U.S. spies."
There was no elaboration on the
Tanjug report.
The hosta ges are 62 America ns
and 36 non-Americans - believed to
be mostly Indian and Pakistani embassy employees.
The U.N. Security Council and
OPEC appeared today to be the nert
battlefields in the cold war between
Iran's revolutionary regime and the

IRONTON , Oluo I AP I - Jue Ed
Moore begins serving a rune-&lt;iay jail
sentence for child neglect today but
he won't be forced to subsist on a

50 persons hurt

SURVIVORS USTED
Others preceding Mrs. Mary
Virginia Pierce in death and not
IL&lt;ted earlier were her second
husband, L. V. Pierce, and a stepdaughter. Mae Evelyn Calve•

" The purpose of this order is to insure that clalfllS on Iran by the
United States and its citizens are
provided for in an orderly manner. "
Powell said.
Powell's statement said the exact

amount of money being blocked is
not known. "but there is no reason
for disturbance 1n the fore~gn exchange or other markets."
Baru Saclr , aske&lt;l ttxlay whether
his letter to U.N. Secretary-General
Kurt Waldheim asking for a Security

United States. '
The U.S. government rebuffed the
Iranian Revolutionary Council's apparent offer to free the 98 hostages in
the American Embassy in Tehran if
the United States agreed to an international investigation cl the
deposed shah's alleged crimes and
trallllferred all his holdings in the
United States to Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini's regime . Sen. Howard
Baker, R-Tenn ., reported after a
bnefing by Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance that the Carter admirustr ation "will not consider
discussing the matter" until the
hostages were freed .
Security Council members were
holding private talks on Iran's
request for a council meeting to
t Continued on page 12 )

Parents sentenced

PARMA, Italy IAP I - A gas
explosiOn demolished a wing of
the city hospital Tuesday , k11ling
at least seven persons and
burying patients, doctors and
nurses under tons of debris.
Rescue teams searched for 23
persons believed under the
wreckage.
The blast hit early in the afternoon, and police, firemen and
volunteers worked into the night
under searchlights. ca refull y
clearing their way through the
wrecked building.

If Our Christmas Club
for '79 Passed YOu

DEER KILLED
A deer was killed on Whipple Road
Saturday at ~ : 30 p.m. when it ran into the path of a pickup truck driven
by Wendell Ervin, 23, Racine, the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department
reported. There was moderate
damage. The driver was not injured.

sidicuies .

U.S. Treasury officials, White House
press secretary Jody Powe ll announced that C.arter had acted to

Seven killed

mrm ·,

and boVl del)llrtment -

CORRECTION
Carol J . G1bbs, Rustic Hills,
Syracuse , was a passenger involved
in an accident Friday night in Minersville. not Julie Gibbs of Racine .

"bloc·k" ufficial lranian assets + including deposits of the government
of Iran. Central Bank and "other
cont rolled entitle.' " in US. banks
and their for eign branches and sub-

After an emergency meeting of

1.6645 Francs .

Ma.kesyou feel.good all under.
SM trw

already shrinking value of the dollar
on world markets , and the dollsr d1d
fall abruptly on foreign-excha nge
markets and gold rallied. One London dealer said the Iranian fiscal
squeeze play "took the market by
storm." But the dollar began climbing back up later.

francs in Zurich from an earlier

"nd"'-"*' '

1

DINNER PLANNED
Meigs Chapter 53, Disa bled
American Veterallll, will hold a
Veterans day dinner this evening at
6 p.m. at the chapter home on Butternut Ave.
The dinner is for members ands
their wives. The ladies aare to bring
a covered dish. Following the dinner
a business session will be held.

By The A11oclated Prtlfls
Iran, striking a new blow in an
economic war with the United
States, decided today to withdraw
biltiollll in Iranian government
money deposited in American
banks. But President Carter trnmediately ordered a freeze on those
lunda .
Iran 's foreign affairs chief.
Abolhassan Bani Sadr, also reaffirmed that the 98 hostages at the
U.S. Embassy in Tehran will remain
captive until Shah Mohanunad Reut
Pahlavi is deported.
Bani Sadr reportedly said,
however, that some might be freed
by the weekend if found "innocent."
In another development, northeastern Iran was rocked by a
powerful earthquake today, and
rescue workers said at least 500 persons were killed.
Bani Sadr announced at a Tehran
news conference that Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini •s regime had
deculed to withdraw all of its fund.'i
fr001 U.S. banks and re-&lt;leposil them
in banks of nations " friendly" to
Iran.
He 5aid the funds amounted to $12
billion, but reporters in Washington
were told it was closer to $5 billion .
Bani Sadr declared the W1 th. drawal would seriously erode the

UNDERWEAR

1

SALE

enttne

bread a nd water sentence wa s

FOR All YOUR BABY NEEDS

2nd ANNIVERSARY SALE

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

NO . 150

•

Carter orders freeze on bank withdrawals

MEETS TIWRSDA Y
The Democrat party wiU meet
Thursday, Nov. IS, at 7:30p.m at the
Carpenters Hall in Pomeroy .

430 Second Avenue
NEXT DOOR TO POST OFFICE

VOL XXVIII

•
Area deaths

PARADE ENTRY FORM

NAME ..

CuLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Majority Senate Democrats apparently were set today to decide
where the axe will fall on GOP Gov.
James A. Rhodes'
million state
construction plan.
The 18-member contingent was
being calletil into caucus to discuss
the record high cap1tal improvements bill, as members &lt;l the
Senate and House returned from a
five-week recess.
A3 the Legislature adjourned in
late September, Senate President
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, and other
leaders of the 33-member upper
chamber said they planned to make
major cuts in the House version.
They were undecided what to cut,
although the $488 million m the
docwnent for higher education appeared too large and was therefore
vulnerable, Ocasek indicated.
Rhodes has urged that the bUl be
left intact, saying all of the projects
are needed.
But Senate Finance Conunittee
hearings on it, while the Legislature
was in recess, left S()(Ile panel members less than convinced. In some
cases. university officials conceded

e

I USPS 145 960)

Majority Democrats set to decide fate

·christmas parade
participant form
MIDDLEPORT - Persons In terested in partJcipatrng in the annual Middleport Christmas parade
are asked to compiete the fonn
below and mail to Candy Ingels. 1n
care of Ingels Furniture . Middleport, Ohio 45760.
The parade will be held on Monday, Nov . 26, at 6:30 p .n and is

whose residents could walk and oruy
required basic assistance, did not fit
into the nursing h&lt;me category.
Legislation pending in a House
Ways and Means subcommittee
would expand the sprinkler law.
Its sponsor. Rep . Paul R. Leonard,
D-Dytoo, said the bill as drawn up
might not have covered the Pioneer
situatioo . But he said it should be
used as a vehicle to amend and
update the state's fire code.
The worst nursing home or
boarding house fire in the state's
hist&lt;ry was in November 1963, at the
Golden Age Nursing Home in
Fitchv ille . Sixty-three people
perished and 24 were injured in the
fire .
A January 1970fire at the Harmar
House Nursing in Marietta killed 32
elderly residents . It brought about
the legislatioo requiring niLfsing
homes to have sprinklers.

•

Ath•ndmt.{ WPn· Hrdtarrf .lone!".
prl'sHft•nr. fll'nry Wdl:s . ;.m d 1' lw : . lt "~
Wt•lb . cuuunts.~tUIII'rs . rmd Man:
!l t tl ,~ !· ·tlf'r ., ll'r\

Sprmg.' F111rgroumb fn1111 5 t t l Yp m.
No\' 19 i\11 rt ':o\tdt"nl"i holduu..:. lllt'llllw r stHp ! wk. L' an · ~·) 1~ 1 Uh- tu \ ' tllt'

·'

later Monday by representatives of
the Ohio Education Association
asking that he be present for a
meeting it was calling for Monday
evening between the associatiOn and
the board of education. Judge Buck
said he was present but that the
board did not attend.
Calling the session between the
two groups was not protocol in the
negotiations process , Judge Buck
commented.
He satd that no package had
evolved in the negotiations held in
his office and that a package which
was to have been considered at the
Monday night meeting from the
teachers association was not the

result of any negotiatiollll carried
out in his office last week .
When the Monday night meeting
failed to materialize , the teachers
association for the first time in
several days ISSUed a statement to
the media on Tuesday morning .
They also put up an informational
picket line at Powell 's Super-Valu
Store. operated by board member ,
Larry Powell, Tuesday afternoon
and evening

Judge Buck said that release of a
statement to the meeting Tuesda y
by the teachers association was in
violation to an infonnal agreement
in his court .
It had been agreed that neither
s1de would ISSUe statements to the
med1a at th1s time. he reported .
Judge Buck reported that he has
no knowledge at this time of future
nego llatwns between the tw o
groups . He did indicate that protocol
was violated by the Oluo Educai.Jon
Association Ln the negotiations
processes but added that he does feel
tha t urgency ts very importan t at
the present time s1nce the strike ls ln

1ts eig hth week .
Supt. Davtd Gleason sa1d this morning that members of the board had
not seen the package which was to
have been presented at the Monda y
rughl meei.Jng . He. too. potnted out
that the Ohio Ed uca i.Jon Association
was 111 violation d protocol by not
working with the board 's negotiatrng
team w1th the package and in attempting to set a meeting of the
dlStnct ·,board of educatiOn M onda~
rught.
Supt . l;l eason said that on Monday
Board PreSident Ca rol P1 erce and
Treasurer Jam• Wagner were in

Columbus where they had been subpoenaed a fe• !·. ral court heari"!:
regarding to " recent action by the
Me 1g~

I ,t)("al Bna rd tn cancelling the
1" · 1P 1, 1,.., 1•f tht• lt•al·hers nn

11\SUra! ~ r -~ ·

strike .
1ContUiued on page 121

1llegal.
·When I first heard a bout it, I
thought 1t was appropnate, " Lambert sa1d. "But when you stop and
think about it ... To just give them
bread a.-.:1 water would have
violated their civil rights. They will
be given proper treatment."
The Moores were accused of putting their sun in a wire cage each

Ky., during the tinne he serves his
sentence. But Bwwell said he was
inc reasing Moore 's sentence from
seven to nine days.
· ..._

"The oniy reason I'm doing this is
solely so he ca n maintain his job and
support his other four kids, " added
Burwell, who said he would permit
Mrs . Moore to serve her seven-day
sentence later so a parent could
remain at home with the other
chUdren .
The judge said the Moores apparently had given their natural
children adequate treatment.
"We haven 't found a motive as to
why they treated their adopted child
as they did, " he said. "It's real hard
to understand."
During their twt&gt;-day trtal the
Moores maintained that they were
advised not to feed the boy unless he
asked for food by name . They also
said the wire cage was not designed
to to prevent him from obtaining
food .
Burwell, who said he would abide
by the prosecutor's decision, said he
came up with the idea ol l:nad and
water becauoe It ""'" a punlal\rQent
that """med to !It the crime.

night , failing to feed him, failing to
keep him clean and failing to mawtam a sanitary environment. The
boy was moved from the couple's
home last month. Judge Burwell
made the separation pennanent after their conviction.
The judge said he would allow

Moore to contmue working at his JOb
at Armco Inc . at nearby As hland.

Driver faces
DWI charge
A Gallipolis man, Marvin Kirby,
37, was cited on a cha rge of OWl
early tnday following a one-vehicle
accident on Georges Creek Rd .. onetenth of a mile west of U.S. 35.
Called to the scene at 12·-lb a.m.,
the Galilli-Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol. reports a west bound auto
operated by Kirby failed to negotiate
a curve. passed off the right side of
the roadway and struck an embankment.
Three persons were c1ted
followin g t~ree accidents in·
vesu gated Tuesday by the patrol.
A Vinton man, Donald R. Berry,
25 , was ctted on a charge of DWI
following a one-vehicle mishap on
CR 16 , one-tenth of a mile north of
SR 160.
Called to the scene at~ : 40 p.m .. offl eers report Berry's north bound
auto went out of constrol. passed off
the right side of the roa dway, struck
an embankment and overturned .
Berry displayed visible s1gns of mjury, but ,was not immediately
treated. The auto was demolished .
Charles Riedel. 22. Bidwell, was
cited on a charge of unproper
backing following an accident on Old
SR 160, one-tenth of a mile north of
SR 160.
Called to the scene at 6:00 p.m ..
the patrol reports an auto operated
by Riedel struck a vehicle driven by
Paula JILStice, 24, Vinton.
There was moderate damage to
the Riedel auto : slight damage to
the Justice vehicle.
Officers investigated a tw!Hluto
mishap in Meigs County on CR 25,
e1ght-tenths of a mile north of SR 7,
at 12 •45 p.m.
The patro l reports an auto
operated by Unda Rohrbau gh, 28.
Gal lipolis , backed from a private
drive into the path of a north bound
vehicle driven by Geor~e Collins, 39,
Heeds ville.
Rohrbaugh was c1ted on a charge
of failure to yield . There was slight
damage to the Rohrbaugh auto;
moderate damage to the Collins
vehicle.

F'RONA PETRIE. JR.

Petrie
honored
Frank Petrie, Jr .. R.S., deputy
health comrrussioner for the Meigs
County Health Department, has
been named as the outstanding
samtarian of the Southeast District,
Ohio Environmental Health Assn.
Petrie began his career in environrnenta l health with the Gallia
County Health Department as a
sanitarian in 1969.
In 1972 he became a district
sanitarian with the Ohio Department of Health.
In 1978, be was made head of the
recreation department of the Ohio
Department of Health. In June , 1979,
he accepted a position with the
Me1gs County Health Department.
Petrie said he has enjoyed his
position in Meigs County and is
looking forward to the move of the
local health department into new
quarters near Veterans Memorial
Hospital in the new multi-purpose
building now under construction .
"I feel the county health department is a vital part of an)' community and I want to let county
residents know that the Meigs County Health Department will strive to
cuntinue to serve the needs of the
people," Petrie commented.
~

~

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