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                  <text>12 ~ The Dally Sentmel. Middleport-Pomerov. U.. Wednesday . Nov 14. 1979

Carter administration adopts 'tough' stand

Sen. Metzenbaum wants charges investigated
PIKETON. Uh10 1 AP'
getting mvolved m

.1:l

Without

labor dispuh'.

U.S. Sen . Howard Metze111Jnuu1 Sd!' ~
charges of alleged safety vJOlallon.&lt;
at the Goodyear Atomic Plant
should be invesligated
Bu t Metzenbaum adrru tted there
JS little he can do until the U.S
Department of Energy a llows a&lt;'·
cess to employee hea lth records
The r ner!(Y deparunent , which
owns and f100nces the plant, has
refused to uw e~ti ga t e concerns
about health and safety at the plant
until a stnke by the Oil, Cherru cal
and AtomiC Workers Umon ends .
J otning union leader.;; in a 1neetmg
Tuesday w1th Metzenba um, D-O tuo,
were members of a coalition of enAuthor i&gt;ed CATAL OG
SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
Phon e 991 2 I 78

134 E . Ma•n St
Pomeroy , 0
OW NED AND OPERATED BY
Ja c k &amp; Judy W1ll1am s

Open . Mon . thru We d . 9

~.

T hur 9 -12 , Fn . 9 -5, Sat 9 2

Sa t• s tact•on Guaranteed
or Your Mon ey Back

Vlrorunental groups callmg 1tself the
PorL,rnouth Strike Support Group .
·· The senator told them he couldn 't
get mvolved in the labor diSpute, but
said he would look mto the matter of
heal th and safety, " said Roy Meyers
of Metzenbaum '.s office .
But even then, said Meyers , a lithe
sen.ator could do 1s press for " a
study of the situation which would
not rt'sult in actual changes ."

Also meeting w1th the coalitwn of
16 orgaruzat,ions was Dr . Anthony
Hobbms . director of the Nation.al Institute of Occupational Safety and
Hea lth .
Despite the 6-month-&lt;Jid stnke by
an estimated U90 members of the
wnun, a Goodyear SJXlkesman said

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Veterans Memonal Hoopital
Admitted-Fred Roush, Letart, W.
Va .; Maurice Hotz Ill, Lakeview ,
M1ch.; Pearl Garnes, Dexter; uUie
Robinson,
Hu tland ; Herman
Michael , Middlepcrt ; Michael Harbour, New Haven ; Betty WiUJS,
R.acmc .
Discharged-Diana Tillis, Joyce
Ebersbach,Richard Winebrenner,
John Jeffers, Lela Shenefield

the plant contiuues to operate a t full
t.:apaeity with s upervtsorv per·
sonnel.
\.oodyear Atomic, a s ubs1diary ri
Goodye•r Tire x Rubber Co., is the
only plant in the country capable of
producing uraniwn pure enough for
both nuclear weapo!IS and power
plants .
Among the charges leveled by the
umon JS one that radioactive waste
has been dwnped into the public
sewer system.
Robhm.&lt;&gt; a l"o ha!'l vowrd to 1n-

EXTENDED FORECAST
Fair Friday tbrwgb Suuday.
LAlwB In tbe upper 2GB aod low 30s
Friday. wa1'11ling to tbe upper 30s
to low 408 by Sunday. Highs In the
low to mid 50s Friday, warmlug
lAl the mid 50s lAl low IIOs by
Tuesday .

NEW DIRECIURS
J ei!IIUI Arnott, secretary for the
Pomeroy Chamber of Corrunerce,
announced today that four members
have been elected to the board of
directors for a twl)-year term .
Elected were Jim Frecker, Kyle
Allen, Fennan Moore and Bill
Mayer.

Clear tonight. i.A&gt;w near 30. Mostly
sunny Thursday. High in the upper
~s and low 50s. The chance of
precipiLation near zero tonight and
10 percent Thursday.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES NOV , 13
Gladys Amsbury, Arlene Blair,
Arthur Brooks , Marsha Elliott,
Dorothy Eubanks, Patricia Fraley ,
Sarah Gibbs, Karen Hale, Clifford
Hay s. Hazel Holley, Herbent
Jenkins , Della KEams, Mr s. Robert
Polcyn and son, Belinda Roush.
Melvin Smith, Frances Ta ylor ,
Eurana Thomas, Ruth Willey.
BIRTIIS NOV . 13
Mr . and Mrs Barry Pitten ger,
daughter, Wellston .

Ham &amp; Cheese loaf .•.•••••..~~~ s1.97
Hom e made

HAM SALAD·····················L·~· s1.19
CANNED HAMS •.•••••..•.••• ::~.. S4J9
3 lb . Agar

DAIRY

PRODUCE

6 oz . Kraft American or

Pimiento Single Wrapped

7gt2/99c

SLICED CHEESE
1 lb . Teen Queen

MARGARINE

Quarters

s lb.

Pink or White

GRAPEFRUIT ••• S1.29
0 0

RED GRAPES •••~~. 1'1

NEW CABBAGE 2 Lb]C]

13' • Chef !'.oy -Ar -Oee

FROZEN Pl

771\
Cheese or Pepperoni
~·····················

$119

.

16 oz . Del Monte

GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS ..•..•.••.•. 59~
10 ', oz . campbells Old Fashioned

VEGETABLE SOUP················ 2/59~
14 1,oz . Hunts Whol e

TOMATOES ..••......•...••... ··•··· 2/99~
IS oz . Chef -Boy -Ar · Dee

BEEFARONI ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 59'

(Continued from page I)
counter a "climate of war" it
charged the United States was
spreading. Observers expected the
meeting to be delayed at least until
Thursday to await the arrival in
New York of Abolhassan Bani-&amp;idr,
Iran's new foreign minister and a
member of the ruling Revolutionary
Council.
The council last F[iday condemned the Iranian violation of the
U.S. Embassy's diplomatic immunity and demanded the release of
the h06tages. But Bani Sadr made no
mention of this in his letter to
Secretary-Ceneral Kurt Waldheim
asking for a council meeting .
The letter to Waldheim also hinted
that Iran might ask the other
Moslem members of the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to join it in cutting
off all oil exports to the industrialized countries, apparently
hoping that would pressure the
United States into handing over the
shah. But unofficial analyst.'! in
Kuwait said they believed Iran was
asking only that the other OPEC
members not mcrease production to
replace the oil denied the United
States by President Carter's ban on
the import of Iranian crude and
Iran 's ban on exports to its enemy .
'"Do you not think," Bani Sadr
wrote Waldheim, "that the people of
Moolem countries whooe oil is
placed at the dispooal of the industrialized countries for a pittance
would use this opportunity to show
their dissatisfaction and anger and
that that cutoff of oil would turn the
crisis into a world crisi!? ''
Pars, the official Iranian news
agency , reported later Tuesday that
Iranian Oil Mlniater Ali Akbar Moin-

far called on the other OPEC oil
ministers to "back up" Iran 's stance.
The Revolutionary Council also
barred U.S. planes from Iranian air
space, Tehran Radio reported. But
Pan American World Airways, the
only U.S. airline that has been flying
to Iran, said it suspended all flights
there Nov . 7.
There was no indication from
Washington ri retaliatory U.S. action against Iran Air, the Iranian
goverrunent airline. Its only flights
to the United States are being diverted to Montreal because ground
crews at New York airports refuse
to service them .
Meanwhile. a newspaper m
Kuwait said the United States had
informed coWitries in the Persian
Gulf area that it will intervene
militarily to rescue the hostages if
internatlooal efforts failed .
Al·Anba said its report came weUinfonned sources, but the report
could not be confirmed in
Washington ilnmediately .
The newspaper also quoted Iran 's
81llbassador to Kuwait, Ali Shams
Ardankani. as saying the Iranian
goverrunent would not accept any
mediation for release ci the h06Ui~es
because it was not " party " to the
matter.
Meanwhile, U.S. officials said the
shah, hospitalized for cancer treatment, is suffering from a basebaUsized tUI!Ior on his neck, but a
spokeswoman for him denied re por·
ts that more surgery is plaMed .
Administration sources who asked
not to be identified said the shah's
doctors plan to operate on the cancerous twnor as soon as the ousted
monarch is sufficiently recovered
from recent gallbladder surgery

3 oz .

Area deaths

INSTANT NESTEA ..•.....•••...... s2.39
32 oz. Vla sic Kosh er

DILL PICKLES······················ .. 99~
32 oz. Kraft

GRAPE JELLv ••...•••...•..•••••...• sl.09
12 oz . Jif Creamy or Crunchy

PEANUT BUTTER················· ••• 89'
&gt;allons of Rich -n -Ready

ORANGE DRINK-················~~~~~~- 99'

MIWE GILMORE
Millie Gilmore, 83, Colwnbus, formerly of Pomeroy , died Monday at
Grant Hospital.
Mrs . Gihnore WIIB preceded in
death by her parents, Myrtle Sapp
and John Gilmore, three sisters,
Eunice, Evelyn and Buelah ; three
brothers, Olla, Elz.a, and Kelly .
She is survived by one daughter.
Florence Byrd, Columbus ; two
granddaughters; two great granddaughters ; one brother, Harley
Gi lmore, Pomeroy, and several
nieces and nephews ri Middleport

you get
·get
10" Wellington
Leather : Full grain cowhide uppers (fan) .
Contruction : Cement. Bottom : Kingcel
Crepe sole and heel pyramid tred design .
Lining : Unlined. Insole : Bonded p1gsk&gt;n
leather .
Other Features : Side pull straps; reintorc ·
ed back stay; steel shank .

ALSO AVAILABLE Willi SAFETY TOE
(Remember Now is the Time to Lay -Away for Christmas)
9 d .m .-5 p . m . Mon .
thru Thurs . &amp; Sat.

9 a .m -B p.m . Fn .
Clos ed S•m d clY

HARTLEY SHOES, INC.
Middl e of the Upper Block
in Pomeroy

I

~~\!li--l

and Pomeroy.
Funeral se!Vices will be held
Thursday at I p.m . at the 0 . R.
Woodard Funeral Home, Colwnbus .
Burial will be in Greenlawn
Cemetery, Columbus.
LAWRENCE REED
Lawrence Reed, 81, Route 1, Middleport, died late Tuesday night.
Mr. Reed made his home with a
son, James Martin Reed.
He wBB bom Aug . 4, 1896, at West
Lafayette , Ohio. a son of teh late
William Sherman and Florence
ROBe Poland Reed. He was also
preceded m death by his wife.
Frieda Mart.in Reed Ill 1966, three
brothers and five sisters .
Surviving are four sons, Robert
W., Pomeroy; Lawrence Eugene
(Gene) , Columbus; James Martin,
Roote 1, Middleport, and Richard
E .. Grove City; a sister, Mrs. Jessie
PoweU , West Lafayette ; six grandsons ; three granddaughters ; five
great-grandsons and four greatgranddaughters. Mr. Reed WIIB a
carpenter by trade. He WIIB a
veteran ci World War I having served m the U. S. Navy . He was an
elder in the Zion Church of Christ .
Funeral se!Vices will be held at 2
p.m. Friday at the Rawling~oats
Funeral Home in Middleport with
the Rev . Robert Purtell officiating.
Burial will be in Riverview
C&lt;!metery . Friends may call at the
funeral home anytime after I p.m.
Thursday . Pallbearers wlll be Tom,
Richard. Dave, Ronnie and Ed Reed
and Ed Durst.
Mr. Reed was a member of Carpenter's L•&gt;eal Union650 .

The Carter administration, With several econom'i'c

repriaal cards left to play, is adopting a tough, "' no negotiations " sU. nd

111

1\s

war of nerves w1th i!lln.
The administra lion Wednesday evening recalled Ramsey Cia rk , the
specUII envoy who never made it to Iran, underscoring its Wlwillingness to
negotiate wlille Iranians hold 62 Americans hostage at the u.s. Embassy in
Tehran .
Follmvlrl€ the same pclicy, Secretary of SLate Cyrus Vance flew to New
York _on Wednesday to dissuade the U.N. Security Council from holding a
meet!Jig at Iran 's request and COIISidering Iranian demands for an m·
temational tribunal to indict the exiled shah and force his return to Iran for
trial.
.
Clark, along with Senate aid~ William Miller, was returning from lsLanbul, where his mission stalled last week when the Iramans reversed themselves and BMounced they would not see him.
A week ago, the administration said it hoped Clark would be able to
discu8s the release of the hostages and U.S.·Iranian relatioru~ .
But on Wednesday, the administration said the release of the hootages had
to come first.
" We're going to work actively to prevent a discussion by the Security
Council Wltil the hostages are released," said spokesman Hodding Carter.
" lbere Is no way this government will negotiate under the gun of its people
being held."

Weather

Carter orders
Eckrich

W~GTON (AP) ~

vestigate the charges but admitted
he has been handcuffed by the
ener gy departme,Jt's refusal to per·
mit an independent investigallon
The department, which has denied
the union allegations, suggested that
current labor negotiations would be
disrupted il any of the employees
were questioned.
" Metzenbawn feels that irrespective of the labor-management
dispute, the charges should be
looked into," said Meyers.

TOMORROW is not " D" Day but it io " S.O" Day for the Me_igs Chap~~
of the American Cancer Society. Thursday, the local chapter IS asking
Meigs Countians to lay their cigarets aside for the entire day 9;! a pa::.~
the Great American Smokeoul, a national observance. These SIX res! .
ts aU fonner smokers, are asking aU Meigs Oluntians to cooperate With
th~ Smokeout Thursday. Pictured are front, I tor, Paulme Derenberger, ,
Dr. Clyde Ingels, Mrs . Gemma Casci; back, I to r, Jean ~k. Ge~~:
Hobstette r and Penny Compton. ·'Take a day off from SI!IOking •
too could become a habit and you could quit for good," the group urges .
'

Three defendants were fined in the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night. Fined $!iO and
costs each were Ronnie Anns, Route
1. Middleport, and George McDaniel
and Don Lovett, both ci Mlddleport,
all on disorderly rna Mer charges .
Eight defendants forfeited bonds
and two others were fmed in the

Middleport police
make I 08 arrests
Middleport poli ce ma de 108
a rresl.'l in the commuruty during Octobe r with 70 of that toLal for
speedmg, acconling to the month
repcrt of Chief of Police J . J .
Cremea!IS .
There were 10 arrests on disorderly manner charges and four on
assault c harges with three
possession of marijuana arrests qnd
two on dn ving while under suspension and two on menacing threats
c harges. There was one each for
c runina I trespassing, petty theft, no
exhaust, allowing a dog to bark ,
destruction of property, disturbing
the peace, carrying a concealed
weapon , no operator's license,
driving while mtoxicated, reckless
operation, leaving the scene of an
accident, running a red light, improper passing , running a stop sign ,
failure to yield the right of way.
Two cases were dismiosed and
three were transferred to the county
court . Parking meter tickets issued
totaled 592 for the month and the
police cruiSe r was driven 3,529
miles
FlJNDS RECEIVED
State Auditor Thoma s E .
Ferguson reported the November
distribution of $7 , 145,5~ . 53 1n local
goverrunent !Wid money to Ohio's 88
counties and 108 cities and VIllages
levying loca l mcome taxes . Meigs
County received $12,500.

CORRECTION NOTED
'Cavalcade ', a 10 voice group , will
appear on Thursday Nov . 15 at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist Church
at 1:30 p.m . instead of on Nov . 1 as
was erroneousl y reported in
yesterday's "Sentinel. "

•

e

(USPS 145 -960)

VOL XXVIII NO. 151

Mayor's Court

Ca rter did not rule out the possibility that in discussing the release of the
host.ages, U.S. represenLatives rrught al•o t.alk w1th Iran about its gnevanees . llut he md1cated there would be no actual negotialions on them .
While the adirunistration waited for the next move from Tehran , 1t had
other several new option.s open as a result of the state of emergency declared
Wednesday by President Carter when he froze Iranian government assets .
He took the action after Iranian offi cials threatened to withdraw their assets
from U.S . banks .
" You s houldn 't discount possible further steps, .. said one Treasury Department official, who declined to be named .
One possibility was a freeze on privately-held Iranian assets which administrati on officials said would amount to almost as much as (he government assets. They estimated the gove rmnent assets at between $S billion and
$6 billi on .
A second option was a partial or complete trade embargo against lrdn,
which could cut off supplies of food and spa re parts to Iran .
White House spokesman Jody Powell, foUowing a policy of not discussing
conting ency plans , refused to rule out the possibility of e ither step.
And Treasury Secretary G William Miller said, " I don't think we can
foreclose options in the future ."
MJUer refused to speculate on future actions, however, saying, " We don 't
&gt;ntend to do anything that would add to tensions .''

a1

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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. NOV . 24th

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Miller will be asked
to resign presidency
CHARLESTON, W.Va . ( AP)
Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller wiU be asked to resign
to become " president emeritus," a
member of the union's governing
body told the Beckley Post-Herald.
The member of the union 's International Executive Board, who
asked that he not be identJied, said
that Miller would reLain his title and
rank, but union Vice President Sam
Church would asswne the day-today responsibilities of running the
union, the Post-Herald repcrted in
il.'l Thursday editions .
Miller, who suffered a heart attack Monday, was reported in
sallsfactory condition in the
coronary care unit of a Charleston
hospital, a hospital spokesman said.
The ~year-&lt;&gt;1d union chief has
been numing the UMW since l97l.
~ United

..

PRESENT CHECKS ~ The president of the
funeroy Chamber of Coounerce, Paul Simon, center.
was presented checks in the amount of $500 each from
Edlaoo Hobltetter, rt&amp;ht, president of the l'mleroy

•

~'

'

Crew arrested
NEW YORK ( API ~ Three
members of an NBC-TV news
crew were seized at gunpoint
today in Tehran and taken into
the occupied U .S. Embassy compound, NBC reported .
1be network news desk in New
York said It could not provide im·
mediate details about who took
the three into custody. why they
were seized or how long they
might be held.
It Identified the detained men
as correspondent Martin Fletcher, cameraman Barry Fox and
technician Derek Herincx .

Hotel tax in bill

Need a
gift idea?

·

A spckesman for Foreign Minister Muhanunad ibn Mubarak al Khatifa of
Bahrain expressed even stronger s uppcrt .
·'It is high time Ayatollah Khomeini got some of his own medicine, " the
s pokesman said. " He has violated every principle ci civilized conduct between nations . It is sheer sacrilege that he is acting in the name of Islam."
Speaking privately. administration officials said the United States thus far
has decided against asking for boycotts or embargoes ci i!lln by the
American allies which are among Iran's major trading partners ; France,
Great Britain, West Germany and Japan.
The officials said the adminiatration was reluctant to expose the embassies ri thooe countries to danger by asking them for overt action.
Meanwlille, administration officials said they expected that the shah,
being treated with radiation at a New York hospital, could be weU enough to
travel within two weeks, ending the justification for his being in this country
for medical treallnent.
But they insisted that the shah and his doctors would have to delemline
when his medical treallnenl had reached the point where he could travel.

THURSDAY. NOVEM BE R 15. 1979

Board-teacher
(Continued from page 1)
Supt. Gleason saJd that although
summoned to the hearing by the
Ohio Education A.llloclatlon attorney, neither Pierce nor Mrs.
Wagner were called to testify . He
termed their subpoenaed appearance in the court as " another
form of harassment."
The superintendent reported that
his automobile left at the home of a
friend in Portsmouth Tuesday night
was heavily damaged with a sledge
harruner and that tires on the vehicle
were punctured, apparently with an
ice pick.
Supt. Gleason pointed out that
negotiations mll.'lt be set up through
him since he is chainnan ci the
negotiations te81!1 of the board . The
provisions of the package being
pres e nted by the teachers
association are not items on which
agreements have been reached,
Gleason said. The board president,
Pierce, can be advised when a
negotiations session is desired, Supt.
Gleason said .
With the strike In its eighth week,
some concern is being expressed on
how students can complete I~ days
of classroom work by the June 30
deadline required by the sLate in or·
der to part.ieipate in the state foundation program funding .

lL'i no grOWld for concern ."

en tine

court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined were Keith Musser .
Pomeroy, $50 and coots, disorderly,
and $100 and costs, intos.ication, and
Ray Baker, no address recorded,
$300 and costs, issuing menacing
threats and $50 and costs. disorderly .
Forfeiting bonds were Annette
Boyd, Pomeroy, ~. posted on a
speeding charge; William Hedrick,
Jr., Athens, $50, speeding; SaUy
Conrad, MilSon, $30, speeding ;
Elmer Messer, Jr., Westerville ,
$100, speeding; Terry Phillips,
Pomeroy , $50, disorderly ; Chri8
Smith, Middlepcrt, $31 speeding ;
Barbara Murray, Pomeroy, ~­
speeding;
Benjamin
Hickel,
POI!Ieroy, $211, speeding .

The decision to freeze Iranian assets in the United States drew a generally
favorable response from Arab foreign ministers attending a meeting ci the
~n.ation Arab League in Tunisia .
''It ill a very sound decJSion, " said Saudi Arabia's Saud al Faisal. "It gives

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) ~
Counties and townships could
levy a 3 percent hotel and motel
tax under a bill now on its way to
Gov. J81lles A. Rhodes.
The proposal by Rep. Francine
Panehal, however, requires that
townships ,
along
with
municipalities
aires dy
authorized to levy the tax on
lodging, would have to turn over
half d. the proceeds to their convention and visitors' bureaus.
Any county that levied such a
tax would have to surrender twothirds of the revenues they collect
to the bureaus.

Auto sales down
DETROIT ( AP) ~ U.S. auto
producers sold 25 percent fewer
cars in early November than
during the same period a year
ago and the decline was led by
C!tr).sler Coil)., which suffered a
43 percent drop despite a new
rebate program, according to
company reports Wednesday.
Sales for the first 10 days of
November were the worst for
that period since 1974, a recession
year. Trade publications already
are saying that bloated inventories and chopped-back
production schedules indicate the
industry is in another reces1nun.

National Bank , and Ted Reed , left. president ri the
Fanners Bank and Savings Company Wednesday . The
money wiU help on the expenses of the newly paved
pcrt.ion of highway along Pomeroy 's Main Street.

The IEB member was quoted by
the Post-Herald as saymg :
" Fu-st off, I can assure you that no
one IS going to try to ouster anyone .
Secondly, Satn, if any changes are
made, will still be vi~ president.
There is a word you should look up +
emeritus . The deifinition I have is
'retired from active se!Vice while
still retaining title and rank.'"
The action , the !EB member said,
would come Friday during the
board's meeting in Washington, D.C.
Another IEB member, who also
asked that he not be identified, said
he had not heard about the proposal
to make Miller president emeritus ,
but he said Miller was incapable of
handling his responsibilities because
of his sickness .
Having a president emeritus
would oot be unprecedented for the

Immediate settlement appears far off,
Meigs strike ends eighth week Friday
Tomorrow will mark the end of the
eighth week of a teachers strike in
the Meigs Local School District with
a settlement apparently not too
f
likelyintheimm edi·ate ulure .
Negotiations between the Meigs
Local Board of Education a nd the
Meigs Local Teachers Association
which took place in the offices of
Probate Court Judge Robert E .
Buck last week broke down comletel . after the t eac h e r s
p
)
tte ·~~ to ••t a
association a mp=
~

meeting with the district's hoard of
ed ucation Monday night at the
Probate Court facilities .
None of the board members attended , but by the same token
of th
t h '
represenLatives
e eac ers
negotiations team did not a ttend a
negotiations session set in the court
facilities for Monday moming.
Meantime, teachers this week
have been picketing Powell 's Super
Valu Store in Pomeroy, operated by
Larry Powell , a member of the

Ohl·o Power must reduce rates
Ohio Power Company was ordered
Wednesday by the Public Utility
Commission of Ohio to reduce il.'l
rates by about $4 million annually
foUowing a rehearing of the company's recent rate case.
The company earlier had volunteered to make $2 .8 million of that
reduction after Ohio's coal conswnption tax was found to be unconstitutional.
Since the company's current rates
took effect in April, It has collected
about $1.2 million under the surfurbased coal tax , and that amount will
be credited to customers' bills in a
future month.
Both the company and the Ohio
Consumers' Counsel had requested
the rate-case hearing, after the
PUCO allowed Ohio Power to in-

crease its rates by $66.8 million. The
company had sought a rate increase
of $123 million .
Included in the rema ining $1.2
million of the rate adjustment to be
made is a separa te issue, raised by
the Consumers' Counsel, in which
the PUCO conceded a $407 .~error
in calculating annual groos receipts
taxed on ·'test year " fuel expenses
updated to reflect current costs.
Ohio Power will adjust its rates to
corrt!Ct that error.
On the same issue, the PUCO also
considered an offsetting error of $2.4
nullion , in Ohio's Power's favor .
However , due to 1ls interpretation
of Ohio statute, the PUCO said it
would not order the $2.1 million adjustment. which would have Increased Ohio Power 's rates.

district 's board of education. Signo;
carried by pickets urge the boycotling of the store charging that
:~_::u,·atiwillo
.n . not negotiate with the
~

This morning,

Bonnie

Fisher ,

president of the Meigs Local
Teacher Association, issued the
foUowing statement :
"The MLTA is disappcinted that
its genuine efforts to resolve the
teachers' strike are bemg mocked
and Ignored by the supenntendent of
schools.
"The MLTA IS in possession of a
package which could end the strike
irrunediately. To date Supt. Gleason
has not allowed the hoard of
education to review the package .
F.ven more amazing is that this
man, whose professional role should
be to see that students have a fWictioning school system, has made no
attempt to take a look at the package

Supt. Gleason said that he would
be in Colwnbus this afternoon for
meetings with the sLate superintendent of instruction or his
assistant and with a represenLalive
of the Ohio Education Association .
District schools were officially
closed on Oct. 16 and tomorrow wiU
mark the 24th day that students
would have to make up at the end of
the year . Students must complete
180 days of school by June 30 in order
for the district to part.icipate in the
state foundation program .

union. John L. Lewis volunLarily
resigned in the early 1960s.
The board does not have the
authority to remove Miller from office , but may force him to take a sick
leave. Church l!lld other union offi cials have said the IEB may also
discuss imposing that sanction on
Miller.
lnitiaUy, the IEB had intended to
focus Friday 's meeting on
preparations lor the union's constitutional convention Dec. 1~20 in
Denver.
John Brown, a spokesman for the
Charleston Area Medical Center,
said Wednesday that doctors were
describing Miller's illness as a
" small heart attack. But there is
concem since it was hill second."
Miller, wbo suffered a heart attack and ~~rake Jut yeu llbortlr alter the end of a 116-&lt;iay natlonw\lle
strike , will remain in the hospital for
at least 10 more days and will undergo more tests, Brown said .
LOCATION CHANGED
The 1-llou of llle aiiiiiUII Melli
Jualor Mill Pllgeaal bu beea
cba111ed from tile Melp Jlllllor High
School in Middleport lo lbe Soutberu
High School Ill RJ!clne. The ..fleaal
will be held at8:10 p.m. Salarday In
lbe Racine localioa. There are
sevto coaleolaolll lb1a year-four
from Melgo COWJty aod three from
VIDioo COUDty.
SPECIAL MEETING
Meigs County Auditor Howard E.
Frank, clerk of the Meigs County
Budget Commission, has announced
a speetal meeting of the commi:lsion
to be held at the auditor's office
tomorrow at 9 a.m.

himself.
·As always, the MLTA remains

ready to meet anytime, anypla ce, in
order to bnng this strike to a n end ."
Supt. Gleason says that the
association's package is not a result
of the negotiations which were held
m the Meigs Probate Court facilities
last week and that its provisions
were not agreed to the board 's
negotiating team which would be the
nonnal negotiations procedure .

Deputies investigate alleged arson
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
are investigatiug alleged arson of a
boat owned by Ronald Epling, Rt I.
ReedsviUe . Epling notified the
sheriff's department Wednesday
evening that someone had set fi ~ to
his 14 fool Starcraft boat tied up a t
Indian Run above Heedsville.
Epting said he had checked the
boat Monday but when he went back
on Wednesday he discove red
someone
had
apparently
deliberately pcured gasoline or
other namable liqmd on it before
setttng Jt on fire.
The meLal boat melted as did the
cover on the 10 hp Mercury motor .
There was another bo&lt;lt across the
creek that wa' sunk. II JS unknown
at th.s time 1f thl' "'cond boat was
ar• pj1 ·nt! y •Jr di'IJbt•r01tl'l y sunk

•

Deputies received a report from
Ernest Va nlnwagen, Brddbury, that

Couple files
•
court action
A suitm the amount of S-11,500 has
1- n fl ied In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by James 1.. Mash and
Norena Mash, Kt. 1, Middleport,
agamst Cumi!IS Insuran ce Soc~ety,
Inc. Mawson . WISconsin.
The suit is for the loss of personal
property . lurruture. clothi n~ and
buildin~ s CJ ~ f hf• result of a fire on
Aug 1n .

l~7 ' 1

-~

sometime late Monday evening and
ea rly Tuesday his mailbox was
smashed with a blWit object.
Deputies investigated an accident
Wednesday evening on Bigley Ridge
Road when a five point buck was
killed when it ran into the path of
truck driven by Harold J . Evans,
Rainbow Ridge Road, Long Bottom.
Eva ns was not injured and there was
only slight damage to the truck.
Under mvestigation also io the loos
of 30- 1,500 pound bales ri hay at the
Carol Pierre residence, Langsville.
A passi ng motorist noticed the fire
at 1:50 a.m. and awoke the Pierce
famil y. Thue hay was in a field by
the house . No buildings were involved . The sheriff asks that anyone
having information to call his departuwnt

CHRISTMAS IS COMING ~ Two dedicated memb!rs cl. the Pooleroy
Chamber of Commerce were busy Wednesday afternoon putting up
Christmas decoratio!IB In the downtown business section. Pictured
placing a "candy cane" on a utility pole is 31m Frecker. The other chamber member working on the project Wednesday was Jolut Anderson.

�Z-lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Nov . 1~ . 1979

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President Jimmy Carter -

Jimmy's Whitehouse
WASHrNGTON I API - President
Carter 's wrestling match with a line
of gummy tape may earn him a new
nickname - "sticky foot ."
The president won, but the tape
put up a good fight.
It happened last week, when the
president was ushering Irish Prime
Mlnister Jack Lynch to a waiting
limousine .
White House aides had placed a
microphme at the edge of the
driveway , holding its wires down
with the tape , in case Carter and
Lynch wanted to comment to
reporters.
But just before the men left th e
White House, an aide removed the
microphme , placing it a!ongs1de a

buah .
When
Carte r
and
Lynch
approached the car, the president
!lOugh! the microphme and moved it
back into position .
And he got one of his heavy, black
llhoes caught oo the tape .
First he gave his foot a little
shake . lben a twist . A grin appeared
m his face . Finally, after some more
maneuvering , his foot was freed and
be and the prime minister got on
with their farewells .
Presidents always ride arowtd in
shiny cars that look like they just
rolled out of the showroom , rtght ?
Wrmg.
The president drove to the State
Department the other day in a gray
Uncoln that, upon close observance ,

bore several Signs of mtstreatment.
The left rear door showed three
touched-up spots - the gray touch·
up paint didn 't quite match th e
origmal finish - and one nick that
hadn 't yet been patched .
There was a foot~ong scratch on
the lower panel of the door , and .
signs that gasoline had spilled out
from the filler pipe at the pump.
The car is part of the Secret
Service fleet kept at a garage
several blocks from the White Houst
when not being used by the
president.
A caU there turned up no one who
would answer the question "Who
put the dent in the Lincoln?"
Because there are no records of
Ca rter or h1s car havmg been
involved in a traffic accident, one
Secret Service agent surmised that
"!!Omecne must have backed into tt
in the garage. "
Not all Secret Service agents
aspire to protecting the president.
One yo ung agent, currently assigned
w the pres1dent 's detail , has asked
for a trans fer to protect former
President Richard M. Nixon.
The agent explained that, as a
bachelor, he's had it with spendmg
most of his weekends closeti!d a t
Camp David, Md ., the presidential
mountain retreat Carter seems to
love. He 's r eady to move to New
York City, his hometown. where
Nixo n
rec ently
bought
an
apartment .

Business mirror
NEW YORK I APl - Those
billions of dollars of unfunded
liabilities of private pension funds,
about which so much concern has
been expressed in the media, don't
seem to worry many of the
companies that rwt them .
In a survey of very la rge
industrial and service companies , 74
percent of respondents said the furor
had caused them to r .,_.,xamine their
own company 's plans. but 92 percent
said they saw no problem .
About plans in general, including
those of other co mpanies, however,
the corporate execti ves wer e far less
certain, with only 49 percent of those
particpating in the survey saying the
Issue was exaggerati!d
The re sponses were to a
questionnaire mail ed to c hi ef
executives of the 2,500 largest
industrial and service companies by
William M. Mercer Inc ., th e world's
largest employee benefits advisor y

Well ... un funds , he said, follow
actuarial principles, maintallling a
fu nd suffic1ent for paymg claims as
they arise. Unless a company fails,
the fund is constantl y replinished bl

In reply to the letters of Lori
Faulkner i ll ·7J. Nel White 111 · 11 1,
a nd Melanie Wert 1IJ.i2 1 as well as
to the questwn being asked by the
superintendent of both parents and
teachers I How wtU teachers ever
mamtam disc1pline after the example they 've set ? I, three points must
be llutde :
1!1 Avoid the situation. If students
arc dealt wtth fa1rly and communicated with honestly, problams
can usually be worked out before a
cri sb: occurs.
The same IS true with teachers ;
just a !Jttle more effort and honest
111tentwn.s on the part of the Meigs
Loca l Board of Education could
have averted this entire situation .
Wtse leaders do not push a group In·
to a situation where the only al terfllltlves are strike . sit-in, delmquent
behavtor, or unconditional s urrender
12 1 S. prepared to accept the conseq uences . Any time one breaks the
rules of society or the laws of our
land, one must accept the respon·
sibiii ty of such behavior.
Anyone who drives over 55 mph
a ccepts the riSk or paying a speeding
fine, for example . Teachers are
willing to accept the conseq ue nces of
a ctions taken; those sitting-in at the
)Umor high bu1lding were fully
prepared to be arrested, jailed, a nd·
or fined .
We were told wtule inside the
building that we were under arrest;
when we got outside, we were told
Lhat we were not now under arrest.
If the law did not make us s uffe r
the consequences we were willing to
risk , whose fault is that? Students
who break rules or laws must also be
wtlling to accept the respons1biUt y
for their own actions.
Recognize that civil disobedience
is nottung new . To imply that Meigs
Loca l students have learned about
such thtngs as s trikes , sit-irts ,
demonstrations, riots, or crime from
teachers in just the past e1ght weeks
is rtdiculow .
We dJd not mvent these tactics .
Civil disobedience is common in the
news, tn TV shows, in movies, and 1n
history - going back as far as the
disagreement of J esus with the civtl
authorities of His day . When sta nding for a cause they believe in,
people often take actions which ctvil
authority frowns on.
Perhaps all actions of aU teachers
ca nnot be justified, but the same is
true of all parties conce rned. Ms.
Wert objects to an obscene gesture
ma de by a s triking male tea cher to
her; I object to the same gesture
made by a male school board mem·
regular contributions .
A possible problem for the future ,
iJ not for now, was indicated by the
426 responses - an above average
return. accordin g to Mercer dealing with the issue of ear ly
versus lale retirement.
Nearl y three-quarters of the
responses disapproved of raising or
eliminating
the
m andatory
retirement age, now 70 years, to
allow grea ter numbers of older
people to r emain in the workforce
In fact, some SBJd they fa vored and
would enco ura ge eve n earlier
retirement .

be r to mr . Mr W1.Jte vbjed .s tu tht'

In an emot1on-&lt;: harged situation
Ltk e this , people on both sides often
do not act ra tionally .
HopefuUy , such a situation can be
a voided in the fu ture by positive , not
punitive, leadership- whether we're
talking about students , teachers, or
any other group . But any group that
does resort to what Lori calls

lan~uage used by teac hers .

I object to s ome language that was
s houted at teac hers by the sg mc
board member . Bee a use both Si de;
du the !lame thmgs docs not make
them n~ht or moral , lagret' , but a n y
attempt to p&lt;tint one sidt&gt; bla ck ::t nU
the otht•r wh1te " d earl y unpuss ible .
Fridey , Nov. 18

f)OC!~

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Be de Osol

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fab . 19) If
t hong~ are m a mess take charge
and or gan ,te that la rge group
act •v•l) tllat has evsryone gomg
arouno rn

CII Ctes

YOu II well surt -

ed tor 1he tDb

0

Crbur
CJtirthday

NoumMr 1ti, 18Ti
A Do g c hange th a t m og h t h ap[)e n
a Subtle m anner ts tn the off1ng
tho s c;omon g year The result s a re
e.o. tremety good and can alt er
you a c h a nce to ac Q u~re a lew
lu .o: ur y tl em s
SCORPIO (Oct . 24- Nov . Zi!)
Wh en •I c omes to your l 1nanc1a1
PICTu r e ana how to n andte ot you
w on t need anpo a ss•s t ance toda y
trom anpoone You alr eady naYe
the an swer s Fm&lt;l ou t more
abo ut vou r seH by se nd1 nq for
your copy o f A s tr a-Graph Le tt e•
wh•ch beg1ns wttn you o tnr thday
Maol S 1 fo r each to A stro -G• aph
B o ~ 489 . Ra ao o C 1t y Sl atto n. N Y
10019 Be sw e to sp ec •l y b1rt h
d a te
SAGITIAAIUS (Nov . 23-Dec . 2 1)
A f rtend cou ta De •n s tru 'TH~n tal
to day on c hangmg f OUr outl oo l&lt;
about somolh1ng you weren 't too
sur e about He o r sr n:l kno w ~ no w
to lilt the ve•l
In

PISCES (feb. 20-Marck 20)
You ' ll e.o. per•enc.e an em ot iOnal
11 11 as a result ol tne k on d way tn
w hoch you hand le a sot ua too n
where you ha ve the optoon to
sato sl y m e o the• person 's need s
above poou r own
ARIES (M•rch 21-Aprll 1i)
Be1ng 1rw o1ved w 1th others today
ar ou:le s you1 more co oper alive
1nSt1n c t s A change o t heart on
some maner c ould develop tmm
your 8t11t u de
TAURUS (April 20-M•y 20) Vou
have the abol1ty l ode y 10 do
som e t htng d1 lteren t and Clfltlllve
m or der to turn ota Dorono us.ts

NOTICE OF

an agreement that s b~ n na ng-

APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Oc tober 29th , 1979, in
the M eigs County Probate
Coun , Case N o. 22865. Dan
ny R
Ka rr. lOB Town
Stre eT , C•rc leville. Ohio
was
appoint e d
Ad
ministrat or of the es tate of
Denn te
W
Ka r r , Jr ,
decea se d . lare of R 0 .
Ra ci ne , Oh io
Robert E Buck
Probate Judge Clerk

ong l1re so as to p lea se

111 1 1. 8. 15. Ji c

CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-J•n . 19)
Tnos could be a sat os lymg da y
You 'll be able to fmall y work ou t
ell€ ry -

delinquent behavior must be
prepared to accept the consequences
of their actions .
And any individuals who pretend
to be shocked by the survival tactics
of any threatened group of people
a re hiding behind an outdated, fake
cloak of innocence . - Dorothy J .
Oliver , 213 Union Ave., 992-2570 .

onto adventu res 811ng 11 out ol
you
GEMINI (M•y 21·June 20) Here
are two reaso ns why you ar e lun
t o De ar ound IOdtl )' You tet oeo·
ple do the1r own thln!;l and 11
tney don ·t. you ·u !h on k o t ways 10
onsp1re them
CANCER (Jun• 21 -July 22)
Agarn today . you II ap o r ecoate
your rmme and en toy e11p res song
you rself C10 1ng som eth 1ng
crea 11ve Yo u kno"" h ow t o tak e
the wor n and mak e tl loo k n ew
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You 1111n d

good c awJe to change a b&amp;d
OPimOn abo u t someone you
k no w soc oatty Somethong n1ce
th•s person wtlt do w tll be t he
rea so n
VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpt 22) You
shouldn ' t nave to leave homtt on
order to 11nd new ways to Du1tc
upon what you already t'lave You
have many valuable mgred1en't s
lymg ar ound tust wa111ng 10 be

ut1hzed
liBRA (&amp;.pt. 23-0c t . 23) There
shoutan t be any doubl on y OUI
mond today as to who you are or
where you want to go Follow
yow n obler tnsuncts They· l,
'-OOV yuu un the HQhl track
r ~fW SP .t P(R

PROBATE COURT
OFMEIGSCOUNTY,
OHIO
ESTATE
OF
DILLON
HAROLD
TAYLOR ,
DECEASED
Case No. 22789
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On November 2, 1979, in
the Meigs Cou nty PrObate
cau rf , Case N o
22789 ,
Hom er
Ba xter ,
315
Me&lt;hanic St.. Pomeroy ,
Ohio, .t.'i769 was e~ppointed
Administrator of the es te~ te
of Di llon H aro ld Taylor,
deceased , late Of Rt . 1, Por
tland, Ohio, Meigs County .
Ohio

Robert E . Buc k
PrOba re Judge
Clerk

111 18. 15, 22 , llc

E"'TERPR ISE

A SS ~

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On OCtober 29th, 1979, in
the Meigs County Probate
cour1, case No . 22867. Fred

w. Crow , P 0 . Bo x 486.

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769 wa s
appointed Ancillary Ad
min is tr at or of the estate of
Bernice C. Tucker decea s
ed, I ate of 2500 One Indi an;:,
Square , Indianapolis, lnd
Robert E . Buc k
Probc-fe Judge ·Cierk ( 11)
1, 8. 15, Jt c

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CIN CINNAT I lAP)
Bob
Johnson showed up for his first
practice with the Cincinnati Bengals
wearing a gray business suit and
carrying an old crange helmet.
The suit fit. The helmet didn't.
Johnson, who retired after 11
years as captain of the National
Football League team after last
season, came out of retirement
Tuesday to replace injured center
Blair Bush .
Johnson weighed in at 224 pounds,
down from last year's playing
weight of 255. His size 7".! heimet
was too big . He needed 7....
" We 've got to beef you up for
sure ," sai d 280-pound offensiv e
tackle Mike Wilson . one of many
players who cro wded tnto the
training room to welcome Johnson
·back .
" He looks like a cornerback.
doesn't he," said guard Glenn
Bujnoch. Linebacker Jim LeClair
asked Johnson if he had had his
" Wheaties ."
Equipment manager TOOl Gray
found a pair of shoulder pads an in ch
smaller than Johnson 's old pair .
On the field , Johnson was rusty .
" The best football exercise I get is
playing tag with my son ," said
Johnson, now an executive with an
adhesives canpany .
His center snaps were erratic on
punts and field goaL..
When be walked out on the field fer
the first time to Umber up , offensive
line coach Mike McCormack tried to
assure him .
" It 's just like riding a bicycle,"
McConnack said.
Johnaon bent over the ball . His
. first effort reached McQrmack on
·one bounce .
" How am I doing so far," grinned
JohnliOn .
" Did I say bicycle ? I meant
tricycle, " McCormack said .
But, "" the afternoon progressed.•
his center passes were stronger .
" He's got a lot of zip on the ball,"
said Bengals Coach Homer Rice .
.. He's not bad, fer- a rookie .~~

Affirmed
retired
to stud

BANQUI!:I' MONDA V

tt.le trltere mrrfrrr arrvke oot anlqbl,. , One

. . . . ts.to.

eredllecf 1o tile

Slimmer
Johnson
•
practices

Gaelic Flame and Rat Two, ~ 1 .
paid $44.21) lin the double and th e
crowd of 924 bet Sll&gt;.418 .

soto. loveseat. recliner. lounoe choir and ottoman

IIWm.

n. .U..U.trd Prn.ll .. uf'lwllnly l'llliltle&lt;d
.. me •e ,.. publlndoo (){ ........ d:ll..k"kt

team to win both the poll and the
playoff I in 1976)," a&lt;kled Faust, in
the midst of preparations for a big
S&lt;:hool semifinal Saturday against
Toledo Whitmer in Dayton's
Welcome Stadium .
"There's really not a ny extra
pressure with it (the poll tiUe). It's
an honor to have it . It's a pat on the
back," said Faust, his team heavily
favored to win tts fourth playoff

f1 v e

an e xtr~ burden on us. We 're on e or

season s.
Winning the Class A regular
season ratings ' crown . as well as
qualifying for the playoffs , is a new
experience foc Mogadcre Coa ch
Ncrm Lingle. His 104() Wildcats go
against Crooksville Friday night in
the small school semifinals at
Dover.
" They have recognized us as state
poll champions . I don't think it puts

only two teams tha t are able to
prove they 're No. I in Ule playoffs,
Wo I think it's a bonus," said Lingl e.
Wh y did Mogadore make 1t to Ule
playoff s for th e first time ?
" It bolls down to poise we've
shown aU year We had a very good
team last season and had two close
games . We lost them both . Th1s year
we had six close games in a row and
woo every one .'' answered Lingle .

c h a mpionship

in

the

las t

Indiana ranked number one
•

m AP' s initial cage poll

KIP MARTIN

Young Martin
earns award
Kip Lewis Martin, son of Roy and
Sharon Martin, Sandyville, W. Va .,
was named "Mr. Football" at a
midget football banquet held recen·
tly at Ravenswood High School
cafeteria .
Kip, a quarterback, played for the
Browns at Ravenswood Elementary. Kip is 12 years old and a seventh grade student.
Kip comes from a football family
sta rting with his grandfather,
Lawrence Larry (Goat) Lewis,
Maple Street, Mason, formerl y of
Middleport.
Kip 's grandfather Wllll an outstanding football player at Mid·
dleport High School as were his un·
cles, Dr. Edward W. Lewis, and the
late Art " Pappy" Lewis and Harold
Lewis .
Kip was known as Kip Pauley
when he attended Mason Elementaryu.
Kip was the top rusher and scorer
for the Browns, tallying five touchdowns and one two point conversion
for 32 points and rushing 62 times for
223 yards (3.6 ave.). The Browns
rushed the ball 133 times for u; yar·
ds on the season (3.2 ave. ).
Martin also paced the Brown's
aerial attack, completing 10 of 21
passes for 118 yards on the season.
Martin was also the leader of the
Brown defense, with 39 tackles , two
interceptions and a fumble
recovery.

BASKETBALL
NEW YORK l AP ) -New York's
Nattonal lnvitatimal Tournament,
the co untry 's oldest college
basketball tournament, will expand
from 24 to 32 teams for the '1980
event, it wllll announced .
The NIT also aMounced the
formation of a Women's NIT to be
held as a preseason event starting in
Novem ber. 1980.

The Indi ana Hoos1ers, among the
rich kids of the rugged Big Ten
Cmference , are the nation's No . I
team in The Associated Press
preseason college basketball poll for
1979-80.
The Hoosiers, last year's winners
of
the
National
Invitati on
Tournament, were accorded the
honor by a slim 12 points over
Kentu cky of the Southeastern
Cmference, 974 to 962, in one of the
closest and most balanced voting in
recent years.
No team In the voting went over
1,000 points, usuall y a prerequisite
for the leading schools in the poll .
And only one team - third-place
Duke - was named on aU ~9 ballots.
Indiana received 14 ballots for the
No. 1 spot in the nationwide voting
by sports writers and broadcasters ,
Kentucky collected 11 and Duke had
seven and a total of 956 points.
Ohio State, Indiana's power~ad en
colleague in the Big Ten, received as
many first-place ballots as the
Hoosiers, but ooly 936 points .
Ironi ca lly, neither defendin g
NCAA champion Michigan State nor
Indiana State, which lost to the
Spartans in last year's finals, were
picked for a Top Twenty berth .
Voters obviously demurred to the
talent drain at both schools Earvin "Magic" Johnson and Greg
Keiser at Mic tugan State and Player
of the Year Larry Bird at Indiana
State .
In fact , No . 9 DePaul was the only
team from last season's Final Four
to gain a preseason ranking . Penn 's
Quakers, the defending East
Regional champions who lost most
of their starters, were also left out.
The rest of the first-place votes
were scanered among five learns Notre Dame with 9 and and North
Ca rolina , UCLA, DePaul and
Purdue with one each.
Those votes were enough to help
lift the Fighting lrtsh into the No. 5
position with 884 points. North
Carolina received 812 points for No .
6 Louisiana State was No . 7 with 800
~ints, UCLA No . 8 with 631, DePaul
No. 9 with !i49 and Louisville No . 10
with 529.
Purdue heads up the Second Ten
with 472 points, just a neck ahead of
No. 12 Syracust with 462 .
The remainder of the Top Twenty
includes : No . 13 Virginia , No. 14
Texas A&amp;M, No. 15 Brigham Young,
No. 16 St. John 's, No. 17 Oregon
State, No . 18 Marquette, No. t9
Gecrgetown and No . 20 Kansas.
Last season 's final Top Twen ty
poll, taken before the NCAA final s:
I, Indiana State; 2, UCLA ; 3,
Michigan State; 4, Notre Dame ; 5,
Arkansas ; S, DePaul ; 7, Louisiana
State; 8, Syracuse; 9, North
Carolina; 10, Marquette ; ll, Duk e;
12,San Francisco; 13, Louisville ; 14,

Penn ; 1 ~. Purdue ; 16, Oklahoma ; 17,
St . John 's; 18, Rutgers ; 19, Toledo
and 20, Iowa .
The AP Top Tw enty

JRD &amp; OLIVE
~....~,.,~1L~PO~:J.~, OHIO
1'1

LARRY'S WAYSIDE FURNITURE
446-1830

Eastern High School fall sports
banquet will be held Monday, Nov .
19, at6: 30 p .m .

MON. &amp; FRI. OPEN 9 to 8
TUESail WED. 1 THURS., SAT. 9 to 5
:;

Tickets may be purchased from
John Bostm , athletic dil'ector, or at
the office ~t the high school. Tickets
are $4 each and may also be pur·
~at tbe door.

Faust has compiled a 159-17-2
record as the only coach in Moeller 's
17-year football history Some say
this could be his best production , but
the coach is not venturing out on a
ltmb at this poin t
"It's too ear ly We 've got to wait
the next two games. Th e thing that
has impressed me abo ut this team ts
their closeness . Their attitude ha s
been phenomenal," said Faust .
In the other Class AAA semifinal
Saturday , second ... anked Massillon,
11}.0.&lt;), goes against No . 6 Parma
Padua, 9-Hl, m the Akron Rubber
Bowl.
In the Class AA semifinals Friday
night, Ironton, 8-&lt;)..1, takes on 1978
runnerup Hamilton Badin , !H.O . at
Groveport while Fostoria , 9~ I, goes
against Akron St. Vincent-St. Mary,
11-1·1. at Mansfield 's Arlin Field .
In the other Class A semifinal

By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams i n 'The
Associa ted Press co llege bask etball
po ll , w ith first -place vo tes i n paren
theses, last season 's records and
total
point s
Points baed on
10 I9 IB 17 16 15 14 13 11 11 10 9 8 7 6
5 0 ·2· 1.
1. India na (14) 2 12
974
2. Kentucky (11) 19-12
961
J. Duke 171 11 B
956
4. OhioSt"te ( 1_. ) 1912
936
5. Notre Dame (3) 24 6
88-t
6. North Car o lina (1) 23-6
812
7. Louisiana Sta Te 23 6
800
B UCLA ill 25 5
631
9. DePaul ( 1} 26 ·6
549
10. Louisvill e 2~ 8
529
11 . Pu rd ue ! 1) 27 a
472
12. Syracuse 26 .t
462
13. Vi rg i nia 19 10
406
u . TexasA&amp;M249
34!1
15 Brigham Young 20 -8
304
16. Sl . Jon n·s 21 11
289
17. Oregon Stit1 e 18 -10
172
1B. Marque lie 22 7
157
19. Georgetown , DC 24 5
138
10. Kansas 18· 11
133
Ott:ters receiving votes , l isted
alphabeti ca lly : A labama , A lco rn
State, Arizona, A rkansa s, Ca lif or
nia, con nec ti cut, Creighton , Dayton,
Detroit, Duquesne. Eastern Ken ·
rucky , Florida State, Furman,
Georg ia , Holy Cross, Houston , 11
li n oi s, Ill inois State , India na State,
l ana, Iowa , Jac ksonvill e, Lamar ,
LaSalle.
Long
Bea ch
Sta t e ,
Maryland , Michigan, Michigan
State, Minnesota, Mississ:pi Sta te,
Missouri , Neva da Las Vegas, New
Mexico,
Nort h Ca rol i na
State,
Okl ahoma, Old Dominion, Pacific,
Pennsylvania, Rutgers , San Fran ·
cisco, Sou th Alabama , Sou thern
Ca lif ornia , Te mple, Te nnessee.
Texas, Texas Christian, Tol edo,
Utah. Villanova , V i rgini.a Tech ,
wa shi ngton State , Weber Sta te,
Wichita State .

Friday mght, Tiffin Ca lvert, 8-J.l,
laces Covington , !)..().1, at Uma
Shawnee.
St . Marys, the Class AA poll
victor , did not qualify foc the post·
season play.
New champions are assured in all
divisions since 1976 winners
Cincinnati Princeton, Brookfield
and Newark Catholic failed to
qualify as regional leaders.

r

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Florist Since 1957

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FlORIST

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352 E . Main, "omeroy
Your FT~J. _
I,

LARRY HUBBARD &amp; THE COUNTRY RAMBL£RS
WILL APPEAR AT niE
MASON V.F.W. POST 9926
IN MASON, W. VA. ON
SATIJRDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1979
FROM 9 PM TO 1:30 AM

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TOOLS

HORSE RACING
LEX INGTON , Ky · I AP )
Gainesway Fann, acting as agent,
paid the top price of $710,000 for
Spring is Sprung durtng the
Keeneland November Br eedmg
Stock Sale .
A total of 108 hcrses were sold
during the session for $4,731,300
Since the sale began last Saturday •
927 horses and ~I shares have been
sold for $04,888,900

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
110 W. Main

992·2811

Weekend At Meigs Inn
FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

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vou must be 21 or accompanied by parents or legal guardian.

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Valley Pd'hb'ac Compuy· MD.Ittmed.lli, lac.o .,
UJ C.... St., P...er.,., Oblo 4S'211. Bulaa.l
0111co nz. na oo~ rt.-

~lid

COLUMBUS, Ohio I AP I - The
coaches of two of The Associati!d
Press' poll champioos contend Uley
can use it to their advantage in th e
Ohio prep football semifinals Ulis
weekend .
" It 's someilling to uphold in Ule
playoffs, " C1n cinnati Moeller's
Gerry Faust says of the honor that
has cmte to his Crusaders in four of
the last six seasons .
" We were the firm Class AAA

latonia resulu
FLORENCE, Ky . lAP)
Embassy Express, a 21·1 longshot ,
won the $1,100 featured pace mile
Wednesda y night at Latonia and
paid $53 .80, $25.60 and $Jl .
John LaBelle placed, $4.W and
S3.21l and Amexbro Ginny, third ,

,..,,...;

AIMdl-. Jill

Cincinnati Moeller prepares for big battle

LEXINGTON, Ky . lAP) - Juan
Alaniz was mtsty.eyed as he handed
the reins of Affirmed to a
Spendthrift Fann handler . For the
first time since the big colt took the
track at Belmont 21'. years ago,
Alaniz was no longer his groom .
Affirmed, winner of the 1978 Triple
Crown and thcroughbred racing's
first $2 million winner , was r etired
to stud Wednesday in ceremonies at
Spendthrift Farm.
There were no tears, however,
from Brownell Combs I I. The man
who syndicated Affirmed fer $14 .4
mlllioo was grinning from ear to
ear .
Affirmed swept to 22 victcries In 29
career starts whil e winning
12,393,818. 'This year, he also became
the first thoroughbred to surpass U
million in a single year .
But Affirmed ma y be bes t
remembered for his stirring duels
with archrival Alydar .

I

_avln
l21

1

3-lbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 15, 1979

�4-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, Thursday , Nov . 15, 1979

Nation•l Basketball Association

At A Glance
By The Associated Press
E~ntern Conference
Atl~ntic Divi1on
W. L. Pet .

Bos1on

3 . 7116

11

GB

Philadelphia
12 4 .750
New York
7 8 467 411J
Washlnoton
6 7 . .662 4 1; ,
New Jersey
5 10 333 6 111
Central Division
Atlanta
11 6 .607
San Antonio
9 7 .563 2
Houston
1 7 .500 J
1ndlana
8 10 .4-44 4
Cleveland
6 11 .353 5 1/ J
Detroit
5 10 .333 5 11:7
Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee
13 4 .765
Denver
6 11 .765 7
KansasCity
6 11 .353 7
Chicago
4
14 .222 9 111
Utah
2 14 125 10 •11
Pacific Division
Los Anoeles
12 4 .7SO

Por11and

13 5 . 722

Phoenix

11

Sean&gt;e

10 6 .625

6

.647

7 B . ~7
6 12 .333

Golden State

San Diego

Toledo favored In MAC this year
•

STANDINGS

lly GEOKGE STRODE
A P Sports Writer
I' El\KY SBURG , Ohio 1 APi - Bob
Nic hols , the r oach of Toledo's Mid Ameri c a n C unferen ce baske t ball
title favontes, sadl y recalls t he last
time hts Roc kets were thrust int o
su&lt;·h pressure .

" We we nt 23-1 and won lh e lea gue
in 1~7 with three sophom ores ,
on e Junior and one senior . The next
sea son we had a hec kuva tune . We
wound up third ," Nichol s told th e
medt£1 at the Mid -Ameri can
baskclba ll meetings.
Sttll . the Rockets were named on
all but fuur of 76 firsti&gt;lace ballots
Wednesday and had close to 200

:;....'!be Da~y Se ntine l, Mtdd leport .P omeroy. 0 .. Thursda y, Nov. 1&gt;. 1979

'l -

more poll points than runnerup
Howling Green, 756 to 567 .
Ball State was selected foc third
with 326, Central Michigan for fourlh
with 186 and Ke nt State for fifth w1lh
158. Those lhree, along with Bowling

it. ..

Miami was pic ked to finish sixth
wtth 431 points, Western Michigan
se venth with 297 , Northern !Uinois
eighth with 264, Ohio University
nintl1 with 248 and Eastern Michigan
last with 147
Nichol s believes Toledo has m ore
of a chance to uphold the predic tions
lhts time, saying, "I've got mature
guys . !think they can handle it . It 's

The Rockets assembled a 22~
record last yea1 , including a 13-J
league mark tl1at matched Central
Michigan for the co-championship.
Toledo also stunned Iowa 111 the
NCAA Tournament.
Nichols has two all-conferenc e
selec tions returning in &amp;-foot-7 Jim
Swaney and IHi Dick Miller , a pair of
forward-cente r s. Poinl guard Jay
Le hman. another 197fl-79 regular ,
also is back along with lhe muchused Harvey Knuckles and Tim
Selgo .
Because of six fine newcomers,
three regulars and eight lettermen

a challenge . I'm not sure WP df'sPrve

from last year, Bowling rrreen is

(;reen, had one firsli&gt;lace vote each .

e&lt;pected to be Toledo' s prime
challenger despite a rash of injuries .
Joe Faine. a returning regular, has
his mending elbow in a cast . Mitch
Kopystynsky also sports a cas\ on
his broken right thumb . Dan
Shumaker , a three-year perfonner ,
is out for the season Wlth an
aggravated knee injury.
" If this had happened last year, "
said Bowling Green Coach John
Weinert, "it would have been a
catastrophy . But we do have some
depth now ."
Ball State's top two scorers, 6-8
George Bradley and fl..ol Mike Drews,
lead three regulars and eight

thro ws .

lettennen f&lt;X" the Cardinals.
" I'm not interested in being
c ompetitive, I ' m interested in
winning," said BaU State Coach
Steve Yoder . "We are stronger
physically and quicker ."
At Central Michigan, Coach Dick
Parfitt returns only one regular, IHi
forward Leoo Guydoo . However , the
O!ippewas have been bolstered by
the transfer of &amp;-10, 25Si&gt;&lt;JW1d center
Mike Robinson from Michigan.
" We lost our predictability ," said
Parfitt. " We're at least a year

away ."
The first seven teams in the
conference race will qualify for the
Mid-American's first tournament
March 1-2 in Ann Arbor, Mich . All
but N&lt;X"thern illinois Coach John
McDougal voted f&lt;X" the tournament,
which determines the league's
NCAA qualifier _

Dantley-Drew scuffle in Hawks' win r-------------,
Ma r c us J ohnson, sixth-leading
scorer in the NBA , had 23 pointll for
Milwaukee, one less than teammate
Mel Bndgeman.

ByTheAssortatedPress
John Drew of the Atlant&lt;t Hawk s
feltabigtapinth e smallofhi.S ba &lt;· k .

Well, a ctually, it was m ore like a
thump .
" He did it mtentwn a ll y ," Said
Drew . "The film s showed thai. ·
Drew was talking •bout his sc uffl e
with Utah 's Adrian Dantle y during
the
Hawk s'
108- 97 :-.l •lio na l
Ba sketball Assoc iati on n c tory
Wednesday· n ight
The Hawks were II ailing 61Hil 1n
lhe third period when Da ntley
appeared to hit Drew 1n lhe t.l ck
With the ball and the two exchanged
punches. Both players we re gtv en
technical fouls and ej~ted . But th e
officials changed their minds and
allowed Dantley to remain "' the

~arne .

H1

2
4 111

7

&lt;:" ''' "~ " J

Wednesday's Games
Boston 115, Of&gt;troif 111
A11an1a 1011. U1ah 97
Washington 118, Chicago lOS
Hous1on 133, Golden S1a1e92
Phoenix 104, 1nd iana 100
Seattle 136, Milwaukee 117

HtH&gt;j OIO~ 'U B ... lC 0f 0

The fight seemed to mspir e lh L·
Hawks . who out scored th e Ja zz I~
and asswned d lead tile). ne ver lost
·
Dantley wow1d up wi th 2R ro&gt;nl.'

NY Islande rs
Wash ing1on

W L
12 1
8 s
7 6
6 6

Sports
World

T P15 GF GA
1 25 65 45
1 11
J 17 62 50

n n

3 15 57

52

5 10 2 10 50 69
Smy1he Division
Vancouver
7 5 5 19 60 53
Winnipeo
s a 3 13 36 60
S1 . Louis
5 9 3 13 45 63

Olcago

4 7 s
3 9 4

13 39 49

Edmonton

Colorado

3 10 2

8 43 57

10

5.4

8y WiJI

72

Boston
Minnesota
Buffalo
Toronto

Conference
Adams Oivi1ion

9
9
8
a
5

Quebec
~ontreal

2 3 21 54 35
3 3 21 74 53
5 3 12 53 43
7 1 11 65 56
8 2 12 46 52

Norri s Conference
9 4 3 21

62

Los Angeles
Pi"sburgh
Har1ford

8 6 3 19 75
5 5 3 1l 46
4 6 5 13 45

Detroit

4

8

1

10

40

48
74
48
47

l ~ ton .

«

Wednesday 's Games
New York Rangers 3. D"'tro•t2
Toron1o 7, St . Louis 2
Vancouver 5. Chicago '1
Minnesota 7, Quebec 2
Winnipeg 3, HarHord 2

ldea Uy , the bowl mat&lt;:hups should
hav e
natto na l
champwn shtp
r~un1f i eat.10ns . On r urrent status . th e
gnctiron " druther s"' would send Nu l
Alabama against !'&lt; o 3 Ne braska in
the Orange Bowl. :\ o. 2 OhiO State
against No 4 South em California in
the Rose , with N o . ~ Flornla Sta te
and No .6 Texas 111 the Colton
Sugar Bowl director s have to be
pulling for Auburn t o beat Georg ta to

' ~;

BOWL!Nr.
DEERFIELD, !U. t AP &gt;- Warren
Nelson increased his lead to ~9 pins
at the end of three rounciol of a
$130,000 Professional Bowlers'
Asoociation tournament .
Nelaon, who began the round 4:'1
pins ahead of Ed Ressler, had an
eight-game pinfall of 1,833 for a 24game total of 5,a98. Ressler, who
picked up 1,81~ pins the third round,
remained in second.
Marshall Holman, the 1977 World
Open Champioo, is third with 5,:'133,
followed by Joe Hutchinson with
5,506 and Steve Martin at :'1,483.

Bulldogs . Undefe ated Brigham
YoWJg . with multitalented Marc
Wilson , is a tremendous Wlld card
for a major bowl.
But Saturday 's games ma y spoil
the porridge . Last weEk's score : 3!111. .780. The season . .771.
Georgia 27, Auburn 20 : The
llulld"'(S hav e th e depth and ta len t ,
but only get excited against SF:('
foes .
OhiO St 15, :\ltclugan 6 The
lluckeyes , death to 101 ,000 hostile

fans,

Team 1

49

34

Karr &amp; van Zandt
vaughan's Cardinal
Team6

Team 5
HIGH

33

JO
26

20
Becky

IND . GAME

&gt;l,ame

Florida St. 38, Memphts St. 13 :
When Coa c h Bobby
!lowden
mnaned,
"N obody
goes
undefeated ,'' his kid s w eren ' t

Broderi cK 184, Becky Anderson 176.

HI GH IND 3GAMES - Mary
Porter .03, Clara Mel ntyre 431 .
HIGH TEAM GAME - Team No
6, 791.
HIGH TEAM 3-GAMES - Team
No. 6, 22611.

~st e nmg .

Te.as 32, TCU 7: Only two teams,
Arkansas and Houston . have sc ored
double figures un the 'Horns .
Oklahoma 28, Missouri 7: Billy
~1ms is great. but J .C. Watts is
elec iiic as the Sooners' Wishbone
quarterback .
Brigham YoWlg 44, Utah 13 : The
J£lephrne may not jingle from too
111any bowls, but the pro scouts are
sure to call .
Yale 17, Harvard 7: It's The " Big
c;ame" in the effete East, and the
Yales preserve their perfect record .
Stanford rl, California 20 : This is
th e "Big Game " in Northern Cal ,
and you can flip a co in .
South Carolina 25. Wak e Forest
16: It 's been a great year for the
Deacons, regardless .
The others :
EAST
Pitt 32, Army 14 : llro wn 26,
Columbia 7: Delaware 30 . Colgate
24 ; Dartmouth 23, Penn 6 ; Temple
14. Penn State 10 : Corne ll 20.
Princeton 17 ; Kutgers 19. Villanova
0: Syracuse 24 , Boston College 6.

BOWLING BELLES
BOWLING LEAGUE
November 9, 1919

Team Standings
Blue Tar1an

Won Lost
60 20

Oerifield Jewelry
Johnson 's Supermarket

48
43

32
37

Federal Mogul
Jock's Awning Sales

43
42

37
28

Cochran's Texaco

40

40

Enchanted Mirror
38
Ace High Music
38
Tim's BodY Shop
36
American Leglon · Post23
34
Jim's Sohlo
28
Sml1h &amp; Halley 's Ashland Svc. 28

42
42
44
46

52
52

Individual competition :
Ace Hioh Mus ic won 6 points and

Derllleld Jewelry 2 poin1s . High
boWlers were Virg inia Grove,. for
Derlfield with 457 series and 156
oame. High for Ace High Music was
ORby Barcus with .fU series and
Claudette McCreedy with 166 oame
Cochran' s Texaco won 6 points
and Jack 's Awning Sales 2 points .

Hlgh for Cochran 's was Polly
Swisher with 386 series 153 o,ame
High for Jack's Awning was Jan
Howell with 445 158 .
Blue Tartan and Federal Mogul
spill, each laking 4 points. High lor
Blue Tartan was Violet Cox with
448-164. Mary Davis was hioh for

SOUTII

North Carolina St. 25 , Duke 7 ;
Georgia Tech 15 . Nav y 10 ; t.ows tana
St . 23, Mississippi St. 7, Tenn rsseec
rl . Mississippi 13 ; Virginia 31. North
Carolina 25; Richmond 1~ . William
&amp; Mary 0: Maryland 20. Louisville
14 . East Carolina 2.1, North Texas St
13 : Kentucky 19. F1or ida 6 ; Southern
Mississippi 19, Ar kansas St fi :
Virginia Tech 2'J , V~ll ;

Federal Mogul wi1h 419· 154.
Johnson 's Markel and Tim's Body
Shop split, each taking 4 points .

Johnson's high bowler was Gale
Ferguson with 4lnss. High tor
Tim's was Allee Smith's high ser ies
of 404 and Flo Riffle's 1SS game .

Jim's Sohlo and Smith &amp; Halley
split with each laking 4~1n1s . High
for Jim's was Phyllis Ferrell with

«14 series and 161 game . Nellie
Jackson was high for Smi1h &amp;
Halley 's with 394-146.
Enchanted Mirror won 6 points
and Amerian Legion Post 23 two
points. High tor Enchanted Mirror
was Venitta Smith with 453·169. Kay
Gabritsch was high tor American

Legion wi1h 484 series 169 game
Spli1s oicked up were : Kay
Gabritsch and Bev Casto the 5 10 .
Chris Williams the 6 ·7; and Mi cky
Ji~den

the 5-7 and5·7-9.

;

setlle old scores

Texas A&amp;M 21, Arkansa s t&gt; :
Speakmg of home crowd advantage,
tt 's big stuff in the Southwest .
Alabama 211, Miami , Fla 14 One
S&lt;'are IS enough for The Bear , so he
bears down on the team that beat
1-'enn State
Nebraska 33. Iowa St. 7 The
Cornhuskers should preserve Jarvis
Redwme &amp; Co for lhc Oklahoma

POMEROY BOWLING LANES
MORN1NG GLORIES
Oct . 30. 1979
G&amp;J Au1o Parts

cmti;~ue to

Country fresh Dlenthol.
Mild,s01ooth and refresh ing.

MIDWEST

Warnmg The Surgeon r,eneral Ha s Oe1erm1ned
That C1gare11e Smok~ng Is Oangetous 10 Your Health
KIN G 16

mq ta r . II mg n&gt;co t&gt;ne . 100 ·s 19 mg ·tai" .

13

mg mc oline. a1 pet C&gt;ga•eile.

fT C Repon

MAY '78.

z·

Clemson 20. Notre Dame I1 :
indtana 21, Purdue 17: Mi&lt;·higan St.
21, Iowa I~ ; Kansas 14, Colorado 10 :
Minnesota 17, Wiscon sin O: llhnuts
;!1 , ;"; ort ~ . cst N n i . Oh iO t ' .!J

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS
8 til Noon

T ex as-J-:1 Pi-l so 12

Denrus Johnson ' s 27 points helped
Seattle wallop Milwaukee with a
season-high pomt total. The victory
was the Sootcs' seventh in their past
eight starts .
The Sonics got rolling early w th a
~1 0 lead and later reached the1100point mark alter 7: 41 in the third
quarter on Lonnie Shelton 's two free

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VIctory in H games
Suns 104, Pacers 100
Walter Davis hit 12 of his 2t
second-half points in the fourth
quarter - including two freE throws
with four seconds left - to spark
Phoenix over Indiana .
Davis enJoyed his finest night of
the season offensively with 30 points,
but it was his quick hands in the
frenzied final seconds that boosted
Phoenix to victory. His two closing
free throws were made when he was

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fouled alter a steal.
Sonics 136, Bucks 117

Computer

Okla hnllJi:l SL 17. K ;:w sas St. 7.

SOL'THWEST
lla ylor 35. Rice 10: Southern
!11clhod1st 14. Texas Tech 10 ; TexasArlin gt on 14 , Lamar 7.
FAR WF-~T
Washmgton 32, Washmgton St. 15 ;
r\J.r F or et• 20. Vand e rbilt 7; Arizona
Si 28 . West Vtrgin ia 17; Oregon 20 ,
Ul'l.A 15: Ariwna 35, Oregon St 14 ;
Ha wan 18. Wy oming 14 ; Utah St. 35 .
IV.·ber St 13: So n Diego St 17.

hav e the servt c es o f starlin g
forward Scott May , who pulled a
·
1
gram muse e.
Celtlcs liS, Pistons 111
Larry Bird and Cedric Maxwell
helped Boston build a 23-pomt lead
alter three penociol as Bostor beat
Detroit for its seventh victory in
eight games.
With their big lead, the Celtics
eased up in the final 12 minutes and
were outscored 43-24 as the Pistons
drew to within four points in the final
seconds . Bird had 23 points in
scoring in double figues in his 14th
straight game as a pro, while
Maxwell hit for 20 111 Boston's 11th

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eliminate the four.tim e b e a te n

Local
howling

th e game .
Rockets 133, Warriors 92
Calvin Murphy s.:ored 20 points .
including 10 in a brealuiway first
quarter. as Houston routed Golden
State to extend 1ts winning streak to
five games . The victory marked the.
longest winning streak for the
Rockets since they won nine games
m a row in March 1977.
The Rockets jumped to a 45-1 7
f&gt;rst-quarter lead, sparked by
Murphy's shooting, while the
Warnors hit only
percent from
the field, and ballooned their
advantage to 71-45 at the half.
Bulletsll8, Bulls 100
Bobby Dandrtdge and Elvin Hayes
combined for :;o potnts as
Washington defeated in jury..-iddled
Olicago . Dandridge sank 13 of 18
ds
d
shots, grabbed 10 reboun
an
dished off four assists while scoring

Grim~lt•y

College football starts fillin g &lt;ts
bowL• this weekend - SIX day s
hefore Thanksgiving Some hearty
appetites are gomg to be S&lt;J ttSfied ,
llthers diSappointed .
A good bet not to go empty-handed
ts long-enduring Alabama. If the
nation ·s No.I team doesr 't land
.1 ut.omattcally in the Sugar , 11 should
hrl ve its choi cr· of th P Or a nge or

W~les

points came in a tast&lt;mnute, 1().
point Hawks flurry that locked I'?

30 points in his best all-around
performance of the yoWlg season .
Hayes scored 20 points, picked off
a game-high 17 rebounds and
blocked eight shots as the Bullets
took advantage of O!icago's lack of
depth to pull away in the second half.
The Bulls , already playing without
all-star center Artis Gilmore , didn't

Today's

National Hockey League
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Campbell Conference
Patrick DiViSIOn
Philadelphia
NY Rangers
Atlanta

butonlyone fteldgoalafterthefight.
··J don 't want to talk about &gt;I ,..
ll a ntl e ' s a1d a ft e rward s . " It
'
cha nged lhe ternpo of th e game
Th ey ran well after tha t "
Ulltil lh e fight , the Hawks looked
hke dead birds, according to Coa ch
fl ub ie Brown .
··Ttw ftrst !me was tn a coma in th e
fir st hal f," he said " I was happy
with tl1 e secund ha ll , though . We 'r e
still play ing in peaks and valleys ."
In oth er NBA actwn, Houston
clcfealed Gold en State 133-92 ,
Washtn gton trimmed Chicago 118105. Boston turned oock Detroit 115Ill . Phoenix trtpped Indiana 104~ 100
and Seattle routed Milwaukee 13611 7.
In betwe en i&gt;J XJ ng, th ey also
pla yed so me bas ketball in Atlanta .
Dan Hound hc ld scor ed 30 points and
r:ddle Jo hnson adde d 20 to lead the
·ltlan• · offense . Six of Johnson's
~
'

loo k !ur t tn')

o; ogn .n y o ur

OEALEA

n e •yt1bor 11oo el

I 'I IH 1

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1N(l 1V T0 UA l 5 1 0 1=1E S

�~The D&amp;ily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Thursday , Nov . 15, 1979

7-'The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday, Nov . lo, 1979

Singles not swingers
as most people think

Thanksgiving dinner held by Forest Run Methodist women
A Thanksgiving dinner was held at
the Forest Run United Methodist
Church by members ri. the United
Methodist Women Tuesday night.

Mrs . Hllda Yeauger gave devotions precedmg the dinner . She read
about Thanksgiving and a poem.
"Every Day is a BJes,ing "Follow-

mg the dinner, a rrusl'ellaneous pro-

gram was enJoyed. There was group
s1n~ mg of "All Over the World " and

each member gave a reading on

Thanksgiving.
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon had charge of
the thank you box dedications. She

Cheshire-Kyger holds PTA meet
The monthly meeting or the
Cheshire-Kyger Pf A was held on
Thesday, Nov. 13 at Cheshire-Kyger
Elementary School.
Pledge of Allegiance was led by
Becky Thomas, Janet SWtner and
Stacy YankWJS, members of Junior
Girl Scout Troop No. 1099, and Lee
Ann Newell and Mitzi Mays, members of Browrue Troop No. 1&gt;15.
Room count was won by Mrs.
Christine Napier's Primary Individualized Instruction class.
Reports were given by Ellie
Wright, chairman of room representation and budget and finance .
Mrs. Wright also announced that
the Showcase will be decor a ted in
December by Mrs . Lucille Ha~ger­
ty's third grade class and room
mothers.
Ms. Roberta Zdepskis' fourth
grade student.s and room mothers
will decorate the showcase m
January .
Hospitality Chairman, Ali ce
Gilbert, announced the following
schedule for refreshments : refreslr
ments served following the Christmas program will be provided and
served by Mrs. Jesse Ftsher's
second grade parents.
Refreshments served following
the January Pf A meeting will be
provided and served by Ms. Roberta
Zdepski 's fourth grade parents.
Mr. !Joyd Myers, principal at
Cheshire-Kygor, stated that the
Christmas program will be held on

(;t&gt;nc·ration Hap
B~ llt · l~ · n

and

""tw Bottr · l

ONCE HIS OWN 'FAIR LADY'
NOW SHE'S ONLY FAIR GAME
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm 24, have a 3-year-&lt;Jid daughter,
and have never been married.
When I met Craig, I feU hard . It 's
the first time I've been intimately involved since Lucie was bom. After
four wondetiul dates 1Craig called
me "his fair lady " and made me feel
like a queen 1, we had sex.
Since then he only picks me up at
dances or wherever, and we go to his
apartment. He doesn't even buy me
a drink, and only dances with me
just before we leave.
I'm beginning to think I've
become just a convenient pick-up to
him, yet I go where he Is because
I'm crazy about hinn.
In these liberated days, could he
think I'm cheap because I didn 't say
"No"' -INSECURE
DEAR INSECURE •
Yes, a few men sWJ think tllere
are two kinds of women : put -&lt;luiS
and hold-oots- and the former don't
rate taking out in publi c
Get Craig out of your life - fast. HELEN AND SUE
RAP :

I've known Tom for three years .
I'm sure he loves me, but he won't
say so or do anything about 1t. He's
very pa!ISessive and jealous, it
seems like. Still he says I've just got
a foolish crush, because I'm not very
old yet.
I want to be married to Tom and
have his children, but you see, he 's a
Catbolic priest. Will there ever be a
time when C&lt;ltholics allow their
priests to marry' - LONGING FOR
mE DAY
DEARlFI'D:
I doubt the day will come in time
to help your dreams along .
Unless Tom leaves the priesthood
(and that doesn't seem likely) , he's
as off-limits as a well-married junior
high teacher. You'll outgrow him believe me- HELEN

Monday, Dec. 17, under the direction
of Miss Suzy Retser .
The PTA meeting will not be held

in December.
A Book Fair was held foll owing the
meetmg.

Bridal shower honors
Sharon Wilson Hawley
'

The Eleanor Circle of Heath
United Methodist Church recently
held a bridal shower honori ng
Sharon Wilson Hawley, bnde of
George Hawley
Punch and cake were served.
Presenting gift• to Mrs . Hawley
were Euvetta Bechtle, Twila Childs.
Enuna Clatworthy, Beulah Hayes.
Maxine Philson. Betty Fultz . Beulah

r------------------.
Social Calendar

THURSDAY
REVIVAL in progress now
through Nov . 2!i, 7 p.m. rughtly at
Mount Olive Community Church.
Public invited.
1 ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday 1:15 p.m. at home of
Louise Folmer. Sandy Folmer in
charge of program and Betty Conkle
in charge of contests.
MIDDLEPORT ClflLD CONSERVATION LEAGUE, 6 p.m. with
members to meet on the upper park ing lot in Pomeroy across from
Nelson's. The group wJU leave from
there for Williamstown, W. Va. and
a tour of the Fenton Glass Co. Mrs.
Susie Abbott will provide the travelmg prize, and Mrs. Jeanette Duffy
will give devotions. _
ADULT Basic Education classes
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday .
Middleport Library from !Oa .m. to 2
p.m. and Pomeroy Library from 6
p.m. to 9 p.m.
DEMOCRAT PARTY Thursday
7 .ll p.m. at Carpenters Ha U in
Pomeroy .
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday , 1:15 p.m. home of
Louise Folmer. Progl'llm by Sandy
Folmer . Contest by Betty Conkle .
GALLIA-MEIGS Community
Ariton Agency, board of trustees,
Thursday 7 p.m. at Cheshire Village
council chambers .
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, asststing
hostess.

BAKE SALE, LeLeche League,
beginning at 10 a.m. at Kroger.
Silver Bridge Plaza.
SATIJRDAY
MEIGS RETIRED TEACHERS
ASSOCIATION, Meigs Inn , Saturday noon luncheon . Mrs Patrick
Lochary to give a book re view .
Reservations to be made by Thursday at 992~ 123 or 992-.lJ&gt;!:i.
HOLSTEIN CATTLE CLUB
covered dish dmner Saturday 8 p.m.
at Meigs Museum . Sterling Timmons, state president. will speak on
benefit of membership. Holstetn
breeders urged to attend.
HIILBILIJE:S with caller Rob
Pickett will present old fashi oned

Jones. Joan Robinson, Margaret
Weber, Donna Jenkins, Marjorie
Milhoan, Cherole Burdette, Nancy
Co le. C&lt;lrol Tannehill' Juanita
Rachtel, Erruly Sprague, Sandy
I .uckeydoo, Beulah Strauss.
Marg1e Blake, Mary Wise, Jennifer Wtse. Vickie Houchins, Donna
Byer. Julie and Mary Teresa Byer,
Benuce Ann Durst, Jeanne Ann
Bradbury, Pauline Horton, Hallie
a nd Nellie Zerkle, Frances Wllson,
Kathryn Knight, Lettie Young,
Helen Byer, Frances Brewington,
Freda Mitch, Clara Criswell, Mae
Lambert, Nan Moore, Lorena Davis,
Elizabeth Mourning, Beulah McComas, Jean Cook, and Kate Wilson.

square dance Saturday at Chester
Grdde School from 8 p.m. until midmght. Admission $2.50 per person.
Children under 12 free. Refreslr
ments will be available. Proceeds to
su pport the toys for tots and Christmas food basket programs sponsored by Shade River Jaycees.
TURKEY DINNER Saturday at
Thppers PlatnS F1re Department
from 4:0 to 7 p.m. For carry out order.; bring containers. Adults $4 and
$2 for children. Sponsored by ladies
a uxil1ary of Orange Township
Volunteer Fire Department.
ORGANIZATION of District Stx
Jumor Holstein Club Satruday at
Meigs County Museum 8 p.m. with
potluck dinner . For persons age 9
through 21 who own Holsteins. Any
questions call 992-2264.
FIFTH AND SIXTH grade girls m
Southern Local School District Interested in playmg basketball to
meet Saturday at 9 a.m. at junior
hi gh

Songfest held
Asongfest wiU be held Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Middleport Mount
Moriah Baptist Church. Among the
special groups to sing will be the
Senior Citlzens Chorus, the Mt.
C&lt;lrmel junior choir, Bidwell, the
men's chorus of the Paint Creek
Baptist Church, GaWpolis.
Mrs . Robert Hamn of The Heights
Untted Methodist Church of Point
Ple8S11Dt will give a sermonnette.

The Young Adult Class met
recently at the Bradford Church of
Christ with Mrs. Janice Haggy
presiding at the meeting . Steve
Pickens had the prayer, and Mrs .
Haggy gave devotions using Psalms
HXI and 111 .
The candlelight Christmas program was announced for 7 p.m on
Dec. 23. A gift was sent to Mrs. Ruby
Hysell, a patient at the Pleasant
VaUey Hospital. A gift will also be
sent to the wedding shower for Belinda and Yancy Roush .
Holiday cookies and hot chocolate
were served by Mrs. Nancy Morris
to Steve and Dreama Pickens, Mrs.
Haggy, Bonnie Pickens, and Mrs .
Morris .

PUBLIC MEEI'ING
A public meeting will be held at
7:30 1\tesday night at the American
Legion hall in Rutland to discuss
recreational opportunities for
teenagers and adults in tbe Rutland
community. Mrs. Ellen Bell is chairman for the meeting.

Rust left its mark
DEAR POLLY- Please help me
get rust spots off of my creamcolored cotton skirt. I have tried
bleach and spot removers but with
no luck.- L.A.P .
DEAR L.A.P.- An old standby for
washable fabrics (when the color
will take it 1 Is to sprinkle the sta m
with salt, moisten with lemon juice
and then put in the sunlight. When
stains are gone wash as usual. Do
test anything before using. -POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I think the dirtiest thing in most kitchens is the
electric can opener. I keep a small
bottle of alcohol near mine and if the
opener has been ·used spl'lly this on
the wbeels and cutters every day .
About once a week I clean tbem with
,- ··,p as te and a discarded
..()L.urush. Wipes off well with a
clean damp cloth or sponge. - W.P.
DEAR POLLY- When I vacuum
the floor and the upholstery in our
car I prot.-ct the huse by covering it
with le~: ·' 'rom discarded pantyh06e 01
I nylon stockings. If
the hofie is dragged along the ground
or gets wet it is well protected . BE'ITE
DEAR POLLY - One of the
readers asked about removing
stains from her mattress and I
would like to leU her that I used one
part liquid bleach, three parts water
and then added tBicwn powder
1enough to make a paste 1. I brushed
th.ia on the stains very thickly, let it
dry and then brushed it out. Repeat
unW satlmied with the results . It 's
bollt if the job can be done ouWoors
or in the garage because there will
be a lot of powdery dust when the
mattress Is brushed.
Also, I make my own jelly and
always hated skimming it before

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WASHINGTON !AP I - Women
are significantly narrowing the
enrollment gap with men at the
nation 's colleges, accordingew
Census Bureau rep&lt;rt .
The study , released Monda y,
rep&lt;rts that in 1970 men attending
college outnumbered women by U
million. but by 1978 that lead had
shrunk to an estimated 4!0,000 .
Two-year colleges have been a
significant factor in this increase,
the report said, with many people
choosing to attend these schools on a
part.tinne basis.
" Apparently , the growth of

Racine, Ohio

Behavior
program
underway
Pre-HOLIDAY SALE

r

A behavior modification program
was started at the Wednesday morn ing meeting of the Rutland TOpS
(take off pounds sensibly! held at
the EMS headquarters in Rutland .
Queen for the week and also for
the month was Sandy Peyton. She
was presented a gift of money for
having lost the most weight. Rurmerup was Connie Cleland. Pigs were
presented to each of the members by
April Haggy. A new contest was
started with the "a horn of plenty "
being explained by the leader, Shorty Wright .

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DRAW FOR YOUR DISCOUNT COUPON

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION

EVERYONE'S A WINNER
Hours :
9 :30 ro 5 : oo
Mon . thru Sal .
9 :30 lo 8 :00
Friday

923 S. Jrd Ave.

Middleport , 0.
992 -2709 or 992 -6611
Open : 7 : 00 lo 5:00 Mon.lhru Fri .
7:00 to 3. 00 Salurdav

things," Cargan said.
"Since marriage was normal ,
s1nglehood was abnormal, " he satd .
ut that's changing now , U.rgan
said . si nce "singlehood ts being
looked at as a viable lifestyle."
Ca r gan and
Melko br oke
responde nts into groups of never
married ; married; divorced and
currentl y single: a nd divorced and
remarried .
They discovered that divorced
adults differed from other groups in
several respects. Among them :
- More divorced persons said th ey
gr ew up in hou se ho lds wher e
rela tions hips

were

''cold

and

conflicting ."
- By a 2-1 ratio, more divor ced
persons said they disliked entering
an empty room and also least liked
living alone.
- Nearly half the divor ced group
reported having no on e to share
problems with , while 18 percent of
the married respondents had tlle
same complaint.
- Neve r-married and d1v orced
singles tended to get along less well
with their parents.
"This suggests to us Ulat nevermarrieds who aren't getting
married are violating a social norm

TIIORNTON ENlJSTS
WlUGHT - PATTERSON , Ohio David Thornton, son of Mr. and M~
Wil,liam Thornton of 30360 Joe
Boring Rd., Langsville, enlisted in
the U. S. Air Force's Delayed Enlistment Program recently according to
T.Sgt. Orene Gabbard, Air Force
Recruiter here .
Thornton, who will be a 1960
graduate of Meigs High School , ts
scheduled for enlistment 111 the
Regular Air Force on July Ia, 1960.
Upon graduabon from the Air Force's six-week basic training course,
David is scheduled to receive
technical training in the Electronics
Career Field.
He wiU be earning credit• toward
an Associate Degree through tlle
Community CoUege of the Air Force
while attending basic and other Air
Force technical training schools.

MARRIED
Announcement ts be1ng made of
the mamage of Mary E. Watson and
Ronnie M. Pickens.

and that the greatest pressure to
marry comes from the parents ,"
Ca rgan said . Divor ce appear s to
renew parental pressure, he said .

IVeeke nJ gueJts listed
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
McLaughlin over the weekend were
Teresa McLaughlin , Columbus; Mr .
and Mrs . Alan McLaughlin ,
Fostoria ; Mr. and Mrs . Bill Howells
and their children, Robbie, Scott and
Kacy, Rittman; Mr . and Mrs . Bruce
McLaughlin, Mark and Lynn, Hambur g, N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Leon
McLaughlin, Mrs . Bonnie Tyson and
family, Davie, Misty and Tammy
Hotelling, Mr. and Mrs . Gene Hotelling, aU of Findlay; Mrs. Doris
Hotelling , Alvada; Mrs. Norma
Wedge and daughters, Susie and
Dee, Fostoria .
They were here especially for the
wedding of Miss Debb1e McLaughlin
and Gary Cooke. Telephoning on
Sunday before the couple left for
their home in Florida were Duane
and Debbie McLaughlin of Idaho ;
and Kevin McLaughlin, Virgin
Islands.

SAFETY COURSE COMPLETED - Eight
employees of Imperial Electric Company have completed a safety training coUJ"e given by the Industrial
Cornmio;sion of Ohio. The course was enlitled "Safety
Tra 1ntn~ for Ohioans". There were 12 total sesstorn

g1ven in the course. Completing the course were, front
row , I to r, Shirley Baity, Bonnie Proctor and Vicki
Snouffer Back row, I to r, Ron Holley, John Compton,
Marvtn Boxdorfer, Larry Sayre, and Samuel Simonds.

Delegates attend grange session
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan .
Meigs County Graf1Ee Deputies, Mr.
and Mrs. Keith Ashley , delegates.
and Billy Dyer , Star Grange. Mei ~.,
County Grange Prince, have returned home after attending the lll7th
annual Ohio State Grange Se.o;sion
held at Stouffer's Inn , Cmcmnat1
Under the direction of Ohw State
Grange Master James Ross, the
event ran from October 21 through
October 24.
Talent contest winne rs and
Ri tualistic contest winnen were
heard on Sunday afternoon and a
very Unpressive memorial service
for departed members was g1ven on
Sunday evening.
More than 150 delegates were
present fo r the Monday forenoon
session, then went to their variou.'
committee meetings in the a rtemoon to select resolutions for action uy the delegate body on T\tesday
and Wednesday. Many resolu tions
were brought before the delegate
body by the sixteen committees
which incl uded Agri culture, By Laws and Good of the Order , Con-

se rvatwn
Cooperatives
and
Marketing, Credential5. Education,
F1na nce, Highwa ys and Transportation, In s urance . Jum or
r;rangc and Youth Activ1t1es.
Memorial. Pomona Grange, Public
}(elations, P ubl ic
Welfare
Resol utions and Taxation. Selected
resolutions Will be sen t to the State
elected officers as recommended
laws a pproved by the Ohio State
Grange .
Presentati on or the Junior Degree
and Fifth Degree were given by wtnntng teams on Monday aftern oon
also.

More winning Drill and Ritual!stic
contest winners started the evenmg
program at the Cincinnati Convention Cente r, followed by the
selection of the Ohio State Grange
Prmce. Pnncess, and Young Couple
of the Year. Billy Dyer, Me1gs County Prince, was in the top seven con·
testants who were interviewed.
A youth pageant, directed by State
Gra nge Youth Dtrectors, Mr. a nd
Mrs Bernard Shoemaker, and wntlen by 1978 Young Couple of the
Year. Mr . and Mrs . Arden FILCh or

Richland County, showed and told
the meaning of Grange work. It was
a beautiful presentation.
The Degree of F1ora (6th Degree )
wa s exemplified following the
pageant by the regular State Grange
Officers, and lffi candidates were
in1tiated. The State Grange Degree
Team had exemplified the degree
two times earlier this year in
preparation for the National Grange
Session which will be held in Pennsylvania this year. It was interesting to those in this area to note
that, to addition to Ohio State Master
James Ross aad his wif,e Mary
Ross, who will go as delegates to the
National Grange Session, the Ward
family from Huntington Grange in
Gallta County will represent Ohio in
the Instrumental Family Group in
the talent contest and be among the
contest wumers attending.
Some other highlights of this Ohio
State Grange Sess1on were the
Youth Luncheon, the Youth Ball, a
banquet on Tuesday evening for all,
Waltz and Square Dance Contest,
and operung of the Wednesday
session by the youtll .

enrollment in two-yea r colleges,
espec ially among old er femal e
students , is a result of their
locations.
scheduling ,
and
crientation or '.tr
toward th e
stude nts who had other full~ ime or
part-time respon sibilities such as a

job or family ," the bureau reported .
The burea u said the number of
men enro lled in these schools
remained about the same between

1970 and 1978, while the number of
women enrolled full time grew 48

Holiday activities
discussed recently
Holiday activities were dtscu..'lSed
during a meeting of the Sew-RiteSewing Club held at the home of
Mrs. Ann Browning Wednesday
night.
The annual Christmas dinner will
be held at the Meigs Inn on Wednesday, Dec. 19 at 7 p.m. Special project
work was discussed. Mrs . Joni Hoffman presided at the meeting with
Mr s. Browning giving th e
treasurer's report. and Mrs . Evelyn
Gilmore, the secretary's report .
Mrs. Martha Hoffman wiU host the
next meeting.
Mrs. Lucy W·. ~ won the door
prize, and a de:;."l

course was serv ·

ed by the hostes.' Others a ttending
were Mrs. Barbara Mullen, Mrs. Flo
Strickland, Mrs. Pandora Collins.
Mrs . Nettie Boyer, Mrs . Retty
Wehrung, Mr.. . Lenora McKnight,
and Mrs . Shirley Baily.

percent and fe mal e part -lime
students IIlcreased 144 per cent.
Women also made sharp gams in
graduate school attendance with
enrollment doubling between 1970
and 1978, while male attendance
grew 21 percent in the same tinn e.
The study found that more older
persons. both men and women. are
attending c"llege. Increases in th e
nuber of college students aged
between z:; and 34 were responsible
for more than half of th e total
growth in enrollment between 1970
and 1978.
The study sa 1d this may be
because of the need fer more
education to compete for jobs with
large numbers of available workers .
Other fa ctors cited were the
availability of federal and state
financial support for students and
the declining birth rate, which has
left more wom en with time Ill attend
college.

Announce birth
Mr . and Mrs Gary Acree of Middleport are armouncmg the birth ol
their second child, a son, Gary Lee
lie was born on Sept. 28 and
we1ghted e1ght pounds. 10 ounces
and was 20 inches long . Mr . and Mrs
Acree have another son, Jeffery

'_,

CHAPMAN SHOES
NIXT TO ILBERfELDS IN POMEROY , OH .

Alan , nuw .

Paternal grandparents are Mrs.
Margaret Bennett, Middleport. and
the late Earl Acree. and the maternal grand parenL-; an.· ~1r and \1rs
Hobtert Keye.' . New Haven Mrs

Lyd1a Keyes. Johns Hun, Kv
maternal great-grandparent.

b

ATTENTION

a

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

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

KIDDIE SHOPPE

Near Stiffler's in Pomeroy '
2nd Street
992 ·3516
Pomeroy. 0 .

' .

newspaper .

have traditionally considered
marra ige "th e natural orde r of

Women narrowing enrollment gap

MONDAY
EASTERN HIGH fall sports banquet Monda y 6·30 p.m. Tickets may
be purchased from John Boston at
school offi ce or at door Tickets are
$4 each.
SAUSAGE PANCAKE Super Monday at Heath United Methodist
Chuch. Middleport from 4 p.m . to 7
p.m.

and
bnnding materials

pouring so I scrubbed an old percolator until it was very dean and it
provided the perfect solution. The
hot jelly was put in the percolator
and when poured into the glasses the
scum stayed in the spout and made
for neater pouring.- MRS. P.B.
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer , Peeve or Problem in her
Writ e
POLLY'S
c olumn .
POINTERS 1n care of thi s

narrow a range of people.
C1ere have been few studies made
''' .tngle adults because socio logists
t.oo

I

)

·t '

• •

"The impression is we have a

society gone sex ually berserk," he
said, faulting each report for polling

Polly Cramer

Beg1n depos1 11ng 1n1o
club accounl .and sl art look1 n g forward 10 a very enJoyable holiday' Ask
one of ow helpful adv1sers for mfo .

''lHV

minority of singles over 18 years old.
Cargan added that the only group
approaching the sw inger stereotype
was divorced people who have not
remarried .
He took issue with some highly
publicized studies. parti cularly the
. Kinsey and Hite reports .

POLLY·s POINTERS

Great
ot-"'"lc;G:l~r-~ Start!

SUPPER PLANNED
The Enterprise United Methodist
Church wtll hold its annual
Thanksgiving agape supper on Sunday, Nov. 18, at 6 p.m.
There will be a short program
followed by candlelight supper and
Holy Communion. The Rev. James
Corbett is the pastor.

LFTD:
Fantasies about unattainable men
are part of growing up 1and many
women -men too - never stop grow ing! ). I lived through a lot of them
. not too long ago. And so will you
before you find the real man m your
life. -SUE
DEAR HELEN:
I'm a 16-year-&lt;Jid girl and really
liked this guy I've been going with .
But some of my friends told me he is
gay. So I went to the place where
gays nang out and, sure enough,
there was my guy with this drag
queen.
My girlfriend has had the same
problem. How do we relate to our exboyfriends? Is there any chance that
they'll go straight? -M.A.
DEARM.:
If you 're on speaking tenns with
your ex-boyfriends, then ask them
about their preferences. A frank
discussion might show you whether
or not there 's a chance that they 'll
go straight. Could be they're merely
experimenting - or earning extra
money - ~nd some sessions with a
counselor might help - HELEN
AND SUE

DAYTON, Ohio i AP I - A study by
two Wright State University
JrOfesSJrs indicates that most single
Jl€(lllle are not lonely , unhappy types
cr swingers as many people believe.
After interviewing 400 single and
married per!llns in the Dayton area,
Cargan,
associate
Leonard
JrOfessor of sociology, and Matthew
Melka, chairman of the department
of sociology and anthropology, said
the popular stereotyPes fit only a

Voun,l.! adtti!J meet

BAKE: SALE, Gaul's Grocery ,
Chester, at 9 a.m. Sponsored by
Chester Cub Scout Pack 235, Saturday.
SUNDAY
COUNTY WIDE Prayer Meeting,
Hobson Church of Christ In
Chrtsttan Union at 2 p.m. Glen
Bissell, class leader, Sunday.
ANNUAL THANKSGIVING
Agape supper Sunday 6 p.m. at Enterprtse Uruted Methodist Church.
Program followed by candlelight
supper and supper and Holy Communion . Rev . James Corbett,
pastor

Present were Mrs . Betty
Blackwood, Mrs. Evelyn Hollon,
Mrs . Elma Holter, Mr!t. Mae Holter,
Mrs. Betty Koch, Mr!t. Leah Nease,
Mrs. Mary Nease, Mr!t. Mary K.
Roush, Mrs . Carolyn Saber, Mrs.
Kathleen Scott, Mrs. Edith Sl.wm,
Mrs . Ann Watson, Mrs. Noami
Wyatt and Mrs. Hilda Yeauger .

displayed a leaflet tree called the
"Tree ri. Thankfulness" and gave
each member a colored leaf on
which they wore something for
which they are thankful . After
reading "Thanks Be to God" , each
member placed her leaf on the tree
and gave her offering saved during
the year in the thank you boxes.
The offering will be sent to the
district treasurer. Mrs. Mary Nease
had charge of the business meeting
with the ri.ficers giving their
reports. The love offering was taken .
Mrs. Edith Sisson, Mrs . Naomi
Wyatt and Mrs. Hilda Yeauger will
take care of basket.s for shutins at
Christmas time . There were 36 sick
calls made .

1-614-992-2156

I

�-

8-The Daily Sentinel , Mlddleport-P omeroy. 0 ., Thursday, Nov 15. 1979

Health Review
By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
Cllnlcal Associate Professor
of Family Medlcfoe
Ohio Ualvenlty College
ol Osteopa lhk Medicine
PARKINSON'S DISEASE

HAS MANY CAUSES
QUESTION : What is Parkinson 's
disease ?
ANSWER : James Parkinson first
described this disease in 1817 as
"shaking palsy ." He said it was a
chronic progressive disorder of the
nervous system beg1nning insidiously in middle age . He went on
to describe many more important
symptoms of the disease . We now
know, however, that Parkinson's
disease, as it came to be called, is a
degenerative disease of a part of the
brain which neurologiSts call the
" basal
gan g lion "
Alth oug h
primarily affecting men between the
ages of 45 and 60, It can strike at any
age in both sexes . The onset is quite
gradual, but the disease becomes
progressively debilitatm~ - running
a course of 15 to 20 years. This time
span can be much shorter if the VI('·
tim has additional medi cal
problems
QCIESTION : Do we know what
causes Parkinson ·s disease ?
ANSWER : There IS no s mgle
cause of this neurological problem .
Sometimes ?arkin.son's disea se
results from m cephalitis, or a
d!sease such as syphilis or scarlet
fever. Childhood viruses have been
suspected in some cases as have
poisons like carbon monoxide , lead
and manganese. In rare circumstances, even brain tum ors and

L
I
B

R
A

R
y

vo1-A'"

, o&lt;

electrical shock are thought to ea u.se
the disease.
A he reditary tendency has never
been firmly established . Va rious
researchers have reported that from
15 to 20 percent of the ca ses seem to
" run in fa milies," but there is
nothing like unanimous ag reement
a mong doctors on this point
QtiESTI 0 N: How is this disease
recognized or diagnosed ?
ANSWER : Jjke most of the
neurological problems we have
discussed ret·ently , this disease has
no simple test to a1d a doctor 's
diagnosis. The chrucal judgement of
the individual physician is the onl y
method of diagnosis. Fortunately.
the signs and symptoms of this
d!sease are easy to spot. A tremor of
the hands , and occasionally the
head , 1s often the first clue . Unfortunately . this shake IS the one
most not1ceable to the patient as
well as to other people, and the least
responsive to treatment. Also. fatrly
typical IS a s hutnmg walk and sto)&gt;ped appearance The facial aJ&gt;pearance of victirns IS very much
like a mask and lacks nonnal ex·
press1veness . A very bothersome
complaint ;., the rig1dity present in
the muscles of the arms and legs .
Slowness of movements resultmg
from this rigidity severely limits the
person's ability to move efficiently .
However, muscle rigidity is helped
the most by the medi cations now
avai lable . Other less common
manifestati ons are drooling from
the muuth, fatigue and low voi ce
tones

Library

~ ~n\) 1 f-r

o•'

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Letters
November 4, 1979

Joe Dennison
Main Street
Rutland, Ohio 45775
Dear Mr. Dennison ·
I'm so glad you and Bob Snowden
and Lyle Hyell want to help the
teenagers around Rutland.
I've passed by so often on my way
to IUid from the library and seen the
teenagers on the bridge. But I never
really thought about the implications - that they have no other place
to go and nothing else to do - until
my husband commented on the increased nwnber of burglaries in
Rutland in the past few months. It
didn 't take long for us to realize that
the nwnber of Rutland burglaries
reported m the Sentinel seemed to
have gone up after the pool hall closed.
It's all very well to cluck our
longus and say , "They ought to do
something aobut that." But 1 figure
that they are really us - all of us
who live in our near Rutland, all of
us who care about teenagers . So it 's

PROCEEDS ANNOUNCED
A total of $171.29 was made on the
recent yard sa le staged by the
Rutland Church of God with the pnr
ceeds going toward the purchase of a
mobile home which will be used for
additional Sunday school rooms .
Donations on the purchase are being accepted by Jo Ann Eads,
742-3078 or Jean Cremeans, 742-3045.
The church extends thanks to those
who donated items for the sale and
those who supported it with purchased.

~·· ~ · I '

.. - - " '
'\'·

time for us to have a meeting and
he lp the teens find some fonn of
recreation wluch is not destructive.
The Rutla nd area teenagers who
work at Pomeroy Library have asked their friends to join us at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday , Nov. 20th at the
Rutland Amencan Legioo Hall.
1And we are very grateful to the
l..£gion for allowing us to use the
Hall . ) I hope that everyone else who
IS a teen or has a teen or cares about
teens or about Rutland will come.
I'm sure the teenagers have some
good ideas abou t what can be done .
And 1f we adults pitch in to help,
what a wonderful experience 1t could
be for a ll of us.
Sincerely Yours,
Ellen Bell, Ubranan
Serving aU of Meigs Counly

BOOK SALE PLANNED
Fnends of the L.ibranes will spon·
sor a book sa le at the Middleport
Public Library basement Saturday,
9 a .m . to 5 p.m. Both juvenile and
adult' books, f1ction and non-fiction ,
hardback, paperba ck. and all
magazines will be for sale . The
books wi ll sell for 10 cents each, and
magazines will sell for $5 a package

Plans made for flower show
Plans for participat1ug m the
Christmas flower show, Dec . land 2.
were made during a recent meeting
of the Star Garden Club held at the
home or Mrs . AMa Ogdm.
Mrs . James Nicholson reported on
the county meeting of the garden
clut.l and noted that the Star Club
will be responsible for five exhibits
in the classes "''m Dreaming of a
White Christmas " , " April Snow , I
Found Her Little Footprints in the

Snow ", " Le t It Suow" , Le t It Snow",
"Wiuter than Snow, Lord " , a nll
"Chns tmas Where Snow Peaks
Stand Solemn and White."
A report on the reg1onal meetmg
held at Ma rietta was also given by
Mrs . Nichub un who rorrune nted on
the de m onstra tion on holiday
decorating. Mlss Ruby D1ehl a lso
reported on the meeting . Mrs. Pat
Holte r was installed as Region II
director II by Mrs . Joe Bolin.

Ministerial program ideas
reviewed at recent session
formation which will be needed as
preparations are being made for a
pastor-church directory for Meigs
County . It was noted that there is
good mterest m a basketball league
and that six teams have already sul&gt;mitted names.
A meeting has been scheduled for
Sunday , Nov .. 25 at 4 p.m . and will
be held at the Pomeoy United
Methodist Church. Any church interested is invited to send a
representative or call either the
Rev . Mr. McGee or the Rev. Robert
Robinson.
Next meeting will be held at the
Rutland United Methodist Church,
Dec . 10,9 :30 a .m .

The Meigs Ministerial AssOC18 ·
tion, meeting recently at the Chester
United Methodist Church, heard program ideas from the Rev. Richard
Thomas , vice president.
He suggested that local people be
invited to join in the fellowship to
share their special fields and in so
doing to help in keeping the clergy
better informed . The Rev . AI Dittes,
president, reported on the prayer
service held at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The service was
to show the concern of the associa·
tion and that of the community over
the Meigs Local School teachers'
strike.
The Rev . Robert McGee shared in-

~~

Legion Post 39 meets
Dan Thomas and Rick Willlamson, who represented the post at
Buckeye Boys State at Bowling
Green, outlined their experiences
a nd thanked the post for sponsoring
them when Drew Webster Post 3!1,
American L£gion, met Tuesday
night .
Plans were made for the ol&gt;servance or Veterans Day . On Sunday the post will join with other
posts of the county for services at II
a .m. at the Community Park m
Rulland and on Monday morning,
10:30 a .m . at the courthouse in
Pomeroy . All members are urged to
participate .
Joe Young was accepted as a new

MEIGS 4-H NEWS
POMEROY - The Meigs County
Shepherds, 4-H Club met at the
Meigs County Extension Office. 4-H
certificates and pins were given out
and project books were returned to
the membeni. The club members
sold 575 tickets and received $28 .75
from the 4-H Club committee . The
club members discussed Junor Fair
Night and decided that they as a club
like it better in the show arena . The
first meeting for the new year will be
held January 14 at the Extension Of.
lice . Enrolhnent closes with the
January meeting. Winners of
trophies and other awards were
asked to send thank you notes to
their sponsors.

(Women's)

p- .

,, •. ,

1· r · :•

: t•

,..

r , ·/f-: r•,..

·

.-. • .,- J •t

REVIVAL ANNOUNCED
A revival will be held at the
Rutland Church of God, on Friday .
Saturday and Sunday evenings . The
Rev . Marvin CaM of Cincinnati will
be the speaker and the yo uth choir
will be doing the singing . The Rev .
Bobby Porter is the pastor. On Friday and Saturday nights, the services will begin at 7 p.m. and on Sun day night the services will begin at
6:30p.m .

•I I

. -' • ."
I ,.

t· . . •r·

member and Clifford Hayes was
reported in fair condition at Holzer
Medi cal Cen ter
Plans were made for the aMual
"Gifts For the Yanks Who Gave"
program in Pomeroy. Paul Casci is
serving as chainnan and members
&lt;i the post will go house to ho~
beginning at 6 p.m. next Thursday
evening leaving loaves of bread at
each home . In exchange for the
bread, they will accept contributi ons
for the "Gifts for the Yanks Who
Gave" program . If any bread is left
over , it will be distributed in front of
the Elberfeld Department Store on
Saturday mornmg . Proceeds from
the activity provide remembram:e."i
for hospitalized veterans.
Three World War I veterans , uo
Story, Robert Burnem and Fred
Goeglem, were present for the
meetmg . The annual oyster stew
supper was served by Charles
Hayes, assiSted by Robert Vaughan
and Paul Taylor

voters of Olive Township,
Thank You for your vote in
the recent election .

CLERK OF OliVE TWP.

ADA BISSEU.
Pd . Pol . A dv

THE
"REGENf'
SMOOTH
LEATHER

Hush Puppies
make you feel
warm inside
:· ' ,

New meat plan closer to law

COOPERATIVE EFFORT - Bernard Gilkey, left, superintendent or
the Ohio Department of H1ghways in Meigs County . and Pomeroy Mayor
Cia renee Andrews worked tog ether to raze a n aged bUIIdmg on Nye Ave .,
Pomeroy , Wednesday morning. The aged building has been a subject of
numerous complamts from motorists over the years. The bUilding was
near collapse and drivers felt that il might fall onto the ir ca rs. It was not
possible to trace the ownership of the s tructure which many yea rs ago
was a small candy shop. Gilkey and Mayor Andrews a re pictured a t the
site .

WARM LINED BOOTS

~

.•..

On the farm scene

plume grass a nd berries of all kmds .
Mrs . Ogdin told of the different
kinds of ca ctw cacti, how to plant
and care for them, and tben explained how to dry a pineapple with
clover .
Mrs . Radekin and Mrs. Ogdin had
arrangements and Mrs . Orion
Nelson exhibited an unusual cactus
in bloom. Mrs . Stella Atkins bought
~he traveling prize donated by Mrs.
Henry Turner. Mrs. Atltins won the
hostess gift. Refreshments were
served .

Mrs . Clara Shenefield, one of the
ea rly members of the Star Club, was
a g uest at the meeting. Mrs . Ogdin
gave devotions using "I Judge No
Man " from the Daily GuidepoBL
Members answered roll call by naming something they were thankful
for . The creed and collect were
giVen In unison .
Mrs . G. A. Radekin, Mrs .
Lawrence Chapman, Mrs. Kearney
Ogdln, Mrs. Henry Turner, and Mrs .
Nicholson provided flowers for churches during the past month.
Mrs. Chapman conunented on the
migration of birds. Mrs. Harry
Le vis' topic was "Plan now for
Christmas
decorations
from
Nature ."
She named different things which
can be dried and told how to do it ef.
fi ciently, commented on making
love apples, and tile use of peach
pits, acrons and nuts . She also told of
grape vine use in wreaths with

...

9- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pome roy , U., Thursday , Nov. I&gt;, 1979

...

CORRECTION

Earthquake

FREE GRINDING

POMEROY LANDMARK
8 : 30 til5 Thurs -Fri .
8 : 30 till2 Noon Sal.
Jack W . Carsey ,
Mgr .
Ph . 992 · 2181

Top-Notch

I

DENIM

'

THE

JUST RECEIVED

NEW SHIPMENT!

''CUDDLES"

LEVI JEANS in
Denim, Straight Leg ,
Small Flare and Boot Jean

ALSO IN
SMOOTH
LEATHER

killed and 1.500 suffered injuries in
the earthquake that s tru ck
northeastern Iran, a rescue
oocrdinator ~W~id today.
Rescue wor kers were still digging
up bodies from rubble more than 24
hcurs alter the quake flattened at
least 18 villages Wednesday, leaving
hundreds of peasants homeless, said
oocrdinator Mohammed Ali Shirazi,
reached by telephcne in th e Iranian
city of Mashhad from Nicosia ,
Cyprus .
Shirazi . son of the religious leader
in Mashhad , said the quake struck
before dawn local time, crumbling
dwellings on top of thousands of
sleeping villagers.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini , the
nation's revolutionary leader , called
the quake " tragic and freightening "
and appealed to Iranians to provide
all possible atd to the victims.
" This tragedy requires everyone's
he lp ," the Iranian leader said in a

Weather

COLOR S

BAHR CLOTHIERS

•Black
•Brown

BRUSHED
PIG SKIN
CO LOR "HICKORY

N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Lay ·A · Way For Christmas

THE
SHOE BOX

s;,_,_,~p;MA

Middleport, Ohio

~~
genuine gemstones

S l1 m ula lc s a le s
w1 lh lh 1s l n s iR iu l
s el ec l1 0 n . ·
14 kt gol d .
d1 a mo nd s a n d
q e ms lo nes.

for

Use Our Convenient
CHRISTMAS
LAYAWAY

THANKSGIVING DINNER
The aMual Thanksgiving dinner
of the Rutland United Methodsit
Church will be held at 12 :30 Sunday
following the worship service
Turkey and all the trimmings have
been arranged for and those attending are to take a salad, vegetable.
or dessert along With their own table

~0@'

'Q'JetieleN
ll ~ E

MAIN . POMEROY

serv1ce.

Partly cloudy tonight and Friday .
Low tonight around 30. High Friday
around 50. The chance of
precipitation 20 percent tonight and
10 percent Friday .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Fafr Salllnlay lilr&lt;tugb Mooday. LoW!i lo lbe mid to upper 3GB
Salunlay and lo the low to mid
4GB Sunday and Monday. Highs fo
lbe mid to upper 50s nort.b to tbe
low to mid 1108 south.

DAVID TIEMEYER PROMOTED
Marine Lance Cpl. David L
Tiemeyer, son of Loretta Tiemeyer
of Rutland, has been promoted to his
present rank while serving with 3rd
Force Service Support Group on
Okinawa .
He joined the Marine Corps in
May , l977 .

TO END MARRIAGE
ue Cameron Snu th, Portland.
and Tamela K.ay Smith, Rt. 3,
Racine, filed for dissolution of
marriage.

BATTERY /ELECTRIC
Co mplete

with hl9h
fidelity earp/lone ond
telescopic antenna . HI
impac t styrene case
Not exac tl y " ' pictured
By Nobility .

REGULAR '17 .99

Radio, monitor ed in London, said it
measured 5.6.
Earthquakes occur frequently in
Iran , often taking many lives. A
quake measuring 6. 7 on the Richter
scale struck 27miles south of
Mash had on Jan . 16 , killing about 200
pe rsons, injuring many others and
leveling hundreds of structures .
The Richter scale is a measure or
ground motion as recorded on
seismographs. Every increase of
one number means a tenfold
increase in magnitude . A quake
measuring six can cause severe
damage. A quake measuring seven
represents a "ma jor" quake
capable of widespread, heavy
damage .
The San Francisco earthquake of
1006, which occurred before the
Richter scale was devised, has been
estimated at 8.3 on lhe Richter scale .

WASHINGTON (AP) Agriculture Department says
Soviet Union has bought
additionall01,600metric tons of

ttii'·

Everything Must Go By Nov. 30

competition can't baal.

When yo u ' re behi n d the wh ee l o f
a 1980 Jeep Cherokee Chi ef . you ' ve
g o l a head start on winter drivi n g .
That's be c ause you'll have lh e
lraction work1 n g for yo u every in c h
o f the way, regard le s s o f wealh e r
co ndili o ns .
And , while you ' re oul there
beating lhe weather. you can enjoy
how the 1980 Jeep Chero kee Chief
beals the compe t ition With h igher
ground clearance I han Blaz er o r
Bronco . With lower enlry and
loading heights . Wilh lhe avai labilily
of four doors as well as t w o . With
an integral steel roo f mstead o f a
plastic lop

When 11 comes to fuel e fli cie n cy,
th e compelition can'! beat the 1980
Jeep Chero kee Chie f. New gear and
, , ;
-~ J ' t.: ! incd s- e train
e nab le the Ch1ef lo deliver an EPA
estimated MPG of~and a hig hwa y
estima te of 20' .

and going - lh e 1980 Jeep
Cherokee Chief Co m e on in ! G o fo r
a lest drive!

So. this winter slep up to a real
leader: the 1980 Jeep Cherokee
Chief . Unbealable lraclion with
loc king hubs standard . Available
with an automatic transmission or
c hoose Ouadra - Trac ~ Jeep 's
exc lusive automatic fo ur-wheel
dnve syslem .
This year beal winter in a vehicle
th a t beals the c ompel1tion coming

• Use th e s e lig ures lo r co mpan so n Your
res ult s ma y d 1ff er due to dr 1v1ng sp eed
weather co nd 111 0ns and l fl p lengt h. Ac tual
h1ghway mi leag e Wil l be tes s Ca lifo rnia
fig ure l o wer

2Q

HWY
EST

MPG

..,_/ ~ 1'

TV -

EPA
EST

[ill MPG

446-9800

APPLIANCES

All Priced For Quick Sale!

GET THE BEST

¥I JeeR

Feeder Steers :
(good ·choice)
300 ·500 l bs . 60·88, 500 -700 lbs . 59 /6,
Feeder
Heifers
(good · choice J
300·500 lbs . 5.1-74, 500 -700 lbs . &lt;6 -71.50,
Feeder Bulls (good ·choice) 300-SOO
lbS. 55 .50-89, 500 700 l bS . 45-63 .50 .
Slaughter Bulls : !Over 1.000 lb• .l
50 .75·59 .
Slau ghte r
Cows :
Utilities
46 .50·52 .75, Canners -Cu tfer s 39 ·56.25.
Spr i nger Cows (by t he head) Cw t .
37 ·55 .50 ; Cow·Calf Pairs (by 1he
unit) 395 ·575 .
Veals (cho ice·prime) 73 ·91, Baby
Ca lves ( by !he head) 32 .50· 147 .
HOG PRICES : Hogs t No 1 Bar ·
rows and Gi lts ) 200-230 lbs. 36·38,
Butcher Sows 19 .75 ·JL Butcher
Boars 23 14.85. Feder Pigs (by the
head I 9 25.
SHE EP PRICE S ' SlaughTer
Lambs 53 54 .

f

tOhio Build.i ng Codes
tAFHA&amp;VA
See our lot model today.

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
1100 E . Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992· 7034

The
the
an
U.S .

a

r•q t-,t
p ,1

T'1f'

It s 1,-.P '•n

r

Ql

' IC h

The look

or•r~

•S

quu d

011

rld ' L.I t l

leiln- p · c;n•,('S ' ,, rn

THE TWIN TRACK

LAYAWAY

NOW FOR
CHRISTMAS

MARGUERITE'S SHOES
102 E. MAIN

BICYCLES
SLEDS
TOYS
GIFTS
AVAILABLE

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets

r• gh t

(AT NO EXTRA CHARGE)

SNOW TIRES

WE WROTE THE BOO~
ON 4·WHEEL ORIVE.

MODULAR
HOMES

15

ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
November 10, 1979
CATTLE PRICES

COOPER

RIVERSIDE AMC-JEEP
1Q!" UPPER RIVER RD.

STEREO -

Offic ial s s aid Wednesday the
latest sale raised to nearly 9.4
million metric tons the amount of
grain bought by the Soviet Union for
the fiscal year that began Oct. I. It
includes about 4.1 million metric
tons of wheat and 5.3 million of corn.
The United States has given the
Soviet Union approval to buy up to 25
nullion metr1c tons of wheat and
corn this year.
Shipments in 19711-79 totaled about
15.7 million tons, including about
11 .7 million of corn and 4 million of
wheat.

1 hf' t1mP ,., r •rJ hl

•••••• (NEW STOCK)

And get gaa mll..ge

wheat for delivery in the coming
year .

I

MEETS TI!ESDA Y
The Eastern Local Board or
Education will hold its regular board
meeting at the Rivervie Elementary
School at 7 :30p.m. Tuesday .

CORRECTION

AM/FM PORT ABLE
RADIO

·fhe bill
· wa s sent to th e Se nate
alter the House accepted by vo1 ce
vot e a Carter-adm1mstrahon
amendment to set the mmliTlum
annua l imports at 1.2 5 billion
pounds .
Originall y, the measure had a
fl oo r of l 2 billio n pounds .
Gradison 's attempt to ral'IC It to 1.3
billion was rejected , 26&amp;-136 .
In addition to ratsmg the floor , the
new bill gives Carter power to a llow
more II!lports m emergencies or
after :·market disruptions" Present
law g1ves him broad diSCretion, but
the 1978 bill he vetoed allowed hun
virtually none .
About 1.57 billion pounds of the
quota-type meat will be imported
this year from Australia and Ne w
Zealand - whic h a re the major
suppliers - and about a dozen other
countries .
The law covers fresh , frozen and
chilled beef, veal , mutton and goa t
meat, but nearly all is beef used by
U.S. processors to make hamburger
0
and other products . The imports are
p e o p eequal to roughly 7 perc-ent of
domestic production .
Presidents can suspend quotas se t
statement broadcast by Tehran
by
the 1964 formula and allow more
Radio .
meat
to enter if supplies ar e
Shrrazi said the tremor was felt in
inadequate
or pri ce s
Mashhad, 500 miles east of Tehran,
"unreasonable
."
but that none of the famous domed
The
cattle
mdustry
argued tha t
mosques, tall minarets or other
presidents
have
used
that
authority
buildings in the holy city suffered
mostly
to
make
political
points
with
any damage.
consumers,
depressing
ranchers'
The quake measured 6.7 on the
prices in the process and disrupting
Richter scale, the U.S Geologica l
normal market cycles .
Sur vey in Denver reported . Tehran
or food prices for year s.
Ame ri can cattle produ cers , after
trunmin g herds severely, are just
now beginning to rebuild breeding
in ventories, and it will be several
more years before much II!lpact is
felt by con sumers.
Most foreign suppliers also have
red uced herds in recent years
be cause of heavy losses and won 't
have much extra meat to offer until
they adjust to the new import rules ,
the economists saJd .
Rep . Willis D. Gradison Jr ., ROhio, and other opponents argued
that any r estrictions on trade for ce
higher consumer prices.
But Rep AI Ullman , Mre ., the
bill's main sponsor , said the old
formula has hurt both producers and
consumers ,.;uun the shorter time
frame of a IO.year cattle cycle.
'fhe reversal of the 15-year-&lt;J d law
has long been sought by the cattle
industry and opposed by meat
import ers .

cIanns 600

By The Associated Press
As many as 600 persons were

At

1

•Taupewood

CORRECTION

Special No Limit

MEDIUM
HEEL
COLORS
•Black
• Brown

THE "CHRIS"
BR USHED
PIGSKIN
FLAT HEEL
COLOR

-

WASHINGTO N 1AP 1 - A longawaited new meat import plan has
ta ken a big step in becoming law It
includes compromises said to be
ac c e ptable
to
th e
Carter
administration .
'fhe House approved the measur ,
352-48, Wednesday. It would allow
more foreign m eat to enter the
co untry whe n domest ic o utput
declin es and tighten 1mports when
production rises.
'fhe current method based on a
1954 law , is keyed dJr~ctly to U.S.
production . That means when
domestic output declines - as the
situation is now - II!lports also are
reduced .
President Carter vetoed similar
legislation a year ago . Officials said
he support. the new bill because of
two compromises accepted by the
sponso r s. Gove rnment economists
told Congres s t hat the measure,
which involves a "counter-cyclical"
formula, wouldn 't affect consumers

POMEROY, OHIO

�II - The Dally SentUJel, Mlll dleport-Pomeroy 0 , Thursday' Nov . Ia, 1979
DICKTRACY
.

10- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomer oy, 0 ., T hursday , N ov . I ~. 19'19

Your Best Buys Are
Auto Sates

Givea_l/iay

Servic es Off e red

ANYONE HAVI N G Ooug hf

1973 N OVA 350 4 speed
P B , gOOd cond1 t 10n A tt er

COLL I E l YPE lema le,
Pomeran•a n
t y- pes ,
1
fema le, 1 ma le. 2 Husk 1es. 2
fem al e. 1 spa yed
Long
ha ired Ch ih ua hua, fem a le.
4 short ha rre-d terr iers, 3
m a le, 1 fe mal e. spayed
1rrsh Se tter , fe m a le Sho t s
and w or m ed . H umane
S0&lt;1e t y . 992 6260 .

BABYSITTER
10
my
ho rne F""e ddy'l a w Pek
rwo Childr en Rete r enccs a
must
Co n t a c t
Den1se
Wo lf e n t 949 2377 aft er 5 JO

baby f u rn •ture a t I p r ice on
N"ov 11 at D• c k W aever ·s

13 Word!! or Under
Ca.sh
Char ~~: e

I da y

100
l :iO
l !Wl
l .OO

2 d ii )'S

3days
6da ys

11:1
1!10
2ZS
J. 7 ~

Eae h wor d over the nunmlWll
15 words L3 4 et&gt;nls per word per

day 1\d.! runru"-' otikr thllneon·
sa·u tJ v~ da y~

t~

Wlll be

l ' har~l"d 'It

In memory , Ct~ rd uf Thank..s
ttnd Obr tuary S r ents p.:r word .

Uuh u1 lHl·

S:l 00 1rummw••
l \'.ll. llt'1'

Mub1le Homt• !W.les cwd Ya rd
.scd c:~ .ar e aceepted onl) Wi th
cash '#llh order 2!1 n:nt d"lilf~t'
flK ad!!cHrryml( Box Nwn tM-r In
c.arto orThl' St&gt;n t uu~l
Publi.~ her

Tht·

re~rves

the

n ght W t'dJt or rt' Jet't any ~tds
dee med
ob Jert Jorut l
The
Pub lt~her

f&lt;Jf'

w•llnott.Jto

more than

~~ porurtH e

O!)» Incorrect

m-

.'ler1 1011
PIKln•'

21 56

99'~

NOTICE:
WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Satur day

Auto ,

Beg.nn.ng and advanced
ce r ami cs
D re hel ' s

1977

Ce r a m •cs. 5';1 N 7nd A ve .,

215 1

f ac t o r y

P S..

t oppe r

P.B . $6800

Phone 98S 4339
C HE V ~ O LET

P I CKUP tru c k . H eav y
duty , 6 c vl . auto . t rans _,
wittl toppe r . SJ600. 992 2892
- - -- --~--

W RESTLI N G.

THUR

SD A Y. B p m Ad ults $4 .
c n il d r en S2 a t O h• o Ri ver
Au c t •on BLn ld•ng, Rt 7.
Sourn ot M iddlep o r t

AT T E N T I ON

SE NI O ~

CITIZE N S a n d
d•~a b lt:'o pN son s

t otally
E ner gy

d•scount You have unt il
N ov JO to ap p ly for your
energy
disco u n t
Ap
p l •ca t •on s mdy b€ ob tain ffi
at local ba nks . pos t off ic e,
ve 11:'rit n&lt;:. se- rv1ce center ,
senror
c rtr zens
centers,
!&gt;f"nror cr l •l ens c lu bs, Coun
tv Aud• t or s Ott ice Also,
check wllh th e pas tor of
your chu r c h

MU S T

S ELL

19 79

Ctlev r olet 4x4, stlort bed ,
350 auto .. P . S., P. B ., AM
FM rad io, 3,000 m i les,
$6500 . 991 5396 anytime
1976 GM C

ton pi c k u p ,

J ,.

T WO B LAC K and wh ite k it
tens, 1 wh ite w•tf1 bl ond
ea rs , male _ Tiger kitte n,
ye llow and gold, female
Human e Soci ety, 992 6260

cnihuanua, bla ck and wh i te
fe mal e.
l ove s c hild re n .
H u mane Socie ty , 99 2 6260 .

P S. P B . A M FM rad io
23,000

$.3 ,000

m i le ~

wanteli tOReiit-

99 2

7055

------1977

~ O YAL

DODGE

Wanted lo Buy

."iilllda }
4p M

CH I P WOO D Poles max .
d •a meter 10" on larges1
end S 1? p er ron . Bundled
slab . S10 per ton D e li vered
to O h•o Pa ll et Co .. Rf 2.
Pomeroy 992 2~9 .

aftf' m oon

Notices
M E I GS
C OUN T Y
HUMA N E SOCIE TY . 9'12
6260
Pe t s av a i la b le f or
adopt ro n a nd rn f or ma i1 0r"1
service

G UN
SH OO T E V ERY
SUNDAY 1 PM . F AC TC ~ Y
CHOKE ON L Y RAC INE
GU N CLU B
NO
H U NT I N G .
no
rres pass1 ng wdh no e)f;
ce p t 1ons on my pr ope-ty
Ju d y M cGra w Self
GU N
SH OOT
Ra c •ne
Vo l u nt ee r
F ire
D ep t
Eve r y Saturd a y 6 30 p .m
At the ir build1ng i n Bashd n
F a c t or y c hok e gu ns on ly
G UN SH OO T every Su nd a y
12 00 F41 c tory ( hok e onl y
Cor n HOllOW" G\.l n Club ,
R utldnd P roceeds dona t ed
to Boy Sc O\Jt T r oop1-49 .

OL D

F URNITURE.

'c e

boll: eS. b r ass beds . iron
beds , desk s. et c , c omplete
hou seh o lds
Wr i te M . D .
Mi l ler . R t . 4, Pome roy or
call 99 2 77 60

sand , gravel.
ca l ci um
chlor i de ,
fertilizer , dog
food , and all types of salt.
E xc elsror Salt Work s. Inc ..
E. Mai n SL Pomer oy , 992

7019

3891.

1974 CHEVY ' '2 ton pi c kup ,
350 auto .• P S .. P . B .. run~

good . $1100

197&lt; Mazaa

p ic kup , Rotary eng i ne . 4
speed , AM FM radio, run s

WINTER

deliver , 741 2056 .

DL E PO ~ T

FRE E
C ANDY
dem on
s trat1 on every Satur day at
1 p .m a t the c arou se l e n
t ect ione r y, 317 N 2nd Ave,
Middl eport

CER AMI C CLASS E S. M on
da y , T hur sd cw , 7 9 pm .
Tuesd ay and Fr 1da y 2 4
a nd 5 7 p m
Orehel ' s
ce r am1 cs, 59 N 2nd Ave ,
M id d leport. O H ~ 117 51

POWER

1974

buy WIN POWER Call 51 3
788 2589 .

FO~D

MUSTAN G

Ghia . auto ., 6 c yl , low
m i leage . $1900 . 9A9 1042
1975 EL CAMINO . White

Caddlac. Call992 7«8 .

APPLES

CIDER

HONEY . Fi1lpatri c k Or
chard, State Route 689 .
Phone Wilkesvil le, 669

3785
Yard Sale

HOUSE COAL , lump or
stoker , will deliver 742

WA N TE D

2183

FREE GRINDING
Special No Limit

SAW

logs .

Paymen t upon delivery to
ou r y a r d , 7 30 to 3 30 week days Bl a ney HardwOOds,

Mulberry Hts ., next t o
Cemetery 10 a .m . to 5 p m
Sat ., 17th Rain c an ce ls
I

SR 339. Barlow . DH . 678
7980
A N T IQUES ,

FUR

N lTU R E,
g l as s,
china ,
an y th1ng See or c all Ruth
Gosne ·r . an t iQu es. 26 N .
2nd . M •ddl eport , OH . 992

3161
ches W i ll i ng t o pay top
d oll a r
Call
I 592 2973
evenings

-·---- -

Auctions

BIG AUCTION ev ery Wed ,
7 pm . Hartf ord Community
Center , Hartford , WV, ~
m i les
abov e Pomeroy
Mason Br idge

·---·-AUCTION .

FRIDAY .

p .m

L ots of glassware,
some old
Collector ' s
.t ern s, e tc as well as new
m e r c h a nd ise at Ohio R i ver
Au c t •on . Rf 7, south of
M id dleport

SALE

Pets for Sate
HOOF HOLLOW . Engli sh
and Western . Saddles and
tlarness .
Horses
and
ponies _ Ruth Reeves 61-4
698 · 3290 . Bord i ng
and
Riding Lessons and Horse
Care prOducts . Western
boot~ .
Ctlildren' s $15 .50 .

Adul!.S29 .00 .
K ennel.

Boarding Call367 ·0'l9'l .

POODLE
GROOMING .
Judy Taylor . 61067 ·7220 .
HILLC~EST

KENNELS

Boarding , all breeds. Clean
i ndoor outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans . 61-t 446 7795 .

THREE

WELL

Trained

beagles 3 pups , my brood
S!ock . 742 2521

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBI L E Home
Park , Route 33 , north of

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, Nov. 17, 1979
1:00 P.M.
Moving lo mobile home so must sell the following
items . Located approx . 7 miles from R:acine , Ohio
on State Route 124 . watch tor sale signs .

"HOUSEHOLD"

Pomtoroy . Lar9{' lots .Calt

9'12 7479

lANDMARK
This
week
celebrating
40
years of service lo
the farmers.
MlLE OPEN
8: 30 lill M ·F
8 · 30 til12 Noon
Jack W. Carsey

Mgr .
~

J AND 4 RM f\.lrni shed ap
ts Phone 992 5434
TRAI L ER LOT for
Call H2 312'1

22

FOOT

PhoneH2 ·2181

N Bens. Glassvi ew . Leyden
Hearth , Old Time r , Fire
view .
Suburban
mobi le
home wOOd heaters , UL ap
pr oved , and Suburban fur
nacemasters .
O u td oo r
Equipment Sal es, J et Rts
7 and 35, Gall i poli s, OH .
Phone 446 3670

r ent

TRAI L E~

o ne .
Ut i lities
Syra cuse 991 2897 .

lor

paid

THREE ROOM furn . apl .

RUTLAND HARDWARE ,
Plumbing, Heating , El ec
tri c al and Auto Supl ies . 822
Ma in ST., Ru11and , OH .
Plas t ic sewer and drai n
pipe , 250ft . coil , $90 Cut in
any lengths. 37 c a ft . 20.000
BTU
c irculat i ng
gas
heater. S-208 . King 0 Heat
fiv e room coal heater ,

Bond Tite

APPLES -- ROME beauty
apples at $.4 per bu Be ~ I f or
appl e buffer . Cal l 609 3785,
Fitzpatric k Orc hard, SR
689 .

Utilities paid . A d ults. no
peho ,
no drunks . Jo hn
Sheets, 31'1 mrles sovth, Rt .
7, Middlepor t .

HOTPOINT

"MISC ."

and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

cash

Positive 1.0.

DAN SMITH
949 ·2033

JlM CIIRNAHAN
949 ·2708

Not responsible for accidents or loss of property .
License&amp; Bonded in Ohio, w . va . &amp; Ky .

Lost and Found
LO ST . tiger c at, ne utered
male , flea collar , answers
to
nam e
of
Tommy .
Reward 992 53.SA.
FOUND
Hobson
Rd
Lead i ng
Cre e k
a r ea
Beagl e. b lac k . brOW"n a nd
white female
Humane

Soc ie!y. 992 6260

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, November 17, 1979
10:00 A.M.
Going out of farming so will sell the following items
Located oo State Route 124 at Portland , Ohio .

"TRACTORS".
1~78 Ford 2600 gas, 1976- 540 Long 65 hrs ., power.

d1eset , w loader , Farma l l H w -wench on new tires ,
Massey ~erguson ba c khoe, 7 H .P . Slattion r iding
lawn mower .

"FARM MACHINERY "
I. H . hay baler, I. H . rake , 6 ton new I. H . wagon , new
post driver , 2 sets 3 pt. 6ft. rota hoes, 3 pt . cu l tivator
and stee~ wheels for Ford, cement m ixer , and 3 pt .
wood splitter .

TRUCKS &amp; CARS
Ford F600 1978 5 speed &amp; 2 speed axle, w ·22.000
m i les ; 1974 Chev . dump !ruck, 1969 Cornel Dodge
1972Cricketcarinooodshape.
'
"MISC."
King coal stoves , tomato stakes &amp; cu t ·off saws pool
tables, mise guns, 1976 Honda motorc ycle , electric
c ook stove, Kenmore dryer , refrigerator , pitcher
pump, lumber , watches , anti fre e ze, wheel barrow ,
12,000 ft . new Jt• " plastic hose , tool bo)(es, 1957 8x40
Pacemaker house trailer, woven wire , e&gt;c:tension
l~dder , 2 sets of tractor chains , 750x:16 tir e, 950xl6.S
t1re, and used clothing .
Cash
Positive I. D.

OWNER-GOROON PROFFITT
DAN SMITH
JlM CARNAHAN
949-2033
949 ·2701

LO ST

F EMAL E Walk er
Flatwood s ar ea.

hound

2&lt; 7 31 25

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FlDUCIIIRY
On Oc tober 29 . 1979, in
the Meigs County Probate
Court , Case No
'118.46,
Walter Heilman , 38811
Heitman Road . Pomeroy ,
Ohio was appointed Ad
ministrator of the esta1e of
Alber1 Heilman , deceased ,
tate of R 0 ~ . Wolfe Pen
Road . Pomeroy . Ohio .

Rober t E . Buck
Probate Judge -C lerk

I ll) 1, 8, 15, 3!c

au!o

r e pair
kits
with
in
structions . Also Bond T i te
bOdy putty , S9 a gal Rapi d
repair ,
$11 . 99
gal .
Bus i nesses
c a ll
tor
wholesal e prices

V" _Jack W. Carsey

~
Mvr .
.,_ ,... Phone tf'l -2181

ONE SET of roc:rl tre~s.e s .
Discount price. 6 12 pi t ch .
2lx28 ft . bu ild ing _ 15 p iec es
at $20 ea . Wilt deliv er . 742
241)&lt;1

Case

No.

1285&lt;1.

Genevieve G . Ht~rvey, 2a..1
East State Street, Athens,
Ohio 45701 was appointed
E)(ecutrix of the estate of
Edna S. Hart, deceased ,

l ate of Village of Pomeroy ,
Meigs County, Ohio.

ROb•rt E . Beck
Probate Judge -Clerk ' c 111

l , 8, l5,,3tC

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

COMM E RCIAL BU I LDIN
G on 132 ft . lo r a t 1600 N ye
Av e, Pom e royd . OH W il l
frnanc e at 9 Pc f to r el iabl e
c oup le N o re a l tors 99 '1
57 86
'l til acres in Ches ter Tw p
99 2 61-40 after 5 p .m

HOU SE FOR SALE beh ond
J ones B oys _S5500 Ca ll 304
'1 73 5019 Sharo n Stark
1971

12x 60 m ob• le ho m e

S5900 949 2860 or 949 2801 or
s~ Charl es B1 sse 11 , Rt
1,
Lon g B ott om

Ba shan

OWNER WI LL setl 40 ac r es
mo r e
w i th
19 78
or
H o llypark m o bil e ho m e
14 x7 0 w i th expa nd o, plu s
14 x 36 f a m i ly
room
at
carpeted ,
t ac ned , full y
rural water , some pasture,
fence . sta nd i ng timber ,
som e wa lnu f , sun dec k
fro nt a nd b ack Lac died on
New L•ma Rd Call614 14'1

e.

Mick ' s
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

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

ms .
Call for appt . or walk in

992 -2367
Main St .

E78 14

$25 for both . 992

..

1951 WIL L Y 'S Jeep tr uck
~)(A . v 8, body gooct . ru ns
oood 9'11 1914

l " '"

TOW~

P UT A C::OU NTER:FE IT
COIN IN THE
5C::ALE D ID.

IN FRAN CE 15

FARTHES.T AWAY FROM THE
PLACE WE'IlE A CTUALl-Y

HE-ADlN&amp; 1

\COSMATb

DTI _ ;

)_, --

Now arrange tne CI'Cied 1eners to
torm the su rprrse an swe r, as sug ge s ted by the alx&gt;ve canoon

rI 11 I

Answer here

ADO ONS &amp;
REMODELING

I III

jA[

RENOVATED - N'ce 2
bedrooms , nat . gas fur
nace . carpeting , bas.e
ment, 2 car garage a nd 1

lots. S25.000 .
NEW HOME

3

bedr oom s,
ce r a m ic
bath , carpeting . n1ce
ea t in k itc hen, ful ly in
su lafed , garage , and
larg e fenced lot .
IN TOWN - 6 rooms, 3
be drooms, b alh, natu ra l
gas furna ce , and 3 lot~
w 1th all ci t y ut i litie s

2

RIVER

Eat your meals as yo u
watc h the traffi c go by .
3 bedrooms , nat . gas
furnace and above a l l

l loods. $17.500
WE HAVE A ONE
YEIIR PROTECTION
PLAN IF YOU WANT .
CIILL 992 · 2325 or
992 -3176 for lNFORMA ·
TION.

Housing ·
Headquarters

1

FOR~25 A'58A.T, I
Cf&gt;..W'T k5K. 7

• J 92

t K 10 3

+Q J 9 7

ROOFING

WF.~T

All types roof work, new
or repair gutters and
downspouts,
gutter
cleaning ~nd painting .
All work guanrn1eed.
Free Estimates.
Reason•ble Prices
Call Howard

IN ST O C K f or imm ediate
delivery v d r •ous s•z es of
pool k its . Do rr yo urs,e lf or
le t us ins t a l l f or you D .
Bvm gardner
Sales. Inc.

+A

U'ITLE ORPHAN

B· BUT MY
I · I' M JUSl AN

lHFRf TH FRE,
'3 fi PAH ' Y THI"''K

O LO MOON TAlN
WO MAN '

9'12 5n• .

PAINTING AND
sand
blasting Fr e-e esl •m ates

Real Estate for Sale

- - - - -- - -

-

·--

FIN A NCIN G V A FHA LO
AN S LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
0~
R E FINANCE
IRE LA ND M O RTGAGE ,
77 E STAT E . ATHEN S
614 592 3051

Call9&lt;9 2686
DOZER .

END

Loader.

br\.ISh
hog .
Will
do
basements , ponds , brush .
timber , land c l ea r i ng
Charles Butc her . 742 19.40

SEWING

MACHINE

Repairs ,
serv 1c e ,
al l
makes .
991 ·2284 .
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy
Au1horiz ed Si nger
Sa les
and Ser v1ce We s harpen
Sc tssors

~~2 - 12~.,

- Very
n1 ce 1 floor plan, 2
bedroom s, bath , some
carpeting , l arg e lot
50&gt;260 JU ST Sl6,200
SYRACUSE Large
br ic k dup lex , l ive in
part. r ent part nd have
an income $ 18,000 _00 .
POMEROY
E&gt;
cellent 2 story fram e, al l
renovated , 3 bedrooms,
l 'h baths, lovely kif
chen ,
full basement ,
util i ty _140.000 _00
ALMOST NEW - Love
ly bri ck &amp; frame , 3
bedroom s, n ice kit chen ,
util ity , slor a ge bldg .,
chain fen ce yard . About
lleve t acre . S37,500 .00
NEAR CHESTER
Ni ce ly
remodeled
2
bedroom home , built in
k i tc hen ,
c arpet i ng ,
bas e ment and about 25
ac r es w ith 3 s pri ngs
CAN' T
BE
BEAT
S38 ,950 00.
LOVELY
FAMILY
HOME - Overlooks the
ri ver . 3 be d room , equip
ped kitc hen , rec . rooms
LOADS ~ remodeling .
A MERE $35.000 .00 .
WE HAVE 16 PROER ·
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-lSU
Henry E . Cleland Jr .
992-6191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
742-2474
Jean Trussell
949-2660
Office H2· 2259

5232 ..
HOWERY AND MARliN
se pI i c
Excavating ,
sy stems, dozer , ba c khoe
Rt 143 . Phone I (614 ) 698

1331 or 7 42 2593

ce lle d ?
operator ·~

IN
c on

Lo s r
y o ur
l ice nse ? Phone

992 2143

YOU Af"'l MEVER
GOIM ' !0 BE OLD,
SARAH "· AS FER
ll&lt;' HAIR ·· ON · RfE

A~! MO - DOM~

ZIS EES ZE

&lt;&gt;RAND
PlEAS- SAIR -. .

WILL HANOLE. "THAT 1

lEM I WHAT
HAVE YOU

OONE 1 AM I

DI!I'AMIHG&gt;

ELECTR IC

Motors , rewind and repd ir

Beech

51 ,

M iddleport. Ohio

3752

ALLEYOOP

BRADFORD , Au c tioneer ,
Complete Service . Phooe
949 2.ta7 or 9-49 2000 . rac i ne ,
Ohio , Cril1 Bradford

ELWOOD

SO THIS IS

W&gt;&lt;E RE T&gt;&lt;E
TRIAl'S

YEP ' IT U)&lt;)~') Lil- l

I

FI " J/\LLY Hlf 111 ' . 1•\l\o..POl,

A LICE

i

.,...

R_UTLAND ~ l 1 1 story f ra m e, 3 be droom , 1 bath,
n1ce large 1ot J eM gMage , nt'e-ds a l itt le repa• r .
COI.II(I bf' it be au t iful homt" Onlv S17 .900 00

DOWNING-CHILDS
Middleport, Ohio
Rodney , Broker
PHONE 992 -2342
EVE . 992 ·2449

Bill, Mgr,

,.

Wrsl

Nortb

En1

South

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

2•
3•
4•

Pass
Pass
Pass

3•
3+
l'ass

I

of

M orn i ng Report 3; 6 5D----Go00
Morni ng , West Virginia 13 ;

6 : 55- News 13
7 00--Today 3, IS; Good Morning
America 6, 13 ; Friday Morning 8;
Batman 10 . Three Stooges 17;

7 15- A .M . Weafher 33 .

clubs by North IS the

SI X

best slam contra ct All 1t
req uires fur sure s uccess ts 32 h rea k s 1n both bl ack sut ts
a nd a succ ess ful spad e
fm esse. s1 nce North can di s·

C'a rd two of his diam ond s on
T he few who d1d get lher e
w 111 know they b1d the bes t
slam but wtll get fewer po1nb

tha n slam bidders in spades or
not r ump

If the ACBL wer e mdm ed

H E LD.1

to

play

game s

With

I :-o; t-:W SPAPI::H E:"T!-:H I' IUSE

BOWERS

REPAIR:
Sweepers,
tOllsters, irons, all small
a ppl.an c e~
Lawn mower
N ex r to State H igtlway
G arage on Route 7, 985 ·

(Do you have a questio n lor
the experts ? Write "As~ the
Ex perts ... care ot this newspaper Individual q uest1 ons w ill
be an swered tf accompamed
b y stamped. self- eddressed
envelopes. The most inlerest mg quest10ns w1fl be used m
th1s column and will rece1ve

thing with this one
North and South have JUSt
28 high·card points betwee n
them _South has a fine openmg
spade bid . North , w1th 14 highcard pomts and balanced

3825

s

distribution, has a book twonotrump response but many

&amp; G c arpet Clean i ng .
c leaned
Free
Steam
es ti mat e
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard . 992

7 3o---- Family A f1a ir 10 . 7 : 55--Chuck
Wh ite Repor ts 10.
8 :{)()--Capt . Ka ngaroo 8, 10; Leave 1t
To Bea ver 17 ; Se same St . 33.
8 .Jo- R or1per Room 17 .
9 ·oo-- Bob Braun 3. Big Valley 6 ;
Phil Don ahue 15, 13 , One Day At
A Tim e 10 , Porky Pig 8, Lu c y

Show 17
9 30-- B ob N ewhart 8 , L o ve of Life
10; Green Ac r es 17.
10 oo-C ard Sh ark s 3, 15 . E dge of

Night 6:

Andy Gr ilf i th 6: YVhew! B.IO
10 · 5&gt;-C BS News 8; House Call 10 .
Elec Co 10
11. 30- Whee l of

INSULATION iS

cop1es ol JACOB Y MODERN)

Ch i ldren

c tleaper than tleatino oi l.
Take advantage of a gOOd
1nvestment. Call 992 3288
for more informaTion
HO~SE

SHOEING
for

Call

GASOUNE ALLEY

What's this . ,)
about. Walt/

! the Great

throw it

· . \ Ame rican and

__../

Darrell

l wa~tl,.jO t,i tO
ta ~e mLJ pipe

To-d3Lj lSi

·I

awa4!

. Smoke

=~

out ' / . . ______,\Ir
. . . ._ _.. . ,
(.._.

P I ANO
TUNING , Lane
Dan iels . New phone num
ber, 7A2 -:2951
Service to
sc hools and homt sirxe

1hrow I WOIAidn't Ph4llis. 40u 1-\now
1t
touch the I don't have the
heart to
filth4
do1t
thinq!
m4self'

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, NOV. 17 AT 11 O'CLOCK A-M.
ON ST . RT ln RFTWFEN VETO

AND PORTERFIELD , OHIO
Turn off 51. Rt. 60 in Be\lerty , ohio onto St . Rt. ut
through Waterfield or Exit off St . Rts. 7 &amp; ~below
Belpre at the Beverly -Porterfield Exit onto Rf. 339.

WINNIE

_

.:. •.... :::. . ~ J."J :.:::.

:-I

--..J• .::-

&lt;:=.

"&gt;UT I ~1 ·\JK I LL SNEAK

INTO H!::R ROOM
TuC K riel&lt;. IN .

:_._~ ....A-, '7~­

iNA HOME OF
OUR OWN!

"-"D

G IV": 1"!:::&lt;'.
A GOOD-N •GrKIS:' .

Selling antique furniture , old items , household fur nishings, farm machinery, tools , etc . from the
estate of the late vernon Halt at the Vernon Hall
residence .
ANT . F'URNITURE : Wi cke r stand ; Victorian ash
bed w 1carved he adboard , Vi c torian ash dresser
w / sw ivel mirror , a c orn pulls, &amp; glove boxes , barber
s~op mirror ; cast iron firepla ce front ; oak
srdeboard w /c arved top , oak library table , iron bed
w / bass : kidne)l stlaped stand ; tredle sewing
ma~hine ; old floor lam~ ; old radios ; arrow bach
cha1r : plank _
b ottom chatr ; rO&lt;:ker ; steamer trunk ;
hall 1r~ ; PI Ctures &amp; frames : c edar chest ; old
porcela1n gas range ; 1 sect ion of stack bookcase .
et c .
~ISC . OLD ITEMS : Professi onal sign Dainters kif
10 wooden c a~ . tot old cards ; books ; oil lamp;
homemade qurl1 ; sc hool desks ; hand auger ; dble .
trees ; s-et shalves for 1 horse ; some harness · iron
rake wh_e els , pit cher pump ; ant . i ncubator; ce i ling
c handelier Ce lec.); Old grindstone w / stand ; ant .
brak 1ng pl ow used on Blennerhassett ISland ; ant.
gas furnace control. and other items .

FURNITURE,

ETC.:

Vinyl

BARNEY

BALLS O'FIRE !!
I NEVER

SEEN
S ICH A SLOPPY

WATCH YOR E
TONGUE , WOMAN ''

DRESSER"

couch

G .E . TV

&lt;B&amp;Wl :

depression
IS Wurk unit
16 Minute .
17 Palm leaf
18 Alncan
beast
%0 fiber knot
21 ObVIOUS
U Hurdle
24 Unchallenged
l5 Sheriff's
group
Z6 Mouth off
27 Newsman
Dan
2l! Child of
Nancy
Hanks
:!9 I Jght wood
30 German
art1cle
31 WaU
greenery
32 Anger
3S Step oul
37 .. fevered ..

engrossed
4 Ogle
5 E:mphaS IS
6 Like
th e inept
matador
7 E:ggs
8 Bnstl e, as
with ange r
II free
12 Pell

area

3l! Barroom
39 Artific e
40 - Donuno
41 Mimic
DOWN
I l'allent

se eker

mto

Lucy 17.

f~a ste r

Yesterday's Answer

22 .. Heart of
2ll Arclu e
Runker
Dixi e" sta te
type
23 These
arf' drawn
33 Kenn edy

rs

pi

j'c

I''

J14

F

[6

matr1ar ch
34 Wat er
36 Brown ki wi
37 Half
a b1kim

I'

IB
I''

"

b

flq

[14

,, 'l'

lb

,;; .

12'5

12'l

~ 1 31

131

~~

""

140

Week 20 ,33.

'

I I l'!l

how
AX R

Here's
~

to

work

it :

CRYPTOQUOTES

GVE55
WHAT
SIR.

: riE ...\,RD TH.L&gt;.T Ti-lE
30-\RC' OF EJUC,..\,TION
.\.~ l' TI-{E PR ,N..: IP.XL K,.\\ E
B~E .\ ..\RGJI ~ o ABOUT THE
LEAk. I~ THE CEILING.

THE\" C..\N'T DECIDE wHAT
TO DO ...! IMAGINE iT'S

A FINANCIAL PROBLEM.
'(OU 5/11{, SIR'

•

..

17 :

News 20 ;

David

Sussk ind 33.
10 J(}-Up Close Wilh 17 : Lock.
Sfock &amp; Barrel 20 .
11:00--News 3,6,8,10, 13 , 15; Las! of
the Wi ld 17; Dick Caveft 20 ;
Monty Python 's Flying Circus 33.
11 3(}-Ton ight 3, IS ; The Seekers 6;
Mov ie " Look Back in Darkness"

JP

JUST
EMPN
Tf.lE PAN
AGAIN
WILL lfO\J,

MAWE?
\

Dallas 8, 10 : Lord Mounfballen
20,33 .
IO :oo-Rockford Files 3, IS; Winston
C hur chill

l, O!IOGFELLOW

Ont letter sam p l)' ~land s ror an ot her In thi s sampl e A i s
used for the thr ee L '~. X f o r th e tw o O ' s. etr Si ngle lf tl er s.
apostrophes . the len gth a nd f orma tio n of th e w o r ds are all
hint s Each d ay t h e roM \(·\tc r s are diff("r &lt;'nt

PEANlJI'S

3, 15; Celebrity Comedy Football
Cl a ss ic 6, 13; Dukes of Hazzard 8:
Wa shingt on Week in Review
20,33, O SU -Michigan Preview
10 ; M ovi e " Dr Terror ' s House of
Horrors " 17; 8 3D--Wall Street
9: QO-- Fren ch Atlantic Affair 6,13;

DAILY CRYI'TOQlJOTE A X f D I, R
Is

Tyler

Joker ' s Wild 8; Pop Goes The

[38

[. :.

Mary

Coun tr y 13, 15 ; All In The Family
17; Ma cN eil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
8 oo--Mov ie " A Br idge Too Far"

' '/3b

[3'&gt;

20.3J .

M oor e 10 . M y Three Sons 17
5 JG-C arol Burnett 3: New s 6:
G om er Py le 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Ma sh 10. Hap py Days Again 13 ; I
D re a m of Jeanni e 17. Do c tor
Who 33
b oo- N ews 3,8 , 10 , 13. 15; ABC News
6: Zoom 20. Car ol Burnett 17 ,
F r ees t yle J3 .
6 3Q- NB C News3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Bur ne tt 6. C BS News 8, 10;
B ob Newh ar t 17; Over Easy

20,33

113

1.8

Hospita l 6 , 13 : t L o ve
Up5ta ir s, Downstairs

7 00-- J' s A Crowd 3; Tic Tac Dough
8; N ew s 10 ; Newlywed Game 13 ;
L ove A me r ican Style 15, Sanford
&amp; Son 17 . Dick Cavett 20,33 .
JQ-- P ri ce is Right 3. Newlywed
G am e 6 ; Family Feud 10 ;

I;!C

111

l.lO

I he

Wild 10 ; F l~n tstone s 17
QO--Misfer Cartoon 3, Password
P lus 15; Be v erly Hillbil lies 8 ;
Se sa m e St 20,33 , Si)( M i llion
Dollar Man 10 . Real M cCoys 13 ;
Spec frem a n 17
4 30 - Bew it c h e d
3.
P etticoat
Ju nc tion 8, Tom &amp; Jerry 13;
M er vG rifl in 15; Gilligan's Is . 17 .
00- 1 D r eam o f J eann ie 3; Sanfor"d
&amp; Son B. M ister Rogers ' Neigh -

bor hoo d

holder

birds

ll

[ll

&amp;

4

d!spl ays

liB

Young

20 .
3 JO--One Da y A t A Tim e 8; Joker ' s

olu styl e
27 Cr ow
family

21 M ilitary

telescope ·

binoculars, end tables , ele c ranges ; camera . rugs'
bedd i ng , curtains, etc; metal be&lt;:t ; fans :
elec :
c hec k out counters , pots, pam•. d i ~he s, etc .
~ACHINERY, TOOLS , ETC .: All is Cha l mer s drag
d1se; A .C. blad e. A .C. 14 in 2 gang plows ·
cu lf ipac ker . tractor cut -off saw, 3 pt , trac to~
spra yer , 5m . tractor hitc h; G rave ly snow blade &amp;
su l k ey ; E c.onomy ~o~ a to h i ller ; Simpl ici t y plow , 5
~hove l c u1t1vator ; r1d1no lawn mower ; 2 horse brak ·
mg plow; old hay t~der ; seed cleaner ; '(ard roller ;
2 wheeled farm tra d er ; wagon tongues ; a ir cOm p r essor ; cham_p heater : overhead garage door ,
st ee l framed w •ndows; Circulator metal cut ·otf saw
w / motor ;_ a rmatu~e la1he; new Manni ng Bowman
benc h gnnder ; 7 1n . ele c. hand saw: ·~· in. etec
dr i ll ; bt&gt;nc h gr inder w / motor ; c ircular table 54!w
w 1motor : v• se F erguson heathouser , ponable
~e r osene drum . door s. lot hand, vard &amp; farm tools
carpenter tool s ; brush burner_; ~ODe block s . 2 baa't
seat s; l awn mower , sm . outbutldtng to be torn down
&amp; moved, and m a ny otner m tsc . items not listed
Nothing shown before day of sale. Lunctl on
premises . Terms - c•sh or check w / posltive 10 dly
of sate . Not responsible for 1ccidents..
Owners - Emerson &amp; Lillian Gates
Auchoueer - Bfll Jane!.
PhonP SS1· J411 ur iSJ 3133

3 . ~ Genera l

25 Somewhat
ashen,

16 D1m1msh
19 Seoson

[i5

6, 13;

L i ve 6, 13; 2 25- News 17.
2. 3(}- Another World 3, 15: Guiding
Li gh t 8, 10 : Gi gglesnorf Hotel 17.

3 Become

It Moon

'I
(

-----....

2 Cupid

ACROSS

I Coffee-house
5 Open-mouthed
9 Chinese islond
10 Secret1 ve
13 Hurting

3, 1S ;

R es tless 8, 10
JO-- A s The Wo r ld Turns 8.10;
'l oo--Oo ctor s 3, 15; One Life to

by THOMAS JOSEPH

,

Forfune

Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20,33 , 11 · ss--News l7 .
11 00 - N ew~ce nl e r
3;
News
6, 8, 10, 13: M indreaders 15: Love
Amer ican S1y le 17.
12 JO-- Ryan ' s Hope 6, 13. Search for
Tomorr ow B. 10, H e alth Fi eld 15 ;
Movi e "Sifti ng P re tty " 17; Elec.
Co 33
00--0ay s o f Our Li v es J. 15, All My

6309 or 742 2348
P~OPER

Seal I he Clock 8. 10:

Mor ning Magazine 13 ; Movie
" The Spira \ Slairc ase " 17 .
10 30- Holl yw ood Sq u ares 3. 15;

ll · QO----H igh R ollers 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Sh1r ley 6, 13; Pri ce is Right 8, 10;

A ~.:,s r.,

th e

computer -dealt cha r itv hands,
they would certainly do som e -

w / chatr ; v .nyl Lazy Boy chair ; cir culating gas
tleater : new Hoover swee-per w / aMactl. ; dinette

I

Vulnerable East -Wes t
Dealer South

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

\'.'! \ l

2

I

• AK62

1· 00-

FRIOAY. NOVEMBER 16,1979
5 • &gt;- Fa r m Report 13; 5:5o-PTL
C lub 13
6 00-700 Club 6,8: PTL Club 15;
Heal th Field 10: 6 l Q- YVorld at
Large 17.
6: 30--K idswor ld 10; News 17; 6: 45--

South's long spades

I •

portable

·~
• J 52

Opemng l ead· • I 0

1965

tables ;

• J 732
• 9 74
+1 0 5 1
SOUTH
.AQI0 5 l

A&amp; H Upholster ing, across
f ro m me Texaco Stat •on in
Syrau c se 9'92 3743 or 992

992 3288, ask
M c Clanahan

AUTOMOB I LE
SURANCE
been

MODERN

FOR SALE

dozer ,

loader and ba c khoe work
dump tru cks and lo boys
for hire , will haul fill dirt ,
top soil , l1mestone and
gravel Cal l Bob or R09er
Jeff ers , day phone 992 7089 ,
night ph one 992 3S25 or 991

WI !=E l!Kf YOU?

Business Services

561

6

ANNIE

~ MAN COUL D

9'1 2 2356 ,

Q8

• 83

949 ·2162
11 · 14 mo .

REYNOLD 'S

F.AST

+K 8 3

• 76
• Q 10 9 8 5

w!lh

Jr respe('t1Vf of ho w North
st a rt s pr oceedmgs. th e fm a l
(·un t r &lt;H' l at mo st t&lt;~ ble s IS
gom g to be three no tru m p o r
fo ur spad es
All su1ts break a nd Wes t
hol ds both th(' ace and queen
of d tamomb, su 12 tr1eks a re
t he re at e ither no trump or
spade s. Spade and notrump
slam s r ec e1ved th oroughly
undeserv ed good seo res whil e
f ou r -spade bidde rs whu we re
1n the correct fin al conlrac t
wo uld r cce1 ve v e r y bad
scor es .
There are hundr ed s o f ways
to bid this hand The con t ra ct

• A K6

6, 13 ;

To m orr ow 3; New s 15.
l · 'l.s- B a nacek 8 ; 1:50--News 13;
2 ·00- News 17
2 0.&gt;---Mov ie " P etulia " 17 ; 4: 15-M ov ie " The Gafl ing Gun" 17 .

re~ pu nd

players wo u!U
t w o cl ub s

Il l~

13;

Mov ie " T yc oon " 17 .

12 40- Baretta

Correct bid costs points

H. L WRITESEL

CALL 992 -7544

WILL HAUL l i mestone and
gravel A lso, l i me hauling
and spread ing . L eo M orr is
T r v c King . Phone 742 24 55

MlDDLEPO~T

bungalow w i th bath , 1
bedrooms , and large tot
on RT. 7. A skingS18,500 .

'3A'{Ii.J0

Road

6, 13. Co lumbo B; ABC News 33;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

9'12-731&lt;
11 · 1 ( Pd .)

Hours ~ - I M., w., F .
Other times by appoint ·
ment.
107 Sycamore (Rear
Pomeroy, 0 .

Business Services

PH .

17.500.
UPPERS PLAINS fl oor
5 room

TK&amp;Y'Rf

You'Rf iJOf 'SIJPR::&gt;SW 10.. ,
THIS IS BAL-L-E'T ~ r.JOW, SH H!

949·2748 or

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES. INC.

ALL

BRIDGE

I CAll'T HEAR A \UOf&lt; D

T he

Snea k P revi ew s 20,33
9 3Q-Cam er a T hree 20,33: 10:00-Q ui n cy 3, 15, News 20; Sound s tage 33
10 · 30- Civ ili sation 17 · Hock l ;,g
V all ey B lue grass 20 .·
11 00- New s 3,6,8, 1U . I J, I; ; Ulck
C avett 10 : Fall &amp; R ise of
Reg i nald P errin 33.
11 3D---- To n igtlt 3, 15; Police Woman

----~

BORN LOSER

RACINE, 0.

Federal
Hovsing &amp;
Veterans Admin . Loans .

EXCAVA T ING .

1I ROOMS L arge
rame with gas furnace ,
baths, panel ed kit
hen , and 2 c ar ga r age .

Thursdoy . Nov . 15

V. C. YOUNG Ill

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

2182

"'1 -llH
110 E . Second Street

Answ er

(FREE ESTIMATE)

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

j

tomo ~ro w J

STA ID JOV IA L DOUBL E
Wt1al the s w• m mm g rnstruuor kne w
TH E DIVES

On

Sports: Close Up 33 .
9 QO-F renc h Atlanti c baffa lr 6, 13;

Yeslerd ays ; Jumbles VIPER

Gutter
work, down
spouts, some concrete
work,
w~lks
and
dneways.

mite off Rt . 7 bv -pas s
on Sf Rt 114 toward
Rutland .
J ,1

Business Services

Town

3683 or 1628 Linco ln Hts.

,] '

v

¥49-~862-949-2160
4 5 tf c

f VfR roPGE t A

and cha i r Good co nd ii •On ,

TWO FIRESTONE

S TO C ~

WHAT

GOOD : WE NEED 50ME0 ~E TO &amp;0 5EEO IF T HEO
GEN DA R ME? HAVE THIS
,\fiE DfC A L. CLHJIC STAK ED
OuT: HAN G ON A SEC -

THAr CA USES HER.
'~VU BE-- WIL.LI~ G
TO RU"-.1 AMOK? ~ TO t-'E~~ GWE N·
-"
\
DC L"',IJ~

Fre~stimates

TRAILER 1'10'111 AV AI L ABLE

Pomeroy, 0 .
10 19 1 mo

Sl 25 3048822958 .

and Country snow ti r es
with stllds , tvoet es s. S•ze

GOOSE

CAPTAIN EASY
YOU MEA&gt;! A FR EN Ce · -C 1 5 SAY
SPECI Al iST MAY BE I "H E :;&gt; HA VE
A8LI: TO TREAT THE ( A FIGMT ING
HORRIBLE DISEA SE I ( HANc e: WOL'Lr

1\0RTII

EARLY AMERICAN sof a

MU ST SELL . Ha ve m an y
baby items lefT , co nsole
stereo, sewing m ach. ne
Plea se c all992 350 '1-

S UPER

W o l kt"~~ •ll t

Roger Hysell
Garage

die port

L UMP COA L
de l •v~ r e d
loc ally . S39 per ton 99'1

'l M• l!'! EoH i o l

E ~ c " ' "ll ~

IO 19 1 mo

BAILEY ' S ST ORE . M id

the Meigs Countv F»robat e

Court,

LAR G E L O T on dea d e nd
slr ee t w it n wa 1er a nd
se wa ge . W i ll finance to
r eliable c oupl e at 9 P et
992 5786 N o r ea ltor s

M E N ' S USED wo r k und or
m s, pants _$1 49, sh1 r t s
S1 15 , jac kets ~ 88 N ~ w
hooded sw ea1 sh1rf S S4 .8B

7126

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
on OctOber 7"1th, 1979, in

Real
Eslale
·
--- -- for
- -Sale
----

VIEW OF

POMEROY
LANDMARK

M (ln i90IYi t'r .,. Ad
l.IIH:l\~ &lt;11 (&gt; Oto&lt; O

4 30 tf (

bedrooms , bath , fu l l
basemen1 and large lot
160x 160 for on I y S14,000 .

Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

J1J1 ~

Free Estimate

Nashvill e

Coun t r y Road s 15; All In The
F a m i l y ll ; Ma c Ne il -Lehrer
R eport 20, 33
8 OQ--- M ovi e " A Br idge T oo Far "
3, 15; Lav erne &amp; Shirley 6, 13;
B ugs Bunny 8, 10; Evening at
Symphony 20 . NHL H oc key 17 ;
Sfal e YVe' r e In 33
8 3Q----M ovie "Si lver Streak " 8, 10;

WHA'T T HE &amp;LN WHO

N'ew, repair,
guHers and
down sp«~uts ,
Wintlor' cleaning
Gutter cleaning

TRAILER SALES
~ · ~ ·~ 9 ~1 4 5

30 - H ollywo od
Squar es
J;
Newlywed G ame 6 ; Joker' s Wild
8 , S100 ,000 N a m e T hat Tune 10;

H. L Writesel
Roofing .

Aluminum Sidinq

9 28 1 mo. Pd

Sl 5.500
MILLFIELD

He~dquarters

MoNTGOMERY

elnsu-l•tion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Window~
• Replacement
Win ·
dQWS

797 ·2741

992 7331

Antique din •ng room sui te , 14 tt m etal boat, Me
Cullough chain saw , 7 new i ns1 de d oors , 2 o ld k i t
c hen c ab i nets w flour bi ns. lawn c hairs. and mise
tools .

OWNER - BERTHA WOLFE

J&amp;L BLDWN
INSULA
nON
Vinyl &amp;

Roofing, gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Estimates.
All
work
guaranteed . 20 years ex ·
perience. Call Athens,
collect, Geratd Clark
797-4857 or Tom Hoskins

THREE men 's suits, size s
41 and 41 . L ike new Phon e

S226 .95

E lee tri c &amp; gas cooking s toye s, upr 1ght deep free ze, 2
liY ing room suites. breakfast set , ref r igerator . wool
ru g, 1 fuel oi l heates, 2 gas stoves w tans, metal
wardrobe , 2 bedroom suites, cedar c hes t, sm a ll gas
&amp; oil heaters, K enmore d ishwa she r , auto. washer ,
d ishes , pots &amp; pans . and misc.

AT POMEROY

WOOD STOVES by Belter

STA~

RIS I NG

Son 17; D ic k Cavett 20.33 .

OHIO VALLEY
ROOFING

tak i ng orders. W i ll

EMERGENCY

1 00----J's A l. r owd :); T ic lac ·oouoh
8.
B axter s 6 .
N e ws
10 ;
N ew l ywed Game 13; Love
Amer ica n St yle 15 , Sanford &amp;

!Answers

sale .

al rernators ·own the best

BACKYA~D

--

FOR

2042

142 233 I

ANTIQUE POCKET wa!
GET T OOAY 'S MARKET
VA LUE
F O R DYD U R
GO L D 0 ~ SI L V E~ CON
TA CT
ED
B U~K ETT
BARBER
SHOP. M I D

Ghia , aut o .. 6 cy l . low
m i leage . S1900. 614 942

SA LES. P T PLEASA NT ,
wv 304 675 44 24

POTATOES

197&lt;

MU STAN G

Mobile Homes - Sale
1971 LY NN HAVE N l 4X65 J
bed r oom
19 70 Vi nda lt• l h 63 w i th ev:
pa nda, 2 bedr
197 0 New M oon 12x 603 bd r
19 73
Sk.y l1 ne
12x55
2
be droom
197'1 B onanra 12x; 2, 2 be-d r
B &amp; S M OBIL E HOM E

Business Services

C W . Proffitt IMm . Par
Hand , OH . S6 a hund re d a nd
S5 a hundred .

FIREWOOD

Unscramble these four Jumbles
one Ittner to eac h square 10 !orrn
tou r ordtnary words

VITAMIN, BON NIE?

---------------------~-------------J

L IME S TONE .

good, $1650 . 992 ·784 1.
FORD

LIKE TO DO baby~• tf •ng •n
home . 8 S 992 7448

mv

1_

For Sale
COAL ,

Television
Viewing

W HAT'S WRO N G WI Tt--!

THURSDAY , NOVEMBER 15,1979

sM AL L FARM with house
or t r ail er . 99 2 5'196

MondCO wagon 440 V 8.
P .S., P . B ., A . C. , filf wheel.
AM FM stereo, 5 stee-l
belted radials , c hromium
p l ated roof rack . E)(cellent
c ondit•on . Ideal tor large
family and hauling cam
per . Asking$36Ufirm . Call
betwee-n 5 and 7 p _m . 992

SALE . LOIS of c iOiheS , SOc
and cheaper Any evening
after 5 at Jb-4 E . Main St ,
Pomeroy, 2nd ho\.lse above
Francis F lori st

OL D COIN S, pocket wt
ches, c lass nngs , wedding
bands, d 1am onds . Gold or
silver . Ca ll J . A . Wamsley ,

HA I RE D

S H O ~T

Now

.

lht• day bt l ore publie a lwn

F ri da}'

1979 FORD F 150 , 4 wheel

CERAMI( CLASSES stdr
tmg N crwember 17 eac h
Sa tu r day , 6 JO 9 30 p m

Tue.'lday
Lhru F rrda\
4P M

6. 985 35&lt;1

drive .

SLUG M A TCH a T llaak
Wa lt on c lubgr ou nds near
Ches ter eve r y Sunday until
deer
season
Bacon ,
t u rk eys,
ha m s
Shells
ava il able 1 00 p m

M ...-.d&lt;~ y
~oon Of1

resrdence . please con tac t
9'91 3502 •mrned •a te ly

M iddl eport . O H Ph one 991

l day nllt•

in the Sentinel Classifieds

Notice s

WANT AD

CHARGES

~'ound

Q UB D

0 W OJ 0

HW Y J G K

r; KP NA K .

Q U WB .~Il

WB

I. p B .

Y K t";KB JWBX

8; AB C News 33; Movie " Return
o1 me G i an i Monsters" 10; Movie
'' Sssssss' ' 1J; M o vie " Cr y of the
Ba nshee" 17.

00--M idnigh l Spec ial 3,15 : Juke-

0 W B 0,

B P J

UHPW C WBX

JVKQ

X .
L.
AWLVJKBTKYX
Yesterday ' s Cryploquote: ALMOST EVERY REFORM
CONSISTS IN THE C!J:J\RING AWAY OF AN OLD RATHER
THAN IN THE M~OF A NEW I.AW.- H .T .BUCKLE
I
;

Bo)( 8; Movie "The two Faces of

Dr . Jekyll " 10.
1. 10- News 17 ; l : IS- News 13;
Movie "Califronla Passage" 17,
2 3Q-News 3, 3 : 1s-Movle "In Old
Ca lifcrnia "

17;

American Style 17.

5 : 15- Love,

�12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 15, 1979

Fire hits r-------E-LB_E_R_F_E-LD-5-IN_P_O_M_E_R_O_Y_ _ ____,

'!~~· - -~,

sons suffered smoke inhalation and
several hundred employees at the
Logan Division of Goodyear Tlre x
Rubber Co. were evacuated from the
area when a fire broke out at the
plant.
Anthony Beverly of Logan and
Michael Simms from Nelsonville,
both 23, were reported in stable condition after being admitted to
Hocking Valley Community Hospital
Wednesday evening.
Firefighters were called to lhe
plant about 7 p.m . when "a static
spark ignited the wax compound on
a foam mold," a firefighter said.
"! was about 50 feet from the fire
when it started," said Mark Carner,
an employee. "I had my back to it,
but when I turned around, alii saw
was flames going to the ceiling."
A total of 350 employees were
evacuated from the plant to a nMr·
by Ohio National Guard armory .
" It started on the line where we
make forms for dashboards in
automobiles," said Carrier.
Several other eyewitnesses confirmed that the fire broke out while a
bot wax process was heing completed. The process is used to form
molds for automobile dashboards .
Carrier said he saw the flames
burn through the roof, which is about
4li feet high .
''I ran to the nearest exit," he
said. "I told the people in my section
about the fire and we got out fast. "
He estimated that it required only
about five minutes to evacuate the
building.
Plant Manager B.C. Jolmson said
the blaze was contained in a rear
area by the plant's automatic
sprinkler system . He refused,
however, to list a ca\llle.
Logan firefighters, who got help
from firefighting units from
Hocking, Athens, Vinton and Perry
counties, say the blaze was extinguished about an hour after they
arrived on the scene .

B RGA I

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16TH AND SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17TH
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT

I WOMEN'S WINTER

SALE PRICES
EASY
CHAIRS
Selec t a c hair now , la y it
away and we ' ll d e li ver
for Christmas . Kroehler
and Berkline c hairs in a
wide array of s tyl es,
fabric covers and col
ors.

PAJAMAS
AND NIGHT SHIRTS

I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
i
I

WOMENS WINTER
.
GOWNS
Lon g and shor t styles . Sizes xs,
smal l, medium. la rge, ex tr a

large and ex tr a, ex tra large . En
ti r e stock o n sale_ Solid colors.

al l

f amous

!
!I

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
!Disebarges Nov. 14!
Juanita Arthur, William Battrell,
Ruth Bowling, Janie Bowman, Alice
Croyle, Mrs. Douglas Davis and
daughter ; Mrs. John Davis and son;
Mrs. Rodney Frecker and son;
Angella Garten, Tera Goodwin,
Ronald Hawleyh, Mrs. Charles
Howard and son; Vivian Jolly,
Albert Keaton, Jr., Cecil Kirk,
Preston Mustard, Mrs. John Nibert
and son; Maude Persinger, Mrs.
Marvin Rocchi and son; RJyan
Russell, Michael Sanders, Joseph
Schirmer, Anna Shaw, Richard
Shaw, Bette Sheets, Gertrude Short,
Mary Skaggs, David Stamper and
PAtrick Stanton.
(Birtb)
Mr. and Mrs. George Allen,
Gallipolis, daughter.

Boys
Boys
Boys
Boys

WESTMORELAND
GLASSWARE

and
and
and
and

Vests ............
Vests ............
Vests ............
Vests ............

S14 . 76
$19 .46
$23 .36
531.16

THIS CHRISTMAS
GIVE A DESK
FROM OUR SELECTION
FURNITURE, lrd FLOOR

brands

Another big shipment, new coloiS of

SAVE 20%

'6 40
sa 00
60
'12 ()()

WOMEN ' S S8 .00
WINTER GOWNS ... . .. ,
•
WOMEN 'S SlO .OO
WINTER GOWNS ........
,
WOMEN 'S S12 .00
U1
WINTER GOWNS .. .... , · ;,,
WOMEN ' S SlS.OO
WINTER GOWNS ......
,

coral and green, also white. Arranged
lor your easy selection.

ARTIFICIAL

Dried flowers and leaves, silk flowers,

SALE PRICES

SALE I

CHRISTMAS

A big selection of s tyl es in s lipov ers, car
digans and sleeveless s w ea ter s. S izes S, M, L
and XL . ,-he perf ec t Christmas gift for the
m e n on your list .

you need now.
Housewares Department, 1st Floor

TABLE
COVERS

SALE PRICES

fR.~
CHILDREN ' S
~~
.-,r ~:T:" COATS AND JACKETS
{· .· ,:''; Jl(: ~, two
Entire stock on sa le for th.ese
days . Si2es 2 to 14. Man y

~

l.'·' .

f' \ · .•.
·~ft ;
\.
. "'•\ , ' , ~
-·

hooded sty les . 100 per ce nt
nyl on a n d co tton and nylon
b lenas . Ch ildre n 's Depart
ment, 2nd F loor . Reg . pn ces
520 .00 lo 166.00 .

SAVE 20%
Buy t ab le covers you ' ll nee d for Thanksgiving
(November 22) and the holiday season. Entir e
s tock included . Oblongs, ovals, squares,
rounds . Big se lec t ion of co lors and patterns .

SALE PRICES

Children's
Children's
Children's
Children's

'20.00 Coats and
'27 .00 Coats and
'32.00 Coats and
'48.00 Coats and

Jackets .......... '16.00
Jackets .......... '21.60
Jackets .......... 125.60
Jackets ......... '38.40

Autu workers oul

SAVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

WOMEN'S WINTER

ROBES

WOMEN'S
ANGEL
TREADS

GIRLS' KNIT TOPS
Pullovers , turtle nec k s and some hooded tops .
Sizes 2 to 4, 6 to 8 and 10 through 14. Regular
prices $5 .00 to $13.00 .

Regular $4 .00 and S-4 .50
Angel
T r eads
Good
selection of colors . An
ideal Chri stm as gif t S,
M . L . )( L . Limited quan
1ity

SAVE 20%

Girls '6.00 Tops .......................... Sale '4.80
Girls '7.00 Tops. ......................... Sale 15.60
Girls '9.00 Tops .. ........ ....... .......... Sale '7.20
Girls '11.00 Tops ......................... . Sale '8.80

20~.

Women ' s SIS .OO Winter Robes •••• Sl2 .00
Women ' s $21 .00 Winter Robes .,., Sl6 .80

Women 's S25.00 Winter Robes • ..• $20 .00
Women ' s $32.00 Winter Robes ••••

us.6G

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE!

JUNIOR TOPS
An excellent selection of junior size tops in
knits , suedes, solid colors and stripes . Junior
sizes s, M , Land XL. Regular pri ces are from
$7.00 to $18 .00 .

Junior 18.00 Tops .......................... ... '6.56
Junior 110.00 Tops. ............. .. .... ........ 18.20
Junior '12.00 Tops ...... _..................... '9.84
Junior 16.00 Tops .............. , ........... 13.12
1

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE!

WINTER COATS

l

1/2

KROMEX
QUART CASSEROLE

Microwave oven sale with metal casserole
holder.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio lAP ! More than 4,1100 members of
United Auto Workers Local 969
went on strike Thursday against
the General Motors Fisher Body
plant in Columbus.
The union and tbe company had
been trying to negotiate a new
three-year contract since mid
July . Negotiations
were
scheduled to resume Friday .
Union spokesmen said a strike
waa necessary because many
d.iaagreetlll?flts remained .

built by the Pomeroy Otamber of Commerce . Pictured
are, front, Guy Morris ; back , 1-r, Chuck Mullen, Kenn y
Klein, and Don Snyder .

Teacher rally slated
Saturday in Pomeroy
A rally will be staged in Pomeroy
at 1:30 p.m. Saturday to demonstra te the solidarity of teachers
across the state in &gt;l!lpport of the
Meigs Loca l Teachers eight week
old strike, Eugene Brundige,
president of the Ohio Education
Assoctaton, sald late Friday mor·
ning .
In a press conference Brundige
announced the rally which will be
he ld in fr ont of the Meigs Inn . He
said that ed ucation associations
across t he state ha ve been invited to
attend the rally.
Brundige indicated that he is
hopeful that a negotiations session
being held in Columbus starting at 2

Two men injured

A t remendous selection of styles and
col or s in long and short style$. An e)(
ce ll en t time to buy for Christmas oiv ·
ing . L.orralne , Phil Maid and Katl
makes . All si zes i nc luding ex frli Iaroe
sizes. Reg . pri ces$1J.OO to536.00.

SAVE

WORK ON STAGE UNDERWAY - Work on the
stage located on the up per parking lot in Pomeroy was
in full swing Thursday morning. The stage is being

...

Slip into something Playtex and get
$1.00 refund on any Playtex bra or girdle in stock. Details available in
Lingerie Department, 2nd Floor.

SPECIAL SALE!

PRE CHRISTMAS SALEI

Junior , missy si zes . hal t si zes and extra
large sHes Big selection of st ye ts . Ou r
all weather coats are included in this
sa le. Buy for yoursel f or Chris tm as Qi\1
1ng Regular prt c e~ S56 00 to S155 00.

SPECIAll

SALE PRICES
/.

TWO DAY SALE!

Secretaries, roll tops and knee hole
desks in many different styles. Choose
walnut, oak or maple finishes.

Housewares, 1st Floor

MEN'S
EATERS

FLOWERS

FRIDAY . NOVEMBER 16, 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

1

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY SALE

MEN'S WINTER

JACKETS AND
VESTS

Two men are listed in guarded
condition tile intensive care unit of
Holzer Medical Center following a
two-vehicle, head-&lt;Jn collision last
night on SR 7, five-tenths of a mile
north of Georges Creek Rd .
Called t.o tb e scene at 10 : :;o p .m ,
the Gallia-Meigs Post, Highway
Patol, r eports tbat a nortb bound
auto operated by Nathaniel T . Rife,
17, Cheshire, and a south bound
vehicle operated by Charles Adams.
25, Sandyville , W.Va ., colllded head on on the state route .
The patrol reports a minor hre,
whic h was extinquished by an
unid enti fi ed passing motorisl ,
erupted following impa ct. The
Gallipolis City Flre Department was
called t.o the scene, but tbe blaze was
out upon it 's arrival.
The GaUia County Em ergency
Medical Service reports tbal upon
it 's arrival at th&lt;' accident, Adams
was pinned in his vehicle . Rife had
reportedly been removed from his
auto and was ready lor transport.
Both drivers were transported by
tb e squad to Holzer Med ical Center ,
where Adams was taken into
surgery at 11 :45 p.m and later
transferred to tbe ICU . Adams
suffers from a fractured left leg,

fractured ribs and multiple
lacerations.
Rife w85 admitted to tbe ICU for
treatment of a flail chest wound,
pulmonary and cerebral contusions.
Botb vehicles were demolished .

The

accident

rema ins

under

10 vest 1ga lion .

A Vinton
woman, Odessa
Morrison. 27, was cited on charges of
DWl and operating a vehicle witbout
a license following an accident on SR
5&gt;4, a t milepost 10. at 5: 15 p.m .
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Morrison struck a
parked veh icle owned by J oyce
Cremeans , Bidwell
There was moderate damage tu
the Cr emeans auto. slig ht damage to
the Morrison veh..i cle.
A Kw Grande man, Elijah Y1sa,
18. was Cited on a charge of reckless
operation followirg a mishap on
East College Avenue at 7:20p.m .
Officers report an aulD operated
by Yisa turned onto College Ave ,
slid off tb e right side of the roadway
and struck a parked vehicle owned
hy Joseph Leach, Bidwell .
There was severe damage to the
Leach auto, moderate damage to tbe
Yisa vehicle .

p.m. today under the auspices of the
Ohio Department of Education wiU
bring a settlement to the strike
which is the longest in duration in
Ohio this year .
Should a settlement fail to be forthcoming at the Columbus sess1on
being attended by full teams of
negotiators from the Meigs Local
Board of Ed ucation and the Meigs
Loca l Teachers Association, the
Ohio Education Association will appeal to the community for a settlement, Brundige indicated . The
stated that Judge Robert E . Buck,
Meigs County Probate Court Judge,
will be asked to act upon a suit In his
court requesting that the court take
over tbe functions of the Meigs Local
Board of Education if the settlement
does not evolve .
Keynote speaker at the Saturday
rally, Brundige reports, will be Don
Hill who is president of the Minnesota Ed ucation Association . The
Ohio Education Association stated
that the 113,1100 members of the
organization are behind a settlement
of the local strike as well as the
Natioru.l Education Association.
On a proposal of tbe teachers
group for 60 percent of new moneys
coming into the Meigs Local
District. Brundige reports that the
proposal pertains to genera l
operating funds and not funds for
building improvement and other
capital improvements. He said that
tbe figure is not excessive.
He indicat es that the strike should
be ended but only through fair and
eq uitable contra ct agreements
reached at the hargairung table.

Iranian situation worsens
By The Associated Press
An
estimated
80,000
demonstrator s marched on tbe U.S.
Embassy in Tehran today and
Moslem militants tbrMtened to lake
harsh action against thelr hostages
inside tb e mission if the United
States forced tbe shah to go to any
country but Iran.
NBC-TV news in Tehran said the
march on the embassy was the
biggest since the hostages were
seized Nov. 4. After Moselm Sabbath
prayers, loudSJ!e8kers broadcasting
from
minibuses
led
the
demonstrators in anti -American
chants.
The protest took oo a carnival
atmosphere,
the
British
Broadcasting Corp . reported, with
families and vendors minng with
the demoostrat.ors . A loog line of
Tehran taxis drove past the
embassy carrying stuffed animal
effigies of woed and straw which
pe&lt;~ple in the crowd struck while
shouting anti-American slogans. It
' was not clear what tbe animals
signified.
A spokesman for the militants
inside tbe embassy told Tehran
Radio : " We announce tbe message
of the Iranian people to the world
that if America expeLs the shah, it
will be committing an offense even
greater than its previous ooes. The
shah should be delivered to the
Iranian nation with his hands tied. If
America expels the shah, it must be
certain that harsher decisions will
be taken against the hostages."
The Associated Press in Bonn .

Weather
P"rt ly cloudy torught and Satur·
day . Lows tonight around -10 and
highs Saturday bet ween &gt;5 and 60
The chance of precipiLllton is 19 percent tonight and near z.•ro SatUI dar .
EXTENDEU ounOOK
Extended forecast for Sunday
lhrough Tuesday : Fair and mDd
Sunday lhrougb Tuesday . Hlgbo
In the 50o and lows In tbe upper
30sand40o.

CLEVELAND !AP) - H~are

the numben dntWII Thursday In
the weet.ly Ohio Lottery game :
Boii81Wl %1; flO; 7686;,22331;
211!173.
Pryamld: 83; 284 ; 1075 .

West Germany reached tbe embassy
rn Tehran by telephooe and spoke
with a student who said, "So far
those hostages are safe here and in a
comfortable condition ."
"'But I'm not sure what would
happen if the United States lets tb e
shah leave. I'm not sure what action
the people will take."
The broadcast. monitored in
London , also said the militants
would boycott American goods and
that they urged other Iranians to ban
U S. products in any way possible

during the coming week.
So far tbe U.S. government baa
refused to meet the militants'
demand for the shah's extradltim,
and has given no indication It
planned to expel him .
Ayatollah Ruhollah Kbomelnl,
Iran's 79-year-old revolutionary
leader ,
has
canceled
all
appointments f!l' the next three
weeks because of "sllght fatlgue and ·.
illness," the state radio said, and'
foreign diplomats In Tehran
predicted a loog siege for the
hostages .
As the crisis entered its 13th day
today, the United States mounted a
new initiative to win lncreaaed
domestic and International pressure
for release of the captives, said by
the State Department to number 10
to 62 Americana and eight nonAmericans.
Tbe
number
ol 11011\aaea
prevlolllllY hid WB~··.......•ed at
nearly 100, but the State Department
said
Thursday night that about 30
Judges for the 1!1111 Meigs County
Iranian employees were freed
and Vinion County Junior MiM
shortly after the embauy tateowr
Programs were announced today by
Nov.
4.
Southeast Ohlo Junior Miss , Inc .,
Iran was stlll in!lstlng that Shah
sponsors of the annual event.
Mohanunad Reza Pahlavi, Oll8ted
Meigs County Judges are Mrs.
by Kbometni 's f&lt;rcesln January, be
Jayne Eddy, vocal instructor at Vin·
extradited from the United States
ton County high school; Merlin Ross,
before the captives could be
Rio Grande College, and Terry
released, and there was no sign the
Collins, chairman of the Social
crisis was about to end soon , foreign
Studies Department at Vinton Coun diplomats
In Tehran told The
ty high school.
Associated
Press In Bonn, West
Judges for tbe Vinton County
Germany,
by
telephme .
program are Mrs. Janet Korn, past
Further
complicating
the situation
judge for the local Junior Miss
rwas
an
apparenUy
growing
tfupute
Program, Pomeroy; Ron Vance,
between
some
Iranian
goverrunent
assistant principal at Wahama High
offictal.s and the demmstrators who
School, and past judge for the Junior
seized
tbe embassy . The conflict,
Miss Program, and Rick Patrick,
which
intensified
Thursday, left It
Athens, representative of The Blue
unclear
who
would
decide th&lt;
Cross of Central Ohio.
hostages'
fate
.
Finals for both programs will be
held Saturday night, November 17 ,
at Southern high school, Racine,
LOCATION CHANGE
beginning at 8:10p.m .
Salllrday DlCbt'• Melp Jwlior
The two local winners wlli
Mila Pageant bu been moved
represent their county at the Ohio
from lbe Melgo Junior High
Junior Miss Finals in Columbus,
School
to tbe SGalbem Hlgb
Ohio, January 12, l!WI.
Scboolln
Racine llDII will olarl at
Special guests will be the recent
8:
10
p.m.
There are oeven cwinners of tbe Gallia and Jackson
testanlll
tbls
year, !oar fnm
County Junior Miss Programs, sponMeigs aud three from Vlnloll.
sored by Lear Photography ot
Galli polls.

Pageant
judges

announced

Entire stock sa le pr iced . Sizes 36 to
48 Good style selection in wa ist
length and l onger lengt h sty l es.

Regular '16.00

SQUAD CAlLED
Tbe Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to Route 143 at 12 :59 a .m.
Thursday for Rita Roush who had an
arm laceration . She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

JEANS

LANE
CEDAR
CHESTS

New sh1pment just received Choose

straight leg or bool fl are !.fyle •n
si zes 18 to 41 waist, lengths 30 to 36
inches . wrangler 1-4 ounce, No
FAu lt, Pre washed Blue Den im

SEEKUCENSE
A marriage licell.!le was issued tu
James David Barrett, 29, Rt. I,
Lanpvllle and Virginia Gail
Wbafey, 30, Middleport.

no later lllan 2 p.m . Friday, Nov. 16.
~ will be a limite&lt;: lo.unber of
Uclletsat the door.

SAVE 22%
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets
Jackets

enttne
A break in the eight week old Meigs Local Teachers Strike appeared quite possible today.
According to a release from the Meigs Local TMchers Association a meeting was to get Ullderway
in Columbus today and it was indicated that an agreement between the Meigs Local Board of
Education and the Meigs Local Teachers As.ociation might be reached by 6 p.m. Sunday .
The release states :
" David Gleason, superintendent of the Meigs Local School District and Bonnie Fisher, president of
tbe Meigs Local Teachers Association, announced toda y that negotiators representing the board of
education and tbe teachers' association will meet Friday, at 2 p.m. in the offices of the State Department of Education to seek a solution to tbe e1ght week teachers' strike.
"Talks are scheduled to be conducted through tbe weekend and an agreement is hoped for by 6 p.rr.
on Sunday, Nov . l8.
Both Supt. Gleason and Mrs . Fisher urge thelr constituent representatives to respect the process
which has been set in motion to fina • workable solution ."
Meigs Probate Court Judge Robert E . Buck who had oeeu providing quarters for negotiations in the
teachers strike of tbe Meigs Local School DL•tnct last week today issued a statement in regard to
negotiations heing held in Columbu.s.
He said:
"I am hopeful that positive actwn will come from the current talks heing conducted in Columbus
and feel that each of us should endeavor to maintain a positive attitude toward these negotiations.
Furthermore, I feel satisfied that botb sides have been able to meet in a neutral forum at this time.
As I previously indicated, I feel that urgency in tbe negotiation process should out..t.rip either side 's
comrnittment to strict policy considerallons ."

Boy s sizes 8 through 20 in a fine setec
l ion of styles Many are hooded Pick

518.95
S24 .95
S29 .95
S39.95

•

Strike may end

JACKETS &amp; VESTS

Women's
Women 's
Women's
Women 's

Regu lar prices S6 .00 to 518 .00 .

MEETS MONDAY
The Meigs County Men 's
Fellowship of the Meigs County
Clwrches of ChriSt will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday at the Middleport
Church.
Carl Hysell, county
juvenile officer, will be speaker and
will show a film.

. FRIDAY DEADLINE
'l'fcllet:J·to 'the Eastern banquet to
be help Montlay mu.st be purchased

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

SEE OUR LINE OF

in grapes and many more. Select what

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Eloise E blin , Mid dleport ; Clara Heines, Hemlock
Grove; Malvera Wheeler, Middleport; Flora McCoy, Shade ; Ronda Hoekstra, New Haven.
Discharged-Linda Bailey, Edwin
Corzart, Pansy Young, Shelly Roush ,
Paul Nease. Harold Demosky,
Michael Harbour.

VOL. XXVIII NO . 152

BOYS' WINTER

out tne jackets you need now .

$7.00 Winter PJ 's and Shirts ..•. SS.60
$9.00 Winter PJ's and Shirts .... $7.20
S 11.00 Winter PJ's and Shirts ... $8.80
S1S.OO Winter PJ's and Shirts .. 512.00

(USPS 145-960)

at

TWO DAYS ONLY

Shorties and regu lar s tyl es, all sizes. Flannels
and brushed nylon . Entire stock included in
this IWo day sa le. Regular prices $6.00 to
18 00
$ · ·
SAVE 20%

TWO DAY SALE!

patterns,

---·-·-·-·---r

poly ferns in various sizes. Assorted coloiS

WATER MEETING
There will be a m eeting of tbe
Southeast Ohio Tributaries River
Basin Policy adVISory committee
and citizen-technical advisory committee Nov. 27 at 7:30 p.m. in the
Lyne Center (upstairs in gymnasium) of Rio Grande College, Rio
Grande . Purpoee will be for committee review and approval consideration ot the revised mine
drainage section of the Part lll
Water Quality Management Plan .

e

DAYS

~;;;;;-~;·;-o~;;;;Me-;T,";;d"F"LooR'-1--------·----

•

$13 99

We have an excellent se lection of Lane Cedar
Chests . Wond e rful for giving a t Christ m as
time . Select yours now . f ur nitur e d e partment ,
3rdf loor .

SALE PRICES

SPECIAL SALEI

MEN'S TRYELLA
FLANNEL SHIRTS
campus Tryella shirts, 65 per cent
polyester, JS per cen t cotton
Regular and western st yles Siz~ S.
M, L. XL and XXL Plaid patterns

Men 's
Men 's
Men ' s
Men ' s

513 .95
515.95
516.95
$17 .95

Flannels
Flannels
Flannels
Flannels

.... . .. .. . . ..... S11.8S
........ . , . ..... Sl3. 55
. ....... . . . ..... S14.40
..... . .......... S1S.25

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30AM TO 5 PM

---"""-

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

A SANDYVILLE , W. VA., MAN was pinned in this
vehicl•late last night following a two-vehicle, head-&lt;Jn
collision on SR 7, near the Sta le Roadside Park at
K~nauga . Charles Adams , ~.and Nathaniel T. Rile,

17, Cheshire, the operator of the other vehicle, are both
listed in guarded condition in the intensive care unil of
Holzer Medica ; Center .

TOYS PRESENTED - More than 30 toys, made
by members of Meigs County Granges were presented
to Teresa Collins, director of nurses at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Thursday afternoon . The toys will
be given to children who are patients in the hospital. '
Each toy was filled with Poly.fil which is made by the
Fairfield Processing Company . The National Grange,
along with Fairfield Processing Company , sponsor the ,
program each year witb tbousands of toys giv~n to
hospitals throughout the United States. This is orie of

many communty service adlvitiM !lpOIISC)I"eel by the
Grange. Participating Granges were Rock Sprtnga,
Hemlock Grove, Racine, HarrlaonviUe, Star, IJid
Columbia. Pictured are,l-4', Mrs. Colllns, Mrs. Mendall
Jordan, Colwnbia ; Mrs. Herbert Roush, Oblo Valley,
Goldie Reed, Hemlock Grove; Barbera Fry, Rock
Springs; Bernice Midkiff, Star, lioldiDg ~
Vaughan, Emma Adams, Racine, and Ruby 14mhert,
Star.
~

~·

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