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

D-12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 16, 1979

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f

Country festival announced
PT. PLEASANT - The Mason
County Farm Museum will hold an
old-fashioned Country Festival
Saturday and Sunday. Sept. 22 and
23.
Everyone is welcome and ad·
mission is free. according to Waldon
Roush, president of the museum .
Hours of the event are 10 a.m. to 9
p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m. to 6
p.m. on Sunday.
Roush says some interesti ng
activities have been planned by
Hazel Smith and her committees.
Visitors will be entertained both
days with country music, a nd
everyone will have a chance to
square dance on Saturday from 3 to 9
p.m.
There will be wheat threshing
Saturday with an old steam engine
powering
antique threshing
machine. The grist mill, also steam
engine powered, will be in operation
both days.
Corn meal , both yellow and white,
will be on sale throughout the
festival.
Some of the crafts planned for
each day include spinning, rug
weaving and whittling.
Cecil Smith and his committee will
be making apple cider to be offered
John E. Greene of Milton will have
a yoke of oxen and a span of mules
on the grounds. Rides will be offered
on a sled pulled by the oxen or in a
wagon drawn by the mules.
Across-cut saw contest, sponsored
by Keefer's service center. will be

includes rom

Heath United Methodist Church,
Middleport.
Mr s. Thomas explained the
operation of t.he senior citizen
program and how it it funded. She
also distributed leaflets explaining
the program.
There were three guests in
attendance and Jack Walker ,
president, presided.
Dinner was prepared and served
by the ladies of the church.

MARRIAGE LICENSES

GALUPOLIS - Four couples
applied for marriage license in
Ga!lia County Probate Court this
week.
Making application were :
Michael E. Dressel, 20, Gallipolis,
foreman, and Denee M. Oesch, ·18,
POMEROY - A 16-year-old youth
Gallipolis, sales ,clerk.
been committed to the Ohio
has
Timothy E. Gillespie, 19,
Youth
Commission for violation of
Gallipolis, electrician, and Carla D.
probation.
The youth has appeared
Rocchi , 17. Gallipolis, receptionist.
four
times
in Juvenile Court on
Donald R. Mount, 19, Bidwell,
·
delinquency
charges since April,
deck han d. and Tamara J. Theiss,
1979.
17, Bidwell, farmer .
In July, he was given a suspended
Earl E. Stover, 26, Gallipolis,
commitment
to the Ohio Youth
Mason County School's employee,
Commission.
and Electa L. Martin, 24, Gallipolis,
On September 16th, the youth was
hospital attendant.
found in violation of probation by the
Juvenile Officer, Carl Hysell, while
on the Pomeroy parkirig lot. The
commitment was made by Judge
Robert Buck. The youth will be
taken to a Direct Community
Placement within the state
sometime within the next two weeks
by Hysell.
The following traffic cases were
terminated by Judge Buck:
Brian Bowling, 17, Racine on
~
charges
of speeding. Bowling was
e
Willis T. Leadingham
•
fined
$19
and costs.
e
Reahr
e
Teresa Fetty, 16, Rt. 1, Langsville,
on charges of Left of center.
(accident involved). Fetty was fined
~.
$20 and costs.
e
It's nor unusual to find t hat the amount of money needed to finance e
Ray Patterson, 17, Rutland, on
e the l?urchase of a hom e and th e ~.~mount of cash in the bank account are • charges
of passing at an
too close tor comfort. When does it mak.e sense to pul l back your horns •
•
• and when would propriety say - "Go the limit." ?. .
intersection. Patterson was fined $15
•
It's better not to spend ev ery last cent avai lable for a home if you •
and costs.
customar i l y buy big ti cket items, such as cars and appli ances on tirTl e; •
•
Mary Ann Tripp, 16, Mason, W.
if the local property ta xes ar e likely to go higher ; or if you have any e
•
e unusual financ ial obligations , such as med ica l care for a member of e Va . on charges of failure to yield.
e !he family .
•
(accident iiwol ved). Tripp was fined
On th e other hand, you might just ify going the limit if you can make •
•
$20.00
and costs.
• a big, down. pay men! ; if th e home is unlikely to need mai.ntenance or •
Cline, 26, Rt. 3, P.omeroy,
Richard
•
repa1rswh1ch are aOove and beyond your personal capability ; if your
· outlook for finan cial advance m en t is bright, and if your famiy has pro· •
on charges of passing at an
41 ven that it c an tigh ten belts if yo u really have to.
e intersection. Cline, who has had two
traffic offenses was fined $15. and
e It ther e is anvt~ing we can do to help you 1n the fi eld of real estate
costs and his operator 's licenses
e please phon e or drop on al LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE , 512 Second e suspended for 30 days.
• 4ve., Gallipol•s . Phone 446 ·7699. We'r e here to help.
•
This disposition will he suspended,
~
all except for seven days operator·~

16-year old youth
committed to state

•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~al

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CEstate ~

.:

Today

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GOING TliE LIMIT

.:

.
•

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••

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

•.

Wants action ...

hrNtd and

MIDDLEPORT
Eleanor
Tbomas, executive director of the
Meigs County Council on Aging, was
the guest speaker at the regular
meeting of the Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club Friday night held at the

~lldrr""' "k ,, .....,, _,.,.1 po·r ..,.•l•t• r •

I

Rotarians given program review

an

:
~

I

beans. hot dogs, baked goods, ·pit
rodsted ham, ice cream, and cold
pop.
"Everyone should bring their
families both days and enjoy the old
fashioned fun and food," Roush
concluded.

held at 3 p.m. Saturday.
There will be goods for sale such
as clothing, plants. potting soil,
garden vegetables, books, furniture,
records, tapes, bird seed. jewelry'
corn meal and miscellaneous items.
Food also will be available. The
nwnu

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DR.RATANSHAH

Radiologist
joins clinic
GALLIPOUS- Holzer Clinic Ud.
Administrator, Robert E. Daniel,
has announced the recent arrival af
another physician to the Holzer
Clinic Ltd. staff, Dr. Ratan S. Shah,
a Board Certified Radiologist.
Dr. Shah joins Dr. John Markley
and Dr. Tony Sola, who comprise the
Radiology Staff at Holzer Medical
Center.
A native of Ahmedabad, India , Dr.
Shah attended St. Xavier's Science
College and received his M.B.B.S.
degree from the Municipal Medical
College In Ahmedabad In 1974. His
postgradll8te education in India in·
eluded an internship at V.S. General
Hospital from 1972·73 and as House
Officer at Nagari Ophthalmic In·
stitute, V.S. General Hosplial and B.
General Hospital from January 1974
to March 1975.
Dr. Shah completed his internship
in the United States from July 1975 to
June 1976 at Mercy CathoUc Medical
Center of Southeastern fen·
nsylvania in Philadelphia, and en·
tered Radiology Residency in July
1976 at Gennantown Hospital In
Philadelphia. . He completed his
Residency there In 1!179 before
coming to Gallipolis.
Dr. Shah is tioard certiiied In
Diagnostic Radiology, holds state
licenses from Ohio, Maine and Pen·
nsylvania, and is a member ol the
American College af Radiology. Dr.
Shah resides in Spring Valley Green
Apartments in Gallipolis.
license suspension, providing that
"Cline attend a driving school in
Athens, which he agreed.
Cindy Haggy , 17, Rt. I,
Middleport, on charges of failing to
stop at a stop sign. Miss Haggy was
fined $10. and costs.

DEAR SIR :
On October 4, 1978, an Adv.ioory
Jury awarded judgment in favor of
my wife and I amount of $1,050 plus
costs of the action, with interest at
lhe rate of 6 percent.
It was ordered by journal entry
executed by Judge Ronald R.
Calhoun, that we recover from the
defendant Robert Meade the sum of
$1,050 compensatory ·damages, with
the costs of this action with interests
at the rate of 6 percent.
Precipe fa- Execution, dated April
14, 1979, has been fUed with the
.Gallia County Clerk of Ccurts.
Sheriif James Montgomery, upon
pressure from me and my attorney,
made a feeble attt~~~pt to collect
this judgment from Robert Meade
and reported lhat Meade had no
property or money to be used in
settling this judgment. This report
made o.n August 29, 1979. Only 11
months after judgment was
awarded.
In reality, Mr. Meade has 1 1963
Rambler a utomobile, a 1968
Chevrolet automobile, and a 1974
Chevrolet automobile, aU with clear
tiUes at Jhe time.
It is now September 15, 1979, and
still no action has been taken to
protect my legal rights:
Why does chief law officer of the
county not do his duty? Is it because
Robert Meade is a deputy sherilf? Is
it because this case is lost in a duel
between Judge Calhoun and Sherilf
Montgomery?
Something has to he done about
the deplorable condition of the
judicial system in Gallia County. I
invite replies from other citizens and
my many friends of Gallla County.
Sincerely
Mr. and Mrs. WUJiam Lee
SNIPERS KILL TWO
SAN SALVADOR, El Salvador
(AP) - Snipers, firing from~e roof
of a police building, traded shots
with leftist demonstrators, leaving
at least two persons dead and more
than 30 wounded on the eve of
independence &lt;Jay in this tiny
Central American nation. ·
·President Carlos Humberto
Romero's military-backed
government canceled today's
scheduled celelration marking the
I38th aMiversary of the nation's
independence from Spanish rule.
Security forces girded for more
violence as three major left-wing
anti-government groups called for
independence day demonstrations,
including a funeral procession for
those killed in Friday's shootout.

Court News ·

••

"

•

",,

GALLIPOLIS - Eleven ca- ~
were wntinued in Gallipolis;
Municipal Court Friday.
:
Charged with DWI, assault,\;
physical harm and no operator's •
license, the cases against Samuel ~
Meade, 18, Bidwell were continued. ~
Denver Wallace, Gallipolis,"
pleaded not guilty to a charge of: •
domestic violence. Bond was set at; .
$500.
:
Charged with grand theft aiM,~
David M, Harmon, Athens, pleadedM. :
guilty to the reduced charge o •.
unauthorized UBe of a motor vehicle!
The case was continued foC::
.
. ~~entencmg.
"
Tmy Slooe, 24, Gallipolis, pleaded::
not guilty to a charge &lt;i DWI. Bond~:
was set at $500.
•
Charged with . DWI, Dennl~
Fraley, 26, .Galllpolls, pleaded no(
guilty. Bond was set at 1319.
~
The case against Paul G. Cclllns,~
52, Ironton, charged with OWl, was·
continued.
;:
Charged with driving while under,
suspension · and no operator's.
llceru~e, the cases against David E.:
Stroud, 21, Galllpolis, wert!
continued.
.
Jerry Colley; 33, Gallipolla,•
pleaded not guilty to a charge ofifailure to control a motor vehicle; ·
Entering a plea ol not guilty to a·
charge of failure to display valid:
registration, the case against
Kamron Rezal, %1, Rio Grande, was,
continued.
:
Ten other cases were tennlnated"
In Judge James A. Bennett's court'
Friday.
:
Orin D. Wheeler, 21, Gallipolis;
pleaded guilty to charges ol Dwt
and failure to obey a lawful order~
and was fined ~ plus a six mcnt~~:
sentence, all but 10 days suspended:
A charge of failure 10 lltop after Ill!
accident wu clisnlaaed at the
request &lt;i Ule proaecutlon.
~
Charged with physical barm, the:
case against Doug Wheeler:
Gallipolis, was dhnt•w at the
request &lt;i lhe prosecution.
Dickkie VIars, Lawrence Co1111ty, ·
was found not guilty to a charge of
trespallling.
Forfeiting $25 on a charge o(
operating a vehicle with a defe!:tlve
exhaUBt was Bertie Browning, 23,
Galllpolla.
Francis Burdell, 70, Bidwell,
waived $30 on a charge of failure to
yield.
Fined or forfeiting bond on
charges of ezcesaive apeed were
Samuel L. Morrill, 39, Gallipolis,
$29; Beverly Bums, 19, IUo Grande,
$32; and, John Thomas, 31,
Gallipolis, f;ll.

..

MEETING SET
NEBO- There will be,a meeting
of Ule officers and members of the
Nebo Cemetery Asioclatlon at Nebo
Church on Saturday, Sept. 29 at 1:15
p.m. Reports of put activities IinCe
last meeting and any new twlnesB
will be considered.

Stewart facing murder charge

Middleportyouthdiesfrom gunshot wound
Keith Landers, 17, a 1979 graduate
of Meigs High School, was killed
early Sunday morning by a .38
calilre •revolver allegedly fired by
his stepfather , Tom Matthew
Stewart, 31, at the Stewart residence
In Middleport.
Meigs County Sheriff James J .
Proffitt reported Stewart. Is belnj(

held in the Mel£11 County jaU.
Stewart was to he arraigned In the
Meigs County Court tOday on a
murder charge, Prosecuting
Attorney Rick Crow said.
According to the report of Sherilf
Proffitt, the shooting occurred at the
Stewart residence at 235 S. Fourth
Ave., Middleport, about 12:30 a.m.

Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Stewart are
!II!Parated and in the process of
getting a divorce, the sheriff
reported.
It was reported that Mrs. Stewart
had left the house about 15 minutes
before the shooting occurred. Young
Landers was lying on ~ bed watching
television when the shooting.

Street brawl ends with .stabbings
TWo Point Pleasant men received.
stab wounds in an apparent brawl
Sunday evening al 11 :30 p.m. on
Kanawha Street at the entrance to
W.Va. Malleable Iron Co., according
to the Point Pleasant Police
Department.
Wounded were Anthony E .
Blessing, 19, 2003 North Main Street,
and Roy Lee Mills, 21 , 211 Main
Street. Blessin~ was admitted to

Pleasant Valley Hospiial with a stab
wound in the left side, and is listed in
satisfactory condition. Mills, taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital by the
Point Pleasant Rescue Squad, was
treated for a stab wound to the ann
but refused to be admitted.
Details are sketchy, according to
Patrolman Jerry Higginbottom, who
investigated the incident.
The Police Department were

turnipg the rePOrt In to Prosecuting
Attorney Dan RoD this morning for
further investigation and possible
future charges.
There wer~ nunors of a third
person Involved in the stabbing
incident, but according to the Police
Department, there have been no
reports of such person. However,
there wece no witneSses at the scene.

•

VOL XXVIII NO. 108

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Attorney Crow, BCI Agent Hennan
Henry, and Capt. Robert Beegle,
Gar Wolfe, investigator, and Deputy
David Ohlinger of the sheriif's
department.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call to the scene but
Landers was dead upon the unit's
arrival.
Middleport officers took Stewart
into custody outside the residence.
Stewart was reportedly not at the
residence when Mrs. Stewart left the
house a Short time before the
shooting.
.
0. Keilh Landers was preceded in
death by his fa Iller, Orville Landers.
He is survived by his mother , Judy
Landers Stewart ; three lrothers,
Robbie Eugene Landers, Charles
Andrew Landers and Thomas
Mathew Stewart, Jr., and a sister,
Tammy Jo Landers, all at home,
and several aunts and uncles.
(Continued on page 8)

KErniLANDERS

•

enttne

at

e

occw-red. He was hit in lhe face and
it was reported that he was knocked
from the bed by the impact. A
younger brother, Robbie, telephoned
for help after the shooting.
Young Landers was employed by
lhe village and he was held in high
regard by some of the neighbors for
whom he occasionally worked
during his time off from his regular
job. Nelghborl said he was per·
sonable and ambiUous · and had
secured another job in a trade which
he was to begin when he became 18.
Middleport Police requested lhe
assistance of the sheriff's
department following the shooting.
Answering the request wer.e Sherilf
Proffitt, Deputy Lou Oslxrne and
Sgt. Randy Forbes. Middleport
officers on the scene were Capt. Sid
little, Lt. Bill Miller, Sgt. Dave
Woolard and Sgt. Joon King. They
were joined by Dr. Joon Ridgway,
assistant coroner; Prosecuting

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 1979

Kennedy pushing tax cut, tough guidelines
WASHINGTON ( AP ) - Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy, at the brink of
a 1980 challenge to President Carter,
qgests It may take a tax cut soon
10 cope Wllh rising unemployment,
and tougher wage1Z"ice guidelines
to cope with inflation.
Insisting that he hasn 't decided
whelher to run , Kennedy silid he has
been "heartened and encouraged"
by the support generated in lhe 10
days since be said he'd consider it.
The MassachUBetts senator said
he had decided by Lalxr Day "that I
at least would not preclude the
possibility of candidacy ."
Always before, KeMedy had said
he upected Carter 10 run and
Intended to support him . But he said
he reconsidered during the swruner
at the urging af congressional
colleagues and other suppocters.
He said his family approved, and
he also concluded that a challenge to
tile incumbent president would not
divide the Democratic Party more
Ulan It ·already is divided .
" I became convinced that the
divisions that existed In the
Democratic Party and in the
country existed today ... and were
very deep-.;eated, and they would be

there whether l was .a candidate or
not," he said in an interview with
The Associated Press on Friday.
While Carter suppocters coo tend a
Kennedy challenge could be so
divisive as to make the Democratic
nominee vulnerable 10 a Republican
in lhe general election, the !.enator
said past Contests have seemed to
" energize the party. bring new
people in ."
He said those factors and, most
important, "my own deep concerns
about the di.i-ection oflhe nation, our
ability to deai with many of the
problems that we're facing here in
this country, about the mood of the
nation ," led him to consider
running .
' KeMedy said his decision is not
made yet, and he dDesll 't koow when
it will be . But he also said that if he
runs, he expects to lUIIpete in the
Iowa Democratic caucuses. They
will open . the delegate selection
process on Jan . 21 , and to run there ,
he would need some time 10 organize
and campaign.
He said economic problems, and
the way Carter is addressing them ,
are one of his principal concerns,
and will weigh heavily in his

decision about 1980.
Kennedy offered no specific
alternatives to carter economic
policies, but questioned whelher the
president's leadership can inspire
confidence thai such problems as
inflation •and recession will he
handled.
"It's back 10 whether lhe people
have a sense of confidence Ulat he
can deal with these issues, I think
'that's the matter of deepening and
increasing concern to people as we
ctme to lhe 1980s," he said.
On Thursday, an AP-NBC News
poll showed only 19 percent of those
questioned rated Carter's work
excellent or good . It. was the lowest
overall job rating for an American
president in 30 years.
Asked what he would do
differently, Kennedy said "the way
we ame to grips" with rising prices
and unemployment will set a course
for tile early 1980s.
"I today dm't call for a tax cut,
but I think we are going to have to he
sensitive to the need for that over,
potentially, the latter part of this

year and the first part of next," he
said. "How that is shaped,
formulated, is going to be a very
imporlllnt choice and decision by the
administration .. .. "
Treasury Secretary G. William
Miller said Friday that " at the
moment, it would be inappropriate
to consider a tax cut." Carter said on
July 16 that "ii unemployment starts
getting too high, then I will take
action," probably to lower lhe
payroll taxes that finance Social
Security.
But nine days later, he spoke out
against Republican tax-cutting
proposals. And administration
economic officials have been
playing down the possibility of
payroll tax cuts.
Kennedy also said he thinks pe~Je
are confused about the Carter
administration's commitment to
wage-price guidelines. He said
Americans don't know how sincere
thepresident is about his own
program.
He said voluntary guidelines
worked in the early 1960s. "As a

technique; it has merit." liut he said
it sometimes seems the guidelines
are not really the president's, but
only a project of inflation adviser
Alfred E. Kahn. He said tbat "leaves
some confusion on this ."
Again , Kennedy did not offer
specifics as to how he would make
the guidelines more forceful. Like
Carter, he opposes mandatory wage
and price controls.
Carter announced the current
guidelines last Oct. 24, to be
effective for one year. A revised
program is due soon.
The current standards call for
wage increases to be held to a
maximum of 7 percent, and for price
increases to be held onH1alf of one
percent below the average increases
of the last two years.
Despite that program , consumer
prices this year bave increased at an
annual rate of more than 13 percent.
The administration is trying now
to fashion a compromise that will
enlist lhe support of organized labor
for revised guidelines . .

On oth~r points, ~ennedy: -Said
he anticipates "a heavily-contested
battle" for the homination ii he runs,
and does not believe that Carter
would withdraw as a candidate no .
· matter what happens in the primary
elections.
-Sad it is "clearly a possibility"
that Chappaquiddick, the accident in
which Mary Jo K~echne drowned
in Kennedy's car 10 years ago, will
be raised during the campaign. "I'd
respond to questions about it, as I
have," he said.
-Said he has considered his
personal safety during a national
campaign: Two of his brothers were
assassinated, Robert as he
campaigned for the 1968 nomination,
John in 1963 as he prepared to seek
r~Jectlon to the presidency.
Edward Kennedy said it would be
foolhardy to ignore the risk, but that
to O'l'erstre88 it would IIJril.t hll
effectiveness. "But it's something
that I'm very much aware of, taking
lhe kinds of precautions that I think
are necessary."

Fire season hits

Brush fires blacken California skies
By The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Stubborn
!rush f1res roared out of control
today in Southern California ,
bla"ckening thousands of acres and
destroying more than a score of
fashionable homes as firefighters
called in reserves from as far away
as Maine and Rhode Island.
Residents of Hollywood Hills'
Laurel Canyon area were stUMed
when a fire pushed by 25 mph winds
burned its way through 19 expensive
homes in the wooded area
overlooking Los Angeles.
Among the homes destroyed were
lhose of blues musician John Mayall
and actress Mackenzie PhUIIps, a
regular on the CBS television series,
"One Day At A Time ."
"My home, my beautiful home,"
said George Hunt as he walked near
his home on Grandview Drive,
where houses are valued at as much
as $500,000. " It was so beautiful, so
lush here. "
Three hundred firefighters
stopped the flames after water drops

ELBERFELDS presents ...New
Seamless Stretch Cup Bras by Playtex·

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12 killed on highways

Air meta l l ic si lver, one of t he nices1 around .

By The Associated Press
At ieast 12 people were killed in
weekend traffic accidents in Ohio,
the Highway Patrol said Sunday
night. Two of the accidents,
resulting in lhree deaths, occurred
in Delaware County.
The patrol counts highway
fatalities in the state from 6 p.m.
Friday until midnight Sunday.
The dead:

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'76 PONTIAC GRAN PRIX

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L .J. Burgundy wi th matchi ng landau top. loaded . Nice, new Gran Prix
trade .

'76 BUICK SKYLARK
4 Or .• air cond ., one owner , V·6 eng . Economy here .

were made by helic~ters and two
"super scooper " airplanes that
skinuned the Pacific Ocean to fill
lheir water tanks.
The Forest Service asked for 800
firefighters to help the 2,473 men
and women battling the blazes which
had consumed more than 55,000
acres.
"We've gone about as far as we
can wilh what we have, so now we 're
drawing on our flreflghtln!l
resources nationally," U.S. Forest
Service spokesman Lee Redding
said Sunday.
The crews called in to help were
from stations in Indiana, Ohio,
Maryland, Pennsylvania, Maine ,
New Hampshire, Rhode Island,
Connecticut, Michigan , Minnesota
and Wisconsin.
Meanwhile, orders closing !lie
Angeles, Los Padres, Cleveland and
San Bernardino National Forests
were issued during the weekend
because of extreme fire hazard.
Only one of the major fires, the
Pinecrest blaze which at one time

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Ollar ends December 31 1979

· · · ·Erb·eaeras In .Pome·

PRI!Jf'~ FOR WINTER -

Dr. Jack Hart, Bunker Hill, was at

work SatUrday prejlaring for the upcoming wlnte.r m;:. The chalnnan
rl. the dlpertment of conununicaUve arts at Rio Gr
College, Hart's
wood-a~ttlllg efforl$ were motivated by having j~ , d $200 for a firllt
shipment of home heating fuel. Larry Ewing Photo{

l ;.

SUNDAY
MENTOR- Michael P. Fischer,
29, of . Mentor, in a motorcycle
accident on Ohio 306 in Lake County.
ST. CLAIRSVILLE - Debbie
Greenlee, 18, of Malaga, in a one-car
accident on Ohio 800 in Behnont
County.
FREMONT - Virgil W. Shobe II,
26, of Warren, Mich. , in a one-car
accident on Ohio 510 in Sandusky
County.
MARYSVILLE - Larry E. Ring,
38, of ~lain Clty, in a two-car
/ accident on n Union County road.

,,

SATIJRDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Ronald E.
Kingery Jr., 19, of Gallipolis, in a
one-car accident on a Gallia County
road.
AKRON - Lou J . Jackson, 54, of
Akron, in a two-vehicle accident on
Interstate 77 in Sun\mit County.
LISBON - Kevin D. Strabley, 21,
of Salineville, in a one-car accident
on Ohio 164 in Colwnbiana County.
CHARDON - Marylou Allyn, 50,
of Burton, in a two-car accident on
Ohio 87 in Geauga County.
CANFIELD - Robert A. Shaulis,
18, of Newton Falls, in a tw&lt;Kar
accident on Ohio 534 in Mahoning
County.
FRIDAY NIGHT
DELAWARE - Thomas Curry,
29, and Carla Curry, 23, both of
Delaware, in a train-car collision at
a railroad crossing on a belaware
County road.
DELAWARE - Roy M. Russel
Jr ., 34, of Colwnbus in a one-car
accident on J .S. 23 in Delaware
County.

threatened lhe radio and television
tr ansmi tiers serving Southern
Calif&lt;rnia at~ mile-high Mount
Wilson, was expected. to be under
control today . After charring nearly
5,000 acres of valuable watershed
since Tuesday, it was contained
Sunday night.
Farther south, San Diego County's
most destructive brush fire In
decades was liought under control
after seven bours Saturday, but
ocean breezes caused flare-ups
Sunday that kept more than 100
firefighters busy. Seven homes were
destroyed and the fire was halted .a
half mile from Torrey Pines High
School.

Some 9,800 acres were charred
from the blaze that started at Black
Mountain and swept through the
Rancho Penasquitos area . Damage
was estimated at more than $2
million, according to fire
authorities.
Six other brush fires in lhe San
Diego area left up to 50,000 homes
and businesses without electricity
Sunday.
Meanwhile, Oregon firefighters
controlled three forest fires in the
southern part of the state after the
·blazes had charred I ,600 acres. ~e
largest fire, In the Winema Nationai
Forest about 30 miles north of
Klamath FaDs, burned 1,150 acres.

Jailed teachers ·
reach agreement '.
By The Associated Press '
Negotiators for Paterson, N.J.,
teachers, bused from jail to contract
talks, reached a tentative se\tlemll(lt
with their school board, but ' across
the country more than 30,000
teachers in 10 states were walking
picket lines today.
In San Francisco, Mayor Dianne
Feinstein met Sunday in maralhon
negotiating
sessions
with
representatives of some 3 600
teachers, but 60,000 students ~ere
kept away from !!Chool today as the
strike · continued into" its second
week .
in
western
Teachers
PeMsylvania's New Castle district
ratified a new two-year cdntract
·Sunday, said lhe state Education
Association, whi\~ teachers In
Ringgold and Union City walked out.
And tentative agreements were
reached in three Dlinois school

Weather

Sunny and warmer Monday. Highs
near 80. Partly cloudy Monday night
and Tuesday. Lows Monday night in
the upper 518. Highs Tuesday near
80. The chance of rain is near zero
Monday and 10 percent Monday
nip;ht. .

districts - East Maine Elementary,
McHenry Coooty and Springfield,
but teachers were manning picket
lines in seven districts.
The strikes have disrupted classes
for more nearly 750,000 students
nationwide, ahnost half ·of them in
Michigan.
In Indianapolis, where a judge
ordered teachers to return to class
and lhe school board to find the
money to give them a 7 percent
raise, school board officials satd
Sunday they had not found the
money and teachers srud they were
not going to work without a contract.
Some 21 teachers ln. Woodlrldge, ' .
N.J., ~re to . go to court Tuesday
follo'Ymg lhelr arrest last week for
refusmg to obey a court order to
return t~ work.
. Negotiators for the 1,700 ~eachers
m Pater!lln were jaDed Fr1day for
refusing to obey a back to work
order.
· Buses took them from detenUon
centers to the negotiations before
the settlement was reached Sunday.
There was no word on the detaUs
of the settlement. Samuel Ranhand,
a state-appointed mediator, satd
"money was the Issue," ·and a
ratification vote was to be taken
today.

�Z- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept, 17, 1979

/o' THI::

Editorial opinions,
comments

--

3-11M! Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 17. 11179

,------- -- ---- -- -- .
FOLLOWING

LI§A,

PROGRAM CONTAIN&amp;

Go To YouR

&amp;CEI'IE§ OF EXPLICIT

ROoM UNTIL. THf::
NE:W[l I~
OVE:R.

\/IQLENC[ WHICI-l MAY BF.
DlfuTURBING To CHILDREN.
PARENTAL DI§CRniON

Today's commentary
Gold fever ris~

By DOD Graff
Years ago, the world's major
nations went off the gold standard.
No longer were their currencies
Ia ADVI§t".D.
1 bscked by and convertible into gold.
, It made sense according to
if sophisticated economic theory. Gold
'' ~· is nothing more than a metal in
limited supply. Defining a currency
By Martha Angle and
Democrat noted, that could well
in terms d its availability is an arRebert Wallen
depend on who wins the presidential
tificial restriction, unrelated to real
WASHINGTON (NEAl -In a con- nomination. Party rules - like
economic needs and an obstacle to
frontation heavily Influenced by the
history books - tend to get written
monetary flexibility and economic
Carter-Kennedy rivalry, Maine and
by winners.
expansion.
Maasachusetts are defyjng orders
A 11barbaric relic" in this view,
fnm the national Democratic Party
UNCOMMITI'EDCOMPLAM
gold is not much less primitive than
to push back their 1980 presidential
The DNC's compliance review
wampum or. cattle as a monetary
caucus and primary dates.
corhmission has also voted to
"'
standard for compla industrial
Under new party rules adopted prohibit New York Democrats from
economies.
last year, states are not supposed to includmg an "uncorrunitted" option
There is only one thing amiss with
begin selecting 1980 convention
on the 1980 primary ballot unless
the well-reasoned argument against
delegates - whether by the caucus those who want such an alternative
gold: It has never convinced the
system or by primaries - unW Mar- gather the same minimum of 10,000
public.
ch 11.
petition signatures required of
By way of current example, the
But Maine has scheduled caucuses presidential candidates seeking a
~
market in the "barbaric relic" is
for Feb. 10 and Massachusets has set ballot spot.
CJ ~f-J N '7? booming as never before in modern
a March 4 pl'llnart. Sen. Edward M.
·The commission 's majority
ROct&lt;'f MTN times a! trading centers in Europe
Kennedy is expected to do extremely ignored complaints that such a
-------~;....__ _ _ _ _......,::___ _ _N_E_W::;:§I_N_;EA:.:,Asia and United Stales (there is ~
well in both, a proapect that hardly requirement wsa never conthriving Chicago commodity market
pleases President Carter and his templated by those whO wrote the
in the metal). The' price goes higher
allies on the Democratic National party rules. Members recalled that
and higher, up more than 50 percent
Committee.
California Gov. Jerry Brown in 1976
so far this year and currently about
H the two stales can he forced to successfully urged voters in several
10 times what it was only eight years
switch to the March 11 dale, any states to show their support for him
ago when the United States severed
Kennedy gains there might be offset even though he wasn't on the ballot
the last link between the dollar and
by results from primaries in at least by voting for an "unconunitted"
gold -the official Treasury price r:l
caused by a relatively small number
By LaJDar C. Mlll~r, D.O.
three Southern states - Alsbama, delega~ slate.
$35 an ounce.
CHnif A!isoelate
of viruses, and can thus be imFlorida and Georgia - that may yet
Carter supporters at the DNC do
munized against with specific vacWith the barrier of S300 an ounce
Professor of
be joined by South Carolina, not want any late starters in the 1900
now behind, some forecasters are
cines. All viruses are very small
Family Medicine
Mississippi and Tennessee.
race, such as you-know-who, to use
micro-organisms (smaller than bac- expecting the $400 mark to be
· Ohio University
The national party's compliance the same ploy in New York .
reached by the end of the year .
teria) and all are Wlfesponsive to
College of
review commission has already
Numerous reasons are advanced
antibiotics.which really narrows our
Osteopatblc Medlclue
granted rule exemptions to Iowa,
ROSALYN'S PLOY
for the surge. Supply and demand is
area of available treatment.
THE COMMON COLD
with its Jan. 21 precinct caucuses;
Rosalyn Carter gets far beter
clearly a factor, and it is a fact that
. QUESTION : What are the sym~
Since the "cold season" is beginNew Hampshire, with its first-in-the- marks from the public for her persupplies r:l newly mined gold are off.
ning, I thought it might be useful to toms of the cold? What can be done
nation Feb. 26 primary, and Min- formance as first lady than her
Leading producer South Africa is
answer some quf!!tions regarding · to relieve them?
nesota, with Feb. 26 precinct husbsnd receives for his showing as
holding roughly steady but conANSWER : The common cold
this troublesome problem.
caucuses.
president, according to a sUrvey
signments from the Soviet Union, a
QUESTION: How common iS this usually begins slowly over a period
In all three stales, the dates were released last month by Opinion
somewhat erratic number two that
of one to two days with sneezing,
illness we call the "cold?
set by state law and Republicans Research Corp.
sore thrnat, and running nose. Other frequently tries harder as a quick
ANSWER:
Colds
affect
about
30
control either the governorship or
An Aug. 23-ai telephone poll of
million people in the United States symptoms are often present, in" way to pick up vital foreign exthe legislature and refuse to agree to 1,004 adults gave Mrs. Carter a 64
every·year. The ''cold season" star- eluding headache, cough and ex- change, are repol'te\1 down more
changes, Maine and Massachusetts, percent job approval rating vs. a
than 30 percent so far this year.
is with the onset of school in Se~ trelpe fatigue. Occasionally, the
Howeve~. have no such excuses and
mere :rT percent approval for her
Industrial demand, primalily for
tember and runs until school is symptoms may resemble those of flu
their requests for similar exem~ husband's performance. Only 18 perthe manufacture of jewelry ,
dismissed in June. You stsnd better with muscle aches, loss of appetite
lions from the DNG have been cent disapproved of her conduct,
than a 50 percent chance of having a or a low-grade fever (100-101 remains strong, unlike previous
denied.
compared with 51 percent giving the
peri""' of rapid price increases
cold before the season is over. Very de;rees). A specific medically ef.
Party leaders in both states say president a negative rating.
when It has shown a tendency to fall
young children average sill colds per feclive trestment does not exist for
they will stick to their guns, raising
The public is, however, rather
off.
year, and their parents just a few this problem. It is unfortunate, but a
the possibility that their delegations evenly divided in its reaction to Mrs.
And _perhaps moat significant, .
less. AJJ the children grow older the good deal of truth is present in the
to the 1980 Democratic National Con- Carter's role as a policy adviser to
"black gold," in the words of a Frenincidence of colds in the family tends old bromide that a cold will dlsap.
vention in New York will he denied her husband. Some 49 percent favor
to decrease . The seasonal nature of pear in one week if you do nothing,
seating for having been chosen in her acting "as a pilrtner to the
colds is due not so much to the and seven days if you treat it. Conviolation of the rules.
president in policy making," while
weather as to the crowded con- sequently, sound treatment consists
But as one key Massachusetts 45 percent oppose such a role.
ditions and the multiple exposures of nothing more than making the
which children ·are exposed to in the person more comlortable, with nose
NEW YORK ( AP) - Sports critics
schools. Also, younger children do dropa for the stuffy nose, aspirin for
have
lon g complained about
and
aches,
cough
syrups
less to prevent catching colds from the fever
bailclubs
that load up the bases and
for the troublesome cough. Getting
other people than to older children.
then
fail
to score runs. And some
plenty of rest, taking fluida, keeping
QUESTION: What causes colds?
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - House
of
the
economy now say they
critics
and
good
nutrition
are
also
$526 million , the total of the last
ANSWER : More than 150 different wann,
Finance Chairman Myrl H.
see
a
similar
situation in their
important.
There
are
a
huge
number
measure .
viruses have been implicated as
Shoemaker, D-Bourneville ,
ballpark.
of
O.T.C.
(over
the
counter)
causing colds, which accounts for
introduced Thursday a bill giving
After analysts had assured us that
COLUMBUS, Ohio (APl - Ohio's
the lack of a single vaccine to prepara(\ons and kitchen remedies
the Legislature more time to
weren't piling up, the
inventories
for
the
relief
of
symptoms
available
local school boards could eliminate a
protect against this troublesome
consider
proposed
capital
Commerce
Department released
little red tape with legislation now
disease. It also explains why a per- of this disease . Everyone rememimprovements around the state.
1 before .the Senate.
showing
a huge 1.9 percent
figures
.
bers
the
proverbial
hot
chicken
soup
son can get several colds in one
His measure reappropriates funds
in
July
inventories
of goods
jump
the
old
Jewish
mothers
gave
which
Rep. John V. Bara, D-Eiyria,
season. Each virus you are exposed
and protects projects committed by
produced
but
not
yet
sold.
received 88-2 House approval
their
children.
I
suppose
every
to will give some inununity to that
the 1977-1979 capital improvements
That . percentage
increase
Thursday of his measure requiring
particular germ in the future , but family and culture baa been their
bill. They would lapse Oct. I without
to
$7.84
billion,
and it
amounted
own
unfailing
treatment.
My
the signature of only one school
will not protect you against any
the legislation .
brought
the
total
of
unsold
goods
to
officia l on school board checks.
mother-in-law
believes
in
mustard
other virus since there is no crossNormally, the reappropriations
nearly
$414
billion.
It
told
economists
Currently, they must be signed by
to
the
chest
and
a
good
plasters
inununity. Flu, on the other hand, is
are included in the new capital
that the economy was loading the
lallative!
two officials - usually the treasurer
improvements bill.
bases but not bringing the runners
and the president of the school
Shoemaker said he expects to
home.
board.
receive the new document Monday
Sports fan s know that the name of
Bara said many boards use
from Gov . James A. Rhodes, and
the game is to score runs , and that
facsimile check signers for the
hopes his committee can act on it
you don 't do it by leaving the bases
president and that his bill recognizes
before the end of next week .
full. Same thins with the economic
and authorizes the practice.
Senate approval still would be
game : you can't win if you produce
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
required, but leaders of that
goods that pile up in warehouses.
chamber have indicated a vote won 't
For
months
economists,
come there until a schedul ed
government officials, purchasing
November session of the General
agents and others had vi.Wed the
Like most living things, apples
SUDDEN INFANT DEATH
Perhaps the most important thing level of inventories as healthy! like
~mbly .
respire. Respiration causes sugars
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
I could do for you is to tell you that 1973, they said, when inventories
The governor's office has not
to be burned and carbon dioxide, . DEARDR.LAMB - Iam!Byears
the baby's death has nothing helped create a severe recession.
divulged the cost of proposed new water vapor , and heat to be
old
and
recently
my
four-month-old
whatever to do with anything you
projects at university, pr iso n, produced. In apples, respiration
The view of William Cox,
baby
daughter
died.
The
doctor
said
did.
It iB quite common for such a Commerce Department economist,
mental health and other facilities, gradually diminishes crispness,
it was a crib death but nobody can
baby to be carfully examined by a was typical.
but it is believed to be more than flavor and attractiveness.
tell me what a crib death is. She
very COI'llpetent physician and proA month ago he reported : "In
wasn ;t sick or anything, She played
nounced to be in good health. In most general, the inventory picture does't
and laughed the night before she
cases there is nothing you can see on look all that bad to me except in the
died. The doctor said she was
an ordinary physical examination auto sector." Last week he was
perfectly healthy. H she was, why
that would lead you to think that the concerned. "We certainly wouldn 't
did she die? I've got to know what a
baby had any problem at all. Autop- like to see inventories continue to
crib death is, so please help me.
sy examinations fail to show build up at this rate;" he said after
DEAR READER - This problem
anything that would be responsible reviewing the figures for July.
goes by several different names. It's
for the child's death.
One month seemingly had made
also called sudden infant death synSuch unexplained sudden deaths an enormous difference, but some
drome (SIDS) . I'm sorry to teU you
have led to real human tragedy who study economic statistics as
that no one knows for certain what
where parents were accused by law zealously as others study batting
causes these deaths.
enforcement officers of mistreating averages aren''t so sure the situation
RESPON~IBI..E
They're most apt to occur during
the baby which doesn 'I help.
hasn't existed for quite a while.
the first year of life. There are over
FOR ANYTHING
You should also know that your
Several,
including
Alan
10,000 infants who die from this probaby did not suffer. The usual pat- Greenspan, chairman of Townsendblem each year. It 's the most comtern is for such infants to die in their Greenspan &amp; Co. and a former
mon cause for infant death in the
selep although sudden death has eccinomic adviser to President Ford,
first year of life.
been known to oecur In other situa- suggested that in preceding months
Old Testament accounts refer to
tions even inunedlately after breast business had underestimated its
such deaths and it seems to have
feeding :•.
inventory problem.
been just as frequent in the 18th and
You and other parents might want
That's an easy enough error to
19th century as it is today. So it's not
to know that there is a National make if your view is optimistic as,
exactly a product of modem civilizaFoundation for Sudden Infant Death. for example, It was in the
tion.
There might be a chapter in your automobile industry, You have faith
There have been an infinite
conununity .'If not, headquarters for in your ability to sell. You don 't want
number of theories presented as to
the National Foundation for Sudden to be cut short. You produce.
what causes the sudden death in an
Infant Death is 310 Michigan Ave .,
But optimism, faith and hard sell
apparently healthy baby, No doubt
Chicago, Ill. 110604; their phone won't help very much if the
there is more than une cause. The
nwnher if (312) 663~. You may be eonsumer isn't inclined to move.
most prevalent view now is that it's
able to get additional infonnation
And so the runners are left on
associated with the inimature
from this agency or If you have pro- base. Th e economy has been
development of the vital centers in
blems or questions, they may be
the brain, particularly those that
able to direct you to the right place.
stamped, self-11ddressed envelope
control respiration . Research in reTHERE ARE many causes of for The Health Letter number 1~.
cent years has shown that certain diarrhea and there Is new infonntion
What You Need to Know About Diarsleep patterns, particularly those
on how to treat and prevent some rhea . Send your request to Dr.
associated with period,s when the
conunon causes. Readers who want
baby may .&lt;top breathing temporari- more infom.ation on this can send 75 Lamb, in care of this newspaper, P . ·
0 . Box 1551, Radio City Station, New
ly, may b&lt;? ,assudated with SIDS.
cents in check o~ coin with a long, York, NY 10019.

In Washington

When winners write rules

--;:=::------

----JJ..,::

Health Review

ch econcmist, is being converted in~
to the real yellow stuff. Heavy
buying from the Mideast is reported.
According to one i'eport, Sando '
Arabia and a few other oil countries
are picking up close to a third of all
gold currently being c;ffered for llale.
And that points to the basic reason
for the inteqsifylng interest in gold:
The worldwide Inflation th&amp;t Ia af·
fectlng aJri1o8t all major currenclea,
and especially the dollar. 'lbe •
producers would not be shlfllnc Ill*
accumulated wealth Into gold If U..
were not worried about the dollar •
a dependable repository.
The current gold fever infeet. Ill&amp;
only bulk buyers and deall!l'll bat
small investors. Even at more thaD
$300 an ounce and despite l!Jnlt.d
funds, a stake in gold is possible
through purchase of lncreaaingly
numerous and popular gold coins.
Gold Napoleon coins, favorites of
French and' other private investors
for years, have been joined by South
African Kruggerands and, m08t
recently, Canadian Maple Leaves.
Economists may still not think
much of gold, but clearly the world
public does. Arab purchases and
other explanations of the current
price surge beg the real lasue. And
that is that despite years of governmental efforts to retire gold, It
remains a universal indicator of
economic conditions ·and the
preferred refuge from inflationary
storms for millions of indlviduais,
frOI'll large investors to small hoar·
ders.
It has yet to be proven to them that
when it comes to retaining value,
. anything else can really be as good
as gold.
SELF-HELP PROJECI'

SECOND THOUGHI'S ON
HEADLINES DEPARTMENT'
"OPEC SEEitS TO
IMPROVE IMAGE."
(From The Olristian Science
Monitor, reportlilg plans by the
Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries to establish a news
agency to COI!JIIer critlcal coverage
of Its operetions by the Western
media .)

There's certainly plenty of room
for it,

Business mirror

Capital briefs. •

•

HEALTH

Berry's World

I AM. NOT

- ------- -

•

producing goods and services, but it
hasn't been scoring. And a situation
of that sort eventuall y is
demoralizing, in baseball or in
economics.
In business it shows up in cutbacks
and layoffs. A retailer's inability to
se ll hurts the distributor , the
distributor 's inability hurts the
producer, the producer's weakness
hurts the supplier .
BUZZED HOME
PEMBROKE, Mass . (AP) - A
golden bumble bee which had been
kidnapped was found and brought
home on the roof of a police cruiser.
The bee is actually a metal
ornament which has adorned the
cupola of a library here since 1975. It
is 47 inches long and 47 inches wide
and weighs 46 pounds.
The police said the bee had been
stolen, apparently as a prank.

RAD~'Bsffift-ffi:RS

In accordance wlfh s~ ­
llon 307.86 of !he Ohio

Revised Code( sealed bids
will be rece ved by the
Meigs C0&lt;1ntv Board of
Commissioners at !heir of.
lite. located In !he Coor·
!house, Pomeroy, Ohio until ~ : oo P.M . on September
2, 1979 . The bids
speclfltatlon will be opened
at 6:30 P.M. on September
~ 1979 and read aloud
1 hey may be picked up ai
!he Meigs
county
Emergency Medical Service Office.
The front of the envelope
enclosing the bid must be
marked "Sealed Bid"
E.M.S. Radio. Bidder to
furnish their own bid form
The Board ~of County
Commissioners may ac ·
cer,t the lowest bid or
!"' eel the best bld for the
mtended · purpose, and
reserve !he right lo reiecl
any or all blds .. or any part
thereof.
MEIGS COUNTY
SCOMMISSIONERS
19 . 17 ,2 ~. 2tc
11IE DAJLY SENTOO!L

IVI.PSI ..... )

~~~~· ---·DEVOTED TO THE
INTEIIE8T OF

MEIGHWION AREA

ROBERT HOEFLICH
Cltj E&lt;UIOr
hbllabeddoDyncop&lt;S.-yll)'neOllo

vouey hiiiiii!Jq

c_.,. Mol-.1111:.,

Ill Court St., PDIMrey, ()tde 41W• ._._.,
Ofllce P - lfl. liM. E&lt;Uiorlol PM.·

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Setood cl.au pt~lqe pUla&amp; POIDfi'Dt', O!Wo.
Natiouladvertillq repraeldld\le, 1.u11oa
At•oc•lel, llllll'MIId Ave., Clev~ Okkt

44115.
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wbere availlblt • m1t1 per weelr;, By ...._.

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lbreo moolhl III.M. - - 111.•; lb
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The AIIGdat.ecl Preu II aetulve~..::=
to tbe ue fer pubUeiUGa o1 aU.,..
credUed lo Ule DeWipaper aad allo
laall
-pulllllll&lt;dberdo.

Bad Sunday for quarterbacks
BY Ali!OCIATEO PRESS
Terry Bradshaw led a parade of
clobbered quarterbacks · from the
field to the sidelines Sunday.
Fortunately for the Pittsburgh
Steelers, Terry made it back to the
huddle .
Bradshaw, carried off the field on
a stretcher with a badly bruised
ankle in the first half, retwned and
guided the unbeaten Steelers to a 17polnt final quarter that overhauled
St. Louis :!4-21.
"Our whole football team, I think,
came back from adverse
circumstances. I think that's the
mark of a champion," Coach Chuck
Noll said after rookie Matt Bahr's
ZG-yard field goal with 13 seconds to
play turned back the Cardinals.
Bob Griese left Miami's game
with a pulled leg muscle - and Don
Strock stepped in, throwing a pair of
fourth-quarter touchdowns to propel
the Dolphins past Minnesota Z7-1Z.
Cincinnati wasn't so lucky. A
bruised back sidelined Ken
Ande1'3011 and the Bengals, despite
two TD runs by rookie quarterback
Jack Thompson, 1081 ZG-14 to New
England.
In Sunday' s other National
Football League games it was
Houston :In, Kansas City 6; Seattle
Z7 , Oakland 10; Denver :In, Atlanta
17 in ·overtime; Cleveland 13,
Baltimore 10; Dallas %4, Ollcago :In;
San Diego Z7, Buffalo 19; Los
Angeles Z7, San Franciaco Z4 ;
Tampa Bay Zl, Green Bay 10; New
York Jets 31, Detroit 10 and
Philadelphia 26, New Orleans U.
The New York Giants visit
WaS!ington tonight
With St. Louis leading Zl-7, Rocky
Bleier began Pittsburgh 's cornebsck
with a 4-yard TD run to open the
fourth period. Then Brad!haw, who
had .thrown an 18-yard ro pass to

John Stallworth in the first period.
tied it with a 5-yard strike to Bennie
Cunningham.
And finally, in the closing minutes,
Terry guided the Steelers from their
own Z!l-yard line to the Cardinals'
doorstep for Bahr.
Ollis Anderliln and Theotis Brown
ran foc the Cards' TDs. Anderson
failed to become the first rookie to
gain 100 yards In
of his first
three pro games. He was held to 37
by the Steelers.
Dolpblns %7, Vlldngs!Z
When Griese hobbled to the bench,
Miami trallled 12-7. But in the fourth
period, Strock tossed &amp;-yard TD
passes to Larry CSQ!lka and Jimmy
Cefalo and heaved a 4l).yard pass to
Durie! Harris that set up the
Dolphins' final score, Norm
·
Bulaich's !;-yard run.
"I'm n~ surprised. He's done that
for us before and he'll probably do it
for us again," Mialrii Coach Don
lJtula said of Strock.
Patriots ZO, Beugall14
Steve Grogan passed 17 yards to
Stanley Morgan for one TD and Z7
yarda to hirri to set up Dolt Calhoun 's
3-yard acoring run that· helped the
Patriots beat Cincinnati .
The Bengals were forced to go
without Isaac Curtis, their star wide
receiver, as well as Anderaon, both
injured.
"Early in the game, we had a
package plan with Curtis and then
he gels hurt on the first series and is
out, " aid Coach Homer Rice. ' "Then
Kenny's out. That changed a lot of
things. The plan went out the

each

-'"'~

wutuOW .

.

Oilers 20, llllefa I
With Gifford Nielsen replacing
banged-up Dan Pastorini from the
start, the Oilers' offense didn't
suffer. He passed Z4 yards to Tim
Wilson lor a TD while Earl Campbell

rusbed for 13Z yards and a score
against Kansas City.
" I'm still Dan's backup
quarterback and I played because
he was hurt," Nielsen said. " I told
Dan before the game 1 would do my
damdest to win the game."
Seabawks 27, Raiders tO
Jim Zorn passed for three TDs,
two to Sieve Largent to offset Ken
Stabler's 343-yard passing show and
carry the Seahawks past Oakland.
Seattle, which co~ghed up the ball ·
10 times in its first two games, both
losses, didn't commit a turnover this
time.
· Broncos 20, Falcoos 17
· Jim Turner kicked a 24-yard field
goal 6: 15 into overtime to beat the
Falcons. Atlanta could have won it
in regulation time, but Tim Ma~ti
missed a 31-yard field goal try with
17 seconds remaining.
Uke Anderson of the Cardinals,
rookie William Andrews of Atlanta
had a chance for a third straight 100.yard game - but he got 41.
Browns 13, Colts 10
A Brilin Sipe~e Newsome
pass covering 74 yards set up Don
COckroft's 23-yard field goal for
aeveland with 1:51 to go that heat
Baltimore. The Colts could have
forced overtime - but Toni Linhart
blew a 2&amp;-yard field goal try with one
second left.
Cowboys Z4, Bears 20
Roeer Staubach passed for three
touchdowns, two to Tony Hill, as
unbeaten Dallas rallied three times
to beat the Bears. Olicago's Vince
Evans ran for one ro and heaved
TD bombs of 64 and 52 yards.
lllargera Z7, Bills 19
Clarence Williams rushed for 157
yards and a OJarger-record four
touchdowns - one of them on a 55
sprint to put San Diego ahead of the

Seaver hurls 2-0 shutout,
Reds hike... lead in NL West
LOS ANGELES (AP) - On the
day that Ci ncinnati formally
eliminated Los Angeles from the
National League West pennant race,
the Reds alllo expanded their lead in
the div,lsion to Z% games over
Houston.
Tom Seaver, who eliminated the
Dodgers with a three-hit, ~ victory
- his 5Znd career shutout, most
among active pitchers - said afterward there's only one way for the
Reds to maintain their lead.
"We've got to play good every
day, " said the 34-year-old veteran
right-hander.
·
Seaver's catcher. Johnny Bench,
agreed, saying, " I felt in the spring
that this club could win about 90
games, maybe· more. I felt we had
the pitching, we did have question
marks, b\4 I figured we would be in
a dogfight .
"We've played some unbelievable
games this year. We've blown sevenrun leads and we've had games lost
in the last inning. That's why a game
I

NFL standings
ay Tilt AIIOCilltd Prus

AmtriCin Conference
E111

Miami
New Eng.
Buffalo
N.Y.JeiS
Ball.
Pills.

Cleve.

HO\Iston
Cine.

w. I. I. pel. pi PI
3 0 0 1.000 -14 29
2 1 0 .667 89 33
1 2 0 .333 66 60
1 2 0 .333 56 91
0 3 l .000 34 56
Ctnlrol
3 0 0 1.000 78 ~1
3 0 0 1.000 65 56
2 I 0 .667 56 71
0 3 0 .000 38 11
Will

so
Denver
KC
Oak.
sea111e

3
2
1
1
1

Del.

0
o
0
o
o

1.000
.667
.333
.333
.333

National Conference

Dallas
Phil a.
Wash.
St. L.
N.Y.Gianls
T. Bay
Chic.
G. Bay
Minn.

0
1
2
2
1

9C 45
39 :10
-14 ~7
-14 74

53 62

Ell I

3 0 0 1.000 67 54
2 1 0 .661 59 45
1 1 0 .500 54 53
1 2 0 .333 69 60
0 2 0 .000 31 50

Centro!

3 0 0 1.000 81 52
2 1 0 .667 52 3&lt;1

1 2 0 .333 41 &lt;46
·1 2 0 .333 ~7 75
0 3 0 .000 50 89

West
2 1 ~ .661 71 6ol
2106675757
0300005976
0 3 0 .000 67 9~
Sunday's Gomes
Cleveland 13, Baltimore 10
Denver 20, Allanta17, ot
New York Jets31, Detrolt10
New England 20, Clnclnnatl1~
Philadelphia 26, New Orleans U
Houston 20, Kansas City 6
Mlaml27, Minnesota 12
Tampa Bay 21, Green Bay 10
San Dlego27, Buffalo 19
Dallas 24, Chicago 20
Sea tile 27, Oakland 10
Plllsburgh 24, SI.Lools 21
Los Angeles 27. San Franclsco2A

All.
LA
SF
N.Orl.

Monday's Game

New York Giants at Washington
Sund•y, Sop!, 2l
Allan!a al Detroit
Balli more al Plltsburgh
Green Bay at Minnesota
Houston at Cincinnati
New York Jets at Buffalo
san Diego at New England
Washington at St. Louis
Oakland~~ Ko.nll!s City
Chicago al Miami
LOS Angeles at Tampa BOY
Now Orleans at San Francisco
Philadelphia at New York Giants
Sealtle al Denver
Mondoy, Sop!. 24
Dallas at Cleveland

like Saturday's Is so gratifying."
Bench referred to the Reds' Z·l
win which they achieved on solo
homersin the final two innings.
"It was a game we came from
nowhere to win," he said. "Our bats
were quiet but we sWl won, still
battled for the lead."
Seaver worked with only a 2-4
lead, the result of five successive
hits in the fifth inniJ.!S off loser Don
Sutton, 12-15. Ray Knight and Helty
Cruz drove in the only runs that
Seaver needed.
Seaver permitted only three
singles in posting his 15th win in Zl
decillions and his 13th in the last 14.
"My last couple of starts, Montreal and Houston, I didn 't pitch
well," said Seaver. " But at this point
in my career, I'm going to have
those kind of games. I just have to
say 'Okay, get L.A. Sunday.'
" I'm not as overpowering as I
once was, there's no doubt about
that," added Seaver. "But I'm stili a
power pitcher. My fastball is still my
best pitch.
"I'm in a very good streak rtght
now, but I have had better. I've
pitched wellthiB year, and there are
games In which I've pitched
poorly."
He pitched very well Sunday, to
the surprise of even Bench.
"He had a little trouble getting
loose, it looked to me," said the
Cincinnati catcher. "He walked
(Dave) Lopes on four pitches and
got behind (Blll ) Russell in the first,
I dldn 't expect to see him get past
the third.
Giants 2, Astros 1
Houston lost to, San Francisco in
late innings for the second straight
day to faU further behind the firstplace Reds.
J .R. Richard, 16-13, had allowed
one hit and an unearned run going
into the ninth. But Mike Ivle's single,
an opposite-field double dolfll the
first base line by Darrell Evans and
an intentional walk precedect Larry
Herndon's long drive to left field that
officially was a called a single as
Ivie trntted in from third base with
the winning run .
On Saturday, Houston had a 3-0
lead before the Giants won with five
runs in the eighth.
Meta3, Pirates 0
Pittsburgh dropped into a virtual
tie for first with Montreal in the East
as New York got surprisingly good
pitching from Pete Falcone, who
won only his sixth game in 19
decillions.
The Mets' left-bander took a sixhitter into the ninth but he failed to
get his second complete-game
shutout when Lee Lacy led off with a
single Falcone threw two balls to
Bill Madlock. Nell Allen came in to
complete the walk, but then forced a
groundout and a doubleplay .
grounder to finish the seven-hitter.
Dan Norm~n·s homer, a single by
Lee Mazzllli and a double by Joel
Youngblood brought home the Mets'.
runs.
Cards 4-1, Expos 3-5
D~ve Cash, who rode the bench
until late August, drove in all five

Montreal runs, the last four with a
lOth-inning grand slam, in the
Expos' second11:ame victory .
"My job is to be ready when the
manager calls on me," said Cash. "I
don 't care who 's playing and who's
not playing. Winning is the only
thing that matters now ."
The Pirates and Expos start a twogame series in Montreal tonight.
Larry Parrish, whose error in the
fourth gave St, Louis a W lead In th~
opener, hit a two-run homer off
winning pitcher Silvio Martinez, 147, to pull the Expos.close, but Mark
Uttell pitched two innings of hitless
relief to hold the line.
PIIDUes 4, CUI!&amp; 3

Garry Maddox scored two runs
and knocked in the game winner
with an eighth-inning triple to lead
Philadelphia over Chicago.
Maddox 's blast to the center field
fence off loser Dick Tidrow, 1~.
!!Cored Greg Gross, who had walked
with two out, with the tie-breaking
.,., . Maddox also doubled . and
scored in the first and singled in the
fourth to ignite a two-run rally.

Bills to stay. He also went over from
2, 1 and 5 yards out. Buffalo's Joe
Ferguson ran for one TD and passed
to Frank Lewis foc another.
Rams 27, 49ers Z4
Pat Haden 's two touchdown
passes and a pair .of Frank Corral
field goals helped the Rams hold off
the 4~s. Two San Francisco TDs
came on Steve DeBerg's fourthquarter passes to Mike Shumann.
Bucs Zl, Pacllers18
Tampa Bay won its third straight
as Ricky Bell ran 19 yards for one
touchdown and caught an 11-yard
pass from Doug Williams for
another against Green Bay. Rookie
Jerry Eckwopd gained 99 yards, 40
of them on the go-ahead TD.
·
Jets 31, Lloos10
Wesley Walker caught sill Richard
Todd passes for 177 yards, helping to
set up Kevin Long's TD runs of 7, 4
and 5 yards for the Jets. Jeff
Komlo's !~yard pass to David Hill
accounted for Detroit's TD.
Eagles !8, Saints 14
Philadelphia's Tony Franklin
kicked field goals of Z4, 36, 19 and 44
yards - one in each period - and
Ron Jaworski hit
Wilbert
Montgomery with a a;.yard TD psss
to keep the Saints winless .

lfighlanders tune -up for
big game with NG Pirates
Southwestern posted Ita second
win in three !llarta Friday night, 36IZ aver Hannan, W. Va. in a nonleague encounter at Frazier's Bottom. Coach Bob Ashley's Highlanders got rolling In the first period
when Shennan Potter, senior
fullbaclt, capped a long march with
a 19 yard run.
Hll llrother, Joe, ran the ellra
points.
Four minutes later , Potter CI'OMed
the goalllne on a 13 yard run. He also
added the extra points.

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pel. GB
Montreal
87 57 .604
Plllsburgh
88 58 .603
St. Louis
78 118 .534 10
Philadelphia
76 72 .514 13
Chicago
74 73 .503 14'12
New York
56 89 .3841 31'12
WEST
Cinc innati
85 6~ .570
Houston
82 66 .554 2'12
Los Angeles
11 78 .m 14
San Francisco
66 84 .440 19'12
San Diego
62 87 .416 23
Atlanta
59 88 .401 25
Soturdo_y•s Gamu
Pittsburgh 5, New York~
Clnclnnall2, Los Angeles 1
Son Franclsco5, Houston 3
Monlreal 2·1, St. Louis 1·4, lsi
game llinnlngs
Philadelphia 8, Chicago 1
Atlanta 6, San Diego 1
Sundoy's G•mes
New York 3, Pittsburgh 0
St. LO\IIs 4·1, Montreal 3·5, 2nd
game 10 Innings

Transactions
By Tile Assocl•lod Prus
BASEaALL
Am•rlcan L••eue

NEW YORK YANKEES
Recalled Dove Rlghelll, Mike Grlf·
fin, Rick Anderson. Bob Kammeyer
and Paul Mirabella , pitchers; Den·
nls Werth, Damaso Garcia and Roy
Staiger, Infielders; Bobby Brown,
outfielder; and Bruce Robinson, cal·
cher, from Columbus of the In ·
ternatlonal League.

'Toronto Blue Jays .. Purchased
!he contracts of Sieve Luebber and
Sieve Grill i, pitchers, from Syracuse
of the 1nternallonal League.
BASKETaALL
CHICAGO BULLS - Signed David
Greenwood, forward , to a flve ·year

contract.
WASHINGTON BULLETS Waived Andrew Parker, Conrad
Whlslenlon and Ron McF'artand,
guards, and Archie Aldridge, for·
ward .

FOOTBALL
Nlllonll Foolbllll L811UI
MINNESOTA VIKINGS - Ac ·
llvaled Phil Wise, safely . Released
Joe Harris, linebacker.
NE-W YORK GIANTS - Placed
Cleveland· Jackson, light end, on the
Injured reserve list. Activated Gor ·
don Gravelle, offensive latkle.
HOCKEY
Natlonol Hockey LNIUI
ST . LOUIS BLUES - Signed
Larry Patey, tenter.
WASHINGTON CAPITALS Awarded the rights of Bengi·Ake
_9ustafsson. forward, bY NHL.

A PIONEER - Marietta College 110phomore Brent Stanley of Albany
is a member of the 1979 Marietta College Football team. Stanley will be
playing linebacker for Coach Joe McDaniel's Pioneers which went $-4
duriilg the 1978 !leaiiOn. The team is led by 19 returning lettermen this
~. which starts September 15, with an away game at Heidelberg
College. Marietta is playing a nine game Ohio Athletic Calference
schedule, featuring five lion¥! games at Marietta •s Don Drumm Stadium,
including the OAC Divisional Playoff. Brent is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Stanley of Rt. 2, Albany, andiB a 1978graduale of MeigS HighSchool
' wbere he lettered In football, track, and basketball and was chollen first
team All-sEOAL.

"Philadelphia 4, Chicago 3
Clnclnnall2, Los Angeles 0

San Franclsco2, HCMJston 1

Only games scheduled

.
Hannan cut the lead to 16-6 on a
four yard run by Tolliver. A kick for
the EP sailed wide. Southwestern's
defense held Hannan to just a series
&lt;i downs in the third periOd.
Tbe Highlanders broke the game
open with 20 .pointa in the final
period. Potter rambled in from 16
yards out and Dale Newberry added
the extra point on a kick.
Later that period, Newberry
caught a four yard pass from Jay
Burleson.
Southwestern's final TD came on a
daDllng 91 yard pass Interception
return by Rmnle Hammond.
Luther Young scored Hannan 's
final sill pointer:
Potter ledSWHS's offense with 115
yards In 18 attempts. Joe Potter had
62 yarda in 10 tries and Ronnie Carr
had 80 yards In 12 carries. Southwestern travels to North Gallia
Friday night In the SVAC opener for
both clubs.

BrATISTICS
sw 9
DEPARTMENT
13
First Downs
4
Z34
44
YardaR\IBhing
Yarda Passing
30 M
164 108
·Total Yardage
Passes Attpt.
9
8
4
· Passes Compt.
I
Interceptions
1
1
2
Fumbles
2
Fumblesl..o81
~ 5«i
Penalties
By Quartets :
8 8 0 20-38
sw
0606-12
H

z
z

PREVENTION
IS THE

BEST POLICY
As an independent insurance

agency, our primary function Is

lo provide policies which afford

financial protection in case Of

Meigs Junior
High schedule
Sept. 20, Gallipolis, 5:30p.m.
Sept. Z7, at Lpgan, 4:30p.m.
Oct. 4, at Pt. Pleasant, 5:55p.m.
Oct. ll, Wahama, 5:30p.m.
Oct. 18, Jackson, 5:30p.m.
Oct. 211, at Wellston, 5:30p.m.
Nov . 1,atAthens, 5:30p.m.
Meigs Seventh Grade
Sept. IS, Jackson, 5:30p.m.

Oct. I, at Belpre, 5:55p.m.
Oct. 8, Pt. Pleasant, 5:55p.m .
Oct.18, at Pt. Pleuant,5:55 p.m.
Oct. 23, at Oak Hill, 5:30 p.1,11.
Oct. 29, Belpre, 5:30p.m.'

loss.

·

But, we also have a vltaf . fn·
terest In loss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caution and safety •..
pre'llentive measures which can
keep that car accident from hap·

pening, !hal building fire from
starting, !hal home burglary

from being commiHed.

Prevention saves life, limb and

property ... and helps control In·
sura nee costs and premiums.
When losses do occur, our

policy holders can count on pro·

tecting and ser'lling in time and

need. But we still say- preven·
lion is the best policy,

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992-2143
102W. Main
Pomeroy

Mondav's Games

Pittsburgh ID . Robinson 7-61 al
Montreal (Rogers 13·91
Philadelphia (Car'llon 15·11) al Sl.
Louis CB. FOrsch9·11l
Houston IJ. Nlekro) 18·101 at San
Diego (0WChlnko5·10l
Atlanta (McWilliams 2·21 at Los
Angeles (HO\Igh 5·51
AMERicAN LEAGUE
EAST
W.L. Pel.
Baltimore
97 50 .660
Milwaukee
87 62 .584
Boston
82 6ol .562
New York
80 66 .548
Detroit
80 69 .537
Cleveland
14 7~ .500
Toronto
~9 99 .331
WEST
California
81 68 .544
Kansas Clly
78 71 .523
77 72 .517
Minnesota
Texas
7~ 76 .493
Chicago
65 83 .439
Seattle
63 87 .420
Oakland
52 98 .347
Saturdly'sGames

GB
11

w ;,

16'12
18
231/2

..a•;,

Cut heating and cooling costs
UP. to 30%'With Certain-teed
F1ber Glass Attic Insulation
Take a day"' less to Install

Certain-teed Fiber Glass
Attic Insulation between
the joists in your attic floor.

3

A
1 112

It's lhe most economical

15 '12
18'12
29 '12

Detroit ~ · I, New York 3-7
Torontos, CleYeland 2
Chicago 3, Oakland o
Boslon'10, Baltimore 2
Milwaukee 3. California 2
Kansas City 5, Seattle~ . lllnnlngs
Minnesotan , TeMas 4
Sundav's Ga~nes

SAVE
NEV.

Toronto a, Cleveland 2
Baltimore 13, Boston 3
Delroll8, New Yoi'k ~. 121nnlngs
Chicago 5, Oakland 2
Milwaukee 2, California 1
Seattle 6, Kansas City 3

.......

._
Mile

way to save big money on
those skyrocketing heating
and cool1ng coots. Yoti'll
be warmer in w;nter and
COOler in summer, too.
Come in now. We'll show
vou how to do the Job
quickly and easily.
Bat1s U' tl'uck, 15¥1" wide and
46" loi'IQ cove1 48 sQ tt.
Batts per1orated at 21' 101'
use between Hi'" or 24" framing.

Minnesota 6, Te)(as 2

POMEROY

CEMENT BLOCK CO.
MAIN ST.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

�...
Mrs. Barbara Knight, l'lmeroy u the Supreme Court b8ll struck
attGmey, was guest speaker at the down many decisloll8 in recent years
Friday meeting rl Return Jonathan Including such things as the right of
Meigl Chapter rl the Daughters ol women to serve on juries and to parthe American Revolutlcn, held at the ticlate In athletic events formerly
open only to men.
home rl Mrs. Paul Elch.
Mrs. Knight commented on
Mrs. Knight used "'l'be CoMUtu·
Uon all(! Women's Rlghta" as her rewriting laws which will make it
topic, IJOintlnc out that the 14th easier for woolen to receive equal
amendment rl the Ccnstltutlcn rights as guaranteed by the Con·
sUtution without resorting to the
already protects women and their
rlghla. Sbe noted, however, that the . courts. She aaid that women do have
courts have II!Jt always upheld dec!· equal rights without the pa.MIIge of
the Equal Rights Amendment, but
slonsln legal battles.
The speaker, Introduced by Mrs. that If it passes, then such rights will
Clyde Ingels, vice regent, described be easier to enforce and simplify the
the picture as changing for women procedures toward enforcement.

Middleport Gardeners
meet, install officers

.... .., ..

Davis, telephone; Mrs. Davis scrapbook; Mrs. EIToll Conroy, Mrs.
year highllghted the Wedneaday Everett Taylor, and Mrs. Pratt,
night meetlnc of the Middleport ways and means; and Mrs. Ferman
Amateur Gardeners held at the Moore, Mrs, Reynolds, Mrs. Arthur
Strauss, and Mrs. Lohse, social.
bOrne of Mrs. Edward Burkett.
'l'be gardeners' creed opened the
Mrs. Edgar Pratt was the Install·
ing officer. Installed were Mlas Er· meeting. Mrs. Crooks gave the verse
ma Smith, president; Mrs. Walter of the month and the communlca·
Crooks, secretary; and Mrs. Harry tioll8 Included an invitatiOn to attend
Davis, treasurer. Mrs. Edgar a dem0ll81ralion, "Autumn Frolic"'
Reynolds, vice president, is on vaca· to be presented at the open meeting.
rl the Chester Garden Club, Wednesticn and will be Installed later.
Coounittees named were Mrs. day, Oct. 3 at 8 p.m. at the Chester
Harold Lohse, parllmentarian; Mrs. United Methodist Church. Mrs. Paul
Edgar Reynolds, Mrs. I.Alhse, Ml'8. Collett of Belpre will be the guest
c. E. Blakeslee, Mrs. Arthur demonstrator.
Mrs. Pratt gave the treasurer's
Strauss, and Mrs. Hugh CUster,
report, and Miss Smith reported on
Chrlstmaa lighting contest; Semlce
Ann Durst, Mrs. Pratt, Mrs. Ferman the demonstration given by Mrs,
Irene Jackson of Wellaton on Satur·
Moore, civic affairs; Mrs. Reynolds,
day. Classes being held on Monday
Mrs. Crooks, Mrs. Davis, Mrs.
Daniel Thomaa, and Mrs. Pratt, pro- evening al the Middleport Ubrary
grsm; Mrs. Crooks and ·Mrs. ' with Mrs. Janet Bolin as instructor
Blakeslee, publicity; Mrs. Harry were noted.
'l'be regional meeting was anMoore, .Mrs. Lohse, Miss Kathryn
Hyaell, Mrs. Blakeslee, and Mrs. nounced for Oct. 'EI at Marietta. The .
Ferman Moore, flower show and traveling prize donated by Mrs.
Thomas was won by Mrs. Crooks.
workshop; Mrs. Burkett and Mrs.
Mrs. 'l'bornas won the door prize.
Cake, ice cream and mints were
served by Mrs. Burkett and Miss
Smith.
Installation of new officers and the

naming of committees for the 1979-80

Young reunion
held locally

POMEROY- The annual Young
family reunion was held recently at
Forest Acres Park near Rutland.
Attending were Mrs. Lurene Ken·
nedy, Galena; Mr. and Mrs. WUUam
Buck, Sr., Rutland; Robert Young,
Galena; Mr. and Mrs. William Buck
m, Jaaon and Mellasa, Hemlock
Grove; Mrs. Carol Buck, Cbeshire;
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Buck and
Jeremy, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs: W.
Young, Mindy, Rutland; Joe and
Rowana Young, Pomeroy; Ralph
and Patty Clark, Bob and Rick, New
Haven; Larry and Susan Cleland,
Greg and Mary, Chester; Frank and
Allee Young, Rutland; Dorothy
Young, Middleport; Toni Pope,
Rutland; Mrs. Wlb YOWJg honored
thoae with August birthdays with a
decorated cake.

Chairman
named
MIDDLEPORT - Mrs. Phyllis
Luster was named mlssionary study
book chairman for the remainder ~
the year when the Middleport Chur·
ch rl the Nazarene missionary ser·
vice was held Wednesday night.
The service opened with singing ~
''They Thai Wait Upon the I.Alnl,"
Jed by the Rev. Jim Broome. Mar·
jorie Taylor, mlaslonary president,
gave scripture from Acts 20, and
there was a skit by Mrs. Luster en·
tilled "Passport to the Pacific Islan·
ds," She read an article concerning
miMionaries and church growth in
Japan and then sang "Don't Take
My Cross Away." An aliar ol prayer
closed the meeting.

Attends convention
Mrs. Evelyn Holter, Route 1,
Racine, a Stanley Home Products
, Unit Sales Leader, attended the
Cmlpany's National Convention in
St. Louis, Missouri, September 4-7.
Over 7,000 of the Stanley family at·
tended the Convention which kicked
off the Company's 50th anniversary
year, which begins in 19110, Many
received recognition for their sales
achievements. 'l'be highlight of the
convention was The Bob Hope Show.
H. L. Tower, Stanley's President
aaid, "It wasexcitlngtobewithsuch
an outstanding group rJ independert
Stanley dealers in St. Louis. It's
wonderful to see the Stanley opo
portunlty continuing to provide ad·
venture, security, recognition and
self-apression to more and more
people. "
Mrs. Holter and three from the
Zanesville Branch appeared on the
Olannel 5, St. Louis News Program,
and told of what they were doing in
St. Louis. Stanley Home Products
manufactures household cleaning
lJI'O(Iucts and good grooming aids.

r--Social Calendar
MONDAY
CANDYSTRIPERS of Veterans
Memorial Hospital will resume
meeUnga al 7 p.m. Monday at the
hospital. Girls interested in
becoming members are invited.
REVIVAL at Silver Run Freewill
Baptist Church, Monday through .
Sept. 22, at 7: :Ml each evening with
Bill Price as the evangelist and .
special singing each evening; public
invited.
MEIGS COUNTY JAYCEES
holding work seaaions on haunted
house Monday, Wednesday and
'l'bursday 7 p.m. at former Pomeroy
Senior High Building.
MIDDLEPORT Business and
Professional Women's Club Monday
at Columbia Gas Office in Mid·
dleport. The legislation commlttee
will be in charge. Mrs. Becky
Moehler is chairman. Sheriff James
Proffitt will be the guest speaker,
Members urged to attend.
TUESDAY
LAFAYEITE White Shrine, 7:30
p.m., Leah Schoonover and Aileen
Carter, hostesses.
SOUTHERN JUNIOR HIGH
Athletic Boosters, foc all sports and
cheerleaders, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
the junior high in Racine. All
boosters urged to attend.
XI GAMMA MU CHAPTER, Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority, 7::Ml Tuesday
night at the Columbia Gas Co. office.
Mrs. Carol McCullough and Mrs.
Phyllis Bennett to be holltesses.
SALISBURY PTO 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday with teachers and parents
of new students lo be introduced.
Refreshments.
QUARTERLY BIRTHDAYS will
be observed when Chester Council
323, Daughters of Amet;ca, meets at
8 p.m. Tuesday. Potluck refresh·
ments.
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band
Boosters meeting, 7:30 p.m.,
Tuesday, new in high school music
room; all interested parents and
band students invited.
'IUUJISDAY
MEIGS COUNTY Tubercul011is
Board of Trustees meeting 7:30p.m.
ThuTsday at Meigs Inn, Pomeroy.

LAFF- A- DAY

. .... _, _ _ _ _ ,...__

..,_.:...c,
'1'·17

"Okay, now walk with me for a
few blocks .. . I hate to be out In
this neighborhood alone."

Following her talk she was
presented a gift from the chapter.
Mrs. Emerson Jonespreaetned the
national presented tile national
defense report which pertained to
the SALT II tr\'ftty. She ooled that
the viewpoint of the DAR Is that the
·treaty is unfair to the United States
because Russia cannot be counted
on to keep Its end of the bargain. She

noted the inequalities in what each
country may produce in we&amp;poll8
and pointed out that whereas the U.
s. will limit their 8rms production,
the Russians do not have to do that.
Mrs. Jones also corrunented on the
iJeed for better civil defense programs to be used both in war and DB·
tional disasters such as Hoods and
earthquakes.

The meeting opened In rituallsUc
fonn with Mrs. Gene Yost, regent
and Mrs. Patrick Locbary, chaplain.
Mrs. Yost read ~ Dle!l88ge from
the president general In which she
discussed the need for support rl
chapters for the DAR schools main·
tained for mountain children and In·
diall8,
Mrs. George Skinner and Mrs.

Eleanor Smith acted as treasuers In
the absence rl Mhis Lucille Smith
who is hospitalized. Mrs. Skinner
read the yearly budget Members
were asked to save Campbelllabeb
which can be redeemed for
classroom equipment and sport

Grange officers named
Officers were elected at the Thurs·
day night meelinl! of the Rock Spr·
lngs Grange held at the hall.
Elected' were Fred Goegleln,
master; WOllam Grueser, overseer;
Ethe!Grueser, lecturer; James Fry,
steward; WUUamRadford, assistant
steward; Beuna Grueser, chaplain;
Lucille Leifheit, lre88urer; Frances .
Goegiein, secretary; Ray Pullins,
gate keeper; Susan Pullins, Ceres;
·Helen Blackston, pomona; Nancy
Morris, Flora; Martha King, lady
assistant steward ; Harold
Blackston, executive committee.
AppoinWd were Elms Loucks, and
Louise Radford, plnaists; Barbara
Fry, CWA chalmsn; Susan Pullins,
juvenile chairman; William Rad·
ford, legislative agent. Mrs. Edison

Helen Help
US. , , By Ht•len Bott.-1
AN OUSTED DAUGHTER
MAKES MO'IHER'S LIFE
A NIGHTMARE
BY HELEN BOTI'EL
DEAR HELEN:
I finally told my 18-year-old
daughter she'd have to go. She was
using my house as practically a
brothel. She wouldn't get a job,
refused to help with housework,
screamed If I suggested she shape
up. She had always twisted me
around her finger and at last I got
courage, and rented her an apart·
ment, moving her things into it. Told
her after a month, I was through
paying her bills.
Ever since, I've been harassed.
Rocks are thrown through my win·
dows, firecrackers. set off in the
yard. My car b8ll been stolen, and
another smashed to pieces wlille I
was away.
I'm sure she's getting her gang to
torment me. Last night a bullet
came through the window and hit
my bedroom mirror. I called her and
she JIJllllaughed.
I've told the pollee but don't Wll1)t
to get my daughter In trouble. She's
a mixed-up girl and jail would finish
the job. So I don't implicate her.
What shall I do? -MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER:
Give the pollee a solid lead: tell
them your daughter is master·
minding the harassment. As long as
she knows you will protect her, she 'II
continue "getting even."
Better she is stopped now than af.
ter she goes on to bigger crimes.
Certainly you don 1 owe her any
more loyally! -H.
DEAR HELEN:
You asked readers • opinions on
whether or not marriages have
worked better If they lived together
first. In my cue, they haven't!
Maybe because I always picked the
wrong men.
I lived with all four of my hUBban·
ds before marriage, and il didn't
. solve a thing. The first time, this was
because he was already married.
HiB divorce came through when I
was 17, and our marriage lasted
three months after that! (We'd lived
together a year, and my parents ex·
peeled us to make It legal.)
The second 8lid third marriages
lasted longer (three and five years),
but they were better while we were
Ol)iy living together. The fourth
relati0ll8hip was great until we said
our vows, and then he left in three
montha -with another woman.
Somehow marriage changed us. I
was always In a panic when we were
only living together, wondering If
he'd stay. But this made me try bar·
der. When I became a wife, I relued
and stopped caring, or maybe he did
-or both li us.
HI find anyone else (lll)d I'm pret·
ty disillusioned right now), I don't
think I 'II marry him. II probably
won't last anyway, so why go to the
trouble. -FOUR·TIME LOSER
DEAR HELEN:
Yes, I think living together helped
our marriage ..We split up twice, and
then we realized we truly cared. Had
we been married, we might not have
given ourselves that "away" time to
think - and talk. It helps, being free
untU you know you don 1 want to be
completely free any more. :- WAN·
DAANDREG

Hobetetter was reported ill.
Ml'8. Fry reported on the Pomona
judging for the Rock Springs
Grange. Mrs. Opal Grueser took ·
first In stole; Mrs. Betty Conkle,
first on baby set and seccnd in stuff·
ed toy; and Mrs. Frances Goegleln,
first In cake.
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
William Radford gave the
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
legislative report. An invitation was
called at the Foglesong funeral ·
read to the ground breaking at
home Wednesday evening to pay
Canter's Cave. Mrs. Opal Grueser, a
respects to his cousin, I.Alra Brown
.nurse with the Meigs County Health and visit her family.
Department, announced that flu
A birthday party was held at the
vaccine will be available for those 26 home of Mr. and , Mrs. Dorsa
and over al the Senior Citizens
Parsons· for Bernice Roush a recent
Center, Sept. 24 and 211, and at the
&amp;mdsy. She was presented a cake
Health pepartment office on Oct. 3.
by her sister, Mrs, Cvayrer Durst of
Refreslunents were aerved by
Niles, decocated with white icing
Bertha and Leona l.eiving and Mrs.
with pink roses and "Happy
Loucks.
Birthday Sis." Attending were Mt.
and Mrs. O!ester Durst, Craig,
Melanie and Kelly Reeder, Rooald
Cox, all of NUes, 0 ., Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Lewis, Clifton, Mr. and Mrs.
Roo aid Russell and children, Mandy
Maurlsha Nelson was selected and Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Shennan
valentine girl for the XI Gamma Mu Reeder of Mineral Ridge, Mr. and
Chapter of Beta Sigma Pill at a
Mrs. RockyHuppandson, R. J., Mr.
meeting held Tuesday night at the
and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr. and Mrs.
home rl Mrs. Carol McCullough.
Eddle.Huppandson, Keremy, David
'l'be meeting following a pro- Roush, Cindy Roush, Ed Roush ,
greaaive dinner which began with Tressa McDennott of New Haven,
the appetizer at the home rl Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush. A
Ruth Riffle, tile salad at the home ol potluck dinner was served at 4 pm.
Mrs. Susan Baer, the main course at The evening wu spent playing
Annie Chapman's and the dessert at wlleyball and socially.
the McCullough home.
Herbert Roush was a patient at
A thank you note was read !run Pleasant Valley Hospital Tuesday
the Meigs County Fair Board thank- through Thursday .a t Point Pleasant.
Ing the group for working at the adMr. and Mrs. Jack Ables spent
mlsslcn gates during the tair. Also
Labor Day weekend with Mr. and
read wu a.thank you note from Mrs. Mrs. Paul Ables, ViCki Ables at
Evelyn Knight for the lawn recliner
Groveport, Mr. and Mrs. Roonie
which she received fnm the
Ables at Tlrurston, Mr. and Mrs.
chapter.
Larry Abies called at the Paul Ables
Mrs. Riffle thanked those serving
home and visited with Mr. and Mrs.
al the progressive dinner. Mrs.
Abies. 'l'bey also saw a parade at
Charlotte Hanning asked members Canal Winchester.
to contribute canned goods and
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell visited Mr.
miscellaneous Items on a monthly
and Mrs. Bruce Hart at Columbus
basis to help needy familles at
recyntly and called on Mr. and·Mrs.
holidays. It was noted that Billy
Harold Grinun and Dr. and Mrs.
Anderson, son of Mrs. Jennifer
Earl Grimm at Columbus.
Anderson, is hospitalized. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. sieve Chaney and
Carol Adams asked members to
daughter , Misty Dawn, Mr. and Mrs.
register allhe Middleport Bookstore
Roy Searles of Middleport visited
for secret sister gifts,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell Thursday
evening.
Don Bell will enter Holzer Medical
Center Sept. 9 and will have surgery
A •100 contribution for kitchen ap- Sept. 10.
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, Mr.
pliances al the parsonage wu made
and
Mrs. Eddie hupp and son,
by the Afternoon Circle at a meetiJ1c
Jeremy
, attended the Hupp reunion
'l'buraday at the Heath United
at
the
Community Center at
Methodist Church, Middleport.
Ravenswood
a recent Sunday,
Plans were made for the annual
Mr.
and
Mrs.
O!ester Durst of
pecan sale with the circle ordering
NUes,
Craig,
Kelly
and Melanie
l2 cases to be sold at ~.25 a pound. A
Reeder
of
Mineral
Ridge
, Roonle
contribution rl ~ wu made to the
Co1
of
Niles
spent
the
Labor
Day
Rev. and Mrs. Robert Robinson
weekend
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rusaell
toward retreat expell8es, Oct. 22 and
Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons,
23 at Burr Oak Lodge.
Mrs. Robert Rinehart opened the Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush. They
meeting with a plano prelude and also visited Mrs. Iva Durst at the
several readings. Mrs. Walter Care Inn at Ripley and other
Hayes gave the study lesson from relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bass,
the book, ''Visions of Palmos" a con·
Kendra
and Corinne of Clifton, Mr.
tinuing study of the book ofRevela·
and
Mrs.
Jim Hupp, Billy and
lions, Mrs. Hay,es discussed the
Jinuny,
visited
Mr. and Mrs. Afnold
theme which runslhrough the book
Hupp
Labor
Day.
rl RevelatioM on the power of good
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Burri spent
and evil and the Christian's choice.
Labor
DaY weekend with Mrs.
The birthday of Mrs. Marjorie
Kathryn
Hunt and family and visited
Milhoan was noted. 'l'be Rev. Mr.
Mrs.
Erma
Wilson at the Arcadia
and Mrs, Robinson were guests.
Nursing
Home
at Coolville.
Refresiunents were served by Mrs.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
David Hensler,
M. C. Wilson, Mrs. Rose McDade,
Rachel
and Nathan of Racine were
Mrs. James Euler, and Mrs. Nan
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Don
Moore.
Bell Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. John

Carpenter
Personals

Mrs. Starkey's sister, Mrs. Elms
Vernm, at the home rl her son, John

Vemon, in New Lexington, and jour·
neyed on to Colwnbus to see Mr.
Starkey's sister, Jessie Jewell, who
Mr. and Mrs. John Cordray. remains in a serious condition
Fullerton, Calif., were guests ol hla followed surgery.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jordan atbrother-In-law and. sister, Mr. and
tended
the wedding of David Ash·
Mrs. Reed Jeffers and he and his
worth,
formerly
of Albany, which
,brother, ~rt Conlrsy of Wester·
was
held
at
the
fairground near
ville are making repairs at their
Aberdeen,
Ohio.
David
is now in the
farm home in Athens County. ·
ministry
and
the
couple
will Uve at
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey, local,
Hillsboro,
where
he
is
pastor
of a
and daughter, Wilda Mae W'lBelll8ll,
church.
Joshua
and
Jeremy
Jordan
~ville, called on Marian
Fisher at ·Shawnee and visited the spent the day with their grand·
cemetery there. They then called on parents, Mr. and Mrs, Clinton
Gilkey in Albany.

Mr. and Mrs. Albert Quivey li
Strasburg visited his mother, Mar·
thaMays,
Mr. and Mrs. John Dunham, John
Carl and Richard, New Boston, ru.,
are vacaUonlng here with her paren·
ts, Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffers, her
sister aild family, Mr. and Mrs.
Lavern Jordan and family, and her
brother and sister-In-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Jeffers and members of
their family. The Dunhams
daughters, Connie and Yvonne, who
are both employed, will fly to Columbus and join them for a fe days
vacation before they all return to
their homes.
Mr. and Mrs. William Culwell of
Pomona Park Fla., are spending

Maurisha Nelson,
Valentine Girl

$100 donation noted

Adventist youth

. .

.

The ·student mlaslonary concept

serve as mtsstonanes
Seventh-day Adventist young
people are serving as overseas
missionaries In record numbers, according to Albert Dlttes, Putor of
the Pomeroy Seventhoday Adventist
Church,
Dllles says at least1'200 college-age
students have been 1sent out from
North America in ilhe past year.
Many teach EngUsh u a second
tongue at Engllah-language schools
In the Far East, while others serve
as nurses, pastors, secretaries and
pilots In Third-World areas.
Student missionaries caine from
12 North American colleges
operated by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. They pay their own
transportation to and from the
mission field, and are hosted by the
.mission organization for their room
and board, Dlttes says.

OPTOMETRISt

f

r OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON I
t_O_!'_:"~~~~!...-:.~~S_!:~'!_R]!~::_':07M_~~~·--.,--.o.~

began In 1959, when Marlin
Mathieson went for a t!Jree.month
Sllllllllel' stint from Colwnbia Union
College In Maryland to Menco. 'l'be
average stay for student
mlaslonaries now Is one year, 'l'bey
have warted in 89 different nati0ll8.

O!aney of Pine Grove called in the
evening.
Arthur Wilson of Marietta was a
dinner guest a recent Sunday of Mrs,
Kathryn Hunt and family.
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis, Clifton,
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
Mandy and Michael, Mrs. Iva Orr,
Russell Roush, Cindy Rou:;h, David
Roush were Labor Day guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush and
assisted them in digging potatoes.
David Roush and Tressa
McDennott of New Haven called on
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush a
recent Sunday. Others calling .were
Mrs. Edna Roush, Mrs. Gladys .
Shields of Racine, Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman Reeder, Mr. and Mrs ..
Walter McDade of Troy.
Mt. and Mrs. Walter McDade and
Roy Wilson of Troy spent a weekend
with Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mrs. Edna
Roush and family . .
Mr. and Mrs. David Gloeckner
and daughter Carrie, Mr. and Mra, ,.
Erwin Gloeckner enjoyed a cookout
at the home of Clarence Story and
daughter , Rosalee, at Darwin
Moo day.
Attending the Durst reunion at
Kara Land at Ravenswood were Mr.
and Mrs. Olester Durst, Ronnie Cox
of Niles, Mr. and Mrs. Sherman
Reeder, Crslg Kelly and Melanie of
Mineral Ridge, Mr , and Mrs.
Herbert Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa
Parsons, Mr. and Mrs. Dans Lewis,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush, David,
Cindy and Ed Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Eddie Hupp and son, Jeremy, Mr.
and Mrs. Ronald RusseU, Mandy
and Michael. The reunion was held
oo Saturday evening and will be held
next year at the park at the Racine
Locks and Dam .
- Mrs. Focle Hayman and son Keith
visited Saturday evening with Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Jewell of Letart, W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp and son
Jeremy visited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Waldnlng at Syracuse Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Homer Belt, Mr. and
Mrs. Rocky Hupp and 11011 R.J ., Mrs.
Irene Hupp were Saturday evening
dinner guests of Mr. and mrs. Ar·
nold Hupp.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Norrts rl
East uverpool visited Sunday with
Mrs. Iva Orr. Mr. and Mrs. James
Norrts and two daughters rl Akron
visited Mrs. Orr Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Parsons,
Angle and Jim, and Bob rl Ashland
visited Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa Parsons
Sunday.
Mrs. Eunice Durst and soo rl Pitt·
sburgh, Pa., attended funeral ser·
vices for their uncle' Owen Hall at
the Ewing Funeral Home Friday .
and called on Mr. and Mrs. Dall8ll
Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Roush
entertained at their home Aug. 13 in
honor ol their son, Joey, who was
celebrating hla birthday. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Dean Hill, Mr.
and Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mr. and Mrs.
Darrell Norris, Tracy and Ryan,
Mrs. Dolly Wolfe and Cortney
Roush.

some time with their IIOII-In-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jor·
dan, Bryan, Keith and Sarah and
also vl/lltlng relatives In Jackson,
Ohio, and northern Kentucky.
Harley Pickett and son, Buddy,
Miami, Flli., were recent guests of
hla mother, Laura Krebll, and other
relatives here.
Laura Krebs and mothr, Maude
Holcomb, called on Mrs. HolCOOlb's
slater, Ruth Swlaher~ at the home of
their bnither and Bllter-ln.Jaw, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Cottrill near Rad·
cliff. Mrs. Swisher recently returned
home from Holzer Hospital,
GalllpoU.s, after suffering a broken
hlp several weeks ago.
Recent weekend guests ol Mr. and

BONELESS

trsinlng.

tJsa Dye, daughter of Madge
Blackwood, b8ll completed basic
training iiJ the National Guard and
b8ll returned home to complete
plans to enter Ohio State University

In September.
'l'hoee calling to see Mr. and Mrs.

WiUiam Cheadle and Metta Fisher
were couslnl, Fem Weluman,
Boston, Mau., and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Jeffen, Athens. Other
relatives vl/lltlng were Mr. and Mrs.
James Foster, South VIenna, Mr.
and Mrs, Wilbur Smith, Jollnatown;
and Rev. and Mrs. David Woodyard,
Toby and Jennifer, Marietta.
Relatives here have learned rl the
death of Grover CUter, 90, at Hen·
dersonvllle, North Carolina, Mr.
Caster, who was rUred In this com·
munity, was a brother ol Mrs. Earl
(Orna) Starkey, local; A. R. (Ben)
Caster, Charleston, W. Va.; Mrs.
E1ma Vernon, New
and
Mrs. J;',.,.....t

-

~~'i~~. . . . . . . ~.~ }69 .~~E-=K. . . . . . .~:! 2 .
~~~~~.~~............~. $}89 ~~t . .!~.~-~~~-'.. 8gc
SUPERIORS

PICNIC
HAMS.

.

SEA STAR
BAnER DIP
5 LBS.
OR MORE

gge

.

ECKRICH
SMOKED

ECKRICH

HOT .

FISH

SAUSAGE

DOGS
99~

LB.

LB.

$199

REGULAR PKGS. lb. '1.19

BANANAS
....•..•........
~
..
~~.
88~
ICEB£RG HEAD
.
LETTUCE ....................H.~~ •. 59~

U. S. NO. 1

POTATOES ...... ~~.~~~... J.129

SALE DATES
SEPTEMBER
17-22, 1979
QUANTITY
RIGHTS ·

MONARCH
WHOLE KERNEL OR
CREAM STYLE

~ 16-oz.~

co

II

•

II\

IICo&amp;lt

RESERVED

MOIAICH GIEEI BEAlS (CUt or French Stwlel
MOIAICH WAX BEAlS
llOIAICH IIDIEY BJAIS
1 ll·oz,

Cans

MOIIIIAIICH

Gn• LIMA BEAlS ........................2 ·~: 89&lt;

EICHEl

Cano

y. CJuiet

MONAIICH

POll' BEAlS ...................................... ~~~ 75&lt;
MONARC_H

IIDIEY BEAlS ......................................~;:· 75
10 oz. jar
Limit One
Per

Customer

REG. OR
DIET PEPSI

YELLOW CLING •
SLICED OR HALVES

CHEERIO$ •••••••••••••••••••••••••• 99$

OPEN PIT

18 OZ.

PI IlK
SALMON

~Lssc

Pufthase

29-oz.

BARBECUE SAUCE .•.•••••••••••••• ·6 9~

OMATO
JUICE

PEPSI.
8 l~~z.$109
With

15 OZ.

HAWAIIAN PUNCH ••••••••~.~;_ 59~

MAXWELl HOUSE INSTANT

COFFEE

~

GENERAL MILLS

..$r
...
c..

THURSDA Y

HOSPITAUZATIONf

.

ONLY

Can

KIWT

MACARONI
N $}OO
&amp;CHEESE..............!.~l-'1

SWEET
•' ORES • CARDINAL FOOD STORES

RC COLA

KEEBLER

ELFWI
_. ...
Umh ... Wllh

PRINTS, WHITE OR ASSORTED
With

$10.00 purc~au

GLAD FAMILY PAK

TRASH BAGS

RDIIA
RGARII

BUNS

$199

12~.59

I.a..
Cta

For

Mrs. WUUam t;hadle were their
granddaughter and hulbar¥!, Mr.
and Mrs. Sam Johnaon, Stoutsville.
They were joined on Sunday by other
family members, Metta Flaber, Un·
ds Harrison, Billy, Roger and Cindy
Ross, Stoutavllle, Mr. and Mrs. Res
Cheadle, Kathy and Bradley, local.
DorlB Ross, grsnddaughter Df Mr.
and Mrs. WWlam Cheadle, has com·
pleted bulc training in the National
Guard and has been sent to Fori
Sam Houston, Texas, for advanced

19

Apple Grove News Notes

,-------------------------~~-~- -,
I N. W. .COMPTON, 01~D. . :r

.:

Items for schools. II "u noted that
300,000 labels were contributed last
fall.
Mrs. Robert Ashley reported on a
workshop held recentiy In CoJumboJI
where Mrs. George Baylles, preli·
dent general, was a apeaker. Several
chapter officers attended.
Mrs. James Brewington Ia halidling the state and national magazine
subscriptions.
Refreshmenta rl cake and a
dessert COUI'8e was aerved by Mrs. ·
Elch, Ml'8. lnl!els, Mrs. Yost and
Mrs. J . E. Foster. Peasant figurines
which Mrs. Elch brought back from
Russia were tl.'ed on the table for a
centerpiece.

5- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Monday,Sept.l7, 19'19

BORDEN

2/8

LITE

ONION DIP... : .~~..~~.. 62 ~ YOGURT. ........ 3/89~
VALLEY BELL

ICE CREAM SANDWI(HES ...... ~.~~ ..

L.J. HMfUII

21-oa. IJit
. PPU PIE
A
~·~- .. ····.......... · .. ···"'•·

890
'

L. J. HAOOIII

BLACIBEIIJ PIE

z:.:

'I H

•

~ ·
~

co

li'

-

e

. ~0 STOR! S

�6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pom~roy, 0., Monday, Sept. l7, 1979
'

.

Your-Best Buys
Are
Found
in
the
Sen.
t
inel
Classifieds.
-

7- Tbe Dall,t_Ser.tlnel, Middleport-P~roy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 17, 1979

-•

.

wanted to Buy
CHIP

WOOD .

Poles

Pollet Co .. Rt. 2. Pomeroy .

OLD FURNITURE . ice boJCes ,

brou bed1 , Iron beds . desks .
etc.,

complete

households .

Write M .D. M illw . Rt .
Pomeroy o r coli 992· 7760.

4,

OLO COINS, pocket watches .
clan ring~ , wedding bands ,
diamonds . Gold or silver . Coli
J . A. Wamsley, 742-2331 .
WANTED: S~W logs. Payment
upon deli'tlery

toOtH

yard . 7:30

to

3:30 weekdays. Blaney
Hardwoods , SR 339, Barlow,

OH. 678· 2980.
ANTIQUES, FURNITURE . glou .
china . anyth ing. SH or cal l

I day
2days
!days
&amp;days

M iddleport ,

OH .

992·3161.

GiveAway

15 Wurds or Under
Dish
Char!j:e
1.00
1.~ '
uc
1.9()
1.10
2.2:i .
3.7:i
3.00

Each word over the minJmwn 1
15 word&amp; Is 4 cents per word per
day , AdsruMingotherthanconsecuUve days will lie ctwrged at
the l day rate .

In memory, Can! of ThankS
and Obituary : 6 cents per word ,
13.00 minimum. Cash ln ad·
vance.
Mobile Home sales and Yard
sale!l are accepted on ly witll
cash with order. 25 cent char~e
for ads cai'T)'ing Boll Number In
Care of The Sentinel.

Ruth Gosney , ontiqves . 26 N .

2nd .,

Auctions

CHARGES

diameter I 0'' on largest end.
$12 per ton . Bu ndled slob. $ 10
pe r ton. Delivered to Ohio
991·1689.

Lost and Found

WANT AD

mox .

red

white.
Amer ican domestic s, 8 kit·
tens , 3 block , I tiger. I yellow ,
I calico , I grey, I grey and
white . I miniature lassie type
mole , you ng, ton and whi1e.
Collie te rrier , black and
while, young , male, short
ha ir, shots . Humane Society .

deemed objectional. The
Publisher will not be responsible
for more than one incorrect insertit1h .

NOTICE
lA DVERTISING

PiJEADLINES
Monday

Tuesday
tbru Friday
4P.M.

the day before publication

SIX lob .puppies. 3 femoles . 3
moles. Very playful. Humone
Soci ety . 992· 62~.

_

Sunday

Notices

image and win their gratitude
and respect . Your unsellishness
becomes yoLJ. Find out more of
·what lies ahead lor you in the
year lollowlng your birthday by
sending lor your copy of AstraGraph l etter. Mail S1 for each to
Astra-Graph, Box 489. Radio
City Station. N.Y. 10019. Ba sLJre
to specify birlh dale.

dear friends In Meigs Coun·

1y, so we would like to say

"Good·bye" this way and
thank you all for your
friendship thru the past o45
years. You have all enrich·
ed our lives In someway, In
our hours of happiness and
in our hours Of sorrow.
Please drop by and see us
at Box 68, Lot 37, Rt. 1,
Kentwood Mobile Home
Park, Quinton, VA 231~1 .
Aaron and I rls Kelton.
NO HUNTING on George
Freeland's property.

rents are stirring which will give
MObi' le Homes Sale's
you somelh ln~;~ big to be hopeiul
about. Fortunate things could 1 7.. 14
70
bile h
x
mo
ome.
start to happen as o f toctay.
SCORPIO (Oc:t. 24-No'f'. 22) Good c:ondltlon. 992· 58!»8 .
Should you find yourself In a ·• 1965 GENERAL 60xl2 2 bedr
cl'u!!lenging situation toda y, 1970Sylva 60)(12 2b.dr. '
don t let circumstances inllml91 C 1'
' 2 bod
date you. lady luck will be avail· 1 0 ast e, 60)(12,
r.
able 11 you have to call upon her.
197.. Morklina, .50x12, 2 bedr.

4

1969 Vollanl, 12•60, 2 bedr.

Sometimes your Insight regarding the outcome of events is
startling. This is one Cl f those
days when your predictions
could be right on target.
CAPRICORN (Doc:. 22-Jon. 181
Your greatest benefit s or advantages ere likely to be gained
today from joint ventures or situ·
ations you manage for others .
Focus on these. areas.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 181 A
wise selection of a partner could
double your luck today in an
Involvement where a team effort
is required. Be very choosy.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20) Persons In th e position to give your
career a boost see you in a very
favorable light today. ConlinLJa
to do a good job. The y will be
even further impressed.
ARIES (Marctl 21· April 18) You
will be luck ier today In dealing
with persons wh o you deem to
be " big shots" rather than with
thOse you feel pre smalllrles. Go
right to the top.
TAURUS (April 20-Mor 201 A
domestic sltuaton that has concerned you appears as If It will
work out so that all will be
pleased . Hope for the best.

1967 National, 12~e:50, 2 bedr.
B'S MOBILE HOME SALES , PT.
PLEASANT, WV . 304-675-442...

cess will not be denied you today
if you visualize what you hope to
achieve positively. Think " win.''
Act accordingly.

William•. 949·2571 .

GEMINI (Mar 21-Juno 201 Sue·

CANCER (Juno 21-Julr 221

Something you are Involved In
can be expanded today to produce an even larger return than
anticipated. look lor ways to
enhance what you 've already

begun.

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Enterprises requiring your personal touch
should work out as you hope
today. instead of delegating,
handle the important elements
yourself.

NOTICE ON
FILING OF
INVENTORY
AND
APPRAISEMENT
The State of Ohl'!r Meigs

County, Court of

~;ommon

Pleas, Probate Division

To the EKecutor or Ad m ini strator of the estate, to
such of the following as are
residents of the State of

Ohio , viz : .. the SUtltl~lng
spouse, the next Qt U, the

benefi c iaries
urt'iler the
will ; and to the a t1orney or
attorney s representing llny
of t he aforementioned per ·
sons :

Ethel Blackwood. Rt. 2.
Albany , Ohio, Co:;e No.
22717
\
You are hereby r\o•if led
that the lnvento•y /Jr1r, Ap ·
pra isemen t of the es tate of
the
aforem t~if,t
i ned,
deceased/late ot ;;aid oun ty , were iled in t ' iS ourt.
Sa id Inventor y
Ap ·

pra is.ement will be for
hearing be fore this Court
on the Ath day of October,

1979, at 10 :00 o 'c lock A.M.
Any person desi ring to
f il e exceptions th@reto

mvst fi le them at lea t f ive
, days prior to the date set

for hearing .

G iven under m y h8nd
an d seal of .sa i d Court, this

14th day of September 1979.
Robert E . Buck
Judge

aycarolrn
Tho
Deputy
191 17, " · 2tc
.

RN OR LPN with Pharmacology, full ti me. 3-11 shift.
Stlifting differential . Pinecrest
Core center , Judy · 'Barkus,

«6-7112.

1969 FORD BRONCO

For Sale

~ · wheel

drive. wnlte spoke wheels , 3
speed
trans .
Call

COAL,

tllizer, dog food , ond oil type•
992·3891 .
WINTER POTATOES. C.W. Pr,.

7~2· 2~().1

tfitt form . Portland, OH . $8 o
hundred and $5 a hundred .
APPLES . Now picking Grimes
Golden . Other varieties to
follow . Fitzpatrick Orchards,
SR 689. Pllone Wilkesvil le

boforo 2 pm

E~e:cellent

669·3785.

~·

condition. · POTATOES for winter. Cobbler , Kennei;Hic and Superior.
Phone S.U.2.. 91 . Tom Sayre,

1978 CAMARO. 12,000 l]lilos.

SR 338.

305 engine , A .C., rear d'efogger, excellent condUion. Take,
aver payments . 247-3863 .
OUROC

DODGE

pickup,

pondo, 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bedr.
1973 Skyline 12x55 2 bedroom .
1972Bonanza 12x52, 2bedr.

B &amp; S MOBilE HOME SALES ,
PT . PLEASANT , WV .
304 · 675-«1~ .

1975 KIRKWOOD 14 x 70, total
electric, 3 bedroom. Ellcellant
condition. Best offer, must

318

engine , A. C., white spoke
wheels. sliding back gloss,
good condition. 247·3863.

PIGS, seven weeks old, $20
each. Straw, $1.25 bale.

985- 41 ().1,

'

1963 FORD PICKUP. Ex·
condition. W'ill
trade for good running car

cellent

or cash. Also, freezer, 13 in . •

tires with wheels. 949·2379.
1975 CHEVROLET NOVA, 6
cyl., std. shift, 4 new radials.

. $995. 992·J.I06.

POTATOES, Red Pontiac,
Kennebec, $8 per 100 ltr. ,
Small S.C per 100 lb. J m iles
west of Darwin between
Gold Ridge and c R 14 on
TR 1-45. Cecil Toban.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork,
Lorge )o1s. Call 992.7479.
3 AND~ RM furnlsned and un·
opts.

Phone

992·5434.
ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor, 992-nB1 .

REGISTERED Appaloosa colts.

SENIOR CITIZENS , I bodroom

3 weanlings. 1 17 mos. old.
Good bloodlines , good con-

opts. for
rnet . Rental
auistance
available .

Call 61~ · 593 ·7390 .

992·7721.
SYRACUSE,

'/,

double,

formation , and good blanket.
FIREwOOD for sale . Now taking orders . Will del iver. Phone

2

bedroom, semi furnished ,
adults only, no children or

742·2056.

pets. Doposlt992·2749.
beds

7"'·2:133.

Prono 3Q.1.882· n71 .

EARLY AMERICAN couch and
velvet choir. Excellent condi -·
tion. Contact Bob Asnley ,
ChHhire, OH. 367- 0oi80.
.

SLEEPING ROOMS fOr rent in
Racine. 949-2591.

HOUSE , Four rooms and
bath. All carpeted except
kitchen. Deposll required.
992-3C90.

1979 HONDA XL 500. Low
m ilecge. Excellent condition.

Free estimates. Call 9..9-2686.

and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

LIKE NEW

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Serv-ice

'250

l USED FREEZER $75
1 NEW ELECTRIC FURNACE
00

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr.

CLEARANCE PRICED

Phone 992-2111

1 NEW FUEL OIL FURNACE

WILLING TO trive tractortrailer free for 2V. mOf'lths in
exchange for experience on
tM rood . I will poy my own
personal expansa,s. Call

CLEARANCE PRICED
MAIN ST.
JACK W. CARSEY, MGR .
PHONE 992-2181

'191·5770.
Will bo house cleoninQ.
Hours to call 9 om to 6 pm

JO.C·773·54ZI or J0.4.77:J.5069 .

DEPENDABLE

BABY

sitter

9~9·2377 aftor 6

p.m.

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, English and
We stern .
Saddles
and
horneu . Hor ses and ponies .
Ruth Reeves. 614·698-3290.
Barding &amp; Riding leuona and
Horse Cora products .Western
booh, Children' s $15.50,

Adults $29.00.
RISING STAR Kon n.ol. Boor·
ding. Call 367-CJ292 .
POODLE GROOMING . Judy
Taylor. 61067·7220.
REGISTERED BEAGLES, $25 . 7
weoks old. ~ · 882· 3242 .

•

21 ·FOOT of wrought Iron
railing . Beige carpet 8x10.
Pull down ceiling light.
Movie
projec tor
and
screen. After 5, ca II
742·2020.
ITHACA SHOTGUN, 16
ga ., feather light pump ac·
lion. Modified barrel . Ex·
cellent condition. $150.
992·3640.
BIG BLUE manure spreader.
Zip seeder , Woods pull type
brusn hog , S h . Ford scroper.
All like new condition .

992·5166.
ELECTRIC LAWNMOWER .
t ires ,

electric

1~ "

motors .

742·2785.
12' ALUMINUM BOAT , Mer.
cu'J motor, tro lle1, life jacket
an oars . 667-3025. .

Pomeroy,

J&amp;L BlOWN

STONE Nice one
bedroom home with
bath. nat. gas F .A. fur ·

e$tor111 Windows
• Replocomant
Windows
eGullers ond
Down Spouts
FrH Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992·2772
8·17·1 mo.

nace with city water and
21!2 acres. Reduced to
$20,000.
NEW LISTING 2
level acres with large
shade trees. 3 bedroom
cerami c

bath,

nat. gas F . A. furna ce.
Garage with tool room .
Ideal lor family .
NEW LISTING- Clean
60 acre farm at Allred.
Lots of buildings , good
fences, minerals and
farm house . A real trac ·
tor farm .

BUILDING LOTS - In
Baum Subdivision, will
welcome offer. Others
at Syracuse, Rock spr -

Jurrrl
ANN's
·:_

INSUlATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

NEW

LISTING 27
acr es near Forked Run
Lake. Water and elec .
ava i lable. $15,000.

PIJrchase
and
R eftnance
30 Year Terms
A - No money down

(eligible veterans)
FHA-AS low as 3%
down (non -veterans J

IRElAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E . State, Athen s
4-23 -1

MODERN THREE bedroom.
Total electric home on o Iorge
lot in Hutchison Sub-Division.

742·2Q.I7,

14 mile off Rt. 7

TRAILER SALES

acres . 992-2523 .

---

-40 ACRES LAND on Bailey Run
Road . Good hunting. timber
all mineral rights . $12,000.

7~2·24~2·.:..·- - -- -- -

Y*l~~ mv~ ~~ ~~
I~~~

ll.l'tmST6D (1.) ~­
..........-'IAA~ II.! IT ! .

~RBAOO

L•nglYillt , Oflio
" 4·•"· 414S E ve n ings
1 M olts Eul ttl Wilktsvillt

ST OC K

TRAilER NOW AVAILABLE .

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repa i r
Phone 992-5682 '

• S 1 mo

608 E. ··ololliQW..I
MAIN
POMEROY,O.
NEW LISTING
Established bvsiness in
Pomeroy, " THE KID ·
Dl E SHOPPE". Call for
details.
NEW LISTING - JO
acres , vacant land,
secluded, on a QOOd
townstllp road. 7 acres
tillable,
balance

woodland·. Has many
uses. ONLY S1J ,350 .00 .
NEW LISTING - Ap ·
proximately 25 acres of
building sites, 4 lots
already
s urveyed.
Water,
electr ic
available, on a raod adi acent to good subdivi sion . Call for financing
available. $27 ,500.00 .
NEW LISITNG
7 year old

Syracuse,

ranch type, full base·
ment with rec. room, 2
large woork benches,

fully equipped kitchen,
range ,

refrigerator,

washer ,

3

se If-propelled mower
and
many
other
features.
All
for
S.C0.380.00.
LOVELY 2-STORY
FRAME - 4 bedrooms,
equiped kitchen, 2
baths, lots of carpeting
and paneling, N.G . fore ·
ed air heat, full base·
ment , garage, carport,
patio. A low $28,500.00.
NICE
I - FLOOR
FRAME - 3 bedrooms,

bath , N.G. heat, storms,

glass enclosed porch,
part basement, garage,
about 3 acres, fruits and
grapes and others .
$25,000.00.
Ml DOLE PORT - Love·
ly home located in ex·
ce llent neighborhood,
brick and frame. 5
bedrooms, 1112 baths,
carport, patio, fenced
yard. This you must see.
$59,500.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Clelond, Jr.
992·2259
992-&lt;1191
HOUSE FOR sale on Brownell

A,. . '192·52Q.I.

REYNOLDS

992·2356. 651 Beech
Middleport, OH .

St.,

Real Estate for Sale

~·

REALTY

PHOIJ£ 74Z-2003
chen, living roqm and
l lfa

baths .

Ca r pet

throughout .
Th is
beautiful home Is brick
"Vith a garage and full
basement. Call for your
appt. today. S-j7 ,500.00 .
TUPPERS PLAINS Nice lot In Arbough Ad·
dltlon
with
septic
system and water tap.
POMEROY - We have
2 nice homes that are
real buys.

RUTLAND - Lovely 4
bedroom hOme . You
must see II to appreciate
it's beauty . Only
$35,000.00.
LANGSVILLE - Nice 2
bedroom home on a little over an acre. Sell
pr ice $22 ,500 .00.
WE
NEED
LISTINGS! II If you are
thinking af selling give
us a call.
Cheryl Lemley

Associate
Ph. 742-2003
Velma Nlclnsky
Associate
Hilton Wolfe
Associ ole
GaargeS .

SHOil.E ... THAT 'S WHY
OlliE IS GOIN' ALONE

~fP .. ·CRAZY SUMMER

CAMPERS MESBE ...

UP

-· AND 5A'flN' HOTHtN '
TO NOOO DY ...

HfADIN '
INTO
UOOSE - NEC k
CA N YON ...

'

E-C ELECTRICAL Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region.
Six days a w. .k. 24 hours ser·
vi ce. Emergency calls. Call

882·2952 or B82·J.I54 .
HOWERY AND MARTIN h ·
syst•ms ,
Rt. 143.

Prono I (614) 698·7331 or
742·2593.
IN STOCK for lmm.dlote
delivery : various sizes of pool
kits. Do-lt - yourself or let us
lnttoll for you . 0 . Bumgardner
Sales, Inc. 992-5724.

ANN'S CAKE Decorating Sup-

pllos, 50716 Ooborn Rd ..
Reedsville. OH ~5772 . For In·
formation coli. 667-6A85. Will
be open late If ypu need
\
something,
S&amp; G Carpet Cleaning . Steam
cleaned . Free estimate .
Reasonable rates . Scotchguard.
992 - 6309
or

lng prlco. Call '192 · 32~3 after 6

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South
West

North East

Pass

2+

Pass
Pass

J+

Pas.S
Pass

Pass

Pass

.

Soutb

time to discard one diamond
on dummy's fourth heart and
made an overtrick ."

3t

Ask
You hold:
g..lt-8

AJ.,LEYOOP

H. L Writesel
Roofing
'
.
New, repa1r,

WHATCHA MeAl-.,
HEWPWEHAYE
TH' SAM£ 'n-IIIIIGS
IN MOQ ...ONLV
\AlE CALL 'EM
~VU!

~

gutters and
down spOuts.
Win,dow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estim;Jtes
949 -2862-?49-2160

Axxxx

••AQ

t
• Axxxx

By O.wald Jacoby
aod Alan Sontag

Ph . 992·2174

WI. - UWNNWDS
0.
IDSSQMR
Yesterday'• CryptoquGte: IF YOU WANT TO PULL YOURSElF INTO GLORIOUS ADULTIIOOD DO NOT PERMI1
YOURSElF TO IJVE AN UNCHARTED lJFE. - RHODA
LACHAR .

1:00-Tomorrow 3; News 15; Movie ·
" Tho Borgia Slick" 17.
· '2 : 10- News 13; 3 :00- News 17;
3:20-Movle "King of the
Vikings" 17; 5:10-Dragnet 17. ..

we bid this hand?
We open one club and pla n
to bid spades at least once
later.
tNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ~SSN . I

(For a copy of JACOBY
MODERN. send $ t to: ' 'Win at
Bridg e, " csre of this newspaper. P.0 . Box 489. Radio City
Station. New York, N. Y.
t OO t9 .)
.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

38 Shandy 's

1 AcTOII)'III in

creatqr

3t Pll!.'lllble
s Composed
4t Drove
11 King Hussein's 41 Augur
late wife
DOWN
1% Tabasco
I Greek
brtcks
island
13 Patch
Z On the
It -out (hunt)
q!li-vlve
the headlines

or 949·2000. Roclno. Olllo.
Crltt &amp;radford.

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR Sweepers, tootters . Irons . all
small applloncn. lawn moer ,
next to State Highwoy Garap
on Route 7, 9BS-3825.

SEWING MACHINE Rtpalrs.
service. all makft, 992-2284 .
The Fabric Shop, P~eroy .

Yesterday's Aluwer

IS Grampus

3 Home of

Authorized Singer 5aiM and
Service. We sharpen Scitson .

11 Skin

the Met
4 Youngster

EXCAVATING. do•or. loader

17 Uterary

5 Protection 18 Artful

scraps
18 That's

fabric
8 Elysium
11 Kind of cone
:13 Actress
7 June beetle ZZ Meander
Bancroft
8 Abode
%3 StudloUB
of bliss
zt Pact twixt 31Shrew
37 Prefix with
9 "I wtiB a powers
gram ar tope
Werewolf" Z51nherttor

problem

and bockhoe wart..; dump
trucks and to-boys for hire ,

will noul fill d irt, top soli .
lirneatone and gravel . Coli lob

enough!

or Roger Jeffers, do)! phone
992 -7089,
night
ptlone

Z8Top or ·

992·3525 0&lt; '192-5232.

BUT, P.liRDIS,
WHY DIDN 11

EXCAVATING . dour .
bockt.oe and dltcher , Crorles

YOU TELL
ME ?

R. Hatfield. Block Hoe Service ,

Rutlond, Ohio. P0&lt;1o 7~2· 2008 .
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Com.

WELL, AT FIRST I
THOUGHT IT WAS
JUBT A NIATTER

OF TIME ~E ­
FORE HE'D
lAND A

wOB ...

plete Service. Phone 992-:Z-478.

TI4EN WHEN IT DRAGGO' D ON
FOR MONTriS AND MONIMS1
I WA'J EMI&gt;ARRASB E-D
TrAT YOU M IGHT
~ IN K I WAS

$UPPORT/Nt7

OH, \' IRDIE1 SOMETIME5 I WON DER WH ETHER.
YOU R::ALLY
KNOW ,IJ\E AT
ALL !

HIM I

operators

llcens•?

Phone

10 Grandiose
properties

r7 Conditional
30 Expunge

31 Man-made

S)'IIIbol

%Z Frenetic

state

1...-+-t-i-

Z5 Shelters
!IFonnerly
r7 North

SAVE ON CARPET
DRIVE A' LimE
SAVE A LOT
RUBBERBAC~

straw n Purity

Zl Rochester's
only
employer

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
been concolled? Lost your

and Baltic
!I Suff!J:
denoting
origin

n

!iAttNEY·

GIVE ME THAT
THAR JUG, SNUFFY!!

CARPEl

ENUFF OF THIS OL

38 Knowledge
38 Swiss river
34 -pro nobis

DEVIL'S POTION

'4
' 99

Lwnber)ack's

shout

YOU'VE HAD

1=-+--t-t::--+-t-t--t--t-

35 Zellous
S7 Brltlaber's

AND UP

CASH &amp; CARRY
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It:

SALE ON All CARPET IN STOCK

II

'9~fouP

brick

I
Ave. In Pomeroy .

on
I
Th ey just
build them like this anymore. Cen - 1
tral heat and air conditjonlng. You've got to see this
Mme 10 appreciate. Call for appointment.- S-jS,OOO. ·

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992-2342, Eve. 992 -2449
Middll!port, 0.

r

CRYPTOQUOTES
1

THOSE AREN T OOT5 ...
THOSE ARE EifE5!
1-lAVEN'T LfOU EVER
HEARD OF I'5 El.{£5?

CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742 -2211

Rut11nd,

AXYDLIIAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One ·letter simply stands for anolher. In this sample A to
used for the three L's, X for the lwo O's, e tc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hiots. Each day the code letlers are dilfeTent.

Installed and Pad FREE
GOOD SELECTION"OF
CUSHION VINYL

STICK AROUND!
f/OU MAV LEARN
SOA4ETt!ING!

YAUDODPR

ICQ

MRMDNNP

IBAMHNQO

DLIQB

AY

o. •

TUESDAY , SEPTEMBER 11, lt7t
5:45-Farm Reporl 13; 5:»-PTL
.Club 13 .
6:00-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10;
PTL Club 15; 6: 10-News 17.
6: »-Concer~s &amp; Comments 10;
Dragnet 17 ; 6 :45- Mornlng
Report 3.
6:»-Good Morning West Virginia
13; 6 :55-News 13.
7:00-Today 3,15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three Stooges:
Little Rascals 17; 7:15-A.M.
Weather 33.
7:JG-Famlly Altair 10; 7 : 5~huck
While Reports 10.
8:00-Capt . Kangaroo 8.10; Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:00-Bob
Braun 3; Phil Donahue 13,15; Big
Valley 6; Porky Pl'g &amp; Friends B;
One Day AI A Time 10; lucy ,
Show 17.
9:JG-Bob Newharl 8; Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.

AWl\

A Dakota reader asks how

~~~

BRADFORD, AuctlanHr , Complete Service. Pho,. 949·247

6: JG-NBC News 3,15; ABC Nevys 13;'
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News B,10;
Bob Newharl 17.
7:00-Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Muppet Show 6; News
10; Newlywed Game IJ ; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:30- That Nashville Music 3; .
Newlywed Game~ ; Joker's Wild
8; Family Feud 10,13; Nashlvlle
on the Rood 15; All In The
Family 17; MacNeii · Lehrer
Report 20,33.
8: 00-LIIIIe House on the Prairie
3, 15; 240· Robert 13; Edward the
King 6; White Shadow 8,10; Bill
Moyers' Journal 20,33 ; Falcons
Football 17.
9:00-Movle "Coming Home" 3,15;
NFL Football 6,13; Mash 8,10;
Movie " A Summer Place" 17;
Once Upon A Classic 20; Murder
Most English 33.
9: JG-WKRP In Cincinnati 8,10;
10:00-Lou Grant 8,10; Poldark
33; News 20.
10:JI)-Coplng Wit~ Kids 20; 11 :OilNews B,IO ; Dick Cavell 20; Book
Beat 33 .
11 :JG-News 3,15 ; Harry·O 8; ABC
News 33; Movie "Georgy Girl"
10.
11 : ~5-Movle "Come and Get 11"17;
12 :00-Johnny Carson 3,1~;
News 6, 13.
12 :»-FBI 6; Emergency One 13;
12 : ~0-McMIIIan &amp; Wile 8.
I : 30- Tomorrow 3; 1 :50-Movie
"Marlr:Jes. Let 's Go" 17; 3:»News fl; ~ : 1&lt;&gt;--&lt;)pen Up 17.

IO :Oil-Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
"Rosie" 17.
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Whew 8,10.
10:55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
11 :Oil-High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10.
11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3, 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St.
20; 11 :55-News 17.
12 :00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8,10,13; Mlndreaders ·15; Love
American STyle 17; Big Blue
Marble 33.
12 :30-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search for
Tomorrow 8.10; Health Field 15;
Movie "Asylum for a Spy" 17;
Elec. Co. 20,33 .
1 :Oil-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
Children 6,13; Young &amp; the
REstless 8.10.
1:30-As The World Turns 8,10;
2:00-Doctors 3,15; One Life to .
Live 6,13; 2:25-News 17.
2:»-Another World 3,15; Guiding
Light 8,10; Glgglesnort Hotel 11.
3:00-General Hospital 6,13; I love
Lucy 17; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-0ne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10 ;
Flintstone• 17;
Crockett's Victory Garden 20 .
4:00-Mister Cartoon 3; Tom &amp;
Jerry 13; Password 15; Mt!rv
Griffin 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
Sesame St. 20,J3; Six Million
Dollar Man 10; Spectreman 17.
4: 30-Bewllched 3;
Petticoat
Junction B; Bionic Woman 13;
Little Rascals 15; Gilligan's Is .
17.
5:00-1 Oream of Jeannle3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh·
borhood 20,33 ; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; Abbott &amp; Costello 1~;
My Three Sons 17.
5:»--Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec . Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13;
Lucy Show 15; I Dream ot
Jeannie 17; Doctor Who 33.
6 :00-News 3,8,10,13, 15; ABC News
6; Carol Burnell 17; Villa Alegre
20.
. 6:»-NBC News3,1S; ABC News 13;
CArol Burnett 6; CBS News 8,10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20.
7;00-Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Pulse 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13 ; Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7:JO- Hollywood Squares 3, 10;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; Sha Na Na IJ; Country Roads
15; All In The Family 17;
MacNeil · Lehrer Report 20,33 . .
8:00-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3,1 S; Happy Days 6,13; Movie
" The Other · Side al Midnight"
8,10; Movie "The War Lord" 17;
Hotcakes 20; City Notebook 33.
8:!10'-Angle 6,13.
9 : 00- Movle "Semi ·Tough" 3, 15;
Three' s Company 6, 13; Minnesota Orchestra's 75th Anniversary 33; Border Traffic 20;
.
9:30-Taxl 6,13.
10:00-Lazarus Syndrome 6.13;
News 20.
10 :30-Baseball 11; Like II Is 20.
11: 00- News 3,6,8,10,13,15; Oick
Cavell 20; Book Beat 33.
11 :30-Johnny Carson 3,15; Barney;·
Miller 6,13; ABC News 33; Movie
" The Last Rebel " 10.
12: 05-Movle "Three on a Date"
6,13; 12 :40-Movle "A Sensitive,

Oswald: " In duplicate every
tri ck is very important. With
this in mind, every expert will
make occasional bids to make
things difficult for the
de fense . South's three-diamond call is typical of this
sort of action . He intends to
play in four spades and wants
to stop a diamond lead againsl
that contract."
Alan: "He ca n't get hurt by
fooling his partner . Spades

A·S-ffc

'192·11.o3.

p. m. for appointment .

t H4

+

Molols,lnc.

.

8·21 ·1 mo.

WILL HAUL limestone and
gravel. Also , lime hauling and
spreading. l ee Morrjs Truck ing, POOne 7A2-2.4SS.

.A

Je

Hobstetter, Jr., Broker

TWO BLOCKS from business
district In M iddleport, out of
high water. 3 bedroom, eat-in
kitchen , pantry, dining room .
living room and bath. Natural
gas furnace, full basement,
and attic, endos.d bock yard ,
washer ,
dryer ,
range ,
refrigerator.
curtains and
carpeting included In purchas·

• 74
.. 10 9
t AJ6
• Jl71 3 !

ORPIIAJO( AQIE-HE TRAVELS ALONE

Smith Nelson

Free Estimates
992-5304, 992 -2238

Braker, 992-5739

• 8
.. 8 7 4 2
t KQ93
• K Q 10 6

Opening lead : + K

Services
·Offered
All MasonaiJ Work
Foundation,
Brick Laying,
Concrete Finishing.

742·2348.

EAST

'f K J 6

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

THAT'S RIGHT,
OSCAR! IT 'S

cavatlng. sep tic
dozer, backhoe .

WEST

outrank diamonds and if partner raises diamonds Sout h
jus t goes back to spades."
Oswald: "This type bid is
less effective today than it
used to be. Players have
learned to be suspicious when
declarer gives them too muc h
inform ation. This West was a
doubting Thomas . Left lo his
own devices he would almost
surely have opened a ~tub .
This time he decided that
South was playing games.
Hence. he opened the king of
diamonds. The defe nse rattled
off three di amond tricks and
declarer was held to his
contract. At ta bles where the
c lub was led , declarer had

""..."' _... .,.,., c.r•.

~ · JO · t f c

NEW LISTING - Total
electric , 3 bedroom
home. Dinino room , kit-

..17-A

so urn

ELECTRIC .

Motors, rewind and repair .

NORTH
• J 96 5
• A Q5 3
• 10 7 2
• 95

'.•

Radiator·=~~
S.rvlcir
From n..
aut ldoaer

(Answeralomorrow)

Declarer does himself in

SWoUSe I'M Vm&lt;'l'

WIW'PW 'M;

EVERIINCED

.

J

Jumblol: UNITY BLAZE FAIRLY TONGUE
Answer: What she never learned how to doTIE A "BEAU "

+ AKQliH

9·J.lmo.

on 51 . R1. 114 toward
Rutland.

27320 Montgomer'f' Rd .

GOOSE

by · p~us

r I I ][ I XI I

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

BORN LOSER

RACINI. O.
,.,..741or

7·12

Now arrange the circled lettero to
form the surprise answer, as sug11001ed by lhe above cartoon.

BRIDGE

down

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Roger Hysell
Garage

Housing
Headquarters

I

.

Call 992-JJ25 or 992-3876

REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot In Rlggscresf Menor, between Tu!)pen Plains and Chaster.

'192·7255.
SEVEN ROOMS and both. 2

.
Salurdays

REMODELING
work,

THIS

.•

ADO ONS &amp; '
spouts, some concrete
, work,
walks
1nd
. driYOWifl.
(FIIEE ESTIMATE)

()

I I

1

Cllortotraph.r

Gutter

CAME iHFI:OU6H

Monday, Se pt. 17

Located In Racine, o.
(farmorlr
Wonoro
Skiff aulldlnt)
Ph. f49-1710orMt-2150
B·n ·l mo

•New Home
•Addons
•Remoldlngs
*Free estimates
992-6011

mo.

REAL ESTATE loons. Purchase
and ref inance. 30 year terms ,
VA. No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA - As low as 3
per cent down (non·veterans) .
Ireland Mortgage Co. , n E.
State. Athens . 614-592-3051.

home on approx. 2 dcrea of
levelland with plenty of shade
trees,
on
Rutland
Rd.

Top&amp;J111
A"l-4 oncf up
Shlrloy Corpontor
I natructor •

C. R. MASH
VINYL &amp; ALUM.
SIDING.

Real Estate for Sale

Prone 9fl5.3929 ond 9BS-•1n.
NICE COMFORTABLE 8 room

•.. .

"•""' ,

..

~AIN

FEEDAa
Answ.erhere:

OPENING SEPT.lllh

5071
Osborn
Rd .,
RHdsvlllt, OH, 45712.
Far lnformollan Coli
"H415. Will be OPon
late If you
n••d
something.
9-U · 1 mo.

I

MAY ~TI~L SE ALIVE:

WHA1' 1'HE CONVIC1'
~AID Ae&gt; THE
"THE R'OO~-

WI!U... PON'T 15ii:fATHE A WORD
TO ANYONJ; .. &amp;UT I'Ve GOT A
SNiiAKIN6 HU~CH DADDY

CARPENTER'S
DANCE SllJDIO

DECORATING
SUPPUES

Real Estate Loans

Ings, Rutland, Pomeroy
and near Rutland.

CAI'I'AIN EASY

o.

Announclll9 Oponl119 of

-~ _CAKE

estorm DoQrs

592-3051

ICAHBLE
I
I K)

CALL 992-7544

Pomeroy, o.
8·26·1 mo.

Moln St.

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17,1979

~TfTo

Housing &amp;
Admin. LNnl.

ment.
107 Sycamore (RNr)

992-2367

Television
Viewing

0

L K).

"
••

Hours 9-1 M., W., F.
Other limes by oppalnl·

elnsulollon

"
1977 KAWASAKI 400. Only

1.EXCEU!NT UNICO 16 CU. FT.
COPPERTONE REFRIGERATOR

Monday thru Friday . 2
children. Call Oenl1 e Wolfe.

acre.

bedrooms, hardwood
floors and carpeting.
Also washer and dryer,

Pomeroy Landmark

HOTPOINT

HOUSE WORK DONE in
evenings and Saturdays.
Call 7~2 · 3119 .

RENOVATED
2
bedroom home, nat. gas
furnace, carpeting, dining area, 2 car garage
and extralot.' $25,000 .
70 ACRES- Will sell at
a little over $200.00 per

dish

'192·5421 .

l ..

I~OCK I

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

9·14· (Pd .)

992·5969.

1000 miles , blue in color. like
new . Coli after 5 p. m.

For Sale

WILL 00 baby sitting In my
home for a child from 3 to 9
years of age. Call Alice

bunk

bookcase headboards with S
drawer dreuer, hutch. 1963
Va-Ka-shun-ette
comp8r ,
sleeps six , Beorcat Ul sccnner
women 's coat, size 16:

LARGE Block bullding &lt;40x60,
for garage or storage. Corner
Pomeroy ' 2nd St .. Mason .

367·71 01.
PAINTING AND sandblasting .

I.AMIIUII: .

SOLID MAPLE

TRAILER SPACE . See Mrs.
Woltor Hayes, 635 Mill St ..
Middleport.

Veterilns

RUTLAND
742-2328

$9,500.

home,

Fedtrll

AL TROMM
CONST.

SUPER

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.

furnished

REMODELING
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

available. Good home
sites for A -Frames.

For Rent

•

NOW HAULING limestOne in
Middlepor t· Poemroy area .
Call for free estimate.

FIVE 10x20 General Nygen
tires on Daytons, $385. 1972
Dodge pickup 1 ton offer. 1
Army winch, $190. 011 field
swab unit, S.C95. 2 ea. 8.25 x
20 like new mud grip in·
eludes tube and flap, $85.
300ft. Wild Cherry 1x6 8'1.o
fl. long, $60. Evenings

POMEROY - Nearly
maintenance free . 2
bedroom home with full
basement and extra lot.
Walk to the store .
$25,000.
22 ACRES - With water
and
electricity

7~2 · J093 .

sell. Phone 985·3554.

Services Offered

BOARS . . Purebred.

Reedsville. 614-378·6311.

1972 LYNN HAVEN 1b65 3
bedroom .
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex-

sand,

of salt. Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc ., E. Main St ., Pomeroy,

on engine. P.S., P.R., cruise
control, electric blcket s.ats
with contole, rear defogger,
new tires , new e)(haust.

1973

LIMESTONE,

gravel, calcium chloride , fer.

614·«6-9595.

and seeing so many of our

LIBRA (Sopl. 23-0cl. 23) Cu r·

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 221

197~ VEGA HATCHBACK , call
303·675·1501 or 305·675·2488
or J0.4·67S.I553.
·
197~ DODGE CORONET ~· door
Custom. 992·5858.
1976 PlYMOUTH VOLARE. h·

'192·55,,

MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE
SOCIETY. 992·6260 , Peto

TO SAY goodbye : We could
not gel around to calling

Because you place the needs of
others before yoUr own today it
will db muct1 to enhance yoLJr

Auto Sales

speed.

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY 1
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONLY.
RACINE GUN CLUB .

VIRGO (Aug . 23 -Sopt. 22)

CAR SALESMAN . Send fesume .
to Box 7..3. Pomeroy, OH
45769 . No experience
necessary.
CITY
LIMI TS.
Bartender
wonted. Evening shift. Must
be 21. Apply in prson.

or cfter 5pm.

oval/able for adoption and Information service.

will. be S;Jti treme ly hetpul.

knick·
Rain

1971 FORD F· l50, 6 cyl.

ASTROeGRAPH

September 18, 1979
Those you have done favors for
in the past will do much this
coming year to make your tOt In
life a rosier one. One in particular

""d

$11100.

4P. M.
Friday .attemnoro

TUHdor, S.pt. 11 _

Bernice Bede Osol

Boat, swing set, baby,
teenage , women's
men 's clothlno-oood con -·

1970. T·BIRD, 2 door coupe,
new -429 engine, ,. barrel, new
e~e:houst, le11 than 3000 miles

Noon on SaturdBy

992·6260.

Help Wanted
LIV&amp;IN HOUSEKEEPER wanted .
in exchange for home and
security. 985-4392 or write box
no. 46898 , long Bottom . OH .

YARD SALE . Vic Brown' s ,
Minersville. Monday 9·5.

dltlon, furniture,
knacks,
misc .
cancels.

. 216,E . Second Street

cellent condition. 29 ,000
milos. $2.aQ, '191·3198.

WANT~AD

BEAUTIFUL block and white
female medium size dog . Long
haired face. Humane Society .

'

the~

The Publisher reserves

and·

'192·6260.

YARD SALE . Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday . no
Sycamore St., M iddleport.

four ordinary wOrds.

..

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

RootiNG

byHenriAmoldandBobletl

u~- lour Jumbles,
one loner 10 NCI&gt; oquere, to fonn

..'

·Business Services

.I

Yard Sale

right to edit or reject any ads

COLLI E, FEMALE , medi um to

Iorge ,

Brldgo.

~ ~ ~~ ·

~

LOST . Presumed stolen. I ~
mole Walker, 3 years old, all
white, tan Mod and black
spat left side. Tattooed
S.W.M . left ecr. Answers to
"Ranger ." Apple Grove area 1
Monday night. Call 992-3023
or 742-2214 . All information
confidential .

BIG AUCTION every Wed. , 7
pm . Hartf ord Community
Center, Hartford, WV. 4 mil"
above
Pomeroy - Ma son

'flfl~~~'fl ~ THATSCAAIIBLEDWOADOAIII!

or~~cv

R AS

Q A 'y Q

WRY' I

UDI Q B

MY I W N

VAMBR

Passionate Man" 8.

I

I
\__'

l
1,

�8-TheDailySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday,Sept.17, 1979

e

Dairy farmers getting boost
WASHINGTON lAP ) - It appears
tD Agriculture Department experts
that dairy farmers not only will get a
boost Oct. I of about 6.8 percent in
federal milk price supports but that
an additional raise of about 4.5
percent may be due by next spring. ·
·The Oct. I increase tentatively

was announced last week by the
department 's Commodity Credit
Corp., which is in charge of price
support programs. Effective then,
the
basic
support
for
manufacturing-grade milk of 3.5
percent fat will go up to $11.22 per
100 pounds from the current rate of

$10.51.
By law, USDAmust set milk price
supports each Oct. I - the beginning
of the dairy marketing year - at
between 75 percent and 00 percent of
parity, the indicatnr which at 100
.
percent would gtve
Ianners the'
buying power they had in 1911}.14,

Foseveral years, the Oct. I
adjustment has been at 80 percent of
parity . The tentative rare of $11.22
was estimated at the 80 percent level
beginning next month.
The law also requires a midyear
adjustment on April 1 to reflect
changes in production costs since
the support was set on Oct. 1.
For example, last Oct. 1 the
support was pegged at $9.64 per 100
pounds and adjusied upward six
months later to the current $10.51.
Actording to ba,ckground papers
.
r
considered by the CCC board last
Agencies (RESA) - the Ohio )'did·
week when it approved the increase
Eastern RESA and the South· for Oct. I, prodilctioo costs are
Central Ohio RESA.
expected to continue rising through
The project was submitted for the first six months of the new 1979approval by the Department of 80 dairy marketing year.
Economic
and
Community
Thus, the figures showed, next ·
Development's Appalachian
April 1 dairy farmers are likely to
Development Office ,
which see the support price raised again to
administers the ARC program in ar milk price supports may go up by
Ohio.
at least 11.5 percent from the
Ohio 's 1979
Appalachian
Development Plan and Project current rate.
Milk market prices have been
Investment Package contains higher then the support rates,
approximately . $8.4 million in
generally, for some time, and USDA
funding proposals for Ohio's 28
economists expect the trend to
Appalachian counties in area of
continue fairly steadily until
health, child development, energy,
production picks up seasonally next
education and natural resources.
spring.
ARC is a state-federal partnership
But the boosts in price supports do
which promotes the ecooomic and
provide a floor against precipitous
social development of the
tumbles in prices paid to dairy
Appalachian region of the United
farmers.
States.
The CCC reports said that in the
absence
of a support program "the
HOSPITAL NEWS
surpluses of milk above commercial
VETERANS MEMORIAL
demand ... could result in severely
Saturday AdJJJWions - Martha reduced prices" paid to dairy
Hunnel , · Middleport; William farmers.
Clonch, Racine; Richard Hudson,
"Faced by such depressed prices,
Syracuse; Dorothy Greathouse , producers would likely increase
Racine.
herd culling, thereby curtailing
Saturday Discharges--Billy
future productive capacity," the
Brewer, Betty Carpenter, Sharon
CCC papers said.
Smith, Francis Andrew, Belinda
"While downward adjustments to
Connolly, Faye Dunlavy , Mary
dairy cow numbers could be
Kiser.
achieved relatively rapidly ,
Sunday Admissions--Clarence rebuilding would take significantly
Norris, Racine; Virgil Saunders, longer -as much as several years
Pomeroy; Donald Covert, Pomeroy;
- resulting in sharp dislocations
Clifford Smith, Pomeroy; Mary Hill, throughout the industry as well as
Pomeroy.
higher prices at the retail level."
Sunday Discharges-Roger Athey,
Harry Swan, Evalena Pauley.
~--------------- ----------

VOL XXVIII NO. 109

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

enttne

at

Stewart's bond
set at $10,000

$40,000 grant okayed
.•

COLUMBUS - Gov. James A.
Rhodes, Saturday announced
approval of a $40,1100 grant from the
Appalachian Regional Commission
(ARC) to the Southeastern Ohio
Voluntary Education Cooperative
(SEOVEC) for the second-year
operating support of a computer
network within Athens, Gallia,
Hocking, Jackson , Meigs, Monroe,
Morgan , Perry , Vinton and
Washington counties. ·

SEOVEC, located in the city of
Athens,
provides
diverses
educational services tD local school
districts in its service area.
The grant will be supplemented
with $5,100 from state funds and
$14,900 from local sources.
SEOVEC's computer network will
be part of a consortium comprising,
in addition to SEOVEC , the
computer network of two adjacent
Regional Education Service

Eight escape East
Germany in balloon
NAILA , West Germany - Four
children and four adults bet their
lives on a hot air balloon made of
nylon and bedsheets and drifted
through the darkness of East
Germany, hitting the jackpot freedom across the border in West
Germany.
Peter Strelzek, an airplane
mechanic who designed the escape
craft, told reporters Sunday the 12mile, 21}.30 minute flight was his
second attempt to escape by balloon
from
his
communist-ruled
homeland.
" It was no longer possible for us to
lie to our children and put up with
the political cooditions in East
Germany,n he said.

He, his wife and two children,
along with stonemason Andreas
Wetzel , his wife and their two
children, got onto a gondola made of
an iron plate. Gas burners were
fired, filling the handsewn envelope
with hot air at a field near
Lobenstein and the balloon rose
aloft.
Borne toward the south by a good
breeze, the refugees flew over the
"death strip" border and put down
in this Bavarian town, far from the
border's electrified fences and
minefields. It was believed to be the
first time refugees had used a
balloon tD cross the border.
During the flight , the children
rode in the middle of the lll·squarefoot iron plate, and were huddled
around bottles of gas used to fuel the
fire that heated air in the 5,23()..
cubic-yard balloon . The adults rode
on four iron rods projecting laterally
irom the plate, each grabbing onto
inch-thick ropes attaching the
gondola to the balloon.
Strelzek said he designed the
balloon using principles he learned
from his work with airplanes.
The escape began about 1:30 a.m .,
Strelzek told reporters, and the
balloon climbed to 8,000 feet in the
moonless sky as the breeze pushed it
toward freedom.
As the balloon came down, it was
met by two West German police
officers who had raced to the landing
. site, thinking the floatin g object
might be a UFO.
"Are we in the West here ?" one of
the balloonists reportedly ask.ed.
"We were convinced that we were
in the West even before the police
officers came because we saw a
modem farm machine on the field
unlike anything we have," Strelzek
told a reporter.
He said his first attempt, during
the night of July 4, ended 220 yards

short of the border, but the
balloonists were undetected and
they returned home.
After their arrival in Naila, the
mayor reportedly offered the
families housing and jobs but the
group had not decided whether to
stay here.

President's health
reported excellent
CAMP DAVID, Md . (AP) Jimmy Carter's pePsonal physician
says
a
"comprehensive
examina lion" shows the president to
be in excellent health despite his
near-collapse in a weekend foot
race.
":r'he president's healtjl is
excellent and his strength i!l' fully
returned," White House deputy
press secretary Rex Granum said
after the Sunday examination by
Navy Rear Adm . William Luash.
"He feels fine."
The stress of running a difficult
6.2-mile course Saturday in the
Cawctin Mountain National Park
caused Carter to become
overheated, Granum said.
Thesident was treated for heat
exhaustion, Granum said, quoting
Lukash as saying arduous muscle
work demanded by the hilly course
brought oo the condition.
Carter became wobbly and nearly
collapsed ahout 4 miles into his first
competitive effort. He dropped out
of the race and returned
immediately to Camp David, just
100 yards away.
The president rested several hours
and then returned to the park for an
awards ceremony. where he told
reporters, "They had to drag me off.
I didn't want to stop."
Carter explained he was trying to
cut his own best time for the course,
which he said he run four times in
the past.
"Our best time was 50 minutes and
we were trying to cut that by ahout
four minutes today and didn't quite
make it,'' he said .

An avid jogger for almost a year,
Carter called it a "good race" and
urged his fellow runners to become
evangelists lor the sport.

TO MEET TONIGHT
There will be a special meeting of
the Meigs High School Band
Boosters Association torilght at 7:30
p.m. in the band room. Among the
items to be discussed will be the pur·
chase of band jackets.

New York will not accept
nurse examination results
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP ) - In a move
that could affect more than 100,1100
nursing candidates, New York
officials have decided not to honor
th e results of · a · nationwide
certification examination because of
reports of cheating .
The state Education Department
said Saturday it would not accept the
results of the test because the exam
may have been sold for as much as
$2,1100 to nursing candidates in at
least four states before the exam
dares .
"We began getting letters in mid·
July from candidates who said they
had either purchased the exam or
knew of people who had, " said
Thom as Sheldon, coordinator of
professional ed uca ti on for th e
department .
He said the letters promoted the
depa rtm ent to begin checkin g
failure rates.
"There was a dramatic drop in the
failure rare in some cases," he said.
"We noti~ that many people who
were taking the exam "s repeaters

showed
a
201}.400
point
improvement."
He said about 70 percent of
foreign-trained candidates failed the
July exam, instead of the usual 85
percent to 90 percent, while there
was a small change in the usual 10
percent failur e rate among
domesti cally
trained
nurse
candidates.
Sheldon said it.was not known yet
whether the security breach
occurred on a state or national level.
Arnold Bloom, a spokesman for
the department, said the state
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
and the National Council of State
Boards for
Nursing were
investigating the allegations.
Bloom said there were indications
that the question s were available in
Chicago, Philadelphia ,and Detroit
as well as in New York state.
"Not only will we not accept the
test r esults for the exam given in
New York state, but we will not
accept results from candidates who
took the exam in ot~er states,"
Bloom said.
•

! . Area Deaths !

)"oday ,
...
. in the world

To reduce costs
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
Zimmer nuclear plant near Cin·
cinnati will reduce fuel costll of
the Colwnbll! and louthern Ohio
Electric Co. by $61 million during
its first' three years of operation,
company officials say.
The company says the 80()..
megawatt nucler plant schedled
to begin operation in 1981 "offers
us, and in turn our customers,
ong-term operating economies
over an equivalent coal.fired
unit."
James P. Fenstermaker,
CXSOE senior vice · president,
told the Public UtUities Com·
mission of Ohio that Zinuner will
save his utUity and two others Cincinnati Gas 111 Electric Co.
and Dayton Power ~ Light Co. +
more than $130 million annually
compared with a coal.fired plant.

Benefits issue
DAYTON, Ohio (AP)-An ex·
tension of supplemenial unem·
ployment benefits for workers
laid off from the Frigidaire plant
In Dayton is the toughest issue
remaining on the bargaining
table between the International
. Union of Electrical Workers and
General Motors Corp., the
union's president says.
Under the current agreement,
the supplemental benefits for
thousands of former Frigidaire
workers will begin to expire next
spring. The IUE wants the pay,
which gives the workers about 95
percent of their regular after-tax
earnings, extended another year.

DWIGHT CLIFFORD OUVER
Dwight Clifford Oliver , 61 ,
&gt;ererans Memorial Hospital.
He was born Aug. 14, 1918, a son of
the late Charles and Harriett
Hamilton Oliver. He is survived by
his wife, Kathryn Roush Oliver; a
daughter, Karen Patton, Marietta ; a
son , David D. Oliver, Litchfield,
·Ky .; a brother, Myron E. Oliver,
Zanesville ; a stepson , Leon .Jordan,
Pataskala ; two granddaughters;
two
grandsons;
a
step·
granddaughter, and a step·
grandson.
Mr. Oliver was a member of the
Sanara United Methodist Church;
was a 32nd degree Mason, and
belonged to Malta Lodge 118,
Scottish Rite, and the Laurel
Chapter, Orde• of Eastern Star,
Norwich.
Private services will be held at the
Ewing Funeral Home. There are no
calling hours and friends are asked
tD cootribute to the Meigs Cancer
Society in lieu of flowers.

Middleport
(Continued from page I)
Funeral services will be held at I
· p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home and burial will be in Gilmore
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral horne anytime.

County Court Judge Charles
Knight (las set bond at $10,000 in the
case of Tom Matthew Stewart, 31,
Middleport, charged in the alleged
murder of his step-son, Keith Lan·
ders.
The action was taken Monday
during Stewart's initial court appearance.
PrQ'leCUting Attorney Rick Crow

ON STREETS- A bll! "Snoopy" of comic strip and cartoon fame and
a clown were on Pomeroy's streets Saturday afternoon distributing
balloons, candy, gum and leaflets to yQW!Pten. ''Snoopy" "as actually
Mike Zirkle of Middleport and the clown, Craig Dougan of Athelia. The
pair represented tbe Middleport United PenieccJetal Church.

Another teacher strike underway
NORTH CANTON, Ohio (AP ) Members of the North Canton
Education Association have gone on
strike, setting up picket lines at
schools and at the district's school
bus garage.
The walkout came after weekend
talks produced "no substantial
movement" m a new contract,
according to association President
Robert Sheldon.
About 240 reachers in the district
are seeking improvements in
salaries and fringe benefits. The
district serves about 4,500 students.
Current base pay is $10,000.
Tea chers are seeking an iilcrease to
$10,550 this year and $11,27~ next
year.
They have been working without a
contract since school opened Aug.
28.

· "Every effort will be made to run
the buses," said the president of the
school board, Jo Lindamood.
She said there were no plans to
shut down classes today and that
substitutes and others who are

Patrol cites one
driver after wreck
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident investigated
Saturday by the Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol.
Called tAl the scene in Meigs
County on TR 7, a\ 12:15 p.m.,
officers report a vehicle driven by
' Carlton Smallwood, 16, Albany,
backed from a private drive into the
path of} north bound auto operated
by Clyde Slone, 28, Albany.
There was moderate damage to
the Slone auto, slight damage to the
Smallwood vehicle.
Smallwood was cited oo a charge
of improper backing.

willing to work would be on hand .

Nearly 1,100 other Ohio .teacher&amp;
are on picket lines, affectillg some
21,500 other students across the
state.
ATHENS LIVESTOCK SALES
Saturday, Sept. tS,

1979

tC•Htel

1.,

FHder St..,rs l00·5110 87.50·115;
500·700 80·91 ; Choice 300-5110 75-88.50;
500·700 50·8t .75.
Feeder Heifers (-100·700 lbs.) 300·
500 Bt-!01.50; 5110·700 6t .50·8.5; Cholet
300·500 47-81; 5110·700 52·68.50.
F""der Bulls 300·5110 81.50·102 : 500·
700 74.50·86.50; ChOice 300·5110 68·90;
500·700 55·67.50.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1.000 lbs.)
50.50'63.
Bred CowHJ.75-60.50.
· .Slaughter Cows: Util ities &lt;16 .755:1.25.
cow and Calf Pairs 510·810; can ·
ne&lt;s and cuners ~ 1.25·&lt;46.50.
Veals (ChOice and Prfme l 8.5·115.
Baby Calves (by the head ) 37.50·
llt .
(HOIIS)

(No. 1, Barrows and Gills,
200·230 lbs.) 38.20 ·39. 10.
Sows 2SJO.J3.50.
Boars 25.2$'27 .85.
Pigs (by the head) 18·26.
IL•mbs)
Slaughter Lambs 6t .50·62.90.
HOIIS

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The
Third
Wednesday
H001emakers Club will meet at 10
a.m . Wednesday at the Municipal
Building in Syracuse.
All
homemakers are "elcome to attend.
Those attending are to take a t"o
liter plastic coke bottle for the
project. There will be a . potluck
dinner at noon .
ANKLE INJURY
The Middleport Emergency Squad
answered a call tAl Cheshire at 5:33
p.m. Sunday for Bob Misner who had
a possible fractured ankle as the
result of a sand lot football game. He
was taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

IN 10·0%
DuPONT NYLON
VELVET
PROTECTED
WITH
SCOTCHGARD

Baby critical

EVERY ROCKER IN STOCK
VALUES TO 1259.00
REDUCED.
I

'

YOUR CHOICE $

1 5888

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

An outstanding selection of
velvet merry-go-rounders swivel chairs and rockers. all
sale priced for comfortable
buying and Infinite seating
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and hearty Early American.
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to life.
.
Knight also told Stewart that he
need not make any statements, that
he had a right to a preliminary
hearing and jury trial and that lf he .
could not afford an attorney, the
court would appoint one.
Stewart said he did not have funds
in which to secure counsel,
therefore, O'Brien was appointed.
Following his court appearance,
Stewart was remanded to the
custody of Sheriff James Proffitt's
department.
Stewart Is accused In the early
Sunday morning shooting death of
his ste~H~on, Keith Landers, 17, a
1979 graduate of Meigs High School.
According to Dr. John Ridgway,
assistant Meigs County Coroner,
Landers died of massive brain
damage due to a gunshot wound of
the head.
The incident occurred at the ·
Stewart residence, 23~ S. Fourth
Ave. at 12:30 a.m. Sunday.
I
Mrs. Stewart, who is separated
from her husband, had left the home
about IS minutes before the
shooting.
I.Jmders was lying on a bed wat·
ching TV when the shooting oc·
curred. He was struck in tbe face. It
was reported that he was knocked
from the bed by the bullet from a .38
calibre revolver.
Meigs County sheriff's deputies
with assistance from BCI Agent Her·
man Henry are assistaing Mid·
dleport Police with the in·
vestigation.

did state he bas had the opportunity
BY BoB HOEFUCH
tAl meet with many staff members
A federal mediator secured to
and
indicated that the Staff is putting
mediate problems between the
forth
a lot of effort and concern.
Meigs Local Bolird of Education and
"It
can be a super year if we can
the Meigs Local Teachers
get
the
problems ironed out", he
Association rega,rding a new con·
death cf 0 . Keith i.Jmders~ 17, SWiday morning at the
E:NROUTE TO COURT - Tom Matthew Stewart,
commented.
.
tract was scheduled to arrive today
Stewart residence on Fourth St., Middleport. Stewart
31, who has been residing below Middleport, was taken
Besides
a
meeting
with the
to begin discussions with both
is escorted by Gary Wolfe, investigator for the sheriff's
. to . COWity court Monday on his initial appearance.
Supt.
federal
mediator
today,
groups.
department.
Stewart is being charged with murder in the shooting
Gleason
was
facing
a
hearing
earlier
This was announced Monday night
in the day before the Liquor Control
by Supt. David Gleason when tbe
Board regarding the establishment
board met in regwar session at the
of
a carry-out business at the border
Meigs Junior High School in Mid·
of
the Harrisonville Elementary
dieport.
School.
The hoard of education went
Supt. Gle~~S&gt;n indicated a big
on
record
last night as "strongly"
difference at the present time
opposing
the
opening of a carry-out
between the board and.the teachers
so
close
to
the
school and letters
is money.
from
the
staff
of
the
school as well as
"We can't come close to what
.
employe§.
were
also
presented
request of Village Solicitor.
· they're asking ", he commented. He
Gleasoo who will tum them over to
council's
review
Monday
night.
BY KATIE CROW
A portion of the contract stated
those in charge cf the hearing being
Web;;ter in rebuttal told council
Pomroy councilman Larry
that
the
engineer
will
not
be
held at Pome~oy Village Hall.
Wehrung, Mooday night voiced his that Mayor Clarence Andrews had
responsible
for
tbe
technical
Before conCluding the two and
drawn up a schedule and he
disappointment over the fact that
assistiutce
of
construction,
and
more
oo!Htalf
hour open session last night,
presented the schedule to council.
the light at the Pomeroy-Mason
particularly
11111
not
be
responsible
the
board
voted to move into
Webster added, he was abiding by
Bridge was not operated manually
for the contractor's failure to per·
Two drivers were cited following executive session to further dscuss
the
Mayor
's
request
regarding
the
one day last week, (Thursday )
form the construction work in ac·
two accidents investigated Monday negotiations with teachers of the
scman on vacation and another
during Monday 's regular council
cordance
with
the
contract
by the GalJia..Meigs Post, Highway
district .
attending school.
meeting.
documents. Fred W. Crow, village
DuriDII the opeD sesJIOD, DaD E.
Patrol.
Webster argued that he works
lllllicltor, 'W'8S not pleased with that
Council earlier had ordered that
Officers investigated a two· Morrill, director of curriculum 81111
eight hours a day and many times is
the traffic light at the bridge be
portion ot the !')~~tract.
vehicle accident iii Meigs County on llldustrl81 pngrama, pftRilted 8
called out at all hours. He
The coo tract also called for a cost
operated. manually from 4 p.m. to
Union Avenue, one-tenth of a mile letter teq~~eSiillllbat Ill)' dllculaion
maintained that working the light at
5:30 p.m. lo controU the heavy
of co.ldei'IIUOII Of 1ppo1Dtmnt, emeast of SR 7.
the bridge is over his eight hour da y. of $29,1100 plus $175 a day for an eight
Following a discussion with Dr·
hour day not to ezceed $14,000 and
traffic coming from West VirRinia.
Called to the scene at 10:40 a .m., ploymeat, premoUon, demotion or
Wehrung contended if no officer is
John
Parsons, State Department of
Control at the light had
possibly an additional $7,000.
the patrol reports a west bound auto compensatioll or 811)' bm!ltlgation
available it was the responsibility of
Education,
office of school
an electrical s hort and
An ordinace with the Colwnbia
operated by Clarence Molden, 27, ol cbarees or complaiata agaiDIIt
the chief tD do the work .
and
Paul Wood, area
management,
therefore
he
did
not
Pomeroy, had stopped for an animal blm be beld ID a pubUc meeting
Harold Brown, coWlCilman, said Gas of Ohio was given the three
.
coordinator,
the
Southern Local
operate the light on last
necessarY readings for passage. The
rather tileD ID execntive session.
on the roadway.
directives should be upheld, but
School
District
Board
of Educauon
Thursday, but had operated the light
ordinance calls for the addition of
A vehicle driven by John · Wriles,
added Webster does have problems
resolution
rescinded
an
earlier
the other days of the week . Webster
the gas cost recovery clause, Rule
Content of the letter was
27. Pomeroy, failed tD stop and
with the !acted orders to be carried
reducing
the
salary
index of
went on to explain that the short on
struck the Molden auto in the rear. incorporated into the board meeting 'teachers and returned the index to
out . In order tAl settle the issue,
28.
the light had been repaired , rut he
minutes and Supt. Gleason stated
Aransfer of a liquor license from
Both vehicles incurred slight
council will meet in special session
d
had no knowledge of this until later .
that any employe has this right of !M.
Richard A. Stnre, DBA Mulberry
damage . Wriles was cited on a
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
.
The reduction of the index ha
Wehrung also said Webster was to
public
discussion
in
comparison
to
Inn, Pomeroy, to Clarence Gans,
charge of failure tD maintain an
Webster said Andrews was h1s
been a point of contention between
make up a schedule of working
DBA Mulberry Inn, Pomeroy, was
executive session.
assured clear distance.
boss and the mayor presented the
the board and teacher~ of the
hours lor the police · force lor
passed on a 4 to 1 vote with Wehrung
The board employed Elizabeth
Officers investigated a two·
present schedule that "I will use
LaRue to replace Christine Garst at district.
vehicle mishap on SR 124, at the
unless wid otherwise."
abstaining .
The hoard accepted the
Council set Oct. 30, as "trick or junction of Welsh Town Rd., iii
the high school, pending proper
BIDS READ
resignation of Betty Wagner from
certification and a list of 10 tuition
treat" night from 6 to 7 p.m. The
Meigs County, at 1:10 p.m.
the board at the recent meeting and
The
patrol
reports
an
auto
siren
will
sound
tAl
begiil
and
end
the
Mary ,will wait a,required 10 days before
students was approved.
Two bids were read on repair to
Powell, John Blaettnar and Linda ·naming a replacement. The .next
·operated by Judy Krautter, 31,
the wall at Laurel Street. One was
activities.
Betty
Baronick,
council
won,
Yonker were authorized to attend
Minersville, had slowed to turn
from Ohio Bridge Corp. and the
regular meeting of the board will ~
other from the PIJilleroy Cement
reported that at a fmancial meeting right. A vehicle driven by Tamela
professional meetings .
The
at 7:30p.m. in the school cafeteria .
it was decided outstanding bills in Smith, 18, Portland, was unable to
resignation of Delores Surface as a
Block Co. The bid from the Ohio
Dr. Parsons and Wood discussed
the amount of $2,1100 be paid. Council stop and struck the Krautter auto in
bus driver was accepted and it was
Bridge was in the amount of $73,400
with the board a recent rmancial
also agreed to transfer $5,1100 to the the rear . .
voted to pay seven EMR students
with bulk concrete and $91,400ifthey
analysis made in the district by the
cemetery fund and $4,1100 to the
working in the cafeteria 50 cents an
A passenger in the Krautter
Meigs County Sheriff James J . use formed concrete. The bid from
state department of education
Proffitt reports the August 3 Pomeroy Cement Block was for con·
street fund since both funds are m vehicle , Betty Imboden, 55,
hour 1in addition to providing lunches
before the board returned the index
the red. The money was transferred Minersville, claimed Injury but was
breaking and entering of Gilbert's crete alone. It called for concrete at
for these students.
to !.by the stare department of
from the parking meter fund.
Texaco on SR 7 below Middleport $2 a cubic yard except for Sunday
The board released the three
not immediately treated.
'education
before the board returned
The meetiilg was opened by
children of Troy Hyatt to attend
has been solved with the arrest of 18· and holidays and the charge would
Both vehicles incurred moderate
~· index tD 1.80.
prayer by wu Osborne. Attending damage. Smith was cited on a
Alexander Schools, a continuation of
year old Michael A. MltcheU, Rt. 1, be $4 a cubic yard . The bids were
were Mayor Andrews, Osborne, charge of assured clear distance.
(Continued on page8)
RuUand.
tabled for additional study.
Wehrung, Brown, Bill Young and
Tools owned by Danny Bowers,
Contracts from Burgess and
Baron ick council members, Chief
employee at Gilbert's Texaco, have
Nlple, for extended sewage, were
Webster, Tom Werry and Jack
been recovered.
'
tabled for additional study and
Krautter.
Mitchell was arrested Sunday
opinions of other engineers at the
evening by Deputy Sheriff Lou
Osborne. Following questioning he
admitted to the breaking and en·
tering and theft of tools . Deputy
Osborne was acting on a tip received
The deck replacement on the bridge will be completed by the
Shadle Bridge Is still scheduled to be middle of October; however, a lot
from Middleport Police captain Sid
will depend on weather conditions
completed by mld·October, ac·
Little.
Mitchell was taken before the
cording to the word from Higgins because concrete has to have seven
emunon Pleas Court Monday on a
Erectors contractor Joe Gordon and days to set up. Therefore, if it is
rainy, they cannot pour the con·
Bill of lnfonnation. He entered a
Mason County Del. Jimmy Joe
crete."
guilty plea after waiving grand jury
Wedge.
Gordon notes, " We are currently
action.
working the grating down both sides
Judge Robert Buck, presiding in
the absence of Judge Bacon, ac·
and hope to pour JTIOre concrete next
cepted the guilty plea and ordered a
week ."
Commenting on the work, Wedge
pre..entence investigation to be con·
said,
"My understanding is the
dueled.
Mitchell was released from
The resignation of Councilman
custody after signing his own
Daytnn .Raynes was accepted by the
recpgnizance bond.
Mason Town Council when it met in
Deputies are continuing In· Cold front·· will push
regular session Monday evening.
vestigation of a breaking and en·
The Council will take various
tering at Eddie's Restaurant in sunny skies away today
persons into consideration for the
Letart Falls. The building was en·
position and appoint a council
By The Associated Press
tered early Sunday morning.
member
at the
next regular
A cold front dropping down from
Entry was made through a win·
meeting.
the upper Great Lakes was expected
dow on the north side of the building.
Trick or treat ha s been set for Oct.
w
push sunny skies out of Ohio by
Several Items were taken.
30,
from 6:30 to 8 p.m. Slrens will
thisfternoon.
.
Deputies also Investigated an ac·
designate
the beginning and end of
The National Weather Service
cident at 2 a.m. Mooday. It occurred
the
event.
said that by Wednesday , however ,
at the intersecton of CR 34 and SR
On October 27, the Mason Com·
the front will be south of the Ohio
124atBowman'sRun.
munity
Activities Committee will
are 1to r, Beth Rtebel, Denise White, Debbie Eynon,
River and skies across the state will
An auto driven by James Grady,
NEW UNIFORMS - Eastern High School Band
a
Halloween
party and dance at
hold
Na~cy Sarno&amp; ahd Janet Mora. The new uniforms,
a~ain
be
sunny.
19, Racine, ~~me out of CR 34 and
Members and the Majorette Corps are sporting new
the fire slation.
The
forecast
called
for
overnight
worn
for the first time Friday ngiht, were provided
flshtaUed on SR 124 and ran off the .
uniforms this fall. The band unforms are the
The closing of the town park and
lows ranging from the low 40s tu the
through
the support of businesses and lndividuala.
roadway.
traditional green and white, while the majorette
tr nni' courts were discussed, and
low
50s
and
highs
on
Wednesdady
tn
Grady was cited to Meigs County
uniforms are gold and white. Modeling the uniforms
uoth will be closed on October I.
the 60s and low 70s.
Court for no operator's license.

Councilman W ehrung upset,
wants orders carried out

· Patrol cites
two motorists

Board returns
to 1.80 index

Rutland youth
pleads guilty
to B&amp;E, theft

Repair completion date set

Raynes resigns
council position

·I
'J

suggested bond be set in the amount
of $100,000 due to the animosity
toward other family members.
Atty. J . B. O'Brien was appointed
as Stewart's legal counsel.
Stewart was infonned concerning
the charges against him and given
his rights as a defendant by Judge
Knight. Kn!ght said a murder
charge carries a sentence of I~ years

Federal mediator
arriving today

SIGNATURE
CHAIRS

INDIANAPOLIS (AP)- An in·
fant girl, delivered from her
lifeless · mother by paramedics
getting directions by radio from a
physician, was alive but in
critical condition Sunday at Com·
munity HOspital.
The full-term Infant was
delivered by Caesarian section
Saturday at the scene of the car·
train . accident that killed her
mother.
The woman, Angel L. Barton,
17, of Indianapolis, died of
massive head injuries after Am·
trak ' s National Limited
passenger train slanuned into a
car stalled on tracks on the city's
east side. Mrs. Barton, who was
in the back seat, was thrown out
of the car, which was spun across
the road and knocked into a gully.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1979

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