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•

y
M

D-12- TI1e Sunday Times-Sentinel, Sunday, Sept. 23, 1979

•

HOMER HYSELL

Senate
honors
Hysell

•••••••••••••••••• ••••••••••••••••••

~al

~

Today

.!

CEstate :

.:

~

e

.

Wi!lis T. Leadingham

•

•

Realtor

•

:

RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY

:

•

It

yo ur home is on the market long enough , you 'll hear t he propos i-

•

•

tion :

•

I 'll rent your home with th e option to buy ," We've heard it time and e
again . It is usually made by so meone who wan ts to get out ofthe rain e
and is not re all y seri ous about buy ing A NY house .
•
I would not advise you to r ent your home under these circumstances

•
e
e
•

•

•

unless there is a serious consideration for the option over and above

•

•

e
e
e
•

•
•
:

e
•

•

the rent . The consideration shou ld be a significant amount because •
you are re m ov ing your home from fh e market. The longer the period e
of 1i.m e, t he large r th.e consideration . The option may or m a y not appl y e
agat nst the sale pnce . These and many other items· should a ll be 1
specified in the opt ion contract whi ch shOu ld be drafted w ith even 1
more care than the usu al pu rchase and sale ag reemen t .
Most import ant of al l - r emember t hat you are now culling your ;
prospect s down to one - one who has already told you he would prefer
to r ent th an bu y .
If there is anything we ca n do to help you in the fi eld of real estate
pl ease phone or drop in at LEAD! NGHAM REAL E ST ATE, 512 Second
~ve ., GaUipo\i s.. Phon e ~~6 ·7 699 . We ' r e here to he lp .

•.•............................

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POMEROY - Homer Hysell,
Route 3, Pomeroy, has been commended by the Ohio Senate through
Sen. Oakley Collins for his work in
the development of the athletic complex at Meigs High School.
The congratulatory message from
the Senate is signed by Oliver
Ocasek, president of the Senate and
Sen. Collins, 17th district. It reads :
"On behaU of the members of the
Senate of the 113th General Assembly of Ohio, we wish to take this opportunity to recognize Homer
Hysell, recipient of Meigs High
School Special Service Award, for
your active and enthusiastic support
of the athletic program at Meigs
High School.
"Due to your outstanding efforts,
Meigs High School now has substantial and comprehensive outside
athletic facilities. Your progressive
leadership in promoting and
developing Meigs High School 's
sports program has significantly
enhanced the popularity of athletics
among the students.
"By your total commitment to improving the quality and environment
of high school sporting events, you
have distlnguished yourseH as ·a
truly concerned and responsible in·
dividual who is helping our young
people prepare to 1J1eet the
challenges of the complex, competitive world of tomorrow. We applaud your singularly outstanding
efforts .
"Thus, It is with a great deal of
pride and 'satisfaction that we extend well.(jeserved recognition to
you for your excellent work and , in
so doing, salute an outstanding Ohio
citizen."
METZENBAUMSPEAKlNG
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP ) - Sen.
Howard Metzenbawn, D-Ohio, is to
•be the keynote speaker at the annual
fall meeting of the Fed erated
Democratic Women of Ohio, Sept.
211-29 in Columbus.
Nearly 700 women are expected to
attend the meeting.
In addition to Metzenbaum, who
will speak Friday night , Sara
Weddington, special assisatant to
President Carter, is scheduled to
address the meeting at a Saturday
luncheon.

EURI!KA

Upright with

SUCTION
POWER I

with losses concentrated in the :
durable goods InduStries, notably :
motor vehicles and (l'imary metals. •
·,11e rate of unemployment in Ohio . ;
has been iower than the national ;
average for nine of the last 13 ;,
months. On an aMual basis, Ohio's ~
unemployment rate has been, "
greater than the national rate in only
four of the last 11 years.
Statewide unemployment was
higher (han the national ayerage In
emphasized Ohio's economic
January, February , July and
dependence on heavy industry ,
August , but the margln of difference
saying that the nature of such work
between the two sets of jobless·
could lessen the effects of a
figures in the other three month~
recession in the state .
The OBES report provides support
was less than 1 percent.
The OBES reported that total
. for his statements; for it blames a
portion of the present rate o£
employment in Ohio rose .7 percent
unemployment on layoffs in the · ln August over the previous month
auwmotive industry which were
and that non-fann wage and salary ·
caused by model changeovers.
employment dropped .S percen\ ,
The bureau said that employment
during the period. The bureau said
in manufacturing slipped 1.8 percent
the latter decline was caused mainly.
across the state from July to August,
by layoffs o( factory workers.
The reports tend to support
statements made last July by an
Ohio State University economics
professor who said heavy industrial
production would prop up 'the
economy in Ohio while it sagged
elsewhere ln the nation . National
economic statistics have indicated
that a recession has been developing
since spring.
The professor , Paul G. Craig,

COLUMBUS , OhiO (AP) Unemployment in Ohio, which has
been slowly rising since spring,
surged a full percentage point ahead
of the national average in August.
The state's jobless figures suggest
that the effects of a nationwide
recession are being felt in the
pocketbooks of an increasing
number of Ohio workers.
The Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services reported Friday that
354,000 persons, who represent 6.9
percent of the state's civilian labor
force, were unemployed in August.
The Ohio unemployment figu.e for
July was 6.6 percent, while the
current national jobless rate is 5.9
percent .
The OBES had reported Thursday
that for the week ending Sept. 15, the
number of Ohioans making initial
claims for unemployment benefits
had increased by 6.1 percent
compared to the previous week.

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BUICI&lt; PONTIAC
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•

•

Location!ii

Today i

NEW EAGlE SOOVT -

Terry Snowden, a

sophomore at Eastern High School and a member of
Pomeroy Boy Scout Troop 249, received the highest

honor in Boy Scouting Sunday in ceremonies beld at the

Middleport First Baptist Church. With Terry and his
mother, Mrs. Doris Snowden or Pomeroy, and his
father, Jerry Snowden, of Doraville, Ga. Terry
received the Eagle Scout rank. A reception followed
the ceremonies.

Senate committee works on energy proposal

WASHINGTON (AP ) - The
Senate Energy Committee is
beginning work in earnest this week
m President Carter's proposal to
offset U.S. dependence on imported
oil with a huge synthetic fu els
program.
•
Key
energy
leaders
ln
both th e
MIRAMAR, Fla. (AP ) - A
House and Senate have expressed
fuel-laden light airplane nose·• deep skepticism about Carter's
dived into a home Sunday and ex·
proposal to spend S88 billion over the
ploded Into flames, killing the
next 10 years to extract oil from
three persons on board but
sparing a woman and four teenagers In the house .
Police had said four persons
w~ on the twin-&lt;!ngine plane
when It took off from a small airport near here Sunday morning .
But alter an air and ground search lasting several hours, they
said later there apparently had
been only three aboard .
"According to eyewitnesses
Meigs County Sherilf's deputies
there were four persons loading
are investigating the alleged stabthe aircraft," said Miramar
bing of a Kentucky man which ocpoUce officer Lee England.
curred Saturday night at Harrison"However, from the site of the
ville.
crash and everything e!Be there
According to the report, Gregory
are only three positively
Dean Hall, Grethel, Ky., who just
located."
moved to Meigs County, had gone to
a pop machine at the Harrisonville
service station and became involved
in an argument with two men. He
· AKRON Ohio (AP) - Police
was stabbed during the alleged
have atTested the last of silr
altercation.
escapees from the Ross County
Hall was admitted to Veterans
Jail.
Memortjll
H011pital for treatment of
Pollee apprehended 22-year-()ld
Robert Peterson of Akron while
he was drving a car shortly
1
· before &amp; p.m. Sunday. Officials
said Peterson attempted to flee ,
bUt that his car crashed into a
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - The
pollee cruiser. Officers outran
Ohio
Department of Administrative
Peterson wben he attempted to
Services has launched an
fteeonfoot.
invest igation into the way federal
Peterson hal! been charged in
grants are distributed in the state.
connection with the wounding
The Investigation was triggered
last month of state trooper
by complaints from the Corporation
Thomas Scott.
for Appalachian Development
Six men escaped from the Ross
against the Governor's Grant Office,
County jail Wednesday after
charging that the grant office
overpowering a guard.
improperly funneled job training

...
. in the world

Crash claims 3

shale and on other unproven means
of producing oil alternatives.
As a result, Carter said last week
he would accept a smaller, phasedin $20proposal to offset U.S.
dependence on irhported oU with a
huge synthetic fuels program.
Key energy leaders in both the
House and Senate have expressed
deep skepticism about Carter 's
proposal to spend $88 billion over the
next 10 years to extract oil from

shale and on other unproven means

Rep. Richard L. Ottinger, D-N.Y.,

of producing oil alternatives.

voicedsomeofthe criticism heard ln
Congress about the president's
proposal .
"There is a lot of suspicion about
turning over $88 billion to an agency
that will have no political
accountability w anyme," Ottinger
said.
Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash.,
chairman of the Senate Energy
Committee, has indicated he will

As a result, Carter said last week
he would accept a smaller, phased·
in $20 billlon effort.
Energy SeCretary Charles W.
Duncan was called befoce the Senate
Interior Cunmittee today to explain
Ca~ter's present position on
synthetic fue!B, which are to be
financed by a new, independent
Energy Security Corp.

thru Wed., Sept. 26
1n le res ! rate. Long -term interest rate tor a short-terln
gua ranteed investment . And at maturity, you can rene;w
y.Jur CD at the prevailing rate. All accounts insured lip
·o 540,000 by the FDIC.

OhioY~}!ey ~~nk

Federal regulations requ ir e a substantial interest ·penalty for
premature withdrawal of certificate ~unds nd prohibi.fcompoundlng Of
interest during the term of this deposttcategory .

*The actual return to investors on Treasury Bills Is higher than the
discount rate offered .

·----~----------------------------------------------------.J
'·

producing synthetic fue!B are tested.
In
other
congressional
developments this week:
-The House will again try to
reach agreement on a budget for
fiscal 1980, which begins nut
Mooday.
Last week, a coalition of
conservatives
and
liberal
Democrats defeated the bu&lt;\get
pa.ckage, one group belleving it ill
too high, the other decrying what It
caJied Inadequate spending · levels
for social programs.

l stahbing incidentl 27 killed on Ohio highways

Escapee caught

\

fo ur
Convenient

Pomeroy, at Middleport First Baptist 'Dlurch Sunday
afternoon, from the left, included Hank Cleland, Troop
249 committee member who was master of

ceremonies; Bill Knight; Point Pleasant, M-G-M Scout
Distrtct representative; Troop 249 Scoutmaster; Ray
Laudennill, Troop 249 Assistant Scoutmaster, and Pat
Wood , Troop Committee Chairman . The Eagle rank is
the highest in Boy Scouting.

rn;;;ti;;,'";;~b; ':'l :~~~~::::: ::u..-= ~

Figure

Home Furnishings, 1st Floor

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1979

5

Every Tuesday, the U. S. Treasury announces the
current auction discount rate to be paid on six -month
Tre asury Bills. The following Thursday, Ohio Valley
Bank brings il home ... a six-month, $10,000 minimum
CD directly re lated to the s ix -month Treasury Bill

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VOL XXVIII

ON STRIKE ~ Manning the pi~kets this morning at Meigs Junior
High in Middleport were two Instructors, Fred Baloy and Mike Wilfong.
Teachers voted to strike Sunday afternoon. Thus far, no negotiating
sessions have been set between the board's negol,iators and teachers'
negotiating team.

new Pontiac trade .

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on

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•

Meigs Junior High School Sunday
night after it was . learned the
teachers were going to strike.
Following that session, Supt. David
Gleason had this today :
"At 4 p.m. yesterday afternoon,
the board of education of the Meigs
Local School District was notified by
the Meigs Local Teachers
Association that its membership had
voted to strike by a 57 to 55 margin.
"We deeply reJUet this haopenlng ....; as it is a sad time for us
811. ThiS·Is.the third straight strike
that hal! occurred at the end of the
contract year ·with the teachers
association of Meigs Local. Oil- ·
viously, we have problems that are
deep rooted- -and that won't go
away overnight. All of our efforts in
the negotiating process including the
board's offer to meet with all of our
teachers, which the teachers turned
down fiaUy, have been to no avail. ·
"We have constanUy heard that
there is more money available than
(Continued oo page 12)

ESS

dir1.

you cl tan frOm
I

Mrs. Bormie Fisher, president or
the Me igs Local Teachers
Association, had this to say this mor·
ning:
"The Meigs Local Teachers are on
strike because they do not have e.
master contract. There are more
things at stake than money In a
master contract.
"It seems unusual that Mr.
Gleason would speak only about
money when the school district hal!
received nearly a baH mllllon
dollars in money this school year.
"One of the important items to the
teachers that is still unresolved is
the dismissal procedure, an item
which Mr. Gleason does not seem to
want to discuss. Eight of the 11
ortginal items are still unresolved.
The only way these can be resolved
is at the bargaining table and not
through public media.
"The teachers' negotiating team
1B ready to bal'!lain at any time."
Meantime, the Meigs LOcal School
District met In SPecial session at the

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Dull Edge
on
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picket line said that approximately
five students were in the building
and no teachers . At Salem Center
there were reported to be about the
same number of students in the
building and three teachers.
The strike by the teachers came
following two attempts w work out a
new contract between the board and
the teachers last week.
Bill. Lewis, a federal mediator,
was in Middleport to con!er with
both groups and later ln tbe weeil he
met with representatives of both
groups in Columbus. However, it
was reported that no significant
progress was made during those
sessions.
Supt. David Gleason contends
money is the primary problem in
reaching a settlement while the
teachers contend that there are
other .problell18 involved in the
establishment of a new master contract for teachers.
There are some I« teachers in the
district and about 2780 students,

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By BOB HOEFLICH
For the second time in less than a
10011\h, schools of the Meigs Local
School District were virtually closed
today - although declared officially
open - &lt;kle to strikes.
Meeting at the Rock Springs
Fairground.! Sunday afternoon the
Meigs Local School District
Teachers A.uociation voted 57~ to
strike beginning this morning. On
Sept. S, the opening day of school in
the dlatrict, non-certified employes
d. the dlatrlct went on a one-day
strike which also virtually closed tile
IICIIQolB.
Today, the teachers' strike was
equally effective. It was being
honored by the non-certified employes and there were only a few
students In 110111e of the buildings, according to reports. Buses for the
most part, if not In all instances, did
not nm and IIH!re were no cafeteria
operations and other school functi0118 being penonned. At the Meigs
Junior High School, teachers on a

e

5

Classic. cruise, AM ·FM, Rallye wheels, 22,127. miles. Sharp.

~~

·~

Meigs teiJchers strike today

Some of the prices are close to loan value.
Check with your banker for down payments.

cleanlno power . .

ground~ ln

~

~

manpower to push and prod 1the
LIBERTY , Ohio (AP I - A state
:projects
along .)official says Ohio stands to lose
"We're
caught in a bind. We want
some $80 million in federal funds for
to spend the money, but the U.S.
sewage treatment facilities because
EPA, both in Region Five (Chicago)
of the inability of the Ohio and U.S.
and in Washington, are somewhat
enviroTUT\ental prot ection agencies
removed l from the situation )."
to keep up with their paperwork.
Tr umbull Coun ty San1tary
Rick Kuhlman , the Ohio EPA's
Engineer George Ubertin indicated
assistant grants section chief, told a
meeting of Mahoning Valley area · his frustration with EPA &lt;\elays
which are holding up the $20.5
contractors, members of the
million cons truction of a new
Northeast Ohio Utility Contractors
Association , that th e money will be Mosquito Creek-Cortland regional
sewage treatment plant in Trwnbull
lost on Oct. l.
He explained the fund s are part of County.
Libertin said lo ca l officials
Ohio's allocation for the 1978 fiscal
submitted
the first phase of the
yea r . Th e federa l gover nment
project,
the
faci lities planningstage,
allows the states two years to spend
to
the
Ohio
and U.S. EPAs for
the funds aUo cated them .
in
Sepember 1977 .
approval
Kuhlman said that lf the funds are
However,
he
said
the U.S. EPA
not spent within that time, they are
Region
Five
offi
ce has not
reapportioned to other states.
completed
its
review
of the plans .
He said U1• blame for the loss in
Kuhlman
held
out
little
hope that
federal funds falls on consultlng
anything
could
be
don
e
to
keep the
engineers, who are supposed to work
$80
million
in
federal
funds
in Ohio.
with each community ln planning
He
said
that
only
four
states
have
sewage treatment fa cilit ies; with
fail
ed
to
spend
the
federal
funds
the communities who have resisted
improving sewage treatment; and allotted U1em U1is year.
Since the other 46 states will
with the Ohio and U.S. EPAs for
benefit
from the redistribution of the
their inability to review projects
Ohio
money,
he said it would be
q~ickly en&lt;Jugh.
unlikely
that
fed eral legislators
"We have six coordinators to
would
vote
for
an
extension of the
cover over 500 projects," Kuhlman
spending
deadline.
explained . "We rlon 't have the

:

~

Recession now· felt zn Ohio --..••

Buckeye State could
lose sewer funding

~

...
...

a stab wound to the chest. Hall t&lt;Jld
Sheriff James Proffitt he did not
know who assaulted bim.
The incident is still under investigation,
Deputies Saturday investigated
maUbox vandalism complaints on
WoH Pen and Bailey Run Roads.
Saturday afternoon the Sheriff's
Office took a report from Gary
Sellers, Rt. I, Portland, who said
sometime slnce Tuesday a threemonth old Hereford bull caH strayed
from the field or was · stolen. This
field is along CR 35 In Lebanon
Township.

Probe follows complaints

Schools reopen
MOIDLE, Ala. (AP) - Mobile
County officials said Sunday they
(Continued on page 10)

funds to big Cities in order to capture
more votes for Gov. James A.
Rhodes in the 1978 election.
The policy, corporation officials
said, resulted in job training
programs for youngsters in
southeastern Ohio being scrapped

while programs in big cities were
expanded.
'llle corporation represents 16
Community Action agencies which
received $335,000 bet,ween January
and September 1978 . to provide
training and jobs for youths aged 16
to 21, according to Roger McCauley,
a program planner foc the group.
A hearing officer for the
Department of Administrative
Services said enough evidence exists
to warrant ·an lnvestigation .
The investigation is expected to be
completed in about one month,
according to Ned Dunn, director of
the staUl's Mahpower Development
Office.

By The Asi!OCiated Press ·
The Highway Patrol said 27
persons, including .four Clevelanders
dead in the same accident, were
killed in Ohio weekend traffic
accidents. The toll also lncluded four
pedestrians, the Highway Patrol
sald.
The Patrol counts . highway
fatallties in the state from 6 p.m.
Friday unttrmidnight Sunday.
The dead:
SUNDAY
WILMINGTON - Richard A.
Copeland, 18, Dayton, in a on~ar
accident on Ohio 73 in Clinton
County.
TROY - Thomas M. Kraft, 24,
Vandalia, in a one-car accident on
Ohio 571 In Miami County.
WHEELERSBURG - Charles
Steele, 9, Wheelersburg, a
pedestrian struck by a ear on ll:ounty
Rd. I in Scioto County.
DELAWARE
Mary H.
Schirt~ger, 63, Westerville, in a
twa&lt;ar accident oo Ohio 521 in
Delaware County.
CLEVELAND - John J. Nowacki,
24, Akron, and Cathleen M. Mcauley,
24, Talmadge, In a three-ear
accident on the Ohio Turnpike in
Cuyahoga County.
SAINT CLAIRSVILLE - Michael
R. Halpin, 2\, Bellaire, in a ·one car
accident on Uhio Route 7 in Belmont
County.

HAMILTON -Frances Deborde,
WARREN - Richard K. Rowles,
34, &amp;merville, in a two-ear crash on
«, of Niles, in a car-train accident
Ohiol22 In BuUer County.
w Ohio Route 193 ln Trwnbull
HAMILTON - James Morris, 43,
County.
Hamilton, when his motorcycle
NORTH ROYALTON - Howard
collided with a car oo Ohio 4 In
A. Casper, 52, North Royalton, a
BuUer County.
pedestrian struck by a car on a city
COLUMBUS - Ge~rge SolD, 23,
street.
Columbus, in a on~ar crash on 1·70
ASHTABULA- Robert Veres, 4~,
in Columbus.
of Rome, Ohio, in a single car
UPPER SANDUSKY -Laurie L.
accident on Ohio Route 45 in
Mackintosh, 15, Bucyrus, In a twoAshtabula County.
ear cras!t on County Rd. 82 In
CLEVELAND Blastlmer
Wyandotte County.
Karapandzi, 56; Nada Zelenka, 55;
NEW ARK - Christopher M.
Sandor Zelenka, 59 ; and Ana
Schell, 11, Heath, wben struck by a
Pavosevic, 42, all of Clev~land in a
motorcycle on Canal Road In
one-car accident on a city street.
Ucking County.
WILMINGTON
Ric'hard
BARBERTON- Joon F. Mace,
Copeland, 181 of Dayton, was killed
21, Clinton, In a ooe-ear accident on
in a one-ear accident on Ohio 73 near
a Barbertw city slreet.
Wilmington.
FRIDAY NIGHT
SATURDAY
MARIETr
A - Mary Mitchell, IS,
GREENVILLE - Pamela K.
New
Martinsville,
W.Va., pasaenger
Kuhn, 17, of Dayton, a pa.ssenger in
in a car that went out of control on a
one of two cars which collided on a
curve and crashed north of Ohio 2110
Darke county road. ·
CLEVELAND- Anthony Curry, in Washington County.
4, Cleveland, a pedestrian struck by
a car on a city street.
CANTON - James H. Gibson , 48,
Canton, in a two-car crash on Ohio 21 ·
in Stark County.
Clear tonight. Sunny Tuesday.
TOLEDO - John Flores, 19, and
Low
tonight in the low 50s. High
Jill Powers, 17, both of Toledo, killed
Tuesay
In the low to mid 'IIlli. The
when the car in whlcb they were ·
chance
of
rain ia near zero pe~t
riding collided with a train at a
tonight
and
10 percent Tue,lday.
CI'Q~g in Toledo.

Weather

"

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, Sept. 24 , 1979
2 -The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept . 24, 1979
.:::::;::::::~:;: ::::;:;:; :;::: ; :;:;:; :::;:;:;:;:; .;.;. ,.;.,.,

.::::

~j~~

... ;:::;.;.;.,:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:,.,.;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:,:;:,.;.;.;.;.;.;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;.;.;.;:;:;:;.;.;.;:;.;.;.;:; ;:;.;:;.;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::.;;._:.

Hunting, Fishing event attracts 100

Today's commentary

I

What's in a hundred days?

BY DON GRAFF
Franklin Delano Roosevelt was
responsible for Introducing into the
language of American politics a
time period that Is now of critical
Importance to James Earl Carter 100days.
There similarity ends. It is differences, however, that are
significant in this case. And as they
apply to the importance of that
period in the two presidencies, they
go far to define the rnagnitode of the
task at present facing Carter.
For Roosevelt, the "Hundred
Days'' were those at the very begin-

ning of his first administration . They
saw a rush of innovative legislation
t!lat had a lasting effect upon the
nation, established the pattern of an
activist presidency and provided
much of the momentum to carry it
through three subsequent elections.
For Carter, the situation is in
many respects the reverse. A hundred days is roughly the period his
own staff has set for the task of compiling a record of administrative and
legislative accomplistonent. These
are not actually the last days of his
administration, but they are effectively his last chance to turn his

., L-------------:------------~---'

In Washington
But no federal help!
their toxic, volatile or flammable
products.
Since it was established eight
years ago, the emergency center has
received more than 90,000 incoming
caUs, including occasional requests
for assistance from Great Britain,
Belgium, Israel and other nations.
In handling almost 215,000 Incidents during that period, CHEMTREC personnel have relied heavily
upon a set of elaborate files that afford instant access to the information needed in the crucial
minutes following an accident.
If provided only with the trade or
brand name of a chemical, a duty officer can identify the product by
both its generic designation and its
producer. Also on file are detailed
instructions on how to handle each
compound in an emergency.
Perhaps the operation's greatest
strength is the willingness of many·
chemical companies to provide
voluntary assistance in handling
potentially calamitous situatil!os, often dispatching teams of experts to
accident locations.
What about the goverrunent,
which has the primary responsibility for protection of the public's
health, welfare and safety? Almost
five years after passage of the law
req'uiling a federal emergency center, the Department of Transportation continues to drag its feet.
The department does require
elaborate post-accident reports, but
it makes no effort to evaluate that information to aid in dealing with
future accidents.
When a House subcommittee held
hearings last year on the situation,
Rep. John L. Burotn, D-Calif., and a
Maryland fire chief engaged in this
illwninating discussioo about · a
chemical accident:
Burton: You were able to reach
CHEMTREC but not any federal
agency•
Chief : Not only federal but slate.
It took over seven hours for the state
... man to get there ... The federal
govenunent showed up two days after.
Burton: THey wanted to know
what had happened?
Chief : Yes . They congratulated us
on doing a very , very fine job ...
which was very nice but didn 'I help
me at the time.

-"How would YOU like it if 1 put Guy Lombardo
on full-blast? "

.•

WASHINGTON (AP)- A Carter
to
administration
proposal
reorganize the federal government's
for eign trade programs would
con solidate day-to-day trade
activity in the Department of
Commerce.
The plan, to be submitted to
Congress Monday, also . would
expand the author ity of the
trade
president 's
special
representative . Ou !lining the
proposal Friday at a news
conference. James T. Mcintyre Jr. ,
direc tor of the Office of
Management aod Budget, said it
would mean international trade
"will no longer be a "tepchild in the

IZAAK wALTON members-were kept busy as they served lunch to
more than 100 youngsterS and adults on National Hunting and Fishing
Day. The activities were held at Royal Oak Park, thanks to Horace
KarT's generosity.

HARRY BAILEY'S ARCHERY EXHIBIT was popular at National
Hunting and Fishing Day at Royal Oak Park.

Nursing home operators skeptical !
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Many
Ohio nursing home operators are
skeptical, at best, about certain
parts of a House-approved bill
revising payment schedules for
Medicaid patients.
Ralph E . Hazelbaker of Columbus,
president..,lect of the Ohio Health
Care Association, stated some of
that group's concerns last week
before the Senate Finance
Conunittee.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. John
A. Begala, D-Kent, is nearing a floor
vote ,in the state .Senate.
Hazelbaker, whose organization
has 285 members, said he believes
that it is "questionable at best" to
require mandatory participation in
Medicaid, which is Oiie of the
provisions of the bill.
The association spokesman and
John Corey of Cleveland , who
represents a northern Ohio group of
nursing homes, said many nursing
home operators are disillusioned
because of long delays in being
reimbursed by the state for care of
Medicaid patients.
Corey said that such delays can
last from three to six months and
mentioned one in cident that
stretched over nine months while the

state welfare department tried to
determine if the patient was entitled
to benefits.
The application was denied, but
the nursing home had provided care
for the patient during the period and
had lost Sli,OOO " with nowhere to
turn 1 " Corey said .
Hazelbaker. who also noted that
delays of several mooths often
occurred, said under questioning
that he does not know how many
such incidents there have been .
Finally, he said he would guess that
they involve less than 3 percent of
the patients in Ohio nursing homes.
Bns home from failing to accept or
retain a patient because he or she is
or may become a Medicaid patient.
At the same time . it says that the
home must have a Medicaid
provider agreement with the
welfare department and must
comply with all applicable federal
and state regulations.
It also requires the department to
make payments no later than the
15th day of each month following a
month in which care is provided.
The first reunbursement '"'a newly
admitted patient would have to be
paid no later than 60 days following

his or her admission .
Each home would be required to
keep rec&lt;rds for seven years and file
reports as required by the
department and to open aU records
·for a department-supervised
. inspectioo and audit.
Under current law, Medicaid
reimbursements to nursing homes
are made on projected estinnates of
" reasonable cost." The bill
retrospective
establishes
a
reimbursement procedure for
patient ca re ·costs, thus making
recovery of overpayments , which
have been a big ,problem, more
likely.
·

briefs ~

U.S. government." He said he
expects "broad political support"
lor the measure in Congress.
WASHINGTON (AP ) - Donald F .
McHenry and Neil Goldschmidt
have been confinned to their new
jobs as U.S. ambassador to the
United Nations and secretary of
transportation.
The Senate voted unanimously in
both instances Friday. McHenry,.42,
succ-eeds Andrew Young at the
United Nations after serving as
Young 's deputy . Goldschmidt,
former mayor of Portland, Ore.,
succeeds Brock Adams.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Federal Aviation Administration
says preliminary reports on the
inspections of DC-9 aircraft have
disclosed only one serious bulkhead
crack.
FAA spokesman Fred Farrar said
Friday a 51h-inch crack was found in
one DC-9 operated by Eastern
Airlines and minor cracks were
found in some other aircraft. The
inspection of about 125 DC-9s was
ordered WedneSday alter the rear
bulkhead of an Air Canada DC-9
failed and knocked the tail cone off
th e plane.
In 1789, President George
Washinton named John Jay as the
first Chi ef Ju stice of the United
States.

i

•

~~~-·--·-

s•.

I

By Greg BaUey
Saturday was National Hunting
and Fi.shing Day, and although it
rained near.ly all day, the wet
weather didn't dampen the spirits
and enlhusi88111 of the 60 youngsters
that turned up at Royal Oak Park.
The Izaak Walton League and a
few of the other sportsmen's cluboi of
Meigs County always keep the
youngsters in mind on that day . The
facee on the young ones Saturday
made all the effort put forth worthwbi.le, according to Russ WeU,
Prealdent of the local Izaak Walton
Owpter.

More than 100 people, youngsters
and adults, turned out for the
exhibits and to participate in some
of the outdoor sports. Some of the
scheduled activities had to be cancelled due to the weather, bijt
everything added up to a day of fun
and learning for the sixty kids
registered.
Game Protector Andy Lyles and
Wildlife Agent Jim Splete first
talked to the youngste~ on gun handling and gun safety. Then the
always popular Roger Birch and his
wife, Sharon, showed the beauty ahd
joy of a weU.Uained dog as they put

their two bird dogs through their
paces.
Doc, a Brittany Spaniel, and Jill, a
Springer, delighted everyone as they
responded beautifully for their
masters.
Harry Lee Bailey and his archery
participation held the youngsters •
-attention. Although the bales of
straw weren't hit very often, there
were lots of laughs and much fun as
everyone got to . shoot a bow and
arrow.

A free lunch was then served,
followed by a conservation talk, trap
shooting, and a muzzleloader

demonstration. The awarding of
door prizes to all those present capped off the day's activities .
The day would not have been
possible if it weren't for the
generosity of some local donors.
Fritz Sisson !)( The Tackle Box in
Syracuse donated an expensive rod
and reel combination and several
miscellaneous prizes such as lures .
Picj(en 's Hardware of Mason chipped in a nice reel, and BaW'n Lumber of Olester donated a whole box
of Mepp 's lures.
Horace KelT, as usual, was
gracious enough to lend the facilities

TRAP-sHOOTING is a yearly favorite of the youngsters at NHF Day.
Here Izaak Walton let some of the younger set shoot at the clay pigeons.

of Royal Oak Park for the day.
Pratt's Pleasonton Processing of
Athens for the second year in a row
processed the meat that was served
at lunch, and Seaman's Gateway of
Athens contributed, food, catsup,
mustard, etc.
Contributing money to help with
the expenses were the Pomeroy Gun
Club, Ridenour's Supply, Newell's
Sunoco, Gaul's Market, the Meigs
County Fish and Game Association,
an anonymous foreign supporter,
and·the Farmer's Bank and Savings
Company.
Clines' Fruit Farm of Tuppers

Plains supplied some delicious apples.
The Izaak Walton League would
like to thank all who conllibuted in
any way to make the day another
success, and everyone who attended
was not disappointed.
Thanks also go to all the members
and friends who showed up to help
and filled in on the spot. Some of the
local sportsmen who are concerned
about the kids of the area cooked and
served, helped with supervision,
came to demonstrate activities but
got rained out, and many, many
other too numerous to mention.

;

•

By ROBERT E. IIID J .ER
A.uoelated l'nla Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
Richland County lawmaker wants
the Legislature to establish
·qualifications for Ohio's sheriffs.
Rep. Sherrod Brown, D-Mansfleld,
has drafted the proposal and will
seek to have it illcluded 'l'lnlnday in
another proposal he already has
pending before a House local government subconunittee.
Brown, who said he was motivated
in part by recent charges of criminal
activities against some sheriffs, including one in his borne county, said
Among those who have declared
he thinks a major reason may be the
theselves most forcefully is Albert
lack of qualifications.
Cox, Jr., president of Merrill Lyncb
"Under Ohio law, there i.s only one
Economics, a subsidiary of the big
qualification for serving as a county
investment house. He foresees a
sheriff- a majority of votes. Deputy
"downward spiral" of interest rates.
sheriffs must meet certain · stanIn Cox 's opinion , the reversal most
dards, highway patrolmen are
likely will begin "In a matter of
trained, and city police must be
weeks,'' although he admits to some
qualified," he said.
indecision. The downtW11 might be
Under Brown's proposal, sheriffs
delayed until yearend, he concedes,
first would have to complete a 240with even higher rates until then.
hour peace officer training course.
No matter, he forecasts, the prime
He also would require four yean '
interest rate, now at 13.25 percent,
experience in law enforcement, or a
will reach 8.5 percent by late 1!180,
college degree with two years r1. exaided by cutbacks in industrial inperience. A third alternative would
ventories and thus the need for
be a law degree and one year of excredit to finance them.
•
perience.
In theory, as Interest ratea drop
U Brown's proposal should be
stocks become more attractive.
enacted, Ohio would become the firThe explanation is unst state in the nation to adopt
complicated : When interest costs
specific standards for sheriffs, he
fall, so do busine8s costs. Moreover,
said.
companies can again afford to invest
He wants to make his proposal a
in more productive plants and equippart of his bill governing the use of
ment, further lowering unit costs.
federal ''furtherance of justice" funWhile most inveators remain
ds in Ohio. " RecenUy, several councautious about all markets, and
ty sheriffs and prooecuto!'ll have
others seem intent on getting the last
been accused of converting money
fraction of a percent advantage out
from the fund to their personal use of rising , interest rates, some · for vacations, flying lessons, office :
already have been returning to
decorations, and other questionable
stocks.
uses," he said.
Are they acting prematurely? InBrown . said his measure will
vestors recall that last spring,
tighten restrictions on how the
hoping to spur intereat in stocks,
monies can be used.
some brokers told clients that inIt will allow its use for extradition
terest rates already had pealced. So
purposes, drug and infom111tion purmuch for foresight.
chases, and for special inIt is true, too, that attempta to see
vestiga\ions.
the future are complicatd by convulsions of the dollar, gold, Interest
rates, stocks, housing, energy. Alone
mE DAILV SENTINEL
iUSPSI!i-1101
and as they relate to each others,
they baffle reason.
Hunches + now they're another
DEVOTED TO THE
thing. With Interest rates at levels
INTF.RF,ST OF
never before recorded, and with the
MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
signs that industry and individuals
Clly Edllur
are lowering their credit demands,
. Pllblilbt!d dally tlttpl S.tardlly by Tllr: Oldo
the feeling i.s spreading.
VaUe1 Publllbiq Compuy· Muldmttllai, IR.,
Ill Court
Pomen&gt;y, Oblv tli711. llallaou•
The feeling, that i.s, that Interest
Off!« Pboae 111- m1. OOio&lt;fal nrates that seemed headed to the
IIZ..IIi7.
SetoDd cla11 poi&amp;IJe paid at Pomeroy, Ollio.
heavens might be returning to earth,
NitloDIIadverUIIag reprete:DtiUn, u-..
accompanied by economic static, to
A11ocll\et, JIOl F..uciJd Ave., ClenLIDd, ~
«115.
be sure, but returning nonetheless to
SubacrlpHoa ra1tl: DeUvered by c:~rrier
their natural envirorunent.
wbere avalllble II ceatl per week. By Moter
Roule wben: unier servlf!e DOt 1VIillble1 Olle
The re-entry lsn 'I to be awaited
mootb,$1.10.
with haled breath, any more than
The DIUy SeaUDe~ bJ ma.U 1D OliN aDd West
VlrJinll, ODt yeu p:3.•; Sis: moadw $17.11;
the next appearance of Haley's
thnt moatU ••uo. 'Ellewllere ..-.•: six
moatbl $Z0.08; tbret montbl fll .IO.
Comet. But It will be an event, a big
The AIIGdlted Prep II f'J:dWIIVt!,. Htided
one, and already they're talldng It
to tiH! ue for publk1lloa of aU_... dlr-.khes·
ut."dlled 1o thr uenpaper ami alae £~ local'
up In business and invesbnent cirllf'Wtpablbbed btn:la,
cles.

Business mirror
NEW YORK (AP) - Don 'I hold
your breath, as they say, or keep
your fingers crossed, or in fact get
involved in any of those physically
uncomfortable
positions,
but.. ...could interest rates be
pe~
....
-~'""?
That notion is spreading among
securities and economic analysts. It
worked its way into the latest bond
market review of Smith Barney
Harris Upham x Co. And Merrill
Lynch Economics sees a sharp drop
ahead.
More importantly, some in-·
vestment institutions, such as pension and mutual funds, apparently
feel the same way + or so you would
judge by their sudden interest in
blue chip stocks late last Thursday.

,

Lawmaker wants
sheriffs qualified

•

Washington
WASHINGTON (AP) - Police
departments which receive federal
aid would be barred from requiring
job applicants to list such aiiments
as heart disease and epilepsy under
proposed Justice Departm·ent
regulations.
Those and several other rules
proposed Friday are aimed at
keeping police agencies from
discriminating
against
the
handicapped . While prohibiting
general questions about health
problems, police agencies would be
able to ask about an applicant's
ability to perform specific jobrelated functions such as the ability
to drive a car, fire a pistol or work
over long periods of time in
emergency situations.

·Berry's World

'

administration around him for a
second tenn which, despite the absence of a personal announcement
and popular demand, it is still
believed he intends to make.
The obstacles are awesome.
Roosevelt launched his legislative
program fresh from a landslide election victory and with a large and
largely cooperative congressional
majority . Congress and public, stunned by the Depression and relieved
that someone wsa at last doing
something , were ready to be led.
Carter conunences his hundred
days not after an election but on the
eve of one, a hyper-political
situation that inevitably must have a
distorting influence his initiatives
and reactions to them. He is almost
three years into a presidency in •
which he has had manifold opportunities to do something. In tlie
congressional and public consensus,
he had.not delivered. .
Above all, in compiling his record
he must deal with a Congress that is
not only unimpressed by his performance to date but skeptical as to
prospects of genuine improvement.
It has a number of minds of its own
on how to deal with energy, the
economy and defense , the foremost
make-or-break issues.
Some see it as an "imperial"
Congress, successor to the "imperial" Johnson and Nixon presidencies, relishing its post-Watergate
prominence and resistant to
presidential direction. And it has no
reason to do this president any
favors.
Dealing with a Congress more inclined to lead than follow would be a
tough act under any circwnstances.
Carter has not made it any easier for
himself by past neglect of Capitol
Hill. By any reckoning, including
that of his own staff, congressional
liaison has been poor to non-existent.
Personalitis ccrnpound the basic
political problem. Other than Vice
President Waller Mondale, the
While House front echelon that is
now gearing up for an intensive lobbying effort is not popular on Capitol
Hill.
It addl; up to a tremendous task in
selling a program - at least the
White House version of one - to
Congress. That body on its own is
already considering almost as nnany
· proposa1s on dealing with the energy
problem as there are facets of it. It's
questionable that any meaningful
measures dealing with the faltering
and inflation-ridden economy could
shQw results before the election. And
of the other major issues, strategic
arms limitation with the Soviets has
been enonnously complicated by the
burgeoning dehale over Soviet
troops in Cuba, an intrusive issue
that by the time campaigning is underway in earnest may well take
precedence.over SALT itself.
The countdown for Carter began
with the reconvening of Congress.
To succeed by his own. deadline, he
will have to overwhelm Congress
and country with more leadership
than he has displayed so far.
And should he against all odds succeed in doing so, it could tutn out to
be a performance as impressive in
its way as FOR's. The timing is, after all, not just a matter of a hundred
days but of the 11th hour.

on

Editorial opinions,
comments

BY MAR111A ANGLE AND
ROBERT WALTERS
WASHINGTON (NEA) - After
speeding to the scene of a major
train
derailment,
volunteer
firefighters from the nearby rural
community are confronted by an
overturned tank car spewing acrid
fumes over the countryside.
An ominous-sounding, fivesyUable chemical name is stenciled
In 4-lnch-high letters on the other
side of the ruptured car, but it
provides no answers to the countless
questions racing through the fire
chief's mind as he struggles to avert
dW!ster.
Will the vapors be toxic to the fire
and rescue workers• Is evacuation
of homes and stores imperative?
Can the fire in another derailed car
lead to ignition or explosion of the
chemicals? Will water produce an
unwanted chemical reaction?
Crucial technical assistance can
be obtained In such cases by placing
a single toll.free call to the Chemical
Transportation Emergency Center,
known as CHEMTREC, a
Washington facility operated around
the clock'eveyr day of the year,
CHEMTREC's significance lies in
the story of who does -and who does
not- support the valuable emergencycenter.
The federal goverrunent has
nothing to do with it, even though a
1974 law specifically required the
Department of Transportation to .
"establish and maintain a central
reporting system and data center so
as to provide the law enforcement
and firefighting personnel of communities ... with technical and other
Information and advice for meeting
emergencies connected with the
transportation
of hazardous
materials ."
CHEMTREC is financed and
operated by the Chemical Manufactorers Association, the leading trade
association in an industry that long
has been a target for critics who
allege that producers of industrial
chemicals cynically refuse to
acknowledge their responsibility to
society.
Those corporations may not be
candidates for sainthood, but they
have poured at least $3 million into
CHEMTREC in an effort to
minimize the impact of rail, truck,
air and ship accidents involving

llll '

Eastern dumps Parkersburg Catholic, 20-0
By Grec BaUey
A hard-hitting defense that scored
two touchdowns in the first quarter
wu the difference Saturday night as
the Eastern Eagles white-washed
the host Parkersburg Catholic
Crusade!'ll,~.

Greg Wigal had nine

\liUISSUted

taddes wbi.le Brian Bissell had two
key

interceptions

to

stop

the

Crusaders cold.
With 7:~ showing on the clock in
the first period , BlsseU picked off a
CfiiSader aerial and raced 50 yards
.to paydlrt.
Less than two minutes later, an
Eagle defender blocked a Parkersburg punt, and after several Eagles
got their hands on the pigskin,
BisseU finaUy picked the ball up and

raced 20 yards for another score.
A pass from BisseU to Wigal madd
the score lHl, and that margin stood
unti.l the last eight minutes of the
contest.
Parkersburg had only one real
threat, and a bit of bad luck snuffed
that raUy out.
With 8:55 to go in the first half, the
Crusaders' fullback Wigman broke

loose along with two blockers. oilly

one Eagle remained in the runner's

Bray's field goal beats Panthers
RICHMOND ALE - Jay Bray's 34
yard field goal in the secood quarter
here Saturday afternoon proved to

be the difference as H8nnan Trace
won Its fourth straight game this
fall , t-7 over Southeastern of Ross
County .
Colch Larry Cremeens ' Wildcats
are df to their best start ever in the
!Chool 's grid history . H1liS has now
won sill In a row Including the last
two games lastyeat.
The Galllans broke into the
scoring COIWIUI In the first period
when junior quarterback Archie
Meadows went over from the one
yard line. Bray's kick for the EP
was blocked.
FoUowlng his field goal in the
aecond stanza, Southeastern got
back into the game with a 3() yard
pus to Art Hill. The kick cut the
scoretd9-7.
Playing in a steady downpour ,

neither team was able to move consistently however, Hannan Trace
missed a scoring opportunity in the
third quarter when a penalty
nullified a play at the 11 yard line .
• Alter I:IT failed to move following
the 15 yard penalty, Bray attempted
another field goal , but the attempt•
was blocked.
Bray led the I:IT offense with 94
yards in 21 carries. Todd Sibley had
38 yards rushing.
Friday night, Hannan Trace puts
its unbeaten string on the line in its
SVAC opener at Kyger Creek. The
Bobcats are 2-1-1 after Friday's IHJ
loss to Oak Hill.
STATIST!a&gt;
DEPARTMENT
Hr SE
First Downs
13
5
Yards Rushing
181
87
Yards Passing
50
94
Total Yardage
231 181
Passes Attpt.
7
10

Sports briefs.
By The Asooelated Press
BASEBALL
BALTIMORE ( AP) - The
Baltimore Orioles clinched their
sixth American League East
championship and first since 1974
when the Milwaukee Brewers were
defeated by the Minnesota Twins
Saturday.
The Orioles are the first team to
clincb their division title this season.

GOLF
NAPA, Calif. (AP) - John Fought
lroke out of a five-way tie for .first
pla(!e with a birdie on the final hole
to win his second coosecutive pro
golf tour event, Napa's $300,000
toW1!ament.
Fought finished with a :kinder-par
69and a 7Ulole total of 11-wlder '!17.
Alan Taple, Bobby Wadkins, and
Buddy Garilner finished at '!18.
MOOR PARK, England (AP) Britain's Michael Klng, a 29-yearold fCI'mer stockbroker, held off a
strong challenge from Brian Waites
and Gary Player to win the
Players'
Golf
Tournament
Championship.
OVERLAND PARK, Kan. (AP) -'Sandra Post fired three straight
birdies for a 3-under-pat 70 to rally
to a :Htroke victory in the $100,000
LPGA Kansas City Classic.
POst finished with a four-day total
of 284, S-under-par, on the par-73 ,
6,273-yard Brookridge Country Club
course. Orona Capooi Young fired a
final round 75 to end the tournamP.Dt

• •

Passes Compt.
Interceptions
Fumbles
Fumbles Lost
Penalties
By Quarters :
I:IT
SE

'

4
0.
0
0
6-40

6
0
0
0
7~

6 3 0 o-9
0 7 0 0-7

.

path, but the blockers got in
W"lgJ1l811 's way. The ball earlier
gave one of his own men a litUe
push, and the blocker ''fell" light in- ·
to a clipping penalty. Wigman raced
in for the score, but the penalty
negated the six points.
In the last period, Eastern got the
game out of reach at the 8:31 mark.
Bissell teamed up with Mark Norton
for a four-yard scoring toss to make
the final score~.
Defense was the big factor in the
contest, but of offense the air hattie
was the big statistic.
BisseUooomectedon7ofl5~

for 81 yards while the hosts managed
just 16 yards on two of eighteen
looses .
Eastern had 13 first downs while
the Crusaders had seven, and the

College results
College Football Scores
By The Associated Press

Illinois St . 24. E . Mich igan 15
l ndiana18, Kentucky 10
Kansas St. 22 , Oregon 51. 16
Memphis St. 16, Wichita Sf . 10
M ichigan 28. Kansas 7
M ichigan St. 2-4, Miami , Ohio21
Nebraska 2..C , Iowa 21
Ohio U . 35, Marshall 0
Ohio St. &gt;15, Washington St. 29
Oklahoma 49, Tulsa 13
Purdue 28, Notre Dame 22
Syracuse 54, Northwestern 21
UCLA 37, Wisconsin 12
Youngstown Sf . 24, Ashland 3
SOUTHWEST
Arkansas l7, Oklahoma St. 7
Arkansas Sf. 24, S.lllinois 16
Lamar 19, Louisiana Tech 7

Saturday's Games
EAST
eoston College 34, Villanolfll7
Co lgate 10, Lehigh 3
Cornell 52, Penn 13
Harvard 26, Columbia 7
Hoty Cross 35, Rhode I stand 6
Navy 21, Connecticut 10

Princeton 16,· Dartmouth 0
Rutgers 16, Buc knell 14
Slippery Rock 21 , Cent .

Con ·

necti cut 15.

Texas A and M 27, Penn St. u
Yale 13, Brown 12
SOUTH
Alabama 45, Baylor 0
Appalach ia n St . JSr W: Carolina 27
Auburn 31 , S. Miss ss (ppi 9
Citadel27 , Mississippi 9
Clemson 12, Georgia 7
Florida 7, Georg ia Tech 7, tie
Louisiana St . 47, Rice 3
Maryland 35, Mississippi st. 14
McNeese St. 12, NE Louisiana 10
MissouriJJ, M ississippi 7
N. Carolina 17, Pittsburgh 7
N. Carolina St. 38, W. Virg inia 14
South Carolino 35, Duke 0
SW Louisiana 19, W. Texas St. 10

Eagles amassed 198 yards to 106 for
the hosts. Eastern threw no Interceptions.
Wigal was the big ground1lainer
with 79 yards in 25 llies. Norton
fmished the game with 24 yards on
seven carries and had three catches
for 37 yards. Wigman had 77 yards in
·13 carries for the hosts.
Eastern is now 3-1 on the year and
will host Federal Hocking next
Friday.
By Quarters:
E
14 0 0 6-20
PC
0006-0

Depar1meul

E PC

FirstDowns
13
7
117 . 90
Rush
Pass
81
16
Total yards
198 106
Comp.-passes
7-15 2-18
Inter. thrown
0
2
3-29 5-25
Punts...v.
Fumbles-lost
1-1 5-2
Pen.-yds.
7-75 8-73
Scoring : First quarter: 7: ~. Brian
Bissell interception for 50 yards,
kick failed. First quarter: 5:12,
blocked punt, Bissell for 20 for TD,
Bissell to Greg Wigal pass for extras. Fourth quarter: 8:3(), Bissell to
Mark Norton four lards, extra pass
failed .

PREVENTION
IS lHE
BEST POLICY
As an independent insurance
agency, our primary function is
to provide policies which afford
financ ia l protect ion in cese of

loss .
But. we also have a vital in·

terest in loss prevention, as
should our clients. We encourage
care, caution and safety ...
preventive . measures which can
keep that car acc ident from hap·
peni~g , t~at building f ire from
start1ng, that home burglary
from being comm itted .
Prevention saves l ife, limb and
property ... and helps control In·
.sura nee costs and premiums..
When losses do occur, our
policyholders can count on pro·
tecting and serving in tim e and
need . But we still say - preveil·
t lon is the best policy.

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

Pomeroy

SAVE
MONEY.

Tex,as 17, Iowa St . 9
Tex,as -Arllngton 37, NW Louisiana
14
Texas -EI Paso 171 Nev .-Las Vegas

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

IS
in second place at 286.
Tulane 33, Texas Christian 19
TENNIS
FAR WEST
LOS ANGELES (AP ) - Peter
Arizona u, Texas Tech, .., tie
Arizona St. 49, ToledoO
F1eming stunned top....ected John
Army 17, Stanford 13
McEnroe , his longtime doubles
California 13, San Jose St. 10
partner, 6-4, 6-1 to win the singles
Drake,lJ , Colorado 9
Hawakk 20, New Mexico 3
championship in the $175,000 · Jack
Tennessee Sl , Utah 18
· Idaho 17, Pacific U. 13
Kramer Open tennis tournament.
Tennessee St. 21, Texas Southern 3
Ill inois 27, Air Force 19
Tn. -Chattanooga 45, Furman 14
The eighth-seeded Fleming's
Indiana St . ..0, New Mexico St. 23
Virginia 19, VMI 0
San Diego St. 32, Fresno St. 23
stalled a comeback by the reigning
Virginia Tech JS, William and
Southern Cal 48, Minnesota u
U.S. Open champion in the second
Mary 14
Utah St. 24, Colorado St. 0
WaKe Forest 23, E. Carolina 20 ·
set to even the series between the
Washington 21 , Oregon 17
.
MIDWEST
Wyoming 9, Richmond 7
two at 3-3 during their professional
Ball St. 35, Kent Sf. to
careers.
The 24-year-old . F1eming earned
$28,000, while McEnroe collected
TUESD~ Y ONLY
$14,000 for his runnerup finish .
PALERMO , Sicily (AP) Swedish star Bjorn Borg defeated
Italy's Corrado B8razzutti 6-1, &amp;-0, 64 to win the $75 ,000 International
Tennis Championship of Sicily.
ATLANTA ( AP) - Fourth-seeded
Billie·Jean Klng overpowered West
Gennan Sylvia Hanika &amp;-3, 6-2 to
advance to the second round of the
25~
$100,000 Atlanta women 's tennis
P....t Your
tournament. '
Marise Kruger of Sooth Africa
Golden lluciiiJI Card
also advanced by beating Jeanne
When Onlerina.
DuVall 6-3, 3-&lt;l, 6-1 as did No.7 seed
Virginia Wade wtio !)eat Betty Stove '
6-2, ~~ . 6-1.
TRACK AND FIELD
TOKYO (AP) - American Ron
Uvers won the triple jump with a
leap of 55 feet 11 ~ inches at the AllJapan Industrial Track and Field
Meet .

Take a day·or less to 1nstall
certain-teed Fiber G lass
Att ic Insulation between
the joists in your att ic floor .
It's the most econom1cal

way to save big money on
those skyrocketing heat 1ng

-..__
Mtic

II

1 '

Uon

---

and cooling costs. You'll
be warmer in w1nter and
cooler in summer . too .

Come in now. We'll show
yo'J how to do the job
quickly and easil)f.
Bans 6" th1Ck. . t5V•( w1Cle ano
46' long cover 4ll SQ t1

Bans oer1oraleel at 23" lor
use between 16" or

2 4~

lrammg

·c.--·
....,. .......

SENIOR CITIZENS

SALE

OH Purchlse,

• Just

POMEROY

ADOLPH'S

CEMENT BLOCK CO.

DAIRY VAU.EY

'

"

MAIN ST.
The Department Store of Building Since 1915

..

'l

•

~ I

�5.- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0.,Monday, Sepl. 24, 1979

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Monday, Sept. 24, 1979

'

Dinne_r meeting h~ld

Ironton picked to win SEO
For the seventh time in eight
years the Ironton Tigers have been
picked to. capture the SEOAL football championship.

This prediction came Sunday at
Association held at Jolly Lanes in
the fall meeting of the SEO Spor- · Jackson .
tswriters and
Broadcasters
With Coach Bob Lutz at the helm
of the Tigers the ~ven time league

The annUal dinner meeting of the
Women's Christian· Temperance
Union was held-recently at the home
of Mrs. Robert Wl!rJier.
A table grace was given in unison
preceding the dinner. Mrs. Allen
Hampton, president, oonducted the
b113iness meeting which opened with
the song, "I Am 1bine 0 Lord" and
prayer by Mrs . Hampton. A
memorial was conducted for Miss
Lucretia Genheirner and those who
have died during the year. Scripture
was taken from John 14 by Mrs.
Warner, and Mrs. Joseph Cook read
"So Swift So Short the Day."

champions have compiled a 2~-1
record in preseason contests, including a 13-13 tie with Washington
Court House last Friday night.
Under Coach Lutz the Tigers own

Pastore finds
-~:;~~:7;d:1~~af~~o~!?~~
•
forman· cefo~~~~:~!~ttoWellstonwith
m
respect ·

•

The assoctatton tabbed the Metgs
Marauders to finish second for a
repeat of 1976 when they tied Athens

.
Clutchper
·

'·

HOUSTON (AP )
Cincinnati's
Frank Pastore found respect in !be
Astrodome Sunday, and Houston
catcher LUis Pujols discovered his
juggling act was costly and not too
entertaining for the Astros .
·"I'm sure they felt alter beating
our best pitchers they wouldn't have
much trouble with me," the steelnerved Pastore said Sunday after
pitching the Reds to a 7-1 victory
over Houston, which trails
Cincinnati by l lf.: games lor the
National League West Division title.
"I could have thought the same
thing and said who am I to beat these
guys," said Pastore, sent to the
minors earlier this year alter being
shelled by Los Angeles. "But I've
learned a lot this season . I just tried
to stay calm and be myself."
By remaining calm before the
frantic 42,067 fans in the Astrodome,
Pastore helped the Reds avoid being
swept in the three-game series.
The Reds scored five runs in a
controversial fourth inning when
umpire Joe West ruled Ray Knight
safe on a close call at the plate on a
play that would lul,ve been the third
out. The Astros would have been out
of the inning trailing only 2-1.
Instead, West ruled that Pujols
juggled the ball while making the
,tag and that cleared the way lor a
five-run inning from which the
Astros never recovered.
"It turned the game around,"
Astros Manager Bill Virdon said.

"There was an apparent juggling of
the ball . There seemed to be a
question of whether Knight touched
the plate and if he didn 't the umpire
shouldn 1 have made such a quick
decision." ·

Knight said he tried to slide into
Pujols as he went lor the plate.
"When I hit him, I saw the ball
squirt up and the umpire saw it too.!
knew then that I was safe."
Pujols admitted he juggled the
ball but thought he had made a
successful tag. "I caught the ball in
my glove, made the tag and then the
ball came out," said Pujols,
substituting for injured starter Alan
Ashby. "Tiuit play cost us the game
. but not the pennant."
Johnny Bench doubled off Houston

High school grid scores
By The Associated Press
Akron Centra1 ·Rower 18, Akron
Kenmare 13
Akron St. Vincent 13, Cuyahoga

FallsB .
Alliance 26, Cleve. Adams 8
Bedford Chane! 24, University
School14
Black River 18, Norwalk 51. Paul 0
. Buckeye Central14, Elgin 7
Buckeye North 26, Jefferson Union
0

East

GB
Miami

9 112

13
17
18 21 •;,
49

New Eng .
Buffalo
N. Y.Je!S

4

7
20
20
32

3
3
2
1

1
1
2
3
I 3

0 6 64
o 111 7
0 79 54
0 51 109
0 87 99

54
58
3109860
1 J 0 76 71
0 4 0 .. 94

wash .

Oakland 2, Kansas City 0
Cleveland 7, Baltimore 3, lsi game
Cleveland al Baltimore, 2nd

Sf. LOUiS
N. Y . Giants

game, ppd ., rain
Seattle 6, Chicago .4
Sunday's Games
New York 7, Toronto 5
Boston 2·2, Detroit 1·3, 2nd game
10 innings
Cleveland 4·1, Baltimore3·3
· Milwaukee 8, Minnesota 7
California 6, Texas 1
Kansas City A, Oakland 2
Seattle 8, Chic ago 3
Monday 's Games

Tampa Bay
Chicago
Minnesota
Detroit
Green Bay

Allanla
LosAng .
N. Orleans
San Fran.

Central
4 0 0
2 2 0

Day. Edgewood 31 , Middletown

2 2 0 74 96

West

1 3 0 74 112
1 3 0 62 73

2
2
1
. 0

2 0 94 88
2 0 13 78
3 0 97 115
4 0 80 105

Pa inesville Harvey 21, Fairport

Harding 20

Painesville

Houston 30, Cincinnati 27, ot

Tiffin Calvert o, Fostori a o, tie
Wintersville 20, Steubenville Cent .

Cath . 7

E)(hibition
Season Results

By The Associated Press
National
Basketball Association
Saturday's Game
Kansas city 113, Mi !waukee 105

Portland 107, San Antonio 104
Los Angeles 119, Phoeni• 111
Golden Stale 105, San Diego 102
Allanla

93
93
83
81
78

San Diego 10, Los Angeles 8
Sunday's Games

Monlreal7, Ph ila delphia 4
St. Louis 7, New York 4, 10 innings
San Francisco 2, Atlanta 1

Pillsburgh 6, Chicago 0

Cincinna ti 7, Houston 1

Los Angeles 5, San Diego 2
Monday ' s Games

New York (Swan 12·13 ) at Chicago

t Lamp 11 ·91

(Sc hatzeder 10·4 and

(E ll is 3·7

and Bly leven 11 ·5). 2
Houston (Will iams 4·6 and Forsch
11 ·6) at Atlan ta (Mc Will iams 2·2 and
Solomon 6·13). 2
St . Louis ( Vu ckovich 14·10) at

Ph iladelph ia ILerch 10·12)
Only games sc heduled
...--TvHdjly 's Games
New York at Chicago, 2
. Houston a! Atlanta
Montreal at Pillsburgh
St. Lou is al PH iladelphia

San Diego at Cinc i nnat i
Los Angeles at San Francisco •

I

.

al

w. COMPTON, O.D.

I

t

GAMECANCELLEt)
This evening's Galli'polis Blue Imps at Meigs reserve football game
has been cancelled, due to the
teachers strike at Meigs .

,._. \, ll l l1 1l lll l t~

L" ~l llli11 Uilh.: .IIIPI1 "

pro~ ra m

tlllt'f (, tll lll ' h pn.''l 'llta l iun ' d cal111g \ \ lth dif.
IL·rcnl .t'-llL"l"h \ll t h~.: l : lll'l g\ -. l!uatHlll . I n

.

"(h l·duk· a )"'l l l\.~fd!ll tnr \nur ).! fllliJ'. Ill'-' ~o,: all
m..3'786.
All pr~,·-. c..·ntatl ( lth arc \\ ithout
c h;ti·gl' .

01-110 I'OWER &lt;.:OMPANY

MI.

Pleasant, Mich .
Kansas City vs. Denver at Omaha,

Neb .

Tuesday's Games
Atlanta vs. New Jersey at Glens

Fa lls, N. Y.

Chicago -v s . Cleveland at Canton ,

Oh io

THE DAILY SENTINEL

National
Basketball Association

ATLANTA HAWKS .- Cut Keith
Herron, forward , and Dedrick Ra f ·
figee , center .

NEW JERSEY NETS - Released

Gary Brokaw, Tony Smith and Art
Collins, guards ; and Doug Jam ison,
forward .

Monday's Games

Dallas a! Cleveland
Sunday, Sept. 30

M iami at New York Jets
M innesota at Detroit
New York Giants at New Orleans

Pillsburgh at Phi ladelph ia

washington at Atlanta
Buffalo at Baltimore

Cleveland a! Houston
Tampa Bay al Chicago
Cincinnati at Dallas

Denver a! Oakland
Kansas Cily al Sealtle
Sl. Louis a! Los Angeles
San Francisco at San Diego

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

'22.00
THEY WILL
RECEIVE
9 MONTHS OF
THE HOMETOWN

Monday, Ocl. I
New England a! Green Bay

DAVID L. CARR, D. 0.
Announces The Relocation Of His Office
FOR
GENERAL PRACTICE

And
ALLERG l' AND DERMATOLOGY
At

FAMILY CLINIC
292. 4 JAC!o&lt;SO N AVE N U E

,... U ! N T PLEASANT . WEST V IR G INIA 2!50 'SV

Office Hours: Monday-Friday 9 a.m.. 6 p.m.
Telephone : Office 304-675-6971 -Home 675 -65i7

THIS
OFFER
GOOD .

AT ANY

CLIP &amp; MAll

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769
NAME •.•••••••••••.•.•••••....•..•.•••••..•••..•••••••••••••
ADDRESS ••• ••••• •••

OFFER

EXPIRES
OCTOBER

15,

I •• ••••• •••••••• •• ••••••••••• • ••••• • ••• •

COLLEGE
IN THE
UNITED

CITY•.•••••••••• .••.•• •••••••.•••••••••••.••••• ~ •••••••••••••
StATE. ••..••••.. .••.•.....•.•.•......•. ZIP CODE ........... ~

SORRY,
NO \

STATES

[ J CHECK .••••••••.••• 0 MONEY ORDER •••••••••••••

0

AMT•.••••....•••••••••.••••••••••.•••••••••••••••••••.••

'

REFUNDS

PTO plans·jall activities

OLD TIME phot06 of Meigs County will be copied at The Farmers
Bank on Sept. 25 and Oct. 4 in a progr.am in which the bank is putting
together a coUection of historic photographs. This picture was taken on
Pomeroy 's Main St ..in horse and buggy days, apparenUy just foUowing a
majorOood .

Farmer 's Bank to copy
old time photographs
Bring til your photos! You may
Remember the days of the 4ld
even see them in a future presenstreetcars, passenger and freight
trains, horse-drawn vehicles, and . · tation or exhibit at the bank. It will
only take a few minutes of your time
steamboats? What about Carlton
to have them copied while you wait.
CoUege in Syracuse, and even the
The photos will not be kept overWildennuth Bl1!wery?
night. The bank is interested in all
11lo!te days are gone but the
people and activities of the county as
' memory lingers with many old
well as county . scenes and arphotographs and stories which have
chitecture.
been passed down through the years.
Color photos and slides cannot be
The Fanners Bank is interested in ·
copied in this manner. U you have
putting together a collection of
color photos or slides of interest,
historic photographs and is inviting
please bring them in and we'll let
the people of the county to partiCipate. There will be a photo copy · you know how they can be handled,
in order to be a part of this collecstand set up at the bank on Tuesday,
tion . For further infonnation cooSeptember 25, l.J p.m. and Thurtact Tricia Adleta 992~ .
sday,October4, 9a.m.-12noon . . ·

Private vocal lessons to
be available at ·FAC
Arrangements have been made~
Mr.1. Rowan has announced that
with Thomas "Ed " Harkless, vocal · Harkless , 26, who holds a Masters in
instnlctor at Meigs Local Schools, to
Music from Marshall University
teJich privately on Tuesdays at ,, specialiilng in voice performance,
Riverby, starting at 4:30p.m., ac- . will be at Riverby at 4:30 p .m.
cording to Phyllis Rowan, MU3ic
tomorrow afternoon to meet with
Olairperson for the French Art
those students who are Interested in
Colony.
studying voice under hi3 direction .
The lessons will be on an individual
basis and 30 minutes in length on
· Tuesday ol each week .
Harkless ' background par'nlESDAY
ticularly qualifies him f!l" vocal inDREW WEBSTER POST 39
struction. He was the Music Director
American Legion Auxiliary, 7::.J · of the Community Players of Hunp.m. Tuesday. Dorothy Jenkins
tington, W. Va . this year, before acmusic chairman, to present the pr~
cepting hi3 ~ching position at
gram.
'
Meigs Local Schools. He held the
PAST MATRONS , Pomeroy same position for the Appalachian
Chapter !86, Order of the Eastern Arts Festival at Morris Harvey
Star, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the home College in 1974. He maintains his
of
Mrs .
Ella
Smith . own studio, teaching piano, voice
EXECUTI VE COMMITIEE of and saxophone.
Also in 1974 he was conunlssioned
the Meigs Chapter of the American
Cancer Society Tuesday a1 7:30p.m. Composer of West Virginia Arts and
Humanities Council. He studied
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
vocal specialization with piano
AMERICAN LEGION AUX - major at Ml}..rri.s Harvey College and
ILIARY , Drew Webster Post 39,7 :30 holds a Bachelors Degree in the
TUesday night at the hall. Special Humanities, Music Education, K-12,
musi c to be presented by Margaret from Marshall University, in adNeuman and Jim Soulsby.
dition to his Masters .
Anyone interested in studying with
LADIES AUXILIARY of th e
Harkless
should immediately conRutland Volunteer Fire Department
tact
Mrs
.
Rowan
at 446-4622 or Janet
' Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Inwrested
44&amp;-1903,
and plan to be at
Byers,
•persons urged to attend .
Riverby tomorrow afternoon at 4:30
AUXILIARY OF Veterans p.m. to meet with Harkless and
Memorial Hospital , Tuesday even- make all necessary arrangements.
ing at 7:30 p.m. at the hospital.
•
Board meeting at 7p.m.

Sloan, and Martha King were apFall activitiel included a festival
to be held in November were plann- pointed to revise the by-laws. The
ed during a meeting of the Salisbury playground equipment conunittee
reported that they are OP\lllfor sugPTO held Tuesday night at the
gestions as to the type of equipment
school.
Arrangements were made to serve to be added to the playground.
John Usle, principal, announced
the Central Ohio Milk Producers
Association to be held tonight at the school stall, Martha Hoover,
theSenlor Citizens Center. Helen first grade ; Helen Dlas, second
grade: Rosa .lie Story, third grade;
Corsi Is the kitchen chalnnan.
Lisle, fourth grade ; Dorothy
The festival tentative date is Nov.
27, Mn. ·susan Pullins, president, Chaney, fifth grade; and Ed Bartels,
announced. She asked that members sixth grade . He also presented
save Royal Crown bottle caps, Karen Walker, reading teacher
under Title I; Elaine Bouchet, art
Elberfeld slipe to be turned in for
door prizes, and also collect things teacher; and Ed Harkless, music insuch as glassware, ornaments, can- structor.
He al.!!o announced the school comned goods, and craft items which
munications council which is commight be sold in the country store.
Youth ol the school who par- posed of Bob and Karen Sloan, Jenticipated in summer activities were nie Warth, the Rev. Floyd Shook,
congratulated and Margaret Parker Paulette Harrison, Barbara Fry,
presented to the school a trophy won Yvonne Young, Helen Corsi, Judy
by the Girl Scout Troop 1100 which Kin«, Darlene Hayes, the Rev . and
will be displayed in the school trophy
Mrs. Jim Corbitt, Margaret Parker,
Arland and Martha King, Barbara
case. The PTO agreed to sponsor the
Beegle, Judy Humphreys, Thelma
Brownie and Girl Scout Troops and
also the CUb Scouts of the Salisbury J~ers ,- Susan Pullins, and Frankie
Hwmel.
School.
During the meeting the PTO
Parents stood and introduced
agreed to purchase tooth paste lor themselves, and Dar-lene Casto,
the children, grades one through membership chainnan, announced
that membership will remain at 5()
three, who will be participating in
the tooth brushing program. It was . cents, and an award of $10 will be
also voted to purchase duplicating given to the room which has the
paper so that the men113 can be sent highest percentage of memberships ..
The second grade won the room
home.
RefreshmentS were served.
count.
Yvonne Young. Ed Bartels, Karen

REGULAR MEETI NG, Ohio
Valley Commande~4 , Knights
Templar, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
temple; officers arc to take swords
and belts. All Knights Templar
welcome.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The North
Bethel United Methodist Women wjll
hold a combination bake and yard
sale all day ThUtsday and Friday at
the home of Lucille Burroughs in
Tuppers Plains.
PYTHIA SISTERS, 7:30p.m. at K
of P Hall, Gallipolis. Members,
please attend .

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
CHAPtER, Beta Sigma Phi Chapter,
7:45 p.m. at the Riverboat Room of
the Athens County Savings and Loan
Co.
.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Middleport First United Presbyterian
Church, 6;30 potluck dinner with
Group I to be hostesses. Members to
take covered dishes. Mrs. Joseph
Cook to present the progrll!", .with
Mrs. Harry Moore to give devott'tn5-

'Ba~tered

Women' theme of
program by Forest Run UMW

~---Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
WILDWOOD GARDEN CLUB, 8
p.m., home of Mrs. Ada .,oiler,
Wednesday. New officers to be installed.
c MIDDLEPORT UTERARY
CJ,UB, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home of
Mrs. Robert Ftsher. Program by
Mrs. Betty Fultz and Mrs. Joseph
Cook. Roll call will be a memorable
scripture.

and

By The Associated Press

New Orleans 30, San Francisco 21

saturday's Games
Pittsburgh 4, Chic ago 1
St . LOUiS 6·3, New York 3·2
Philadelphia 9·2, Mont rea l 8·8, 1st
game 10 inn ings
Atlanta 10, San Franc i sco 2
Houston 4. Cincinnati 1

vs . Chicago

Weekend

Tampa Bay 21 , Los Angel es6

60 .608
61 .604 'h
71 .539 10'12
Phi !adelphia
75 519 13'12
Chicago
77 .503 16
New York
56 98 '364 37&gt;;,
WEST
Cincinnati
88 68 .564
86 19 .555 1_
Houst on
Los Angeles
76 eo .487 12
San Diego
65 91 .417 23
Atlanta
61 92 .399 25'12

Monday's Games

Sports Transactions

13

GB

:· N.

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

Philadelphi a 17, New York Giants

Kansas City at California

.

Sunday's Games

Wash ington 17. 51. Louis 7
Denver 37, Seallle 34
Miami 31, Chicago 16

Oakland at Te• as

Luciano may sue his boss:

( hll

Detroit 114, New York 95
New Jersey 111. washington 101
Milwaukee 115, Ch icago 69

Kansas City 35, Oakland 1

Seattle at Mi lwaukee
Chicago at Minnesota

29 ,

Sandusky Perk ins 23, Sandusky St.
Marys 6
Strasburg 33, Buckeye West 0

oetroil24, Atlanta 23
Minnesota 27, Green Bay 21. ot
New England 27, San Diego 21
Pillsburgh 17, Baltimore 13

Cleveland at New York

Riverside

''--

Detroit v s. Seattl e at Spokane,
wash .

Buffa lo46, NewYorkJets31

•

Moun! Heallhy 25, Cin. Anderson 0

102 58
68 65

Sunday 's Games

Kansas Ci1y (G ura 12·11) at
Californ ia (Ryan 15·131
Only game scheduled

Pillsburg~

West

National Conference
East
3 0 0 67
Dallas
Phila .
3 1 0 76

Delroll at Boston, pdd ., rain

May 10·3) at

Cin. Western Hills 29, Cin . Tafl6
Clearfork 20, Lexington 0
Cleve. Central Calh . 6, Elyria
Calh. 0
Cleve. St. tgnalius40, Rhodeso
Cleve . St. Joseph 26, Mayfield 7
Conotlon Valley 13, Buckeye Trail

Portsmouth Notre Dame 47 , Por ·

Central
4 0 0 95 54
3 0 0 65 56
3 1 0 86 98
0 4 0 65 111

Denver
san Diego
Kan . City
Oakland
Seallle

Minneso1a 6, Milwaukee 3
California 3, Texasl

W. L. Pet .

Birmingham,

W. L. T. PF PA
tsmouth East 6
4 0 0 86 45 '
Revere 14, Akron Firestone 6
3 1 0 116 54
51. Edward 12, Lakewood 7

Baltimore

Pills.

3

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST

33,

Ashtabula St. John 22

2 2 0 123 91
1 3 0 87 137
0404973

Cleve .
Houston
Cincinnati

Saturday's Games
New York 7, Toronto 4

Montreal

Cin. Moeller
Mich .. Rice 14

Lou isville 02, Canton Tim ken 7
Mansfi eld Madison 14, Man sfield
Sencor14

American Conference

x -· c linched division title

Montreal
Pi ttsburgh
51. Louis

Hi iiO

Va . 6
Edison 24, South Central 0
Elyria Wesl23, John Hay 0
Indian Valley North 24, Malvern 0
Lake Catholic 34, West Tech 6

National Football League .
At A Glance
By The Associated Press

Toronto at Boston
Detroit at Baltimore

21

Cen. Colerain 21 , Northwest o
Cin . Forest Park 3, Cin . Turpin 0
Cin. McNicholas 21 , North Coll ege

Fenwick 8
Day . Jefferson 12, Day . Dunbar 0
Day. Roth 22. Day . WrightO
East Liverpool 28, Oak Glen, W.

FOOTBALL

Tuesday's Games

WOOd

6

BASfBA! I

I

canton Central. 30, Cleve. COl lin·

Saturday's Results

~
~

Baseball At A Glance
By The Associated Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L. Pet.
100 54 .649
X·Balt\more
91 _ 64 .587
Milwaukee
Boston
87 67 .565
New York
83 71 .539
Dei roil
83 73 .532
Cleve land
79 76 .510
Toronto
52 104 .333
WEST
Cal ifornia
85 71 .545
Kan . Cily
82 74 ,.526
Minnesota
81 75 .519
Te•as
78 78 .soo
Chi cago
68 60 .417
Seallle
65 91 .417
Oakland
53 103 .340

starter Vern Ruhle to start the
fourth inning and scored the goahead .run before the fireworks.
Pastore singled to right to send
Knight to the plate and Dave Collins
then tripled to the right field wall to
score Hector Cruz and Pastore.
Collins also scored on the play when
Rafael Landestroy threw wide to the
plate for an error.
George Foster got Cincinnati
started with his 28th homer in the
second inning and Houston tied it in
the second on Jeff Leonard's double.
The Reds added the final run in the
seventh when relief pitcher Tom
Dixon loaded the bases oo three
straight singles and walked Cruz to
Ioree home the run.

Jackson picked fourth to round out
the first division.
The revitalized Logan Chieftains
were accorded fifth, Gallipolis sixth,
Athens seventh, and Waverly the
last place by the scribes and casters.
In a coaches poll conducted by
Tom Metiers, league statistician,
T$0PI:UES PRESENTED : Tropies were awarded at the recent 18the eight head coaches also gave the
holet'Niurnament of the Mason Golf Club Junior League as a conclusion to
nod to Ironton with Jackson second,
summer golfifl!;. Net scores were used to determine the winner, Tony
Logan third, Meigs fourth, Wellston
Jewell, first: Handy Pierce, second; and Rod Boardman, third. A1llo
fifth, Gallipolis sixth, Athens sevengiven the awards ceremony were trophies for net and gross. 1be winners
th, and Waverly again in the league
were Randy Pierce, Rod Boardman, and Scott McKinney, gross; and
basement.
Walley Raynes, Fred Young and J. R. Wamsley, net. Each participant
In the prediction voting.,by the
also received a junior league trophy. A wiener roast was hosted lor the
writers and play-by11lay men Irongroup by the. sponsor, Chet Campbell. Winners were, left to right , front,
ton received 10 first place votes of 14
Handy Pierce, Rod Boardman, Scott McKinney ; and back row, Wally
possible, with Gallipolis receiving
Raynes, Fred Young and J . R. Wamsley.
two, and Meigs and Wellston each
one vote.
The poll by the eight coaches saw
Ironton garner five of eight first
place votes with Wellston getting
two, and Meigs one lor the chamNEWYORK (AP )- Ron Luciano,
us. " said Ohlin eyer. "Our position is
pionship.
the colorful umpir e who has been
simple. He 's one. of the guys we're
In other business Sunday the prohibited by the American League
considering. But we're not going to
members elected Pete Wilson of the from working its playoff games as
get in the middle of a policy
Waverly News Watchman as
an announcer for NBC, said Sunday
squabble between them . Baseball's
president, Craig Dunn of the Logan
he is going to sue the AL for
laken a position that Roo is a
Daily News as vice president, and
restricting his right to work .
baseball employee and they have a
Randy Heath of WXJC-WXIZ-FM as
Luciano also said he was thinking
right to make that policy. We won 't
secretary-treasurer.
of suing NBC because he and the the
have baseball dictate policy to us ~so
Heathreplaces Odie O'Donnell of network had a verbal ag reement,
we won 't presume to dictate policy
the Gallipolis Tribune, who has ser- including salary arrangemenU; .
to lhem ."
ved in the capacity of secretaryDon Oh lme yer , excecutive
Luciano is not scheduled to work
treasurer 22 of the past 24 years.
producer of NBC Sports, said
as an umpire l.r the playoffs or
It was noted that SEOAL teams
Luciano was one of several expert
World Series allll considers himself
this season have compiled an overall analysts being considered, including
free to accept employment from
12-10-2 record in non-league contests Detroit Manager Sparky Anderson
NBC . Luciano 's lawyer , Riehle
with Ironton and Wellston 'each win- and Kansas City Manager Whitey .,Phillips , said nothing in tlie
ning two and tying one.
· Herzog . Ohlmeyer said he was
co ll ec tive bargaining a greement
Following are the 19 79 leaning loward Luciano but not
would bar the umpire from wocking
prognostications of the spor- unless the umpire and baseball can
in !be broadcasting booth alter the
tswriters and broadcasters with first reach an agreement.
regular season .
. place votes in parenthesis, followed
'' Baseball isn 't dictating policy to
by the coaches' poll.
Pils.-Team
Points r ------- ~ - - - - - - - - --~----------,
104
!- Ironton (10 )
I
2-Meigs (I )
83
3-Wellston (I )
76
OPTOMETRIST
4-Jackson
64
OFFICE HOURS : 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
I
5-Logan
58
ON THURS . ) - EAST COURT ST., POMEROY .
I
6-Gallipolia (2)
54
------------ - --~ --------------~
~
7- Athens
39
8- Waverly
24
The eight head coaches voted "'
follows : ·
Pos.-Team
Points
!-Ironton (5)
59
2-Jackson
49
3- Logan
38
4-Meigs (I)
37
5- Wellston (2)
35
6-Gallipolis
34
7-Athens
6- Waverly

It was reported thl!t .literature will
be , distributed and films on
ten'tperance sho\m in the schools.
Members discussed the Susan B. Anthoriy coin, noting ·that she was a
strong advocate of women 's sulferage and also a forceful advocate
of prohibition.
Mr8 . Cook reviewed the book,
''The Life of Fannie . Crosby", and ,
the book, "The Guideposts Treasury
of Faith" was placed in the Pomeroy
Ubrary in memory of Miss
Genheimer. Reading of the 27th
Psalm and prayer closed the
meeting .

Mrs. Betty Blackwood was program leader at the recent meeting or
the Forest Run United Methodist
Women held at tbe home of Mrs.
Helen Neue with Mrs . Betty Koch
as aaslstir)g hostess.
"Battered Women" was the topic
of the program which Mrs .
Blackwood presented in three parts,
physical, sexual, and acceptance.
She gave a history of wife beating
noting that In 1882 the state of
Maryland passed a law to punish
wife beaters only to later have it
repealed.
She said that understanding
violence in American society Is imIK"'Sible without first understanding
violence In the family where it
primarily occurs. She spoke of
divorces in America and posed three
questions for discussion: - What
kind of a man will beat hi3 wife? Is
alcohol a factor? Why do women live
with wife beaters? The program
closed with Mrs. Blackwood reading

the fifth chapter of Epheslana,
verses 21 through 33.
Mrs. Ann Watsoo opened the
meeting with devqtioils using scripture from n Sam~l. verse 12. She
read ''The Stolen Lamb" Saints~
Sinners" closing with prayer.
Mrs. Evelyn Hollon gave a specai
special reading, "Grandma was a
Galloping Gourmet."
During the b113iness mf!!tlng conducted by Mrs. Mary Nease; a loye
offering was taken and a report was
given on the recent district meeting
held in Nelsonville. The UMW voted
to retain the same officers lor
another year. It was also voted to
keep the pledge the same as last
year. A total of 58 visits to the sick
and shut-ins was reported.
A dessert course was served by
the hoStess to those named and Erma Roush, Naomi Wyatt, Elma
Holter , Lelah Nease, Mary K. ·
Roush, Hilda Yeauger, Edith Sisson,
Kathleen Scott and Mae Holter.

Reedsville News Notes

family of Columbus were weekend
guests of Mrs. Helen Archer .
WOMEN
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Smith of
The Reedsville United Methodist
women held their September · Charleston, W. Va. visited with Mr.
meeting at the Belleville Locks and and Mrs. Grant Smith and other
MONDAY
relatives last weekend.
Dam perk. A pcnic supper and
MIDDlEPORT PTA, 7:30 Monday cookout were held. Devotions were 1
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown, local,
night at the Middleport Elementary led by Mrs. Mamie Buckley using and Mr. and Mrs. William Thomas
School. All parents and teachers the topic "In Search of Noah's Faith and family of Springfield vacationed
urged to attend.
Today." The business .session was at Greenfield Village at Dearborn,
RUTLAND PTO Monday at 7:30 conducted by president Mrs. Vivian and Frankenmutch Wilderness State
p.m. at Rutland Elementary School,
Humphrey. Seventeen shut-in calls Park in Michigan.
7:30p.m. Dwight Goins will answer
Mrs. Pauline Atkinson and Mrs.
were made. A surprise birtl)day
questions on maintenance and
cake baked and decorated by Mrs. Opal Randolph vacationed in the
repair of school building.
Marlene Putman and homemade Ice Renfro Valley and Nashville, Tenn.
RtiTLAND GARDEN CLUB, 7:30
cream were served. The following They also visited the home of
p.m. Monday night at the home ol
were present, Mrs. May Humphrey, Abraham Lincoln in Kentucky .
Lt. and Mrs. Michael Boring of
Mrs. Eugene Atkim and MiBs Ruby
Mrs. Leona Ruth, Mrs. Nell Wilson,
Diehl. Mrs. Marvin Wilson to preMrs. Mamie Buckley, Mrs. Pat Mar- Syracuse, N. Y., were recent visitors
sent, "Plenty of Bulbs."
tin, Mrs. Lorraine Wigal and of his parents, Mr. and Mrs , Grant
Beverly, Mrs. Connie Rucker,_Mrs. ·Bortng and his sister, Mr. and Mrs .
Marlene Putrnan, Mrs. Vivian Hum- Hugh Martin and sons.
Mrs. Mary Jane Pryor and sons,
phrey, and Mrs. Lillian Pickens.
GOP COMMITI'EE MEETS
Next meeting will be held at the Ryan, Jose and Charlie of Bethel
The loth District Republican Com·
Parll, Pa. visited with her parents,
mittee will meet this Thursday at 7 home of Mrs. Vema Rose.
Mr. and Mrs. Allred Cashdollar
ReedlvWe PenooaiA
p.m. at the Hocking Valley Motor
recently .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard
Young
of
Lodge south of Nelsonville. Speaker
Mrs . Gladys Baughman of GahanPaden
City,
W.
Va. spent a few days
for the meeUng will be Dr. Arthur L.
na
spent a fe'\' days with her sister,
with
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Garth
Smith.
Peterson, Executive Director of the
Mr.
and
Don
Coleman_
~
Mrs.R.~os~e~~~------~
Committee for Fair and Impartial
Redistricting. The Conunittee ls circulation petitions to place on the
ballot a Constitutional Amendment
to eliminate partisanship in
redistricting.
Reservations lor the meeting
should be made with the local·
Republican County Chairman. The
dinner-meeting will follow a social
hour which begins at 6p.m.

r

Social Calendar

UNITED METIIODIST

'

,

..
'

·-'..'
'

.'

Marcelltz Charles
"

Marcella Charles plans to wed
Mrs . Carolyn Charles of
Minersville, announce the approaching marriage of her
dilughter, Marcella Loretta, to
Michael R. Hoy, son ofMr. and Mrs .
Marshall Hoy, 42 W. Channel St.,
Newark .
·

The wedding will be held on Sept.
29 at l: 30 p.m. at the Wright

Memorial United methodist Church,
Newark. A reception will be held im- .
mediately foUowing the ceremony.
The bride-elect is the daughter of the
late George D. Charles.

Mary ·Shrine reads invitations
Invitations to receptions were
read at a recent meeting of Mary
Shrine 37, Order of the White Shrine
of Jerusalem, held at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple.
Vivian May, worthy high
priestess, presided at the meeting.
Communications included Invitations to receptions from Hope Shrine

Mrs. Clark hosts meet
Mrs. LaDonna Clark hosted a recent meeting of the Evangeline Missionary Society of the Pomeroy
Church of Christ at her High St.
home.
Mrs. Betty Spencer presided at the
meeting which opened with a
reading, "Clouds", and Mrs. Evelyn
Smith had prayer. The treasurer's
report was gtven by Janet Venoy.
Mrs. Clarll read '"My Dally Prayer"
by Helen Steiner Rice and also had
devotions usingscriptures on
gentleness.
Mission Sunday was discussed. It
was noted hat Walter and Mary
Maxey, missionaries in Japan, will
send slides and other articles for the
Society to present. Mrs. Venoy read
.'"Ope11 Up", and reading Helen
Steiner Rice poems were Gertie
Bass, Evelyn Smith' and Pauline
Kennedy. Mrs. Eva Dessauer was a
guest .
Mrs. Clark served dessert and coffee following prayer. Next meeting
will be held at the home of Mrs .
Spencer.

LOCATION CHANGE
The Central Ohio Milk Producers
Association dinner scheduled to be
served tonight at the Salisbury
Elementary School will instead be
served a.t the Senior Citizens Center
in Pomeroy. Serv'ing will begin at
7:30p.m,

106 honoring Barbara Eagan,
supreme noble prophetess, and
Robert Eagan, watchman of
shepherds; Delaware Shrine 53,
honoring Marian Tossey, · supreme
first hand maid, and also
celebrating hand maicls night, a
frienclship night, and Christmas party. Official visit to District 7 was announced lot Oct. 4, at the Logan
Masonic Temple, Logan.
Other communications regarded
Rosa Shrine 8 and Mt. Olive Shrine 3
and a reception for Loujuana
Worstall, presld~nt, and Maxwell
Brown, associate president of the
Ohio State White Shrine Association
on Sept. 29 at the Masonic Temple,
:lm!esville.

Greetings were read from the 86th
annual supreme session in
Oklahmla City. Refreshmenta were
served in the dining room following
the meeting.

Shower held
A bridal shower hooortng Mrs.
Wayne Davis, the fonner Debbie
Ohlinger, was held Friday night at
the home of Debbie Ellis. Hostesses
for the shower were Betsy Amsbary,
Twila Childs, Debbie Ellis and
Becky Smith.
Games were played with prizes
going to Sharon Dalley and Tonya
Brown. Bernadette Anderson won
the door prize. A cake Inscribed
"Congratulations Debbie and
Wayne" was served with punch,
mints, nuts and coffee.
Attending were those named and
Barbie and Sarah Anderson, Peggy
Houdasbelt, Donna Ohlinger, Kim
Ohlinger, Mildred Ohlinger, Barbara Logan, Gamet Harbrecht, and
Dorothy Davis. Others presenting
gifts were Bron Williams, Martha.
Howell, Roberta Dailey, and Nene
Stivers.

I

tietback
iotbe ·
driwr's -seat
at c-rty Loan.
When you need money to ·
keep )'Otll' car running, or
for any good reason, talk
to us. We handle 'Personal
Loans quickly, easily and
with considei:'alion. You
can bOrrow v.ith trust
where people save with
trust. City Loan &amp; Saving';.
We 6nd w.ar.; to help.

IH E. Main St. •.992 ·21"71

On this date in 1963, the U.S.
Senate ratified a treaty with Britain .
and the Soviet Union limiting
nuclear tests.

l.t !ilm tu 140.000 thtuuAh
·1 h,· Cit,· l.ufn c : ump•n~·

�7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 24, !979
e ·11M! DIIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 24, 1979,

Meigs
Property
Transfers

,..
,-

I -

I.

Reva Vaughan to Frank Austin
Vaughan, Lot 79, Pomeroy.
Freeman Williams, Vonderine
Williams to William B. Bradford,
Carolyn M. Bradford, Wallace Brad-

PERF
GIFT
FOR

ford , Muriel Bradford, 115. acres,
Orange.
W. Franklin Baker, dec. to Mary
Baker, Lilly May Baker, Carl T.
Baker, C'hades E. Baker, Cert. ol
Trans., Olive.
Ully May Baker to Robert A.
Baker, Parcels, Olive.
Charles C. Baker, Cafl T. Baker,
Glenda J . Baker to RobertA. Baker,
Parcels, Olive.
Ola St. Clair to Jack E . Peavley,
Janet K. Peavley, I acre, Bedford.
RichardS. Owen, Sara H. Owen to
Clarice M. Erwin, Lot 29, Jones

\fiddleport.
M. Erwin to Jerry
Yeaug~
Donna Y. Yeauger, .298
acre, Mia~ · •port.
Erma S. Jolmston, Affidavit,
Chester.
Carolyn Sue King to Harry King,
Divorce Decree, Chester.
Jacob M. Bush, Suzanne Bush to
Aaron Sayre, Shirley Sayre, 16\0
acres, Sutton.
Bernard Paul Lavalley, Bernice
L. Lavalley to Bernard Paul
Lavalley, Bernice L. Lavalley, 23.56
acres, Sutton
Cl. "e

Pomeroy . ··

'

'

Shirley D. Bentley to William s.
Bentley, Parcel, Bedford.
Sharon Boyles, Phillip N. Boyles
to Paul E. SNyder, Helen L. SNyder,
.49acres, Olive.
Robert C. Johnson, Genevieve

WHOLE FRYERS
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RESERVED

LANE
CEDO OfESTS

Johnson, Donald E. Johnson, Ida Bearhs Wili!on , aka Nanna E.
Johnson to Robert Schaer, Teresa · Wilson, Cert. ofTrans.,Pomeroy.
Schaer, 2.4340acres, Olive.
Norma E. Wilson, dec. to Sharon
Jan Pickett, Darla Pickett to Dorinda Nardei , aka Dorinda NarCharles E. Wheeler, Martha K. dei, Cert. of Trans., Pomeroy.
Wheeler, 3l acres, Salem.
Erma S. Johnston to Charles A.
White, Rebecca S. White, 10 acres
In 1869, thousands of businessmen
Sec. I, 16 acres, Mil!erals under 55 were ruined in a Wall Street panic
acres, Chester.
after financiers Jay Gould and
John W. Bearhs, aka J. W. Deaths, James Fisk attempted to corner the
dec. to Dora A. Bearhs, Nonna gold market.
In 1905, Sweden agreed to
Bearhs Wilson, All. for Trans. ,
Norway's complete independence.
Pomeroy.
Dora A. Bearhs, dec. to Nonna

Hubert Stalford, Frankie Stafford
to Herald Ou and Gas Co., Right of
War. Salisbury-Rutland .
Ruth M. SMith to Robert N.
Gilmore, Kathryn E. Gilmore Lot
24, Riverview Acres, Middleport.
Frank A. VaUf.han to Anthony J.
Territo, Cella G. Territo Lot

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CREAM CHEESE .................... C1n.'

RIMIMIIR

PLENTY OF
FREE
PMKING
AT THE REAR
OF OUR SIORE

A SMALL

DOWN
PAYMINT
WIU. H9LD

-

ANY ITIM

..

,....

.~

,. .

..

CHICKEN·····································
BORDEN ASST. FLAVORS

$}&amp;g

VALLEY BEU

ICE CREAM

CHOC. DRINK ........... ~.~~: ..

'

-

'

69C

.

I

age
COTTAGE CHEESE ..........
BORDEN

.

.

·

GillOn

•••• ••••••••• • •••••• ••••• •• •• •••• Ctn .
!O ct

FROZEN HEATH BARS ., •••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••• ,••··

$209

.,39
-

'

VALLEY BELL TWIN
,,,

'.

:i;

ftOfH

:

.

!lO ·l 4-0&amp;

I

@

~~

�..
~~~'gySentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 24,1979
GOT IT ALL,'' SAYS TRACY.
....UTT QUITE," SAYS SAMPSON.
••we DON'T HAVE THEM.''

TIED THEM TO
DOZEN PETTY
ROBBERIES BETWEEN
HERE AND L.A. AND
THE GROCERY STORE'
PROPRIETOR HAS
IOENTI
BONY...

Each word over the mlnimwn
15 words ls 4 cents per word per
day . Ads rUMlng other than consecutive days will be charged at

HILL
bedroom, 1 bath frame home. Co,nv&lt;ml•ont loc&lt;ttlon.

the I day n1le .

Lllrge living room with fireplace,

'l'h.anb

In memory, Card of
and Obituary : 6 cents per word,

In

kitchen ,

full

basement,

new

- outdoor facUlties . Also AKC
registered
Dobermans .

$25,000.00.

$3.00 mirllmum. Cash In ad·
vance.

DOWNING-CHILD~

Mobile Home sa tes and Yard

614- 44~7795 .

Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992-2342, E ve .992·2499
Middleport, 0.

sales 11. re accepted only with
cu.~h with order. 2:i Cf!nl charge
ror ttd.s carrying Box Number ln
Care oJTheSentinel.

The Publisher reserves lhe '.

sertio~ .

incorrect in-

Phooe 992-2156

Thomas
Deputy Clerk

(9) 17, 24, 2tc

:1

Tuesday
thru Friday

Bernice Bede Osol

4P.M.

the day befo~.e pubticaUon
Swnlay

4P.M.

Friday ~ftemoon

loptombor a, 1111
More opportunities than usual
will give you the chance to build
up your bank balance this comIng year, In fact. there could be
so many that you may have to be
MlectlvtJ aa to which ones you
pursue.
LtaiiA (lept, ZS.OCt. 21) A kind
ge~ture will take you eo unawarn today that If you have a
caae of tl'te doldNma It'll enap
you right out of them. Think
goodn111 for llfe'a little
eurpriNt. Find out more of what
liM ahNCI !or you In the year !oiIOwlng your birthday by Hndlng
tor your copy or Altro-arapn
Letter. Mall $1 for each to AttroGraph, Box 488, Radio Clly
Station. N.Y. 10018. B:e sure to
apeclry birth date.
SCORPIO (Oct. :14-Now. 22) Your
magnetic personality can !nfluence even the stodgiest of characters and have them kicking up
their heels In no tfme. Thay 'lllo'fe
you for it.

IAOmARIUI (Now. 23-0ec. 21)
Listen to that Inner voice today,

Card of Thanks
WE WOULD like fo ext•nd our
heartfelt thanks and appreciation to e9ch and everyone
wf:lo helped in cny way ot the
time of the detOth of our husband, father and grandpa .
Our speciol thanks to Father
Paul W..Jton of Sacred Heart
Church and Father Raymond
Jablinske of Pt ~ Pleasant. New
Haven Emergency Squad, Or.
Grubb and night shift at Pleasant Valley Hosp., Ewing's
Funeral Home, my husband's
co-workers on A-shift , all his
friends In Fabrkotion Depr. or
Koiaer
Aluminum
at
Ravenswood. To thank our
relatives , friends and special
neighbors we can only say
God Bless You .
Mrs
Harry
Bolinger .
Doughten Jo Ann Bolinger
and Mary Sheets, Son-In· law
Michael Sheets, his most
beloved grandchildren, Tod
and Jo Leigh Sheets.

~Fob.

11)

PIICEI (Fob.

~Morch

10)

When tht going gets tough ,
that's when you'll get going
t oday . You're ext r emely
retourcetulln overcoming otlstaclea to your prex~rtll .
A~l!l

(Moroh 21·A,rll 18)

UMxpected h•p and cooperation wilt get you over the .tough
spots today , 10 don't fret If you
find yourMif with more than you
think you can handle. It'll get
dona.

TAURUS (Ap&lt;ll

~Moly

ZOI You

can 't tell a book by Ita cover.
TOday could bear this out when 1
you are thrown together with one
you deemed boring, only to find 1
him or her enchanting.

DEMINt (Moy 21·Juno 20)
Domestic responsib ilities will
actut~ty turn ou,t to be tun today,
much to your surpnse. Instead of
holding beck, tackle your dulles
with viQOr.
CANCER (June 21-July Z2,
Bumping Into a triend today will
btl "' a pleasant experience for
both. You'll enjoy a diversion
and he or she will profit from
somethlnp you have to offer.
LEO (Juty 23-Aug. 22) Evonts
can occur today to either prove
to you or reinforce the fact that
your family brings far greater
enjoyment than anything money
can buy.
•
YIRQO (Aug. 23-lopt. 22) A
chance remark today could be
responsible for giving you the
solution to something very personal that has bugg ed you for
quite some time . Listen allenl ively.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.I .

LAFF-A-DAY

bross beds, iron beds, desks,
etc., complete households.
Write M .D. Miller, At . .4 ,
Pomeroy or coll992-n60.

..

---

ONE BEDROOM opts. Contact
VIllage Menor, 992-n87 .

SENIOR CITIZENS, 1· bed•oom
opts . for
rent .
Rental
assistan c e
available .

JG4.27:J.5272,

COAL.

Mar'fin

Hltt farm , Portland, OH ..SS a
hundred and $5o hundred.

1978

credit

department.

614-592·5122.

EMERGENCY

POWER

olternators·own the best-buy

WINPOWER .
513-788- 2589 ·.

Colt

POMEROY
LANDMARK
GOOD USED

CHAIN SAWS
McCulloch Pro
Mile 55
McCulloch
Mil· TO
Remington 34
!SO Auto
Hom elite
KK12 Homellte
KUOO Homellte

$150.0G
$12S.OG
$100.00
5125.00
$185.00
$200.00

Remington

Yardmaster
$75.00
Hometite Zip
5125.00
Remington
Super 754
SIOO.OO
Sears
SIOO.OG
XL Homl!tite
575.08
1 Excellent Unlco 16 cu.
ft.
Copportone

without

Refrigerator, like new,

5250
t New Electric Fumece,
clearance priced
t now Fuel 011 Fumece,
cle•rance priced
MAIN ST.
Jack w. Carsey
· Mgr.
.. ,..,... . Ph. 992-2111

YARD ·SALE. Fri . ond Sat . Sept .,
21 , 22 . Main St., Rutland at
Goldie Graham's. New qnd
utedlremt . 10omto6pm.
2().~ .

acrou form Minersville Ball

Field.

ALTO SAXAPHONE, used one
season. l ike new. Aeotonoble.

992·5565.
11 PIGS, hove had shots,
warmed and docked. Excellent pigs, $29 eo. , or all for

$299. 614-667·:1493.
Sll1/ERSTONE COOKWARE.

PATIO SALE, rain or shine. All
kinds of music books for
piano, argon. ond chord Lamps, figurine• and owls.
organ, bric·a· brac. Household , 493 Broadway St., Mlddloport.
Items. Tupperwore,
some . 992..~98 . new, women's clothing all .
sizes, summer and winter ,
Services Offered
books , used coronet, games, ,
womeN thoa tise #~ and $,
NOW HAULING limestone In
llYterial, JMUern• 11nd other Middleport-Poemroy orec .
tetning itenu, r.anni"B J•r. Call for free estimate.
11nd mu~h more. All itemtJ in 367-7101.

fair to excellent condition.
Come to baclc Joo,. at 361

PAINTING AND sandblostlng.
Gront St., Middleport. Good ..free estimates. Coll949-2686.
pa,.hing. Frft gift to fint 40
people.

HOTPOINT

YARD SALE. Sept. 24·26. Blcy·

and

cle like new, humidifier,
household items, men's and
• women's clothing , 3 miles east
of Chester on 248.

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
HeoGquarters
. Appuences
Sates &amp; $trY Ice

GiveAway
KITTEN'S, KITIENS, Kittens. All

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Humane

Jack W. Carsey
Mgr,

FIVE COLLIE puppies , oil male.

,992·23119 or 9'12·5073.
TWO PLAYFUL tamale boogie
labs . Shot, , wormed, good
wirh children . MCJmane Socl•

ty. '1'12·6260.
kiffens

1mother cat. 742·2321.

and

NEW LISTING
Mobile home and · •
acres, 2nd hookup. L.C.
water. Just off Rt. 7.
Askng $12,500.

1

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

Phone 992-2181

DOZER, END loader, brush
hog. Will do bosoments ,
ponds , brush, timber. lond
clearing. Charles Butcher,

742·2940 .

Feottirtng :

H011rs 9·1 M., W.. F.
Other times by oppolnt·
ment.
t07 Sycomort CRear)
Pomeroy,O.

.wo..,en'l

gas furnace,

base·

ment and nice yard .
Jusl$18,500.
BARGAIN - 8 room
frame home, bath, .4
bedrooms, basement,
nice equipped kit .. nat.
gas F .A. furnace .and
one acre. Only 510,500.
NEW LISTING- Nice 3
bedroom home in good
location. Total electric
with drilled well . Has

FOR YOUR
NEW HOME OR
EXTENSIVE
HOME
REMODELING
Also Masonry
Work
992·7513, or 992·2282
1·1 mo.

FOR SALE OR TRADE
-

Large 9

room

home

with 2 beths, city water
and central heating.
Has 3 car garage with
rental over, and one
other rental . Over an
acre ' of land. Want
$30,000 .
HAllE YOU TRIED
TH.E NEW WAY TO
SELL WITH A YEAR'S
PROTECTION AT NO
COST TO YOU. CALL
H2-332S OR
. H2·3876. . .

Housing
Headquarters

Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete

~work,

wolks
and
drl•ewaya.
(FREE! l!l'rtMATE)

Evtt~lngs

E•stol WIIIIH'II'tlft

AMounclnv OPMtlnw ot

OPENING SEPT. lllfl
ClaUH: aanet
Top&amp; Jau
•
Alls..,.ondup
Shirley carpentar
lnstructorChoraotra..,....
Locatacl In Ro.clne, 0 .
(formerly
Weavers
Skiff llultdlnt)
Ph. 9.,·2710 or H9·215e

'lltN-Homt

11tAclcl ons
• ·Remoldings
*Free estlm•tes

mo

7·12

REAl ESTATE: I ocre lor in Rill'
gscrest Manor. between Tur&gt;

pen Plains ond Chester.
PI oono 985-3929 ond 985-4129.
SEllEN ROOMS and bath. 2
acres. 992-2523.
TWO BLOCKS from buaineu
district In Middleport, out of
high water , 3 bedroom , eot-in
kitchen , pontry, dinlns~ room ,
living room and bath. Natural
gas furnace , lull batement
and attic, enclosed bock yard ,
washer,
dryer ,
range .
refrigerator , curtains , and
carpeting includ.d In purchas·

(oll~lblo

troland Mortgage Co., n E.
State. Athens. 6U-592·305t.

~. . . . . . .

!.l'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

ON
CO.,PAr?ED

INSUlATION
VINYL AND

ro

I GUESS TH' ONLY THING
LEFT FOR ME T'DO IS 'fRio'
AN' CAT(';H 'EM .'

.

Real Estate lDans
• and

Rellnance

Ttrms

A- No moftey down
I eligible veterons)
FHA-AS tow •• 3%

down tnnn-vateranl)

. IRELAND ••
'M7]OimiAGE
CO.
E . Stole, Athons
592·3051 . .

A -2J .'I ' n ~ o. -~

'-----......---

Six dcrya a week , 2A hou•s ..,.

Crltr BrodfOf'd.

vice . Em.,.gency coils. Call

ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR -

11112· 2952 Of 882-3454 .

Sweepers. toosten , lron1. all
small appliance~ . Lawn moer,
ne11Ct to State HIQhwoy Gaf098
on Route 7. 985-3825.

HOWERY A.NO MARTIN h ·
cO\Iotlng, septic sy•tems .

•

SEWING MACHINE Ropalrs ,
service. ell mokn. 992·2284 .
The Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scl11ors.

IN STOCK for immedl01e
delivery: vorlovs slz.. of pool
kits . [)o. if. yourself or let us
Install for you . D. lumgorcfner

EXCAIIATING, dozer, loader
and backhoe work: dump

Saloo, Inc. 992·5724 .

trucks ond lo-boys for hire.

grCNel. Also. limo hauling and 11

llm..tone

operators

licenM?

Phone

GASOLINE ALLEY

Non- stop,
unrelentin'·

rmorrow
I starts
t' walllr

till prices
qodown!

10

protest
o'

992 -3743

hiCjh

and

eqult&gt;ed kitchen, WB
FP, large garage, quail ·
tv craftsmanship
throughout, many other
features. 544,800.00.
BUILDING LOTS- We
have several, starting at
53,000. Water and elec ·
trlclty available.
Secluded and wooded.
70 ACRE FARM -Near
Long Bonom, House,
large barn, other
buildings, $33,500.00.
ORIGINAL OAK - In
this nice 2-story frame
home, fireplace, basement, 3 bedrooms, all
s!orms, many features.

FROM WHAT I.'VE e&gt;EEN
READING B INC5 MY RE·
1URN ,n11 S KINDOF
SlUFF 15 VERY "IN '
RIGHT NON!

or .

9'12·3752.

RUBB~RIIJACK

CARPO .

BARNEY

8RllS

FIRE!!

I CAN"T SLEEP !~

'4'~DUP
.CASH

GO DRINK

1/0RESELF A
GLASS OF Ml LK,
HONEY POT

ME AN'MV
BIG MOUTH

..
SALE ON ALL C'ARPET IN SIOCK
~~

&amp; CARRJ~ .

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

'9'5 UP
AND

Installed and Pad FREE
· GOOD SELECfiON"l»

$3.1,500.00.

MINI FARM- Close to
mines, 6 acres, remOdel ed 11h story home, new
WB FP, basement,
many
features .
.I

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

RUTlAND FURNITURE :

You hold:
• 86

11-24-B

A Florida reader asks what
we think of a one-heart
Alan : " Lt. Col. Murray response to partner's one-club
Schnee died recently . Do you opening?
remember him1 "
We think it is a very bad
Oswald : "I played againsl bid. You have a good hand and
him many times. It was should respond one diamond
always a pleasant struggle. with every intention of bid·
Here is a hand where the ding hearts later.
Army didn't give lhe Navy a (NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)
chance to make a fine defen-

sive play."
Alan : "I asssume that he
won the diamond' lead with his
king. l..ej1 a club to dummy's
king after you ducked and
then retumed the deuce of
hearts."

(For a copy o,. JACOBY
MODERN, send $7 to: " Win sl
Bridge, " care of this newsps·
per, P.0 . Box 489, Radio Cjty
Station, New York, N' Y.
10019.)

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1979
5:3S....World at Large 17; 5:4S....
Farm Report 13; 5:50-PTL Club
13;.

6:D0-700 Club 6,8; Health Field 10:
PTL Club 15; 6: to-News 11 .
6:3Cl--{;oncerns &amp; Comments 10;
Dragnet 17; 6 : 45- Mornlng
Report j; 6:50-Good Morning
West VIrginia 13; 6 :5s-News 13.
7:DO-Today 3.15; Good Morning
America 6,13; Tuesday Morning
8; Batman 10; Three StoogesLittle Rascals 17.
7: 15- A .M . Weather 33; 7:30Famlly Affair 10; 7:55-Chuck
While Reports 10.
s :oo-&lt;:apt. Kangaroo B,TO; leave It
to Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8:30-Romper Room 17; 9:01l-Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6 ; Phil
Donahue 13, IS; Porky Pig &amp; ·
Friends 8; One Day At a Time
tO; Lucy Show 17.
9 :3o-Bob Newhart 8; Love of life
10; Green Acres 17 .
tO :oo-&lt;:ard Sharks 3,15; Edge of
N1ght 6; Beat the Clock 8,10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
' 'Moonr·ise' ' 17.
10 : 30-Hollywood Squares 3,15;
$20,000 Pyramid 13; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew! 8, 10.
10:55-CBS News B; House Call 10.
11 :DO-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; Know Your
11 : 55-News 17.

schoO\s

33;

12: DO-Newscenter 3; 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 "Fame Is the Name of the
Game" 17; Elec. Co. 20,33.
1 :DO-Days of Our Lives 3,15; All My
by THOMAS JOSEPH
Children 6,13; Young &amp; !he
Restless B, 10.
ACROSS
S8 Prefix
1 :30-As The World Turns B, 10;
1 Computer
with rocket
2 :DO-Doctors 3, 15; One Life to'
material
39 Sicilian
Live 6, 13.
· 2:25-,-News17; 2:30-Anolher World
$Not fluid
lava source
3,15 ; Guid ing Light 8,10;
11 Actor,
DOWN
Glgglesnort Hotel 17.
JackI River
3:oo-Generai Hospital 6,13; Lilias
-11 MOllS Hart's deposit
Yoga &amp; You 20; I Love Lucy 17.
auto3:30-0ne Day At A Time 8; Joker's
Scl.fi
Wild tO ;
Fllntstones
17;
biography
creature
Ynterday's Alllwer
Crockeft's Victory Garden 20.
12 Such as
3 Be offended
4 :DO-Mister Cartoon 3: Tom &amp;
lJ Incubates
4 Wood core
%1 Coil,
ll.e7Palnter
Jerry 13; Password 15; Merv
14 A Niclllaus
Grlffln 6; Beverly Hillbillies 8;
5 Rocky debris
as twine
Rivera
Sesame St. 20,33; Six Million
need
I Indian
Z% Pilot's
%8-a mil·
. Dollar Man tO; Spectreman 17.
15 New Guinea 7Glare
employer
Uoo years! 4 : 30-Bewltched 3; Petticoat
port
8 Hoosier State Z3Hone
Z&amp;Actrus
Junction 8; Bionic Woman 13;
11 Dickens
Merv Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is. 17.
I Tyrant
Z4 Foret"Wlller
Rlgg
5
:
DO-l
Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
hero
11 Lessen
Z5Fonner
HNaUooal
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh.
17 Impart
lliDalaiNYC
W&lt;IDeD'I
borhood 20,33; Mary Tyler
life to
lllShoppl.ns
mayor,
org.
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17.
It Philippine
place
5: »-,-Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Abe35 Mature
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec. Co . 20;
tree
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
ztDeslgnate
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Z1 Yearn for
Who 33.
Z%Before
6:DO-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
cedabra
6; Carol Burnell 17; VIlla Alegre
20.
Z3 Latvian city
6:»-NBC News3,15; ABC News 13;
Z4 "South
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Pacific"
Over Easy 20; Bob Newhart 17.
girl
. 7:DO-Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough B; Pulse 6; News tO; ,
Zi Bell sound
Newlywed Game 13; love
zt Shrew
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
. %71937 Bogart
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33.
fUm
7: 30-Hollywood Squares 3; Country
3Uiigh spot
Roads 15; Newlywed Game 6;
Joker's
Wild 8; Hollywood
31Form of
Squares
tO;
Sha Na Na 13;
John
Baseball 17; MacNeil - lehrer
3% King: Fr.
Report 20,33.
33Crown
8:DO-Misadventures of Sheriff Lobo
3, 15;
Happy
Days
6, 13;
35Movledog
Calllorrila Fever B, 10; ; Jim
3tMadden
Ballard 20; City Nofebook 33.
37 Achieve
8:3o-Angle 6, 13; Crosstalk 33.
9:DO-Last Convertible 3,15; Three's
Company 6,13; Movie "Death
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's haw to work it:
Car on the Freeway" 8,10; Sacra
AXYDLBAAXR
Blblla 20; AII . Star Swing
Fesllval 33.
Is LONGFELLOW
9 :30-Taxi 6, 13.
.
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
10 :00-Lazarus Syndrome 6, 13;
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
Russian Connection 33; Six
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
Wives of Henry VIII 17; News 2q.
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
10 : 30- World of
Franklin &amp;
Jefferson 33; Like It Is 20.
CRYPTOQUOTES
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,10, 13,15; Dick ·
Cavett 20; Book Beat 33.
H~YA
RAHECBN
OE
OW At 11: 30-Johnny
Carson 3,15; Barney
Miller 6,13; Barnaby Jones · 8;
HPDPCB
UCT
WA
MWE
HJ&gt;DAN
ABC News33; Movie "The Sound
&amp; the Fury" 10; Movie "Ball of
SJ N 0
RA
XGAXUGAT
YEG
Fire" 17.
12:0S....Movle "Stay Away, Joel" ·
6, 13; 12:AO-;-Movle "Mayday at
40,000Feeti"B; !:Oil-Tomorrow
3; News 15.
1 :50-News 13; Baseball 17; 4 :20News 17; 4:4Q-Star Trek 17 .

z

'"9·

SAVE ·oN CARPEl
DRIVE A LimE
SAVE.A LOT

acre, good subdivision, 3
bedrooms, 2 baths,

l been wal it. in' in m1.:1
sleep since 1were a
small
c---&lt;'lll chi Ie ~

'"Spreading. Leo Morris Truck -

~yracuae .

Pass

6:30-NBC News3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10; ·
Over Ea•y 20; Bob Newhart 17.
7:01l-Three' s A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Muppet· Show 6; News
10; Newlywed Game 13; Love
American STyle 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dkk Cavell 20,33 .
7:30-That Nashville Music 3;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8; Family Feud 10, 13; Nashville
on the Road 15; All ' In The
·Family 17 ; MacNeil -lehrer ·
Report 20,33.
8:DO-llftle House on the Prairie
3,15; 240. Roberl 13; Edward the
King 6; White Shadow B, to; Live
from the Met 33; Falcon Football
17; Bill Moyers' Journal 20.
9 :DO-Last Convertible 3,15; NFL
· Football6,13; Mash 8.10; Movie
" The Best of Everything" 17;
Once Upon A Classic 20.
9:3Q-WKRP In Cincinnati B,10;
10:DO-Lou Grant 8.10; News 20.
10 :3Cl--{;oplng with Kids 20; It :00News 3,8, 10,13,15; Dick Cavell
20.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,15; Harry-0
8; Movie "A Fine Madness" 10.
11 :3S....Movle "The Adventures of
· Marco Polo" 17; 12 :DO-News
6,13 .
12:3Q-FBI 6; Charlie's Angels 13;
12 :4o-McMIIIan &amp; Wife 8.
! :DO-Tomorrow J; News 15; 1:40News 13.
1 :45-Movle " Island of Lost
Women" 17; 3: IS....News 17;,
3:35--&lt;lpen Up 17.

~-~tr

dozer, bacht.oo. Rt. 143.
Phane I (614) 698-7331 Of
742·2593.

HAUL

Oswald : "The play
destroyed all Navy communications. It didn 't matter how
we continued. He was able to
play a second club, get to
dummy later on and discard
"his last diamond on dummy's
remaining high club."
Alan : "If Murray had ,
rroutinely led a spade to his
hand you would have taken '
your ace, led a second
·diamond, gone up with the ace
of clubs when the suit was led
next and underled your ace·
queen of hearts to put your
partner in with the kmg so he
could take the setting dia·
mond trick."
Oswald : "A nice play that I
never had the chance to make.

By Oswald.Jacoby
ud Alan Sootag

P-992·2772 .
1·17·1 mo.

Will

(Answorslomotroy&lt;)
UNSOLD ATOMIC

"AKH
t KJ653
• Q2

oStonnWI-.

·

a•

It
Pass

THIS , .. OfAD

oiiiiUiaoStorm Dolin

JO Ye•r

Soutb

Pass
4+

Opening lead: +9

ALUMINUM SIDING

Plfrch~se

Pass
Pass

Nortll East

MfN. SAO&lt; o · MOST
EVERY ROCK··· SHOT'

"" 949·2000. Roclno, Olllo,

992·2143.

POMEI!OY, 0 .
NEW LISTING -Com·
mereta! property, East
Main St., Pomeroy .
CotJid be rental unit.
'OWNER NEEDS SALE
- Will sacrifice this
nke Hloor plan home In
Pomeroy, full • base-.
ment, large lot, equip·
t&gt;ed kitchen, flnancln~
available.
ONlY
$19,900.00.
RANCH - I yr. old, l'h

•

West

Pllono 742· 2455.
or Roger JoHon, day pl&gt;ono
S
&amp;
G
Carpet Cleaning. Stoom
992·7089 ,
night
phone
cleaned . Free eltimale .
992·3525 or '1'12·5232.
-.easonoble ror•• · Scot EXCA\IATING ,
dozor , ctlguord . 992 -6309 ar •
bock hoe and dircher, Charles 742-2348.
R. Hotftold. Bloch So&lt;vico.
Rutlond, Ohio. Pone 742-2008 . REYNOlD'S ELECTRIC Motors.
rowlnd ond ropalr. 992· 2356,
PULLINS EXCAVATING. Co..,. 651 loec:h St., Midd'-',
ploto Sor;lco. Phone 992·2•78. OH.
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE A &amp; H Upholotortnv. otrotl
been cancelled? lost your from the Texaco Station tn

veterans) . FHA. • As I~ as 3
per cent down (non-veterans) .

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
HH259
H2o:6191

I.
KIN0ERC;At:?1EH Sn.JI='F

E-C ELKT!ii:I~L C1or1l r!JCfOr
1ervlng Ohkl Volley 'region

llm..tone and grovel . Call lob

REAL ESTATE loans. PJrcha.;

$2~.500.00 .

Vulnerable: East·West
Dealer : West '

mo.

BRADFORD. Auctioneer, Complete S.rvice. P"'one 9"9-2487

will haul 1111 dirt, rop soli .

lng price. Call 9'12·32-43 ohor
6pm for appolntrM'nt.

MAIN

•94

N

.

•108742
t A 10 8
• KQ6
WEST
EAST
•A43
·~
•AQ6
•KJ93
• 94
• QJ762
•AJ!083 .752

t K53

BUT I GUESS THAT WA'3

J&amp;L

11-24-A

•s

Onor~
Rd. ,
llHCISYIIte, OH, Unt.
Fo~ lnformetlell Call
U7-6415. Will be OP.tote If yoy netd
9 · 1~·1

) [ I I l XI J

POUND

SOUTH
• KQJIIII!

S071

992-6011

Real Est ale for Sale

608 E .

'5AY 'fJO'foh\IIJ .

Freelsllmates

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

CARPENTER'
.
--S
DANCE STUDIO

and refinance. 30 year terms ,

1/A. No monory down

'PO JUS!' 5AID 'W i,OC)(Jt.DIJ'T

. CAKE
DECORATING
SUPPUES

9·7·1 mo.

I Jumbles: HIKER

• 87

JAMIS KIISE!E

1mo

8·21H

BOENLOSER

DowttSpovts

"t-2741•

NOW AVAILABLE .

r1 I I l

NORTH

oOultari-

RACINI.O.

A

Now arrange the circted letters to
form the surprise answer, as .suggested by the above cartoon.

Defense utterly helpless

...............,
V. C. YOUNG ·m w-.

L1nosv111t. Ol'llo

A·.S

SHIN IF

f[ \ MN'S

--···

{J

the photo shop for-HER "PRINTS"

9·U · (Pd. )

!
·

~-WHA'T RE'&amp;Ul..'TiiD WHEI'J
A C:OVP'LE IVHO W!Jti:E
ENGJA6ED IN A l..ON6·
. DI6'TANCE "OMANCE
EI&lt;C:HANGED PIC:.TURE'5
IN MAll....

Answer: What the fairy tale heroine went to

742·2321

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

~

tIJ I tJ

eur AFTER H I ~

Saturday's

AI. TROMM
CONST.

&amp;

~tyllng,

~
~

J

~[IQNS

Main st,

Ul70MMftOm..., .d.

F'~

~~

CAR CRASHED IN THAT MOUNTAIN
~AKE, 1 THOUGHT IT WA'f, ALL.
' OVER·· FOR t&lt;EEP&amp; ~ .

RUTLAND

TRAI.l£R ~

full basement and 21J:a

acres. Just $3.5,500. for
quick sate.

men's

.ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

TRAil

MY

HOUSES BUILT

992-2367

992-7544

•l•· .. t-4141

0~

IT WAO. GORT OF A 51rCRET

JOI&lt;E &amp;HWEI'N

Answer here:

perrris.
Coli for appt. or wolk ln.

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

2 MiiM

nat.

FIREWOOD FOR sale. Now
taking orders. Will deliver.
742-2056.

4·5·tfc

MAlK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

NEW LISTING 3
bedroom
renovated
home. Bath, new nat.
gas F.A. furnace, base·
ment, set of glass drs. to
atio. On one floor plan.
Want only $17,SOO.

LINCOLN HTS.- Good
3 bedrooms home, bath,

Yard Sale

GREY

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

OO:Ifc

BALDWIN organ. 4 year1 old.
Call credit department .

No Sunday calls. 949· 2563.

FOUR

2 tots.

614-592-5122 .

Call

Reed .

GARAGE SALE. Sept .

boat,

ed to soli . '1'12·2196.
BALDWIN PIANO, I yoa• old.

WANTED: JUNK. Batteries,
radiators , motors, auto . trans.

sir;es and types .
Society, 992-6260.

shower, nice kitchen,
full basement, natural

ATHENS WAY -Nice3
bedroom home, bath,
eat·in kit., full basement
and large lot. Furnace
heating and T. P . water.
$25,000.

1-592-2973 evenings.

For Lease

STARCRAFT

Stardeck 19ft., 140 h.p. Mer·
cury engine and trailer , Excellent all purpose boot . Pric·

filter . Call'l'/2·3690.
ANTIQUE POCKET watches.
Willing to pay top dollar . Call

pm. Hartford Community
Center. Hartford, WV. A miles
above
Pomeroy - Mason
Bridge.

sand.

992·311'11 .
WINTER POTATOES. C.W. Pc&lt;&gt;

Reedsville, OH . 37S.6237 .
WANTED TO buy: Used fish

BIG AUCTION every Wed .. 7

LIMESTONE.

grovel, calcium chloride, fer·
tlliler. dog tood, and oil types
of sclr. Excelsior Salt Works,
Inc., E. Main St., Pomerov.

OH 678-2'160.
WANTED: CHEVROLET sedon

Auctions

NEW LISTING room hOme, bath with

GIVE: ME A NEW O·NE
&amp;tRTHDAV:

992·5304, 992·2231
1·21·1 mo.

ROOM

11, mite off Rt, 7 bY·IHISO ·
on St. Rt. 124 toward
. Rutland.

216,E. Sot1111d Stroot

YOU ~I!E:, 1 ~OVE teDDY &amp;EAR:&amp; ~
!!10 EVI!RY YEAR DADD\1 WOU~D

RE~~NG

Genge

gas heat and
$23,500.

For Sale

!

Roger Hysell

Sale, Rent or Trade
FOR SALE or rent . Nice 3
bedroom modular locat"ed in
Portland area. Set up on lot or
can be moved. Call after -4 :30,

Pomeroy ,

94t'-2862~o49-2i6o

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

CALL

. . . .3J25

upon delivery to our yard.
7:30-3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods, SR 339 , Barlow ,

or

1972 Bonanza 12»c52, 2 beck ·

B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES
PT .
PLEASANT ,
wv:
304-675-«24.

in Pomeroy. Coll992· 2288.

2nd .,
Middleport ,
OH .
'1'12·3161.
WANTED : SAW logs. Payment

with

pan do, 2 bod..
1970 Now Moon 12&gt;&lt;60 3 bedr.
1973 Skyline 12xSS 2 bedroom.

ONE BEDROOM furnished apt.

china. anything. SH or call
Ruth Gosney, antiques . 26 N .

aquarium

bedroom.
1970 Vindole 12K63 witll tK·

Alos . will care for elderly p~ .
pie in our home. m.7314 .

OH. 678-2980.
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE. gla11.

10.15 houn P.,r week , $6().85
o wHk . Coii9A9-2360, 8 om to
7pm only Tuesday, Sept. 25.

1972 lYNN HAllEN 14&gt;&lt;65 3

12 )( 60 2 bedroom mobiie
home. Racine areo. 992·5858.

WANTED: SAW logs . Payment
upon delivery to our yard . 7:30
to 3:30 wHkdays . Blaney
Hardwoods, SA 339, Barlo\v,

body .

1974 U x 70 mobile home.
Good condition. '1'12·5858.

992-7721.

OLD COINS , pocket watches ,
class rings , wedding bonds,
diamonds . Gold or 1ilver. Call
J.·A . Wamsley , 742·2331 .

15.
tillED MONEY' Ladies to work

reserve the right to reject
any or all bids ·· or any part
thereof .
MEIGS COUNTY
SCOMMISSIONERS

$200 .

992·268'1.
OLD FURNITURE, leo boxes ,

NEED MONEV0 lodiM to work
10. I 5 hours F-er week , $60-85
a week . Ccll9•9-2360, 8 a. m .
to 7 p. m . onlv Tuesday, Sept.

c ept the lowest btd, or
select the best bid 10r the
intended purpose , and

condition .

CHIP WOOO. Poles max.
diameter 10" on .l argest end.
$12 per ton . Bundled slab. $10
per ton . Del\vered 10 Ohlo
Pallet Co .. Rt. 2, Pomeroy.

30. Coolville, OH 45723.

flee , located In the Cour·
thouse, Pomeroy, Ohio un·
Ill ~ : 00 P .M . on September
2.
1979.
The
bids
SPeCification will be opened
at 6:30P.M. on September
2, 1979 and read alood.
They may pe picked up at
the
Me• gs
County
Emergency Medical Ser·
vice 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
Comm issioners may ac ·

992·5434.

shape.

Wanted to Buy

FARM COUPLE for part time
work on form and homestead
near Coolville, OH. Mobile
home In attractive setting and
all utilities except telephone
furn ished. Farm tKperience
essential . Mechanics and
carpentry-construction
8)( ·
perience helpflil . For further
wirtten details, write PO Box

··~
" The twenty-d&lt;&gt;Uar surcharge is
for tbe oil in your salad."
C9, 17,24, 2tc

Ph. 992·2174

Now

992-2794 .
1973 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL,
fully oquipp&lt;l&lt;l. 985-35n .

dleport .

lion 307 .86 of the Ohio
Revised Coder sealed bids
will be re&lt;:e ved by the
Meigs County Board of
Commissioners at their of·

REGAL .

CHEVROLET SUBURBAN,

running

8· 4. 992-9919. or apply at
Headquarters Bar . Mid-

~RS

350

1965 FORD FAIRLANE . Good

WAITRESS WANTED. Doy shift .

In accordance with Sec·

MONTE CARLO,

front and rear air condition·
ing, cruise t ilt whMI. AS..
engine, trailer end spiiCial
pockoge, silver rodeo deluKe
interior. A.~ FM radio 8- frock
tape.
bumper
guards.
overhead cab light1, power
rear window , equipp.d for
CB, luggage rack, fog lights.
Caii7A2-22ll before 5pm .

Help Wanted

Phone

ONE SMALL trailer , 1 or 2 persons. m .nes.

tm

CAR SALESMAN. Send resume
to Bo)( 7A3 , Pomeroy . OH
A5769 .
No e&gt;&lt;perience
necessary.

opts,

1973 FORD F·IOO. 8 cyl .. std .
shift. $1500. 742·2978 .
1973 CHEVROLET CAMERO
Typo l T, 350, 8 cyl. Phone
9'12-6093.
1976 \/EGA HATCHBACK . Ex·

radial tires. Good
$800. 949·:1234.

Pomeroy for leo••· Former
Warner Barber and S.Outy
Shop. Also. 3 bedroom opt.
upstairs, furnished or un-.
furnished. 992-2528 evenings. •

AnENTIOI

29,000

furnlshed

HAVE ROOMS ond boord.

992·2656.
1973 BUICK

LARGE BUSINESS building In

GET

condition .

Route 33, north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Caii992-7A79.

1973 1/W STATIONWAGON 30
mi. per gol. Auto., trans . , im·
macUlate. 378-615S.

1976

GUN SHOOT EllERY SUNDAY I
PM. FACTORY CHOKE ONLy.
RACINE GUN CLUB.
II

3 AND .4 RM furnished end lill-

engine, low mileage, $2600 .

~

AQUARIUS (Jon.

1976 PlYMOUTH V01.,6.RE. h·

ce11ent condition. Auto. trans .
20,000 miles. $2000 or best of·
fer. 992-3717 .

no matter how dlffarant the path
It would have you take. It could
d you to win a long, hard batNotices
t you've been flghtlng.
APRICORN (Doc. 22-.lon. 18)
MEIGS COUNTY HUMANE•
like a breath ot fresh air, a new
SOCIETY . 992·6260. Pots
Idea wtll be IntrOduced Into
thouohts you had on 8 subject · available for adoption ond in·
formation sentke.
·
thai had \onQ alnce becomfl
wearisome. How refreshing/
Taka the bull by the horns. Show
those who are atyml&amp;d how to
get that project vou're al l
involved in oH the ground . You
know how to get the show on the
road. -

COUNTRY MOBILE Homo Park,

new 429 engine, 4 barrel. new
"eKhaust , less thon 300 m iles
on engine . PS, PB, Cruise con·
trol , electric bucket seats with
console, rear defogger, . new
tires . new e)(houst. $1800.
7A2-2AOo4 before 2 p.m . or
after S p. m .

Monday
Noon on Saturday

ASTROeGRAPR

1974 \/EGA HATCHBACK, call
303·675· 1501 or 305-615-2488
or JG4.675-1553.
miles. $2400. 992·3198.
1970 T·BIRO, 2 door coupe.

WANT~AD

A]JVERTISING
DEADUNES

For Rent

cellent

NOTICE
By Carolyn G .

Auto Sales

Mltols, Inc.

I CHITE

tRAHPONj
1 I· r·

CAPTAIN EASY

Free Estimates

~~~--~~~~.· ~~----~~~~~
Mobile Homes Sale's

Mght to edit or rejed any ad!
deemed objectional. Ttle
Publisher wiU not be responsible

fnr more than one

REGISTERED CHOCOLATE po&lt;&gt;
dlo, $60. 992·6280.

guHers.and
down spOuts.
Win,dOw cleaning
GuHer cleaning
Fret! Estimates

Television

Y!~s.~!~~

four ordinary words.

I KJ

All Masonary W. ·
Foundation,
:Brick Laying,
Concrete flllishing.

N~w. repair,

srilith Nelson

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Unscramble these tour Jumbles ,
one latter to each square, to form

Offered

.Roofing .

ding. Call367·0292.
POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Taylor. 614·367·7220.
HILLCREST KENNELS. Boar·
ding, all breeds. Clean indoo.-

THAT SCRAMBLED WOIID GAME

·Servlws

H. L Writesel
. RISING STAR Kennel. Boar·

l}fll}ru} fi)~ ~

Q!J ~- ~~ ._

PEANUTS

EXPLAIN TITLE IX TO
ME .~GAIN, WILL l(OU?

.-·""

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, b., Monday, Sept. 24, 1979

~xcluded

Rental property

Area Deaths

tax break year earlier than expected
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A
legislative sleight-of·hand will bring
most Ohio hc:rneowners a $30 million
break in property taxes a year
earlier than most state officials and
General Assembly members were
figuring .
The 1212 percent break, which is
for Ollloans who live in their own
homes, has taken mo st state
officials and legislators by surprise.
The new provisioo was quietly
inserted into a bill to make state
employee pay raises retroactive to
July 1. The short paragraph on taxes
made the tax brea~ for 1980 instead
of 1961.

Budget Director William D. Keip
said he didn't know anything about
the change until several weeks after
the bill was approved in July. He
said the money will be available for
the tax break, even though the
state's budget is very tight. He said
he is not sure the General Assembly
will have to appropiate money for
the tax breaks .
State
Tax
Equalization
Commissioner Robert Kinney said
he wasn't aware of the tax break
until a few days ago. He said, on the
surface, the pay bill didn't apply to
his office, and he also said he had
been on vacation .
Many Republicans and Senate

President Oliver Ocasek think the
tax breaks are illegal because they
apply only to residential property,
but other legislative advisers say
they is not.
County auditors are hWTying to
get together applications and figure,
ways to alter their tax duplicates
before they must be cc:rnpleted in
mid-November. Many auditors
doubt that the necessary changes
can be made so that homeowners
can take advantage of the breaks on
the first tax bills mailed out next
year .
However, the General Assembly
will probably approve a plan which
will allow hc:rneowners to make up

Israeli-Syrian warplanes
battling ·in Beirut skies
BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP)- Israeli
and Syrian warplanes battled in the
skies south of Beirut today, and two
to four Syrian jets were reported
shot down . It was Ule seeond
dogfight between the old enemies in
four days.
Lebanese government sources
said two Syrian fighters crashed in
flames near Beirut International
Airport but their pilots parachuted
to safety.
An Israeli military command
spokesman in Tel Aviv said four
Syrian planes were downed and all
Israeli aircraft returned safely to
base.
Associated Press reporter
Mohanuned Salam said he saw a
large explosion near the airport
when he was di'iving to wOrk.
"There was a big orange fiash and
a big explosion and then smoke," he
said.

The air clash came at a time when
the United States and other
countries are growing increasingly
critical of lsr aeli military acUons in
neighboring Lebanon. But Israel
vows to continue its policy of
striking at Palestinian guerrilla
bases in southern Lebanon.
Syria's Damascus Radio said last
Thursday that Syrian jets had
engaged and driven off · Israeli
aircraft flying over southern
Lebanon. Israeli newspapers said
Ule Syrians used air-to-air missiles
in that encounter.
Syrian and Israeli jets clashed for
the first tirne in five years last June
'l:l, when the Israeli air force used its
U.S.-made F-15 fighter for the first
time in combat. The Israelis
claimed they brought down five
Syrian MiG-2ls in Ulat battle over
southern Lebanon .
Military activity stepped up in

GM mum on electric car ·
DETROIT (AP) - The General
Motors Corp. may have made a
breakthrough in car bat ~ery
technology, but the giant automaker
is keeping mum about reports that a
practical electric car is in Ule offing.
Company spokesman Cliff Merriot
said GM president Elliott M. ·Estes
would ''make some announcement"
in Washington on Tuesday. But he
wouldn't say whether .it concerned a
copyright report in Sunday's
Chicago Tribune quoting a "highranking executive" on the
breakthrough in developing a longlife zinc-nickle oxide battery.
Estes has Said repeatedly Ulat
General Motors e1pects to market
an electric car by the late 1960s,
probably for around-town use at
first .
To be practical, GM says, such a
car would have to be able to carry
two passengers and about 100
pounds of baggage for 100 miles at a
cruising speed of 50 mph . The car expected to be about the size of a
Chevrolet Chevette - would also
have to reach 30 mph in less Ulan 10
seconds and to be able to cover about
70 miles in stop-and-go traffic before

CAROIJS
COIFFURES
fall Permanent
Special
Now is your chance to try
that c11rly look you've been
thinking about.

NOW '20.00
EFFECTIVE

MON .

SAT., 29

24 ,

lhru

call for Appt. 773 -5352

recharging.

Three persons

hurt in wrecks
Three persons were injured during
three
weekend
accidents
investigated by the Gallia-Meigs
Post, Highway Patrol.
Two persons were injured during a
two-vehicle accident investigated
Saturday on SR 160, at the junction
of CR 47, at 9:30am.
Officers report an auto operated
by Kenneth· Barr, 39, Bidwell, pulled
from CR 47 into the paUl of a south
bound vehicle driven by Janice
Wedemeyer, 38, Bidwell.
Both drivers claimed injury, but
were not immediately treated.
Barr was cited on a charge of
failure to yield . Both vehicles
incurred moderate damage.
One person was injured during a
motorcycle accident Sunday in
Meigs CoWlty on CR 42, just east of
SR 7, at 2:30pm.
Officers report an east bound
cycle operated by Randall
Carpenter, 32, Minersville, went out
of C(X'ltrol in gravel and overturned.
Carpenter displayed visible signs
of injury and was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for
treatment.
There was slight damage to Ule
cycle.
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident Saturday on
TR 34, five-tenths of a mile noriJl of
SR 160, at 4:50 pm .
The patrol reports a noriJl bound
auto operated by Kenneth Morrilkln,
23, Gallipolis, and a souiJl bound
vehicle driven by James Wilburn,
34, Gallipolis, sideswiped on a
hillcrest.
There was severe damage to the
Morrison auto, moderate damage to
the Wilburn vehicle .
Wilburn was cited on a charge of
left of center.

Custom full upper &amp; lower

Lebanon's troubled !kluth late last
week.
The
Palestine
Liberation
Organization claimed an Israeli
armored force crossed Ule IsraeliLebanese border last Friday and
engaged PLO guerrillas, who drove
the Israelis back across the frontier.
Israel denied its troops had entered
Lebanon, and said fighting Friday
and Saturday in Ule border region
was between Palestinians and
Israeli-backed Lebanese Christian
militiamen.
Israeli warplanes have frequently
flown Ulrough Lebanese airspace on
reconnaissance and other missions
in ~OOjWlction with the campaign
against guerrilla strongholds In the
souiJl.
. .,

.~Today .
, •. . in the world
(Continued from page 1)
plari to open schools on Tuesday
after nearly two weeks of being
closed due to Hurricane
Frederic, which struck the Gulf
Coast.
The &amp;Mouncement came as

tons of non-perishable foodstuffs
donated in Alabama and Georgia
arrived by truck to help feed
hurricane victims, many d.
whom remain homeless or
without utilities.
Shipments were stored at the
Municipal Auditorium and the
City Hall in suburban Prichard to
be distributed by city and volunteer workers.
The Food.for-Mobile effort
began Ialit Thursday night after
Gov. Fob James made a
statewide televised appeal.
Food was collected at National
Guard armories, churches and
some fast.food restaurants. The
first truckloads were rolling
toward Mobile less than 24 hours
later.

Finishing capping
MEXICO CITY (AP) Mexican oil workers hope to
finish capping the runaway IxtocI oil well today after lowering a
12S-ton steel cone Into place over
the maverick gusher that has
fouled Gulf Coast beaches from
Mexico to southern Texas.
The capping operation, aimed
at reducing the flow of oil and
natural gas by 85 percent, was
halted by darkness Sunday. A
team of 300 technicians, divers
and engineers from the Mexican
state oil monopoly PEMEX had
worked for a dozen hours SWlday
to lower the 35 foot by 69 foot cone
onto the Wlderwater superstructure over the well.
BOARD TO MEET
The CommWlity Action Agency
Board of Trustees will hold its
·monthly meeting on Thursday, Sept.
27 at 7 pm . in Ule Cheshire village
Council chambers.
MEETS TUESDAY
SaUsbury Brownie Troop 1220 will
meet Tuesday at 7 pm. at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church. The meeting is for parents
and children.

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Athletic Boosters
will meet this evening at 7:30p.m. at
Ule high school.

GRIDDER HAS SURGERY
Bill Powell , Middleport, a
member of the Meigs Football squad
, was injured lh a reserve game last
Mooday. Thursday he underwent
surgery at Holzer Medical Center.
His room number is 508.

the loss on the second tax bill of Ule
year.
Under current legislation,
homeowners must apply for the tax
oceak by Sept. 30. But a bill now
pending in the Senate Finance
Committee has been amended to
change the filing deadline to Dec. 30.
The bill is a measure to
reappropriate $261.5 million that has
not been spent for capital
improvements during the last two
years . If needed , the General
Assembly could appropiate the
money for the tax break in that bill.
Applications must be made
because the tax break is only for
those who live in their homes. Rental
property is excluded.

Meigs
(Continued from page 1)
we are offering, that Ule teachers
are actWlUY subsidizing the district.
Well - if anyone is subsidizing the
district it certainly has to be our kids
who have gone without proper textbooks, adequate physical education
equipment, and actually attended "
classes in buildings where the
plaster is falling off the walls, the
roofs are leaking and the baiJlroorns
have only a few operating facilities.
It is frustrating when we are told by
a member of the teachers '
negotiating team that they would
rather have a $10,000 base salary
now and force schools to close at the
end of the year, than to keep schools
open and have a $9700 base salary.
"The difference between~ two
salaries on each two week pay check
is $1Ui4 gross. That is difficult to
understand when the same teacher
will be docked $54 each day they are
illegally abaent from work. The
highest paid teacher in the district
would only make $19.61 more pay at.
the demanded $10,000 base salary
while they will lose ~.60 each day
they are absent from work.
Economically, it does not make sen-

MARCIA M.HOBSIEI lEA
Mrs. Marcia M. Hobstetter, 7~.
well known Pomerey resident, died
at 1:45 p.m. Sunday at her borne on
Lincoln Hill Road.
Mrs. Hobstetter was well known in
Meigs County in her role as
helpmate for her husband, Edison
Hobstetter, long.fune president of
Ule Pc:rneroy National Bank. She
was a member 9f Return Jooathan
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution; Pomeroy
Chapter, Order of Eastern Star of

HOSPITAL NEWS
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday admissions-Kelly
Tanner, Caldwell; Jiunes Haning,
Albany; JW1e Mayes, Pomeroy;
Betty Clagg, Bidwell; Clara Pullins,
Pomeroy; Walter Jewell, Dexter;
Harold Stobart, Racine ; Gregory
Hall, Grethel. Ky .
Saturday
dlscharges-Nonnan
Lehew, Alice Brauer, Dorothy
Greathouse .
Sunday admissions-Paul Burton,
Racine; Mary Pugh, MinersVIlle;
Belen Dayo. New Haven; Faye
YoWI8, Albany; Eva Schaeffer,
Racine;
Oscar
Imboden,
Minersville.
Sunday discharges-Marlin Rife,
Kelly Tanner, James Haning .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES $EPI'. Zl
Christopher Adkins, Jerrie Beam,
Abbie Canterbury, Charles Dewey,
Estella Dunn , Ethel Gilliland,
Bessie Hern , William Hill, Mary
Hoffman, Winifred Hurst, Anita
Javins, Stephen Jones, Mrs."VIctoria
Keefer and daughter, Jane
Mallatnaci, Thelma Mattox, Cora
McGhee , Mabel Oliver, Mary
Ousley, Mrs. Mark Perry and
daughter, Mrs.Patricla RldcDe lllld
daughter, · Mildred RUilllell, Betty
Saurxlers, Cynthia Siders, Maurica
Tressle, Betty Van Maue, Michelle
Walker, Thomas White, Lewia
Whitt, L«a Wills.
BIRTIIS SEPI'. Zl
Mr. and Mrs. James Gilbert,
daughter, VInton; Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Workman, dau~hter,
Dexter.
"
DISCHARGES SEPI' ZZ
se.
Ralph Amis, Robert Beraoo, Okey
"Strikes hurt us all. They strip us
Camp, Mrs. Daniel Colby and son,
of our credibility and our pride.
Christal Cornell, Leslie Cron, John
However, "despite all of these
Dailey, Bryan Davis, Pamela Davis,
problems, we are still going to keep Michael DePue, Dwayne Detty,
our schools open. You can help.
Michael Halley, Donald Hendrix,
· "All parents and adults are adAlbert Hill Jr., Eddie Hughes,
vised and encouraged to help in the
Carrie Jeffers, Stephen Jeffers,
following ways:
Susie Kelley, Roger McClaskey,
"Send your children to school;
Samuel McKinney , Mrs.Dwlght
send a lunch with each child in Ule
McKoy and daughter, Jooathan
event our lunchrooms are not McWhorter, Teresa Miller, Gladys
. operating; contact your child's Moore, Peggy Petrie, LaDonna
teacher and encourage returning to
Plants, Glenn Rose, ~ela Shelton,
work; contact other parents and Marvin Thc:rnas, Mrs. David Watd
form car pools; attend school wiiJl and daughter, Grace Wasner, Hazel
your child and volunteer for recess Westen.
duty, kitchen duty or other duties.
BIRTIIS SEPI' ZZ
"Also, volWlteers and those inMr. and Mrs. JAmes Casto, son,
terested in substitute work of all Evans, W. Va.
kinds are urged to call the
DISCHARGES SEPI' Z3
superintendent's office at 992-2153
ALta Bates, Mrs. Stephen Cochran
[or work assignments and contracts.
and son, Mrs. Eugene Elliott and
"Students not attending school son, Mrs . Ronald Harper and
will be counted as absent. The only
daughter, Vera Harrel, Tanunle
exception will be those students , Keller, Larry Nolan, Mabel Planta,
whose bus is not running. They will Mrs. Ronald Ringling and !IOn,
be COWlted as excused absences . We Elizabeth Welch.
also have been assured some buses
BIRTIIS SEPI' Z3
will be running this morning:
Mr. aod Mrs. Harold Davis,
"Again, we are extremely disap- daughter, Jackson ; Mr. and Mrs.
pointed. However, we are still op- Darrell Doggess, son, Oak Hill; Mr .
timistic and we hope we can solve and Mrs. Craig Belville, daughter,
our differences as soon as pos&amp;ble." . Crown City.
~

~

wlllch she was a past matron, and
Grace Epacopal Olw;ch.
'
!~ falling health for the put
11everal inontha, Mrs. Hobstetter bad
been returned to her home on
Lincoln Hill Road two weeks ago
after a -H day hoepltal confinement,
Ste wu born In Pomeroy on May 211,
19M, a daughter of the late Judge
and Mra. Albert P. Miller.
Besides her husband; Mrs,
Hobstetter Ia survived. by a sister •!
Mrs. Hazel Groff, ~ker Helghu,;
and seven nieces and neph~
Including Mrs, Oulrlea A. Weed,,
Shaker Heights ; Frederick M.:
Groff
Dearfleld, Ill.; Eri~
Ouunbers, Middleport; James
Hobatetter, Rutland; Pamela :
O'Laugblln, Athena; Bette Jean :
Krawaczyn, Minersville, and Robert :
E . Hill, Dayton.
. 1
In conjunction with Mrs.,
·Hobstetter's request, there will be 1
no 11ervlces. Friends may give ,
donationa to the Meigs Cancer::
Society in Ueu of Dowers. '!be Ewin8 •
Fwl•al Home Ia in charge of~
•
arrangeinents.
'

w.:

•

:;::::::~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;y.

•

EXTENDEDOU11AlOit
:
Pvtly tlolldy Wetusday. Fair :
Tlnlnday. A clwlce crl ~bowen
Frtday. Hllbllll tile~."""' Ill
tbe$11.

.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::.

ltiCXOFF RALLY
The Meigs County Holiness :
Mlnlaterlal AaiJoclation will hold ita ·
annual kick-off rilly Tuesday, Sept.
25; at 7:30 pm. at the Laurel ClUf
Fl'ee Methodl.lt Olurch. There will
be a slngspirallo ~d the public Ia ·
invited to attend.
'

SQUAD CALLED
The Middlepcrt ER Squad was.
called &amp;mdly at 10:42 pm. to 749
South Third Street for Nettie Hayes:
who wu taken to Rober Medical '
Center.

Playtex·

.ipiltit
BODY ;BRIEFER

•11'

9

I

Size 34A thrl.! 3BC in white or biege.
Soft cup style bra. Body Briefer is
soft as a whisper from the tricot
seamless bra to the body made of a
comfy material. Try it .... it's the
smooth way to look smoother In
clothes.

LINGgJE ON 2ND FLOOR W/P·t··~·o
r
.
I

Elberfe

VOL XXVIII NO. 114

•

CINCINNATI (AP) - Cattle !DO.
Allction early. Steen, helfen, coWl
aru1 bulla !Jteady .
Steers, low dreulng, choice, :t-1,
900-1175 !be, 83 .~.25;.
Helfen, good and chOice, :t-1, •
1175 !be, 81.00-86.10.
Cows, uUUty, Z-3, 900-1110 !be,
48.00-51.25; cutter, l-2, l'lr&gt;-1250 lbe,
43. 7~.DO.

Bulla, couple 2, lm-11!151ba, 57.2558.00.
Feeder ateen,larie yield IJ'ade l,
300-t00lbe, 90.00-16.00; h6n,large
yield grade 1, 300-J75lbl, aD.oo.tO.OO.

TEENAGER ltNIFE VICI'IM
lEIPSIC, &lt;Jilo (AP) - The
stabbing death of • tee!Hige migrant
worker wu under lnv~atioo
today by · the Putnam County
sheriff's department.
Two other teen-8ge migrant
workers suffered stab wounda.
lllerlff Robert C. BeuUer said the
stabbings took place in • Leipsic
tavern frequented by Ht.panlcs in
the area . He uld that no one had
been charged with the klll.lng or

assaults.
Dead Ia Manuel Aguilar, 19. u.ted
In crtUcal condition Ia Jo11e Valle, 19.
Treated and relelllled was Juan
VuqueZ,'19 •

enttne

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1979

Firm employed
to design park
BY BOB HOEFIJCH
Uz and Gerard Hilferty, known
professionally as "A Oluple o•
Designers" will be Invited to design
a park at the corner of Garfield and
South Third Sts. in Middleport.
Middleport Village Council
meeting In regular session M:onday
night, following a discussion on a lot
at the location, authorized ClerkTreul!rer Gene Grate to contact the
Hilfertys to see if they will design a
park on the property which wu
given the village by Mary Ellzabeth

Thoma.a.
Present to discuss the use of the lot
witb council were Mrs. V~lma Rue
and Mrs. Kay Cecil who live in the
neighborhood. A letter ol interest in
the property was read from the
Hilfertys. All apressed concern on
what the lot will be used for.
During the discussion, it wa
brought out that the property I., not
large enough for a playground type
park, but it could be an attractive
spot in town as a non-playground
park with sirppUcity and beauty

atresaed.

Garden cluba could be contacted
for beautlfyiug the spot after some
design Ia worked out, it wu decided.
Council discusaed at length the use
of a second police car in Middleport
and the low tate ri. pay of pollee offleers consideri!lg the dangers they
are sometimes conlrooted with .
It was decided to call a special
-son to determine if some plan
can be worked out to irpprove the
situation. Meeting with council last

Uv..t...,k report

Elberfelds. In Pomeroy

SALE! '19 95

e

J

•

•

Today
...
. in the world

Lands safely
ZARAGOZA, Spain (AP )
One engine of an Iberia Airlines
DC.f jeWner exploded in fiiglt
today, but the plane landed safely
with Its 56 (l8Sllfll8ers and crew ol
five, a spokesman for the Spanish
airline said.
The engine blew up as the
Madrid-Barcelona flight passed
over Zaragaza, about half way
along the route.
The plane was further
damaged when It made an
emergency landing at a military
alrbase, officials said.

Efforts stalled
CIUDAD DEL CARMEN,
Mexico (AP) - Rain and ocean
currents are stalling efforts to
cap the runaway Ito• I oil well,
but Mexican officials say they
will probably try again today to
place a huge steel cone over the
Wlderwater gusher.
"It is raining, cloudy and there
are very strong ocean currents.
We have some operations that
must be done with divers which
we cannot po5Sibly do now
because of the currents," Rafael
Marque!, a spokesman for the
government oil monopoly ,
PEMEX, sald Monday.
"We will probably continue
tomorrow, " he said. On Sunday,
diven lowered the 35-foot by 65foot steel cone to the test well's
platform, 190-feet underwater.
But Marquet said darkness
prevented them from positioning
the 310-lon device to catch the oil.

Founder captured
ROME (AP) Police
critically wounded and captured
a found~r of Italy's feared Red
Brigades terrorist gang Monday,
Identifying him as the man who
organized the abduction and
slaying of fonner Premier Aldo
Moro, authorities reported ,
Pr011pero Gallinari, sough! by
pollee on several murder COWlta,
was captured after a gWl battle
near · Rome's ancient Appian
Way, officials said. They said
Galllnari was hit by submacbine
gun bullets when poUce returned
fire at a car they w~re approaching in response to a
telephone tip.

night to discuss those problems was
Police Olief J. J. Cremeans. Councilman Olarles Mullen and Mayor
Fred Hoffman indicated that a
second poUce cruJser would pay for
itself.
It was decided to notify the property owner of tbe Sewing Center
building that the condition of the
sidewalk at the side of the structure
is in bad shape.
CoWlcil gave a first reading to an,
ofdinance providing for a $40 a month increase in the salary of the director of the Middleport Park effective last JWJe I. Pat Kitchen who served
as park director met with council
and reported that the park was
heavily used during the sununer
months. She was commended for
her work at the park.
Mayor Hoffman pointed out it is
difficult to secure police officers
even if money is available and this
was r~mphasized bv Councilman

Mullen said officers are underpaid.
Mullen also urged council to take
action on Ule heavy traffic on North
Third and Fourth Sts. These streets
are being used by through traffic
and motorists are speeding and are
careless In their driving, Mullen
said . .He urged that streets be posted
with "no Ulrough traffic" signs.
Also included in the discussion
was Grant St., where several
councilmen indicated a considerable
amount of speeding, is taking place .
"Councihnan Carl Horky reported
the village hall will be sandblasted
before cold weather, btlt said he has
been advised th8t painting of the
building should not take place Wltil
warm weather in the spring due to
drying problems which could be
involved in colder weather.
Attending the meeting were ·
Mayor Hoffman, Grate, and
Councilmen Horky, Mullen, William
Walters and Dewey Horton.

Energy costs causing
consumer price hikes
( AP) Higher energy costa
continued to surge through the
economy .in August, pushing
consumer prices up 1.1 percent, Ule
govenunent said today.
The sharp rise was the eighth
consecutive monthly increase near
or above 1 percent, the Labor
Department said. And it OC&lt;'IUTed
despite a leveling-off in food prices,
which showed no change in August.
U there is no break in the price
pattern, the nation will end the year
with an inflation rate above 13
·percent - the worst since World
War II, econc:rnlsts said.
The Labor Department today also
introduced Its new energy report,
which gives monthly price statistics
oo gasoline , fuel oil and other energy
C081s.The report showed the impact
on families of the 60 percent rise in
cr'ude oil prices enacted by the
Organization
of
Petroleum
Exporting Countries since the start
of the year.
Aruong the statistics: - The
average price of fuel oil was 110 cents
per gallon, . tip 25 . ~ cents since
December 1978.
In another report , the .ljabor
Department said Americans'
average weekly earnings were badly

eroded by inflatioo in August, falling
0.6 percent in the mooth. Spendable
earnings, which are weekly earnings
after Social Security · and federal
taxesare deducted and adjustments
are made for inflation , fell 0.9
percent In August, the third
consecutive monthly decline.
The Carter administration has
been hoping for a turnaround in
Inflation before the end of the year ..
But Labor Department economist
Patrick Jackman said signs of Ulat
turnaroWld are not yet visible in the
Consumer Price Index.
The report said "about two-thirds
of the (August) increase was due to
higher energy and hc:rne ownership
prices.''

Transportatloo prices were up 1 . ~
percent for the month, with most of
the rise blamed on a 4 percent surge
in ga!klline prices. PubUc transit
C081s also rose .
"In the 12 months ended in August,
gasoline prices increased 46 .1
percent," the report said.
Housing costs allkl reflect higher
fuel costs, wiiJl a 7.1 percent August
rise in fuel oil costs (56.4 percent for
the year ) pushing the oost ahead
rapidly.
(Continued on page 6)

Council tables
wall repair bid
council agreed to have Fred Crow,
village solicitor, draw up a perfonnance
contract for approval of
Cambridge, to repair the wall at
the Ohio Bridge Corp.
Laurel St., was not accepted when
Meeting with council was Karl
Pomeroy Village Council met in
Wetherholt, engineer for the city of
special session Monday rught.
According to the bid, cost of repair. Marietta.
•
Wetherholt was asked to advise
would run between $82,400 and
council on a contract submitted by
f73,400 depending on amount &lt;i
' materials used. The project is to be · the engineering finn of Burgess and
funded by a IJ'ant frc:rn Housing Ur- Niple.
The contract is for extending the
ban Development (HUD).
sewage line from the Kroger store
Wesley Buehl, county engineer, af.
on East Main St., to Kerrs Run. This
ter meeting with council agreed to
project will also be funded through a
engineer the project at a cost not to
grantfrom HUD.
exceed $500,
Wetherholt agreed to study the
Rod Karr moved and Betty
cllntract before meeting with council
Baronick seconded to accept the bid.
next week.
· However, followin&amp; a ·discussion
Attending were Mayor Clarence
before a vote was taken, it was
Andrews, Jane Walton, clerk, Karr,
decided that the bid was not spelled
Baronick, Bill Young , Larry
out as to what type of repair will be
Webrung and Harold Brown,' council
made to the wall since the bid listed
members, Buehl and Wetherholt.
. tbe cost of material and labor only.
Karr withdrew his motion and
BY KATIE CROW

A bid from the Ohio Bridge Corp.,

PRESENTS CHECK- Dave Diles, left, ABC Sports Broadcaster, Sunday presented Tom Wolle,
president ol the Racine Home National Bank, a check
in the amoWlt of $5,000, profit from the first Dave Diles
Celebrity Golf Tournament held in July at Riverside

Diles golfing event
financial success .
The first Dave Diles Celebrity Golf Tournament, termed as one of the biggest sporting eventa
ever to bit the Meigs-Mason area, will go down in history as one ol the most successful.financlally ·
A profit of $5,000 will be distriboted to non-profit groups in the Meigs-Mason area 1t was disclosed
Sunday by Dave Diles and Tom Wolfe.
. .
. Plans call for establislunent of a $500 Dave Diles scholarship in the college of commwu~tions at
Ohio University. Any student from Mason or Meigs Counties interested in a career m communications will have the opportunity to apply for the scholarship.
.
Other organizations benefitting from the proceeds will be eight emergency squads, Mason City,
New Haven, Point Pleasant, Racine, Syracuse, Middleport, Pomeroy and Rutland. They will reach
receive$400.
.
.
.
Cancer Soc'eti
The Cystic Fibrosis Foundation will rece~ve S250: the Me1gs and ~ason.CoWlty
.
I es
will each receive $200; the Meigs and Mason County Heart Associations will.each rece~ve $1JlO and .
$250 will go to the family r1. Tracy Hein. Tracy, 16, a stu~t at Eastern High School, underwent
SUI'J!ery for a rjdney transplant recently at University•Hospital, Colwnbua.
.
,
OiJes also said there will be a· contingency fWld available if a crisis should anse whereby
someone could be assisted according to need.
.
. .
DUes said the tournament was fantastic and praised Ulose who assisted in making tbe event a suc-

cessHe especially mentioned Gary and Mary Roush and Bob and Louise Roll8h for the use of Riverside GoU Course free of charge.
.. Diles
" Alot of people around the coWltry have indicated a desire to participate next year, . com1

mented.
·
·
of J
There will
Plans are already underway for next year 's classic at Riverside~ the !"oniJl
Wle.
,
he a get acquainted party and dinner the night before the event. Trophies will be awarded at the close ·
of the tournament.
.
Those serving on the committee for the distribution of money were Tom Wolfe.• president ri. the ·
Racine Home National Balik; Ted Reed, president of the farmers~ and Savmgs; Joe Young,
loan officer at the Pomeroy National Bank, and Olad Humphrey, funuture dealer mMason County.

Strike enters second day

Security guards placed at
all Meigs school buildings
Security guards have been placed
in all of the buildings &lt;X the Meigs
Local School District as a strike by
the district's teachers move~ into
ita second day Tuesday.
Supt. David Gleason reported Ule
security guards had been hired as a
protective measure for all penons,
including the pickets at the schools.
Gleason contends the strike
revolves aroWld mooey and Mrs.
Bonnie Fisher, who says that onehalf milllon new dollars have come
Into the district this school year, contends that there are other issues,
with eight out of 11 issues still
resolved.

..

Meantime, it is reported a meeting
may be set up with Bill Lewis,
federal mediator, who met with
representatives of the negotiating
teams of the board of education and
Ule teachers association last week.
Apparently, no solutions were
found during two sessions with
Lewis and a strike was voted 57-65
by the teachers on Sunday. It Is not
known when the next meeting "~
Lewis will be held.
.
Whether the Friday nigbt football
game and the band perfonnan~ will
·go this weekend was not known this
morning . However, it was reported
that unless teachers involved in

Middleport trucker has minor mishap

A dump truck filled with chips
overturned Monday afternoon on
Union CampgroWld· Road, spilling
part of its load and blocking traffic
on the rural thoroughfare for nearly
four hours.
hes, Manning Mohler, Don Eynon,
The truck , owned and driven by
Keith Wood, Charles Rife , Jim
Richard
B. Bailey, 50, Middleport,
Soulsby and investigator Gary
Ohio,
was
headed north at 3:45 p.l)l.
Wolfe.
when
,
according
to the driver, he
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies
was
forced
off
the
road by an onare investlgating a hltsklp accident
coming
vehicle.
that occUlTed at 12 :45 p.m. Monday
Mason CoWlty Deputy Sheriff
on CR 16, approximately four. miles
G.M.
Kearns said the truck.traveled
.
north of SR 124.
146 feet along Ule
approximately
James J . Fish, Jr., 18, Rt. 1,
dltchllne
until
it
hit a large drop in
Rutland, told deputies he was
the
ground
structure.
Bailey attraveling south on CR 16 in his 1976 .
tempted
to
pull
the
truck
back onto
Ford pickup truck and was
the
road
and
the
vehicle
rolled
over
sideswiped by ~" northbound
onto
.
its
:Side
in
the
middle
of
the
.
Chevrolet Mallbu. . .
road.
He was unable tel' obtain the
The New Haven Rescue Squad
registration "number of the
treated
Bailey at the scene for a
Chevrolet,

·Marijuana plants confiscated
Seventy-one marijuana plants
with an eStimated street value of
$71),000 were confiscated SWlday by
Meigs County Sheriff's deputies.
The plants ranging in size frc:rn 30
inches to 13 feet were found along
With 37 large ziplock haggles of
marijuana in Scipio Township, souiJl
of Pagetown. No arrests have been
made.
The marijuana will be stored for a
period of tirne before being
destroyed upon an order of Meigs
CoWlty Common Pleas Court Judge
John C. Bacon.
·
Participating in Sunday's raid
were Sheriff James Proffitt,
deputles Robert Beegle, Randy For-

Golf Course in Mason. The money will be distributad
this week to various non-profit organizations. The tournament was one of the biggest sporting events ever to
bit the Meigs-Mason area as well as a huge financial
success.

.

scrape on his arm.
Also on standby in the event of fire
was the New Haven Volunteer Fire
Department.
The unspllled chips remaining in
the truck had to be unloaded before a
wrecker could pull the truck upright,
Deputy Kearns said. He estinoated ·
damage to the truck at $3,000.
A pickup truck was demolished at
9:50p.m. Monday after it reportedly
was forced off Route 2 into the ditch
at Gallipolis Ferry by an unidentified vehicle.
According to Deputy G.D. Kaylor,
the driver, Jolm Parker Ross, 38,
Aberdeen, Md., was headed south
when the mishap occurred. His
truck traveled the ditcbline for
approximately 160 feet, striking an
underground telephone cable
marker in the process:·

these activities are on duty then the "
Friday night events will probably
not beheld.
,
This morning, Gleason reported ·
he is greatly encouraged on the
. second day of. the strike. More
stUdents are reporting to achools
along with more teachers and mon
buses are running, he saJd,
On the other hand, Mrs. FIBber :
, said the strike with the support ol ·
non~rtifled employes is effective. :
One school had eight students today :
and another, four, she said. She
,reported that seven teacbera In the'
diBtrlct have crossed the · pick«
lines.
_
• .
In a statement th1a mociliDg, .
Gleason said:
'
"As you know, our teachers are on :
· str have a magic wand to make It 110 :
away. Despite that fact we are
going to have schools open. To MY .
that we are concerned is putting It
milcDy. We are extremely upset and
disheartened by the situation.
"We would not have you chutl.ae
our teachera nor do we want you to
lose faith in these people. Inlteld
look at the message they are trytnc
to get acrosa. We believe tbey are
saying teachers need to make more
money to support their families and
themselves. We can all identify wltb
inflatiOn and we can all Identify wltb
inflation and we can all Identify witll
these problems.
'
"I per!IOnally have given my word
to the teachers that I will work to
pass a levy In the spring !10 we can
increase the aalarlee, buy textboob
and llx llllldlngs. However, at the • '
present time, the board Is In a
difficult position-that of wanting to •
(Coiitlnued on pagU)

v

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