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8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0., Oct . I, !979
•

Study ~ays coal-based
system more efficient
nmg, and William K. Coleman,
place in the energy mix, " he added.
A coal-based electric system is
director,
residential
and
com
"This country must explore every
more efficient in providing residen mercial
services,
both
of
AEP.
possible
avenue of energy supply
tial energy requireme nts than a synmad•
this
observation
·
and
development
for use now and In
thetic gas system using a coal"
While
the
Lurgi
Process
coal
the
years
ahead
ipto the 21st cengasification process,
gasification
system
currently
being
tury
.
study released today .
1
considered does not use coal resour" All we are saying right now Ia
Details of the study
ces
as effectively now as the electric that, when you take all the avalldle
the American Electric Pn••Pt_.
power system for residential ser- independent data and measure It
vice Corporation were explained at a
vice, research of this and other coal- carefully for meeting residential
news conference in Washington, D.
gasifi cation tec hnologies should be energy needs, the electric system Ia
C. 1be Service Corpordtion and Oh1o
actively pursued and encouraged ."
more efficient. Our conclusion t.
Power Company are affiliates of the
White also stressed the AEP was that the research on coalAmerican Electric Power System .
not advocating abandonment of the gasification should proceed apace 110
W. S. White, Jr ., chairman of the
c oa l-gasification process .
that this system can hopefully
board and chief executive officer of
·'What this study proves is that all
become a valuable aid sometime In
AEP, which serves 6-million people
energy
sources
and
fuel
use
systems
the
future ."
in seven states from Michigan to
need
to
be
studied
to
determine
their
Tennessee, said the "study c'
significant because it utilizes inHOSPITAL '\EWS
dependent data as the basis for the
assumptions and conclusiOns."
cy Williamson, Dickley Wolford,
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
He noted that the study should
Walter Yates.
Discharges, Sept. Zl
prove valuable in the current
Birtll!l, Sept. za
Mrs . Stephen Adkins and
discussions over enactment of
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
BiD Angell, son, Roddaughter , Nancy Altizer, Ray Angel,
legislation to fund research and
ney; Mr. and Mrs. Stephen We.t,
Sadie Baker, Mrs. Walter Booth and
development projects invol ving
son, Gary Bryant, Larry Burnett ,
daughter, Wellston ; Mr. and Mrtl.
gasification and liquefaction of coal.
Mural Black, daughter, Wellston;
Rodney Butcher, Irene Clagg, John
The report polnted out that the
Mr . and Mrs . Gary Acres, son , MldClifford III, Ada Couch, Thomas
coal~asification systems now un Deck, James Eggars, Martha
dleort .
dergoing examination have not been
Elkins, Emily Finney, Thelia
tested oo a commercial scale .
Ga iner, Thelma Goff, Karen GonDlschargeo, Sept. %9
However, the report added , the
zales, Edmund Kegley, Daisy Ken\,
Mark Addis, Karen Alien, Linda
available data from many sources,
Sharon Lewis, Bernice Martindill ,
Bledsoe, Mrs. Mary Balles and
including the government, indi cate
Fred Ma cCumber , Twila Mcdaughter, Mary Bradbury, Debra
the superior efficiency of coal-based
Daniels. Dana Mink , Stephen
Davis, Weltha Dillenger, Romaine
electric generation systems .
Powell , Herley Pyles, Lisa Ratcliff,
AI the same time , the report· s
Frederick, Charles Greer Jr., Sara
Minnie Riffle , Mary Rawlins, mavis
Hawk, Stephen Hood, ' Ronnie John·
authors, Blatr A. Ross , vtce
Saylor. Russell Sheets, Uge Shields,
son Jr., Robert Lee, Mrs . ChadeB
president, energy resources planAllen Stag em, Scotty Whobrey , NanLegar and daughter, Glade
Maloney, Mrs. KeMeth McCoy and
son, Carol Moody, William Mulllna,
Helen Nicely, Mrs. James Owe111
Custom full upper &amp; lower
and son, Mary Shlltz, Anna
Spaulding , Lyronda Stone , James
Vogt, Jack Wheatley , Roy WUliams.
Blrtllll, Sept. %9
Mr. aod Mrs. Deanta McCormlcl,
daughter, Oak Hill; Mr. and Mn.
Jeffrey Pallln, oon, Letart;

Mr. ud

Mn. George Joaeo, son, Henderson.

Ctlll todu jo,.
1'0t'' FrH

of Dr

cop I'

R l trlrn' 'l

U1ftv'"QII"f'
brodut~

Dlscbargeo, Sepl. 30
Mrs. James Adldns and son, Barbara Broyles , Robert Davis, Mary
Grinun, Bonnie Hq)ely, Richard Jeffers, Esta Johnsoh, Lilly Kaylor,
BMan MUJl)hy, Nicole Newell,
Josephine Stanley, Mrs. Clifford
Young and son .
Bll1ba, Sept. at
Mr . and Mn. Richerd Whltteldnd,
son, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs. Olarles
Moody, daughter, Cheshire.

Dr. Riviere poyslor the call!

RiYicrc Center
Or ao .. td f . Rl•kn
\i iilrhh • D • G J """''b~~ ~ h • Do &lt; \lo !k;~~ l
'4 lJ 1\ onlh• ll • 11r J l 'l" 'f'~' • 0 • ~ C:,1ul11
i &gt;• ' \l. .,_Jim ' • llr {, .0, 'V h&gt;&lt;.H&lt;
o\ I

f .. U•I"Ptoll 1\ • •

i

·olumbu \ , Oh10

~JlO'

V\e~

when
the Meigs County population
was around 28,ooo.
I

I

s
y

e

Fs

Farmers

Bank

Pomeroy, Ohio

Membtr FDIC

at

•

enttne

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

•
.,

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

-- ~- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Levy passage
being pushed

Spectators lining streets
BOSTON t AP 1 - Despite a
chilling mist and the threat of steady
rain, scores of sp ecta tors, the
vanguard of an estimated 2 million
people, kept an all-night vigil near
the Boston Common , waiting for a
spot to see Pope John Paul II at the
start of his tour of six U.S. cities.
Officials predicted the pope's visit
would more than double Boston's
population as special trains and
buses carried m pilgrims. Much of
th e city - g roomed a nd draped with
papal flag s - was closed la te
Sunday to most traffic.
Teams of police and National
Guardsmen began clearing th e

•

specially-marked motorcade roUte
earlier in the weekend .
An afternoon papal Mass at the
downtown park, once the spot where
Puritans pilloried and hanged
Quake rs, was expected to attract
between 400,000 and I million people
- a nd at least one demonstration to t his city of 640,000. Another I
millton people were expected to line
th e 2ll-mile route of the pope's
motorcade
Cold , rainy weather did not deter
many who waited through the night
for the Common , roped off by police
Sunday , to re-&lt;&gt;pen at 7 am .
" We wanted to ha ve the

BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monda y night
emphasiZed the importa nce of
passlng the city income tax in the
November Genera l election .
Harold Brown, councilman, said
the village of Pomeroy is not an
inexpensive town to control. It was
noted that the tax will effect the
worlung pubUc only, not retired persons or persons receiving disabi lity
pensions or social securi ty.
Council agreed it must sell the tax
and scheduled a public meeting to be
held on Oct. 16. The location and
time of the meetilll( will be a nnounced later.
Rod Karr , councilman. has spoken
to lhe senior citizens, Legion mem~
bers and the libraries rega rding the
tax and Bill Young, counc ilman , ha s
spoken to the Jaycees .
George Mora , branch manager of
an engineering firm li1 Athens.
presented council copies of contracts on the extension of U&gt;e sewage
system from the Kroger store on
East Main Street to Kerrs Run .
Council has recetved a $432,000

experience
fir st hand .
It's
so mething you can 'I grasp on
television," said Wayne Bates , 19,
who with Jim Standring, 17, set up
camp oo a street comer withjn sight
of the red carpeted altar .
Standring and Bate s arrived
equipped with sleeping bags,
doughnuts and frult jUice. They
planned to stay awake until the
Common opened.
"We'll sleep when we get the spot
we want," said Standrin~

HOSPITAL PATIENT
Herbert RA&gt;ush, Route 2, Racine , is

Area Deaths
WILUAM C, PECK
William C. Peck, 79, Route 3,
Albany, a long-time educator in
Athens, Trumbell and Meigs Countie9, died Saturday evening at the
Kimes Convalescent Center in
Athens.
He was born in West Virginia, a
son of the late George Benjamin McClellan and Margaret See Peck . He
received degrees from Rio Grande
College, Ohio University , Athens ,
and Ohio State University, Columbus. He began his teaching career in
the one room Buzzard School which
was located in Columbia Townshi .'
of Meigs County. He was employed
during his career for a short period
wltl'l the Internal Revenue Service.
Mr . Peck was a member of the Temple United Methodist Church. He
served with the U. S. Army during
World War IT both m the European
and Pacific Theatres.
Surviving are two sisters, Mrs.
Edgar (Kizzee) Crabtree, Annada,
Mich., and Mrs . Enzie (Elsie 1
Davis, Parkersburg : two nephews,
Harold (Max) Crabtree of Armada,
Mich ., and Arthur Crabtree,
Albany ; five nieces, Marguerita
Crabtree Scott, Albany; Virginia
Vlnsoh Townsend, Columbus;
Madge Jackson Blackwood, Route 4,
Pomeroy; Kathryn Davis Fetty,
Parkersburg , and Mary Davis
LUzano, Charleston .
Preceding him in death were two
brothers, Paul L. Peck and Charles
0 . Peck; three sisters, Mrs . Corilda
Vinson, Mrs .Georgeanna Crabtree
and Mrs. Rebecca Jackson, and his
parenlll.
· · Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Tuesday at the Temple United
Methodist Church with the Rev . Ray
Price officiating. Burial will be in
the Temple Cemetery . Friends may
call at the Bigony-Jordan Funeral
Home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p .m .
'today .

Belpre; Ruth Wolfe, Apple Grove,
and Everal Pearson, North
Carolina.
Several nleces and
nephews also survive.
Mrs. Grinun was a member of the
women's group of the Letart United
Methodist Church.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing FWJeral
Home with the Rev. David Harris officiating . Burial will be in the Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home from 7 to 9 this
evening .
ROBERT LEE MOREHEAD
Graveside services for Robert Lee
Morehead, 77, Portland , who died
Sept. Tl at Veterans Memorial
Hospital, were held at I p.m . Saturday at the Ravenswood , W. Va .,
cemetery .
Surviving Mr. Morehead are his
wile, Mildred, and several nieces
and. !l~hews. He was a son of the
late' 'Charles and Margaret Garren
Morehead. The Ewing Funeral
Home was in charge of services_

President
i Contlnued from page I I
Secretary of State Cyrus R . Vance
and Sovtet Ambassador Anatoly
Dobrymn held an unsc hedu led
meeting at the State Department
Sunday afternoon .
However, the administration
maintained its virtual silence on the
enti re Cu ban issue with State
Department spokesman Davtd Nail
declining to give any indication of
the purpose of the&lt;f4-minute meeting
or even which side had instigated it .
Later , Vance met at the White
House for three hours with other top
administration officials including
Secretary of Defense Harold Brown
and presidential natiooal security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski .
l,eibach said that meeting had
been scheduled previously to discuss
the president's speech and was not
specifically related to the Vane~
Dobrynm meeting.
(\s Carter a nd administration
officials worked oo their response to
what U.S. offic ials insist are Soviet
com ba t troops in Cuba, .. ·castro
"challenged" Carter to tell the truth
about what the Cuban leader
portrayed as ·• an invented crisis"
and "a comedv ."

a patient at Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Point Pleasant, W. Va .
Cards may be sent to Room 143 .
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F XAM, will
hold a regular meeting at 7:30p.m .
Wedneaday at the temple.
Ali
Master Masons are invited.

SUSAN F. WHALEY
Groveside Mtes for Susan Fay
Whaley, infant daughter of Paul and
Carolyn Price Whaley, Route I,
Long Bottom, wbo died Sunday at
Camden-Clark Hospital in Parker sburg, W. Va ., will be held at 2 p .m .
Tuesday at the Mt. Olive Cemetery .

VASim M. GRIMM
Mrs. Vashti M. Grinun, 83, Letart
Falls, died Saturday at the Chri.!t
Hospitalln Cincinnati.
Mrs. Grimm was born May 5, !896,
a daughter of the late Josephus and
Etta L . Smith Plckerut .
Also
preceding her in death were a son,
William C. Grimm, and her
husband, Ernest Grimm .
Surviving are a daughter~n -law ,
Edith Grimm, Kenton ; two granddaughters, Patricia Tarr, Cuyahoga
Falbi, and Barbara Brutvan, Cin·
clnnati ; four great~randchlldren ;
four slster. , Wilma McClintock,
Point Pleasant ; Virglnla Quillen,

·.a·

~,.o.
·d
.
. l:·l .:

A marriage license was issued to
Lawrence J . McGraw, 33, Gallipolis,
and Jo Ann McLaughlin, 33, ll!l· 3,
Pomeroy.

~., · •I_ • •·

.

MEE ll! nJESDAY

The Middleport Garden Club will
meet Tuesday at 6:30p.m. at the fire
house. A harvest dinner will be served . Hostesse!l are Mrs. Dcrothy
Roller, Mrs. James Arnold and Mrs .
Judy Arnold .

VETERANS MEMORIAL

NEW SHIPMENT

CREST
UNIFORMS
AND

PANT SUITS
JUN lOR SIZES

3 to 15
MISSES SIZES

6 to 20
HALF SIZES

to 26th

Stop In on the 2nd floor - •••

all the new styl1s and
matnlals. Select wt'lat you
need.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

.

'

, ·• ~·.
' '

.

LEBANON, Ohi o 1AP1
Village Manager Forester Gross
said he hopes residents wtll be
able to stop boiling their drinking
water by the end of the week.
The village water system has
been con lamina ted s ince Sept . 14
when the flooding little Miami
River covered the Warren Count y
·city 's two water wells.
Gross said tests showed acceptable amounts of bacteria m
most of the system this week .

suit for dlvo~ against Bonney L.
Shaffer, Pomeroy. Ephriam Von
Herdman , Rt. 2, Pomeroy , and
Gloria Jean Herdman, Pomeroy,
filed for dissolution of marriage .

Saturday Admisslons-Leona Hubbard, Syracuse.
Saturday Discharges-Herschel
LeMaster, Anna liter, Nancy
Manley, Billy Brewer, Matthew Van
Vranken, Mildred Bissell , Ellene
Smith, Clarence Norria, Nola Bradshaw, Willlam Weaver, Jr., Earl
Clark, Alicia Evans.
Sunday
Admlsslons-Blanche
Bral'i/, Rutland; Elwyn Yost, Middleport; Brian Wlllis, Pcmeroy ;
William
Donahue ,
Pomeroy;
Th&lt;mU Sayre, Portland; Kenneth
Reed, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges-Oara Pullins,
Mary WeUman, Julia Pennell, Una
McDaniel, Donald Lovett, Audrfa
Swick, Bonnie Walker, Wesley
Cochrn, Wendell Barrett.

.

:-;:;;~':

Must boil water

Couri.
Lula V.Shaffer, Pomeroy, filed

HOMECOMING PARADE SET
Soutllem Local High School will
stage illl homecoming parade on
FMday, Oct . 12, leaving the high
school at 2 p .m .
Any group or organization wishing
to participate Ia asked to contact
Cindy Warden, 94~Z7211 ; Crista
Beegle, 949-2001, or Meg Amberger ,
992-6115 before Wednesday, Oct . 10.

,,

"y: ,,

-~ ;

. .. . in the wotld ·:.

TO END MARRIAGES
A suit for divorce and an actioo for
disaolutlon of marriage have been
filed 1n Meigs County Common Pleas

ELBERFELDS

W 12

~{

SEEK IJCENSE

WOMEN'S

Serving the area's banking need$ since •904·

NU II ~

VOL XXVIII

ADA VICKERS
Mrs . Ada Vickers, 89, Route 3,
Pomeroy, died Sunday at the Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolville .
She was born July 10, 1890, a
daughter of the late Wllliam and
Sefronla Smith Jobes. Besides her
parenl8 she waa preceded in death
by her husband, Roy Vickers ; five
sisters and a brother. Several nieces
and nephews survive.
Funeral services will be held at I
p.m. Wednesday at the Ewing
Fwteral Home with burial to be in
Beech Grove Cemetery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
anytlmeafter4p .m . Tuesday.

h was in 1904.

•

/

an get.., 18 years

A

COVINGTON. Ky . 1AP1 Howard D Kelly, 2!1. was se ntenced to a total of 18 years in
federal prison a fte r pleadtng
guilty to the $3 70,1XXJ robbery of a
Wells Fargo m oney truck June 18
tn Newport, Ky.
Howard T . Kalsbe ck . 49 ,
Kelly's the fa ther. had been given
the same sentence earlier and
will be eligible for parole in three
years, accordUlg to U.S. District
Judge Eugene Siler Jr .
However. Kelly. who uses his
mother's maiden name. will not
be eligible for six yea rs. Siler
noted Kelley 's previous felon y
conviction in Rochester. N.Y.
The patr was arrested by
federal and state officers in
Rochester . All the cash was
recovered .

Trip cut short
SPENCERVIIJ.E . Ohio !AP I
Thunderheads and snow
caused the c rew of the DaVinci
Trans-America to cut short thetr
effort to make the first tran scontinental balloon flight at
around midnight Monday .
The four crewmembers were
taken to St . Rita's Medical Center
m nearby Lima where Ver•
Simons , the onl y woman aboard ,
was admitted for treatment of a
broken leg . Hospital officials said
she was the only one treated for
injuries . She was listed in fair
condition.
The cr ew descended near this
western Ohio city inside the 100foot high balloon 's gondola .
The crewmembers, in addition
to Ms . Simons of McLean, Va .,
were Fred Hyde, an eye surgeon
from Prairie Vllage Kan . :
Rudolph Engelmann of Boulder.
Colo. and NBC-TV cameraman
Randy Birch.

Plane crash ian
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPl - A
twin-i!ngine Rockwell Aerocommander ail;llane crash-landed in
a soybean field in dense fog and
caught fire about 600 feet short ol
a runway at Den Scott Airport in
Columbus Monday morning .
The pilot, Robert Dearing, 50,
of Louisville, Ky ., the only person
aboard the pl1111e, was not Injured, the Ohio Highway P~trol
said.

HUD gran t to extend the se wage
system . Council wtll study the con tracts before any decisions will be

made ~

Also meeting with · council was
Hank C land, local realtor . Cleland
informed councU that he had an out
of town buyer interested in property
on East Main Street and asked if the
sewage line would go up as far as the
traffic light at the mtersec tion of
Nye Ave. and East Main.
Counc il does not know as yet how
far the line will go With the funds
available. It is felt , however, that
the line will possibly go as far as the
traffic Ught.
Counci l.
und er emergen cy
legislation, passed an ordinance
which authorizes the Board of Public
Affai rs to enter into an agreement
with the Ohio Power Co. to provide
electric energy to operate the
municipal sewa!(e system of
Pomeroy Village.
GraVel that was placed on the upper parking Jot by the Pomeroy
Chamber of Comme r ce was
discussed by council. Council agreed
tha t tf the gravel is not moved by
Od. 15, it will be moved by the city .
Larry Wehrung , councilman, announced that pe rso ns having
problems with cable TV are to con tact PoinTView Cable by phone . The
cable company has a 992 number
and it is listed in the phone directory.
The Board of Public Affairs was
granted pennission to advertise for
a truck chassis.
The report of the Chief of P olice
showed that the department collected $1,551.50 from the parking
meters, investigated 2:J accidents.
made 24 arrests and drove 4,757
miles .
Council voiced disappointment m
the report feeling that co llec~ons
and arrests were ver y low .
Council voted to purchase two
trucks of salt and agreed that the
streets in 'he downtown section will
be cleaned once a week .
The meeting was opened by
prayer by Lou Osborne . Attendmg
were Mayor Clarence Andrews,
Ja ne Walton, c lerk, Os borne.
Wehrung , Brown , Karr. Young, and
Betty Baronick, council members ,
Chie f Jed Webster, and Dennie
Ward .

Patron s encouraged
to attend session
Mei gs Local Sc hool patrons are
encouraged to attend a talented and
gtfted conference Friday, Oct . 19,
7:30p .m . and Saturday, Oct. 20, 8 : 4~
a .m . to 12 noon a t Ohio Uruverstly
Inn. Athens .
Dan E . Morris, director of
curriculum and instruction and
federal programs . sa1d today the
c onfe r e nce theme wi ll ~ e
" llecomU!g Aw r re of the Talented
and Gifted Children " wtth Dr .
Dcrothy Stsk, fot.ner dire ·tor of
H.E .W. Office of Education, Gifted
and Talented Office as the spea ker .
Saturday's program will featur e
TAG programs establis hed in
Marietta and Upper Arlington . A
new TAG film. "It's Cool to be
Smart" will be shown on Saturday .
The program L5 made posst ble m
part by the Ohio Program in the
HUITUlllibes under a grant from The
National Endowment for the
Hwnanlties. Morris indi ca ted that
plans are underway for the
esta blishment of a local co uncil for
talented and gifted st udents .

Gold soars again
LONDON 1 AP i - 'Gold soared to a
re(:ord $440 an ounce Ln IJJ ndon
tod ay and $436ln Zunch. The dollar
dropped .
The !JJndon ju mp of S21i . 75 from
Monday's lat e pnce was the b1ggest
one-day rise seen li1 the bullion
market here.
Market men described the tradmg
, as fran tic turmoil
One dealer predicted the prt ce Will
soon reach $50(f' an ounce " bee a~
everyone wants to buy and no one
wants to seU." .
Gold also r&lt;lf" in Ron g Kong.
jumping $24.86 to $419 .24 from
$394.38 Monday .

COURTDATECHANGED
All county court CJlSes scheduled
for Monday, Oct. 6, will be heard
Wednesday , Oct.. IO, due to the courthouse being closed Columbus Day .

•

FAI,L FESTIVAl . ENTERTAINMENT - Francis Andrews, standing wtth violin , left, and his group w1Jl be featured as part of the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center fall fcsltval en tertaUlffient rriday from II a.m to 8

p.m. in Pomeroy Other activities will include a country store, games,
plenty of good food , applebutter making and a cake decorating contest.
Another attraction will be Kenneth Ward of Bidwell, right, who will
provide additional entertairunent. The public is mvited .

Carter's alternatives fail to
untie knot, critics say
WA SHI NGTON
1API
Cong ressional cnllcs say Pres ident
Carter's Cart bbean UlttJatives have
failed to untie the knot hnk ing the
SALT
treaty w1th tile Soviet brn
Cuba '
in hts speech to the nalton Monday
mght . the pr.,;1dent outhn L'&lt;l plans to
Increa se U .S ~ urvt!illanc e of
rrulitary actlvtttes Ul Cuba , bolster
the U.S Nava l and mtlttary
presence m the area and speed m or ~
atd to those Latin American natwn s
wh1ch feel threatened by the SovietCuban al liance .
At the same tune h e repm1cd that
h~ has been gl\'en "assuran ct~S from
the htghest levels of the SoVJet
gov~ nunent " that the bn~ade of
Russtans are mdeed engaged only'"
trammg and that they will not be
used to lhreat t&gt;n an vu m•

\1

Board

Rut the Carter speech d1d little to
sway e n tics of the admin istration 's
foretgn polic y, many of whom
comp lamed that the presiden t failed
to keep hts pledge to change the
status quo m Cuba by n egotiatin g
withdrawal or dtsma ntlmg of the
br igade .
"No. we are not gomg to push
forward w1th SALT unlil the SoVIet
troop question IS resolved, " s aid
Se n. Roben Dole : R-Kan ., one of
se veral
GOP
prc s tdenttal
eonte nde r s who comm~nted .
Sen Char le s McC Matil1as. RMd ,
referrtng
to
th e
admintstratton 's early h a ndling of
the Cuban nap, said the president
spent most of the spe€ c "trymg to
deal wtth a self-inflicted wound ."
Sen . Cha rles H Percy, R-ll l. sa 1d

optimistic~

The Meigs Local School District
teachers strike moved into its seventh day Tuesday morning with a mixture of pessimistic and optimistic at titudes following a meeting of
negotiating teams ln Nelsonville
Monday night.
The attitude of the administration
reflected by Davtd G leason, superin tendent of the district , appeared optimistic Tuesday m orning although
he did state that no significant
progress was made at the Monday
mght meeting The statemen t of
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, president of U1e
Metgs Local Teachers Assoc iation.
this morning re fl ected a gloomy piCture follow ing the Nelsonvi lle
meetmg
Gleason had this t o say this mor ning
" Last m!lht at 4:30p.m., the nine
members of the negotiations team of
the teachers · associa tion and the
Jx·.rd 's team met in Nelsonvi lle .
The overall atmosphere seem ed
positi ve even though no significan t
progress can be reported .
" We have another negotiations
session set for Wednesday afternoon
at 3:30p.m . We are oplirntsttc that
some progress can be made at this
meeting which can be taken back to
the association's voting body .
" Again our schools are open . We
do have qua lifi ed personnel in every
building . We have several parents
who have volunteered in va rious
buildings and they are domg an out-

Formt•r H io proft·...... or

filt·.., -. uit i 11 l'ou rl
Chargmg he was dtsrntssed for
crtt tr breach of con tract
Sa1d M. Karara. who coordinated
the college's mmmg technology
program, ~- laims the colle~e · s dean
tennmated hts $21,279 contract for
the !971!-79 academic year beca use
he criticized promotion polt ctcs by
the school admuustratwn
Named 1n the su 1l as code fendants are college dean Ronald
V. Easley , college President Paul C.
Hay es and college PI'O\'OSI Clyde
(:;vans .
The complaint states that m
August 1978. Karara criticized dean
Easley 's " raptd promotion from
teacher to associate dean to dean
wtthout compliance with alfirmat1 ve
actton gutde lines."
Ka ra ra wa s d ismissed in
November . The suit charges he
rece1ved no due process heanng
prior to his dtsmissal .
Karar a is seekmg reinstatement
and $100,000 in damages .

that what he sees as the president's
mabtl ity to change th e status quo
"will cau~ me to be mor e secure m
my vote agamst th e SALT treaty ."
" I thmk thts leave s us right where
we were ," said Sen . Jake Garn, RUtah . a prmcipal SALT II opponen t.
But a senior administration
offtctal
who has be-en closely
rnvolved m mtense negotiations with
the Soviets on the troop tSS Ut:! said
the status quo has in fact been
changed by the presidential order s
m creas m g the C .S. m tlt lary
prese nce near Cuba and by SoVlet
assurances that their troops in Cu ba
·wtll not be a th reat to the Untted
States or to any other nation · ·
Sen . !'rank Chur ch. D-ldaho .
cha trman of the Senate Foreign
Relal!ons Comm ittee , ca lled the

Soviet assurances, said to have
come persona lly from Soviet
Pres1dent
Leontd
Brezhnev ,
·· welcome bu t insufficient."
"I continue 10 believe that before
the treaty fTiay take effect the
&amp;nate will lllSISI on an affinnation
by the president. backed up by our
own intelligence , that Soviet combat
for ces are no longer deployed in
Cu ba ,' ' l'h urch satd.
The president said the Cuban
controve rsy must be kept in
perspective He maintained it is no
reason for a rebi.rth of the co ld war.
And he satd tf it led to tlle
destruction of the SALT II treaty,
the Umted States would be forced to
ltve li1 a world " in which every
cot1 frontatton or dispute could carry
the seeds of a nuclear confl1ct."

teachers pessimistic

standing job. We woul d like to commend all those people for their
tremendous effort . We urge you to
send your children to sch ool and we
also urge you to volunteer to help in
this time of need .
" As we have mentioned before, we
do not want you to get down on our
teac hers . F.ducation today takes all
of us - par ents, teachers, adrrunistrators and kids - to overcome
the extreme hardships and
pressures of our complex societ y.
We must look a head to when this
cn sts is ove r . 1And 1t Will be over
sometime. 1 Let's be positi ve and
let 's not forget that we are gotng to
need a lot of help tn making our
school system the kind of system
that meets the need of all our
kids - help from you. from me, from
U1e board and from ~ur teachers "
TEACHERS SIDE
Mrs . Ftsher had the followmg
statement this monun~ :

Juveniles charged
in two B&amp;E cases
Two br eaking and ente ring offenses were solved in one hour after
they were discovered Monday afternoon by the Middieport Pol1ce
Department.
Po~ce Chief J J Cremeans satd tl
was discovered after 12 nooo Mon day tha t the Hackett storage
building on Pear l St ., and the Ford
storage building, also on Pearl St .
had been illegally entered . Tools
estunated to he worth between $400
and s:;oo were 'ta ken from the
Hackett_ building and vehicle keys
and other ite'1 from the Ford
building .
"'¥
Charges Will be filed against two
juveniles All of the items taken
were recovered Chief Cremeans
Said .

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called to the fire station at II : 12
p.m . Monday for Delbert Lawson,
Minersville, who had been taken to
the station apparently suffering
from a heart attack . He was taken
to Holzer Medical Center by the
·squad .
At 6:12p.m. Monday the unit went
to Mechanic St. for Paula Derenberger who had fallen . She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was treated and
released .

'1'oday is the seventh day of the
teachers ' strike and everything ts
status quo .
" Ninety-nine percent of the
students in the district are not in
schools. Contrary to the superinte ndent 's r eport, attEndance is not
on the rise as both Monday and
Tuesday there was a stigh t dectine Ul
attendance . Seven non-members are
staffing two schools by crossing
picket lines and two oul-&lt;&gt;f-count y
s ubstitutes are in a building with approximately 20 students.
Till s
buildmg is one that ha' three nonmember teachers.
·'Teachers are being harassed
datly by administration, board
members a nd the Parkersburgbased security guard
"Negotiations are at a standstill
After Monday 's m eeting, all
unresolved items remain that way .

No end is in sight for the strllle . The
Metgs Local Teachers AMociatlon
would like to state again that the
schools should be closed until thJs
situation is resolved .
"The association would like to
po int out that the Meigs Local Board
of Educatioo is virtually nonetistent . The five elected and appointed members have turned over
our schools to a stranger who does
not even live in our county.
Desp1te repeated attempts to contact the board. the public has had little or no access to the members. No
pubUc board meeting has been held
st nce the first day of the strike .
·We would like to urge citizens of
:'oletgs Local District to can their
board members and provide them
with their opinions. The board main ·
tains they have received no contact
from the local citizens ."

Middletown strike ends
The Associated Pnss
Middi etown teachers ended a nineday strike Mooday after approving a
tw&lt;&gt;-year contract offer Sunday .
Settlement of the Middletown
walkout leaves more than 1,1 00
teachers off the job in three other
Ohio districts . About 22,1ll0 students
are affected by the walkoul8 .
The
Middletown
Tea chers
Association sai d 1t had won a 4 percent salary increase sta rting Jan . I,
and that salaries would go up
another 10 percent, depending on
passage of a tax levy .

doth i 11g, fum it ure
The Charles Ohlinger fami ly i:; in
need of c lothing . They lost all their
personal belongings when the trailer
home they wre living in was
destroyed by fire Sunday morning.
The home was located on SR 143,
Homer Hill .
~- "The family of six, four children,
needs the following clothing : boys'
pants, si2e 12 to 14; shirts, size 14 ;
and size 3 and one-llalf shoes : boys'
pants , 29 waist and 32 length ; shirts,
sile 18 ; size 7 and one-half in shoes ;
boys'pants, size 7; shirts, 6to 8; size
12 in shoes; girls' clothing , slacks,
size 14 ; blouses, ,size 14 ; size 6 in
s hoes; mother, 9-!ll-12 in slacks; 32
or small in blouses; size 6 and onehalf in shoes; father, panl8, 38 waist
and 30 length ; large in shirts ; size 11
inshoes .
.
Those wishing to donate clothing
are asked to call 992.JS37 .

..

The strike kept 640 teachers off the
job since Sept. 2! . Schools had been
closed in the 11,000-pupil district since last Tuesday . Contract talks had
been going on for four months.
Meanwhile, strike!! continued in
the Ohio Valley Local, Meigs l..ocal
and Lorain school districts .
Teachers in the Ohio Valley
district turned down a contract
proposal over the weekend. The
strike by about~ teachers is now in
its sixth week.
'l;eacher spokesman Richard
Frankhouser said the latest proposal
was turned down by a vote of !Bfl.-6.
The teachers are under a court order
to continue negotiations until a contract agreement Ls reached. Six
thousand pupils in Adams and parts
of Highland and Brown counties are
affected by the walkout.
No progress was reported ln the
strike by 140 teachers in the 28,000pupil Meigs Local School District,
headquartered in PoJperoy. the
walkout moved into its second week

·~:?-~r.,.:.,·:·:-:-:·:·:-:·:·:·:':·:· :::'::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::,,,,,:
EXTENDED FORECAST

Partly cloudy 'lbnnday, fair
Friday and Satnnlay. ()aly mluor

dally varladooa In temperatura
with blgba arODDd 10 aad Iowa In
the 401.
::: : : :: ::;:::::::: ::::::::::::: ::::::;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :~~;;.:x:x:::::::

Weather

Partly cloudy tonight wtui lowllln
the low iiCM. Variable cloo"''DNI
Wednesday with highs In the mid to
upper 80s. The chance ol rain Ill per.
cent tonight and Wedneaday.

�'

'

;

2- The Datly Sentinel, M1ddl eport -Pome ro) 0 Tu sd
"-' ·• e ay , vd 2,1979

----------~-- ~
'71

3fEJN

Editorial opinions,
comments

RVCJ.~.y

h L4

William Steif

Revamping Social Security

cause .
The flap over Soviet combat
troops in Cuba, a crisis large! v of the
administration 's own maki~, has
unquestionably interrupted the
momentwn for treaty ratification
that had been steadily buililing in the
Senate .
But the damage thus far 1s more
apparent thar reaL With all the
fussing and fulminating that has
emanated from Capitol Hill in recent
weeks, only one senator - Russell
Long of Louisiana - has actually
come out against SALT and linked
his decision to the Cuban situatiOn .
Long is a wily and 10fluential
pohtlcian Iand one who is runmng
for re-..lechon next year 1, but
nobody ever accused him of ex pertise on defense ISSUes . fur thermore , treaty advocates had
never cherished more thar the fain test hope of wiruung I.ong'ssupport .
"On a scale of 1 to 5 for likelihood
of a 'yes' vote, we had Long at a 4,"
said one White House lobbyist. 'This
just moves him to 5. "
Senate Majority Leader Robert
Byrd effectively prevented Long's
announcement from touching off a
stampede by publicly and privately
urgmg other senators to keep the
whole matter in perspecltve . Soviet
troops in Cuba are certainly
rrntatmg, Byrd conceded, but as a
threat to American security , they
are hardly In the same class as a
nuclear holocaust.
The strategic arms treaty will not
reach the Senate floor for another
six weeks at the earliest , and by then
the political storm over the Cuban
situation should have abate'tl provided that Prestdent Carter and
the Soviets find some "solution" that
allows for face-&amp;ving on both sides .
The other big side issue that has
become entangled in the SALT lJ
debate is the size of the defense
budget over the next five years .
Sa!. SamNunn, 0-Ga.,and anwn-

c.

ber of like-mJnOe&lt;l sel)8tors are In SISting the defense budget should
grow by a " real " 1after mflatwn 1 5
percent a year beginning in fisc al
1981, wrule President Carter IS un ~&lt;1ll10g to ask for more than a 3 percent real growth for those years .
. UnleS&gt; Carter agrees to the rugher
fl~ure , these senators runt . they
won 1 s upport rat1ficallon of SALT
II .
The problem with that, of course,
IS twofold . first, it is not the
president but the C&lt;lngress that
determines the size of the defense
budget - and Nurtn et al. simply
haven't been able to persuade thetr
colleagues that the rugher spending
levels are necessary . So why
" punish" Carter 1and SALT [[) for
thetr own failure to make a con.
vtncing case?
The second obviOus rutch to their
stategy of puttmg the arm on Carter
for a commitment to higher defense
spending IS the likelihood thill he
won't be around to deliver even if he
were prepared to prmruse what they
want.
Moot Senate Democrats , including
several who support Sam Nunn 's
demands for higher defense spen ding, are hoping and praying that
Teddy Kennedy will be the next
president. Rut 1! Nunn trunks Jimmy
Carter ts stingy with the military ,
wa1t unlll he sees the budget a
second President Kennedy would
propose ~

Argwnents over Soviet troops in
Cuba and over the proPe; level of
future defense spending may make
for some lively discussions in the
Senate, which can certainly use a bit
of stimulation, but they are essen ttally irrelevant to ·the rallftcation
tSSue .
When the vote on SALT II finally
comes, every member of the Senate
will be forced to confront the only
question that really counts : Will the
United States be better off with the
treaty or without it'
for all 1ts bobbling on the side
ISSues, the administration has made
a strong case for the merits of the
treaty itself. When the roll is called.
that may yet suffice .

Business mirror .

\

NEW YORK 1AP, - It 1S fall. and
Th e author found chanty to be a
as part of the American ritual,
pPcul1arly Amencon hab1t one that
111dustry ts d1stribut10g Un1 ted Way
nught even be the largest 'mctuStry,
payroll deduction form s to 1ts
but one that IS often 10eff1c tenl
employees , the easaer for them to
unfa1r. 1n voluntary. frequent!}':
make Olear charitable conlnbutwn s .
Irrelevant , anU sometune s rnrrupt
Suppose you don't giVe . W1ll 1t
1\eade rs rn 1ght be apalled, but
matter that your refusal m1gh t
engro ssed . too . In tell10g the story of
hinder prom otion possabilities of
400 cha nt1es, Rakal covers Amenc~::~
your boss, who hea ds the offi ce
- health . wealt11 and culture - with
effort ? Or might embarass the
aneedotes, mten1ews. and personal
company pres iden t. who hea ds the
cxpe n ence s
1n
a
manner
local UW drive '
re1mmscent of .John Gunther and h1s
The Uruted Way , or a s t11 ey say .
" lns l d t~ " book.s . H1s ro mmenLS are
the " put all your be~s 10 one ask-1t ..
HH.' I t I\' ('
approach , us ually w10s support from
local busmess because , among other
things, 1t supposedly ends the
nutsance of repeated requests .
Under UW aegts . local 111st1tUt1ons
are a ll ocated certam swns from one
commumty appeal , generally led by
a prominent local executive whose
WASllll"GTO ~ 1AP 1- The SAL T
charitable instincts sometun es run
II treaty 1s m deeper trouble than
second to his sense of compet1t10n
anyon e thought puss1ble weeks a go
That bemg so , say Uruted Way 's
and 1t may take he lp from the ~me t
critics, charity IS often compu lsory
Umon t.o sa\·(· 1t
rather than voluntary . Cons1der th 1s
:· r·m nut say1n g It looks rosy. ··
segment of letter from an angry
sa 1d Senate Demo c rati C lead e r
West Coast e.ecutive ·to hts laggard
Hobert C Byrd th iS week " Rut I'm
subordinates :
not sayin g th e trea ty IS ready for an
" .. .frankly, our results lo ok
Obituary yt•t. "
terrible. I have bent over backwards
What ha s become 10 c rea sm~ly
seeing that you be given maximum
l1kely IS that the arms control
salary treatment. Next year 1s
agreement will end up m co ld
another year . Will you please Sit
storag e.
down and reconsider your pledge '"
Th e btgg est obstacle holdmg up
All this is from " Charity U.S.A.,"
th e Sena te 's rat•hca t1on of SALT IS
which Times Books soon will have in
th e Sovtet combat bngade in Cuba
bookstores, and which is bound to
and Lhe Lmwil lmgness of Moscow to
kick off more controversies th1s fall
make any gesture lhat might lower
than there are footbal l games or
th e emotional level of the debate
charity kickoff drives.
Sov1 et Fore1gn Mimster Andre1
After five years of dogged
Gromyko, addressmg the United
research and interviews: Carl
Nation s on Tuesday , dismissed U.S.
Bakal, author and social critic
con cern s
by
s a y tn~
" th1 s
bluntly writes that UW, the bigge.;
pr opa ganda IS totally w1thout
fund raiser, "most sacred of
foundation and IS mdeed based on
charity's sacred cows ," ls " giving
falsehoods ."
sour milk.'
Gromyko 's speech was VIewed on
One of his strongest aecusations is
Capitol Htll as yet another example
that the money collected ts often
of Moscow 's lack of understandmg
routed routtnely lo established ,
of U.S. domestic politic s .
acceptable, middle&lt;lass, usually
It gave strength to those who
white charities, while newer causes
argue that the treaty ought to be
have to fight for small change .
shelved until the troops issue IS
The office of Wtlliam Aramony,
settled and possibly until after the
UW 1 S national chief executive, was
1980 presidential election .
told of Bakal's reference to sacred
But what could prove equally
cows and sour milk . It reflected ,
damagmg to the prospects for SAl"T
called back and suggested the
ls the way the administration
author's view was the sour factor.
handled the disclosure of the Cuban
"WI)at is sacred about United
situation and · the perception on
Way, " said Aramony's office, "is Capitol Htll that it was yet another
the- belief in voluntary, private
example of President Carter's lack
initiative and a pluralistic society,"
of understanding of congressional
a society that it said has "room for politics .
authors with poor taste buds. "
What may have been buried by
Other charities are likely to react . subsequent developments is the fact
less charitably; some may compare
that the first public hint something
i!
another bovme product
was awry 10 Cuba ~e from

Washington briefs.
WASHJNGTON 1AP J - Trin1ty
College han hoped for a wave from
Pope J ohn Paul n as he headed for
tlle nearby Shr10 e of the Jmmaculale

ConC't'pt1011
lnstead':&lt;l!l the last day of h1s visit
w th1s c~ untry. the head of the
Homan Catholi c Church will worsh1p
m Trmtty 's chapel w1th 600 Chnst1an
leaders from etght non-{;athohc
churches .
The pope will also use the campu s
as a place to bless 300 ~verel\'
handicapped people, too disabled t~
attend h1s Mass on the Mall later
next Sunday afternoon

WASH!r\GTOI" 1AP 1 - Km~
Husse 10 of J ordan says he wants the
Arab natiOns w hold a summit
met&gt;tmg bdore the t&gt;nd of the year to
wS&lt;·uss Arab-Israeli conflicts .
In the mean tune, he sa1d Sunday
1n a taped 10terV1ew on ABC's
" Issues and Answers," he hopes the
Arab nations can " maybe evolve a
position " on Israel's right to exist as
a natiOn . Hussem 10d1cated he
belwves most Palestinians would
such a pos1t10n .
Hl1S.'l&lt;e10 , considered one of the
more moderate of Arab leaders also
indicated the key to any succ~l
resoluuon to the conflict will be
Israel's wlll111gness to y~eld on the
question of Palest10 1an autonomy .
WASHJV;TON 1AP 1 - Prestdent
Carter 's modifi~d wage and price
gindelm es go mto effect today ,,
mark10~ a second year of the
admmistration program .
InflatiOn now ~tands at a record •
annual rate of 13 percent .
The most VlSible change 10 the
program will iJ&lt;' Pre sident Carter' s
appomtment of a I&gt;-me!)liJ&lt;'r Pay
Ad\'lsory Comm1t\ee and a five member Pnce Adv1sory Corrumttee .
Both will h;:~\· e authonty to

W ashing~o·n today

w

'

&lt;

allegatums bY Sen Htr hard Stone
D-Fla .. a 11;em b€r of th e Senal~
For e1gn He 1 atlons Committee .
Stont' ·s charges that there were
So\'lrt combat t roo ps m Cuba
prompted a dosed-&lt;loor bnefmg for
tll e eomtnltte&lt;• by Del ense Sec Petar\'
Harold Brown .
After tilat l.J nefmg, Sen Frank'
Churc h. D- l1laho, the committee
cha1rrnan . ami S~ n . Jacob Ja\1l S of
New York. th e sen1or Hepubhcan .
Issued a ~tat e rnent that thev had
been a.o;surt.od b y Brown that. apart
from a nuhtary ,;roup that had been
ad v1s mg Cuban for ces for !5 years.
"Our mte lllge nC'€ does not warrant
the conclus10n th at there are any
other Slgn1f1cant 1mhtary forces ~~
Cuba ...
That was on July 27 Soon
a fterward&gt;. Stone released a letter
from Secre ta r y of State Cyru s R .
Vance malung samtlar claims.
A month later . the roof fell m when
.lhr admm1stratwn s a1d 1t had
received new l,nforma: ion that a
Soviet corn bat bngade 111deed was 1n
Cuba .
Prestde nt Ca rter con t10ues to
promise &lt;t satas fa ctDry reso lution of
til(' Si tuation .

But unless th e mood 111 the Senate
c han ges. anything s ho rt
of
Withdrawal of the Soviet combat
troops wdl leave the prospects for
appro val of SALT se v e re lv
underm10ed .
You'll like Pannesan Bis&lt;:uits as
an accompaniment to a salad, soup
or rnam dish. Melt three tablespoons
butter in pie or calte pan. Place onefourth cup Pannesan cheese on a
flat pan or wued paper . Roll one
package i8 oz . ) refrigerated buttermilk biscuits iltto sticks about
three-fourths of an inch in diameter
then dip each one in butter, then

• •

reco mmend changes 1n
the
gUide lines t o the C&lt;luncil on Wage
ard Price Stabolity
The pay board also wtll detennine
whether specific contracts are in
!me with the gtlldebnes .
WASHINGTON 1APJ - The head
of the Soctal Secunty system says
h1s agency ts tak111g ··a more
aggressive stance " to c urb
defections from the system bv state
and local government worke~s.
C&lt;lnumss10ner Stanford G . Ross
say s he believes the number or
g overnment workers who have
dropped Social Security coverage
has been neghgible . But he adds that
" from a public affairs standpomt.
1t 's an unportant tssue, and I'm
going to get more aggressive ."
Two weeks ago, Alaska dropped
Soc1al Security coverage for iL&lt;
14,000 employees , becom10g the first
state to do so.
Ross says desptte the nsmg Soetal
Security tax bite , no one has come
up with a better buy for most
workers - and no private plan can
match a ll its benefits .

Capitol
ideas. • •
WASHINGTON ( AP 1 - It was
time for the speaker to speak and the
clock was runn10g down . But where
was Thomas P. O'Neill Jr'
Rep Jack Brooks, D-Tex., looked
frant ically around the House
chamber for the speaker . He was
nowhere in sight .
Two minutes remained for debate
on the btU creating a Department of
Edu cation
and
0 ' 1\elll
was
scheduled to make the closmg
argmnent in favor .
Fma lly, off to Brooks' right came
a request :
" Would the gentleman from Texas
)leld me one minute ?"
It was Rep. Mtllt cent Fenwick, R:\.J ., a vehement opponent of the
bill
·Hardly," snapped Brooks .
But w1th O' Neill missmg, Brooks
finally relented and gave Mrs
Fe nw1ck her chance f1r one last ca II
for defeat of the bill.
O'Neill !tnally arnved with only
enough tune for a perfuncwry
appea l for support of the new
cabinet department.
The bill passed . It was tune to
celebrate , ttme for Brooks. the
committee chairman, to have his
pi c ture taken with the speaker .
Brooks ts a Wll'Y. bald Texan ;
0 '1\ e tll a massive Boston Irishman .
whose red face is topped by a unruly
mane of white hair .
On ce again , O ' Netll kept Brooks
wa1t10g . The chatrman and the
photographers had to cool their
heels 111 the speaker's office while he
went off to comb his hair .
Ready at last, O' Neill looked at
Brooks and asked : "Don't you want
to comb your hair , too?"
" ] d1dn't need that," replied the

By Wllllam SteH
One thing makes the U. S. SOcial
Security system uniquely different
from other social insurance systems
in the @vanced industrial world .
Our 1125 bUion~-year system, a
quarter of the federal budget, is far
more open, and subject to pressures
of ordmary Americans, than the
systems of West Germany, Japan ,
France, Britain or any othe r
developed nation .
Mind you , our system isn 't any
better . It doesn 't offer more
benefits ; on biiiance it probably offers somewhat fewer. Nor is it finan ced any better - or as well - as
many systems . Nor is it at the
forefront of changing social and
economic conditions : decline in bir th rale8 1 rise of working women ,
shifting view of the handicapped
worker, breakup of families .
But it is open . You can have more
impact on it, and discover how it 11
affect you, much more easily than
the average German. Japanese or
Frenclunan can find out about his
comparable system . Thai's the
American genius .
Social Seeunty C&lt;lrrurussioner
Stanford G. Ross traveled to Britain ,
West Germany, France and Sweden
in early June and discovered this .
He says :
A great deal more work IS
required in the area of forward planning for the U. S . svstem even
though the U.S. syste~ does~ good
deal of this work .
Our projections are made farther
into the future and our findings are
given wide public circulation, which
is often not the case abroad , he adds .
Ross wants to make this publi c Circulation wider and broader . He wan ts people to start thinking about
major problems facing the system
and ask questions about what to do
about them.
That's where you comein .
Ross is cranking up hundreds of
meetings at which you should be
able !&lt;&gt;talk and ask questions regar ding Social Secuntv .
First there'll be. a nattonal sym -

Today in hU!tory
Today isTuesday,Oct. 2. the 275th
day of 1979. There are 90 days left m
the year .
Today's htghltght in '·'-.tory
On thiS date in 1919, President
Woodrow Wilson suffered a stroke
that paralyzed the left stde of h1 s
body .
On this date :
ln 1187, Jerusalem fell to Moslem
forces led by Saladin, the sultan who
was try10g w drtve Chnstians out of
Pa!est10e
In 1780, tlle British officer who
negot iated Benedict
Arnold 's
attempt to surrender West pomt
Major John Andre, was hanged .;
Tappan . ~ . Y .. as a spy .
ln 1889, the first Pan American
Conference was held 10 Wash111gton .
In 1941, in World War It , German
armtes launched an all-&lt;Jut drive
aga10st Moscow
- '
ln 1967, the ftrst black to sit on the
U.S. Supreme Court, T hurgood
Marshall , was sworn 111 _
Ten years a~o : A controversia l
U .S. test of a hydrogen bomb was
earned out underKround in the
Aleutians without sening off the
earthquake that some had feared .
F 1ve years ago . The U.S
suggested a major cutback by oil eonsuming nations in a strategy to
force down world petroleum pr1ces.
One year ago : A huge landslide at

The Daily Sentmel , Mlddl eport -Pom er ov, u .. · t~esda y, Oct. 2, 1979

Candelarr'a vs. Seaver
in tonight's playoff

THE U.S. AND YOU

"'~L,.
r" ~

No nuclear holocaust ·
By Martba Angle and
Robert Walters
WASHINGTON (NEA) - Desptte
the Carter administration's peculiar
talent for snatclting defeat from the
jaws of victory, the SALT II treaty
should not be written off as a lost

J-

posium Oct. 3 at the headquarters of
the Health , Education and Welfare
[)epa rtment in Washington.
Then there are going to be 10
regional meetings : Oct . 29 in New
York ; Oct. 31 , Dallas ; Nov . 7
Clucago; Nov . 8, Kansas City; Nov :
15. Philadelphia; Nov . 16, Boston;
Nov . 20, Seattle; Nov . 27, Denver;
Nov . 30, Atlanta; Dee . 12, l.ns
Angeles .
•
The format of all these meetings is
to bring wgether 80 w 100 community leaders. But that doesn't
mean other people who are looking
for information - or have ideas are excluded .
Most important of all , from
January through next June, Social
Security is planning dozens of local
town meetings . That's where you
can have your greatest impact . To
participate, or to listen and learn,
you should ask your local Soctal
Security office where its town
meeting IS going to be .
There are nearly 1,500 local Social
Security offices throughout the
nation, and they1l be able to steer
you. If you have any questions about
these town meetings, Wlite to Susan
~ubick, Acting Associate CAlm·
missioner for Governmental Affairs,
Social Sec urity Administration ,
Room 639H, Hubert H. Hwnphrey
Building , 200 Independence Ave .,
SW, Washington, D.C, 20201. She's
111 charge of all these meetings.
Ross is eager to put out more, and·
more mterestmg , information about
the system . So you can expect a
barrag~ from TV and radio .
He 's also modernizing the
system's rather fusty !me of explanatory pamphlets. The 1lirst batch, free of course , will be ready
within days . They're entitled "Men,
Women and Social Security" and
"Social Seerutty at Your House ...
Both are good jobs, clear and at·
tractive , and you can get them from
Peggy Rhoades, Associate C&lt;lmmL'&lt;&lt;toner for Public Affairs, Social
Security Administration, Room 100,
Altemyer Building, Baltimore , Md .,
21230

CI NCINNATI IAP I _ Playoff
veterans Tom Sea ver and J ohn
Candelaria, throwing hard afte r
betng hampered by mystenou s
atlments earlier this season, will be
the starting pitchers 111 torught 's
opentng game of the National
League c hampionship series .
Seaver, 16-&lt;i , will open for the
Cinc10nati Reds and Candelana, 149, will start for tlle Pittsburgh
Pirates .
Pittsburgh Manag e r
Chuc k
¥;anner said Candelana "1s fit , 100
~rcent " after bemg bothered with a
recurring ache in his side .
" He says he's ready to pitch ,"
Tanner sa1d . "When he ' s pitch10g
well , there's nobody any better ."
Seaver, out a month w1th back
trouble, came back to win 11 straight
and now says he feels " f10e ."
" I've pitched fewer mnings this
year than I ever have in the big
leagues, " Seaver sa1d . "Bemg

fLORENCE , Ky . I APt - Silver
Solo, ridden by Jerr y Sulli van .
captured tlle $3,700 ,featured eighth
race at Lalmua 111 1:42.1-5 for the
mile Monday mght , and pa1d $15, S6
and $0.20 .
Ne~o The Torch was second, $4
and 13.80 andk Raja Baby, third,
$10.40.
The 7-3 double of Lightning Flight
and Bon Brok prud $32.80 and th ~
LTOWd Of 3,874 bet $568,336 .

u; -

'

h1s play mg day s dwmd hng
·'Thtt ..-xpen enee ttse lf ts m ore fun
tllar th e post -game cel ebra tion," he
sa1d. " Wh en I was youn ~er . I
thou g ht ' That 's th t• u ltim a te
cxpen ence ,
t he
~o s t -gcmH:
cl ubhouse cel ebratiOn .·
" ! learned I was wrong The
ultlmatt.• j oy 1s righ t out th ere . on the
field I e njoy 1t more out ther e tha n
m he re - or when I go off by
myself ."
lro mcall y, Cm cmnat1 's starte r 111
th e se cond ga m e w1ll be r ooku:
Prank Pastore , &amp;- 7, a fLJeballer whu
reminds obser ver s of the yo Wl gt:r
Tom Seave r .

Coleman
•
surprise
selection

Cincinnati fans
hold celebration
•

CINONNATl iAPt "There
aren 't many towns left like thiS
anymore," said Bob Jennings, a
lifetime Cincinnau Reds fan dur10g
a
downtown celebration in
preparaUon for tonight's opening
National Lea~ue Championship
Series .
The downtown area was swept
clean and red and white banners
strung from light posts Monday .
Jazz bands, marching bands,
caliopes and strollmg mmstrels will
greet ticket holders for the Ofl"n10g
game tontght between the Reds and
the Pittsburgh Pirates at Rtverfront
Stad.Jum
A crowd of less than I ,500 turned
out Monday night for the first
evening of e nterta111ment planned by
the Downtown C&lt;luncil .
Those wtxJ turned out were quiet ,
listening w Pete Wagner ' s jazz band
and trv10~ to hear a It ve radto talk

Laguna Beach , Call!. , sent at least
24 expensive homes down htllsides
and
left
o thers
teetenng
orecanously on cliffs .
Today 's birthda ys : Wnter and
film mt1c Rex Reed IS 39 years old
Editor and publisher Oay Felker 1s
S-1 . Former baseball star Maury
Wtlls IS 47.
Thought for today : A habit cannot
be tossed out the w111dow . It must be
coaxed down th e stall's a step at a
time - Mark Twain . American
hwnonst . 183&gt;-1910.

nff. DAIL \' SF1i'MNEL
t L; SPSi~ f

~~~~ ~-·-

show on the square with three Heds
players.
The council cancelled the fans
banner parade . Only
sev en
homemade banners were entered .
Ray Knight seemed the darl10g of
tll e crowd, answering questiOns live
on the rad1o show. The others were
p1lcher Dave llume and outfielder
Dave C&lt;lllins.
The radio show was interrupted
briefly when a woman rushed to the
stage and kissed Krught, bend10g
hun backwards over a chair .
The players all said they were
anxious to start the playoffs,
draw111g more c heers .
"Our super seoul, Ray Shore, has
been with the P1rates for 14 days
now . They are not go10g to surprise
us with anythtng tlley do, " Knight
sa1d of the extensive scouttng
reports compiled by tlle Reds staff

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Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.
8 : 30 to S:OO Thursday till12 Noon

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Mason, W.Va.

773· SS92

Berry's World
•

SAN DIEGO 1AP J - While he' s
not exactly a kid nor dtd he play left
field , J e rr y Co leman wasn t
r&gt;xpected to be tlw new manager of
the San D1ego Padres. And he
adrmts that he d1dn 't expe ct 11 .
either
" lf we'r e gomg W turn th1ng s
around, we're going tu have to bl·
wtlling to do something dtfferent, "
satd Ballard Snuth, tllc Padres·
president , after announcmg Monday
that Coleman would manage the
National League team next season .
The c tx&gt;tce of C&lt;lleman , :i!i , an
infielder with the New York
Yankees for nine years , was rt
surprise , to sa y the least .
lromcall y, h e was seen on national
teieVlslon Sunday mght as th e , ·
Padres' announcer in the new
motion picture . ''The Kid frurn Left
F1eld ," 1n wh1 c h a 12 -ve ar -&lt;&gt; ld
batboy, played by Gary Coieman , IS
named manager of the clu b.
Coleman, who succet.--d s RoKt:r
Cratg at the helm of the Padres, was
the team 's l' o . l radio announcer for
the pa st eight years . Pnor to that , he
broadcast Yankees' ganws for se ve-n
years.
C&lt;ll eman told reporter s at a news

conference that hlS appomtrnent was
"probably a bigger surprise to me
than 1t 1s to yo u - this ts m y la st
challenge I rehsh it. 1 grasp it, and
I'm going to run with tt ."
C&lt;lleman , who has no managenal
experience, compiled ·a lifetime .263
batt111g average wtth tll e Yankees
He was respected as an out&lt;;tanding
defensive mflelder .

Eight -year-old
now record holder
Meigs County has a national
record-holder in the form of e•ghtyear-&lt;Jid Honoree Aikman of Dexter.
Running in a ten-mile marathon
race at Lynchburg, Va . Saturday,
Sept. 22, Hon.-ee set a new national
age group record for e1ght -year-&lt;Jid
women .
Miss Aikman covered 'the course
in 81 · ~to break the previous record
mark of 86 :53 by nearly stx

minuters.
Bill Lindsay of Boulder, C&lt;llorado ,
defeating previous three-time win ner Bill Rogers, paced the 2800 par ticipants with a clocking of 47 ·02 ,
erasing Rogers' record of 47 :47.
Grete Waitz of Oslo, Norway , won
the women ' s divi..'liion in a record
time of 53 :21.

Live Entertainment
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
AT THE INN PLACE

•

9 til 1

LAST SHOT

•

cht!eoe . Place on lightly buttered
baking sheet. Bake 1n 8 preheated
400 deg. F. oven for 10 to 12 minutes
or until goiJen brown. This will
provide 10 soft and cheesy "sticks"

Injured early in the year (..'ust me
about five starts ."
Before Tanner announced Monday
that Candelaria would start the fir st
ga me and Jim Bibby, 12-4, the
set~nd , Candelana refused to adt111t
he would get the nod.
" I know, but I'll never tell, " he
said "Who would you start '"
Seaver,
meanwh ile,
talked
pensively about the playoff series
a nd how hts perspectlv e ha s
change,!.
" R1ght now, I get more enjoyment
out of see111g guys like F'lsh ( pitching
coach BILL fischer 1 and Humic
1pitcher Tom Hume 1enjoy tt than tn
me wmning,' ' Seaver said .
He admitted that the clubhouse
celebratiOn after the Reds had
clmched the West Diviston title
brought back memones of his first
league championship with the New
York Mets.
"The way they were running
around, I could see myself 10 years
ago," Seaver said . " I acted the same
way in 1969 . The excitement
manifests itself 111 different ways
now .' '
He sa1d the thing that hasn 't
changed is the motivation .
, " I love to pttch !love tt more now
than ever. It's the same difference if
it' s June I and there's 2,000 people in
th e stands or if 1t 's October and 1t 's
on natiOnal televtston ," Seaver S8ld .
"I never predicate my effort or the
i.m~rtance of tile game on external
c ~rcwnstances ...
Liv10g the experience of major
league competitton has becom e
more important to Seaver as he sees

LATONIA RESULTS

Teun
Rep John Brademas of Indmna
the House Democratic whip:
complained to reporters that he is
gett10g tired of bemg asked at .;octal
events " If I'm for Jimmy or Teddy "
Wh1ch prompted tlle inevitable
question : " Well, are you for Jimmy
or Teddy ' "
Brademas said some day he 'll
answer the questiOn " but 1n
lndtana ."

-

4 PIECE GROUP FROM

•
•

•
•
•
•••
••

GALLIPOLIS, 0.

.
•

MEIGS INN
992-3629

Meet the Eastern Eagles •• ~
:P • ,

.:

-~ .

'.,
;

Todd Nortou
&gt;-&gt;. l.W lbs .
SophlliJIOre Bark'

·l

•
J

Dave Wolf
lt-1, 177 lbs.
Sophomore End

Johnny Riebel
&gt;·10, 1:;() lbs .
Sophomore Bark

Local
bowling

Den Talk

Thursday Swingers League

By Greg Bailey
Don't pass up the fall fishing
1t
can be superb 1 You might even con·
s ider a weekend camping expedition
and take along a rod and a gun . The
squirrel huntmg 1s exceptiOna l th1s
year and there an_, very fpw wa r·
bles .
National Hunting anJ F'tsrung Da y
was again a b1g success thJs year .
although we had ram nearly all day .
More than 100 persons tumed out at
Hoya l Oak Park to watch and take
part in such things as trapshooting,
muzzleloading , archery , etc Anumber of local businesses c ontributed
money and prizes .
The Jzaak Walton Le ague. Ken
Amsbary Chapter , spearheaded the
event , but the Pomeroy Gun O ub
and the Me1gs Fish and Game
Assoc1al10n gave their financial s upport. \lwnerollii lndt\idual.li fr om
other clubs showed up to lend a hand
1fl whatever way they could . Thanks
goes to everyone . from all us luds .
Deer hunting pennil&lt; are now on
sale and cost $10 .75. A permit 1s
reqwred 111 addition to a 1979 hunting
license Oruo Wlll have a deer gun
season m all 88 count ies thi s year .
The state is divided mto four deer
hWtting zones, and the season dates
for the 1979 deer zones a r e ·
Zone One - i'i ov. 26 through Nov .
30 , buck onl y lfive-tnch antle r
rrunimum 1 Antlerless deer penruts
will be available for selected counties. Kelley 's Island Ls closed to gun
hunting .
Zone Two - l'ov . 26 throW(h ;&gt;;ov
30, buck ooly 1five-Inch antler
minimum J.
Zone Three
Nov. 26 for buc k or
doe . Nov . 27 through Nov . 30 , buc k
only tfive-inch antler nunimum .
Zone f our - Nov. 26 thr oug h Dec
1, buck on ly 1fl ve -m ch antl er
minimum 1. Antlerless deer permits
wtll be available for se lectf'd co un Ues.
Legal f~r ea ml-5 for the dee r gun
season a re a s hotgun us mg u s mgel
baU or nOed s lug, or a smgle s hut
muzzleloadmg nfle of .38 caliber or
larger. Huntin~ hours arc fr om 7
a .m . to5p m
This year free publt c antlerl ess
dee r penmts will be ava ilabl e 1n -Iii
selected coW1Ues of Zon es On e an d
F our An applicat iOn blank for u
public antle rless deer hunt1 ng per mit IS attal' hed to the bottom of the
1979deer permit. HWlters want1n~ to
apply for antler less d eer hunting
perrruts ha ve until Oct. 'lJ. to mall
their appli cations Successful applicaniB Wlll be dctermuned by ran dom computer selecti on and will be
nottfied by ma il The art ier less pe r rruts are valid onl y during the dee r
gun season .
Qualified disa bled v e te rans who
have certification from the Veterans
Administration and are ex empt
from purchasing a huntmg !Jcense or
deer permit may request an antlerless deer penn1t apph cat1on
from the Di vis ton of Wtldl1fe , Ohi o
~partment of Natural Resources ,
Fountain Square. Colwnbus 43224 .
· Applica tions m ust be s ubmitted by
Oct 22.
Landowners may obtain one
family antlerless deer pemut that
allows the lando~&lt;11er or the landowner's children to hunt antlerl'ess
deer on thetr property in coWlties
specified for antlerless pennits.
Only one a ntlerless deer may be
taken per penrut. Landowner application forms wiU be a va ilable at
official deer check111g stat10ns and
county Soil and Water Conserv a lion
Disrict offices . The applicatio"'
must be s ubmited between Oct. I
and Oct 31.
In Zone four , antlerl ess penruts
will be issued for Athens, Belmont,
Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton,
fairfield ,
G alli a ,
Guernsey,
Harrison, Hocking, Jackson , Jefferson, Knox, [jcking, Meigs ,
Monroe, Morgan , Muskingum ,
Noble, Perry, Richland , Ross,
Tuscaraw• s , Vint o n, and
Washington couoties .

The deer longbow h untmg season
will open state wide for deer of either
sex o n Oct. 12 and continue through
J a n. 19, 1980. Hunt10g hours are one half h our before sunrise to one-hall
hour afte r s unse t . I ..ongbow season is
cl osed dunng the deer gun season .
The prurullve weapons deer hun ting s eason will be Oct 29 through
Nov . 3 on three specially designated
areas. Buc ks only may be taken
dunng thts season . The hunting
areas are Shawnee State Forest in
Scioto and Adams counttes, Wildcat ,
Hollow in Athens, Morgan and Perry
Counti es and Salt fork Wildlife Area
•n Gue rnsey C&lt;lunty .
New this season is a statewide
prim1 t1ve weapons deer hunt. The
season wtll be Jan 2-4 , 1980 for
e1ther buck or doe deer
Legal huntmg devi ces fur the
pnmitive weapon seasons are single
s hot muzleloading rifles of at least
.38 caliber, muzzleloading shotguns
llSin~ a smgle ball, or longbow and
arrow .
Deer crossbow ts open statewtde
for de€r of any sex Dec . :l through
Jan . 29, 1980. Hunting huurs are onehalf hour before sunrtse t o one-half
hour after sunset. Crossbows must
have a worltlng safety and a onepiece stock more than 251nches long .
Hunting of all wtld anunals except
deer and waterfow l is prohlbited
statewide during the daylight houFS
of the deer gun season , the daylight
hours dur10g the statewide primitive
weapons season , and durmg the
priinitive weapons sea'Jon on the
three primitive weafXJns area.s fronl
Oct. 29 through Nov 3

Packers
upset
Patriots
r; l l f-:f·: ~ BAY . W1s

1 AI' 1 D&lt;md
passed 15 ya rds to
Au ndra
Th urn p sun
fo r
on e
tu ur·hd own and r an for ano th er,
whilt&gt; ( ;reen Bay ' s yo ung Sl' COndar y
mt~ r C t&gt;pte d f1 n· p a ss t&gt; s a s th e
P&lt;i c k t·rs upst't the \ l• w l·~ng la nd
l'atr1 ots 27- 14 m a :\auor.al Foo tball
Lea gue gaml' ~l onda; n1ght
Wh1te hur '1 .-ompleted 1; of 27
passes for 200 yar ds . an d th e
Pa ck e rs.
2- 3,
sc or ed
t hre e
to uch do wns a ft t' r mtl•rce ptlons of
Stl•ve l~rog an pas.st·s b y safet tes
J ohnnie Gray an d Sten:• l .uke and
corn erback ~lk t.• Mc('oy

\\&gt;1-u te hur ~t

c ;r o ~ an .

:'\ I.' W

Standings for Sept . 27, 1979

Team

Won Lost

Jo hn son 's Mkt No 1
J onn son ·s Mkt . No 2
Hocken berry Pharma cies

26
25

6
7

21

11

H&amp;C P l ant F ood

16

16

Presc r tpt ,on Sho ppe

10
2

22

Te a m 4
20
H tgh game and sen €'s : Johnson's
M ark et N o 1. vonda Jordan 152·409 .
John son ·s M a rket No _~. Opal Casto
199. M ar ilyn Brown ing 545 Hocken ·
berry Pharmac ies, Joan Chasse 156 ·
430 . H&amp; C Plant Food , Lucille Hick ·
man 174 ·3913 Pre cription Shoppe,
F lo Ann e R •tfle 155 401 Team No . .a,
Kand ·y Nu ce 132. Rachel Whitehair

JJB

Splits con v erted · Joyce Mooney S·
10 and J 10 , Optfi Casto 5·6, Bonnie

Ge r ma n 3 10 , Golda PiaN 5 7·9, and
Joan Chasse 5 7

Co! UlllbllS made his first landfall
m the new world on S8l1' Salvador
Island in the Bahamas in 1492.

.-cooo -.s
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Bill Quickel

" Acron from the
Courthouse, " Pomeroy , 0 .
991 ·6617

R&lt;p&lt;e&gt;&lt;nti"l!

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�5- The Datly Sen tmt~l . MuJUieport -Ponwro: . U ., l'ut'sd&lt;:ty . Od 2, 1979

Wedding Fall
plar.t.s made meetzng
•

slated

Wedding plans hl!ve been finalized
for th t:' marriage of Bonnie Ann
Her n . Middlepor t , t o John M.
Haggl'rty .
The weddmg will be an event of
Saturday , October 6 at 2 p.m at th e
F1 r s t
Pr~sbyt e rtan
Churc h ,
Middleport.
A receptiOn will •mmediafe ly
follow the ceremony .
The gracious custom of open
church will be observed .
OOXOLOG Y TO APPEAR - On Thursday evening. Oct. 4. the
evening service o! the revival •t Asbury United Methoc!Js t Church will
feature the gospel music o! "Doxology ." Doxology. whose name mean s
"an expression o! praise", endeavors to share the love and joy o! Christ
through an easy-listening style of gospel musi c. Us mg the aceompaniment of an e lectr ic piano , the five-member group presents a
varied program through the LLSe of different voice combmallons, s1ngmg
harmony which ranges !rom two-part to five-part . Smn• begiruung this
mmistry a! music m November of 1977, Doxo logy has sung in churches m
much of central and southeastern Ohio . They have recently completed
their first albwn, entitled "A G1ft of Pra1se " The members of the g roup
include Tom and Pam Sager . Bev Bush . Janet Osborne, and Bruce Piper.
Tom and Pam live u1 Athens, Ohio, whe re Tom pastors t he Richland and
Clark.s Chapel Uruted Methodist Churches . Bev. Janet, and Bruce aU live
in Johnstown, Ohio, where they are acti ve 111 the Miller Un ited Methoc!Jst
Church. The Asbury United Me thodiSt Is loca ted at Syrac use. Pastor Ha r vey Koch and Doxology cordialy tnvJ te ttw r ubl1c t ( l ::~tte m.l the serv J('e ,
which wlll begin at 7 · 30 p.m .

Shower held
A layette shower was held recen tly honoring Myra McKinn~ith
Shi rley Tyree and Anna Me
ey
as hostesses .
·
Gam~s were played a nd cake, ice
cream, potato chips , and pop were
served
. O!! ..bi.. lyjeKinney won the door
.

pnze .

s f1eld , M ll , f:n11a Smith . Be r nadette Anderson, and Patn c1a Ar-

A1TEND MEETING
Four persons from Ute Meigs
County Umt of the American Cancer
Society attended the 34th annua l
meeting of the Amencan Cancer
Society, Ohio Division , on Saturday
Sept. 15, which was held at the
Columbus Hilton Inn, Columbus .
Attending were Dr . WUma Man-

The fall conference to be held on
Oct. 11 at Lithopolis was announced
at a meeting of the Racine American
Leg ion Auxiliary, Post 602, held
recen tly a t the hall. Several members plan to attend .
Thelma Walton presided at the
meeting during which time. a communication was read from l.nrem~
Snyder on memberships . It was
noted that four boxes of ribbons have
been sent to the Veterans Hospital in
Dayton . Mrs . Frances Roberts , who
had the opening prayer, attended the
school o! Instruction which was held
by the Auxiliary recently .
Thank you notes we re read !rom
the Easterday family , Mrs
Margaret Houdashelt, and the
Rhodes family . The travelmg prize
donated by Beulah Neigler was won
by Leora Young. Officers ' re ports

nold .
(' harl es

A !luha y . M.D., tn·
temationally known breast can cer
spt· clalt ~ l
wa s the p r inc 1pal
speaker . Spt•r• al guest was Joe
Feeney, noted lnsh tenor on the
Lawrence Welk Show.

Others attending were Nakurna
Tyree , Evel~11 Grueser, Vivi an
Phillips, Lucy McKinney, Carla
McKinney, Ryan McKinney, Heath
Ric himond . Greg McKinney, Love
lla tey, Katrina Matheny, Juanita
Owens. Irene Phillips , Brenda
Walters and Cara and Jan Davis .
Sending gifts were Betty Batey
and Andrea, Bill McKinney. Grace
Welch, Daten Phillips, Dorothy McCloud, Handy Osborn. Richard
Owens. 1-:ugene McKirmey, Max.ine
Burns , Bud McKinney, Patti Boyles ,
and Lucille and John Harrison .

were given.
Mrs . Shirley Ables and Mrs . Julia
Norris served re!reshiments. Membership dues are now payable . Mrs.
Roberts will have re!reshiments at
the October meeting .

PTO meets
RACINE - At a meeting cf the
Racine PTO held Monday night at
the school, several money making
projects were discussed.
Shirley Carpenter, president, conducted the meeting during which
time it was agreed that the group
will collect Post Cereal boxtops,
Campbell's soup and bean labels,
and labels from Swanson carmed
products . As for fund raising projects, further discussion will be held at
the October meeting .
The pledge to the flag and the
Lord's Prayer opened the meeting .
Linda Holter gave the secretary's
report , and Pam Diddle, the
treasurer's report . Several committees were appointed . The room
count was woo by the second grade
with 12 present .
Next meeting wtllb e on oct. 15 at 7
p.m .
(

........
Yellowstone. created in 1672, was
the first national park in the country
end the world .

PccPtlsVcwll

••

13" PIZZA •
Your choice of any •

•

one lopping . ····~

iit~O'Si=· ····-·
L

AU LOCATIONS

BOWHU TE

I Our Reg . 49 .96

Ben Pearson ·
'Mirage' Bow

Whitetail
Hunter · Bow

Bear · Polar L.T.D. ·
Compound Bow

Com pou nd b o w ha s
2- pulley st yl e 50 -lb
p ull a nd 50' , dro p -o ff
Magnes•um nse r

3·p os itlo n
we1ght ·
c on tr ol sys t em A d ·
JUStable over 10 lbs
Power-tap e red l•mbs

L1ke hav1ng 3 bows 1n
1' Can be set 1n the
field at 50 . 55. or 60lbs . Magnesium nser s .

~----------------------

Susan Well was selected as
" Valentine Girl" of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorori ty
at a meeting he ld Tuesday night at
the Columbia Gas C.o. office .
During the meeting, fall acti vities
were planned including the rush party held Thursday night at GraC€
Episcopal Church " Around the
World With Beta Sigma Phi .. was
the theme of the party.
Kathy Doidge reported that in stead of a Christmas bazaar this
year, one will be held at Easter time .
She a lso noted that Santa YJsits will
be carried out again this year
The by-laws were read by the officers, and Connie Dodson noted that
the chapter rece ived a three star
rating from International.
A cake and g ilt were presented to
Cheryl Crow who is movmg tu
Zanesville . Sonya Ohlinger Introduced Sheri!f James Proffitt, who
gave his view on the JOb as sheriff
and the duties o! his department.
Sherrie Abbott and Denise Wolfe
were hostesses . Pledges attending
the model meeting were Patty O.rcle, Nancy Clark, H.honda Cond e ,
Linda Paulk, Brenda Hill, Debbie
Jones , Joyce Quillen , Jennie Srmth .
Darla Thomas a nd l.ori Warner .

'Lost BorJks '
program topic

r---:
Socit~l Calendar

l

TIJESDAY
HOMEMAKERS UNLIMITED
Cl,ub Tuesday 7:30 p .m . at Athens
County Savings and Loan. Program
on dried !lower arrangements .
Public invited .
PORTLAND 1'1'0 Tuesday 7:3(,
p.m . Jolm Constanzo will be
s peaking during the pare nt
awa r eness session. Plans lor fall
carnival will be finalized . Everyone
welcome to attend .
RUSS AND TilE Gospel Tones
Sunday at 7:30 p .. at North Bethel
United Methoc!Jst Church .
SUTI'ON ffiWNSlflP Trustees
Tuesday 8 p .m . at Syracuse
Memorial Building.

Mrs. Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Ma n
Martm
· r p
t. th
·
, e resen lng e Amencall
Legion Auu!I
f ",
ary o "'' ew We bster
Post 39 and M · C
Sa
.
•
·· ion 710 ,
Eiaht and D e1gs
rt ounty
h
~
r O Y,
a ve returned
from Indianapolis, Ind ., where they
attended the Heo
c. 1 .•
hiOn u eauers h.ip
Conference ·
.
Mrs · Knapp and Mrs · Ma rt In
a r t:'
co-dlainnen of veterans affcurs fur
the Auxiliary . Mrs . Mar!Jn IS a lso
thenatlonal EJaht
d f
ort y par1 h an
nership cha,·rman
·
John M · Car ey was c hainna n for
the confe r enc'e ·tl M ,,
K
WI l rs . · o.6H es t' n ·
al
d
f
.
nedy • nat10 n
presl ent o th l'
Am ·
1..egion Auxiliary , an rl
encan
WI·u; am B . Jackson, coordinator for
the con(erence, active Ln the

weekend meetings

The two Pomeroy represe ntal!ves

MIDDLEPORT Garden Club, harvest dinner Tuesday at 6:30p.m . at
the lire house In Middleport. Mrs
Dorothy Roller will be hostess. Mrs .
J ea nne Bowe n will talk on
"Com ' 'and show some crafts .
i'OMEROY Chapter 186 DES, 7:45
Tuesday night at the Masonic Temple . ElectiOn of officers . Dues are

scout building located behind the
!ire house m Clleiiter . All interested
persons are invited to attend .

CARNIVAL SCHEDULED
A !all carnival will be held at Tuppers Plains Elementary School on
Saturday, Oct . 6, beginning with a
soup s upper at 5 p.m. A carnival will
follow at 7 p.m .

MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

e ('on g re~ ..., and the &amp; nate do not
fo rge t ve tera ns on lhC' G . I. Bill and
of Ulc la ck of conce m for th e veteran
bemg shown 1n Was llmgton toda 'v
Stellar enco ura '.,ed vo luntee r work
m the VA. lluspitals . a s well a s nur s1ng hom es , a nd call ed fur ur\Pnin11
"'
"
post home!':i t o sc n 1or t·Itizens ant!
vet era ns whu a re aw Ci _v fr u111 hom e.
In the A.me ri ca.m sm worl.."-"·,hop
condudt·tl 1u· ) · [la ni e l O'Co1mer , en1ptllit; l.'i WH S on ,.natn ot1sm , wiJI.Ie ' ''
the chil dren a11d yo uth works hop .

BUSH
Mr. and Mrs . fred E . Buch, for•
mer M'ddl
1
eport residents now livmg
In Columbus , announce the birth of a
new granddaughter .
1,auren '"'
uues Graf. e1ght pow1Js ,
10 ounces, was born on Sept. 21 '"
·
,~
... rls t Hospital,
Cincinnati, to Mr .
d
M
W'
an
rs . 1ll •am Richey Graf , Jr ..
· have a
Llncin nati . The Grafs also
h
ld
t ree year o daughter . Lindsay
She pherd Graf .
The baby 's mother. Martha Bush
Graf, was born a t Christ Hospi ta l 29
yea rs ago . The hospi tal was
celebrating its ~ birthday on the
day of La uren's birth .
l,auren is a grea t-jlrandda ughter
a! Mrs . Florence FltLsh Rhodes of
Middleport and the late A. L. Bush
and the late Mr and Mrs . L. D.
Diles . She is the fifth grandchild of
Fred F.. and I .OIS Diles Bush.

HAPTONSTALL
Mr . and Mrs . William Haptonstall,
Rt . 4. Pomeroy , announce the birth
of their first child , a daughte r, Whitney Corrin, born Sept. !6, at Holzer
MedJcal Center .
Mate rnal gr'l/ldparents are Mr.
and Mrs . David Cumings, Rt . 4,
Pome roy . Paternal g randparents
are Mr. and Mrs . Paul Haptonstall ,
Middl e port.
Mate rna l
grea t grandmother is Mrs. Maye
Cujm•ngs, Rt 2, Pomeroy .

In the sea, bving forms which are
too small to direct their own
movement are conside red plankton
whi le nekton are those strong
enough to migrate and swim .

GILMORE
Mr . and Mrs . Michael Gilmore,
ftutland, a re announcing the birth of
twin daughters , born Friday , Sept.
211, at the Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Pomt Pleasant
The infants have been named
Bra ndee Michelle, who weighed five
pounds.-!Jine ounces, and was 18mches long, and Brianna Danielle,
t hr ee pounds, 14 ounces, and 17 inches long
Grandparents are Mr . and Mrs .
Wa rre n D. Black, Rutland , and Mr .
and Mrs . Elza Gilmore, Jr .,
Pomeroy . Geat-grandparents a re
Mr. and Mrs . Burdell Black, Route
4, Pomeroy , Sidney W. Taylor , Mid dleport, and Ms . Nora Gilm ore,
Pomeroy .

TODD RAWLINGS
ASSIGNED
SAN ANTONIO, TEX . - Ainnan
Todd R Rawlings, son of Mr . and
Mrs. Richard W. Rawlings of Route
I, Mason , W. Va , has been assigned
to Corry ~· 1eld, Fla., lor technical
training in the U. S. Air Foce communication system operations field .
The airman, who recently completed Air Foce basic training a t
[,ack!and Air force Base, here ,
studied the Air f orce mission
organization and customs and
received special training in human
relations .
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn cr~ts toward
an associate degree in applied science through the Community College
o! the Air Force.
Airman Rawlings IS a 1979
graduate o! Wahama High Sch ool ,
Mason .

..
fur a close wa v ·h on ie"Isi'. tJ un a f...
,_, ...
fectmg child re n , s uch as c'h!.ld a buse
an&lt;l drug control It was announ c· ••d
'
that Apn! IS you th m onth .

tu Eight a nd F orty , and also noted
oward!-i for increased partnership .
Gifts we re presented to Mrs . Maxine
Martin by the state chapea u .
A jomt banquet was held on SaturAt the Ei ght and Forty meetmg,
da y night wi th Carl Erskine, a forMrs. Maxtne Ma rtin , nati ona l
me r Dodge r , as the speaker . He
chapau , talk ed ·· bout the "·ark w1th
u
children and .Youth . Mr• . Ma ry Mar - ·• talked about his ca reer and h iS
~
fam1ly noting that his fourth child
tin spoke on pa rtne rs hip a nnouncing
was m e ntall y retarded . He talked
the theme " The Purple Ma n• n
a
bout the special olympics a nd the
Seoul, S c out 1nu f o r
Part '
joy
of accomp!ishiment to both the
nership ".( ;oal IS 25 ,000 partner"
~
retarded
c hild a nd the famil y.
with 1,055 new m embers ne€1Jt•" Sh"
"
'
&lt;:rel'l1ngs
were brought by Mrs .
asked that Awu ha r .v memberships·
Kennedy
a
nd
Mrs . Frank Hamilton,
be checkc'd lor JJrospccts lu •nv 1t.. 111 .
'
na t 1u na l com mander of the
Arnenccw LetS ion .
Theme for the Legion a nd the
A=hary this year is "Square Deal
PRODUCTS PARTY
for Eve ry Child " With the goals
WED NESQ,AY
A products party will be held "t 7 ~mg to provide a setting con dud ve
for full potential.
p.m Wednesday at the ltJ ver boat
Workshops were also held on
Room at the Pomeroy Brandh,
econom'ics,
leg islatiOn . rnembf'rsh1p
Athens County Savings and Loa n. by
and
pu
bliC
relations
the Whit e Shrine of Jerusa lem .

Moore family meets
Tbe annual reunion of the Uescen dants of James C. and Ethef tn da
Stone Moore was held Sunda y, Se pt.
9, at the Shriners' Park . Haune,
with 32 relatives and fn e nds
present.
Mrs . Carl Hicks gave grace , and a
dinner as enj oyed. A bak.mg cun test
for best cake and pie was judged by
Rev. Mark Hynn a nd Rev Carl
Hick.s . Winnern we re Patty c.1 rcle,
best cake , a nd Kathryn Windon . bes t
pie
Gifts were presented Mattie Ci r cle, oldest woman ; Garren c.1 rcle .
oldest man ; Grant O.rc!e, youngest
boy ; Becky Lee, youngest girl ; Mr
and Mrs . Dana Fell , Washington
Court House, traveling the fa rthest :
Douglas c.1 rd e, the largest family .
Attending the reunion were Re v
Mark Hynn , Rev . and Mrs . Carl
Hicks, Cecil Eiselstem , James H
Eiselstein, Paul Moore, Mr . and
Mrs . Douglas Circle, Mr . and Mrs .
Larry Circle, Grant and Shane : IJn ·

da and Terry Patterson, Mr . and
Mrs . Harold Hage r , Kim f ott rod .
Martha and Becky 1..,., Mr . and
Mrs . fred B. Smith . Mr and Mrs
Virgll Windon , Brian, Becky, Blair :
Todd Tripp . Mr . and Mrs . Dana
f'ell,a nd Mr. anli Mrs . Arthur Orr .
The ne&lt;t reuruon wil l be held at
Shriners · Park the second SUIIday of
September, 1980.

.-oooo
-····TIMES SPECIAL.

••
•

I

13" PIZZA •

SUPERIORS

CHUCK

TURKEY

CHUCK

one 1opp•ng .•
199
Re g )3 55
J Dayt. Only

1t1n0'si
l.illi·li.l

ere

5!flcard

Our Reg . 7 .9 7
Metric~ Arrows
Aluminum alloy W 1th
Converta® shaft .

B

l t fcard
Our Reg 11 96

DRUMSTICKS ...............................L~~ •• 49~

SUPERIORS

BLADE CUT

ROAST...........................~~·...5

PRODUCE

RED
DELICIOUS

APPLES

1

19

SLICED BACON ..........................L~~--~ 1

BROUGHTON DAIRY 2% MILK......................... ~-~~~ 1.~, ~~~-~~-N .. $1 69
....
BROUGHTON ICE MILK ............................................ -~~~- -~-A~~~~- ... 99 ~

PEPSI
6 PAK
CANS

EGGS Grade A Small ..............,.. ,................................... ~~~~ .. 39~
VALLEY BELL DAIRY COTTAGE CHEESE ........... ,..... ~.~-~~ - ., $119

4 lbs.

3.96

Metric ' Magnum Converta · Arrows 3 Arrow Points

4-Strap Arm Guard

X-7 al loy

Velcro • guard . With
leather backing . Save .

Stro ngest
arrows available .

7
WATER ............. ~~- 9
39¢

2 -31!!:~6 2!?ag

Alum1num shaft. 50
60- lb sp1ne we 1ght

Satellite Point F its any
Co nverta® arrow

HOLSUM KING SIZE

:«.Vi

tt_~

7o~!g

2 t7

Compound-bow Case Camo Bow Tape
Cotton in camouflage
print. Full zipper.

•

Camouf lage tape for
compound bows . guns

7o~!9

20 OZ. lOAF

BREAD....................... .

r;
5~leg6. 96

¢

r-

.U

2 68

Buck Deer Lure
Pure wh• teta•l doe sec ret iOns and unne .

Reg . 6.47

Hunting Sight

O ur Reg . 17.86

Camouflage Suit

4 -pin sighting . Metal 2-pc . Cotton poplin .
Our 2.44, Cap . . 1.88
with dull finish .

49¢
..
'

HOLSUM

8 PAK

BUNS ...... ~~-~-.~~~~~~
PARTY

ICE ....................... ~?..~·..~..

39¢
THURS. ONLY

-5' to 6' Rubber Trees
-5' to 6' Scheffelery Trees
!Umbrella Tree)
- Yucca Canes
-Massa ngeana Tips
(Those are in 4 gal. tubs)
- Dieflenbachia (Dumb One)
-10" Hanging Ferns
----6" Tropical Plants
-Grafted Cacti

RC

FRIDAY ONLY

DR. PEPPER
8 PAK 16 oz. btls.

k~

99 ~

or DIET RITE

$1 09 ·

8 PAK
16 OZ. BTLS.

HOURS 9-5 MON, ·SAT

•

OR

DlET RITE

SATURDAY ONI.. Y

WOLFE'S GREENHOUSE
SR 124, 'I• mile past Southern High Sch~l on the right.

E

GROUND BEEF. ........................... ~~~--~ 1 29 CUBE STEAK ............................... ~~·....s1 99

DISTILLED

47

3 f fe"!Card
Our Reg 5 96

v

ARM ROAST ...............................l~~ •.•5 1 39

ALL STAR .DAIRY BUTTE~ MILK ............... ,..................t·.:.~-~~ .. 89~

~'

A

FRANK IES .................................. !!.~~.. 99~- BONELESS ROAST...................~~·... ~ 149

Le~ths

~~~

1

Your choiC~ of any •

$

ers

E

Buy at vour price on
WMPO 1390 every Wed.,

BAKER FURNITURE

th

v

RADIO
AUCTION
8:45a . m .

Ueforc th e l ..c~ l on 1 ~ to be sure that

children . It was noted that last year
the legiOn and AuXJIJary con ·
lnbuted $780,000 to the special olym '
p1cs program . The speake rs cal led

Bzrt
• hs announce d /oca //ry

A

CHUCK
HOMECOMING Sl.iNDA y
Hemlock
Grove
C hur ch
Homecoming will be held Sunday
Oct. 7. Worship ser;oice at 9 30 a.m.
and potluck dirmer at 12 :30 p.m Tile
afternoon program will be held at 2
p.m.
The Gospel Tones and other
groups !rom area churches will be
smging .

the main task

Paul Fnnstahl , deputy direLt or of
the Special Olympics , and Mrs
Waller Stolte, Auxllia ry re presen ta tJve , talked on programs to help

~======~==~======

$

WEDNESDAY
UN ITED Methodist Women .
Letart falls Church, to meet Wednesday at 7:30 p.m . at the home o!
Mrs . Bert GrliTUJl. All members are
urged t o attend to make plans for the

SOUTHEAST OHIO Garden Trac·
wr Cl ub Wednesday, 7:30 p.m . in

Ulat

DOUBlEHEADER r&gt;OTED - Pomer oy res idents who travel Um on
Ave . throughout the baseball season watch the home of ardent Cincinnati
Reds !an, l.owse Gilmore, for the s igns which she posl5 t o give her per sonal comment on the Reds' progress . On the day the " lteds Won the
West '' , Lo uise became the grea! aun t of twin daughters born to Mike and
Debi Gilmore . So - IJJuise used this sign to announce th&lt;' new "rrivals
and still didn't get away from the basel&gt;&lt;41 them e

payabl~ .

new year .

emphaS I7.ed

.....

Xl GAMMA MU Sorol'ity wiU ha ve
a barbecue Tuesday at 7:30 p .. at the
hQme of Cathy Johnson .
RUSS AND GOSPEL TONES will
be s mging at North Bethel United
MethodiSt Church Tuesday at 7:30
p.m .
POMEROY CHAMBER of Comme r e'&lt;' Tuesday at noon at Meigs
Inn .
RACINE VJU.AGE COUNCIL
Tuesday at 7 p. m . at Racine fire
Station . f all festival plans to be
made . Any noniJro!it organization
of the Hacine area who wish to par tici pate in the festival are tl.'lked to
attend .

attendee! a \-\ ur ks hun u11 Vt&gt;tt.' ra n~ af "
fa1rs and r etw bll!t o ll un cond ucted
by Cheste r Ste lla r of Oluo. He spokt•
of his grati tude to the Auxll iar)' um L&lt;
for tht'Ir help 111 V .A. hospital s and uf
the cl•a lle nge whi c h '' a head . He

DOUBLEHEADER FOR
.AND DEBI GILMORE
,gjJPTEMBER 281979
I. ~ LS LITTLE LEAGUE.
·HITTER ·BRANDEE · 50
,....... ITTER -BRIANNA · 314

TROPICAL PLANTS

. , 30"-31 "

~

Valentine
girl named

and Mrs . Moore have three grand daughters, Kelly and Terri Wilson
and Usa Kaye Jett, all o! Pomeroy. '
Mr . and Mrs. Moore were married
on Oct. 6, 1934, at the Nazarene Par sonage in Syracuse by the Rev . Carl
Clendenin .
Relatives and friends o! the couple
are mvited to call during the opew
reception hours o! 2 to 4 p. m. Jt IS
requested that gifts be omitted .

Our Reg 89 .88

~ 3997 6597 11'§97
f 39;c-;.9~7l
""

An open receptiOn in &lt;;€1ebration of
the 45th wedding anniversary of Mr .
and Mrs. Car l Moore of Pomeroy
will be hel d Sunday , Oct. 7, in the
Riverboat Room of the Athens County Savings and l.oan Co., Pomeroy
Branch .
The &lt;;€1e bration is being hosted by
Mr . and Mrn . Moore's daughters.
Marl ene Wilsoo and flnd a Jell .
Besides their two daughters , Mr

A program on the " Lost Books of
the Bible", was presented by Mrs .
Bernard Pultz and Mrs . Joseph Cook
at the Wednesday afternoon meeting
of the Middleport I jterary Club he ld
at the home o! Mrs . Robert fisher .
Mrn . Fultz re VJewed the research
o! the Apocraypha ri .lfle Old
Testament with Mrs. Coo!11' reading
s elec ted
sc r ip ture
passages
Illustrating the beauty and qua!Jt y of
the ancient literature.
Mrs . Dwight Walla"' presided at
the meeting whi ch opened with the
co llect. She welc omed guests. Mrs
Robert Robmson , Mr. . James Euler
and Mrs. Joseph Cook.
A social ho ur folluwed the
meeting . Next meeting will be held
on Oct. 10 at the h orne o! Mrs . Bert
Grimm . Mrs . Nan Moore will revie w
"The Bishop 's Mantle" by Agnes
Turn bull.

OPEN DAILY 9:30-9:30; SUNDAYS Hi

Knapp, _._Martin attend regional conference

45th anniversary to
be celebrated 5'unday

We

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M..
SUNDAY 10 iG 10
Federal Food Slam

ne Keserve Ih" Right To Umit Quantities

COLA
8 PAK 16 oz.
99~
BTLS.
Plus fax &amp; Dept.

09

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Mid(lleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 2, 1979

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov 0 Tuesday Oct 2. 1~9

DtCK I RACY

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Clas~ifieds
_ wanted to Buy

WANT AD
CHARGES
t.- t:lnder
C'..ub
Charge
I 00
1.~

15 Wonb

I day
2days
lda)'l
6day!

uo

I lll
J 00

190
2.1!1
3.7fl

Each word over the rrunimwn
15 wtrd&lt;l il't 4 cent! per word per
da y Ad!~ other than ron!M!Culive day~ wtll ~ cllarxed at
the 1day rat e.

In memury . O.rd of ThaW
and ObltWlry ' 6 cents per word ,
$3 .00 nununwn Cast! rn ad
vance .

MOOUt: H\Ill~ .!Uti~ and Yard
sales lift: act-eptt!d only wttl1
L: ~ witll orde r 2!) cent d"lMr~e
for .11d! carry1ng Bo.: Number In
Care of The Sentmel

11M: Publl3hel

rerrve!i lht&gt;
right to edit or ~J@(_'t 811) ad.ol
deem@d
ob)el'tiOnal
The
Publi.sher wtl1 not bfo responsible
for ~ than one lllfiJrf" fi't rn ~rtiOn .

Phone 992 -Zl 56

NOTICE

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monda y
Noon on Saturlili)"

CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 10 " on largest
end $12 per ton Bund led
slab SIO per ton Del1vered
fO O h i O Pallet Co , Rt '1 ,
Pomeroy 991 1689 .
OLD FURNITURE . ' ce
boxes , brass bed's , iron
beds, desks , etc . com plet e
hou seholds
Wr i te M D
M•ller Rt 4 , Pomeroy or
c a II 99'} 7760
OLD COl N S. pocket wt
ches, c lass r 1ng s, wedding
bands, d•amonds Gold or
silver Call J A Wamsley ,
742 2JJI
W A NT EO
SA W
log s
Pdyrnenl upon del•very to
our yard , l 30 to 3 30 we-ek
days Bl~ney Hardwoods,
SR 339, Barlow , OH 67B
,980
ANTIQ U ES .
FUR
NI TURE,
g rass. cn.na .
anyth.ng See or call Ruth
Gosney . ant1ques, '16 N
'2nd , Midd leport . OH ~n
3161
......
A N11QUE POCKET wa r
Lhes Wd 11ng t o pay top
dollnr
Call
I 597 7973
E-ve n 1ngs
WANTED
JUNK
Bat
ter •es. rad•ators. motors .
auto
trans
N o Sunday
calls 9491563

Tuesday

lhru F'ndln

4 PM .
the day bdu~ pulllll'lltl un
SUn&lt;!&gt;)

4 PM

Fnday 11fternoon

Notices
MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMAN E SOC IETY 9'1'
62MJ .

Pets

aiJddrtbiE' for
adop t ion and 1nt or matton

serv1ce
GUN
SHOOT
EVERY
SU NDAY 1 PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB
N O
HUN TI N G .
no
tr espass ing with no ex
ceptions on my property
Judy M cG raw Sell

DUES tor 1980 are payable
fro m Oc t 1 to Dec J1 . 1979
TEn dollars . Rac1nc Gun
Club
BAK E R 'S
BUSY
Bee
Ce ram• cs announ ces tall
hours Tuesday 10 3, 7 10
W e-dnesday l 10 Thurs 10
3, 7 10 It 's t1me fo far1
those Chr istmas gift s . Call
667 -3252 for information
J.R.
HUNNELL
RESID E N CE . BESIDE
BAPTIS f C HURCH . AN
T I QU I TY
FUR NI TURE .
APP LI A N CES ,
AN
TIQUE5 . REFRIGERAT
OR,
DI N ETTE
SE T,
CLOT H ES .
AND
5EVERf'L ITEMS FROM
THE GEORGE STOBART
AUCT ION

Lost and Found
LOST MELA LE red I1CK.
coon hound Eagle R•dge
Bashan area Answers to
Annie 94'il 2694
FOUND
MALE 1err1er
poodle a! Old T own Creek
949

nn

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
POMEROY, OHIO
~5769

CHARLES H . MORRISON
AND
SARA
ANN
MORRISON, Route 2, Box
tJO ·A , Miner at Wells , west
Virg1nia 24150
Plaintiffs
V5

FRANK G . WEAVER and
NANCY L. WEAVER , and
MICHAEL L . CONLEY ,
Address unknown
GEORGE
C'LLINS ,
as
Treasurer of Meigs County ,
Pomeroy, Ohio
·
Defendants
CaseNo . 17,170
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
Frank. G . Weaver and
Nanc y L .
W eaver
and
Mic nael L . Conley , wnose
last known residenc e was
Box 301 Waverly , W . Va
2618_., oiherw ise the pla ce
of residence of each of said
DefendantS
being
unknown , wil l take noti ce
that on May 2. 1979, Charles
H . Morrison and Sara Ann
Morrison filed a com plaint
in the Common Pleas Court
Of Meigs County, Ohio,
alleging that the Defen
dants, Frank G Weaver
and Nancy L. Weaver and
Michael L
Conley, are
' ointly and solely liable to
he P laintiffs in tne sum ot
$21 , 829 . 8~ plus inlerest oi a
percent per annum from
February 12, 197a, and fur ·
ther alleging tnat said
Plaintiffs have a f irst mor tgage on
rea l estate
descr ibed
in Mortgage
Book 131, Page 105, Meigs
County Mortgage Records
Plaintiffs
demand
Ludgm~nt
against
the
Defendants ; n the a mount
Of $21,829 . 8~ plus interesl at
8 percent per annum from
Februar y 12, 1978, c osts of
suit anrf further demand
the foreclosure of the real
estate described in Mor tgage Book 137, Page 105of
the Meigs County Mor ·
toaoe Record s and such
other relief as may be
proper .
Each Of the Defendants
named above is required to
answer on or• before the ex iration of 28 days after
ast publication Of lhis
notice which date will be
October JC, 1979.
Charles H . Morrison
Sara Ann Morrison
(8) 2819) ~. 11, 18 &lt;10) 2, Sic

l

r.

Yard Sale

Auto Sates

Real Estate lor Sale

1976 MONTE CARLO, J.5Q
engine , low mileage S2600
9'12 2656 .

LARGE H OUSE, l ogel ner
wi th 7 ac res of real es tate
Owner w i ll se ll onland con
tra c t . $.5,000 down payment
and owner will finance
balance
Real
estate
loca ted in Le t ar t Fails, OH,
near Oh•o River Out of
flood
For d etail s. call
days , F red W Crow , ~2
'692

1977 HONDA ACCORD. 5
speed ,
radials ,
32,000
miles, snarp, S-4150 1976
N ova . 6 c yl. , au t o , P .S,
a~r ,
rad•als. Se-e to ap
preciate
$2500
L• ttl e
Hocking , 989 246--C
1975 CHEVROLET Monza .
v 8. au t o , rad1al tir es. also
2 new snow t1 r es $2100 949
2516or 843 2524
1973 DODGE PICKUP, 318
eng•ne, extras Good co n
d•t•on Best offer '147 3863
1976 SIERRA GRANDE. 1' 1
ton P• c kup , P B , P S ,
A C , radio. $3200
John
1n1e, Rf 1. Ra c •ne
1973
CHEVROLET
MALIBU FST Added loi s
of new parts but stil l ne-eds
work , $300 992 2969 or see
aT Betfy 'sCarryout
1967 JEEP pi c kup 4x4 19 74
Cherok ee 985 -4 20'1l

YARD SALE. f our tam1ly
Tuesdny , Oct '1 th ru ? 10
am Spm B ra dbury CR 5,
tram M•ddleport , 4th house
pas t The sc hool on me r1ght
CARPO R T SAL E Fr i
5
Cloth . ng ,
tw in
spr .ng s, be dspreads ,
tde . trumpe t . mise
nortn, l •r sl road left
Chester F1re House

Oc t
bed
floor
Turn
past

" I VE FAMILY Ya'd Sa le
rovs, adult and child r en's
clo thes, pl an t s , curtans
Monaay . Tuesday, Wed
nesday
TWO FAMILY Yard Sale
Oct 1 1hru 6 Q am 5 pm
W1n1er clothe-s . furn 1ture .
m1s c
Charles
Kuhl
res•dence , 3_. 289 F l atwoods
Od 991 7537
FOUR FAMI LY Yar d Sale
Thurs . and Fr i., Oct . 4 and
5. Approx . '3 m i les out of
Rutl and up New Lima Rd
aT Joan (Tom ) Stewart 's
Watch for s•gns Rain can
eels
RUMMAGE
SA LE
0c
Iober 56 Fnday and Sa tw
day, 10 am 4 p m Gra ce
EP•scopal C hur ch, 376 E
Ma1n St , P o me-roy , OH ·
Lot ot cloth1ng , household
1te-ms
CAR PORT
SALE
Wed
and Thurs , O c t 3 and 4 at
31 1 Wr 1ght 51 , Pomeroy.
10 4 Ra•n or sh.ne
YARD 5ALE 409 5 lth St .
Mtddleport
Tues
and
Wed , and Thurs L ots ot
lad1es ' larger s1 zes
POR CH SALE Oct 3 and
-4
1 m11e from c nes ter
Br•dge on Rt 148 Couch
a nd cnai r , se w•ng machine ,
h1gh cha1r . t oys. books.
c oa t s, ooors. fishin&lt;J gear ,
odds and ends . c loth,ng
FIVE FAMILY Basement
Sale Oct J, 4, 5 on Bone
Holl ow Rd off Rt 7 Bypass
near Bradbury Dressers ,
oil st ove. lo t s of m 1sc
FOUR FAMI L Y Yard Sale
Oct 3. 4. 5 from 9 30 t i t 5 at
640 Grant St , M iddleport
YARD S.ALE Wed , Thurs
Eva
Hartley
residen ce,
Locus t S. treet
YARD SALE Un til Oc t 8
Guns.
bow .
b• c y c les .
motor cycle 6:2 5 Oliver St ,
Middleport
T HRE E FAMILY
Yard
Sale . Wednesday and Thur
sday , 678 Oliver 51. , M id
dleport Men ' s, women 's
a nd bab y clothes.
SEVEN FAMILY
Yard
Sa l e. Rain or sh ine 870 Ash
Sf., Middleport.Friday and
Sa turday _ All si zes and kin d s of c lathes, household
items, furnit ure, boat and
trailer
YARO
SALE
W e d ..
Thurs ., Fri . Ralph Laven ·
der residence, end of 2nd
St ., Syracuse Hospital bed,
c lothlng, odds and ends .
99'l 5888 .

Auctions

BIG AUCTION ever y Wed . .
l prn Hartford Community ·
F I VE ROOM neuse, all
Cente r , Har1ford , WV , 4
carpeted.modern kitc hen
miles
above
Pomeroy
and bath , garage and car
Mason Bridge
port In Bradbury . Ca l l 991
53 10.

WHIRLPOO L Cuslom lm
peria l dishwa sher Har vest
gold 3 yea r s o ld . Excel lent
condition Atter -4 pm , 992
1348

3 AND A RM furnished and
unfurn ished apts . Phone
992 -5AJA .
ONE
BEDROOM
apls .
Contact Village Manor , 992 ·
7787 .
ROOM
AND
board .
working persons or retired .
$165 month, $45 weekly

992 -6022 .

11~ AC FeES. house, 5 roo ms
and bath , basement. wOOd
and coal furnace, fru it
tr ees, ')miles from Rt . 7 on
good road . School bus a nd
mail route at door S23 ,000
985 43J4 or 985 · 3590 .

14
FOOT
Aqua
Cat
Ca tamaran sail boat and
trai ler, $BOO Call W2 3429

Pets lor Sale

COAL,
L IMESTONE ,
sand , gravel, ca l c i u m
chlor •de , fert ilizer,
dog
food , and all types ot salt
Exce ls•or Sa lt w ork s, Inc ,
E . Main St , Pomeroy . 992
389!

HOOF HOLLOW , Engh sh
and West ern . Saddles and
harness .
Horses
and
POnies . Ruth Reeves . 61_.
698 32 90 .
Bording a nd
Rid ing Lessons and Horse
Ca re products . West e rn
boots . Ch i ldren 's Sl 5 50
Adults S29 _00

WINTER
POTATOE S
C. W Proffi tt f arm , Por
tl and, O H . $8 a nundred and
S5 a h u ndred
CA MPER
SHELL
f o'
pi ckup tru ck . 2-47 ·2852, An
drew Cross , Letart Fall s
1978 HONDA 750 K , e•tras.
exce l lent condition $1800 .
9'12 6303.

-------FIREWOOD
FOR
sa le .
Now takin g orders . Will
deliver , 7.&amp;2 -2056.
E MERG E N CY
POWER
a lter nators -own th e best
b uy WIN POWER . Call 513
788 2189 .
1979 YAMAHA XS 1100 .
lJOOO Also new Magnavox
color co nsole . Jonn Lyon s,
9911514
CAMPER . 5710 Sleeps 6
Roger Stobarf , 992 6190
OWNER
MOVED
to
Oklahoma , must sel l . 3
year old reg iste red q uarte r
hor se gelding , ve r y gentl e,
well b r oke. 1500. 991 ·616 2.
DAVENPORT AND c hair
30 gal . ca b inet type elec tr i c
water hedt~r 19 " Admiral
co l or
t elev •s•on
70 ,000
B T U
L P gas l ioor fur
nace
w•th
therm osta t .
Lav at o ry
with
H W .D
Upright P•ano C Barnhill ,
Tuppers Plain s. Phone 667
J.&lt;OO
GRAVELY
TRACTOR
Phone
7137

m

VIP HP1 5 bass boat wdh .so
hp M e r cu ry engine s~e:, · s,
acc essor ies and lr ader
Exce llent cond• t 10n
992
5217
TWO WH EEL trailer . 15 "
ftres and wheels. heavy
construc t ed handles good .
In good shape
Robert
Jacks , Rt 1, Long Bot•o m.
O H 985 4343
RAY'S USED Furni tu re .
Addison, 367 0637 Fuel oil
heater .
gas
heate r ,
refrigerator ,
k1t c h en
cab i net. couch. bedroom
suite,
platf orm roc ker ,
auto . washer . dryer . c hest.
breakfast se t . c upboard ,
china cabinet , potte-ry and
glassware
FI VE ROOM h um1dif1er ,
excel len t condition , S.... 5
M odel
1.400 Win chester
auto . 12 ga . gun, A 1 co n
dition S200 _Phone 991 ·3.4.42

------·----

-

·-

LARGE , 7 drawers, good
co ndition , $150
Utility
trai ler . oood
c ond i tion,
$100. Large c onstruc tion
wheelbarrow, S25 .
FOR SALE : 1970 Dodoe
pic kup, $. .f2S . Phone 992
2360 .

For Rent
COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Rout e 33, north ot
Pomeroy . Large lots .Cal l
99'l 7A79

CLOSE TO Pomeroy on
large pr iva te lot , l2x.60
mobile home, 2 bed r oom .
11' ' bath s, new carpeting
throughout. new gas f ur
nace. washer and dry e r 6
months free rent on lot 992
6398
THFCEE ROOM houst' , bath
a nd utility room , gas f ur
na ce, close t o sc hool 99'1
3592 atte r 7 p . m .

For Sale
GARAGE SALE Oc t I 5
tr am 10 S Located off Rt 7
Bypass on O ld RT
143
South at Ja c k. ·~ club Baby
buggy , gu1tar . new items
and much more

THRE E BEDROOM home .
E . Main St, Pom eroy ,
Basement
and ca rport.
ca rpet wall to wall , com
plete kitchen,
cabinets,
r ange, refrigerator, dish
washer ,
disposal
and
brea kta st
bar ,
wood
burn ing fireplace , concre te
dr 1ve Will se ll with or
w1tnout adia ce nf A -fra me
business building . Shown
by appointment _ Phone 992
392 1

RI SI N G STA R Kennel
Boardi ng . Call 367 -0192 .
POODLE
G ROOMIN G
Judy Taylor 614 ·367-rno
HILLCREST
KENNE LS
Board ing , all breed s. Clean
indoor -outdoor
faci l ities.
Also
AKC
registered
Doberman s 61~ - ... ~ · 7795 .

and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headqulrtera
Applionces
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jock W , Coraey

Mg,._

. PI!One 992-2111

U"T

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
FOR SA LE or rent . Ni c e 3
bedroom, modu l ar loc ated
in Portland area Set up on
lot or can be moved . Call
af Ter_. . 30. 304 ·273 -5272
FOR T RADE . two lots 1n
Pome ro y, fo r motor home
9'9 11B2

Serv1ces Offered
WILL DO babysi tting in
my home . Monday Frida y .
Reasonable r a t es . Ca l l 985
.., 3958
WILL CA RE for elder l y in
our home Also, room and
board available. 991 731-4 .

Giveaway
SEVEN 11 Ir ish Se tt er and
sheep dog puppies 7 weeks
old Wormed . 985 396 1
FREE COLLIE
981 3335

pupp •es .

FEMALE , all while col l •e
shep he r d,
good
with
chi ldren Hu ma ne SocieTy,
'l'n 6260
BEAGLE CO L L IE , bla c k ,
brown and
while , had
sho t s
Humane Socie t y,
991 6160
MIXED BREED . t an w i lh
wavy hair , loves Ch i ld ren
Humane Socie ty . W7 -626/J
CALICO . long hair , and
some
Angora
b l ack
cats Humane Soc1 e1y , 9-'fn
6160
KITTENS . all ~i zes. shapes
and
col ors
H umane
Socie ty , 992 6260
GALLIPOLIS
ter rie r ,
female , black with a 11n 1e
' br own , laking for a home in
the
Galli polis
are3 .
Humane Socie ty , 992 -6260.
FEMALE .
co llie boxer ,
miniature, looks all collie .
Humane Socie ty , 992 -6260 .

HOUSE TRAILER , 10x55, I
bedr ., good shape
Fur ·
n ished, $2200. Unfurnished,
$1800 . 7•2 -2..0. before 2 pm
or after 5 pm .
1972 LYNN HAVEN 1._65 J
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x6J with ex ·
pando , 2 bedr .
·
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr .
1973 Skyline
12x55
2
be-droom
1972 Bonanza 12x52, 2 bedr .
B &amp; 5 MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT . PLEASANT ,
WV 30A · 675 · .U2~ .

,

S HE IS TEt\CHIN t-,

I

____.l

MAIN
POMEROY , O.

m~nt .

11 Sycamore cRear )

RUTLAND
742-2328

0.

CALL 992 -7544

e

Mick ' s
Barber &amp;
Style Center
.. lntreduces' -

and

R e ftnance
JO Y ear Term s
A - No money
down
( el191 bl e veteran s)
FHA - AS low as 3%
down (non -veteran s)

MARK MORA

992 -2367
Main St.

4 23 1 m o

m+tai hwi .·.
CAfPrAlN EASY
WE~L- ~ D ID YOU

;ee

OKAY, OKA" --

HIM 5TA&gt;JDI&gt;JG

TH~RE -- WATC H I&gt;Jb
U~

M WE I!IOT 1"TO THE CA!H

Housing
Headquarters

5 0 HE i&lt;EACLY
60ES FOR YOUR
TYPE~ LIKE- THE-Y
"&gt; AY- - IT TAKES
AL.L.

WHAT 'S THAT v
SUPPO,ED TO
ME.A.N. MR .
SMA~TYf

IJ

6REAT~

IF HI'
CA&gt;J TAl" U ~ THF?OUG&gt;4
T~IS F~E~CH TRAFFIC
MORE POWE R
TO HI Mi

IN .: IOEN TALLY ..
HS:'!' TAKI"-1&lt;5 ... HE
TA'I(I TH/\T WA?
I&lt;16Hr SfHIN D
OUR 5''

KIND?~

1

I

rr J

1

Pomeroy , 0 .
8 16 I m o

C. R. MASH
Radiator ·~
Service 1Tf1Tfm111 VINYL &amp; ALUM.

tAns w¥ers tomorrow 1

CARPENTER'S
DANCE STUDIO

Jumbles f ASTY SWAM P CARBON ARCADE
Used on wtl ches· hair . no ao ubt -SC ARE SPRAY

Yest Hrday ~

,_1 Answer
Tut•sday . Od . 2

OPENING SEPT , lith
CllllltS : 81Ue1
Shirley Carpenter
lnstructorCit0r009rlpher
Located in R1cine, 0 .
(formerly
Weaven
Skill Building I
Ph . 949 -2110 or ••• ·2150
829· 1 mo

BRIDGE

BORN LOSER

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

fiRST 111EY~T I '+J/&gt;5 JlJST

' AtJ

--

-----

· l'{).\; THE.'( 'JE GBCI(;f.D I' ~~
\, ,--;CST PLAIIJ 17LJM6 1

UtJ~CH I ~VBR ...

------

-

Unusual play cues defeat

~ rom lh t&gt;
8ulld O/f f
~ m.lllo• \ 1

l~r~,nt Trucll:
j;tl(lo.I!Or

or

I

111-2-A

Smith Nelson

*

Motoo, Inc.
Ph qq1 -1174

r-, - --. 1~

RACINE,O.

UTILE OHPHA N A'rn! E

, .., .11Ucif

·~fR A SPELL .. _ BUT

97 -1mo

THfY' F?E ll~ D TO
DISCOV!'R I AIW T

CAKE
- . rr "--:;.,·
r~
'
DECORATING
SUPPLIES

,- . I

111? 0

'

M ()I'I I9 0 rY~ t rl

' OH, MY EARS
AND WI-&lt; ISKERS ,
HOW LATC IT'S

• ~ I m q

1

GETi1NG .

S&amp;G Carpet Ctea n1ng .
St eam
c leaned
F r ee
esl•mate
Reasonable
rates
Scot c hguard
'n2
6309, or 74'2 13.48

A&amp;H Up hols tering , across
from t he Texaco St ation in
Syra ucse 992 3743 or ~2
3752

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

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

'

I

ELWOOO
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters , irons, all sma ll
appl i an ces . Law-n mower .
N ext t o State Highwav
G arage on Route 7, 985
]821

BRADFORD, Auctioneer.
Comp lete Serv i ce . Phon e
9-49 'i-487 or 949 2000. racine.
Oh io, Critt Bradford .

YOUNG LADY ' YOU'Lt NEVER
GET TO ' HE TRIAL O N liME
IF YOU [)()N'1 HURR'Y.'

IN STOCK t or immed iate
delivery va r io us sizes of
pool k i ts Do 11 you r sel f or
let us insta ll for you _ o.
Bum gardne r
Sa It'S, Inc
992 572A .
PIA NO
TUNING
La ne
Daniels N ew phone num
ber
742 -'1 951
Se rv •ce t o
sc hools and na m es since
1965

- •.I..-GOOD TillS SP(CIAL.

13" PIUA •

I

Your choice of any •
one .lopping
·
99
Reg SJ .55
J o..,. ow,

GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS
McCulloch Pro
Mac 5S
McCulloch
Mls-10
Remington 14
150 Auto
Hom elite
XK 12 Hom elite
KL~OO Homelite
Remington
V•,.dmaster

Jl$8.00
$125.00
SIOO.OO

ht :-.

k1ng

llf

hold

\ H-~ - H

;

t A KI,P l2

In v t·~ t Ndc~\'"

'0 '

6£~,

G A.~I.INF. ALLEY

You're on

$100.00

•7 Insect

" ''&gt;&lt;

'- ~ ... 5 ·'\=3:=~oo =~- =z

~- _r­

.. I

m .oo

!BARNEY

(Do you have a quesr1on fo r
tfle experts _., Wnte
Ask rne
f , perts · care at th1S ne wspdper In d iVId ual qves ttons w 111
be ans wer eO 1! accomprm1ed
b y s tamped. .:; plf -addressed

envPiopes Tt1e most 1n teres t mg ques fton s wr ll be used m
fhiS column and w1 /! rece1ve
cop,es of J A COBY MODERN I

time

volcanll
OOWN
I Valuable
item
%Task : var .
3 Future

Yesterday'• Alllwer
12 Word
27 Famed
W.W !nurse
from home
II Snow lield Z!l Regional
19 Allegiances 30 lta~an
2% Ball film
cit y
Z3 Moorish
31 Leguminous

rulers

4 Aim
5 Flinty;
unbending

6 Word with

moon

or bee

longer
fashionable

7 No

%1 Ethereal
!% Measure

Philip, e.g.
9 Set up in

herb

instrument

36 cartoonist

24 Antipasto
items
Z5 City m

8 Elizabeth's

Gardner
31 The - Gees ,

popular trio

!tali a

a series

Z3 Colorado

resort
Z5 Stock car
!&amp; Bugle
call
Z7 Singing
favorite
!&amp; Loboter -

33EW
34 Petition
l5 Punish
by fine
37 JUII
delivered
:18 Ancestral
3t Irish girl's
name

~ •r ,

Fine Guns - In Stock Now!"

Pomeroy, 0.

\!- ,\1. "-I 'A I ' t .li 1- "',Tt·ll i 'Hbi· , ..,..,\

abbr.

Ph. 11·2111
__:__j

RAINBOW
INN
Jeff Morris

lined

!t JeremiAds
l% 01 '! rifle :

Refrigerator
115.00
1 Good Coldspol
MAIN ST .
J•ck W. C•rsey

Browning BT99·32 " , Full, 12 gauge
Browning BT99-34", Full, 12 gauge
Browning BLR, 22 caL Grade II, Rille
Browning Citori, 12 gauge-28" F/M
tthica SKB Century Trap-32", Full, 12
gauge
Charles Daily, Superior Grade, 30", Full,
12 gauge
J , P, Sour Drilling (16x16x7.?)
Remington Field Guns - Knives
Will Take Orders For Any New
Guns, 1 Week to Deliver
Ammo - Hunting License - Deer Permits

J

Newburg

JllO

ALILOCATI()fj$

"tart m~J \ r•·J p

\ld\'- o fl

Italian

18 In maMer
irritable
ZO Grimalkin

out

)(L Homelite
1 Excellenl Unlco 1' cu.
II.
Copperlone
Rttrlger•tcw, like ni'W,

l New Electric Fur"ace.
cle1r1nce priced
I new Fuel 011 Fum•ce,
cle•r•nce prlctcl

lor

U

signal
I Goes to
market
10 Chinese God
II Opera's
late Jennie
13 Uttered
14 Complete
u Be at fault
II Lawyer's
charge

, ~us~
"'"U". . .: A'\7 ~ --

-.., ]!IY~-

40 Play

wanling

WTNN!F.

:,i('\'Prthl'l t"'S 111 :1m ~d.~~·(·r :-­
w•)ulll up( 'r1 '.l.' tlh JU:--t 11nl'
dl&lt;:un•m&lt;.l Th1 · r~ · •'"- ·,t·n ltttll·
t·hawt· thrr1 ont· dt.JII "I 'li)d '-'&gt; tll
bt· pc~ :-.:-.ed .Jll c~rr~und .:..n.J 1lw

THOMAS JOSEPtt

I Nature's

S7S .OO
S100,00

v.._.

.. ~.,,.,

ACROSS

noo.oo

sears

..~rtH · ll-

wt·n · ;, shd 1!" til l' hdnd wJ ~
\o\'Oi"lh d [WI J-diJ!lliJrld 11p1'rllnl::,

"East won tht• ft r st tn ck
w1th the acr- of h&lt;'arts and

$125.00
S11S .OO

Remengtt.tt.
Super 7541

•..I- . .

187 Mulberry Ave.

ma ke

• R

trv

liO.S-··-··
IJ'. . I I .____ _
II_

..

If vuu . as tif~fPnder \~:ant to
get ~: our p&lt;H! ncr t11 makf' an
unusual ddenstve pl~y . you
('an su~gest ll to htm bv mak
m g one of yo ur own .
North's jump to f our Sl)Bdei
w as on(' of those \"fJUr guPS-'"
ts ~s ~ood as m1ne btd!'l Ht.·
dtdn ' t know wh &lt;H South could
make m spades. or what E i1SI
cu uld make 10 h{'Jr! S, but felt
tha t four spa des was worth a

POMEROY
LANDMARK

WILL CARE for el der ly
person, live in . c ook•ng and
l1gh t hou sewrk 992 5556

,_

t•

I E:: RE .

by

REYNOLD ' S ELECTRIC
Motors , r ewind and repair
&lt;m Dl6. 161 Beech 5t ..
Middlepor1 , Oh1 0 .

AUTOMOBILE
IN
S URAN CE
been
c an
ce lle d?
L o~t
your
operator ' s li cense? Phone
992 21,3.

WHA"T A.R E YO..J rx) t N G

ROOFING

WI L L HAUL l1mes tone ~nd
gravel Also . l1me n aul•ng
and soread• ng Le-o M orr ts
Trun.• ng Pnone 7.42 1-45.5

I

to

You

South
I+

Ry (t5wald Jatoby

OHIO VAUEY

'1

East

••

fJVl'r

Ask tiM l!xpcpts

at•d 'Alan Sonl•ll

9 28 ·1 mo . Pd

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E)C c avating ,
se pt ic
sys l ems, doze r , backhoe .
Rt . 143. Phone 1 1614 1 698
733 1 or 74 11593

North

Wt·s t

sp'*r.Jtos for lh(' " elltng tn •·k

Vulncrable : Both
De aler : East
Wf' s l

do

Wt · replied \ \'-...

\U PEW
G OO'iE
5TOOt
Til AllE R N OW A VA i lA IH_E

1 1 mo

•
•

YEP .. f\ fR Y MINuTE
(QtJt-HS YE Rf 1HIS
5Et M5 (-\ t·K EL Y SPoT

u•

4 30 tf (

•

1-1 1

~ 1•
474S E vr-n&gt;n q 1
J Mol{'\ E oll 1 Ol 11\'o.-{0-\ v 1 11~

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

EXCAVA T I N G,
do zer ,
loa der and back hoe work
dump tru ck s and lo bOys
for hire . will haul fill di rt,
Top soil, limes tone and
gravel . Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeff ers, day phone 992 7089,
n ig ht phone 9'91 3525 or 992 ·
5231 ..

sur('

lfct

Roof1ng , gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Est•mates . All work
guaranteed . 10 ye11r1 ex ·
penence . Call Athens,
col lect, Ger11ld Cl11rk
797 -4857 or Tom Hoskins
797 -1745 .

SEW I N G
MAC H INE
Repai r s.
servi c e .
all
makes
992 2284
T he
Fabri c Shop , Pomeroy .
Au t hor 1zed S1nger
Sa les
and ServiCP We sharpen
Scissors .

I I,

s,l

ploty

tr1

!o rn;lkt' an

th trd diamond and S(•Uth W&lt;J :o.

TRAILER SALES

FOR YOUR
NEW HOME OR
EXTENSIVE
HOME
REMODELING
Also Masonry
Work
992 -7583, or 992 -2282

DOZER . E ND
Loader ,
brush
hog
Will
do
basemen t s. ponds , brush ,
t imbe r , land cl ear.ng
Charles But cher 742 1940

U11\J 'I Il&lt;11

w,·-.; t

took ht s ptH' lner : :, ktng . lt·d a

Opening lead • 9

CON::iTRUCTION

1 md e off Rl . 7 by -pas s
on Sl Rf 114 toward
Rull nnd .

H l· Wdn\cd

• '' K '-/1&gt;4

ROUSH

-~

EMPTY-HANDED

T HE N .. .

• 1nsulation
• 5 tor m Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
eGutters and
Down Spouts
Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone ?92 -2772
8 17 1 mo

5071
Osborn
Rd
Reedsville , OH , ... :-- ... .,
For inform1tion Clll
647 -6485 . Will De OPen
late
if
you
need
S:Omething .
9 14 1 mo

ANN~NOT

what Eas t \l.dllll'd htrn

SOUTH
• A J 10 4 :1
• K J 5
• J 10 !J 7

Dfi\D A&gt;TE'R

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL AND
ALUMINUM SIDING

ANN'S

PAl N TI N G AND
sand
blas11ng
Free estimates
Ci111949 ?686

ORPHAN

TtH'n. wht·n ht• l'onttnuPd
wtth thf' ktnK We :- . t knt·w JU ~ t

+Q

7 12

Pomeroy

• 6
• g a4
+ A802
• J 9 6'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

lll :\ 2

EAST
• K :12
• A (,J 10 7 fl
+KQ
• 8 7 -1

WEST

Gutter
work , down
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways .
IFREE ESTIMATE I

•New Home
•Add ons
Remoldings '
*Free estimates
992 -6011

Aidl;tiOf

+AK

REMODELING

SIDING

H {'.!l d{'l Cilre

Q g
• 32
• fi 5

pr ompt!\' ll•d bcH·k .J dtatJlllnU
J-{(' as.surnt•U thc~t h1" p&lt;.trtnn
he ld the dl "(' of dtam11nds
Thl'rr wa 'i l1\llt· de--c h t· l 'ttuld
hold for h1:-. IH·art rdl~ t ·
Huwl·\·er . i"':d:--.t I1•U thl'
4Ul'l'n . not tlw , \,t nrlrtrd lt· cJd
11 f ttll' k1ng

a1

+

ADD ONS &amp;

E){PERIENCED

Now arrange !he c•rc1ea 1eners to
form the surprtse answer a s sug
gested by the a bo ... e cartoon

XI Jr I I ] oF( I I I 1

Answer: KI

oo-1 Dre am of Jeannie 3; Sentord
&amp; Son 8; M ISter Rogers NeighJiorhood,0,33; My Three Sons 17 .
JO--C arol Burnett 3 . News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10. Happy Day s Again 13; I
Dr eam of Jean nie 17 : Doctor
Who 33 .
6 00--- New s J. B. 10. 13, 11; ABC "'ews
6. Zoom 20; Carol Burnett
6 JQ- NBC N ewsJ, IS; ABC News 13
CBS N ews8. 10; Bob Newhar11 i ;
Over Easy 20.
7 00--- Three 's A Crowd 3; Pulse 6 ;
T1c T ac Dough 8; New~ 10;
Love
N ew lywed Game 13 ,
Americ~n Sty le 15 ; D•ck Cavett
20.33 . San ford &amp; Son 17 . "
3D- Hollywood
5qua"'"
J;
Newlywed Ga me 6; Joker' s Wi ld
8, Hollo;wood S quar~~ 10 , Sha Na
Na 13 . Cou ntr y Roads lS; All In
The F amil'p' 17 ; MacNeil-Lehrer
Report 20.33 .
8 00--- Baseball Play -Off 3, 15; Happy
Days 6.13 . Cali forn i a Fever 8, l O;
Nova 20,33 ; Movie " The Tin
Star " 17
30 - Angie 6 , 13 ; Q DO-Three ' s
Co mpany 6.13; Mov ie " Portrelt
ot a Stripper " 8, IQ. ,
9 30- T a x1 6, lJ; 10 00- Lii zarus
Sy ndrom e 6, 13; News 20; Six
Wives ,of Henry VIII 17i City
Nolebook JJ .
II 00 - N ews 3, 6, 8, 10, 13, lJ; Dick
Cavett 20 . Ca rry On Laughing 33.
11 3o-Johnny Carson 3, 15 ; Barney
Mil ler 6, lJ; ABC News 33 ;
Barn aby Jones 8; Movie " Stalag
17" 10 ; Movie " Sabrina" l7 .
n 01-Movie " Having Babieo Ill "
6. 13 . 12 : 40- Movie " In lhe
Mat te r at Karen Ann Quintan " 8.
()()--Tomorrow 3. News 15; 1 3()-News 13
oo-- News 17 ; 2 : 2()----Movit " The
Road to Den ve r " 17, 4 :20-Star
Trek 17

;1 .

WHA'T 'TO ='0 FO ~
A WH ILE WH E 'I YOU
BRE AK 'YOUR LE6
IN 'TWO PLACE S.

I

tREMPIT

~ORTH

Roger Hysell
Garage
NEW LISTING - Ni c e 2
bedroom tr a1 1er , gas
furn ace.
furnished .
stocked fi s h pond and
J L J acre on Rt 143 W.=.nt
on ly $12,000 .
COUNTRY HOME
Wes t at R ufl and on R t
124
Three bed r ooms .
ba tn , L.C
water . Sf
w i ndows, and 2 acres
ASk1ng S25 ,000
RUTLAND
Good
so li d Older home w .tn
good OPPOrt unity tor a
f ami l y
buS •ness
4
bed r ooms . 11 2 baths .
f urnace ,
fireplace .
di n ing, equipped k•t ,
a nd
2 c ar
ga r age
531.000 .
BUSINESS BLDG . P lus
a 3 b t droom rental and
ex t ra lot .-on Rt
124
Start your own t h ing
and
I ive
up sta ir s
"7 ,500 .
MIDDLEPORT
lot s, -4 bedroo m older
home , 11 "] baths , nat
gas hea t One loT has '1
trailer hookups Asking
$17 ,500.
SYRACUSE
Brick
ran c h
home ol
J
bedrooms ,
7 b~ths ,
d1n 1ng ,
n• c e
k•1 ,
cove red p a t io . .tl ots. one
on th e river $-45,000
POMEROY
J
bedrooms ,
aluminum
si d i ng , bath . basement.
nat . gas f u rna ce and fr
porch W a I k to sto res .
s 18,500 .
NEW
LISTING
J
bedrooms
with bath ,
ci ty water, nat gas hea t
and I acre for only
$8 ,500
WANTED 5 acres on The
water line
BUILDING
LOTS
BAUMS ,
S PTS .,
RACING , POMEROY ,
SYRACUSE, REED SVILLE ,
FORKED
RUN ,
RUTLAND ,
ROCK SPRINGS, AND
BOWMANS RUN .

tJ

h-it

Tap &amp; Juz
Ages-4 and up

Featuring :
men ' s &amp;
women ' s
styling ,
perms
Call for appt. or walk in .

592·3051

TUESDAY. OCTOBER Z, 1t19

Announcing Opening of

HAIR STYLIST

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E . State, Ath en s

L rJ -

4 5 ft c

9 1• 1Pd l

Real Estate Loans
Purcha~e

N'e w, repair
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949 -2862- 949-2160

AL TROMM
CON ST.

w..

'iOI s 9 · M .,
F.
0''ler tt mt• by appoint -

Pomeroy,

H. L Writesel
Roofing

REMOOt11NG
KuliM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

1

I ' J ~ l-k , v :

ROO~ lNG

de · al
t-tou -. ing
&amp;
\"der. 1s Admm . Loans .

[Mosux

'

c, j

sJpJ iw-it
I/'1311Cl

REAL ESTATE
F INANCING

\

\J.'::J&gt;

Television
Viewing

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one lener 10 ea ch square . 10 rorm
lour '?rdtl"lary words

r-1

,____B
_ u_s_i_n_e_s_s_S_e_rv
_ i_c_e_s_

_216. E . SecondSir@Ef

,

F 50 UDE-NTS T Hf
LAN GUA C, f .''

. Real Estate lor Sale

NEW LISTING 8A acre
war ing f arm , '1 stockt:&gt;d
ponds, 30 acres t illable
45 ac res pasture fen ced,
barn , large yarage,
ot her buildin gs, plus a 7
year old ranch type
h o me
w•fh
lull
basement , large fam ily
room , built in kit chen,
large liv•ng room w1th
woodburn• ng t •repla ce
plus
a wood bu rniny
s t ove downsta•rs
J
bed r oom~
and bath
Real n1 ce $76, 350
NEW LISTING Approx
98
a c re s
va c ant
woodla nd .
several
building
s~tes.
near
Rutlan d, all minerals .
Won ' t
last
tong
at
534,300 .00
NO
LONGER
A
DREAM Now you can
own your own npw ran
ch type home w 11h 111
ac r es ot most wooded
l and
Large master
bedroo m, nursery and
gues t room , 2 f ull ba th s,
built in equ•pped kit
chen, di n 1ng area, large
plush living roo m with
w .b.t .p ., large garage ,
good q ualit y h ome good
location . ~4-4 .8 00 . 00 .
BUSINESS
OP ·
PORTUNITY
N 1ce
c lean bu s•ness w1lh ex
ce ll ent tra ck r ecord
"T HE K I DOlE SHOP
PE" includes all equip
m ent necessa r y - don't
c al l, come •n for det a il s.
V .A . APPROVED
Ni ce nome , l arge l ot .
Sy ra c use, I 0 1 1 Pet int
30 year t erm, Sl82.95
month , P&amp; . Buyer Only·
N eeds Closng Costs 1m
mediate
Possession
Good
Value
At
520.000 .00
HANDYMAN ' S SPECI ·
Al - Ev eryone needs a
r en ta l. $6 ,000 .00
MIDDLEPORT Cute li t
tie 2 bedr oom home ,
great st a rt er 1n good
loca t ion . 5 16,200.00 .
WE
HAVE
MANY
OTHER PROPERTIES
- CALL TODAY
REAL TORS
Henry E . Cleland , Sr
Henry E . Cleland, Jr .

.

1-&lt;IMA

RE G I STERE D CHOCOLA
TE pood le. 560 . 992-6280

Mobile Homes - Sale

HOTPOINT

· ··

OAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It :
AXVDLBAAJIR
LONGFELLOW

II

PEANUTS

WHO

CARES?

w~o

CARfS?

SPORTS RE~LL'&lt; DON'T
INTEREST ME SIR, 50
WHAT DO I CARE?

BUT WHAT
ABOUT
WOMEN 'S
RIGIHS 7

One Je tte r simply !lands for another . In this sample A la
u 5ed f or the three l ."s. X for th e t wo O's, et c Single letters.
apo~trophes. the length and formati o n of the words are all
hinlJ. Each da) th e code letters are dlff~rent

CIIVPTOQVOTES

VGOTUBCO

UYK

AWRK

X p

PGJ

WE

J VK D

KC .
Y..tenlay'a

FOU

FOU

Cryptoqllote :

~

EWYKO.

GBUJJKBC·

XUTPY
WHOSE

HANDS

HAVE

ROCKED THE CRADLE ARE NOW USING OUR HEADS TO
ROCK THE BOAT. - WILMA SCO'IT HEIDE.
'' lf1tk lnQ

F•eturn St"nclket• , lf'K

'
•

WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER J, 1979
5 2Q.-- World at Large 17 , 5 :45-Farm Report IJ; 5. 50-PTL Club
13
6 D0-700 Cl ub 6,8 ; 6 : 1o-N•w• 17 .
6 30--Christ opher Closeup 10 ; Love
American St yle 17 ; 6 : 45MO&lt;n,ng Report 3; 6 :50-Good
Morning WesT Vir g ini a 13 ; 6 : 55-News !3
00---Today J. IS ; Good Morning
Ameri c a
6. 13 ;
Wednesday
Morn ing 8, Batman 10; Three
Stooges L 1ttle Rascals 17 . 7: 15AM Weather 33 .
3o--Fami ly Affai r 10 . 7 ss-Chuck
White Reports 10.
B OCJ-Ca pt Kangat'OO 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver l7. Sesame St 33
8 3()-Rornper Room 17
9 00---Bob Braun J. Big Valley 6;
Phd Donahue 13.15: Porkv Pig &amp;
F nen ds 8, One Day at a Time 10 ;
Lucy Show 17
q 3o- Bob N ewhart 8; Raumatan
\0 ; Green Acres l7 .
IQ:oo-(ard ShiWkS 3,1S; lidQe ol
N ight 6. Beat !he Clod&lt; 8,10 ;
Morrung Magazine 13; Movie
" Lonely hearts" 17
10 30- Hollywood Squares 3, IS ;
Andy Grif f i th 6; Whew! 8, 10.
10 55- CBS N ews 8 . House Call 10.
11 00 - NBC News Special 3,15 ;
Lilverne &amp; Shirley 6, lJ; Price Is
Right 8,10 .
11 30- F amity Feud 6,13 : Sesame
Sr 20 .JJ . I I ~Wheel of Fo'tune 3. 15 11 · 5$--News 17 .
11 00 - Newsce nter
3;
News
6.8 . 10 , 13, Mindreaders 1S ; love
Ameri can Sty le 17
17 30--Ryan ' s Hope 6,13 , Search tor
Tomorrow 8. 10; Movie " Gold
D•gger~ of 1935 " 17; Ele&lt;: Co
20.JJ
1 oo--D ay s of Ou r Lives 3. 15; Young
&amp; t he Restless 8. 10; I »-As
The Wo rld Tu rns 8. 10.
2 oo-- Doctor s 3.15. One Life lo Live
6 . I J . 1 2'&gt;----New• 17 .
30 - Gu, d ing
Ligh1
8, 10 ;
Gig glesnort Hotel 17
oo- B.sebal l
Play Of f
J, l l :
Gene ral Hospltel 6.13 . I Love
Lucy 17 . Con nections 2fl; About
Thinkabout 33 .
3 Jo--One Day At A Time 8 . Joker's
Wild 10. Flin tstone s 17
4 00 - Mer v Gri ffin 6 .
Beverly
H illbi ll ies 8. Six Million Dollar
Man 10; Sesame Sl. 20,33 ; Tom &amp;
Jer r y IJ . Spectreman 17.
4 30---Pet t icoat Junction 8; Bionic
Wo man 13; Gilligan ' s Is . 11
5 oo-San f ord &amp; Son 8; Mister
Roge r s 20 ,JJ ; Mary Tyler Moore
10; My Three Sons 17 .
5 Jo--News 6 , Gomer Pyle 8; Elec
Co 20 : Mash 10 ; Happy Days·
Agai n lJ , I Dream of Jeannie 17 ,
Doctor Who 33.
6 oo- News 3, 8,10,13.15; ABC News
6; Ca rol Burnett 17 ; Zoom 20 .
6 JO- NBC News 3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnell 6; CBS News 8,10;
Bob Newhart 17 ; Over !asy :!0.
7 00--- Three's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac
Dough a. Match Game PM 6;
News 10 ; Newlywed Game 13;
Love American Style 15; Sanford
&amp; Son 17
7 Jl)-(ouni'Y Road~ 3; Newlywed
Game 6; Joker 's Wild 8; The
Judge 10 ; Family Feud 1J; Wild
Kingdom 15 ; All In The Family
17 , MacNe i l - ~ehrer Report :!0,33 .
8 oo-Basebatr:PI.e y -011 J,IS; Eight
is Enough 6. 13; Last Ret6rl8,10;
Greal Performances 20,33 ;
M ov ie "Charade" 17 .
8 . ]()-Struck by Lightnl ng 8, 10;
9 DO - Charlie's Angels 6,13 ;
M ovie " The Golden Gate Mur
der s" 8, 10.
10 ~Vegas
9: 30-S itcom 20,33;
6. 1J; News 20; Connedlons 33.
l.O: JO- Upstoirs, Downatalrs 17;
Besl of GroucltO :!0.
11 :00- News 3,6,8 , 10 , 1J,15 ; Dick
Cavet t 20; Wodehouse PleyhGuse

33.
113()-Johnny Carson l. {i; )-ove
Boat 6, 13; Swlll:h 8;- 4841/~
. 33; Movie
Worki::O $1iil&amp;
Wong"
10 ; 'Movie ~' Union
Station" 17.
12 :40-Barella 6,13; Haw•ll Flve-0
8; 1: DO- Tomorrow 3; News 15.
1: 1()-Movie "The Lady Tokes e
Sailor" 17; 1 ;50-Newt l3,
3 : 1o-News
17 ;
3 : 30-Movle
" Monlana Belle" 17; 5: 1o-Aat
Patrol 17.
'

''l:t;;i

�j

8-The Daily Sentinel . Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Oct . 2, 1979

Marketbaskets show effects of inflation
,COLUMBUS, Ohio I AI' 1 - The
Associated
Press
Ohio
Mllrketbasket list continues to show
the effects of inflation . The total cost
of the items on the hst IIIchcd up
fractionally at the end of Septemb&lt;r .
Prices in the sampliiig of 17
standard grocery items at selected
stores in 18 cities totaled an average
of $21.48 III the latest check, That

figure was up Jl9 perc ent from the

nme others anu the cost at

"verage of $21.29 at the enu of
August . The same items checked in
Uw same cities a year ago CO!:I1 an
average of $19 79 , with the new
f1gures representtg an 8.5 ~rcent
lilcre.a~ over the year .
The cost of seven items on the list
went down. whtle pnres went up on

pound

saL·k

of

d

five.

store-brand

gr"nulated sugar remained at $1 .19.
The same bag of sugar cost $1.08 a
year ago and $1.{)4 at the enol
September 1976.
Higher-priced 1tems in the
September survey IIICiuded a pound
of hamburger, upfrom$1.41to $1.44 ;
a fX)Wld of name-brand baC'o.n . up

Pope's arrival cheered today
NEWYORK t AP1 - New Yorkers
cheered the arnval of Pope J ohn
Paul II today with bann.rs flymg
from \he Bronx to the Battery and
thousands lining the streelS Wlder
gray slues. many m ethm c Polish
costume .
The

scoreboard

at

Yankt.'~

histone address . Mayor 1-:dward
Koch had promised a "b igger and
better " receptiOn than thr pope
rece1ved in h1s natJVt' Poland .
Mary Jo Mullally , who saw the
pontiff at the begmnmg of h1s
pilgrm1age m her home of Dublm ,
flew here

w1th

a

L'UUSiJJ

to see him

Stadium was Itt up with a g1ant
"Welcome. " At Shea StadiWlllt was
"Shalom ." Tilt' top of the Rmp1re
State Buliding wa' ablaze wtth w1U1
white and yellow lights, tht• Vatican
colors .

a gam

''I'm really amazed at tht' passiOn
this event has generatt!d,'' sa1d

world . that when you see a holy man
yo u want as much of him as you

Marife Hernandez , chief of protocol
for the United States m New York .
Thousands wavmg banner s.
permants and balloons stood behmd
police barricades along ctty streelS
as the pontiff landed at LaGuardia
Airport 1n "Shepherd I ." h 1s
specially marked TWA 727. and
drove to the United !';allon s for an
lustonc address. Mayor Edward
Koch had promised a " b1gger and
better" reception than the pope
received m his native Poland .
Mary Jo Mullally . who saw the
pontiff at the b&lt;gmnmg of h1s
pilgrimage m her home of Dublm,
flew here with a cousin to see hun
agam .
" We shook his hand We follow
turn jlll&gt;'l like people follow Elvis, "
she said, refernng to the late rock
'n' roll star E!Vls Presley
1
' There are so many smners Ln the
world, that when you see" holy man
you want as much of hun as you
can." sa1d her cousm. Suzzane .
Others on hand for the welcommg
Ct!remony, along with Mayor Koch,
included Govs. Hugh Carey of New
Yith banners flying from the Bronx
to the Battery and thousands linmg
the streets under gray sk1es, many
in ethnic Polish costume
The scoreboard at Yankee
Stadium was lit up with a giant
" Welcome ." At Shea Stad1wn it was
" Shalom ." The top of the Emp1re
Stae Buildmg was ablaze with w1th
white and yellow ltghts, the Vatican
colors.
"I'm really amazed at the passion
this event has generated," sa1d
Marife Hernandez, chief of protocol
for the United States in New York .
Thousands waving banners,
permants and balloons stood b&lt;hmd
police bamcades along c1ty streets
as the pontiff landed at LaGuardia
Airport 1n " Shepherd I," h1s
specially marked TWA 727. and
drove to the Umted Nation s for an

can,' · sa1d her cousin, Suzzant! .
Other s on hand for the welcoming

" We shook hts hand . We follow
hun just hke people follow Elvts,"
sht&gt; sa id , referrmg to the late rock
·n · roll star EIV1s Presley .
"There are so many stn ncrs 10 the

ceremony , along with Mayor Kw

here wtth a cousin to~ him again .
" We shook his hand . We follow
hun Just hke people follow Elvis. "
stw sa1d , referring to the late rock

'n · roll star ElVIS Presley .
.. Then are so many sinners 1n the
world.that when you see a holy man
you want as much of him as you
can,'' said her cousin, Suzzane .
Otliers on hand for the welcoming
ceremony, along wtth Mayor Koch,
mcluded \,ovs Hugh Carey of New
York and Brendan Byrne of New
Jersey , Cardinal Terence Cooke of
tbe New York Archdiocese and
Bishops Franc1s J . Mugavero of the
Brooklyn Diocese
At United Nations headquarters m
mid-Manhattan, diplomats had
assembled unpress1ve guest hsts for
two receptions and Pope John Paul's
major speech

to

the

General

Assembly.
The guests ranged from Jcquehne
Ot'lass1s and her daughter, Caroline
Kennedy, to the preSldents of Cyprus
and Gabon and the prime ministers
of Portugal and Mauritius .
" [ can hardly wa1t ," said Mayor
Edward Koch, who intends to trail
the :;~year-&lt;&gt;ld pope through most of
his tightly packed New York
schedule .
Koch ·s Joyful antlcipatwn was not
dampened by the cost of deploying
more U1a11 11,000 pohcem~n - half
the city for ce - for $2.5 mtllion m
overtime .
Pohce estimated 5 mtllion people
wuuld turn out along the pope's
route, whatever the weather - and
ram was fort~ast .
That figure would
rival the crowd
( '
that gathereQ•· under sWlny July
skies for the tall ships of the
Bicentennial "Op Sall " celebratiOn .
An estimated 70,000 persons were
expected to ja m into Yankee

Hoofs and Paws
By Marion C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
POMEROY - Rememb&lt;r J told
you not long ago about U1e busy time
we had of it in August.
Well , September was a h u ndinger, let me tell you . We ,, ade so
many fWl8 to come to the aid of
animals that there wasn 's much
time left over for a personal life .
Even the Thrift Shoppe m Mid dleport didn t do too badly considering all the yard sales going on
in the swnmer. The five women who
work down there were kept
reasonably busy and the proceeds
helped pay for , some of the gasoline
used on ambulance and placement

runs .
1bis writer, Major Miller and Ollf
president, Dorthea Fisher, spent
some time working with Humane
Society Inspectors who visited the
Gallia County Pound, met with the
conunissioners down there, and stnce have talked several times w1th
the woman who is spearheading the
development of a Gallia County
Hwnane Society.
That brings us to the lljlimals
themselves and most of tbe news
about them, although each started in
abandonment 28 ended up being
placed in good homes - four were
euthanized - three because they
were in bad health and one very
pregnant Beagle type.
. Here is the picture of what the
Hwnane Society did during September:
Nul,sance Call (barking dog)
Rutland , 1, Referred to Police-

Sheriff.
Pick-up of abandoned animals: 10.
Delivery of newly adopted

animal : 1.

run

Ambulance
to vet : 6.
Pick-up of animal in distress : 2.
First aid nm of animals being
housed temporarily : 3. 1

F:utharul.allon of rntically 1ll or inJUred animals : 6
Pi ck-up of supplieS for animals : 2.
Wild goose chase of reported
strays-aba ndoned animals - not
there : 2
Physical exam at vet for new
stray : 4.
Investigation of negl.-ct : 2
To vet for dog'&lt;'at med1c trainin~ :
2.
Animals reclauned by owners : 4.
Notice the 1lem above, "Pick-up of
supplies for animals ." Well, let me
tell you about a phone call we got on
Thursday .
A truck drtver ca lled from
Coolville asking where he could
deliver sometbing like 3,000 flea and
tick collars. l couldn 1 believe my
ears - but he said he had them and
that the slupment was prepaid - so
what would you say ?
l said. ' 'I'll meet you at our Thrift
Shoppe in Middleport ." So that's
what l did and that is why we offer a
free collar to each person who adopts one of our kittens, cats, puppies or
dogs .
Major Miller in the second request
to Sergean!B asked for J6 dozen more
coUars than were shipped originally
and they must have cleaned out their
warehouse for us . We sure do appreciate it - as l know the new pet
owners do that accept animals from
us.
You see each year quality companies like Sergeant make improvements on their merchandise
and what they have left over from
the previous year is donated to nonprofit organizations dealing with
animals, like ours to "giVe" to pet

owners.
They profit on their income tax
and our animalB profit by being
''flea promed"prlor to being offered
for adoption. Needless to say there
wtll be a nice letter of thanks sent to
Sergeant Company .

Stad1 um tomght a s the pope
cele brate s Ma ss With Cardinal
Ter ence Cooke, archbishop of New
York , and Catholic bishops of the
art&gt; a.
And about one mlllion persons
were expected for a major address
Wednesday morning at Battery
Park on Manhattan 's southern tip, a
crowd so huge city offlctals d.-c1ded
to close down the nearby Staten
Is land ferry slips for two hours .
The 53 rntles of parkWays and c1 ty
streets along the pope's route were
ordt•rpd closed a half -hnur in

~

from $174to $1.L7. and whole frymg
chicken , up from 59 to 62 cenL' per
pound .lostalg1a buffs might note
that hamburger sold for BO cents a
pound III September 1976, but the
averagt&gt; cos t for whol e frymg

chicken, even tllen , was 59 cents per
pound in cities hsted m the survey .
The rost of chuck roast averaged

advance of Ius amval at each pomt.
and transportation chiefs brared for
an all.Jay rush hour, pleadmg wiU1
drivers to leave thetr cars at home .

But rro one doubted that for t wu
days, the c1ty would see not only one
of the most im~rtant visitors m 1ts
history , but some of the worst trafftr
jams of all time .
The second Homan Cathohc
pontiff to vis1t the c1ty , Pope John
Paulll will spend IWlre as lung here
as Pope Paul VI d1d on Oct . 4, 1965,
and w1ll get much closer to New
York's ordlnary citize ns than Pr1ul

did durmg hts wtrirlwmd tour of Uw
United Nattons, the World' s Fa1r
and Yankee Stadium

r-------------------------1
Letters of opinion an· \u·lromed. They should be less
than 300 v.urds lun!( 1or subjeet tu reduction by the editor 1
and must be signed with the st~nee ·s addr.-ss. "'ames may
be v.ithheld upon puhlication . Huwenr. on request ,
names will bt· dis!'losed. Lettns shnuld bt• in l(ood tastr ,
addressing issues. not personal it it's .

The other side. ..
September 30, 1979
Dear Editor,
Usually l would deign to refer to a
letter to the Editor of the Sentinel
writtn by someone apparently
biased as ts Linda L. Shul17,
however, her rema rks should not go
unchallenged.
She states that ''meardngful
education" is taking place in
Harrisonville in her room . How can
anyone so oblivious to the economic
situation of our country today
pretend to teach effectively •
'!'his
Shultz person
asks,
" Whatever happened to the $3,000 a
year teacher who truly TAUGHT the
great scholars (sic I of the world'"
Those teachers have vanished
with the five-eent candy bar, the
twenty-nine cent per gallon gasoline,
tbe seven-cent per gallon fuel oil, the
ten-cent cup of coffee, and the tencent loaf of bread.
U Unda L. Shultz truly thinks so
highly of the" $.1 ,000.00 a year
teacher", why does she then write,
" I'd like a raise , sure"' She should
obtain the facts about the amount of
money alloted to Meigs Local School
System by the state and its
disposition .
Nonga F .' Hoberts
Hetired Teacher, Meigs
J.ocal School District

Hlanu·~

hoard, Supt.

Dear Editor,
Who does Mr . Gleason tlunk he is
coming in to run the school eli strict. I
say if they have enough money to
pay a lawyer 70 dollars an hour for
JUSt sitting on Ius can, and pay guards $7 an hour to guard an almost empty school then they got enough to
pay the teachers what they are
asking . Mr . Gleason, we have news
for you, Meigs JCoWlty mothers Jove
their kids and we wil not let our kids
be the strike breaker 1 It is not fBJr of
you to say if our ktds don~ go to
school, they are counted absent. I
will fight and protest this till you
know what freezes over. The truth Is
we know you don 1 pay the teachers
enough . l wouldn't walk into that
classroom to teach a bunch of those
luds for under $150 dollars a day . It's
not the teachers' fault about the
schools falling down . It's not tbe1r
fault thert 's not enough books or
Help

they are outdated
l 'd SBY the school board and the
superintendent is to the fault. You
all knew this was coming all summer . Why didn't you all slop it
b&lt;fore it started? U we have some
kid in the future whose a 6th grade
dtopeout become president of U. S.
feel proud Mr . Gleason you helped
put him there . You've got a few good
teachers. Try to keep them . I
wouldn 1 blame them if they went
elsewhere !

Mrs. William Fink,
246 Sycamore St.
Middleport , Oluo

Decision upsetting
Dear Editor,
l would like as a parent to express
my feelings on tbe Meigs Local
School situation.
l do not know Mr. Gleason, but
what he did to our band kid5 was all
uncalled for. They had looked for ward to their first contest at
Wellston . We parent.&gt;; got them out
there to practice and back all week .
The ktds had it all worked out to
get there in cars . Then late Friday
thi:i great man called and told them
not to let the band on the field .
Now, l ask you , is that a way to do
the kids' They can't have school,
now he has taken the ball games and
band from them . What have they
done to be punished for that is what
they are doing. What lund of a school
board do we have' :'&lt;one at all. Do
we parents have to sit by and watch
our luds be in~ hurt ' There must be
sometlung we can do.
Rosemary Hysell
698 Laurel Street
Middleport, Oluo 45760

dropped from $1 to !M3 cents while a
10-jx&gt;Wld sack of Idaho potatoes fell
from $165 to $1.59.
Tomato prices increased from 58
to 64 cents per pound 011 average,
wh1k the average price of a head of
lettuce went to 68 cents, up 10 Ct!nts
from the previous month .
The average prices of other Items
surveyed included: center cut pork
chops at $190, down from $2 .02 a
month ago ; a gallon of store-brand
whole milk at $179 , up from $1.77 ;
and a pound of margarine in
quarter-pound sticks at 68 cents, up
from 67 cents.
Following are average totals for
Items on the Marketbasket list from
reportmg cities, witb September
prices first and August prices
second:
Athens, $22.31, $21.44 ; Canton,
$19 .34, $!8.36; Cincinnati, $22.14,
$22 .10; Cleveland, $21.63; $22.44 ;
Dllwnbus, $22.58, $22.32; Conneaut,
$21.41, $22 .36; Findlay, $22 .65,
$22 .26 ; Fremont, $22 .&gt;9, $21.10;
Kent-Ravenna, $21 .26, $20 .93;
Marietta, $21.48, $21.30; Massillon,
$19.96, $19.40; Painesville, $21.65,
$22 .13; Portsmouth, $21.10, $21.80;
Salem, $22.01, 121.48; Steubenville,
$22 .66, $2194; Toledo , $19 .30, $19;
Van
Wert,
$22 . 18 ,
$22 .37;
Youngstown, $20.43, $20 .56 .

11 65 pt:r ~JO W'ld m tht.&gt; latest price
d.• · l· ~.. up .·.4 percent from the endo f -Au gu ~~ orin~. A dozen gradt! A
htrg l.' ··~g::.; cost an awrage of 77

cents at the end of September, down
Sl'Vc n cen ts per OOzen from a month

ago .
The cost of an llklunce jar of
peanut butter fell from $1.21 to $1.19
tn the CitieS checked .
. The a . . ·crage pnce of a one-pound
c e~n

of name-brand co £fee increased

Six

cents - from $2 .99

w $3 .05

'Illc cost of a 103 .. -ounce can of
tomato soup dropped fractionally to
22 .9 cents. while the price of a 13ounce P"ck of chocolate chip cookies
rose 3 percent ·to an average of
$!.1 6' ' · The price of a 12-&lt;&gt;unce ran
of froze n orange jUice concentrate

Truck drive fund
at $10,200 mark
A publtr fund drive by the Middleport Fire Department to ra1se
113,000 for a heavy duty rescue van
has reached $10,200.
The department is hoping to wrap
up the final $2800 in the near future .
Those wtsh\flg to contribute may
send contributions to the department in Middleport noting that the
donation is for tbe new truck .
Latest contributors were Denver
Nelson , Mrs. John Kincaid , Silver
Hun Free Will Baptist Churc h, Betty
Lou Kerns, Adolph Saelens, Home
Bwlders Class of the Middleport
Church of Christ, Hearthstone Class
of the Middeport First Baptist Church, Cynthia Gori ng , Doroth y
Ycauger, Mirl Ratliff. Leo Rupp,
Clara Bell Smith, Margaret VanCooney, Mr . and Mrs . R. L. Miller,
Mr . and Mrs. William E. Lewts,
Dorothy Young, Mr . and Mrs .
Waller Housh, Robert Goodall, Mr .
and Mrs . Ted Riley, Sr .. Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Bachner , Bnan Mullen
and Feeney-Rennet! Post 128,

--------------------------

! Are:-a De:-aths
I

BLANCHE M. BRALEY
Mrs . Blanche M. Braley, 79, North
Main St, Rutland, died Monday
evening at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mrs . Braley was born Sept. 18,1900
in Rutland Townslup, a daughter of
the late Edwin M. and AnM Sisson
Taylor. A homemaker most of her
life, she was married on May 24,
1919, to Victor H. Braley , who survives . Other survivors are a
daughter, Mrs. David (Dorothy 1
Tillis, Chillicothe; four grandcluldren, DaV1d Tillis , Jr.. Dearfield , 01; Robert Tillis, Greenfield;
Mrs. Robert IRoseanna 1 Grooms
and Mrs . Michael 1Pamela 1 Thompson , both of Chillicothe, and three
great-grandchildren, Cindy James
and Robert B. Tillis, both of Greenfield, and Jennifer Th!IIlpson of
Chillicothe.
Several nieces ,
nephews and cousins also survive .
Mrs. Braley was a member of the
Hutland Church of Cllrist for :&gt;4
years. She was a Sunday school
teacher and church treasurer there
for several years.
Funeral services will be held at 2
p .m . "Thursday at the Rutland Church of Christ with Mr . Brad Henderson officiating. Burial wiU be in
Miles Cemetery . Friends may call
at the Walker Funeral Home in
Rutland after 2 pm . Wednesday Wltil 12 noon on Thursday when the
body will be taken to the church to
lie in state . The family will receive
friends at the funeral home from 2 to
4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday .

American Legion.

MANTOUX PREFERRED
The Board of the Meigs County
T uberculosis Association has
decided that the Mantoux skin te.t
would be the preferred method for
admintstenng skin testmg 1n the
schools .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-David Smith, Reedsville ; Gladys Shwnway, Pomeroy ;
Kenneth Matson, HuUand; Robert
Lewis, Middleport ; Hobert Carnahan, HW1ttngton , W. Va .; Edna
Kennedy. Middleport.
Discharged-Mary Jane Pugh,
EllZBbeth Carpenter, Mary Pierce,
Huth Larkins , H.ichard DeMoss, Edna Bush

RUMMAGE SALE
The Harrisonville Senior Gtizens
will hold a rummage and bake sale
at the Hamson ville Town Hall Wednesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to
3p .m .

·····.-GOOD TIIS SP£aAI.-.

••

13" PIUA •
Your choice of ony •

.one topptng .' l " l
Reg . $3 55

I

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were 1ssued to
Jeffrey William Marcinko, 20, Tuppers Plains and Peggy June Johnson, 18, Tuppers Plains; Hanry
Edgar Stewart. 24, HI . 2, Cheshire,
and Debbie Kay Lemley , 22, Rt. 2,
Cheshi r e.

l """ Oily

liltictsi
-. •••.••1

meetmg, an Ht.!euuvc sesswn for
the must part, lasted until a bout
11 30 p.m . durmg whtt· h the progress
of negotiations was reviewed
Two parents Wt&gt;re present for the
meetmg before it was mov~d into

word of thes~ canceHutwns . Late
Tuesday afternoon , board m ~ru l&gt;t:1"S
were notified that a spec1a l sesswn

towards lht.: setllcme nt uf lht.· stnke
li:iter loday was evllJ ~ nt from
C lt.·ason lhts mornm~ .

would be held last m~ht. It was
reported that the two parents who

exe&lt;· utlve session .

session started were not advised
that the meetmg was to be held, but
comc identally went to the bu 1ldmg to
ask thetr questions 1f the m cetm g
were held .
Dan E . Morris, dt rector uf in':'
strruction and curriculum. reported
he was not notified that the m ce tmg
would take place .

(;Ieason said that the f&lt;&gt;&lt;Jtball
team will be penn1tted to pra\'tlt'e
this cvcmng in preparatwn fur the
Wellston game Fnda y. However, 1!
the strike 1s not settled, the same
s1tuCjtion will exist fur Friday's
game that existed last Friday .
meamng. the band actiVIties and
game will not be held uiJJess the

The media was not not1hed that a
meeting would be held
·
Although special sessions have
bt!en set for each night stnce the
strike began last Monday , the
sessiOns through Friday were all
cancelled . There were no meetings
un Saturday , Sunday or Monday
evenings and the media received no

HALlOWEEN
IS
WEDNESDAY,
OCTOBER 31

VOL. XXVIII

NO 120

By KBtle Crow
The positive and negative s1des of
the B1g Bend Hegatta were ouUmed
when the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce met in regular scss10n
Tuesday at the Me1gs Inn .
Bill QUickel, c&lt;Khatnnan of thiS
year's Hegatta , presented the
positive and ne~ at1ve Issues .
The chamber los t more than $4,000
on this year's Hegatta , Qutckel's
comments were to assist in changing
the picture for next year. however,
when Qu1ckel concl uded , Fred Crow
and Paul Stmon did not agree with
some of the plans Quickel had
outlined .
On the good side. Qu1c kel liSted ,
worthwlule event.&gt;; were tenms mat ches, c once sston s tan ds, two
parade• . a large attendance of

for many years except this year ,
should be in charge of the rides, Jim
Frecker the parade , and others in
charge of other events .
Regardi ng Quickel's remarks
Crow said, " You're trying to do too
much, one person can oniy do so
much ." You went hog wild on expenses," Crow said to Quirke!.
Quickel further added that grant
money is available and the chamber
should try to secure some of the funds for the Regatta .
Simon reported that tbe stage on
the upper parlung lot should be completed within the next two weeks . He
also sa1d that Mayor Clarence An drews had indicated that parking
meters should not be moved from
thetr present locallon to across the
street where additional pavmg was

qu~ns ,

done .

out~f-tnwn

VIsitors ,

Lt.!

talent show. boat races, Herttage
Sunday, P . A. Denny and art s how .
On the other hand. bad features mduded rainy weather, the cam1val,
tbe Jeannte C. H1ley show, the fact
that tbc stage was not co mpleted.
teen dance whtch was cancelled,
parade route changed , and Jack of
infonnation , and a broken copy
machine.
Changes Quickel suggested were
better promotion , budget
established, develop a master plan,
include other activities such as a
long distance marathon race. and
for comnuttee members to attend
area festivals to gather 1deas for the
Regatta .
Paul Simon. president. noted that
the program~ were not out until two
days before Regatta . He also sa•d he
felt the president of the chamb&lt;r
should be general chatnnan stnce
the result of the Regatta falls on the
president's shoulder . He further
commented that the fact that the
copying maclune m the chamber offlee broke just a few days b&lt;fore the
event had no be ann~ on the Hega tta .
Fred Crow emphas ized that there
are far too many actlvtties and the
chambers does not have the manpower or tbe money to handle .
Crow ~he felt one person
rge of one eve nt.
should be in
Crow fell
t Bill Grueser , who
Ra.s been in ctiarge of the cam1val

Sunon observed tbat the merchant.&gt;; had paid for the paving with
the 1dea in mind that the meters
wuld be moved .
Bob Miller infonned members of
tbe upcoming golf tourament for
chamber members scheduled at
Hi verside in Mason Oct. 11.
There W!ll be an entry fee of $5
paid to the chamber Wlth each per son paying their own green fees p4jB
cart. Lunch w!U be served beginning
at noon and the tee off will be at 1
p.m. with a shotgun start
There will be troohies presented to
1Continued on page 14 1

EXTENDED FORECAST
Friday through Sunday: A
chance of showers in the northwest._,two-tblrds of the slate
Friday and across the stale
Saturday and Sunday. Highs In
the 6&amp; , lows ln the 408 .

Weather
Variable cloudiness tonight w1th"
chance of showers . Low 45 to 50 . Par tly sunny Thursday Wlth the lugh in
the low 60s . The chance of ram 30
percent tonight and lO percent Thursday .

ON THE FIRST FLOOR

MASKS AND COSTUMES
HAllOWEEN CANDY
Autumn MiJI: .

to read water meters Con

Halloween Cards · Streamers
Decorations
Tlble Covers

tact Cih' Hal l, Pomero y ,
tor applications.

of

Hallmark

Plat@s · Napkins - Cups.

ear
Top

company for 50 years . Ex
pertence in sales and ser
vice . Neat appearance,
transportat i on
needed .
Phone JQ.4 ·675 1954 or apply
in person , 601 Main St ., .Pt .
Pleasant .
WAITRESS WANTED . Ap ·
pi y
in person , Craw's
Family RestauranL
EXPERIENCED
SER
VICE mechanic Carter 's
Plumbing and Heating . 992 ·
6282 .

" Toda y our schools a r e all open .
" Last mght the beard of ed ucotion
m et at 7 :30p. m . 1n a specta l sess ion
whi ch had been scheduled . The
board first answered qu estions fr om
parents who were 1n attendance Af te r the ques tions wer e answered tht!

beard moved mto executive session
to discuss negotiations.
"This morning we are very opturusttc about a settlement at our
next negotiations meeting scheduled
this evening at 3:30 p.m . at a
Pomeroy church.
" If a tentative settlement would
occur , it would require a ratification
by all teachers in a general meeting.
We sincere ly hope this can and does
occur tonight.
" Aga m' remember most of our
teachers are extremely capable and
dedicated people who want the best
rOmtinued on page 14)

entine

at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

WllJNlSDAY . DCI08E. R 3. 19/9

is listed in salisfactory c·onditton at Veterans Memorial Hospital where be
was admitted for treatment of numerous inj uries. Luckily , no one was
lulled .

CAR DEMOUSHED - Three persons were injured, one required
hospitahzatwn tn a four-vehicle accident Tuesday morning at the Junction of SR 7 and SR 124 in Meigs County . Hi chard Glasgow , :&gt;4, Gallipolis,

Three injured in four-vehicle smashup
Four persons were injured during
Tuesday "ccidents investigated by
the Ga llia - Meigs Post, Highway
Patrol.
Three persons were injured during
a four-vehicle accident in Meigs
County on SR 7, at the junction of SH
124 .
Called to the scene at II :55 a . m .,
officers report a northbound auto
operated by Richard Glasgow . 54.
Gallipolis, had stopped at the in -

tersectton .
A northbound vehicle driven by
Hi chard Shook, 48, Belpre, stopped
b&lt;hind tbe Glasgow auto . A third
northboWld vehicle operated by
Ra lph L . Kessler , 28, Sturgeon, Pa .,
was unable to stop and attempted to
pass .

The Kessler auto and a southbeund vehicle driven by Betty J .
Foster . 24, Minersvtlle . collided

Commissioners table
communications bid
Also meeting w1th the board was

Wesley Buehl, county engineer.
Buehl discussed the opera tions of
the county highway departrnW. -~
Bueh l rep o rt e d
work
is
progressing on county road 18 and
that work would b&lt;gin next week on

headon . ·The Kessler auto then
struck the rear of the Shook veh•cle,
the left side of the Glasgow auto . and
overturned on the roadway .
Kessler and Glasgow diSplayed
visible signs of injury and were transported by the Middleport Emergency Squad to Veteran.s \l el!lorial
Hospital for treatment .
A passenger in the Shook IThlcle .

MAN CHARGF:ll
HAMILTON, Ohiu ,,,p, - Thre&lt;•
c·nunts of murder han· htTn Jodgt.·d
ctgainsl a Hamiltun man in
ronneftiun \4-'ith tht· dt·ath!! uf lhrt'('
persons in an On•rpt•rk ar('~l trailt•r.
Rirhard Sa,y lm . 27 , \o\a :-. wldt·r
police gua.rd Tut-sday in tJ hospital
undergoing tnatmt.· ut for stab

"''Sods. wrrr
.

d

John l.russu, li, and

RaJ · Wright Jr .. 31. whu liH-d in
tht• trailrr, and (~ah- :\Tilt , lM. uf
nt.·arb}' Libt-rt)' Town ~hip .

Gladys Shook, Belpre, claimed injury but was not inunediately
treated .
The Kessler ad Glasgow velucles
were demolished . There was minor
damage to the Foster and Shook
autos.
Kessler was cited on a charge of
failure to maintain an assured clear
di!; lance.

One person clai med injury
following a two-vehicle mishap on
SH 7 at CH 20, in Gallia County.
Called to the scene at 10 :3() a .m .,
the patrol reports a southboWld auto
operated by David L. Taliaferro, 31,
Belpre, had slowed in traffic.
A southbound velucle driven by
Robert L. Plullips, 24, Bidwell,
failed to stop and struck the
Taliaferro auto tn the rear .
Phillips was cited on a charge of
assured clear distance.
Taliaferro claimed inJury, but was
not immediately treated.
There was minor damage to the
Phillips vehicle, heavy damage ~ "
the Ta~alerro auto .

county road 25.

Also dtscussed was a ditclung
problem on county road 24 near the
Eb~n property and a water problem
on Oak Grove road . Buehi reported
that these problems would be taken

care of at once .
It was reported that a dedica tion
cerernoney for the

new nursmg

home 1s tenatively scheduled for
Sunday aftemoon on Oct 14 .
Permission was granted to Janet
Morns to attend a d1stnct club conventi on 1n
Oct. 4

~elsonville

on Thursday,

Parent filing deadline set

Plus bo)(ed candv and Trick or Treat Bags.

selection

the program

•

present contract there is to be no
charge for the headquarters
allocations.

Spook costumes

Fine

optuni sm

$l ,865.1n.
It was pointed out that under the

CraJy Rubber F~ces - Hands · Feet - Pretty Faces
. vampire Blood - Plus children's and ,adults'

PART TIME EMPLOYEE

of the

The Me1gs County Conuniss1oners
Tuesday night received one l&amp;id for
the Meigs Emergency Medical Ser vices Communications system from
tbe Motorola Corrununirations in the
amount of $6:&gt;. 750.93.
The bid was tabled and referred to
the EMS Board of Trustees for
•
stud y.
Meeting with the board were Bob
Bailey, EMS coordmator,and Bob
Fisher, president of the EMS Board
of trustees . They . discussed the
SEOEMS billings . A review 0! July
and August billings were made and
authorization was given to pay the
amount billed' less the headquarters
allocations charges in the amount of

'

HAU.MARK HALlOWEEN

reDection

1n

and the students arc m classes thi s
week .
In reference to the meetmg la st

night . Gleason saJ d there wa~ appan:ntly a mi.sWlderst.andin g and as
a resu lt , Lhe med1a was not advtsed .
The media would not have been per nutted to sit in on the Ion~ exec utt ve
sesswn, however . tn accordan ce
w1th law .
Gleason h~d thJs tu ~ay th iS mor mng -:

Chamber ponders
•
Regatta Issues

SElECTIONS

nings

A

teachers involved

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

SEE OUR HAU.OWEEN

-

asked questions before the execut.Ivt·

e

Scarf Pops · Caramels · Party Paks · Candy Corn

BAR HELP needed . 9'12
3860 be tween 8 and 10 mor

UNLIM I TED H I GH
ninos oPPortunity .

BY BOB HOU' LKH

Optimism towa rds the settlement
of a teachers stnke 1n the Me1gs
Local School Distnrt, possiblv ttus
evening, ran hi~h Uus m o rmn~ with
Meigs l.ocal Supt . Uav1d Gleason .
Gl ea~on announced a negotiations
sess1on bet ween the teams of the
Meige Board of f:d ucalion and the
Meigs L.ocal Teac hers Ao;sociation
will take place at 3:30 this afternoon
at a Pomeroy Ch urch .
The optimism followed a lengthy
meeting by the Mc1gs Local Board of
EducatiOn at UlP juni or htgh school
in Middleport Tuesday ni'!'Stt. The

ELBERFELD$

By Fanny Famrer and Brach -

wanted

Supt. Gleason optimistic about s~ttlement

HAND WORK ITEMS - Margaret Johnson is pictured with B'Small
part of thehandmade items and other merchandise to be featured at the
country store'~hich will be a part of Friday's fall festival at the Meigs
Senior (,'itizens Center in Pomeroy . 'The festival, from 11 a . m . to 8 p . m .,
Is open to the public .

'There has been a change in the
rules and regulations governing the
release of student directory mfonnation by schools. Under current
federal and state law directory in formation held about c urrent and
fanner public schol pupils by an
educational agency or insl1tut10n
may be released to any group or person tor use in a non'{lrofi t-making
plan or activity .
Directory information is defined
as a pupil's nome. address,
telephone listing, date and place of
birth . maJOr field of study, par -·
ticipation in officially recogniZed activities and sports, weight and
height of members of athletic learns ,

•

dates of attendance and date of
g raduation and awards r ecetved .

Such release of mformation is permitted unless expresly forbidden by
a student's parent or a ''ludent who
is of age
In accordance with this rule,
Southern Loca l School District has
established the period of Octob&lt;r 4 to
October 12 as the period during
which parents or eligible student.&gt;;
may file to refuse to penni! the
release of directory information.
Such s tatements s hould be subznitted in wrillng to the principal of
the building in which tht! student at tends .

EXTENSIVE DAMAGES - Two Middleport firemen were injured
and damage was extens1 vr toctay in a fire at 8:35a.m. at the fonner Reed
residence , 143 N. Front Sl \1 ,ddl epo11 T't• ltume, recently purchased by
Mr. and Mrs . Allen I .Ct' 1\,.,g 11 as not OCt'Upl ed. The blaze was discovered
by a neighbor who saw smoke coming from the kitchen area. There was
heavy smoke damage . Two fire fighters were injured, one had a burn on
the hand and the other a foreign object in his eye. They were taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital for treatment. It was believed the blaze as
caused from faulty wiring . There was no insurance and no monetary
figure was placed on the loss .
•

•

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