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DOUGLAS R. ROUSH
Douglas Riley Roush, 14, born
April:!&amp;, 1965, died Saturday.
Doug is survived by his father ,
GleM E . Roush, who resides at
Graham Road, St. Clairsville, 0 .,
and mother, Donna R. Spillars of
Stone Gate Apartments , Columbus.

0.
Other survivors are sisters, Debra
and Alisa, and maternal grandparents, M .... Paul E . Efaw of 218
Efaw Ave., St. Clairsville , 0 .. and
paternal grandmother. Mrs . Earl
Roush of Angels of Mercy nursing
horne in Albany, 0.
Funeral services will be held at
Beck Funeral Home on Tuesday at
1l a.m ., St. Clairsville. Calling hours
will be today from 2-4 and 7-llp.m .

ELMA W. BAILEY
Elma Whiteside Bailey of New
Richmond, a former Meigs County
resident, died at a ancinnati
Hospital Saturday morning .
Mrs. Bailey was a graduate of the
Che.!ter High School having lived for
many years in the Long Bottom
c&lt;mmunity . She at one time worked
in a beauty shop in Middleport.
She was preceded in death by her
father, George Whiteside, her
mother, Leota Whiteside Hawley,
her step-father, Wellie Hawley , and
a step-brother, James Hawley .
She is survived by her husband ,
Amos Bailey, sons, Herbert and
Michael, and a daughter, Mrs . Martin (Debbie 1 Williams. along with
five grandchildren, a sister, Mrs .
Joe (Joan) Haas, a brother, Jack
Hawley, a step-eister, Mildred
Hawley; a sister-in-law, Mrs . James
Hawley, an aunt, Mrs. Ella Hannum, and a number of nieces ,
nephews and cousins.
Funeral services will be held at

P~aa~~

• PIZZA BREAD •
•

Your choice of any

.one toppong .
·Reg . S 1.20

I

•

I

89C.

I Doy&gt; o.ly

:&amp;1nO's:

•••••••
•

AU LOCATIONS

•

the White Memorial Funeni1 Home
in New Richmond Tuesday afternoon .
MINNIE C. FORTil
Minnie C. Forth, 86, Ht. 2, Crown
City, died Sunday at 9:15p.m. at
Holzer Medical Center following a
three month period of failing health
Born on October 29, 1892 in Mason
County to Stephen Arnold and Sarah
Frances Leonard Jackson, Mrs .
Forth marned James C. Forth on
November 22, 1917 in Gallipolis .
Mrs . Forth was preceded in death b)O
her husband on October 25, 1969.
Surviving are children: Byrdell
James Forth, Crown City; Mrs .
Haymond Baker, Middleport; Mrs .
Clifford King, Galhpolis; Delc1e
Forth, at home; and Mrs . Odell
Smith, Middleport. She was
preceded in death by an infant son.
Seven grandchildren and eight
great-grandchildren survive, as well
as one brother, Lowell Jackson,
Southside, W. Va .
Mrs. Forth was preceded m death
by four sisters and SIX brothers.
A member of Edna Chapel Church, she attended Providence Church
and Victory Church.
Services will be held Wednesday
at 2 p.m . at Providence Church. The
body will lie in state one hour pn or
to services . The Hev . Charles
Lusher will officiate. Burial will
follow at the ·Ohio Valley Memory
Garden .
Fncnds may ca ll at Willis Funeral
Home on Tuesday from 2 until4 p.m .
and 7 UIItil9 p .m.
VIRGO. E. HARPER
Virgil Ellis Harper, 67, Houte 2,
Hacine, d1ed Saturday night at St.
Mary's Hospital m Huntington, W.
Va .
Mr . Harper was born Nov. 26,1911.
a son of the late Joseph and Mary
Asbury Harper.
He was also
preceded in death by a sister.
Surviving are his wife, Faye
Brown Ha r per ,
three sons.
Theodore Ogene. Tulsa. Okla .:
Hoger Eudell. Apple Grove, W Va ..
aJrl Jerry Wayne , Racine; five
daughter., Gertrude Huth Hobbs.
Playpool, Ariz .; Zelia Mae Pat ter son, Apple Grove, W.Va .; Janel
Adkins. Huntington , W. Va . ; Carmen Marshall , Hedgev11le, W. Va :

,---- ---------------------------1

I N. W. COMPTON, O.D.
~

Eight killed In
airpl~ne blaze

OPTOMETRIST

:

1

l -------------------------------·
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON

:

ON THURS.) - EAST COURT ST.. POMEROY .

I

~ \\0-e

ATHENS, Grc&gt;ecc I AP) - At least
e1g ht passengers were killed and
scores injured m a [ire that
destroyed a Swiss airLiner as it
landed at A!hens with 154 persons
aboa rd .
Among the passengers were 100
doctors bound for a medi c al
eunvention tn Peking, officials srud.
Sw1ssa1r, the Sw1ss airline, said
many of them were affiliated with
the World Health Organization in
(~eneva .

ROGER TURNER

Turner joins Cleland Realty
Hoger Turner is now e1 realtor
asso&lt;:iate with Cleland Healty, Inc .
m Pomeroy .
Hoger recently passed the Ohio
Heal Estate license exam in Columbus a fter completing course work in
Heal Estate Pnnciples and Practi ces. and Real F.,tate Law al Hio
Grande College. He also attended
the Umon Professional Heal Estate
School in Columbus .
Hoger graduated from Hutland
High School and moved to fllinoi s.
There he worked as a foreman for a
food processmg company and later

as an operator for a chentical com~
pany.
Stx years ago. Hoger moved back
to Langsville, lo operate Turner 's
Grocery . He has been employed by
Southern Ohi o Coal Company for the
past hve years .
Turner is a member of the
Harrisonv ill e Masonic Lodge , and
attends the Dyesville Commumty
Churc h . H1s hobbles are basketball ,
baseball , bowl mg. and !.able teruHS.

Pontiff

W1tnesses reported flames were
shootmg out of the undercarraige of
!he Swissair DC-8 as it skidded to a
halt amid light rainfall and high
winds late Sunday night .
Transport Mmisler Alexander
Papadonganas said a Greek pilot
who lande d a few minutes before
reported "b rakmg action was
rnetlium to poor because of wet
runway
conditions."
But
Papadonganas and other officials
sa1d they had no idea what caused
the fire .
One passenger sa1d the fire spread
rapidly and heavy smoke filled the
plane. Firemen reported they found
th e bodies of e1ght passengers ,
burne-d beyond recognition, still
s trapped t o their seats. Two
passengers were refX)rted in serious
conditiOn and were not expected to
::;urv1vc. A number of others were
treated for burns and smoke
mha lat1on at va rious hospitals . All
12 crew members escaped unhurt,
;urport off1c 1als sa1d.
Sw1.•;sair s aid 20 other passengers
were unaccounted for . But it was
believed most or all of these had left
U1e mroort unhurt Without report in~

Fur ht s lllall homily. lhL• pope
chose ·· f;wuly ltfl&gt;" l)l'cau.se " Kight
li1 l.1fe Sunday:· an annual en.•nt .
c&lt;J tnt"ll.ied ~· tth h1s \"I S.It In t.hc
stron ge.st lan~--:uage ( Jf tht• Wt&gt;t•k . t.he
pi! pt..&gt; u rged hts il stencrs to reflect on
tlll' ·· ncuure of marna ~e. un Lhe
farnll _\ ctnd on tht· vctlul' of ltft• ...

control
" "'"h~n

MEET TONIGHT
The Olive Township Trustees will
m.eet at 7 p .m. this evening at the
fire station in Reedsville .

vvhen

the Meigs County population
was around 28,000.

the sa c n-dnes.s of lift•
before birth IS attacked , we w1ll
stand up and proclaim that no onl'
l'\"l?r ha !': the authority Lu dt&gt; stroy
w1born life." the ponttff said in b1s
worldv~-'ldl' -tl'lt•\1sed hUJmly .
"' \\11wn till' mst1tUt1on uf marrta ~=:t
IS r~b.andrmt"cftu human sel fi shness
ur r t• du Cl•d to a lt•rnporary .
condllwnal ~~rran i:! L' lll ent U1at can
L'CtSi l } bot· t~nnmatt: d. we w11l stand
up anll affinn tht· lrldi.ssolubd ity of
tJH.· rnarnage bond ." he sa 1J .
·' \\/hen fn•ed um I S u s t"d to
do nuna te U1e wt•ak. tu s quander
neil ural rcso urct:'s and energy. and to
deny basiC rlt'n•ss Jtlt'S to people , we
w1ll sta nd up and reaffirm the
demand s uf jtL..,1IO' rl nd sonal lovt•
·· Whe n the s1ck . tht' aged or the
dy mg are ab~mdoned m lonel iness,
we will stand UIJ and proelaun tnat
t.hl.'y art' worth ~ of ltJ\"t' , c art· nnd

I

s

A SUPER BUY •••

95

respe( t · ·

MEETS TONIGHT
Olive Towship Trustees will meet
this evemng at Reedsville Fire
Stalwn at i p.m.

TY

of Pomeroy, Meigs county,

•Exclusive Dial -A - Nap carpet ad justment adjusts cleaner to all car pet heights, even Shags.
•Huge top-filling bag prevents
clogs.
•Wide
wrap -aro und
furniture
guard.
Steel motor hood.
•Lilli me lubricated motor
•Dual Edge Kleener cleans up to
baseboards.

SAVE •4()00

'•

MEF.TS TUES DAY
ltac ine Lodge 461 F and AM will
meet Tuesday at 7 :lOp m .

EUREKAS BEST-SEUING
DELUXE UPRIGHT
WITH

'llloJJ.

~JJ

MEETS WEDNESDAY
Pomeroy Chapter 80 HAM will
meet Wednesday al 7:30 p .m .
Bosworth CoUIIcil H and SM will
meet al8 :30 p.m .

...

SPONSORS DINNER
The juniOr class at Eastern High
Sc hoo l will sponsor a spagehelt dinne r Oct. 12, before the homecoming
game with Southwestern .
Dmner will be served from 4 p.m .
to 7:30 p.m . Dinners are $1.95 per
J&gt;Crsnn The cheerleaders will be
5e!l m ~ homemade pie and eake .

Sa: ving the area's banking needs since 1904.

MEET WEDNESDAY
The Meigs County Jay cee~ttes
will meet at llle haunted house Wednesday at 7: 30 p.m . For addi tional
informa t iOn contact !'lacy Burns at

Exclusive VG II hu 1 individu~l
steel beater bars for ell:ceptional
carpet cleaning perform•nce.
•Exclusive 6 ~w1y Dial -A -Nap, SO"'
more adjustmenh th•n competitive
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•Brilliant headlight
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•Decorator styling
REG. $109.~

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Model 14SI

FREE TOOLS!

992-$4 .

Farmers
Bank
Pomeroy, Ohio

Member FDIC

VETF.RANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions- Will iam
Morris, Pome~o y ; Eva Die hl.
Hacine .
Saturday Discharges--Evelyn
Yost , Thomas Sayre , Hoger Adams .
Rita Stump.
Sunday Adm iSSIOns--Clarence McDa n~&lt;•l. Middleport ; Waynr Chase,
Aibany ; &lt;Hobert Van Meter, West
Columbia; Peggy White, Minersville; Tirruny Smith, Reedsville ;
Husse ll Hol, .nger, Jr., Chester.
Sun.:dy Discharge-Arul Barrett.

...

'

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Although no settlement was
reached, negotiating teams of the
Meigs Local Teachers Association
and the Meigs Local School
District's Board of Education m e t
for a two hour session Monday
night.
While the lwo learns failed to come
up with a solution lo be voted upon
by striking teachers, it was
generally felt to be an encouraging
factor that the negotiations are
taking place in the strike which
moved into its 12th day today .

Supt. David Gleason Monday mght
met wi!h a group of some 15 parents
from the Salisbury and Pomeroy
areas to discuss problems created
by the strike.
Supt. Gleason then went t o the
negotiating session held at a
Pomeroy church.
He conunented he has positive
feelings about last night's meeting
and stated he has been in co ntact
with Bill Lewis, federal mediator,
askin~ him to come to Pomeroy for
another negotiating session.
Lewis is unable to come today, but
has indicated to Gleason that he will
be able to come Wednesday or Thursday.
Supt. Gleason alo;o indicated th&lt;lt
possibly other negotiatmg sessions
will be held before l,€wis arrives.
"We are talking and we are going

INTEREST RATE UP AGAIN

Ohio

POWERFUL UPRIGHT WITH
4-WAY DIAL-A-NAP

hi!'l Homan Cathu llc flo&lt;"k m
the Umtt·d Sttttes : a iXJrtJUn and lHrth

OUR 115TH ANNIVERSARY SALE
CONTINUES ALL WEEK
Big Savings this weekon men's and boys•
Jackets, Carharn Brown Duck Work
Clothes, Men's Fashion Jeans, Women's
Coats, Sportswear, Girls Dresses and Many
other items all over the store.

ELPERFELDS IN POMEROY

Y~

•

~~
~
surw.~fbr

enttne

fUf:. SOAY . OCTOBER 9. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

~,. ,...,., ~---- 0&lt;!

1 !) IIA

Board-teachers hold
•
•
•
negotzatzng sesszon

Annc)(ed of the estate ot

SUPER SALE

dn·ides

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Mary Miller deceased , late

Robert E . Buck
Probate Judge -Cl erk

at

'

Some encouragement seen

Street ,
Pomeroy , Ohio
45769 was appointment Ad
ministratrix with the Will

EUREKA

In lht• Ma ss. !el t•vt.sed ttJ a globa l
cwd it'll&lt;"l', .John Paul ra1 scd h1 s
~trOnJ.! \"OICL' un a touchy issUL' that

NO. 124

c ourt , Case No . 14, 274, Ed
na F . Sc hoenleb. 333 Lasley

ELBERFELD$
115th Anniversary Sale

non-stop to Home

VOL XXVIII

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
. On September 25. 1979, in
the Meigs County Probate

1101,8,15Jtc

1Continued from page I I
Wash111 g1on, Pope J ohn Paull I flew
Domta Starkey, Gailipo~s Ferry, W.
Va .; three brothers. Jack , Bandytown . W. Va .; James Everett,
Hedgen lle , W. Va ., and Arthur of
Manfr ed, Okla . Also s urv iving are
31 grandchildren and 14 greal '
grandchildren .
Mr. Harper was a member of the
Pomt Pleasant Church of Omsl.
Funeral se!'Vlces will be held at I
p.m . Tuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Mr . Phillip Curtis officiating . Burial will be 1n the !,€tart
Falls C.,metery . Friends may call
at U1e fUIIeral home at anytime .

tD othc1als or had been taken to
hospitals before ofhc1als began
making a count.
The plane was a burned out wreck .
One survivor, journalist Guy
Stafford of Portsmouth, England,
reported the passengers were
unable to open some emergency
••its but finally got out by sliding
down emergency chutes.
" People were confused but ttiere
was not much panic," said Stafford .
"Flames were visible within
seconds after we landed."
The plane, Swissair Flight 316,
was en route from Geneva and
Zurich, Switzerland, to Bombay,
India, and Peking .
Papadonganas said fire-lighting
un1ts from the airport and the U.S.
Air Force base which uses the same
facilities rushed to the scene
inunediately . Stafford said there
were "plenty of firefighting
eqwp(flent and officials about when
we abandoned the aircraft ."
Airport officials and Swissair
employees tned to calm the
passengers Many were in shock .
Some nulled about weeping . One
muttered : "I've lost everything m
the plane. everythin~ I own ."

•

e

'\

Bodygt111rd held
CINCTNN ATI I AP I - Greg
Benton, 26, Cincinnati, accused of
throwing lwo children from a
fourth-floor window, remained in
jail today in lieu of $100,000 bond .
Larry Combs , 3, and La ressa
Combs, I, the children of Vanessa
Combs. were reported m good
condition a Children 's Hospital.
Poli ce said both children landed
in bushes, breaking the1r fall .
Benton. identified by poli ce as
the former bodyguard of Mrs.
Combs, was charged with two
counts of attempted murder and
one of felonious
assault.
Municipal Court Judge Jack
Rosen set a preliminary heanng
for0ct.21.

Daughter killed
CLEVELAND I AP 1 - All activity was suspended today in the
Cleveland mayoral campaign
following the death of 9-year-&lt;Jid
Molly A. Vomovich , daughter of
Lt . Gov . and Mrs. Geor~e V.
Voinovich.
The child wa• hit by a va n and
killed as she crossed I .ake Shore
Boulevard on Cleveland's far
East Side on her way back t o
school after lun e h Monday , pollee
reported .
Police sa1d the driver, " 19year-&lt;Jid Seven Hills man . was
being held for investi~ation .
Charges were expected to be fi led
today .
Voinov1 c h 's
ca mpai g n
manager, Jim Conrad, said cam paign activities were suspended
indefinitely .

Defector moved
TAMPA, Fla . IAP I - A young
Soviet sailor was moved to a
secluded, undisclosed location
Monday after he jumped ship
seeking asylum in the United
States, the FBI said.
" Now that it 's out , he's been
moved to another locat10n . ll's
for his own safety so there could
be no attempt to force him back,"
said Phil McNiff, specia l agen t in
charge of the Tampa FBI office.
Igor
Aleksandrovi ch
Ponomarenko , 19, a naval
engineering student , jumped ship
at Tampa's port Tuesday and
holed up Sunday in Brooksville,
45 miles north of Tampa .

NEW YORK IAPI - Chase
Manhattan Bank, the nation's thirdlargt·st bank., raised its prime
lending rate a full perce ntage point
tn 14 1 z percent today, a reaction to
thr gun·mmrnt's crt&gt;dit-tight ening
rnovl's an nolUl eed over th e weekend .
Otht'f banks wrn• t•xperted
quirklyto follow Chase's action. Tht·
prinlr·lrnding ratt&gt; has bt-t&gt;u rising
str.Jdily in past Wl't'ks. settin~
n •&lt;·nrdo,; with eaeh inrrras(• , Only a
month ago thr ratr was l2 1 1 pt'rf't'nt.
. . . .:.·.·.· .· .· -:-:-:.;-: &gt;-:-:-:···· .

Cheshire area man
faces theft charge
Meigs County Shertff James J .
Proffitt reported the arrest of 18year old James Hu..sell Peck ,
Cheshire.
According to the report of · Sgt .
Randy Forbes , Peck was driving a
vehicle on county road 2B in Sutton
Township around 9:30p .m. Sunday
when his car stalled .
Peck told Forbes that he i Peck 1
walked approximately 100 yards and
took a battery from a truck owned
by Jack Wolfe, HL 2, Hacine .
Peck took the battery back to hi s
vehicle but was unable to start hi s
car .
•
l.aler Peck took the battery back
to the Wolfe truck and placed it on
the ground. Peck is confined to
Meigs Count y Jail and 1s scheduled
to appear in co urt Wednesda y.

Man hospit.alized
following accident
Two ca rs received med1um
damages and one driver was
hospitalized in an accident on W.
Main St . Pomeroy, at 4:09 p .m .
Monday.
Pomeroy police said a car driven
by Carl Gheen , Sr. , Pomeroy, had
stopped in the lane of traffic when it
was s truck from the rear by a car
dnven by Cectl E1Selstein , Pomeroy
Gheen was taken lo Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was ad ·
mitted for treatment of injuries
Eiselstein was cited on an assured
clear distanee charge.
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
also answered a call for Mrs . Ethel
F.vans at 5:23 p .m . Monday . Mrs .
Evans had fallen at her Pomeroy
residence.
She was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

to continue to l41k ",Gleason said .
FISHER'S STATEMENT
This morning, Mrs . Bonnie Fisher ,
pres ident of the Meigs Local School
District Teachers Association,
issued a statement which is a cross
between encouragement
and
discouragement but does Indicate
that addit10nal negotiating Will be
taking place.
The statement says :
" The Me1gs Local Teache rs
Association 1sstill on strike today .
·'On Monday, fewer teachers and
s ubstitutes crossed the picket lin es
and the attendance level stayed at
about 50 ~tudents. OAPSE members
are standing limn and honoring lhe
picket lines. The school system 1s
virtually ala standstll.
" The MLT A dep lores Mr .
Gleason's use of newspapers and
radio to publish isolated details of
bargammg proposals which give a
false impression that a contract
package is ready for a vote . Both
parties agreed lo do all bargaining
under the directwn of Bill [,€wis of
the federal mediation and conciliation service and that is the
position the assoc1at10n wUI stick to.
"Because of Mr . Gleason's
repeated invitation on Monday to be
ready to negotiate at anytune. the
MLT A team arranged a bargaining
S€ssion Monday evening . The two
teams met al U1e Trinity Church
Mr.
from 9 p .m . to II :30 p.m.
Gleason is to contact Mediator
I ~wis this morning to set up another
sessiOn inuned1ately."
It was reported that members of
!he non ""ertified employes of lhe
district met at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds.
Most of the non""ertified employes
of the district have been off the1r
robs in support of tbe strike. There
was no report issued on the Monday
meeting.,. those """'loyes.

Prayer services
offered in i.~sue
The Meigs County Ministenal
Association is sponsoring a prayer
service for all those involved in both
sides of the Meigs Local School
Dis!riet Teachers Strike.
The service will be from 7 to 9 p.m .
Thursday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. All interested
persons are invited . Persons can
come and go as they please during
the two ho ur service.
All Me1gs C.ounty mirusters are mvited to help lead m the service .
\leantime, 1t has been announced
that the Meigs Local Board of
F.ducation is scheduled to meet in
s pecial session every evening this
week. All of the sessiOns are subject
to cancellation and the meetings
probably will be cancelled unless
there 1s some negotiatin~ development in the strike which has moved
mto its third week .
As of Monday evening , there were
no negotiating sessions announced
for the week even though both the
teachers and the board has annoUIIC'ed that they are available fo r
negotiations
POWER FAILURE
All students in Eastern Local
School District were dismissed this
mormng due to a power outage . The
distri ct IS serviced by Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electri c Co . Power
was to be resumed sometime thiS
mormng

.. .

IT'S APPLE B\JITEH TIME
Appr oXIIT\ately
200 quarts of apple butter were made last Fnday
during the annual fall festival at the Me1gs OJunty

Senior atizens C.,nter. The scene above will be
repeated several limes th1s fa ll. Apple butter making
has become a popular wa y to ra1se funds for vanous
coUIIty organir.ations. Barbara Murphy photo .

Village allocations tabled
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Allocations to Middleport by the
Mc1gs County Budget Commission
for next year were tabled pending a
meeting between Middleport Village
officials and members of the commissiOn when Middleport Village
Council met in regular session Mon day night.
According to the budget com mission, Middleport would re&lt;·eive
$17,544 .50 in undivided local funds ,
which come mostly from sales l«x .
The village would rece1ve 1.7 rrulls
inside the 10 rruU limitation. taxes
not voted on, and 1.50 mills for the
firehouse, outside the 10 mill
limitat ion and 3 mills for street
maintenance and street lights outSide of the 10 m ill limitation. It was
pointed out that villages in Galha
CoUIIty receive a greater percentage
of undivided local funds than given

1n Me1gs CoUIIty .
Village officials also discussed the
possibi~ty of receivmg more than
the 1.7 mills inside the 10 rruU
limitation . An attempt will be made
to set up a meeting between VI llage
officials and the budget corruruss1on
to discuss the two financial matter s.
Clerk-treasurer Gene Grate an nounced anothe-r one cent per gallon
u1crease on all grades of gaso~ne
purchased through Ashiand Oil and
the report of Mayor fred Hoffm;m
for the month of September sho w1ng
receipts of $1963 in fines and fees and
$116 in merchant police collections
for a total of $2079 was approved .
A conununi catlon was read announcing
the
application of
Greyhound Bus !Jnes to d1scontmue
service between Kana uga and
Belpre.
Co UIIci l d iscussed the tool rent

Ohio 'caught in middle'
•
•
zn
coal production zssue
COLUMBUS, OhiO 1AP 1 - Oh1 o's
energy director says the stl:lh.: IS
&lt;.: aught betw een a pres Jd enlt a l
mandate that would increase coal
~ a nU a felieral envu-onment.al
mandate !hat would reduce 11 .
The co mment
cam~
fro m
Department of E nergy Director
Robert S Ryan, who sa1d lhe U S
F.nvironmental ProtectiOn Agency 's
rejection of a plan to use Oh1o's h1gh
s ulfur coal could have serwu s
effet ls on the s late"s ener gy
s upplie s
"OhiO d epends un coal for •12
percent of our total energy supplies
and about half !hal amounl IS Oh10
coa l,'" he sa 1d . ·· Hemovlfl~ Oh10 coal
from our total t'nergy profil~ will put
a trcrnendoll.S stram on suppli es of

rt lt erna tlve energy form s
··Th e JXTSident has utandat~ d &lt;:1
rL'(iUCtJOn ill our dt:pend en ct• on
foreJgn mi. and h&lt;Js offered thl'
mc r~aSt'd liSt:' of coal a~ the ~olutlon
Now comes thP federal EPA w1 th &lt;l
ronLrad1ctory m anda te to less,·n
eoa l ut1ilzatwn by nearly 40 nulh un
tons a ye e~r . ·'
Prt:SH.lent Carter .sa1d 10 a sp~·t·t · h
~~ Steubt•m1 1l l· last mon th tt~ dt lit'
hopes to tnplt· the use fl f 1"t1a l b~
1995. But he also Lnd lccJt L·d he W• ~t:Jd
not 1nterfe rl' w ith l " S EP . \ .otr
quality stdmll:lrds that lunll tl · Ll.'&gt;l'
of lugh sulfur coal.
Hyan equated lht• -lfl rnillwn tun s of
Oh1o coa l ht· da mll:'d IS ht·mg tnken
away as an erwrgy sourl'e tu 1i2
million barn•b of 01!

Fire protection ('Ontract approved
The Syracuse Fire Department
will be prov 1dmg fire protection to
the res1denLs of Sutton Township 1t
was deci ded a t a rneetmg Monday
night
Meetng on the 1ssue Monday n1ght
were members of the hre depart ·
ment, village coUIIcil and Sunon
Township Trustees.
It was agreed to enter into a con tract with the township trustees to
provide fire protection to res1denl&lt;
of Sutton Township.

Residents of Su no n Town.sh1 p
needing the services of the S)Tacuse
Fire Department are advis ed to
phone
992.,)2UJ ur '1.12 -7181.
The fire protect1on serv1 ce is ef ·
fective immediate I}
Herman London and Bill Hubbard
will head a project to purchase
ChrL•tmas decoratiOns and l1ghts to
be pla ced around the park area .
Donations for the project are
bemg accepted . P e rsons who wish to
donated to the Chnstmas project
may call992-0201 or 992-3495 .

m-n77.

arran~ement

it has with one employe and made plans to mark other
tools bemg purchased by the village.
Couneilman Dewey Horton will
work out a plan.
Grate reported that the financial
condition of the general fuM ls In
"cris is" stage and council voted to
borrow $2,000 from the insurance
fund to place in the general fund to
meet the emergency. The loan will
prov1de only temporary relief.
It was reporte&lt;l that the safety
corruru nee had m~t with police to
discuss possible tmprovements for
th e pohce department and that plans
are underway for some plan to go in ~
to effect m January.
A second
reading was g1 ven to an ordmance
providing an mcrease tn the pay of
!he park d ~rector .
Attencling the meeting were
Mayor Hoflman, Grate, and council
members . Horton . Carl Horl&lt;y,
Will•am Walters, Marvin Kelly,
Al len I ,ee King and Charles Mullen .

Country music
winners named
\ASHVIU .I:. Tt&gt;rtrl. IAPI
WLIL ner.s .\1 unde~ y n1ght at the
natlon.&lt;llly tele\·lst•d Co Wltry Music
.- \$SOt"l&lt;lt lon awards sh ow :

Willie \"t'lson ,

~ntt:"rtamer

uf the

~ ·, • ar

KL•nn~

HfJger s. male vocalist of

yl'ar
Bar biira

:11\'

MiJ n drPll .
female
uf thL· )Car
Ttw De\·11 Went Down to
(~eor J.:ia "' by thL' Charhe Daniels
Fland. smglc ot !he year
·.-~ ~ calist

··ThL· (~&lt;imbler " b:- Kenny Rogers,
n.ltmrn of the year
· 'l11 e (;ambler . by Don Schhtz,
son g of the year
'f1lt.' St&lt;t th.. r Brut hers, vof'al group
of th t.' yt'a r
Kenny Hu~ L·r s a nd lJultie West.
\"OCal duu o\ the yeo r
Charlie
Da na·ls
Band,
m ~1r urrH ·n tnl L; roup of the year
! 'h r1rill' f"Ja ruels, Lnstrumentahst
of Lh l' .Yt.'~tr
llank Snow und Hubert Long ,
Country Mus1c Ha ll of Fame

MEETS WEDNESDAY
Sutton Township Trustees will
meet m SJ&gt;Ccial sess ion Wednesday,
Oct. 10, at 8 p.m . at the Syracuse
Municipal Building to consider fire
contracts for Sutton Township.

Nashville bound plane's pilot only few feet from safety
CINCINNATI I API - The pilot of
a Cornair P1per Navajo plane ma y
have been on ly a few feet away from
a safe landtng when lhe twin..,ngine
commuter pla!fe crashed, killing. all
eight men aboard, an a~rline offici a l
said.
The plane bound from Cmcmnati
to Na.tlville crashed in a grassy
area about 45 seconds after tak eoff
Monday . The pilot, William Paul of
Marysville, Ind ., had radioed that h e·
lost power in an engine.
"It may have been bad luck ," said
Timothy Donovan, a spokesman for
Comair Inc ., a Cincinnati-based
airline, which suffered Its fll'st crash
with fatalities m 1ts 3 1;, years in
business. " A few feet more and
maybe they all could have walked
away :
"It was right on the marg m where
it could have gone either way . It

strikes mL• that the plio! carne very
do~ to pulltng 1t off! coming m for a
landmg mst ea d of erashmg 1 "
San Juan Homero. c hief a1r tr~fflc

coo troll er at the Greater CL.ncmftat1
Airport, sa1d lhe plane took off
shortly after 10 a .m .
" The tower saw him trymg to ga1n
attlt udt· . ke ep the plane m Lht' a1r so
he could come in fcx a landm g on
runway ."
Homer u sa1d the plan e had
reached a height o f about 200 feet
when th~ crash occurrt."d .
" From what we could tell , the
p1IOI did a marvelous job," Donovan
sa1d . " He wa s eool under a lot of
pre&amp;o; ure . All tht: mstruments w~ re
locked m lhe proper mann.r , the
plane was landed mlaet and there
was no fire ."
Company off1cals sa1d the :\().yearold Paul ha d jmne&lt;l Corna~r several
anoth~r

weeks ago and was a highly
quahfle d pilot With "s everal
thousand ho urs of t':{penence ."
Steve Corn~, an in Vt'stigator for
the National TransportatiOn Board.
smd a fli ght log and manual were
removed from plane . He sa1d a 01ghl
rL'!.'Order was not required beca u~
of lhe s1ze of Ihe plan. .
" It may recwre us to tear d own
thiS engme," Corrie Sa id or the
~arch for tht' cause . He sa1d
Federal Av1at1ort AdministratiOn
Inspect o r s would co ntinue their
1m·est 1gat10n tllday .
Whl'n l:Hrport emergency crt'ws
reached the pi ' '"'· Ihey immediately
remove-d two persons (o a local
hospitaL On·· man was dead on
arnval at Booth Hospi!aL and
anoth~r man died ~short time Jatt'r
al the same hospita l.
TI1e other six apparently died on

1m pa ct , a ccor dw~ to Boone Count y.
Ky .. Coroner Donald St1th
Dead 111 the crash , wluch closed
th e Greater Cm cmnati lntt- m atiO nal
Airport . were : Bill PauL the p1lot.
Marysv ille. Ind .; Ronald A. Perry,
DaytDn; Douglas K. Junes, 50,
M1ddl etown, OhiO ; William A.
Meyers. Montgomery , Ohio : JohnS .
Huston . 53. Fairfield , Ohio ; J . Pat
Warman, W est Chester , Oh io;
Jeff rev l.ake, 29, Forest Park , Ohio ;
Thom~s J . Oatts, 52, Loveland . Oh10
" Some of the passengers were still
strapped in their seats," Stith srud.
" All of the bodies had multiple
mjunes.'·
The plane, which craspt:d in a
grassy arec; n longsid,Q ~ Jrunway,
had to he pt·deu back
worker•
could reach "' me of the passengers
who were tr•,&gt;Ped inside . Th e bodies
\\"l' re l) 1 ou~llt to a fi ~ld m a mtenance

an

buildmg wh1ch hetd bt&gt;t."n establ!shed
as a temporary morgue.
C'oma1r has mnt' planes which
compa ny offlctals say carry ctbout
70.000 peoplt' a vear to such
destinations as Da)1un, Cleveland,
Toledo, Nash\11le and Akron .
Donovan sa1d the plane. wh1ch
was f lig ht 444 from Cin ci nnall , had
alread y ma dt' one ro Wld trip to
Cleveland and baL·k to Cmcmnati
l.,forc t akm ~ off fur Nashville.

Weather
Partly cloudy and cooler tonight.
Low In tbe mid to uvper :lOs. Partly
cloudy and cool on Wednesday. High
!n tile low to mid 50s. The chance of
rain Is 2il percent tonight and 10 per-.
cent Wednesday.

Tile G reat er Cincinnati Airport is
loc ated m a rural section of northern
Kentucky about 15 miles from

Unem natJ.
EXTENDED Otm.OOK
A chance of showers Thunday
and Friday, possibly mbed wllb
snow flurries at limes In the north. Fair Saturday. Cold. Hlgba In
tbe upper 40o to mid 50o Thursday, mid 50s to low 60s Friday,
8lld In lhe 50o Salllrday. Lows In
tbe low to mid 30o Th111'8day mor·
nbc sod In the upper 3011 to low
41111 early Friday IUid Saturday.

miCK OR mEAT NIGHT
Middleport VIllage Council has set
the aMual trick or treat night for
children of the community f~
Tuesday , Oct. 30, from 6 to 7 p .m.
The schedule coincides with that of
Pomeroy Village .

..

"

�2- The Daily Sentmel, Pomeroy-Middleport . 0 Tuesday, Oct 9, 1979

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To the c1hzens of Me1gs Local School
DIStrict
.We are concerned about Sov1et
troops bemg stationed m Cuba, but
what about the dictator (the optnlm
of many I who commutes between
our co unty and Plckaway County'
Beware of flle wolf who c001es III
sheep 's clothmg 1 Vo1ce 1
He IS on a nuss10n -are we gomg
to let 1t be the possible or the Impossible one ' To the "dedicated "
1sca b 1 teachers and all ofllers who
are the puppets on Ius stnng You
are only the tools that he uses as
stn ke breakers and fllen discards
when he IS f1mshed
You are bemg hoodwmked' Whe re
IS your self;espect ' We were here m
this county long before he came, and
I hopefully I long after he has departed.
His nuss1on ' - to break the
teachers' assoctatwn, and he is
usmg our boys and g1rls I bait for Ius
tra p 1, the mnocent ones. to keep tlle

schools open. But the band and flle
athletic teams are not allowed to
participate - e1ther the schools are
open or they 're not! Oh, yes ' One
slight st1pulallon - flle&gt; must be m
the classroom
Why' One more stnke brea lang
"!&lt;lct1c . CROSS-&lt;JVEH -TIIE-1 JNE '
I Kids always behaved better when
we pronused them candy or presents
at home , especially before Chnstrnas . I Don1 use your child as ba1t
Where do they have guards
rovmg ') Why m pnsons .. 1n con centratiOn camps . m Soviet Countries .. and don 1 forget
m Meigs
Local School Distncts'! 1One more
effort to break flle Association) . And
he's usmg our tax dollars to tear us
apart . Umted we stand and d1 v1ded
we fall Thmk'
Don't let the last mentiOned happen . !Remember "IJttle Hed Hldlllg
Hood ' ' J We have met the enemy
To the members of the Me1gs
Local School Board Stop dancmg to
his tune rget one of your own 1 and
pull flle wool off your eyes or your
head out of the sand, whichever ' We
fought one war 1n Amen ca for In dependence m order to have a
representative government - a
democracy and an autocracy' Wake
up and think and then ACf !
Taxpayer and Concerned O tlzen
KenChane~
'

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.\lc·a ning-ful Pdu('ation
Dear Ed1tor
Bonn ie F1sher , preside nt of the
Me1gs Local Teachers ' Assoc1atwn
has urged parents to k""P the~
children at home durmg the stnkc
because "no mearungful education
IS takmg place m the school• " How
does Mrs. Fisher know •
Meaniilgful educa tion 1s, taking
plaee at the junior high It is
possible , in fact, that the children
who are attendmg are rece1vmg a

more meamngful educatwn than
usual
After all, the II' teacher's !IlTle is
diVJded among hve or SIX 1nstead of
25 or 30.
The striking teachers say they
want to be paid as professionals. Do
professiOnals go through such
childl.'lh a nt1 cs that have been directed at non..,trikmg teachers dunng
the past week ., The children of this
distn ct have as examples people
who resort to cowardly tactics m a
vam attempt to fnghten dedicated
personnel. Is flle pubh c willmg to endure, or worse, support t1us str1ke'
- Melarue Wert, 8th grade spec1al
educahon, Me1gs Junior High .

Illume.~ .~upt'rintendent
Editor's Note - AI oo time luu
Supt. Gleason Indicated to tbls
media tbat the board of education
bas glvea blm the right to hire
and llrt aay teacher wltheut
question

or reason.

l.etter
Awaken , Taxpayers of Me1gs
County Are you there'
Do we sit by and do no_thing or say
nothing while flle school board, that
we elected m good fa1th , bnngs m a
stranger to run our schools, and rum
our children .
Now this stranger want.&lt;; the right,
and he said the board gave him that
nght , to hire and fire any teacher
without questiOn or reason , that he,
Gleason, sees f1t to hire or fire
How long Wlll il be that our tax
dollars Will be paymg teachers from
away while our own teac hers from
this county will have to leave this
county to get a job
Better stand up and be counted
while we have this opportumty.
Name withheld on request.

Teacher threatened
Sir ·

I am writing tlll.'l letter to mform
the parents , students, and all conce rned parties Ill the Me1gs Local
School Dl.'ltr-..1, of the tactics and
methods of flle members of the
Me1gs Local Teachers AssociatiOn
bemg employed dunng the current
teachers' stnke.
I was llorn, raised and educated in
Me1gs County, and take great pride
m bemg a product of such a unique
and wonderful area .
Out of this pnde stems a great personal concern and interest in the
happerungs Within the county . Willi
the advent of the present teachers '
strike in the Meigs Local School
DIStrict, I became, and sill am, concerned that the welfare of the school
distnct, my own Alma Mater , was in
jeopardy.
I then decided to take an acU ve
role 1n trymg to keep the schools
open and the educational processes
of the district functioning while the
Me1gs Local School Board and flle
Me1gs Local Teachers ' Aasoctation
settled their differences, by making
myself avai!Bble to work as a substitute teacher until such agreemen ts as were necessary to end flle
strike could he made .
The events of flle three days I
worked m the school district have
served to magnify my concern and
shocked me to the point fllat it is
painful to think fllat I was dealing
with the educators of the youth of
Me1gs County.
On my hrst.day at the high school,
there was no confrontation bet ween
me and the teacben1 on l'M! picket
line I was permitted to both enter
and leave II&gt;&lt;! school without even
the slillhtcst hint of the events to
come ove r the n.,xt two days

When I entered the school I un·
mediately not1ced that flle building
was m great need of repair, and
thought what a shame 1t was that
Metg:. County's monument to
education had shpped mto such a
state
In the classroom . I asked flle
students to show me the1r textbook.'l
111 order that I might dec1de in what
lasluon I should conduct classes. I
was told , to my sUlllnse, that for
some classes the students had no
texts , and as for the te•ts which the
students did bave, flley were outdated and m e&lt;lremely poor condillon
I found myself wondering how any
teacher m this school cou ld , in good
conscience, demand ra1ses and illcreased benefits from the school
board when the building was in such
need of repair and the students did
not have texts from which fll ey cowd
he taught.
My second day at the school was
when, things began to happen . I was
stopped at the picket line by an
MLTA member who, asserting him·
self as speaking on bebalf of the
MLTA, infonned me that if I contmued to enter the school that flley,
the MLT A, would attempt to
sabotage my military career by
writing derogatory letters to the
Department of the Air Force, and
solic1t the aid of an Influential
General Officer in carrYing out their
threat.
Th1s, In additiOn to the
chastisement and maltreatment of
my farruly 1f I did not bend to their
Will and remrun out of the school.
They did not realize that the Air For ce would have no mterest m or take
any action against me on behalf of
the MLTA, and the General Officer 's
name which was used to give substance to the1r threat was not at all
favorably IIIlPressed that his own
good name was bemg used m such a
dishonorable fashion, parUcularly
smce he had no knowledge of what
was even occurring Within the county
I returned to the high school for
the third day , and as on my f1rst day
there . I met no resistance to my entenng the school From this I
asswned that the MLTA realiZed the
futility of theu- threat of the pre viOus
day m preventmg me from entenng
the school This assumption may or
may not bave been correct, but I was
nustaken m ''linking lllat I had seen
the full e:rte ••t of the lengths to which
the teachers m the MLTA would go
to keep me from entering the school.
I received a phone call from my
father, who asked me to please leave
the school, as he had been told that
if I contmued to try and provide in·
struction at flle high school that
there was a definite possibility that
either myself or the mer..oers of my
family would suffer physical harm
as a result. I subsequently left the
school since I was not willing to put
the health and well-being of my
farmly on the line in this situation
I was told by members of the
MLTA that they had the support of
the conunuruty backing fllem up . but
upon my mvesllgation of fllis , found
everyone I spoke with appalled at
the tactics of the MLT A employed
against me, and that they , themselves, were afraid to send their
children into the schools for fear that
physical hann would come Ill flle
student.&lt;; if flley attempted to cross
the p1cket line , or that once flle
strike was settled and everyone
returned to school, that the teachers
who were m favor of the strike would
be prejudiced m their grading and
treatment of students who attended
school durmg the strike .
From my own expenence, I would
say that these fears are justified.
Could I send my own children in
among such a group of people Wlfll
any hope of fllem ciiDlllg away with
a socially acceptable concept of
morality, decency and mtegnty '
How can they, flle MLT A, return
to school or even walk down the
streets of our communities and hold
their heads up unashamed of having
a part m such insiduous and
degrading actiVIties'
Could I trust fllese people as neighbors?
What has happened to the teachers
who were once respected and
valuable members of the com·
muni ty in which they live and work ?
Me1gs County, what is to come of
us ? -Steve E . Powell .

not negotiation ! !
I am not advocating that GleiliSOI
and the board turn over every
to teacher salaries or subrrut
every dtmand. Gleason stated
the average teacher salary
$13,000. Be aware that a coonmoo
laborer at a plant can gross
and sti ll get bereavement leave,
leave ,

in surance ,

etc.

teachers have invested lhoiWUlds
dollars in 4 to 6 yeal'!l of college
some of !hell' children qualify
free or reduced lunches'
Neifller side will "win" in a O&lt;rU&lt;e.
I urge the board to do some
meaningful negotiations llfld to end
this strike. We are not havlJlB
meaningfulmstruction and this force must end II - Smcerely, Mrs
Brenda Smith, Middleport , Ohio.

Business
•
mirror
NEW YORK' I API - In the past
lew days Amencans learned that
September unemployment declmed
w 5 8 percent from August's 6
percen t, coos umers a~ded to the1r
deb t , and purchasmg agent s
expressed optumsm
Ta ken together, these bits of
mtelllgence hardly convey th e 1dea

BAI.TIMOHE ' AI' 1

il&lt;lhiiiiUr,•

Managtr Ea r l W t' dH· r ts &lt;11rl &lt;'Nnt •tl
about los n1 g t ht• u ~ e ol ht s
dt sJgnated hilte r &lt;i!'l th~ · ()ru 111·..,
prepared to upen til l' 1fJ/9 Wor ld
St'nes tomght &lt;t gd m s! t.Jw P nt s bur ~ h
Ptrates

" It Ct'rtatnly

IS

go ang to rn ;t kt• ..

dtfferenc~ . · saHl Wt·mer , boss 1Jt
the Amencan Lea~\lt' ( hampwns
Mana~er Chuck I .mner of llw
Natwnal Leagul' champ1on Plr.ttt• s
made Jt dear hl' woulU r&lt;Jt.h t• r pi a\

Without the lJH , an 1\lll l' r tc on
I.A!ague mstltutlon d tsdcun,i..J b\ Lh l·

Natwnal League

·

" We haven 't had to do "'lth out tt
smce the 19i 1 W(Jr iLI St: r tes . ..
lamented Wt•avcr " IA! l' M ;1, 1 th t•
Unoles DH tn the rt'gul ar st.;iisun 1.

With th t• I Hi' s &lt;:~ fft• t'l on Uw ~ a me ,
estH n &lt;i l l '&lt;l It wa s worth half-&lt;Hun ;1

gcw tl'

'Hut I'd rath ~.:r tl i&lt;'Ill&lt;.Jgt' \I. Ilhout

11. · sa1d th •· !~rate s ' f~t•ld uoss it 's
a d 1fh·r errt b&lt;:~ll gcn11e Pltth er s sta y
ut lon gt·r You don 't net&gt;d th e lonl:!.
rl'ilt' \ er And why shouldn 't a ~ood
httttn.t.: pltcht•r b&lt;-tt 'l Wh' ~10uld hl'
bt· pt·n ;tlm: d '1 "
•
'J1w DH IS used every othct year m
th t· ~fit's, and lo st vcar. wh en th e
York Yankees. beat lhe Los
Angd es Dodger s, Reggn~ Ja ckson
had nu1e h 1ts m 23 at bats With two
!\ L'\\

home run s and e1ght RBI. The
Dodge rs· ma m DH was Lee La cy.
who \\e nt £.for -14

was a b1g part of our off ense What
effect 11 ha s wlll depend on tilt' other
e1ght guys 1n our sl&lt;irtm g lin eup "
Weaver sa1d
Tanner. who ITICilldgL'&lt;i 10 Ul e

Ma) h1t 19 home runs and had 69
1\Bl IIIIS season as the Onoles DH .
Obv1ousl). the Baltimore offense
ha s to suffer
Rrun.' K.lson, Pittsbw·gh 's ~"tartmg
p1tcher m the first of tile best-&lt;Jfscven game Sen es. had e1ght h1 ts ,

Amencan LeaJ..,'Ue r:~ nd l!:i f&lt;ulllllar·

St ored l' tght runs, drov e m

S IX,

of recesston, wh1 ch so m e economiSts

matntam a lready has us tn Its gnp
and which man y more say will
pounce upon us before the end of the
year
Albert Co• Jr , pres1dent of
Mernll Lynch Econom1 cs and
from er White House econOOJ lst . IS
among the latter
D1d the news m r ece nt days sha ke
h1s recessHJn theory' "No," he
rep li ed
" II
anything,
1t
strengthened my conv1chon that th e
recessiOn w11l wmd up d""p and
long ..
In fact . sa1d Cox, he was already
th 1s Monday mornmg writmg a
report ra1smg to 60 percent the
likelihood of a severe downturn . He
said 1t will c001e by yearend, a nd
reach 1ts depth 1n the first half of
1980
By the th1rd quarter of next year.
he rnamtams, unemployment w1ll
have reached 8.9 percent, and retail
sales wtll be off badly It Will, he
sat d, be "pretty Wi cked," almost as
bad as 111 t974-1975
What IS It th•t makes men suc h as
Cox so concerned ' "The under lymg
trends ." he sa1d. Factors such as the
flaltenmg ou t of em ployment
l ncrt'ases,
sluggi shness
1n
productlvl ty . co ns um er bu ymg
weakness.
"The trend 1.'1 weakneS!I," he said
" InflatiOn Is eaUng away at incomes
and co nfidence ." Sept em ber's
f1gures m1gh1n 't look bad now, he
sa1d . but ove r the long term they 'II
be seen as ocidit1es m a pattern
Cox believes ihey m1ght even
dt:epen the receSSion by giVIng
busmess and consumers a false
sense of hope Purchasmg agents,
for e.ampl e, m1ght be mclmed to
bu1ld up mventoncs. wh1ch then
ca1111ot be sold
Tha t s1tuat1on OCTurred m 1974
Durm g the first SJX months of the
year corn pames bu11t their
inventorieS w " wildly excessive "
leve ls " I fear 1t IS happenmg
agalll," he satd. Durmg July, he
pomts out , 1nvenwnes grew about
about S90 billion, th e b1ggest ever lor
a month

Yanks offer Altobelli post
' i\ r I - Furnw r
San Fran ciSCOGw.nl'l Ma n.aJ;t.: l .Jot•
BAI.TIMOI{r~

Altobelli can takt• tht• twlm i t! tht·
AAA,
Internat1unal
l.e .q..( Ul'

Columbus Clippers 1f he "'mts tht•

ron sl(Jl'r a mtnor league managml:!.

JO b "
'l1ll'rc are thrc~ lll&lt;:tJOI leagul'
managt•nal op~mng s, tn Toronto
an d Kan sa s Ctt y 1n the Amen(' an

JOb . says t;cneral Manuger (~ c or ~ t·

[..,ague and at Ph1l adelph1a 1n the

S1sle r
" I want to talk w Altul!&lt;!lh aboul
managmg U. lwnbus." S1sler sa1d
Monday mght 'I can sweeten the
pot and 1t Will be more than a typlf al
m mor league conlral't ·
Sisler , m wwn for t11 e World
Series, could see Altobelli as soon as
today wht:'n tht:' suburban H. uches tt:'r .
N Y , resident arnvl's hl'rt! for the
openmg of ma JOr lea gue base ball 's
annual fa II nte

Na t1ona l l.t•etgut'

Altobelli, former mane~gl'r of tht•

II. s Rochester Red Wmg s, [Jr st
heard of the offer m a reporter s call
tn hJS Gate s, N Y . hom e
C~eorge IS

a very good fnend of

mme," sa1d Altobelli , whu pla)L'&lt;l 22
games lor U.lumbus lfl 1957 · It
~mnds

hke a developm t!nl hl'fl' ..

Altobelli sa 1d he 's gmng w the
World Sen es ·to look for a JOb althe
maJor leagu e level If I don't gel one
at that level, then I would have to

Co lumbu s
Manager
Gem•
Mitchell, who directed tile Cl ipper s
w the IL title this }ear. ha s been
assurt:"d a spot m the New York
Yankees' front off1ce . S1sler smd
The ll 1ppers are the Ya nkees· top
farm club
Al tobelli . 47. was sacked a s
G1anl':i ' manager St&gt;pt 5 With the
club m fourth place m the Na llona l
!..,ague West With a 61-7!1 record. 436
percentage , and Ul' 2 games behtnd
th~

first-place Houston
In 1978, Altobe lli " as named
Manager of the Year alter dlrL&gt;ellng

the c:lan t s to a third-p lace ftnl sh
w1th an 119-73 record 1\ltobelh and

the G1anL' finish ed fourth m 1977
w1th a 7:HI9 mark
Al tobel li managL'&lt;l th e Hochester
Red Wmgs for s1x II. seasons from
1971 to 1976, a nd fuush ed first three
tunes.

~

ready for winter,

get where you want

to m safely with a

tilc bat IS s.ee mg It m som e bud )
l'lse 's hands Flanagan , however .
wa s 2.1·9 w1th a 2 65 EHA and IS til l.'
b1g tavonte tu wtn the Cy YIJUJ ig
Award a s th e AL s uul":1- andmg
p1t cher
He
w&lt;-~ s
ba seball s
wmnmge st pit cher U11 s yeltr
K1son "a s 13-4 w1th a 3 14 EHA ,

Or10les were m the

was 1971
K1son pitched one-hit ball lor lit - I
mnmgs m relief &lt;-I S the Pirates \\on
the fourth game on therr way to d
seven-game tn urnph

Tlle P1rates, who readwd th r..·
by swecpmg the Nl , West
DIVISIOn champwn l' mc1nnal! Heds
m the1r best-&lt;Jf-fl\'t' champ1on.Jl1p
~t .
were eoncerned a bout the
condttmn of the Baltlillore pia ; mg
Sen~s

held The Baltunore Colts' pla)'ed Ill•
tht• stad iu m Sunda} 1n n ~rtt10 n a l
Footba ll l ..e&lt;:~gut&gt; game a gcunst th e

New Yor k J e ts and the na tural turf
was torn up
Weaver a lleVIated the Ptrl:tt e ~ ·
fear s
'Al l I ca n sa}. · he s .&lt;:~HJ, ·1s Ul ,1t
the 1-(round c rew worked m1rac l e~

All the cleat ma rks and d1vots fr om
the foot hall game have been f ill ed 111
They worked un thetr hand s i:lnd
knees to do the JOb . It Will be
pla)able That 1s. Without ratn
Ba ltimore, wh1ch IL'&lt;l the ma Jors
wtth 102 \'!Clones th 1s season , beat
the We st DIVISIOn champ 1on
Call forma Angels :1-t m the playoffs .
and host s the f1rst two game s The
m1ddle th ree are sehL'&lt;luled for
Pittsburgh, and the fma l pa1r , 1f
needed. m &amp;lltunore

Weaver adin1tted he wa s ha,mg
t.roublt' dt'cldmg on a startmg lineup

because of h1s mab1llty to use the
DH II he dec1ded to put Ma) 10 the
lineup 1t meant movmg a lot ul
pla;ers

around dt&gt;fens1vdy

The

och.ls are May 's &amp;nes rule w11l be a s
a pmch h1tter
The Orioles are expected to play
John Lowenstem m left field. AI
Bumbry tn center and Ken Smgleton
m nght, wtlh Edd1e Murray at flr st,
Billy Sm1th and Mark Belanger the
second base-shortstop combma uon.
and Doug Decmces at th1rd R1ck
Dempse) IS expected to catch

lineup a nd battmg order agam st lefl ha ndt:r Flanagan center fielder
Omar Moreno shortstop Tim Foil .
nght fielder Da\e Parker, left
fielder Bill Rob1nson, first baseman
Willie Starge ll , th1rd baseman Bill
Madlock. catche r Steve NICOSia,
second baseman Phil \,amer a nd
K1son

Morgan's decision
comes after series
CIN CINNAT I

&lt;

AP'

niE DAll.. Y SEN11NEL

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT
CORDIALLY INVITES YOU
TO SEE &amp; DRIVE THE NEW

lUSPSIU..I

~, ~-~--·

1980
OLDSMOBILE
1980
CADILLAC
ON DISPLAY IN OUR
SHOWROOM THURSDAY

p~--

• PIZZA BROD •
•

Your choice of any •

,...,..., I

.one topping . • • • •
Reg $1.20

I

=&amp;ttis=

•••••••
•

.

AUIOCA-

•

OCTOBER 11, 1979

KARR &amp;)VAN ZANDT
242 W. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, Of:iiO

Sophomore Tackle

market
" Believe me ." satd Tom He1 ch.
P!ttsbw-gh, Pa altorney, " Joe ha s
not made up h1s rmnd yet a s to whrtt

Athens captured 11B second consecutive Southeastern OhiO Athletic
Leag ue golf t1Ue afte r "'nmng the
annual

COLUMB US, Oh&gt;O lAP I
How a
stale w 1de pan e l at sport s wr1ter s
and oroad c astcrs rates O h1 0 h 1Qh
school f ootba ll ter~m s lhr s w ee k lor
The Asso c1ate d Pr ess~ 10 po 1nt s f or
f1r c;, t to I porn! f o r l Oih l

( Ire ) Mart 1n s Ferry and Dayton
Oakwood 17 26 (tre), Cleve l and
Bened 1ct1ne
and
Leav 1ttsburg
L aBrae 14 28 Steubenvr ll e 13 29.
Sprrngboro 12 30 . I ronton 11

CLASS A

CLASS AAA
Cr ncr nnat 1 Moe l ler 50 335 porn

"32 Ma ssil lon . 5600.268
,
Zanesvil le ,

151

4 Youngs town Mooney. 6 0. 130
(1 nc 1n n at 1 Prtnceton , 4 1, 117
Sa ndusk y , 6 0 , 11 0
Westerv il l e N ort h , 6 0. 78
Dover 6 0 , 73
L akewood St E dw a r d. 5 I . 70
10 Cant on M c Krnlcy , 3 I 1, S.t
Othe r sd •ool 'i re CPI Vrn g 10 o r mor e
po1nt s II Akron Bu chte l 36 12
Youngs low n South 35 13 Pa rm a
Padua 33 14 Fremont ~oss 30 15
(t1 eJ. North Canton Hoov er a nd
Groveport 25 17 Barbert o n 24 18
Elyr1il 23 19 Boardman 20 20 lh 1n
tersvrl le 17 21 w es t Carrollt on 10
12 Oregon Cl ay IS 23 Cleve lan d St
J oseph 12 24 Macedon1a N OrCi onr a

5
6
7
8
9

10

Newark Cathol rc. 6 0. 238

Arlington , 6 0, 156
Cardrngton , 6 0, 147

128

6 Tr~n t on Edgewood , 5 0. ! 17
7 Warren Ken n edv . 6 O, 12 5
8 Crtnal Fulton Northwes t 6 0 85
9 Columbus Grandvr ew , 5 0 1, 62
10 !t1e ) Steubenville Cathol1 c Cen
Ira! . 4 1 1 and Navarre Fa1r l ess 5 1
]9
O th er sc hOOlS recervrng 10 or more
PQrnts 12 (1r e l. Med 1na H1gh lan o
a nd Cad 1z 33 14 Ely r 1a Catholr c 17
15 ( Ire ) Joh ns town and Perr ys bur g
26 17 Penm s ula Woodr tdge 15 18 .
Cl ell' el and Cc ntrat Cath o l 1c 22 19
West L d fdvett e R1 dgewood 20 20
( I re)
F os t o r ra a nd Cam p be l l
Memor ta l 19
1? ! ! 1e l. Be l l v1 lle
Cl ea r Fork a n d Co al Gr ove 18 / .4

College ratings
The A P Top Tw ent y
By Ttle Assocrated Pr ess

Twen t y

team s '" The

A ssoc 1a l ed Pre ss r ollege footb a ll
poll , w rth f1rst pl ace vot es 1n par en

these s r erord s anrl to tal porn t s.
P o1 nts ba se d on 10 19 18 17 16 15 14
13 12 11 10 q 8 l 6

I So Cald

s

1 A lab a m a
3 Ok laho ma
4TeXi'1 5
5 Nebra ska

4) 2 1

&gt;Il l

IS 0 01 1.185

(Il l ( 4
(4
( \J!3
(4

0
0
0
0

OJ
01
0J
01

I 148
1 126
1 101
1 059

6 WitSh 1n g ton

( S 0 OJ 889

7 HOU STOn

(4 0 0)

884

15 0 OJ

7)6

12 Ark ansa~
\3 LOUI Si dn a 51

II

M1 Ch1g an

North C ar o l 1n a
Mr&gt; sou rr
Br rgh &lt;l m Y oung
No Ca ro St
18 A ubur n
19 M1 rhrg &lt;l n 5 1
XJ P urdu e

14
15
16
17

Go ld

R tchards , 93
GAL L I POLIS - Jones, 76 . Sk td
mor e, 81 . Allen, 82 , Jefferson, 83 ,
Rodge r s, 85
LOGAN
Berr y , 79 , PaMerson,
B1 . vaughn , B2 . Gay , 8.4 , Ingram. 88
WAVERLY - Bearns, 82 : Gullion,
BJ . Ba nta . SA . Sm1th, 89 . Tavlor , 91
JACKSO N - Ye rran , 77, Haynes,
85. Miller . B6. Moore, 102 , Shook,

liM

WELLS TON
Willi a m s, 79 ;
Henry, 83 , Kuntz , 101. Derrow, 103,
Kevenaugh, 105
I RON 1 ON - W olfe, B9 , Layne, 93.
Johnson . 97 . Rrley , 98, Hurley , 10 1

!
=
·-=

sa~emoney

on your auto

4 Hamrlton Bad1n. 5 0. 136

Th e Top

Lawson, 71,

Sberr y . 80 . Kerr . 82 , NoGrady, 85 .

We can show
you ways to

16]

5 C•rcl evtl le , 50,

111-3 record IJlgan ftnl.'lhed third at
14-7, followed by Waverly, 12-9;
Jackson, 6-14; Wellston, 4-16 and
Ironton , 3-18. Me1gs is out on strike.
Athens ' Br1an Lawson captured
SEOAL medalist honors with a 35-:16
- 71on the par 70 course at Waverly .
Galha 's J . D. Jones was runnerup
With a 76 Tony Yerian of Jack.'lon
had a hole-m-&lt;Jne on number 10.
Gallipolis, now 36-7 on flle year,
Will take part 111 the Chillicothe In·
vJtat1onal on Saturday .
Here are Monday 's league tournament results :
AT H ENS -

4 Wes t Jefferson 50 1, 140
5 Bergholz Sprtng f rel d, 6 0, 137
6 Mogadore , 6 0 121
7 Lora1n Clearv rcw , 5 1, 105
8 Port smouth Notre Dame. 5 1. 94
9 Cedarvtlle , 6 O, 91
10 Garf1eld He1ghts Tr1n 1ty , S \ , 74
Other sc hool s rec erv1ng 10 or mor e
p01 nt s
II
M e Donald 71
12
Cr oo k sville 57 13 Brrll1ant Buc ke ye
North 47 14 Chrllt coth e Zane Trac e
35 15 (trel , Sugarcreek Garaway ,
S!rasburg and Tdfrn Ca l vert 23 2 1
Care{ 21 22 Cov1ng ton 18 23 (11e ),
N ew Phrladelphra Tu sc arawas Cen
tra 1 Cathol iC Co lumbu') A c ademy
and B ev erly Fort Frye 12 26 St
Henry 11 27 (t1e 1 M1l tord Center
Fa1rb a nk s, Se br rng and M a rra Ste m
MM tO n 10

Class AA
I 51 Marys , 6 0 , 217
2 Whee lt&gt;rsburg , 6 0. 182
3 Akron St V rncent St Mary . 5 1,

h1s wtfe," scm.! Re1 eh at the Wurld

Morgan's eontral'l e xp1red at th e

at

record durmg regular season competition . W1th a sweep 1n the tournament. AHS fm1shed league play
w1th a 21-&lt;&gt; mark
Coac h John MUhoan 's Ga ll1poll.s
Blue Dev1ls fm1shed second w1th an

AP high sehool grid ratings

8 Oh10 St ate
9 Fl or 1d a St a ! C'
10 Notr e Dam e

end of the 1979 season He IS now
eligi ble to test tile free agent ma rket
m the Nov 2 reentry draft The :16year-old st&gt;con d baSt'man hll unly
250 With 32 rWls batted m for the
Reds who lost Jo the Pittsburgh
Pirates 10 the :'&lt;atJOnal League's
Champ1onsh1p Sen es

tournament

l eague

Waverl y Monday
The Bulldogs had compiled a 14-&lt;&gt;

he wants to do
'l tnld hun go go horne . s1t down
w1th .so me mus1c and rhscus.-.; It wtth
Scn es m Baltimore, ~1d
" i\lter the Senes. I'll go out there
!Oakland Calli 1 and we'll talk
about ll," He1ch s.ud
Re1ch discounted Morgan 's
statcwent earlier that l1e had
already made up h1s rmnd about th e
future
" Naturall). Joe IS bwnmed uut
from the pla yoffs, · Re1ch sa 1d ·He
needs to get away and thmk about
Jt. "

S-11, 160 lbs .
Sophomore End

Athens retains SEOAL
golf title, GAHS second

Joe

World Senes to dt·rtdt• whether to
enter the vt'tt&gt;ran s frl'l" age nt

Mike Bissell

Nick Leonard
:&gt;-6, 165 lbs
Sophomore LB

Charles Massar
:&gt;-8, 190 lbs .

~n es

second baseman. ha s been adv lS&lt;.'&lt;l
by his agent to wa1t until alter the

.

t

linU was uuL&lt;;tamJmg tn the P1r.ates '
September dn ve to the NL Ea stern
DivisiOn Li tle . wummg hJs la s t f1 ve
He' s also 4-0 1n post sea son play
The last time the PLratt&gt;s wert' 1n
the Se nes was 1971 the last tJmt• th e

Morgan, veteran Ctnc mnatl Rl&gt;ds

In the Chinese language, tone is as
1mpo rtant to the meamng as
consonants and vowels One syllable
uttered In four different tones can
mean four different ihmgs . The
hundreds of dialects 1n the language
differ so greaUy that the speakers of
one oft en cannot understand
another

Meet the Eastern Eagles •.•

tnt lud tng four With n g1awJ-sli:un
homL rWl Ill' tut JU'il 14 5
Hu t t ht' unl ) Lunt&lt;:~ct Or 1oles'
starter M1ke F l ana g&lt;:~n ha s h&lt;:~d With

Flanagan
Tanner made no secr et of h1s

goott set of snow tires.

Wants board actinn
Dear Sir
May I please make some comments on the Meigs Local Te.achers
Strike ? First,· I would like to pose
fllat If Mr. Dan Morris had been
hired as superintendent, we would
not be in this situation, but m the
worda of Mrs. Sheet.s, Mr Gleason is
"right for Meigs Local "
U David Gleason were smcere
about providing quaUty edul:atlon
for .the students of Meigs Local,
(which he Insists he la doing ), he
should be sincere enough to provide
that education for all 2,0) students,
not Just 211 or 30. Whom does he think
he is footing' The public' The local
board' The state board ' I fear he is
only fooling himself.
Gleason urges everyone lo "work
together ." His recent statements
that he will negotiate when the
teachers are "ready to concede"
show that he is not willing to "work
together." To demand concession "

Series opens tonight,
noDHbothers Weaver

15 0 0 ) 7'&gt;6
3 1 OJ 064
14 1 0) 648
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OPEN .r ,:,.
! WEEKDAYS Till !,.
!
8,00 P.M.
!,.
! TOM'S · !,.

Mtd Am Stand 1ngs
Mtd ·Amen ca n Conference
By The ASSOCtated Press
Confer enc e
W LT Pts Op
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--···.--GOOD TilliS SPEailW

• PIZZA BREAD •
•

You r cho1 ce of any

.

I

o ne lo p p &gt;ng
Reg St 20

•

I

DAVIS-QUICKEL
AGENCY
Bill Quickel
" Across from the

Cour1house," Pomeroy, 0

992_.677

Repre.eniln~ .

FEDERAL KEMPER
IN SURANCE COMPANY

. ,• •

, o.,, o.ty

:61nO's:

•••••••
•

AlllOCATIONS

•

BASTION OF
FREEDOM OF CHOICE
Here , at The Insurance Store,

~

~

18

79

2 0 105 118
2 0 I 02 70
2 0 10'1 6()

insurance without
sacrifietng
protection
lor price

"e'rr free to sell you what you really need!

a

lr 1\ LH ,II lll' .t g t' ilt ' nll er tht' pOliUCS of
Slngfe InSUrance
u' r:1 pa m ·\ nd thJ t \ o ka y. E \ er) good tmurance co mpany
o l in &gt; ptliiL l t' ~ thai f!ld\ ld e ex c el lent benelt ts to many people.
)Oill l

\\ t·

Jr l'

Bu ( hLTt' at fh e l muranct.' Store we offer more.
f' tdt't w ndr:&gt;flf a ge nt\ That mean s '!oe are free to rev1ew

J nd Tt' Ltlmmcnd 1hc po l1t: 1 e ~ . co verage~ a nd se rv1ces
,,1 nwrn le"u mg compan1e; . l1ke I he ConJJnenta l Insurance
Co m pa me..,, fo r examp le . So you h ave a better
d 1a ncc 10 gel Ihe m ; uran ce prolecllOn Ihat exactl y fits
~·our "t peCial reqUirements

\nd

) Ou

, a n depend on our "Fo llow-Through C rew " for

Rs .::8i~~::.a
2t4 E. MAIN ST.

POMIROY,(ll

992-SIIObr fn-5139
"YOU DON'T IUY A POLICY,
YOU t!IRE AN AGENT"

�J- The !JaJiy Sen!Jnel , Pomeroy ·Middl epon . () . Tu,·stl"'. (Jet 9. 19;~

4- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0 .. Tuesday . Oct. 9. 1979

3 local women attend school of instruction
Mrs . Veda Dav1s, chapeau of
Meigs County Salon 170, Eight and
Forty, Mrs . Pearl Knapp, trophies
and awards chainnan, and Mrs.
Mary Martin , Ia avocote d.epa rtement.al , were in Colwnbus Saturday at Imperial House North for a
school of instruction .
Jocelyn Bowman, Galion, departemental chapeau, welcomed those
attending and led in the pledge a nd
prayer . PackeLs of information for
the salons were distributed .
American Legio~ Auxiliary officers
welcomed were Delores Kilgore,
Department of Ohio first v1ce
president ; Marilou Lenhart, second
vice president; Iris Shields, 24th
district president ; Dorothy Warth,
seventh district president : a nrl

Pe~gy
F1eld s. th 1rd distri ct
presiden t.
Also presented were the national
officers present mcluding Dorothy
Brady , natonal pouvior member ,
and Mary Martin , national partnership chainnan. She talked on
partnership a nd encuraged the
salons to invite new partners . Goal
for the na t10n this yea r is $25,000.
Mrs . Hazel Elliott, children and
youth c ha irma n . outlined
q ualificatioins lor a citat ion of merit
and a lso spoke on the AmerJcan
Legion 'child welfare foundstion .
Mrs . Sandra Merr itt. nurses
scholarship chai rman. ca lled for
donatiOns of $1.25 per partner as
requested by Margaret Clemm.

17~
.,.,

FIFi'H GENERATON - This Meigs Count y fami ly IS a fifth
generatiOn farruly . Pictured are, front. 1-.- . Mrs Nor a Bobo, 91, greatgreat-grandmother uf si&gt;-weeks-{)ld Crystal Ann E blin. Mrs. Arthur
Eb lin , great -grandmother : back . Kenneth E blin , gra ndfather . and Ton y
Eblin, the father.

Chester U1V1 W meets f

Social Calendar

I

The Chester United Methodist
Women met at the church Thursday
with Mrs . Betty Roush and Mrs .
Kathryn Baum in charge of the
program "The Future of the Child ."
Seventeen members attended .
Mrs . Roush opened the program
with reading of statement of purpose
and a scri pture reading. Mark 10.
verses 13-16 and Mark 7, verses 2430. The group sang " SavJOr. ! Jke a
Shepherd Lead Us," accompanied
by Mrs. Sawn . the p1arust.
Mrs . Baum staled that to meet
children's needs today, the Uni ted
Nations has declared 1979 the In ternational Year of the Child
(I.Y.C ). To be observed globally,
I.Y .C. is a time for all the worl d 's
countries to study the conditions in
which their children live and to
strengthen programs which will
make their lives better .
" Why have an InternatiOnal Year
of the Child ' " She cont111ued .
"Because the peace and prosperity
of the future depend on the wellbeing of the c hildren of the present.
UNICEF has been designated ·lead
agency ' of the Um ted Nations
system for International Year of the
Child, and in this capacity, it will
coordinate and lend support to
LY.C. programs around the world ."
Also read was the United Nations
Declaration of the Ri gh\5 of the
Child . The year 1979 is also the 20th
anniversary of the United Nations'
adoption of the "Declaration of the
Rights of the Child." whi ch is an appropriate time to recall its pnn ciplcs and redou ble efforts to put
them into practice . The group then
joined in reading the Lltany and
singing, "Jesus Loves the Little
Children,." The program closed
with the Lord's Prayer .
A business meeting was conducted
by president, Bernice Bailey . The
secretary lind treasurer 's reports
were read and approved . A donatwn
was collected to be sent to the Tracy
Hein Fund . Correspondence was
received from Anita Bryant concerning welfare of children of the
world . The society agreed to send a
donation to Anita Bryant Ministries.
Inc., Hollywood, Florida. The election day dinner will be held in the
dining rO&lt;Xn of the church Tuesday.
November 6, 9a .m .-7 p.m .
There were 45 sick calls reported
for the month of September.
The ne~ U .M.W. meeting will be
November 1, at 1:00 p.m . At this
'I meeting, Mrs. Ethel Orr• will install
new officers for the commg year .

TUESDAY
SYH .\ CUSE I'TO Tuesday 7.:10
p.m . Scutt Woodnn g from the Me1gs
~lenwl Health Ce nter Will be guest
~t&gt; rt kt•r
VHU &lt; H!JJOD PI!ESSUHE Chmc
TtH·~d&lt;t.&gt; &lt;-Jl Harnsonnllt• Town Hall .
frunt 10 &lt;urt to I p.m . Rwnmag~
.s~tiL·

111 t'!!llJUnctwn from 9 i:i. lfl . lo 3
p .111. Sponsor&lt;'&lt;~ by Harnsonvllh•

RAONE IDDGE 461 F and AM
Tuesday 7:30p. m .
UHI OETi\ PHI Tuesday7 ,30 p.m
at Athen s Coun ty Savtngs a nd l.oan
Patty P rckens c ultura l r~port and
Kathv DOidge and Conn1e Dodson.
hoslt· sses
MlllDI.EPORT MASONI C
!J)J~;I-: .16] Wil l confer the enter ed
appr~ ·n ttn·

l';tt Hl td;l\l'S,

\1it ~ 1tT

7

deg re e
on
two
p.m . Tuesday : ;rl l

:'vlaso ns 111\1tt•d

HIVEHBY STUDY Club at I p .m .
at horne of Mrs M T Epltn~ . Sr .
MEIGS CHAPTE H ~3. DAY. 7:30
Tuesday at the chapte r home , Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .
WEDNESDAY
WI:;DNESDAY MOR NINC; Tops
Club meettng , 8 ,45 a .m . Wc&gt;dnesday
&lt;~I Hutland F. MS Bulldtng: new
nlt'mbe rs wt•!come .
POMEROY -M!DDI .E PORT l.ions
t1ub meetmg W&lt;'dnesday at noon at
M t· t~ ~ Jun .
MIJ)[) LFPORT

AMATEUR

( ;a nlcne r s, 8 p .m . Wt:'&lt;lnesday at thl!

ho rne of Mr s. Ed gar He)nolds. Mrs .
Errol! Conroy will be the assi sll n~
hos.tess.
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club, 2 p .
m. Wednesday a t the home of :11rs.
Forest Bachtel. Mrs. Nan Moore to
review the " Bishop's Mantel" by
Agnes Turnbull. For roll call , members are to name a book they would
like to re-r ead .

natiOnal cha1rn1an . Plans are for 25
scholarships to be awarded this
year. Ohio's last year average was
$L Zl per partner.
Mrs . Kathryn Cunningham talked
on partnership and it was announced
that Gallia C&lt;iunt y was first in goal,
with Meigs being second . Wanda
Tanner asked for parodies and Ruth
Krugger, I 'aumonier asked for part -

ners to send prayers for the book of
prayers. Patncia Henthorn gave out
instructions for making up salon
histones.
· linda Edmundson, Ia concierge ,
introduced Iris Shie lds and Grace
Shade as her color bearers. She
talked on proper car e of the flag and
the pledge. l.ucU ie Woodling talked
on the publicity scrapbook noting

TO MEET
The Meigs County Humane'
Society will meet at 7:30p.m. at the
lbriftShoppe in Middleport.

Garden tours, flower demonstrations, and visits to olher garden
clubs were reported at the recent
meetmg of the Rutland Garden Club
held at the home of Mrs . Eugene
Atkins and Miss Huby Diehl .
Mrs. L'ltris Diehl , Mrs . James
Nicholson, :11rs. Everett Colwell ,
Mrs . Kex Shenefield and Mrs . V~rgi l
Atkins toured the Weber and
Milhoan gardens during August. Mr.
Ralph Turner reported on the floral
arts demonstrations by Mrs. Irene
Jackson at Royal Oak Park
recrea tion building and Mr&gt; .
Nicholson who also attended comment ed on the wtt and humor shown
by Mrs. Jackson as she presented
modern. traditional and Japanese
arrangements .
The open meeting of Chester Garden Cl ub , " Autumn Frolic" held last
week was noted . Mrs . Pauline
Collett of Belpre was the demonstrator. Announced was the district
meeting to be held at Marietta on
Oct. 'l:i. A thank you note was read
from Mrs . Betty MIZicko of Florida,
extending appreciation to the cl ub
for the ir work with the Good Luck
Garden Club at the Athens Mental
Health Center.
A report was given on the Meigs
County Fair flower shows. In the fir st s how, Mrs . Virgil Atkins was a
winner in " Black Beauty, " Mrs .
Ralph Turner in "Snow White," and
Mrs. Atkins in "Beside Green
Pastures." In the second show ribbons went to Mrs . Atkins for
"Go lde n Wedding, " a mass
arrangement. and "Orange
Blossoms," a Japanese design.
Members commented on the open
meetmg of the club at tile Hutland
United Methodist Church where
Mrs. Earl Dean was arranger for
"Splendors of Summer."
Those making arrangements for
public meetings were Mrs . Ann Webste r , Mrs . Dayton Parsons, Mrs.
Harvey Erlewine, Miss Diehl, Mrs.
V1rgil Atkins , Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs .
Tumer,and Mrs . Robert Can aday .
Seven arrangements usmg roadside material were on display at the
meeting . These were made by Mrs .
Diehl , Mrs . Virgil Atkins , Mrs.
Nicholson. Mrs . Turner , and Miss
Diehl . Mrs . Norman Will of the Star
Garden Club was a guest. Devotions
were given by Miss Diehl and Mrs.
THURSDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden Club , 8
p.m Thursday at th e home of Mrs.
Marjone Walbum . Prog ram on
macrame .
ELEANOR CIRC LE , Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.
with Mrs. Jean Ann Bradbury, Mrs .
Mary O'Brien. and Mrs. Scotty Simpson. hostesses .
LAUREL CUFF Better Health
Club , 6' 30 p .m. potluck dinne r at the
Meigs County Infirmary . The club's
anmversary tr be celebrated . Sunshine Sister exthange.
REGULAH METING , Eastern
Band Boosttrs, 7, 30 p.m. Tuesday in
the high school band room . A
treasurer ~II be elected and plans
made lor serving the Farm Bureau
Banquet at the Chester Elementary
SchooL Parents of all band members
urged to attend .

Eugene Atkins both using Helen
Steiner Rice 's poems. Members
named an indoor bulb they plan to
grow. Discussions concerning dues
whi ch are now payable and the new
year's programs and a flower show
were held.
For the program, Mrs. Webster
gave suggestions for starting bulbs
indoors from the Journal Home Gardener . She said that bringing tulips.
daffodils, and other bulbs into winter
bloom indoors is easy and forcing
bulbs in off season is nothing new but
few people realize how easy ills. For
Christmas, the King Allred tulip IS
recommended . Pots of light garden
soil mixed with peat and covered
with straw is a good method . Narcissus can be in soil or pebbles or
water . It was noted that the nar-

Flft

SIZE

The first gasoline automobile in
the United States was driven by J .
Frank Duryea in Springfield, Ma ss.,
in 11193.

Reg . Ret

w.ssc

1
\

Herman Grate

1

773-5592

Mason , W. Va -

·V

DENTAL I POUSH
RINSE .~ R!~!!!R

. :·69C?) .~.~44C ~~FJ

991e

IIG. 0&lt; IUT 111111

rog .
re1ail

fp

St 59
1.2S-oz .

.6-oz .

4 - oz

~
JI, Ill

88c! jlk.,L.!

99

COTYUIOL
COLD
FORMaA
reg retail
S2 .85

,....

DR. SCHOLL'S
FOOT

~

.-....
-.

" The most essential aspect of a
Christian education ts spwitual.
Gallia Chri stian School studenL'
beg1n each day with a joyful lime of
prai se to God in song and prayer
The first class for every student IS
Bible. The remainder of the day IS
then spent in learrung to apply the
principles Jesus Christ taught 10
each class and facet of ltfe ...
It was pomted out thai the
acaderruc course is designed to meet
individual needs . In many subject
areas the gifted s tudent is permitted
to advance as rapidly as he can .
Sma ll classes j ave rage one
teacher to seven students! allow
average and slower sluden\5 all help
ne cessary . the curriculum for
readmg and math is similar to the
public school prograrns so that
students can t ransfer without difficulty

Ga llia Christian School students
have the opportunity to t&lt;Jke part in
Rio Grande College's physical
education teacher training classes
where they have a varied and intereslmg program .
State-approved plans call for this
kind of setup '
FIRST FLOOR - office and
g rades I, 2, 3. A large multi-purpose
r oom on the nurthern side of the
building for (! 1 assembly hall . 121
lwich room and perhaps (31 phy s ed
for small children .

fp

•

5oz

I

OXY-10

reg . retell $1.69

''

!

ACIIE
LOIIOII

, - . ..

rog . ro1111 S3 . 79

1-oz .

I

SCHIAFFT'S

.c----CORI

=&amp;lncts=

•••••••
•

reg . ret .

AU LOCATIONS

•

A

ere

v
E

PORK LOINS ..............................L.~·.•.99e
SUPERIORS

°

9

- - ·-

19

PICNIC HAMS ............................~·.. 79e
SAVORY

BACON

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••L~; ••

BROUGHTON

COTTAGE CHEESE ...................................z.4.9!~ ••• s1 19
All STAR

2% MILK .................................................~~L ...5 1 69
VALLEY BEll
BUTTERMILK ..........................................v!-~~~·••• 8 9 e
VALLEY BEll
DRUMSTICKS ..........................................~.~~~ ..8 9 e
U.S. GRADE B LARGE
EGGS .......................................................IJ!l.~E.~ •••.5 9 e

CRACKERS············:~~~~.x.. 59e CHEWING TOBACCO.c.~
BATH SIZE
KING SIZE
e
HOLSUM

LUX BEAUTY

BREAD.............. r···· ... ~9~~. 39

SOAP. ....~~~·.~~~~~.~:·.............~~~.

8 PAK 16 oz. btls-

HAK
16 oz.

$129

PARTY ICE
10 LB_
BAG

Plus Tax

RC

OR

DIET RITE

9e

SATURDAY ONLY

RC or DIET RITE

$1
09
16 OZ. BTLS.

Coke &amp;Pepsi

$556

FRIDAY ONLY

$1.011

6 9e

ALL WEEK

DR. PEPPER

reg . r.. all 75'

16-oz.59c

.

I

WHOLE OR HALF

ZESTA

I.,a d,", $214

UQIIPRIN

J D.yt 0"1'

•

SMOKED

$ 39

l.S-o~ 1 1 ~
~:::J

1

Your choice of any

PORK FAMILY

BOX

;;,.Reg. Retail

TIMES SPECIA!W

BACON ............... :.........................~~~- $1 29

TIDE

~ CREAM
Col'~'\
$1 .99

.-cooo
--···-

PORK RIB CHOPS .................... .I:f~: $1 29

KING SIZE

COLD

Mr. and Mrs. William A. Young ,
Pomeroy, are announcing the birth
of a son, William A. II, bom on
Saturday, Oct. 6, at MI. Carmel
Hospital, C&lt;llumblis . The infant
weighed seven powHJs, five ounces
and was 21 in ches long . Mr . and Mrs.
Young have a 16 month old
daughter, Ray an Elizabeth .
Grandpa rents are Mrs . Emora
Boice, Pomeroy, and the late Dr.
Raymond Boice and Mr . and Mrs .
Hank Young .
Mrs . Young will remam at Mt.
Carmel Hospita l, Town St. , Columbus. unbl Saturday . Her room number is 673.

• PIUA BREAD •
. one lopping
894 •
Reg $1 20

ers

LOIN CHOPS ............................ ~)~;.:$ 1

36's 87C

It

Birth announced

$

PORK FAMILY

reg . retell S1 .2S

5 33
3SCC

~~. 109 riiQ . retail 12 .09

ll&lt;!Se. North Da kota, ann ounce the
birth of a son , Kt'nneth Detvtd , Jr ., on
O&lt;·t. l , at the Ai r Force hospi ta l. Th e
1nfant wt•Jghed seven pounds and 12
and one-hcdf ounces.
\-l aternal grandpa rents are Mr.
anu Mrs. J . A. Sunth, Rt. I. Racme .
Paternal ~randp a rents are the late
Mr. and Mrs . F r an k Hays.
Middleport.
\laternal
great
grandmother I S Mrs. Lillie Smith,
Mornst own. Tenn ., and maternal
.~r eal grandfat her ts ~lw~n Yost,
\-11dd leport .
The coupl e are also the parents of
2 oth er child ren, Ja cqueline age 6,
and Franklin Alan , age 4.

RIB CHOPS ................................... ~·..$1

"• 85

IIG. or IIllA DIY

JERIENS
LOnoN

PARADERS WELCOM E
Groups or organizations wishipg
to take part in the Southern Hi gh
School hom ecorrun g parade to move
at 2 p .m . Frida y from U1c hi gh
school are invited to call Cindy Warden, 949-2728 ; Crista Beegle, 9492008 : Me~ Amberger, 992{)115.
Those WIShing to take part are to call
before Wednesday.

Hi\CINE - Starr Sgt. a nd Mrs.
Kl'nnelh Hays, Minot Alf Force

PORK LOIN CHOPS ................~~~- $1 39

,,, ,.,,;,.,..,

LIQUID

SO' OFF

S2 .69

charge of the meeti ng . Door pnzes
were won by Pat AeJk er \\1th other
pmes go1ng to H. J . fWynolci,,
Pa trJck Aeiker .. Jeanme Gibbs "nrl
Carol Drake

Arthur's lather, Henry Whittingham Gilman, in 1877 built the
Young Ladies' Seminary, Boarding
and Day School , where Miller's
Home for Funerals now is . In one
sense, Mildred Gilman has done
what her grandfather did -she has
esta blished a ~chool through the actio n of the Gilman Foundation .
Students from Gallia, Me igs, and
s urrounding counties will be accepted at GaJlia Christian School on
Mill Creek Rd. A reporte r who
visited the budiling during a work
sess ion found an e&gt;cJted, happy
group of chi ldren and teachers .
Mauri ce Dean, president of the
board of trustees, said that Gallia
Christian School i.s "unique in its
phtlosophy and dedication of st&lt;Jff .
The school believes that children
belong to the parents and the school
exists to educate them to become
adults to live abundant and

lt!en&lt;:~ger .

SECOND FI.OOH - fourth grade
through the loth grade . Ubrary .
Fire escape leading off the front porch . The fire escape will go down the
south Side ; the porch is on the west
side of the building .
Members of the board are
Mauri ce Dean, president ; Dr. Edward Shelidan . William Davis, and
Mrs . Connie Skaggs .
Faculty is composed of Marjorie
lianlon and Mary Derks, kindergarten and primary ; !.lflda Butcher . Sturley Tabor, and Barbara
Sheridan.
When Arthur Gilman constructed
this house 68 years ago , he used dirt
from the basement to have bric k
made. Masons carved stone from
the hill back of the house to go into
the foundation . Some of the lumber
also came from the hill back of the
house .

ME TS

-

ROLL-ON

rog ro1ell

~'oundation .

. th announced
B zr

E

POWDER

JR.

~........

WISE ...

PRODUCE

CONTAC

j~

BUDGET

A

t 2-oz .

ARRID

•

OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT
ONLY
.,

e

'

; -·. . 99 "'" . . . 1

I

Mon ., Tues .• Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
8:30 to 5:00 Thursday till12 Noon

CIS

0

suo

•••••••
AU LOCATIONS

Q

iail ISTRI-DEX
~ POWDER SHAMPOO )_ · PADS
!::j ,.,.'"· c '$'"'" 77 I~

SIBS

' ..... ~

office. A fire escape will be placed at the right of the
upper front porch . It is the 68-year-old Arthur Gilman
house .

Christmas projects discussed by CH 'ers

$

iiiY

rog . rel

,.., .; __{ jlt,..,_.,

HERE'S THE NEW GALLIA CHRISTIAN School
on Mill Creek Rd .. two miles from the Gallipolis post

The annual Christmas project of
assisting needy fa m il ies wa s
discussed durin g a meettng of the
Big Bend Citizens Band Radto Club
held recently at the grange hall on
the Rock Springs fair grounds .
Committees were encouraged to
begin working on the various aspects of the holiday program . A
Hall oween party was set for Oct. 26
at the hall with a potluck dinner at
7: J(] p.m. Officers will be elected at
that meeting and a good attenda nce
is encouraged .
It was reported that the recent
"cotree break" was a success. Purc hase of a loud speaking system was
discussed . Mike Capehart was in

"Ia"f _
=·b,. . .:. .J-.

---+------

Reg. Ret. $1 . 44!';:::= = ':l

=&amp;nets=
•

t6's

BANDAGES

•• Your
PIZZAchoiceBREAD
•
of any •
. one topp'"g .
••
89
Re g $1 20

I

Mrs. Erlewine reported that fall is
an excellent time to control weeds in
the lawn . She sai d the grass should
be cut short, raked up and then grass
seed sown A mi.ture of set!ll is best
and it should be quality seed. Oc'~ober mowing and fertilizing in OcIober provide a greener covering in
the spring .
Mrs C. 0 . Chapma n gave time ly
tips for October reminding members
to trim. wash , a nd spray plants
before bringing them into the house.
This s hould be done before tbe heat
IS on in the house .
Nert meeting wtll be on Oct. 29 at
the home of Mrs. Roy · Snowden,
Rutland, with Mrs. Hobert Canaday
as co-hostess. The program will be
on dahlia culture. Refreshments
were served by the hostesses .

CLARK JUIIIOIIS er

lf.. -IIICH PLASTIC

.--0000 liiS SP£CIAI.--.

MASON FURNITURE
,

'.

lives in a changing
world .
·· u offers Christian parents an ex ·
cellent alternative education. " the
president said, " in a warm, loving
atmosphere which emphasizes the
mdJVJduality of each child and
wholesome

Reg . Retail $1 58

CURAD

MASON FURNITURE
.

lly J . SHERI\'.AN PORTER
Tribunt&gt; Fraturt- &amp;rvict·
Fourth year for Gallla Christian
School began on Sept. I m a new
locatiOn, the Arthur Gilman property a mile from Gallipolis on the Mill
Creek Rd.
With plans approved by the State
Department of Industrial Kela tions
Division of Bwldings and Factories ,
the move from Vinton to the Gilman
House took place with parents of the
approximately 4~ s tud en\5 pitchmg
in to help t he staff and the board get
ready .
Arthur T. Gilman built this st ruc,
•' lure in 1911 for his home ; a devout
Chlistlan. he spent his life in
promoting the Christian religion as a
layman. and raised his three
daughters in the fa ith . HL' daughter,
Miss Mildred Gilman, purchased
her sisters· interests in the home and
d onated it to her church, the
Gallipolis First United Presbyterian
Clmrch.
This church established the
Gilman FoundatiOn, which, over
recent years, ahs rented it to various
families . The Gallia Christian
Sc~ool has leased it from the Gilman

•

REGULAR or SUPER

09

$

St 39

SHOP

~

department president; Ol'l . 21,
homecorrung for Ins Shields, 14th
District president;
Oct. 28,
homecoming for Joy Bowman,
Galion Legion hall , and May 17-19
Chapeau Day at the National Jewish
Hospital in Denver, Colo.
Mrs . Knapp talked on trophies and
awards stressing the importanr• of
starting now in their work .

••••
TAMPONS

BABY RUTH
or BUnERFIIIIER

--···J Doy• Ooly

cissus IS an e&gt;i.'eUent ~ulb lor
children to grow and idea l for
classroom demonstration. After
blooming, the bulbs are moved outof-door s. Hycainth a nd lily of valley
ca n also be st&lt;J rted inside but direrlions need to be followed as each
require different methods and t ernperature .
Mrs . Harry Williamson talked on
" When Thinking of Bulbs Hem ember the Ulies" from Flower a nd
Garden magazme. She said that
Wies are uncomparable additions to
a garden , have a high decorative
value . in landscape , and are un surpassed for arranging. They come
in large range of blooming times
that ca n be se lected to have blooms
three months or longer. Tall unes
need to be st&lt;Jked, s he said .

,,,ti"tf$\\tet
DIOYRolh

RACINE LODGE 461 F and AIM
Thursday at 7, J(] p .m . for purpose of
observing past masters night.
Speaker will be past grand master
James Harbage . Refreshmenls . Nl
master masons Invited .

MEIGS COUNTY J aycee-..ttes
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at haunted
house . For additional information
contact Nancy Bums at 992-.'&gt;664.
POMEROY CHAPTEH Ill HAM
Wednesday 7:30 p.m . Bosworth
Council Rand SM 8:30p.m . All companions invited to attend .

·

Gallia Christian School relocates this year

October tips heard at garden club meet

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRI STAT~ ARE·A \

HUMANE SOCIE'Q',

that the date and the name of the
paper must be included .
Last year's publicity chau-man,
Shirley Davis, presented the
publi city book to Dorothy Brady . It
had t&lt;Jken a second in national competition .
Announced were Od . 14, open
house a t Xenia Home. Oct. 20. the
homecoming for E leanor Hartline.

,

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.
SUr:CAY lG iU l~

8 PAK

We

Federal Food

we neserve '""

To Limit Qflantities

COLA .
8 PAK 16 OZ.
99~
BTLS.
Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

�•
6- The Daily Sentinel, Pomeroy -Middleport, 0. Tuesday , Oct. 9~ 1979

7- The Dally Sentinel, Pomeroy -Mtddlepun , 0 , Tuesd"y. f..&gt;d . 9. 1979

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds
WedneldaJ, Oct. 10

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede Osol

Lost and Found
LOST OCT 4. M rnrtteport
Dol5erman
trrsn
::.e tt f&gt;r
Bla &lt; k wrlh wt1r l e ~po t on
c h es t . ! €'Mill~ . AnswE-rs to
H etdr
Humdne SOCTely .
991 61b0
LOS T
Middleport .
Shepherd
Co l lre,
black .
wh rle and tan . mdle An
swers to Be n Wrtl p1ck u p
Hu ma ne Soc re tv . 99? 6160

October 10, 1979
Tt11s com1ng year could herald
the co ncluSIOn to many u-nngs
whtCh no ranger ser11e any pro
duc trv e purpose rn your Ide Your
posrt 1on gets str ong e r as each
occ ur s, aUowtng 'f OL to develop
new lhrng s whr c h wrll add t o your

growtt1
LIBRA

~Sept .

23-0ct. 23)
Depresston need qnt uv F!r u)me

you tOday I! you feet your 1deas
are bemg thwarted
Redirect
yourself Find a drflerent route or
e)(press10n F rnd out more or
what l1e1 ahead lor you 1n the
vea r lollowmg your b1r tllda y by
send1ng lor your copy a t Astra
G raph Le tter Mall $1 tor eat:.h to
A s tr a -Graph 8011 489
RaCIIO

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22} tn

LOST
Mulberry
Ave
Chrhua hua . brown
wrlh
spo t s. f ema le Answers to
1 nnov
Hum am• Soc rely,
991 6160

COUNlRYMOBILE Home
Pdf~ . Route 33 , north ot
Po meroy L arge lot s Ca ll
991 7479

l!t W ~KW IX Undt.·r
I day

cu n
I 00

2 days

I

J days
liday.-;

Char~e

I 2f:l
1 f()

ROOM
AND
board .
work,ng per!. ons or rrt~recl

I~

2 25

JOO

3 7!1

Sl6 5 month . S45
997 6012

~

t~n l!l

Ads nut./\11~

dily

pt&gt;r word pt!r

ottwr than t'OO·
be c har~t"d Bl

th&lt;-1 day rate
U1 m~mory . Card of 'llumU
and UbLtlUir1' 6 t·ent.s ~r word .
IJ 00 nmumum. CB.!lh rn ad -

'"""'
Cart&gt; of The

sale~

n..
n~t1t

).ilfe'l
scn~ptffi

are

SentTnt'l

Publisher r~~ne!'l lht·
tv ~:ht ur re}t'("l lUI)' lldj

rlPt&gt;m&lt;&gt;d

objt'('tlonal

PUblrsht'r wtU not
for morf' tharl
.-wrtwn

Tt1e

b(' respm.~1ble

Of'IC' LlW t HTt'1:1 Ul ·

Help_ Wa_nted

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Orvtlle E. Wel ch. dec .. Hobert A.
Welch, co .;,xc . Manlyn T Taylor,
co.""xc. to Hufus Edward Dtllon,
Marine Anne Dillon, 40 acre,, Sctp1o.
Wilham S. Cole to !Joyd Awalt ,
Nona H. Awalt . 1.00 acre, Orange
Mary E. Jamison, former ly Mary
E. Nichols, Denc1l Jarruson to
Richard J . Cashdollar, Betty J
Cashdollar . lots, Reedsville .
Patricia D. Humphrey, Lewts E.
Humphrey, Esther Loraine Venoy.
Hobert A. Benoy . Marcta Jane
Houdashelt , Hobert Houdashelt,
Gregory S. Graover, Linda S.
Grover to Gregory S. Grover and
Linda S. Grover, parce ls, Salisbury .
Max F . Ray lor, Esta Mae Tay lor
to James Mathias, Debby Mathias.
parcel, Sctpio.
Rtcky Lee Deeter to Argyle I ..
Deeter, parcels, Lebanon.
David Loren Wanzo, dec., to Mary
K. Wanzo, cert. of trans ., Rutland .
Orval Blake, Oara Blake to Gary
Green, Linda GreeD, parcel, Olive .
James R. Ingels, Jr. , Pamela H.
Ingels to James R. Ingels, Elnora P.
Ingels, 1.893 acre, Rutland .
George F . Glaze, Rebecca L.
Glaze to Trans-America Investment
Corp., 5.4n acres, Salisbury.
Robert Dale Holliday, Avanel
Holliday to John T. Holliday, parcels, Columbia&amp;lem.

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADIJNES
Monday
on Sa turd-.)

~oun

Tuesday
thru FndaJ
lJw

!ill)

IpM
hf&gt;fnrf' pub iiUIIIOn
S:.mda v
4 r ~,-

1-'nday aftrrlll)o;m

Notices
MEIGS
COUNTY
HUMAN E SOCIETY 'I'll
671-IJ
Pets dvailable for
adoptron .:tnd rntorma t ion

If YOU WANT TO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY GIVE US
A CALL 992~342

DOWNING-CHILDS AGENCY

VERY 5MALL etfr r •en &lt; y
apdrlmenl
t or
r en t
Su1table lor only 1 workrng
person Call rlfter 5 30 , 991

TRAILER
for
rent
1
bedroom. dePOStl requrred
9"91 5914 after 5
HOUSE
TRAI LER,
Chester area 1 bedroom
U ITI!I TeS not p01 d . $100 mo ,
reference
and
depos•f
requ~red Call 304 663 5161
AMERICAN
HERITAGE
nouse , burtt 1813 . 8 room
brrrk residen rc , 1 mile
from Rutland on Beec h
Grove Rd (dll 513 539 74)9
or wr11e M f-er let , 146 Wrn
stan Lane , Monrow . OH
45050 .

For Sale,
Rent
or Trade
- -·FOR SALE or r ent N1 ce 3
bedroom , modular located
in Port l and area Set up on
lot or can be moved Ca ll
alter 4 · JO 304 1!3 5177
FOR TRADE two lo ts 1n
Pomeroy , tor motor home

949 ?181
FOR SALE or rent . !louse
'n
Karr rsonvrlle
'}
bedroom.
l.a rg p
l1vrn g
room, kitChen and bath
Call 1 928 4417

RISING
STA R
Kennel
Board1ng Cal l 367 019'1

POODLE

GUN
SHOO T EVERY
SU NOAY I PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB
NO

H UNTI NG ,
no
wrth n o Cll
l.ept1ons on my propert.,Judy M cGra w Sel f
trespas~1ng

ED BURKETT BARBER
SHOP now open l u lltrme 10
Mtddleport
GU N
S HOOT
Ra cr nf'
Volunteer
F rre
Dept
Every Sa turday 6 30 p m
At therr buTIOingin Basnan
Fa c tory c hoke guns only

Auto Sales

FOUR PUPPES.
'I'll 7518
CHOCOLATE

beagle

COLOR ED

pood le
IQ good
home
Unable to t ake ca re o f htm
949 22 70

HILLCREST

K I TTENS . YELLOW and
wh1le trgcr ilnd c al reo 949

1495
F EMALE

GERMAN

Shep t1erd pup , shots, wor
med , b l dck. wh 1l e and
brown Two fem a leS! Bcr
nMd t ·o :.es one. b l ack and
whtle.
on e, brown and
IJiack , good w1 1t1 children
Female terr1er type , ~ma ll,
black and whrte . shots an
dwormed
Humane
Sor1ely, 997 6760

!974 CJ 5 JEEP For more
rntormalr on , c all 74] 1503
1977THUNDERBIRD,ps,
p b . a c , am fm radio .
rad r~l
!~re s.
rerltntng
seats Excellent co ndi110n
\.4300 Must sell 147 3594

BEAGLE COLLIE , blacK ,
b rown and white, s not s
Collie type , brown end
black, f emale . 1 bOrder
collre , black and while
temate
Cocker Spanrel.
black and tan , l emal e
Good with krds , sho t s, wor
mcd J to A mo old 51 Ber
nards . olack and whrte
temale , brown and black
ma le and female
ShorT
t1aired German Pornter.
while wrfh br own . female .
shot s. brrd dog K1t1 ens . aH
shapes.
s1zes
Humane
Soc 1et·,-, 992 6260

Wantec!_to Buy _
C H I P WOOD Poles ma)(
d ia meter 10 " on large ~ t
end $.11 p er ton Bunated
slab $.10 per ton Del1vered
to Ohro Pa llet Co , RT 1.
Pomeroy 992 1689

OLD

FUR N ITURE.

''e
rron

KENNELS

Board1ng , all breeds Cle.=tn
1ndoor outdoor
facrl111es
Al so
AKC
rcg,sterPd
Ooberman s 614 446 7/9)

Mobil e Homes · Sale
197l LYNN HAVEN 14x6S J
bedroom
1970 Vindale 1h6J with ex
panda , 2 bedr
1970 New Moon 17x60J bdr
197]
Sky l ine
12x55
1
bedroom
1971 Bonamd 12~~:51. 2 bedr
8 &amp; S MOBILE HOME

SALES . PT

wv

CLOSE TO Pomeroy on
ICHge prrva le lot . 11K60
moOrl e home. 1 bed r oom .
I ' , ba th s. new c arpelrng
throughouT , ne w gas fur
nare . wa sher and dryP r . 6
months free rent on 101 99'}

6398

log;

1980
ANTIQUES,

FUR

NIT U RE , glass.
Chtna ,
Ftnylhrng See or ca ll Ruth
Gosney, anlrques, '16 N
?nn Mtddleport , OH 991
316 1
ANTIQUE POCKE T wal
ches Wrll i ng to oay top
dollar
Ca l l
\ 597 1'il7J
r"en1ngs

WANTED

JUNK

Bat

ter1es , rad1a1ors , motors .
auto
trans
No S und~y
ca ll s 949 156J .
WANTED TRUCK bed t or
a 197 5 F 100 Ford tru c k
Also . a tead gutfar player
lor country ro c k b and 997
'1969 or see at Betty ·s
Carryout, J mrles sou th of
Midd leport

Down Spouts
Free Estimates

'~&lt;• nrnq }
Wri. ['W! II ~

GOO~ f

TIIAILE'Il NOW

·

CO AL,

~TOCI&lt;

II.VAIU\OLIE

3891
POTATOE S

C W Prollill farm . Por
!land , OH $.8 a hundred and
\5 a hund rL•d
FIREWOOD
FOR
Now taktng orders
dPirver 742 705o

EMERGE N CY

sa te
Wdl

POWER

altNnators own the best
buy WIN POWER Call 513

188 1589

TWO SNOW lrres. used 7
m onths ,
Srlc
GR78xl4
Phone~"} 3379
OLD
WA L NUT
grand
fa!her·s cl oc k tnqu1re at
thf&gt; Wood S.hed on Broad
w&lt;1 ·,- 1n Ra c ,nc

APPLES

CIDER

HONEY
Ftllpalr.ck Or
c nard , State Route 689
PhonP
Wllkesv rtle . 669

31 85
PURE DURO( BOAR , top
Qualrty Rf'edsv!lle . 614 378
6311
"TWO AXLE backhoe
tra11 cr
Phone Gallrpo l1 s.
446 478'}

POMEROY
lANDMARK
GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS
McCulloch Pro
Mac ss

Garage

I I I

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

5071
Osbol'"n
Reed svi lle , OH ,
For information
667 ·648S . W1ll be
late
if
you
something .

9 lB 1 mo . Pd

MllS -10

IN S. I OCK for tmmedtate
del1very var10us '.i.TlPS of
poo l kds Do If yo urse l f or
lf't us rnslall fo r you 0
Bumgardner
~ales .
In c
992 5774

A&amp;. H U pho tstertng , a c ross
!r om the Texa co Station rn
Syraucse 991 37 43 or 991

3151
BR ADFORD. l...uCI10neer,
Complete Se rv1n• Phone
949/487 or 949 7000 ra c rne ,
Oh10. Cril l Brddlord

Jack

URGENTL. Y NEEDED
··n·r·e-

BOWERS
~we-epers.

toa s t ers. tran s, nil .:,mall
app t rances La wn mower
N e)(t fo StFtte Hr g hway
Garage on Reule 7. 985

3815
PI A NO
TUN I N G
Lane
Dan •e ls N ew pho ne num
ber
742 29 51
Servr ce to
sch ool s and hom es. s1nce

1965
-·

Real Estate for Sale
F IN ANC IN G VA FHA LO
ANS LOW OR NO DOW N
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
OR
REFI N ANCE
IRE LAND MORTGAGE,
77 E STATE. ATHENS

Services
Offered
---- - -- -

~-

WILL CARE t o r elderly 1n
our home Also, room and
board a~.~a,lab l e 992 7314.

HOTPOINT

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E)( cava 1 1ng ,
se pt rr
svs tems . dozPr . bM khoe
Rt 143 Phone 1 {6 14 ) 698
7331 or 747 2593

AUTOMOBILE

IN

SURANCE
bt•en
c an
ce l led")
Los t
your
operator 'c, llfl' rl'&gt;e ? Phone
!.197 21 43

CENTURY 11 Pug Pepper
and Co
Tuppe r s Plains
BeautTtu l J bed r oo m br 1c ~ .
famrly room wtth wood
burn 1ng firepl ac e, 7 c ar
garage . ') ') ba th s on •
beautiful
acres
Cal l
Forrf' sf Ca-;.sady, 413 5050
Tupp(&gt;rs Plarns Owner has
be-en tra ns ferred andhas
pr1cea
tht s
l o vel-;
3
bedroom home t o se ll . For
mat d1n1ng room , kr1chen ,
free !&gt;landing
fire p lace
1nlrv1ng room, garage on 1
a c re lot. S-32 ,900 Call Ellen
Knots, 413 B1 10

Headquarters
Appliances
Sates &amp; Service

+
•
•
•

acres in OITve Township
near Forked Run Lake

$5.000 .
HANDYMAN -- 9 room
frame suitab le for il 2
fam ily dea r 11 2 baths,
nat . gas, city wa t er, cor
ner lot Renr will ne lp
Pay it ott SlS,OOO

3

POMEROY
LANDMARK
Jack W . Cars@v

Mgr .
Phone 992 -2181

W tl! RABYStT chi ldren
o t a tl dges 1n my home
Tuppt&gt;r s Pla ins area 667

3305
HAVE ROOM and bOard,
laundry , lor eldE-rly only
tn wal~ung distance of
S~ nior
Crtizens
Reasonab le 997 6027

SCHOOL

Good 4 bedroom f rame
with 1 1 "1 batt1s. F .A . fur
nace, f ull basement and
5 acres of land ASking

ORPHAN ANNIE-FILL IN
RECKOI'i I WAS TAKit-f'
A MAP RIGH i l HEN
~QOM THEl SlO'iE
AS

DEER

per
Stove , refrige-raT or ,
bo ttl e gas , I ight!., bunks,
S500 Swing 5e t , li k e new,
S-30 1975 Kawasaki , S150 .
'197 7318

HUNTER 's

com

Wanted to Rent
WANT TO rent : 2 bedroom,
vn f urrWshed house in Meigs
County . 992 19~ .

THREE

BEDROO M .

GOIN G ON

---~--='-

----'Auctions
B !G AU C TION ever\ Wed .,
l pm . Hartford Communi ty
Center . Hartford . WV, .c
mites above Pomeroy
Mason Bridge

and

East

2.

South
J•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Ask tiM l!xperts
You hold
10-9-H

+ A

••

=:::o- \."'

Thm~s

didn't look at all good. bur
li e

It's the nut who's
wali&lt;t1n q till price.;
drop, Ma'

Poor man'
Come. dear'

Don't

That wasn't a
nice thinq to
do,darli '

qet too close

to him!

.. ',

Res . H2·2S61

th1s column and w111 ,-ece1ve

ace

of

Co . 20 .JJ
00--Days of Our Lives 3, 15; All My
Ch ildren 6, 13; Young &amp; the
Rest less 8, 10 .

311-As The World Tu rns 8, TO;
2 00--Doctors 3, 15; One Ute lo
Live 6, 13.
2 25--- News 17: 2: JD-Another World

3, 15;

capital

~~~~!!¥:~

the Borgias
3 Positively!
4 "C' - Si

Bon''
S Burning

heap
6 Asian river

7 Go broke
8 Exceeded
the limit of

9 Defensible

Ye~terday's

BARNEY

DON'T 'IE WISH
WE ·UNS HAD
'LECTRICITV,
PAW?

j

I SHORE
DO

!

A.alwer

11 Bucket

Z9 Stonn
handle
of anger
15 Insigni:10 Hlgh.,strung
ficant
31 Wield
IS Spoiled
a broom
21 Halloween 33 Swiss
drink
city
%2 Field
3&amp; Philippine
%3 Drum roll
tree
Z4 Tergiver- 3'7 Bandleader
Brown
satory

I WOULD 14AVE MADE
A GOOD PlfTHON

HIDDEN IN A TREE
UNTIL A VICTIM
APPEARED...

T11EN I WOULD HAVE
SLITHERED OUT ONTO
A BRANCH , AND...

8

NEE(IS A LITTLE
WORK ~

L F C

Three Sons 17 .

S 30-C arol Burnett 3; News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; E lee . Co . 20 ;
Mash 10; Happy Days Agalf\13 ; I

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

Dream of Jeannie 17 ;

RFA
B C S 0 N

XOPOXVX

F C

Doctor

Who 33 .
6:!l0-News 3,8,10,13,15; ABC News
6: Carol Burnett 17 ; Zoom 20
6:30-NBC News3 .1S; AB C News13 ;
Carol Burnetl6; CBS ~ews 8.TO ;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20.
7 :!l0-3's A Crowd 3; Tic lac Dough
8; Match Game PM 6; News 10;
Newlywed Game 13 ;
Love
American Style 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17 : Dick Cavett 20,33 .
7 : 30-Country Roads 3; Nowl ywed
Game 6; Joker's Wild 8; The
Judge 10; Family Feud TJ; Wild
Kingdom IS; All In The Family
17 ; MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl
2(),33 ..
8:00--Real People 3, T5 ; World Series
6, 13; Great Performances 2(),33 ;
Movie " McHale's Navy Joins the
Air Force" 17 .
8:30--Movie " The Greek

A K B

AKB

I C K T
J

F

F P V

OCJVGOSFCMV

TOSJ
JOL.
NFPFSVG
Yesterday's Cryptoqaole: WHEN THE FOOL IS TOLD A
. . 1/ Pfi.OVERB, ITS MEANING HAS TO BE EXPLAINED TO HIM .
- ~~- - AFRICAN PROVERB

Tycoon"

8, TO.
9 :()0-Movle " Mirror, Mirror " 3,T5 ;
Baryshnlkov at the White HooM
33; All -Star Swing Festival 20.
tO Oil-Upstairs, Downstairs 17 ;
News 20: Connections 33 .
10 :30-Best ot Groocho 20.
11 :00--News 3,8, 10, 15 ; Last of the
Wild 17; Dick Cavett 20 ;
Wodehouse Playhouse 33.
11 : 1S~ News 6,T3 ; 11 : 30-Johnny
Carson J, T5 ; Your Turn: Letters
to CBS 'News 8; ABC News 33;
Movie "David and BathsheN"
10; Movie "With a Sbng In My
Heart" 17.
t1 : ~5- Love Boat 6, 13; T2 :ooSwltch 8.
,,
12 : 55- Baretta
6,T3 ;
T:OG- •
Tomorrow 3; News T5.
,
I : T()-Hawall Flve-0 8; 2 :!l0-Newt ,

Henry E. Cleland, Jr .

Rts . H2-61fl
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Ros. 742·2474

Aflerschool

ford &amp; Son 8; M isler Rogero
70.33; Mary Ty ler Moore tO; My

CRYPTOQUOTES

C VPVG

3;

Special 6,1J, Petti coat Junction
8: Mer v Griffin 15; Gilligan's Is.
17
s:oo--1 Dream of Jeannie J;; San.

12
27 - Plaineo ,
IU .
Z8 Work on
edging
Z9 Holidays
32 Japanese
volcano
33 Scottrsh
speech
sound
34 cut down
36 Combl18tible
substance t..-t-t-"'ft
37 Occupation
38 It's for
the birds
3t Gaelic

/tN! SLITHERING

8,1 0:

Dol lar Man 10; Spectreman 17 .

4 30- Bew1lched

One l etter s1mp l y ~ lan ds f or anot her I n th is sample A is
u sed f or lhc thrt'e I. 's, X for the two o· ~. t•lc Single letter s,
apostrophe s, 1he l eng t h and format inn o f I he wurds are all
hlots Each day the rode lrtter~ are d11ferent

I WOULD HAVE

Lig hl

8: Sesa me Sl . 70,33; Six Million

DAILY C RYPTOQ UOTE - Here's how to work it :
A X YDL 8 ~ AXR
to l. ONGFELLOW

PEANUTS

Guiding

Gi gglesnort Hote l 17.
3 oo-General Hospital 6, 13; I Love
Lucy 17 . Connec tions 10
3 JO--One D ay At A Time 8; Joker 's
Wild 10 . Flintstone~ 17.
4 oo--- M ister Car toon J ; Tom &amp;
Jerry 13 ; Password Plus IS :
Bewitched 6; Beverly Hillbillies

1 Morocco's

2 Llive, among

Movie

Tomorrow 8, 10 ; Health Field IS;
Movie "Shoot First" 17; Elec .

cop,es of JACOBY ~:,::r-~7=

Sc~iber

Ap

Henry E . Clelend, Sr .

envelopes. The most mferestmg ques tions will be used m

DOWN

Possessed"
12 Pugilistic
event
13 Gone aloft
14 Part of
a circle
15 Bakery goody
16 Pitcher's stat.
11 Prickly herb
19 Eye
20 Negative
Zl Kiel , e.g.
Z3 Refute
t5 Popular
muaical
comedy
10
%&amp; Comic, -

$37, 500 .00 .
ABOUT 10 ACRES -

REALTORS

h 1s

11 "-

and fram e, 1 lov ely
acre, at&gt;out 6 years old 3
bedrooms, dining room ,
ut i lity, Patio, c ha in fen
ced ya rd , large garage .

AL - Live in or rent , )
bedrooms, bath, kit ·
chen.
livi ng
room .
Owner w ants 10,500.00 .

(Do you have a question for
t he exper ts? Write " Ask the
Experts ... care of thiS newspaper. Jnd1v1dua1 ques tions wm
be answered if accompanied
by stamped. self-addressed

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
tO Wyoming
1 MouUty Martha mountain
5 Prospective
range
1V series
II One of
10 Freeman
Hitchcock's
Gooden role
"Thirty Nine"

GASOLINE ALLEY

Mtd

HANDYMAN'S SPECI ·

t oo k

13;

tO 311- Holl ywood Squares 3, 1S;
S20,000 Pyram i d 13 ; Andy
Griffith 6 : Whew B. TO .
10:S5--C BS ~ews 8; House Call 10.
11 :QO--High Rollers 3. 15; Laverne &amp;
Sh irley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,1 0.
11 . 30- Wheel of Fortune 3.15 ;
Fomlly Feud 6, 13; Sesame Sl.
70.33.
New ·
12 : 00- N ewsce nter
3:
6.8. 10. I J; Mlndreaders 15
11 311-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Search tor

~

Brick

-

Morning Magazine
" Nora Prentiss " 17

hand on e heart
Yes, wt&gt; would Treat those
hearts as a fi ve-card su tt
r\'1-:W SI'AI'l::lt E~TEHI'RI S I:: ASSN J

is a right optimistc contract.

dleport, 2 story frame , 3
bedrooms. natural gas
furnace . equipped kit
chen, carpet i ng
and
paneling, $18 ,200.

LISTI~G

A K Q J

tO DO-Card Sharks 3, 1S; Edge of
Night 6; Beal lhe Clock 8, tO;

but Claude was there a nd
tn

10 ;

New York expert who

A

H er e is one played by
Cl aude Oelmoul y . Four heart s

it

Batman

only orns five -card maJOrs
ask s i we would open th 1s

tion of hands.

wanted to bring

6,13 ;

10 , L u cy Show 17
9 . 311-Bob ~ewharl 8; Love of Life
10, Green Acres 17 .

Dantu is a fa scinating &lt;·ollec-

LISTING

pro)(imatetv 72 1h acre-s
vacant
land
near
Rutland
on
Happv
Hollow
Road .
all
minera ls, S2S, l7S.OO.

America

Wednesday Morning 8; Three
Slooges Utile Rascals 17 , 7: 15-A M Weather 33 .
311-Fam ily Affair 10; 7: 55--Chuck
Wh ite Reporls 1().
)().-( apt . Kangaroo 8,10; Lea ve It
T o Beaver 17: Se same St. JJ.
d :311-Romper Room 17 ; 9 :00--Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Porky Pig
&amp; Friends 8 ; One Day At A Time

·· sndge AnalySis" by Jose Le

t!

Near Cheste r , 2·sfory
frame
house ,
A
bedrooms. bath. own
water , free gas, c ar
peting and
paneling,
l arge carporf.
co ld

6. 30-C hristopher Closeup 10; News
17; 6: 45- Mornfng Report 3;
6 : SO- Good
Morning , West
Virginia 13; 6 :55-News 13.
7 00--Today 3, 15 . Good Morning

Claude would ha ve played his
queen and been able to ruff
hiS third club in dummy

t 1mr t o do any more bndgc
t r a nslations . Her last o ne of

3971

RANCH TYPE -

Health F ield I D.

became

Note t ha t it would he:~ve
done East no good to play low

10

5:55--World at

6 00--700 Club 6,8; PTL Club 15;

his I Oth wmner

Cla ud e worked it o ut

E
Mam 51 , Pomeroy ,
Basement
and
ca rpOrt ,
c arpet walt to walt. com
ptete
k rtc hen ,
cabi net ~.
rangf' , retrrgerator . dish
washer,
dtsposal
and
breaklast
bar :' wood
burning fir eplac e, con c r e te
drtve WTIJ ';.ell w•th or
wl!hout adjacent A frame
bustnes ... build rng Shown
by appomtment Phone 99'1

C l aude 's queen

13;

Large 17 .

club. West had to play hiS ace

shtp . we doubl If she wtll find

c

PTL Club

trump back
Claude drew
trumps and led hi s last low

that Amalya Kearse
has accep te d a federal judge-

S&amp;G
Carpet
Clean in g
Steam
clert ned
Free
est,mate
Reasonable
rat es
Scol c hguard
~2
6309 , or 741 2J.48

~EW

room nouse . w•lhba th 592
Pearl
St , Midd l eport
R emOOeled . a II new inside
and out PtTone 7~2 7405 or
'191 779?

• 5
.K J I0 764

Now

, -..-&lt;.._
\..'~

5· 25 - Love American Style 17;
s 45---Farm Repor• 13; 5 : ~

led a trump. Claude fin essed
West took hiS king and led a

8 7 4

Ry Oswald Jacoby
arlft Alan Son la g

[ DON 1T KN()V-.l
so DO I~ HOLY
!.. . r FEEL VERY
MIICKEREL.'
s-TRANGE' . ( WHAT TH ' HE CK5

Dick

WEDNESOAY,OCTOBER 10,1979

East rose wi th his k ing and

•

SAC ,OOO.

6

from dummy

Opening lead : t K

all
ca rpeted
with
c losets, lo'Jely equipped
1&lt;.1tc hen,
i nsulation ,
storm doors and win ·
dQWS, full basement .
Thi s you must seel .

Housing
Headquarters

•

hts two l os mg dtamonds on t he

Pass

BEAUTIFUL R EMOD ·
ELEO
2 - STORY
FRAME - J bedroom s,

WE HAVE ALL KIN ·
OS OF PROPERTIES
FOR SALE . DROP IN
FOR INTERVIEW OR
CALL 992 JJ1S or 992 '
3876.

• K 5
o KQ874
• A 3

We st

HIT ME ·"

WILL HAUL l1mestone and
gravel Also , l1me haul1ng
and spread1ng Leo Morr 1s
Truck1 ng Phone 742 245.5

Rutland, about ''J acre,
water, ligt1ts, and gas
Lovely si te . $2,400.

2.4xao tile cons tru c tion ,
c it y water and gas . Two
extra rooms and bal'h
Will takeS 11 ,000

F.AST
• H 2

17;

spade ace and kmg , led a cl ub

Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer : West

TJ.\E'( tAUGH1 "DADDY"
1100 SOLD ~1"1 10 A
(,IT'( GAHG ..

.4 ~ tf r

room . SJO,SOO.OO .
BUILOI~G
SITE

$30,000 00 but
BUSINESS BLDG .

WEST
+Q 98 3

l.ITIT .F. ORPHAN ANNIE

N'e w, repair,
gul1ers and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates
949·2862-949 -2160

NEW LISTI~G -

14,3

10 after West played low So
far so good Then he dtscarded

SOUTH
;
•AQJI06 !
t A3 2
• Q8 2

Chester area. over 2.5
acres, nice l y r emOde led
home , equi pped k i tchen ,
por ches and patio , small
barn ,
t i mb er
and
pasture . 538,950 00.

-2· lJ25

s pade and f1nessed dummy 's

1[}-!t-A

AKJ106
!.l :J
J 10 9 6
95

.

POMEROY, 0 .
PH . 992 ·2.2 l9

$10,000.
MEIGS

s tove , S200 949 2.450.

14 tN turn1ng plow Bundy
flute and ca~~. excel len t
condition 9.!9 J125 .

dtamu nds. led hts stngleton
NORTH

MAIN._.-.,~_,

bed r oom hom e, bath ,
ndt. gas F A furnace ,
ci ty
water .
full
basement on sma ll tot

ONE USED WOOD burning

wringer wa sher with e lec
tn r pump 7 Cdr race tra ck
949 1803

Dubious game driven home

Al-L I'M ASK\f.l0
IS 10 Be- f'1&gt;..1 D
..... ""'"J I'M~ I

608 E . ·

Ph . 1l ·llll

MAYTAG

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

THREE BEDROOM home .

Real Estate
- - - for
- Sa.le

NEW LISTING

TEMPER

BORN LOSER

~-- --- - ~-

-

GRIPE MISHAP IMBIBE
What he regularly ra1sed 1n the garden - H IS

Answer

BRIDGE

Real
- - Estate for Sale

MODERN TYPE -

Campin!I_Equipment

DELUXE

SEWING
MA C HINE
Reparrs ,
serv1 ce.
all
maKes
99} 7784
ThC'
Fabrrc
Shop . Pomeroy
AuthonH?d S,nge-r Sales
and Serv1ce We c,harpe n
s( rsso r s

216 E Second Street

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

w . Carsey
,.,. ·r .

DOZER ,
END
L oader,
b ru s h
hog
Wtll
do
betsements , ponds , brust1,
trmber .
land
c learing.
Chartes Butc her 742 2940

SIX
ROOMS.
bath,
basement , outbuildings
cmd gar d en at LeTa rt OH
Second house oa st fdlmg
stat ron

512S .OO
SIOO.OO

ST .

I

H. L Writesel
Roofing

NEW

and

S8S .OO

PAI"'T I NG
AND
St'lnd
bla st rn g
Frf'e estrrnale&lt;j
Call 949 1686

614 S97 3051

!MI._

Yesterday~ f Jumbles FEl CH

1 1 mo .

Pd .

t I XI)
!Answers tomorrow)

ELECTRIC

Motors , rewrnd and rcparr
997 2JS6. S61
Bee c h St .
Mtddleport , Oh• o

Now aHange me c~rcled 1eners to
lorm the surpnse answer . as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

Print answer here :

CALL 992 ·7544

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

CONS[
I

A SMART 6AL-

l

Son

7 · 30-Hollywood
Squares
3;
New lywed Game 6 ; Joker's Wild
8; Hol lywood Squares 10; Sh8 N8
Na t3; Abbott &amp; Coste llo t5; All
In The Fami l y 17 ; MacNeil L ehrer Reporl 20,33.
8 . QO-Misadve ntures of Sheriff Lobo
3,15 , Cali fornia Fever 8 , 10;
World Series 6, 13 ; N ova 20,33;
Movie "Duel in the Sun " 17 .
9 00--Mov ie "Amer ican Graffiti"
3,15: World 20,33.
10 :00--News 20; Cily Notebook JJ;
t0 ·3!f-Like It Is 20: Another
Voice 33 .
10 : 45--- L ove A m erican Styl@ 17;
11 :oo-News 8, 10; Las1 of the
Wi ld 17 : Dick Cavett 20 ; Carry
on Laughing JJ .
11 15--News 6, 1J; 11 : 7!f- News J, 15;
11311-Ba rn aby Jones 8; ABC
News 33; Mov ie " Bel ove d In ·
lidel" 10. Movie "The Snows of
Kiliman jaro' ' 17 .
11 · 45--Barney Mil ler 6,13; 11 : 50Johnny Carson 3. 15 ; 12 · 20M ov ie " Wild &amp; Wooly " 6, 13.
12 : 40- Movie
"A ll
lhe
Kind
Strangers" 8; 1: 20--Tomorrow
3: N ews lS.
1 00--News 17 ; 2 :05--Movle " The
Glory Brigade" t7 ; 2 :21&gt;-News
13; 3 .25--Mo vie " The Great
Missouri Raid " 17-

15 5UPP05ED TO KNOW
HOW 10 PLAY,

[J I

CON.&gt;fRUCTION

AL TROMM

(} 1.4

[J

ROUSH

RUTLAND
742·2328
, ·.

51SQ.OO

lSO A&amp;JtO
Home lite
SI 2S.OO
XK 11 Hom eliTe S11S .OO
KL40Q Hom elite 1200.00
Rem i ngton
Yllrdmaster
S7S.OO
Remington
Super 754
Sears
XL H om elite
HS.OO
1 Exct!'lle-nt Unico 16 cu .
ff .
Coppertone
Refrioeril tor , like new,
1210
I New Electric Furnace,
clearance priced
1 new Fuel Oil Furnace,
c learance pr iced

Call
OPen
need

ADDITIO"IS
HOUSES BUILT

9 7 I mo

I

[ NARBUT

M., W., F.

by appoint ment.
· 'l1 Sycamore { Rear)
Pom eroy , o.

llvJM

V. C. YOUNG Ill

5137

THAT'5 HIM. AlL il:IGHT.•
TH!: 5AME DUDE WHO WA5
81VIN6 YOU THE EYE AT
-1(~::::1 :
THE AIRPORT:
-

Onu~r ' 1m 1

REMOUtuA6

!FREE ES'I"IMATEi

REP/1.1~

Rd .
4 5772.

ROOFING

Gutter
woik ,
dDwn
spouts, some concrete
work ,
walks
a nd
driveways .

ELWOOD

Lfot s 9

q 14 1 m o .

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

EXCAVATING.
dozer .
loader and backhoe work
dump tru c ks and Ia boy~
tor h rre , will hau l ftll d1rt,
top sail. l tm estonP and
gravel Call Boo or Roger
Jeffers. day phonf' qq2 7089 .
ntgh t pnon e 9Y'l 3515 or 997

I

7 00- J's A Crowd J ; Tic Tac Dough

15: Sanford &amp;
Cavelt 20,33 .

t BOILEM
CAPTAIN EASY

TUESDAY, OCTOBER9. T9U
8, Pulse 6 ; News 10 ; N@wlywed
Game lJ ; Love American Style

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

DECORATING
SUPPLIES

797 ·7.74'}.

McCulloch
Remington )4

.

GALED

f de a l Hou 'i ing
&amp;
Vete r . 1s Adm1n . Loans .

--·j

Rooting , gutters. , .and
downspouts .
Free
E stun.at es .
All
work
g uaranteed . 20 years ex ·
penence. Call Athens ,
collect, Gerald Cl ark
79 7-485 7 or Tom Hoskins

REYNOLD 'S

S IX MONTH Old plush red
floral
Schwe1ger
living
room su,te, 2 matching
sw1ve l roc kers , 1 tree lam
ps , $699 Call Ingels Fur
n.rvre , 99 2 1635, alter 5. call
J04 887 2037

~

0

REAL ESTATE
F 1 NANCING

(i.- · i·l~ ANN'S
~ Jy ·-r-3-' ~ CAKE
&gt;c.

ROOFING

LIMESTONE .

sa nd ,
g ravel , calcium
c hlorrde ,
fertilizer,
dog
toad . and atl types of salt
E)(ce lsror Salt Works , Inc .
E Ma1n St , Pom eroy . 991

-

Roger Hysell

A 30 tt c

OHIO VALLEY

For Sal e

MAl~

BETWEEN 8:30 and 5.

669 "74' f

~\I PFR

JAMES KEESEE
Phone 992 2772

949 ·1748 or

1 Good Col d spo t
Refrigerator

DAILY SENTINEL CARRIES
IN THE
MIDDLEPORT AREA.
CALL 992-2156

~·I

l Mrfl•\ f cJ I ' Of

RACI~E ; O .

MAJE S TIC WOOD burner ,
]6 " WT &lt;Je lt~f' nPW . \12S
See a t 591 Broadway St,
M 1dd leport

SAW

I.........
....., I,__.... I

l1 mite off Rt . 7 by -pa ss
on St Rt 114 toward
Rutland .

TRAILER SALES

• Gutters and

PLEASANT ,

OLD COl NS , pockeT wt
c nes , r tass r1ngs . wedd1ng
ba nd!&gt; , d1amonds Gold or
Srl ver Call J A Wamsley .

Payment upon delivery To
our yard , 7 JO to J JO w e ek.
da ·,..s Blaney Hardwoods .
SR 339 , Barlow, O H 67A

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm W i ndows
eliieplac ement
Windows

304 675 4424 .

MAGNUS CHORD organ,
~tool and books Ex c ellent
r ondrt ron . $25 Also paper
bn c k books 747 J 176

WANTED

MONTGOMERY

Vlrt I L ANU
1\LUMINUM :iiUING

LOVING ANIMALS lookng
tor a good home Collie
type , m1n1 ttfure collie pup,
borde r
co ll1e ,
German
Shepherd pup a nd a te r rier
pup. 1 femaleSt Bernards
Humane SOC 1Piy , 992 6260

boxe-5 . br ass beds.
beds , desks, et r , comp lete
house ho lds
Wr ile M 0
Mrller Rt 4, Pomeroy or
c all&lt;w2 7760

l4ll33 I

MOXIA
~

IN~ULAIIU~

Television
Viewing

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one leMer to 6aCh square. to lorm
tour orarnery words

Business
Services
•.&gt;-------------------J&amp;L BLOWN

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAllE
t&gt;y HeM Arnold and Bob Lee

~ ~ ~~,

I

Bl71ma

WINTE R

1976 MONTE CARLO. 350
engrne . low mtleage S/bOO
99'1 2656

GROOMING

Juay Taylor 614 367 7'}20

__ _Qi ve_il_wa l'_ __

Si'(VICf:'

Ernest Jumor Road, Ernest Road
to Dorothy T. Snyder, Harold W
Snyder, 1 a c re , O~ve .
Horace W. KJ!rr, Dorothy M. Karr.
to Thomas Wesley KJ!rr. Dtana
Karr . 13.2.'&gt;2acres, Chester
Haze l Blackwood Oli ver, Ohler
OIJver , William Alan Blackwood.
Marta Blackwood. Deanna Black wood Hucka bee, Charles Huckabee ,
Cynthia Darlene Jacobs , William
Jacobs to Philip bwen Blackw ood,
:!.1.184 acres. Scrpio.
A. Hay Brown, M. Eileen Brown to
Hobe rt Smddie, Beth Arrumya, JJ .49
acres, Sctpio.
Joseph Christy, Mary Christy t o
Ruby Casteel, parcel, Bedford.
Hobert Musser , Betty J . Musser to
Daniel J. Roush. Esther Loui se
Roush, .279 acre , Rutland .
Victor A. Bahr. Wilma Bahr to
George Martin Sayre, Jr ., Damel
Bruce Sayre, Steven C Htnes , parcels, Orange-Chester
Kenneth Ward Hartley , Avis N
Hartley to Kenneth G. Hartley , 4~
A., Bedford.
otrner Gay Polk to Oarence T
Wolfe, Rosalie Wolfe, 7.99 A.,
Chester.
James J . Proffitt, Sheriff. f'lora
Dixon, etal , to Florence Lurana
Reves Boring, Parcels, Scipio.
dMelvin DeVol, Edith Ward DeVol
to Tyler T. Elgin , Jr., Carolyn DeVol
Elgin, Parcels, Sutton.

WE HAVE PROSPECTS!
WE ARRANGE FINANCING!

MIDDI,EPORT, OHIO
OFFICE 992-2342
EVENING 992-2449

NOTICE

PH] FORD F 10 p tc k.up
wrth c amper s tyl e top
Body 1n good c ond1110n
Less than 60,000 m11e s
PrHe\1350 ~76119

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!

ts Phone 99'} 5434

MoliLle Ha11e

7771

DEPE NDAB LE BABY ~I
TTER want ed rn my hornf'
DenrSE' W Olf E&gt;, 949 ])I!

3 AND 4 RM lu rn•S hC'd ilP

5378

11nd \'ant
only Wlth
ca.'ih With order 25 c-ent duu· ~,
for ads c urym~ IW• .\lumt&gt;t!r In

FOUND BltKio. Oobermrln
P rnc her Typ e dog Found aT
Jac k War d ' s N rte Club 9&lt;12
5416 or 991 3793 between B
arn and 4 30 prn

wL' t' k ly

Pet s for Sale
HOOF HOL LO W . Eng lrsh
and W{' Stern Saodles and
har ness
Horses
and
pontes Ruth Ree ves 614
698 J/90
Bordrng
and
R1drng Lessons and Horse
Care produ c ts
Western
boots
Chrldren·s SI S 50
Adults $]9 00

F.!ll'h word U\"t'r Lht&gt; nununwn

I !I words LS f

NORWE G IAN
E 1khound
f ema le , F lcJI
woods arer! 992 1857 or 991

LOSr

tomt "en tures today 11 s be st thai
you take a back seat Let otners
run the show lhere rs J strong
POSSTb tlrt ·~ '{ Our rdea s a•e or1 the
~UfLANO
FUEL Co tS
wr ong tr ac k
ldk rnQ appl,catrons for full
5AGITTARIUS (No~ . 23-Dec . 21)
trm e ernployet&gt; , ~orne (')(
Persom11 s trtYifHJ ~ tor dltdrrlm~rtt
pertence rn wor~rng w1•t1
must not talo.e pre&lt;:edence o vet
na tu ra l ga~ wanted but not
the needs o f thOSt' wrt h whom
nr crssar y Apply by mad.
you r t- trlllolved wday T ou could
PO Bo~~: 1538. Hun 11 n g ton .
be labeled selttsf1
wv
15716
C APRICORN (Dec . 2.2-Jan . 19)
More concre te knowTeage couto
be necessary be lort' ., ou takP on APPLI(A fiONS ARE now
a ma ter prottKI todi::l')o Double·
lH:'rng
art:&gt;pled
for
a
cnec k all your way s and medns c ooperaf1 ve ex lens ron &lt;;.N
Wi th someone m the kno w
v rc e progra m as.srs tant to
AQUARIUS (Jan 20-Fab . 19) a ss,s t area extens1on aqenl
Set01e ma.,mg plans rnvolvmg
w tth comm un rty resour ce
your fr1ends lind out what the'l
dev e lopment
program &lt;:.
thrnk about tne 2Cir&gt;.rly S u r pr ,~­
M111rmum ol a Bachelor 's
rngl., they -nav not c~qree w1th degree, Ma-;.tcr 's Degree
what you had 11 nlltlll
prf'lerred
Automob1le
PISCES (Feb . 20- Marc h 20}
requ rred
ContaciCharlrs
Plac1ng your mates 1fl l erest
Knotts or Sam Crawf o rd.
above your own today couta
Ho~~:
32 .
Ja c kson , OH
avo1d a domestrc spat and , m the
Phone 786 ?177
tong run . have he or she ca ter lrlQ
to you Try 11. you 11111o.e 1t
~AlES
{M•rctl 21-A pril 19}
Strrve to be cooperative rattler
than crr trcal today Srncere com ·
phments wtll go a tong way where
harsh remarks cou10 cause pr ob NOTICE OF
lem s
APPLICATION
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
Pu b lr c N&lt;J trre is hereby
Tempt at tons mtght ansi? today to g•ven
t hc:lT
Greyhound
encourage you to buv thmgs you Lt nes, Inc has fl ied wrth
don ' t need . or perhaps cant the Publ r&lt; Utrli l res Com
even afford ltve w1lh1n ·your mr!JSron a t Ot1ro an ap
means
plrralron To amend Cer
GEMINI (M•y 21- June 20) Take l rfr r ar e o f
Pub l iC
Con
care ot domes tt C responstbtlltres ven •en ce dna N ecessrt ·r No
Bus contarn1ng
early tod~y II 'f'OIJ tlnr l 1 when 1750
yOu la ter want to do sometMrng aulhorrty to transport per
fo r yOu rself. you won t be able sons. thP r b~ggage dnd t•x
pre ss
mdtler
1n
the
10
foltow,ng respec rs
CANCER (June 21-July 2:2)
To abandon route bet
Crtances ~rA you won t !lave all we en Kanau9a and Belpre
!tie !acts on an rmportant matter over OhtO Hrgt1wr~y 7 and
and cou ld tump to concl usrons U S H tg hwa y 50
prematur ely caus1ng needless
In teres t ed partres may
obtatn further tn f ormat,on
trustra11 0n lor yoU! self
LEO (Juty 23-Auu. 22) Untess bv address1ng the Publ1 c
Commrss ,on
of
you are prepared to alter yoU! U l d d 1eS
111
North
Htgh
thm long concerntng a tmanoal Ohio.
01110
matter today you could su tter an Street . Columbus .
rrreptaceable toss Keep a tle,.;t 43 1 15
GRE YHOUND LI NES .
ble mmd
INC
VIRGO (A ug . 23-Sepl . 22) Tnts rs
Grey hound Towe-r
not a da\1 to ttlrow cau tr on to tMe
PhoenrK . Ar rzond
wrnd s and bani&lt;. ot specul atron
85077
Deal wr th the reailt res rn lrfe "10 1
the ra1nbows
( 10 \ 9 10 73 . Jt r

''

WANT AD
CHARGES

Sl'I.' UilVf' dil)'~ ~\J

Cr ty Stat1on . N Y 100 l 9 Be sure
to speedy btrll1 drttA

--- - - For
- Rent

'il Jt~ 1MJ fb}'\t W

oro: TR'- cr

17.

.•

2 :05--News TJ; MoYle "Terror In • I

Texas Town" 17; 3:.., /Aovle ;
"The Atomic City" 17 ..
•

\

�Altercation reported

Area Deaths
Marton C. Crawford
Meigs County
Humane Society
Animal control rs a subject that rs
being discussed in many countres
throughout the natron because of
" citizen interest" and "animal

damage'' among other reasons .
It isn't only Galli a and Metgs
Counties that are overrun wrth
strays, wild animal packs , that's for
sure. But you know it is becoming
more and more obvious where a lot
of the blame lays - not effedrve
enough laws concerning licensing of
animals ... not enough enforcement
of laws that are in effect ... resulting
in not enough money bemg brought
back into the county through licensing fees being fed back into the
proper animal control agency of the
county .
You see , Ohio State law !Sec.
9f&gt;S.l9 ) states that all money colle&lt;·ted from the sale of licenses must go
back into operation of the pound . pay
to the Warden and reimbursement to
those who lose stock tu wandenng
packs of abandoned animals . If
everyone who owned a dog was
made to license that dog, tf less ken nel licenses were sold to those who
really don't quality 1anyone buyrng
a kennel license must keep all
animals confir
_,an actual kennel
and dogs ar. .• to be allowed to run
loose 1. Yet over 700 kennel licenses
were sold in Mergs County this past
year- many to people who just happened to own over five dogs .
If all dog owners d.Jd what the law
requires , if the county enforced the
laws concerning animals, there
would be plenty of money in the
Animal Control Fund to pay for
adequate pound s, appropriate
vehicles for the pick up of strays,
and to pay the Wardens the kind of
money that would make all their efforts pay off I here I speak of the type
warden that Meigs County ha s - a
good one who has little to work wrth
but who ts a good humane man and
tries his darnedest to help the
animals put in his charge 1.
Notice I haven't been hitting too
hard on the Metgs Pound lately and that r.s because there has been
some irnprovemt!nt - not enough but some .
We still have no heal m our pound
to keep animals from freezmg to
death tn winters - but have a
meeting corning up Wlth the commissioners soon to discuss just this . I
will keep you posted . Also, each
pound should have a sign displayed
on the build1ng lettmg people know
where and how they can confi!'iicate
or reclaim their pets that have been
picked up and deposited there . ThJS
sign should give information on how
to go about adopting an anrmal that
is seen and wanted .
The county can then go ahead wrth
the weekly enuthanrzatrons wtth a
clear conscience that " a II has been
done that can be done for the
animals. " Then a humane method of
euthamzati on is the fmal must which is presently in doubt. I rrught
add here that if the pound had s uf ficient people worlung there to keep
the animaL~ separated . s~ek from
healthy , etc . that a daily ·· pr ck up "
list could be run in the paper giving a descnptton of all anunal s
lodged in the pound .
This small effort would nul only
alert pet owners who have lost !he rr
animals , but would perhaps entr ee
people who have no pets. but who
want one, to acquire one from the
pound and save its life . Of course. all
anyone has to do to find a lost pet "
to call a few numbers - but whe n
they don't call the dog warden , don 1
advertise in the paper, don 't ca II
WMPO and don 't call us , rt sort of
has all the earmarks of someone
with a lost pet who really doesn't
want it back . Wouldn't you sav'
They say the average Amen can
family or household has over two
dogs . If Meigs County can be
declared an average county then
there are a minimum probably of
JS,OOO to 40,000 dogs 1Meigs being
primarily rural accounting for a
high number of animals) which
means that if all of these animals
were prorerly licensed and the
money being properly channeled in to the dog and Kennel fund only.
then would be approximately
$SJ,OOO per year to use for a better
pound , the warden being paid a better salary and he would have
assistants to do a more complete job
and round up every single animal
running loose in Meigs County .
1ben, then would be no money
being paid out for fann animals
killed by strays.
Presently there are thousands
being paid out to !ann animal

owners tho! could hetter be spent on
anuTlC:Il euntrul hkc ts bemg done 1n
Fauiield County, n g ht here rn Ohi o.
That co unty pays NO money for
krlls .
Further . Humane Societv of the
Uni ted States research - studies
reveal that people are less likely to
drop antmals when the county in
whic h they live provides a well
equrpped a nd managed pound where
the ci tizens know that the animals
arc berng properly housed , fed,
receiving reguJar veterinarian .&lt;tt·
tentron and whan a ll else fails are
humanely disposed of - all of which
is not done locally If it were,
Hurrutne Society members would nut
hes itate to ,i 'ssocrate themselves
W1th the county operated pound . The
two organizations would work
together for the good of the anintals
and rn the lung run. just as team work works in any endeavor in accomplrs hrng a goal , Anrma l Control
could be a successfully combined effort . I see thai time in the far future.
but for the sake of the anunals . I
wtsh I could say in the "near"
future . That time Ci::Ht't come soon

OWEN K. HAWLEY
Funeral services for Owen K.
Hawle y , 17-year old son of Mr. and
Mrs . Owen Hawley of Rhinelander,
Wis ., former Meigs County residen·
ts, were held Thursday at the
carlson Funeral Home in Rhinelander . The Rev . Robert Anderson officiated at the services and burial
was at the Northland Park
Cemetery .
Going from here for the services
were his uncle and aunt, Mr . and
Mrs . Richard DeMoss, Richard, Jr.
and Kim, and his gr-eat-aunt, Mrs .
Kuby Burnside, all of Pomeroy.
Mrs. June Sayre Kalatta , Syracuse,
is also a great-&lt;~ unt.
The youth died unexpectedly after
having been hospitalized a month
ago . He was under the care · of a
physician .
Born Nov . 25, 1961 in Rhinelander,
he was a senior at the high school
there and was a member of the

DOTTIE TURNER

enough .

Dogs, cats. pupprcs and kittens
are avarlable for adoption to the
rr ghl people . For a description of
them please call 992-&lt;;260. Put a
· ·eold nose" m your future ~

VE."''ERANS MEMORIAL
Adrnitted -- Jennre
I.rttle,
Pomeroy: Elizabeth Giles. Mrddleport; Douglas Kltchen. DeJ&lt;ter :
Ruth Fmk, Cheshire; Helen Blankmann. Parkersburg; Carl Gheen,
Sr .. Pomeroy; Ethel Evans,
Pomeroy, Jimmy Wolle, Pomeroy :
Ruth Ann Mulford. Pomeroy .
Discharged--Catherine Mees.
Vrrgrl Saunders .
HOI.ZEK MEIJIC,\LCENTER
DISC IIARG ES OCT . 5
\1elrCJ sS&lt;I
Rlss t· ll.
Hobart
Rla r· kburn .. lant•i BuffrnKton. Sadre
t:ctrr. Cura Casl u, Mu.· hut.&gt;l Caston .
\1t..·rll' Conn ie~ . Leunard Cunner.
!..t·slle l'nm. JaniC'l' Detty, Ehz.a
Estep, Tara Cerlach. (~wger H&lt;~ll ,
Uwaynl' Hoq)l'r Jr ., Mrs Jeffrey
!lash rmcl diiughll'r . Thomas Helm ,
Walter Jt•well Sr ., Jarnes Johnson
.Jr ., Uelbom Lawson, &amp;tty Lemley ,
Shelly Ma r c um. Hulh McCrn t• ,
Ht·\·t.·rly ~cGowan. 'n10mas Miller .
G.rtri:t M u r g&lt;~n. ivhchelle Morton ,
Pearl St'ymours. [)o r sel Srmth,
\1axmt• Smith , Paul Stac't'y , Sherry
Wuod .
llfRTHS OCT 5
\1r and Mrs. R onme Snydt•r ,
&lt;.lciughtl•r . :vl;.~ c /\rthur; Ylr . aml ~1r s .
Paul Clemon s. Dau~tt• r . Wellston ;
Mr &lt;tnd Mr s (~raham Stanley,
ili1ughll'r, Pu1nt Pleasant.
ll!S&lt;HARG ES OCT 6
Lark; l:Ja rer. Ollre Campbell
M" Rr ck1 Cole anrl daghll'r . Cora
J)t,wrll , Mrs . Stephen Ebert and
ililu~.hter , Dav1d Frt•eman , Clarence
Gllkl') . Sam uel Hl'nry Jr .. J uann
Lawr ence. Terry ~ cGw re . Ke\1n
:Vhlam. Joh n Y!rtc h. Katherme R"ll .
Mar;::etrd Sm1th . Hosalyn Wo brl'~ ,
ko lwrt Wood
IIIKTHS OCT. 6
Y!r ;rnd \ 1"
Carl Alcorn.
dc1u;.!llh'r . .l&lt;t c k~n : f'-1r and :'v1r s .
T&lt;'IT) Sl;m ley . d"u ghter. Oak I hi I.
\1r and Mrs . (l1arles ML·Kt·an. son,
We llstun
[)I SC HAKG ES OCT 7
Bt •nn lt · ('ardwt•ll, Mr s . Paul
l1 ernons am..l Je~ughter. Marguente
Eskew , Mrs . .Jlmm1e Jt•nkws and
so n. IJonald McCoy. Ta mm y
Mullrns . Mrchal'l Powell. Mrs .
.Jost&lt;ph S&lt;.'itcs ~nd son. Patn ck
Smrth. r:rrk Swrsh er , Karen Weller .
HlKTHS OCT 7
Mr . and Mrs . .John S1mrnons,
d~tuglitcr . c;all1 puhs: Mr . and \&gt;1 rs .
Cl.ayton &lt;.."r:lfler. so n, Oak H11l . :'vlr
cmd Mrs H1&lt;.:hard Purdue. son,
Wellston .
Dl~CHATGES OCT . 8
Nedra Barrd. Paul Butcher, Tmr
Ca ldwe ll , Mrs. Gary Carter and
daughter . Raymond Casey. Mr s
Kerth Drummond and son . Elizabeth
Haw ley. Vrola Henson, Hena Htll .
Bnan Me loy, Fa ye Miller, Mrs .
Deborah Null and daughter . Donald
Pratt . .John RoS&lt;' , Mrs . Honore
Sryder and daughter , Jarod Snyder,
Venrda Stone, Glorra Wrllrarn s.
Hussell Wrlson .
BIRTHS OCT B
Mr . cmd Mrs. Wilham Morga n,
son . Wellston; Mr . and Mrs . Larry
Bixler. daughter. Jackson ; Mr . and
Mrs C~eorge Markm. son. l'hesh1rc .

Joins Cleland Realty
Dottie Turner is now a Realtor
Assocrate wrth Cle land Realty. Inc .
rn Pomeroy . Dottre recently passed
the Ohio Real Estate license exam rn
Columbus after completing course
work in Keal Estate Pnncrples and
Practrces . a nd Heal Estate Law a t
R.to Grande College. She also attended the Unron Professional Real
Estate Schoo 1m Columbus.
After Dottie graduated from
Rutland High School, she moved to

Dlinois and worke&lt;l at varous office
and prtntmg tabs . She moved back to
Langsvrlle six years ago, where she
now resides . She operated Turners '
Grocery. and fo r the past two years
has been re upholstermg f urnt lure .
Dottie is a certifred E M.T for the
1\utland Emergency Squ"d, vice
president of the Salem Center
Educallonal Orgamzallon, and at tends the DyesVllle Community
Church . She enJoys bowling, swim·
rrung. and traveling .

Hearings resume
on major bill
lly HOHEHT E . MILLER
1\ssociatl'd Pn•ss Writt&gt;r
('()I.U MBUS . Ohr o I AP 1
Hi e nm€11 ca pit.alunprovemenl s bill s.
uK urpuratlng the governor's plans
for nt•w parks . pnsons and other
llllpr o\"t'me nL~. aJway .s lngger a
sc r~p 111 tht• Legi slatw·e.
c;ov . James A . Rhodes· 1979-1981
plan IS no exct'ptlon . Most of the
current fireworks are m Uw Senate
Fmcmt"e Comnuttet.'. wh1ch res WYleS
ilt.'anngs today .
The hill. approved by the HcJUs&lt; on
St.' pi 20m &lt;:~bout tht• s etmt• shape a s
Ult roduretl, has drawn r ntl CIS./11 for
1ts s1ze
a sta gg~rmg $775 mllllon
and fur what some see as
unnl'L·ded ·· pork barrt:&gt;l'' projects
and ln&lt;ldequatt• fun&lt;lm g
Mos tly, the brll uppr oprrale s
spe nd rn g authorrty for prOitl'tS and
;mthui"IZl'S setiL· of re\·t&gt;nue bonrls
wh1c h would bt• b&lt;1c ked by USl'r rents
and fees . :-.;o pro jt:'l'l would begm
)IIllcss approved by the Office of
B~d gl'l &lt;tn&lt;.l Manageml•nt and t.he
S4..'\"t•n-mt.•rntwr Co n tro llm ~ BtJard .
Bec&lt;JUSl' of thost• sa fe guards,
S&lt;J!Tlt' mernlwr !'i of tht· IA'~ J slature
St.'L' r1o hcmn m ~~ 01ng along w1th
whHl Hc•p 1\oh&lt;•rt E . 1\elzley. Hl.aura. tl•nnt.-d ··a w1sh book ...
!IOWl'\' l'l". uthcr s feel differently
F o llowmg art' th e obs...·n·t-1!1ons of
~ssurtt&gt;i.l
lej.pslators un
t he
ernbaltlt'&lt;i brll
Hc p . Waldu l:knnetl Hose. R! Jrna . as tht:' b!ll lefl tht• llouse
Fm cm ce O;m ml ttee : ·· J th u1k we all
shoul d I.H.' warned agamst saymg
thai thcSt' projt·cL"l drc ~om~ to
happen . I thrnk w,· ought to be a li ttle
nervous We lrJSt." crecli btht y It

St.•n . Marll:!.t.' nt• VdllQUt.'ttt•, DTolt:Uo . 1n an apparent referenct· to
Uln o' s 70-yl'M · old go\"t'rnor : ·· At th e
rtgt• of 8 or 10. ur 11 , you are supposed
to g 1n· up till' 1ded of Santa Claus .
\1 ay be 11 co lllt'S back tu you late 1n
li fe I don 'I know "
Sell . Sam Spl•ck, H-:-..;l'" Con cord
"' Many of our l'Xlstmg capital plants
an· nol tkml.! matnt£Hnl•d . At one
unta·rsity tn my lhstn('t, they ' ve got
a w&lt;:~te r buckl-t tu d~a l w1th a leaky
roo f. "

Natiooal Guard asstgned to C Company. He recently completed seven
weeks of baaic training at Fort Dix,
N. J .
He was a member of the FourSquare Gospe I Church and the Headwaters Christian Youth.
Besides his parents he is survived
by two sisters, Annette and Jean·
nette, and a brother, Samuel, all of
Rhinelander; a rna ternal stepgrandmother, Frieda Cooper,
Michigan ; and a paternal stepgrandmother, Mrs. Zelma Hawley,
Pomeroy.

ASK TOWED
Marriage licenses were issued to
David G. Lambert, :z:;, Shade, and
Cinda L. Davis, 18, Middleport; John
Mark Haggerty , :JJ, Middleport, and
Borurie Ann Hem, 19, Gallipolis .

SEEK DIVORCES
Two suits lor divorce have been
filed in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court.
Filing for divorce were Unda
Rathburn, Middleport, against
Richard Rathburn, Middleport;
Juanita Wilkinson. Pomeroy , again·
st Gerald Wilkinson, Akron .

SHOWER FRIDAY
A shower and belling honoring Mr.
and Mrs . David Lambert, fonner
Cindy Davis, will be held Friday,
Oct. 12, at 7:30p .m . at the Hemlock
Grove Grange Hall. All friends are
invited .
'

Oil price.4! hiked
MEXICO CITY I API - MeXJco
has ra1.sed U1e price of crude oil for
export by $2 a barrel to $24.60, the
government orl monopoly Pemex

announced Monday .
Mexrco does not sell oil on the spot
market and does not belong to the
Org"nrzatron
of
Petroleum
F.xportrng Countries, but keeps its
prrces Ul hne with those of OPEC.
The international oil cartel 's official
prrce range now rs $18 .00 to $23 .50.
Senate Finance Chal!'1Tian Harry
Meshel , D-Youngstown: "I do not
ha1·e the sl rghtest notion at this
juncture whetht&gt;r any of these
pro Jc•c ts ever will be funded ."
Hep Hobert Taft II. H-Cmcmnati:
"I don 'J thrnk the people of Ohro
want us to spe nd hundreds of
rmlhon s on hutldings for higher
educat ton. Fanul1es are stra pped ,
h11 by tnflr~tmn . They need money to
pay thel r k1ds' twtion .'"
Sen . Thomas ,\ _ Van Meter , HA'\hland : "Maybe some of these
pro jet·t.s won't ge t built for four or
hve yectrs. But at some point, the
aclmrmstration has to have the gO-

SLIDE PRF.SENTATION
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Grueser will
show slides of their trip to Alaska
when Rock Springs IJtange meel8 at
7:30p.m. Thursday .

MEETS THURSDAY
Prel:eptor Beta Beta Sorority will
meet Tllunday at 7:45 p.m. in the
River ~Room at Athens County
Savil!P '
Loan. Pat Mills will
~011
ia .

ahead signaL "

ELBERFELD$

rc:=~~~~

• PIZZA BREAD •
•

Your choice of any

.one topping

I

Rog . $120

89

,.

I hyt Ooly

I

:&amp;lt\0'$:
•••••••
•

AU LOCATIOHS

F ederfll mediator zn Pomeroy Thursday
Federal Med.Jator Bill L&lt;wr s wrll
be in Pomeroy at 3: 30 p.rll Thur sday to conduct &lt;:t sesston between
the negotiatrng teams of the Mt·rgs
Local Teachers Assonatron anti tht•
Meigs Local Board of Education .
Tile re turn of Lewts lo Pomer ot·
for another negotiating scsston wa·s
arumunced Wednesday mornr ng by
Mrs. Bonnie Fis her , presrdent of the
teachers association .
This was good news for the drstnrt
where a teachers .stnkr h&lt;:t s bt'cn Ill
progress for the past 13 da ys
The status of tire strike a t th "
point rontinues on the past level wrth

•

Anniversary

Sale
MEN'S &amp; BOYS'

WINTER

JACKETS
SAVE 20%
of styles in warm winter jackets for men in regular and extra
large sizes and for boys , sizes 8 to 20_ Come in during our Anniversary Sale.
Select the jacket you need and save 20%

ch&lt;:trge-s and counter ch&lt;trges bl'tr lg

hurled ~t several puiJilc meetings
whic h ha ve bee1 1conductl•d over tht·
past few d"y s
The last of such rnrettng was ••
lenghty sessron held Tuesday nrglrt
at Salem Center . Several of th t•
slnking ~achers were at th e
meetmg " lung wttll Supt. Dav rd
G l eason
and ( ';uroll Pierce ,
president uf the Meig s Lot'al Hodrd
of Educatron .
The mcctm~ was a sess10n of the
l'f A of thl' "'hool. It was reported
thai temper~ flan~d 011 OoU1 s1 des .at
lunes during the discussion on the

VOL. XXVIII

NO 125

Drowning has been rult&gt;d as the
ca use of death rn the Tuesday
evening traffic accident wh1ch took
the life of Jeffrey D. Pope , 22. Ht 2,
Vinton .
Called to the ~ene on Adam.&lt;vrllc ·
Harrisburg Hd . two and seven ·
tenths miles from U.S. 35, at 10 .40
p.m . , the Gall ia-Me1gs Post . Hrgh way Patrol , reports a north bound
auto operated by Pope r"n uff the
left side of the roadwa y and overturned 1n a ditch .
Pope was pronounced dead "t the
scene by Gallia County Coroner Dr
Donald H. Warehune The body "'"'
discovered, mstde the ve h rdc. Jy rng

High &amp; Dry, behind cyc lone metal fence - Protected!
Outside or Inside space, 90,000 sq . fl located Point Pleasant,
W. Va. T.N. T. area across from Mason County Industrial
Park, formerly used by Mason Furniture Corporation
Office open tO a .m . lo4p.m., Saturday, IOa .m . -ip m . ·

ohio state bar association
What IJOU don't lmow aboullhe law cvukl cost f/OU.

For more information, call Huntington,
•If y ou

or---. 1 know a

lawyer.

call the L&amp;'NYSr Referral Serv1ce

1n

Oh•o 1-800-282·6!)(X)

•

l'1!&gt;8ls. and follows the pr{'n.•tlent
eslc.tbl!.'lfwd tn 197B whCn another
SEOAI. school was unable to pla y
comple te sc hedules as a result of a
teacher strike .
As of tod"y. Vfe rgs 1-!Jgh School has
play ed no league games .n football ,
but has P"rtrcrpated rn other sporb .
The dec lstun IS l.lll cncompas..'itng ,
covenng all sports wh.i1·h .an.· ln cl udt•d in the detemlUidllOn uf .:1 11
All,&lt;;ports C'hamoron .

rneantngful

t:d U&lt;'&lt;Jtlun

L';

lciklnt.::

plac:e m the scho(JI.-, a nd lhl'y shuuld
be rlosed until t he stnke I.'!. St:'ttl etl
However . Glea.sun m&lt;:HIIla lns that 11
1s the responstbil tt y uf the d1stnd tu
co ntiOUl' t o offer edul'Ol!On m Sp ilt• uf
Uw s tnk~ f-\i· ll.ii.i urgt·d pctrenl... l1 .1

fonn ca r~ilL.., and tu \ulullt•·er ftJI
wurk dutw.s at tht• schr,ob lfl ordt•r l11

get

student:.;

back

l!lltJ

! 1!1

classrooms .
H 1e stnke L'l support by lht..· rliHI
cert1f1ed tlllpluyt'.'i of the d!Str\l't.fiH"

rwr

IJerrrg pard rf they are not working
durrng t ht• strr ke . If schools were offt&lt;'tetlly do!:&gt;cd then makeup days
wuuld be requlrt'd and employes on
stnkt' wo uld ret·eJve pay for the
tiietkeup days
Mr:,\ 1"1s hcr swd this morning that
her group ha~ made a fonnal
tl·qut·st tiJ tht· Sta tl' Department of
J:ducalrorr askrng that the depart·
rrtt·nt :nvesti gl:lk th.t: l:ILIJ:gation that
_-, l.&lt;lt(· st.an dHrds (Jf"t&gt; not Dem~ met at

~"-~
lc~~

enttne

eJt:JeJ
Something for
Everyone

PRICE FIFTEEN CENrs

WE.DN ESDAY. OCTOBER I 0. 19/~

the tea chers

llw rHIIt-&lt; ·t.: rtifJe&lt;.l employes are

•

at

~l'llher

1ht· fllost part

'-

• • ~•"'PI"""" "" " '' "'

o

I) .• ,.

a nd released .
The Rio (:rande Volunteer F'ire
Dt.• part111~ n t wa s callt•d to tht.&gt; ."icene
tn guard agarnst the poss rbrlrt y of
gasoltnc !eakctge from the veh1clc .
The cu:cldt.· nt . GiiliLa Co unt y's ntnth traff rc f"talrty of 1979, re matns ·
under

tnvestlg::~tlon .

News
briefs.

• •

AKROr\ , Ohto 1,\P 1
Furnwr
Rrc hland County Shenff Tllu11w' J·:
Welkt'l must serve a ja il tt'nn 1n tltt·
Manifl~ld Cll)' )ali for a (.' CXJViClJOII
on charges of assu.alt ;md eot.·n·\(Jf l
He was sentene t·d Tues.&lt;\;1~ b~
Summll Co unty probiitt· J udcc ·
James Barbuto to s1x 111 cmth~ 1n Jtitl
and frned $1.750 .
Wetkel52 . w"s found ~urlt; of the
tw o counts Ln July ilftt•r plt·rtdlng Jlf J
contt&gt;st as part uf 411 pll•a bar~cun!fl ~
agreement . Thl' cas-t.· wa s ht•ard b~
Barbut o on as..o;,I~IHtll'nt aft er J
contentwn Uy WL·lkl·l th.at prdn n.l
publicity would rnakl' a farr trral
unpo sst ble rn Hrchlan d Cuunt;
REYNOI.DSB UH&lt;; _ Dhro •AI' '
A woman who was k.rllt.-d b~ a puwer
driven nall wh.J.Je ~ he wattt-d 111 &lt;1 b.ar ber.ihop was the v1cllln uf &lt;.~n Industrial acci&lt;knt and nu L"hiir~e :-.. vnll
be flied against th€ m an wlro dru1 ,.
the nail, police say .
Reynoldsburg Deteclrve lla r r;
Reid said the death of U.rolyn 11ovrl ·
ston. 32. cannot legally IJe cunsidered negligent horruc tdc beca use
a nail-driver is not considered o
deadly weapon and was not berng
used at the time as a weapon .

Applications
available ...
AppUcations for the additlon.al
and unt·-half pen·eut tax
rullba('k art' no": available al th e
~l'igs County Audllor's ()ffi c t· .
Auditor Frank rt'pnrts that only
pcrsorLIOJ with nn•r 30 acrt•s of Land
nt•t-.1 pkk up and lilt the applkatiuns . PPrsnns with less land
will
rt'('e in·
tht·
rol\hack
automatkally.
The reductron will be two and
une-half pt&gt;rcrnt of lhl' 10 perel"nt
n·s idenl~t no"' re&lt;"ein•, or onefourth of the !0 percent roll bark.
This reduction applies only to
ul4·ner ofrupied homesteads only.
Then• are no incomr or a~e
qualifications net•t&gt;ssary fur tht·
two and one-hail prrn·nt rt'dur two

tiun .

~~~

!'O:'ITRAC1' SIGNED
Tht.· HanQ•' Frre Uepartment wrll
not a n.s \H'r (tre calls tn Suttnr1 Tovm shlp oul.'il{lr of lhr vtllagP because
the Sutton Township Trustee:-:; h~\· e
nut stgned a ne'r'. ('O ntra('l wtth the
department

-···

CINCINNATI -- The Ohro V"lley
fmpr on·nlt•nl A.'\SOCl&lt;tll on repre.se nllng d broad ran ge of Ohio Valley 111 lere sls today presented to the Office
of Manage ment and Budget rls VY
1981 funding recommendatiOns for
Ohi O HJ\·er B.asin Water H.esu uret.'
Projet·ts accordrng to Wrllram J
!lull . assLK'Jatlon president.
Urgm~ thHt fr1111Ls be budgeted to
l:iSSure progrc~s 111 Oh1u Valley
wat er resource plannmg and con struction Cit rnax1rnum dflt 'lt'nt
rates, OV IA ~ tated
The b1emual 1/l\'estment survey
whr e h OVIA conducts has deter ·
rn1net.J that smcC' 1950 , over S63.6
bdlrun has bt·en mve.sted In maj or
plcmt proJeCL"i Ul count ies bordcnng
the Ohro ltr ve r and rts navrgable
trrbut&lt;trres . Abundant supplres of
fresh w&lt;.~te r. flrKH:i control of s1tes
SUildbl l' fur plant con.strud1on 111
uthcrw1 se mountamuus tern tory,
and Jow-&lt;..·ost water transportation
arl' the reasons most conununly ad vanced for the Ohru Valley srte selec trons. In cornbinatron wrth the rr ch
notural resources and high qualrty
uf tht...• Ia txJr force . co.mprf'hcn_..;j ve
water resource deve lopment e:~nd
w1sc ust&gt; are thus critical to the
moJor rule of thl~ expansiVe reg10n
111 sustauwd h1gh employment, co n uumnenl of mflatwn. sec ure energy
su pply. and growth of the ""trona I
economy .
Gallipnlis
Concerntng the Vlle:~lly tmportant

(i.alllpolL&lt;i project 10iuo and Wl'~t
V1rg1ni.a 1, the assoc·lat1on noted thot
the present lucks and dam "t th rs
s rte, completed rn 1937. ore had II
deterwrated , operat10nall~· U/l&lt;iaf~
a nd .sen uusly tni::ldequate to modem
na,·rgatron technology and raprdly
nstng traffic demand. resultmg HI
Sl'\"ere lraffH" cungt•stlon whtch IS
stea drly gett1ng worsl' .
In support of rts reques t that fun cis
be bud~eted to mttiate construction
of expanlied modem facrlrtre,, OVIA
descnbed th~ dependen ce of !Tl.aJor
cormnudity movements upon l'X pedrtrous trans it vra (;allrpolrs .
notably coal and petrolewn produ cLs. cheml cttl s aml1rurr and ste el
Th e assocJatl o n s upp l lt'd
es tunate~ showm~ that nn th{'
present cun.struct1on schedule wh1 ch
.assumes uut1at1on of construt tlOn 111
1985 and completion rn 1989 . cos ts of
traffic delay to shippers . rece 1vers
and ea rners would reach $.17 mdl10n
for thusc twu yee:~rs, without otlluwan ce for 1nnat1on, and . at an ultra ·
conservative mflat10n r&lt;:Jtt• 11f 5 p.:r eent a yt:ar, thP tott:tl fur thr tW(I
yt:ars would reach $140 nuUwn
·· Jt rs entrrely possrble .'· m lA
porntcd out. ·· that traffrc demand m
1988 and 1989 may exceed the
ultmwte physrc"J capacrty of the
present G•llrpol" locks . Should thL'
occur. most of the element of lo" cost watrr tran~portat10n wuuld be
eltnunatl'&lt;f from the economy of the
UpJJ&lt;r Ohi o HJver Basro for the

· -- - - - - -

uf the LTl~l' ·
The eronum1c burdt'!l n· .o.,ul!llli..,
from lh1s w&lt;.~ s te uf res uun·e.-. v. (•uld
bt· felt 111 hwher eledn("lty rali'.., nnd
petrolewli prOOucL;; fH" H"• ·-... &lt;tnd 111
los."i of e mpl oy n~t• rrt m tlw stl't·l &lt;i nd
other tnd ustnt.·~ .,.,·hov lmTl'd't'd
l'USL':i wuuld we&lt;.~kr•n th t•l r I"Ofll P~""tltl\" l' posl llll/1 d.i;!atn.'ll f11n·a~n .-..up plrl'r ~. UV IA stat1·d
To ITl ltlg&lt;ttl' tlu .-. ~..;r~1\P pn 1s pet"! .
UV IA has ur~ed thl· &lt;lllt!l• · f iZi fl~
couunlttt'eS uf Cun~re:....'l to f"t'l"•lll! lll~IILI autluH .lL&lt;:!llon uf l"llllSlrut·: ll \11
now .and thu~ to eltnHndtl· tlw i"Ll/ 11b&lt;'r su me. tJnll' -\"onsu mulg t Y. I• phase auth0nzat1on pron.'dun· !' 1
whl ch Gctllrpolrs t:tnd cert.&lt;J tn u th. ·r
proJee~ an• preSl'ntl~ subJl'c\
This. a l'Cordlnl:! to 0\"IA . '.\ oUid
penni! (I probetb!e S &lt;i\" l ll ~ o)f tY. ·I
yct:trs 111 thl' tun e fur t"l ll! ipll·t lllll v. •tl.
enonnuus Si::l\"1/l~s l 11 tht · L'LIIIlt•lll _•
and eC:Irllt.T t.•lmunatl oll 11f t ht• hanu d()us &lt;tprro11ch cond1 t 1ons .t!
Call1pul1 s w~uch dl"l"llllllt f(1r cn1 &lt;H
c1dent r&lt;Jt&lt;' Hi llfllt'."&gt; hight·r· th..:m th.d
at any other uf the tllll(krn l(lck." and
dCJI1l'\ ab(1Ve and tx:low 1t l.&gt;t·t.&lt;-Hit·d
eng1 neenng and dL'Sl~n undt·r thl·
rt.'\"l St&gt;d prn&lt;'Pdurt.• l"t•uld bt.·~1 n 111
1980 and ·ron.&lt;;tr uctlon CtiU ]d twgtn 111
late 19ft2 1Jr early 198:1. w1th ci Jfll pl etwn m l ~le 1981 ~ rl·td 1"it11 ·
. prospe1 ·t
SubJt't't tu authonzatwn . OV IA
urKentll requested 0\tll t" budKt'l

dtill l -.t&lt;.jL: I· ;!\ !ht·

dur~t1on

llh · 1 ·~)r p~

COI.U~1

BL1 S,

i'L'r'ilm ~ n•t1r11t ~

OhlO

I

AP t

aftl· r 1982 Will fan·

rl.'dun•d SA1Ct(-jl St&gt;t·unty bendtts. hut

prl\"iltl' tndu!'itry won 't nece ssarrly
p1r k up ttw sl&lt;.11 'k . acr'Onhn ~ to an
1-tl"tUOII"\

·· If tilL' guH·rnnll'nl prov1dc~ less.
pnvHtl' 1ndustry lll~Y tla\·e tu
pro\'lde
mort' .
But
not
etutumatlt ·rdl~

... sa1d J uhn

~1asscy,

a
Sl'lliOr partm·r "·1th Ml"t.c&gt;ks &amp;· Co . a
ht.·nl.' flts cons ultmg finn
Effcdt\'l' Jn tour years, bt.•neflts
~' Ill bt• red uct.'ti by e:~n t:~11Jn(jtt?J :&gt;
fJ'I..'ft't!nl as tln~ result of wha t a So&lt;."J(jl
.i,;,ecurlt)" represt•nta t1ve JcscrJbed
H&lt;i a " qu1rk u1 th•• 1: ~· .. (h•a hng w1th
\

('Ost..Qf-hvm g provl'iiOn s
\\'hen a.mendment5 to tht:' Sun.al
S•:currty t\rt were passed 111 1972.
lhl"v wt·re destgned to mr rea:-.t· ttlt•
bt.&gt;~efits by rnclud.mg a ("0~1-{)f-!Jnn~
factor . But . satd the spokesmon ,
Ul:,1 ead of rrusmg the ~neflts e~tter H
per«m became ehgtblc, the law
&lt;:~ctually rnflah..•d the working mcome
on whrch benefits would later he
ba sed - somethlng that was never
Jntent..led.
A 1977 r~mt&gt;ntlment. however .
("O rrectt~li tJw pru blt&gt;m by creating a
lll'W tormula for eomputing ~nehls .
" If th•• change was,; 't made,
t:w~ nl fh.-. Hclu'a1ly CflUid have bt...oen

PTII) I't"b

J-",r th• · l "ppl'f t J/11 1!. ()\"] ." r ('t"OIII -

1"\p•·ditt·d 1,.\l•rk on the
etulllon zi.:lt lf l/l
1f '"p l&lt;tl t'll1• nt .\,,rk.s fu r tht:'
I ).t.-.. hlt'ld.o.... /·.r n.-... .... ortJ , ;tnd MonIt l! ·JI

h·d

. . t Ld , . .., J~ ~·k•rl'" r u ·.~ drd

t ~(.· Jt H · r ~

h land frwil llll':-.. tugl.'ttle r
'"'·1 th rl'll~tbl!ltdtltlli .,. . 11rk Jt Em"'"', •r'tl!
hllld.'l V 1 1 omplt"tt· tht· V! lal
.l)l lllthl ~H id t1nd l"nlllft11' '.'. ' 1 prtlj~· l'ls
111 tht · l~•\l.l'l 1{1\" (•J -..1 lht-tl ·Jw B tuJJ
IHJbl ll" \";tim·~ '

F lntlfl f'outr u l

Stn·'"ll't: ' h•· r t t w~l 1 111po rt~nce
uf fluod t" fiJ i t'·,,] Il l thP IJ h! u Valley
l~h•'ft. ; I ll lr!ill '.

tt·r··,tln lt·.1u·--.

,,rt ·; r.'l

llH!Un l~ll llOU.S

d:t·nl&lt;tt lv;• for m,Juqr :;tl 1' :' .• t!. r•\.."L\ f lllfll nl.'d the
~ ... !'1 1
:t [&gt;1'"1 1+" 1 I. J;H ii.l t,..:t· - $5 .2
h1lll1,n
r t·,tl lr t ·d
i r um
projPcls
r·u.,tlltlo:
$:! , hill11m. - through
I lrt-r r'l 1ilwr :ll . l ~ ~ ;p cmd warnetl of the
grl'~lt ta s k n· rn.umng It expressed
par1H·ul ar 1 1111 t·rn f,Jr o uthonzat10n
11nd fu!Hll:u!. tilL-.. :. t'i1 11 Jf a n &lt;:~dequi:tle
r to

fllxJil ! "OiltJII I pr ogra111 for the Big
Sand1 and t· ppt•r Cumberland
\ '&lt;Jlky., aff ll t· t~·d w1th devastating
flood,, 111 :\p nl PJ7i

I : ar~ dantaL!•·•I.
rwu

aftn

dri\l'r

: ttTitknt

( ar&lt;..

recetved medium
was cttcd to
llliJ\'(JJ \ 1 11urt ;1:-. th{· resu lt nf an act"ld~nl •Jn Wl'st \1a tn St., Pomeroy,
"t ; 02 p .rn . Tuesday .
Pomeroy Police a car driven by
[;Jadys Williams , Mason, W. Va.,
was strul'k from the rear by a car
dnvcn by Sheila Cash, Athens . The
Will rams ca r was preparing to make
" left turn when the accident took
place. poli ce said There were no in·
Junes and cash was cited to mayor's
court on an assured clear distance
charg(' .
d;1J il;l~t ·:-- cHid 'lf 11' drr\"t.'f

rn•-rt&gt;tl n-mt ·nt
explauwd D&lt;:~v 1d K~ chrrg
of Sc,el al Set· unt ~ ·s reg 1onal offH.'l' tn
nuca l:!.o
Based on sunplt&gt; an thmett c. thL·
a\ · e r&lt;:~ gc retirement payment made
by Soc raJ Secuntr rs $292 .17 a month .
Under the new formula, people who
retrre rn 19B.1 wrll get about $15 a
month less Lhcill those who relired a
lhfln

•

t/\· HIJl.&lt; t iJlf'd were

.1 11

ilblt rt'lll[ll[/!t" rldt•d

L'arnm~s."

vt•ar earlier .
,y
" Tile change won't reduce the
benefits for people already on the
rolls," emphasized a Columbusbased Social Security spokesman
who dtd not want to be tdentifierl .

ful : 1·&lt;1pa b\l1ty uf
('mphasl7.lng

f &lt;n..:t n ~ · ~ · r ...,,

tlw ''ll ttrr n11u&gt; n·:..: IIJ/liil \·a l ucs ett
' tfl tho II" I !Hpil(i!! IOI\." dS tu
11 .1 t 1on&lt;t I ni•J,., ·t ' , t':-. ,111 d puhct l' ~
fHh,·r '\ ~n1 g atinn

funds for r n~o:me errrrg ~nd dt'slgn
W1Wk ~yond the d esl).!ll !llt' !IH 'I"an -

h1Khl'r

·l

... t. tkt• 1-1

Social Security benefits
may he less after 19.8 2

WINNER - Donnie Becker, 10, son of Mr. and Mrs. Don Becker, Middleport was the winner in his divisiOn m zone competition at Huntington.
last Saturday in the punt, pass and kick compelltiO!l . Oonnie won locally
two weeks ago when competition was held at Racine. He_will compete rn
district competition on !'&gt;ct. 20 . If he would happen to wm rn the dtstnct he
ill compete in the state event at Hiveriront Stadium at Cincinnati. This
:the first time anyone locally has won in the zone competrtion. Do.n nie's
younger brother. Christopher. age 8. won frrst place !~ally rn hrs
division . The events are bemg sponsored by the Ford Motor Co .

- --

Gallipolis Dam project action sought

&lt;·ilt·d

With ll ,.,.NJ Contest"plea,
Butno1v he:s a jailbird instead.

BOAT SPACE &amp; R.V. SPACE FOR RENT

MON -LEAGUt; GAME.'i
Jack Coya'n . Execullve Secretary
of the So utheastern Ohrn Athletrc
League, announced today that "II
games, me~t.s ur matches par trc rpa ted 111 by Mergs Hrg h Sch()(ll
liunng the 1979 Fall season will be
considered as uon-league games and
will not be consrdered a factor intht'
c"lc ulallon of league standings .
This drc1si on was re~ ched afte r
consultation w1th the lea~ue prin -

has lflo;l:,tl·d that· tlw 'jt ' ht~ub t)l:
lw·it.."ti
'!1 1e as.sOt'lal lon d1ar ges th!::lt nu

r

Vinton area man
dies in accident

'-'Ureless roadrunner
named Fred
S1ippecl under a light that was red.
He thought he(J go.free
·· No Contesr· ts only an admrsston of facts charged against you But even in
trafftc court . ·No Contesr · can land you in jail as fast as " Guilty:·
Yet . in certatn instances . pleading " No Contest" is the smartest thing you
can do So how do you plead?
Call your lawyer• Sound legal advice can cost I! lot less than you
think And rt can keep you out of trouble.

.,.. ere uff lcw.lly upen, Su!Jt (; lt·asun
reports and the te.achers CISSU(." J~LHm

MeantlllH', S('hools uf uw ·'d l.stnd

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

cheript~llS IJU/" LJ..:' ( "\ SIOII-!IIakln g "

stnke

e

•

ll5th

SPEAKER NAMED
Scott Woodring of the Meigs Mental Health Center will be speaker
when the Syracuse PTO meets at the
school at 7:30 this evening.

304-525-4065

SHOWER SLATED
A miscellaneous housewarming
shower will be held at 7 p.m. Thur·
sday at the Rutland American
Legion Home for Mr. and Mrs.
James Pierce and family who lost
their home and belongings by fire
recently . All relatives and friends
are invited.

•

Weather
'

Partly cloudy tonight. The low in
the upper 30s to lower 40s. Cloudy
with a chance of showers Thursday .
The highs in the upper 50s. The chan·
ce of rain lJl percent tonight and 30
percent Thursde~.

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