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                  <text>8- The Daily Senttne I, Mtddlep&lt;~rt -Pomeroy . 0 ., Tuesday . Oct. 16, 1979

County Court
'·

Seven men were found guilty of
violating game laws in the cou •1 uf
Meigs County .Judge r harlt•S Km ght
Monday .
Two of the seven, Thomas G Edwards of Mason. W Va .. and
Michael S. Layne , l{oute l. Heed sville , were found guilty of
spotlighting from a motor vehi cle
wtth hWJting implements . a gun a nd
a bow and arrows, in the car atl0 :20
p.m. on Sept. 9 on the (jckskillet
l{oad in Meigs County . Th e arrest
was made by Andy Lyles. game
protector .
They were ftned $75 a nd costs,
each; sentenced to :10 days 111 th&lt;·
county jail. 25 days s uspended : w•·n·
ordered to forfeit the gun , bnw and
arrows, spotlight and huntmg kmfe
to the State of Ohio and had all hun ting and hshmg nghts tn Oil1 o
suspended for two ye.ars
Five other men wen.&gt; found gudty
, of spotlighting deer from a motor
vehicle with ftr earrns 1n their
possession . They wen? arre!'ited at
1:10 a .m . Oct. 14 on Parker's l{un
Road in Meigs County by Ohio State
Game Protectors , James Splete and
George Ledbetter
The men were l{ay G. Burl eson,
James A. Burleson. Delbert H.
Alling, Jr ., all of Canton : Kenneth J
Ailing, Minerva. and Hobe11 J Barnete , Plano, !II . They were fmed $2!JO
each, thetr hunting nghts in Ohi o
were suspended for two years and a
~un. four hunting kru ves and a
spoUight were forfe ited to the Sta te
of Ohi o.

REVIVALSLATF.Ll
There will be a re,wal at the uld
Dexter Church, Oct. 18. 19 and 20. On
Sunday. folloWing Sunday School.
worship ser;ices will be held by the
l{ev. l{alph Smith, pastor, assi.sted
by the Rev. Willard Butcher.
The Messenger Quartet wtll be
featured on Thursday evening The
public is mvited to attend .

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

Area Deaths
l'AUl. A. SIMPSON
Paul A. Sunpson, 59, ltose l-lill ,
Poml'roy. died eHrly tlus morning at
Hul1.t&gt; r Mt•dica l C't&gt;nter.
Mr . Simpson was bam Sept . 16,
t92U a t Freedom , PH ., the son of the
late Kyle and HHrriett MitcheU Stmpsun He was also preceded in death
by une grandson , ttu·ee brothers and
vne sister
lie was a member of The Service
Umted Presb)~e nan Church. Pa ..
and was ct boiler operator .
He is survtvc'&lt;l by his Wlfe, Jane
Ktto;;on Simpson : four sons, Paul A.

J, . C:ary Lee, and H.andall H Simpson of Pomeroy; one sister , Mrs .
Johr 1 Huth 1 Taylor . Monaca. Pa ..
and one brother, Orrie 1.. Simpson .
MonacH: five grand children and
seve ral ntC L'€ S and nephews.
Funeral services wtll be held
Thursday a! I p.m . at the l{awtingsOJats Funeral Home ~ot h the Rev.
James Corbitt officiating. Burial
will be 1n \I•·Igs Memory Gardens .
Friends mav ca ll at the funeral
home Wednesday from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9.

NON EGOTIATIONS SET
f.ven though schools of the Meigs
l~1ea t School Llistrict were officially
closed today and both the board ol
education and the teachers
a."oclation have indicated lhal this
is an encouraging factor towards
st•ttlement of a 17 day teacher.;
strikt·. no negotiations sessions have
bt-f"n .'it&gt;l.
Supt. Llavid Gleason said
he
notified the association that sc hools
would be closed today and lhat be is
available to negotiate. He oald that
he was questioned on whether he cun
now offer more money and when he
said he could not, be was told there is
uothlng w talk about.
However, Gleason did report that
the association representative to
whom he talk Indicated that the
a'"ociatlon will ··get back to him" .

ALBERT ELMER HEILMAN
Albert Elmer 1-!eilman, 87, l{t. 4.
Pomeroy. died Monday at his
residence .
Mr . Heilman was born March 30,
1892 the son of the late Phillip and
Hannah Kalb Heilman . l-Ie was also
preceded in death by hi.s wife, Edna,
two sisters, Maggie Smith and Lydia
Wyersmiller.
He is sur;ived by one brother ,
Walter Heilman , three sisters, Add1e
Hetiman, Florence Hedilinan and
Felicia Grueser, all of Pomeroy .
Mr. Heilman was a veteran of
World War I.
Funeral ser;ices will be held
Thursday at 1 p_m _at Ewing Chapel
with the l{ev . W. H. Perrin offic iating . Burial will be in Bunker
Hill Cemetery . Friends may call at
the funeral home after I p.m . on
Wednesday .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES OCT 15
Correne Deluse, Gladys Foul,
James Halley. Gail Herrmann,
Richard lssacs, Helen Keyes ,
Dianne LeMasters, Paul Martin ,
Timi McClellan, Mrs . Stephen
Mor se and daughter , Michelle
Ousley . John Peters. Correna
Stevens Janice Stewart, Martha
Stewart: Michael Swigger, Marsha
Walker. Mrs. Clarence Williams and
son. Arbour Yingst.
BIRTHS OCT IS
Mr . and Mrs . Conrad Fulton ,
Daughter. Jackson; Mr . and Mrs .
Joel Adkms. daughter . C.'rown Oty;
Mr. and Mrs. James Doss, daughter.
Letart.

HOMECOMlNG SUNDAY
The Morning Star United
Methodist Church will have its
homecoming Sunday beginning with
worship at 9 :45 a .m . followed by
Sunday school at 10 :45 a.m. A carry m dinner will be ser;edat 12 30 p.m .
An afternoon ser;ice will be held at 2
p.m. The pastor, Florence Smith, extends a welcome to the public .

UNDERWRITERS ASSN.
MEETS WEDNESDAY
The Meigs-&lt;Jallia-Mason Ufe Underwriters Associaton will hold a
noon luncheon meeting at Meigs Inn
on Wednesday, Oct. 17. All area life
and health agents are invited to attend .

9e ready to winter,

JESTIE MOLDEN

get where you want

HOSPITALIZED
Mrs . Jestie Molden of Rutland is a
s urgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center in Gallipolis. Cards
may be sent to room 214.

to m safely with a
gootl set of snow tires.

NIGIIT SET
Rutland Village trick or treat
night has been set for Oct . 30 from 6
to 7p.m .

Meigs" schools
1l'ontmued from page II
dunng the strike.
Supt. Gleason . on behalf of the
board , expressed concern that the
programs have not gone on, but
stated the board must take an
overall view of the situation in that
the jondergarrten student. the
atbegra student and others cannot
go ahead with their studies so the
students in band and athletics can\
either.
Gleason spoke wt~h pnde of the
booster groups in the district and
their work and with pride of the
athletic programs . Some parents
charged that the band is falling
apart and there was concern about
not only football but the girls
· volleyball team which had stood a
good chance of coming up with a
state championship this year .
He pointed out that he knew the
band had worked hard to prepare for
competitions. However, he main·
tained that the board does have to
look at the overall picture for all
students. not just those involved in
special programs .
At this point, the discussion
brought out up&lt;~n questioning by
parents, that teachers are still
receiving fringe benefits such as in·
surance coverage even though they
are on strike.
Several parents indicated that
they feel these benefits should be
taken away .
" If things are _.Qeing taken away
from the stlllienl.., then things
should also b€ taken away from the
teachers 't a parent commented .
DISfRICf TEARlNG APART
Joy Bentley . women's athletic
director, brought up the point that
the Ohio High School Athletic
Association does not require school
attendance for participation in the
regular athletic events. She charged
that the lack of the athletic program
is tearing the district apart .
Gleason countered that it w.., the
strike vote that was tearing the
dtstnct apartment.
The board was questioned on
whether teachers had actually asked
for $SO a day for each day they have
been on stnke. This was dented.
Howeve!"', Gleason said this was

stated at a pubilc meeting held
recently at the American Legion
l-lall m Pomeroy .
Mrs . Fisher said that had been a
private meeting. Gleason countered
saying that Bibler had placed on the
negotiating table at one point a
proposal that teachers receive a
$10,000 base pay plus $SO a day for
each day they had been on strike.
Upon questionil\ll by Mrs. Pat Kitchen, Supt. Gleason reviewed the
demands of the teacher for a new
contract. He took each Item
separately and told of solutions
which the board had been able to of·
fer . Some of the requests of the
association such as class size, plan ning periods, etc., are not negotiable
Items but are problems for !Gleason
said
He brought out that teachers want
more time off . l-Ie said they receive
15 days a year sick leave, two
busmess leave days, one emergency
day plus the hve calarrudy days
which invaribly occur each year. He
p&lt;~inted out that they work only 182
days a year and commented that he
didn't really see how they could have
more time off.
Several parents indicated they
would like to see make up days take
place for the good of their children.
Dr . l{iggs corrunented that make up
days which include Saturday school
and extension at the end of the
school year never seem to be very
well attended .

schools - at the repairs that are
needed. textbook shortages and
other situations all of which take
money and there are no funds there .
To a question raised by Ed Kitchen, Supt. Gleason ~id that the
lack of attendance over the strike
period does not affect that amount of
state funds received by the district .
A question came up on whether
teachers would be replaced . It was
stressed by Mrs. Sheets that there is
no plan at this time to attempt to
replace the teachers . The primary
concern is to settle the stnke, she
commented .
Gleason read the state law dealing
with the failure of a board to renew
the contract of a teacher. The
possiblity of bind arbitratioo was
discussed but he stated this get.s into
a lot of ramifications and problems
for all concerned. Other comment.s
dealt with harassment that has
taken place during the strike and the
feelillll of some parents that students
were being used to break the strike .
All members of the board who in·
dude Dr. l{iggs, Mrs. Sheets, C..rol
Pierce, president; Virgil King and
Larry Powell were on hand for the
open meeting which was followed by
a lengthy executive session with the
sheriff and prosecuting attorney .

You've known us for many years as the
Citizens Nat ional Bank

But our name

has cha nged to The Central Trust Com
pany, N_A_, Southern Ohio Division .
We've been wa :c hing Meigs County
grow . And as it grew, we realized th e day
would come when we would need to tak e a
bold step to keep pace with that growth

new Central Trust Company, we're ready
to help build your future . With all the ser vices and financial resources you'll need .
Stop in and say hello . You'll find all the
same friendly faces in the same con ·
venient places . There's just one new
name to remember . The central Trust
company, N .A -. Southern Ohio Division .
But you can call us Central Trust .

THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

,...n.:··

.\ 1idtllcport, 0.

Ucolll'll
laneotDUI'IIill

(lf&gt;Ct. . Ut 1111111

MEMBER · FD IC

really looked forward to the eighth
grade football team activities thi.s
yea r slnce his son is a member and
the team had promised to be one of
the best in years. He used this point
to stress that even board members
are hurt by the policy of not per·
milling band and athletic events to
continue during the strike.
After Supt. Gleason had reviewed
the demands of the teache111 for a
settlement, Mrs . Fisher told those
attending that they had just been
presented a distored view or
bargaining issues and they she
deplored public presentations of
these issues . She indicated teachers
are willing to negotiate at anytime .
M111 . Sheets responded saying she
had made eve!) effort to be police
during the strike . She said she has
made no rerna rks about any
teachers and feels the district has
good teachers . However, she com·
mented she felt It absolutely
necessa '1 to bring out points made
last night to let the public know what
the board has encountered .
At the opening of the session. Supt.
Gleason told the group the board has
cut aU expenditures to a minimum to
come up to a $9700 base salal) . The
additional money that has been of.
fered since has been made possible
only through funds which have not
been expended in salanes since the
strike began, he stated. He said the
board 's expenditures many times
are fixed and others are ~n the in·
crease and that salary requests
made would mean that the board
could not !"'Y its bills_ He cr~ed
those attending to look around their

Seven candidates seeking election
for three vacancies on the Eastern
Local School Board were speake111
at the regular meeting of the Tuppers Plains Booster Association Oct.

8.

-:-:-:-:-:-: ·.·:-:-:-:-:-:·-·

··. ·.·.·.··.·.·.

~g-t. Chamlwr~ ~t'rws

a~

PR -:24

Norma Arbaugh, president, in·
traduced the seven candidates . Each
gave a reswne of their qualifications
and reason for wishing to be elected
to the board.
Candidates are Roger Gaul, B. N.
Rinehart, Sandra Sheets, Victor
Gaul, Bernard Shrivers, Hugh Mar·
tin and Jim Caldwell.
r1 the candidates are write~n
candidates and the procedure for
write-ins was explained . The
procedure is to indicate the office
and name of person for whom you
wish to vote on paper provided by
the election board . The election is
Nov.6.
The president thanked all those
who had helped make this year's
carnival such a success especially
the chainnan, Carolyn Ritchie, Sally
Caldwell, Joyce Ritchie and Ann
Collins.
Room attendance prize was awarded to Barbara Tripp, second grade.
The membership drive is still in
progress and will clnse Nov . 1. The
winning class will receive a cash
prize .
All parents, teachers and in·
terested persons are welcome to join
the Boosters. Open house at the
school will be held Nov . 2 during the
regular meeting.
The proposed projects for this
year were discussed and acted upon .
It was decided that the association
buy indoor play equipment and a
committee was named to fonnulate
plans for the playground area of the
schooL
School corrunittees are Uoyd
Blackburn, chainnan, Linda and
Beryl Wilson , Wilma Parker, Bar·
bara Tripp and Sandy Savoy.
Refrestunents were ser;ed by
mothers of the sixth grade class.

Six

REVTV AL SLATED
A revival will be beld at the
Salvation Anny, 115 Butternut Ave.,
beginning this evening at ·7: 15 p.m .
through Sunday.
The Rev. Larry Lewis, Mason and
associate will be the evangellllli and
WPSM Eloise Adams aud Bob
EBtewp wUI be the song leadel'!l. The
pubUc Is Invited_

in~lrudor

Sgt . Richard E. Chambe111 of the
Middleport Police Department ser·
ved as Pl{-24 instructor at the 13th
regional police self defense in·
structor 's seminar held Oct. 11 -12 at
the Northern Virginia Criminal
Justice Academy. Fairfax, Va.
The seminar was authorized by
U1e Law Enforeement Liaison U
Division of the United States Karate
Assn .
The even t was condu&lt;;ted by Of.
ficer Wayne Murray and was the fir·
st regional seminar to utilize the In·
tegrated team approach to the in·
struction of defensive tactics for
police recruits.
The instruction. in handcuffing,
searching, coping with stress, PR-24
and empty handed defensive tactics
utilized the principles and concepts
of the Japanese martial art, aikido,
as the instructional basis,
The team, coordinated by Officer
Murray, including Lt. Mike Beckley
of the Nassau County, N. Y., Police
Department; Richard Rood of the
Baltimore Aikido Institute and in·
structo r for the U. S. Bureau of
Poisons . and Sgt. Chambers
repr esenti ng the
PR-24 In ·
ternational Institute of Boston,
Mass .

Campaign organizers turn anger into action
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS

s1 1l \'t ng tnflctlton are net.&gt;ded . nut louktng for S l'd.pego&lt;:~ts, ··the sl.ii tcnt ent set td .

The organizers of today's Campaign For Lower Energy Pnn,; an· try mg
to tum anger into action, urging Americans to let the oil mduslr} &lt;:~nd Uw
government know they are fed up with rising costs.
The agenda for the day included the usual rallies, demo nstration,, lllarches and teach -ins .
The sponsors included the Gray Panthers. Consumers Opposed to Inflation
in Necessities, the Episcopal Urban Bishop 's Conference, the Alne nca ns fu r
Democratic Action and a variety of unions.
A major effort was the distribution of millions of red . whi tc and blue postcards headed : " Big oil discredit cards.· · The cards urge Congress to put a IIll
on oil and gas prices, appoint a special prosecutor to investigate the oil in dustry and create a publicly owned energy corporation .
Oil company offices were targets of demonstrations even before the official day of protest. About 30 peop le picketed the headquarters of the Standard Oil Co. (Ohio) on Tuesday , chanting slogans like : "Suluo , 'tuv pumping
WI dry."

The company, which closed off the entrances to the building and stalioned
guar.ds nearby , said in a prepared statement. that It understood the
frustrations that lead to demonstrations. " But fundament al answers on

NO _130

Winpls!llger also is also heading an effort to draft &amp;n . Edward M. Kenned y for the l!JIJO Demonat•c presidential nonunation . l-Ie brok e wtth
!'resident rAi rter last year over the issue of whether to decontcol energy
pnces Congress already has approved the phasmg out of controls on natural
gas and is cons1derin~ an end to cunlrols on petroleum. Price controLs un
heat111g oil and diesel fuel were ended during the Ford AdministrHtion .
Carter's re~IPcfion headquarters in Cone ord , N.H .. wa!i the focus of a

planned afternoon march. Sponsors S1lld they would tl) to telephone UJeir
demands to Carter; if they get no response, they said , they will urge
every one drivin g by to honk horn s in protes t .
An Associated Pres;, spot check mdiCH ted s upport for the prote st seemed
strongest i.n stat es where wmter heating bil ls are expected to be a serious

•

e

(USPS 145960)
VOL XXVIII

In St I .outS, r&gt;on Owen~ . tiJl' head of resear c h and pllblit· r ei&lt;Jtlon."i fnr
llts lnd 9 of the lnt~rnat JOn&lt;:~ l Assonalt•m of Machmists. one of tht• .-; punsors
llf a rJud-Oety demonstrati on, .sa ttl : " Wl' 'rl' hold t n ~ this rally because wt· ·rl'
.'.tc k and ttred of a nati onal e nergy p olt cy that rub~ the worktng!Tla n and
g1ves tu the multi -nati onal oil curporat iuns ."
Wtlliarn Win pi singer , president of the Inte rnational As.')Ol'lalt on uf
Mach1nisl\i and tht• c hatrrnan of lhe coalltton coo rdinating tht&gt; events,
desc ribt&gt;d the protest as a "'nati onal grassn){Jts organizing effort ."

a1

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17 . 1979

~:---,/

_ ...

---~ ~~~. ~-·

...,.. .

CONTRACT RENEWED

Monday night. the school board

HEREOCT-!e
The Meigs County Bloodmobile
will be held Friday. Qct_ 211. at the
Pomeroy Elementary School, Ver non Nease, chainnan aMounced
today .

--···- - - MS SPECIAL----.

•
•

•

I

BAKED LASAGNA ••
Oinn•r wirh
golde11 brow"
bu• ... " "

tt7t

TOGO ONlY

u •.,......

I

E&amp;1niSi
-. •••.••1
~

* MADE TO lAST

BUTCHER BLOCK
BASE
Mexlmum C.OPI!clty•Colo,..

FIRST Pl.ACE HONORS - The rtfle and flag corps of the Wahama
White Falcon Marchillll Band both received first place honors for their
perfonnance this past weekend in the Tri.state Marching Band Fesllval
held in Huntington . The auxiliary corps competed in Class B which included bands with 50 to 80 playil\ll members from several high sc hools m
.·.......... ·

Oluo and West Virginia . Mason OJunty was also represented by the Big
Blacks of Pl. Pleasant. J eff lluell , director of the Wahama White Fal con
Man·hing Band, and all the band members wish to compliment Gary
Stewart, director. and the PI Pleasant Big Blacks for a performance well
done . The Wahama Band will be conducting their annual tag day on
Saturday, O.:·tober 20

....... ::-:-·.·.·.· .·.·.·.·.·· ...... ·.·-·.·.··:-··:-·

OPEN HOUSE NOV.Jl
Amerlcare Corporallon of Columbwi, owner aDd operator of the
Pomtroy Heallb Care Center, anDOUDces tbal dedlcation and ribbon
culliog ceremooJea of the new cen·
ter, near Pomeroy, aloag wilb a
pubUc open bouse at lbe facility will
be held from 1 to 5 p.m. on Nov. 11.
Ronald E. Zldlan, admlnlltrator of
the new faclllty oaJd that delalled
planJ lor lbe ceremooies and open
bouse will be aooounced later_

Willow Island report coming soon
CHAHI.l·:STO\ . W V" ' AI' 1

A

federal re p ort o 1J tht• scaff oltll ng
collapse at Wtll uw Island will bt.·

relea sed onn· &lt;"l\" 11 actwn H~atn~t
contractors h~.&lt;. b,•en completed .
sa1d US Labor SecretaC\ lVI\·
Marshall .
" We'll conttnue to pursut&gt; lht' nvll
c itati on~. hut aflt'r thctt, 1f the flh·~
are r elea st&gt;d by the .Jll s t l l" t

Department . we'd bo: glad to turn
them OVt'r t o tht· state." "'ar ~a II
TI1e Governor's Cornnusswn rm

Willow lsiHnd ha s bt·en seeking UJL·
report .
prepa re d
b1
tht ·

16 injured
SOUTH POINT, Ohio rAPI
Sixteen elementary school
students were injured, none
seriously, Tuesday when a school
bus overturned in this community near Ironton .
Ten students were taken for
treatment to Lawrence General
Hospital in Ironton but none were
admitted. Six of the 49 students
aboard were treated at the scene
and the other 33 were taken on to
school aboard another bus.
The Ohio Highway Patrol is in vestigating the accident and iden·
tified the driver as Julia E.
Moore, 38, South Point. She had
no explanation for the accident
other than that she lost control of
the bus while en route to South
Point Elementary School No . 2.

Leaves prison

2 lockl • extra wide

meeting in regular session, voted to
close schools temporarily begiruting
on Tuesday morning . Some parents
attending the meeting indicated they
felt closing the schools would bring ·
about a speed up in negotiations.
The board of education and the
teachers association both indicated
that they believed closing the
schooL• would be helpful towards a
settlement of tlle strike.
Meantime , Gleason reported that
pi c kets from the teachers
association were on picket lines at
the schools of the district today and
secunty guards, hired by the board,
are still in the distnct.

announce

*AU STEEL

DOUBLE SHELF
CLOSET

There have been no negotiatiOn
sessions between the Meigs Local
Schoool District Board of Education
and the Meigs Local School District
Teachers Association set to end the
18 day teachers strike.
As of Wednesday morning, Supt.
Llavid Gleason reported that no additional negotiations have been set
for the teams of the two groups .
Supt. Gleason said he notified the
..,sociati on early Tuesday morning
that he IS available for negotiations
but has had no reply from any
association representative .

renewed a fire cootract for 19M with
the Racine Fire Department for fire
protection. l{acine Village officials,

NEW ,..,HIPME:NT

Sturdy•Decorator colo,..

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

No negotiations
slated in strike

QUALITY STORAGE CABINETS

'LARGE' CAPACITY
PANTRY

'Here 1n OJnnedJcut, the rally will focus on low and middle-income
fa rmlies already aff ected by cash-on-&lt;lem,.nd payments for heatillll oil,"
sa1d Lou Kiefer, labor co-c ha1nnan of the coalition sponsoring todliy's
derr 10nstrations .
The protest follows on the heels of announcements of price tncreases by
IJ \Jya and Iran , two of the world's major oil exporters. Carter has blamed
pn ce mcreases by the Organization of Petroleum Exp&lt;~rting Countnes for
U1e high rate of inflation in the United States . The oil industry says its price
h1kes ar e due to the OPEC boosts
Ftgures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics show that from December
1978 through August 1979, the heating ml component of the Conswner Price
Index went up 46 percent , the gasoline section went up 42 percent and the
natural gas part went up 12 percent. In the same period , the overall index
rose 9 percent.
Another aspect of energy wtll be in the spoWght on Thursday . Nuclear
Energy Women, a group found ed by women who work in the nuclear in·
dustry . has organized informal discussions and special events which, it says,
are designed to educate the public about nuclear energy . NEW is sponsored
by the Atomic Industrial Forum, Inc ., an international assoctation which
wants to develop the peaceful use of nu clear power.

enttne

Onupat10nal Safety and

Ht•a ltli

1\dnnnt stratton. on the Apnl 19 7R
rhsas!t"r 1n wh1 rh :&gt; I runstructlun
work e r s d ted. ThL' Lfl mmisswn lS
chargt-&gt;d with r rv t t: wm~ OSI-t :\ ·s

mn·sttgatwn of the rtfT Jdr-nt
OSHA has reftu&gt;eLl tu relcast' ttw
rt&gt;port , sayin~ part of the reas4Jn fo r
U1 e delav was that the J ustice
De partment was mvt'"stigrJtin g tht•
;wl"ldL·nt But U.S. Attornt'y Stepher1
.Jory sa td rece ntl y that a federal

grand JUr)· co uld find no ev id en ce of
cnnuna l misconduct by rontr rH.· tors
OS HA has also ci ted thrct•
("(l lllpan Jes, Including Re se&lt;:JrC" h Co\\relt of !lound Rrook . \ ..I .. t11r
prtn c tpa..J contra.c tor, fur nvll
\" IOJ::i!IOO S of federal sa fety ltJW S
Tlwse ci tations are bemg lJppt·O:tk•d
Marshall was Ln Ctu-trl estun tu
Hddress the West V•rguua AFI A' IO
con ventmn tudcty

sa"l 'liwsday rught

.,

probl em .

•

Letart Township Trustees have

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Dr. Riggs pointed out he had

That's just what we ' ve done . As the

Board candidates
speak at meeting

--

CHINA UNIT

Decorator COlon

MECHANIC STREET WAREHOUSE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

AVON PARK, Fla . (AP) - Dr.
Carl Coppolino left pr;son a free
man ror the first time in I2t years
Tuesday, saying he want.s to
clear his name and sit down to a
western omlette.
As he left Avon Park Correctional lnsitute, the Brooklyn-born
anesthesiologist vowed to clear
his name of the 1967 conviction in
the drug-overdose murder of his
fir.t wife, Cannela. 32. also a
physician .

Contract
ratified
•

$50,000 action filed
A s u•t 111 the amount of $SO.OOO was
ftl ed in Meigs County Common Plea'
Court by Mart e Watson , Pomeroy
agat nst Conn ie Fi elds , New Ha ven .
The suit charges that the plamtiff .
Wa tson. was walkmg at the iflterscetwn of Butternut and F ourth
Street when the defendant drove her
car into the plaintiff. The accident
occurred on :-lov . 7, 1977.

The contract between the
Southern Local &amp;hool Board and
member.; of the OAPSE was ralifled
when the board met Tuesday night
A $12,6.11 judgment action has
The contract calls for an increase
been
filed m Meigs County Corrunon
in salaries, based on the teHcher's
Pleas
Court for material and labor
salaries; longevity pay , $100 a year
to
renovate
and unprove a r estdence
after the 12th year , $200 a year after
1
n
Chester
Twp.
the 18th year and $300 a year after
Da vid Bwngardner, HI. l, Midthe 24th yeHr. The non-eertified were
dl
eport
, filed the action agamst Fray
also offered , if they choose. $2,500
ancl Fran ces Reut er . HI. 3.
term insurance to be paid by the
Pomeroy .
board .
Four other suits )la ve been filed in
Meeting with the board was Frank
Judge
J ohn Bacon's court.
W. Porter. Pomeroy Attorney and a
H.
S.
Parker. etal. trustees of
resident of the Southern Local
·
Carleton
College , a non-profit legal
School District.
entity
has
brought suit •gamst the
Porter, in a statement to the
Ohw
Attorney
General's Office .
board, talked about some of the
er
seeks
to sell property for
Park
·proble!Tl.'l in the distri ct such as the
$25,000
which
will
be deposi ted m the
football program , baseball
Fanners
Bank
and
Savings Comprogrwn , coaches, clas.."i assign pany
under
the
car
leton College
ments and bus scheduling .
Trust
Account
for
use
as a school
Porter suggested that the board
training
fa
ciuty
for
the
mentally
and
institute a program that would instUI
retarded
pride and respect in the students . He
A s uit for cancellation of conalso discussed the band program
veyance
of real estate was filed by
and the conflict over the ball field at
Will1
an1
S.
Long, Rt. I. Long Botton1 ,
the junior high . Porter s uggested
G. Long and Shirle y
against
Eugene
that the problems he outlmed be
M. Lo n~. Ht. I, Long Bottom . The
taken under consideration it was
suit charges that the defendants
reported.
In --other business, the board ac- promised to care for the well being
cepted three tuition students and ap- of plaintiff. Willian1 S. Long. The
defendants breached their promises
proved changes in the marching
and
have failed to ca re for and
band book . A large crowd wa s in atproperly
take care of William S.
tendance . The boad r ecessed anrl
I
&lt;&gt;ng
will meet again on Tuesday at 7: 30
A suit for partition of real esta te
p.m .

was fi led by Joilr Pi ckens. Ht. i.
Portland, and Samantha Pickens,
Ht l, Portland, against lJllian
Hhodes . Keithville . LouisiHna. et a!.

Gallia-Meigs board
•
recezves
$62,905.88
COLUMBUS - Eighty&lt;lix counties ser;ing mentally retarded persons today were sent checks totaling
$11,965,000, the Oluo Department of
Mental Health and Mental l{etar dston has announced.
The funds represent the annual
state reimbursement operating subsidy sent to County 1169 1 Boards of
Menta l l{etardation and fi gu res out
to about 87 percent of their
requested reimbursement .
The programs had ..,ked for

Weather
Co nsidera ble cloudiness torught
Wlth a good chance of showers . Low
in the upper ~ to low 50s Cloudy
Thursday mornmg, becoming partly
s unny in the afternoon . High in the
mtd to low 6(1&lt;; . The chance of rain .W
percent tomght and 20 percent Thursday
EXTENDED FORECAST
A cbance of showers Friday
and Saturday . Fair Sunday . Mild
through the period w1th highs In
the mid 60s to low 70s and lows in
the 40s.

SEEKS DEVELOPMENT - During a recent
Washington meeting with E nergy Department officials , l{epresentative Clarence Miller, right,
discussed with DOE's Director of Fossil Energy,
George Fumich, seated, the importance of stepping up
consideration ct Conoco 's Noble County goal
gasification projecl. Congressman Miller expressed
urgency in DOE's seleetion of !he Noble County site for
a $6()U m illion conversion plant that would convert !ugh

$13,008,870 (based upon serving
22,328 ~rsons ), however legislatve
restrictions in the Department's
fiscal year 1979 budget keeps it from
dispensing the state s ubsidy at the
statuto!) authorized ceilihgs. ThOBe
limits are presently set at $700 for
each adult and $500 for each child in
county programs.
The Department is currently
negotiating to gam approval to use
other funds to make up the dif.
terence between the legislation appropriation and the counties'
request.
Of the 22,328 enrollees in county
programs, 10,351 are preschool,
school age and under 21 years of age
in activity centers and workshops;
9.294 are adu lts working in
workshops and training centers; and
2,683 receive home-based ser;ices .
Only t!6 counties receive state
reimbursement since mentally
retarded persons in Meigs County
are enrolled in Gallia County
pr ograms . and Noble County
enroll ees are in Guernsey County
programs . The Gallia.Jackson·
Metgs board recei ved $62,905.88 .

sulfur coal into synthetic pipeline gas. Conoco's Mike
Ware,left, and DOE's AI Uoyd also attended the conference during which Miller emphasized that the
energy shortage, the protection of jobs, and Increased
coal production and use, dictate an "aU out ~
program type push" oo coal gasUicatlon teclllology.
DOE is presenlly evaluating demonstration plant
design proposals from both Conoco and the llllnola Ccal
Gasification Group_

•

�,,

3 - The Da&lt;h ~e ll t ine! M1ddl
·
·
epurt -Porneroy , U., Wednesday , Oct.l7,1979

2- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, U.. Wednesday , Oc t. 17, 1979

·'

In Washington

,I•.
'
'•'

A national shame

urged htm not to gu .

By Martha Angle and
Robert Walter&gt;
WASHINGTON 1 NEA 1
Ten
years ago, Sen . Edward M. Kennedy
was invited to a memortal servt('t' tn
Memphis, Tenn ., upon the first anniversary of the assassmation there
of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr
Mourners were plarmmg to mare h
around the block past the motel
where King had been shot before
c onducting a serv 1ce m a nearby
church. Kennedy 's rudes, fearin g for
the senator's safety in sueh an
emotionally charged atm osphere.

" Tell tht&gt;m I 'm r un un ~." Kcnrwdy
re plied . ·if anything happe1L', they
can walk around the uloek twr&lt; '&lt;'
neKt year ."
Gallows hl!mor , Irtsh fe~talt sm .
fuulha rd y mal ·hu -call tl what you
wtll , the r espOJ tSl' was utterly
c haracteri st ic of the way the last of
the Kennedy brothers ha s con srslt·ntly dealt With the posSibility
thLtt one more nut is lurking out
tht'rc sornew herl' with a bummg
u r gt• to contplete ttw seorc .

It was not a bad way lo

('Ope,

Editorial opinions,
comments

Washington Today
WASHINGTON 1AP 1 J ohn
Heinz is a politlc1an in trauung. a
man who appears to be prepa rm g to
seek tlle presidency .
He's deftmtel y not r wmmg next
year . There already arc 11
candidates for the Republi can
presidential nomination. and you
the l1tt le-k nown.
wo n 't find
imm e nsely nch senator from
Penns)·ivama among them .
But In 1984 perhaps, or more likely
in 1988, Hemz would hke to go for the
roses. He IS grooming h1mself now ,
developmg attrartrve legtslation,
working
tn
key
comm1 ttet.1
assignments and homn g an
imaginatiVe
public
relation s
machine, all in an effurt to mast er
the ftne points of politics and law making on Cap1tol Hlll .
By foclliiing his ener~pt!'S on h1s
da y-to-day work m tht• Senat e.
Heinz · " traimng " IS dec1dely
different from that of Sen l.arrv
Pres..'iler , another freshman sena to.r
who is vy ing f&lt;K tlle 1980 GOP
preSidential nomtnatwn even tho ugh
he IS little known .
Unlike Pressler. Ht&gt; llll 1sn't
trwnpebng his amb1trons .
Asked
about
pres1dent1al
aspirations , Heinz r epli es with a coy
smile and a stock phrase : " I' ll cross
that bridge when l c-ome to 11. ..
Hetnz IS best known for spendmg
$2 .5 million tn h is 1976 Senate race .
That '"" 't much of a calling card, so
he Is worl&lt;lng hard to build his
stature and expand his influence .
The tall , handsome hetr to the
Heinz food fortune is begmnin g to
catch the attention of Senate
colleagues 1n th e wood-p an e led
world where freshman Republicans
are sometimes seen but St~l d om
heard .
Earlier th1s year, th" 4().yea r -old
mulllmJII Jo naJr e
wa s
e lected
chairman
of
the
~ational
Republica n ~mtturial Comm ittee .
In that post , Hem z IS chief fundrruser for all GOP Senate campa i)(TlS

HOG REPORT

COLUMBUS, Ohio 1AP 1 - D1rec1
hogs ( Fed-State I : BaJ'row s and ~Ills
generally 25 lower . Demand good
U .S. 1-2. 200-230 tbs . countr y pmnts
34.56-34.75 , few at :15 . plan ts. 35 35.50 . U.S. 1-J, 23().250 lbs. country
points , 33 .7&gt;-34.5(), plrull,;, 34.2535.25 .
Receipts Monday 8.400 , tu&lt;Jay ·s
esti.ma tes 5,500 .
Cattle , from Col umbus P roducer s
Livestock Cooperative As.&lt;;Oclat lon.
Cattle - Market $1 to $.1 lowe r .
Slaughter Steers : choice 6!&gt;-75 .. good
~ - Cows - Market steady to Sl
higher . Bulls - Market steadv . Veal
calves, stead y to $1 lower . -Chor ce
and prime $90 and down . Sheep and
lambs $3 lower to $4 h1g her . Old
sheep, 23 .25 and down.

and thus a eonf1 dant of many of h1s
~ 0 K~pubh t'o n &amp;•nate col leagues .
Ht'Ul7 1s alsu seeking VlSibllJly
through h1s

co mrmttee assignments .

Ht• JS the tlltrd.,.anktng Republican
on tht• Banktng. Housrng and Urban
AJfa1r.s r'omnnttet' and ran kmg ~
mt.·mber or1 1Ls mternat10na l finance
s ubt'OJ nmittee
Hl'mz hasn 't Hiwliys commanded
respt"('! . hO Wt'\'e r .

In June, Sen . Lo well We1cker . RConn ., brought a Senate sess1on to a
halt when he ca ll•d He1n z "an 1drot "
and "de\10llS " durmg a debate on a
p!·oposed &gt;1eel loan to Wheeling Prttsbur~h Steel Corp .
·n1e outburst came after Heinz
suggest ed that We1cker opposed th e
loan beca use It m1ght j eop ardize the
lntt&gt;re~1 s of a Connec ticut company .
" When a mem bt&gt;r s ubs ti tutt:&gt;s
mnul'nt..lo for fact ur lhe persuasion

of log1c.

he IS ellher a n 1d10t or

dt_' nO tLs. and

the

sena tor

from

Pt·nnsyh·an la quahfit•s Ln IXJth

The Poet's
Corner
MY WORK
l have so many aches and pa1ns.
And 1'm so sore and weak
Until It's hard for metod~
My work from week to week .
It would be easy to give up .
An d li e m bed and rest.
Hut the re ts work! or me to do,
And I must do my best .
So . !lie down and re.st awlule
Then strive to do some work '
And pray unto our precious J'.ord
To help me ,lest I shirk .
He also g1ves me work to do
Wh1le I am tn my bed,
He gives thoughts for me to wnte .
And by His gra ce I'm led .
He has given words for poems
At most hours day and night .
And when He g1ves them unto nre
'
I ta ke my pen and write ;
If pen and paper is not near .
He keeps them in my rrund
Until l get the chance to write,
He surely has been kind .
A few have asked how 1 can writ.The poems which the y see.
lt " a gtft from our dear I .ord,
He g 1ves the words to me .
l thank Htm for His wondrous love
And to H1m daily pray ,
.
Oh : m ay f be a little help
To others, on life 's way
Composed Aug . 7 and 9, 1979, By
Mrs . Riley Pigott , age 86 years .
l.orrg Bottom, Oluo 45743 .

SIDE GLANCES

Deciding game tonight

-'

by"'"

t'lther. as long as Ted Kenned y
remamed " just " the most fcunuus
membt!r of the Senate .
But fataltsm is a feeble defense
and hwnor a porous slu e ld against
the very real threat that looms nuw
tha t this Keru1edy, hke Ius brothers
before him . seems bent on a bid for
the presidency
Kennedy himself recognized as
much when he asked lor - and immediately received -Secret Service
protection even before becorrung a
declared candidate . But a detail of
bodyguards, I&gt;Jwever compete nt,
srrnply isn't enough to guarantee his
safety .
Secrel Service agents are the first
to admi t that given the way
presidential campaigns are normally conducted - huge outdoor
raiUes . open~ar motorcades. shopping center walk-throughs and the
like - there is no way they can
protect a candidate against a determmed gurunan who is prepared to be
killed or captured himself to ach ieve
his goal.
··
The only sensible answer -and it
applies not just to Kennedy but to
President Carter and all who seek
his job -is to change once iind for all
the way presidential campaigns are
conducted .
It is a brutal fact, however unpl easant to face, that anyone who is
very powerful. very famous or both
ts m real danger in this country
when e&lt;posed willy-nilly to crowds
of unscreened people . Indeed, police
forces in Washington and elsehwere
on the pope's schedule are currently
having a nervous breakdown a bout
Insuring his safety during Ius U. S .
visit.
A public f1gure need not inspire
great passion- be it love or hate- to
become an assassination target,
although men who do, like the Kennedys a nd George Wallace, are
probably in extra jeopardy . Nobody
felt strongly about Gerald Ford , and
yet he was the target of two un-

successful assassination attempts
during his short presidency .
Kennedy has said that if he
becomes a presidential candidate he
wi II not campaign from a television
studio. No one is suggesting that he
s hould . But he and President Carter
and every other cand idate can exercise m ore caution titan has been
shown in the past.
They can hold mdoor rallies ,
where metal detectors can be used
to screen the au:dience as it arrives,
instead of outdoor meetings. They
can ride In closed cars along unpublicized routes when traveling to
and from events . They can do more
" wholesale" courting of votes through press conferences,
meetings with community leaders,
televised debates and the like- and
less "retail" shopping for support .
Yes, it is a national shame that
s uc h precauttons should be
necessary to protect a candidate
Kennedcy or a President Carter or
anyone else from bemg shot at as he
goes about the business of seeking
popular support for the lughest offi ce in the land .
But it would be an even greater
s hame to allow the bullet to replace
the ballot in determining who wUI
occupy the White House '" ttu s
democracy .

Today in History
Ry Tht&gt; .&lt; \ssodatt&gt;d Press
Tuday rs Wednesday. Oct. 17, the
290th day of 1979 . There arc 75 days
ldt m Uw year
Ttlday 's hoghlight m hist ory :
lm th1s date tn 1777, Bnllsh for ces
under Gent·ral J ohn Burgoyne
surrendert&gt;d to Amen can forces m
Sa ratoga, N.Y., a turntn~ potnt in
th e Re volutionary War .
On tl11s date .
In 1855. Henrv Bes&amp;mer an
F:nghsh engmcer ~nd manufact~rer
patented h1 s steel-making proct!Ss .
In 1933, Al bert Emstetn . a refugee
from Nazt Gennany , arr ived in
America
In 1945, Juan Peron staged a coup

.

tn Argentma and became dJC'tator

I

t
'

ill

ID

"I remember when we userl to do the c h a-cha .
Thoeo rtllilvCI

!llftor nn.o

r'h~

·

h~!io '~ hp~tl "

In 1968. It was annourced tll a t
Jacqu.-•ltn e Kl·nnecly would "marry
(;reck sl11pprng tycoon Aristotle
OnaSSIS .
In 1973, Maynard Ja ckson was
elected ma yor of Atlanta, becoming
the hrst blaek rnayo r of a major
Southern city .
In 1977, West German commandos
s tormed a hija c ked Lufthansa
a irliner in Somalia and freed all 86
hostages unharmed .
Ten year s ago : Arthur Burns was
appointed head of the Federal
Reserve Board by President Nixon.
Five years ago : President Gerald
Ford wenl before a House Judiciary
Subcommittee and said that, in his
pardon of R1chard Nixon, "there
was no deal , period "
One year ago : Pope John Paul fi ,
taking the rei gns of the Vatrcan,
promised a " mmistry of love ."
•
Today 's birthdays : Actress Jean
Arthur ts 71. Playwright Arthur
Miller rs 64. Stuntman Eve I Knievel
is 41.
11wu~ht f&lt;K toda y : What mighty
tw1 tests rise from trivial things!
.\l ~&gt;v~ r HI,_. r

P(,nt'

t lf)AA..1744)

World championship on line
BALTIMUHI·: 1AI' 1
Juhn
Can&lt;lelana stood m the Pittsburgh

P1rate s' dr~ss1n~ roo m aft er
pract1ce Monday and held aloft a
crumpled ucket for the seventh
game of the Wor ld Sencs .
" After to morrow n1ght th1s w1ll be
worth a lot of rnnney ,'' shout ed

Candt'laria . who usua lly he~sn ' t too
much to .say .
Can delaria ·went out Tuesday
n1gbt and put hts ann wh er e hi s

mouth was t1nd made U1at last -

chance t1cke t worth the CjS kmg
pnce . He combmed w1th reliever
Kent Te kul ve for the1r fou rth
ta ndem shutout of tlw season .
T1l e National League champ1on
Pi ra tes scored four late-Inning rW1s
and beat the t\mcrican League
champion !Jaltimore Orroles 4-&lt;1 to
lie the Serres at 3-3 .
Pit tsb w-gh now 1s withm one game
of becomm~ the fourth team 10
history t..o com e back to w1n
b1lseball's showpiece from a :1-1
de fic it m a best~f ·seve n World
Se ries.
J un Bibby. the star ter m Garne 4
who was not invol vt..&gt;d in th e
Prttsburgh loss, has the assignrnent
for lontght's seventh game . He'll be

Bond's opinions
By Julian Bond
WASillNGTON INEA ) - Two big
city Democratic mayors, both
preswned to be supporters of Jimmy
Carter's reelection, have been
careful to avoid listing their names
on any cificial campaign committees.
One is the mayor of an industrial
midwestern city . The other presides
over a decaying muricipality in the
east. Both are black .
When the draft-Kennedy forces in
his state atulounced he had joined

Singing hymns
won't do

their bandwagon, the mtdwestern
mayor firmly and politely announ ced it wasn 1t so . A mayor whose
city relies on federal largesse must
keep Ius White House contacts friendly .
Neither man supported Carter in
the 1976 Democratic primaries . As
did all other members of the
CongressiOnal black ca ucus !excepting then 1\ep. Andrew Young
from Georgia}, they supported
Morris Udall or Birch Bay h.
They came to Carter re luctantly,

r-------------------------

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Letters of opinion are welcomed. Thry should be lrss
than 300 words long 1or subjrct to reduction by thr editor 1
and must he signed with the signee's address . Names may
be withheld upon publkation. However, on request,
names will be disclosed . Letters should be in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities .

Councilman r4&gt;sponcl~
Dear Editor :
l am writing in rebuttal to Mr .
Roger Davidson 's "Dear Mr .
Editor" article recentl y published in
Sunday 's paper .
The article was headlined "Still
A8ainst Levy " and signed Sincerely .
It seems Mr . Davidson 's political
candidate doesn 'I know any of the
facts about the levy or he wouldn \
have written the letter and how
could he be sincere when he doesn't
take the time to find out ?
All he did was write a letter trytng
to get voter support using an important tax issue as his c rutch .
The facts have previously been
available to anyone who wants
them . If Mr . DaVIdson was sincere
he would have attended the publi~
meeting held earlier this swruner
OR read this paper's report on t~
meeting, OR called any of the coun cil members OR attended any council meetings .
Mr. Davidson apparently hasn \
made a sincere effort, or he would
have some factual research before
he wrote a political motivated letter
to the editor.
If the Village of Ptmeroy wants a
good Mayor, a sincere Mayor, then
they 11 vote for Clarence Andrews, if
you want a political mud slinger,
vote for Roger Davidson , the ci&gt;Jice
IS yours.
Sincerely. Rod Karr, Councilman,
VllJ.AGE OF POMEROY

Wants new faces
Dear Editor :
1bis probably won 'I make the
papers, but I am going to write it
anyway.
I think it 's about time those
teachers woke up and started
thinking about somebody besides
themselves .
It 's the kids that are suffering not
them and l don 1 see why they have
to take it out on them.
Also I blame the Board ci
Education too because they sat
around all swnmer and waited for
school to start to settle things . For
my part, the whole bunch is getting
paid more than they're worth
already.
Parents should get rid of the whole
bunch and start over with board
members, teac!)ers and unioo too.
Another thing, my son has been
trytng to take Drive1· 's Education for
about six m ntiiS and Meigs doesn ~
even have a te&gt;~cher for that. 1 can't

even get him in Triple A because of
this stupid strike . Down with the
whole bunch.- Russell Capehart .

Team disappointed
Dear Sir:
The gtrls vars1ty Volleyball Team
a t Meigs High School IS '' ery disa ppointed that nothing came out of the
meetings held the past weekend
regarding the teachers strrke .
School is very unportant to all of
us since we all except one are
seniors. We are getting behind in our
education, and because we felt we
had a championship Volleyball team
this year .
Now . because of the strike
nothing is possible . There IS no wa ;
we can ever get another shot at thts
since tlus is our last year .
Since Volleyball has been at
M.H.S. , we felt tlus year is tlie best
ever . We won the Sectionals and
were district runner-&lt;Jp last year .
We felt we would be better tlus
year, but we'U never know . Our
record was 7.() before the strike .
Everything we have worked hard for
will go unnoticed.
What a way to end our school
years, to look back on your last year
at M.H .S . with great disapointment
and disgust.
We don't know who is to blame for
all of !Ius , but we do know for sure
who is getting hurt, I we, the students I.
Varsity Volleyball players at
M.H.S. -Sonia and Tonia Ash , Beth
Bartrum. Sheri Lightfoot, Dodie
Chapman, Terry Wilson and Lori
Rupe .

Think about"it
Mr. Editor :
In concern of the teachers strike of
Meigs Local School District. what is
our school board for• They seem to
be staying in the corner 1 Do we want
to send our children to school for an
educatioo or athletic activities ? Yes ,
l would like the strike settle! but
parents and students, let 's take ~
look at some possible situations that
might occur in the future : Do we
want one man to have the say so
over who is hired and who is fired
with no questions asked• Do we
want teachers belonging to cult
movements teaching our children?
Think about it' "HASTE MAKES
WASTE "" - Name withheld on
reouest .

and then only when the Georgian 's
successful pursuit of the nomlnaton
and his mystical appeal to black
voters made any other course unthinkable .
Each mayor is convinced that
Kennedy will dectmate Carter in any
primary where they meet. Each
belie ves that a Carter renomination,
possible only if Kennedy does not
run, is the beginning of the end for
the Democratic party's preeminence 1n Congress and a majority of the
state houses, not to mention the
White House .
Yet even a Carter resignation , an
impossible scenario to anyone who
knows his pride , would not make
these mayors run toward Kennedy .
Both fear that the 1979 Kennedy
stampede resembles the 1976 dash to
Carter, when black political leaders
proclalmed new strategies weekly
while Carter woo primary after
primary with a healthy a!Si.st from
the very voters they thought they
directed .
By the time the black leadership
began to consider presenting a
united front to all Democratic candidates , there was only one - Jirruny
Carter.
These men don t intend to support
Kennedy simply because their constituent.. and the polls tell them they
should . Instead, they plan to pull
together a list of legi;jlaCtve, appotnttve and policy questions from
which they'll demand detailed an s wers from each of the asswned and
announced candidates : Democrats
and Republican alike .
They plan to give the answers
wide circulation before 1!180 hopllfuls
have a chance to solicit and secure
endorsemen l•r from amon~ the black
leadership groups.
These mayors, and a larger group
of activists who 've tried without
much success to steer black politics
nationally away from personalities
and
towards
sophisticated
organization, hope they can forestall
a repeat of Carter's 76 strategy.
Carter's campaigners attracted
widespread s upport from secondline bla ck leaders , including many
who had not been active in politics
before, by appealing to their
jealousies of the media stars who
dominate the leaderslup.
They also capitalized on the
growing minority discontent with
the liberal- and frequently arrogant
- Democratic leadership that had
lost two presidential electons. This
created a grass roots movement for
Carter that the leadership could not
detail .
" We don 't want to support Kennedy because white people liked his f
brothers," ooe mayor said , " or \
because of what he's done so far . We i
need to support a candidate who's
made hard promises . Smiles and
hymn s inging wont do ."

nmo•n.v SENTINEL
IUSPSI..-1

~,~-~--

Wildcats host Eagles
•
zn top SVAC baule
SVAl'
\H d pup
HTC
Tvw lett g Ul' l'nga gemcnts cmd a
nu u-(· unf~._•rL'nn• 1-(C:I llll' rr ~ akt.'

up

th 1s

Wt't'k ·s

art10n In t.Iw Southern Valle..1\thld lc { ·{mft-rt"nn ·
·
L'ndefl·a t(•d HanlliUJ Tr aL't' pia) s
I&lt;;L~ l·rn

m anutht· r (T UC"Ial league
lx•ttll' and So uthwe st.-rn hOJl&lt; S to get
ba ck mtu tht• tttlt. pt cture agamst
wmiL·ss SuuthL'rl l Ln a non -leagm•
r n nte~'il.
;.;(!rlh C~::~ll1&lt;J hos ts

At MercerVIlle. Coach Joe
M&lt;tchem's Eastern Eag les a ttempt
t.o keep U1eir ti tle hopes alive against
tlle tough WJidcat.5 of Coach Larry
Cremeens .
Last Fnday night , Hannan Trace
and 1\orth Gall1a fought to an ()..{}lie
oo a muddy turf. Although both
teams manag ed severa l scoring
th reats, noone crossed th~ goa lhn c
TI1e char ged -up Wild cat defense

held North Gallia 's offe1tse to a
season low 97 ya rds. Speedster Tim
Howell was unable to get loose on th e
Pirate sweeps .
A determined Ptrate defense wC:ts
equal to the oecaswn stopping the
Wildcats ' two r unn1ng th rea t s,
juruor Todd Sibley and se nror Ja y
Bray . Stbley led the HT offense wttll
103 yards m 15 carnes. Howell was
held to just 58 yards on the ground.
StallstJcaUy. Hannan Trace won
th e battle hut the drffere nce counts
on the scoreboard .
Eastern edged Southwestern,lH
last Frrday rught to remaln as a title
contender. The defe nding SVAC
champs scored tn the first quarter
on a Six-yard pass from Brian
HJSseU to Greg Wig al The winning
TD came on a one.yard r WI by
BtsseU.
Coach Bob Ashley 's Highlanders
scored on a pass play from
quarterback Scott Russell to Joe
Potter
Agam, fW11bles, pcr1e:tltic s, and a
s loppy foo tball fi e ld hurt the
Htghlanders
So uthern , SWHS 's opponent tll os
Wt'Ck.was sounclly trounced, 33-&lt;1 by
Kyger Creek last ~'rida y ntght.
The Tor nad oes of Coac h John
Duddtng could not mount a senous
Ulreat agamt Coach Jun Sprague 's
Kyge r Creek Bobca ts .
Kyger Creek was led by semor
tailback Paul Lasseter. sophomore
rwmtng back Ed Moore, sophomore
quarterback Rob Waugh and senior
Greg Srn 1th. who has bt-en swttched
to tight end.
Apparently
some
offensive
changes in serted two weeks ago by
Coach Sprague are paymg off since
KC now has two stra ight VICtories
and a 4-2-1 rctvrd. KC IS 1dle this
week .

Hannan .W Va

Dependable Cockroft
hits erratic streak
BE HF.A . Ohio 1AP 1 - Steady Don
Coc kroft has s uddenly developed an
erra uc streak. and th e Cleveland
Brown s
h&lt;i\·e
s ufh•rl'd
the
conseqUL'nl ·t ·~

1'\HL"l'kJC k.lng ha s

t wt'/ 1

\h1: unt•

thtn ~ til L" ArtJY.Tl~ ha vt' /1.1 twd much

to worr ~ a bout s J n tT lh· · ~ Sl•1 rr ned
ont.t1 lhL' \ atluna l F1•1lba l! t~· a ~~ -w
sc._·t·nc 1n 1 !1~ 0
Tht•y bn 1ught kwktn t. ! 1-! r ,·;tl I .ou
Groza wttlt thl'ltl fno rll !I a· r\11 Alr Jt' rt C&lt;t l" urt fL•rt·nn·. VlL'Il ft~ \1 11 \H'fl

hu n w1U1 \l lt.:Kruft ,

U11rd-r ound
drnft p](" k 1n 1%7 frurn lllti l' Arla ms
Stall• Collt&gt; gt:' 1n Colorado .
He took (!\'er fu r Gru za tht• rwxt
&lt;i

se&lt;t sl!n and ha.'i sliH" t' lH..•t·n t11e m us t
tjlT Uf&lt;tlt' fte !d gu (l\ kl L"k t:r l!l tlll'
\Fl.
In f&lt;ict . h1s Iii p. ·rcl"nl

acc tJrac y vn liH.l't'·PUIIl l l'rs h ·ttdlng
tnlo t.ht' 19 / ~J :-.~: aso n wa s tltt· bl' st
ever b~ an \Fl . piac eklc k L·f"
And ." until lii:-il Sunda y , t. l k· rc Wi:l ~

st11lllttle r eason to worr y. Cut:kro ft
hnd con\'er tl'd nUlt' of hts 12 field
~o al attempt" tins season , wtnnm~
(KJ( ' ganH'Irt un·rtim e and anothl'r tn
th t• wanU1~ sc&lt;·orH1~ uf rt'gulatwn .
The only real con cl'm for the blond
kicker was that ht• had nussed thr ee
of 16 t' xtra p01nt attcmpL, . But that
ha s bt' ("Vrnt' t:~lmu~1 comrnonp li! ("l' Hl
tht• ~Fl. thl ~ S(.'i-jSOO .
Howevt'r , m Swldilj 's 1 3-~ \u ss to
thl' Wasllln gton Hl'U !i kln ~ . ("o('kroft

OU's Green
shares award
CO L UMB US, OhiU I AI' I
K.Jck1Il!5 Spl'L'IC:thst Ste\"1.! c:retm or
Ohto Umverstty and Toledo safety
Mike Kennedy are toe Pla yers of the
Week m M1d-Amencan Conference
foot ball
Green, a semor fr om Athens, Oh1u,
lucked field goals of 35 , 42 ar d 20
va rds tn Ollio's 9-7 upset at M1an11
Sa turdav . He ts six·for~tght on h1.s
held go~ls thrs season . tncludtng six
straigh t from lllStdc th e 50.
Kennedy. a junior from Toll-do,
had 16 so lo tackles from hrs strong
sa fety poSition . hc lpin ~ the
surpristng H oc k ct s remam wtbeaten
in the league with a 17-&lt;1 victory over
Weste rn Mi~h1gan . Kennt-dY had
four tackles beh1nd the lme of
scnnunage tor losses or :n yards .
Also rece1v1ng spt..ocia l mentiOn for
the honor s was Ce ntral Michigan 's
225-pound sophomore fullba ck Willi e
Todd . He r eac hed a career high of
163 ya rds 1n a 31 -11 rout of Nor thern
nlinois .

had an extra point and a 44-yard
f1 eld goa l atU.mpt blocked , then
missed a 33-yard effort tllat would
have put tlle Browns on top 12.0 with
JU St t · 55 remam mg .
" I've done everythm g I can thmk
(Jf to m1 ss k1cks the last thret'
wel•k s,' · Coc kroft s~ud . ·"I've just
about covere d the rang e of
pi •ssJbtl l tles
·I can't rt'call

havmg seri ous
prublems like tl11 s since 1971, when I
went one for e1ght at the sta rt of the
season . But . I know I'd better

t.•ltmmate 1t from my mmd pr ett y
qu1c kl y, because , if I don't, I won't
be aro und long ."
He pulled himself together m 197 1
and wound up connecting on 15 of 28
fteld g oC:~l tries. A resurgen c~ ltke
tllat m1ght be a necessity for tlle
Bro vms, now 4-3 and ridtng a three game losing string .
'!11e Munieipal Stadiwn field wa s
muddy and sl ippery Sunday , but
LDc kroft wouldn 't use that as an
l'X 1" U5e .

" Mud wa sn't the problem . The

ALL GAMES
W L
Hannan Tr ace
6 0
N or th Gall i a
5 0
Eastern
5 1
Kyger Creek
4 2
Sou t hwestern
3 4
Sout hern
0 5
SVAC ONLY
TEAM
W L
North Gall 1a
1 o

footmg was worse on the one (fiel d
goal 1 I made good 1from 37 yards 1

TEAM

U1an the other two .
" Nothing really seemed nght to
llle all day . l uidn 't even kick well Ill
tlle pre~ame warmup ," he said .
It ' s tmportant that you go mto a
game fee ltng confident. I don't know
what&lt;! IS, but I certainly haven 't lost
Illy leg ."
Cleveland Coach Sam Rutigliano
£J ~rees, notmg, " He's a
12-year
ve teran and he knows he's pressmg
n ght now. But, don 't forget , he only
llllssed three of 12 going into that
1Wasltinb~on 1 game.

Hannan Tra ce

tO

I

I

0

125

1

98

0
1

120
38

T

P

'

~" .I ,J

,!•It\ •

Especially lor
cars that use
unleaded
gasoline
D1 Plot On" aol Cl111 "
ftCIJS , .. Ill ~IIIII Ill
millllt. imJIIIII
1111i11t perfmnuu . 1d
SIWIItl Oft tu111 u,s

1

.ta

OP
8

1

13

6

went

·· He 1Ca ndelar1a 1 p1telled Lhruugh
tontght rTu l'sdayl.' sa1d
l'ltts bur ~ h Manager Ch uck Tanner
Tttnner ex pl amet.J th ett his star left.
han!Jer wer1t out desptte an &lt;H:lu ng
stde . Can dclana has been OOthcr ed
w1th a rib ri:lge InJUry for rnore ti1an
et month
··He' s a money pitcher , onl' of tht·

pa1n

best in the game ,·· gushed Tanner ,
who hLIS t..o be li vmg wllh mixed
emotion s. He needs onl' v1ctory to
gain h1s ftr st Senes triUmph .
And win or lose , when 1t ·s over , he
has to go homc tu ~ew Cast le, Pa .,
a11d attend the funeral of h1s mother ,
Anne . 70, who d1ed Sunday rnorn1ng
Tann er had a p1tc her warmmg up
from tile f1r st pitch.
··we were concerned about h1s
side all tlle way ," Tanner explamed .
" U there was any ind1 ca hon he
wasn't throwing ri ght, I wa s going to
go o ut and get hun . I kno w 11 hurt
hun ."
Candelana . who struck out two
and walked none , adm1tted that 1t
hurt when he pitched .
" It hurt then and it hurts now ...
sa1d the pltchl'r after he enrergt&gt;d
from the shower .
The Prrate s' p1tc he r sa1d that he
worked without a pam shot He ol so
s.a1d there was nothmg wrong w1th
hrs shoulder

tht." fmal three mmn gs . Plnchhttter Billy Srmth Sin gled with twu
out u1 tl1e se\"l•nth for t.lw onh· hll uff
Lhe reile\·er .
TL·ku l ve, who wets ban~ed ar ou nd
m th ~ fourth g&lt;itnt', fannt:.-d plnch httter John Lowcnsh•tn to enU lhe
s.' venth , one of th e pit cher ·$ four
stnkeouts.
The Pl ra te s Oppl'ar tv ha ve put
tllt'lr defensive act bdck together ,
play1ng errorle ss b&lt;JIJ . Seco n d
baseman Garner and tturd baseman
Bill Madlock made fine plays
Garner was tn the middl e of one
do uble play, increas1ng hrs World
Senes total to ninc and breakin g U1e
ret-ord of e1ght by Washmgton 's
111

~

CREATE ANEW ROOM

" It 's m y side anU back, ' " h~
explamed
Why did he ;1art to leave the fr eld
aft.er warming up m th e soxth .
" J saw Chuck eom mg out and
thought ht~ was commg to g~t mi.! ,"'
Candelaria said .
The winning rWls camt: 10 the
seventh inning wherl, &gt;Ntth one out,
Omar Moreno s ingl ~ d . Mor en o
reached secoo d on an mfleld h1t by
T1m Foil and scorl'&lt;l on Do ve
Parker's single_
F oli , who reached t ln rd Ill'
Parker's hit , then raced homt&gt; on
W&lt;lhe Stargell's sacnfice nl' That 's

OVER 1,000 COLORS!

World Series
At A Glance
By The Associated Pre ss
Best-of -Seven Senes

fh~Jn.;,p on P o r more fr um ove r

Fir-st Gam e
Balf 1mor e 5, Pittsburgh 4

ih ...Jt 1u1Jk d ':&gt;
Ill I

Second Game
P 1l fsbu rgh 3, Bal1 1more ~
Third Game
Balf1 more B. Piffsbur gn 4

a t ho usan d co lors
oro th e wad .JS t hey do m your

nd

Now

yo u r _i/l

g er 1 1 u ~

ou t do

ev e r t one w it h

you r c reative
Cus tom

~ cl ~ )' t o Jf.pl y. eas y clea n u p L UCITE

Co lo r Wall

Fourth Gam e

L m t d~ I H

Pa1nt makes you a n expert .

Balf1more 9 , PITtsbur gh 6
Filth Game
P1ttsburgh 7, Bal11 m ore 1

Tuesday's Game
P 11fsbu rgh 4, Baltimor e 0 Se r1 e c;

t1ed 3 3
We-dnesday 's Game
Pittsburgh
l B 1bby
I? 4 )
Baltimore (McG r egor 13 6) . n

at

PICKENS HARDWARE
MASON, W. VA.

I

at N orth Galli a Kyger Creek oft

PARTS

PEOPLE

c

"\

I

I

~-IJLPII!l

[1611(
tlEliU

QUICK.
EASY
ENGINE
CLEAN- UP
Dissolves grease
and oil . Just spray
on . flush off

.,75
.,37 •
-.11 () 1 c; a1 u l

1

• J 8 11

' AL~- ENOS OCTOBER 31 , 1919

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
t44 W. 2nd St.
Pomeroy , 0 .

G&amp;J AUTO PARTS
Rl . No. JJ
Mason, W. \Ia .

Roll Roofing Special
57 lb. Smooth-108 Sq. Ft.

S920 ·PER ROLL

TREATS

10 GALLONS

.....

b-}"~ar . .old c~ndeldna

SIX pam-wracked tnnmgs, garc up
ju st SIX htts and no runs . Te kul ~o• t·
followed . allowmg only on e ht l m
three mntngs fur h ts scL·und sa ve uf
the S4:!rtes.

Bucky Harrrs m 1924 .
Garner also has II hits for 21 at
bats tn the six games for a .524
C:~verage , hig hest in the Series, wiUl
five HBI. Game r , however, would
111ake no prediction on tonight's
seventh game.
" lt 's a t.otally different situation "
SetiCJ Garne r "We go up against the
ldt-hander , Scott McGregor .. .l'm
nut going to predict an aU-out win
tomorrow 1Wednesday }"
~ow that the Pirates are even, has
the ou tlook changed?
·· I don't think it 's changed at all,"
sa1d Garner ... We had a JOb to do.
No w we ha ve to win one more or it's
all for naug ht. "
The Orio les ha ve scored just one
r un m the last 19 innings and
:&gt;lanager Earl Weaver said he
couldn 't put his finger oo why .
Bibby said tllat he takes pressure
uH htmself by going over the hitters.
··1 r ernmisce ln my mind what
guy s can h1t and the way I want to
pitch them, and then l fall asleep,"
B1bby sa1d
McGregor sa1d he would pitch the
SaJne a s he did m any other game.

rtJ' PROFESSIONAL

,,;.•,

Pkll

'11Je

(J IJ the }~rates net-det.J tu hang th ~
loss on Baltimore ·~ .hm P~h n t• r ,
who went et ~ h t inmngs and gave up
all four Pittsburgh run s
"ll1e Ptrates wretpped tt up w 1th
two more m thc eighth .
EJ Ott srngled w1th on e out and
&lt;rrepress1ble Ph tl Carner followed
With a ground rule duuble. the ball
bouncmg U\"t&gt;r the left f1eld fenc ~ ·
se ndm g Ott to Unnl
,
Btll Hub1nson delivered one nUt
With Cl sacnf tce ny an U Orni-:lr
Moreno 's Lh trd h1t of the mght
S('Ored another
Tekul Vt' , rne~:mwh 1le , c ame on m
Uw se ven th and fa cL•U iu ~t 10 ball er 5

Bttlll rnort.' ·s Sc-ut t

lht• ~·t n n cr u f Cillllt:' 3

at Southwes te r n and Ha nnan Tra ce

-':.~,~~~~!,ca

""'"'
....

Mlf~reg ur .

OP
JJ
29
54
45
82
) 84

Kyger Cre ek
2 1 0
53
19
Eastern
I 1 0
20
10
Sou thwes tern
0 2 0
14
26
Sou thern
0 2 0
0 69
This week ' s game~
Friday
Eastern at Hannan rra ce , Southern

~

-

1 0

T P
) t17

opposed by

......
, ...
....

.....

�4- The Dally Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy , 0 , Wednesday , Oct. 17, 1979

Mitchell has good feeling toward game

I

•'I•

t:

I ,'

Today's

Sports
World

stunned bt•l'aU St:' tht• C l e\' e l ~tn d
Hrowns wa1vell hun fur $100, adn tll.'&gt;
tu a ··spt•t·Htl ft"t' hng · · for t}Hs Wt't' k -~
gamt· agams t tus old lt'anuJHit l's
" I really thmk w~ · re g 01ng to bl'ril
tht'lll ." sa uJ M 1! t·ht•ll . who now plr~ y~

Sports briefs.

8y Will Grimslt'y
BALTIMORE
1AP1
P ittsburgh 's little Phtl Garner
carnes the hottest bat and flash test
g love into the sewnth game of lht.•
World Senes turnght, but h••

entertams no v1s10ns of drivmg
horne m a flashy new sports car .
" I never thmk about it. It 's lh1·
farthest thmg from my mmd, ''
mststed the su r e-handed Ptrate

second baseman, son of a Tennesset·
preac he r. when remmded that he ts
the leadmg candidate for the Most
Valuable P layer award
"I'd be willing to go httless ancl
make li error s tf we co uld onl y wm

th e Senes."
Gar ner rapped out hts lOth a nd
11th htts tD boost hts sen es battmg
aver age to 524 and fi gured tn hts
nmth double play . a recvrd. 111 the
Pirates ' 4~ victory T'uesday ovt•r tllt•
Balllmore Ortoles, tymg th•• Senes
at 3-3.

He was the most modest man 1n
the locker room as the Ptrates
savor ed th e lr comebac k from wh &lt;:tt
appeared to be hopeless odds after
falltng behtnd tn games 1-3 .
"One man can't ta ke any c rc'&lt;ht
for double plays," he satd when to ld

tllat he had erased

ct

mark set by

Bucky Harris in the seven-gam e
Wa s hwgton Sena t ors-New York
Gtants senes in 1924.
"'11le pttcher has tD make the
batter hit the baU on the ground . lt
has to bounce ju st right a nd then you
have tD cvunt on two other guys th e shortsop for a relay a nd the ftr sl
baseman to handle what ma y be a
hurned and maccurate throw .
" I can' t tell you how many tLme~
Btll 1 Btll Madlock, Pirate third
baseman 1 has kept me from getting
my le~s sa we'd off by th e sptke -n ymg
rWlner
By P1rate standa rds, Garnt'r IS
just a wtsp of a man - 5 feet, 10
tnches tall and 1n pounds - w1th a
wtspy mustache and a molasses

Transactions
By The A:uoci~tl!d Press
BASEBALL

American League
OAKLA N D A's
Named L en
Montle1mer general mrtnager of
th e •r Ogden , Uta h c lub •n f he Pa c d1 c
Coas t League .

Nar .onal League
CI NC INN ATI REDS N r~med
J1m Beau c hamp manager ot th e1r
lnd•anapolis c lub

1n

t he Am e r1 c an

A ssoc•a t ion
FOOTBALL

Nat•ona l Football League
NEW YORK GIANTS

Plac E'cl

Joe P• sar c• k. quarterba ck , and Er
n1 e Jones, safe t y , on th e tn 1ured
reserve
list
Released GOrd on
Gravell£' , offens•ve tackle S• g n ed
Randy Coff 1eld, linecaCker , and

Oa"e Rader , auarterba c k
NEW YORK JETS - Watve a Rt c h
Szar o , k tc ker Stgned Ton1 Ltnharf ,

ktcker
ST LOUIS CARDINA LS

Stg n e d

Chrt s G.ul trh , lt neba c ker

HOCKEY
Natonal Hock ey L eague

EDMONTON

OILERS

Pete L o Prest i. gontfender
c 1nna t i ot
the Centr al
Leag ue

Se nt
to C1n
Hor key

w1th the 1\atwn&lt;:~l Footbal l IA:ag ul''s
l."tn t· mmtll &amp;• nge~l s .. 1 thtnk that
across tilt• Ward pla yt• r for playt•r ,
" 't ' 'n • bdtl'r than tilt.' } &lt;u t' 'Tlll'r t•'s a
Jut l llUI' l' enthU SICISJ il tl rl till S club
tha1 t "' ' Clt'\'t•!and . a Jut uf good,
\'ntm g talent
. " 11 ·11 1akt• ;1 lot \ (I \.\. tn tht&gt;n' tlll t

('IN( 'INN t\TI i AP t
Ht.'!'it·n·l'
dl'f~n s ivl' em] Mal'k Mlt t' hcll , stil l

drawl he ptcked up

Ul

hlll eountry .
Now :10 years old. he broke tn wtth
Charlte 0 Fmley's wild, feudtn~
Oeiklanll A 's 1n 1973, the m Jdle year
of th~tr thn't' world c hampwnslu ps,
and rematned then:• unlll he came tu
th e nrate s tn March 1977 U1 a SIX ·
for-lhret• dt•al
The uul &gt; s tmdtntt) 1n the
champton A's cmd lh~ r urrent
l'lrates hes Ul the fierce ftghttng
of the two tean1s The A's
tllnwd on d1scord The P1rates
prevail on togetherness ar1d mutual
respect.
" We're a free-swmglng team, ··
(~arnc r satd . " We ar~ aggress1v~
even whe n we pliiy 1·arci-; and
backganm1on . But the bUI'ld a m ong
all of us 1s very stron ~ . "
(iarner carne to the defense of h1.s
Ba ltunore counterpart , RH'h Dauer .
who misplayed Dave Pe~rker ' s
anfte ld scorcher an the seventh
tnntng . opentng the door for the
l-1rates ' ftrst run and st•ltmg up the
St't'Ond .
" I looke-d at the sput when 1 took
th e held .' he sa td . It loo ked like It
took one hop &lt;:~ nd bounced off to the
rtght. '
Th e sparkling mfielder e&lt;pressed
the highest respect for the Onoles
and wasn't abo ut to g loat
" Th&lt;•y're a to ugh bal l dub," he
sat d . " They don't loo k awesome . But
the1r pttchcr s th ro w stnkes, thetr
h1tters htt and tllcll' runners rWl .
·nll'y are p.at1 e nt Tiwy nt•vt·r ht·at
thcrn~lves . They are a ty p1 ral Earl
Wea\'er lt'(:lffi .· ·
Garner. a three-spor t lt'tterma n tn
h1gh sfhool at Knoxnllt• . Tt·rm , and
a tJusirw.s.s majur ell thP Untvers1ty of
Terme.ssce, IS a gn:al k1cldt&gt;r , JOlnmg
btg Dave Parker m tiw Mutt -a ndJeff act that ke&lt;'PS the Pnt sb urg h
loc ker room loose .
Yt'f he reveols llllnSt'lf a.-; a
st•nous, mtrospectlve l!lan .
" I can't forget tha t bad error 111
the hrst game when I threw the ball
a way ," he sa1d . r dernn g, lLl a tworun error on a s ur e double play
chance .
" At tlmes thts club ha s seemed
r ea dy Ill pack It up and go horne. )'et
1t puL'i 1ts nose in the dtrt ;Jnd goes
out and does the job It nt•ver qu1ts . "

• •

lop 10

'1""'

w;1lluped Flnnda 4f)..(l and recetvl'd
42 ftr~1 .pl&lt;H't' votes ami 1,3:32 of a
pu ss tbll' 1,:100 potnt s from a
rtat aonwJdl' ptmel of spurts wnters
i-tnd bro&lt;tdca.slt•r.•..
Al d b~lma was clusely trrnll'&lt;"l by
Tt•xas. whtch defea te&lt;l Oklahom a 167 a nLl JUmped from folll' t h to ~co ml
w1th 26 f1r~11)lace ballots and 1.31:3
pu111ts .
1\ebr aska , llousl on, Oluo State ,
Flonda Statt•, Uk.lcthoma, f'otre

B) 'Ilw Assndah·d Pn·ss
COLLEf.E FOOTBALl.
NICW YOHK 1Al'1 - Alabama,
the defemlmg natwnal champtun s,

IJOsed out Texas for hrst plan· m '11w
As~c l et tt&gt;U Press co llegl' football
poll while Southern Caltfonua . No 1

Slnre lht• preseason pull , Jroppt•d tu
fourth .
Southern Cal dropped followmg
thetr 21-21 tie with Stanford . That
oPened the door for Alabama, wh1rh

SIK:CER
WASHINGTON 1 API - The North
Amen c dn
Socrt•r
Le(:IJ;:!Ut'

Wlanmwusly app ro ved uwnrrsh1p
changes for three fra nchises . All
til ret' tt·ams wtll rem am in the 1r
pr eSt•nt utll~s unde r local ownersh tp .

Till'

Me mphi s

Rogues

were

purchased by Avron F'oge~nan, a
Te nnessee businessman who also
U'A'll .s tlw Memphts l'h1eks ' rmnor
lt.•&lt;::~gue
basebal l team .
Tht'
I1JUlStana -Pat lf n: Corp., a P ortl andbtJ s e d company special!ztng 1n
fore st pr oducts. took over tht:
Portland Ttmhers and Vmc cnt
Col u c c w,
a
Washm g t on
bustnessman, purchased till' Seatt lt.•
SoW i dCI' !::l.

BOWLING
HA1'TI.E CREEK , Mtc h tAP I f:arl Anthony regamed the lead over
f' r ed Conner tn the fUth ro und of U1e
$95.000
Professtonal
Bowling
A.••iSJciatton tournament at Ba ltl e
Creek .
Ant lwny began the round tn
sec ond place but fell further off the
pace when he lost hts first match to
Conner . AntilOfi Ythen went on to win
th e next st x games wh tle Cooner lost
three of h1 s nt:&gt;xt seven matc hes
Mtk e Hane, , a roo kt e n ght hander, moved from sixth place to
thtr d dunng the round

toughe st dlVlston m football ."
'11le Browns and Benga ls, who are
both 111 the Amertcan Football
Conf~ren ce

Central Dtvtswn, are
even at nine victories each smce Ule
OhiO rivalry began in 1968.
Mttchell, who was drafted in the
first round tn 1975, said he has no
animosity toward th e Cleveland
roaches He believes the decision to
watvc him was made in the Browns
front office .
.. In four years, I was th e most
productive e nd they had . It was just
a number s game, but 1 began to
suspec t something was up when they
ac quired Jac k Gregory I from the
G1ants1 and then Lyle Alzada I from
Denver).
" The people they hve now haven't
produced that well," he said.
Mike Brown , Bengals assistant
ge neral manager, said the Ben ga ls
went alter Mitch ell immediatel y .
" We think Mack's a good pass
rusher We had trtouble with him
before. He had 4.5 sack s aga inst us
last yea r ," Brown said.
Cmcin nati Coach Homer Rice
revealed Tuesday that there was an
added factor tn Sunda y's defeat of
the Steele r s
"One of the goo d I hm gs - I won't
tell you how we did it - was that we
ptc ked up some !Stee ler 1 a ud tbles,"
R1ce sa id.
R tce discounted r e ports that he
mtend~d to start rookie runn ning
back Charles Alexander against
Clevela nd . Alexander ran for 98
ya rds against Pittsburgh .
" I sa td he wold play a lot, but I
don't want to commtt myse lf until I
see our players durtng the week,"
H.tce sa td.

Paterno feels Penn State still good team
·na.

questwn .lrJt.' IJ&lt;t knll, Iitts
ht&gt;ardmost ofte11Ul J s fa i iJ ~, ·· Wha l ·._
wron~ w1th Pl'ml St att' ' ..
'Ill~! 's what ha ppt•ns whei i \ ou Wil t
mort' than 80 pt·r n·n t uf yo w: J.:&lt; ll lh' :-o
but Sl&lt;lrt a St•ason b~ loSif! J.! twu of
your ftrst ~ rt't' Mll'r ht· at Jn 1 ~
Rutgers, lht :\Hta ll) Llw ls Wt'l" t'
trowlced by Tt·xa :-. t\&amp;.~1 27-14 and
manhandled h~ \dJr&lt;tska 42-17
" ]1le on ly tllln ~ \H un~ t ~ tJl al
we 'rt' not a \' t·r~· ~.!DO d ft-tlhall
leC3m ," Patern o Sei!'S " Vh· startt'd
the season wt1h 1-1 t·otnp ll't l•lv
mcxpt:rlenn·d st•cond;tn and tilt';!
we had SOJ!Il' tnjune ~ th;•r t• Wt' &lt;1 lso
had an ln ~XPl'fll'lh't' d Kwk1n ~ l~ iilflt' .
mexpenenct' at qu&lt;H1erb&lt;1( 'k a nd
only one retur nm g wHlt• rt.'t't' I\T
" The defens t\'l' down hne1nen and
a co uple of lineba ckl'r ~ \\Tr l' t ht · on h
lhmg Wf! had gomg for us Tou rn &lt;ln ~
peop le had to play thernsl'l vt•s 1nt ~'
be mg pla)'ers."
Since that d1smal start, thou)..( h.
Penn Sta te ha s ddL'&lt;ltt·rl Man lctnd
27 -7 and Army 24 -:l. :" ulh1ng
sensatiOnal , hut poss1tJh· tlw stCJrt of
something good .
·
·· We 'rf! gettin~ a little bettt:r each
Wl:&gt;ek," Paterno sHvs
" Wt' rt· .a
better football team ~1ght now tJliin
at any timt' th1s yec.u "
Paterno made a kt•y move 1wo
weeks wht•n ht' swtt c hed All·
Am en can defenSIH' U:t r kle Hruct·
Oa rk to noSt: ~uard a longstdt• ~1ottt
Millen. th e l Jon s· other !'.tar tacklt•.
Opponents cdn 't wa stt• fo ur JX•oplt•

11" .\ II IJ..! l u d uu bk -let.l lll

P uTTING IS MENTAL
1'01\TE VE DRA BEACH, F1a .
1 AP J l .ee Trt•nno went mto
pu tt ing slump an d hcu.l a umque
l'X pi(! Tl&lt;:l t lOll .
" Puttmg IS IIIOSt)y llll'nl.cd ," he
sa1d , .. and my thmkUlg on tilL'
s u bjt· c t has been a tug-Df -war
bet w een po s1t1ve th1nk1ng and
nt·~a tl \' t' . Th e trouble
I S,
tht•
fll'gCJtl\'l' sidl' ha.s bt•en wmnmg "

piayt' r \~ t ,- \" t '
t•\·l' r had \V· ··n· rtl'\t' f' had ;1 pi ; J ~ ~·r
wt111 \ \&lt;J "&gt; so III U{' h bl'lter than anymit '
,·]s,• Tht· onl .\ un1· clost· would lw

{)1 \ '

I IIUSt

dOJ II JH Cl fl l

l.t.' li ll) !\1uur t• "
S ~T i H'U Sl' ( 'utwll

Frank :vtalorte ~· .
wh11 11111'-it hnd a wa y to n t•utr;tlt Zl'
Clark . u dls ('lark a nd MtliL'n " tlw
lx ·~t \wt l Lleft•ns t\'l' hnt•rnen [ ' w 1'\' t'r
st•t'n on ont• tl'CI IIl. It 's nd 1culuus to
il'l th l' Foo tball Wfltl' r s As sot·wtr on
\"t ilt' on the Outla nd Trophy Lh1s
~ t· ar .lu:-;t lock Clrrrk and \1 Jileni n a
W IJ III anLl " ·hot' \·er l'OIII t'S uut will bl'
tlw wtnr ll'r . ··
' 11ll' rt , ~alone:.

•
•
•

I

golden broWI'1
bu n

ht

" Ht's lht.· fuw ~ t dt•f t•ns J\'l• linen tan
r· Vl' St't'l! Strll't' ( · •:e bel'n l' (Jtll'hm g · ·
H.aylor 's \~rant Tet-.~ff ha s a worll of
caut ton for C:tnyone who thtnks '] \ ·xa:-;

ts rr sl1ou-Jn for llll' Sou thw es t
Confl•renct• c hamp10n~hip &lt;-J ild a
bt&gt;rth 1n tlw Cotton Bowl .
" l ht· v 'v t• s ttll got to plav
1\rkan sa s. Southt·rn Mt'thodts t ,
Texa s Tedl . ll ou s to n . Texa s
f1m st1a n. Baylor ;md Tl'xas A&amp;.M ."

t 'oai..J , IJr iJtt t•tl iak
pa:-;t prl'std l'lll of tl w Am cr ll·an
F H(Jt!Jd ll ( 'vctcht·s A s ~w 1at um , S&lt;l )' S

to be re lteved so he could jotn
;mothe r or gamza tJOn . Ferguson had
rl{J uth er t'Xplanatwn for the move

Si-lturday 's Dl\·tswn

Pan• i:l nd Hofstra IS being
btl It'd li S '" The ~atilt' uf tilt• Traimng
C&lt;t111p~ " The Nt•w York Ctant~ hold
Ltw1r prt&gt;St•a!-.O n cam p &lt;J I !'art•
Unt H'r stty 1n Pll'a san t~· 1lk . ~ Y .
whllt&gt; th l' ~l'W Ylt rk .lt'l s ha \'t· the1r
~ l'&lt;H -round
pr aqu ·t· f1 e ld ;tnd
hl'~lllquarte rs a t Hofstrd Ulll vt!rstty
m ll empsk ad, N Y.
heiW l't'n

Va ~ a s Fl'rguson sho uld twcttttlt'
:'-/(Jtrt.· fhtntt•' s a ll -time rusl11n g k1ng
1h1 .s \\t.·~kend against Southern Cal.
!It· nt.•ed s only 21 yanis to break
.lerom e 1-h_.avens· mark of 2.682 ;tfter
gaanmg 34 aL;amst A1r F urce last
S.aturd&lt;:t!
"l took h11n out C:tl the half 1-'l'l'i'JU Se
I d tdn't want tu rWl up th e S( 'OH' . ..
~aJd Coach D:m DeviJll' . " He uu~ ht
have gawt·d -100 yards thl' w&lt;:~y ht•
wa s runmn g
Ferg uson wasn't upset. s1nrc he

154021
w ith 8- Track

Tape Recorder
154041
with

8- Track
and
Cassette
Tape
Recorders

299.00

at Kentu c ky Fr te&lt;l Ch •Cken c iln vou g e• Th•s c hOtCf'
Ongrnal Rectpe c oo k ed w•th !he Co to nc l s blf'nd o f 11 hf'ft1s
an d sptces O r Exlta Crrsp y rnarr nal ed an d d ou tJ I P- d rp p~d to

i.ol·a ~ ut•

TENNL'i
S YD NEY . Australta I AI ' 1

V ttas

l ~l'fula1tl s

;q!pt•aJ t•d

;1

- I

$2,000 fin e ITII jJOSl'tl tJ~
Hm.dle f•, r t i l l'

( 't tlrrltu ssw rw r Pl'tl'

In otht·r ma tche s , John l\t&gt;w co mbt·
of Australia beat countr)1nan Huss

Huzelh: lt.'\'lt'd tilt.' fJnt · ( .k 1 'L .
stenmlm g fr um a luc kt:I ruu m
sc uffl e be twt•t&gt; n Clay bur n and W11l
~ c Dun u u F! h of ·n1e Bo ston t__;Jobt·
after ~ Sept 9 game m Foxl;uro.
\r1 a~s . et nd &lt;:J verbal t· ncoun tt.T th f
"' t.'l'k I~ for e w1lh A~so not ed Pr t·ss
spurt ~ wnter Bruc-e l .ownl
1\ spokesman for H oz~ l le SCI Hl thl'
appea l was filed by th&lt;· 9 I.PA la st
week (1.'\1'111 be heard by ltuzelk.
a,.nd ~it-'\lu: f\;F LP A ts unhappy wt!h
·lh t.• result, 1t cC:ln take the &lt;'ase tu &lt;t
neutrnl arbttrator .
BOWLI-.G
IJA'I"l'LE CREEK, '.lH'h I AI' I
Larr y l.aub daunell h 1s 12th c ar~er
l'rofesswnal Bowl~r s As suc Ja !Jun
nctury . defealln l:', L1rl Aflthuny 2JJ.
2tG 1n tht&gt; hnab uf u $95,0011
tournawent .
l .aub earnl:' d tlic $11 ,000 fi rst ,p,rtz.t·
while Anthon y won $6,000

('(Is.•

6-:1 . 6-1, Tom (;ormttn

ddt'i tt~.· d

Austraha "s Ch ris Ka chel 7-5, :i-6, 1;..:~ ;
1~111 Oent topped Paul Kronk li-2. :1-il,
h-3 and Ceoff Ma sters uf Aust r al !&lt;•
Uownt•d countryman Hr&lt;:~d Dre wl'l t

li-:1 ' 1.(;, &amp;-1
BAS F. I.. Switzerland 1AP 1 - F nt!
Huehntng ups~!t South Afncan H;1 ~
Moore 6-7. 6- J, 6-1 m the opem ng
round of the $75,000 Swt s~ ImJuor
Tt:nnis Champ10ns.h1 ps .
[n oth er act 10n, sixth-set~d ed h ·;.ul
I A:IHJI of Czt&gt;cltuslu vak1a elirrHnatcJ
Sw it zerl and's Markus Guenthar d t iil. &amp;-0 wtule another Czech, et~htil ­
set'dt tl Toma s Snud , o u s ted
Br ita m ' s Mark Cox 6-3 , 6-1
FOOTBALL
New I·:ngland
BOSTON t AP!
J!atrtot s c urne r back Hay m ond
Clr~ y t-x, r n and tilt' :\at1unal Foot txt II

pla~t·r · c;

truubk

llll'tlJa . tr w ludtn ~

With t ht.· rit•w ...
punl'lltn g a :-;por ts

wnlt'r

It bl'gan when Louisv ille's Ricky
Skiles recovered a fumble by Tulsa's
IIIII 1\ l"nkenship Tulsa got the ba ll

l,;t r k twu plays later when Bob Laird
reeu vered a fumble b y Greg
llt c kma11 . On the next play,
Blankc nslllp fumbled aga tn and
lhtYid Drachman recovered for
IAJUISvJlle .
Ou
Loutsville's thi rd play,
qua rterba ck Stu Stram ( yes, he's
lla11k ·s son 1 fumbled and Tulsa 's
Eugene Wtlhams recovered . Three
pl" v·s later , l.outsville got the ball
IJ&lt;t c k whl:'n Ra y Pa yton inter cepted ·a
Blan ke nship pass.

SPECIAL

PEPSI
2 Lifer Bottles
Reg. $1.29

Now

CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
1qs N . Second St.
Middleport, 0 .

FREEZER BEEF

~, . -, ~

SIDES
AVERAGE WEIGHT

AVERAGE WEIGHT
1 50-160 LBS.

300-330 LBS.

/
,
l.49 ORANGES... 6 79 .
MARGARINE
,
29'
QUARTERS ... 2199 CELERY.~~~~;~
8 oz. LARGE COOL WHIP. ......... 69e

TASTEE TREAT WIENERS ..................... ~:.~~-.:~~~. 79&lt;

THIN CUT PORK CHOPS ............................ ~~~-$1

30 Count

16 oz . Del Monte

269.95

lla\t'

California

CHICKEN STAR SOUP. .......... 2/59'
1

of l' rrur s m tbe second period:

beat Austrlil ta·s Mark
Edmondsc:m i-fl, fi-2 , 7-5 1n thc f trst
ruuri tl of Lht• Aust ralian lrrdtHH
Tenn as Chdmpwnsh tp .

CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS ....................... ~~~. $1 59

GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS........... 59'
PORK 'N BEANS................. 2/59'.

69

FRESH LEAN PORK STEAK ..........................L~;. $1 19

TASTEE TREAT CHUNK BOLOGNA..................~~·•. 79&lt;

KEEBLER GRAHAM SQUARES
OR FUDGE STRIPES
PACKAGE

99e

KEEBLER

''NEW" FROM NABISCO

OYSTER CRACKERS

CHEESE &amp; CRUNCH SNACKS

12 oz. Pkg.

49e

PRODUCE

NEW CROP

2 lb. Aunt Jemima R egular

24 oz . Aunt Jemima

PANCAKE SYRUP..................... $F9
29 oz . Golden I sle

PEACHES••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• sgc.

7 oz. Bag

~------._--------------~------~=

With steak, with beef , with turkey

PANCAKE MIX ....................... 89'
Audio ...
The Flipside of Zenith.

• •
Pla ye rs Assouat iUII

USDA CHOICE

HINDS

113 Count

1

Only

Sports briefs.

FREEZER BEEF

PRODUCE

14'120Z . Showboat

BOTH

'269.00

l tta r rl'c..l

SLICED BACON ................~.~·..51.29

FACIAL TISSUE ............ lOc off 59'

All sys1ems h ave s1mulated wo od
cab tnct s qrarned Wal nu t lt ntsh

·nw

lilUI Sv lile.'f\r. lsa game was
by se v ~n lost fumbles,
ll ll' ludtng tltrs thr~~-mmut e comedy

Y !l Ull ~

1 lb. French City Vacuum Packed

10•12 oz . Campbells

with
Cassette
Tape
llecorder

1r1

200 ct . White Kleenex

• Choose the Tape Unit
You Like Best!

154031

WH "

USDA CHOICE

ORANGE DRINK ..................... gge

6 . - I'I Ct" WOQ ) M &lt;I'IC ?- ln (. h tWl' (&gt; Tf!f
pl us th e farrou "- Allcqro Tunf' d Pori lo r
clear r 1c h sou n d ( Mode l MC 1000)

p l:tn

ht s

Bn g ha nr

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a lion Rich -n-Ready

W l\h

d e~c n bt·U

HAM SALAD ....................;?~. 51.19

1 lb. Teen Queen

• Allegro 1000 Stereo Speakers

('o;wlt Hr un· Sn yde r

S nytl er· gues sed wrong Marc
Wil son ' o111pleted 19 of 35 passes for
Ji2 yi..l n.ls &lt;~nll tw o touchdowns in
BYL ·, lB-24 VJc tory .

Homemade

COTIAGE
s
CHEESE .......

le'&gt;'&gt; lOla I

'( Jur Hll tl&lt;ll J.! &lt;Hn t•

hlln

St't.' l ll l'd

MAKE GATEWAY YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR

SMOKED SAUSAGE. ....•...•.:~~ 51.79

24 oz . Broughton

h a rmo mc fl i·,Jor i To n t ram 1 00 · 1 ~ 000 H7

Ill cuntc.st

IHJt pr l'SS UI"l'

tlh· p&lt;t.'if . ddt' ndm g hun

!11
b: Jt] H•r h trr i · That 's how U l.dh St ;Jit'
In

1 1t·f\' l l ~ l \t ' str dte~y o ~a m st

11 1 . Januar~

·Flr :-,1 , W t' hm·t· to fi nd Il LII all tht ·
di'! ;-HJ s." CiJIZ&lt;-1 ~Lt ~ S ·Jf tht• JJl l'Idettl
lt;tppt'fl l'd ;~ yt&gt;&lt;-tr llg u. wtl\ was tilt•
sull flkd now ·)· ·

dd t·lid Wtlsor t omJ

18, 19, 20, 1979

iGltiiSi
I. il'i.ii 11

DAIRY

RMS pow t• r pe r

ft g u n ·~

tt' t"·t·ak tlh · n ·( ·t,r d ;11
" l' rn t: lnd to st•t• lilt· ul h l·r
gu~ s get S. !l ll t' plo } Hig tnrlt.' , .. ht•
s.atd .. 'lllt' rl'curd w1ll COIJ II ' "

th,· ,\F('J\ 's E thw ~ ('uuiuiiii L't' ~· Il l
II !\ t·st tga tt• An zon~r St&lt;Ht.' s ftr11 1g of
Vr;L nk Kush ;tt li s armua l &lt;' On\ 't.•rt tlflfl

TO GO O NL Y

Prices Effective Thru Sat., October 20th

Heor your music come olive!

w11h T untnq Me ter 5 w at t&lt;. m1n
c ha nn el tn10 8 o ~m r~ .V I! h 11 0 Qr

Fried Chicken

C t.~ rrn

1179

Phone 742-2100
Uw C lass AAA lnlernattona l I &lt;'ague.
a Houston fa rm club
Ferguson said Majt yka had as ked

11ow

lton~t ·

casts Cl \'ol e for

t 'la rk .

• AM/FM /S tereo FM Tuner- Amplifier

k's nice to feel so good about a meal.

Y;rk ·~

I
]. , ..,

u·,

hidt

llutL-;t un "

BAKED
LASAGNA ••
w•tk

o_.,,.,

STORE

ALL THESE SYSTEMS FEATURE

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lwpt Hfl l.'&gt; t rul , ; idtlltl ~. ·T i lt \' el .~
( lfl

.-cooo
--···-

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w1tt1 Cue Ccn:ro t and Ou st Cove r

crunchy

ln

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY,
OCTOBER

RUTLAND

• Precision Record Changer

be super

both uf U k

' It )!.1\' t' S pl'opil' SU TH l ' IJI O&lt;'k ll ll.!.
problt·lns ii nd 1t 's maJt• u ~ .a IJt'ltn
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s h t• tb Ills c u s t UJ H&lt;H y lo 'A · kl·~
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" l'lark IS a super plil~ t.·r . and :o •n1
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California

'We

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TilliS SPECIAl.. .

Former Red rejoins club as Indy pilot
BA I.TIM OilE
1 AP 1.ltm
Ekauchamp has bet:n namt.'d by tJw
Ctncmnau Reds tD replace 1\oy
Majtyka as manager of thm Cla ss
AAA Amencan Assonat10n farm
team . the lnd1an a~hs l nWans .
J1111 Fe r ~uson , director of pubht·
relatiOns for th e Reds. made the
annuunet:ment from Halt unore.
when• he was allendmg th e sixth
World Scn es ~ame bt&gt;tween the
Halllrnure
Ortole s
&lt;:md
th e
P ttts burgh Ptrates.
Beaucham p , who play•• rl wtth the
HL&gt;ds, Ne w York Met•. Milwaukee
Braves and Houston Astros, ha s for
the last th ret· years been manager of
the Cha rl eston . W Va .. ('harhe s of

sa1d . referrmg to Sum.lay '.s :t4-10
ups.t·t of tht· Super Bowl c hampwn
l~tt sbw ·g h Steders by the Bengals .
·Tru glad I'm still m the same
dtvJ son , pa r ticular ly because
( lc vcla nd IS m 1t I thmk 11 ·s Ul e

llan tt' ;md Arka ns&lt;1 .s ro und out the

hts nattve East

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NEW POTATOES •••••••••••••••• ~g···99
YELLOW ON IONS ••••••••••••••• ~~ ••

e

�R~~ki·;~c;rt;..ight shines in big Knick win
Ohio
Sportlight

Km cks , Houston's Moses Malone
was warne d by hos coach , Del
Harns · " You 'll be seeing a lot of Bill
Ca11wnght lor a long lime ...
He saw all he wanted to see of hun
Tuesda y rught .
New York 's g1fted rookoe center
took on la st year 's Mo'1 Valuable
Player 10 tile National Basketball
Association as 1f he had been playmg
Malone all Ius hfe . .

By George Strode
C'OLUMB US, Ohio I API - Berne
Union , once a dommant for ce in
Fairfield County prep footbal l, ha s
fallen on hard timt!S .
The Class A school at Suga r Grove
has lost ots last 25 games and shows
ooly two vic tories and nne tie m 1ts
last 57 contests .
Berne Union won four str&amp;lght
league champiOnships !rom 1957
through 1960 and followed with titles
m 1972 an d 1973 before hilling the
skids .
This fa ll the Rockets have lost
seven mor~ gam~s . scorm g just 22
points to 341 for tl1e opposition .
Quarterback Greg Schneider has all
of Berne Union's points . too .
AroWld Ohio : Blanchester's 1&amp;-14
victory over Ma&amp;m la.o:.1 wa-k caml•
on an omprobable finish . Jim
Burroughs tackled the Ma s on
quarterback in his own end rone for
the deciding lWDiJOUll safety on the
final play to ext&lt;nd Blan chester' s
unbeaten home streak to 28 games .
Pity Jam estown Gr eeneview _ The
Greene County team still hasn't
scored a point m seven straight
losses. losing two touchdowns l1l a &amp;0 defeat by Ointon Massae . One
score was nullified by a penalty, the
other by an official's early whistle .
Cadiz tailback Jay Peterson is
running at a record c lip in the Ohi o
Valley . The 5-foot-9 , 155-pound
senior now has 1,516 yards in 123
rushes for this season and 3,214
yards in his career , both sc hool
records . The old ones were held by
University of South Carolina 's Jeff
Kendzwrski .
SteubenviUe trimmed Winter svtlle
12-7 in the first meeting between the

Pro cage prospects.
MILWAUKEE
BUCKS

rookie

HICHflE:lJ), Oh10 1 API - Fiery
Detroit Coach Dick Vitale said he
wa,; shocked after the fast-br ea kmg
C1eveland Cavaliers' coasted to a
t37-IJ 7 v1ctory over tile Pistons
Tuesday rught.
Rookie Cleve land Coach Stan
AI beck said he felt vindicated as hi s
tactic s of free-wheeling substitution
and a run-and-g un offense gave h1m
hJS first ,;ctory as a Na tw na l
Basketball Association coach m
Ulret&gt; outings .
Seven ca val iers scored 11 or m or e
pomts. and the entire roster saw
ac tion. with veteran guard Walt
~·razler ' s 13 mmutes the least time
spent on the fl oor by a ny Cleveland
player .
The defeat Tuesday mght was th e
first a~alnst two victories for th e
Piston s.
" I wa s shoc ked . They 1 th e
Cava liers 1 lost the first two games
1of tile season 1. We didn 't get back
m tranSJll on . A team that traps you
tha t often. we should make them
pay , l1ke Boston did," sa id V1tale
Boston defeated Cleveland 139-117
on Saturday noght.
A beaming AI beck observed, " I
said when f first got here we would
move out h ke ga ngbusters, then hot a
regresswn period, the n pick it up
again . Our regresston penod was
:--lew Jersey and Boston," the first
two games, wluc h the Cavaliers lust .
" I think of thiS team as ll pla yer s .
I'm not afraid to use the bench ."
Guard fumdy Smith pumped in 23
points to lead the Cavaliers in
scoring . He ripped off 10 quick points
ea r ly in the third quall€r to give
Oeveland a 90-61 advantage . Detroit
got no closer than 18 for the r est of

• •

CHICAGO
BULLS
By Jt"rry Sloao
Uead {'oacb

In t h~ m1dst of a f1ve-year
plan to bnng a champ w ns h1p
to Mllwaukee. the Buc ks have
bolstered an already s trong
nucleus of youn~ and talented
players .
In the backcourt . s tartmg
guards BRIAN WINT E RS and
QUINN BUC KNER re tur n
Winters· stock has mcreased
with the inception of the
three-pomt field goal . while
Buckner has been workmg on
hts shootmg.
Off the benc h Will COme the
top sixth man m the league
statisticS-WISe
J UNIOR
BRIDGEMAN , who will a lso
swing to forward . Rookie SIDNEY MONCRIEF will mak e
the Bucks backcourt one of
the deepest in the league
Up front the Bucks have the
premier small forward in the
game - MARQUES JOHN SON , the third leading scorer
in the NBA last season For ward DAVE
MEYER S
appears healthy and ready to
resume his starting role of
two seasons ago .
Coming off the bench will
be HARVEY CATCHINGS
and PAT CUMMINGS. The
duo will help consoderably 1n
tbe rebounding department .
where the Bucks were weak
last year. Both may see some
action in the pivot.
KENT BENSON will hold
down the middle. One of the
most improved players from

his

Cavaliers
coast to
•
easy wm

two smce 1943. The Big Red dropped
MassJIIon to take on 1ts ne1ghbonng
nval.
It's feast or Iamme for Hemlock
Miller . The Perry County school ha s
c other shut out 1ts opponents or been
shut out in a 4-2 start
St . Marys , Ohio' s top-ranked Class
AA power. JS averaging 46 .8 points lu
hft 1ts regular season Wlillling streak
tD 28 games . Veteran Coach Ski p
Baughman's Roughriders are after
their third straight playoff berth
Convoy Crestview 1~71 has onl y
lour touchdowns . Two are by a
defensive back, Steve Holden . He
r~turned a pass interception 100
y a r d s for one score a~a in s t
Lafayette Allen East last week .
The Buckeye Conference has a big
game on tap for the second
c~nsec utive week . Elyria, which
mpped Fremont Ross :HJ last Wt'&lt;' k.
a walls Sandusky They both are 1n
Oh 1o·s Class AAA top te n.
E lyr ia Catholic has two members
of tile 200-yard rushmg c lub on a
sm~:l e game th1s fall . John Walker
rushed for 205 yards a~:ainst U.raw
Southview, jotning teammate Kevin
Ziegman 's 287 yards agamst El}Tia
West tile previous week
M1ami Trace's 34jjame South
Cen tral Oluo League winntng streak
JS over . Madison Plains dealt Ohio
SUite quarter bac k Art Schlichter 's
alma rnat~r a 7-6 d!!fea t. Xenia has
three ti es for th e first time in a
smg le season . Wh eele r sb urg 's
winning streak has r eached 16
regular season games. Portsmouth
Notre Dame junwr tailback Tom
Bowman has 1.289 yards r uslun g and
144 points thJS fall .

By Daa Nelsoa
HeadCoadl

to

Thf' Chl&lt;'ago Bulls hav(·
,.! /way s t'nJoyed " r{'putatwn
.J.s u tough ddr nsl \l t' t(•arn &lt;l nd
W4' plan l u Jrnpr ovt• on that

rP pulJtl on
-..-;t-.un

1n 1h r

the

.:t Ilo w

offp n ~t ·

u~

to
murl'

opt•n

19 79 · fW

up

our

Offt:nstvf'ly . wt· will fast ·
break a t Pvcrv av cul a bl e
opport un ity . but ·If the brea k
tsn 't lht&gt;r(&gt; W(' Wtll re ly hcavtl y
on set pcttterns
a n offense
Similar to that of the Wa shm g.
ton Bullets
We Will most llke ly get the
bulk of our scon ng from All S ta r
ce n te r
AHTIS
GILMORE. the NBA 's a ll ·
time leadmg l!eld-goal percentage leader: guard REGG IE THEUS, the leadmg
rooki e scorer last sea son .
guard RICKY SOBERS. and
fo rward DAVID GREEN WOOD. our first -round draf1
c hoice.
Defense. though , wlil be our
strong point . Gilmore is a
domln.attng defender and one
of the prem1er shot blocke r m
the league Greenwood 1s
another strong intimidator
Sobers is one of the best
de fenSive guards m the NBA
Last season he ra nked fourth
in reboundinf among guards
Another of-season acqutSI ·
lion. forward-center COBY
DIETRICK . provides us Wtlh
addllJOnal strength both offensively and defensively .
In the final analysis, we Will
be a young, aggressive, eJCC il ·
ing and improved team

sophomore

ga m ~ .

Atl anla

Thurs'tlay's O•mes
1 1

333

I

Thursday 's Ga-D'es

Portland at U tah
Chic ago at San Diego
Pro Hockey
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
National Hockey League

CamPbe ll Conference
Patrick Division

W l T PIS GF GA
2 J 0 4 16 13

At la n la

2

washington

2

1 0 11 14
2 0 4 10 10

N Y Isla nder s

1

2

0

2

9 11

NY Rangers
1 1 0 2 9 8
Smy1he Division
SI. Lou;s
I 1 I 311 10
Chi c ago
1 1 1
Vancouver
I 1 1
Wi nnipeg
1 2 0
Edmon lon
0 1 J
Co to r ado
0 2 1
Wales Conference
Adams Division
M1nnesota
3 0 0
J 1 0
Butlalo
Boston
J 1 0
Tor onto
1 J 0
Quebec
0 2 0

Farrington
still serious
COLUMBUS, Ohio !AP I - Bob
Farrington , six times the national
harness driving champion, has been
switched ID Olicago's Northwestern
Hospital after sufferi ng serious
injuries in a training accident
Tu esday .
Steve Rosmarin , a spokesman for
Farrington, tnld The Associated
Press via telephone that the ~year­
. ol d veteran suffered paralysis from
the waist down at first
" He has some movement m his
toes now , but does have three
cra cked vertabrae," said Rosrnarin
from Farringtnn's farm at Mokena ,
where the accident happened .
Farrington first was taken to
Silver Cross Hospital in Joliet, IU .
Rosmartn said Valiant Dream, the
horse Farrington was training,
stumbled and flipped the driver out
of his sulky and then rolled over
Farrington.
Farrington, who has 3,070
victories in his career, was the first
driver to reach both 200 and 300
wtnnmg drives in a stngle season . He
won the national championships 10
1961, 1962, 1964, 1965, 1966 and 1967 .
Among his driving assigrunents is
Rambling Willie, pacing's all-llme
career mone y winrer with $1.56
fTl illion .

m.,

New York at Detroit

Ph il ade lph ia

New York Is landers at Boston
Vancouver at New York Rang ers
Atlanta at Philadelph ia
Quebec at Col orado

3 8
3 9
'1 6
2 9

10

10
10

Pacer. 113, Nets 100
Indiana's Johnny Davis scored 26
points, including 12 in the third
quarter when the Pacers built a 21pomt lead and coasted past New
Jersey .
Alex English came off the bench
with 22 points and Billy Knight
a dded 20 as the Pacers, leading from
the start, had little trouble agamst
the Nets.
Cavaliers 137, Ptstonsll7
Randy
Smith scored 2J points as Cleveland
routed Detroit for Coach Stan
Albeck's first victory in three
outings. The Cavaliers took a 4&amp;-26
lead lead into the second period and
collected a club record 79 pomts on
the first half .
Spurs 118, Hawks 116
George Gervin, the de fending
NBA scoring champion, collected 30
points, including the gam.,.winning
basket with four seconds left, to lead
San Antonio over Atlanta. The Spurs
squandered a 22i&gt;&lt;Jint lead amassed
in the first half t o fall behind the
Hawks in the third quarter before
rallying behmd tile &amp;-foot-7 Gervin .
Suns 102, Soules t!6
Center Alvin Adams scored 26
pomts and Truck Robinson added 22
as Ptloenix defeated Seattle. The
game was the first between the t wo
Western Division powers since th e
Sanies eliminated Phoenix in th e
conference finals last year .
Blazers 88, Clippers 81
T .R. Dcmn pumped in 18 points and
harassed San Diego's high-scoriiiK
guards all night to lead Portland
over the Clippers. The victnry was
the third in as man y games for the
Blazers, who grabbed the lead fur
good at 33-J6 on Dunn 's IS-footer
with 4:57 left in the first half.
Lukers 105, Bulls 96
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar scored 21
pomts and collected 10 rebounds to
lead Los Angeles past Chicago .
Jamaal Wilkes added 20 points for
the Lakers and rooki e Magic
Johnson and his backcourt mate ,
Nc.-m Niioo , had 19 points a pi""' for
U.s Angeles, which was playing its
home open 113r .

Mldr..iiL•purt ·I )Oillt' rll)'. 0 ., W.:dnesda y. lk t II. 1 97~'

Uffln~ rs fur the 197~-80 y ea r were

REIBElli HONHREO
Mr and Mrs. He nry 1\ei bel were
honored on the Bob Evans Show
taped at H.itter Park. Huntmgto11 . W.
Va ., Mondsy .
The couple married for 60 'Years
we re presented a planter with red
carnations. Mr. Heibel was 90 years
old last month . They were taken to
Huntmgton by their granddaughter ,
Mrs. Donna Shato a nd her daughter ,
Kristin, and were a ~.:c ompe:micd by
Mrs. Betty Heobel.

4

,

B

Beegl e, second

1\1r:-. . Altce Tlwmpsun , t n ·as urT r .
Mrs Th or•rpsun pr ese nted the
program • m :nakmg 111ft \ r ; tlnt '
ha nge r s
With Mrs
w ~llbu rn

tin_. home of Mr.s Mar june Wa lburn .
Mrs. Addaluu Lewis lfJStalled tile
of fr cers , Mrs. Margaret Pa rke r .
pr t,&gt; s td e nt : Mrs. PHt Thoma .
secretary : Mrs _ Marianne Milr·hell ,
fir s t vr ct&gt; prPsrdent ; Mrs Cora

lhspld yJng sev era l whtdl ....,ile ild~
T he
m e et 1ng upt·nt•LI w1ttl
devull urts b~ Mr s. \\la lburn who Witd
llale llarla nd 's · A Tree of tlor
Own , ' ' aml a rea J mg un ·· f..uve .· · F ur
rull call memUers n.ouned the ir

The

l &gt;fi OII{,•• Our 1.. 1

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HI ... ! A \1 1( \oil 'l r... (",\

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il&lt;h'ert•_, p&lt;•ce
lO l»"fl

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f_oe&lt;-.,1h"lQ &lt;r:&gt;u bo.J\ .ill II.&lt;OQaf •I gu.ao&lt;ilnlMI(l l ot VOl.&gt; ' Hl ~ l

Uhsl,. ~.,.,, ' "9'' dllou o l ma nufK I"'"'

II .,a._,

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COOO ' U H D A ~ OCT " I HI U SATUIOA~ OCT }0 l tn IN

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INCLUDES' 12- ~IECES OF CHICKEN ONLy .
3 THIGHS . 3WINGS. 3LEGS &amp; 3SPIIT BREASTS

2.59
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Barn·O·Chicken .. .. .. Each
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7TH Aven\le Charleston

Rice

CENTER CUT

g radua h·

...,,r.,,.,

·Salad Dressing

RIB

l~ iq

CHOICE

t-.n• I"U • Il rljl;

PORK
CHOPS

a

hcopt Closed Saturday Midnight
Til 9AM Sunday
hupt Hinton , Whito Sulphur &amp;

'«&lt;'"'.u

~ ~ .taverliSeO •ut&lt;n' •!
to t~
h••laO~ 101 wie ,,.. -.:t• ,; , l¥' S tO&lt;I! en~r ••
~ · ~~ tt•.-J 11 -oo rvo""roi~~P~-~

o'

IU'S FBEE (:l'~'TO~I n:.\Tt'lli-:S!

214 !:

L"i

Hts fath er . Willi&lt;J m H. J!o well. tdso
reSJdes on New Have n.

(

570 W. Main
Pomerov, 0.

Pnwt•ll

of Wahar11a Htg li Sehool, :v1 aS( •!l . W
V" .

A ~ DAY

o "' or eo&lt;. II u• ... u

~9~~U)Il~I"-' :L\.4t.~ Kl~fi

DAIRY
VAllEY
992 ·2556

wtll r1u w rt·rel\-"l'

spcriali zl'd ms tru ct1 un m the su ppl;t
f1e id
Ai m J&lt;Hl

·-···-

Dues fur the year were colln t ed
fo r (k.'tober by Mrs
Mttcllell 1/lcludeJ, plantmg rlo r ·
l'JSs us, tul ip and ill y bulbs, fer til iZing I:Jwn . mulchmg leiJVes. arHJ
sr tt111 g out sh(jde trc:-; or shru bs
preft· rabl y 1n b"lled or burlap["'" '
wra pping . S he a lso suggc:-;ted
kcepmg the ~ ra s.s l'U t a&lt;.; lung as 1t
t'Ontlnu es l&lt;J grow. and do1ng some
pr uru ng 1f nt ~_:es.sa r y .
The fal l re g1una l mel'lt ng w ~ a nIJO unced fur Oc t. 27 at the Ba plls t

( ~ a rdening lip~

OPEN
24 HOURS

SPECIAl.

ADOLPH'S

e~inn&lt;:~n

Church Ill Manetta , wtth members
to notif y Mrs. ThomP"on by Oct. 19 if
they plan to attend . " Decorating for
the Holida ys" will be the theme of
the program . The traveling prize
pruv1 ded by Huth Moore was won by
Mrs Pa r ker .
Next meeting will be at the home
of Mrs . Jackie Brickles. Mrs.
Wa lburn se rved a dessert course.

USDA

\1 a,. ·ut

CHICKEN FILLETS $1.49
WITH FRIES ........... s1.79

fovunte fall fl owe rs.
Cuuumtte ~s appointed by th~ new
president mc lude Mrs. Mitt·hell and
Mrs. Thompso n. program.s: M rs .
Beegle. cards and nowe rs; Mrs
Thom ps1Jn. t ours; Mrs . Pe ggy
( 'r o ne. upen mee ti ng; Mrs. M i tc hell
a11d Mrs. Thom JJ6 on. yearbook . Mrs
Pe~ t ThomiJ . Mrs . W!lma Tern:!!.
~ rs . Wa lburn . and .Mr s. l .e w1s. c 1v1t·
bt•rt ut 1f 1cat 1un

h t aUd ition , a wuJ~n who l"om plt•te
basic traming ea lll c rcd ~ ts tu w&lt;.~ nJ s
an assu&lt;.'lale de}.:!ref 111 l:lpplled sr·ten·
ce thr ough the ConHntmtty ( 'ull e~ e
11r the Air Force

WILLIAM POWELL
ASSIGNED
SAN ANTONIO, Texas -- Airman
Wliliam M Powell. son of Na ncy 1..
Powell of New Have n, W. Va ., has
been a ssigned to Lowry Air Fore.:!!
Base , Colo. , after completing A1r
~ orce bas oc train mg .
During the six weelL'\ at i..&lt;Jckland
Air Foree Base, the airman studied
t he Air Force mission , organizat ion
and customs and rece1ved spec ia l
tr;ti nina in h.,,.., ~,. ...... J~tj,..n .,.

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORE

\l O t !

pn·s rd L·n l . and

\' Jl"l'

rnst..:tlled and a prognun un mak!llJ::!
ma c rame hangers was prese nted &lt;:1 l
the Th ur sday night mee tin g of the
W1ndmg Trail Garden Club held a t

,---------~--~~~=~

1 6 9

0

Hogt.•r and Pam~ la Chan~y are announcing the birth of the or forst
child, a daughter, Ange la Vada
Da wn. ShewasbornonSept. l 2at Sl.
Joseph Hcr;pita l •nd weighed t1ght
pounds , 12 oum: es a nd wa s 21 IJJ L'hcs
long . Grandparents Ci r e WiUiarn and
Ada Congrove, Heedsvi lle, and J olm
and Dorotlly Chaney . Mmcrsv11ie .

&lt;.

lt

6 14 6
4 15 10
4 10 6
2 8 lt

Winding Trail Gardeners instal/ '79 officers

Hirth announced

Portla nd trunrned San D1ego ~I
and Los Angeles beat Chicago tila-96.
Warriors 108, Nuggets 106
John Lucas and JoJo White 1gnited
Golden State's fast break in the third
period , triggering the Warriors past
Denver . The two Golden State
guards, who com bine d lor 39 points,
led the Warriors ID a ~mt third
period tha t wiped out a 00-54
halftime advantage for Denver

ll iHI •· r ' ' '' Ut"

We 1 oadly AC:t:ept·Fed . l'ood Sl1111p's

2 lb.

Vaocouver at St. Lou is
Detroit at Winn ipeg

Indiana at Atlanta
Sa n Antonio at Cl eve l and

~)

PHEBE ' S STORE

FIG BARS

'1

1 1 333 1
H o u st on
0 3 000 2
We stern Conference
Midwest Division
Kansas City
I 0 I 000
Milwa ukee
2 1 61J7
Chi c ago
I I
333 1
Utah
a 2 000 ! 1 '1
Denver
0 3 000 2
Pac111c Div1sion
Phoenix
30 1000
Portl and
301000
2 0 j{)()()
I 'l
L os A ngeles
1 1333)
Go lden State
San Di ego
I J
333 J
Sea ttle
0 '} 000 1 1' 7
Tuesday 's Games
Sa n Anton io 118, Atla n ta 116
New York 126, Houston 121
Clevela n d 137 , Oetro•1117
Indiana 113, New Jersey 100
Golde n Stat e 108, Denver 106
Phoen 1x 102 , Se att le 86
Los Angeles 105, Chicago 96
Portla nd 88. San Di eg o 81
Wednesday's Games
Cleve land ctf Boston
P hilade lphi a at New Jersey
A tlanta at Washington
Denver at Milwaukee
Golden State a t Kansa s City
1ndiana at H ouston
Los Ange les at Seattle

LB.

Kraft Dinners

1

Wednesday's Games
Los Angeles at Pittsburgh
Minnesota at Toronto
Hartford at Buffalo

THIS WEEK'S

5th &amp; Pearl

15 oz. Cans

1

I

Cleveland

$}89 STEAKS

00

0 1 2 J B 10
Hartford
0 1 2 2 7 10
Tuesday's Games
W ash ington 8, Los Angeles 6
N ew York Islanders 5, Atlanta 1

St rlt 1nel.

Df"t!~n your own t·lu8e rirlf(

·'

Mond1y thru Friday
9:o0tll7:00
Solurdly 9:00-9 :OOl
CLOSED
SUNDAYS .

J

I

COLLEGE
MISS ION, Kan. I AP 1 - The
Unive rsity of San Francisco
basketball program has beeu placed
on a one-year probation for several
violations comnunitted between 1972
and 1976, the NCAA said.
The proba lion is the result of a 36month investigation into the Dons'
program unde r former Coach Bob
Gaillard . The probation will keep
USF out of postseason play until
after the 198().ill season .

Oet ro;t

W. L.Pct . GB
Boston
'1 0 I 000
Philadelphia
2 0 I 000
N ew York
2 1 667
N ew Jersey
I 1 500
Washington
0 1 000
Central Oi'll'ision
Detroi 1
2 1 667
1ndiana
2 1 607
San Antonio
I
1 500

scor er w1th 27 points. Tuesday mght ,
he played a 'game-high 43 minutes .
In other NBA action, Golden State
defeated Denver lOS-106, Indiana
stop ped New Jersey 113-100.
Oevela nd whipped Detroit 137-117 ,
San Antonio "edged AUanta 118-116,
Phoenix turned back SeatUe 102-M,

Norris Division
Pittsburgh
2 0 1 5 11 6
Montreal
2 0 0 4 6 2
Los Angeles
1 1 1 3 15 15

National
Ba sk etball Association
At A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Atlantic Division

Austin Carr was a cloSt! second
w1th 22 points.
The Cava lier s scored a club
record 79 points m the first hal f,
settmg a scoring mark for the e nure
contest as well .
Detrmt roo kie Greg Keiser led the
Pistons with 21 points .
Oeveland Cenl€r John Lambert ,
who sta nds &amp;-feet-10 and we1gh s mat
220 pounds was mat£hed up a ga1nst
Bob Lanie r , who is &amp;-II and 250
poWJdS .
!:lut Lambert had II rebounds a nd
&gt;&lt;·ored 7 po.m ts tn 2ll mmutes, wh1le
l.arue r had 7 rebounds and 13 points
m 22 rnmutes .

The· ;-lthlt•tt•s on ou r &lt;'lub
lh1." yt·i.lr :ihould nut !l nly play
a rnurt· dl(gr rssl\lt dPfe nst·.
but Lht •lr ta le nts shoul d also

campaigns, Benson flts we ll
into the Bucks' play.
Overall, the Bucks have a
young club with a nice mi• of
playoff experience . They'll be
a running club with a controlled fast break .

Cartwroght scored 31 pomts while
huldmg Malone to 17. And the result
was a 12&amp;- 121 victo r y for the Kni cks .
" Tomght I learned how to play
Muses Malone ," said Cartwright. " I
dec ided to keep Moses away from
tile boards and keep him from
ge tting mside the basket area .
Basically , I thmk I s ucceeded . He
was lakin~: shots he d idn 't want to
take . If I had to play against Malone
wmorrow, I'd play hmo the same
way I played tum to mght "
Cartwright, ti1e 7-foot-1 product of
tile University of San Francisco who
was the Kn1cks' No . 1 draft pick thos
ye ar, os demonstrallng durab1hty as
well as court savvy ror a roo ki e . In
the Kmcks ' other victory this
season, a 12:&gt;-118 overtime game
against tile Washington Bullets last
Sat urday, Cartwright played 50
mmutes and wa s th e team 's high

By KEN KAPPOJ'ORT
AP Sports Wrlttr
Bt•fore playmg tile New York

7 - Tl-w._· Den!~

ggc

�I' he lJtJ tl ) St'llt tllt.'l . \ l tddlq.hll't -1'urru·ru.'&gt; . 1) . Wt ·d;wsd ~• -"

t )d

I7.

9- The Daily Sentmel, Mlddlrp~~rt -P• H rH' ru~ .

Pll~l

(J ,

Wt·l hwsday, Oct. 17, 1979

. :-::-:::::::::

....

Second 'Stardates ' performer set

Star Gardeners install officers

)
·:.·

IUO GRANDE - f'olk, rock and
New officers were installed when
gospel singer, Jooh White is the
the
Star Garden Club met at lhe
second performer in Hio G1 ande
home
of Mrs. Eugene Atkms and
College and Cooununity College's
Miss
Huby
D1ehl .
"Starda tes " Artist and Lecture
Mrs.
Henry
Turner installed Mrs .
Series.
James
Nicholson,
president ; Mrs .
White , who tours over 150 college
Atkins,
first
vice president ;
Eugene
campuses a year in addition to his
album recording dates a nd
teleVIsion niteclub appearances, will
appear in the colleg.,'s cafeteria
MASON - Officers were eleded
Thursday , Oct. 18at 8:30p.m.
when the Mason Busy Bees met at
His repertoire includes tunes he's
the Mason Youth Center recentl y.
adapted from his father 's illustrious
The officer.; are Angie Johnson ,
career as well a.s from such writers
president ; Melarue Mossman , vtce
as Marvin Hamlisch. Raun McKin president ; Marcia
Sisson.
non and Bill Danoff.
secretary; Patty Oh lin ger,
"I sing because it's an expression
treasurer ; Tammy Hupp, reporter;
of my soul," said White. "Everyone
Judy Stodola, historian; Mary Alice
can be touched if we just find the
Sisson and Becky Hoffman. song
right song."
leader ; and I .a Donna Bennett and
The "Stardates" series at Rio
Kelly Reynolds, game leaders .
Grande, of which White is he second
National 4-H Week was observed
performer, has four performances
by participating m two exhi bits. Offollowing White. Gil Eagles, hY]&gt;ficers training school was annotist and psychic will appear on
nounced for Nov . 3, 10 a.m unhl
Dec. II. Bob Verbeck will acnoon for all officers A hayride was
cOOJpany an evening of silent films
set for Oct :'n, and the achi evement
Jan.9.
banquet was announced lor Nov . 17
Three classic films will be shown
at 7:30 p.m. at the Point Pleasant
oo March 10. They are the 1937 "A
Junior High School.
Star is Born", ''The Red Shoes," and
Laurel and Hardy in "Way Out
PO'Il.UCK HELD
West."
A
poUuck
dinner was held at the
Wrapping up the seMon series will
home
of
Mr.
and Mrs . Everett Hut·
be former senator and chairman of
ton and family on Sunday .
the historic Watergate hearings,
Attending were Mr.~ . Don Hutton,
Sam J. Ervin, Jr.
Mr
. and Mrs . Tim Hutton , Mr . and
Tickets for each performance are
Mrs
. Roy Jeffers , Mrs. Pat
$5 per person.
Hoisington,
Nathan and Patrick
Savings can still be realized by
Hoisington,
Athen s;
Elsie
purchasing season tickets at $15 for
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Bob
Sutherland,
individuals, $20 for couples, and $25
Graham,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Errunett
Mc for the entire family .
Caskey,
Mrs.
Betty
OUver,
Vincent
For ticket information call Rio
and Randy Oliver, Rutland ; Mr. and
Grande College and Commuruty
Mrs. Walter Jewell, Keith Hypes of
College 2~. ext. 214 between 9
Dexter; Bill Holcomb, Mr. and Mrs.
and4p.m.
Andersoo Wooten, Mr. and Mrs.
Everett Hutton, Stanley, Gary and
David Hutton, Albany.
ATIEND WEDDING
Mr. and Mrs . Henry Reibel and
Mr. and Mrs . Donley Reibel were in
Wilkesville Saturday for the wedding of Donnie Eugene Strong and
Shelly Wright , Gallipolls.

October

14-20

ASalutt ...,.
The local B · &amp; PW Club is olfllialed with No Ilona I F.cleratlon of Buolnou and
Profouional Women 's Clubs, Inc., and tho Ohio Federation of Business and Proloulonal

National Business Women's WHk w.as Hrst ctllbrlt.c:l April 15th through 22nd, 1921,
wtth tM t~nnounced purpose of dram1tizing tht contributions of women to the btnlnessand
Pf'Ofessional life of tM country . Pest NaUonal Prnkltnt Len. M. Phllnps wrote :

Women's clubs .

As a servi&lt;o club, Middleport BusinHs and Profftslonal Womtll's .Ciub hlvo as
proleeh o HMpltal Loan Cenler, with sl&lt;k room suppiiHI ScMIIniiiJ Fund lor Nurvs
Training Corps at Holler Hospital; Cooperotlon in Clvi&lt; Affairs, lncluclnt 1111 Hurt Fund
Drive for 29 years, ond recently liMy hive taken on lht collec:tlng ollundsln tho Middltport

" BUSINESS WOMEN 'S WEEK SHOULD STRIKE A RESPONSE FROM THt HEART
AND EFFORT OF EVERY LOYAL FEDERATION ... HERE IS A CHANCE TO REVEAL
AND TO INTERPRET THE VALUES OF OUR CLUB LIFE AND WORK TO OUR
NEIGH BORS. INDEED, TO ALL CITIZENS OF OUR COMMUNITIES"
From these earl~ efforh, Niifionill Business Women 's WHk h.as grown to bt a nation ·
wtM recognttton of Busmess and Proteuion1l Wom., •s contribution n citi1tns today and
of fh e leadership they are prowiding in the tconomy , ~ctciel , cultural, business and
pro•es~•onal lite of the Unit~ States . Now htld durtng the third full week of October, it is •n
o uf &gt;tan din~ publ• c relat ions event . 1 stimulus to Pf"otram interpretation 1nd an aid to
memb{'rshtp prCJqress .
On the local scene ~ Mtddleoport ButirMnend ProNnlonal Women 's Club was organized
tn 1946 bv th e Gallipolis 8 &amp; PW Club. The charg•r is dated July I , 1946 , although the club
was

ore~a n•le-d

area for th1 Cancer fund and Cystic Fib,-osis funds . They twve supported the Meigs
Memorial HospitaL Gtrl to Bud:eye State, and sponsored WRAP Prot~rems ... 11 well IS
participating in local parades.
The interests of all busin~s and professional wom~ ue sh1rtd by the PUHonel
Federation of Business and ProfessiOnal Women's Clubs, Jnc . A non -partlun, nonwctari.in , non-profit , self -supporting and self-governing organl11tion . NFBPWC is .a
represented by appro•im1tely 17S,OOO worlcl09 women in the fifty states of our nation, the
Dt strict of Columbta, th e Virgin Islands and Puer1o Rico . The Nltl0111l Federation is 1
member of the International Federation of Business and Protesslon11 Womtn.

•n Mav of '46.

The Emblem ..•
~IKE

SHIP OF COMMERCE

The Greek goddess of wictor:· traditionally pl1ctd on the prow of a ship is
an expression of the Federation mowement in the face of prejudice and
hmitaflon . The Hike also depicts individual drength and courag•.

TORCH

The symbol of leadership and wisdom ; it signifies our obligation to ligh 1
the WilY for aiL And is an t~tpreufon of our c•reer ad-wAn cement program .

WARL
Represents the staH of Mercury, herald of a new area of opportunity and
equality fhrough IW!atrt\, harmony and power . It signifif~'!l our He-alth and
~ftty Proc;~~ram .

·11'1 A Pl

Typifies the entrance of wom•n In to business 11 well 11 our outer
communication with the world in accomplishing our oble'-'lvts. It II
ssymbolic of our International Rtlltion Program .
. ··

SCROLL OF LEARNING

Signifies our faith in the future and our obligation to thoU who foBow .
Symbolizes our Public Affairs and Legislative progrems.

THESE
FIVE SYMBOLS
These tlve symbolizes the initials N .F. B. P.W.C . 1nd the inscripf1011
~our

lflf

foundinQ date) are bound in a gold circle, signifying unbrok.n

and loyolty lo Fedoralion Ideal•.

:"ii'OTI.U; II 'P-i TilE .\U liE\ Dl E \T"i 01 · 01 H

\\ E E"ii'Ec:J.\I.U SAUTE THE \JIJ)UI.EI'OHT Bl

REAL ESTATE - INSURANCE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THE DAILY SENTINEL
POMEROY , OHIO

RAll'S BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MEIGS INN/PIZZA SHACK

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
POMEROY, OHIO

TEAFORD REALTV
G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

CHESTER, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY. OHIO

VAllEY LUMBER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE FOOD MARKET
RACINE, OHIO

EWING FUNERAL HOME
POMEROY, OHIO

WESTERN AUTO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SI~ES"i &amp; I'ROFE~~IO.'ii\1. \\0\IE~·s

ROYAL CROWN BOTTliNG CO.

BAUM TRUE VALU

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

\IT liS \\ OB" IV; \\ 0\1 E,,

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

um \II

MARGUERITE SHOES

POMEROY , OHIO

TWIN CITIES GATEWAY

BETH HINDY

WORKIN6 WITH)lOIJ •

\ \1'10'\ \1. Bl "il\l·: "i:-1 \\0\lEY"i \\ EE" !HTOHI&lt;H lith TIIHOL (;II 21hh

DOWNING CHILDS AGENCY

Halloween
fare set

SMITH NELSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO

PAT HILL FORD
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CLl iB.

FABRIC SHOP
POMEROY, OHIO

MARK V
POMEROY, OHIO

ERWIN'S GULF SERVICE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

heritage house

The reg10nal meeting was announced for Oct. 25 at Marietta . The
travelin~ prize donated by Mrs. G.
A Hadekm was won by Mrs. Turner .
Mrs
. Virgil Atkins won the hostess
arrangement theme for her ingift.
stallation ceremony, comparing the
Mrs. Orion Nelson's topic was
officers to the needlepoint holder,
''Spnng
Flowering Bulbs." She said
the members to the conlalner, and
they
add
an array of color in early
the execu tive board to the frame
and
they grow and flower
spring,
work of the arrangement She said
with
litUe
care.
Now is the time to
that each member must be ready
se
lect
new
bulbs
, she said, and
and willing to serve as it takes all
suggested
adding
something new
parts to make a good arrangement.
this
year
She
also
sa id that narEach offi cer was presented a corcrocus,
daffodils,
and hyacincissus,
sage by Mrs. G. A. Hadekin.
ths
should
be
planted
in
the
fall, She
Miss Ruby Diehl gave devotions
explained
depth,
soil
and
mulch
to
using U1e theme "The Li ving
be
used.
Message" with Mrs. Eugene Atkins
Mrs . Virgil Atkins talked about
conducting a Bible quiz. The creed
fall
cleanup. She sa1d to burn
and collect were given by the mem which might cause disease ,
anythlng
bers. The county garden club
and
put
the
rest of U1e plant material
meeting was announced, and plans
in
the
compost
pile. She also
were made for a therapy program at
suggested
setting
out
shrubs and
the Gallipolis State Institute on Oct.
trees
before
it
freezes.
She read a
25 . Mrs . Nonnan Will wlll have
poem,
"Odober"
by
Longfellow
.
charge of the program.

ACE HARDWARE

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY NATIONAL BANK
POMEROY, RUTLAND. TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

... .

POMEROY, OHIO
RACINE, OHIO

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPI
POMEROY, OHIO

THE SEWING CENTER
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

The

w 1N

l ighter h as

p1ez0
it~

tained energy
on a tour h fl 1nts

own

cl~
e1ectron 1c
~e lf con

~o ur ce

Lights

no batteries, no

lullftl'22~
GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST., POMEROY
OP~ ,... Ji·lt'4

II 109 l ()
1 t&gt;

".,U N Dl&gt; 'f

··r::=l·l ......-.....

Ahalloween party was planned for
Oct. 31 when the Loog Bottom Com·
munlty Asaociation met recently at
the community building. The party
will be a cooturne affair for the
members and those not in cootwne
will be penalized .
Preceding the meeting a products
party W8ll held with a portion of the
proceeds going to the group . Mrs.
Leona Hensley presided at the
meeting which opened with the
pledge of allegiance, scripture and
the Lord's Prayer. Mrs. Mae Mc Peek gave the secretary's report,
and Mrs. Ernestine Hayman gave
the treasurer's report .
Francis Andrew expressed appreciation to those who remembered
him during his illness and
hospitalization. It was ooted that An·
drew and Tom Hayman will be
making necessary preparations for
the new parking area .
Attending were Mrs. Leona Hensley, Mrs . Mae McPeek, Mrs . Ernestine Hayman, Mrs . Dora Crispin,
Mrs . Jenny Newlun, Mrs. Janie Fitch, Mrs. Ruby Brewer, Sanuny
Rairden, Mr . and Mrs . Tom
Hayman, Paige, Beth and Ginger,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bissell, Mr . and
Mrs. Bill Thurston , Mr. and Mrs .
Francis Andrew, Mr. and Mrs .
Qyde Adams, Mr . and Mrs . Slanley
Wells and Mr . and Mrs . Paul
Hauber.

• ~- r rr A

•r~·

•'

0::. &amp;\' "" ''"'~\

,. .

.

. r.

: :.., ·.

'.

.....

..... ·- .

:_;
:~

MRS. DONNA Davidson . "Woman of the Wee k" for the Middleport
BWPClub.

~Donation

--·

Gl OR/A GAYNOR

. '·

1 Have a Ri ght

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

POMEROY, OHIO

a touch of

,___THE SAVING PLACE

1-lomecoming observed

....

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROW'S FAM llY RESTAURANT

WIN

./

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
FRANCIS FLORIST

..

MEIGS AUTO PARTS

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

POMEROY. OHIO

Mtddleport and Doris Curry. Sew Haven and Kaymond Fields, New
Haven, is the new featured twtrler w1th the Tiger Mar chtng Band of Circleville High School. &amp;th, a &gt;ophomore. has tw~rled for 10 years and has
taken lessons for f1 ve She was the milita ry commande r of the Blue Lancers and sill' has comP"ted for four'""" She has been a majorette for
~ lhree year; and a feat ured twtrler for two Sume of the comments about
·· Beth are . "she lS really good", ·fanl&lt;l,tw "fleth also plays the PICcolo
and the flute for the band . Her huhlll e» ae softba lls, tenms and tWll'ling .
:;he is on the Circle staff and a m ember of the marc hmg and concert ban·
' - ds . She is also ii membf.·r of Studt·nl Coun{' \1 cmcl the CHS tenrus team and
sophomore projects ( llatmlan .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RAWLINGS
COATS FUNERAL HOME
'
·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FEATURED TWIHIEH - Beth Hint!y . daug hter of Mr. and Mr.~.
Dan Hindy , Circlev ille, and granddaughter of ~r . and Mr~ . Cass Hindy,

:}

Mrs. Kearn ey Ogdin, second vlt'e
president; Mrs . Orion Nelson.
secretary and treasurer.
Mrs . Turner used the flower

Busy Bees meet

National
Business
Women's
Week

·- :;:;:;:::::: :::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::\

made Thursday

=: A donation to Christmas sea ls w&lt;Js

: :uade by the Philathea Women of the
•• Middleport Chur ch of Chnst.
:.' meeting Thursday night at the chur! : ch.
.
• Plans were finalized for prepann g
! and serving the Homebu ilders
~ banquet tonight. Mrs. Betty
:: McKmley presided at the meetmg
~ which opened with the Ph1lathea
~! sdng
Mr.~ . Kathy Erwin gave
• devotions , and there """ a readin.-1'
"l&lt;'alse Faces. " Mrs . Dorothy Roach
and Mr.~ . Farie Cole gave the
secretary and treasurer 's reports .
Mrs . Grace Hawley reported on
nowen anc1 cards. and those on the

s1ck ltst were Cannan Evans, Vin-

cent Martin. Josephine Uttman , a nd
Mr . and Mrs. Huss Bailey.
Mrs . Lena McKinley, Mrs. Erwin ,
and Mrs Bea Stewart were
hostesses with Mrs . Sharon Stewart
and Mrs. Debbie Melton 8ll con tnbuting h&lt;"tesses
Others attendmg were Mrs.
Marga ret Jones, Mrs. Everlyn
Murray. Mrs . Heva Beach, Mr.~ .
Kathryn Erwin, Mrs. Ella Mae
Daugherty, Mrs . Mary Bailey, Mrs .
Mabel Walburn , Mrs. Beulah Roush.
Mrs. Martha O.ilds , and Miss
Mildred Hawley . Mrs. Eleanor
I..oh'5e was a ~uest.

TUPPERS
PLAINS
Homecoming wM observed Sunday
at the St. Paul United Methodist
O.urch with guest singers being the
Angelaires, and Mrs . Bonnie
Thomas, Mrs. Sarah Lunsford, and
Mrs. Linda Damewood.
There wM a potluck dinner at
12 :30, following the morning worship
service attended by 58 with 50 lor
SWlday school The Rev . Richard
Tholll88 used scripture from Mark 9
for the sennon.
The Adult Bible ClJw meeting will
be held on Oct. 22 at the home of May
Viney, 7p.m.TI}e class recently met
at the home ol dtester Gorrell for a
wiener roast. A bake sale w8ll held
by the wmien of the church on Oct 6
and on Sunday, Oct. 7, conununion
was observed.

ALBUM

®UADR OP HENIA
' " , ' ,r.

r'

ALBUMS

8-TRACKS OR

596

647

CASSETIES

8-TRACK OR

CASSETIE

.1 " ot •I ' ' ' " '

""

.'.1 • .. ' ' '· ""

1047

..

28
Your Choice·

Book and Record Sets

410 Grand central Mall
Ph. 422 -2402

" Superheroes come to ltfe for ltttle
believer s 1n lh•s com•c book and

Kohler &amp; Campbell Piaoos
All THOMAS ORGANS
20% OFF

record se1 10

45 RPM record

Four fav or1te llt.:roes

-

on Sale at This Time

to 7 year warranty.

....

996

. .. .,.
r&gt;· •·, 1 • "•

Vienna Music Center

All Thomas Organs with 3

'

-

1~5 UPPER RIVER ROAD, GALLIPOLIS

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy . 0 .. Wednesday, lkl. 17. 1979

Frances Barrett Lucas speaks to DAR
Frances Barrett Lucas. natiOnal
vice chainnan of the National
Defense Committee of the

Daughters of the Amencan
Revolution, was guest speaker at the
Fnday meeting of Return Jonathan

-

7

Me1gs Chapter at the home of Mrs
Owlght Milhoan .
Aspects of the country's national
defense including the SALT Treaty
were rev1ewe&lt;l by Mrs. Lucas who
has been active with the OAR in
many capacities for the past quarter
century . She is marr1e&lt;l to a retired
Lt. Colonel in Air Intelligence and
while m Washington with her
husband served as executive
secretary lor the National Society
OAR there. She has been a member
of the OAR National ResolutiOns
Committee and national vice chairman of the conuni ttee, as well as
national chairman for the OAR
Speakers Staff.
Mrs . Lucas wrote for some time

for the DAR Magazine and prepared
nat10nal defense material for
mwling . She has testified before
House and Senate Committees pertaining
to
DAR
National
Resolutions, and has appeared on
radio and television many times.
The spea ker attended Western
College for Women, Ohio State
University, and the Carnegie Institute at Tectmology maJoring in
art and clinical philnsophy . She was
introduced to the local chapter
member~ by Mrs " Pat Ingles ,
program

chainnan .

Mrs . Gene Yost presided at the
meeting which opened m ritualistic
form " Mrs . Patrick Lochary ,
chaplain, held memorial services
for Mrs. Marcia Hobstetter.

Birthday noted

f-'fdiiC£' .1

15ri!TL'II

Jnshua Allen Phalin, son of Mr.
and Mrs . Doug Phalin, celebrated
his first birthday recently with a
party at the home or his paternal
grandmother, Mrs . Virgmia Phalin .
A Mickey Mouse theme was
carried out. Cake, ice cream, pop,
candy and Kool-Ald were served to
his maternal grandmother, Mrs .
Esther DeMoss, Kim , Karla, Marty
and Richard, Anna Bru!:ter . Mr. and
Mrs . Terry Phalin , Amy and Tera
Dawn, Mrs . Kathy Phalin and
Tonya, Mr . and Mrs . Jack Jacobs
and daughter. Mr . and Mrs . Ronnie
Phalin and Som, Mr. and Mrs . Jeff
Martin and Ryan, Mrs. Kathy Fife,
Tracy and Terri Lynn, Gail nd
Toma. and Keith Phalin .

f.tiL '&lt;i.\

t.tw

:-:--:-:-:--:-:-- Mobile Homes - Rent
"-

TWO

&lt;"UUntry With

tuned to ABl'
\BC had four shows 1n the wt't'k 's
Top 10. mcludmg " The Miracle
Wllrkl·r :· .. l.HIPs. " " LJ ttle Houst•
on tht· Pratnc " and a mor1e. ·· When
Ht•ll was

In

Session "

" 'Illt' \1iraelt&gt; Wurkt•r," a new
tt•lt' \l SIUn versiOn of the stage and
scn·en h1t of two decades ago,
fm1.shed fourth m the ra tin gs, behind

second game m the baseball
champmnstlips betwet•n Baltimore
and Pltlsbuigh, UJS' " M-A-S-H,"
and the series· first ~ame
The rating for the week 's mostwatche&lt;l show, the second game of
the series Thursday night , was 28 .6.
Nielsen says that means of all the
homes m the co un try With televiSIOn,
2JL8 pt•r ct•nt s aw at !t•ast o part off
tht• spu rt s spccJal.
thL·

"

mo ~ J d f'

BEDROOM

hom e. partly
turn1shed
Mid d l eag e d
or
elderl y
people preterred No pet s,
no children Deposit 9'91

Thund•J. Oct. 11

-

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bern1ce Bede O so l

27-49 .

__V'i an t,ed to B_IJ}'
' CHIP WOOD Poles ma:.
diam eter 10 " on la r ges t
end . $12 per ton Bund led
slab $10 per ton Del1vered
to Ohio Pallet Co , Rt 1.

Pomeroy 992 2689

Octobet' 11. 1171
Many m1eres11no changes are •n
store tor you th1s commg year
Thmugt1 these happemngs you ' ll
gall1 a more op1 1m1Sl 1C oul!oot&lt;
As your op 11m1sm gr ows , so

OLD

FURNITURE .

boxes,

brass

be do. .

'ce
1

ron

oeds, des.ks , ere , complete
households .
Wr ite M D
Mill er . Rf . 4, Pomeroy or
call'l'/1 77/IJ .

OLD COI NS, P&lt;&gt;&lt;kel wt
c hes , class r 1ngs . wedding
bands , diamonds . Gold or
silver . Call J A Wamsle y ,

742 1331 .
WANTED :

SAW

logs .

Payment upon de livery to
our yard , 7 : 30 To 3 : 30 week
days . Blaney Har dwoods .
SR 339, Barlow . OH . 6!8

2980.

ANTIQUE S.

FUR

NITURE .

china .

g lass,

anyth ing . See or ca ll RuTh
Gosney , antiques , 26 N

your success
LIBRA (Sept. 23· 0CI . 23) tt

Auto Sales
1916 MONT E CARLO . 3SO
eng1n e , low m il eage $2600

ANTIQUE POCKET wal

CATALINA

1913
Willing to pa y top

Call

II

spec•ty btrth date
SCORPIO (Oct. 24--Nov. 22)
Much can be !earned today by
playing t~ obse~er's role on
the sidelines Stand back a lillie
to gam a c learer perspec11v~
SAQITIARIUS (Now. 23-Dec. 21)
Try no t to let your amb1t1ons

9911656

ches.

w1 ll

su .
uation you are 1n\/Oive&lt;l 1n w1tt1
another has not beefl runnmg
too smoothly totety 1t" s 11me 10
assume a more i1C!1ve rote so
thal you c an Q81 th1ngs back o n
course F1nd out more ot what
lies ahead tor you 1n the year to llowmg your birt hday by sendmg
lor yo ur copy ol Astro .Graph
Let1er f.A&amp;1I S 1 lo r eact~ to AstraGraph , Bo,; 489 . Rad•o C1ty
Slal 101'1 . N Y tOO t9 Be sure to

2nd, Middleport , OH . '1'11
3161.

dollar .

telenswn were

P O NTIAC
C hevy

tru r to.

bed '1'1 2 2101

become more 1mpor111nt today
than wmn1ng and hOIOmg tr ..nos
Pals are more worthwhile than
power
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22· J•n. HI)
Yo u t1a"e the abili ty to come out
on top m a sticky compet111ve sit uat iOn toda)" w1thout msk•ng olh ·
ers angry You 're tougt1 bu tlaH
AQUARIUS (J8n. 20-Feb. li)
You should be able to get an
accurate grasp of s•tu8l10ns
today because of your ab1hly to
see M th S1d8S Ol the ISSue s ACI
m accordance with your sound
Judgment
PIBCE:S (feb. 20--M•' · 20) You(
rewards will De greater tO&lt;lay
trom things you manage l or oth·
ers than from those you do only
lor yot.H&amp;etl Cons1der your needs
§BCOndary
ARIEl (M8retl 21 · April 18) Bal ·
ance your 11me w•sely today . with

work and play proport•onately
ttqUIII An

imbalance could cause

frust ratiOns
T AUAUS I Ap&lt;ll ~ Moy :Ill)
Much can be accomplished
today 1f you let cooperation be
param ount 1n your thougtns. By
heip.ng other s, YOtJ 'il 1\elp your sell

GEMINI

(M•y 21 · June 20)
Somet hing you-..lfl been poslpon.
mg because ot tear 11 m~ht be
too ditficult can be accomplished
w1th surprising ease today . pro·
v1df!d yoo have couragt'l to takl'l
the flrst steps .
CANCER (June 2t -Julr 22)
Th1ngs will w ork out to your lik ing today It your att1tude is pos1 -

For Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home

ROOM

AND

board .

work•ng p e r!.ons or retired

weekly

992 6012

evenings .

1916 FO RD VAN . CB. AM

WANTED :

FM c a ssel e . 6 r yl . ( ap
tam· s rna 1r S 991613 7

J AND 4 RM furnished ap
ts Phone 992 5434

NEW 1979 Ford L T O Coun
tv Squ 1r e st at•on wagon
Low mi le age . lots a t ex
tr as . Will sacrifi ce ~2

APT , S125 , S50 dePQsi t

JU NK .

Bat

terles , radiators , moTor s .
Trans . No Sunda y

auto .

ca ll s . 949 "2563.
WANTED .

STANDING

timber, $100 a

thousand

5752

SMALL

992 -6319 .
WANTED : Used amps Call

1914 CHEVY PICKUP , 350
engine , aut o , os , pb .

Kelly Thomas 742 ·2139 or

white spoke wheels . ill50

John Van Meter, 742 2006 .

9'12 1841

BUYING SILVER US
COINS . WILL PAY 95c
FOR DIMES , $2 .37 F'lR
QUARTERS, $4.15 FOR
HALVES, $11.50 FOR
SILVER DOLLARS , $US
FOR CLAD HALVES (1965"
19691. ALSO S190 PER
POUND FOR STERLING
SILVER . ALSO WANT
GOLD CLASS RINGS ,
WEDDING BANDS. DEN "
TAL GOLD, PLATINUM .
TREASURE CHEST COIN
SHOP, TOP OF MILL, RT .
33 SOUTH !POMEROY
RD . ), ATHENS , OH .
PRICES GOOD TILL
MONDAY .

•

1915

Furn1':&gt;hed No c hildren .. no
pets J07 Spring Ave :

COMET .

good

c'ondi11 o n 949 2417

EFFECIE NCY

apar t me n t suitable tor one
work•ng or retired per
son Call 992 5738 a fter 6

pm

LARGE HOU SE f or renT in
eastern part of cou n ty For
information , c all Fred w

Truckload Of New Tools
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 19th, 6 P.M.
Complete selection hand tools , air tools, and electric
tools for plumbers , carpenters, mec hanics , electricians,
and contractors . Tools for every need including air c om "
pressors, welders , sanders and grinders, etc.
Refreshments available .
Howard Beasley, Auctioneer

State Rl. 7, 2 miles south of Middleport, O,

CREATIVE
TOUCH
&amp;
Joshua fJIJalm

FASHION MACHINE

1030

'450

WITH A 3 YEAR .
SERVICE CONTRACT
FEATURES
• E~,clusive Flip &amp; Sew panel ,' horizontal "spinning
ree l thread deliv_ery, exclusive( ' Magic" button -fitting
button holer, ad1ustable maxi "stretch, wide zig "zag
slilch, snap "on presser feet, push button bobbin wind
front drop "'" bobbin, built "in speed basting and a full
year warranty:

30

JUST RIGHT FOR CHRISTMAS

ASSORTED SIZE SEWING BASKETS
LAY AWAY NOW

FABRIC SHOP
112 W. 2nd Ave .

Pomeroy, 0.

tagfl . It w ill wOfk because you' ll
be sincere
_

VIRGO

(AUil.

2l-S.pt.22)

Be

ater1 today and tomorrow lor
pouibililies t o add to your
reib urces or enhance your
se&lt;:unty lnterest1ng develop ments could occur
IHfWSPAPEA ENT(RPAI SE A3 5'&lt; I

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW, Engl ,sh
and Western Sadd les and
harness .
Horses
and
ponies . RuTh Reeve \ 614 ·
698 3290
Bar ding dnd
Riding Lessons i'lnd Horse
Care pr oducTs . western
boots . Children's $15 .50 .

Adults l29 oo
R I SI N G

STAR

Kennel .

Boarding Ca ll367 0191
POODLE

KENNELS .

IM

Yard Sale
PORCH
s·ALE
Starts
Wed ., runs ti ll all ~I d . Ou f
s i oe
Chr1stmas
decorations , brown ve l vet
pictures and m 1sc items
Karl Kloes , Co l l ege St .
Syracuse , OH 992 3014
S I X FAMILY Garage Sa l e
Star ting 10 a .m . to 5 p .m
Oc t . 18 fhru 21. Rt 143 ,
Harr 1sonville on CR 17
Wal ch f o r signs

1973 MERCURY MON
TEGO MX, 56,000 miles .
good c ondition . Dr op leaf
tab le. Also, firewood for
sa l e Hi ckory dnd oak Will

deliver . 8-13 2703

77~

S15. V·4 cylinder Wisconsi n

motor. 843-2701 .

after 4:30 . 304 "273 ·5272 "

electric hot water heater ,

Mon.-Sat 8 am-1 0 pm
Sunday 10 am-10 pm

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE TiiRU SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1978

CENTER CUT LOIN

PORK

chamber .

RUSS AND THE Gospel Tones at
Syracuse Nazarene Church Thur sday at 7 p.m .
MEIGS COUNTY Democrat Central Conunittee, Thursday, 7:30p.m.
at the Carpenter's Hall, Pomeroy .
GALLIA-MEIGS Community Action Agency Board of Trustees
meeting, Thursday, 7 p.m. at council
cbambers of Cheshire Village.
FRIDAY
HEVIV AI. now in progress at
Salvation Anny, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy , at 7: I~ p.m. ntghtly . Services through Sunday . The Rev .
Larry Lewis, Mason and associate
will be the evangelists and WPSM
Eloise Adamsand Bob Step, song ·
leaders. Special singing nightly .
Public in vi ted .
SATURDAY
RUSS AND the Gospel Tones at
Gospel Mission at Parkersburg,
Saturday 7:30p.m.
SUNDAY
SINGmG at Mt. Moriah Church of
God Sunday 7 p.m The Eternal
Youth group of Wellston will be
featured. Other singers invited to
participate"
COUNTY WIDE Prayer Meeting
Sunday at 2 p .m . at Middleport
Omrch of Christ in Christi an Union .
Glen Bissell class leader.
HOMECOMING of Mommg Star
United Methodist Church Sunday
beginning with worship at 9:45
followed by Sunday school at 10 :45.
Carry-in diMer at 12 :30 p.m. Afternoon service at 2 p"m . Florence
Smlth, pastor, invites the public.

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .
7 Pm . Hartford Communi1y
Hartford , WV , 4
miles
above
Pomeroy
Mason Bridge .
Center ,

SONGFESTSLATED

,

WHOLE FRYERS.~8;.49¢
GROUND

9
CHUCK ..~;~} 5

SAVORY BACON ....c:.69

Lost and Found
LOST : 9 month old tan
mal e pupp y with white
bleze face, in Ru11and area .

!linfng,

Call 742"2491.

•

4

FRENCH CITY TASTEE DOG

WIENERS............ -~~l:-. 69¢

BANANAS....... .•••••
LB.

KRAFT MIRAClE

MARGARINE ......'.8~.59
KRAFT AMERICAN

LIQUID

CHUNK TUNA ..
COUPON

HI DRI

.,

PAPER TOWElS

.r

JUMBO ROLL
LIMIT 2 PLEASE

- -

'"-. - - . "'7 --;- '

39¢

·I

I

·I'

.t
.I

~

--

9

~~2-~~-

Limil1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powl'll'~
Oct . 20, 1979

!

.

POT PIES..... ;.!.;.4 /
COUPON

COUPON

CAMPBELL'S

ARGO

MAXWELL HOUSE

10.75 oz.
LIMIT 4 PLEASE

19¢

Limit! Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer E
Oct _ 20, 1979

..
.I

}
.It

-I:

"_.,

"'

.!.

$

0

COUPON

TOMATO SOUP

SLICED PEACHES
29 oz.
LIM IT 3 PLEASE

39

¢

¢

$ 19

¢ MORTON

CHICKEN OF THE SEA

The Mt. Moriah Church of God will
feature a sing Sunday, Oct . 21, at 7
p.m . The Eternal Youth group of
Wellston will be featured . Other
singing groups are welcome to participate . The evening will be spent in

$}59
CHOPS...... ;s~ ••

GRADE A

GALI.lA -MEIGS
Comm unity
Action Agency Board of Trustees, 7
p.m . at Cheshire v1 lla ge Council

CLASSES OFFERED
The Community Mental Hea lth
Center will be offering classes in
child management on October 30,
November 6 and 13 between 6 and 8
p .m . each night . The coct will be $5
per participant. For more infonnation, call the mental health
center at 992-2192.

For Sale,
Rent or Trade
FOR SALE or rent . Ni ce J
bedroom, mOdular located
in Portland area . Set up on
lot or can be 1noved Call

]957 CHEVROLET one ton
flal bed truck . 30 gallon

THIRD
WEDNESDAY
Homemakers Club, 10 a.m. Wednesday at Syracuse Municipal
building" There will be a potluck dinner at noon . Members are to take
decoration for yardstick holders, a
one-dish recipe, and cents off
coupons.
THURSDAY
MIDOLEPOHT Child
Conservation League, 7:3()' p .m . Thursday at the Riverboat Room of the
Athens County Savings and Loan Co.
Mrs . Susie Soulsby to have
devotions, Mrs. Susie Abbott to
provide the traveling prize. Members are to take botUe caps. Amy
Hill will have the program "
BAZAAR AND BAKE SALE Thur sday , 10 :30 a.m " at home of Mildred
Spencer, Antiquity . Sponsored by
Willing Hands Ladies Group of lne
Antiquity Baptist Church"
HEVIV AL at old Dexter Churcl
Thursday, Friday and Saturday
Worship servi ce following Sunda
School . Speaking will be the Rev .
Ralph Smith , pastor and the Rev .
Willard Butcher . Messenger Quartet
on Thursday evening. Public invited .
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Club Thursday home of Sandy
Folmer at 1: I~ p .m . Betty Conkle in
charge ri program and Helen
Blackston 111 charge of contest.
Secret pals will be revealed .

GARAGE SALE al Lyle
Swai n 's on CR 18, between
Eastern School and Cl i ne's
Farm o c t . 19 and 20 from 9
to dark . Clotho. dishes ,
foys,
qu i lts
andm 1s c
Ga rage will be heated
Follow signs

nighT 992 75 11 .
HOU SE , FOUR rooms and
bath, p a rt ly furnished . No
pets, ca ll after 5 pm, 992 ·

Store Hours:

2816.

Beginning Thursday, Oct. 18, the
Pomeroy United Methodist Church,
112 E . Second St., will be open to the
youth of the community from I until
4 p.m. This service will continue until there is a settlement in the strike.
On Mondays and Wednesdays the
church will be open to elemen!Bry
students . On Tuesdays and Thursdays it will be open to junior and
senior high school students.
The students will detennine the
activities in which they wish to participate . Activities will include,
listening to records, games, crafts
or just visiting with friends . There
will be adult supervision during all
times the church is open .

Boarding, all breeds Clean
indoor outdoor
facilities .
A lso
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 446 7795

Crow. Ill, day. 992 2692 o•
1913 CHEVROLET
PALA . S475 . 142 2146

WEDNESDAY
UNITED Methodist Wome n
Racine Wesleyan Church, will meet
Wednesday at home of Mrs" Hobert
Hill to make apple butter as a
project. Apple butter is $2.50 per
quart plus clean ja~. Orders may be
placed at 949-2013, 949-2372 or 949-

Church opens
to students.

GROOMING .

Judy Taylor . 614 ·367 7210

HILLCREST

~---Social Cale~

MEIGS - GALIJA - MASON Life
Underwriters Association Wednesday at nqon at Meigs IM. All
area life and health agents invited to
attend .

GIGANTIC TOOL AUCTION

t1ve and optimistiC To bE! a
wlnner . lirsl see yoursellas one .
LE:O (JuiJ 23-Aug. 22) Your wit
and charm are your greatest
astel&amp; today You'll find ways to
use them to you r fu llest advan ·

Parle Rou te ll. nonn of
Pomeroy Large lots Call
~7 !479

S165 m onth . S45

1"592 297J

NRC. which finished dea d last 1n
the rat mgs in the 1978-79 season , won
th e compNit1on two of the first three
weeks of the current season . The
network's d1allenge to ABC 1n the
week of Oct. ~14 was damag,&gt;d by
poor ratings for two shows from the
network 's new s department.
"Prinw Tune Sunday" hmshed
53rd and " Henry Kissinger An
InterVIew With David Frost," was
57th, or last. Tile K1s:nnger program
apparently was damaged in the
ratings by a controvt!rsy s~veral
days before the air date over editing
of the mterview .
CBS' " Paris" was No. 54 for the
week,
with
" The
Lazarus
Syndrome" on ABC 55th and a
mov1e, "Life~ uard," a lso - on CBS,
56th .

was appointed to fill the office .
Following the meeting mern bers
toured the Milhoan home and looked
at her antiques. Refreshll1nents were
served by Mrs . Milhoan . Mrs .
Thomas Ewing, Mrs . George Skinner , and Mrs. MarkGrueser , Jr .

OHIO RIVER AUCTION

World series scores homerun in ratings
NEW YORK 1AP 1 - NBC took
another unpressJve run at flrst ploee
m the netw ork s' ratmg.s ran•. but
ABC .s&lt;.:ured w1th the f1 rst tltrl'l'
games of baseball's World Senes
and ftmshed No . I tn the week endmg
Oct. 14 by a falT marg111 . f1gun· s
from the A.C Nielsen Co show .
The month'lld season has, for
ABC. been somethtng of a struggle .
Last season ' s runaway winner,
predicted by many ill the Industry to
repeal as No . 1 ill 1 979~0. listed only
three shows m the first 10 for· the
week , all World Series gam es .
ABC' s rating for the week was,
nonetheless, 21, with NBC second at
18.8 and CBS t hird - for the fourth
week 111 a row - at 1 7 . ~
The networks say that l l Jt'&lt;:tns m ~Hl
average prime-tlflll' lllinute dunng
the week , 21 per cent of tiw honws 10

The president genera! 's message
was n&gt;ad by the regent and a silent
auction was held with the proceeds
going to support the DAR schooill .
The resignation of Miss Lucille
Smith as treasurer was accepted
with regret. Mrs. Phyllis SkiMer

II- The Daily Sentinel , MiddleportPomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Oct . l7, 1979

COFFEE

2 LB.

$599

1

�12- The Daily Sentinel , MiddleportPomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Oct. 17,1979

BALLOT LANGUAGE AND ARGUMENTS OF LAW
PROPOSED BY INITIATIVE PETITION TO BE
SUBMITTED TO THE ELECTORS OF THE STATE
FOR THEIR APPROVAL OR REJECTION
AT THE ELECTION TO BE HELD
NOVEMBER 6, 1979

Roush
reunzon
noted
•

The annual family reunion of Arthur and Sadie Roush as held Sunday, Oct.14 at the Letart Cornmumty
Hall.
For the occasion a four by six foot
hand-embroidened linen picture of
the Rausch (Housh I Coat of Anns
was displayed. The picture belongs
to Mr. and Mrs. Gene Roush. The
hand-embroidering was done by
Mrs .. Roush, who as the former
Shelia Shain of AntiqUJty . A scrapbook of memorable occasions was
displayed by Mrs. Eula Wolle.
A get-well card listing all 10 attendance was sent to Orion Roush
who is a patient in Holzer Medical
Center. The seven sons, with the exception of Orion, and the one
daughter of the Arthur Roush family
were present

The birthday of Lon Euler was observed with a surprtse birthday
cake. It was furnished by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hobert Euler.
Harold Housh, oldest son, asked
the blessing before the dinner .
followed by a minute of silent prayer
in memory of their parents .
The oldest person in attendance as
Mrs. Laura Watson of West Jeferson, 0 .,-and the youngest was Mrs.
Watson's great-grandson , Robey
Hite, Wintersville, 0 .
Those in attendance were Mr . and
Mrs. Harold Housh. Mr. and Mrs .
Clifford 1Pat 1 Housh. Dee Housh
and daughter, Anuny, Pam Granen
and son, Chad, Mrs. Otis McClintock
of Racine; Mr. and Mrs. Garen
Roush, Piqua; Mr . and Mrs. Ons
Housh, Salem Center; Mr. and Mrs
Robert Roush, Mrs. l~ura Watson,
West Jefferson; Mr. and Mrs . Marvin Hite and son, Robey, Wintersville; Gene Housh and son. Andy, Krista Housh , Fred River.
Chillicothe ; Mark Roush , Portsmouth ; Penny Frances.
Gallipolis ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Euler and children, Lori and
Michael , Elkview. W. Va.; Norman
Housh and son, Garen, 01arleston,
W.Va .; Mr. and Mrs. l~rry Fisher,
Pomeroy; Leota Birch, Portland;
Ethel Euler, Hemlock Grove ; Early
HoUsh, Eileen Buck, and Eula
Wolle, East Letart; Henry Roush,
Racine, and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Sargent, Middleport .

An Aerobic Conditioning Class.

sponsored by the Ohio University Office of Continumg Education, will be
held at the Gallipolis Developmental
Center iGSII on the followmg dates,
providing there is sufficient
enrollment.
Thursday, Nov . 1, 6~ p.m.; Saturday, Nov . 3, 8 a.m.- 12 noon : Thursday, Nov . 29. 6-9 p.m.; Saturday,
Dec. \,8am .-12noon _
The course may be taken for noncredit for $25 or for one-hour of
credit for $29 _ The cost of the textbook (which will be available at the
class site I i.s not included in the
above fees . Mr. William Haviland,
instructor of Bio-Medical Science at
Ohio University, will bring to the
classroom topics on type• of traimng
for running, aerobics and physiology
of running, nutrition, envirorunental

effects on rurming, and other types
of aerobic conditioning . Mr .
Haviland has been the Director of
the Ohio Distance Running Clmic at
Ohio University . particpates in
marathons aU over the country .
being one of the top winners in the
recent New York Marathon . He also
is qualified for the 1980 Olympic
trials to be held in May .
Participants should have good
running shoes - dress may be ac cording to personal likes.
Registration must be in by 4 p.m.
October 19. Money will he refunded
If the class is not held . There will be
no on-61te registraton . Registration
fees are to be maield to RUN - Box
716, Athens, Ohio 45701. For further
information, call toll free in Ohio 1lro-282-4408 or 1614 1:i94-6876 _

EVANGELISTIC SERVICES
BEGIN OCTOBER 17
Evangelistic services wUI he held
at the Church of th~ Nazarene in
Racine, beginning Oct 17, and continuing each evening at 7:30 pm.
lhrough Oct. 21.
George and Charlotte Dixon, full·
lime evangelists in the Church of the
Nazarene, are the special workers.
1be Dixons are both speakers and
elngers, featuring in their services
the electric Hawaiian and standard
IJUitar, and also the electric violin,
and plano.
The Dixons are recording artists
and gospel songwriters. Their
albums Include "Dixon Duets,"
"Hallelujah Time," "Heaven's Harbor Ughta, .. and their latest album,
uJeeua the NaZarene.''
Everyone is cordially invited to attend these servics.

'

.

EXPLANATORY NOTE
In the TEXT OF PROPOSED LAW below, the words written
in all capital letters would be additions to Ohio Law. The
words written in small letters and not crossed out In Sections 913.99 and 4301 .99 are already in Ohio Law and
would remain as Ohio Law. In Section 913 .99, the words
written in small letters and crossed out are in Ohio Law
and would be taken out of Ohio Law.

PROPOSED LAW

FULL TEXT OF PROPOSED LAW
BE IT ENACTED BY THE PEOPLE
OF THE STATE OF OHIO .

1

PROPOSED LAW
To amend sections 913.99 and 4301.99 and to enact
sections 913.241 and 4301.031 of the Revised Code
THIS PROPOSED LAW WOULD:

I. REQUIRE AT LEAST A TEN-CENT REFUNDABLE DEPOSIT ON

ALL GLASS. METAL OR PLASTIC SOFT DRINK:, BEER. AND
MALT BEVERAGE CONTAINERS SOLD IN OHIO FOR OFF-PREMISES CONSUMPTION. THE REFUND VALUE AND THE WORD
"OHJO" WOULD HAVE TO BE CLEARLY MARKED ON EACH
CONTAINER.
2. REQUIRE RET AlLERS TO ACCEPT RE1'URNED CONTAINERS
MARKED "OHIO" OF THE DESJGN, SIZE AND BRAND SOLD BY
THEM AND REFUND THE CUSTOMER'S DEPOSIT. BEVERAGE
BOTTLERS OR DISTRIBUTORS WOULD HAVE TO ACCEPT THE
RETURNED CONTAINERS BOTTLED OR DISTRIBUTED BY
THEM AND REIMBURSE THE RETAILER.
3. PJIOHJBIT THE SALE OF BEVERAGES JN METAL CANS THAT
HAVE DETACHABLE PULL-TABS.
VIOLATORS OF THIS LAW' CoULD BE FINED UP TO SEVEN HUN·
DRED FIFTY DOLLARS ($750) OR IMPRISONED FOR UP TO NINETY
(90) DAYS. 011 BOTH.
JF PASSED THIS LAW WOULD TAKE EFFECT DEcEMBER 8, 1981.
(Proposed by Initiative Petition)
A majority yes vote is necessary for passage.

YES
SHALL

mE

ADOPTED~

PROPOSED

LAW

BE

-=-----

=
-=

--

"'* """' ..._

EXPLANATION (By propon-b of IMue)
The proposed, citizen initiated law reduces litter and promotes recycling and re-use by requiring a refundable deposit of at least ten
cents on all beer, soft drink and malt beverage containers, made of
gla ss, metal or plastic, that are sold at retail Each container would be
clearly marked "Ohio" and have on it the container's refund value.
Accordmg to the proposed law, no retailer, may refuse to accept from
customers any empty container of the brand, size and design sold_ Nor
may the retailer refus&lt;: to refund the deposit charged to customers on
those containers sold by the retailer.
For the convenience of the consumer, any soft drink, beer or malt
beverage retailer that sells beverages, for off premise use, must provide
facilities on the premises or within 100 yards of the premises where
anyone can return beverage containers and receive their refund in cash.
Under the provisions of the proposed law, regional centers for the
return of containers with a refund may be set up. But they must be an
addition to, not a replacement for, facilities required by each retailer.
Another major provision prohibits the sell of metal contsiners that
have detachable flip-top openers. The beverage industry must provide
containers with openers which stay attached to the container, for the
health and safety of the general public.
Penalties have been established for retailers and distributors who
violate the law by; selling beverages without charging a deposit or
refusing to take back containers or refund a customer's deposit
The law, when passed, would take effect December 1981.
ARGUMENTS FOR THE PROPOSED LAW
· Issue I provides a financial incentive to return cans and bottles
rather than being pitched into yards, fields and roadsides and prohibits
metal containers from having detachable flip-tops that cause thousands
of injuries annually to children and wildlife.
Since the introduction of throwaway beverage containers, Ohio's roadsides, fields and :'ards have been plagued with this growing eyesore and
hazard . Attempts to educate the public about the litter problem have
met with sheer frustration as the momentum of throwaway containers
continues. Issue l offers an option to the disgraceful clutter of bottles and
cans that spoil our beautiful state.
The results of a refundable 10~ deposit law are miraculous. In states
having such a law, notably Oregon and Vennont, 90% of all cans and bottles
sold are recycled and refilled. The bottom line is a 40% reduction of the
most hazardous and long-lived element of the total litter problem.
Issue I saves energy. In Ohio alone, enough energy would be saved to
provide for the heating needs of 55,000 homes annually. On a smaller
scale. p_urchasing a six-pack of throwaway bottles Is like throwing away
I Y, pints of gasoline.
Issue I saves consumer dollars. Currently, Ohio beverages in returnable
containers are 30-50 % cheaper than throwaways and would continue to
be as inexpensive under the refundable deposit Jaw.
Issue 1 reduces tax dollars spent for disposal of municipal waste.
The city of Detroit's waste was reduced, in weight, by 9.4% after only 8
weeks of the Michigan deposit law, resulting in a savings of $18 million
annually .
The choice belongs to Ohio voters. Do we want bottles and cans spoiling
the beauty of this great stste, or a refundable deposit law which attacks
the litter problem at its source' A 'Yes' vote November 6 w1ll get results.
Committee for the Proposed Law : Louise Blankenship, Michael Mann and
David Sonner.
AiiGUMEl-iTS. AGAINST THE PROPOSED LAW
FORCED DEPOSITS: THE HIGH PRICED IDEA THAT WON'T WORK
WHY NOT FORCED DEPOSITS?
• Forced Deposits could raise the price of soft drink by $1.00 a case or
or more . . . in addition to the $2.40 depo&amp;it This rise in price ~QJJ-Id
be due to increased handling, gasoline and transportation costa by
distributors, and conversion by manufacturers to a total returnable
system.
• Forced Deposits will eliminate thousands of head--of-household jobs In
the steel, can and botUing industries.
• Forced Deposits do not require recycling thus neglecting the most
important means of litter/clean-up.
• Forced Deposits would cause soft drink and beer distributors, nationally,
to use an additional 127 million gallons of gasoline, due to transportation
of both fulls and empties.
• Fore ~d Deposits do not clean-up 80% of the litter on our roadways,
such as massive amounts of paper, packaging, etc.
• Forced Deposits cause a terrible inconvenience for conswnen and
retailers, alike. In states where Forced Deposits have become law,
retailers have been forced to limit the branda of the beverage they carry.
In addition, consumers have been forced to walt in long lines for deposit
returns.
• Forced Deposits cause terrible storage and health problems for small
retailers. Grocery owners must store returnables for weeks at a time,
causing increased insect infestation and health problems in the stores.
• Forced Deposits are an additional method of government regulation
that Impacts directly on your pocketbooks.
That's why a majority of both political parties in the Ohio House
and Senate have rejected a Forced Deposit bill for the last six years ...
and that's why you should vote No on Issue 1 on Tuesday, November 6th.
Committee against the Proposed Law: Jerome Stano, Thomas Van Meter,
Dave Johnson and Art Bowel'!l.
P.S. Let's quit fooling with forcro deposits and get a litter law that wor1-s.

Section 1. That sections 913.99 and 430L99 be amended and sections
913.241 and 4301.031 of the Revised Code be enacted to read as follows:
Section 9I3.241. NO PERSON SHALL SELL OR OFFER FOR SALE
AT RETAIL ANY SOFT DRINK IN A GLASS, METAL, OR PLASTIC
CONTAINER FOR CONSUMPTION OR USE OFF THE PREMISES ON
WHICH IT IS SOLD OR OFFERED FOR SALE UNLESS;
(A) THE SELLER CHARGES ON EACH SUCH CONTAINER,
AND THERE IS PAID BY THE PURCHASER, A DEPOSIT OF NOT
LESS THAN TEN CENTS, WHICH DEPOSIT SHALL BE THE CONTAINER'S REFUND VALUE, AND WHICH SHALL BE REFUNDED
UPON THE RETURN OF THE CONTAINER; AND
(B) THE CONTAINER OR ITS LABEL IS CLEARLY STAMPED
OR OTHERWISE MARKED "OHIO" AND THE CONTAINER'S REFUND VALUE.
NO SOFT DRINK RETAILER SHALL REFUSE TO ACCEPT AN
EMPTY DRINK CONTAINER OF THE DESIGN, SIZE AND BRAND
SOLD BY THE RETAILER OR REFUSE TO REFUND THE DEPOSIT
CHARGED ON SUCH CONTAINER. NO SOFT DRINK RETAILER
SHALL SELL OR OFFER FOR SALE ANY SOFT DRINKS FOR CONSUMPTION OFF THE PREMISES "'UNLESS HE PROVIDES F AGILITIES ON THE PREMISES OR WITHIN ONE HUNDRED YARDS
THEREOF WHERE ANYONE MAY RETURN ANY SOFT DRINK CON.
TAINERS AND RECEIVE FULL REFUND IN CASH. REGIONAL CENTERS FOR THE RETURN OF SOF'T DRINK CONTAINERS WITH RE.
FUND MAY BE ESTABLISHED IN ADDITION TO, BUT NOT AS SUB.
STITUTES FOR, FACILITIES REQUIRED BY THIS SECI'ION_ NO
SOFI' DRINK MANUFACTURER WHO BOTI'LES ANY SOF'T DRINK,
OR ANY BOTI'LER OR DISTRIBUTOR SHALL REFUSE TO ACCEPT
FROM A RETAILER ANY EMPTY DRINK CONTAINER OF THE
DESIGN, SIZE AND BRAND SOLD BY SUCH MANUFACTURER,
BOTI'LER OR DISTRIBUTOR OR REFUSE TO PAY THE REFUND
VALUE OF SUCH CONTAINER.
NO PERSON SHALL SELL OR OFFER FOR SALE ANY SOFI'
DRINK IN A METAL CONTAINER SO DESIGNED THAT A PART OF
THE CONTAINER IS DETACHABLE FOR THE PURPOSE OF OPEN.
lNG THE CONTAINER WITHOUT THE AID OF AN OPENER.
AS USED IN THIS SECTION, "SOF'T DRINK" MEANS ANY NON.
ALCOHOLIC CARBONATED BEVERAGE, FRUITADE, SODA, SODA
WATER, CLUB SODA, SELTZER, OR READY-MIXED TEA.
Section 913.99 (A) Whoever violates sections 913 .01 to 913.21,
iReliiBiYe, of the Revised Code; Hltftll 1&gt;e fiflffi
~
\lt&amp;ft
......, ~""ol•efi !lull""" lM" H.m sffeR•e IS GUILTY OF A MISDEMEANOR
OF THE FOURTH DEGREE; for a second offense such person &gt;t~tttH ""
lffiM !...... H..... """ llllllfh•&lt;tl +fl.t.tt ...... 11111111"'' tltllltH'fl - .....
I'Pioo""' ttffl. H... loltfl-fl - fitwff ....,. .....,... H..... ......_., ~ "" ~"'*-it IS GUJ L TY
UJo' A MISDEMEANOR OF THE THIHD DECRElo: .
(B) Whoever violate• "" tio" SECTIONS 913 .22 to 913.2&amp; ;.. , htHin.
of the Revised Code; Hltftll e.. Htte.l
~fl.... ..,... illllllil'lli •l•linPfl fffl.
" ffi.M off.""' IS GUILTY OF A MISDEMEANOR OF THE THIRD DEGREE; for a eubsequent offense such person Al+aU !..- H.....! - ....,.... t-l..t..
l'ffle J;nmtlrul tlfllln ..n ~ intpPifllltH'ti ft+H. tftf+t'fl f-tttttt uit•t I.• ~ ttf" ~ IS
GUILTY OF A MISDEMEANOR OF THE SECOND DEGREE; for a
third offense such person's license shall be revoked.
.fG+ V,'htte'leP Vittlttt£8 fW'CtJAfl ~ ..f. ~ 1-\e- • iFu tJ ~ ~ fte ~
....t, !eoo Ht....
tiHHt .,_, I"'" l•eol
w • .,_ elf'""" , ,..,.
ffiffi ""b""~"'-"1 ..
.....ft ~"""""' ..lt..tl 1... l#l&lt;'+l
"""'l-It.... """ hHAtlrai
fH}P ftt&amp;re f:h.tt.tt ~ huAfiPfd tl!iii8PIJ fff' illlflPifllllll ti ~ ~ Ht#fl ~ ftttt' ~

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Section 4301.031. NO PERSON SHALL SELL OR OFFER FOR
SALE AT RETAIL ANY BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE IN A GLASS,
METAL, OR PLASTIC CONTAINER FOR CONS UMPTION OR USE
OFF THE PREMISES ON WHICH IT IS SOLD OR OFFERED FOR SALE
UNLES.~ :

(A) THE SELLER CHARGES ON EACH SUCH CONTAINER,
AND THERE IS PAID BY THE PURCHASER, A DEPOSIT OF NOT
LESS THAN TEN CENTS, WHICH DEPOSIT SHALL BE THE CON.
TAINER'S REFUND VALUE, AND WHICH SHALL BE REFUNDED
UPON THE RETURN OF THE CONTAINER; AND
(B) THE CONTA INER OR ITS LABEL IS C LEARLY STAMPED
OR OTHERWISE MARKED "OHIO" AND THE CONTAINER'S REFUND VALUE.
NO BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE RETAILER SHALL REFUSE
TO ACCEPT AN EMPTY BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE CONTAINER
OF THE DESIGN, SIZE AND BRAND SOLD BY THE RETAILER OR
REFUSE TO REFUND THE DEPOSIT CHARGED ON SUCH CONTAINER. NO BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE RETAILER SHALL SELL
OR OFFER FOR SALE ANY BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE FOR CONSUMPTION OFF THE PREMISES UNLESS HE PROVIDES FACILITIES
ON THE PREMISES OR WITHIN ONE HUNDRED YARDS THEREOF
WHERE ANYONE MAY RETURN ANY BEER OR MALT CONTAINERS
AND RECEIVE FULL REFUND IN CASH. REGIONAL CENTERS FOR
THE RETURN OF BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE CONTAINERS WITH
REFUND MAY BE ESTABLISHED IN ADDITION TO, BUT NOT AS
SUBSTITUTES FOR, FACILITIES REQUIRED BY THIS SECTION. NO
BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE MANUFACI'URER WHO BOTI'LES ANY
BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE, OR ANY BOTI'LER OR WHOLESALE
DISTRIBUTOR SHALL REFUSE TO ACCEPT FROM A RETAILER
ANY EMPTY BEER OR MALT BEVERAGE CONTAINER OF THE DESIGN, SIZE AND BRAND SOLD BY SUCH MANUFACTURER, BOTTLER OR DISTRIBUTOR OR REFUSE TO PAY THE REFUND VALUE
OF SUCH CONTAINER.
NO PERSON SHALL SELL OR OFFER FOR SALE ANY BEER OR
MALT BEVERAGE IN A METAL CONTAINER SO DESIGNED THAT
A PART OF THE CONTAINER IS DETACHABLE FOR THE PURPOSE
OF OPE~ING THE CONTAINER WITHOUT THE AID OF AN OPENER.
_S edlon 4301.99 (A) Whoever violates section 4301.47, 4301.48,
4301.49, 4301.62, 4301.63, 4301.70, or 4301.71 of the Revised Code is guilty
of a minor mi•rlemeanor.
(B) Whoever violates section 4301.15 division (D) of section
4301.22, section 4301.64, or 4301.67 of the Revised Code is guilty of a mis- ·
demeanor of the fourth degree.
(C) Whoever violates section 4301.251, division (C) of section
4301.58, 4301.59, 4301.60, 4301.632, 4301.633, 4301.636, 430l.66, 4301.68,
4301.69, or 4301.74 of the Revised Code is guilty of a misdemeanor of the
first degree.
(D) Whoever violates division (A) or (B) of section 4301.58 of the
Revised Code is guilty of a misdemeanor of the first degree.
(E) Whoever violates section 4301.61 of the Revised Code is guilty
of a felony of the third degree.
(F) Whoever violates division (B) of section 4801.14, or division
(A), (B), or (C) of section 4301.22 of the Revised Code is guilty of a
misdemeanor of the third degree.
(G) WHOEVER VIOLATES SECTION 4801.031 OF THE REVISED CODE IS GUILTY OF A MISDEMEANOR OF THE TIDRD
DEGREE; FOR SUBSEQUENT OFFENSE, SUCH A PERSON IS
GUILTY OF A MISDEMEANOR OF THE SECOND DEGREE.
Seetlon 2. That existing sections 913.99 and 4801.99 of the Revised
(',ode are hereby repealed.
Seetion 3. Sections I and 2 of this Law ehall take etTect two years
after the effective date of this Law.

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY
OF STATE
I, ANTHONY J. CELEBREZZE, Jr., Secretary of Slate, do hereby
certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Proposed Law flied in the
Office of the Secretary of State by Initiative Petition pursuant to Article
II, Section lb of the Constitution of the State of Ohio, together with baUot
language certified to me by Ohio Ballot Board and explanation and arguments submitted to me by the proponents and opponenta of the issue as
prescribed by Ia w.
'
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF, I have hereunto subscribed my name
and affixed my official seal at Columbus this 12th day of September, 1979.
Anthony J. Celebrezze,
Secretary of State

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�\ 7 - The Dally &amp;nt1nel, M1ddleport-Pmneroy. 0 . Wednesday . Oct 17. \979

TB clinic activities given
Jt Jdll
'I ewk,-;IJor_~, H N
tubt:r cu l•JSIS nurse and ci!IJ\(' dtn·d11r uf
the M t·J~s Co . wty Tulwr• ·u lusts
Cl!ntc today reported un tht• &lt;W -

ttvtlte~

11f the clime .

Twent }-two of the Me 1 g ~ Count\

sehoo[s hal.·t·

I)Pl'r l VISited

lh1:-. S('htH;I

yct:tr by t ht· luberculusJs nur se for
the dded!On of tui)t'f('UI O!-i!S IJI~
feetlons _'l11ese tesL'i were g1vcn una

consent sh p basts by the parents,
antl 111 mo~t of the S('h()o\s. lhL' !'i Ur·

Vf'y

was cuncJucted a mung specwl

nsk grou ps
Skm tesllng

especially 1111 pot"Wnt U..&gt;ce~u se tuberculosis tn ft.Ttwns ca n be treated proph ylett· ·
tn·ally .
There h&lt;:~ve bee11 1,193 tubercul111
tt.· ~ t s g1 ven to pup1 L~ thts srhool year,
Mrs. Tewksbary r e ported . Eighteen
puplis haw had postttve rea ct wns to
the tm.;t
PusltiVL' rt..'Cwtlons reflect se rt ~ltlvl ty resulting front lnfeeton of
ts

Contributors listed
for Racine project
Members uf the Hac1nc E m ergen program . Rhonda Dailey, R.N ., BSN. moocrator. In service Director , Veterans Memorial Hospilal : l .t"{J na
Mourad, R.N .. MSN. Assistant Director . Department
of Pharmacy. Ohio State Urliversity; and Dr (;eorge
W. Waylonis. M.D .. Director of Physica l Medi cine.
Hiverside Methodist Hospital. Columbu s .

CONFERENCE HELD - 'l'huty-tlve persons attended the day long nurses conference held last Friday
at Veterans Memorial Hospital. The title of the
program was "Management o£ Acute and Chrome
Pam ." Pictured from I to r are the speakers of the

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Margaret Haymond to Walter
Everett, Parcels, Hutland .
Edgar H. Tuckennan, Kathryn E.
Tuckcrffiljn to James William Cun ningham . Be ve rly Jean Cun nmgham. I.&lt;Jt 59 . Pt . 58. Middleport .
Eugene G Long to Shirley Mae
i .&lt;Jng, ~2. \i acres,J.eba non .
Shlfley Mae i .&lt;J ng to Eugene G.
Lo ng, I acrt&gt;.l.ebanon .
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Young to Edward Allen
You ng , 22.67 acres, lkdford .
Uebb1e Kay Young to F:dward
Alle n Young. Parcel, Salisbury .
P.dward A. Schaekel. Jr ., Patncia
A. Sct1aekel to Andrew Edward
Lyles. 8.6 acres. Chester.
He..,;hel McClure . Hhojean McOure to Hex Allen O..rst. 2.19 acres ,
91 a cr es, SaliSbury.
George D. Stobart. Velma E.
Stobart . to I rene Hhodes . Danny
Shain, I ac re, Sutton.
John F Cook, Peggy Cook to
Mi chae l H Hayman . 13 ac res. Olive
James Robert lktz to Walte r
P.verett. Margar(t Haymond . Parcels, Kutland .
Don V Tufto, Velma 1.. Tufto,
Kenneth D. Johnsen , Wilma F . Johnsen to I.&lt;Jretta J . Askew, John A.
Asher. to Manan C. Hambel, 8.5()383
acres, ~ 92743 acres, 6 . 1521~ acres.
Sc1pio.
Donna J ea nne Burson. guard1an.
Mark Owen Burson , a minor , to
Hobert Steven Burson . 3.96 acres,
Fled!ord .
Stanley S. Kaldor. Ze lda J . Kaldor
to Ph1l1p D Moidey , Frances M.
Moxley, II acres, Bed ford.
Ga ry K . Honaker , Teresa Honaker
Wisecup . Ke1th Wis ecup to James
Warner , Inri Wamer , 100 acre Lot
29~ . .23 acre, Syracuse .
Barbara Well Kerr, Scott D Kerr
In Columbus and Southern Ohw
F:lec Co . P.asement. , Orange.
William P. H.lze r , Kathryn N.
l\1 ze r to Columbus and Southern
Ohw Elec . Co .. Easement . Lebanon .
l'orma M Newland t o Columbus
a nd Southern Ohio Elec . Co .,
Easemen t . Olive-Orange .
Grant A. Newland. Unda Van
Meter Newlantl to Co lumbus and
Southern Ohio El ec. Co., Easement.
Oil ve -Orange.
Pamela Lynn Burson to 1\obert
Steven Burson , 3.96 a cres, lkd!ord .
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec.
Co . to Sandra Neal, Trus . 1sub. of
3:161, Middleport .
William C Hayes, Adm . Dav1d 0 .
McKnight, dec. aka Otho David
McKnight, dec . aka Otho McKnight,
to Kenneth M. Haller , BO acres.
Co lumbia .
Billy W. West, Teresa A. West to
· Monongahela Power Co., Easement,
Olive .
Dale E Smith, Thelma Jean
Smith to Monongahela Power Co .
Easement. Olive.
Mary Bise. Frank Bise. Marion A.
Hetzer . Shirley Hetzer t o
Monongahela Power Co .. Easement.
Ohve
Jack E. Seelig to Mark D. Hudson .
Cathy A. Hudson. 1 acre, Salisbury .
Haymond B. Allensworth , Betty
J o Allensworth to William E . Cadle,
Phyllis L. Cadle, Pt . Lot 119, Middle port .
Paul J . Pauley, Lois A. Pauley to
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elec
Co .. Easement. Chester.
Jack H. Stanley, Karen J . Stanley
to Columbus and Southern Ohio
Elec. Co .. Easement . Chester .
Larry L. Baker. Phyllis I.. Baker ,
Harold E . Sizemore , Jane 1..
Sizemore to Columbus and Southern
Ohio Elec. Co .. P.asement. Chester.
Doris E . Well to Columbus and
Southern Ohio Elec . Co ., Easement ,
Orange .
Brian K. Well . Doris D. Well.
De,ryl E . Well , Doris E . Well , l.inda.
1.. Well . F . Kussell Well to. Columbus

~Building

family strengths'

topic for health conference
To strengthen the family and
enhance the atmosphere in which
family members live, the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Serviee is cosponsoring with the Ohio Health
Council a one-day training program
helping people build fami ly
strengths.
This meeting, " Building Family
Strengths," wtil focus on changes m
the family , parental tasks . what are

Extension office
taking

order.~.~

now

The ordering and planting of trees
4-H members can be a very
rewarding learning experience and
for this reason the Oh10 Division of
Forestry will furrush 200 trees of any
one species only free to each 4-H
member.
Only one species ma y be orde red
by each member. Spec1es are white
pine, red pine , green ash, and black
locust .
The applicant must be enrolled as
a 4-H or FFA member . He must
plant the trees on land where they
may reasonably expect to grow to
maturity and may be harvested as
timber product.s. The trees are not to
be used for shade . ornamenta l,
Christmas trees , or wmdbreak purposes . They must agree to protect
the trees from livestock and fire and
must penni! a representative of the
Division of Forestry to inspect the
tree planting if tl1ey so desire .
An additional 200 seedlings of p1nc
only are also available from the
West Virginia Pulp a nd Paper Com pany .
Anyone mterested Ill ordering the
trees shoul d contact the Me1gs County Extension Office before Nov 28
All orders must be sent to Columbu s
prior to Dec . I.

ry

and Southern Ohi o Elcc . Co..
Easement, Orange.
Kenneth K. Well to Colum bus and
Southern Ohio Elec. Co .. F:a,e m en t.
Orange .

fam1ly strengths and how to develop
them in one's own fami ly.
The District Health Conference
will be held at the Jackson Area Extension Center. Route 93 South of
Jackson on Tuesday, October 23.
Registration will begin at 9 a m .
with hospitality provided, and the
conference will adjourn at 2:30p.m .
The registration fee IS $1. You
s hould bring your own lunch.
&amp;verages will be furnished. Please
make a reservation by October 19
with your County Home Econorrucs
Agent, Diana Ebert.s, Box 32,
Pomeroy. Ohio, 992~96 . so we will
know how many to expect.
Dr Kent Hamdorf. ExtensiOn
Specialist in Family Relations and
Human Development will resource
the morning session. HIS presen tation, " Building Fam1ly Strengths :
A Way Toward Health," will help
families identify and deve lop the
pos1tive aspects of our family
si tuations.

Three sessions buildlng on the
moming program will be offered in
the afternoon . They are · " Turn Off
the TV and Tune In, " resourced by
members of the Jackson District
Health Counc il Planning Com mittee ; "Help Needed ' - Try Extension," resourced by Pat Glass,
Area Extension Agent, Home
Economics; and "What Shall! Do ' "
by ~arcy Taylor. Vmton County

Homemaker. During these sessions
participant.s will ha ve ar upporturuty to take part in acti vities,
see displays , and get additonal1dcas
for uses of the information in their
own home and community.
All educational programs and acti vities conducted by the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service are
available to all potential clientele on
a non-discriminatory basis without
regard to race. co lor. natonal origin.
sex or religious affitiation .

-~

cy Squad art' sol1cltlng cnntribu t1on."i
to curc; truct a n ~w building &lt;:H.lJ&lt;-tt:cnt

to the fire sta t1 on .
The most recent con tnb utors werL·
W1 ley Ours. Tom Thc1ss. Ellen
Well s, GilhPrt Hart , .Joh n Prall ,
Harold Walker , ~aUI III Nevil le.
P"dtricla Shain . Anna Hols mger .
Fntz !luck. (;crald Sunpson . l·:st&lt;J
Hous h, Mike Winebrenner. T1Hil
Beegle , Margie Lawson , Ho~ l' r
Theiss, Chester VanM eter . Kath;
McDaniels. Roge r Holter. (;corgc
Pullirts. J ohn Hens ley. Charles Co r ·
nell . Jr , Gretta Sm&gt;pson. P.d.na
Deem , Nick Kmg. Vera Beegle,
Milton Gary, Betty Frie nd. Hom e r
C!fcie. Verna C!fcl e. P.lm er
Plckens. Ku th Wolfe, Ethel Hoback.
Otis Ba1ley. Don Bell, Dal e McGraw .
Koy Johnson. Eun1e Bnnker . Carl
Shultz. Andy Cross. Hac1nc Department Store. Ura Morn s . Ann Boso.

Fairview
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mrs. P.tha Warner and Mrs . Pearl
Norris s pent Wednesda y through
Thursday with Mr . and \Irs . Jim
Preston at Clifton, W. Va .
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Hoy v1s1ted
her mother . Mrs Etha Wa rne r .
Monday . Mr . and Mrs. Arthur

Patterson . Earl Cross,
.\ 1ax1ne Seller;:;, Gamet Ervme. Btll
Foster , Hattlt' Paynter . I ..en a llolta.
[lave Zirkle. Paull..awrerwe. (;retta
Su ttle. llaudJa Housh. Blond en a
Hudson. Maxmc Win6ett. CI&lt;Henre
Bradford. Ed O'Connor. Alene

!Jt·s:-:; Jt

Weaver. Mae Cleland, .Jes.'i An derson , Yuvonne Sellers, Carulyu

end Boone Adams, l11fford II 1U,
U,e~ l
Hoseberry. Hazel Beahrs.
NetnC'y Jrtspt&gt;rs . McKel vey Farrru ,
Gold1e Swart , Clifford and Mary
Hr• ush. F:d Wa gner. Koss Norns.
Albert Hill . Dale Warner Insurance.
F.ugene Wh ytsell. Clarence l.awrcnL·c,
Hetrry Hili . IRona Hensley .
Sylvia Poole, La rry C ~rcle . Don
Johnson . Carol Offutt. l'rll t Brad ·
ford. Charles Alkire, Jack F ollrud.
Don Salmons . Hod Grun , \{ay mund
He nsler . Mrs. Clint .Johi!Son , J C.
Chancey, Clifford Hay es, !.aura
By ers. Nondus Hendricks. Wa lter
Voss, Bethelehem Baptist Church .
Hobert Lewis. Audrey Bre wer .
Wav1e Circle , Chnstma Branum .
Helen Smith. Joc Manuel. Arvill
Holte r. Eugene Ca rpente r . Hoger
H1ll. Lindley Hart. Frank Wallace .
J ohn Kose. Lottie Bradford , James
Parso ns. Mthur Stoban . Marsha l
i{ous h, Pau l Marr. Alma Hees.
Harr y Swan , Manl yn Powell . Fred
J.a rkm s, Chuck Ba1ley. Kenn y
The1ss, Dave Diles Chanty, Thomas
Sayre. Laura Byer s. Hoberta Thax.
ton, 0lf'k Wam5ley and Hoger
Adam.s.

Mycowcterium tuberculosis .
A poSitive reac11on lndicates lnfcc tlon. hut does not prove the
presenre of disease, Mrs .
Tewksbary conunented . Followup
proced ures inrlude , rareful history,
physica l examination, chest x-ray
studies a nd chemoprophylaxis.
Chemoprophylaxis -the prevention
of diSease in the infected individual
by drug holds great promise for tl1e
co ntrol of tuberculosis, Mrs .
Tewksbary stressed. It involves the
usc of a si ngle, inexpensive drug
isoniazi d.
In a few cases two drugs are used.
l{oy L Donnerberg, M.D .. from Ohio
Sta te Umversity Hoopital is the
chest clm1 cian for tl1e Meigs Clinic .
The fifth clinic of the year will be October 24 under the direction of Dr .
Donner berg .
The re have been 1166 tuberculin
skm tesls given at the dirlic this
yea r. 49 of these have had a positive
reaction to the test and have had the
followup ches t x-rays and necessary
trea tment. \04 patlent.s have been
see n by Dr Donnerberg this year
and 270 chest x-rays have been given
to clime patients. 39 patient.s have
received som e fonn of medication
th1s year.
ClinJCs for testing are avai lable to
all organizatiOns in the county upon
1·equest. fre€ of charge .
Contact may be made with the
lubercu losis c lin ic by phoning 992-

:\722.
Al clinic ser vices are free and ·
available to serve all Meigs County
re sident,; . Mrs. Tewksbary added,
"Our purpose and concern is to help
you because we ca re."'

Authori1ed CATALOG

SALES MERCHANT

ISears I
Phone 992 -2178
134 E . Main St .
Pomero\1 , 0 .
OWNED AND OPERATED f
Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open : Mon . thru Wed . 9·5
Thur . 9-12 , Fn . 9-S, Sat. 9·2
Satisfaction Guaranteed
or Your Money Back

Warner of Racine were recent
visitors of Mrs. Warner.
Mrs. Joyce Manuel and children,
Robm and Donnit&lt;l , spen t the
weekend w1th Wya tt and Cindy
So uth at Columbus and atten ded the
OhioSW.te Fair Saturday .

Makm g use of wastt' wood IS tile
~1 e p in lookmg to wood as an
energy so urce. e xp ~rt s say . WOdd
now makL•s up &lt;ibout 2 percen t of thl'
nauon·s fuel s uppl y, and federal
CX J~ rts bel1eve 11 co uld be 7 percent ,
sa nng morl' than 2.5 nullwn bHrn: ls
of c'il rt drty
f1r st

gas-fill ed oo lloon kee ps the

Portugut&gt;se man-of -wtt r - a relat1ve
of !he jelly fish - afl oal A crest un
to p of Uw balloon cat ches lile wmd
hke a sad .

GREAT CHRISTMAS GIFT

Aspen
New for fall

.
\

/

/

Moc ha Buck
Natural Sherpa ,Lining
Water Resistant Upper Leather
Rhino Crepe Sole

CHRISTMAS LAYAWAY

HARTLEY SHOES
9 i .m .·Sp.m. Mon .
thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.

9a .m .-8p .m . Fri .
Closed Sund14V

"Middle of Upper Block in Pomeroy"

·WE WORK HARD TO KEEP
MICE IN OUR WAREHOUSE.
" Stoc ki ng oil the p a rt s ond pieces that make up a lelephone
system " a full -lime job It meam making sure that we hove every·
thing on hand , fro m Moc key Mo use phon.,; to nuls and bolls and
telephone poles
" it 's on impo rtant 10b . too Con you imogme tell ing o customer
con 1 g ove hr m 1ervrce becau se we 1ust ran out of telephone poles?
" I'm responSible fo r rr.akir.g sure that kmd of thing never hoppe ns Thot 's why I m proud to b e one of the people
General TelephonP ' ' ta lk ing obout when they say (
'We keeo )'Ou io lki n,; ' ..

C") • ;J

.

Julie l.bn Aulcen,

Stoorerooom Allendant,

Athens, Ohio
One of the 100,000
GTE professionals.

who ore working

to bring you
beller and more
eHicienl tele-

�18 - Tht• Da dy Sent 1npJ. M rdllll'pll11- P t 111 u·ru .~ . ( l . Wt"(J lll'Sd CI} , Od II. I!II! I

Your Best Buys Are f,outtd
Noto ces

WANT AD

CHARGES
l!J Wunl.s!lr t 'nd+'r
Cash

l tl.:O\
! tiHi ·'
l•l&lt;l~'
~i dl:l) ~

1 "harJit'

100

125

150

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...._.ht• PICh,l &gt;f r,1mp; t'QUIP
P t'tl for ! he tr;,rt\I)O r t of
wh t•t' h ll,l•l" cliHl S l rl~ l &lt; ner
IJC•unc1 Pt~&lt;.,'&gt; ~ ' ll(I J 'r&lt;,
I I •'&gt; l)f01('1 1(1 (1 ltl,ll 1 .jOQ 1n
'." dl o( J Pt'f'&gt;(HI\ wdl UC.. t' lhl'
'&gt;&lt;' I '-'" (' '. &lt;'V ('fl llclf.., P t •f
o'\l t'•·k. f l•r ! r d l l'&gt;POr ldi &lt;(HI to
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pllY\I t • dll'&gt;
nth . r•&lt;, o ttl( ' l
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NOTICE
DEADLI~ES
\1 &lt;•11&lt; j,, I

J&lt;t'

\, , • •II ' &gt;I . ..... f lll

l lrt·•·d .. \
!1 1ru t- r&gt; d,.
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tl o• !." 1• 1 • I '' ·'
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r''H'hon wh o P&lt;~'., ', l' d dWd ,
l)nl' Vl'rlf cH jU Q ( IOIII'r 1.~
1978
Her&lt;., CIOflP hut Will nP\/P r hf'
torgo rl cn
H •S m c mortes
..trf' nlw,lv 1 wllh u"i !rom
dny to day
Srl dl If
r'll11Sl'd
t )y
Wilt·
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o., nn'&gt; J )t\nn i rHHl
Fd cJ, t·
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: .,1,1 " 11 ,

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N

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E"VERY
~U N DAY 1 PM FAC TO~Y

1\, d

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•

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1' (1 ,11 11

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t'

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R ACI NE
_1:1~ ~ante~

no

trt•SP d SS •nC..J wtlh no ~ ·~
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Jur1y M1 G r dW St•ll
R cJ ( , n f
f- , r e&gt;
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11rr q fl dt or 11&gt;\Jil l t 'l ' 11,. .
f (l ll nwon(l f oll &lt;n ', ( l ' o~' ·•, ')
p,., ,,,, '•' )
Br&gt;lll' r
il. n n
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R ul ' cl ')l;
OH
VtOiol to r s
w 11 1 b e
p roser u ted
.\D~OLurr~

d"CI • .! , J ~ ll

fo

l..d ll '1'-'1 0 !.' I

G UN CLUB

HUNTING .

GU N SHOOT f''Je r y Sunday
11 00 i=;t c tor v r ho k.t' only
Corn H ollow Gun (lub
Ru t l,:Hl(1 Pr o( ('&gt;f•(J&lt;, OOilr! II::'Cl
t o Bov Sr ou t Trno p ?49
NO H U N TI N G on l h~' Cl·P•·
Hu iT' phr·P y prnp,~rt,. on P '
143 o r t h e Andy (,r,lvl' r
prnpf'r 11 on £l~11P v R un Pd

Help Wanted

LO NG H Al RED b ('ilu l d ul
lut11 · n~ . a wee k s o ld , rnalf' '&gt; .
r renrn . s dvf'r . fd l t( O f! 4J
n J4
one bCrtulilul t'Jord (' r r Oll!f&gt;
OPagle , b r own , b l o;1rk, clrH.I
whde
rnt&lt;'ll t,.Wnl .
qoo&lt;J
wll tl ' hdart&gt;n , o:, tl o l &lt;., . wor
ll"1 1'{1 Hurnrln(' ~Or n ' l ~ 'Y/ 7
61;1)

't

\!\l iNTE R
P OTATQt:=\
C W
Prolt. t l let rrn . Por
I I rtrHl O H SH rt huntl r t 'C I rl i1C1
\ ', d rtund r f'tl
f-l f.l t: WOOD
1- Uf.&lt;
N ow tn h.1nll ort1•• 1&lt;,
dl')ll,ipr ) ~ '} 20)6

___ _

D~PENDAB LE

BABY SI
I T E R w,lnt p(f rn my !lOIYlP
!Jf'nt"&gt;P W o lf f' 949 i]J.'

A"PL E 5

CIDE R

J/A~

lr Jdo&gt;r

UXLE
11. 11 ld l~\t'
Pilon{' Gr1111pOl1',

J.l&lt;'::o J lHJ
POlATO[~

\ W [E f

,•.,:l t1!1' ,HHj
f.( ,~,. 1nt·
hi

rt•! l

tf' ll ow Rt l ,
W LI'W I" A.t 3

J.U}

OL D
WA L N U T Qr&lt;:ln d
f a ther 's dO( k
!nqu 1r e d l
lit e Wood ShPd on B rooa
WdY 111 Ra r tne

POMEROY
LANDMARK

w \,' ; ~ l l fJ

Mac 55
Mas -10

ROM E Beaulv

apples at~ pe r bu . Best f or
a pple butt er Call b69 37 85 ,
F 1 17p~ l r1ck
Ordlitrd . SR

R:emington 34
SlOO. OO
150 Auto
Home lite
s 125.00
XK 12 Hom ehte
s 185.00
.t&lt;L400 Homel ite S200 .00
Rem1ngton
Yardmaster
S7S .00
R e mington
Super 754
SlOO .OO
SIOO .OO
Sears
x L H ome 111e
\75.00
1 E.celtent Unico 16 cu .
tt .
Coppertone
Refngerafor , like new,

1 New Ete-ctric Furnate.

1 new Fuel Oil Furnace,
c h~arance pric~

1 Good Colds pot
R e fr1g erator

fOI/'vN
Qn,
t. f:-:,vr N G
KI' II ! TJrJ rl '
w~l ~ l 1 1llll
r&gt; 1 o~ r l1o11C, 1, . ..,., lh rl n a rnon 111
o i(J. $200
1 cha tn ':.&lt;'lw
Ptoncer u~e d ve r y l1tlle .
\125 1 lawn mow e r . usea
one summer, \SO . 1 d t' Sk .
so lid wood, $200. 1 17 ' Star
rr&lt;Jf1
aluminum
c&lt;~ n o€'
SJOO Ca ll '192 530 I
R E'd and '{ f'llo w
dcl •r1 ous
Bu
hu
pec l&lt;. s . ana 4 10 baske t s
Pum pk. tn') S 75 ilnd uo
Lf'CHlcHd 8d SS.
k'l
1?4
~,,.r,-l r USP 997 ~OOI'l
COAL. lu rnp or
w ill (J"IIV I' r
! 4"}

1

HOTPOINT
and

M E TA L
IT\Pil
\ H EfT
w •·J f ·d G001 J lJ••ne f1l &lt;, nrHI
'-.dlcHV

J ,l6 ~ Ooho r 416 7l 16

( , /, '&gt; "-. 1 r. T I O N &lt;i lfr' nl~•l &lt; l
,I•CJu,· · · 1' 1:; . 1 "l "&gt; 10r U' l lc
6 lO En I t\'l,1111 f'lCln1r· r n v
O rl

GALLI A-JACK SON-MEIGS
COMMUNITY MENTAL HEALTH CENTER, INC.
CENTER 01 RECTOR . Mental health prof eSS IOn &lt;U
in the fr e lds of psycho l oqy , 'ioc1 al work . p syc h1atry ,
or related m e ntal healfh dt SCip ltn e . or equtva l ent
education and expenence, for a co mpr chen srve
m ental h ealt h center fund ed under fhe mand.l 1t•s. of
P . L. 90.03 .
Th e Ce nter Otrect or 1:. th e ch1ef empl oyet· o f th e
Center Board and res.pon 'i rbh.' for lhl' d ay to day
operation ~ of the Center Fnng t:' bene t II package tS
comprehen s1v e and competrt1ve Sai.Hv neq ofl.able
An
EEO ·Affirmilft\le
Actton
employer
Send
resume to : Juanita Atha , Per sonnel Adm•n• ~ frator ,
G · J ·M Community Mental Health Ce nte r , Inc . 417
Vinton Ptke , Gallipolis , Ohr o 45611.

MACHINIST
Permanent position for individual with
job shop experience . Must be able to do
own set ·up on conventional and horizon tal mills , lathes, and grinders .
Respond to Perso.nnel Department, Ap ·
palachian Power Co., Mountaineer Plant
Operation s, Post Offic e Box 398 , New
Haven , W. Va . 25265 · Area Code 304 882 2151.
We are an Equa l Opportunity Employer .

l85 .00

Jack W . Carsey
M ... r .
Ph . 1 · 7181

1... HRY '-1 ~ ER

I Cu&lt;:. l o rn
1rH
lOry wn t• PI&lt;, $1 700 /\n f1 Q1 w
dedi ·-n,) rle 1rt G r~ • m, u y 111•!
W('&gt;l·n lYI 5 ,1/ l(l 1 •,1/~ . $ 'l J5
'1'1? JJ 47

?1 HJ

RU BBE RMA I D pa rt y plan
needs d e mon s 1ra t ors N o
r oller t .nq, no pnck..nq _ no
Ot•lo vf' r •n Q '
Top
rom
rno&lt;,'Ji0rl5
(rill
9'17 ~ OR/
Caro ly M t Co ·"

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK

\7,..... __Jack W . Caney
~

......,o•u•

lH I~ !:. L
B i::D ROOM
r OfJ III h f)l.,'-.1' W 1lrl b,1!h

.

fo

)'·;.'
P1•dr l
'-, !
M ~ d c llt&gt;P tl r l
f.(f'llHH ft • Pt! .Ill llf'W rns1d['
.m d ou t P IIQn[' ,'.t / 1-105 or
99 '} 1 )'19

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Windows
• Gutters artd
Down Spouts
Free Estimiltes

Mgr.
Phone 992 ·2181

Real Estate for Sale

ERA MERCER
REAlTY

st oker .

1111~

n •1
7

\I JPFR

o - - · ·-

!FUL

-·

NEW liSTING - Rea l nice 3 BR home w it h extra
larg e l1v tng r oom . equ1pped k i l rhe n , washer , d ryer ,
f ull basemen! . w 1th re ntral a•r La rge brPereway
le adin g to e xira large garage Tnt s well c ared tor
h OIJ5 (' hi) ~ many (')( t rr~ s and SPVeritl fr u1t l rP f' S ol dif
f Pr Pil t VrHit' 111'5 . &amp; n tre qarden $£?(' to ,1pr ('rta t e
Vcrv n1 1 (' IO&lt; .111 0n 1n l o wer ~ vraru sc Pr 1r cd a t

Ul 900
CHESTER
4 BR tw rne. hardwood t l ocn o;, IMQP
L l.l: . l&lt;trn tl)l r rn. q Mclqe, ou 10u 1ldrnq, frut t tr e ec.. and
gnrd en sp ace . Asktng 148.900
THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR
14 acrE:&gt;s w11h a
11 1 sto ry horn(' , s .ts brt r ~ off rodd s u r r ou nde d w 1th
maple tr ees L g pond , l oca Te d tn Mornmg Star
area Pr tcc ~3 3. 900
FAMILY HOME
Lo ts o f POS Si b rl tt tes w tth th is
n 1ce 2 story Man y lea lur es. c entral dtr . b u dt tn ap
pilan ce'5, all c ar~tcd , gooo tn ves tment w i fh several
n ice build i ng lo ts . On approx 4 1 1 acres n the center
of Ra ci ne . Asking SS4,000 .

Garage
of! Rt
0 n 5 1 R • 1/
Rufl,lnd
mil l'

1
l

n~.-JM
by p.a s~
towa,d

- Remodeled I BR home on
b l rt c kf op road M Os tly carpeted FA . nAt g&lt;ts fur
na c e . attra(li VP s.mall home and 1 ~c r f' land P r 1r e d
f or Qut r k ~a l e. !.17 .500
S32 ,00o .oo
Good 3 BR all (d rpe l f'd nome rlose to
Pom e roy &amp; M 1Cidte por 1 Loca l ed. o n 11~ l'!cres
FARM
OvN 70 acres bOrd e r1ng Pom e roy w1th ex
t r,l large barnrt and.. ol d farm h o u se. but o ten t y of
pas fur e a nO somP farm ground pr ,ced On l y $49,000
LOTS OF LOTS
Fr om I t o 75 ar r es . borderi n g
Pom e r oy
MIDDLEPORT
3 BR horn e approx 10 vrs . o l d ,
~ lo ve &amp; r e f nge rator . lg stor age bldg
Pri ced at

0 ~YIOUSLY

' 00 NICE 10
BE '\I XED UP

IF YA WAN'-IA STICK ,
YOuR OW&gt;J Ill~ CK OUT
T'THOH SC.UMM'I RATS ..

HORSE 13LANKET5!
IF YOU BELIEVE THAT
'IOU'~~ BE:L IEVE

ANYTHIN6!

PHONE 742 2003
ATTENTION nrtd lo ! sot
!t ·rHli' r lovt rl y ( clrf· 1':J
wil,&gt;l thr ', i) Qtn f' 1"1.'1'&gt; t1,1eJ
4
I H' cl ro or~ l"&gt; .
l1v1nq
r oo m . d11l11l&lt;l r oom . b ~th
NH1 tJ f) ~e m c n t Gas to r
' •'&lt;I cl rr lvrnnre (&lt;I ll l or
.111
d c tr~rl s
Only

RUN

i..'1gnt a ( r es. w!l h
'l bt• a r oorn !lOme Usc
your tm ag1na tron wttn
fh t ~
pla ce
Lot3
at
p o ssibilit i es
On l y

113.500 .00 .
NEW LISTING

S70 100 00

1

)[j . .'ILL ~ .

WE NEED LISTINGS"
Chery l Lemley . Assoc.
Phone 742 2003
Ve lma N•c m sky
Phone 742 3092
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr
Br o ker . Phon e 992 ·5739

C

·er

I.

S.

W .,
by appv1nf ·

n

ni

m

7 I car ·O r l' R ear )
•om• oy )

Real Estate
- for- Sale
FINANCING VA FHA LO

A N &gt; LOW OR N O DOWN
PAYM~N T

P U R C H A SE
OR
RE F IN/1 N C t
IRE LA N D M OR TG /\ GE
7J r:
SlA!E
A TH E N S
6 14 S9 '} 10~ 1
FIVE ROQ fl, t1 0u~ t '
rll l
• cl rp(' t f'l(l ll"lOU(' rrl k I! ' 11('1\
rHTd t!ii H T (frlrt~yt · (lf i&lt;.J ( &lt;H
port I ll ur,ldl)ur y C all 'N "}

53 10

MA IN
POMEROY , 0 .
PH 9q2 HSCil
NEW LIS T ING
J "vt'M
01d
r r) fl ( h
W • th
bn~~·rrrPnt 1n ~ rr &lt;Hu:.l• )
b('dr oon 1 &lt;. . f' Qu tPPt'rJ krl
&lt;hen , l &lt;trQt' r N
r oorn.
ull n e w . al l elec fn r, ntre
levpl 101 1n an e x ce lle n t
lor a 11on $44.000 00

ff ()..)[;
THI~b ...

~J S . OOO

00

NEW

LISTING

ELECTR IC

HEERED OF

HIM ··· HE. WAS AJ;:QR'E
M'f TIME ··· ~OT SHOT
I="ER TALkiN' TO O
MUCH, THEY SAY ...

SPf? tH(i liERFABo:JTS·

WHY?

tny . a c ross
fr om th e Te xa co Station 1n
S y·r ~u (&lt;; f'
9fi7 )74] or 991
11SJ

SAVE ON :cA'RPET
DRIVE A timE
SAVE A' LOt

R"BBER BACK
CARPET

RIG I-IT B E
~INP M ~'

fHE

1'-,C t h 1 f

arou nd

4 \IT
6+

Pa s~

would

A M Weaiher JJ .
8

6

let 1t nde

to dummv ·s

9

010(' ,

("Omt~ to hi s ha nd wrt-h the Jack
and g('l to d1scard a heart o n

Pa ~:-.

r..: ·'

GOOD GRACIOUS ~ IT'S
A PUPPY! A BIG ,
FRIENDLY PUPP'f .'

9

would tak(' the heart fmesse

10 oo- Ca rd Sharks J, 15 . Beat the

f or SchenkPn And If hP lrd a

Cloc k 8 , 10 . Morning Magazine
13 . M ovie " The Juggler " 17 .
10 30 - Hol l ywood Squares 3 , 15;

ruff m dummv

i \~ : \11 '-\ I ' Af'HI E~TEHI'H1 S F

at an

excellent !'imall sra de slam
contr act . Nor tb "Ji f our -club h1d
was a cue bid showin~ tht&gt;

"

120 .000

S1mple pla·y but ty~teal o f
how a r eal npert operates

arr~vcd

North-South

ASS :'Ii

I

Sta tiOn. New York . N Y 1001 9 )

~
41 Famous

II Bonng tool
12 S1lly
13 Wall~t
contents

aroun'

17 " It's Dam Hot"
18 Emling
for subsist

· MAANPPAIN
A 7l?Aii.ER. lfOME

OUTWESTI JUST ::A \J

r'

..... _....-/

~ICTU'Z := 'T f

$3800

.

'

' I KE~ "' ~O IZ ·
s::--·\.G l-OW
::JL:/ - ... ::.,
A.i&lt;E:

IS ·· ·: . :

LOVE
I

'

. l

'

/.( i

I i-

21
22
23
25

~~

Calf 742-2211

9 Sanct1on

Rutl

PUBLIC AUCTION
Saturday, October 20 at 10:00 A.M.
Location : 917 South Newhampshlre, Wellston, Ohio
Listing in part : 2 Wardrobes , 2 Storage Cabinets.
Rollawny Bed . Serving Tray , Wall Cabinet, Utility
CaOtnef , Band Sa w , Table Saw. Pipe Vise and Ben
c h . E l ec tr ic Motors, Wringe r Washer , Coal and
w ood Heating St ove. Sideboard . Rinse Tubs. Hand
Bench Grinde r , Flt~r Furnace , Por c h Swing, House
Ja c k ~ . 1 Snow Tire s and Rirn s

TATER, I RECKON
VO"RE ALL DONE WIF YORE

LUNCH
BROKE

LUNCH BREAK -··

tested
25 MISS
Hedgrav e

31 State . abbr
3S D1aper
cla sp

or seal

I~

'

I"

'

Who JJ

?O.JJ

.,

1.'0

p

.,

Il•
\

.I.

b;'·.
F'
l/.!.1

I"

-~

'*

[ '-;

"'

DAILY ('HYI'TO(!l ' OTE -

f37

I '&lt;~

fl

F

3

[71, I"

·'

~

1--

'

~
r:r '"

"

10 · I I

llere'' how 1o work it :

AXYOI, BAAXR
ANTIQUES : 3 Railroad Lantern~ . Ice Tongs, Iron
Trunk , Tr ea d l e Sewi ng Mac h1ne , Library Table,
Small Oak Shoe Case . 1ron Bed Comp lete. Oak
Dresser, Wicker Rocker. Flat Top Rockef , End
Tables. Small Tabte , 2 Tall Flower Stands, Metal
Picturf Frames, 3 PIKe MOha ir Li\o'ing Room Suite,

~11 , 500

Is I. 0 :\ G f" E L L 0 W
One letter st mp)y ~l and s f o r anothe r. In this , samplt- A ls
used f or the thre(' L 's, X fo r the two 0 s. etc . Stngle letters,
aposnophes.'"'t hP lenglh and format!on or the words are all
hint ... Each da~ thP rode lf' tt rrs are Lllffl'n· nt

Lot of Figurines, Oak Ped•sta l. Oak Dre.,er . Hall
Tree, Organ and Bench with Carvings, L . Oak Glass

Front Book Cas•. Old Book• . Opro Glo•ses, Mantel
with Mirror, 2 Laroe Poterv vase~. Oak China

utilily room , kit . e-quipped w stove · and refr i g .
Mostly ca rpeteri . for ced air g~s furna c~, 1 yr . old .
Ga ra ge . a c ompletf' tr ade r h ool&lt; up with nat gas
tap and sc pft r r c.1n adct rn rornc Over 7 arres .
S19,900 C a ll l or rlPDOintm ent
JUST liSTED
Mm1 ! ar m w be ~dul b r r k bt
lt•\le l . w J BR &amp; lull I.JttsPrnPn! l y c,ypo rt tota l
cle c, tn suhtd . iii I hardw~ oc.t fl oor';;. , 31 l o h ofl10w,cs.
WltllCIPPr ox 'i rtr r f'&lt;:, $113 .'&gt;00

Cabinet

ROCK SPRINGS -

Near Meigs H igh Sc hool - A

n1 re 1tftl e st arte r home, 2 b edrooms. ltv 1nq room .
drn• ny r m , k 1l &lt;h e-n . tvllv equioppd b~ t h . br1 'if'rt1f'n f
t urn1t uregoes. too Jus t$25 ,000 00

DOWNING-CHILDS

WANT TO SEll! - t.IVt u::, ;. 1.1\Ll

'

•.

Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
P~•me 992 ' 2342, Eve. 992·2449
' Middleport, Oh.

with

Mirror

and

Lot

of

•

OWNER, MR . RODNEY CARTWRIGHT
Auctioneers
kenneth Sw•in
Wellston, Ohio
Gallipolis, Ohio

James GeHies

Not Responsible for Acridentt

( 'R YPTOQUOTES

PEANUTS

Carbings ,

Phonograph In Extellent condition, Oak Sideboard
with Mirror very orname"lal , Lot ot Old Pi ctures ,
Round Oak Table with 3 Mal c ning Chairs. Large
C upboard , Large Wood l ee Bo x, 3 Bentwood Chairs,
Child 's Wr~gon . St one Churn. Stone Chamber, 1 Oak
R or lc. e rs , Stone Rugs, 3 Oak Pressed Spindle Bac k
R oc kf'r s. Co w Betls . Light Shade~ . Kit chen Cup
board . St eel Traps , snoe Last . Small Anvil and Lots
o f M1scellaneous Items.
TERMS : CASH
•
LunchwillbeservecL

TRUE? WHO KNOWS
FALSE? ONL4' TIME
WILL TELL

7

PERHAPS... COULD BE .

MMBE ..I DOVBT IL

--

DON'T COUNT ON IL
' - y// .- -

MMBE IN THE LONG
IWN ,. IT ALL DEPENDS ...
WEATI-IEK PERMITTING

SOME 01= LIS, MA'AM.
SEE EVEK'I'THING IN
51-lADES OF GRM

ABCD
HOA

N B

JKGLMNHOMK

AEDFGHI

PJHNQ

CESK

00 3's t..., Crow d 3. T ic Tac Dough
8
Baxter s 6 .
News
10 ;
Newl y w ed Game 13 : Love
American Sty le 15 . San ford &amp;

Son 17 , DICk Cave ll 20.33.
30 - H ol l ywood
Squ ares
3;
Newlywed G ame 6: J oker 's Wild
a. $100,000 Name That Tune 10 ;
Nas h v rl le on the Road 13 ;
Counfry Roads 15; All In The
Fam ily 17; MacNeil - Lehrer
Repo r t 10.33
8 00-B uck Rogers 3.15 ; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6 ,1 3; Waltons 8 , 10 ;
Evening at Symphony 20; NHL
Hoc key 17 ; State We ' re In 33 .

B Jo-Be nson 6,13 ; Sporls . Close. up
))

9 DO-Qui n cy 3. 15 . Barney MiHer
6, 13 : Hawaii Five 0 8.10; Sneak
Preview s 20,33 .
9 30 - Soap 6 , 13; Camera Three

20. 33 .
IO : oo-Kate hte Detective 3, 15; 20-20

6, 13; Barnaby Jones 8, 10 ; News
20; David Sussk ind 33 .
10 : 30- Civlllsati on 17 ;
Va lley Bluegrass 20.

Hocking

' 1 : 00- New• 3,6,8,1 0,13 , 1S ; Dick
Cavett 20; Fall &amp; Rise of
Reginald Perrin 33 .

ER

NQKT

IBL

H

NJI

UHNQ.

BCAKO
OHDQ
Yeslerdl:y's Cryploquole; WHEN YOU HAVE NOTHING
SAY. SAY NOTHING. - CHARLES CALEB COLTON
~

30 One O.:~y A t A T 1me 8. Joker ' s
W il d 10. Flintstones 17
J 00 M1 ster Cartoon J; Password
PillS 15 . M er v Gri ff in 6. Beverly
Hlllbill1es 8 . Se::.ame St 20,33 ;
) t.l M rJI,on Dollar Man 10; Real
M cCoy s 13 . Spectreman 17 .
.1 JO - B e &gt;A.rt c hed
3;
Petticoat
Junc tion 8. Tom &amp; Jerry 13 ;
M erv Grr ff1n 15. Gilligan's I s. 17 .
00 I Dream o f Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son
M rs ter Rogers Neigh t)o rho o d 20 )) , Mary Tyler
MoorP 10 My T hree Sons 17 .
30 Cru ol B u rnett J; News 6 ;
Gom f·r Pyle 8 E l ee . Co . 20;
Ma sh 10 H appy D ay s Agd in 13 ; I
D renm o f Jprton re 17 . Doc1or
6 00 N e w s 3.8 10 , 13. 1S . ABC News
6 . Ca r ol B urnet t 17 . Zoom 20;
u f e Ar oun d Us 33
6 30-- N BC News J.l5 ABC News 13;
Carol Burne !! 6. C BS News 8, 10;
Bob N ewha rt 17. Over Easy

,,

I'

Andy

a

32 Hum away

&lt;

I'

s

l4 Donk ey :
Fr .
l5 Suffer
38 Shoppe r 's
binge
39 Don't exist
40 Proia nged
atla c k

-- SEEI N' AS
HOW 'v'ORE

31 Fait hful

:W One krnd

14

:W Santa ·s~de
33 I'"
slandstill I,Jl
h\~NEY

23 Stanee
24 Probed :

\

membe r

d, D.

27 SUit SIZe
Z9 See 7 Down

I"

2S Letter
29 Fami ly

FURNITURE

contents

14 One k1nd
or age
21 Alf1nnatrve
22 K1nd of frve r

i! :I'

poem

RUTlAND

spot

Sm11h
5 Nomad
6 Prepared

Party-g ivrr

Equal
Wind
indica to r
26 Throw
hghtl y
27 Narra live

J j ,,.·1'illi

andup

P LEASA NT .

.

,._.-

Yt"Stf&gt;rday 's An.swt"r
10 Vac&lt;otron
26 Caddy

Hank ering

or Kennedy
WINNIE

example

name

·9~~dup

20 Hockey

IJ ;

JO

4 Sportswriter

potatoes
i W1th 29
Down .
Cehf n t y
s Disney
output

19 Husing

6'xl2' to 12'x16'

for

15 Title of respect · abbr.
16 Charge

IN STOCK

SELECTION

l Secret :itor e
2 (;reC:It
Lake
3 T·man .

competitor

SALE ON ALL

GOOD REMNANT

[)OW~

6 Track

prices .'

Jnstalledwith Pad Free

tenor
42 SA range

vegetable

GASOI.INF. AI.I.F.Y

Pyramid

Gri ff ith 6 : Wh ew B. JO : 10 : 55C B S N e w s 8, House Ca ll 10 .
\1 oo--- H1gh R o llers 3, 15 . Laverne &amp;
Sh1r!ey 6 . 13 . Pri ce is Right 8,10 .
11 30 - Wheel o f Fortune 3, 15 ;
Family Feud 6. 13 ; Sesil!me St
20 . Nova 33 . 11 ss-News 17 .
12 . 00- News ce nter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13 ; Mindreaders IS; Love
American Style 17
11 JQ-Ryan 's Hope 6, 13 , Search for
To morrow
8 . 10 .
Movie
"S ebastian " 17 E!ec. Co . 20,33.
00- Days o f Ou r Lives 3, 15 ; All My
C hildren 6, 13 ,
Young &amp; the
Restle ss B. 10
3()- A s The World Turns 8.10 ;
2 00- Doc iors 3. 15 . One Life to
Live 6. 13
2s- N ews 17 . 7 30--A nother World
3.15
Guidin g
Light
8 , 10 ;
G 1gg le snort Hotf'l 17
J 00- Gener a l Hosp i tal 6. 13 ; I Love
Luc y 17 Mast erprece Theatre

(For a copy o f JACOBY
MODERN. send $1 to :· w rn at
Bm:tge, .. care of tf11s newspaper. P 0 Box 489. Rad;o C1t:y

Four notrump wa .s Bla c k ·
wood. and th(!n South l"onf• -

I l,eafy

JG-Famlly Affair 10 ; 7 : 5.&gt;-Chuck
White Reports 10
oo-C apt K a ngaroo 8, 10 : Leave It
T o Beav ~ r 17 . Sesam e St . 33 .
J(}- R om per Room 17
oo-Bob Braun 3. Bi g Valley 6 ;
Phil Donahue 13 . 15 : Porky Pig &amp;
F r ien d s 8 One Day At A Time
10 . Lucy Show 17
30 - Bob N ewhart 8. L ove of Life
10 : G reen A cre::. 17

thr acr of clubs
If he led back a hea n that

· dub a('e wtth a max1mum
ha nd and a good f11 in spades

and up
Cash &amp; carry

'4".

BUILDNG

Roger &amp; Dottie Turn e r
Res . 742 · 2474

S&lt;"hr nk en

:1.

and Alan Sontag

In

ASSOCIATES

Pa.s!)

Pa!)!)

South

By Oswald Jacoby

a1n"t
qo1n' t'
brinq
down
no

9662

Henry E . Cleland , Jr
Res . 992 ·6191

,.

ACROSS

BIG SELECT ION of pr e
owned 10, 12'. and 14' w1de
mob t le hom es
Kanauga
M obi lc H o me Sales. 4.46·

Res . 99nS68

Pe~ss

4+

so-

by THOMAS JOSEPH

wv 30 4 675 44?4

Henry E. Cleland , Sr .

2 NT

Farm R eport -13 ; 5 : 5Q-PTL

Heal t h F 1eld 10 : World at Large
17
6 3!} For You Black Woman 10 ;
N ews 17 , 6 45--Mo rning Repor t
3· 6
Good Morning West
Vi rg1nia 13 . 6 55-News 13 .
00-- Today 3, 15 ; Good Morning
Ameri ca 6 , 13; Thursday Mor ning 8 . Batman 10 . T h ree
Stooges L ittle Rascals 17 ; 7 15----

Schenken co ntinued w1th a

East
Pa ss
Pa ss

North

I 50-

Club 13
6 00 700 Clu b 6 ,8 ; PTL Club IS .

d1amon&lt;l . Schenken would
s1rnply di scar d a hrart &lt;:tnd

W H ERE'S

P IANO ' TUNING
Lane
Dan1el s New phone n um
bf'r
747 ?Cil51
Se rvt r:e to
&lt;,r h oo l s and horf'e S s1nn.·
1965

REALTORS

West

... Pass
Pass

JS

low s p.adP to thf' 10 In h1 s hand
a nd led the club queen for a
frr, .,.se It fa1led
East wa s on lead and
{'tt ught 1n a th ree- sutl end
plav If he led back a cl ub .

Vulnerable: !loth
Dealer : West

17.

THURSDAY , OCTOBER 18. 19H

fa il

th e rcmainmg d1amond honor.
d1sca rdmg a low heart

• Q J,
• 2
• Qj ~

Baskeiball

:3S-

N ews 13 . 4 · 10 - Movie "T he
Bonn1e Parker Story " 17 .

cas hed th e king or spades and

Opening le&lt;od : • Q

BOWERS

dOH'r
E XCA V ATI N G ,
lOader and ba&lt; khoe w o rk
cJum p tru c k s ana 10 oovs
t o r ht r e. will hr~ul l 1ll d1r t
top sod , 11mesto ne and
W d vel Ca l l Bob o r Roger
J p lfcr '&gt;, day phone 991 7089.
ntghl phone 99'} 352:, or 991

M1dd lepon . 1
bus 1 nt~ s roo ms down , 1
apartments up can f o r
details . S3J.SOO 00

No

• G- · N BA

Sc hPnken won th e optomng

Up tw l~ter

REPA IR
Swee-pers,
feasters , rrons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower .
Next to State Highway'
G arage on Route 7, 985 ·
3815

St, L ES. PT

EH?

Sl ..

Re-pairs ,
servrce ,
ail
makes .
992 128•
The
Fabric
Shop,
Pomeroy
AutMorized
Singer Sales
e n d Se rvi ce W e 'ihnrpen
Sr is so rs .

IN

ntN ' r

8
1 00 To m or r ow 3, News 15 :
N ews 17

d1amond lead 1n dummy . thf'n

• 9 7 65
+ K 10 8 2

• .4.109 5 $ 3

Hf) .,..l')

.ao

-

$:;:re'J te st hndge players

SOUTH

FI Lii ·...tHI:R E?

· -- -

&lt;:r . how ever. and he sho wed
whv he wa s one of the w orld 's

¥ K 10 2

98 7 4

• 63

Motor'S , rewrnd and r e patr .

A&amp; H

..,

• Q J 10 8 43

9 7 1 mo

----:---

1n SIX spades because both
f1nesses are off s1de The late
Howard S&lt;.:henken was de c\ar ·

EAST

ORPHAN ANNIE-WATER CURE

EL WOOD

MACHINE

bedroom
1970 Vindale 11&gt;&lt;63 with ex
pando, 2 b@dr
·
1970 New Moon 12x60 J bdr
1973
S.kyline
11x55
1
bedroom
1977 Bonanza 17x5? . 1be-dr
H &amp; S MO BI LE HOME

1 •tory ,
f ull
basement . wOOd
burner 1n far''f11 i y roo m,
up to 4 bed roorns . n1ce
yard , g .-.r age , o tner
l ert t urec,. shoul d V /, or
F H &lt;I $18,900 00
MINI FARM
In Cu un
try
6 d&lt; r es. tHee
h orne. IMyc 11v 1nq room
..v 1t h W B F P , 1arye
newer
k t t &lt; ncn ,
3
bedrooms
parr
base m e n! , tn yood co n
dt t •on S/4 .~ 00

/

•

..

'1'&gt;7 2356. 561 Beech
M •dd l eport . Oh10

JJ
11 30 John ny Carson 3. 15 ; Love
Boat 6. 13 . Swih:h 8 . ABC News
JJ . M o ..ne "O ld Acquaintance"
10 Movi e " Dodge City" l7
1i
BM ella 6, 13 . Hawaii Five -0

Man y derlarcrs would

J 8

News 3,6,8, 10 . 13, IS; Dick

Cav ell 20 . Wodehouse Playhouse

At;

&lt;',

dently b1d the sl am

10-1 7

A 6 :1

• 6

1972l YNN HAVEN 14 •65 l

STATELY

•

LIITI.F. OHPHA\ AN NIE

S EW I NG

Mobile Homes- Sale

$2, .00.00

+KQ

WE.ST

BRA DFORD . Auctioneer ,
Com pl e t f' Serv1ce
Phone
9d9 l -48 7 or 94Cil 2000 rae me .
O ht o. Cr itt Bradford

IN S TOCK t or tmmed1a l e
rll'IIVCry
V(HIOU '&gt; SIZeS Of
p ool k1f &lt;; Do tt yourself or
lc·t u'&gt; ms f a ll for you D
Bu mgJ rdn er
S a le~
In c
99? 'i77 4

MIDDLEPORT
l\l ,re
home Wllh 7 r ar qa r .l qf'
nnd work shop on a q{,Od
'&gt; lreet S18 900 00
RUTLAND
S tfe fo r
trailer or nom e, water
and ele&lt;t r ici t y on s 1te
Priced
redu c ed
to

!

~IRTH

• AK
A97J

RACINE, 0 .
94n748 or

912 7 14)

$1 7 900 00

OP1N ,CJIV.

+

DOZER .
END
LO&lt;lON
brush
hog
W 11 d o
h~&lt;,t:'nwnt&lt;; .
p o ne! ~. !) ru sh .
l1m be r ,
lnnd
r 1e ar 1nq
Charlt·'&gt; But r twr l 4 ] 79 A0

SURANCE
bt?en
c an
( £&gt; lied?
Lost
y ou r
ope rator 's l• cens e? Ph one

34

\

Af1-n JL&gt;IX 1.

733 1 or 7&lt;2 2593

d ( r es lit l td 1n EdS i f:rn
SChOOl d t ~ l rl( ! . r IQS(' t o
St
Rt
! , ?O:dO new
bloc k bud cJrrHJ p l u~ r1
rnob d e hon w t o I1 VP 111

BUSINESS

PAI NT I N G
AND
!:.rlna
hla s t 1nq Free t' ':. l1 ma teo;,
(d II 9J9 ]686

AUTOMOBI L E

A '75GOIJD

',

V. C. YOUNG Ill

REYNOLD 'S

00

II

ro·l'&gt;•dl ' ,.l

Expert play looks simple

I FREE ESTIMATE!

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E)(cavat1ng ,
sept• c
sys tems, dozer . bilCkhoe
Rf . 143. Pnone 1 t 614 J 698

LISTING

IF 'lOU r:otJ'r
Mlf.JD, I 'D L-11&lt;6

l.Af.lOJ..{

Gutter
work,
down
spouts, some cqncrete
work ,
walks
and
driveways.

5732

Beaut i fu l ] '&gt; lor y h om t:&gt;
wdh
ri VE'r
v1ew
rn
"Pomeroy , 3 bedroom~ .
b nse m e n t . n ew
ra r
alu mtnum
p e ftn g ,
~ld tn g , 1•
bat11s very
go od
IO ndd oon

Housing ··
HeadquaTtsTs_

WILL HAUL l imestone and
gravel Also , l1m t&gt; hauling
d '1 d spr e ad tng Leo Morrr s
Tru ( k 1ng P hone 1421 455

1.1 ' '· 1'1 ' '&lt;l

_ _.::_
O__
swald Jacoby and_AI (i_'l_Sc&gt;ntag

REMODELING

Cil 18 1 mo. Pd

NEW

BEDROOMS
J~
f clnliiY home . I ' 1 D.l th s.
n&lt;'! r
qil s
f u r na c e .
odn(•tecJ 1&lt;. 1t pl us h c nr
p ertn ~L
and
2
c ar
ga ra ge . $17 .500 .
GARDEN - Renovated
1 bedroom home. nice
kitchen with
din i ng
area . L1ving rm . l7xll
w i th
wood burning
l1r C'blac e. basemen t. 1
ra r y a rage and ex tra
ro t ! 25 ,000
FRESH AIR
N ew J
becJ r oorn
( 0 p p (' r
p I U 1fT t; I IT 4
g.'Hclllf ' . O li •O cowe r an d
ant• l ., r ur· ...J(rl' of n1 &lt;E'
ldy •ng l,lnd t enrc d
COZY
] bf&gt;droon'
tr an ww &lt;111nc1 t ge1sF A
f urnn&lt; t·
r1 ty
utrl 1f 1f'"o
ne ar K rogers \15 ,500
EASY WALK
T o the
stor e 3 bcaroo mc;, bMh ,
naf QdS f u r nace, ci fy
water and garage with
vtcw o f r iver
ASking

11

ADD ONS &amp; ·

R o . IJn~•
gutt e r ~ .
and
J o, ..,.,~ ·Jut -. .
Frl"!e
_; ~t
l.:Jt us.
All
work
liUiJ I ,l nt ('f"'d . 20 year5 CK ·
er1 nee Call Athen s,
oi l • (f,
Gerald Clark
: 97 · ..J 8~7 or Tom Hosktn s
"197 2745.

Vt

EX

CELLE NT BU Y It

, _.

94~·2862--949-2160

ROOFING

7

bPd r oom hOml' on Un ron
Av p n u •'
Extr&lt;)
lo t .
rPacl r to pu t r rr~• IP r on
Cn l l
W(· w on t hitVe
till ". o nt· lonq a T cl pr re

oi

s.

'-to ' rn •
&amp;
rm,, Lodns

l tJJ AUI&lt;1

BRIDGE

BORN LOSF.H

'(01!12

: 1Rh F11;A"dAL

$3S,OOO 00
CHOICE lOT 111 Ar
bauQh
Ad d1 ! 10 n
100 ' Ki00 ' with water tap
and
sep!t(
sys t e m .
Sel l 1ng Prt r e $5 ,000 00 .
RACINE AREA
611
dnes on B asha n Road
Lovra lv 3 tJPdroom lr nrn r&gt;
CMp(·l thr oughout Fu ll
l lr) ', f'11l t'!11 Wt ll1 lcl •llrl -,
roan" nno lrlUn(lr y roorr
N1 r 1• hrHI1 ;,nr1 lot&lt;:, o i
r oom
t or
l ht&gt;
h d"
/• .... ~ 11H, u r1 1r bJ9 &lt;tOO Oil
POMEROY
'/./1' II CJvl '
two I I O!llf''&gt; lt"IFII ol r P OnitrJ
..,.,)IUl'~
fJ r'.
t od ~ y's
111 drl&lt;. vt (,1 11 101· rno 1t'

d

V/ ' •,J l

Wednesday , Oct . 17

New, repair,
gutters and
down spouts.
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

OHIO VALLI:.Y

',1 / TY

Answe r

AI:::,Lf !H i C..I

Roofing .

HUILI

JufT\ tJ ie!:J

is

oo-

"[1l lJ[Ill11IJ"

Answer

Eight

Enou gh 6 , 13, The Body Human
8.10 G r ea 1 P erf ormances 20,33 ;
NBA Ra sk etba \1 17
9 00- M ovie " Bel l er L ate Than
N ever " 3. 15 ; Charl te 's Angels
6 13
Movre " The Concrete
Cuw boy 5'" 8. 10
10
Vega s 6, lJ . News 10, Con ' neCIIOn S J J
10 30- Up star r s D o w nsta i r s 17 : Best
of Groue ho 20

Now arra nge lhe CI'Cied lett ers 1c
to1 m rne Su'P'ISe ans we' ac; s .... q
gested by !"1e abov e car1oor

OUT YOIII( FATHEI('5
AND MINE, TOO!

.\IAFIA!

Rea l Peop le l iS;

8 00

HAV",G DOUBTS.

FII&gt;J&amp;! JU~T DOIIi'T STICK

.,.\l iT H T HE

.\ 10 111

c!i:lor opener . ~~s~d $15,.500.
JUST LISTED -~ 6 Yr . old home. 3 BR, din ing and

'49-2654 or q49· 7S91

Rd . ,

B UT HE-5-

H. L Writesel

RlJTLAt&gt;.D
742 -23 28

Rl-&lt;l '::STATE
F NANC I NC.

..

I Answers !Of"'lor· ow

\l)~ ;)I,

135.000 .

CALL JIMMY DEEM . t S5Cr1ATE 90Y '"88
OR NANCY I~SPE~S. ASS0&lt;;1ATE

DID YOU HAVE
TO ORAlS ME AWAY 50 RUDE L'' '!
L K'-IDW WE WERI&lt; "'&gt; U ~PI CIO U5
OF .JeFF PARKER 1\T FIRST- ·
DAR'IV IT, EA~Y!

tate
if
you
need
somethin9.
9· 141 ·1. mo

Al TROMM

utility rm. , plenty of storage, two ·car .Q(!rage.. elec .

Mental · Health Center· has openings in
psychiatric
Inpatient hospitalization
program.
Previous psychiatric ex perience not required. Rotating sh ills.
Salary and fringes excellent . An EEO ·
Affirmative Action employer. Contact :
Juanita Atha, Personel Administrator, G·
J -M community Mental Health Center,
412 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 or
calf 6.14-446·5500.

Osborn

,.uoi;!r ·;s

HUUS~::i

Repair
Phon e 992 · 5682

:t e
re r

117,500
NOW IS THE TIME T.O
BUY OR SELL WHILE
PEOPLE ARE EAR ·
NEST , BEFORE WIN ·
TER .

COUNTRY SPECIAL

'il _CKI&lt;

r,QO ~£

---

CAfl'r AIN EASY

Reedsville, OH , 4S772 .
For informltion C1ll
66H48S. Will be OPen

ROOttNG
REMO.IJtLirtb

Roger Hysell

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

116 E SecGnd Stre-e t

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAL FINANCING FOR
MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR AS LOW AS S%
DOWN

&lt;' n111l/ ~
Wd ~i•H tl!f'

I ~All E A N O W ,0,\/AILAE!LE

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair

&gt;71 .000

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

I Of

5071

Phone 991 -2772
8· 17 1 mo.

FOR SALE
I n (h est er ,
OH
fl ronrn housf' w 11h
IJ ,l lh
Bt q
bP,1ul tf u l lo t
$11.')00 Cnl166! 3087

/~olmos l

•'--------------~

f

1/ H

Eo1

Oh.n

- •'

6 30. Nlj l N ews3.15 ; ABC NewslJ;
Ca r ol Burnell 6. CBS News 8, 10 ;
B ob Newh art 17 . Ove r r::asy 20 .
l 00- 3's A C r owd 3. Tic Tac Dough
B. M&lt;tlch Game PM 6 ; News 10 ;
N Pwlywed Game 13 .
Love
Amcncan Style 15, Sanford &amp;
Son 11. Dr ck Cave tt 20.33
JO Count r y Roads 3 . Newl ywed
Gam e 6. Joker's Wild B; The
J udq e 10. Fam dy Feud 13; Wild
K1ngdom 15. All In The Fam i ly
17 Mn c N eil Lf'hrer Report 20.33 .

IHE Y
CALLED IHE GALWHO WA ? ALWAYS

? I B)

HYSELL

BOATERS
L lttl('
H o&lt; k tn O
RtvPr Iron
lrH.J C'. l or boa t dO( k ancl
O., wirnrTlitH j
p lu'&gt;
h Orn f'
t1u ldr nrr &lt;,po t 1 ~ 1 nr r t'S
~" 900
Call V1rg1n 1a Ha yman
Ph 985 -4197

6~~

Mo • f'~

••II&lt;·

Lr~~

•

0.-I "'' 'IIOmf'r'/' ll!t

! ~tnq •

JAMES KEESEE
COAL . lurnp or
w •ll de ttvN . 742

l 'liO

MINI
FARM
14
acres, 3 bedrm house.
f 1repldce
Very
o;erluded Cash or· co n
v cn t 1ona l f• n an cc o nly
s.:n ':iOO S( out C.Hnp R d
B&lt;~ r 1&lt; o f Ct1et, ter
84 FT
OHIO RIVER
FRONT
3 l7 a&lt; r t'
wtlh mob1lt: 11u rne
3
tr rrn , I . b,J t h&lt;; , ,,.,.
P&lt;~ndclv rnr $16 .000
LONG BOTTOM
6
rn1 ol dt' r ho rP ro
1 rlr
p (' t Pd . t)M n p lu~ '} ou !
truo ld1nQ &lt;;
on 10 In!'&gt;
')HI 900
REEDSVILLE
7
tr o rm !ra .rer . "1 rov red
po r r hes . 3 c ar g arilgf' .
II JT IO! . \23 ,000 Owner
w i lltng to talk
REEOSVtLLE - Home
wllh 1 c ar garage and
· +~ c e b u siness building
W rfh
'1
restro o ms

RACINE - 2 B R tra 1Jer on n iCe lo t A')k.tng

TRAILER SALES

Television
Viewing

u .·.::.cramb le !he::.e four Jum ble~
011e rener 10 eac t, squar e to IQrrTI
rour ordr nary words

.

DE:CORATING
SUPPLIES

IILUMINUM ~IUINli

20 WOOOEO ACRES --&lt;an be dividod . $22 ;000
LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - 3 Acres , • BR home , fully
ca rpeted, equipped kit ., tam . room nas flr•plac e, Ig .

PS.VCHIATRIC AIDES/Assistants

~

.

THIS 15 C HIEF
OF POLICE PROUD-THER E IS
SOMETHING YOU S HO UL D

,---.0--)Tfl
ANN'S
--g """ CAKE

A l so Transmisston

MAIN ST .

N EFDLn
tw lwt +' l t 9 t'lll{l 'J &gt;92

') ') , 1'.1

,

MR. TRACY,

MONTGOMERY

ANU

VI~ 11

J73 rn 6

SIH.OO

clearance priced

l'i•RP~- P\l.JN
(".~ ~~

FOUR ROOM ll OU SP 1n
"&gt;vrcV uc..P 011 7nctr Sf !.6.000

W OO [)FD
lo t 1 18 tl f res ( i l l watt&gt;r
Cl ose to !&gt;r llool &lt;:. rw nr Rod,
Spr-t n qs A fT er 'i . (.=:; II J04

S I SO.OO

$5 .000. 7422819

'-. I U ~I' r

J&amp;L ~LUWN
I~ ~ULA I lUI"

B[~\UT

McCulloch

5250

HCUSE

.I

'//!,Q'

HOUSE

JO HN DEER E . d•C SPI. )U 10
dOl!..: r .
ou 1Sid f'
rnounli'd
b l &lt;td e . good
c on d!l lo n

APPL ES

Wednesday Oct 17 197"

Business Services

McCulloch Pro

HO NEY
Ft l7palr tc k, Or
r ha rd, Sfa tc R ou te 699
Phone
Wd k t's v lii t~
669

TWO

BEDROOM

lHB l~B9

GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS

ll, PPLE~ .

kUfLI• N O t U[l Co
'"'
I,Ho,1nq rlpp ! i( ,)f rOii~ l or f ull
' •rn e e rnp iO t t.'l' 'lOI'ni' c )l
p• 1 "w t' .r1 w or K.nq w , 111
n,•lurn l (Inc., w,H1 1P(l i)U t no t
'' +" &lt;' '-,',, l ey
!"\[)p ly Dr IIT&lt;'lil
r•() B o • l)lfl H',lll ' l'l ' lt ll!"l

Si! lt·
W 1l l

FMER C-. E N C Y
POWCR
cl l i t•rnaiO r &lt;, own 111(' bt ' 51
buy WINPOWFJ&lt; ..Crlll ~1J

'N l 78 10

For Sale

IHREE

doubl e- w rae , 1 baths , wood
burn 1ng ftreOidc e, equip
~d Jt, 1tchen, s.un de-c k , se t
l 1nQ on '} r~ver fr on t il C rP ~
B uyer rn~y pur chase exTr a
lot !lfld ren t al tra d er 99?

9'1 7 2106

IY
C~'\ "'I PE R
'&gt;P II
I Ulllrl ln('Q
SIP!'•p &lt;.. 6 $1:1~ 0

lY!}

,.

tJ U N

L IMES lON E
'&gt;, Ht f1 , gr avel ,
(ttl• •u rn
r tllor, d e .
fer fd tl J' r.,
d ay
! nod &lt;t n a al l I~ Pt''i o t &lt;,i'\1 1
E" r !'IS+ Or Setll W or k s 1nr
F MnHl
Purn e r oy 'NJ
tWII

0)60

r . 1r
,r'

I(.

NO

GE RMAN
SH EPHE:RO
b lit, 1&lt;. dnd cre.:Hn , f t· m rll f'
"&gt;tlots Bo rd~? r 1 ollu • bl',Hllt&gt;
t ype . b lar k . brown .l ll&lt;J
..... h!l(' f f' rnalt:' . SilO h . Vl' l y
tn l•'ll•qen l
1
ro ll 't'
&lt;, IWph t•rd blat k dnd browr1
pup it'lllrlll...' "} OOI)f' r rn ,lrt
&lt;O I Iws 1 rnalr~ 1 +t 'l""llrl l!•
"t l1 llrl n,llt L• rJ IC.H lq 'lcltrr'n
Il l rntll " ro lor , ( ,lnl r' ! r o rn
&lt;..nt,ll l 1 Jilt~• &lt;, IIIII'-. &lt;'I IH1 W(J r
w,· .: ~
Ht, nl ,lll• · '::&gt;tlt 1•.· ty G9'}

CO AL .

~l'N P OR

o'

CHOKE ONLY

Mo ma le Eng l• sh '::lt' l
r. •r . w h• te wtth oror llW
II ( K'&gt; 8A3 1CilS-1

6A9

t1.U.

n/oC,
f' ,·r ·, ,;,.., "J ,r o~ :J.+
.HII!;) I I!'I ' .tl• &lt;: ' ' ' " ' "
) I

fi• · ~.H(l.\

Serv 1c es Offered
'

N otrees

r

I' l l

lur

t · .. d l li)(,l, •,
l)it 11 ) (j :J))\,'l il '
l t1 1l . 1&lt;' 1dl l ' , o r· Till' liP+' ii l
rr ,l ll', p ur t ,t t . on ._, ,.r,, l ,. t1 1&lt;1 l
'II 1'1 1• '11
p r 10 1
IC
1 '' I " ' ''ll ,) P,.U J)t)',l l
,\ r l flt•rT 1 rl lltl'llllh nr ,tJ o r
~~ O;Jo~ rl l •, u&lt;,t l)l· &lt;,uo m !1 ('(1
&lt;t11il11rl !l11 1t 1 t 10 ' d it y"&gt; t u
t n•· ,H l!'ll' ., ,ll lil t ' a bOv C' ad
ur.- ss W1tl1 ~'~ r opy t o the
Ot,,o Dl~p,:p rmcn r of Tran
s o o rlii! 10n
B urertu
of
Pubt •c Trc'l nsport a t1 on . 25
Sou t h '-,trt• t' l
Co l u mbu s.
Qn .o Jj .ll)
1\ ll(•n ! tO rl
C,r 1n1•, f• ( lrn.r t. &lt;,lr,l l n r
1

I N Mf 1\/'.Qh' "( (.1 l u · l" r ,·

~ IX

Campin!J Equipment

&lt;., '

[ ~ , 1•'

L ,, , C

&lt;:. 1-0 fM '-.

In Memory

o• d

II " "1 1&lt; ,J ill : () I
f .' l di::J\)&lt;_, , ·!1',
l r(Ji1 1 , oil ll l (·' ' '". l•'r: I)UI11H
p1 ,. ,, to • ,l'\0
Wd'·tl fr,H IO., t
!&gt;l)r'l &lt;1fPr ·, 1l'• U\ ll ntl f il(l
(J :J t•&lt;l 1 U ' '&gt;
I (J •
l h1&gt;
I.) I IJ\o o(jl! li.J () I trrHl ~l)t) l t&lt;1t 10n
':, 1'(11 '• ,. I (J r rnp o•l(1('rly anrJ
h1llld• 1 •lPO•·(!
wtlf1ofl
Our
",('/ Vlf ( ' c)f&gt; '&lt;l
Opt•r ,1h11 ·,
~'\1 1 10
.H t
•ll
' t l &lt; ',l• I
d!
il l l t / l lllj
! rOJI (l &lt;,,r l'
' " 11''•) \110• ' c.,, ·r
o., t111 · 1 · '&lt; ll' ld • r D r
Dt~n

)· TII1oll ,,,·,·rq ...

"1\

'-, , 11J I II

the Sentitiel Classifieds

· ··

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

l " ,,d o• ll' • '.,

T I) 1·

ADVEHTISING

( 11UI1

I ' H ' ~11. 1111 , q P 111 ct lll ll '
l• · qll+' '. ' 1&lt;1\H &lt;-, 1,11 HI,'ll(j

I ll''.

I

WA~T-AD

\I ' d \. i.I'J &lt;&gt; '

Ill

DICK IHAL'Y

KNOW

Giveaway

PUHLI( N U ll ( [ •
rnt•
',p,;Tn ~'&lt;'l) l
O h iO
[ rnerq t'n r· v M ed tr al Se r
v• r t'':&gt; tnr 1 ~E OEM 5, ). wn
(&gt; h ,.., .1 pr,.,, di C' non proht
I U f IiLI I iti 10I\ Hl ll 'flr1". IU 5 U!J
rn.r ,H T ,1ppl 11 ,li •OI\ t o r , 1
t o p t l&lt;t l u t rll tl tll ll 1t'l lhr •
pr o v •&lt;.. •nrt t d '-.o•t i •Oil 16 ( b l
!] l
o t lht• Ur hMT Md ':.'&gt;
Trdtt&lt;,p0r1c'l l o&lt;lll !\ , I &lt;J ! 1'#6-l
,t" , JIP t·lltlt 'fl
I t•
~Jr()VI(it'
11011 ••11"1 1 T ll • 'll(y
lllV,llo(l
'rdll '-.:)0 1 t,JI,()II '·&lt; " V" t ' for
, ,,,. t- l r: ,•r l t
ttll ' l
hdfl
II• ,l j'f:'t 'd ...Vt'll 'I ·\ ltlt'fl)
Hrl• "- •; '; Ll • k '.11 11 l .lWI +' ll

19- The Daily Sentinel, M ldd leoo l"t · "omcruy 0

•

' " ' K!nv F"uturet Svndtc•te , Inc .

TC

: Jo-Johhny Carson J, 15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; Columbo 8; ABC
JJ ; Movie "Bunny
Ne ws
O'Hare" 10; Movie "The Sea
Hawk" 17 .
12 : 40- Baretta
6,13;
1!0D-Tomorrow J; News 15.
1 · ~Banacek 8; 1 :50-News 13;
2:1&gt;0-News 17 .
2 : 05- Movle "The Enchanted·
Forest" 17 · 3:45-Movle "Girl•
in Pr4ison "

17 .

1

�20- TI1e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday . Ot·t. 17. 1979

Higher education would get large chunk of Rhodes' bill
COLUMBUS, Ohio I API - Stall'
Regents Chancellor Edward Q
Moulton came close but stopped
short of defending outright th t·
controversial higher educatiOn
section of Gov . James A. Rhodes·
$775 million capital improvements
plan .
Higher educatiOn is down for th e
hon 's share - $488 m1ll10n - but the
Regents requested ooly SloO nulllon
and the governor added tlw rest.
Moulton took the middle grow1d ,
as he !Did the Senate Fmance
Oxnm1tlee m testunony Tuesday
that he was s ure the additiOnal
proje&lt;:ts were needed .

com·cr rese.arl'h
tre&lt;i t.ment fauhtaes . a ge natncs
centn, an arthntis center , day ..care
centers at 17 campuses , and many
other s.
Moulton's testimony on Rhodes'
proposed $775 million eapita l
$;«)

MARTHA E. ROSE
Mrs . Martha E. Rose. 66 , 35160
Lakewood Road . Pomerny . died
early Wedresday morrung at the
' Holzer Medical Center .
Mrs. Rose was horn March 26,
1913, a daughter of the late George
and Lucinda Sponagel Frecker. She
was also preceded in death by her
husband. Norman , and one sister.
Mary HiH .
She was a member of the Chester
United Methodist Church and was
formerly employed at the Gallipolis
State Institute and by Belk 's 1n
Athens .
Surviving are two sons, Don M.
Rose. Portland. and MaJor Roger L.
Rose, Phoenix, Ariz ; two
daughters, Rosemary Keller,
Pomeroy, and Anna Jean Phipers,
Denver. Colorado; two sisters. Ruth
Spencer . Bradenton, Fla . and
Esther DeWolfe, Delavan, Wise.;
one brother . Edward Frecker,
Co lumbus. and several meces and
nephews . She IS also survived by
seven grandchildren.
Funeral services wtll be held at I
p .m . ~' riday at the Ewmg Funeral
Home with the Rev. Richard W.
Thomas officiating and the Rev . Ar thur Lund assisting . Burial will be m
Pme Grove Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home after 7 p .m .
Wednesday .

have been made to the go vernor 's

office , anstead of tu the Hegt&gt;nts.
since tlie latter, m effect , finalized
thelf recommendatiOns for lugher
education m August 1978.
Priorities and SituatiOns ca n
changt' over th e course o f a year,

Moulton sa1d .
But he sa 1d : " I am not really m a
(X)sition to review projects other
than those recommended by the
Regents," add1ng !hat thos t•
"continue
to
be
our
recommendations .'·
The Regents ' ret·oml llt.!lldatwn s

for the 1979-1981 biennium , as
submitted lo Gov . James A. Rhodes .
called for $1o0 m1llion worth of
re nova tions

on

Ohio 's 64 t'Oilege and university
campuses .
When 1t came to the Legislature

from the governor. It had swelled to
$488 million. and mcluded $224
million in projects the He~ents had
recommended for the two-ye ar
periods, 1981-1983 and 1983-198!&gt;.
Included but not recommcndc'&lt;l by
the Re~ents were such add-on s a s

.-cooo
--···liiiS SPEaAI..

•
•

( 'Uilllllllt'

today . The plan, although

approved by the House VIrtually
mtact , may faee some sharp cuts in
the Senate ,
Last week . Senate President

Oliver Ocasek , D-Akron , said the
do c ument
may be ser iously
underfunded, in light of uncertain

PAUL A. SIMPSON
Funeral services for Paul A. Simpson. ~9. Rose Hill, Pomeroy, who
died Tuesday morning at Holzer
Medical Center, will be held at I
p.m . Thursday at the RawlingsCoats Funeral Home in Middleport .
Mr . Simpson was born Sept. 12,
1920 at Freedom, Pa. , a son of the
late Kyle and Harriett Mitchell Simpson . Among the survivors are four
sons, the name of one, David A. Simpson, New Haven, W. Va., being
unintentionally omitted from an
earlier death notice.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. this
evenin~ .

•

bu,.

I

·~ U'l~

'179

TO GO ONLY

I

SQUARE DANCE SE.I
A square dance will be held at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
Friday, Oct. 19, from 8 p.m . Lo II
p.m . AdmissiOn is Sl with children
under 12 admitted free . Mus1c will
be provided by the Stringdusters.

) flyt Mly

irlneis:
-..-•.•.••1

ELECT

"The People and the
Taxpayers Cand1ate "

ROGER M . DAVIDSON , Lincoln Hill , Pomeroy , 1:; seek•ng : h e
political position as Mayor of the Village of Pomeroy .
Mr . Davidson 1S a graduate of Pomeroy High School, Class of 195 2.

He has at.fended several colleges and untversities , the latest betng
West TeJCas Stare .
Mr . Da vidson is a Service Connected veteran of the Korean Con flict
and received an Honorable Discharge from the Un1ted States A•r Far ·

l'ullege and Wliversity presidents.

madt·. parl!cularly in the

askmg them to justify needs and set
priorities for projects included for
th eir mstJtut1ons in Rhodes' bill .
He plans tD take testimooy from
some of them at further hearings
Wednesday, bul then will give the
presidents two weeks to compile the .
data
requested
in
the
questioonaires .
Hearings then will be suspended

lu~hcr

L"liucallon .seclio;,
However , he sa ad decisions about

Sll"cifl c r uts would be delayed,
pendm g more study by the Finance
Comnuttee. The panel is cooducting
mterirn

hearings ,

with

the

Three defendants forfeited bonds
and one was fined 1n the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night .
Forfeiting were Donald Mcintosh,
Middleport, $350. posted on a charge
of driving while intoxicated;
Michael Park, Chillicothe , $350,
driving while intoxicated and $100
leaving the scene of an accident, and
Sheila Cash, Athens, $30 assured
clear di5tance. Fined $200 and costs
on a reckless operation charge was
Michael Conley, Salyersville, Ky .
Nine defendants forfeited bonds on
speeding charges in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday rught.
The group included Gabriel J .
Prete, Gallipolis, $28; John J .
Manley, Middleport, $33; Jerrena
M . Dill, $33; Karl Krautter,
Pornetoy, $31; Suella Walter,
Bloomingtoo , Ind., $28; David G.
Neigler, Racine, $23; Michael Marcum, Middleport , $29; Hershel H.
Grant , Madison, W. Va ., $31, and
Dale W. Mourning, Columbus, $27.
Fined in the court of the Middleport mayor Tuesday night were
J . P. Warner, Middleport, $15 and
costs. speeding and Don Lovett, Middleport, $50 and costs, disorderly
manner and James Peck, Middleport, $25 and costs. Forfeiting
bonds on charges other than
speeding were Randy L. Lewis, Clifton, W.Va., $l!i0posledon a reckless
operation charge and $200 on a
c harge of leavmg the scene of an accident; Dennis C. Clark, Houle 3,
Pomeroy, $350, driving while intoxicated, and $100, possession of
marijuana, and James Peck, Middleport, $25, blocking an alley .

while Ocasek and Meshe l, at
Rhulles ' request, accompany a
group of Ohio's business leaders oo a
two-week trade mission to Olina.
The two Democrats were to have
accompanied Rhodes on his July trip
l&lt;J the People's Republic of China
last July , but were precluded
because of a deadline snarl in
passage of the state 's two-year
~rating budget.

Marines practicing beach landing
G UANT ANAMO BAY, Cuba I API
- Mannes swarmed ashore by
helicopter and amphibious craft m a
pra c tice landing today on the
beaches of the the only U.S . military
base on communist soil . A Soviet
surveillance ship stood offshore and
Cuban r eservists in the area were

called to duty .
''So

far as we know, there were no

problems" m the 8 a.m. landing,
said Cmdr . Howard Matson. a spo kesman at Atlantic Fleet
headquarters 10 Norfolk, Va .
Three Navy warships had carried
the Marmes close to the shore at
dawn 1n the show4he-flag exercise,
hastily arranged by the Carte r

Mayor's Court

BAKED USAGHA ••
Otnnar wtth

golden bro...,n

state f l'\·cnues. lk sau..lcu ts will bt•

IA!gislature in recess until Nov . 13.
Finance 0 1airman Harry Meshel,
D-Youngstown. sent detailed
questiOnnaires Thur sday to all

Area Deaths

reason s why some requests may

and

111

unprov e men ts paeka.l:!e was tu

He there are understandab lL'

eonstrut·tJon

IIIIIIIUH

County Court
Twelve defendants were fined and
12 others forfeited bonds 1n Meig•
County Court Monday ,
F ined by Judge Charles Knight
were Ronald F. Bonaci, Huron, and
David I.. Champoir, Massillon, $1&gt;
and costs each, speeding; Ernest J.
Edwards, Gallipolis, $17~ and costs,
overload; Jeffrey Vandyke, Columbus, $25 and costs, driving over fresh
paint; Ronald L. Deem, Rt. I, Reedsville, and William E . Eakins, Rt. 2,
Racine, Sl:iO and costs each, three
days confinement , license suspended 30 days, DWI; Charles P .
Hopkins, Logan, $55 and costs ,
overload; Charles M. Canter,
Syracuse, $35 and costs , speeding;
Robert Willis, S}Tacuse, $25 and
costs, disorderly conduct; Mamie
Harmon, Rt. I, Rutland, $35 and
costs, expired operator's license;
Richard A. Stone, Pomeroy, $50 and
coots, six days confinement, DWI
and no operator's license ; John I..
Taylor, Middleport, $150 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended 30days, DWI.
Forfeiting bonds were Wesley C.
Blythe, Columbus, George G. Ardell,
St. Albans, Scott L. Cole, Venice,
Calif., William M . McDonald ,
Gahall!Ul, Carroll R. Nelsoo , Middleport, and Cherry S. Johnson, The
Plains, $35.50 each, speeding;
William E. Berry, Coolville, $611.60,
reckless operation; Craig Foley, Rt.
I, Coolvile, $110.50, public intoxication; Robert Bissell, Rt. I,
Long Bottom, $35.50, failure to
display plates; Herbert Smith,
Gallipolis, $35.50, no headlights;
William L. Faw , Wil.ksbara, N. C.,
$35.50, failure to yjeld ; Mark A.
Gillilan, Rt. I, Reedsville, $611.50,
speeding .

administration as a

flexing

or

military muscle in response to the
presence in Cuba of a Soviet
brigade, about oOO rrules west of
Guantanamo.
In Washington , a Pentagon
;-pokesman said !~ere was no overt
action bv the Cubans.
About 2,200 Marines were involved
1n

the

exercise,

a

prachce

reinforcement by helicopters and
amphibious vehicles at Guantanamo
Bay, on the eastern tip of CUba :;oo
m1les from Havana.
Military officials ins1sted the
exercise was routine and, although
they made extreme efforts to
accommodate nearly 80 reporters
and photographers covering the
landing, they denied reports that the
exercist! was merely a media event.
·'Th is is a training exercise which
remforces the Marines and Nava I
Wlits rstationed at Guantanamo
Bay)," Navy Capt. John Fetterman
said at a bnefing Tuesday mght.
However . Fetterman said, "What
you will see !Dmorrow 1Wedresday 1
in no way approximates what would
be done under hostile conditions. "
He said if the base was threatened ,
reinforcements would be flown in
instead of brought in by ship ,
"It is not a classic amphibious
assault." sa1d Capt. Robert Bowen,
a Pentagon spokesman.
Once ashore, the Marines were to
move in!D defensive positions behind
the 17.4-mile perimeter fence, then
engage in about four weeks of
traming and drills before returning
home .
Sources in Washington sa1d they
v1ewed the call-up of about 3.000
Cuban reserVIsts and other action as
"normal precaullons."
There was no indication in the
Washington reports that the Cubans
were moving any troops close to the
4:H;quare-rnile base, but about a
half-&lt;lozen tanks and an equal
nwnber of anti-aircraft guns were
said to have been shifted to the
VICinity of the base.
Administration sources 3.00 said a
Soviet hydrographic research ship ,

wh1ch U.S . intelligence officials say
is a cover for surveillance activities,
was reported off Guantanamo.
On Tuesday, President Carter
crilici&lt;ed Cuba as "the most highly
militarized country on Earth per
capita," and said it is " constanUy_
interfermg" in the affairs of other
nations . He said it has more than
4!) ,000 troops in countries where
"they have absolutely no business.".
He said the United States will not
move to establiSh normal diplomatic
re lations with Cuba until it ~nds its
involvement i.n other nations' affairs
and until the regime of President
Fidel Castro re leases political
prisoners .

Culd t'runl

hit~

By The Associated Press
A cold front was approaching Ohio
from the northwest, brmging an end
l&lt;J the sca ttered showers. That fron i
was expected to pass through the
state by !Dnight followed by clearing
skieS
and
slig htly
cooler
temperatures .

Overnight lows are expected to be
m the upper 40s and low ~Os . Highs
on Thursday will reach the mid to
upper 60s .

Holzer Medical Cenler
Discharges, Oct. 16
Mrs . Denmis Arthur and son,
James Bennett, Londell Browning,
Harold Burcham, Margina Caldwell, Mrs . Ricky Clark and
daughter, Robert Colley, Robert
Gee, Carolyn Gross, Charles Holley,
Samuel Jenkins, Teresa Massie,
Estelle Maynard, Albert Moore,
Mrs. JolmOrd and daughter, George
Pugh, Elizabeth Richards, Richard
Spires. Russell Spriggs, Paul Stinson, Almeda Walker.
Births, Oct. 18
Mr . and Mrs. Tim Baker, son,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Ramsburg, daughter, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs . Kenneth Hayduk, soo,
Ravenswood

Jane Stark .

Pd ool Adv

TO END MARRIAGES
Kuth Ann Epling, Reedsville, filed
suit for divorce against Larry
Eplmg, Dunkirk , Ohio.
Margaret Faye Hamilton, Rt. I,
Minersville, and Cha rl es D.
Hamilwn. Jr ., same address, filed
for dissolution of mamage .
Vivian 0. Garnes, Pomeroy field
suit for alimony against Harry D.
Garnes, Sr., Pomeroy .

DON'T PASS UP THES~ LIKE NEW USED CARS

•·---------------------------------------------1977 TOYOTA CELICA 6 T., 5 SPEED .............................................~4795
1

---------------------------------------------1977 FORD PINTO 2 DR, 4 CYL, 4 SP ........................................... $2895
---------------------------------------------1976 PLYMOOTH VOLARE WAGON .................................................. 3195
---------------------------------------------1

1976 CHEVROLET LUZ PICKUP 4 SP, 4 CYL ...................................$2895

•·-----------------------------------------------

1976 CHEVROLET VEGA, NOMAD WAGON, AC, 5 SP, 4 CYL ............. $2295

---------------------------------------------1974 AMC MATADOR SMALL V8. AC .............................................. $1295

•·-·--·-·-----------------------------------------. 4 DR ....................................................... ..SJ25
1974 CHEVROLET NOVA
·-·----·-·----------------------------------------. .
'695
1973 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 2 DR ................................................ ..

,

The September housmg figures
as a surpnse to many
analysts.
HoUSing experts had expected
both starts and sa les lD fall off
sharply by now because of the
e&lt;:onomic downturn that began in
came

XENIA, Ohio IAPI - A young
Dayton woman died en route to a
hospital here early Wednesday
after a traffic accident left her
trapped in the wreckage of her
car for about four hours, officials
said.
The victim was identified as
Elizabeth Shaffer, 24.
A half-dozen rescue crews had
worked to free her following the
accident on U.S. 35 four miles
east ci here . The accident occurred at about 2: 30 a .m . when
her car ran &lt;if the road and slammed headilfllnlo a tree .

•
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MOTORS
. 992-2174
. POMEROY OHIO

more ."

Traffic victim

RALL V DAY ON SUNDAY
Sunday school raUy day will be
held Sunday at the Rutland Bible
Methodlst Church at 9:30a .m . A trio
from God's Bible School, Cincill!Ulti,
will provide the special music . Danny Tillis, Sunday school superintendent, invites the public.

MEETS THURSDAY
Racine Legion Post 602 will meet
Thursday at 8 p .m. Following the
meeting an oyster SUPP&lt;O" wiD be served .

WASHINGTON 1API - The
construction of new houses and the
sale of eXIsting homes have
remamed strong mto the fall, but
housing experts see a precipitous
drop on the horizon .
What wtll soon tum things around.
analysts said Wednesday , are
mortgage interest rates soariog tD 14
percent or more and a severe
shortage of loan mooey .
The pred1ctloos came as the
government and private mdustry
announced surprismgly stron~
housmg figures for September:
- The Commerce Department
S3Jd new housing coostruction rose
4.2 percent last month !D an annual
rate of 1.88 million units. Much of the
strength was attributed lD a 2!i
percent jump in starts on new
apartment units, many of them
federally subsidized.
- And Jack Carlson, chief
economist for the
National
Association of Realtors . sa1d sales of
extsting homes rose nearly 3 percent
m September to an anmual rate of
3.9~ milbon units . "This could be our
second best sales year ever. second
only lD 1978," Carlson said .
Meantime, Federal Reserve
Board Chairman Paul A. Volcker
warned that Americans will have to
accept a lower standard of living if
inflatioo IS tD be controled .
Volcker told the congressiOnal
.Jomt Economic Committee that If
people " try !D catch up with the
extstmg standard of living or try to
In c rease
the!f
standard
of
hvmg, .. . up goes the price level some

Portsmouth with South Shore ,
Ky ., is beginning to take oo the
appearance it had before being
cloeed for repairs more than a
year ago .
Workmen from the American
Bridge Divisioo of the United
States Steel Corp . on Tuesday
completed the reinstallation of
the first of seven large sections of
flooring for the U.S. Grant
Bridge.
The six remaining sections of
the bridge deck are expected to
be put back into place in the next
two weeks after being removed
for a recabling project .

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted--Joseph
Rudolph,
Athens; Frances Oldaker , Mason;
Wilma Anderson, Racine; Roberta
Dill, Cheshire .
Dischargod-Jennie UtUe , Olden
Thaxton, Eura Llirgent, Russell
Holsinger, Jimmy Wolfe, Wayne
Chase. Douglas Kitchen. Clarence
McDaniel.

r~ !

m

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

POMEROY -MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

IIIUR SOAY, OC IOBE R 18 , 19 /9

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Drop foreseen in housing industry

PORTSMOlJI'H, Ohio (AP) -

The 104th annual meeting of the
Meigs County
Pioneer and
Historical Society will be held at I
p.m . Sunday starting with a potluck
dinner .
Membership in the society is also
due at this time . Those who carmot
attend the meeting are asked to send
$5 per person of $10 per £amily memberslup to the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society, Box 14~.
Pomeroy. Oluo 5769.

en tine

at

Economy roundup

The Ohio River bridge linking

SOCIETY TO MEE.I

SALE FRIDAY
A bake sale to be beld by the
Ladies Auxiliary of Veterans
Memonal Hospital will be held at
Krogers Friday rather than Saturday as reported earlier. The sale
will begin at 9 a.m. and proceeds will
be used for the purchase of new
hospital equipment.

VOL. XXVIII NO. 131

Span takes shape

PIONEER-HISTORICAt

e

(USPS 145 960)

ELBERFELDS

ce.

Mr . Davidson was employ ed tn th e mass appraisal and computer
business for the past 20 years . He pioneered the use of the computer in
implementing taJC structures and collections . He is well known in his
field by city, co unty , and state taxing officials as well as being a pa st
member of the International AssoctatiOn of Assessing Officers . He is
curren11y em ployed by Tom Rue Motors in Middleport, as a
Chrysler · Piymouth Sales Representat•ve .
Mr. Davidson is the son of the late Clara Ebersbach Davidson and
Ernest '' RINK '' Davidson, both lilet•me restdents ot Pomeroy . He is
the grandson of the late Belle Davtdson Grlflith and Edward Griftith .
He is also the great grandson of the tat e Catherine and Jacob Eber
sbach who came to Pomeroy in the Year 1850, from Germany .
Upon returning to Pomeroy , Mr . Oavtdson marrted the former Mila

Ohiu

•

CINCINNATI (AP)
A
Federal Aviation Administration
official confirmed Wednesday
that immunity from prosecution
had been granted to a Comair
Airlines pilot who came forward
w talk about the commuter service's operations .
A commuter plane enroute to
Nashville Term ., crashed at'
Greater CrnciM&amp;ti lnternatimal
Airport 00 Oct. 8, ldlltng all _eight
persons aboard. That cr1111h IS under investigation by the Nallonal
TransportallonSafeiy Board .
Jack Barker, pubic affairs officer for the FAA's Atlanta
regimal office, said the agency IS
conducting a separate probe of
Comair's operations.

the ye&gt;ar's second quarter
But demand has rernamed str ong
despite retard high mortgage rates,
now

m

~xcess

of

11

per ce nt

nationwide&gt;
Carlson "ttnbuted the contmued
housing demand to U1e matw-mg of
the "baby boom" generation, which
IS 10 the age range for many first home purchases, and to inflation .

which has driven people to buy rea l
estate as tax shelters
What could dampen the demand 1s
the Federal Reserve 1 S Oct 6
annoWlcement Ulat it was raising a

key mterest rate and changing tl1e

controls lllunet&lt;:U} g ruwtll
'l~l' board "s policy l'h;mgt• couu.·s
t-J .' \ setvmgs £1ncJ loan assor· aatwn s &lt;:~ re
n•purtmg a dechnt· m deposi t S iHid ,
thus. a loss of JIIU rll') tht· y could lend
as mortgages .
'llle NatiOnal ASSU(' Jatl on of Hornt•
Ru1lder s is so concerrwd ahout the
Federal Reserve 's act1on th£11 at
announc ed Wednesday 1l1s ciil lmg a
"s urnmtt confe rence, · prob&lt;Jbi}
next month, to dtscuss the Siluatwn
"Th is poll&lt;.'}' could lead to (I det:per
c1ml more prolonged mttwntt l
recesswn.·· tht:' tndustry group saad
u1 a sta tement . It a lso predacted "a

W&lt;JY 11

ca ta strop hH drop m new hom e
t·onstructlon . a." m01·h rt~ I malllon
ur11ts lower th&lt;! n 1978 .,
:-.lt•w cunslruct10n !&lt;Jst year tutalell

1 rmllion umts. s l! ~htly below the
!~vel expert s say IS nertle&lt;.l to meet
d l' nldnd cmd repll-ln' worn -o ut

housan g .
Treas ury Si.:'tTl'ldry (_; , Wdliam

Miller .

whl;

testified w1th Vol cker .

~aad "h ou.s1~1g

1s ner vu us" bec ause

of Wlu.·rti:tm\;· an the muney markets
resultwg

frorh~ 1-..,e&lt;ll•ra!

lTL&gt;dJt-tJghtemn~

He serve

pullcleS.

Bul he addeJ -that 1f the poliCY
to
t.lampen
anflation

wurk s

No actions taken in strike
bers of the bo~rd of educat1on conccrmng this offer and the
assocJatwn IS extremely disappointed by the fact that the board
faUed to act upon this request for
Rep. James' help in trying to resolve
the remaining issues in the crisis
s1luatlon
in
Meigs
Local."

of H.~presentatives and LS also
BY BOB HOEFLICH
fanuhar with school finances .
Despite the apparent consens us of
"Rep . James is willing to forego a
opinion that closmg schools of the
previous committmcnt if both par Meigs Local School District would
ties accept his offer .
Board
expedite the settlement of an almost
President Carol Pierce was confour week old teachers strtke,
tacted by the asociation at 8 :30p.m.
notlung has happened.
Wednesday and asked to poll memThe Meigs Local Board of
Education which had kept schools
officially open for the first three
weeks of the stlike, Monday mght
voted to officially close the schools .
As of Thursday morning , the first
word in negotiations has not taken
place following the Monday mght
meeting and there were no
negotiations meetmgs set .
Some tfultrict residents expressed
frustration at the present situation .
Some wondered why some vote was
not being taken amoog the teachers
smce the vote to strike in the first
place was only 57-Sii in favor of the
action . Others are unable to understand why teams of the board
and the teachers are not spending
time attempting to reach a settlement.
Supt. David Gleeeon uid .n. Red
contacted the teachers association
twice since Monday night to adVIse
them of his willingness to continue
negotiations, but no meeting has
been set. Pickets were still at the
schools today and security guards.
hired by the board of education , are
also still at the buildings .
Meantime, Mrs. Bonnie Fisher,
president of the teachers
association, said that Rep . Ron
James had indicated that he would
be willing to help with the
negotiations. A check tlus morning
revealed that Rep . James is presently in South Dakota, but he had in dicated he wUI fly home if he is acceptable by both the board and the
V ARS!TY CHEERLEADERS - Varsity cheerleaders for Southern
teachers to help with the local
High School th1s year are center , from froot to back, Paula Wolfe, SonJa
problem, Mrs . Fi.sher said .
Hill, Julie Gibbs. and Came Gumther . Left is Beth Huffma n ; nght, Della
In a statement this morning, Mrs .
Jolunson.
FISher stated :
" The . Meigs Local Teachers
AssociatiOn is encouraged by the
fact that the Me1gs Local Board of
Education has closed all schools of
the district in order to aid in the
negotiations process.
"The members of the assoc1atwn
president . Henry Well s. and Chester
Larry Spencer. Me1gs Cou nty
are further encouraged by the fac t
Wt&gt;lts , commissioners and Mary
that H.ep. Ron James has offered to Clerk of Courts , discussed his 1979
Hobstetter,
clerk .
budget
during
Tuesday
·s
regular
act as a facilitator in negotiating
weekly
meeting
of
the
Me1gs
County
betweten the association and the
board of educatioo . Rep . James' of- Commis..ljion.
Spencer was remdmded that funds
fer was readily accepted by the
teachers association.
He is ex - are limited and that a purchase or perienced in this area smce he acts der system will have to be adhered
in s uch a capacity daily in his work to .
Dr . John H. Ridgway , D.O., who
The bo;~rd and Spencer also
between factions of the state House
has practiced medicine in Meigs
discussed the possibility of mov1ng
County for 2!i years, has been certhe Title office to the thtrd floor of
\lfied in general practice by the
the courthouse adjacent to the clerk
Board of Trustees of the Ame:ican
of courts office .
Osteopatluc Association
Olarlcs Blakeslee .regional plan To receive certification from the
rung commission director , met with
association, the applicant mlllll be a
the corrunissioners to discuss the
graduate of an approved osteopathic
planning grant that the Plarming
college ; must have an American
CoiTliTIISSlon has received from FarOsteopathic Association approved
ALBANY , Ohio r API - One
mers Home Administration in the
mternship or its equivalent and must
person was killed Wednesday when
amount of $7,500 . The boards agreed
two single-.,ngme p)anes collided
show evidence of conformity to the
to meet with the commission at its
while approachm~ the Oh10
standards set in the code of ethics of
regular meeting on Monday. Oct. 22.
the assodatioo .
University airport .
It was announ ced that the
The victlm was 1dentihetl as Mrs .
Applicants such as Dr . Ridgway
Pomeroy Health Care Center Nurmust have a minimum of six years
!.A:&gt;re Bergdahl, wife of an English
sing home will hold its dedication
Ul general practice as well as active
professor at the uruverSity .
ceremonies Sunday, Nov . 11 , bet membership 1n the national
Officials sa1d the accident
ween the hours of I and o p .m . For
American College of General Pracoccurred when the Cessna 150
additional information ca ll Hon
aircraft Mrs. Bergdahl was piloting
Ucianers in Medicine and Surgery
Zidian at 992~ .
collided with a similar plane piloted
organization .
Naoma Brinker , CETA ad Without membership the apby Todd Carmosino, a student al the
nun
istrator
.
discussed
various
plicant must document 900 hours of
univl'1'Sl\y . Both planes apparently
CETA programs
The cum postgraduate study .
were attempting tD l&amp;nd when they
missioners reviewed several ap·
Membership, in good standing for
hit .
phcations for empl oyment in the
two years immediately prior to cerMrs . Bergdahl's plane crashed to
llf lcation, in the American
the ground, while the other plane .
program.• .
County Engineer. Wesley Buehl,
although heavily damaged , landl"Ci
Osteopathic Associatim and the
reviewed progress of road repairs on
association's divisional society are
safely .
ro unty roads 18, 2!i, 31 and 35. The
also necessary.
Nei-ther Carrnosino
nor
a
Dr. Ridgway had to undergo
problem of over loaded truck s
p.assen~er Ln his plane was senoll~ly
testing to rece ive his certification in
tra veling county road 31 was
mjured .
general pra•·tiee in G.:tcgories as
dlS&lt;'USSed and referred to the
llle Ohio Highway Patrol and th•
they re!:Jt&lt; to ~eneral practice inFederal Aviation Adm1ms tratio11
pruset·utmg attorney
Attemli n~ we re Richard .Jon.,;,
t·&gt; t.J:n.l! ~t'neraJ mcdicim· . emergenwere inwshgating the crash .

Meigs commissioners discuss
clerk of court's 1979 budget

expectatiOns rapidly , "then housmg
does not have tD go miD a ta1lsp m."
He added , " But 1t's a worry "
Experts including Carlson and
H1chard MarCIS , deputy d!fec!Dr fur
t:eonomic research at lhe Ft...lo(jeral

Home Loan !lank Board. predict
ho11smg starts will fall Ul a range of
1.5 rmlHon to 1.6 million next year.
Marc1s sa1d the bank board , which
uversees
sav~ngs
and
loon
operations, believes housing starts
lh1s year will total 1.71 uulhon .

He
suggested
that
new
l'onstructwn tlus mooth m1ght hold
near September's annual rate of 1.88
rrullion umls "but wtll be off sharply
after tha t. "
ln ChJca£.o. meanwhllc . vanous

econom istS at a Mortgage Bankers
Assoc1atioo cooference predicted
housing starts next year will fall to
the range of I million to 1.4 million.
New York bank vice president
Leonard J . Santow, also addressing
that conference , said "every major
bank " is already ratiooing its loan
money as a result of the Federal
Reserve action. •
W1thm the next two weeks, he
sa1d. banks will further reduce loans
to homeowners, conswners and
small busmesses. Adding that large
corporations will race to test their
Ime s of credit . tymg up money that
could go !D other types of loans,
Santow added, ·' Within one month,
you w1ll find it very hard to borrow ."

Accidental shooting
incident investigated
Twenty - year old Dale Franklin
Bing, Rt.l. Rutland , (Beech Grove
Road 1 was accidently shot in the
right leg Wednesday afternoon by
Ius 14 - year old cousin Larry
Laudermilt,Jr., with a 30.30 rifle acc'Ording to Sheriff James J . Proffitt .
Bing was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the RuUand
Emergency Squad where he underwent emergency surgery.

Me1gs sheriff's deputies were first
informed by the teenager that Bing
had been shot from the directioo of
the woods behind the house .
Sheriff Proffitt -called in several
off-&lt;luty deputies to immediately
search the wooded area.
After talking with members of the
emergency squad regarding the entrance of the wound and 1ts approxlfnale size and where the victim
told the squad members he was standint!. shelifl P10fllll and wildlife

agent, Jim Speet again questiooed
the y9uth as to what happened.
Larry I.audermilt. owner of the
residence, advised that he had a
30.30 rifle and upon investigation offleers discovered that it had been
fired.
Upon further questwmng, the
juvenile admitted he had gotten the
rifle and was going to go out and
shoot at some targets while hill
father was away .

Laudermilt said he was holding
the riOe and it went off and struck
Bing . Becoming frightened, the
JUVenile took the nfle back mto the
house, got some pillows to make
Bing comfortable then ran to a
neighbors house to call for help . Still
in fear . he gave a false story to the

Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy.
It is alleged that the pair did
knowningly use or operate a vehicle
that they drove through the gate at
the back lot of the Pomeroy Motor
Company in Pomeroy on the morning of Oct. 16.
They allegedly jumped and ran
from the vehicle near the Hobson
Bndge when Sgt . Randy Forbes of
the Me1gs County Sheriff's Department approached
Later that morning the pair was
located walking on West Main Street
ui Pomeroy. They denied any
knowledge of havmg been in the
velucle.
Tuesday evening Sheriff Proffitt
and Juvenile officer Carl Hysell
agam questioned them and obtained
" confess1oo from one suspect. The
two are confined to Meigs County
Ja1l.s
Deputleo today tra!ISJ")rted Baney
J . Dugan and 'Tony W. Manley to
begin their tenns in the appropriate
Oluo Penal Institution recently imposed by COO'IIllon Pleas Court
Judge John C. Bacon . They were
charged with selling controlled substances and entered guilty pleas and
are to serve a minimwn of two
years.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and ~-riday
With a chance of showers by Friday
afternoon . Low tonight in the mid to
upper :;Os. High Friday in the mid
70s. The chance of rain 20 percent
tonight and 30 percent Friday.

officers.

Sheriff proffilt said al tlus time no
charges are planned . The rifle. upon
examma tlon was found to have a
defective safety Bmg was shot m
the back of the right leg and the
bullet e:&lt;ited 10 the front.
In other matters . Sheriff Porffit
reports he has filed eharges of
unauthonzed use of a motor velucle
agamst Hocky Freeman , 21.
Cheshire and Richard Warnecke , 20,

EXTENDED FORECAST
Warm willt scattered showers
Saturday through Monday. Highs
In lhe mid lo upper 70o Salurday
and In lite upper 60s lo low 708
Sunday and Monday . Lows S.turday In the mJd lo upper 50s. Lows
Sunday and Monday In lite upper
408 to low 50s.
·=···:·:·:·:·:··· :·:·:·::: ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·:·:::::·:::::::::::::::

Dr. Ridgeway earns certification
cy medicine, surgery, preventive
medicine, therapeutics and
o'ileopathic principles, obstetrics

and gynecology , neurology and
psycluatry, public healh, pediatrics
and medical jurisprudence.

Plane crash
kills woman

~

DR. JOHJN RIDGWAY, D.O., Pomeroy, who has practiced medicine
in Meigs County for about 2ii years, has been certified as a general practicianer by the Board of Trustees &lt;i the American Osteopathic Assn.,
Chicago, Ill .

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