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                  <text>IO- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Moi1day, Oct. 22. 1979

Administrative

Area Deaths

tron tinued from J.l"ge I I
II was reported that the first
secret negolialions sesston had
taken place in Columbus Friday
with representatives of the teachers .
Gleason and Lewis in attendance .
The second meeting is in Nelsonville
today .
The fact that the meetings were
being held, reportedly asked to be
kept a secret by the association,
Gleason said, was dlsclosed because
the meetings were announced Saturday afternoon when a parents rally
was held at a roadside park on Route
3J
A teacher had told of the
meetings, 1! was reported .
Brought out Sunday night at the
board's meeting "ith the pu bhc also
was the status of the insurance
benefits proVIded by the board for
teachers ard non-certtfied employes.
Last week several parents atlendlng a meeting with the board indicated that they felt the benefits for
the teachers should be taken away .
At Sunday night's meeting, it was
diSclosed that letters have been
prepared to send teachers and noncertified employes that the insurance benefits will be discon linuPd . All employes will be given
adequate time to make other insurance arrangements, it was reported. and the letters have not yet been
mailed Insurance benefits for some
46 certified and non&lt;ertified employes s till working will be conlmued . 1t was reported.
Two representatives of the noncertified employes organization

Vn'ited Methodist Church and the
Me1gs County Sem ur Citizens Group_
She was a lifelong resident of Meigs
County .
Surviving are four daughters.
Mrs . Holand ITressie 1 Stethem and
Mrs . Herald I Josephine) Osbome ,
both of Long Bottom; Mrs . Berdell
t Hubyi Dunn. Midland. Pa ., and
Mrs . Emerson t Leota 1 Johnson,
PoriUJad ; two sons, Dorsel and
Hobert Larkins. both of Long Bottom ; a stster. Mrs .Mabel Fletcher,
Hacine. 20 grandchildren and 16
great~randchildren
She was
preceded tn death by her husband,
Dell. in 1957, and four children .
Gilbert, Juanita. Charles and an In fant son, five brothers and a sister.
funeral services wtll be held at I
p.m . Thursday al the Long Bottom
Umled Methodist Church with the
Hev . Freeland Norris officiating .
Burial Wlll be in Sand Hill Cemetery
at Long Bottom. Frtcnds may call at
the While Funeral Home at
Coolville. after 4 p .m. Tuesday . The
body will lie m state at the church
one hour prior to the service.

EDNAS. HART
Mrs . Edna S. Hart, 73. rued Sunday at her home at 22ll Unton Ave ..
Pomeroy .
,
She was a daughter of the late
Harvey A. and Rosa 01ck Gerlach .
She was also preceded in death by
her husband , Stanley Hart, a
sisterand three brothers.
Surviving are five sons. James E .
Barnett, Walhondmg. Ohio ; Halph
L. Snyder , Stockton, Calif.; Floyd K.
Snyder, Letart. W. Va.; Earl F
Snyder, Pomeroy, and Eugene
Snyder, Stockton. caltf.: a daughter.
Mrs . Genevieve Harvey, Athens; 14
grandchildren and 14 great·
grandchildren. Also survtving are
two brothers, Oyde Gerlach . Letart .
W. Va ., and Benny G&lt;&gt;rlach, Fairplain, W . Va.,and several ruece.samJ
nephews .
There wtll be gravestde nics al 3
p.m. Tuesday al the Ml Flower
Cemetery al Leon, W. Va . There will
be no visitation at the Ewm~
Funeral Home which is tn e harge of

arrangements .

IIO"I'IT\1.

JOSEPHINE BAOCOCK
Mrs . Jooephme Balx·oc·k. 78, Tuppers Plains, formerly of Long Bol·
tom, died Saturday evening at the
Marietta Convalescent Ce nter
following an extended tllness .
Mrs . Babcock was bum ut Me1gs
County. a daughter of the late Ar thur and Carne Petty Coleman . She
was a lifelong member of the Long
Bottom Christian Church and had
been a resident of Metgs Coun ty for
her entire life . Her only surv1vors
are a niece and nephew, M r _ anJ
Mrs . William Kramer, Co lumbus.
and a brother-m-law and sister -In law, Mr and Mrs . Oscar Babcock.
Tuppers Plams She was preceded
in death by her husband, Thursman
Babcock m 1973 and by two brothers.
Haymond and Hobert Coleman .
Funeral services will be held al 2
p.m . Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville w1th the He,·
Hobert Wyatt offi ciating Bunal will
be in Sand Hill Cemetery at I Alii ~
Bottom . Fnends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to ~
p.m . loda)

'1-. \\~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
AdmiSSIOns --Edward
Martin ,
Pomeroy F:ula Welker . Columbus:
Hortense Humphrey. Pomeroy :
DaVId Jenkins, Pomeroy : Pearl
Ash. Pomeroy; Esta DeLong, Middleport : Glenora Swatzel, Pomeroy;

Fram:es Hewetson , Pomeroy : Anna
Gnm, Middleport : Haymond Littl e.
Pomeroy. Jeremy Morris, Cheshire .
DJScharged-Aretha Sruder. Samuel
McKinney, Alice C1ark. !jJhan Gardner. James Miller .Karen Phalin .
!Jnda Dye, Lucille Cundiff , Sandra
Windbreenner.
Holzer Mf'dlcal Center
Discharges Oct. 19
Joel Adkms and daughter. Johtn
Armstrong, K.-in Barton , Hobert
Bratton. Bessie Bums. Georgin1a
Burton, Noah Cahcoal, Kimberly
Cante rbury .. Huth Cham ber s.
Forr"&lt;t Pc,her, .James Fowler, Mrs .
Kenneth Hayduk and son, Keith
Hesson, Pauline Howell, Edwa!'d
Jackson. Ken Kmg. Melarue Lyons,
James Neal. Jodt Plymale, Flora~
Smtih , Andrew Toler , Sandra
Wallers. Chnstme Ward. Geoffrey
Ward. Lee Western, !Jay . Wheeler .
Mrs . John Wetzel and daughter.
Mary Wi seman, Mary Wolfe,
Michael Wolfe. Terry Wolfe. Edtth
Womeldorf.
Births Ol'l. 19
Mr . and Mrs. Stephen Rice, son,
Pomeroy : Mr. and Mrs. HusscU
lthodes. son . Northup.

Discharges Oct. 20
WtUJam Adams. Brenda Allie ,
Virgima Arbaugh, James Aubrey,
Mrs. Tim Baker and son, Addie
Brown, Albert Collins, Eugenia
Crabtree, Alma Dement, Paul
Dingess . Hay Duhl, Chloe Fellure,
Linda Fulton, Barry Gardener, Mrs .
Jack Hall and daughter, Jonah
Hafield , Olfford Hayes, Dwayne
Hickes , Sarah Jerrell , Gayle Johnson, Charles Karr, Jr., John Kelley,
Mamie Mann. Nicole Newell, David
Hade tiff . Mrs . Robert Hams burg
and daughter, LouiSe Rosenbaum,
Dora Grunion. Charles Shirley, Barbara Sffilth. Terry Ward, Della
Wickline, Doris Wood, Berni ce

Woolum .

Births, Oct. 20
Mr . and Mrs . Douglas Pierson.
daughter, Point Pleasant; Mr . and
Mrs. Michael Nichols, daughter.
Gallipolis.
Discharges, Oct. 21
Chad Barger, Kevin Barr, Mrs .
David Blevins and son, Jeffrey
Oarke. Mrs. Samuel Hale and son,
William Hicks, Mrs. William !1nton
and daughter, Charles McGrayer ,
,~------~------------~----------, Angela McGrath, David Moore ,
Stephen Williams .
Births, Oct. 21
OPTOMETRIST
1
Mr . and Mrs Larry Walker, son,
OFFICE HOURS : 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE AT NOON
: Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs . David SexON THURS.! ~ EAST COURT ST., POMEROY.
I ton. twtn sons, Bidwell; Mr. and
Mrs . Larry Beaver, son. Gallipolis .
------------------------------~

ETHEL LARKINS
Mrs. Ethel Larkins. 84. Long Bot ·
tom, died unexpectedly Sunday a fternoon at the .home of a daughter.
Mrs . Holand Stethem.
Mrs . Larlons was born in Metgs
County. a daughter of the late Isaa c
and Ann McMurray Taylor . She was
a member of the I A&gt;ng Bottom

:

l

N. W. COMPTON. O.D.

:

Patriot man in intensive care
unit following SaturiUJy mishap
A Patnot man, Dav1d F Whitt, 21,
hsted in stetble conditwn in the
mtensive care Wlit of Holzer Medica!
Center followmg a Saturday
acCident oo SR 141.
Called to the scene just east of
mtlepost 18 at 6:50pm, the Gallia MeJgs Post, Highway Patrol, reports
an cast bourd auto operated by
Whitt passed off the nghl side off the
roadway , came back across the
pavement and slid left of center
;trt kmg west bound vehicle driven
by Jerry Miller, 24, Gallipolis,
broadside .
Both drivers displayed VISible
stgns of injury and were transported
by the Ga llia Emergency Service to
HMC .
Whitt was admitted for treatment
or a contusion of the chest and deep
laceral10n s of the head and arm.
Miller was treated for an injury to
the right hand , and released .
Both vehicles were demolished .
IS

which has supported the teachers
strike voiced a complaint that
disconttnuance of their insurance
was unfair because they have a contract. However, il was pointed out
that the insurance dlscontinuance
will affect both certified and noncertified employes who are not
working during the strike.
Supt. Gleason eJ&lt;plained that the
board 's policies and budget IS open
to public inspection . He again stated
!hal the board had eut all expenditures to the minimum in order
to try lo come up with enough money
to meet the salary requests of
teachers . The only money the board
has to deal wtth now as far as
benefits are concerned is the money
being saved from the money wluch
would have been paid employes had
they been working . One person attending the meeting said this money
should not be offered the teachers
but should be used for expenses such
as textbooks and building repairs .
A question was raised on why the
board had turned down the offer of
Rep . Ron James to help settle the
strike . It was offered by several
board memhers that the strike
should not become political.
Quest10ns were raised about the
band taking part in competitiOn.
The policy of the board against th1s
was again g1ven parents interested
in that phase of the strike.
The hiring of stcurity guards was
questioned by a patron who said he
understood fnm $10,000 to $12,000 a
week IS being spent on guards.
Gleason said the bill ran $4100 for
seven days and has since been cut.
One school patron commented she
felt the guards are needed because
of the incidents which have been
taking place
Board members in answer to a
questiOn InVolving the stnke told
parenl' and school patrons that they
have a right to be involved in the settlement of the strike.
Parents met with the board for
about one hour after wh1ch time an
approXJirulle hour and one-half
exeeutive session was held to
discuss negotiahons.

Deputies.

We were around
when a fancy suit
of mens' clothes

reckless o~ration .
One person was injured during
three oth er weekend accidents
tnvest igated by tlle patrol.
Officers were called to the scene of
a mctorcycle accident on CR 25, one
and tw&lt;Kenths of a mile north of SR
160, Sunday at 9 :!i() p.m .
The patrol reports a north bound
cycle operated by Terri Plants, 23 ,
Gallipolis Ferry. passed off the left
side ·or the roadway and struck a
tree.

SF.RVICESTIJESDAY
The Holiness Association Rally
Preachers Service will be held at
7: 3V p.m . Tuesday at the Danville
Wesleyan Church with the Rev . John
Coffman preaching . The Rev. R. D.
Brown is the host pastor.

SQUAD RUNS
Four emergency runs were made
by the Middleport Emergency
Squad on Sunday.
Alll :56 a .m ., the squad repored to
the fire station for Oretha Snider,
Hacine, who was taken to Pleasant
Valley Hospital. At I : 36 p.m ., Roxie
Oiler, Ash St., was taken to Holzer
Medical Center and at 2:56 p.m.
Jerry Cheatham, Oliver St., from
taken from village hall to the office
of Dr. Dayo for treatment.
At 4: 42 p.m. , Mildred Riley was
taken from her home at 240 Mill St .,
to the Holzer Medical Center .

Higher rates
COLUMBUS, Ohio IAPI - Gov.
James A. Rhodes says that newly
implemented federal air pollution
regulattons will mean higher
electric rates but not cleaner air .
Rhodes said 111 a statement issued
Sunday that consumers could end up
spending $50 mtllion a year or more
tn h1gher rates without the benefit of
better air quality .
"Given the present attitude of the
federal EPA." the governor sa1 d ,
" this figure could easily go to $100
mJ!hon a month or a hall-billion
dollars uver the next five years .,.

ODNR.
•

1Contin ued

Ill

Serving the area's banking needs since 1904-.

Farmers
Bank

Mamber FDIC

POMEROY, OHIO

from page 11

surface water was still eroding
the soil despite the vegetation.
" These temporary stick dams
are working, but the area needs
lo be carefully monitored t o ensure other problems do not
anse," Buchanan said. "Even
though it was retumed to its
natural state over a year ago, the
area is delicate . It can not
w1 thatand heavy use. "
He said people are diScouraged
from using the area . " It will take
at least five more years until we
can consider letting people drive
any vehicles on the land or permilling la~e numbers of visitors
to use the area . It is that fragile ."
Until that tune, Meigs County
1\eclamation Area will. continue
to be closely wat&lt;:hed. As more
and more of these scarred areas
undergo a fa ce lift, and as coal
plays an increasingly greater
role in Ohio's econonnic wellbeing, there may no longer be the
need to ask i" strip rrurung is good
or bad for Ohio.

(USPS 145 960)
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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

numstrGtl!On 1n Middleport wa :i n
d1rect contrast t u what the te&lt;:~rht·r . .,
~ay tn that negutitttluns were IX!1ng
held Monday wlule they occuplc'li the
off1ces and mdlcated that they wan·
ted to ncgotiattons .
He said avenues are be1ng pursued
nn what can be done e:tbout tlw Ol" ·
cu~ancy of the offices .
Office personnel remw ned m
their jobs dunng the occupancv on
Monday . However . they were n ~,t ttl
thecr posts today .
A spokesman for the teachers ot cupylng the offtces sa1d there wa s
not reason why the employe:-~ cnuld
not l:w working tn the offices . He
satd Ute teachers were not tn-

tedernng wtth thP wurk of the staff.
ll was reported that Mtddleport
Pultt'e Ch1ef J. J. Cremeans spoke to

the teac her s Monday and pernutted
them lo stay but advtsed them not 10
do any destru ctiOn
At B a .m.
Tuesday, Dan E. Morn s, director of
curneulwn of thE' d t.strtd . re·a d a

Weather

MOiilly cloudy and cooler Wilh a
c hcHlL'l' uf ~howers tomght. L()W nea r
40 V(:lrtablr c!uudmess lJnd cool
WL,Jnesday . Htgh m the upper 40s to
luw :;()s. The chann:' of ram 30 percent tun1ght and 10 percent Wednesday

leller to the t.eachers occupying the ·
offices "respectfully requesting"
them to leave the offices. It was
beUeved that the letter was read at
the req uesl of the board &lt;l
education .
However, they did not leave and at
11 a .m . were shU occupying the offlees and were waiting for the
su perintendent to appear, a
spokesman of the teachers said.
Pickets were at the schools of the
district again today . Schools have
been ofltcially closed since la.!ll
Tuesday mommg.
There have been no further
negotiation sessions set, it was
reported tod ay .

en tine
TUESDAY. OC108ER 23. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Cong. Miller speaker for
Rio dedication Saturday

THE E . E Davi s Career Cente r rece1ves fmol touches before dedic&lt;.ttion .

Planning commission
approves agreement
Marines critical
SAN ANTOI\'!0, Texas I AP 1 Two Marines from Ohio were
listed in crittcal condi!ion at the
Brooke Anny Medtcal Center
here Monday followmg a freak
fire at their J apanese base.
Pte . G&lt;&gt;orge S. Dye. 20. of
Columbus. Ohio . and Lance Cpl.
Sleven H Tumer, 22. of l'ipp
City, Ohio, are among 37 Mannes
who were severely burned 1n the
blaze and were airlifted ba ck to
the United States .
One Marine was pro nounced
dead on arriva l Sunday mghl at
Brooke as a result of the blaze .
He was identified as Pvt . Thomas
J Breunig, 19, of St. Paul. Mu111 .

Coach charged
BEIJ.AJHE. Oh1o 1 API - The
women's basketball coaeh at
Wheeling College was among ·
three persons charged with
aggravated drug trafft ckin g
Monday , accordlng to Bellai re
police .
Police charged 29-year-&lt;Jid
Isaiah Wilson in connection with
a drug raid . J ohn Happard, 23,
and Roger Childers, 29, both of
WhceUng, W.Va.. also were
charged 1n connectiOn with the
raid.
PoUce allege the three were
selltng thousands of dollars worth
of cocaine . 'll!ey were jailed in
lieu of $10,000 bond each .

Treatment sought

tion

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adjull$

EXTENDED FORECAST
t'air Thursday through Saturday with a warming trend . Highs
&lt;in the 50s Thun~day . warming lo
the mld 60s to low 70s Saturday .
Overnight lows mainly in the low
to mld 30s early Thursday, warming to the low to mid 40s Saturday.

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negotiations".
Supt Gleason added that tak1ng
over the offt ces of the ad -

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teachers tn Uw adnuntstra t1ve of fices ··cJues put ii damper Oil

•• __ ••

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CuJJied the offtces, negotiations were
being held in Nel, onvllle Monday
with represcntativ e.'l of the teams of
the board of ' educt:~tiun and the
te.c~chers meetiug with B1JI Lewis,
feu era! media lor .
Supt. David Gleason satd this mormng that a pa ckage was oflered
teachers at the Monday negotiating
session and he had been promised
tllal Ted Bibler. fteld representative
of the teachers. would take the
package to the teac:hers for a vote .
This had not been done alii a.m. this
morning, Gleason sta ted. He i.n dicated that the failure to Bibler to
take the offer to the teachers for a
vote anrl the occu oancv uf the

CARIJ sHuWER
A card shower is planned for Mrs.
Eula Wolfe, Racine, on Wednesday
on the occasion of her 80th birthday .

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• •

• •

Plants was transported to HMC,
treated for abrasions of the upper
left arm, and released .
Tile motorcycle was demolished_
Plants was cited on a charge or
reckless operation.
One driver was cited following a
two-vehicle accident Saturday in
Metgs County on Pooler Rd ., just
north of CR 82.
Called to the scene at 3:45 p .m.,
tlle patrol reports that a west bound
auto operated by Glenn as Hoffman ,
04. Pomeroy, and an east bound
vehicle driven by Hazel Wiener, 36,
Tuppers Plains, collided at a
hillcrest .
A passenger in the Wiener auto,
Kimberly Wiener, 12, claimed
injury, but was not immediately
treated.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage. Wiener was cited on a
charge of left of center.
Officers investigated a twovehiele mishap Sunday at noon on
U.S . 35, at the junction of SR 7.
The patrol reports a south bound
auto operated by Irene Newlon , 70,
Pt. Pleasant, had stopped in traffic.
A south bound vehicle driven by
James Rothwell, 36, Columbus,
failed lo stop and struck the Newlon
auto in the rear . Rothwell was cited
oo a charge of assured dear
distance .
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage.

BY BOB HOEFI.ICfl
Some 40 Meigs Local Sc hool
Distnct striking teachers occupit'&lt;.l
the admmistrative offin' of the
district at the Meigs Junwr f11g h
School in Middleport overrughl Monday .
ApproXImately 50 tea chers moved
into the administrative offices Mon day morning with sleeping bags and
vowed that they will occupy the offices until a settlement in the 22-dayold strike is rea ched . Food was
being brought in lo the tea chers who
stayed in the offices throughout the
night.
While the teachers indi cated their
wi!Ungness to negotiate and oc-

ELBERFELDS

1Continued from page 1 1
locate two women who allegedly
took a while poodle at Ponland
Saturday afternoon . The women
reportedly were driVIng a white
Ford Granada when they picked up
the dog.
Deputies are also searching for a
red 2IJ inch, 10 speed bike stolen from
the Hoff residence in Racine about
noon Saturday. Anyone having any
infonnat10n IS asked to contact the
sheriff's office.
Deputies are also investigating
damages to the mailbox of Walter
Voss, near Hacine. The box had
been struck with an instrument
similar to a ball bat, deputies repor- .
led .

cost $9.00.
~twas

Wl11tt was ntt.'(l on a charge of

40 teachers occupy superintendent's office

NEW YORK I AP 1 - TI1e Shah
of Iran arrived in New York late
Monday, pohce said. and the
State Department reported he
had come to the United States to
seek treatment for an undisclooed il~1ess.
Shah Mohammad Heza Pahla vi
arrived al LaGuard ia Airport
about 10 p.m .. police sa1d. The
Gulfstream twtn-engine plane
carrying him landed at a remote
section of the airport, and he was
IITUllediately taken away .
ll was not known whPre he went
in New York , and police said they
had been informed of the trip only
a short time before the .l!ah 's
arrival.

Life term given
LOS ANGElES &lt; AP 1 - Ke nneth Bianchi, quiet and cain1,
was sentenced to life in prison after pleading guilty on Monday to
five slayings in the " Htllside
IContinued on p..ge 1U1

A comprehensive plannmg contract With economic development to
be stressed a long w1th housing was
awarded
James
Jennings
Associates, Colum bus, by the Meigs
C&lt;lunty Hegwnal Planmng Commission Monday afternoon
Jennings a nd hi s son, John,
discussed at length planning which
Will be done through a SIO,OOO Farmers Home Administratiung:rant
winch will include $7500 m cash and
$2500 match1ng, m kmd .
The group dlscussed econom1 c
development . water supply, waste
disposal and housing w1th economic
developme nt being g1ven the top
pnonly. Some phases of housing
Will be covered mlhe study because
the dlscusswn brought out that there
ts a shortage of good housing tn
Me1gs Courly .
Accorillng lu a report giverJ, 14
percent uf the housing IS good, 52 1s
fmr and one-third of the housmg ts
poor . Some of those attendmg felt
tbat Meigs County would have
rece1 ved more new residents employed at the mines if the c ountv had
had adequate housing .
'
Some expr essed opinions new
housmg is needed to attract new in dustry while others stated that
housing should be upgraded for the
benefit of people already living here
Jeff Burt of the Buckeye Hills Hocking Valley Regional Planning
Commission presented popu lation
growth projectiOns whtth indicate
that Meigs county. with a populatiou
of 21,600 in 1976 will have 22,467
people in 1980 and 24,315 people tn
1980.
Hank Oeland questioned the value
of the new ;tudy when it is completed . He said other studies on
Me1gs County have been done . but
little has happened
C. E . Blakeslee, executi ve director of the cornmisston, sai d local tn lcrest must be aroused so that the
ne('e."sary follow--up work needeJ on
reports such as a recent industrtal
site study wlll t _,carried out. The ex tenswn scrv1ee ha' offered lo help
with a local committe on the sJte
study and chambers of conunerce,
asked earlier to help, w~l be conta cted again .
Blakeslee 1nd1cated that he
believes they will see signs of im proved housing in Meigs County
without the efforts of the planrung
corrurussion . Another meeting was
set for November to discuss again
"ith Jennings the study, what is to
be emphqsized and the information
wh1ch the commission expects the
report to contain.
Blakeslee was authorized to
secure secretarial nelp when it is
needed and he reported that Howaru
rrank. county auditor. has agreed to

receive the $7500 FHA money lor the
grant am.! will maintain records on
the grant month . Plans were made
lor expanding the commission's advisory committee later on.
Clearing house review items approved by the group included an
areawide action program prepared
by the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley
group; a community opportunity
program for $57,000 prepared by the
Meigs County Cou ncil on Agtng; an
econoffilc community development
program for ~.000 for Southeastern
Oh.Jo c.:onUl1uJlities, and an application for a grant by Syracuse
Village for $51.000 which would
provide a boat launching facility to
be operated 111 conjunction wtth the
town·s recreational program .
Thereon Johnson. preSident. was
tn charge of the meeling

Frye given
4-25 years
Me1gs County Prosecuting At·
lorney, Fred W. Crow lil, reports
that on Monday John Hay Frye, Jeffre y. W. Va., was taken before the
Metgs County Corrunon Pleas Court
on a charged of a!l!iravated robbery
and was sentended to a tenn of four
lo 25 years for the Dec . 8, 1978 robbery of the Jones Boys Store "'
Pomeroy
frye entered the store where with
a handgun , he robbed the main office of a large amount of cash and
several thousand dollars in c hecks.
Prosecutor Cro w said Frye has
agreed to ass1sl in the recovery of
the checks and has agreed to take
the sheriff's investigator. Gary
Wolfe. to the place where l he checks
are buried.
ln vesti gator Wolfe while 111vesltgaling the armed robbery of the
store. came across information conceming a similar mc1de nt tn Kenlucky .
Upon lea rning that thesl' two
crimes had similar aspects, Wolfe
went to West Virgtma lo contmue his
mvestigalton . Deputy Wolfe found
that the descriptions of the suspects
in both robbenes were the same .
Wolfe. together with Sheriff James
J Proffitt. went lo Huntington , W.
Va ., where a lineup was conducted
and two eye witnesses identified the
suspect. Wolfe then presented his Investigation pac kage to Prosecutor

HIO GHANDF:
U
S.
C&lt;lng ressman Clarence Mill er. lOth
Di.stnd , will prov1de the dedJ cl:lturv
remarks ali{Jo Grande College and
Community College ·s Career Center
ded tcatwn .
The center will be dedicated the F:
E . Dav1s Carc&gt;er Center, !Jet. 27, II
a .m ., in memury of Edward E
Davis .
..
Davis was an indtLStrial leader 1n
the firebrick and banking induslrtes
and a philanthropist He offered eontmuous and generous s upport to
educa tion throughout Southeastern
Ohw.
Dav1s. who died at age 7:1 on !Jec.
22. 197l. was deeply tnvolved 111 stat e
anrl rommunity orgamzat1ons He
Wl:IS a member of the Ohw Boord of

f{q~l'n t s du nn~

thf· ttnll~ whl' rt tht:
uf Utl' Hto r;ramk
ColteJ..!f' &lt;Jnd Communi t y Colll'gl' P&lt;H tntrshlp \\a:-&gt; bt·1nF: debated
lit• served as preSid ent of both tilt'
Southe&lt;:~stern Oh10 Heg1unal Council
a nd the Oh10 Valley Health Servi ces
tn addil ton to memberships 111 the
Oak llill Chamber of Commerce .
Jackson H.otary Club and the Holzer
Medical Ce n~er Board of Trustees .
Mrs F: . F: . DaVIs 1\111 attend and
pGtrt tr lpatt' m the dcJJcatwn
&lt;·en: nlUn tes
Tht&gt; new E. F: Oa\·J s Caree r Center h o use~ thl' co lle~ e·s two-year
tt• t· hnwal prog ram s 1nclud1ng
~.;skiiJitstunl'rtt

m a gnculture . accuu Jtl tng. se~._-retanal .sc tencc , fuod
se r VIL-e
rnanHKement. nwd1 ca\

council honored

WOMAN L"JURED
A ca r was heavily damaged ami
its driver was citt.--d to mayor 's court
as the resull of an acctdent on West
Main St., Pomeroy. at 12:45 a.m
Tuesday .
Pomeroy Pol1ce sa1J tht' ca r
dnven by Darlene Moomaw , 19.
Hutiand, was tra ve~nK west when tt
struck a utility pole Ms . Moomaw
who has been charged with reckless
operalton was taken to Veteran.s
Memonill Hospital by the P ome ro1
Emergency Squad .

."ilwotinr:

.~till

probed

tt'chn11l r ,g1~S

Mayor Hoffman,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
and village officials were honored
when they met in regular sesston
Monday ntghl.
John Hood . president of the Middleport Youth l.ea~ue . attended the
meeting and presented an eng ra ved
trophy to Mayor Hoffman and other
officials in appreciation for the
VIllage cooperation and help 1n the
operation of the Mtddlcpon Communtt y Park . Accompanying Hood

li:i bura tury , mafl Uiactunng, mining,
cmd electronics .
!J1 addlt ton to Hepresentative
\111ler's anr:l Mrs . Davis' remarks a
hnef program , includlng key givi~g
ce remomes . techntcal faculty introduclions. and lours of the facility
w1lltake place .
Construction on the $2.25 million
.structure began m February of 1978.
Actual operation of the building
began lh1s fall while outside lancbca ping was hemg completed .

to counctJ for the presentation wa s
Edd1e Kitchen .
Mayor Hoffman h1~hly cornmended Hood for Jus work as head or
the youth orgallizatwn at the park
fur the sunun er . Other offic ial s termed the prese ntation us a ··fmc
gesture ·,
In a short. routi ne meetmg, council gave a th1 rd read mg to an or·
dwance tncrea.'ilng the s.alarv of the
park and pool dJ rector by $40. a mon·
lh I rom May 15through Sept 15, th"
year .
Mayor Huffman satd he w1U eonWet the co unty auditor tn rt:ferenn'
to the town's allotments from the
cuunty budg~t L'OIIUllJS.."ilon He also
annoUilced Ulat a te('hfllcal as.s!stance works hop for towns wh1ch htive
obtmned block gr"nts from HUD
will be held :-;ov. I and 1 1n Colwn bus. Attendance ts not requm:'(J
Attending the m ee tin g were
~ayor Hnffrrum . Clerk-tr~e~ s urer
Gem· r;rctt~ . and ('O Une J!ntl'll \llarvtn
Kelly , Carl Horkr. Dewey Horton
and Williarn Wa lte rs

~o arrest ha s yet been made in the
shoo ting dea th of Johnny Ray
Hosrhar. 25. West Columbia Route I,
acl·ording to a spokesman for the
Mason County Sheriff's &gt;Department .
Hos char died Monday mornllJg In
l'leasant Valley Hospital where he
underwent emergency surgery for a
12 gauge shotgWI wound ol the lower
right chest. He was shot during an
In olden! Sunday at 6:08p.m. outsldt
Jones Place. a private club on
Route 62 near West Columbia.
As a result of the same lucideot,
anolher man. Charles Samuel
Wheeler. 54. West Coiumblu , was
takf'n to \ 'e trrans Memorial
Hospital (n Pomeroy, where atlendanls reported he had sustained
an L'Yt' injur~· . It was later learned,
howner. that Wh eeler also had two
pellet&gt; Judged In his chest.

Cohl 11ir t'llfltinuing
By Th e Associated Press

A m id flow of air from the west
and northwt&gt;st wtl l continue through
Wt'dnes day
caus mg
lower
lemperatures across Ohio.
Show~;:rs ~ere expected across tile
~1 atl::' today: and over most of the
state tontKht, w1tll the possibility of
11Iunder.-,1orm.s over northeast Ohio
near Lake Ene. The National
Wea ther Serv1ce said some showers
mrty lmger over the northea!)1
W t'(j nc sda y .
I.&lt;Jw temperatures lomght will be
m the n11d :Ills to low 40s and highs
Wt•dm·sdily wlil be m the mid 40s to
low &gt;Os

Crow

Since Frye was sentenced to a
penal institution m the State of Kenlu c ky.
the
Metgs
County
Prosecutor's Office made application for Frye's return to the
State of Ohio under the laws of interstate detention.

NEW FRONT - Workers are installing a new front
at 106 Cocrt St., Pomeroy . The building is owned by
Dale Warner and connects a West Main St. structure

housing his insurance agency. The building on Court
St. will continue to house the taxi office, Warner repurts .
.

�2 - The Daily Sentinel , M oddlepon -Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesda). Od . 2:1 . 1979

Today's commentary

apparent to almost everyone -

In -

cluding the U. S. State Deparune nt .
The sole signlftca nt excepti on appears to have bee n ous t e d
Salvadoran Pres.tdent Carlos HWll berto Rom e r o, who resolute ly
resisted Waslungton ·s entrcatoes to
moderate hos heavy-handed rule .
It ma y well be that t he Salvadora n
c oup was hastened by the revoluto on
in nearby Ntcaragua, but it was not
instig ated by ot.
The country has been going
through a prolonged time of troubles
for more than a decad e . Ba c k on the
late '60:; and early '7~ . it w as
engaged in a confrontation wtth
neighboring Honduras that som e observers at the tim e t e rm e d
"demographic wars." Honduran
troops clashed with Salvadoran
workers crossing the border seekmg
work and , Honduras ba soca lly
feared , land.
El Salvador has a population of
more than 4 million m a tern tory of
8,260 square miles. about the soze of
Maryland . Honduran s number
£ewer than 3 ruil!Jon in fi ve tunes as
large a country .
Subsequently . tension built up in ternally as military leade rs intrude d
mcreasingly mto politics, blodung
apparent opposition wins in several
presidential electoons .
The Salvadoran situation has not
been, however, a relatively c l ear ~ul
squaring off between a r epressove
military regime and more or less
democratically inclined civ ilian
dissidents . The struggle has been
mulli-llided among moderates . right
and left extremists and the ~overn ·
ment. aU attac king each othe r .
And then there is the Rom a n
Catholic Churc h. deepl y s pht bet ween social acttvt ~1 and con·
serv ative fa c tions. Arc hUt shop

In Washington

Oscar Arnulfo Homeru y Gr:tldamez
has been a le a d ing c r itic of t he
guve rrunent a nd severa l pn ests
have lost the tr li ves, presuma bly to
rog hl -wi ng ve ngeance .
The U S role has been less amboguuus than in the Nicara gua n
so tua tion, whe r e suppor t for the
ousted Somoza dynasty lasted t oo
long a nd ronununications W1th the
voctoroous Sadinislas began too late.
ma king a post-re volutwnary accommodatiOn d offocult.
Was hingt on made cl ea r its opposo tion to Homero's strong-&lt;~rm
tacti cs, cuttmg off military assostanc e several yea r s a go t o g ove point to
ots protests a gamsl human-rights
violations . More ret--ently, it has
urged early presidential e lections to
fa c ohtate a non -f'evolullonary tran-

*

--:rl-11§-" ~ -\1H-Y
I[) DOE2JN -1 WA~ n: A

AN ANK l-t?

IT'2J tJO

ED U§. fiE

t'llRACL[?

NE£D~

TfiEYlL J V ~T
5H IP filM

A TR I ~

H AN 0 LEP
I CAN' I

qr

TO

LOURD[ S.

K TO THE

T

LIN ES.

TI-lE
CHATTE.R!
DON'T

You KN o v.J
THERE 'b A
FOOT BAL-L

A'fPN ON ?

sfer of power
Rom ero, however , would hav e
none of 1t. And a s a conseq uencc. he
has had to transfer power even

earlier
Washington os thus off to a better
start than ot was woth the Sandimstas .
The questJOn now for Washington
and for the juruor offocer s who were
a pparently hstening to its advic e
whert Romero wasn 't and processed
to removt' hiin is whether they can
hold on to powe r agams t the e xtremists of nghl and left long
e nough lo attrac t popular support
They promise laOOr and agrarian
refom1s and a transotional regime ,
woth free electiOib lo be held as soon
as " prudent."
This was whe n .such a pronounee menl from a military Junta would
have been worth no more than
laughs . But mterestmg things have
been happening tn the Laton world witness Peru 's gradual return t o
representatove government from
nulitary rule .
It just m ogh l happen on El
Sa lva dor. And the n would come the
real test - dealing With the over populated. und e rendowed country's
cnto cal economi c and de m ographi c
problems .

Capitol Ideas
Fow- yea rs late r , Goldwa te r had
ro ugh gomg 1n Uw earl y pnmanes .
Hen r y Ca bot Lo&lt;ige , running as a
wn t~-111 , outpulled Gold w aler Ill
:-&lt;ew Ha mpshore by mor e than 12,000
votes . 'i11e An w na senator won the
Dltnm s pnmary a month Jatt•r and
then lost to I.odgl' m Ne w Jerst&gt;y and
Ma.;sac husett s and to Wolllam W.
Scranton m Penns ylvania .
Desp1te Iu s losse s 1n pnm.anes.
( ~o ldw at er wa s the favonte of a lot of
Republi cans and whe n he defea ted
:'&lt;l'l son Hockefe lle r on the Cahforma
prun e~r y Jun ~ 2. that mul ed down th e
nu rmn atlon .
n wse were st mple r tunes wrth
fe wer prrrna n es .

ln 1972. a yt.:"a r tn whteh thl.'
number uf pnm anes mcreased to 21,
~ ,{ ;0\ 'ern

lost a lo t of th e earl y bo~
on es - i\ew H a mpshtre. F londa .
Pt.•nnsy k a nta and Ohw - but w~.:nt
on

to

WJn

tt1e

De m oc r~tJ c

nurnm &lt;J tton
Junm y Ca rter madt· the most of
ea rl y pnmant•s m 1976, wmmng
most of lil em , so that by Apnl 27,
wht•n ht•
f n u s hed
ftr st rn
Pt·rmsyk&lt;HHa . t ht::' ran· was over .
Bu t on t1 1e Hep ulJh can stde . Ge rald
For d won rno~1 uf the t•&lt;:t r ly one s, lost
a lot of late pruna n es a nd sti ll pulled
ou t the nomma tton .

Editorial opinions,
comments

Washington today
WA S HIN GTON t AP! - The
recent economic policy actions of
lile Carter a dministration and the
Federal Reserve Board poml up the
growm g
onfluence
of
the
Inte rnational Monetary Fund over
tJH:~ nation 's economic pol1cy .
It 's an innuence Arnencan pohcy maker s want the IMF to have , smc e
the y look lo th e 138-naloon
organization to coordmat~ l'&lt;..'O nomtc
poloctes of allots member natoons for
Th e deelSion by the Federal
Reser ve Board on Oct . 6 to tighte n
the sc rews on the U.S. money
suppl y, through a dramatoc full
percenl.:lge mcrease i.n its disco unt
rate , carnt.! on the hee ls of a new
reco mmendation by the IMF that
money growth has to be curbed m
many n ~ tion s before inflation can be
brought Wlder cortrol.
A year ago , the I MF had
rccommendt'd that majo r nations
at t e mpt lo pur s ue poli ctes t o
gradlllilly slow onflatlon . But il
co ncede d the failur e of lhos
approa ch m its annual report thi s
year
"G radualism as an a pproach to
th e rcdu c loon of onflatton and
mflationary expectation s has b~ n
too g r adual - 111 many countries t o
the poml of no r eduction a t al l." ot
sa od . While ot tli dn 'l name lhe United
Sla tes, no one had to be told tha t the
U .S. tnflt:ttwn rate ts one of the
wur st .
U.S . offoc oals, oncludm g board
Cha irma n Paul A Volcker and
Tr e a s ury Secretary G . William
Moll er. came Wldcr fore at the rMF 's
~nnu al
m l.'t' tl ng 1n Bel grade ,

.

WA SH[NGTO N • AP o -

Se n .

Edwa rd Kennt&gt;dy - will defe at
Presodent Caner for the pa rty 's 1980
pr ~side ntJal

nurntn atwn .

Ja ckson said Sunday on CBS ·
" Fa c e th e Nat oon " 1hal th e
w o r se ntn g errinom y will g 1ve
Kennedy a !Joost in the e arl y
pruna roes next year tha t could e nd
m a victory ove r Carter . Bul th e
Washmgton stal e leg islator nott.&gt;d
that whoe ver the Dt.&gt; moc ra t tc
eandod a te IS, he woll ha ve to exp lam
to vote rs why the part y has been
helpless to ~ uide the econom y
duron g the four yea rs ot 's held both
the Whote House and the Congress .
WASfllN(;TO~

"/ was lucky. 1 got into gold and va luable old
comic boc-~ -. d lew years ago. ..
·

Yugoslavia. earlier thi s month, to
take some new actions to check the
soaring U.S. onnatoon rate and halt
the pan ic m mternalional fmancial
markets lila! had depressed the
dollar anew and pushed the price or
gold to $440 an ounce.
Saudi Araboa 's fmance minister,
Sh e ok
Mohamed
Abalkhail,
pom tedl y warned the United Stat es
that hos eountry would take a c tion to
push up ool pnet•s agam of steps
we ren ' l taken to pre ve nt "a
contmuous erosion" of U1e do llar.
Another IMF-dev e loped theme
that os fondmg its way onto U. S.
eco nomoc policy is that th e latest
mcreases in the price of oil and ot.her
ote ms must be allowed to work their
way through the world 's economoes
without becoming part of the
underlying inflation rate.
That means worke rs
and
consumers will need to absorb the
hogher prices by reduc'ing their
standards of livmg , rather than seek
to o ffset them through rising

mcom es.
Volcker made the pomt dunng an

appearance before a congressional
committee on Oct. 17, sayin g
Amencans " can't esc ape " from
l o wt~r liting standards because of
hogher oil prices . " The standard of
hvtn g of lile average Americ an has
to dt&gt;&lt;: hne."
Th e Umled Slates. as the IMF 's
must powerful member , obvious ly
mflue nces tls polic ies to a major
de gree . But there os a genume
willingness by U.S officials to
mc r ea se the IMF's authorit y m
hopes that ot can lead the world out
of th e general e conomic di sarray it
1s now tn

Washington Briefs .••
Ht&gt;nry Ja ckson predicts one of ht s
De m oc r a ti c co llca ~ u es - Se n

l

By Martha Angle and
Robert Walters
WASIUNGTON INEA )- With the
unwelcome but inexorable advent ~f
the 1980 poll to cal season , the country
'1'.111 soon be awash agaln in a sea of
brig ht and shiny new campaign
promises. And more's the pity. too .
There is probably no way to
pre vent a presidential candidate
from promising the sun, the moon
and the stars to each and every
Arnencan trusting enough to vote
for him . They all do it, as naturally
as breathing and with as little
malice aforethought .
That does not, however , mean that
the practoce is harmless . For no
matter how " sophisticated" we are ,
how quick to deny any faith in campaign prorruses, we are a ctually
nowhe re near as cynical as we claim
to be .
We may not believe the little
promiSes - ' 'I'm going to invite eac h
and every one of you to the
Inaugural" - but we swallow the big

ones every time.

U1e1r common good

WASHI NGT ON 1AP 1
To
understand the 1980 presodenual
primaries, it helps to r em e mber the
year a Mass a c hu se tts s e nat o r
named KeMedy outpolled eve ryone
and a Callfornoa gove rnor na med
Brown had the second tughest vot e
totaL
Or recall the yea r Sen. Barr y
Goldwater wa s t he man to beat for
the Repubhcan nomonallon and on
the earl)· primane s nearl y evt·r yone
did .
And don 'l forget Sen . Geor ge
McGQvern. who los1 most of th e
early pnmanes, wh1le ht• was
wmnin g de legat es m non-pnm ary
states . and then won a eo upl t• of
unportant test s at the end .
It was a btg yt"ar for tht' pn mar y
system m 1960. Sixtet• n !-.t ales hd d
preSidentoal prunanes and Sen .
John F. Kennedy knew that hos on I)
chance for th e De m ocr ati C
nomination lay m demonstratong hos
appeal by winmng most of t hem .
Kennedv entered 10 and won 10.
He dodn'i go to . Callf ornoa whe re
Gov . Edmund G. Brown ran a s a
favorole son . In those da ys th e
governor commonly was r eferr e d to
as Pat Brown . Now he 's ofte n
identified as the fa the r of Go,·
Edmund G . Brown J r , com mo nl y
referred to as Jerr y Bro wn

CUT

&gt;

I AP I - Three
.s tat t!s so far hav e establi s he d
"solve r-haired legislatures," spccoa l
bodtes that give semor c tllzens mor t&gt;
tnfluenc e on laws aff~ tm g th em .
The c hamber s have no po wer
act ually to make laws, but they gove
the elderly a vo oce Ill the legoslahve
process. The idea o f an e lected body
to repr esent citizens over t.he age of
6() was pioneered in Misso uri in 1973.
Dele gates , el ec ted by e ld e rly
citoze ns . mee t Ill a three.&lt;fay session
and the n follow through as lobbyists
try ing
to convince
regular
lawmakers to put their ideas mto
law . Somllar programs have been set
up m Iowa and Florida as elected
officoals ac knowledge the growmg
politocal strength of the elderly .
WAStiiNf,TOI'f'. .-f'ill" l

~

-" m't

mflue ntoal &amp;nate Democrat says
Co n g ress will o r d l!r mandator y
w a ~e a nd price c ontrol s next year even though President Carter 's c hie f
eronomoc advoser c onte nds they
won't work .
Th e as ses sment s b y Charle s
S chultz e,
c h a orman
of
th e
preside nt' s Councol of Economtc
Advisers, and by Sen . fl enry M.
Ja e k su n , 0 -Wash , we re rnad e
separately Sunda y. Schultze , on
NBC's " Meet the Press ," saod
control s would not be effect tve m
de (:t lUJ g with the nation 's soaring
on fla t oon rate because " th ey would
be addre ss ed l o th e wr on g
pr o bl e m s" Rut Jackson , wh o
preWe t.s the annual inflation rate
woll n se from the current 13 percent
to 15 percent on conun g month s. saod
on CBS' " Face the Nation " that the
fr ustrated publi c will demand such
t&lt;llltro ls .
WASfi[NGTO N 1 AP I - A federal
rl'g ula tor s a ys thl' cur re nt
opposition to regula tion can be

cha r actertz ed

as a

" bu s 1ness

ba c klash "
H. Davod Pill le, a member of the
Co n s umer
Product
Safel y
Co rnm iss ion, s aid Sunday th e
mvolved ondustrtes do not want thetr
activ i tt es r e stric ted by th e
~o v cmment . But he contends the
majority of Americans favor such
regulation . PttUe 's rema rks we re
contained in a s peech prepared for
delivt•r y Ia a confer e nc e of
con!'i unwr u1ganizotions in Madison ,
Was.

Williams named
Manager of Year

A lie by any other n~e

LE ATI-ll[TI C EJURG ICAL 1-JOSPITAL

, /-lfu THifu
A KNt:E oR

3- The Daolv Sen tone! . .'v1oddl epurt-f'omeroy, 0 ., T uesday , Oct . 23, 1979

Meet Southern Tornadoes

''

Revolution strikes again
By DooGralf
And now El Salvador .
The smallest, most crowded and
close to poorest coun try on th~
American mainland h.a.s be-en over taken by a governme ntal up heaval
whose corrung has long been dear ly

r-

We believed that Lyndon B. Johnson was the candidate of pea ce . We
belie ved that Richard M. Nixon
would bring law and order . We
belie ved that Jimmy Carter would
whip Washington into shape and
give us "a government as good as
the American people ."
We believed , we voted accordtng
and we wound up feeling betrayed .
Because no matter how th e
polltocoans bob and weave, a broken
campaign promise by any other
name is simply a lie. And lying is
sometlung this nation has had a
bellyful of in recent years .
During a
"National Town
Meetmg" program at the Kennedy
Center earlier this month, State
Department spokesman Hoddmg
Carter Ill asserted that there is ·'not
more but less lying on public places
today than ever before . "
H. L. Mencken used to say that
"conscience is the irmer voice that
warns us somebody may be
looking," and Carter readily
a cknowledged that the new truthfulness of government officials is
largely a "matter of pragmatism ."
What with sunshine laws and

freedom of informatioo acts , not to
menti on a press corps stung into
skepttctsm by Watergate and Vietnam , '1here are very few lies in 1979
that wiU not be found out," Carter
s aid . Therefore , " most public offi c ials don 't lie ."
The same , unfortunately, -cannot
be said or candidates for public offi ce . In their anxiety to please all
and offend no one, they make
promises that simply cannot be ke(t
-even if they refuse to acknowledge
the fa ct. And those are lies.
A prllTle example : President Car te r 's vow to the building trades
unions a couple weeks back that he
" will not fight inflation with your
jobs," a " guarantee" he delivered
practically in the same breath as his
endorsement of tight .money policies
that will most assuredly create
unemployment in the construction
industry .
There will be scores, if not hundreds, more statements like that
from Carter and all of Ius rivals in
the months ahead, and each one will
take its toll in public trust .
As Sissela Bok notes in her superb
book " Lying : Moral Choice in Public
and Private Life," voters who cannut tell what and whom to believe in
a campaign all too often stay home
on Election Day , wlule candidatesonce elected- find '1hat their warnmgs and their calls to corrunon
sacrifice meet with disbelief and
apathy, even when cooperation is
most urgently needed."
The whole sorry cycle is starting
up again . Like Charlie Brown
charging the football, mret of us are
forever ready to forget past
treacheries and to asswne that this
time will be different. And like poor
old Charlie , we are stunned and hurt
anew each time the bail is yanked
away ,the campaign prorruses shattered .
Charlie Brown always c001es back
for more, year m and year out. But
m every election year since 196(),
more and more Americans have
been staymg away from the polls .
That's something the ca~didates
might keep in mmd when they start
nmgmg campaogn promises about
so carelessly .

Business mirror
NE W YORK 1 AP 1 - Even though
we have been assured that rubber
bands and paper clips wlil contmue
to hold the world ecooomy together,
a t lea st thruulifo tomorrow, there
n•ma1n so me very puzzling
con cerns .
- With the Chrostmas catalogue
season upon us, why os it that the
best customer sometimes gel th e

by offering them a one-tiltH! discount
from the regular, or cata Iogue.

" Whe n E. F . Huttoo lalkll, people
listen ." But after that just silence ,
and a poclure of people listening. But
to what ?
- Automobole rental rates have
nsen , 1n part bee a use of higher fue l
prices. Most rates quoted today are
dry rates. meanmg you pay extra for
whatever gasolme you use . And
somet \lTles you pay extra , ertr a
New York-area customers of Avis ,
for e xample, have been startled to
find how much they are charged for
gasolme , especoally when they stop
to e 11:amine the i r computer calculated boll, whoch estimates
consumption .
Some c.1 1stomers have d efied the
Lrc o f impatient l' \U)"tomers behind
them in lme and asked that the car' s
gasolme tank be measured Ill order
to detennine real as opposed to

pnce.

esti.mat.t!d ronswnption .

Asked why lhos was done, an
officer of one company , Pfae lzer
Bros.. a Ch tcago meat products
m mpany , rephed tha t almost all
companie s do it Ln order to attrac t
new custome r s.
He a ssured the complaonant that ot
was tn hts best mteresl s that they do
so , presll/Tlably in order for the
company to rruse its volume and
thus hold catalogue pric es from
bemg even higher.
But why discrimmate agamst
loyal cu,1orners' The Pfaelzer man
tlidn 't explain . Nor did he explam
why . for a limited lime and perhap s
a luniled quantity, the discount
co udn'l apply to everyone'
Wha t is it that E .F . Hutton says '
An informal survey of less than a
dozen peop le revealed all familiar
wolh
the
E. F .
Hutton
ad vertisements, but no one who was
unmedoately famohar wtth the big
broke r 's advic e .
They had heard and seen the well
known words of the TV commerc ial ,

One such customer has found
mvanably that the more timecon sumtng procedure resulted in
substantially lower bolls . In a typical
onstan ce, a mileage charge of just
under $7 was c orrected
less than
$4 .
TI1e attendant explained : " We use
the o ff ocial miles per gallon
estunates for ctty and country
driving in calculating the charge .
When most of the driving is in the
country , however, less fuelts used ."

worst price ?
11oe soluahon comes about this
wa y : Existing customers an~ mailed
the latest issues of catalogues from
wtuc h they have prevoousl y ordered ,
and urged to place the ir holi day
or':lers ea rly .
Me anwhile , thro ugh
direc t
mailings or med1a advertosements ,
the company seeks new customer s

111E DAILY SENTINEL
jUSPSI~I

w

Today In Hlstory
By The AstiOCialed Pre••
Today is Tuesday, Oct. 23, the
296th day of 19~ . There are 69 days
left in the year .
Today's highhght in history :
On this date in 1917, American
troops saw their first action in World
War I, near Luneville, Franc e .
On thts date :
In 1776, George Washington 's
Revolutionary Anny withdrew from
Manhattan, leaving New York City
to British occupation.
In 1925, 25,000 women marched in
New York City, demanding the vote .
In 1929, stock prices fell sharply in
New York, but it was only a prelude
to the crash that came six days
later .
In 19«, tbe Allies recognized
Charles de Gaulle ' s provisional
French government .
In 19~ . the United States , Britain,
France and Russia agreed to end
thelr occ upation-of Germany .
In 1973, President Richard Nixon
reversed himself and agreed to turn
over the Watergate tapes to Judge
John Sirica .
Ten years ago : Palestinian
commandos raided Lebanese
frontier posts in respoose to Beirut's
cra ckdown on the guerrilla.

-- 1vement.

.&gt;.

Flint Grt't' r
5-8, ISO fbs.
.Junior (;uard

Bill Cogar
5-7, 135lbs.
Sophomore Back

Jim Meadows
11-3, %20 lbo.
Seolor Tackle

Steelers bomb D en ver
P ITTS B UHC;H •1\l' 1
T ile
Den ve r RrurH~Js· tlllllll~ wa!'i off
They n lt't tht • 'Ar!Jr l~ tt•&lt;lfJl &lt;.Jt llu:

wrong lirnt•
.. 111 ~ n•al PliL'&gt;bur~ h Steelers
showed ltt•cl 1n pnJd tn· 111 prt•vJous
WL't'k s by lflJUrh.- s But l;b1 '.o\"l•e k ,

Affirmed
retiring
~ EW YOHK ,,\1',
Af f"' "'L'I,
tlwmughbr ed rann g's \978 Tnp le
Cro wn wmner, ha s bt.:.en ret 1rtod to
st ud, endin g a ll ·' P"'ulatoon - even
Bud Oelp' s - thai U1ere wuuld b••"
ma tch ran• wtt h Spt:&gt;t'la cula r B1d
Tra lnl'r l ~ z B.arrt•ra anno uncl&gt;d
tht.' tit&gt;CIS IOn MundCJy at Aqueduct II
was a dl"c ts\On t hat he m a dl' fu r
Ha rbor VIew F&lt;in ll \ Luu1.s Wolfson ,
and 1t ca mt' on e rijct: carl lt&gt;r than
expe cte d The ~-) ear-{)ld so n of
ExcllLSJVe r'-ia t1v e was ~ x pt~ctt'd to
start in Sa turday's $250,000 Turf
C1assoc at Aquc du d .
''I'm very pro ud of Mr Wol fson
for l ~tlln g n lt' ma ke tht· der isiOn,' '
Rarrera sa 1d nft.t•r a L'Unn•r s.allorr
wltJJ the uwm.•r .
The ti rmn g of th l' announ L't' ln l'n l
et ppare nt ly w as ln fl ul'nted b~
Affirmed's dJstastt• f&lt;J r runn 1ng on
gr ass. He worked a n ule Sw1da]
Wlder JOc kl·~· l ..a ffi t PltH.'d.v llle
tJm t• was slow. ~nd Puway sw d tJ1e
colt was c.:a utJOU.."i and uncumfu r tab le
w1th tht.· surf&lt;:tt "l' .
·· H p di d n 't l1k e th e gr&lt;tSs . ··
Barrerct said . ·' It would not tw fcur
for lh l' h or~ or th e public f&lt;, r hun to
corrlpt'tt&gt; .If ht· dm·sn'! l1 kt · ~J. ras~.
hu w cuultJ I run hu n and Uw hr,r w bt•
1-!&gt;'
L.&gt;elp . tr a uwr uf Spt·ct&lt;H 'Ul&lt;lr Bul.
ha d bt-en Cillllp&lt;il~nJn~ for a 11l;.t!ch
rate Wit h Afflrllll'd (.'tJ iilCil"tt•d rtl hiS
home m l"oun•l, :11d . l),·lp 'aod :
" l"rn dlsap ptunted. n&lt;1turall~ \1y
fi rst nmn~ rn IS tht1t Aff1rmed wa s
health y . a m.l tl Jl'Y d s.-.; ured !Ill' that he
was ."
I&gt;elp . who trawt·d H1d \() \'ictoral'S
1n t he Ke n t uck~ Dt•rbj a n d
Preakness 111 1979. s;ud hl~ h&lt;:H1 bet'I I
" loo km g forward w sud1 ;.:~ r &lt;:ic e lt" s
no t go mg to bt' . It wuul d bt• ii ~ r cat
thm~ for r&lt;1c mg -· t W(J gredt hn r."ot.'S
in a ma tc h f d l'l' . It would u~ a Urll' Ill
a Lfetune th on ~.-Rod an d Afflm1ed Wl' rt' locked on "
dose duel fur Horse of I ht· Ye« r
honors unlll Affi rmed bea t Bo d lJy
thret."--Quartcr s of a le ngth on th e
J ockey fl ub Gold Cup O&lt;t . 6 at
Bt'imun1 Park m Affln ne&lt;l' s last
rac e.
"'flle y 're F.:O ifl l;! to rest with their
laurels , Hnd Iil ey hope he woll lJe
voted Horst:' flf the Ye&lt;:tr ,'' Ddp said .
" I thtnk we 're ~'till 111 U1c nmning "
Afhrm c&gt;d. sy11d ocated last ye ar for
$14 4 rmlh on , os tho r oug hb re d
ran ng's o nl y $'.! mil liOn wmnt"r ea mong $2,393,818 on hos caret• r woh
'n VIctories. five seconcl'l and one
third m 29 start s .
His due l with Spe&lt;1ae ula_r Bod for
horse rac ong 's MV P domuo a ted th e
atte ntion of ra(' mg enthu siasts tn
197 9, bu t Afform ~d woll b e
rememb~red bt.•st ror his st 1rnn g
n val ry with Cal umt·t F cum 's
Alydar .
Alydar flm she d sec o n d t o
Affimll&gt;d in eac h of lil e I ~ 7 U Tn ple
Crown rae~. by marg1 ns of 11'l
lengths, a ne ck and a hea d. They
mel 10 tunes as 2~ond 3 -yea r-&lt;~ l ds.
an d Afftnnt&gt;£1 won St'\Tn limes .

Noll ha d a vtrtua l return to traoning
camp, c omplete woth conditooning
rWls and no-fumbl e drills.
It paid off as the Sleelers climbed
to 6-2 a nd into sol e possession of first
pla ce on tht• Af C Ce ntral Dlviston .
Th e Hroncos, m eanwhile , slipped
to 5-:1 an d onto second plaee behind
San Doego in the AFC West . And
Den ve r OJ ach " Hed " Molle r was
do wnng ht dis plea sed .
·· Wt• wert' outplayed, outcoached
and vt·r y em barr ased tn front of a lot
of people ," Miller sa id . " Not just
lwre, ac r oss th e country .
" Tht s wa s the worst, most
humoloalon g defeat on the 30 years
I've be en assocoated with football .
And I don 'l hke ll. I dor't know how
any body c ould stom ach tha t and live
~.~.·ah then1St!l ves ."
By hal ftim e, th e St ee le rs he ld a 237 lead .
ln the f1rst quarter , a ~yard rWl
b)
Harris set up an ll-yard
to uchdo wn toss from Bradshaw to
Lynn Swa nn , bac k on the lineup after
mJ ssJng two games with a hamstrin~
pull .
ln t he second-quarter, Bradshaw's
p;ossong set up a pa or of short
touc hdo wn ruros by Harri s and

Injuries force
defensive changes
C I NC I I\~ ATI

1 AP 1
The
Ctndnnatt Bengals are
I-JCI:!;Uln mg to loo k m ore like a on e~
plBtoon t eam. at lea st among the
rt'St'rV l'S.
Fur th e second time this season ,
t11e R e n ~-;a l s have been forc ed to
work " player a t b oth offense and
ba tte red

d t• fl'llSt'

La s t ll lUn th . Ll d~n s i vl' r Mik~
l ...·venSt•ller ""t il sta rt lea min g how
to play defensove sa fe ty today
be l "rlll'it.' Scot t Pe rr y tnjured a knee
m Sund ay's 23-27 loss to the
(le\'elan d Browns and strong safety
~a f\· on Cobb suffer&lt;~! a muscle pull .
Both wol l be out of the tone up for the
Be nga ls' Naloonal Fortball Le ague
~arnl' wtth tht.' Pht iadelphia Eagles
ht'I'L' next Sund a y.
" I don 't ren :ill a sttuatwn hk e thts
on pro foot ba ll But ldon 'tthmkit 's a
p&lt;:tnll Si tua tiOn . We 're just ve ry
short on people," sa id Bengals
defensove bar k eo a ch Charl ey
Winn er .
" l'U en joy ll . The mor e I ge t out
there. t he better ," sa od Le ve nseller ,
who wa.., act1 vated earlter following
a kn ee mjury to receiver Billy
Brooks. Broo ks is e xpected to return
from the mjuTt&gt;d reserve list, for c ing
lilt• Rengal s to drop a player .
" It won't be totally new . I was an
all-lea gue safety in lugh school and I
pla yed some in the Hula Bowl after
mv senior vear " at Washington
St~tt! , Leven~ller said .
Wtnn er stressed that Le venseller
would play at safety orly in an
l'rnergen cy.
Doc k J auro n woll will start at
safety a nd R&lt;o y Gruhn woll play
cor ner back ag ainst the E a gles.
" You just can 't expec t hun to
lea rn the pos iton in a week ," Wmner
said . ''Th en~ IS a b1g clifferencl!
between runmng forward and
rWlnmg ba ckw a rd .
" I don 't know if ol 'll do any goqd."
Perr y sa 1d. " You can expect a lot of
enthust a sm from him , but some of
tll esc th mgs JUSI can't be taught
O\"t:m 1~ h t ·•

MACHINIST
Permanent position for individual with
job shop experience. Must be able t_o do
own s et -up on conventional and honzon ·
tat mills . lath e s , and grinders.
R espond to Per s onnel Department, Ap palachian Power Co., Mountaineer Plant
Operations, Post Offoce Box 398, New
Haven,
va. 2S26S - Area Code 304 882 ·
21 s1 .
we are a n Eq u al Op port u n it y E mplo ye r .

w.

another by Sidney 'Illornton .
" Ever since the league went to a
l~ame scheduled, every team has
a lot of ups and downs ," said Denver
linebacker Bob Swenson . " Last
week, Powere. "
Bradshaw , who hit 18 of 24 passes .
added a 17-yard scormg pass Ill the
fuoal quarter to Thornton . And
Steeler rookie Anthony Anderson
bolted lO yards for his first pro
touchdo\\11 wtth 26 seconds left in the
game.
Denver managed its only
touchdown in the first quarter on a
64-yard pass play from Morton lo
Haven Moses Despite the lopsoded
score, Morton hit 16 of 31 passes for
261 yards . just SIX less than
Hradshaw .
" We moved the ball well , but we
didn't get many points," Morton
said . " That's very disco uragmg .
There 's not much you can say except
the y really beat us . They scored a
lot. We didn't. "
•
The Steelers finished Wlth 53(),
offensove yards compared to 329 by
Denver. On the ground, Poltsburgh
netted 236 yards, compared to
Denver's 53, and the Steelers did ot
Without theor usual trap blocking.
" Most games, we'd trap our
grardn10ther if she was there," said
Bradshaw. "But not tooight. We
went stratght at them . We went back
to basics, big men against big men .
And [ thtnk that surprised them-"
Meanwhile, the Broncos left here ,
SOWlding like the Sleelers did the
week before.
" It's back to the drawing board for
us, ba ck to basocs," said safety Boll
Thompson. " It's a bitter pill to
swallow . But we 've gpt to ~t going
and get ready for next week ."
The Steelers figure to stick to
basocs this w""k as they prepare lo
meet Dallas here Sunday .
" We played fundamental football
tono g ht , Ste e ler football ," s aid
lmebac ker Jack Ham . " Before , we
had guys banged up and we were
practicing half-speed, and all of a
sudden we were playing half-&lt;lpeed .
" But last week in prac tice , the
guys were keyed up. We had a great
week. a super week . We were
deckmg people on practice and we
were ready to play tomghl.
" Now , we have to gu back and
practoce that same way ."

Monday 's

Sports Transactions
By The Associated Press
FOOTBALL
National Football League
DALLAS COWBOYS - Wa &lt;ved
Aloi s Blac kwell. running ba c k . Ac
t i vated John DJtton , defensi ve end
COLLEGE
OREGON STATE - F ;r e d Cra;g
Fertig , head football co ach

NE W YORK I API - Sea soned
Dock Withams, who led the
e xpansionist Montreal Expo s to
th e or b es t base b a ll year e ver .
Tuesda y was name d The Assoc iated
Press' Nalooral Lea gue Ma nager o f
the Year for 1979.
It os the secood such award for
Wollams, who was se lected as the
Amerocan League Manager of the
Year after winning a di vision title
with the Oakland A's m 1971.
Williams won the NL a wa rd on a
r e lativ e ly c lose
battl e wolh
Houslor 's Bill Vordon , who had the
Astros tn the !hock of the West ern
Dovision race until the last few days
of the season .
A nationwide pane l of sports
writers and broadcas ters g a ve
Williams 113 voles w 95 for Virdon .
Under WilUams, the Expos came
the closest they ever tlid to wonnmg
th e
NL
Eastern
Divis ion
championship . They filushed with a
95-&lt;i!i record , two games behind the
Pittsburgh Pirates, who went on to
wm the World Senes .
Until this season, the Expos had
never finished over .500 in their
prevtous 10 years in the league .
This is WillialllS ' third year on
Montreal. His previous experie nce

Alabama holding
onto first place
By HERSCHEL NISSENSON
AP Sports Writer
Defending national champion
Alabama held onto forst place today
in The Associated Press college
football ratings while Nebraska
moved into second place and Texas,
last week ' s runnerup, skidded all the
way to nin th.
Alabama, a come-from-behind 2717 wmner over natoonaUy ranked
Tennessee, receoved 52 first-jliace
voles and 1,3-41 of a possible t,360
poonts from a natior wide panel of 68
sports writers and broadcasters.
Nebraska,
wh1ch
trounced
Oklahoma State :IG-0, moved up from
third place to secood with six firstplace ballots and 1,266 points .
Southern California, which was No .I
until a 21-21 tie with Stanford a week
ago, whipped Notre Dame 42-23 and
climbed from fourth to third with
nine first-jllace votes and 1,198
points .
The other first-jliace ballot went to
Ohio State, which c lobbered
Wisconsin 5~ and vaulted from
Sixt h place into a tie for fourth with

Top twenty
The AP Top Twenty

By The Associated Press
The To p TwenTy team s 1n Th e
Associated Press college football
pol l, with first -plac e v otes in paren

theses, records

and

total 001nts .

Pointsba:t.edon20 · 19 18 17 16 I S
\4 tJ · 12 II 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 J

2 I.
1. Alabama
1. Nebraska
3.
Calif

152 1 16 0 0)
161 16·0·0 \
191 16-0 II
\60 ·0 \

so.

4. Arkansa s

I .3 41

I , 21&gt;6
I , 198
1,089

(fie) Ohio State

11117 00 ) 1,089
6. Houston
16 0·0 ) 1,070
l Oklahoma
I 5 I 0 1 883
8. Florida State
1600 1 871
9 . Texas
~ 410 )
864
10 M ichigan
16 ' 0 1 757
I I Br igham Young
1600 1 6 77
12 Pi ttsburgh
o5 1 or 4q4
13 Auburn
1510\ 488
14 Notrt&gt; Dame
\ 4 2 0 1 43 7
\5 North Carol ina
15 ' 0 \ 40 \
16 Purdue
15 20 1 349
1l Navy
16 0 0 ) 237
18 Wake Fores t
\ 6 ' 0 \ 163
19 Tenn essee
14 201
Ill
20 Washington
1520)
89

"Freedom of Choice!

Not aU insurance agencies
have it.''
I!\ true .. . -.o rn e Jth u ra n ce age ncte.., rt•prt.., ent on!~

one

as a manager was a ll m th e
Am'e n ca n Le a g ue, wh e r e he
managed the Boston Red So x,
Oakland and th e Caloforma Angels
ov er a span of mne seaso ns .
Wolloams managed Oa kla nd lo
World Series victon es 111 1972 and
19i:l, becoming the fir~t non-New
Yor-k Yankee foe ld boss to win
con sec uti ve world champiOnships
sinc e Connie Mack. He also gmded
the Red Sox to the AL penna nt in
1967 m h1 s first year as rJ rn&lt;:~ J or
league manager . He has 941 ma jor
league victories thus fa r .
Wolltams managed Toronto on th e
Intern atio nal
Le ag ue
be for e
surfacing in the maj or s.
As a p layer , the Cah forn ia-born
Williams spent 11 years Ill th e
ma jor s as an outfoelder a nd utiht y
mfielder with Broo kl yn, Bal tamore.
Cle veland, Kansas Ci ty and Boston .
No other managers we re m th e
ballpark on the vo tmg .
John McNamara , who led th e
Cmcinnatl Reds to lile Western totl e,
finished a ttistant thord woth 32 votes .
Pittsburgh's Chuck Ta nne r w" s
fourth With 19 and Ken Boyer of th e
St . loUi s Cardinals was the only
other manager to rece ive vot es w1th
two.

1m ur a n ~..· c

com pa n; . So th e bc~ t th a t com pan\· ol trr -.
a ll the y ca n &lt;l ffer yo u An d rha t ma y be ok ay .

A o;; a re&lt;ii ult, wh en we reco mmend a po licy fr om th e large
o; ; tock ava ilable to u ~. you can be .., LH f yo u an: ge111ng
msu ran ce prot ectio n rha t ~ uit .., yo u r need' a nd ,.., a fforda b le .
Bcxa u ~e W t' have freedo m of c h o~ec , you ha ve a hette r
c ha nce to ge t e xactly rhe insu rance yo u need .
Slore

REUTER-BROGAN
INSURANCE SER~ICE
lUI! . MAIN IT.

m-sue .,. m-s"'

free agents
Cli\ CINNATI 1AP I - Baseball
ve teran s Fred Norman and Paul
Bla ir have declared themselves free
agents an d the Cmcinnati Reds are
planning further negotiations with
second baseman Joe Morgan, two-tun e Most Val uable Player.
Dock Wagne r , Cinc innati Reds
president , saJd he plans to talk with
Mor gan 's a gent , Tom Reoch of
Pittsburgh d urmg the Major League
ge neral managers' meeting this
week Ill Scottsdale , Anz .
Wagn er saod he did not want to
comme nt on Nor man and Blair .
Norman , 37. a pitcher , said he

wants a

t w o-v~ar

contract .

" I kmd of f;gured they would offer
rne a li ttle more than they did,"
Nonmm sa ad of Monday's meeting
Wllil the Reds.
" I'm de fin otely seeking a tw()-year
plan . That's good securoty for my
fa nul y . I don 't thonk that's asking
fur too muc h
"The Reds dodn 't give me a
s ubst a ntoa l offer . I have no
anunositv toward the Reds . I'm
confideni I can help somebody . I just
hope some one will draft me,"
Norma n sa od.
Norma n has co mpiled an ~
record si nce joinin g Cincinnati in
rrudseason in 1973. He has a 52-29
wan nln K r e co r d a t Riverfront
Stadmm but suffered through his
worst se ason th is year with a wonlost ret·ord of ll -13 and a 3.65 earned
run avera ge.
" On paper , 1 dodn 't have a great
year but I c ould've e astly been 15 10
or 15-!2, somethmg at least over
500, ·' Norman said .
" Stoll, 1 loo ked up some statistics
and found out that there were only
love other left ha nded pitchers in the
lea Kue wh o won 11 games or more,"
he added .
The y were Steve Carlton , 18-11;
BUilft , 16-10: John Candelaria 14 9;
Vida Blue. 14-14 and Randy Jones,
11-12
Blair , 35, has eight Gold Gloves
and os looking f..- a team that can
carry a defensove specialist for
ce nte r fie ld . Blatr ha d said earlier
he was c.o o sJ denn g re trrement.

Adulfu ( ;unzalez uf Me;u co 3-6, fr3, 62: Fred ~ .-'i ao· uf Che vy Chase,
Md .. beat Horh Roze n 6-2, 6-4 , and
Joaquon Loyo-Ma yo of Mexico
do wned Ke ller Ste wart of Dallas 7-lj,
fi-.1 .

TENNIS
GUADALAJARA , Mexoco • AP I To p-seeded Paul McNamee o f
Australia defeated Dr ew Gotlwn of
Los Angeles IMJ . 6-{) Ill the opener of
lile $25,000 Assocoatoon of Tenn os
Professoonats a t Uoe Hacquet Club
1n othe r matc hes, La rr y Loe b of
Denver down ed J eff Ma rtonez of I ;;s
Angeles 6-2, 6-2; Ge remy OJhen of
Plloenix defeated Ted Wolha m s of
San Diego 6-4 , 6-4 ; U.rr y Da\1dson
of Pholadelphoa d ow ned Moke
Machelte of Belvedere, Cahf .. 7-lj, 63; Peter Holl of West Germa nv bea t

~!J't
•
Baked
•
•

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Roe. SHS

•

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:
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I
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:611\0's:
;..A~~t~A-~~

NOTICE!
MOTOR ROUTE
CARRIER

t\

But. hap p ily, in th 1-. co rnpc 1111~ e bu ~ l n C'i'J, ou r Jn -, u ra n ~..· e Store
i'&gt; ll Ot confined to o ne line o f merc handl 'I.C . \\'r can \ele.:t
fro m th e po locy o f im ng &gt; o f a number ni ii ne m; u rer\, loke
Th e Con11n em al ln ~o, urrtn ce Compalll e':l, l or e- \ a m p le

The Insurance

Arkansas WJth 1,089 points. The
Rawrbacks , lOth last week, upset
Texas 17-14 .
Despite a 37-1 0 triumph over
Southern Methodl.'ll , Houston slipped
from fifth to sixth wi t h 1.070 points
The Cougars meet Arkansas this
weekend .
Oklahoma rose from eoghlh to
seventh with 883 pomts for a 38-&lt;i rout
of Kansas Stale while F lorida State ,
whoch was idle, slipped from seventh
to etghth w1th 871.
Ninth-place Texas receoved 864
polnts while Michigan, a 27-7 vict or
over Illinois, went from lith to lOth
With 757. Notre Dame, whoch had
been ntnth , dropped to lith .
The Secon d Ten r on ~ i s t s of
Brogham
Young,
Pitts bur gh ,
Auburn, No tre Da m e, North
Carolina , Purdue , Nav y, Wake
~·ores! , Tennessee and Washong ton .
Last week , ot was M1c hogan ,
Washmgton, BYU , Aubum , North
Carolina State , Purdue , Po ll.
Tennessee , North Car olina a nd
Navy .
Wake Forest os the only newcomer
to the Top Twenty The Demon
Deacon s, the nation 's Ctnderdl &lt;:i
team, upped their re cord to 6-1 woth
a 2&gt;17 triumph over Mar yland . N C
State fell out of the ran kongs b)
losin g to North Carol ona .15-21

Norman, Blair

NEEDED
FOR THE

DAILY SENTINEL
CALL 992-2156

POMIIIOY. 0.

"YOU DON-r IUY A f OLICY,
YOU HIIIIAN AGI!! NT"

BETWEEN 8:30 &amp; 5:00

�4- 'The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Tuesday . Oct . 2:1. 1 ~79

'5 - 'The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Oet. Z1, 1 !17~

CB 'ers donate to fire
victim families here

Man honored by birthday fare
A party in observanee of the 68th
birthday of Bill Rovnak, a ve teran at
ArcadiB Nursing Home. was held by
the American Legton Auxiltary
Thursday.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp and Mrs. Mary
Martin , veteran ·affair s and
rehabilitation chainnen for the
Auxiliary of Drew Webster Poot 39
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Veda Davis
the junior unit of that post. went to
.Arcadia for the party. They took a
'decorated cake and a shirt from the
junior unit, jigsaw puzzles and
pajamas from the se nior unit , a-nd

rt

CHOICES

loot bags for all 1\J of the vf'terans
the re.
Jommg them fur the pHrty was
Mrs . Nelhe Cooley of Athens Untl 21
the O.partment of Ohto husp1tai
represental1 ve for Ihe America n
Legion Auxiliary, w1th a decorated
cake for the fi ve vete rans having
bu-thda ys in September and October . She also had shirts for the
fiv e. and the party was opened to aU
residents of the nursing home wtth
cak e and ice cr eam ~ing served
Adam Martm entertatned wtlh
hymns and popular selections

Karen Blaker Ph.D.

·,
.

&amp;ltley . Back row. 1 to r, Brenda Calaway, Renee
Trussel l. Vl'lvet Elkins, Donna Jacks, and Synthia
W1u1r .

RESERVE CHEERLEADEHS - These are the
reserve cheerleaders fur Eastern Htgh School llus
year. Front year,lto r, are. C'-&lt;~sSte Sheets and Me lame

COLU MBUS. Ohio I AP I
Unbeaten Oh10 Slate has not

Sports

S ttrTl~ndttred

a touchdown pass in its
l&lt;Jst thret• victon es m ma tching
~lchigan stnd t' for stnd e for the Big

Ten Conference football lead .
Earle Bruct:' , the Rucke yes' fir styt•&lt;Jr coach, attnbutes it to one

World

Te rr y and me 1s ve ry finn

·· we hav ~ ~aten our pro blems
w1th fa1th ."
Ms. Starbuck was m New York
Monda y practicing fer her Wtnt er
Olympics promotional tour to be
followed by a spectacular stage
featunng

her

an d

hl'r

longt im e skatin g par tner Ken
Sh eUey . fl opens Feb . 14
Valentine's Day and her btrthday at New York 's Rad to Ctty Mus1c
Hall.
After a two-h our sk a t1 ng

s~ss10 n

and another two hours uf dHnn•

Oh1o College Football
By The A SSOCiated P ress
Mid -American Conf.

leagu e All
W . L.T
6 00
500
320

( M 1Ch
Tol edo

Oh io u
Mi am• , Oh10
Bowl ing Green
E . M ie n

J

0

Gil mes
W. L . T .
60 0
5]0
43 0
430
1 4 0
7 5 I
4
0

4

0

I

4

0

2

I

]]

0

330
3

Ball St
Kent Sf .
w Mi c h .
N Il l

0

I

7

6

0

5

0

3

1

Oh io Conferenc e
League All Gam es
W.L.T
Ohio N orthern

3 0

Ba ld Walla ce
Denison

2 1 0
2 I 0
I

0

Mount Un ion

2

Ohio Wes leyan

0 3 0

0

o 3 o
Blue 0i¥i sion

Wi" enbe r-g

J

Ollerbei n
Cap ital

3 0 0
1 7 o
1 2 0

5 1 0
4 2 o
J 3 o

Musk i ngum

1 2

I

Mariella

0 3 0

woos1er

0

6

0

0

5

0

0

7 4 0

Hoosier -Buckeye Cont .

League All Gam es
W . L.T
W. L.T .
500
50 1

Findlay

Hanove r
Anderson

41

Wilmington

Blufflon
Defiance
Manchester
Taylor

Ear lham

0

420

4 20
4 30
330
230
230
050
0 50

420
4 20
3 4 0
1 4 0
140
060
060

Others
W . L. T .

Ohio State

Youngstown Sta Te
Dayton
Hiram

Centra l State
case western
Akron

Ashland
John carroll

7 0
7 0
7 1
J 2

0
0

3

0
0

J

4
4

0
0

stron,i:!er for lt ...

Ca nton

grid rating.&lt;;
CO L UMBUS , Oh10 ! AP J
How a
state w 1de pa nel of sports wri ter s
et n d broadra'!.t ers rate-S Ohw t1igh
'&gt;f" hool foo r ba ll team s this we-ek for
The A o:&gt;"&gt; OfJatecl P ress ( 10 po1ntc; f or
first to 1 po 1nt tor lOth )

CLASS AAA

Mr K 1nlev 10
CLASSAA
St M arys, B 0, 26'2
2 Ha milton BadJn, 7 0. 195
3 Wheelersburg, 7 0, 185

.Jo J fJ IS ma km g ht&gt;r Olpnplt' lour
spokes wulll an for C'up u · 0:oodles
so up , adopt t'&lt;l as a st&lt;.1plt: for the
Wtntcr Ulympw s m l..ake Placid.
'\ Y . under the sponso rshi p of
\1ssm of J apan. unt: of tlw corporatt'
Llnde r\\'Titer s uf lht&gt; Caines.
·· J qu 1t .-:.katlllg :-.~.·notL':ily a ftn
~ e1t111g marned m.June Jij/6. " .JlJ J (J
.~ud ·· r resignl!d myself willingly to
lh t• role of h ou~t.·WJft · But ! found 1l
dtfftcult. Terry would cumt' h1 J!Ih'
~ · t·r\· t Lrt·d
I folUl d I couldn 't bl·
bnll!ant evt·ry ntgh t It wa s not total

ii."i

f!Vt?

nu1!1ths

Ma r y, 6 I ,

b WJrren Kennedy , 8 0, 140
7 Canal F ullon N or t llwe&lt;:.t. 8 0, 117

8 T r en t on Edgewood , 7 0 , 96
9 Columbu s Gra ndv1ew. 7 0 1. 59
10 Cadiz.60 'l . l4
Ottw r sr t•ools rece (ving 10 or mor e
po1 nts II Steubenv il l e J'l 1'l [ l1e ).
MPd 111a H Jg h !dncl and F oc; tor• a 30
14 West La fayett e R1dgewood '26 IS
E !yna Cr~t h oi Jt 74 16 Broo k l iPid '}1
17 M a rt 1ns F e rr y 20 18 (l1e), Coa t
C. ro vf' , Perrysbu r g and Ironton 17
7 1 M ed• na H 1ghtand 16 '12 John
"'&gt;town 14 23 WAu&lt;:,f'on 12 74 1f1e ) ,
W( J!ard
and
CleYe land
Central
Cii lhO!I C 10
CLASS A
1 N ew .=trio.. (d 1 h O!i C, R 0 , 7S 4
7 Artington . 80.7 1l
3 MOQ itdore . 80 , 210
4 Be-rgholz 5pr ,ng f le ld , 8 0 , 16 1
5 Portsmouth No tre D ct mf' . 7 1, 131
6 Ceda r ville , 8 0. 124
7 Crook~vllle . 7 I. 116
8 caro(ng to n , 7 0 1, 71
9 M c Donald . 71 . 38
10 Pte ). Columbus A c ademy , 1 1
etnd Cov1ng ton . 7 0 I. )S
Or h er Sf hoolr, rece1v,ng 10 or mor e
po 1nts 12 Sugarcree k G araw ay 34
13
l fi E'l,
T( f hn
Calve rt
and
(hd!(\othe
Zan e Tra ce 3 1
15
L,_eet on' a 19 16 Br1l !tan1 Bu c keye
North 27 17 Ada 26 18 Mar1 a St e1n
Mar(on "14 IQ Str asourg 23. 20 . Or
wel l Grand Valley 2'2 '2 1. Lorain
Clearv•ew 19 n Ga rf ie l d H eig ht s
Tr1n1ty 16 23 St Henr y 14 24 [ ti e),
Carey and Sou th1ngt on Cha lk er 13.
26 Frankl (n Furnace Green 11 27
(tit') . Mil lord Cen l !:!r Fa1rbank s and
Beverly Fort Fry e 10

as

4

-

V1rKen t St

) Clrti£&gt;VI II e . 7 Q, 149

L' hampwn s. first saw .Ju .Ju wh~n he
Ht tended an In• Cap&lt;:tde:-; show 1n
l:.,tLsburgh Fnends tned to ftx htm
up With one of tlw ladws t.n tilt'
chorus . '" I want to lllt't'l tht• blonde 111
green." Te rry sa1d . pomtmg to Ji1
.lo Ms Starbuck dt·dJnt.'fl
A yt•ar later. Ju Jo . IL•Cirnmg thCit
tlw Stee ler qu~H1t•rb&lt;wk was ~
" Born Agam l11ns t1an ." :-&gt;ought h!m
out . T hen c allll' rtJ IIl ~tnce an d

rnarnage

Akron 51

4

ISO

fulfi llment
" Wtwn I ~uta &lt;'hann• tu continue
skatm g. I took 1t Terry nt-~t urt-~ll )
didn't hke 1t at f1r st -· he I S CJ home
person - but ht• "dju sted We both
have adJusted ·
nationa l hl'rO

l

5

a fte r

Bradshaw had won h1 s :-.e(~ Jnd Super

Bowl

She's always been
a little gem,
now she's Jewelry.
''

0

5 0

5 0
1

5

If the edges of crepes are too crisp
and tend to crack, the pan may be
too hot or the batter too thin . If the
batte r is too thin , mix in one or two
tablespoon s of flour .

.

SENTENCING DEFERRED
Randy Michael entered a gui lty
plea when he was arraigned before
Judge John C. Bacon in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court on a
charge of trafficking in drugs. Sen·
lencing was deferred to a later date.

$

I I H'

II

,\I J!

i" II•
1) 1&gt;

1

as king yo u to make a big sac r ifice so

he won't have to be as frtghtened
that the same thing will h.appen
l:.lgam . He might feel yuu t;tre m or e

GEORGE REED
RECUPERATING
George Reed of Reedsville IB
recuperating from surgery at the
home of his son, Wilbur V. Heed , Sr..
2144 Cl. Sdky . Road , Marion , Ohio
43302. He would appreciate cards
and letters from Meigs County fnends .

I

j, '

, •1•
1.. • j•~. t~ 1

"')I

lit

,f,·lli!•l.

". ! "I'Ji t d

It

founda tion

merely

rejection part of the reason you wan-

ted the separa tion?
Explam to you r husband thai
buying a nd movtng mto a new house
would only put added stra ins on an
'Hlready shaky situation . Tell him
you need some energy to work on the
re lH!t onshlp and alreHdy fee l overburde ned without even thinking of a

REVIVAL THROUGH
SUNDAY
l{e\,va l services will be he ld Wednesday through Sunday evening at
the Church of Christ in Chri;t ian
Union , PearlS! , Mtddlepo rt .
The Rev. George Scott , Col umbus.
will be spea ker for the 7: 30p.m. services each evening. The publJc is invt ted to a ttend . Wesley Young ts the
elder and Lawrence Manley . the
pastor .

mo ve.

Suggest putting off the house hun ttng for a while. Wouldn't it be "
wonde rful celebration of a new
marriage commitment to move into
a new house after everyone feels
more secure ?
For facts about yo ur fears, order a
copy of Dr. Blaker's newsletter "If
You Are Phob1c ." Send :;o cents plus
a stamped, self ,addressed env elope
to Dr Blaker in care of tillS
newspaper, P. 0 . Box 475. Radio
O ty Station, New York . NY 10019 .
Wnte to Dr. Hlaker at the above
addres..'"i Volume of mail prohibits
personal r~pUes , but qu esti ons of

genera l interest will be ans wered in
future col= .

E

SAVORY BACON........................~~:. 69e

'I
' I

I

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'

·11·
I

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1/l f: W

STEVEN CONLEY
Rt:PORTS FOR DUTY
Marine ~1 . Steven C. Conley . sun
of Thurma n a nd Barbara Conley uf
12&lt;100 Chillicothe Road . Chester . has
reported for dut y at Manne C&lt;Jrps
Helicopter Alr Station . Tushn . Caltf .
He joined the Manne Corps 1n
February,1979 .

f u ··l urucu rement

!! 1t '

~ J rJC! ICf;~

p0 !1C 1eS

dl l d

Columbw.
Oh 10

}'~

MAIN - P!l'MEROV

""'t '"'• ·~ ''" I'L~ ·,~,..,fiP ¥"' ' ' "

~----------------··

of

Southe rn

anrJ

E IPL \I IC Co m pan y ,

!h~ o~ ..,rat . o n of

ds

Ad1u ~ tment

Cost
dlld

No

E L - FAC lo re

C lause.

'I'I J !Pd rndltl':'f S

'~' 'JI

"IIJ

41n

11

ThJ~

,cn•·rJuled to !H'

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Fu el

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u11 Oc to

rw· 29. 1979 &lt;1 : thP Com lll iS'WJ ~l·s O~t ce) . 100

~!Jill
•

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•

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East

Culu• nb us .

A ll .n t&gt;'J•'&gt;l··'! pe r sor~ ':l will

•

Lie 4 1ven an o;J portull l l'y' to

•

be ~ ~ eJrd

I

Or~lw

St~&gt; '"l

0h l1) 43215

•

';..';'1.79
l Do.,,

8"Jdd

F ..Hther .nf o rma ·

t •o n m ay
cont ac t (n q

:611\0's:
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olJt d lne&lt;l tJy
the

Comm1s

S•O il

THE PUBLIC UT IL I TI ES
COMMISS IO N OF O HIO

Bv

,

Oa·•.d

~

Po1 k.

$
A

ere

v
E

ALL WEEK

PEPS 1.................................... :.~~~~~.~~:

89~

PRODUCE
ALL STAR DAIRY

COKE &amp;SPRITE

2% MILK ..................................... ~~.~~~~. $1.69
VALLEY BELL ASSORTED
4 LBS.
TWIN
POPS
....................................
~!?~~~... .
VALLEY BELL DAIRY
BUTTERMILK
..............................'~:.?.~.L.~'!.~.... 89e
TOMATOES BROUGHTON
DAIRY
2 LB.
ON ION CHIP-N-DIP.................. ~.~.~: .. 2/99e
BROUGHTON DAIRY LANE
99e ICE CREAM................................. ~(2.~~~~~!! ... '1 19
WINTER &amp; SUMMER

ANTI FREEZE ••••••.......•..•~~~•.'3
16 OZ.

ZESTA ZALTINE

I SCOTLAD
99 I
I
I
I

DEL MONTE WHOLE KERNEL

CORN •....••...••••••..•. }~}.~~z.E•. 3/'1

8 PAK 16 Ol

$129

ans.

PARTY ICE
10 lB.
BAG

CHUNK LIGHT TUNA .... Y~.?~-. 89

CRACKERS.......................... 59

6

39e

e

e•

I

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1

CLARK, PAYDAY, BIG TIME, ZAGNUT

I

Holly Hobbie ~&lt;»
Jewelry
'QJeflelers
11&gt; E

~Jt.Jt!l 1c

00
THURS. &amp; FRI. ONLY

~

i..\ .\ 1,

The Puhl ,c U t , l1t1 es Com llliSSI·Jn ·J I Uh o ha s se t tor

PORK STEAK ......................~: ..99e FRANKIE$ .........................1.~.?~ .. 99e
PORK ROAST ................... JP: .. 89e PICNIC
HOMEMADE
e
5 A U5 A G E...............................~~~. 9 9 e H A M 5 .......................................~~; .. 7 9

DR. PEPPER

,-

L EG ;\L NOTICE

SUPERIORS

RC OR
DIET RITE
COLA

FRIDAY ONLY
BOWLING
GREENWOOD, Ind. ( AP) - Mark
Roth averaged 242 to take the lead
heading into today's finals of th e
$85,000 Professional Bowlers
Association Kessler Classic.
Roth , 28, from North Arlington,
N.J ., finished the sixth round with
games of 236, 269, 224 and 240 at the
Astro Bowl lanes to surpass O.nnis
Lane of Kingsport, Tenn.

Aeiker.

TS

Jh'!

1]) .... 1\J~

potluck dinner at 7 p.m. It was
decided that all those who come unmasked wlll be fined. Members are
to take a meat dish and a covered
dis h. Officers wiU be elected at the
meeting .
Purchase of a public address
system was approved and it was
voted to purchase a plaque for a
deceased member. The club also
voted to honor one member a year as
an outstanding C. B.'er. Coffee
breaks for October and November
were armounced .
Several members presented ideas
on Chnstmas projects which this
year wiU include semor citizens, the
hospita l and the children's home.
Cookies, donuts, coffee and pop
were· served . The door prizes were
won by Patty Capehart and Pat

79 232

ers

SE ...

v

wou ld

trouble d om~ thiS by yourselves. you
nught want to enlist the atd of a
roorrii!ge counselor .
If your husband flatly refiL,es to
reconcile unless you meet hi s terms,
you may wa nt to ret hink your
decision to g1ve the marria ge
a nother c hance . Were his mnexiblltty and innated sens itivity to

,,

TIJRKEY DINNER PLANNED
The Racine PTO ham and turk ey
dinner wiU be held at Southern Local
Hlgh School on Nov. II , not Nov . 22
as was earlier announced. Serv ing
will begin at noon .

than

moving into a new house. If you have

HONORED SUNDAY
Mrs. Clara J . Powell was ho nored
Sunday wtth a birthday d1nner
basted by her child ren at her hume
111 Antiquity .
Attending the dinner were Mr . and
Mrs . Jerry F . Powell . Jun . Juantta .
and Crysta l, Mr Hnd Mrs Mike
Powell , Joe, Bill, Steve, Don and
Ronni e, Mr . a nd Mrs . John Powell ,
Jason and Tommy, Mrs . Vtrg1l HtU
and Mrs. Ha rry Hlll . They were
JOined later by Mr and Mrs . Jerry
A. Powell .
Mrs . Powell wa s prese nted
several gt fts along 1/&gt;'tth two btrthday
ca kes .

OYSTER STEW.••••.•. }~:':.~:.~~ ••;,;6;;..9_e~C~A......,.N-::D~Y-B~A-R~S~·-··~···=-··-···~··_~~~-:~.:-6_f_$.,1

I" II•'

0

I can sec h1s potnt. Rut I have a
full-tune job and two chtldren. f JUs t
wouldn't ha ve the energy to move a:-;
well as to work on our relati onship .
He says I am betng difficu lt 3nd
probably don'! want us to gel back
toge ther. f disagree. I think I am
being realisttc. But I need your
suport.
DEAH HEADE H - You've gut 11
You don't have to prove your desire
to end the separation by dotn g
everything your husband 's way.
Before you look at other ways of
handltng the situation, exa m ine whv
he might be maktng this demand . He certai nly must have felt reJected when he was "k1cked out" of the
house . To save face, he may be

HILTON

It .\ • I ·

I. " 'I"

leCJve fi ve months ago '] Wh y do you
want to reronl'ile now')
Conung up with st rong, pos ill vt:&gt;
an swers to thes1.&gt; qu esti ons would
provide yo ur marriage With a fi m1er

want to be r eminded constan tly of all
the unp leasantness when we spli t

Mildred Hudson, Edna and Sha ri
Sta lder, Janeth Beal, Yvonne and
Yvette Young , ljnda and Heather
Well . Karls and Jessica Cheva lier
Mar jo rie Smith, Brenda :
Olristopher and Michelle Housh
Donna and Barbie Hatfield, IJlah
Frecker, Eva Klng , and Paulette
Harrison.
Those sending gifts were Marv
King , Kay Walden , Ruby Burnsid ~.
Mrs . Charles Frecker, Mildred
Bowen, Elizabeth Cannan M1ll1e
Klug, Neva Klng, Catherine Slusher.
Mryle King, Virginia Knecht, Clara
Baer, Hazel Wilson , Helen Nelson.
Christi Ramsburg , Ci nd y Glaze.
Becky Smith, Carne Klng, and
Sharon MichaeL

)

Why dtd you ask your husba nd to

DGET

A

PRESTONE II

1 5 0

Oberlin

unprovmg, our mtens1ty on defens IS
tmproving . I think the thin g that IS
helping us 1s that our yo ung men are
gettmg confidence ," satd the Ohio
State coach.
Bruce says No . 1 tailback Calvin
Murra y shou ld be re ady for
Mtch1gan State . Murray rushed for
135 yards before going out with an
aggravation of a hip pointer injury
tn the first half against Wisconsin .
However, regular fullback Paul
CampbeU, who mo.ssed the Badgers'
rout with an injured toe, is m ore a
quest ton mark. "We X-rayed it
again today for a stress fracture. It's
not one . It 's just takmga little longer
to heal than we e&lt;peeted ," said
Bruce.
Ohto State and Mich i~an share the

Big Ten lead with W records and do
not meet until the last game of the
season. Nov . 17, mAnn Arbor, Mich .

tly at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Phil
Harrison, P eac hfork Hoad
Pomeroy, honortng Mrs . Hodney
(Mona) Frecker. Assisting Mrs .
Harrison in the preparati ons for the
·shower was Mrs . Judy Carl.
Games were played and pri zes
were awarded to Yvonne Young .
Mabel Brickles, Sadie Carl, and
Elizabeth Murray . The door prize
was won by Yvette Young.
Cake, punch , mints, nuts.
cheeseball and crackers were served to the guests. The cake was
baked by Mrs. Sharon Stewart and
was designed with a large duck center to match the napkins used for the
shower.
Those attending were Martina
King, Mabel Brickles, Ula Ca nnan
Mary Lou and Audra Houdashelt.
Janet King. fona and DeniS.:
Brickles, Louise Harrison, Marlene
and Jodi Harrison. Judy Hadford,
Virginia Dean, Anita and James
Dean, Judy and Melodi Carl,
Elizabeth Murray, Joy Quinn , Faye
Pratt, Sadie Carl, Bernice Riffle

you sepa rated

I g uess he 1.5 still upset about gel!tng ki cked out of here Hnd does n't

IS

1 3 0

Cincinnati

Kenyon

2 Massillon, J u. 277
3 W P&lt;:, fp r vll l e Nor th . R 0. I BI
4 Cinc( n na 11 Pnn ce t o n , 6 I , 149
5 Dover. 8 0, 146
6 Elyr1a . 7 0. 140
7 Pnrmn Pndua . 7 L 108
I:J Youngs t own Mooney , 7 1, 88
9 Zanesvi lle- . 7 1. 51
10 Clay t on N o rtnm ont, 6 ·0 1. 49
Other schoo l s rece1ving 10or mor e
POin t s · 11 ( t Je l. Sandusky and Brd
man 45 . 13 . Macedonia Nordon ia 30 .
14 Youngstown Sou t h 26 . 15 . Upper
Ar l 1ngton 24 16 Ravenna 17 17
Warnm western Reserve 14
18
( heL We st Carrol l ton etnd T oledo
Wh1tmer ! 3 70. Cen te r ville I I 21

High ,.,chool

qu" rt erback of U\l' 1975 Supt•r Buwl
W. L .T .
5 0 1
I 1 0
l 1 0
5 1 0
0 6 0
0 6 0

Lea gu e All Gam es
W .L.T . W. L.T
0

Inst ruction , she new to Pitts burgh tu
W3 tch her husband quart er b;wk tht•
Supe r Howl chcunp 1on Steele r s
agamst I he Denver Bron cos .
·· 1 ~o t.o every ga.rm• I can ," shL'
.x ud. ""e x ce pt the away giJmes . I
l'Hn't stand the hostthty of the
LTuw tls . We havt' une of thuse g1a nt
TV s&lt;.:r~ns m ol.lr apat1mcnt. I
wat ch tt the r e .· ·
Tht· rnarnage of lhese two spurts
super sta rs tllnlh:'ll rumant1usts
t'H'ry when.• but tt wasn "t long before
Uw gosstp rmll ~ wen· gnndmg .
'I11 ere wt•rt• rept·dtt.., l rum or s of a
spilt .
··Peop le wrote SfJ!llt' c r azy
thmgs." J u Jo 5aid . ·· It WH S nev~r
!rut• . \1aJTiagL· IS hard t•nuugh fu r
peopl e With no pn.~ssures and nut tn
tht• public e}&lt;' . Wtth us . 11 has been
dead ly . People scruttnlllng us.
Neither of us has any prtvacy .
"" Ru t we hart• organtzt•d our l!vt•s
to f1t o ur prt•ssun.•s. Our ma rnag e tS

Br adsha w . a

Red Di v ision

He idelberg

wor d healthlllt'Ss .
I k m cnnlams that once mi ddle
~ u &lt;:~n.l Tu11 ~w i c kl a nd tackles
Luther Henson and Jerom e Fost er

Grim~lt·y

J o Jo Starbuck ha s ltved her lit e on
.razor-..'iharp ice skates an d Tt·rry
Bra dsh aw has inscribed h1s carl•t•r
with foot baU cleats on a hundred
gndiron s. and - tn the language of
th e poets ~ newr the tw am shall
meet.
But it did , and , con trary to the
gossip mongers. all IS well .
" lt
hasn't
been
easy,
acknowledges Jo Jo, former U S
Olympi c skater and star of ItT
Capades. " Husban d and wtft w1th
conflictin g ca reers . 11lt' J-Jres~ure!-i
are tremendous. The e hallen~ e IS
great . But th e relat10nsh1p between

sho w .

From 1 to r are, Kristi Gaddis , Tera Guthrie, Tonya
Fortney, Renee Buckley, and Lori Wolfe.

Healthiness key to OSU's defense

Today's

By Will

JUNIOR HIGH CHEERLEADERS - 'These are
the Junior Hlgh cheerleaders for Eastern this year .

'

'!•

.w .• .

home .

hus band and I huve decided to

Layette shower held
A layette shower was held recen-

reconcile. I ttm h&lt;J pp y &lt;JiJout lht.·
decis ion but up.'jl't Ul&lt;Jt ht· thinks wt•
s huuiJ make a new sldrt tn a new

cmrumtteo w makmg the 11 1arriagt'
wurk lf you an· wt llm g to ~u through
tht· ha.~ s lt.· uf !lliJVI n g
If e1ther uf yuu neeilii reassura nce
&lt;.thout till' potentte~l strength of your
ruarrwge. 1t would be more helpful
\ tl
dl ~c u!ls
toge th rr wh eth er
rmyth1ng has rt'a lly changed sin L~

ONE MOV E AT A TIME
By Karen Blaker, Ph . D.
DEAH DH . BLAKEH
After
being separate&lt;.! for fiv e munth."i, my

Ttw B1g Bend C1t11.ens Band Haclio
Club. Inc. meeting recently at the
Rock Springs Grange hall voted to
give S50 to each of the recent fire VIC tuns , the Ohl1nger Hnd Pierce
families
Plans wen: llla de during the
weekend fur a halloween party to be
held Friday mghl at the hall with a

REG. &amp; DIET

9

e

16 oz. b.ls.
.
...-SAT. &amp; SUN.Iiiii!O~N~L~Y---

8 PAK 16 OZ.

COKE

PAK 16 OZ.

99e

I

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M.SU~CAY .9 iU lu
We

Federal Food :&gt;tamps- ne

Keserve 11e

To Limit

BTLS.

99~

Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

�6-

Tile Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 . . Tuesday , Oct . 23 , 1979

7 - The Daily Sentmel. Middl eport -Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Oct. 23, 197Y

CF drive
totals

'

$1,102.50
The Meigs County cystic fibrosis
drive . excluding Middleport which
was solicited separately , brought in
a total in contributions of $1,102.50,
Mrs . Mary Martin and Mrs. Ruby
Marshall , co-chairmen , report.
The Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty. sponsored the fund drive
and members of that organization
soliciting were the CCK:hairmen,
Mrs. Veda Davts, Mrs . Pearl Knapp,
Mrs . Eileen Searles, and Mrs.
Catherine Welsh .
Mrs . Marjorie Grintm handled
Racine with Tom Wolfe giving $250
from proceeds from the David Diles
tournament fund . Others soliciting
were Nellie Brogan, Harrisonville ;
Mrs. Herbert Roush , Letart area;
Mrs. Edie Grin1m, Bradbury ; Mrs.
Knapp, Mrs. Leonard Roush , Mrs.
Searles, and Mrs . Diana Davidson
Syracuse; Sue Fry and Ruth Fry:
and Mrs . Helen BLackston, Hemlock
Grove, Hock Springs area; Mrs .
Belva Glaze, Mrs . Garnet Harbrecht, Mrs . Nancy Hill, Mrs . Betty
Wehrung, Pomeroy; and Mrs . Fay
Wildermuth, Mrs . Ellen Couch, Mrs.
Betty Wiles, Mrs . Janice Fetty , Mrs .
Evelyn Gilmore, Mrs. Marjorie
Goett, Hobin Campbell, and Jennifer
Couch , AuxtUary members working

J',
&gt;
f

'~/

.....

'/

..
SP4 TIM ROACH ts an electrom cs repatrman for the 3664th Mamterumce Company of the West Vtrgtnia Anny Nat10nal Guard unit in Point
Pleasant . He and other umt members "'ll be going to West Germany m
February 1960 as part of thetr annual traming wtth the guard . The unit
started a new recrwtmg dnve. "OperatiOn Hlgh Port-crossover , .. Monday night, Oct. 22, at 6.30 prn at the annory . They intend to enlist at
least 30 new members tnto the unit by December 15 tn order to take them
on the European tnp . For tnfonnatlon, contact the armory, on Route 62
North, by phorung 675-390() 1 Photo by 153rd PubUc Affairs Det. , WV AR·
NGJ

in various areas.

Sorority plans tour
A tour to Fenton Glass and a
family skating party were planned
when the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi met Tuesday night
at the Columbia Gas Co. office.
The Fenton tour was set!or Nov. 6,
while the skating party will be held
on Nov . 11 at the Skate-a-Way Rink
on Route 7. Mrs . Ruth Riffle, social
chairman, reported on the plans.
Mrs . Carolyn Grueser rerrunded
members of the d&lt;&gt;-your-own-thing
auction to be held at the next
meeting , and also noted that she has
the I.incoln House book for those
who might like to order.
For the cultural program, Mrs.
Judy Crooks and Mrs. Carol Adams
talked on planning a kitchen . Mrs .
Bette Jean Krawsczyn, Mrs . Sandi
Sargent and Mrs. Donna Byer were
hostesses.

By DAV([) ESPO
Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (API- A former
Juslice Department employee who
says she was fired f&lt;r prot esting the
advances of her boss appealed to
Congress today to protect federal
workers victimized by sex ua l
harassment .

" Women
making
sexual
harassment complaints, like women
who have been sexua lly assaulted,
are treated as the culpable party.
rather than as the victim," Diane

Rennay Williams told a House
subcommittee.
" Wom en com plaining of sexual
harass ment should be given
temporary deta ils or transfers until

to hide. Once I callf&gt;li a hotline and
they told met to report my next

TilE HEY KIDS will be the highlught of the Meigs County Fann Bureau
Federation annual meettng to be held tonight , Mrs . Maida Mora, president, announces. The Hey Klds IS a group who plays numerous instruments , including
organ , clannet_. drums , synthest1.er, etc , who will sing and dance as well in
therr presentation . They have appeared on television, concerts, festivals and
fatrs . The meettng Mil be held at 7:11 p.m on Tuesday at the Chester Elemen~ School. Ttckets may be secured by calling Tom Hamm, 94~2574 : Sylvia
Mtdkiff, 992-7216: Hilber Qut vey, 992-2338: Andrew Cross, 247-2852: Eula Wolfe,
247..3638; Hobert Burdette, 992-3930 ; Mrs. Joe Colwell . 742-3002 . Rex Shenefield
669-4831 ; Rick Koblentz, 965-J84 7; Norman Will . 742-2791 or the Bureau office at
992-2181.

G•·nt·ration Hap
~~~

llt·l4·n and

""'w · Bond

WHICH PARTNER SHOULD
LOVE TilE OTHER MOST
IN MARRIAGE?
BY HELEN AND SUE BO'ITEL
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
My mother says, "To have a hapPY marriage, find a man who loves
you mroe than you love him . Then
he'll always keep trying ." Is this
right? - SHEILA

enti re time, and asked Wayne to
help me . That was when my world
started crumbling You see. he Is
scttiwphrenic.
What I th oug ht was "i ndividualism.. was actually withdrawal from realtiy He betieves
every lie he told me 1and I fell for)
because he lives in a fantasy world .
He has homble hallucinations of
devils coming out of walls and
"voices" telling him what to do. At
tunes he even thinks he is a woman .
And he can be violent. God only
knows how many bruises I've tried

beatmg to the police, but I'm the
only one he trusts and if I "betray "
him, he might never respond .
Since I'm a psych major (I returned to college after our baby was
born I I 've been trying to persuade
him to get psychiatric help, but he's
afraid schizophrenia lsn 't respectable disease - if word got around it
would ruin his career.
Helen and Sue, please tell your
readers !including Wayne, who
won't listen to me ) that
schiwphrerua is a real illness, upsetting the lives of millions. It tends
to run in families, like diabetes ; it 15
partly from disturbed family l!fe,
but there is also a physical chemical factor. And most important, tell them that it can be
treated, maybe even cured if caught
soon enoug h. - WAYNE 'S WIFE

the cornplalllt ts mvestlgated and
resolved," said Ms. Williams , who
wa s dism issed· as a publi c
Information officer at the Justice
Department's Community Relations
Service in 1972.
Her remarks came in testimony
prepared for a House Post Office
and Ovil Service subcommittee,
which opened hearings today into
sex ual harassment of federal
worker s.
Rep. James Hanley , [}.N .Y., the
subcommittee chairman, said an
investigation has shown sexual
harassment is an "everyday,
eve rywher e occurrence" in the
fed eral government. He appealed to
Notice of Election
on Ta• L.evy in
Excess of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOTICE is hereby given
that in pursuance of a
Resolu tion of the Council of
the Village of Syracuse,
Sy racuse , Ohi o passed on

Notice of Election
on Tax Levy in
Excess of the Ten
Mill Limitation
NOTtCii is hereby g i ven
t ha t in pursuance of a
Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the Township of
Ch~ste r , in M ei gs County,
OhlO , passed on ftle lOth
day of July , 1919 there will
be subm1tte d t o a vote of
th e pe-o p le of said Township
a t a Ge nera l ELECTION to
be held 1n the Township of
th e
Ches ter , Ohio, at
regu lar pla ces ot voting
t11ere1n , on Tuesday , the
6th day of November, 1979
the question of levying, i~
excess of the ten m ill
l i m rtat on, for the benefit at
Ches ter Township, for the
purpose of prov1.d ing and
m a 1nta in ing
f 1re
ap
pa _ra_tus ,
appliances.
bu dd1 ngs, o r sites therefor ,
or sources of wat er supp l y
and materia_ls therefor . or
th e es tabliShment and
maintenance of li nes of fi re
a lctrm te legraph or th e
paym~nt
of
~rmanent ,
part t1m e,
or
volunteer
fir eme n o r fire fighting
companres to oPerate the
same or t o purchase am
bulance equ 1pment or to
p rov ide ambulance or
e m ergency medi cal ser
v1ces ope rated by a fire
department o r f i re fighting

the 13Th day

of

August. 1979

there wilt be submitted to a

vote of the people Of said

Village at a Genera l ELEC
TION to be held in the
Village of Syracuse, Ohio,

at the regular place of
voting therein, on TueSday ,

me

6th day of November,
19 79 1 th e question ot
levy 1ng , in e)(cess of the ten
mill lim i tation , for the
benefit of Syracuse Village

for .

~he

purpose

of

prov1d1ng and mainta i ning
lire apparatus, appliances,
bu i ldings, or sites therefor ,
or sources of wafer supply
and materials therefor , or
the establishment and
maintenance of lines ot fir e
al arm telegraph or the
pay m e nt of permanent .
part time ,
Of'"
volunteer
fir emen . o r fire fight ing
compan1es to operate tne
same or to purc hase am
butan ce equ1 pment or to
provide ambulance or
emergenc y medical ser
v1 ces operated by a fire
department or fire fight i ng

the Office of Personnel Management
to take steps to eradicate it.
Hanley noted that an informal
survey taken by a Housi ng and
Urban Development employee
recently turned up about 160 women
who reported th ey have been
harassed sexually on the job. Other,
informal surveys also have turned
up large numbers of women
claiming similar harassment.
"This type of behavior simply
should not be tolerated in the federal
workplace,"
Hanley
said.
"Managers should be put on notice
that a 'boys will be boys'
atmosphere will not be condoned in
any federal agency ."
Federal court rulings have held tn
the last several years that sexual
harassment is a form of sex
, discrimination, and outlawed as a
result .
Committee aides say sex ual

harassment normally takes the form
of a male supervtsor mak ing
advances to a female worker , then
taking retaliatory measures suc h as
issuing poor job performan ce
ratings &lt;r an outright dismissal
notice if the advances are spurned.
Ms . Williams, whose case is
expected to go to a new trial in
several weeks , was fired on 25
nunutes notice in 1972, several days
after filing a sex discrimination
complaint against her boss .
While her supervisor ha s
remained in his job , her case ha s
been in the federal courts and had a
number of administrative heartngs

company ;

Satd ta x being : a renewal

of. an existing ta x of 2.3
mills to run for five years
ar .a rate not exceeding 2.3
m1lls for each one dollar of
va l uation, which amounts
to twenty -three cents for
each one hundred dollars of
va l uation, for f i ve years .
The Polls for said Elec
lion wil l open at 6 :30o 'c lock
A.M . and remain open until
6 .30 o'c lock PM . Eastern
Standard Time of sa id day
By order of the Board Ot
Elections of Meigs County
Ol'lio .
'
Ernest A. Wingett
Chairman

com pany ,

Said ta x bein g a renewal
of an e)(isting t a x of 0.4 mi l l
to ru n for Five (5) years, at
a rate nor exceeding 0 .t
mi ll s for eac h one dollar Ot
va luat ion , whi c h amoun ts
to fo ur cents f or each one
hund r ed
dollars
of
va lua tion , for Five years .
The Poll s tor sa 1d Elec
t1on will open at 6 30
o'c lock AM . and re m din
open unfl 6 30 o'c lock P .M .
Eastern St a ndard Ti me of
said day
By order of the Board of
E tec ti ons. of M eigs County,
Oh10
Er nes t A Wing en
Chairman

•

•
•

REVIVAL UNDERWAY
A revival is underway each
evening at 7:30 p.m. through Oct. 28
at the Mason, W. Va ., Center St.
Christian Brethren Church. Henry
Roberts of Missouri is the
evangeUst .

I

laked

•

s~!'i

•

~";' '1.79
J hys o.tr

I

•.. sus

•

:6ftiO's:

····-··
•

AU IOCA liONS

•

DEAR SHEILA:
1bis advice could backfire mto
unhappy endings:
A wife who loves her husband less
than he loves her might soon start
looking for someone she could love
more. OrIf she selfishly takes advantage of
his love, It may dwindle.
Besides, it's no fun, living on a

Great styling, performance and
reliabil i ty! Use!. less power th an
a SO·watt light, bulb . Fa st precise
" Equal Ease" UHF tuni ng plus
other deluxe features .

$29!r
BAKER
FURNITURE
SPECIAL

Middleport, 0.

pedestal .

To care equally for one another
iBn 't always possible but don 't
marry unless you care a lot - and
will try as hard as your partner to
prove it.- HELEN

I'

'

DEAR RAP :
When I met Wayne two years ago
It was love at first sight. We eloped
soon afterwards . He's gifted
musician and wants to be a recording artist.
I never made a single dcmanrl un
·him- until I got r'·"g~• :: u·;r, ,q the

Whitewalls (No extra cost)

RECAP $14~~0

TIRE

Plus IOC

Fed. Ta•

UP

Recappable

Trade -In

FREE MOUNTING

MEIGS TIRE CENTER, INC.
700 E. Main
992-2101
Pomeroy

caLLsative agent-. some researchers

She needs
Room
Service.
Ollly
day for an extension phone.
~a

H yoo're tw.d cA con4Niing with the NFL
(and losing). moybe it's limo lor an o..-..;.,
phone from GTE. f0&lt; o price this low, yoo

con hcM o phone In atl'ff roam in the haute .
. You con escape to the bedtoam, the-'"11 room 0&lt; _,the buthooam. And yoo con

into the,....; _ _
All it talc.. to get Room Senli&lt;» is a quidc
trip to rour GTE Phone Man. Just pick aut
the phone lha! goes witt. rour fa¥aritw room,
talte it homo and start .,joying the . -

stop ~ling

IOCincl cA silonco.

(#ii:Jm-me

16 West Washington, Athens

Meigs Offt ct' uf lh•' Atl wns ( ·uunt ~
Sa vmgs and J .oan I ·~~

clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer. Peeve or Problem in her
coiUITUl. Write POLLY'S POINTERS in care of this newspaper.

r---Social Calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY PAST MATRONS, Order of the Eastern star, will meet at
the Pomeroy Masonic Temple, 7:30
p.m . Tuesday.
AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXIIJARY. Drew Webster Post
39, 7:30 p.m . Tuesday at the hall .
Mrs . Fay Wildennuth to have a
program on edu cation and scholarship .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
lions Club Wednesday at Meigs Inn.
SPECIAL SERVICES Wednesday
through Sunday at the Laurel Free
Methodist Church with the Rev .
James L. Mason, Canton, as guest
speaker, and the special musi c each

Disthargt's ()t·t . 22
1

H 1 ~', 1 ' !"

FW.'X "l.H'

.JI'ff, ·r "

;

.j
}111111

Having

AMERICAN LEGION, Feeney Bennett Post 128, 7: 30 p.m. Wednesday at the hall .
AMERICAN Legion Auxiliary ,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 7:30 p.m
Wednesday at the hall. Bean and
l'ornbread dinner for both legionnaires and auxiliary members at
6:30p.m .
TIIURSDAY
MONTHLY MEETING, Southern
Hills District, Ohio Nurses Assn ..
7:30p.m. Thursday at Parks Hall on
Ohio University's West Green .

Indiana

begun

her

We can show
you ways to
sa-. money

!
=
·-=

IJ~

\1r s .)() :\1111

~ rs

n.:n :lvt d

ht'l"

mg tlt M l dLlle p11r1

Ma rJorie Huff nn
:~5 P"tund nbb un anJ

year mall expcnrncnt(JJ. non -~raded
elementary school, and for two m or e
yea r s as a t~alll le£JU~r 1n the Oh 10

Untverstty-Melgs Local Sehoul
System Teacher Corps ProJeCt.

Chapman los tng the mos t wetght

vrst l 11.:-t~ bt·t·n po._'itpon erl until Oct.
26 , &lt;:~nd ttw11 r1 nly tf schools are open
t11 therr uperd tion, and that the CCI.
w1U ser.&gt;l•tht' t.:antcen .
Nam es wt: re drawn for a Christ .

mas gift excha nge The holiday party was U"l'ut;Sed and will be held at
th e Meigs Inn Plans were made for
a l n SJ to Fl'nton G la ss Co . at
WtllJorf'L'&gt; lown . W Va m November
wtth mernb• T" tu mee t on the upp er
p&lt;-trkrng lrt l tn Pom er oy ct l Op .nL
\ ll&lt;Hlw "'a s submi tted for m ern l.w r·)tiJI \ 1r •, J·. lubt' Wh !tl' won the

IJt ,s tc- . . ..., pr ,/ (' .\ 1r:-; Cla rice Kenned y
and Mrs !\ann Mor ris serl:ed pum pk UI pt l'.nuts. ha ll oween l'andy , iced

l(':t and ('U ffPt' to those named and
.\ 1r·o .lr·" nr·t ll- Duffy, Mrs. Thelma

u. . b!)rnt·.

t·cr t t f t c &lt;tl t·

--·~~
P-'""••~,:r
G,.o

•
•

Baked

Re~ . S2 .9S

I

•

' . ~Atm·'"~~~

AIM

EXTRA ACTION

TOOTHPASTE

TIDE G-

c 4:~·.· · $166 ~ rJ

4.1&gt;-oz.
tube

JOY
DISHWASHING

10' OFF

Reg . Retail $1 .15

~------

22-oz .

'-

r'

Rletail"

~~· ~

COAST ~~~;~
BAR SOAP

4

6

DEODORANT

HAIKSCRAFT
VAPORIZER

40 's

.WILD
. 96C
f)
BIRD ;~'
BELLS

\ OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
Herman Grate
Mason, W.Va.

~~
Mti

ICE SCRAPER
14-in .

DRAFT
SHIELD

QUEEN-0-MAT
24x141NCH
A

Reg . Retail $5 .99

~

(

,,.,.
AlUM\..
....01

~

Reg . Ret . 51 .69

----.-

1

49

SAFE STEP

ICE
MELTER
Reg . Ret . $2.19

1---;:--- U

7c 102:$159

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66C
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Reg Ret $2 99

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Reg
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eg . et . 54 · 86

M~A.~~w~~~~~!~s~,E

bars

GERITOL

~o-.179 ··:~;

J".

Reg . Ret . $1 .39

INSURANCE COMPANY

8 : 30to5 : 00Thursdaytili12Noon

!;~$ 149

Re g Re t"II $1 65

Reg . Re,l
ail $1c 9

Reg . Rei ail S2 BO .

DURAFlAMEI

Rtprosent in- :
FEDERAl KEMPER

Reg

SliCK DIODORAIIIJ RIGUlAR

...~

1

OFF

RIGHT
FRAMES GUARD

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$322

I

PHOTO

CLUIMATIC

OLUEMATIC

As

25 '

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Reg . Retail$1 .82

89c 99C
I

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. . ;. :;:;.:.-)

EFFERDENT

.. DETERGENT

1

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40'5

LABEL

••

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NEW

Reg . Retail $6 .49

~

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~----------------------------------------·~· ~fF:-,
ac'
,,. - -

" Across from the
courthouse. " Pomeroy, 0 .
991-6677

FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

'I 79

All lOCATIONS

Bill Quickel

MASON FURNITURE

'"G•

•

:&amp;liis!
........

I

SHOP

•
•

s~,~~~~ti

•

Potnt Pleasant daso Wi lh l.tll tan

BIRD ·~: -~~- STAYFREE
FEEDER ~ L, IJ· MINI PADS
~-I

DAVIs.QUICKEL
AGENCY

Tonda Seidenable,

t\1rs

ami Mrs . Susie Abbott.

~·o:-~-- ~

RUBBERMAID

without
sacrificing
protection
for price .

'"'"' discusst'f1 the things they enjoy
dUJng wttl r thct r hand s.
It was noted th at the bloodmobt le

FALL
VALUE DAYS

SNOW SHOVEl

773 -5592

T ut'\' l.:-~ ~·

At th t•

l'ia ss,

Cruther s, sun , PonwrO)'

SATIJRDAY
SYRACUSE PTO fall halloween
carnival, 7 p.m. Saturday, at the
Syracuse Elementary School.
Costume judging to begin at 7 p.m.
Gannes, food, and entertairunent.
Public invited .

1

fXJWl' r

dl ll l
U txl t' S&lt;1 yn·
ren ·n L'tl twr :t:; p t~u n d i:l m.l 50 pound
n!Jbons cm Ll c- erufwa tes HhiJn dCJ
H.oustl lost l ht.• most Wt' tgh t flJ r tht•
wee k wtth Evt:ly n F orema n as tht·
runne r-up
At the Tw:s dCJy m orn m~ \1 ;t s, 1rt
C la s~. f1 ve new mernbt·r~ W l.' rt..'
welcomed . Brenda HLL'5S t' l l lHst tlw
ll loSl W&lt;~ ight , CJnd E t li:!. ()'[)ell wr1s
runner-up . Vel v&lt;i Ptersun awl l~J ret 1.£1 \Vams le y tled for runner-up et t ttw

R

)

\'. li ]

~ I_' W~I I/IIl'

Clar k~J il .

...

on your auto
insurance -

••II

\.q· n · pn· ~ cn t Ni

(' la ss t·urrd uded

RIHTHS lll'T ZZ

Btdwell . Mr . and Mr s . Htchard

I.AURIE

FAll. BAZAAR SLATED
The annual fall bazaar of the
Asbury United Methodist Church.
Syracuse, will be held Oct. 26 and 27
at the church social room. Hours will
be 10 a.m. to 6p.m. on Friday, and 10
a.m. until3 p.m. on Saturday . There
will be a bean and cornbread dinner
starting at 11 a .m. until I p.m. on
Saturday . Other features of the
bazaar will be the country kitchen,
crafts , ce ramics and baked goods .

;nt.J \ t•Jf dt r·l't' t•n t
n u.:c tln )! .\ 11f Uw Sl tnd crl'l! a 1Jt t 1
J&gt;ii Jf: tol l!l

('l ll lf!dl'JI('t '

Mr . and Mrs. John Hussell . sun.

master's work while an undergraduate at Ohio University, Ms.
Schmoll continued her graduate
studies the following year while
teaching with the Meig s Local
School System in Rutland .
In 1972, she returned to Ohio
University as a graduate assistant in
the Department of Curriculum and
Instruction, and completed her M.S.
in education with a concentration in
reading
in 1973. Following
graduati on s he returned to the
Meigs Local Schools to work for one

MIDDLEPORT [jterary Club, 2
p.m. Wednesday at the home of Mrs .
Bert Grirrun. Program will be on
·:Hobert Frost- the Critical Hecep!ton" by Mrs . Forest Bachtel. Mem bers to respond with a favorite Frost
poem.

1 rtll d

Mrs FreJd 1e Kl' IHJrr cks , sun ,
Well ston ; Mr . ami .'v1rs :\1o nroe
Murph y, son . .J&lt;Jt: k.')On : ;\·1r. and Mrs .
Jerry W!c kltn e . dc:~u~htc r. CocJ!ton :

University in August, 1979, and has
since assumed lhe position of
ass istant professor of edu ca tion tn
rea ding at Augustana College in
Sioux Falls, S. D.
Ms. Schmoll ts the granddaughter
of Hilda Greaser Schmoll and the
late George Otto Schmoll . Mid dleport, and the late Mr . and Mrs .
l.ee Kaufman . Botkins.
For the past three years while
worktng on her ED . fl. in Readmg
Education, Ms. Schinoll has been
em ployed as a graduate asststant
for the Indiana University Office of
Teacher Education and Extended
Services. During that time she has
also served as an educational con·
sultan! for Resource Development
Labs , has been selected as a member of Alpha Chapter of Phi Delta
Kappa , and co-authored with
Shanklin and Steffel , Readtng
Curn culum , Primary throu gh
Career Preparation : A Socia Psycholinguistic Approach, of the
se rt es Occasiona l Pape rs tn
l.anguage and Heading published by
Indtana Unive rsity .
A nat1ve of Middleport, Miss Sch·
moll graduated from Ohio University 1n 1967 with a B.S. in elementary
educat ion .

.11 -rlk lft."

/;ear diet pm![mms

son. Oak Htll : Mr. and Mrs. Phtllip
Combs. daughter. Oak Hill : Mr . and

Janis Elaine Sc hmoll , daughter of
Mr . and Mrs . Hobert Schmoll, Mid ·
dleport. completed her doctor of
from

fl t·l t·rt

Mr anU \1r s Denms

.\clmw/1

degree

\1il l'llfl

Shar tlll lll

H~dp l t

'

Completes PhD
ed ucation

.\1r ~

d &lt; HH~ hb · r .

i\diiTTI S.

and

k.l•l!t•f . \ "••l lf l (l r;,, •] lt·t .
Hu.o. ; St •ll l.n t Jt... HL' rt h;J :\1ll! t· r . \llr ~
.l:tnH· ~. :--.1ullihan aJHJ &gt;WI, ~n llr a
Stewa r1 . Mrtr sha Wt:ilkt·r

.l11r dt•r 1.

evening

Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon

c~!J.I'es

.)Iinde reIht

Hnlzt·r M t"di(·al (' e nlt· r

remissions and worsening of symp -

toms .
The MS patient 1s likely to fir st
come to the doctor 's office complatning of a weak or hea vy feeling
in the arms and legs . Another com·
mon symptom is numbness or
tingling in the limbs. Some patients
also complain about vision problems
or other eye trouble . Pain Is seldom
present in multiple sclerosis . As the
disease progresses mental problems
begin to appear such as depression
and euphoria. A false sense of well
being, in fact , is often one of the
distinguishing characteristics of this
disease .
QUESTION : I've heard that overwork and emotional stress often
bring on MS. Is this true ?
ANSWER: Even though work and
strain are not a direct cause of MS,
we notice quite often that the disease
gets worse when environn1ental
stress is great. One must ftrst have
the disease before stress will have
thi.s effect . Unfortunately there is no
sound advice which the medica l
profession can offer to the public
which will prevent MS until we are
more certain of the cause of this

Polly Cramer

and anything that might attrac1
them . The bay leaves do not impart
a taste to the other foods . I have used
them for years as have many others
• living in humid areas. - POLl. Y
:;_, DEAR POLLY - For years I have
:::lollowed my grandmother's advice
:;-and washed and dried a few ni ce
:; ~ones that I put in with flour , com
- ;JJ!eal or anything else that might atIJ'act bugs. It has always worked . MRS . S.E.T
DEAR POLLY
I have
:.:hovered that housework can ac·
:;:uauy be enjoyable when ac:.eompanied by soft instrumental
~usic - no singing is required . Find
a radio station that will provide this
and try it.- MRS. L. H.
:" DEAR POIJ.Y - While rak:ing
::. feaves and twtgs we gather little kin ·
;;.:&amp;ing pieces and put them tn a
:' lbedium-&lt;~ize grocery bag that we
::;lhen close or seal. The next time we
=:want a fire in the fireplace we put
- one of these bags at the base. It is so
:' neat and clean and ooe match will
: Ugh! the paper bag that tights the
kindling that lights the logs. If we
had grandc hildren this would be
their happy little autumn project. -

111 '"' wor ksho p. Th t&gt; m et.'tmg w &lt;::t "l
qpcru.:d w1t h lht· pl ed ge &lt;md tlw
Mother ·..., Pra yer by \i rs f't·l:!.J.:\
H l!u d&lt;:~ .'i h d t \1r:-. ~ an q Morns ha d
d c volhillS rt"etdmg it ]JI WI II , " /\ I 11&lt;-tn ·
t'l' lu J)u fktt er " F •Jr ro ll ca il llll' lll ·

re li ability Diagnosis has been particularly difficult m the early stages
because MS is subject to frequ ent

.

Wee,ils came along
By Polly Cramer
POU..Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY We tried
: everything we knew of to get r1d of
weevils , the n moved a couple of
;years ago and they are still
·pestering us. I thought I had packed
: carefully but it did no good so please
-help me . They are the only bugs we
have. -MHS E. J.
· DEAR MHS. E. J . - It sounds to
me as if you moved the weevils too .
.They were probably lurking in some
food you seldom use . Sometin1es
they are brought home from the
more where they stayed too long on
the s helves during wanm weather .
Try to find the offending item .
- Anything that seems questionable
:: .should be burned.
It sounds as if you may need a
professional to get rid of them all . If
;_ you spray with an insecticide your: · self. wash all cupboards and storage
,;: ylaces thoroughly. fumigate and
•• keep closed ion~ enough for 1! to
work . Alter they have all disappeared keep a few bay leaves in your

preS&lt;'nted Ill .\ l r' A111y Hill al Ute
Thur sdli y ni ght llt•·ett n ~ of ttH· ~ HI ·

needs rurther work to increase its

now believe a person does not get MS menace .
unless born with wea k defensive
Due to an increased volume of
mec haniSms agatnst the dtse!lse.
mail
, Dr. Miller will no longer be
QUESTION : How do you know
able
to personally re.spond to letters.
• when you have MS ? What are its
However, questions of general l/1 : symptoms?
: ANSWER . This Is a very difftcult terest will be answered in the
; disease to diagnose correctly. In . coiUITUl and can be sent to : Lamar
. fact, until just recently , no Miller, D.O., c-o College of
Osteopathic Medtcine, Ohio Unive r• ~;tboratory tests were avaiLable. The
sity.
Athens, Ohio 45701 .
~ physi cian had to ba'le his or her en ; tire declston on how well a patient's

flour canist er, in com meal, cereals

DEAR W.W.:
You 've said it well . What Wayne
can't grasp in his present &gt;tale is
that only if he allows his illness tn'ijo
untreated will it nti1I1 his career.
You aren't betraying his trust if
you discuss the problem with a
psychiatrist for both you and your
husband need help . If he doesn 't
receive tt soon, then you should
leave a dangerous situation .
HELEN AND SUE

lf2 PRICE OF NEW
TIRES WITH A NEW
TIRE GUARA~TEE

or scleros is (scar tissue}- was once

a favorite theory . MS was also on ce
betieved due to a bacterial infection
of the nervous system. One of the
most recent theories attributes this
disease to a slow growing virus .
Whether or not a virus is the

Mrs Hrll de.11onstrated the craft
ami tlll'n rHt· mbt.' r S uf the ( '(' [. junll'd

dJcport ('h1Jd ( ' JflS.t' I \.JllUfl i ,l'&lt;l /-: 1 ~ 1 '
held &lt;:~ 1 til e H1 verboC:il Ho o111 of the

S]mptoms matched those of a
"typica l" MS patient. The new test
which mvolves an analy sts of spinal
fl utd holds much promise, but still

'

a

HIGH MILEAGE
RETREADS

perate climates . It is also more
.prevalent among people of Scandinavian descent, butts not actually
hereditary since the disease does not
consistently run in famili es. Keep 111
mind that these statisti cs just show
tendencies . MS can strike anyone
past the teenage years and those of
every nationality .
There are a number of theories
about what causes MS . Most of these
theories have been popular at one
time or another. Blood clots sca ttered throughout the brain and
spmal cord- causing multiple areas

~

SHEILA :

Happy for who ' You or the lessloved man • -SUE

r eason is more frequent in tem -

Wi:I. S

p lt~ .':i lt •r cret ft

A prog r&lt;J!II un

,~~IPOLLYS POINTERS

22" (diag . meas .) 100% Solid
State B&amp;W Console TV

Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
Dated Oc tot:&gt;t&gt;r 1 '1 , 1979

By Lamar C. Miller, D.O.
Cllnlcal Associate Professor
of Family Medicine
Oblo Unlvenity College
of Osteopalhlc Medicine
MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
QUESTION : What type of person
gets multiple sclerosis' What brings
on the disease?
ANSWER : While the cause of MS
Is still a mystery, we do know that its
usual onset is during young adult life
-between the ages of thirty and for ty. Both sexes are equally prone to
acquire this disease which for some

.,..

Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
Dated October 12, 197"

1101 16,2J.J011115.•tc

M C'CI hears plastercraft program

Health Review

Harassment commonplace on the job

110 1 16. 13. JO 111 15. 41C

BAKE SALE POSTPONED
A bake sale planned by the Forest
Run United Methodist Women for
Friday has been pa~tponed .

'

Women complaining

.

'

'

Reg. Ret . 51 .19

I

I

DE-ICER

c

W/SCRAPER TOP
Reg . Retail $1 .09

77

�-

'
9- The Daily Senlmel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Tu ·d· . 0 .
OR7:TirACY
· ·· es a), tl.2:l.1979

8 --The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct . 23, 197'J

\f ) f \ i~~ ) e)\ f

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel Classifieds

SI T Vf-HY STII!.L . MY Ml ') t ,lJ I[J[[)

WANT AD
CHARGES
I~

!day
2days

3days
6days

Words« Under
Cub
Lll.arse
1 00
lZb
1.50
I 90
I .IJ)
2. Z5
3.00

3 7:'i

Each word over the rnmimwn
15 word! ~ t c-ent.B per word per
day Ad3~otherthancon ­

se&lt;:ubve day s wtU be charged 11t
the 1 liMy r ate

In memory, Card of Thanb
and Obituary · 8 cenU! per word,

$3.00 nururnum. Cash

,,...,.

IIl

ad -

Mobile Home sa.le!! and Yard
sales art' accepted only Wlth
cast! Wlt.h order . 25 cent charge
for ad.1 carrytng BoJ: Number In
Care of The SenUnel .

n.e Putlrl.istl@r reserves lhl'
nght to edit o.- reject All)' ads
deemed ob jecltonal
The
P\lbll.'lher wtU not be resporuuble
for- more than oOt' mrurrect U1 -

Lost and Found

Yard Sail!

MEIG S
COUN1 Y
H U M A N E 50CIE TY 99?
6760
Pel&lt;; c1Va1lable tor
adop l 1on ~nd •n tormat 10n
St"fVICt:'

L05 T, SA. rUROAY n1gf11
F a•rv,ew ..He a
Fema le
Wallll.er pup About 6 man
th s old '} .s7?6 18

H_e1p Wanted
·GU N
SH 001
EVERY
SU NDAY !PM FACTORY
CH OKE ONLY RACI N E
GUN CLUB

SHEET
M ETA L
men
nC"cdcd Good bent'tJTS ana
':&gt;d i ary 4-Ul 4066 or 446 1716
FARM COUPLE f or par !
tlf"'ll' w ork on ! arm and
hompor.,tedd near Coolvil le
OH M obile hom e and al
tra r- t •ve se ttm g and all
ul&gt;llf •es ('l(rep t telep hone
f u r n1shed
Farm
ex
per 1ence neres.':&gt;ar y ~ntl
mechan1 r ul and rar p en lr y
ro n s tru r l •on exper•enr(·
he lpful For t ur lh er wr1ft('n
dea 1IS wr.te PO Bo)( 30
Cool vdle OH 45723

no
HUNTIN G .
NO
tr esp&lt;JSS•rl9 w1tt1 no f' )(
ce pt1on s on my pr opt&gt;rty
Judy M cG raw Se lf
SH OOT
Rac1ne
Volunteer
F1re
Dept
Even· Sdlu rd ay 6 30 P m
AI th e•r budd1ng.n Bashan
Far Tory r ho~e guns on I y

GU N

GUN SHOOT every Sunday
11 00 FMtor y c ho k e on l y
Corn Holl ow G un Club .
Rutland Proct&gt;eds donated
to Boy Scou t Troo p 149

Phone Wl-21 J6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
: ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
I

NO H UNfi N G on the Gene
H umphrey pr ope rt y on R t
14J or the Andy Gr over
pr operty on Badev Run Rd
A NY O N E WH O has had
any problems w 1th spra ·y o r
to w ele tt e
typ e
1n sec- t
rePellent , send
all
1n
to
Box
·05.
form at1on
Rac1ne . OH

PORC H SALE
St arts
Wed . runs till all sold , Out
s1dc
Chr1s t mas
ae{ o r a t •ons. brown velvet
p, c tures and m•sc 1fe m s
K nr 1 K 1oes. College St
~yr~luse . O H 991)014
PORCH SALE We d It ems
have been added s1nre la st
wee k
A ll
h elve
been
rcdurcd
Opal
K loe s ,
Co ll ege St . Sy r Muse

19/J MERCURY
M ON
T EGO M X . 56.000 miles .
good r ondlft on Drop lea l
1ctb1t• Also . firewood tor
sale H 1r kory and oak Wil l
d i.'IIVf'f 843 ']70)

·-- - - - Pets
- -for
- -Sale
----

1951 CH EVROLET one ton
t la t b('d trurK. 30 g allon
r lec tr ,r hot wat er hea ter
5.1 5 V 4 I yl11lriPr W 1S\OnS1n
motor 843 170 I

FUR NI TURE.
1&lt;e
bo)(e~ .
br a~s beds . 1ron
beds . des k s etc . co mplete
householdS
Wr~t e
M D
M iller R1 4, Pomeroy or
r a i l 991 77b0

OLD

1? !7 THUNDERBIRD . AM
FM . A C. rad .a l s. $4 ,000
Must se ll 747 J594 bt-for e 7

l\le!lday
t.hru Fnd&amp;y
4p M
the da ; be f o.rt&gt; pu bheatJun

Sunda)

4p M
t-'mlll ) tiltemuon

Not tee ot E 1ect10 n
on Tax Le\ly
in EKcess ot the
Ten Mill

Ltmitation
NO riCE tS hereby g1ven
that 1n pursuance ot a
Reso l ution of rhe Coun c il of
the Vi ll agE&gt; o f Rilct ne . Ohto .

ED
BURKE TT
Barber
Shop now open full t1me ,n
M 1ddleport
GE 1 MARKET VALUE tor
your gold and sd "N ro ms
Wrde or
ro nfact
Ed
Bu r k.elt Barber Shop , M 1d
dlepo rt

OLD COI NS . pocKe t wt
c hes . r lass r1ngs . wedd1ng
bands . d1amonds Gold or
sliver Call J A Wamsley ,
742 ')3]1

JA NI CE DAVIS 1"i now em
pl ayed at Ha1r B y L1la
Beauty Salon , spar 1al1sl 1n
men 's and boy 's ha1r c uts
Open eve nmg s by
ap
001n tm en t
Mr s
Ke 1th
R 1denour . ownpr
CERAMI( CL ASSES . Mon
daY' and Thursday . 7 9 p m
Start 1ng Thursd~y . Oct 25
Orehel's Cer am1cs 59 N
2nd . M•ddleport . OH 991
5560

passed on the 2nd d ay day
o! Ju l y, 197q, ther e w ill be
su bm 1tted Ia a vote at th e
oeople of sa1d Village at a
Generrt l ELECT IO N to be
he la 1n the Village of
Ra c .n e.
O h 1o, at
th e
regular Place of votmg
lhere1n. on Tuesday , !he
LAFF-A-DAY
6th dr1y of N ovember , 1979,
the queSI 1on of levy1ng . 1n
excess of the ten m1 11
11m•tat1on, tor tne benet 11 at
Racine Village tor th e pur
. .. ·' ' . ~ '~
pose of prov1d1ng f1re ap
paratus .
applu'! nces.
buildings. or sif ps lhen~· for .
or sour ces of water suppl y
and mater•als tnPretor , or
· ~ - ..........,.,._ .
t he es tabli Sh m ent
and
~-J..,.- - &gt;
---- -·
ma 1ntenance of l 1nes ot f 1re
ne:.::....___
ala rm telegraph or the
paymen t ol permanent ,
par t t 1me , or
vo lunt eer
f i remen or fi re fighting
compan1es t o operate the
same or t o pur chase a m
bula nce equ1pment or to
I ),ld kl'! ' jl'- 11·11 1 11~ Ill• ' I lllll..,l
prov,ae
ambulanre
or
emergency medi cal M&gt;r lht tlli lll'•IW\ ~Ju',\' 1111 trt·t·:o.
v1ces opera ted by a fire
department or f i re fight,ng \\ l1.t 1 " .t I i'i '~' '
r ompanv .
Said tax be1ng a renewal
ot an exis ting tax of 1 7
mtlts t o run tor live year s.
at a rate not exceed1ng 1.7
mills for ea c h one dolla r of
PROBATE . COURT OF
va l ua t ion , wh ich amount s
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
to seventeen c pnts f or earh
ESTATE OF BERTHA T .
one hundred dollars of
LASHER . DECEASED
valuat1on . tor t 1ve years
N OTICE OF
Th e Poll s f er sa1d Elec
APPOINTMENT
t1on w dl open at 6 30
OF FIDUCIARY
o 'c lock AM and remtt ,n
On Oc tober 9th , 1979, 1n
open unfd 6 30o 'c lock. PM
t he M e1gs County Probat e
Eas tern Stanaard T1me of
Cour t
Case No
1?B.40.
said day
Mdryaret
T1IU'!.
R D
By order at th e Board ot
Rullana . Oh10 , was ap '
E lec t 1ons . of Meig s County .
po1nted E xecu tr•)l ot the
Ohi O
+:&gt;state of Bert ha L LashN.
Ernes1 A Wm getl
deceased . late of Rutland
Cha1rman
Town ShiP . Me 1gs Cou nty
Oh 10
Dorothy M Johnston
CIN k
Rober t E Buc k
Dated October 12. 19 79
Probate Judge
C lf' rk
( 10 ) 16, 23 . 30 { I ll 5, 4t r
I \0) 16 73 . 30 . )!!

WANTED
SA W
log s
P&lt;n· m en1 upon del•very to
our y·ard . 7 JO to 3 30 w ee k
day s Slaney Ha rdwoods .
SR 339 . B~rlow . O H 678
1980
ANTIQUES .
FUR
N tTURE
g !a ss.
ChiOU,
anyth1ng See or CAll Ruth
Gosney . ant1qu es. 16 N
2nd , M iddleport , O H 997
3161

RISING
STAR
Kenn el
Board1ng Cal l 367 02 91
POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Taylor 614 367 7220
HIL LC REST
KENN ELS
Ooard1 ng, al l br eed s Clean
1ndoo r outdoor
fa 11 1111 es
Also
AKC
re gis t e r ed
Doberrnans _614 446 7795

I'

I

lr'
'

I

l

Oorotny M . Johnston
.
C lerk
Dated Oc tober 11. 1979
(101 16, 23 , 30 ( 11I 5, 41c

Not te e of E lec t•on
on T.u. Levv in
Eu ess of fhe Ten
Mill Limttat1on
N OT I CE 1s hereby g1v en
that •n pursua nce of a
Re so tuton of the Board of
Tru stee s of the Township of
Orang e. Me ig s County .
Oh10 , pa ssed on the 1nd day
of Ju l( , 19 79 ther e w111 be
subm1 ted to a vo te of the
people of sa1d Townsh•P at
a General ELECT ION to be
h eld in th e Township of
O r a nge, O h 10,
at
the
r egular pl ace of vot1ng
t he r ein. on Tuesday , the
6th day of November . 1979.
the quest 1on of levymg , 1n
excess at the te-n mill
!i m1tai 10n , tor the benef•lof
Or ange Township t ar the
purpose of provtd ing and
ma1nla 1ni n g
fire
ap
paratus .
app li ance':. .
bulld1 ngs, or si tes th erefor .
o r sou r ces o f water supply
and mafer tals therefor , or
the es ta blis hment and
maintenance of li nes of fm,
alarm telegraph or the
payment a t permanent ,
part t im e,
or
vo lunteer
fi remen or tir e fighting
r ompanies to ope rate th e
same or to pur chas.e am
bulance equ tpm ent or to
prov•de ambulance or
em ergency medical ser
vices operated by a fire
department or fire fight ing
company ;
Said tax bei ng : a renewal
of an existing tax of 0 .8 mi 11
to ru n for ftve years at a
rat e not ex c eeding 0.8 m i lls
for each one dollar of
va luat ion , whi c h amounts
to e 1ght cents for each one
hundr ed
dOllars
of
valuat ion , for Five years .
The Poll s for sa1d Elec
tion will open at 6 &lt;10
o 'cloc k A .M . and remain
op en unfl 6 :30 o 'c lock P .M
Eas tern Standard Time of
said dny
· By order ot the Board of
Elections, of Meigs Coun t y,
Ohio.
Ernest A . Wingett
Chairman
Dorothv M . John ston
ClerK
Dated Oct 12, 1979
( 10 1 16. 23 . 30 ( 11 I 5. 41c

Bf:AUTIFUL MA TC H ED
r1g
19 75
P lymo uth
Voya ger va n
24 ' Terry
T r~ve l
trad e r
Se ll
con ta1ned Equal i Zer hlt ( h
S7900 W2
Bo1h lo ad ed
1 6~0

19 57 FORD lRU C K . l ' 1
ton . new mot or . rww t 1r es.
12 tt f lat bed S750 . ~ 2
1876

19 75 VW BEETLE. au to.
good r ond1 t ion 991 3401
19 74 G RAN
TORINO ,
whJIE', brown vmyl t op .
QOOd
r ondit1on
Fully
eQUip ped No ru &lt;;. t $1 '1 00
991 5565
1978 4x4 351 eng1ne, c ustom
pa1n t jn b and 1n te r,o r Ex
ccl lent co ndtt,on
Ph one
991 16So
196/ PONT IAC. t17S or
tr ,ldC' to r small Honda r oad
b• tc.e 997 75RO

COUNTRY MOBI LE Home
Pa rk , Route 33. north oi
Po meroy L arge lot s Ca ll
~7 7479

3 A ND 4 RM furn is hed ap
t s Phon e 992 5434
APT . , S1 25, SSO deposit
Furnished No child ren . no
pe ts 307 Spri ng Ave
HOUSE
FOR
ar
ro mmoda l ion of 3 ron
str ur t 1on men Call after 4 .
99 7 7791

Auctions

For Sale,
Rent or
Trade
- ------

BIG AUCTIO N every Wed .
7 pm Hartf ord Comm un1ty
Cen t e r , Har tt or d, WV 4
m1 1r=os above
Pomeroy
Mas.on Br ,dge

FOR SALE or rent N1 ce J
oe droom , modular loc ated
,n Portland ar e a . Set up on
lot or r an be moved (ttll
a ft er 4 30 304 273 5172

Real Estate for Sale
OW NER WIL L ~ell 40 a cres
or or e w ith 1978 Holl yoark
mob1le home 1.4x70 w i th ex
panda, plus 14)(36 fam ily
room attached . fu lly c ar
P&lt;&gt; l ed, rur a l wa er , som e
pastu re , fence . stand i ng
t 1mber , some walnut , sun
d(&gt;rl&lt;. Iro n!
a nd
b ack
Loc ated on New L1ma RD
Ca ll Jamt'~ lngf'l ~ 614 74]
1181
FIVE ROOM house. all
carp eted monern k1t che n
c1nd bat h , gar ag e and car
po rt In Br ~d bur)' Call ~2
5310

_ ___.F
._o
...._r Sa l. _,_
e_ _

NOTICE OF
APPLICATION
Publi C Notice is hereby
g1ven that
G r eyhound
L 1ne s, Inc has fli ed w1lh
the Publt c U fil 1t1 E.'S Com
ml!'!S10n ol Oh1 0 an ap
p l ica tion to amend Cer
~II ICa Te
ot Pub l 1c Con
"en1ence and N ecessi ty No
17SO
Bus con t a1 n1ng
author~ tv to tr ansport per
son s. th e1r baggag e and ex
pre ss
matter
1n
th e
f ollo w1ng respec t s
T o abandon r ou te bet
ween Kanau~a and Be l pr e
ovf'r Oh10 H1ghway 7 and
U S H 1ghway 50
1n teres ted part 1es may
ob ta 1n furt her ,n tormat 10n
by a ddress1ng th e Publi c
Utd 1f 1eS Comm 1SS10n of
Oh•o . 11 1 North H 1gh
Str ee t. Co l umb us,
Ohio
43'2 15

GREY HOU ND L INE S,
IN C
Gre yh ound Tower
Phoen1x . Arizona

LIMES10NE ,
COAL .
sand . gravel , c al c1 u m
chloride , fertilizer , dog
food , and a ll types at salt
EHe lsior Sa lt Work s, Inc,
E Ma1r, St. Pom e r oy , ~ 2
3891

Nott ce of Electton
on Tax Lewy 1n
EM cess of the Ten
M1ll Um•tat1on
NQ.T IC E IS hereby g1ven
t hat m pursuan ce of a
Resol ul1on of the B oard of
T ru stee'l of the Townsh1P
Sc1 p 10, Me 1g s Cou nty ,
O H •o. pass,~:&gt;d on th e 3rd day
ot Au9ust , )979 th ere w111 be
subm1fled to a vo t e of the
people of sa1d Townsh1p at
a General ELECT ION to be
he ld 1n the Town sh1p ol
SCI PI O, Oh10, at fhe re9u1ar
pla ces of 11011ng t here1n, on
T uPsday . the 6th day of
Jt179 ,
the
N ove mber .
quest1 0n of 1evy1ng, 1n ex
ce ss a t th e ten mil l
!•m1tat1on , for th e benet1t of
Sct p tO Townsh,p for th e
purpose of pr ov1d tng an d
ma •nla•n 1ng
fir e
ap
paratus ,
appl1an c es .
build tngs. or sites th erefor .
or sou r ces of wafer sup pi y
r'!n d ma ter 1al s ther ef or , or
the est abl 1sh m e nt and
ma•ntenanre of l mes of lire
alarm tel eg raph or the
paymen t oi
permanen t ,
part t 1me. or
volun l eer
fi re m en or f1re f ight1ng
corn panws to ope rat e !he
same or to pur c hase am
bulan ce equ tpm e nt or to
provide ambulan ce or
emerge ncy med1G'II ser
v1 c es · operat ed by a fi re
depar tment or f1re fi ghting
co mpany ;
Sai d tax being a ren ewa l
of an existing ta x o f 0. 7 mil l
to run f or f i ve years , at a
rate not ex cee ding 0.7 m il ls
for each one dollar of
valuation , whi c h amount s
to Seven c ents for each one
hundre d
dol la rs
at
valuation , for five ';'ears
The Polls lor said Ele&lt;
tion will open at 6 : 30
o 'c lock A .M . and r emain
open unti i6 :JO o'c l ock PM .
Eastern Standa rd T1me of
said day
By order of th e Board of
Elections, of M eigs County ,
Ohio
E rnes t A . Wingett
Chairman
Dorothy M Johnston
Cl erk
Dated Oct 11, 19.-9
( 101 16. 'l3 . 30 ( 11 ) 5. 4I C

--1 -112S
21~

WIN1ER
POTATOE S
C W Proff1t1 farm , Por
llanO . OH . SS a hundred and
~ 5 a hund r ed
FIREWOOD
FOR sa!e
Now tak,ng orders W1l l
ael•ve r . 742 2056
EMERGENCY
POW ER
alternators own the best
buy WIN P OWER Crt II ~ 13
188 1589
A PP LES
CIDER
HONEY
F •fzpatr 1C k Or
rt"l llfd . Stat e Rout e 689
Phone Wdke sv •l le, tKJ9
3185

85077

110 1 9. 16 . 23 . 31r

5WEET POTATOES. r ed .
while and ye ll ow Rt 2.
Rar 1n e R w Lew, s 843
?437
APPLES
ROME Beau ty
apples at \A per bu Best l or
apple butter Cal! b69 3785 ,
F 1 11patr • c ~
Or r h a r tl , SR
b89
H OUSE COAL. lum p or
stok er. ,.,1111 oe11ver 747
2183
GOO D YELLOW
\7 50 bu 747 1359

1 M •lt•\ E ~~ ~ (l l

w, lk f'~v ollr

\UPf ~
GOOS£
ST OC~
T ~All E" N O W AVAILABLE

(Qr n

HIDE A BED .
needs
up holster.ng . \20 9'97 2683.
130A Pow e ll
Sf
M1d
dleport
USED
TOPPER .
140
1nqu1re at 400 L asley St ,
Pomer oy , O H
HOUSE COAL, lump or
stok er Wil l deliver 142
')18]

JO HN DEERE d1ese l 1010
dozer
Ou t s,de moun ted
b lade SS.OOO 74/ 1819
ELECTRIC FUR N ACE l or
mobde home Good ron
dillOn ~2 SS09 .

E. Second Street

REDUCED
Ni ce 3
bedroom home in good
loca r.on Total ele ctr ic
wdh d rill ed well
Ha s
f u ll base ment a nd 1' 1
acres
N •ce
ou t
buildings, roo Now o nl y
133.500
NEW
HOME
3
b e drooms ,
cer am1 c
ba th , copper plumb1ng ,
ca rpPt ing. Oh•o Power ,
7 car garages and 1 ni ce
arre of land
2 TRAILER LOTS One trail e r 1nc luded 1n
sa le
Leadi ng
Creek
water . over 4 ac res on
Rt 114 wesr . Want only
112.500
CO UNTRY
A
rea sonable
olde r
3
bedroom home with edt
,n k1 t c hen . modern ba th ,
c en tral
hea t1ng , fu ll
basement. a nd large lot
Just S75,000
POMEROY
L1nco1 n
HI
nas 3 bpdrooms .
oath w 1th shower. b 1r ch
k 1tcnen . lul l base men t
and large lo t Go1 ng tor
Sl8.500
NEW LISTING - Fur
n1shed
JCH 1 M rd land
mobile home 1n the
Ha s
3
c oun tr y
bedrooms and 2 bath!&gt;
La nd ha s rural waf er
and f ee natural gas
116.500
NEW LISTING - Hun
11ng land near Forked
Run Lak e over 'll acres
at w 1ldlancl Good place
f or ca b•n
or
travel
t rai ler Want $15 ,000
NEW LISTING 3
ac r es •n Deer c ountr'f' on
good s.c hoo t bus and
mall rou t es On lY' $5,500
WE
ADVERTISE
EVEV
DAY .
LIST
WITH US , CALL 992332S or 992 -3876 .

Ho-using
I Headquarters

I

JI!.L BLOWN
INSULAIIlJN
~11'1ll AND
ALUM I!'tUM :iiDING
elnsulatlon
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
Window s
• Gutters and
oown Spouts
Free Estimates
JAMES KEESEE
Phone 991 -1172
8·11 1 mo

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N·ew, repair
gutters and
down spouts .
Window cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Fre~ Estima t es
94~-2862-949 - 2160
.:i 5 lf r

POMEROY

LANDMARK

!)?,... _Jack W . Carse.,
(_.::::J
Mgr.
u .. ·n

Phon• 992-:lltl

. l FORVA

'

''_ _l__!L
v-1

ROOFING

1

V. C. YOUNG Ill
RAC1NE,O .
949 2148 or

l

CLIFEK ]

Ro ofing , gut1en , and
do\·, nspouts. .
Free
~ st • utes.
All
work
,,ua, ,m teed . 20 years eK .en . . nce . Call Athens ,
olll' ct, Gerald Clark
197 ·4857 or Tom Hoskins
791 ·2145 .

CAP'I'A!N F:ASY
OH, FOR PH E '5!3-AKE, EA'?Y! .. DO"'T
BE ~UCH A NeRD! 1
VIA'? 0NLV TEASI&gt;J (?

WHEN [ KISSED '( O~ A'i, OK AY-.
~ou A&gt;JD THE&gt;J I 6UE55 1
THJ'IEATEIVE D TC
WAS OVE RCAll A COP . IT
REA C TI~ G:
WA'5 JUST A
DUM~ JOI&lt;E!

~AID YOU
WEII.E J!'A~OU'? OF

WHEN l

O&gt;J THE OTHER HA&gt;! D-!'LAZE 5o!
5UPP0!7E THAT THREAT
WHAT" IF
tNA51.J'T A JO KE~ MAYBE $HE '5 RI6HT ~
I WA$ MAD 'C AUSE
MAYBE I AM
MSY D•D''T RE5PO&gt;JD
JEAlOUS OF
TO M'l KIS5-!
THAT JERK
PARI&lt;E/Z!

JeFF PARI&lt;

HOW IO Bf&lt;:i&lt;SHTEN
UP THE. EVEN'.NG.

[' LOSTID

rJ

No w ar·ange the C l rU~c let1el':i 1c
l()rr'1 1t1e surpr•se answer as sug

! ,

Xj

[1

Answerhere

Real Estate for Sale

608 E . ·

MAIN

POMEROY, 0 .
PH . 992 ·21S9

NEW LISTING - Close
TO nature on a 6 .:tcre
min1
far m
Ga rd en
sp a ce,
2
s t orage
bu i ld ings , sec luded. but
close to Pomeroy . n ice
, 2
story
r emode led
home 1n c lud ing a new
eou ,pped k1 tc hen . air
co ndit ion1ng . 3 or 4
bedro oms.
O N LY
~29 . 500 00
NEW LISTING
Han
dy Man 's Special. good
location 1n M idd leport .
large 11v 1ng room. 3
bedrooms. family room.
level
tot , 111 stor y
O N L Y $8 ,000 00
LARGE
STATELY
BRICK HOME - A true
landmark in Pom er oy ,
home has th e charac ter
ana ch arm of t he ea r l y
1900's and was bu !It b y
one of our m os t respec
ted
bu s, n ess men .
Prt ced Far Below Fair
Mark et
Value
at
158 .900 ()()
1 YR .OLD Ranch
type home ot quality , 3
bedrooms . I
bath e;,
w b l p ,
bu i It i n ex
ce ll ent c ond1tion . large
garage,
many o th e r
tea tur es. must be seen
to
be
appre ci at e d
$44,800.
30 ACRES
VACANT
LAND - Building Si tes.
7 t i llable acres , f encing
Close t o mines - A steal
at 113.350 00 .
64 ACRES OF NICE
LAYING FARM LAND
- All c leare d and i n
pas t ure
and tillabl e
ground , barn s and ot her
building s, fen c ing and
ponds , plus a newer
large ra nc h type home
w11h fu l l basement ,
w b f .P , many fea1ures .
Pri ced
t or sale
$76.325 .00
EASY
ON
THE
POCKETBOOK - G&lt;&gt;O&lt;l
nom e. good loca tion ,
good lot . full basement.
equipped kit chen, air
conditioning , F or ced a1r
h ea t
A
Stea l
$19 ,900 .00 .
OVER
•o PROPER ·
TIES
TO
CHOOSE
FROM
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Res . 742 -2474
REALTORS
Henry E . Clelancl, Sr .
Res . 9'i;2568
Henry E . Cllland, Jr .
Res . 992-.1191

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

INSULATION

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

Juf"''Otes Vll l /J

JAMES KEESEE

Main St.

10191mo

REAL ESTATE
F'NANCING

PARK FINANCIAL
SER~ICLS, INC.

,, mil e off At _ 7 by -pass
on St . Rt 114 toward
Rutland .

'"t&lt;X s9 · M ., W . , F.
011er 1m1 by appo1nt·

Auto &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 9~2 - S682

m~nt.

· 17 Sycamore I Rear)
Pomeroy , 0 .
~92 - 7S44

.4

:-...~IIU"II

DOWNING • CHILDS

Phone 992 -2342, Eve. 992-2449
Middleport, Ohio
Rodney, Broker
Bill Sr. Mgr.

t

~~ I

,d l tlllt't' tr ur nr:-. m t tw WDI

1' 1~ !

h,m(j

l· l

•

'.

-.1 1. ·UN l o\ IH
I LI ~N

•f !

j

~U I

t :.o\ S T
IO 4 ~

t1fll

I',

• •\ .J ..

+ li_ li :,

Nfl)~

W l', l

h'I(Jl\1 IHI k'f

._,f ,.,

742 -2328
&lt;f 1• ( Pd I

-

---GE RM AN
SHE PHERD
co ll ie , male , blac k and 1a n .
worrned . shols Mal e and
female par t Dobe rman and
part co ll1e. br1n dle (Oior .
good w1th c hildren, w ar
med.
s hots
Hum ane
Soc1e ty 992 6160

GOOD HOME , male grey
t iger k1tten Cu te Rac•ne
949 20'13
DAVENPORT 99 ? 57 47
FREE PUPPIES
Sma ll
and med •um dog s Call 992
7231 .
GERMA N SHEPH ERD.
spayed To good home J
years. f ema l e . 742 2651
IRI SH
SETTE R
pup.
f emale, red,good w1 th
child r en. J blue heeler
pups . 5 to 6 week s o ld . one
female . 2 mal es, 1 bla ck , 'J
whi te with b lue Humane
Society . 992 6260

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14X65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12X63 w 1th e)(
panda , 2 bedr
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr .
12x55
2
197 3 Skyline
bedroom
197'1 Bonanza 11x52, 1 bedr .
B I. S MOBILE HOME
SALES . PT PLEA SA NT ,
wv . JO• 675 4424 .
BIG SE LECTI O N o f pre ·
owned 10, 12, and u · wide
mobile homes
Kanauga
Mobil e Home 5a tes . 446
9662

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING VA · FHA LO ·
ANS L OW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
OR
REFINANC E
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E STATE . ATHENS .
614 591 ·30 51.

l';h:-.

:!+

1',, -.:--

4t

I'd ~~

~·

, ..... ~:-.

~·

aiid

45772 .
Call

1

!',,..,..,

, ·our '&gt; t' th•·n· ~~ lin('
m J!l thJ \ Wh r n
Si!ulh hul for1r . , pades h•· \i.&lt;J:-.
ta ktng li tn·nwndou:-. r1:-.k Fur
&lt;~ll ht• krww th P\' wotJld tJ,·
down otH' Jl f 1n• ht' Jrt ~ .-\ !so.
(J!

wt·dk.JH'~ ~

I

1'.~ ~ ,

I•~

'\'t~rth wq u]d p ro h ;:~b ly ha~y
h1d lh.:tl ... a nw ~ ~x w11h thr
quP{·n:-. " ' ht·&lt;Hts &lt;tnd s pad t~
tn .., tt•:Jd u f lht• kmg of s pa ck ~

:Jnd dl'lwt· of h1 •Jr ls and T
. ht •rt
wuu ]J h;tn• h• •t·n no pla v fill

Alan Sontag -

"I X

',f· V. \ 1' \I ' I· H 1·\rLHI' Ill\1' ·\\..,\

OP0&lt;1
need

'H.)U ~OLL ()\\- ,_l ) UR
\JVSE ', ~,_""~ U ' LL STEP
ON HE R 'T~...-"!ES .'
J
'~

-1 mo

\

'.,

-TI·~Al ·;:;:

-r H' ~TUP1r'EST

.),N;3\\E:t:? l E\ ER
H E".RC': r ... _.J J

t :ly Cultw rhll n onr&lt;' ~.HJ
· · An~'
ttmt• J part nt-r ~ lu p

NO\\ WH e RE
['I["' S HE 60?

h P l ong~

1n a :-. IJ!ll tht· Cultwrt
~ ~m "Y"lt' ll l nwthocls w il l
1t

r -:;'j

w·t

the rf" ··
Trans l &lt;.~tl· t1

Business Services

nw&lt;.~nt

tl

tho1t

With all the t·ar d.., tn :-.r ~ht E lv
could juggl l' ht ~ sys lt.'ITI to Kl;l

WILL HAUL li m estone and
gravel Alw. l i me haul ing
and spre ading Leo Morri s
Truck1ng Phone 742 2455

to lht&gt; nght c 1mtr.wt
Today ·:-; :-.l am d (•p&lt;'nd s on
nnthrn_g mon· lh ;tn nl)! frnd rn~

rOo you have a ques tton lor
As k the
the ~xper t s 7 wnre
E•per ts. cart' ol th1S newspa per !ndl vld uijf ' ques rwns will
be dns wered If accomoarued
by sta mped. se/1-.J ddrcsscd
envelope~
rhe most ~ nreresr ­
'ng quPSIJ CJ /15 will he used 10
t htS column and w 11f recewe
COf.J/BS o l JA COBY M ODERN j

PAIN11NG AND
sand
blast1ng Free est1ma te'&gt;
Ca II 949 268&lt;&gt;
DOZER.
END
Loade r ,
orush
hog
Will
do
basements, ponds , brush ,
f1mber . land
rlearing
Char les But cher 7•2 1940
SE WING
MACHINE
Repa 1r s.
servrce .
al!
makes .
991 128.t
The
Fabr ic
Shop .
Pom eroy
AuthO r ,zed Stnger Sales
and Se rv ice W e sharoen
SCISSOrS

IL

• .,__
/

~.'Htt'

\

by THOMAS JOSEPH
40 ·· - Fa ces
ACROSS
1 Measured
of Eve"
41 RaiSon d' med1ctne
5 Lots
DOWN
of people
1 Pia)'
10 Makt' t1me
2 Horse
opera
11 Tonsonal
produrl
3 Terrified
4 Hhym~stt'r 's
13 Rose ex'
\ 't&gt;sterday's An."iwrr
adverb
tra ct : var .
19 l·:x plosl\e 30 One
5 Term tn
14 SUitS
grammar
20 Small
dmmg
15 Sea . f'r
nH·tt sures
:11 Alan I.add
6 Check
16 H mt
23 Antip asto
fthn
for rank
11 Healthy
1tem
33 l .ouk
7 Base ball
look

GASOJ.INF: AI.I.EY

II
You tool-\ advan'aqe

Let's see

Fiqb4's Ptcl41es atn't I declare '

that letter qone down t' 69¢ 1
Coulda
fr om Papaf TheLJ's went
swore that
t' 99¢! ___-.....; .-,I were a Six 1

o' me.

"-Newton'

v.

EXCAVATI N G,
dozer ,
loader and ba c khoe work
dump tru cks and Ia boys
for h i re . will hau l fill dirt.
top soil, limestone and
grave l Ca ll Bob or Roger
Jeffers , day phone 991 7089.
nig ht phone 991 3525 or 992
5232
HOWERY AND MARTIN
E xr avat i ng ,
septi c
systems , dozer . ba ckhoe ....
R I 143 Phone I (6141 698
733 1 or 7.t7 2593 .
AUTOMOB I LE
IN
SURANCE
been
c an
c elled?
Lost
your
operator 's l icense? Phone
'I'll .21-13 .

· ~:.JST n... '."\.

REYNOLD 'S ELECTRIC
Motors , rewind and repair .
'192 2356 , 561 Beech St .,
M idd lepo rt , Ohio .

\'.r-.::'\. ~-=

·t,OJ~ 0 """&lt; 'Z.J '..A -...
GCt'\16 TC ~= ~\. ~S

Is

ALL OUR.S ,I T

..

'\\

. .~ r ~n,l'
- I

=J_-&lt;.S

s ,... :::~s=

II

isl

\

'

' ,.
II

BARNEY

BALLS o'FIRE!!
SHE 'S S EEN

ANOTHER MOUSE

arnb1cnccs

20 Make a - 1n

21 Dreadful
22 Fury

12 Tenan1
16 ··- Nome"

23 Bout

25 More
JKnuble

!4

'

&lt;6 r upld
. _;~::

~

' , .._;'E:.J
ntAT

.: ·~ 4

'

~ I

.

i . '~ '
l.,..._ji:Y \
- ..:_____/
- '-,
... :: ·
~

24 In the
lnnclt ~ ht

;;

5

,J;;

II

I"

[21

woman

:5

I'"

37 Gree k

1e

tung II{' abhr
wet ~ ht

l

:"

19
1'2

I· •

.'

Turkis h

rrra tor

1'6

'

34 Tnumphan t
cry
3S Jus( about
enough

:1~

[10

I'

.,

nn\\ ·
F r&lt;-Jul eln·s

25 Vu lg&lt;tnan
Sha ndy' s

l

'

:uj

2~

27 Hody,
m biolog y
2H Venice's
beach
Z9 Prepares
a S&lt;J1ad
3Z Chemistr y
sufftx
33 That

,,

~/

[19

1' .;

.'

.

mountains
38 Young M.D
39 Cuttmg

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepe-rs .
toasters , i rons . all small
appl iances . Lawn mower
Nex t to Statt' Highway
Gar age on R cute 7, 985
3825.

BEAT THE hi~h cos t of
hea ti ng your home thi!.
winter by insul&amp;t i ng now
Call Jim Johnson, who
experienced in
blow in
sulation services . For free\
home evaluation , ca ll end ·
make an appointment now .
273 2064,
Raven swood .
Refer ences avai lable upon
request

. . . . ...,. ·.

~.

BRADFORD, Au c t i on~?er ,
complete Service . Phone
949 2487 or 949 ·2000 _ racine ,
Ohro. Crin Bradford .

PIANO
TUNIN G . Lane
Danie ls. N ew phone num
ber · 7•7 1951 Servicp to
schools and homes since
1965

~

~ oJt-"

t

A&amp;H Upholstering , across
from the Texaco Station in
Svraucse . 992 -3743 or 992
37S2 .

gr eat
i See 3 Down
9 Ma dd en

I! Sports

WINNIF:

IN STOCK for immediate
delrvery . va rious sizes of
pool kits . Do it ·yovrself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sales . In c
792 5724 .

l ot

MODERN FIVE year Old J
or 4 bedroom home on 2 111
a c r es
of
l and,
full
basement, drilled well , car
peted , storm
windows ,
fully insulated . Also , 16x32
bu i ld i ng . would consider
VA or FHA loan . $33,500 .
742 JOH.

.-; tx

l'h Oswald Ja(·oh'

Rd .

G.: "' ·~·

PERKY
GERMA N
Shepherd r o 1t1 e.
male.
bla ck and tan . wormed anc!
s hots German Shepherd .
large, male . bla c k and
brown . shot s and wormed
Humane Soc •ety. 99/ 6U:IJ

,.

::•
4+

fl.

tJld

' (II ' Cid!ri'l•d

Fr·11111 ttw n on lilt' tll(ld rn g
Sou th \
four dJanrtJIH1 ·~md four -spJde
b1d:-. .Jf"! ' I 'UI ' h1d ~ IJf .... Ofl.'o , ~1nd
frn:tll .v '\llrih \o\.lttr h1 ~ rnJX I ·
lllll/1 1 ..,1ngil- r·JN' JUmp s 11 1

.' u uth

I'd .~!"&gt;

1';;:-.:-.

llnl '

P' '~~" '' !'d~ • · c.~ :-.!1\' til "IX

Lht

'\nrth

Op..n1ng

RUTLA~D

r11

D •rj ( ,IN

I·.~~!"&gt;

CON ST.

'l

\ 'ulnt&lt;ra h!t· Hoth
Dt.·d lPr Sou t h

~A•' &gt; ' -JI(.I t~ () ! ~I U

qf

U'l t'

hux
11)

htd ~ lfl1 " r tht· '"&gt; tnKit· rdht' a -.k :-.
]urtn• ·r for h1·lp 1n 1ht· l'luh
" I HI ·\ f'l'-] U I\ rt~tll g l!lld h1·Jp
.1nd :--;urth -.h11·,.,. .., ' l:11 n 1nktt'\l
t)\ ~111ng [11 ! I lUI l' i lJh"

• \ 1n
• ~ 1\ J 5 I :1
+H
... K ri 4

W1NV'1

lht-•

•·qn\t ·ntton South .., l hn ·t' ·tluh

· ~~ I

I', -.~

S071
Osborn
Reedsville, OH ,
For informltion
1&gt;67-6415. W•ll be
late
if
you
s.omethinv .
9 U

I 11

. 'I

ORPHAN ANNIE--JNOESTRUCTmLE SPIRIT
) f 1--

11 b~

+./

UTTI.F ORPHA:'&gt;I A 'IN IF

tn

t11 ddmg

.._iJII W' htJW JlJ~ po ~:-.lhlt•

WFST
+ 1J9 ift

~o t

30 tf c

Tht ·

'l.

li ~~ '1.

+ r ~~ 7 :1 ~

:JO · , Ht lt

THREE
BEDROOM
HOUSE . 6a cr es , i n Ches ter
Township .
Alum i num
si ding , storm
w indows,
ca rpeted , i nsulated . 70 pe-t
ba emen t . Clayton Shar
tiger . S35 ,0C(l . 985 3563

bri ck sta te ly home on
Ave . i n Pomeroy .
Th ey JUSt don· t build them l ik e thi s anymore . Cen ·
tral heat and air co ndit ioning Y ou 'V&lt;' got t~ee this
hOme 10 apprec ia te Ca l l lor appointmpnt. - s.ta,OOO. ·

)II~ l i

tt\ !,JIII

ROOFING
REMOUtLII1li
II"JM t11JDITIC"IS
HOUSES BUILT

HOU SE ON
large
Ra ci ne 949 ·'})40 .

•

+ :\

.-niL , fH I •f i l l f l l
'::&gt;LI Vf- '" ' "1~--'~U t• P

AL TROMM

~ ;_ /J l

Systemized slam bidding

Roger Hysell
Garage

Hif AN I

(J f-f- THf

__ Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Pomeroy, 0 .
10 19 1 mo .

de · at
l-iOU \ ing &amp;
'v~ t er . 1s Admtn . Loans .

f' l A U[J

BRIDGE

BORNLOSFR

992 -2367

PH_992-2772

AiJl I

O F I H E l MJ [J

Featuring · men's &amp;
women's styling, per ms .
Call tor appt. or walk in.

Free Estimate

~

H (J wp.:~w n t J~&lt;J ~ ''' '"&gt; ll•'

Answer

MARK MORA
HAIR STYliST

Win -

Giveaway__

[X l XJ

IN THE

(Answe ts tomorrow t

J&amp;L BLOWN

CALL

lhe aboYe cartoo n

gestea by

~--..- _________J,____l__

9·7 1 mo .

elnsulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
•Replacement
dows

I y·-'-1~i-

-~

~

ll

20

I"

25

~'; I"

if

[l6

-=

14 0

IC I

DAILY CRYPTO&lt;!l!OTE - Here's how to work it:
AXVDLBAAXR

lo

PF:ANUTS

LONf.FELLOW

O ne lett er stmply stands f o r another. In this sample A i s
u sed f or th (-' threr 1.·,, X for t ht· two O's . t•lc Sing l e le tter s.
apos troph es. the lenJ?th anrl formation n f t hf' wn rcis are all
t11nts Earh day the co d e l ettHs are different.

I 'RVPTQqUOTES

A

B C,

DE F

NDCOBPQ,

D G

Television
Viewing
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23,1979

LL r .l+-,.-,

1H C l D

and

Appliances
Sa lei &amp; Service

-l"

'J' lll''"' ' f ..., u ras

• KJ

HOfPOINT

Headquarten

DICI-&lt; TRAC'(-~

OtfiO VALL£Y

Guner work,
down
spouts, some concrete
work,
walks
and
driveways.
(FREE ESTIMATE)

,.-, r,

LOOKING F OR a r espon
siDle parr y i n the Pomer oy
area to assume paym en ts
on a p•ano Call collec t 59'2
5111

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

ADD ONS &amp;
REMODELING

928 I mo . Pd .

For
--- -Rent
-----

WANTED
JU NK
Ba1
!l? r 1es. rad,alors . mo tor s.
au l a
tra ns
No Sunday
ca lls 9&lt;~9 1563

-

Notice of E 1ect1on
on Ta• Levy in
E l((ess of the Ten
Mill Limitaton
NOTI CE is hereb y g1ven
that in pur su ance at a
Resolution of the Board of
Trustees of the Townsh ip of
Olive, Meigs County , Oh 1o .
pe3ssed on the 2nd day of
Apri l , 1979 there will be
submitted to a vote ot the
people of sai d Township at
a General ELECTION to be
held in the Township of
Olive , Ohio , at the regular
places of voting th erein , on
Tuesday , the 6th day ot
November .
19 79 .
the
q uestion of le"ying , in ex
cess of
the ten
m ill
limitation . for the benefit of
Olive Township for th e p ur
pose of
provid i ng
and
mainta ini ng
fire
ap
parailfus ,
appliances .
buildi 1QS , or sites th e refor ,
or sou. ·ces of water supply
and ma'erials therefor , or
the PSL' blishment
and
maintenance of lines of f ire
a larm telegraph or the
payment of permanent ,
part ·time ,
or
volunteer
firemen or fire tightmg
compa nies to operate the
same or to purchase am
bulance equ tpm ent or to
provide
ambulance or
emergen cy medical ser
vices operat ed by a fire
department or f ire f i ghting
compa ny .
Said ta x being : an ad dit ional tax of 0.5 mill to
run for Five (5) years , at a
ra te not exceeding 0.5 m ills
for each one dollar of
valuation , which amounts
to five ce nts for each Oil!:!
hundr ed
dollars
of
va luation, for fiv e years.
The Polls for said Elec
tion will open at 6 :30
o' c lock A .M . and remain
open until6 : 30o'cloc k P .M .
Eas tern Sta ndard Time of
sa id day .
By order of the Board of
E lec ti ons, of Meigs County ,
Oh io .
. Ernest A . Wingett
· ·-&lt;.
Chairman

Cam_ll_i.l1_9_!: qui pment

AN11QU E POC K ET w al
rnes Wdl1ng t o pa y top
dol l ar
Call
1 591 2973
even .n gs

TRAILER SALES

! I

-

Mood.11y
:o-.· oon on Saturdl y

MONTGOMERY

pm

1913 CAMERO . body good,
run s excellent Can bf' sef'n
107 Locust St
Pomer oy
( M onkey RUil !

I· l• ,,

YOLID

~&gt; '• ~~ ~74 S E"~'"'"q~

HOO F HOLLOW , Eng li Sh
dnd we stern Srtddt es and
harness
H orses
and
pon,es. Ruth Reeves 614
698 ){90
Bo rd1 n g
and
Rid1 ng L essons r~nd Hor se
Care products
W estern
bUOI'&gt;
Chi ldr en's SI S 50
Adu Its $29 00

Want_ed to Buy
CHIP WOOD Pol es ma~~:
IJ•dmetf'r 10" on largest
end $1 2 per ton Bun dled
&lt;;.ldtJ S IO per ton De! 1vered
t o Oh iO Palle t Co , Rt 7
POmPrOy ~11689

'

Business Services

1916 MONTE CA RL O, 350
e11q1ne . low mileclge S1b00
9'17 7650

't"lt&gt;Se l uvr Ju rn o1ec;
'Jr €' l t;'J1er I CJ f'd :n '&gt;&lt; l U d'f'

ll) !::"+"A :-, )lt ) U
SU .._ RuGELY CALL ~fh'. !""';

Auto Sales

THATSCRAMBLEOWORDGAME
.
Oy Hen r~ Arnold and Bob Le e

U"'-&gt;C Tr~r•"H.Jle

~h.'lf ~ J[J -- '',"'.t'()M

~5 .
Notices

~

~ ·~ &lt;.l "/(.j~ ~~

F I J

DG

K AR J

F I J
B

S B I' J T

KBLAJM '
GAM!

DEl'

FIDCBM

MLBLSJKK
Yesterclay's Cryptoquote : LIBERAUTY CONSISTS LESS IN
~IV1NG A GREAT DEAL THAN IN G!Flt. WELL TIMED
JE.\N DE LA BRUYERE

6 00 New s 3, 8, 10 , 13 , IS ; ABC News
6 ; Zoom 20 ; Carat Burne t t 17.
6 3Q- NBC News3 , 15 . ABC New s 13 .
C B S News 8,10 ; Bob Newhart 17 ,
Over Easy 20
00---3's A Crowd 3; Pu lse 6 ; Tic
T ac Dough 8; New s 10 ;
N ew lywed Game 13 ; Love,
America n Sty le 15 ; Sanford &amp;
Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20,33.
7 30 - Hollywood Squares 3. 10 :
Newlywed Game 6, Joker' s Wild
8. Sha Na Na 13; T V Honor
Socie ty 15; All In The Family 17:
Mac Nei I Lehrer Report 33
8 oo- Mi sadventurps of Sheriff Lobo
3. 15;
Happy
Days
6,13 ;
Ca lr fornia Feter 8, 10 ; Nova
20 33; NBA Basketball II .
8 )()- Angie 6. 13
9 00- M ovie " Undercover with the
KKK " 3. 15; Th ree' s Com pany
6.13 . M ov1e " Mind over Murder "
8. 10. World 70.33
9 3G- Ta&gt; l 6.13 .
10 Do-H art to Hart 6, 13; News 20;
Ci ty Notebook 33 .
10 3Q--Si• Wive s. of Henry VIII 17;
Like It I s 10. Another Voice 33 .
II 00 N ews 3.6, 8. 10. 13 , 15 ; Dick
Cavett 20 , Carry On Laughing 33 .
I 1 30--- Johnny Carson 3, 15: Barnaby
Jones B. ABC News 33 : Movie
"The Se ven Littl e Fays" 10.
l 'J 00----Movie " Dark Vi ctory" 17;
12 os-- Dog 1!. Cat 6. 13 .
11 4()- Mo vie " D illinger " 8 . 1 ()(}Tomo rrow J. News 15
45 - N e w s 13 ; 2 05 - News 17 ;
7 Jo-- N BA Baske tball 17 .
4 aO---S iar
Trek 17. 5 4Q--Love,
American Slvle 17

W EDt. o.uA 1 , OCTOSE R 24, 1979
5 45--F a r m Report 13. 5 SG-PT L
C lub 13.
6 OQ-700 ( (ub 8; PTL C lub 15,
Hea lth Field 10. 6 : 1(}-World at
Large 17
6 30---Christopher Closeup 10 ; News
17
6 4.5----Morning Report 3: 6 :50--Good
Morning . West Virginia \3 ;
6 55--News 13.
7 oo-Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America
6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Morning 8. Salman 10; Th r ee
Stooges 17 . 7 15--A .M . Weather
33
7 Jo- Fam ily Affai r 10 , 7 . 55--Chuck
White Reports 10
B oo-C apt Kangaroo 8. 10. Leave It
To Bea .... er 17 ; Sesame St . 33.
B 30-Romper Room 17.
9 00--- Bob Braun 3; Big Val ley 6 ;
Phil Donahue 13 ,15 ; One Day At
A T ime 10; Lucy· Show 17
9 30-Bob N ew hart 8. Love of L1fe
10. Green Acres 17
10 00---Card Sha rks liS , Edge of
N;ghl 6, Beat the Cloc k 8, 10;
Morning Magazine 13 . Movie
" She Couldn 't Say No" 17.
10 30- H o llywood Squares 3, 15,
Jun 1or Py ramid
13 ; Andy
Griffith 6 ; Whe w • 8. 10.
10 ss.--css News B: House Call 10.
11 00----High Rollers 3.15 . Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13; Price is Right 8.1 0.
11 30 - Whe el of Fortune J, 15 ;
Family Feud 6. 13; Sesame St
?0.33
12 00- N ewscen ter
3:
News
6,8, 10, 13 ; Mindreaders 15; Love,
Am eri c an Style 17
11 30-Ryan's H ope 6, 13: Search tor
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15;
M ovie " Along Came Jones" 17;
E lee Co 10,33
1 00-0 ays of Our L ives 3, 15 . All My
Children 6.13 . Young &amp; the
Re stless B. 10.
1 30-As The Wor ld Turns 8, 10;
7 00-0octors ), 15; One Life to
Live 6. 13
:zs-- N ews 17, 2 ·3()-Ano ther World
3. 15 .
Gur d in g L i ght
8 , 10;
Gigglesnorl Hotel 17
00-General Hospital 6, 13. I Love
Lucy 17; Connections 20
3D-O ne Day At A Time 8 ; Joker's
Wild 10 ; Flintstones 17.
11 DO-- Mi ster Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15 . Bewitched 6. Beverly
Hillbi ll ies 8; Sesame St . 20.33,
Si)( Million Dollar Man 10 ; Real
M cCo ys 13 . Spectreman 17 .
4 30- BPwitched 3. Afterschool
Specia l 6. 13; Petticoat Junction
B. Merv Gri ffin 15; Gilligan ' s Is.
I7
00-- 1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8 . M is ter Rogers ' Neigh ·
b orhood 20.33 : Mary Tyler
Moore 10, My Three Sons 17 .
S JO-Carol Burnett &amp; Friends J ;
News 6 : Gomer Pyle 8. Elec. Co
20 . Mash 10; Happy Days Again
13; I Dream of Jeannie 17;
Doclor Who 33
6 00-- N ews 3,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News
6. Ca rol Burnett 17. Zoom 20 .
6 3G-NBC News 3, 15 ; ABC N ews 13;
Carol B urnett 6; CBS News 8, 10;
Bob New hart 17 ; Over Easv 20 .
7:0Q-.--J's A Crowd 3; T ic Tac Dough
8; Match Game PM 6; News 10;
N e wlywed Game 13 ;
Lo ve
American Style 15; Sa nford &amp;
Son 17. Dick Cavett 20 .33_' ' ·
7 30---Coun try Road s 3; Newlywed
Ga me 6; Joker' s Wild 8; The
Judge 10 ; FamHy Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Family
17; Mac Neil -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 oo- Real People 3, 15; E lght is
Enoug h 6, 13; Magic ot David
Copperfield 8,10 ; Great Per .
formances 20,33 ; Movie " No
Time for Sergeants" 17.
9 :00- D if f ' rent
Strokes
3,1);
Char l ie 's Angels 6, 13; Movie
" House Calls" 8, 10 ; Alwin
Nikola is Dance Theatre 20,33 .
9 : 3G-Hello, Larry 3,1 S; IO :OQ-Best
of Saturday Night Live 3, 15;
Vegas 6, 13 ; News 20 ; Con .
nections 33.
10 : 30- Upslalr&amp;. Downstairs 17 ;
Best of &lt;ftoucho 20'.
11 : 00- News 3,6,8, 10 , 13,15 : Dick
Cavett 20; Wodehouse Playhouse
· ·- ~·
33.
11 :JO-Johnn y Carson 3, 1&gt;: Love '
Boat 6,13 ; Sw/1ch 8; Movie "Son
of Palenface" 10; Movie " Now ,
Voyager" 17; ABC News 33.
12 : 4G-Baretta 6,13; Hawaii Ftve·O
8; 1 :-..Tomorrow 3, 15.
'
: 50- News 13; 2 : 0o-News 17;
2.05-Mov/e " Checkpoint" 17;
4:05---Movie " Commando" 11 .

'

�10 - The Da1ly Sentinel Mlddlepo n -Pomero), 0 , Tuesda), Oct 23, 1979

Supt. Toothaker says:

Annual Meigs Farm Bureau meeting held Tuesday

Steps must be taken
• •
to deal with crzszs
A Gt'nt' rul t und dt·frt tt ul
$282at co rd1n~ tu rl 1er-;un prt' pd t t•d
by the Offtu• 11f "'&lt; huul i\ 'LUJdgt'lllt'l l!
Asststan L't:
Th t•
St&lt;~tt•
n q Jc~ rtr~rt·nt
,If
Edu L· atLun r t pur t tn.tdt· ptJh 11

Mon da\ h;. supt·t ll ltt'fl t kttt l " rt 1. 1
Toothakl'I rt•t LJI!llnt•rtd "
-.!tJ!
shuuld

Lt•

t.tkLr t

expcndr t ur es

rtdU 11
dru ! 11

{11

dtn.lt h

ll!tl!ll

Uw senuu" ftn.JJlt tdl r undt!HJ JI 1f

Ga llta ( ourll\
Dt sln( t
I n prt' "l t' llt H it!
flh.. rn h er s

11! th t

L'ilu&lt;.ntJun

l &gt;r

c lJ &lt;:~ s ttr ac lliH l

tu tk,d

1..&lt;-ikt'll

fmar ll l&lt;.tl

d

tilt

11 ., i

\1

I he r t'f '"': 111
lot .t l bo .. rd 1d
I•Hdh '~' r "" d
\\&lt; u! d h"'·L r, b1

1 1 "'..,
I

t' dl'- &lt; II

t\(ptil ' l
'i d

t'll lll~tflt\

.Jlt

!Jllil l ll' lfl

furthtr

n1 tiw futurt'
d tng to I h I oot ha kt•r Utt'
ltll.t! H 1.1lh pl.t)..:: Ut'd -,dloul dt s! r ltl
u ill prt 1bahh i:&gt;t' .1bll' t o a\oid
\t

11 H

id

II

v.1 'l

'-'.41

,,rrt (If tht dislrHI :o. hwlglll

I~'

11&lt;1\\ t'\ 1 1 ti 1.JI tJ11 111JI\ su \u! iOII IS to
411.1.1h 1 r tlh Si.J! t• t&lt;oWl ddtl vl\
l'T ug i .I'IJ llw u iJ\IOUssulutiO n ts !u
Jld '&gt;'&gt; lla ! ~ \\ iJJ \1!\t'!llbt•J so \\l'\\ll l
qu.dth
l11 -, ,ll(J
f••llu~ l ll)..!;

'1 tJ.-..1 r 1p1

•I

tilt'

I~

&lt;111

L'di t l'd

rt port r t_•!t•&lt;Jst-J

\ J, •!H [,t \
I h1 -.. r 1 J:H •r 1 '" lwmg :,u br t lJ! I L'Li 111
·• " fi"ll'- t 1•• \uur ltttl'r tlatt•d
'-&lt;p!trli!J t l

1~7 1 1 tn

wht c h \our
I dULdtiUn throuJo:h ..

11

fi,. 11 d 11!
'-...,,i ullttl rt'4Ut''&gt;il'd tht• fu l!u ~,~,mg

lht · lt. 1ard ,,f 1-.ducauun

'l it

t\. ; tl llht wt ~

\t'd.r '
~t·xt \t' dl s
\,tl&lt;!t rrept l'St&gt;Jl tlfl ~ 20

,ju-; urt• tl11 ...
di'IH II I"

IIH•

ill• !ht otll!l lf Jdtt d

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It

111

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ht•rph~

-, t-. . l ~s lstanrt· from
thr
p.u lrn t 11 1 11 [ Ecluc atltHl. ()ffu t' uf

qLH

~

huu\ \l.tn,lgt•rnt•fl( Assllit&lt;ttu ' C' 11u•
JHll pmt 11~ lh l" rt· qut•st IS tu confmn
\li rnll tt o, tr .J twn anahs1s uf tht
prnjt 1 k d dt fie 1t fur lht~ c urnn t

Cincy hoard
will close
its schools
I l'q 1\\ \II \I' '
lh, , i l ' '
Hu.ud 1d I du1 .tllu/1 \Ull'd :\111ndo~\ ! o1
s hu t dm.,rllht "&gt;\...,l t'Ill fu r fiiLIJ \-\t't'k "
lcl!li L'f

!li.tll

.I

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th t• ...,t, tlt ~

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l OildltiUJl &lt;; f1 11 dll t'll l l'fi::: t !It\

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I ht 5H [)()(~-pup il "' stt•r n f.-H ,•.., .t
!i 7 lllllli iJ/1 dl'flt II dftl'r tY. O Ito\ It"
Wt'rt ' \oll'd du\, 11 tin~ 't'dr
SupL'I U\ t,•r~tkfl! J , tJ II t' 'i .J d ( otJ'- ~.ti d
illolll t ttrtd11 11•ll
fti•JiJr'" ' cl In l Jhh•
Stqwrt flltttl t•' r d I 'll' t it ln,1rt.• r o"
f 'dtlkJII \\ ,d! t r lilt I 1d1 d l]h 1 II.IJ..,
l•f lhj '&gt; Li ff l.tt 11tl1t r ~ M4 • t I !', .1
ltd •h t !'&gt; d!tt! !t ' .l dl!..,
'It ~
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\ f !t•r
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r t'IUl!lllhfllidW JII'-

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l!JIJq

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o JJ\Illl'nd,tli ll fl

huuh and P•&lt; k up uur

t'dll! HllOJI,tJ prot&lt;r.llll v.hen lllt lll t \
lll' lllllh ' ,]J\)L' I lhl.lfl t-i...,k for [IIOnt\
from tlw \1 1 11 1 fund
lr11 t1 h •, t .. !tl tl 1•
IJ.Jard
I.
S(

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1 .Ill!

t

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t

li t'

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t l,

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Ill

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I· rHl.J\ ~\Jt•n ~ h tK J] IUlliJII..,
planrwd d \\,-d kt, ul tu dt•lll•tn '&gt; l!.th
downto\.\ n
seh uol s

i th111k thT'

tlw (
S(

\\t

h OU["

hun],
on[\ tJo~J,trd
St.

lt11

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\. II\•
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t !tt'-1
s.t ld Ht ·! ht r ' t'. r 1\~ IJ tit

111 1 Hill 1! 1

Wh4 '!1

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f o lltJ~InJ.!

"' lt\ t'II U•' {t&gt;l IIJ711 i-Hld 1980 hi-1\L'
t, , 1 r 1 J.t"t r! UfH JI! 1nf tnrn~-dtun
'- 1. 1 111, ~ t)\ : ' ll ( t•urtl~ \u(llt ur

luund tiiO!l P ru~r.l l ll
llll&lt;il ll i .t\1 111 J if }8/ 1J tl!ld 198 0 hd S
I~' !1 t,,k, 1 lilllll 111L fil t"dlf thl.' Oh 1o
l!tp,l/1111 11 11 «f! dlHdt lll [ Dt\I SIU!l
• f \1 h " I I \I I.! lit l
) Xp1 11d11 Ul t'S f OJ Scddrlt' S Y, l'lt'
f!l tJtt h·d f111 J 1f;'q &lt;:UHJ 1980 U l\ th t•
t~t &gt;li l '- uf 1 Ullt'f\1
adu pi L'd s al,-lf\
:-.( ht d\IJt- .., of t ht ~ huu l Dtstn L t and
Sl.tlt' \ 1mutlllll l Sa lan Slht•du lt•
1 t qUir t llli'Jlh fo r 1980 Pr u jt:~(_ twn s
d11 r1u1 lilt ludt.· ,t n~ utht.• r s alar)
\

J

!l.t

shu t rl ov. n 111 rJ, rt P Ii '-. lrdlt •
dlstrr&lt;t &lt;.; nt·td , \1 1 \&lt;Itt r:-i

A ..,..,IJC..l c.J llllfl

un tilL'

He\t lll h ,Hld t' Xpt_•nchturt.• dat.a
fur thv pt.•r u1d uf !97 ~ through
St pt vn d&gt;t.·r 1!fi'J l.tkt•n frum Sc.. hool
!J i~t r tt! fJ st a l r t.'(o rd.s and SL&lt;i tl' of
I ~h1o l tl f!ll ~'}!
J•rrtj t'l tltJrt'- of ]tll'(l l propt.•rt}

r

~ 11

! 1 •,

• 111

he1'rl hfi:Jt•d

, 1[,

"i i.ll.tr\

lilht•dult•s,

I'XfH'IIIIItUrt' S,

and

,~., 111

tJW LiO Sl!l .l:
l k Y.rt:" dpt!l\11111" • ft, I t r~d r. LL '&gt; k
fon t• lui uJr dlrt J!t 1 ff , ,r '-Ill pr• .1ol•

SO!lH' l'dUt di l l II ' u Plli l l h dJ!\1 1' Ttl•
closrn g fi t s,wlri' pl.u i" \\t Tt t ' J,pJ,
but th at S t \ t / d [ i tll /-'IOliS ,Jiid
commurn! ) grt1up~ &lt;1re i ilk111 J.,; db11U t
settmg up t las.St lltHJ I-.. 111 tut •'r
pup1l s

Ill

'I'' 1Jtll1urt " fur Oth t· r und t:r

1•\th t

)lld)Hflll 'it 'I{U I

F!~(J

Ttfi !t..,t'tll ptrtt'fil,lht' bctst•d upun
1 uto~ l
1! 1
.11 tu.tl Losts 1n all
• ,J11 h i 111 ' thl tiiH,:h Sepkmbt•r 1979
p l u ~ r1 pr t1) t't ted l'Stirll.:ttl' fur llw
1 t'tll , t ntJ, r 11f \97&lt;t l:xpendtturl'" fur
I , h, r
und t•r t• udl of till' JIIOJW
tu"1" 111 J9aO \-\t'ft' pruJe(1t•d t:1 \ d
' ' '.ll\ pt rt,·n1 lfllll'.-t " l ' fu1 HIOatiUn
r\i, .l ll ;.J\\ .., IS of tht fJnc-tl\( j,Jl
' ondll~&lt;tll ~· f th t• I ;,tl ltci I uunt\ Loud
",. ht1ul [J tstrl tl I' re\ t'Cllt·d thr or q~h
!1 ,,

!ltl )ll \o\IIL~

S4 ho11 l Dt ~ trH t
ha s
1 " ill ph It d ( alt· JHkr l t·ar 19 -;'H \\lth
.l '.i'l h ho~l.tlll t
tl f ti~J4 5~4 49 Th t ~
It Jtlt '\lt lh
,L
dt •ti iJ II' 11\l' r
tht•
pr~ 1 1•'11" 1 ,tlt·ndt •r \ t' :Jn
II "' "rgr ufrr au t to notl' that th1
'-ITt~&lt;tl J)1 q r11 t ha:-. hulul to qli.Ciltf~

I h'

I&lt; I '-..t.llt l ti UJU!atrtlll Fun do,; ~Jnt t
J'li!'i h t I ,HI..,\' of thl' (' Ufrt'lll

tt pt·r .ttln g mlllagt• l&gt;t· m~ ht·ln " tht
rt ·q•un ·d ~~~ null s Ba srtl upon data
. , uhmJttt cl In llr s lrlfl ~rhttul

d like 1o

r:.____J.J'

prt' Sl' llt

-" A~

a gt·neraJ rule, a

o,; lnkt• s dfeti!\L'Jlt's.&lt;;

'llil' Oh 10

should strnt· tu marntam H
(ot•nt&gt;ral
t- und rash flo\\ un

llild111 gl11

llllt'ft-!&gt;.1

"ht·rl a
pruhlt· rn .., 111 tht·

(rt.•JJI'fal Fund
tht• SeJIOU S fiiiC:illll &lt;.i J
tU11d111on tJ f tlw (;alll.a Count\ I Ol&lt;-t l
S... liul)l [)l ~trJtt as Jt.'\'L'dlt·d m thh
! t•por1 s kp ~ sh11uld bt_• taken tu
1ti..l ut t l xpt.·ndlt ur es lllll l lt'&lt;lidtl'i )
) )\u

rnakt•

(( ,

d

&lt;..

L' t ll pl o~ t ·e~ 1

c he:trgt·s nn short-

\&lt;\hu·h must bt• bsut•d
&lt;h -.1 rrct has 'cash flm-\ '

t~flt.'r

st1 1k e

dt

c'U ntrdf t

St'! wusl't
lld lllper t•d
\1ondd! ,
.J&lt; ('lirdl!lg tu dL·pttr t111ent off1 c1a ls
It 1 !ht str tkt• 1 IS S(J rn rntmal, Wl'
Wdn t e~L'Il fe t•1 1t was nen·ssan to

adt·ljuatt· (ash ·l' arr~-o(J\t• r to mt·t•t
Janu.arJ and Ft•bnwr) rss£&gt;nlall
upt·ratm.c l'X pt·nditurrs ~ rll assist m
lllltt· ~

Sundd\

F mplo' L'l' S

(Jpt'l ~LiltHI S .1! tllt' S{dl l ' S !0 lllelltcil
heo~ J11i
lri S tiiUtJun ~
Y. e!t:
fliJ1

t•q dfurt lw madt• to rerluC't '
exp(•nditun·s
An

dutmg

let•

un

t'Xll'ndul

Ullllt 'C t' ~sar)

rt

S..· 1 \

\~t_· nt

tdlks f.ukd to pr udr11 L ,1 ' t'!lll'r!ll'lll
!l it' 11/ll\111.., tlirt'L'·\1 \ -Jr tu nt r att,
to\ t ' flll j..! &lt;i bCJUI
!J()(] dt.partlrll'fl!
L'lllpi(l\ t 't' S
lt dd p!t '\11J USJ\
bt'l ll

DutrntM·r 31 su.ffrcwnt 111 !'!Ill' ttl
llltl 'l all t•sst·ntJal t•xpt• ndltun·~ for
th t•
months of .Jar!IUJr) ar1d
l 'l'tJrU:Jf\. Uurmg lht•st• months
~ dtuol dJstrHt rt'\t·nut· IS nunnall)
at
Its
lo\&lt;\t'!'!t
lt•H•i
(;4Hid
rnana/.WOll'lll prac·tH't' dt{'tah·s that

ll'fm

( ' 1\ 1!

\ s~u t Jrtl 1011

S&lt; hool

I k)pk111g

ount

, uf

.\1u ru.1&lt;-J),

spokt&gt;srnan for Uw Ohtu

Dt·p~ll t !l h.:nt of \ 1t·nldl llectlth .md
:\tlt.'l11.tl !h'taniL.Jtrnn
D'1pkm~ Sd ld pH kt•t1ng at so nw
:O. ! i-l lt• 111'-lltUIIO!lS
hilS
be en
diJs..tlute l\ nw fft.·cti H' rn kt•t·pm 1;
f ~'ti p l l' frorr 1 rep,1rtmg tt1 y,urk
t

I· &lt;-H rt s satd lle dtd not have figures
tJn hu" mdn\ rx:ople were off Ol e JOb
\1on da'. but he sa1 d off1c1als of
OCSI :A lo( &lt;~I s hctve mdrcated that as
llldll\ (ts i5 percent of Monda) s
l.h ud-sh lft .md Tuesday 's hrst -sh1 ft
()( SI : A-;epres t·nted \\Orkers would
/ltJI bl.' 1m lht• j OIJ
F,u n s r r ltlt' IZed sta te offiC ials for
refu.srng to Cl ~ rt·c to brtn g1ng a
ft•dt·r a] !llt'dti-tlor mto lhl' ta lks He
Si-tld i H SEA \l.uultl not return to the
har g&lt;~ tnm g ta blt• until

m edwtor

&lt;-1

t' tllt: r" negotlatrun s
·111t urn un i:l! so \\ant s assuranlt'S
IJ) i-11 ~tnker s v.1ll not be pumshed
S!"IL' offi cia ls hav&lt;• sa1d the) wtll
not I t&gt;turn to negottatm g until i::lll
~ tnkl'

a(_ I lVII) cea ses

Dopkm g s&lt;:r 1tl Ill' thd not know 1f or

HOWARD H. DAIU. Y
ll 1&gt;Wa rd H Dalley, 62 Koute 1,
Heedsv11le d1ed Monda} at the '\rcaciJa r--;u r sl ng Home 111 Coo lviJie
foUuwmg an extended 1Uness
He was born at Portland , a s on of
the late John and Cora Conger
Daile;
lie attended the Un1ted
Method1s1 Chu rc h He was a con structi on worker and belonged to
Laborer s Lot al Umon 639 , Mane t ta Mr Dat le} res1ded 1n Athens
Wasllrngton and Met gs Counties fu;
lilt' greater part of hi s hfe
Sun 1v1ng a rt' thre-e daughters.
"'rs Cene '.\'lary I Phlll lp.s, f .lltle
But.lung
\1 r:-; James dam t e 1
llilll o fkcds\llle, Mrs Charl es
r f )Wl!ld l Stone, IJtti e Hockm g, a
Si s te r
Mr s
Hob e rt A ley
C1wileston, W Va " ha lf -broth&lt;•r
Onutr Dcu lt•) Hau ne. rune gran'
rbon.s, et grandLiaughtt•r, a grea t·
grandson
He was precedt'tl m dea th by hLS
foster parents John and Ella Bush
hi s w1fe . Nord Elizabeth fo ur
brothers, four half brothers, fou r
half Sis t ers rmd a s1ster
Funeral s ervKes Will be held a t 1
p 111 W&lt;'dnesday a t the Wh1tr
FU!ll' r.t l Home ('oolvt llr- Wllh Ow
He\ r ret·lnnd Sorn s offlt'latmg
llwl,tl "Ill be 111 ( oolv1lle Ccmetcr)
Fncud.s l! l.a ) call at lhe funen-t. l
l!omt' .mvtun e i:lft er 3 r m today

Born Ju ne 17 1954 , 1n Mason , he
Hosc har ,
S• , and Al1 ee I. Van Meter
ll nst har , West Colum bia
He wur kl'd for .State O:m~t ru tt1un,
served Ill the U S Army, and wa s a
member of the West Virginia
Na tional Guard a nd Salem Co m mumty Church
Sun1vmg, 1n add1llon to hLS paren·
Is , are h1s w1fe , Drema W Host·har ,
a son, J ohnny Ha y Hoschar . Jr , al
home. one srster . Len or&lt;:~ M
Hoschar . West Colum b1a
fou r
brothers, George F H~cha r, Jr,
Pomeroy, Oht o . Th omas W
Hoschar . Hoger L Hoscha r and Jef .
fr rl I. Hoscha r , all of Weatlcolum-

•
You 've known us f o r many years ac th e C1 t1Z en s
National Ba nk Bu t our name ha s chan ged to Tile Cen
Ira I Trust Company , N A , Souther n Oh 10 DIVI SI On
We've been w a t chm g Me1g s Co unty grow And as , t
grew, we real,ze d th e day would co'm e wh en we woul d
need to lake a bold step to keep pa ce w1th that growth
That's [USI what w e've done As th e new Central Tru st
Company , -ve ' r e r ea dy to help bu1 ld yo ur future W1th all
the serv1ces and fman c , al re so urces you' ll need
Stop ' " and say hel lo You ' ll f 1nd a ll th e sa me fr~ en
dly face s m th e sa m e conven 1cnt places Th ere's 1ust
one new nam e to r emem ber The Cen tr al Tru st Com
pany , N .A , Soutllern O l11o DIVI SIOn But you ran rai l u s
Central T r us t

lliE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

b•a
Funeral servtces wtll he twi rl
Thursday a t I 30 p 111 at the
Foglesong Fum•ral Home wtth the
Hev
Jam es Le w1s offl&lt;'lallng
Bu na l will foll ow tn the ,Kirkland
Memortal Gardens .
Fnends ma y call at lhe funeral
home after 4 p m Wednesday

when the F erguson Act, wh1ch
outlaws stnkes by publ1c employees,
would lx- mvoked
He s atd he knew of only one stnkerelated arre s t , a woman who
Jumped m the hood of a car Ill an
attempt to block 11 from entermg th e
Dayton Deve lopmenta l Ce nter
Monda y
Farn s s a1d p1cketm~ "as gomg on
Moncla y al fa c U1hes m Tlffm, Mt
Vern on.
Toledo .
Day ton,
Spnn gf1eld Cleveland, Cambndge
ard Youngstown
McanwhLle, rallftca tlon votes are
pendmg on contracts work.-d out
between th~ department and two
other
umon s
Both
lhe
Co nu n unt catwn s Wf5rk er s of
,\rne nra and the Amencan

m Jss Hlg
so rd AI

l!uY.L'\t'r .Juh•1 Lrn Js O(' ...,~ J·. A
x1 ·1 uti\ L' du t•t l11r , "'&lt;-liCI tl1t· st1 1kt
rs bl· g 111111 n 1-! 1o mwJu uo Ill

Area Deaths

wa ~ the son of (;eur ge F

tnl!'lll

tOI. UMBUS, OhiO 1AI'1
l&lt;~lk s
thl' st:tt t• s Ml' II1dl llL'ditl
l.h.pdltlllen l and d '-'lnkm g pubhL
t ' IJI[)J (I\L'l'S UIII O!l rtJ l' !:il.'Jit•flldtl'd
amul ~an trl ~ report s rt s to tht•
'"-' IV. t'L'tl

dt~tru I

t'\

Second row , 1 tor, MeliSSa Thomas and Lon Longenette Back row, 1 tor, Pebbles Blake , Jeanrue McClure
and Pam Murphy

Contract talks stalemated

t•duc at1on program and staff A
C.t·rlt'fal Fw1d dt'f1c1t uf $282,668 75 1s
pr"J'''lt'd fnr 1979 and $953,379 92 Ill
!!ISO
- " It Is l'SSt'lltlaJ tu nott• tht·
l,lstrut mu~1 mo\t' tt l lht· IU''-'IJ
aduptl'rl Muumum &amp;dan S&lt;'ht•dult•
111 19MO-SI sdHKll yt•ar Th~ estlmatt-d
tH('fl•a st· i11 eost has bt·t·n nH lud(·d 111
th1· 19!W dt'fH II figure

e venm~

·-...-

VAHSfTY CHEEKI .EADEHS - Th1s IS the vars1ty
cheerleading squad for Ea s tern H•gh School th1s year
r runt row 1 to r , e re Beth lillt h1 e a nd Wend y Elkins

fl'\('DUt'S,

thl'

JOHNNY HOSCHAR
J ohnn) H&lt;ly Hoschar. Sr 25, West
l'olum llla. d 1ed Monda} morn1ng 1n
t he Pleaso nl Valley Hosp it a l
following a shootmg 1nc1dent Sunda y

C ;.;··

•
I

II o-.p I 1'\ I \ 1·. \\ ...
\ ETERANS MEMORIAL
Adm itted -Namon
Jo s eph ,
Hutldnd VIetor l,e•fhell, Pomeroy,
Lms McKenZi e, H11c1ne, Alma
M1ller. M1ddlepon , Emma Dougl•s,
Pomeroy, !{Icky Wal~er. H&lt;lcme,
Kobert Hupe , Kutland
D1 sc harged--Cladys Shumway ,
Barbara Harns, Jeremy Morns.
C1oyd Brookover CooSle Gran! and
J ohn West

I I ''

I 11

l1 it' .j,., l'-1 tf ,., l '- lJ.l( ~ ··d ))\
(tfJ(I/l lL.it\1 ldL ! .J lil!ll ,,) !tdt
. t nd

h-.. , .II \ t .tr . 19 71t "
'-..t,~tf
rnt'IIIIH•r s
uf
til t•
I lt~ • p.tl lt llt'lll 11f l .LiUt ~1\ I {J II li lt' I Y.J\h
\rtlJ o11 1d ! LfJrl'Se ntiltJ \t':O. uf \uUr
"'j ltt~nl 111-.;lr It t t.Ju.-' pdst thret• \4t 't'k"
It' I /o [Hl!piJ &lt;.,t• 11f St'tllrln~ tllt
r t ( t so..,,u \ tLitd to t~J illph y, tth tht
1{,.,&lt;1! d " l l'qUt'"l
111t
flll.t/11 ld l .uJ,th SIS uf Lhl'
So: lit lol ! )Jstr J&lt; t 1s t urnplt•ll' &lt;-Jnd hd s

nfr~r•al .... tht· district "'-11Uid haH•
qu ,Jllfu·d
for
$373,14 5
10
transpt iftilllml s ub s idll' ~, S2K9,992 111
spt'41al t•duc at run suhs1du.•s ; and.
$11 ~ .9 56 111 \ neauonal t•dut·atwn
'ub~ultt·~ Lht• 1978·79 h sc a! year .
- ·· J·.XJH'IIrlltun•s ha.,. t' c·t•ntJnued
tu Ill&lt; fl'i:.ISt' durinK lht• pt•nnd 19i4
thrttUJ.dl
197~ and pruj('rtion s
1111111 .ttt• a &lt;'ontmuatwn uf UH' reast·s
ttl ruugh 1980
- · I ht·
proJt' &lt;'lJOns
prl'dH I
(~t nt-ra! FunU dt•fieJt s fur tht• S&lt;·houl
llt~trH't un Dt•t·t•mbt•r 31. 1979 and
'lh·«·mlx•r 31. 1980, based upon
t urrt·ut outstandmg nb!Jgaliuns .

CALLIE I.IE\ l~G
C&lt;ll he ~I I Je vmg , 81. Mason. d 1ed
Monda) In the !11orm Memon a l
Nu r ~ m g Home . Milton
Bum Sept J:l 1898, m !11e1gs County, Ohw. she was a Jau~hter of the
late Be n a nd l.e pllla l'renk
(;tUliand
She wos "' meml)('r of tile Mason
Umted Meth ud ts t Chu rch an d wa s
preceded m death b\ hn hus band .
Adla1 S Lie\ m g. "" hu dJl-d Ill 1971
Survl\mg are a daugh tt:-r , Mrs
J..ou1se H tXIf Manhattan. Kansa s
one son Hobert r I It'\ 1ng of Hun tmgtun t\.\o s1:ster :s. Mrs Gllbt•rt
Meal, Mr s Onli Whi l e both of
(;alit polls se\ t•n grand&lt; hlidren iind
s tx great-gra ndLhildn·n
Funeral .se nJte s will Ue &lt;_'U lldueted Thu rsda) , 11 a m , at the
F og lesong F une ral Hom e Wllh the
Hev .John Wlll laJll uff1c1.atmg
Bu1Jal wdl folio" m the Kirkland
M en wnill Gardens
F ncnds uw ~ call a t the fun eral
honll' on Wt.•dnt&gt; S&lt;.Itn from 7lo 9 p m

BOOSTERS TO MEET
The Southern Junwr High School
Athll'tlt' Hooolers will meet at 7 30
p 111 Wednesday at the sc hool
bu lid mg

SEEK LICENS~"
(;erald Pullins. Jr , 27 . Houle 1,
Hull,md . and Angela Kal Glnlher ,
18 Pome r o\

d n t' 1114 rl•a st·s
Thl· prl' ss ur~
do uhk~ "lth l'\t'f\ 13 fet•t of depth
.tlld .tt :.ifi fL l I I hl v. ater press ure JS
.tb(Ju1 12l p0 unU s pt&gt;r square·rn ch

,,,1-Jf.~~·-.·':
.... '
(t

st·wer renovation
CHAHLESTON
The C.amp
Conl e) PubliC Sen••ce D•s tn et,
Mason Cou nt), has f1led an apphcallon wllh the Pubhc Serv1ce
Corruru sston fo r a ce rtlf1cate of conveme nce and nPce'iSty t u renovate
1t s e:ostUlg sewer .S) stem
In tt.&lt; appli ca ti on the dlStncl told
the cornnu ss ron ill present se wa ge
&lt;.:ollectron s ~ s t e rn 1s (_OJn pn sed of 8rnc h and l()..mch lines and sewage IS
p1esently lx-mg diScharged 1nto the
Ohio H1ver Witho ut an) treatment
Under the 1mpro"'ements t o be
ma de, the d1s tr 1rt mte nds to construt t a 120,000 gallon per da}
sewaj::!e trea tm ent plant to ehmUlate
the d1rect discharge of raw sewage
mto the Ohw H1ver The treatment
plant Will lx- compl ete With blowers
for aeration . chlonnalors , a 1r tift
s ludge pump.,, and aU othe r Item s
nec~sa ry for a complete secondary
extended aera u on sewage treatme nt
plant
Thf' proposed construction IS
estu nated to t ost approxLmately
$000,000, a nd w1ll lx- financed by a
loan from th e U S Farmers Home
Adrmmstra t1on
( "'"P Conic) Public SL'"" ""
01 st rn t IS locatL'd m l\1,1!-Jon CtJUilt)
a bout 1'&gt; m 1l e.s north nf lhr l'11\ ol
P oml Pleasant, JU&lt;l off Stale K~u te
li2 The d1stn d "pnman ly restden tral 111 nature. With :1 motel, an
automoliH dealer s hip and a
Nat10ual liua n 1 Annnrv

•••

.
.

,
r,..0

ff.•H

.

.

'

'

·..

tc ... ,

_ •

, , ·a-.,...

·$·.'.. ",,,

-.;,
'

i;{;:-t ·i.•~';)

.;.

.J'!,!' ' "

• •.

''·..t:, }.in
'
,,.

.

-a: ,
.,

•

,
·r

.

•

.;'

~

·:!. ' ;~

·.~.·~·

.•

:.

·-·

the wot/d:·:

1Conllnued from page l J
Str a ngler " murders that
terronz ed Southern Californta
wumen for SIX months
Btanchl had quietly answered,
Yes. I d1d,' as Deputy Dlslnct
Attorney Koger Kelly asked h1m
1f he k1lled each of f1ve Vlctl!ns m
a stnng of 10 sla)'lllgs from Septemtx-r, 1977 through February,
1978 He also pleaded guilty to one
coun t uf conspiracy

••
it)

(U SPS 145 960)
VOL XXVIII

NO 135

DEER TAKEN
Wallace KusseU, Bradbury Koad ,
killed a large doe deer us1ng a :;o
pound compound bow on the second
day of the bow hunbng season The
deer we~ghed approxm~ately 190
pounds and was k1lled 1n the
Harnsonv1lle area

SQUAD CALLED
The Mtddleport Emergency Squad
was called to Houte I, Middleport, at
7 15 p m Monday for H&lt;lymond
W1llord who had a hand lacerallon
He was taken to the off1ce of Dr.
James Conde

car•11ar•tt
BROWN DUCK
OVERALL 6BF
Com fo rt F reed o m Long Wear Obi
knees , pockets Elas ll c suspenders
tool loo ps e tc
'

s,zes 36 to 50

See the comp lete selectton of
Carhart! Brown
Duck work
clothes · men's department
lst
floor. Jackets
'Vests
Hoods _
Coveralls.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

from left uf Rurdette , wer e 'v ernon Nease, Stella
Crueser, !111-s Eve• ott Culwell Mrs Kuby Halliclay
and ~ r.:; P~u lm ~ Atkrns St&gt;t' Sl111\ and other p1ctures
on Page lh

•

at

enttne

POM EROY MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 24 1979

PR ICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Crime rate reported down in Buckeye State
By Th t· A ~sor1att·d Prrss
De.'iplte a 2 pt::rrt&gt;nl nse n..t! 1onall~
1n Cnnw Indt'x offenses record ed rn
1978, tile total number of crunes
report ed "' OhiO dropp e-d sllgtlll}
A total of 500.i7G v10 lt.' nt ,md
pro pe rt ~ l rllllL'~ w~r e rt•ported tu
law a(Tunt· ra tl' offenses Y. t&gt;rl'
r eported nationv.Jck m 1978
V IOlent erune mcludm g murder
and noo-fleglrgent me:tn sle:tughter ,
for cl ble
rap e,
robbeq
and
a g ~ra\ated a ss ault . Jumped to
H .357 1n OhiO m 1978, up 1 9 per cent
from the year bef,.-e The sa ml'
offl'!l S€s also roS€ na uona ll) for th"t
pt.•nod . but at a muct1 hl ~ht.•r r~tt- -

52 pt·rc t'lll

l ht

r u-.;t• 6 B per&lt;

llrltiOil

s prHptrl\

lflLlu t hn ~ b ur hi an

u

pl'rlud, th t•

Hllt

l.tru·n~ - ttll'ft

COLUMBUS , Ohio 1AP 1 - TI&gt;e
Ohto Su preme Co urt an nountt d
toda) that 1,221 persons pa&gt;Sl'd
the state bar exammatr on g1ven
tn July and" •ll bt· adrnl!ll'd to !he
practice uf law
A total 1 37~ applicant.&lt; look the
three-day lest ~1ven 1n Co lumbu s
The pa ss rate was 88 5 percent
llle coun d1d not Include the
name of the highe st Sl'ore r on the
test In 1ts ILSt of s uccessful a p
pile ants as tl has tn past yea rs

l'I J\

dur 111g till' Sdllle

htghe~1 &lt;. rlll ll ' r&lt;Jtl' JI St'

n;JtJOllWl d L'

and fll ut or \ t'hlt h thl'fT r ~~ ~ t· 1 5
per n·r1t ldst H·ar But tilt '&gt;ti ll!l'
off t·n~· " tJ n ,pped b~ 1 1 p11 c t·nt 111
OhiU i lilllp~tiL'1. l \i.Jth l!:Ji~ fl gUit''-

I orub lt• rapt' d tmbei.l 0 9 of 1
pt'l(t•rt In Oh111 L1st \ear , wh de
IIIO{()f \ehH Ito tiWft rOSL' 0 8 li f 1

'\ gi,.! r ~t\ .tted ;1s..o;.;ault JUIIIJ&gt;l'd H.'j
f)l'r&lt; t•nt m ( Jh 1o 1n l'IIB lhL• lar gl'&lt;:t
tTl lllL' riSl' rl'ported m t tw st dtt
rtw t means 195 B of l()(J 000 Ohl tl&lt;lll '\
Wt'r L' t-~s.setul ted last \t_' .tl
r the nettl on aggrd\(:lh•d .tss,tult

th, tt
1
\ 111

J..ll' l (t'll l U\ L'r llJ/~ fl g un.' S T hl' t rtrn e

dropped 11 percent I'h ere "" ert• 7-1 1
1nstantesn f the two cnrnt•s rt' ported
111 \9i8, comparetl to 833 the [J f l'\ wus
'tl'at
Ohw s ftgures compared Y~lth a 2 J
pnu n t natwnal lilli ease 10 mur dcr
dll\ l notH i e g hg~nt 111ansbmght t: r Ill

v.tth et 11 pt&gt;r ct•n t ns.t• nal 1on all~ for
tilL: S&lt;.illle

23 da) S. t urned dtJWn o prHkag e ufferc'tl b) th•• M e~gs I ,ocal Board of
F:tJuca t1o n. 78-21. rn a vott• taken
Tuesda ;
A sti:l tcmcn t reg.Jrchng tlw str tk t
and lht• \t~tl· on the 'l t'l\ lt·tTH'nt
pal kagl' \\ a :-. ls.sut·d tlus nwrnmg b)
t h e \1 r1gs !. ~a t-il
f l'.:H 11e r s
:\.'iS()( ldtlon
It n·, ~t b
Contran to \1r (;[t•ason s lll'\A. s
release I uesda ~ ULt 2.1 ~I rA
membe rs ot t up\ I ll).; thf .\f e1gs I ~ H .tl
S&lt;:huol DrstrH t r!d!llllllsl r dtl\e nfflt'l'S

s uJll' MuncJ&lt;:~: ,

11 .am ,

\\l' rt'

g1v en the latest board package b~
Ted Bt bier OEA f1 eld repre"· ntatJvr at apprux1rnateh !0 30 p 111
Monda }, foll owmg negollallons tlldt
day 111 1\el.son\l lle
· B) 11 a m T uesdcn a fo nnr~ l
secrPt ballot vote uf the .t ss()( 1atum
was half completed , b~ 4 p m al l tht•
me m lx- rs who could be reached had

Sentenced

auoss the Unt tl'd Stat l'~
A.o;, t.•xpt'f h·d Clt.'\ elan d regl~"tered
t11e lnghes t C!Ul1L' Ind.t· x total1n 10/H
(UIIOng ( )hiO (!Ill'~ \\ lth ptlpUl d!HJrh
,f 1110r l' thr~n 10 000 \tota l (,f ~o 'JS2
JCJ7 8
~&gt;',If 1.h L St'\t'n offe nsts y, ere re porll•tl
Hobbo.·r) decline-d 3 7 pellenl 10
]"fleJ l' \Hft' 21J murders a nd /lllll
Oh 10 last )ear tn eontrast tu a .l
llel.!\ igl'lll !lli:tll Sl C:IU~hter ( (ISl'S
percent n se reportt&gt;d nat10nall ~
t&lt;.JIJ i l'{j ln tht• [.;.tkl' f . fl l'
Lit~
l.arct!ll y-tht!ft dro JJped 2 perL·ent m
f.lt countrnl!. for 28 7 per&lt;_ent of all
OhiO last year from 1977, compa re-d
mu rdt r
and
non -negilgt'nt

ed I ht. lo"" est Jn&lt; rea se O\ er
was burglar~ up 0 3 ( Jf 1
per Ct!nt m 19i8
Desp1h~ a sltght n st• m Ohw s
s h(JV\

-..wlent offenses last \-ear . murder
d rH inon -n e~ ll gt' n l mans lau ghter

IIH rt:aSt·

v(l ted The res ult v.as 78-21 agamst
"' rc pllll~ the package
The teac her s hope the1r presence
111 tile adnlmlStratwn building a nd
the vote not to accep t th4· latest
bt K~Jcl offer ""111 bJJng about 11 10rl'
pruduct1ve

neg otlatr ons

and

s pt•t'tl) Sl'ttlemcnt of tlu

t

has been offered b) la " enforce rs
1111s new event has senousl )
damaged negotiatiOn pr ocesses
rhc teac her.; occupym~ the offlt'e'
l&lt;K1 k over the telephones. VIOla te-d
the pll\ acy of the off tee personnel
lJ) l'WTU1Jag1ng through Jesb, fil L''
anU other matenals .and ha'.t
st·nous l~ rnterruptetl the ce ntnt l uf
ft Le da li) routme
They have shown littl e or 110 lUll ·
~ 1dera tton for o ur dJ~1net , our k H.i~
or an} one other than themselves
At the tim e of th e forted en
trantr b\ the tc&lt;:~cher s the supt.•nn
tendent .. treasurer and other r1d

d

unent

str1kr "

·\bout 30 t ea(_ her ~ wen.' 111 t ht• aU111 \Ill Slratl vt' uff tces a l the :\1c1gs
,! un1or High Sc hool In !11 tddleport
Wednesda) rnorntng Tht• lt'dt: ht· rs
he:t\ l' ~r11 VLLUfJ)I Hg tht' Uu1ldmg
Sl/1(_( 11 d m \1 qnda\ nJ(J flllng
r\1 5 p m [ uesclu) the phon e St:r·
vu I' was d1 st ont1n11ed 1n the offll E'!'i
Other utdrtJ es 11 1tht-• u ff~tes be111 g l)l i'Upted on a 24 hour bas1s y, ere still Ul
o~· y athm Wcdnl'sd ao., morning
!n ii slit tf'rnent Wedn r_'itl.-n mor IIIHg, Su pt Gll·asu11 hatl Uus to sa)
A stnoL!S .-1nd tllegdl \'l ola tton of
tilL' id ~ s uf tht' State of Ohru lras bet·n
.tnd 1s lX' I urr 1ng rtt tht~ M l~lgs Jumor

EXTENDED FORECAST
Fair Friday throu~h Sunda)
&lt;. old Friday 1\lth a "armmg
trt'nd through ttw wet&gt;kt·ud
H1ghs 10 the upper 4lls and 50,;
f'r1day, warllllng mto the 60s b)
Sunda) Lows 10 the upper 20s
aDd 1o" 30s Friday, warmmg mto
the 4lls b) Sunda)

ll1g h .l)&lt;.:hol ll
At th1s {)t JI!l l no rea l asst:-; U:tnt'l'

of to\i. n ror
nq~ uuatwn s \J.hi ch crrtatnl) settmtc 1
ha\t' been a plo)
BOARD 'S OH'ER
TI1e lx,ard s offer at the \1 (1nrJa\
negl)llatlorl.'i st-• ss 1un ln&lt; l udC's the
fulloy, 1nl.! pmnt"
11 "&lt;tlar\ , $10 (){'I()
1

dtlhtbast.:o "r~f:-,l'pt
$\0 , ~ 00

Baby survives
MJNNEAPOIJS IAP 1 - All 8month-old Infa nt. crar'J ed Ill hiS
mother's anns as she plunged
from a MlSSISSlppl R1 ver bndge,
sllJ'Vlved the 80-lool fall that
killed the 24-year-old woman,
pollee sa1d
Jean Krauser of Minn eapolis
dted Tuesd a) soon after rca~.:hrng
Hennepm County Mt&gt;d1cal Center. Her son, Kyan , was Ill
sallsfactory condtt 1on late
Tuesday , hosp1tal off1c1als sa1 d

hd..,t

CO I.U\IB US, Oht u 1AP' - 'l11e
state IIH·d up tv 1ts prumiSL' Tu t•-;d. n
and lwgdn fLT in~ strtk lng t'lllf) IU\l't's
m the Depa r1111L lll of \ 1Ln!nl Ht .tlth
ami \1en ta\ lkt ardd1tull
·nwdl•partrnent 1m t~kt"(\ tilL· httkLL'ied

rl'l g ll'j.() rl

Al t

t 1,',

dl:::fllll St

\)

UnlO!lS

of precrpttatwn 10
tomg ht and Thur.;da y

Lha nce

W! thC1Ut d IIIL'&lt;..IidlUI

.Jo hn Farn ~. t'Xt'&lt; Utl\ L' dtrecto r uf
Uw Ol.' SJ:r\ scud Uw WllOn w1l l nut
'durn lo tht• b ii rgalmng tablt' un til
Ull' ~i i-ltt' a ~ r t'l'" to ILl &lt;t mt_&gt;c\talor

rnansl&lt;:~ughtt:·r

tl ffense s reg istttred tn

Uw statt
Tht.· lowest {runt' lnrlt'x m c1ttes
"nh po pu!dt 10ns uf mute than 10,000
\-1.&lt;-i!'i found 111 U1e\ 10t and Sha Y.. nee
I cJ wns.lnp ~A hi( h OOth reported a
liJtal uf 115 of fenses la st year

rapes 1Jt aggra\iated
1 t&gt; por red lu law
~tffll 1..tls 111 Cht.•\ 1ot m 1978 And no
111~1arc L'~ of et th t&gt; r murder or non ll t'l..: ill.!. t_'llt
ntt:~nslau~hter
\\ er e
r t'~I stt·r 1 d HI Shrtwrwt.• T (l wnsh1p
~ v for(

.t s~ c~ults

1bJ, .

\l.l'lt'

\1 t:-is ('rtnfh IngJt· ... ( halnllrtll f11r

'A

l&gt;op king sa Ill the wal ko ut b\ about
l 500 0(~ 1 ·A illL mbt·r s. ""hwh be~an
\f um.lin u\t'f a iontrat! d tsputt' h.1:-.
hrtd uni) a mmllnal t&gt;ffl'&lt;. 1 on rncntttl

Jt•pttr 1111g tu y,ork '
J11 l' lUli Ufl S&lt;J\"' tht_• "'tri kt• lS

Assot.1a11on
Thl' r erguson Ac t prO\ ld l'S for lhl'

not y,a gt•s

rehmn g of fir ed stn kt·r s. bu1 those

Jy, n

Pt.• rsoll"

)X'rl'Ull

ht·alt h opera tions,
\H'rt_·

at

nurnJHl

n•po rt1n~

thl'

n
\\ l

llls1 t1 ut1on s

ld\

P!t kl•trng .rt

..... nm· m stltUIIon c::,
I )opkln~ -;aul h&lt;:t ~; bet•n absu lutd \
lf!dft-LI I\ t.' iii kt·t&gt;pmg peopiL' fr om

(JVt.'r

.,.. ur klll l.: pr o\ l'lo ns uf tht&gt; {'1Jtl lral l ,

othl'r

un 1on s.

l hl'

1,

Ry Jud' 0\\t:'n
st \'l r~mra ( oil\ t'rillfl John 1)
1 Hockcfell er
I\
s pl,tkl!l ~

l' "trrd&lt;n at dedtci::lllon ren• Ill•1na· "

fm
lnt

Pu,~ er

OtstnhutiOn l'rodu Ll "
thr hrst plant t o Jocd t(' 1n th \'
\1.tslln ('ount 'r Industrial l'drk
pr.11sed PDP for It s &lt;'O iliiJlll nti nt to
\\ &lt;'S t Vt r l::lnld and rt s t u~ s to th e co&lt;~l
md ustn thr ough thr manu fa ctur E' of

!t&gt;drllal n• ntrol &lt;ipparatu..,

\~hH

h I"

lt•nl&lt;'l tiVt'

nff recrs

on ont.'-\l'Hr
tllL' d t"par1rllt'll t

.~ ~rt_'l' llll.'lllS

a

&lt; un1rcu t s wrth

ft:{\e! a! rn ed ta!or
'!1lt rt_•'s no rea snr for o rntU lCH CM

vo te s on
tht•
" 1lllw ta ke n next week
Thl' thret:' unton s repr esent about
171l00 "'"r kt r " m '10 nwntal ht·alth

saul. espeueJll\
a~rt·ctlll'llt'

"lt h

11 •.
Lh l '

D upk1t 1t'
\\1

1

u ll 1~.· r

,.

I1Ld
I V. 11

M I~S

i n~Jes

J- UrTll turr

In

\1 Hl

run
~.1

1 1g lt ..,

r t'' '" d. t 1 ..,11,

,

l ll;.tkl' lh!:-t \td! '- pal.:-tdL' !Ill

lto pl n~ fur Yo dt
\1 t'nhants Y.!ll "t,Jg t
a III()(J!Lilght sail: \H th speual pr IlL'S
1n conJune twn "'tth thl' l'' ent

,:.et and l.S

Vlerchantc; ~111 bt· condut t1n ,e:
thcu Ol,l, fl Chnstma:-i seasu;1 ~!\&lt;.. ·
d\i.&lt;l! p r umullitn

proc ess

m

ac-

1

rru rH 'itri-l!t lr at

V\

h1ch lime reasons

ttklltltlnd l

Ji' k

lf'n.\e

to be ac·

umulott•Ll 'Tm. ahng 180 days corn·
p.trt.•cl to \55 no""- 1J1 a way to earn
10 i:Jddltlunal di:iJ" of severance pay
' 6 nuleage muease fr om the 12
( t'IIL'1 reque;)led to a more rea listic
1

li

1

cnl'i a rnliC' ,- • other language

('hangt'' thot L-n rh team.s agreed
!no

Surt

(, Ieason lhar ged

thrs mor·

r u n~

that thl' \o lmg un the contract
1 1:-. ,, f. 11 u'
!!t· satd t he package

,., d " rHJI e xpla~r1ed

tu teachers and
wen• nut answered He
suggt st U1a 1 the tea chers hold an
open st'ssion &lt;In lhe package offered
qu e~liO i t.'i

.~t

wlllch tum- thetr questiOns could

lx!

~:t n swered

\1 p;.mllmt•,

then· ha ve no new

ntg utlcttJUII s st·t 1n the .stnke whtch ts
Ill 1L' f1fth week Teachers WIShing
to t:stab llsh a negotiatiOns sesston

sho uld conwct board pres1dent,
Carol Pren:e, (;Ieason eoncluded .

H ~1! If !C at ton

a ~.: r eemcnts

Ul'-11 1UtiU1.~

tJ..u u,_;houl till'

Fall festival

• •

thmgs

:ilate s

\fun lt 1prd L1nplc•~ tl'" hi:l \l' l l'adlL't.l

ut, '11J,

t" pa r tl l -patt •
lnl.;!t•s b\ rhone

rslnng

dedication speaker.

~cn r

11/ll'

am one

Governor Rockefeller

mrnm l!
Ho ekefl'ilt'r told th 1· ne.IC I\ 200 pt' l
sons 111 attcndancc that PDP s four

JU" I

~

sho uld ( onti::l(_ t

btl.!~t·st

( '~l!Hil unl t .tllon s
Wor kt'f!'i
of
, r nt.'f!ra i-llld thl' ·\ rnl· r 1 c.r~n
h· t.lrr atton of St, l ll' Co u nt~ C:l flt!

fo r

1m rtcd

1s h1 n~ to Pn tt•r ! o do so

p.trl H l pt:~ll u n

wot ker s wuuJd Ut_• un p1obrtt tun
w1ttlout tt.&gt; nure for tv.o ~ l!ars ,1/ld
mclJgJble fu1 PH.' IIH r edst' ' for unt•
recH ht.:d
SUth.'lllate a f ter tJll' dcpd l lll lL'nt
rt'jt'Clt•d a UT!IO!l rt'QUl'St for :1

he:ts

due

·nrnallon.s

t rlrdanlt \\-lth th e li::IV\ 111 i::IU non·
Jl'lle\i.al sJtuat lllllS gl'.tng the !lldl\ 1du.d thl' nght fu r Lu nfl:' r er1 ces U1
tlw pn·&lt;.:t.•mt· of a laW}er or
I tpr~" 'l lntdt l '.u
Y. lt h the ad"'11 bo.• sWletl b\ the adinimstratwn
\() lilt.' perso n no t bemg g1ven a
n· nrY~al
A nun-renewed person
"ould hd\l' the n gh t to appealto the
' upt•rmll'ndent at whJlh tLme the
..,t Jpt•nntt-ndent would rev1ew and
~ ou ld i:~l sn ha\e to gl\e reaso ns for
tht tutt her nnt bu ng rene wed f4)

Llrt• aruw.tl Chnsllnas paraUt• spon·
:-.Pred b' the \1 tddlt•pur1 Cha mi.JL•r lif

( OITU!lern·

'2 1 su pplemental equalizatiOn ot
"&lt;&lt;lanl'" 1 { 1 fa1r d1.-,rmssal non·
r ell&lt;'" c:~l l;-mgu&lt;'lgr wh1 ch grve all ter -

t•ntt·r the ta l ks

workl'r s tn tht• Trff tn \1t ntdl l kalth
and Dl'\ elo prlll' Tllctl (\·nlt.•t T ht.• &lt;11 t
pr o h1b1t s
s trrkt• s
tJ\
publ11
erh pIa) L't'S
D t.'[Mffll ll'nl
spuk, ,s rn ..tn
.\ 1
Dopkm g sa11.l th e sti-ltl' ttlsu ~ ~
rt'\ ll'Wmg a dtLton al &lt; ase s arou JI{l
the stott· to dL'tcnmne If ::;uffH IL'I"l4:
t.'\ lfit•nt L' ex1sts to u~· the strttUtl'
agams1 othl'r stn kt ng ll l L'lll iJL&gt;r -; of
Uw Oh1&lt;1 CIVil Sen llt' J·:mplo\u'"

M e~mwhlil' 1ht \1,1,0 s1 de~

l 1 ~8(1

annual parade

1\I •JX.' '- ( (I

Part!} cloud) tomght and Thu l sda) Low tomght m the m 1d ,!if,
H1gh Thursda) m the lo" 00s 1 he

striking e1nployees

11974o\1f ha

fft• ( f ' \t' S..· pt l

sought for

, , ,.., ..,

Weather

I

Participants

ur lllflli at

State begins firing

~ e re uu t

llllJliStratur S

dlt

OKLAHOMA CITY 1AP I
Koger Dale Stafford. 'li, after
protestmg lus mnocence, was
se ntenced Tues day t o be
executed by drug lllJCCtlon for the
murders of srx employee:; at et
steakhouse 15 months ago
Stafford's attomey , J Malone
Brewer, 1s appealing the stx first degree murder convictiOns a nd
the process will Lake yea rs,
making 1t unposs1ble for Stafford
to be put to death Jan 17 as
D1stnct Judge Charles Owens or dered
The Sll&lt; murder.; at the S1rlom
Stockade were " hideous and
Vlc&gt;ous and cruel ,'' Stafford sa 1d
" I'm not capable of s uch a cnme
I feel that maylx- someday
some way, they'll ftnd the real
person who d1d 1l and I'll lx- set
fr ee "

penod - the lo'l.'est Lllllll'

Meigs teachers reject latest contract package
BY BOB HOEFLICH

1,221 pass bar
FREE CLOTIHNG DAY
Free Clothing Day Wlli lx- held at
the Salvation Army, 115 Butternut
Ave, Pomeroy, from 10 am to 12
noon Tuesday All area residents are
InVIted

61 YEAR MEMBEKS - S•xty-&lt;llle year mem bers
v.ere pr esented g1fts at the a nnua l Me1gs County Farm
Bureau mect1ng held Tuesd"y mghl at Chester
Presenttng g1 fts wct s Kobert Rurdette left Honurrt• o,;

•

e

PARENTS' RAU.Y
A parent.&lt;;' rally for the Me1gs
Local School D1stn ct w11l be held at 6
thiS evenmg at the Middleport
Muruc1pal Park
All mterested
peopl e of Me1gs County are
welcome , Sarah Welch announced

ELBERFELD$
( ·.. I

Bureau were left to nght , Mr m1d Mrs Fran cis An

of the Me1gs l ..o&lt;. ul
School DlStntl, on stnk e for !he pa st

:·

. ·.1· , H.- ·
•

/!'/,.~~ .1•.: .. ' ',.

'•.: . '

' . ,.,
.

..

I'

. •'
·.0~·:

.. -

.

dr ew, HeuJ Young, M1 (:lfld Mr.s Howard ;-..;ulan, i::lnd
Mr a nd Mrs Ha;mo nd f'ur lx-e ll1e "nnual dtnner w,&gt;s
held al Chest er ~]ementary School

Tea&lt;_ hers

\\,tll'r plt ' :i.~ urt· ag&lt;Hnst a dJ\ er s
tJofh Ulueast'S ns tht' dt·pU1 uf his

','

Camp Conley seeks

ACfiONS DISMISSED
Two acuons have been disrrussed
m the Me1gs County Corrunon Pleas
Court
They mclude an arbon for the
dissolutiOn of the marnage of Kathy
Sue Seth and Bnnle) Frank!Jn Seth
and an actwn by the F'armen; Bank
and Savmgs Co , agamst 0\arles H
Mash Ill. et al
A dissolution was ISSued m the
marnage of John S and Paula
thomas and an action for divorce,
chargmg gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty , was filed by John
W Yates, Cheshire, agaliiSl Drama
C Yates , Hurncane, W Va The
pla1ntt ff asks custody of one chi ld

40 YEAR HONOKEES - KeCelVlng recog n1l 1on for
40 year m emberships m the Me1gs Co unt) F'am1

" 1Lift:'

t

11~f d 1n &lt; ool

&lt;.~ r e ' ll!l'll

of

YI S IOil " Th L'S('

Tlt t'n Newtnn Roberts. lr . John
1,l]('ntmc1" Pn no~ld Neuhauser and

Tral'\ Kltt hen Ill . left S€cure jobs
tn "it.trt th ei r nwn busmess. the
1:o\ l'rnor po Pllrd out " That In lt sclf
1s llllp r r,--= 1 \e " he ~D id . ·' but the r rs k
''1' "' ·r.t•n lonk ~a"' a ven car efull}

1

,i\( U[cltt.:d

rl ~k

l11e\ knm' r oal ts thl rt ns"e r t o
tl. t· t'nt'rf.!: \ sun I\ al of ou r ndtJon
' nd Jt 'sonh c1 molter of tun e be fo rt'
o~ , IHlSf'n "iUS 1111 r onl \\ ill he rear hed
th111U~ h out th 1s lcllld
( I J!lliUdNI

HrnkefL·Iler
!

Hot kt&gt;fl lil·r

\\ 3S mtrod u&lt;. rd

b\

h.1rh . , I .mhetm trea surer of the

\ ln S(Jn
f
Author1 t '
I dnh&lt;.l! r l's

"l'l(

li

1

1llllK

1111n t \

Bn&lt;:~rd

l&gt;e ~.rlo p m &lt;' n t

of

&lt;i ddrC' ss

01re c t o r s

fol lowed

lomm ent s

b)

I lt·vc l oplllrnt /\ uthonty m emb er

.IHck Fr uth . spea king 10 the absence
of .I &lt;~C k Rurdelt , board presid ent
Fruth on behHlf uf Burdett and
otht•r lllPIJ .b e r s of the Development
1\uth tHit) 1,.\ l'lt n'llrd PDP, saymg
th e
dedl call oo
of
Po wer
l&gt;1stnbulion Product s Ir1c marks H
grea t da y In Mason Count y

set at Racine
The streets of Hacme VIllage will
bt.' orne alive w1th the sound - not of
moO! &lt; - bu t of an old fas hioned f~ll
festival from 6 30 to rrudrught
Fnda)
Van ous non-profit groups of the
commuruty are sponsoring the
fest1 va l and there WJU be various
food booths, co untry stores , games
of varwus kinds, a queen contest,
cos tume JUdg ing,
pumpkin
dec oratmg contests and other events
throughout the evening.
A square dance will be held begin·
mng at 9 p.m The public tB mvited to
the even! Any group or individual
needmg any further information
may contact Charlotte Wamsley,
949-2008 , Lmda Diddle, 949-2533, or
Behnda Johnson, 949-2794.

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