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                  <text>!)..12- TbeSunday Tunes-sentmel, Sunday . Oct . 28, 1979

Young Middleport man dies in jeep wreck
Wheeler Joe Thomas, 20 , Route 1.
Middleport, was killed at about midnight Saturday when IJle jeep which
he was driving went out of control
and overturned several times on
Locust St. in Middleport .
Middleport Police said the velucle
went into IJle island along side the
road before overturning several

times and coming to r es t in a lot

aJong the road. Thomas was thro wn
from the velucle.
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to the scene at II : ~~ p.m .
and Thomas was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he was
pronounced dead upon arrival . Mr.
Thomas was traveling towards Hoi&gt;-

home; matern a l g randparents,
Gilbert and Laura Bechtle, Henderson, W. Va .. and sever al rueces,
nephews, uncl es and aunts.
Mr. Thomas was a member of
Heath United Methodist Church in
Middleport and was employed as a
coal miner .

Serv1ces have been tenatively set
for 2 p.m . Thursday at the Rawling•
Coats Funeral Harne in Middleport
with the Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating . Burial will be in the Joppa
Cemetery near Reedsville. Friends
may call at the funeral horne from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . Wednesday .

en tine

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 138

F. both uf Middleport ; St&lt; Sisters.
Mrs. J essie 1Dorothy J Morns.
Pom er oy; Mrs. Homer t Eva 1 Griffith , Springfield ; Mrs. Jane J .
Runyan , in Spain : Mrs . Dennis
( Merian Ann I Glaze, Houston, Tex .;
Mrs. Joe t Laura ) M. Davis, Middl eport ; MtsS Usa B. Thomas, at

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(USPS 145 960)
VOL. XXVIII

son on the str~ t when the acc tdent
took place.
Mr . Thoma s was born Aug . 3, 1959
at..M_a§t&gt;n, W. Va ., the son of the late
PA,ufF. Thomas who died in 1978 and
Mr~. EveJ.yn M. Bechtle Thomas.
Besiiles"'llls mother, he is s urvived
by two brothers, John S .. and Paul

MO NDAY. OCTO BER 29. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

.,

'I
and Dorothy Rilile . This was the first fall festival held
in the village for many years . The event was sponsored
by various non-profit organizations in the village .

PART OF TiiE ENTERTAINMENT at the fall
festival held in the village of Racine Friday night were,
1-r, Belinda Johnson , Charlotte Wamsley , Linda Dtddlc

fans~

Ravenswood

officers

clash in near riot Friday
PT. PLEASA!'&gt;IT - A near-n ot
broke out at F rtday rught ·s football
game between Potnt Pleasant and
Ravenswood as officers a nd a n~ry
fans clashed at Sande rs Memortal
Stadiwn.
As a result of thr fra cu s.

s t&gt; \'L' Il

pe rsons were arrest r rl by lht' Maso n
Count y Sheri ff's Departm l'nt ;mel
th e Point P leas ct nt P oli c(' t~ n
m ultip le c hHr~es rang tnt.: fr nn1

11 hst nH't ion pf an ,,ff ln' r and tnl tiX IcatlOn l 11dl's lr uctJOn of propt·rty .
Thn 'l' dl'pUUE'S and three c1 t y

polt r c

n f ftc t'r~
O n !~

t nj ur!t&gt; S

s us tam Nl rn tno r
tw u. h o wt'\' ('f ,

dep utio•s J ohn Withe rs Jr . and .John
P e rn . soug ht Immediate treat mrnt
a t tiw Pl easa nt Va lley Hospital
1·nwn.:!t'ncY room
Othrr nfftcers reect vmg minor
\~err

l llJUrlt'"

de pu t.\'

Handy

Truck theft probed

tr eatment

:o&lt;e dri ver r eportedl y lost control
of the van when it s wheels slipped off
the high berm . The van wPn t mto thf'
ditch line and th en mto t he rtH'k w;ll t
l.t enng
Ho&lt;-1d . r1eru
We s t

( 'I l! tnd Jii l

; 111

,-.;chou J.

.11'\'H ll'nt

l!l'.1 1 l \' Hl ~ auto ~

W&lt;:t ~

4 25

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SCl'nc o f

pIll

Friday

dnn·n by Susan .t\

Sw1shn. 25. Pnmt P lra scmt Houtt' 1,
;tnd Hf•x Ali nn I'l ttrs t. ~ 1 . \"1tddleport
lil' pllt\ .J H ~1 r{' o ' repo rte d tha t
1:~. 1 t ll whwles had
be (• n tr ;n· elin~
"est whL'n Sw1sher st opped suddenly

for an a p p r&lt;J a c hm ~ ve ha:\e wtth a
wah.' \nad D a r st \\aS uunab\ e to stop
111 time and stru ck tht• Swis her ca r in

the rea r
1&gt;am:1gr wa s Ps1ima t ed a t $275 to
the .'i \ \ 1-.;her \-rlm· ll' &lt;llld $tl00 to thl'
f);n -.;1 ;n1t1'

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

~

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Today

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:

By

Willi ~

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••
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••

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CEstate :•

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T. Leadingham
Re alfor

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THE 'DREAM HOUSE'SYNDROME
Tlw re are tw o '&gt; PC' (Ir•&lt;, 01 'lOL,&lt;, r•t"",un11 ··
·r. l ,r,.,qr~-, ,, , ,~ , ilrlCl the
,,
id ea li sT. B e war e o t yo n y 1v t &gt; ,;'r rrne~ &lt;1t •· 1lh f 1 ··"d •J t tnP h nanr 1a 1

sp~~t~uc~n

be T OO p r n r trra l For rn!olann• a ss uming I ha t , home ~ ~
d of r e p a 1r ran bf' f 1)(ed a t an ove r all prru• sav1nqs and t.nd ou tt na
nee
Bu'?mg
a
the final c ost gre a tly exceeds t ne es t 1ma te
,. . a home
r alh
1n ..
nei ghbo rh ood whose val ue 15 gor ng downnrll because 11 saba 9
d
Buy i n g a home w rth f ew er rooms that vo rJ real l y nel:'d You ma v ; n
~p w ith an unsu 1table , u nr om t o r tdble home wrfh a lower resale po en

tia60 th e o th er hand , t he rdeal rst sho u ld beware ot The all t oo

tr eQ~~~~

" dream h o u &lt;;e " synd r ome Sure . rl ' s tf'mp1 1n Q t o set out rn oues t o
~
absolutel y per ect nome . out rt ·s bt •ller to balonre your oreams ~~
1
poc kef boo ~ Even 1 t you r an de h n&lt;' l he pe rtec I home (whrr
s
~~~~tful ), yo u pr obably r an · t a t to r d 1T Rr oreoared to ( omp r omts.e

1

..... ..........................
•

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If thef'e i s anyth1ng w e can do t o h e l p you 1n Thr fi eld ot rr·,ll i•&lt;.,lt~l.
please phone or drop 1n at LEAD! NGHAM R E AL E S TAT E . Sl] Sc&lt;ond
Ave ., Gallipolis . Phon e 446 ·7099 . We' re here to netp .

~

POMEROY - A 1978 Dodge four
wheel drive truck owned by John E.
Moore, Rt. I, Rutland, was reported
stolen Friday afternoon according to
Meigs County sheriff's deputies .
Moore said he was traveling on CR
75 Wednesday evening when the
truc k developed engine problenns .
He parked it. When he returned to
get the velude, it was missing .
The vehicle is yellow with Oluo
license AHY 305. Anyone having information concerning the velucle
should contact the Meigs County
sheriff's department.

••
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Court News
POMEROY - Five defendants
were fined and eight others forfeited
bonds in Meigs County Court this
week .
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were Lawrence Stewart, Rutland,
Sl5 and costs, speeding; Vernon M.
Grant , Pittsburgh, Sl511 and costs,
three days confinement, license
suspended 30 days, DWI; Sarah C.
Welsh, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, costs on!;,
assured clear distance; Michael
Harrison, Rt . I, Middleport, $50 and
costs. license suspended 90 days,
leaving scene of accident; Steve
Taylor, Middleort, S2!i and costs,
license suspended 60 days, theft.
Forfeiting bonds were Kent
Blystone , Athens, Wesley Blythe,
Jr., Columbus, Patricia A. Thompson of The Plains, Ohio, Joseph L.
Jordan, Shade , and Ronald W.
Price, Wadsworth, $35.50 each,
speeding; Billy Dawson, Huntington, $35, improper passing ;
Jerry L. Shumway , Millfield , $35.50,
unsafe velucle ; Arthur W. Gray, Rt .
2, Racine, $35.50, unable to stop
within assured clear distance .

unavailable for the review.
According to Oluo Department of
Health consultants only 10 charts
were required for reviewing skilled
nursing , and, according to patient
load and the City Department 's
discretion, the other services were
to be evaluated .
For skilled nursing records
reviewed there were three adnrns.•ions in the third review and six
discharges with one fiO.&lt;lay patient
care; in the fourth review there was

GALUPOLIS - The third and
fowth patient clinical records
review, held Oct. 19 and Oct. 22, lil
the Gallipolis City Home Health
Department noted no deficiencies
and resulted in a finding of accurate
documentation .
There was a discussion of improvement of all documentation .
The reviewers were Becky Brown,
RN ; Erika Wetzel, RN, and Paula
Crace, Rn, but past reviewers contacted by telephone were

..;;- ------

- ----"-~ --=============~

Year End Clearance Sale
On All Mobile Homes In Stock

under arrest

*SCHULT *VEMCO *BARON
Likes Voinovich

*HOLLY PARK *PARKWOOD

CLEVELAND (AP I -

ONLY 1 • 1979 MODEL LEFT

SAVE ANYWHERE FROM ssoo TO s1000
FROM NOW UNTIL NOVEMBER 15th.

K&amp;K MOBILE HOMES
675-3000

3411 iJackson Ave.

Point Plusant

\

The

Cleveland Plain Dealer, in a front
page editorial Sunday, endorsed
U. Gov . George V. Voinovich for
mayor .
" At no time in history has
Cleveland shown a greater need
for a responsible, capable administrator, " the editonal
statement said.
"City services are in shambles,
its finances are a morass of WJpald bills and defaulted bank
notes. The record of destruction
and incompetence of the Dennis
J . Kucinich administration has
been detailed over and over. The
need for change is obvious to
avoid fw-ther urban chaos and
disaster, " it further stated .

eturn to normal
COLUMBUS, Ohio lAP )- Qty
services are expected to return to
nonnal Monday, following an 11 day strike by non-uniformed
municipal employees.
Memben of local 1632 of the
AmeriCan Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees ratified a new three-year
contract Friday by a vote of ~15-

THE PLAVTEX'
CONTROL TOP PANTYHOSE

432.

v

'

Save up to $2.00

Now On Display

CARROLL, Ohio (AP ) - A 33year old Canal Winchester man
was killed Saturday when a coml:tne fell on him while he was har·
vesting soybeans.
The victim was identified as
John M. Diley . The accident occurred about four miles north of
Carroll in Fairfield Colmty .
Sheriff Dan Berry said Diley
crawled under the front of the
farm machine to repair it, but he
failed to set up a safety device.
The head of the combine, an attaclvnent on the front , fell on him
and crushed him, according to
Berry.

NOW is the time to save on
Pfaytex Control Top and
Extra Control Top Pantyhose ...
!he pantynose thdt 111 sm ooth lor a
smoo t h loo~ u n d er cloth e s

'eg

Style
(,,n •r, )l Tr, p S ht '', l··C
Lur, !r r)o l (•IJ Sn o&gt;r·t l ••lj

'j'l l l ' J t (•·r~ '
'· d• h l . l •t

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now

S3 00
S3 00

·II

ContrCJI Too. :-,;hl•(·r Supp o rt L r· q

retlll l1ru:.r1 nee I and 1oe 1'J6:,:JJ
Cofl fr')l Top/ ShPer Suppor1 Lf'g s,tndal'()(l t (~6fj2 )

SS
I

9~

S5 y~' $3.85

E .. Ira Control lop Shee r Leg
reFl fUII

f::'(j 1r It:'

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~ ~~t·a Con trol Top 91£&gt;Cr Su ppo rt L"'l
hee laMtoet ')6S3t

rpln l r)rc.,p(j

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Pant-y PanTyhoc;p Control Too Sllg ht Suppor1
Lr:q r('lnlor c.ed !Of' BetgP pan ry 1':. 7901

Panty' Prln ty tuJo., f· Cu nlrol Ton Sl1qht Su oport
L~q-si1nr1illi ,I() T

Whtl f' l)dlil&gt;y

I~ 7Q? I

Panty Pantyhose C..o n1 ro1 Tnf
Sheer Leg -rl:!rnlot( ed I(J(' f~t • rq t· p,w!; I ~~Y~ \
P &lt;Jnty ·Pantyhose Control rop
C', ,,,.l't l f&gt;fj c;anl1i:lff•)(

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Mayor Tom Moody says he expects all operations, including
trash collections , will go
smoothly.
The strike, which was called
Oct. 15, was the longest
municipal employee walkout in
the city's lustory.

Farmer killed

on every pair you buy!

"

Struly planned

,· '

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)
Nearly $35,000 in federal taJ:
money will be spent by the Ohio
Department of Uquor Control to
study ways to ellJ)8Jld and improve a program to prevent
alcohol abuse bylt.een ... gers.
Tu revenue from the National .
Highway Traffic Safety AdministraUon l.s financing the
program + part of the Governor 's Highway Safety Program.

$3.89

S4 '&gt;0 $3.89

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY

Spurlock, Browning had performed
the proper maneuver by jettisoning
the main chute. The main chute ts
released prior to opening the reserve
to prevent the two from enlangling.
"Post impact inspection showed
that the ripcord for the reserve
chute, for some reason , was not
pulled," Spurlock said . There was no
apparent equipment malfunction .
Browning, a veteran of over 300
jumps, had passed the written test
for an expert parachutist's license,
wluch is the highest level of
parachuting sanctioned by the North
American Parachute Association,
on Saturday.
Sunday's fatality was the first
parachuting death at the Bidwell
facility since 1971.

Anti-nuclear
protesters

Featuring

~

1980 Buick Electra
Limited Diesel

Skydiver killed
Sunday afternoon
A Chesapeake man, Robert D.
Browning, 31, was killed Sunday
when his reserve chute did not
deploy during a jump at the Greene
County Sport Parachute Center on
Fairview Rd .
Called to the scene at 3:15p.m .,
the Gallla County Sheriff 's Department reports the five-year veteran
parachutist died upon impact after
releasing his main chute, which experienced a partial malfunction
known as a 'Mae West', from its harness during a 10,000 foot jump In a
'Mae West' shroud llnes become entangled in the canopy dividing it into
two or more sections, resulting in an
accelerated, spinning descent.
According to owner, opera tor and
pilot of the BidweU branch of the
Greene franchise system Andy

one admission and five discharges
with four patients under 60-day care.
For home health aide records
reviewed, there were two discharges
and one 60-day patient care under
the third review, and the same under
the fourth review.
For physical therapy records
reviewed tllere was one discharge in
each of the third and fowth reviews.
One notiation under the third
review was that records were found
in good condition with one chart
being deficient in socio-economic
data; discussion was made regarding improvements of recording this
mfonnation.

No deficiencies noted

fi v r other a rres ts.

New Haven rnan hurt
PT . PLEASANT - A van ~· as
de molished a t I :50 a m. Saturda;·
when tt struck a rock wall on Hart ford HUI, near New Haven.
Rubert [) Housh. l l. :'it'W ll "l't'n.
driver of velucle , reeetved nunor
mjuries but. CJcco rdin~J, to tlw rqx-.rl
of Mason Cuunt1· De put y Shm ff
Randy ColPgrov~. d td not ~t·ek

('lll rgr m ·e and pollee offi ce r s Don
Spe nce, J ~e Akers and Joe Mill er.
The fist cuffs apparently broke out
utte r patrolman and deputies attempted to arrest two Ravenswood
men The fighting continued for
nearl y 15 minutes. netting the police

ne, second place, and Lennie Dowell, third place . This
was the first fall festival held in Racine for many
years. The event was sponsored by non-profit
organizations in the village . Jt.was held on the Racine
Home National Bank parking lot.

WINNERS OF BEST DECORATED PUMPKINS
- Winners of the best decorated pumpkin contest held
at the fall festival in Racine Friday night were, 1-r,
Cissy Lyons, first place , Chrts Diddle and Donnie Rif-

NEW YORK ( AP i - Police
arrested more than 600 anti-i!uclear
protesters this morning as they tried
unsuccessfully to shut down the New
York Stock Exchange on the 50th anniversary of the stock market crash
of 1929.
The demonstrators, who numbered mvre than 1,000, sang and
chanted as they sat in small circles
on streets around the e1cbange,
waiting for police offlcers to lift
them onto stretchers and take them
to vans for a ride to headquarters for
booking on disorderly conduct
charges .
But the market opened as usual at
10 a .m. with the sounding of the gong
after hundreds of 8IU10yed Wall
Street workers had been passed
through barriers around the excbange by fla8hing identity cards to
police. initial trading was described
as active.
Outside , the mood was almost
festive, with little acrimony
displayed among the protesters and
hundreds of police officers on hand .
A 15-piece brass band played circus
muaic and spectators watched the
protest from nearby vantage points,
including the steps of the Federal
Building.
" I havenl had this much fun since
the 1960s," Police Capt . Thomas
Ryan told some of the demon strators.
"Tell my mom I 'II be late for dinner," a young woman called out as
she was lifted onto a stretcher .
Among those taken lillo custody
was Daniel Ellsberg, the key figure
of the Vietoam-era, Pentagon
Papers case .
The protesters were from a group
calling itself Wall Street Action .
Leaders said the demonstration was
a move to protest investinent in the
nuclear industry and ' ·expose the
abusive role of corporations and the
financial community in controlling
people 's lives ."
"This is a new focus for the antinuclear movement ," said Sharon
Tracy, a leader of the action . "UnW
now it's been focused just on the
installations . Now we're targeting
the financiers ."
Stock exchange officials had
asked employees to arrive early and
were planning to close their doors
once all employees were inside .
Hundreds of employees either
stayed overnight in offices or
straggled in during the hours after
ntidnight .
The group had approa ched
officials of the stock e.change
earlier this month to request that the
61 corporate members doing
business in nuclear weapons and
power be suspended .

Weather
Clear tonight. Low in the mid -ms.
Mostly sunny Tuesday . High in the
upper 6(ls . The chance of rain is near
zero percent tonight and 10 percent
Tuesday .

,,

. . . ;_)
PREFERENTIAL TEA - New members of Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Plu Sorority were honored Sunday with a preferential tea
held in the Riverboat room of the Athens CA&gt;unty Savings and Loan

Honorees include left to right, front row , Dina Gryszka, Nancy Clark,
Joyce Quillen, and Brenda Hill . Back row, Lori Warner, Debbie Jones,
}jnda Faulk, Darla Thomas, Jenny Sntith, Vicki Ault, and Patty Circle.
Absent, Rhonda Conde .

Meigs teacher strike enters sixth week
A strike by the teachers of the
Meigs Local School Districk moved
into its sixth week today with no settlement apparently in sight .
Supt. David Gleason said there
have been no negotiations sessions
set up but said he hopes the day wiU
bring some prospects towards further talks and a settlement in the
situation.
Some 30 teachers including members of the association's negotiating
team are in the Meigs Junior High
School, Middleport, occupying the
administrative offices of the district .
The teachers began their sit-in last
Monday and vo w that they will continue to occupy the offices until a settlement ts reached . They have indicated their wil li ngness to
negotiate.
However, the board 's position is
that the sit-in has put a damper on
negotiations and that negotiations
will not take place until the administrative offices are vacated .
Central office employe s completed the day last Monday when the

Deputies probing
gasolint&gt; theft
The Meigs County Sheriff's Department is investigating the reported
theft of gasollne from the Jay Hall
property on SR 338 at Plants. The
theft reportedly took place during
the late hours Thursday .
The department reports it has not
received any word on IJle theft of a
1978 Dodge truck stolen sometime
between 9 p.m . Wednesday and 4
p.m . Friday . The owner of the truck
is John E . Moore, Rt. I, Rutland .
The truck is bright yellow in color
and bears Oluo registration AHY
305. Anyone having any infonnatton
on the vehicle is asked to call the
s heriff 's department .

~1

iddlt•port oh•wning

triek or lrt•al n ighl
Mayor Fred Hoffman today
reminded Middleport residents that
Trick or Treat Night will be
Tuesday, Oct. 30, between 6 and 7
p.m .
The siren will be sounded at the
beginning and end of this period .
Residents are asked to leave their
porch lights on if they WJsh to treat
the cluldren who will be out at thal
time .
Motorists are asked to use the utmost caution in traveling streel' at
that hour since there will be many
children on the streets looking for
Halloween trea ts.

sit-in began but ha ve not been at
their posts since until this m orning
when they entered the building to
resoune their duties. This took place
about 9:15a.m. Monday morning .
There was no statement this morning from the teachers association.
However, Supt. Gleason did again
remind district restdents that the
State Department of Education
reviewed finances of the district last
Monday .According to Gleason, the
state concluded that if there are no
emergency e1penditures the district
could end up with a small balance.
·· we have never denied that we
would like to pay our teachers more
money," Gleason commented.
·· Howe ver,

we

have

cut

ex ·

penditures to the fullest extent in order to come up with the offers we
have made ."
Supt. Gleason said on a daily rate
basis most of the teachers of the
distnct are malting $52 a day while
many do receive from $90 to S94 a
day .
Tea chers turned down a package
last week by a wide margin. The
package evolved from a negotiations
sesswn held in Nelsonville on Monday .
Saturday , Att orne y Charles
Knight submi tted a letter to the
Meigs County Board of Education
requestin~ that the county board
take over the functions of the Meigs
local Board of Education as
provided by law when it has been
detennined that a local board is not
carrying out its duties.
Meigs County Supt. Robert Bowen
today said the request from Knight
Wlll
oubled! y come bel ore the

eounty board which is scheduled to
meet in regular session Friday
night
The co unty board might
make a decision at that time, but the
members could table the matter for
fwther study and discussion , Supt.
Bowen indicated.
Meantime , the Meigs Local Board
has special sessions set up for each
evening this week . However, all
meetings are subject of cancellation.
Supt . Gleason reported this morning that letters are ready to go into

the mails tomorrow advising
teac hers that their insurance
benefits, provided by the board of
education , are to be discontinue.
1lUB action carne after two public
meetings when parents, upset
because students bad been deprived
of extra curricular activities during
the stnke, urged that teachers also
bave something taken away from
them .

'\t--. HaH·n

Re~cue

"iqutul HikP~ Rates
EXTENDED Ol!TLOOK

A chance of showers Wednesday through Friday. Mild
each day. Higha mostly in tbe 60s.
Lows from tbe m.Jd 40s to tbe low

so..
.·.·.·.··.·

::::::::.:-:-::·:-:-:- ··· · ··

Twins die
MINNEAPOUS rAP t - Twin
boys joined face-to-fa ce from the
neck to the upper abdomen died
three days after they were born,
Minneapolis Children 's Health
Center said .
The cause of death early Sunday was given as "cardiorespiratory problems," said Suzi
Hagen, a hospital spokeswoman .
She said the problems
developed Saturday night and the
twins " did not respond to
resuscitation efforts
by
physicians and staff in the
neonatal intensive care unit.

The :'ie w Ha\'en Rescue Squad is
an nuwK ln g an mcreas e ln the base

a nd m ileage rates for ambulance
servtce. effectiv e Nov. I.
The new rates will be $25 base
loa ding fee a nd $1.50 per loaded
mile. Acc ording to a squad member,
this ra1se in cost is felt necessary
because of the co nstantly increasing
cost of gasohn e and maintenance for

ambula nce s.
As volun teers, the squad will
continue its eight year policv of
providing ambulance service to all
residents regardles s of their ability
to pay any fees.

COURT AcrtONS FILED
A suit in the amount of ~.256.20
has been filed in Meigll County Corn·,
mon Pleas Court by the Fanners \
Bank and Savings against Danny
Wayne Robinson, Sr., and Rebecca
Sue Robinson, Rt . 3, Pomeroy.

20 killed on Ohio highways
q

I

By The Associated Press
A tota l uf W people were killed in
acc id e nts on Ohio roads this
weekend , the Highway Patrol S8ld .
Etght of the vtctims died in
mulhple-fatalit y accidents .
The patrol counts traffic deaths in
the state from 6 p.m . Friday until
nrudnight Sunda y.
The dead :
SL'NDAY
Cr.'&lt;C INN ATI ~ Roy Hendricks , 27,
of Clllc inna ti , wh en Ius motorcycle
coll ided with a truck on a city street.
WEST LAKE - Hipolito R.
F lo re s. 40 , uf Cle v e land , a
pedestrian struck by a car on a city
str ee t.
TOLEDO - Gerald J . Miller , 55,
of Berkey . in a twCK·ar a r ei dent on
Ohio 29~ in Luca s County .
DAYTON
Delmas
D.
Kaltenback, l4 , of Moraine, in a onecar accident on Ohio 741 in

Montgomery County
NAPOLEON - Brent A. Hurst, 18,
of Archbold, in a two-car accident on
a Henry County road .
IRONTON - Charles E . Arthur
Jr ., 22, of Coal Grove, a pedestrian
struck by a car on U.S. ~2 in
Lawrence County .
SATIJRDAY
MIDDLEPORT
Wheeler
Thomas, 21, of Middleport, in a onecar a cc tdent on a village street.
ASHTABULA Patri ck M.
McCormick , 18, of Meadville, Pa ., in
a two-ear accident on Ohio 85 in
Ashtabula County.
BOWUNG GREEN - Helyn L.
Shearer, 20, and her five-month-old
dauJ!hter ,.. Stephanie, in a two-car
accident on Ohio 105 in Wood County .
CANTON- Barbara J . Balley, 'J:i,
of Massillon, in a one-car acddent
. ona Stark County road.

LEBANON - Deanna L. Ervin,
17, of Franklin, in a two-car accident
on Ohio 741 in Warren County.
AKRON - Mario Michale, 29, of
Kent, in a two-vehicle accident on an
Akron street .
FRIDAY NIGIIT
BUCYRUS - Thomas G. Langley,
28; William G . Pitchf&lt;rd, 50, and
James E . McKinney, 52, aU of
F · emont, in a twt&gt;-vehicle accident
on Ohio 19 in Crawford County.
ZANESVILLE
Christy
Campbell, 19, of Newcunerstown;
Roger A. Jacobs, 19, of Collhocton,
and Rubakumar Rajaratnam, 21, of
Zanesville, an exchange · llludent
from Malaysia, ln a two-car
accident on Ohio 60 in Mlllklngwn
County.
EUCI,JD - Walter Savuldnu, a,
of Wlllowlcll, in a ~ acddenl

m a Euclid street.

�Z- The Dally Sentinel, Middteport·l'ameroy, u . Monday, Oct. 29, l~ n

o- 1'hP fle ilv Sentinel, Mid&lt;llepu&lt;H 'Uintc":'

In Washington
Pelican State politics
By Martba Aalle aad
Robert Wallen
AMITE, La. (NEAl - With a
81lbematortal campaign in its final
frenzied weeks, Wuisi81UlllS were
ooce again demonstrating that they
prefer their politics the way they
take their chicory-based coffee thick, strong and steaming hot.
First there's the state's unique
mosaic ol ethnic, religious, racial ,
political and geographic diversity .
In the bayou country sprawling
south of Lafayette to the Gulf of
Mellico are the Acadian parishes,
where French is spoken almost as
frequently as English and virtuaUy
aU of the residents are Roman
Catholic.
At the western end of Acadiana
lies the New Orleall8 metropolitan
area, a world apart from Cajun
country - and other rural areas of
Wuistana -by virtue of its status as
the feared (if not despised) "big
city."
To the north of the city and Lake
Ponchartrain lie the Florida
parishes, whose political con·
servation stands in contrast to New
0rle8Jlll'liberali.sm. Sprawling from
Alexandria north to the Arkansas
border is heavily Baptist North
!Auisiana.
11Jen there's the state's tradition
ol playing politics according to rules
that never will be endorsed by Common Cause or the League of Women
Voters.
Fonner Democratic Rep. Richard
A. Toney was packed off to a federal
pri800 two years ago after he
pleaded guilty to. charges of acceptln!l illegal campaign con·
tribuUOIIB. Rep. Clsude "Buddy"
Leach, also a Democrat, faces trial
soon on 30 federal charges of vote
fraud.
A state senator has just been sentenced to a six-year prison term af.
ter being convicted on extortion
charges, a federal grand jury is in·
vestigatlng the state's Agriculture
Department and the federal
proeecutor in Baton Rouge is
probing vote-buying among black

groups.
Democratic Gov. Edwin Edwards
remains the state's most popular
political figure, even though he ad·
mitted three years ago that his wife
received a $10,000 gift hun South
: K!nBII rice dealer Tongsun Park.

that is, overestimate your money

supply, you'd have checks bouncing
like pingpong balls, you'd be fined,
and your reputation would be
damaged.
But the Fed, the nation's central
bank, woo 't suffer many financial
consequences. Those wiU be borne
by those who made financial and
investment decisions based on what
they thought were the facts.
They wiU not be the first to be
misled by the official numbers that
!D many elements of the economy
must rely on for a sense of direction .
But first the latest case . The
F;deral Reserve system, whose
error amounted to $3.7 billion, will
not escape ootally without damage .
Its image, its reputatiOn, 1ts
integrity, its credibility are
priceless.
If, for mstance, its figures are
suspect, who will have confidence
that it is on track in its batUe with
inflation' Who will not suspect it
hasn't rigged figures to produce the
interest rates it seeks'
What the Fed did was miscount
the supply of money circulating for
the first two weeks of October. In
coo ceding the error, it al!D admitted
in effect that things may not have
been as bad as pictured.
As a consequence, many money
market people now assume that the
Fed probably clamped down overly
hard on inflation, and that the
resulting rise in short-term interest
rates was a coosquence of that
policy.
Whatever, short-term rates fell
sharply after the Fed announced its
error, to the chagrin of those who
already had borrowed at the higher
rates which prevailed just before the
annoWJCement.
Bitter though they are over being
misled, they are not unique. Others
too have been misled by other
numbers,

official

1b BE A l)RAG. WH EN I FI R'bT
~TA Rlf.D 1'1VG6 1N G

You
Against that background, a sixman .held was yying for voter suJ&gt;port In the ext. Tl "open primary, ..
with the two leaders gaining the
right to compete in the Dec. 8 runoff
that wiU select the state 's next
governor.
The only Republican in the race
was Rep . David C. Treen, who was
virtuaUy certain to gain one of the
two runoff spots but was far less
likely to win agaill8t a Wlified
Democratic party.
New Orleans' candidate was u.
Gov . James E. "Jimmy" Fitzmorris
Jr., the favorite of the petroleum,
banking and other Influential in dustries in the state.
Public Service Collllllission Chairman JAnis Lambert and Secretary
of State Paul J . Hardy were trailing
Treen and Fitzmorris in the most
recent political poDs. Hardy's campaign offered several examples of
the circus-like atmosphere that often envelopo~ !Auisiana politics.
After Hardy spent months
haranguing against the "strong-arm
tactics of labor boss~s." the
president of the state's AFL-CIO,
Victor Bussie, revealed that Hardy
had secretly sought the support of
organized labor but had been rebuf·
fed .
Trailing in the polls were probably
the two most capable and best
qualified men in the race - House
Speaker E. L. "Bubba" Henry and
State Sen . Edgar G. "Sonny"
Mouton Jr .
Henry has been endorsed by a trio
of !Auisiana 's most prestigious
"good government" groups and
three of the state 's four biggest
newspapers.
That support may not mean much,
however, in a state that once inspired author A. J. Uehling to comment: "Politics In !Auisiana more
closely resembles that of a banana
republic than in any one of the 48
states."
The passage of time has brought
two more states into the union and a
veneer
of
contemporary
sophistication to a media-{)riented
gubernatorial campaign that
probably wiU cost the candidates
more than $21) million.
But politics in the Pelican State
remains a tradition-bound spectacle
urunatched elsewhere in the nation .

Business mirror
NEW YORK I AP) - If you did
what the Fed did earlier this month.

MAN, '{ou'RI;: GETTING

md1sputable momtors of the
economy, and those who compile
them are those most aware of the
defic1enc1es . Most numbers are , in
fact , not counts but calculatwns.
What's theifference• A calculation
is the product of a formula, one that
m1ght be weighted or seasonally
adjusted . It corl.ains an element of
arbitrariness, of subjectivity. It is
often, If not always. revised .
Monthly retail sales, for example,
are often revised . So, too, the
monthly

index

eccnomic

of

indicaoors. Sometimes the JObless
rate, too . And the jobie'i.' rate . of
course , IS seasonally adjusted as
well.

Ford 's smaU "Tin Lizzie " became
so popular that the average price of
auwmobiles dropped from $3,000 in
1900 to $605 by 1916. Ford's four cylinder models were raised from
$345 to $645 in 1917. Standard mass
production enabled Ford to turn out
his cars faster than other auto
makers .

YOV~

Crime, Country-Style
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
Indiana farmers used to worry
about kids cherry-llombing their
mailboxes. Now those same kids are
often high on drugs or booze, and
farmers are locking their doors
against thieves and vandals.
CatUe..-ustling In New MeXIco
jumped 300 percent in the past year .
Fruit by the truckload is routinely
ripped off In F1orida.
From the cornfields of Ohio to the
coalfields of West Virginia to the
cow country of the Southwest , an
almost fivefold increase In crime In
the past two decades is threatening
the easygoing, secure lifestyle of
rural America .

Annual FBI statistics show that
since 1960, crime in rural America is
mcreasing more rapidly than III
urban areas .

In 1960, the rural crime rate was
423 mcidents per 100,000 population .
In 1977, the latest year for which
figures are available, the rate stood
nearly five times higher at 2,012 per
100,000 population. During the same
period, crime In metropolitan areas
rose about four times higher .
Put another way, In 1960 the odds
of someone In a rural area being a
crime victim were about one in 23e .
By 1977, the odds were ooe in 49.
Profes!llr Howard Phillips of Ohio
State University says the FBI
figures show that rural crime is now
roughly equal to urban rates
reached in 1967 .
"The question I have," says
Phillips, "is do you have to catch up
to the problems of urban ccenters
before Washington and others will
pay attention'"
Information on the nature and
extent of the problem is sketchy, but
researchers generaUy agree rural
crime has certain characteristics :
- Property crime is the leading
problem. especiaUy vandaUsm and
theft . PhiUips estimates that in rural
Ohio, vandalism accounts for as
much as 50 percent of crime . Purdue
University studies of two Indiana
counties found vandalism accounted
for 23 percent of crime.
In Hampshire County, W.Va.,
farm equipment theft is the most
prevalent crime , accordmg to
researchers Thomas Bean and

Layle Lawrence, and a local hunter
there was recenUy caught shooting
up a farmer's house .
This swruner, someone took a

four -wheel drive vehicle and ripped
through cornfields on the outskirts of
Toledo , Ohio.

StlllpfCI.

Critics aren't unanimous on whom

w blame. Some claim to see errors

L:":-" . ,, ,,~;:,,. -" ,,.,00:"' - J
•

Howser new manager

Meet Southern Tornadoes

Martin fired again.

Today's
commentary
.,

NEW YORK I AP ) - Billy Martin
out , after another strike call.
In the wake of an alleged fight in
Bloomington , Minn. , the free swinging Martin was fired Sunday
as manager of the New York
Yankees and replaced by one-time
coach Dick Howser.
Yankee
owner
George
Steinbenner, supportive of Martin in
many of his earlier controversies ,
apparently had reached the limit of
his endurance after the manager 's
latest news-making incident last

Here we don't go again?

numbers, that are regularly revised
(corrected) or which have long been

I

i&gt;1 onday . Ort. 29, 1!1&gt;

WERE h'I CH!

'-r-Jf..I AT HAP PE NE.D

government

of methodology, and blame the
government. Others cootend that
those who accept the numbers as
chiseled in granite are themselves to
blame.
Both schools abhor what they feel
is a mindless reliance oo numbers as
the basic Interpreter of the
economy. Businessmen, unions,
presidents, offer them as concrete
testimony to lhe correctness of lheir
positions.
The fact is that they are not

Yov,

Editorial opinions,
comments

o' · ,

Around the country, tractors ,
ccmblnes and other expensive farm
machines are easy prey for thieves ,
because many rural Americans
can't get used fD the idea of locking
things and removing keys .
- Rural crime is generally not as
violent as urban crime. but the
murder rate in rural areas is only

slighUy less than in cities.
- Rural criminals are almost
always young males. They usually
commit their crimes in their home
county , although not in the same
town .
"One thing's for sure. It's not
people from metropolitan areas
running out and victimizing rural
areas," says Purdue researcher
Joseph Donnermeyer .
Several reasons are offered for the
rise in rmal crime . A leading cause

cited is the lack of law enforcement
per!llnnel m rural areas.
A second factor is the wealth in
many country towns : there's plenty
worth stealing and not much
protecting it. Rural America is
much more affluent these days .
In

Montmorenci,

Ind .,

Thunderbirds are parked In front of
$100,000 homes . As often as not, the
keys are left in the cars, and the
front doors of the houses are
unlocked .
Inside are stereos, color TVs and
microwave ovens .
New highways and new industry
have helped open the way for crime
in rural America . Strange cars
cruise through, strangers move in .
In many towns, city people buy
country homes. The distinction
between country and suburb is
graduaUy blurring .
Phillips notes that the past decade
witnessed the first increase in rural
population in years . Rural
communities are losing their first
line of defense : knowing your
neighbor. knowing who belongs .
"What you have is homogeneous
communities becoming more
heterogeneous. People don't know
each other," he says.
Life for rural teen-agers has also
changed . In many states, tight
money has forced smaU high schools
to coosolidate Into sprawling county
schools just as crowded as their city
cousins .

Donnermeyer says peer pressure
and lack of adult attention in these
county schools often lead to drug
use, drinking and sometimes crime .
to
Ironically ,
according
sociologists, rural America finds
itself facing the same basic problem
faced by crime-ridden city
neighborhoods : the ripping of the
social fabric , of knowing and caring
about neighbors.
Many, Including the federal Law
Enforcement
Assistance
Administration and the National
Sheriffs Association , feel the answer
is to restore the strength of country
neighborhoods , to~.ke the
neighbors care again .
Since 1972, the sheriffs' group has
received an annual $250,000 grant
from LEAA to operate a National
Neighborhood Watch Program . The
program, initiaUy geared toward the
suburbs, is shifting its emphasis
ooward rural crime .
Director Ben Gorda says the
program teaches people to fight
crime
· with
common·sense
precautions l!ke locking doors and
vehicles and instaUing anti-burglary
devices .
It also encourages people to keep
an eye on strange cars driving along
rw-al roads , and note license plates
if they appear suspicious.
But beyond such programs, many
who have studied rural crime
complain the problem bas gotten
meager attention from government.
"There is a myth about rural
areas being relatively crime-free,
and that's not true," says
Donnenneyer. "I doo 'I think the
government ·ecogniz"" the problem
yet. "

By Don Graff
So you thought that once the
doUar-a-gallon barrier had been
breached, the gasoline shortage
would be over'
So you were wrong .
The word from the experts in
government and the oil industry is
that another supply pinch and a
return of long lines at the pumps are
in store for the United States by next
summer thanks to anticipated
production cutbacks In a clutch of
OPEC countries that produces
three-quarters of U. S. crude im·
porta.
Saudi Arabia, the No . 1 suppUer,
has already given notice of intent to
cut back on the first of the year by a
million barrels daily , the bonus output it has been providing to get us
out of this year's shortage. Nigeria,
Libya and Venezuela are also
reducing production , and
revolutionary turmoil that has
already cut deeply Into Iranian supplies is·expected to worsen.
The actual shortfaU may amount
fD only a few percentage points of
total U. S. imports. But the balan&lt;&gt;!
between supply and demand is now
so close that a few points wiU have
national impact.
The forecasters see one possibility
of averting next year's shortage
rerun - a major recession that
would diminish worldwide demand
for oil.
That's good news?
No, but it might weD turn out to be
far from the worst if another
forecast turns out to be anywhere
near the mark . This is a long-range
survey of supply and demand
produced by a Boston-based
economic think tank, Arthur D. Little Inc., and it makes dismal reading
indeed .
Looking ahead a decade, the surveyors anticipate strenuous efforts
to expand the energy supply. But
even aUowing for mallimum benefit
from increased Alaskan production,
development of new offshore fields
and Improved recovery methods in
older fields, domestic production is
likely to decline from the 10.3 million
barrels per day of 1978 to 8.5 mllion
in 1990.
Total synthatic and other unconventional fuel producl!&lt;lfl may by
then be the equivalent ci a million

is

barrels per day, half or less of the
administration's target under the
yet-to-be-legislated ~lion energy
program.
Meanwhile, world markets will be
tightening and OPEC prices rising .
The upshot, as the survey sees it,
is that "significant changes In
American economic growth and
lifestyles may be required" to
reduce oil demand to the level of the
curtailed supply .
It is a situation in which we could
weD be looking back to the summers
of '79 and ;Ml as the good old energy
days .
Of course, forecasts are at best
only educated guesses at what the
future holds. They may be solid
enough in their bases - current
realities. But it is the variables unanticipated deveiOJXIIents - that
reaDy shape that future. Was there a
forecaster I 0 years ago anywhere
near close to defining accurately the
realities of our energy situatioo
today'
The actual situatioo in 1990 may be
very different from the grim picture
presented here - for the better, we
can always hope, but quite possibly
for the worse.
'The bottom llDe
What will cost $1.2 million, take
two years to complete and have us
reading at the ninth-grade level?
The simplified tu fonns that the
Internal Revenue Service is under
congressional mandate to produce
and that it is now commissioning a
team of private consultants to
develop.
The intended result is a form the
taxpayer can comprehend and complete more easily than the present
version, which supposedly was
designed for thOBe who read on an
11th-grade level.
The convenience Q( the taxpayer is
not the real reason for the change,
however. 1bat's a matter of dollars
and cents.
The complexities of the present
fonns are held largely respoll8ible
for roughly 5 percent ci relurll8 that
contain errors , and these cost money
to correct. The new fonns are el·
pected to reduce the error percentage and thus save money - for
the IRS, not the ta:r:payers.
It figures .

Ohio perspective
COLUMBUS, Ohio 1 AP 1 - A
Columbus Democrat feel s law
enforcement officers need some
state-supported protectiOn a~amst
court suits filed agaiJlSI them .
Rep Michael Stinziano , who
introduced a bill this week creating
a state liability msurance
commission , said police officers risk
their homes, savmgs and other
family possessions every time they
put on their uniforms .
" Law enforcement officers can be

held liable for any action taken while
on duty, and many can no longer
obtain
liability
msurance ,"
Stinziano said .

" II a police officer is sued, he can
be held responsible for all
legal expenses, and if found
liable, even though his action was in
U1e lme of duty, he can be held
per sonally responsible for the
judgement."
An officer could be forced w sell
his horne, car and aU other family
possessions to pay the costs ,
Stmziano said .
The insurance commission which

Stinziano's bill establishes would
make liability insurance available
for all public employees of counties,
municipalities and townships . In
addition, employees could purchase
the insurance on an Individual basis
if the governmental unit chooses not
00 provide the protection , Stinziano
said .
The price of liability insurance has
skyrocketed in recent years, and
many firms which previously wrote
police liability insurance no lDflger
offer the coverage, he said .
"This has created a crisis for our
police off.icers and department•
whic h have diffi culty finding
insurers and then find the rates
prohillltive ," said Stlnziano, who
ch'a 1rs the House Ins uranc e
Committee .

Ballot Issue 1, which proposes a lll·
eent deposit Ofl glass and plastic
beverage contamers, has been the
subject of numerous newspaper
articles and broadcast reports
recently .
But a column written by Steve
Wilson, capital bureau chief for
Gannett newspapers, took perhaps
the roost personal approach .
Wlison, an avid jogger, told of his
encounter w1th a can carelessly
tossed aside
" Somemone,

for

some

reason

unknown to me, decided the
roadside was the best place to
dispose of a beer can," Wilson
wrote . "As my left foot hit the can, I
tripped. The nearby guard rail aimed at protecting pedestrians
from passing automobiles suddenly became P lethal weapon .
"As I struck the guard rail, my
right leg was ripped open, and I
ended up on the ground staring at
the beer can that had put me there ."
The cut in Willlln 's leg required 36
stitches.

Tornadoes always move in an
easterly, most often northeasterly
direction . Inside the fWIIIel, the
barometric pressure is ntremely
low, causing buildings to blow apart
from the outward pressure of the air
inside them .

T11E DAILY SENTIN!.
IUSP81 ..... 1

·

week .

Bryan Lawrence
" · 1110 lbl!.
Senior Center

John Porter
:Hi, 125 lbl!.
FreabmanQB

Martin, who has a long history of
similarly sordid affairs , wa s
accused of punching an IUinois man
last Wednesday night in the lobby of
a Bloomington hotel. His aUeged
Cooper
of
vic tim, Joseph
Lincolnshire, Ill ., was sent to a
hospital where he required 15 to 20

Robin Fortone
:Hi, 1451bs.
Junior Back

Once dominant powers lose
ByHALBOCK
AP Sports Writer
The torch may have been passed,
mce and for aU , in the National
FootbaU Conference's West and
Central Diylsions.
Los Angeles and Minnesota have
ruled those two divisioos for years
but both have faced disheartening
reversals this season and Sun~ay 's
games may have signalled the ~nd of
their control.
Los Angeles surrendered first
place In the NFC West, losing for the
first time since 1961 to the suddenl¥sizzling New York Giants, 20-14, and
dropping one game back of New
Orleans, which beat Washington 1410.
Minnesota, six times champions of
the Central, went head-«Hlead with
this year 's leader, Tampa Bay. The
Vikings ccarne out on the short end
of a 12-10 score and slipped three
games back of the Bucs .
Elsewhere in the National
FootbaU League Sunday, Houston
edged the New Y&lt;rk Jets 27-24,
Pittsburgh downed Dallas 14-3,
Buffalo edged Detroil 20-17,
Baltimore ouUasted New England
31-26, Cleveland ripped St. !Auis 382ll, Miami beat Green Bay 'll-7,
Cincinnati stunned Philadelphia 3713, Denver whipped Kansas City 20-3
and Chicago edged San Francisco
~Tl . Oakland defeated San Diego
~22 Thuroday night .
SeatUo plays at AUanta in the
Mooday night game.
GlaDIS 20, Rams 14
Rookie Phil Sinuns threw a pair of
ID passes as the Giants won their
fourth in a row and dropped the
Rams to a ~ record and second
place in the NFC West. where
they've woo the title for sil straight
years .
It was lhe third straight loss for
Injury-riddled Los Angeles and
marked the first time since 1966 that
the Rams have been under .500 this
late in the season.
SaiDlo 14, Redsklns 10
New Orleans' defense sacked
Redskin
quarterback
Joe
Theismann seven times and stopped
WaSIIngton 18 times m goal-tQi!O
plays to deliver a vttal victory for
the Saints.
Archie Manning hooked up with
Wes Chandler on a 45-yard m pass
play and Tony Galbreath's 2-yard
burst supplied the ocber Saints' m .
But the defense turned the game.
Bucs 12, Villngo 10
Tampa Bay came from behind
against Minnesota, with Ricky BeD's
2-yard TD in the fourth quarter
supplying the winning points. The
Bucs had traDed 1&lt;h'l before Neil
O'Donoghue's 4-4-yard field goal
narrowed the Vikings' lead in the
tllird quarter.
The victory moved the NFC
Central~eading Bucs to a 7-2 record
cunpared to~ for the Vikings, sll:time champs of the divisioo.
Steelers U, Cowboys 3
Franco Harris rushed for 102
yards and scored TDs on MliiS of 1
and 48 yards, leading Pittsburgh
past Dallas in a rematch of the
Super Bowl X and Xlll oppooents.
The Steeler defense limited the
Cowboys to 79 yards on the ground ,
73 by Tony Dorsett, who had his
string of 100-yard games ended at
four .

Oilers %7, Jets 24
Tool Fritsch's 35-yard overtime
field goal was the differnce for
Houston after New York had rallied

for a pair of fourth quarter TDs to
send the game into an extra period.
" Everytune I look up and see that
kid oo the field, I thank God for our
immigration laws," said Houston
Coach Bum Phillips of his Austrian
placekicker who also delivered an
earlier overtime victory against
Oncinnati with a three-pointer .
Bears 28, t9ers Tl
Walter Paytoon scored three TDs
and rushed for 162 yards, becoming
the first NFL player to go past 1,000
yards this season, but Chicago
needed a 48-yard bomb from Mike
Phipps to James Scott with 1:291eft
to defeat San Francisco.
Steve De Berg passed f&lt;r a careerhigh 332 yards for the losers.
Dolpblns 27, Packers 7
Bob Griese shook off a slump,
passing for 287 yards and leading
Miami past Green Bay . DurieI
Harris set Dolphin club records with
10 catches for 180 yards

Saturday's
college
results
By The Assoc::iated Press
EAST
Boston Colleoe 29 , Army 16
Colgate 24 , Columbia u

Cornell 21. Dartmouth 10
Delaware 4(), William and Mary 0

Holy Cross 14, Brown 1
Penn St 31, W. Virginia 6
Pittsburgh 24, Navv 7
Princeton 9, Harvard 7

Slippery Rock 14, Edinboro St . 13
Svracuse 25. Miami, Fla 14
Yale 24, Penn 6

SOUTH
Alabama Jl, V irginia Tech 7
Citadel 49, Wofford 30
Flor ida St . 2... Louisiana St . 19
Georg ia 20, Kentucky 6
Maryland 27, OukeO

Mc Ne-ese St _ 24, Tn _- Chitttanooga

Broncos 20, Chiefs 3
Denver moved into a first place tie
with San Diego In the AFC West by
downing Kansas aty
Craig Morton threw a pair of first
half TDs and Jon Keyworth added
another score on a 32-yard option
pass .
Bengals 37, Eagles 13
Ken Anderson threw two TD
passes and ran f&lt;r anocher score as
Cincinnati surprised Philadelphia .
Rookie Jim Browner set up two of
the Bengal scores with an
Interception and a recovered fumble
and Dick Jauron also recovered two
funobles for the Bengals, who won
their second gaiile.
Archie Griffin ran for 103 yards for
Cincinnati and caught one of
Anderson's TD passes. Pete Johnson
grabbed the other and also ran one
yard for another TD.
Colts 31, Patriots 28
Joe Washington's third TD of the
game, a 12-yard sweep with 4:51 to
play, carried Baltimore past New
England. The loss dropped the Pats
into a first place tie with Miami in
the AFC East.
Bert Joo~ passed f&lt;r 280 yards for
the Colts, who won their seccond
straight game sin&lt;&gt;! he returned to
actioo .
Bills 20, Lions 17
Joe Ferguson, the NFL's leading
""-""""• threw a 7-yard TD pitch to
Reuben Gant with 1:25 left, giving
Buffalo its comeback victory over
Detroit.
Ferguson threw f&lt;r 339 yards for
the Bills, who blocked a 42-yard Lion
field goal try as time ran out to
secure their victory.
Browns 38, Cardinals 20
Cleveland came from behind
against St. !Auis, taking the lead on
a !-yard TD by Pat Moriarity In the
third quarter . Then the Browns put
the Cardinals away on three fourthquarter TDs by Dave lAgan, Cleo
Miller and Dino HaU.

17

Memphis 51. 22. N. Texas St 0
Mississippi 6J, vanderbilf 2B

N . Carolina St . 16, Clemson 13
s . Mississipp i 21 , Mississippi St . 7
SW LouisianaJl. Cal Poly · Pomona
9

Tennessee St 17, Southern U 6
Texas ·Arlington 30, Louisiana
Tech 16
Tulane 12, Georgia Tech 7
Tulsa 20, Florida 10 ·
Villanova 2.4, Marshall 14
VMI21 , Furman 20
Wake Forest ~2 . Auburn 38

MIDWEST
Ball St _38, Bowling Green 23
Cent . Michigan 44, Kent St . 21
Cincinnati 17, Richmond 1.4
Illinois 17, Minnesota 17 , tie
Indiana St. 23, Illinois St. 21
Iowa 2~. W i sconsin 13
Kansas St . l9, Missouri 3
Michigan 27, Indiana 21
Nebraska 38, Colorado 10
Notre Dame 18, S. Carolina l7
Ohio St. 42. Michigan St . o
Oklahoma 38, Iowa S1. 9
Oklahoma St . 30. Kansas 17
Purdue 20, Northwestern 16
S. Illinois 21, N . Illinois 11
Toledo 2-4, M iami, Ohio 21
W . Texas St . 58, Wichita St . 0
W . Michigan 20, Ohio U . 6
SOUTHWEST
Baylor 16, Texas Christian J
Hawai i 27, Texas·El Paso 12
Houston 13, Arkansas 10
Lamar 20, Arkansas St. 10
TexaslO, Southern Meth . 6
Texas A and M _.1, Rice 15
FAR WEST
Arizona St. 28, Utah St . I&lt;
Brigham Young 59, New Mexico 7
Colorado St . 20, Air Force 6

Fresno St. 33, Pacif ic u 10
Nev ·Las V"'JaS 28, Wyoming 24
~regan 37, Washington St 26
ur"'lon St . JJ. Stanford 31
San DI"'JO St . 17, Utah 13
San Jose St. SJ, Long Beach St . 42
Southern Cal2~. California 14
Washington 3~. UCLA 14

Pop Warner coached 313 winmng
college-football games. one less than
the record-holder, Amos Alonro
Stagg .

Archie, Jim Browner
lead Bengal victory
CINCINNATI ( AP) - Archie
Griffin felt he had something to
prove. So did rookie Jim Browner
and the rest of the Qncinnati team .
So
the fired-up
Bengals
overwhelmed the Philadelphia
Eagles 37-13 Sunday for only their
second National Football League
vicfDry this season. The other win
was against the Pittsburgh Steelers.
"This victory shows we've got
something, that we're not a fly-by night baUclub," Griffin said.
Last week, the two-time Heisman
Trophy winner said he might ask to
be traded if he didn 't get the baD
enough to show what he can do .
Sunday he ran for 103 yards in six
carries, one of them a 63-yard run,
and caught a pass for a OOIIChdown .
"Yeah, it's all related," said
Griffin , who had ooly his second 100yard1Jlus game in the jros despite
doing it routinely at Ohio State . " lt
feels good oo win again."
Browner got off to a slow start
with the Bengals in summer trainmg
camp, but he was ready for his first
start Sunday in place of the Injured
Marvin Cobb.
He intercepted a Ron Jaworski
pass and recovered an Eagle fumble
just minutes later, and both led to
Qncinnati scores.
"When you've practiced as much
as I have for this opportunity, you
can't hall~ep 11 when you get the
chance to play," said Browner, the
younger brother of Bengal defensive
end Ross Browner. "I've been
working a long time for this."
The Cincinnati defense forced four
turnovers ,

resulting

in

four

touchdowns and one field goal, but
Coach Homer Rice said the Bengals
didn 't do anything they hadn't been
doing while losing seven games.
"We did about what we've been
doing , but you might say we were
more successful," the low-key Rice
said. "We're playing very good now,
and we have people healthy "
Eagle Coach Dick Vermeil was in
no mood to mince words, though.

$AVE
MONEY.

" It makes me mad to play San!B
Claus with th e foo tbali We stopped
ourselvl!s, "

he sa id. " Cincinna ti

played weD , bu t when you turn the
ball over like we did 1four
turnovers ), it helps them play well .
" If you get beat, you get beat. But
when you give a game away ... "
Quarterback Ken Anderson threw
a pair of touchdown passes for
Cin cinnati and ran for another
score . Pete Johnson crashed one
yard for a touchdown, and Chris
Bahr kicked three field goals.
The Eagles. 6-3 , were held to a
pair of field goals by Tony Franklin
until reserve quarterba ck John
Walton and wide recei ver Harold
Carmichael combined on an eightyard touchdown pass with 53
seconds left in the game.
Earlier, Carmichael caught a
four-yard pass from Jaworski to
equal Danny Abramowicz' NFL
record for 105 consecutive games
with at least one reception .
"We knew they weren't a 1-7
football team," Jaworski said. "We
wanted 00 come right out and Ulke
~~ol. But it was u p \ day for

oo investigate the case. The owner
appeared to prejudge Martin when
he commented :
" We just can't have him getilng
into these things every two mooths.
It 's not good for organized
basebaU ."
But Stein brenner had nochlng to
say Sunday after letting Martin go,
ending a stormy retatlooship that
started in the middle of the 1975
season . No definitive statement
concerning Martin was Included In
the Yankee announcement, just
these succinct worda:
''The New York Yankees
announced tonight that Billy Martin
wiU not be returning as manager of
the Yankees."
It was the second time in hlo ·
controversy-studded career that
Martin has parted with the Yankees.
In the middle of the 1978 sea110n he
resigned under pressure after a
series
of
problems
with
management and superstar Reggie
Jackson, uttering his Infamous
phra se that Steinbrenner and
Ja ckson deserved each other
because "one is a born liar and the
other is a convicted liar."
But less than one week after Bob
Lernob had been hired to replace
Martm, Steinbrenner reversed hlo
f1eld
with
the
shocking
announcement that Martin would
return as manager in 1980.
While neither Steinbrenner nor
Mart in was available for comment
Sunday, Howser was.
" I've been around New York 12
years ," he sald . "I understand what
a manager of the Yankees has to go
through ."
Howser sald he then flew Sunday
to Ocala, F1a., where Steinbrenner
has a horse famo , w see the owner
and "the deal was conswzunated."
Although Howser had settled In
the Tallahassee. Fla ., area to get out
of the glaring major league
spoilight, he said: " It would be hard
for anyooe to Jurn down the New'
York Yankees ' managing job,
especiaUy when you've been part or'
the organization for 12 years. I'm a
Yankee. I know the players falrly ·
well ."

PREVENTION
IS lHE
BEST POLICY

Weekend Sports Trans.-ction5
8y The ASSOCiaPed

Press

BASKETBALL
National
Basketball Association
CL E VELAND CAVAL I ERS
Traded Bobby " Bingo " Smith , for ·
ward. to the San Diego Clippers for a
third round 1980 draft c ho tce and
future cons id erations

Over a three-sea son span , 1968-&lt;i970, B1ll Burnell of Arkansas scored
at least one touchdown m 23 st rrught

--···-

games.

.-cooo TIMES SPECIALW
••
•

I

13" PIZZA •

1

You r cho1ce of a ny •

one to p p ong
Reg $3 .5 5

f 199

J t»opl Only

EG1nO'
s
i
I. Allilii .I

As an independent insurance
agenc y, our primary funct ion is
to pr ovide policies which afford
linanc 1al pF"otection in case of
IO!»S

But, we also have a vital In ·
teresf in loss prevention, as
should our c lients. We encourage
c are, caution and safety
prev ent ive measures which can
keep that car acc ident from happeni ng , that building fire from
star t 1ng , that home burglary
from be ing comm i t1ed .
Pre vent ion saves life, limb and
p rope r ty . and helps control in ·
sura nce costs and premiums.
W hen losses do occur. our
po l i&lt;. yhol d ers can count on pro ·
tec 1tn g and serving in time and
need But we still say - preven tion ts th e bestpolicy .

DALE C. WARNER
INS.
992·2143

102 w. Main
Pomeroy

I

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UP. to 30% with Certain-teed
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Take a day or less to tnstall
Certat n-teed Ftber Glass

An te Insulation bet&gt;Neen
the jOISTS tn you r an te fl()()j
t• s th e mos t economtcal
way to save btCjj money on

those sMyrocket tno heat tng
and COOi tng costs vou ·u
be warmer tn Winter and
COOler tn su mmer. too
Come tn now We 'll shc:M
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to d o the tab

"ow

Qutckly and eastt y
Ba" 3 fr th•c • IS''I. w •Oe i!Jn O
48 sq 11
Ban s oert o•i!l teO i!lt 2J tor

•e torlQ cc ~e·

lr•--

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use

D et wet! '~

16'

or 24· tlam.no

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in the
ctmer's -seat
at Crty LoaD.
When )W need mmey 10

keep
carream,
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iJr any)001'
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Loans qulcldy, edy and
dh mP't•ation. \bu
canlllirrow db tnlll
whert people Sl9e db
ltusl Otrl.oln a:
-IIIWI Wlt'ID belp.

sm.

The Department of Taxation say
Ohioans trimmed their use of
gasoline by 3ii million gallons in the
12-month period ending in August.
The figures rejresent a ; 19
percent dec-rease for the year,
according wthe department's motor
fuel tax report for CXtober .

POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO.

Howe ver, the eonsumplion of

diesel fuel increased almost four
n11llion gallons during the perio&lt;l, a
jump of 6.14 percent, the report
says.

'

stitches to close cuts on his lip .
Mar tin den ie d t hrowing any
punches. But just the news wa s
enough 00 get Steinbrenner up in the
air over the weekend, jetting off to
New York from his home in Florida

• •
'

MAIN ST.
The Department Sfor(' of Buildin1. Since 1915
I

'

L.c ..... toHeaoodlr.....

n ... c:te, a..-.,:......,-

,.

�5-TheDailySentinel.Middlepv,1 ·1' UIIh .- • ''

4-TheDallYSentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Monday , Oct. 29, 1979

:vt cday .'\1·t 29, 19&gt;

ON RECEIVING END - Eastern's senior quarterback Brian Bissell
who normally throws passes wa.; on the receiving end of one Friday night
in this action shot against the North Gallia Pirates . Closing in is the
Pirates' Jim Caines (51 l. Eastern defeated NGHS, 2().8 .

Pro standings
National Football league
At A Glance

By The Associated PreH
American Conference
East

W. L. T . Pet . PF
Miam i
6 3 0 667 173
New Eng l and 6 3 0 667 135
Buffalo
5 0 444 194
N . Y . Jets
4 5 0
194
Baltimore
3 6 0 333 133

•

.....

PA
133
149
159
117
179

Central

P ittsburgh

7 1 0

Cleve'and

6
6

liB 226 150
3 0 667 211 205
3 0 667 103 206
7 7 0 111 163 110

Housfon
Cinc innati

West

667 137
J&gt;l 224
5
150 105
14)
5 0
3 l 0 .315 ll1

1...
159
184
131
161

National Conference
East
I 2 0
Dallas
176 103
Philadelphia 6 3 0 661 165
Washington 6 3 0 .""7 111
N Y . Giants 4 l 0 . 444 148
St . L0Ui S
2 7 0 222 153

146
163
11 5
119
1'1'1

Denver
San Diego
Oakland
Kansas City
Seattle

3 0
3 0
0

6
6

••

....

Central
Tampa Bay
Chicaoo

Minnesota
Green Bay
Oefroi t

7 2 0 .778 lBO
5 0 .
150
4 5 0
114
3 6 0 .333 130
1 a 0 111 141

•

West
4 0

New Orleans 5

143
166
195
116
195

.....
....

111

195

5 o 444 155
Atlanta
3 5 o 375 160
San Fran .
1 8 0 Ill 176
Thursday's Game

185

556

LosAngeles .4

181

14

Cincinnati 37, PhiladE&gt;Iph ia 13
MOnd~y · s Game
Seattle at Atlanta
Sunday, Nov . 4
Cleveland at Philadelphid
Dallas af New York Giants
New England at Buffalo
Tampa Bay at Atlanta
Washington at Pittsburgh
Cincinnat i at Baltimore
M in nesota at St . Louis
San Diego at Kansas C i t y
Detroit aj Chicago
LOS Angeles at Seattle
New Orleans at Denver
New York Jets at Green Bay
San Francisco at Oakland
Monday , Nov . s
Houston at Miam i

National
Basketball Association
Af A Glance
By The Associated Press
Eastern Conference
Arlanfic Division
W . L. Pet. GB

Philadelphia
Boston

B 0 1.000
6 2 750 2

New York
Washingto n

5
2

New Jersey

2 6 .250 6

.556 3 1'1
286 51 11

Central Division
SanAntonio
5 2 .714
Atlanta
5 5 ..500
Detroit
4 5 .444
Indiana
4 6 .-400
Houston
2 5 .286

Cleveland

1111
2
2 111

J

2 7 .222 4

W . L. T . Pis GF

lil haul in a 1!1-yard Sipe aeria l. Soon
Sipe whipped passes of 24 and 9
yards, and three plays later rookie
Pat Moriarty plunged iniD the end
zone from the 1.
Moriarty's touchdown, while
establishing only a 17-13 Cleveland
edge, for aU intents and purposes
signaled the demise of the Browns •
foe .
The Cards ran only three more
plays before punting back w the
Cleveland, which quickly embarked
oo a 64-yard drive . Sipe's !).yard
pass lil Dave logan capped the

advance . Soon afterward, Cleo
Miller raced 39 yards me play alter
a St . Louis fwnble and Dino Hall
turned the contest inlil a rout by
sweeping left end ID sc&lt;re on a 52yard jaunt.
Grounding out yardage at a 5.4
clip , Cleveland's l'llllhing doolinated
the Cards despite the early e:rits of
the two Pruitts .
Greg Pruitt lasted ooly one roo,
leaving the field with a knee injury
after a 3-yard gain on the game's
first play . His running mate also
suffered a bruised knee but was not

Saturlhy's high
school grid scores
By The Associated Press
S1turday's Results
Akron Buchtel 10, Akron Hoban 7
Akron Garfi~ ld 42, Akron South 14

Ash . St . John

22,

Ash . HarbOr 0

Ayersville 10, Tinora 7
Batavia 17, Bethei ·Tate 13
Cadiz 35, Buckeye North 21
Cleve . Univ 38, Painesville Har
vey 0
Conotton Valley 19, Indian Va l ley

S . 13
Day . Roth 23 , Day . Stivers ·
Patterson 0
Elyria Cath . 34, Bedford Chane I o
Fairless 16. Canal Fulton NW 8
Fremont St .Joseph 8 , Clyde 6
Hudson W. Reserve 23. Kisk i Prep
8
Kirtland 6, Beac hwood 6. tie
Lakewood Sf. Edwards 26, Tot . St
Francis 12
Lorain Sr . 51 , KingO
Lud low, Ky . 35, Ci n . Country Dew

14
Man c hester· 16 , Tuscarawas
Va l ley 8
Medina Bu ckeye 54, Lutheran

West 0

Milan Edison 41, Norwal~ St . Paul

20
Newark
Cath . 13 ,
Watkins
Memorial 0
Niles 14, Alliance l3
Parma Padua 19, Mentor Lake
Cath . 17
Poland Seminary 35, W . Branch 21
R ichmond Hts . J9, Warrensville

Hts . 1•
Shaker Hts. 13, Cleve land Hts . 11
Steubenvi lle Cath . 4. E . Liverpool

7

Tol Bowsher 2e, ToL Waite u
Warren W. Reserve 24, Young . Ur
suline 17
Waver l y 35, North Adams 0
Young Rayen 21. Young . East 0

Why drive all over town ? Do your g &lt;fl s hop p&lt;ng the easy way through the full -color
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Pro Hockey At A Glance
By The Associated Press
National Hockey League
Campbell Conference
Patrick Division

2-41

Oakland 45. San Di~o 22
Sunday's Games
Pittsburgh 14, Dallas J
New Orleans 14, Wash ington 10
Houston 27 , New York Jets 2.&amp;, ot
Buffalo 20. Detroit 17
Clevel8nd 38 , St . Lou is 10
Baltimore 31. New England 16
Tampa Bay 12, M i nnesota 10
Chicago 28 , San Fran cisco 17
Miami 27. Green Bay 7
Denver 10, Kansas Ci t y 3
New York Gidnts 10. L O'l Angeles

4
5

Western Conference
Midwest Division
Milwaukee
B 1 889
Kansas C1fy
4 5 444 4
Ch icago
3 7 300 51' 1
Utah
2 6 250 5 1 "}
Denyer
1 l
125 6 1 "}
Pactfic Division
Porfland
9 1 900
Los A nge les
6 2 750 ']
P11oen1x
6 4 .600 J
Go lden Sta te
4 5
.u...t .:P 1
Seaffle
" 5 44-4 ,.. , 1
San D1ego
4 6 400 5
Saturday 's Games
Boston 100 . A tlanta 95
N ew York 9.&amp; , New J.ersey 91
Philadelphia 11 2, C leveland 106
San Antonio 128, 1nd 1ana 121
M ilwaukee 132. Detroit 118
Denver 116, Utah 96
San 0 1ego 110 . Seaftle 105
Go lden State 101. Kansas Ci ty 95
Sunday's Games
N ew Jersey 120, Houston 11 s
Los Angeles 97 , Golden State 90
Phoen1x 89 , Portland 88
Sea ttl e 108 , Ch ica go 97
Kansas City 106, San Diego 10 1
Monday ' s Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Houston at Cleveland
Los Angeles at c hie ago
New Yo rk at Denver
San Anton1o at Phoen i x

ST . LOUlS I API - Neither a pair
of ill-timed fwnbles nor the loss of
regular running backs Greg and
Mike P ruitt served to deter the
Cleveland Browns .
The National Football League
u.am, stung by adversity in the
opening half, merely regrouped
rapidly and stormed SUnday to a 31120 triwnph over the St. Louis
Cardinals.
Cleveland's wide margin of play
en route to its sixth victory in nine
games favorably unpressed Coach
Sam Rutigliano .
" In the first half, I wasri 't really
!A!rribly coocerned because we were
moving the ball," he said. "It was
probably a measure of some growth
oo our part - just by losing two
outstanding players like that. It 's
really what great learns have to do .''
Whether the Browns, who
remained in the thick of the title
chase in the American Cooference
East , fit the descriptioo ol great
remains ID be seen.
But against St . Louis, 2-7 , their
tenacity was beyond reproach. A
fwnbled pitchout early in the contest
sent the Cards to a ~ lead oo Steve
Neils ' 72-yard romp . Then, after Don
Cockroft booted a 51-yard field goal ,
a similar mishap set up Ottis
Anderson's 3-yard touchdown run .
Staring at a 13-10 deficit at the
start of the third quarter, Cleveland
began to take charge oo the
throwing ann of Brian Sipe and the
paSS&lt;atching and running abilities
of Calvin Hill.
Hill spun 2 yards from the Browns '
3{), then slipped out of the backfield

GA

Philadelphi a
6 1 1 13 40 31
NY Islanders
4 3 1 9 28 23
NY Ranger s
il
4 1 9 41 35
A tl an t a
4 4 1 9 33 29
Wash1ngton
3 6 0 6 3.&amp; 44
Smythe Division
V ancouver
il
J 1 10 30 26
Ch 1cago
3 4 2 8 21 27
W i nn ipeg
3 s 1 7 16 19
S l LOUI S
2 .&amp; J 1 2-4 31
E dm onton
1 4 4 6 32 45
Co lorado
1 5 2 4 20 28
Wales Confennce
Adams Oiv1S10n
Buffalo
6 3 1 13 37 26
Minnes.ota
5 2 1 11 35 2•
Boston
5 2 1 11 19 21
Tor onto
4.4192930
Qu ebec
3 4 1 l 11 25
Norris D iv ision
M ontrea l
6 2 1 13 39 30
L os Angele s
5 3 1 11 .t6 42
P ittsburgh
J 4 1 7 31 33
Detro1 f
2 4 1 6 26 26
Har tf ord
1 4 4 6 20 28
Saturday 's Games
Phi l adelphia at Pi t1sburgh , ppd ,
l abOr problems
Vancouver 5, Wash i ngton 3
New York I slanders 6, Chi cago"
M ontrea l 3, Detroi t 2
Buffalo 3, Quebec 0
Minnesota 7, New York Rangers 2
Atldnfa 3. St . Louis 0
Minnesota 7, New York RanQers 2
Atlanta 3, St . Louis 0
Los Angeles 7, Toronto s
Sunday's Games
Buffalo 4, Colorado 2
Hartford 2, New York Rangers 2
Philadelphia 5, Detroi t"
Quebec 5, Montreal 4
Boston 4 , Chicago 1
St . Lou is 2. Winnipeg 2. t ie
Washington 6, Edmonton .t
Monday 's Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday's Games
Mon t real at Washington
Colorado at Atlanta
Edmonton at Sf Louis
Boston at Los Angeles

You II fmd cheeses. nuts , candy, fru1ts. serv1ng trays. speCial glassware and dmnerware . Plus maple syrup from
W1sconsm . honey, fan cy preserves . an old fash1oned
coffee grinder, picn&lt;c sets , luggage . And fo r the little
people, Klaus the cuddly mouse .

SUPERAMERICA®
JludJ men tlum a gus sun!

believed to be as serioU8ly hurt.
Sipe 's
passes,
meanwhile ,
accounted for 208 yards as part of a
Browns offense which clicked off U
plays in the first and third quarters
to a St. Louis aggregate of 15.
"Cleveland played very well, "
conceded Cards Coach Bud
Wllkinson . ··we had trouble stopping
them IIi first down and second down
and third down. F&lt;r the time we had
the ball , we did okay ."

A surprise party was held recently
honoring Lydia Hysellm celebration
of her 86th birthday . The affair ,
hosted by her granddaughters,
Lydia Cleland , Ethel Mae Hysell,
Betty Spark, Barbara Hysell, and
Pat Shilts , was held at the Ashle y
Grange hall at Ashley
All six of Mrs . Hysell's children
were present for the celebration . It
was their first gathering in six
years . She received gilts and cards
from relatives and friends and
besides those attending tbe party
several neighbors called to eJrtend
their congratulations.
Attending were Ethel Grueser ,
Monessen, Pa .; Harold Hysell .

TIME TO QUIT
SARA'I'C(;A, N.Y. (AP ) - Jerry
Fi.shback, a 31-year-old star among
steeplechase jockeys, decided on the
spur of the moment w retire after
riding New Look to a victory in a
"jump race" at Saratoga .
" It seemed like the right time,"
Fi.shback said . "I was still in me
piece . I have plans for the future .
And I was able to retire on a winning
note ."

Party planned

.-oooo
--···TI1ES SPEail~

•

13" PIUA •

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Your choice of any •
one topping .

Reg . $3 .55

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45th anniversary noted
POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs . Ca r l
Moore, Pomeroy, observed lh€1r
15th wedding anniversary recent!)
with an open reception at the River ·
boat Room of the Me1gs Office.
Athens County Savings a nd Loan Co.
The affair""was hosted by their
family, Jeff and Marlene Wilso n,
Linda Jett, daughters and SGn-in law, and three granddaughters,
Kelly and Terri Jo Wilson. and IJsa ··
KayeJett.
Mr. and Mrs. Moore were married
oo Oct. 6, 1934 at the Nazar ene Parsonage in Syracuse by the Rev . Carl
Clendenin . He is lh€ son of the late
Mr . and Mrs . Lean Moore , a nd Mrs
Moore was the fanner Mabel Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Verne
Davis .
The refreshment table featured a
bouquet of dais ies and a ca ke inscribed " Happy 45th Anniversa ry,
Mabel and Carl." Kelly Wil.sun
presided at the punc h bowl , Mrs .
Wilson and Mrs. Jett, assiSted by
Paula Saunders and Patric1 a
Harri.oon served the cake, and Tern
Jo Wilson and Lisa Kaye J ett
registered the guests .
Attending the celebratiOn were
Mrs. Edith Ryther , Mr . and Mrs .
Dennis Moore and family , Mr . and
Mrs. Robert Cunningham and
Shawn, Mr. and Mrs . Bob Moore,
Mrs. Margie Cunningham , Sue F: .
Lemley and Mindy, all of Syracu-'e :
Florence Ann Bearhs, carrie Bfth
Bearhs, Mr . and Mrs . Ri chard
Vaughan, Evelyn Moore , and Ra y
Wollford, Middleport , Mr. and Mrs

Gilmore
reunzon
noted
•

The Walter Gilmore reunJun was
held recently at the Route 3:! road side park.
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Charles Zeigler , Pomeroy; Becky
and Joan Wise , Middleport ; Bar bara and Tanuny Stahl ,Pomeroy;
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Michael, Mason,
W. Va. : Rick, Darline, Ri ch and
David Stewart. Vinton ; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Zelman, Shawn TrHC)
Gilmore , Pomeroy ; Mar y
Tiemeyer, Pomeroy ; Mr. and Mrs .
James Gilmore, Laurel Cliff; Mr.
and Mrs . J . Gilmore , Jeanni e and
Jay, Pomeroy; Brenda Haggy , Pam
and Kim, Middleport ; Mrs . Hubert
Wolfe , Mr . and Mrs. Bob Manley,
Crystal and Tra cy, Middleport : Bonnie Scott Payne, Columbus ; Clyde
Dilcher, Colwnbus; Mr . and M111 . D.
Reeves, Columbus
The 83rd birthday of Wal ter
Gilmore was observed li e was
presented a cake by his dau ~-, .t er ~n ­
law , Mrs . Richard G &lt;lmore and
received many gifts

Custom full upper &amp; lower

!-Jlinderel/a meets
Home environment and dieting

was dlscussed at the Slinderella

GET YOUR FREE CATALOG AT THESE LOCATIONS:

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Iff. Ro111W r. Rh"ltft"
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1'1 • Yt n .,.,,.t-all• !"!.r I ( Murrh r • 01 V.W l,1uh1
U. , \dtm l • Dr L -" Moou·
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Ohio

4~)0 '

SECOND AND PINE
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
© 1979 Super america. Division of Ashland Oil Co .. Inc.

Report ii!J sale heard

Lydia Hysell honored
with birthday fare

Browns lose both Pruius, still win

cla3ses last week .
Three new members were
welcomed at the Middleport class
with Mary Jewell being the member
having lost the most weight.during
the week, and Peggy Lewis the rWlner-up . Mrs. Ruth Smith received
her 20 poWld ribbon.
In the Mason class, Candy Van
Meter l06t the most weight with Linda lhle as the nmner-up . One new
member was taken into the class.
Pamela Hannon lost the most
weekly weight at the Point Pleasant
clw and runners-up were Cindy
Mealge, l.A&gt;retta Wamsley, and
Darleen Bing . Mrs . J o Ann
Newsome is the instructor .

Otto MortrJeld, Kenosha. W1s.; Mr .
and Mrs. Dave Shain and Jason ,
Mr s. Mildred Spence r , Antiquity ;
Mr . and Mrs. Chester Roge111,
l"olum bus: Mrs. Ma rgaret Wyatt ,
Mason. W. Va .

Mr and Mr.&gt; . Will Mason , Water·
ford ;
Mrs . Be ulah
Krantz,
Charleston, W. Va .; Mr . and Mrs.
Lawrence McE lhinney , Frame , W.
Va .; Mr. and Mrs. Paul Grinstead,
Amy Jo, Lori and Paula, Belpre ;
Mr . and Mrs Jay Brown, Mounciwlllc. W. Va .: Paula J . SaWlders,
lmi&lt;anapoll s. Ind.; Mr. and M111.
Paul Sa unders . Mrs. Patric ia
Harnso n and Brett , Bedwell ; M111.
Anna r: . Buck Dumolt. New
i..(.•:ti ngtun : Joann K.alltz, Chester;
Mrs. Dorothy Barnes Woodard,
Langsv ill e. Mrs. Edith Ables
(;llh y. Mr . and Mrs. Thomas Scott,

A halloween party was planned for
Wednesday night when the Salisbury
Brownie Troop 1220 met at the Ente'l'ri"" United Methodist Church .
The meeting opened with the girl
scout promise and the pledge and
each girl decided to donate money to
the Juhet l.A&gt;we Food. The story of
the American flag was given by the
leader who also outlined the steps of
a flag ceremony for the troop.
Jennifer Warth and Dian e
Caruthers assisted the girls in
making pwnpkins and owls for the
craft time . Games were played and
the Brownie ring and taps closed the
meeting .

Ashley ; F:ileen Martin . Chester ,
Beulah Autherson , Racine; Helen
Vandall, Delaware; and Margar et
Wyatt, Mason , W. Va .; Ethel,
Harold and Ethel Mae Hysel l, Mr
and Mrs . John Hysell and famil y,
Mr. and Mrs. George Cleland , Mr
and Mrs . Robert Shllp and famtl Y.
Mr. and Mrs. Roger Sitters . all of
Ashley ; Mr . and M111 . Willi am Wy att
and family , Westerville ; Mr . and
Mrs . Robert Spark and fami ly, Mr
and M111. Scott Glasburn and famil y.
Mrs . Sherri Sosa and farrul y.
Melissa , Nancy and Paula Vanda ll,
Mr. and Mrs . Bill y Wyatt, William
McCUmber , Mrs . Chford Chnsll~&gt;n.
Delaware.
Jane Wyatt and Shawn . Mas on .
Mr. and Mrs. David Vandall,
Marysville ; Ethel Jones, Leonar .
dsburg, Ohio ; Mr. and Mrs . Jim
Foor, Pataskala .

CORRECTION
In Sunday's election ol officers
story I Southeastern Ohio Board of
Realtors 1 Vcrgil B. Tea fo r d .
Pomeroy, and Russell D. Wood,
Gallipolis, were named direc tors .
and not trustees as published in the
Times-Sentinel. Trustees are E . M.
Wiseman . Gallipolis; Maxine Robbins and Harry Naugle , Jackson.
and Willis Leadingham, Gallipol is

A report on the recent ~le
wh1 ch netted nea rly $250 ~· the
hosp ital eqwpment fWJd was p n
a t a meeting of the Auxillal'y of
Vet erans
Memor \al
Hoapltal
Tuesday night.
"I
.:
The Lord's Prayer In
opened the meeting. Mrs . lletty
Templeton donated an afghan Which
will be used for a fund ri1itlng

*'""

r-----------~

:

Social Calendar

1

MONDAY
,·
HUTLAND GARDEN CLUB Monda y at 7:3{) p .m . at the home ol Mrs.
Ruy Snowden C&lt;&gt;-hostes.s, Mrs.
Robert Canada y.
SOUTHE H N
ATHLE.TI C
Boosters, 7 .30 p.m Monday. the
high school, Racine. Parents !f"foot.
ball team m embe111 are espedally
asked to attend in order to~
parents night and the annual fllilCball
banquet .
~
EASTERN Athletic Boostera Mooday , 7:30p.m . Plans for falllllpOTts
banquet.
WEDNFSDAY
BE TiiEL LADIES AID , 1 p.m .,
with Gladys Church on LA&gt;wer River
Hoad .

project. 'drs . Parker read !!Back in
the Depression Days wheO Tbings
Were Tough ." Games wert played
with a prize going to Mrs. Carrie
Kennedy . Tentative plant were
made for a bake sale in December.
Mr!l. Mildred Fry, Mrs, Clara
Bonis, Mrs . Gilda Baxter l!llci M111.
France s Smart were named
hoetei!Ses for next month. llefresl&gt;ments of a decorated halloween
cake, candy corn , and ice cream
were served by Mrs, Lucille
Leifheit , Mrs . Ethel Grueaer, Mrs.
Bertha Parker and Mrs. I...eona
Karr . The tabl e was centered with
an arrangement of gourds aild llllall
pwnpkins.

.-cooo
·····•
•

.

I

TIMES SPEaaw

13" PIUA -. •

Your choice

of anY-

one toppin g .• , ...
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~-

III

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l
OPTOMETRIST
I
1

:

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0FFICE HOURS : 9 : 30 to 12, 2 to S (CLOSE AT NOON
ON THURS . ) - EASf _COURJ" ST ., POMEROY .

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OPEN DAILY 9:30to9:30; SUN.1 ·6

r--fr
THE SAVING PLACE
0

•

0

..

D

l~&lt;:t!hpolls

Mr . and Mrs . Bob Hoeflich, the
1\l-v . and \1111 . Jun Corbitt, Mrs .
France.-; &lt;;oeg lem . Mrs . Ethel
Srn tlh . Mr
and Mrs. Allen
E1clunKer . Mrs . Grace Warner, Mr .
and Mrs. Don Moore and family, Mr .
and Mrs . IJoyd Moore, Mrs. Dwight
l.t1~an . Mr and Mrs. Lorenzo Davis,
Mr and Mrs . Denzil Goeglein, Mr.
and ,\1 rs. Robert Vaughan, Mr and
Mrs. Hugh Bearhs , Charles S. Gi bbs,
Mrs l·:arl Srruth. Mrs. Georgia Watson. Mrs Cary l Cook , Mrs. Scott
Brown, Mr. and Mrs Phihp Smith,
TrH CI Casto, Bea tnce Buck, Janet
Korn . Mane l'urd. Sheriff and Mrs .
.llll1 Proff!lt . and I .ucllle l£lfhelt, aU

Custom ConYertllllt ""
Upright wltll Headllgllt

I ) OIIIl'ro~

Works of
Robert Frost
reviewed

Reg.

18

8 1h' x11 1n'

EDWARD MciNTOSH
SURGICAL PATIENT
Edward H. Mcintosh underwent
kidney surgery Thursday at the
Citrus Memorial Hospital , 502 W.
Highland Ave ., Inverness, Fla .,

• 32650, He remains

1•1

intensive care,

accordlng to word received by his
•ist er , Mrs . Ralph Spencer.

-.

100% Olefin

Polypropylene with r u b ·
ber waffle back .

Our
Reg
$6 .97

Footed Blanllet Sleepers
Non ·skid pla s t ic sole .
Flame res istant f abrt c.
nylon z ipper .

$5
2/

our
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our
Reg .
Each 3.68

Polyester Fiber Fill
Standard size pillows .

3
Thermal Underwear
7

' 3 97

Men's

397.

28 .88

Room Size Rug

·· A Cnttcal Rece ption ," all about
u-... lif e and works of Robert Frost,
was rev1ewod by :'.Irs . Forest ·
Ha chtel at the Wednesday meeting
of the Middleport l J terary Club held
at the Le tart F alls home of Mrs.
J)ert Grinun.
Mf' . Hachtel noted t hat i"rost
h\·ed on a farm 1n Ne w England ,
~&lt;Tole ma ny poems about the nor theast but that hi., poetry was
uJ1lvcrsal. He began writing when
he was a small boy and wrote until
he died in 1!*l6.
The rev1ewer noted that he Uved
on the New England fann for many
vears then sold It and went to
Engl a'nd where he continued his
writings . He won the Pulitzer Prize
lour times . When he returned to
Amer1ca several years later, he
found to his surprise that he was well
known and very famous for his
writing . Mrs. Bachtel read excerpts
from the writings of Frost noting
that he gave significance to the Wl·
significant in· hL• poetry. He wrote
his last book at the age of 88 .
Mrs . Bernard Fultz led the group
in the dub collect. and for roll call
members gave a favorite poem by
Frost or anottn author .
Mrs. Ruth Euler and Mrs . Cooper
were guests. Refreshments were
served by M111 . Gnmm assisted by
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter . Next
meetmg will be at the home of Mrs.
S1bley Slack on Nov . 7.

2697

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Roof Coaling ...... . ..9.88
1 gal. Aluminum
Roof Coating ......... 7.97

100°'o Polyesler , 72x90,
Tw in or Full .

77 4Pr
..
Pkg .

Soft Brushed Booties _
a cry lic I S tretcti

15

97our
Reg.
$21..'7

Quilted Body Sack
Polyester ;colton
for1er to wrap up in.

5 gal.

Aluminum Roof Coating

Plaza Blanllet

1

36.82

.3c

796

Our
Reg .

10.96

Ginger Jar Lamp
Classic
ginger
1ar
shape . with white vinyl backed shades .

4

97

Silverston Griddle

Our

Reg.
8.73

�.

o- 'lbt: J.AU.f ~IWAIIC'&amp;, ".UUWC:6'\Il •·c •uou•" VJ

Pottery
lecture
Thursday

"BUBBLE, bubble, toil and trouble .. . " Never
fear, these two realistically costwnt'd witches don't
really use that cauldron to prepare the goodies they

sell at the Jaycee haunted house. Located in the former
Pomeroy High School, the haunted house will be open
from 7:30 to 10 p.m. through Wednesday, Oct. 31. Admission is Sl.

To officially open the November
nhibit in both Galleries at Riverby ,
entitled " Fire and Earth," a special
lecture demonstration will be
presented on Thursday evening at
Riverby .
Bill Meadows, a pn:lessional potter from Huntington, West Virginia
is the artist whose outstanding
creations wiU make up the November exhibit. He will be at Riverby at
7:30 p.m. on Thursday to both explain and show how Raku Pottery is
made. He will be bringing his own
kiln with him so that those who attend can actually watch him at
work.
Holding a degree in Painting from
Marshall University , Meadows
changed his interest emphasis from
painting to ceramics, and has his
Masters degree in Ceramics from
Marshall University. Raku Pottery
is his specialty.
A teacher in the Cabell County
School System, Meadows also is a
member of the faculty of the Huntington Galleries and has been since
1968. He has his own studio located in
Huntington .
He says the greatest influence on
his career came from Charles Scott
at Glenville State College during the
summer of 1970 where he attended a
workshop directed by Scott. This experience convinced him that he
should beccme a professional potter .
Meadows has exhibited at the
Mountain State Art and Crafts Fair,
the Huntington Galleries, Tri-State
Art Association exhibits and Morris
Harvey College .

junior gardeners m eet

.

J

./

)_

SNAKEMAN. one of the many terrifying attractions at the Meigs Jaycee haunted house, here
demonstrates his soothing bedside manner to a not .. &lt;&gt;-

Helen

willing victim . The haunted house , located in the former Pomeroy High School, will be operating through
Wednesday, Oct. 31. Hours are from 7:3() to 10 p.m. ,
and admission is Sl.

ll~lp

US • • •B~ llt ·lnl Bnt11 ·l
IF GIRL LS ' No-GOOD mASH '
CAN SON BE FAR BEHIND '
By Heleo Bottel
DEAR HELEN :
Many of our neighbors have told
U8 they 've seen our son , 17, drinking .
making out and taking drugs at the
graveyard with his 16-year-old
girlfriend .
'
Jrynes maintains his innocence
even though the girl writes notes to
her friends about their affair . The
things she says are unbelievable tple X-rated . My neighbors have
seen some of the notes to their
daughters and read them to me over
the phone. The notes mention "domg
chemicals " and other un mentiOIIIIbles. The two even carry
tweezers and other equipment.
Don't teU me they're for pulling
splinters out of their backs from the
tombstones!
My husband and I have tried
talking to the girl's mother. But
she's so busy running for public offlee she won 't listen.
The neighbors want to send her the
notes , or pin them up in her office
where her c&lt;rworkers at least would
read them . (She's seldom on the job
as she's out campaigning. l
What would you suggest , before
they both damage their minds with
drugll? -CONCERNED MOTHER
DEAR MOTHER :
Seems to me you're concentrating
on the girl and her mother as the
ivllalns of this gossi!Hired scandal
when you should instead focus on
James. Confront him with the notes
and make It clear booze and drug

aesslons will stop.
You're in charge here: why
depend on neighbors to fight your
battles • (Their concern could be
more political than moral.) - H.
DEAR HElEN:
1be most active couple in our little
boy's soccer club is Mr. and Mrs.
Smith (we11 call them), who we
thought didn't have children of their

own.
Now I 've learned that the man has

a aon being raised on welfare by his
ex, and the owman 's children are
with their grandparents.

1be two deserve praise for helping
otber people's ldds, but shoulctn 't
' '-Charity begin at home? - NEIGH-

'

The Uttle Redbuds Junior Garden
Club recently met at the home of
Larissa L:Jng with Lori Hudson,
president, in charge of the meetir.g.
Mrs . Bunny Kuhl showed
miniature flower arrangements to
the group. She also explained to
them that an arrangement must be
three times the size of a contAiner .
In a pitcher or container with a handle, flowers must cover a little of the
handle and spout. Mrs. Kuhl passed
out tulip bulbs Wld told the dif.
terence between them and the bulbs
of hyacinth, narci.ull!l, and crocus. A
tulip bulb is smooth all the way
around. It should be planted 6-8 in·
ches deep in the fall and will bloom
from March to May. Hyacinth bulbs
are planted in the fall ~ Inches
deep. Narcissus bulbs are planted in
the late summer or early fall about 6
inches deep. Crocus C«&lt;llS should be
planted in the autumn about 2 inches
deep. They will bloom in the early
spring . They should all be planted in
well drained soil, fertilized , and

B&amp;PW members attend

FRI:SH

CHICKEN PARTS

UN dinner in Marietta
POMEROY - The MiddleportPomeroy Area Branch d. the
American Association of Univel'!lity
Women was represented at Marietta
Branch 's 34th annual United
National Day dinner on Oct. 24 at the
First Congregational Church in
Marietta by Mrs . Fay Sauer, Mrs.
Kathryn Knight, Mrs . Dorothy
Woodard, and Miss Helen Smith.
The diMer menu consisted of
chicken baked in coconut milk
representing Indonesia; meat pies
for Syria, Barley Pilaf for France,
parley potatoes, turkey, fruit salad,

WHOLE
LEGS ...................L~~.

European, green salad, for South
America, pumpldn cake for Ger·
many, bread for Mexico, and coffee
and tea for auna.
Mrs. Ann McGrecor mended
greeting~ to the members and

BREASTS ............L.s~.89e

guests. Mrs. Ethel Gutbrl~ talked on
the "United NaUOIIII Today" Wld the
address eniiUed "Penpedive on the
Nicaraguan Revolution" wu given
by Dr. T&lt;mas W. Walker, a fonner
Peace Corps member and Ford
Foundation Fellow, now director d
Latin AmerleBD studies at Ohio
University.

sand added if soil is hard. In the
spring, bonemeal should be added. If
each color is planted together, they
make a show arrangement. The
foliage should not be cut unUIIt turns brown . Foliage feeds the bulb for
the ne:rt year's bloom. To force
bulbs, they should be put in the
refrigerator for 90 days before planting in pots.
Discussioo oo the December
Christmas flower show was held. It
was announced that members of the
club won eight ribbons at the Meigs
County Fair flower shows.
The next meeting will be held Nov.
12 at Larissa Long·~~ with Lori Hudson and Renee BuCkley speaking on
feeding the birds. Kathy Parker will
talk about planting of new plants she
has ordered.
Mrs. Long served refreshments to
J o Ellen and Donia Crane, Lar!Ma
L:Jng, Renee Buckley, L:Jri Hudson,
Patty, Kathy, Jim, Joe, and Mike
Parker, Peggy Crane, Bunny Kuhl,
and Margaret and Chuck Parker.

Ann Halllday; safety tipll for cbain
saw usen by LarTy Montgomeroy,
and harmonica music by Ray
Whaley. Norma Lee read "The Way
of Indian Summer."
Membera of the Hemlock Grange
presented a *It, "VIalt to the Doctor's Office" with Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Whaley, Mr.and Ml'!l . HUbert
Quivey, and Wallace Bradford
taking part.
There were jokes and quips by
Rober1 Reed, and Rosalie Story read
the history d Halloween and bow it
had been celebrated through the
yean. Games and rela)'ll were held
Wtdaa supper was served at the conclusion dthe meeting .

Today In History
By The Aseoclated Pre11
Today is Monday, Oct. %9, the
302nd day of 19711. There are 63 days
left in the year.
Today's highlight in history
Fifty years ago today, on Oct. %9,
1929, the New York Stock Market
collapsed in frantic trading .... the
most dramatic indication of the start
of the Great Depression .
On this date :
In 1618, Sir Walter Raleigh ,
accused of treason, was executed in

BONELESS
HAMS .••......... ~s~.

50 LBS

BOK WHO KNOWS THE FA CIS
DEAR NE IGHBOR :
Yes , charity should begin at home
- and that includes in the home of
acquaintances who may not know
AU- the facts . Have you really
listened to the couple 's side of the
story' - H.
DEAR HELEN :
I s ympathize with the bachelor
whose friends are always trying to
set him up with a marriageable
woman : I too get the old , " You 'd
better hurry up and find a nice wife "
routine constantly .
I 've divorced age from my
timetable for accomplishments . It
isn't " failure " that I don 't have a
$200,000 house , two cars, two kids, a
wife, and perhaps an impending
break-up . I still don 't feel old
enough, at age 35, for ali that hassle .
I sometimes ~ ~nk friends urge my
confonning to their way of life
because they need more company in
their misery . So if they can't
produce envy, they try making me
feel guilty .
They say I lack ambition, responsibility and " maturity ", and the
right woman could change all that.
Who needs someone to take the joy
out of life? - STILL GROWING UP
DEARSGU :
The world also needs hapy,
carefree bachelors. Stay young ! -

H.

-----

Got a problem ? An adult subject
for discussion ? You can talk it over
in her column if you write to Helen
Bottel, care of this newspaper .

The Magellanic penguin of the
&amp;mth Atlantic spends five months of
the year at sea, never once touching
land.

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CHERRY PIE
2ooz. $119
FILLING ............ ~.~~.

PEPSI

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GOLD MEDAL

~

LIM

4

Plus Dep.

HEINZ WHITE

iT

WHITE &amp; DEC., ASSORTED OR DESIGNER

ENRICHED SLICED
BREAD ··

3

8 :~OL

NEW BOLT

9 · 01

.. P'kg

CARDINA L WHITE

REGULAR OR DIET

,

GOLDEN DELICIOUS JONATHON OR WINESAP

ON IONs ................................~.~:. 39¢ BANANAs ...........................~.~---1

13" PIZZA •

=~talki~

~

$ 00

Your choice of ony • ·

Being a General Telephone Communications Consultant is a full-time
job. It means taking as much time as
needed to survey, plan and discuss all
details of a business customer's
pt10n1e installation.
But they don't stop
They are also
busy looking for ways
to show customel'li how
to use. their phones
more efficiently. Sometimes they can show
them how to save money and maybe even how
to make money.
Sound like good people
to know? They'll be hap-py to meet you anytime
make a survey of
requirermmts. Call your
local General Telephone business
office and make an appointment t~
day. And remember there's never an
c-hAr~re for their services.

6
SLICED BACON............ 9
KA.HN'S CRISPY SERVE

NEW CROP YELLOW

LIMIT 2 WITH PURCHASE
DEAR MRS. McC - Cast-iron
posts are supposed to get black from
use but not the food that is cooked in
them. It sounds to me as if your pot
needs seasoning. All cast-iron ~ten­
sil.s should be seasoned before use .
Wash it and then !ICour the inside
with scouring powder to remove the
lacquer on the inside . Dry well.
Spread vegetable oil or unsalted fat
ali over the inside of the pot and
cover . Put in a warmovern for
several bow-s '"d then wash
thoroughly and dry well . Every half
hour or so while pan is in the oven
rub the fat around . Repest the
process.
For the next several times the pot
is used , rub fat around tl)e inside af.
ter it is washed and dried. The
seasoning process is a slow and
cwnulative one. Drying is very im·
portant or such a pot will rust. I find
they dry well in a still-warm oven.
- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Throughout the
year I but stacks of holiday paper
napkins - that is at Valentine,
Easter, Fourth of July, Halloween,
Thanksgiving and Christmas. One
pack for each holdiay makes a nice
Christmas gift for a friend who entertains a lot. Of course, they are all
wrapped as one gift . - MAE
DEAR POLLY - When my
children balk at finishing their
vegetables I tell them they must
each finish 113 many spoonfuls as
they have years in age . Thll!l the
oldest is required to eat nine spoonfuls and the youngest only five. This
stops many attles over suspected
favoritism at the dinner table and
really becomes sort of a game . CHARlENE.
Polly will send you one of her
signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problemin her
column . Write POLLY'S POfN·
TERS in care of this newspaper.

46 LBS. FOR$6900

HINDS
'1.39

SIDES
'1.29

.

FRESH CRISP ICEBERG

Polly Cramer
HER BEANS nJRN BLACK
By Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I bought a castiron bean pot from a mail order
house and every time I cook beans in
it they turniack. We have boiled
had it burned out at
lye in it and
' welding shop. ill you please teU us
how to clean the instde so it wiU net
turn beans and other foods black. MRS . McC

39

ES
59¢
POTATOEs ...............................~..
APPL · ...................................:..
4
HEAD LETTUCE ..............~~~--4 9 GRAPES ...............................~:... 69¢

u.s. NO.1

.-COOII TIIS SPEaAI.---..

I

WHOLES

)

WE DO
CUSTOM MEAT CUniNG

--···J...,.

s

SUPERIORS E-Z CARVE

$129
BOLOGNA ........ !~.2~·...

In 1682, William PeM landed in
what was to become Chester ,
Pennsylvania .

.onelopping .• , ••
Reg . S3 .55

10 LB. PORK CHOPS
15 LBS. CHUCK ROAST
10 LBS. GROUND BEEF
3 LBS. SPARE RIBS
3 LBS. BEEF STEW
5 LBS. CUBE STEAK

ROAST......... ~s~ ••

KAHN'S SLICED

(

·

CHUCK

WINGS ..............~~-.s9e
PICK OF THE
CHICKEN ............... ~~~.a9e

Loodon .

••

e

BONELESS ROLLED

Pomona Grange meets
Meigs County Pomona Grange
made its excbange visitation to Vinton Countyat McArthur Monday
evening.
Thirty-two members from Colwnbus, Star, Harrisonville and
Hemlock Granges made the
visitation and participated in the
program under the direction of
Pam01111lecturer. Pauline Atldns.
"October's Varied Facets" was
the theme of the program with Mrs .
Eugene Atldns telling of the life d.
Christopher Colwnbus and his
discovery of America, Maxine Dyer
giving a salute to the United States,
and Mrs. Anna Ogdin reading a
poem, " Our Flag ." 8oth poems
were written by Mrs. Dwight Mutchler. The group sang "God BleSB
America " and Mrs. Mendal Jordan
gave an original poem on October .
There was a monologue by Mrs .
Muriel Bradford entiUed "Mrs.
Perkins ' VIsit" household hinta by

PICNIC
6 9 HAMS .........L!~

--FREEZER DEAL--

CAR

I

1 1 · OZ .

2%

Pkg.

GARDEN DELIGHT

FRENCH FRIES ................. . 59~

GLACIER CLUB

12 GAL
$}
09
EAM
ICE CR •••••······ •••···•·•. •··
1

$}59

MOUNTAIN TOP

APPLE PIES .........................~~-~~ : ..

ISEAFOOD VALUE I
OCEAN PERCH FILLETS .....

$169
lb

EGGS
- a.-------------------16

BTlS. LIMIT 2 .

16

DOZ.

~

GARVIN'S

COTTAGE CHEESE ....... • ·~~... 79
1~ GAL 7g~
BUTTERMILK ................~.... ..
GARVIN'S

MARGARINE. ..................... 2

99~

MEDIUM

... ..

CHIFFON QUARTERS

PKG.

~--UAIRY B U Y - - - -

PLASTIC

MILK ............ ~.~L

2-LBS.

8oz.

I -Lb

C1n1.

s

100

,

~"~~ S&lt;O RI S • CAROtNAl &gt;000 SlOAlf

~

---

.

jittliJ

g.r:•

�8- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Mooday , Oct. :!9, 197~

•

Your Best Buys Are Found In the Sentinel Classifieds
ELECTION
LEGAL NOTICE
The Ohio Soil and Water
Conservation Commission
witt cause an el ecti on of
Supervisors of the Me tgs
Soil and
Water
Con
servation Distrtct ro be
he ld in acco rdance w 1i h
Chapter 1515 01 14 ot the
Revtsed Code ol Ohio . etf
C hester

WANT AD
CHARGES
I!)

CaM!

Elementar'(

sc nool , cnes rer . Ohto on
November H , 11,)79 at thetr
annual meet1ng beg tn n ,ng
at 7 15 p m Nominees are
L arry
Ho llon , T he reon
Johnson , James Lucas , and

rha.rK!'
l 1!1

I dll}

I 00

2ll ll) ~
hl&lt;l) ~

1:;()

I!Jl

I 80
300

2 2!)
37!)

6dtip

ce pt ed from the floor at the
time of
elecfton
Two
superv isors are to be e lec
ted You may cas t your
ba ll ot
at
tt1e
annual
meeting or on the day ol
elec tion at th e 5od Con
serv at ion Serv ice offi ce.
22 1 W SecO nd St . Frtrmers
Bank
Bu tldt ng
be tween
8 · 00.:t m and 4 OOp m Ab
sent ee ballots may
be
secured a! t he local d •str .c t

ln memo') . U.rd of Thanks
and Ubttuary · ti centJ per word.
$3.00 nununum cash U\ ad ·

1vam;t'
Mohtle Hlln~ Yle:!i •nd V~tnJ
are acctpted only Wllh

!Rll~

cash w1th order 25 cent chargt&gt;
fBr aili! l'arry tn.: Bo1 Number In

Cart'

(J f

·n. Jl, 2tc

fltr mon · than ont' meornoct

lfl·

'it"rtllil l

'}Q

Phunr '192 -Z l~

I' .\1

t nJ,a 1 Hftt&gt;rnoon

ME IGS
C OUNTY
HUMA N E SOCIETY 992 ·
6260
Pet s dVailab le for
adopt 1on and in formation
s-ervice
GUN
SHOO T
EVERY
SU N0 AY1PM FACTORY
CHOK E ONLY
RACI NE
GU N CLU B
no
HU NTIN G .
NO
tresp a ss•ng wilh no e:.
cept.on~ on my pr operty
Judy M cG raw Se lf

Mobile Homes - Sale
1972 LYNN HAVEN Ux65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with e)( ·
pan do, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr .
1Q73 Sky lin e
12)(5S 2
bedroom
1972 Bonanza 12x52 , 2 bedr .
B 1!. S MOBILE HOME
SALES , PT PLEA SA NT ,
WV . 304 675 4424 .

Mobile Homes - Rent
TWO BE CROOM party
furnished , prefer middle
aged or elderly co upl e . No
pets, no chidl r en 992 2749.

Giveaway
HANDSOME GERMAN
Shephe rd
co llie , male ,
bla c k and tan , wormed and
shots
Large
German
shepherd , mal e, brown and
black , looking for a special
country home, shots a nd
wormed . White
terri er
type . female , good with
c h i l dren . wormed
and
shot s Fema le b l ue hee ler
kettle aog to good coun t ry
home . wh i te and blue , sho t s
ana wormed . Hu m an f'
soc;e ty , 992 6260 .

G UN
SH OOT
Ra ci ne
Vol unt ee r
Fire
Dept
Every Sa tu rday . 6 . 30 p .m .
At their building i n Bashan
Fa c tory chok e pu n s only
~--~------

GU N SH OOT every Sunday
12 . QO _ Fa ct ory choke onty
Corn Hollow G un Club,
Rut land . Proceeds dOn!\ted
to Bov scout Troop 249 .

OctoMr JO , 1979
com.ng year you are head Ing 1nto an Plc:eltem soCi al LVI.. I~
and could me@l m an y new

NO HUN TI NG on the Gene
Humph rey prope r1 v on R1.
1-43 or th e Andy Grover
prope r t.,. on Bailey Ru n Rd .

ED B URKE TT
Barber
Shop now open fu ll l 1me in
M •d dleport
GET MARKET VALUE tor
you r gold and si lv er co in s
Wr i te or
c ontact
Ed
Burkett Barber Shop , Mid ·
dleport
JA N ICE DAVIS is now em
ployed ill Hai r By Lila
Beauty Salon , spacia li S1 in
men 's and boy 's hair cuts
Open
even 1ngs
by
ap
poinlme nt
Mr s
Ke i th
R: tdenour , ow ner
CERA MIC CLASSES. Man
day a nd Thurs day , 7 9 p m
Starting Thu r ~day. Oc t 25
Ore hel ·~ Ceramtcs
5? N .
'}nd. Middleport , OH 992
556()

MINI CAKE decorating
c lass. learn 1u st enough to
do those novetfy cakes
Cr aft lee S5 Call W? 6341
tor intor m at 1on

Tl u~

lnends

A wo•d ot cau1o on
however Steer clear ot alliances
w1th those m whom you lack
complete con fidence
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) One

wh o is te111tous could resent your
popularity today and try to cause
you trouble Oon't retalial e
because you 'll look. as bad as he
or she. Find out more about
yourself by S8nding lor your copy
ot ABtro-Graph Letter whiCh
begins with you r b irthd ay . Ma1t
$1 l or each to Astra-Graph, Sol
489 Radio C1ty Station. N_Y
10019 Be sure 10 specify bir1h
date

SAGmARIUS !Nov. 23-Doc. 21)
Kaep your own counsel ilfld
don·! let other people 1nt o your
act lhey moght mean welt . but
they cou ld tnfluence you to use
unintell igftn t methods
CAPRICORN (O.C. 22-Jan. 19)
Because you rrught have a successful day m neg ottal!ng . you
c ould IBt~r let your &lt;lelense:;

down invotv1ng a JOint PNort and
do somet h~ng costly
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Fob. 18)
Someone with lew scruples
could try to impo!M! on you
today. Take care that _because ot
thlt one experience you don ' t
treat ell othent unhtirty.
P18CU (Fob. 20) You
could flave a tremendous number of super Ideas today, but be
realistic as to how many you can
realize. Unfinished project..: will
create 1 men.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 11)
Ther&amp;'s a strong possibility lhl!lt
you could be much too Irritabl e
to relate well on the social level
today. Try to keep to yousetf
TAURIIS I Aprlt 20-Mor 20) One
ol your biggest asset s is your
patience. However, today eve11
you might feel 11 to be st ramed
Vou could taka your frustrations
out on innocent family members .
GE- (Moy 2t.June 20) Get

your work done early an~ don 't

depend on luck to help achieve
your purposes today. Later
you're apt to be too disorganized
to aacomplish anything

Jack W . Carsey
Mgr .
" " " ' " Phone "1 -1111

~

FIREWOOD
FOR Si'lle
Now faking orders . W ill
deliver , 74'1 ')056 .
E M ERGENCY
POWER
alTernators -own the best
buy WIN POWER . Call 513
788 2589

WO RK SHOP I N mak1ng
Gtngerbread houses and
also wat er paper pa i ntinQs
Call ~2 6J4 7 for de tails

Help Wanted
CARRIER WANTED tor
l i nco ln Hill in Pomeroy
Ca tl t he Daily Sentinel , 'lf/2 ·
2156 between 8· 30 and s ·oo
pm
LP N FOR 3 to 11 or 11 1o 7
shi ft . Pinecrest Care Cen
ter . Con ta c t Judy Barcus ,
RN , Direc tor of Nusino .
446 7112

Want ed to Rent
WANT ED · t o ren t a bull.
Ca ll collect 29-4 -0616 , James
(Coke) Morton or see Jim
my M orton , Willis Hilt

Auctions
BI G AU CTION every Wed .•
7 pm . Hartford Community
Center , Hartford , WV, .t
m iles above
Pomeroy ·
Mason Br idoe .
CANCER (June 21..July 22) Your
relaUonstllpt with your friends
today are excellent so long as
you don't melle any promises
Involving money . You coul d be
leU holding the bag
LEO (July :Z3~ Aug . 22) lf you let
your genorosil y toward your
!amity get ou t of hand today
you 'll only have yourself to
blame. Don't accuse th6m of t he
cause tor your extravagance.
VIRGO (Aug. 23- Sopl. 22)
Because you ' re willing to
concede and c ooperate, you
-nay m istaken!~ Judge everyone
· by your standards and e11pect
otners to do likewise View oth ers rea listically

1-)(L HDm eli te
S60.00
! -McCulloch
$12S .OO
1· Remi Yardmaster
$75.00
1 Ne-w Fuel Oil furnace
1 New Electric furnace
New Genera I Electric
B&amp;W TV
Only $99 .9S

R I SIN G STAR Kennel .
Boarding Ca ll 367 ·0292 .
POODLE
GROO MIN G .
Judy Taylor . 614 367 7220 .

POMEROY
LANDMARK

HILLCREST
KENNELS .
Boarding , all breeds . Clean
i ndoor outdoor facilities .
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans . 614·446·7795
UKC REG , treeing walker
p uppies . 3 fe mal es,
2
males . Ha'le Nite Ch .Ch
G riffins rock , Nite Ch
b l a i rs Ban jo Babe, N ite Ch
1973 AC HA Worl d Ch
Beanblossom Buck , 1970
ACHA Wo ql d Ch . Nile Ch.
Ga n n·s Firttst'le-r and other
Cha mpions
in
J
generations. Finley River
bree d;n!f bo1h sides. $50
e ither se)( with reg . papers
Have been wormed and
will have 4·way shots. Call
742 221'4 or 992&lt;1023 and
leave name and number .

Jack

~·--·

- -For

Rent

CO UN TRY MOB I LE Home
Park , Route 33 , north oi
Pome r oy Large lots .Call
~2 7479 .

FREE PUPPIES Smal l
and medium
Mal e or
temale . Call992 72 31.
BORDER COLLIE, blac k
and wh ite, male, shots .
Brown dog , colli e type,
good with c h i ldren . Female
b la c k
and
tan co ll ie
shepherd Shots and w ar
med , good with chi ldren .
Small Beagl e. femal e . have
al l shots, 2 years o ld .
Humane Society ~2 6260 .

OLDER HOM E, pa r tl y
redone , a pproved septic
s,.-stem , wood a nd el ec tr ic
heat, city water soon , 93 ft .
front on JJ 1 in M1 . Alto . For
information , see Jim Rif ·
t el .
THREE BUILDIN G to ts ,
approx . 1 acre each , in
Pomeroy Vi I I age near
elementary school. City
water , sewage . Call 992 ·
6279 .
BUILDING LO S, 1 ac re
eac h , L eading Creek Rd , 3
mi les off Rt . 7 Bypass
Si gns. V it atoe

3 AND -4 RM furnished ap
t s Phone 991 · 5-434 .

&lt; 8 ACRES NEAR Me;gs
Mine N o . 1. Rural water .
L and contrac t availabl e
742 ·27«&gt;
.,

TRAILER SPACE tor re n1
in Midleport. Phone 992 ·
3&lt;.57
BEDROOM
12x60 TWO
mobile home near Rac ine
9'12 .S8S8 .

For Sale

1978 4x4 351 engine, cus t om
pai nt job and inter ior E)(
ce Hent condit ion . P hone
992 2656.

1967 PONT IAC, $175 or
trade for small Honda road
bike 9'92 -7580 .
195A T~UCK , good con
di tion , air com pressor . 1965
Ford Mustang , 4 speed
992 5741 .

1971 DODGE POL ARA ,
P _S.. P . B .. CB radio Ve ry
gOOd con d ition GOOd gas
mileage . Phone 992 J77S or
992 5211.
1972
KINGSWOOO
ESTATE WOQOn, &lt; QOOd
Tires, Conta c t Don M ayer,
25 Cave St . Pomeroy .
595&lt;
~-- ~~-----

1973 VEGA stat ionwagon ,
new ti r es. goodon gas . $.400
992 70~

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD Poles max
diameter 10 '' on largest
end $12 per ton Bu ndled
sl ab SlOper t on De l ivered
to 0 1"110 Pallet Co .. Rt 2.
Pome roy 992 2689

OL D FURNI T UR E. Ice
bOxes, brass beds, iron
beds. desks , etc , complete
households . Write M D
Miller . Rt . 4, Pomeroy or
c all 992 ·776/J
OLD CO IN S. pocket w1
ches , c lass rings , wedding
bands, diamonds. Gold or
si lver Call J . A . Wamsl ey ,
7&lt;1 ·2331 .

APPLES
CIDER
HO NE Y . Fitz patri ck Or ch ard, State Route 689 .
P hone Wilkesvi lle, 669 ·
3785.
SWE ET POTATOES , red ,
white and yellow . Rt 2.
Racine _ R . W lewi s. 843
2432
HOU SE COAL, lump or
stoker , will deliver . 742
21 83
JOHN DEER E diese l 10 10
dozer . Outstde mounted
blade S5.000 71.2 281Q

ELEC TR IC FURNA CE to r
mobi le home . Good co n
dition . 992 · 5509
LOOKING FOR a respon
si bl e party in the Pomeroy
area to assume payments
on a p1ano . ca n col tect 592 ·
5122
FIRE W OOD, all
wOOd Ca ll 9'12 ·5449 .

hard

NEW FRENCH Provin c ial
ant ique white dining room
sui t e . \900 . 985 4170

WOOD STOVES by BeMer
N Bens , Gl assv iew , Leyden
Hearth , O ld Timer , Fire
view . Suburban
mObile
home wood heaters, U L ap
proved , li nd Suburban fur
nacemasters
Outdoor
EQuipment Sales, Jet . Rts .
7 and 35, GatJ;pot;s, OH .
Phone 446 3670 .
APPLES
ROME Beou1y
apples at $.4 per bu . Best tor
apple butter . Call 669·37 85,
Fitzpatrick Or chard , SR
689 .

WANTED o SA W tog s
Payment upon delivery To
our yard, 7 : 30 to 3 : 30 week
days Blaney Ha rd wOOd !. ,
SR 339, Bar low, OH 678
2980

LARGE PALOM IN O hor
se , mare , sa ddle and
bridle, $..00 . Black Western
horse sa dd le and bridl e,
$50 Judy Smith , Racine.
OH, 949 2813

ANTIQUES .
FUR
NITUR E,
glass.
cnina ,
anything . See or c!!! tl Ruth
Gosney , antiques , 26 N .
2nd, Middleport OH . 99'1
3161 .

S IZE
h and
LARGE
c rocheted bedspread, ti ny
$125
1 3-4 1/ J
desi~n ,
Ave .. Pomeroy .
Mulberry

ANTIQUE POCKET wat
ches . Willing to pay top
dollar . Ca ll 1-592 ·2973
eveninos.
WANTED : JU N K . Bat ·
terles , radiators , motors,
auto . trans. No Sunday
c alls 949 2563 .

Yard Sale

991 ·S658
FIREWOOD , SEASONED
hardwood $18 p;ckup toad
985·3906 .
POTATOES . S8 per hun
dred . 3 mile! west of Oar ·
win , Cecil Toban, TR l4S,
between Gold Ridge and
CR U
DELUXE GE washer and
dryer , S150 pr Ca ll 992 ·

3023
POR C H SALE . S1ar 1s
Wed ., runs till al l sold, Out ·
side
Ct1ristma!
decorations, brown velv .?
pictures and misc . items.
Karl Kloes , Collf!9e St ,
Syracuse, OH . 992 &lt;101&lt;.

Mgr .
Phone 992 -1181

Real Estate for Sale

--

Auto Sales

w. Carsey

REDUCE SAFE and fas1
with GoBese T able1s and E
V ap " wa t er pil ls. " Ne l son
Drug .

VE RY
REASONAB LE
bri ttany Spaniel , female , 21
mo . old Ca n be r egistered
Phone 992 · 5267 .

m

HRO CA NDY c la sse!l star
ting
thi!l week
Learn
suckers, hard candy , taffy .
Chirstmas or"na ments 992
6342

L--_B_u_s_in_e_s_s_S_e_rv
_ i_c_e_s_

FOR SALE

Not ic es

Bernice Bede Osol

Q"" _

YEAH- ME TOO
-r WANNA

Viewing

Un~cramO ie these lour Jumbles
one lettPr ro eact1 squt~re lo tm m
tou1 ordmary words

HELP. TOO.

[ TAGEA

J&amp;l BLOWN
INSULATION

OHIO VALLI:.Y
ROOFING

9·28 I mo . Pd .

elnsulafion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

\ 1]

Mick ' s
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

A: o )fiog
guttel" s, and
do .. :1S5J OU B .
Free
~ st
lat l'S. All
wo rk
1ua . 1nteeCI . 20 years ex ·
.er1 nee . Call Atllens ,
olh c t , Gerald Clark
117 -.; 857 Dr Tom Hoskins
797 -27 4S.

____.i

' ROMMEYL

MARK MORA

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

'IOU HAVE

Featuring : men 's &amp;
women 's styling, perm&gt;.
call tor appt. or walk in.

tr ·s AlL IZIGer EA"' ·· ';'" OKAY. 60 AH~AO.
THIS GENTL EMAN WAG
J A C Q UE .; ~- 50 lO ~ G
Jl 'cC 60 1~ 6 TO 5HOW
A, WHATE'VER YOU'RE
ME SOMETHING!
601NG TO ~ H OW HER
ISN'T J.OAOEP!

'REEZE. 1;115TER!_ )

j;OMETHI~G

\(

TO !&gt;HOW
ME~

992-2367

IT7'""':JJ

Hie&gt; DENT6T.
New arrange !he o rded lette• s to

[1 l J - t]
Answer vou[

10·19·1 mo.

.?

WHAT TH E 'PATIENI
SA ID AS HE F IRED

L ZILZES ~~

Pomero,,O~

10· 19 J mo.

n 7c

LI

CA~A INEASY

HAIR STYLIST
W in ·

'.,

,,

fo rm the surpnse answet as sug
gested by tne aoove cartoon

Xn aN
[I]( XI I I I

]!

(Answers tomorrow f

FOR SA LE or rent . Nice 3
bedroom, modu lar loca ted
in Port land area . Set up on
lot or can be moved . Ca ll
alter 4o30 . 304·273 ·5272

~ntlay

ASTRO•GRAPH

POMEROY
LANDMARK

ME ,

HEL.P

6

WINTER
POTATOES
c. w . Proffitt farm , Por
II and , OH S8 a hundred and
$5 a hundred .

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

nw!Kia)·
thru Fnds y
~ p M
Uw d&lt;t) t...· fur t' publ 1&lt;·at11.m

Tuooday,Oct.30

Apptiances
Sales &amp; Service

KEYS
FO UND
on
Pomeroy
Parking
l ot
ac r oss tram Stiffler 's . Ford
key . 6 keys and nail cli pper
on chain . Identity and pi c k
up at Stiffler ' s.

,\1u(lda y

5 ) I :--

Heo~dquar1ers

LOST : MALE beag le pup,
N . Main on New lima ~d ,
~utland .
Has
leash .
Reward H2· 16-'8

-.,, ~l! llltl.~turd.B)

i

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

FOU ND KEY to Honda
Ca ll ro identify , 992 2750

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

PUBLIC NOTICE
rtH? annua l etcc t 1on of
th P
MetQS
Co u nty
Agr icult u ral SortPfy 01 n:-c
t ors w ill be he ld Monday ,
NU\oTmber 19, IQ70 .n the
seuf" t ary ot fl ce at th e F-a~r
Grounds a t Rork Spr .nqs,
Oh•o from 5 t o 9 p m
Quali f ica ti ons for d~rPr
to r s are that they must be a
q ual ified voter ot Me •gs
Cou nty a nd mu st hav e a
membership ti c k et in sa1d
soc iety ot 1979
Cand tda tes
petlf •o n s
must be t i led w ith the
Secr etary no later than 5
p m Monday . N ovember
12 . 1Ql9 _ Only
per sons
h Old i n g
membe r sh•P
ticke t s at tne close of tne
JQ79 County F;11r or at I PaS I
1 1Sl c atf'nd ar d ays befo re
lhl• datr· of elerl•on MP
qual•f •ea to vo tP
lhu Me•QS t~gr•rullu re~ l
So( •rty Bt Mrs W .1t1arC'
i3riW f Or ci, S('( rPfiH {
I

COAL.
LIM&lt;;' STONE ,
sand , gravel,
ca l cium
chl oride. fertilizer , dog
f ood, and all types of sail
Ell: celsior Salt Works, Inc.
E . Ma 1n Sf , Pomeroy, W2
3891

NOTICE

( \I I 5. 12 . 4tr

( 10 I 22. ?9 ( 11

LOST : BEA GL E answers
to Bert _ German Shepherd
Short hair pointer , answer s
to Ringo M 1ssing 2 days
Contac t Ben Ewing , W 2
2121

Tht' S~.·n ( tnt&gt;l

Tht&gt; Pul!b~ht'r re:w:rves tl'lt
n.~hl tv t'tllt ur rt:Jt~ct all)" tld.o!
dt&gt; t'lllt'd
obj t&gt;I' \ Jt ma l
The
Pubil'lher lt"tll not bi&gt; re5po1Ulble

o ft iet"

( 10 ) Tl

For Sale

and

day Ads runmn~ other thMn ronsecut tvt' days W'lll bt&gt; charged at
the I day rate

Nominat•ons W i l l be ac

SOUTHERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRI CT
BOX 176
RACINE , OHIO 45771
PUBLIC NOTICE
TO o BIDDERS
SUBJECT : Purchas e of
School Bu ses
FOR : The Board ot t he
Sou th ern
Loc al Sc h ool
District , Bo-, 176, Racine.
Ohio ,
45171
Sc aled prop os al s w il l be
rece•ved by th e Bonro ot
Edur at •or o f the Southern
LOC rll Sr nool D•Sirl l I of
R ar •ne . Q t 110
iii
the
trea ~u rer ·s
o ti 1Cf&gt;
uot 1
12 00 o r lork noon or1
November 15. 197Q and o'
that t1m1: o pened by thf'
tr easurer of c;,,-.,d board ~ "
prO VIded oy t r~w lor two i 2 •
sc hoo l busec, on e 1 11 be• ny
a 65 passenger and one ( 11
be1n9 a 71 passenger . a{
co rd1n g to specl f lca t .ons ot
said Board of Edurllf•on
Separate
and
1n
dependent b •ds w ilt oe
r ece 1ved w1th respec t ro t he
c hassis and body type an d
will state that th e bus wh en
assemblt.&gt;d and pr1or to
del iverr c om p ly w ith all
SC h OO
d•Si r 1ct
spe c ifl c at•on s, all sat et y
regul at ions and current
Ohio M 1n•mum Sl f!ndaras
tor
Srhoot
Bu&lt;:.
Con
~lru c t• on
n t t he D t 'P &lt;irt
rncnt ot E ctu • nt •on aaopl t&gt;d
by rllld w Th In•' { on&lt;,('n t o•
lhf· Orr•·• tor of H •qthv&lt;'lY
~a f P'V flU I ",llttl l l I O l er I '0 11
45\ I /6 f1 1 Tt"t• Rt'J •',t'O (tHlf'
,Hlct
cl I
u tno&gt;r P••rt ollf'!ll
prOV IS IOil S 01 ldw
SPN .h r c3tron"&gt; ,-.no
on
st ru r t ron~ t o b•d aers ar e on
t ile on thE' olflrf' of the
rrea surt&gt;r , Ra c •ne . Ot1 •u
The Boa rd of Ed uc ation
r eserv es th e ngh t to r e 1ec t
any and all b1dS
Bv Oraer of the Bodrd of
Edu c at1on
N an c y Ca rnahan ,
Tr easurer
Southern Local
Sc hool D •slri c t
RM tne . Ohio 45771

HOTPOINT

Each word over the mmunurn
l) words LS ~ cl!nlll per wor d per

Roy Miller

( 10 1

Wunb ur Unde1

Lost and Found

MISTER-UNTIE
AND LET ME

LA DI ES BEAU TIFUL ·up
to date size 10 cl othes. Har
dly worn . Designer labels
e~nd fine fabrics . Dresses,
coats, slacks, blouses, etc.
992 ·3283 .

HOBSTETTER

REALTY
PHONE 742-2003
NEW LISTING 42
acres w ith -4 bedroom
home .
bath .
l i ving
room, ki tc h en and laun
dry . Located on 5•1ve r
Ridg e Road
W o ul d
make a n•ce hun ting
lodge . Cal l for more in
fo .
Asking
on ly
$30,000 .00
NEW LISTING 80
acre farm abou1 Smiles
from
P o m eroy
•n
Chester Township . Ap
pr ox imately «J acres
t i llable and 40 acres
pasture . Big 10 room
t arm house with barn
a nd seve ral sheds . Ni ce
ro ll in 9 land for farm ing
or
su b di vid ing .
5ell
pr 1ce SB O,OOO 00 Ca l l for
you r appt .
LANGSVILLE - Nice 2
bedroom ho m e on a 1if
ti e over an acre . Storm
windows a nd doors,
aluminum siding, new
gas furnace , new septi c,
new roof and more . Only
$22,500 .00 .
FAMILY HOME 4
bedrooms, l iving room,
d i ning room , kitchen
and bath . Basement and
garage Situated on . 7S
of an acre . Ask ing
$35,000 00
HYSELL RUN 2
bedroom hom e on a I it ·
tie over seven acres .
Make us a r easonabl e
offer!
NEW LISTING ~~ A
ve r y gOod busi ness in
vestmen t opportun i t y
WE NEED LISTINGS!!
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Phone 742 ·2003
Velma Nicinsky, Assoc .
Phone 742-3092
GeorgeS . Hobstetter,
Jr.
Broker Phone "2 -57)9
SMALL FIVE room house,
aluminum siding, 1 acre
lots , a'll ut l litl e! . R1 . 681.
ReedsvHte . $10 ,000 or best
otter . 378 6347
195-4 TRUCK . good con
dition , air co mpressor . 1965
Ford Must!\ng . "'speed .
99'157&lt;1

REAL ESTATE
F ' NANCING

Roger Hysell

.. Cle · al 'iou '-i ng &amp;
Vlder . 1s Admtn . loans.

Garage

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

14 m ile Dff Rt . 7 by -pass
on St . Rt . 124 toward
Rutland.

'-to1 s 9- M ., W .,F .
O• 1er tmt by appoint·

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

m ~ nt .

J7 Sycamore (Rear)

PDmerov. 0 .

CJ.LL 992 -7544
W I LL HA U L l imes tone and
gravel Also, l ime haul ing
and spr ead ing . Leo M orri s
T ru c k •ng . Phone 7-42 ·2455

PA I NTI NG AND
s and
blasting . Fr ee estimates.
Call 94q 2686.
DOZER . END Loader,
brush
nog .
W il l
do
basem ents. ponds, brush,
timbe r . land
c le~ring .
Charles Butcher . 7,.2 ·2'il..O

Satu rd ays

~NO~
-y

608E · RFAI
MA IN
POMEROY , 0 .

BRIDGE

TRAILER SALES
I

lJJ70 NIOf1190ft'•r-'r Rd

Ohio
U9 47•J ~v('nlngt
2Mtlt"t E11~l ot Wtllt~Hitle
lll"q ~vl ll ~ .

SE WIN G
M AC H I NE
Repairs,
servi ce ,
all
makes
992 ~ 2284 .
The
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy .
Authorized Si nger Sales
and Service . We sharpen
Scissors .

J

1 mo

NOR Til
• 9 7 '3
• 10 7 3
t 'Q 2

IN ·
AU T OMOBILE
ca n ·
SURANCE
been
you r
c elled?
Los t
operator ' s license? Phone
99'1 ·21&lt;3 .

FINANCING ·VA ·FHA LO ·
ANS LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT . PURCHA SE
OR
REFINAN CE .
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E STATE , ATHENS .
61092 3051.

• 6'

N'ew, repair,
guMers and
down splluts .
WindOJII cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Fret!' Estimates
94. -2862 - 949 -21 An

.• I.JlTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

YOUR PROPERTY GIVE US
A CALL 992-2342

IXMNING-CHILDS AGENCY
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
OFFICE H2-2342
EVENING 992-2449

lHE MASSACR E 6AR
SO'S MY OlD PAl S 'D
Gll ro C HAT WITH

I N STOCK for Immediate
delivery : various ~lze-! of
pool ki ts. Do It yourself or
let us install for you . D.
Bumgardner Sa t~ . Inc .

lf"Pi t't , UlAR OS '
..,tf'(ER.5 ··

GAMBLERS ·'·

MAR'5HAL~ -- · 0AN C ~

HALL G IR L'S ...

A LIVE ' UN

~EP

··YOU GOT
S PECI AL POWER TO

THAR'S TVJO liVE O NES
IN HER E ··· ONES 11'3 S HOULD

Wes1

Norlb

Easl

Soutb

SEE US AND TALK
Wtn.t liS
tl 'S QUI ff f\
lRfA T K&gt;R US · ~
-.._

BE GHO S TS , EFF EN I'M tlN.'(
,JEDGE 0' CHARAC TER ..

Pass

I+

P ass

2 NT

Pas..'&gt;

3 NT
Pass

DbI

Pa ss

1

'vOtJ"R~ N CT ~'E:5"11P\IL::. ~-.
NErT~ER ~ 'JC"U k..~~'II,A,
Wl-iO'S ON T '? l.\L ?'

·,\-E:::.. J.. J;'.._X '()ut:::_ IN F.)~
' ' S T~---&lt; Al J\l.'..ST'i
.J.l.C'k.. ..)~ HE .\I&lt;TS ! "'l..J\\
s.,.L...,~ L li'"1 •Na . M; C'E A."R .
1\1-'.:n..) I\J

~NC'

i ...,""IU

Ala n: " H ow abou t a week of
h i nts
for
l o urn a m enl
pl ayer s? "
Os wald : ··1 have one right
here . Wh en pla ying a Swi ss
team match don ' t get upset
when something goes wron g
a t the first or second hand of a
m atc h. Ma ybe your partn er s
will do j ust as well as yo ur
opponents did when they get
•.he hand later.··
Alan · "Som eti m es yo ur
partn er s ma y do even better .
Here is a hand that got Eas t
so upset that he went crazy

'\ . ._ C' (\)•iT c..:&gt;'&lt;OET
1"2 T..\ lo...E TME LEFT
T~ E

P.l.TH:

BE ....~ \\ ITH
..::'R' "t.._."~U LL "-11$:3

THE P'l'O.:EEC't"JGS

~

On ILl two,

Two qallons.
1)!::z::1..._S Iim 1

Steam
c lea ne d .
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . Scotchgvard . 991·
6309or 7&lt;2 23-48.

Gaso ltne

Avery? You r tank is
almost
emptf1 '

t5

heavL!. Walt'

Why paLJ qood mone 4 t o haiAI
around qas l won't be ustnq f1ll
next wee ~ /?"-?.'-- .~""""'--&lt;

,:!!

•I

••

11

I

'4"

and up
cash &amp; carry

TAS-::

:..•:::~

':'&lt;. A3':: -.,4 'J
"" ;:•;&lt;::&lt;. OI?EAMEO o:o
x;- """ :OA"(_

IN STOCK

Housing
Headquarters

Rutland, 0 -

''

For Details, Phone or Stop by ...
~~~

THE DAILY SENTINEL
111 Court St., Pomeroy

Ph. 992 -2156

-

dummy

II Suave

15 Wai t er's b tl!

5 The Nazarene
6 Perch

161 Jttle gtrl
17 (;ay

1 Common
str eet name

8 Recovering
from a t oot

nicknam e

9 Balcony
12 Wen t

21 Lurrunux
22 L ab amma ls

16 Alluvial

Yesterday's Answ er

19 Overeal er ·s

27 Fmstrat e

afnic tion

2!1 Scr eemng

22 Ca n dy na vor

deVI CE'

:roour · Fr

23 Sartortal
weapon

31 Flortda

21 .. Wm ter 's

far aft el d

Bowl game

Tale " lady

36 Egypttan
we tght

25 l'om
tn script ion

depostt

37 Ovtne c r y

r.--r.,--r.--r.:-

cnsp

I

35 Took

•

a chan ce

I

!~~y~----~~~

I

•

~

37 Preacher

IF YOU SNIFF ENNY BEARS.
01.: BULLET -- BARK YORE

l. ucrd ta
38 Cargo
drrn ck

FOOL HEAD OFF

39 Ha~rd u , tyle lr.--t-+~

I'
•

10 Mteh aelmas turl~+-1--t-~t-­
dats y

II So uthwest
wtnd

llAILY CRYPTO I!liOTE - Here' s how to work it :
AXYni.BAAXR

Earn Spending
money and
win valuable
The Daily Sentinel
has an Immediate
carrier route opening
on Lincoln Hill In
Pomeroy .

N Y

:t4 Hurn -

ATTENTION BOYS &amp; GIRLS••.

prizes.

Yor k ,

w tth exam

GOOD REMNANT

RUTlAND
FURNITURE

New

100 19 )

~S Blunder

•9·~duo

Call 742-2211

S tarwn.

29 In sesswn
32 Voofaraw
33 Suffix

ln&gt;lafledwllh t'ad Free

and up

(For a copy of JA COBY
MODERN. send $1 to " Win al
Bridge, · · care of ttus newspaper, P 0. Box 489, Rad1o C1ty

5 Wave's top
10 M a~tnot ' II Put up a f LL.s
13 Grandpa r enta l ! Fenctng

23 Gush; spew
25 Broke bread
26 W ei ght
27 Suspend

SALE ON ALL

! NE WSPA PF.R F:NTERPHI SE ~ SSN r

DOWN
I B lue Sp€Cial
2 Adversary
3 Well off

ACROSS

I Bolster

IM Sad verse
wnter
20 Gtrl' s
-&lt;: t ~S ~\/A.I'&lt;'---:=;

too low

THOMAS JOSEPH

Ninet ies, e.g

RUBBER BACK
CARPET

$38

by

Latin aclor

•'

A Nebraska reader wants to
know what we respoml to
partn er ' s opening not rump
We j ust pass . Even tf p artner has a max imum 18 pomts
we d on 't fancy our ch ances
for game Our spot car ds are

~

GASClLINE AllEY

B. G Carpet Cleaning.

00

Y K65 4
t .J R 7

• "8 2

----·~ - ~~ ---

SELECTION

Oswald Jacoby

AIJ.EY OOP

PIANO TUNING . Lane
Daniels. New phone num ·
ber : 742 2951 . Service to
schools and homt&gt;~ since
1965.

6'x12'to 12'xu•

• Q43

and Alan Sontag

BRADFORD, Auc tlon~r.
Comple1e Service. Phone
949 ·2-487 or 9&lt;9 2000 . roclne,
OhiO, Critt Bradford .

LOt

Ask tiM lucPis
1

You hold

By

m

SAVE.r.

tncks."

10· 2"::1 H

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Te)(aco s,&amp;_,tlon In
Syrllu cse . 9'92 JJ.CJ or
3752

SAVE ·oN cAIPrt
DRIVE Allln.I

with lhe result . He had no
need to be. When the hand
r eac hed the othe r table, East
also doubled. bul Sou th redou·
bled a nd cashed t he same n tne

••

•6

0p€ ning lea d

i

REYNOLD 'S ELECTRIC
N!otors, rewind and repair .
99'1 ·2356, s-11 B...,ch 51 .,
M iddleport , Ohio .

hi s doubl ed co ntr ac~ - "
Alan "East was unhapp y

Vulnerable East-West
Dealer: South

Pass

99'1 ·512&lt;.

WE HAVE PROSPECTS!
WE ARRANGE ANANCING!
IF YOU WANT TO SELL

ORPHAI'( Al'(l'(JE-GEIO:RALL Y SPOOKJI'(G

4 5 tt c

s

t hree is borderline . East's
double !Sa lightner lead din:•eto r to ask for ;;t spade lead .
wh1ch Wesl mak es. U nfortunately for East. South runs
off his top tricks and m ak es

+A 10 5

-- ~·------

REASONABLE - 12x50
mobile ho me on l 'h
acr e s of
lana with
sto cked
fish
pond
Ask;ng Only $12 ,00
COUNTRY HOME - 2
acres of land with a J
be-droom home , bath &amp;
L ead ing Cr . water on
Rt . 12 4.
BUSINESS &amp; HOME Lock, Stock and f ur
nishings go with this
sale
Extra
lot for
parking .
A -FRAME
SITES 22
acres near Reedsville
on 681 Will sell for only
$9,500.
NEW LISTING - Ni ce
laying 80 acres, tractor
tillable . Good farm
house , bath, and lots of
buildings. $80,000 .
RIVER FRONT 3
b4!odroom bri ck ranch
home . 2 car garage,
d ining , patio and 4 lofs.
$45,000 .
HUNTING LAND - 27
acres North of Forked
Run
Deer and other
wild game .
PRIVATE - 1 bedroom
stone home w ith bath ,
nat . oas F .A . furnace
and ove-r 2 acres. Now
$2(),000 .
FAMILY
HOME
Good older 3 bedroom
home on llevel acres on
Rt. 124. Garage and
covered picnic area .
1 ACRE - • bedroom
older home , bath , gas
furnace, nlce kit. and
basement .
Asking
$10,500 .
BUILDING LOTS
Eleven to sell In good
locations .

+n

tAKJI O~

I

3825.

216 E . Second StrNt

notrum p rebid is emmen tly
correct a nd North 's rai se to

• A8 4
• 9 75

SOL'Tif
+K 8
y K J2

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Swe-epen,
toasters , Irons, sll small
appllf!lnces. Lawn rnaw.r.
Next t o State H i ghway
Gar aQe on Route 7, 985·

wn:ns

EAST
+ AI,IJ 104

Y l,l9&amp; 5
• 6 43
• J 982

- - - · - --

.Real Estate for Sale

f or the nex t t hree hand s of a
match when he reall y h&lt;:t d
noth1ng to worry about ..
Oswa l d .. North's o n e ~s p ade
re sponse ma y not m eet With
app r ova l bu t m an y tournament playe rs do make that
r es ponse
South ' s
tw o -

l 0 2\1 A

+ K 1.16 4

WEST

I BRUHG YE IN TO
HOWE RY AND MART IN
septIc
Ex c avating ,
sys tem s, dozer , backhoe .
Rt 143_ Phone 1 16W 698·
7331 or 7~2 2593 .

Helpful tournament hints

.. BUT 111EOY P120Bt&gt;.BLY
L.l !&lt;'.£. YOU .• . ~--

H. L Writesel
Roofing

EXCAVATING ,
dozer,
l oader and ba ck hoe work ·
dump t r ucks and lo ·bOy s
for hire, will haul fill d i r t,
top soil, limestone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers, day phone 992 7089,
n ight phone 991 ·3525 or
5232 ..

RE AL TORS
Henry E . Cleland. SR
Res. 992 ·2S63
H enry E . Cletand, JR
R es . "HI91

WE ARE SELLING
REAL ESTATE!

---

',bU'LL liKE' MY PA!lBfJT&lt;?,
D,t..PHtJ~ ...

S UP~R
GOOSE
STOC~
1 RAILER HOW AVAilABLI!
~

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

!BORN LOSER

614

&lt; 30 tt c

PH . qq 2· 2259

ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottie Turner
Res . 742·2474
NEW LISTING - M;d
dleport , 2 story frame, J
bedroms. NGFA heat ,
lo ts of capretino and
pl! neling , new garage ,
m ust sell. $19,900
LIKE BRICK? - Here 's
one!
N ice loca t ion ,
built · i n
kitcnen ,
3
bedrooms . large lot ,
JU S T
p o r c hes
$23 ,500.00.
WANT ACREAGE Portland , 56 acres . ap
p r ox
5 tillabl e, 15
pas ture, bal !\nce t i m
ber, partly tenced, ex ·
cellent . Just S23 ,900.00 .
ACREAGE INTOWN Pom eroy , about 2 acres,
nice home, J bedrooms,
ni c e
k i t chen ,
part
b ase m e nt ,
garage,
glassed In porch . fru it
trees . 525,000 .00 .
BUILDING SITES About 25 acres , some
lots su rveyed.
water
and el ec tric aiJailable ,
ad i acent to good sub
divis ion, S27 ,500 .00 .
MIDDLEPORT
Frame duple)( , a lways
ren t ed. pr ivate baths,
c orner lot , needs a l it11e
repai r , make
money
l"lere . $10,900 .00 . ,..
LOCATED ON ST . RT .
124 Almost new
building, ..O'x.60 ', corner
tot , lots of frontage , fuel
oil forced air furnace .
$55,000 .00 .
RECENTLY REMODE LED - Lovely 2 story
frame ,
3
large
bedrooms,
formal
dining , Iaroe
living
room with fireplace ,
N .G .F A
heat, lovely
for chi ldren. $34,500.00.
WHY PAY RENT, WE
HAVE PRICES AND
FINANCING AVAILA ·
BLE TO MOST ANY
POCKETBOOK . STOP
ANO SEE US TODAY II

1--' ljLi lE

Monday , Oct. 29

Real Estate lor Sale

-.E

t.HlF UL

A nsw er
1--'AHI L r

m

OW NER WILL se ll ..0 acres
or ore with 1978 Hollypark
m obile home l 4x7 0 with e)(
panoo, plus J-4 )( 36 family
room attached , f u ll y c ar
peted , ru ral waer . some
pasture, fence. stand ing
t i mber. som e walnut, sun
deck
front and
back .
Located on New Lima Rd
Ca ll James Inge l s 61.4 74~
2182 or 985· 4107 .

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Yeoterdlty'o Cryptoquote : A HANDFUL OF SAND IS AN ANTHOLOGY OF THE UNIVERSE. - DAVID MC C&lt;iRD

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Jo-

NB C N ews 3, 15; ABC News 13 ;
Caro l Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10 ;
Bob N ewhart 17, Over Easy 20 .
oo--n A Crowd 3o T;c Tac Dough
8 : Muppet Show 6 ; News 10;
Newlywed Game 1) , Love
American Sty le 15 ; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cave tt 20,33 .
7 JO- That Na sh vil le Music 3;
Newlywed Game 6, J oker ' s Wi ld
8; Family Feud 10, 13; Nashville
on th e Road 15; A ll In The
F am il y 17 , MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20.33 .
8 00- li ttle H ouse on the Prairie
3. 15 , '240 Robert 13; Edward the
K ~n g 6; White Shadow 8. 10;
Movi e " Cathol ics" 20.33, Falcon
Footba ll 17
9 oo-Mov ie "Freedom Road " 3, 15;
NF L Football 6. 13 . Mash 8, 10;
Movie " Forever Amber" 17.
q Jo--WKR P inCinc innati8 , 10; Wal l
Street Week 20, 33
0 00-Lou Grant 8, 10; Pol dark II
33. News 20; 10 Jl}--(opi ng with
K;ds 20.
11 00-- New s 3,8, 10, 15 , Dick Cavett
20; F awlly T owers 33
11 30-Johnny Ca rson 3. 15. Harry .Q
8,
ABC N ews 33 ;
Movie
.. Apa c he " 10
12 00- N ews 6, 13; Movie " Angels
with Qirty Faces" 17 , 12 3Q-F Bl 6. CharHe's Ange l s 13
11 40--M cMillan &amp; Wife 8. 1: 00Tomorrow 3. News 15
40 - N ews 13 . 2 00 - News 17 .
2 05 - M ovie " Qu iet Please ,
Murder'' 17
.:10- Lo ve American Style 17 ·
4 H)- --Goen Up 11
T UESDAY, OCTOBER 30,1979
" &lt;I -F ar m Report 13 ; 5 51}--PTL
Cl ub 13.
6 OQ--700 Club&lt; 6.8 ; PT L Club 15 .
Health Field 10. 6 · 10-Worl d at
Large l7
6 JO- Con ce rn s. &amp; Comments 10 ;
N ew~ 17. 6 45----Morning Report
J, 6 5o--Good Morning, West
Virginia 13 ; 6 · 55---- News 13 .
7 oo-- Today 3, 15; Good Morn;ng
America 6, 1J.
Batman 10 ;
Tu es day Morning 8. Tt1ree
Stooges-Li tt le Rascals 17 ; 7: 15-A.M . Wea ther 33 .
30- F amily Affa i r 10; 7· 55--Chuck.
White Reports 10.
8·00---Capt Kangaroo 8. 10 ; Leave It
To Beaver 17 . Sesa m e St. 33 .
8 JQ-Romper Room 17.
9 oo-Bob Braun 3 : Bio Vllev 6;
Porky Pi9 8; Phil Donahue 13, 15 ;
One Day at a T ime 10 ; Lucy
Show 17 .
9 Jo- Bob Newhart 8 , Love of Life
10; Green Acres 17
10 110-Card Sharks 3. 15; Edge ol
N;gh l 6. Beat the Clock 8,10 ,
Morning Magazine 13; M ovie
'C apr ice" 17
10 30- Hollywood Squares 3, 15 ;
S20 ,000 Pyram;d 13 , Andy
G r 1ftith 6; Wh ew 8.10
10 55---CBS N ews 8 ; H ouse Call 10
11 (l()-High Rollers 3. 15; laverne &amp;
Shirley 6, 13 . Price is Righ t 8, 10 .
11 30 - Wheel of Fortune 3. 15 ;
Fam ily Feud 6, 13 ; Sesame St .
20 . Kno w Your schools 33;
11 55--N ew s 17.
12 00- Newsce nt er
3:
News
6.8, 10, 13; Mindreaders 15; love
American Sty le 17
12 JQ-Ryan ' s Hope 6. 13 ; Searc h for
Tomorrow 8, 10: Health F ield 15 ;
M ov ie "Johnny Beli nda " 17 ;
E lee Co 20.33 .
DO-Days of Our lives 3, 15; A ll M y
Childr en 6, 13: Young &amp; the
Re stless 8. 10 .
3()-- A s The Wor ld Turns 8, 10.
DO-Doctor s 3, 15 ; One life to live
6. 1J ; 2 25-N ews 17.
2 30-- Another World 3, 15. Guiding
Light 8. 10. Gigglesnort Hotel 17.
3 oo-G eneral Hosp ital 6. 13 ; I Love
Lucy 17 , Poldark II 20.
3 JO-One Day At A Time 8. Joker's
W il d 10. Flintst one s 17 .
4 oo- M is ter Cartoo n 3; Password
Plus 15; Merv Gr iff in 6; Beverly
Hillbill ies 8, Sesa me St. 20 .33;
Six Million Dollar Man 10 ; Real
M cCoys 13. Spectreman 17.
30 - Bewit ched
3,
Petti coa t
Junction 8; Tom &amp; Jerry 13;
Merv Griffin 15 : Gi lligan 's I s . 17 .
5 00---1 Dream of Jea nnie J ; Sanford
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers Ne igh ·
borhoo d 20 . 33 o Mar y Tyler
Moore 10 , My Three Sons l7
S 30----C arol Burnett 3; New! 6;
Gomer Py le 8; E tee. Co. 20;
Mash 10. Happ y Days Aga;n 13; )
Dream of Jeannie 17 ; Ooc _
t or
who 33.
6 oo-- N ews 3.8.10 , 13 ; ABC Ne ws 6;
Zoom 20 : Carol Burnett 17 .
6 30 NBC N ews 3, 15; ABC News 13;
Carol Burnett 6: CBS News 8, 10;
Bob Newhart 17; Over Easy 20 .
7 00-3's A Crowd 3; T 1c Toe Dovgh
8; Pul se 6; News 10; Political
Talk 13. Love American Style 1.5 ;
San ford &amp; Son l7 , Di ck Cavett
20,33 .
' 7 30 - Hollywood
Squares
3:
N ewlywed Game 6 ; Joker's "'!lid
8; H oll ywoo d Sq uares 10, Sha Na
N a 13 . TV Honor Society IS; All
In The Fam;ty 17 ; MacNeil ~
L ehr er Report 20.33.
a oo- Cas per ' s Hal l oween 3, 15 ;
H appy Days 6, lJ o CBS Reports
8.10 . Nova 20,33 ; Movie " Body 1!.
Sou l" 17.
8 o31}--Witch's N ;gh t Out 3, 15; Angle
6. 13 .
9 OO-Movl e "F reedom Rood " 3,15 ;
Three's Company 6, 13 ; Movle
.. One on One" 8,10; World 20. 33 .
· 31}--Taxi 6, 13; ID oOO-Harl to Hart
6, 13 o s;x Wives of Henry VIII 17;
News 2() ; Ci t y Notebook 33.
10 31}--Uke lt Is 20; Another Voice
33 .
·oo- News 3.6. 8. 10 , 13, 15 ; Dick
Cave ll 2(); Carry On Laugh ing 33 .
11 : 31}--Johnny Carson 3,15; Barney
MH ter 6,l,l; Barnaby Jones 8;
ABC News 33 ; Movie " Run
Silent , Run Deep" 10; Movie
"The Slrawberry Blonde" 17 .
12 :05--Movie " Rosemary's Baby
II" 6, 13; 12 : A~Movie " A love
Allo t•
l oOO-To,..._ow J; News 15; 1:30-News " ' 1 oJs-Movle " Smoky"
17.
13 ;
· ):JS· ~Movle
1: 15- News
" Johnny Angel " 17; 5:1t-St..Trek 17.

�lG- 'lbe Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 29. 197~

Productivity up 0.1 percent third quarter
WASHINGTON ( AP) - The
productivity of American bll5iness
and workers rose at an annual rate
of 0.1 percent in the third quarter,
reversing two consecutive quarters
of sharp declines . the Labor
Department reported today
However. the slight rise was not
likely to cheer government
economists who predict that a
stagnant productivity rate will mean
high mflation and a diminished
standard of living for the
foreseeable future .
Productivity, a measure of goods
and serVIces that the economy turns
out per hour of paid working time,
has drawn inc-reased attention from
economists lately because of its
sluggish growth and resulting
impact on inflation . Today ·s figures

pointed to a continuaUon of that poor
growth .
ProductJVIty dechned at an annual
rate of 2.2 perr-.,nt in the sel'ond
quarter and 3 p 2.2 pertent 10 the
second quarter and 3 percent Jn the
first quarter. according to revised
Labor Department figures. Both
declmes were the sharpest since the
1974-75 recession .
The D. I percent productivity rise
in the three months ended Sept. 3D
applied to aU pnvate businesses
Among non-farm businesses, the
rate rose 0.2 percent. and among
manufacturers U1e annual increase
was a healthier 3.2 percent, the
government reported .
OUtput by the private sectcr rose
at an annual rate of 2.5 percent
during the third quarter. while hours

work ed rose 2 4 perl'ent, thu s
accounting
for
the
siJght
productivity gam .
Worker compensation per hour
rose at an annual rate of 8.5 percent
during the quarter , while unit labor
co&gt;is increased 8.3 percent . Both
figures are the smallest since the
fourth quarter of last year.
Separately, the department
reported that major tmion cuntracts
negotiated during the first nine
months of the year provided average
first -year increases of 7.5 percent
That Js down shghtly from an
average of 7.6 percent in such boosts
in all of 1978.
The figw-es do not include fringe
benefits or cost-of~iv ing raises tllat
employ ees might receive in addi\Jon
to wage increases.

Among
larger
contract
settlements. tho!:ie covering 5.000 ur
more workers, the department said
first -year wage and fringe benefll
increases are averoging 9.1 percent
this year. up from 8.3 percent last
year.
The department also reported tllat
contract provtsJOns for cost-of~ivmg
pay increases accounted for only 5li
percent of the inflatlon rate so far
tllis year, as measured by the
Consumer Pr1ce Index .
Charles L. Schultze, chairman of
the president's Council of Economic
Advisers, warned last week that
unless productivJty improves,
Americans can ex:xpect inflation to
run at 8 to 9 percent a year for the
indefinite future
Inflation now is running at a 3()-

Korean president assassination victim
SEOUL, South Korea 1AP 1 South Koreans closed ranks agamst
:-iorth Korea today. and the Umted
States moved an aircraft carrier
closer to the Korean coast as the
government admitted that President
Park Chung-hee was assassmated
by the head of the Korean CIA.
Opposition leader Kim Youngsam, a strong critic of Park's
goverrunent, said the entire nation
united in warning North Korea it
"should by no means miscalculate
this misfortune of ours as an
opporturuty for mvas1on. and Jt
should bear m mmd that the natJOn
is determin ed to defend free
democracy
ur:Jder
any
circumstances.'·
Another leading opponent of Park,
1971 presidential candidate Kiln

Dae-jung,
also
warned
the
communists ··not to try to take
advantage of the situation ... The
en\Jre people's voice is united.
transcending poiltJcal differences."
Warnings to the North and support
for acting PreSJdent Choi Kyu-hah
also came from President Carter,
Defense Secretary Harold Brown
and the commander of U.S . for ces in
Korea. Gen John A. WJckham Jr .
U.S officials said they saw no
Pvi dence of unusual North Korean
military ~ctivity However, Brown
said the Umted States had sent two

airborne warning and con trol
aircraft to South Korea and moved
an atrcr aft earn er . aiready on
station between Japan and Korea .
c loser to tl1e Korean coast.
Wickham. who also heads the

com bined U.S.-Korean Command ,
sent a letter to Choi pledgmg that
"s hould hostilities occur the
combined forces command will
defend the republic ... (and) will
remain ready and totally dedicated
to the security of the republic."
Choi. the defense, home and
fore1gn mmtsters and other key
nff if'ial.s met for two hours this
morning and declared · "Everything
is in order and calm has been
restored ...
However. the Korean armed
forces remained on emergency
alert. and the nation was still under
martial law . There were no
disturbances.
Park's body was in a closed casket
at the presidential residence, the

Ohio deer population high
COLUMBUS. Ohw 1 API - State
wildlife experts and the Oh1o r·arrn
Bureau Federation ag;ee there are
too many deer m the state. but they
differ on how many there should be .
Some
farmers.
primartly
orchardists. have complained in
recent years that deer are damagmg
fruit trees by eating young trees and
the bark and twigs of older trees.
So, the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources' DivJSJon of
Wildlife wants to reduce the size of
the 1D2,IJOO.&lt;Ieer herd to about 85 .000.
Steve Cole, executive admini&amp;rator
for wildlife management and
research, says that's about the rtght
number for Ohio.
The diviSJon plans Ohio's first
statewide deer gun season since
1964. Cole said the number of
antlerless deer permits will be more
than doubled from 29,000 in 1978 to
67,000 in an effort to decrease tlle
number of female deer 1n the
population .
Cole says it all adds up to an
attempt tc increase the deer.harvest
from 22,000 in 1978 to 37,000.
But Bruce Benedict of the OhJo
Farm Bureau Federation says that
while farmers welcome the
department's ac'lion. 85 .000 deer
may be too many.
"The wildlife people say they want
oo get tlle program back to a 1977
level, but were questioning whether
that's still enough," he said
"There's still going to be 80,000 deer
in the state and they can do a lot or
damage ."
It's not that farmers hate deer.
Benedict said, but they ! deer ihke to
eat soybeans, peach and apple tree
seedlings, and corn and they are
simply plentiful to the point where
they cau.se real economic damage ...
He could not place a val ue on the
"damage catL'led by deer. however .
Cole met w1th farmers Oct 17 at
the statehouse m Columbus to
discuss the situation. "T he
agricultural damage hasn't been
that bad in the past . But we are
experiencing more problems with
deer in agricultural crops," he said .
Previous complaints resulted in
the division allowing farmers and

.-cooo
--···-

TIMES SPECIAL W

•
•

13" PIUA •

1

Your choice of any •

•

one topp;ng ,

I

Reg . $3 55

199

l Days On ly

E&amp;lnO'
s
5
1. illirii.l

thetr workers to ktll deer at any
seasoon
if a wildlife officer
determined deer were ca usmg
excessive damage . The division also
provided some orchardists with
extra antlerless permJts for use
durmg the deer-hunting season.

Cole said the division is surveying
5.000 rural landowners to learn how
they feel about the size of the state's
deer herd.
.. We'd like a response from more
people than the relatively select few
that have experienced problems in
the past, " he said.

Employees get share
of firm's ownership
MEDINA, Oh io 1AP 1 - Harco
Corp. JS finding that claims of
benefits from ESOP - Employee
Stock Ownership Plan - are no
fable .
"It used to be ·them' versus 'us,'
but now ·them· is ·us, ... said Harco
Chairman W. Joseph McDade,
speaking of the new atmosphere at
Hareo after employees got a share m
the ownership
Harco is one of a gruwittg ·nwnber
or Ohio c001panies to adopt ESOP, a
program wh1ch some congressmen
have proposed to help th.: ailing
Chr),;ler Cnrp. out of Jts fmancial
problems
Harco, whose 450 workers make
and Jnstall co rr os1on protection
systems. mamly for oil and natural
gas plpellnes. got Jts first taste of
employee ownersh1p in 1971 when a
group or 20 employees, including
McDade , bought control of the firm

from former owner Harr y W.
Hosford.
McDade sa Jd tlle employee group
boiJilht a company that was not
doing well and "turned it around."
Sales and profits grew steadily, With
sales rismg from S!i million in 1971 to
about $25 rrulilon last year .
It was not until a few years later.
after Me Dade saw a television
segment on Louis A. Kelso, a
promoter of the ESOP idea, that
Harco
instituted the broader
employee ownershJp program.
At tllat time, Harco management
was seeking a way to fulfill an
earlier agreement to buy o ut a 42
percent interest held by Clarke
Bearden . Also. McDade saJd he felt
that broadened ownersh ip would
produce even more dramatic
results .
"We had seen what it did to 20
guys," he said . " What 1f we had 4~0
people JUSt comrrutted' ..
Here is how the plan works under
federal laws permitting creation of
ESOPs:
Depending
on
the
company's financial performance,
Harco makes annual contributions
U&gt; the ESOP trust in amounts of up to
15 percent of an employee's pay . The
contributions are in addition to

RE-ELECT

CLARENCE ANDREWS
WRITE-IN CANDIDATE FOR

normal wages .
The trust is administered by three
emp loyees and two company
officers who vote the 42 percent
stock interest at Harco annual
meetmgs . The trust is buying tlle
stock from Bearden. who McDade
said holds a 6()-year note "at a
reasonable interest rate ."
Harco receives a tax break in that
its cmtributions are tax-deductible.
Employees benefit from income tax
deferment m money placed in trust
for shares in ownership of a growing
concern .
It takes 14 years for an employee
w acqUJre a fully -vested interest in
the trust When he leaves the
company. he can eith er sell his
ESOP shares or leave them 1n :he
trust until he reaches retirement
age
"At some time Jn the futw-e ,
maybe m 10 years," ESOP is to take
over full ownership, buying up the
rest of the outstanding shares.
mcluding McDade's interest
ESOP programs can have some
problems as well as benefits - for
example. miSunderstandings among
employees who may tllink the plan
gives tllem control of company
operations

TO END MARRIAGES
t' iling for dissolutiOn Or marriage
were Michael Lee Grate, Rutland,
and Debrah Len Grate, Rutland .
Marriages dissolved were ~gina
Dawn Grate and Ronald Eugene
Grate: Stephen Maynard, and
~becca Lynn Maynard.

Blue House, and hundreds of
thousands gathered at public altars
across the country to burn incense
and mourn the dead leader . His
funeral was to be held Saturday.
Rioting against Park's Ill-year
dictatcrial rule erupted last week in
the southern cities of Pusan and
Masan,
and
North
Korea's
Commumst Party news paper.
Rodong Shinmun, said Sunday that
Park's killing "proves how serious
the political crisis and social
disorder in South Korea are."
Park was shot Friday by the head
of the Korean Central Intelligence
Agency. Kim Jae-kyu . The
government said at first the shooting
was accidental but the chief of tlle
mve&gt;1igation, Gen . Chon Doo-hwan,
admitted at a spec ial news
co nference Sunday that K1m
assassinated the presJdent
Chon said Kim shot Park and
Park 's chief bodyguard three times
each during a dinner Friday night
while f1ve of Kim's men killed four
other presiden\Jal bodyguards and
seriously wounded another m the
next room.

Chon sa1d Kim planned the
assassination because he was out of
favor with the president and feared
he would be ftred. He decided to do it
tllat night after he and the chief
bodyguard. 01a 0JJ-chul, got into a
heated argument durmg the dinner,
Chon sa id .
Cha
was
Park's constant
companion, one of his closest
advisers and a longtime enemy of
the KCIA chief.
The government denied that Kim
was trying to take over the
government. Fore1gn observers said
\llJs was borne out by the absence of
mass
arrests, . .seizure
of
communications facilities and other
tllings characteristic of attempted
coups.
There was no explanatJon of why
the government origmally sa1d the
killing was accidenta I.
Kim and all five of his men were
under arrest. Chon said many others
were being questioned to determme
1f they were involved
According to the South Korean
constitution, a new president must
be selected within three months ,
"without debate ," by the electoral
college, whose 2,583 members were
supporters of Park .
In the forefront of possible
contenders are two former military
men who are also former prime
ministers and now members of the
National Assembly - Kim Jong-pil .
53. and Chung ll-kwon. 61.
As a lieutenant-('olonel , Kim was
the main organizer of the 1961 coup
that put Park Jn power . He was a
powerful adviser to Park and is
married to Park' s ruece.
He organized the KCIA and was its
first director and also organized
Park 's DemocratJc Republican
Party and was Jts chairman. He was
prime minJster in 1971-75.
Chung, also a close adviser to
Park, was prominent in the
Syngman Rhee administration
overthrown by Park and has held
nearly aU major army posts and
many powerful pohllcal ones . He
was fore1gn minister twJce and
prUne ministe r in 19&amp;4 .

Higher productivity lets the entire
economy prosper and brings a
higher standard of living for the
average American. Production can
be increased at higher wage rates,
which means more Income for
cmsumption of goods, which leads
U&gt; more jobs.
Some economists have been at a
loss to explain the declining rate of
productivity . But other economist8
blame the lagglng rate on a sharp
drop in investments by American
business for new labor-saving
machinery .
Productivity grew at an average
rate of 3.1 percent a year between
194 7 and 1967, fueling an
IJllprecedented rise in the nation's
standard of living.
In the last decade, however,
]X'Oductlvity growib slowed to an
average 1.6 percent a year, and last
year it barely grew at all.

Area Deaths
ROSELYN WHOBREY
Mrs . Roselyn Whobrey, 49, a
resident of Addison, died Saturday
night in Holzer Medical Center.

IIO~PITAI.

.\ E\\

~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Saturday Admissions-Margaret
O'Donnell, Pomeroy: Martha
Searles, Middleport: Dorotlly Antllony, Middleport.
Saturday Discharges-Raymond
Little, Edward Martin, Howard
Roush .
Sunday Admissions--Richard
Grady, Racine: Paul Clark, Middleport: Howard Roush, Racine .
Sunday
Discharges--Rick
McKnight, Ross Kent, Barbara
Harris, Margaret O'Donnell.
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharged, Oet. 241
Sherman Ba!Sden, Jr., Stella
Brady. Mrs. Dennis Clarkson and
son. Mrs. Phillip Combs and
daughter, Lola Crow, Ellen DeMy,
Debra Goody, George Henry ,
Richard Lewill, Sandra Lucas, Jeffrey Manring, Cheryl Rnbey, Agnes
Runyan, Mrs . John Russell and son ,
Ervin Ryan, Sarah Simpkins,
Madge Tredway, Mrs . Jerry
Wickline and daughter, Weldon
Woods, Florence Workman, Charlotte Wren .
Blrtbs, Od. 211
Mr . and Mrs. Franklin Keck, son,
Wellston.
Discharges, Oet. Z1
Ira Adkins, Mrs. Michael An derson and son. Bernice Barber,
Carol Burnette, Mae Bradley, Brian
Brandeberry, Ray Broyles, DaMy
Buffington, Elaine Burston, Mary
Byerly, Patricia Coleman, Carolyn
Crabtree, Chris Crace. William
Cromlish, Mrs. Mark Dillinger and
son. Steve Foster, John Frazier, AItllur Hoyt, Asa Jorden, Donald Kerk,
Sharon Lambert, Ray Landers, Sr.,
Richard Perkins, Jr., Helen Robinson, Mrs. David Sexton and twin
sons, Harry Swartz, Alden Thaxton,
Harry White, Danny Wilber, Lester
Wise, Jr.
lllrlha, Oct. 27
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Buffington,
son, Wellston: Mr. and Mrs. William
Buckley,son, Pomeroy: Mr.and
Mrs . Ronald Barton, daughter.
Gallipolis: Mr. and Mrs . Herbert

She was born on March 22, 1930, in
Louisville, Ky ., daughter of the late
Richard and Harriett Blincoe.
She married H. L. Whobrey, Sr. ,
who survives, along with two
children: H. L. Whobrey, Jr., Middleport. and Rickey Dale Whobrey,
Addison .
Four brothers and three sisters
survive: James, Richard, Joseph
and Robert Blincoe, all of Sellersburg, Ind .; Mrs. Robert Burnette,
Gallipolill; Mrs. Bernie Harris,
Louisville, and Mrs. Tony Hoffman,
Sellersburg. Five grandchildren sur-

(USPS 145960)
VOL XXVIII NO. 137

CHARLES R. GILKEY
Charles Ray Gilkey
Friday was preceded in
brother, Willlam Ray
Funeral services for Mr.
be held today .

who died
death by a
Reynold!! .
Gilkey will

MEETING HELD
Danville- The
Melgs
Area
Holiness AssociaUon met Tuesday
evening at the Danville Wesleyan
Church.
The next monthly meeting will be
beld at the Pomeroy Nazarene Chur·
ch Nov . 'J:I. The public is invited.

MARRIAGE UCENSES
Marriage licenses were Issued to
Richard Allen Ramsburg, 21, Middleport, and Carol Jean Neutzling,
17, Rt.l, lAngsville : Larry Joe Keirns, 18, Tuppers Plains, and Sonia
Ellen Carr, 19, Tuppers Plains.

Reffit, daughter, Hamden.
Dlacllarxe~, Oet. za
Mrs. Joel Atha and daughter,
Thelma Fleming, Connie Johnson,
Roxie JusUce, Mrs. Freddie Kendricks and son, Kim Mahan, Michael
Mattoll, Rachel McManus, Debra
Walker .
Blrtbs, Oct. za
Mr . and Mrs. Hershel Gilbert, son,
Gallipolis.

£L8£Rf£LOS

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POMEROY ·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TU ESDAY , OCTOBER 30. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Sporn officials unveil 'new look' facility
NEW HAVEN, W. Va.- The " new
look " Philip Sporn Plant here was
shown to area goverunental and
community leaders Monday and
today.
During the tours, visitors were
shown how the plant now meets all
air regulations and how the plant
has evolved over the years.
Pointing out that the first unit at
the plant was completed in 1950, E.
H. GLoss, plant manager, said:
"That year, the plant was rated the
most efficient in the nation at converting coal U&gt; electricity. Today, 29
years later, the plant is still going
strong, and remains among the most
efficient in the nation. ranking loth
in 1978."
Durtng the intervening years, the
nurnber of generating units has risen
from one U&gt; five, the plant capability
has risen to 1,000,000 kilowatts, and
many other changes have been
made at the plant.
The latest, nearly completed, is

the installation of $84. 7-million worth of electrostatlc precipitators.
They are designed tc remove 99.7%
of ash created by burning coal
before it can escape out of the
plant's two tall stacks.
The precipitator installation,
along with work on the generating
units and installation of a dry fly-ash
system, mark a new milestone in the
plant 's history. "It represents our
corrunitment to using the plant just
as long as we can to produce needed
electricity to the area," according to
Gloss.
The plant is joinUy owned by Appalachian Power Company and Ohio
Power Company, affiliates of the
American Electnc Power System.
During its 29-year We, the plant
has, in rapid succession, taken on
several new appearances. Two
years after the first !5D,IXXJ kilowatt
unit went into opera \Jon, three other
units like it were completed at the
!ant

Each umt had Jts own 250-foot.fl.igh
stack, and the plant had a
generating capability ci 600,000
kilowatts. Incorporated in it were
many new designs and features
which marked the advancing tehcnology of generating electnc1ty .
A fifth unit, now rated at 450,000
kilowatts, was added to the plant in
1960. This unit , considered a marvel
of efficiency, had its own 600-foothigh stack !by comparison. the

Washington Monument JS 555 feet
high)
Two years later, work was completed on a single 600-foot stack to
replace the four smaller stacks used
by the plant's first four units. It and
the Unit 5 stack were designed to
carry plant discharges high enough
into the atmrephere to offset any
horizonal winds.
New precipitators, which completely change the appearance of the

plant again, point up two things
about tlle plant and the companies
which own it, according tc GLoss.
"The hrst is our continuing commitment to clean air. When the first
four units were built, the latest in
technology mechanical dust
collectors with an 85% efficiency were installed . When Urut 5 was
built a decade later. it had electrostatic precipJtators with an efh ciency of 95% Now, all have been

L.ETI'ER DEADLINE
No Leiters to the Editor dealing
with poUUcal subjects In relation to
the Nov. 6 election wW be printed In
The Dally Sentinel later than Friday
Nov. 2. Letten should be neaUy
prepared and in good taste and kept
within 300 word. and must be signed.

vive.
She was a member of the Moose
Auxiliary, Pt. Pleasant and Elks
Auxiliary of Mandan, N. D.
Graveside services will be held
10:3() a. m. Tuesday at Gravel Hill
Cemetery with Rev. Raymond
Jakllnske officiating .
Friends may call at the Warehime
Funeral Home from Z-4 and 7-9 p.m .
today .

e

Judge appointed
WASHINGTON I AP) -Shirley
M. Hufstedler, a federal judge in
California, will be nominated by
President Carter on Tuesday to
be the first secretary of the
Department of Education, a
senatorial rude said late Monday
night.
Roy F. Greenaway, administrative assist8nt to Sen .
Alan Cranston, 0-Calif., said
White House officials have advised the senator that Mrs. Hufstedler has been chosen for the
top job in the newly created
federal Cabinet agency.

Dollar, gold up
LONDON I AP ) - The dollar
jumped in Tokyo today and improved on most other most
foreign exchanges. Gold prices
also rose .
In Japan, the dollar dosed at
237.70 yen, the high for the year
and nearly three yen up from
234.7i Monday .
Dealers said the Bank of Japan
sold an estimated SJOO million to
support the yen. weakened by increased oil pr1ces and a troubled
Japanese economy.

Offer increased
ONCINNAfl I AP) - The
Umver.lity of CincinnatJ upped Jts
pay offer to 1.1 percent within the
demands ci striking faculty
members . Pres1dent Henry
Winkler said Monday night.
Winkler, who said he can sympathize with the "real economic
and non-economic problems" of
the faculty, saJd the administra\Jon increased it's offer
from 15 .4 percent over two years
tc 17.4 percent.
The striklng American
Association
of
University
professors had demanded 19.~
percent. The umversity said that
the average salary for the 1,800
professors, assoc!Bte professors
and department heads was a lltUe over 120.000 based on nine
months of work .

Sentence
set aside
William Allen Dawson, 19,
Cleveland. Monday asked Meigs
County Common Pleas Cow1 Judge
John C Bacon to vacate the sentence he had imposed in August.
Dawson had voluntarily entered a
plea of guilty to a charge of auto
theft as contained in a bill of information prepared by the
prosecutor . He had received a
suspended sentence and one year
probation .
In the interim , Dawson was bemg
sought by Texas authorities on a
similar charge. However . the
BSSJstant prosecuting attorney in
Tarrant County. Texas , indicated
charges would be dropped if Dawson
were sentenced on the auto theft
charge in Ohio.
Judge Bacon, being advised or
this, and with the concurrence of
Dawson and Prosecutor Fred W.
Crow In ' set aside the preVIOUS sentence and ordered Dawson to be imprisoned in a proper penal instJtu\Jon for a term of not less than
si.x months, nor more than five
years Texas authorities will be advised of his decJSion in the case.

WASHINGTON TRIP
Lee Wood of the United Mine
Workers International armounced
today tha t a bus that will accommodate 43 persons wiU be
traveling to Washington, D. C. on
Nov . I, at I a.m. in support of the
Ohio EPA plan .
The bus fare is free the only cost
will be for mea is for the one day trip.
All Southern Ohio Coal Employes
will be excused from their employment U&gt; attend.
Those interested in going are
asked tc call Lee Wood at 992-3319:
Patsy Oiler at 992~163, or Halley
Eblin at 992-7366.

replaced with the new precipitators
which have a design efficiency of
99.7%," Gloss pointed out.
"The seond thing is that this kind
of work does not come cheaply. The
new precipitators cost $84.7-million.
This figure can be brought into focus
when you realize that the entire
original plant cast $121-million to
build ."
Gloss went on (;) polnt out that the
plant, in addition tc meeting particular standards, also mee\.'1 sulfur
dioxide standards through the use af
low-sulfur coal
During the tours, Gloss also commented on the economic impact the
plant has had on the area since it
was built .
He said the plant has the
capability of producmg enough electricity aMually U&gt; meet all of the
eleetrical needs of 600,000 homes .
Last year tl)e plant burned 1.~
million tons of coal, providing employment for 932 coal miners earning $18. -million in aMual wages.
·'There are also 385 employees
operating the plant. They live in thla
area and invest most of their S6million in annual wages here,"
Glass added.
Work now beJng completed was
begun in 1975, and it also provided
economic benefits to the area in the
form of wages, employment, and
local purchases. "At the peak of construction, there were approximately
400 people at work earning a weekly
payroll of $24U.OIIO. " Gloss said.

Friend
honored
THE ":"'E W LOOK" - E. H. Gloss, manager of the Philip Sporn Plant near New Haven. far left. is shown
taking several Mason County offJcJals on a tour of the newly modernized Bend Area fa cil ity Monday . New
precipitators. which comp letely change the appearance of the plant . have been installed at a cost of $84.7 million.
The new precipitators, one of which is in the back~round, have a design efficiency of 99.7 percent. Assisting Gloss m
explaining the technological aspects of the precipitators is Appalach1an l"ower Company's Huntington D1vis1on
Manager Fred Helm, fourth from left. Pictured, from left, are Gloss, Mason County Commissioners Charles
I Horsey) Fow ler. Jr. and Bob Powers, board pres1dent: Helm, Commissioner Michael Whalen , Commission Office
Manager Kevin Durst and County Clerk L. W. Getty. The county played a signifJcant role m the plant being
modernized, thus assurmg the retention of 385 jobs at the faclhty, by issuing tax-free bonds for the insta llatwn of the ·
precipitators.

•

Teachers' znsurance will be
discontinued Wednesday
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Me1gs Local Board of Education
Monday night authorized its superintendent David Gleason to proceed
with plans to mail letters to all ce rtified employes I teachers 1 adv1s1ng
them that their JnSurance coverage
is being discon tinued as of Nov I.
The insurance coverage of all non certified personnel will be continued
for the time being and the future of
that coverage will depend upon the
actions of non- certified employe,;
when schools reopen, Gleason said.
Both teachers and non-teachers
have We insurance, Blue Cross and
Blue Shield and maJor medical msurance at tlle present time. lli&gt;rt of
this coverage is proV!ded by the
board of education.
Supt. Gleason said UlSurance companies have indicated that they will
give teachers the opportunity to continue their coverage with each individual paying the premiun!S involved.

VOTE FOR

HUGH MARTIN
WRITE IN CANDIDATE

The board, meeting to discuss the
teachers' strike now enten ng its s!Xth week, also agreed to have the orflee of finance and management
come 1n and look at the financial picture of the di.stnct. Last week this
was done by the same offi ce in
Columbus
Today a representa\Jve from the
office was taken mto the Meigs
Junior High School to go over reco rds of the treasurer, Jane Wagner ,
and the representative will tssue a
report on tlle financial status of the
district. Gleason stated .
At II a.m. this morrung there were
no new negotiating sesswns set up
between the board and the teachers
association, Gleason reports. Mean time . occupanC) of the administratJve offices of tlle district at
the junior high building in Middleport continues by about 3()
teachers who have vowed they wlll
continue the occupancy un\JI the
strike is settled. On the other hand,
the board and Supt. Gleason has
taken the positJon that the s1t-1c has
put a damper on negotiatlons m the
district.
Schools have been offict.ally closed
for two weeks. It was the general
feeling expressed by teachers, the
board and the public that the closing
would help bring about a strike settlemen t. However, a settlement has
not been forthcoming . A package offered a week ago today followmg a
negotiations session in NelsonVIlle
was soundly rejected by teachers
Supt Gleason said ttu.s morning

that the Mlddleport Pentecostal
C'hurch has been offered as a fourth
site at which negotJatJOns could take
place. lie expressed appreciation to
groups which have offered sJtes.
The Meigs County Board ci
Education will meet in regular
session Friday evening and at that
time JS e~pected to dJSCUSS a letter
from Pomeroy Attorney Charle_s
Knight requesting that the coun ty
board take over the duties of the
Meigs Local Board
For the second day, teachers of
the distrJet JSsued no public
statement regarding the strike .
All members of the board attended
Monday night's sesswn and special
meetings have been set up for each
everung ttu.s week Jn addltlon to a
sesswn at 11 a.m . Wednesday .

EXTENDED FORECAST
The el1ended foreca• t Th111'11·
day through Saturdoy I• for 8
gradual cooling trend and a
chance of showers Thll!11day and
Frtday . Hlgbli will be ti5 to 70
Thunday. dropping to the low
and mJd 00. Saturday.
....... .
'

Richart; M. Friend was officially
commended for his superior performance at theGallipolill Locks and
Dam Sunday.
Friend. who has been employed at
locks and dams for the past 17 years,
was presented with a special
achievement award and 8 gift af
$200.
The cJtation reads :
"Richard M. Friend is officially
commended for his sustained
supenor performance during the
penod 15 August 1978 to 15 August
1979 for which he was granted a
special achievement award.
.. As lock and dam leader with full
onsite shift responsibility at
Gallipolis Locks and Dam, Ohio
River, Mr . Fnend demonstrated excetional conscientiousness in the
performance of his duties . He effectively
accomplished
safe
lockages of river traffic and has
develped his shift intc one that excells in all phases of work detail.
"Mr. Friend's superior job performance. courteous manner and
dependability have contributed substan tially to the missions of the
operations division and promoted
good public relations for UJe Huntington Distnct."
The award was signed by James
H. Higman, Colonel, CE, District
Engineer , U. S. Amly Engineer
District .Huntlngton .
rnend received a similar award
seven years ago. He and his wife,
Shirley, reside at 36000 Rock Springs
Road, Pomeroy. They have five
children , Richard Owen, Marvin,
Brian, Belinda Friend and Mark and
stx grandchildren.

·.·.··.·.·

UONSTOMEET
The Pomeroy - Middleport Lions
Oub wlll host the Zone Advisory
Meeting in I Jonism to all Linns,
relative to tlle club projects anJ dCtivities for Olstrict 13-K at the Meigs
Inn, Thursday, at 7 p. m . All Lions
are urged to attend .

{

\

•

Vandalism complaint checked

EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL BOARD

MAYOR, OF POMEROY, OHIO
Just write myna me and office on the back of your gray
ballot envelope.
Your write-in vote will be appreciated.
Pd . Pol . Adv.

year high of 13 percent annually.
Schultze said soaring prices for
energy, ho uslng and loans are
causing nearly half the currrent
inflation. with prices for other goods
and services rising at less than 10
percent a year.
A decline in productivity, which
measures the efficiency of both
workers and labor-£aving machines.
contributes to inflation by pushing
up production costs and ultimately
consumer f:rices
If fe wer goods and services are
turned out each hour, the cost for
producing each item goes up and tlle
increase is passed on to tlle
consumer .
Increased productivJty helps fight
inflation by helping offset rising
labor costs stemming from worker
wage increases, and by helping
absorb higher energy costs res
helping absorb higher energy costs
resulting from the skyrocketing
costs of imoorted oil.

•

.............. "-,. •' '·.·'

NOV. 6, 1979

THANK YOU
PD. POL ADV

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

HALLOWEEN DECORATIONS - The exteriors of
many homes throughout the Meigs County area are
decorated for Halloween . One of t~ most extensively

•

decorated is the Epple home on North 4th St., Middleport , pictured here.

,

Meigs County Sheriff duputies are
investigating a vandalism complamt
filed by Charles Wolfe. Rt. 2, Racme.
Wolfe adVIsed the department tllat
sometime Sunday a large window in
a house he owns in Letart Township
was broken out by a large rock.
Jeff Fowler, Rt . I, Middleport,
reported that sometime since Saturday evening and this morning a 12
volt battery was stolen from his
pickup trucL.
Will: trick or treat in most com-

munities this evening Meigs County
Sheriff James J . Proffitt urges area
motorists to be on the alert .
Parent can make,their children's
Halloween pleasant and safe by
proper precautions and careful instructions the sheriff stated.
"Protect the little ones-be sure
they are accompanied by an adult or
responsible older chlld. Have them
stay ln their own neighborhood" the
sheriff suggested.

RICHARDM. FRIEND

f

Weather
MosUy swmy Wedneaday. The
high today In the upper
Clear
tonight wtU! a low near 50. 'lbe bigh
Wednesday In the low 708 •.Chance ol
rain is near zero percent tonight and
10 percent Wednesday.

eos.

'

•

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