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                  <text>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

en tine

at

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.

'

•

�.

!-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Oct. 30, 1979

In Washington:
By Martha AD«Ie

111111 Robert Wallen
WASHINGTON (NEA I - F'ifty
yean after Black Tuesday , the
Qoash of '29 and the Great Depression it precipitated remain
indelibly engraved upon the
American PIIYche.
Nobody who was alive on Oct. 29,
1929 ,
or
anytime
during the decade that followed ,
emerged WIBCathed from those
yelll'!l when the nation lost Its shirtand
very
nearly
its
soul, a.s well. And small wonder .
The most cocksure society on
earth, riding a wave of unprecedented prosperity. was suddenly torn from its moorings and
plunged onto the rocks of financial
and econootic ruin.
Proud men sold apples on street
cornen, dowager queens queued up
at soup kitchens and a generation of
young people shelved their dreams
to scrap for sheer SW&gt;'IVal. Th"""
who escaped the worst felt forever
011 the precipice, fearful their own
jobs, their own homes, would be the
next togo.
What is remarkable, though, is not
so much the effect the Depression
had on those who lived through it a.s
the degree to which it shaped the
values wid attitudes of millions who
weren't even born at the time . And
the two of us -ages 38 and 41 -are
very much in that category .
We have directly experienced one
world war and two lesaer conflagrations; the Cold War and McCarthyism; the Civil rights revolutiOn
and the race riots of the ·oo. ; the

lherited
depression ethos

Kennedy and K.mg assassinations;
the ant1 -war movement and
Watergate
And yet it was the Depression.
over before we arnved, which has
moot deeply affected the way we live
from day today .
We digested its lessons at the dinner table every night of our
childhoods as we heeded parental
admonitions to " clean your plates
and don 't waste food ... And we , who
never nussed a meal in our lives,
now scowl sternly at our own
children artd repeat the old com mand .
As conswners, we are obsessed
wtth quality and durability. Who
cares if this washing machine costs
more than that one, as long as we're
sure it will hold up well " And yes ,
that 's a lovely coat but it nnight be
out of fashion m a couple of years ;
better to stick wtth a classic style
that can be worn for five years , or
even 10.
Credit cards ? A convenience to be
sure, but one to be used WJth caution .
We share an irrational dread of debt
which has kept us from borrowing so
much as a nickel above and beyond
the mortgage on our home, no matter how often we are told such conservatism is downright foolish in
this inflationary era. U we can't pay
cash, we do WJthout unW the
necessary sum is saved . And we
sleep just fine , thank you .
Ah yes - savings. They are quite
fashionable these days. or so we
understand . But not in our family,
where even the baby has a passbook
account , opened just days after her

Editorial opinions,
comments

Crime, Country-Style
MONTMORENCI, Ind . ! API Two years ago, the Vorst farruly
moved about 10 miles - from
Lafayette, Ind., population 43,000, to
thill corn-growing hamlet of 200 searching for a place where they
could leave their doors unlocked .
They felt they had replaced urban
fear with coWJtry secwity .
But last October when JoAnne
Vorst walked up to her elegant,
1100,000 horne, the frantic barking r:J
her dog told her something was

wrong.

some of her more incensed neighbors urged people to buy guns and
take matters into their own hands.
More meetings were held . At one
gathering last June, more than 100
people from neighboring towns attended, as well as Tippecanoe County Prooecutor John Meyers and state
poUce Detective Jim Kesterson .
Meyers now admits, " I wasn't
aware that they were that concerned ."
The meetings revealed that people
thought the state police cared too little about their crime problems and
dealt with them too slowly . Townspeople complained to the county
pro..'lecutor that, as Mrs. Kerlthove
pul'l it, " laws protect the criminal
more than the victun . ''
ln turn. Kesterson told the people
of Montmorenci what IIIey could do
to prevent c rime : buy locks , note
strange persons or vehicles, buy
dogs, list aU possessions and stop
mail deliveries when on vacation .
One major accomplishment of
those meetings was that neighbors
got to know newcomers to Montmorenci , drawn by job&lt;; in nearby
Ught mdustry or. like the Vorsts,
movtng out of cities looking for a
mure peaceful We .
lt dawned on Mrs. Kerker that
" we don 'I know all our neighbors, ..
and that knowmg one another had
always been rural Amenca ·s first
line of defense against crime .
Some of Montmorenci 's problems
are more difficult . Kesterson says
the kids he arrests for vandalism or
break -ms are often drunk or high on
drugs . He says the problems that
trouble city kids are just as common
among country kids now, with the
b1g consolidated courty schools servmg as breeding grounds for
nnischief, crune and drugs .
lt's too soon to tell if Montmorenci 's conununity crime preven tion prlJI5ram will actually lower the
crime rate, says Meyers. But there
are some results already .
-Other towns in the county, Ulte
Tecumseh and Hanna Park, are considering fonning similarcorrununity
anti&lt;Mme groups .
- County judges are getting the
message, and Meyers is demanding
stiffer sentences. He says there
hasn't been a single suspended sentence for serious crime this year
inippecanoe County .
- Neighbors now cali each oilier
day or night if they spot unfamiliar
people or cars .
- Fina:Jy, the two men - both
courty residents - who vandalized
the Vorst home were caught with the
help of a neighbor who recalled the1r
license plate. One man was sentenced to six years in prison . The
second pleaded guilty and is
awaiting sentence ne:rt month.
Still, says Ml'll. Vorst, the vandalization of her home scarred her
and her family .
"I never thought it would happen
to us . We always felt it was a lot
safer in the country . We don't feel
that way now."

The house was a shambles .
Tire.(read scars on the lawn still
show where vandals pulled their van
up to the back door. Walls and doors
were smashed. A bureau was in
pieces . Jewelry and guns were
missing. Eggs had been tossed
against the wall~ . The odor of wine
hung in the air.
"Were we bad, Mommy? is God
pWiishing us? ' ' her young son asked
as Ml'll. Vorst surveyed SIO,OOO in
damage .
Ml'll. Vorst called a neighbor .
Jacky Kerker, and together they
decided it was time Montmorenci
did something about the burglars
and vandlals who had preyed on their
town for more than five years .
Somehow, the system that was
supposed to prevent crime and
punish wrongdoers simply wasn't
working ilJ Tippecanoe County, Ind .
The"Kerker h001e had been broken
Into six times. Down the road a b1t.
Bob and Paula Kerlthove had lost a
portable 1V, several high-powered
rifles and a valued collection of old
silver dollars to thieves . It seemed
that almost everyone in town had
similar stories .
But it took the case of Jim and
JoAnne Vorst to stir Montmorenci .
Their ordeal had a profound impact
on the town.
Some of the houses now have the
hefty deadbolt locks favored by c1ty
dwellers.
After the break-tn, the Vorsts Illstalled a $2,000 Blann system with a
siren that can be heard a mile away .
U the alann is tripped, phone calls
automa4cally go out to the state
police, the sheriff and a nearby
neighbor .
A month ago, the Kerkers bought a
menacing Dobennan named Zeke ,
so fierce it allows no one but the
family near the house.
Townspeople are now religiously
jotting down license plate nwnbers
ol any can or trucks they don,
recognize.
The change hasn't been eBlly for
people who never used to give crime
a second thought.
Kerkbove says he finds locking
and unlocking his front door
"mighty Wlhandy" and he still
refuses to put a lock on his gas
pwnp, although neighbors have had
gasoline stolen.
The community turned to a
strategy to fight crime much like
that being used by many urban
neighborhoods - organize to defend
Itself.
The first ~ep was a meeting of
in 1&gt;75, following tile death of
about 40 people In Ml'll. Vont's living
F'rancisco F'ranco, Prince Juw.
room. She calls that first gathering
Carlos became King of Spam
the "vigilante . meeting" because

•

J

OU12. l!OLI&lt;S
IND.

b•rth last June . We tell owselves
we 're savmg for the g~rls ' college
educations, and so we are if all goes
well . But the dimes and dollars
squirreled away here and there are
also a cushion , our very own soft landing pad, if the disaster which befell
our parents· generation should ever .
descend upon ours .
Let the members of the .. Me
generation " hock their socks for
cars and campers, boats and beach
homes, TV sets and H&gt;-day vacations
- easy living on easy credit. That 's
the " modern" thing to do - instant
gratification and what, me worry•
We are haU amused, half appalled
by such lfiSOuciance. But we are
wholly incapable of sharing it .
Somewhere in our bones we still see
bread lines, and broken dreams, and
bankrupt businessmen humming
" Brother, Can You Spare a Dime?"

Capitol
ideas. •

•

WASHiNGTON !API - George
Bush is the organuation man of the
race for the 1960 Republican
presidential nomination .
Point to the fact that he rarely
comes out higher than fourth or fifth
in opinion polls that try to rank the
Republican contenders and Bush
shrugs it off . Ask how expects to win,
and
Bush
replies :
" Build
organization ."
But even the best organization has
its off days .
The
ca ller
from
Bush
headquarters alerted a reporter that
the candidate would be at the Capitol
Hill Club to speak to a group of black
community leaders.
A short Iinne lalfr, there was
another
call
from
Bush
headquarters :
"Sorry. it's not the Capitol Hill
Club, 1l's the Capital Hilton ."
The reporter thanked the caller
for letting him know and prepared to
head for the hotel.
Before he got out the door the
telephone rang again . It was a very
apologeti c ca ller from Bush
headquarters . There'd bee,n a
terrible rrustake . The candidate was
not going to the Capital Hilton, he
was gomg to the Washington Hilton .
The House was debating a bill that
would provide federal money to help
communities unprove their airports
when a spectator leaped from the
gallery and made a three-PQint
landing on the floor .
The jumper, apparently unhurt by
his 20-foot fall, had gotlfn to his feet
and started toward tile speaker's
rostrum asking .for recognition when
I.e() lnglesby, a staff a1de. tackled
the mtruder, who was hustled from
the chamber .
It was all very exciting for a
moment. In the words of one
member, "Chaos reigned ."
You 'd never know it from reading
tile Congressional Record . Here 's
how its transcript described the
episode :
Rep . Harold T . Johnson, 0-Calif .,
had the floor
"The
. five-year
airport
development program wh1ch we
authorized m the Airport and
Airway Development Act of 1976
mcluded approximately $207 million
m discretionary funding programs
for fiscal year 1980. However the
1976 act prohibited .... "
"The Speaker : The chair would
like to state there will be no
disturbanc e in the gallery . You are
the guests of the House . We wish you
would act accordingly "
The Record for the following day
cortained a hint that somet.llmg
unusual had taken place .
Rep . Lionel Van Deerlin, 0-Calif..
paid tribute to Ingles by :
" At the moment when chaos
re~gned. Leo remained alert and
calm ." said the congressman .
And, a doorkeeper preparing to let
tourists into the visitors' gallery,
told them : " Please. refrain from
reading and writing m the gallery .
Also. don't disrupt the decorum .
That means no jumping over the rail
onto the noor ...

nu: DAILY SF..NTINEL
i

USPS ltHIOI

~~ ~~ . r.-_Q._
DEVOTED 1'0 lliE
ll&lt;f'ERE8T OF
MEir...Cii-MA.'tON ARF..A.
ROBERT HOEFl..JOt
CUy EdJtor
Plbllllted dally ncept S.t.~Wy by 11x Obll

Vtlley Publilhlaa C~•&gt; · Multlmedla, lar .,

111 C..rt SL , Pomt'rwy, 0t00 UTII. Bas~Mtt
Offt« Pboor tft· 2151. fAI&amp;M1111 Pbooe
ti'WU7 .
Sftood t'lall IM*I.Ce paJd II PIHDC"toy, Ohio.
NtttGDaltdv~l'tllllq repr"!SHt.dve, Uuxiot~
Alaoda&amp;e., 1111 Euclicl.;(ve., Clrnl . .d. Ob.J~
44115.
.
SabKrlptloa r.1es : llri!Unr...t by can1•r
wbert' av.ilabie te t"fttla per weet . 8)' Motor
Rou&amp;.t wlwft e.n14!r urvi« ootavalllble, Oor
month, U ...
Tbe O.Oy SeaUael. by ~IIlii otUo 1Dd Welt
\' lrglala , ~Dr year W .OO ; SIJ mootba U7.5•:
thr~ mootba IIUI. Ellnrb.re $311.00 : 111:
mooU.~ 1%1.00: dlree moadu. II UO.
Tht&gt; A.aaodat.d Prftl ll ~laJJvely f'DIJU•d
to lht WI• for publkatlno of 1U Df'W! dltJMih'lln
credited to OM' ~wlpapt'r aDd aiM dw lonl
newt

pul:tl18bccl btrt'ln.

Where does Michael
•
fit In Yanks' plans?

COLU MB U~ .

NEW YOI{K 'l\ I' ,
P t·rh &lt;•ps tlw
mo st su rpn s1n~e; part nf !JJ('k
Howser 's &lt;1P ! liJJn1rm~nl as !llilllH~l'r
of th e N"' w Y11rk Ynnkt'l'!'l 1s thP fact
that he Kot th1· Joh and 1;t' r• t· \1tdl&lt;H'I
didn 't
The rt·ason 1~ UJC:Jt Lm· Y;n~kt'L'.~

--

-

_,

III~Al"S 'mAT
SPOOK HES
SCAR!;O 01'
AT WORK 7

have oth l'r plan ..; fur .\1ichacl. Y&lt;h&lt;J 1~

expected to Ut· aanwd ttw t~:ariJ ·s
genernJ m&lt;Jna ~n '111ursdi!y wiH"l

..

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Lettt'rs of opinion an• \H'komt&gt;d. They should be less
than 300 "ords lon!( 1ur subjt'&lt;'t to rl'duction by tht&gt; t&gt;ditor I
and must be signed "ith the signt•e's address. '.James may
be withheld upon puhliratwn . However . on request .
names "ill be disclosed. Ll'll&lt;'rs shnuld be in gond tastt·.
addressing issues, not pt&gt;rsnnaliti&lt;•s .

II ••• ~-':~
?Jtt
.
uU£
:
I
A pen pal .1. esponds

could use up to 12 I, and still not
cover everything .
4. Attending council meetings ;
like I said, " at this time I can see NO
purpose As for being a taxpayer .
why do you Uunk l'm running for
Mayor of Pomeroy .
5. Mr . Karr, 1 am not so naive as to
think the Mayor single handediy arpomted you, 1t still takes the city
council to operate this village .
Also, with writing or arurfering
your letters, I could possitft lose
some votes or gain many votes . You,
cannot lose your election; no one is
running against you.
I've been away from Pomeroy for
'l/ years, (other than visits). The
men I'm running against are well
known in this commun.,y. The oniy
difference is, I've been working on
Equalized Tax Appraisals, Minicomputer Tax Systems, and
Federally F'unded Projects IHUD
and HEW I for the past 20 years in
court houses and city halls
throughout the United States. I donl
want to " Wave the flag", ali I want
is a chance to use the experiences
I've gained over the years, in my
"Own Home Town" , to try to better
it.
16.1 Mr . K.arr, I want to thank you
for admiring my enthusiasm . This is
one trait I have always had and
always will ty.ve. You do not know
me on a personal basis as the Mayor
or the majority of the courcil members, but 1 pronnise you, I will work
with you and all council members to
the fullest extent, as long as it's for
the taxpayers interests of this
v11lage. Thank you, Rod.
Your Pen Pal,
Roger M. Davidson .
Candldate for Mayor
Village of Pc:meroy

October 28, 1!179
Dear Mr. Editor :
This is my response to Mr. Rod
K.arr 's .. Last Response... 1 would
like at this time to give Mr . K.arr the
definitions
of
what
the
tenn " politician" means according
to Mr . Webster 's Dictionary .
POUTICIAN - I I. I A person experienced in the art or science of
goverrunent. 12. I One actively
engaged in conducting the business
of a goverrunent. 13.1 A person
engaged in party politics as a
profession. I4. 1 A person primarily
interested in political offices from
selfish or other narrow usually short
run mterests .
Mr. K.arr, as you can see by the
above choices I am not N0 . I. I do
not have as much actual political expenence as you have, even thought 1
am 47 years of age .
But, I will admit since l've been 13
years old 1 worked very hard (in my
way I to help Mayor Delmar A.
" Kid .. Canaday to get elected Mayor
of Pomeroy, not once, but twice. I
even helped Mayor Canaday twice
when he oppooed Congressman
Thomas Jenkins for his position as
Congressman
of
the
lOth
Congre..'ISional District .
Choice No. 1.. I do not think pertains to me personally .
Choice No. 3., Does not pertain to
myself, as I am a registered
Republican, running as an Independent Candidate for Ma yor
Choice No. 4. , 1 do not personally
believe pertains to me, I amnot
"selfish" and 1 have no "Short Run
Interests " . As a matter of fact my
competitors, '" my chosen
profession over the past 20 years of
Equalized Ta• Appraisals and Computer System' have referred to me
In addition to the money spent by
as a "Long Range Planner." Also,
the Meigs Local Board of Education
how could a person be selfish ofduring this strike for substitutes,
fering Ius private and personal
guards, lawyers, funning a bus with
ability for a salary of $2,400 a year as
only one to four students to the high
Mayor of Pomeroy "
school, etc ., much money has been
Now Mr. Karr, to get to the main
lost to the district through the canpoints of your Letter to the Editor,
cellation r:J extracurricular activities. How can a presumably
dated October 25, 1979, published in
this newspaper Sunday, October 28,
money-conscious board and superin1!179.
tendent possibly justify these
looses'
I. l promise I will not sign my letters "Sincerely yours", since it
How will the athletic department
seems to offend you .
replace the estimated $6000 of gate
2. 1 promise I will check with you
receipts lost so far and the $1000 for in the future, because you seem to be
feit fees paid thus far? How wUl it
the ONLY person in the Village so
replace the refreshment stand and
well informed oo aU matters,
program sales receipts it did not
especially " Political Matters" .
collect during football~?
J. Mr. Karr, if you would read my
Can the Board support ali the
last letter again, very slowly, I did
athletic activities this year - or will
nQI admit to "Playing Politics" . 1
other programs have to be cancelled
for lack of funds"
said, " l'm trying in this election to
get voter support on political
The bend boosters, too, have loot
issues", and believe me there are
approximately $2000 In food stand
plenty . For Instance : 1a I Why do we
proceeds. But putting mooey aside,
need another ''Temporary Income
nothing can ever pay for the hearTax"" ( b J Why is our water system
tache suffered by Meigs Local
eating up our plwnbing fixtures' Icl
students because of this board acWhy do we have parking problems
tion ; the teachers deplored the
and bent over parking meters ? (d )
decision and were heartbroken as
Why so many long lasting " pot
well . To punish students in this
holes "• (e ) Why is our community,
fashion for something beyond their
especially our "down town .. , so unt-ontrol iB lnhwnan beyond comclean" 1f 1Why are our water bills so
prehension . Their continued acexpensive, compared to other
tivities could neither harm no help
towns • 1g I Why is our cemetery
either side of the adults' war.
grass not cut' 1hI Why is our City
The senlor football players who
Hall in such poor condition", how
were hoping to be seen by a college
many years has it been since our
scout and maybe receive a scholarCity Hall w•s even painted 7 , does
ship will never in their whole lives
paint cost that much' li I What about
know if they were good enough.
our plugged up stonn sewers " 1
Our band will always mourn the

Lost monies ...

Howse r repl~wt_·U Il!l!~ \1artuJ
after a braw l~r1·.i.l•mg \1ctrtJn m a
Bloom tngton. \11nn .. h(lt('l left
mar sh mall r• w .-.ak!-J mCln .Jost·ph
Cooper uf Lirwu!nshtre. !ll wt th .::a
cut ltp reqUinnr b tu 2(J stttd H·&lt;.:
\1artl n 's pub he explr:natwn "a ~
that the man r.~td fallen nnd nlt
tumself. Hut pnvately. th(' lllaniigl-r
gut word t.o 1 r.mkt't''i ''"11er (~l'IJrg~·
Sll' tntm~nr.n U 1:1l ht• hdd hll tl te
o,dn, d ".lJUn •· :1,]r j Tht A:j~L'Iilt•·d
Press. That cb.c.clusure ('OnY in n·d
Stemhr cnn tT :~, :ni:l kt · the •·harJ~\·

r-------------------------1

I

Howser 1.s offictal!y lntrudLwt•d at rt

news t'Ur,fl'renct:'

I

1
1
1
1
1
I
I

II
I

\ 1Ftrtln ',l,ii~ r(·p .wted dl.'itn!lli- :.r
&lt;tnd u ,J\ ;q!e~bl1· '••r , 1 :urn,·nt

eight trophies and grand champion
designation they were positive
they'd win . Our volleyball girls have
the right to be forever bitter that
their prorrusing season was so
unilaterally cut off. And to no avail ;
the calculated move to divide and
conquer falled ... but at what a price '
As one board member phrased it
to a teacher, " We want to make it
that the teachers will never strike
again ." Obviously, who else has to
suffer in order to punish teachers, &lt;r
how much our school district is torn
apart, or how much education time
IS lost while the teachers are taught
a lesson is unimportant to our board
and superintendent.
•
leda Mae Kraeuter,
Racine, Ohi o

_,ol paying any

.'\1unda~

Mtch&lt;•el I,~Hl lw•'r1 II IIJ ·,t'l•·n'f! ,t
prune r·;·tndllb~·· f 11 th ·· :''b ~dtt·r
..nnnin~ O.t· lriL· ·n •. u.,r a: Lea,· '" ''
pennant tn h1• tt;o.,t ',( 'il'll1 't'.t'h
Colum bll.'&gt; lk 1.'- ·1 fa\·ont t· td
Strmbrennt·r . .,..ht l ~lrl" u.. . ,.d r un 111 a
\&lt;l fldJ of ~~r~;tnlt&lt;Hion:ll . ;tp.a c:: I.'\

ant
\u't'. \1 tt

CJ~S I ~:t

00 .

Erny Davies,
Rt. I, Bo• 42, Langsville

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Brucl' :-, a r~tmlt.· nt &lt;if ow:: onv llll' f
test S•turd• l · The w1defeated H t ~
Ten co-leadf"t"s play &lt;1t lllinoJ!; 1n a
rf'~ lon&lt;ilJ~

lf•lt•',J-.;t•d

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Ratings
._,,

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(ULU '." H U'-

5 1 oliO· Wid &lt;· Cc!llt 1 •'

ol "

t}r ')&lt;'llj &lt;,'l '", ! [• r &lt;, ',JI• ·
t :;r, • Odll t,'rl''' ·

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A S.~UI

ti

I•

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N'

•·.

·~·ar~kce-- wat c hers will reca ll that
ll.ob Lemon was s upposed to ~el the
I ;yt J&lt;t b That wa s pa11 ul the g rand
plan SteUtbrermer pieced together
f(Jliuw in g
Martin 's
tearful
r&lt;'si~ twti on .July 24. 1978 and his
t.num phant return on Old Timers
I l&lt;t) at Ya11kee Stad turn five day s

l:it ('f

Tht·

sc enano had Lemon
a:-; manager throu.gh 1979
:tnd ttwn yte idin~ that post to Martin
whu woulJ r{' turn for 1980. But when
Ul•' Y:mkees struggled early last
Sf'il:-.llll. Stt'inbrenner speeded up tl1e
Lnnel&lt;thle an d retw·ned Martin to the
ma~a~t'r's post in June
!.(!mon then drifted Into an
t..:lldf·f tn l' d fr fJ nt office limbu,
l!pf·rat tm! a.&lt;; something less than
1 ;.\1
\1j·anwhile, . Martin, see ming
;dJilu',t :-;erl'ne, wa s unable to move
:;w 1 dnkr·es up in the standings but
., ·~.-. o.., t•l r~s manager until the
f!.lriiJJJi lfH!,lun affair
ll&lt;tws.·r . the Yankees third base
• ·, .II' It I ,r Ill) e ars. had left the club
,•f!•·r il11' 1978 season to become
:J&lt;t..-..·ball r·uach at }lorida State
l'nru·rsl t~ in taUahassee, Fla . His
1
t·:un posted a H-16 record in his
ftro..;t Har tJwre rtnrl he seemed set,
t• " l unti l Ste m brP rtrter called him in
ti ,. ' !U)~~~ut .S..nurday during a game
lt 'l!l'-tlfl Uig

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C L A~S JlA
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181
4 wa rr er K pnn('d { , 9 0 174
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6 CoturnbusG rn 'llh.lf&gt;W M 1 1 9'.;
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J? 14 t loe l. M rr11n(1 Burkeye rtn U

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R 1c1gew oocJ 26 )7 [ '~· r ·(1 C athol 1c /4
I !I Br ookfie-ld: 1 1. ,v,1r11'15 FNr.'
10 10 (11('), (Od CI••V{' P('fry&lt;;bur~
and IrOnton 17 7J \\H! •nn H 1gt'l,.:tnf1
16 14. Jollnc;town IJ 7~ W rw ~f't)n li
16 (11{' 1 W illa r a ~nrl ( lr•vr&gt; l&lt;)nrJ (1"11
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P o rt s m o uth
DAm e, 7· 1, 53
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M .H•a
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Hr lh ,. '.et· nt..; unruffl€d by all the
fu -.;.o. , :J U11d &lt;st his :; quad.~ in the
!\. 1: Tr:~ ·.n th :"11JchJgan and headed

a :\u\

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7 Parmn P,1:Jun 11 1 t 1-t
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9 Zolil€\'llllf:' , 8 I bb
10 80Mt!rT1rln 11 I!' J?
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Toledo

')f we dick, we click big," said a
0.. :.
1' Rr uee
The Huckeves' roach said the
lt ·\' t·lop mt:&gt;n l .of thr offensive and
ddt·nsJve llne s as the rnaj&lt;r reason
f(Jr :1 r &lt;Jnlting among the nation 's top
f1\·L- :lJfiy'r college powers . Ohio
."!t;!l,. ·~· ;~ ~ unranked ~fore the

\m1

, .V rt&lt;,&lt;,,lloro P IJ 1M
1 1•

St ale

(,,J

(LA)') AAA
(orr 1r,n ,1 1 f'/ ·1•·1 r·~

) '&gt;/VI • &lt;., ' o•r .'
o1 L)O-• t·r ~

J·:ST 1.
.'-') fc11· the !-i urpnsin~ Buckey t:s ,
w1th t' lght ncturaes in Bruce 's brief
1 olf· ~·t·r
;-n tus alma mater, have
',., k. l t.'l~'l r coach' s words with
d··(·d" Tht~ wrm at Mumesota 21 · 17
.tnr: r1 1 LT !.A r ;-.14 1n Lhelf only away
&lt;t:--·,1 c; nnwnL"
1 !·, \n·n·~ -. for the l~st four weeks
( ,t 111 1 .-·.: atl· hc.s st a~ e&lt;t home to nudge
'\11r11 ,•.r·st t·crJ lfi..l a nUthen run up a
, •J!I,h:r···l 14f\..(i "~'o rtn ~ margin over
!rlriJ;.w;i, Wis&lt;'un sJn and Mi chigan
i rrJ p.m

...... ;:"'1n

ID I 00•n' l "r IC'~ 1

n

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1l ot'

Sugarcre e k

White called How""r a good fr1end
who"" sense of humor kept the
Yankees loose .
" I thought he was very happy wit.ll
tus position at florida State and that
he had no intention of coming back
to the major league level. " White
said .
Shortstop Ducky Dent, who signed
a new Yankees contract Monday
mstead of trying the free agent
draft. ca lled Martin a good
manager .
"I felt very sad that Billy was
fired," Dent said . "He didn't bother
me and I didn't bother him . l guess
Ill at's a pretty good relationship . 1
think I had a good chemistry with
Billy . I think will have a very good
relationship with Dick Howser . He
will be a good manager . I think he'll
be
an
authoritative,
c alm
nmnager .·'
F'irst baseman Jim Spencer, who
also signed a new coo tract Monday.
ca lled Howser "a mild-mannered,
easy-gomg guy. He'll expect 100
percent and in hiS quiet way. he'll
make sure you g1ve it."

Mike Collint;
H.l55lbs .
J nnlor Eod

Dave Talbott
5-9, 1411 loo.
F'reshmao Back

Hannan Trd CP 10

ny l on
an r t

1'&gt;

~outh1nnton

Gnlf'"&gt;
Cr o wn

Spencer award
T·oph:es for owners of animals
whwh sco red tugh in the past racmg
.'i cason were presented Sunday when
lhc nmth annual awards banquet of
U1e River Valley Colt Circuit was
he ld at the Me1gs lnn .
~1aking up the circuit are the
.lukson , Lawrence, Pike, Athens,
Wastungton, Hocking and Meigs
Co unty Fairs.
Tht• Sidney Spencer Driver Award
wen t to Ron Newhart of Marietl&lt;l,
~· ho came through with 25 wins
dur1n~ the season and the OHJLLCO
pac:ng trophy for 1!179 went to Louise
Tat h«rn, U:llwnbus, owner of Maxie
Ma ple .
l'unky Miss Lou. owned by Ray
'lcwhart and Larry Srnithberger,
Marietta, won the two year old fUy
pace trophy; Mrs. Daring, owned by
'lcwhart won the three year old trot
trophy ; Homebound, owned by Mr .
and Mrs . Charles Cart.r ,
Chillico the, and Mr . and Mrs . Leo
Lrownol'er. McArthur, won the two
yea r old pace trophy; El Townson,
u~:wd by Paul Sayre, Racine, won
tt.c tro phy for the best two year old
trot diVISIOn ; Marken By, owned by
Dr Ken Owens . Marietta, won the
three :· ra r ol-1 pace trophy; J.OY
Gate . owned by Mary Bach.
Wastungton C.H .. won the two year
old filly trot trophy , and Gintown
Ro.."is, owned by RoSer Bateman,
Athens, won the three year old filly
tru t trophy .
Dr W. S. Howe. vice president of
th(&gt; c ircuit, was mater of ceremonies
anu speaker was Claire M. IBUZZJ
llall. Jr , Athens, representative
lea rn Dlst . 91 of the Otuo Ho""" of
I! PprP!-irntil t i vr~
wa~ prov1d€d byJo
Llown, wh v (jppeared at the
Mctgs Fa1r a couple of years ago.
The mvocation was by William
Uownie, Racine, active Meigs Fair
Roa rd member . Approxmwtely to

Allen Page
1&gt;-4, 1.20 lbo .
Sophomore QB

SVAC sponsors all-sports trophy
Beginning this season. th e
Southern Valley Athletic Conference
will offer an All-Sports Trophy for
the for the school collecting the most
points in its boys and girls athlett c
competition .
This action was taken at a recent
meeting of tl1e league 's official s at
Kyger Creek High School.
Points will be obtained m boy s'
football, basketball and basebaU and
in girls' volleyball and basketball .
A team winning the trophy three

strcught

~

t.'ar:-, w11l !....,

p~·rr:lltt l· d

t ruplt~

kt· Pp 11

'lll i.'

ftr st

dvna tl'd

b~

~l'wlwrr ~

( ;ood.'i

tu
wtll be

Sport1r 1~

111 ( ~ ;.J il q:x,_,lts

In other matters. 11 wa,r., a~n·(·d
that all schrJu l ~ wt U ('hdfl);!t· thet r
football scht·dull's 111 t• rrkr Ulat thv
la"it ftve grunt·~ &lt;1rt· i-I~Oill"l lto&lt;t~Ul'
uppum·r1ts
Offi CIC! ls al~1' '&gt;t-&gt;'u~~ J,_'..JF!UL'
vo lleyball :-;cht·dull'o.., fur EJliO-Bl
It was ann{Jlin\ i'd t h(Jt the 1~1~
SYAC CaF&gt;:e Pre·. tt·w ~· til be h1•ld
Sa turda y, \'ov 24 l;eg truJmg di fi

p.m. at I.ynt' CL-'nter. Hj() Cramk
Th e event will ft&gt; a tun· :llL' lt·agut·'s
resrrv t· a.nrl r&lt;1r"1ty b;.~s k d b ctl]
tCCU!l!i

is optimistic

ClNClNNATI(AP!- Despite a 27 record, Cincinnati Bengals Coach
Homer Rice, who always thinks
pos11lve, believes his team still has a
chance ftr post season playoffs
" There are a lot of good things
happening," Rice said Monday after
reviewing fUms of Sunday's 37-13
victory over the Philadelphia
Eagles.
"Our defense played weU . Our
offense ism target now . lt's j ust a
shame that we're not :H.
" I still feel that we should have
won those games with Houston.
Kansas City and Cleveland .
Cincinnati plays Baltimore this
week. ittsburgh leads the American
F'ootball
Conference
Central
Division at 7-2. Cleveland and
Houston are both &amp;-3.
Rice isn't ready to give up and
start looking at draft choice
possibUities that would come with a
poor record .
Rice spent tile day figuring wildcard poSSibilities with seven season
games left.
" MathematicaUy, we're still in it.
" Nine victories could still get you
a wild-card berth and as long as
there's a ray of light at the end of the
tunnel , you keep fighting for it, " said
Rice .
Assistant coach Boyd Dowler
insisted that the Bengals would be
fighting f&lt;r first place if they were m
the National football Conference
Central DiviSion .
" We've never felt anything but
equal with any of those teams. We
thought going in that we had a good
c hance to match up
with
Philadelphia, even though they were
6-2 and we were 1-7," Dowler S&amp;d.
Defensive tackle Eddie Edwards

M il!or.,
Cdy

p•·rsnns attended .

-'

..._.........

Top twenty
The AP Top Twenty
By The Associated Press
The Top Twenty teams in The
Assoc i ated Press college foot ball
poll , with first place votes in ocrcm
theses , records and total points
Po i nts
based
on
10 19 18 17 16 IS 14 IJ 1'1 11 10 9 8 7 6

S·4 3 2 I :
1. Alabama ( 46 )
2. Nebraska

3. So . Calif .

(7)
(4)

4 . Houston ( 1)

5 Ohio State (5)
6 . Florida State
7. O~lahoma
8 Texas
9 . Arkansas
10 Michigan
11 . Brigham Young
12 Pittsburgh

13 Notre Dame
14 Wake Forest
15 Purdue
16 Washington
17 Tennessee
18 No Carolina
19 Pen n ~tate
10 Auburn

) 00
) 00

1, 126

70 I
700

1.058

B0 0
700
6 I0
S I0
610
7 I 0
) 00

~ou t hwcstc r n

Ea'&gt;lt rn

Sounowes tern

1 3 0 62 58

177
140

will remam on the probable list tilts
week because of his knee injury
Linebacker Bo Hams reinjured
his thigh and 1s questionabl e
Running backs Cllarles Alexander
and Nathan Poole , linebacker Jim
LeClair and defensive tackle Wilson
Whitley all have muscle allrnent.s .
Safeties Marvin Cobb and Scott
Perry are both quesionable With
in juries , the Bengals said .

••

13" PIUA •

Your cho1&lt;e of any •

•

I

ooe !oppong
Reg ~1 55

'l" l

J Dun Only

E61nO'sE

;..·.l··-·1

to

Ohio

Virgini~

State Law

the legal

period for
~res
&lt;tart
1979.

studded
Nov. 1,

MEIGS TIRE CENTER INC.

992 -2107 Mqr., John F . Fultz

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

ill signel~jiJrasea-cruise tn1e (lay.
,When they prollliSe(/ her_Ll'in~l~salt a~l(l spray.
\\6~
But a line t!//Lne JJnnt
"~
., ~}bu1/loue your nell' stint
As ou~flgurellea(/
pointing the toay.··
New laws are d o tng m'me lhese days lo prolect you as a
consumer Bul you sit II can gel you t sel f tn over you r head by
not read 1ng ancl un dersla n c;tnq what you s:gn
For ex ample !he new H o m e Sol :c: tat:on L Jw g1ves you three
bus 1ness days to cancel any con1rac t you s :gn as a res ult o f
door-tCHJoor or te le pho n e so l: ctta tton But u nless you under sta nd th e terms o f !he contrac t the law d oes you l1t1le good
If you don t un derstand a con tract. don I s:gn Call your .
lawyer • Sound legal advtcP can cos! a lot less tha n you tht nk
And 11 can keep you ou: o l J:rJ ul!le

ohio state bar association
Wlwt you dma lmoUJ aholll the laUJ andd cost IJOII"

'I I yno 1 oon 1 k now a la.....-ye• c atl the Lav,yer Re te rr al Sef\ltCe 1n Oh1 0 1·800-282 -6500

54

.-GOOD TIMES SPECIAl.

Recapped and
New Tires

9)

19

28

--···-

Meigs Tire
Center Inc.
Will Stud

116

OP
28

Southern
0 3 0
8 97
This Week 's Games
South western at Kyger Creek and
H annan Trace at Sou thern

~II

)5 9

69

W. L. T. P.
3 0 l 82
2 1 0 53
2 1 1 56
2 2 0 56

H annan1 fa ce
Kyger Crl:tek
N o rt h Ga llia

7?5
601

4l 0

t 187

SVAC ONL 'I'
TEAM

900

)() I

s10

K )"ger Creek
F rl&lt;.,l er n

877

6 20

520

0

6 I 1 161 ~9
5 1 t 124 .&amp;5
6 3 0 161 88
4 5 0 168 12~
02146262

1,052

7 I 0

5 I I

W. L. T . P.OP
8

1, 08]

610

s1 0

TEAM

Hannan Tra ce
Nor ttl Gal l1a

l , D5

653
546
4))
456

6 10

Me l Ca rter .South\\estrrn H1g h
School. ha s char ge of obta in mg
official s whilt: S.Juth wt•stPrn wtll
ha ndle t he pr ogram.\
During the session . [Jon Sa under~.
head bas ketball coach at Hannan
Trace, wa ~ elected pres 1dent while
Larr y Cre m een s, HT foutbOJII
coach .wa s named sec r eta r ytr eas urer
A committ ee composefi uf Jot·
Mitchem,l-:astern: Dr IJ ;:n ·ld :'vlJ!I er.
Kyger Cre e k •nd ('a r l Wolle'.
Southern. v.:a,:-, mmwd :v study and
report on tht&gt; lt'a~'c!e· s &lt;·on:'illtut wn A
report 'A·ill he ~.IY I' n &lt;Jt tlw nl'Xt
meetin g ~ o\·. 1]
Atte nd ing wpr e Paul Dillon,
Saunder s. I .arry Crc meer. s. and

luhn I. usher, Hannan Trace; Paige
Shec·t&lt; and
Melvin
Carter,
Southwestern : John Blake and Ted
I,eh.-w. ~~ orth Galli a ; Carl Wolfe and
.John Oud u m~. Southern; Mike
Yfulfurd .Kyg er Creek ; Joe Mitchem
and .J.l_,tw,.oloston . Eastern.
SVAC STANDINGS
ALL GAMES

j(, , t!~L'

G ar &lt;l W ,l y
f'r fl'
it.

Bever ly
Fort
A da
15
26
Ch al ker
17
n
H aw k en
11
h

Newhart given

l·:nt( :-!&lt;l!t l:!wnl

' .'

.r

F r,:,n~l'"
]1

•

,1

('f J[. l' \! 1 ~l

18

Ten years ago: Thirty-five black
students as Vassar Coll•ge seized
tile adminilllratioo building on tile
upstate New York cam• .

t" f:ll

I' 1 \f "'r '·'

po~ rtf ullo

against Indian H1v~r Junior College .
The two men met Sunday and the
c hange was made .
The news stunned most Yankees
players.
·· rm surprised he was named ."
said uotf1elder Roy White, who has
declared for this week's free agent
draft. " I thought Gene Michael was
the more likely c~01ce . He 'd been
mentioned a lot as the suceessor to
the Yankee manager 's job ."

OSU's 13ruce rloesn 't
Bengals' Rice
buy road game theory

tax~·~

October 'll, 1!179
'
Dear Sir,
Two current public issues have led
me to re-think my relati0118hip with
goverrunent : The cali for an increase in the military budget to offset the SALT treaty, and the
renewal of the death penalty.
The wholesale death of war and
the deliberate execution of criminals
are both great horrors. 1 have come
to realize that government is addicted to these horrors.
Laws are enforced, and international policies are implemented by threatening those who
rl'-'ist . Where threats are not successful, the final authority of government is the presumed "right" to
take We . Why is government so
willing to sacrifice hwnan life' How
do we come to condone murder so
easily"
One nation. afraid it will lose control of its destiny, anns itself wtt.ll
the power to destroy aU possible
enemies . Others fearing that power .
also grasp after it, vainly hoping
that bomoo can somehow repel bom bs . The super powers ''talk" about
anns control. but desperately build
bigger bomb&lt;; to hide behind . And
the whole world trembles on the
verge of Annageddon. Fear rules
the world.
At home, it is fear that keeps us
separate from the living,
cooperative society that we ali long
for. It is fear of shortage that gives
birth to our private, Wlequal
distribution of property. Fear then
developes a criminal " justice"
system to protect the "haves" from
the " have nots" . It isn't our courts'
purpose to heal those who have been
warped by the various cruelties of
our social structure. The courts, instead, try to intimidate them into
docility . But, after receiving
" justice", criminal people usually
return to society more dangerous
than before, more thoroughly
schooled in cruelty. By returning
evil for evil, fear sustains evil.
U we cannot believe that Love has
the power to resolve human conflict,
and if we cannot realize that the
Creator offers us the courage to endure cruelty while we search for a
loving response to evil; then we condemn ourselves to live in fear .
I admoniah our society to turn
away from the power r:J fear and the
threat of death. May we depend instead on our faith that love is sufficient to sustain llfe. Indeed, only
Lo-re can correct the chaos of our
society! Surely, only love can carry
us beyond the anns race !
I cannot, In good conscience, continue to support our government In 1
its attempt to rule by threat &lt;X death.
I am, therefore, f'l!IOlved to not file
tax returns or pay lnc!me taxes. I
am glad to have found the freedom
to follow my conscience. May It
shine through my fear and lead me

!! d!d dlhttn:~trcttt·.~·

1ncl ud tng 1 t•;•,

!rvnt offi ce post that has been more
ll'.'&gt;S \'acant with t.he Yankees .
t t"'lrt(' Tall is, a dub v i c~ president ,
Lo~..., upn&lt;-1ted &lt;JS GM without

11r

Meet
Southern
Tornadoes
r

�~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0, Tuesday, Oct. 30, 1979

Seattle's razzle-dazzle beats Falcons

Today's

Sports

World
By Will Grimslt:"y

w.,.,

ll
't disj!ust or lmpatience
that provoked Yankee Owner
George Steinbrenner to yank the 'Ill&lt;
from under his belligerent manager,
Billy Martin - it was brotherly
coo cern.
"Ge&lt;rge was afraid somethlng
terrible would happen to Billy if he
continued
in
this
barroom
gunslinger role." says Bill Fugazy . a
close friend of OOth men . " He feared
that, if this were allowed to continue ,
Billy might be killed or might kill
somebody."
Mter the stunning Sunday night
announcement that Martin had been
frred - his second loss of the Yankee
job in 15 months - because of
another brawl - 51einbrenner went
mto oeclusion, refusing interviews.
and Martin was convemently out of
pocket.
So. to get the facts on what
tr1ggered the latest episode in the
continuing Steinbrenner-Martin
drama . we tum to the man who has
been a non-dispassionate observer
from the beginning .
Fugazy, who heads Continental
Travel Corp ., a vast trav e llimousine leasing-credit c ard
emprre, is an mtimate of the great
and near-t:reat in sports. He is often
seen oo TV with comedian Bob
Hope . Golfer Arnold Palmer stays at
his home during the Westchester
Golf Classic. Fugazy is a golfing
partner of both Martin a nd
Steinbrenner.
"The two guys really like each
other," Fugazy said . " They ' ve
disagreed a lot but each admires the
other's fttcefulness and leadership
qualities.
" Billy once told me · ·George is
good to me I love working w1th
hiin ."'
Fugazy SBJd Stemtrermer was at
his hoone the evening before the now
fabled Old Timers Game at Yankee
Stadium July 29, 1978. Five da ys

befo r e, Martin , under

sevt&gt;rt:

pressure because of his feud With
Reggie Jackson and
uncompllinentary remarks about
Steinbrenner , created shock waves
by resigning . Bob Lemon was
named ro replace him .
' Steinbrenner reall y agonized
over Martin 's r esign ation ," Fugazy
S&amp;Jd . " He knew of Billy's drinklfl~
problems and his fiery temper but
he thought he was a flne manager
He worried about Billy 's future and
the impact Billy 's de cision might
have oo his teenage son . Billy Joe .
"Ge&lt;rge told me !hat night what
he was going to do at the Old Timers
Game the next day You know wha t
happened. The Yankee players were

National Basketball Assona11on
At A Glance
By The ASSOCiated PreB
Eastern Confer ence
Atlantic Oiv1510n

W. W Pet .
Ph il adelph ia

8 0 1 000
6 1 750
5 A 556
2 5 286
i 6 250

Boston
New York
Washington
New Jersey
Central
San Antoni o
Atlanta

GB
1
J'

1

51 ~

6

DIVISIOn

5 2
5 5

Detroit

~

5

714
500
u.t

Ind iana

4

6

400

Houston

1
'l

1 1

2 ' .•
J

1 5 :?86
Cleveland
1 7 27.'1
Western Conference
Midwest Divisi on
M i lwauk ee
8 r 813~
Kan!&gt;as City
4 5
3 7 300
Chi cago

51 }

Utah

5I

1

12 5 6 I

)

4

introduced and then the electric
scureboard flashed the message :
'The Manager In 1900 and Hopefully
foc Many Seasons After That Will Be
No . 1
Billy Martin !. Then Billy
ran out on the diamond . The c r owd
went mad ,.
Fugazy said he drove Martm to
Yankee Stadium that day and they
talked serious ly about Billy's
problems . " I urged him to try to get
along w11h Gcocge,'' Fugazy added .
" He promised he would .,.
Nevertheless. on Nov . II. Martin
was c harged with hitting a sports
writer in a bar in Reno . His future
aga in was clouded but on June 18,
wit h the Yankees s lumpin g,
Steinbrenner plucked Ma rtin out of
lhe ranks of the unemployed and
returned hlm as manager. replaci ng
Lemon.
All went well until last wee k when
Martin was involved in a skirmish
with Jose ph Cooper. a n Illinois
mar~mallow sa lesma n. after a
meetmg in a Bloomington . .Minn .,
bar. CA&gt;oper wound up with 15--2(}
stitches . Martm sa1d the man fell on
a r ug .
·ceorge was al&gt;sol utely crushed,,.
Fugazy said " He ke pt say mg . ' I
can't be a watch&lt;lug . I can't let tll is
keep going on ... ·
Martin sen t word to Ste inbrenne r
th a t . co ntrary to hiS previous
account. he had actua lly struck the
guy That, says Flll(azy. broke the
camel 's ba ck
" I never sa w Geo rge so upset ,"
lhe travel tycoon said . " He told me
when the guy fell he almost hit his
head on a wrought-iron railing . Billy
could
have
been
up
for
mans! a lll(h wr
··Grorge was concerned about
several thin gs . One was th e
mvest iga tion that the commission er
had la unched . He fe ared Billy might
be barred from bawball He was
worri ed aboul Billy's drinking and
penc hant for bar-.-oom trawls. like
an old.fash1oned gun fig hter .
" He told me. ' Billy can' t stay in
lhis battlefield. He has to learn to
solve his own problems . wash his
own laundry The fa ns love Billy . 1
love Billy. But there's more to think
of than Martln or Ste inbrenner . We
have to think of Ui e Yankec ima ge,
lhe rrifluence this has on kids." '
Fugazy said Steinbrenner told him
he was not walking away from his
deposed manage r but hoped to work
closely wilh both B1lly and his son,
Bllly Joe
He quoted Steinbrenner as say mg :
" Don't be surprised if you see a
s1gn ' Martin a nd Steinbrenner
A.sso&lt;: ia tes.· ··

11 46
5 3
Los Angeles
I 31
P•ttsbu rgh
32 '4 1
6 1;
Detr o d
l
4 4
6 10
Harfforo
Sunday 's Games
Buffalo 4, Co lorad o 2
Hartford 2, New York Ranger " 2
Philadel ph ia 5. Montreal 4
Boston 4 , Cn1ca go 1
St LOU IS 2, W1nnipeg ') , t1e
Wa!&gt;h 1ngton 6 , Edmonton 4
Monday 's Gam es
No game-s sc hedule-d
Tuesday ' s Gam es
Montreal at wash•ngt on
Color.ddoat Atlanta
Edmon ton at St LOu•S
Boston ~1 Los Ange les

42

33

1 6
1 7

250

PacifiC DIVISIOn
Portland
q 1
Los Angeles
6 2

900
750

P!'hoenix

.600 J

6

4

Monelay·s Sports Transact1om
By The Assoc•a1ed Press

BASEBALL
2

Golden State
Seattle

4 5
4 5
san Diego
4 6
Sunday ' s Games
New Jersey 120, Houston 115
Los Angeles 97, Go lden Sta t e 90
Phoenix 89, Portla nd 88
Seattle 108, Chicago 97
Kansas Ci ty 106, San Di ego 101
Monday ' s Games
No games scheduled
Tuesday ' s Games
Houston at Cleveland
Los Angeles at Chicago
New York at Denver

Am encan Leagu e
N EW YORK YANKEE S - S• gned
Buckev Dent. shor t stop , and J1m
Spence r . f irst baement to mu lt, ye.u
contra c ts

FOOTBALL
DETROIT LIO N S Resigned
Dav e
P .vkin , deft-ns•ve bacK
Released Rober t Woods , kick
relurner
ST LOUIS CARDI N ALS
Placoo
Steve N e ils, linebacker on the .n
1ured reserve l is t Ac t ivated Mark
Arneson . linebac ke r . fro m the 1n
1ured reserve l ist

HOCKEY
National Hockey Leag ue
HARTFORD WH ALER S
Signed
Greg Carroll , c enter Sen t M F
Schurman to Spr, ngfiel d ot the
Arneric an Hoc k ey Le ague

San Antonio at Phoenix
Pro Hockey At A Glance
By The Asso .:ia ted Press
N•1ional Hockey League

Campbell Conference
Patrick Division
W L T Pis GF GA

Philadelphia
NY Islanders

6
•

1 1 13 •o
J 1 9 28

NY Rangers

4

4.

Atlanta

4 4 1

9

1

J 6 0
6
Smythe Division
vancouver
4 3 5 10

J

4 2
5 1
2 4 3

Winnipeg

34

«

30

26

8 22 27
7 16 29
7 24 32

3

St . Louis

23
35

9 33 29

Washington
Chicago

41

31

1 ~ 4 6 32
1 5 2
4 20
Wales Conference

Edmonton
Colorado

Adams Division
Buffalo
6 J 1 13
Minnesota
5 2 1 11

45
28

Boston

5 2 1 ll

37 16
35 14
29 21

Toronto

4419

h30

Quebec

3 3 1
Norris Division

Montreal

6

1

I

7 11 15
13

39

JO

BASEBALL
NEW YORK ( AP I - Bllly Martin
sealed his late as manager of Uie
New York Yankees when he got
word to owner George Steinbrenner
that he had hit an Illinois
marshmallow salesman during a
Bloomington, Minn ., hotel argument
last week, a source close to the team
said Monday .
Steinbrenner dec ided Sunday that
he' d had enolljlh of Martin's bar
r oom bout s and replaced the
embattled mana ger with Dick
Howser. a lon gtime Yankee coach
who had left the club last year to
becoone baseball coach at F1oriaa
State University.

·-

ATLANTA I API + The Seattle
Seahawks tossed the standard
National Football League playbook
out the window for their Monday
night television debut, then swea ted
out a last-minute rally by the Atlanta Falcons.
The Seahawks used three fourthdown gambles to trim the Falcons
31-211, but not before Atlanta had the
hometown crowd of 52 ,566
screaming. The Falcons scored with
j1 seconds left, then recovered an
onside kick and marched to the Seattle 13 before Steve Bartkowski was
intercepted in the end zone by Dave
Brown with only 35 seconds left .
" The turniqg point wasn 't the
gambles, though, " said Seattle
Coach Jack Patera, whose team is
now 4-{i _ " The turning point was
Dave Brown 's interception ."
Bartkowski called the pass his
most disappointing in five years
with the Falcons .
·'I can't remember a pass that was
any more disappointing than that
one, " said the former No . I draft
choil..,.
Jim Zorn, the Seattle quarterback
who accounted for two touchdowns
and set up another with a ~yard
pass to placekicker Efren Herrera.
also thought the Falcons could win in
the final moments .
The Seahawks had apparently
wrapped it up on a 26-yard touchdown run by Dan Doomink with 1:51
left to play for a 31-211ead . Doomink
had converted a fourth-down play
moments earlier to keep the drive
going .
" Bartkowski did a super job
comwg back the way he did . But

Dave Brown and the rest of the guys
hw1~ in there and got the key play .
That's what really won it for us, ..
Zorn said .
Sea ttle stwmed the Falcons with
fourth-down gambles four times

during the game, converting three
and barely missing on the other .
Zorn scored Seattle ·s fi rst touch down on a 34-yard run on a fourthand-five situation and t06Sed a 4yard pass to Sherman Smith for

Sports briefs.
TENNIS
COLOGNE, West Ge rmany I AP) Americans Trey Waltke, Tom
Gorman and Bruce Manson scored
first..-o~d victories in a $75,000
European
Open
Indoor
Championship tennis tournament.
Manson whipped Alvaro Fillol of
Chile !HI, 6-1 , Gorman defeated
fellow American Toon Gullikson 6-4,
6-4 and Waltke rallied to beat David
Schned~er of South Africa ~ - 6-4 . &amp;1.

GENERAL
NEW ORLEANS 1API - A federal
appeals court was asked to make
two National Football League stars
return money they took to sign with ·
a World Football League team that
folded before they could join it .
Rayfield Wright and Jethro Pugh,
all-pros with the Dallas Cowboys at
the time, got $75,000 each to play out
their options and sign with the
Birmlngham Ame ncans . The team
folded while Pugh was in his option
year at Dallas and while Wright had
a year to go with the NFL team .
Although another franchise was
granted to Birmingham , the two
players stayed at Dallas.
Pugh retired and Wright is still a
member of the Cowboys .

• •

&lt;:OLLEGE FOOTIIALL
NEW YORK ! API - Alabama ,
Nebraska and Southern california
held onto the top three spots ln The
As.ociated Press college football
ratings while unbeaten Houston
moved up to fourth place .
Alabama. No.1 for the third week
in a row , received 46 first-place
votes and 1,235 of a possible 1,260
points from a nationwide panel of 63
sports writers and broadcasters.
Nebraska received seven first-place
votes and 1,176 pomts while four
first-place ballots and 1,083 points
went to Southern Cal .
Ohio State was fifth, followed by
Florida State, Oklahoona, Tell.8s,
Ackansas and Michigan .
BASKETBALL
NF.W YORK (AP) - Guard Michael
Ray Richardson of Uie New York
Krucks was named the National
Basketball Association 's Player of
the Week for the period ending
Sunday, Oct . 28.
The &amp;-foot-S Richardson , New
York's No. 1 draft choice last
season. had 51 points. 26 rebounds,
26 assists and 11 steals in three
games last week, shootmg .594 from
the field .

3(),

1979

Miss Cullums named Nurse of Hope

another score ln the second quarter
foral4-!4tie .
Doomink scored on an 8-yard run
to give the Seahawb a 21-14 halltime edge. The TD was set up when
Seattle faked a 56-yard Held g081 attempt by Herrera, who _broke
through the middle and ..:aught the
fourth-&lt;iown pass from Zorn at the
Atlanta 17.
The gamble that falled came on a
fourth-and-12 at the Seattle 32 when
punter Hennan Weaver pused nine
yards to Jesse Green. The Falcons
falled to capitalize, when Tim Mazzetti~ a ~yard field goal .
The Falcons scored on a :1:&gt;-yard
run by Lynn Cain and a »-yard fumble ....,avery by Rick ByBll In the
opening half, and Bartkowski hit
Ryckman with touchdown tosses of
1? and 20 yards .
It was a disappointing loss for the
Falcons, who feU ro 3-6 after a :HI
start. They made the playoffs a year
ago for the first time in their 13-year
histnry with a 9-7 record that included five victories within the last
two mlnutes.

Pducational

; \ Il l' lid (11111' 1!11

t

13" PIZZA •

Your choi ce of any •

3 o.,,

con cenun~

materials or film are asked to call
the cancer office at 992-7531 .

.one topping . ····~
Reg $3 .55

I

program

for the November meeting when the
!lend o· the River Garden Club met
Monday ni~ht at the home of Mrs.
Eileen Buck .
Mrs . James Diehl presided at the
meeting w1th Mrs . Dean Bamitz , a
new member, reading the club
poem . Mrs. Andrew Cross gave the
club prayer, and Mrs . Wilson
Carpente r , the devotions. Mrs.
Carpenter gave an autumn reading
whi ch was followed by a discussioo
on the beauties of auturrm . F or roll
call members talked on their most
successful planting .
During the meeting , 11 was decid-

cancer or whi ch needs a spea ker,

.-GOOD TIMES SPECIAl.

•

A VISit to lJudley ·s Ill Parkersburg
w11h a dinner to follow was pla!Uled

more person one more chance ·'
She s uggesls tllat everyone h.ct ve
yearly checkups to ass1st 1n prompt
dia~no."iis and early treatment , en courage srn ukers to quit , and above
all care for one another .
Any organization interested in an

--···•

Gardeners plan Parkersburg visit

lle 1n the contrnumg fight i:ll{ i:tl ll.'SI
cancer maybe we could g1ve just one

(,mgcr (111/umr . 1\11n c

u; ll uf'c

cw,

i6lliO'
S
i
I. illiAii •I

Glnger Cullums is Miss Hope for
197!&gt;-110 for the Meigs County Cancer
Unit.
Miss Cull urns is 20 years of age , a
graduate of Meigs High Schoo l and
Holzer Medi ca l Center School of
Nursing . She is presently employed
at Holzer Medical Center.
At Me1gs High School she wa s a
member of the National Honor
Society and student council a nd participated in the junior and senior
p ~&gt; s a nd was a candystripter at
Veterans Memorial Hospital .
She is a member and p1anist at
Hemlock Grove Christian Church,
member of the Regional Nurses
Assoe~ a ' &gt;n and resides with her
parent·
and Mrs . Ernest

Striking a balance between
nMds amilnulget:

Employers know
that flexibility in
health care protection
is important.

Cullum s, Rocks pr ings
Road,
Pom eroy.
She enjoys reading , sew1 ng ,
playing the piano, bowling and softball . She will be in Columbus Nov . I
through Nov . 3 giving a speech in the
Nurse of Hope of Ohio conte.&lt;t and attending a training conference.
She hopes to broaden her honzens
and a lso more importantly trust
that through servi ce to her community s he can share with others,
spread hope. and educate those who
fear cancer .
She has been able to learn from
her experiences in ca ring for cancer
•patient• how mu ch understanding
they require. Miss Cullums stated,
··If only all of us could work just a lit-

/u uill l'

Funeral services for Pearl H.
Mora were he ld Saturday at F.wmg
Funeral Home with the Rev . W. H.
Perrin officiating . llurial was m the
family plot at P ine Grove .
Serving as pallbearers were tie1d
Y o ung , Pomeroy ; Robert
Sh umake r , Somerset ; Thoma s
Fisher, Cambridge; Pete Nibert,
Gallipolis; James Andrews, Athens.
and Grant Smith. Reedsville
Comlng from out or the county
were Mr . and Mrs. Harry Sla wter
and Amy, Delaware; Mr . and Mrs.
James Andre ws and Mrs . Sandra
Sayre Gumpf, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Kautz. Mr . and Mrs . Donald
Fink, Mrs. Davi d Jones, Columbus ;
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Fisher,
Senecaville; Mr . and Mrs. Thomps
Fisher and family, Cambridge ; Earl
F . Ingels, Jr . and Bryan Ingels. CinCl!Ulati; Robert Shumaker and Mrs .
Delbert Robinson , Somerset; Mr .
and Mrs . Pete Nibert and famil y,
Gallipolis ; Mr . and Mrs . Paul
Hayes, Belpre; Mr. and Mrs. Hiram
Sl a~&lt;1er. Ma•on. W. Va .; and Jeffr ey
Ehck. RwGrande

ed to contributt- tn a fu nd for

:l

for the past regional director , Mrs .
Charles Kuhl . Each member also
contributed to a fund from wtuch
materials for the Christmas flower
show will be purchased . Members
will also furnish cookies and sandwiches for the show refreshment
stand , Dec . 1 and 2 at the Pomeroy
Elementary School.
Mrs. Diehl thanked those who
assisted wiUi the program for the
Meigs County Association of Garden
l1ubs ' meeting held recently at the
Middleport Library. Mrs. carpenter
was chairman for the program with
several garden club members making flower arrangements suitable
for classes in the Chnstmas fl ower

I

show schedule .
A workshop on dried arrangements followed the meeting
with members creating designs
which were discussed and critized.
Refreshments were served from a
lace covered table centered with a
fall arrangement.

THE CAVALRY

IS RIDING
WITH US
NOW.

gift

Halloween party held
A halloween party was held Sunday evening at the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church .
Costume prizes were awar~d to
children . under six, Stevie W"ooa.
most onglnal ; Mary Beth lilwery,
the prettiest; and Paul Harkins. the
ugli est ; and six and over, P . J. Harm, the ugliest ; Joey Poulin, most
original ; and Sherrie Southworth,
the prettiest.
Sloppy joes. hotdogs. potato chips,
Kool-Aid and cookies were served
and sacks of candy were giVen to the
children . Games were held .
Attending were Mary Beth
Brewer , Ertc Johnson , Kevin
Milam, Tracy Walker, J err y

JoshlUI Daniel. He is welcomed
home by a brother;Jeremy Lee , age
two years . Mrs . Markin is the for mer Rhonda Bales.
Grandparents are Ms. Inna Bales ,
Kyger; Mayo Bales, Severn , N. C.;
Mrs . catherine Stone, Jackson ; and
Stanley Markin. Allensville. Greatgrandparents are Mrs. Muriel
Spires , Kyger ; Mrs. Faye Bales ,
Wellston ; Mr. and Mrs. Jay Pen·
dleton, Radcliff; and Mrs. Opal
Markin, Uruon Ridge . Great~reat­
grandmother is Mrs . Della Scott of
Wellston .

New arrival
C:HESHJ RE - Mr . and Mrs .
George E. Markin of Cheshire
proudly announce the birth of a son
on October 8 at 8:07 a.m. at the
Holzer Medical Center. The new
arnva l weighed seven pounds , 14
ounces, measured 20 and one-half inches long a nd has been named

Kirkham, Stormy Walker, Mary
Beth Stein, Donald Stein, Gall
Kirkham, Michael Smith , Cindy
Harris, P. J . Harris, Joey Poulin,
Cynthina Mills. Nicky Mills, Don
Vaughan , Pam Vaughan, Dodger
Vaughan, carol Ann Harper, Aaron
Harper , Ryan Harper, Stevie
Woods, Judy Crooks, Pam, Cindy
and Eddie . Sherrie Southworth ,
Amy Satterfield , Kelly Satterlield,
Carolyn Satterfield, Linda Chapman, Paul Harkins, Ruby Vaughan,
Fay Wallace, Nancy Wallace. ViVIan Waddell . Kim Glass , Missy
McMillan, Beth Vaughan, Zandra
Vaughan, Patty Stem. Donald
lilwery , Helen Sauer, and Lois
Harkins.

Now we can cover you r
i n sur~nce tern tory better
tll~n e\ler, because now we
c t~n provide you wi.th fine

products from 1he Kemper
Insurance Compirries . We' ll
find the righr ~uto ,
homeowners , busineu ,1nd
other insu rince CO\Ierage-s
to ~t your ne-eds .

DAVIS-QUICKLE

.-cooo
--···-

INSURANCE AGENCY

TIMES SPECIAlW

•
•

•

I

13" PIUA •
one to p p.n g .•
1 ••
Reg . $3 55

Bill Quickel
"Across from the
Courthouse in Pomeroy"

1

Your choice o f any •

·

992 -6677
R~-; 111 -

J Days O"ly

FEDER"L
KEMPER

!61nis!
•.Ill•iii .I

INSURANCE
COMP ...NY

~~

HIGH FDDD PRII:!ES
1
e
BACON ..............~: .. 6 9
99
5
BOILED HAM .....LB;.....

CHICKENS.......... ~; ..

Needs

CUBE

STEAKS .............~~: ...! 1

GROUND
BEEF

SAVORY

99

SUPERIORS

FRANKIES ..... ..I.~.9~. 99

e

CHUNK

LB.$129

49e

16
18

... '

Denver

:&gt;-The Daily Sentmel . Middleport -Pomeroy , 0 , Tuesday , ()(·t

BRAUNSCHWEIGER .~!t. 69e

19
-

PRODUCE

BANANAS

I

I
Your Blue Cross
and Blue Shield
Plans believe flexibility in health care
protection means being able to offer
alternatives. Alternatives in health care
programs which help many companies
strike a balance between their needs and
budget. As a matter of fact, more and
more companies are considering health
care packages in which the patient can
share in the cost of benefits in return for
lower rates. These kinds of options are
important in today's world, where
businesses are looking for ways to use
dollars more effectively.
Of course, Blue Cross and

4LBS.

•

Blue Shield
Plans are well
known for top of the line benefits that
pay the full cost of most hospital
services ... pay the doctors' usual,
customary and reasonable charges for
covered services and pay major medical
benefits of up to a quarter of a million
dollars. And dental coverage, America's
fastest growing health care benefit, can
be designed right into group health care
packages for companies with as few as
10 employees.
"Top of the line coverage. Sotmd,
affordable alternatives.
That's value added.

APPLES
LB.

GENERIC

HOMOGENIZED MILK ..............................~~!!-~~ .. '1 89
auffERMILK ............................................ ~.~~~... 79e

'1 OO 2R~uGM~LK ....................................................~~~-~.. '169

DEliCIOUS &amp; J0

4

ALL STAR DAIRY

DOZEN

vALLEY BELL

PAPER TOWELS.~.~!~.~-H~~: ..... ~~~~L~ 49~ !EGGS.................................~!~~.. 59c
ARGO
LUX
BATH
I PEAS.
3 CANS $}00
BEAUTY BAR SOAP. .............s!:~ .. 29¢ I
·········.. ········ ···········.. ····· ··
DELMONTE YELLOW

CORN ... ~.H-~L.E.~.E.R.~~~ ••••••••••••••••••• 3/$1

()()

25 LB $399

I TRAILBLAZER

!DOG FOOD......................... ~~~.-.

F--...--~

THURS. &amp; FRI. ONLY

RC OR
DIET RITE
COLA

DR. PEPPER
Blue Cross.
Blue Shield.
R~•lll'ld ~a rkt 81~te CION AIMXt ii iOn

"-&lt;&lt;•ll•reCI t.ll• r11.1 81u1 S l'ueld A..acoll,on

99e

8 PAK

SATURDAY &amp; SUNDAY

8 PAK 16 07- $

SUPER MARKET - OPEN DAILY 9 TO 10 P.M

COKE

Value added.
1\.

2 LITER
PLASTIC BOTTLE

·fUDGE BARS........................................................ .
VALLEY BELL
GALLON ~ ·,59
$100 CHOCOLATE DRINK ............................................ .
I GRADE B LARGE

FRIDAY 0"4L Y

'li

PEPSI

8 PAK

I•

I

I.

99e

I We

\1111.1rt
Suunay

Federal Food

.

9 .,...I U ...
1\l

we

Kese!Ve 1re

To limit

BTLS.

i

Plus Tax &amp; Dept.

09

�"'

6-- The Daily SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Tuesday. Oct. 30, 1979

B&amp;PW week
concludes
lbe observance of BlLSmess cmd
Professional Women 's Week by the
Middleport BPW Club was concluded lasl week with vtsits to two
charter members .
Mrs . Alwilda Werner and Mrs
Janet Korn visited Mrs . Essie
Russell at the Pinecrest Nursong
Home 1n Galllpolls . Mrs Korn
vis1t~d Mrs Pearl Reynolds at her
home . Both were presented gi fts
from ttl&lt;&gt; c lub. Both Mrs. Russell and
Mrs Reynolds are charter members
of the Middleport cl ub and Mrs
Reynolds is also a former distnct
director .

..

7- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 30 , 1979

Members of Alpha Omicron
Chapter of Delta Kappa Ganruna
Society, Int. met Saturday for alw&gt;cheon and program at Sadler's
Restaurant m Jackson . Hostesses in
charge of the luncheon arrangement
were Elizabeth Lantz, Virginia
Atkinson, Leona Calvin . Cecille
Maerker. Dorothy Scott, and Mrytle
Fri who gave the invocation .
Meigs County members attending
were Ruth Euler, Mildred Hawley,
Martha Husted, Nan Moore , Geneva
Nolan, Olive Page , Nellie Parker .
Maune Philson, Mary V. Reibel,
Beatri"" Rinehart, Fay Sauer, Emily Sprague, Roberta Wilson. and
Dorothy Woodard .

Margaret Benson presided at the
meeting during which time an invitation was read t(la meeting to be
held by the Portsmouth Otapter at
the Hillview Retirement Center on
Nov . 10. Commitee reports were
given by Viola Gettles, membership,
and Mryl.le Fri, scholarship . 1\
memorial service was held for the
late Helen Stevenson, past president
of Delta State, by Judith Matheny
and Ms. Gettles.
The program was conduckd by
Lucille Downard, chainnan of personal growth and services, and emphasized the theme, " Building
Bridges.' ' She encouraged members
to participate in appropriate pro-

grams of action including such
things as cra!l.'l, more time for
reading, neighboring a little better,
and volWJteering for various projects.
Mrs . Downard introduced Dr.
Earl Lavine, Wellston, wM showed
slides which he narrated on a recent
trip which he made to Scotland. He
spoke of the many places visited by
the group and particularly of the
castles of Scotland. Dr. Lavine was
preoented a gift from the group.
The Nov . 19 meeting will be held at
the Meigs Inn with a silent auction
for the benefit of the scholarship
fund.

World Community Day slated C-,ommittees

•

Oturch Women Uruted of Meigs
~ty Will ""lebrate World Commuruty Day Fnday at 1 :30 p.m. at

the Middleport First Baptist Church .
The worship service wiU be on the
theme, "This Community, USA ."

.•

Gc·nc•ration Hap
lh lld, ·n &lt;111d

'•w Hul !t ·l

\

,\1 n .\ ;,/n,

1

/)lid

11 u!"//1

lid lie /I

Celebrates 1OOth birthday
Mrs . Sidnr r Duck worth BarteL'
Wlll be observ1n~ her lOOth birthdav
qwetiy Wednesay among farru ly and
friends at her home. 1101 lith Ave.
Huntmgton , W ·.;a
Mrs . Bartels ts ttl&lt;&gt; daughter of the
late Mr and Mrs . Adam Duckworth
Slle " bedfast most of the time but
has an acl.Jve rrund and loves for
friends to v1sit .
IJv&gt;nK w1th her IS her daughter ,
Ruth, who takes care of her needs
Mrs . Bartels and farruly were

suranre Co . She has another
daughter , Mrs George Dempsey
who restdes in Huntington but is in
very poor health . Another daughter .
Mrs Mark Roller is deceased, also
her husband, Mark Roller .
Mrs . Grace Weese . Syracuse, ts
her stster-in-la w. and Mrs . George
Snider and Mrs Howard Largent
both of Syracuse are her rueces and
Richard Duckworth also of Syracuse
is a nephew .
Visiting her Sunday were Mrs .
Dorothy Fwller . Mrs Kenneth Cale
and Megan , aU of Middleport . Mrs .
Bartels received a congratulatory
message from President Carter

residenl"i of Main Street for many

years. they res1ded tn the Compton
home . d unn ~ which tune her la te
husband . Charles Bartels, was with
the Wes tern and Southern !Jfe In-

Health Review
·.
By Lamar C. Miller. D.O.
Cllnlcal Associate Profe,;sor
of Family Medicine
Ohio lJnJvenlty Collegt•
of Osteopalhk Medicine
AMYOTROPHIC I.A TERAI.
SCLEROSIS 1AI.S I
QuestiOn Is amyotropluc lateral
.clerosis the same as multiple
sclerosis ' If now. how IS 1t different '
Answer
While amyotrophic
lateral sclerosis 1ALS 1 does resemble multiple sclerosis m certain
ways, they are entirely separate
,diseases . ALS and MS are both
diseases of unknown ongtn for which
no useful diagnosti c tests are vet
available . Also, a specific treaunent
has not been diS&lt;·overed for e&gt;ther
one . ALS victims , however, get
progressively worse and die m a
short period of time - usuallv three
to five years . MS. a.' yo~ may
remember from la.5t week . often
runs a course of 20 ye-ars or more
with frequent penods of remissiOn
during which the s)m ptoms are
Ln.active

Question : What are the symptoms
of AI .5'' fl ow do the) dJffer from
those of MS '
Answer : Perhaps the best way to
describe the s)mptoms IS to look at
how the disease affected ll"i most
famous v1ctim - Lou Gehig . This
super sta r w&gt;th the New York
Yankees had been a corunslent
player. setung a record for consecutive games played which st11l
stands today. One year Gehng
began to fumble routine plays on
defen..e . He noticed his fingers and
hands had started to lose their
feeling and were numb to the touch .

Numbness of

extremitie~

is a com·

moo early symptom. Characteristi c
of this disease is the progressive
weakness and ftnal para lysis of the
muscles of the hands and arms
which Gehrig expenenced . TI1i.s

weakness and paralysis eventually
spreads not only to both arms. but
also to the legs . However, the most
seno us problems arise when the
renters of the brain which control
respiratiOn and heart action begm to
be paralyzed . The victim IS always
confined to a wheel chalf at some
poml and death follows in f1ve years
or less . It IS very difficult to
distingUISh between the symptoms
of 1\LS and MS, but a skilled
physician can often make an accurate ''differential " diagnosis .
Question : My mother-in-law died
of a disease the doctor called Charcot's syndrome . Is this a type of
multiple sclerosis?
Answer : No. It is just one of a
number of different names for ALS .
For mstanre , this ailment is often
called Lou Gehrig's Disease,
because it was forst recogruzed as a
dtstinct problem &gt;n the 1930s when
Gehrig became a \ictim . Over the
years it has also been referred to as
Oejerne type, progressive bulbar
palsy and progressive spina l
musc ular atrophy . These latter two
names indica te the involvement of
the bram stem 1 bulbar 1 :md the
spmal cord, respectively . Usually
both areas are involved and the
qwckness of death is detenruned by
how soon the brain stem is affected .
Question : What type of person is
usually afflicted with llus problem'
Answer . Unlike Wllh multiple

sclerosis, males are more prone to
be v1cti.m.&lt;&gt; of AL5 than are females .
Also. this disease usually strtkes alter U1e age of 40 . Lou Gehrig was 36
when he had to retire because of
Al.~ . and he died two years later at
lB . Unfortunately, 40 years later
medical "science" does not know
much more now than 1t did then
about AI.S .

,-------------------------,
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could
Love

n v t-&gt;l lu w u r wh r!! •

l OK Go l d Sf&gt;! w r!h fr ne .:; yn
the!r c n rr th &lt;:. l o nes fo r i',1Ch

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Christmas Layaway

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_JJ~ettelel"$

214 E . MAIN . POMEROY

I

'

October 29, 1979
Dear Editor and Parents ,
I fee l that I have something to say
and I 've gol to let 1t out
I have heard so many opinions on
what the board should do, or the
stnking teachers . Well , people . 1
have one thing to ""Y about llus . You
all discuss me . You tell me and
others what should be done . Have
you ever thought , ·'What am I really
doing to help stop this strike ., " So
far, all I hear .s your voices behind
closed doors. Why not call the board
or someone and push our idea·· It
may work . Who knows, until you try .
This one is for the board. You said
two weeks ago that papers would be
served on these teachers who are
striking . Have they been' No. The
children are still out of school and no
hope in the near future to return to
their classrooms. Even if it is a few
children, at least they are learning
something . And you should do it soon
for you are losing ground sam-. as
the tea chers on strike . And the
children are paying dearly .
And parents, if vou want to help
stoo tnis strike then please contact
me for !want to get a group together
to help lmd a way to stop this strike .

IFYOlJ ARE 'ALWAYSllfERE'
YOU CAN BECOME INVIS£BLE ~
By Heleo aod Sue Bolte!
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm nuts about Alicia . We we re going real well for a while , but then s he
started breaking dates - even ones
she'd made herself . I found oul after
she cancelled her invitation to a
sorority dance thai she'd taken
another guy. But I pretended I
believed she "had to study for a
fmal. ..
She knows I'll be understanding,
though I get the suspicion she only
goes with me when nothing else
turns up . If I say anything, I might
lose her . Sinee she seems to en joy
our few dates. should I continue bemg - ALWAYS THERE WAJTING '
1\TW :
You're the answer to a selfish
women 's prayer : the good old
·always there" faithful who keeps
off-nights from going dull.
A guy who would rather be
dumped-&lt;Jn than " lose her," usually
becomes a dumped loser. Stop makmg ruce and tell Aliclil you're on to
her bes. - SUE
DEAR ATW :
When you take 11 and say nothing,
you invite selfishness. I'd say
S. a turned worm Break your
next date with Alicia, and tell her
you " know she'U understand ... The
reperc ussions may lead to real talk
- or a break-up . And this relation ship certainly needs one or the
othe ~ 1 - HE LF:'I
DEAR HELEN AND SUE
My husband t of a year 1 doesn't
hold on to a job very well . Our son
and I live with my mother and he
lives with friends until he can afford
to take care of us. We want to be
together! He really tries'
My sister and brother-m-law live
downstairs. They don't like my husband. though he now has a job.
Whenever he comes to see me and
the baby, my siste r throws him out.
She makes my life miserable. What
shall I do' - VERY HURT DEAR
V.H. :
Apply at a low-cost housing project, and make this a real marriage
as soon as possible. Your husband
may hold on to a job when his
resportsibilities are no longer being
assumed by his mother-in-law SlJE

Mrs. Gemma Casci speaks to group on Italy
Mrs . Gemma Casci was guest
speaker on Italy as the Preceptor
Beta Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority continued the theme of
" Around the World with Beta Sigma
Phi" at its Thursday night meeting .
Mrs. Casci introduced by Mrs.
JWJe Van Vranken, program chair·
man, talked about Lucca where her
family originated . She noted thot the

r--1

Social Calendar

WEDNESDAY
BETHEL LADIES AID, 1 p.m.,
with Gladys Church on Lower River
Road .
WILDWOOD Garden Club
Wednesday 730 p.m . at the home of
Mrs. Dwight Milhoan .
DAN HAYMAN and Country
Hymntimers at Fathers House
Church, Hartford, Wednesday 7 30
p.m .
llfURSDI\Y
MEMBERSHIP COMMI'ITEE of
Mary Shrine 37 Thursday 2 p.m. at
Masonic Temple. All members urg ed to attend.
YOUNG FARMERS meeting,
Southern Local Vo-Ag building, 8
p.m. Thwrsday; all mterested
£anners are welcome.
POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT
LIOns Club to host zone advisory
meeting in Lionlsm relative to dub
projects and activities for Dist. 13-K
at Meigs Inn, 7 p .m. Thursday .
DON AND TriciB Adleta will be at
Fanners Bank and Savings Co. 9
a.m . to I p.m. to copy photos for 75th
anniversary slide presentation for
bankd . Phot06 dealing with workers
of yesteryear and fairs, dances, pic·
nics, etc., from era 1920 to 1960's
needed along with photo of Wildermuth Brewery, Barkofl Orange Co.
and Carleton College .
FRIDAY
MEIGS OOUNTY Pomona Grange
46 Friday 8 p.m. at Rock Springs
Grange Hall.

original fortification walls are still
in place. Mrs. Casci talked about the
customs of the people and the places
of historical significance . She
displayed photographs for the
members to look at after which Mrs .
Betty Ohlinger and Mrs . Ruby Baer
served pizza and beverages in keeping with the Italian theme of the

MEIGS COUNTY REACT Team
7:30p .m . Friday at Senior Citize.,;
Center in Pomeroy; all members
urged to attend.
SATIJRDAY
BOARD OF Columbus Township
Trustees, Saturday, 4 p.m . at the
township building, Gloria Hutton,
clerk, reports .

MRS. IV A STEW ART
CONFINED TO HMC
Mrs . Iva Stewart of Rutland is a
patient at the Holzer Medical
Center. She was admitted last Sun·
day and is confined to Room 405 .

evening.
Meeting in the Riverboat Room of
the Athens County Savings and Loan
Co ., Plans were made for the Nov . 8
meeting with members to have dinner at the Sacred Heart Catholic
Church at 6 p.m . and then go to ttl&lt;&gt;
Riverboat Room for a work ses..•ion
on frog replicas to be sold during
Regatta, 1900.
Mrs . Ann Rupe, ways and means
chairman, talked about the qwlt
which will be taken to the Ohio con vention to be used in a fund raising
project . A candy sale will begin
sometime in ea rly December.
Mrs. Nonna Custer, president of
City Council. announced a meeting
to be held Wednesday rught at 7:30 at
the Meigs Inn . lt was noted that Mr.! .
Gra"" Eich will serve as sponsor ri
the chapter. A letter was read from
the Corrununity Health Center an nouncing programs availabl e
through their agency.

yo u are not taktn~ tht• chan ce th...tt any tJnc comran~
fra ' all tht· am··' t'r"

.'l eTt." , at The Jn ,ur~lll Cl' Store, \~l' ;nc mri('{Jendent agent . . .
'We repre"ent a nurnht'f or !rt\e llhtlf l' f '- -- 11 \.. r fh c (onllfll'llla l

ln, urance CornpJnt r'. lur l'\:l lll f)l l' I hat rneam \~C ca n
analylt? your rt.' Ljlllf t:fllt'nt' ~1 i1 d \t·lc. t the hc&lt;..t m -. urancc
prot ec riun fo r yuu lrtllll rn :w\ ' t \ 'i l!.tbk ;ll t rrnatt\l'~ .
ha" c:

l\'e

1!11' l... hlll l' l',

~u u .~r~ h~c:i'.

~..· u•c rag t·

yo ur m on cy -- 1/l'Ur&lt;Hh:l'

that

lth

U\ .

Le t U)

f C\ I C\\

and urJatc

DAN HAYMAN and the Country
Humntimers will be featured at the
Fathers House Church, Hartford,
Wednesday at 7:30p.m.

POMEROY, 0 .
214 E . MAIN ST .
991 ·51)0 or H2 ·Sll9
"YOU OON 'T BUY A POLICY ,
YOU ~IRE AN AGENT"

POWELL 'I
5tore Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

? 30 p m on
~ nv er"ltJer i 6 J!J IY .11 :ne
Cr ly Co un rrl Cllr ce , ,8
rr on, '

30

to

Cl eveldnd Ave S W Crn
ton Ohro 4ll 702 An evenw~

sessron will be r ondu1 Trd
I• om 5 00 Job 00 o"'
All rnterested per\ons wrtr oe
{jl'ven .10 opporllnrly to be
hC' rHO Further ••llorm,r ron
flld~

De OD!ar'1ed by coni M!

rng the Commrssron
lHl PUIJII C Ul iL"' l S
CO MM •~ S tn ~.

r r ,.., 'J

Bv O,r vr d

rn •

~~

Committees for the annual
Christmas flower show of the Meig•
County Association of Garden Clubs
have been announced .
Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis is
general chairman for the show
which will carry out the theme "I'm
Dreaming of a White Christmas ." It
will be staged Dec . t and 2 at the
Pomeroy Elementary School .
Other corrunittee cha1nnen are
Mrs. Pal Holter , ways and means
and food sales ; Addalou Lewis,
registration and classification ; Mrs .
Rev a Snowden, hospitality : Mrs.
Bernice Carpenter, publicity book;
Mrs . Bunny Kuhl, entrance theme
decoration; Mrs . Kate Jarrell. Mrs .
Mary Nease, judges' clerks ; Mrs .
Janet Bolin, judges' comments;
Susie Carpenter. sweepstakes; Alice
Thompson, horticulture : Pearl Lit·
tie, Marie Birchfield, juniors Janet
Koblentz, staging; Fernwood Club,
acceptance and placement .

Annual potluck held
The annual fall potluck dinner of
the Jolly Bunch Sewing Club was
held at the home of Mrs . Margaret
Belle Weber, Rutland.
Mrs . Nora Mills gave grace
preceding the dinner whi ch was
foUowed by a business meeting in
which new officers were elected.
Elected were Mrs . Weber , presi dent; Mrs . Edith Jividen , vice president; Mrs. MiUs, treasurer; and
Mrs . Helen Reynolds, secretary
For the program , Mrs . Weber had
a reading from Ideals entitled " In
the Warm Day of Autumn .. and Mrs .
Jividen read " The Little Black
Dog." Games were played with
prtzes going to Mrs. Reynolds and
Mrs . Jividen.
A Christmas party was planned
and will be held at the home of Mrs.
Evelyn Grueser with Mrs. Bea Rol&gt;son and Mrs. Freda Mitch as
assisting hostesses. Others attending the meeting were Mrs. Ethel
Hughes, Mrs. Rhoda Hackett, Mrs.
Wlian Smith, and a guest , Mrs. Donna Jenkins.
VISITS HERE
William Reynolds of Kalamazoo ,
Mich. spent the past weekend here
visiting his mother , Mrs . Helen
Reynolds .

Polly Cramer
MA ITRESS SMELLS MUSTY
By Polly Cramer
POU. Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I have a practically new box spring and mattress
that were stored in a damp basement and now have a musty smell .
Is there any way to get rid of this
unpleasant odor' - EVELYN
DEAR EVELYN - Sunshine and
air would be my first step. Make
sure they are completely dry aU the
way through . After you are sure of
that place rumpled newspaper bet·
ween the mattress and spnng plenty of it - and do protect them
from the newsprint. Open containers
of charcoal could be left under the
bed for as long as need be. A light
sponging (do not soak) with alcohol
would also be a help. - POI.L Y
DEAR POLLY - Th1s year my
daughter though! she was much too
grown-up to use her Mickey Mouse
lunch box for school. I sprayed it
with some leftover painl and she
pasted on pictures of her favorite
teen idols and then collaged her own
box . Many coats of shellac went on
to make the box rainproof and she
loves it. - LINDA
DF.I\R POLLY - When my electric percolator gets stained from
making coffee in it I fill1t with cold

water and instead of adding coffee
put in one tablespoon of automatic
dishwasher detergent, plug it in and
let it perk . When the perking stops I
empty the pot , rinse it weU and it is
sparkling clean without any rubt}.
ing . - ERLENE
DEAR ERLENE -Thank you. My
coffee pot has never been so clean
with so little effort. Your Pointer is
one I will continue to use.- POLLY
DEAR POLLY - So many purses
and billfolds are now made of a
canvas-like material, but they do get
dingy and spotty looking . I have
discovered that they really clean up
to look great if you use furniture or
automatic upholstery cleaner to
remove the soil and dirt .
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pomter, Peeve or Problem in her
column .
Write
POLLY'S
POINTERS 1n ca re of thi s
newspape r.

--···.-cooo TIMES SPECIAL.
• 13" PIUAany ••
•

Yc '

no.ce of

•

one to pp1r g

I

Reg ;_, ,5

1

199

I

J Ooys O•ly

E611\0'
s
:
;. il'lrii .1

The best tune to look for shootmg
stars is between midnight and dawn
On a norma I mght, an observer
shuuld see betw een 5 and 10 an hour

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon. , Tues., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat .
8 : 301o5:00Thursday lill12 Noon

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

773 -5592

5% OF GROSS SALES DONATED
TO MEIGS JAYCEES

COSTUME JUDGING
AT 6 P.M. SHARP

COME TO THE
6TH ANNUAL MEIGS JAYCEES-POWELL'S
SUPER VALU COMMUNITY HALLOWEEN PARTY

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

COUPON

LEGA_l NQTIC[

C: ompan~ ·n p operd tro n n•
rls f uel Co\1 AO JJ S!Illent
(l d rr\ P rlnrl rp .ih.. (J lllJIIPI'
Jtw., "'CJrrnq •'&gt; sc hed u t· r:

PHll.SON, WEBB
IN COLUMBUS
Mr. and Mrs. S.n Philson and
Ralph Webb were in Columbus Friday and Saturday . Mr. Philson and
Mr . Webb attended the Grand Lodge
held at Veterans Memorial
Auditorium . Webb was honored by
being appointed the educational officer for the 12th Masonic District
for 1980 by newly elected gand
master.

POLLY·s POINTERS

selected

PRICES GOOD All DAY WEDS., OCT. 31ST ONLY

FLAVORITE

~1&amp;, ~

I 1H·

f I I II C to revre w lhP 'l, r"

rrotcction

C hance\ em· ) uu'l l gel more I'" lc" .11 I he ln 'IJrancc S10rr .

FEA TIJRED SINGERS

If you want to help then plea.-.
send me a letter and your phone
number and I'U contact you . We
need your help and your ideas
Thank yo u.
Sarah Welsh,
Still a Concerned Parent
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769

orocurePler t lJidC !rce -, rnrJ
;JO ill . e·, c l lfP [lh •o PnwP·

tht•

~ULI Jl fC'l l.' nt [~ ha\ C ,

won't.

;q: l·l

~l't

mo rl' tor
,Jnd 1\ ;t r!urdablc
tlf

R
B.::~~~N~~~::.cE
Come 1,('('

If you don't want to get mvolved then
you had better stop and think first. I
am one person, not God. and I can 't
do it alone . Nor can the few who are
trytng . You 've got to put your two
cen ts in now for we are getting tired
of standing up for everyone else's
children when their own parents

Ire_ hCrllrr{) [(!Sf' "-l o

Three dinner parties were held in
celebration of the 89th birtlxlay of
Miss Marcia Karr , Syracuse. On
Wednesday evening, Mr. and Mrs.
MiUard Van Meter and Mr . and Mrs .
Franklin Rizer held a dinner in her
honor at the University Inn, Athens .
Friday evening, Mrs. Martha Moore
hosted a dinner at Long John
Silvers ; and on Sunday evening, Mr .
and Mrs. Fred Crow entertamed at
the Holidayy Inn, Gallipolis. On
Saturday neighbors and churcfi
fnends caUed with giffu and cards .
Miss Karr also received many birthday greetings .

\\-'h en you brmg ) Our tn,u ram.:e nt·cL.! o., 10 Th e l mur arKe Store,

DEAR V.:
Does you mother share your
sister's dislike of your husband ' If
not , your combined action could
keep her from throwing him out.
Should the whole family ag r ee he
ISn't a good nsk, however, maybe
they know something you don't want
to admit . Honest now. are you ready
for a real marriage "ith a man who
can't hold on to a Job ''- f!EI.EN

Pu blrc Ut•••T w&lt;, Cor-m1,-,
1•on ot Oh•o h,l• Sf' ' 'rJr tl ,r,

89th birthday
celebrated by
Mrs. M. Karr

Our
Insurance Store
Motto.

Bcca uo;e

Duringhe servi"", the Women wiU
explore the meaning of the words,
"community " , "exile " . and " hope "
with emphasis on what the words
mean in a world where thousands of
refugees are adrift upon the endless
oceans.
Through the resources of World
Conununity Day offerings, the
Church Women United will be
responding to the plight of boat people by supporting programs which
provide irrunedlate crisis intervention and by fwthering other efforts
which seek solutions to the rna jor
questions of resettlement and
relocation .
Mrs. Letha Proffitt, outreach
worker for the Corrununity Action
Agency, will speak on the needs in
this commuruty. Gift certificates
will be available and 19BO.dues will
be accepted at the meeting . All area
women arc urged to attend .

BREAD

Room
Service
a day for an extension phone.

LG. 20 OZ.
LOAF

Only~

If you run at the sound of o bell. maybe
it's time you looked into an extension
phone from GTE . For only 5c o day,
you can have a phone in any room in the
house .
Whether you're in the living room, the
laundry room or even the bathroom, you
con stay right where you ore and let your

extension phone do all the work .
And all it takes to get room service

11

a

4/'1 00

1. TIME: WED-, OCT. 31, 5 to 7 PM
z_ WHERE: OLD MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL, POMEROY, OHIO
3. CASH PRIZES FOR BEST COSTUMES
4. FREE TREATS FOR THE KIDDIES

r-------------------1
1

COUPON

! DIET RITE OR RC COLA !
I

1 s PAK

16

sns.

o;~.

LIMIT 3

99

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Good Oct- 31st, 1979

COUPON

quick trip to your GTE. Phone Mart . Just
pick out a phone, tak e it home , put it ,n
your favorite room and relax .

FLAVORITE
'

SUGAR
5LB.
BAG 99e

Not only because you can stop run ning, but because you've got a phone that's
as reliable as the phone company .

•
16 W.sl ~shml(ton
Athens

~ fo r ·p 'J r ~

•

I

e

I
11
I
I
I

�$-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 30,19'19

~ T'lte f)oilv

OTI'"J[ ·rm.cv

•

Your Besi Buys Are Found In the Sentinel Classifieds
.Noti'c e of E tect•on
ori' TaK Le~o~y
m E•cess of the
Ten Mill
L1mtfal10n
NOTICE IS hereby gtven
mat 1n pursua nce ol a
R e~o lut1 on ot th e Cou nc il of
the Vil lage of Ra r 1ne, Ohto,
pdssed on the 1nd day day
of July , 1979. tl1f.&gt;re w i ll be
submt11ed ro a vo re of th e
peopl e ot sa td V illage a t a
Genera l ELEC TION to b e
held •n the VIllage of
Rdl 1ne . O h 10. at
ttw
r egui M p l ace ot vo f mg
lhere 1n, on T ue~ay , th e
6th day o f November . 1979 ,
!he ques f ,on of l ev y .ng , •n
t&gt; Kces s o f the ten mill
ltmll a t •on,lor t he benef1t of
Rac m e Village for th e pur
pose of provrd1ng li r e ap
para tu s.
appl1an ces .
bu!ld1ngs or s1tes ther efo r .
or sour ces of wdter supply
and materials th ere for or
th e establiShment and
ma mtc nan cc of l1nes o f II r e
alar m tel eg raph or the
pa yme n t ol permanent .
parf t•m e , or
volunteer
firemen or fire hghtlllg
r ompan•es to ope rate th e
same or to pur c ha~e am
bul ance eq u1 pm ent or to
p r o11 1de
ambu l an r e- or
emergen c y m edi cal &lt;;e r
v1ces operil ted by a f 1re
dC' putm cn l or lire t 1ght 1ng
romp any .
Sa1d lnx be1ng a renewal
of an f_')(15 t1ng ld:M o f I 7
mil l s to run tor f1 ve years,
a t a rat e not exr E&gt;e01ng I 7
M1ils for each one dol ldr of
vnluat•on. wh1 ch amounts
to sevPnteen re nts for each
u ne hundr t&gt;d dol lars of
va lu a t •on . tor f 1ve years
Tht&gt; P oll~ tor SCI•d E tec
' 'on w il 1 open at 6 30
o 'clor k A M and r em dtn
open unt il 7 JOo ' c lock PM
Eas te rn Stanoara firne o4
sa 1d dt"tVBy orcler of the Board ot
E le( t •O ns ol Me ,gs County ,
Oh·o
E rn f'"&gt;l A W• ngPtt
Cha1rrnan

WANT AD

CHARGES
15 Worrut or Unde-r
CaJ.h
Charge

I 00
I 5C
I fll

I 25
I~
2 2!l

300

175

Jo::S,ch wor d o11er ~ nununum
J:i wordsl.'i 4 cent-\ per word per
da y Ads runru~ other than l"OI I·
~- utlv~ dayi!l will bt&gt; ctu!rgl"d .!It
the I d&amp;y ratP

In memory , Uird of Thanks
lllld Obituary 6 rent.s per woni .

nummum

$3 .00

CK~

m

ad -

1 v am~

Mobtle H&lt;Ill e saleti and Yard
:u1les are accepted only Wlth
t a~ with order 2!1 cent charge
lor ad'! t•ar;ylllg Bot Number In
Care of 1lle Sent1r1eJ

Th.&gt; Publ1.1he r reserves thtn,.:ht to edit or reJec-t any ads

de~ me t.l

objec tiOnal
The
Publtsht-r wtll nut be re5porutble
for more than one Ln&lt;.'OTTt"&lt;_1 lJI

sertwn
Phont 992-2 156

NOTICE

WANT-AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Monday
'l/1..1.m on SH.t urrlB )
Tue!lday

t.hru f'nd6)
i PM
lht- d.ay be fort' pul.lltl·ct mn
Sund11\"
4 PM

Fr1da .1 afh·rnooJil

O~tr-d

Not tee of Etec t1on

on Tax Levy 1n

E xces.s of the Ten
Mill Lrm•tat10n
N OT I CE 1S here ov g tvt•'l

't'i a l tn pursua n ce ot a
Rcsolu ton of fh c B o ar d ol
Tru"'&gt; tees of the T ownsh•P of
Or .=.nge,
M e 1QS
Co unty ,
Ot11 o . passed on the 2na aa ·y
of Julr · 1979 t here w •l! oe
sutYm• ted to a 11ote o f th e
pf'ople of sa •d Townsh ,p at
o General E L E CTtO N !Obf'
f1Pid 1n t he To wn&lt;;h 1p of
Or anqe , Oh•o .
at
ttl('
regutar p l tKe of IIOllfly
!herP1n , on Tu esday . th e
6th da r ot November . 1979.
the ques f ,on of lf'vv•ng 1n
l' • CP S5 o f
thp ten
rnill
ll m,lat,on . to r th e nenet1tot
Or anq e T ow nsn, p t or the
pu rpOSP ot prov ' d,nq and
mf! , n t n , n,nq
hre
np
p ,1 r n I u '=.
fl p p I ' a n r f' &lt;,
huildlfHJS . or o.,dps H1 eret or
or (\OurrC's of w ater suppl y
t~nd m~i ler•a l s th eref or or
H 1('
(' Si i!biiS h men t dfl Cl
fn&lt;'llfllena nce of l1nes of li r f'
d larrn tete qrdpll o r HH-'
p.:.ymen t ol pe r manen T.
a rt t1 me
or
volunTeer
1r emcn o r l1r c hghtmq
r o mpan,es to ooerate the
same or to pur r hase dm
bul ance equ 1pment or to
provide
ambulan c e or
emergen cy m ed1 c a1 ser
v •ces operated by ll t 1re
d epartm en t or hre hghl 1ng
rom pany .
Sa •d ta:M be1ng . a renewal
ot an e x,st ' n ';i Tax of 0 8 mtll
to run for t1ve years at a
rc'tfe not ex c eed1nQ 0 8 mills
t o r each one doll M
of
vi\ luati on wh1ch amoun ts
to e1ght ce nts f or earh one
hundred
dOllar s
of
va luat1on , to r F1ve y e M s
Th e Polls for sa1d El er
l1 0n will open rlf 6 30
o 'c lock A .M and rl-'ln~il1
open until 7 : 30o 'c loc k PM
tas rern Sfandard Tim(' of
s.:11d day .
By order ot t he Board of
Elec l10n5o . of Me•g"&gt; Co unty .
Oh 10
Ernest A W 1nQ€'tT
Cha1 r mon

f

Doro th y M Johnston
Clt •r ._
Da l ed Oc l 11 , 197'1'
I 10' 16. 2J. 30 I 11 J 5 . 4t r

Ooro th ,.. M Jo hns ton
Cler k
Of I ober I ? 19r9

llli16}] 30 111 ! 5 . J1 (

Wanted to Buy

For Sale

WE
WANT
to
thank
everyon e t hat helped us
ce lebrate our
45th an
n1versary and tor all the
many
g1fts .
f l owers ,
moneTary Q1fts , c ards and
phone cards
A spec1al
than k s to our tam ily , Je ff ,
Mar lene . Kelly , Terri Jo,
L1nda and L1sa Kaye , for
g ivi ng us a ddy fa remem
ber
Carl and Mabel M oore

CHIP WOOD Poles ma x .
d1ameter 10" on largest
end S 12 p er ton . Bundled
slab $10 per ton Delivered
lo Ohio Pallet Co , Rt 2.
Pomeroy 992 2689

COAL,
LIMESlONE.
sand.
gravel,
calc1um
ch lortde , terfll' zer , dog
food . and all types of salt
E• cel sior Sa il Works, tnc .
E Ma1n St . Pomeroy , 992
3891

WE WOU LD like to extend
our s1ncere apprec1ation
for the flowers , food c ards
and other express1ons of
sympathy
s h o wn
us
follow ng the death ot our
mother . Edna Ha rt
Children

Notices
MEIG S
COUNTY
HUMANE SOCIE TY 991
6260 Pels available tor
adoptton and information
servi ce
GUN
SHOOT
EVERY
SUNOAY1PM FACTORY
CHOKE ONLY RACINE
GUN CLUB
NO
HUNTIN G.
no
trespasst ng w1 Th no ex
ceptions on my propert"
Judy M cG raw Self
GUN
SHOOT
Ra c tne
Volunteer
F~re
Dept
Every SaTurday . 6 . 30 p m .
At their build 1ngin Bashan
Fact ory choke guns only

OLD FURNITURE . ice
bOxes. bras s beds . iron
beds , desks , etc • complete
households
Write M 0 .
M11ter RT .c , Pomeroy or
ca l l 992 7760
OLO COINS. pocket wt
ches , class nngs, weddtng
bands, dtamonds Gold or
silver Call J A Wamsley ,
7&lt;2 1331.
WANTED ·
SAW logs
P~yment upon delivery to
our yard, 7 30 to 3 30 week
days Blaney HarawOOds ,
SR 339, Bartow, OH 678
2980
ANTIQUES ;
FUR
NITURE , glass , chtna ,
anything See or ca l l Ruth
Gosney , antiques , 16 N .
1nd, Middleport , OH 99'1 ·
]161
ANTIQUE POCKET wat
ches Wdlrng to pay top
dollar
Ca ll
1 5n 2973
even1ngs
WANTED . JUNK . Bat
ter tes . radii'ltors , motors,
auTo
trans
No Sunday
calls 9492563

WINTER
POTATOE S
C W Proffitt farm , Por
fland , OH S8 a hundred and
S5 a hundred
FIREWOOD FOR
Now fdk.1ng order.-,
de l rv er , 742 20S6

NOfiCE! Of EleCtiOn
on T a• Levy 1n
E ~tcess of the Ten
Mtll Ltmrtation
NOTIC E 1S hereby g1ven
That 1n pur suanre of a
RPSOIUt 10n Ol the CounCil Of
th (' Village of Sy rac use ,
s,-racuse, Oh iO , passed on
thf' IJth dny of August . 1q79
there will be &lt;;u!J mi11Pd to a
vo te at the people of sa1d
v lli!ge a t a Ge neral ELEC
T ON to be he ld •n th e
v ltaQP of Syracuse, Ohto ,
"' thf' rt.•gular pla ce of
vo t1 ng Thcre ,n . on 'T uesday.
rn e 61h dav at November ,
19,'9
Plf'
qu eS I 10 n of
I(' V)' ing , •n c :.: ccss of th e ten
rn1 l l l•rn •tat10n
t or th e
~ l'!l L' ''' o t Syraru se Village
l or
tn e
purp ose
of
pro.,..1d1ng and mainlain1ng
' '"~ ap pa r a tu s. ,1ppl1ances .
bu11d 1ngs . or Sties the ref or .
or so ur ces of witt er supplv
and mater1al s the-refor , o r
!he
estaO I•shment
and
maintenance of l1nes of ftre
alarm telegraph or the
PM men t of permanent .
pari f ,me.
or
vo l unteer
f~r eme n
o r life flghl 1ny
c o mpan ie~ 10 opera te the
same or to p ur chase am
bulan ce cqu 1pm ent or t o
p ro v•de ambulance o r
emergency med•UI I "&gt;er
v •ces opera l ed by a t.re
departm ent or fir e fi g ht' ng
(Ompan ·y .
Sa•d fa)( OeinQ a ren ewal
of nn ('-,: ISI,ng- lax of 2 3
rn 1ll s to r un lor f1ve vears
ar a r ate nor e)( ceed 1nQ 7 3
m 111s f or eac h one dollar of
valua t,on , wh• Ch amounts
to twenty thr ee cents for
eMh onf' hundred dollars of
vdi U.=tl iOn , for fl11e years
The P Ol iS tor Sd•d Elec
! 1011 w ill opPnn l 6 JOo'ctock
A M and rcma •n open until
7 30 o'cloc k PM E.=ts tern
'l f~ n o ~r d T 1tnf' of Srt lr1 day
B,... o r aN ot thf' Boaro of
l:.lt'( l •ono., 0 1 M e•gs count ·~ ,
on o
E r nt'S t A W1ngeH
Cha 1rmrln

( 10 t IO 73 30 I 11) 'l. 4l r

Notrce of E lect•on
on TaK Levy 10
Excess of the Ten
Mtll L1mttaton
NOTICE 1S hereby g1 ven
that •n pur suance of a
Resolution of t he Board of
Trustees of the Townshipol
Olive , Me1g s County , Oh 10,
passed on the 2nd day of
Apr!! , 1979 there will be
submitted to a vote ot the
people of sa1d Towns h1 p nt
a Generdl ELECT I ON to be
held in the Townshtp of
Olive, Ohio , at the regular
pla ces of vo T1ng mere1n , on
Tuesday , the 6th day of
Novemb er ,
1979 ,
the
question of levy,ng . 1n ex
ce ss of
the te n
mill
l tmtTaTion, for The benef 1t of
Olive TownShiP for the pur
pose of
prov1drng
and
maintaining
fire
ap
paraatus ,
dppl t .=~n ces,
buildings , or sties therefor .
or wur ces of water supply
and materrals therefor , or
the establishment and
maintenance of lines of l1re
alarm telegraph or the
payment of permanent .
part·tim e , or
volunTeer
firemen or f 1re f1ght1ng
com pan ies to operate the
sdme or to pur c hase am
bulance equ1pment or to
provide ambulance or
emerge ncy medtcal ser
vices operated by a ftre
department or fire f1ghting
company .
Said fa)( being · an dd
dttional tax of o 5 mill to
run tor Five (5) years, aT a
rate not exceedtng 0 .5 mills
for each one dollar of
valuation , which amounts
to f ive cen ts for each one
hundred
dollar~
ct
valuatron , for five years .
The Polls for said Elec
lion will open at 6 30
o 'clock A .M and remd ln
open until 7: JOO'clock; PM
t:as rern :lTanoaro 1 rme
said dav .
By order of th e Board of
E lections , of M etys Co unt ·( .
Ohio
Ernest A . Wtngett
Chairman

Nof1C e of E IH I10n
on Tax L evy 1n
E•cess of the Ten
Mill L 1m1tai10n
NOTICE 1S nereoy g1ven
tnal .n pursuance of a
Resot u t• on of th e Board of
Trustees of the Townsh1 P ol
Chester . •n Me1gs County .
Oh10 . passed on the lOth
day ol July 19 r9 tner e wd t
be subm' II P.d to a vote of
!he PC'O OI C Ol '&gt;Jid TownShiP
il l e1 Gener a l ELEC l tON to
be held '" the Townsh1p ot
Che st er
OhiO,
at
the
regular pla ces ot v011ng
th ere1n, on Tuesday , t he
6th day of Novem ber , 1979,
th e question of levy,ng , rn
ex cess ol the ten mill
11m11a t on , tor tne beneftl of
(nes ter r own sh1p. t or the
purpose of pr 0111d1ng and
m n mta1 n 1ng
l1 re
ap
pdrnl us .
nppl1dnres .
bv il d1ng s, or sdes therefor .
o r sou r ces ot water supply
and maTe r1a1 s therefor , or
th e establ1shme nt and
mi'Hntena nce of I Illes o1 fire
nlarm l e legr"ph or the
paym ent ol permanen l,
part l tme , or
volunteer
fir emen or f1re tighttng
compan1eS to opera te the
same or to pur c hase am
b ul .=mre equ,pment or to
prov1de
ambulance or
emergen c y medi ca l ser
vtces operated by a f1re
depa rtment or fire figh ting
company .
Said tax being a renewal
of an ex1Sf1ng ta:w: of 0.4 mill
to run for Five (5) years , at
a raTe nor exceed1 ng 0 .-1
mills for each one dollar of
valul!tion , which amounts
to four cents tor each one
hundred
dollars
of
val uation , for Five years
The Polls tor satd Elec
t 1on will open at 6 . 30
o'c lock AM and remai n
open un iti7 : 30o 'clock P .M .
Eastern ::,tanaara 1rme of
sa 1dday .
BY or dC'r of th e Board of
Elrc t1 ons. of Metg s Cou nty .
Oh10
Er ne st A W1ngeft
c na1rman

Dorothy M . Johnston
Clerk
Dated October 12. 1979

Dorothy M Johnston
Clerk
oa red Oc Tober 12, 1979

1101 16, 23,30111 1 5. 4t c

1101 16.23, 30 111 1 5, 4t c

sale
Will

EO
BURK ET T
Barber
Shop now open full t1me tn
Middleport

PORCH
SALE . Starts
Wed , runs till all sold , Out
Side
Chrislmds
decorations , brown velvet
ptcfures and misc. ifems
Karl Kloes, College St ,
Syracuse, OH 991 3014

GET MARKET VALUE tor
your gold and srlver coins
Wrlle or co nta c t
Ed
Burk.elt Barber Shop, Mid
dleport

SWEET POTATOES. red ,
white and yellow . Rt ?.
Ra ci ne R w . Lewrs 843
2437 .
HOUSE COAL. lump or
stoker . wtll de lrver 741
21BJ
FIREWOOD.
atl
wood C a II 992 5449

hard

FOUND : KEY to Honda
Call to identify , 992 2750 .

N E W FRENCH Provmc ial
ant,que wniTe d1nrng room
suite S900 985 4170

HOTPOINT
and

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
Headquarters
Service

POMEROY
LANDMARK
\(,..._Jack W. Carsey
~

CERAMIC CL ASSES . Mon
day and Thursday , 79 p rn
Starf tng Th ursday , O&lt;:t 25
Drehel ' s Cerarn1cs 59 N
1nd. Middleport_ OH ~2

LOST · MALE beagte pup.
N Main on New Lima Rd .,
Rutland
Has
l eash.
Reward 742 16.48

550()

KEYS
FOUND
on
Pomeroy
Park1ng
lot
across from St iff ler ' s Ford
key , 6 keys and nail c 11pper
on cha 1n ldenttfy and p• ck
up at Sti ffler ' s

HRD CA NDY c lasses Sldf
t .ng
th 1s week
Learn
suckers, hard ca ndy , taffy
Chirstmas ornaments ~2
63.41
MINI CAKE decorat1ng
c lass, learn iust enough t o
do those novelty cakes
Cratt tee \5 Call 992 o:w
for tnformdhon
WORKSHOP IN mak i ng
G1 ngerbread houses and
al so w~ter paper paintings .
Call 99 2 63-42 tor details

Mobile Homes - Rent
TWO BEDROOM partly
furniShed, prefer middle
age-d or elder I y coup le No
pels no ch1d lren q97 17A9

Auctions
BIG AUCTION every Wed .,

7 pm Hartford Commun 1ty

Center , Hartford . WV . .c
mile~
above
Pomeroy
Mason Br idge

Camping Equipment
1975 WILD E RNES S cam
per , 25 tt long , new c arpet ,
a~r cond,ttoner . c lean 992
3312 or 992 6288

Help Wanted
CARRIER WANTED for
11ncoln Hill 111 Pomeroy
Ca ll the Daily Sen ltnel. 992
/ 156 between 8 30 and 5 00
pm
LPN F 0 R J to 11 or 11 to 7
shift P tnecresT Care Cen
ter Contac t Judy Barcus ,
RN , D~rector of Nusing
446 7112

Pets for Sale
HOOF HOLLOW , Eng li sh
and Western . Sadd les and
harr)ess
Horses
dnd
pon1es Rutti Reeves 61&lt;4
698 3290
Barding &lt;tnd
R•ding Lessons and Horse
Care produc Is
Western
bOOTs
Chi ldren ' s $15 .50
Adults \?9 00
RISING STA R
Kenne l
Boarding Call 367 0192
POODLE
GROOMING
Judy Tayl or 614 31&gt;7 7210
HILLCREST
KENNELS
Boarding , all breeds Cledn
rndoor ou1door
facilities
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans 6l.C .4.46 ·7795
VERY
REASONABLE
br1ttany Spaniel , female , 21
mo old . Can be registered
Phonem 5267

--------UKC REG treeing walker
puppies . ) females , 2
males . Nave Nite Ch Ch
Griffins Rock , Nite Ch
bla.rs Santo Babe , N ite Ch
1973 ACHA World Ch
Beanblossom Buck, 1970
ACHA World Ch . Nite Ch ,
Gan 's Finisher and other
Chdm p10ns
Ill
3
generatrons F1n1ey River
breeding both sides S.SO
e1ther sex w1th reg papers
Have beenwormed and will
have 4·way shors . Ca ll 7&lt;42
2214 or 992 ·3023 3nd leave
name and number

For Sale

Mgr.
, •••• , •• Phone 992 -2181

Auto Sales
195.4 TRUCK , gOOd con
dit1on , air co mpressor . 1965
Ford Musfang , 4 speed
9925741
1977
KINGSWOOD
ESTATE wagon, .4 good
11res, Contact Don Mayer,
15 Cave 51 , Pomeroy 991
5954

WOOD STOVES by Better
N Bens . G\assview, Leyden
HearTh , Old Timer, Fire ·
view
Suburban
mobile
home wood heaters, UL ap
proved, and Suburban fur
nacemasters
Outdoor
Equipment Sales , Jet Rts
7 and 35 , Gall1polis, OH
Phone 446 31&gt; 70

1973 VEGA stat1onwagon,
new tir es, good on gas .
$4()() . 992 ·705&lt;.

APPLES
ROME Bea uty
apples at $.4 per bu Best for
apple butter Call 669 3785,
FthpatriCK Or c hard SR
689

19 77
CHEVY
VAN.
c us1omized,
chrome
wheels, w 1de tires, good
snape . 992 6188 or 992 3317

LARGE PALOMINO hor
se, mare, saddle and
brtdle, $..400 . Black Western
horse sadd le dnd bridle ,
S50 Judy Smith, Racine,
OH. 9&lt;9 2813
SIZE
nand
LARGE
c rocheTed bedspread , t iny
design ,
$125
134 11:1
Ave ., Pomeroy
Mu l berry
997S658
POTATOES, S8 per
dred 3 miles west of
w1n. Cecil Toban, TR
between Go ld Ridge
CR 14

1976 TRANS AM
5637. after 5p .m

(II 992

1972 DATSUN FLAT bed.
new tires 742 22.56

LOCAL
FEMALE
OWNER · 1977 Camara LT
350 auto . , AC , AM -FM
st ereo 8 track cru1s.e con
Trol, tilt wheeL fron1 and
rear spoiler, rally wheels ,
very low m 1teage . Blue
bOok , S5100
Sale pr1 ce
S-4700. tngels Furntture,
992 ·2635 or after 5, 304 8B2 ·
2037 .

DELUXE GE washer and
dryer . S1SO pr Call 9&lt;12
J07J

REDUCE SAFE and t.-t
w1 Th GoBese Tablets and
E Vdp
" water
pills "
Nelson Drug
ELECTRIC CLOCK, floor
lamp, table lamp , Gossip
bench , Princess Eureka
sweeper
and
all
at
tachments and vaporiZer
992 3420
ALL PRACTICALLY new
furnifure
7 piece livi ng
room su1fe with 1amP5 and
drape5 S.500 Gibson self
c1ean1ng electr.c ranoe ,
S275 1977 Kawasaki KZ400
deluxe , S600 9'97 J560
LEBLANC
CLARINET
Excellent condition $100
991 WJ
MOVING SALE . Nov 2and
3. 9 6 Wicker chairs , old
chests, cranberry glasses .
truck tires . flowers Many
items from
att1c
Bob
Hayman , Bradbury
KIRBY
UPRIGHT
vacuum All attachments ,
and shampooer . 949 1490
SEVEN WEEK old p i~s.
S20 ea. Kennebec pOtatoes ,
$8 per 100 lbs . Straw S1 .2S a
bale. 985·4104
3•
REGISTERED
Arab
Mare
dnd
Ge lding
Registered Arab srallion, 8
year5 old Priced right for
quick sle . Esky H1ll ,
Pomeroy , OH . 992 3885
evenings .

Wu• -

Free Estimate

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
10 19 I mo .

J 16

E . Second Street

REASONABLE - 12x50
mobile home on 1 11J
ac res o t land wiTh
I 1sh
pond
s toe ked
Asking Only $12,1)()
COUNTR¥ HOME - 2
acres ot land w1th a 3
bedroom home . bath &amp;
Leading Cr water on
Rt 124 .
BUSINESS &amp; HOME LOCK, Stock &lt;tnd fur ·
nishings go w 1th 1hts
sa le
Extra
let for
park1ng
A -FRAME SITES 22
acres near Reedsville
on 681 Will sell for only
S9 ,500
NEW LISTING - Nice
lay ino 80 acres , tractor
tillable
Good
farm
house , bath , and tots of
buildings S80,000
RIVER FRONT 3
bedroom brick ranch
home . 2 car garage,
dining, patio and A lots
$45,000
HUNTING LAND - 27
acres North of Forked
Run
Deer and other
wild game
PRt\IATE - 1 bedroom
stone home w i th bath,
nat. oas F .A . turnace
and O\ler 2 acres . Now
$20.000 .
FAMILY HOME
Good older 3 bedroom
home on 2 level acres on
Rt
124. Garaoe and
covered ptcnic area .
1 ACRE - 4 bedroom
older home, bath. oas
furnace , nice kit . and
basement
Asking
$10, 500
BUILDING LOTS
Eleven to sell in good
location~

~~

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.
t-tou .. sf- 1 M ., w., F.
Ot ner time by appointment.
'il7 svc•more fAear)
Pomeroy, 0 .

Featurin9:
men's &amp;
women's styling, per ms.
Call for appt. or Willk m.

992 -2367
~

MONTGOMERY

Roger Hysell
Garage
mile ofl Rt . 7 by ·pass
on S1 Rt . 124 toward
Rutland

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

I

HJ10
~&amp; 1 4

Mon,gom~·'

Rill

ut 41•5 e"e"'"9 '

1 Molt'S EoJ\IOf W•lilt&gt;'"'llt&gt;
SU~ER

G005E

STOC~

HI AlLER NOW AVAILABLE

WELL. C'MOt-J .WHAT t~ IT YOU
HAVE TO SHOW
ME~

UN MOMHJT,
MAM' 5ELLE,
WHO 15 Z17

N&amp;VEI'( MIN D HI!' NAME:
YOU C AN TRU?T HIM A8-

TELc MC' .• ~AVe; YOU E'VAIR

SE'E'N 215 BEFORE

~I.UTELY-- HE'? PUT HIS
OWN LIFE l"l C&gt;AN6EI&lt;-

FELL O W~

2

Real Estate for Sale
FINANCING VA -FHA LO ·
ANS . LOW OR NO DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
OR
REFI NANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE ,
77 E . STATE , AT HENS
6 I.e 592 3051
OWNER WILL sell.40ac res
or ore w1fh 1978 Hollypark
mobile home 14x70 with ex
panda , p lus 14:x36 family
room ~ftached, fully car
peTed, rural waer, some
pasture, fence, stand i ng
Timber, some walnut, sun
deck front
and
back
Located on New Lima Rd
Call James Ingels 614 ·742 ·
2181 or 985·4107
SMALL FIVE room neuse ,
alumtnum srding , 1 acre
lots , al l utilit 1es Rt 681 ,
Reedsvdte $10,000 or besT
otter . 378 6J.C7 .
1954 TRUCK, good con
d1 tion , air compressor 1965
Ford Muslang, .c speeo .
991 574 1
THREE BUILDING lots,
approx 1 acre each, m
Pomeroy
Village near
elementary school
City
water , sewage Call 992
6279 .
BUILDING LOS , I ocre
each , Leading Creek. Rd ., 3
miles off Rt. 7 Bypass
Signs . V 11a1oe
4 8 ACRES NEAR Me~~s
Mine No I. Rural water
Land con tra ct available
7&lt;7 ·2746

LARGE LOT on dead end
street with water and
sewage Will ftnance to
reliable cou p le . 992 5786
No reanors

Business Services

PAINT I NG AND sand
blasting . Free estimates
Catl949 2686
DOZER,
END
Loader.
brush
h og
Will
do
basements , ponds , brush,
timber , land clear 1ng
Charles Butcher . 7422940

BORDER COLL IE , b l ock
and white . male, shots.
Brown dog, collie type,
good wlth chi ldren . Female
black
and
un collie
shepherd Shots and wor
med, gOOd with children .
Smal l Beagle. female, have
al l shots, 2 years old
Humane Soc iety 9'92 6260 .

HOWERY AND MARTIN
Excavatino ,
septic
systems. dozer , bac khoe
Rt . 143. Phone 1 (6 I&lt;) 698
7331 or 742 · 2.593

HALF GERMAN Shepherd
pup . female, 10 week! old,
very friendly 742 2300

IN ·
AUTOMOBILE
SURANCE
been
can ·
your
celled?
Lost
operator 's I rcens.e? Phone
1143.

m

IN STOCK for 1mmedlate
delivery . various sizes of
pool kits Do 1t yourself or
let us install tor you 0
Bumgardner Sa le s, Inc
992 ·572&lt;

BRITTANY
SPANIEL,
fem-ale, friendly house dog ,
red and wtllte , wormed and
shots . Loveable husky
· shepherd, female , small,
husk;y type face, checked
our by ~o~et , IJQOd healTh,
spayed. shots . K i t1ens , kit
fens, all sizes, all shapes .
German Shepherd, Iaroe
t1m 1d, male, shots, wor ·
med . Humane Society, 992
6260

wanted to Rent
WANTED : to rent o bull.
Call co llect n•-0676, James
(CokeJ Morton or s.ee J1m
my Morton, Will is Hill

snsoo.oo.

WANT AOIEAGE
Portland, 56 acres. ap
prox . 5 Tillable, 15
pasture, balance t!m
ber, partly fenced, ex ·
ce tlent Just 523,900 .00
ACREAGE INTOWN Pome roy , about 2 acres,
ni ce home, 3 bedrooms,
nice
kitchen,
part
basement,
garage,
olassed in porch, fruit
trees S25,000.00 .
BUILDING SITES Abovt 25 acre5, some
lots surveyed, water
and electric available,
ad 1acent to good sub
division, S27,500 00
MIDDLEPORT
Frame duple)( , always
rented , private baths,
cor ner lot, nf!'eds a little
repair, make money
here S10.900 00 .
LOCATED ON ST. RT.
124
Almost new
building, «::'x60', corner
lot, lots ot frontage, fuel
oil forced a1r furnace .
$55,000 .00
RECENTLY REMODE LED - Lovety 2 story
frame ,
3
large
bedrooms ,
formal
dining , large li~o~ing
room w i th fireplace,
N G. F A . heat, lovelv
tor children . $34,500 00.
WHY PAY RENT, WE
HAVE PRICES AND
FINANCING A\/AtLA ·
BLE TO MOST ANY
POCKETBOOK _ STOP
AND SEE US TODAY! I
REALTORS
Henrv E. Cleland, SR
Res . m -2561
Henry E . Clet•na, JR
RH , 992 -.191
ASSOCIATES
Roger I Dottie Turner
Re1 . 742·1474

wr:e M'f~ '- weE:: MfSSCORI

M'S IEVR .

[)I)

JDJR 'SOLJP

"iiiRTII
• ](I~ li :,

1

• A 9

WF..\T

. , /:1

E .&amp;.~T

• .1 H

. I Q~;t1;

t

~Hi

t .1

\\ts l
l'a:-;~
l'a ~s
l'a o.;~

, , 10 I")

Eas! ruffed East led a thtrd

hls Jack of trumps
for dummy's ac.:e of

at tnck one he would
actually have made all 13

hearts
Sou lh
Pa ss
1•

1+

l' a:-.s

l'ass

Pass
l'a ss

tr1cks ·

4•

You hold

•4

Ill

111

H

• &lt;./ R 04
• K2
• J 32
+A K \,/8

By Oswald Jaco~y
Sonta~

Four s pade~ by Sou th IS a

verv normal contrart At
moSt tabl es. Ea st was stuck tn
a two-club overcall o f North 's
d1amond open1ng h1d West led
the ace of cl ubs and th e suit

A New York reader wants
to know what we respond to
partner's one· heart openmg
WP favor the unusual
response of two clubs We can
show spa des later 1f we thmk
1t adv1sa~le We deflm!ely do
not respond two notrump
I Nt' W SPAP ~R t-:"lT FRI'R IS Jo~ A. S.." ~ '

was contmued w1th West get-

ttng to ruff the third cl ub wtth
h1s queen of trumps The n1ne
of hearts would be discarded

from dumm y and South would
make the rest of the tr1 cks for

h1s contract
At the table show n. East
fatl ed to overcall and West
opened the four of hearts
Most Sout h players would be

t&gt;ASOLINE ALLEY

I Ive heard 1t ma4
IS
qo up another ftftLJ
~ othlnq ' cents b4 Januar_~

r:,ft4
cen ts

Up another ( This
cent.Sitm~

7 ~b~

j'

QJ·

'-

:).)s' '

&amp;

I

Slim . 40u have to be
careful what LjOu sa4
around
Aver4t

ACROSS
I Legal

( "".........

)

',.,

( · onstra1nl~

s Serfs
11 (;rectan
theatt&gt;r s

IZ Inhab1!
13 Wander
H Wtthuut
delay
15 (;o wrong
16 Small part.
as tn a play

WrNNIF.
CA\! ::0\!-:' R.'A '.J
'I J - :3::"\.

=

(Do you have a quesr1on lor
/he experts ' Wnre " Ask the
Experts .. care o f th1s newspa per lnd!Yidual questtons will
be ans wered d accompamed
by stamped, self-addressed
envelopes The most mterestlng questrons w11f be used m
this column and w1ll rece1ve
COpieS o f JACOBY MODERN I

by THOMAS JOSEPH

39 Lynns!
Harbach
40 Inf arnou.~
marqUIS
41 Doua~· name
for Host'a
LIOWN
1 F1lm queen
2 Pray to
3 Hun.'\
hts home
I H1ck 's pta no
pl ayer

17 l'reamy brew &gt;A way up
18 Homestt&gt;ader 6 l.atv1an

t.;A \.. T

CC &lt;.' := A\:J S :;
.A 5 :. ,\ S&gt;-&lt; . .

l'ut off
2 1 Larder
20

contents

22 Instead
23
2S

Hurt
llut\'h

26

South
Afncan

7 Black
r ur koo . var
S ~{ (;I d 1&lt;:t t10n

v..stPrday's
9 Hem In
10 lmTeast·
16 C'urvdturt'
19 How of
~eat5

22 ltaltan
voiLa no

c 1rc lm~

23 Humiliated
24 ~ak e a store

ea rlil

25 (;lrl 's name

Answer

27 Arlul!
30

0" the
warp£~th

.1 I Paddlt
built

33 Ta ke uff
36 Shtntn
temp lt·

:n l.ov mg
sou nd

pamtrr

27 Thom.:ts

560 .00
Sl25 .00

or Horace

2M F.le&lt;· lt•rm
~

SrmttJc

language
:12 lleolth

I CAt-iT STAND LOOKIN'
AT THAT CLUTTERED -UP
PANTRY ENNY LONGER

reso r1

11

Suo.,.,,~,.

stop abbr

w. Cus.ey

:~ ~ llt .s ton ..

Mgr.
Phone 992 -llll

tJ ITit'
:~5

Japant'St'
tsland

37 Hlgh -

AITENTION BOYS &amp; GIRLS.••
Earn Spending
money and
win valuable
pnzes.
The Daily Sentinel
has an immediate
carrier route opening
on Lincoln Hill in
Pomeroy,

landf'rs·
~roup

3l! She was

Hada ssa h

THE DAILY SENTINEL
l'"h _992,21 S6

I

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how !o work it:
PEANUTS

AXVDI.BAAXR
11

WE'RE SUPPOSED TO
DO A REPORT ON
PRAIRIE DOGS

WHAT DO [ kNOW ABOUT
PRAIRIE DOGS? I'VE
NEVER EVEN SEEN ONE

BESIDES WE DON 'T
LIVE ON A PRAIRIE

HOW ABOUT A
VACANT LOT 006 ?

For Details, Phone or Stop by ...

111 Court St ,, Pomeroy

draw u urnPs &lt;mll ge t somr
d1scards on diamonds. but thl!\
South wa s really greedy He
c al!ed f or dumm y's nme and
the roof fell on hlm Ea st
returned the mne uf cl ubs
Wf'st cashed thf' I 0 and a l'e
and led a second hea rt whwh

railed

Easl

2•

happ v With the lead and n sc
with dummv· s ace tn ord er to

made

and Alan

POMEROY
LANDMARK

-·

Norlh

llpemng lead

$75.00
1 New Fuel Oil turn•ce
1 New Electric furnace
New General Electric
B&amp;W Til
Only S99 .95

~

A GLA!IEH

Duwn !hree and 1f South had

PJ ss

1-Rem• Yardmister

Jack

ll rJr k

led another heart a nd Eas!

Vul nerable Both
Dealer E:a s!

H f 'f
rt~H'f. '':l A
..~ ffPHOl f
I
U\ N &lt;o f- F JH'
WHO L E- ROO M . .

FOR SALE
1972 LYNN HAVEN 14X65 3
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x63 with ex
pando, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr .
12x:.55 2
1973 Skyl i ne
bedroom
1972 Bonanz~ 12x52.2 bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, PT PLEASANT ,
WV . 304·1&gt;75 ·4424.

.I I Ill ':&gt; Ql d ":&gt;', tJt'I 'J I•· IH ·

dct) ',

club which West ruffed With
thf' q11een of trumps for de-fen ·
stve tnck numhf&gt;r f1ve West

'Til

.. \,/.I' '
• 7
. , 6~

FOR SALE or rent Nice J
bedroom, mOdular located
rn Portland area . Set up on
lot or can be moved Call
atter 4 30 304 273 ·5271

t -XL Hom elite
1-McCutloch

'!

.AK 1 4~

.A 'I ANNIE

For Sale,
Rent or Trade

Mobile Homes - Sale

j(t rl

+ 1\'-JI ~ · ·I
~ot

1lx60 TWO
BEDROOM
mob i le home near Racine .
991 5858

S &amp; G Carpet Clea n ing
Steam
c leaned
Free
estimate .
Reasonable
rates . Scotchguard
992 ·
6309or 742 2348 .

•K

2

+-\HI

3 AND A RM furnished .ap
ts Phone 992 · ~ .

PIANO TUNING . Lone
Dan1els . New phone num ·
ber : 742 ·2951. Service to
schools and homes since
1965

Ill "

111

t A K \,/H&lt;
+R2

UiTLEr

[iJ lid

l •lf~ tJ t·r

Greedy declarer devoured

COUNTRY MOB I LE Home
Park, Route 33, north of
Pomerov Large lots .Call
991 7479

TRAILER SPACE tor rent
1n Midleport Phone 992 ·
3457

d

-~-

(O!Jf{)U).)D IT, MM.l, If- I'D WN.n ED
lbW.TO &lt;;;oup, I WCUL.Df.l'l
HAW' a&lt;D€RE:O

For Rent

ELWOOD
BOWERS
REPAIR
Sweepers,
toasters, ~rons, all small
appliances . Lawn mower
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
3875

tv

~A fl f..t f..,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

D"'

OU I ,

I (

BRADFORD. Auct ioneer,
Complete Service . Phone
9.49 2487 or 949 2000 . racine,
Ohio, Critt Bradford

' ) UY ll d '&gt;

~HM I NI::_

BRIDGE

---~--c-----.._

REYNOLD 'S ELECTRIC
Motors, rewrnd and reparr
992·2356. 561 Beech St .
M idd lepc&gt;rT , Ohio .

j

l(J

BORN LOSF.R

Giveaway

A&amp;H Upholstering, across
from the Te xaco Station in
Syraucse . 991 ·3743 or m
3752 .

i'IEW Lt5TING - Mid
dleport, 2 story frlllme , 3
bedroms, NGFA heat ,
lots of capreting and
paneling, new garage,
must ""If. S19 ,900
ltKE BRICK? - Here's
one!
Nice
locat1on,
builf 1n
k;itchen ,
3
bedrooms,
Iaroe lot,
porches
JUST

Tuf'sda~ . (kt

FREE PUPPIES Smalt
&lt;tnd medium
Male or
female . Ca ll992 · 7231.

EXCAVATING.
dozer ,
loader and backhoe work :
dump trucks and lo ·boy5
for hire , will haul fill dirt .
Top soil, l 1mes1one and
gravel Ca ll Bob or Rooer
Jeffers. day phone 991 7089.
n,ght phone 992 3525 or 992
5l32

ll\ 1',
'"

9 28 1 mo . Pd .

5ci~sors

Now arra nge the o rcted 1et'e1 s to
lorM lhe su rpr1se answe1 "' ~ '&gt;ug
gesled by !he aoo~e car1oon

J l J '( 'j HE [ J J J J

A n'&gt; Wel

ORPHAN ANNIE-PANEL DISCUSSION

SEWING
M AC H INE
Repo11rs ,
serv 1ce ,
all
makes
992 · 228-C .
The
Fabric Shop,
Pomeroy
Autl'lonzed Sinoer Sales
and Service We sharpen

'"'

WH EN A WOLF
VIHI'5TLE5.

tl M Y

-

·~= ::::.

--- -- --- ______;

..

I. 0 N G F E I , I. 0 W

One lette r s1mply stands for another In thu, sample A is
u sed f or !h (' thr ee I.'s, X ro r lht&gt; two o ·~. de Stng le letters,
apostrophes, !he lenglh and fo rmatiOn or the words are all
htnls Each da) the rode letters are different

CRYPTOQUOTES
ABCDEEB
FG
D
HFIAJK
LMMN.
AJDA
HOBP
AJM
NMQFI
NBMG
ROBEMMN. - CMSUDPFS
LDAMOJBTGM
l Yesterday's Cryptoquote: SPIRIT IS THE REAL AND
E •'ERNAL ; MATI'ER IS THE UNREAL AND TEMPORAL_• ' ! . MARY BAKER EDDY

'

TUESOA¥ , OCTOBFI&gt; 30, 19"
New5 3,8, 10.1 3 ABC New s 6,
Zoom 10, Carol Burnett 17
6 30- NB C News3, 15. ABC News 13;
Coro l Burnett 6 CB S News 8. 10;
Bob Newhart 17, Over Easy '10 .
7:0Q--3's A Crow d 3; TtC Tac Dough
8; Pul se 6. News 10 ; Political
Talk 13. Love American St yle 15;
Sanford &amp; Son 17, Dtck Cavett
20,33 .
30 - Holtywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6, Joker's Wild
8; Hollywood Squares 10, Sha Na
Na IJ . TV Ho~or Society 15, All
In The Fam1ly 17. MacNe11
Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 DO-C asper's Halloween 3, 15 ,
Happy Days 6, 13. CBS Reports
8, 10; Nova 20,33 . Movie "Body &amp;
Soul " 17
8 30-Witcn ·s Night Out 3, 15 : Angie
6, 13
9 OO----Mo11i e '' Freedom Road '' 3.1 5;
Three ' s Company 6 , 13, Movie
'One on One" 8, 10 ; Wor ld 20,33 .
9· 30---Taxi 6, 13; 10 .00-Hart lo Hart
6, 13, Slx WivesofHenryVIII 17;
News 20 . C'ty Notebook 33
10 30- L tke It I s 20 , Another Voice
33
11 00 - New s 3.6.8, 10, 13, 15 , Dick
(ayett 20, Carry On Laughing 33 .
ll 30-Johnny Cars on 3.15; Barney
Miller 6. 13 . Barnaby Jones 8 ;
ABC News 33, Movie "Run
S d~nt. Run Deep" 10 , Movie
"The Strawberry Blonde" 17.
12 05-Movle " Rosemary's Baby
11' 6.1 3. 12 .40-Movie " A Love
6

, .-- ~':-..-'_j

"&lt;L

Jumoles f'Httf

Ye sterdays

ROOFING
Roof1ng , gutters, and
downspouts .
Free
Es 11 nates.
Atl
work
quaranteed. 20 years ex :Jen Lnce Call Athens,
ollc ct , Gert~ld Clark
197-4857 or Tom HoskinS
797 -2145.

•

(An;:;wers Monday 1

OHIO VALLEY

WILL HAUL li mesTone and
gra-vel. Also, l 1m e hau l1 ng
and spreading Leo Morris
Trucking Phone H2 2455

JJ

.'1'

D ! l CJ J

T0 PROTECT Me:

4 5 If f

30 ti c

'

,.......,

,

New, repatr,
guHers and
down sp41uts.
Win.dOjN cleaning
Gutter cleaning
FreP' E&lt;Ii mates
949 -'"62 - 949 -2160_

TRAILER SALES

) c:

I SMUOIR r,....,.~
[) KJ [J
LLPWHLYt..,--,

CAPTAIN EASY

H. L Writesel
RoOting

l .)

&lt;1
·

"'

Television
View~ng

[_1'11 l tJ

CALL 992 -7S44

Pomeroy, 0 .
10· 19 1 mo.

'

"• ..-

Ll.lL!_j

f de .. al
Hou si ng &amp;
veter- .1s Admin. Loans.

MARK MORA
HAl R STYLIST

Mil in St.

J

'

[ LUNCE ,__[_

Answer here [

608 E . '
MAIN
POMEROY,O
PH . Y'f..t -1259

hun
Dar
145.
and

LADIES BEAUT IFU L up
to date size 10 clot hes .Har
dly worn Ocs•gner labels
and f1ne fab r i cs Dresses.
coats , slacks, blouses , etc
991 3183

• Insulation
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

4

Appliances

Lost and Found

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

W

lou• Jumble&lt;:&gt;
O'"~ l! Ie fler to e&lt;Kh ':&gt;Qua re 10 torrn
•our ,Jrcl•nary word s

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Cen fer
Introduces -

INSULATION

APPLES
CIDER
HONEY
Filzpatnck Or
chard , State Route 689
Phone
W il kesville , 669
3785.

Yard Sale
GUN SHOOT every Sunday
12 ·00 Fdctor y c hoke only
Corn Holl ow Gun Club .
Rutland Pr ocee ds donated
to Boy Sc out Troop 149

L - - - -

J&amp;L BLOWN

t f f\INr

1
fli)'lt
THAT SCAI. .. SLED WOAD GAME
~ ~ a .~~,
Oy Hem1 Arnold and Bob Lee
Ur::.uam ble !'"le5f.'

Business Services

EMERGENCY
POWER
al ternators own the best
OuyWINPOWER Call513
788 2589

Sales &amp;

Doroth,... M JohnsTOn
Cle rk
D,ll Pd Qr l obcr 17 , 1979

o•

Card of Thanks

Sentinel, Middleoort-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday , Oct . 30, 1979

oo--

Atta~r "

a

00- Tomorrow 3. News 15, 1· 30--N ews 11 . I 35--Movte " Smoky"
17
1 15- N ews
13
J 35 - Movie
" Johnny Angel " 17: 5 1D---Star
Trek 17
WEDNESDAY ,OCTOBER 31,1979
5 45-- F arm Report 13; 5 50-PTL
Club 13
6·1)()-700 Club 6,8. PTL C lub 15:
H ealth Field 10. 6 . 10-World at
Large 17
6 3o-Chnstopher Closeup 10; News
1J , 6 45-Morning Report 3;
6 SO - Good
Morning.
West
Virginta 13 ; 6 Ss-News 13.
IJO-Today 3, 15, Good Morning
Amerrca
6, 13 ;
Wednesday
Morn i no 8. Batmnn 10 : Three
Stooges L rttte Rascals 17 ; 7: 15-A .M . Weather JJ
3(}-F amily AHa ir 10 ; 7 . 55-Chuck
White Reports 10
8 oo-Capt Kangaroo 8, 10; Leave It
To Beaver 17. Sesame St . 33.
B&lt;ID- Romper Room 17, 9 oo-Bob
Braun 3. Big Valley 6. Phil
Oondhue 13 15. One Day At A
Ttme 10 , Lucy Show 17
9 3Q-Bob Newhart 8 : Green Acres
17
10 00---Card Sharks 3.15 : Edge of
N'ghl 6. Beal the Clock B, 10;
Morning Magazme 13; Movie
" Romance on the H igh Seas" 17
10 30 - Hollywood Sq uares 3, 15,
Andy Griffith 6; Whew 8, 10.
10 55-CBS News 8; House Ca tl 10.
11 OD-H1gh Rollers 3, 15 : Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6.1J. P ri ce rs Right 8,10
11 30 - Wheel of F ortune 3, 15;
Fam1ly Feud 6, 13; Sesame St
20.33: 11 55--News 17
11 00- Newscenfer
J.
News
6,8, 10.13 ; Mindreader s 15. Love
Ameri can Style 17
12 30---Ryan s Hope 6.11 . Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10 . Health F ield 15;
Movie " Slim " 17. Elec Co 20,33
GO-Days of Our L111es 3, 15 , All My
( htldren 6, 13
Young &amp;. the
Restless 8, 10
30- As I he Wor ld Turns 8, 10:
2 oo-Ooc tors J . 15 . One L1fe to
L 1ve 6, 13. 2· 2.&gt;---News 17
1 30---Another World 3, 15 , Guiding
L1ght 8. 10. Gigg lesnort Hotel 17 .
3 DO-Ge neral Hospital 6, 13 ; I Love
Lucy 17 . Connections 20
3 30---0ne Day At A Ttme 8: Joker 's
W i ld 10, Fl intslones 17 .
4 oo-Mtsler Cartoon 3; Password
Plus 15 Merv Griffin 6; Beverly
Hlilbtllies 8, Sesame St 20,33,
S1x Mill ton Dollar Man 10; Real
McC oys 13. Spectreman 17
30 - Bewilched
3;
Petticoat
Jun ction 8. Tom &amp; Jerry 13 ,
Merv Gnffin 15. Gtlligan's Is 17 .
5 oo---1 Dream of Jeann1e 3. Sanford
&amp; Son 8, Mary T yler Moore 10,
My Three Sons 17 .
3()---(arol Burnett 3:: News 6.
Gomer Py le 8. E lee Co 20 .
Mash 10. Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17, Doctor
Who 33.
6 IJO- News 3.8.10.13,15; ABC News
6 ; Caro l Burnett 17. Zoom 20.
6 JO-NBC News3 .1 5; ABCNew s1J ;
Caro l Burnett 6; CBS News 8, 10:
Bob Newhart 17; Over Ea~y 20.
OQ-3's A Crowd 3; Tic Tac Dough
8. Mat ch Game PM 6; News 10:
Newlywed Game 13; Love
American Sty le 15 ; Sanford &amp;
Son 17 . Dick Cavett 20.33 .
30---Country Roads 3, Joker's Wild
8: Newlywed Game 6; The J udge
10 : Family Feud 13; Wild
l&lt; i ngdom 15; Atl In The Family
17; MacNeil Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 oo-Reol People 3, 15 ; E ight is
Enoug h 6,1J; Bugs Bunny 8.10;
Great Performances 20,33 ;
Movie "Ensign Pulver" 17
8 30-Raggedy Ann &amp; Andy 8, 10 .
9 : 00- Diff'rent
Strokes
l,15;
Charlie's Angels 6,13, Movie
" The Two Worlds of Jennie
Logan"
8, 10,
Great
Per ·
formances J3.
9: 30-Helto, Larry 3, 15.
JO ·oo-Best of Saturdoy Night Live
3, 15 ; Vegas 6, 13; News 20.
10 30- Upsta l rs, Downsta irs 17;
!lest of Groucho 20.
11 . 00- News 3,6,8,10,13,15 ; Dtck
Cavell 10.
11 JO.-.-Johnny Carson 3,15 ; Love
Boat 6,13 ; Movie " Gunfight at
the 0 . K Corral" 10; Black Sheep
Squadron B.
11 : 3&gt;-ABC News 33; 12 .40-Baretta
6, 13; Howall Ftve-0 8.
·()()-Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1 :2&gt;News 17 ; 1 : 30-MOvle "The
Mummy" 17.
: 50-News
13;
3:4Q--Movle
"Children Shouldn't Play wllh
Dead Things" 17; S: 10-Siar
Trek 17.

�!~The

Daily Sentinel, Middelport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Tuesday, Oct. 30, llrnl

·:·

:-:·

.;.:.

!Celeste
believes
voters
will
assails anti-inflation '
C of C economist

control guidelines
By DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON ( UPI I - A key Chamber of Commerce ~: Democratic
gubernatorial
economist called the administration 's anti-infiation .::: candidate Richard Celeste
guidelines "a straitjacket on workers and business ::: has accused Gov . James A.

PHILJP SPORN PLANT - The 600 ,()X) kilowa tt Phi~p Sporn Plant as
it looked m 1952. The fl r't of four IJO ,OOO kw wut.s was put mto sem cc m
1950 and three others compl eted by ea rly 1952
VETERANS MF.MOR lA l .
Adrrutted- Bemard Ramlen, Hartford ; Dlarles Fn ley , Pomeroy;
Beatrice Ra!rden, Hartford ; Mac
Bird, Pomeroy : Da le Proffitt .
Racine : Morri s Neutzling, :-.liddleport .
Dtscharged-t'rance; Hewet.son .
Doris Miller , V1rgirua Kmg .

TillS IS HOW the 1,050,000 kw Philip Sporn Plant looked before the
addition of the new electr011tatics precipitators. The 450,000 kw unit 5 added In 1960, has a 600-foot stack . In 1962, the four original 250-foot stacks
were replaced by the single 600-foot stack shown at the right .

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTF..R
DISOIARGES OCT. Z9
Lo nde ll Br owni ng, Mr s . .John
Coons and daughter . Shelby Conner,
Chri sti Drake , Mrs . Rubert Euba nk s
and son , Lest er Evans. Ma rgaret
Evans, James Gooderham. Wtlliam
Grigsby, Stephanie J, 'm:&lt;ln , Diln~el
Paxton . Mrs _ Hrrbf&gt; t H(·~·tt ;:md

daughter, Mrs Harold Humlt•y and
so n , Charles St r ai~ht . Mat the w
Swam . Edith Swa nson . StC'ph.an lt'

Weethee .
BIR'I'HS on . 29
Mr . and Mr s. Arn old Parsons.

daughter , POmeroy; Mr and ~I rs
De nm s John so n. .son, Po 1nt
Pleasa nt , Mr a nd Mrs f ra n kl tn
!.ea ch , lwm da ugh ters, Wells1on
REVIVAL UNDERW AY
The Middleport Umtt•d Pen tecostal Church wtll hotd a thret' day
revi yal beginni ng tht.s evcmng and
runrung through Thursda y Wlth tlw
Rev . Mar k Fnend , Hamtlton.
speaking The Rev . Mr F n cnd 1.1
only 19 and will appear at the local
church as a recommended dynamt c
speaker. There will be special
singing each everung for the services which will start at 7 30 p.m
Pastor William Knittel tnvi tes the
public.
RF.CFS'lED MEETING
The Southern Local Board of
Education will meet in rf'&lt; 'Cssed
sesston this eventn ~ m the !ugh
school cafeteria at 7 30 p m .
ASKED TO REPORT
Student.s of Mei~ Ht gh School whu
are interested in the gymnastics
team should report to the sc hool
from 5to 7 this everung for pract1cc
TIMF. CHANG EO
The Wl C workshop sdwd ul ed for
Nov . 2 at the Meigs Hea d Start Cen·
ter will begin at 10 a .m. rather than 1
p.m . as announced ea rhPr Those
needinJ.( tra nsporU.ttwn nrP ll1 cal!

the center at 992-2096

--···-

.-cooD TIMES SPECIAL W

•
•

.

13" PIUA
•
ol

Your c ho1 le

any

on e topp•ng I
199
Reg SJ 55

1
•

kil~fls:
-. ...l~A-.1

t' ALL F'ES'I'IV AL QUEEN
f rowned lalllesllval queen at activities held In Racine Fr1day
night wa• Keoda Rizer, sixth
grade student at Racine Elementary . The lestlval, opansor&lt;d by
non-profit orgaolzatlons of the
village, was beld 011 the Racine
Home National Bank parldog lot.

PLANT W1Til NEW PRECIPITATORS - This ill how the Philip
Sporn Plant looks following completion of an $84.7 -million project Involving the installation of new electrostatic precipitators on all units. The new
precipitators are designed to remove 99.7 percent of ash particles from
burnlng coal before they ae emitted from the plant's stacks.

ASK TOWED
A mamage license was issued to
Harry Bruce McMullen, 21 , Albany,
and
Sharon
E
Iaine Jones, 25, Albany .

'1'0 END MARRIAGE

In Meigs CoWlty Common Pleas
Court Thomas J . DeMarco
Pomeroy, and Nancy J . DeMarco:
Ashtabula, filed for di880lution of
marriage.
Patricia A. Ireland filed for support under the Recipro c al
Agreement Act against Dennls R.
Ireland .

ten the prescription in question .
Meigs County Corrunon Pleas
Court Judge John C. Bacon, accepted the plea of guilty and sen·
tenced Snow to a minimum sentence
of six months in a proper penal in·
stitution. The sentence was vacated
pending investigation of the defendant by the probation authority .·
Final sentencing will be at a later
date .
Ln other cases , Meigs CoWlty
Prosecuting Attorney F'red W. Crow,
m.has announced that Joe Watkins,
19, Middleport , voluntarily entered a
plea rJ guilty on Monday to a charge

MAYOR'SCOURT
Three defendants forfeited bonds
in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Clarence Andrews Monday night.
They are David L. Ramey, Rio
Grande, $50, posted on a charge of
running a red light; Michael S.
Kaufer, New Albany, Lnd , $4(1
speeding, and William F' . Tiemeyer.
Mason , $:&gt;0. drivmg while under
suspension .

~'U

persons were injured during

two actidents inv estigated Monday
by the Gallta -Metg s Post , Htghway
Patrol.
Office rs were called to the scene of
a lwo-vehtcle mtshap on U.S. 3!i ,
five-tenths of a mile east of milepost
12. at 12 ~ 3 p m
TI1e pat rol reports a west boWld
auu, ope rated by Karen McGuire,
Z2. Btdwell . had st opped m traffic. A
veh1c lr driv en by Lawrence Martt,
72, Gallipohs , faded t o stop and

'1r uck the McG uire auto in the rear .
McGuire cla uned mjury and wa s
tr£tn s po rtf·ti t o Holzer Medical

v nte r. where she was treated for a
ba ck stram and relea sed .
The Ma rtt auw was demoltshed
There was sever e dama~e to th e
\-l cGuire vehi cl e Martt wa s cited on
a charge of failur e to ma111tatn an
assured clear dista nce
( ~p

person was 1njured durin.'o( a
:w11-\· • ·h~t·l e &lt;wn dent un L' .S :15. fiV('~
'+·nL1" td ;1 rn!lto Past 11f rmlepost

12.

P R O BATE COURT OF
ME IGS COUNTY . OHIO
ES TATE OF BERTHA T

LA S HER , DECEASED
NOTICE OF
APPO I NTMENT
OF F I DUCIARY
On ()( 10hf'r 9th . !919 , 1n
'h• • r\ll t 'I(J':&gt; Coun t ( PrQ1),1h•
(:tun

Ctc;(&gt;
No
T&lt;tu',

r.t&lt;~~ ' .&lt;~fl ' l

O'lou

P u l 1tln (J
[)0'1h·f1

f''.l.-'IIP o t
dNf',l':.f' d

Wfl\
• f' ( ttlr •
ot

I

,lp
ltlP

L asher ,
Ru t ln nd
MP 1Q':. CounT f

~Ntha

Town')h• P
TH .()

L
I.J T(' ol

.. •( ' ' ' f

'-'r ,_,nd •,

'lLI

·na 40
R D

16 )J . JO, ] I f

I~ u, ~
J .Hlq•

( 't•r k

CLARENCE ANDREWS
WRITE-IN CANDIDATE FOR
MAYOR OF POMEROY, OHIO
Jus! write my name and office on the back of your gray
ballot envelope.
Your write -in vole will be appreciated.
Pd . Pol Adv

at 11 .54 am .
The patrol reports an aut o
operated by W~am Kemp , 49.
Mason , W.Va , pulled from a
commercial dnve into the paUt of an
east bound vehicle driven by Rhonda
Stewart , 23 , Gallipolis .
A pass enger in th e Ste wart
vehtc!e, Cath y Ann Ro use. 23,
Noftceol Elecfton
on Tax Levv m

E .cess of the Ten
Mlll Limitation
N CHICE is 11er eb y g1ven
lh a f 1n purSuan ce Of cl
Reso lu ti on of fhe Boa r d ot
Trus te es of fhe Town sh1P
Sc1 p 1o.
Me 1g s
C o unt y
O H 1o, pa ssed on the Jrd day
ot Au9u st , 19 79th ere w ll l be
s uom, n ed t o a v ot e of t he
peo p le of said Tow ns h ip a t
a General E L E C TI O N t o be
twld 1n the l ow ns h 1p o f
SC• PJO , Oh 10 , aT tn e r eguliH
pla c es of vot 1ng t h ere 1n , on
T u esd a y , the 6th dav at
N o vembe r .
197q ,
the
QUf'\l ron ot l f&gt;v y1ng, 1n e•
r f' S~
of
I~H!
lf' n
m •ll
l• m1ta t •on to r t he tJene r 11 of
)• •P•O
Townsh1p l o r lll('
purpost· o f pr ov 1d1nq nnd
rT11•n la 1n 1nq
l 1rc
ap
pnr~l u "&gt; ,
a pp l1arH e.,
bu1ld1ngs, o r s d es l hN e fo r ,
or o;,ou r c es of wat e r su p ply
&lt;'lnd m .:!ler,a ls ther ef or . or
Hw
cs t o bl 1s hm e nt
and
mc'l. nf en a n rc of t1nes of f 1rf'
fll&lt;lrm I Piegr~ p h or TlW
pnyment of pe rm an('n t ,
part 11me . or
volun t eer
t.r,.men or l 1rc f 1g h t 1nq
&lt;o'll pnn ,es to ope r c!! e t he
".r"! mf' or t o pur (h asP arn
lJUirliH e e q u •p rne nt o r to
prov•de
amou t an r e o r
f'me rgency m ed,col scr
v 1r es o p e r ated by a hre
d f'P Mimen t o r li re hght 1n g
r OPl Oc'lny .
'), hd Ta x be1ng a r enl'wnl
'J l an ('.O:ISIIng l c'l)( o f 0 7 m oll
ICJ r un tor l 1ve yea r s. ot a
rdlc no t exreC'dtng 0 7 m olls
t o r eac h on e do lla r o f
vi'ltunt 10n . wh1r h a m o u n t s
t o Se ven u : nts to r e a rh o ne
runa r ed
d o llar s
of
va lu o lion , tor fiv e v ears
Th e P o ll ~ f or sa1d E lcr
l 1on wil t o pe n at 6 30
o 'c loc k AM 1'\n d rema1n
op en unt i l 7 JO o 'c l oc k p M
t: as Te r n ::, 1a noara 1 •me u 1
Sd rd day
By o r d er of t he Board of
Eler t 1ons . of M e1 g s County ,
Oh1 0
Erfl€':&gt;1 A W rng(&gt;Tt
Ctln 1r m a n
Dor ot hy M

D a ted Oc t li , 19N

Johns t on
Cle r~

Jackson , claimed mjury and was
transported to HMC, where she was
treated for a contuston of the right
elbow and neck injury, and released .
Officers were called to the scene of
a three-vehicle accident on U.S. 3!i,
one-tenth of a mile east of milepost
13, at 7 20 a .m.
The patrol reports east bound
autos operated by Bonnie Zornes, 42,
Portsmouth. and Ann Forbes, Z2,
Vinwn, had stopped in traffi c. A
vehicle driven by Larry Wright, 30,
l.angsville, failed to stop and struck
the Forbes auw in the rear . The
force uf impact pushed the Forbes
auto mto the rear of th e Zornes
vehicle .
There was se ve re dama ge to th e
Forbes auto . The Zornes and Wright
vehicles incurred slight damage .
Wright was cited on a charge of
assured cle ar distance .
Offic~rs investigated a one-vehicl e

accident in Meigs Count y on SR 124,
m e-tenth of a mil e east of nnllepost
29. al 10 ·45 a .m.
The patrol reports an east bound
auto operated by Paul Wilson , 64,
Syracuse. passed off the right s1de of
th e roadway and struck a utility
pole
Th e veht clc wa s dem oli shed .
Wilson was ctted on a c harg e of
ex cess! ve sp ft'd .

with the
NEW Yashica FX-3
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""-' '" 'd SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY PRICE!
Kit includes F X Camera
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REG. 504
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SALE

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

MAYOR OF MIDDLEPORT

"Tir1' 1-'riNully llur~h: "

J

Keep Middleport on the Move

MAYOR OF MIDDLEPORT
Pd . Pol . Adv

the burden of fin ancing
education to th e s ta le,
because propert y tax hits
ha rdest at hom eowners and

cand1date called the char~e
"desperation tactics"
Celeste sa td the st ate
con sti tution re quir es the

Hhodes "
Cde,1e said he does 'not
uelt eve &lt;'harges that his
proposals for fundin g schools

:,:, and in each of those twelve
'_, :,,_:. years he has failed to solve
the crisis in school financing
·•· which Jocks children out of
) their classroom s," Celeste
···

he said . "His running mate ,
George Voinovich, says it will
succeed by creating a climate
where people will vote for
local school levies .

reapprai s al for Cuy a hoga
County
r esulted
in
homeowner s payin g S39
million more while business
~ol an $8 million cut.

employed and the unemployed."
Ce leste pr edicted the
voters will re jed what he
ca lled "lhe bu y and lte media

Ohio has fa iled w itve up w
tRhe
ho d re qutre rn ent under
es. And he charged thai
Rhodes stands for mor e of the
same .

local levies . He said he thinks
Ohioans wa nt a leadership
change Utat would give them
a chance for a long-tenn
answer lu fl!ll dtng problems.

TilE CENTRALffiusr COMPANY

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XXIX

NO. 139

Negotiations on
;treaty resumed
' By JIM ANDERSON
WASHINGTON i UPli
Amid encouraging signs of
progress on fundamental differences , Egypt , Isr ae I an d
the United States today were
· t o res ume forma 1.
pIanrung
~ '
· ·
faee-tu-oace
negottations
on a
peace trea ty.
Afte
meeting with u s
· ·
r a
Secntary of Slate Cyr~
Vance, Monda y Egypt s
. a cting f'o rei gn Mini ster
Butros Ghali said Ute three
' parues would ~eel today 111.a
full, three-wa; session at
Blair House .
It would be the first such
·
· 10 d
Our
sess~on m
ay s.
tng
Ut t 111 te
I Ute talks arne
a
rva • .
c
close w suspenston over the
I.
f link
... th
cructa tssue o . age w e
wld~r
questton
of a
~ en s1 ve
-~uement
compr...
~
involving Ute West Bank and
Gaz a ·strl'p ·
.
'I The talks went tnUJ a state

.1

.

of informal suspension over
the weekend, and the
personal intervention of
President Carter prevented
rec all of the Egyptian
delegation .
After an informal meeting
Sunda Y nt'ght bet ween the
avpu·an and Lsraeii delega·
E "'
lion s heads , both sides came
to the State Department
Monday
for
separate
meetings with Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance.
L.raeii F'oretgn Minister
Moshe Dayan said later, "l
see no obstacles, really , for
getting an agreement. I think
it is feasible and attainable
and we can get it in a very
short time ...
Ghaii said his meeting with
Vance had been ·'vecy con·
structlve and --'Uve,"
and
,....
he announced UX!ay's Blair
meeting .
The
House
. Egyptians were scheduled to

i .J~_Th_e_W_o_rl_d_T_o_d_a_y_
.
Amin invades territory
DARARRES SALAAM . Tanzania I UPI I - Tanzania
charged UX!ay Ugandan President Idi Amin has invaded its
territory and large numbers of groWld troops were reported
mvolved in fierce border fighting .
The U. S. Embassy in Darre s Salaam said 16 Amertcans
were known to be in th e area of the heaviest fightmg.

An absentee candidate ••.
IJ)S ANGELES 1UPI 1 - Most elections have absentee
voters . The race for the '1ate Assembly seat representing the
western San Fernando Valley has an absentee candida te .
The Democratic candidate, Hal Goldman, has been
evicted from his home for nonpayment of rent and left no
forwarding address. Reporters and others trying to contact
him say he caMol be located.

CINCINNA'I'I tUPli - An airplane pilot charged with
buzzing a high school football game pleaded innocent Monday
to six counts of inducing panic.
John C. Stahl lll, 20 , of suburban Reading and son of a
Reading policeman , was freed without bond after pleading
innocent in Hamilton County Municipal Court. A pre-trial
hearing was set for next Monday . Stahl was accused of flying a
single-engine plane within !ill feet of Ute Reading Htgh School
football stadiwn just before a game last Friday night. He was
charged wiUt six coWlt.s of inducing panic on grounds he
allegedly buzzed Ute stadium, which was filled with football
fans , six times .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY. OCTOBER 31. 1978

00
1

°

"serious matter" and said he
was disturbed by it, but the
Israelis insist the settlements
are legal.
Dayan. after his meeting
wtUt Vance, described the
settlements as "a blessmg,
not an obstacle" and said
they were not illegal and
would not drive a single Arab
off his land .

ONLY A PART - This is only one part of the framework on the 100 bed nursing homefacility well Wlderway tn Metgs Coun ty .

Construction
•
progressmg

Up to 500

BY BOB HOEFLICH
No one probably likes the thought of going into
nursmg home _By the same token , famili es are also prone
to be a gainst placin g a family member in a nursing home .

words can

However , th1s does become necessary in many cases ,

he written
Margaret Parker, co·
chairman of the Meigs
Co unty History Book com·
mittee . explained today that
each household is entitled to
500 words in the book free of
charge .
This means that children
who live in Meigs County or
have lived here and have now
left the county can each
submit 500 words, Mrs .
Parker states.
in·
Anyone
wishing
vitational, explanatory let·
ters sent to children out of the
county should drop a request
in the mail to Box 145,
Pomeroy, no later than
Monday . Senior citizen
volunteers are addressing out
of coWltY letters this week .

•!though it 1s far from a JOYOUS oecaswn, it ma y be some
consolation w Meigs Countians w know that within the
nel&lt;t few month s at least there wtll be a local fa cility .
Sin ce small nursing homes have been closed down tn
the coWlt y because they we re unable to meet the costly
state standards . local reSidents have ha d to be plac.-d in
nurstn g home fa ciltttes. 20 , 3(), 50 or more mtles from the
c-ounty .
This. of course , ha'i made the st tu ation even more

&lt;tifficult for the relatives as well as the patient II1 that the
patient is uprooted frgm familittr scenes and familiar
fa ces and relatives m~t travel long distances to visit -

PAUL ELLER of Eller Enterprises, Inc ., Columbus, checks out materials on the site of
the nursing home facility in Meigs County . Eller is construction supertntenden t for Ute bo rne
which will be owned by Americare . Eller says that beautiful fall weather has put Eller
Enterprises way ahead of schedule .

Three youths facing
charges in vandalism
Weather

l

ew Nursing Home being built--------,

see Van ce a second time
today, _ Just . before the
trlparttle sesston . .
Lsraelt offtclals said there
had been stgruflcant progress
f the
ce
11 ·
at tssues 1 d'
peath
r ea Y.bl tnc
hi hu · tng
1 de the
pre am e w c me u s e
d 1.
...
·
t
e tcate u.nguage 1aymg ou
I .
h'
' th
th e re attons tp wt
a
penn anent settlement .
After their last all-party
.
ferenee spokessesston. a con unced
the
;~;gatiC::~:dagreed on the
text of a trealy . But changes
d
d d
by
both
eman e
.
governments r~qu~red a
return to bargrunmg .
The
subsequent
n e go t i a t i o n s
we re
. t d b an pen
1
comp tc a e
y
o
dispute between the United
Sta•- and lor~~el over the
ed "th' k . " f
anno~
tc enmg o
Lsraelt settlements m the
West Bank .
Vance descn'bed that as a

No letters to the editor pertaining to candidates or issues to
be voted upon Nov. 7 will be pubilshed In the final two issues of
Charges of vandaliSm will
Ute local papers prior to election day.
be
filed today against three
Purpose of this policy ill to BBSUI'e that no charges or
·1 1 11 wing an in
•
statements will be published wiUtout adequate owortunity for juvent es o o
tensive investigation by
refuting such charges, or statements.
sheriff's deputies and Meigs
Friday's paper (Nov . 31 will be the last day for letters on
·
all election issues and individual races . Letters should be in the CUWlty juvenue offtcer Carl
hands of the editorial department no later than 5 p.m. on HyselL
Thursday, Nov 2, for Friday's publication.
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should, however , be
less than 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by the
Clear tonight, lows between
editor 1 and must be signed with the signee's address and 40 and 4~ . Mostly sunny
telephone number . Names may be withheld upon request. Wednesday, with highs In the
However, oo request, names will be dl!closed. Letter should be low 80s. Probability of
in good ta8te. addressing issues, not personalities.
precipitation 10 percent
today, near zero percent
tonight, Wednesday .

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

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

Pilot enters innocent plea

OPEN YOUR ACCOUNTS AS OF NOV. 1, 1979

~~~~e c~::.~ ~~s~o~~s~r~ ~~~ov:.' ~f ~:a:h~ls~~~~: :!:~s;a~i~~:c~lny~:g 7;~

pr2:'u7y
has
often proposed shtfting the
burden of property taxes
from homeo wners to th e
business community He

TO OUR 1979 CHRISTMAS CLUB MEMBERS

REPUBLICAN

·1

understand the
Proposition 13,
governor has
education plan

WIU BE GOING INTO THE MAIL THIS WEEK
TO HELP PROVIDE lliEM WITH A WORRY-FREE
HOLIDAY SEASON.

1

absolutely nothing new," he
said . " When you get in the
rut, cl unbing out of the rut

who does
message
because
proposed

MANSFIELD , Ohio t UPI 1 - The body of a woman found
in a wooded area in Mansfield has been identified as Mrs .
Besse Irene Buker , 84 . who walked away from a nursing home
on Aug . 14, Mansfield city police confirmed today . The body
was found SWlday by an area resident walking through some
brush .
Police said a green Mansfield General Hospital wrist band
was found on Ute body and Ute body was clothed in a blue
pantsuit which Mrs . Baker was wearing at Ute time of her
disappearance . Police said there were no indications of foul
play.

$140,000.00

~ax~~ocrat,

the governor Ask ed a bout
Ute governor 's charge Ut"t
Ce leste 's sc hool fina ncing

method that has bled
) homeowners while failing to
) solve funding problems for
.·.· the past 12 years.

Elderly woman identified

MORE THAN

=~ir~ ~:~~c~ on;·::li~~:~n 7ha: !'un~;

property taxpayers of this
stale will send J IIIl Rhodes a
messa~ehewill understand ,"

Carlson said . noting that the dollar abroad has reached :::·

I

( lO J 16 . :n JOtll .1 5 , 1n r

RE-ELECT HOFFMAN

hik·~e

1

FRED HOFFMAN

Over 1/2 million dollars in grant funds ob·
tained for sewage system improvements .
Over $30,000 in municipal park im ·
provements made during the past four
years.
Over $50,000 in street improvements
made over the past four years.

:_:'_:•_._.

~~

imposition of wage and prtce guidelme controls )
have created the most negative response of any :::
government policy annoWl cement in recent hllltory ," :':

on the charge.
Watkins was returned to Meigs
County from the State Correctional
Facility at Lebanon to face the
charges.
The guilty plea was accepted by
Judge John C. Bacon who sentenced
Watkins to a minimum of si..J: months
to five years in a proper penal in·
stitution, the sentence to be served
concUJTently with time presently
being served.
Watkins will be returned tc
Lebanon in the next few days by the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department.

DINNER SCHEDULED
A ham dinner will be served at the
Wesleyan United Methodist Church ,
Racine, Nov . 3, from 5p.m . to 7 p.m.
Tickets are S3 for adults and $1.50
for children . Tickets will be
available at the door . F'ree entertainment will be provided
following the dinner . For additional
infonnation call919-2764.

The nation was to learn wday how organized labor feels
about it.
The AF'L-&lt;:10 executive council - perhaps organized
labor's most influential panel - scheduled its fall meeting
after a one-week postponement because of President

to deliver the first public statement on the wage-price
gulnide!Utines afstter thMe 35;nemtberedgroubop hmeet.s .
d
t vo1untary an
e pa , eany crt tctz
mandatory wage-price controls , bul made it clear he
prefers the latter after learning the administration
planned merely guideltnes .
The CUW1cil oession t'Dmes one day after Jack O!rl.son ,
chief economist for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce , assailed O!rter's plan to have industry voluntarily hold
down pnees and Wlions adhere UJ a 7 percent annual wage

of forgery . Watkins had been indicted by the grand jw-y on Oct. 10,

Two hurt in Monday wrecks

RE-ELECT

RE-ELECT

MEETS WEDNESDAY
The OH KAN Coin Club will hold a
regular business meeting Wednesday evening in the Riverboat
Room of the Mei~ Branch, Athens
CoWlty Savings and Loan, W. Main
St., Pomeroy
Doors will open at 7 p.m . with out
of town dealers present for trading.
A com auction will be held and
refreshments will be served . Prizes
wtll be awarded . Anyone interested
in collecting coins or paper money is
tnvited to attend the activtties , Club
Prestdent Eddte Burkett report.s .

She had been taken into custody
last F'riday by Middleport Police
when a local pharmacist became
suspicious of a prescription she had
presented. A call to the doctor,whose
name appeared on the prescription,
affinned that he had no patient by
that name and that he had not writ·

:::

budget director thinks the
Rhodes plan requires at least
$300 million in increased

O!,;i~;!:e~~~~l~t;:~~~~~~C:~~\Ieany, is expected :[ ~ct':s ~::lv~e~e:~~e/n~ ~~;~sedis pro~=~~d ta~~s~~ f~~du~e9~: ·~~~:r~i~h st~~ ~0 ~h~n e~~:r~y~c~~e~~~ect~ ~~~~~tw;~furg~r~~~~~~:n .;', ~ ~~0c:, ~~t~r~!~:!ghe~}

Judge Bacon sentences pair to prison
A West Virginia woman has pled
guilty to possessing a forged
prescription in Meigs Ollmty Com·
mon Pleas Court.
Denise Snow, 21, of Elkview, W.
Va ., voltmtarily entered a plea of
guilty to the charge as contained in a
bill of information prepared by the
prosecutor.

people."

cooference wiUt Cuyahoga
County Treasur er Frank
Gaul.

The three juveniles from
Rt. 1 Middleport, Rt. 1
Cheshire and Pomeroy area
gave statements admitting to
most of the vandalism that
occurred alo a SR 7 betwee
no
•
n

altoholi c drink s for the
1uventles.
.
Hyseil extends hiS thanks to
he
t · 1 ed f r their
t paren s tnvo v . o
.
ooope_rattonand assistance m
brtngm• thiS case to a suc-

Saturday morning .
According
to
the
statements, the juveniles had
been drinking and did not
actually remember what all
they had damag&lt;d. Char~es
also wi:l be filed against the
adult that purchased the

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday tbrougb
Saturday, fair through tbe
period, with blgbo In the
low or mid 60s Thursday
and Ia tbe mid 581 or lower
50s Friday and Saturday.
Lows will be In the 30!1.
', ' . ' ,' .'.',' ........ -.·.·.·.·.·.·,·.' .. ·.·.·:.:.·.·.:-.·.' .... ·.;

°

.1

~~~~ ~~:n~;d 1 :~:. Ge~ll:~; :~,",~,~:1, :~~1:"=~: ~~;,, , .,.,., , :,:,:,:::,:

many times a real morale booster for the patient, too .
WhJ!e plans for a nursing borne facility in Middleport
ha ve fallen through, at least for the tim e bemg,
construction is well Wlderway on a 100-bed fac ility on
former Route 33 tn Metgs CoWlty .
Ex cellent progress is being made and the plea sant fall
weath er has been an asset to this progress. Builders say
Utat the structure will be ready for occupancy well ahead
of the 10 month pertod set by the contract.

Firemen, squadmen
called to wreck scene
At 6•!i4 a .m. today, the
Mtddleport emergency Wlit of
the fire department and a fire
truck were dispatched to the
scene of a train-truck accident at Cheshire . Dale
Whitt, truck driver , was

treated on the scene .
The emergency squad went
to 730 Beech St., at 9:16p.m.
Monday, for William Wilson
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

TWO MARRIAGES END
In Meigs co unty l'ommon
pleas court one marriage was
dlssolved and another was
granted. The marriage of
Martha Diane Hoffman and
Ronald Mark Hoffman was
dissolved and Mary Kay
Blanks was granted a divorce
from George Allen Blanks.

TOWEL SHOWER
A towel shower wiil be held
when the Ladies Auxiliary of
the Middleport fire depart·
men! meet Wednesdlly, Nov.
1 at 7, 30 p.m. at the fire
station. Hostesses are Phyllis
Baker, Sue Imboden and
Barbara Hoffman .

'Crime alert'
Me igs county Sheriff
James J . Proffitt offers the
crime
alert
following
suggestion in the wake of the
recent auto thefts •
"It takes a lot of hours and
hard work to pay for an
maintain your automobile.
But many people won't take a
lew extra minutes to keep a
thief out of their car .
Operation Crime Alert and
the Meigs County Sheriffs
Depa rtment remind you . to
lock your car whether it's
parked on the street or at
home in your driveway.
Never leave the key in the
ignition and never leave the
title in the car. Stay alert and
be on a crime alert - lock It
and pocket the key."

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