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                  <text>10 - Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 .. Tuesday , Oct. 31

Generation Rap •·
By Helen and Sut&gt; Hottel
WEDDINGS C.1N RUIN

By THOMAS J . SHEERAN
LOUISVILLE, Ky . I UP!)
- Gov . Julia!) M. Carroll
pointed Monday to residents
of northeastern Kentucky
who are angry over the
shutdown of the U.S. Grant
Bridge as representative of
increasing citizen demand for

FRIENDSHII'~

RAP :

Jerry ~nd I grew up to~l'lhn H!H..I our pa n· nb c-trL'
fr1ends - or were, UJ1tlllht.·y st&lt;:trtl'd plan111ng our weddmJ,!
When we told

l{ood

th~m

we wt.:rt· t.•nga J..: i'tl ttlt'y wt·rt· :,uper the y dt'l'ldt'd Ull'y'd go 111 t u ~dtlt'r un a
big, Sit-down dinnt:r wcdthng b;-J-"'11 1-:vt•r s tru ·t·. our In T.. , haVl'
not been t:a lm .
Each mother wrtnls a dJfferl'nt llll'llll Tht•) an· lm kl' nug
over the number uf ~uesb, Uw kmd (If Wl'lhhng l'Ctkt•, ntusw.
flowers, yuu nc:nnt· Jt. Morn and J erry \ rnothl'f , l'\'t•Jl though
they're Jikt:' Sisters, l'OIIlpt.'lt' &lt;:t lot. cmd our J)ads d rt• .t.;t'tt 1n~ Intu the al'l too . It's still four fTlHIIths tu go, and &lt;:~lrl'ad~ J L' rry·
and I are nervous wrecks . The pal'l'llh forgl'\ lt' !-i :-; upposl'd \H
be our day, and Wt' W&lt;inled sonwtlun )..! .-.uupil' . Whl'll wt· ll'll
them that, they ~et their feeling s hurt rh 111 . ·· Wh&lt;-tl would pt•tJple think if you hml a cluntzy wt•dtltng·• · ·
What would you suggt·st'' -TEHI IY AN!l. Jr-:HHY
DEAR TERRY AND.JEHHV
As a nun-belu·ver In h1g , posh Wl'dliln g~. I'd ~ ugges t you t wo
make a d&lt;:~lt' with yuur lnln Jstt·r , Innte d ~1.'&gt;t ' re lalln.':-. . ;u1d
have a s1mple L"e rem uny 111 Ius st udy Your n•s pt•('lln. · 1110\htor:-.
may t•ven feel rdil'\"t'd - a flt•r thl' ~ reco\"t•r from nt·ar plcased . Right

HWay

more government services.

curunanes . - HF.l.EN
TERRYANDJF:RHY
If Mum's way I!) just too s1mpk, wt1 y don ·\ you 111akc ytJLJr
own wedding J&gt;lans c:tnd st1 ck to tlil'lll , 1111 llli·tllt•r how tth·
parcnl':i howl.-, It ·s your dily i'JiJ u1w s hotild takt · 1t itwa.r fn,rn
you, even though lhl'y thutk tht·y'n· do1n g ~ ou it f&lt;t\·or - SL' F
DF:AR IIEIF.N .~:--IDSlJF
I thought I ·u bt_· i:t ·· Jiber~:tted Vo" l JJil&lt;m ·· ami d.'i k ii g u _\ to g t) ((, ;1
disl'u w1th me . He 111t:tdt:' up S()l!lt' la!IH' l'X(" U:-e , \"t' r! l'lll l.J~u·­
rassed . Wt&gt; 're prt&gt;tty gui.Xl fnt•ntb . but llu\\ Wt' ;n ·oJd t•;H tl
other. And f feel JUS( piilllllTUSht•d .
Now I under~t.and what ft•lluw ~ f:.:t J throu ~-: h t'\"l T~ tllllt' tlw~
a.sk out a new ,t..:Jr l. Onl' rt•Jt•c ll url \\it .'&gt; t•noud l lu fn u~ / 1 I ill ' \' t'l
flk.l!es are s uppust•d to kt't'P r!J.!ht on tr yu1 J,! :'-lo w. •r Hkr it lot of
guys don 't dak . I woul&lt;fJI"t t'Jlht·r· If I &lt;-tl w;1 ~ s ll;ul t , , !;1 kt • I he lll ·
lltallve.- F'FFI.~ FOil TIIF M
DFAR F'FT
Your letter shows aga111 "'h~ 111 tttda~ \ w~trld . 1t llld _\ bt•
··okay " for a girl tu ask a Uoy fur &lt;:1 datt• , but 1rH1:-.I J.! lrb \\un"t
Ct•ntunes of cunditwnmg l1.;.1\'t' ge&lt;:trt•d us tu IH· ttw rl'fll.'it'I"S, !lui
the refused . - .SUE

.
'

.

DEMONSTRATES
JAWS OF LIFE - Mason Ftre
Cha.·f Russ Roush, front ,
demonstrates this new piece
of emerge ncy equipmen t
designed to !reo a trapped
person from a V{'h icle . The

Hurat Jaws of Lifo was
purchased through matching
county and state funds . While
the Mason Uepartment Will
keep and mamtain the tool. 11
will be used for e m rr~e~~cy

sit uations tnruugtwut the
count y. Looking on, left tu

right : Commissioner Michcal
Wh alen. Bob Hockenberry.
who IS prestdent of th e Ap·
p&lt;:~ \ a{· hian
Em e rgency

ModJcu l Serv ices Board of
D1rccturs: Commissioner
Will1am Hardm. and MaS&lt;JO
Mayor ~·red Taylor. who IS
a lso emergency serv1ces
directnr for the county .

\'elrrans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Paul Shuler.
Port land ; •: ana Evans .
Middleport ; Debbie Eynon.
Pllmeroy. William Wilson.
M1rldleport .
lltscharged - Deborah
Hidgway. Betty Hanm1uns .

MORE THAN
$130,000.00
Will be going Into the Mail
Monday, October 30, 1978
To Our 1978 Christmas
Club Members to help provide
them with a Worry-free

Tile students, most of them
seniors, established the camp
Monday about half a block
from their teachers' strike
headquarters.
The students. ind1cat1ng
they are the victims of the
strike. satd they \\ill continue
the protest around the clock
until teachers return tD work .
Cowt action was expected
soon, possibly today, on a
request by the Painesville
Township Board of F.ducallon
for
contempt citat ions
against teachers refusing a
back to work order.
The board also wants
negotiations, which broke off
Monday, to be con tingent on
teachers returnmg to work.
The teachers walked out
Sept. 27 tn a ftght over wages
and working conclitions and
have stayed out despite a
court rulmg against their job
action
Teacher s in the LDrain
County Jotnt Vuc..·at10nal
School District a l Oberlin
went on strik e one week ago
in a dispute over salary,
fringe benefits, dism issa l
polictes and retroactive pay.
All school districts 10
Lorain County. except the
city of Lorain , send students
to the voca tional school.

SPRAWLING FAOLITY - The Sentinel camera was unable to pick up tihe e ntire
construction pi cture of the new nursmg home facility in Metgs County . The large H-shape
complex wtll conta in 28,000 feet of noor space .
PRODUCTION SHUTDOWN
TEHRAN. Iran tUPIJ - A
general stnke against the
shah today com pletely sh ut
down Iran's $20 billion-a-year
01! industry, which supplies
both the United States and the
Sovtet Union With fuel, newspapers reported .
The shutdown was total. the
Kayhan newspaper reported .
Major oil wells in southern
lraman
fie ld s
stopped
productng cr ud e and the
world's largest integrated
refinery at Abadan has

m Manetla fo r the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services .
The bureau sa1d slightly
over $1 million of the money
will be taken !rom funds
planned for a simtlar offi ce in
Pamesv11le . Tho se BES
facilities will continue to be
leased .
Another $307,561 will be
transferred from funds In tended for an office building
in Findlay, where the cost
can be reduced, a spokesman
said .

FUNDS APPROVED
COLUMBUS 1UPI 1- The
state Controlling Board
Monday approved the release
of $1.7 milli on for co nstruction of an office building

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

Holiday Season.

~R,1llllml

Count us in to take part m the annual Mtddleport
Cllamber of Commerce Christmas Parade on the evening
of Nov. Ti .
Name ______________________________
Address _____________________________
Phone _________________________
Type of Entry'- - - - - - - - - - - - Please complete and mat! to Candy Ingels. in care of
Ingels Furmture Store . N. Second Ave .. Mtddleporl. Oh10
45760.

ceased
refining
product s. 11 sa id .

mo s t

lfl\Tf'.S ('

ABORTIONS CONSIDERED
WASHI~GTON 1UPI1
The inflammatory issue of
abortions for minor s will be
considered once agam by the
Supreme Court th1s session
The high cou rt agreed
Munday to review the cunstitutiona lit y
of
a
Massachusetts law requtnn~
unmarried girls under IB to
obta in consent from their
parents or a judge before
having an abortion .
The oourt 1 s review follows
a 1976 ruling in which it held
unconstitutional a Missouri
statute co ntaining a "blanket
rule " requiring parental
consent for minor daughters
to obtain abortions.

,.....-JOIN~

OUR

1t leak :-.

the

llkt• &lt;t

~ H'\T

LAFF - A- DAY

l4K white gold
Diamonds total I ct .

Open Your New Accounts
As of October 31, U78

Walk-Up Teller Window
And Auto Teller Window

CECIL RUSSELL
Cec il Russell, 611, a restdent
of Rt. I, Bidwell. died in
Holzer Medical Center 3:30
a.m . Monday.
He was born July 4, 1910, at
Pomeroy. son of the late
Lewis and Alice Russell .
Mr. Russell served in the U.
S. Anny during and after
World War II, !rom 1943
through 1946.
He was a retired employee
of the Ohio State Highway
Garage, having retired in
1974.
Mr . Russell married Hazel
Fields on May 11, 1974. She
s urvives, along with four
ste p-children :
Bert
Browning, Gallipolis; Mrs .
Joseph tSadieJ Jones, Rt. I,
Bidwell :
Mrs.
Harold

EVA G. WELSH
Mrs . Eva G. We lsh . 86, 515:&gt;
N. High St, Columbus, died
Saturday at her residence.
Mrs. Welsh was retired
from the Columbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co ..
Athens, alter 28 years service. She was a member of
the Maple Grove United
Methodist Church and the
Athens
Busmess
and
Professional Women's Club.
Surviving are sons and
daughters-m-law
including
Roger C. and Ruth Welsh of
Grove City; J ohn M and
Anne Welsh, Gallipolis,
former residents of Meigs
County; five grandchildren ;
four great-grandchildren; a
sister, Bernice and her
husband, Bernard Higley of
Grandvtew.
Funeral services were held
Monday evening at the
Woodyard Co. Chapel, 255 E.
State St., Columbus, with the
Rev. Hans Klee officiating.
The body was then taken to
the Jaegers Funeral Home in
Athens where services will be
ehld at 10 a.m. Wednesday.
Friends may call at that
funeral home. Burial will be
in Wells Cemetery in Meigs
County.

NO 141

Open Friday Evenings 5 to 7 p.m.

Rf/!11 o BlUE wsmE sOOmpooor
IO ge1 the scnbbing OCfion you
neo&lt;llo -.n ood lilt ou1

THE FRIENDLY BANK

!1&lt;JUnd-in din ll1d grime Md use
BltJE UJSmE stonpoo IO gel
'fJUf CQfpefs briglll , CleOn Ond
plUSh'

I

.....

RENT only S2.50 por d•y

Now is the time to Lay Away

For Christmas

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
Court St., Pomeroy,

0.

Seeks presidency

Special Price

Olarges dismissed

here~

The

ELBERFELD$

ME .' l LS rosl a dollar and a
half "

Our Impressive

BULKY

1977 CADI Ll.AC
ELDORADO

'9700
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You' ll Llkt Our Quality
W•y of Doing Businfls
GMAC FINANCING
9f2-S:W2
Pomeroy
O!Mn Evenings '1116 :00
Til s p.m. S•t.

Everyth1ng you could ask for
1n a bulky swea ter-Jacket '
Space-dye cab le kn1t card1gan of
100 % Acryl1c co nvertible co ll ar. front -tie
belt . two patch pockets, c uffed sleeves
Grey combina tio n and beige combination
S12es S. M.L

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

KNOXVILLE , Tenn . tAP ! - A
judge on Wednesday disrrussed
criminal charges agalllSt rune
firemen and a sheriff's deputy accused of repeatedly raping a
woman during an 16-hour ordeal
at a fire station .
Wimberly ordered that
aggravated rape charges be
dropped against the nine
firemen . He also dismiSSed an accessory-{e&gt;-rape charge against a
sheriff's deputy who was accused
of drl ving the woman to the
Highland Avenue Fire Station on
the day the alleged crime ocCUlTed .

and all others acting in aid or in coocert with them and to whom
knowledge of tbe issuance of this order shall come, be and they are
hereby restrained as follows : '
" I. From interfering in any manner whatsoever with the plaintiff's
officers, supervisors, teachers, substitute teachers, employees or
representatives, and agents in tbe
performance of the duties of their
employment and in the operation
and maintenance of the elementary
and secondary schools of the Meigs
Local School District.
"2. Fnm interferinl( with the
I Continued on page 9)

enttne
THURSDAY. NOVEMBER l. 1979

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Gallia hoard facing
future school closing

Street, is being razed by Dennis Boothe . The home U;
owned by Mrs . Oscar Roedel. Minersville .

SEOEMS contract,
billing outlined
WASI:llNGTON IAP J - Former first
lady Marn~e
Eisenhower died peacefully m
her sleep early today at Waiter
Reed Army Medical C.,nter. ofricials 5aid.
Mr.; . Eisenhower. widow of lor mer President Dwight D .
Eisenhower, was 82, hoopital
spokesman Pete Esker said. He
noted that her 83rd birthday was
two weeks away .
Doctors
attributed
Mrs
Eisenhower's death at I :35 a .m
to~art failure. Esker said

not conduct their daily business
while the members of tbe defendant
association occupy the ad·
ministrative offices of the plaintiff.
.. It further appearing to the cowt
that the injuries are irreparable in
that Wlless defendants are enjoined
from picketing and treppassing
these actions will continue and could
intensify .
"Now, therefore, it is ordered, adjudged, declared and decreed that
the defendants, Meigs Local
Teachers Association. Bonnie
Ftsher, David Bowen. Cella McCoy,
Carolyn Smith, Donald Dixon, Jack
Slavin, Rita SlaVJn and Ed Barteis

•

at

POMEROY MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

BUIWING BEING RAZED - This large two
story frame home located on Pomeroy 's East Mam

Mamie dies today

jury has been and wlll be caused to
plaintiff. as follows :
"1. Plarntiff's buses and property
have been subjected to damage and
vW&gt;dalism at the picket lines at the
various !actlities of plamtif!.
" 2 The automobiles of employes
and parents have been damaged at
the pickets lines at the various
facilities of the plaintiff.
" Plaintiff , plaintilf's employes
who are working and students have
been subjected to threats, coercion,
harassment and danger of bodily
hanD at the picket lines at vanou.s
facilities of plaintiff.
"4. Plaintiff and its employes can-

•

•

Ful l Power

"' IA'I s g('l ou! of

'5995

992-2920

VOL. XXVIII

unlawful stnke agalTISt the plaintiff
are are engaged in mass picketing
activities at various school facilities
owned and operated by the plaintiff,
and will continue to strike again
plaintiff Wlless restrained by order
of this Court, and that members of
the Meigs Local Teachers
Association have, without authority
to do so, remained in the adminlstrative offices of the plaintiff,
resulting in the inability of the administrative personnel of the plaintiff to conduct the daily business of
the Meigs Local School District,
such an act being one of trepass, and
that unmediate and irreparable in-

e

(USPS 14'i 960)

WASHINGTON !API - Sen .
Howard H. Baker Jr . declared his
candidacy lor president today ,
coupling a
warning that
"America has lost its margin for
error " with a new aweal for
defeat of the SALT II treaty .
Departing !rom the traditional
generalities of presidential announcement speeches, Baker
devoted a major section of his
brief statement to the proposed
anns treaty between the United
States and the Soviet Union .
" Approval of Uus treaty with
its acceptance of Soviet strateg1c
superiority could guarantee to
the Soviet Union the margin for
error that u.'led to be ours," sa1d
Baker, who as Republican le&gt;~der
of the Senate has emer~ed as a
key opponent of the pact.

1976 CADILlAC
SEDAN DEVILLE

FIRE-liTE

Member F. D.I.C. Deposits Insured to 140,000.00.

11 ,

propu rtl1111

pn ~~ thtl!t~

USED CARS

YOUR BEST DIAMOND
BUYS ARE HERE

CLUB

tiYes to members
The restraining order action filed
by the Meigs Local Board r1
Education reads :
" This cause came before this
Court on Plaintiff's verified complaint, ~n plaintiff's motion for a
temporary restraining orde r , the
certification of the attorney for the
Plaintiff stating efforts which have
been made to give notice to defendants of the motion lor temporary
restraining oder and the affidavit r1
the superintendent of schools filed in
support of said motion, and it appea ring to the Court that the del endants have and are en~a~ed in an

1Darlene 1 Shortridge, Rt. I.
Thurman ; Mrs . James
1Irene 1 Coe, Rt. I, Bidwell
and Mrs. Jimmy I Ruth)
Barnes. Rt. I, Bidwell.
Nineteen grandchildren
survive along with nine greatgrandchildren .
One sister survives, Maude
Sarles, Pomeroy .
Funeral services will be
held at p.m. Thursday at
Miller's Home lor Funerals
w1th Rev. John Jefferies
officiating . Burial will be in
Campaign Cemetery
Friends may call at the
funeral home !rom 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. on Wednesday .

·~~·

FOR CHRIST MAS AND ~- OREVER

CHRISTMAS

tlllo.Ec::.:'

The l'fl JPY lllt'll t ~ 1f ~~~·; mn g
rail\ p&lt;tlt~·nii J.! 1111 tl w ro!Jf 1..., tn

W. J . ROLLINS
William J. Rollins , 92,
Route 2,
Le tart,
was
pronounced dead on arrival
at Pleasant Valley Hospital
He was hom Sept. 29, 1886
in Letart. to the late H. N. and
Sarah Smith Rollins. He was
preceded in death by his wife,
E lizabeth R . Smith Rollins.
He was a m ember of the
Guiding
Star
Church,
Rebecca Lodge of Letart, and
the IOOF, Point Pleasant lor
65 years. He was a farmer
and banker.
S urv1vor s in c lude three
daughters. Mrs. Sybil Norris,
Junction City. 0.; Mrs.
Kathryn Blessing, Mrs . Clare
Capehart , both of IA!tart ; two
suns,
Nathan,
Let art:
George, E lg in . Il l : 10
gra nd chi ld re n ; 16 greatgrandch ildren .
Funeral services wtll be
Friday 2 p.m . at the Guiding
Star Church. Letart, with the
Hev Wilbur Baxter of ·
fi ciatmg . Burial will be m
Eve rgreen Cemetery.
Fnends may ca ll after 3
p .m
Thursday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home .

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

'79

Meigs County Cununon Pleas
Cowt Judge John C. Bacon this morning signed a temporary mjunction
order against the striking Meigs
Local School District Teachers
Association .
The inJunction stops picketing at
all distnct schoois during school
hours and provides for teacher.; to
vacate the administrative offices at
the junior high school where they
have been on a 24 hour daily sit 1n for
well over a week .
The restraining order is dJrected
to the leadership of the Meigs Local
Teacher.; Associatim and those
leaders are instructed to Issue dii'PC·

Area Deaths !

OAPSE members still out
dispute
Negotiations Uetween representatiVes of the board
and OAl'SE were scheduled
for today .
Ron Bawnan. president of
the local OAPSE chapter .
said 17 - 13 language and
four
money issues
remained to be resolved
before today ' s meeting .
The teacher 's contract provides a base salary of $9,100
and sets forth procedures for
negotiations when the pact
expires .
Elsewhere,
strikes
cont inu ed
today
'"
Painesville Township and the
Lorain
Co unt y
Joint
Vocational School District.
Meanwh il e. about two
dozen Painesville Township
High School students have set
up a camp to protest their
school system 's 35-&lt;lay-&lt;Jid
teacher strike .

The residents of South
Shore - who normally use
the bridge to travel across the
Ohio River to Portsmouth,
Ohio, lor hospital care have
"com plained
vociferously," about the
bridge problem, Carroll said.
" The American public is
demanding more and more of
us every day," Carroll told
delegates to a con ventlon of
state highway department
officials !rom around the
nation .
Carroll noted he was unable
to
continue
medical
emergency helicopter service
between South Shore and
Portsmouth. The helicopter
serv1ce was discontinued
because of 1ts $1,000-&lt;Hiay
cost.
"They don't understand
why we can 'I just pull the
money out of the sky," said
Carroll, referring to demands
bv South Shore residents lor a
r~swnptwn of the helicopter
service

Hospital care can be •,
obtained on the Kentucky
side of the river with only an
additional five or IIHninutes
in tra vel time over the
normal driving time to
Portsmouth, Carroll said.
The U.S. Grant Bridge, the
only link between Ohio and
Kentucky lor 25 miles, was
closed
in
July
when
structural defects were ·
discovered. Officials hope to
repair the defects within 13
months.
Earlier,
Carro ll was -"'·'-'"'''•
cheered by the highway
administrators when he
pointed out the state's
success in raising $600 million
through the sale of bonds in
recent years to pa y lor coalhaul roads.
" Wouldn 't you like to have
an authority like that, " a
beaming Carroll asked. The
question was met with warm
applause.
The governor also said he
believed inflation made it
cheaper to borrow mooey at
interest rates which he said
can
make
highway
construction costs lower in
the lung run. Last week the
state sold highwa y bonds for
6.506 percent while inflation
may reach 10 percent this
year, Carroll noted .

Judge Bacon signs temporary injunction

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

Logan teachers settle~
Press
By
United
International
The Logan Board of Education and the Logan Education
Association
have
unanimously ratified a new
contract, but the state's
longest school strike i,
history continued today.
LEA
President
Bill
Parrigin said teachers would
man picket lines again today
in support of striking nonacademic
personnel,
members of the Oh10
Association of Ptlblic School
Employees .
Parrigin said negotiawrs
for the hoard and the LEA
reached
a
tentative
agreement on the new twoyear pact Monday and tl was
approved by both sides in
meetings a lew hours later .
The teachers in the 4.1~
students system walked out
August 29th in a contract

eachers must vacate offices

More goventment
•
services
sought

Dan I Joyd, eli rector of SEOEMS,
dtscussed Meigs County's contract
and current billings during the
weekly meeUng of tbe Meigs County
Comnntssion Tuesday night.
Also meeting with the comrrussioners was Don Uoyd , director
of SEOEMS, to cliscuss Meigs County 's contract With SEOEMS and
current billings .
Meigs County 's contract with
SEOEMS is for services for a 12
month period, commencing Jan . I,
1979, with a total cost not to exceed
$24.959 . To date Meigs County has
patd a total of $16,7*1.95 :or eight
months . The latest billing !rom
SEOEMS is for s:i,B72.41l lor Sept.
whtch leaves a balance due
SEOEMS of $2,307 for tihe remainder
of the year .

Cold \\t·atlwr

t'OIIIIIIg

BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
A ('(l id front was expected to cross
Oh1o bv tonight and move mto
Pennsyivania by ,Friday This front
is part of a s'.rong low pressure
storm system moving off to the
northeast.
The showers will begin ending
from the west tonight. However. the
rain will linger in the eastern
rountles through most of the day
Friday .
The air behind the cold front is
much cooler than that wh1ch has
been in Ohio the last few days.
Lows tonight will dip into the 40s
and the mercury will rU;e only
slightly Friday Highs are expected
ooly tn around :10.
The outlook !oc the weekend is for
fair weather and cool temperatures
Highs will reach only into the mid
40s Ill the low 50s . Lows wUl be
around the freezing mark
ASSISTANCE GIVEN
The Orange Township Volwtteer
fire Department fi.'ISisted Chester
Fire Department at a fire this morning at 1·05 a.m . at the Jesse
Buchanan residence on Silver
Hldge .
C.. LISe of the fire ts Wldetennined
and is being mvestigated by the
State Fire Marshal
There was heavy damage to the
first floor of the two story frame
home

It was agreed that should September's btll be paid m lull , billings
for the remainder of the year would
not exceed $2,307.
Lloyd also said he could see no
problem should the Me1gs EMS want
to attach an antenna to the existing
SEOEMS t o wer on Mulberry
Heights at no charge .
Bob Bailey, Meigs EMS Coordinator, and Bob Fisher, presidenet
of the EMS Board of Trustees also
met to discuss their operations as
related to the SEOEMS contract
Bailey and F1sher were advised of
the boards· previous discussion with
Uoyd .
The corrunissioners said they
would make a request to SEOEMS m
writing regarding the placing an antenna on the tnwer instead of Meigs
Coonty buying its own tower .
It was agreed tn purchase
titwninous materials lor the month
of Nov . from Guernsey Asphalt Co.
the only company s ubmitting a
quotation .
Also meeting with conunissioners
was County Engmeer Wesley Buehl
who reported work has been completed on county road 2." lor approlUJT18tely $30 ,000 .
A letter W88 received from James
Jenrungs and Associates requesting
to be considered for employment to
help 1n getting an administering
Federai-Stste grant programs for
Meigs County .
Attending were Richard Jones,
president, Henry Wells. and Chester
Wells, corruniss1oners. and Mary
Hobstetter, clerk .

BRUSHFIRE
The Orange Township Volunteer
Fire Department was called to a
brUSh fire Tuesday at 7:05 p.m .
betund the Tuppers Plains Elementary School .
Six members responded to the
call r_,.use of the fire is unltnow: .

SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
was called at 2.~5 a m. Thur.;day for
Mabel Kester.;on who had a leg mJllrY - She was taken to Veterans
Memortalllospital.

The GaUia Cty Local Board of
Education, by requesting the State
Auditor's Office to conduct a cash
audit, took the first step last night
toward district-wide closure during
part of November and December-&lt;&gt;r
applying !oc an emergency ioWl
from the State Department of
Education .
The audit is required by law to
take either of the options being
for ced on the financtally plagued
distnct which la ces a $282,000 deficit
this year and a rninimun $953 ,000
deficit next year
Superintendent
Ga ry
E
Toothaker. PhD., presented to the
board a · contingency plan to be
implemented in the event that the
operating levy being placed before
district voters falls next Tuesday .
That plan Included
recommendations
from
The
Balanced Budget C&lt;mm.ittee which
W88 formed earlier this !all to study
the effects of a then estimated
$825,000 deficit for 1980. Since the
!ormation of that conunittee, the
Department of Education ·s Office of
School management Assistance
confirmed the deficit, but projected
the amount at $282,668 .75 for 1979
and S%3,379.92 for 1980.
The contingency plan was
presented in three phases .
Phase I. dealing with the time
per iod pnor to and including
November 6, represented the "best
solution" to th e fiscal crisis.
According to Dr . TooUtaker. if th e
operating levy passes. there will be
sufficient funds to operate the school
district through December 31, 1980 .
The superintendent said last night
the State had committed assistance
in excess of $700.000 through tihe
State Foundation Program !oc the
1979-$ academic year if millag e
necessary foc participatio in the
fund is ratified by distri~t voters.
Phase I! of the contingency plan
deals with the 1979 deficit That
.·•·

·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·
EXTENDED FORECAST

Fair Saturday and Sunday aod
a chance of sbowen Mooday.
Cool. Highs In the mid to. to the
mid 508. Lows In the upper too
and 3011.

Weather
Showers and a few thunderstorms
tonight . Low tonight from 45 to 50 .
M06Uy cloudy and cooler With
showers likely Friday . High in the
low 50s . The chance of ram is *1 percent tonight and 60 percent Fnda y.

phase reads. m part. as follows :
" In the past, the district has been
able to borrow funds w pay expenses
for one year from local bands with
anticipated revenues !rom the
following year as collateral. The
practice of borowing money from
ooe year to pay f&lt;J" another was
common . However. such practice is
illegal . F'urthennore. the penalty for
over expending an appropriation
was identified as "' personal
liability " lor such expenditures by
the Supenntendent. the Treasurer
and the President of the Board
iORC 5705. 412 and &gt;705 .45 1
·•The State Auditors office has
declared that the law will be
enfocced beginning 1n the 1979-80
school year. Consequently. the

Theft reports
investigated
The Me1gs County Sheriff Department is investigating the theft of a 10
speed bicycle and a Sear.; 5 HP
rotatiller from the residence of Rita
Maust, Rt. I, Langsville. The theft
occurred within the last I 0 days
The department is also ut·
vestigaling the attempted breaking
and entering of the mobile home of
RessieShaffer, Racine.
According to a report, Mr.; . Shaffer returned t o her trailer aound
II . 30 p .m . Tuesday and oOO.rved a
man running I rom the area of her
trailer .
A pane of glass from the rear door
of the trailer had been removed and
was s1tting on the floor by the door.
Nothing appeared to have been
disturbed
Deputies recetved a theft report
from Leroy Hendrix, Tuppers
Plains. Hendrix is worlang on a new
home at Morning Star Heights m
Sutton Township and S&lt;metime after
work on Munday and Tuesday mar·
ning discovered' the buildinj;: had
been entered and a number of tools
were taken .
Wednesday evening deputies cited
two 17 year old Rutland youths to
Meigs County Juvenile Colll1 for attempting to steal gasoline from a
truck at the Rutland Furniture
Store.
The pair were spotted by a
restdent just as they were getting
ready to put the hooe in the tank.
Deputies later located the pair
who gave a signed statement admitting the attempted theft. They
were released to the custody of
parents pendiing hearing later in
juverule court .

enfoccement rules of local school
district finance have changed in the
State of Ohio this year. Bills must be
paid during the fiscal year by
revenues that are obtained during
the same year . Bills may not be
rolled forward . Revenue must be
obtained during the year from which
they
are
used
to
meet
expenditures .··
Last night's meeting was called
speclficall)· roc the purpose of
formally requesting a cash audit
from the Audiwr of State. Such an
audit U; reqwred by law f&lt;r the
district to proceed Wlth e1ther of its
opt.tons-close the schools oc seek an
emergency loan from the State.
According to Dr . Toothaker's
report. " The administration's
recommendalton for which course of
action to follow will be dependent
upon the acquisition of additional
infcrmatlon about lhe lldvan\a&amp;ea
and disadvan tages of each
alternative ...
"~a uld the board decide to seek
an emergency loan !rom the State
Department of Education, local
control of the school district will be
senously
threatened,"
Dr.
Toothaker said , "On the other hand,
the closing of schools lor a period of
time represents a serious threat to
the basic rrussion of any school
distnct10 educate children ."
The supenntendent further
lfllcrmed the board that II the State
should be called uprn to supply
emer~ency funds, the State would
unpose an irlcome tax on district
restdents s uflictent to cover the cost
of the
loan,
interest, and
management expenses.
" These decisions represent
response to a difficult situaUon," Di'.
Toothaker said , "The choices are a
distasteful pair of alternatives, but I
know of no other course of action at
thts tune ."
Phase III of the cootingency plan
deals with the possibility of two
cases that co uld occur depending
upon the outcome of Tuesday 's vote .
Case A concen trates on the
reduction of expenditures that would
be required with a minimwn deficit
during 1980 of S825.~o carryover
!rom 1979 .
According to the superintendent's
report reductions in the following
budget areas would be necessary:
teacher aides, $22,0011 ; regular
classroom instruction, $145,122;
EMR , $13 ,500; vocational education,
$31,500 ; libraries, $17,984; central
office . $2 ,050; principals and
secretaries, $8 ,700; Treasurer's
office . $80 ,000;
maintenance,

J.'

1Contin ued on page 9 )

Sen. Glenn requests full funding
for Gallipolis Locks, Dam project
Senator John Glenn 1D-Ohio J has
requested the Senate C«nmittee on
Environment Wld Public Works to
include the full $170 million in
authorization funds far the Gallipolis
Lock and Dam project on the Ohio
River .
Glenn's request took the form of a
letter to the chainnan of the Senate
panel, in which Glenn renunded the
committee of his earlier request of
June 12 of this year. Glenn's request
in June stated : ·'Should the situation
change and t.te decision be made to

•

proceed with a broader bill , I
request the Committee to give every
consideration to moving Gallipolis to
the 'construction ' column of the
bill ...
The House version of tbe water
resources bill already contains an
identical $170 million and with inclusion of the funds in the Serulte
bill, t.he fin•! verison sent to the
White House ior ~~~: -- - •ur, . "· .!ld
definitely cootain t]!,o funds lor
GallipoliB.
··1 feel inclusion of these ftmds will

'

now prove an economy in the future.
Facilitating construction cl thil Improved transportation project now
will benefit the econcmy cl the relon
and the nation, provide needed jobe
in an economically deprused region
during an expected period rl.
recession, and facilitate sll!lllflcant
energy savings &lt;n river transportation," Glenn said.
,
" I believed the beneflta rl. begin.
ning construction are dear, welcbty
and in the best lntereata rl. the
private sector and the gOYel moent,"
Glelll' •:;ld the chauman.

•

�2- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. Nov . 1. 1979

Today's con1mentary
By Don Graff
If Jimmy Carter and Menachem
Begin could afford the time out from
their respective domestic preoe ·
cupations for a brief troubles - sharing chat, they might find in much m

common at the moment.
Both are having tough going with
recalcitrant legislatures. Both are
betng challenged by the courts in the

exercise of thelr preswned executive prerogatives. Both have
serious personnel problems on their
executive teams . Aiid both are
heading into political weather that it
would be an understatement to
describe as threatening .
But here there is also a difference.
Wlul e Carter knows the dimension
and timing of Ius challenge - the
presidential primaries and election,
Begin is beset by uncertainties .
He has survived the no-confidence
votes precipitated by Mos he
Dayan's dramatic abdication as
foreign minister - thanks in no
small part to Dayan 's disinclination
for the time being to team up w1th
the oppos1tioo in the Knesse t.
But with the parliamentary baS€
of Begin 's anything but harmoruous
coalition eroding 1 lhe et:&gt;onomv in
decline and criticism of Ius polic1es
at home and abroad on the rise, the
end theoretically could come at any
time .
Not that anyone at home or abroad
is really expecting Begin to be
bounced in the near future . True,
polls indicate that were an election
to be held today, he would probably
lose . But then&gt; is no consensus as to
an acceptable alternative .
This accentuation of the nega tJ ve
has become something of a common
denominator m Israeli affa1rs of
late . There seems to be a much
stronger awareness of what is not
wanted than of what is Even Dayan,
whose resignation protested the
dominant goverrument fa ction 's
stonewalling on the Palestinian
issue, was unable to specify what he
would deem an acceptable solutwn
to that puZ7.1e .
The most positive aspect of the
situation may be that developments.
most prominently rlayan 's departure wtu ch has deprived the govern ment of its most personable • nd persuasive r epresentative. are lik ely to

compel a reassessm ent of poli ctes

and puss.blii!Jes that nught ot herwise we resi sted
Whi ch brmgs us back to Interests
eommon lo Beg1n and Carter .
Reassessment could or could not bt&gt;
one of them .
There understandable may be
great tem ptation in Wastungton to
take advantage of the present uncertainty In Jerusalem to pre&gt;&lt;S for a
more accorrunodating a ttitude in the
draggmg negotiauons w1th the
Egypllans .
This might be in the short-term interests of Washington and especially of a Jmuny Carter hea dill!! mto
the prunarte'i and in need of
whatever achievement badges he
can come by . But the long-term, as
Car t er 's
own
Mid eas t
trou bleshooter , Robert Strauss,
warns, would likely be somettung
else aga m - Israeli resen tment ,
rather than accommodation, wtuch
cou ld only further complicate the
already convoluted efforts to
negotia te a Mideast S€ttlement that
everyone can live With If not love .
A gen wnc settlement can only be
ac hieved with the partic ipatiOn of a n
Is rael realistically a ware of wha t it
wants . This is lJl every one's interes t
and it must come from within Israel,
II cannot be imposed from without.

Big John Blunders?
Poor John Connally
Ever smce shifting his prepresidenti a l campa1gn emphasis
from corralling Republican support
in the Midwest to spelling out a new
U. S. pol icy for the Mideast . he has
hea rd little but criticism . E &lt;cept, of
course, from assorted Arab quarters
whi ch have no complaint wtth Ius
equaling of an assured U.S. oil supply and talking tough to Israel .
Ed!toria l flack has been profuse.
the di plomatic establishment is appalled and Republican rivals are
bumpmg mto each other m the rush
to disagree .
About all he seems to have accomplished is to make tumself the
focus of attention in the prelimmary
Jocke ying for the Republi can
nomination . rais mg his public
rt-rogni lion factor several notche.s
above everyone else in the pack w1th
the cus tomary e•ceptlon of l{onald
Reaga n

•

Business mirror
CHI CAGO I AP 1 - More than half
of votlng-age Amenc ans have grown
up since the Great Depression . ·n1at,
say• Professor Michael Bosldn, can
make all tht! economic difference 1n
the world - and probab ly wil l.
Boslon, 1n h1s ea r ly 30s , one of the
new breed economists who have far

less faith than their predecesso rs m
th e ab1l1ty of gove rnme nt to
manipulate the econom y, explains :
Much of American political and
eeonom1c tll mkm g was mf1 u enced
by the e&lt;pen ence of tlle 1930s,
especially that of unemployment.

Voters saw

~overnmen t

as th eir

savior , and trusted it tu pump the
economy .

Votes were cast with that dismal
expenence m mind. and elected
officials never for got it Governm e nt
spent heavily and it ran up deficits .
The top prionty wa s the reduct ion of
unemployment.
Then came the post-depression
voters . Therr experi ence has been
differen I: 1t mel udes 1nflallon.
tax es. regulations and , more
recently, stagnation . They have
been hurt by continued deficits .
Their econom ic view is differenl.

as different as that of some of the

yo un g economists who grew up m
the past Ulree decades. smd lloskm ,
uf Stanford Un iversity
'' 1 see that bloc of voter5 changing
how we \.iew economic policy," he
said In an mter\'icw following his
address to the U S. l.eagoe of
Savin~s Associations the home
mortgage lender s
meeting Ulis
week .

Boskin threw a barrage uf
unpleasant statistics at Ius audienc e
of 7,000 people . most of whom were
assodated in so~e way with sav ings
assoctation s. which hold more hom e
mortgages than a ny other ~ r o up .
For e~mp!e : Disposable income
per per son rose 2.4 percent a year
from 1947 to 1973. but m the ,,ext four
years at only half that
And more : In 1947-1967 U.S .
mflat10n aver aged on ly 1.6 percent a
year , but 111 the next 10 yea rs it
averaged 7 percent. The late•t U.S
""e 1s 13.2 percent. but in Gennany .
last year 11 was only 3
The impart of inflation , economi c
stagnatwn and double taxation on
savings 1when earned :...1 d a~a1n
when interest is received) has cut
sharply mto the ability to save . sa1d
!loskln .

l!'
'' ":y\ -

ft
.

Mr Fryer an d Mrs. Tr autv e lte r show how they regr f&gt; w h.=.1r
did not have ma le patter n baldness

t

•

TPi e y

P . D . Ourkalski Will Explain Hair Problems al lhe
Holiday Inn, 450 Pike 51., Gallipolis, Ohio Saturday ,
November 3, 1979 .
Mr . P . D . Durka lski wi l l be ba c k
in Gallipol iS again Satu rd ay .
Nov . 3, 1979. Now i s the time t o
ac t on thi s grea t opp ortunit y
Every man and woman now los

ing hair should take advantage of
this FREE CONSUL TAT ION .
.
GUARANTEED
You will be given a writt en
guarantee on a pro ra ted basis
from the beginning to the end .
Natu ra lly we c ou ld not give yo u
such a guarantee if it didn ' t work .
CAN'T HELP
Male pattern baldness is th e
cause of a great major ity of cases
of baldness and excessive nair
loss, tor which no method is effec
tive . Ebb Hair Speciali sts ca nnot
help those who are sli ck bald
after years of gradual hair l oss .
But, ityou are not alradv sl ic k
bald , how can you be sure wh rt t is
ac1ually causing your hair loss?
Even if baldnes s seems t o " r u n in

th e fam il y , ' ' t h•s •s ce rta1nly no
proof of Ttl e La u s. e of vour ha •r
loss
Many c ondit1on~ c an cuse ha1r
loss N o ma tt er which o ne •s c aus
1ng your hair loss , d you w.=til un
til yo u are sli c k Bald an your hair
r oo t s are dead you are beyond
he lp So, if you sti l l have hair on
top ot your head. and would lik e
to stop hair loss and grow more
hair
now is the tim e to do
!)Omelhing about it before i t 's too
late .
FREE CONSULATION
Just take a few minutes of your
time on Saturday, November J ,
1979 and go to the Holiday Inn, 4SO
Pike St . in Gallipolis betwePn I
p.m . and 8: 30p.m . and ask the
Desk Clerk lor P D . Ourkalski .
There is no c h a rge o r obl igaHon
all c onsulta l• ~ n .-. are pri vate ,
you will nol be em ba rrasse d 1n
_,.ny wa y

r-------------------------1 ]ames opposing
State Issue I
Lt• Jlt·r~ of opinicon an· \&lt;t'iccoml'd . Tht•y should bl' lt•ss

lhan :100 "onh, long 1or suhjP&lt;'I ln rt'duction bl' tht' t•ditor 1
and must ht· si~o:rwd "ilh tht· s igm·t· ·, addrt'ss . \lames rna\
bt· \&lt;ithht•ld upon puhli• ·a Jicon . Hco\&lt; l'\'t'r, on requt·si.
namt·~ "ill bo· di sdcost'd . Ll'ttt·rs shcould tw tn gcood lash·.
addrt'"lng lssu t•s, i111 t pt·f\ onalitit·s .

... ~~:----

God given right. ..
Dear Edi tor,
Most mothers I've talked to want
the1r kids back in school. We thin k
it's their God given right to go to
school and learn all they can. If they
11r e to be the leaders of tomorrow,
they need education now , not two or
three months from now .
If the school board a nd the
teachers ca n't come to an
agreement then they should all get
out. Let someone who is inte rested in
our kids take over.
I agree the pa rents a r e the ones
who teach Ule kids . The teachers are
too busy fighting in the streets
disrupting stores and doing their
thing In Mr . Gleason's office The
school baord should talk to everyone
of those teachers one at a time and
see how many want to go back . Let
those who do, do so and the ones who
don't fire them and get new
teachers.
l would like to say to the teacher
who wears the tee sturt · 'Teaching is
hazardous to my health ", get out of
teaclung and get another job if you
can . You won't find it easy to do that
my friend . Try living on $3 .35 an
hour and get paid twtce a mnth and
raise three kids, buy a house and a
car and then see if you want to stop
teaching . School board , stop all their
benefits, stop being Mr . nice guy and
put a stop to these sitins and stnkes
every other year . l dare any teacher
to take ttus letter out on m y k1ds .
You wouldn '!like if I got mad'
Mrs . William Fink
244 Sycamore St.
Middlep ort , Otuo

Removing pickets
I have asked Meigs teachers to
withdraw their picket lines on electionday. They have told me they are
wtllmg to comply with my request .
The democratic process must be
allowed to function. Everybody
must ha ve an opportunity to vote.
There . are three polling sites
where pickets would have to be
removed · Middleport Elementary,
Pomery E lementary , and HarrL'IOnville Elementary.
AB a candidate for school board,
and as one concerned abo ut the
cnsis in our schools , I appreciate the
teachers willngness to do ttus . 1
know how conunitted they are to
their cause .
Robert F . Snowden

Who will survive~
Many people feel that the current
Meigs Local tea chers' strike has
evolved int o an
e ither-or
~ituation either
the superintendent -Board or the teac hers Will
s urvi ve and they ma y be right .
On Tuesday, October 16 , the first
day schools were offi cially cloS€d,
the s upenntendent mforrned me personally that any superintendent the
board hired would be much like tum,
would do the job the same way he
had , and even 1f he wer en't around
someone much like him would
replace tum, because of the situation
the Board finds itself m .
The situation" How did we get
here ? New teachers who were interv!Cwcd this swruner were asked
if they planred to jom the teachers'
associati on, and how they felt about
strikes and-or p1cket lines . 1Some
female tea cher-a pplicants were
eve n asked if they planned to marry
or have more cluldren.l
Pnor to the teachers' strike, " A
Stnke Plan for Principals" from the
s upenntendent's office was S€Cn in
one school office .
On September 23, the day of the
strike vote, an OAPSE representative was asked by the s upermtendent if they would be willing to
stay out stJ&lt; weeks for the tea chers and later added that teachers
would not be willing to stay out that
long for OAPSE '
At the end of two weeks , the
supenntendent corrumented to a
teacher on a picket line that the
teacher had lust $700, and asked 1f he
would sWI be there at $1400 1 four
weeks I and $2100 ls1x week.' I Was
this strike anticipated even its
length'
Principa ls were told to leU parents
that at the end of 3() days, ag• in. s i•
weeks of school, s tudents would be
fail ed One has to wonder .
One board member told me personally that these conste ot •1rikes
must be stopped once and for all ,
that the teachers have all the
" leverage" wtule the board has
none . Another board member told a
tea cher that farm aninnals mi.ISt often be " broken.. before the y are
good, useful arumals . Another
suggested that all teache r s be fired

Carmel News~
By the Day
Mr . and Mrs. Orvy Gainer of
Hebron , Otuo, and Mr . and Mrs. Ber nard Gamer of Barberton called
recently at the home of Mrs Dean
Brink er.
Mrs . William Perry and Mr . and
Mrs . Danny Perry and family , all of
Holland, Ohio, v1si ted recently with
Mrs . Mary Circl e .
Sheryl Leann Johnson spent Sun day w•th her grandparents, Mr . and
Mrs . Douglas J ohnson of Hacine
Mr and Mrs . Arthur Earl Johnso~
called at the Johnson home on Sun day e vening .
Mr . and Mrs . Arthur Orr of
Chester called at the home of Mr .
a nd Mrs . Hobert Lee on Sunda y afternoon
Mr . and Mrs. James Ci rcle of New
Have n. W. Va ., spent Sunday at the
home of Mary Circle
W1lliam Ca rel ton of Hac me calle d
at the home of Mr . and Mrs . Arthur
F.arl Johnson, Patrick and Sheryl
LeAnn and Betty Van Meter on
Friday evening .
Ma ry Ci rcle visited at the borne of
Mr. and Mrs. James Ci rcle of New
Haven r ecently .

'

as
seen
on

• No plumbmg needed

TV

White~s

00

CINCINNATI I AP 1 Rookie
defensive tackle James " Mike"
White has a ferocious love of football
Ulat Is even beginning U&gt; infect the
coaching staff.
·
" He's works as hard in practice as
anyooe l ever saw," sa1d Coach
Homer Rice of the roo kie from
Albany , Ga .. State College .

Transactions
Wednesday ' s Sports Transacttons
By The Associated P ress
BASEBALL
American League
MILWAUKEE BREWER S
Add
ed
Dav e L~ Point an d
Rene
Quinones, p1tcher~. Bill Foley and
S tf"~o~P Lake. ca l chers Kev in Ba ss
and Bi lt vo se .... eren s, out11e lders , and
Mike H ende r son , in fi elder
National league
MONTREAL EXPO S
Renewed
a working agreement with Denver of
the Ame r ican Assocu~t . on Na med
Billy Gardner manager of Denve r .
N E W YORK ME T S
Traded
Richie Hebner . third baseman. t o
th e Detroit
T1ge-rs for
Jer rt
Mora les, o utf ielde r . ano Ph1l Man
bkowsk.1 , 1nf ,el de r
FOOTBALL
Nattonal Football Luqu e
DENVER BRONC 'l~
S1gned
George AT k inson . safety Wi1 1ved K •l
Lathrop , defens•"e end
DETROIT LIO N S
S1gned John
Arnold ,
w1de
r ece•vcr
Placed
Lu ther Blue . wide rf" ce•ver . on the
injured reserve list.
LOS ANGELES RAMS - SIQned
Rlckv Odom , corn erba ck. R e leased
Ivory Sully . ru nn ing ba c k
MIAN. I DOLPHIN S
P l ac ed
N orm Bula iCh , lull b ac k, on th"' •n

BANQUET PLANNED
The Eastern Athletic Boosters
Mooday night made plans for the an nual fall sports banquet.
Circle's of Gallipolis will cater the
banquet wtuch will be held Nov . 19 at
the high school. Advance tic kets are
being sold at $4 each.
The boosters in other business
voted to purchaBe new unlformt for
the girls's varsity basketball team .
The next meeting will be on Nov . 5 at
7 · 30 p.m. at the tugh school.

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th e structure of ballclubs and tested
th e loyalty of fans .
' ·If good ballplayers Jump club&gt; , 11
will con fu se the fans ," he said .
Wagner sa id his post-seaoon talk
with Morgan was " kind of a sad
conversation " ~cause of Morgan 's
frustr ation after bemg si dllned w1th
naggmg in Junes and battlng .239 and
.2!i0 the last two yea rs.
" He feels he needs a fresh sta rt , ..
preferably w1Ul a West Coach team
near his home m Oakland, Wagner
said . " He had two tough years here .
It 's very tough to come down ...
when you do 11 out ln public in front
of 30,000 people ·
Wagner sa1d Morgan has the
apt1tude to manage in the major
leagues .
" I've told hun for years I though
he should manage, but he said he
doesn't ha ve the patience," Wagner
srud.

said defens1ve line coach Dick
Modzelewski .
" If we had 22 guy s like him who
love practice. you could do thmgs.
He's p1cked up the pass rush real
good . Whenever I take him out of the
lineup, he's muttering with a fine
choice of words . I like that ," said
Modrelewsi .
" Just to be in football was all I
wanted," said the 6-foot.,&gt;, 27~ound
native of Augli!ita , Ga.
"I had no choice, and really didn 't
care anyway, " who selected him the
National rootball League draft , he
said.
White started in place of Edwards
against Cleveland and last week 's
victory over the Philadelphia
Eagles.
"This defensive line can be darned
good . We were under a lot of
pressure earlier, and we were
playlng spotty . But we c an see us 1in
the films I getting better each week
We really should have won the
Kansa s City, Cleveland and Houston
games," he said .
White said he would play again for
a small college if he had to do it over
agaln

"Goin g to a small schoolln a way
it helps you and ln a way it hurts you
The small schools don 't have the PR
power . l know this , if you're a good
player, the pros will flnd you . If I
had to do it over agam, l wouldn't
change a thmg.
"When you 're drafted from a
small school . you appreciate it
more . You don 't get anything at a
small school. A lot of those guys who
went to big schools and were star s
are spoiled, " he said .

THISTLEDOWNS
NORTH RANDALL , Ohio I AP 1 Dangerous Dave. Wlth St eve
Gnbeheck •board, covered SIX
furl on gs ln 1 12 Wednesday t o wln
th e featured e ighth ra ce at
Th 1stledown and pay $18.80, $8 and
$HO .
Native Highness was second and
returned $5 and $3, while Gravaman
paid $2 80 Ul show.
A crowd of 3. 802 bet $.)1)1,576

Browns glad Hill
came back again
BEREA, Otuo I AP I - The injury
Ul runnmg ba ck Greg Pruitt is
making the Cleve land Browns
happier than ever that they got
Calvin Hill out of "rellrement" last
year.
Coach Sam Rutigliano Sllld now
Ulat Hill knows the Browns' syst em ,
he's "playing even better than he did
last season."
" l e.pect him to get even better
now that he'll be getting more work
ln practice ," the coach said .
Hill, who was c ut by the
Wash ingtoo Redslons, was picked
up by the Browns beeause of injuries
ln the offensive backfield last year .
Offensive backfield coach J un
Garrett, who calls Hill "an amazing
athlete, " also notes improvement in
Ius running.
Garrett, who saw Hill m earlier
days when Ule back was a mainstay
of the Dallas offense, said Hill made
!lOme " fine moves" in Ule Browns'
31'.-20 victnry over the St. Lows
Cardinals. He said he saw !lOme
running reminiscent of the Hill style
" that gave me nightmares when I
was defensive coordinatnr with the
New York Giants ."
Garrett said the 31-year-&lt;&gt;ld Hill
plays with the real "of a junior high
school playe!' who has ;ust been

given hiS first uniform ."
And the veteran back has a knac k
for flnding open areas beyond th e
line of scrimmage that makes him
one of passer Brian Sipe's fa vonte
targets .
Hill , v;ho led aU Nati onal Football
Lea gue runnmg backs by catching
si• tuuchdo"n passes last year , says
he and Sipe "haw developed a good
rapport. "
Rutigliano said he plans to start
Hill Sunday against the Phliadelplua
Eagles and "play him a lot , givlng
him br eathers during the game by
letting Pat 1Moriarty 1 and Dino
1Hall ! take over for some series "
" We 'll pick our spots for th em.
Dino c an run w1de , and we can do
anythmg with Pat It 's not the most
desirable way to go, but we 're
fortunat e to hav e peopl e like
Moriarity and Hall - which proves
Ill at nobody ln thi.s game has all th e
an s wers, .. Rutigliano sa1d . T h e
latter was a reference Ul the fa ct
Ulat all three - Hill , Hall and
Moriarty - were signed as fre e
agents .
Meanwhile, Rutigliano said his
staff was continuing to look at mor e
free agents as the Browns seek a
roste r replacement for the injured
PrUitt

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Please Call in Advance For Appointm e nts

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1977 VOlARE
STATION WAGON

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DISPLAY.

m

i ured reserve list Signed Bob Tor
rey , running back.
NEW YO RK JET S - Placed Bob
Raba , tigh t end , and We~ l e.,. Walker ,
wide receiver. on th e i n ju r ed
reserve l1st Signed Roger Farmer ,
wide receiver
S T LOUIS CARDINALS - Cla•m
ed Mike Hannigan , linebac k er , o n
waivers Placed Boo Rozier , delen
s1 ve ena , on th e injured reserve li~l
COLLEGE
HOBART COL L EGE
Named
Joseph N Ab r aham ath l et1c d~re c

• Real

OF:\'OTED TO 111E

INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AkU
ROBERT HOEFLIOI
City F..dlt.or
Publil1hftldally ncepl S.lllrl:l.)' by Tht OhJ(I
Vall~y PubU.hJq Com~ny- MR.Irtmfdlli . llk' .,
111 Court St., Pomeroy , ObJo 4578. tkalhlf•p
Offlrr PboM
21$1. Edt&amp;orial Pbooc
9!Z.-tl57.
SHond dna poatacr paid at Pomrroy. O!Uo.
NaUoul..tverUJI.a&amp; ~ .. avt, Lalldoa
AlaO('bi t.ll, Uti Eu&lt;"lld Ave ., Ckonl.ud, Obkl
44115 .
Sut.crlptioa nlln : ~ilvered by rarrttr
when~ nalt.blr 10 CI'DUI P"" Wftk . fl)· Mtttor
, Route wbert C'llrrl~r aervlc!e DOt a vaU.ble, 0114!
moo.Ua, $3.11.
Tbt Dally Sr:oUMI, by malllD Ohio ud We~t
VIrginia, ollf" )'l'ar 133.M; Sll. mootlu 117.5t :
thrft' moetba UIUCI. Elnwherr 13A.M: 1h1
moolhr $%e.IJII : lhret moDlhJ 111.10.
"The AutH'iaW Pr~1 ill n&lt;"huh:rlt· rnUUf'd
to thC' usro for pc~blicatloe of all orws dbp.td!M
1·rrdllt•d t.u thr nrwspillJ)f'r and ab11 ttlt loul

White ha s been subblng for the
injured Eddie Edwards the last
three games and is making a name
for himS€1f .
" He's all over Ule field . He plays
Ule same way We 've got to find a
starting place for him in the future .
He 's too good," Rl ce said .
" He loves it . that 's the big thing ,"

• S tore 1n anv room

P lr.Jfl! 111to lf~nd~ul ~ ff!ol." fflf &lt;ll uo f}~ fl

cloS€ a deal at the World Series ..
but 11 's hard to get anybody serious
until after Ule draft. We have our
eyes on a couple of deals we would
like to make ."
Wagner added to speculation that
one or more frontline players may
be offe red in trade s, tunting that th e
centerfield job is open, that Dave
Collins could take Dan Driessen 's
job at first baS€ and that the Reds
are looking for a left-handed pit cher
Ul repla"" Norman.
He said the talent available in this
year 's re.;,ntry draft is not as
plentiful as other years when th e
Reds spumed Ute draft. Last yea r .
for the first time, the Reds made a
cmeerted effort to si~n two players
from the draft, Lee Lacy and
Tommy John , Wagner said .
Wagner said he still oppoS€d the
concept of Ute draft. that the draft
and climbing sa laries hav e changed

football love affects coaches

• Fam1ly stze capac•ly
• Use •t at any stnk

•• :r .,

....._.,.,;_

two offers by the club .
" I'm not adverse to givln~ up a
frontline player to get what we
want, " Wagner said " But you can 't
make deals if you talk too much
abo ut them . We made an e ffort t o

• Does 24 Lbs. '" 30 m1n.
'Rap1d SPIO dryer

Only 3 Days · Fri. · Sat. · Mon.

TIIF IM II ,\' SfNTTNEI .
1 lJ S~ IU.910 1

"'&gt;v

•It rolls on wheels

CIN CINNATI I AP I - Clncinnati
Reds president Dick Wagner is
Inching closer Ul committing the
National League ballclub to
personnel changes for ne&gt;t season
either through trades or the fre~
agent re.;,ntry draf t.
" We have a list of about seven
names we will go through very
carefull y· I would guess we would
draft a co uple of players," Wagner
Sllld Wednesday. " We would like to
see us have a little more of a veteran
bench than we had this year. "
At least tllree members of this
season 's
Western
Division
championship team will not be back .
Second baseman J oe Morgan,
p1tcher Fred Norman and outfielder
Paul Blair will enter the draft .
Wagner said Blair was not offered
a contract, tha t no se rious
negotiati ons wer e begun with
Morgan a nd that Norman r ej~cted

FALL SALEI
'100

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

swners and retailers alike. Con s umers may walt ln long lines for
deposit returns Storing returnables
for weeks at a time could cause shortage problems and health and insect
problems for cons ume rs and
retailer.; Such problems may force
retailers to limit the brands of
beverage they carry, causlng further inconvenience for conswners
and retailers .
' 41 Issue 1 addresses itself only to
litter ca used by throwaw ay
beverage containers, which accoWlt
for only 20% of the litter on our roadways . The massive amoWlts of
paper and pa ckagi ng account for
80% of our litter, and Issue 1 will
have no effect on this Utter.
151 The Otuo General Assembly i.s
taking steps to g1ve Otuo a comprehensi ve anti-litter law that will
dea l with the whole Utter problem.
House Bill 361. wluch has passed the
Otuo House, levies an annual tax on
the dollar value of sales of certa1n
" litter products" by manufacturers
111 Otuo. The proceeds of the tax
would be distnbuted for recycling ,
c lean-up and
co nservati on
progrBI'lS , wluch are not provided
for in Iss ue I.
.. I support House Bill 361 as an
• lternallve to Iss ue I , and I will
work for the passage of House Bill
:161." Representative James concluded . " Iss ue 1 will create more
problems than 1t solves, and t he
problems - like unemployme nt ,
l'&lt;.'onoiTllc loss , addjtional costs,
•1orage, and health problems - are
very "'nous . I believe that House
Bill 361 i.s the answer to Oluo's litter
problem and tha t Issue I is not the
answer HoUS€ B11l 361 is a comprehensive Utter bill that , unlik e
Iss ue l. deals wt th all forms of litter
and sets up recycl ing , clear-up and
conserva ti on proKrams . For aU
these r easons. I will vote "NO" on
Issue 1 "

steering wheel ,
tires

IM'W8 pubJi~ h• •d lll'rt'ID .

•

the night the strike vote was taken .
None of these attitudes tndicate a
willingness to bargain as much as a
determination to fight.
AB far back as the September 19
meeting in Columbus with a federa l
media tor, the teachers' representatives indicated a willingness to go
to binding arbitration wh1ch was
again mentioned at the public board
meeting on October 15. The superintendent-Board have not agreed to
this
step, saying
various
" ranufications" would have to be
considered . What 1s more important
than settlement'
Also , teachers ' acceptance of
Representative Ron James' offer to
serve as intermediary indicated a
willingness to let impartial tturd
parti es help settle the issues, but
again the Board-superintendent did
not agree to ttus step. Why ?
Perhaps settlement 1s not the goal
of the board and superintendent at
all; perhaps the goal is to break the
spirit and unity of the teachers of
this district in much the same way
as the spirit of our football team,
band, volleyball team . etc . has been
destroyed .
Dorothy J Oli ver
213 Union Ave.
Pomeroy, Otuo

COLUMBUS - On Tuesda y. Nov .
6, voters in Otuo wtll vote yes or no
on Issue l. the proposed contamer
deposit statu te sponsored by the
Otuo Alliance for Returnables
Issue 1 proposes a refundable lOt'
deposit on bee r ard soft drink cans
and bottles, and prolub1ts the
detachable pull can. Retwlers in
Ohio would be requin&gt;d to accept
returned containers marked "Ohw "
of brand and size sold by them. and
refund the deposit Bottle" and
distributors would then ha ve tu accept the returned contamers bottled
or distributed by them from the
retailer .
" I believe that most voters 1n my
district a re fami liar with the baSics
of Issue 1," Representative James
sa1d, "and many voters, like myself.
have already decided how the y will
vote . At this time , I would like to
reiterate the reasons why l inten d to
vote " NO" on Iss ue I "
Representativ e James listed Lhe
following fi ve reasons why he opposes Issue 1.
11) It is estimated that Issue 1, if
passed , will elurunate thousands of
skilled Jobs in the stee l. can and bot ·
tiing industries in Ohio. Over 15,000
beverage and container firms 1n
Otuo could be affected . The Ohio
AFL-CIO i.s predicting a $100 rnilwn
loss to the state's economy in los t
wages alone .
I2) Deposits on all beer and soft
drink cans and bottles will incr.,IS€
pr:ice.'i for those produel~ in addit1on
to the deposit i!S€lf . Ttus mcrljll"' i.s
due to mc reased handlill!! , gaSoline,
and transportation rosts by
distributors , and conversion by
manufacturers to the totally retur nable system . It is estimated that
Issue I, if passed, could ra1se the
price of a case of soft drink by $1.00.
in addition to the $2 .40 deposit
13) Issue 1, if pasS€d, wtll ca "-"' a
'"'' "
. '" inconvenience for con-

R";d;~·;;;p;~ied to be active
in draft, winter trades too

.,

•

Today's

Sports World
Yale dusts off the faded portrait of
Wal ter Camp and goes after its 700th
gridiron victory this weekend ,
rocklng the old cradle where the
sport was born .
College football - you've come a
long way, baby .
Loog hair has repla ced handlebar
mustaches Slic k , form-f itting
&gt;1retch apparel has succeeded Ule
slats-and-leatheriJadded gear of our
ancestors. No more high-laced shoes
or ribbed woolen stockings .
Lin emen are stunted if they doo 't
stand IK&gt; and weigh 275. Ballcarriers - th e IM . Hipps, Vagas
Fergusons, Billy Sims and Charles
Whites - run like the wind . Even
Ohio State has got around to
thro wing the ball , and the
Bucckeyes have a corker in rangy
soph Art Schlichter.
But the pro scouts won 't be at
Ithaca , NY .. where Cornell hosts
Yale Sa turd ay . They'll be at
Tuscaloosa, Austin , LA and
· Stillwater, Okla ., where the national
ran klngs will be contested.
Las t week 's score, including
Houston ov er Arkansas, was 31'.-9 ,
.809. Season record : 304-95, .762 .
Alabama 39, Mississipi St . 13 : The
Crimson Tide woo 't have to haul out
their heavy artillery .
Nebraska 45, Missouri 20 : The
Cornhuskers are chairmen of the
board of the 500-Yards-A-Week Club
Southern California 38, Ari1.ona 7:
Th e Trojans are so big and so good
their main enemy is overconfidence .
Houston 33, Texas Christian 13:
The Cougars don 't stun you with
their statistics - they ring your bell
with body shots.
Ohio St. 38, Illinois 14 : Accurate
appraisal of the Buckeyes somehow
got lost in the Wood y Hayes episode.
They 'r e potential No . l.

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Tommy Let Sayre, Halcie C.
Sayre to Brian D. Mani ckl , Kathleen
A. Mani cke, parcel , Orange .
George A. Molden, Bernice
Molden to Warren K. Molden , KAthy
S. Molden, 17 acTes , Rutland .
Rebecca Maynard to Stephen
Maynard , parcel, Rutland .
Roy C. Herrmann to Gail Herrman, eert. of trans ., Meigs.
74 E:asements. Tuppers Plains Olester Water D1stnct .

latonia results

F1orida St. 29 , Cincinnati 7: The
Seminole defensive unit is ooe of the
nation's best , and Bobby Butler is a
pass-llawklng whiz.
Oklahoma 35, Oklahoma St. 14 :
The Sooners are a better team Ulan
their nati onal ranking I No . 7)
indicates.
Texas 22, Texas Tech 6: As the
song says, the eyes of Texas are
upon you - their eyes and their
shoulder pads .
Arkansas 2!1, Rice 6: The Porkers
have enough resiliency to bounce
back from th e emotiooal Houston
eff&lt;rt.
Michigan 28, Wlscoosin 6: The last
breather for the Wolverines before
Uley hit double jeopardy - Purdue
and Ohio State .
Brigham Young 4Q , Colorado St.
14 : BYU keep• rolling aloog behind
the exploits of Marc Wilson .
Notre Dame 28, Navy 7: The
Fighting Irish have too much
muscle, but nothing can taint Ule
fine season of George WeLsh's
Middies .
Pittsburgh 18, Syracuse 15 : The
Lambert Trophy could be hanging
oo the line in this traditional beadknocker .
North Carolina St. :IS, South
Carolina 19 : The Gamecocks left too
much soul and sweat on Ute field
against Notre Dame.
The others :
EAST
Cornell 18, Yale 15 ; Penn St. 35,
Miami Fla . 14 ; Tulane 17, Bollton
College 10; Brown 23, Harvard 7;
Dartmouth 22, Colwnbia 7; Holy
Cross 25, Boston U. !lO; Princeton 19,
Penn 6; West Va. Tl , Virginia 20;
Colgate 22, Lafayette 20.
SOU'Ill
Mississippi 27 , Louisiana St. 23;
Tennessee 36, Rutgers 7; Auburn 'rl,
F1orida 10 ; Clemson 14, Wake Forest
10 ; Maryland 17, N. Carolina 15;
Georgia 31 , Virginia 14; Kentucky
20, Bowling Green 15 ; Memphis St .
26 , Vanderbilt 13; Villanova 20,
Richmond 13; Georgia Tech 14,
Duke 9; E . Carolina 28, Appalachian
14 ; S Mississippi 26, Louisville 13 .

MIDWEST
Indiana 21, Minnesota 18; Purdue
22, Iowa 13; Kansas 30, Kansas St.
25 , Michigan St . l9, Northwestern 7;
Ball St.~. E . Mictugan 6; Iowa St.
14, Colorado 7; C. Michigan 14,
Toledo7 ; Miami,O.l7, W. Michigan
7.
SOI.ITHWES'f

TexM A&amp;M 25, S. Methodist 17 ;
Tulsa 21 , Wichita St. 7.

FAR WEST
Army 19, Alf Force 15: Oregon St.
21, Washingtnn St. 14; Stanford 'rl
Arizona St. !lO; Washingtoo
CaWornia 25 ; Temple 32, Hawaii 13 ;
Utah 22. New Mexico !lO ; San Diego
St . 18, Wyoming 14 ; Utah St . 3(),
F'ullertoo 14.

FLORE"l CE , Ky
1AP 1
Showtime Vicki captured the $1 ,200
featured claiming pa ce mile
Wednesday night at Latonia and
paid $7, $3.1!0 and $2.20.
Carpenter Bob placed, paying $3
and $2 .20. and Widow 's Uberty was
third to pay $2.20.
The !1-1 double of Daily Flame and
Gra bber paid 118. Th e crowd of 895
bet $113 ,760.

32:

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J

4-The D&amp;i.ly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . I, 19'79

'

No changes in this week's

COLUMBUS,Uhio \AP) - For the
first tlme In history, the same 12
teams lead the Ohio High School
Athletic Assoctation 's computerized
regional football ratings for two
straight weeks .
"It's the first tlme as far as I
know," said Fred Dafler, associate
commissioner of the OH.SAA, which
conducts the ratings to determine its
state playoff berths . The playoffs
began in 1972.
The regional leaders after the last
regular season games automatically
qualify for the state semifinals.
Cincinnati
Moeller,
The
As8ociated Press' state poll leader,
has the highest ranking of any of the

..·-·.

·~

Class AAA regional leaders wtth
134 _66 in Region 4. Parma Padua
paces Region I with 132.00, Dover
Reg ion 3 with 130.92 and Wester vtlle
North Region 2 with 118 . ~0.
Fostoria, atop Region 6 with 130 .00
points , has th e highest tota l among
the Class AA leade r s . Medtn a
Highland in Region 5 has 1011 .50,
Hamilton Badin 90.12 tn Regton 8
and Canal FUlton Northwest 83 50 in
Region 7.
In Class A. Mogadore ts ille
overall leader with 93.50 and pal'CS
Region 9. Crooksville tops Regwn II
with 83.00, Covington Region 12 wiill
73 .25 and Tiffin Calvert Region 10
with 71.75

43 players head

free agent list
NEW YORK ( AP) - At least 43
major league players will be
available for claun at Friday's
baseball r~ntry draft - the free
agent auction that often creates
instant millionaires.
The list is headed by Nolan Ryan ,
flamNhrowing right-hander of the
California Angels, and includes a
host of familiar names .
Besides Ryan , some of the
pitchers ..no have declared for the
draft are Fred Norman of ille
Cincinnati Reds, AI Hrabosky of the
Kansas City Royals, Don Stanhouse
of the Baltinnore Orioles, Rick Wise
of the Cleveland Indians, Dave Goltz
of the Minnesota Twins, Lerrin
LaGrow of the Los Angeles Dodgers,
Rudy May of the Montreal Expos
and John Curtis of the San Francisco
Giants.
Other players up for grabs include
Bob Watson of the Boston Red Sox,
Tony Pere:z of the Montreal Expos,
Joe Morgan of the Cincinnati Reds,
Jorge Orta of the Chicago White Sox,

~~··. t ·· •••• ~~

Room
Service
Only a day for an extension phone.

.

5~

If you

run at the sound of a bell , maybe
it's time you looked into an extension
phone from GTE . For on ly 5c a day,

you con have a phone in any room in the
house .
Whether yuu 're in the living room, the
laundry room or even the bathroom, you
con stay righ t where you ore and let your

extension phone do all the work.
And all it takes to get room service is a
quick trip to your GTE Phone Mart. Just
pick out a phone , toke it home , put it in
your favorite room and relax.
Not only because you can stop running, but because you've got a phone that's
a. reliable a. the phone company.

f' red Patek of ille Kan sas l'it)
Royals and Jose Cruz of Ute Houston
Astros .
One of the more interesting free
agent declaration s came Wednesday
when Don Kessing er . former player ·
manager of ille Chicago White Sox.
who quit last summer in his first
year with the dual jobs, filed his
notice . Kessinger played in :xi games
last season, batting 200 in 110 at
bats.
Also declaring for the draft was
Jesus Alou , who served as Houston 's
first base eoach and a part-time
player last season . Alou batted .256
batting just 43 tim es.
Also on the list are Ed Kranepool
of the New York Mets, Willie Horton
of the Seattle Mariners, Milt May of
the White So•, Merv Rettcnmund of
the California Angels , Rowland
Office of the Atlanta Braves, Jay
Johnstone of the San Diego Padres,
Rennie Stennett of the Pittsburgh
Pirates and Greg Gross of ill e
Philadelphia Phillies.
In addition to ille 43 players who
have already declared thetr free

agent intentio ns , another doze n

•

16 West Wuhin,ton

Pro Hockev At A Glance

Athens

By The Associated Press
N1tion11 Hockey League
C•mpbell Conference
Patrick Division
)}
W . l. Pels . GF GA
~Hade lphi a
6 I I 1J 40 31
Atlanta
5 4 1 11 36 30

NY Islanders
NY Ranger s

4 3
4 4

2 10 30 25
1

9

41

3.5

3 6 1
7
Smythe Division
V ancouvt&gt;r
4 3 3 11

36

46

32

28

Washington

Consolidating domestic suboidlariea of the

Chicago

3 4 3

St. Louis

Winnipeg

RACINE HOME NATIONAL BANK

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lllc(

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Ill:

0

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:e

Ill

3

4 5 I

9 22

27

9

26

JJ

9 21

ll

l 5 4
6
Colorado
I I 2 4
Wales Conference
Buffa lo
Minnesota
Boston
Toronto
Quebec

National Bank Region Nwnber 4

33

47

23

35

Adams Division
6 l 2 14 37
6 2 I I 3 40
5 2 2 12 33
4

5

I

9

3I

3

5

1

7

24

Norris Division
Montreal
6 2 2
Los Angeles
5 3 2
P ittsburgh
4 4 1
Hartford
2 4 4
Detroit
2 5 2

Statement of Resources and Liabilities
Thousands
Cash and due from depository institutions . .... . .............................. 1,0&amp;1,000.00
U.S. Treasury securities .. ... .................. . ..................... ..... .. 1,301,000.00
Obligations of States and po!J tical
subdivisions in the United States ...... ......... . ..... . ....... ... .. , ......... 373,000.00
All other securities... . .. . .. . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . .. . .. .. . . . .. .. . . . . . . . . .. . . .. .. 8,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell ................................................. 700,000.00
Loans, Total (excluding urearned tncome 1...................... 8,~.000.00
Less : Allowance for posstble loan losses ....... . . . ................. 61 ,000.00
Loans, Net ........... . . . .. ... . . . ..... .... .. .. ...... ... ...... ...... . ..... 8,393,000.00
Bank premises , furniture a nd fLttures, and
· other assets representing bank premises ........................ ·...... .. .. 125,000.00
/
All other assets ... . ..... · · · . · .. · .. · · · · .. · .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ...... · · · · .. ·
1.000.00
TOTAL ASSETS. ............. . .. . ..... .. .. . ... ............. ... ... ......... 11,966,000.00 _ __

II)
Ill

4

Edmonton

in the state of Ohio, at the close of business on Sept. 30, 1979 published in response to call
made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12, United States Code, Section 161.
Charter nwnber 981~

3

14

12
9
8
6

41
50
3.5
24
29

26
27
25
34
30
32
46
JS
30
31

Wednesday 's Games
Pittsburgh 4 Col orado 2
Minnesota S, Detroit J
Hartford •. Toronto 2
Winni~g S, Quebec 2

Buffalo 0, Chicago 0, !tiel
New York Islanders 2, vancouver 2
(tie)

Thursday's Games
St . Louis .1t Philadelphia
Minnesota at Montreal
New York Rangers at Los Angeles
Friday's Games
Toronto 'w'S . Hartford at Spri ngfield,
Mass .
Quebec at At lanta
Washington at Winnipeg
New York Islanders at Edmonton
Boston at vancouver

Demand depostts of indtvidua ls.
prtnshps ., and corps .. , •. ; . ....... .. , ........ ., .... .. ....... .......... .. .. 2,6~.000.00
Time and savings depo.sits of'individuals .
prtnshps., and corps . ........ .... ....... .. . ............... ................ 7,523,000.00
Deposits of Uni ted States Govenunent ,, ... . ....... . ..... ... . .......... .. ...... 172,000.00
Nationill Baske1ball Association
Deposits of States and politica l
At A Glance
s ubdi visions in the United States . ................. .. ·.· .... .. · .. ···•··•· .. · 556,000.00
By The Associated Press
Certified and officers · checks .. . . ............ ...... . ....... ... . · · · · .. · .. · · .. · 82,000.00
Eastern Conference
Total Deposits , .............................. .. .... ..... ........ .. · .. · .... 10,953,000.00
Atlantic DiYision
W . L : Pet.
GB
Total demand deposits ....... ... , ............................. 3,2:19,000.00
Philadelphia
e
1
.889
Total time and savings deposits ................ . . . .. .. ........ . 7,714,000.00
Boston
7 2 .ne 1
TOTAL LIABn.ITIES (excluding s ubordinated notes and debentures I
10.953,00Q.OO - - -•
New York
5 5 .500 J l; l
a . No. shared authorized 5.000 Ipar value 1
Washington
3 5 .375 4 1 ;::~
New Jersey
2 I .222 6
b. No. shares outstanding 5,000 (par value J.. ............. ..... ............... 125,000.00
Centr11 Division
Surplus . . . . . . . . . . .. . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . .
. . . ..... .. . . .. ....... .... 12$,000.00
San Antonio
6 3 .661
Undivided profits and reserve for contingencies
Atlanta
6 5 .5-45 1
and other capital reserves. . .. . . .. . . .. . . . .. . .. . .. . . . . . . .. .. . .. .. . . . . . . . .. .. . . 0 0
-:
Indiana
S 6 ....S5 2
' Detroit
4 5 ......u 2
TOTALEQUTTYCAPITAL ............................... .. ........... . .. 1,01
.00
3 8 .273 4
' Cleveland
TOTALLIABIUTIESANDEQUITY CAPITAL ............ .......... ....... 11,
.00
Houston
2 7 .222 4
Amounts outstanding as of report date ;
WHtern Conference
•'.
Time certificates of deposit in denominations
.·'
Mldwett Division
Milwauke-e
9 1 900
of $100,000 or more.. . . .. . . .. . . • . . • .. .. .. .. . . .. . . .. .. .. . . . .. .. .. .. . .. . .. . .. 200,000.00
KansasCity
5 5 500 4
Average for 30 calendar days 1or calendar month I ending with report date :
Chicago
3 8 .273 6 1'1
Total deposits ........ . ....................... . ... . ................. . . .. . 10,827,000.00
Utah
1 7 .27.1 6 11:;!
Denver
2 6
200 7
Pacific Division
I, John T. Wolfe, President, of the above-named bank do
Portland
9 2 .818
hereby declare that this Report of Condi•ion is true and corLos Anoeles
7 3 . 700 11;~
rect to the best of my knowledge and belief .
Phoenhc:
7 4 .634 2
John T. Wolfe
Golden State
5 5 .500 3112
Seattle
.s 5 .SOO J l t~
San
Diego
4 I .364 5
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this statement of resources and
Wednesday 's G1mes
liabilities. We declare that it has been examined by us, and to the best ci our knowledge and
Atlanta 102, Philadelphia 91
belief is true and correct .
Boston 116, N~w Jersey 79
washington 114, Cleveland 105
Indiana 133, Houston 129, OT
Earl Cross
Milwaukee 110, Los Anoele5 106

players were eligible to enter Ute
draft and have up until midnight
Thursday to announce their
participatiOn . Therefore , the
number can increase from 43 bul
will not decrease before the draft 1s
he ld Friday morning at the Plaza
Hotel.
Under the rules of the basi c
agreement between organiZed
baseball and the MajCO" League
Players Assoctation . players
declaring for free agenc y can still
sign with their old clubs up until
three days before the draft. That
deadline was r eached Monday .
Shortstop Bucky Dent and flrst
baseman Jinn Spencer, who ~both
signed with the New York Yankees
that day , fell into \hat category .
Players eligible for the draft but still
undeclared were able to sign Wlth
their old clubs all week . the way
pitcher Lynn McGlothen of the
Olicago Cubs did .
With more than 39 players eligible
in the draft, each major league club
may sign up to three . unless tl loses
more than that nurnber.The New
York Yankees, for example, have
five players in the re-entry pool outfielder Roy White, first baseman
George Scott, pitchers Don Hood and
Jinn Kaat and utilityman Lenny
Randle .

5- TheDallySentmei, MiddlepurH'mnr roy , O . Thursday,Nov . J. J979

Milwaukee Bucks post ninth straight win

CLASSAAA
REGION 3 - l, Dover 130.92. 2,
Massillon 126.14. e, Boardman
!!7.50 4, Macednia Nordonta 111 .:/:i.
5, Wadsworth 105.00. 6, North Canton
Hoover 9'7 .00. 7, ZanesVIlle 96.05. 8,
Grensbu r g Green 96.00 . 9 ,
Youngstown Mooney 95.00. 10, Akron
Buchtel 88.92.
REGION 7 - I, Canal Fulton Northwest 83 .50 2. Iron! on 76.00 . 3,
Navarr e Fatrless 75.50. 4, Uniontown Lake 70.00. 5, Canton Central
catholic 66 .87. 6, Jackson 83.02. 7,
Johnstown 63.00 . 8, Martins Ferry
59.57 . 9, Steubenville 58.26. 10, Olal
Grove 57 66 .
REGION 8 - I. Hamilton Badin
00 .12. 2 Wheelersburg 00.39. 3,
Dayt o n Oakwood 76 . 28. 4,
Washington Court House Miami
Trace 73 .00 . 5, Dayton Jefferson
72 .00. 6, Cincinnati McNicholas
66.50. 7, Urbana 66 .00 . 8, Trenton
Edgewood 65 .92 . 9, Cincinnati
Mariemont 61.25. 10, Cincinnati Finneytown 61.00.
CLASS A
HEG lON II - I, Crooksville 83.00.
2, 'lewark Catholic 61.50 . 3, Bergholz
Springfteld 55 .00 . 4, Beverly Fort
Fry e ~· . oo ~ . Woodsfield 42.25. 6
, tie 1, Canal Winchester and Colwnbus Academy 42.00. 8, Crown City
Hannan Trace 40 . ~ . 9, Brilliant
Buckeye North 38.50. 10, Sugarcreek
Garaway 34 .00 .

By Tht• Assudatrd Pn·~s

enjoyed w1nnmg

" Th is

IS

what th e :\llA should be

RE-ELECT

FRED HOFFMAN
REPUBLICAN

MAYOR OF MIDDLEPORT
For Continued Efficient and Progressive
Village Government
For Continued Improvements in
Streets, Water, Sewage. Cemetery
and Recreaiion Facilities.

.. ,;.

1elha
TM

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday School attendance Oct. 21
was 37 . Preaching followed with
Rev . Richard Thomas using Mark
9.30-37 as scripture . Mrs . Bonnie
Thomas sang a special.
Vi siting Mr and Mrs. Wilber
Parker a recent Tuesday evening for
supper were Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Parker . Syracuse, and Mrs. Mildred
Collins of can ton .
Ma rion Parker called on Mr. and
Mrs. Wtlber Parker a recent
Tuesday afternoon.
The Alfred U M.W. has vanilla for
sale . Anyone interested may contact
Nina Robinson.
Mr . and Mrs . Oarence Henderson
Vlst ted Mr . and Mrs . Dave Williams
and Aaron a rennt Sunday evening
for supper .
The Alfred U M.W. met Oct. 16 at
Thelma Henderson ·s home with 10
member ~ present and one visitor .
The m embers answered roll call
with how many s hut-in and sick
people they vistted for the month .
Thelma Henderson and Nina Robinson gave a report from an annual
meet.lng the y attended tn Logan .
Genevieve Guthrie had the prayer
calendar . The program was on
Br oade nin~
Our Vision of
Wholeness . A Bible study was
presented by Janet Moore.
The next meeting will be Nov. 2ll at
the church at 7 : 4~ p .m . with potluck
for refreshments . The program will
be a Thanksgiving Special. We
welcome anyone who is i.nlerested
and concerned with God's work in
c hurch and corrununity to join us in
fellowship .
The Alfred Youth group met a
recent Sunday evening . For a
project the group will clean yards
and gutters Anyone wishing to have
this done may contact Ruth Brooks
or Thelma Henderson . We are glad
to see the youth in the area getting
together and learning and working
~oward thei r goals .

FOR BUSINESS,

LEARNING
AND

ENTERTAINMENT
llg 12"
VI d..,
Montlor

Cat Mitt
Data
IIKorder

Freeland S. Norris - Directors

Golden Slate 111 , Portland 105
Seattle 97, Denver 89

George J. Neigler

San Antonio 130, San Diego 123

Thursday 's Gillnes

53·1Cay
ProleiiiOnll
ICay-rd

---

C HA RGE IT
rM US T S TOR£S 1

Level I 4 K TRs-80
Model 1• System
as Shown Was $599

Level II 16K TRS-80
Model I' Was $988

$499$849
' LP•l'l ·e't'r&lt;.., !l" \t'rs•on ,11 UA ~IC IM1yu.1QC' Lr,tell•s a
ad ·,~anc ec

beg•n n,·r s ld' ' G . .. t llt' .... hde Level II s .'erv
Lellf' • rt n1l

Plf'f'ltH '. l

manua l a n&lt;J yarr11.·

.H• t"'lt" e -. p,lndeC A .r -syS!Pm s •n ciL., df'

C ilssPttl~

It's not too e arly t o s tart th1nk1 ng about
that spec1al Ch n stmas G1ft fo r your
fa m1ly th e TRS- 8 0 m 1croco mputer The
TR S-80 will take you 1n to the world of
tomo rr o w fo r less than a se t of encylopedl as a nd 11 can f ree you from rout1ne
tasks tt1 a t wast e so many valuable
hours V1s1t yo ur nearby Rad10 S ha ck
Com puter Cen ter o r Rad• o S ha c k s tore
for de tai lS

TRs-80 Modell Ready-to-Run Software
Personal Finance

Casino Games
Pack

8d l.lf'C , , , ~·L .r , r' ' 'L ..
t"I ~ • (Ho,

P .l '

Cr,1rs KP 11t..• '"-. lu t

!.t "

26-1601

16 &gt;\ LP• l

Budget
Management
bl t""•u :~JE'I•'~ l .t ll0L : o..,
w •P ' , ' 11 ( .1 s t• f• q ·t&gt;r &lt;&gt;t:~
1

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II

26 ·1603

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tr

26 ~

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ur

1995

26 -1901

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M ak r ·.,: ou
F•vf '

I

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lr,

1 fl C- r l l f ' ~p .l C t' T.r-.. ,
JK u• . el I
26·1805

1995

w •H1

1K

t l&lt;l l s

995

Flying Saucers
•ea r 11nw

Wll fl y ou r

ta ser cannon
L~l 01 II
. 26- 1905

-lK

995

~1 Meet

TAS-SO's Big Brother!
jl he New TRS-80 Model II

I

~liday

Delights In Cooking

ctory trained demonstrator will
our store Saturday. Nov . Jrd from I
4 . 2 Separate Demonstrations.

SYSTEMS FROM

n
-~$3450
l;r
. --------

1,

'

.......-

W eve added a b1gger . m o re
powerful " br o the r · to th e
TR S-80 family It" s TR S-80
Mode l II - a com pletel y
new m1 c rocomputer for
bUS IIl eSS appl iCat iOilS

Mi.xon and 2J from
center Kareern Abdul-Jabbar while
Car vin Johnson was held to 10
points
In other NBA games , tl wa s
Atlanta 101, Philadelphia 97 ; Boston
116, Ne w Jersey 79; Washington 114,
Cleveland 105 ; Indiana 133, Houston
129 in overtime ; Kansas Qty 12:1,
Utah lOll; Golden State Ill , Portland
105; Seattle 97, Denver 89 ; San
Antonio 130, San Diego 123.
Hawks 102, 76ers 97
John Drew l'ollected 23 pmnts and
Eddie Johnson scored four of his 18
points in the final 42 seconds to
power Atlanta past Philadelphia .
Julius Erving had 26 points and
Doug Collins 23 for the 76ers
With Philadelphia leading ~2. ille
game was delayed 31 rnlnutes by a
wet floor at the Ornm in Atlanta .
Moistur e from the hockey 1ce
underneath seeped up through ille
basketball boards and players were
shpping and falling .
The floor was mopped durtng
every tinneout .

Mo51

LANDOVER, Md . I API - The
injury.plagued Washington Bullets
may have lost Kevin Grevey for an
indefinite period, but they could
have found an able replacement in
Gus Bailey .
The well-travelled Bailey ca me in
with 10 minutes to play and the score
bed at 00.00 Wednesday night and
helped direct the Washington Bullets
to a 114-105 victory over Cleveland .
"Gus was the story tonight," said
Coach Dtck Motta . '' He ran ille
offense very, very well . He got the
ball to our shooters and played good
defense ."
With Bailey directing the attack.
Bobby Dandridge scored 14 of his

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

l uo._ jor 1rw s
\lfJil on 'f'Ltur

1 ,.,

y I •tll'l l I)( &gt;() rl

~ A QIIJISI("l~

1 -, , T A~Ol" CUR P Q il l,llf'N

P!iH f ::, V /'. Y V I'\ UY AT INDIVIDUAL S TO R ES

a fter a sec und-quartt-r t·o lh swn th ~t
left hlffi With a chJJJ frat·tun' plus

stretched hgament s 1n h1s kft elbo w.
He ts expected to be Sldeltned 3-4
weeks.
Bullets Ill. !"a v ali•·" 105
Wa.'"ihington gut :n putnL':&gt; from Hob
Dandridge w beat I kvdand and
keep th e Cavolrers \\Hrlt·~s m hvf'
ruad games lh1s se~!-lOn I )d n drrdg~.:

made 14 of 21 shot!l

li1

tht:' r·ontest cmd

scor ed 2.5 pomts m tht' '-JI 1cund half
Pa &lt;'e r s 133. ll&lt;K·kd ; 129
.Jne Has.st-tl "--:· ur t"fl 21 pornL'i.

lilCi udmg U ~r· ~ th ree-poult f1d d
goals, to help lndtan" h"nd Houston
its Sltth eo nsecut1v~ rtJad loss
Indian a , unOeat~ n m fl\ t" ~anw ~ i:il
home. rushed ba("k fruur a l~'11n t

fir&gt;Ht a If deficit wit I h&lt;'ip frun
Hassett Jnd Clemon JohTto;o n. The)
tied the gam e at 1Ht "'1th 1i seconds

game-!ngh :11 potnts tn the fina l
period and F.lvt.n Hayes contnbutt·d
27.
" Our offens£' 1s geetred tu get the
ball to the forwards . "nd 1f :hat"s
what the coach wants. tho t s whot
I'll try to do." said !la ilt· ~ . who was
signed as a free agent ~fter ploym~
in ille We51ern League last year
Cleveland , whi ch IS wmks.o:; in five._
attempt.s on til e road under new
coach Stan Albeck, led l\8-a6 u• U1e
open in 1:5 minute s of the f ou nh
quarter after fulndy Smith 's 111nc
points tn the thtrd quarter helped Ute
Cavalier s nw•r com e ~ 62-59 halftun(·
deficit

Sports briefs.
TENNIS
TOKYO I AP I - Top-seeded Bjorn
Borg ouUasted Bill Scanlon ~. 7-fJ,
6-1 and seco nd -seeded J immy
Coonors whipped Austria 's Peter
Feigl 6-3, ~ to advance to lite
quarte rfinals of th e $300,000 World
Super Tennis Tournament.
In other matches, fourth-seeded
Vitas Gerulaitis defeated T trn
Wilklson 6-3 , &amp;-1; Bob Lutz beat
Australian Kim Warwick 7-'&gt;. ~;
John
Sadri
eltminated
Checltoslovakia 's Ivan Lend! &amp;-I , 4-&lt;i ,
&amp;-2 ; Tim Gullikson ousted Marty
Riessen 6-1, 4-6 , 6-2 . Franc e's
Yannick Noah whipped Austra!Jan
Geoff Masters 6-1, &gt;Hi, 7.fJ and Vi Jar
Amritraj of India downed Britatn 's
Buster Mottram 6-3. 6-3.
COLOGNE, West Germany 1AP 1
- Stan Smiill ousted local favorit e
Karl MeiJer 6-3 , 7-&lt;i and Poland 's
Wojtek Fibak beat Jan Kodes of
Czechoslovakia &amp;-l , &gt;Hi, 6-3 in the
first round of the E uropean Open
Indoor Tennis Champtonshtps .
In other action, UU Pinner of West
Gennany beat Jorge Andrew of
Venezuela
6~3,
6-4 ;
Zjelko
f'ranulovic of Yugoslavia toppled
Steve Docherty of Australia 6-1 , 7-fJ
and
Heinz
Guenthardt
of
Switzerland took Stanislav Btrner of
Czechoslovakia 6-1, 6-4 .
PARIS I API - Top-seeded Harold
Solomon outlasted Bernard Fr1tz of
France 1-&lt;i, 7-fJ, 6-3 in the second
round of the Paris Open.
In other action . Vince van Patten
eluninated Andrew Jarret of Britam
6-1 , 3-6. 6-3 and Me:&lt;.ico 's fulul
Ramirez defeated Ove Bengtsson of
Sweden &gt;Hi. H . 6-2 .
DALLAS i AP 1 - Baltimure Co lts
owner Robert lrsay withdrew h1s
request for a franchLSe move before
NFL represe ntatives, saymg ," If i
can work it out, I want to stay in
Baltimore."
Irsay , who studied plans from the
state of Marylaod and Baltinnore to
refurbish Memoria l Stadiwn, said
the Colts will play there in 1980 .
Such cities as Jacksorville. F1a .
and Memphis, Tenn .. had been
mentioned as poasible sites for ille
Colt franchise .
BASKETBALL
WASHINGTON IAPI - The
Na tional Basketball Asso ciat ion
said the 1980 All-Star ~arn e will be

ldt trJ rq;(ulau un , then scored the
frr:-.1 s1x potnts of the overtime.
:&gt;111ke) .Joh rl!;() n had 27 points for
t.ht: Piict&gt;rs while Moses Malone had
26 f1r Houston .
Kings 125, Jazz 108
Otis Btrdson ~ amassed 31 points,
lA of them m the second half, to pace
Kansas f '1ty' s victory over Utah .
Adrian DanUe y had a game-high 32
po m ~s for the Jazz, which played
w1th uut Pete MaravlCh .
:vtar ~v u·h suffered spasms in his
l•11·k and neck earlier Wednesday
and fl ew back to Salt J.ake City .
Warrior s 111. Trail Blazers 105
Pun is Short erupted for a career·
h&gt;Kh :17 poi nts, including l7 in the
final six mmutes, in leadtng Golden
State past Portland . The Trail
Blm.er s. who suffered theetr second
nmSt:t ·utJve loss after nine victo ries,
Kut ~0 potn lS from M.auriee Lucas.
SuperSonics 97, Nuggets 89
Fr ed Hrown came off the bench,
~ ·ured 10 of h lS 19 (X)inl&lt;5 in the fourth
quorter . and helped Seattle
r·3pttcdJze on a Denver shooting
druu~ht to hdp ill e SuperSonics beat
il1c \uggt·Ls
Denver . led by DaV1d Thompson's
19 points, made )USI four of its 19
f1 eld goal attempts tn the final
pt·r~od

Spur s 130. C1ippers 123
A.ntomo wa'5 powered by
C l.l(}r~t' (~er vin, who collected 33
po ints. 1n JL'5 \1Ctor y over San Diego .
The Cl ipJl&lt;'rS. who tralled by 19
p01nts m the first half , rallied to
wiilltn 123-121 with 1: lo left before
1;ernn made a field goal and Larry
Kenon - who had a season-high 31
po1nt s - added a dunk shot to open a
siXi!O int San Anwnio lead .

S-Jn

• •

played Sund") . f"eb :l. "t the Capi tal
Cen tr e a ·s the fint tmw thl' game
has heen held m the Wastung(()n
area

,

WEEKEND SPECIAL
JUNIOR

JEANS
TAPERED LEG

WATCH
CAPS

R YOUR HOLIDAY SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE THE MIDDLEPORT
DEPARTMENT STORE WILL
.________.._._.E~N~F~R~ID~AYTILB~P-. M•.. . . . . . . .. .

SEE and
HEAR
A
TECHNICAL KNOCKOUT
ON SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3
TOM'S STEREO CENTER AND J.V.C.
WILL INTRODUCE THE HOTTEST NEW PRODUCTS IN THE
HI-Fl INDUSTRY.
Along with our product seminar, we will have
the following off ers:

(1) Prices will be reduced on selected items .

(2) We will clean , demagnetize and spec
check your present cassette deck FREE.
(3) Bring in your 1 oz. di s c washer solution
bottle and we will refill it for only $1.00- A
regular $2.25 value.

Local
howling

( 4) Every one who attends one o f our sessions
will receive a FREE "Technica l Knockout"
poster .

POMEROY LANES

SATURDAY NOVEMBER 3RD
AT

11em~

• , AaatQ 61\ack
-~ k,., "f":Oe81..,.S

("dtks lUi. \t'"h 49
CeJnr.: Maxwt:ll ~·u1 t:'rl 2J jJUIIlb
and l.arr y Btrd added 18 as llu stun
pulled w leads of 16-2 and ~ ~ and
went oo to blast ~ew .lt:rSt'y
'fue Nets lost forward Tun B.&lt;t ~~t' tt

Bailey leads Bullets" win

Ji!&gt; O it Villi abl e liT

Phoenix .11 Los Angeles

San AnTonio at seattle

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October 24. I J79

The biggest name in lillie computers:•

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a

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New York at Utah
Atlanta at l'hlladelphla
1 New Yor-11 Kansas City
Chicago et Doonver
~ Portt•nd at!' m Diego

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Kansas City 115, Utah 108

Pd . Pol Adv

.,.j.

.

---1•

·· These were two or the best teams
tn the league, playmg with all-&lt;Jut
Ullensi ty," Johnson co ntinued, " and
1t 's just enJoyable to play in a game
li ke that Jt would have been
enjoyable even if we lost, because
both te ams played so hard and so
well ."
Mllwaukee gel the little extra it
needed when Dave Meyers and Kent
Benson scored four points each in
the fin a 12'•, minute s to help snap the
!.akers' ftveiJame winntng streak.
Los Angeles rallied from an IJ .
pomt . third-{Juarter deficit to tie it
9&amp;-96 with 2 : ~0 rernatning before
Meyers and Benson went to work .
"This meant a lot to us because
tonight I think we proved to
everybody that we can play, "
Johnson said . " The Mtdwest
Division has been kind of laughed off
as being mediocre . Maybe from
second place down tt is, but the
Milwaukee Bucks sh owed they can
play with the !.akers, who are a
collection of all-stars ."
Los Angeles got 24 points from

abo ut every mght ," said th e Bucks'
Marqu es Johnson , who scored 2:1
po ints to help Milwaukee beat Los
Angeles 111).106 and record its ninUt
co nsec uti ve Na ti ona l Basketball
Assoc1aUon ltiun1ph .

It wait:~ ru~ht UH:' p!ayt&gt;r s t&gt;n joyed
pla ymg, lil&lt;· fan., en1cred watch tng
and the Mtlw"uk•·e Hucks reallr

ng .

WL
39 25
34 30
3J Jl
32 37
J() 34

Larry ' s Grocery
28 36
lnd Hioh Game - Jane 169 , I nd .
Hloh Series - Pat 451 . Team Hioh
Game - M c' ntyre 's Small Eng . Ser
v ice , 418 . Tl:'am H igh Series - WM
PO, ll :&gt;J

SESSIONS WILL BE AT 11 AM · 1 PM - 3 PM

DON'T MISS Ill
~om ·:.t

$/eluw. 8ud&amp;t.

' i l TlltRn \\TNt ' l

.

�.

....,....,,

7- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Ponieroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . I. 1979

s-5-b;;uy Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Nov. 1. 1979

Representatives from 183 churches to meet
Representatives from the 183 local
United Methodtst churches tn
Athiirts District ...mirusters and la v
persona_ will gather at First United
Methodist Chw-ch, Athens , Sunday
Nov. 4 for the 12th in a sertes of
"DIIyson the Distrtct. "
Fl'olil ~ : 30 to 9 p .m ., they wW
aft~ trorkshops , spectal tntere;1
dl&amp;:' ' 5 ~, consult With distnct
I ·6f1'11locut their responsibi lities
irt ~ church and jmn in a
cel.&amp;alson that evening.
Special attention will be focused
oo the newly-authorized West Ohio
Coni~ Latin America Hunger
t'IJJ•
through 1980 to

L'O nferenee·s 1380 local (.'hurr hes .

Ce nter of a ttention at Fi rst Cllurch
that day wtll be a 'Ttesta " where
vt.s tturs wilt snack in a So uth
American at.Jnu.sphere and browse
through a Resource Center where
they will ftnd materials on the
Hunger program a nd on their
special responsibilities in the loca l
church . A Cokesbw-y bookstore will
have books. pamphlets and audiovis ual materia ls in aJl areas of local
church work
The Rev . Wesley Clarke. Athens
distrt('t s upermtendent . and the Hcv.

r::ll~!er~;i·
.~_Brazil
~~~ projects
In
-~
, Bolivia,
Petll and Ecuador .
This ill the se&lt;.'Ond annual series of
· Days" sponsored by the West Ohto
United Methodist Conference Council !lll Ministries to bring leaderslup
skiBI'-resow-ces to leaders in the

FALL BAZAAR
SATURDAY
The Carpenter Baptist Church will
hold its faU s upper and bazaar
Saturday a t 6 p.m . The publi c " tn·
VI ted .

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS IN THE
TRISTATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
Mon ., Tues ., Wed ., Friday &amp; Sat.
B: 30 to 5 : 00 Thursday fill 12 Noon

EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT ONLy
Herman Grate
Mason,

·;...-·

w. Va .

ANNIVERSARY
SPECIAL
'l'wo's Company Dress Shop will
celebrate its 1st Anniversary

James K. Wagner , pastor of F1 rst
l'hurl'h , will be hosts to the " Day "
BIShop Dwight E Loder '" the
ep1scopall•ader of the Conference .
When all 14 days are held , more
than 7000 per sons are e&gt;q&gt;eeted to
have attended .

THUR.SDAY
MEMBERSHIP COMMITIEE o(
Mary Shrine 37 Thursday 2 p.m . at
Masonic Temple. AU members urg ed to attend .
YOUNG FARMERS mee ting ,
Southern Local Vo-Ag building, 8
p .m . Thursday; all interested
fanners are welcome .
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
I Jons Club to host zone advisory
meeting in Lionism relative to club
projects and activities for Dist. 1}-K
at Meigs Inn , 7 p.m . Thursday .
DON AND Tricia 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 . Photos dealing with workers
of yesteryear and fairs, dances, picnics, etc ., from era 192tl to 1960's
needed along with photo of Wildermuth Brewery, Barkoff Orange Co.
and Carleton College .
EVANGELINE CHAPTER 186,
Order of the Eastern Star, 7::10 p.m .
Thursday at the Middleport Masonic
Temple . Installation practice 2 p.m .
Sunday at the temple .
FRIDAY
. POMONA GRANGE, 8 p.m . Friday at the Rock Springs Grange hall
with Rock Springs members as
hosts .
MEIGS COUNTY Pamona Grange
46 Friday B p.m . at Rock Springs
Grange Hall .
MEIGS COUNTY REACT Team ,
7::10 p.m. Friday at Senior Citizens
Center in Pomeroy ; aU members
urged to attend .
SATIJRDAY
BOARD OF Columbus Townslup
Trustees, Saturday , 4 p.m. at the
township building, Gloria Hutton
clerk, reports .
·

' .··~.;pee. 1, 1979 by giving away a

"'~Ip

for two.

REGISTER NOW
A Choice of Las Vegas, Nevada, Miami Beach

'

Florida, or Lake Bridgeport, Telas will be given.
WEEKEND SPECIAL

SELECT GROUP LADIES

TOPS

SIZE 32-46

SALE
PRICES

JOIN IN THE CELEBRATION

Y!~' TWO'S

COMPANY
DRESS SHOP

.. _.,..,

MMEROY, OHIO

•' -;~

,.. .--'. r

...

POWWOW

WORKSHOP
Tri-State Area Council, Boy Scouts

of America, is holding a special
training workshop for all volunteer
adult.'l involved in the Cub Scout
program . This Cub Scout Pow Wow
is being held at the Johnson
Memorial United Methodist Chw-ch,
513 Tenth Street, Huntington,
November 10, 8:30 a.rn .-4 p.m . Cost
is $2 .00 per persvn.

ENJOY
FRESH FARM COOKING
RIGHT AT THE FARM.

.· .

,

CHICKEN DINNER
SLATED
The Mason Ftre Department
Auxiliary will hold a clucken dinner
on Saturday , Nov. 10. Dinner will be
served to the public starting at 4
p.m . at the fire station . The menu
consists of baked chicken , mashed
potatoes , gravy , green beans ,
noodles, slaw, coffee and punch . The
price is $2.00 for adults and $1.50 for
cluldren . Dessert will be extra .

'

Eat1ng good farm cook mg IS always great,
but ther e's somet h1ng spec1a l about eating
farm fres h food in a resta11rant th at's loc aterl
right at th e far m
At Bob Evan's Sausage Shop you not only
get de lt CIOUS farm size helpmgs of your favor ite farm d1shes. but yo u get tru e farm atmos phere and fn en.dly service to go w1th them .
So pack your k1d s 1n the ca r and drive on
over . We hope to see you soon.

WE DO IT RIGHT. OR WE DON'T DO

IT~·

(;c·rwration Hap
' IIIIAT PEOPLE KIDS' NEEU US
SAYS A SYMPATHETIC TEEN
RAP :
Many of the kids at school are
really trying to help the 17 boat people and other Vietnam and Cambodian refugee students enrolled here :
They're making a big effort to learn
our language and adjust in a new
country after some terrible ex periences .
But there 's one bunch that makes
fun of them, and a few come right
out and say they don't belong m
Amenca . I know a guy whose father
is on a committee to "Get the Gooks
Out " because i he claims) they 're
taking jobs away from U.S . workers
and costing us tax money . Naturally, this boy is a leader in baittng the
refugees .
The other day he "proved his
point " by showing me a newspaper
column that said most of the people
writing in were against bringing the
boat people to America. If it's really
true that the big majority feels this
way , all I ask is : " How can we be so
cruel!"- ROOM FOR ALL
DEARRFA :
Believe me , the majority of
Americans, just like the majority of
kids in your school want to help- or
at least accept - war refugees . Compassion is a tradition with us : we
haven't changed'
But the dissenting few - those who
feel threatened -are traditionally
more vocal. They're the letterwriters, the baiters, the groupjoiners. And their noise - amply
reported by the media- makes them
seem more numerous than they actually are.
The cruel crowd won l get far if
othlr students make a real effort to
befriend the refugees. How about
leading the movement, RF A ? HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE: About letters to
columns : We've found from experience that reader response on
controversial issues doesn 't always
"prove" majority opinion . Complainers (including doom-&lt;:ryers 1
wrtte because they're upset and
scared . Satisfied people don 't
bother .
Also, there arc pressure groups
I almost always " anti '' 1 who
organize letter-writing campaigns .
If they go nationwide, they can load
a column with false statistics .
Then too the tone of the original
letter often determines what type
answers it will receive . F or exa le.
yow- note , RF A will probably bring a
big sympathy vote for the boat people.
... And our votes will be among
them! -SUE
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I can certainly relate to "Pekey"
who wrote, "We all (guys and girls 1
slept together but we didn't 'sleep
together .' " My boyfriend lives on a
different campus and often stays
overnight at my apartment , but
nothing happens. My place is convenient for the gang to sack out in but
no orgies occur . Society, which considers itself "liberal " ;, actuaily
narrow -minded. I was brought up
very rigidly, and if my parents ever
found out I had "just slept" with a
fellow, they wouldn't believe my innocence. - HOBOKEN

Past matrons meet
Tuesday night at the Pomeroy
Masonic Temple, the past matrons
of Pomeroy Chapter, Order of the
Eastern Star, entertained the Past
Matrons Club of Evangeline
Chapter, Middleport.
Evangeline members attending
w~re Virginia Buchanana , Evelyn
Lewis, Marie Hawkins , Dorothy
Young , Grace French, Helen
Reynolds, Beulah Hayes , and
Rose mary Lyons. Pomeroy
members were Thelma Dill, Thelma
McMurray, Ella Smith, Marjorie
Crow , Lucille Swackhammer,
Evelyn Lanning , Marie Curd , and
Edna Schoenleb.
Mrs . Crow welcomed the guests
and read a poem entitled ''To An Old
Friend 's House ." Grace preceding
""rving was given by Mrs. Thelma
Dill . Creamed baked chicken, relish
trays and hot rolls were served from
a table decorated with fall flowers
and orange tapers. Halloween
napkins were used and pinons were
round felt circles with halloween
motifs .
Games were played with prizes
going to aU the guests .

Hruu ·nies !Jat ·e par/)'
The Rutland Brownie Troop 1293
held a Halloween party with
costume prizes being a warded to
Lori Black, the ugltest ; Amber
Eblin , the prettiest ; Jody Tillis funniest, and Tracy Leark , the ~oot
original.
Seventeen scouts attended the party with most COming in costume.
Games were played and
refreshments of pwnpkin face
cookies, brownies, chips and
koolaide being served. The girls
received sack treats to talie home . •
Assisting w;th the party were Pat
Hysell. Tina Leark, Sharon Darst ,
""d .Judy Eblin .

Golden anniversary
noted by open house
Mr a~d Mrs . Oyde Seragg. Route
t , Rutland . celebrated thetr 50th
wedding anniversary on Oct 7 wtth
an open house given by theIr
children .
The celebration took place at the
Masonic Hal Hallin Harrisonville .
Mr. and Mrs. Scragg we re mar ·
ned on Oct . 17, 1929 at Coal Fork . W.
Va . He was empl oyed for 35 years by
Owens-Illmois of Charles ton and
retired from that company tn 1960.
The Scraggs have lived the past 30
years in Rutland and ha ve been active on the Leading Creek Watershed .
The anniversary cake wa ~ - four
tiered and decorated with ye llow
roses . Fall fl owers and st lver
candelabra decorated the head
table .
Mrs. Scragg was attired in a blue
suit and white and nav y blouse, a
recreation of her wedding su it made
by her daughter, Helen.
Hostesses for the occasion were

B&amp;PW to select 'Outstanding Careerist '

the deaughterstn-Iaw with Mrs . Jack
Cnsp rel(tstcnng the guests. Mr .
Jack Cri sp pertonned Ube wedding
ceremony with the couple repeating
their marriage vows.
Those attending were their seven
du ldren a long with thetr families,
Barbara Corner , Big Flats, N. Y.;
Helen Brown, Columbia, S . C. ; John ,
Albany : Carol Norman, Orange City, Fla . : Bill , Parkersburg , W. VA .;
Lynn Swackhamuner, Shauck, Ohio ;
and David , Belpre .
Other out-of-town guests were Mr .
Scragg's
four sisters, Esther
Tay lor. Cleveland; Nettie Smith ,
Ravenswood . W. Va .; Ethel Stewart ,
Marmet. W. Va .; Mr. and Mrs .
F.verett Alderman, Fairmont, W.
Va .: and Mrs. Scra~g·s brother and
sister-In -la w. Mr . and Mrs . Joe
Stewa rt . Kyger .
Other r elatives and friends from
out of the county a ttending were Mr .
a nd Mrs Robby Brown, Texas ; Mr .
and Mrs . Jody Stevens and Sbannon,
U:&gt;l lllnbia. S. C.; Lana Brown, Columbia , S. C. . Ruby Scragg , Mary
Perry . Mr and Mrs Leonard Wilson
and Beth, Mr . and Mrs. Woodrow
Nonnan and Marttha, Ira Stewart,
Charle&lt;nn. W. Va .; Mrs. J . L.
Ratliff . Cleveland ; Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth Lowe, Hmckley; Merl e
Swackharnmer. Louise Frye and
Tanuny, Williamstown, W. Va : Mr .
and Mrs . Charles Stewart and fami ly. Albany. and C. B. Cash , Athens .

LAMAZE CHllJJBIRTH
CLASSES SLATED
ATHENS A series of Lamaze
Childbirth Preparation Classes.
sponsored by O'Bieness Memorial
Hospital, will begin on Sunday,
November 11. This c lass is for
couples whose expected date of
delivery is prior to January 20, 1980.
Class participants wil l learn
breathmg and r elaxation techniques
for first stage labor , effective expulsion technique for second stage
labor, physical and emotional aspects of the birth process , and bodyconditioning exercises to promote
comfort during pregnancy and postpartunn .
The fee for the series is $.1() To
pre-register for this series , or to
request a schedule of future classes,
contact Pamela Collier, 20 Woodside
Drive . Athens . Oh. 40701, or call 59:1-

some beyond the time period because homes are not readily available.
This young female is just a sweet, lovable thing and loves to play and
romp ... would be great for a family with a child or children or if you just
want company . We will hold her a few more days in hopes that the right
person comes along . If interested call the Meigs CoWJty Humane Society
at 99U260.

A Halloween party for approximately 30 residents at the Athens
Mental Health Center was held by
members of the Elects Circle of the
B. H. Sanborn Missionary Society of
the Middleport First Baptist Church .
Mrs . Freda Hood had the welcome
with Mrs . Sarah Dawn Owen giving
devotions entitled " Who Loves
You ." Mrs. Frances Smart played
for a sing-a-long .
Donuts and Kooi-Aid were served
along with cups of halloween candies . Gifts were presented to each
ooe . Others rl the circle attending
were Mrs. Eva Hartley, Mrs . Ber·

Casey Kasem
WMPO
SATURDAYS ·
8 til Noon
~--

participate in the program .
Terrie Walker is chairman of the
project which is a way of honoring
successful young business and professional women while intrcxlucing
them to the ideals and standards of

FRISKY SHEPHEIU).{;OIJ..IE NEEDS GOOD HOME FAST
Because it is awfully hard to properly describe some animals we keep

lla!lmNen )are IJC!.I

5049.
UMWBAZAAR
TIJESDAY
The Chester United MethodLst
Church will hold a bazaa r In the
church soc tal room, Tuesday, Nov .
6, from 9 a .m . to 7 p.m . Anyone
having items for the bazaar, have
them priced and at the church
before Monday . Nov . 5. For more lll·
fonnation call 985-3557 , 992-7714 , or
965-4201.

Again this year the Middleport
Business and Professiooal Women 's
Oub will select an "Outstanding
Young Careerist" with the selection
process to take place on Nov . I9.
This will be the club's fifth year to

nice Baker, Mrs . Lillian Demoskey ,
and Mrs. Katheryn Metzger.

R~GESALESLATED

A nmunage sale will be held at the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church on
Monday and Tuesay. Hours will be
from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m.

to speak on the legJslatlve plllU unn
of the National Federation . One
Young Careerist and an alternate
will be chosen by a panel of judges
on the basis ol the candidates personal data sheets , her oral presentation, and response to questions con-

the National Federation of Busine ss
and Professional Women .
The program also gives young
women the benefit of BPW 's experience and expertise through
social interaction and planed plann ed programs. From local club level
to the national convention . the
Young Careerist program is considered a rewarding partnerslup for
BPW members and young career
women alike .
The search for a young careerist
begill'l in a screening proc-ess at the
club level and ends in a cooperative
spirit of sharing at the national
level. To be eligible, a young woman
must be between the ages of 21 and
:10, must be or have been employed
in business or the professions for at
least with a year of full-time work
expreience ln her career area, must
be outstandingin scholastic work,
conununity service and or church
work , and must be living, working ,
training, or continuing her educatioo
in the area served by the local club.
While contestants are not required
to be a member of a BPW dub, they
must support the goals , objectives
and legislative platfonn of the National Federation.
The Young Careerist chosen by
the Middleport Club will advance to
district competition in Feb. 19al with
her experuJes to be paid by the local
club.
For the local screening process.
the candidates will be asked to give
a brief resume of their lives in
general' their careers, and their
future goals. Each will also be asked

proc-ess .
Local employees may nominate
an employee wh&lt;m they feel meets
the criteria . Candidates are encouraged to enter on their own.

,,@(!OiM• N'S cou eo•-;'!"M'N •s ci&gt;iiPiiNC: ;;·)

• •• $2000 OFF

s3oo OFF
DRESS SLACKS
Coupon Valid Nov . 2-l
GoOd at New York Clothing

~r "~.~~~:"
: :1:

_:I ::

Any Men's

Coupon Valid Nov . 2-3

.¥I.111

Eloi'5 1COUPO

.

... .. . .. '.

DENIM SUIT

TWO DAY SPECIAL
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

'10.00 OFF

Any Men's

·. ·.

Coupon Valid Nov . 1-3

11
:; ::

1._:..: ':,.

At ."':· ew v__ "'.k .C..I•.'.h..i"
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.. · · -.··.·.·.·.·.·.

.

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I

OfF

MEN'S HEAVYWEIGHT

THERMAL UNDERWEAR

Coupon Valid Nov. 2·3 at New York Clothing

At New York Clothing

·.·.

.. .

MEN 'S COUP

Announce birth
Mr . and Mrs. Jeffrey Jacobs of
Bossier City, La. are 81Ulouncing the
birth of their first child, a daughter,
Jennifer Dltelle. The infant was
born on Oct. 14 and weighed six
pounds, 13 ounces.
The paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs . Stew Jacobs af Ger·
many, now h&lt;me f..- a visit. Maternal grandpareo&amp;a 1n Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Guy, Oklahoma City,

$200

$300OFF

oFF

Any Men ' s or
Young Men's

DENIM LEVI'S

DRESS HAT

SWEATER SHIRT

coupon Valid Nov . 2-l
At New York Clothing

Coupon Valid Nov . 2·3
At New York Cloth•ng

Coupon Valid Nov . 2-l
At New York Clothing

.·.·.·· ..

Paternal ~-gandparenls are
Mr . and MIL D. M. Jacobs, Middleport and lin. Garnet Roush,
Gallipolill. 11aJ Roush, RAcine , is
a great-grtlll-Crandfather.

ANY MEN'jS

ANY MEN 'S
SWEATER OR

·,'

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE
KERM'S KORNER

126 E. MAIN

POMEROY, 0.

-- -- - -- - - - -

ALL BUNK AND TRUNDLE BEDS

·~ .-

51.00 Off Tops, 51.00 off Bottoms

Coupon Valid Nov . 2·3

.·.·..

.

$3000 OFF

1 ..,;~;r

AI New York Clothing

$1 ()()

..

slooo OFF
·.....

l
l

•·

ANY MEN'S

Okla .
RUMMAGE SALE
There will be a rummage sale at
the Pomeroy First Baptist Olurcb
on Nov . 5 and 6 in the church b&amp;Rment, 9 a.m. to3p.m.

Entries will be accepted until Nov.
15. Persons wishing to enter the program or to nominate a candidate
should contact Terrie Walker, 34719
White Hill Road, Rutland, phone
742-2377 or 992-7056 ; Wanda Eblin,
992-2272, or Linda Lambert, 992-7491.

cerning her career and her life goals
and her knowledge of the legislative

DINING ROOM
SUITES

EMPIRE'S
BIGGEST SALE

chin• b~ • Oul

••t.

t•. . • Chin" df'clc •

§

CONNIE- FOOTWORKS

EVER

ANY LADIES DRESS SHOE
AND HANDBAG CONBINATION

--oR·--

3 DAYS ONLY

SOFAS ·&amp;

Any Ladies' Dress Shoe Only
or Any Ladies' Handbag
'14.95 and up.

LIVING ROOM SUITES

LOVE SEATS

FRIDAY TIL 9 PM
SATURDAY TIL 9 PM

CHAPMAN SHOES
'Nell to Elberfelds In Porn eroy"

SUNDAY

Table

LAMPS

and
bulldhtg materials

\L;.;-&lt;j _;....,_._

1 PM

-6

PM

ALL 5 PIKES

SAVE UP TO 50% OR MORE
•APPLIANCES •BEDROOMS •DINING ROOMS

Bedrooms
BU :LDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US F11RST AND COMPARE OUR
MATeRIAL AT REASONABLE PRICES .

CASH &amp; CARRY
PRICES

PRICES .

QUALITY

WE
DELIVER

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORA liON
923 S. Jrd Ave.

Su!Mo in a wide •ari.ty at
otyles and finishes. FornDUI makers, odd pee..,
auch a• bedo, che111,
en.-.. mirron and nile
standi alta aYailable.

Middleport
992 -2709
992 ·6611
'
Open : 7:00105:00Mon . thru Fri.
7:00 to 3 : 00 Saturday

or

•LIVING ROOMS •OPEN STOCK •ETC.
EVERYTHING IN STOCK ON SALE!
--

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS DURING THIS SALE
- - - - -- ·

.,. RECLINERS

o
.

OCCASIONAL
TABLES

.

You M•Y Qu•llfy For ,

$1,000
INSTANT
CREDIT
If YOU HIVe
VISA. AMERIC.AN
EXPRESS
MASTER
CHARGE Credit Cards

or

IJ

ao H .CI.II4 Ave.
Ph•"• «6·140S
Getli,•li•

~......:~
"~, ___

�8--The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday, Nov. 1. lli'Tll

-

r-------~--~~~~~T~·-~#

Library

to\~._o'l.

,n

L
I
B

~\PD

,.

...

Letters

A

R
y

October 311-79
Jacq ueline E. Wagner
Mason County P ublic Librar y
Point Pleasant . West Vtrgi ru a 25550
Dear J aclue,
The Boanl of Trustees of the
Pomeroy and Middleport Li braries
met la s t wee k and voted
una nimous ly to g1ve all Mason County resi dents free bo r rowi n g
pri vileges at the Pomeroy and Mtddleport Llbranes . And , Si nce the
same card is also good on the bookmobile and at bookmobile headq uarter s, the bookmobile also allows
Mason County reside nL"i to borrow

materials fref' of charge
A:; many of tbe local people know,
tha t free ltbrary card ent1Ues the
holder to lA1rraw ret·ords . books,
magaZJ nes and pamphlet.s for four
weeks, movtes for a shorter t.une,
and a 16 rrun projeo:tor for a dHy or
tw o. And the latest 1tem wh1ch can
be borrowt•d i!-i an opaque proj ector,
whi ch is esP"Cially useful for anyone
tal lung to a ~roup who would like to
show something Wi thout passmg 1t
a round _ 1This projector was just
dona ted to u.s 0\ Mr. and Mrs
•
Howar d Nolan . 1 •
I thin k m ast folks know tha t their

. 6" , ...

,..,,.~· ~· ·

..'

library ca rd also allows them to ask
quesbons , which can usually be answered a t Ohio University if the y
can 't be answered here, and to
borrow books owned by other
li bra ries (through the interlibrary
loan pr ocess I. And the Board voted
at the last meeting to make thb
borrowing and the borrowing of
rese rved books even simpler by
ma iling the books . This mailing will
be an experiment at first because we
can 't tell how much it wW cost.
1 am looking forward to talking
with you on the Your Ubraries Sbow
Ofl WMPO Monday November 5th at
9:45a .m . If you come to the studio at
9:30. we 11 have a chance to c hat
briefl y before we go on the air .
Sincerely,
Ellen, Bell , U brarian
Servmg all Metgs County

The Un ive rsity of Michigan says
lilat nearly 62 percent of all entering
freshme n m 1978 had graduated
w1thm the wp 10 percent of their
tugh--school classes

WANDA L. EBLIN
- Cand idate For -

CLERK
SALISBURY TOWNSHIP
Election , November 6, 1979
E x penenced Accountant &amp; Tax Consulant
Pd Po l. Adv .

1977 CHEVY C60••••••••••••••••••••••••• 15695
lSO v Beng . , 15,000 lb . 2 S l-&gt;~?~ d . l•ke new . 82S t•rH , \08 " c ab to axle .

1977 CHEVY % T.. •••••••••••••••••••••• 13995
8 ' Fl~&gt;f'IS•df' . 350 £&gt;nc;;
,1nr1 lo w mt l e~

nu ro

P S. P B . sl1d tng R gl a ss. loc a l ow n er

1976 CHEVY 20' TEC
M tnt Hom P. citron r h""'"''" iH1 (1 b Ody. l es~ I han 25.000 m il es . ful l e qu 1p
ml•'ll

1976 CHEVY C60 ........................ 14895
eng •ne . l soeed

a. :~~l e . B25 I •re s . 102 " c ab to ax 1e

1

1976 MG MIDGET CONVERTIBLE ......... 2995
rape . AMFM , OaO, JOpl u~ MP G

1972 VW •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• s2295
F ol d oowr 1 ':&gt;t..'a! , 1c e DO)( , r lean 1nl e r lo r , !ab l e , goo d t 1res

1

1971 CHEVY Cl0 ......................... 1295
GoOd !1r es. A' dlum

I oper, J50 V 8, Ju l o. P

~,

P B . C he.,.enne c ab

Runs good

1976 CHEVELLE MALIBU CLASSIC 4 DR .. ~2295
V 8. aulomallr . pow Pr c,1 nnd tJra kf' 5. f M ior y (ll r , l+n1 gl d 55 . A M FM
.st er eo rad1 0, c lean 1n i N10r

1973 CHEV. IMPALA .............. .. .. .. ......... 1295
1

Cpe , atr . V 8. au t o . P S . P B . c l ean 1 owner

GREAT DEALS ON CARRY OVER
'79 CAPRICE, IMPALA, MONTE
CARLO, MALIBU CLASSIC AND
% - % - 2 WHEEL &amp; 4 WHEEL
DRIVE PICKUPS.

STOP IN .••Visit Our Service &amp; Parts Dept.

w

MODEL CARS--This 1914 Mercer Raceabout is among the several
model cars and trucks Ul Donald Salmons ' display at the Pomeroy Public
Library .

Hobbies bring happiness to lots of
people and thb fall residents have
been given the opportunity to see
demonstrations and displays o(
crafts and collections as a part of the
better living through libraries program at the Pomeroy Library .
Amy Hill demonstrated plastercraft, there was a program an handicrafts by the owners of the local
American Handicraft Shop , a
workshop on candy making by the
Carousel Confectionery Sboppe, an
amateur authors night, and a
display of model trucks and cars by
Donald Sahnons .
Salmons display features only a
few of the over 200 model cars and

Cancer Society
urges checkups
"Despite the large number of
deaths from cancer of the coloo and
rectum, the potential for saving
lives from the disease is greater
than for most cancers," declared
Sharon Michael , public information
chainnan of the Meigs County Cancer Society .
"More than 12,00J cases of the
disease are diagnosed each year and
men and women are all ected
equally,·· Michael said.
The colon, or large bowel, is a continuous tubular organ about five feet
long which absorbs fluid and expels
solid waste materials.
Most of the deaths from colorectal
cancer are avoidable, about three of
four patients could be saved by early
diagnosis and treatment. Thus it is
reconunended that aU adults over 40
have the "practo" eiJIITlinatian with
their periodic checkups.
The procto is a procedure that permits the doctor to see the lower portion of the rectum and colon with a
lighted tube . This is where most
colon and rectum cancers develop .
It is neither dangerous nor difficult
when performed by an experienced
physician .
Another test is the more recently
developed fiberoptic colonoscape
which permits the physician to view
the entire colon . In addition, a
screening procedure called the
guaiac test to detect blood in the
stool has been made more practical
and has added to the possibility of
detecting colorectal cancer when it
is m..rt curable.
" Remember the first line of defense against cancer is the regular
checkup, including a procto , if you
are aver 40," Michael said .
A free leaflet and ather inforr..auon is available on the seconu
floor of the Pomeroy Junior High at
the Meigs County Cancer office .

Catt le bruce llosis. a h1g hl )
conta g ious di sease, is us uall y
mtroduc ed mw a " clean" herd when
the owner buys a "banger " - a
brucellosis-rnfected anima I.

------.

~eason

tune-up.

KEEP THAT GREAT GM FEELING WITH GENUINE GM

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
-~

.

Makeup mars knits
DEAR POLLY - Please tell me
what is the best way to remove li quid IIldeup from double mit
polyester material? Thank you. MRS. N.M.
DEAR MRS. N.M. - I have had
good luck USJng a commercial spray
spot lifter - fallow directions an the
can. Sometimes when spots are very
fresh the suds from a solution of cold
water and a detergent for woolell!l
and fine washables works well, too.
Always test anything you l!se on
your particular faerie. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I have another
suggestion for Jeanne who has the
fagged spot on a table left by a hot
plate . Rub on toothpaste, leave it for
a few minutes and then rub it off.
This has worked for me an large
areas of fogged wax when a take-out
pizza has been set on a table as well
as on rings left from hot coffee cups.
- !UTA .
DEAR POLLY - Alice M. can
make coat hangers pretty enough
for gifts by crocheting ail around
wtre ones or knitting a strip 14 stitches wide and 64 ridges long, stick
the hook through the center of the
pieces and then sew the edges
around a wooden hanger. - E.C.W.
DEAR POLLY - When I buy
garlic I get the smelly part of the jab
aut of the way at one time. I pee1 it
all and then freeze it in a small jar.
When frozen the buds slice and chop
very easily and there is no odor .
When bell peppers are inexpensive
I buy a quantity and wash, cbop and
then freeze them on coolue sbeets
where they stay until well frozen and
then I transfer them to pjlastic begs
that lack . It Is so easy to reach in and
get the quantity needed for a recipe.

1

!I

1
I
1

l=lorist Since 1957

t'2

.

.T_~

FLORIST
PH. 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy

O p~n Evt&gt;11 111 gs

III 8 p.m.

eOhio Building Codes
eAFHA &amp; VA
See our lot model today .

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

I

1100E . Main
Pomeroy , Ohio
992-7034

I,
e
rr. I
~~~

COUPON

8 TRACK TAPES

Rock - Disco-Cou~t r~

29

Reg . 52 .99 Only

1

Limit 2 Per Coupon

&amp;ma~~hse

II
II
II
I

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

COUPON

CONTAC
99'

Phar -

Reg . 52 .24 Only

Limit 2 Per Coupon

&amp;ma~~hse

Good thru 11 · 5· 79

I·

COUPON

FILM

RUSSELL STOVER

CANDY

$1()9 11

Limit 2 Per Coupon
Swisher &amp; Lohse Phar mac

$ 44
I 1 Reg . 51.95 Only 1
II
Boz.

SLACKS
TOPS

I

t.,._ ,Y 0_!1!. F! '?.._l;.!?_!.i~--j

Limit 2 Per Coupon
.
5WIS h er &amp; L ohse Phar macy
Good thru 11 · 5-79

·--

s4 OO

STRENGTH CAPSULES 1 1
100
Reg . $5 . 160nly

II
11

SJZ9

Limit 2 Per Coupon
Swisher &amp; Lohse Phar macy
Good thru 11 · 5-79

~-~-~------

1 1I

.

OFF

N. 2nd

MEET SA11JRDAY
ColWIIbla Township Trustees will
meet at 4 p.m . Saturday at the Township Building.

CLEANING i

MEETS MONDAY

Tbe Letart Falls PTO will meet at
7: :II p.m. Monday at the school.

being given.
"In conclusion, It is again unfortunate and aaid that our teachers
resorted to such actloo."
Meantime, there was no action
forthcoming this morning from a
request filed by Pomeroy Attorney
Charles Knight that the Meigs County Probate Court take over the
operations ~ the Meigs Local Board
d Education.
Knight charged that the board Is
not carrying out ita functioo . He had
earlier asl&lt;ed the Meigs County
Board of Education to asswne the
duties of the Meigs Local Board. No
meeting ci the county board was
SC!Ieduled until Friday night 80
!Ciirght ffied hb request with the
Prollilte Court Wedllesday.

Get professional
results at a
fraction of the cost .

America 's No. 1
Home Carpet
Cjeaning ·
SYOtem

..--------1
SJOO ---FOR

PER HOUR

ONLY

(4-Hour Minimum 1

OUR NEW NAME IS

STAR SUPPLY CO.

RE-ELECT

CLARENCE ANDREWS
WRITE-IN CANDIDAT1 FOR
MAYOR OF POMEROY, OHIO
Just write my name and office on the back of your gray
ballot envelope.
Your write-in vote will be appreciated.
Pd . Pol. Adv.

FRIDAY NIGHT SPECIAL 5 TIL 10

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
NIGHT

~ p . mm

~toqp

CAROLYN'S

PH q·•2J 9jS
Po m e ,.oy •)

ER OF SECOND &amp; STATE
I

•Uniforms • Maternities

•Full Figure Fashions

I
I

L-------------J

EN1£R'I'AlHMEffT

DOOR PRIZE

1

RENT

I
I

SIZES 38-44

FLOWERS FOR THE FIRST 25 LADIES EACH DAY

F M;un

\'lHY
PAY
MORE:
FOR
CARPET

Coftee or Milk

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2 &amp; 3

0.

- - ·- ---- -- -

PETITE &amp; REGULAR
LENGTH SIZE 30-40

GRAND OPENING

Fn e n d ly Se nn ( e

Open
M·F 9:30til 5

ELECTION DINNER
An electioo day dinner and faD
bazaar will be heidi in the social
rooms ri. the Chester Metbodist
Church Tuesday , Nov. 6.
Dinner will be served from 11 a.m .
to 1 p.m . and the bazaar from 9 a .m .
to7p.m .

8 oz. New York
Steak
Baked Potato
Salad Ba1
Roll,
Tea,

JEANS, SKIRTS
AND SWEATERS IN
EXTRA SIZES.

macy
Good thru 11 · 5· 79

PRE ~C RIPrtONS

" In the event that the schools are
unable to operate within the coo fines
of the abovementlooed reductions , a
carefully detailed 'reduction in
force' pan should be developed by
the adminlBtratlon ."
Cafe B of Phase III deals with a
projected 11180 deficit of $1,108,333 . 7~
(a S282,1168.7li carryover from 1979) .
That sectloo of the contingency
plan reads as follows :
"This !!ize deficit, and thb is
!I'Obably a minimum eStimate if the

DRESSE~

·-------

8:
12 .

seU-&lt;~upporting .

1979 deficit is carried into 1930,
would require aU of the reductions
identified in Case A, plus serious
consideration of "the fallowing
alternatives :
- "Continued effll'ls should be
made to obtain emergency funding
throughout the 1980 year.
- "The establishment of an extracurricular activity charge w parents
based upoo student participation .
-" A freeze in hiring new certified
employees will have to be
coosidered a viable alternative.
-"Limited cootracts for both
certified and clusified employees
that eq&gt;lre in 1980 sbould ooly be
renewed on an emergency need
basis .
-"Transportatloo costs could be
reduced further by providing
transportatioo to students in grades
K-3, ONLY .
"The 1930 school year would be a
most dlHicuh and trying year for all
members of the school community if
Case B becomes a reality ," Dr.
Toothaker concluded.

Shrimp Cocktail

JOIN US FOR COFFEE &amp; COOKIES -

~;jl~:;"i~'
iii
IO :lOia

' (Continued from page 1 )
f/9 ,800; and transportation, ~25 , 000 .
" Furthermore ," the plan reads,
"the follolr!ng slepo! should be
coosidered : parents should pay for
wockbooks ; lab fees should be
charged foc areas such as shop,
biology , chemistry, etc.; significant
reduction of field trips should be
coo!!idered; long distance telephone
calls should be minimized ; and, the
food service fund should become

••

MENU

Limit 1 Per Coupon

1
.JI

Board requests cash.

Weekend At Meigs Inn

FULL FIGURE
FASHION DEPARTMENT

COUPON

.

m.ooo

HAS EXPANDED
AND ADDED A NEY

Phar -

Good thru 11 -5-79

11

C110· 12or C126 · 12
Reg.S1.760nly

Swisher

992·5759

the administrative building and of·
of Supt. David Gl eason with the
board of education . Later, Supt. .. fices and the establishment ol new
negotiations sessions.
Gleason in a statement charged that
" Action needed to carry out ~
the statement was removed without
rel!Oiutions
has already been starauthority from his personal file.
ted.
Yesterday
afternoon the
The teachers ' statement reads :
board's representatives filed the
'" The Board (will I not arbitrarily
complaint in Judge Bacoo 's court
or capriciously call for (the Superinfor the temporary restraining order
tendent's) dismissal and .. the
against the teachers .
Superintendent shall have the rlgbt
to service of written charges, notice
Yesterday afternoon and . evening
of hearing, and a fair bearing before
talks occurred between representhe Board.'
tatives of the association and the
"That language, unprecedents for
board.
an Ohio superintendent, is part of
'' These talks will be continuing but
Meigs Superintendent David
due to their delicate nature and the
Gleason 's contract with the scbool
preaent violable situation, we will
board. It is basicaUy the same
not be able diBcloae the time.
position teachers aslt be in their conlocation nor datea ~these talks .
tract.
In effect, Supt. Gleason
"II should be noted tllal the Ohlo
denies to teacbers that which he
Education
Association has
'negotiated' for hlmaeU .
establlahed headquarters at the
"In addition, Supt . Gleason ' Melp Inn. They have brought a
secured other provlsiCIIII worth exnlllllber of people from the state
ploring . With the right w written
staff into the conununity to help
reasons for termination, and a 'fair
write press releases, to help the
hearing' before the board, Supt.
teachers pr~mote their candidates
Gleason can have his own attorney
for the boai'd election and to do aU
present. Particularly unusual is the
kinds of other publicity and
fact that the board must provide at
propaganda chores.
least one full year's notice before
"It b again unfortunate and aad
any termination of his contract.
that our teachers can picket and sit
Otherwise. it is automaticaUy exin but must utilize the OEA people to
tended. On the other hand, should
resolve the problems they, in fact ,
Supt. Gleason want to reslgn,all he
created themselves.
has to provide is 'as much time as
" It has also been reported that
possible' for notice.
over flO copies of the superin"Supt Gleason's $27,000 salary is
tendent's contract were distributed
automatically increased whenever
to teachers at their meeting late
any raise is granted certified emWednesday afternoon.
ployes.
"Teachers occupying the superin"Teachers believe what's good for
tendent's office tool&lt; the contract
the
chief officer of Melg!
fr~m the superintendent's personal
Local Schools ought to be good
papers without any authority from
enough for its employes."
the superintendent or the board ~
Supt. Gleason thb morning said
educatioo or without even uaing the
his entire contract was dlltrlbuted w cooUilOn courtesy to notify the board
sorne50teachersWedne!day. Heof- - before reproducing and distributing
fered his contract for publication in
it in mass. It is felt from quest101111
its entirety to The Daily Sentinel.
that have been received from
AIJJo it was reported reliabily that
teachers and other coaununlty
negotiations or "talks" had tal&lt;en
members that teachers intend to use
place between the board and the
the contract to suggest that the
teachers yesterday. A member of
superintendent has the type o( fair
the teachers group said he knew
dismissal policy teachers are
nothing of such talks. However,
seel&lt;ing. As the contract shows,
Gleason today in his statement
boever. the superintendent is
acknowledged such talks had taken
provided exactly the same
place and said more are scheduled .
procedures for termlnatloo and
He said today :
renewal to which teachers are en"It has been stated several thnes
titled.
to us that the main reason teachers
"For discharge throughout the
are in the administrative building b
term of the contract, the superinto hinder our ability to conduct the
tendent 'shaD have the right to serday to day business ~ the scbool
vice of written charges, notice of
district and especially to hinder the
bearing, and a fair bearing before
reopening of schools.
the board'. Teachers have thb aame
"We have been patient. We have
procedure before dl8mbaal under
given the 11880Ciation plenty ci time ' the Ohio Revised Coda 3319.19.
to realize the error of its ways. Un"If the board intends not w renew
fortunately, they did not adhere to
the superintendent 's contract, one
our repeated messages and have foryeare notice must be given but no
ced the board of education to take
hearing and no written reasons are
different actioo.
provide . A teacher must also be
"Yesterday morning, the board of
given a written notice if his contract
b not w be renewed, and , in lideducation met in special session to
dlscu&amp;o the situation . During the
dillon, the board has presently ofspecial session, the board passed
fered a procedure providing for a
several resolutions which plot a
hearing with the superintendent, the
court of action. The board inteacher and a representative of the
structed the superintendent and its
!heber's choice, at which time oral
attorney to file a complaint
reasoos for the renewal will be
requesting John C. Bacon to sign a
given. The superintendent, by contemporary restraining onler against
tract, can be non..-enewel by the
the illegal picketing and stril!e acboard, with no reasons whatsoever
tions ol the Meigs LDcal Teachers
and ordering them not to remain
illegally in any buildings .
" The board also passed
resolutions concerning the opening
of scboob, the teacher occupancy ol

THE UNIFORM CENTER

1O's

........_____,.-------Swisher

Phone tn your prescription and we·u na~e
it ready when you arri~e. We maintain
family prescription records and we honor
most insurance-oaid ofescriptions

VILLAGE PHARMACY

-------.. ·--------·-.
I

'·!-( .. _' ' . .

992-2126

MODULAR
HOMES

- GLENDEANE
DEAR POLLY - Instead of lining
my dresser drawers with plain
paper I now spray tissue paper with
my favorite p!!rfume, let it dry overnight and then put it in t~ drawers .
This warb much better than sachet
and I can use more than one
fragr811Ce if I wish . My clothes have
~uch a nice scent and I do nat have to
wear as much perfume as I used to .
- SUSAN
Polly will sne dyou one of her signed thank -you newspaper coupon
clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her '
column .
Write
POLLY ' S
POINTERS in care of thi s

:

POMEROY

Convenient \ Service

I
1
I
Y
Good thru 11 "5 "79
II
I
I ~····------,
COUPON
II
COUPON
I
TYLENOL EXTRA I 1 T1 MEX
I

rv-~e;;~;-o;;;;;-;·-l

" It is further ordered that this or der shall expire at 12 midnight on the
15th day of November, 1979, unless
such time the order for good cause
shown is elrtended or unless the
defendants consent that it may be
extended far a longer period .
" It is further ordered that the
plaintiff 's appli cation far a
preliminary injunction be set down
on the 14th day aC November 1979 at
l p.m . o'clock in the Meigs' Co~ty
Common Pleas Court, Pomeroy .
" It is further ordered that copies
of this order and of plaintiff's complaint and plaintiff's motion for temporary restraining order and the af.
fidavit of the superintendent of
schools filed in support of aaid
motion, together with proper summons issued by the Clerk of this
Court, be inunedlately served by the
Sheriff of Meigs County, Ohio, upon
the defendants Meigs Local
Teachers Association , Bonnie
Fisher, David Bowen, Celia McCoy
Carolyn Smith, Donald Dixon, Jack
Slavin, Rita Slavin and Ed Bartels.
and that the Sheriff of Meigs County ,
Ohio, shall read thb order at all
locations indicated in the instructions filed herewith and that
copies of this order to be served on
all persons present at locations obtaining names and addressed of
those persons so served for the purpose of return endorsement."
The order was issued at 10 a .m .
thb momlng by Judge Bacoo.
The teachers association apparently not aware thb mornlng
that the U!lnporary restraining order had been signed, issued a
statement hitting upon the cootract

By
ALL AMERICAN
Meets

·~ . ,, ' ~~tt.f.i '

"Your Chevy Dealef"

,.;u

Polly Cramer

IS WHAT YOU'LL FINO
WHEN YOU SHOP
BAHR CLOTHIERS FOR
MEN &amp; WOMEN'S
WEARING APPAREL

MOTORS PARTS

through the directions on modeis to
give that personal touch.
Fire trucks fasc inate Salmans and
he has several in his collection and
plans to construct others . He is also
mterested in trucks and is hopeful rJ
coming up this winter with a logging
outfit to go with one of the truck3
now on displa y at the library .
Salmans
be changin g his
display from time to time , but is expecting to have mode ls far li brary
patrons to v1ew on displ ay for the
next few week.•

library .
" Relaxing " is how Salmons
describes his hobby . He says he
usually has a baH-dozen models
under construction at a Iinne . Mast of
his models are plastic with the
earliest belng a 1903 Oldsmobile .
The several hundred pieces are
glued together and then the models
are painted . Part of thb, according
to Salmons. must be dane with a
toothpick to fit into the crevi ces .
Salmons likes to make some varia tions in design as he progresses

POLLY·s POINTERS

EXCELLENT
SELECTION

GMQUAJJTY
SERVICE/PARTS

OONALDSALMONS describes hirn•eU as a "car nut. " He has a collection of over 200 model cars and trucks and will be featuring different
displays at the Ubrary .

truck3 which he has constructed
over the past 20 years. A teacher at
Southern High School, Salmons
describes himseU as a "car nut "
and says that besides his models, h~
has an extensive collection a( antique car postcards and pictures
which be has picked up at many of
the car shoWll he's attended in recent
years.
His collection on cars includes
some advertisements, many from
the World War II era, and several of
these are also an display at the

Make your appointment to get your c•r or truck winterizf'CI ancl

yelrly

(Continued from page 11
egress from and lngreM to any
building , facility , or structure
operated and maintained by the
plaintilf.
" 3. From picketing in, on and-or
adj~cent to any premises, building,
facilities or structure owned and
operated by the plaintilf.
"4. Frcm entering and remaining
in the offices ~ the plaintilf at any
building, facility, or structure owned
and operated by plaintiff without the
autbority of plaintiff.
"It b further ordered that Bonnie
Fisher, David Bowen, Celia McCoy
Carolyn Smith, Donald Dixon, Jack
Slavin, Rita Slavin and Ed Bartels
as officers, representativesand
members of said defendant , Meigs
Local Teachers Association, are ordered to issue a directive to the
members of their associa tl on
revol&lt;ing any directions, Instructions, encouragement or persuasion they have heretofore given
to their respective membership,
with reference
picl&lt;etlng against
plaintiff, and to limit all picket activities at any building, facility or
structure owned and operated by
plain till, and to vacate the occupation of any building owned by
plaintiff. Defendants are hereby
granted the right to picket by no
more than two pickets between the
hours ~ 4 p.m. and 7 a.m., Monday
through Friday and all day an Saturday and Sunday, at any building,
facility or structure owned and
It is
operated by plaintiff.
specifically ordered that no picket
activities be conducted during
school bours.

\.J _fo'-i

Y o ur Vot e and Influen ce Appre ciated

4 Sp , C B

Judge Bacon

Library patrons see numerous demonstrations

,., ,..~·

R

797

II-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , o., Thursday . Nov . l, 1979

GENERATIONS

\\\ \\\ 1.

4 PC. GROUP
FROM
WHEELERSBURG, OHIO

All LEGAL
BEVEIWiES SOLD

Vou must be 21 or eccom~Nnlecl by parents or legal guardian.
-

THE MEIGS INN
Pomeroy~ 0.

Phon•~ 992-3629

'

\

�10-The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 1, ljl79

•
Your Best Buys Are t,ound In
the Sentinel Classifieds
Notices

WANT AD
CHARGES

Lost and Found

Auctions

sen11ce

LOST L ARGE Sa 1nt Ber
nard dog abov e Edstern
H1gn sc noo1 . Rt 7 ar &lt;&gt;a
Ch"d ' ; pet 985 3313

B IG AUCTIO N every Wt&gt;d ,
' pm Hdrtford Commun1ty
(P nl~:&gt;r .
Hartt orct , WV , 4
miles
above Pomeroy
Mason Bridge

GU N S H OOI
EV ERY
SU ND AY I PM FAClORY
CHO K E O N LY RACINE
GUN CLUB

LOS T MA LE tom ca t , tab
by
Answers to Tommy
Has flea co l lar Reward
992 SJS4

NO
HUNTIN G ,
trespasstng WtTn no

LOS T
TWO handmade
baby quillS , one painted ,
o n~ embrOidered , bOth blue
and while Monday bel
ween 10 and 11 am 1n
Pomeroy on Ma1n Street
Would
app reci ate
th~i r
re turn Call 997 2066

MEI GS
CO UN I Y
HUMAN E SOC I E TY 99 2
6260
Pets a'w'ailable tor
adoptton

1~

W1..1nb or Ulll.l~or
Cash
l 'harge

I day
2 days
3 days
6 diiy:;

l 00

I~

150
I ll&gt;
J oo

190
2'~

Jn

Each word over the rrununwn
15 words lS 4 t~ nt.a !&gt;@r "' ord per
da y Ad.!! I"'Unlll~ other than l'Onsecutlve days Will bt- thar~td !tl
tht: I day rate
In ll'"lt!lllO(")' , C.11rd u( Thank..s
and Ob1 ttutry 6 l'en\:1 per word ,
S3.00 rrummwn Ca~ tn ad 1vance
Mobile Herne ules and Yllt"d
.ut.les are MCctpted only w1lh
ca!Jh w;lh order ~cent charge
for acb carrymg lkl• l'iwnber In
ear~ ol

The Sentlnd

Pubh.!.her rellf'rves ttw
nght to edit or !'eJect any ads
deemed
ob jectiOnal
Tht
~

Pubhsher wtU not be resp&lt;K"LSiblt
for more lNln one lJll·orrect m~r1HJfl

tntorrndlton

no
ex.

ce pt 10ns on my property
J uay M cG raw Se lf

GU N
SH00f
Ractne
Volun t eer
F trf'
Dept
Eve r y S atur d ~y 6 10 p m
At tn e tr butldtnQ•n Bashan
Fa c tory c hok e guns only
GUN SHOOT ev ery Sundav
12 00 Fa c tory chok e only
Corn Hollow Gll n Club .
Rutland Proceeds dona tea
t o Boy Scou t Troop 24q
ED BURKETT
Barber
Shop now open tull 11me 1n
M iddleport

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mundli)
:-.: oon on SaturdB .v

Tuesdllf

thru Fnday
pM
Uw ility bdurt' pubiiCHIIun
~

GET MARKET VALUE for
v our qold and silver co1 ns
wr t e o r
c ontact
Ea
Burk ett Borber Shop , M1d
dleport
CERAMIC CLASSES. Man
da ·y and Thur sd ay . 7 9 p m
Sfarl 1ng Thur sday , Oc t 25
Dr ehei ' S Ce ram ,cs 59 N
2nd . M1ddleport . OH 997

;soo

S ERV I NG

~I ' M

r rl da }' &lt;lftl·rnwn

FEDERAL
REVENUE SHARING
A coPY of 'he actua l use
report on general revenue
sharing and ant, recess1on
fiscal assistance funds and
supporting data tor the
fiscal year 10 1 78 to 9 30 79
is available at Courthouse
( locatiOn ) dunng the hours
of 1 4 p m tor the publi C 1n
spec l ion
Howar d E Frank
Auditor
I 61-4 992 2698
Oct 19 79
~ 11 ) \.Hc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIA~Y

Oc tober -zq , 1~79 , 1n
the Meigs Cou nty Probate
Court, case No
n846,
Walter
Heilman , 388 11
Heilman Road, Pomeroy ,
Ohio was appointed Ad
ministrator of the estate of
Albert Hei l man . deceased .
late ot R .D . 4, Wolle Pen
Road . Pomeroy . Oh io .
Robert E . Bu ck
Probat e Judge Clerk
l ll ) 1, 8,15,31C

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On October 79th , 1979, 1n
the Meigs County Probote
Court . Case No
71856.
Genevieve G Harvey , ]64
Eas t Str'l l e S1rt&gt;et , Afhf'n'l. .
Ohio 45701 was appointed
Executrix of the estate of
Edna S . Hart , deceased ,
late of Vi II age of Pomeroy .
Meigs County, Onio
Robert E Buck
Prob a te Judge Clerk ( 11 )
I , B. 15. )IC
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIAQ'I'
On October 29th , 1979, 1n
the Meigs Count y Probate
Court, Case No 22865 , Dan
ny R
Karr. 208 Town
Stree t,
Circ leville. Ohio
was
appointed
Ad
ministr ator of the estate of
Dennie
W
Karr . Jr .
deceased . late of R 0 .
Racine , Ohio
Robert E . Bu c k
Probate Judge Clerk
I ll ) I , B. 15 . Jtc

BREAKFA S T

at Ftve Potnts 5 30 am to
10

Sllndll)'

on

and

am

LOST IN Chester arecl
sma ll brown mate poodt-e
Wearing choker Call 985
J5q 7

!ie!I&gt; Wi!nt_ed
LP N FOR 3TO 11 or 11 to l
sh1ft Pinecrest Care Cen
ter Contact Judy Bar cus .
RN . Director of Nu s1ng
4407112
NEEDED NURSE S f or 11
7 shift
Pomeroy Hea lth
Care Center Conract Mr
Z1dian , Administrator r;92
66fJ6

For -SaiP.
---·

F IRST C HR ISTMAS Auc
t1on Sale F r1day , N ov 2. 6
pm Two Tru ckloads of t oy
and g ift Items as well as
m1sc at Oh10 R1ver Aut io n .
SR 7, sourn of Mtddteon .
OH
Howar d
Beasl e y .
owner au c t 1oneer

For Rent
- - -- -

sausage, baco n

SL UG MATCH at l taak.
WJiton Cl ub Groun ds near
ChP'51er evf:'ry Sunday until
deer
season
Ba c on ,
turkey s.
hams
Shells
available 1 00 p m

STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
FOUNTAIN SQUARE
COLUMBUS, OHIO
4J224
LEGAL NOTICE
COMPLETION OF
RECLAMATION
PERMIT NUMBER
B -1114
NAME . GRIMM
MINING COMPANY
ADDRESS , 1510
Waynesburg Dr . S.E .
Canton Ohio 44707
Final re-clamation on the
atorement1oned s trip mine
Perm 1t has been approved
b{ the Chief of the D ivision
o
Reclamation for 5 .1
acres located in seclion(s)
6, Orange Townsnip, Meigs
county
Re lease
of
$3, 120.00 has been ap
proved and any person
c ldiming to be depnved of
a r1ght or protect 1on af
f orded h1m by law may fi le
an
appeal
with
the
Secretary
of
th e
Re c lamation
Board of
Rev 1e'W , Mrs Wanda Str a t
fan . Rou te 1. Flush 1ng ,
Ohio 43977 by N ovember 18,
1979 W1th i n tnree 13 ) days
atfcr any appeal IS f i led
w ilh th(' Board of Rev1ew
th·e person fil1ng the appeal
must not1 f y Hw Chie f of the
DIVISIOn Of R ec lamatiOn
and !he Operator b·r cer
t lf,ed ma i l of the fil1ng of
sue h appeal

3 AND 4 RM furn is hed ap
ls Phone 992 5434

APPLE S
CIDER
HONEY
F11zpatr1Ck Or
chard . Stdf e Route 689
Phone W il kesville , 669
3785

TRAILER SPACE f or rent
tn Mid leport Phone 9&lt;J'l
34157

12x60 TWO BEDROOM
moOile home near Rac1ne .
992 565B
THRCE ROOM furnished
house
Adults only
99 2
2596

S MA L L
HOUSE
in
Harrisonvil le. across from
station . $115 per monTh
Call614 nB 4417

(l1 1 1. 8,')! c

ADO ONS &amp;
REMODELING
Gutter
work,
down
spouts , some concre te
work ,
wo.tks
and
drieways .
(FREE ESTIMATE)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

CHIP WOO D . Poles max
diameter 10 ' · on largest
end $17 per ton . Bundled
stab S10 per ton Del ivered
to 01'1io Palter Co , Rt 2,
Pomeroy 992 '1689

OLD FURNITURE . •ce
bO&gt;&lt;es, brass beds . 1ron
beds, desk s. et c , complete
househol ds
Wrlle M D
Miller . Rt 4. Pomeroy or
call992 776()
OLD COINS , pockf' t wt
ches , class r.ngs , we-dding
bdnrls . diam onds Gold or
silver . Call J A Wamsley ,
741 -'2331

WANTED
SAW logs
Payment upon de li very t o
our yard , 7 30 to 3 30 week
days . Blaney HardwOOds .
5R 33q, Barlow . OH 678
7980
ANTIQUES.
FUR
NITURE , glass , Ch1na .
anything See or c all Ruth
Gosney, antiques, 26 N .
7nd . Middleport . OH 997
3 161.
ANTIQUL: POCKET wal
ches Will ing to pey top
d o llar
Call
1 591 7973
eventngs .

WANTED · JUNK
Bat
ter 1es. radiator ... . motors ,
auto
trans
No Sunday
calls ~49 2563
WANT TO buy lot 1n Mid
dleporl Call992 351 1

LICENSED BROKER OR
LICENSED SALESPERSON
Got that bOxed in feeling , not happy with your com mission checks, being suppressed by your boss ,
want to make more money? Think there's got to be
a better way?
There is, and we would like to talk with you about it
Let us show you how the expertence , knowledge and
leadership of nearly a century can work for you let
us provide the tools, reputation and tratntng
necessary to succeed in both listing and se lling
Pay no franchise tee . We succeed or fail together .
Don ' t wait any longer . Let us show you the better
way .

STROUT REALTY, INC.
PLAZA TOWERS
SPRINGFIELD, MO . 65804

IN POMEROY 3
frame home . Convenient location .
room with fireplace , dining room, eat ·
ful l basement, new gas furna ce.

DOWNING-CHILDS
Rodney, Broker
Bill, Br. Mgr.
Phone 992-2342, E~e . 992 -2449
Middleport, 0.

APPLES
ROME Beaulr
apples at \4 per bu Best for
app le butter Ca l l 609 3785 .
FitLpatr i ck Or c hard . SR
689

HOOF HOL L OW , Engl is h
and western Sadd les and
hdfness
Horses
and
ponies Ruth Reeves 614
698 3290 .
Barding
and
R1ding Lessons and Horse
Care products
Western
ooots . Chi ldren·s S.15 .50
Adu lt s $29 00

RISING
STAR
Kennel
Boarding . Call 367 0292

HIL LCR EST KENNEL S
Boarding . al l breed s Clean
1ndoor outdoor
ta CII1t1eS
Also
AKC
registered
Dobermans 614 446 7795
VERY
REASONABLE
brittany Span1el. female , 21
mo old Can be reg1 o:. t ered
Phon e 992 5267

P O 1 A TOES , $8 per hun
d red J mi les west of Dar
w1n , Cecil roban . 1 R 1-45,
between Gol d Ridge and
C R 14
DELUX E GE wasl'1er and
dr'(er S150 pr Call 992
3073
ELECTR IC CLOCK. floor
lamp , tabl e lamp , Gossip
ben ch , Prin ce ss Eureka
sweeper
and
all
at
tachments and vaporizer
992 3430
ALL PRA CTICA LLY new
furn1ture
7 p1ece living
room suite w1th lamps ana
drapes \,500 . Gib!)On self
c 1ean1ng electric ra nge ,
S275 1977 Kawasa~i KZ400
delux e, \600 . 997 3560

LEBLANC
C LARINET
Exce ll ent con dit ,on $100
99')')41]

UKC REG treeing walker
pupp,es
3 female s.
7
males Have N1te ChCh
Griffins Ron. Nite Ch
blairs Banjo Babe , N ite e n
1973 ACHA World Ch
Beanblossom Bu c k. 1970
ACHA Worlo Ch Ni1e Ch .
Gann ·s Finisher and other
c hamp 1ons
1n
3
gener.:1tions F 1nley R1ver
br('('ding both sides SSO
e ilh~:..- .-.ex with reg paper s
H ave been wormed and
will hdve 4 way snots Call
742
14 or 997 3023 and
l enve name and number

n

PORCH
SALE
Starts
Wed . runs lilt all sold , Out
s1de
Chr 1stmas
decorr'lfions . brown velveT
p1ctures and m isc. 1Tems
Karl K loes . College St ,
Sy ra cuse, OH 992 3014

GAR AGE
CL EA RAN CE
Sa le Thurs , Nov 1 only
34285 Flatwood s Rd 992
733 I 9 5
BASEN.C: NT
SALE
Bll
H igh St 9 4 Nov 2 New
humidifier , bOoks . table
saw. p 1nball mac hine , baby
clo thes, clothes all SIZes .
small ele-c tric applian c es .
m1SC
items
Cr1rislmas
tree
INSIDE HOi.,SE sale . I
mile south of Middleport on
Rt . 7. Thurs , Nov 1st, lhru
Sat , Nov 3rd . 1 room of
new fabri c s from c loseout .
rock bottom pr1 c es 1 room
of used mise . 1nc lud i ng
use-d medt sea les. goOd
used clothing and m ore
Star ts at 9 a m

PATIO SALE . Fishing
rods , tools , dishes , rocking
chai r , coins, coin folders .
hovse plant s and more
items . Nov 2 and 3. 10 S.
930 Logan Sl ., Middleort ,
OH

EIGHT
FAMILY
Yard
Sale . At 870 South Jrd Ave .,
Middleport . Friday and
Saturday . 91il 3. Nov . 2 and

3.
LI\RGE GARAGE Sale ,
rr.ov€'d Saturdl1'f, Nov . l
Jean
Stou t 'S
residence ,
Syracuse Wat ch for siQn!.

REAL ESTATE
F NANCING
de
\ . _ 1er

LiOI in9
&amp;
s ~ . lmm . Loans .

tl

f' .~RI\

FINANCIAL
SEIUIClS, INC.

'-i01 s9 M ., W ., -= .
t •er m . by appointll'· ·nt .
17 S " CilrTtOre Rear)
&gt;-&gt;omt· ·oy . 0.

c,__ LL

992 7544

H. L Writesel
Roofing
N·ew, repair .
gutters and
down spouts.
Win.doy; cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Fr e!! Estimates
94Y -2H62 - 949 -2160
t1

)U P£R

TRAtLEA

For Sale
SEVEN WEEK old pigs ,
S20 ea Kennebec potatoes ,
~8 per 100 lbs . Straw Sl 75 a
bale . 985 4104 .

REGISTERED '• Arab
Ma re
and
Geld1ng
Registered Arab sta l lion , 8
years old Priced r1g h t for
qu1 c ~
sle
Esky
Hill ,
Pomer oy. OH
991 3f!8'i
even1 ngs

Heidquarters
Appliances
Sales &amp; Service

DELICIOU S APPLE but
te r \2 . 50 per quart Call
992 6095 or 9 49 2355
CLEARANCE SALE
Componen t systems in
matched sets of mix an d
match Speakers tor home
enterta1nmen t
ce nter s,
radios , .=tufomobites and
patios Combination AM
FM stereos and tape deck ,
cassette or 8 track, CB
base stations and mobile
un1ts
Portable AM FM
rad1os w 1th tape play~r and
re&lt;orde r 01g1 lal AM FM
cloc k rad1os and compact
AM FM pocket raoios . Par
table recorder Televis1on s
portable and conso le
mode l s . Regency scanner s
Antennas
and
mas1mg
Many optional accessorie s
and yeneral elec tron iC sup
pli es Fran ce TV and Elec
tronics . 39760 Bra d bury
Rd , M 1ddleporl , OH 457b0
997 7270
1971 VW VAN camper . e)(
ce tl enl
condi tion
New
engine and parts , good
mi leage, consider trade on
small car . Call 992 5236 af
te-r4 : 30p m

FOR SALE
1· XL Homelite
\60 .00
1-McCulloch
1125 .00
l · Remi Yardmaster
$75 .00
1 New Fuel 011 tur'nace
1 New Electric furnace
New General Electric
B&amp;W TV
OniV $99 .95

POMEROY
LANDMARK

~
.............

w. Carsey
Mgr .
Phone 992 ·21 81

Jack

SMALL FIVE room house.
aluminum siding, 1 acre
lot s, al l utilities . Rl 681,
Reedsville . $10,000 or best
offer 378 6347

LARGE
street
sewage
reliable
991 5786

LOT on dead (&gt;nd
with water and
Will fin ance to
coupl e at q P et
No r ea ltors

ROOFING
Ro .finy
guffer ~, and
do ·. ns~out.:. .
Fr ee
; st l atl's.
All
work
1ua , mtPcd . 20 years ex ·
er 1 11 ce
Call Athens,
oll 1 ct, Gerald Cl~rk
97 ...;957 or Tom Hosk•ns
!91 -114S.
9-28 1 mo Pd

.-......

992 .JJ2S
216 E. Stcond Stretot

REASONABLE - 12&lt;50
mob i le home on Jl)
a c re s of
land with
sto c k ed
f 1s h
pond .
Ask i ng Only $12 ,00
CDUNTR Y HOME - 2
ac re s of ldnd with a 3
bedroom home, bafn &amp;
Leading Cr water on
Rl 12-4
BU51NESS &amp; HOME Lock , Stock and fur
ni shings go with this
sale
Extra
tot tor
park1ng
A-FRAME SITES 22
acre s near Reedsville
on 681 W il l sell for only
$9 ,500
NEW LISTING ~ N ice
l aying 80 acres, tractor
t il lable
Good farm
house . bath , and lots of
bu 1ld 1ngs \80.000
RI~ER
FRONT
3
bedroom bnck ranch
home . 2 car garage,
dining, patio and 4 lots
$45,000
HUNTING LAND - 27
acres North ol Forked
Run Deer and other
wild game
PRIVATE - I bedroom
s'one home with bath ,
nat . gas F A . furnace
and over :t acres _ Now
$20.000
FAMILY
HOME
Good o lder 3 bedroom
home on 2 level acres on
Rt
124 Garage and
covered picnic area .
1 ACRE - .t bedroom
older home . bath , gas
furnace , n ice kit and
basement
Askino
$10,500 .
BUILDING LOTS
Eleven to sell in OOOd
locations .

.r--Housing ...
He~rk/ua.rters _

Cll 997

1977
CHEVY
VAN.
custo miz ed,
chrome
wheels, wide l 1res, good
snape _992 ·6288 or 992 3311
LOCAL
FEMA L E
OWNER 1977 Camaro LT
350 auto ..
A(. AM FM
stereo 8 track cruise co n ·
trot , lilt wheel, front and
rear spoiler, rally wheels ,
very tow mileage _ Blue
book . S5100 . Sale pri ce
\4700
Ingels Furniture.
997 2635 or after 5, lOA 882
7037
1971 PL YMOUlH SCAMP.
slant 6. 37 ,())() miles Kept
inside Looks a nd runs like
new Asking $2200 . J78 6776
1976 CHEV Ma l ibu , 4 door .
6 O't,nder, P S _, and P B .
auto , make good work Cdr
S1950 Call after 5, Ralph
Trussell . 949 2660
1976 L TD. good shape . 1 ex
tra
snow
11res ,
low
mileage
Take
over
payments 985 4185
au t o .

1977 CHE VETlE 99 2 7378

Giveaway
HALF GERMAN Shepherd
pup , femal e . 10 week s old .
very friendly 742 2300 .

Jack W . Carsey
Mgr .
Phone 992-2181
.

NEW LISTING - Mid
dleport, L story frame . 3
bedroms, NGF A heat .
lots crl capre ting and
paneling , new oarage,
must sell . $19,900
LIKE BRICK? - Here ' s
one!
Nice
1oc at 1on ,
built -in
kitchen .
3
bedrooms , large lot ,
porches .
JU S T
523 .500.00 .
WANT ACREAGE
Portland, 56 acres . ap
pro)C . 5 fillabl e . 15
pasture, balance tim
ber , partly fenced , ex
ce ltent . Just 573 ,900 .00
ACREAGE INTOWN Pomeroy, about 2 acres,
nice home, 3 bedrooms,
nice
kitchen .
part
basement,
garage ,
glassed In porch, fruit
trees . $25,000 .00
BUILDING SITES About 25 acres, some
lots
surveyed , water
and electric available,
adjacent to good sub·
division, $27 ,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT
Frame duptex, always
rented , private baths.
c orner lot, needs a tirtle
repair , make money
here . Sl0,900.00 .
LOCATED ON ST. RT .
124
Almost new
buildino, ..O'x60 '. corner
tot , lots of frontage , fuel
oil forced air furnace .
S55,000 .00 .
RECENTLY REMODE ·
LED - Lovely 2 story
frame ,
3
targe
bedrooms.
formal
· d i ning,
targe living
room
with fireplltce,
N .G . F .A . heat, lovely
for children . $3-4,500.00.
WHY PAY RENT, WE
HAVE PRICES AND
FINANCING AVAILA ·
BLE TO MOST ANY
POCKETBOOK . STOP
AND SEE US TODA'I'I!
REAL TORS
Henrv E . Cleland, SR
Res . 992 -2568
Henry E . Clel•nd, J R
Res. 992-4191
ASSOCIATES
Roger &amp; Dottit Turner
Res . 742 ·1·H4

A'-IOTHER RING~
.. , WAIT! 1HI5/MY
BE IT~

~OW

YOU HAVE PA&gt;;SE r T HE TE~T'~
OF CO URSE L SEE A:" ONCE ZAT
YOLI LOO K L IKE 2.E P HOTO 21=
MA~ ' 5ELLE FO LL !:: TT ~

AVAILABLE

BIT~~M

.. BUT ONE
MU5T Fii&lt;:ST
MAKE SUI(E!
YOU UI.JDER·

mo

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER I, 197
Hollywood
Squares
3:
N ew lywed Game 6 . Joker ' s W i ld
B. $ 100,000 Name That T une 10 .
N ashv ill e On The Road 13 ,
Country Roads 15 . All I n The
Famtly 17. MacNeil Lehrer
Report 20,33 .
8 00 B uc k Roger s 3, 15 ; Laverne &amp;
Sh1 rley 6 , 13 : Waltons 8 , 10 .
Evening at Sy mphony ?0; Mov ie
· ·cas.ablanca " 17; State We ' re In
33
B 30 Benson 6,13: Sports : Close Up

'

&gt; I _...

L.

7 30

• tnslt'lif ion
• Storm Doors
• Storm Windows
• Replacement
dows

BR i lTANY
SPANIEL.
female , friendly house dog ,
red and white , wormed and
snots
LOvPable
husky
shepherd, female , small,
husky type face , c he c~ed
out by vet. good health,
spayed, shots Kittens, kif
tens , all sizes, all snapes
German Shepherd. Iaroe
timid, male, shots , war
med . Humane Society , 992
6260
BEAUTIFUL HE AL TH'I'
kittens. 991 5019 .
BEAUT IFUL BORDER
cot1 1e shepherd,
black .
brown and white female ,
nave had att shots. Large
timid German shepherd,
male, brown and black ,
shots and wormed . 2 perky
She tland collie type black
and tan, 1 male, 1 female ,
wormed
and
shots
Humane Society . 992 6260 .

Mobile Homes- Sale
1972LYNN HAVEN Ux653
bedroom
1970 Vindale 12x6l w i th ex
pan do, 2 bedr .
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bdr .
1973 Skyline 12 x55 2
bedroc.m
1972 Bonanza 12xS2, '1 bedr
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME
SALES, Pl PLEASANl ,
w" 30467 5 4424 .

H IMSELF Cl..EA'-' ,
oo: CO- '&lt;'S =' .

.......,r___,

~ rJ v. drrange tn e CP(I ed l!:"ttc· ., ·
1r,w., the )u rpr1 se ans...,er n'i .;,,,r;
ge;.led by I l iP ii ;Jfhl' C3 '1 DQ r

!_j
A

Prtnl answer here

i=r X f r j ~i~-olj_·D.-.:-.:

... ·... :., ' •,

Jufl'"lOie "'

HO I()

I

1 1 J/ 1

t i l• Hr'

I _,I ;.

; .',

." .

l•n1nq ,•, II Ito• · ' •i' • ·
t'l~lO '/JII' ',

BORN

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

I.OSER

HMM ... A. FIVE&gt; LE.1Tfl&lt; 'MJI&lt;D
STARTif.l0 WITH 'e," ME-AI..IIIX:&gt; 1D
a&lt;.A.WL. &lt;? T~lTHIL.Y ..

BRIDGE

11-\t&gt;-.T''? IT,

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

"CR£fP~"

e

NORTH

Fe•turing :
men 's &amp;
women's styling, per ms .
Call for appt. or Wille in.

WEST

EAST

+JI0 832
Y K 74

+&lt;.i

.,.) 10Rfi 2

t&lt;,i8
K72

.Q l09)0

.,

+

0.

YQ

UNSEEN AUDIENCE

10191mo.
N WA h' t1U (k~ ~ wAS
!riAl' 01 D
Sf"l i\h ' lif l-' I HERE
[Y ! k' ( 10T
W~SN ' T SU PPQSfD 10
I C.&gt;n ; f 1! l Nt-Vf 1.('
SE NO W t INfSSES
riGGf k' 11-1' wA'(
LHl'
H!: Wf\'..• · , [1\ l(l l J
OUT IN ' 1!1 :.-o~JN -

l~APIN '

Hf DON' f

~'Ht

WILL HAUL timtls t one and
gravel. Al50 . ti me hauling
and spreadinQ Leo Morris
Trucking Phone 7-42 2455

11 '5

lllfH-? DS.' I '.
(._,Q1TA WARN S ARAH .. I
GO TT A Gf I 1( . II i ' 0\HtN

TH

BOS~

10

MRK E Wf\k' BUCI&lt;S
~1 1' '- HA1TY • .

AHEAD 01

I

tv1

tAKJ IO~H5

;· ~~~
I

+A 8fi

Vulnerable · Both
Dealer South

I

••

Wf'st

~ortb

t-.::ast

Pass
Pass

1+

Pass

49

Pas!'
Pass

Pax.'I

Pa s.".
Pass

3•
?t

\

;,)L

.

.

.I
Jf

'

Pas.'i

b1d ~ IX notrump and mad~· It
on the noSf'
If West he ld all thrc·t• dia -

grun1ed

had

:&lt;" 1..,31-oT OUT

been te rrible

He

contmued . " SIX dia monds IS cold . but 1f 1 held one

=l""\..''-' ~ 1 '\,,3
BuT IT:3

more trump you would have a
zero tnstead or a top ..
Th e pla y for s&lt;&gt;ven wa s
short a nd s1mple After Win ·

"Tl-1E ~ E .:5 ......_'"'Tk •-....;
-E~ ._-,. T I-l E

mng the opemng spade lead .
pla yt:&gt;d the aces of ('!Ub!'i
and diamond s. ruff~ a cluh
South

Al .l.F.Y

\
a
)
l,ttle r1ch
.
M1x t ures

--

----~

. '1

ACROSS

1N STOCK for immed1ate
delivery . various sizes of
pool kits Do it yourself or
le t us ins1atl t or you D
Bumgardner
Sales, Inc
992 572•

10 U.SSH
mland sea

I Tt bt-l&lt;in
bt-as l

II V1c of son~

2 Stimulate
J IJve 1t up
4 Stevedore s·
unton

star

ll Co nf 1dPnt1al
14 Proper

5 Skillful
6 Momm~ s

15 (;0111

a l)br .

16 EJward1an

A&amp;H Upholstering , across

from tne Texaco Station in
Syraucse 992 3743 o r 992
3752

. OH. Tl-&lt;E-\J

I'MYfYc:: :C

.... "1E Lt ..... ~LC

M I5U'J7:0r..:

A"A?.-1." :0\.-

ST007
·- ll..JTL .

~ ~~~

A"'l7!:.

5-"-A:&lt;E:/ .

--&lt;/)

B RAOFO~ 0, Auct1oneer ,
Com plete Service . Phone
949 2487 or 949 ·2000 racine .
Ohio. Crill Bradford

,\ SS\,

(Do you have a que siJOn to
rhe experts 7 Wrr te 'Ask th ..
Experr s . .. care o f tn1s newspa per lnd1v1dua1 quest1ons w111
be answtJred d accompan1ed
by stam{)ed. seff-addressed
envelopes The most tnreres t mg quest1ons wtll De used m
th1s column and w11/ rece1ve
copres of JACOBY MODERN J

41 Tall

12 Tt:mporary

--.-AK. I'\JG C'. ~C.

E\H : HI'HI \ ~ .

42 Outdo
DOWN

Jean --

S

1N E\I. "i'A I'U{

39 Verdt opt· ra
40 I l'e - had

Sca .'i cl:l n ot..·
J Actress .

~o-4~

lhf' o pen1n~ lead

by THOMAS JOSEPH
I South

1r-.. . FA::T

d1amond

sevf&gt;n

~ ..'61:4'

~

1

REYNOLD 'S ELECTRIC
M otors , rew i nd and repa i r
992· 2356, 561 Beech St .
Middleport , Ohio

thf'

would havf' hPt·n down &lt;:~m
number of tncks dependm~ oil

--~ ,T5 S ... IN '

6M I!.. E:'.

I,A.'&gt;UI.I'IF.

Pfltlll

thai he lho u!lht the bidding

:o..·~ l;,£['

AUTOMOBILE
IN
SURANCE
been
can
cel led?
Lost
your
operator 's l icense' Phone
992·21&lt;3

nJcknarn('
17 Jdpanese
volcano
18 Ottoman

B\JT:;: COULD ~AVE SWORN
11J1U S AI D 51LL WA S
PEAI76ET AGAINST
ANY DAUGHTER O"
~IS LIVING O N HE R
OWN.

1 Makmg
merry
~

Wtn one 's
heart
9Goad

off inal

Yesterday's Answf'r
II Etttm~

place
15 Blessed
spot
21 Slanl
22 Leg
s lang
24 lnc lmat1o n

25 Sneak y one

26 Ent1n'

27 An lmhan
lang tJi:I~L'

28 I ,,ops
:W Wee
32 Englis h
r1 ,·er

37 Tykf'.'. ~ i:Hllt.·
3ll Subside

19 Sweethe art
20 Jutn 111
22 Auth or
Vidal
23 Frault•in 's
une

.:'

24 lntt"rdlrt
25 Insed
2: Huug h·and -

tumbll· guy
l9 \IXIt '
:10 Stannw1 1

y

:11 ta rr•·r

ON YORE FEET. SNUFFY
IT 'S TIME FER A
LEETLE JOGG IN'

t1pp lPr

:13 Wh ull1
34 ln nn nllnb .
f urn1

35

fd\'Of
I

DAIRY DISPERSAL

plt'&lt;f..'.t-' ,

1n Span 1.&lt;&gt; l1 1

:16 l'umpet1 ·nt
:n! &lt;; cH' lJc

SATURDAY, NOV. 3, AT 1:00 P.M.

l&gt;AII.Y

THE OHIO VAllEY LIVESTOCK CO.

l'RYI'TOqt iOTE - Here's how

to work it:

A X Y D I. B A A X R
ia

Gallipoli~

-

PF.ANU'I'S

HERB CAPPER, OWNER
For more information phone Tommy Joe
Stewart, 446 · 7222- 446 -3941.

It seems that m at c h

West m &lt;1 manner that implied

,-

ry·

lrtfl(' below

tudd e rs would all b(' down
onf'~ The Slx -nutrump h1dders

biddin~ .·

Ntce

d

bidders seem to des p1 se m1n1'r
sun contracts and must p&lt;ms

and Alao Sontag

ING, AH' CIYE
U5 A STRAIGHT
ANSW£R ,
8£FORE ! ...

HOWERY AND MARTIN
E :-:cavating .
septi c
syst ems, dozer , backhoe
Rt . 143. Phone 1 161&lt;1 698
733 1 or 7&lt;2 2593

31 HOLSTEIN COWS
cow~ consisting of 10 first calf heifers.
Balance of cows 4 to 6 years old. Cows
will be bangs tested, pregnancy checked
and aged.

4+

Ry O.wald Jacoby

... 60 QUIT STALL-

trump .

aver agf'

monds

SE WING
MACHINE
Repa i rs.. .
ser'11ce .
all
makes
992 2284
T he
Fabri c Shop ,
Pomeroy
Authortzed Singer Sales
and Ser'lice We !.harpen
Scisso rs

S &amp; G Carpet Cleaning .
Steam
cleaned
Free
estimate
Reasonable
ra tes
Scotch guard
992
6309 or 74'1 2348

t.

Pa s~

l ast

rarded a c lub on th t' kmg of
spades. ruffed a hearT pwkPd
up West's quren o f trump s and
c la1med
Wf:' don 't blam{' Wf•q fqr
bemg d1sgruntled H e kn ew h('
had a bad score and knf'w tht:~t
ht&gt; had done notn 1ng to
d('se rv e ll . but we thtnk th&lt;ll
a ny patr wh1ch btd sevt•n did ·
monds hati tnd verv well
1nd eed We are not quite surf'
of how lhr b1ddmg s hould
have gone . but SeVf• n d1a
monds 1s a ftne &lt;:untran
Tht s hand wa s playf'd m th1 s
summer natJOna l 's Goldf'n
patrs and stx diamonds b1d

was .:.ctuall v

Jt

Openmg lrad +3

DOZER.
END
Loader ,
bru s h hog
Will
do
basements , ponds, brush ,
11mber . land
clea ring
Char les Butcner . 7.41·2940

EL WDOD
BOWER S
REPAIR
Sweepers.
toasters, irons, all small
appliances _ Lawn mower
Next to State Highway
Garage on Route 7, 985
JB25 .

South
It

PAINliNG
AND sand
blast 1ng Free estimates
Call 9'9 2686 .

EXCAVATI NG ,
do1er .
loader and backnoe work
dump trucks and lo boys
f or hire, witt haul tilt dirt ,
top soil, limestone and
gravel Call Bob or Roger
Jeffers. day phone 992 1089 .
nigl'1t phone 992 3525 or ~n
5232 ..

••

SOU Til

il'ITIF. ORPHAN A'lN!E

dummy 's

cashed the are o f hParts. d J!-. -

+AK 916 4
YA9 13
• 32
+ J

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

Business Services

With

II l

I WAS THE HERO 1
I SCORED THE
WINNING GOAL~

I WOULDN'T
\

SM THAT

IJ

.

t;

'fl&gt;'
.

JUST BECAUSE I i
BOUNCED OFFA WAITI&lt;:ES~
IN THE COF,-EE 5HOP ~
. -

l

- { &lt; .-

('IIYPTOQUIITES

ABC D

K II I. \1 C
:&gt;l(;CZQ

- j
~

I. 0 N G f E I . L 0 W

One l rt t&lt;&gt;r s1mpl y stBnds f &lt;..~ r another In 1hil' sampl e A is
u'ed f ·,r th r· thre e 1. \. X for tht• two rr:- . de Stngl t• !f'tl('f S.
apostrophes. the IPn t.:t h ,1 nd f orm.-.tion l)f thr \\ords are all
l1 tnts F. arh d :J) the t't •de lettf'r!! &lt;If(' ditren·nt

z

E
N H

FGHCBZI

OCM

HEK

MGCJ

DZOOZEJ

ZB

;

- -

. . . I.

--~~

J

K

GEPC
Sl.MOCQ

t,.

K C E M N.
! eslerday' s Cryptoqu~~E POWER TO TAX INVOLVES
TH:O: POWEll TO DESTROY.- JOHN MARSHALL
t"t KirtQ Feeturn SvncUut• . Inc

20, 33

10

oo- Kate

loves A Mystery J , 15.
70 20 6, 13. Barnaby Jones 8.10 :
N ews 70 ; Soundstage 33 .
10 30 - C , vilisafion 17 ; Ho c king
Va ll ey Bluegrass 20
11 00 - N~w s 1, 8, 10 , l3 , 1S . Dick
C avell 20.
Fall &amp; Rise ol
R eginald Perrin 33 .
11 Jo--Johnny Carson 3, 15 ; Police
Woman 6,13. Columbo 8; ABC
N ews.
33 .
Movie
" The
Professiona ls" 10. Movie " The
Public Enemy" 17
1'1 40 - Baretta
6,1J :
00 Tomorrow 3. News 15
Bana ce k 8: News l ?;
: 30-M ovoe ' Honeymoons Will Kill
You " 17
50- N ews 13. 3 3Q--Movie " War
ltal1an Style " 17 ; 5: 25--Love ,
Amer1 can !)tyle 17
FRIDAY , NOVEMBER 2, 1979
45-F arm Report 13; 5. 50--PTL
Cl ub 13 . 5 55- World at Large 17
. 6 00- 700 Cl u b 6 . PTL Club 15 .
Health Field 10.
6 30 Kidsworld 10 ; News 17 . 6 : 45Morning Report 3. 6 ·5()-Good
Morning, We 5 1 V1rg inia 13 ;
6 55- - News 13
DO-Today 3,15. Good Morning
America 6 , lJ ; Friday Morning 8 ;
B atman 10: Three Stooges -L ittle
Rascals 17 . 7 15--A .M Weather

1s---

Top point play performed

Mick's
Barber &amp;
Style Center
Introduces -

992 -2367

J rjr,

Thu.-.da) . Nov . I

Win·

Pom~roy ,

]3

9 ()(} Quincy 3. 15; Barney Mill er
6.13; Hawaii FiveO 8,10. Sneak
Previews 20.33
9 30 - So ap 6 .1 3. Camera Three

1Ar ' ' ""~ r&lt;; IOfTlC!HOw

Free Estimate

Main St .

1/HA-:- 7'&lt;:AC __ A
TAKES -o &lt;EEP

.___!

~--.1

STANO~

1.0 19 1 mo .

1972 DAlSUN FLAT bed
new tires 742 2256

w

I'&lt;,

~~c~94~~'- -

CA9'TA!N EASY

Vinyl &amp;
Aluminum Siding

A C,

~

I

\

"·

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

OHIO VALLI:.Y

1973 PINTO.
S600
3077

'f
. _ _ _ !_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ,

-~-----L _ .

HOCk

4 'i 1

SIX ROOMS and bath , on
Cherry St , Syracue, OH
992 5989

POMEROY
LANDMARK

GLASTRO N BOAT 15 mo
old Good condition Ha s
many ex tr as S3850 949

84 "
EARLY
American
sofa , 5 years old Good c on
dll ion S.SO 992 7891

OWNER WILL sell40acres
or
more
with
1978
Hollypark mobile home
l4x 70 w i th expa ndo , plus
14xJ6 fam i l y room at
!ached . fully
carpeted,
rura l waer , some pasture ,
fence . standing
timber ,
some walnut . su n deck
front and bac~ Located on
New Lima Rd Call James
Inge ls 614 74'1 2182 or 985
&lt;107

GOOSE

4 10 tf r

195• lRUCK, good con
d i tion , air compressor 196 5
Ford Mustang , 4 speed
992 5741

FINANCING VA FHA LO
ANS . LOW OR NO 'DOWN
PAYMENT
PURCHASE
OR
REFINANCE
IRELAND MORTGAGE.
7! E . STATE, ATHENS
614592 3051

•") , 'ld'V &lt;Ao Q tClS

'-'

t l4 U9 •'•s E"ll@'ninq\
1 Molts EJ ~ I ol Wdkt!\YIIIe

1975 WILDERNESS cam
p('r , 15ft . tong , new carpel.
air condi tion er', c lean . 991
3312 or 992 62B6

BUILDING LOS, 1 acre
each , Ledding Creek Rd ., 3
mites off Rl
7 Bypc ss
Signs Vitatoe

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

I "O~'l;l&lt;iATIN I? HUOM ."

11llO Montgom erY Rd
L.lnqwiiiP Oruo

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

1976 TR ANS AM
5637 , after 5 p .m

lc

t''' ;"

'l't:Se 1(),, • Ju"'lblf')
ea cn ~Qud'!" ·~.,. :JA'"

l!T9L?

us

TRAILER SALES

Auto Sales

l WO RADIAL snow tires
on r1ms . used l w1nter 9'92
2060

and

J"f'

rnu 1

Television
Viewing

by Henr1Arnold ana Botllee

r,

,, mi le off Rt . 7 b'1 ·pas\
on Sl. R t 114 toward
Rutland .

Camping Equipment

Real Estate for Sale

'&lt;~"l tJ f:'

'--'' '&gt;

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

A~.J,t:__':JL!}~ .

MONTGOMERY

Roger "Hysell
Garage

"i tf r

1954 TRUCK , good c on
d 1tion , a1r com p ressor 1965
Ford
Mu st ang , 4 spee-d
992 5741

HOTPOINT

\ ~ ; f)lf.\;l f ")'}

~ ·~

SPFAK.

MOVING SALE Nov 'land
3 9 6 Wicker chairs , ola
c hests . cranberry glasses.
tru ck !ires, flowers Many
i te ms from
att ic
Bob
Hayman , Bradbury

Yard Sale

SIX FAMILY Garage Sale .
Starting 10 a m . Nov 1 lhru
4. SR 143 on CR 11 Wal c h
for signs .

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

WOOD STOVES by Belter
N Bens. Glassview, Leyden
Hearth, Old Timer . F1re
vtew
Suburban
mobile
nome wood 1'1eaters, UL ap proved, and Suburban fur
nacemas t ers
Outdoor
Eq uipment Silles, Jet Rts
7 and 35 , Gallipolis , OH
Pnone 4.46 J670

7377

RACINE . D
949 -2748 or
99HJ14
111~P d)

HOUSE COAL . lump or
stoker , wd 1 deliver 7.4'1
21BJ

1979

_"V~~c~ • WE'vE A
AID kiTBLANKE T
1-Ar&lt;JO ·TH E f&lt;EAF&lt;
5 UUT.

Business Services

Pets for Sale

POODLE
G~OOMING
Judy Tay lor 61.4 367 7'120 .

Wanted to_Buy__

sa le
Will

EMERGE N CY
POWER
altern a tor s own the best
bur WIN POWER Call 513
786 2589

co mplete
Mus! be good, accurate
typist , shorthand re qune&lt;t , good hours , good
fnnge
benet1ts .
If
employed.
present
employer won ' t be con tacted without permis ·
s1on, 1nferv1ew wilt be
arranged . Write Box
406, Pomeroy , Ohio
4S1", giving complete
qualiticafions and in formation .

FIREWOOD FOR
N ow Taking orde rs
del1ver . 741 1056

COU NTRY MOBILE Home
Park , Route 33. north of
Pomeroy L Mge lots Call
99? 7479

B tSC UtTS and gravy ,

brea ld ast menu

WINTER
POTATOES
C W Proffil1 far m. Por
tland. OH \8 a hundred and
S5 a hundred

·-

S MALL
FURNISHED
MOBILE home
Utilities
pa 1d Coup le only 992 7479

Office Help Needed
By Local Pomeroy
Business

COAL.
L IMESlONE,
s.a nd . gravel , c al c ium·
chlor,de . tert il11er.
dog
food , and a ll types of sa lt
E ~~:eels, or S o~Jit Works , Inc ,
E Ma1n 5 1 , Pomeroy , 992
3891

~The
Dally &amp;ntmel . M1ddleport-Pomerov
0 . ' Thursday ' Nov . l '
UI\AI&gt; fHAI ·'{
J'

]3

30--Family Altair tO, 7 ss-Chuck
White Reports 10
8 oo-C apta 1n Kangaroo 8. 10 . Let'tve
tt to Beaver 17 . Ses ame St . 33.
8 30-- Romper Room 17.
9 00-Bob B raun 3. Big Valley 6 ;
One D ay At A T i me 10 . Phil
Donahue 13 , Lucy Show 17
9 30--Bob Newhart 8, Love of life
10 . Green A cres 17 .
10 00--Card Sharks 3. 15. Edge of
N igh I 6 . Beat the Clock B. 10;
Mornmq Maqaz1ne JJ ; Movie
" Up In Arms " 17
10 JO- Ho 1lywood Squueo;, 3,15.
$20 .000 Pyramid 13 . Andy
G r1ft1th 6 . Whew 8. 10
10 55- CBS News B. House Call 10 .
l l Cl0- H1gh Rollers 3, 15 . Laverne &amp;
Sh1rley 6 . 13 . Pri ce is Right 8.10 .
E lee Co 20
11 30 - Wheel of Fortune 3 , 15 ;
F ;,mily Feud 6 , 13 ; Sesame St
20.33 . 11 ss-News l l
12 00 N ewsc enter
3.
News
6,8. 10. 13: M 1ndreaders l5 ; Love
Amer1 cdn Sty le 17
· 1 Jo- Ryan ' s Hope 6 13 . Search for
Tomorrow 8. 10 Hea l th Field 15;
Mov1e k ubr· Gent ry · 17. Elec
Co JJ
()()-Days of Our L 1vesli S. All My
Children 6. 13 . You ng &amp; the
Rest l£'ss 8. 10
1 30 As The World Turns 8, 10;
7 oo-Ooctors 3. 15 One Life to
L 1ve6 .1 3
7 '15-- News 17 , 2 3D--Another World
3 I)
Gutd1ng
L 1qht
8. 10 ;
G1gg 1esnort Hote l 11
3 00-Genera l Hospital 6. 13 . I Love
Lucv 17. U psta i r s., Oowns1alrs
20
Jo- One Day At A Time 8. Joker 's
Wdd 10. Fl i nlstones 17 ; Foot
steps 33
4 00--Mis t er Cartoon 3, Password
Plu s 15 : Merv Griffin 6, Beverly
Hi l lbillies 8, Sesame St 20.33. ,
Si x Million Dollar Man 10, Real
M cCoys. 13; Specfreman 17 .
JO Bewtt ched
3.
Petticoal
Junction 8: Tom &amp; Jerry 13.
MervGriffin IS . Gilligan's ls _ T7
DO- I Dream of Jeannie 3. Sanford
&amp; Son 8, M is ter Rogers ' Neigh
borhood 20 . 33 . Mary Tyler
Moore 10. My Three Sons 17 .
5 30- Carol Burneft 3. News ' ;
Gomer Py le 6; Elec. Co . 20;
Mash 10 : Happv Days Again 13 ; I
Dream of Jeannie 17 ; Doctor
Who 33
6 00 -- New s 3.B. 10, 13, 15 , ABC News
6 . Zoom 20 , Carol Burnett 17;
Freestyle 33
6 3Q-- NBC New s 3. 15 , ABC New s 13;
Carol Burnell 6. CBS News B. 10;
Bob N ewhart 17 : Over Easy
20.33
Q0-3's A Crow d 3: Tic T.:iL uough
B: News 10 ; Newlywed Game 13 ;
Love Amer ican Style 15 ; Sanford
a. Son 17 ; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
30-Price is Right 3. Newlywed
Ga m e 6 ; Family Feud 10 ,
Joker's Wild 8; Pop Goes The
Country 13 : Pop Goes The
Country 15 ; All In The Family
17 , MacNeil -Lehrer Reporl20 ,33.
B 00-Shor ley 3, 15 ; Battle of lhe
Network Siars 6,13; lncred1ble
Hulk B, 10; NBA Basketball 17.
B 30-Wall Street Week 20.33.
9 00-Movie "The Other Side of the
Mountain . Part 2" 3, 15 ; Dukes of
Hazzard 8, 10; Great Container
War 20 .33.
10 00-Da llas B. 10 ; News 20; David
Susskind 33 .
I0 · 3Q--Up Close With 17; Lock Stock
&amp; Barrel 20.
11 00-News J.6.B.10.13. 15 ; Last of
the Wild 17 ; Dick Cavett 20;
Monty Pylhon ' s Flying Circus 33.
11 30 - Johnnv
Carson
3, 15;
Charlie 's Art&lt;lels 6 ; Movie "The

Eyes have It" 8; A B C " ' " " , _
•.
MOVIe "Scream &amp; Sctea
Again" 10 ; Movie "W.C. Field~ ·
Me" 13 ; Movie "Countdown" 17.
12 , 40 - FBI
6;
1:00-Midnlght
Special 3,15; Juke Box 8; Movie
" They Mystery of the WaM
Museum" 10; 1' 15--News 17.
' ' 2o--NBA Basketball 17; 1:30News 13; 2' 30--News 3.
3 , 50--Star Trek 17; '4 :50--Star Trek
17 .

�•

12-The DallySentlnei,MJddleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Nov . 1,1979

OSP recruitment
effort underway
Today, mark:; the kr c k~ff of
recruibnent efforts for Oluu State
Highway Patrol Troopers.
Lt. E .W. Wigglesworth . rom ·
mander of the Hrghway Patrol 's
Galla-Meigs Hwy . Patrol Post , announced the opening of recruibnent
for Patrol Academy classes to ~
conducted durmg 1900. He as ked al l
young men and women interested in
pursuing a career as a Troope,· to
contact their nearest patrol post for
further information .
" The position of Oluo State llrg hway Patrol Trooper offers applicants the chance of a challengmg
career ." U . Wigglesworth saru .
" Troopers are frequently called
upon to take charge of vanous . often
emergency situation~ . For ttus
reason they are thoroughly trarned
to handle peopl e and srtuati oll'
calm l y ,
efficient l y ,
and
dipl omatrcally " Applicants for th e
position of Trooper must meet the
folloWlllg qualifi cations : 21-35 year;
of age . a rrunimum height of 5'8"
rm easured in stockmg feet 1 with
body weight proportronal to herg ht ;
have a val id driver 's license : mlliit
have graduated from lugh school or
~ able to show satisfactory COIII pletion of the G.E. D or equivalent

Starting s alary for Troopers IS
$14,248 per year wrth maximum
potenlial . through yearly increases ,
of $18,428 annually. Benefits include
paid holida ys . vacation . and sick
leave, a comprehensi ve retirement
and pensron plan : group medical.
surgi cal . dental, vision, and life insurance programs
" The Ohw State Highway Patrol
needs slrll·ere , you~&lt;g people who are
mterested m developing a sotid,
secure future in law enforl·ement,"
Lt . Wigglesworth s a1d . "Men and
women who wrsh to apply for the
position of Trouper are asked to call
their local patrol post U!lmedia tely .
The Ga lha -Me1gs Hwy . Patrol
Post rs located at lhe State Highway
Department garage on U.S No 35
Calli1 . Wigglesworth al446-2433 for
further mfom~ation . The Highway
Patrol IS an equal opport wlily employer . any qualified resident of
Oluo may a pply

Ord rnance ro su p
pl('mf'nl th e Park nnd Poo l
Orrc&gt;f ror s Sa l My tor 1979
Oe rf ordd rnt.&gt;d by the
~ ~ ·r

tt ro •

AVAILABILITY
OF UNCOMPEN SATED
SERVICES

of M.1y

15,

19!9

se r v,ces

dur i n g
the
ti scal
y ea r
wh ic h begins on January 1,
1980 and ends on Decem ber
31 . 1980 Un co mpe nsa ted
se r v ices will be avadablf'
u pon reque st t o e lrg rb le
pe r son s on a fr rst cOm f' lr r
s r se r ve oasr s un t il the an
nual co mplran c '- le v el ot
$48 , 206 00
rs
sat rs lr ed
El rg i b le persons ar e Those
w ho are m need of care an d
w h o se tam rly rncome does
not e x ceed t he c u r rent

CORNING MICROWAVE

TEA KETTLES

BROWNING GRILL

2': , quart, tr igger o p erated spout.
fast heat ing aluminum , fade and
stain resistant exterior . Go ld or
Brown .

FLANNEL SHIRTS
REG. 11.00 ...... ....... SALE 8.79
1

Large selection of
vinyls and
fabrics.
Recliners
Rock -0 Loungers - Waii -Aways - Swivel
Rockers .
Lay -Away For Christmas!

ALL CHAIRS
REDUCED

REG . $1.49 WJNTUK

KNITTING YARN

AU PURPOSE

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Oc tober 19th. 1979 , rn
th e M ergs Count y Prob r'll f"
Court , Case No '1186 7, Fred
W Cr o w . P 0
Bo_- 486,
Pomer o y , Otl ro 45769 wa s
appo in ted An c il lary A d
m rni str a t or of the e state of
Ber nrce C Tuc k e r d ece a s
ed . l at e of 25 00 OnP ln d 1a na
Square , lndr anapo lr s, lnd

pov e rty rnc ome gu rdel rnes
by H1 e Co M
munrty
Se rv rces
Ad
m rn r straT ro n G ur delrnes
def i n i t rons T h is no:ru: rs
pub l rs ne d pu r su a nt To
F ederal Law ser io rttl dl 47
C FR
124 ,5{)5
N ot rce o f
A var la bilrt y
of
un
com pe ns ette-d St=&gt;r vr ces
( 1 I J I. If &lt;

Robert E Bu c k
Cler k. r il l

P r o b.~ t cJud q c

l , 8 I S JTc

Sizes S (30 32 wai st), M (3 4 J6J, L ,:38 40) and
X L ( 42 44 ) 50~ Po ly ester
50' Cotton
draw str 1ng war sf fl eec e tined .

FLANNEL SHIRTS
Sizes

s, M,

E xce llent selection of paterns and
colors
non slip
washabl e . For
c hair s, sofas , cha ises. sectionals,
s tudio couc hes .
Home Furnishings Dept. - lsi Floor

L and XL, 50% cott on and

KOOet po ly es r er Two pockets,
ra i l s, co lorf ul plaid pa tt erns

SPECIAL

ANOTHER SHIPMENT
ANOTHER SALE

50~

ful l length

$]49

Although a temporary r estrarni ng
order was issued by Judge John C.
Bacon against the striking Meigs
Local Teachers Associa tion Thursday morning, picketing by teachers
a t lhe school• was heaVIer than
usual Friday morn mg .
A spokesman for the teac hers
associatron sard teachers who had
~ occupying the administrative
atfices of lhe Meigs Local School
District sine'€ Oct. 22 were removed
Thursday afternoon and this freed
more teacher.; to picket at lhe
schools.
The temporarv rniunctioo issued

MEN'S $31.95

INSULATED
COVERALLS

MEN'S MR. LEGGS

FURNITURE THROWS

13.95 BWE DENIM JEANS

1

S izes 29 to 42 waist , 30 to 36 inch
length s . 14 ounce pre washed blue
denim . Boot flar e o r s traight leg .
Two Day Special.

Size s mall (34 · 36), medium (38 ·40) ,
large (42 · 44) and extra large (4648)
Shorts, Regulars and Longs .
Red quilt lined , adjustable snaps
on legs , permanent press in brown
or oliv e green .

SAVE 20%

SPECIAL

·~'!(

SALE

SALE

GUN CABINETS

TABLE LAMPS

Stop in wh i le th e

Lay -Away" For Christmas

SAVE 20%

;

ARMSTRONG
LINOLEUM

~ '·I

$349

-~

Dromedary
Brushed
Pigskm

'

j~

/

...

.' "'

\
\ ";\

Sizes 8 to 18 Snap fr on t , wrists and po c kets ,
co lorfu l plaids Wr ang ler . Leggs and Ca mpu s.
makes

Puppies·

'1.

";\

'

.\

~---.::..

Boys S7.95
Western Flannel Shirt ........... S7.07
Boys SB .95
Western Flannel Shirt .......... . 57 . 96
Boys 510.95
Western Flannel Shirt ........... $9.74

'

-~
.'

l

BOYS'
SWEATSHIRTS

FLANNEL SHIRTS

Hush

(

, ,j

by:

Sq . Yd .

_j

'

THE SHOE BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Bath room rug with matchrng l id cover or lid

Sol id colo r s

15.95 CREW NECK STYLE
1
9.95 HOODED STYLE

FALL SPECIAL!

je ans

of

1 00~

Last

~JO . OO Value

8 PM
NOV. 2nd

FRIDAY

THROUGH

NIGHTS!

NOV. 10th

Phrlma i d , Lorra rne and Figurefit
While and assort ed color s of IOO ~ ny ton
Srzes X S thru XXL

1 REG. 16.0Q ................... SALE 14.79
REG. 7.00 ...... .. ....... ..... SALE 15.59
1

REG. '8.00 ......... .. ........ SALE 16.39
LIM IT EO SUPPLY

SPECIAL

$1200

SALE

MEN'S CORDUROY

Buy While Sizes are complete.
Small deposit will hold your selection.

heritage house
Of SHOES
N. 2nct AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Good se lection o f s tyle s in boot flar e
and straight leg s tyles . Many styles
that you 'll like !
MEN'S $14 .95
CORDUROY JEANS . .......... $12.19
MEN'S $16 .95
CORDUROY JEANS ........... $13 .89
MEN'S $17 .95
CORDUROY JEANS ............ $14.79
MEN'S 519.95
CORDUROY JEANS .......... . $16.39

lAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS
S159 .95 .. . .. .. ..... SALE
$199 .95. . . .... . .... SALE
$279 .95 .. . .... .. .. SALE
$299 .95............ SALE

colorful

REG. 137.00 SUIT.......... SALE 125.00

Miller in hospillll

MEN'S WRANGLER
LINED

Large se lec ti on of quality Lane Cedar Ch es t !
in many styl es and fi n i she s
In c luded are th e popular love chesf5 with
upholstered tops

REG .
REG.
REG.
REG .

in

REG. 140.00 SUIT.. ........ SALE '28.00

CHESTS

JEANS
LAYAWAY
FOR CHRISTMAS

100% Polyester suits
raspberry and tea 1.

CEDAR

SPECIAL SALE

ClflU.ICOTHE. Oluo I AP I
Poli ce in Ch illi coth e have
charged Ohio Supreme Court
Justice Willlam B. Brown with
operating a motor vehicle while
intolicated, following a two-car
accident Wednesday .
Police in lhe Ross County community said Brown was drivrn g
on a city street at about 9 p.m .
when his car ran into lhe rear of a
car driven by Marilyn J . Eitel, 34 ,
of Chillicothe . Brown also Jives in ·
Chillicothe .
Although Brown reportedly
refused to take an int oxication
test, officers oaid Ius physical
movements and the •mell of his
breath indicated he had been
drinking .

PRE-TEEN
2 PIECE SUITS

REG. 15.00 ....... .......... ... SALE 13.99

- Blue de nim arm length jacket
-contrasting s titc hes
- Slight irregulars in sizes S ·M L .

Cited for DWI

Reg . Sl.SO heavy knit tobo9g~;n s witfi school
and colors . Wahama · Eiutern · Meigs. ·
Southern .

REG. '4.00 .................... SALE 3.19

JACKETS
TIL

H .OI
$10 .91

TOBOGGANS

1

WOMEN'S WRANGLER

ON WOMEN'S

$1 .64

n11me
~

ssooOFF

SA .2.

55 .0'1

SCHOOL NAME

HALF SLIPS

creetm

colored cotton t\vrtl with tapered leg s Wa• S1
sr zes 26 thru 31
Whtle They

Aeg . $4 .99 Bath Set.. ................ .
Reg . $5 .9'1 Bath Set. ............... .. .
Reg $1 .99 Bath Sel .... ......... ... .. .
Reg $9 .49 Bath Set ...... .. ......... . .
Reg . Sll .99 Bath Set .. .... ......... ...

SALE

JUNIOR JEANS
Wrangler

SALE 18.65

cove r and toilet tank - big ra nge of color s

Children's

Reg . $12.00

Qudlity

SALE 15.17

S128.00
$159.00
$234 .00
$240.00

CHARLESTON, W.Va. I API United Mine Workers President
Arnold Miller has entered the
hospital for the third time since
June .
Miller , se, was admitted to a
Charleston hoBpital Thursday for
what a Wlion source said was
ulcers. A hospital spokesworr.an .
however. said there would be no
official comment on Miller 's
ailment until the completion of
t.e.ts sometime Friday or after .
Earlier this week Miller told
members at the Wlion 's International E xecutive Board,
who were meeting in Marion . ru ..
that he would ~ taking time off
to ponder his fu ture, according to
Sam Qrurch. the UMW's .ice
pr!!Sident.

JACKETS AND .VESTS
Sizes S, M , L and XL -

denim or corduroy

Sh~rpa lined blue

western stvle jackets.

Vests are western sty le wi t h sherpa lining .

Ut. 95 Waist Length Corduroy or

.

CINCIN NATI I AP I
A
federal judge has thrown out the
Oncinnati schoo l board's surt
against the State of Ohio, ruling
that education is the respon ·
sibrlil y of the state. not the
federal government .
The 56,000-pupil system had
asked the federal court to order
lhe state to fund its $7 .7 millron
deficit.
Thursday 's actioo by U.S.
District Judge Timothy S I logan
came after two days of hearings
on the swt.
Q ting legal precedents , th e
judge sard there is no fede rally guaranteed rig ht to an education
and that a state system of finan cing schooL&lt; sha ll not ~ subjected to strict scrutiny by
federal courts .

BATH SETS

Made by Spr i ngfoof of 50~ co tt on and 50'
Kodel polyester . Boy s sizes S (6 8) . M ( 10· 12 ),
L 11416 1 a nd XL (181 Warm fleece 11n1ng

.

~ · '•
' .,

Case thrown oul

2 AND 3 PIECE

SPECIAL SALE

a·y·.·:_

Thursday morrung by Judge Aacon
ordered vacating of builditlj(s of the
Meigs Local Boa rd of Education by
the teachers and also forbids
pi cketing at the schools during nor mal school hours on week days
It was reported that Sheriff James
J . Proffitt, Middleport Police Chief
J J Cremeans and several other officers were at the Meigs junior High
School Thursday afternoon for
removal of teachers who have con·
dueled a 24 hour sit 1n for well over a
week . There were 13 teachers occupying the builoling at the tinne, a
teacher said . and the teacher s were
told severai times that they were Wl der arrest. But opce the y left the
building they wer'f told lhal the y
were not under arrest the teache r
Sll ld .
Meantime,
Thursday
night
teachers met at the carpenter's hall

.·... in the world '

- - -~--,..~-

BOYS WESTERN STYLE

.

.,_·

'

- 12ft . Width
- 2.colorful patterns

SPECIAL

• f• • •

.·.~.T
.· . '. d . . , ~_,:_:.
..
-.. o·

WAREHOUSE
REG. S4.45 sq. yd.

Save 20 % on any table lamp in
stock . Wood, ceramic and brass
styles.

20% OFF

-

COLOR:

'·:.-;,

:i ..

maple and pi ne finishes
sele c tion is good

-·

FRIIJA Y. NOVEMB ER 2. 1979

suppl em enl&lt;ll s urvey of business establishments reported a cootradictory
nse of employment by 300,000 jobs.
The Labor Department . whi ch uses the household s urvey to detemtine
JObless fi gures , was at a loss to explain the diScrepancy, other than to note
that such a result has oc curred oceass1ooal ly in the past.
The jobless rate amon!( adult women rooe from 5.5 percen t 1n Septem~r to
5. 8 percent in October , and the rate for blacks jumped from 10.6 percent to
I1.7 percent.
The jobless rate among mrnority teen-ager.; went fr&lt;m 31.5 percent tn Septem~r to 35. 7 percent , the highest in nearly a year .
The department provided these other breakdoWTJS on unemployment rates
for October :
- Adult men : 4.3 percent in Octo~r . up from 4.2 percent in September.
- Teen-age rs: 16.6 percent, up from 16 .4 percent.
- Whites : S.2percent, up from 5. 1 percent.
- Full-time workers : S.5percent , up from 5.4 percent.
- Part-tune workers · 9 percent, up fnrn 8.3 percent .
- Blue-&lt;:ollar workers, 7.3 percent, up from 7.I percent.
- White-collar workers, 3.5 percent, up from 3.3 percent.
AdminJ.Stration economists were surprised las t month, however. when lhe
Labor Department reported that the JObless rate fell from 6 percent to 5.8
percent between August and Se ptem~r . The administratioo had predicted

Despite order, picketing
•
zncreases in Meigs strike

FOR THIS SALE!
WRANGLER $8.95

7 SWEAT PANTS

Ni c e group o f 6. 7 a n d 10 g u n c abinets in

THE "YUMA" WARM ll NED BOOT

20%

TWO DAYS
ONLY

th e 'nn d d a y a t

$295

Reg . 53 .00
Panty Hose ... . .............. Sale $2.39
Reg . 53.95
Panty Hose .............. . .. · Sale U- 29
Reg. $5 .95
Suppor t H ose ..... .. ........ . Sale $3 .95
Reg . $6.95
Suppor t H ose ............... . Sale $4 .95

5 95

Red H ea rt 4 p l y hand knitt , ng yarn in a big
se l e-c ti on of S.Oiid co l ors , varrega l ed and
~parkle co lor s. 31 2 0 1 . skein

SALE

PANTYHOSE
SALE

Men's and Young Men ' s

IOt&gt;('r ,

11 ! I {f r

enttne

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

WASHINGTO N 1AP1- A s purt of layoffs, most ly among women and
blacks, pushed the nation 's unemployment rate back up to 6 percent rn Oc tober, the goverrunent reported today .
The Labor Depanbnent said the nurn~r of W1employed persons rose by
200,000 from September to 6.2 million . As a result, the JObless rate returned
to lhe level reached in August following a drop to 5.8 percent in Septem~r .
Desprte the nse , Labor Department ana lysts said the figures did not
provide signs that a recession is takmg hold .
"You would have to have a crystal ball to say these are indications to say
we're in or about to enter a recession," said Labor economist Norman
Bowers . " The figures don 't say that .··
&amp;wers said the risrng unemployment appeared to stem fr om the fa ct that
new jobs were not created at a fast enough rate to provide employment opportunities for those who had lost their jobs.
The nation 's unemployment rate has nuttered ~tween 5.6 percent and 6
percent for th• past IS months .
The Labor Department said lhe increa,., m unemployment last month
resul ted from workers losrng their jobs, as opposed to people who entered
the job market but were unable to find work . Two-thirds of the job losses
struck women or blacks .
Total employment, as measured by the government's survey of
households , declined by 220 ,000 during October, to 97.3 million . However. a

PLAYTEX CONTROL TOP

KROEHLER AND
BERKLINE CHAIRSI

REG. 126.00 ........... SAU 120.79

'"wPrl ')';,ed

ti O r 15

Reg. $3 .39

20% SAVINGS ON

Warm 100% cot ton flannel plaids in
junior s1zes s M L .

TWO DAY SALE

19 79
A ttest

Automat ica lly removes rust, lime ,
minerals . Deodor izes , sanitizes ,and
cleans toil et bow ls with every flush .

CHAIR SALE

JUNIOR GIRLS '

1

AUTOMATIC BOWL CLEANER

SALE 5lSOO

Reg . 521 50

to Sep

Ge n e G r a te
( IPr k
M L K elly
Prf'Srdent o f Counrr t

e s tabli sh ed

-.' :

11'h x12
in c he s
Improved
b rowning
per for mance, specialy
desig n ed drip well , easy to use · easy
to c lea n . Dishwasher safe.

Reg . $S.95

I I Thr '\ Or d rnan oe
~r.11 1 t nk r et ten an d bern
tor r P f ro m and a f1 e r 1t1e
f'&lt;H i r('&lt;;l PNr o d al lowe d by

Or

at

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Nation's unemployment rate hits 6 percent

DAY

WEST BEND WHISTLING

Scr

at

Mulberry Hgt s. Pomr-r olf
Oh io , will mak e ava , la blc
S48 .1 06 00
1n
un

co mp e nsat e d

Poo l Orr er to r

VOL. XXVIII NO 142

•

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8:00

tr·n•lx• r I S, 197 9, rn rlusr ve

M emor1 d l
lo c at e d

P,H ~&lt;, r~n o

..,tl ,)ll bf' &lt;; up pl emented by
&lt;-.r1 111r r l' .1:,c o f $40 00 ppr
mon th t or l he Pay p er rods

NOTI CE OF

H oo;.pital.

Ttlrtl th e S&lt;i iM)I o t

1

(USPS 145 960 J

FRIDAY, NOV. 2ND, SATURDAY, NOV. 3RD

r,n

Courv rl at !he V tf ldQt' o f
M rllrJi r·pur t as fo llows

veteran s

NOVEMBER SALE DAYS

REG. 116.00 ........... SAU 112.79
LEGAL N OTICE
ORD INANCE No . 1086 ·79

e

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Denim

Jacket • • ••• •••••• •• . • ••. ••• • ••••••• • SJ1 ...
loM.tS Longer Lenvlh Dttllrn J•cket •.• $:Jol ...
sn.u Denim or Corduroy Yost .. ..... . . 117 ...
nc.tSSuede·look Vest. ........... ..... Sit ...

OPEN SATURDAY 9-.30 TO 5:00 PM

ELBERfELD$ IN POMEROY
•

I

Crump Dies
In 'Copter Crash

acc ident.

lW 2 CrWlrp was serv1ng a tour of
dut y ln Korr CI a fter recentl y corn·
pletmg the tow co bra gunne ry
qual1fl catwns co ur se at th e Am·1y
Avi a t1on Crnter . Fort Hu c ke r .
Alabam a . He ha d served in the U.S .
Anny for nin e y ear s.

ment.
Surviving. other than hi' mother.
are his wife, Diana Ferrell Cnunp ;

two daughters, Melis.'a Dawn, ageS ,
a nrl .Jamre ~oel Crump. age 8. both

CW2 JAMES H. CRUMP
at

hom e;

a

s1st er . Mrs.

L,ar y

rSharon 1 Cochran . P oint Pleasant .
one brother . l,'aul Crump, Mason,
maternal grandmoth e r .
Mrs .
Thelma Elliott. Point Pleasant; and
mother and father-in-l aw , Betty and
Ra ym ond Ferrell. P oint Pleasant.
Funeral arra nRement s will be
announ ced at a later date .

Banquet tickets
being sold now
Tickets are now ~ing sold for the
Meigs Soil and Water Conservatior
District annual meeting and banquet
to be held at 7: 15 p. m . Nov . 15, a t
Chester Grade School .
Following a steak'dinner served
by the EaBtern Band B0011ters, there
will ~ an election of two super visors, an interesting speaker.
special music, and presentations r:i
District awards.
Candidates for the s upervisor
election are Larry Hollon , Thereon
Johnson, James Lucas and Rlly
Miller .
Featured speaker will be Walt
Buescher from Tennessee. who is a
Widely re n ow n ed spea ker
throughout the Uruted States and
Olnada . He is sponsored by Sperl')
New Holl and .

JACK W. CRISP

Crisp

SEORC
I

Word ha s ~e n rereJ ved by local
relatr ves of th e dea th of CW2 Jam es
H. Crump. 29. who wa s krlled
Thllr sda y mormn ,~:; 1n a hel!copt c r

Crump was barr June 25 , 1950 U1
Pomt Pl easant . a son of Julra Crump
Long. Pomt Pleasant . and the late
James A. Crump .
He had recentl y ~ e n awarded the
Me r it orious Sen·ic e \1t!dal, th e
second highest award a serviceman
ran r eceive duri ng pe&lt;'~cetim e, fo r
his outstanding a bliltJ' as a Medical
Evac uat 1on Helicopter Pilot dunn g
a searc h emU resc ue lllissiun in
Florence . South Carolina
Crump was a 1969 graduat e of
Point Pleasant Hrgh School . an d
served a s a former patrolman wnn
the Point Pleasant Police Depart-

Authority given
for user survey

m Pomeroy to dL'ICuss the s trike
which is now in it.. sixth week .
··It's time to put an end to strikes
m Me1gs Local. Don't accept
anything less than what you need.
The Ohio Educ.ation association will
~here to hel p see you get it" .
This was the comme nt of Eugene
Brundige .
Ohio
Education
Association presrdent, who spoke lhe
approximate 130 teachers who attended Thursday .night's meeting to
re\iew the court action sought by the
Me1gs Local School Board .
" When you hear criticism about
·outs iders· coming to help teachers,
remem~ r what this community has
had to s uffer through - strike a ft er
strike because of ouL&lt;ide superin tendents and attorneys ," Brundige
stated .
Dunng lhe meehn~. assocrati on
1Continued on page 10 t

cW2

Special mii.Src will be proVIded by
Mr. and Mrs . Brll St ockwell
Goodyear , F .F .A. Land Judging.
Outstanding ram~er. and SuperviSOr Service a wands will be given at
the meeting .
Reservations should ~ made
before Novem~r 9 and tickets at $4
each are available from the
foll owing : Extension Offic-.,, John
Rice: Landmark. Jack Carsey :
ASCS, Dave Fox ; SCS. Boyd Ruth ,
Reid Young or Leota Young; Meigs
SWCD supervisors , Rex Shenefi eld,
Tom Theiss, Rlly Miller, Thereon
Johnson , and David Gloeckner ;
James Lucas , Rutland; J.m-ry
Hollon , Rt. I, Minersville ; Horace
Karr. Baum Addition on Route 7,
and at Sugar Run Flour Mills, Thee
Smi th .

unemployment would snow an mcr ease in September, bas1ng that estimate
oo an assumption that the economy was headed into a recession .
However. subseque nt fig ures showed that rather than ~gistering a
decline , economic activity grew at an annual rate of 2.4 percent during the
July-September quarter . That report put predictions of imminent, sharp
nses in unemployment on the back burner .
The Federal Reserve Board , the nation's central back , moved to slow innation Oct . 6 by increasing interest rates to linut credit and by restricting
the money s upply . Administration economists say those mov!!S will trigger
an econontic slowdown and higher unemployment furthe r down the road,
perhaps bringing on the long-anticipated recession .
Meanwhile, a natioral employment commission urge&lt;! President Carter to
push for exparided job programs for the nation ·s disadvantaged young
people, who suffer from chrome Wlemployment.
" Youth from low-in come famili es and commwlities, particularly mem·
~rs of minority groups, often face severe, long-temJ barriers to jobs," Eti
Ginz~rg , chainnan of the National Commission for Employment Policy,
said Thursday in a report to the president .
"Even though the youth population wtll decline in the ·~. without a comprehensive and concentrated attack on the problem, this group will still be in
trouble, a nd this is where federal resources should be targeted," said Ginzberg , a professor at ColumbJa Unrversity

honoree

Author ization was given to
proceed with an archaeological and
user charge survey for lhe villages
of Racine , Syracuse and Rutland.
when officials of Racine , Syracuse
and Rutland met Thursday night at
Syracuse Mwlicipal Building.
The archaeological and user
charge surveys are necessary i.n order to proceed with a sewage system
in aU three villages.
Estinnated cost for the ar chaeological study in Syracuse and
Racine. IS $20,000 and in lhe village

More rain expected
By The A!lliOdated Preu
A cold front spread rain today
from western New York across the
Ohio Valley and the Appalachians to
the soutll east .
Another front moving into the
Pacific Northwest produced light
rain from northern California across
westerr Oregon and Washington
Ught snow fell over parts of upper
Michigan , nort her n Minnesot a .
Wyom ing and eastern Colorado.
Showers and tllundersto rms were
predicted rn the upper Ohio Valley
tllrough the Atlantic Coast states .
Rain also was expected rn the
Pacific Northwest and northern
Ca liforn ia, with s catter ed sn ow
showers from northern Minnesota to
upper Michigan . Partly cloudy skres
were forecast over the remamder of
the nort~rn part of tlle nation and
sunny rn the so uth .

Ja c k W. Cris p, Langsville ,
president of the Leading creek Con·
servancy District. has ~en named
Meigs County's outstanding man of
the year by the Southeastern Ohio
Regiollal Council .
Crisp is one of 13 outstanding
Southeastern Ohio men who will ~
honored by lhe council on Thursday.
Ro~rt L. (Bob 1 Evans, president of
the council , announced, when lhe
organization holds its annual awards
dinner at the Ohio University ltuJ in
Athens .
The honored guests represent 10
counties in Southeastern Ohio and
LO'ITER V WINNERS
were nominated for the awards by
Two Meigs Countians were a bit
the Cham~rs of Commerce and
n cher Thursday as a result of a visrt
business groups in their home counby Bill Abdella , Ohio Lottery Com ties and cooununi ties.
mission representati ve . NaomJ D
According to Evans, this will be
Wyatt, Minersville, received a check
the 11th annual awards meeting.
for $5,00J for her win in the lhree of a
Honorees in c! ud e educators.
kind instant game and Patricia
physicians , optometrists, attorreys,
Kloes, Middleport , received a $500
merchants and Industrialists .
check as a wiMer in the regular
Awards are made by the council
weekly game.
on the basis of contributions to
Southeastern Ohio by participation
and leadership in the communi ty affairs .
Born in West Vlfgirua , Crisp has
been a resident of Meigs County sin Plant one, get one free . That's the
ce 1946 and in his position With the
word to landowners in Gallia County
conservancy district has been
and 11 other southeastern Ohio counbeneficial towards the development
ties . Landowners in the area a r e
of Western Meigs County . He and
receiving a boost from Westvaco, a
his wife, Glenna, have four children
pr ivate paper com pany . in
who are James, Tom and Carla
reforesting their land .
•
Crisp Large, all of the Langsville
Westvaco is renewing an annual
area, and Glen of Salem Center .
offer to match every tree seedling
They have five grandchrldr en .
purchased for planting with another
.&lt;·:·:-:-:-:-:-:·.·:····
seedling .
The trees come from nurseries
LEAF PICKUP
operated
by the Division of Forestry
Leaves lu lbe vlllage of Pomeroy
of lhe Oluo Department of Natural
will be picked up beginning
Resources .
Tuesday, Nov. 6. All leaves are w be
The division bas been promoting
In bag• and at tbe curb.
reforestation
in southeastern Ohio
The foUowlug Is 0.., scbeduled for
for
years
.
The
southeast, once
pickup: Nov. 6, flnt ward ; Nov. 7,
nearly
denuded
at
timber
in the 19th
second ward; Nov . 8, tblrd wand;
century from lumbering, ironNov , 9, fourtb war:d : ... ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.
making and stripmining, has the
·.·.·.·.·.·.·,·. ·-:-:·&gt; .. ·.·.·.· ... . ·.· ·.·.·.·
vast majority of Ohio's forest lands .
Now in its 13th year, Harold Todd
at the Division of Forestry, said
Partly cloudy tonight. Low in the
Westvaco has matched ~ween
low or mid~ - Mostly sunny Satur140,000 and 400,000 tree seedlings a
day . High in the low !iOs. The chance
year to reforest about 4,500 acres in
southeast Ohio since 1966.
of rain is 20 percent ton1ght and 10
percent Saturday .
Landowners in Athens, Belmont,
Gallia, Hocking, Jackson , Lawren·
ce, Meigs, Monroe , Noble , Vinton
EXTENDED FORECAST
and Washington counties can parFair Sunday and a chance ol
ticipate .
sbowen Monday aDd Tuesday.
The counties are m the malt' j mHJgbs In tbe 501. Lows lu tbe 30o Sun·
~r buying area of We.'Vaco 's Luke,
day and Monday and near 40
Md. mill. The mill manufactures
Tue•day.
high quality, white printing papers
for books and magazines. Todd said

of Rutland $10,000.
Cia ude White will begin the ar·
chaeological study as soon as the
ground where the treatment planlll
and pumprng stations are to be
located IS plowed . White hopes to get
started Ill two weeks.
If anything of value, such as ar·
lifacts . are found they will be kept
one year and then returned to the
property owner. Frank Porter,
solicitor , stated.
The next step, according lD Ed
Tinkle of Commonwealth Engineers,
will ~ to acqulfe easements from
property owners and appraisals
made . lt was suggested that
Freeland Norris be named the appraiser .
There will be one treabnent plant
for the Syracuse-Racine Regional
Sewage District which will be
located in Racine and three pumping
staliom, two in Racine and One in
Syracuse. It was indicated that the
village of Rutland will have fewer
problems that the other two villages.
The plowing and bulldozing of the
ground in various loca tions will be
done by local people .

Striking teachers
to remove pickets
At lhe request of Meigs Local
school board candidate Rllbert
Snowden. teachers have agreed to
"ithdraw pickets from polling sites
on elocbon day , Novem~r6 .
In making the announcement the
Meigs Local Teachers Assn. said :
"The right to vote is precious no
matter what election. With the crisJs
m Meigs schools going into its seventh weedk by election day, voters will
have a real opportunity to make a
difference .
" Removal of pickets in no way indicates a change in MLTA 's position
that contract issues must ~ settled
at the bargaining table . ..

Westvaco renews annual offer
there's no requirement that landowners sell the mature tim~r to
the company .
The main requirement is that landowners buy at least 500 tree
seedlings . Landowners can buy hardwoods or pine, but Westvaco will
only match seedlings with pine.
"Hardwood comes back naturally.
The pine does not come back as
easily," said Harris LeFew, public
relations manager for lbe company 's Luke mill .
LeFew said similar programs 81'1!
offered to landowners in Kentucky,
Pennsylvania, and Maryland .
The c""pany, which is headquar.
tered in New York City, operates in
the eastern and southeastern United
States.

Weather

CLEVELAND (AP) - Here U'll
tbe 'll'inDinl -ben drawa 'JW.

oday lu the Oblo Lottery:
I BoiiiUlla: 85, LTI, UIS, 12111,
100!90; 5kenll'yramld25, la, . .7.
·'

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