<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="15961" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/items/show/15961?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-09T18:44:33+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49085">
      <src>http://host69-005.meigs.lib.oh.us/files/original/3ba68bb86ccfa65206b98835f9da2ce2.pdf</src>
      <authentication>35124632b21b92d0c18f78d761fea938</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="51099">
                  <text>fl•l
fi
·
nomeowners must l e or
llb k b s
tax ro ac
y ept. 30

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday , Sept. 25, 1979
DRlVERINJURED,

A~~!~\.~~ur~ andacar
0

heavily damaged m a one-ear ac·

:~~=~;~:yp~~~rtsai~a~~~~ c~~

ddent on Mulberry Ave ., a t 10 :30

Ptmeroy, was headed south on
Mulberry wben it struck a utility
pole, then struck a fence and ran into
an embankment before turning
over. Davis who was taken to
Veterans Memorial HospiU.l by the
Pomeroy Emergency Squad has
been cited on reckless operation
charges.
MEETING CHANGED
The meeting of the Twin City
Srinettes to be held Thur sday has
been changed tn Oct. 4.

rr

By DIANE DUSTON
Assoc iated Press Writer
COLUMBUS, Onio (AP I
Homeowners must file for a 2'k
percent property tax rollback by
Sunday if they expect the reduction
to show up on their 1979 tax bills.
At least one county audiwr said
that the deadline may escape the
notice of many eligible taxpayers,
which would mean that they would
have w wait until they get their 1980
bills to take advantage of the $8-$12
savings. Year~nd tax bills are

SPCIIT MDm

FAIIIC SOmNEI 24-CT.

EIIESCO
BAIIKS
.....
R• !i ·
Rtl .

CLIIIG
FREE
~~. $117

99,.
.,

L.liGIIIICIIlN

JOHNSON'S

ILAD
BAIS

DENIAL
FLOSS

... 9SO

~~' $119

Aet .

St .H

ASSOIUD BOUTIQUE 125'•

ltOIJSIIOlD

KLEENEX
FACIALS

PillE SOL
CLEANER
:: $166

::....S9°

U .33..._,

11111. com1

''~&lt;SX ru :•

, ...1.

Q-IIPS
88's

COFFEE
FILlERS

,,

::.SS0

0

11.01

n MCi . so·.

TRIPLE LANOLIN

TELDRIII

COCOA
BUTTER

I·STREMGIH

... $399

CliME

R11.

$7 .60

~$133

6&amp;-0l . Sill

CAlGON

CLOROI
BLEACH

BAIROIL
' BEADS

· ···tso

~:~... 66°

NATUII MADE SOO.t

VITAMIN
CIABS
,,..
. ,, $299

Rtt .
S1 .5S

____,DABAIAYS
80'S

:: 9S0

A" .

11.5 7

NUTRI·TONIC son CUlL

DISITIN

BODY
PERM KIT
co•~;• $159

BABY
·POWDER

:::990

"~··

SUi

James L. Farley, Executive
Director of Pleasant Valley Hospital
for the past nine years, announced
last night at the regular monthly
meeting of the Hospital Board of
Trustees, that he is resigning to
accept a position with a proprietary
health care corporation in Cin·
cinnati, Ohio, effective in approximately three months. Farley
will become the Chief Executive

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admitted-Joan Conkle, Cheshire;
Nola Bradshaw, Middleport; Ancil
Prunty, Bidwell; Hershel LeMaster,
Guysville; George King, Mid·
dleport; Russell Meadows,
Pomeroy; Joy Pennell, Racine;
Carolyn Gilmore, Rutland; John
Clonch, Gallipolis.
Discharged-Alice Wise, Kathleen
Lehew.

SQUAD RUN
The Pomeroy Emergency Squad
answered a call to Route 7 at 12:56
a.m. Tuesday for Ralph Keller who
was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
At 7:44a.m. Tuesday the unit went
to Wright St. for Mrs. Herbert Moore
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

IHISCO 101111.

HAIIGIIII
-PLANTERS

THERMOS
JDJUG
.f~s SA44

~.

11. '1

-

SQUAD CALLED
The Middleport Emergency Squad
was called to Route 124 at 1:13 p.m.
Monday for Russell Meadows, 16,
who had received a head injury in a
fall. She was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
IMPORT ANT MEETING
The owners of lots in Wells
Cemetery are asked tn attend an
important meeting Tuesday, Oct. 1,
at 7p.m. at the Page ville Town Hall.

88°

• PUIIT 110' IIK.l.IJDfll

MEETS WEDNESDAY
Racine Village CoWJcil will meet
Wednesday at 7 p.m. at the Rion .
Plans for the fall festival will be
discussed.
Asked to attend are council
members, emergency squad
members, volunteer firemen and
members of ladies auxiliary.

IIISTA

DIS'fSAIU LIGHTll

WHITI

THUMB
THIIIG

BIG ROLL
IOWELS

~~~ 88°

::.S9°
"'

Officer of Montgomery Care Center
which currently owns and operates
three health care Rehabilitation and
Convalescent Centers which has
plans for additional facilities.

Retail receipts up,
vehicle taxes down
Rtitail sales tax receipts in Meigs
County for August, 1979, were up
21.21 i&gt;"rcent compared to AugUBt,
1978, while motor vehicle sales tax·
receipts w:ere down 32.57 percent for
the same period, accotding to the
report of Mrs. Gertrude Donahey,
sUite treasurer.
Retail sales tax receipts for
August, 1979, totaled $93,549.23 com·
pared· to receipts of $77,176. ~ for
August, 1978.
Motor vehicle sales tax receipts
for August, 1979, totaled $40,090.22
compared to receipts of $li9,460.50
for August, 1978.
ACTIONS FILED
1n Meigs County Common Pleas

Court Robert Imboden, Burtcn, S.
C., filed suit in the amount of
$7,291.36 against Noah Chasteen, Rt.
1, Middleport.
According to the entry the
defendant (Chasteen ) agreed to
assume a debt of the plaintiff
(Imboden) at Jackson Production
Credit Assn., Galliplis and plaintiff
agreed In convey personal property
(farm equipment) to defendant.
Plaintiff performed all conditions
on his part but defendant has not
performed his promise and has
failed to pay plaintiff's d·ebt
according to the entry.
Kathy J. Fife, Pomeroy, and Gary
L. Fife, Middleport, filed for
dissolution of marriage.

Three Meigs Countians .
elected as trustees

12.37

' WITH "UM, - LIME

YASILINI

Farley resigns
hospital post

IS-o! .

nn

Yl·gll. .....- . . , -

County Auditors ASsociation of Ohio,
said in a letter w county auditors.
The auditors' group sCheduled a
meeting for late morning to discuss
the implementation problems.
Many state and local officials
were taken by · surprise by the
rollback. They knew it would be
coming, rut they expected it to' be
applied to 1900 taxes and they
weren't prepared with the proper
application forms, said Gorry.
• Tracy said co\]IIty auditors would
like to see the rollback extended and
the filing procedure eliminated.
"We want it (the rollback) to
apply across the ooard to residential
and agricultural property," Tracy
said.
'Among the properties exCluded
from the rollback are rental oomes
and apartments, homes owned by
persons other than those in
residence, .homes owned by
corporations, homes in buildings
used primarily for non-residential
purposes and oouse trailers, Tracy
said.
Those homeowners who pay their
property taxes through their bank or
savings and loan association as part.·
of their mortgage payments should
speak to their lending institutions to
find out how the savings will be
recorded on their mortgage bills,
Gorry said.

WOlD If UIIW.UID

ll·Ct.
10
'"'·

....
·~

generally sent out in December for
payment in January.
For those who do file with their
county auditors in time, tlje savings
will be tack~O percent
property U.x rollback that has been
in effect for several years,
according to James Gorry, atwrney
for the state Department of Tax
Equalization. The break to a person
owning a home with a $DO,OOO market
value would be about $1~ for the
year, he said.
The tntal savings In homeowners
statewide has been estimated In be
abo\lt $30 million.
The deadline provision was
slipped into law via a short
paragraph in a state employee pay
raise bill.
"The way it stands at this minute,
I have 240,000 potential applicants
who have to file in my office by
midnight Friday," Franklin County
Auditnr Roger Tracy said Monday.
"The phone has been ringing off the
hook."
He said he thinks that abOut onethird of the persons qualified for the
rollback will never hear about it and
not file for it. Property owners must
actually Jive in the dwelling in order
In qualify for the reduction.
The law "will play havoc with our
offices and we must correct this
situation immediately," Robert J.
Kosydar, legislative counsel for the

PRODUCTS PARTY
The Long Bottom Community
Association will have a products
party along with their regular·
meeting Wednesday, Sept. 26, at 6
p.m. in the commWJity building.
Refreshments will be served.

Three Meigs Countians were elec·
ted to the Board of Trustees of Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio at
its recent Annual Meeting held in
Gallipolis. Elected were Hank
Cleland, Mary O'Brien, and Kermit
Walton.
RoU.ting off the Board after long·
time service are Betty Fultz and
Gene Riggs. They were presented
with appreciation certificates by the
President of:the Board.
PPSEO provides educational,
social, and medlcal services in the
areas of family planning, maternal
care, and related health services to
seven southeastern .Ohio counties,
including Meigs.

No settlement in sight for Meigs strike

Area Deaths

·

LELIA K. BAILEY
lelia K. Bailey, fill, died Monday
evening, at Veterans Memorial
Hospital wbere she had been a
patient for several days.
Mrs. Bailey was born Jan . 20, 1911,
at Burlingham the daughter of the
late Mr. and Mrs. James levacy.
She was also preceded in death by
one sister, Doris and an infant
brother.
She is survived by her husband,
Wilbur, daughter, Ruth Ann Wiley,
son-in-Jaw,
David
Wiley,
granddaughter, Angela Rae Wiley,
all of San Francisco, Calif; five
sisters, Mrs. Margaret Bobo, and
Mrs. Ethel Metcalf both of '
ColumbUB; Mrs. Anmna Mae Smith,
Zanesville; Mrs. NeUie Sanborn,
Athens, and Mrs . Clareda
Kalklosch, Logan ; four brothers,
Frank of Athens; Ernest, New
lexington; Jim, Marion; and
Everette of Chester.
She was a long lime member of
thue Rock Springs United Methodist
Church.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Chapel

Security
(Continued from page 1)
pay our teachers a higher salary on
one hand and not be able tO on the
other. With that in mind, wbat can
we do? Well, there's litUe l'eft for the
board to do but w take specific
action to deal with the situation as
best it can.
Therefore, utilizing the money lost
by our non-working professional
staff ana our non-working certified
staff, we have hired a security guard
for each of our buildings to help all
those kids, teachers and parents who
wish to come w school during this
crisis. At the same· time the board
has passed a resolution to increase
the pay of substitute teachers to $li2
a day and the going rate for all noncertified substitutes in any capadty
including bus drivers will be
established at the regular rate of
pay now paid our employes.
"The protection of all of our
people, including the people
picketing our schools, is of utmost
importance to us. You, as parents,
can help by calling your child's
teacher and urging the return to
school and by calling the
superintendent's office if you are
willing tn work in any capacity.
'·At this time we are in the process
of trying to arrange another meeting
with the teachers association to
discuss the unresolved matters and
In see if they have made any
concessions on their salary
demands.
"We sincerely hope we can resolve
our differences as soon as possible."
This morning, Mrs. Fisher,
president of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association, issued ·the
following report:
"Monday, there were 19 students
in the sChools, no buses running, few
non-certified personnel in the
buildino and seven teachers
crossed !he picket lines.
"The association urges parents to
keep their children home as there is
no meaninful education taking place
in the schools. In light . of this
situation the Meigs Local Teachers
Assn . urges the Board of Education
wclose the schools unW matters are
resolved .
"The hiring of security guards Is
the most horrendous strike·
breaking, anti-union tactic ever
brought to Meigs Dlunty. The
teachers association wonders why
the bol!l'd capnot meet our requests
rut have, the money to spend on
security guards at fl an hour and an
out of town attorney at flO an hour.
"The Federal Mediator, Bill
lewis, stated that he would set up a
meeting as soon as he could contact
Mr . Gleason. The association is
waiting for a call conflnnlng this
meeting". ·
A special meeting of the board
scheduled for Monday night was not
held and there have been no
negotiations since the strike began
Monday morning.

with the Rev. Jantes Corbitt fl.·
ficiatlng. Burial will be In Mt. Her·
man Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home Wedneady from 2
to 4 and 7 to 9 and Thursday after 10

a.m.

·

'

Astrike by the Meigs Local School
Distrtct teachers moved into its
third day Wednesday with set·
Uement apparently no closer than
when it began Monday.

'

No negotiations have been held
since the strike started and no plans
had been 81Ulounced today for a
negotiating session.

MYRTLE SIIJEID(I
Mrs. Myrtle Shields, WI, New

Haven, died Moodsy at Jackson
General Hospital.
She was born May 7, 1892 at Mt.
Alto, a daughter of the late George
and Isabelle Carpenter Canter, was
a member of the Hopewell Baptist
Church and was the las! •urvlvin&amp;..
member of the George Canter :
family.
•
Her hUBband, Fred A. Shields; •
died in 1m.
!
Survivors include a daughter, :
Mrs. Cecil (Mary) Sayre, New :
Haven; a grandson, Paul F. Sa}'l:e, :
New
Haven;
one
great· ;
grandda11ghter, Candace Sayre, ;
New Haven; and several nieces and
nephews.
'
Services will be held Wedneaday' :
at 1:30 p.m. at the Hopewell Baptist ~
Church by the Rev. Clarence :
Morton. Burial will be in the :
Hopewell Cemetery.
.
,
Friends are being received at the ·
Foglesong Funeral Home at MlliOil •;
from 6 to 9 p.m. today.
'
•

Supt. David Gleason again an·
nounced that schools of t11e district
are 1open and that cafeterias are

VOL. XXVIII

NO. 115

By Bob Hoeflfcb
Boring a hole into the groWJd over
a mile deep is not an inezpensive nor
a simple process. However 1
sometimes it pays off -sometimes it
doesn't.
Ei:citement has run high in the
Stlversville area of Meigl! CoWJty for
the past week where the .Adams
Drilling Co. and the J . D. Orilling
Co. of Radne dug into the earth
where a deep gas well was !sunk.
11le massive, heavy equipment,
valued at wer $1.5 mUlion owned by
the Burdette Oil and Gas Dl., ct.
Charleston, W. Va., was moved into
the area last Tueoday before being
assembled for the drilling process
which got underway Tuesday af.
ternoon.

Two accidents were investi3ated •
MOOday by the Gallia-Meigs Pollt, ..
Highway Patrol.
·
.Officers investigated a two. ;
vehicle collision oo Story! Run Rd., ·
in Meigs County, at 6:40p.m.
The patrol reports a north bound •
auio operated by John A. ~ell. 18,
Gallipolis, pulled from Old SR 7 Into :
tile path of an east bound vehicle :
driven by Steven Uttle, 33, ;
Mlcklleport.
Both vehicles incurred moderate
damage . The accident remains
under Investigation.
One vehicle inc:urred severe
damage during a, two-vehicle
mishap on SR 7 at milepost 31.
Called to the scene at 4:30 p.m.,
officers report a north bound auto
operated by Mary Swisher, 52,
Oleshlre,had stopped in traffic on 7.
A north bound vehicle driven by
Stephen Sellers, 20, Racine, failed to
stop and struck the SwUber auto In
the rear.
There was severe damage to the
Sellers auto, moderate damase to
the SwiSler vehicle.
Sellers was cited on a charge of
assured clear distance .

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1979

11le ctmpany had three men at the

Newburg zone. However, on Sunday
morning the drilling had gone to
5,470 feet, pa.st the Neirburg zone,
and the heavy hit had not been

rig for each eight hour shift as the
drilling progressed constantly on a
24 bour-a-OOy schedule.
realized.
Despite the fact that heavy rains
Drilling continued Sunday unW
surrounded the huge equipment with
·
6,000
feet bad been reached and then
a sea of mud, the teams of workers
kept the equipment operating . drilling stopped. '
Independent drillers are not per·
around the clock and in tip-top
mitted
to go deeper than 6,100 feet.
shape. Workers of the drilling comTile
massive
equipment was moved
panies supplemented the work ofthe
into
Radne
where
it was still located
Olarleston crews.
yesterday
until
a
decision
was made
Tile earth was cored out at an
on
whether
to
proceed
with
drilling
aver,age rate of 75 feet an hour with
another
well
at
this
lime.
sediment being forced out of a
Roger Adams, a third generation
lengthy pipe into a sediment pool.
in
the well drilling business, has
It had been the hope of the drilling
beaded
the' Stiversville operaton. ·
companies that the pay zone on the
His
grandfather
is Roy Proffitt and
well would take place in the
his father Is Bob Adams. Both have
been active in well drilling over the
years and have passed on their
know-how to Roger. .
Although disappointed that the big
strike didn't come in at the Newburg
zone, Adams commented : "We may
have lost the baWe, but we haven't
loet the war."
Cost of sinking the well was
estimated at between •110,000 and
$150,000. And -while the well did not
come up to expectati~ns, It is
•
producing well. The drilling went il!·
to the medina zone. It is now to be
shot and then will be metered by
Columbia Gas of Ohio.
Gas was found in several zones
passed through by the drilling and
treatment can now be apJllied so that
the well will be producing.
A Newburg field equal to the wells
in the late 1960s would have meant a
$20,000,000 to t:lO,OOO,OOO boom for
Eastern and Southern Meigl! County.
The Adams and J. D. Drlll.ing
· Companlesare also drilling a
t2,191,000 Berea program for dif.
ferent parties in Gallia, · Meigs,
Hocking and Perry CoWJUes and
they anticipate drilling another 25
wells before the end of this year.

-

Energy
(ConUnued from page I )
"In August, honle prices rose 1.5
percent," the report said. "Home
financing co•s roae 3 percent,
reflecting increases In both
mortgage interest r ales and holl!e
~X"ices.''

Alihough food prices held,
continuing a pattern begun in June,
clothing prices rose 0.7 percent after
two months of dE!CUne and the
mlsceUaneoua category went up a
full percentage point.
The Consumer Price lndez In
August stood at g:l.l.l, meaning that
goods that cost flllO In 1987 cost
f221.10 lut month.
The figure was 12.7 percent ahead
of August 1978, a record fer a oneyear increase, The previous record
was 12.2 percent in 1974.

RADIO
AUCTION

MAssiVE EQUIPMENT was used at the Stiversville, lebanon Town·
ship, drilling site of the Adams Drilling Co., and the J . D. Drilling eo. The
equipment, surrounded by a sea of mud due to'Weekend rains, is valued at
a mllllon and one-half.

Buy at your price on
WMPO 1390 every Wed.,
8:45a.m.

BAKER FURNinJRE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Excitement runs high
in Stiversville
area
..

Patrol probes
two accidents

$1595

en tine

Drilling continues

Tax relief deadline
extension expected
'

LONG PIPE -This lengthy pipe carried sediment
from deep gas well operations as the earth was cored

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP )- County
auditors said they were taken by
surprise when they learned that a
2'k percent real estate tax rollback
approved by the legislature will be
effective this year.
Since the original deadline for
homeowners to apply for the tax
break was Friday, many of them
beseiged auditnrs' offices in person
cr by telephone.
The Senate Finance Committee,
however, was expected to act today
on ar request by the auditors
extetlding the fUing time to Dec. 1.
Audiwrs also want the committee
to allow individual county auditors
1
the option of isslling the tax breaks
In the first or second half of the tax
year.
Nearly all 88 counties were
represented
Tuesday
when
members of the County Auditors

CO J.UMB US, Ohio ( AP) - House
sponsors say they want to study
major Senate changes in a bill
making it illegal for Ohio's schools
w close for lack of funds .
The Senate , by a vote of 21).12,
returned to the House with
amendments Tuesday the bill which
grew in part from national publicity
given school shutdowns in the state.
It would force financially ailing
districts to seek loans from local
.
hanks, and if turned down by them,
FACES EXPULSION
In borrow from a newly created
. .CINCINNATI (AP) - A It-year·
state school loan fund.
old student from Bloom Junior High
House Finance Chairman Myrl H.
School faces possible expulsion for
Shoemaker, 0-BolllTleville, the chief
tangling with a teacher, but his ·
sponsor, said he wanto!d wstudy the
punishment could have been worse.
revised bill and to discuss it with
. .The student disturbed an eighth
House Speaker Vernal G. F.lffe Jr .,
grade class taught by Johodalyn
O.New Boswn.
Hamby Mooday by walldug into the
Presently, schools are permitted
classroom w see a friend.
to close after the state auditor finds
.. When Miss Hamby told the boy to · they lack funds to 'finish current
leave, the student, who is not school terms.
assigned to her class, twisted her
Loans envisioned in the bill would
arm, mocked her to the noor and be limited w the amount, certified
tried w choke her, police said.
by the auditor, required to allow a
.. Several students pulled the boy off districl to finish the current school
Miss Hamby and held him IDltU the year.
school 's security officer arrived.
Senate Education Chairman
Marcus A. Roberto, 0-Ravenna,
said the " bottom line" in the bill is

Rutland man

Association of Ohio met to discuss
how best to deal with what was
developing into an admininstrative
nightmare . .
Some auditors complained they
thought the rollback would go' into
effect in 1980. This, they reasoned,
would have given them tirpe to
prepare.
Only homeown ers who have
owned arid lived in their homes since
last Jan . 1 qualify for the additional
2'r.! percent rollback.
Since not ·all residential and
agricultural property owners were
eligible tor the taK break, a few
auditors said they thought the
rollback
may
be
ruled
_,
unconstitutional.
"An across-the-board ' tax brenk
would have cost ari additional $29
million and leg islators didn't think
f (Continued on page 1~)
.

•

'

/

hurt in wreck
One person was injured during a
two-vehicle accident Tuesday in
Meigs County on SR 124, threetenths of a mile east of milepost 13.
Called to the scene at 6:37 p.m.,
officers report a west bound auto
operated by Charlene Bing, 41,
Rutland, had stopped in traffic on
124.
A west bOund vehicle driven by .
Daniel Roush, 22, Rutland, faUed to
stop and struck the Bing autn in the
rear .
Bing displayed visible signs of
injury and was transported by the
Ruland Emergency Squad to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Both vehicles incurred severe
damage. Roush was cited on w
charge of failure to maintain an
assured clear distance.

\

'

''

..

out for over a .mile in depth in the Stiversville area deep
gas well project by the Adams Drilling Co., and the J.
D. Drilling Co., Racine.

House to study bill making
it illegal to close schools

POSTALEXANDNATION

BASIC JEANS

I

Mr. Gleason rejected ~uch an Dff~­
some of the. leadership of the
association wondered why · Mr.
Gleason wanted a teacher strike.
"The federal medlator cootacted
the association yesterday to report
that Mr. Gleason is not willing to
negotiate until the teachers are
willing to surrender and give up
their posiUon (strike). It is ~­
tremely unfortunate that such a
position by the superintendent could
force the strike to continue for weeks
and weeks".

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

MEN'S WRANG~R

~ .;~:. 660

sonnel are honoring the teachers'
picket lines. Tbere are seven non·
member teachers who are crossing
the lines. The only other certified
staff on hand are the principals.
"At the last mediation session,
prior to the strike, the MLTA offered
Mr. Gleason a way to avoid a strike.
We proposed that all unresolved ·
issues be submitted to binding arbitration. Such an action would have
made the strike unnecessary.
"However, such action is un·
workable atthis time . At that time,

'

•

Made of famous wrangler
No-Fault pre-washed 14
ounce blue denim -Straight
leg or boot flare style. Waist
sizes 28 to 38 and lengths 30,
32, 34 or 36 inches. Complete
selection. Stock up now on
what you need. Be sure to see
our new selection of Men's
western Shirts.

the Meigs Local Teachers
Association, today issued the
following strike report:
"The Meigs Local teachers again
urge parents to keep their children
home.
"The schools are virtually closed
and no meaningful education is
taking place. Thirty-eight children
were in the schools.
"Again, we emphasize that bu.ses
are not running. There are no cooks,
one secretary and one janitor in
OAPSE per·
various buil~s.

at y

JUST RECEIVED

lOUGH SIIN

Special sess.ions scheduled for the
Meigs L&lt;lcal Board of Education for
both Monday and Tuesday nights
were not held. Security guards have
been placed at the buildings of the
&lt;Us\rlct.

A decision is expected soon on
whether the football game and band
show will be held Friday night. Supt.
Gleason indicated yesterday ~t
unless coaches and teachers in tllese
endeavors are on the job, Friday 's
game and band show will be post·
poned.
Band personnel were at the high
school Tuesday afternoon rehear·
sing the band show. Friday night Is
supposed to be the annual
homecoming observance.
Mrs. Bonnie Fisher, president of

•

ELBERFELD$

SCHOLL
REMOVER

OJICrating. He urged parents to help·
by volunteering for work at the
schools and to form car pools for
tra,nsportation of students. The
strike Is being supported by the
Meigl! Local non-eertified employes
which includes the bUB drivers .

The United SUites PM!al Service

Is announcing an examination for
Clerk-Carrier position at the
Langsville Post Office, with the
examination to be given at Parker·
sburg, W. Va.
Applicants must have reached
their 18th birthday on the date of
filing their applications, and must be
citiZens.
Opening date for applications is
Oct. 1, 1979, with the closing date
Oct. 19, 1979. Applications may be
picked up at the Langsville Past Of·
flee.

Weather
Partly cloudy tonight and Thur·
sday. Low tonight in the low to mid
50s. High Thursday in the mid to upper 70s. Tile •hance of rain is 10 per·
cent through Th•II'Sday.

its guarantee that Ohio's school
children will not have their
educations interrupted due to local
money shortages.
Sen. Oakley C. Collins, R·lrontnn ,
said the measure has been needed
"for many yeru s. Ohio 's school
closings have been a disgrace . They
have given the state a black eye, and
caused Ohio to be held in ridicule
aroood the nation."
Earlier this year, the legislature
approved another new law
permitting school districts wsubmit
to voters a temporary local income
tax, of up to 1 percent, w repay
loans.
Previously, they had been limited
to local property tax revenues which
have been losing favor among voters
around the state over the past
decade .
Roberto said his committee added
language to the House proposal
under which school districts could
better withstand possible delays in
state subsidies later this year as P

result of a state cash flow problem.
The administration of Gov. James '
A. Rhodes at one point mentioned
giving the schools only 45 percent of
their 1979-1980 subsidies in the first
six months of the July !.June 30 state
fiscal year , and 55 percent in the
second six months.
More recently, the governor has
said he thinks the schools can
receive their subsidies on schedule,
with other state obligations held
temporarily in abeyance.
However, Roberto's committee
provided that if school payments are
delayed, districts may borrow ui&gt; to
the amount withheld and take WJW
July I, 1980, w repay.
Current law says school districts
may . borrow within one calendar
year only such amounts which they
can by the Dec. 31 end of the same
calendar year.
Public schools received top
priority last July when the
legislature enacted the state's 19791981 budget bill.

Evans named to
Southern board
The Southern Board of Education
in regular session at the
high school in Racine Tuesday night
appointed Gary D. (Denny) Evans
to fill a vacancy on the hoard.
The vacancy was created recently
by the resignation of Mrs. Betty
Wagner. Evans,.wbo prevloUBly ser·
ved on the board, will begin at·
tending meetings next month.
The board also voted to advertise
for two new school btises. The pur·
chase of the lluses has been approved by the sUite. Later, three old
buses wtll be· sold through sealed
bids and those buses will be. ad·
vertised so that Interested persons
will be advised of the sale.
Anna Wines was named tn the ~ub­
stitute cook list and named to the
teachers substitute list were Andy
Lyles, Lee Lee, David JenkinS Lin·
da Fisher, Joyce Seelig. Audry Grin·
m~ting

..

dley was named ·to serve as a four
hour a day custodian at the junlcr
high school.
The board approved the at·
tendance of Carl Wolfe and Howard
Caldwell In at a coaching cJlnlc to
be held Oct. 5, Tile board entered In·
to an agreement with the Atbens
County Board of Edcuatlon for an
EMR supervisor. The supervisor
will work over a wide area giving a
part of his work time to each dl!trid
involved in the cooperative
program. BU!s and the financial and
activity fund statements were approved.
Attending were Supt. Bobby Ord
High School Principal Jim
Treasurer Nancy C8mahan and
board members, David Ne8ae,
Shirley Johnson, Sue Grue~~er and
Dallas Hill.

Adams:

'

t

�•

2- The Daily Setitinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1979

Business
•
mirror

,1 •.• .

Editorial opinions,
comments

Washington today
WASHINGTON \AP) · - Once
there was a Democratic presidential
candidate wh o said that the
compelling issue was leadership , not

an itamizad list of programs and
proposals.
Now there is a potential candidate
who says much the same thing .
The first was Jimmy Carter in
1976. Th e second is Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, who may contest Carter 's
renomination in 1900.
Search for the compelling items that
divide the president and the senator
from Massachusetts and you will
sea rch in vain. There are more
programs on which th ey agree than
on which they differ.
Ask Kennedy for specifics on what
he would do differently as president
and you'll gel an answer like this:
" I think right now what we 're
seeing, or course, is the substantial
inflation, 13 percent inflation, the
increase of three-tenths or one
percent in the unemployment, the
beginning of the pressures in terms
or recession . We're going to face, I
think , an innporlant and deepemng
crisis in our economy in the latter

part of this year about how we're
going to balance llje efforts to deal
boU1 with the inflationary and the
.recessionary pressures .
" And the way' we come to grips
with those is going to have, I think,
very significant implications in a

variety of different fronts over the
period of the ea rly '80s."
That's a lot of words without an

answer.
There is some frustration among
Carter loyalists at Kennedy's ability
to generate support without getting
down to it emized proposals. but
probably no more than there wa s
among Carter 's 1976 rivals at the
difficulty of pinning him down to
speCifiCS.
•
Not that Carter campai gned
without proposals. He made scores,
and eventually hundreds. But most
of them came without numbers or
dollar signs, or specifics on the way
they would be implemented.
.Carter always said he had been as
specific as any other candidate. And
at one point during that campaign,
he said , " It 's not the little, ticky
iri divid ual , co rn pi:! rtmenta tized
interests that concern people when
they vote, " he sa1d on April 28 , 1976.
"They're s earchin g for somebody
whom they can trust and who cares
about them and who is com petent. ''
Now it is Kennedy who is !&lt;liking
about leadership, saying that , the
critical question to hinn Is the way
the adininistralion addresses such
problems as infla tion and
unemplo)1nent.
" .. . It 's back to whether the
people ha\'e the sense of confidence .

..0

,,,1., v, ,,.,,

1
11 • • --&gt;oi..L..t.•h~IN~~ ; ' '· · 11'',

."!; W..

.!

'Ohio Perspective'
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

An

considera ble decision~naking power
but have not made significant gams
is on th e ·many boards, commissions
and advisory bod ies in state
government.
-' Right now women comprise 19.9
percent of the 3,254 members on 317
such bodies.
But a new "how-to" book compiled
by the Women's Ohio Volunteer
Employment Network, known as
WOVE N, is expected to boost the
number of femal e ' boa rd and
commission members.
It is a directory which provides a
complete rundown of the boards and
revea ls _their co mp osition, the
qualirications needed to be on 'them
and other details.
For example , the Underground
Parking Commission ha s the
following entry:
- Five members: four appointed
by the governor with advice and
consent of Senate; director of
administrative services; ex~ fficio.

- Expiration: One member on

It).

mE DAn.. Y SENTINEL
!USPS lu.M:I )

lb

will have to detail her expertise in
the
particular
area,
her
accompli shments and po litical
affiliation and recommend ations
from oth er people qualified In her
area or interest.
" We recognize the place of
patronage in state government, but
also believe many appointments are
made purely on the qualifications of
the individual," Ma r y Miller,
director of WOVEN, said.
Mrs . . Miller's research for the
directo ry
shows
that
the
predominantly male boards are
small in size suggesting tighter
decision-making control. Of the 126
members on three-member boards
having public members, only three
are women .
According to lhe directory, " It is
in teres tin g to note that the
percentage of women (on boards)
as
decreases
cons istently
remllfleration increases- from 33.1
percent for no compensation to 7.8
percent lor full-time positions."
The directory concludes, " U our
state government is to be truly

tllat 'h e can deal with these lssues , I

1-79~

one each odd-numbe red yea r

representative of the citizens, it

think that's ·the matter of deepening
and increasing concern to people as
we come to the 1980s," he said .
And Carter seems to have changed
his mind about the impact of specific
programs on the attitude of the
public, at least as it is reflected in
his slumping poll ratin gs.
" ... Most of the decisions that
have to be made by a president are
inherently not popular ones, " he
said the other day. "They are
contentious. There is not a single
vole to be derived from the evolution
of a national energy policy . ... "

through 19B5 .
- Length of term: Eight ye,a rs
ending 1().1.
-Compensation: Expenses.
- Freq uen cy of mee ti ngs:
Monthly.
---{lualificalions: Not more than
two of the same political party ;
lhree-year residence and voting
requirement.
- Fun ction: Construct, operate,
maintain parking facilities.
- Prese.n t Composition : Five

follows that, in lhe decade beginning
with 19M, we must more widely
engage the resources of the talented
and skilled women in problemsolving and policy-making positions
in state government and that their
absence must be serioUsly
addressed by appointing officials
and by women themselves.''

ThUfldly, Sept. 27

ASTRO·GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A

'-Your

~'Birthday

S•plember 27, 1979
Y'ou are likely to do a lot of
weed ing-out this coming year
ragardlng situat ions and ventures that h1:1ve proven to be ol
little worth. Your new projects
wilt De hOpeful and prom ising.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0CI. :Z3) Selfdefes tlng thoughts are the only
things which could hold you back
today. Think P.OBillvely Instead of
worrying abo'ut that which will
never happen. How to get along

Wanted to Buy
CHIP WOOD . Poles max
diameter 10" on largest end.
$ 12 per ton . Bundled $lob . $ 10
per ton . DeliverEtd to Ohio
Pollet Co .. Rt 'l . Pomeroy .

992·2689.

OL D FURNITURE, ice boxes .
brass beds. iron beds , desks .
etc.. complete households .
Write M .D. Miller, Rl. 4,
Pomeroy or co ll 992-7760
OlD COINS. po cket wa tches,
cl.pss rings . wedding bond s,
diamonds . Gold or silver . Coli
J. A . Wamsley . 7411-1331 .
WAN TED: SAW logs . Payment
upon delivery to our yo rd . 7:30
to 3: 30 weekdays. Blaney
Ha rdwoods . SR 339 , Barlow,

OH . 678-2'180
ANTIQUES. FURNITURE . glo"

chino , ony th 1ng See or coli
Ruth Gosney , antiques . 26 N
2nd .,
Middleport
OH

992-3161

WANTED : SAW logs . Payment •
upon deli very to our yard .
7:30·3:30 weekdays . Blaney
Hardwoods . SR 339, Barlow ,

OH 678-2900

WANTED TO buy : Used fish .
aquar ium with or wi thout
ti lter Co ii99 2-J690 .

ANTIQUE POCKET wJ tches
Willing to pay top dol lor . Co li
1_::;91-1973 evenings..
WA NTED: JUNK . Batteri es ,
rad iators . motors , out~ . trans
No Su n day ~ 949· 2563.

male.

A woman seeking a board position

One yea r ago : Freight and
commute r

rail

service

was

paralyzed across most of the U.S.
when a clerks' union expanded a
strike against one · railroad to 43
others.

with others' signs is one of the
sections you'll enjo y In your new
Astra-Graph Letter which begins
wi th your blrtt1day. Mail $ 1 for
each t o Astra-Graph , Box 489.
Radio City Station , N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birt h date .

well within your reach today, but
LEO (July 23- Auu . 22) Seek
even alt er you accomplish you r · enjoyable outlets today that cost
aims you may st ill have some
you little or nothing. You lend to
doubts as to whether you han be a !ril le extravagant and will
dled things right.
tater regret spending too much.
AQUARIUS (J1n. 20--Feb. 19)
VIRGO (Aug. 2,3..lept. 22) Your
Before asking favors of any new
possib ilities tor gains today look
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Noy, 22) acQuaintance. take the time to very prom ising. ytt tor some rea.
You 'll treat persons In need com - bu ild good will or you may scare
son you may IMI you·re entitled
passionately and considerately them off. Once they know you,
to mora . Be glad, not greecy.
today . Someone you' re realty it 's a different matter.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I
indeb!ed to might be uninten- PISCES (Feb. 2&lt;J..M1rch 20)
tionally overlooked . however
You 're very sell-su fficient today
SAOITTAFIIUS (Nov. 23· Dec. 21) and capable ol doing what needs
IN THE COMMON
Too much time may be soent doing on your own. Associates
PLEAS COURT,
today on things you enjoy rather could prove to be more or a hinMEIGS COUNTY ,
than on a serious matter neectlng drance than a help.
OHIO
att ention . Reverse the orcter. ARIES (Mirch 21 - April19) Mak - IN THE MATTER OF SET·
Take care ol ctuty first.
OF AC ·
ing an Import an t agreement TLEMENT
PROBATE
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19) today? Be sure all the lerms are COUNTS,
Goal s you hope to achieve are exactly what you want belore COURT, MEIGS COUNTY ,
signing or you mav later have OHIO
Accounts and vouchers of
Auto Sales
remorse.
following
na11_1ed
TAU~US (April 2D-Miy :ZO) You the
1974 VEGA HATCHBACK . coli are a good worker t oday. up to a fiduciaries have been fl~ed
303-675- 1501 or 305 -675-2488 certain point. II you leel you 've in the Probate Court, Me•gs
or 304·675· 1553 .
been at something too long you County, Ohio~ for approval
stop before the task Is and settlement:
1976 PlYMOUTH VOLAR E. Ex- may
CASE NO. 20471 Fifth An ·
completed .
ce ll en t condi tion . 29 ,000 QEMINI (M1y 21·June 20) Vour nual Account of Martha
Childs, Trustee Under the
miles . $2400 . 992-3 198 .
charm end winning ways wlll Last Will and Testament of
make
you
popular
with
your
1970 T· BIRD , 2 door coupe ,
Bertie N. Watts, Deceased
CASE NO. 22541 Final
n'ew 429 engine. 4 barrel. new peers today , but you mull be
ceralul to treat everyone e~ua lly,
and Di stributive Account of
ex haust . less than 300 miles or you'll oflenct a friend .
Witt,
Ad on engine. PS, PB , Cruise con· CANCER (June :Z1·July :l2} Oth - Connie
ministratrix of the Estate
trol. electric bu cket seats w ith ers witt be willing to help you
of Cecil Higgenbotham,
• co nsole. re ar de fogger , new today, but you mustn 't Sltpect
Deceased
tires , new eJChoust. $1800. th em to do all the work . Should
CASE NO. 16148 Se~ond
742 -2404 before 2 p.m . or you become too demanding ·Account of Fannie Miller,
they're apt to lay down their
Guardian the Person and
after 5 p . m
J
tools.
Estate of Grover c . Oliver,
1973 VW STATIONWAGON 30
an incompetent ~rson
mi . per gol. Auto ., Irons .. imCASE NO. 21496 Final
and Distributive Account of
macula te. 378-6155.
PROBATE COURT
OF MEIGS
Patrick H. O'Brien, Ad ·
1973 FORD F-100, B cy l. , std.
COUNTY, OHIO
ministrator of the Estate of
shift . $1500. 742-2978 .
ESTATE OF BERTHA C. Melvina
Barnhart,

1916 MONTE CAR LO . 350 CANAOAY,DECEASEO
Case No. 22818
engine , low mileage, S2600.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
992. 26::5,=,6·==:-:-==~:-:
OF FIDUCIARY
1917 CHEVROLET SUBURBAN.
On September 19, 1919, in

lront and rea r o lr condition. the Meigs County Probate
ing. cruise 1il1 wheel. 454 Cou rt, Case No. 22818, Anne
engine, trailer end specia l Marie Chapman, 107 H i ~h
package, si l ver rodeo deluxe Str ee t, . Pom eroy, Ohto
was ap pointed
interior. AM-FM radio 8-l rock 45769,
Executri x of the estate of
to pe ,
bumper
guards , Be rth a
C.
Ca nad ay,
overhead cob li ght:~ , power deceased , late of 140 Lin rea r window . equipped for co ln Hi ll , Pomeroy, Ohio
CB . luggage rack , l og lights . 45769.
Robert E . Bu ck
ca tI 742·2211 . before 5 p
Probate Judge -

or 985 ·4338 alter 5 .

m.

1977 HON DA AC COR D, 5· (91 26 ' ( 10) 3• IO, Jtc
speed ,

r adia Is ,

Clerk

32 , 000

miles , sharp, $4250. 1976

Sale, Rent or Trade

Nov a, 6 cyl ,, au to., P .S. , ,
air. radials. Sede t o a p · FOR SALE or rent . Nice 3
preciate . $2500 . Litt l e bedroom modulor located in
Hocki.ng . 969·246-4 .
Port lend area. Set up on lot or
can be moved . Ca ll after 4:30.
1965 FORD FAIRLANE . Good 304-213·5272.
running condition . $200.

992-2194
FOR TRADE : two tots in
1973 dNCOtN CONTI NENTAL, P omeroy, for motor home .
949·2182.
fully equ1pped . 985-3577 .

Deceased

.

~y~o...zo- ....._&lt;:;11._
DEVOTED TO THE
INI'ERFSJ' OF

MEIGS-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEFLICH
City Edl\or
Publ.ilbed d.Uy ncept S.turdly by Tbe ObJo
VaUe:y P\lbi.J.shJ..q Compaoy- Multimed.l.l, lac. ,
Ill Court SL, PomtN)', 0~ 4S7e. Bwlocu

Oflitt Pbooc tft- 2151. Edltorill

m-zm.

Pbo~ae

SecoOO cia., JJOillllt pakl11 PoiMroy, ObJo.
Natiou.lldvertkln&amp; ~prettn\ativt, L.aadoa
AJtodiii.H, 3101 E•tUd Avt ., Cle:velaod, ObJo
!jUl.
Sublcr1ptloa niH : DeUve:ml by carrle:r
wbe:rt IVIIJ.Ible to cuta ~r week. 8y Molor
Rouk where CIUTie:r aervlce oolant1able, ODe
t!IGDt.h,

$3.10.

'·

The OaUy Sealiael, by IDIIU La Ohkl Ud Welt

Vlrgi.DJII , ooe year $3UG ; Sla moatlu U7.5f:
Ulree moathl tlUO. E!Hwbtre $SI.DII ; l lx
moatbl JZI.• ; llllft momlhl SlUe.
TIM! Ataoe:lllted Preu ll exclulvely eaUUed
totbeue forpu blkiUoo of 1U ot., dJIJiflkbn
credUed 1o the etWI.-per 1od 111o the Jooeal
DtWI publiJ.IItd bft'elJI.

Today in history
Today is Wednesday , Sept. 26, the
269th day of 1979. There are 96 days
left in the year .
Today 's highlight in history :
On this date in 1777, British troops
occ upied Philadelphia in the
American
Revolution. · The
Continental Congress directed the
American war ei· ' rt from
Baltimore.
On this daLe:
In 19il7, New Zealand became a
self-governing dominion within the
British Commonwea lth .
In 1918, the World War I Allies
launched an offensive that broke the
Germans' Hindenburg Line.
In 1919 , President Woo drpw
Wilson collapsed aboard his private
train afte r making 40 speeches
around the country on behalf of the
Treaty of Ver sailles.
In 1950, United Nations troops in
the Korean War recaptured the
South Korean capital, Seoul, from
the North Koreans.
In 1955, the New York Stock
Exchange experienoed its worst
price break since 1929 - a reaction
to the news that President Dwight
Eisenhower had suffered a heart
attack.
In 1971, President Richard Nixon
flew to Anchorage , Alaska , for a
meeting wit h Japan 's Emperor
Hii-ohito , who was makin g a
stopover on a flight to Europe .
Ten years ago : A military
government wit h leftist leanings
overthrew the government of
Bolivia.

......
....

.... ci!

~ ;~
...~'-I;

[twas, instead, like a beginning ~ ·
of renewed cooperation among
labor. management, education ~
government ; of federal md; of:
efforts to diversify; of attempts ta..
control rather than be victinnized by:change.
..
New companies, including an ..
aircraft assembly plant, are settling;
into the area, and older coocerns,some or which had consider~
leaving for newer facilities and:'
fewe r labo r pr oblems, ar e;
expandin g.
" We now have as m uch ·
cohesivness as it is possible to have•
in any business, labor and politicaL
community," says . J . P hillip:
Richley, mayor presiden t of the ·
Mahoning
Valley
Eco nomic
Development Corp.
' ' 'When I became mayor i~
January 1978 I was depressed,' ' said
Rich ley . " I expected we would havea fantastic tragedy."
To begin with, said Richley, th e·
"tragedy " really wasn 't one at all, 1(.
discovery he made many weeks
after taking office.
He blames the national media .
"They buried us and put a 10-ton
stone over olu- heads, " he says.
"They created a whole series of
tear-jerker stories about a dying
town wedded to one industry."
But the valley had becom ~ more
lhan steel ; for a quarter..:entury it
has been diversifying. Now, says
Laird Eckman, associate director of
the co rporation, 76 percent of
manufacturing is unrelated to steel.
Co ncedin g a great deal of
industrial obsolescence and, in the
pa5l , official apathy a bout
correctin g it, Richley says the valley
still was able to abl;orb the plant
shutdown with unexpected ease.
He cites a Youngsto wn State
University study. Of 4,100 workers
laid off , he says, 1,500 found work in
the valley ; I ,000 retired ; 800 moved ;
800 are being retrained, looking , or
have dropped from the job market .
For those who lost jobs, he says, it
was ind~ a tragedy . But for the
valley as an economic entity , he
maintains, the real damage was
done by the myth of a "debilitated,
distressed situation."

1~~~
~QC...._
~Q.: ....
~

A.

nual Account of Robert B.
Titus Guardian of Stephen

en

(9)

26, lie

Ohoo

~f.n

a: E CfJ Cl: :00:
--~ .."'
'""C'\Io ·· . a.
' (;;
0.
u., uo
roc
Jl,lol
0.
~

-c o""....
a:

.....
coi

Vi~
og
E~

u

isQl

u.lil-

...

- - • ......C-4 '
an
...
u

CIC

:,::

J::

CIC

et-

=
Cl:

a.:

~

.:8

~

-~

..E"' ."' "'
""'
~

Q)

0

::J --

..

"'
iii

u

.."

~'

-

",,

t...

I .

Robert E. Buck
JUDGE
Meigs County,

....

{

~

execufton of the trust, not
less than five days prior to
the date set for heanng .

Probate Division,

~:;

:;:

...
""

the

·common Pleas Court,

a::(4.

"

Unless exce~;~tions are
filed thereto1 Silld accounts
will be for nearing before
said Court on the 26th ~ay
of October, 1979 at wh1ch
time said ac,counts will be
considered and continued
from day to day until
finally disposed of.
Any person i nterested
my tile written ex ceptions
to said accounts or to mat ~

,

~ ~-.,·

u.t

an incompetent

to

a.oo
QC
U.!!l

,...

person .

pertaining

Q.~

•

N

~UJ

Deceased
CASE NO. 22462 First An·

ters

~c.

~

2

Meinhart,

rhus,

.,,

~

...:

CJ

Barbara · Jane Meinhart
Mayer, Executrix of the

E.

.,&gt;
-"'""'
"'u-·
S

.0 CfJ •

Berry's World

and Distributive Accoun1 of

George

•

~~

Julie London is 53 years old. Iowa
Gov. Robert Ray is 51.
Thought for today: A man is not
old until regrets take the place of
dreams - actor John Barrymore, ..
1882-1942.

.

of

Q)

"'o
c

CASE NO. 22594 Fonal

Estate

~

~

decay.

area in which women could wield

en

YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO (AP)
The downtown streets and plazas·
are clean and bu~y, if not bustling,
and the north-south highway
through the suburbs is strung with
seemi ngly prosperous fast food
restaurants ana motels.
Compared with two years ago,
employment and personal ineome is
up, property values are hi~her,
building activity is healthy. It 111 no
more difficult to measure the
areas's spirit: It too is higher . .
In September 1977, this Milhomng
Valley city midway between
Pittsburgh and Cleve land was
described in terms of tragedy and
desperation, a symbol of what
happens when industrial plants
become obsolete.
The climax came, it was believed,,
'on "Black Monday," Sept. 17, 1977~
· when Youngstown Sheet &amp; Tube
abruptly closed its outmoded
Campbell works and laid off 4,10&lt;t
workers.
;
Many in the area felt it was the.
beginning of the end. The message.
spread about the death of a
steeltown, and the entire area
the
natlonat
became . in
consciousness a s)mbol of industriat.

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller
Is the American spirit beginning
people are too often inclined to let
to wilt? I would like to think not, but
others do for us what we could do for
there are too many signs suggesting
ourselves. We are inclined to put forotherwise. America appears to be
th only as much effort as is needed to
treading a path of mediocrity. It no
get by .
longer aspires to the standard of exHow can we undo the damage that
cellence that it once dld. Many say it
has been done?·How can we restore
is the times; that no longer can the
the drive and the American spirit
problems of our country and the
that has made this country a true
world be treated in simplistic terms.
land of opportunity? Where do we
Granted, technology has put a dif- start ? In my humble opinion we
ferent face on national and world
should ' start by dismantling the
events, but in and of itself, it has not
welfare state. This is not to suggest a
been responsible for the tragic tran- ·• discontinuance of aid for the truly
sformation of the American will that
needy, but it is to suggest that those
seems so evident.
that are able bodied should be made
Where has our sense of common
to work for their assistance. We need
purpose and dedication gone. Has it
to put a stop to the "something for
been replaced with a selfish, me first
nothing" philosophy which has so
attitude; with a mind set that says
seriously undermined our nation's
"what 's in it for me?" The signs are
work ethic. We have to instill a new
numerous that it has, burgeoning
appreciation for quality in our
crime, ever expanding welfare rolls,
schools and in our workplaces. We
a moral decadence that rea ches into
have to get tough in our courts and
every element of our society, a
stop coddling the criminal. It is not
cynicism with respect to our
going to be easy. All of us as incherished traditions of religious
dividuals will have to make
freedom and patriotism.
sacrifices. We are going to have to
This "me .first" mentality has
get involved to see that the job gets
given birth to a society in. which
done. We are going to have the
sacrifice and sharing no longer ap- courage of our convictions, to stand
pear to have meaning . We see it with
up for what we feel is right.
respect to consumption patterns; we
For too long now our country has
see it with respect to our increasing
been coasting; we 've been living on
military manpower needs. Who is to
past laurels. Perhaps we enjoyed too
blame for the unraveling of the 'much success too soon, perhaps
American way? In my judgment our
we've been spoiled. And like a fruit
govenunent is the primary culprit.
that 's been spoiled, perhaps we 've
Our government, though well ingrown soft ; too soft to take the finn
tentioned, has discouraged in- stands necessary to keep this coundividual· initiative, has discouraged
try on course.
individual responsibility; in sum, it
It's time we recognized these shorhas discouarged America's amtcomings and put them behind us. If
bition, by burdening it wi th
we are to continue enjoying our
regulations and disincentives too
democratic form of government as
numerous to name. In its place is a
we know it, we as a nation are going
malaise tha t pervades every
to have to work harder than we have
household, every workshop. We as a
been to preserve it.

....c•

"Go through that door. Turn righ t at the second
Moonie. Then go past' thref! mor(# Moonies and
the check-in desk is on the left. "

I

'.I

- -

-

�-ali
cue

IU

u

..,c
.!ia:~

0%

=
=-

u

cncu
-c
enI
c
c
en._
.. .c

ar:

:I

o;

"'

"' "'

u "'
&lt;(
C

..

0
&gt;-

=

£

=en

:iG
_...

en C)

::r -·

3:iii.:

!!. ~

-=
... =

..

QCI

oac
Ill CD

lO

Ol

-c_,
o,,.
~ - ~ &lt;ll c::
::JC::Q CD
- roo Q,

en

~g.:-:~

~

~
"'"'"'
0 ~0
(") .

- n-

Qro(l)

~

:"Q

"'"
' :n
"'ro
&lt;J&gt; ·
"'"'
m~

"'. "-"" -t

:;-" -·=
iD a. . c::

~~

~

- · ;:r
"'""
3tD '1:
=::s -5.
(';'

.
....
=
= .....

"u
.... O&gt; CD'
o n·a. r"ro-

"'"'
"":IE
"'"'
~~
., _

&lt;llr--

::00 ~0

(.)•

·-&lt;0
OOl

.s:: .

o lD

.._Ol

,.,
"'"
;;t ~jO
.., .,
"'8
"'1'C
... "'"'
&lt;
-·" "'
o;~II&gt;

::I

::J(I)

oa:

::::0

&gt;-

01 - ·

-'0

~~

n

en!='

0

:-':c
enC:
,.:a
,..en

....

o ·

.... -"
~

0

-·

~
m

-,,.
·~~

"':,~c

3

,.-t

.,.,

m"

-

:a

Ot
-rn

"-

~w
~ ~
.J

&lt;( "' .
; .::£~

uo
5 0'" a.

Cd ·:; c:

u~"'o.c

Q)
&lt;!)~(/)

-:&gt;

Ol

&lt;IJ

a:,..._
"-L{)

:::J(\1

D.

0ffl

-~
m....,
2

=;I

iitO

&lt;O:r
&lt;1&gt; ·

n~o CD
!!!.
.._...
, IJJ

"'-~&lt;

~

"'""
ou
"'

DO
t1&gt; :;;

~CD
"' o CD

· s.
a;-&lt; :s-· o0
"'

~- ~ 3 c
"' :n~
=r :s
~ - •'
.
" - · e.g
&lt;D"

"&lt;T"'" "'
31::

(/):;: .,&lt; &lt;Dw

oo

, l.ol

ue&gt; 31:: -

=0

'i'"

U)

(1

~

.. ~ -

•

O&gt;a.
&lt; m
&lt;

~ ~ u:t
= en
m
.,.

.-

.._...

"''., '" "
~

..."'

:;; &lt;"&gt;

.

;;;

0

en

-cO::J

::J

(J)
~ 0&gt; ~ - ·

~ t0 $&lt;£ CCI ·

-mcro
.:.... ' :J
fD

s· __a •
I

iii' '1J ::J ~ en
::::r 0
... ::r
w _. ro c
!!!..=.:~ .- ,..

g-,;-roN&lt;. "'· en
::::r
.

0"

(/) &lt;tl

~ -·

c: ro

m2
0

~

' tO

Q

m
,..
' . u::t
w

::J"

~

=
=

::ro o

(A)

-

0-:;(

ctlQ:I::;
Ql:'" (')

a.

~ ro

&gt;C

&amp;

"'

(J1

::T

m

0

a. "'

c "'

ru o
:&gt; CT 0
0 =- &lt;
:&lt; '&lt;=-"'

-o

~

"'

-QG)co
=

-., "'ig en
....-·
=

ro
('1)-&lt; 3 ~
~ ru&lt;n
ro '
(J) ..... Q

....cun:s
....en

v:J

"'Q:mw
" ~ CD
~ O n

enm
"'ro&lt;

...

::::1

a. =r ~ ~

[JJ

~C:Q}

&lt;.O ....

a...,. "',.
D

=l

0

~

w ....,
Q

I
1-:

&lt;
rn

I»

Oi

·-en'C

~

c

0

Cl

z:
.....

•

0..

0

-o--i
"C

"'-

"' -·
VI=:
a~..&lt;

"'"'
"'"
cuiii
(I) - ·

~:IE

Q.l~

-:r
;&gt;&lt;:

3"-

"'"'
~r:

V)

~

~-

;:Ill:

-·

::I
nl

.,.. ~
.
G
... -...
"'""'"'
. "'"'
~. Q 0

~-

.•

ii

...

'
;;·
$

"
c:
-ro&lt;O
Ul Ill :r
vo
z.,
0

·

n
-

w

a.~
:T&lt;t&gt;

...

~ c:

(!) ·

"

5.

!!! . o~

=

(§ro~

Vl

(J)

-

-'0

&lt;Om
ffl:&gt;vo

&lt;
"'"'"
mroro

-

0

::0

;o

~

!"'
w

c

!!1.

w

""'

a.:&gt;

:r&lt;cn m

OCD!U -

3:&gt;- CD
m-Jbn

"'vo ro ....
«&lt;·
-.
--ll&gt; - ·
Q).....,Vl
nwo
~ 0-.:
0

3N~ :C

:P•O
\'"l::I C:
1 -a.UJ
c: a.oo
. "''
a.:: 3
1

I

::.,

" -·
"':;
:;·
tO

Vlro:J

..

c

~n.,

'3 ""'
Ill··~
w ...
;~
Ou
CT - ·

=

-IC
(') &lt;1&gt; ,

=:u o AI
&lt;tl(I)Q:l

cr cr

CD
•

a · ro c:;-mw
:J"

(J)

.,u
mom
.
'
3

~

0
0
0

&gt;-

...

"'.
c~5

a- ·::aU

.CJ-c
'"'"'
&lt;(c
.c

· 0

"'"u
,.,

...
... -o&lt;t

-u

&lt;.t;&gt;

jgi
z:

" ....

--=..,n:s
cu

A.

[!J

~tO VI

0

CTO

·--......

::;;::;;-

~

::)

Q..&lt;l)&lt;ll
~c

-· u c

~(/J~

.owe
t"'.c
: - "'

oo&gt;
a.-&gt;u_u
"'o
a.uu

E,c

0 "' .,
= 0'1

u

'C

C'tl Q) · -

--

~c.

E- "
erom
-O&gt;c
Q)o:.=

u
c

U)
"
OlQ

"'c
E·.::
E
D Q)
.g_E
~

Ql

e.

a.C.CJQ)

-a;,

cu-

~ :

0)

wo:;
u-~ou

wu ·a.

�.

'J

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1979

Pirates win big game,
~ Reds' lead decreased
APSports
Pittsburgh Manager Chuck
Tanner called Tuesday night's 1()..4
victory over Montreal "the most
important, 'pivotal gam.e of the
year."
Till tooight, that is.
"From now oo each of them will
be the most important ," cooceded
Tanner, whose Pirates take on the
Expos in Pittsburgh tonight in the
concluding game of their four-game
series. The clubs split a twi-night
doubleheader Mooday .
The Pirates climbed one-half
game ahead of Montreal on the
strength of veteran Willie Stargell,
their in~pirational leader, who
slugged two home runs.
"I like for them to mean
something," Stargell said of the
home runs, which gave him 31 for
the season and 460 for his career. " If
they're meaningful, then I'm excited
about the contribution."
Meanwhile, the West Division race
tightened up as Cincinnati lost and
Houston won . The front..-unning
Reds dropped an 8-2 decision to the
San Diego Padres and saw their lead
trimmed to II'.. games as the Astros
blanked the Atlanta Braves 8-0.
In other NL action, the St. Louis
Cardinals beat the Philadelphia
Phillies 4-1, the Los Angeles Dodgers

defeat~d

the San Francisco Giants
11-2 and the Chicago Cubs split a
doubleheader with the New York
Mets, the CUbs winning the opener
11-3 and the Mets taking the
nightcap 4-3 in 10, innings. .
Pittsburgh's Bruce Kison, 11-7,
will start against Montreal's Steve
JWgers, 13-10, when the clubs square
off tonight for the NL East lead.
Stargell hit a two..-un homer in the
first and a solo shot in the fourth .
Astros 8, Braves.0
J.R. Richard scattered four hits
and struck out 13 to pass the 300strikeout mark for the second
consecutive season and Luis Pujols
and Rafael Landestoy drove in three
runs apiece for the Astros.
The 13 strikeouts gave the 6-foot-8
Richard 302 for the season, one short
of the the National League record
for right-handers he set last year. He
is expected to start one more game
this season.
The Astros have four games
remaning while Cincinnati has five .
Padres 8, Reds 2
Dave Winfield and Kurt Bevacqua
drove in two runs apiece as San
Diego defeated Cincinnati. The
Padres broke the game open with
five runs in the seventh inning, two
on Winfield's third single of the night
and two more on a double bv

Cincy boosters plan
downtown celebration
CINCINNATI ( AP) The
Cincinnati Reds haven't even
clinched theii division yet, but their
bOOsters are already dreaming up
.\&gt;'ays to celebrate the National
League playoffs and · the World ·
Series.
The Cincinnati Downtown Council
held a press conference Tuesday to
discusss plans for painting the town
red for the Reds' possible ·
participation in the playof!s and
·World Series.
If the Reds get into the National
League playoffs, the first two games
would be played here Oct . 2-J, before
moving to the Eastern Division city.
~ The World Series will .U.rt Oct . 9
ln the American League city and
!nove to the National League Oct. 12,
13, and 14.
: A parade is ,being organized for
pet. 1 for participants who will
M!lpete with original signs and
banners . Businesses are being asked
:.. get into the spirit by outfitting
personnel in team t-&amp;lirts . At the
Greater Cincinnati Airport, tour
hostesses will be passing out
t)lousands ·of " I'm Reds Hot "
butt&lt;IJs to incoming passengers next
Monday and Tuesday .
There are plans underway to
broadcast the final games of the
National League playoffs, which

would be out of Cincinnati, on a
special speaker system oo Fountain
Square, in the center of the city.
And win or lose , there would he a
parade in the learn's honor if they
get into the World Series.
Baseball has been the cause of
some jubilant celebrations in this
southern Ohio city .
Police estimate that between
J:i,000-40,000 people converged on
Founta111 Square the night the Reds
won the 1975 World Series in Boston .
When it caine time to give them an·
official welcome more than 50,000
turned out. There were even more
fans the next year when the Reds
won the World Series by beating the
New York Yankees .
Conventions
and
previous
bookings have sold out three major
downtown hotels, but a special "hoiline" number has been set up to find
overnight accomodations in the
Greater Cincinnati area .
Although businessmen may be
rooting for the Reds, they may
secreUy be hoping that they win, but
win slowly .
The Convention Bureau estiplates
that the economic impact on Greater
Cincinnati is 13,850,000 for each day
a game is played. The total for five
days of games - the maximum stay
in Cincinnati - would be $19, 250,000.

UPPER DECK
At

llevacqua . Winfield leads the
National League with 116 'runs
batted in.
"This is a real baseball city and I
really like to pitch here, " said San
Diego starter Bob Shirley, 8-16, who
hasn't lost a game in Cincinnati in
three years.
Dodgers 11, Giants 2
Rick
Rookie
.right-hander
Sutcliffe, 17-9, combined with Bob
Castillo oo a five-hitter and Ron Cey
belted a-grand-slam homer in an
eight..-un second inning as Los
Angeles beat San Francisco.
Cards 4, Ph lis I
Swith-hitter Garry Templeton ,
bidding to become the first player to
get 100 hits from each side of the
plate in one season, had two hits for
St. Louis batting right-handed . He
now has 95 as a righty and will bat
.that way in every game for the rest
of the year, since he already has Ill
hits left-handed .
Templeton reached career highs
with his ninth homerun and his 19th
triple of the season.
Cubs 11-3, Mets 3-4
The CUbs broke the first game
open with seven runs in the fir.st
inning and were on their way to a
sweep before the .Mets tied . the
second game on a two-out, ninthinning RBI single by Richie Hebner.
The Mets won the nightcap on a runscoring single by pinch-hitter Steve
Henderson .

Meet the Eastern Eagles •••

Scott Hill
5-10, ~lb.
Senior End

Joe Stout
5-11, 170 lb.
SenlorLB

solo tackles, three assists, broke up
two passes , and recovered two
fumbles in a 24-21 loss at Michigan
State.
Others vying for the honors were
Ohio Universi ty tailback Tony
Ca rita and Bowling Green
linebacker John Fitzpatrick.

Cll
0

Vl"'
"o

..,

:I:

1
--·

"''0

.!
l

"'n
oo
:o.,

5':J

~~

_::;r

"'CC

"'"'
:....~
o-

.."' "

5~

r"

0

...c
;o

11 PIECE BAND FROM
CLEVELAND

1 WEEK ONLY

Zide 's Sport Shop
16
Tony 's CarryOut
12
Swisher -Lohse Drugs
12
HeadQua rters
,
10
High series ·· Larry Dugan 587,
Pat Carson 491; Darrell Dugan 540,
Delores Tyree ~79 .
· High game
Larry Dugan 211 ,
Carole McLougnlln· 1114; Darrell
Dugan 198, Pat Carson 180 .
Team series ·· Swisher -Lohse 189~ .
Team game ·· No. -1685 .

-....,

~

CHARL.IE L.ILL. Y

&amp;

...

POORSIDES
. ...

--- - · -~-- ---

·•

,.--·

··----- r

are nobody knows. I wish I could put
my finger right on it. When you're
losing you can find a million things
wrong, but nothing seems to help."
The explanations of what has
happened to the Bengals are varied.
" If you're in a high performance
profession like moWltain climbing,
deep-sea diving , aviation or pro
football , you better have some
how-s,' ' explained Frank Gansz, a
former airline pilot who is now the
Bengals special teams coach.
" When you start out in aviation, the
plane flies you. Then as you gain
experience, you start to catch up
with it and eventually get ahead of

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Alina
Hanover led wire-to-wire to win the
$103,000 Appleseed Pace mile at
Lebanon by a length Tuesday night
to collect $!i1,500 for her owner,
Charlie Hill, Columbus, owner of
Scioto Downs and Hill Farms.
The victory in the Ohio Sires
Stakes race boosted the two-year-old
filly's winnings to $75,000 this year.
The winning time was 2:04 .2-5 and
the payoff was $!i, $3.40 and $2.60.
Silver Spoon was second, $18.20 and·
$6.40 and the show horse, San Juan
1.
Hill, 13.20.
The 1-8 double of El Camborio and
G. Berry B. paid $601. The crowd of
2,438 bet $176,100.

it . The same thing is true with
football.
" For a lot of young guys, pro
football is a good time and not so
much their livelihood. I could see
that at the game Sunday when we
got ahead 24-0. Everyone was
starting to think about what they
were gonna have at the party."
The party was over for the
Bengals by the time the game was
over, with the Houston Oilers
winning in overtime 3()-27.
Rice says his team may be
capable of realizing a Super Bowl
dream "in about three years."
"What has been done had to be
done for the future of the
organization, " Rice said of the
Bengals youth movement in which
there are 21 players with Jess than
two years' experience . " We've
structured things correctly. We're
doing the right things. I know
they're the right things because I've
been through this too many times."

VISIT OUR
CONVENIENT

DRIVE THRU
CITY LIMITS
DRIVE THRU
748 N. Second St.
Middleport, 0.

SPECIAL

Say "hello" to
Kero-Sun heaters!

/

•

Say ''goodbye~'
to woodstoves!

FIBER ED
ALUMINUM
COATING
FOR TRAILER &amp; METAL ROOFS

"Omni" models

5 Gal. No. 50 Bright

'

" Radiant" models

Portable heat for contractors, greenhouses,
small businesses, workshops, garages,
outdoor recreation.
New, imported Kero-Sun kerosene heaters beal woodstoves every way! No
logs to cut. haul, split and stack. No Smoke, soot , ashes . Nowasled,heat up
the flue - Kero-Sun heaters need no chimney . Fuel cost averages only
3- 5~ an hour. Absolutely no installation cost or mess (compare lhat with
• woodstovesl) . Burns with no kerosene odor; tesled for pollut ion safety. Au ·
tomatic igniler . automatic lip-over shutoff. Every Kero-Sun heater "Puts
the warm where you want itt"

PRICES

PERFORMING
SUNDAY, SEPT. 30th

.....

-

Bengals can't
pinpoint
problems
,

Point .Pleasant Inn

They're Baekl
''The Deltones''

~.1651bs.

Senior End

t

The *
CINCINNATI ( AP)
Cinctnnati Bengals, after four
straight losses, 'know they have
problems. It 's just that many
players can 'I pinpoint what those
problems are.
''We play so hard, but it seems like
we 're in quicksand,' ' said Eddie
Edwards, the Bengals' big defensive
end. "The harder we try, the deeper
we get in . It's got to get better; it
can't get any worse ."
Last year, the Bengals went 0-8
before wirining a game. There were
. four more losses before the next
triumph .
Little, McCafferty
The fact that the Bengals finished
the 1978 National Football Lea~ue
MAC players of week season with three straight victories
raised hopes for this year. Bengals
Coach Homer Rice spoke of carry4!g
the momentum into this season.
CO LUMBUS. Ohio ( AP ) That hasn't proved to be the case.
Quarterback Albert Little of
"Our problems are the same ones
Western Michigan and middle guard
we've
had the last three years," said
John McCafferty of Miami are the
guard
Glenn Bujnoch. "What they
Players of the Wee~ in Mid- ,
American Conference football.
The league office selected Little, a
&amp;-foot-1 , 170-poWld quarterback from
Kalamazoo, Mich., for the offensive
honors. The senior equaled the
P~omeroy Bowling Lanes
Early Wednesday
school's modern scoring record with
Mixed League
four touchdowns in a 45-17 romp over
Sept. t 9, 1979
Northern Dlinois.
Standings
Team
Pts.
The league 's defensive laurels
L ongsnots
26
went to McCafferty , a &amp;-I, 205-pound
No. 4
2ll
senior from Cleveland. He had four

Leonard Myers

STARTING AT
ljORTABLE HEATERS

'1-9 8

00

$249~

HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
Ph. 773-5554
Mason, W. Va. ·

PICKENS' HARDWARE
0

MASON, W. VA.

I,

�~~Y~:;~•Id~.epo•~~ome•~~~~~~~~~9N~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

8- The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., We dnesday, sept. 26, 1979
0

Outdoors zn Ohio
By MICHAEL HUFFIIIA~
Associatl...-1 Pn.-s:;; Wrih•r
Squirrel season i s underw}J\'

wood cock season opens Frtd~):
(Se pt. 21! ), bow season on dt&gt;rr
begins Oct. 12 along with grouse. U1c
upland game season kicks off Nov.
15 a nd waterfowl huntmg 1s gettmg
close .
U that won't gladden the hea rt of a
hunter, nothing will. llut here's
som ething that might cause a few
skipped beats: TI1e huntmg just
might be pretty good this year.

j Hannan Trace at Kyger

F
d
,
•
k
~~l,:rtsla:r~!~e~eA~e~~~~~
ri ay m ey
Cole said !Job llonohoe, head of tile

.

percent m the sprmg drummmg
count at tile 3,000 acre area in
Zaleski State For est .
When it com es to whitetail deer ,
" it's got to be good," Cole said. " We
should be going into this yea r
f season ) with a pproximately 102,000
deeo," The fi gure is based on co untyby-coun ty populatioo est imates - as
reliable a way to figure as you can
get, Ccle sa id .
Sure, t here's no qut:til season, and
tile pheasant population has a way to
" It 's as accurate as they (Wildlife
Division resea rch staffer s ) can get it
go befor e it 's even adequate. but the
... a lthough it could be off in either
abbits and grouse arc up: squirrCl
dire.:t.ion as much as 20,000," he
popula tions are higher th an
said. That fig ure is an increase of
expected ; deer - Wow !
approx imately 11,000 over la st year.
" It's going to I"' better than last
This year more hunte rs Ulan ever
year," said Steve Co le, game
wUl be able to get antlerless deer ·
m anagement chief of the Oh1o
perm its as part of a move to keep the
Diviswn of Wildlife. " It's not the
whiteta il population a t a more
best (yea r ) we've ever 11ad, but it's
manageable level.
going to be good," he predicted.
"We'r e loo king at about 67,000
Ccle said the late season rural
apt\e rless permits and we 'estimat e
m a il ca rr ie r s survey s s how ed
slightl y less than 17,000 (antlerless
pheasant populations up abo ut 23
percent over last year and quail up. deer ) will be taken, " Cole said. " We
had a ro und 6,200 ( antlerless deer )
17 pe rcent. A reg ular ear ly-season
take n
la st
ye ar
with
rabbit survey showed populations up
ap
pro
x
ima
te
ly
30,000
a
ntlerless
across the sta te by abo ut 48 percent,
pe nnits."
Ccle said .
The most liberal seasons go to
Buckeye State grouse hunter s
oowhunters, who get a deer season
may just have a top notch season,
that r uns through · Jan . 19 with a
according to Cole. "Grouse are
break for a one week gun season ,
loo king real good this year," he said .
pursuers of tile ruffed grouse.
and
Ba sed on s pr i-ng checks a nd
Ohio's
grouse season is among tile
drumming counts. Ohio will have ·
longes
t
'in the na tion, getting
··o ne of t he hi ghest gr ouse
underway
in mid October and
populations in the last 10 years,"
continuing
tllrough
Feb. 23.
Ccl e asserted.

California wins
AL West pennant
BY ASSOCIATED PRESS
This just hasn't been Frank
Tanana'syear.
But Tuesday night was Frank
Tanana's night.
"'!'his takes a little bit o£ the sting
out of a sub-par sea son," said
Tanana after pitching the California
Angels to the American Leag ue
West Division title with a 4-1 victory
over Kansas City. "It 's like a trip,
really. Ther e was long while where I
didn 't think I 'd pitch again this

season. f'
Saddled with arm problems most

of the year , Tanana hadn ~ pitched
more Ulan 62-\l innings ina game since early June . But Tuesday night , he
went tile full nine, pitc hing a five -

Anderson
•
returnzng
to lineup
C I NC I N~' ATl

\ AP I -Cincinnati

Benga ls (:oach Homer Rice
indicated vete ran quarte rback Ken
Anderson will retu rn to the starting
lineup this Sunday against the
Dallas Cowboys and vowed there
will be no more "letups."
" U he's ready , he'll start," said
Rice.
The Bengals. wincing after their
fourth stra ight loss. are also hurting
on the offensive line Willi InJUries to
messenger guards Glrm1 Bujnoch
and rookie Berney Cotton.
" We' r e in a critical situation,' '

said Rice. "Cotton is definitely out
for Dallas and Bujnoch is a wait and
see . If he can't play, we·u move
Mark Donahue over tl1ere and that
will leave us with only 1 roo kie) Max
Montoth as a backu p on either side ."
Rice said he call ed a team
meeting following the 30-27 overtime
loss to llle Houston Oilers.
" I t old th em I was encouraged by
our big plays, and we made some
ver y big plays . I said 1 didn 't wa nt
tllem to gel used to losing. lllat we
can 't listen to all t11at ·young club '
talk." Cincinnat i has 21 players with
less than two years experience .
''The time is now, and we've got to
make thin gs happen now We 've got
to overcme what I call letup
periods."
Rice called the beating "one of the
to ug hest
lo sses
I 've
eve r
experienced .
" It's ha rd to pinpoint an)ting. It's
a letup thing. That's what happened
at Buffalo. We let up and we stayed
letup.
" It was different against Houston.
We had our let up penod bu t we carne
back. We were st rong late in the
fourth qua r ter . We took the game to
Ul em in overtime."
There will be no recriminations
againt ki cker Ch ri s Bahr who
missed th e wumm g field gual in
overtime, he ~aid
· " I can take ea ch player and pmnt
to things he di d tha t cos! us U1e
game, " Rice sa1d .
Sunday's meeting with Dallas will
be the first between the two teams
since 197:). The Cowboys won that
one 38-1 0.

I .

e

Waterloo Wijdllfe Researc h unit at

hitter to lead the Angels to their first
tiUe of any kind in the club's 19-year
history.
Tanana, 7-&lt;), was milking his fifth
start since being reactivated three
weeks ago after missing nearly
tllree months because of tendinits in
his pitching shoulder .
In other AL action, Chicago routed
Minnesota 9-3; Detroit edged
Baltimore 3-2; Milwaukee defeated
Seattle 7~ ; New York turned back
Cleveland Hi; Texas tripped
Oakland 5-\l and Toronto beat Boston
5-\l.
Brian Downing slugged a pair of
run&lt;!Coring singles in support of
Tanana's fine pitching. Downing
singled in tile game's first run in the
second inning, when the Angels
scored three times to knock out loser
·Craig Chamberlain, 4-4. The California catcher singled in another run in
the fi7th for the final run of the night.
··~- -Tige rs 3, Orioles 2
Ron LeFlor e's run-scoring single
knocked in the winning run in a tworun nin th as Detroit beat Baltimore.
Trailing 2-1 entering the ninth,
Detroit got singles from Lance
Parrish, Alan Trammell and pinchhitter Lynn Jones for one run to tie
the score at 2-2. After Rick Peters
flied to center, LeFlore singled to
dri ve in Tra mmell with the tiebreakin g run.

Jack Morris, 16-7, pitched the first
eight in nings for Detroit. Aurelio
Lopez pitched the ninth to gain his
21st save.
Brewers 7, Mariners 6
Sixto Lezcano's two-run double
with two out in the eighth inning
ralhed Mi lwaukee to a comeback
victory over Seattle. Paul Molitor
walked to sta rt the Milwaukee
eighth and Gorman Thomas beat out
a single off third baseman Bill
Stein's glove with two out. Lezcano
followed with his double off Shane

Witll a W record, the best start
ever in the school 's history, coupled

I

with the fact that no Hannan Trace
football team has ever beaten a

The Outdoorsman

By BILL SCHULZ
Associated Press Writer
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - If you
shoot or trap a raccoon , fox, beaver
or mink , tllere's a pretty good
chance Cbris Plott is going to get tile
skin.
" We buy for some of tile finest fur
houses in tile world," said Plott, who
heads the Plott Hide a nd Fur Co. in
Griffin, Ala .
He said he purchased more than

Top twenty
The A P Top Twenty

By The Associated Press
The Top Twenly learns in The
Assoc ialed Press college foolball
poll, with first -place votes in paren theses, records and total points.
Poinls based on 20-19·18·17·16-!5·1413·12·11 -10-9-8·7-6·5·4·3-2-t :
t. So. Calif .
(St) (3 -0·0) t , 826
2. Alabama
ill) (2 -0·01 1,235
3. Oklahoma
(2 -0·0) 1, 122
4. Texas
Ill (1 -0·01 1,040
5. Missouri
13·0·0)
89B
6. Nebraska
(2 ·0·01
862
7. Mich . St.
(3 ·0·0)
B16
B. Houslon
q -0·0)
755
9. washing!on
(3 ·0·0)
635
10. Purdue
(2 ·1-0 599
11 . Michigan
(2-1 -0)
564
12. Florida St.
(3 ·0·0)
556
13. Arkansas
• (2 ·0·01
5t9
!4. Ohio St.
!3 ·0·0) 45B
t5. Notre Dame
( 1· t-O)
436
16. No. Car. 51.
(3 ·0·0)
293'
17. UCLA
12·!-0)
2BO
lB. Penn 51 .
11-1-0l
261
19. Southern Meth .
!3·0·0)
246
20. Lou isiana St.
(2{1 ·0 )
tB4

Rawley, 5-9, the third Mariner
pitcher.
The Brewers trailed 5-0 early m
the game before making their
comeback that made a winner of
Jerrx Augustine, 9~ .

Yankees 7, Indians 5
Damasco Garcia drove in three
runs with two clutch singles ,
including the go-ahead run, as New
York defeated Cleveland . Ron
Davis, 13-2, the Ya~kees' third
pitcher, was the winner, hurling 2 2-3
innings before giving way to Rich
Gossage, who earned his 18th save.
Rick Wise, 15-10, the Cleveland
starter, pitched 61-\l innings and
gave up seven runs and nine hits
before giving way to Sid Monge.
Garc ia ' s
two-run
single
highlighted a four-run fourth inning
that gave the Yankees a 5-\llead. An
RBI single by Garcia in tile Yankee
sixth broke a M tie.

Rangers 5, A's 3
Brian
Kingman 's two-base
throwing error and a wild pitch in
tile seventh inning gave Texas its
triumph over Oakland.
Nelson Norman led off the Ranger
seventll with a single. Catcher Jim
Essiari tllrew Norman out at second
on Mickey Rivers' sacrifice bunt
attempt. But Kingman, 7-7, later
threw wild in an attempt to pick
Rivers off at first and the Texas
center fielder went all the way to
third. mingman tllen threw a wild
pitch, allowing the run to ·score .
Jim Kern, 13-5, got the victory
after relieving for Doc Medieh in tile
seven til .

100,000 raq:!oons last year, as part of
about $7.5 million in business with
hunters, trappers and fur dealers in
27 states ..
Raccoon s m a ke up about 40
percent of his business , he said.
"The pelt of a good, big, adult
male raccoon is wortll about $20 on
the carcass," said Plott.
Professional trappers know how to
skin an animal, Plott said. The
amateur shouldn't try it if he hopes
to sell the hide .
The hunter who bags a fur-bearing
animal should freeze it whole and
bring in the carcass to a fur dealer to
avoid damagin g t he pelt with
improper skinning , he said.
Furs bought last year ranged from
bobcat pelts at $50.62 each to
squirrel tails at nine cents each .
A carcass brought into the factory
at . Griffin, a few miles soutll of
Atlanta , is skinned, the hide scraped
and tile pelt stretched on a frame to
dry and cure in ·a room kept at 90
degrees, Plott said in a telephon e
interview. A fast worker can have
the animal skinned, fleshed and on
the drying frame in five minutes.
That part of the job is over for tile
year, and tile pelts now .are being
stored in bundles at 34 degrees, t o
prevent infestation by hide beatles.
Georgia raccoon pelts make good
coats, said Plott. Nortll Carolina,
South Carolina and Texas also
produce good coat raccoons, he said .
Skins from tile nortllern states are
heavier "trimming coons, tLSed in
collars, cuffs and borders," he said .
"They come from a colder climate,
so naturally, the animal has to have
more fur . That 's not nece ssarily
desirable in a coat. A heavier skin
makes a heavier g~rment, wh ich
can be uncomfortable to wear ."
A good pelt has no holes in it, from
bullet, knife or " coon dogs" t eeth, he
said.
" In a raccoon, you are looking for
a dark coon with bluish , silvery
sides, which, when put into a
garment so the silvery sides meet ,
produces a dark stripe, then a
silvery stripe ," said Plott, the third
member of his family to run the
·
business.
Pelts are sorted by quality iiOd
color and shipped to differ ent
garment makers.
"One manufacturer may work
witll a lesser qu~lity raccoon , while
another might work witll a better
quality, " Plott said . "We break up
the lots to a manufac tur er 's
specifications."
Plott said he deals witll about 2,500
trappers. most of whom trap ill tile
winter and farm in the summer .
"There are a heck of a lot of people
who otherwise can 't make a dollar ,"
he
s aid .

svAc opener
·

'

Kyger Creek . grid team, a large Bruce Shriver's key interception In
amount of interest will be put into tile end zone saved the same.
North Gallla touchdowns were
Friday 's crucial SVAC match at
scored by Keith Payne on a 13-yard
Cheshire.
Coach Larry Cremeens' Wildcats pass from Don Shupe and a 67 yard
will be out to spoil Kyger Creek's run by Larry Howell. Howell had an
homecoming and try for a comeback excellent night rushing for :lil3 yards
in 31 carries.
in the SVAC tiUe')licture.
Coach Bob Ashley's Highlanders
After five straight league cham·
boWJced
right hack by getting a
pionships, Coach Jim Sprague's
Bobcats tasted a losing ~n last block punt in the end zooe,
Friday night , Southwesterq
year in the SV AC.
traveiB
across river for a one-league
Hannan Trace owns six straight
wins including two to finish out the encounter against Wahama. The
1978 campaign. This season, the White Falcons lost their third game
Wildcats own victories over Sym- in four starts last weekend, 21~ at
mes Valley, Hannan, Huntington · Belpre.
Coach Bill Jewell will be hoping
and Southeastern, both of Ross
for better weatller conditions againCounty.
The Bobcats, after two opening st Wahama. The White Falcons lost
wins, bave fallen on bard offensive their third game in four starts last
weekend, 21~ at Belpre.
times tile last two weeks.
Coach Bill Jewell will be hoping
KC defeated Federal Hocking, ~
and Wahama, 15-12 but have been for better weatller conditions this
shutout the past two outings. An ~ Friday. Last week, Wahama turned
the ball over twice in the first quar·
tie against Alexander came the third
ter to set up the first two Golden
week of tl1is season.
Hannan Trace will put its well- Eagle touchdowru1.
At Eastern, Coach Joe Mltchem 's
balanced club against the moredefending SV AC champion Eagles
experienced Bobcats.
HTIJS boasts two of the area 's seek their fourth win of the seaBOn
leading offensive players in junior against the hapless Federal Hocking
Lancel'll. Last Saturday, Eastern in·
running back Todd Sibley and senor
creased its record to 3-0 with a -~
halfback and place kicker, Jay
win over Parkersburg Catholic .
Bray.
Eastern was behind a hard hitting
Sibley has scored 36 points in four
defense which scored two touchgames while Bray, who won last
downs in the first quarter.
Saturday 's 9-7 thriller at Richmondale, has scored 33 p6ints inSVAC STANDINGS
cluding two field goals.
TEAM ,
W . L. T. P. OP
In other games, Nortll Gallia puts
Hannan Trace
4 0 0 96 27
Norlh Ga l l i a
3 0 0 ~ 2'1
its 3~ record on the tine against
Eastern
3 1 0 87 3~
Symnmes Valley. The Pirates edged
KyQer Creek
2 t 1 ol.5 26
Southwestern , 12-81ast Friday night.
Southwestern
1 1 0 70 S2
Southern

0

3

t

26 107

298 SECOND ST.

.«s

POMEROY, 0.

PRICES EFFECTIVE lliRU SEPTEMBER 29, 1979

s

WHOLE FRYERS.!!..

Toronto at Boston
Cleveland at New York
Sealtle a! Milwaukee

OaKland at Texas
Only games scheduled

NATIONAL LEAGUE
EAST
W. L . Pel,
Piltsburgh
95 62 .60S
Monlreat
94 62 .603
St. Louts
85 71 . ~5
Phi ladelphia
8t 77 .513
Ch icago
79 79 .500
New York
58 99 .369
WeSI
Clnclnna!l
88 69 .561
Houslon
87 71 .551
Los Angeles
77 80 . ~90
San Francl s.co
. 69 88 .439
San OieQO
66 91 .420
A11anta
63 93 .«J&lt;4

Chicken Breasts.~~. 89~

GB
9_

14'12
16 1/l
37

1'12
11
19
22
:il.C V2

Wednesdly's Games
New York (Hausman
Ch icago (l(rukow9 ·9)

1-6 1 at

Montreal (ROQers 13 ·10 ) at Pif ·

tsburgh ( Klson 11 ·1)
·
51. Louis &lt;Mart i nez 15·1) at
Philadelphia (Carl!on t6 ·11 1
Houston (J. Nlekro 20·101 at Allan ·
Ia &lt;P. Niekro 19·20)
Son Otego &lt;Jones 11 ·11 1 at Cin·
cinneti ( Sellver 1S ·6)
Los Angel~s (Welch 5·6) at san
Franc isco O&lt;nepper 9· t2J

ThurldiY'I Gimes
51 . LOU IS at Piltsburgh
Monlrea l a! Allan! a , 2

San Oleoo at Cinc innat i
LM Angeles at Slm Fra ncisco

7

-----~ .

The se rv1ce shoe that s so com~~-·
f t bl
1
Whole &amp; Camel
or a e II eels beautifUl fr om th e
All si zes avail able
f~rst step . That's because th e. heel
IS II a t m back. not towered An other
s tyt1 sh took for the lnd 1v1dual 1s t
who happens to be m uniform .

c~ate~ -

,

.

Pa .m.-5 p.m. Mon.
1hru Thurs. &amp; Sat ,
9 a.m .·l p.m. Fri.
Closed Sund•y

Middle of Upper Block Pomeroy , O ."

Tuesday's
Sports Trens.ctlons
By The AUOCII1ed Press
BASEBALL

.

$ ]g

2

American Leilgue
MILWAUKEE BREWER S
SlgnO!d Mike Caldwell, pitcher, to a

multi-year contract .
BASKETBALL
N1tlonal
Blsketball Association
NEW YORK KNICKS - Guaran ·
!04!&lt;1 the conlracl 01 Toby Knlgh1,
forward, through the 1979·80 season.
FOOTBALL
N1tlonol Foolb1tl Lugue
OAKLAND RAIDERS - Placed
Morris Bradshaw, wid@ ,.ecelver, on
the Injured reser\le list.
conodlon Football Leogue
TORONTO ARGONAUTS
Traded Wayne Sm ith, defensive end.
to !he Saakatchewan Roughrlders
for future considerations. Released
Jim Marshall , defensive back ; Ed ·
die Vaylon, runn ing back : and Vic
Anonsen, wide receiver . Signed

Gary

THE DAILY SENTINEL

.

OYSTERS....... :!!~~.

Transactions

c~ur~•

HARTLEY SHOES

FRESH STANDARD

On l y games scheduled

Anderson,

defensi"e

U. S. NO. 1 WHITE

and,

SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

$}09

POTATOES.........22!~·..

.

end .

Placed Terry Melcolf, running bock.
on the in lured reserve list. Activated
Mike Williams, defensive back ;
Mike McArlnur, runn ing back ; AI
Chester, wide r~eiver , and Ste\le
Ackroyd, defensive back .
HOCKEY
N•tlon•l Hockey Le11gue
ST . LOUIS BLUES Signed
Kevin Willison, Serge Menard and

FOR ONLY

CABBAGE ............~.12e
'

Denis Houl•, forwards.

'22.00

COLLEGE
BROOKLYN COLLEGE Named Harold Tonlck men 's basket ·
ball coach, and Arnold Smith
women's baskelbail coach .
OLD DOMINION UNIVERSITY
- Steve Dodge, assist an! basketball
coach, resigned.
UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA Named Dpn Beasley assistant
baskelbail coach .
Exhibition Scores
Exhibition
Soason Resulls
By Tho Assoclaled Press

Reg. $229.95

TMIS .

OFFER
GOOD
AT

Group of

·~O"

Wool •60" Boucle'
•60" Velour •Corduroy

1

h PRICE

Christmas Laway

FABRIC SHOP
Pomeroy, 0.

VALLEY BELL

A~Y

COLLEGE
IN TME
UNITED
STATES

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The Dai~ Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769
NAME •••••••••••... .•••••..• ••• •••••••••••••••••••• ~··· · ····
ADDRESS .... ............................................... .
CITY •.•••••.. ••••.•••• •• ••••• ••.••••• ••••• •••••••••••••••••••
STATE. ••••.••••.•••.•••••••••••••••..•. ZIP CODE •••••••••• ~

0
0

CHECK ............. 0 MONEY ORDER ........... ..
AMT..••••••.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~ •••••

OfFER
EXPIRES

OCTOBER
15,

Notional Hockey League
New York Islanders 2, Buffalo 1
Minnesota 5, Toronlo 5, lie
Montreat 6, Chicago 2
Washington 4, Hartford 2
Notional
Boskttball Association
Allanta125, New Jersey 120
Cleveland 110, Chicago 85
Mllwaukee95, Detrol191
Sealtle t08, San Otego 104

SORRY,
NO

Jockey Jorge Velasque2 rode tile
wirmers of 22 stakes ,races in 1978.

REfUNDS

Jackie Robinson of tile Brooklyn
Dodgers WBB walked fqur times ir\ a
World Series against tile New York
Yankees in 1952.

PlASTIC GAL

$ 59

JIF

Peanut

TUIId•y' s G•mes

-.

Features 6 "bult· in " Fashion and Flexi -Siitch Disc Patterns, free arm, front drop-in bobbin, straight stretch
stitch, sell -thre·a ding take-up lever, twin needle stitching, wide zig -zag stitch and a fuiiJO year warranty.

w. 2nd Ave.

Sunday 10 am-10 pm

Los Angele$ 11 , San Franci$CO 2

MACHINE
MODEL 533

115

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pn.

Ch icago (lt ·Jl. New York 3-4, 2nd
game, 10 inn ings
Houslon 8. Atlanta o
PittK&gt;urgh 10, Montreal4
51 . Loulu, Philadelph ia 1 ·
san Diego 8, Cinclnnall 2

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

STYLIST
SINGER

BIHINII At A Gl1nce
By The Assocl•ted Press
AMERICAN LEAGUE
EAST
W. L . Pet. GB
x -Baltimore
100 55 .1&gt;45
Milwaukee
92 1&gt;4 .590 8112
Boston
87 68 .56 1 13
New York
87 68 .542 16
oetrol1
84 73 .535 t 7
Cleveland
79 77 .506 21 '12
Toronto
53 104 .338 ol8
WEST
x ·Callfornl~
87 71 .551
Kansas City
82 76 .5t9 5
Minnesota
8t 76 .516 5'12
Texas
79 78 .503 7'12
69 86
16'l 2
Chicago
Sea !tie
65 92 -~~~ 21 '12
Oakland
53 10~ .338 33 '12
x .. clinched division title
Tuesd1y's Games
Toronlo 5, Boston 3
De1roll3, Balli more 2
New York 7, Cleveland
Milwaukee 7, Sea !tie 6
Chlcago9, Minnesola 3
Texas 5, Oakland 3.
California •· Kansas Ci ty 1
Wedntsday •s Games
Detro!! (Chris 3-2) at Ballimore
(Palmer 9·6 or McGregor 12-6)
Toronto (MQOre 5·6) at Boston
(Rainey 7-51
Cte.v elond (Waits 16-tl) a1 New
York (Guidry 17-8)
·
Seallle
l Parrott
13· 11 1 at
Milwaukee (Haas tl -10)
Ch icago ( Baumgarten t 3·8) at
Minnesota (KQOsman 19·13)
Oakland (Langford 12-15) at Texas
&lt;Comer 16·11 )
Kansas Clly !Leonard 13·11 ) at
California (Carr 10·12 )
Thursday's G•mes
Ch icago a! Minnesota

..

Tuesday's Games

lrl

TH~ FALL SALE

L.

fWiAW I SCOREBOARD

.. ...................

~::~ ~~==~ ~=-

..............

PURITAN
COUPO N

1

-

18.5

.$
39
0IL3~!.~ ...

1

l

1

)

FUVORITE

CAKE MIXES
.

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP

3j$ 200

Limit 1 Per Customer
~ood Only at Powell
Otter EXpires sept. 29, 1979

10.5 Ol

5/$1

limit I PerI Customer
•
.G ood Only at Powell

1979 .

39

3
. suppers............~.o:.•.• 1

DUNCAN HINES

oz.

$

BANQUET FROZEN

_::ouPlJN

DOMINO SUGAR
5LB.

BAG

$119

limit I Per customer
Good Only at Powell
Offer Expires Sept. 29, 1979

CORONET

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO .
ROLLS

2/$1

limit I Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's

Offer Expires sel_rt. 29, 1979

�'
10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1979

Shaeffer speaks· to gardeners

Proffitt, Dye exchange vows in july
,.

...

\

,.

·'

·'
·'

.
·'
'

·'

\
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dye
Teresa Lynn Proffitt and Richard
Wesley Dye exchanged marriage
vows in a candlelight ceremony on
July 28, 2:30 p.m. at the .Mason
United Methodist Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. :lames R. Proffitt Mason
and the bridegroom is the s~n of Mr:
and Mrs. Robert P. Dye, New
Haven.
The double-ring ceremony was
performed by Rev. Richard Wright,
Bridgeport, West Virginia, who also
married the bride 's parents, and Dr.
John Wildman.
The organist was Mrs. Evelyn
Proffitt, grandmother of the bride
and the pianist was Mrs. Lynn Kit:
chen. Their selections included
"Bridal Chorus from Lohengrin "
"Wedding March," ''Melody
Love, '' ''The Sweetest Story Ever
Told," "Close to You,"and the
"Theme From Love Story."
The soloist was Mrs . . Debbie
Roush, who sang "Whither Thou
Goest" and "A Tinne For Us " prior
to the ceremony, and "The Wedding
Prayer" while the couple knelt at
the altar.
Given in marriage by her par-ents
and escorted to the altar by he;
father, the bride wore a full length
gown of white polyester organza
with a sculptured open neckline and
full front· and back bodice of Chantilly lace and duster pearl trim . The
Bishop sleeves were all lace and the
high-rise waistline extended into a

;n

three-tier skirt with borders of"Chantilly lace. The back waist featured a
bow trim and the hemline extended
into a full chapel train . She wore a
three-tier matching fingertip veil
edged in Chantilly lace with cluster
pearl trinn adorning the cap.
The bride wore a gold pearl
necklace which had belonged to her
grandmother, the late Mrs. Virginia
Roush, and carried a sixpence in her
shoe .
She carried a silk cascade bouquet
of yellow, blue, and white daisies
mwns, cornflowers, baby's breath
and blue and yello~.- streamers tied
in"lovers knots .
Angela Proffitt, sister of the bride,
served as maid of honor. She wore a
light yellow crystal pleated gown of
polyester knit with a gathered empire · bodice and double spaghetti
straps, and a capelet of nylon chtffon
knit. A yellow silk daisy surrounded
by baby 's breath accented her hair.
Bridesmaids were Carolyn
Rickard , Unda Test, Lora Smith
and Linda Brewer, sister of th~
groom. They wore light blue gowns
of the same design as the maid of
honor and .a blue silk daisy surrounded by baby 's breath accented their
hair.
The attendants carried white
hurricane lanterns with yellow and
blue daisies and streamers .of yellow
and blue tied in lovers knots.
Christy Kincaid served as flower
girl and wore a light yellow long

Barr reunion noted·
The families of Alpha and Elvira
Barr met at Forest Acres Park for a
reunion Sunday. A picnic dinner was
held at noon , while the afternoon
was spent playing ball. Pictures
were taken .
Attending were Mr . and Mrs.
Frank Morone and children', Dickie
and April, Marysville ; Mr. and Mrs.
Duane Barr and Shawn • Jackson-

.

dress of sheer dotted swiss with a
tiered skirt and wide lace accents .
Her hair was accented with baby 's
breath and daisies entwined among
her curls, and carried a white basket
decorated with blue and yellow silk
daisies and ribbons and filled with
blue and yellow daisy petals.
The groom wore a light blue formal tuxedo with white ruffled shirt
and bowtie. He wore two white
daisies surrounded by baby 's breath
in his lapel.
Joey Parsons served as best man
and wore a tuxedo identical to that of
the groom with a light yeUow ruffled
shirt. Ushers were Bobby Dye and
Donnie Dye, brothers· of the groom,
Scott Brewer,. brother-in4aw of the
groom, and John Jewell. They wore
tuxedos identical to that of the
groom with a light blue ruffled shirt.
The best man and ushers all wore a
white carnation in their lapel.
Trevor Dye, nephew of the groom,
served as ringbearer. He wore a
light blue tuxedo identical to that cf
the groom with a light yellow ruffled .
shirt and a white daisy in his lapel,
and carried a heart~haped pillow of
lace and satin.
·
The mother of the bride wore a
floor-length gown of baby blue lacy
polyester knit with capelet sleeves
and blouson top and wore a corsage
of blue, yellow, arid white daisies.
The mother of the groom wore a
floor length gown of light blue chtffon with lace covering the bOdice
and sleeves and wore a corsage of
blue, yellow, and white daisies.
The father f the bride and the
father ·of the groom wore tuxedos
identical to that of the groom with
light blue ruffled shirts and a white
carnation in their lapel.
The altar was decorated with an
arch candelabra and two ?-branch
candelabras accented with white
tapers and hurricane globes, and a
brass kneeling bench. The family
pews were marked by white satin
bows and pew candles with
hurricane globes .
The bride and groom lit the unity
candle as they faced their guests,
and after the ceremony they presented their mothers With a longstemmed yellow rose.
A reception wiis held in the social
room of the church innmediately
following the ceremony. The Tshaped bridal table was covered
with white lace and decorated with
blue and yellow bows and silk
daisies. The table featured two 3branch silver candelabras with blue
tapers and a silver punch bowl along
with silver compotes holding blue
and yellow daisy mints. The wedding cake consisted of three
separate cakes with three tiers each.
The center cake sat atop a blue foun· tain surrounded by a garland of
greenery and topped with a bride
and groom. The t;vo side cakes were
attached to the top of the center cake
by · two stairways topped with
miniature bridesmaids and ushers.
The entire nine tiers were decorated
with clusters of yellow daisies and
blue swag trim, along with
miniature wedding -bells and doves.'
Assisting at the reception were Etta Richardson, Agnes Roush, Kathy
Connors, Cinda Foglesong, Joyce

•

•

1840.

The speaker said that when planting tubers a part of the old stem
with an eye must be used and planted six to eight inches under ground
· in April . He talked about soil, about
preparing· dahlias for showing and
noted that the best Iinne to bring in
dahlias Is in the late evening or the
early morning. The cut stems should
be dipped in hot water to seal the cut
area so that the flowers will last a

By Ml'l. Fraucla Morris
Mn. Wanda Powell entered
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. C, E. Hendershot of
Hartwell, Ga. and Pete Farta of
Cohunbus were guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Farra and took them' to
the Heiney reunion at Marietta.
Mrs. Mona Farra celebrated her
84th birthday Sept. 21, and the 63rd
wedding anniversary of Floyd and
Mona Is October 11.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bowers of
Urbana, Ohio visited Mrs. Margaret
Houdashelt over Labor Day
weekend.
Miss Ml!rabelle Sharpnack of
Colwnbw! spent Labor Day weekend
with Mrs. Nondus Hendricks and
Mr. and Mrs. George Oiler.
Mrs. Nondus Hendricks spent a
few days in logan with her son and
daughter4n-law, Mr. and Mrs Roy
Hendricks and her brother-In-law

j eremy Grimm

Birthday noted
The third birthday of Jeremy
Shain Grimm, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James .Robert Grimm was
celebrated on August 13. The party
was given at their home , 231 Union
Avenue, Pomeroy.
His mother made a train cake. The
door prize was won by Sherry Darst
:md each child was given gifts. Cake,
tee cream, potato chips, sandwiches,
lemontide, coffee and a. tray of
casllews, mints, and candy kisses
were served.
·
Those attending were grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Raymond J .
Smith, Pomeroy, and Mr. and Mrs.
Danny Darst and Corey, Pomeroy,
Mr .and Mrs. Archie Rose and
Tyson, Long Bottom, and Janice,
Bob and Israel Grimm, mother,
father and brother.
Sending gifts were grandparents,
Rev. and Mrs. Lloyd D. Grimm,
Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. Adrian
Carson, Middleport, Mr . and Mrs.
Donald R. Smith, Columbus, and
Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Smith, Sr.,
Pomeroy.

Plans for the 40th annual banquet
. of the Homebuilders Class of. the
Middleport Olurch of Christ were
made when the class met recenUy at
the church.
The banquet will be held at the
church with the dinners to cost $4
each. Named to coounittees were
Mrs . Coleen VanMeter , Mrs.
Dorothy Roach, ticket; Mrs. Flo
Grueser and Mrs. Clarice Erwin
decorating and Mrs. Shirley
Baumgardner and Peggy Brickles,
program.
The annual Grundy Mountain
Mission project was ~ussed and

Dye and Sue Dye.
Registering the guests were Chris
Richardson and Alicia Roush.
After a wedding trp to Natural
Bridge, Kentucky , the• couple now
resides in Montgomery , West
Virginia.
Out-&lt;Jf-town guests include Mr.
and Mrs . Marty Holbrook, Mrs.
Robert C. Guthrie, Mrs. William D. ·
Crites, Dick and Helen Kidder Jinn
Stewart, Genny, Kim, Hollie and Jill
Laph~, Jan Eicliinger, Florine
Braderuck, Tom Stillwagon, Carole
Foglesong, Rev. and Mrs. Wright
and Darren, Bob, Sue, Trevor and
Wesley Dye, Darla Kelley, Mr. and
Mrs. T. E. Weyer and Michael and
Amy, Michael N. Lewis and Harold
and Elouise Brown.

the class took as a special project
providing school supplies and toilet
articles. It was then voted to purchase a case of soap for the mission.
Denver Rice had the opening
prayer. Hennan and Margaret Kincaid volunteered to prepare com·
munion for October. Refreshments
were served by Mrs. Bea stewart
and Mrs. Farte Cole to Mrs. Van
Meter, Mrs. Hazel Wilson, Mr. and
Mrs. Denver Rice, Mr. 'and Mr3.
Kincaid , Mrs. Briekles, Mack
Stewart, Raymond Cole, Mrs.
Roach, and Miss Thelma Boyd.

l()i()C

and sister, Mr. and Mrs. William
Wagner;
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Carpenter
of Flemingsburg, Ky. spent Labor
Day weekend with Mrs. Garnet Er-

vme.
Mrs. Garnet Ervine accompanied
M':l. Dixie Smith to Veto Lake and

VISited Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Walters.
Mr. and Mrs. Edison Brace spent
a day with Mr. and Mrs. James
Brace and children at Crown City.
Mrs. Francis Morris was a dinner
guest of Mr. and Mrs. Critt Bradford
Sunday.
· ·
· Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Turley were Mrs.
Gladys Turley and Eddie of
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Sheridan
Russell, Jr. and Marisa Queen of
Mason, W, Va.
Mrs. Enna Norris of Charleston
W. Va. spent the weekend with he;

ByMn. HerbertRoalb
Mrs. Goldie Shaln of logan is
visitlitg two weeks with her brother,
•John Joe Shain, who was recently
discharged from Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Lewis.Sarsons is a medical patient
at Holzer Medical Center due to a
blood clot in his leg.
Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill, Mr. and
Mrs. Dean Hill, Mr. and Mrs. Mar·
shall Roush, Joey and Cortney, Mrs.
Dolly Wolfe, Tracy and Ryan Hill enjoyed a cookout at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Darrell Norris Sunday
evening.

Mr. and Mrs. Bob lfl!rden and soo
Eric of Marion were recent weekend
guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
soo-tn-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Nick Thle.
Rev. Steve Wllsa! !If lllinois spent
several days visiting friends.

Vernon Donohue. Butch Donohue of
Marion spent a few days with the
Donohues.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Knighting of
Racine and thfoir niece, Missy
visited Mr. and Mrs. Arnold ThW'S:
day evening.
Mr. and Mrs. George Yonker and
daughter, Melissa, have moved to
their new home at Bashan. Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Boggess and daughter
have purchased the Yonker home
and moved in at Letart.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Roush and Kimberly, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Russell,
Mandy and Mike, Issac Lewis, Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush, Cindy
Roush visited Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Lewis at Clifton Sunday. Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis are remodeling their .
home.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs. •
Dorsa Parsons visited graves of
loved ones at Baden Cemetery and

also called on J14rs. Henry Hunt and Attending were Mr. and Mrl. Rablr
family .
•Hart, Brice and Beth Ann, Mr. •
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hayman and , Mrs. Allan Cunnlnlham, Ol8'ria •
son Keith attended the reunion of the Zach, Tina Smith of Bubu. Mr.late George and Mae Crawford Mrs. Bruce Hart of Colum'-w, M1
Hayman at Portland Park Saturday. . and Mrs. Don Bell.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman and
Mrs. Bessie Stitt returned to lilr
family of Westerville spent the
home Sunday after a vlllt with ._
weekend with the Haymans and also
daughter, Mrs. Anna Wheel•. IIIII
attended the reunion.
was recently . dllcharged fr'llli
Sunday Mr. and Mrs. Gene Jewell
Veterans Mtmorial Halpltal aftl!r
of Letart, W. Va., Mrs. Tocie · having a heart attack.
Hayman, Mrs. Robert Hart Mrs
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa ~ ..
Bertha Robinson attended the 50th
tended a birthday party at the baml
wedding anniversary of Mr. and
of Flo Sayre for Hazel Slmday It
Mrs. FandHaughtat Walker, W. va.
Leon, W.Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsa~.­
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables and
daughter, Vicki, visited Mr and Mrs Saturday evening with Mr. andJfn.
Paul Ables, Mr. and ~- Ronni~ Dana Lewis at Clifton.
.
Ables, ~- and Mrs. Butch Ables at
Visitors of Mrs. Margie Hunt
Canal Wmchester.
recently were Mr. and Mrl. Elll
Mrs. Alice Balser attended the ' Birch of Racine, Mr. and Mrll.
.Beegle reunion at Royal Oak Park a Hubert Rice of Kanawha aty llld a
recent Sunday.
niece, Phebe, from Florida.
A birthday party and celebration
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Jcmn- of
for Bruce Hart getting his airpl
Racine visited Mr. and Mrs. Roo-t
' pUot license was held a recent Sun~
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Don)3ell. Smith and Martin CUnniiWIIm.

24
A

JOt fNtl ~

1'tOOOUGOOOUT
ITOIIH)I '"'

PANTASYIC UiiiHGI
Oft IIOGtl llANO
OIOOOCU
ltSfiO IILO'flt Al'l MT
A fiW IXAW'\IS

Except

bcfl,

,

Of .,_ ~ .,.. it t'IQI,InCI 10 t.
..,...... for IIIII -" -.d'\ ltiOP' Sto.. ~ •
,.,_, " l'il Ill II ... dD 1\11 1M d ~ ~
'tll'e Wll off..'f04JI cf'IOIOt d I CO: Wible ~ -

11'11..,.,.,.
.,. IIMrt-s IWn al thl
l)f •

~

Star Grange names officers

caPYIIGHT lm- mt liiOOII CO . fTWI ANO rtnCII
0000 lUNDAY a.T . H fHM.I U. 'f\eA YMPT . It, 1m IN
GA L L I ~L I 5

Officers were elected at a recent
meeting of Star Grange 778.
Elected were Ray Midkiff,
master ; Larry Montgomery, overseer; Ruby Lambert, lecturer; Linda Montgomery, steward; Ricky
Macomber, assistant steward · Lelia
Rulnfield, chaplain ; 'waid
Nicholson, treasurer; Nina Macomber, secretary; Ben Rife, gate
keeper ; Vickie Macomber, Ceres ·
Ruby Rife, Pomona ; Carla Rife'
Flora; Opal Dyer, lady assistant
steward; Billy Dyer, John Holliday
and Waid Nicholson, eiecutive committee; Ann Halliday, CWA chairman ; Ben Rife, legislative agent ;
Maxine Dyer, junior youth chair-

NOW

man ; and Billy Dyer, youth chairman.
Randy Osborne was balloted on
and elected a member. Mrs.
Catherine Shenefield and Kethel
Hatfield judged entries in the state
sewing contest with Nina Macomber
taking first, and Bernice Midkiff,
second . Nina got third in the county
at the Pomona judging.
The hayride and wiener roast
were enjoyed by 33 members· and
guests. On Thursday, 1Srnembel'3 cf
Star Grange visited Racine Grange
2606 and presented the literary
program. Degree Day at Rock
Springs wiU be Sunday.

I P'OM IE IIIO"f" 5TOIIIU
WI .aYI fMIIIGNf TO LIMIT QUAimTIU . NONIIOlD
TO DIAl- .

Mixed
Fryer Parts ..........

, 11 foll9 11

LIMIT liAG WITM .
UD $1.5UDDITIOIIAL
PUICMUE !UCLUDI., TMIS ITEil
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER FAMILy

lit.

KROGER

Green.Beans

3

Spotlight
Bean Coffee ... :~

29

3
~
09
Kroger 20-oz.

White Bread ..... ~::~·
2

IIOGll

Vegetable

Fresh Whole
Pork Loin .. ......... .............

SUCIDAII
IHTOOHI
(()tijVINIIPfT
TAkiHOMI

, PACKAIH

I ~·17-ll. A\IG. WHOlE

Fresh
Hams ._..._......... .

77c

lit.

I
I
I

Can

LIMIT 3CANS IIITH $7.50AOOITIONU
PURCUSE!ElCLUDINC THIS ITEM)
12
OF

LIMIT ONE CO\.JI'ON Pll FAMILY

- - · · · l l n.fl ...._,lln.ft.lllt
IIUCT TllP'f'UCiaiiTIR lliCil WU

KROGER COST CUTTER COUPON

Oi

UOGII WHOLE 01 SliCED

234 E. Main 51.

'·

c..

......,___...._..;..;..:::. :. .:.:.

., Sears I

Ohio 992-2178
W . Va. 773-9577

12 oz. Pkg.

Tomato Sauce

or Your Money Back

RED GRAPES
BACON

$139

c..

l&amp;c

Mag1c
• .................. .

MAIKIT IAI.KET GRo~DI AASELIECTIAIOI.

KROGER ORANGE

Breakfast ......
Crys t aII ....... Jar

' lEW

79~

Avondale
•
.,......
Sh0 rtenlng ............ Can

HOT fOODS AVAIWiliUI·_'IPII

KROGE.

Boiled

ORANGES
4

DO

EACH

Duncan Hines

112 Gal.

CAKE MIXES

$ 49

FRI &amp;SAT. ONLY

BEANS

,

303size

2/79¢

ICKEN

COKE

$2·99
lUCID

Ill..

, •••

iNcLUDUI·PIICUCH.C.'tiNONLY

PLUS Dli'OSIT

Del Monte Cut

AYAIWL£ OIILYIUTIIU 1111
D£U D£PAITIUT$.

to• LB. ·

Macaroni

3

Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

/

•'

~S~N;~;~ONSIN

158 59·

·lb,
t
P
t
_. o a oes ............lae'

8 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS. $}39

I
I
I
I
I

•

RED .,OTATOES

15

$}l 9

SAVE
44'
..._'_"--'Bunch

SpagheHi
Sauce .................. .

LB.

SLAB

SLICED LB.

1·01.

Hamburger

Grade A
Large

KROGER

Satisfaction Guar1 nteed

ECKRICH

BOLOGNA

KROGER

I

c

16·01.

Jack &amp; Judy Williams
Open: Mon . lhru Wed. 9-5, Thur. 9-12, Friday 9-5, Sal. 9-2.

CLASS RING S

2,. E . MAIN . POMEROY

Plastic Ctn.

Pomeroy, o.

OWNEDANDOERATEDBY

I
I
I

Paper or

IIIUit· r .• 111 11 1"

Q!e.~-=lliiit!lo..
--

a. I

Gal.

JOHN ROBERTS ""'"""'''' Y"" '"'''"

,

9

$

Ice Cream

~ uulil+ •

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Country Club
Ham Patties

Country Club

$ 99

Ti ll S ·I ll To CET T ill S IIFFE!l U ' IIE~
YOL' tlllllEil YO U!l Sll , \IJI UM III ~G .

18oz.

I
I
I

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Catsup

lll! l ~C 1 ~

PEANUT

-I

1A· I7·li.A\IG.

iOUNDTOP

(Discount from Christmas Book Only)
STOP IN AND PICK UP
YOUR CHRISTMAS CATALOGS

I
I
I

I
I

un•l•·r , ,,,,.,.

bwru , liu ~

Jif Creamy, Crunchy

Df

Jer

Fin·loun l

..

12

$

your own t•luss ring

nn•l•· •· ~ tu tw - - J • l

Bag

Taii·Less
T-Bone Steak

Cottone lie·
Bath Tissue

- _

\l .. ~· ···t

c·!

5

1.. .

UMn4PLWI

U.S. GO\I'T GRADED
CHOICI. POITEIHOUSE OR

·

(:I AlliS HI:\"( I

I
I
I
I
I

-lb.

AVONDAUCUT

OCT. 17, 1979!

Dornino
Sugar

(!]

HOLLY FAIIMS, U.S.D.A. INSI'EClED

PLt.:S FREE U'STO~I n:.\Tl'RES!
o ~tii~n

Apple Grove News Notes

Homebuilders plan banquet

.
SII~\J)Il ~I ®

d

Sept. 26• l'119

Racine Social Events

week or 10 days.
Shaeffer displayed many plants
and also answered questioll9 from
the group.
Dollie Hayes opened the meeting
with Psalm '11 arid a poem by Helen
Steiner Rice. Mrs. Ruth Moore was
hostess and Mrs. Addalou Lewis
presided at the business meeting. An
invitation was read from the ()!ester
Garden Club inviting members to an
open meeting on Oct. 3 at 8 p.m. at
the Chester United Methodist Church.
A gift was presented to the
speaker. A buffet deasert course was
served. Attending were Mrs. Lewis,
Mrs. Alice Thompson, Mrs. Pat
Thoma, Mrs. · Cora Beegle, Mrs.
Jackie Brickles, Mrs. Hayes, Mrs.
Moore, Mrs. Margaret Parker, Mrs.
Jo Wiles, Patty Parker, Mrs. Mary
Mitchell, Mrs. Peggy Crane, Mrs.
Marjorie Walburn and guests, Mrs.
Audrey Wood and Mrs. Barbara
Hackett.

Shaeffer told of his interest in
dahlias whlcll dates back to his
teenage years, when he became involved in a planting project. He
belongs to seven societies and was
an organizer for the Greater Colwnbus Society which recently staged its
16th annual, dahlia show. He noted
that currently there are 2,700
varieties of dahlias in cactus, semicactus, decorative, ball and porn. He
talked of grading of dahlias according to size and noted that they
have been sold commercia)ly since

Francis Shaeffer who has · been
growing and showing dahlias for
many years, was guest speaker at
the Winding Trail Graden Club 's annual open meeting held in the Riverboat Room of the Athens County
Savings and Loan Co.; Pnrnpr·ov

~~~$/!!~o9s

Mr. and Mrs. Blair Cadwallader and
sons, Brian; Brent and Chris of West
Union; Mr. and Mrs. Mike Barr and
son, Michael, Syracuse; Mr. and
Mrs. Larry Barr and children,
David and Michelle, Rutland ; and
Elvira Barr, Langsville. In the
evening the group returned to the
Barr home for a visit.

11- The DaUy SenUnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday,

.

~j~~~~~~ten ...... . . . . . . .... Each$3 99
~~=
$1 99
:::~ =:~~~:!.:•: 99 c

. . . .... ..'.... ........... ..
.
I

lb.

---··- -·--·

�I

13- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 21!,1979

12- The Daily Sentinel, Middlepo,rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 21!, 1979

Meigs mine· rescue team competes

'Bunker 's Place ' outranks 'Mork and Mindy'
1APl - A pair of movies featuring
some of Hollywood's biggest stars
helped NBC win the networks' rating
race for the first time in nearly a
year, figlU'es from the A.C. Nielsen
Co. show.
NBC began its fall prime-time
season the evening of Sept. 17 with
"Coming . Home ," the widely

acclaimed motion picture starring
Jane Fonda and Jon Voight.
"Coming Home" finished No. 4 for
the week ending Sept. 23, and NBC
went on to place four other
programs in Nielsen's Top 2(] and
win the networks' ratings race for
th e first time in nearly a year .
It 's offering of the Clint Eastwood

movie " The Outlaw Josey
Wales" finished fifth .
NBC's rating for the first week of
head-on competition in the new
season was 2Q.6, followed by ABC at
18and CBS at 16.9. The networks say
that means in an average primetime minute during the week, 2Q.6
percent of the homes in the country
with TV were tuned to NBC.
Ratings are vital to the networks.
A highly rated show demands more
of the advertising dollar than its
lower-rated competition.
It was the first time since 1972 that
NBC began a season No. I, and the
rating was NBC's highest for a
premiere week in 10 years.
NBC finished the 1978-79 season
dead last, and was given little hope
of improving its standing this fall .
ABC, the front-runner all of last
year, entered the new television
year a strong favorite to repeat.
ABC's research department
described the period ending Sept. 23
as "a week marked by atypical

One incident she wou,Id rather
forget,
Yet she laughs when again she tells
What hilppened to the potato salad in
a jar all wet,
As she took it from the refrigerator,
and itfell.
Her hands couldn't grasp it, her eyes
didn't see
Her boss looking back from the

stairs,
As they cleaned it from the floor on
bendedknee
He quickly moved on to other af.
fairs.

Mrs. Edith Harper

Mrs. Harper honored
on 80th birthday
Mrs. Edith Harper of Tuppers
Plains was honored recently with a
surprise party in celebration of her
OOth birthday. The party was held at
the nome of Mr. and i\1rs. Clair
FoUrod, Alfred.
The back yard was the setting for
the picnic lunch served from a fann
wagon decorated for the occasion.
Inside the home, the dining room
was decorated with reminders of
Mrs. Harper's 80 years . The
decorations featured a large bir·
thday cake in the fonn of a book
depicting "This Is Your Ufe." Even·
Is of her life were written on the cake
and emphasized with miniature
replicas of the activities.
A poem, "A Tribute to Mother,"
written by her daughter, Edna Har·
mon, was read. Gifts and family pic·
, lures were presented to her. Cake
and punch were served to the 48 per·
sons attending. At the celebration
were Mr. and Mrs. Aubra Baily
(Alta ), ZephyrhUis, Fla.; Mr. and
Mril. Harry Harmon (Edna), Tuppers Plains; Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Henderson (Thelma), Coolville;
Bertha Wright, Zanesville; Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Wollett (Nola), Man·
nington, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Ray
Harper, Mannington, W. Va.; Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Follrod (Osie),
Pomeroy, many grandchildren,
great~andchildreil , and several
friends.
Mrs. Harmon's poem:
ATRmUTE TO M0'111ER
Our Moth~r gave to us her time
From dawn to dusk and beyond;
When she sat down to rest and rock
Was with a child cradled in her ann.
We watched her as we grew,
How she could work and sing too.
We tried to grasp what Mother knew
How the many things she could do.
She could sew our clothes like in the
store
And polish our shoes to look like new
That's only a start, she did much
more,
Yet had time to share a story or two.
She would churn the butter, bake the
bread,
Stir up a cake or make some pies,
Some magic in her hands, as noodles
she made
For none ever compared, though we
try.

She was our nurse, always on call,
She was our teacher, the best to be
found,
We were taught by doing and best of
all,
Taught with love that knew no boun·
ds.
She was the first one up to start the
day,
The youngest next, then the in·
between,
Five girls all in a row, but say,
A boy is now arriving on the scene.
Not yet complete, one more girl
That must be, to make us seven.
Each one to her a precious jewel
Acup of joy, a bit of heaven.
Some years were lean, some were
good,
Through thtm both, she laughed and
sang.
She knew someone cared for her
beyond the blue,
So off to church we went when the
beUrang.

We learned to work, play, share and
love,
Sometimes we would fight to show
our stren~th,
Early we learned sure as there are
stars above,
It's our MPther that won each battle
in the end.
We had a tree in our yard that grew
switches
And Dad 's razor strap hanging in the
kitchen on a nail,
Gave Mother a choice, whatever she
wishes
Got our attention and smarts in the
britches.

The quilts she made, the prize a blue
ribbon
Not for her, but for each of her
children.
Then for her church, when mnre she
made,
To buy bricks until they were all
laid.
'
From these toils she smiles as she
looks,
At her fingers all healed, no pain
they tell,
In her heart she reserves a special
nook
For her grandchildren and their
young as well.
Her vacations she enjoyed wherever
she went,
' To the ocean and smacked by the

waves,
Or the largest of cities, or on a road

,ofintent,
Bring back souvenirs
traveling days.

of· her

With you we cherish these memories
and more,
We agree to give you a new memory
today.
So we could all tell you again, "We
Love You,
We Love You, Mother, Today and
Everyday."

programming by the competition ."
But there was more to the. story.
Three of NBC 's returning series
were listed among the 16 highestrated - "CHiPs" sixth, " Li,ttle
House on the Prairie" eighth and
" Diff'rent Strokes" 16th.
The quick start was particularly
significant for NBC, which carries
the major league baseball playoffs
in prime-time starting Oct...2...NBC's
best week last season was during its
broadcast of the World Series.
ABC airs the World Series this
year, but NBC is counting on the
playoffs for an early season shot in
the arm.
ABC found strength in the first
week of head-to-head competition in
its regular series. " Eight is
Enough " was the week's No.I show,
followed closely by " Charlie's
Angels." And ABC's "Benson" was
the week's highest-rated new show,
No. 15.
•
The rating for "Eight is Enough "
was 28.3. Nielsen·says that means of
all the homes in the country with
television, 28.3 percent saw at least
part of the show.
CBS was quick to note that
"Archie Bunker's Place," successor
to the long-running hit, " All in the
Family," beat ABC's "Mor~and

Historical
society
gives _award
The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society is announcing that
it wti1 provide one prize to tbe Meigs
County winner in tbe 19'19 American
History contest. The prize is to be
· given to tbe high school senior in
Meigs County that has tbe highest
score in the preliminary round of the
contest.
The ccmpetition, run by Ohio
University's Histpry Department is
in its 33rd year .
"The Historical Society appreciates this opportunity to
promote the additional learning of
American History in our youth,"
says Charles Blakeslee, president.
The preliminary round of the com·
petition wtil be held this fall on Qc.
Iober I or 2. The final round, which
takes place on tbe Ohio University
campus, wtil follow in early November.
The winner of the final round of
.this state-wide competition receives
a full tuition scholarship from the
university. Teachers or parents
wishin~ more lnfonnation should
contact contest chairman Dr. Marvin Fletcher, History Department,
Bentley Hall, at (614) 59h'ill6.

One great sound.

Rt. 124, Racine, Ohio

HOGG HOLLOW
DABBLE SHOP
Fine Line of ' Plasterer aft' Items
For You to Make or Give As Gifts
OPEN :
Tuesday-Friday I :00·10 :00
Salurday 1:OO·s :oo
Closed Sunday and Monday

Interested In Classes
Call 1-614-949-2682

~
Plaques
Slalues
Planters
Baby Gills
Animals-lg. &amp; Sm .
Christmas Decor

Halloween Decor.

COMMUNITY Action Agency,
board of truslee3, Thursday at 7
p.m. in Cheshire Village ·Councl
Chambers.
'FRIDAY
COMBINATION YARD and bake
l!llle Thursday and Friday by the
North Bethel United Meihodist
Church Women at the home of
Lucille Burroughs In Tuppers
Plains.

SUNDAY
DEGREE DAY will be held at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall, Sunday,
l:Jl p.m. Each subOrdinate grange
is asked to take sandwiches, pie or
cookies.

WEDNESDAY
LONG BOTTOM Community
Association wti1 have products party
in conjunction with meeting Wed·
nesday at 6 p.m. in community
building. Refreslunents.
RACINE Village Councl Wed·
nesday 7 p.m. at ftre station. Plans
for fall festival to be discwlsed.
· Members of councU, members of
emergency squad , volunteer
firemen and members of ladies
auxiliary asked to attend.

~·.nur·iul( ""' '·"n'""

Allegro Tuned Port Speakt~l' System
and S-Track Tape Recorllt;I'·Piayet·
~====~~ LR916PN
The Newberry
Early American Styling
Pine Finish

PAINTING COMPLETED - Alice Koenig, Mid·
dleport, has completed this painting of the Meigs Cour·
~of yest~ryear, copied from an old photograph.
HOMECOMrnNGSUNDAY
The Chester United Methodist
Church will hold its atmual
homecoming and rally day Sunday.
There will be morning worship at 9

The painting shows also a part of Mulberry"Ave., and
the former Samuel Ervin home. With the painting,
which is on display at the Pomeroy National Bank, is
Linda Fabry, bank employee.

a.m . with church school at 10 a.m. A
covered dish dinner will begin at
12 :30 p.m. And an afternoon
program of inspiration will feature

ELVA HUDSON
HosPITALIZED

Elva Hudson, Minersville, is a
surgical patient at the Holzer
Medical Center. Her rom~ number Is
238 for those who wiah to 3end cards.

RECUPERATING

ATHOME
Ruby Burnside is
recuperating at home following
surgery at tbe St. Francis Hospital
in Charleston, W. Va .

29th

S

KAHN'S

1.69

BACON
ENDS &amp; PIECES

PRODUCE

8 OL Kraft
Velveeta

$} 39·

LR915P
The San Marino
Mediterranean

Slyl ing
Pecan Finish

SAVE
$70

30 Count Michigan

Bun~h 39~
CHEESE •••••••• 89~ CELERY•••••••••

NAVY BEANS ••••••••••••••••••••.218!r

CELERY.................... 3 BUNCHES $} 00

Gallon R ich·n·Ready

lARGE SWEET SPANISH
-

CANDY BARS ......................Sl.09

• 8-Track T"ape Recorder-Pit~er

• Allegro Tuned Port Speaker System
fea turing l -inch Woofers and 3- lnch
Tweeters
• Simulated wood cabinets, woodgrained finishes.

Audio•. Jhe Flipside of Zenith.

· INGELS
FURNITURE &amp; JEWWLRY
106 N. 2ND AVE.

992-2635

DAN DEE

CHOCOLATE CHIPS .............. sL39

· TOWN HOUSE
KEEBLER

CRACKERS ••••••••.•••••••••••••~~·.~~..

49 oz. CHEER ............. }~~~'! .. s1.59
29 oz. Del Monte

PEACHES.............................. 79~

PRINGLES

.

POTATO CHIPS ••• ~ ......... ~!~.~~~~.

s oz. Armour

VIENNA SAUSAGE............... 2/99~

SAVE 30'

POTATO CHIPS...............~·.~~~. $} 39

12 oz. Bakers

~

99¢ I

I
I
894
I

.

_

1

$ 'OO

r------ ----------·I
II PEPSI COLA II
. COUPON

I

6 pack Reese Cup

• Solld-ttate AMIFMfStereo FM TunerAmplifier with HI Filter &amp; Tuning Me ter
• 2.5 wallt min. RMS power per channel
Into 8 ohms with 1% or lesalotal
harmonic distortion, 100-10,000 Hz .
• Precl aion Automatic Record Changer
with Cue Control

4 LB

.ONIONS, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• :.

GARBAGE BAGS................... s1.09
~toVE

LB.

FRESH CRISP PASCAL

15 pack Glad Large Kitchen

$39995

BEEF

ONIONS •••• .'••••••••••••••••••~.~·-~~~. 59e

17 oz. !-ucks

NESCAFE COFFEE. •••••••••••••••• s4.89

~

MEAT

LB.
PKG.

U.S. NO. 1 YELLOW

10 oz. Instant

Fin ish
Maple
Early American
Styl ing

FRANKS ·

PRODUCE

ORANGE DRINK .................... 99~ .

Wilmington

OR BEEF

ALL

3 LB. BOX

I

8 oz. Large
Cool Whip........... ~ ·69e
Cheese or Pepperoni
Chef..Boy-Ardee Pl:ad.•••••••••••1.D9

$60

992·2556
570 w. Main
Pomeroy, 0.

LB.

HAM SALAD ••••••••••••••••••• ;~~. s1.19

POTAlOES....

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAllEY

KIELBASSI

Homemade

2I 97

WITH FRIES ......... $1 34

KAHN'S
SMOKED

BULK WIENERS ••••••••••••••• ~~; . s1.29

e

SANlWIIDf ••••••••••••••••$104

KAHN'S HIUSHIRE
SMOKED

French Citv

10 lb. No. 1 Ohio

SPECIAL

SAUSAGE

~eptember

·

of the Meigs No. 2 team are Captain
Randy Cross, Martin Broderick, Jim
White, Terry Kovach, Greg Bonecut•
ter, Terry Staten and Mike Hoffman.
Joseph Karpinski, a Pittsburgh
based Federal Mine Inspcctoi' who
served as one of the 220 judges at the
competiton, said that the Meigs
team "Looked very good for being in
their first national meet. "
Sponsored by tbe Federal Mine
Safety and Health Admintstratim,
the 1979 competition was coilcluded
Friday night with a banquet at
Louisville 's Executive Inn.
Wllllam catney, Manager of
Safety for American EleCtric
Power's Fuel Supply Department,
served on tbe contest Rules Com·
mittee for this year's event.

THIS WEEK'S

HOMECOMING HELD
The homecoming at tbe Langsville
Oturch was held Sunday with a din·
ner in the fellowship room. Other
features of tbe day were hymn
sin8ing and a speaker.

Mrs .

Prices Effective Thru Sat.,

Thursday and Friday, Sept. 20-21.
The Meigs No. 2 team, making its
first ever appearance in naUonat
competition, . earned the right to.
compete in Louisville based on its
perfonnance at a mine emergency
simulation held last month near
Wheeling, W. Va. for rescue teams
of American Electric Power ilf.
filiated underground mines.
The Meigs No. 2team was tbe only
Ohio team entered in the national
competition, which is known as the
"World Series of Safety." The first
national contest was held in 1912 in
Pittsburgh ; the last seven have been
held in Louisville.
Each participant in the competition received a r~. white and
blue medal and a plaque. Members

THURSDAY
FRIDAY
SATURDAY
SEPT. 27-28-29, 1979

131/4 oz.

SAVE

~g~~~~!~~2~J

"The Unity Singers. " The new piano
will also be dedicated at this time.
The pubUc is invited to attend by
Rev. Richard Thomas, minister.

The annual gathering of sill
classmates who resided at 16
Pahner St., Athens, during their
years at Ohio University, was held
Sunday at tbe home of Fay and
Harold Sauer, Middleport, Route I.
The sill, joined by their husbands
and other members of tbe families,
have had reunions for the past 25
years. In the group Sunday at the
Sauer home were Mr. and Mrs.
WUUam Meredith (Gladys Pickens)
and son, Roger, and his daughter, ·
Terri, Beverly; Mr. and Mrs . Frank
Lambs (Mary Kate Bowman),
Stoutsville; Mr. ·and Mrs. Richard
Rattray (Helen Bowman),
Olillicotbe, accompanied by an exchange student fr&lt;m tbe Philippines; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Miller
(Maurita Lee), Pixneroy, Route 2;
Mr. and Mrs. Jolm Bowman (Jean
Mattox), Reynolds; and tbe hosts,
Mr. and Mrs. Sauer (Fay Pickens)
and daughter, Joy.

Phone 742-2100

MARGARINE

.7'*"* The qualify goes in before the name goes on•
Mirrors

Annual gathering held

RUTLAND
DEPARTMENT
STORE

Quarters

CHECK THESE QUALITY FEATURES:

§
tJ

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA BETA
CHAPtER, Beta Sigma Phi Chapter,
7:45 p.m. at the Riverboat Room of
the Athens County Savings and Loan
Co.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, Mid·
dleport First United Presbyterian
Church, 6;30 potluck dinner with
Group I to be hostesses. Members to
take covered dishes. Mrs . Joseph
Cook to present the program, with
Mrs. Harry Moore to give elevations.

. DAIRY

LR9 t7M

1-614·949·2682

REGULAR MEETING, Ohio
Valley Cornmandery 24, Knights
Templar, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
temple; officers are w take swords
and belts. All Knights Templar
welcome.
JAYCEE-ETI'ES Wednesday 7:30
p.m. in River Boat Room at Athens
County Savings and Loan. All
women age 18 through 35 are
welcome.
POMEROY · MIDDLEPORT
uons Club Wednesday noonat Meigs
Inn. All uons urged to attend.
TUPPERS PLAINS - The North
Bethel United Methodist Women will
hold a combination bake and yard
sale all day Thursday and Friday at
the home of Lucille Burroughs in
Tuppers Plains.
PYTiiiA SISTERS, 7:30p.m. at K
of P Hall, Gallipolis. Members,
please attend.

1 lb. Teen Queen

The

FtlN

WEDNESDAY
WilDWOOD GARDEN CLUB, 8
p.m., home of Mrs. Ada Holter,
Wednesday. New officers to be in·
staUed.
MIDDLEPORT UTERARY
CLUB, 2 p.m. Wednesday, home of
Mrs. Robert Fisher. Pr!J!lram by
Mrs. Betty Fultz and Mrs. Joseph
Cook. Roll call wtil be a memorable
scripture.

with three NBC offerings right
behind : "A Man called Sloane" in
30th place, "The Misadventures of
Sheriff Lobo" 31st, and "Buck
Rogers in the 25th Century" :!&amp;d.

OLIVE or PICKLED PIMIENlO LDAF ••L.~.•

To the dietitians at the hospital, she
·
lent a hand,
To make salads and serve trays to
the ill.
Amazed her co-workers with energy
to spend,
And time to help them with her
skills.

DABBLE AROUND'

~--Social Calendar I'

Eckrich

Four great looks.

She let us go one by one, out on our
own
And finaUy to the city she did go
A hitch at the factory, new friends to
find,
Other talents yet she wanted to
show.

'COME ON UP AND

Mindy,, " in direct competition. CBS'
"60 Minutes" was the week's third·
rated program .
NBC appeared to come out ahead
in ratings for new shows. "Trapper
John, M.D." from CBS was No. 25,

the Southern Ohio Coal Com'
pany's Meigs No. 2 Mine Rescue
Team was one of 77 Mine Rescue
squads from across the United
States which competed in the
National Mine Rescue BRd First Aid
Competition held in Louisville, Ky.

'·

DIET PEPSI, MT. DEW

8 PAK 16 OZ. BTL. CTN. '

LIMIT2

99~

LIMIT2

Without Coupon Repl• Price

.

·---------

Exp. 9/29/79

~------

CAMPBEll$

TOMATO SOUP. ...............4 ·~~N~$1 00

II

G
. OLDEN ISLE SALTINE

I

JOAN OF ARC

I CRACKERS ••••••••••••••••••••L.B:.'!'!~.
.11 KIDNEY BEANS ........... 3 ~N~z.
1

$ OO

1
.

.

Attend The Flea Market On Our Parking Lot This Fri.-Sat.-Sun. Dealers Welcome.

_

·•

MIDDLEPORT, 0.
'·

';

•

�\

-~}c;rr;~ Sentinel. MlddlePort-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1979

14- The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1979

ft fli}Nl

fe}';l ~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ ®
byHenriArnoldandBobLee

Your Best Buys Are Found in the Sentinel ·Classifieds
Pets for Sale

WANT AD
CHARGES
lllay
Uayo
&gt;cloyo
ldayo

HOOF HOLLOW , English and
Western .
Sadd les
and
harness . Horses and ponies
Ruth Reeves . 61.4·699 -3290.
Barding &amp; Rid ing L,usons and
Horse Core products .Western
boots . Chi ldren' s $15 .50,

1$ Words or Under
Cuh
charae
1.00
1.~
1.50
1.110
l.lll
2.2$
3.00
3. 7~

REG ISTERED CHOCOLATE poe&gt;
die. $60 . 992-6280.

Tbe Publiaher relf!rve!l the
r1ilit lo odlt or "')oct ony ods
deemed objectional. The
Publllber will not be """"""lble
for more than one iJlcorrect in-

For Rent

11 PIGS . have had shots,
wormed ond docked. Ex cellent pigs, $29 ea .. or all for

sm. 6~&lt; - 667 - 3493
SILVERSTONE
992-2598 .
GIBSON

opts .

Phone

992-S.:!' .

NOTICE
WANT~AD

ADVERTISING
DEADUNES

3()4. 773-5023 .

ONE BEDROOM opts . Contact
Village Manor, 992-7787 .

TWO HOGS. reody to butcher.
appro)(. 300 lbs. 2·H-262.C .

ONE BEDROOM furnished opt .
In Pomeroy . Call 992-2288.

GE WASHER and dryer. GE
refrigerator . baby bed complete. 1976 Buick Regel .
Racine, 9&lt;49·2001.

Will CARE for the elderly in
our home. Also , room and
board avai lable. 992-7314.

Mond.oy
N0011 on Saturday

GiveAway

Tueaday
thru Fricloy
4P.M.
the day b!fore pubUcatioo

FOUR
GREY kittens
mother cot. 7&lt;42-2321 .

Suncloy
4P.M.
Friday afternoon

FEMALE .
shepherd

ONE NANNY goat and 2 kid
nannies for sale or trade for

coif . 992-6134 or 992-2572.

lWO PLAYFUL female beagle
labs . Shots , wormed , good
with children . Humane Society . 992·6260.

... USEO COLEMEN floor furnace ,
70'000 BTU with thermostat
and vent
pipe . Phone

and

All white co llie
Humane Society

992-6260 .
FEMALE BLACK AND wh ite Lob
. Beagle, wormed , shots, good
with children . Humane Soci•

Notices
HUMANE
Pets

available for adoption dnd informat ion service .

TWO PIECE couch. console TV.
Sweeper . Stereo stand .

985-3501 .
1979 YAMAHA XS 1100. $3000.
Also new Mognovox color
console. John lyons, ~2- 2514 .

HOTPOINT

FEMALE BEAGLE . Ton wavy
brown hair. loves children .
Humane Scoiety. 992-6260.

FREE CANDY classes starting
this week . Coli Carousel Con·

WOULD YOU like a lassie in
your life? 5 moles, town and
white . Humane Society .

registar .

992-63A2 .

7"'3 . Pomeroy, OH
&lt;45769 . No
eJ~:perience
necessary
to

Box

SEVEN 'h Irish Setter and
sheep dog puppies. 7 weeks
old . wormed . 985-3961 .
SEVEN 6 weeKs old ha lf
beagle puppies. 992 ·7518.
PUPPIES. Will be medium
sized dogs. 992-6246 or 992·
7231.

time work on farm an dhomestead near Coolville.
OH . Mobile home in at ·
tractive setting and all
utilities except telephone
furnished .
Farm
ex ·
perience
essential.

Mobile Homes Sale's
197&lt;4 1&lt;4 x 70 mobile home.
Good condition . 992-5858 .
Price reduced. must sell

Mechanics and carpen!ry ·
const'ruct i on

$6.000.

eKperience

1972 LYNN HAVEN 14x65 3

helpful. For further written
detai ls, write PO Box 30,
Coolville, OH 45723.

bedroom .
,
1970 Vindole 12x63 with expanda , 2 bedr.
1970 New Moon 12x60 3 bedr.
1973 Skyline 12xSS 2 bedroom .
1972 Bonanza 12)(52, 2 bedr.
B &amp; S MOBILE HOME SALES.

Yard Sale

PT.

YARD SALE . Fri . and Sat. Sept .
21 , 22. Main St. , Rutland at
Goldie Graham's. New and
used items. 10om to 6 pm .

PlEASANT .

WV .

30.4-675-4.42.4 .

across form Minersville Boll

BIG AUCTION every Wed., 7

Field.

pm . Hartford Community
Center, Hanford, WV, 4 mile,
above
Pomeroy - Mason
Bridg:,•:.·= =--:--- : : - - - OHIO RIVER Auction reopen·
ing on SR7, south of Middleport (Old King' s Building) .
Friday' Sept. 29 , 7pm. New
merchandise including · new
wood heater . box springJ gnd
mattress , carpeting, etc.

SALE
at
John
YARD
D:omewood's . Sept. 77 and 28
above Eostern High School on
CR 28 ., Clothes end lots of
misc. Very old din ing toom
suite. 9 till 5 each day .

LARGE BUSINESS building in
Pomeroy for lease. Former
Worner Barber and Beauty
Shop. Also , 3 bedroom apt.
upstairs, turnished or un- ·
furnished . 992-2528 evenings .

Oct. 2. 9~9-2001 .
YARD SALE . Two family .
W.d., Hoven Heights, New
Haven .

YARD SALE . Mason , WV. No.
10 Faster Dr., up street at car

wash. Sopl . 26, 27 and 28.

For Sale

10omto5pm.

SIX FAMilY Yord Solo. Wed ..
Sept . 26. 1 day only. 9 til 5.
Corner of Main and Tyree
Blvd, Rocine. Adult cloth ing,
baby clothes, misc. 9.49·2778 .

COAL, LIMESTONE , sand,
gravel. calcium chloride, fertilizer , dog food , and all types
of salt . Excelsior Salt Works ,
Inc., E. Main .St ., Pomeroy,

THREE

992·3891.
WINTER POTATOES. C.W. Pro-

Sale.

FAMILY
Lou is e

Yaro
Dixon,

Carolyn Althouse, Lnda
Whitlatch at Pageville on
Saturday and Sunday . Rt .
692 . 614-698 ·5211 .
YARD SALE . Sept . 27, 28,

on a litacre . sen

hom~

an

tricity

credit

deportment ,

._y, Holstein . 9.49 -2175.

YARD SALE . Sept . 24 ·
26 . Bicycle
like
new ,

excellent condition. $1800.

1978 HONDA 750 ·K, e.tras,

Long Bottom ,
large
barn ,

OO ·tf c

Remlng1on 34

150 Auto
$125.00
Hometite
XK12 Hometlte $185.00
KL400 Homotlte $200.00
Remington
$75.00
Yardmaster
$125.00
Hometite Zip
Remington
Super 754
SIOO,OO
Sears
5100.00
XL Homelite
575.00
1 EKcellent Unlco 16 cu.
It.
Coppertone
Refrigerator, like new,
$250
.
1 New Electric Furnace,

clearance priced

1 new Fuel Oil Furnace,

clearance pric~
MAIN ST.
Jack W. Carsey
Mgr,

buildings, $33,500.00 .
ORIGINAL OAK - In

WE
NEED
LISTINGS!!! If you are

this nice 2-story frame
home, fireplace, base ·
ment, 3 bedrooms, all
storms, many features .

$34,500.00.
MINI FARM- Close to
mines. 6 acres. remodel ·
ed 1117 story home, new
WB
FP ,
many

REMODELING
Gutter work, down
spouts, some concrete
; work',
w•lks
11nd
drivew•vs.

TRAILER SALES
I

(FREE ESTIMATE)

17J20 Montgom~r'f' RO .
Langsville, Ohio

V. C. YOUNG Ill

" ' 6U •24S Evening'
1 M!lel E.Uf Of Wifk~I Y ille

~

S 1 mo

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland, Sr.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-2259
992-6191
. ( .....

Announcing Opening of

CARPENTER'S
· DANCE STUDIO

brick stately home on Mulberry Ave . in Pomer oy .
They just don 't bui ld them like th is anymore. Cen tral heat and air conditio ning.. You've got to see this
home 10 appreciate. Call for appointment. - $.48 ,000 .

REAL ESTATE: 1 acre lot in Riggscrest Manor , between Tuppers Plains ond Chester.

Phone 985·392'1 ond 9B5-4129.
SEVEN ROOMS ond both . 2
LARGE HOUSE, together
with 2 acres of real estate.
Owner will sell on land con ·
tract. S5,000 down payment
and owner will finance

balance .
Real
estate
located in Letart Falls, OH ,
near Ohio River. Out of
floo1. For details, ca ll
days, Fred W . Crow, 992 ·
2692.

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

8ulldo1er
s mo~llnt

' t1rqes1

Pomeroy

14 ac res of

nice rolling land with a 1112 story hosue that sits back
off the road surrounded with maple trees. Lg . pond
stocked with fish . N ice ly located in Morn ing Star
?rea. Price 133,900.
FAMILY HOME - Lots of possibi lit ies with tnis
rea l nice 2 story home . Many features, like central
air, built -in appliances, all carpeted &amp; so forth . A
very good investment with several ni ce bu i lding
lots. On appro&gt;&lt;. 4112 acres in the center of Rac i ne,

6

rm . older
home,
carpeted, barn, plus 2
outbuidlngs, on 10 lots.

-

2
bdrm. trailer, 2 covered
parches, 3 car garage,

flat lot. $23,000. Owner
willing to talk .
REEDSVILLE - Home

2624 .

- Neat sm . 6 rm . ·fur ·
nished summer house

11 PIGS , have h ad shots ,

on 1.50 acre . $21 ,500.
Ca ll

-

$32,000.00 -

Good 3 bedroom , all car peted hom e

close to Pomeroy &amp; Midd leport. Located on good 11/:.&gt;
acres of land .

6

room home, bath with
shower , nice kitchen ,
f u ll basement, natural
gas heat and 2 lots.
$23,500.

NEW . LISTING

-

3

bedroom
renovated
home. Bath, new nat.
gas F .A . furnace, base ment, set of glass drs. to
atio. On one floor plan .

NEW LISTING
Mobile home and

REYNOLD'S ElECTRIC Moton.
rewind and repair . 992-2356,
651 Beech St ., Middleport ,

OH .
A &amp; H Upholstering, ocross
from the Texaco Slatton in
Syracuse .
992 -37-i3
or

992·3752 .

Services Offered
NOW HAULING limestone in
Middleport-Poemroy area .
Coli for free estimate.

367-7101.
PAINTING AND sandblasting.
FrM estlmot•'· Coll949-2686.

4

acres, 2nd hookup. L.C.

water . Just off Rt. 7.
AsKng $12,500.

DOZER , END loader, brush
hog. Will do basements,
ponds , brush, tlmb.r . land
clearing. Charles Butcher ,

LINCOLN HTS. -Good
nat . gas furnace, base ·
ment and nice yard .

f~lly carpeted, equipped kit., family room has nic~
fireplace, large utility room and plenty of storage
two-car garage has electric door opener. One great

feature after another. Listed S75,500.
JUST LISTED+ 6 year old home with 3 bedrooms
dining and utility room , kitchen equipped with stov~

~nd refrigerator . Most of the house newly carpeted .

Forced air _gas furni! ce olily ' i

year

Old. Also

garage. A complete lratler hook up w ith nat. gas tap
and septic can add income to the home. Over 2 acres
of land. All for 529,900. Call for appointment.
JUST LISTED _.:.. Mini farm w /a beautifUl brick bi level/tw /3 bedrooms &amp; full basement, large carport ,
total elec. Not eKpensive, fully Insulated, all hard wood floors . 3 large hothouses. You can have all this
wit h approximately 5 acres Of land for only $63,500.

WANT TO SELL? - GIVE US A CALL
CALL JIMMY DEEM, ASSOCIATE 949·2388
OR NANCY JASPERS, ASSOCifTE
949-2654 or 949-2591

DECORATING

Rig~t

'

CURFEW

PONCHO

NORTH
• ·a 3

!!-26

• A 742

+AI0864

• J 7
WEST
EAST
• J 7 52
• 6
• Q 963
• K 10 8 S
• J 7
+ K Q9
+ K 10 9 6 2
• Q 85
SOUTH
+AKQIOII
•J
•• 3 2
+A 4 3

• t nsulallon
eStorm Doort

• Storm Windows
• R eploctmtnt
Windows
•Guttonond
DownSpouts

LI'M'LE ORPHAN ANNJE

JAMES KEESEE
Phone m -2112
8·11 ·1 mo.

lo.:IPif'l ' Lll&lt;'IRDS 1 THAT
SUN B fATIN ' DOWN ···
LIKE BE IN' TIEO ON TOP
OF A STOVE "

Real Estate Loans
Purchase
and
RPfkllince
30 Year Terms
A-No m'ney down

approach takes all

OUICK··· NO KNIFE ···
BUT THIS !OHARP STONE'LL
DO IT··· !..EM ··· C.:IN YO U
Hfi\R ME? , .. LEM'

1

(eligible veterans)
FHA - AS low as 3%

Vulnerable : -North-South •
Dealer: East

West

North East
Pass

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead : • 5

down (non -veter•ns)

IRELAND
MORTGAGE
CO.
77 E. State, Athens
'i92-3051

~ · 23 · 1

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

BOY, WILL THEY
BE SURPRISED
WI-lEN THEY SEI'
ME ! r .... ..

mo.

Here is one of Kel sey·s s im ·
pler problems in " The Tough
Game" .

BRADFORD, Auctioneer, Complete Service . Phone 9-49-24187
or 9-iq·2QOO . Racine , Ohio,
Critt Bradford.

You are

in a

spade contract and win the
first trick with dummy's ace

of hearts .
You need to ruff a club in
dumm y 5() th ~ s imple line of
play is to duck a club a( tr ick
two . .The n if everyting goes

ELWOOO BOWERS REPAIR SwHpert . toasters. irons . all
small appliances. lown moer .
next to State Highway Garage
on Route 7, 98S-3825.

well you lose one club and two
diamond s.
S upp ose trumps don'l
break ' Can you do anything
about that? Thai fiv e of
hearts looks like a fo urt h-best
lead . If it were a short lead,
Eas( would undoubtedly have
bid some number of hearts
during th e a uction so maybe
you ca n gel J 0 tricks in spite
of a bad trump break.
You s(arl this campaign by
ruffing a heart a( trick two.
Now you lead a low club. East
win s and leads a trump. You
ri se with your ace, cash the
ace of clubs, ruff a club with
dummy 's last trump, ruff
another heart. cash your last
lwo high trumps, setting up
West's jack, le.a d a diamond to
dummy, ruff dummy 's last
heart for your lOth trick .
West wins the last trick
with hi s jack of trumps but he
has won it against his
partner's high diamond ._
You won a lot of IMPs here.
Al t he other tab le, your \Vest
partner ope ned the JaCk of
diamond s a nd d eclarer
couldn't bring 10 tricks home.
He was short one entry to
dummy for those three heart
ruffs.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

normal four-

(For a copy of JACOBY
MOOERN, send $1 to: " Win at
Br;dge. " care of this newspa~
per. P.O. Box 489, Radio City
Stslion , New York . N. Y
100 19)

SEWING MACHINE Ropo;rs,
service, all maket , 992-218.4 .
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy,
Authorized Sing'er Soles and
Service. We sharpen Scissors.
EXCAVATING. dozer. looder
and backhoe work ; dump
trucks and l&lt;&gt;boys for hire ,
will haul fill dirt, top soli ,
limestone and grovel Call Bob
or Roger JeHers, day phone
phone
992-7089 ,
n i ght

9'12· 3525 or 992·5232 .
EXCAVATING ,
do1er ,
backhoe ond ditcher . Charles
R. Hatfield. Block Hoe Service ,
Rutland. Ohio. Pone7A2-2008 .

GASOI.JNE AlLEY

Sinqle-handed
I will save our
fine nation from
economic ruin~

You
alms

' t'

walk

is qoin' t' make m4
marlt. in
r/'! I'll
be worl:

till

Phono I (61A) 698-7331 or
7n2593.

9 Inflexible

10 Dessert

capital

wine

13 Bawl out
15 Dutch

14 Whetstone
18 Gennan-style
cake
19 Think
20 "Big- John" :
1961 song
21 Down under
bird
2Z College
in Iowa

conunune
11 - brio
17 Etqllosive
18 Carney's

992- 21~3 .

systems .
Rt . 1.43 .

work
8 Falling out

in Tampico

be.n can celled? lost your
operators
license? Phone

cavot!ng . sept ic
dour. bockho•.

6 Meager
7 Do fancy-

the movies

12 An Arab

INSURANC!

882-2952 or882-l'S. .
HOWERY AND MARTIN Ex·

1 Miles of

6 Gaza -

plete S.rvlce. Phone 992-2&lt;478.

E·C ElECTRtCAl Contractor
serving Ohio Volley region .
Six days a wHk , :Z.C hours ser vice. Emergency callt . Ca!l

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
5 Why?

11 Friend,

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. ComAUTOMOBILE

~W'6td'

" Harry

WINNIE
ITo JI,JST NOT

• I. APPR£CI."'TE HON
COOPERATI VE:
IS
AROU ND THE HOUBE,
WINN I E~UT I W15H
HE'D G E: r A .JOO .

n.rn;

l'lll111RAL FOR
A V\A.N TO 13E
HOME- WHI LE

HIS WI "'E
WORKS !,1\f~!i

IN STOCK for Immediate
delivery: various sizes of pool
kits . Do-lt· yourtelf or let us
Install for you. 0 . Bumgardner
Soles. Inc. 992-572&lt;4 . ,

IT'S Nar LIK.E 1\JTIJ DIDN'T TRY
TO F IND WORK,! l'lESIDE-5,
MAYI'lE HE AND BILL WILL
HIT ON SOMETH ING THEY
f.JOTH CAN DO I

and-"
zo Tum into
Z3 - rm&amp;

Yesterday's
Z5 In time
gone by
Zl Fashion
Z8 Acquittal
30 Bell sound
3Z U.S. labor
leader
33 Steep rock

Aluwer
35 Nefarious
37 Be in a
- (angry)
38 Holm
39 British
carbine
41 Lamprey
4% "Make -

Z1 Love,
:u:u..!~~~-,:;--r:u~:~~sym~bo~l;,;-~do~u~b~le~"-,
Italian style r;
•o
28 Beatie name b.--+---&lt;f-+-t2!1 1\me for two
30 Sinew
r,;.+-t---&lt;f--t--f.':l
31 Rousseau

book

IBAitNEY

A DADBURN
PACKAGE GOT LOST
IN TH'MAIL,

SNUFFY

suffix
37Family
member
41 Yell at
43 Extraneous
44 Set of steps
45 My lands!

If Devoured

DOWN
1 Sapient
ZAmong

3 Split
4Grow old

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

AND UP

Installed and Pad

Has 3 car garage with

FRE~

-GOOD SELECTION OF
CUSHION VINYL
CALL 742-2211 TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grate or Gene Smith

RUTLAND FURNITURE
742-2211

RutlanC!, o. '

Is

Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formal!on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code lelters are dtfferenl.

PEANUTS

CRYPTOQUOTES

TlolATS A NEAT
LOOKING

BASKET·

BALL, Ci-IUCK

QDABTXO,
LAGJ
K B

AQ

LB

JHTBOG

JHTBOG

KB

HCDOBYSBO,

LB

LAG

J

HGJBD. L

OJPYY

B P I J'

WBHDWB
RPIXHTPYX
BEST BLOOD WilL AT SOME
TIME GET INTO A FOOL OR A MOSQUITO. - AUSTIN
O'MALLEY
Ye&amp;terclay'a Cryptoquole: ·THE

@

.

AWOKE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

J&amp;L BiQwN
INSUlATION
VINYL AND
AWMINUM SIDING

'995

FOR SALE OR TRADE

530,000.
HAVE YOU TRIED
THE NEW WAY TO
WITH A YEAR'S
AT NO
CALL

XJ r l XX)"
(A':lswers tomorrow)

I Jumbles : PIECE

Yesterdais

SALE ON ALL CARPET IN STOCK

- Large 9 room home
with 2 baths, city water
and central heating ,
rental over, and one
other rental. Over an
acre of land . Want

rl

BRIDGE

AND UP
CASH &amp;CARRY

NEW LtSTtNG-NiceJ

acres. Just S35,500. for
quick sate .

Prlntanswerhere~"ITJ

SUPPLIES
5071
Osborn
lid .,
RH&lt;tsvlltt, OH, 45772.
For Information CJII
667-+415. Will bt OPon
tote If you nttd
something,
9-U ·Imo.

•4••

one acre. Only $10,500.

location . Total electric
w ith drilled well. Has
full basement and 2'h

Now arrange the circled leners to
lorm the surprise answer, as suggested by tho above cartoon.

\Vedoesday,Sepl.26

iUBBERBA(K CARPET

bedroom home in good

LARGE SPLIT LEVEL - on 3 Acres, 4 BR home

[J

toge the r goi -"WHEW! "

SAVE ON CARPEl
DRIVE ALITTLE
SAVE ALOT

Just$18,500.

$.1 .~ . 000 .

[j

38 Chemistry

J bedrooms home, bath,

bedrooms, basement,
nice equipped kit ., nat.
,gas F .A . furnace and

r

f

33 Guevara

525.000.

MIDDLEPORT - Good 3 BR home approx. 10 yrs.

I I

-__....,

7~2 · 29~0 .

bedroom home, bath,
eat -in kit., full basement
and large lot. Furnace
heating and T. P . water.

BARGAIN - B room
frame home, bath, 4

I

tn

Answer: What the goss1ps wt10 put who and who

ATHENS WAY- Nice 3

From 1 to 75 acres, bordering

LOTS OF LOTS Pomerov.

with mobile home. 3
brm, 11!2 baths, expando
lv . rm . $16,000.

LISTING

HOME &amp; INCOME - lmmepiate possession, large
3 bedroom home, living room &amp; fam i ly room, all
nicely carpeted . Eat ·in equ ipped k itc hen , 2 full
baths, IJ2 basement, garage, nice garden area . lrt"
come from trailer on property . Racine, $45,000 .

off.,. Price $57,000.

Rf:AI:TY

NEW

Want only $17,500 .

gas furnace . A very attractive small home and1
·acre land . Priced for quick sale for S17 .500.

4-5·tfC

7~2 - 2348 .

Ohio. Asking only $54,000.

COUNTRY SPECIAL - Nice remodeled 2 bedroom
home on blacktop road . Mostly carpeted. F.A. nat .

94~·2862 -949-2160

, S &amp; G (or pet Cleaning . S•.tam
cleaned . Free e st imate.
Reasonable
rate s
Sco t·
chguard .
992 -6 309
or

4 BR home, hardwood floors ,

THIS IS WHAT YOU ASKED FOR -

H. L Writesel
Roofing
,
. -

Will HAUl limestone and
grovel. Also. lime hou!ing and
spreading. Leo Morris Trucking. Phone 70-2-i55.

WE HAVE CONVENTIONAl- FINANCING FOR MOST OF OUR HOMES FOR
AS LOW AS 5% DOWN.

AIVD HE
GAM!ILED
THAT l'D SE
~Afl.T ENOUGH
TO KfEP QUIE-TI
AFTER ALL, THE
CARD ITSEl-F
WA'? A SECRE-T
COPE f?IGIIJ!

AJ.:tf!~ ACAKNNE'S

7·12

New, repa1r,
gutters and
down spOuts .
Win.dow cleaning
Gutter cleaning
Free Estimates

MotOIS, Inc.
Ph. 992 -2174

*New Home
*Addons
* Remoldings
*Free estimates
992 -6011

;

R1d i1for

He•ttr Girt .

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

Nice r.e creation spot, minerals, too, Let 's have an

ERA MERCER

985-4197

the

DOWNING-CHILDS

SHOULD BE SOLD - 70 acres, house..&amp; gOOd oarn ,
about LOOO feet of beautiful Oh io River frontage .

Virginia Hayman

Servlcir
Fr o m

.

and garden space . Asking $48,900. Just off Rt . 7 in
Chester . .

Real Estate for Sale

$18,900 .
REEDSVILLE

Racflator·..--..-.

large LR, also fami ly rm , garage and gOOd out -

REAL ESTATE loons . Purchase
and refinance. 30 year terms ,
VA. No money down (eligible
veterans) . FHA - As low as 3
per cent down (non·veterQns) .
Ireland Mortgage Co .. 77 E.
State, Athens . 61&lt;4-592-3051 .

LONG BOTTOM -

Weavers

C. R. MAsH
VINR &amp;ALUM.
SIDING

[j

&amp;U!SY &amp;f1Ni5 A JET·!n:T PARTY
GIR~ TO IIIOTI~I' SUCH THIIIJG'!

9·1A· (Pd.)

FrH E1tlmiltt'1

9·7·1 mo.

$24,500.00.

buil~ing, Many nice features, plenty of fruit trees

Ph. 992-2181

RACINE , 0 .
949-2741 or

SUPER
GOOSE
STOCK
TRAi l ER NOWA\IAILA8LE .

basement,
features .

"lUI LT tN 1877 - Completely re s tored 1970 - Solid

NEW LISTING -

FOR YOUR
NEW HOME OR
EXTENSIVE
HOME
REMODELING
AlsoMuonry
Work
992-7583, or 992-2282
1·1 mo.

ADD ONS &amp;

EJSPERIENCED

HOGS , READY to butcher .

for $299.

'

House,
other

GOOD USED
CHAIN SAWS

$25.000.
FORKED RUN AREA

worm ed and docked . Ex ce ll ent p igs , Si9 ea., or all

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

HE KI.JEW MOM 1\/AS TOO

742·2328

CONSTRUCTION

lo1 m ile off Rt. 7 by -pass
on St. Rt. 124 toward
Rutland .

,;o 'IOU Tl!lll)l&lt;. THt,; .,..-....,..,..,....,

TfDDV 81'AR CARD WA,;
'lOUR PAP',; WAV OF
TIPPINS 'IOU OFf iAAT
HE:"5- 5TILL ALIVE 1

RUTLAND

Pomeroy, 0 .

ROUSH

tiarage

(formerly

992 ·6303.

YARD Si(LE . Sept . 27-28·29

Roger Hysell

Skiff Building)
Ph. 949-2710 or 949·2150
8·2'1·1 mo

$125.00
$100.00

styling,

Hlollo\ ••

[J

.............. ...

I FLUDON

CAPTAIN EASY

AL_TROMM
CONST.

8·26 ·1 mo.

Located in Racine, 0 .

with 2 car garage and
nice business building
with
2
restrooms .

Have been c orn fed . 247·

Main St.

Sech/ded and wooded .
70 ACRE FARM- Near

POMEROY
LANDMARK
$150.00

&amp;

" lt~~~-

RootiNG
REMO'DEliNG
ROOM ADDITIONS
HOUSES BUILT

992-2367

CALL 992-7544

Choreographer

McCulloch Pro
Mac5S
McCulloch
• Mos·IO

men's

Call for appt. or wolk in.

Pomeroy, 0.

available .

price $22,500.00.

thinking of selling give
us a 'all.

Featuring :
women ' s
perms.

53,000. Water and elec ·

RACINE - 2 BR trailer on nice lot. AskingS11.500.
20 WOODED ACRES- Can be d iv ided. 522,000.

boot .

Thursday . 10·5.

Clothing of all kinds, books,
d ishes . From 9·5.

bedroom
tle over

MARK MORA
HAIR STYLIST

Hours9-1 M .• W.• F.
Orner rimes by appointment.
101 Sycamore (Rear)

have several, starting at

flat arid elec. ln. \'3,500.
84 FT . OHIO RIVER
FRONT 3.77 acre

STARCRAFT

BULL CALF , 112 Guernsey,

at the Massar Farm across
from Eastern High SchooL

535,000.00.
LANGSVILLE- Nice 2

PARK FINANCIAL
SERVICES, INC.

BUILDING LOTS- We

1978

CAMPER SHELL for
pickup true . 247·2852. An drew Cross, Letart Falls.

humidif ier,
household
Items, men's and women's
clothing. 3 miles east of
Chester on 248 .

bedroom home . You
must see it to appreci ate
it's
beauty .
Only

FP. large garage, quali ·
ty
c rafts m a.n s h i p
throughout, many other
fea.tures . $44,800.00.

old, stove &amp; refrigerator, lg . storage bldg . Priced at

Call

Roush's residen ce . Signs .
Women's
and
men ' s
clothing, shoes, sizes S1J2
women ' s. Wednesda y and

~

available.
ONLY
.519,900.00.
RANCH - 1 yr . old, 1'/,
acre, good subdivision, 3
bedrooms , 2 baths,
equ i ped kitchen, W B

75x15 ft .
Hocking River lot . All

61~ - 592 - 5122 .

IN MINERSVIL LE, Susie

Lovely

Will sacrifice this
nice 1·floor plan home in
Pomeroy , full base -.
nient, large lot , equip ·
ped kitchen, financing

FROST

ed lo sell. 992-2196.
BALDWIN PIANO. I yeor old.

odds and enos of all kinds.
368 E . Main St ., Pomeroy

real buys.
RUTLAND -

CQuld be rental un it .
OWNER NEEDS SALE

ffitt form , Portland, OH. $8 o
hundred and $5o hundred.

Stordeck 19ft., lAO h.r. . Mercury engine end troi er, h ceUent all purpose boat . Prlc·

29. Breakfast set, TV stand,
ClOthing of al kindS, lOIS Of

Nice lot in Arbough Ad ·
.ditlon
with
septic
system and wat~r tap.
POMEROY - We have
2 nice homes that are

Housing &amp;
V~ter.trlS Admin . loans.

OPENING SEPT. 11th
Cluses: Bollet
Tap&amp; Jon
Aves--4 and up
Shirley Carpenter

acres . 992-2523 .

For Lease

YARD SALE , across from
Eber't Gulf, Racine. Sept. 25·

with a garage and full
basement . Call for your
appt. today. 547,500.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS -

Ph. 742-3092
Hilton Wolfe
Associate
George 5.
Hobstetter, Jr., Braker
Broker, 992-5739

Auctions

YARD SALE . Sept . 2&lt;4-26 . Bicy·
cle like new , humidifier,
household items , men's and
women's clothing , 3 miles east
of Chester on 2.48 .

throughout.
This
beautiful home is bri ck

Mick'S
Barber&amp;
Style Center
.. lntroduces'-

f t· deral

Instructor ·

UtoiiiO. . . . '

.GARAGE SAlE . Sop!. 20-22.

Carpet

NEW LISTING- Com ·

REAL ESTATE
FINANCING

mercial property, East
Main St. , Pomeroy .

.......-.... . Phone 992·1181

MALE IRISH Setter, 1 year
old . 742 ·2467 .

FARM COUPLE for part

baths .

POME~OY,O.

Jack W. Carsey

992·6260.

WANTED: THREE pi&amp;ee lountry
music bond. Apply in person
ot Jock' s Club.

1'1'

Velma Nlcinsky
Associate

POMEROY
LANDMARK

GIVE A nice dog a good home.
Terr iers , collie-shepherds,
, lab-beagle , beagle type, col·
lies , shepherd-doberman,
chihuahua. Humane Society.

FARM COUPLE for port time
work on form and homestead
near Coolville, OH . Mobile
home in attractive setting and
oil utilities except telephone
furnished . Farm 8)(perience
essential. Me&lt;:honics and
ccrpentry·,construcilcn ell·
parlance helpful. For further
wirtten details, wriTe PO Box
30 ~ Coolville. OH .45723 .

Total

608 E. ·
MAIN WOIIii~;...l

~gr .

GALLIPOLIS. We hove terrier,
small, block with little brown.
Humane Society, 992-6260.

CAR SALESMAN . Send resume

LISTING~

electric, 3 bedroom
home. Dining room, kit·
chen, 1ivlng room and

Associate

Headquarters
Appliances
Sales~ Service

992·6260.

Help Waoted

PHONE 742-2003

Ph . 742·2003

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

992-6260.

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Cheryl Lemley

and

doberman .
Good
with
children . Humane Society.

GUN SHOOT EVERY SUNDAY 1
PM . FACTORY CHOKE ONLY.
RAC INE GUN CLUB.

to

992-2282 .

ly. 992-6260 .
10 mo. old female shepard-

- - - - --

42 ACRE FARM. 985- ~32B .

r
[]NT
I I

Business Services

1.C ROOM HOUSE and store.
Born and outbuildings. 2 1/ 2
ocres of ground. Pogeville,

appointment. Phone 9923921.

NEW
REFRIGERATOR .

Magic Chef stove, both used
only nine months . Table and
six choirs. Washer and drye'r ,
both
Whirlpool.
Phone

3 AND 4 RM furnisl-led and un·

furnished

COOKWARE.

Lamps. figurines and owls.
493 Broadway St ., Middleport.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33 , north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lots. Co11992-7479.

lltltlm.

fe ctionery

Coli

992-5565 .

- outdoor facilities . Also At((
reg i stered
Dobermons .
61~ · .. b- n95

aaloo are IC&lt;.'Oilled m!y wllll
~ with ~rder. ~cent charge
for ada earT)"'.na Box Number In
Core of 1bo Senlinol

992 -6260 .

POWER

ALTO SAXAPHONE , used one
season , like new . Reasonable:

POODLE GROOMING. Judy
Taylor 614-367-7220.
HillCREST KENNELS. Boor·
· ding , oil breeds . Clean indoor

Mottle tkme aall!l and Yan:l

SOCIETY .

Basement and ca rport,
carpet wall to wall, com OH. $35 .000. 698.3290
plete kitchen, c abinets,
12)(56 TRAILER . 7 room house,
range, · refrigerator, dish both , fu rnace , gas , garage.
washer , disposal
and
breakfast
bar ,
wood - · On one and one twen tyseventh acres . Off Leading
burning f ireplace, concrete
Creek Rd. 742-3090, . 8-11om
drive . Will sell with or
ond2·5pm .
without adjacent A -frame
busines building . Shown by

WINPOWER .
S13-788-2589.

RISING STAR t&lt;ennel. Boar.
ding. Coll367-om .

·

COUNTY

614-592-5122 .

alternators-own the best-buy

In IDOinOr}". Card ~ Thanb
and Otituary : I cent.l per word ,
P .OI minimwn. Cash in ad-

MEIGS

THREE BEDROOM home,
E . Main St., Pomeroy .

7n20S6.
EMERGENCY

LHIEWLj

Real Estate for Sale

BALDWIN organ, • years old.
Coli credit department ,
FIREWOOD FOR sale. Now
taking order5 . Will deliver.

Adu l15 $29 .00.

E.c:h wonl over the minimwn
15 wordl ill 4 cen&amp;a per word per
&lt;lly. Adl runn1na other than con~w dl)'1 ...ru be charged at
· lilo I day rate.

vance. ·

Real Estate for Sale

For Sale

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to form
four ordinary words.

191' King Featurta Syndlcata, Inc .

Television
Viewing
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER26,
7:06--Three' s A Crowa J ; Tic lac ·
Dough 8; Match Game PM 6;
News 10; Political Talk 13; Love
American STyle 15; Sanford &amp;
Son 17; Dick Cavett 20,33 .
7:3G--Country Roads 3; Newlywed
Game 6; Joker' s Wild 8; The
Judge 10; Family Feud 13; Wild
Kingdom 15; All In The Family
17; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
a·:oo-Real People 3, 15; Eight Is
Enough 6, 13; Last Resort 8, 10;
Movie " Son of Paleface"• 17;
Masterpiece Theatre 20; An Act
of Congress 33.
8 :3G--5.t.ruck by Llghnlng 8,10:
9 :00- L"ast
Convertible
3, 15;
Charlie's Angels 613 ; Movie
"The Betsy " 8, 10; Great Performances 33.
·
9 : 30-Upstairs, Downstairs 20 ;
I O: OG--Vegas 6, 13 ; Upstairs,
Downstarls . 17.
10 : 00-Vegas
6,13;
Upstairs,
Downstairs 17.
10 :3G--News 20: Community In the
Key of D 33.
11 : 00- News 3,6, 13, 15; Best of
Groucho 20; Last of the Wild 17 ;
Book Beat 33.
11 : 15- News 8, 10; 11 : 30-Johnny
Carson 3, 15; Love Boat 6, 13;
ABC News 33; Movie "Sergeant
Y,o rk" 17; Dick Cavett 20.
11 : 45-Swltch 8;
Movie " The
Stripper" 10.
12 :40-Hawall Flve-0 8; 1 : 0G-Tomorrow 3; News 15.

1:50- News 13; 2 : 30- News 17;
2 : 50- Movie
"Front
Page
Woman" 17 ; ~ : 4G--Star Trek 17.
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1979
5:4G--World at Large 17 ; 5 :45Farm Report 13; 5 :50-PTL club
13.
6 :06--700 Club 6,8; Haith Field 10;
PTL Club 15; 6 : 1G--News 17.
6 : 3~For

You .. Biac k Woman

10;

Dragnet 17; 6:45-Mornlng
Report 3; 6 : 5G--Good Morning
West Virginia 13; 6 : 55--News 13.

7:06--Today 3, 15; Good Morning
America 6,13 ; Thursdoy Mor·
nlng 8; Batman 10; Three
Stooges-Little Rascals 17.
7: 15-A .M . Weather 33 ; 7 : 30Fam ily Affair 10; 7:55--Chuck
While Reports 10.
8 :00-Capl . Kangaroo 8,10; Leave It
To Beaver 17; Sesame St. 33.
8 :3G--Romper Room 17; 9:oo--Bob
Braun 3; Big Valley 6; Phil
Donahue 13, 15; One Day At A
Time 10; Lucy Show 17 .
9:3G--Bob Newhart 8; love of Life
10; Green Acres 17.
10 :06--Card Sharks 3,15; Edge of
Night 6; Beat the Clock 8, 10;
Morning Magazine 13; Movie
" That Kind of Woman" 17.
10 : 30-Hollywood Squa~es 3,15;
$20 , 000 Pyramid 13 ; Andy
Griffith 6; Whew 8,10 .. 10 :55CBS News 8; House Call 10 .
11 :06--High Rollers 3,15; Laverne &amp;
Shirley 6,13; Price Is Right 8,10.
1 t : 30-Wheel of Fortune 3 , 15;
Family Feud 6, 13; Sesame St .
20; Faces of Communism 33 .
11 :55-News 17.
12 : 00-Newscenter
3;
News
6,8, 10, 13; M indreaders 15; Love
American Style 17 ..
12 :3G--Ryan's Hope 6,13; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Health Field 15;
Movie "A Bullet is Waiting" 17;
Elec . Co. 20,33 .
,
1:06--DaysofOur Lives3,15 ; All My
Children 6,13 ; Young &amp; the
Restless 8, 10.
1: 3G--As The World Turns 8, 10;
2 :06--Doctors 3,15; One Life to
Live 6, 13; 2 :25-News 17.
2: 3G--Anolher World 3, 15; Guiding
Light 8,10 ; Glgglesnort Hotel 17 .
3:06--General Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20; I Love Lucy 17;
National Geographic 33.
3:31}-Qne Day at A Time 8; Joker's
Wild 10: Fllntstones 17; Turnabout 20.
4: 06--Mister Cartoon 3; Tom &amp;
Jerry 13;

Password 15;

Merv

Griffin 6; Sesame St. 20,33; SIK
Million Dollar Man 10; Spec·
treman 17.

4 : JO-Bewltched 3 ;
Petticoat
Junction 8; Bionic Woman 13;
MenrGrllfln 15; Gilligan ' s Is. 17.
5 :06--1 Dream of Jeannie 3; Sanford
&amp; Son 8; Mister Rogers Neighborhood 20,33; Mary Tyler
Moore 10; My Three Sons 17. ·
5: 3G--Carol Burnett 3; News 6;
Gomer Pyle 8; Elec. Co. 20;
Mash 10; Happy Days Again 13; I
Dream of Jeannie 17; Doctor
Who 33.
6 :()()-News 8, 10.13.15; ABC News 6.
Carol Burnett 17; VIlla Alegre
20 ; Life Around Us 33.
6 :3G--NBC News3,15; Carol Burnett
6; CBS N'ws 8, 10; Bob Newhart
T7 ; Over Easy 20,33.
7 :oo--Three' s A Crowd 3; Baxters 6;
News 10; Newlywed Game 13;
Love American Style 15; Sanford
&amp; Son 17; DicK Cavett 20,33.
7 : 3G--Hollywood
Squares
3;
Newlywed Game 6; Joker's Wild
8 ; $100,000 Name That Tune 10;
Nashville On The Road 13; Archie Campbell 15; All In The
Family 17; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33.
8 :06--Buck Rogers 3, 15; Laverne &amp; .
Shirley 6, 13 ; Waltons 8, 10;
National Geographic 33; NBA
Basketball
17;
National
Geographic 20.
8 : »-Benson 6, 13.
9:()()--Barney Miller 6, 13 ; Barnaby
Jones 8, 10; . Greaseband 33;
Russian Connection 20.
9:3G--Soap6,13; World of Franklin&amp;
Jefferson 20.
·
10:()()-..Qulncy 3, 15; 20-20 6, 13; News
20; Gospel Resurrection 33.
10 : 30-Civlllzatlon 17; Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20.
11 : 00- News 3,6,8,10,13.15 ; Dick
Cavett 20; ·Book Beat 33.
11 :3G--Johnny Carson 3,15; Pollee
Woman 6, 13; ABC News 33;
Movie " The Three Faces of Eve"
10; Movie "High Noon" 17.

12 : 40-Baretta
6,13;
1 : 00Tomorrow 3; News 15; 1 :2G-Banacek 8.
.1: 25-Movle "The Bamboo Prison"
17; 1:50-News 13; 3:06--News
17; 3:2G--Movle "Adventures of
Casanova" 17.

.. .

�16- The Daily Sentinrl. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Wednesday, Sept. 26, 1979

'1

Area Deaths
MARYM.HILL
1\frs. Mary M. Hill, 76, 36109
Flatwoods Roact, dted Tuesday at
Veteran s Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Hill was born May 13, 1903, a
daughter of lhe late George and
Lucinda Sponagel Frecker. She wa s
a member of the Flatwoods United
Methodist Church.
Surviving are her husba nd, Eskey
Hill ; a son, Paul E . Hill,
Indianapolis; three dau ghters,

Comtty Court

CONSTANT WATCH OF GAUGES was rquired durng the deep gas
well drilling tn tllr Stiversville area of Meigs County by employes of tile
Burdette Oll and Gas Co. of Cha rleston, W.Va. A producing well was the
result of the dri lling.

Mayor's Court

·.

Three defendants were fined and
Seven defendants forfeited bonds
ands two others were fined 01\ three others forfeited bonds in tile
court of Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
charges of speeding in the school
Andrews Tuesday night.
zone in the court of Middleport
Fined were William Eakins,
Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday
Racine,
intoxication, $100 and costs;
night.
Barney
Hiles, Pomeroy, speeding,
Forfeiting bonds on charges of
$25
and
costs; Charles C. Blake,
speeding in the 20 mile school zone
Racine,
leaving
the scene of an acwere Paula S. Jones, Midtlleport, . 31
cident,
$100
and
costs.
nliles, $23 ; Brenda K. Chatlin, West
Forfeiting bonds were Eli EberColumbia, 41 miles, $28 ; Winifred '
Middleport, leaving tile
sbach,
Clark, Letart, W.Va ., 30 miles, $22;
scene,
$100;
.Karla Ingels, Gallipolis,
Virginia J. Vaughan , West Colum$27; Greg Childers,
speeding,
bia , 30 miles, $22; Mary K. Shatton,
Mason,
DWI,
$370.
Willow Island, 31 miles, $23; Patsy
G. Ohlinger , Middleport, 31 miles,
$23; Robin J . Southern, Middleport,
Ann ual m eeting slated
33 miles, $25. Fined for speedi ng in
The annual meeting of the Bend
the school zone were Trina D.Faulk,
Area Medical Center, Inc. has been
· Rt. 4, Pomeroy, 32 miles, $12 and
set for Oct. 9 at 7:30p.m. at the New
costs; Gloria Reynolds, Pomeroy, 30
Haven United Methodist Church, acmiles, $10 and costs.
cording to John R. Cannpbell, ChairAlso forfeiting a bond was Gall E. . man of the Board of Directors.
Thomas, Long Bott om, $26 ,
Purpose is to eleci members of the
speeding.
corporation to the board of direcFined were Riehard' W. Stanfill, tors, receive reports on the status of
Gallipolis. $100 and costs. failure to
tile clinic a nd deal witll any otller
stop following an accident, $i 00 and
items of business which may be
costs, operating vehicle 11othout due
presented.
regard to safety of persons or
The public is invited to attend this
property. $200 and costs, fleeing a
meeting of the Corporation. All
police officer , $100 and costs,
membe rs of the Corporation are
operating vehicle while license
requested to be present .
suspended; Don 1AJvett, Middlepott,
$50 and cosls, disorderly manner .

Tax
(Continued from page I )
they could curne up with that much
extra money," said Robert Kosydar,
lcgislali ve coun sel for the
asso ciation.
" It' s not really a rollback," said
i\llc n County Treasurer Herb
McElwain, who attend ed th e
mcctmg. " It's one-fourth of the
auto mati c 10 percent ro llback
effective in 1971 wh en the slate
lncome was passed. "
Implement ing U1 e rollback will
result in 11igher admininistrative
co;ts to auditors. The tax relief
measu r e includes a 2 per cent
reimburseme nt to co ver such
expenses, but most auditors agreed
the amoun t won't be sufficient.
Franklin County Auditor Roger
Tracy. in an attempt to simplify the
filing process, has agreed to accept
an ap plication printed in the
Tuesday editions of The Columbus
Dispatch . It wa s. not known,
however, whether oth er auditors
were con sidering using newspaper

WEAR ONE OR
SEVERAL TOGETHER
Beller Costum e J ewelry

GOESSLER
JEWELRY STORE
Pom eroy, Ohio

~tppl1catiun

forms.

'·Legislators should have asked
for 1nput from the co unty auditors
before they approved this,"
.Jefferson County Auditor Richard
Ca nestraro told the gro up . "But here
we arc, behind the eight-ball again. "

We'd Love to Shoot You!!!
We'll aim our cam·eras to "shoot" you good . Call us for
information or to make an appointment for :
v SENIOR CLASS PORT RAITS
v WEDDING CANDIDS
...-C HRIS TMAS PICT UR ES
...- ANNIVER SARIES
...- PAS SPORTS

THE PHOTO PLACE
(992 -5292)
Charlene and Bob Hoeflich
109 High St.
Pomeroy

Ten defendants were fined and six
others posted bond in Meigs County
Court Monday. ·
Fined by Judge Charles Knight
were John White, Middleport, John
Casto, Pomeroy and Paul Kessel ,
Gallipolis, · $15 and costs each,
speed; Leonard Shoclley, Shade, and
George Whited, Stewart, $175 and
costs each, overweight ; John Radcliff1 Atllens, $250 and costs, .overweight; David Arix, Harrisonville,
$15 and costs, unsafe vehicle; John
H. Wiles, Pomeroy, $15' and costs,
failure to stop in assured clear
distance; Ellis · McMillan, Rt. 3,
Racine , $50 and costs, no highway
use tax permit; Wetzel Phillips, Rt.
4, Pomeroy, $25 and costs ,
possession of marijuana.
Forfeiting bonds were Patrick D.
Arnold, Torch, Teresa Virgin, Kitts
Hill and William D. Baker, Tuppers
Plains, $35.50 each, speeding; Edna
Stewart, Pomeroy, $35.50, left rA
center ; Tamela K. Smith, Rt. 2,
Racine, $35.50, failure to stop
assured clear distance; Herbrt M.
Settle, Oak Iilli, $35.50, left of center.
FIRM CONTACTED
Due to an editor's error, a
headline in Tuesday's paper was
misread. A finn Wa.!i contacted by
Middleport Village officials for a
park design not employed.

Eunice L. Jones, Columbus ; Mary
C. Nicely, Walton.
Surviving are h~r husband, Eskey
Hill; a son, Paul E. Hill,
Indianapolis; three da ught ers,
Eunice L. Jones, Columbus ; Mary
C. Nicely, Walton, Ky., and Janet E,
Hill, Pomeroy; a brother, Edward
Frecker of Columbus; three sisters,
Ruth Spencer, Bradenton, Fla.;
Martha Rose, Pomeroy, and Esther
Dt-grandchildren .
Funeral services will be held
Friday at th e Flatwoods United
Methodist Church with the Rev .
James Corbett officiating. Time
will be announced later. Friends
may call at the Ewing Funeral
Home anytime after 3 p.m.
Thursday.

•

•\

•

FREE CLOTHING DAY
Free Clothing Day will be
observed from 10 a.m. to 12 noon
ThurSday at the Salvation Army
Headquarter s, Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. All persons in need of
clothing are invited.

alternatives, this alternative was
selected as the best because of tile
small amount of property damage,
an acceptable envirorunental impact, and a low!!r'cost.
According to ODOT's District 10
Deputy Director, Glenn A. Smitll,
the Environmental Document
providing tile basis for this decision
is available lor public review at the
Ohio Department of Transportation
District 10 Office on Muskingum
Drive at Davis Avenue in Marietta.
.Plans and documents pertaining to
the project are on file at tile District
Office.

TRIMMING UP- This "werewoif" gets' a trim from Mark Mora for
his appearance at the Meigs Jaycees Haunted House. The Haunted House
will be held at tile Pomeroy High School from Oct. 18 through Oct. 31. This
year's haunted house will have twice as many rooms and will be twice as
scary. The house will open at 7 p.in. and close at 11 p.m. Admission price
willbe$1.

Car No. 1078 where were you?

Highway patrol cruiser stolen,
recovered following joy ride
A State Highway Patrol cruiser was stolen early tod&amp;y and, apparently,
used for joy riding. The vehicle was recovered this morning by ·Galllpolilt
City Police.
According to a report filed witll city police, car No. ID78 of tbe Gallia-Meigs
Post was parked at tile Gallipolis Motor Cofllll8lly for servicing at approximately midnight last night.
Trooper Rodney C. Cook, reportedly, parked the cruiser and left tile key on
tile top of tile left front tire . The cruiser WI!S locked.
Sometime after leaving the OSP cruiser , someone took the key and stole
tile patrol ca r.
At 7:00 a.m., the cruiser was located, by city police, in Mound Hill
Cemetery, where it had been abandoned. According to the police report,
nothing was missing and no damage had been done to the cruiser. Several offica! forms were, reportedly, scattered in tile rear seat and floor.
Beer cans were found on the front floor on the passenger 's side.

FffiERUNS
The Pomeroy Fire Department
was called Tuesd•y at 2:08 p.m. to
Second and Mulberry where a car
was ·on fire. At 3:46p.m. they were
ca lled to the intersection of SR 7 and
124 where a dumpster was on fire.

REVIVAL SLATED
The North Bethel United
Methodist Church will be holding a
revival Sept. 30 to Oct. 7 with the
Rev . Roy Deeter bringing the
message at 7:30 each night. Allto,
tllere will be special music and
singing.

The Middleport ER Squad was
called Tuesday at 5:13 p.m. to Rt.
I ,Cheshire, for Gale Herman and at
6: I 7 p.m. to North Second for
Margaret VanCooney. Both were
taken to Holzer Medical Center.

MEETS THURSDAY
The Riverview Garden Club will
meet at i30 pm. Thursday at the
Williams-Ba lderson horne .

ELBERFELD$

Brawn Du.Ek

WORK WEAR
SPORTSWEAR

Little progress- if any- has been
made in the latest teachers' strike in
the Meigs Local School District as
the beat goes on.
Representatives of the Meigs
Local Board of Education and the
Meigs Local Teachers Allsociation
reported today that iittle
progress-if none-has been made
in tile strike which moved into its
fourth day Thursday.
A negotiation session- quite
brief - was held Wednesday
night-the first ~ince the strike
began-by tile negotiating teams of
botll the board and tile teachers.
Meantime, Supt. David Gleason
announced district schools are open
during the strike which is being supported by the non~rtified employes
of the district.
On the otber hand , the teachers
association spokesman, Mrs. Bonnie
Fisher, president, urged parents. to
keep their children at home contending that· no· meaningful
education is taking place in tile
district.
A special meeting of tbe board ri
education scheduled for Wednesday
night-the third this week - was cancelled. ' It was reported Ulat about
10 residents were at the Mei2s

Survives fire
BEACH, N.D. ( AP ) - A container of low grade radioactive
material survived a roaring
truck fire without contaminating
any rA the suiTOWidlng area,
authorities said Wednesday.
The container was !;Brl'ied IS
miles to tile fire station in this
'small conununlty just east of the
Montana line for safe-lteeping.
"The container is llllder lock
and key, under the control of the
state Board of Health , until the
shipper makes necessar y
arrangements to pick it up," said
Darrell Byrum , pro gram
specialist for Disaster Emergency Services in Bismarck.
Officials had feared the barrel
holding the non-weapoiU.grade
material might rupture as the
twin-trailer truck burned along
Interstate 94 Tuesday night.

Opposes Salt II
CARUSI.E, Pa. ( AP ) - Former President Gerald Ford said
Wednesday he opposes the SALT
II propll'lal unless America spends more to rebuild its military
superiority, warning the Soviets
pose "a clear and present danger
to our national security."
" I am opposed to the
ratification of tile treaty untU and
unless we can once again be certain of our strength," te said
during lecture at tile U.S. Anny
War College. "My position is tllat
I am against the treaty unless the
necessary defense spending
decisioru1 have been made and
have been written into law. "
The lecture was closed to tile
media, but Ford's remarks were
distributed later at a news conference.
The fonner president also said
he would urge against Senate
ratification of SALT II until a
Soviet combat brigade is withdrawn from Cuba.

a

·'

Oil consumed.

P:l Blanket lintd' )Jckrtfi8U- FOf' WOfk or pia~ U Blanket lifted COlt 68lC _
Rugged scy tmg and warm D Pele-lmed ranch coat 34C8 - luxurious pH lint'fl&amp; lor rttl style iJ Pile-fined we$lt
Ht
29CB-:- Warm and sturdy, yet I~Khl DJ Insulated qurlllmed j&amp;cket6QU - Licht weiahf !nsulat;on l iVfS yow tnobitfty 6 :~
QUilt lined coat 6QLC - Sty1 tng wilt1 r&amp;d nylon Clll~ting m Utaay penb 62W - The ill trOUnd work ~Ynt ID C.rpenter
luA back o~eralls 66FB - Designed lor the professio11al craftsmen llD full btck bib OWfl• tlfB _ A won lftln'a
dream. s11ag proof and wrnd reustant W Insulated coveralls 996Q - Total Comfort and loti! Wlflllft : lilld
D P1le-lined vest 6SV - The wa rmest vest made

snap-on hood - M.ilt hmg hood a ~ailable for all jacket, coat and comall styles- m1tchlna ~nlnp too.
'
f

as rugged as the men
who wear them

Complete selection of sizes inctudin9 extra large,
shorts and tongs . Stop in the Men 's Department 1st Floor. Buy what you need now .

ELBERFELDS POMEROY

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1979

Meigs strike
•
•
contmumg
•

VETERANS MEMORIAL
Admi ssi ons--Robert Davi s ,
Pomeroy; Bonnie Walker, Racine;
Brook Hoffman, New Haven;
Carolene Bing, Rutland .
Discharges-Brian Buffington,
Roy Frecker, Russell Meadows,
John Beaver, Belen Dayo.

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
DISCHARGES, SEPT. 24
Di Ann Adkins, Phyllis Baird, Annis Bluffng, Hester Carper, Mrs. Ora
Crabtree and daughter, Ronald
Davis, Patricia Dent, Mrs. Clinton
Gillespie and daughter, Robert Hendrick, Donna Hubbard, Anna
Lausch, Eva Nichols, Minnie
Perkins, Eliza Powell, William
Powell, Leonard Van Meter, Sr.,
Oshel Walker, Walter Wedemeyer,
Ray Wollum, Mrs. Richard Workman and daughter, Kenneth
Yeauger.
DISCHARGES SEPT. 25
Margaret Allen, Geraldine Atkinson, Wilma Bahr, Penny Biggs,
. Georgia Clark, Audrey Clark, Albert
Frank, William Fry, Sr., Mrs.
James Gilbert and daughter, Ernestine Gillium, Lottie Hall, Lloyd
Kidd, Joann Lyons, Debra McKinney, George Miller, Rosetta Minus ,
Ber11ice -Molden, Frances Reuter,
Margaret Rollins, Lewis Smitll, Betty Terry, Goldie Terry, Michael
Whalen II.
BffiTIIS SEPT. 25
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth McCoy,
son, Point Pleasant ; Mr. arid Mrs.
Stephen Adkins, daughter, Oak Hill;
Mr. and Mrs. James Owens, son,
Oak Hill; Mr . and Mrs. Walter
Booth, son , Crown aty; Mr. and
Mrs. Jackson Bailes, daughter,
Gallipolis.

"

meet at Nelsonville
The loth District Republican Committee will meet this Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Hocking Valley Motor
Lodge soutll of Nelsonville.
Speaker for tile meeting will be
Dr. Arthur L . Peterson, Executive
Director of the Conunittee for Fair
and Impartial Redistricting. The
conunittee is circulating petitions to
place on the ballot a Constitutional
Amendment to eliminate partisanship in redistricting.
Reservations for the meeting
should be made witll the local
Republican County Chainnan. The
dinner-meeting will follow a social
hour which begins at 6 p.m.

en tine

•

It

GOP committee to

Planning completed
for Rt. 544 project
MARlETT A - Planning has been
completed for construction of a section of State Route554 near Cheshire
in Gallia County. Construction is expected to begin in about a year if tile
necessary funds are available.
The Ohio Department of Transportation's District 10 Office at
Marieta will next complete the
detail design and request authority
to purchase several rtght of way parcels necessary for the project. Work
calls for the reconstruction and
relocation to begin at a point approximately 0.1 mile soutlleasterly
of tile intersection of Cheshire Township Road No. 17 (Stingy Run Road)
and continue to nea'r the west corporation line of tile Village of
Cheshire. The traffic will be maintained during construct~n by tile
use of existing highways or temporary roadways.
The project estimated to cost approximately three quarters of a
million dollars has been developed
in conjunction witll the Federal
Highway Administration. A public
hearing was held last May 31.
Selected from several project

VOL XXVIII NO. 116
~~

a1

e

"

;

•

LOS ALAMOS, Calif. (AP) An explosion and fire at an oil
.field consumed about 200,000
gallons of crude oil Wednesday,
melting six oil storage tanks, burning one worker and igniting a
brush fire, Santa Barbara County
fire officials said.
Victor Ramirez, 58, an employee at the Union Oil GIIM~on
lease site, was listed in critical
condition with second-and third~
degree burns over 110 percent or
his body. He was flown to Fresno
Valley Community Medical Center.
The six-acre brush 1 fire was
exting ulshed,
. promptly
firefighters said, but the oil fire
raged for hours aft~r tile 8 a.m.
explosion.

•

•

Junior High School in Middleport
prepared to attend the meeting.
Mrs. Fisher had this to say today
regarding the strike :
" As there were the same seven
non-member teacher.s and approximately one percent of tile•
student population in the build)ngs
yesterday , the Meigs Local
Teachers Association would lille to
fonnally request Supt. Gleason close
tile schools until the present difficulties are resolved.
' 'The board's negotiators and tile
teachers ' negotiators met last night
and talked for about 20 minutes. The
associatio~ feels Mr. Gleason is not
willing to negotiate a settlement to
. end the strike.
"Gleason 's position of total
surrender on the part of the teachers
was very obvious. Such an attitude
is making the strilte a long one.
"Altllough the school system has
received nearly $470,000 in new
money , it was stated by the superintendent at tile table, Ulat be was able
to offer only an increase C06ting approximately $20,000. Thi.s is an offer
consisting of 4.7 percent rA new
monies.
"No further meetings to negotiate
are scheduled."
There appeared today still to be no
definite 1 )'es" or 'llo"flllSwer on
whether activities will be held
Friday night by the football team
and tile band in Pomeroy when
Meigs is scheduled to meet Logan.
The policy was still stated Ulat
unless teachers involved in the
music program and coaches in the
football program are at their school
duties and participating students in
classrooms, the game will not take
place.
In regard to the strike, Supt.
Gleason said today :
"Today , we report Ulat all of our
schools are open. Also we are
plelllled to report Ulat we bave two
more teachers reporting for work
today .
"Yesterday evening, we had a
negotiations meeting witll tile
- (Continued on pa ge 10) .

Road repair
costs placed
at $39,733.63

GETS STATE AWARD- Mrs. Nora Rice, Middleport, was presented
a state award as Mother of the Year, 1979, from the Ohio Department of
Mental Healtll and Mental Retardation at a 'meeting Wednesday night at
Meigs Inn. More than SO residents attended the session sponsored by the
Meigs County Board of Mental Retardation . Rep. Ron James presented
the award plus a conunendation from the Ohio House of Representatives.
The Motller of the Year Award was "In recognition of distinguished service to the mental retardation program of Meigs County." Shown witll
Mrs. Rice is Manning Webster, chairman of the Meigs Board of Mental
Retardation.

GUEST SPEAKER - The total human being was tile theme of a talk
given Wednesday night by Mrs. Ruth M. Bouchard, residential coordinator of District V, Division of Mental Retardation and Devolopmental
Disabilities during a meeting sponsored by tile Meigs County Board of
Mental Retardation. Mrs. Bouchard Is being welcomed by Chris Layh,
·
administrator of tile Meigs Board of Mental Retardation.

Floor vote slated today on
price hike of vehicle tags
.

Associated Preos Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio ,(A_P) - State
senators scheduled a floor vote
today on a bill containing the first
hike in state motor vehile license tag
fees in 28 years.
The Senate Finance Committee
voted 6-2 Wednesday night to double
the present $10 annual autl' fee and
to boost those for trucks and other
corrunercial vel)ic!es by 10 percent.
However , the committee defeated
S.J an amendment to raise the
gasoline tax about two cents a gallon
to financ e sorely needed state
highway and bridge improvements.
The action came just before the
panel recommended passage ~ of
the House-approve d, two-yea r
budget for the transportation and
highway safety departments . It was
scheduled !ol a Senate floor today .
Sen. Sam Speck, R-New Concord,

.

offered the amendment which would
have levied a 3 percent sales tax on
wholesale purchases of gasoline.
It would have meant a boost of 2.1
cents-a -gallon at tile pumps to start,
but would have grown as wholesale
prices increased , up to a llmit that
could not yield in excess of three
cents a gallon.
The amendment would have
provided $110 million to $liS million
more a year for hig hway
improvements.
Speck said he was unecided
whether to offer the amendment
during today's floor debate on the
budget bill.
Finance Chainnan Harry Meshel ,
D-Youngstown, ended several days
of speculation about whelher th e

majority Democratic caucus would
vote for lhe tax . He told Speck and
the committee : "There have been
surveys of our caucus, and the
support wasn 't there ."
Earlier, the House toyed witll the
idea of putting it into the budget bill,
but backed away after learning
Senate support was shakey.
Sen. William F . Bowen , DCincinnati,
sponsored
the
amendment whi ch would hike
registration fees for the first tinie
since 1951.
It was more politically palatable
to tile committee and probably will
be to other lawmakers, because
revenue goes to local governments.
The state shares revenues from
the seven-cents-a-gallon gasoline

Democrats defeat
tax_relief request

Cost estimates on the needed road
repairs rA five county roads will run
FORMS AVAILABLE
~.733 .63 according to Meigs County
The
.
Ohio House of RepreseoEngineer Wesley Buehl.
tatlvea bu enacted a oew two and
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) Meeting with the ~eigs County
oae-half perceot tu reduclloo oo
Majority
Senate Democrats have
Coltlll1issioners Tuesday night Buehl
owoer-cupled resldeotlal real defeated an attempt by Republicans
infonned the board Ulat repairs oo
property, Melga Auditor Howard
to get an inunediate floor vote on a
county roads 35, 31, 'll, 18 and 125
FraDit reporu.
constitutional
amendment offering
would cost nearly $4(),000. It was
There IB DO IDcome lest or age relief to property taxpayers.
agreed tllat county crews would im- .
qwtllflcallon to =elve lbe two and
Senators voted 1~17 along party
mediately begin applying a hard-top '
one~ percent reduction. The
lines
to allow the Ways and Means
surface on two and one half miles of
Seule will vote on lhls bill next Co'nunittee to continue considering
county road 18.
week.
tile resolution , which is designed to
Buehl said he had received a bond
U pall8ed, ID Ill present form and
prevent property tax increases
in the amount of $2,000 from the
slgued by the G&lt;lvernor, appUcatlons
resulting
from inflation-caused
Smitll Gas., Co. The bond had been
caa be picked up at the office of h1kes in property values.
requested from the Smitll Gas Co.
Auditor Frank as soon as lbe tax
The vot e came on a motion by Sen.
for damages to county road 46
commlnlonera prepare the ap- Paul R. Malia; R-Westlake, who
caused by Smitll Gas Co., while in·
plication forms .
contended lhe ·Legislature should
stalling a gas line.
Ao extension of 30 days will be delay no longer on property tax
Victor Gaul, president of Shade
granled by lbe County Auditor to relief. The pending resolution was
River Jaycees, discussed progress lbose wbo qualify.
introduced May 17. It has been
of tile Chester Community Park
'
project. Gaul reported the application for a grant looks favorable .
Michael SWisher, welfare director, also met with the board to
discuss the department ' s
operations. Bituminous bids for the
montll of Octorer were awarded to
Guernsey Asphalt Co .
Attending were Richard&gt; Jones,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - An agreement has been reached
president, Henry Wells, and Chester
which lets county auditors go ahead with implementation of a
Welis, conunlssioners, and Mary
recentfy approved. 2~ percent reduction in property taxes for
Hobstetter, clerk.
residences and fann homes.
Senate President Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron, said Wednesday tile
pact satisfied frustrated auditors who had lobbied all week for action to ease administrative problems.
Deputies cite driver
The audi[Ors were unaware until recently that the reduction actually a 21'. Pet, increase in tile existing 10 percent rollbackfollowing minor wreck
had been approved by tile Legislature ip July. It tllen came to tlleir
attention
tllat tile deadline for taxpayers to file for tile new reducThe Meigs County Sheriff's departion was Sept. 28.
tment cited a driver to court
Ocasek, along witll other Senate leaders, said this problem was
following a minor accident that ocwhen the parties agreed to not require applications for
overcome
curred sometime Tuesday night or
this year, except in tile case of !ann proP.,erty owners
the
reduction
early Wednsday morning.
for
whom
the
deadline
will be extended to Dec. 31.
•
According to tbe report Walter D.
Senate Finance Chaliman Harry Meshel, 0-Youngstown, said
Arnold, 29, Langsville, was traveling·
the
Senate was assured by the auditors Ulat tlley have "a pretty
on county road 11 in Colwnbia Towngood handle" on which taxpayers qujlllfy for the reduction, and
ship without headlights. His car
that tllose receiving It unjustly will have their bills adjusted acwent off tile left side of the road !Dto
cordingly next year.
'
a ditch.
Under
the
proposal,
included
as
a
$45
million
item
in
the
state's
Arnold was cited on charges of
1979-198! budget bUI, tile reduction applies only to owner«cupied
operating a motor vehicle without
dwellings
and !ann homesteads, plus one acre of .and.
headlights. He wlll appear In county
court.

Tax implementation·
· agreement reached

approved by tile House, but in
different form .
Ways and Means Chainnan Neal
F . Zimmers Jr., D-DaYton , opposed
Malia's motion which would have
lifted the bill from his conunittee.
He said members want to study tile
entire spectrwn of property tax
problems.
" I think our committee deserves
time to do this effectively,"
Zimmers said.
In addition to putting a check on
inflation-caused tax hikes , the
proposed amendment, if approved
by voters, would remove the
question of constitutionality of a 21'.
percent property tax reduction
autllorized by tile Legislature this
year.
.
Some legislQ!ors say they fear the
1979 cut fails to meet constitutional
muster because it was extended only
to residential and !arm property.
Ohio's uniform rule of taxation
requires taxation of all property
classes at tile same rate, Sen. Sam
Speck, R-New Concord, and others,
said.
'

.

tax with local govenunents, but gets
to keep most of. it although some is
earmarked for debt retirement and
otller non-construction purposes.
Bowen said his proposal will bring
in about $120 million fr local
governments over the first 18
months.
In other business Wednesday, as
both houses acted on a handful of
routine measures ; lawmakers
worked out with county auditors
some administrative problems
involving a newly enacted, 2'h ,
percent property tax reduction for
residential and farm occupants.
lfhey agreed to eliminate a
requirement for taxpayers to apply
for the reduction prior to a Sept. 28
deadline. Instead, the auditors will
use existing records to ascertain
whi ch
residential
generally
taJqiayers are eligible, tllen go
ahead and apply the reduction.
To qualify, a homeowner must
have lived in the same r1'5idence for
at least a year.
In situations where ineligibli
taxpayers receive lhe cut, the
amount will be added to tlleir next
tax bill, it was explained.
Under the arrangement, owneroccupants of fann homesteads still
must apply .. for the reduction .
However, the deadline for tllem was
postponed until Dec. 31.

Middleport emergency
squad has busy day
Four calls were · answered Wednesday at tile Middleport Emergency Squad.
,
At 2:22 p.m., the unit went to· &gt;
Route 1, Middleport for Betty Little, •
a medical patient, who was taken to ·
Holzer Medical Center.
At 11 :01 pm., tile unit went to ·
Hooker St. for Kenny Searls who was ·
lll. He was taken to Holzer Medical
Center. A second call was received .
at 11:02 p.m. and a second truck :
went to Cheshire Route 1 for Tom ·Stewart who was injured. He was :
taken to Veterans Memorial : ·
.Hospital.
.
_·
At 11 :56 p.m., tbe squad .,..ent to · .
Sycwnore St. for Tommy Eakins :
who was ill. He refused treatment,lt ·
was reported.'

EXTENDED FORECAST
Saturday tbrougb Monday
Clearing Saturday. Mosly fair
Sunday aod Monday. Highs through.
the period from the lower 70s to near
SCHOOL FUNDS RECEIVED
80. Lows from lbe mid to upper 508
Meigs
County's three local school
early Saturday to the upper 4011 ~
districts
received a total o(
low 508 early Monday •
$310,7~.98 as their shae of the State
School Foundation payments for
Septembet,1979.
The amounts received by each
district following deduction for
retirement of certified and nm·
certified employes include Easter,
Rolin likely tonight and Friday. $82,733.16; Meigs, $144,707.24 and
Lows tonight in tile low 60s. Higlu Southe111, '$83,303.58.
Friday between 70 and 75, The chanIn addition, tile Meigs County
ce of rain is 70 percent tonight and
Board of Education received a
Friday.
·
· direct allotment of $18,640.47.

Weather

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="820">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11490">
                <text>09. September</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="51101">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="51100">
              <text>September 26, 1979</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2496">
      <name>frecker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="313">
      <name>hill</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
