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L .

a-.-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Aug. 7, 1978

..::
'•

Brazos River checked
GRAHAM, Texas (UPI ) Officials today cautiously
checked tbe Brazos River lor
signs of surgint! waters that
could further inundate the
town and hoped lor · clear
weatber to give residents a
chance to recover from three
days of chain-reaction
Ooodlng.

•

Te:us has had a week of
deadly flooding in the
Graham - Albany area and
tbe HW Ccuntry in the central
portion of the state. At least
25 people were killed and
Ooodwateu washed away the
homes
and
personal
belongings of hundreds.
Authorities Sunday also
became concerned with a
tropical stonn, newly lonned
Bess, in the GuU of Mexico.
The stonn appeared headed
lor Mexico.
"We're doing fairly good
now." Graham 'Police Chief

William Paul said early
today' while waltint! for an
anticipated flood crest to pass
his town. "The water is ·stili
rising but r~al slow now. We
appear to be in pretty good
shape."
The river rose and' receded
sporadicaUy early today and
officials - workint! without
electrical power - were
unable to detennine if the
crest had passed. Authorities
also said there were reports
of looting.
About 250 residents S'!"daY
were evacuated from the
west side of Graham, which
had become a shelter for
some 700 residents of floodravaged EliasviUe and South
Bend.
'
Floodwaters had flowed
into the basement of the
Young County Courthouse
and also covered several
lumberyards and a stock-

yard.
Civil Defense worker Gary
Sheets said water from Salt
Creek had gone over Its banks
Sunday afternoon and was
spreadint! through the !own.
In Albany, 50 miles southwest of Graham, five peOple
were kiUed earlier in the
week. Twenty bodies have
been found in Central Texas
where the towns of Medina,
Bandera, Comfort and Center
Point were awash with
floodwaters produced by
Amelia, the first tropical
stonn of the season.
.
Both areas had been suffering through a swiuner. long drought and hardened
creek and river beds and
prairie lands were not able ·to
absorb au the rain.
Central Texas residents
also were hoping for dry
weather today to aUow them
to recover, but the National

Weatber Service predicted a
30 percent chance of rain.
Eleven people still are
misaing in the area.
·
The HW Country flooding
was caused by tropical lllorm
Amelia, wblch first moved
into Texas last Sunday. The
new ltonn reportedly was
headed toward Mexico but
would create even greater
problems if it turns near tbe
water-logged TeiWI towns.
"We're watching it pretty
closely," said Department of
Public Safety spokesman Jim
Robinson. "We're optimistic
Bess will follow the track It's
on.
"It would be tragic if we
had something like that move
into the state again. Even if it
brought just a bu!ICh of rain,
with the streams and rivers
runnint! at capacity, we'd
have the potential for some
reaDy bad problems."

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VATICAN CITY (UP!) Po(le Paul VI's successor,
whose electioo will decide the
future of the Roolan Catholic
church and perhaps the allegiance of nearly 700 million
faithful, probably will come
. from a group of fewer than :IAI
cardinals, Vatican experts
said today.
Predicting the outcome of a
papal election is always difllcult, but particularly so this
lime because the CoUege of
Clirdlnals is at ita largest
strength in history.
.
There will be 115 cardinals
meeting in Michaelangelo's
Sistine Chapel to elect a new
pontllf, COOlpared with tbe ao
who elected Paul in 1983 and
the 51 who elected John XXlll
in 1968.
Many of the newer
cardinals are from distant
Ianda, rare vlsila's to Rome
and as yet Wl&amp;cquainted with

Getting your
share of the pie?

ASBESl'OS, Quebec (UPI)
- The last peraon to lliiCape a
bus that piiiJIIIed into a lake
and slowly dr..,ned 40
pauengers said she apent 10
minutea in the slnklni dellth
trap consoling the victlmo
and liltening to tbeir'screams
and prayeu.
Lucie Pouliot, one of
several volunteers on an
outin~
with a group
rl handicapped people, aaid
living 'through Canada,'s
worst bus disaster Friday
night at a lake near the

.Vermont border waa a "beD
I'D never forget. "
Dazed relatives, many
CI'Yl!lll. pu.ahed pall 1'8p01'1ers
and onlookers &amp;ulday Into a
makeshift
morsue
in
Eastman to Identify the '¥1
bodlea taken from the bw!.
Three other c«rpaes were
recovered separately.
One official said the
battered vehicle, puUed .from
the muddy bottom of Lac
d'Argent earlier in the day,
waa a "maaa entanglement &lt;1
wheelchaits, crutches and

Farmers
Bank

POMEROY ,' OHIO
Member FDIC

"--""

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Cardinals' .first preparatory meeting today

acco~~:nt

Behind the funeral home in
Eastman, 75 mllea from
AsbeatOI , hearaes waited
bumper to bumper to take the
v1ct1ma home. They pulled

away ciiT)'InC u many u
three bodleo each.
"When we hit the water
there wu maaa panic,'.' Mill
Pouliot
aaid.
"They
acramed, they 1lloOd up, they
were terrifted."
For the next 10 minutes, the
22-ye!ll'-&lt;&gt;ld volunteer worker
aald, abe was "cmlollng and
whispering hopes" to tbe
passengers.
·.
•
"I told everyone to stay still
in their seabt. I .told them we
were going to live," she
said.
"Some were saying the
Lord would never let tbem
die. He would aend help.
· Couples embraced and cried.
1ben we started to link."
Seconds alter she dived into

· HOSPITAL NEWS

Veterau Memorial Hospital Joan Gberke, Rosalene
Harkins, Mrs. Prentiss
Saturday Admissions Martha Roush, Rutland ; Hatfield and daughter, Tony
Christine
O'Do nnell, Hawk, Cleta Hoffman, Carrie
Long, Ruth Musaer, Melissa
Pomeroy.
Nance, Mrs. Cbarles Plants
Saturday Discharges Gary EUis, Milton Geary, and daughter, Betty PoM,
Shirley Powell, Thomas Phyllis Sullivan, Ellie
Wells, Richard Werry, Trotter, John Va nee, Mrs.
Clarence Wickline, Nellie Clarence Williamson and
daughter.
Lemley, Donald DaUey.
Aug. 5Birth
Sunday
Admissions
authority, priestly celibacy Albino Luciani.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Char.Ies
Audrey
Woode,
Pomeroy
;
Noo-Itallan cardirials, who ·
and birth cootrol. Or he could
Kapp,
West
Columbia, a
Martha
Klein,
Middleport;
he a progressive trying to were given long-eliot chances
dsughter.
Gary
Gillenwater,
Rutland
;
election,
include
. align Roman Catholicism for
(Aug. 6 Dlacbrges)
with what he feels is the spirit American Cardinala John F . Carolyn Chas, Pomeroy;
Sarah
Adkins, c.amora
Robin
Ritchie,
Tuppers
Dearden and John J . Wright,
of the times.
Allen,
Shana
Ferrell, Johnny
Plains;
Kenneth
Cromlish,
Leon Duval of Algeria,
Italian " papabill"
Hood,
Virgil
Justice,
Kenneth
Gallipolis.
potenti81 papal candidates - Gabriel Garrone and Jean
Madden
Ill,
Maureen
MuDSunday
Discharges
include Cardinals Giovanni VWot &lt;1 France, James Knoot
hem,
Mrs.
Curtis
Sizemore
Benelli, Sergio Plgnedoli, of Australia, Frariz Koenig of Mary 'Scaggs; Lewis Harper,
and son, James Slone, Ann
Sebastiano Baggio, Pericle Austria, Maurice Roy of Willa Jacobs, Donna Par- Stapleton,
Mrs. Allen Wilson
Felici, Giovanni' Colombo, Canada, Johannes Willen- sons, AngilyM Brunty.
and
daughier.
Michele PeUegrino, Antonio lrands of Holland and Stefan
Aug. 6Birth
Holzer Medl•al Center
Poma, Ccrredo Ursl and WysZynSki rl Poland.
Mr.
and
Mrs. Larry Reese,
(Aug. 4 Dis•harses l
Oak
Hill,
a
son.
Ray
Barker,
Diana
Robert Burley, Paul
-~------------------------ Belcher,
Burnette, Jennifer Barns,
PICNIC WEDNESDAY
Michael Carey, Harry Click,
The Middleport Youth
I
I Valroy Close, Ralph Davis, BasebaU League will have its
Wilbur Dickson, Freelove
PAUL W. HUDSON
&lt;laughters, Mrs. Lawrence DriscoU, Brenda Dulaney, annual picnic Wednesday,
Paul w. Hudson, 64, (Beatrice) Stewart, Mid- Tammy Dulaney, Tonia August 9, at the Middleport
Park. There will be swimSouthside, was pronounced dleport, and Mrs. Robert Dulaney.
ming from !HI p.m. followed
dead on arrival at Pleasant " (Judy) McKinney, Cary, N.
Waiter Fraley, Daniel by a picnic from 8-10.
Valley Hospital Saturday, C.; a son, Clarence Marvin of Garthee, Anna HaD, Mrs.
after an apparent heart at- Lewisburg, Ohio; two sisters, Larry Hall and son, Edward Coaches wiD contact team
tack .
Mrs . Ida Bachner, Mid- Hlad, Janelle Hysell, Viola members as to what to bring.
He was born May 20, 1914, dleport, and Mrs. George Ireland, Rush J arne!!, Lori The event is for T-!lall
Pony
League
Southside, to the late John (Evelyn)
Louthan
of Kelton, Mae McGuire, through
players,
coaches,
and
Gordon and Cora Hayes Sarasota, Fla., and a brother, Thomas Meade, Nelgene
famllles.
Unifonns
are
to
be
Hudson.
Vaughan, Akron. Also sur- Pegg,
Mrs.
Kennetfi
in
at
this
time.
For
turned
He was an employee of the viving are four grandsons; a Robinson and son, Maxwell
Avtex-Fibers Inc., Nitro, and granddaughter; a g•eal' Runyon, Edith Rush, Helen more information caD 992was a member of the Har- granddaughter and several Russell, Ninabelie Saylor, 6212.
mony Baptist Church.
nieces, nephews and cousins. Bernice Spaulding, Alien
BIR'l11 ANNOUNCED
Survivors include his wife.
Funeral services will be Tilley, Christy Ward, Marin
Nicholal and Debol'ah King
Frances M: VanSickle held at I p.m. Wednesday at Wilcox , Margaret announce
the birth of tbelr
Hudson ; three daughters, the Rawlings-Coats Funeral Winebrenner, and Chad 8ecOI\d daughter, Bobbi Jo,
Mrs. F . Manford Bowles and Home with Mr. George Glaze Wyatt.
both July 28 at the Pleasant
Miss Cheryl Hudson, both of officiating. Burial will be in
(Aug. 5 Dlaebarges)
V
aUey Hospital, Pt. Pleaaant,
Soulhaide, and Mrs. C. S. Riverview Cemetery .
Kathryn Circle, Ronald " · v•. 'lbe infant weiRbed
Cerquittlne, St. Helena, Friends may caD at the Davis, Mrs. Myron Fran- eight pounds, eight ounces
Calif. ; two sons, P. Douglas funeralhomefrom2tohnd 7 ckowiak and son, Mrs. and was 22 inches long. Mr.
Hudson , Southside , and to 9 p.m. Tuesday .
.Sherman G'raham and son, and Mrs. King's other
Roger B. Hudson, Downey,
· daugltter, Brandi Nichole, is
Calif. ; two · sisters, Mrs .
two years old.
Macel Dunaway, Chauncey,
Maternal~~randilarents are
0., and Mrs. Katherine Long,
John and Edria Hunnell and
Henderson: one baH-sister,
Three people were killed in Township, .Stark CoWlty.
the maternal great ; grandMrs. Edith Boardman, Point a Butler County accident
New Lexington : Poia Cal- parents are Don and Velma
Pleasant ; three brothers, Sunday, when a total of 11 soneri, 19, Columbus, killed Stobart and John A. HunneU,
Lester
Hudson,
Point traffic deaths were logged by when the car she was driving and the paternal grand..rent
Pleasant; George Hudson, the Ohio Highway Patrol.
crashed on Ohio 13 east of is Va&lt;la Kint!.
Southside and Chester, Rt. 1 · The weekend, which New Lexington in Perry
DAVMEETING
Gallipolis ; four grand- started at 6 p m . Friday and County.
Meigs
Chapter 53, Disabled
children.
ended &amp;tndsy night, was
American
Veterans, will
Funeral services will be marred 16 traffic deaths in 12
at
7:30p.m.
Tuesday at
meet
held Tuesday 2 p.m. in the accidents. A motorcycle
the
chapter
home,
Butternut
Crow-Husseii Funeral Home crash took one life and a
NOW YOU KNOW
Ave.,
Pomeroy.
with the Rev . Fred Mc- moped-car collision took
Of 263 popes in the history
CaUister officiating. Burial another one .
SPECIAL MEETING of the Roman Catholic
will be in Kirkland Memorial The fatalities by days : church, only 46 have been
Pomeroy ·Lodge 164,
Gardens.
Friday Nlgbt
non-Italian - the last being F&amp;AM, will hold a special
Friends may call at the
Parma : Richard Brown, Hadrian VI of Holland who meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wedfuneral home this ·evening. 17, Parma, and Kurt Levlaeur reigned for 13 monthS in 1522- nesday with work in the EA
Degree. AU Master Masons
m, 18, Parma, killed ina two- 23.
are
invited.
car accident on a Parma
CLARENCE H. MURRAY street.
Clarence ·Howard Murray,
Newton Falls: Melissa
73, died early Sunday mor- Wilson, 13, Rave:u:a, kiUed in
ning at his residence at 549 a one-car crash on a
Headley St. in Middleport Trumbull County road, south
following a lingering iUness. of Newton Falla.
Mr. Murray was born Jan. Saturday
29, 1905 in Rutland, a son of
Troy : Riclilrd Hale, 25,
the late Jacob and Enuna Troy, killed in a one-&lt;:ar
Jones Murray. He was also crash on 1-75, north of Ohio
preceded in death by a 571, near Troy.
brother, Don .
Columbus: Walter H. ManMr. Murray wa s a member bevers, 57, Twinsburg, killed
of the Middleport Church of in a car-truck accident on
Christ and was a retired Interstate 71 .
brakeman for the New York Sullllay
Centra l Railroad .
Hamilton : Michael Oflynn,
Surviving a re his wife, '1:1, Middiewwn, David W.
Evelyn Bailey Murray; two . Alter, 19, Lebanon, and VIcky
Bowling, 17, Mason, ldUed in
a three&lt;ar crash on
Cincinnati-Dayton Road in
BuUer County.
Wauseon : John P. Tyler,
3&amp;, Pittsburgh , kWed in a onecar accident on the turnpike
l:i Fulton County.
Lancaster : Gilbert ·Hilde·
brand, 26, Columbus, kiUed in
a twa&lt;!ll' crash on Ohio 158 in
Fairfield County.
London :
Steven
E.
OlamberUn, 23, Washington
C.H., killed when his car
crashed on Ohio 323 in
Madison County .
Columbus: JuUus Peterkin
Jr., 14, Baltimore, Md., killed
when his moped was bit by a
car at Columbus.
Lancaster: David W. SimpSOli, 20, Reynoldsburg, JVlled
when his motorcycle went. out
of · control on Ohio 204 in
Fairfield County.
Cantoo : Daniel J . Fritz, 43,
'1-...'fOU'I.LNIDTHIPUIII
1SOl l•ttern Ave., O.lllpolis. Oltio
Maulllon, the driver, and
J.ck10n Awe. &amp; 2•t11St., Itt. PM••nt, ~. V1 .
Ruth J. Fritz, 41, MaasiUon,
'" Wnt Mltln St .• Pwuneroy, Ohio
killed in a collb:ion in Sqar

:;

bodies/'

the cbiU waten - Ill lbock
ml believing otb1n wwe
fcJIIowq her - the back end
ol the bull . . . below the
dark uface of the Iate. Site
wu the laat of aeven.

survtvon wbo eacapecl. ·

Uti

1,000 pectple li
&amp;tnday waa a day
ol 1110111'111nC. F'ullef'l1 lllllllle
played constantly radio
statiooallld flip flew at half

. Far

AI~.

staff. The bodlu were lyial
In state today at the local
recreatlan center.
In the dty's hockey &amp;111!18,
workers IICI'IIbbed walla and
floors
and
volunteer
carpenters buD t blera In • ·
prepare lion for a mass

.
mlllkovired bull wu
locked In a garage, awaiting
aamlnation to aee why It IOit

VATICAN CITY (UPI) Cardinals of the Roman
Catholic Church In their
scarlet robea are beglru:ing
t1ti!' solemn and secret rites
that will lead to the choice of
a succeaaor for Pope Paul VI
as spiritual shepherd to 700
mUiion people.
.
Church officials said the
first of the preparatory
meetings to lay the
groundwork
for
the
conven}ng of the Sacred

College of C!ll'dinals were
being held today under the
supervision of French
Cardinal Jean ViUot, the
V!ltican secrei!II'Y of state.
The late pontiff himaeH
ruled that such meetings be
held daily foUowlng his Cleath
until the conclave of
cardinals formaUy begins the
actual election process.
Under ·800-ye!ll'-old rules
amended by Pope Paul to
tighten secorlly. the ennelRve

The

•

1111 alr brakes on a staep bill,
hit the water at about tO mph
and floated aevera1 hondred
feet to the center of the Jate_

Chang~·over
-

Pair ejected from class
WASIUNGTON (uPi&gt; - President Carter's &amp;mday
School class and church services were dilr'upted by neutron·
bomb demonstratou marking the 33rd anniversary Ill the
HlrOshNinelmawlxmere.~~lied. Some were forcibly gagp:1 and
dragged from the church Sunday. A man and woman were
removed by force from Carter's Bible claaa earlier, when they
stood and started to make siatementlt protesting the neutron
bomb,

HOneymoon OVer, bn'de

·
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ATHENS, Greece (UPI) - C!trlstlna OnUIIa Kauzov
tendint! to bualneas in Greece, 1,400 miles away from her
Russian husband, and the abrupt interruption of her hOilleY·
. moon has the rumor milia working overtime.
Christina arrived in Greece alone during the w~~~~
according to her lltther's oldest IIIIer, Mrs. •
G!ll'ofaU:II.- Mrs. Garofallidl quickly added, ._ever,
there is no turmon in tbe Kauzov oo-hold.

Six injured in crash

a
from WiiCCIIIin were injured Sunday when a amaU

. Michigan racer dies Sunday
TOLEOO, Ohio (UPI~- Tlmolhy Downs, 18, Utica, Midi.,
was ldUed Sunday night at Toledo Speedway when he .,.. bit
by at least five cars after he walked out oo tbe speedway track,
police.
,
Police aaid the incident occurred on the backstretch u
Downs was attempting to crou the tradi:. Alter the incident,
the remaining races were c&amp;Ued off anoia fight elllued when a
group of cltizena went to the bolt: office and demiD:Ied refwlda.

a1 y

DRAVO CORPORATION
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the heart attack was brought

Pomeroy city council ,
meeting in regular session
Monday night, discussed with
Fire Chief Charles Legar the
possi biilty of aUocating funds
for the change-&lt;Jver of a
newly purchased ·chassis for
the ta.nker. The change-over
would include cleaning,
painting and repairing of the
truck, Legar said.
Legar reported the !ire
department borrowed about
$14,000, to be paid back over
five years, to purchase the
badly needed chassis. Bids
have been sought for bids for
the change-over work.
Council
approved the
department's recommended
acceptance of a bid from
Mounta ineer Supply in
Ravenswood totaling $8,9W
and agreed to pay lor the
work done. The only
stipulation was that the fire
department would borrow
additional monies for the
change-over and council
would pay It back. Legar said
firemen are working on fund
raising ideas to finance the
new chassis.
Also discussed was the
poss ibility of placing an
additional .~ mw· on the

current I mill operating levy
for the fire department on the
November baUot. Although
the additional millage would
only mean an additional six
cents on every . $100' to the
taxpayer, Legar advocated a
simple renewal of the current
one mill levy because "if the
millage was voted down we
wo.uld . have only one alternative, that being a special
election." Council agreed to
go after the renewal this year
and see if the fire department
can function efficiently on
that. II the one miD is found
lacking t~en the additional .5
mill could be voted onlater.
In other business, Clerk
Jane Walton gave three
readings of Ordinance 493
providing for the public sale
of $30,000 in notes at an interest rate of six percent or
lower.
Bids for street paving and a
new air compressor were
discussed .
It was noted the only' bid
for the paving, submitted
by the Sheliy Cpmpaoy for
2,500 tons of asphalt tac al
$23.30 per ton, ineluding
labor , equipment, and
malerlals, wa6 S81IOO over
the $50,000 council had

1

arthritic condition , from
which the pope had suffered
many years, and a bladder
infection .
1
'Despite specific cures un·
dertaken inunediately, His
Holiness Pau l VI expired at
9:40 p.m. (3: 40 p.m. EDT)
Sunday, " at his su mmer
palace in the Alban Hills
village of Castel Gandolfo,
the Vatican said.

•

SEO-RESA in Athens.
The RE;SA covers the tOcounty area of Athens, Gallia,
Hock ing , Jackson. · Meigs;
Monroe , Morgan , Perry,
Vinton and Washington
counties and serves 'll school
districts.
The grant will he supplemented with $190,000 from
federal sources, $111,548 from
state sources and $41,990
from local sources. SEOClear tonight, with a RESA will continue the
chance of fog late tonight. piaMing, development and
of
Lows In the 60s. Increasing implementation
educational
programs
and·
cloudiness Wednesday , highs
services which it has offered
in the mid 80s.
with ARC and other federal

Wt!ather

.._,,.

!

Finally, councilman Harold
Brown reported council has
applied lor a 5o-50 grant from
the Ohio Bureau of Outdoor
Education for upgrading the
Sugar Run Jaycee Park near
Mechanic Street. The gr~nt,
which would total $29,651.25,
would help cover expenses

I
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"i

I
j

for two tennis courts, basket-

By NICHOLAS pANILOFF
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat and Israeli Prime
Minister Menachem Begin
will meet with President
Carter at Camp David ~pt. 4
in a renewed effort to break
the Middle East peace talk
stalemate, co ngressiona l
sources disclosed today .

handball

faces, a top lot, lighing, a bike
rack and a water fountain . .
Council also heard fire
department and police
reports.
Mayor Clarence Andrews
pres ided at . the meetin g
which was · opened with
prayer by coWlcllman Lou
Osborne . Attendin g were
councilmen Osborne, Brown,
Blil Young, Larry Wehrung,
and Larry Powell ; Clerk
Walton : and Fire Chi ef
Legar.

the reign of Pope St. Gregory
!he Great in the 6th century.
The Vatican announced
Paul 's body will be brought to ·
Sl.
Peter's
Basilica
Wednesday afternoon and
will lie in state in the mighty
edifice Thursday and Friday.
The requiem mass wiU be
held in Sl. Peter's Sati:rday
followed by burial in a grotto
Wlder the church and an
official nine-day mourning
period.

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29. No. MO

Conference
slated in
Washington

courts, shuffleboard sur-

$34,722 grant okayed
COLUMBUS - Gov. James
A. Rhodes, today announced
approval of a $34,722 grant
from . the Appalachian
Regional Commission (ARC)
to
Southeastern
Ohio
Regional Educaton Service
Ag ency (SEO-RESA ) lor
continued fifth -year
operational funding of the

,,&gt;

new air compressor.

facilities,

summer residence Monday.
His frail body was clad in
his rich white and gold papal
vestments. His head lay on
three pillows and his hands
clasped a rosary .
Across his right shoulder
lay a staff topped by a silver
crucifix that symbolized his
office as ''servus servorum
Dei (servant of the servants
of God )," a title that dates to

en tine

previously allocated to
speud on the project. It was
decided io table aclion on
the issue until the next
eounctl meeling to see if a
lower bid com·· · ln.
Council accepted a $4,650
bid from the Rish t;;quipment
Compari'y, Parkersburg, on a

bail

About 20,000 mourners filed

on by a worsening •of the past the pontiff's bier in the

.

Sources on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee
said Sen. Richard Stone, I).
Fla ., had co mmunicated
news of the September
summit to his staff member
attending a routine hear~
· 0
on. a mba ssa doria l
~?
pomtments.
Sen. John Sparkman ,
chainnan of the committee,
and other leading members
of the panel were summoned
to the White House this
morning on short not ice for a
briefing believed to deal with
the Camp David meeting.
The ·dramatic new s of
another face-to-face meeting
between Sadst and Begin
apparently res ulted fro m
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance's current peace efforts

in the Middle East.
An officia l White House
briefing and an anouncement
on the Begin-Sadat meeting
was expected about 11 :311
a.m . EDT , Wh ite House

OFF ICERS INSTALLED at last ntght's J aycee-ette meeting w~re-sea ted . left to right ,
Becky Tnplett, treasurer ; Nancy Burns, presid ent : Joni Sellers, presidenl-&lt;!leet: and stan·
ding, Shelly Clark, ways and means chainnan ; and Cindy Smith , publicity chainnan . Not
present for the picture was Jmmita Weaver , sec retary.

Organized in March, the
.J;qcce-€tles ar~ planning
severa l projects towa rd commu nity improvement. During

Hegatta weekend, they s.old
"Frogtown, USA" bu ll oons
and helped the Jaycees with
the dilly dunker. .
A ya rd sale has been planned fur lil tc Aug ust. One project of the group is holding
mrmthly birthday pilrties fur
the residents of the Meigs
County Jnfirmilry .

!.ike the Jaycees,

sources said.

School hands

New officers installed

assistance in the past.
The project was submitted
for approval by the Department of Economic and
New ofltcero were installed
Ccmmunity Development's
Development Monday night when the newly
Appalachian
Office, which administers the organized J ayc ee~ttes met
at the Meigs Inn .
ARC program in Ohio.
Past Jaycee president Mike
Mullen was the insta lling af.
NOW YOU KNOW
licer for Nancy Burns, presiOf the two immediate dent ; Joni Seller, presidentsuccessors to Peter among elect :
Becky Triplett.
Popes of the Roman Catholic treasu rer ; Shelly Clark, ways
church, nothing is known and m ean~ chairman , and
beyond their names and the Ondy Smith, publicity chairyears of their reign - Unus, ma n. Juan ita Weav er,
A.D . 67-76, and Anacletus, sc"&lt;:retary , will be installed
A.D. 71h'18.
later.

AL LEONARD

the

Jaycee..cttes' goal is com-

muni ty help. Profil made
from various projects is used
luward betterment of the
co mmunity and its residents.
Women. 18 to 35, interested
in joining th_c group are inn tcd to attend a meeting on
Aug. 21 at 7:30 p.m. at the
Southern Ohio Insurance oi·
ficc in Pomeroy: Inform&lt;:tliun
ca n be ubta iolt'd by telephoning 992-5098 ur 949-2607.

Leonard
promoted

participating
~'o lio wing tradit ion, high
school bands of Meigs County
will be playing at the 115th
annual Meigs County Fair.
The Ea,~ern High Band,
dtrected by Charles Wilhe lm ,
will play on Wednesday; the
Southern Band, directed by

Al la n
L.
Leonard.
Sou th eas t ern Dist n c t
man age r of comm un ity
relations·for Columbia Gas of Jesse Bro wning, on Thursday
Ohio, with hea dquart ers at and the Meigs High Band,
Athens. has been promoted to directed by Randy Hunt. on
genera l representative in the Friday.
Western Rate Departm ent
Mrs . Munel Bra dford ,
for
Columbia
Gas secretary of the fa ir board,
Distribution Companies at also announced a schedule
Columbus.
has heen completed for the
Leonard start ed with the emergency squads which will
gas company in 1953 as a se rve on the grounds during
meeting that the talks went valuation technician in the next week's fair.
"smoothly."
company's General Office in
On Tu esday, the Racine
" It is true that there have Columbus. He was promoted
Squad
will be on hand during
been no new elements from to rate acco untant in 1960, the day
time and will be
the Israelis, " -he added, named Pomeroy- Middleport joined in the evening by the
meaning Vance brought no manager in i964, promoted to Rutland
Squa d.
The
concession from Israel on the M&amp;rtins Ferry manager in demolition derby is slated
issue of oecupied territories. 1967 and became Central that evening.
"The talks were held in a District manager of comOn Wednesday. Middleport
friendly fashion ."
munity relations in Columbus · will serve ; Pomeroy will be
Vance will send his deputy, in 1970. He was named to his
there Thursday: Syracuse on
Alfred Atherton , w Saudi present positiOn in 1972. ·
Fnday with Rutland returArabia , and William B.
Born in Wilkinsburg, Pa., ning for Sat urday, the final
Quandt of the National Leonard was graduated from day of the fair .
Security
Coun cil
to high school there in 1945. He
The
Bates
Brothers
Jerusalem Wednesday to received a bachelor of arts Amusement Co. will be on the
report to those governments degree in bus iness a d· midway this year . Kiddie day
on the Sadat talks. The ministration from Otterbein will be observed from I to 5
secretary hiinself plans ID College, Westerville in 1953. p.m . on Wednesday. Those
return to Washington the
Leonard IS chatnnan of the attending can ride for the
same dayto report to Carter . Athens
Co unty
Bloo~:,-· four hours for a flat $3
Program for the American charge.
Red Cross, president-elect of
Making up the office staff
the Athens Ktwams and a thi s year to assist Mrs.
member of the energy ad- Bradfo rd and the fair board
NOTICE ISSUED
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence visory committee .of the ~ri- · with handling the paper work
Andrews infonns the public it Co un\y Commumty ActiOn will be Sarah Collums
Wil son,
Mary
ha s ten days to move old junk Agency, Ohio. University Sharon
ca rs and other eyesores from Green and Whole Club and McAngus and Cheryl Ken. its property. Aiter that time a Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164. nedy.
Leo nard and his wife,
not ice will be served and the
Joyce,
live at 283 Estate Dr ..
junk will be towed away .
Athens . They · have a
daughter and two sons.

Peace efforts fruitless

NOTICE

DRAVO CORP. WILL BE CONDUCTING BlASTING
OPERATIONS DURING AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER AT
·THE RACINE DAM. IN THE INTEREST OF SAFETY,
ORAVO REQUEST THAT 2-WAY RADIOS CLOSE TO THE
CONSTRUCTION SITE BE TURNED OFF. DRAVO WILL
BE STOPPING TRAFFIC ON STATE ROUTE 338
DURING EVERY BLAST. WE APOLOGIZE FOR ANY
INCONVENIENCES THIS MAY CAUSE.

Wlder the age. o! 80 have the
right to vote for election of
the new pope under rules
promulgaU!d by Paul in 1975.
But as princes of the church,
aU 130 living cardinals have
the right to attend th e
preparatory "'eetint!s.
Fifteen cardinals arrived in
Rome Monday , one day after
Pope Paul, 80, died foUowing
a heart attack.
An official death certificate
released by the Vatican said

funding
discussed by council

CHAGRIN FAILs. Oblo ( UPi) -Six meml:ers of

plane in which they were l;iding crashed,_.. a gravel pit
miles south of the Chagrin Falla Airport.
Geraldine PauUdvic, 311, Waukesha, Wll:., and
daughter, Bridget, 5, were reported In fair condlllon
Hillcrest Hoopiial, Mayfield Hel8hbt, where four other lltmily
members were treated fer laceration and bruises and
- were released.

Vatican .
The cardinal took from
Paul's band the fisherman 's
sea l ring bearing an
amethyst depicting St. Peter,
the fisherman of Galilee wbo
became the fir't pope.
Acting
accordirtg to
tradition, Villot smashed the
ring with a silver hammer.
The pieces will later be
melted down to cast a new '
ring for Paul's successor.
Only the 11 5 C Rr~inals

•

e-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, August s, 1978

~-

(Continued from Plltl ~
world's first test-tube baby, healthy u any normal baby but
ooly a few ouncea heavier than when shewu bern.
A hospital apokeliiilllll said Louise and her mother, Mrs.
Lesley Brown, 32, left In a private ambularice for an ~
destination. The girl's lather, raUway delivery man John
Brown, 118id earlier he waa taking his wife and·daugbter fer a
vacation in England's lake district before returning to tbelr
three-bedroom heme in B:istol.

! Area Deaths I

wiU begin at the earliest on
Aug. 21and no later than Aug.
26.
By tradition , Cardinal
Vill_ot, as head chamberlain.
of the Vatican, wiU preside
over.dayt&lt;Hiay affairs of the
church until the 263rd
successor to the Throne of St.
Peter is choae:i .
Taking on his role Monday,
ViUot followed sacred church
custom by closing the late
pope's apartments in the

funeral 'lburaday.

j_)~·_
·_rh_e_W_o_rfd_·_To_d_·a_r_·

11 deaths recorded

Put yoursel f on a steady savings d iet no w. and you' re sure to
have a sweet li tt le nest egg for
the future! You've nothing to
lose .. and high interest to gainl
Start your sav ing s account soon I

.::

Last survivor gives

20 Cardinals under consideration .
the various Vatican lobbies.
Most observers feel the
l!'aditiona)ists wiD prevail
and choose an Italian, just
like aU other popes 'fer more
than 450 years. But some
think the posoibilities foc a
non-Italian are the best so far
this century - possibly a
liberal central EUI'OJM'Ain or a
cardinal from the Third
World .
Election of an American
would
be
virtually
impossible, most Vatican
experts said.
Only 46 of the church's 282
popes have been noo-ltalians.
The last was Hadrian VI of
HoUand who reigned for 13
mooths in 1522-1523 and was
booed by Roman crowds at
his election.
The new pope could be a
conservative, bent on
maintaining the Church's
traditional dictums on papal

' :··'· &lt;:. :·::!

!M1' !

• IIIIEWS DELICIOUS DRIP COFFEE PAIT- 10 cupo In I
mlnul•. 2 cupll In • - 2 mlnul•
·'
• KEEPI COFFEE HOT-k-wonn plele k-1 ~

Mrvlng hot

• DOES MOllE THAN IRIW
COFFEE - mekeo 111, co·
COl, IOUPI 1nd other in·
lllnll

.HOUSEWARES • 1ST ROOR

'

Elberfelds In Pom810J

MAPS ON FILE in the refer~ce room . of the Gailia County Dt•irlcl Ubrary show
edallng, new, and proposed electriC transmlsalon and generating facilities. There are nine
llparlte mapa, one of which is being studied by Ubrarlan Jonathan Louden in this TlmesSenllnel newsphoto, and they've been placed with some older topographical maps In the new
lilllllnlllliJI file. Anyooe may l,ludy these maps during regular llt&gt;rary hours. The nfaps
came from tbe Ohio Dellartnient of EneNIV. The director, Robert S. Ryan, wrote that
11mi1ar mapa have beeq aent to the Meigs Local School Diatrlct and Pomeroy Ubr!ll'y , 200
EM! Second St., Po!nervt; the Herbert Wescoat Memorial Ubrary, 122 w. Mai:i St.,
McArthur; the Jacbon Oty Ubrary, 21 Broadway &amp;.,Jackson;' the Sylvester Memoria l
Wellllon Public Library, 135 East Second St., Wellaton ; and the Briggs Lawrence CnWlly
PobUc Ubrary, 321 Soullt Fourth St. , Ironton.

r

By ALVIN B. WEBB
Palace on the eastern fringes
ALEXANDRIA, Egypt of this Mediterranean seaport
(UP! ) - Secretary of State city.
Like the one delivered to
Cyrus Vance seems to have
accomplished . little more Begin Sunday, the lettet was
than delivering Pre!sident belie ved to contain a
Carter's mail on his latest suggestion from Carter that
he. Sadat and Begin rnight
Middle East mission.
His efforts to bring Egypt benefit fr om a summit
and Israel together seemed co nference , possibly in
near failure today.
Washington :
Alter two days of talks with
Vance and Sadat chatted
Israelis in Jerusalem and privately for two hours and 10
Egyptians in Alexandria , nei- minules Monday and had
ther side appeared ready to another meeting ' scheduled
give an inch : Israel refuses ID for this evening. The evening
give up occupied Arab land , sessions are necessary
and Egypt refuses to talk because devout Moslems are
directly to the Israelis .Wltii observing the Ramadan
holidsy.
they do.
_
If
any .
dramatic
A senior Egyptian official
breakthrough is at hand, it said alter the Monday night
was not evident in the closemouthed , tight-lipped Vance Youths injured
camp.
.
State
Department
spokeSman Hodding Carter in cyc1e wreck
·m did say Vance felt his
The
Middlepor t
meeting with President
Anwar Sadat Monday night Emergency Squad was call ed
was "a ver y good session ." to the Goeglein Gravel Co.
Bot he would not specify grounds at 6:44p.m. Monday
whether th is characterization lor Max Geary and Richard
CQvere d atmosphere or Resler, both of Middleport.
The two youths were riding
substance.
The secretary bad a gim- a motorcycle on the property
mick: a pair of personal, , prior to an accident, i:They '
hti'ridwritten messages from were taken to Veterans
carter - o:ie for Israeli • Memorial Hospital for
Prime Minister Menachem treatment of minor injuries
Begin, lhe other for Sadat. and released.
At 12:30 a .m. Tuesday, the
Vance gave Sadat his letter
Monday as they strolled squad answered a call to the
across the lawn at the Sl orys Run a rea, but
Egyptian's lavish summer ret urned to station when it
home in the shadow of the wtts del ermined tha1 it wa s a
late Kin~ Farouk's Mnntazah prank call.

;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;

B&amp;E CHARGED
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster has charged Keith
Herdman. 18, Middleport ,
with breaking and entering
th e Pomeroy Wine Store
early Sunday morning.
Hern1an allegedly broke into
the establishment and took
$150 worth of merchandise.

MEETS THURSDAY
The Meig s County
Budget Commission will
meet at the Count y
Auditor's Office Thursday,
Augusl 10, at 10 a.m. to
organize and review
budgets lor the calendar
year 191t.

VALLEY GIRLS WIN
The
Va lley
Lumber
wom en 's softball tea m
defeated the Portland Gals by
a score of 5-2 Monday evening
in Middleport .
Hits for Valley Lu:nher
were made by Sue Shepherd,
J oa n Edwards , Bonnie
Lightfoot, Ray Hicks, Nancy
Puilins., and Diana Karr.

•

,

�.

• lahve
• report
L.ee ....... .. .. .

2- The Daily Sentinel,t•tiddleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday. Aug. 8. 1978 ·
General Assembly acted,
'IYJ ~
there was no_ progr~m. In
fact, the admimstratlon was
granted $13-million in federal
By State Rep.
only a mmunum of $17- funds to pay low income
Ron James
million (.14 percent of what Ohioans' utility bills. The
(0-Prodorvllle,
the companies wanted ). And administration only spent $8Hnd House District )
the staff recommended no million of the total to help
COLUMBUS - Wllile the increase for Cincinnati Gas &amp; Ohioans - sending $5 million
alleged energy . supply Electric,
a
$~-million· back to Washington.
"crises " change from oil to decrease for Dayton Power &amp; Heuse BJJI 579 (Prime
natural gas to electricity to Light, and a $700,000 decrease spoosor, Representative Ron
coal, Ohioa ns are · ex- for Columbus and Southern James, D-ProclorvUie)
periencing a very real .and Ohio. The majority members
Two years ago the OHio
permanent energy crisis of the Commission chpse to Gener~l Assembly passed a
the crisis of imossibly high throw out the starr recom- bill giving the PUCO more
utility bills. As the Columbus mendations - they gave authority to clamp down on
Dispatch put it : " Yel.l Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric, t he costs Ohio electric
'energy crisis' in Ohio and DaY,ton Power &amp; Light and utilities pass on to consumers
watch 'everybody grab' ·fo r Columbus and Southern Ohio through the automatic Fuel
their wallets ." (Columbus Electric rate increases. And Adjustment Clause. But the
Dispatch, Sunday, March 12 the bottom line is that Ohio PUCO did just the opposite
1978, p. B-t6).
' consumers will be payirtg when this winter, they
F-ortunately, I and other morethan~millionmore in allowed Ohio electric utilities
members of the Ohio General utility costs - 2!iO percent to automatically pass
, Assemb ly hav e taken more - than we would have if through costs of power
aggressive action to help the" comm issioners had purchased from out-&lt;&gt;f-state
consumers. But, instead of followed
their . staff's during_the coal strike. The
working to implement these recommendations.
total bill consumers will pay
initiatives, the PUCO has
HOUSE BILL 230 (a bill I for purchasep power used
often cancelled out much of &lt;&lt;&gt;-sponsored)
during the .coAl strike could
the savings Ohio util ity
Last yea r the General total $250-million. And purconsumers would ha ve Assembly passed a Jaw (H.B. chased power is up to four to
rea lized from legislati ve 230) requiring all Ohio five times more expensive
action.
electric utilities to offer than power generated by the
AMENDED SUBSTITUTE 0 hi o' s a I I - e I e c t ric utility. I believe the com·
SENATE BILL 94 I• bill 1 c&lt;&gt;- homeo wn ers an optional missio11ers acted Illegally in
sponsored)
time-&lt;&gt;f-day rate this past allowing the pass-through of
Two years ago, the General winter . If the ·•PUCO and-&lt;&gt;r purchased power.
Assembly repea led the 63- the utilities had fully iraAmended Substitute House
year-old "RCNLD" rate- plemented H.B. 230, Ohio's Bill 1073
making formula , giving Ohio $2~0 . 000 all-electric
Th e
Ohio
General
the legal framework for a homeo wners could each have Assembly has once again
dramatic slashing by the saved $1tl0-$300 this year in taken the lead in protecting
PUCO staff of utility revenue. heating costs alone. But the Ohio electric consumers from
req uests under the new PU CO bowed to utilit y unfair charges in the absence
Original Cost rate-making pressu re and
adopt ed of initiatives from the PUCO.
formula . We succeeded wat ered-down. guide lines H. B. I073 requires the PUCO
where
29
previous without time-of·day ra tes . and the Consumers' Counsel
legislatures had failed ~ in Bottom lin e cost to con· to investigate and report to
instit uting a major wide- sumers: $25-$7~-million this the General Assembly on
ranging reform of the way year.
electric utility practices with
utility rates are set in Ohio. In
H.B. 230 also provided for a regard to emergency power
the major rate 'cases filed 2!i percent discount on winter purchases, coal stockpiling
nnder the new Jaw , the heating bills for Ohioans who and pre-strike coal prepared-.
'lilies asked for $121-million are disabled or over 65. .ness for the winter of '78.
J; additional revenue. The Utility bill . relief for the The PUCO has taken no
PUCO staff recommended elderly has been rhetoric for action to protect consumers
allowing those companies several years but untU the from excessive fuel charges

Americ•n Le1gui
Atlo
020 200 OlD- 5· I 1
passed- along through the to provide for an agency
Ea1t
Cine!
000 100 11D- 3 6 0
G.
W.
L.
Pet.
FAC. And the PVCO took no capable of coordinAting the
Mahl...-,
G•tW (7) lnd
69
•o
.633
Bo1ton
Nolan ; See\ter, Satml.nto (8)
action on its own to in- energy planning , con61 46 .510 7
M llwauke
and cortell . w - Mihler (• ·5l. L
B'h
vestigate electric · utility servation , research and
61
A9
.555
NewYprk
- Seaver 01 · 10). HRs-tlncln League St•ncllngs
"
60 ..9 .550 9
Detroit
natl , Foster (26) .
practices this winter. For- development efforts of the ByMiltor
1
9
12
UnittCI Press lnternatlonfl
60 50. .545
Baltimrt
tunately , Senator Howard state- and to give Ohio the
11
lf1
National L.. gue ·
Sl S1 .471
Clevelnd
San Ogo
000 000 001- 1 6 1
Eut
41 69 .373 28V2 LA
010 200 OOx- 3 6 1
Joron to
MelzO!Jbaum and the Federal · tools to deal effectively with
w. L. Pet. GB
West
owchlnko, O'Acq"-'lsto &lt;Bl end
Energy Regulat ory Com- energy supply. and price Phlla '
59 •• .551
w. L· Pet. GB Tenact ; John and Ferguson·. W
57 53 . .518 3'h Kan Cifv
Ch iC!!! gO
mission have .initiated a crl!les.
60 _.8 .556
- John (13-18 1. L - Owchlnko (8·
53 60 .469 9
Calif
61 53 .l3l 2
8). HRS- LOS Angeles, Fergu formal investigatil&gt;b of power · The bill alao took an im- Mortre!ll
50 57 .467 9
Pinsbrgh
Oakland
60 s• .526 3
son ( 11 ), Lacv (9).
purchases during the coal portant step toward tighter New York
47 65 .420 14'12 Tello!IS
52 56 ..C$1 8
43 68 .317 .18
Minesota
•a 63 .•22 141/:r
(Only games scheduled)
strike after finding, in in- state con~rol over Ohio St . Louis
W.st
Chicago
46 63 .422 U lf:r
1
formal audits, evidence of electric utility demand
W. L. Pet. Ga Seatt le
41 72 .363 21 f l
66 46 .589
Monday's RIIUitl
improper billing practices by forecasting - an effective san Fran
1
65 •6 .586
h
Toronto 2, Ba lt imore 1
major ~lectric utilities.
way to hold down future Cincineti
Los Ang
64 48 .57 1 2
sea ttle 6, Minn 5, 14 Inns .
lllE DAILY SENTINEL
57 5.5 .509 9
OEV(YI'ED TO mE
Overch,arges may reach $100- electric rates by making sure San Diego
Ch lcago S, Kansas Cltr 3
52 59 .468 13'h
Oakland 1. Californ ia 0
INTEREST OF
million with a significant the utilities don't "overbuild" Arll!lnta
Houston
51 59 .464 1.4
MEIGS-MASON' AREA
TOdiV 'S PrOblble Pltch•rs
portion paid by consumers of and pass the cost on to conMonday's Resulh
ROBERT HOEfUCH
I All Times EDT)
s. Pi1tsburoh 4
Balfimore (FianagM 14-9) at
O ly Editor
Ohio utilities. Recent an- sumers. H.B. 415 transferred · Chic&amp;oo
St . Lou is 6. Philadelph ia 3
Toronto ( Underw()Od S-10L 7 :30
Publi!!IK!d dll.ily ext'i:pl. Saturday
nouncements by Columbus the review and evaluation of
Atl"nla S, Cirl cinna'i 3
b)' The Ohio Valley Publishing
p .m .
Los Angeles 3, Solin Diego 1
Com~X~ny-Multimedht , Inc.,
111
Cle ve land
CCiyde 5-6)
at
and Southern Ohio Electric the utllities 10 year de!hand
Today's Probable Pitchers
Bost on (Torrez 13 -6) , 7:30 p.m .
Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 15789.
Company and by Cincinnati forecasts from the Ohio
IAIITimesEDT) ·
Milwaukee (Caldwell 14-5) at
Busines.'l Office Pho~ 992- 2 1~ .
P ittsburgh (Robinson 5-4) at New York fTtdrow -4-8), B p.m .
Gas and Electric of customer Power Siting Commission to
F:dlturUI I Pho~ 992·2157.
( Reuschel 10-9 ), 2 : 30
Sc&lt;.•und cll:ls1:1 posl.&amp;tgt" pltid at
Tex as I Mirabella 1-0 ) , at
refunds due to overcharges of the Ohio Department of pChicago
.m .
Detroit ( Rozem a s .S), 8 p .m .
Pomeroy, Ohiu.
purchased power paid by the, Energy, and required DO to
Philadelph ia (Christenson 8-10
N11tiunal tulvertising repre~n ·
Seattle
(Colborn 3-81
at
Lonborg 7-9) at St. LoU is Mlnne!ota (S erum -4-SL 8 :30
tative. IA!nt.lun . As~WU.•11, 3101
consumers only tend to develop an independent and
{V uckov ich 8-9 and Bru no 1-0) , p.m .
Euelld A\'1! ., Clev'elllm.I,Ohlo441.15.
further
confirm
these capability to make its own 2, 6:35p .m .
Chicago ( Proly 2-0) at Ka n!a!
Subscriplion ndb : Delivered by
New York cBruhert 2-SJ at City (Splittorff 12-9). 8:30p .m .
c11rVer wbe~ !lvttilltble 75l'en'--" pt!r'
suspicions.
electricity demand forecasts.
{Scha tzeder .C -JL 7 :35
California (Har tzel l 3·111 at
week . Ry Motor Route where c11rrier
HOUSE BILL 1%13
The enactment of 1972 Montreal
p.m .
Oakland £Johnson 9-6) , 10 :30
service nul uvailMble, On!! •nunLh,
At lanta
(Mahler 3-5)
a t p.m .
In 1976 the Ohio General legislation requiring utility
SU5 . By' mail in Ohiu ami W. VM .,
n cinnati (Seaver 11 -9&gt;. 8 :05
(Ale Year, $12.00; Six months,
Wednesday's Games
Assembly passed a )aw to • filings of 10 year forecasts Ci
p.m .
Cleveli!tnd at Boston. night
$11.50 : T h rt&gt;c months. $7.00 ;
protect Ohio residential plus the impact of H.B. 415
San Diego (Per r y 12-4) at Los
Milw at New Yo rk, night
El.&lt;iewhcre $26.00 year ; Six months
Angeles (Sutton 1\ -9}, 10 :30
SIJ.50; Th ree months, 17.50.
Texas at D etro it, night
consumers from . paying for have forced Ohio electric p.m
.
Subsc ription prit:e l.ndude11 Suntbty
Seat11e at M inn, night
hi gh-pri ce d ~ emergency companies to revise their
Hou ston &lt;Dixon 5-8) at San
Chicago at Toron to, night
Tu n&lt;.·-~.Sentinei.
Ko~~ n sa! City at Balt imore
natural gas used by com- demand forecasts downward. Francisco · (Montefusco 8 -4),
10 ,35 p .m .
mercia! and industrial ' This regulatory pressure will
Wednesday 's Games
Pittsburgh at Chicago
customers. The bill also have saved Ohio electric
Houston at Sa n Francisco
ordered tile PUCO to adopt cons!llllers as much as $2.4- Atlanta
at Cincl, twilight
the same standards it now billion in construction of
New York at Montreo~~l , night
Phila at St . Lou is, night
applies to electric companies' unneeded capacity by 1980
San Diego at Los ·Ang, night
use of automatic fuel pass and $4 ,~ billion .by 1984 .
throughs to the gas ·com· Passage of S.B. 467 and
panies. The draft policy to companion biD, . H.B. 1226 ship from the PUCO, the Ohio
tighten control on the PGA's currently pending before the legislature has enacted
is still buried in the PUCO General Assembly , would significant legislation to help
bureaucracy - and gas increase regulatory pressure control utility prices and to
consumers remain un- on and provide for further •avoid energy supply crises in
IN THE
protected. Since the cost of public scrutiny of demand Ohio.
gas accounts for 70 - 75 forecasting by Ohio electric
Unfortunately " for Ohio
percent .of a consumer's total utilities. Passage of ihe bills consumers, the PUCO has
gas bill, failure to effectively would also avoid the potential· ~ften failed to properly carry
regulate the PGA's is hitting "bureaucratic nightmare" of out the intent of these
hard at consumers pocket- various state agencies measures passed by the Ohio
OPEN :
books.
developing their own forecast General Assembly.
Mon .. Tues ., Wed. &amp; Sat . 8: 30tiiS:OO
HOUSEBILL415
data in carrying out their
We must d9 something
Thursday Til12 Noon
In 1977, the General planning and regulatory further. I have introduced a
Friday Until5 P.M.
Assembly passed a law responsibilities.
bill calling for the election of
Herman Grate
creating an Ohio Department
Conclusion
PUCO commissioners.
773-5592
MasDn, W. Va.
of Energy. The objective was
In the absence of leader- Perhaps that is the answer.

ijf';:::!:;,:,~~~.:,~~~~~~~:,:,~r,;.?,:.:.~=~;,~,~~· a,

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COOPERSTOWN ,l'i.Y. (UPI) -The full
of what wal
happening llnally hit Eddie Mathewa.around three o'clock in
the morning, ooly a few hours before he was 1o be enshrined in
Bueball'a Hall of Fame.
He wu llttlng around with a couple of his old buddies from
the Ml!,waukee Braves, Warren Spahn, a Hall of Farner
himJelf, and Johnny lAlgan, having a couple to help kill some
of hill nerv011111eaa and talklng about the total nwnber of those
elected before him.
·
'.'I asked how many players there were In thl! Hall of Fame "
he said. "They told me I'll be the !35th. Imagine that!- I thought
there were a lot more than that, I couldn't believe it. You think
about that total number and believe me, It shakes you up more
than a little bit.
"Now when I go back home to San Diego, 110meone's gonna
tell me how lucky I was to make the liaU of Fame, 1know 1 was
lucky."
Eddie Mathews W8110 't lucky. He was good, plenty goOd, but
only because he worked at it. ·
As he said In his induction spee&lt;;)l Monday after they
unveiled a bronze plaque of him in the Hall along with those of
the late Cleveland pitcher Addle Joss and the late Larry
MacPhail, father of night baseball, "Baseball has given me
everything I got and I gave It everything I had. ••
Mathews did everything he could to convey his feelings
inside. Where else but In America could an ex-Moe shine· boy
grow up to beat the socks off so many of those he idolized as a
kid and wind up one day in that hallowed shrine he had only
read about In story books? .
·
"My mother will deny It up and down If you ask her but I
shined shoes when I was a kid In Santa Barbara " M~thews
laughed. "Later on, I was a delivery boy in 11 grocery store and
I remember Ralph Kiner getting married and having his
w';?dlng reception only a block from where I was working.
I wasn't mvited, of course, but I got into the reception
anyway. I was just wearing my coveralls and apron , and l
stood in til~ back. I just wanted to see what a big leaguer
looked like m the flesh . There was such a big crowd,! never got
to see Ralph, though."
In his time, Mathews hit 30 or more home runs nine years in
a row playing third base for the Braves. He flnillhed with 512
home runs, tying him for nthth place on the all-time list with
Ernie Banks, another Hall of Farner, and totaling more
homers than some of those he had admired as a youngster, like
lAlu Gehrig, Mel Ott, Joe DIMaggio, Hank Greenberg and even

,. Kiner.
, Mathews, who managed the Braves two. years after he was
through playing, was never one of those goodyi!oodies when he
was playing and dldn 't pretend to be .
"We used to measure off ten square blocks in a city like San
.Francl.!co,'' he remembered. "Bob Buhl and 1· would go
looking for Spahnle and Lew Burdette and they'd look for us.
The only place we looked was in bars. Everytime we'd go in
one, we had lo have a drink and the same thing with them. The
winners, the ones who found the others first, would get a free
dinner ."
·
· ~Tell him about the tl!ne we missed the train," Spahn cut ln.
Mathews laughed some more.
" We were cm~lng up from F1orida one spring and I missed
the train the team was on," said Mathews. "I was scared to
death. &amp;lddenly, asl was standing there in the station, I heard
footstepll. Someone was l'lllllling like hell. It was Spahn . He had
ml!aed the train, too. We tried everyt)Ting to ~et from
Blnningham to O!attanooga. Plane, bus, the local pollee. No
dice.
"F1nally, we got a cab to take us and rode all night. We beat
the train and got in before the ball club. Charlie Grimm was
the manager. He never fol!hd out."
"That's your story," Spahn corrected. "Charlie found out all
right because 90meone squealed on us. "
,
Eddie Mathews told all these stories the night before being
Inducted,
On Monday morning, there was only one thing on his mind.
He wanted to make sure that hill mother, Eloise Mathews, had
a good seat at the ceremonies . She had one right there in the
·second row.
It was easy to teU who she was.
!;Te was the proudest mother in all Cooperstown.

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CINCINNATI (UP!) Tom Seaver offered a self
analysts.
And the 33-year-&lt;Jid Cincinnati right-hander gave
himself a worse beating than
he took from the Atlanta
Braves Monday night when
they tagged him with a 5-3
loas that ended the Reds' one
day residency in first place in
the National League West.
"My tempo was bad, my
thinking wasn't good and the
resuh was the way I felt ,"
said Seaver, whose season's
record now stands a dlasppontlng 11-10.
"I didn't run the bases well
and I didn't field well,'' he
continued, "and those are
things I've been working on
for over 10 years .

ate

FAVORITE

"It was the kind of game
you've got to win 11-4," he
added. "And If you're lucky
enough to do it, you hear guys
telling you that you did a good
job when you know you didn't
that you really·. just
sneaked away with a win."
Seaver was thinking of Joe
Nolan's single over the
mound into center field
following a lead-orr walk to
Jell Burroughs that led off a
tw&lt;&gt;-run second inning. And;
too, there was ,the wild pitch
and passed ball that followed
Nolan's single, giving the
Braves the ·first of their .two
runs and setting up Rod
Gilbreath's sacrifice fly that
sent home the other one.
"The passed baU? A mix·up

Sports briefs...
SPRINGFIELD, Mass.
(UPI) - The Naismith
Butetball Hall of Fame
ended the last fl8cal year with
a~~ro~~lncome of t%11,750 for
--;.. 1110111 IIICceuful financial
,.... IinCe the shrine opened
10 years qo.
• The 1ar11• portion of the
.-o• lncome - SM,IIBO eame from lldmlulonl, uid
Han of Fame Director Lee

WUIIIII\I.
'

: PORTLAND. Maine (UPI)
:... The Bolton BrulnJ and

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UP!)
Jerry PeterCU8kle, 25,
wboae father John is an
assistant coach of the
. Cleveland Browns, Monday
was named an assistant
football coach at Brown
University.
Petercuskle ·1a moving to
Brown after two years as a
part-time lllllalant at Penn
Stale. The Brown poll Ia hla
first full-time job, a 'IIJIOkellwoman said.
-

Fblladi!Jpllla Flyera will meet

8 PK

16 OZ. BTLS.

99~

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l.eallll Phlbillon same 111
lhe Portllnd Civic Center, the
Maille Mariners have

SUPER MMKET- OPEN DAILY 9 10 10 P.M.
.SUNDAY 10 10 10 ·
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. We -~ccept FederiJfood Stamps-We R..,. l'he Right To Lmit

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•
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ROYALS - Playing for the Middleport Tee-Ball Royals are, 1-r, front row : Steve
Coffee, Missy Nelson, Jason Smith, Suzanne Cassell, Joey Edwards, and Mike Barton. Back
row, Heidi Caruthers, Sissy Curtis, David Smith, John Tillis, Janet Stiltner Bruce Barton
Stacy Edwarda and Alban Curtis, Standing behind the team is Coach Charle; C.Ssel. Abseni
were
Hill and Brian Broome.

TOURNEY CHAMPS - These members of the Middleport Tee-Ball Tigers captured
first place in the Middleport Tee-Ball Tournament held over Fourth of July weekend. From
1-r _are: front row, Bucky Gilkey , Jason Fife, lAlri Engle, Jeff Goff, Kelly Stewart, Carl
SWisher, and Ada King ; and back row, Todd Hood, P. J . Richmond, Melissa Woods, Mike
Southern, Lesley Carr, Ronnie Powell, Lu~e Burdette, Matt Baker, and Joey Hysell.
Standing behind th e team are Coach John Hood , left, and helper Joe Powell, right.

PEE-WEE CUBS the Ml'do:fiepii1
front row: Pat Shrimplin, Tammy Cremeans,
Davis, Scott Hanning, Richie Long,
Chuckle Pullins, Gary Curtis and Randall Arnold.
row: Kim Stewart, Eddie Baer,
Eddie Kitchen , David Shuler, Robbie Cundiff, Jay Martin , Tim Durst, Greg Rager, and
Donald Stein. Standing behind the team is Coach Ed Kitchen.

TEE-BAI.L RAMS - Members of the Middleport Tee-Ball Rams baseball team are;
frQm 1-r, front row, Eddie Crooks, Karen Martin, Chris Barker and Chris Becker and back
row, Jason Drenner , Brett Little, Patty Martin , Jenifer McKinley , and Clinton Glaze.
Standing be hind the team is Coach Geqrge Glaze. Absent were Heath .Richmond , Mike
Frash, Kathy Thomas, and Johnny Swanson.
~ .

MUSI' ANGS- Playing for the Middleport Pee-Wee Mustangs are, 1-r, front row : Donny
Becker, Eric Johnson, Steve Cassell, Tim Cassell, Jeff Nelaon, J eff Hood and Toni Utile.
Back row : Lester Stewart,Trey Glaze, Terry Little, Tony.Mohler, Darrin Drenner, Jason
Bush, Jay Buskirk and Christy Farley. Standing behind the team a~e Coaches Gary
Drenner and Don Nelson . Absent were Stanley Broome, Sheila Britton, John Britton, Dave
Dodson, and Trent Nash .
-

Dodgers'pull
within 2 ·games
of first place

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
Tommy John and Lee La cy
have
both
expre ~sed
disappointment with the Los
Angeles Dodgers this season
and hav e indicated th ey
would seek their free agency
at the end of the year . But,
without them the Dodgers
on signals," said Seaver, a pinch hitter in the bottom of accounted for the fir st run. wouldn't be in contention in
Murphy, who took third on the National League West
the seventh.
taking the blame.
race.
A one-&lt;&gt;ut walk to Nolan, Griffey's fUiile throw to the. pennant
The Braves scored two
Both
were
instrumenta l
more runs off Seaver in the followed by Dale Murphy 's plate, scored the second run Monday night in
helping the
fourth before he 'departed for double off the right field fence of the innin g on Gilbreath's Dodgers defeat the San Diego
squeeze bunt.
" ll was a perfect bunt and Padres, 3-1, and move to
caught us all by surprise," within !wo games of fir stsai d Red s' catcher Vic place San Francisco in the
division . Lacy hit a tw&lt;&gt;-run
Correl.
Seave r , one gathered, homer and John tossed a fi vefi gured he should have an- hitter for his 13th victory.
John had a shutout goin g
ticipated the maneuver and
into
the ninth inning but
By
United
Press Leeman Bennett, "The first pitched accordingly.
pin
ch-hitter
Jerry Turner
"Getting out of the seventh
lntematlooal
half was very, very poOr. We
spoiled
it
with
a run-scorin g
The New York Jets and the didn't execute. The Jets after I got into trouble was single.
Atlanta Falcons won their outhit us. I was very the only good thing I did all
"I was expecting to see
exhibition openers Monday impressed with Jackson. If night," Seaver said.
Dave
Winfield walking up to
And moPe than a little of
night. Which was strange , we play the way we did in the
the
plate
. I was surprised to
because they played each second half, we'll have a Seaver's disgust stemmed see Jerry Turner,'' said John.
from the fact that he perother.
pretty good season."
mitted
Brave
second "I wanted to get the shutout
"I'm satisfied - we won
In the only other exhibition
and I was trying to strike out
one half and they won the game in the NFL, New York baseman Chico Ruiz to tum Turner . What can I say?"
what was intended to be
other,'' said Jets' Coach Walt took Cleveland, 21-7.
·
Lacy made a rare start in
Michaels.
Reserve running back pitchout into a line single to right field and belted his twoThe Jeta won the first half Willie .Spencer carried 3 right fi eld that put runners on run homer in the fourth
plus the first minute of the yards for one touchdown and first and second with none inning off loser Bob
third quarter, 17~. with their set up another with a :iS-yard out.
Braves' lefty Mickey Owchinko . It was Lacy 's
starting units on the field, and run to pace the Giants in the
ninth homer and his .309
the Falcons countered by exhibition opener for both Mahler picked up his fourth batting average makes him
win against five losses while
bringing reserve quarterback teams .
teaming
with Gene Garber to the only Dodger batting over
June Jones off the bench In
Spencer's :iS-yard gain took
.300.
the second half. Jones the Giants to the Browns' 15- restrict the Reds to six hits.
"We've got a fine ballclub
One
of
tho
se
hits
was
George
mapped out three ·touchdown yard line early in the fourth
and
everybody has got to
drives to give the Falcons a quarter, setting up a 11&gt;-yard Fost er's 26th homer of the pitch in," said Lacy . "I'm not
2G-17 victory. lightning and TD pass by reserve quarter- season that came in the&gt; saying I should stay in. We
heavy rain cut the game short back Jerry Golsteyn to rookie eighth inning off Garber. '
wtt.h 1:39 left to play.
" I was klnda looking at It which
NewBilly
Yo•kTaylor,
a 14~1
runninggave
back
like a college ·game - they lead.
·
had a lot of rookies out
The Browns scored on a 15there," said jones, a second· yard pass from reserve quaryear man out of Portland terback Terry Luck to rookie
State. "Allred (JackliOn) can wide receiver Keith Wright
fly - he's very deceptive with 1:28 left in the game.
with hll long stride and I The key play In the drive was
dldn ~ get touched. The line a 29-yard pass from Luck to
was super."
Keith Flmlan.
·
"I think t.hls victory means
On the ensuing kickoff, the
a great deal," added Browns recovered an onside
Jackson} who caught four kick and had an opportunity
pasaes for 105 yards, "It's to tie the game. But defensive
important to win the fir• end
Jack
Gregory
game, It should help us down intercepted a tipped pass
the stretch."
from Luck and raced 38 yards
Said
Atlanta
Coach for the Giants' final score.

Seaver off form, Reds lose

EVERYDAY SPECIALS

DOG fOOD ........ 3

ByMILroN RICHMAN
UPI 8[10111 Editor

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I

Cubl. 5, Plratet C:
Bill Buckner's two-run
single capped a II ve-run
fourth inning, which carried
~The same wW m.ll the Ollcqo lo victory. Bruce
return of Bob McCammoa to &amp;Itt.- got the lut out for ihe
the ~ of pall PrY In hll 'Qiblln ihe ninth to ll4ltch hll
J11W role u co.ch of the 22nd save and preaerve
Donnie Moore's Iilith victory .
Jl'ly. ..

Falcons, Giants post

exhibition triwnphs

~r.==:=:~~~~~C~~~~~~~~~

need every body. We' re
excited and you need to be
excited at this point (pennant
race ). I don't think we played
to the point where everythin g
went right for us all year ."
Joe Ferguson also hit a solo
homer for the Dodgers.
Elsewhere, St. lAluis beat
Philadelphia, 6-3, Atlanta
topped Cincinnati, :&gt;-3, and
Chicago edged Pittsburgh, 54.
Cardin~! ' il, Phillles 3:
George Hendrick drove in
Ulree runs with a homer and a
double to pace the Cardinals
and help hand Randy Lerch
his seve nth loss in 13
decisio ns. Carlo s Lopez
allowed four hits in seven
innings for the victory .

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�5- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tue,.,lay' Aug. 8; 1978

Just a week from today the ll~th annual Meigs County Fair
will get underway so no wonder the feel of fall is in the air.
And about the fair ..... Exhibitors have Thursday and Friday
from 10 a.m. to-4 p.m. only in which to make their entries with
the secretary at the fair board office on the fairgrounds .
How lllllnY times we have stood back and heard someone say
- "look, that got a blue ribbon, and I think mine's better than
that." Let this be the year that you exhibit yours. Whatever it ·
is, there is undoubtedly a class lor it somewhere.
'
Geramics, homemade articles of all sorts, clothing,
decorative items, flower arrsngmenls, baked goods, horne
canned products, _are just a lew of the general categories having hundreds of classes.
And you might just win that blue ribbon!

FAVORITE ·FAM ILV FOOD
CHARLES D. WOODE was initiated into the Half Century Club at the recent community service recognition
program of Camp 10900,. Modem Woodmen of America .
Pictured willi Woode who holds his certificate are, from
the left, Hobart Swartz, C. Lee Henderson and Garner
Griffin, all~ year members of the Camp.

Marjorie Oliver Jolmson wlio lived here lor many years and
worked at Crow's Steak House, and her husband, Donald
Johnson, have just recently returned to their home in Norwick
alter a three week vacation trip to Europe.
They visited Germany, Sweden and Denmark taking in the
castles on the Rhine, the Swedish glass factories, the salt
mines in Germany and even vislted Hitler's last headquarters.
They were joined in Copenhagen by Mr. Jolmson's daughter
and her husband, Lt. Col. J!IIIIOS E. Sims, stationed there with
.llie U. s. Army. He had arranged for the couple their transportation and aCC!Omodations through the American Embassy
which greatly facilitated their traveling.
Highlight of the trip was the ferry to Denmark. It was a one
hour trip and the ferry was described by Marjorie as a regular
floating city with luxury restaurant, post office, telephone exchange, barber shop, and in addition to the buses and trucks
and people it carried, also transported a train across the chan·
nel.

Modern Woodmen
hold
family
·-·
picnic, recognition program
'

..

Other Meigs County vacationers have been Aaron and Iris
Kelton. They joined a Fan Travel Trailer Caravan in Carlisle,
Pa. for a trip to Foxboro, MI;ISS where a national jamboree was
being held. There were 140 Fan Travel Trailers and 280
campers there for the four dsys of the jamboree.
From there Aaron and Iris went to Cape Cod, took a ship to
Martha's Vineyard and the scenic tour of the island. They
visited points of Interest in Plymouth, Boston, and Concord,
Mass. along with the Basketball Ha U of Fame in Springfield.
Then it was on to Blue Lake at Rome, N.Y., Niagara Falls
and Niagara City on Lake Ontari&lt; to observe their 44th wed·
ding anniversary. From there the two went to Chautauqua, N.
Y. lor a visit with Marc Fultz, Middleport, there lor the swn- ,
mer. And before returning home Aaron and Iris visited Sea
World at Aurora. They traveled 2300 miles.

MISS ADA KENNEDY, New Marshfield, was the recipient of the Modem Woodmen.of America community se rvice award. Herd she exhibits her plaque of recognition,
along with one of her water colors.

But that 's not far when you cousider that James and Clara
• Criswell drove 9,000 miles on their vacation.
They took the southern route to the west coast, spent a
weekend in san Francisco, and then came the northern route
back home. Trips into old Mexico, stops at National Parks,.and
tours of the many points of interest beiween here and there occupied llie five weeks they were on the road.

.'

·,_ '

By Helen and Sue Bottel

ble.

The Mary Shrine No. 37
Order of White Sta r of
Jerusalem will hold their
regular meeting and practice
Friday night at 8 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
All officers are urged to attend .
A picnic will be held prior to
the meeting at 6:30 p.m. at
the Mason Park in Mason
City, W. Va. Inspection will
be held September 29.
One man 's rumor is
another man 's unattributed
source, ,

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Nelson's Drug Store
Pomer-oy, Ohio

Mom and Dad are sca red to death. She twists theni around
ber finger. She gets all the attenti on an~ I get none. They're
spending thousands of dollars for psychiatrists, and I can't
even ~ave a new pair of jeans. If I say anything, I feel guilty
because I talked her into dieting three years ago.
I understand lliat Tandy isn 'I in control and can't stop this
terrible fasting and overactivity- tha t ,she needs expe rt help
and we should all cooperate.
But I still feel resentfullliat she gets all the attention. Then I
hate myself for it because she's so miserable. When she tears
into me for nothing at all , I try to make allowances but I still
fight back and am so sorry later.
.'
If this keeps up much longer ,l'll be ready for the funn y fann.
Do other brothers and sisters have problems Hke mine when
lliere's anorexia in the family'!- NATAUE
DEAR NATALIE :
Do they ever! The "special child syndrome," whelher it con-

LORETTA
Hoi·
singer,
daught~r
ol
Larry
and
Nancy
Holsinger, has accepted
employment
as
a
beautician with Dorothy's
Beauty
Shop.
Miss
Holsinger Is a 1978
graduate of Meigs Hlgh
Sehool.

~rns

anorexia ~ervosa, physieal or mental handicaps, severe
Illness or emotiOnal problems, can split a family apart, if

In 1974, !acing expected
impeachm ent over the
Watergate cover-up scandal,
Presiden t Richard Nixon
went on nationwide televisim
and

announced

his

resignation,
the
first
American president to do so.

.

A lliought for the day :
German novelist Thomas
Mann said, ''Time cools, time
clarifies. No mood can 'be
maintained unaltered
through the course of hours."

IIIVR·II,IOI.RB·. ·
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

.

Q. We hilve just bought 1n eKpenslve tape deck to go in
our c1r. How do we insurt tht dtck 1g1lnst I heft, etc.?

, A. as long as the deck Is installed permanently in the
automobile it is Insured under the Physical Damage

Portion of your Fam ily Automobile Policy . The
coverage does not e•lend to the tapes. Only the
recorder and qne tape const itute a unit and will be
insured . lnsvrance coverage for the tapes can be
prov ided by an endorsement to your pol icy at an extra
premium charge .

·I

.REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVfr
Tile lnsuronco Storo

2t4 E. ~Min

m.mo

Porwwoy, o..

special thanks for the importance of a wholesome family
life, was given by the Rev. Mr. Tlillmas .
·
Each family shared a favorite family snapshot. C. L.
Henderson won an award for having four generatious of
MW A members of his family present. Several families
were represented by three generations.
Charles Woode, Allred, led the group in singing ol
hymus and was accompanied on llie autoharp by Marjorie
Coakley, Coolville.
Contest prizes were won by Mrs. Ca lvin Hawj&lt;, Alfred,
Robert Robiuson and Mrs. Harold Dunfee, Little Hocking;
Aaron Williams, Frieda Justice, aiid .David Conley,
Belpre ; Gerald Swartz, Marietta; Oscar Pennington,
Silver Ridge; Hazel Parrish and Oscar Gunder, Coolville;
Helen Swaim, New Marshfield ; Bonnie Thomas, Tuppers
Plains, and Michael Pullins, Allred.
Following the picnic Margaret Follrod, Lena Belle
Pullins, Paul McPherson, Helen Woode, and Ralph
Henderson, secretary of Camp 10900 delivered picnic
plates and visited shut-in membe rs of the camp.

A family appreciation picnic and community service
recognition program of Modern Woodmen of America,
Camp 10900, was held recently at Woode's Grove , Alfred.
Rec~iving recognition for concientious and dedicated
community service were Ada Kennedy , artist, conservationist and retired teacher, New Marshfield; and C. Lee
Henderson, retired Iarmer and grocer of Alfred, a camp
trustee willi 25 years of service as a camp officer. Also
recognized and presented a pin and membership certificate was Charles D. Woode, Alfred entering the "Half
Century Club." Twenty-live membership pins went to
Earl H. Deem, Reedsville, Paul E.. Guthrie, Tuppers
Plains, Esther P . Ridenour, Chester, and Warren Van
Meter, Alfred.
Mrs. Nina Robinson presented a bicentennial flag' for
llie St. Paul United Melliodist Church to the Rev . Richard
Thomas, Tuppers Plaius. The new church was built in
1976.
The pledge service was led by Mrs. Richard Follrod,
Pomeroy , and Garner Griffin , Alfred. Mrs. Hobart Swartz
led the group in llie opening song, and prayer and a

parents don't recognize what's happening and deal with it
wisely.
·
Your mother and father should include you in their talks
with the psychiatrist- and you too would benefit from getting
your resentments and guilt out in the open .
You've described your feelings well, and that 's a first big
step. Now discuss them. This honesty may also help Tandy , for
even though she is getting most of the attention, her illness still
isolates her terribly.- HELEN AND SUE

., .

NOTE FROM SUE : Again, the address ·for the National
Anorex ic Aid Society isjBox 294 lumbus, Ohi o 43229, Pat Howe,
director. ~at chapters or affiliates are now operating in New
York, Baltimore, the San Francisco area, Sacramento ,
Chicago, Columbus, and by the time this column reaches print
several other groups, from Toronto to !~s Angeles to Tennessee Will have started . A stamped , self-addressed enve lope
to Ms. Howe will bring you further information .
HELEN AND SUE :
I'm almost engaged to a man 10 years older than me. I'm 16.
Though he 's sweet, kind , though tful and wonderful somehow
I'm scared of him. We've done everything together but sex so
why am I afraid to get close to him , when he's so gentle?
What's wrong ' - H.L.
H.L.:
.
We'd guess you aren't afraid of the man but of sex because
you aren't reatiy yet. lf he's as ki nd and gentle as you 'say he'll
wait. Ask him and see. - HELEN AND SUE
'

10TH REUNION
All former veterans of WW
I, WW II and the Korean
Conflict', who served in the
37th "Buckeye" Division, are
invited to attend· their 60th
Annual Reunion. This reunion
will be at th~ Marriott Inn,

LEONIA , N.J . (UP! ) British Leyland Motors confirmed Monday John Buffum
of Burlington, VI. , will drive a
fa ctory
Triumph
in
Scotland's Internati onal
B
.w:mah Rally, Aug . lS-19,
gJymg llie United States one
2124 S. Hamilt on Roa d, of its best chances for a top
Columbus, OH 43227, Sep- f' 'sh ·
temher 1-3, 1978, over the tnl er '" a European rally.
Labor Day Weekend. For . Buffum , llie only Am&lt;1!'ican
further details contact: to seriously challenge
Headquarters Office of the European rally stars on their
37th Division Veterans home ground, will drive an
experimental TR7 equipped
Association, 6~ S. Front with a V-8 engine. His coStreet, Room 707, Columbus, driver is Neil Wil:o:&gt;n of
OH 43215.
Cheste r, Englan,d.
·.

Mr. and Mrs. Sammy
Lewis and daughter , Anita,
returned to their home in
Okeechobee, Fla . after a
several days' visit here with
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Powell.
Mrs. Carolyn Grueser and
daught er, Barbara, have
returned !rom a trip to
C harlotte s v i ll e,
Williamsburg ,
Newport
News, and Virginia Beach,
visiting places of interest in
each location .
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson

1 Calendar 1
TUESDAY
Springs Grange, 8
p.m. Tuesday at llie hall.
Members will vacate the hall
for the Meigs County Fair.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter 255 OES meeting, 8
p.m. Tuesday at the temple.
ROC~

WINDING TraU Garden
Club, B p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mrs. Addalou Lewis.
F.'or roll call members are to
name their favorite e:trranging book. Mrs. Cora Beegle
will ha ve the program on
plant disease, and the arrangment theme will be "People,
People. Everywhere."
REG ULAR meeting of the
Racine Lodge 461 F &amp; AM.
Work in Fc Degree. All
master masons welcome.
MEIGS Chapter ~3, DA V,
7:30 this evening at chapter
home , Butternut Ave .,
Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, special meeting, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday with work in
EA degree; all Master
Masons invited.
MIDDLEPORT Youth
Ba se ball League annual
picnic Wednesday, August 9.
Swinuning from 6-8 p.m. and
picnic from S-10 at Middleport Park. Event for T·
Ball through Pony Leaguers,
coaches -'and families.
Uniforms to be turned in at
this time. Call 992~212.
THURSDAY
GOSPELTONES of Chester
will sing at the Alfred United
Methodist Church at 7:30
p.m. Saturday; the Rev .
Richard Thoma s, pastor ,
invites the public.
PAST OFFICERS CLUB,
Racine Chapter, will meet at
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter.
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE No. 37
Order of .White Shrine of
Jerusalem . Regular meeting
and practice Friday, August
II, at 8 p.m. at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. All o!!lcers
urged to attend . Picnic
preceding meeting at 6:30 at
Mason Park, Mason City, W.
Va .

..

NEW YORK (UP!)
Montreal Expos outfielder
Warren Cromartie, who
averaged .444 with 12 hlts In
27 at-bats, was named
National League Player ol
llie Week for llie period
ending Aug. 6.
During
hls
spree,
Cromartie hit safely in six ol
seven games, ecored live
runs, had two doubles and
drove ~ two rUIIB.

LEAN &amp; TENDER

'

~~~ .............~~.!.119

NESTEA

Carpent er have returned
from a vis it in Cincinnati with
th eir s on-in-law and
daughter , Mr. and Mrs. DennJs Car roll and children.
They went especially · to
celebrate the first birthday of
llieir grandson, Andrew.
Mrs. Robert Grinun of Columbus is visiting here with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
bayton Phillips, Pomeroy,
and at Letart Falls with Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Grimm.

"

19
:~~~AGE ........~ ..

l

4 ~.

'

CHICKEN DINNER
RACINE - The Constant
Builders Class of the Racine
Wesl eyan United Methodist
Church will serve a chicken
dinn er from 5 to 7 p.m. on
Saturday, Aug. 26. Tickets
may be purchased from any
member of the class or
reservations made by calling
949-2671 or 949-2789.

STEAKETTES.~~~ .....

KRAFT

12 oz. PKG.

..

s 1 29

COOKOUT SPECIAL

69e

CHEESE
SINGLES

MACARONI
&amp; CHEESE
3 BOXES

99e

99e

GOLDEN ISLE
BRANDS SALE

• GOLDEN ISLE
BRANDS SALE

Cream style corn, whole kernel
corn. mixed vegetables, peas &amp;
carrots &amp; cut beets.

Mix or Match

4cANS . ,
\,

00

Sweet peas. whole green beans .
cut green beans, s liced green
beans. spinach. carrots, whole
potatoes. Mix or Match

3CANS

89e

...

PRODUCE SPECIALS
U.S. NO. 1

FRESH CRISP

HEAD
LETTUCE

In as many ways

NEW WHITE
POTATOES

LARGE HEADS

asBULOVA.

9~

EACH

Nobody!

10 LB. BAG

$129
'

Bulova makes a ll kinds
ot dlgitals. And all kinds
of conventiona l watch es,
too . In every price rang e.
So when you 're in the
market for a watch, see
us . We' ll show you
precise ly what you want
· ... a beautiful watch by
Bulova, the dependable

COUPON

COUPOIW

BIRDS-EYE

MAXWELL HOUSE

COUPON

IMPERIAL MARGARINE
W/C

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE

69¢

12 oz. CAN

MILL STREET AND SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
.,
7:30 NIGHTLY

"COME EXPECTING A MIRACLE"
EVERYONE WELCOME

No. 305
POUND CAN

W/ C

Limit One Please with This Couoon

Coupon Expires Aug . 12, 1978
YGATEWAY

cOupon E·xpires Aug. 12, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Coupon Expires Aug . 12, 197S
TWIN CITYGAT.EWAY

l

COUPON

89¢

No. 255
10 CT. BOX

W/C

Coupon Expires Aug . t2, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

20 CT. BOX

49t

W/C

Lim it One Please with This Coupon

5g~

PEANUT BUnER

- -- -

COUPON

W/C

100 CT. BOX

$}69

W/C

INSTANT COFFEE
10 OZ. JAR

Aug. 12 , 1978
GATEWA

,..,.

..

..

BANOUET

$}99
'

. ·'
.. ,.

COUPON

.FROZEN -DINNERS

FABRIC SOFTENER
96 OZ. BTL.

.I

W/C

Coupon Expires Aug . i2 . t9 78
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

I

Limit 0... t'louo with 'Tills Coup&lt;in

$399

· Limit One Plea.se with This Coupon

STA-PUF

W/C

.,

FOLGER'S

Coupon Expires Aug. 12, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COIUP~In Expires Aug . Ji, 1978
GATEWAY

TEA BAGS

W/ C

Limit One Please with Thi S Coupon

TENDER-LEAF

PETER PAN

Co

,.__

WHITE TOILET TISSUE
4 ROU PKG.

69¢

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

COUPON

'

99~

-·..

No. 155
5 LB. BAG ·

li m it One Pl ease witn Th1s Coupon
Coupon Ex p1 res Aug . 12, t978

GOLDEN ISLE

CQljPON

'

18 OZ. JAR

COUPON

j

FOOD STORAGE BAGS
No. 105

Limit One Pleue with This Coupon

\

COl J~ {Jf',j

GLAD

TRASH BAGS

AUGUST 10 THRU
AUGUST 26

W/C

FLOUR

Limit One Please with This Coupon

GLAD

WITH EVANG. SAMMY MOORE

ROBIN HOOD

limit One P1ea!. ~ Nith -.:his Coupon

Pomeroy

TENT REVIVAL

COl:PON

FROZEN ORANGE PLUS
No. 105

No. 75

nam e in time .

Court st .

6 OZ. CAN

'1'9
BORDEN

An noun cement ls belng
made of the marriage of
Millie S. Dill apd Mr.
Thurston Stone, Jr . The
marria ge was an event o(
July 28 at the United
Methodist Church in Pem·
brook, Va., with the Rev.
Raymond Kelly officiating.
The couple is residing at the
present time in Mason, W.
Va.

TUNA FISH

3 OZ. JAR

Nobody
Son born to
you the time
Nicholsons tells
•
Mr. and Mr s. Bill
Nicholson , (the former
Carolyn Maples of Langsville ), Rutland, are announcing the birth of a son
July 28 at Holzer Medical
Center
in
Gallipolis.
Weighing in at 9lbs., 3 oz., the
baby has been named
William Joseph .
Paternal grandparents are
Mrs. Ethel Nicholson of
Rutland and the late Ernest
Nicholson . Maternal grandparents are Mrs. Betty
Brown, Piketon , and the late
Joe Maples of Gallipolis.
"Billy Joe" is welcomed
home by a sister, Miranda

STAR-KIST -

ICED
TEA 'MIX

TONY'S STORE MADE

Marriage
announced

TONY'S SPECIAL

GATEWAY GROCERY SPECIALS

.

r------··-·1 Pomeroy Personals
Generation Rap 1 Social 1

Local "seens"-Suzan Thoma receiving letters of congratulations from Sen. Oakley Collins and McClure Dairy Isle
SIBLING RIV AI..RY MIX-UP
m her essay and art work which appeared in "Ohio DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
Woodlands" ....... Bessie Darst being really surprized at a birReading in your column about anorexia nervosa makes me
lliday party hosted !or her by her son, Craig ...... Peggy Harris want to share my problem with y0u.
seeing her California cousin on Cross wits win gifts galore ......
My sister and I went on diets to lose a few pounds. I knew
when to slop, but she developed psychological problems. She's
been diagnosed as anorexic ·- she goes to grea t lengths
avoiding food ; she throws tantrums (when before she was
much sweeter to our folks than I was J; she's down to 72 pounds
(from 120) and the whole household revolves around her trim-

Mary Shrine
meeting set

C. LEE HENDERSON, Alfred, a 5Q year member of
Camp 10900, displays his certificate of recognition plaque.
The four-generation family of Modem Woodmen includes
his son, Clarence W. Henderson, Alfred ; his granddaughter, Mrs. C. D. (l..inda Sue ) Williams, and his great- .
gra ndson , Aaron Williams, Belpre.

A BICENTENNIAL flag was presented by the Modern
Woodmen ol America Camp 10900 to the Tuppers PlainS
St. Paul United Melliodist Church built in 1976. Here Mrs .
Nina Robinson makes the presentation to the Rev.
Richard Thomas, pastor.

'

Limit Ono Pioue wiltl ThiS t'oppon

Limit One Pte••• with This Coupon

12, 1978
y

Coupon Expires Aug. 12, 1178
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

49¢

. 'I

. "'

TURKEY, CHICKEN, SALISBURY STEAK,
MEAT LOAF .

W/C

11 OZ. PKG.

W/C

limit One Plea se with This Coupon

Coupon Exp ires Aug. '"' r&gt;rd
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•

•

�7 :--The Deily Sentlnei,Middl~rt-POIIIeroy, 0 ., 'I'Uesday, Aug. 8,1978

.8- The Deily Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomer6y, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 8, 1978

DICK TRACY

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items lnto .Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
Ida)'
2du)'!i
l da)'Ji
6days

1:; Wurds Or Undt'r
(.'harge
Qish
1.;!;
1.00
1.50
I. !ill
UI J
2:25
l .OO
3.75

E•n·h Word over th.:- mmhnum IS
wvrW. l.!i 4 l"t"nts prr wurd pt-r day ,
Ads running utht'r than t.'U R!It'l'ulive
dMys will bt! dwr!!!t'd at tht! 1 day

"'"'·

In memory , Card of Tium~ and
ObitUii9' : 6 t~nls pt'r word , SJ.OO
minunwn . Ct~5h inlld\'lilll. ' t' .

Mubilt' Humt' salt:!~ and Y1tn.l salt'S
ll.rt.' ;u·t:eplt&gt;J only with caSh wlth
urdt'r. 2S t-ent charge for ad:! l'Mft')'ing Box Number In Cure of The Se nUnd .

THE FAMILY of Robert l. W.hite , tF YOU ha ve a service · to offer ,
wisl-les to express the ir op·
want to buy or sell something.
pr..:iation fer the mcmy kind·
oe looking for . work
or
nenes e:.pressed during the il·

lnen and death of our loved
one. For the cords , flowers .
visits, food . transportation and

help from the Keno neighbors PORCH

SALE ,

during the hospiralitotion and

9 to

death

of

h~,~sbond

Our

and

fa1her . The docton . nurses.
Racine

Emergency

SEOMS. Holzer

Squad,

Med ical Center ,

Pinecrest Care Center , Rev .
Freeland Norris for his consol·

lng sords .
for

E~ing

the i r

Fu11erol Home

efficient

. and

understanding kindnesses . and
all o thers who helped in any
way . Your . kin~nesses will

always be remembered .
Wife. Mrs . Hilda White; Children ,

Tho11101 White , Mrs . Wm . Ohlllw riMhl

inger, Mrs . lill ian Penn and

or reject any 11dl! ~~ned ub~'l LOf\llo l. Ttw Publisher will nut bt!
resporuibko ror mort' than one im·or-

Mrs . Clair Woode and Families.

Tht:' Publis.htor

rt!St'rv~

Lo ~lit

m :t lllst'rliun.

Phont• 992-2156

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADUNES
Mun day

Noon un S&lt;tturday

STAN'S BARGA.INLAND . A store
for the p&amp;ople. We buy , trade
and sell . New and good used
merchandise, furniture and ap·
pli onces . Ant iques . You will
always gel o fair deal with
Stan . Open 7 days a week
Monday thru Saturday . 9 om to
5 prn . Sunday lOam to 6 pm .

OIL OR gas lease. Fre&amp;, 30 acre5 .
2 miles north of Pomerov .
61&lt;1 -126·2701 e11enings .

TueS&lt;.hty
Lhru F'nday
~ P.M
Lht' dl! y before puUiieali un

.Sundl! V

LOST: YELLOW and white St . Bernard , female , 2 111 years old on
Rt . 33. Phone 992· 7664 .

4 P.M:
Fridcty lifh:muun

~m

Vl!.J\!JfJ

fOJArx.,Jl...,Jlr.lllJ

l.!J\JlJ\JWI.!J\.!J IJ
August I, 1171
This coming year things that
come In small packages could
prove to be the most profitable
for you . By planting a series of
small seeds you could later
reap a substantial harvest
LEO (July 23-Aug . 221 Secretly ,
you may have small regard for
the opinions of associates
today . You might think they
don ' t recogn ize this, but they
probably wil l. Find out who
you ' re romantically suited to by
sending for your copy of AstraGraph letter .- Mail 50 cents for
each and a long , self addressed, stamped envelope
!o Astra-G raph , P .O . Box 489 ,
Radio City Station. N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth sign .
VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 221 Pru·
oence should be exercised
today in the manageme rlt of
your assets. If you let your
Quard down there 's a chance
you 'll do ·something foolish and
costly .
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 231 Estab·
lis t1tng goals and working
toward them is a sure-fire formu la for success, but today the
targets you select could be tar
too unrealistic.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2._Nor. 221 Ex·
perlence from a mistake that
lett a small scar is likely to be
ignored today . A fresh wound
fro m repeat ing the error may
result.
SAGtTIAR!US (Nor. 23·Dec.
21~ Avoid sharing activities with
a friend today who usually
manages to stick you with the
t ab . The leopard hasn ' t
changed its spots.
CAPRICORN (Dec . 22·Jin . 111
.A letharg ic assoc iate could
hamper you in reach ing your
goals today . The extra burden
will prove a bit too much for
you .
AQUARIUS (Jon . 2D-Feb. 111
You ' re very adroit at formulating plans today, but you may
not be so energetic in executing them . Good ideas will be
shelved to collect dust .
PISCES (feb. ZI-M1rch 21) This
is not o ne ot .your better days
for taking gambles, particularly
if you ' re belting on someone
else . Don't look for pie in the
sky .
ARIES (ll1rch 21-Aprlt 111 Prob·
lams will ensue in one-to-one
relationships today If you try to
force your opinions on others .
The breach will be difficult to
repair .
TAURUS (April 2D·IIay 2DI
When It comes to issuing orders today, you'll do a pretty
good job . Where the shoe is on
fhe other foot , you're reticent.
GEIIINI (lily 21-June 2DI Your
will power is at a low ebb today
where discipline is requ ired to
live within your means . Th is is
not a 'iood dey for shopping .
CANCER (June 21.Juty 221 On
occasion a little bluff and bravado can carry you through a
sticky situation . Today , however, a false front is a veneer that
will be pierced .
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

Tbe Alamanac
Untied Preoalnternattonal
Today is Tuesday, August
8, the 220th day of 1978 with
1&lt;15 tn follow .
The moon is approaching
Its first quarter.
The morning star is
Jupiter .
The evening stars are Mer·
cury, Mars , Venus and

Saturn.
'lboee born m this date are
WJC!er the sign of Leo.
America's
first
professional
architect ,
Olarles Bullfinch, was born
Au 11 • 8, 1783 . Am,erlcan
performers Connie Stevens
1111 d Esther Williams alao
were born m this date - the
1om1er In 19311 and the latter

in 1123.

()! Ibis day in hillo.r y:
Jn liMO, the German Luft·

,

whote ... er ... you'll get results
foster with o Sentinel Wont Ad.
Coll992-2156.

MATURE
BABYSITTER ·
housekee per
nee ded .
Wadlington , WV . Employee
benefits , so lory ' se parate
haus ing in mobile home . All
expenses poid . 30-4·863-bOBB
oher Spm .
EASTERN LOCAL School District is
look;n9 for pori Ume vocol
music
teacher .
Coli
614·985 ·4291.
ciNc-D
::-U
: -S
:cT:-:R:-IA
- L- .::-M:-A:-:1-c
N-:T::EN
: -A
::--c
N-::
CE
mechan ic . Apply in p,rson.
Pomeor y Fo re1t Produch ,
Bailey Run Rd . ~2·5965 .
SAWMILL FOREMAN . Good
wages and benefits for the
righl man. _A:pp ly in person.
Pomeroy Forest Products ,
Bailev Run Rd . ~2 - 5965 .
LPN TO do horne nurs1ng.
Weekdovs . Phone ~.&lt;19 · 2655 .
MECHANIC NEEDED . Experience
necessorv. Must hove tools .
Good working conditions .
Good wages . Ottter fr inge
b~tnef i fs . A.C . air core equipment , a li gnment · John Becm
visualizer Two River Ford .
304-675-1490.
BAR PERSON. Neat app&amp;aring .
Dependable . Fle)Cible hours.
Als o , pcrl .fime person. Apply
Five Points Grill. Rt . 3.
Pome rov . 10·12 noon .

HELP WANTED
Couple
light
for a
Livein.

or lady to do
housekeeping
retired man.
Con tad:

PAUL ORR
Long Bottom or
Basham
949-2193
or
985-3586

I MALE puppv , 3 months old , 55J
So . Fourth Ave ., Middleport.
Phone 992· 7023 .
MOTHER DOG and 2 pups . Mother
is housebroken · end smalL
9~9 . 2626 or 9&lt;19·2852

1974 PONTIAC VENTURA . b cyl.
$1000. '1'12·7453.
1969 CAMARO, V-8. $550 .
991-7891.
1956 CHEVY BEL AIR. 55 .000 OC ·
tuol iy needs work , engine 81( ·
cellent shape. $150. 9..9 .2065 .

Mon ., Tues. &amp;
Clothes In e)C ·
cell•nl condition , 8 track lopes 1970 FORO GALAXIE . Fair condi ·
lion . $200firm . Coli742·2256.
and other miscellon&amp;aus items .
553 So . Fourth Ave., Mid· · 1977 CHEVETTE . $2600. Phone
d leport .
742-2123.
PORCH AND Yard Sole. 160 S. 7th 1971 AMC HORNET wogon . b cyl ..
Ave .. Middleport. Ohio . August
automatic, has reverse oul .
7-13. 9 to dusk
Bicycle,
Make on offer . 992·2 .. 28.
macrame . choir, hunting bow ,
CHEAP
TR-'\NSPORT ,0.TION . I %9
boat trailer , 12 volt motorcycle
Che vy 1Kingswood wagon . A.C..
bauerv . electric motor, baby
P.S.. auto., radio , good tires .
items , lots of clothes , etc .
992·6287.
Y_.,RO SALE . First lhls year . Tues·
day and Wednesday . Aug . 8 &amp;
9 . 10 - 3pm . ~3 Race St .. Mid·
dleport. Ohio . lots of clothing .
Wed ..

~.

u.s:

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

POMEROY

LANDMARK

Pomeroy Landmark

The. Photo Place
{Bob Hoeflich)
109 High St .

NEW FIBERGlAS TIRES
Mounted on new w-.ls,
rudy to go. no to us
complete. Truck owners,
don't miss this dut. We sell .
at discount prices every
d.oy . Slop in ot

FRED'S TIRE CENTER
in Hartford, W. Vo.

Residential and c.ommer·
Hour Service. Any day ,
anytime .
Phone 985-3806
Jack Ginter 985· 3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
sox 3

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c

EXPERIENCED

Radiator~

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

Service..... ..,.... ,........,.......
,.,
•rot~t

-·

lllii6ll

OFF

Pomerov Landmark.

BURROUGHS SENSI·MATIC oc ·
HOOF HOLLOW Horses . Buy . sell
counting machine . Phone
trade or tra in . New and used
9&lt;l2-21Sb, The Doily Sentinel,
scddles . Rvth Reev es , Albonv .
1l I Court St reet . Pomeroy .
(bU ) 698.3790.
Ohio .
~--,----RISING STAR Kennels . Boarding 1975 BLACK
EL Camino Clos1ic.
ond grooming. a ll breeds .
350 two barrel , automatic,
Cheshire . 367 · 0~2 or 367 -0lOb.
powe r sleer ing and brakes .
May be seen 111• miles off
AK C REC.lSTERED Doberman pup .
Route 7 ~YJXJSs on 1&lt;13 or call
7 weeks old . Hove health cor·
992-3750. Good co nd ition .
. tificate . $125 . 8&lt;13-3053
. !2b00 .
MIXED CONDITIONED hov .
Shade, Ohio . 61&lt;1-69b· l234 .
COUNTRY MOBILE H6me Pork CA NNING TOMATOES . pick and
bring own container . $3 o bu .
Route 33 , norlh ol Pomerov .
Gory Rovsh , Letarl fo ils.
Lorge lots . Call fl97-7479.
2.47-3901 or2&lt;17·386 l ,
ONE BEDROOM opt . Contocl
1976
YAMAHA RD &lt;100 . Also, ..
Village . Ma nor Apt .. Mid·
new IS '" Dodge whvels .
dleporl. 99'1-77B7 .
992-7066 .
3 AND &lt;I RM . furn 1s hed and un ·
opts .
Phone 1972 FORO ECONOLINE Van .
fvrt"! ished
992-5&lt;13.&lt;1 .
Phone 992-3278 .

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
r~

!!2·2174

H. L WHITESEl
•
ROOFING

Siding ··

New or Repair

GuttetS and

Gtner1t CAlntroetora
Phone 94'-210 1
or 949-2160
FREE ESTIMATES
No Surlday Calls PteaM
7·9·1 mo.

Free Estimates
Phone 949, 2862
or 949-2160 .
7-7· 1 mo.

~
MODERN SUPPLY·

GARAGE
~ mtle off Rt.

1 bY'!NII on
St. Rt. )'24 towonl Rutland.
0.
Aute&amp; Truck
.
Repait
Also Transmission·
'
Repair
Phone 992-5682

399 W. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Ph.• 992-2164
, .S-4· 1 mo .

92Jl

-

'((X) OO.l'T C£S\:11:Ve: A~IZ~ LIJ&lt;t

,.1

---..,=-~M'&lt; ~\TILt:
01~!

Construction

742-Z321
Free Estimates
Work G. . r1ntlod
7-10-1 mo.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
A1

MOORE'S
Brakes
Tires

Installation Service
Pomeroy, 0 . ·
J. 15·ffc

Include

sates tax or

'

0

I [j

300MIIn St.
Pomeroy,Ohlo
Pomeroy 992-6ZI2
or 992-6!63
I A.M. to4:JO P .M.
SALES AND SERVICE
11 ·9·tfC

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE
SERVICE

NOw arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by lhe abo~o~e canoor1.

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
V~ TWO PI:&lt;L S
WENT TIIA1· A-WAY ...
Hlo1 · M· M ·"

AIM:(

I I I I)[ I I J WITH THEM

(Answers 10monow)

. \ Jumbles· GDR(lE MINUS DELUXE IMPACT
Yesterdays Answer : How wttch doctors keep fit THEY "EXORCISE"

All types of roofing, guHtrs
downspouts. 20 yurs
e~tperience .
All
work
gu11r11nteed . Call Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160. Free
Estimates.
7· 16· 1 mo.
&amp;

~tUcJ._,w
by

HOMESITES for sole , 1 acre and BRADFORD . Auctioneer , Com·
J0 1 1 ACRES . 8 room house , .&lt;1
up . Mlddleporl , near Rutland .
plete Service . Phone 9~9- 2&lt;187
bedroom , new bath , new kit·
Call 992.7..81 .
or 9&lt;19.2000. Rac ine , Ohio , Crill
che n . city water . On Rt. 33 in
Bradford .
BUrling ham . 992-7751 .
NEW 3 bedraom house . 2 baths .
oil e lec .. 1 acre , Middlepor l. ELWOOD BOWERS REPAIR SIX ROOM house and both on 11
close 10 Rullond. Phone 992Sweepers . toasters , irons, all
acres . All minerolrights .
7&lt;181 .
small appliances . lawn mow•r .
742 ·307 .. .
ne)CI fo Stale Highway Garoge, 30 yr . financing , also
on Route 7. Phone (61.&lt;1 ) 985·
THREE BEDROOM home on 3 VA·FHA
refinancing. Ireland Mortgage,
3825.
ac res . Close to school. Priced
197 1 BRONCO -4-wheel drive .
77 E. State, Athen s. phone (61&lt;1 )
reosonoblv . For more informo·
592·3051 .
SEWING MACHINE Repairs . se·r·
997 -7054 .
lion , co JJ9&lt;J2 .5126.
vice. all mo"k es , 992·228.&amp; . The
FIVE YEAR old riding horse and
THREE BEDROOM frame home in
Fabric Shop , Pomer oy .
1
2
STORY
"A"
frame
on
'1
IJ1
/,
saddle , S400. 5hp rot oti ller
Middleporl Co11992· 3~57 .
Authorized Singer Solei and
ocre1 . E11tro Iorge fomHy room
$125 . ·5 tir es 560 x 15 on OW
IN SYRACUSE : 2 bedroom house .
Service. We sharpen Scissors .
with
free
slonding
fire
place.
3
rims , !i"-e new , S70. 16,000 BTU
bed, ooms , I V~ both , lorg&amp; utili·
New ~form windows . New EXCAVATING , do1er , looder ond
01 r
con ditioner .
$200 .
ty room , heat pump . 992-6011 .
olvminuO" building . 2 porches .
backhoe work : dump trucks
614 -696- 1055
and lo-boys for hire : will ha ul
"992 -3219 .
NI
CE
J
b&amp;droom
ranch
home
with
1974 YAMAHA DIRT bike . Been
fill dirt , lo soil. limes tone and
olloched 2'6 ccr garage . TWO NEW 3 bedroom houses
n dden ve ry lillie. 985-3909.
under conttruclion of Morning
graveL Call Bob or Roger Jef.
fireplace, 2 11, acres and 2
--Star ~ Heights . Rec room ,
fers. day phone 992·7089 , night
well s. 992·6323: . : · - - - - fireplace . garage and bose- ;:;;p';:h-;o~n~e-;9:;
9;;
7 ·,:-3c.
51:.;5 o:._r_99
...:.
2 ·-;5"1"3':'2:"._
men!. Ready for occupancy in EXC A·v'ATtNG . do1er , backhoe
near future . lee Cons tru ction .
and ditcher . Charles R. Hot·
m .3.. 5&lt;1 or 61&lt;1 . .&lt;1&lt;16.9568 .
field . Back Hoe Service ,
84 ACRES ON 1.. 3. 3 bedroom
Rutland , Ohio . Phone 742·2008 .
house, fenced , &lt;I outbuilding1 , Will do roofing, cons truction.
20 acres , posture. 2 ponds. the
plumbing and heating . No job
balance t imber . $&lt;12.000. Phone
too Iorge or too small . Phone
949•2057 .
742·23.t8.
105 ACRE estate , IOv•ly Iorge ~I&lt;;O
;~W
;;;;
ER~Y;---;A:;N-;;D~:-M
:;A
~R;:
TI:;-N;---:E•·
modern
home
wlth
porches
,
co
...
oting
,
seplic
systems
,
VIRCIL B ;R ~~:'1
darer , backhoe . dump truck
Iorge deck , pool and londscop·
MAIN
992-3375
in g. Barn , ponds, well fen ced .
limestone, grovel , blacktoP
POMEROY,
Nearly all land In use . meadow
paving, Rt. 1.&lt;13 . Phone 1 (614)
2l6 E. Second "street
and posture. $225,000 firm .
698·733 1,
NEW Lt S T1 NG - Priced to
BEECH STREET 4
61&lt;1 ·667 -33:98 .·
sell quick . J acres on Rt. 7,
PULLINS EXCAVATING . Complete
bedroom brick , large
close to Pomeroy, 3 storage
LARGE LOT on Rt . 7. All utiliiles
Service . Phone992-2&lt;178 ,
liv ing , 111 baths, equipped
available. Lorge. Ia! . 6 room
buildings, 2 story home , 3
kit chen , and 2 car garage
hovse. full basemen t. holf PUDDLE POOLS. All sires and
bedrooms. basement , In
wi t h shop . Only $77,SOO.
both , needs some repa ir. extro
shop~~ts . Swim pools , 2 years
good
condit
ion
.
Will
heat
MAIN STREET - Nice 3
ground . 992 ·722.. .
experience . free elitimates ,
rnexpenslvely with coat
bedr o om large home .
anything you need for
and
wood .
ONL 'I'
Equ ipped kitchen, dining.
underground swim pooh . New
$25,000.00.
office, 2 car gar&amp;ge with
cheri\icol and supply store .
NEW LISTING - Over 1
storage . All tor only
Albonv . Ohio , Phone
acre In the country near
S35,000 . Corner location in
HOUSE PAiNTING. indoor or Out ·
61&lt;1·698-6555 . ( Aher 6 pm,
Forked
Run
State
Pork
.
Rutland .
door . No job too big or small.
614·689·5251 John Jeffen or
New , very large, nice
LAND - 25 acres near
Reasonable prices . 992·6368.
089·5265 Bill Gi ltette. ) We or•
garage
with
workshop
,
Rutland on good gravel
NOT all wet on PRICES.
id~al
for
a
.mechanic
or
LPN TO do home nursing .
road with electri city .
business . Large 4 bfdroom
Weekdays . Phone 949-.2655 ..
S12,SOO .
NEIGLER BUILDING Supplv for
home with dining room ,
building houses , repa ir work
124 RACINE - La,ge 4
family , 'fiiOOd burning
bedroom home with bath,
and cabinets . Call Guy H.
fireplace, ·storm windows .
Neigler. 9&lt;19-'1508 after S pm .
gas furna ce, central air,
EXCELLENT
BUY .
~sement , and large eat-in
REEVES TRADING Post , Poge 11 ille .
$29,500.00.
kitchen . 4 porches . Want
Grocer.ies , dry goods, . hard·
NEW LISTING - 10 lots,
$25.000 .
wore, fiNd , tack shop. SPftiOI
nice
1
floor
plan
home
In
COUNTRY FARM - 75
751b . of dog lood , $3 .88 .
the country, barn-garage, 2
acres w ith lots fa places to
buildings and small house .
enlarged our
put a pond . Severa l good
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
HQ!lle has 3 bedrooms.
department and .
hay fields . old house and
cancelled? Losl ~our o·p erofort
modern k itchen, part
service Hotpolnt and
outbuildings. All minerals .
license? P~one 992·21 &lt;13.
basement. fruit cellar.
$25.000 .
brondo.
THE CHIMNEY Sweep . Reduced
View of the Beaufltul Ohio.
RUTLAND - 3 rooms, oil
rates til Sept , I. 61~ - 373· 6057
Below ~air Mrket Value at
on one floor . Good chance
WHkdovs
until 5.
$17,700.00.
for . a small busi ness &amp;
NEW
LIST!
NG
Over
5
living quarters . Ask ing
acres, mini farm on the top
. . . Jock W. Carsey , Mgr.
$13 .000 .
of a secluded ~Ill close to
RT. J3 NORTH - House
Pomeroy. Barn , small milk
Phone 992-2111
WATER WELL d;ill ing. William T.
only 28 y r s . old . 2 nice
house ,
large
garden,
Gron·t. 7&lt;1_2·'1879.
,
bedrooms , bath, n,a tural
fencing.
3
bedroom
gas heat, city water , 2 .Car
remodeled home. In good
garage and 9 acres : Only
&lt;or&gt;dftton . Part basement
U.S. Department .o f Labor
$18 ,5QO.
with cellor . Nice kitchen.
WETZGALL ST .
3
Manpower Administration
$16,500 .00.
bedrooms, bath , large eat ·
DUPLEX - 1-2 bedrooms,
In kitchen, basement, new
1·3 bedrooms , In Pomeroy,
F .A . furnace. and back
in good condition , ready to
vord . Asking $18 ,000.
move Into
ONLY
Young Women and Men Ages 16·21 years In
NEW
LISTING J
$15,000.00.
bedroom air conditioned
GIANT - 2'1• story home home . Two full baths .
up to 5 bedrooms on a
dining , equipped kitchen
corner lot In , Mlddtoport,
with bar . Sundeck, front
Get pold w~lle learning, FrH food, houolng, medlcol
garage . ONLY $9,500.00.
por-ch, barn, old lov house
c•re, clothing •nowance and spending money. JOB
RANCH 3 bedrooms,
and 28 acres near Portland .
CORPS tr•ins m•lesand femalll for iob·sldlls such 11
basement,
large
lot.
could
WE NEED GOOD HOMES,
Au1o Mechanlco, Keypunch, Brtck1oytnl. Nunlng
be
real
n
rce
home
.
FARMS, AND LAND ON
Skills, Welding, Ofllc• Skills and m•nv more. Must
$18,000.00.
WATER LINE ON RIVER
leav&amp; area. If Interested In Improving vour future,
FOR
BEST
RESUL
T5
FRONTAGE .
wllit:
'
LIST WITH US! I It
HENRY E. CLELAND
HELEN L. TEAFORD.
ffEALTOR
JOB CORP REPRESENTATI'ItE
HANK, KATHY, LEONA
City Hall· Council Chambers · 2nd Floor
REAL TOR ASSOCIATES.
110 2nd St., Pomeroy, OH .
Housing
ASSOCIATES ['· B
·. Tues . &amp; Wed. Aug. 1,9-9-4:30

B·O

It puts us in a
nqht

7

l\ealE'5tli~~-""' ~

.. .bein' such qoc&gt;d
fr'en·s · th

ticklish

scounrels
like we i s~

17 Chew the fat
:1 19 Anglo-Saxon
money
:10 UMerve
23 Hairdo pad
24 "C'- Si

c Bolivian

export
5 Ending for
subsist
6 Dash
7 Diving bird
8 Shah

Yesterday's Answer

BRIDGE

country
9 Not
admit
10 - and

laney
21 Deep-sea
diver's
·salvation

ground
33 Knowledge
34 Visitor
to Siam

15~~~~

~~:,ng

~~~:ate Careful defense pays off

laugh

(victimized)

~.,.,rT.~

38 Generation

- - -::;;c---::-:--:---:----:--::-:---=-- - - - Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
- - - - --

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

NORTH
• Q J 9l

• J 975

+ 965
WEST

+A 7 5
• 9 53
t AQ843

+ A8

32 Carpentry

• 2
+QJ103 2

\

nable

••~

•-•
I

39 English

•

42 Handled

&lt;

APPLIANCE

Vulnerable : North..SOuth
Dealer : South

'-'-+-f-+-11

composer
40 Pressed
4l See 37

Down

Ia

WINNIE

• I 'M AN IP&amp;A IMN 1
MISS WINKLE. niEY
COME TO ME J UST
LIKE 'THAT!

WHY IF I GOT A TOLL
FROM EACH IIlEA THAT
PASSED 1H ROUGH MY
M IN~ tD f!&gt;E 1'1

M/LUONAII?e/

&gt;OU PO HAVE A VIVID
IMAGINATION 1 13UT
WHAT WILL IT C05T
TO PUT IT TO WORK

"THIRTY PE RCE NT ON ANY

FOR ME ?

Here's how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

HARD BEING
A BIRD .

•!
I

I

ESPEC lAlLI( WHEN ~OU

KNOW WHERE ~OUR NEXT
IS COMING FROM

North East

Obi.
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

work It:

z•

Pass

Pass

Opening lead : • A

'fE GOT NO CALL
TO BE SCAIRT

WHAT MADE
'IE PULL 'lORE

OF ME

HEAD IN
ALL OF A
SUDDEN?

I
I

Ht-ns•. 992-6191

Headquarters_

1....------ ...,

South

By Oswald Jacoby
One lette r simply atands for another. In lhi1 sample A it and A lao Sontag
u sed for the three L's, X for the t wo O's, e t c. Single letters,
George Rapee of New
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are an York has been one of our
hiats. Each day the code letters are dilfere nt.
greatest players for almost
40 years . He is noted for
CRYPTOQUOTES
general conservatism, but
he also steps out on occa·
y r; . sion . His double of two clubs
PDMLQDP
HG
HYSHGHOKX
represents one of those occa·
PLNX,
YCPLNX
HG
S H G H • sions.
West opened the ace of
OKX
PDMLQDP.- DXHYNHTD
l;)XHYX clubs and continued. It is
Yealerday'a Cryploquo«e: YOU SEE THINGS, ~ SAY general expert practise to
trumps when your part·
"WHY?" BUT I DREAM THINGS THAT NEVER WERE AND I lead
ner doubles a low part-score
SAY "WHY NOT?"--G.B.sHAW
contract.
© 1e78 Kla1 Fealv"s Syndicate, Inc .
Dummy followed will) the

MR. TURTLE!!
iT'S

Weol

five and six of c lubs and hen •
is where George made a
really fine pla y . He put on
the seven instead of taki n g
his king and leading th e suit
ba c k t o p ull d ummy's la st
trump .
If h e had adopted this li n e
of play , declarer would hav e
rea c hed dummy with th e
nine of tru,mps. taken a
heart finesse, con tinued th e
s uit and wound up losing just
tw o trumps and one trick in
each other suit.
After George's play of th e
club seven, ca reful defense
was still essential. It was
careful and South was dow n
one instead of hom e with .1
doubled contrac t.

1.,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

SE.RVICE

t K 10 6

+K74

• A Q 10 4 2

3&amp; lntenni·
37 Declaim

• KJ 6

+ K2

:,r~RAN~~K!&amp;!,!E:,:;R~N:,:;IE::..__ _ _ _ __..-..._____________________..._......_______....,...............__, 35 Butcher

&amp;

EAST
• 10 8 6 J

SOUTH

tool

NOtN #leAD
IAGI' YOU/fl
V![liiON Of. IT.

8-8-A

• 87

~L_:r~~~a~:sirt~ .. ,.'j, 31 ~=~
•

"'

11 Come up with :18 Kind of al&lt; TnPSdav. Au~ . 8
18 Precipi·
32 Plot of
- - - -- - - - - -- - , , - - - - - · - - - - -

Z9 Remote
30 Road
.for
a chariot

o.

~':,~ricH M~.R ~~lf:o'\~

DOWN
I Bucolic .
2 Correspond
In sound
3 Ooze out

Bon"
%5 Pixie
%7 Envoy

I

Pomeroy Landmark

THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1 Mucilage
6 Coasted
10 - point
(example I
II Dennal
aperture
12 Give the O.K.
13 Horse
IC Cessation
15 Cheaply
made
11 Cargo
· weight

""'-L

JOB OORPS

CdHs not

""""e 992-211 t

.!mRNLOSER

HEAnNG INC.
.

.~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~®
by Henri Arno4d and Bob Lee

•

PWMBING &amp;

Roofing, Siding,
Room Additions
&amp; Spray Painting

1

Unscramble these tour Jultlbles .
one lettlf to each square, to form
four ordinaJY words.

FREE JOB TRAINING

Price includes
Fed . T1x

b.llancing)
FULL 'I'
RANTEED

&amp;wrn

WEDNESDAY,AUGUST9, 1971
5 :45- Farm Report IJ; 5 : ~PTL Club; 6 :()()...PTL
Club 6 ; PTL Club 15: Summer S..mester 10 . .
6: 30-News Conference 4; News 6 ; Summer Semester
8; Christopher Closeup 10; 6 :45--Morntng Report 3.
6 : ~Good Morning , West VIrginia 13; 6 :55--News 13.
7 :()()...Today 3,4,1 5; Good Morning America 6, 13; CBS
New s 8: Underdog 10; 7 :25--Chuck White Reports
10.
7:31)-Schoolfes 10; 8 :00-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10 ; Sesame
Sf . 33 . '
9 : 00- Merv Griffin 3 ; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15;
Emeraencv One 6; Brady Bunch 8; T ic Tac Dough
10; Studio. See 33.
9 :31)-Andy Griffith 8; Family Affair 10; Mulligan Stew
33 .
10 :()()...Card Sharks 3,4,15 : Edge of Night 6; ; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Joker ' s Wild 10: To Tell he ruth 13; Over
Easy 33 .
10 :31)-Holtywood Squares 3,4, 15; High Hopes 6 ; Price
Is Right 8.10 ; $20,000 Pyramid 13; Paint Along Wilh
Nancy Kaminsky 33.
1\ :IJO.-Hfgh Rollers 34.15 : Happy Days b,13 ; Men ot
Bronze 33 .
11 :31)-Wheel ol Fortune 3, 15: Fam ily Feud 6,13;
Partridge Family 4; Love of Life 8.10 : 11:55--CBS
News 8; Loving Free 10 .
12 :()0-Newscenter 3 ; News 4,6,10; America Al ive 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magaz ine 13;
Watch Your Mouth 33.
12 :31)-Ryan's Hope 6.13; Bob Braun 4; Search f01
Tomorrow 8, 10; French Chef 33.
1:()()...For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; Not For Women
Ohly 15: Way It Was 33 .
1:31)-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15 ; As The Wor ld Turns
8,10; Lowell Thomas Remembers 33 .
7 :00--Cne Life To Live 6, 13; Once Upon A Classic 33
2 :»--Docfors 3,4,15; Guiding Light 8, 10.
3:IJO.-Anolher World 3,4,15 ; Genera l Hospital 6, 13 ;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20;33 .
3:31)-A II In The Family 8, 10; Almanac 20;
Economically Speaking 33 .
4 :00-Mister Cartoon J; Superman 4; For Ric her, For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6: Addams Fami ly 8;
Sesame St. 20.33 ; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4 :31)-My Three Sons 3: Gi lligan' s Is. 4,8 ; Bat man 10;
Little Rascals 15.
5:IJO.-Here Come The Brides 3; My Three Sons 4:
Gunsmoke 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33;
Voyage 1o lhe Bottom ot the Sea 10; Emergency
One 13 ; Petticoat Junction 15 .
5:3o--&lt;&gt;dd 'Couple 4; News 6 ; Elec . Co. 20,33 ; Hogan's
Heroes 15.
·
6 :()()...News 3,4.8,10, 13, 15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20;
Making Things Grow 33 .
,
6 :»--NNBC News 3,4,15 ; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy70; Anllques33.
7 : 00- Cross -Wits 3 ,4 ; New lywed Game 6, 13;
Newlywed Game 6,lJ ; Sha Na Na 8; News 10;
Gilligan's Is. 15 ; Dic k Cavett 20 ; People &amp; Places
33 .
7 :31)-Ait -Star Anvlh inq Goes 3;Sha Na Na 4; Woltman
Jack 6; Fam il y Feud 8; MacNeil Lehrer Report
20.33 ; In Search Of 13; Wild l(fngdom 15 .
8 : ()()...Movie " Peler Lundy 3,4, 15 ;; E lght Is Enough
6,13 ; Carol Burnett a, 10 ; World 20 ; No va 33 .
9 :QO-Frank Sinatra 6, 13 ; Movie " The Hawaiians"
B. 10 ; Great Performances JJ ; Poldark II 20 .
lO :DO-Pollce Woman 3,4,15 ; Ba r,.bara Walters ·6,13;
· News 20.
10 :31)-How To 2d; 11 : IJO.-News 3,4,6,8, 10,13, 15: Dick
Cavett 20 : Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Police Story 6, 13 ; Hawaii
F ive.O 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie '' The Oppos ite Se x' '
10.
12 :()()...Janakl 33 : 12 : 4G-Mystery ot the Week 6,13;
SnoOp Sisters 8: 1 :()()-Tomorrow 3,4; 2: l~ New s
13 .
Movie Chant1el 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M . - Too Late For Teals I G i
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - White Buffalo ( PG)

'\l

b

4-30-ttc .,

'

CARTER
AI Tromm

.MPLOYNiiNT OFFICE ...V'Mi!AN

'IOU TWO ARt ~OOI(IN' F&amp;ll ,10115
Ht!RI!I... /MN. vou "UY6 r,\~T
'If 'IT1&lt;ANIE1f'l IN TOWN I

ROGER HYSELL

small engine 1o moservice, ~Sit't Ferguson
1o Gillon Titters, ywn Boy
Mower Sites &amp; Service.

Ph. 992-ll&lt;ll

5 :3o--odd Couple~ ; News 6: Elec. Co. 20,33 ; Hogan' s
Heroes 15.
6 :()()...News 3, 4,8,10,13, 15; Zoom 20; ABC News 6;
Making Things Grow 33 .6 :»--NBC News 3,4,15 ;
ABC News 13; Andy Grfftlfh 6; CBS News 8,10;
Over Easy 20; Antiques 33.
7 :()()...Cross-Wifs 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13 ; News 10;
Pop Goes The Country B; Gittlgan's Is . 15; Frenc~
Chef 20; How To Buy A Home 33. .
7 :3o-Holfywood Squeres.3; Let' s Go To The Races 8;
Hollywood Squares 4: Candid Camera 6; Mac Ne il ·
Ler~re Report 20,33; Price Is Righi tO; That's
Hollywood 13; To Be Announced 15.
8 :()()...Just For Laug~s3,4 ,1 5 ; Happy Days6,13 ; Movie
"Charlotte's Eeb" 8, 10; E~elln Conviction 20;
Movie "Broken Btos5oms" 33 .
' : 3().-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6, 13 ; 9 :IJO.-Movte " Deadly
Game" 3,4,15; Three' s Company 6, 13 ; Mov ie " He.ll
Boals" 8,10.
9:30-Carter Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13 ; Five
Red Herrtng• 33; 10 :()()...20·20 6,13 ; News 10.
10:3().-Mystery Murals of BaJa California 33 ; Like Ills
20.
11 :()()...News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Over

;;-

Bissell_ Siding ~

Downspouts

Muffler
Shocks
Battery .

TUESDAV.AUGUSTI,1971

Storm Windows
Ca II Professiona I
Builders

~.

5
White-Wall ~P
Custom Poly
A78x13

LITT!;L.

Villfl &amp; Aluminum

'SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
cial . Call for estimate. 24

TELEVISION
VIEWING

AWAY,

r--------------. - r---~~~~---.

. 7-20-1 mo. pd .

9 ..

WANT fO buy· Ut di ty trailer .
61&lt;1 -985-4329 .

waffe began a series of
daylight air raids on Britain.
In 19&lt;15, Russia declared
war on Japan, seven days
before Tokyo surrendered .
In 1968, Richard Nixon won
the . Republican nomination
for president. He was elected
in November, defeating
Hubert
Humphrey
and
George Wallace .

appointments for senior
portraits . w~ use tndi ·
tion111 settings and .also
fea1ure
outdoor
por traiture.
Call U• Today

8·2· 1 mo .

•289.95

s~

SENIORS
We are curr&amp;ntly making

P~meroy

NEED A WATER
SOFTE NER?

iiiiiii

HOU SE or Iorge house
on land contract . SIOOO down .
$200 o month, Write or call col·
"f8ct : Anho Ha ines . 957
l oc kbou rne Rd ., Columbus , OH
-43206. 614·253·5&lt;18 1.
WANTO TO buy . Early 70's or
older pickup t~r":::'::.kc..9.:._4.:._9.c:·206.S

COAL , LIMESTONE . sand, gro..,el.
calcium chloride , fertilizer , dog
food . a nd oil types of salt . f)C ·
celsio r Salt Works, Inc. , E. Main
St ., Pomeroy. 992·3891 .

H1gh School

$1295

MOBILE HOME space , 1 ac re. TWO YEAR old Hotpoint e lectr ic
country . 61&lt;1-985·&lt;1329
washer and dryer . excellent
condition , recently ser viced .
RIVER FRONT trai ler lot lor rent.
$250 pr . Ro laway bed . $10 .
593 N. 1st St. . Midd leport.
747.379 1. ---c---,---;:c-992.7738 .
BEAT THE October rush . Give us
AVA IL ABLE AT Rivers ide Apts .: l
your order now lor cHows
bedroom , $ 113 per month , $150
cus tom made the way you wont
se&lt;urity deposit , Eq ual Housing
thttm and cut 10 your indi vidual
H l i.
·'O pportunity , ~2 - 6098 .
length f Pic" up anytime before
October I . $5 depos it with
CHI P WOOD . Pole' mo)C . CAMPER FOR rent ot Hickory
order
(Easton Gamegette r)
Lakes
Compgrovnd,
Tuppers
dtamete r I 0" on largest end . 58
alum lnvm arr ows . 526 .95
Plains
.
Ohio
.
$225
per
month
per ton . Sundled slob, $6 per
dozen . Fiberg lass $2&lt;1 ,95
i n c lud i ng
utilit i es ,
ton . Delivered to Ohio Pc;:allet
dozen . We re flet ch ar rows .
61&lt;1
-667
·3349.
Co .. Rt . 2. Pomeroy . 992·2b89 .
gloss . aluminum or wood. in·
eludes 3 new plastic vane1 nick
TIMBER . POM EROY Forest Pro· GOT rwo" slee pin g rooms . Will
furnish 3 hot mea ls o dov . Will
and insert . $1 per arrow . Also
ducts . Top pric e for standing
do washing end ironing. In
We 1traighten alum inum or·
sow timber . Call 992-5965 or
Pomeroy cit v limits . Ca ll
rows , S.SO each arrow . Tri
Kent Hanby , 1·446-8570.
'1'17 ·3680.
Co unty Sport Shop North and
OLD FURN ITURE . ic e bo •es . brass
Tr i Coun ty Spo rt
Shop
beds. iron beds. desks. etc .. BEAUTIFUL NEW home . 2SOO sq .
Downtown , 30&lt;1·675·2988 ,
ft
.
living
orea
.
2
bedroom
.
2
com plele households . Write
bot hs , fom ily room . central JUST RECEIVED a shipment of
M.D. Miller . Rt . 4. Pomeroy or
heat ond air . $4100 per mo .
Wh itmer Block Diamond lini ·
co11992 -77b0.
References . 30&lt;1-773 -5.. 5 I .
ment. Also Rawle ig h·s ProOLD COINS . pocket welches.
dvcts . 192.. Eastern Ave .,
class ri ngs. wedd ing bands ,
Gallipolis , Ohio &lt;15631 . Phone
di amonds . Go ld or silver. Coli
61&lt;1 ·&lt;1.&lt;16·9516.
· Roger ~oms ley . 7&lt;12·2331 ,

ROOMING

lent , W. Va. beside Heck's .
1973 Broodmore U 11 6&lt;1 2
bedroom
1973 Dorion U • 60 2 bedroom
1972 Victorian 1.. x 67 3 bedroom,
1 both
1972 Cov•ntrv 12 x 65 3 bedroo m
19b9 Statesman 17 x • bO 2
bvdraom .

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

WANTED : TRAILER space lor rent
on outsk irts of Pomeroy or Mid.
d leporl . Co1 199'2·5S79
WANT TO rent : 3 bedroom home
1n Middleport or Pomeroy .
99 3 8

WE PICK up iu nk auto bodies buy·
ing junk cars , st rop iron , bot·
re ries and metq,ls . Rider"s
Salvage , SR " 1214 , Pomeroy .
991-546B .

8 &amp; S MOBILE HOMES. Pt. Plea-

F&lt;ll fill Your
MY YARD Sole was roin&amp;d out . So 10 • 50 Tw'O bedroom mobile
il wi ll wrap up Thursday from
home . $1800. 992-S8S8 .
GE-fV-,1\.
9om Ia 12 noon . Girls' fo il
1976
NASHUA
I &lt;I x 65 3 bedroom
Hn1[J(llfl1 Appl
cloth ing, 12's , l•fs and pre·
11/ , both , underpinning, $1500
tef!ns : vasf!s .' planters. rubber .
Sdll' flrt(I'S
and assume loon . 9.. 9-2683 or
sta ir lreod$ , orlificiol flowers ,
B43-3311.
J,lck W C.11 '&gt;PY.
etc . Charlene Hoeflich , 109
High St ., Pomerov .
19b4 PARK ESTATE 10 11 52 . Very
Mqr.
good condition. Coi1992.J789.
THREE FAMilY Yard Sole. Th urs
Phon•· '192 1181
and Fri . 10 til 7 ol Gory
Willford"s . Brood and Walnut in
Raci ne, across from Telephone
RECE NTLY FRESH J.e rsey mi lk cow
Buidir:-g .
with calf. Very gentle·. $400 .
YARD SALE . Mostly children's 15 CU FT Sears Coldspot chest
742-3 114 .
type free1er . Very good condiclothing . few boby items.
tion . $ 160 . Call Sunday or after 1973 FORD FIOO pic kup truck , 302
fewnew curtains . Aug . ~ - 10.
V·B. auto ., P.S. First $1600 buys
5:30pm 61&lt;1·667-30&lt;11
11. 10om to 5 pm . 1041 1/ , S.
il
. Gene's Body Shop, 307 Con·
2nd Ave .. Middleport .
do r St .. Pomeroy . Phone
COMMUNITY YARD Sole . long
997632B .
Bottom Communitv Bu ilding.
APPALOOSA MARE for sale . Gen·
Aug . 9 and_ I 0. Bake sole the
lie . Good 4-H projecL Western
IO!h .
.
sadd le and bridle . QQ2.2J95.
RUMMAGE SALE . Wed.. 1 hurs.,
FRESH HOlSTEIN heilers . Also.
Fr i. 9:00 . 2'17 S. Fifth Ave ., Mid·
Bo rder Co l lie pupp ies ·
dleport , Ohio .
0 14·286·2&lt;196.
YARD SALE . Aug 10 and I I . SR
1&lt;13 . Beside Horner Hill Corry
Out. Baby clothes . babv fur ·
nilure, urwing machine . Ra in
cancels .
Any
made car -parts
YARD SALE . 103 Condor St .. Avg .. extra if needed. ExcludeS
Let Pomeroy Lanilmork
8
I l . Women·s. men's and front-wheel drive cars.
soften &amp; ~ condition your
g irls' clothing .
1
with Co-op water
BACK YARD Sole. Thurs . and Fri.
softener, Modo! UC-SV!,
9·6. 191 N. 3rd Ave ., Mid·
Now Only
dleport . Interio r louvered
doors , 2 folding doors . GE
Let us test your water tree ·
washer .
draperies ,
bedspreads. curtains, clothing
and numerous mise, ilems.
::!_0ck W. Carsey, Mgr.
THREE FMAILY Yard Sale . Thurs .
ond Fri . Aug . lOth ond l lfh
Phone 992-2 181
from . 9-5. Men's , women's ,
children "s and infonl"s "( lathing .
al l si~es . Mi sc . items . Child's
CANNING TOMATOES , SJ o bu .,
residence, &lt;14.&lt;1 lincoln St . Mid·
picked .
Raym on d Rowe .
d leport .
SPECIAL
747
·7192
.
PI! ICE
Expires
1973 .. BLACK . DATS UN " pickup .
August 15, 1978 ·
992.74 14 or 992·6057 .
1967 APACHE FOLOdown campe r .
S
- P-EE-DQ tJE"E N~RINGER - w-a--;
sh-e r
Good con d ition . $400
with t ime r. Ex cellent condition .
949· 2747 .
Coll949 -2275 .
Call now for appoin1ment.
27 FOOT TERRY travel trailer .
1977 650 YAMAHA , 2400 miles .
Self. contained. "Excellent con·
Coli 992· 37 .. J ofler 5 pm . Besl
dit ion. 992· 7b56.
offer .
W. Carsev. Mgr.
ICill LARt&lt; FOLD down camper .
-MIN-ER'S STEE l lo~~s-u-clo_l_
od-;--r-u-:b:-­
Sl&amp;eps eig~ ~cellent con&amp;
ber boots . Sl 9.95poir . Polnter"s
&gt;omeroy "2-2181
lion. $900. oof~ u n topper , $75.
white ponts and shirts . Bailey's ,
997.7561 .
Middleport.

SPECIAL

Busin.ess Services.

Easy 33.
11 : 3().-Johnny Carson 3,4,1 5; Soap 6,1 3; Movie
" Counterfeit Green" 8; ABC News 33; Movie
" Hud" 10; 12:()()...Janokl 33.
1~ : 05- Movfe " Cleopatra Jones"
6,13 ; 1: 00Tomorrow 3,.&lt;1 ; 1 :Os--Mov le " The Outrage'' 8;
t : ~News 13 .
Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; TP .M . - Ghosts on The Loose IG J
9 &amp; 11 P .M . - Valentino (RI

K -8 .
;

I•

A California reader wants
to .~now if there is a 50- point
bonus for making a double d
contract.
·
Yes, there is . There are
also overtrick bonuses of 100
for each overtrick not vul·
nerable and 200 for each
ove rtrick if vulnerable.
The 50-point bonus never
varies . A redouble raises th e
overtrick bonuses to 200 and
400.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

(Do you have a quesUon for

the experts ? Write " As"" ihe
Experts ," care of this ne'wspaver. Individua l questions will
be answered if accompan ied
by stampBd,. s•lf·addrossed
envelopes . The most interesting questions will be Used In
th is column and will receive
copiBs of JACOBY MODERN.)

....

�'

.

8'- The O..ilv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Aug. 8, 1978

,:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Work at Willow Island
halted by court·ordei170 feet above ground, when it
suddenly collapsed April 27,
dropping them beneath tons
of concrete and steel inside
an unfinished cooling tower,
being built for · Monongahela
Power Co.
Federal safety experts
from the Occupational Safety
·and Health Administration
failed to pinpoint the cause,
but lodged 16 citations
against ResearchCottrell,
Bound Brook, N.J., for
allegedly abusing safety ·
standards.
"Will you- let them in
volun t arily ?"
OSHA 's
attorney, Michael Shapiro,
inquired of the firm 's
lawyers.
"Yes," replied James M.
Wilson, one of the company's
lawyers. "Did you e~pect us
to say anything else ?"

ELKINS, W.Va. !UP! )
Research -Cottrell
has
reluctantly agreed to comply
with a fi veday court order
barring it from moving
anything at the Willow Island
disastet site where Sl me ~
perished in a scaffold
collapse last spring.
~ order signed Mooday by
' U.S. District Judge Robert
Maxwell aUows the National
Bureau of Standards of the
U.S. Labor Department to
tour the disaster site along
the Ohio River and hunt
through debris in hilpes of
telling them more about the
accident.
Research-Cottrell resisted
the government 's argwnents,
but promised to obey
. Maxwell's ruling .
'
· The 51 victims were
working from a scaffolding,

INSURANCE REDUCTIONS

lower Preferred Rates for Pe!Sons
45 Years or Older on Homes Without
A Lien.

Month~

Payments Aslo

Available.
Visit Us

Davis Insurance Agency
_
.Across from the Court House in PomerOy
8111 Qutckel
Jeannie Starcher

992-6677

.,

CHECKING ACCOUNTS
A checking ac count elim inates the danger
of losing cash . And your check stubs are a
compl ete r eco r d of your e x penses .
Cancelled checks are re ceipts for proof of
payment .

OPEN YOUR ACCOUNT TODAY
DEPOSITS INSURED TO $40,000.00
By Federal Deposit losurance Corp .
Interest payable quarterly on cert i ficate
"THE FRIENDLY HA N K ':

li~itel\s

NatioMI Bal\k

Gl

wu.tu~
""'0

-~*" r-__.,,.llj
"-'

Member FDIC

.

.

· ~· -·.~ ~-

/·

;;; 1\b
'•

Explaining his decision,
Maxwell told the court lillY
hardships which Research·
Cottrell might face would be
outweighed by the demands
of the government's probe.
• " If we err on the side of too
much investigation, in subsequent proceedings the
conclusion borne there from
can always 1M: exluded," .
Maxwell said.
"If facts remain unknown
in the shadowy depths, the
law is shackled and doesn't
have the opportunity to act
and · react. We · have
everything to lose and
nothing to gain by cutting off
the investigatin before a final
conclusion can be made."

Maxwell said aU concerned
in the investigatioo mus!
accept the fact that such
research tends to be "tedious,
detailed , minute."
The NBS' secood visit to the
site is needed to check the
agency 's findings with the
debris, Shapiro said, adding
the probe could be done in: two
days, and maybe even one .
Wilson suggested OSHA
was looking for more

LINIOUL W. JOHNSON
Linioul W. Johnson, 70,
Reedsville, died Monday at
University Hospital in
Columbus following
a
lingering illness. Mr. Johnson
was born at Ripley, W. Va., a
son of the late John and
Maggie Myers Johnson . He
had been a resident of
Martins Ferry until his
retirement from Wheeling
Steel at Yorkville in 1970. He
was a member of the United
Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife.
Ermaleen Connolly Johnson;
three sons, Roger, Akron;
Larry, Jacksonville, Oregon,
and Ralph. · Barberton; two
brothers, Robert, Marshall·
ville , and Alfred, Grand
Rapids, Ohio; a sister, Mrs.
Bessie Cochran, Colwnbus
and eight grandchildren. A
son, Earl, preceded him in
death in addition to his
parents.
Funeral services will · be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday at the
White Funeral Home at
· Coolville with the Rev .
Richard Thomas officiating .
Burial will be in Sand Hill
Cemetery at Long Bottom .
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time after 6
this ev ening.
THOMAS RUSSELL
Thomas Russe ll , 63 .
Columbus, died at University
Hospital Friday following a
heart atta ck. Mr. Russell was
a son of the late John L. and
Pearl Fleming Russell. He
was also preceded in death by
two brothers, Mark and John
(Buster ) Russell, and two
sisters, Josie Russell and
Mrs . Gentle !Beatrice )
Brown .

Mr. Russell w~s a member
of the Fore•t Run Baptist
Church here and had been
employed at the America,n
Zinc Oxide Co. in Columbus.
Surviving are his wife, Cleo
Ridley Russell, Canton ; two
daughters. Mrs . Phyllis
Anderson and Mrs. DiaMe
Chabis, both of Canton ; a son,
Thomas Russell, Jr., Canton ;
two sisters, Mr s. Alien (Lula )
Hampton , Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Leon (Adele ) Tatum,
Columbus; two brothers,
James E.. Columbus, and
Luther R., Dayton , and .five
grand chi ldr en . Several

NOTICE

DRAVO CORP. WILL BE CONDUCTING BLASTING
OPERATIONS DURING AUGUST AND SEPTEMBER AT
THE RACINE DAM. IN THE INTEREST OF SAFETY,
DRAVO REQUEST THAT 2-WAY RADIOS CLOSE TO THE
CONSTRUCTION SITE BE TURNED OFF. DRAVO WILL
BE STOPPING TRAFFIC ON STATE ROUTE 338
DURING EVERY ~LAST. WE APOLoGIZE FOR ANY
INCONVENIENCES THIS MAY CAUSE.

DRAVO CORPORATION
'

••

-·

'

EXTENDED WEATHER
Thursday tbroucb
Saturday, a chaace of
showen or tbwidersbowe.n
through the period, with
blglu rangtnc from the
upper 70s Co the mid 80s and
lows from the upper 50o to
tbe mid lOt.

Workmen carvmg tomh

By ROBIN STAFFORD
VATICAN CITY (UP! ) Workm~'l began · carving a
Nlhite marble tomb for the
late Pope Paul VI in the
grottoes
beneath St. Peter's
::::::::::;.::::::;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::·:·;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;
Basilica today and the
Vatican said his casket would
evidence to support the
be sealed for the lying in state
citations it issued June 8
and funeral.
against ResearchCottrell.
While cardinals in the Vati·
can began the solenm and
"They shouldn't a¥t this
court to resurrect some ellasecret rites that will lead to
lions that shouldn't have been
the choice of his successor
issued," Wilson told the
l'OLUMBUS (UPI) - The long lines of mO\Inlers, many
court.
Ohio
Mining
and weeping, passed the pontiff's
Wilson said his firm had its Reclamation Association bier in Castel Gandolfo, the
own experts and had pJaimed Monday asked U$. District
to gather the debris, tag and Court here for a temporary
catologue it; then store it in a injunction to stop five Ohio
Pennsylvania warehouse.
electric utilities from
"This employer shouldn't purchasing o.ut-of~ate · low
now surfer because the sulfur coal .
Department of Labor doesn 't
The ASfOCiation and one of
have as good a case as it its member finns, Par-Dee
should have," Wilson said. Coal Sales · Co., Cambridge,
Hocking Technical College
"Couldn't your experts and want the utilities to be barred wilt present a "Rescue Power
the NBS experts work beside from purchasing the low Tools" Seminar on Saturday,
each other?" Maxwell won- sulfur coal Wltil hearings are August 19. The seminar will
de ed
held . to determine the ~ be held at the Hocking
r.~N~." Wilson declared . economic
impact of buying Technical College (room 250)
"We take the position that out-of-state coal.
from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p:m.
OSHA has inspected to the
The hearings ordered· by
In the past several years
extent they're allowed · to. the .U.S. Environmental auto extrication has become
Sufficient time has passed . Protection Agency wiill be a specialized craft. This field
We need to· resume normal held Aug. 15 in Cleveland and has become very apparent
.operations."
Aug·. 22 in St. Clairsville.
probably because of the
In rebuttal, Shapiro said
However, · U.S. EPA tremendous interstate high·
OSHA was only trying to Administrator Douglas way system throughout the
determine what occurred in Costle has refused to require country . More and more
the accident, and not seeking utilities to refrain from tr affic crowds these in·
evidence to back up its contracting with out-of~ate l erstate highways, con·
citations .
coal producers until after the sequently , more high speed
crashes.
hearings are held.
Named in the suit brought
This se minar offers
by the association are Costle. prospecti ve students an
the Cleveland Electric opportunity to use some of the
llluminating Co., Toledo latest and most moderal
Edison, Dayton Power and rescue equipment. Students
nieces and nephews also Light, Cincinnati Gas and will .get to use each piece of
survlve.
Electric and Ohio Edison equipment. In the afternoon
Funeral services will be companies.
they will go to a wrecking
held at I p.m. Thursday at the
The suit claimed the yard to practice the
Ewlng Funer': Home with utilities plan to substitute the techniques they will Jearn in
the Rev . Edd1e Buffington use of between 12 and 15 the morning session .
officiating. Burial will be in milllon tons of Ohio coal per
Tools which will be used
Beech Grove C,emetery . year with outol-etate coal
Friends may call at the which the utilities claim
funeral home any time after 9 would be tess epensive for
a.m. Wednesday .
them to use than to install
anti-pollution controls.
MEET THURSDA V
In order to make the
RACINE - The Past Of· substitution, the utilities
firers Club of Racine Chapter must breach contracts wiUi
All Southern high school
t34, OES, will meet at 7:30 Ohio coal firms, causing and junior high band
p.m. Thursday at the home of severe economic disruption members are requested to
Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Car· and unemployment in various report to the high school band
penter.
room on the following dates
regions, the suit said.
and times :
Aug. 17 , 8-11 a.m.,
Rehearsal; 2 p.m., Meigs
Count) Fair.
Aug. 21. 8·10 a.m.,
Rehearsal.
Aug . 22, 6·10 a.m.,
Rehearsal.
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . (UP!) - A multi-purpo_se
Aug . 23, 6·10 a.m.,
spacecraft blasted off without a flaw early today to start a Rehearsal .
four-month, 35-million-mile weather fact-finding voya ge to
Aug. 24, Bus leaves at 6
Venus.
a.m. for Ohio State Fair and
The Pioneer Venus 2 lifted off precisely on schedule, at Nelsonville Parade of the
3:33a .m. EDT. The spacecraft went into a parking orbit short· Hills ~n August 25.
ly after launch where it remained until the engines aboard the
Aug. 28-Sept . 1, Band Camp
Centaur portion of the rocket sent it hurtling out of Earth 's from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.
gravitational pull and toward the barren planet.
Sept . 2, Band tagging from
8 a.m .-4 p.m.

Injunction
is sought

summer palace 15 miles
south of Rome,where the pope
dl.ed S1111day night at age 80.
An estimated 1,500 persons
were standing in line in cool,
windy weather after several
days of temperatureo in the
90s waiting . lor admluioo
when the doors ol the papal
residence opened again in the
morning.
They entered in an orderly
way and there was no
repetition of Monday's
crush.

Three priests stood in front
•

Rescue seminar
slated Aug. 19

Band schedule
is announced

j,_)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_ro_d_a_y_
Spacecraft blasts off

Flooding hits Switzerland

MILAN, Italy (UP! ) - Flash floods and tornadoes hit
northern Italy and southern Switzerland, isolating Alpine
valleys and causing several deaths and widespread
destruction , officials reported today .
·
First reports said six people were dead and several were
missing in Italy 's Ossola valley near the Swiss border, where
Italian and anti-Nazi resistance fighters set up a short-lived
"Ossola Republic" in World War D.

HOSPITALIZED
Lora Roush, 14 year old
d;;ughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Bobby Rous~. Pomeroy, re·
mains confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital. Lori was
injured when she fell from a
van while on her employment
with the CAP 1n Middleport .
While
she is not permitted
UJNDON (UP!)- The U. S. dollar hit new opening lows
visitors,
she does enjoy the
.n major foreign exchanges today following an unconfirmed
cards and fiowers
nwnerous
Middle East report of a 5 percent rise in oil prices next month .
she
has
received
.
Gold rose sharply in London and Zurich reflecting the
dollar's weakness. The dollar hit lows in Germany and
Switzerland, fell below a 2-year low in Italy and closed sharply
down _to another low in Tokyo.
REUNION SET
The 1971 graduating class
of Kyger Creek High School
NIAGARA FAU.S, N. Y. (UPil - With the 'extent of will hold a class reunion
government relocation aid still undecided, most of the nearly August 20 at 2 p.m. at the
100 families in the chemically contaminated Love Canal area Gallipolis Park Front.
have toped for an uncertain future rather than an unsafe one . Members should bring a
"We want out. We doo 't care about anything. We don't covered dish and swimming .
ever want to see the Love Canal again 1 " an angry Tom apparel. For more in·
Heisner, vice president of the Love Canal Homeowners formation call Joyce Swisher
at 614·367·7467 or Bill Quickel
Association told Gov . Hugh Carey Monday night.
at 992~n.

Dollar hits opening lows

Niagara residents want out

END MARRIAGES
Three persons filed for

. .· ... ·....

divor ce, one couple for

dissolution of a marriage,
and one dissolution wa s
granted In Meigs County
Monday .
Filing for divorce were
Diane Molden, Langsville,
against Bobby Molden ,
Langsvill.e; Anne S~uler ,
Pomeroy, against Richard A.
Shuler, Pomeroy; and Wanda

are: Hurst ~~Jaws of Ufe-";
High Pressure· Air Chisel;
Porta-power; Come-a-long;
and, Power Saw. The in·
struct9rs will be Don Schultz,
Logan Fire Department and
John Peters, EMT Instructor,
Hocking Technical College.
This will be an all day
seminar consisting of onehall day classroom ·lecture
and one-half day outside
hands·on training. Special
attention will be placed on
maintenance and sarety
precautions to both rescuer
and victim. Students must
bring protecting clothing.
The registration lee for this
seminar is $12 payable in
advance . . This includes a
luncheon at the Hocking
Valley Motor Lodge. For
further information please
Wolfe,
contact · Karen
Hocking Technical College,
Nelsonville, Oiho (614) 7533591 or ext. 221. Deadline for
registration is August II,
1976.

Tractor
pulling
contest

or the pope 's bier, saying
prayers aloud.
A fern had been placed
near the bier, apparently to
dull the heat from the camera
lights.
Vatican attendants kept the
mourners moving, but
allowed group11 of nuns 10 stop
briefly. They lllood weeping,
their heads bowed in their
hands.
The pope's body Is 10 be
returned to the Vatican
Wedneaday evening for three
days of lying in state before
the funeral mau on
Saturday.
Vatican spokesman Don
Plerfranco Paatore said the
late pope would be sealed In a
special . casket at Castel
Gandolfo before being
returned to Rome because
the summer heat was causing
"delicate problems" with
possible decompoeiUoo of the
Vatican sources said the
pope's body was only
"partially embabned" early
Monday before !be silmmer
palace was opened for the
public to view the late ponUff.
The tomb being prepared
lor Pope Paul is in a draped·
off area of the grottoes under
the floor of St. Peter's
Basilica.
Work on the tomb began as
Cardinals of the Roman
Catholic Church were
summoned to begin the
solenm and secret rites that
will lead to the choice of a
successor for Pope Paul as
spiritual shepherd to 700
million people.
Church officials said first
preparatory meeting, or
"general congregation" of
cardinals, was called for 6
p.m. (Noon EIYI') to Jay the
groWldwork for convening of
the Sacred College or
Cardinals that will name a
new pope. The meeting was
beind held under supervision
of French Cardinal Jean
Villot, the Vatican secretary
of state .
,
The late pontiff l!lmself
ruled that such meetings be
held daily following his death
until the conclave of
cardinals formally begins the ·
actual election process.
Under 800-year~ld ru)es
amended by Pope Paul to
tighten security, the cooclave
of cardinals that will select a
new pontiff wUI begin at the
earliest on Aug. 21 and no
later than Aug. 211.

ELBERFELDS
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PCI. CIIANINQ
TOOLIIT ..
INCLUDIDI

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SALf
New 1978 Deluxe
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, AcfIustable UP••"

SAVE •39.95
•6 -way Dlai -A·Nap to

QUALITY HOME
FURNISHINGS
AT

clean All carpets
• Brilliant Headlight
ollletlme lubricated

motor

• Huge to-tilling biQ
Rev. S119.90

w-toolo
NOW

REASONABLE
PRICES

By JACX R. PAYTON
VATICAN CITY (UPI) Abqut 5,000 policemen,
parUnllltary honor guards
and special antl-terrorlat
qer,ts lined the lknllnoute
from the papal summer
palace to St. Peter's Bulllca
today for the cortege
~ lhe late Pope Paul
VI to hll final resting place.
Among the security
arrangements was !be
deployment of lhe llpeClal
anti-terrorist III!Ctll'ity units
that have been lnveatigating
the Red Brigades urban
guerri)la gang that killed

former Italian· Premier ·Aido point during bls captivity
Moro, the officials lllld.
Pope Paul issued an
The officials "'ould not emctlonal plea "on bended
11pecify how many of the 5 0110 llnee" f&lt;r the su•rllla gang
were anti-terrorist agents'but to rei ae the political leader.
pollee sources said the
As the leCIIl'ity forces ganwnber was 111118n. Pollee thered, a ' bomb explosloo
olflclala aald molt of the damaged the door of the
force waa made up of honor church of Our Lady ol the
guards traffic controllers Roeary in a suburb of the
and mfutary orcheotru 10 . northern city of Turin early
clear the 118y for the papal today in the secood attack oo
cortege . and _ salute Ita Roman Catholic church
palllling
property in Italy since the
The
Brlgadea killed death S!lnday of PQpe Paul
Moro a personal friend of the VI .
.
late p;,pe May 9 after boldln~
The Turin explosion, which
hlm h~ge S5 days ; At one also smashed windows in

Roo

Pearson, Racine , as reported
earlier.

spectacular operations in
connection with the pope 's
death but that discreet
security precautions had
been initialed for proteclion
of the 11) lloolan Catholic
cardinals already in the city
or arriving shortly to take
part in choosing a new
pontiff.
Only 113 cardinals are
taking part in the cooclave
later this mooth because the
two other church princes
eligible to vote on a new
pontiff are unable to travel
lor medical reasons.
Cardinal John J. Wright,

a1 y

former
P i ttsburgh the towering ruins off. the
archbishop who now heads Colosseum and through the
the Vatican's Coogregation of Roman Forum and then to
the Clergy, is In Boston for the Vatican.
cataract surgery.
The cortege to the Vatican
Cardinal V11leriari Gracias, comes after the r1ns1 day of
78, archbjahop of Bombay, lying in state at Castel
India, is seriowdy ill at home • Gandolfo during which about
andalsowillnot be attending, 5,0110 faithful, some of whom
Vatican sources said.
were waiting since dawn,
Part of the route of the filed through the viewing
papal cortege from Castel hall.
Gandollo to St. Peter's is over
A bier set beloce the main
the ancient Via Appia.
altar in the Renaissance
Once in the city of Rome, opulence of St . Peter's
the cortege was . to stop BasUica awaited the body of
brieny at St. John Lateran Pope Paul, who will be buried
Basilica, then wind around in lhe crypts reserved lor the

en tine

DRYING OliT - Welenolsky spread his waterlogged supplies out on the levee to dry
before re-packing bls canoe and taking off with the current lor the last leg of his near 400
mile trip.

tombs of Roman Catholic
pontiffs.
.
The gates of the papal
palace at . Castel Gandolfo
opened at 9 a.'?. for a last
v1ew1ng seu1on at the
pontiff's summer residence.
Five th11uaantl J~tW!e .1!1!!
been in line since dawn
waiting for a glimpse of the
~Ye!IJ'-old pontiff
0rlgUlal P~ had called
foc the body to lie In state 10
be vtewed by hUndreds of
thousands ~ the basilica
prior to bur~al Saturday.
But SO cardinals, the first
!Continued on page 14 )

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 211, No. 81

Corp. getting award

NEWARK, Ohio (UP!) - The Kaiser Alwnlnum and
O.emlcal Corp. will receive an award. lor energy reduction
Friday at a cerernmy that will include speeches by its
'President Cornell Maler, Sen. Howard Metzenbaum, [).{)hio,
and Tom Grou of the U. S. Department of Energy.
The Ohio plant Ill.to get an award from Maier for its
reduced coosumpttoo of oil used In heating and
manufacturing.

TOOLS I

Home Furnishings- 1st Floor

Elbe.rfelds In Pomeroy

.

,J

MIAMI (UP!) -

Cora, the season's first Atlantic

lalrrtcane, packed 80 mph auatained winds and gales up to 100

:::~r:~~:~c:~r~~:.:~ stopn would not be a

In an advisory iasued at 10:.30 p.m. EDT Tuesday, the
Natiooal Hurricane Cenler said Hurricane Cora was located at
'Latitude 14.0 north and 45.5 west, or about 1,450 miles east
southeast of San Juan, Puerto Rico.

Second deadline has passed
MOSOOW (UP!) .,.. The second deadline baa pasled lor two
U. S. reporter&amp; to retract articles declared llbeloua by a
Moecow clvll court, but neither has been told what action
·
Soviet authorities wW take next.
Craig Whitney ol1beNewYork Times and Harold Piper ol
the Baltimore SUn both refused to comply with ·u,e original
order to retract their stories and simllarly ignored the five-day
exteoalon granted last Thuraday by MIIICOw City Court Judge
Lev

Almazov

Ouistina denies rwnors
MOSOOW (UPI) - Christina Onasais Kauzova today
strongly.denied rumors that her week-&lt;&gt;ld marriage to a Soviet
bualnesaman bad foundered and said she will return t6 her
huabaod In Moecow.
She also dlac:ounted published reports that her husband,
Sergei Kauzov, was once an agent of the KGB, the Soviet
Unloo's secret police.

300 firefighters walk out

JUit four houn ell'ller, more than half ol the city's third
pollee ablftcaUed Ill lick. Fire chief Floyd Hobbuaid about 80
IIIPII'TilorY penonneJ will man four fire ataUooa ll'ound the
city blltllid that wu not adequale prolecUon for the city's
m,ooo rellidenta.

HOUMA, !AI. (UPI)- Four ell)' policemen disciplined for
all 11dly ._Iiiii a prllloner have 15 day. to appeal their
~ aocllltlllPIIIIIon to the ClvU Servlee C«nmluuan.
Ml7&lt;r Edward "llubby" LyOIII Tuelday uplllltl• decllloo
11' lilt pollee c:bllf to lire three oftlcwa and IIUipllltl a faurlb
far a" 11!11y llltllnc an Ohio man IIT8IIed for btqlary. "I
' don't 'll'lllt to II)' anrtNna (about the cue), but I do 111ppor1
lhe cblaf in thll acllon,'' -Ly..., llld.
.

of the United States by mak·
ing that trip," Welenofsky
tells with all the knowledge of
the river history buff he is. He
. rMmA Jwi.W bi' .,.U~earQlP ad,\1:;. with ;u)mi~ation that
snowy huskY and leaned "that man never lost a bat·
against the bow of the tle.to
· Although he originally
memorabilia marked canoe.
At least you can bet the hoped to cover all 981 miles of
bearded Nutley, N.J . nafive the Ohio River, Welenofsky
. won 't ever forget his visit to says he will stop when his arthe downtown area after· rives in Ironton Friday. But,
which, upon returning to the he assures, someday he'll
levee, he found a nearly cap- complete the route. The ensized boat and much of his tire trip, according to h1rn,
gear - including the lantern
by which he writes at night floating among the driftwood
in the middle of the Ohio. And
to top it off, when he rowed
oot to retrieve the equipment
his constant companion Son·
ny jwnped first into tne water
and then took off down the
railroad tracks, apparently in
CHARLESTON, . W.Va .
search of his master whom he
(UP!) - No coal mines have
thought had left him behind.
But finally, after recover· been closed in West VIrginia
ing his supplies, spreading or Pennsylvania in the three
Uiem out on the concrete months since new federal
ramp to dry in the sun, and interim regulations became
being reunited with Sonny effective .
In
&lt;;Jintrast, federal
wbo was chased down and
returned by two Pomeroy inspectors have ordered 21
boys on bicycles, Welenofsky mines · shut down in
loaded his canoe and paddled Kentucky.
down river with the current · About 90 mines in eastern
have
been
Tuesday afternoon for the K~ntucky
last leg of his near 400 mile inspected since early May,
trip. He was briefly delayed according to the . Offlce of
by the mishap supposedly Surface Mining in Knoxville,
caused by waves from a pass· Tenn. Inspectors ' have
imposed 21 closure orders
ing barge.
Welenofsky arrived in and 45 notices of violations to
Meigs County Monday even· operators in Kentucky. ·
Officials have visited 40
ing, having passed the 300
mile mark of the Ohio River mine sites in West Virginia,
in Syracuse, a spent the night issuing lour notices of the
under a tarp tent on the federal regulations but
Pomeroy levee . But while in, imposing no orders of
town he met Don and Dorothy cessation.
There have been 56 inspec·
Rea of near Minersville who
tioos
in VIrginia with 10
sort of took him under their
wing and invited him to visit notices of violation and three
· in their home. He often meets cessation orders .
such people on his trips and Pennsylvania has seen 36
says Meigs Countians are inspections , II violation
among the friendliest he 's notices, but no orders to close
any mines.
eome across.
Inspectors in Region I,
He began this exPfdilion,
· his first since 1976 when he based in' Charlestoo, have
rowed from Ottawa, Canada coocentrated on Virginia in
to Philadelphia in celebration their early months or
of America 's Bicentennial, operation ,. according to
July 15 on the Monongehela Chuck Baerlin of OSM.
Federal inspectors are just
River at Brownsville, Pa .
to "gear up" in the
beginning
A teacher of the emotional·
Mountain
State, he pointed
ly disturbed during the fall
out:''
1111d winter months, Welenof·
"Since West Virginia had a
sky alternates swnmers hik·
good state program that
very
ing the Appalachia trail (5211
miles of which he has already meets many areas of the
covered 1and canoe(ng on the federal requirements, we
nation's most famous and. haven't been emphasizing it
yet," Baerlin said.
historic waterways.
Twenty tnapectors are asHe chose to undertake the
Ohio thl.• summer because signed to this region, and
1978 marks the :IOOth anniver· Blerlin wants to Increase the
sary of George Rogers stall five-fold over the next
Clark's expedition down the few mooths.
As things now stand,
river. "Clark doubled the size

would take a lone paddler
·about eight weeks.
Forwarded mail awaits
him in Ironton as well as his
car driven by a friend,
lormerly of Nutley, now of
l\18rietta. Before returning to
the east coast he will visit a
George Rogers Clark
museum exhibit in Indiana.
The trip has been an en,
joyable one so far, despite
yesterday's delay and a hold
up in Marietta where SoMy
(Continued on page 14)

No ·coal mines
have closed

LONDON (UP!)- The U.S. dollar slid to record lows for
the second day ruming on key Eilropean money markets
today, but recovered slightly against the Japanese yen.
Gold again reacted to the weaker dollar and hit fresh
peaks in Londoo and Zurich. The dollar opened at a new low ol
1.687SSwlu franca in Zurich and slid quickly to 1.87575 against

protection .

FREE

.'·

U. S. dollar hits record low

~ii~:e has 8(hnph wmds

..

ByJUDVOWEN
" I'll never forget Pomeroy,
Ohio," conceded AI Welenof·
sky with a sigh as he knelt

:Oi,.)_l_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_o_da_y~
~ser

.BEST FRIENDS - Canoeist Welenolsky leans against the bow of his memorabilia
marked boat with Sonny, the II year-old husky who accompanies him on all his trips.

Canoeist won't forget

RETRIEVES GEAR - Welenofaky paddles out to the
nilddle or the Ohio to retrieve gear which was nearly lost
when waves from a paulng barge virtually capsized his
Tue8day while he visited do'Wntown Pcmero)'.

Four policemen diSciplined
CORRECTION
Forfeiting a $53 bond in the
court of Meigs County Judge
Robert Buck Friday posted
on a disorderly conduct
char~e was Betty Persons,
Rac1ne , and not Betty

adjoining buildings, was not
immediately claimed by any
of the more than 200 terrorist
groups of the right and left
operating in Italy. .
On Monday, two lll'ehmlbs
had caused minor damllge to
the door of a Franciscan
monastery at Rimini. An
anonymous telephone caller
who said he spoke for the
," Young Organized Prole(arlans" told a newspaper:
"We did it to celelll'ate the
death of... Paul VI."
Police sources said !hey did
not think. the. Red Brigades
would
attempt ,
any

•

e

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, August 9, 1978

WlClUTA~ Kan. (UPI)- The entire rqular force ol more
than 3110 flrellpten walked of! the job early today .in a wage
dllputa with the city, leaving Wichita with virtually no fire

Mae Patterson , Pomeroy ,

against William Ler oy
Patterson, Pomeroy.
Filing for dissolution were
Mary L. Darnell and Harold
E. Darnell . Granted a
diss olution were Debbie
Smith and Carter Smith.

.· Heavy security for transfer of Pope's body

body.

A total of $1,000 in prize
money will be offered in an
out·of·field stock tractor
pulling contest slated I p.m.
Saturday , Aug. 19, at the
Meigs Counfy Fatr.
Classes included are 5,500
field stock; 5,500 state points
field stock; 5,500 state points
field stock, powder puff; 6,500
field stock ; 7,500 field stock
Hospital Nt&gt;ws
state points; 7.,500 field stock
state point, powder puff; Veterana Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Edward Bush,
8,500 fiefd stock, and 9,500
Racine ; Robert Burnem,
field stock.
There must be six entries in Racine; Larry Dillon II,
each class and two pul)s per Reedsville. ·
Discharged - Carol Jett,
clasS per tractor are per·
milled but only one prize Elva Dailey, Shirley Bahr,
given. Rules for the cOm· Freda Lewis, Goldie Lawson.
petition are listed in the 1978
county lair premium bookHolzer Medical Center
Aug. 7Dlacbargea
Carolyn Akers, . Clarenl'f
VBS UNDERWAY
Boyer, Judson Clark, Roscoe
Bible School at the Cozart, Helen Dowler,
Pomeroy Church of CbriJt Ill Ronald Eakins, Mrs. Charles
being held from 6:30 to 8:30 Kapp and daughter, Hazel
p.m. each eveniog this week Napper, Mrs. Carl Perdue
with classes lor children and daughter,\Vanda Stiffler,
through high school. AI !be Lester Thompson, Elsie Van·
Friday night session there ness,
and
Florence
wUJ be a program to wblcb Workman.
the parenta are Invited. Fur·
AUI!. 7 Birth
ther lnlonnalion on !be
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy
school can be obtained by Lewis, Oak Hill, a daughter.
telephoning 99Z.Z9%8 • .

'

••

Rae and Ron Reynolds confer on a meat ·order for their Syracuse restaurant. '

.

Mans+ield
couple
bu
.
y.s
J
Sy·•ocuse resta U .. nt
j

I

U

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy
Russell (she was the former
Freda Houdashelt). Mr. and
Mrs . Russell had been
residents of Meigs Co1111IY
many years ago. They were
anxious to "come back
home" where they had scads
of kin folks. So, their ln·
fluence on the Reynolds was
of some consequence.
twn an~ Rae purchased the
former home of the late
Jin:uny Martin in Minersville
and rede~orated the in·
teiior of the picturesque
home. They also purchased
the drive-in building and
started to work with the help
of a cousin, Brad Maag, to
remodel the interior of the
IJ(ructure.
· Paneling was installed,
new ceilings, new lighting,
and new flooring , all
enhanced by a nautical theme
wallpaper accent. Neither
twn nor Rae has had a
minute's prior experience in
ACTIONS FILED
the restaurant business, but
One suit for money and they have only one goal, that
another for dissolution of a is " good food . " So far,
marriap were filed in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
Tuelday.
SQUAD CALLED
FUing for judgment in the
The
Middleport
amount of t58,184.36 plus Emergency Sq1111d was called
interest was the Racine to the village jail at5 :47 a ,m.
Home National Bank, Wednesday for Ronald E . .
Racine; against David D. Bostic, a prisoner, who was
Panons, Vero Beach, Fla ., W. He was taken to Veterans
et. al.
Memorial H01pital and then
Filing for dluolution were returned to jaU. Bostic was to
Patricia Triplett and David be picked up today by
Marietta police.
Triplett, both of Portland.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
There's quite a change in
life style from business
careers in Mansfi~Jd to
operating a dairy bar in
Syracuse, but Ron and Rae
Reynolds are adapting to the
change qulte nicely .
Before buying the Syracuse
drive-in restaurant , which
had closed, Ron and Rae
were ''city folk" . living in
Mansfield where Ron was an
industrial supply salesman
and Rae was an accountant
and a part-owner In · a
business endeavor.
However, they gave up
their jobs after deciding to
get away from the city and
making plans to move to
Meigs County.
A special influence in this
decision were Mrs. Reynolds'

9

I U

business is good and is
growing.
The establishment - the
only eating establishment in
the growing community of
Syracuse - will be known as
the Syracuse Dairy Bar. It
will open from II a.m. to 10
p.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays
and Wednesdays; II a.m. to
II p.m. on Thursdays and
Fridays, and from 12 noon to
10 p.m. on SWldays .
The Reynolds already have
found Meigs people to be
among the best in the world.
Mrs . Reynolds, who had·
visited Meigs County as a
child many, many times, is
delighted to return on a more
permanent basis and Is more
than enjoying meeting
numerous relatives she has in
the county.

MINOR ACCIDENT
Meigs sheriff deputies
today investigated an accident at 12:30 a.m. on SR 124
near the Paul Kloes residence
in Minersville.
·
Arthur Roush, 23, Racine,
was travelling east on SR 124
and reportedly fell asleep.
His auto nn off the road
striking a stone wall. There
was heavy damage to the
vehicle. No · lnjuriea were
Incurred and no citations
Issued.

'

inspectors in Ule Department
of Natural Resources are
to
enforce
powerless
regulations issued at the
federal level. By Aug. 15,
however, tru! DNR hopes to
implement regulations it
drafted to approximate the
federal guidelines.

Three hurt
•
m
two-car
'

.

collision
Three persons were injured
in a two-auto accident at 12
p.m., on SR 7, five-tenths of a
mile south of milepost 28, in
Meigs County.
The Gallia-Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol reports
a vehicle driven by George
Genheimer, 76, Long Bottom,
traveling north on 7, turned
left into the path of an on·
coming south bound auto
driven by Denise Shiflet, 25,
Parkersburg.
Shiflet was transported to
St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, where she wu
treated and released.
Genheimer,
and
a
passenger,
Mary
A.
Genheimer, 77, Long Bottom,
displayed , visible signs of
injury, but were not im·
mediately treated.
The patrol reports heavy
&lt;~~!mage to the Shiflet auto,
moderate damage to the
Genheimer vehicle.
Genheimer wu cited on
charges of laUure to yield. '
At I :30 p.m., officers Investigated I two·VehlcJe
mishap on SR Zl8, folll' and
(Contitiuedon page 14}

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