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8-- The Dculy Sl'IIIH Jc l. Midllll'J&gt;urt-Pmrwru_r. 0 ., ,\1 um l a~ . 1\u r.:, . :m, i ~ t ;~

••••

Department heads staying
appointment of some new
cardinalS before reshuffiing
the Curia, so he can bring in
some new faces .
The sources said they
understood ViUol, 72, had
been talking for some Ume
about retiring but John Paul
asked him to stay on in the
post he held for nine years
under Paul VI.
The new pontiff showed his '
regard for Villot by slaying in
the French cardinal's apartment as a guest from the
moment he left the cooclave
area Sunday morning until
attendants got the . papal
private apartment ready for
Craig Bolin with a good
lead in the 10-speed race
him in the afternoon.
The new pope announced at Sunday's bicycle rodeo
plans for a simple enthrone- took lime to stop and
'
ment next Sunday rather capture this big frog along
than the elaborate coronation
the route.
rites usually beld flir Roman
Henry, Jasper Houck, Ellen . Catholic pontiffs.
Holzer Medical Center
Killinger, Cecil Kirk, Walter
Discharges, Augusl25
Linda Boggs, Vicki Brooks, Lambert , Susan Lawless,
Martha Cain, Jo Can- Cora McGhee, Howard
terberry, Zelia Casey, Mendy McHarry , Cheryl Nibert,
~th
Schchannell,
Winifred Paul Payne, Gertrude
(Continued
from
page
I)
Crosier, Tammy Dalton, Pellegrini, James StamMichael Davis, UUian Deal, baugh, Mrs. Stephen Stout treated for muscle strain to
James J. Proffitt. reports
Mrs. Joseph Evans and · son, and son and Mrs. Mitch the right side of his neck and the arrests of WiUiam Stone,
shoulder area , and released. Tinuny Coates and Ronriie
Gerald Gee, Eleanor Gilliam, Weber and son .
Births, Aug. 26
The . Canaday and Casto Williams, all of Pomeroy,. on
Virginia Gould, Mrs. MatMr. and Mrs. Darrell autos incurred · severe charges of forgery.
thew Hall and daughter ,
There
was
Shirley Haning, Mrs. Larry Tilley, daughter, Jackson. damage.
Chec~s stolen from Ewing
Mr: and Mrs. Ralph Chand- moderate damage to the Funeral Home on August 22,
Hartshorn and son, Mrs.
Janey vehicle.
Lauris
Johnson
and ler, daughter, Wellston.
were cashed on August 23.
Casto was cited on charges The arrests were made on
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
daughter, Frances Johnson,
of excessive speed.
Allan Lambert , Raymond Homery, son, Jackson.
August 25 and 26 -by Sheriff
Saturday, at 12:10 p.m., Proffitt, sheriff's investigator
Discharges, Aug. %7
Mathias, William Maynard,
Jackie Bacon, Floilla officers were called to the Gary Wolfe , and Deputy
Rose McQuaid, Belva MiUer,
Kathleen Mulhern, Charles Barcus, Audrey Bethel, scene of a two-vehicle mishap Randy Forbes. Stone was
Musser, Sherry . Neutzling, Clayton Caldwell, Gayann on U.S. 35, two-tenths of a taken before Common Pleas
Melinda Newsom, Cathy Clay, Donald Fetherolf, Mrs. mile east of SR 325.
Judge, John Bacon, on a Bill
According to tbe patrol, of . Information . After
Oliver, Della Price, Jack Donald Funk and son, Bellie
Price, Edna Rogers,. Mary Hall, Stephen Noble, Vilqla autos operated by Lewis pleading · guilty he was
Carl Sheets, Terry, 69, Beckley, and released, pending a preShamblin, Willard Shook, Pikkoja,
Shennan
Splete
and Mrs. Charles Petty, 37, Car- sentence investigation .
Donald Slone, Emma Smith,
pentersville, Ill. , were west Williams and Coates are
Vernie Van Dyke, Valerie Charles Spencer and son.
bound on 35.
VanMatre, Barbara Watson,
being held and will go before
The Terry vehicle passed a Judge later this week.
Judith Watson, Zeldon West,
from the left lane into the
Dorothy Whited and Lora
Sheriff Proffitt advises
right lane, striking the Petty Investigator Gary Wolfe,
Williams.
auto .
Births, August Z5
working on a tip, recovered
A passenger in the Petty two bjcycles that had been
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth
Veterans Memorial Hospital auto, . Kathy H. Petty, 18, stolen recently from the Earl
Baker. son, Leon.
Carpentersville, claimed Cleland and Hilton Wolfe
Saturday .Admissions Mr. and Mrs. Barry
Hanun, son, Point Pleasant. Dorothy Demoskey, Mid· injury, but was not im - Jr.'s residence at Racine .
Mr. and Mrs. Cary Wallis, dleport; Nell Klein, Mid- mediately treated.
The bicycles were found in a
Both vehicles incurred creek.
dleport; Paul Anderson,
son, Gallipolis Ferry.
Mr. and Mrs. Marc Eblin, Pomeroy; Juanita Runyon, slight damage. No citation
A deer accident occurred
Glouster; Debora Gillilan, was issued.
son, Gallipolis.
early Saturday morning on
The patrol -investigated a SR 124. Anthony G. ,Bradford,
Mr. and Mrs. Forest Chester.
two-auto
accident Sunday, at Rt. I, Portland, reported a
Saturday Discharges Mullins, daughter, Ironton.
3:30p.m.,
on SR1 , just south buck deer ran into the side of
Helen Bartels, Osie HenDischarges, Aug. %6
of
U.S.
35,
at the entrance to his vehicle. There was minor
Mrs. Richard Barcus and derson, Kyle Woods, Alma
the
,
Silver
Bridge Shopping damage to the car. The
daughter . Wade Bennett, , Carnahan, Linda Dickens,
Plaza.
Rodger Bostic, George Christine O'Donnell, Carrie
animal was killed.
Officers report that an auto
Burkett, Mrs. Eugene Call Osborne .
and son, Ma~ine Clay, John • Sunday Discharges - driven by Mary Burnette; 17,
Click, Joseph Cox, Delores Garnet Potts, Syracuse; Patriot, pulled from the exit
Craig, Tami Dalton, Douglas Ronald Reynolds, Pomeroy; Or the shopping plaza into the
path of a vehicle operated by
Dar•t. Margaret Earwood, Joseph Halfhill, Bidwell.
Sunday Discharges - Stephen R. Stumbo, 28,
Marjorie Fruth, Mrs. Bethel
OUTDOOR PRACTICE
Gillenwater and daughter, Edward LeMaster, Patricia Gallipolis, traveling south on
The
Meigs High School
7.
Carol Harmon. Louella Vaughan, J9seph Stanley.
The Burnette auto struck Band will hold an outdoor
the Stumbo vehicle In the left practice session from 7 to 9
rear. 'Burnette was cited on p.m . Tuesday to prepare for
the first football game show.
charges of failure to yield.
Both vehicles incurred All members are expected to
be present.
slight damage.
VATICAN CITY !UP!) - Popo John Paul 1 today
confirmed all heads of
Vatican departments would
remain in their post~ and
Vatican sources said he
wantP.d lA) familiarize himself
with men and issues before
making any chang.,.
Officials confirmed in their
positions included Cardinal
Jean Villot, the French-born
secretary of state, American
Cardinal John Joseph Wright ,
head of Congregation for the
Cle~gy , and all other department heads.
Also confirmed in his post
was Archbishop Agostino
Casaroli, head of the Council

f
•

''fA
••

New voting system explained

for Church Public Affairs, the
Vatican equivalent of a
foreign minister . .
The Vatican announced
John Paul's diecision less than
two days after he was elected
wpe Saturday in the briefest
conclave in this century.
The decision was in line
with his promise Sunday to
continue the moderate
reformist policies of his
predecessor Paul VI.
Vatican · sources said
changes in the top posts of tlie
Curia, the central ~hurch
. goveminent, may come later
after the pope has settled in.
They said he may want to
hold a consistory fOI' the

MEIGS COUNTY voters who for yean have ~n "X-

will be coWited In a matter of minutes compared to hours
· under the old syste~. Everyone )IIIII work less and the
rcectnct .wirkets following the closing of the polls wlll go · election results will be known mu~h quicker . The four
1-, mlhe punch card system Nov. 7. Votomatic machines will
photos show the simple steps the voter lakes in using the
be tiled In the polling places and the voies will be
votomatic.
automatically tallied following the election. Each precinct
l!tg" paper ballots which were t~ousjy counted by

•.

GO

HOSPITAL NEWS

ibson$

17.0 CU. FT. FROST*CLEAR
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER

Model RT17F4
A re fngerator with convenren ce
you car alford Work-sav rng
Fr'Js t ' Clear S ~'stcm and hand y
factor y-rnstalled Ice Master OllrS
3 sr&gt;.-oosnron ad Justable glrae-out
shelves. 2 gl rde-out cr rspers .
Sr lver L rnrng foam rns utatr on and
canvenrbl e-reversrble doors

NGELS FURNITURE

106 N. 2ND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT 0.

ENJOYING THE ORGAN music provided by.Armand
Turley at the annual picnic of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce Sunday were, standing,l-r, Jane Walton, Mary
and Walter Grueser and Mrs. Lewis Telle. Seated is
Armand.

Two ••.•

--------------------------1
I
I

I
I

Area Deaths

MRS. LENA LENZ
Mrs. Lena G. Lenz, 82, Rt.
2. Coolville, died Saturday
evening at Arcadia nursing
home, Coolville, following an
extended illness.
Mrs. Lenz was born in
Cathage Township, Athens
County, the daughter of the
late George and Desta Bailes
Colmer . She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Charles E. Lenz in
1928. Also preceding her were
one brother, Clarence Colmer
and one sister, Golda Koker .
She had been a resident of
Athens and Meigs counties all
of ·her life.
She is survived I&gt;Y one
daughter, Mrs. Ga ry (Laura)
Fields. ·Coolville; one sister,
Mrs. Addie Dorst, Uniontown , Ohio, three grandchildren , Arlene Koenig, The
Plains; Mrs. Hoben (Carol )
Croft, Tuppers Plains, and
Norman S. Wires, Albany,
and •
eight
greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services will · be
held Tuesday at I p.m. at the
White Funeral Home in Coolville with the Rev . William
Knittel officiating. Burial will
be in the Christian Cemetery

I
I

at Tuppers Plains. Friends
may call at the funeral home
any time.
'·
NO AUGUST MEET
The Magnolia Club will not
meet in August. The next
regular meeting will be . in
September at the home of
Kathryn Miller.

MEET WEDNESDAY
The Long Bottom Community Association will meet
at the community building
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. All
interested persons are inviled
to attend.

LUNCHEON SLATED
The Pomeroy - Middleport
Lions Club will meet at noon
Wednesday for a luncheon at
the Meigs Inn. All members
are asked to be present.

SKIN TESTING
All members of the Racine
Emergency Squad, the fire
department and any of the
public interested are asked to
report to the fire station at
6:30p.m. Tuesday when skin
testing will be held.

0\

C'(\

II"\

~
I

II"\

I"-

\0

Mikki Casto's
Ballroom
Dance Studio

If It Is then Farmers Bank has good

n.e ws for you.
The farmers Sank has free Checking

n

I

Wll~ing

to teach groups, clubs,' and civic groups dances of your
choice.
. 10 REASONS FOR ENROLLING
11) Fun, 12) Popularity, (3) Exercise, (4) Relaxation, (5) Meet New
Friends, (6) H.obby or Interest, (7) Brings out Grace &amp; Poise you
never thought you had, (8) Impress Others, (9) Gives one Self· Confidence on dance floor, ( 10) Sense of achievement.
ACTNOW!

Accounts for students.
It's simple . If you are a full time college or vocational student we'll
give you a free checking account, with ·no service ·tharge. We'll ev~ri
give you your first 50 Personalized Checks Free.

""'""'
""'
""'

1. Singles 0-1-S..C-0 Class (Great way to meet new people ... fun and
exciting!)
2. Couples Only (Disco and Ballroom) Class or private Instruction.
3. Junior and High School Students - (Special class for this age
group in D·loS..C-0, and only '12 price!
4. Women Only (Daytime classes in D·I·S..C-0. Fim way to exercise
... great therapy for the body!)

Is This You Heading for School This
Fall?

~

Fall classes begi011ing the first week of September.

)1

Be sure to come in to the Farmers Banlc today
and open your student checlclng account.

F8

You're lnvitP-d
"f'rida,r Night .Fever"
Sept. 1, .1978
Di1co Dance

Farnters Bank
POMEROY, OHIO

Pt. Pleas. Moose Hall
. 9:00p.m.·l:OOa.m.
Music by--WKF.F.' ~ Jack O'Shea
Sponsored by--!\1ikki Casto's Ballroom Dan&lt;:e Studio
Oonatimt -- $:1,00 per person
B.Y.O.B.&amp;Smll'k
,

............. 1
u:=~

40,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor
Member 'Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

REMEMBER CALL 675-4539 or 675-6664
FOR ENROLLMENT OR INFORMATION

1£_0~,~

_

-.

ACTIVE PLUS FASHION in this 100'1&gt; nylon
outerwear jacket from OUT 'N ABOUT•, For that active life·
style of today', the nylon jacket with zip lront, pockets and
remo~o~able lamb hood strip, Mechjne we.shable for eaty cere.
Colon Grey. Whlh!, Sand. Mint. Powder, Navy, Green , Sizes

8-18.

~~

.:tt~~~~:-;~ii~·

GO
TO NEXT
PACE
h

.,....,

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

' '""&lt;"•

forgery .

ll"\
211 6th St., Point Plea81tnt .........
(Acro88 from Court Hou8el

Mikki ·
as ballroom instruetor at Arthur Murray Dant-e Studio
in Columbus. She is qualified tu teach both smooth and Latin dances hll'ludi?g Fox
Trot. Slow. Dance, Swing, Discotheque, Waltz, Pullw. Cha-Cha. Rumba, Samba,
Merengue, and Tango.

PACE

Three charged

ELBERFELDS

-oe::r

TO NEXT

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

STEP 1- Using both hands, the voter slides the ballot
card all the way into the vote recorder.

STEP 2- Be sure the two holes at the top of the card
fit over the two red pins on the vote recorder .

•

•~

:;:-.: J

~- ·~.;r.;.,.l

........,

·-·..

-~---

·~ -" ""

- --- "'-'

~·-

. . .,...-+-'&gt;•·
.......... l .
. .... t
~··- "
~

STEP 3- To Vole: Hold the pWich straight up and
push down through the card for each candidate of your

choice. Vote all pages. Do not use a pen or pencil.

_,

STEP 4 - After voting, slide the card out of the vote
recorder and place It under the flap in the write-in
envelope. Note: If you make a mistake, ask for another
card.

•

e

.
VOL XXIX

-

•

NO. 95

LOGAN, Ohio (UP!) Teachers who are members
of the Logan Education
Aslloclatlon struck the Logan
School dlalrlct today in a
contract dispute.
· The Logan Board of Education met early today and
decided not to open school as
scheduled today which was
the flrl!t day of school for the
system's 4,300 students.
The strike centers on individual rights, a grievance
procedure with binding
arbitration and termintlon of
what
teachers
called
harrassment, ·
The district covers most of
Hocking County.

CHARDON, Ohio (UP!) Today was the flrl!t day of the
· new school year In the
Chardon Sc~ool Dilllrlct and
schools were open, but the
district's non-tea~hing
• employees remained on
: strike and most teachers
: honored the picket lines.
, Classroom duties were
, handled by supervisory
• personnel, substitutes and
' some teachers who crosaed
the picket lines, according to
. Superintendent Richard A.
Miner, who said the noo·
teachinll employees struck
• Monday.
: The 3,000-etudent system's
· 150 teachers - members of
the Chardon Clauroom
. Teachers Assoclatloq - met
at 6:30am. today and voted
; overwhelmingly to support
the 75 ltrllt:ers, members of
• tlllo Alllocilltlon of Pulillc
School Employees Local 180.
Some Teachers Monday also
honored the picket lines.
The OAPSE strike began
after lbe Olardon Board of
EG!catlon llopped paymenta
m medical !nuance for 110
nonleach... tmployeea, who
include cafeteria workers,
blaa
driven,
clerlla,
:' a!llodl-, llld IIIIChanlca.

· OA~':!:=~

aplred Jut July I llld wu
• utendld lbne tlm• by the
• bard, which then refilled to
;.

extend it again.
The Chardon School
District includes Chardon
and Claridon and Chardon,
Hambden and Munson
townships. ·
The walkout also could
affect Geauga County
students of Notre Dame
Academy, Notre Dame
Elementary School, St.
Mary's Elementary School,
Chardon, and Lake Catholic
High School, Mentor, since
the Chardon system handles
their transportation .
MARlETTA, Ohio (UPJ) Striking teachers and the
Warren Local Board of
Educatl.on settled their
differences and teachers
returned to classrooms today
after a oneday strike.
The 140 teache~s refused to
go to classes Monday, the
first scheduled day of school,
forcing substitutes and
supervisory personnel to hold
classes. School oHiclals said
not many of ihe 3,000 pupils
showed up for clasaees.
Teachers
ratified
a
contract negotiated with a
federal mediator Saturday,
but the Warren Local Board
of EdtiCalion. rejected the
pact Sunday night.

_Power outage
hits Pomeroy
A power outa«e in the
11ncoln Hill area of Pomeroy
lasting almost four hours in
some Instances occurred as a
result of Monday night's
heavy rain.
A large tree branch broke
off and wrapped into some
primary power lines on High
St. around 9:20 p.m. Ohio
Power Company workers
were on lbe scene for 18Veral
hours making -repaln.
Company workers worked
on ihrotllh a second heavy
rain llonn which followed the
firlll to complete repairs.
~

According to the report,
By JAMES HIWRETII
sectors other thari· food also
WASHINGTON (UP!)
lnfiatlon eased in July as showed improvement.
Clothing prices declined by
consumer
prices,
particularly for food and 0.6 percent, the fir!;! drop in
clothing, rose just 0.5 percent that category in five months,
in the best performance of and housing rose 0.8 percent,
1978, the
government the smallest increase since
February.
reported today .
The transportation and
Food costs were unchanged
last month after rising by an medical care sectors rose at
average of 1.6 percent each the same rate as in June·, 0.7
month during the first half of percent and 0.5 per cent,
the year. The prices of beef, respectively.
On the negative side, the
pork, fresh vegetables and
eggs - staples of the entertainment sector rose 0.6
American diet - all turned percent after declining in
June and the index for other
downward .
The encouraging report goods and services climbed
from the Labor Department 1.3 percent, by far the largest
had been anticipated by the of the year.
in a separate report, the
administration. President
department
said the average
Carter and his economic
American's
buying
power inaides have consistently
creased
by
0.2
percent
from
maintained that inflation
the
June
l~el
but
was
still
would taper off during the
second half of the year after Clown by 2.1 percent from
soaring at a double-&lt;iigit pace July 1977.
during the first six months. · The overall decline in food
July's 0.5 percent increase prices, the department said,
in the prices Americans paid was primarily due to lower
at supermarkets, department costs for meat.
Inflation bas become the
stores and other retail outlets
translates to a 6 percent public's No .I worry and
President Carter's popularity
annual rate.
has
been in steady eclipse for
It was the smallest gain
the
Past
few months because
since last December's 0.4
there
has
been no apparent
percent rise and was
considerably better than the progress in fighting it.
The administ-ration,
0.9 percent increases
recorded in eaclJ of the three according to several officials,
preceding months, the has been working on the
deoartment said.
During the first seven
months of the year, prices :::::::: :: : ::::::::::::: :: : : : : : ::: :: :::::: : :: : :: ::::~::: : : :::::::::: : :::::::
rose at a compounded annual
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
rate of 9.8 percent - high by
Thursday through
historical standards - but
Saturday, fair Thursday
still the first time it has fallen
and Friday with blgha from
below the 10 percent level
75 to 80 and lows in lbe 50s.
since the spring.
Chanee of showers or
The department said its
lhundert!lorms Saturday
Consumer Price Index for All
with blgbs from tbe mid to
Urban Conswners stood at
upper 80s and lows from ~
196.7, meaning that goods
to 85.
costing $100 In 1967 were
priced at $196.70 last month . ::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::

enttne

.

~&lt;second

'

stage" of an anti-

inflation drive and hopes to
have it completed by late
next month or early October.
Most officials agree the
initial anti-Inflation effort,
.involving
a . vo luntary
"decleration " of wage and
price increases by labor and
business, has failed.

TPR. E. J. SHEETS
PROMOTED - CoL Adam G. Reiss, Ohio State
Highway Patrol superintendent , has announced . the
rcomoiion ofTpr. Ezra J. Sheets to the rank of Sergeant. .
Sgt. Sheets leaves his present assignment as resident
trooper in Meigs County to assume the responsibilities as
an Assistant Post Conunander at Delaware. Since Joining
the Highway Patrol in 1965 he has also served at
steubenville. During his career he has been trained in
Management and Supervision . Originally from South
Solon, he graduated from Rutland High School in Meigs
County. Sgt. Sheets and his wife, Unda, bave three
children: Viki, 16; James, 15; and Bernard, 7.

West Virginia
•
•
repa1r proJects

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1978

'BID OPENING
Bid• were to be opened
today . lor colllitruction of
lbe West VIrginia and Ohio
abulmenll for the long
awaited Ravenswood
Bridge, according to the
West ViriiDIB Department
of Highways. Superstructure bid• will be
opened on Sept. 19.

\

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Stolen car
recovered

'

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A 1975 Plymouth owned by
George Hobstetter was stolen
Monday between I and 3 p.m.
from East Second Street
Pomeroy Police Chief Jed
Webster reported today. The
vehicle was recovered at
6:30 p.m. by Webster's son,
Jim, under the Pomeroy ·
Mason Bridge. It was covered
OFFICERS ELECTED AND 'CHAIRMEN NAMED-At the quarterly meeting of the
with weeds, however, the car ·
Meigs
CoWity Unit of the American Cancer Society Monday night officers were elected and
was not damaged.
chalrmen
appointed. Shown are, front , 1-r, Bernadette Anderson , president .and Joan
Chief Webster requests that
Anderson,
vice rcesident; back, Michael Bendlnelll, service chairman, Teresa COlii~s, out
people, when parking their
going rcesident, Rhonda Dailey, professional education chairman, ~nd Sh~ron Michael,
c~rs . please remove the keys.
public information. Not pictured are Mrs. Pat Arnold, public education chairman, Erma
He said three cars have been
Smith, budget chairman and treasurer, Kermit Walton and Hank Cleland, Jr., special
taken within a week .
events chairman. The meeting was held in the east-west dining room at Veterans Memonal
However, all have been
Hospital.
recovered.

.Fire department levy sought
AI the request of the fire department will im·
Middleport Fire Department, mediately place $10,000 into
Middleport Village Council the purchase fund if the levy
meeting in regular session is approved, but Indicated
Monday
night,
voted that even if the levy is apunanimously to place a one proved on Nov. 7, actual
mill levy before village . arrival of the engine and
voters at the Nov. 7 election . equipment would probably be
Wayne Davis and Bob one year away. Fisher said
Fisher representing the fire the .Jiepartment has gone as
department appeared before long as it can with its present
council. Fisher told council
the department is of the
opinion that action mUll be
taken no"( to seek lunda for a .
new fire engine and equipThree teachers were hired
ment. The one mill levy
would provide fWids for the Monday ngiht when the Meigs
purchal\! of the engine and Local School District Board
equipment and would be in of Education met In special
effect for five years if ap- session at the Meigs Junior
.
proved by voters. Fisher High.
Hired to work in the
:estimated the cost of the
vehicle at some
and elementary field was Jane
Indicated the tax levy would Borne, Pomeroy. William E.
probably have to be renewed Stivers, Pomeroy, was
·for a two year period alter the named high school welding
Initial live years. He sald the
1

equipment and still be
reiiable.
Council discuss ed the
purchase of a back hoe, but
no action was taken because
councilman Charles Mullen
said he was not prepared to
act on such a purchase on
such short notice.
·
Councilmen had been sent
information on the equip-

ment, but Mullen said he did
·not receive such advance
material for study. ·He had
drawn up the specifications
for advertising on the purchase.
· Two bids were received.
They were submitted by
Brown
Tractor Sales,
Pomeroy,
and
the
(Continued on page 8)

3 teachers employed at Meigs

.-o.ooo

-

instructor, and .Melvin Jo'elts
was hired as head teacher
arid sixth grade teacher at
Salem Center School. The
district still needs a typing
and business education
teacher and a Spanish in·
structor.
Jess Vall was named junior
high track coach and
Elizabeth Hemsley and
Margaret Johnston were

The
West
Virg inia
Department of Highways has ,
scheduled the following road
work in Mason County for the
week of August 28,&lt;;eptember
I , depending on weather
conditions , deliv ery of
materials, and several other
factors outside the Depart·
ment's control.
Paving crews will be
working on the following : Greer Road (Co. 24 ).
Flagmen will direct traffic
around work sites; - Point
Pleasant - Winfield Road
1U.S. 35 ). Traffic will be
controlled by Oagnien and
pilot truck.
Road renovation work
includes: - Grading on
·County roads 80, 45 , 80-10, 30,
35-2, 21 , 21-1. 21-2; Ditch
repair on County roads 76, 78,

•

78-8, 26, 23-1, 20-1. Ditch and
shoulder repai r will be
performed on U.S. 33 from
New Haven to the Jackson
County line. Flagmen will
direct traffic in the work
area; - Slip repair on County
I, 72-1, 72, 78; - Paving on
Roads 39, 82, 82-2, and 82-4 ;.Pothole repair will be under
way on county roads 50, 33-2,
72, 45-3, and W.V. 62.
Centerline road marking
will be installed on W. Va. 62
and W. Va. 2.
,.
In addition to these specific
projects, routine main·
tcnance will be performed in
Mason County this week. This
in cludes vegetation control
( weed-cutting ), repairing
fences and repairing guardrails.

.'

j,.)_r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_To_d_a_y_
One killed, two injured
SOLON, Ohi9 (UP! ) - Kelly Tombo, 21, Solon, was killed
and a man and a woman were injured critically today when
their Jeep overturned along Ohio 91, police said.
The identities of those injured was not released, pending
notification of relatives.

Statue plans dropped
KENT, Ohio (UP!) - Plans for a statue to commemorate
the 1970 shootings of students on the Kent Slate University
campus bave been dropped by university administrators after
the school rejected as "inappropr,iate " the theme of a
sculpture proposed by noted artist George Segal.

Free course eliminated
SANTA CRUZ, Calif. (UPI ) - Because of Proposition 13, ·
residents no longer will be able to lake - free of charge - a
Parks and Recreation Department course on basket-weaving.
The department said Monday resid,ents will have to pay
$12 for the course this year and at least six persons must enroll
for it.

Abortion jury selected
BOWLING GREEN, Ky . (UP! ) - A jury has been chosen
to hear the case against the first .woman in American history to
be tried on charges of performing an abortion on herself.
Marla Elaine Pitchford, 22, is being prosecuted under a
state law allowing only licensed doctors to perform abortions
and if convicted, she could· be sentenced to 10 to 20 years in
rcison .

employed as teacher aides in
conjunction with_operation of
the Apple Crate. Supt .
Charles Dowler was also
authorized to employ three
CINCINNATI (UP!) - A judge has upheld an honor
other aides to be involved in student's expulsion from high school In the wake of a pie
the Work Study Program.
thrown In the face of a~ English teacher.
·
·The resignation of Jean
Mark Ger~ci, who would have been a senior at St. Xavier
Shaver as yearbook advisor High School this year, went .to court seeking reinstatement
·was accepted. Miss Shaver after he was expelled last school year, but Visiting Hainilton
resigned as a teacher earlier. CoWity Ccmmon Pleas Court Judge Robert Marrs on Monday
upheld the expulsion.

Court upholds expulsion

'I

•\

'

G.
William
Miller,
chairman of the Federal
Reserve Board, has asked the
administration to impose an
''anti-inflation tax" on excess
profits as one possibility.
Another suggestion that has
· been debated is the issuing of
"standards" for wage and
price increases to give labor
and business some guidance .

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORf, OHIO

Strike hits
Logan schools

..........

•

at y
.

Inflation eases,.. food,
clothing prices go up

'

'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Tuesday, Aug. 29, 1978

Atlanta, San Francisco not bragging about distinction
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UP! Health Editor
Atlanta and San Francisco
share a distinction neither
city's cham ber of commerce
brags a bout.
Atl an ta, a ccording to
figures on file at the U.S.
Center for Disease Control, is
the gonor rhea capi tal of
America. San Francisco is
th e syphil is capitaL The
ranklngs a re based on the
latest rates of r eported VD
cases durin g the year 1977.
But the two cities may be'.
getting competition for the
title in 1978. F igures for the
fi rst six months of this year
show the following cities and
states ar e showing significant
Increases in Incidence of the
two big venereal diseases :
Cities: Chicago, New York,
Los Angeles . States: Texas,
Mississippi , Georgia , South
Dakota, New Ha mpshire,
New Jer sey , Oklahoma .
The figures are not perfect ,
the center ·points out, because
not all cases of VD are
r eported and because some
TII F. lU I LV SENT INEL
I)E \'IITEU TO TH E
INTE REST OF
~ 1 E I \.S ·MAS0N 1\ Rf, A
ROHERT HOE FI .If ll
City Editor
P tJIJit~lwU d;u ly t•xct·pt Sll lurtbt)
b~ '!'In• Ohiu Va llt·;; P u blishln~

1'umfl&lt;111Y·Mtihl trwtha, Inc:..

II I

Cuur-t Sl. . P onh:r'uy. Ultlo.J 1~769
BU&gt;lllt'SS Offwe PIIUUl' !1!1&lt;!· 21S6
Ldti•WI&lt;Il Ph tt tll' !1':12-~1 5 ~

St·rt•nd d;t-.~ puS~/.!l' p;ml al
Puuwr u\ , O htu
'l .tttuli:tl a rJ \'I~ I" I L'&gt;m~ rt•pt~sen·
\;t\ln•. 1-":lrtUuil A s.wnr~ h•s, 3101
E ud11l Ave .. CJ..: wlaud . Uh tu H i lS.

Subs.._riptiun ·r&lt;lll'S Dt·ltrt•rt11 by
ra tTit'r wlll'rt' a~· &lt;ulai.Jic i:l n~ nbl per
weeK . lly MulHr Huute whf l"l' l"l:lrrier
.....~1"\' ll' t~ nut avuilallk. 0 11t' llkllllh ,
t !:!!) Ill' 111a1l 111 Ohiu ami W. V11 .•
Oli' Yi..ar. 122.00 ; Sl1i: months,
$ll.j(J ; Tluee muntt1s, $7.00 ;

yt•ar : Stx months
$1J.:i0 : Thrt• t• muntlt .... Si. 50.
Sub!icripllun pnn · indudl'S Sunday
Elsl·wh ~· rt· S~6 .no

Tunt':-~"'4'11\l!ld

cities are better at reporting .
" Much under-reporting is
s uspected ," said a top center
official.
Actually , some authorities
say the " VD capital of
America " may be more an
age group than a place. They
put the spotlight on sexually
active teenagers, especially
In the l~to-19 age group,
calling VD In that group
pandemic - more severe and
intense Ulan an epidemic.

"Venereal disease among
the 21 million adolescents both sexes - aged I!Ho-19 is
estimated to total more than
2.5 million. cases annually, "
Samuel Knox recently told
the United States Se nate
Committee
on
Human
Re!!Ources .
Venereal disease is a term
applied to many different
diseases, each caused by
different
germs,
each
producing different
symptoms and each treated
quite differently . All are
given by one person to
another through direct sexual
contact : copulation or
homosexual coupling.
The National VD Hotline
( 800-523-1885), called
Operation Venus, is a free
call to help for anyone
worried about VD.
SyphiliS and gonorrhea are
the big two among the
sexually
transmitted
Infections.
Untreated syphilis has a
timebomb effect, destroying
brains or hearts or livers of
victims years after the Initial
sickness ceases annoying .
The . incidence of syph.ilis
these days is hlgt¥st In the
homosexual collll'riunities in the San Francisco 1Bay
area and New York City.
Gonorrhea silently Infects

and blocks the female tubes
huma n eggs must pius
through to ge\ ·in position to
be fertilized.
Blocked tubes means no
babies - sterility. For life .
Test tube babies are the only
kind a woman with blocked
tubes can have, if the
t ec hn o lo gy be c ome s
availa ble.
".An epidemic of sterility is
coming up," said Dr. Paul J .
of
Weisner, . Direct or
Venereal Disease ·c ontrol ,
Public Health Service , at the
Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta , -estimating that
every year fron\ 60,000 to
100,000 young American
iemales are made sterile via
gonorrhea.
The victims don't know it's
happening until pain strikes.
By then, it's too late to avoid
blocked tubes.
Th e tragic scene was
sketched as part of the
answer when Weisner was
asked to name the VD capital
of Ame rica , based on cases
reported to the center .
The center's statistics list
Atlanta, with. 3,347 cases of
gonorrhea per 100,000, the top.
for that sexually transmitted
disease - STD as VD · is
coming to be called. Other
cities with high rates include
Baltirrlare,
2 , 855 ;
Washington, D. C., 2,378 ; San
Francisco , 2,352 : Memphis,
2,099. The national rate for aU
cities over 200,000 population
is 926 per 100,000.
As for syphilis, the center
lists San Francisco with 124
cases per 100,000 population .
Atlanta is second, with a rate
of 80; Washington, D. C., 79;
Richmond, Va .,61 ; Boston 43.
The national rate for syphilis
in large cities is 22 per
1110,000.

Samuel Knox is Na tional
Program Dire ctpr of the
American Social Health Associati on
t he only
·voluntary health assoc iation
focused on the prevention ;
research
and
control,
eventual elimination of
·venereal
disease
epidemic
0
.
across· the nation.
Knox told th e Senate
proposed additional federal
help for pregnant teenagers
and efforts at preventing
such pregnancies cannot be
separated from the venereal

disease " pandemic" among
teenagers.
" ... To
the
extent
unintended pregnan c y is
epidemic among female
adolescents,
venereal
disease is pandemic among
this group ;" Knox testified.
" As
alarming
and
compelling as the adolescent
pregnancy statistics are, the
female adolescent venereal
diseases statistics are far
worse - both In terms of
sheer magnitude; and also in
terms of severity of resulting

consequences."
A theme of personal
responsibility runs through
all of the VD education and
prevention programs
promoted by the Association .
" The idea of personal
responsibility is very big In
our
VD
education
programs, " Dr. William R.
Cunnick Jr., PreSident of
ASHA, said .
" Year s
ago ,
health
education about VD was
based on fear . The old Army
movie and lecture that scared
soldiers . Many cartoons of
the time showed Gls putting
on gloves before. touching
door knobs after such
lectures.
"Today, that is not the way

to motivate people. Today we
motivate by appealing to tbe ·
iqea of exercising personal
respon s ibility
and
respoosibility toward your
sexual partner.
"The male is the only one to
know he has gonori'hea ... He
should exercise personal responsibility by getting diag:
nosed and treated. He should
show responsibility toward
his sexual partners by telling
tl)em to get checked out, too.
"This calls for a maturll
and responsible reaction much better "' than one
motivated by fear ."
In its programs the
Association Is trying for
education . programs that
work with teenagers.
"One kind of education we
have found that works is the
teen-age-run hotlimi" said
Cumick. "In Ohio where VD
education is mandated, there
are good hotlines. The one in
Columbus, I think, is typical.
" It is run by the teen-agers
recruited from the high
schools. After several weeks
of training, these volunteers,
· all peer leaders, answer
questions on the phone .
"They are asked . about
symptoms, where to get help
- diagnosed and treated.
" I have been impressed by
the maturity ·of these young
people. It's a two-way thing.
Through the hotline involvement they work out a lot of
anxieties and concerns about

sex' '
The National VD Hotline is
run something like that.
Calling it the other day, a UPI
reporter was surprised to get
a live voice Instead of a
recorded message. Kathy, as
the cheerful girl identified
herself, (no last names
permitted over the phone ).

Among the ·facts included:
lesions, often rec urrently
. ~Eight out of 10 women through life.
-Cervical cancer occurs In
who contract gonorrhea have
no visible symptoms. Most women with genital herpes
will not know they have it eight times more frequently
unless their treated partners than in non-herpetically
care enough to tell them, or if infected women.
-One thousand babies
they ar~ lucky enough to be
routinely screened by a annually die at birth because
conscientious doctor, family of sexually transmitted
planning cliinic, community herpes.
"Many elements In society
health association .
the
- 17 percent of gonorrhea conspire to give
result in
pelvic erroneous and dangerous
will
inflammatory disease, for a impression that sexual
total of over 200;000 cases a Intercourse early, often and
with many people is a mark
year .
- 25 percent of those cases of sophistication to be
will result In tube damage, desired, " It says In the
pamphlet for · teen-agers.
Involuntary sterilization upwards of 50,000 cases a
" Sex magazines, manuals, c-advcrtislng
and locker room
year, at least.
-Genital herpes, another bravado all tend to suggest
kind of venereal disease that if you are not doi~ It,
sexually transmitted, is .now you must be frigid, square
estimated to strike upwards or using Brand X.
·
of 500,000 a year . There is no
"They don 't tell you that
revolution."
·
. available cure and the one' thing these sexually
In a free pamphlet- "Body. !llsease continues to Increase. active people are getting out
Pollution" - the American Genital herpes causes of life is a lot of VD and that
Social Health Association, 260 excruciatingly painful ugly VD can be dangerous."
Sheridan Ave., Palo Alto,
Calif., 94306, gives teen-agers 1 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • - .
"an environmental impact
report" on harmful byproducts of the sexual
revolution .
said the hotline got about
52,000 calls last year.
In response to questions,
she said the line Is supported
by funds from the U.S. Center
for Disease Control, the
Pen·n sylvania
Health
Department and the Catholic
Archdiocese of Philadelphia.
"We get calls from· all over
the country and we have this
directory that we use to tell
callers where to go _in their
area for. diagnosis and treatment or infonnation," she
said.
The people running the
hotllne are " 15 to 16 to maybe
30, " according to Kathy.
CUmick said in addition to
information on treatment,
" We're saying to the young
people - don't feel freakish
or abnormal if you're not
sexually active . They need to
be told not to worry if they
haven 't joined the sexual

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE
FOR THE BEST DEALS

Mineral Riches
Niriety-five percent of the
world's gem emeralds are
produced by Colombia. The
Muzo emerald mines, 75
miles from the capital of
Bogota, have been in operation for four centuries. The
mineral-rich South American
nation also produces such
precious metals as gold,
silver, copper and plalinwn
as well as lead, mercury,
manganese, iron, nickel and

IN THE

TRI~STATE

AREA

MASON ,FURNITURE

Den Br.~ll£y

Atle!ltion, aU area sportsmen i Toolght at the Meigs
Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan there Is a
&amp;pe~lal. meeting that should be of Interest to all sportsmen .
Scheduled at 7:30, the meeting Is mandatory under the Natural
Resources Conservation Act .
Let me ex.Pialn further . Under this Act, every county In the
U. S. ~ust have an open public meeting. At this meeting,
priorities are to be set for the spending of federal monies over ·
the next five years. We're talking now about the spending to
promote, cooserve, preserve, etc. our natural resources.
Lots of things fall under " Natural Resources," but what is
often overlooked Is our wildlife . NOW WE'RE TALKING
ABOUT. PROGRAMS l"'R MEIGS COUNTY OVER THE
NEXT F!VE YEARS ! ! At this meeting, we need Input on how
the morues available under this act can be put to use for the
.
wildlife of Meigs County.
Farmers will benefit under this act, as will others. But the
danger is that the wildlife will be put at the bottom of the list
and not get priority attention . So it's imperative that sportsmen attend and have their say.
Doo 't get m~ wrong -,we're oot there to compete, just to
make sure the wtldhfe 1sn 't forgotten or shoved aside for some
of the other beneficial programs. After all, is there a resource
more valuable than ·our wildlife•
~me of the things mentioned Informally that will benefit
lhe wildlife and add to recreation In the area are : A river
access area at the old Apple Grove Locks and Dam. A little
money and work could make a whale of a boat launch and
recreation area .
Another : Clean up Shade River and make some scenic
pknic, hunting, and fishing spots. Once upon a time, Shade
River was one of the best fishing streams In the state.. How
about this? A large lake , say maybe 1,500 acres or more, for
fishUlg , a wildlife refuge, wUqerness area, etc. As of now, we
have no large lake between Portsmouth and Cambridge. A
large lake such as this would possibly be the answers to some
of our drainage problems In certain areas of the county, so we
could kill two birds with one stone (or else.save a lot of birds If
it turned out to be a wildlife refuge . )
Farmers and other conservationists will be interested and
again, I want to stress that the sportsmen are not going ~ try
and get aU the marbles, just their share. I'm sure that by""';'pera.tion, Meigs C&lt;lunty c.ould qualify for lots of programs
antl ro eels and the would benefit everyone - farmers, city
THISWEEK'SSPECIAL . folk, and w'ildlife . See you
'
at 7:30.

OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat . 8:30til 5:00
Thursday Til12 Noon
.
Friday Until5 P.M.
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773-5592
Mason, W. Va .

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·-

I

i

I

Seatne

49 81 .377 2l'h
Monday' s Resuns
Boston 10, Se att le 9
Balt imore 7, Oakl and 3
M ilwaukee 10, Detro-i t 1
N ew York 4, Cal ifor nia 1
K an sas Cit y 3, Chi cago 2
Tex as 11, Toro nto J
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
I All Times EDT)
Seattle (McLaughlin 2·41 at
Bost on ( Drago 2·4L 7: 30 p.m .
(Norr is 0-11 at
Oakland
Ba lti more (0 . Martinez 10-10 ),
7: 30p .m ,
Milwaukee (Replogle 6-2) at
Cleveland (W ise 9-16 ), 7:30p .m .
California (Kn app 13-7) at
New York ( Beatti e 2-7), 6 p.m .
Minnesot e (Gol t z 10-BJ at
Detr oit (Wilcox ll -8 J. 8 p.m .
Chicago &lt; Proly .:t -21 at Kan sa s
Ci ty (Gale J3.6 J. 8: 30p .m .
Toronto (Moore 5-5) at Te x as
(Matla ck 12-10), 8: 35p.m .
Wednesdav ' s Games
Tor a t Boston, 2, tw i .night
New York at Balt i more, night
M i I w a u k e eat Clev eland ,
night
Chicago at 1&lt;ansas City , night

straight loss and 13th in their
last 18 games. The win was
Pittsburgh's 14th in their last
16 games.
The two teams meet again
tonight with Pitts burgh
sending Bert Blyleven, 11-8,
against Cinc innat i's Mike
LaCoss , 3-4.
The game was almost three
hours late starting bec ause of
the rain.
Th en wh en it did get
started, the Pirates erupted
for two runs In the fourth
inning for the win.
wa s
Bill
Robinson
responsible for two of Pittsburgh 's three r uns. Dave
Parker tripled home Omar
Moren o and then sco red
himself on BilL Robinson's
sa'crifice fly. Robinson drove
home the third run in t_he
seven inning on a basesloaded bloop single .
That gave John Candelaria the win, his loth
against II losses.
Fred Norman took the loss,
his eighth against 10 victories.

Today

Sport Parade

..

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1

Dodgers up
NL West 'lead

By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
A team captain is expected
w lead by example and Dave
Lopes fulfill s 'that role
perfectly for the LOs Angeles
Ddilgers.
Ma'jor League Leaders
A perfect example of
By Un~ted Press International
Lopes' leadership occurred
Batting
I Based on JSO at bats)
Monday night when Manager
Nat ional Lea gue
,
G .AB . H. PC:t . Tom Lasorda asked him to
eurroghs All
124 .:105 127 .3 14 shift from his normal second
Parker Pit
116 458 143 .3 12 base position to back center
Clark SF
131--477 148 .310
Smith LA
111 39512 2 .309 field because of injuries to
Madlock SF
95 349 107 .30 7 outfielders Reggie Smith, Bill
Bowa Phil
124 518 158 .305
Wh iffi eld SF
120 392 119 .304 North and Rick Monday .
Rose Cin
130 5.:1 3 16.:1 .302
Lopes, who had not played
124 46 3 139 .300
Cruz Hou
the
position since 1976, made
Concpcn Cin
125 .:1 67 139 298
the shift and not only perAmerican League
.
GAB. H. Pet . formed flawlessly on defense
Carew M in
124--468 158 .338
American League
129 538 174 .32 3 but hit a two;un homer off
R ice Bos
Eut
102 --40 3 128 .31 8 Steve Rogers in the seventh
W. L . Pel. Ga Oliver Tex
Boston
Piniella NY
98 352 110 .313
82 47 .636
1
Roberts Sea
105 361 112 .310 to get the Dodgers started on
New York
74 54 .578 7 ! 7
You nt M i l
98 379 11.:1 .301 their way w a W victory over
M i lwavke
74 56 .569 8'12
Munson NY
121 .:19 0 147 .300 the Montreal Expos.
Detroit
12 58 .55 -4 101(7
Rey nolds se
118 430 129 .300
Baltimre
71 58 .550 11
Playing center field wasn't
· Cievelnd ·
112 397 119 .300
56 73 .-4).:1 26 • Whitker Oe t
109 395 118 .299 as strange to him as hitting a
Toronto
53 79 .402 30'12 Yaz 8os
Home Runs
West
N~tlonal League : Foster. Ci n homer off Rogers .
·w. L . Pet. GB
30; Luzinsk i. Phil 28 ; Smith , L A
Ksn City
"He 's one of the toughest
70 . 59 .543
Calif
70 62 .530 1'11 '17 ; Dawson , Mil an Ct ·Parker , pitchers in the league as far
Pitt 23.
Texas
. 65 " .50&lt; 5
American League : Rice. Bo s as I'm concerned," said
Oakland
62 71 ,466 10
3~ ; Hisl e and Thomas, Mil 29 ; Lopes. " But when I hit it I felt
Minesot a
57 74 .435 14
Bay lor , Ca l and Thornton , Cle v
Chi cago
55 74 . .:126 14
it had enough juice to get
26 .
. Fergy (Joe Ferguson ) ln. One
. Runs Ba!!ed In
National Lugue : Foster , (In , run looked awful big in that
96 ; Garvey , L A 89 ; Clark , SF
88 ; Parker . Pill 87 : Sm ith , LA situtation ."
85Amerlcan League : R ice. Bos
Lopes' homer and anoth~r
110 : Slaub, Det 102 : Hi sle, MH two-run shot by Lee Lacy 1n
95 : ThOrnton , Clev 85 ; Thomp . the eighth was all Burt
son. Oet 82.
Slolen Bases
Hooton needed !!) stop the
National League : . Moreno ,
P itt 56 ; L opes, LA 37 ; Taveras,
Pitt and Ric hards , SO 33 ;
Smith , SD 32.
American League : L eFl or e,
Del 59 ; Crv2 . Sea 45 ; Di lon e,
Oak .:1 4; W ills , Tex .:12; Wilson ,
K C 35.
Pitching
Victories
'National League : Blue, SF 16 ·
7; Gr imsl ey, Mil 16-9: Niekro,
All 16-14 ; Perry , SD IS-6;
Hooton , L A 15 -8; Joh n, LA 15 9.
American League : . Guidry ,
NY 18·2: Flanagan , Bait 11 -11 ;
Caldwe lL M il 16-8; Tanana , Cal
16-9; Palm er , Bait 16. 12.
Earned Run Average
( Bued on 126 innings pitched)
National League: Vu cko¥i ch,
SI .L 2.22 ; Swa n, NY 2.40 ;
Rog ers , Mil 2.47 : Blue, SF 2.58 ;
Halicki , SF 2.77 ,
American League : . Guidr y ,
NY 1.77 ; Matlack , Te x 2. 16 ;
Cal d well, M il 2.43; Pa lm er ,
Ball 2.59 ; Golt z, Minn 2.81.
Strikeouts
National League : R ichard ,
Hou 244 ; Niekro . All 205 ;
Seaver , Cin 169; Mon tef usco ,
SF 146; Blu e, SF 145.
American League : · RyM , Cal
205 ; Guidry, NY 199 ; Leona r d .
KC 1--45 ; Flanagan , Bai t 139 ;
Kravec , Chi 124.

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
9 P.M. to 2 A.M.

SUGAR N' SPICE

li/

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Gr&lt;luD. SUGAR N' SP
talotnled, well polllhedl,, ·~;~~~~l~:·~
Two years of Dl

ob!iCUI'itvand they have finally arrlvtd . Their abll lo-en•lert·aln
age group on such Instruments as organ, plano, string en!l!!nlbl••·
synthesizer. trumpet, saKophone. clarinet, flute, drums, bass, guitar,
and would you believe electric violin. Combine these with excellent
vocal arrangements, dynamic costumes, choreography , end a flair for
comedy and you have one of the most enjoyable musical e•perlenced
available today .

THE UPPER DECK
At The

Featuring Seafood &amp; Steak

I

•

Major League Standings
By United Press International
National League
Ea5t
W. L. Pel. GB
Phi Ia
69 59 .539
Chicago
66 63 .512 31!2
P ittsbrgh
65 . 64 .50.:1 4111
Montreal
61 70 .466 9 111
St . Louis
57 73 ..438 13
New York
52 78 .400 18
west
W. L . Pet. GB
77 54 .588 Los Ang
I
San Fran
76 55 .580
I '
Cinc inat i
71 60 .542 6
San D iego ·
69 6J .523 8'17
Houston
61 69 ..:169 15 '17
Atlllntll
57 7J . .:138 19117
MondaV'5 Results
Atlanta .:1 . Chicago 3
Pitfsburgh 3, Cinc innati 1
Philadelphia 6, san D iego 1
Los Angeles 4, !.{lon tr eal 0
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All Times EDT )
Ch i cago ( Reusc hel 13-11 l at
Atlanta ( Solomon 3-4), 7. 35
p.m .
Pittsbur gh ( Blyle¥en 11 -8) at
Cin ci nnati (LaCoss 3. .:1 ), 8: 05
p .m .
St . Louis (Vucko¥ ic h 12 -9). at
Houston IForsch 7-4L 8:3S p .m .
Philadelph ia (Ruth ven 11·9)
at San Diego &lt;Owch ink o 8-10),
10 p ,m ,
Montreal ( Schatzeder 6-4) a t
Los An geles (John 15-91, 10 :30
p .m .
New Yor k, (Hausman 2-2) at
San Francisco (Knepper 13-9),
10 : 35 p .m .
Wednesday's Games
New York at San. Fran ci sco
Ch icago at Atlanta, night
Pittsburgh at Cine;; night
St , Louis at Hou-s ton , night
Montreal at Los An Q, night
Ph i Ia at San D iego , night

Point Pleasant lmi

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DRUMSTICK$..................•.....••••~.~~ •••79~
PARKA Y MARGARINE ..,._..............
LB.. 5-9~
Bro ught011 s

lbe Reds find themselves
six games out of first place in
the National League West
today with just 31 games left
on the schedule.
What hurt a little Monday
night was the rain-delayed 3-1
loss to Pittsburgh , which
buried the Reds a little
deeper , seeing that division
leading Los Angeles blanked
Montreal H to open a sixgame bulge on the Reds. San
Fran cisco, idle Monday
night, is just one game back
of the Dodgers . ,
It was also the· Reds fifth

$1.19

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ARMOUR POTTED MEAT••••••••••••••••••. 4 ~~·•1.00
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You'll Llko Our QIHolity
Woy ol Doing 8uslntss
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342
Pomeroy
Optn Evenings 'tll6:00 ·
TIISp.m. Sot.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Bestorla, Silent Katy and
Perette Hanover each won a
division of the Ohio Sires
Stakes for 2-year-&lt;&gt;ld pacing
fillies at Scioto Downs
Monday night .
Bruce
Riegle
drove
Bestoria to. a I 1· 2 length win
over Dolly Burr in the first
division while New Riegel
Babe came In third . Bestoria
paced the mile In 2:02 U.
· Silent Katy , driven by Dick
Brandt, defeated Baron Mini
by a nose In the second
division while Alls Fair was
third. Silent Katy paced the
mile In 2:05 4-5.
Perette Hanover defeated
Time to skip by 3 1-4 lengths
with Terrys, Woe coming In
third In the third divi.!lon .
Carl Allen droveJhe winner
in 2:06 1-5.
The crowd of 3,598 wagered
$309,711.

CINCINNATI ( UPI) many flags fly over Cincinnati 's Riverfront Stadium,
but .one of them won't be a
white flag which signifies
surrender.
Second baseman Joe
Morgan lsn 't ready to raise
the white flag .
" Who's to say something
won' t happen that'll ig!lite a
spark that will set us afire? "
he asked.
"If I thought I could start a
fire I would," said Pete Rose,
" But I wouldn't know where
to start ,"

::::::::;:::::::::::::;:;:: .·.·,·,:.·:·:;;;:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:::-··:·:::·:·.:·:·:.-·.·:···:.··.··.··.·:·.····:·:.
·····:·:·:·... ·.;.;.·,•·: .• .. ·,' ... · . . .·.• . ::-:-:-:·:-:-:·:·-&lt;·.··
.
...... ····:·:,·,
INQUIRY UNDERWAY
·::;
CHARLESTON, W. Va .
(UPII - The University of
Cincinnati
has
a ckowledged that the
NCAA has launched an
:11
Inquiry Into possible rules
.·.·
violations by the school, it
was reported today ..
By MILTON RICHMAN
.T.he Charleston (W. Va. 1
UP! Sports Editor
Gazette said most of the
violations apparently InNEW YORK (UP! ) - The Phillies' front office isn 't saying
volve
lhe basketball
anything one way or another, which is pretty much the way aU
program between 1972 and
front offices operate, but the word around the league is that
1977 when Gale Catlett was
winning their division again won 't be enough, if the Phils don 't
head
coach .
Catlett
get
into the World Series , t he re goes Danny Ozark 's job. Ozark
resigned In April to beeome
has
heard some of those rumors for a long time now and is
head basketball eoaeh at
doing
his best not to pa y too much attention to them. "They're
West Virginia University.
something
you can 't control , so why let them bother you ?" ...
Cincinnati
president
Coach Bum .Phillips had a quick answer for
Houston
Oilers'
Henry Winkler said 40
who
kept
asking him whether he planned to play Earl
all
those
specific
points
wer e
Campbell,
the
nat
ion 's No. I draft choice, at halfllack or
outlined in a letter sent to
"
It
doesn
't
make much difference wher e he 's running
fullba
ck.
the school June 13, the
from, it's where he's running to that counts," Phillips said .
paper .said . The Inquiry
Used mostly at halfbacll_ so far by the Oiler s, Campbell has
follows
th e
NCAA's
looked all right In pre..sea son games ....
preliminary Investigation,
If you're having trouble getting a pay raise out of your boss,
made almost 21 mouths
listen
to Hall of Farner Warren Spahn, who never was offered a
ago.
salary
boost in his entire career even though he won 20 or more
Catlett answer e d
13 different seasons and finished with 363 victories .
games
questions
before . a
'.'Every
one I got! had to fightfor ," he says, "and hard." .. .
University of Cincinnati
In
only
a few months, Fred Shero, the New York Rangers'
investigating board In
new
general
manager and coach, has discovered ther e's a
Cinclooati earlier this
of
differen
ce between being mere ly the coach , as he was
world
month. The university Is
with
the
Philadelphia
Flyers, and trying to handle both jobs as
required to make a written
he
's
doing
now
.
As
a
coa ch, all you have to do is handle the
report of Its findings and
manager · if the paperwork isn 't
players
,
but
as
a
general
appear before the NCAA's
can
easily
overlook claiming a player
handled
just
right,
you
committee on lnlractions
there
goes
the
whole
season
shot
before it even star ts ... .
and
Nov. 3, the paper said.
If
Bert
Jones
isn
't
able
to
play
against
the Dallas Cowboys in
:·:-:-:-:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·
the NFL opener Monday night , and right now the chances are
he won't due to a shoulder separation, the Baltimor e Co lts will
have to go to the bottom of the barrel for a quarterback . It ha s
boiled down to Mike Kirkland, who has been with the Colts two
years but has never played a single down for them ....
One of the things Billy Martin has been instructed to do to put
some weight on and fill out a little more is eat regularly . By
nature, Martin is not a big man with the knife and fork . He'd
see the way some of his players gor ged themselves ,
Expos. Hooton tossed a four- particularly after losing a tough bailgame, and he could never
hitter and did not allow a understand why their appetite wasn 't affected the same as his .
runner past first base in
"Sometimes I'd watch them crowd around that table and I felt
raising his record to 15-8.
like tipping it right over, " he say~. " I 'd feel like saying to
" Everything seems to be them , 'You played like pigs, now eat like pigs ."' ... .
failing In place for me," said
George Allen has the distinction of being fired quicker tha n
. Hooton . " It's coming at the any other coach In NFL history, but he wasn't the only
right time because we're in a
professional coach to be sacked as an outgrowl/1 of conducting
pennant race."
his practice sessions too long to suit his players . In 1948, after
Elsewhere in the NL, Ray Flaherty had guided the New York Yankees to two
Atlanta nipped Chicago, 4-3, straight divisional titles In the All-America C&lt;lnference, the
Philadelphia beat San Diego, Yanks reported for practice the fo llowing summer and began
&amp;-!, aild Pittsburgh downed
grumbling about the sessions running too long. Ultimately,
Cincinnati , 3-1.
they brought their complaints to team owner Dan Topping and
Braves 4, Cubs 3:
Topping fired Flaherty and replaced him with Red Strader ....
Jeff Burroughs drove in · For some of the real lowdown on what went on behind the
three runs with a pair of scenes with the Yankees last year, get yourself a copy of Ed
homers In helping the Braves Linn's intriguing paperback, "Inside the Yankees" . Painsnap · a seven-game losing stakingly researched and wellwritten , the book provides you
streak . Phil Niekl-o went with a rare InSight into what wen\ on inside and outside the
eight innings to get his 16th world champions' clubhouse during the Summer of '77 ... .
victory against 14 losses.
It happened during the Giant 's last trip Into Shea Stadium
for a series with the Mets last week . Jack Clark, the Giants'
Phillies 6, Padres 1:
Jim Kaat pitched a five· hot-hitting right fielder, singled and stole second, after which
hitter for 8 1-3 innings and third-base coach Dave Bristol ealled time and warned Clark
Jerry Martin drove In three against getting caught off second by Mets' shortstop Tim Foli,
runs to help the Phillies who often slips In between unsuspecting runners like that.
increase their lead In the NL Clark nodded . He knew all about Foli. Two minutes later, he
East to 31&gt; games over was picked off . ...
second-place Chicago.
Pirates 3, Reds 1:
Dave Parker tripled home
Omar Moreno then scored on
Bill Robinson 's sacrifice fly
By Un lted Press International and running backs Manf r ed
In the fourth innning as the
Monday
Moor e and Ron H arr is.
Football
New
Eng l an d
Pla ced
Pirates, who have won 14 of
Atla nt a - Cu t bac kup quar . l inebac k er Bill Matthews on the
their last 16 games, handed
terbac k K im Mc Quil ken , run . injur ed reser ve list , r elea sed
nin g backs Woody Thompson punter Nei l Clabo , and an the Reds their fifth straight
and Monroe Ely , r ookie defen . nounc.ed the team w i l l r e-sig n
loss.
Si¥e end Don Parrish . oft ensive punter M ik,e Pa tr ick .
.:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:~:::::::: :;:::;:::;:::::::::

Pirates hand Reds
fifth loss in row

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

OOKE ............................................................~ ~. -~~~~ ..'1.19
SPRITE, TAB .. ~~~-~~!.. ~~-~-~~-~.~......................... ~..~~.~-·- '1.19

HAM- SLICED...............................
~·...! 17'
·--- ---- -- --

AND SPAGHETT1.~~~!~~.~~~1•5

sr

~-~~:.:.~~·.. 4r
DR. PEPPER·································~·················~.~~~·.... 99'

MACARONI

HAMS ...........~~.. .

CENTER CUT

r

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P&lt;mJeroy, 0., TuHday, Aug . 2t, 1971

.

Sports transactions

Morgan wants to
stay with Reds

CINCINNATI (UPI J - Joe
Morga n couldn't have been
more emphatic .
" I've read where I wanted
to leave the Reds - go to
another club," he said . "San
Diego has been mentioned.
" I don 't want to go any
place . When I came here
from Houston, I was happy . I
want to leave the same way,"
he continu ed. " And if the
Reds try to trade me this
winter, I 'll refuse to give
them my permission."
And
under
exi sting
baseball rules Morgan has
the power of veto.
Morgan's statement came
durin g a downpour that
Major League Results
· delayed the start of Monday
By Uni.ted Press International
night 's opener of a three ·
National League
Chi
001 002 000- 3 9 0 game series with the PittsAlia
010 012 OOx - .4 7 0
Lamp, Moore ( 6). Hernandez burgh Pirates two hours and
(6), M c Glothen (81 and Black · 51 minutes.
well ; N iekro , Garber' (9) an d
" I want to get back where I
NoiM . W- Niekro {1{1 . 1.4 ). L Moore
(8.6l.
HR s- AII llnta , belong and I can't until! play
Burroughs 2, (20 ) .
healthy ," said Morg an,, who
PISbOh
000 200 100- J 8 1 possessing a .244 batting
Cln ci
000 010 000- 1 2 1
Candelaria , Whitson (7) and average after going hitless as
Sangulllen : Norman , Hume (7), the Pittsburgh Pirates ran
Bair (9) and Ben ch , Correl l (S ). the Reds' losing streak to five
W - Candelar ia (10.11) . L Norman (10.8) . HRs - Cin cln · games with a 3-1 victory.

·'Lea ving the Reds would
be taking the easy way out,"
sa id Morgan . " And I didn 't
get where I a m by r unning
away from problems. One
injury a pull ed stoma ch
muscle has m essed up a
whole season.
"B ut I'll be hea lth y next
year and you won' t see me
ta king any hike," he vowed .
Morgan, one of only two
players ever to win the
Nationa l Leag ue's Most
Va luable Player award two
stra ight years , is winding up
the second of a three-year
contract that, caUs for an
estimat ed $1. 2 million in
salary and bonuses .
" But a long term contract
doesn 't have any affect on
Joe Mor gan, " he sa id,
defiantly . " I love ltje game,
love to win, love to hit and
love to steal bases ."
Morgan 's aware that there
are those who wondered how
he could play tabl e t ennis
nightly
with
Brooks
Lawrence, a member of the
club's front office, and not be
able to play second base.

tackle Bob Jordan and w ide
r eceiver Karl Fa r mer . AI50
pla ced off ensive tackle Br en t
Adam s on the in jured rese r ve
list .
Ba lt imor e - Acqu ired seven
year ve teran cornerback
Dwi ght Harr ison from Buffalo
for an und isclosed pic k in the
1979 college dr aft .
,
Chicago Placed r unning
baCk Johnn y M usso an d "!i nC ·
bac k er Way mond Br yan t on the
inj ur ect r eser ve li st
T ra ded def ensive
Da llas tackle Bil l Gregor y ana an
und isc losed dr aft pic k to Sea tt le
in exch ange tor at least two ol
Seattle 's dr aft cho ices and
pl aced four players on waive r s
r unn ing ba ck Larr y Br in son ,
Jef ens ive tack le Gr eg Schaum
Dave Kraa yeve td and a no t he~
player the Cowboys dec l ined to
na me .
Ka n sas City
Released
linebacker
Danny
John son ,
wide r eceiver Jerrol d McRae ,
nose tackle Dwigh t Ca r ey ,
r unni ng back
John
Henry
Whi te , cen ter Wil lie Br oc k ,
de f ens i 'II' e l ineman Martin
Imho f. runn ing ba ck Ronn ie
Ro w la nd an d li nebacker Br ian
Ru ff .
M inneso ta - Cu t tou r players
- de f ensive b ack Joe Blahak,
def en sive t ack le Joe Jackson ,

N ew Or leans Acquired
l ineba cker Flovct Rice fro m th e
Oakland Ra iders t or an und is closed draf t choice .
Phi ladelph ia Cut punt er
Mitch Hoopes , def en sive li n e
ma n Greg Ma r sh a ll, c enter
Ma rk Sl ate r , safe t y Berna rd
Wi lson , ti ght end Darr y l Wa sh .
in gton offen si¥e ta c k le Donn ie
Gr een and one pl a y er w ho se
name was not announced .
.
Sa n Diego . P la ced J~ h n
Hcom a on 1n 1 ~ r ect r eser ve I 1st.
Placed on wa 1ver s cor ner back
Cl1 tf ~e atherston e , def en sive
en d Wil bur Y oung ,_ f r ee sa ~ety
Cta:ence Du r en , w1 ct e r ecetver
Dw1gh t M c Do n a I d , tac k le
Harvey Goodman and tack le
Ron Lln ds tro~ .
San Franctsco Pla ced on
waive r s qua r te rbac_k Jim Plun l&lt;ett . . W1 de . _rece •ver . Gen e
wash1ng ton , ~1de r e c e 1 v e r
Kenny . Harnson and strong
sa fety St~n Black . Cut _fullbac k
Bruce Gtbson , defens 1ve end
Bob Howard and _offensive
tac kl e · Steve . Mc D an1els. Ob
ta 1ned defens Po~e back Bob ~ury
from the Sea ttl e Sea hawk s 10 a
dra ft pick, deal
Hock ey
. Wash ington - Sig n ed goa lie
Jtm Bedar d . defenseman Bry an
Watson and r ight w tng To m
Rowe_to new c onl~acts . terms
of wh1 Ch were nor diSc lo.sed .

BELIEVIN: ..

~~J(OIM
INSURANCE REDUCTIONS

natl, Foster (30) .
PhiiB
012 000 003- 6 12 0
San Ogo
001 ooo 000- 1 5 1
Kaat, Reed ( 9) and Boone ;
Jones, Lee (9) end Tena ce. wKaat (7-Sl. L - Jones (11 -12) .
Mtl
000 000 D00-- 0 -4 2
LA
000 000 22)( - 4 9 0
Roger s, Bahnsen (8) and
C11rter : Hooton lmd Oates,
Yeager (8 1. W- Hooton {15-SL
L - Rogers 113· 101. HRs- LOS
Angeles, Lopes (14 ), La cy 11n .

Lower Preferred Rates for Persons
45 VealS or Older on Homes Without
A Lien.

Visit Us

Americ1n League

103 000 131- 9 14 1'
Bos
032 010 103- 10 19 2
Abbott, Todd (3), Parrott (5 ).
Romo (7) and Pa!ler , Plummer
· (9) ; Torrez , Lee (3 , Cllmpbell
IlL Stanley (9J and Fisk . w:.._
Stanley t12·1L.L- Romo £10-6) .
HR :.. · •oston , R ice (3-4 ) .

Payments Aslo

Available.

(Only games scheduled )

s..

Month~

Davis Insurance Agency
Acrou from the Court House in Pomeroy
Bill Quickel
Jnnnle Starcher
992-6677

\

I

�•

.· uw Enforcement

4- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 29, 1978

i(r: = ====G;=~;;;ii~:~ , ii,;~=:=

Nicholson family holds 45th
reunion at Forest Acres Park
RUTLAND - The ~!ith anThe children's dour prizes
nual reunion of the decep- went tu Wendy Clark, Sara
dants of Phillip Wilkinson aird Shilling and Penny Clark.
Corinna Cornell Nicholson
· Those attending in Ohio
was held Sunday, Aug ., 6, at were : Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Forest ACres Park near· Nicholson ; Mr and Mrs. EdRutland.
.
die Nicholson, and Nichole,
There were 65 family allllf Cardington.
·
members and 3 guests preMr. and Mrs . John Shilling
sent .
and Sara, of Marion.
A picnk dinner Wi:tS served
Mr . and Mrs . John
at t2:30 p.m. followed by
Wiseman and Nancy Bums,
slr ort business meeting, of Springfield.
which was ·presided ov~r by
Mr. and Mrs . Dale
Mike Nicholson, President. Nicholson; Mr. and Mrs:
Officers elected for 1979 arc : Lan·y Clark, Wendy , Tamara
Pr esi dent , Waid • 1. . and Penny ; Mr. and Mrs.
. Nicholson, Jr.; Viee • ?tesi· Carter French, Wayne and
dent, Michael Nicholson; and Pat; Mr. an~ Mrs. Dennis
Sel'retary • Trea surer , Hackett ; Mr . und Mrs. Allen
t\Jiegra Will.
Blackwood and Nathan , of
The afternoon was spent Middleport.
playi ng games and visiting.
Mr. and Mrs. Ohler Oliver ;
Several prizes were award- Alice Epple 1ind Cindy
ed as follows: Fur traveling Blackwood of Byesville.
tht· farthest , Mr. · and Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Wiseman
Tom Hud gens: fur !raveling of Pomeroy.
Ure farthest in Ohio. James
Mr. Waid Nicholson and
Larizza cmd ramily: having Waid Niclrolson. Jr., of Dexthe largest family present. ter.
Mr . and Mrs. George
Mr. and Mrs. Nunnan
Bm·key; oldest man, John Hamilton , Jeff and Robbie ;
Wisema n: Oldest woman, Mr. and Mrs. James Larizza.
Gladys Nicholson ; youngest Tony and Lisa ; Mr. and Mrs .
person, Sara Shilling, at II Bob Francis, Debbie and
months.
·Mis.&lt;;y ; Mr. and Mrs. George
The adult door prizes were Burkey , all of Vennilion.
won by Dale Nicholson , Waid
Mr. Kermit Epple uf
Nelsonville.
Nicholson. and Joy Ctark .

a

~Right

to Read' conference
attended by Greta Suttle

POMEROY - Mrs . Greta
Suttle, courity supervisor of
Meigs County Schools, attended the third annual Ohio
Right to Read Renewal
Con ference Wednesday at
Columbus.
1,'he Ohio Right to Read
Effort seeks to improve the
read ing skills of all individuals so that each may
function effectively in today's
soctety . A major component
involves inservice education
for teachers and administrators.
The purpose of the con·
fcrence was to provide the
opportunity for personal and
professional growth in the
area of reading.
The group was welcomed

Fonner members of the
523rd Military Police Co.
ga thered for a reunion at
Hagerstown, Md . Aug. II, 12
and 13. Included in the group
were Mr . and Mrs . Kenneth
Harris and Mr . and Mrs. Joe
Stru ble, Pomeroy.
It was the first reunion for
Ore company and marked the
25t h year since their
discharge in 1953. Struble was
emcee for the reunion held at
Ore Holiday Inn. Officers
elected for the 1979 reunion
were Joe Struble , president ;
Kenneth Harris, vice president: and Mrs . Kenneth Har- 1
ri s. secretC~ry · lreCisurer .
Allen Saussaman, Swrunerdal e, Pa . was named
historian and bulletin editor.
After the dinner at the reutli on, a vote of thanks was extended to the chef. Struble
also thanked all those who
l1&lt;:1d made arra ngements fur
the ga therin g and obtained
addresses.
The 1979 reunion was set for
ti1e second weekend m August
at Aberdeen, Md . where the
unit was stationed. A conunit·
tee will be named to make .arnmgernents ror the reunion .

Dues were collected.
Specia l guests were John
Thomas of Rising Sun, Md.;
John Paulson, Bethlehem,
Pa.; Churles Crowl, Port
Deposit, Md .; Robert Lloyds
and Richard Kasmari c,
Havre de Grace, Md .; Arthur
Elliott and Lee Ehlers, Aber·
deen, Md ., members of the
523rd unit.
Gifts were presented to Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Knarr,
&amp;rnesboro, Pa . the couple
having the most children,
nine ; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Brown, Grove City , the· couple traveling the farthest.
Pa ulson received a nower ar·
rangement. Favors were
presented to those attending
by Pomeroy merchants.
Attending were couples
from Ohio, Virginia, Pennsylvania, and Maryland.

jj

Mr . and Mrs . Nonnan Will ;
Mr . and Mrs . Micha el
Nicholson , Ryan and
Br·idget ; William Nicholson
and
Miranda
Ethel
Nidrolson; Duane Will ; Neva
Nicholson ;
Gladys
Nicholson; Mr. and Mrs.
Robet1 Musser; Ruby Halli·
day ; and Pauline Atkins, all
of Rutland .
From out • of • town were
Mr. and Mt·s. Thomas A.
Hudgens, Englewood, Colorado.

,------"-"1

By Helen and Sue Bottel

TUESDAY
OUTDOOR PRACTICE for
Meigs High Band 7 to 9 p.m.
. at ·high school in preparation
lor first football game show;
full attendance' expected.
WEDNESDAY
WOMEN REPUBLICAN
Club of 1\leigs County picnic
6:30 p.m. Wednesday at
Pomeroy Gun Club with Mrs.
Lorene Johnston, Wellston,
loth district committee, guest
speaker . Meat will be
provided.
POMEROY UONS CLUB,
12 noon Wednesday at the
Meigs Inn. Officers and directors urged to be present.
WILDWOOD GARDEN
CLUB, 8 p.m. Wednesday at
Forest Run Church. Flower
show in · conjunction with
meeting.
THURSDAY
LAUREL CUFF BETTER
HEALTH CLUB, 6:30 p.m.
picnic at the soulhbound
roadside park on Route 33.
Family affair.

BY HELEN AND SUE BOTI'EL
I'm 19 a~ my husband is 20. We have a 13-monlh-old baby
boy. We were high school sweethearts and are still very much
in love.
The. problem is, older married l'OUples call us young and in·
experienced: They say we'll have rough limes ahead and will
probably end up divorced. They tel).us their hassles about sex,
liKJney, 'kids, and how awful married life can be. When we
show how happy we are together, it's like they're jealous and
really lay it on. "Just you wait and see" is their favorite expression.
Sometimes we come home ·and start arguing about what
they argue about. Is misery catching, and how can we get im·
munized?-AHAPPYCOUPLE(ONEYEARMARRIED)
DE~RCOUPLE :
·
Yes, marital mis~ry is catching: Listening to complaints,
you may side with one embattled mat11- or the other, then
become aware of similar faults in your own partner.
Immunization? If you can't laugh off these predictions,
avoid 'enn . Tell older ac'(juaintances their anti-marriage talk
depresses you and if they persist, walk away. -HELEN

should start happening any time now.
Keep proving the predictor~ wrong and hopefully they'll find
someone else to dump their hassles on.
And learn a lesson from them: Don't discuss marriage
troubles with outsiders. You · not only risk boring them, but
your words will come back to haunt you once the problem is
solved. Nothing batters a union more than the persistent
rumor it's going on the rocks. -SUE
DEAR RAP :
I'm a singer, and I play the violin and guitar. I just got my
first job entertaining in a nice restaurant. II I wasn 'I good, the
manager wouldn't have hired me.
But nobody listens ! They just keep on eating and talking . If
two people clap the whole evening, I'm lucky. I need the money
for l'Oilege, but myegohas had it. What to do? -CECELIA
DEAR CECELIA :
Take the money and keep yotir ego by reminding yourself
that abnost everyone hired for "background entertainment"
at restaurants or bars. has the saine problem. It might help to
remember G.K .Chesterton 's words, " Music with dinner is an
insult both to the cook and the violinist." (But it's good experience. ) -HELEN

£xll/orerS
hold
picniC
r

:::

Social 1
H.C.:
1 Calendar I Take it from a 4-year-married veteran : This "Wail and see"
lalk tapers off when people slop seeing you as newlyweds; that
1

by Dr.- Fninklin B. Walter,
Superintendent of Public
Inst ruction. who stressed the
state 's commitment to
reading improvement.
The luncheon speaker, Dr.
Roger Farr, spoke on the
topic, " Reading Achievement
MEETING for parents of
of Today's St udent. " The 'kindergarten students of
remainder of the day was Sout hern Local School
devoted to a variety of District Thursday 7:30 p.m.
reading i mprovement at the high school. Purpose is
sessions for teachers and to register students who have
administrators. Mrs . Gerta not as yet registered and
Suttle has served as a state answer qu estions parents
Right to 'Read Commission may have in regard to bus
member for three years. She schedules and needs of the
will be helping to orga nize kindergarten child. Those
Meigs County School's Right students who do not register
ttl"''\ead week in February on the 31st may do so on Sept.
1979.
8.
SPECIAL meeting 7 p.m.
Okey Church.

,. . 523rd Military Police .Co.
meet at Hagerstown, Md.

t

·X

'

Members of Post 230, Law
Enforcement Explorers,
sponsored by the Meigs
County Sheriff's Departnnenl,
enjoyed a picnic at Fort
Meigs near Rutland on
Saturday. The picnic was the
August Special Activity for
the unit. In addition to the
picnic the Explorers played a
softball game with a church
group, also on an outing, and
atouchfootballgamewasthe
final event of the day. AItending were Don Snyder,
Sandi Miller, Kathy Parker,
John Snyder, Kenny Klein,
Ted Darling, Jack Carder,
and Milford Hysell, advisor.
Special guests were Joe
Garnes,
Le land
and

Margaret Parker family .
The Explorers are connposed of males and females
between the ages o114 and 20
y·ears of age, who are
presently attending a local
senior high school. The Metgs
Post was chartered in October ·of 1977 and are
presently having a mem·
bership drive for new
members.
The purpose ol the law
enforcement explorers is to
help young adults become
mature, responsible citizens.
To offer the opportunity to
examine the law enforcement
profession as a · possible
career. To aid in "character
training, to create a better

understanding of the law
enforcement programs on the
local, state, and national
level. To develop a stable
scale of values and to create
an atmosphere of understandlng of better social
relation between YOuth and
adults of the county.
Prospective new members
are Invited to attend a
meeting or cont~ct an Ex•
plorer. Meetings are heM in
the basement of tbe Sheriff's
Department on Wedne~y
evening at 6:~ p.m. Those
who wish to find out more
about the exploring (lrogram
are requested not to call the
sheriff's office but to attend
the meetings.

Plans made for dinner party
to be held at Meigs Inn
c

Pla ns for a dinner party to .
be held Sept II at 6:30p.m . at
the Meigs Inn honoring the
high priestess and her court
wtlre made when lhe Twin Cily Shrinettes met recently at ,

in unison. Mrs. Barbara
Dugan was co-hostess. Others
attending were Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell, Mrs. Enuna
Cla tworthy, Mrs. Mary

Hughes, Mrs. Lora Byers,
Mrs. Mary Bowen, Mrs .
Mary Cleek, Mrs. Edna
Slusher, and a guest, Dixie
Dugan.

FRESH lOO'J, PURE

GROUND
BEEF...............................~·..
HEINZ '

USDA CHOICE

-

CHUCK
ROAST..................~~·..

GATEWAY

CATSUP
32

GROCERY

ECKRICH

oz. aonLE

SAVE 30'

LB.

SMORGAS-PAK ....... !.~~~·.. .
SUPERIORS

USDA CHOICE - GREAT FOR GRILLING

CHUCK
STEAK ................ .'.~~; ..

Ure home
of Mrs. Clara · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -. .
Adams,
Racine.
A letter was read from
Mary Alice Wharton,'
associate princess and Emma Christian, sewing chairman, telling of items needed
for the'. Crippled Children's
Hospital, Lexington, Ky.,
Children's Hospital iti Erie,
Q. Is there a federal bureau whi&lt;h regulates lnsuranco
Pa., and the Cincinnati Burns
companies?
,
Hospital.
Mrs . Iris Kelton read
CECEUA :
"Church
Notices Off the
If you walk among the tables asking fgr musical requests
A. No. Insura nce companies are regulllted through
Bulletin
Board."
Mrs . Cora
you 'II get more notice -and also more lips.
indiv idual state control. Because insurance companies
Beegle presided at the
Ask the manager if he 'II okay a strolling minstrel. .SUE
have such an effect on the publl&lt; welfare, slate
meeting with members
leg islatures often enact laws which govern or dirKt
repeating the Lord's Prayer
the direction of insurance companies. The&gt; Insurance
commissioner has the most immediate control since it
MEETING SATURDAY
is his duty"to see that laws and regulations are carried
TESTING TONIGHT
There will be a special
out
and enforced. The insunmce comr}11ssloner
All members of Racine
.VACATION
meeting
this
coming
licenses
companies to do business In that state,
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Jackson
Saturda y night at Okey Emergency Squad, fire
examines all companies and licenses their salesmen.
Church, located near Lecta. department and a ny in- and sons, Rickie and Mark ,
terested public report to Bradenton, Fla. spent the
It will start at 7 p.m.
Racine
Fire Station 6:30 this past week here as guests of
A Bible picture will be
for skin testing.
evening
their aunt and uncle, Mr. and
shown : "Thief in the Night."
Mrs
. A. J. Slus her and Mr.
The firs t ruler of united
It consists in the rapture of
and
Mrs. Raymond Jewell
The lnsur•nct Store
the church.
modern Italy was King Victor
Errunanuell of Savoy.
and sons.
•liiliiliiiiiitl•••llit92--Sitiiii30i.•••

GALA

SEVEN SEAS
VIVA

ITALIAN
DRESSING
16

PAPER
NAPKINS
140

oz.

COUNT

BOnLE

PKG.

WHITE OR GOLD

.REAME'S

FROZEN
NOO'DLES

DIAL
SOAP

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

7

99¢

SLICED
12 Ol
BACON ..............~~~~:.

SPECIALS

oz.

12

· BAR

oz.

PKG.

Announce birlh
Mr. and Mrs. John Schlotterbeck, Jr. are announcing
the birth of a daughter,
J~anita Jean, on July 31 at
the Marietta Memorial
Hospital. The ba by weighed
seven pounds, I!i ounces, and
was 20 inches long.
Mr. and Mrs . Schlotterbeck
have a son,John Ray, Ill,
three, and a daughter, Ar·
mindia Marie, 19 months .
Mrs. Schlotterbeck is the
former F lorence Biggs .
Gra ndparents are Dorsel
Biggs, Pomeroy, and Mr. and
Mrs . Ray Schlotterbeck, Sr.,
Marietta . Mrs . Inez Randolph
is a great-grandmother.

MR. BEE

GATEWAY

POTATO
CHIPS

HAMBURGER OR
WIENER BUNS

$

- '

10

8 COUNT

PKG.

PKGS.

REUNIONSUNDAY
The Ours Family Reunion
will be held Sunday at the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
There will be a basket dinner
at I p.m.

c0

JP[)'Ij

I

C r 1t I~ fl N

INSTANT COFFEE
10 OL jar

$]99

I

I

:

CORONET DELTA

MAXWELL HOUSE

W/C

oz.

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO ROLL 39~ W/C

'

COUPON

COUPON

BLUE BONNET

CRISCO
$169
3 lb. can

SOFT SPREAD
W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept . 2, 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

99~

2 lb. ctn.

l

BULOVA

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

ARAVELLH'
$lg95

FROZEN FRIED CHICKEN

The affordable quality watch.,, from

2 lb. loaf
We haiJ e a

W/C

2 lb. box

/

$199

W/C

r: OLIPON

MIGHTY HIGH FROZEN
STRAWBERRY'

SHORTCAKE
No. 205
25 oz. size

.$129 W/C

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Ex pi res Sept. 2, 1978

HEADQUARTERS FOR
VISITORS
Mr . and Mrs. Kenneth Hartis were recent visitors of her
sister and brother-in-law , Mr .
and Mrs . .James Alexander,
Newark , DeJa . While there
they visited the Longwood
Ga rden s and attended
"Kismet", an outdoor theatre
production of the Brandywine
Players, A family reunion
was held while they were at
U1e Alexanders .

$169

COUPON

--

..............·=-.

~
~

""1¥ :!!"

KEEBLER

. .''

CLUB CRACKERS

. .I

No. 105
16 oz. box

69~

W/C

superb selec-

lever movements. All
magnificently styled.
Come and see that fine

watches don't have to

HOMECOMING SET
There
will
be
a
homecoming Sunday , Sept. 3,
ar the Freedom Gospe l
Mission , Bald Knobs.
Sunday School will be at
9:30 a.m. and basket dinner
at 12:.30 p.m. Afternoon
services will begin at 2 p:m.
with the Rev. 0 . G. McKinney
as guest speaker.
Featured will be the Gospel
Tones of Chester. The public
is invited to attend.

His: Neatl y tailored
in gold

tone and

stainless steel. With
silver d ial.

Hers :

Sllver tone

with sliver satin dial.

Wh&lt;·n you'temokingan~ri~~~ .
for any good reasoQ; talk tO·USat:. · ~ciij,L6an, .
~ ,- ·.
When major projects require ' J~ts.;"we Can~ a,
Homeovmer Loan quickly andWitbl::ohsideration
A

GOESSLER~ ·

JEWELRY SToRE
' .

Court St.

'.

Po mero y, 0 .

'

•

0·

j

' •

•

•

o

,.
. ...
'

HEINZ

PORK 'N BEANS_
No. 125

3.:.noz. 89~

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 2, 1971

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

. COFFEE
No. 305

1

Pound Can

1$2.29

W/C

. .I
• · f'

. J,

tion of Bulova Caravell a
watches . All with jewel-

be expensive.

~

No. 505
36 oz. bottle

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 2, 1971

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 2, 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

!!!!!'!!~
I

�6- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuetday, Aug. 29,1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
t•or~l"

WANT AD
CHARGES
1 ~ Wurtb ur Uulll·r
Ca:.h
100

I dOt Y

(1jijf~t'

""
:roo
'"'

:!d.K)'S

:Jda)s

6o:Wys

THE FAMILY ot Audrey Woode
wonts to tkonk all our friend s
and neighbors for the cords,
prayers , food ond flowers during her illness and deoth the
Chester Commun ity Jar the
flowers , the nursing staff and
all employees at Veter en 5
M•morial Hospital , Or. Taite,
Or . Vi lloneu vo and his staff . the
fl:ev W .H. Perrin for hrs consot mg words and prayers . the Ewing Funerol Home for the ir
kindgen , and the pallbearers
~Isle and Willard Hrna s, Roy and
Roger Hines ond Families and
Ed1th ond Brll M cCulloc h

125
J.9&lt;J

225
J75

F..ad1 wunl U'H'I' tht• tnliiLJnwn 15
Y.vrtls IS i Ct'llts pt!f wocd pt'l dwy.
Ads I'UIIIllng u~r Own t orlti~:utive
doll) ~ v.·rll be ctutr.:t'd al thl' l dil)'
rt~k

In

lllt'lllUI y. c~ml

ul Tlnmk.s iUid

OtlitU tH)': 6 Cl!llts ~r word. $..1 00

m.lllim wn Cash in Mdvann•.
Mvlnle Hot11t' ~ l e~ t~ull Y1trd Sli le.s
:m.• iln't' J,ll~ unlv wilh n rsh wtth
order 25 t••w l duir.lll' fu1 ad~ n tr r)'·
in~ Bux N1.1mbt!r In Clm.• uf Ti ll' ~~~ ­

OIL 0~ ga s lease . Free . 30 acre s.
'} miles north of Pomer oy
...!'~ · 726- 2701 even r~~ __ _

Thl' PuiJhsher reSt'r\l'S tlk• n ~hl
lu ~ rt ur '"'/~l1m v ad~ dtcmed ulJ.
jet'LHJ!lill T Jl' Pub.ltsh~r will nuli.Jto

JOHN TEAFORD Golf Equipment
_ ~u y . s~ode _6~ ~9-~~ 1_:_
TO AL L o ur custom er s. Th•s sto·
Iron wil l be clased from Fr1doy .
Sept 1sr 10 Tue sday Sept . 5.
lq78 . Erwrn s Gull Service , N
Second
Stree t . Mrddlepor t
OhiO.

n.·sp. msibll' fur mur l' th1:1n Ul ll' Ult'Ul ,,., ·tmSt:'l'lwn
Phom~ 99'~-:ll.lli

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

SHOOTING MATCH . Forked Run
Spor tsman Club . Sunday . Sept.
3 and every Sunday there ofle r.
' - - ~!ory cholo.e guns only __ _

l'ut'silit~
Frida~
~ p M

thru

ttw (1&lt;! ~ bci . Wl! pullllt itlt••rt
Sumlci\'
~ p l\.1
Fmld~ &lt;tftt•t r t~ ••rr

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
ESTATE OF
KATHRYN
ELLEN
FITCHP ATRI CK ,
DE C EASED
Case No . 2'2449 Docket 12
Page 69

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY
On August 24 , 1978, rn the
Meigs Coun t y Pr ob~te Cou r t.
C~se
No . 22449 , Kathryn
Rrchards , 112 Va le Street,
Pomeroy , Ohro was ap
pointed Adm inistratr ix of fhe
estate of Kathryn Ellen
Fitchpatrick , deceased , tate
of 389 Wil l ram Street. M id
dleport , Oh io
Mann i ng D Webster
Probate Judge .Cl erk
(8) 29, ( 9) 5, 12. 3tc

FOUND AT Edson Han re sr dence
Darwin , o po rt Ge r man
Shepha rd dog Frtendly Phone

992 5019

~

~

~

g~ven

credit
Senior Airman Roger B,
Pauley, son of retired Air
Force Chief Master Sergeant
and Mrs. 0. B. Pauley of 2221
Washi ngton Ave ., Po int
Pleasant, W. Va., has been
credited with saving the lives
of two persons involved 1n a

boating accident on Flag
Lake, nea r Barksdale AFB ,
La.
Airman Pauley is a
munitions

systems specialist

wtth Barksdale ' s 3097th
Aviation Depot Squadron .
The a trman and two other
airmen were fishing in the
vtctmty when they heard
cries for help . While in·
vestiga ting the noise, they
discovered two people in t he
water about 50 feet from t he
shor e.

The three airmen managed
to pull one u nco n scio u s
vtctim out of t he wate r and
get h tm t o shore, where
cardto·pu lrnonary
resusc itation
was
ad m tnl s t e re d. Within t wo
minutes , th e vi ctim wa s
breathtng on hts own and it
w as another ten minutes
bef o r e h e re g t~ i ne d co n sciousness.
The other vjctim in the

water managed to cling to a
notation dev ice until rescued.
It was not known unttl some
time later the accident had
claimed the liv es of two other
people.
The airman is a 1973
graduate of P otnt Pleasant
High School.

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

Augus1 30, 1978
H yo u ' r e unco nc er ned ab o ut
oerng rn tne spotlr ght. you w rll
frnd yourselt rn d rr ectl y rnvolved
rn so metn rn g profn atlle and
self -grat rf yrn g thrs co mrng
ye ar The re are ad van ta ges to
ta k1n g a ba ck seat

VIRGO (Aug . 13·Sopl 111 Vou
can a cco mp ltsh m o re tod ay b y
berng the po w er behrnd the
thro ne Subtly tmplanted 1dea s
wrll be rmm edta tel)l prcked up
try oth ers Frn d ou t to wh om
you ' re rom ant ically surted by
send rng tor your copy of A slr o·
Graph Le tter M a rt 50 c ents for
ea ch a nd a l ong . sell addre sse d , s ta m ped e-nv el o pe
to As tra-Graph , P 0 BOK 489
Radr o Cdy Statron , N Y 10019
Be sure to spe edy your Orrth
srgn

CHIP
WOOD . Poles , m ax .
diameter 10 · qn lar gest end , 58
per ton . Bundled slob. Sb per
ton. De l1vered Ia Ohro Pollet
C o ~ Pomeroy 992· 2~~-

WE PICK up junk aut o bodr es buy
rn g junk car s, scrap iron , ba t
te ries and metals
R1der s
Sa lvage . SH 124 , Pomeroy
992·54bt:l

SCORPIO

(Oct

HELP WANTED
Experienced

SAG ITT ARtUS

(No•

13· Dec

21) Th rs rs yo ur kr nd o f day
where thrngs c en tl'!r on ar ous rng a rrghteous defe nse of what
you be lre 11e Be sure , h o w e~ter ,
10 lrs te n to the o th er per son ' s
philosop hy

CAPRIC ORN (Doc . 11·Jan 1g1
Jorn t endeavo r s app ear q urte
promrsrn g today , bec au se Do th
wr ll pr o ftl lrom w ork rng rn har·
many II you don 1 ha11e one .
see k o ut a collab orat or

AQUARIUS (Jan . 10· Fob . tg)
Orp'l o mac y and tact
rntrorn
qua lrtres for you . c ould be put
tu a tes t today However . yo u ' ll
make I he necess ary co mpro m ISes and pass wrlh tl yrng col-

ors
PISCES (Fob . ZO·Morch 20) You
h e~v e

t he edge o ver co w orke rs
and associ ates today be c au se
ot you r logrc al , rea1r st1 c ap·
pre ac h to th ing s Don t hesrtat e
to take the lead

Meigs.
Property
Transfers
E . J. Hill , Mary M. Hill to
Franklin E . lhle, Kathy lhle,
8.1657 acres, Chester .
E . J . Hill, Mary M. Hill to
Clay T. lhle, Jane Ann lhle ,
8.1851 acres, Otester.
Methyl Kinnear , Albert
Kinnear, Vilma Scherr,
Milton Scherr, Curtis LeMay,
Helen LeMay, Uoyd LeMay, .
Lillian LeMay , Leonard
teMay, Patsy 'LeMay to
Patricia Hauger, 84 acres,
Lebanon .

YARD SA LI: Wed , Th urs. Fn
Plont stan d f lower pots baby
mollress , high cho1r , ~peed
Queen washer . m1sc l si rood
on tke left pos1 the Post Ofhce
in Clrlton. Fo llow srg ns.
YARD SALE Aug 30 and 31 Sept
1, 10·4. I SO S. 3rd A ve , M id·
dleporl Women 's dresses size
18 ' 1 to 20 ' ' MQvle protec tor
f ilm splrcer bow l1ng boll and
bog Children s cloth1ng tennrs
ra cquet s toaster . other mrsc
rtem!.

HOOF HOlLOW Hor!.es Bu y, sell
!r ode or tr a 1n Ne w and used
saddles Ruth Reeves,· Alba ny.

(61 41698·3290
RI SING STAR Kennels Boord1ng
and groom1n g, all breeds
Chesh1re , 36 7·0297 o• 307 -0106 .
PY RENEE S Pupp1e!o
I t.l 4·bb7 ·3838

Ph one

(April

ZO·Moy

101

Cha nces are today , yo u ' ll be
mo re interested in lookrng o ut
tor the needs o f others - a no
yo u ' ll enjoy every min ute o f it.
GEMINIIMaw 21-June ZD) Your
creat rve instin c ts w ill be i n h igh
gear t6da y, especially in areas
fe lat rng to c omrT! u nlca tron Tfy
your hand a,l writing or se lling

CANCER

(June

Z1·July

2!1

The r e are days to be fruga l and
day s to splu rge Today you wtll
be able to c ombine th o se tw o
extre m es into one heck at a
good time

LEO (July 23·Aug . 2!) Yo u are
on cen ter stage today , so put
fo rth yo ur best image and
leadership qualities. Oth ers
are anxious to follow your
!)(am ple .
INEWSP .. PER

E NJ F R~ R ISE

ASSN J

for
Catapiller &amp; Terex •
Phone 742 · 280D
Between 9 &amp; 10 P .M

SAU

Bundy

dorrne1 .

992·3405
TWO STORM doors, $40 ea ch . GE
refr1gerotor $50 985·3893 .

-------196S FORD
ton skort bed step
--~-

' J

srde W1th topper , 6 cyl. , stan
dord runs real gOod easy on
gas $900. Call an ytime aft er 5
.P~ · 992 ·5117
lb

992 5797
1q75 CHEVRO LU MONZA 2. V·B
4 speed . m ag wheel s l1ke new
ti• es , 24 000 mile!. E• cellent
cond1 t1on S2b00 Coli qn.7473
1970 REO AM ( PACER. b cy l. 3
speed AM ·FM top@ . &lt;1 3,000
m iles S2500 742 12 11 before
5. 742-'187 4 oft er 5

I

19"17 OLOS VISTA (rui Sf!r stat ionw ag on .
Brll
Wr lli am !.on
7A7 200 7.

Jq78 PONTI A C CATALINA 4·dr
P.S. P B.. A C. , sol ·t·tr ock :
AM -FM rod io . heavy du ty
s u ~pens i on . r od iol 11res e tc
Th1s cor is in A 1 co nd1IIO!l See
Corl It Hysell . Rutland Phone
'141 -218-4 .

THREE BEDROOM fram e home in
M1ddleporl Coll 991·34 57 .
.
.
IN SYHACUSE 2 bedr oom house
New storm w indows . Ne w
olumtnu m budd •ng . '1 porche s

- - ---------

992 3719.
1U ' , ACRES 8 room hou se . 4
bedroom . new bath. new kr !
chen . ci ty water . On Rt . 33 m
Bur l1n ghom 9&lt;12·7751

W

.

ACRES

--·----

house and lurnlture
532 000.00. lmmed1ate posses ·
sron Phone H'J.:NBB after 5
p .m
__ .,..
HOUSE FOR sole neor pool m
Sy ra cuse Call qq2· S7b7.
.
------"---~---NEW LISTING Owner tron slerr·
ing . Over 2 acre s close to
~c hools . hospital , town. 2 cor
garage pat ,o break fa st declo. 3
bedr oom . Nrce basemen t
hardwood floor s. Ce ntral oir ,
J- orc ed o1 r furnace 992-5791

-- - -

~

~

-

3b

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Lillndmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co-op water
softener, Model UC·SVL

•289.95

Now Only

L et us t es t your water
Free

Phoneffl·:Zll1

STRAW FOR !.ole Ke nneth Welsh
bl4 ·b9B 371 9

-

EQUIPPED KITCHEN- 4
bedr oo ms , natural gas
heat , 11!2 baths , 2 car
garage wlth shop over.
Level lot . S27 .500 .

RACINE

Good

•

bedroom home . Nice large
eat -in kitchen , natura l gas,
cen tral heat i ng and large

lot . 125,000.
BUSINESS LOCATION and sm all residenc e with
bath , ki tchen and bedroom .
Will be good for a starter .

Only $13,000.
COUNTRY HOME - New
3 bedroom . 2 bath home.
Has equrpped kitchen, n ice
ca rpet i ng ,
log
houie ,
woods, and garden land

POTATOES FOR wm.ter . Gobbler
Ke nnebec and Superior Ph one
9 43 · 2&lt;~91
Tom Soyre Grea t
Bend . SR 338 .

Are You profiti ng from
inflat ion ?? Buy Land
and you wlli !! !

--

-

tq7J FO RI.)
ton camper spec10l.
Power. orr. au to duo! lonks .
Ex cellen t runn1ng cond1t10n
1 •

$)475 . 992·2392
GE AUTOMAT IC wo'&gt; her A buy
l or someone who ( On repa ir .
Pr ice 51 5. 992 -S250
R!: OUCi: SAFE and lost wrth
C.o8ese Tablet s &amp; E Vap water
pills ' NEtlson D1ug .
PLAID QU EEN srze h1de-o Ded
couch with coor d1no1ing 1.olrd
well hugger recl mer . t:l mo old
b tceller11con drtion 949 T/ 61 ,

Asking $40,000 .

30

ACRES

and

3

bedroom renovated home .
In back of town w ith rural
water . Will take a trade-ln .

Want $24,500 .
BASHAN - · L•rge

3

bedroom
h ome
with
natural gas and T. P . water .
Over an acre of land with a
3 car garage . Lots of

outbuild ings . Just 116,000.
YOU'LL
PROBABLY
FIND A BETTER BUY

T0 0 AY

T HAN

Discount
Prices

fiNO BEDR OOM house Hose HilL
$ 175 per month . No pets.
lease .
securrty
dep os it
6 14 ·678 251 3 or wr ite A . Mor
!in Rt . 1, Do .- 214, Vincenl
Ohio .
17 .:60 TRAI LER . Five points . $140
per mo nlh
No children

9Y2 583A .

DURING OUR
SEASO NAL
CLOSEOUT
eiNSIOE PAINT

OUT SID E WHITE
•ROOF PAINT

CANNING peache s, good quolrtv . Ph . 99:Z -:Z848
Pomeroy,O,
Freestone con nrng peache s
3·15·11C
$7 .98 in P9 Si ic bog containers. ~...:..,
Retail a~d wholeso le , Bob's •
Market .
Mason ,
Midway SEWING MACHINE Repo rr s, ser·
Market . Pomeroy , 0~
vice , all molo.es , 992 -1184 The
Fabri C Shop .
Pomer oy
Autho rized Singer Soles and
Ser vice We sharpen Scrnors

MAIN
POMEROY.
NEW

LISTING

Really

M01lUii2.

s · oo--Bonanza 3;

.. \YONDOB\

monthly gross $370.00 lor
only $29,500.00 .
POMEROY - $6 ,725 OR
make an offer , not bad 1112
story home with fu l l
basement, needs some
renovation .

In Syracuse ,

modern 1 floor plan, wood
burning
fireplace,
3
bedrooms, lacge kitchen ,
dining room , view of the

2 car

gar.!lge , bea utifu l back
yard for cookouts, etc .

Asking $32,000.00. ·
MINI FARM- CLOSE IN
Nice
3
bedroom
remodeled home , fru i t
cellar , barn, mil k- house,
pasture , fencing, l arge
good
garden ,
other
feetures, over 5 acres.
4 'l ots, l'/2 story frame

with lull basement. Storage
building . Many features In
town . A real story at

OOR~ THAT WAY, LISSA
, .. WIL.O AMP B1G AND
"'EA~ "" SUT SCARED
0' F\R f. ...

CUT OUT 1H ' 6 A6S ~
liE WOt•n COME
AAY MEARER THE
LICHH -.
.

6:3o-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Andy Gr iffith 6;
CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:1»--Cross·Wits 3; Billy Graham Crusade 4;
Newlywed Game 6,13; Last of The Wild 8; News 10,
Gilligan's Is. 15; Dick Cavett 20; Mountain State
Arts &amp; Crafts Fair 33 .
7 JQ-Aii·Siar Anyuthlng Goes 3; Wolfman Jack 6;
Fam ily Feud 8; MacNeil · Lehrer Report 20,33; The
Judge tO; In SearehOf 13 ; Wild Kingdom 15.
8 .1»--Movle " The Day of the Dolphin" 3,4,15; Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Billy· Graham Crusade 8; Otto : Zoo
Gorilla 20; P ilot 10; Nova 33
9:1»--Charl l~'s Angels 6,13 ; Movie "The Amazing

form the surprrse an~we r. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

game

daughter

18 Place in

Poldark II 20.
10 :1»--Poilce Woman 3; Storsky &amp; Hutch 6.13;
Callow•y' s Climb 4; Billy Graham Crusade 15;
News 20.
10: 3Q-WIIder Wilder 33; Blx Belderbecke Memoria l
Jazz Festival 20.

11. ~»-News 3,4,6,8,1o,13.15; Dick Cavett 20 ; Lilla!
Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 : 3Q-Johnny Carson 3,4, 1S; Pollee Story 6,13 ;, U.S.
Open Tennis 8; ABC News 33 ; ; Movie Evel
Knievel'" 10; 11 :45--Hawall Flve.O B.
12·1»--Janakl 33; 12.4Q-Legend of the Black Hand

DOWN
1 Lawman's

I A8salled
7 Ordinal

charge or

zt Dance step
for Dad?
%1 French river

zz Gen.

Oh.dear! I'm af raid I
had that for a snack

.

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

not verll hunqrlj

am-!Wa4! Let's just
open this can
of tuna!

1295

SPECIAL S

nwnber

suffix

6, 13;

12·4o-Legend of the Black Hand 6,13; 12 :55--Movie

"The Last Escape" 8; 1 :~Tomorrow 3,•: 1 = ~
News 13.
Movie
nnel 4 -

c...

S &amp; 7 P .M. - MacArthur l PGl
9 &amp; 11 P .M - Sla pshot IR I

y estenlay'• ADiwer
9 Arranged

Z5 Cadence

%1 Bellwether Tue sda y. Aug ._:2.::.g....:..--c=:-::-:::-'~~------·-~

In a series
1% Esplanatlon
II Hurry

29 Greek

1J Red Sox

30 Savor

Oswald Jacoby and :Aian Sontag

31 Goose

slugger

8 Uteral and . ZZ Prong
figurative Z3 Rested
foothold
Z4 Poised

BRIDGE

island

genus
38 Speck
' 37 - CBnto

From bad to expert play

Any U.S. made cor -parts

.BRING IN

s~

OFF

s~s

Pomeroy Landmarll

acres tillable with some very good crMk bottom hilltop l•nd . The balance Is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good ~does need som• modernization),
large all purpose botrn &amp; several outboildlngs. The
m inerals go with It and It's locatod In 'on arN where
gas, oil coal hove bMn found to be plontllul. Nur
Rurland . 60' s .
·

botl•nclngl
FULLY
GUARANTEED
&lt;Miler itzts
CDmPIIr•bly
prlcod.

t•ln taxar

store

• A Q J 10
• 8 52

purchase
Zl TeMla ace
Z7 Suffl.x with
hire or

WEST
+Q
• J tO 9 4
•86 5 3

EAST
• K J
• K8765 3
• 72
+A 96 4
+ Q J 10
SOUTH
+A9 162
• A2
• K94
K 73

+

R!T~R.

Ia

WINNIE

Ope ning lead · • J
to work It:

HY

BRR

HAJDL

GARD
HAR
GR

SROYERB

I Q R •

duce the sa me res ult.

All declarers win the hea rt
lead with th e a ce The bad

QRPXBR player cashe s ..b~s ace o(
trumps, ente r s dumm r by
W DV· ruffing a heart or lending a
JD
LYYT
diamond , leads a club t o his
HY king and winds up with the
AWIIRD
GR

loss of three clubs a nd one

TJBCJFR . - 0. R. FWHRQDTWAC
Yesterday'ICcyploqUGCe: MAKE NO MISTAKE, MY FRIEND,
IT TAKES MORE tHAN MONEY TO MAKE MEN RICH.- A.

trump .
The ordinary d eclarer
cashes hls ace of trumps at

GOtrmEY

monds. If East follow s to

1'0 1978 Kin&amp; Featuret Syndka&amp;•, Inc.

trick tw o and starts on dia-

BAR:&gt;IE\'

JUGHAID.!! I TOLD liE A HUNNERT
TIMES NOT TO RUN IN TH' HOUSE!!
~5, I'D LIKE TO TALK

TO A CERTAIN LIITL.E
RED-HAIRED 61RL ...

ALREA~ AAYE
HER NUMSER ...I W45

NO, I

HOPING lf'OU COULD TELL

ME 50MWIIN6 ELSE ...

thr ee diamonds our o rdmary
player gets to d1scar d a c lub
on the f ourth dtamond and ts

home Unfortunately. East
ruffs the thtrd diamond,
lea ds th e queen of c lubs and
th e d efe nse gets that same
three club tracks .

Bad luck indeed, but now
watch the expert at work. He
ruffs a h ea rt at tnck two,
lea ds a trump from dummy

and d ucks when East plays
t he jack . West is in with the
queen and the contract ts
sa fe .

Suppose East plays his
king of trumps? If he does
that our expert has to pa y off
th e sa m e as th e others .

j,1£t"l.iJ~ $1; ~ :11 }.1
You halF

!l-29-B

+ Q XX
¥ "X X
t J( X X

+X

By Oswald Jacob y
One letter almply stands for another In this sample A ll and Alan Sontag
· used for the three L's, X for the t wo O's, ett. Single letters ,
The dtfference between
apoatrophes. the length and formatio n of the word1 are all expert pla y. ord inar y p lay
hints. Ei&lt;h day the code letters are dlmerent.
and bad play d oesn' t s ho w
up on ever y h a nd . SomeCIIYPTOQUOTES
time s all hnes of play pr o-

NXTJOR

A 'WINNIE ·~ IMMIE'1 ?

Vulnerable : No rth-South
Dea ler: South
Wes t North East South
I+
Pa ss
Pass
Pass 4+
Pass

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

IQRPRQRDOR

A78x13.

own« 's age!revents her from continuing to operate
the farm an she desires an Immediate ule. 50 to 60

•Q

;'~R;A~N:K~&amp;~E~R~N~l~E------~------~~--------~;-----~---------------------------, · 35UBromre
worn away 6+-1-+-+-ll~ ~~·
n~~
38 Slgnily
3t Beinll: Sp.
:s:. '-•~e . -rf.lc
I
DAILY
CRYPTOQUOTEHere's how
oNE: \NI"PH ..-HE

C.ll now for oppolntmenl.

P-992·2111

Z5 Dry1!oods

wanner
33 Attic
prowler

Expires
Sept . 10, 1978

!Iii!!

S-29- A
NORTH
• 10 8 5 4 3

!I Keyboard
lnstrwnelll
!! Bench-

SPECIAL
PRICE

'1'.-!:ck W. Carsey, Mgr.

ovlch's
Z3Sew up

under
28Edlaust

extra if needed. Excludes
front- wheel drive c•rs.

,

Howard Hughes" 8, 10; Great Performances 33 ;

Nasty
look

11 Last-mentioned symbol
13 Night's end
Z VlolenUy
14 Cling
3 Deeply
15 - fizz
t Sea
II Coogo Bantu
eagle
17 Ingrid
5 Sentence
Bergman's
unll

Custom Poly

.j

n

10 l.Alve : Sp.

Whjte.WaA Co-Qp

CAl! THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

AWEIGH

Jurrtlte Book No. 10, wll'l tM . . . 110 pum., • ~ liol $1 .35 paMpaid tram Jurni:M , CIO ttil netnr PI , Box M, 'Norwood, N.J . 071411. ~
'f04J' nM"'e,lddNM, zlpoodlandmMed111Clb..,....., r•• r ;ccr1.

Invited

sg2•

e.

BANNER

passed away- WINDUP HIS ESTATE

5 Cerebral

BE O'ILLED

Tht

HASTY

What they had to do when the clock collector

b, THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
tO Divert from

• REWIEM8ER HOW YOU LAUGHED WHEN
I euoof5TEC1 A l\JMMY FLATIENER

.A 03

(Answers tomorrow)

' Mlkhail·

TWO BEDROOM mobile home
Complete ly fu rnished . Ai r con·
dit ioning. Con be seen alter 5
pm 742-2997

MOBILE HOME . 19S4 liberty 2
bedr Good condit ion
1900
Ci'testnut Dr .. Go ll rpolrs. Ohio3
Phon• 0 14-446· 139 1

Answer

I I XI XI Xr

~NM"t.f -

THE CH IMNEY Sweep . Reduced
r ates II! Sepl I b 14 373-b057
weekdays unt il~ - - - -

COUPON
AND RECEIVE

-------

$9.500.00.
LIST WITH US FOR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE, MEMBERS OF
INDEPENDENT
REAL
ESTATE CONSULTANTS,
NATIONWIDE
REFERRAL
SERVICE .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY, LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992·2259, 992-6"'

141 ACRES -

Now arrange the Circled letters to

~

Heroes 15.

6:1»--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; .ABC New s 6; Zoom 20; Its
Everybody's Business 33 .

. I Jumbles . DEITY

,;-;,..-- Yeste tday s

AUTOMOBilE INSURANCE been
can ce lled ? l os t your operator s
lrcen se? Phone 992-2143

10 &gt;c 40 MOBILE HOM£ completely furnisheQ . Oukll sat e pri ce
$1888 .00 .
Col i
992 · 2138
Fireston e Store or 9&lt;19 -2328

NEW 3 bedroom mobr le home
Non is top qualit y, I ' 1 bath ~ .
total elec tric Thi s in clu des oil
underpinning . olu mrnum steps
and heav y duty ochers cem ent
block s. Al so stoVe Mog1c Chef .
w asher and drye r. Con be seen
ocr on from the Hydro Electric
Plant , at l etart Foils . Ohio .

$16,500.00.
GOOD STARTER HOME
-

I!IE.COME A T16HTROPE WAl...KER.

5:»--dd Couple 4; News 6; Elec . Co . 20,33; Hogan 's

Prlntanswerhere : "(
IJTTLEOHPHAN ANNIE

Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;

tlcoat Junction 15.

II= 'IOU W.ANT 10

I _() K

My

Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33 ; Voyage to the
Bottom of The Sea tO; Emergency One 13; Pet.

~~y TH1~ DIE'T

HOWERY
AND MARTIN h
co vat1ng ,
~f!pllc
!.ys •em s,
doz er . backhoe . Jump truck ,
l imestone , grovel . blackt op
povrng Rt. 143 Phone 1 {014 )

810 S WANTED on o 1974 bO x 24
Modular home . Damaged by
frre The home IS well bu il t ond
con ta ined 3 bedr oom l.1rge liv
ing room , formal di nmg room ,
k•tchen . famrl y room , I ' J
baths. You ore Invi ted to rn
spec! th 1l home located 11 m ile
ea st of Horrisonvltle St. Rt 143
The purchaser musl mo ve lhe
home no t later than Oct . 15.
1978. Moil seat ed btd s to 73
Roose velt Dr .. R.A.F B. , Ohro
43 2 17 to arrive not later than
Sep t. 20, 1978 Include return
addre ss and phone number
A nnouncement crl acce ptance
of a b1d will be mode no t later
thon Sept . 23. 1978 . Terms
Co!&gt;h . Cer tif ied check or bo nk
draft The owner reserves lhe
r ight to re1ect any or oil bids
For appointment to inspec t •he
home ·call 742-3122 or Colum·
• bu s 497 - 1317 . Harold D
Graham , Ownvr .

bedrooms with d i ning
room , enclosed porch ,
large workshop - garage ,
plus a 12 x 60. Furnished
newer trailer , plus another
trailer , plus another lot for
trailers. All rented . Tof.!ll

Ohio ,

... ~-

HAPPY BIRniDAY,

EXCAVA TIN G . dozer . loader and
WATER WELL d;.lllrng . Will iam T
backhoe work dump tru ck s
Grant . 742·2879,
and lo boys for hire . wrll haul
f ill d irt . to soil. limestone and
W1Ll 00 boby Sllhng 1n my home
grovel. Coli Bob or Roge r Jef·
ages 2·4. Ph one 99?- 7689.
fers . day phone 992·7089 , n 1ght
QUALIF IED SITTE R. Will sit 1n your
phone 992-3525 o• 99~· 5232 .
Phone
home
onyt ~ me
EXC A VATING
dozer . backhoe
949·20&lt;2
and drtcher . Char les R, Hot
W1Ll BABYSIT in my hom e o r rour
f ield , Bo ck Hoe . Service ,
home . 12 30 pm on Mon thru
Rutland , Ohr o . Phone 742.1008
Wed: Thurs. thru Sol all day .
Will do roof ing , construct ion
992· 3357
plumbing and heating . No joP
too Iorge or too small Phone
7 4'2 2348 .
•

1976 NASHUA 14 x OS 3 bedroom
1 ' J both . underpinnrng . $1500
and onume loon. q49·20BJ or
S43·331 1.

garage . Carpeting, small
garden space and 2112
acres A good buy $25.000 .
NEW LISTING - Would
you believe In Middleport,
.!1 nice 1 floor plan, J

Beaut if ul

10; Not For Women Only 15.
1.30....0ays of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10 ; 2:0Q-One Life to Live 6,13.
2:3Q-Doctors 3.4,15: Guiding Llght 8,10; 3:00....
Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6, 13 ; Lilias,
Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:30-AII In T. he Family 8,10; Almanac 20 .
4:1»--Mister Cartoon 3; Superman 4; For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Addams Family 8;
Sesame Sl. 20,33; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4:30-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan' s Is 4,8; Batman 10;
Little Rascals 15 .

·\ LAGED

SIX YEAR S old W e rme ~ heime r
698 ·7331.
Doberma n
mi niature
New
PULLINS
EXCA VAliNG, Complete
Ho ven , 304 -882· 2755
Ser vice. Pi't one 992-2478.
~ WEEK OLD all mole kittens .
REEVES TRADIN G Pos t , Pogevi lle
f-'hone 7&lt;1 2-2326
Grocer~es
dry goods. hard·
wore . feed , lock shop Spedol
3~ 'b - of dog food $3 .88 .

0.

Secluded, 3 bedrooms ,
ranch, family room , large
recreation room. bullt·l n
kitchen , separate dining
area , carport. patio. O.Vn
Water ,
wood
burning
fireplace, and JJ.. a cre only .

$20.500.00.
NEW LISTING -

1:oo-For Richer, For Poorer 3; Young &amp; t he Restless

6::
I I I
J

I·

Muffler • Brakes
Shocks • Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

TWO PERSIAN cots to goo d home
Adorable pets 1 rs all ye llow
and one yellow ond blo ck
Hou sebr o k~n~9· 24 ~ __

Young &amp; the Restless B, Midday Magazi ne 13.
12 :3Q-Ryan"s Hope 6.13; Se•rch for Tomorr~w 8, 10;
E lee . Co. 33.

DyHenriArnoldarM:IBoblee

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one tetter 10 each square. to form
tour ordinary words

MOORE'S

Pr1ctlnchiiiH
Fod.Tu
(doll not
Include

EXCELLENT FARM· BUY

~ ~ ~~ ®

------ -

6 ACRES -

POTATOES RED pom 11oc and
Kennebec $b SO per 100 lb .
West of Darwin on Gold fl: idge
Cecil Tobe n. Rt 2 Pomeroy
O hio.

.

APART MENT ovarloble l or sleep
rng quart ers , room fur l or l our
men. 10 min ute s from Moun
tioneer Plant , Hartford , W Vo
Phonel ·J04 BH7 ·33Sb

3 SI:OROOM hou se -o il electric .
Over 1 oc r'e
Mornrngstor
Hetghts . 949 -2424 . ___,_ ___

VIRGIL B. SR . ~~~
992·3325
2l6 E Second Street

Housing
Headquarters .

Pho n e

FI VE ROOM house w rth both . 37
acres
Sorn . Other ou t
bu i!d rngs . CR 8. l angsv ille . Call
742 -1450 f6't opp~ _____ _

GAS COOK stove , used
r el rrgero tot
boo t trad er
991.]573.

ONE BEDROOM op t
Co ntact
Village • Manor Apt .. M id
d leporl 'N2 · 7787 .
o pt s

--------

1' • ACRE S locoled I mi le from
Me.1gs Mrne 1. Dr1lled well and
. septi ~y.:_tem ~~ 882-233&lt;1 .

nice J bedroom ranch , In
the co untry , close tc
Pomeroy , wood burn ing
fireplace , large 2 car

COUNTRY M OBil i: Hom e Pork
Rou1e 33. north of Pomeroy.
Lorge lo ts . Coll 991 -7479.

furn i shed
992 5434 '

ACRE LOT on Rt 7 Nice burldrng
srte 992 75 74

LAH G ii BU SINESS building rn
Mason . 3200 sq . ft . Gro und
floor 1·304-88 2.3356 .

12 : DO--Newscenter 3, News 4,6,10; Amer ica Alive 15;

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

·.-----------l

992 5664 .

GOOD condition 3 bedroom
wi th 1'rr bo th in Pomeroy. Fully
ins uloted wrth
bl own
in
fiberglass stq rm w1ndows ond
doors
Corpeted . in good
neighborhood , wlking d1s ton ce
of town Call 992 -3872 alter
5·30 pm or Satu r day and Sunday .

'i1Jl'f1Nl rn~

For The Best
Price ln Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

38~5 .

7:1»--Today 3,,.15; Good Mor ning America 6,13; CBS
News~ ; Underdog 10; 7:25--Chuck While Reports
10.
7:JQ-Schoolles 10 ; 8:0D-Capl. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
St. 33.
9 :00- Merv Gr I!tin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13,15;
Emergency One 6; Brady Bunch 8.
9:30....Andy Grlfllth 8; Farillly Aflalr 10.
tO :OD-Card Sharks 3.• , 15; Edge of Night 6; Tic Tac
Dough 8; Joker' s Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13.
t0 :3o-Hollywood Squares 3.•. 15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,10; 520,000 Pyramid 13.
11 :1»--High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13 .
1t ·3o-Wheel of Fortune 3,15; Family Feud 6,13 ;
. Partridge Family ~; Love of Life 8, tO; Sesame Sl.
33; 11 :55--CBS News 8; Loving Free 10.

1

1 111l tlo-C&gt;oc.... _

HWOOD BOWfRS Rf PAIR
Sweepers . toa ster s. tr ans . all
smol! oppliance s. l own mower ,
ne.:t to Stat e Highway Goroge
on Route 7 Phone (6 14) 985

----- ---- -----

~

TOMORROW . STOP IN
AND
SEE
OUR
PROPERTIES.
Helen L. TNiord
Gordon B. Tea lord
Sue P. Murphy
Associ•t•s

J AND 4 HM . furnished and un

109 High St .

HOUSE IN M•ddleport . remodel·
ed , 7 rooms both ce ntral oir .

---~

~.

19b5 MU~TAN G CO N V ~RT AB L~

(Bob Hoetlteh)

BRADFORD. A~c troneer , Com plete Service Phone 949-2497
o r 949. ;l()(X) Ro!;_rne , Ohro . Crr tt
Bradford .

SUPER SKHHR boss boot
7' . h p Mer cury motor . Electric
trollrng motor and occessor 1es.
Tra iler, 992 3483

9. Jack W . Carsey, Mgr.
1972 DATSUN 4 door stol1 on ·
wagon 2b ()(X) mrles -4 t:y l ,
good ga s mdeoge 750 N . 3t d
M iddlepor t
Phone 9q7 73:}q
af! er 4 p m

The Photo Place

·-----

J06~

Love" 6,13; Your Turn : Letters to CBS News 8; ·-

ABC News 33; Movie "You ng Cassidy'" 10
12 :1»--Movle "Sweet Bird ol Youth' " 8; Janak! 33;
1 :I»-Tomorrow 3,•; 1. 30-News 13.

o.

8 2 1 mo .

-~---

tO : 3Q-Like Ills 20; 11 :1»--News 3,4.8,10.13, 15,6; Dick·
Cavell 20; Over Easy 33.
11 :3o-Johnny Carson 3,.,15; Movie "'At Long Last

TH' E!te HOOK·
N05~D eUY'!&gt;
A TR:OUBLE·
MAKeR:·· Kl!fP.!I
STIRRIN' THtNCiS
UP ON THE;

TH OSE; lWO
NE-W HAND~ AT
THE PLI\NT!

GARAGE
Aut• &amp; Truck
Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682
4.3Q.flc

News 13.

lO : D0-20-20 6,13i News 20; Five Red Herrings 33.

'I• mile off JU. 7 by .pus Ofl
51 . Rt. T24 toword Rutland,

Pomeroy

wnL ·caiisrtiUcno -:A:-N:::o--=,N
~O R

Pomeroy Landmark

ARIES (Morch 21·April tgl Spon·

ta ne o u s enjoyme n t or ente r·
ta1nme nt cou ld be In !he o ff ing
for you toda y . T he re ' s no need
to feel gu11ty about rt It' s th e
mrdd le o f a wo rk week

TAURUS

Diesel Mechanic

Yc:A':'R':
D"=S'CA,=tE:'..:A;..u_g_u,- ,-::2:8.-;2::9-. 30
:::-clh: .9
to 4 Dar re ll Dugan's res rdence
Broadway St , Racrne
YA RD SALE , Wed.~. .:.a;;;n';
d--:T::h-u-rs-.-on
Rt 124 wes t . •;. m•le off N:t 7
Bypass . Furnrture. applro n ~er. '
clo thing . e tc, Lois of Iorge
women 's clo th 1ng Ever yth ing
real cheap . Sto rts ot q:oo am .

SENIORS

· 8; Christopher Closeup 10; 6:•s--Mornlng Report
3; 6:50--Good Morning, West Vlrglnl• 13; 6:55--

9:J(f-Carter Country 6; Mary Tyler Moore 13; Fi ddler
Named Fodor 20.

ROGER HYSELL

We are currently making
appointments for senior
por:traits . we use tradi tional settings and also
featur e
outdoor
por traiture.
Call Us Today

SMITH NELSONMOTORS, INC.

BUILDING LO T lor sale in
Pomeroy 32 1 1()() o f an acre .
Phone 992·3255.

ONI: GOOD used Un1c o gold
was her. top notch shape $125 .
Anolher good
buy fr om
~~m.!_f~ Y l~n~mork _?~2 ?18 1
USED FARM MACHIN~RV
Mf lb5 ~resei tro c t or
Mf 255 dresel tractor
MF 265 d1ese t tractor
MF 1135 dteseltr actor
MF 200 two Row Chopper
AC Cleaner Combing w 1th 4 row
corn head and 13 ft . gr orn
table . New Ideo one row corn
prcker .
'
SHINN 'S TRACTOR SALES
458 -1 630
Leon . WV

10·30·c

High School

-·

VA ·FHA 30 yr f mon'trng , ol so
re frnanc 1ng . Ireland Mort goge
77 E Sto le Athens phone (014 )
sn 3051

~

Chester, Ohio

6 · 30---News Conference~ ; News 6 ; Summer Semester

9 ·QO-Three's Company 6,13; Movie " The Amazing
Howard Hughes" 8, 10.

Free Esti lnates
Phone 949·2862
or 949·2160
8·20·1 mo. (Pd .)
IT'~

. . . . tor te the

1967 HOUSi: TRAILER 12•b0. All
e lec t ric furn ished . orr cond . ,
was her and dryer 2 lots in Ha rri Son ville 742 ·7820

-·~

992·5636.

-:"-::-.,..-·

1•· No• 11 1

'!'ou r p rrde rn w hat you d o today
wri t be admrred It's no t so
rmpo rtan t what you accomplish
as rt tS ho w yo :r go abo u t rt

BQX3

EXPERIENCED
Radiatorc:::!!!::::a.
Service t:llmll
fr- th4111 ..,.... Truck • ...,.._...,

NEW 3 bes;hoom house 2 bath s.
oil elec. , 1 ocre , M 1dd lepor1
cl ose to Rutland Phone 'Y/2
7481

~-

------· ..

Downspouts

Jack's Septic
Tank service

on hHIIng cos
Exptrlenc. •nd
·lu lly lnsurod
FrH Est.
Call992·2772
B·10·1mo. (Pd.J

SIX ROOM house and both, on
country on 11 acres. cent ral
heat. mrnerol right s 15 minute
drrve to town . lmmed1ote
posses s1on $13,000 742 3074
Of 992·5825 ,

---~--

Gult81S and

'l'A~ - 1BOO

WEDNESDAY , AUGUST 30,1971
5:45--Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13: 6:1»--PTL
Club 15; Summer Semester 10.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 29, 1978
7: 3Q-Hollywood Squares 3; Let's go to the Races 8,
Candid Camera 6; MacNeii ·Lehrer Report 20,33;
Price Is Right 10; That' s Hollywood 13; To Be
Announced 15 .
8:1»--Memorlesol Elvis 3••• 15; Happy Days 6,13; Billy
Graham Crusade 8; Belle of Amherst 20;
Leningrad Ice Show 10; Movie "Tempesl" 33.
8: 30-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6.13.

New or Repair

hck Ginther 985-3106

r'·

1915 DODGE VAN conversio n,
300, auto ., P.S. , P.S., air , AM ·
~M B· lroclo. he ry thrng needed B[n1~9\N s ~ .-- lo r camping
$4000 ftrm .
HOME SITES for sole. 1 acre and
992·2Jqs
-----up M1ddleport . near fl:utlo nd .
23 cU . FO OT chest type fre ez er
Coll992 ·i' 48 1.

IF YO U hove o serv1ce to offer
w ant to buy or sell somethmg
oe lookmg lor worlo.
or
w hatever
yo u II get resu lt s
laster wrth o Sentinel Won t Ad
Coli 992·2,\ 56

LIBRA (Se pt. 13-0ct. 131 Gel lOV ABL E WHITI: snow dr d t great
out where you c an me et and
Cleal wrth lo ts at peop le t oda~
Large groups hold a soe cr al
appeal fo r yo u because you
M'l e mu ch to c lfer 10 the m

Phone-

55 GALLON FISH oquor1um wi th
flor escent lrght ond stand .
Driven motor
frsh g rovel
992·31b2

VARD SALE . Monday Tu esday
ond We-d nesday on Bone
Ho llo w Rd off Rt 7 Bypass
Tools, trres , and all ki nd of
m•sc •l ems .

For Wednesday , Aug . 30

Cellulosic (wood" fiber)
Thermal insulation

--- ----·- -

YARD SALE. Soturdoy ond Sun·
day 2 mrles out on 143 Everell
" M cDonrel r es 1dence

•

JIM KEESEE

--------

OLD COINS pocket wa tches .
closs rrngs. weddrng bonds .
d1omands . Gold or silver . Call
__ !oger Woms ley.:.2~~~~~ _

Airman

ReJidtntiill •nd commercl•l. C1U for estimate. 24
Hour Servlc•. Any dillY ,
ilnytlme.

-·---

LOST.
NORWEG IAN Elk hound
with cho rn followe,d by beagle
pup In the vic ini ty of the Stole
Hrghwoy Garag e and Sand OLD FURN ITU RE 1ce bo•es bra ss
~ i dg e
Rd . 985· -4 4l?b and
beds . rro n bed s desks etc ..
985 ·4155
complete households . Wri te
M 0 Mrller . Rt of Pomer oy or
coli 992 77 60 .

Jan lee Lawson ,
CLERK
(8) 15, 22 . 29 , Jt c

BlOwn Insulation

Sni 30 pet. to 50

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

J&amp;L

r

TtMBER . POMEROY Forest Pro
duels Top price for standing
sow trmber Colt 992·59b5 or
Kent Hanby , 1 440-8570.

PUBLIC NOTICE
See led brdS w il l be rece i ved
by the V rl lage of Syracuse ,
Ohio , Meigs county , a.f the
Mayor ' s Office of the VIllage
Hell , Third Street , until 1'2
o'clock noon. September 6,
1978, for the following
300 tons , more or less , 4~4
slate spec ificat ion AsphaltiC
con c re te in place a nd ro l led .
The VI llage reser ves the
r ight to rej ect.)llny or a l l bids .

Plea ·

5 •nd 7 p.m. - Bobby D-fle1d (F'G)
9 and 11 p.m . - Alvin Purple (R1

TELEVISION
VIEWING

•

Q &amp; S MOBitE HOMES . Pt

BEAT THf October r ush . G 1ve us
son! . W Vo . besrdA HAck s
your order now for arr ows
cus tom made the way you want 1973 Broodm ore 14 x 64 2
bedr oom
them and cut to your tnd11nduol
length , Pkk up anytime before 19"13 Dorion 14.:00 2 bedroom
October I . S5 deposit with 1972 Victonon 1&lt;1 • b7 3 bedroom ,
2 bath
order
(Easton Gdmegetter)
alum invm ar r ows, $20 .95 1912 Cove ntry 12 x 65 3 bedroom
doz-en
Fi berg la s' $24 .95 1%9 Statesman 1'1 • bO 2
bedroom .
donn . We retle tc h arrows .
gloss , alumrnum or wOod , in - CO AL. llMESfONE , sa rod . gravel ,
cludes 3 new plast ic 110n es n1ck
calc rum chloride, le rt1ltz er . dog
WONK
OVI:RSEAS ,
Aust ralia .
and inser t, $1 per arrow A lso
loo.d , and oil types of salt E• ·
Af ri ca South A'menco , Europe .
w e stro1ghten olumrnum or·
celsro r Soli Works , Inc I: Mom
e- t c
Con str uctr on . So le s.
row s $.50 each arrow Trr
St
Pomer oy 992 ·3891.
En grneers . Clerrco l. ere . $8000
County Sport Shop Nor th and
to $50,000 plus. E.w:pensvs paid
UUHROUGHS
S!:N SI·MAT IC ac ·
Trr
Co u-nty
Sport
Shop
~ o r employment 1nformotion
coun ting m ach ine . Phon e
Downto wn 304 b75-298f! .
w rite : Overseas Employment ,
.
'
'
992 ·1 156,' The Doily Sentinel
Bo• 1011 , Bos ton , Ma 02102
CANNING TOMATOE S green
I t 1 Court Street
Pome roy
-- -·..
peppers Gero ldrn e 'Cleland .
OhiO.
OFFIO SUPI:RVISOR . degree in
Racine, Ohro .
Busmess Man.o gement wi th
m o1or in A ccountrn g and ex· 15 CU. FOoT uprrght freeter 3
yea r s o ld . Conta ct M rs . l es lie
perien ce
Hoff man . 742.')374
Cen tro ! Oper ot1ng
Company .
- . - - .
Phr lrp Sporn Plant New Hove n.
H ~A l TV PIG S $25 .00 and up ,
Wes l Vi rg inia 25205 . Phone
Phone 949· 2460
304-882.2028
APPLI:S, Frtzpotrick Orchards .
HHP WANTED · responsible per ·
State Rout e 689 , Pho ne
son to boord several cot s ond
Wrlk esv ille bb9 -3785
dogs untri placed . Meigs Co.
Humane Soc rety troll 9&lt;n . 5&lt;~2 7 2 ~ tl by lb" x 7 · wheels , Pr .
or 992·2639.
\ .,
$25 00 2 100 x 16 W1 nter tires
- - - - pr~ $~0~ ~ · ~ o~t ~9? ~09_2 _ _ _
197{1 CJ5 Jeep 1972 Hondo 450.
992-525 1.

-

tmr l.

Business Services

t"orS!t\e ; ,

DREAMING OF a white Chrrs tr:ios
wrtk no brlls? Wonderful t~
think about , but it cou ld come
true Be a To't Ladies' hostes'srln your home or by orders from
our frien ds torn toys ond grfts
ree . Noma brand to ys ,
r easonably
pr ic ed
w i th
g uarantee Gi ft s l or the w hole
fomr ly For rnformot ion call
742-2377 or 992·7056

Movie Channel 4

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Aug. 29, 1978

X X X

Your righl·hand opponent
opens on e notrump and his
partner raises him to three
A Ca nadian reader wants
t o k now what lead we recommend . W e recommend the

third· best spade . Our part·
ner is marked with some
high cards . Let "s lead a suit
m which we ca n help him .
1NE WSP"PER ENTERPR ISE ASSN . I

rOo you have a quesuon for
the experts ? Wrtte · Ask the
E•perts , · care of rh1s newspa·
per /nd lvtdual ques tion s will
be answe red lf a ccompanied
by sram ped, self-addressed
en'lelop es Th e most rnterest·
rng q ues rions wr /1 be used in
tfus co lumn and w1ll re cei ve
copies of JA COBY MODERN )

�•
'·

1

Logan teacher strike continues, levies lose

The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pm~eroy, 0 ., 'fl!esday, Aug. 29, 1978

Compromise reached, postal strike delayed
lJy GREGORY GORDON

strike.
troops, and pennitted unicin
WASHINGTON (UPI ) Late Monday - just eight le aders
to
avoid
a
For five tense days, the two hours before hWidreds of confrontation with a federal
sides to the postal dispute thousands of postal workers judge who issued an antiwere at a standoff that gave scheduled a defiant walkout strike order.
the nation a scare.
·
that would have thrown the
Director Wayne l;lorvitz of
Union leaders demanded nation's mail system iniAl the Federal Mediation and
the U.S. Postal ·Service return bedlam - the government 's Conciliation Service said conto. .the bargaining table . toP mediator came to the tract talks between the two
POstmaster General William rescue with. a compromise side~ will extend for another
Bolger insisted the contract allowing both sides to save 15 days Wider a process
dispute go instead lo face.
combinin g " " co llec t ive
compulsory arbitration, and
It also kept the mails 1 bargaining" ~nd binding
issued a tough warning to • moving witho~t emergency arbitration.
l!mployees that it is illegal to use of rnexpenenced federal

I

Trends, needs
will be given
The problems, trends and
needs of natural resources in
Meigs County will be appraised and discussed tonight
at 7:30 p.m. in the Meigs
CoWity Branch of Athens
CoWity Savings and Loan Co .
building at 216 w. Main St.,

r--Ai_:~-;-n;;~iil;-1
I

I
JAMES HUGHES
James J . (Mona) Hughes,
68, 106 High Street, Point
Plea sant , died Friday in
Veterans Memorialliospital,

"You call it what you
want / '
Horvitz
told
reporters. "It can be binding
arbitration. It abo can be ln
the form of a neRotlated,
mediated seiuement."
Horvitz, who reccmmended
the plan, sa.id he will appoint
a mediator In the next day or
iwo to bring· the two sides
IAJgether for 15 days of talks.
"lf agreement is reached
during the mediation period,
it will of course have to be
submitted to the various

.

two sons, John ' R ., at home,

'

\

~

Fire •••
(Continued from page I)
Southeastern Equipment Co.,
Gallipolis . CoWicil agreed to
table the matter until the next
meeting to give MuUen time
to study the material.
Meantime, ClerkTreasurer

Bank

£6

DOWNING CHILDS

'I

INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

I

~
.·
~
!

.

.

Bolger arsued he will be
forced tO ralae polltal rates in
advance of hla goal of 2\0 to 3
years if the Postal· Service
exceeds the 19.5 percent wage
and cost&lt;lf.Uvlng increase II ·
already has offered over
three years.

Gene

Grate

Paul VI, ordered hla own
triple crown sold some time
after his coronation and the
proceeds donated to the poor.
John Paul, after thinking it
over briefly, decided he
wanted. no crown at all.
He first told aides he
wanted the coronation
replaced wllh a simpler
"enthronement, " then
'·
skipped that Idea as well In
favor of a mass and nothln&amp;
else.
It was Joon Paul's decision
Columbia Gas Transmission Corp., a unit of the on the. procedure for his
Columbia Gas System, has lnvestllure thai caused probIncreased the rate it will pay lems.
· Mrs: Blanch Gilkey, 509 Headley St., Middleport,
Ohio producers for new gas to
bolds her "crazy, mbl:ed up" geranlwn plant. The plant
$1.90 per thousand cubic feel
blooms with flowers in both pink and red.
in an effort to stimulate
development of new gas
reserves In the state.
SQUAD CALLED
Previously, the maxlmwn
The
Middleport
rate the company paid for
new gas was $1.79 per Emergency Squad was called Veleraaa Memorial Hotpllal . Bryan Utchfleld . and son,
to 249 Pearl St., at 8:50a.m.
Admitted - Benny Spears, Harley McCully, Mrs. For':" .
thousand cubic feet. I
The new rate applies to Tuesday for Clarabelle 1\lley ' Syracuse ; Paul Burton, Mullinl and daughter, Mn.
Intrastate gas volumes who had faUen at her home. Racine; Freda Martin, · Elmer Newell and daughter,
delivered to Columbia Trans- She was taken to Holzer Shade; Bessie Tyrley, Charles Parks, Mamie
mission after July 1, 1978, Medical Center.
Proctorville; Vlrglnl . Riffle,. Plymale, Dennis Searles,
under contracts signed on
,.
Shade.
Kathy Thompson, Libby
and after Jan. l, 1978.
FREE CLOTHING DAY
Discharged - John Bryan, Truesdell, Mn. Terry Wallis
In a letter to Ohio
Free Clothlng Day will be Dorothy Demollkey, Ronald and son, NaMle White and
producers notifylng them of held at the Salvation Army, R e y n 0 1 d s, W1111 am Gertrude Wickline.
the change, Columbia also Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy, Stephenson, Anna Vaughan,
said an aMual escalation of 4 Thursday from 10 a.m. until Wesley Allen, Errol Follrod.
CLINIC CANCEUED
cents per thousand cubic feet noon. All area residents in
PlaMed Parenthood has
would be provided in new need of clothing are welcome.
contracts to combat the in·
announced that Ita clinic this
Holur Medical Cealer
coming Saturday has been
fluence of Inflation on
(Dildullllet, AuiUJUI)
operating expenses.
Esther Baker, Mrs. Ken·' cancelled because of th~
BAKE SALE
Columbia Transmission
neth Barnes and son, John Labor Day weekend. Ntn
Rutland EMS will hold a Berridge, Joseph Bla~er, clinic will be held Sept. 9.
supplies gas to about 75 af·
filiated and nonaffiliated gas bake sale Saturday, Sept. 2 at Laurie Cardillo, Kay Cecil,
companies in Ohio and six Rutland Department Store. Mrs. James Cox and
other states. It produces or Any baked goods or donations daughter, Todd Dempsey,
purchases abaut 10 per cent ' will be appreciated.
VIrginia DePue, Chester
RETURNS HOME
of the Columbia System's
Duhl, Mark Gard, John GW,
Eddie Burkett, Middleport, ·
total gas supj&gt;ly' In the ApJennie GUUiand, Mlna returned home Saturday
BARN DANCE
palachian region.
Hamilton, James Hopson,
A bam dance · will be held Amanda Hu~hes, WilHam after a "ay of 44 days in
Friday at Forked Run State Jeffers, Norma Knox, Mrs. l;folzer Medical Center.
park on SR 124 from 8 to 11
p.m. free of charge.
The large dutch bam is
located on the main park road
Wanted ! 2,500 m.ore on the right side. There will
registered voters in Meigs be a live band with square
and round dancing. A conCounty .
E . A. Wingett, Meigs cession stand will be
County .Board of Elections available.
members, reports thai 9,240
REUNION PLANNED
voters of the county have
Victor C. Young, Jr .
registered to vote In the Nov.
7 and following elections as of reunion wUI be held Sunday,
yesterday . Wingett states Sept. 3 at Royal Oak Park on
approximately ~.500 have not right . side near swimming
area . Picnic lunch wlll be at
yet registered.
noon
. All relatives and
It is being stressed that one
friends
of the family are
need register only once.
invited.
Deadline for registration for
the upcoming Nov. 7 election
Is Oct. 7. Residents may
BOOSTERS MEETING
register f. t the board office
The
Meigs
Athletic
located in the Masonic
wiU
meet
Monday,
Boosters
Temple at · Pomeroy from 9
Aug. 28 at 7:30 p.m. at the
a.m. to 4· p.m.
Registrations are also high school. A special In·
being done at the Meigs vitation to aU junto~ as well
Senior Citizens Center and at as senior high parents of
several courthouse offices. athletes are urged to attend.
Unregistered voters caMot
GET LICENSE
cast ballots.
A marriage license was
issued to Clarence Eugene
Jacks, 31, Middleport, and
FUNDS DISTRmUTED
State Auditor Thomas E. Sandy Kay Davis, 18, MidFerguson 's office reported dleport.
that
fifth
advance
SEEK DISSOLUTION
distribution of 1978 state
Fllln&amp; for dissolution of
motor vehicle registration
fees totaling $24,971,814.22 to marriase in Meigs CoWJty
Ohio counties, cities, town· Common Pleas Court were
Jane
Davis,
ships and villages. Of the Melinda
Pomeroy,
aild
John
Lee
total Meigs County received
Davia,
Pomeroy.
$23,154.55.

Additional

ELBERFELD$

Dressing
is Easy

"FLIXSTIIL"

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

TONI TODD
Toni Todd does your fa vorite kind of breezy so ft look, mingling the heathery texture of Kashmirri
with the fresh romance of a basketweave knit yoke,
front 'n back. Wonderfully full with gathers everywhe re . Elastic-smocked waist. Machine wash-dry.
Blue , Rose or Ca]llel. 6-16 . $32.00
I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
'

I
I

r

•

~e 8,800-student syst em , school operating levies were
have called for strike a pproved and two were
aulllorization.
rejected.
"The negotiations process
Voters in Ashland approved.
hasn 't even rWI its courSe" a 7.fknili operating levy for
he said because both si~s city schools by a 373-vote
areawaltinga reportfrom an margin.
advisory arbitration panel
Voters earUer this year
before proceeding with talks. defeated ihe same levy, and
The teachers contract does school officials had predicted
not have a specific expiration a $1 mUUon deficit this yeat
date, but trsditionally a ilew and the early closing of
pact is effective each Sept. I, Ashland city schools if it had
according to LTA spokesman l;liled again.
Carol A. Dolgosh, who said no
Voters also approved a
further negotiations are renewal school levy for
· scheduled.
Warren city schools Tuesday,
'In voting Tuesday, two but defeated an additional

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

levy for the school system.
The 5.7&gt;-miU renewal levy
was approved by 1,300 votes
out of about 8,000 cast, while
the 4.13-rnill additional levy
was defeated by 700 votes.
School officials said .tbe
renewal levy was needed in
crdei' to keep schools open
this fa ll. The officials said tbe
additional levy may be put on
the Noveinber ballot .
In Garfield Heights, voters
Tuesday again rejected a 7.5mUI operating levy by 1,393
votes, increasing the chances

of a strike by the system's 222
(Continued on pa ~e 12)

•

enttne

WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1978

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

County not liable

::.~::.:.":!.~~-= ~ ·~;·: .~ . ·~~·;"::~ $25,809 suit damages

wondering
about
e"'·
penditures of the school funds
may be Interested in knowing
more than a quarter of a ·
million dollars was spentlast
school
year
on
bus
operations.
· Dwight
Goins,
administrat!ve assistant, today
released the following breakdown involved In the costs ot
bus operation; maintenance
repairs, $16,164.62; fuel,
$47,990.76; tires and tubes,
$6,452 . 76;
insurance ,
$6,466.80; supervisor,
$10,751.50; mechanic ,
$9,216.83; mechanics helper,
$9,289.56; regular drivers ,

HOSPITAL NEWS

BAKER FURNITURE

·

o:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::,:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::&lt;:::::::::::'::::::::::

Producer
•
rate Is
increased

Whatever your taste In furniture, you can
choose with confidence from Flexsteel.
Whether you select contemporary,
traditional, modern or ailonlel, you will find
an Impeccable elegance In every piece that
will be a proud addition to your home. This
distinctive Flexsteel study Is available In
sofas. sectlonals. suites. chairs. and 1
unique sofa -sleeper. Hundreds and
hundreds of fabrics. all decor,tor -selecled
for beautiful correctness.

Tuesda~ .

In
La kewood,
the
La k·e wo od T'e a c h e r s
Association wtll be asked
Monday to authorize a strike
ifa contractsettlement ls nol
reached befcrehand with the
Lakewood Buard of Educalion .
Teachers, who have not set
a deadline for a settlement,
today said five issues remain
WISOlved ln the talks. Among
them are money, fringe benefits and contract language.
SUperintendent Richard A.
Boyd said he's surprised ibe
LTA;, which represents 77
percent of eligible teachers~

e
VOL. XXIX NO. 96

voters sought

of wh a t teachers called
harrassrnent.
The d!Bil'lc\ covers most of
Hocking Colllty.
MeanwhUe, teachersin the
Newark Schoof l)istrict will
meet tonight to vote on a
contract offer from the Board
of Education.
The
agreement was
reached earlier this week. It
contains a pay raise , a
compromise between what
the teachers demanded and
what.~ board first offered
and oUier frlnge benefits.
Classes are to · begin

. i

the father of princes and
kings, guide of the world and
vicar upon earth of Chrlsi
Jesus our Savior."
John Paul's predecessor,

warned that the village
finances are "too shaky to go
into a thing like this."
I' m in t he business of predicting things , but
Methods of flnancing were
eve n I ha ve trouble sometimes . You iust
discussed
and it was indicatne ve r kno w what 'll happen next . That's wh.y
ed
that
the
Southeastern
l ha ve a littl e money set aside savings
Equipment would wail until
acco unt. at the Cit izens Nat ional Bank .
February for the balance of
GARNET POTI'S
Fort une te lle r s wo rry about the future too .
the purchase if a payment of
Gamet Marie Potts, 61 , some seven or eight thousand
Syracuse, died Monday af· dollars was made when the
tern oo n
at
Veterans equipment is ordered.
Memori a l Hospital. Mrs.
A letter from HUD was
Potts was the daughter of the read acknowledging . that
"THE FRIENDLY BANK" .
late Thurman and Laura Hill Middleport Village has been
Ma rtin. She was also given a $128,000 grant for
Walk· Up Teller'Window
preceded in death by her sewer extension work In
and Auto-Teller Window
hu sband, Frank (Benny) conjunction with the plaMed
Open Friday Evenings S to 7 P. M.
Potts, one son, Benny Potts, nursing home. The letter
Jr., a nd two infant sisters. indicated, however, that no
She wa s a member of the actions are to be taken on any
Sy racuse Church of the expenditures until HUD holds
.
.
.. , Nazarene
a meeting with the village
MlltLEI'Oitr
She is survived by one attorney and officials to
01110
daughter, Jenni e Isabel Bass
advise them on how
and son-in-law , Brian Bass, procedures are to be carried
i
both of Sy racuse, on e
granddaughter, Bethany out.
Co un cil gave · a third
(Ell en)
Marie
Bass ,
M
rea
ding and approved
. '·
Sy ra cuse; one brother, passage of an ordinance for
Thurman
Ma rtin,
J r .,
the village to participate in
Syra cuse ; eight sisters, Ebna the National Flood Insurance
Member Federal Deposit Ins urance Cor poration .
Imboden and Myrtle Im- Program. A letter was read
Deposits insured to 540, 000.00.
boden, both of Minersville;
Ann Roush, St. Petersburg, from the Morton Salt Co. on
prices of salt for snow and ice
control.
Council accepted the bid of
The Shelly Co., Thornville,
for approximately 465 tons of
street resurfacing material
at $22.90 a ton, tack coating at
Sl a gallon and the uae of a ·
grader. There was a second
bid, but it was not opened
because it had been delivered
some 15 minutes after the
deadline for delivery of bida.
A motion to purchase. a
time clock for...-illage em·
ploye use made.by Mullen dld
not receive a second.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Fred Hoffman,
Councilmen Dewey l;lorton,
Carl Horky, William Walters,
Alien Lee King, MuUen and
See Bill Chi,ds - He Works For You!
Marvin Kelly, president;
Clerk -Treuurer G·nte;
Fisher and Davis from the
fire department and a
representative . of the
~~~~~0·~----------------~----~'~~;
· 23~4~2__j Southeastern Equipmeql Co.

-~!5!i-A.. "

limits."

bus
drivers,: clerks,
o;ustodlans and mechanics.
· OAPSE's cmlract with the
school board expired last
July 1 and was eitended
three times by the board.
Members of the Logan
Education Association continued a strike · agslnst the
Logan School District in
Hocking County. Schools in
the system's 4,500 student
diltrict will remain closed for ,
a seeond consecutive 'day.
The strike centers ilpoo
· individual rlghls, a grievance
procedure with binding
arbitration and termination

.

The Future ...

llli~ens ,aHonal

announcement, Bolger told
reporters: "l jullt don't haw
anythin8 new In llle way of a
money package IAJ offer. I
know wbat my limits are, and
J think that I've gone IAJ the

Superintendent Richard A.
Miner.
The. · 75 strikers are
members of Local180 of the
!llio Association · of Public
School Employees.
The 3,000«udent system's
teachers, members of the
O!ardon Classroom Teachers
Association, met Tuesday
and voted overwhelmingly to
support llle strikers.
'J'!!e walkout began after
the Chardon . Board of
Education halted payments
on medical insurance for 95
non-teaching employees, who
lnclude cafeteria workers,
lo

Solemn mass marking
new pope's b·e ginning

Shirley Edgeton, Mayberry,
W. Ya.; one sister , Mrs. Mary
Wilson , CedarGrove, .W. Va.,
five grandchildren and three By JACK R. PAYTON
great-grandchildren. He was
VATICAN CITY (UPI) Pomeroy .
preceded in death by a son, Pope John Paul.! has decided
He was born June 14, 1910 in Monty.
IAJ ~gin his pootificate with
Pomeroy . Conce rns in· Kanawha County. He was
Funeral servlces will be neither coronation or endividua ls and resource-· employed in 1922 as a coal held Wednesday 2 p.m. in the thronement, but simply by
related groups express at this miner until his employment Ebenezer Baptist Church celebrating mass Sunday for
meeting will be used to help at Lakin State Hospital where with Rev . Fletcher and Rev. the world 's 700 million
develop a live-year program he worked as a laborer a nd Eddie Buffington officiating. Roman Catholic faithful, the
for the U. S. Department of volunteered his services as Burial will be in a Charleston Vatican said today.
Agriculture.
director of the Employee- Cemetery.
The announcement said the
The Meigs Soil and Water Patient Choir until 1955. In
Friends may call at the 65-year-&lt;&gt;ld former Cardinal
Conservation District and the 1972 he returned to the mines Preston Funeral Home, Albino Luciani, elected
USDA Soil Conservation at Central Coal Company, Charleston, today from 7:30 pontiff three days ago, wtll
Service are sponsoring the Graham Station until 1975. to 8:30 p.m. The body will be celebrate a solemn mass in
meetin g
to
fulfill After his retirement he taken to the church one hour St. Peter's Square at 6 pm.
requirements
of
the became a Fost er Gr.and- prior to the service.
(noon EDT ) Sunday "to mark
Resources Cons ervation Act • parent at Lakin.
the beginning of his ministry
which President Carter
He was well known in the
as supreme pastor."
JOHN R. PALMER
signed November 1977.
llrea for coaching ~nd playing
This will replace the
John R. Palmer, 66, 550
The
Resources Con· adult and little league softball Shady Drive, Beaver Falls, ancient coronation ceremony
servation Act requires ISDA and baseball.
Pa., died Monday morning in 1n which pontiffs for centuries
to use public opinion as well · He attended the Mt. Moriah the Medical Center of Beaver received a IAJwering gold and
as scientific data to appraise Baptist Church, Middleport, County, New Brighton, Ohio. silver triple crown inscribed
the natural resources on all where he was a member of Mr. Pabner was born Sept. 5, with the words : "Receive this
private land; develop a five- the choir and the Paint Creek 1911 at Great Bend In Meigs tiara adorned with three
year program to meet Baptist Church, Gallipolis. County the son of the late crowns and know lllal you are
identified needs ; and to . Surv'ivors include two William A. and Roxie Hughes
evaluate progress toward daughters, Mrs. Darlene Palmer. He lived in the
Hicks, Charleston, and Mrs. community of his home for 50 Fla.; Bernice Winebrenner
achieving those goals.
and Ora Bass, both of
years.
Syracuse;
Mary Cox, BidMr. Palmer and his wife
well;
Betty
Wic)tles, Lanwere owners and operators of
caster,
and
Margaret
Cline,
one of the first motels on Rt .
Beverly,
and
several
nieces
· 18, Palmers Motel at Big
Beaver Boro. For 45 years he and nephews.
Funeral services will be
was employed at Townsend
held
Thursday at I p.m. at
Company, Ellwood City, Pa .
Ewing
Chapel with the Rev.
He retired in 1973. He was a
Dale
Bass
officiatlng ~ Burial
member of St. John's Burrys'
will
be
in
Gilmore
Cemetery.
Church and the Townsend's
Friends
may
call
at the
~Year Club.
funeral
home
after
7 p.m.
He Is survived by his wile,
today.
Dorothy Rosenmund Palmer,
and James R., Beaver Falls,
three grandchildren , two
sisters, Mrs. James (Rev a I
Egyud, Pittsburgh, and Mrs.
Edward (Gladys) Lawson,
Palm Springs, Calif., one
brother, Lawrence, New
Brighton.
Friends may call after 7
p.m. toda y and all day
Wednesda y at · Campbell 's
funeral home, 14th Street· and
8t h ·Ave .. Beaver Falls.
.
Services will be held at the
funeral home Thursday at 11
a.m. with the Rev. Carl A.
Stewart offi ciating. Burial
will be in St. John 's Burrys'
Church Cemetery.

t,eje~Done bW today. My wUe
union memberships for final, he said.
The unlms that rejected was away and I almost forgot
ratification ," said Horvitz,
flanked by three union llle latest qreel!lent are the It - but I certalinly mailed It
presidents and Deputy .American Postal Workers thia momlns."
the
National
Pretident Emmet Andrews
Postlilaster General James Union ,'
of
Letter of the 210,0110-member
Con way, the goverrunent 's Association
Carriers and the National APWU,
halled
. the
top negotiaiAJr.
But Horvitz said If talks fail Post Office Mall Handlen reswnpllon of lalkl and said
he would urge members to
to bring a negotiated accord, unon
1· .
Throughout the crisis the report for work.
the mediator will "decide the
remaining unresolved" postmaster general remalped . But the agreement gave no
issues by the lfklay deadline. calm and confident there clue of how the two Bides will
their
biggest
If it goes through an would be no walkout, telling settle
arbitration process, the reporters Monday : " I difference : money.
my
Just hours before Ho~vitz'
mailed
mediator 's decision wiU be certainly

UDIIedPre111Diel'llllloaal
Strikesagainst the Chardon ·
and Logan school districts
continued today, while
teachers In the New~rk
IICbool district vote tonight on
a new contract,
Non-leaching employees
are 011 strike in the Chardon
School Dilltrict, with most of
the system's · 150 teachers
expected lo again honor
picket lines today·
Supervisory personnel,
substitute teachers and
regular teachers who crossed
theplcketllneswerehandling
classroom duties, according .

'
"'

Although a Meigs County
petit jury awarded damages
totaling $25,809.90, Meigs
County was not found liable in
a $480,000 lawsuit that ended
Tuesday in Common Pleas
Court.
The civil action was filed by
Shirley Ann Evans, Rt. 2,
Racine, and her children,
Jason Scott Lawson, Sherrie
LyM Lawson, Amy Lawson,
and Robert Lawson , Jr ,,
against Robert P. Bums,
Gahanna, Robert Franklin
Lawson , Rt. I, Portland,
and
the
Board
of
Meigs County Commis-s1oners . Th e suit wa s
the result of a tw4H'ar ac:
cident that. occ urred on

... 'f'

L

MAKING CATSUP - Mr. and Mrs. George Aibert
Hill bu.sy making catsup Tuesday. The final product will
not be cm~pleted untU today.

Catsup making,
almost ·lost··art
Making catsup outalde in a
large kettle (also used for
making apple butter ) . is
almost a lost art. This does
not hold true for Mr. and Mrs.
George Albert HUI, Letart
Falls.
Tuesday they were busy
cooking tomatoes. After the
cooking process Is completed,
the juice from the tomatoes is
placed In larse crocks.
The juice stands overnight.
Today It wiU be placed back
in the kettle for another

AnnUJJl meeting
st~~:rts Aug. 31
MARIETIA - The aMual
meeting of members of the
Corporation for Ohio Ap. .,.4.\a~:.blu~..P-t."•'Pmll'

.

cooking process at which
time • spice bag, sugar and
yinegar are added. When the
catsup is ready it is taken orr
and placed in jars. This year
(two years ago the Hills made
catsup J they picked 21
bushels of tomatoes which
will make approximately 25
gallQIIs of catsup. The catsup
maklng process is not easy, it
takes several days before you
have the completed product.
But won't it taste good this
winter.

j_')_.;r~h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_·a_y_
HENDERSON, KY. - A PRELIMINARY HEARING was
to be hald today In Henderson Dl!ltrlct Court for Wayne Lee
Hannah, 23, a racetraclt employee charged in connection with
the Ellis Park fire last week in which 3i horses were killed.
District Judge Harvey Ershlg Jr. assigned altorney James
. Esser, Henderson, of the public defender's office, as Hannah's
attorney.
WASmNGTON - A TIIREAT AGAINST two District 17
United Mine Workers !oCala falled to materialize when
offlciala pledged cooperation with a probe of their local's
financial records.
· ·
The local officials had refused to turn over the books to the
· iilternal!onal union for inspection. Ho·wever, representaliYI!s
of the two locala told the International Executive Board
Tuesday in Washington they would surrender the records as
1100n as they were formaUy notified to do so.

(COAD) will be held at the
Holiday Inn, Marietta,
Thursday, Aug. 31, and
Friday, Sept. I according to
Keith F. Molihan, chairman.
The eighth AMual COAD
meeting will include a Thursday night banquet with Pat
Cusick, Washington, D. C.
national director of Community Action Agencies as
the guest speaker, and the
election of officers of COAD
scheduled for Friday, Sept. I.
COAD is an organization of
16 Community Action
agencies In 29 Southeastern
Ohio counties, serving a third
of Ohio's geographic area,
and one-fourth of Ohio's
· population . The corporate
office is located in Marietta.
Molihan, director . of the
Lawrence County Community Action Agency Is
chairman; Joseph Barsotti,
director of the Gallia-Meigs
CAA Is vlce-&lt;!halnnan; and·
Anthony Mele, director of the
Waahlngton-Morgan Counties
CAA Is treasurer. June
Vernon, of the Jefferson
County CAO serves as

secretary.

The COAD organization Is a
non-profit
corporation
associated with the 16
Co!nmunity Action agencies
and other resources service
agencies.
A_g~ong
the programs
COJID sponsors through the
COLUMBUS - JAPANESE NATIONAL RAD..WAYS has member Community Action
preaented a bid for a Sl million contract with the Ohio aau· · agencies are home win·
Trlinsportatim Authcrlly lor development of hlg!Hpeed rail terizatlon, senior nutrition
aervice In Ohio.
and meals at home, foster
The lid was presented by Hotswnl Harada, director of the
d.
Japanese finn. The contract i.l to be awarded early next Garage damage ,

bam leveled

month.
BAYMIN~TIE,ALA. - THENAVY SAID Tuesday Navy

EnllCn Dennis P. Hirtz, 23, Parma, 0 ., was one of the three
·perDII klUed Monday when . a helicopter exploded and

in ·separate fires

aaahed.

Seven Racine fire department members answered a
call IAJ the home of Grace
Krider, Fourth Sl., Tuesday
where • garage caught fire,
The buUdin&amp; was about 75
percent d811royed flremeri
said. Cause of the blaze was
not determined and no
monetary 1011 figure wu ~ .

The Navy iald the three were a pilotinslruclor and two
lltudents. Hirtz was me of the lltudenla. The Oilier vic:Uma were
Malrlne Capt. Alan Arthur Schultz, :10, HiniGn, Iowa, the
lnltruct«; and Marine 1st U. John TIKmas Jenklna, 211,
IWtilllbUill, Mila.
. NEW YORK (UPI)- AU. S: DISTRlcr OOURT Judie
hu llltlld a permilllent lnjunc\lan barrlil&amp; actor Gtorle
HamiiiGn fnm vlollllinl! · antl:traud provlll0111 rl federal
IIICUl'lllta lawa.
The r.deral .flvemmenl 'l'lladay charled HamUion with
leclll'itiNI~ In ClOMectiOII with the sale 'of thouaandl rl
lloCii 1111..., be owned Ia two ama11 COO!panlea.

M1d d 1e p or t ' s F 1r e
Department was called at
10:11 p.m. TIIIIC!ay to Rt. 1,
Cheahire, where a barn
owned by R.O.D. Corp. waa
leveled by fin, It was fqred
the lire would ..,...~ tO
ntarbJ oil welll, ho-,
fin llllbtar~ were able to keep
It confined to the Immediate

QUCAGO - MEMORIAL DAY WEEKENI) TRAFFIC
' ..._ could be r~ced by IIICIA lllln 2D ]lll'oent If holldlly
.IIIOklrllll-.141 - safety bella, the National Safety CoullcU
IIIII lodQ. ·
"I tilt cumat rail 01 _,.1 belt - II malnlalaetllhil
t.bar Dll)' .........,. fo
I * - wiD cia In lnfllc
ICddentl bet- I p.m. local lime Jl'rkla)'llld mklnllb' area.
llcllday ," CauncU Prllidtlnt Vl!lctnt Tullll)' llld,

m

~·

retirement, $18,340.49; workmen's compensation, $649.99;
hospitalization,
Si8,236.43;
other insurance, $318.48;
utilities.• $4,000.26; supplies,
$1,453.96.
·
Buses during the 1976-77
year were driven 378,432
miles and that mileage in·
creased to 395,081, an increase of 16,649 miles during
the 1977-78 school yeat.
Operating bus costs during
the 1976-77 year totaled
$231,555.95 compared to the
$266,848.48 costs involved
during the 1977-78 year, an
increase of $35,292 . ~3.

lj

panions,
fo od
stamp,
outreach and head start

oie than a ·huiidred

Community Action Agency
personnel are expected to
attend the Marietta meeting,
including stat~ and federal
legislators, representatives
of Ohio 's Department of
Public Welfare, Health, State
Clearinghouse, Economi c
and Community Development, the Commission on
Agmg , and representatives of
several federal departments.
COAD Community Action
agencies serve the following
Ohio ·counties : . Adams,
Brown, Athen s, Hocking,
Perry , Belmont , Gallia ,
Meigs, Guernsey, Monroe,
Noble , Harrison , Carroll,
Tuscarawas , Highland,
Lawrence, Jackson, Vinton,
Jefferson, Knox, Holmes,
Cochocton ,
Ashland,
Muskingum, Pike, Ross,
Scioto, Washington and
Morgan.
.;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::

LETIERS URGED
The Leading Creek
Conoervaocy District Is
urging all Meigo Couallallll
lo write tbe Envll'811111ental
Protection Agency
regarding extension ol
EPA regulallollll for four
yean oo thai Ohio coal can
be baned.
The dlotrlcl points out
that tbe economic effect on
Melga Caallly will be eslnmely urmful to the
county If lhe regulatiooq'
are nol exlellded. Those ,1
willhlll{l lo write !etten are
to addreu them to Etbe!
Norman, hearing clerk, ·
Ohio EPA, Box IOU,
Columbus, Ohio 43!16.
POOL REOPENS
The Middleport swimming
pool reopened today after
being closed for the past wee~
dae to a breakdown of the
circulating pump, 'Cheryl
Burdette, park director,
SMOunced today.
The pool will remaln open
until September 10 in order
tbat additional swimming
will be available to relldenta.
The pool not'lllllliY C]GHI
each Yetr on
Day.

Laoor

Weather
Rain heavy at times
toni&amp;ht. Highs today,
Thlll'lday 75 to Ill, loiU in the
mld lOa. Probability of
preclpttatlan near 1011 perdnl
today. 10 percent tonight, 80
parcenl Thursday.

been changed from a gravel
road to a hard suriace some
50 days prior to the accident .
Da ve · Spence r, office
manager of the Meigs County
Hi ghwa y testified county
work records showed the
amount of time and money
that had been spent on the
road ($40,000 ) two months
prior to the accident.
Ted Warn er , co unty
superintendent of the Highway Department testified to
the amount of work per·
formed an( inspections made
prior, during and completion
of the triple seal job during
the sununer of 1975.
Ga ry Wolfe and Dave
Cleland, members of the

plaintiffs. Presiding Judge
was John C. Bacon.
Testifying Tuesday mor·
ning was Dr. Lewis Telle,
who explained the extend of
injuries to the plaintifls.
Testifying for the state
were Phil Radford, postman ;
Charle s Lawrence, bus
driver
and
Mary
Greer, a neighbor, who
ali
sta ted
that · the
depression in the road was
not of serious nature.
W&lt;1rden Ours, forlljer
county commiss ioner and

Henry Wells, president of the
board of county com·
missioners testified that an
inspection of the road had
been made an~ the road had

Ra c ine emerge ncy squad

grandparents; senior com·
'ir.JMl.J.tr~ .

County Road 31 on Oct: 31,
1975. The plaintiff charged
that road conditions were
responsible.
Burns settled with the
plaintiff, prior to the suit and
was not involved in the trial.
Burns testified for the
plaintiff. Due to the law in the
case the jury was not made
aware of the settlement.
The jury did decide that
Robert Lawson was to pay
Shirley Evans s~. ooo and the
children a total of $809.90.
Rick Crow, Prosecutor and
Carson Crow , Assistant
Prosecutor, represented the
defendants, and Jerry Todaro
·or Wolsky and Blue,
Columbus, represented the

'

Second grade student
dies ln ·:bUs' accident Gallia County's first traffic
fatalit y of 1978 occurred
Tuesday, at 3:40 p.m., when
sev,en-year old Seldon M.
Moore, Route I, Gallipolis,
was killed in a school bus
accident followin g the sec'ond
day of school.
The Galiia-M eigs Post
Highway Patrol reports
Moore was discharged from a
bus, owned by !he Gailia
CoWity Local School District,
by
Harold
'operated
Coughenour, 29, Rt. 5
Gallipolis, across from his
home, on Kelly Dr., just off
George's Creek Rd.
Officers report as the boy
walked in front of the school
bus, crossing Kelly Dr.
toward his home, Coughenour
pulled the vehicle forward,
running over the Moore

.grade student at Addaville
Elementary School.
Commenting on the accident, which is still under
investigation, by the Ohio
Slate Patrol, Sgt. G. D.
Henderson stated that
preliminary findings indicate
· Moore was struck by the front
bumper as the bus moved
forward , and knocked to the
ground.
The back dual wheels ran
over the upper half of the
boy's body.
Followin g the accident ,
Coughenur was transported
to Holzer Medical Center,
reportedly suffering from
shock. Coughenour was
admitted, and was listed in
good condition this morning .
The victim was born June
27, 1971, at Bangkok ,

youth. Moore was a second

both testified that the road
condition was good. Cleland
introduced his report stating
the road was good.
J err y Powell, co u11ty
omploye, teotllied to pa"'\n&amp;
"'· pe rfbi' med.~ to ,ttte ~road;-,... ·,;

r811aurant.
"l don't aee how anyone in
that Pilla Hut llllrvived,"
uld Noel~. who was
wcr~ In a nearby llore
when the twllter alnlck.
Thou11nda of Louisiana
Gulf Qlul l'llllldinta, drlvt~~
to high gro\1111 by Dlbrl'l 80
lllflb 111111&amp; and. high tides,
betlan returnln1 to their
homes Tueaday. Ultle
ctamaae wu ellllld in the
coutal ..... .
IIDI rain llqUil!IJ drifted
north, hilling areu near the

junction of Mississippi ,
Arkansas and Tennessee.
Eloise ~arp, about 5o, died
in her mobile heme near
frystal Springs, Miss., when
a tornado slammed it against
trees. Sheriff Earl Guess said
several other .persons including Mrs. ~arp 's 69year-&lt;&gt;ld mother - suffered
cuts and bruises.
· 'The death brought to two
the number of people kUied
by the stonn. An oU worker
was drowned when he was
knocked from an offshOre rig
Monday by !Hoot waves.
Other twisters were slglited
near
the
northwest
Mississippi
towns
of
Starkville, Springdale, Cedar
Bluff and Flora . Violent
wlndl uprooted · trees In
downtown Little Rock, Ark.,
and damaged hcmes on the
oulaklrta of West · Helena,
Ark.
An olllcial at Methodill
South Hospital in Mempliia,
operatin&amp; on emersency
power, said 21 persons had
been lrought to the holp!tal
from the tornado scene but
only one was Jn)ured
serloully enough to be admitted.

Power was knocked out in a
kquare block section of the
Whitehaven area near
Memphis International

the

G ree r ,

Lester

Richa rd s,

Tha iland, son of Michael D. Bern ard Gilkey, Wesley
and Gill AM Dorman Moore. Buehl , Don Meadows, Bob
One brother , Douglas, 2, Beegle and Sheriff James
survives.
Proffitt.
Grandparents
surv1vmg
Bill Foster, independent
are Mr. and Mrs. Dna Lee candldate r?r c~m.missione r
Moore, Gallipolis, and 1\lr. · who has withdrawn du~ . to
and Mrs. Stanley Dorman, health cond1t10ns, testd1ed
Birmingham,
England; that m hiS opmwn the road
great-grandmothers, Mrs. was not properly repa1red.
Seldon Moore, Cheshire· and
It was brought out under
Mrf· Verble Wallace, Mer· cross exammat10n, Foster
·cerville.
never
reported
hiS
· · ~The Moores have resided in opinion to anyone since he di'd
th e Georg es Creek Com· not feel it would do .any good.
munity the past six years.
Jurors were Wilham A.
Private fWieral services Young, Ra ymond Col e,
"will be held 3 p.m. Friday at foreman, Donna Davidson,
St. Peter's Episcopal Church Sha ron K. B~ffmg t on ,
with Rev. A. H. Mackenzie Margaret Grossnickle, Ina
officiating .
Teaford, Helen Dias, James
Friends may call at the Gaston and AMie L. Moon,
Waugh . Halley . Wood alternate.
Funeral Home from 7 until ~
p.m. on Thursday.

Twister hits Memphis
United Press International
Turbulent remnants of
Tropical Storm Debra
swirled into tornadoes that
slashed through parts of
Missisaippl, Arkansas and
Tenn.,.. Tuesday, killing
one person and injl!ring
dozens more.
The twisters killed one
wm~an , uprooted trees and
extensively d·amaged
bulldlnss and cars. A l«nado
roared down Elvis Presley
Boulevard in Memphis late
Tl!eeday, hiltinl! a line of fast·
food restaurants and cuWng
through two .lllopplng centers
bul mlsaln&amp; Graceland
Mansion where Presley Is
buried.
Twenty-ljve penons were
Injured, lllOII of them when
the roof fell in on a plua

Other witnesses for

st ate not called were Lowell

Airport . Officials cut off ~as
supplies to the area. Power
poles were uprooted or
knocked askew and lines
littered ihe rain-swept
streets .
At its ..strongest, Debra
drenched low4ying southwest
Louisiana with more than 6
'inches of rain and sent
residents of storm-wary
Cameron Parish IAJ relatives
cr shelters on high ground.
But in Arkansas, Debra
brought relief to wilting
crops, scorched lawns and
from temperatures in tbe
1001, dumping up to 5 inches
in south and east Arkansas.
Agron&lt;mlst Ruel Ne!ller of
the University of Arkansas
extension service said the
rain was timed perfectly to
boost the stale's soybean
crop ·
"It's too early to say how
much the rain will be worth,
but If it increases yields an
average of one bushel per
acre on the state's u mW!on
soybean acres It would raise
the crop's ~alue by $30
mllllon," he said.
sh owe r a a nd
thunderstorms
spread
throughout
the
lower
Mlallsslppi and Ohio Valleys.
Flash llood watches were
posted for portions of
(Continuect.onrgei2 )

Ideas

•
gtven
Input as to the role
resi dent s would like the
Meigs Soil and Water Con·
servation District to play was
given by two dozen residents
attending a district meeting
Tuesday night at the Meigs
Branch of the Athens County
Sa vings and Loan Co.
Satisfaction was expressed
on present programs and
some or the suggestio11S for
future programs included
more reclamation of strip
· mine areas, clearing creel\
chaMels, fighting river bank
erosion and perhaps some
zoning.
It was brought out that
more local and federal
moneys would be needed for
program e~pansion.
The dlstnct has some 285
questionna.ires which have
· been completed by Melp
residents on programs they
feel should be carried out by
the district as another aouree
of input.
These questlonnalrea alonl
with the Input provided by tiM
meeting Tuesday will Iii
complied and pt-.ted to
the diltrict board by Call"
servationlst Boyd Rut!: 1111
Friday.
Rex Shenefield, chalnilatJ
of the ~rd. (ll'Wided over
last nlght s meetlni!.

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