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•

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12 .:... The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ptmeroy, 0., Wedneodoy, AU~~ . 30. 1978

Harvard professor heads postal_negotzators

.

r-------------------------

Secretary
:~.~~a ~.~!~~J
Man chin
·n eeds help

WASHINGTON (UP!)- Negotiators lor the Postal Service
and three Wlions, who failed to settle their contract dispute
IUlder the threat of a national mail strike will try agalfi
beginning Friday under guidance of a ~ard University
professor.
· James Healy, a nationally known labor relatlona expert, will
open a liklay cootract bargaining period between the two
sides Friday mornlrig, and will oversee the talks through the
Labor Day hollday weekend, a spokeswoman lor the Federal
Mediation and Concillatlon Service said Wedneaday.
.The talks wiD tun until Sept. 16, if necessary.
Under an agreement that averted tlie Illegal walkout

1

E. L. (Pat) Baldwin, 67,
president of the EckardBaldwin Funeral Home in
Akron,
died
Mond ay
following a seven month
illness.
Mr. Baldwin was fonnerly
a resident of Middleport. He
was born in Osceola, Ia., and
1VOrked as a tire builder for
the B. F . Goodrich Co. in
Akron before be attended an
embalming college in
Cleveland. He then worked

CHARLESTON, W .V a.
(UP! ) - West Vtrgmta
Secretary of State A. James
Manchln says he, needs help
in seeking a court action to
halt the removal of debris at
the site of the Willow Island
scaffolding disaster .
Manchin _called on other
state agenetes and relattves
qf the 51 workmen, .stx ~f
whom were Ohtoans, killed m
the disaster to help . stop the
cleanup of the debns at the
base of the coohng tower on
the Monoogahela Power Co.
~ant.
.·

"My lawyers advised me
that others mltst enter !his
llattle with me if the state Is
to assert lhe Interests of its
citizens at Willow Island," he
said.
"Assisted by the advice of
my attorneys , I have
reluctantly concluded ~at
any immediate legal action.to • Veterans Memorial Hospital
stop this blatant removal of
ADMITTED
Linda
essential evidence must be Rhodes, Long Bottom ; Gloria
b-ought by others with a Decker, Reedsville ; Judith
better standing to seek Smith , Racine ; Rodney
injunctive relief, such !IS Harmon, Pomeroy; Pearl
surviving relatives," he said. Utile, Middleport ; Chester
He said he · believes the Mundry. Reedsville; Brian
family members have a Connolly, Syracuse; Richard
better chance to seek an ' DeMoss, Pomeroy ; Carol
injunction against Research· Lunsford, Pomeroy.
Cottrell
Inc.,
the
DISCHARGED - Minnie
We feture both traditional subcontractor for the cooliltg Johnson, Michael Hannon,
settings and outdoor
tower . The company has Joseph ltaifhill.
portraiture in creating
continued to remove tile
vaur seniar portraits.
debris
despite Man chin's
Feel free to ca II us Holzer Medical Ceoler
decision last week to revoke
Without ob'ligation - for
Discharges, Aug. 29
details .
Research-Olttrell's right to
Mrs.
Kenneth Baker and
do business in West Virginia .
son
;
Louise
Burguess ;
Manchin urged the family
Shirley
Bel
ville;
Ronald
I Bob Hoeflich )
members to seek action in
992 -5292
Pleasan ts County Circuit Black ; Elsie Blevins; J~ssie
109 Hig MSt .
Court, which ·has jurisdiction Boggs; Mary Buck; John
Pomeroy
Carpenter ; Mrs . Ralph
over the accident site.
Cahndler and dau ghter ;
MRS. MArc Eblin and son ;
Zenia Evans; David
Frymyer ; John Guelt ;
Beverly Guinther; Mrs.
Barry Hamm and son ;
Sharon. Harrison ; Clifford
FOR
Hayes ; Judith Ireland;
Sllmley Jones, Jr ; Sheila

r»iE PHOTO PLACE

ENROLL NOW
FALL TERM
AT

Twister

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

!Continued from page I )
southeast Missouri, northeast
ArkllllS88, western Kentucky
and southern Indiana . .... ·
Lo c ally
hea vy
thunderstorms also drenched
portions of southeastern New
Mexi co and West Texas .
Flash flood warnings were
issued foc · portions of two
counties in the • Nebraska
Panhandle and foc Cameron
County In South Tetws.

Choose an exciting Career in one of these
success proven fields :

•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•SECRETARIAL
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•JR. ACCOUNTING
·•GENERAL OFFICE

Logan

DAY or EVENING CLASSES ·

!Continued from page 1)
teachers next Wednesday.
Begin September 18, 1978
The levy - defeated 3,49().
2,097- would have raised an
• additional $1.2 million
Financial Assistance Available
, annuaUy on a continuing
Approved for Veterans
basis, If approved.
It was the llecood setback
Accredited by the Accredit ing Commission of the
for
the levy despite warnings
Association of Independent Colleges and Schools.
from school officials that
drastic cutbacks will be made
throughout the 4,100-student
system. The same levy was
defeated by a margin of
nearly 2-1 in June.
School officials today said
!he levy wili be placed on tbe
51 . No. 75-02-04728
Nov. 7 ballot. ·
·
The Jcbool board is to meet
FOR INFORMATION
tooight to evaluate election
results and plan cutbacks and
teachers are to meet Wednesday night to discuss the levy 's
OR WRITE :
defeat.
However, President Glenn
Jambor of the Garfield
Heights Teachers Association
t P.O. Bo• 7&lt;9
1 ·said no strike vote will be
l Gall ipolis. OH . 45631
1 taken until a meeting next
Tuesday.
~ ( ) Plea se provide me with more infor mation !
:
Teachers are scheduled to
report to schools later that
Name
Age
I
Address
City
Stalo _ _Zip.,-,:
day for1 orientation sesaions.
The .!I!Ystem's three-year
Phone No. - - ' - - - -- -- - - - - - contract with the teachers
expires Dec. 31.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, August 31, 1978

Lanham; Maude Mannering;
Marguer ite McCullough ;
Tekisha Mitchell ; Nancy
Knott ; Patricia Parsons;
Marie Pursley; Mrs. Reevis
Schultz and s·on ; Lynn Slater;
Beulah Swindler; Goldie
Terry; Richard ThoIIIIIs ;
Mrs. Darrell Tilley and
daughter ; William Walters ;
Lannis Williamson II; Mrs.
Lawrence Wood and son .
Births, Aut!. %8
Mr. and Mrs. Terry
Downey, son, Jackson . ,
son, Jackson
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Heines,
daughter , Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. John Tabor,
sun, Ravenswood, W. Va .
Births, Aug 29
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Phillips, daughter, Crown City
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Roush,
daughter, Middleport
Mr. and Mrs. Robert McCallister, daughter, Kilt's
Hill
Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Thompson, son, McArthur

Bidwell man
fined on
four charges
One defendant was fined on
four counis and six others
forfeited bonds in the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews Tuesday night.
Fined was Robert Manley,
Bidwell, $250 and costs ,
reckless operation; $50 and
costs, drivirig while under
suspension ; $100 and costs,
leaving the scene and $30 and
coots, driving left Dl center.
Forfeiting bonds were
Clinton Smith, Jr. ; Point
Pleasant, and Vinton Smith,
Hartford, W. Va. , $350 ·each
posted on charges of driving
while intoxicated; Rodney
White, Long Bottom, $30,
assured clear distan ce;
Howard Writesel, Racine ,
. $30, wrong way on a one way
street ; Theodore Fisher,
Pomeroy, $35, speeding, and
Eddie Jewell , Middleport ,
$30, left of center.

TWO FINED
)'"ined in the court of
Middleport May or F red
Hoffman Tuesday ni ght were
Donald Lovett, Middleport,
$100 and costs in a disorderly
manner charge, and Rhea
Ann Gilbert , 18, Cheshire , $10
and costs. on a charge of
running a stop sign.

CALL 446 4367

[~iuwC&gt;usius~EsscoLLi~£1

I

.I

.

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

BOMJS

ACE

CHICKEN BARBECUE
RACINE - The Ra cine
Volunteer Fire Department
wiU stage a publi c chicken
barbecue on Labor · Day
·beginning at I! a.m. Dinners
includlng chicken , rolls, and
a complete meal will be $2.50
and price for one-half chicken
will be $1 .50.
SQUAD CALLED
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to 368 E .
Main St. , at 7:57 p.m.
Tuesday for Carol Lunsford ,
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where she
was admitted.

BEAUTIFUL ~ The flowers In the yard of Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Donahue, East Letart, are beautiful to say

extended
All seni or citizens and
disabled individuals wh o
have not yet applied for the
Energy Discount for this
winter's heating bills have
been granted a 30 day extension. The original filin g
deadline was September I.
Ohioans must now have
their applications filed by
October 1 in order .to be
considered for the Energy
Discount benefits.
All residents of Ohio should
contact their family, friends ,
and neighbors to ensure all
eligible recipients have made
application. The Energy
Discount
Program
is
available; we muSt take the
time today to enroll all of our
fellow Ohioans who qualify
for the be11efits.
In order to be eligible for
this program a person must
meet the three following
requirements.
- The applicant must be
head of household and
- Must have reached the
age of 65 by December 31 ,
1978 or be totally and permanently disabled at any age
and
·
- must have a total annual
income of no more than
$7,420.00 in 1977 or an expected total income of no
more than $7,420.00 in 1978.
The program provides a 25
percent reduction on utility
bills for the billing months of
December 1978 through April
1979 to those persons who
purchase their energy from a
metered utility company. For
those persons who purchase
their energy from a retail
dealer, the pr0gram provides
a payment of $87.50 to the
applicant provided that at
least that much has been
spent for the heating period.

. BELMORE, Ohio (UP! ) Striking. migrant workers in
Northwestern Ohio were io
move into parts of Putnam
and Henry County today in an
attempt to get more workers
to join their campaign for increased pay and benefits.
Ray Santiago, secretarytreasurer of the .Farm Ulbor
Organizing Committee, said
about 2,000 of the area's 8,000
migrant w&lt;J'kers, most of
whom pick tomatoes and
cucumbers, have joined the
wock stoppage.
FLOC has established a
tent city bere for striking
wockers, giving them shelter
and food .
"We had a caravan up in
Putnam County all day
ye.nei'day and we pulled out
hundreds of wockers," said
Santiago. "We wUl have two
caravans today -about 45 or
50 cars apiece - to go into the
· Pandora area of . Putnam
Colinty and n&lt;l'thern Henry
County.
"We will talk to workers
who are still picking in hopes
of convincing them to join in
our strike and invite them to
our nighUy rallys in Tent
City," said Santiago.
"We have been serving
lunch and dinners to the

MEETS TONIGHT
The Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society wiD
hold a working meeting at the
museum ton ight, 7 p.m.
Preparations will be made
for compiling historical data
for the new Meigs County
History to be published by the
society. Anyone interested in
helping with the project is
invited to attend.
SCHOOL OPENING
Bobby Ord, superintendent
of Southern Local School
District , announc ed today
school will open Wedneaday,
Sept. 6.
Bus schedules will remain
the same as last year Ord
' stated.

LEVY MEETING
Sali s bury Township
Trustees will meet Sept. I, at
777 Pearl Street, Middleport,
at 7 p.m. lor the passing of a
resolution declaring it
necessary to levy a talt in
excess of the ten mill
limitation for cemetery
operation and road dust
control.

ACE HARDWARE
MEIGS PLAZA
9-6 M/SAT, 12.&amp; SUN.

·

allowed to leave the plane .
The alrerait of the Polillh
alrUne LOT was flying from
Gdansk, formerly Danzig, to
East Berlin, when the
hijacker took ammand.
· As soon 1!1 It landed at
Tempelliof, American Air
Force fire trucks IUrJ'Q\IIded
it and a group of :Mierican
officers went out to llpe8k to
the hijacker and to the pilot.
AI the same time, the'
Americano closed the airport
to
visitors
Including
journallsta.

EXTENDED FORECAST ..
Fair
Friday
aad
Saturday with a cbuce of
sbowen or tllllllCieniOrml
Sunday . Hilll• will be
from tile upper 'lt.. 10 mid
111. Lows wm be Ill tile 511
Friday aDd from the upper
5h to mid 1GB Saturday aDd
Sllllday.

forest green, sturdy construction, roomy
'

ralls.

Regular Size Trousers $8 ,95-46 to lO 19.95
"Regular Sizes Sh irts 57 .95, 18, 19, 2() , $8.95.

In flvt colors to match
work trouurs listed
above. Two pockets, full
tails.

'6.95
SHORT Sl EEVE

SHIRTS
All Seats Reserved 18.00 &amp; $7 .00
. ~"~lt.L~.Q!.JlL[ l :,t.R\dCf (Jillf.l(, ,[

Huntington Civic Center Only
Tickets Available as Lateas
Showtlme
For Information C.. II

CIVIC

Two pockets: long tills. Size SII4-WI2 l. Mll5·

conoN
POLYISDI iLEND............... '5,95

100 conoN...................... ••.•s

'

Man injured
in accident ·

Snecial milestone reached

Bids are expected to be
awarded within 30 days for
the construction of lhe approaches and land abutments
of the new bridge across the
Ohio River at Ravenswood,
W. Va . The structure would
co nnect Ohio and West
Virginia above Racine in the
Great Bend area of Meigs
County .
Total cost will be ap proximately $3 million.
Six bids were submitted for
the West Virginia side, just
south of Ravenswood, during
a bid opening ,.Tuesday by the
West Virginia Department of
Highways .
The h&gt;w bid was submitted
by Stevens Excavating
Company in the amount of
$1 ,796,279 .15 . It was for
g rad i n g , drain i ng,
bituminous
c on cre t e
psvement, one land pier,
signing and lighting.
Other bidders were L. R.
Skelton and Co., $2,016,367.92;
S. J. Groves and Sons, Co.,
2 44 8

was $1,396,179.99 by the Karl
M. Geutel Construcfion Co.
Guetel's bid is to construct
the Ohio approaches to the
Raven swood brid ge and
includes grading, draining,
bituminous
co n cre t e
pavement, five land piers and
signing. The reamaining bids
were submitted by Shelley
and Sands , Inc., in t eh
amount of $1,405 ,048.50 ;
Higgins Ere ctors
and
Haulers Inc., $1,448,619.50 ;

and the L. R. Skelton Co.,
$1,556,875.40.
.
According to Pat Gallagher
of the W. Va . Highwa y
Department, the bids likely
will be awarded within 30
da ys. However, the state
could reject any and all bids
if desired. There will be an
award conference sOmetime
next week to review the bids
with the contractors who
submitted bids.

Contract payoff

scandal probed

~ ~~ ~ : ~~;c~~~:- ~e~t~~

Dollar
•
gams

.

·.'

Weather

15'hl , L(16~ 16'12) , XLt17-17 1h ) .

..

Vol. 29, No. 97

their own initi ative and
By GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - sometimes at the suggestion
The head of the General of GSA employees
EDISON HOBSTE'ITER opening the doors of the Pomerov National Bank is a prettY
Services Administration, delivered huge cash payoffs
common sight in Pomeroy. Hobstetter.marks his 50th year with the bank in late S.:ptember.
seeking to break open what to obtain business and
competitive
may be the biggest money circum ve nt
scandal in government bidding procedures.
Asked if there was a chance
history , is asking 35,000
the
massive investigation
J:'
12,040 ,490.78 ; Sh elley and employees to tell what they
would
drive him to give up his
.
,
f Sands, Inc., $2, 102,682 .04 and know about payoffs their
By BOB HOEFLICH
banking, Hobstetter moved been acttve
10 support o
Dunn and Day , Inc., colleagues
job,
Solomon
said many
took
from
When September arrives right up the ladder. In 1931, numerous farn:' groups.
$2,263,941.65.
employees
"are
betting I'm
contractors.
tomorrow, it will bring a three years after he began
Well-known 10 the f•eld of
Four bids were submitted
Administrator Jay Solomon going to leave .. . I've got to
specia l milestone in life to working at the bank, he was banktng, the loca l b ~ nk , for the Ohio side. The low bid predicted at a news beat that bet."
Edison Hobstetter, president elected assistant cashier and prestd ent served a s a
Justi ce Department '
conference Wednesda y a
of the Pomeroy National in 1932 was elected cashier, a member of the Board of
officials
have expressed
long-running
federal
grand
Bank.
position he held until 1941 Directors of the F edera I :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=:=:=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. jury investigation will result concern that without more
Vinson A. Stapleton, ·23, east of U.S. 35, at 2 p.m.
It was on Sept. 28, 1928 that when he was elected Reser ve Bank, Clevela nd,
EXTENDED FORECAST
in bribery and fraud witnesses they will have
Crown City, was treated for
According to tl)e patrol, an Hobstetter first began his · president. He was named a J%2-57; a member of the
Fair Saturday with a . indictments against about 50 diff ic ul ty brin gin g
injuries sustained In a one- auto operated by Charles duties as a bookkeeper at the director of the bank in 1932 Execut ive Co.un cil of the
of showers or
people - including GSA em- indictments against many
car accident Wednesday, at Eads, 53, Gallipolis, exiled bank which he now heads, 50 and has been chairman of the Ameri ca n Ba nkers Assn., chance
sW&gt;pects in the case, despite
thundershowers Sunday
3:10p.m. on SR 180, one-tenth from a private drive into the years later. He has served as board of directors since Dec. 1954-57; a mell\~r of the and M..ctay. Hl&amp;ba will ployees, employees of other evidence that middle-income
agencies
it
serves,
and
~of a mile north of Kemper path ol an east bound vehicle
president of the institution 30, lt161l.
Executive Comllilttee of the range from the upper 70s to
private
vendors
and employees have· hundred• ol
Hollow Rd.
driven by Jeffrey Golden , 17 , since 1941 - 37 years - a
Active in Pomeroy and National Bank Division of the mid 80s with a low from the contractors.
thousands of dollars stashed
According to the GaUia- Patriot Star Route. Both notable record, too.
Mei gs Coun ty commun ity Ameri can Bankers Assn ., upper 50s to mid 60s.
in bank accounts.
The
GSA's
top
investigator
,
Meigs Post Highway Patrol, autos Incurred moderate
Born in Pomeroy on Sept. affairs, Hobstetter was the 1955-58 ; a member of the
Proving
the
money
special counsel Vincent Alto ,
the .Stapletgn vehicle, damage.
q,
1905,
Hobstett er · first pres ident of th e savings Bond Committee of ::;::;::::::::;:;:::;::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::.::::::.:::::::::::::::::: said he now believes payoffs constituted bribes will be
traveling south, went out of ' Eads wa s cited on charges . graduated from Pomeroy Pomero y Cha mb er of the Am e~ican Bankers Assn .,
to GSA officials totaled "in difficult, one source said,
control on 160, passed ofi the ol failure to yield from a High School in 1922 and for Commerce and he is a past and state chairman for Ohio
adding : "'Phe noose is not
the millions of dollars."
right side of the roadway and private drive.
five years he was employed president of the Pomeroy ·for the American Bankers
" It might be the bigg est around their necks yet."
struck a guardrail.
At 3 p.m., the patrol in- as shipping clerk for the Alumni Assn. He is a past Assn., 1965~9 .
money scandal in the history ' Solomon and Alto hove
· Stapleton displayed visible vestigated a two-car accident Pi ttsburgh Co al Co. in mast er of Pomeroy- Lodge
In 1953-54, Hobstetter was
of the federal government ," estimated the scandal
signs of injury and was trans- on SR 7, 50 feet so uth of U. S. Pomeroy.
164 , Free and Accepted elected president of the Ohio
already has cos t the
he said .
ported to Holzer Medical 35 .
He attended the Universi ty Masons and a member of Ba nkers Assn., and the Ohio
And Solomon indicated the govenunent $66 million in
Center.
Officers report that of Cincinnati, 1927-28, where Grange and lhe lzaak Walton School of Banking at Ohio
mos tly
to
investi gat ion , pro bin g fraud
Stapleton was treated for a veilicles operated by John he was a member of Phi -Leag ue of America . He was Univer s it y, Ath ens, was
TOKYO (UP! )- The U.S. wrongdoing over the last contractors who were paid
laceration of the chin, and Stobart, 31, Racine, and Lee Delta Theta Fraternity.
chairman of the Ohio 4-H started during his. term of dollar today gained some sev eral years, is stili a bove competit iv e prices,
bbrasions and contusions of Combs, 34, Gallipolis, were
Apparently quite adept at F oundatio n, 1966-!969 ; offi ce . He wa s a vice ground on the Tokyo Foreign growing . He said its success provided inadequate work or
the left forearm , and south bound on 7.
cha irma n of I he Meigs president of the Ohio Bankers Exchange market.
will depend in large part on products, or were paid for
released.
The Stobart auto slowed to Eastern local
County American Red Cross Assn. in 1952 and served in
Tradin g was li ght as cooperation from a gency work never done.
The Stapleton vehicle in- turn , and was struck in the
Chapter, 1941-46; president of other capaccities with the dealers took a break to adjust employees.
C.UlTed moderate damage. No rear by the Combs vehicle.
the Meigs County Pioneer associat ion during hi s 50 their
tr ading
position
"The employees are saying
citation was Issued.
Both
autos
incurred enrollment down
and Historical Society , 1964- years of banking.
following heavy dealings the to us, 'This has been going on
A seco.nd one-car mishap moderate dama ge ."
1969, and was president of the
Naturally. plans are un- previolL'&gt; day .
a long time . We've known
E AST
MEIGS
occurred Thursday at 3 a.m.
Combs wa s cited on
Meigs Co unty Bankers Assn. derway to honor Hobstetter
The
dollar
ended
the
dlly
at
it," ' Solomon said .
on SR 124 , at Minersville.
charges of assured clear Enrollment in the Eastern during the "Bank Holiday" for his services to the bank 190.00 yen, up from 189.75 at
"I say, 'Why don't you
Local School District where crisis of the nation . He has
Officers report that a distance.
and
the
·community
in
late
Wednesday's
close.
come
forth and tellW&gt; • If you
~vehicle operated by Dale F.
A one- car acci dent oc- classes began on Tuesday
September
.
The
greenback
opened
at
know
it 's there, co me
:Proffitt, 28, Racine, traveling curred at 3:45p.m. on SR 160, appears to be down ap189.60
and
moved
between
forward
and help us.' They 've
east, went out of control on four-tenths of a mile north of proximatel y 50 stud ent s,
189.50
and
190.75,
the
Bank
of
been
scared."
according to figures released
the wet roadway, passed off milepost I.
Tokyo said.
He said the decision to
the left side of the highway,
According to the patrol, a by Supt. Clark Lees.
$621
Turnove
r
totaled
reinstate
two
GSA
Enrollment as of Wedand struck a utility pole.
vehicle operated by Clare
million,
down
fr
om
$743
whistleblowers
RObert
J.
The Meigs County ComPl'offitt wa s uninjured. The Yarbrough, 37 , Gallipolis, nesday included : high school
million
Wedn
esday.
Robert
SuDivan
,
Tucker
and
and
junior
high
,
468
;
mi
ssi oners at Tuesday's
vehicle incurred moderate went out of control when
who were dismissed for
Riverview,
150;
Chester,
171;
meeting
deci!led to submit a
damage. No citation was Yarbrough applied the
RIO
GRANDE
Tuesday , Sept. 5, in Lyne
removing agency documents
142.
Tuppers
Plains,
pre
-a
ppli
cation for Apbrakes. The vehicle passed
issued.
Registrati on times for the !au · Center from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.
in an effort to expose abuses
In
addition
70
students
are
palachia
n
Regional ComThe patrol investigat~ d off the roadway and struck a
quart er a t · Rio Grande Students wishing to register
in Massachusetts - was an ·
en
enrolled
in
kinder
gart
mission
Funds
to operate a
three other accidents on guardrail.
College and Communit y for cla sses must do so at the
attempt to show GSA
day
care
center
in Meigs
Yarbrough was uninjured. which will start later and 24 · Co llege wer e announced following tim es;
Wednesday.
employees they can trust the'
students
are
attending
Count
y.
vehicle
Officers were caDed to the The
incurred
today by the office of ad9-9:45 a .m., L,M; 9:45agency's current leadership .
An agreement was signed
scene ol a two-vehicle moderate damage. No special programs at Meigs missions and records.
10 :30, I, J , K; 10 :30-11 : 15, B,
Solomoo, named to head
High School.
with
the finn of David M.
mishap, on SR 5811, one mile citation was issued.
Re~ i stration will be held
C; 11 :15-noon, A; 12 :45-1 :30
the GSA a year and a half
Ted
W.
Brown,
Secretary
of
Griffith
and Associates, Ltd.,
p.m. , N, 0, P, Q; 1:30-2 :15, Tago, has spent much of the
State,
announced
today
Atto
prov
ide profes sional
Z; 2:15-3, R,S ; 3-3 :45, F , G, H
time trying to clean up the
torney
Patrick
O'Brien
bad
consulting
services for an
and 3:45-4 :30, D, E.
scandal that now involves
agreed
t
o
serve
as
chairindirect
cost
recovery
Open registration for those
evidence
dozens
of
unable to register at the person of attorneys for Meigs contractors - sometimes at program for Meigs County to
recover costs incurred by the
suggested time will he from 6 County.
Brown, who is nationally ·
county fo r-- administerin g
until 9 p.m .
federal programs.
Students who have pre- recognized for his voter
SPECIAL MEETING
George Buchannon met
registered must also attend education programs, said, " It
A special meeting of the with the board asking when
the registration process to pleased m e that Pat rick
a cquire their I.D. cards, O'Brien has agreed to work Meigs Local School District the garhage boxes in Olive
parking stickers and copies of towards my re-election. Board of Education wju be Township would be moved to
their class schedule. These O'Brien is one of many held at 7:30 Friday to hire a new location. The comstudents should follow the Ohioans who will be Involved employes and to acc ept missioners- stated that they
I
would contact the trUstees
same time schedule Usted. in our campaign this fall." resignations.
"These attorneys will aid In
and establish a time to move
If an Individual wishes to
the boxes. ·
apply for admission on county organization efforts to
register
voters
and
represent
Paul Nease, Riggs Crest
registration day, he or she
me
at
the
many
meetings
Manor
Subdivision, met to
should stop by Allen Hall.
TO
CLOSE
MONDAY
held
across
the
state,.
as
we
discuss
a sanitation problem
Office of Admissions and
The
CAA
office
will
be
prepare
for
the
Novel1)ber
that
exists
adjoining his
Records, before going to the
closed
Monday
In
observance
election,"
Brown
said.
property.
The
commissioners
·registration process in Lyne
f
.I
J
of
the
Ulbor
Day
holiday.
S.
Lashutka,
Gregory
agreed
to
contact
the Health
Center.
(
Columbus city attorney is There will be no programs Department and have it inchalnnan of the statewide that day according to Joe vestigated.
Barsotti.
attorney's group.
Larry Spencer, Clerk of
The
group
's
goal,
ac'
i:,
Courts, met with the board to •
Decreasing cloudiness cor&lt;lln8 , to . Brown Is, "To
discuss his budget.
BOARD MEETS
tonight, low In upper 50s. maintain the same loyal
The meetinil was adjourned
'The Southern Local Board subject to recall by the
Mostly sunny Friday, high support we have received In
temperatures between 7&amp; and pall elections and attract the ol Education will meet In president. Attending were
R1
Wamsley,
13,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert
Wanuley,
80.
Probability
of additional voters who sup- special sessilill at 4 p.m. Henry Wells, Richard Jonea
, WINNER OF HOLE-IN.QNE C&lt;ln'I'BI' - Winner of
J.
R.
came
within
lllnchea
of
the
cup.
He
was
Pomwoy,
precipitation 100 percent ported my position against todaY 1n the high school and J lm Roush, comtilt Hai•Jn~
held at Pomtroy Ooll Coune
..,.mted
a
Ht
of
aolf
clubl
by
the
sponsor.
Shown,
1..-,
to
discuss mlsaionera, · and Mary
today, 30 percent tonight, 10 election day registration and cateterla
!ipalllllrld by tile ,_.,J-Micldilport Llana Club wu J.
.-e, J . R. and Bob Hill, preald..t of the Uons Club.
fraud, last year."
percent Friday.
•.
negotiations.
Hobltetter, clerlr.

'

Cltlllt•

RFELDS
I

was the first after five
consecutive months of .
increases. The index climbed
0.5 percent in June.
It was also the largest nonweather..-elated drop during
any single mooth since the
last part of the 1974-75
recession. The indel&lt; declined
by 1 percent in January and
by 1.1 percent in January
1977, but both of those dips
were attributed to the effects
of severe winter ·weather .
The
Commerce
l)epartment reported .
Wednesday that ne.w orders
received by the nation 's
fa ctories plunged 3.8 percent
during July, the steepest
decline sin ce December 1974 .

·o ~

IJJEat.'JIBRAY
TICKETS ON SALE NOW

F.irteen Ce11ts

Bridge bids received

application

O'Brien
appointed

WORK SHIRTS

TONIGHT I P.M.

en tine

Rio registration
to begin Tuesday

· Complete selection of troUser sizes from 29
waist to 50, lengths 28 lo 34. Solid col'!",
khaki, navy. charcoal grey, dark olive,

pockets Including watch pocket .
.
Shirts match perfectly In Size 14'12 to 2() ,
two pockets, lull cut, extra long shirt

·BY JAMES HILDRE111
WASHINGTON (UP!)- A
govelilment index designed
to l&lt;l'ecast the future path of
the economy fell 0.7 percent
last month for the first
decline since January, the
Commerce Department
annoUnced today .
_The newest report, coupled
wtth
several .
other
pessimistic economic
measurements made public
recently , gives a clear
indication that economic
growth during the second half
·or the year will slowdown
considerably from the robust
springtime pace.
The July drop in the
department 's Index of
Leading Econ&lt;mic Indicators

--

180,000-rnember National Association of Letier Carriers and
the 40,000-rnember National Post Office Mail Handlers unlon
all rejected a JX'Oposed three-year contract offering an overall
19.5 percent wage and cost of living incre;ISe.
· l:'oatmaster General William Bolger said the Postal Service
could afford no bigger mooey package and favored submitting
the dispu(e to binding arbitration, where it was posaible the
"no layoff" clause could be eliminated. The unions demanded
renewed negotiations instead.
Both sides agreed to the compromise calling lor a
combination of negotiations and arbitration.

Commission
·will submit

SHORT SLEEVE

. . .. &lt;1«)0

..2-3662

BERLIN (UP!) --' An
armed man from Ea1t
Germany llljacked a Polillh
airliner wllh 80 pauengers to
West BerU11 today and
surrendered to U.S. military
police with a group of eight
other people, a spokesman
for the U.S. Air Force said.
The hijacker SWTendered
his weapon and himaeH to
American Air Police as soon
as the alrcnlt, a Sovlet.made
TUI34 oclginally flying to
East Germany, landed at
West Berlin's Tempelhof
airport, heart of the AUled
airlift that defeated tile
Russian blockade of West
Berlin in 11148-49.
Eight other peraons left the
aircraft with the hijacker and
were being questioned by
American authorities, the
spokesman said.
They · included several
young children.
The remaining passengers,
mostly East Germans, were

MEN'S ·
WORK SUITS

. .

89e YARD

Hijacker s:urrenders

ANOtHER SHIPMENT

FALL SALE
•

·Santiago ailo said an atlor·
ney, who represent&amp; about 100
tomato growers who aell to
Ubby·McNell lo Ubby, had
not responded to the migrants
jX'Oposals.
. The migrants are allldng
lor 30 tO 35 cents. a hamper
which Is 33 pounds of
tomatoes. They are now
getting 21 to 25 cents a
hamper.
Ohio Is one of the nation's
top tomato produers and a
base of operation fer UbbyMcNell I&lt; Ubby, In Lelpolc,
Campbell in Napoleoll,
Hunt's in Roslford and the
Heinz Co. in Fremon.t .

ELBERFELDS

DURING OUR

HEAVY DUTY
VINYL RUNNER

.
.
the least. There are a variety of fall ilowers that are really
sometbin~ to see.
·

striking workers," he said.
"We had planned for this and
we have the mmey In our
. treasury f&lt;l' these meal,!J ..We
dldn, want a strike but it wBB
either strike or allow
conditions to remain as they
are."
"We have cloae ID 2,000
people out oo strtke and some
others are leavlog the stale,"
said Santiago. "The strike Is
definitely growing ...
Santiago
said
repreaentatives of CampbeD
Soup Co. apparenUy have
rejected jX'oposala made by
the migrants oo Mondav.

at y

Index down
last month

Striking workers moving

DeadHne

SAVING

.

arbitration authority) prior to the 15 days."
Healy, 62, an Industrial relations professor at Harvard, has
served on and off since the World War II years as a mediator
and arbitr ator in major disputes """n""'g most areas of
Industry.
He was appointed as postal mediator by Director Wayne
Horvitz of the · mediation service, who proposed the
compromise procedure.
·
Alabor source has said the two sides agreed to negotiate the
mon ey package and a proposed "no layoff" clause the unions
hope to maintain.
The 280,000-memher American Postal Worker.• Union, the

•

HOSPITAL NEWS

High School ·
Seniors

I·

and joined the Eckard
Funeral Home in 1939.
He became a partner in
1946 and the name was .
changed to Eckard-Baldwln
Funeral Directors' Assn., and
a member of the state and
national funeral directors
associations. Mr. Baldwin
was a graduate of tile Middleport High School.
Funeral services were held
at the Church of the Master in
East Akron . .

threatened for midnight Mooday , Healy wa s named f!ledlator
lor a novelliklay bargaining:atbltration period to which both
sides agreed .
He wlll try to first to encourage a negotiated settlement. U
that fa Us, Healy has lhe task of deciding any unresol~ed issues
under a system slmUar to binding arbitration.
The talks at mediation service headquarters need not run
,IUltll the 1iklay period expires, lhe spokeswoman stressed.
" U there Is an agreement prior to then, !he mediator can put
it out lor ratification ," she said. "Also , if he decides alter four
or five days of dealing with these people that there Isn't going
to be an. agreement, he can render a dedsinn (under hi•

I

\

�---- - -------...
2-T~ Daily Sentinel, Middleport•Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 31 , 1978

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

lsrldiO:GIAPH I Area Deaths
Bernice Bede Osol

·

A suit in the amount of
$20,500 was filed In Meigs
County Common Pleas Court
by Clyde J . Morlan and Ethel
Tay lor, Mari~tLa , forme r rirt!
Morlan, Rt. I , Reedsvllle,
M.
inspector in the Meigs area FridHy evening. Represt!n- agQinst
Robert E. Sams, Rt.
for the State Fire Marshal's lalives of area fire depart· I , Reedsville, aiKI Judith A.
Office. Funeral services will ments will be going to Marie!·
Sams, same address.
be held al 2:30 p·.m. Saturday Ia Friday evening.
The suit II for interference
by the defendants to the right
of way to property for pur·
pose of removing timber and
gaining access to mow hay
Stale Auditor Thomas E. successful prosecution and fields.
Filing for divorce were
Ferguson's office reported imprisonment of indigents
John I..ee, Addison, against
Wednesday a total of who committed felonies.
Julia I..ee, Addison ; Edith M.
$400,213.79 has been sent to 82
Moyers , Rt. 1, Rutland,
Ohio counties a s reim·
against steve L. Moyers,
bursement for costs incurred
Lawton, Okla.
under Ohio's Public Defender
Filing for dissolution were
Program.
Janey L. Donahue and Daniel
The program calls for the
L. Donahue, Rt . 1, Mid·
state to pay tullf the defense
dleport; Martha Diane
and operational costs of in·
digent Ohio citizens who · Robert Willard Barton, Hoffman and Ronald Mark
appear in court . The Bonnie Sue Barton to Jerry Hoffman, Reedsville.
remaining half is borne by Yeauger, Donna Yeauger,
'Parcel, Middleport .
individual counties.
Charles Carson , Marie
Payments to local counties
BARBECUE PLANNED
Carson
to Lawnince E. Darst,
were Gallia $283.75 ; Jackson,
The
Olester Volunteer Fire
$441 .50 : Lawrence, $2,666.85 ; Sharon S. 'Darst, Parcel, Department will hold its
Meigs, $1 ,656.22; and Vinton , Rutland .
Robert W. Codner, Belly· annual Labor Day barbecue
$50 .
Monday, Sept. 4 beginning at
A part of the program Jane Codner to Judith Ellen 11 :30 a.m.
provides for the state to ·pay Codner, Parcels, I..ebanon.
A parade will be held at
Raymond L. Oliver, Carol
all court costs incurred in the
1:30
with a. tractor puU at 1.
S. Oliver to Steven R. Scott, .
The
menu
includes chicken,
Sandra K. Scott, I..ot, Olester.
spareribs,
.homemade Ice
ano the r pe r son ' s bur den .
Paul Simon, Allie Simon to
cream,
pies
and cakes. Any
Speak up . Deman d he assum e
Anna Haines, I..ots, Pomeroy.
his o w n o bli ga tion s.
donations of pies and cakes
PISCES (Fob. 20-March 20)
will be appreciated. Those
MEET FRIDAY
Don ' t d emand mo re o f o th ers
tod ay tha n tl'ley re c apable of
An organizational meeting. wishing to participate in the
hand li ng If you le r them d o
the of the Late Comers Mixed parade are to contact a
thmgs 1n the tr way , you ' ll g et
Couples
Bowling League will member of the department.
mo re tn th e long run .
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19) A be held Friday at 8 p.m. at
da y' s wo r k for a da Y' s pay " is .Skyline. Lanes.
· ·
the mo tt o you sho uld adopt
Bowling
wlll
begin
next
mE DA,Il\' SENTINEL
to da y . The re ' ll be no fr e e rides
Friday night. Anyone in·
DEVOTED TO THE
fo rJou at th1 s rime .
INTEREST OF
TA RUS (April 20-May 20i ln all terested should attend.
MEIGS-MA.SON AREA ,
at lhe McClure Monte
Funeral Home in Marietta .
Friends m•y call a t · Ute
funeral home Thursday and

DALE TAYLOR
Word has lx.&gt;en receiVed
here of the death of ·Dale

September 1, 1978
Assess wl1a t you ha¥e to w or.k
with th 1s co mtng year a nd d on ' t
take .o n a n ~ more than you can
h a n d~

Be realistic about your

g,qats and the return s for your

efforts w 1!1 be quite ample .

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sepl . 22 ) N"e·

ty- n1n e per c ent ot th e I t me it '1s
the ch alleng es'" Ide that ot ter
th e great es t rewar ds U you 're
forc ed to rn eet some today .
do n ' t re 1r eat -Li ke to lind o ut
mo re ab ou t yourse lf? Se r. d tor
your co p y o f A si ro- Graph L e t ter by m ai1 1n g 50 c e nts fo r ea ch
ar:~d a tong. sell -addressed
sta mp·e d en¥e lq pe to Astr aGr aph , P 0 Box 469 . Aaelro C•ty
St at ion . N Y 1001 9 Be sure to
specr l y b trl h srgn

LI BRA (Sept. 23-0cl . 23 i II you

. Ntth draw too deep ly today . you
··s k pe rm tl!mg depressiOn to
· .-~~e ov er
Plan to get ou t
1mon g your fn ends
Keep
rJ urse lf busy
SCO RPI O ( Oc t . 2•· Nov . ZZ) A
: 1ed -an (l -true · me th od IS the
t- est w· a ~ to ha ndle a tough
s.r uat1 0n yo u c oula l1 nd yo ur :; ell 1n today In thrs 1ns tan ce .
1 ou can ·r oe too co nservat ive

SAG ITTARIUS INo¥. 23-0ec.

21) Now IS no t the t1me to le t
Jo wn on an Im po rtan t goat. No
ma tter how dt!f tcul t the obsta•:l es ap pe ar . keep plugging It
Ndl be w or tl1 tt .

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan . 19)

Be1rig to o still-necked or un ,.om prom tstn g 1n your altitude
t•nd s .,·ou r opportu niti es tod ay
' ern pe r rust1c e w ith me rcy
TOL(li bro aden your horizons .

&lt;QUAR IUS (Jan . 20·Feb . 19)

11 only have yoursell to
· d'll e d ~ ou rn SISt on c arry tn g
'. 1 u

I N THE COURT O·F
COMMON PLEAS ,
MEIGS COUNTY ,
CARLE . MOORE ,
O HIO
E t a 1. ,
Plaint iffs ,
v s.
THOMAS H . HEADLEY ,
Et a L,
Def endants .
No . 16 ,897
- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION To Thomas H . Head ley ,
resid ence un k nown , w hose
la st kno w n aca ress was 587 0
B i Ci d le Ave n ue , Ne wa rk .
Cal i f o r n i a , 94560 . and if
dec ea sed the un known he i r s.
aevisees .
l egatees ,
d1str ibutees . executor s an d
adm in istrators , il any , ot
Thoma s
H.
H ea dle y ,
De c eased ; John Coms tock .
whose last known pt ace ot
residence and aod r ess wa s
Bu c keye
L a ke ,
Oh i o ,
otherw i se u nk nown ; Ro bert
B
Beeson .
r es i de n ce
unknown , w hose last k nown
a ddress was M iddle po r t ,
Ohi o , and 1t d ecea se d th e
un k no wn he i rs , dev isee s ,
l egate es ,
d i !.tr ibut ees ,
e)(ecutor s
and·
ad .
rni n i s traTors , i f any, of
RoberT B . Beeson , D ec eased ;
Jenn 1e Beasley , res i dence
unkno wn . wnose last known
add r ess w as Athens , Oh io ,
arld it dec eased the unknow n
heirs , d e v 1sec s . leg atee s ,
C11st r ib utees . ex ecutors and
administ ra tors . it any , ot
Jenni e Beasley , Dece asea ;
the un k nown he ir s. dev is ees ,
l egat ees,
d i str l butees ,
e• ecutor s and ad mt n tst r at ors
of ea ch of the lo ll ow inq ar t of
wh ose places of r es iden ce
and l asl k nown addresses are
unknown M vrtle Comstock ,
Dece a se a , Mary R Beeson .
D eceased . Addie Headley ,
Deceased . M agg ie Headley ,
D eceased , Hom er H eadley .
D eceased . John W H eadley ,
De c eas ed . Marga re t
A.
H e a dley ,
Deceased
a nd
Thomas Heaaley , Dece ased :
Sa id De fend an t s or any of
them may have some cl a ims
on sa ia real est at e oy v• rtue
of deed re cord ed 1n Vol 168,
Page 35 ot t he de ed r eco rds ot
M e1 g s Cou nt v . Oh i o , a nd
otner
r ec or ded
· and
unrecorded tnst r um ents of
re co rd
Yo u are herebY no t l'f ied
th at a Complaint ha!. been
t ile d 1n the Commo n P le as
Court ot Meigs County, OhtO ,
Case No 16 ,8Q7 dema nd ing ·
th at Pli:\1n t •tt s be he l d t o hav e
good ti tle to th e fo llo w ing ~
desc r i bed r ea l est at e. free of
an y r tght , t itle , clai m or
if'lterest of the ael en dant s or
an y of th em, and t hat t he ir
t itl e be qu ,e ted as ag a inst •any
aoverse estate or 1nter est of
the d efe n dant s or a ny of
·them . and for the1 r costs
here i n . w h1c h r eal es t &lt;~t e is
descr ibed as fo l low s ;
The follow i ng r ea l estate
bemg in t.a e Vil l age o f M id
dle por t , Sa l •sbury Townsh ip,
Me i gs Co unt y , 011io , a n d
descr 1b ed
as
fo llow s :
Beg i nn ing at the Sou tnwes t
corner o f Lot No
22 In
He&lt;~dle y i'l nd Russe ll Ad d it ion
to M iddl epor t aT an iron p in :
the n ce Nort n 50 teet to the
Nor thwest cor ner of L ot 27 at
an i r on P.j/l ; then ce west 81
fee t to th e Ea st l ine of the
St andard 011 Company Lot at
an ir on p i n ; thence Sou th 55
D eg. 10' West 87 fee t along the
Sta nd &lt;H d Oil Company. Lo t to
1r on p in. 'the n ce East 150 f eet
to t he p lace of beg •n n ing ,
co nt ai n i ng
t h i r t een
hundrea ths a cr e, mor e or
less .
Reference D ee ds : Vo l. 237.
Page 105 ; Vol 163, P a ge- 723
Deed Reco r ds . Me ig s Coun t y ,
Ohi o
Vou are no tif ie d that you
ar o reQui r ed to a nswer the
Complaint w i t hi n twe nt y .
e i gh t day ! af t er t he lcut
pub l i cati on .
T he
l a st
p ublicat ion will be m ad e on
th e 7th da y of sep tembe r ,
19 78.

I

Meigs court
actions filed

Payments are distributed

_Meigs

·Property
Transfers

your soci al co ntac t s today at tem pt to de~elop a fo rg ivi ng
atti tude . One or sev eral pals
co uld be ha vi ng tro uble g elt ing
alo ng with o thers .

GEMINI(May 21-June 20i The re

are so me o bl igati ons th a t need
to be tak en car e of a t home
to da y . Ge t them d o ne so yo u
can enjoy. th e long w ee~e nd ,

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Con·

dttlo ns a re not as h ea ... y or
bu rde nso me as you ar e lead in g
you rself to belie ve toda y A
litt le po.siliv.e think ing can set
thi ngs r1ght for yo u .

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) There 's

more to tile than 1u st the
materi al s1de . so 11 you allo w
yours elf t o dw ell on o nly thai.
you ' l l be missi ng th~ f1ner
th1n gs .
INEWSP 6, P£ R ENT,ERPRISE ASS N I

Pill !.ADELPHIA ( UPI) The Philadelphia Phillies
Wednesday announced that
they are ··bringing up six
players from the minor
lea giles.
The players, all from the
Oklahoma farm club, will
join the Phillies Friday when
they travel til San Francisco
til play the Giants. They fire
righthanded relief pitcher
Dan Boitano ; left-bander
Kevin Saucier; shortstop
Todd Cruz; catcher Keith
Moreland; outfielders Kerry
Dineen, and I..onnie Smith.

CONTRIBUTORS NAMED
Latest contributors to the
1978 cleanup campaign
sponsored by the ~omeroy
Ohamber of Commerce are :
Se'ars Roebuck ; Teaford
Realty : Midwest Steel ;
Shirley and Ruby Guinther;
Karr aiKI Van Zandt; Mike
Young ; Ebersbach Hard·
ware ; Moores ; Cha ~:_les
Blakeslee; Dr. H. D. Brown ;
Sugar Run Flour Mill ; A·
Couple Designers, Inc.,
Gerry aiKI Liz Hllferty; Dairy
Valley, Adolph Saelens;
Marlon Ebersbach; Nancy
· Reed; Royal Crown Bottling
cO.; Helen Coast Hayes;
Bernard Fultz; Mr. and Mrs.
R. C. Follrod; Powells Super
Valu.

1

SQUAD RUN
The
Middleport
Emergency Sq!Uid was called
to 404 Filhe.: st., at 9:39p.m.
Wednesday for four-month
old Susanne Henderson who
was choking. She was treated
al the scene.

Velenu Memorial Hoopltal
ADMITTED - Kathryn
Pierce, Middleport; Clarence
Haning, Albany; Ruth
Woodward, Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Ellen
Couch, Margaret King,
Donna Rankin, Hannah Van
Mater, Rodney Harrison.

!uc ..

~··

"

..
••

..

.. ,.,

ha1;e played the

..

worki11gs a11d pros-

perity of our

DOUG'S

r~atio11 .

They're America's

MARINE

t4'in.uitlg tea111 • •• and
ba1;e earned our pride

(614)992-5652

fine job tbey're doing!
lfl el/ d01w, America.'

808 W. Main St.

FROM

Pom~ror. O~io

v

W!! wi II be closed Sunda &amp;
Monday so that our employes
may enjoy the
Holiday
Weekend.

•
•

•

'

"Nextto Elberfelds
in Pomeroy"

'
•

•
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•

••

c!

Pa
Plus

-

•
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PART

•
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ARIS

QUARTZ HALOGEN

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FOG. &amp; DRIVING LIGHTS

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of natural wool and synthotlc fabric, 1" plle longth.
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easily'to standard 1/4", 3/8" and 1/ 2" powo1 drills.
Cleona ooslly with nap and water. For pollahlng
can, boots and· furniture. Ideal for tho da.[t.yournlf

$46~~R .
INCLUDES COMPLETE
INSTALLATION KIT

2 LIGHTS .- INSUlATED CONNECTORS - FUSE
HOlDER - 16 FT. WIRE, RElAY SWITCH
Introducing •••

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• 10 Ton Press-n-Pull'" System

• 6 Ton Puller System
• 10 Ton Puller Syslem
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4.95

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e fficie nc y .' T hese screws re q ui r e less

turning fo rce tha n co nven tiona l

in board o r o utboa rd . th en lock in

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pulli ng ... with no jaw sq ueeze
as pressure is ap plied.

New 3-Jaw Puller Sets .. . lor a more
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l\.
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New Preos-n-Pui!TM Capability ...
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slraight down or pul l slrai ght up
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New Gear and Bearing Separator
I
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SALE

sophomore Timmy Murphy lense attackle. "We lost II on
all weigh between 250 and 270 offense and six on delenset"
pounds. " I'd like for them to Cremeens sa id of his
be bigger," Cremeens added. graduation losses .
Archie Meadows ha s the
But Cremeens' hopes for
current upperhand on the this year and next arc bouyed
quarterback's position. "He a by two things. His junior-year
straight A studfnl. He's a players were the first players
quick thinker and he has to ·enter Hannan Tra ce's
de fin i I e
1e ad e r ship program while in junior high.
qua lilies ," the third -yea r Also, three-fourths of this
team is comprised of juniors
coach said.
Junior Kerry Ours and and sophomores . Many saw
senior Ronnie Pack, both some varsity action in 1977
about 230 pounds, probably when • the Wildcats packed
will pace the decimated of· little scoring punch.

.NERA
nRE SALES

dropping the second·place
Giants two games behind Los
Angeles in the NL West.
McWilliams is two vlcrories
away from tying Buzz
capra's club mark for most
consecutive wins.

Dave Kingman's tWCH'I/D
homer in the fourth ended
McWilliams' shutout bid and
taught the &amp;-fool-li pitcher a

painful lesson:
"Joe (Nolan ) had me for an
inside fastbaU and I got it
over the plate. I threw-,_it as
hard as I could. like they say
up here, you can't blow it by
anybody ... so I guess I found

out."
Bob Horner , another
Atlanta rookie, stroked two
RBI singles as the Braves

because he was In so much
pain ."
Elsewhere in the AL,
Boston split a doubltHieader
with ToroniD, winning the
opener, 2-l, and dropping the
nightcap, 7-6, and Kansas
City routed Cllicago, 1~.
Milwaukee at Cleveland was
rained out.
In the National I..eague, il
was New York 10, San
Francisco 4; Atlanta 6,
Olicago 2; St. Louis 4,
Houston 2. Los Angeles 4,
Montreal 3; Philadelphia 6, ·
San Diego 5. Pitlsburgh at
Cincinnati was rained out
after four innings.

Red Sox 2-f, Blue Jays 1·7:

dropped the Cubs intll third
place, five games behind
ftrst-place Philadelphia .
Swan, !Hi, yielded nine. hits
over eight innings and earned
the praise of New York
Manager Joe Torre.
"He's ~n so good. I'd take
four like him iii a minute and
never ask where they came
from .''
Swan, 27, got so much help
from his teammates against
the Giants he could hardly
believe he was in the right
ballpark. The usually light·
hittil)g Mets pounded four
Giant pitchers, beginning
with loser John Montefusco,
9-6, for 16 hits.
in other NL games, St.
I..ouis ropped Houston, 4-2,
Philadelphia edged San
Diego, 6-5, and I..os Angeles

-

.,
~·

;

Cincin~ti .

Cardinals 4, Astros 2:
.
Bob Forsch, Ul-15, ended a
personal nine-game losing
streak with a four-hitter and
Jerry Mwnphrey homered to
cap a four-run sixth inning for
the Cardinals.
Ph lilies 6, Padres 5:
Garry Maddox doubled in
Richie Hebner in the top of
the ninth til lift the Phillies to
their fifth straight victory.
Dodgers 4, Expos 3:
Steve 'Garvey singled with
two out iii the bottllm of the
ninth to score Bill North as
Los
Angeles
clipped
Montreal. Reliever Cllarlie
Hough, 1&gt;-3, was the winner.
Wayne Twitchell, 4-12, rook
the loss.

Squirrel season

starts Sept. 8th

Two other tough non·
conference tests follow for
Alabama, which travels til
Missouri Sept. 16 and hosts
Southern cal Sept. 23.
The Crimson Tide's offense
is buill around quarterback
Jeff Rutledge (Sugar Bowl
MVP), halfback Tony Nathan
(15 toUchdowns last year),
center Dwight Stephenson
and tackle Jim Bunch. The
defense is anchored by
tackles Marty Lyons and
David Hannah, end Wayne
Hamilton, linebackers Barry
Krauss, R.ich Wingo and
Rickey
Gilliland
and

more accurate ratings,
voting bas been expanded

992·2126

Pomeroy
Open Evenings til&amp;:OO p.m.

m oving in the younger boys, "

Cremeens sa id.
· Sout hw es te rn

is

in

a

rebuilding year in lenns of
players and offense. Head
coach Bob Ashley said he is
trying lo move away fro"! the
power·! into a veer type of·
fe nse with more trap and
option plays.
Senior - Gene
La yton
probably will be the starting ·
'q uarterback . There 3re four
e xperi enced sophomores

ba ckfi eld

this year to ailow the board's
coaches to vote for the tllp 15
teams rather than the tllp 10.
Six coaches from eaCh of the
seven geographical areas of
the country comprise the
board.
· Points are awarded on a IS.
14-l:H&gt;tc. basis wijJI first
place worth 15 points\nd 15th
place one point.
The first weekly ratings
will be released Sept. 7.

Sports briefs
MILWAUKEE (UPil
A.J. Foyt will be racing for
more than the checkered flag
Sept. lOin the Governor's Cup
:l!iO mile stock-&lt;:ar race in his
bid for the USAC stock car
championSIIp.
He has 1,615 points in
competition Utis year for a ~
point lead over second-place
driver Terry Ryan . Bay
Darnell is in third with 1,480
points and Gary Bowllher is
fourth with 1,465. All are
scheduled to race In the
Governor's Cup and all will
be trying til catch Foyt for the
Utle.

•••

MISSION, Kan. (UPI) The NCAA Classification
Committee Wednesday
granted Florida
A&amp;M
University's appeal lo
reclassify its football
program from Division n til
Division IAA quallfymg
status effective Friday, Sept.
I, a spokesman said.
Under the qualifying
status, the university will
have five years til bring its
football
program
into
compl,iance with Division I·
AA speclficallons.

The line in front of La yton
will be heavier this year and

in cludes 185-pound cent er
John King , !50-pound guard
Ron nie McCartney and
tackles Steve Rawlins at 240
pounds and Marvin Bartles, a
185-poUnd freshman .
" What we have is good , but

We don't have much of it ,11
Ashley said. When practice
opened there were 17 players
on hand . "Thai's the penalty
they pay here. They almost
have to be commandos. "

Friday's games
Greenup Co . at Whee lersbu r g
Bu ffa to . Putnam at Hannan
Wahama at Wayne
Barbour svi l le at Pt . Pleasant
Oak Hil l at Coal Grov e
New Le)( ington at Logan
MarieHa at Athen s
Jackson at Logan Elm
K y g e r Creek at F edera l
Hock ing
Hannan Trace at Sym mes

Va lle y

Green Local at Southwestern
Waterfor d at Eastern

WHY
PAY
MORE
FOR
CARPET

CLEANING
Get professional
results at a
fraction of the cost.

reprcduction and survival

are dependent on the amount
of nuts available .
The 1978 season is open
Sept. 8 through Nov. 11 on
private lands and from Sept.
8 through Dec . 23 on public
hunting areas:
Hunting hours are one-half
hour before sunrise lo one·
half hour after sunset. The
daily bag limit is four, with a
possession limit of eight after
the first day .
Heavily forested areas in
east-&lt;:entral, southeast and
V&lt;IJifi1
southcentral Ohio will
WMPO
provide the best squirrel
SATURDAYS
hunting : however squirrels
9 til Noon
are found in all 68 counties.
Following are the counties '-~~-· --- - - thai should provide the best .
squirrel hunting in 1978 based
on nut crop and squirrel
population estimates:
- Central Oh io (Wildlife
District li - Knox, Morrow,
Licking and Fairfield.
- Northwest Ohio (Wildlife
District II) - Williams,
Defiance and Richland.
- Northeast Ohio (Wildlife
District Ill ) - Tuscarawas,
Ashland , Holmes, Harrison
and Carroll.
-Southeast Ohio (Wildlife
District IV 1 - Ahens, Gallia
and Jackson.
-Southwest Ohio (Wildlife

r - Kasem

LOS ANGELES (UPI)
Los Angeles Dodgers'
outfielder Reggie Smith has
been nanned honorary
chairman of the National
Association of Sickle CeU
Disease, Inc., it was
announced Wednesday.
jt was the firs time the
association has named an
honorary chalnnan. Smith
will host several fundo£aisers
·Including a celebrity tennis
townamenl in -November.

-.,--2
9:_____ ______._
.,;..I•HOUR·~

STAR SUPPLY CO.
949 -2525

RJcine, 0 .

NEWSPAPtR
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR
POMEROY &amp;
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--···

1976 Ford Gr~nada~:J! .~3649

PHONE
111

Red with landau roof, tape , V·8, aut., ps.i·p.b.,

elr, cruise.

992-2156

1976 Chevelle Malibu 53795·

THE DAILY SENTINEL

mileage .

...

4·3 .
beat
. Montreal,
Pittsburgh was rained out in

Bob Bailor cracked four
hits, including a two-run,
eighth-inning double to' offset
Jim Rice's 35th and 36th
home runs in .the nightcap
and salvage a doubltHieader ·
spiit for the Blue Jays. Boston , r---------------~---,
won the first game when
Butch Hobson drove in both
runs on a groundout and a
double.
Royals 12, White Sox 0:
Darrell Porter went 4-for-4
and knocked in four runs,
while Pete LaCock had three
RBI' til back the five-hit
pitching of Kansas City's
Larry Gura, 12-4.
COLUMBUS
Ohio District V) - Butler, Adams,
squirrel hunters awaiting the Brown and Dark e.
Hunters a re reminded to
opening of the !978 season on.
Friday, Sept. 8, should find an get written permission rrom
abundant
supply
of the landowner before hunting
bushytails in most areas of on private property .
the state.
Field reports indicate the
defensive backs Don McNeal nut crop from hickory, oak,
and Murray l.egg.
beech and walnut trees is ,
In an effort to produce excellent . Squirrel

2-dr., h .t . , vinyl roof, l owner, ps, pb, air, low

"Your Ch•vy D•al•r"

" Our bi g boys weren' t
doing the job and we started

competing for

Alabama tabbed No .. 1

V/\llll

a

,j

Francisco

s.

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

suPrn

LAR R Y E SP E N CER
Cler k o r cour.ts,
M eigs Count y , Ohio
(7J 27, ( 8 ) 3, 10, 17. 2-4 , 31 ( 9 ) 7,
II

I

San

By BIU. MADDEN
one in lhe seventh on Cliff
UPI Sports Writer
Johnson's single.
"We
The latest victory in Ron couldn't afford not having
Guidry's sensational splurge him in a pennant race. He's
for the American League Cy the backbooe of our staff."
Young Award may be a little
Guidry drew gasps from his
more than his New York Yankee teammates in the
Yankee teammates can seventh when, on a third
stand.
strike pitch to Singleton, he
Guidry ran his record In 1~ fell til his feel after being
2 Wednesday night in the struck by the bat.
Yankees' 5-4 victory over the
"It was a good pitch .. . I
Baltimore Orioles, but was was just trying til foul off and
removed from the game in as soon as the bat left my
the eighth Inning after being hands, I yelled til him," said
struck by a bat, which slipped Sil\gleton . "He almost
out of the hands of jumped over it. When I saw it
Baltimore's Ken Singleton. hit hlm, I rushed to the
The unflappable Yankee ace. mound but he didn1 hear me
who has kept his mates in the
pennant race aU season long,
IN PROGRESS
was rushed to the hospital
where
X-rays
proved
negative ori the ugly bruise
Making room
inside his left ankle.
However, the ominous
for winter tires.
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
specter of going without
Guidry even for one or two UPI Board of Coaches think
Stop in and check
starts nullified most of the · Alabama will try hardet this
positive points in the Yankees ' season .
The Crlmson Tide, ranked
vicrory
- their sixth straight
for kiw prices. .
- !hal hQd enabled them to a No. 2 last year after posting
an 11·1 record and a ~ rout
tittle ground on Boston .
"Guidry's the clear-cut of Ohio state In· the Sugar
favorite for the Cy Young Bowl, emerged Wednesday
Award and if we didn't have as the solid choice for the
nation's lop team in UPI's
him around for two starts il
would kill us," said Lou pre-lll!ason college football
N. Second.Ave. "
Plniella, who knocked in one ratings.
Middleport, 0 ..
Alabama, with 18 first·
run and scored the decisive
place
votes,
easily
No.
2
outdistanced
Oklahoma, which drew only
four No. I votes. Bear
Bryant's Crimson Tide
received 534 points to ~ for
Oklahoma. PeM State was
third with 398.
[)efending champion Notre
5
Dame was fourth (371), fol·
lowed closely by Arkansas
Local owner , clean interior, AM· FM CB radio , good
(365) . Completing the top 10
Ures .
were No. 6 Michigan, No. 7
Southern cal, No. 8 Ohio
5
Stale, No.9 Texas and No . 10
Nebraska.
4 cyl .. automatic. good tires. blue finish . radio, good
The second 10 was headed
economy &amp; real sporty .
by a pair of Pac 10 teams 5
No. II Washingtnn and No. 12
UCLA - followed by No. 13
l.'&gt;U and No. 14 Pittsburgh.
• door. 1 local owner, 350 V-8, automatic, P.S.. radio,
Texas Aa.M was 15th ahead of
dark green finish &amp; spotless, clean Interior .
No. 16 F1orlda State and No.
17 Kentucky. Closing out the
tllp 20 were No. 18 North
Lancau V-8, automatic, P.S., P .B., olr, AM, 8 track
carolina, No. 19 Iowa Stale
stereo radio, power door locks and windows . High
and No. 20 Maryland.
mileage but a real bargain .
On NCAA probation this
year and thereby ineligible
for consideration by the UPI
Board of Coaches are
Local 1 owner car, V-8 engine, automatic trans ., P.S.,
Michigan State, Houston,
P. B.• radio. Clean Interior.
Oklahoma
State
and
$ ..
Grambling.
Alabama last won the
nationalllUe
in 1973 and has
Sport Pickup, 350 V-8, automatic trans .. P .S., P. B.,
finiSied
second
three times in
radio, like new !.Ires. bed ralls, orange with white trim.
the last seven years - 1971,
'74 and '77. The Tide opens Its
campaign for the naUonal
championship SattD'day night
Conversion 3t8 V-8, automatic, P.S., &amp; P.B.• good tires,
at home against lotl~o«·anked
sound mechanically, nice Interior conversion , Ice box,
Nebraska in a nationaUy
bed.
televised game.

WITH 18 OZ. OF HAND CLEANER

e qual d ist r ib utio n o f pull ing I o r ee

know what's going lo happen.
There's nol going to be any
joking or degrading a boy,"
Junior Brent Miller, a 6foot. 170-pound baseball
pitcher, will quarterback the
Vikings, who finished 2·7 last
year. They averaged 13.1
points per game while giving
up 27.1.
Hannan Trace has 11
heavyweight backfi eld
returning from 1977's 2-41
squad. Head Coac)l Larry
Cremeens and senior Ed
Whitt, junior Jay Bray, and

Quidry struck by flying bat

IN STOCK.I NEW CHEVY. VAN
CONVERSIONS, MOTOR HOMES,
EL CAMINO,
'
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SUBURBANS

HAND CLEANER
DISPENSER

New Adjustable Jaws . . . Ihat a ngle

over

1974 Dodge Van •••••••• s3995

STOPS OIL BURNING AftD REsTORES

forc ing scre w s.

Russell, Victor VanSickle,
Paul Lasseter, Brian Sutphin,
and Randy Taylor.
The Bobcats will be seeking
their sixth straight cham·
pionship, however, at North
Gallia, Coach John Blake has
a different idea. The Pirates
are well stocked with

without a loss Wednesday
night, leading the Braves to a
6-2 triumph and three-game
sweep of the Chicago Cubs,
contenders for the NL
Eastern Division crown.
Earlier Wednesday, Craig
Swan won his seventh
straight game til lilt the New
York Mets to a ]().4 victory

1976 Chevrolet. ••••••••• 3495

•FOR OLDER CARS

New Forcing Screws ... wi lh modified acme
thread- Acme for streng lh and resistance
to damag e - modilied lor speed and

Husty Wtgal and juniors, Don
Eynon and Greg Hayman,
anchor the offensive line.
AI Willow Wood, Symmes
Valley head coach Joe
Bokovilch notes an improved
attitude and sense of self
confidence among his
players.
More
up·
perclassmen, who didil't play
last season, are out this year,
be added.
"We went out there and told
them we w&amp;e going to work
them to death aiKI have some
fun ," Bokovllch said. "They

positions.

1973 Chevelle. ~:::·:: ~::-..' 1995

CP.2 OIL TREATMENT

Featuring:

the SYAC with a 3-2 mark and
5·5 overall . Eagle backs
returning are senior Dan
Spencer, junior letterman
Tim Dillon at fuUback.
Marl\ Norton, a junior
lettennan and Brian Bissell,
a junior or G.reg Wigal, a
sophomore who lettered •s a
freshman will be given the
nod as starting quarterback.
Tailback candidates are
Steve Browning, a sophomore
and Jeff Goebel, a senior.
Seniors Greg Guinther,
Mike Hayman and Russell
Starcher, Randy Keller and

1973 Monte Carlo. ••••• sl895

•CLEANS •OUIETS
•VALVES •RINGS'
•LIFTERS

A complete new puller line!

Can Utis be the·year of the sophomores, juniors and
Pirates, Eagles, Wildcats, senirs.
Tornadoes or Highlanders?'
Returning are senior
Ten w~ks from Friday quarterba ck Sam Smith,
rught, the fmalanswer to that Perry Livingston, a 5-6 junior
questl?n will be available weighing in at 168 pounds and
followmg lhe end of the 1978 . senior Roger Cremeens, 5-9,
Southern Valley Athletic 160 anchor the offensive
Confe~ence season.
backfield. They will be joined
Un,hke past y~ars, this by the quick Buddy Howell.
y~ar s champ10nsh1p may not Pirate pass receivers are
wmd up at Kyger Creek.
Stacy Winston and Scott
Coach Jim Sprague's Lewis.
· Bobcats have not lost a
Eastern coach Joe Mit.l
conference game in six years chem · has 14 returning let·
while placmg fiVe cham· termen from last year's
pionship trophies in the KC squad which finished third in
trophy case, but the 1977 class
has left and taken a large
part of the offensive and
defensive lines with il.
On lhe other hand ,
graduation caused just a few
dents in lhe veteran North
Gallia and Eastern squads.
IRA KAUFMAN
Class A football returns to By
UPI
Sports Writer
the area Friday night when
Two
young National
Eastern hosts Waterford , League pitchers
sent their
Kyger Creek visits Federal
pennant-Beeking
opponents
Hocking; Hannan Trace goes
back
til the drawing table til
to Symmes Valley and Green find a winning fonnula.
comes lo Southwestern.
Atlanta 's rookie left·
Kyger Creek has to let· hander, Larry McWilliams,
termen returning from last tllssed an eight-hitter to win
year's 7·2leam. They include
offensive backs Stev·e his seventh straight game

1974 Olds ·Omega ••••.• 2395

CD-2 OIL DETERGENT

Five New J7RDTD·EASE™
Puller Systems

Football returns to SVAC area Friday night

1976 Mustang ..~:~::-•••• 2795

REGULAR

I

;'0., Thursday, Aug. 31, 1m

1977 Pinto 2 Dr.••••.•• 2995

customer.

MADE OF NATURAL WOOL
AND SYNTliETIC FABRIC

- -----

-·r .

E.
0.

Sales &amp;Service

aud resf•ecl for the

CHAPMAN
SHOES

-

Braves sweep Chicago Cubs, 6-2

People 011 the job
.. . ;, e~ery job ...

Punu:r uy.O hh l

-

BOOSTERS MEETING
The Southern Athletic •
Boosters wiD hold a Work
session at the football field
Thursday at 6:30 p.m.

SEPT4

Ill

T il t lt'~ ...... ,.UIIIid

'!'••

day

Court St.. Puml'ro)', Ot1iu 4r,769.
Bus lllt'.'i.\ Off1 rc Phun~ 992· 2!56 .
F:d1tun al Phu 1~ 99'J-2 l57.
St•t·und dH s~ post&amp;t ~t· ~ n d jj l
Nitllutlal aJ v t• r! t .~ l l l ~ -n ·pn•st• rt ·
U. lln, l.otntlotl A ssjwhi ll·~. :wu
Eud1d A\'1' ., Clt'\;clantl . Olt1u ~ ~ !5.
Sull'!t:n'l'llOII Tlt lt' :-~o : 11l'l ivl.'rt'tl Uy
t:ll r l' ll'l' 1'1' It' I'!.' li VHiiiiUit• 75 Hil l .~ 1"-'l
l'lv.t'k. l:ly Mutur Rl!utt' wltt•rr&lt; ca rr lf!l
.'il.' n'll'l' nut a\'llll&lt;i tJit•, Onl' munth
S:l.:lS l:ly mail ir1 OhTU and W VH
Orw Yt•Hr. $22Jl0 : Stx mu11 1h ~
Sli .S.O : Thrt!t' munt hs . Si .OO:
EL~l· Wh tn• $26 .00 }'t'ar ; S IX lll1!11ths
$1 :U O: Thr ct• mtHHhs . $1.:'10
1-lullsl'npllun prke irtd u(!t•!; Su11d i1\ •

Lawson, therefore, the two
· defendants h~d oppolile and
conflicting Interests In the
trial.
The jury returned a verdict
finding the Meigs County ., · ~
Comml!llllonera not Uable and
tbat the t!efendant, l'obert " '
Lawson,
liable for hla
negligent conduct.

0.~

ROBERT HOEFI.ICH
Cily Edllur
Pu b l i.~ l~~~ W! ily t! XL't'IJI SlltunJay
U.• Tht&gt; Ohio. Valley Publt shwl-!
Cvlll~ut Y · Mul tr mt·dia .

It was erroneoualy reported
in la.sl night's paper that the
county prosecutor's ofllce
represented both defendants
in the f48(1,000 lawsuit fUed
by Shirley Ann Evans against
the Meigs County Board of
Commissioners and Robert
Lawson .
The
Meigs
County
Prosecutor's
office
represented only the Board of
Meigs
County
Com·
missioners, and Lawson
appeared without cotinsel.
The county's position was
that the judgment should be
render~d against Robert

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy

__,---.._

CLUB TOURNEY
A club tournament will be
held for members and green
fee players at the Pomeroy
Golf Club this weekend.
Sunday 18 holes will be
played with the final 18 lo be
played on Monday. There wiD .
be four nights with trophies
awarded in each. ·

.Stride Rift'

Civil suit clarification

---~ - ~-

CLIFTON

BETWEEN

AUTO• SkloSALE$
Loceted 011
of Pomt,.,Y·Mison
!JMl77Mm

''\

I,

.

,.

�- ~ -·-

•

...

-~~4--

---~---

-- --

.... ~-

••

••
~The

Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., thursday, Aug. 31, 1978

.

Full pay
•

g~ven
NE W YORK UPI )
Darryl Stingley, the New
England Patriots' wide
receiver who was serioUsl)'

injured Aug. 12 in an
exhibition game with the
Oakland Raiders, will receive
his full salary for the 1978
seasoo as well as other
com pensation .

1

Stingley was paralyzed
from the neck down as a
result of a pass-play collision
with Oakland safety Jack
Tatwn. Stingley suffered a
blow to his head from
TatW!l's shoulder.
In adqition to his salary for
th e
1978
season,
approximately $60,000,
Stingley will receive half of
his 1979 salary. which would
be approximately $66,000
after a 10 percent increase for
his option year.
Other co mpensation
includes $1,000 per month for
life and $50 per month for
each dependent plus future
medical and hospital costs to
be paid by the NFL Player's
As$ociation . Stingley also will
be eligible for Social Security
disa bility payments and
workmen's
compensation.
LAUREL, Md. (UP! )
India may be represented for
the first time in this fall '~
running of the $200,000
Washingt o n,
D.C .,
International at Laurel Race
Course.

• ••
••••
• • •
•• •• •• ••

.

• ••

•••

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
......-Miior L••gue Standings
8 v .Unifl'd Prns fnt•rnationilf
NifiOnill LUIUI'
East
W. L . Pet. GB
Phi la
71 59 .5..6
P ittsbrgh
66 64 .508
5
Ch icago
66 65 . so~ · 512
Mon treal
61 n .459 lfl 2
St . LOU IS
58 1./t .439 14
New York
53 79 .402 19
West
w. L . Pet. GB
LOS Ang
79 54 .594
San Fran
77 56 .579
'1
Cincinal i
71 61 .538 71 2
San D iego
69 65 .$15 1011
Houston
62 70 .470 16' 2
At lanta
59 73 .447 19 1 1
-, Wednesday's Aesutts
Ptsbgh at Cin ci , ppd .• ra in
New York 10, San Francisco .4
Atl anta 6. Chic ago 2
St . Louis 4. Houston 2
Ph il adelph ia 6 , San D iego 5
Los Angeles .4 , Montreel 3
Today 's Probable Pitchers
( All Times EDT)
Ci nc innat i I Bonham 9 ~ J al
S l . LOu is (Martinez 8·6), 8 :35
p.m .
Mon tr eal ( Gr imsley 16-9) at
San D iego ( Rasmussen lJ. tO ),
10 p .m .
Friday 's . Gimes
Houston at Chic ago
Atla at Ptlsbgh , 2, tw i .n ite
Cin ci at St . Louis, n ight
New Yor k at Los Ang , night
Montreat at San D iego , night
Ph ita at San Francisc o. night
American Le1gue

Ea51
W. L Pet .
Boston
New York "

Milwauke ~

Detro it
Balf i mre
Clevelnd
To rOnto
Kan Ci t y
Calif
Texa s
Oakland
Minesota
Chicago
Seat t le

"' "56

76 54

.636

.585

G&amp;
7

a•'

.573
73 58 .557 10 11
7~

n 59 .550
56 74 .431
55 80 .407
West
W. L . Pet .
71 60 .542
70 63 .526
65 65 .500
62 n .463 '
57 75 .432
56 75 .427

,,

82 .374

11 11?

"

JQI

J

G&amp;
2
5'1'

10 1
14 11

15

"

Wednesoay ·s Nesults
Mil w at Cleve, ppd .. ra in
Bo5t on 2. ToroMo 1, lst
Toronto 7, Bos ton 6. 2nd
New York 5, Baltimore .&amp;
K ansa s Ci t y 12, Chicago 0
Todav's Probable Pitchers
cAll Times Eon
Milwaukee (Caldwell 16 8 .and
Travers
9 1l
at
Cleveland
! Paxton 9 .7 li nd Wa i ts 9 131. 2.
5 : lO p.m .
New York (T idrow S-9) at
Balt imore (McGregor 12 11 ).
7 :30 p.m .
M innesota (Zahn 9·13 1 at
Detro it { Young 5-l J. 8 p.m
Fridiy's G"imes
Cal iforn ia a t Toronto
Chi at Balf. 2. tw i ni l e
O,akland at e oston , n igh!
sea llle at Ne¥( York , night
Tex as at Mi l wa Ukee , n igh t
Cleve at M innesota , n ight
Oetroit atKan Ci t y, ni ght
Mijor league Leaden
By Unite·d Press International
Batting
I Based on 350 at bats)
Nat ional L eag ue
GAB. H. Pet.
Burr oghs All
126 411 129 .313
Parker P it
11 7 462 145 .313
Smi th LA .
11 3 401 l ~S .312
Cll!Hk. SF
129 484 149 .30 8
Madlock SF
97 357 'llO .308
Bowa Phil
125 522 159 , 305
Wh i tf ield SF
122 399 121 .303
Rose Cin
13 1 547 164 .300
Cruz Hou
126 470 141 .300
126 .470 139 .29 6
Concpcn Cin
117 ~ 16 123 .296
Howe Hou
watson Hou
liS 395 117 .29 6
American' League
GAB. H. Pet.
Carew Min
125 472 158 .33 5
Rice Bos
132 S.Sl 179 .325
Oli ver TelC
103 407 128 .314
Piniella NY
100 360 11 '1 311
Roberts Sea
106 364 11 2 .308
Munson · NY
123 498 149 . 299
Reyn olds Se
119 435 130 .299
Whtaker Del
11 3 401 120 .299
L ynneos
1204 40 131 .298
Yount M il
99 382 114 298
Home Runs
National Leigue : Foster , Cin
30; Sm ith , ~ A and Lu zinski.
Ph il 28 ; Kingman . Chi , Dawson ,
Mil and Par ker , P ill 23 .
Ameriun Lugue : Rice , 8os
36; Hisle aM Tno mas , M il '29 ;
Baylor, Cal 27 ; Thornton . Clev

· Sports T ran\ou:rions
By United Preu lnt ernafioflal
W eelntsel ay
Pro Faotbalt
Ba!timore
Cut oHenS I\Ie
lineman Dav id Stod9ard .
Buffalo
Waived quartur
bac~ Fred
Besana , defensive
tackle John Litfle , l ine ba cker
Greg COII 1nS anCI guar CI Steve
Lawso n .
Cleveland
Waived punter
Greg Coleman . r'unning back
Larry Poole , offens ive tack le
Bob L ingenfelter center AI P itts
and defensive t·ackte Larry
G illard of Memphis St ate.
Green Bav - Released w ide
r eceivers Wi llard Harre ll and
Regg ie Craig , linebacker ~im
Gueno, f ullback Jim Culbreath
and det ensive bllck Tim More
sco : placed guard R ick Scr ibn
er on injured reserv e and r e
signed d efens ive back Howard
Sampson .
Los Ang eles -- Cut d ef ensi ve
end AI Cowlings . punter k, ic ker
Glen Walk er , safety Jacki e

w a I 1a c

c and ce n ter Uan
Ryclck ; p laced Tacke · Gus
Coppen s and lmebac kCr Dav e
Morton on inj ured reserve
New England
Wa iwed
Quar d Fred Sturt and r c signed
punter M i ke Patr ick .
NY Giants
Acau ired on
wa i vers !rom Buffa lo l 1neback
er Joh n Skorup.an and released
defens ive tackle Dennis Heim
anellincbackfir Andy Selfridge .
NY Jets
Rel eased safety
Ma u r ic e Tyter . cornerb&lt;lck
Tony Terry , de fens ive ji nem~n
Andre Anderson and p laced
linebacker Greg Murphy on
inju red wa i vers .
Pittsburgh ·~ Cut run n ing
back. Alvin Ma xso n.
Sl Louis - Rel eased ~a t ety
Jeff Se verson , defensive back
R a y While , off ensive tackle
Brad Oates. running backs
Andre Herr era and Earl Ca r r
and wide r ecei ver
Tommy
Sou thard ; pla ced de f en sive end
Jack
Wil lia m s on
iniur ed
r e s e r v e : si gnca I incbacker

Greg Westbr oO )I.S.
Detr oit
Announced th e.
acQuiSition of tour ti me All Pro
w ide rece iver GenE&gt; washing
ton ,
Karlsas City
Sig11ed k lc.k
return spec ial ist Lar-ry Mar
sh all and traded wide receiver
John McDan iel to wash inoton .
See ttl e - Signed tree agent
defensive end Da ve ~raave

caTCher Ke ith Moreland , out.
tielelers Kerry
D ineen and
LQnnie Smith .
Chicago (All Recalled
pitc hers R ich H rnton, St eve
Trout, Rich Wortham and Jack
Kucek from the Iowa Oaks ot
the American Anoctation and
purchased
contract of·
outfielder Rusty Torres from
IOWa·.

ve ld

.
S_igned place k1cker
Rafael Sept ien .
Baseball
HOuston - Called up inf ie lder
Keith Drumright from CM rtes
ton of Internat ional League
Ph'iladelph ia - Recalled fr~m
Oklahoma term team re h~f
pitchers Dan Boi tano and Kevm
saucier , ~hor lstop Todd cruz.

oattas

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Your good health is always our main con·
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on hand at a ll limes. ready lo answer any
questions aboul your medication . Call .

DUITON DRUG CO.
992-3106

N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport , 0.

Runs Batted In
National Leigue : Foster . Ci n
96 .' Garvey . LA 91 ; Park er , P it!
and Clark , _?,F BS ; Smith , L A 87 .
American League : Rice. Bos
114 ; Staub , Del 104 ; H isle , M i l
95 ; Thornton , .( lev 85 ; Thomp
son . Det 82 .
· Stolen Bases
N1tional Le1gue : . Mor eno,
P itt 56 ; Lopes , LA '38 ; Ta ver as.
P ill and Richard s. SO 34 :
Smi th , SO 32
Ameriun Le!'gue : LeFlore,
Det 59 : Cruz. Sea 46 ; Oilone,
Oak. 44 ; W i lls , Tex ~2 1 Wilson ,
KC 35.
PitchinQ
Victories
National League : Blue, SF 16·
7 ; John , LA and Gr imsley , Mil
16 9; N ie kro . All 16 -14 ; Perry ,
SO 15 -6; Hooton , LA 15·8.
Aml'riun league : Guidry ,
NY 192 ; Flanagan , Bal l 17-11:
Eckersle y, Bos 16-5; Caldwe tt,
M il 16-8; T anana , Cal 16 9;
Palmer . Bal l 16 12 .
Earned Run A~· er age
(Based on 126 inning\ pitc:hed )
National League : vuc kovich,
St .L '2.4'9 ; Rogers , M .t t 2.47 ;
Sw&amp;n . NY '2 .49 ; Bl ue , SF 2.58 ;
Knepper , SF 2.69.
Americiln League : . Gu idr y,
NY 1.87 ; Matlack . Tex 2.26;
Caldwell. M il 2 . ~ 3 ; Pa lmer .
Ball 2.59 ; GOIIZ, Minn 2.73
Strikeouts
N1fionat League : . R ich ard ,
Hou 144 ; N iekro. All 205 ;
Seaver , C in 169; Montefusco,
SF 147 ;· Bl yl even , P ill and
Btue . SF 145.
., . American league : . Guid r y,
NY
~07 ;
Ryan .
Cat
205 ;
Leona r d . K C 145; Flanagan,
BaH 142 ; Eckersley . Bos 126 .

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····-

Reds get first break in weeks
CINCINNATI ( UPI)
There was no break in the
rllny weather, tut the Reds
got their first break in we.eks.
It came Wednesday night
when a steady downpour
fQI"ced postponement of the
·series finale against the
Pittsburgh Pirates · with
Cincinnati trailing IH after
four imlrigs.
While Clncy's losing streak
of six games remains intact,
the club's record for never
having lo,. a date sinee
O)OVing into Riverfront
Stadiwn June 30, 1970, ended
at 859.
"That," said Reds publicist
Jim Ferguson, "totals 707

games.
.
''And," he added, "those
707 games include 687 during
the regular season , nine
playoff games, II World
Series games, one All-Star
gal)le, eigbt 'Kid Glove'
games and one exhibition
game before th.e start of a
seaSQn."

The po•ponement, though,
was the second since the Reds
moved int~ Riverfront
StadiWil . The first came in
the second game of a
doubleheader wiih San Diego
July 18, 1971.
The last postponement of a
game at old Crosley Field?
"That," said Fer~uson

after a check of club files,
~~ was

Sept. 1, 1969."
It WI!SII't until 10 :06 p.m.,

two hours and one minute
after the scheduled starting
time, that )lie Reds and
Pirates took the field
Wednesday.
The Reds had rallied for
three runs in the bottom of
the fourth when Wllpire crew
chief Doug Harvey called a
halt in play.
. Alter the required one-hour
and 1:&gt;-minute wait, Harvey
signaled that the game was

being postponed.
"The game pasn 't been
rescheduled ," said Ferguson .
" And ii will be played only if
a situation developes where it
would have a bearing oo the
division title races."
When the game started,
there was a turnout of 17,018
on hand. The official paid
attendance was 15,687.
Only a few stragglers, definitely not !air-weather fans,
remained when Harvey signaled the postponement at
12:47 a .m. today .

Umpires' case
being pres~nted
lly ED MCF AU.
PHILADELPHIA (UPI ) Major-league Wllpires were
scheduled to .present their
case today at a federal tourt
hearing on an injunction
request by club owners
seeking to prevent an
immediate strike by the
umpires.

raised here ," MacPhail
responded. "Any dispute you
have. Any of these articles we
are prepared to go to
arbitration as the agreement
provides.''

Phillips asked MacPhail to
define a "dispute. "

"You tell me what you're
disputing and I- will define ,''
The 52limpires, whose five· MacPhail said.
year contract expires t961,
The defense attorneys hit
::·:'; were
prevented by a frequently at the fact the
, T~d:'·y
:::::::::.::::::::•:::•::•·:·:···:·:·:.: ...: :··:::::::-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::_
,•,
:-:- temporary restraining order leagues never
received
/ last Friday from continuing written a uthorization from
::::
;.:.
::: their one.Qay walkout in a the umpires that their
.• .·
:::: dispute with the American previou s ' attorney , John
:::: and National League over Cifeli, who negotiated the
::::
they
want five-year contract reached in
·.·. issues
:·:· renegotiated.
March 1977, half the right to
::::
U.S. District Court Judge sign the agreement.
{ Joseph McGlynn Jr., .who
.·.·
By MILTON RICHMAN
·.·.
} issued the order last Fri&lt;jay
UPI Sports Editor
:·&gt;
:-:·
} night that put the umpires
,·.·
back on the field, held a halfRACEWAY RESULTS
By GREG BAILEY
day
hearing Wednesday
NEW YORK (UPI) ~ He isn 't the type man to keep
Eagles will look like this:
TOLEDO,
Ohio (UP! )
The Eastern Eagles are the. Bissell and Norton will be the everything locked up Inside him.
·afternoon on a request by the Super Knox grabbed the lead
first Meigs County team to sa fetie s, and KeHer and
He's the closest approach to the late Vince Lombardi I've league to make the ban at the three-quarters pole, led
open the 1918J!ridiron season. Randy Browning wlll be the met yet, not only because of his passion for perfection, his pennanent. He recessed the by one and one-half lengths at
T)ley host Waterford's starting cornerbacks; Rusty utterly single-minded desire to win and his method of handling session .until tllday.
the stretch and then pulled
Wildcats Friday night at 8 Wigal a~~ junior Tim Dillon m~. but also because of the completely open way he speaks
Seven
umpires
who away to a four-length victory
p.m. The Eagles didn 't play will be the linebackers with his mind.
appeared in the courtroom over Shiaway Jewel in the
Uie Wildcals last year, but Mike Hayman and Spencer at
His name is Hubert Vogelsinger and it's a good one to keep in Wednesday , most from the featured $1,700 eighth pace
added them to lhe 1978 the ends. Starcher and Eynon mind . The odds are you're going to hear much more about him National League, were Wednesday night at Rac"eway
schedule.
expected to testify on their Park.
will be the defensive tackles, in the fut111;e.
The Eagle starting back- and Guinther and Greg
At the moment, the •ocky, blond, 411-year-&lt;Jid Viennese behalf tnday .
The third horse was
field will consist of Dan H'ayman will get the nod for native happens to be coaching the San Diego Sockers of the
NL President Olub Feeney Terrible Tim.
Spencer at fullback, Randy .the starting nose guard.
The winner, worth $3.60, $3
&gt; North American Soccer League, but all you have to do is watch said since those wnpires
Browning at tailback, and
Not much is known about him work and talk with.him to recognize inunediately that he's were unable to attend their and $2.80, was driven by
Mark Norton, a junior, at Waterford except that it was destined to go much further.
regular games Wednesday George Bowman in 2:04 1-5.
wingback. The signal caller a pro-set formation for its
The 3-1 nightly double
Vogelsinger couldn't speak English when he first came to night, the league used three·
at the quarterback post, will passing game. Waterford has this country from Austria 15 years ago. His wife, Lois, a men crews instead of (our. combination of Billy Steel
be either sophomore Greg nine seniors on the 35-man former Fulbright scholar who is the most important thing to
He also said two amateur and Speedy Megan rewarded
Wigal or junior Brian Bissell. roster .that tied North Gallia him in his life, not counting soccer, taught him the language umpires, who acted as substi- backers $13.
,Up on the line, trying to ~ in a scrimmage and lost and he caught on so quickly, he got a Masters degree and a tutes during the walkout,
A crowd of 2, 137 wage red'
open up the . holes, will be by three touchdowns to Bachelor of Science degree from Boston University in three were used Wednesday night $167,254 .
Mike !layman and Greg Warren in another pre-season · years.
in Atlanta where only two
Guinlher at ends, Russell contest.
Before arriving in the U.S. he played professional soccer five professional umpires were .
Starcher and Don Eynon at
available.
Head Eagle Coach is Joe yearsin Austria's First Division .
tackles, and Rusty Wigal and Mitchem assisted by Arch
During direct testimo ny
The muscular, :&gt;-foot-9 little dynamo was an All-Pro with the
Randy Keller at the guards. Rose and Dennis Eichinger. Boston Metros in 1963, after which he began his coaching Wednesday. Feeney and AL
Junior Greg Hayman will be Dave Weber and Ed Cromley career at Brandeis University. Later, he was head coach at President Lee MacPhail
centering the pigskin .
handle the junior high chores. Yale eight years, guiding the Elis to the NCAA playoffs for the maintained that their fiveyear ·agreement with the
The defensive unit for the
M.idd leport
first Ume in the 100 years they had been playing soccer.
Major
League
Umpires
Alter leaving Yale, Vogelslnger signed on as head coach and
director of player per9lnnel with the Boston Minutemen of the Association bars a strike.
Work Shoes
Attorneys for the Wllpires
NASL, winning division titles in two of the three years he was
*Western
Boots
there. On the side, he wrote a syndica.ted newspaper colwnn on argued about the wording of a
contract clause, calling it not
soccer and worked as a TV color man.
Open :
While coaching the Minutemen, he ran into a player problem mandatory or binding. The
9-5 Mon . thru Sat.
Friday Til a p.m.
with goalkeeper Shep Messing, the flake, who was with the clause said a dispute "shall"
be submitted to an arbitrator
Cosmos last year and now is with the Oakland Stompers.
"People still ask me how I was able to handle Shep acceptable to both sides if
· Messing," says Vogey. "I simply put myself in his position, agreement on the dispute is
not reached within 10 days.
~~=f:j~~~~~~R~~=======u~ and
it was easy because I'm also an eccentric. I set down the The federal co urt, the
rules. I gave him $750a month, take it or leave it. He took it and
attorneys said, had no
I worked with him ."
"He ll'as a master at missin g practice, Always had excuses· authority to issue a bail
why he couldn't be there with the rest of the team . I'd say to against the walkout.
However, McGlynn ruled
him 'You can't make it at two o'clock, that's okay, make it at
tha
t
"shall "
meant
sev,;, and I'll be there . What 's that' You can't make it at
"mandatory"
and
ordered
seven, either., okay make it at 12.' He got to learn that when he
the proceedings to continue.
practiced with me alone, it was three times as tough. "
Richard Phillips, Pat Ryan
· Acquired by General Manager Marvin Milkes before this
and
John Markle Jr.,
past season after coaching Team Hawaii, Vogelsinger led San
attorneys
for the umpires,
Diego into the semifinals before the Sackers were eliminated
maintained
that the leagues
by the Tampa Bay Rowdies, who lost to the Cosmos last
have
failed
to negotiate in
Sunday for the ch8lllpionship.
good
faith
21
demands that
Vogelsinger is all discipline and organization, the same way
include
vacations
during the
Lombardi was. He has no ~~sacred cows" on his team.
season.
an
increase
in the $52 ·
"Between four walls, they (the players ) can call me
per
diem
allowed
in
anything," he says. "On the field, It is different. Alii ask is
e&lt;penses,
jub
security
and
that they perform . To me, there are no stars. No matter who
they are, they have lo do the job. If they don 't, I pull them. consecutive work days.
During cross examination,
That 's whY I've been in a little hot water."
Phillips
clashed frequently
Vogelsinger feels he 's in a professional business and his
with
MacPhail,
who had
primary obligation is to win . Sometimes, others don't fully
testified
earlie
r
that the
appreciate the utter single purposeness with which he goes
leagues
"
had
a
valid,
about it.
complete
contract
that
has a
Two years ago, for example, when Vogelsinger was handling
no-strike
clause.
I
don't
think
Boston, Ken Furphy, then 1coaching the Cosmos, suddenly
we
should
be
forced
under
charged over and hollered at him, "You Gennan, you Hitler!"
Without losing his composure, Vogelsinger answered, "I'm , threats to negotiate items
271 N. SECOND AVE.
that already were negotiated
an Austrian, not a German."
or negotiate new items."
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
"That doesn 't matter," Furphy kept on. "It still goes."
Phillips asked MacPhail
Later, Furphy apologized. Characteristically, Vogelsinger
what
dispute he would think
&amp;
accepted the apology.
should
be submitted to
"Hitler wasn't Gennan , be was Austrian,'' someone said to
arbitration.
309 FIFTH STREET
Vogelsinger.
"Wha.tever dispute Is being
"but I don't
"I know that,'' the San
NEW HAVEN, W. V•
think Furphy does ."

champion Fernando Montes.
Alter a sluggish first round ,
the · seven th - ran k ed
heavywei ght con tender
began 1IJ show his boxing
ability in the second round,
scoring with a succession of
left hooks to . the head and

body of his paunchy
KANSAS CITY (Uf'l ) ~ opponent.
At I :35 into the third round ,
The Kansas City Roya ls
Bobick
followed a succession
Wednesday night recalled
right-handed pitcher Steve of jarring hooks w\th an
Busby from Omaha in the overhead right that felled
American Association and Montes, who took the Hkount
designated relief pitcher sitting down , his face covered
Steve
Foucault
for with blood.
Bobick weighed in at 21'1
·assignment.
Busby's recall, coming just and Montes, 223.
It was Bobick's second bout
before the Sept. I deadline,
will make . him eligible for Under his new manager.
Dave Wolf of New York City.
playoff games.

!. .,. .,. ,., .

Eagles host
Wildcat team

Sport Parade

Fleece of Foot

FINAL WEEK

FOR 10% DISCOUNT ON AU
BACK TO SCHOOL SHOES

heritage house
OF SHOES
Op·en Friday til8 p.m.
.
N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, 0.

·.• '""

59'5

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CUT 33°/o

28-range measurement W1th 10 Megohm input, mirrored 5" scale. overload
protec ted meter movement, polarity
reverse ~witch. single-knob range
sele ct or. Accuracy ±3% DC and ±4%
. AC. With leads, batteries. 22-201

•

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FALL KICKOFF
SALE!

SALE PRICED
NOW I

VILLAGE
PHARMACY

"NEW FORMULA" LONC·LIFE BATTERIES

SAVE~~ 50°/o

by Rtdlo Shtck•

Hush

R•PR~~:~
lHE SASSY

...IWij-.

1ut gilmeJ
Tor
010000000- 1 51
Bos
()00 011 OOx - 2 8 0
Kirkwood and As l1 b y ,· Eckers
tey and Fisk W- Eckers.ley ( 16·
5). L - K irkwood ( ] . ~ ). HRSToronto , Mayberry (21 J.

Chi
000 000 000- 0 5 I
K.C.
06002301 &lt;- 12 ISO '
Barr ios, Tor rea 1 b a 12 ),
Schueler (6) , Willoughby (9 )
and Colbern ; Gura and Porter.
W- Gura 02·4) . L "- Barrios (8·
121 .. HRs- Kanslts City , Pa:rter

'

None sent by ma il.

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dealer . See what's
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for up to 2 morel. 21 ·1630

A.meriun League
M llw at Cleve , ppcL ra in

N .Y .
110 020 100- ..S 16 0
012 001 000- " 7 1
Batt
Guidry , Gossage fB } l'lnd
M unson ; Flanagan , T .Martinez
(5 ). Kerr igen (7) end Dempsey.
W - Guidry (19 -2) . L - T .Mar
tlnez { J.JI . H Rs- Baltimor e.
OeC inces 123) , Dempsey (6) .

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N iekro . Ruhle (9 ) and Pul ols,
Bochy (91 w ~ B . F orsch 110
15) . l - N ie kro I ll 11 ). HR\- SI
Lou is, Mu mphrey (2) .

(2 nd game) ·
Tor
000 700 320-- 7 13 2
Bos
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Garvin , Cru z (7) end Cer one ;
Hassler, Stanley (6) , Burgm eie r
{9) t~_nd M ontgomery , Fis k (8) .
W- Cruz f 6· 11. L ~ Stanley ( 12
21. HRs- Bos ton , R ic e 2 D6) .

CHARGE IT
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1

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Mil
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000 000 031- .4 10 1
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18)
and
Carter ;
Sutton , Hough (8 ) and Fer .
l guson
W- Houg h (5 -Jl
Tw itche t l (4-12 ). HR s ~ Los An
geles , Sm ith ('181 , Cey ( 161.

Pick one up at your
nearest Rad io Shack

,

BLOOMINGTON,
Minn .
( UPI ) ~ Duane Bobick of
Bowlus, Minp ., began a
comeback in impressive style
Wednesday ni~ht with a
third-round knockout over
Mex ic an heavyweight

l

Color~Packed

Phil a
~00 00 1 ~0 1 - 6 16 0
200 20 1 000- 5 8 1
San Ogo
Lerch . Eastw ick (6). Bruss tar
(7) and Boone ; Perry , Sh irl ey
(6), Finger s (7) and Tenace . W
- Brusstar U -2) L - Fingers 15·
12).

SEE US FIRST ANO COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.

IIEW!

Knockout scored

Riverfront record ends at 707

*

1979

Miior Lugue Resulh
By United Pren International
National League
Ptsbgh at Cind , ppd ., ra in

Ch i
000 ?00 000- 2 8 1
Alia
00 1 230 OOx - 6 11 1
Burr is, Hernandez ~S) , Moore
~5) , Holtzman fll and Blllck
w el l ; M c W ill iams and Nolan . W
- McW illiems (1 0) . L - Burr is
( 5 10). HR s- Ch ica g o, K ingma n

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

IIIOST STORES OPEN LABOR DAY

In fhe NL BatT ing leaders
Burroughs ' per ce ntag e iS .11387
and Parker 's is .31385

N .Y
200 025 100- 10160
San Fran
000 100 120- 4 9 2
Swen ,
Bernard
( 9)
and
Stearns ; MontefUsco, W ill iams
(6 ), Cur t is (6), La11e lle (8),
Minton (9) and Tamargo . w ~
Swan . ( 8-5) . L- MOI"1lefusco (9
6 L HRs- New York , Mau ill i
113 ),
Montanez
( 16 );
San
Francisco , E v ans l14 l.

and
bnilding materials

IIIOST STORES OPEN LABOR DAY

f&gt;-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday., Aug. 31. 1978

RS "AA" 'CELL

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
A OIVISION OF TANDY CORPORATION

(

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Sizes
Misses 121,'2 to 4
Children's 8'12 to 12
Brushed S'12 to 8
Pigskin

Handy lor all battery. operated
products. Stock up now at ·
these low pr ices!

Moat 111m1
. also avei'tb'- 11
.
RMto Shick
Dell., • .
Look for lhil
ltgn in your

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FOR THE COLLEGE SCENE

lHE POlARIS
Sizes
Youths 12'/2 to 3
Little Gents 8t/2 to
Brushed
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COME IN

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OUR SALE TABU.
BARGAINS.

BAHR
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N. 2lld Alt.,

0.

THE SHOE BOX
992·2351

Mlddl ~por t,

Ohio

• WILSOM AUTOGRAPHED
WALTER PAYTON
FOOTBALL
• 1978-79 PRO FOOTBALL
SCHEDULE
With purchase of selected

�.•' ,

-.

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,.,.

• • .. . - . ·-

:-

•
G-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Aug. 31, 1978

'jesus, God S Wondeifu! Gift
theme of vacation Bible·school

Mary Martin receives
award . for youth work
Mrs . Ma ry Marti n of
Pomeroy "'as reappointed
national children and youth
chainnan and given recognition for her past year's work
. at the Eight and Forty La
Marche Nationale held Aug.
24-26 in New Orleans, La.
William Ca ldwell, assistant ·
director of the American
Legion Child Welfare Fowl·
dation Conunission , cummended Mrs . Martin for her
work with children and youth,
noting that she had 100 perl1!nt reporting on work from
all salons. He presented her
with a plaque signed by
Charles Smith, national commander of th~ An1erican
L&lt;!gion.
Robert Patty, also an assistant director with the CommissLon, reported that the
Eight and Forty ha&lt;] given
$1 4,400 to be used for genetic
research and study and for
the publica lion of a book on
genetic conditions.

MODULAR
HOMES
Ry
All American
MEETS
•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
•FHA &amp;VA
SEE OUR LOT
MODEL TODAY

M1·s . Martin held a
preeonvention meeting on
children and youth work wiU1
'"cognition going to \he area
clli:iirmen .

At the Central Division
breakfast held Friday Ohio
received national awards including first on scrapboOk
and third 011 history. The procession of offiters, chapeau
passes, . and distinguished
g:uests opened the convention
attended by 354. Grootings
were brought by Philip
Mayeaux , Department commander' of Louisiana , and·
Mrs . Anthony D'Amico,
Department ol Louisiana,
American Legion Auxiliary,
president. Mrs. Martin gave
a report on children and
youth and introduced Mrs.
Lyle Seymour, national youth
chah1nan for the Alneri can

Legwn.
Speaker at the banquet that
evening was Richard Blueswin. of the Nati onal Jewish

Hospital, who presented the
story of cystic fibrosis and
Ule work being carried out at
U1e hospital .
New offkoers in~'lalled were
M•·s . Herman Reimink ,
Oklahoma, chapeau na·
ti onal e; Mrs . Mildred
Ybarra, Arizone~, Ia con~
cierge ; Mrs. Robert Morrow,
Colorado, Ia archiviste ; Mrs.
Viole! Aichholz , Ohio,
I' Awnonier ; and Maxine
Martin , Illinois, demi ·
chapeau nalionale.
Mrs. Marlin announced
area conferences to be held in
November, Det.oember and
Jlmuary, with Area A at Providence, R. I. ; Area Bat Pittsburgh, Pa. ; Area C in Savannah Georgia ; Area D \o
Topeko, Kansas ; and Area E
at Denver, Colo. Among \be
division chapeaus app()in\ed
was Mrs. Marie Bailey of
West Virginia for the Central
Division .

Meter, Mrs. Dorothy Roach,
Mrs. Marie Uiifheit, Mrs .
Elaine Spires, and Mrs. Alice
Jacobs. Mrs. Van Meter
received a birthday gift from
her secret pal.
A salad, sandwiches, chips,
t'Offee and soft drinks were
served.

Announce adoption
KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
1100 E. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio
992-7034

SYRACUSE-"Jesus, God 's
Wonderful Gift" was the
01eme of the vacation Bible
School held a\ the Firs\
01urch of . God, July 24-28
from9:30a.m. lu 11 :30a.m .
Jan Jenkins taught the
primary class. Wilson and
Cherry Cadle \he in ·
termedia\e class, and Joy

LONG BOTTOM - Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Spencer, Long
Bottom, are announcing the
adopt ion of a daughter ,
Tracie Janel , born July 26,
1978.
They have a son, Thomas
Ja red. age 5. Grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. Harlis
Frank and Mr. and Mrs. Waid
Spencer of Long Bottom.

MIDDlEPORT DEPT. STORE

Great-gravdparents are
Mr .' and Mrs. Johnnie Kibble,
Reedsville , Mrs. Esther
Wright, The Plains, and Mrs.
Mae Spencer, Long Bottom.

,------··-,
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Social 1
1 Calendar 1

1

THURSPAY
LAUREL CUFF BETTER
HEALTH CLUB, . 6:30 p.m.
picnic at the southbound
I'OIIdside park on Route 3J.
Family affair.

RECOGNITION-Mrs . Mary Martin, a member of the
Meigs County Salon, Eight and Forty, and the 1977-78
· chainnan of children and youth for the national orgamzau01,, was presented a plaque in recognition of he•· work at
U1e national convention held m New Orleans last wook .
She was reappointed children and youth chainnan for the
l!i78-79 year.

•ATHELTIC SUPPORTERS
•WARM-UP SUITS
•JOGGING SHORTS
•GYM BAGS
•TUBE SOCKS
•SWEAT SOCKS
AT:

FRIDAY
POMONA GR ANGE , 8
p.m. Friday at the Rock Springs hall. Baking and sewmg
c"Ontests to be held , gran ge to
be inspected, and new of·
ficers to be elected.

Open Friday
Tiii :OOp .rn.

These are some children's
books which are now
· available at the PomeroyMiddleport Public Libraries.
What's the Big Idea, Ben
Franklin? by Jean Fritz. Ben
Franklin was full of ideas :
circulating libraries, fire
departments, almana cs,
electricity, and postal
systems - not to mention a
remote-control lock (so he
could stay in bed and lock his
door ), a,riiCking cjulir (which
JXlWered a fan to keep the
flies off his head) , and a
windmlll (to turn his meat
.
roaster) .
But Franklin was· much
more thah an inventor. He

The annual Black reunion
was held at Forest Acres

PRICE INCREASE. BUY NOWI

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II
POMEROY, 0.

992-7113
I

.J~net Bolin, an accredited tl1e show will be open for
:::; judge of \he Ohio Associatirn1 public viewing until 8 p.m.
:;:; of Ga rden Cluhs, aud an U1at evening.
::::
;::; outstanding arr a nge !', • Mrs. Turnm· welcqmed the
' . MARRIED MEN ARE OFF UMITS!
presented a dcmonst!-ation mernbe1·s and guests al ong
RAP :
entitled "Swmner Splended" with a new member, Mrs.
There's a guy who lives near me and he's really goudlooking, at the Monday night open Ma1v in Wilson. Devotions
but there's one little problem. He's married and has a baby. I meeting of the Rutland were given by Mrs. Berni e~
think I'm in love with him, though we've never spokr n.
Garden Club.
Wirm who read .. A Country
I walk past his house just so I can look at him, and I always
Held at the Rutland Church Garden '' anU "The Spirit of
stare at him when he drives by. l know the sound of his car, so I ' ol Chris\, Mrs. Bulin showed Nature" ta ken from Idea ls
can be outside at,the right times. He's eight years older than 1 modern , traditional and the ' Mag azin e . Id e a s fo r
am and doesn't know I exist. What should I do? ·WVE SICK
Japanese maribana designs. September were given by
DEARL.S.:
She made 'several ar- Mi·s.' Harry Williamson in the
Keep i\ that way I Married men aren 't for chasing. -HELEN
•·angernents one fe-dtu•·ing · absence of Mrs. . Vem on
weathered wood with butterf- Weber.
l.. :,
ly weed, yew, an orange can ~
Mrs. Williarnson spoke uf
And " in love " isn't for someone you've nr:ver even tnet. dle and an orange owl.
perennials for long-nmge cui·
Daydream a bit if it helps, ~ut for reality , pick boys nearer
Durin g the busine ss ur noting Utat perennials are
yoU!' own age (which - ami right ? - is around 14.) -SUE
meeting t'Onducted by Mrs. easy to grow, a l'e long
Anna Turner; plans were fm·- lasting, beautiful in bloom
DEARHELENANDSUE :
01ered fm· the flower show, and as cut flowers, and useful
' I'm not stupid . But in some classes I've very weak, like in "Autwmr's Treasures" to be in arrangements. She said
ITljUh and English. I haven't learned anything about grammar held· Sept. 9 at the Rutland U1at fall plantings are best
in two years. Helen and Sue, you wouldn't believe some of \he United Methodist Church. although some perennials can
wachers I've had. In fourth grade math, we listened \o albums Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis is be planted in the spring. She
all period. My fifth grade math teacher got so impatient with chainnan lor \he show which
my stupidity that she told me to do fractions any way I wanted. ~.is open \o the pu~hc not only
1\ wasn't till eighth grade this year \hat I was tanght what I for viewing but for exhibiting.
should have learned four years ago .
Mrs. Ja~nes Carpenter, an
In intelligence tests I have gotten the highest grades possible OAGC ju&lt;lge, will judge. the
in history, science and vocational. But I'm afraid I'll flunk show beginning all p.m. Exhigh school math and English. Help ! -,NOT DUMB
hi bits are to be in place betDEAR NOT :
ween 9 a .m. and 12 noon and
How abuut an after-school tutor? (Your principal can recom· --------~
mend a good one.) A student with your basic intelligence - and
detennination- won't need specialc"Ourses long, so the ex·
~~·
pense should be affordable. -SUE
·"

Cadle, Harold Roush, Wendy
Clark, Loretta Roush, Perry
Levacy, . and Jeff Roush.
Refreshments were served
each day .
The Bible school concluded
with a picnic for \he children
on Friday and a program by
the children that evening. All
participated in choir singing
with Mrs. Clark at the plano,
and each class presented
what they had learned
through the week. Crafts
were on display in the
vestibule.

THE CHESTER
VOL FIRE DEPT.
• WISHES TO TliAN K
Any or all people who
holped in any way with the
booth at the Fair Ground
during the Fair. Thank you

again.

NOT DUMB:
Should the expense not be affordable, then perhaps a conscientious teacher or two will offer help. I think you can tutor
yourself - with parental assistance -if you get the right books
and guidanc~ from good instructors . -HELEN
RAP :

I'm 16, female, and received a car last Christmas. Most of
the kids cruise (drag Main) and I've met a lot of nice guys that
way. Really nice guys.
'
Recently Dad found out I was cnril&lt;ing with friends instead of
going to the movies as I \old him . He threatens to.take my car
away if I do i\ again.
Is cruising had, as long as you use good judgment •
-DRIVER
DRIVER :
· Lying is bad. Since you didn 't use good judgment about this,
ho"' can you expect your father tu believe you'll cruise sensibly? It 's time you started earning the trust he displayed
when he bought you a car. - HELEN
DRIVER :
Is cruising safe? In your town, perhaps it might be, but often
in larger cities, it's where the dealers and scuzzy pick-ups are.
If you aren't awfully choosy, you can be talked into a situation
you 'II regret- and your parents have no way of knowing where
you are, should you need a fast bail-out.
. :
As one who "dragged Main" a bit when I was 10 hrgh school
(most kids try it ), I can tell you, there are hetter and safer

Greet the new season with Vogue casuals.
For school or just plain fun . Leather uppers ··
in great fall colors.

..
,.

'

..

-MARGUERITE'S SHOES

•

Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main St.

'

IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

..

MASON FURNITURE
.
. OPEN :
Mon .• Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. 8:30 til5:00
Thursday Til12 Noon
Friday Until5 P.M.
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va.
773-5592

..

·-·-----------·F lori st Since 1957

SWEAlERS
CO'JERALlS
BRIEFS

1-SHIRlS
JUMPSUilS
VESTS

JUMPSUilS
DRESSES
10PS .
SlACKS
•

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~wm£s
•

·UNO£RSHIR1S

•
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WITH "SCHOOL-TIMING" JUST AROUND THE
CORNER. WE ARE OFFERING GRADE "A" SAVINGS!
NOW IS THE TIME TO STEP TO THE FRONT OF THE
CLASS AND ENJOY BUDGET MINDED VALUES.
.

WRITE BROS.

NOTEBOOK
FILLER PAPER

1

PENS ....... .... ...... ~~-~!. o~

49~

STAR WARS JEWELRY

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$} 00

LISTERINE MOUTH WASH
)!)~Iz OL

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ONLY

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With Needle

NOTEBOOKS

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... &lt;kot diomotor 20'11'', height from flOor ln&lt;ludn ·
nipples 32", nii'Pie slzo '~'•"• b e t - nipple&amp; 1", .
hoighl of oledri&lt; outlet 241/o", Immersion lyflt 45GO
wott lower orrd upper lwln elenw~ll. CIIN!clly 52.
gel., welllnsuhlted whito onomeled oul8r loclrol. 5-

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49~

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REDUCING PlAN CANDY

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24 oz.

'EBERSBACH
HARDWARE

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WATER HEATER

40 G,IIIOft

9; 30 to 1:00
Friday

Reg . S3.SO

Scatter Pins
And Hypo-Allergenic Posts

REG. 11.84

ELECTRIC

GAS MODELS

Holly Hobbie- Mickey Mou.s e
Donny &amp; Marie, Etc.

~~~~ . . . ..........~~~~·-· ~ 3~9

Reg. $4 .75

Hours:
9:30 to 5:00
Mqn. thru Sat.

Aladdin

40 Sheets

52 GAL &amp;Ia lined

YEAR OUTRIGHT WARRANTY.

OF SUMMER SIOCK REDUCED

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ERASABLE
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PRICES GOOD TliRU SUNDAY, SEPT. 3

49~

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2nd St.

• I

CAMDEN PARK

-------------1

ONLY

BUY

PWS - A BMGAIN Ia MD TABLE

''

Rock Springs

YOU
BEST

SOCI'.S

'

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SHOWS&amp; FIREWORKS - SUNDAY
AND LABOR DAY

PH. 992·2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
Yr-•·r FTO Ft('! r- 1 ~ t

.

FAMILY OUTING"

OF
CONSTRUCTION&amp; GENERAL
LABORER'S UNION
.LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON

FLORIST .

' , I

200 Sheets

GIRLS

SHIRlS

11

Your " E)(tra Touch"

\

JEANS

SATURDAY-SEPTE-MBER 2ND
UNTIL 4 P.M.

Mr. and Mrs. Hayward
Erlewine, Sycamore, Ill.
spent the weekend here
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Erlewine; Rutl~nd. Guests uf
Mr. and Mrs. Erlewine this
week are their two grand. daughters , Beth and Amy
Lynn Eskew; daughters of
Mr. and Mrs. David Eskew,
Newark·. Mr. and Mrs. Eskew
and Kandi will join them
U1ere for a weekend visit.
Mrs. Roxie Oiler has
returned from Colum~us
where she spent the past two
we_eks visiting her daughters,
Mrs. Vile\ Batey and Mrs.
Mildred Millirons. Her granddaughter , Shirley Boyer,
returned Mrs. Oiler to Mid·
dleport.
Mrs. Martha Anderson has
returned after spending a
week in Culwnbus witl1 her
daughter, Carole Painter.

..

B01S

PARK RESERVED

1

Middleport

The Carriers, a singing
group, will present a
program at the Rock Springs
Fairgrounds at 2:30 p.m.
Sunday.
The group has been in
concert in a number of
locations in the Eastern
United States and have
previously appeared in
Meigs County at the Meigs
and Eastern High Schools.
The program is free of charge
but a free w,ill offering will be
taken . The program is
sponsored by the Youth ·
Fellowship of the Rock
Springs United Methodist
&lt;;:hurch. The public is invited.

FOR THE BEST DEALS

...,•

·---

program Sunday

MASON FURNITURE

Pomeroy, 0 .

sa1d tLJHt whcthel' you planlm
be d s, bord ers or for
spctimCJis, plant where the1·c
is pl enty of lig ht and
moistur·c. She mcrlUoned em·- 6
al IJt.olls, iris, peonies, com
flowe rs, ·can dy t uft s,
pri1nrusc , cuuJ tJelphilli1Jtns.
She gave some steps £or
assuriug !luccess. these being

1 Personal Notes 1

SHOP

And so is the Kiddie Shoppe in Pomeroy,
with clothes to fit your child for back·to·school.

Park on Aug . 20". A potluck
diriner was enjoyed at I p.m.
by the 45 family members
and two guests attending.
At ihe reunion were Mr.
and Mrs . John Black,
Frazeysburg ; Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Edwards; daughters,
Sheri and Amy, and sons,
Dave and Runnie, Bremen;
Mr. and Mrs. George Black,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs .
Robert Black and son, Jason,
Rutland; Lonni e Black ,
Pomeroy ; Mi ss Valerie
Johnson, Racine ; Robert E.
Black, Pomeroy; Mr. and
Mrs . Ronald Black and
daughters, Missy and Keri,
Langsville; Mr . and Mrs.
Glen Grooms, . Columbus ;
Mrs. Monna Lanning,, Colum·
bus ; Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Black and daughters , Lynda
arid Brynda, Rutland; Mr.
and Mrs. Burdell Black,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
William Black. Ray; Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Robinson and
son, Larry, Columbus ; Mr.
and' Mrs . Roger Block and
daughter, Shelley, Rutland ;
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Radctifle
1!11'1 tlaughters, Krista and
Stacy, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Robinson and son,
Davey, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Gilmore, Rutland; .
])avid Black' Groveport, and
.Jam·\ Erwin, 'Reynoldsburg .
The 1979 reunion will be
held in Culwnbus .

By Helen and Sue Bottel

lI

School is just around the corner!

Aug. 20 at Forest Acres Park

::::

(.·.·

·Son born

Mr. and Mrs. Keith Anderson, Scm Romon, Calif. are
announcing the birth of a son,
Brian Kent. The baby, born
on Aug. 27, weighed seven
poun&lt;]s, three ounces. Mr.
and Mrs. Francis Anderson,
·Middleport are the paternal
grnadparents and Mr. and
Mi·s. Paul Gillin , Lancaster,
are \he rnaternal grandFrancis Shura . This is a parents.
wonderful story about
Maggie, who wants to be with
the " in" crowd. But the
LEAGUE PICTURES
teacher chooses her to show
Middleport Youth Baseball
the new girl, Tibbie, around.
Tibbie claims to be a witch League pictures are to be
and to possess a wonderful picked up at the E. Kitchen
magic talisman - a seven residence, 293 South Second
stone . Find out with Maggie Ave., Middleport before Sun·
what it really means to be in day. Players with CUbs,
" in " and what is the true Braves, or Indian unifonns
must have them turned in by
secret of the seven stone.
I'm Deborah Sampson by the same daw at the Kitchen
Patricia Clapp. Can a young residence .
girl disguise herself as a
soldier and fight in a war?
· AUXILIARY MEETING
Read about Deborah, who
The Auxiliary of the
changed into " Robbie, " the
Middleport
Fire Department
teenaged soldier who faced
will meet at 7:30 p.m. nelrt
many
adventures and
Wednesday, Sept. 6, at the
challenges in our nation 's
fire
station. All members are
war for independence.
asked
to attend the meeting.
Benjamin West and His Cat
Hostesses will be Bron
Grimalkin by Marguerite
Henry. Benjamin, a Quaker Thomas, Roberta Dailey and
Nonna Jean Stivers.
boy in early America , wanted
so very much to paint that he
dug his colors out of the earth
and made his brushes from
his eat's tail!
Hills End by Ivan Southall.
Trapped in a wrecked town in
the wild mountains of the
West, seven children and
their tea cher face the
challenge of survival which turns out to be more of
a task than any of them
imagined. You won't be able
to put this book down once
you start reading it ; and we'll
all look forward to reading
this author's other books'

•

.

Black family holds reunion

BEAT THE 1979

E. MAIN

Steve Martin, ·Annette and
Jeremy Phalin, Randy and
Shawn Hawley, Mandy
Roush, Beth Starkey, Tarruny
Wright, Na01ni Ohlinger, and
Debi Whitiatch.
Sending gifts were his
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Whitlatch, Mr. and
Mrs. Uoyd Wright, Mr. and
Mrs. John Anderson, Brett,
Brian, and Bracy Korn, and
Steve Tracy.

"'

:}: Generatt·on Rap :: ::

Letters

ON 1978
RCA &amp; ZENITH
TELEVISION'

~20

Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Wright, Pomeroy. entertain·
ed recently with a party in
c1!1ebration of the sixU1 birth·
day of their son, Jason Lee.
Games were played · with
prizes going \o Scot\ Barton,
Danny Fol111er, Nikki
Whitlatch, Randy Hawley. A
Mickey Mouse cake and
another cake decorated with
baseball. players, both baked
by Mrs. Billy Jo Barton,
Leon, W..,. Va ., were served
with ice cream, potato chips
and koolaide .
others attending were

7- The Daily Sentinel , Middlepolt ·Porneroy, 0 ., 'f hursday, Aug. 31, i978
;:':·.:;:;:;::: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:·:;:;:;:;:; :;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ; :; :;:; :;: ·:;:;:::::·:·:·:::·:::::;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:::: :::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:~:~~
;:;:
:·:·

Library

became our· ambassador to
England ; and when he
couldn 't talk sense to the
British, he came home mad
enough to fight them singlehandedly ! Instead, he helped
MEETING for parents of write the De claration of
kindergarten studenls of Independence . And then he
Southern Local Schoo l went back to Europo: to
District Thursday 7:30 p.m. pe rsuade France to , be
at the high school. Purpose is America's ally .
to register students who have
Why Don 't You Get a
not as yet registered and Horse, Sam Adams? by Jean
answer questions parents Fritz. This is another fine
may have in regard to bus book written by the same
schedules and needs of the author. It is the hilarious
kindergarten child . Th ose story of a loudmouth who
students who do not register made it his business to keep
on the 31st may do so on Sept. people angry at the king . He
8.
trained his dog to bark,
SPECIAL meeting 7 p.m. gro.wl, and snap at Redcoats.
But he was a·fraid to ride a
Okey Church.
horse!
THE SOUTHERN Athletic
The Seven Stone, by Mary
Boosters will hold a work
session at the football field
Thursday at ~ : 30 p.m.

STOP IN AND SEE

Clark the junior class .
Helpers were Jenny Wilsoo ,'
Rosemary Eskew, Beverly ·
Faulkner and Terry Barrett.
Students were Kim Wilsoo,
Robin Levacy, Keith Phillips,
Charlene Gadle, Penny Oark,
Anita Levacy, Marla Wilson,
Tamara Clark, Elizabeth
Wise, Chrissy Buzzard, Lee

jason Lee Wright has
sixth birthday celebration

White elephant sale
held at recent
Chatter Club meeting
Mrs . Linda Van Meter and
Mrs. Mary Starcher were
hostesses for a meeting uf the
Chatter Club held recently at
U1e home of Mrs. Van Meter.
A while elephant sale was
held . Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs. Van

1

1

110 W. Mlin

'

Pomitroy, o.

ONLY S~

SUNTAN PRODUCTS
COPPERTONE, SEA &amp; SKI, ETC.

kennell! Nk:C•ut~~=~:'~ Plr.

Chlrlll Alllle, R. Plr.

Honnlng, R. I'll
Mon.lhru Sot. I :OOa.m. to 9 p,m.
Surrdoy IO : JO!o 12 :30and51otp.m.

PRESCAt PTIONS

1h PRICE

PH. m -2955 .

. Friendly S.rvlce
Pomeroy , O.
Open Nights till t

..'

..
'

'

'

�- . - ..,.

.

.

..

U.S. Open Tenn is 8; ABC News 33; Movie 'Love
wi th the Prope r St ranger" 10; 11 : 45-Mash 8.
12 : ~Janak l 33; 12:21&gt;-Movle " Halls of Anger" 8.
12 :41&gt;-Legend of lhe Black Hand 6, 13; I :01&gt;-

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thut·sday , Aug. 31, 1978
J)IC~ THACY

8--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thu1-sday, Aug.~~ . 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
1.; Wt~·J b ur Umlt•t'
&lt;'a:oh
t 'lr&lt;ll"~t·
I !.Sit I

l .t.l
1.:,0·
I.M
:l 00

2da}·:.
:I day:.

t'ti&lt;IY-"

1.25
1.911

2 25
:1 ;:;

f:OI \.'h WU !"\) 11\ 'l'l" IJ11.• lll lli1111W ll ]j
WI ~{(~ IS .f l 'l' II ]S 1)1.' 1" ~ IIIli ~'I tl&lt;i)" .
Ad-. run rtm~ utht•r tharr t•nruwt·utin·
du)' ~

wtll bt:

duu·~··d

FOUNO AT tdson Hor l residence .
Uorwu1, a por t Germe.
Shepherd dog f-riendly Phone
flq2 ·S01'1
FO)JNO UUSH s~tter female lo t
6::1 Roy al O ak t-'or k .
LOS1 BlOND~ mole Af ghan pup
py rn vicrnity ol Oliver )1. in
Middleport
Ch dd s
pe l
'" Rew ord . 98S 390 1

at th t• I duy

t'U lt'

tn·nwmr!l"\ . t.:.11rd r1f Tlw r1 k.~ illlt l
Obituary : 6 · n·rrls pel w"n l. $.:11)(1
r!lillilllWll C a~ h Ill ar.J\'.!IIll"t' .
M11lHit• Hunw

!ill It·.~

wml Yard

!&lt;iHlc~

an• ~l't 't! pl l't.l urlly wrth t•ash Wt\h
\l"til't'. Zfi L't'll\ t•hatl(t' foe· ads t'aiTy·

U\ !1, Bux Numlltt· In Can· 1rf Tht' St•tr·
und.

Tlrt• Pull!isht.•r ft'~t.' fvt'J&gt; II": t tj.! ht
1.1• ~-..!rt vr re,· c~"l ill\}" iltb dt•t•uwd r•l&gt;jt•lllvr~e~l T 1e PuU!t~ht.•t Wlllllut bt·
1\'SJ.IIIIlSrlJ it• fur riii iH' lli&lt;UI Ul!t'

llll'lll"·

!"\'t."l Uist•fliUII

Phunt•!19"l·l i56

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mu!ttl&lt;t\

NoiiJJI 011 ~tUnl a~
1\lt!Sd&lt;JI

thru Ft llfa~
~ p M.
li lt' &lt;..111~ lw•fury puhl ll"litto•11
Surr ~i&lt;t 1

~ P M.

;;ill't"Uiwon

~A:~:;-;~-~,tf~ ~
OIL OR ga s lease Fr ee 30 acre!&gt;
2 m iles nor th of Pomeroy
~1~· 7__2~ · 27~1 ~~~:n~ n9s ~
JOHN TfAFORD Golf Eq urpment.
Buy . sell trade . 61 4-985 3961

-

---YOU Judy,

-

-

THANK
my dorlt, g
w il e l or givrng me the be st 10
yeors of my lrle . Happy An·
niv e r~ory .

oo,

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS COURT

OF MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
IN · RE
P~OPOSED

SY RACU SE -R ACI&gt;IE
REGIONAL
SEWER
DISTRICT .

Case No . 1S1SS
PUBLIC NOTICE
No tic e rs her eby g 1ven
pur! u ~nt to the pro v i! ions or
Section 6119 04 , Oh io Rev ised
Code , that a fr n a l hear ing w i ll
b"eheld by Common Plea s
Court of Me igs County , Oh io ,
on the :nnd day ot Sepfemoer .
1978 . at 10 : 00 AM . OST llf the
Court Hou!e in Pomero y .
Ohio , on the Pe tition tor the
es t ablishmen l of Sy ra c use
Rat l ne
Reg i onal
Sewer
Ol5trlct tiled In !ta1d Court, a\
wel l as on the P lan o f
Operat ion of the d i str i ct as
f i led in sa id 'pro~eed i ngs .
Any ~ persons
or
an y
poi Jticat s ubdi visio n re siding
or lying w i th i n the l!lrea af .
fected by the organ i zation of
th e d is tr ic 1 may file on or
before the date set forth the
case is to be neard its Db·
iect ions w ithlhe Cl et"k ot
Co urts to the grant ing of t he
reques t made in the Pe lilron
reques fi ng e:rd ebl ishment of
Sv ra c use - R~Jc ine
Reg iona l
Sewer D istr ict , 10 the f ihal
organ i zat ton of t he d istr it J, or
t he plan t or t he operation at
the d istr ict as f i led in sa id
proceed i ngs .
Sai d
Pet i t ion
and
proceed ings are Case No
15155 o f the Com mon P leas
Court of Me igs Cou nt y , Oh 10
and the Petit ron , and the Pian
ot Operat ion, ar e now on f il e
and m a y be exam in ed a t the
off ice of th e Cl erK ot Courts at
tn e Court House , Pomeroy .
Ohio

{8)

,.

L A RRY SP ENCER
C LER K OF COURT S,
MEIGS COU NTY , OH 10
24 . 3 1 ! 91 7. 1.4 , 21 ISle

BUDGET HEARINGS
SCHEDULED
The Me igs County Budget
CommiSS i on
Wil l
hOIO
hea r ing s on ouagets ror all
subd ivisions as fottows ·
Townsh i p s ,
1· 00
p .m
August 29
Corp ora tr ons , 1· 00 p .m
Avgu st 30
lib r ar y O rst r ic ts , 1: 00
p m , Augusl JO
Sc noa l s , 1:DO p m , August
31
Heal t h D is t r ict, 7 . 30 p .m .,
August 31
The hear in gs w i ll be held in
the Me ig s Coun ty Au~ 1 tor 's
O ff ice .
The pu rpo se ot t he hear ings
•s t o g i ve the opportunity 1o
ex press 1979 financ ial needs
ta the Budget Comm i ss ion

(8)

OVUISEAS ,
A us trolro
AlrJCo . South A merica . turope ,
et c. Con5 fr uct i on , Sale s.
fngrneers . Cle rical ' et c. 58000
to $50 000 plus . bo;pen$ e ~ paid .
For empl oyment JO !or mo tlon
wr ite O verseas fmpl oy menl
Box 1011 Bos ton M o . 02102

WONK

NOTICE

F n U11~

t&gt;HEAMING OF a whrte Chris tmas
wrlh no brHs' Wonderful to
th ink about but rt could cOme
tr ue Be a Toy lad ies ho stess 1
In your home or by or de1 s from
your frien ds fo rn lays and gilt s
f ree . No me brand
toy!&gt; .
reas on ably
pr rced
w1 th
guarantee. G ilts to r the whole
fom ily. J:or in formation call
742· 2377 or '1'12 -7050.

Howard E . Frank ,
Clerk
Me igs County
Budget Commis sion
2&lt;1 , J 1. 1tc

The Almanac

OFFin SU PtHVISOR , degree in
8u smess Managemen t
wrth
m o1or in Accoun t rng and ex ·
perien ce
Central
Operat ing
Company .
Phrl rp Sporn Pla n! . New Hoven.
West Vj_rginro 2511:15 . Phone

30&lt;-882-2028 .
HHP WAN TW: responsible pe r
~on to board severo/ cot s and
dogs until pla ced . Meigs Co .
Huma ne Socr ety . Col i 9Gl1 -S427
or 992·2b3'1
WA NT A corpentt&gt; r to do some
P ho ne
house
re pa ir
b14 -b9H -5715.
I:!ABYSITHR lor kmdergord en. oge
chi ld . Gro vel Hill oreo After 5.
992·3477
ONE FULL time mon over l B.
Mecha nic a l
expe rience
desi red . Appl~ in person only
We llo.f!r s Ashland
OPPORTUNITY FOR s tudent ~ aged
14 to 17. l or po r t trme e11enrng
work Tues th r v Sun . 3 or 4
n rghh pe• weelo. Mus t n.ol be
1nvolved in BOnd or spor ts . Ap
p ly in per ~o n to Done IIi 1t Pizz o
Mrddleporl . Oh ro N o phone
coil s pl e ase
SOMt:O N~

TO care for elderly 1n
her home . II rnten:u ofed call
B&lt;ll 3· 24'14
I

FUEL TRU CI&lt; d11ver . with e• ·
perrence drr ving tr uck s Wr rte
C·o Bo• nq f The Do ily Sen·
lrn el Pomeroy Oh .

- .

-

NEW SO MfON~ to make an d m·
stall wrnd ow s l o1 old home
'185 424 4. f~e~i~ g~ o_nlt . ~

HELP WANTED
Experienced
Diesel Mechanic
for

Catapiller &amp; Terex.
Phone 74 2· 2806
Bet w een 9&amp; 10 P' .M .

TIMBI:: R POM~f.IOY Forest Pr o·
du C!s . Top pric e l or !. to ndrng
sow l imber Call 992 -5965 or
Ken t Ha nby~ 1 · 44 b · 857~ .
OLD WRNITURE . rte boxes bro!&gt; s
bed s rron beds desks, e1c
comple te households . Wr rl e
M D Moiler HI 4 Porner oy 0 1
coli '1'12 7760
OLU COIN S poc lo.et wott he!&gt;
clo s!i rrngs . w edding bo nd!&gt;
dromonds Gold or ~ilve r Call
Hoger Wam sl ey 742· 2331
W~

PICK up 1unl.. au t o bodres buy
rng 1u nk cars scr ap rr on bat
ter 1e!&gt; and met als . Ride r 5
Sc;. lvage
SR 124. Pomeroy
Q92 -S468

WA N TED 10 buy any old mo tor
cycles or port s. Does no t ho ve
to run
Heo~onob l e
p1 1c es
Q92 ·b34 5
W AN T 10 buy 1B .SOO lb hou!&gt;ing
l or Jq69 GMC tr uck . Spring s
hubs and o• les . f o ton r ear end
l eo MOifl S. 742-2455-:--

..kinetoecope," to ..produce
plcturell representing objects

..

in motion .... "

U: YOU hove a service to offer . 1'f.lil (J~ Jeep 11.1'/'J Horrdo 4 ~0 .
w on t to buy or sell something .
f.IY2 ·S::ISI.
oe look ing l or work
or
whatever
you II get r e su lts O NI:: COOU usod Unico gold
laster with o )enfinel Wont Ad .
washer , top noh:h shape. Sl :/S .
Call Y'l2 ·21 ~b .
A no th er g oo d . buy fro m
Pomeroy landmark . 9Y2 -7Htl .
YAND SALE . Wed ., Thurs . hi .
Plan t stand," flower pots , baby USfO FANM MA C HIN~N Y
mottren . high chgir , Speed . MF 165 dreseltro c tor
Queer? washer . m ise . 1st rood Mf 255 dieseltrqctor
on the leh post the Post Olf ice Mf 2b':J dresel t ractor
rn Clrlton . Follow si gn!!..
MF 1135 diesel tr actor
MF 200 tw o Row Chopper
YAHO SAU . l"hurs ., Fri. , and So t . A( Cleo 11 er Com b ing wi th 4 row
4 m1les oft" NI . 7 on 143. 9 to 5.
co r n heod or1d Jj ft gr o1 n
lots ol clothing
se ts o f
tabl e . New Ideo one row co r n
rrons tone di shes and lo ts o f
pid( ef
~HINN "S IRAClOfol SAlfS
misc .
458 - 1630
YA JUJ SAU Sept . 1· 2 6 miles o ft
leon . WV
Ht
7 by M e ig s Memo r y
Gardens . 0137 , .. q355 !:ogle
H1dge·Bosh4:1n Rd . O tshes. ant i· t-OH ~A l ~
Bundy cla rinet .
que furnitur e and lots of other
942 -:J40S .
rtems . Phone 949· 25bb .

U &amp; ~ MObi L ~ H O M~!&gt; . Pl. Pl ea
~onr W . Vo be!&gt; ide Hec k !o ,

PORCH SAlf . Fri . and Sot . 10-4.
Bradley Pooler residence, 1
mde north ol Chester . Washer .
dr ain trle loble sow . wagon
whee ls, baby lurnr ture , con·
tolou p~s and misc.

lWO FAMILY Garage Sole Sept.
I ond 2 10 -b . John Keck s
res •der\ce Mulberry Heights.
PorT'Ieroy a 110ri ety of 1tems tor
sole incl Udin g clothe~ . reocrd
album~ and so on .
lARGt YAH D Sole. Am moving .
everylhrng mu st go Household
lurnishin gs. cloth ing. book s.
dis he~ . toys . Iown mo wer ,
mu ch more . Thur s .. Fri . and
~at . Aug . J l. Sept. 1 and 2. 10
to dorlt fr rs t road on left pa s t
Cheste • fireh ouse
Fo llow
srgns . Ra in or shrne
YARO ~ All: Saturday Aug . 2
10·5 270 lr ncoln Hrll Rd Hoin
concel5 .
lHfHJ: ~AMIL Y. Syro c.use . o~ r oss
fr om P.O . IO.? Sot ., Sept :2nd
I day on ly Clothing. infant s
thr ough adult . Ch rno Co ot s
~w rmlle x waH p oo l , misc.
fOUR FAMilY Vord Sole at Pete
Mi c hael"~ m
Ru stic Hi ll s in
Syr acuse- Heolly n1ce children's
and women s clo thes, sorne
men s. bedspre a d and curtotns
household and other items
~ r om 10·4 an Sept I 8 2

AD.iD~~-~ ! . ,·,
1912 DATSUN A door itQtion ·
wagon . 26 000 mde s. 4 cy l.
g ood ga s'!fnr leoge . :250 N 3rd .
Phone q9"} -73'}9
M rddlepor t
after 4 p m
19i' b JUIJ AM C PACI:R b cy l J .
speed . AM ·FM tope . 43 ,000
miles $2500 742-2211 bef o re
S. 74:2 287.4 ol,t er 5.
19"17 O LD S VIST A (rurse r stot1 on·
wag on
tt rl l
W il lrom so n
742-1007
1'918 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 dr
f' . ~ , P.B , A .C , ~ol t·tr oc k
AM·f M rod ro
heo11 y duty
suspens ron rod ro l t i r e~ et c.
1h1s car rs rn A - I condrtron See
Car l H. Hysell Ru t land Phone
742·218 4
\Q'/3 FORO lTD 2 -doo• hard top
f.l S P.H. fa ctory orr stereo .

1op e deck 5 new r adial snow
tir es ~ e o ~ono bly pmed . Go od
condrt ion . Call 992 3402.
1917
4

NEED A WATE R
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co·op water
softener, Model UC· SVI.

NowOnlv

•289.95

Let us test your warer
Free
. .

pomeroy Landmark

--

. . . Jock W. Corsey , Mgr.

~

Phone 992-2181

HOOF HO LL OW Horse s. Buy . ~ el l
trade or tra in. New and u~e d
§Oddles Ruth Re eves Alb any
(bi&lt; l bq8 · 3~ 9 0
RISIN G ST Af.l Kennel s Boa r ding
and groo m 1ng
all breeds
Che!&gt;h 1r e , Jb ] .Q2q2 or 367 0106
LOVA BLE WHIT!:: snow drift great
PYRENEES Pupp1es. Ph one
l -b1Hb 7-3838
t-'Y RANHS
614·607 ·3838 .

COON HOUND pup s Hall Bl ue
11ck , hall
Air edale . SlO
q85·4737

SE PT , 2 ot Gord on Holter's on CR
78 above ~astern School. Prices
reduced at 6:00 on small rt ens .
Three wheeled bike, SSO. Tricy cle $5. Honda XR7S , $150. toy s. ,
clo the5 , and misc . Rain can cels .

-

FI V~

- -·Vord Sole .

FAMILY
I:! ryan
Harr1s , Suc cesi Road , Sept. 2
and J

Hroodmore·

L

POTA T O~~

fOR winter . Cobble•
Kennebec and Superior Phone
!i 43·24'11 . To m Sayr e. Great
Bend . SR :J.J8.

19"7 1 FORD ) • ton camper-speci al.
flo wer orr , aut o . dual tonlts
Exce llen ! run nrng condition .
$14 15. 9'1:2 -2397
REDU O

~AH

and la st w 11 h
Go B e~e l"obleh 8. ~ - Vop wa ter
pr ll s Nel son Drug

'1

OA

bedroom .

SfNSI-MAl iC oc·
co untrng mo chrne . Phon e
f.rl'1 2 - :11~b
The Doily ~en t rne l .
111 (o~r t Stree t Pomer oy .
Ohio .

~80S

G HEEN or !&gt;eosoned
9 4 9 · 2~ 58 or 985 3567

(;~

Hotp0111i Appl

~92 - 305 1

S.llr_• J)r·l(l.'\

l"HRH BfOROOM fram e home in
M idd leport Coll9'12-345 7
.
.
\1\q f
IN SYRACUSE : 2 bedr oom house .
New storm .,;... indow!i. . New
fih&lt;!11t• 9"1) }ltjl
o lu minum bu ilding . 2 porches .
992 -321'1 .
· 10 1, A C ~ES . 8 roo m house , 4
bedr.oom , new both new lo. i t·
chen , c ity wotet . On Rt . 33 in
Burlmghom . 99:1 -775 1.
.
BUILDING LO r
for
so le
rn
Pomeroy . 32 100 ol on o c,r e. HOUSE FOR sol e near po ol in
~yro~u se . Coli 9~2: 5 76? .
Ph o n~ 9n -3255 .

!,1( ,,

w

(,lf

',t')"

-

-

HOU S~

IN M idd leport remo del ·
ed i' r oom~ . both , ce ntral 011
4'12 -5bb4

Discount
Prices

RO OM hou se w ith bot h, 3/
Bo r n . O th e•
ou t·
buold in g s CH!::! Lo ngs11 rll e . Col i
"141 2450 for app t

tro t heat . On I I ocr es . l oc at ed
&gt;n coun try on ' Hy se ll Ru n All
rnr ner ol rrght s. 15 minul e!o to
town 1-=Q T Sol e s1gn in yo rd . Vo· ·
can t S 13 OO&lt;J. ~h ewn only to rn t ere~ t ed part ies . 742 -:J074.

~AI

••lock W. Clrsey, Mlr • .

!!!!!.

A I-' AH1M ~ N1

ovorl oble lor ~ le ep
1ng quolter!T room l ur l or l our
rn en 10 mrnu tes lr om Moun
tr oneer Plo t11 Ho r tl ord W Vo
Phone 1 304 f:l82 -3356

TRA ilfH ~ PAU: rn Che ~te r area .
Ve r y secluded on coun lly !i&lt;rde
Cr ly water po r che!o to attach
bu ildrng lo• t ool ~ and stor ag e .
$40 o mon th 985 -39(19
tr ader

A dults

CA TENVIllAR D 4·0 bu lldoze r l o t
sole or !rode fo , Iorge tr uck 0 1
eJ( covo tor bock hoe . 992-247ij

f'llone m -2111

VIRGIL B. SA . 't:"~~
992-332)
116 E Seco~d Stree!

GIB~O NF H HZ U~
!ype . U~ed 1

:25 cu . fl. ches t
year Coli Mr s
f.lolph We lker at 992 3044 .

LOWRt:Y G tNI~ 44 organ . h
ct.&gt;lle nt Lo ndttron . / 47·352 1.
19"! 4

PR O WL~R

C AMP ~ fi .

28 ft .

~e l l - &lt;orHo med , 1 new diamond
~ hop ed I her mol pon e w in dows ,

ant•que both tub wi th leg s. 2
n('w 13 to rnpoct tirei , used
!.weeper wr th pow er he ad .
i' 4'l -25T/

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

1295

SPECIAL S

Any U .S. made car - parts
extra if needed . Exclude1
front. wheel drive cars.
CANNING peaches , good qual ity ,
fr eesto ne conn rng peac he s
$7 98 . br ing o wn conlo rner .
Re ta il and wholesale Hob s
Mo r k e t , M a son , M rdwoy
Marke t, Pome ro y Oh

Dl:AHRS AU CTIO N . Publrc in vi ted Frr , 1 pm trl ? New r11e r
chondrse, sold rn quantity at
Ohr o Ar 'o'er A uct ron, 537 High
St. , Mrddleport , Ohio . Regular
sole hr and Sol nrght oppr ox
., pm .

.BRING IN
COUPON
ANO RECEIVE

s2_00

OFF

SPECIAL
PRICE
Expire$

Sepl . lO, 1978 '

.

PA TIO · YARD ~ale . Fri . and Sat . HEAL TV PIGS $25.00 and up
Phon e 94'1 2&lt;1160
~epl. hi and 2nd . 9 to " Wehe
Vor rous APPLE S Fitzpot riclt On: hord ~ .
Terr..,ce . Pom eroy .
item ~ include manual un derSto le Rout e
t.H'I , Phone
wood
typewnter ,
$&lt;11 0 .
W dke s11 rlle 669·31 85
~wi..,elch o i r
$:25. Win1er and
su mmer clothes . Mud ond !&gt;now ') Y by lb • 7 whe@t 5 Pr.
$2~ . 00 . 2 · 700 ){ lb Winh.• r tir es
g ri p
l tres .
All
p• i ce d
rr . 550.00 Colt qq:;t . 'lb91
reason ably .
(

EQUIPPED KITCHEN- 4
bedr oo m s , natural gas
heat. l 'n baths , 2 car
garage w i th shop over .
Level lot. $27 ,500.

RACINE
PUL l i: 1 i:GGS S.JCJ a dozen A lso
ring
nec k-ed
ph easan ts .
Wdrnetta Leil h ei t , Hocks pr ings. Pom eroy 997 J4 4b.

Clll now for oppointmenl ,

·Pomeroy landmark
. . .~ck W. Carsey , Mgr .

!!1!!!.

Phone992-2111

LISTING

$20,500.00 .
NEW LISTING - Really
nice 3 bedroom ranch , in

acr•s. A good buy $25,000 .
NEW LISTING - Would
you believe in Middleport.

NT

· Pomero, Undmllk

NEW

Sec luded , J bedrooms ,
ranch , family room, large
recreation r(lom , built -In
kitchen . separate d i ning
area, ca rport , patio. ONn
water ,
wood
burning
f i replace . and J;,. acre only .

the country , close to
Pomeroy , wood burn i ng
f i repla ce , large 2 car
garage . Carpeting, small
garden space and 2 V~

UTSiDE WHITE
eROOF

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.

Good

4

bedroom home . Nice ll!lrge
eaf -in kitchen, natura l gas .
central heating and large

lot . $25,000.
BUSINESS LOCATION and small residen ce with

bath, kitchen and bedr'oom .
Will b e good for a starter .

Only $13,000.
COUNTRY HOME ~ New
3 bedroo~ . 2 bath home .
Has equipped kitchen. n ice
carpet i ng ,
log
house,
woods , and garden land .

Asking $40,000.
Are You profiting from
Inflation?? Buy Land
and you will!!!

30

ACRES

-

and

Large

monthly gross S370.00 fO&lt;
only $29,500 .00.
POMEROY - $6,725 OR

make an offer , not bad 1 11~
story home -with
full
basement , needs some
renovation .

6 ACRES -

In Syracuse,

modern 1 floor plan, wood
burning
f i repla ce.
3
bedrooms, large kitchen ,
d ining room . yiew of the
Beautiful Ohio, 2 ca r

garage , beautiful , back
yard

for

cookouts ,

etc .

Asking $32,000.00.
MINI FARM - CLOSE IN

3

3

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

Chester, Ohio

10·30-c

stu ~ WANr~o on a 1'1 i' 4

01 WOOD 80W[HS HtPAIH
Sweeper s, toosl ers irons, all
small ap pliances Lawn mower ,
ne x! to Stat e High way G ara ge
on Haute -., _ Ph one {614 ) qss
:Hl25 .
SEWING MACHINE lol epoirs ~er ·
11ice . o il mak es . "9n 2284. The
~obr ic
Sh op ,
f.i"orne r o y
Authorrz ed Singer S o le~ and
_Ser YiCe , w! sharpen Scis~or!&gt; .

I:: XCAV ATIN G
dowr
bo clo. ho e
and ditcher C horl e~ H. Hot ·
fi e ld
Bo ck
Hoe
~e r vrC"e ,
~utlo n d , Ohio . Phone 742 2009 .
do roo f ir1g . cons tr uclr o1•
plumbing and heo trng . No jolf
to o Iorge or too small l' ho"e
i' 42 -2J4il .

W ILL

V.W

-

,. lots, Ph story frame

with full basement . Storage
building . Many features In
town .

A

real

story

at

$9,500.00.
LIST WITH US FOR
PHOTO
LISTING
SERVICE , MEMBERS OF
INDEPENDENT
REAL
ESTATE CONSULTANTS,

outbuildings. Jusl 516,000.
YOU'LL
PROBABLY
FIND •A BETTER BUY
TODAY
THAN
TOMOAAOW , STOP IN
AND
SEE
OUR
PROPERTIES.
Holen L. Teoford
Gordon B. Tooford
Sue P, Murphy
Asooclotos

OUlSIOf?

AMC JEEP

Al.l.F:Y OOP

T H~

( HIMNH Swtoep . Redu ced
rate s til Se pt . 1 614 -3/ 3-b057
wee kday s u11til 5.

SERVICE,
HE NAY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
HANK, KATHY, LEONA
CLELAND
ASSOCIATES
992-2259, 992-6191

INVENT

. ATOMIC
.

The ta1est JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111. Available for $1.35 EACH, postpaid tram Ju mble, d o this
newspaper, P.O. BoK 3&lt;11, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to

HM· M· M···YfAH

.. THAT f MtNOS ME
TO SHUT Of~ lHIS
FlASHLIGt\T ···

Nf!Wspaperbooks.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
40 Lake
1 Be eager
41 Comers
5Climbed
42 Rose es11 Demonstrate
sence: var.
D Fwmy story
DOWN
13 Miffed
1 Resource
-~-:-----, 14 Zoroastrian
2 Selected
-ve .... LOOK! AHEAD bible
3 EquestriWlS'
16 "TH5 CI'TY
01"
SuffiX.
. U5
~DOME$!
topic
with COWl!
4 Lambkin's
1&amp; Prefix
mom
with natal
5 Partici17 Electric pated
18 Touchdown
8 Sheltered
zo Learning
bay
21 Tie
7 Conswned
22 Telling
8 Go broke .
blow :.sL
9 Registered
"September 10 Casino
employees
~~::::.JL~:uL-.::..:'-..J :U Ciilcinnati
I&amp; Sty
stalwarts r.--ro~r"il'r"
2C Iris layer
burninq!
Z7 Sale sti~
do I rn
ulation
29 Prophet
38 Tornrriy
Rettig's

GASOI.I NF: i\I.LF:Y

It.'s
How

it

· Yesterday's Answer
19 Jordanian
monetary

28 Held a
bearing
Wilt
31 Neighbor
28 Actress
of Lydia
Nelson
32 Sea duck
and others
34 Folded,
23 "La Boheme"
as wings
role
37 Fencing
%4 Infest
dwnmy
Z7 Prosyective
38 Grazing
citizens
growtd

Llndou Top, Rood
Wheels, 60-•o seat, A.c,
Cruise centro!, Till Wheel,

9&lt;9-20&lt; 2.

, you LiC'oi' Lrfe.e

s

• J ~3
• J 96

A MAN Wf.fO•.S

BI::AUTIFUL

ADU LT
fem ale
~ r om ese
cot
Ve ry gentle .
Housebro k en . 9q7 2592 or -992·5&lt;1127 .

.

'.1995

D

I DONT KNOW. I NEVER

OF A WINNIE WINKLE

W/WNI(L,! CREAM?

HAD TO U&amp;E A OI'64M

TO i3ET nJfM ... ! 130T
MINE/MTVRAI./Y/

CRYPTOQUOTES
CTGAWUWD

Of!, )1Jl) KNOW WHAT
I MEAN ... A WRINKLE

H6HOWM7 CREAM !

I
IJ

!j

.'·

~2J)

work

\

0 R S W

EN

EK W

VGK

PH

'"

H l:adquitr ters
141 ACRES -

The

East

South

owner's age!reventa her from cbntlnulng to operate

the farm an she desires on Immediate sale. 50 to 60
acres tillable with 10me very Qood crMk bottom hilltop land , Tho balance Is In posture &amp; wodds. Tile 6
room hOmo Is good (d- need some modernization),
large all pur- barn &amp; several outbuildings. Tho
l)'llnorels QO with II end If's located In on a...., where
gas, oil &amp; Clllll hove boon found to bo plentiful. N•r
Rutland . 60'1.

NO.I WAIT.I I.' ..

5HE JUST IWPEN5 10
6E Rl&amp;f!T H~E BESIDE
Mi; .. I'LL PUT HER ON ... ,

HI, GlUCK! FINALLLf'

Pass

2 NT
4+

Pass
Pass

3+
Pa ss

it:

Pass
~ass

Opening lead : • J

h

,,

By Oswald Jacoby
aad Alaa Sontag
Hamlet , the melancholy
Dane , opened his Jack of
X 0 B • hearts ·against Po lonius's
four-spad e co ntrac t .

© lt78 Kin1 Featurt• Syndieate, Inc.

--AN' THEIR
OADBURN

DOGS!!

GOT UP NERVE TO
CALL ME. EH?

'

any

A North Ca rolinb reader
wants to know if Theodore
Lightner , inventor of the
Lightner convention,, is sh11

alive .
The answer i s a decided

CNJ. THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY ~3643

the

2t
3'

The fair Ophelia won the
trick with her kin g and
E AT WD
GRSW promplly shifted lo the four
RW
VWK
CPSS
of trumps . Hamlet won with
AE
GXTPWUW.ZYSWH
UWDKW h1s ace over declarer 's king
Yesterday't Cryploquate: PROFESSIONAL PRIDE IN YOUR and paused to !loliloqulze .
" To lead or not to lead a
WORK IS ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL TO ADEQUATE EFtrump ? That is the qu estion .
FORT, BUT KEEP THE PRIDE SECRET.-LOUIS GRAFE
For whelher 'tis belter in the

TOURISTERS • - •

Ba c k c ame the three

II was mighty good de·

North

XEKXWPUPKJ,

I PUT UP A "KEEP OUT"
SIGN FER THEM FLATLAND

Then Hamlet thought further . He knew that Ophelia
was the best bridge player in
all of Denmark . Cou ld s he
hold the 10 of spades ' Why
not , decided Hamlet. I n any
event I must stop my heart

f ense for Elsinore or
pla ce of life or fiction .

We st

White-Wall Co-Op
Custom Poly
A78xl3

trump tri c k ·is th e question."

castle resounded with
cheers of the kibitzers .

One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three . L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sing le letters,
apoatrophes. the length and formati on of the w o rds are a11
hints . Each day the code letters are different.

..

(;,dl1pol1'.

·146 9800

II

C:.ORJf'lf MACHINE: • ••
WllAT 170 YOU THINK

GOOO HOM!:: for mole neutered
cots . Housebrolo.en . 997-3477

how to
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

lo my jack of trumps or to
stop th e ruff and sacrifice a

of spades . Ophelia did produce the 10 and Elstnore

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer: South

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's

end to Je t him ruff and hope
for ano the r tri c k in additton

ruffs

•AKQ

·ALINAY.S S.ftMS

TO Be "''b 'ft-IE .
Me~S ~OM, 'PI-It
M~ATefl GOOL!R, THt

• 53

"74
t AK

e
DAILY

• 104

" H85 J2
• &lt;U 2

SOUTH
• KQ 9! 7l

39 Broadcaster's
invitation ,.__._.._....__.___,__

UN~TuHA"rE&amp;.Y, I~

Phone 742·7J2B.

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

WEST
• AJ 3
.. J 10 9 6

gale''

992-3357

7' , WHK OLO all mole kiuen s.

BRIDGE

Swedish
Nightin-

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

GOINCioo PJ-AGe S~

• cylinder ongl1111,
matic, e~tcellent

Tbursday , Aug. 31

38 ''The

l

WILL BABYS!l m my home or your
hom e. 12.30 pm on Mon . thr u
Wed · lhurs thru Sot. oil day .

Valley 3: 7:01&gt;-Bewltched
Movie Ch1nnel 4 5 11. 9 P .M. - Damnation Alley I PGI
7 &amp; 11 P .M. - Island of Dr . Modruu I PG I

NORTH
8-3i
• 65
• Q
• 10 9 6 5 4
.108 74 2
EAST

33 Cockney's
flock
34 Orchestra

-

Q UALIFIED SITT ER. Will !&gt; rl In your
h ome
orly l i m e ,
P ho n e

3; A: 3o--Movle " Women 's Pr\!On" 3; 6 :00--Big

A wise moment of thought

35- polloi
341 Threebagger

REGAL

lO :oo:-CBS Reports 8, 10; News 20 ; 10 :31&gt;-Monty
Python 's Flying Circus 20.
11 :ClO-News 3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15 ; Dick Cavett 20 .
11 :31&gt;-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Barelta 13; Miss
National Teen-Ager Pageant 6; U.S. Open Tennis 8;
Movie "T he Time Machine" 10.
11 :AS-Movie " The Last Survivors" 8; 12 :QO-Janak l
33; 12 : ~1ronslde 13.
1:01&gt;-Midnlghl Special 3.. 4,15 ; Movie "The Indestructible Man" 10; 1: AI&gt;- News 13.
2:31&gt;-News 3; 3:0G-Movle " A Woman of Distinction"

co-star

Tho Ulllmoto
In Ford LuKury
Loedocl

WIL L 00 baby si tt ing in ruy home
ages 2·4. Ph one 99'2· 7b89

Partridge Family 4; Love of Life 8.10; \1 :55-CBS
News 8; Loving Free 10.
1 2:~Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; Young II. the
Restless 8; America Alive 15; Midday Magazine 13 .
12 :31&gt;-Ryan' s Hope 6.13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8,10; Elec . Co. 33 .
l:OG-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; the Reslless 10 ; Not For Women ·
Only 15 .
1:31&gt;-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8,10; 2:01&gt;-Dne Llfelo ·Live 6,13 .
2:31&gt;-Doctors 3,4, 15; Guiding Light 8,10: 3:01&gt;Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6,13 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 20 .
,
3:31&gt;-AII In The Family 8.10; Crockett' s VIctory
Garden 20.
4 :DO-Mlster Cartoon 3; Superman .t; For Richer , For
Poorer 15: Merv Grlltln 6; Addams Fam il y 8;
Sesame St , 20,33 ; Match Game 10; Dinah 13.
4 : ~My Th-ree Sons 3; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Batman 10;
Lillie Rascals IS .
! :DO-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4 ; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rooers' Nelohborhood 20,33 ; VoyaQe to the
Bottom of the Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Petticoat
Junction 15.
S:3o-Ddd Couple 4; News 6, Elec . Co. 20,33 ; Hogan·~
Heroes 15.
"
6 : ~News 3,4.8,10,13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; It's
Everybody's Business 33.
6:31&gt;-NBC News3.4.15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7:01&gt;-Cross-WIIs 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13; News 10;
Gilligan' s Is. 15; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Insight
33.
7:31&gt;-Porter Wagoner 3; Gong Show 4; $100,000 Name
That Tune 6,13 ; Price Is Right 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33; Family Feud 10; Pop Goes The
Country IS.
.8:0G-Biack Sheep 3.4,15; ABC's All -Star Saturday
6,13 ; Wonder Woman 8.10; Wash ington Week In
Review 20,33 .
8 ·31&gt;-Wa ll Street Week 20,33 .
9:01&gt;-Columbo 3.4.15; Movie " AI The Earth's Core"
6,13; Incredible Hulk 8.10; On Being Human 20; To
Be Announced 33.

Let
it
burn!

WAU:Iol WEll dril ling Wrlham T.
cranl . 742· 2879 .

-

TEMPO

Answer· What the trumpet player ' s gtrl lrrend accused

.

A·.Jt

1978 FORD
THUNDERBIRD

IN SURANn been
can celled? lost your operator s
lrcense? Ph one497 2143

(Answers tomorrow )

~

=:~~::~~E

HPusing
EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

WA\1\N ' FOR US

"TIM DH&lt;or Tho!
Clrtl Aboul Quo lily

AUTOMO BIL~

---

IJOES 'f T WORK
FROM IMSIDE •··

RIVERSIDE

RH V ~ ~ l"HADING P o~ t , Pogevi ll e
Grocerres. dry goods. hard.
wme feed , tack sh op . Special
_25 lb . of dog food . SJ 8lL

--

S·S·SUPPoSE
SOMEBOO'f IS

HOMf 195 4 L1bor ty 'J
bedr , Good condr tr on . JIWO
Che!&gt; l nut Dr . Gollrpol• 5 Ohr o.
Ph oncbl4 440· 13'91 . •

AN O MAHliN
l •·
CO'o' o tin g , sep t rc
sys t ems .
dozer bock hoe. dump 1ruc lo. .
lim es tone
grovel
blo clttop
p011•ng , fl l 14 3 Phone 1 (b14 )
6qtl -133 1.

PU lliNS ~X C A V A.TING (omple Je
Service . f'honc992 ·247E!

S · S· SUPPQSE YOUR
GOLDEN WHL51 LE

M O Bi l ~

H OW~ R Y

.

s

lorm the surprise answer. as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

him of doing - TOOT-TIMING tiER

t:JO x 24

M odular hOme Damaged by
l1r e Th e home rs well built and
coni oin c d 3 bed roo m Iorge liv·
rng roo m lormo l drn h1g room .
k 1tchen
lomrly room
I' r
baths . You ar e ~&lt;Wr ied to rn ·
!o. pect thi 5 home loca ted 1 1 mile
cas t o f Horri sonv rll e St. Nt 143.
1he pur c h n~t'H mu ~ t move the
home no t la te• than Oct 15
fCrtij Moll sea led bod!. to 73
'f&lt; oose..,e lt Or N A F 8. Ohro ,
437 1i' to oor rve no t lote r t han
~ep1
20 1918 Include r eturn
odd r c~ s and phone number
A nnouncemen t ol O( cepton ce
o f a b id wrll be mode not la te/
tha n Sep t 7J 1978 . 1 erms
Cosh Cerlrf rcd che ck or bon M
draft f hc o wner r escr VE'lt the ·
r rght to r t•lect ony or all brd s
Far opp orn tme n t to rns pe ct th (;
ho!ll e call 74:].3122 or Co tu rn
bu ~
4 9""/ 13 11
Har old
D
G raham Owne r

I Jumble s AGONY

.

NoW arrange 1he circled letters to

rn A"[ XI I 11 r

Prlntanswerl!ere:

197b NASHU A 14 " bS 3 bedroom
l '1 both, under pinning S1500
an d o s5 ume loon . '149 2t:~B3 o r
843 J311.

BHADFORD . A v ctroneer . Com
p lete Ser vice . Phone 949-2487
or q49.2000 f.lodne . Ohro Cn tt
Bradford .

"u . .:/""nice• ocnelril
-o

II
IJTTLE ORPHAN 1\ NN IF:

-

~~i"""

HE HAD

L IKED COL.L.eG&gt;E .

Yesterday

N Ice
3
bedroom
remodeled home , fruit
ce l lar, barn , milk house,
pasture , fencing , large
good
garden ,
other
fel!ltures , over 5 acres.

s 16.500.00.
GOOD STARTER HOME

bedroom renovated home .
In back of town with rura l
water . Will take a trade ~ in .

Want S24,500.
BASHAN

a n ice 1 floor plan , 3
bedrooms
w i th dining
room , enclosed porch ,
large workshop ~ garage,
a 12 &gt;« 60. Furnished
1--"''"ver trailer, plus another
ler , pl us another lot for
tra ilers . All rented . Total

WHETHE~

In Middleport botween
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mill Street just behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open S;olurday 10-4 p·:m .
Sunday 12 noon to l p.m.
8-31 -1 nno.

I:X(AVATING do1er . ' loader and
backh oe wor k dump lluclt s
and lo -bo ys lor hrre wi ll haul
1111 dHt , to soil. limestone and
gro11el Coli Bob or Hoger Jo f.
fers . doy phon e 992 -708'1 , night
phone 99'1 · 354'~ or 9'17. 5232

o e~es .

DURING OLIR
SEASONAL
CLOSED LIT

R~AU Y

J AN[) 4 HM furnrshed and u n
lurnrshed
opt ~
Ph one
qq] 5434

HOU S~

TRAILER 12 )(00. All
e lec trrc furnished or r cond .
washer and dryer 2 loi S in Hot ·
r IS Onllrf le 74::/ -2C1 26 .

l9b7

WHEN

CHEAP!

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
.

Cf 1\lE a.~\C SVI.\Pl0.\16
OF SCHIZOPHIZSIJIA.,

WOOD HEAT

day,

Jack Ginther 985-3806

BoX 3

01

AIJD ALL. ~IS TIME' I
DIDIJ'T ~liJK 1-lB HAD
AIJY ~~1'1' fiJ m

QUALITY

ReSidential and commer Hour Service . Any
anytime.
Phone 985-3806

9:JI.'f,

8'1011E GOMPANY

cial. Call tor estima1e. 24

11 :31&gt;-Wheel of Fortune 3.15; Family Feud 6,13 ;

b~HenriArnoldanCIBoblee

DUTEE

BORN' LOSER

~~~miD IS DlSPI,AYII.lb

'n8 AI'PAWGIIIAN

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

"~""' ·-~... · · ~·v'""

Experience and

·SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

3,4,1 5; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS
News B; Underdog 10; 7:25-Chuck White Reports .
10.
7: 31&gt;-Schoolles 10; 8 :oo-Capt. Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame
ST . 33.
9 :00- Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15;
Emergency One 6: Brady Bunch 8.
9:3D-Andy Grlffllh 8; Family Affair 10.
10:01&gt;-Card Sharks 3.4,15; Edge of Night 6; Tic Toe
Dough 8; Joker' s Wild 10; To Tell The Truth 13
10:31&gt;-Hollywood Squares 3,4.15; High Hopes 6; Price
Is Right 8.10; $20.000 Pyramid 13.
ll : ~High Rol lers ~.4.15 ; Happy Days 6,13

I TROFYb
I'''" .....I r ........

Save 30 pel. to 50 pel.
on heeling cost
fully Insured
Free Est.
Call992-2772
8-10-lmo. (Pd.)

7 : ~Today

Unscramble lhese four Jumbles.
one letter to each square. to form ~~.;-;:j'~~fll"ii=il~
tou r ordinary words

Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation

Pomeroy, a.

4-30-tfc

ftft\j1.'\ft fii}1}

~ ~ ~~ @

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

3 - 15-tf~

VA· f=HA , 30 vr. frn onc ing also
re linon crng Ire land Mortgage.
i'i' f . Stat e, A thens , phone (614 )

oiNSIOE PAINT

ONl-. 8WROOM op1 . ( onto t1
Vrll oge Manor
Apt . M rd
dlepor t 99'1 778 /

Ph . '992-2848

THE: 816 MAN HIMDON'T !0
POPPIN' OFF: HE:
AIN'T 60T M'f KINO
OF PATI£1-JC&amp;-1

9E~F ... 5-0

8 2 1 mo.

J&amp;L

MOORE'S

l ~l:l1 .

1\1\ You1
1 v ··,/1.

Pomeroy

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Batlery.
Installation Service

Aute &amp; Truck
Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

NI:W 3 bedroom house , 2 ba th s.
all elec .. 1 a cre Middleport,
clo!. e to Rutland . Phone 992·

) IX f.IOOM hou se ond bo t~ , Cen·

19b2 CHI:: VROLH ' 1 ton prclo.up b
cyl . ~td $550 Ph one 99:2 -173'2
aft er 5 pm

COUNTRY MOilll~ Home Porlo.
Route 33 nor th of Pome r o y
Lorge lo ts Coli 997· 74i'9

"'• milt off Rl. 7 by-p.llss on
51 . Rl. 124 loword Rullond,
0.

( of1 9 q ~ · 7 48l

1%7 O. HVY FO H pml 5 191:1 Vega
mo!or Hoy l o r so le . S . H~ o J 81::lJ~OO M hou~e . oil elec trr c
Over 1 acre . M orn rng stor
bole 949-241 3 or (,149 -78&lt;11q
Heigh ts 94 9-2424
LARGE ROUND bole, m i•ed hoy
HOU Sf FOR so le by owner .
$ 1() . 74'} 24 ~5
~howr, by opporn trn en t on ly .
9'12 1225 alt er 3 pm

1q7b OLDSMOBILE ~todrr e
A
speed 4 cylin der 75.000 m iles .
New ll"r es 52900 985 -3'10'1 .

next season wr th
Car e free ownm gs , orr co ndi ·
I rone r ~
RV
on ! 1·lreeze at
CO UN~ R S CAMPI:R S, Ra inbow
Wrd ge ( H 28 to Bo shon

GARAGE

HOMfSITfS fo r sale 1 a cre and
up . Middlepo1t , near Rutland.

r&lt;".

109 High St .

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

ROGER HYSELl

HV ~

FI ~~WOOU

[)fMON Joi O Aut o ,
Cr ager ~ .
ne w e~houst
~y s t em . q91 .5521 .

G~T

8-20-1 mo. (Pd. I

CA NNING T 0 MA10f ~
green
pepper s. Gerald ine Cleland
loloc_ine , Ohio.

POMEROY
LANDMARK

...,.,

8; Societies In Transition 10.
6:45-Mornlng Report 3; Good Morning, West VIrginia
13; 6:55-News 13.

Crusade IS .
8:3o-l:Baseball 3,4; Damien 20,33.
9:0G-Barney Miller 6,13 ; Movie "' Dirty Harry " 15;
Merv Griffin 19.
•
9:l0-Soap 6,13 ;
IO :OG-Oral Roberts 8,10; Poldark II 33; News 20.
10:31&gt;-Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel 20 ; II :01&gt;-News
3.;.6.8,10,13,15; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33 .
ll :JG-Johnnv Carson 3, 4,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;

( Bobtf'Oefllch l

~

6 : 30-Columbus Today 4; News 6; Summer Semester

of Jamie Thomas 4; Waltons 8,10; Once Upon A
Classic 20,33 ; .God's Smugger 13 ; Bil ly Graham

The Photo Place

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

BUHN O U G H ~

BI:A T THf October ru sh. Gr ... e v s
your or der now lor arrows
cus tom mnde the w ay you wont
them and cur to your ind ivi duul
length Piclo. up onytrrrie before
O~tob e r
1. $5 deposi t wrth
order . ( ~as t on Gomege tt er )
alum rn um
ar rows
$76 'I S
dozei1
FiberglaH
$24 q~
darr&gt;n We relletch arrows
glo ss. alum in um or wood in·
el udes J new p lo!&gt; lr c van es nr ck
and inse rt . !. I per arrow . Al so
we 5 !1 oi9hten aluminum or ·
row ~ .
S.SU each ar row lr r
( ou nty Sport Shop Nor th and
Tri
Coun ty
~port
~h op
Oownt own . 304·615-2'1f:IH .

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

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

. FRIDAY , SEPTEMBER -I, 1971
5:45-Farm Report 13; S:SO-PTL Club 13; 6:QO-PTL
Club IS; Summer Semester 10.

Kit 33.
7:30-Hollywood Squares 3; Match Game PM 6;
MacNeii·Lehrer Report 20,33 ; That' s Hollywood 10;
Nashville On The Rood 13; To Be Announced IS .
8:DO-Redscene ' 78 3; Welcome Back, Kotter 6 ; S~llln :

we are currently making
appointments for senio.r
portraits. We use trad•·
tiona! settings and also
feature
outdoor
por ·
traiture .
Call Us Today

Service
IRIIIII
,,..
.... ..,....,ftlllllllr
...........

s 11. 9 P .M . - Outlaw Blues lPG I
7 II. 11 P .M. - The Deep IPG I

Hocking Valley Bluegrass 20; Consumer Survival

SENIORS

Radiator~

Tomorrow ·J,4; I : 5o-News 13.

Movie Channel 4 -

THURSDA_Y, AUGUST31 ,1f71
7:0G-Cross-WIIs 3; Billy Graham Crusade 4,8;
Newlywed Game 6,1 3; News 10; Gilligan's Is . ·15;

High School

· EXPERIENCED

ROOFING

boih

PLAID QU~E'N sr1 e hide·o ·bed
couch wr th coor d ina ting solid A C N~ LO l" on f./1 7. Noc e bu•l d rng
~ rte 992 · 7 ~14 .
w all hugger recl1ner f:l rna old
bc ell en t condr tro n 949 276 1.
1', A C IU ~ located 1 rn rle fr om
M e rg ~ M r11e 1 . l&gt;rrlled w ell and ·
MVfFf~ ~ HALLO W we ll pu rn p l ik e
1&gt;eptrc ~ys t em . 3()4.882-2JJ4
new . $85
l:ldon Walburn

997

H. L WRITISEL

CO AL LIMI:.!&gt;lON~ sand . grovel ,
co.lcrvrn ch lo11du . l ed il ,t(H . dog
food on d all ty pes o f salt , ~ x ·
ce lsro r Soh Wo rlo.. s, Inc , f . Moon
~ t Pomeroy 992 -3891.

SUPI:R SKHH:H bo ss bo ot
'J ' 1h .p . Mercu ry motor . Electric
trollrng motor ond accessories .
lro1l er . '191-3493 .

POTA TOE S. REU porh t1ac and
Kennebec. $6 .50 per 100 lb .
West ol Uor w tn on Go ld Ridge
Cecd Tobon , Rt . 2, Pomeroy ,
Oh•o

x

lf./71 Coven t• v I? x b5 :J bc.&gt;d•oo m
1469 ~lote~mor, 11 " bO '1

dord . r un ~ real good easy on
ga s. $900 . CQil anytime after S
pm , 9'12 -511 1
16

14

hcdroo111
1473 Dor ion 14 • bO "J b edroo1n
1971 V1CIOI ion 14 "" 67 J bed room

19bl:! f Ofm ' , ton ~hor t be d step·
si de . With topper , b cyt. . stan·

lJO DG~

lWO E!WR OOM
on ly 9'12 -3324

G f.I~AT

United Press Inlernatlonal
Today is Thursday , Aug . 31 ,
!he 243rd day of 1978 with 122
ID follow .
The moon is approaching
ils new phase .
The morning stars are
Mercury .
Jupiter
and
Saturn .
The evening slars are Mars
and Venus.
Those born oo !his date are
Wider !he sign of Virgo.
American entertainer
Arthur Godfrey was born
Aug. 31 , 1903.
011 this day in hisiDry :
In 1887, Thomas Alva
Edlaon was awarded a palent
for a device he · called a

For Sal&lt;'

1972 f.il VMOU TH OU SHN . P S
A C new trr es Good work
cor 5795 flhone 985-3596 .
CH IP
WOO D
Pole5
max
dromele r 10" on large st end . 5H
per ton . Bundled slob Sb per
ton Delivered to Ohro Pollet
Co .. Rt 2 Pomeroy 992 -2b89

Business .Services

Yard:;..!c

I Y73

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I

yes . Ted is now 85. He still
plays excellent rubber
bridge at the New York's
Regen c y Whist Club a cou·
pie of times a week .
INE WSI' AI'E R ENTERPRISE ASSN

r

(00 )IOU have a QUeS ftOn for

rne erperts ' Wrrte ··Ask th e
Experts.· care of th iS new spa ~
per lndivldtJal quesrtons Will
be answered If accom pamed·
by stamped , sell-add ressed
envelopes. The mast mte restmg quest1o ns will be used m
/hiS column an d wJII reoerve

cop1es of JACO B Y MODERN I

�•.

tO- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer oy. 0., Thur ,i.. ) .

I 0 killed·in
plane crash

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Fridav . Sept. 1. 1978

In case of an emergency
during the holiday weekend,
physic ian s of th e Holzer

1

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
2 DAY SALE

Nice selection of extra size dresses in rich
fal l colors.

pa tter ns .

REG, 118.00. ............ ........ .. -.. SAtE '14.38
REG: '23.00......................... SALE '18.38
REG. '30.00. ,.:...................... SALE '23.98
REG.
.. ....................... SALE '30.38
REG.
.. ....................... SALE '35.18
REG.
..• •.•......••.•..• ..··•· SALE •.HI•.,)D
REG.
.-.•. .••.•...•..•..... ··•·
ANOTHER SHIPMENT

Boys S5.9S Flannel Shirts

•5.05 .

Boys S8 .95 Flannel Shirts

•7.65
Boys $10.95 Flannel Shirts

'9.35
Boys S1 L 9S F Ia nne I Shirts

•10.15
SALE

GIRLS' DRESSES
Special prices on new fall styles
for ba ck to school ! Jumper s,
d r esses, sk i rts , bibs, 2 pc . outf its,
3 pc. ou tfits. Sizes 2 to 4, 41o 6X , 7
Ia 14.

hand le emergency cases

Reg . $6 .oo ......... sale SU9
Reg. $8 .00 .... .. .. Sale $6.39
Reg . $11.00 ..... .. Sale $8.79
Reg . $14.00 ...... Sale$11.19
Reg . $17.00 .... ; . Sale$13.59
Reg. 523 .00 .. .. .. Sale $18.39

resume normal operations at
bot h locations on Tuesday
morning, September 5.

FOUNDATION FUNDS
Ferg uson.
Aft er dedu ctio ns fo r
Of the total, Eastern Local
ret irement , Meigs County's received $!)6,724.20 : Meigs
three local school distri cts Local. $128,455.73, and South·
received $246.029 .87 as their ern Loca l. $60,849.94.
sha re of the August State
In add.itio n, th e Meig s
School Founda tion subsidy Co unty Boa rd of Education
pay ment, according to State received a direct allotment of
Aud it or
Thomas
E . $15,652.93.

FLANNEL SHIRTS
Small. mediu m , large

and e xt ra large sizes ,
co lorful plaid pa ttern ,
tw o pock ets, f u ll shi r t

ta il s. cotton

SALE PRICED

WINTUK
KNITTING YARN

Stock up this weekend on Coats al"'d Clark
Wlntuk Knitting yarn . Excellent selection of
colors. Jif2 oz . skein . Regularly $1 .'49.

'1 19 SKEIN

polyes ter

COSMETIC SALE
SAVE 20-;. ON REVLON AND COTY

COSMETIC

·•

Lipsticks. perfumes, shampoo, powders.
nail polish. mascara, and eyeshadows.

2 DAY SALE

SAVE 20%

JUNIOR DRESSES
2 Day Sale of our complete stock of junior
dresses. The latest styles and colors .

REG. 516.00. .................... SALE s12.18
REG. '19.00 ....... :..... ........ SALE 115.18
REG. 122.00. ............ ,........ SALE 117.58
REG. s34.00 ..................... SALE s27.18
REG. s44.00 ·.................... SALE 535.18
REG. s56.00 ..................... SALE s44.78

TUBE·SOCKS
Boys size 7 to 11. men 's size 9
to 15 . Regularly $1.25. White
w ith c ol ored top s. Big
selec tion .

99~

REG. 14.50............................. SALE '3.59
REG. 15.00 ............................. SALE '3.99
REG. 17.00 ........ ..................... SALE '5.59
REG. 111.00 ........... SALE '8.79
1
14.00........... SALE '11.19
SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE!

MEN'S
SWEATER
Our new fall $election,
slipovers,
cardigans,

vests . Big selection ot
styles and colors. Size
small , medium, large

p.m.

and extra large .

Good selec tion of st yles , sizes. colors and

Meigs County
People

RACINE
...

......__.....

FDICi
.......... ......... ........ e.

HOME NATIONAL
RAC:INE

Be sure to see all the other new styles of
men's and boys' belts. Excellent new

selection . -~

TWO DAY SALE

$3.95

GYM SHORTS
large.

....,.- Over 120 chal rs to

choose from .
- Laroe selection ot
fabrics and colors.

Wall - aways .

recliners ,
· loungers,

Men's 8.50 Bel1s ................. '6.80
Menis '10.00 Bel1s ... :........ :... '8.00

5 99

SALE 6

rock · O·
swivel

rockers.

TO 1105
VISIT OUT 3RD R.OOR RJRNITURE DEPARTMENT
ACCESSORY DEPT. - 2ND FLOOR

LADIES' ROLF
LEAtHER ACCESSORIES
KEYCASES, BILLFOLDS, COSMEnC BAGS,
CIGARETTI CASES, CHANGE PURSES

SQ. YD.
INSTAU.ED

OPEN SATURDAY 9&amp;30 to 5 'P.M.
CLOSED MONDAY SEPTEMBER 4th - LAlOR DAY
I

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

bargaining. The teachers are
objecting to an increased
workload Imposed by the
college boarq.
The snowballing New
Orleans strike gained
momentum with the addition
of dissident bus drivers to the
picket
line·s
today .
Instruction to 91,000 students
has been curtailed seriously
and teachers promiaed a
strengthening of force s
during the long Labor Day
weekend .
teachers
are
The
demanding $3 million more in
wage 1ncr•a•es th•n the

school board claims it has.
" We could st&amp;y out all
year, " said Na t La cour ,
president of the 4 700·
member United Teacl~e~s of
New Orleans. "The teachers
are not going to get tired and
return to the classroom."
Bus drivers who shuttle
nearly H,OOO stude nts to
school refused Ill roll this
morning ;· leaving pa rent s
with no alternatives other
than to drive their children to
school or keep them home.
The drivers have demanded a
7-percentsalaryincrease, but
the board has off erect 4

l .
.,,,,, ,,.,., ,,,..,.,,. ,. ,.., ., , ., ., .,
1 ~ew p ant means 4,300 ;~::~;;:~f~:y~::
jobs, additional funds
WAVERLY, Ohio ( UPI) The . Ufanium enrichment
plant to be built .a t nearby
Piketon will mean aliout 4,300
new jobs openings, $1 million
in additional revenues for
local schools in · 1989, and
greater demands for services
that already ate strained in
some communities.
Those are some of the
conclusions of a study by the
U.S. Department ·of Energy
and Battelle Columbus
Laboratories, released
Thursday .
The study projected the
economic and social impact
of construction of the $4.5
billion plant on Pike, Ross ,
Highland, Adams, Scioto ,
Jackson, Vinton, GaiUa and
Lawrence counties in Ohio
and Greenup County , Ky .
Originally, the enrichment
plant was targeted lor
completion by 1988, but DOE
spokesman James L. Abercrombie said Tbl&amp;nday the
completion date had been
extended to 1993 because of a
lower anticipated demand for
the plant's products.

The Battelle study, based systems, it should be
on a 1988 completion date, as8umed that not all will
projecle(l an annual influx of succeed.''
workers ,peaking at 300 in
"The sewer systems ih four
1987. 1n all, the plant is communities ·are presenUy
expected to employ about strained and can be -assumed
4,300 construction workers, Ill be inadequate in 1987 .. .
and 2, 400 workers to operate While some of these
the facility when completed. communities are plaMing to
About 700 construction enlarge their systems, it is
workers and 1,200 aperations assumed that not all w.ill
workers are expected to succeed.11
move into the !().county area ,
However, the study said the
with other jobs filled by local' influx of families will not
residents, the study said.
burden police and lire protec.
Counting the workers' lion. There will be "some
families, that amounts to an increased demand in fire
influx of 4,800 in&lt;)ividuals by fighting ,personnel and equip·
1987, the study said, whiCh ment," but "the level and
some communities may he distribution of the Increased
hard..pressed to deal with.
,population does not indicate a
"The water systems in 14 severe strain" on lire fighting
communities are . ~esenUy systems, the study said.
strained and are expected to
It also said only six
be inadequate or overtaxed additional police officers
by 1987 when the peak' ~obably would be needed In
population increase is the llkounty region, with " no
expected to occur," the study major effects on jail
said, ~~·WbiJe

-

of,..UW. populatiort'tmd court~toads~'

c&lt;mmunities are currenUy
upgrading or planning to
upgrade or enlarge their

lh PRICE
MEN'S "MR. LEGGS"

s11.95 BWE
DENIM JEANS
14 ounce pre:washed ·blue
denim
true
western.
styling, waist sizes 29 to 42,
lengths 30 to 36. Flare or
straight leg styles.

Financially, counties can
expect to spend about $100,000
more in 1989, mainly due to

Negotiators begin 15
day bargaining .p eriod
By GREGORY GORDON
WASHINGTON (UP!) Negotiators lor the U.S.
Postal Service and unions
represealing 500,000 workers
today headed into a IS-day
bargaining period aimed at
averting
an
illegal ,
nationwide mall strike.
Both sides expressed hope

a unique approach, to be
mediated
by
Harvard
University ~ofessor James
J . Healy, would help them
settle their contract dispute
either through mutual
agreement· or
binding
arbitration .
Healy, a nationally known
0

SAVE UP

CARPET SALE

1

(

cotton

trim . Sizes extra small thru extra

WAREHOUSE

Reg. $8.5,0 sq. yd., Orite, kitchen carpet, 12
ft . width, heavy rubber backing, and 3
colors to choose from.

·OHIO

stvle ,

polyester blend and 100 per cent
polyester. Solid color with white

PR

Men's 15.00 Belts. ................. 14.00
Men's '7.00 Bel1s ......... .. ...... '5.60

BANK

'1 ..

SALE

SPECIAL SALEI

wi dths, 30 to 44 wa ist .

Adjustable to fit all sizes ·up to 36 waist .
Stretch elastic magnetic buckle. light and
dark colors .•

GIRLS' TOPS

Boys' 13.99 Pkg Briefs, T-Shirts ..... 13.19
Men's '5.69 Pkg. T-Shirts ............ .'4.55
Men is '5.29 Pkr. Briefs .. ........... .'4.23

Fur

JEANS BELTS

Sweaters. kni1 tops, blouses and vests . Sizes
2 to 4, 4 to 6X and 7 to 14.

SAVE 20%s

MEN'S
PARIS BELTS

BOYS '2A9

2 DAY SALE

Spec ial sale on m en's and boys' knit styles,
T·shirts, briefs , athl.etic shirts.

A Home Bank

REG. s4.79 ..................... \. SALE s3.85
REG. ~.79 ....................... SALE SS.45
REG. s8.79 .......... ........... SALE *7.05
REG. s12.79 ................... SAl£ '10.25
REG. $15.79 ................... SALE '12.65

new

Thursday. Tea·c hers picketed
schools in Collinsv.ille,
Edwardsville, · Waterloo and
RO!'klord, .the state's secondlargest district.
A tentative. settlement was
reached in the Edwardsville
walkout late Thursday and a
vote was scheduled today.
About 40 other districts in the ·
state are In the "critical"
stage of contract talks, the
llli n 0, is
Education
Association said.
A teachers' strike at the
nine Chicago City Colleges
was in its third day, with both .
sides unable .to agree on
terms .
for
ren{'wed ·

t:fi Marion , Ind. , a judge
who jailed leaders of striking
teachers earlier this week
issued contempt citations
Thursday against .more than
300 picketers, but released
four of the leaders so they
could
participate
in
negotiations with the school
·
board.
In Michigan, about 1,200
teachers struck the suburban
Detroit districts in Pontiac
and Holly . About 25,000
students are ·scheduled to
start classes in the districts
next we ek . About 4,500
students were idled by a hout

percen~.

·

8-track and cassettes, country, blue grass,
popular, rock , religious, and instrumentals.

Popular

strike. Union negotiator John
Ryan said picketing would
begin at 7 a.Jli. if a strike was
called and would reswne
Wednesday, tne teacliers '
first day back to work.
Classes lor the district 's
250,000
students
are
scheduled to begin next
Friday.
Several smaller school districts in Pennsylvania
reached contract agreements
with teachers Thursday ,
averting threatened strikes.
Four
Illinois
school
districts canceled classes lor
about
50,000
st1,1dents

300 teacher s in Mount
Pleasant, Mich.
Negotiations in the 441yold teacher s s trike in
Char~on, Ohio, produced a
settlement late Thusday and
students prepared to begin
classes today.
School openings are scheduled for next week · in New
York Stale , wher e 199
districts do not have teacher
contrac.ts, and 11 of those in cluding
Buffalo and
Yonkers - · are considered
possible "crisis " areas. The
Buffalo district hils 52,874
pupils, Yonkers 25 , ~4.

Intense · negotiations also
were reported in Cleveland
and Seattle, Wash .
School bus drivers in Knox
County, Tenn ., ignored a
t'Ourt order to return to work .
The strike forced parents to
drive about 25 ,000 students to

sc hoo l, creating massive
traffic jams.
In Santa Fe, N .M., a
tr a nsportation
co mpany
suddenly
canceled
its
contract with the school
district Thursday . School
officia ls urged parents to
arrange car pools for the
3,300 children affected.

~T

TAPE SALE

REG. 58.00.......................... SALE ~.79
REG. s14.00 ...................... SAl:E su.s9
REG. 118.00....................... SALE '15.29
REG. '24.00 ....................... SALE s20.39
REG. s28.00 ....................... SALE 523.79

HANES UNDERWEAR

Labor Dav

Reg. S14.00 ........... ;saleS11.18
Reg. $18.00 ........... ·Sale Si4.38
Reg. $26.00 ............ Sale S20.7B
Reg. S36.00 ........... Sale ~~a.1a1
Reg. S48.0o ........... Sale $38.38
Reg. $58.00 ........... Sale S46.38

Special sale of Queen Casual sporlswear for
fall. Regular sizes in slacks. blouses, skirts, .
jackets. and bla zers.

SAVE ON MEN'S AND BOYS'

41h

Labor Day Sale prices on the
new fall llne of women's
regular size dresses.

WOMEN'S COORDINATE
SPORTSWEAR SALE

MEN'S AND BOYS' SIZES

Offer Ends Saturday. September 2.

WOMEN'S DRESSES

SALE

MEN'S s7.95

blend.

Seplembe r

SALE

EXTRA SIZE DRESSES

Sizes 8 to 18, wes tern flannel s and
re gul ar styles , br i gh t , co lor f u l

only.
Holzer Clin ic Lid. will

We Will Bt&gt; Closed
Monday ,

By ANDREW A. YEMMA
Ualted Prell lntei'IUIUonal
striking teachers idled tens ,
of tho1111ands of students in
New Orleans and school
districts in three other states
today and instructors in
Philadelphia threatened to
walk off the job in a contract
dispute.
Transportation troubles,
meanwhile, plagued students
in Knox County, TeM ., and
Santa Fe., N.M.
Negotiators for the Philadelphia
•·edera lion
of
Teachers and the city Board
of Education held lith-hour
talks in an attempt to avert a

FRIDAY SEPTEMBER. 1st &amp; SA Tl,tRDA Y; SEPTEMBER .2nd

BOYS' FLANNEL
SHIRTS

FiFteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. 98

Teacher strikes sitowhalling, students idled

TWO DAYS ONLY

Clinic Ltd . staff will be on
duty in the Emergency Room
1 Phone 446·5201) of the Holzer .
Medica l Cenler Hospital to

We 'd like to pay tribute to all
you hard work 1ng men and
women of America. Your dili gent labors are well apprecia ted. Thanks. one and all .

at Y·· en tine

.

H MC will be closed Monday
Holze r Cli ni c Ltd . in
Ga llipolis and it&gt; Jackson
County Branch in Wellston
will be closed Monday. Sept .
4, in observa nce of the La bor
Day Holiday .

e

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

NORTH LAS VEGAS, Nev. the Los Angeles offi ce of a
(UP! ) A chartered · Sydney travel agency. Trave ..
airplane crashed into the land, In c.
" All the others are highly
desert shortly after takeoff
Wednesday, killing the pilot distressed and they just want
and nine Austr alian tourists to go home, right now ."
wlio would have been goin g
The pilot was identified as
Charles
Rernir)g, 46, of Las
home today.
The cause of the crash was Vegas, a retired Air Force
colonel with more than 6,000
unknown.
cr ash hours of flight time.
A · seve n-man
The Australians ranged In
investigation team from the
National · Transportatiuon age from 53 to 73 and included
Safety
Board
beg an three married couples, two
exam ining the wrecka ge men and one woman.
Dooald J . Donahue, owner
Wednesday night.
Th e twin -e ngine P iper of the charter a ii-line, was
Navajo Chieftain was the last piloting one of the planes
to take off of three Las Vegas which had already taken off .
Airlines planes chartered to He said he saw Heming's
carry 16 Austra lians to Santa plane climb to aboul·400 feet .
"The next time I looked
Ana, Calif. , to rejoin 33 others
back, there was a cloud of
in their tour group .
The main body of the group dust. "
was touring Disneyland while
A not h e r
witness,
the 16 went on a side trip to contractor Richard Jamison,
Las Vegas , winding up a 32- said the plane "was climbing
day tour of 25 U.S. and upward, then it violently and
suddenly pitched upward arid
Canadian cities.
"The group had grown very to the right and went nose
close ,' · said Peter Widders, of first into the ground." .

•

jWIII)t....-_Th_,_w_o_rld_To_d_a_y_
Carter urges users' help
WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Carter told a group of
business users oflllllural gas Thursday, "I need your help," In
working for passage of the natural gas biU that has been
.
stalled In Congress for 16 months.
Failure to enactlt now, he said, ''would have a devastating
on our national iniage, on the value of the dollar, on our
trade balance , on defiation ." Carter planned to meet today
. with representatives of fanners and Food processors in a
continuing attempt to save the bill, which faces powerful
opposition from both the left and right in Congress.

eff"-'

Residents forced to.move·
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Residents in about 50 homes In a
four to six-block area of North Toledo spent about five hours
out of their homes tate Thursday night and early today after
four propane tank cars derailed on the Toledo Terminal railroad tracks.
After authorities detennlned the cars were not leaking,
residents were allowed . to return home.

Thousands of students idled
Strllling teachers idled leJI1 of th0U1811ds of students In
New Orleana and districts In tbree other states, today and
teacbera in Phil8delphla struck • week before cla~~~e~ were
liCheduled to begin.
TriJllpOrtatkln troubleo, meanwhile, plagued students In
Knox CoWity, Tenn. , and Santa Fe, N. M.

Navy des~yers arriving
CLEVEJ...Al\ID (UPI) - Three navy deatroyen ...e to pull
tonllht fa a five-day • , lllll'kiDI the lint
111M llnee 1•111e NaY)' lu viii ted aGreat Lak• port.
'1'111 Jllblk relllicN effort II allo intended to IUJI!Krl
reendlilll IIIII P. enn eaperlenc:e Ill l'tllrlct.d ntar
•ytptlaa. 'nlellne dellroyenll't the IAae, lbe o.- and
lbe DaYII. 1hey wiJ1 be docked In Cleyeland tbrouch Tllelday.
into Oemand

~.

.

labor relations expert, had
not met officials of either the
government or three affected
unions going into tDday's
talks , in which he was
expected to spend much of
the time outlining his system
for mediatiOn.
No further sessions have
for,mally been sclleduled, but
a spokeswoman for the
Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service said she
expects the meetings to run
through the Labor Day
holiday weekend.
Deputy
Postmaster
General James Conway, who
will head a five-man
government 1 bargaining
team, was prepared to work
all weekend, a POstal Service
spokesman said. The unions
planned to send as many as 18
officials to participate in the
bargaining process.
Under an 11th-hour agree·
ment that avoided a
acheduled nationwide mail
strike at midnight Monday,
Healy will mediate contract
negotiations between the two
sides lor up to 15 dsys - unW
Sept. 16.
U they fail to reach agreenlent during that time, or If ·
Healy detennines there is an
unbreakable Impasse, he will
decide any unresolved issues
· under a system similar to
binding arbitration.
If the sldei reach a
negotiated settlement, the
cootract will be submitted for
another ratification vote by
the
280,000-member
American Postal Workers
Union, the 180,001knemher
National Association of
Letter .Carriers and the
40,001knember National POll
Office Mail Handlers union.
All three unions defl.ed
President Carter's · antlinflatiooappeals and voted to
, reject a propoeed three-year
contract callln11 for a
mulmwn 1U percent wage
and COlt of Hving lncreaae lncluc!ing annual ~- pay
likes 'JI 2, 3 and 5 percent.

Ohio Valley , Publi s hing
Company In order that
employees may observe
the Labor Day Holiday.
Publication will resume as
usual Tuesday.

Appeal
h eanng
•

increased economic activity,
while revenues climb only
.$60,000, the study said. Townships
also
will
see
expenditures rise $50,000 over'
added revenues, as more
money will be needed for
highways and brid ges , .
according to the study .
.But school districts can
anticipate a $1.6 million increase In revenues, with only
$700,000
jump
in
a
expenditures, the study said.
CHARLESTON,
W.Va.
More than hail of the (UP!) - A hearing will be
expecled increase in revenue held Thursday on an appeal
would come 'from the State by Research.Cottrell Inc. of
Basic Foundation Program. the cutoff of its work rights in
Abercrombie told about 75 West Virginia.
local eommunity residents
· The company is the subcon·
that DOE has "no money to · tractor for the Willow Island
lund the impact, except this cooling tower where 51 constudy , But we wiU be working stru ctio n worker s, s ix of
with you to go to the them Ohioans, fell to their
appropriate agencies for
deaths when the scaffolding
funding ."
collapsed on April 27.
"This gives you something
Philip Cocco, a COJ:IIpany
to estimate the impact, spokel9P,an. saki tbe
something lo ptari on ·and as Brook,, t; .J . firm does not
you move forward, we 'll believe Secretary of State A.
move forward ~ith you, ~~ he James Manchin has the ausaid.
thority to revoke its.business
charter.
Manchin took the action
:::::::~:::·::: ::::::::::: ::: ::::;:::::: :::;:::::::.;::::::::::::::;::;.::::::
last week in an effort to stop
' EXTENDED WEATHER
the cleanup of debris at the
Sunday
through
base of the tower at the
Tuesday, a cha~ c e of Mononagahela Power Co .
~nd
showers Sunday
plant.
Monday. Generally fair
Kanawha County Circuit
Tuesday. Highs will be in Judge Oden Goshorn stayed
the 80s and lows in the 80s.
the state official 's decision
:::::::;:·:::::::::;:::::::::::;:·:::=:::·:::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::: when the appeal was filed
Wednesday . However , the
company never complied
with Manchin's.
Cocco said the cleanup was
continuing and the cOmpany
does not have a target dste
for resuming construction .
The state official revoked
the charter to aid a group of
relatives of the disaster
victims who want another
of the accident .
investigation
Motorists insisting that
the Willow
The
group,
Meigs service
station
Island
Disaster
Organization,
operators put leaded gasoline
into their vehicles, built' for claima the probe by the
unl eaded gasoline, are not federal Occupational Safety
only doing the operators an and Health Administration is
Injustice, but themselves as inadequate.

slated

V~"Wli, '·t&gt;:r

,.,

e

Jn rttlwu t•/(
~~ §ft'

l!cf"id

Unleaded

gas users.

beware!

well.
Meigs County service
station operators are finding
they do have a problem. By
selling leaded gasoline to
motorists, who should be
using unleaded gasoline, they
subject themselves to fines
which could go as high as
$10,000.
By ·the same token, even
though the vehicles have been
modified· so that leaded
gasoline can be put into them.
the lew cents that a customer
saves on the transaction is in
vain .
One operator said Thurs·
day the leaded gasoline can
harm the operation of the
vehicle constructed for
unleaded gasoline so that in
the long run any savings is
eaten up in necessary
repairs.
Any
automobile
manufactured during or after
1975 legally must be fueled .
with unleaded gasoline .
However, a lew models of
pickup trucks are an ex·
ceptlon to the requirement.
At one time vehicles
requiring unleaded ~asoline
could be legally modified as
Individuals as well as
businesses serving the auto
busineaa. However, now it is
IUegal for anyone - including
the olll(ller .:.. to 1119dify his
vehicle so that it will accept
leaded ga10line when it was
(Continued on page 12) ,

Meigs classes
begin Wednesday
Wednesday, Sept. 6, will be
th'e first day of classes for the
19711-79 school year in the
Meigs Local School District ,
Supt . Charles Dowler announced today.
District t• achers will hold a
meeting at10 a.m. Tuesday in
the junior high school at
Middleport before reporting
to their own buildings at 1
p.m.
Wednesday will be a full
day of classes for the students
with normal schedules and
bus routes will be primarily
the same as last year, Supt.
Dowler reports.

'11111 week'• winning Ohio
Lottery DUmben:
Gold 1111mber - 1.
Wblte aamber - 8.
Blue aamber - i...
Extra Cash
413014.

Thomas Murphy, Teeters sales manager, Food Division , Landmark, Inc., displays a
small sample of the large variety of Landmark foods which will be marketed with the new
.package ,
'

Landmark changes design
La n dma r k a nnoun ce d
today that they a re changing
the name and package design
of many of t he meal products
processed at French City
Meats, Inc., Gallipolis.
Acco rdin g t o Ro bert
Scherer , vice president, Food
Dt'vi si on, La ndmark, hi e. ,
most of the French City
pro cessed meat products will
now be packaged in a n at·
tractive new red, white and
blue wrapper bearing the
label "'Landmark F ood ."
Prior to thts, meat products
have been merchandised with
a French City label.

in noting the r eason !'or
changing the logo and
pa ckage desig n, Scherer
underlined the need to con·
form with other Lan dmark
Food products which include,
among others, eggs , cheese
and frozen poultry.
In addit ion to me at
produ cts, the Landmark
Food Div is ion distributes
over !100 food items to retail

and institutional customers in
a trading area !hat includes
Ohi o,
Mi chi gan ,
West
Virginia and Pennsylva nia.
Land mark, a fa rm er ·

owned cooperative ba sed in

Columbus. ha s operat ed
French City Meats for six
years. The cooperative also
owns and operates th e
Teeters Packing Company
located in Columbus . The
plants produce a full line of
fresh . processed and smoked
meats.
Accordin g
to
Plant
Ma nager Bill Frazee, several
pieces of new equipment are
currently being installed at
the French City facility to
improve packagin g and
production efficiency and
quality.

ton:o~, h~co~ne~'::n~~:ra~~~:~~he

Gallipolis, was treated for
Injuries sustained· in a twovehicle accident Thursda y on
SR 160, at the junction of CR
22, at 4:10 p.m.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post, Highway Pat rol,
an auto driven by Eldridge
Stanley, 23, Crown City, was
stopped in traffic on 160 , A
vehicle operated by Dovyak
failed to stop, •and struck the
Stanley auto in the rear .
Dovyak displayed visible ·
signs of injury, and was
transported by the Gallia
Volunteer Squad to Holzer ,
Medical Center where she
was treated for abrasion s to
the head, and released .
The Stanl ey vehicle in·
curred slight dsmage. There
was moderate damage to the
· Dovyak auto.
Dovyak wa s cited . on
charges of assured clear
distance .
.
The patrol investigated five
other accidents . Thursday.
At 7: 15 p.m., officers in·
vestigated a one-auto crash,
on CR 33, just east of the
Pomeroy Corporation Limits,
in Meigs County.
According to the patrol, a
vehicle operated by Preston
Evans, 34, Racine, south
bound, went off the right side
of the roadway, ·and struck a
utility pole.
The auto incurred severe
dsmage. Evans was cited on
charges of DWI.
Officers investigated a

at 3:15p.m., on Third St., in
Syracuse.
According to the patrol , an
auto driven by Marion J .
Taylor, 54 , Pomeroy, went
out of control when it went off
the right side of the road .
The vehicle crossed the
street, went off the left side,
and struck a drainage ditch.
Taylor claimedJnjury, but
was not immediately t reated.
There was moderate damage
to the auto .
The patrol investigated a
two-vehirle accident on CR 3,
just east I)! TR 361, in Meigs
County, at 2:3S p.m .
Officers report that autos
driven by Paul Keller , 66,
Middleport, west bound, and
Robert Parker, 16, Mid ·
dleport, traveling east, mel in
a curve. ,
The patrol reports · light
damage to the Keller vehicle,

· Parker auto . Parker was
cited on charges of left of
center.
At 4:50 p.m ., offi cers investigated a (wo-auto mishap
on Ewington Rd ., just east of
Shepard Lane.
According to the patrol , a
vehicle driven by Ellen M.
Murry , 24, Ewington, slid into
an auto operated by James E .
Walker I 25 I Oak Hill &gt; when
Murry applied the brakes.
Both vehicles in curred
m oderate damage . No
citation was issued .
At 3:50 p.m. , a tractor trailer o~erated by Leo
Stumbo,
Bidwell, flipped a
stone which struck the wind·
shield of a tractor . trailer
driven by Jimmy Lloyd, 30,
Mt. Salon, Va .
The mishap occurred on U.
S. JS, just north of SR 325.

20;

Fourth annual festival set
The fourth aMual Athens lormance, marching and
Invitational Marching Band maneuvering . The Ohio
festival will be held In Athens University Marching llO ,
at Peden Stadium, the under the direction of Ronald
football stadium on the Ohio P . Soccarelll, will also perUniversity Campli.s, Sept. 16. form .
The·:Meigs Local High School
Tickets, which cost $2 for
band under the direction of an adult, and $1 for a college
Bobby and Alan Hunt will be stu~nl or younger, will lie on
competing with 25 other sale at the stadlum. The
bands. The marching festival Meigs Local High School
begins at 11 a.m. Bands will band will compete in the " B' '
do field maneuvers and will division, based on the size of
be judged on playing per- the school.

,

•

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