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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.

,

•

�.
3-The Duily Sentinel : Middleport-Pomen&gt;y: 0 .. Friday, Sept . 1, 1978

Um·p ire strike
ban continued

2- The Dilily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Friday. Sept. I, 1978

eTTA •o"' "'o1m1 ~V-"t~Ga•"'

Rhodes' cam.p aign bus
rolling ov'e r state.

--·

Sandusky County would be
By LEE LEONARD
saved $7 million over 10
UP! Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The years.
The
governor
also
campaign bus of Cov . James
A. Rhodes is hot on the trail promised to keep the schools
again, carrying him across open this fall.
"We have looked .at the
the state in search of another
situation
and It shows we can
four years in the job he
do
these
things without
practically regards as his
raising taxes in the state of
own personal property ..
Jn an unusual move , Ohio," said the Rhodes, who
Rhodes has burst out of the also prdpased eannarking
starting gate before Labor the state income tax pnd
Day. promising the people he . lottery money for schools.
"He really hit home in
will cut their taxes and keep
schools open at the same pointing out a lot of these
issues that we 're not aware
time. They love Ul hear it.
l'We need more incentives of," said Mrs. Alice Bishop of
for industry to come in , and Milan, who attended a mid"
receptio n in
that means less taxes ," said morning
Ni&gt;rwalk.
"
We're
interested
J os eph Kindred III -of
Elmore, a strong Republican in where our taxes go. The
who ventured out Ill hear people didn't realize that they
Rhodes at a $25;a-plate fUnd- weren 't earmarKed.''
Mrs. Bishop is perhaps a
raising luncheon at the
Fremont Country Club special fan of Rhodes , since
she is manager of the
Thursday.
" We know welfare 's a Norwalk employment omce.
problem ," said Richard 1'We're interested in more
Hetrick of Fremont. "That 's jobs," she said.
Rhodes did not disappoint
what eats the taxes, so if
her,
promising an industrial
anything can be done in that
development
plan next week
area, it will help. There's too
Ill
briilg
more
jobs intll the
many people t hat are
state.
unproductive."
Even
the
younger
Kindred and Hetrick commented · with Rhodes' words ge neration seemed
still ringing in their ears from enthusiastic about another
a 20-rninute stemwinder of a four years for Rhodes, who
speech in which he promised turns 69 in two weeks.
" I like Ill feel that the
that under hts real estate tax
have
become
credit plan, the residents of voters

HVLME

N.E.A. 7i

•

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.

sophisticated enough so they
go I &lt;I' issues instead of age or
per90Dalities," said numas
L. Yager, the 33-year old
mayor of Tillin.
Yager, who attended a $2Sa plate lund - raising
breakfast near New Riegel,
said
his
area
is conse rvative and ' 1 the
governor's age may be of
benefit. He doesn 't look his
age physically, and I don't
believe it is generally
perceived how old he Is," said
Yager.
Rhodes took Statehouse
newsmen on a rolling tour,
his ca;npaign bus leaving
Columbus ~orUy alter 6 a .m. '
He catnapped and talked
with aides, then began yelling
impatiently when the bus was
15 minutes late for its first
stop. "It's eight o'clock!" he
said, then applauded when
the ..bus pulled into the
Covered Wagon Restaurant.
.....
Rhodes plugged
his ·
primary and secondary
education program to a
it's
somnolent audience of about "I can still afford the luxuries
that blew me out of the tub."
70 RepubliCbllB.
"Under this system, no
schools should close in the
state of Ohio this fall," he
said. "Some may oot open,''
he cooceded, but quickly said
a state loan program should
By .ROBERT STRAND ·
over.
take care of them.
OAKLAND,
Calif.
(UP!)
"We will return to the
"There's enough money
Emily
Harris
stood
inside
the
.
streets
as two individuals
and management to keep the
courtroom
railing,
turned
her
c~itted to change,'' she
schools open," he said.
back on the judge and told her "'Pfedged Thursday alter she
supporters that her battle for and her husband, William,
social change was far from pleaded guilt~ to kidnapping

Wt•ig-ht loss
is n symptom

the necessities

started this work .

Change battle continues

Patricia Hearst on Feb. 4,
1974.
" We feel no remorse, and,
in fact, we're proud of it,"
Harris, 33, said of the
abduction as he sat on the
defendants' table and gave a
six-minute address to the
spectators - many of whom
applauded their words.
Letters
of
opinion are welcomed. They should be less
calaboose, one of the oldest,
The couple had pleaded
than
300 words long (or subject to reduction by tbe editor)
but probably the most useless
innocent, and the ease had
and
must
be
signed
with
the signee's address. Names may
poblic buildings in the town.
been proceeding slowly lor
be withheld upan publication. However, oo req'uest,
Mrs. Willingham says the
months through pretrial
names
will be disclosed. Lenen should be in good taste,
wooden structure. measuring
proceedings in Alameda
a by 10 feet and standing addressing Issues , not personalities.
County Superior · Court. The
about 15 feet high, was
surprise change of plea came
j)~ '
constructed near the turn of
after plea-bargaining with
the century of thick oak
the District Attorney's office.
boards. A tin roof increased
Mrs. Harris said the
the temperature inside by
chang-:, of plea was " a
many degrees .
practicll decision" to shorten
Iron bars, rusty but still
their prison time.
sturdy, covered the two small
The Harrises pleaded
.windows of the jail,. oow Dear Editor :
guilty ' to lour counts: ,
abandoned and standing next
With regard to the letter in your column of Wednesday, kidnapping Miss Hearst,
to the horne of Mrs. Patry Aug. 30! 1978 from Mrs. John R. Murphy concerning the kidnapping a man whose car
Massey.
. Domestrc Am Department JUdgq at the recent Meigs County was used in the abduction,
"History records the fact ," Fau-, I would Uke t~ clarify the issue, and to answer Ida's robbing Miss Hearst's former
said Mrs. Willingham, " that questrons; particularly0 lllpce I was the person she named in her fiance, Steven Weed, and
on one occasion the marshal letter.
·
false imprisonment. The
locked up a town resident wbo
The Fair Board has certain rules for each and every charr,es carry sentences of up
insisted that his mule be de~rtment in which there Is competition, and the board
life in_ prison. but ·the
locked up with him, also . The ms1sts that these rules must be rigidly observed· by the · Ill
couple could become eligible
marshal obliged ."
supen~tend~nt and chainnan of each department. These rules
The most popular event in are prmted tn the. Fau- Premium book which each exhibitor for parole in 1983 or 1984.
The Harrises had faced 13
the town of 125-150 is the ooce- r~~ves, (and are also printed in the Daily Senlinel's Fair counts
with a maximum senta-month get-together when Editron.)
enc~
of life without
the residents converge on the
First - General Rules, Page 6, Rule 2. "Exhibitors must parole.
community center, each with determme lor themselves in what class or classes they will
Judge Stanley P. Golde set
a "covered dish " of food.
make entry."
sentencing for Oct. 3.
Mrs . Willin gham, who ., Secood - Department IX, Domestic Arts Rules. Rule 9
Harris had been identified
keeps
many . records
Any a_rtrcle entered in the wrong class wiU not be judged."
by Miss Hearst as one of two
pertaining w the town's past
Thll'd - ~e :;et of rules - Rule 10, "Articles can only be men who invaded her
history in her home, entered under nuscellaneous If an appropriate class is not apartment,
beat Weed and
produced
one
poetic listed.
carried
her
away. Mrs .
dorument that described the
In Division 909, Hobby Comer, there was a class for Harris, 31, was identified as
origin of the town's name.
Decoupage Pictures - Class 76. All Decoupage Pictures were the driver of one of two
"The lone oak tree has long JU&lt;lged under that class and were not acceptable in Class 92
getaway cars.
since gone, uprooted by a which clearly states, "Othe~ than above." No article which
others were involved in
passing storm. But oo tree would have frtted mto the f~rst 91 classes of the department theSixabduction
, and aU were
ever achieved such lame, or could have been accepted in class 92. It is Impossible to list members of the Symbionese
lived to perpetuate its name. every craft all!~ to offer premiums lor them - there are Liberation Army. The other
Long past and gone though it hundreds! So we have "mlscellan~us" classes for the use of six died in a shoot-out with
may be, it's still held sacred artrsts who create articles other than those we can na!l\1! in the police in Los Angeles in June
in memory.''
book.
1974 .
And, yes, other people have had this experience. There
The Harrises are currently
..__ _ _ _ _ _ __,.... were two others in this department this year. I, myself, had the serving a prison tenn for
expenence a couple of years ago in the flower show, where the participating with Miss
THt~ IJAII ,\1 SF:N TINF.:I.
JUdge was not quite so kind when she turned to the ol&gt;!ervers Hearst in a shoplifling and
UF.\ 'UTElJ T4 I TliF:
and sard, "Tell this arranger she must read the rules 1"
I NTt:Ht:."iT m ·
shooting incident at a Los
ME IGS·MASON 'AHI-: A
I also feel that I must defend the volunteer w~ directed Angeles sporting goods store.
RURt:HT IIOF.FIJ CH
the entry of fda 's daughter to the Decoupage class instead of Miss Hearst was placed on
City Editnr
class 9_2. There were very legible signs, stating the name of the probation on charges In
JluiJIIsh•~ daily ' ' 'U 'Cflt Si:l lunl~:
IJ;' Tht• Ohtu Vi!lll'~· PubhJo:lung
class, rts class nwnber, and the ruimber of entries in the class
conneCtion with that incident.
( 'llm~II )'·MU IIL! nt• tl l&lt;l , Ill&lt;',
Ill
over each space where exhibits were to be placed. If t~
Court St.. l 'utnctu~ . Oluo 4!iili\l
Bu:. Lrit'SS Offwt• l' hullt' Wl· :.!156 .
volunteer looked at the picture, ·and seeill8 that It was
io:d1lunet l Plnm&lt;'9!l'2·1157
decoupage, did i1ot look at the entry tag \0 direct it to Class 92
Sct •und d ;,s:. pu.~ l&lt;• ~ · - pttid &lt;tl
l'ollll't'uy,O hLi l
,
11 would have made no difference in the Judging, because oft~
N11tiomd &lt;HI\'crlt!img rc p rt: l\CI I·
rules prevrously stated.
L&lt;t llvc . r.omduu A s~&gt;ut · ~&lt;• tes . :1101
Eut·lltl AVt! .. Ck~'t:l&lt;iml , l)ht&lt; l HI\~
Good volunteers are hard to come by, for the lair - it's
SuloS(.'fi ,)ILoll TlfleS l k'lt•'t't'l'd 1J)
always
extremely hot, uncomfortable, and dusty, and handling
r ill"r1h w k'rt' tt \'ill lii!JI(• 7&amp; t't•nlli I~~' '
the judges' book is an exacting and resporisib!e task. 1 was
w~l'k , By Mvl"f" ll uul~ Wlll.'l't' t ' ilrrh~r
111!1'\'lt:t' nut iiVil jbtbk· . Om• munth .
very pleased w1th the llllllistance from Mrs : Clyde Ingels, Mrs.
SJltl By 111:111 111 Ohm ;mJ IJ.' . VH . ,
John
Handley, Mn. W. P. JarreU, and Mrs. Paul Turnbull, and
( " II.' Vt'CII' , S:tJOO: Sill lllOIIUI.\,
$11 50: Thrt't' mouth~ , 17.00 ,
I smcerely thank them for it, as I also thank the DaUy Sentinel
F;bii'Wht: rc tlti 00 - ~'l'ill' . SIX 11\1/!llhl&gt;
for the excellent articles and pictures following the show by
1 1.150 : Thrc t• lllllll\1\i&gt; . S i . ~O
Sul.o~:rlplhJII prie t• ilk'IUdt:!o ~ u u d uy
Charlene. Hoeflich, Senline! correspondent, and for the
Tiii1Clo~!klltllid
'
·opporturuty to explain this mlaunderstanding. - Sincerely
'
'Margaret Ella Lewis.

Report from America: r------------------------By CHARLES S. TAYLOR
LONE OAK, Ga. (UP! ) There are no main highways
in Lone Oak and no post
office. Neither. is there .a
railroad, stop light , shopping
center. liquor store. nor
barber shop.
.
·
The oak tree that gave the
town its name is gone, along
with many of its young
people.
The Allen-Lee Memorial
Methodist Church is the
biggest and most iinposing
structure in town. Mrs .
Albert Willingham has a key
to the church and to the Lone
Oak Community Center just
down the road .
On a hot summer day , as
Lone Oak and its denizens

were dozing in the late
morn ing -' sun,
Mrs.
Willingham Ulok a visitor on a
tour of the area . She is the
WJofficial historian of the tiny
village tucked away in the
northwest
corner
of
Meriwether County, where
only an orcasional car is seen
moving past the town's one
general store.
"This Ulwn used to be
called Grab All," she said,
searching through a pile of
old records to prove her
statement. "I guess they
called it that because some of'
them tried to grab all from
the others."
About a 100 yards from the
crossroads stands the

Health
Review
..
By Dr. Lamar Miller

OV College of Osteopathic Medicine
ARTHRITIS-PART Dl
By Dr. Lamar Miller,
Ohio University School of Osteopsthy
QUESTION: How does rheumatoid arthritis differ from
other types of arthritis, especially osteoarthritis discussed last
week ?

ANSWER : Rheumawid arthritis is three times more
common in women than men and usu;lUy involves the smaller
joints of the hands and feet. The middle finger joints .Find the
knu ckles and wrist are involved much more. than the large
joints. Althcmgh not as common as osteoarthritis which affects
12 mi llion people in the U. S., it does involve 5 million
Americans. it tends to be more. rri~pling and disabling (except
for hip and knee joint osteoarthritis ), and usually occurs in
yoWJ~er age groups. Also, rheumatoid arthritis more often
begins as an acute attack and the disease Is a systemic (that is,
a general) diseaS&lt;. and affects the entire body causing fatigue,
loss of appetite, weig ht loss, and even pleurisy or pericarditis.
Remember that this is the usual or typical case of rheumatoid
arthritis. Other cases do affect older people and other joints,
and may begin very gradually rather than suddenly.
Diagnosis, therefore, can be qui te difficult if the physician has
to discover this disease early.
QUESTION : Are there any tests which can be used Ul
diagnose this R.A.~
ANSWER : X-Ray, unfortunately , is of little help early in
the disease since the typical radiological feature does ·not
bec001e ev ident until later in the proress when the diagnosis Is
already evident by examining the patient. Blood tests are
usually Ulo non-specific to pinpoint the early diagnosis but can
be used in addi tion Ill other criteria to aid in early detection.
There is one specific lab test known as the rheumatoid factor
test which tests for antibodies of this disease. However, again
it is not completely specific since i~ is positive in other
inflammatllry diseases as well. The final diagnosis is best left
in the hands of a competent physician who must weigh all the
evidence including symptoms, signs, x-rays, and blood tests.
QUESTION: How effective is treatment for thls .crippling
type of arthritis?
ANSWER : Only 25 percent of the rases of rheumatoid
arthritis go on to severe crippling disease. Most cases can be
controlled to a point short of crippling, although changes need
to be made in the person's living pattern and orcupation to
accomplish this. Appropriate balance between rest and
exercise must be achieved and physical therapy has an
important role in the over..a[J management. In addition to the
drugs discussed last week in the care of degenerative joint J
disease, cortisone may have to he used in small doses in order
· to prevent disabling joint problems. In any case, some
troublesome side effects may have. to be accepted in
preference Ill crippling effects of this arthritis. Gold injections
given weekly for 4 Ul 6 months and then every several weeks
lor lnany years has had some dramatic effect in some cases.
Newer drugs tenned "immune.fluppressant" medications
may also be used in certain cases, as well as quinine type
derivatives. A form of treatment using "bee venom" has
gotten inro the literature lately and I mention It only to
condemn lt at this time. The studies ori it are extremely limited
and the injectioos have a high potential to cause sev.ere
allergic reactio,ns and even death from "anaphylactic" or
aUergic shock. Early evidence in this therapy does not look
promlllill8, although it is being used widely in the Soviet Union .
at this time.

'J

DEAR DR. LAMB_ 1 am a
JO.year-old male und 1 used to
work in a factory. Now I ':York
in a restaurant. 1 work hard ,
long hours day a fter day. My
· 1osmg
· werg
· 11
pt'O bl eln IS
1 . I' m
6 feet and weigh · only 125
pounds and I'm still losing.
On week-&lt;!nds 1 gain a little
· and then 1 lose ·it during the
week. On a week-&lt;!nd, fur example, 1 eat sweet potatoes
(two helpings ), chocolate
cakes, brownies, ice cream,
peanut butter, butter,
homemade bread, pies and 1
l&gt;ven try a brand of stuff
· that's supposed to put weight
on. Still I keep burning it all
up at work .
On vacation 1 gain weight
but right after the vacation it
l'Oines off again. I've heard
U1at football players cal
something that puts weight
on that's · a secret recipe .
What is it and how do you
make it ' I've had a good
medical check-up and at one
time I wa s !70 pounds before 1

.

addressed envelope for it to
me m care of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1:&gt;51, Radio City SI&lt;J.
tion, New York , NY 10019.
The only ways you can lose
tile energy after it's been
U~rough your system is if you
1\ave a disease . Diabetes, for·
example, causes the loss of
lar•h. e amounts of su•ar
and
o
its energy in U\e urine . Your
body m~y use an . excess
amount of calories as occurs
in people who have an overactive thyroid or thOSI! with any
serious illness. Canc-er and
tuberculosis both may cause
· weiglll loss because they affeet the body's use of calories
even at rest. Even a person
who has had recent surgery
usually will lose weight
despite eating the same
amount bee~ use of the increased energy rl'quired to
run the body at rest until adeqoate reuovery has occurred .
Sometirnes the problem is
lack of absorption of fO&lt;xl
·materials. That can occur· if
U1erc arc nul enough enzymes
in the digestive system or if a
person has a diarrhea-like il·
!ness. In any' case. · anyone

. .

... ~.F41/h:

who cats t!normou.s amounl')

DEAR READER -Weight
loss is a symptom. Your body
is an ener!:O' converter. When
you consume food you're put·
ting energy in the system.
The energy is then used tu"run
your body .to enable you to do
physical work or it 's stored e:ts
fat. You can neither create
nor desiroy energy, so once
the food energy has been absorbed into your bloodstream
alter digestion. you're stuck
with it .
To give you a better idea
about energy and its relationship to the body I &lt;~Jn sending
you 'l'hc Hea lth Letter
nwnber !&gt;-2, Understanding
Your Energy System . Other
readers who would like this
issU.eci:inseml50ccnt.swilha
long, s tamp e d, self-

of ca lori es and still loses
weig ht deserves a very
t:areful examination to find
out if there is a n underlying
medical problem or not and
what can be dune about it.
Don't overlook the effect of
nt!rvuusne.ss un weighl loss.
Individuals who are ne1·vous
and t~nse urten are con.stcmtly domg small amounts of
'"physi ca l activity which
enables the body to use a lot
more c-.lunes .
You a lso have to consider
the fact that you may be normal ; 1:&gt;5 pounds for a six-foot
man of moderate to small
bone frame isn't necessarily
bad . The way we judge
whether you arc fa t ol' not is
l&gt;y how much fat is
undemea ththeskin .

Fair issue clarified .-..

II

peopletalk
By KENNETH R. CLARK
Uaited Press lnternaUoual
NIX NIXON SAYS JACK &gt; Politicians never die, they just
become elder statesman - or so hopes Richard Nllron . This
from Clllumnist Jack Allderson who says the ex-president
would like nothing better than to be publicly "exonerated" of
Watergate guilt with an appointment as an emissary to some
foreign country. Anderson told cadets at the Air;.. Force
Academy in Colorado Wednesday that Nixon hopes w
persuade some administration - current or future - that his
contacts in China and Russia could be turned to good use. Adds
the columnist: " f hope no presidentlalls lor it ."
POTfED: How green Cliat Eastwood's valley was, was a
matter of concern to Monterey County sherills recently. Seems
a field of 6-foot marijuana plants was foWJd on the king of
spaghetti macho's ranch in California's Carmel Valley. In aU,
there were 430 large marijuana plants ready for harvesting on
two lots, one of them Eastwood's. But officials say the actor
had nothing to do with planting the pot. They arrested Eugene
Lutz, 56, a caretaker on the ranch who officers said subleased
the property from the people to whom Eastwood rented it.
RETURN TO ETERNITY: When Colwnbia Pictures shot
the Academy Award-winning film "From Here w Eternity "
back in 1953, Burt Lancaster used a broken bottle Ul stop a
barroom brawl between Frank Sinatra and Eroest Borgnloe.
Thursday, WWiam Devane did the honors with Joe Pantollanu
in the Sinatra role and Peter Boyle playu;g the Borgnine part.
Columbia Is sh~ting Eternity again in Hollywood, this time as
a SlX-ho~ rrunr~nes for NBC-TV. But will that jagged bottle
remam tn the scnpt? The point stiU is beq argued. Sex scenes
wW be far more explicit than they were in the movie but
violence these days Is taboo oo TV, and in the final cuWng
Devane may have' to do the old Lancaster bit bare-handed.
'

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915-3301

4

•

. CHEITIR, OHIO

-ENROll N«M!

Phone: Chestw 985-3595

· row : Head Coach William Jewell, Todd Rawlings, Chuck
Stanley, John Barton, Vince Smith Joe Roush Mike
Weaver, and assistant coaches Gordo~ Spencer and Lewis
Hall.

Rebuilding Year At Wahama
By Gary Clark
After losing 16 seniors
due to graduation, newly
appointed head coach Bill
Jewell finds himself in a
rebuilding year at the helm
of the Wahama White
Falcon football team.

Jewell, a 1963 graduate of
Wahama, replaces Marcus
Rice , who guided the
Falcons to one of their
finest seasons in the
school's history with an 8-2
record and a ninth place
rating in the SSAC's final

sophomores and seven
(reshman reported for
practice on Aug. I.
This year's grid squad is
highlighted by the entire
1977 backfield, which
returns intact . Unfor·
tunately, the offensive line .
and the entire defensive
unit, save for one, must be
replaced.
The famed linebacking
corp of 1977, in Brei
Holbrook, Dave Elias,
Greg Blessing, and Kurt
Sayre will be Jewell 's
biggest loss from a year
ago.
In the White Falcon
preseason scrimmage last
week, the local gridders
held Hamlin scoreless
while reaching paydirt on
at least two occasions .. The
·Wahama defense, in the
scrimmage, consisted of no
less than 10 new faces with
only Tim Rickard having
any experience to speak
about.
Joining Rickard as

poll.
Despite
losing
an
astronomical figure of
seniors , Coach Jewell
greeted
some
40
prospective candidates
three weeks ago when 14
seniors, 11 juniors, eight

New Coach Guides
White Falcons
By Frank Stanley
practices.
Despite losing 16 players through
Wahama Head Football Coach WIUiam
graduation, Jewell said the .team wo\lld
Jewell would probably be the first to admit
he would make a terrific baseball coach.
have the service oll4 battle-tested seniors
A WHS graduate ll!mBelf, Jewell atand 12 Juniors during the 1G-week session.
A total of 41 players are out for this
tended Glenville State College in !963, as a
team.
lreslunan. However, throughout the next
. With the Falcons lacing one of the
Jeven years before receiving his B.A.
toughest
schedules in the school's history,
1egree from West Virginia State, Jewell
Jewell might need everyone of them.
•pent · much of his time playing
Games against Hannan and Federal
lrofesaional baseball lor a Philadelphia
Hocking which Jewell referred to as
Phllllea fann team.
.traditional willB have been scrapped in
1 .After giving up baseball, the ex-pitcher
lavo.r of powerhouses Meigs and Spencer.
jecided to finish up his studies at WVS and
oegan teaching at Southern Local.
Jewell said the Falcons are already'
During this period, Je,.lell became
gearing up for their first game against
acquainted with high sch(M)I football,
Wayne-intent on winning.
nltlaUy as an assistant and later as head
~~ we have never beaten them . We're
.:oach of the particular program.
·
waiting
to do something we have. never
He stayed at Southern Local lot eight 1
done
before
and start the season off right,"
years before deciding to take tl]e place of
Jewell
said
.
the departing _Marcus Rice.
said.
Admittedly, the first year coach has had
"We plan to have an outstanding year.
to spend much of his time during swnmer
We'il
take one game at a time, surprise
training adjusting to the new environment
some
people
and win a lot of games," he
at Wahama.
added.
"It's a difficult situation. I've spent a lot
Beoides the varsity team, Jewell Is also
of time learning about the abilities of the
interested
in other levels of the program.
players, but I'm still shuffling,'' Jewell
To
get
yougsters
In football early, Jewell
said.
bas
propoaed
the
creation
of a flag football
Still, Jewell is confident this adleague
lor
Wahama
district
elementary
l~ment period will not adverselY. afstudents.
Besides
the
creation
of a fresh. feet the White Falcons lootbaU program.
man
team,
Jewell
said
he
Is
a!Jo
interested
In fact, he's looking forward to winning 10
in
forming
two
separate
football
squads
games. The team went 8-2 last year.
for
seventh
and
eighth
graders.
At the
Jewell added he has been impressed
present
time,
the
junior
high
scholars
play
with the work and overall morale
on
one
te~m.
displayed by the team during preseason

returning lettermen are :

John
Barton,
Ken
Hankinson , Mike King,
Kevin Roush, Jack Smith,
Rick Barnitz and Vince
Weaver.
Looking ahead to the
White
Falcons
grid
schedule, two teams are
missing from the 1977 card
in Federal Hocking and
Hannan with the Meigs
Mauraders and Spencer
Yellow Jackets returning
to locw slate alter
several -Jjllts of absence.
This year, Wahama
plays the majority of its
contests on Saturday with
six games scheduled for
the seventh day of the
week.
In fact, all five of the
Falcons home dates are

Rookie Bush replaces
veteran Bob ]ohnso.n
CINCINNATI (UP!) -The
"original Bengal" will be ,
psdng the llldelines Sunday. '
Veteran
Cincinnati
Bengals' center Bob Johnson,
the first player ever drafted
by the team, and who Ukea to
call himself "The Original
Bengal,'' has lost his starting
job to rookie Blair Bush.
Bengala'
coach
Blll
Johnaon (no relation), calling
It one of his roughest tasks
. ever aa a coach, informed
Johnlon that he wiD be
rllfllaced by Bush in Sunday's
N:FL regular season opener
,galnst the Kansas City

f'hle!ll.

·AU AGES

Jerome Roush, and Bobby Carson. Second row: Assistant
Coach Keith Sayre, Jack Smith, Tim Young, Fred Smith,
Tim Roush, Jell Fields, 'l'im Roush, VInce Weaver, Rick
Bamitz, Tom Roush, Kevin Jones and Eddie Roush. Third

197$ WAHAMA HIGH WHITE FALCONS--First
row, left to right : Peanut Harris, Raymond Kimes,Bobby
Elias, Larry Gibbs, Shawn Fields, Larry Hesson, Jeff
RoUllh, Jell Stafford, Shawn Paugh, Donald Roush,

JoiNon has started 139 of
the Berwals'14:1 pmes in the
'-"' it 10 yean, mlulng the
;J!i1er lour games only
baaruae of a broken anltle.
When BWlh was drafted out
of the · University of
Wuhingtoo earlier this year,
Benaala olficlala said he
would be groomed "to
eventually nplaee JohiiBM."
"Evwnt•lly'' came sooner
than expected.
"I don't know any other
w~ to II)' It, but we've got to
IPl wllh who hu lmpnued ui
the 111011 and Blair Bulh hu

lmprelllled us as a center,''
said Bill Johnson. "Blair does
a better job of run-blocking
oo the noseman. I could've
started Bob and eased Blair
in, but that's just not the way
to go about it."
Reacted Bob Johnson, "I'm
disappointed to a degree, but
I can understand II. I can't
say I'm devastated by what
happened. Blair has done
very weU. U, people are
honest abuut it, you can
objectively understand the
decision.
"There COO'Ies a time when
til- thlnp happen. I don't
lalow what will happen as the
year goes on. But It's not my
!feclalon anyway. I told them
I'd play any pCIItton they'd
want - tackle , guard.
They've been good to me. I'll
do. whatever I can f..- them."
Jollllon, a star at the
Un!verlllty It T - last
decade, waa Clndnnatl'a No.
1draft choice in 18111 when the
BeDpil began play.
Therelaach8nceJoh111011
could will Ida liartlnc Job
back later in tilt 1111011.
"We have to 10 from week
to week with lhll,'' aplained
BW John10n. "We're 1011W to

WAHAMA SCHEDULE

Sept. 1
Sept. 8
Sept. 16
Sepl . 22
Sept . 30
Ott. 6
Oct . 14

Ott. 21
Ott. 28 ·

watch it closely."
Said Bush about getting to
start Sunday, " It caught me
by surprise. Bob's been
playing weD, but I think I've
been playing well, roo. I knew
I'd get a chance to play. I'm
just happy to get an
opportunity to play a Uttle bit
more. It's going to be fun. "

UMP INJURED
ST. LOUIS ( UPI)
Umpire Satclr DavldJon of
.Well Jeflenon, Ohio, bad to
leave the game between the
Cincinnati Reds and St. Loull
Cardlnala ThurSday nisht
after he sot a IJ)IInter in his
right eye from a lroken bat.
Lou Brock broke his bat oo
.an Infield grounder and a
!lpllnttr from the shattered
bat went through an opening
in Davidson 'a mask.
The 1!pllnter was removed
in the Cardinal tlreulng room
and Davldlon . wu taken to
tbe holpttal to be examined
by en eye l!pecllllat. Paul
Pryor replllced Davidson.
behind the plate.

At Wayne
At Kyger Creek
Meigs
Open
Southern
At Mil ton

Spencer

WAHAMA HIGH SCHOOL
197S FOOTBALL ROSTER
SR
SR
SR
SR
SR

John Barton
Bobby Elias
Ken Hankinson
Mike King
Eddie McClure
Todd Rawlings
Tim Rickard
Joe Roush
Kevin Roush
Kreig Sayre
Jack Smith
Vin~e Smith
Chuck Stanley
Dwayne Williamson
Rick Barnitz
Bodie Davis
Jeff Fields
Mark Gilkey
Kevin Jones
Tim Roush
Tom Roush
Tim Roush
Fred Smith
Vince Weaver
Tim,&amp;' oWJg · .
Bobby Carson
Shawn Fields
Larry Gibbs
Peanut Harris
Larry Hesson
Raymond Kimes
Donald Roush
Eddie Roush
Travis Gray
Shawn Paugh
Jeff Roush
Jerome Roush
J efl Stafford
Kendall Weaver"
Mike Weaver

DETROIT I UP!) - The
Detroit Tigers Thursday announced l,he recall of pitchers
Steve Baker and Sheldon
Burnside plus outfielder
Dave Stegman from their
AAA farm team at Evansville
as soo n as th e Triplets
co mplete their American
Association season.
Baker was 1\-1 with a 3.35
ea rned run average for the
Triplets. while Burnside was
13-5 with a 3.54 mark. Centerfielder Stegman hit .263 with
14 hom e runs and 57 RBI.

~

G
B
B
T
T
E
T
T
B
B
B
G
G
G
B
G

SR
SR
SR
SR
SR
SR
SR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR
JR

c

WI. No.
iHI 170 60

s.a !50 42

ii-10
5-10
5-10
!&gt;-10
~

5-10
5-11
iHI

5·9
!&gt;-7
5-10
!&gt;-10
5-7
!&gt;-11
5-11
5-11
5-&lt;i
5-IO
. 5-7
6-1

170
190
165
160
175
185
1:&gt;5
150
180
!85
170
!55
150
160
165
210

12
70
75
89
79
78
25
23
35
71
65
69
14

66
52
73
33
50
63
80
40

B
145
B
170
C
140
G
170
E
150
s.a
B
B 6-1 165 44
E 5-9 150 81
so B fHj 125 46
so B 5-7 140 10
SO T !&gt;-II 165 72
so B 5-7 160 30
so E 5-10 170 82
so 'I' 5-11 165 73
so E iHI 140 84
so E 5-7 130 86
FR B 6-1 170 41
FR B 5-9 !55 31
FR C fHj 1,55 58
FR B 5-:i 100 36
FR G 5-5 125 62
FR c 5-10 !50 53
FR B iHI 130 42

.

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RIVER RESULTS
CINCINNA'I'I (UP!)
Flight to Bagdad, with
Homero Hidalgo on aboard,
easily beat Crimson Momma
by seven lenghts to win
Thursday's $4,600 allowance
race a t River Downs Race
Track .
Flight to Bagdad ran the
mile and 70 yards in H3 2-5
and paid $8.80 .
A 1-7 Daily Double of
Crimson Faith and J . H Pride
paid $177.12.

Polyester ,no·ti

Park. C.thollc .
At Duval . HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. (UP!) to the dote of moturity.
Nov . .4
Buffalo
Nov . 10
At Winfield -' The New York Jets
announced today ·that Head
Coach Walt Michaels has
agreed Ill a new multi-year .
contract. Michaels was in the
OHIOAN STILL IN
second year of a three-year
EDISON, N.J. (UP! )
contra ct. Terms were not
Ohio State University announced .
Tht A1henl County
standout golfer John Cook
·" It's great to know that I 1
Savlng1 &amp; lNn Co.
goes into the.fourth round rl have the support of tbe Jets'
Sa&lt;ond St.
the U.S, Men's Amateur golf man age m e nt ,'' said
Pomeroy, Ohio
tournament today at Edison , Michaels, who took over last
N.J ,, the only Ohioan still season after Lou Holtz
alive In the week-long abruptly quit the season
tournament.
before with one game left.
John Cook defeated Arthur
Whaley of Wilmington, Del., 4·
and 3 In Thursday's third
round: Jeffrey Johnson of
Mansfield loot to John Jones
rl Lakeland, Fla., 1-up.
SAN DIEGO (UP!) Larry Roberta, bead trainer
at the University of
California-San Diego,
Thursday was named trainer
of the Sail Diego Clippars of
the National Basketball
Association.
Irv Keze, vice-prelldent ill
charge of operations for the
Clippers, said Roberta, 28,
al.lo will be in charge of
travel arrangements for the

By ED McFAlL
McGlynn makes.
PHILADELPHIA (UP! ) Mc-G lynn had indicated he
A federal court judge has was willing Ul make an
continued lor at least 15 days urunediate ve rbal ruling on a
his ban against a strike by request by the baseball club
major-league
baseball owners to continue the ban
umpires and noted there were against the strike by the
"very serious issues raised umpires. The leagues claim a
that
require
some current five·year co ntra ct
reflection."
has a no-strike clause.
With the agreement by
But
late r , McG lynn
attorneys for the Maj or reflected, "I think In fa irness,
League Umpires Association I give 1t the utmost
and the American and co ns id era ti on. Ther e are
National Leagu e, U.S. crucial issues, ve ry se rious
District Court Judge Joseph is.sues raised that require
McG lynn Jr . Thursday some reflection."
continued a hearing on the
The :&gt;2 umpires went on
strike last Friday , claiming
dispute until Sept. 15.
This came after attorneys the leagues had fa iled Ul
for the association said they negotiate in good faith over
were willing Ul wait lor the job--related issues. But after
"findings of fa ct," or the one day in which clubs used
written opinion that would amateur
and
co ll ege
explain
any
decis ion umpires, the regular umpires
we re ord ered back by
McG lynn 's temporary
restra
ining order .
THISTLE RESULTS
The
umpires walked out
.
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
after
claiming
the leag ues
(UP! ) ~ Swinging Affair,
refused
to
bargain
on 21
ridden by Steve Gribeheck,
issueS,
.
including
vaca
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won the featured $5,000 eighth
tenure
,
job
securi
ty
a nd
ra ce
at
Thistledown
increases
in
the
current
$52
Thursday, goin g the six
per
da
y
expense
furlongs in I: 12 4-5.
A 8-9-2 Trifecta of Mr. allowances.
Annual wages are not an
Xaveria , Widsor Sir and Stop
issue.
The sala ry of t he
Talking paid $715.50. There
umpires
curren tl y ran'g es
were 66 winning tickets.
fr
om
$16,:&gt;00
to $39,000, based
A !&gt;-1 Daily Double of Go
on
longe
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The average
Ho t Shot a nd Clems
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is
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lmperator paid $115.80.
A crowd of 4,003 wagered
$417,629.

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�; - The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pumcruy , 0 ., Fnda y, S.:pt. I, 1978

~The Daily Sentinel, Midtlleport-Pomer·oy', 0 ., Friday, Sept. 1, 1978

Relaxed Yanks win,6-2 l
By BILL MADDEN
,.
UPI Spurts Wriler
The New York Yankees
see mi ng ly got all their
rnjuries and turmoil out of
their systems earlier in the
season and now are happy
and relaxed under low-key
Manage r
Bob
Lemon.
They're winning · more, too.
Th ur sda y night's 6-2
\ictory ·over the Baltimore
Orio les was the Yankees'
seve nth straig ht - 'their
luugest winning streak this
) ea r - and moved them to
w• thin 6'r~ games of divisionleadi ng Boston in the
American League E ast.
Under Lemon, the Yankees
are

25· 11

-

percent age of .694 as
compared to 52-431 .547 ) when
the combative Billy Martin
was in charge.
" Lemon 's kept things
quiet, " said Yankee firstbaseman Chris Chambliss.
" He 's settled us. Baseball is
fun again . You go out to win ,
sure , but you lik e to ha ve fun
in the process .''

" We' \•e got a rel a xed
atmosphere no,w, " ec hoed
Celiever Ri ch GosS&lt;Jge. ''He

(Lemon) ha s been ·'a positive
influence. He just lets us go
out and play. There's a lot of
l&lt;llent here and the players
know it. "
Bucky Dent, wh o broke an
ll-for-25 weak , doubled and

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Brewers 1-6, Indians t-lZ
Andre Thorntoo belled a
three-run homer and Tom
Veryzer and Rick Manning
each drove in a pair of runs lo
bring the Indians the
nightcap victory. Ben
Oglivie's \5th homer &lt;tnd
Mike Caldwell's three-hit
pitching woo the first game
for Milwaukee .
Twins 4, tigers 1:
Rich Chiles and Glenn
Adams hit horoe runs to
combine for three of the
Minnesta RBI. Geoff Zahn,
lll-13, got reliel help from
Mike Marshall, who eamed
his 17th save.

-~

M1jor Le•gue Standings

INDIANAPOLIS ( UPI) - .
The Indianapolis Racers anOOWlced Thursday goalie Don
·"Smokey" McLeod and
leftwinger Pierre Jarry have
been declared free agents.
Both were drafted by the
FALCON RETURNING LETTERMEN-H~ad Coach William Jewell has eight retu~ing lette':ffien to start the se.ason off
Racers earlier this swmner at the Bend Area school this weekend. Pictured left to right: Mike K;ing, Kenny Hankrnson, Kevm Roush, Jack Smrth, Tim
from Edmonton.
Rickard, Vince Weaver, Rick Barnitz and John Barton.

·he 'll be running into a
Cleveland defensive unit that
proved itself tough during
preseason play.
With a veteran defensive
backfield and lineba cking
crew, the Browns will be
bolstered by the return of allpro defensive tackle Jerry
Sherk, who was out much of
last season with knee
injuries.
Offensively, the ofteninjured Brian Sipe is healthy
and back at quarterback . But
running back Greg Pruitt is
expected to put excitement in
the
Browns'
attack .
Cleveland has been troubled
by injuries to off ensiv e
linemen
throu gh
the
preseason, however, and pass
prote ction looms as a
question mark.
The 49ers may be able in

Losing streak halted ~
J;ly DONALD BERNS

ST UlUIS (UPI ) - Tom
Seaver sees some parallels
between
his
present
Cincinnati Reds and two
pennant-winning New York
Mets teams on which he
played.
Seaver and a Cincinnati
hitting splurge beat the St.
Louis
Cardina ls
11-6
Thursday night and the thirdplace Reds sU!yed within
seven games of the National
League West-leading Los
Angeles Dodgers ,
" In 1969 the Mets were
about eight games out with
five or six weeks to go, and
we won by abo ut eight
games," Seaver said . "Jerry
Koosman and I won )9 of our
last 20 games over the la st six
weeks.
" And in 1973, we were in
last place and moved past the
other clubs to take the title .
I've seen it happen before."
Seaver, pitching with three
days' rest, gave up four hits
and one rwt in seven innings
against the Cardinals before
leaving the game as part of
the Reds' rowtion strategy .
The Reds have II games
remaining with the Dodgers
and San Francisco Giants
ahead of them in the
swndings . Manager Sparky
Anderson plans to start
Seaver four times in those 11

Seed and Milling
HEADQUARTERS

games.
Seaver had little worry
about his victory , improving
his record in 12-13, when he
left the game. The Reds,
e&lt;ploded for seven runs in the
second inning and led Hl-1
when Seaver was relieved .
George Foster, Joe Morgan
and Johnny Bench hit homers
for the Reds, who won their
first game in seve\\ outings.
The heavy hitting overshadowed the grand slam homer
by St. Louis' Wayne Garrett
in the ninth.
Foster led off . the big

NORTHFIELD RESULTS
NO RTHFIELD , Ohi o
(UPl ) - Full of Coal won the
first division of the fifth leg of
the Ohio Sires Stakes
Thursday night at Northfield
Park, trotting the mile in 2:06
2-5 .

The winner beat J Tood by
a neck .
Dorians Music won the
se~ond division in 2:06to grab
the lead heading into the
$103,000 Ohio Trotting Classic
at Scioto Downs in Colwnbus
next week.
The eight top finishers after
these five legs will compete in
the championship Sept. 8.
Finalists are Dorians
Music , Full of Coal, Ah Go
Project, Hominy Ros , Lewis
Lincoln, Two Twenty Dream,
J Todd and Thimper J P.
Headed toward Scioto
Downs as "also eligibles" are
SUlr City Coaltown and Count
Coalwwn.

second inning with a solo
homer and drove in another
run with a single before the
inning ended. ·
"l don't think I've ever
done that before," Foster
said . " I'm happy to get two
hils in a game, but two in one
inning is great."
Foster's homer carried into
deep center field to a mark
about 420 feet from the plate .
It was the first homer of the
season hit into the center field
batting background at Busch
SU.dium .
"!didn't think it was going
out because it was dead
center ,'' he said. "l was
watching the centerfielder,
and he was going back as if he
had it ...
St. Louis starter Silvio
Martinez was the victim of
the second inning hitting, and
his record is 11-7.
"We still came back and
scored six runs," catcher Ted
Simmons said. "They were
just due to win."

14 players

ClNCIN)IIATl (UP! ) - The
Cincinnati Reds today
recalled contracts of 14
players, only six of whom will
report in lhe par'int club.
Most of the players are
from the Indianapolis farm
team in the American
Association which Thursday
night won the league's
eastern division and go into a
besl.,f-.seven playoff series
tonight .
Six players will join the
Reds at the end of those
playoffs: Outfielder Champ
Summers who lead the AA
with 3!i home runs and 24
RBis; infielder Ron Oester,
third
baseman
Harry
SCIOTO RESULTS
Spilman, catcher Don Wemer
COLU MBUS (UP! )
who was with the Reds at the
Quackenbush, driven·by R.B. sta rt of the season until July
Shafer, won the fealllred race 3, and pitchers Don DuMoulin
at Scioto Downs Thursday and Mario Soto .
night, trotting the mile in
The other eight players who
2
will not join the Reds are
'led from the pitchers Raul Ferreyra,
quarter-pole to defeat Abaron David Moore , Angel Torres,
by a neck. SpoUlte Hill came Doug Capilla and infielder
in third.
Mike Grace of IndianapOlis,
The trilecUI combination of and pitchers Frank Pastore
2,1 and 6 retllmed $2,401.20. and Rick O'Keeffe and
The crowd of 4,034 wagered infielder Rafael
$298,314.
Domingo from Nashville.

'~ackenbush

SEE OUR NEW SHIPMENTS
OF FALL CLOTHING

f 10% OFF ON All WINTER COATS I
fiiVIIIInglteunly

Specl1l Appolntmlllll

OPEN DAILY
9:00..5:00
Phone 304.112·3312

Am erica n League
East
W. L . Pet.
Boston
New York
Milwa uke
Detro i t
Balt l mre
Cleve lnd
Toronto

B4

48

GB

.036

54 .588
57 571
59 553
60 .545
75 .432
55 80 .407
west
,
W. L. Pet.
I&lt; an Ci ty
71 60 .54 7
Cal i f
70 63 .52 6
Texas
65 65 .500
Oaklan d
62 n .463
M inesola
58 75 .436
Chicago
56 75 .427
Seattle
49 82 .374
Thursday 's Results
Milw I , Cleveland 0. 1s t
Cle11 eland 12, M i l w 6, 1n d
New York 6, Balt imor e 2
77
76
73
72
57

6 17

811
11
12
27
30 ' J
GB
2

5',
101 l

14
15

21

I All Tim es E DTl
Cali fo rn ia ( Hrtrt1 e ll ' 5-81

at

( lnd game)
M l lw
001 030 020- 6 8 3
Cleve
300 513 OOx - 12 A-7 1
Trav ers , Mueller (4 ). St e in
(5) and Martinez ; Weils , Kern
(91 lind Diet . W -~ Waits , 10- 13.
L ~ Travers ,
9-8 . HR s Cl e v e
land , Thornton !21 L Pruit1 ( ~I .
-"N.Y .
000 003 102- 6 11 2
Ball
020 000 000- 2 6 1
T i d row, Lyle \. (71
and
Munson ; Me: Gregor , Stanh ouse
(9) and em psey . w -- Tidrow,
6·. L - M c Gregor , 12 -1 2. HR New York , Plniell a (4 ) .

Victories

National Leavue : Blue, SF 16
7 : John , LA and Gri msley, M i l
16-9 ; N lekro, All 16 14; ~err y ,
SO 15 -6_: HQOton , LA 15-8.
Ame-ncan Leag~ue : Guidr';'1
NY 19 2; F lanagan , Bait 17 11 ;
E c kersley ,, Bos 16 5; Caldwe l l.
Mil 16 8; Tan ana , Cal 16 9 ;
Pa lm er ; Ba i t 16 12.
Earned Run Avera;e
{Based on 1:26 Innings pitchedJ
National League : Vuckov ich ,
Sf .L 2.19 ; Roger s, Mtl 2.47:
Swan , NY 1. 49 ; Blue . SF 2.58 !'
Kneooer . SF 7.69 .
American Leag_ue : Guidr y,
NY 1.87; Matlack, Tex 2.26 ;
Caldwell , M il 2.43 ; Palmer ,
Batl 2.59; Goltz , Minn 2.13.
, Strikeou1s
National League : Richard ,
Hou 24 4; N iekro, At!
205 ;
Seaver , Ci n 169 ; Montefusco,
'SF 147 ; Blyl even , Pitt and
Blue . SF 145
American Leatue : Guidry,
NY
2Q7;
Ry a n ,
Ca l
205;
Leonard . K C 1.45 ; Fl anagan ,
Bait 142 : Eckersl ey , Bos 126.

Cl nri
070 012 010- 11 14 2
St .L
000 00 1 014 - 6 9 0
·Seaver , HUme (8 ), Bair ( 9)
and Bench. Corre ll ; Mart inez.
Br uno {2). Falcon e { 4), Thpmas
(6). ·Lopez (9l. and Si mmons. W
- Seaver , 12, 13. L- Mutinez , 8-

NIGHT
SHIFT

Stolen Bases

National League : Moreno ,
Pitt 56 ; Lopes, LA 38; Taveras,

e v e nin~

at

s,·mm f' &lt;:

MIDDLEPORT BOOK
STORE

Hunting season
begins .Sept. 8

"OHIO 01JI'DOORS"
By Jerry Pickrell
Ohiu Flshermaq Magazine
Distributed by UPI
Hunting season isn't far off
and now's a good time to start
getting ready for a day spent
in the wOO&lt;Js . Cleaning guns
and oiling up old boots are a
part of the heriU.ge. Things
just wouldn't be the same
without these rites.
But there 's another
important piece of gear you
should also pay atention to:
yourself.
Chances are your job
doesn 't require the same kind
of exercise that hunting will.
Even if you do strenuous
work for a living, it's a good
bet that it means little
walking or running uphill .
And i'f you're a bowhunter,

5 PIECP!
. GROUP .
FROM SCIOTOVILLE, OHIO

TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY

fOOo/o

\ \ .'

~i

J

I ; (li··,
. - - ---- -1

UPHOLSTIIY

------ --

POMEROY, 0.

992-3629

this

and Clar k. SF 88 ; Smi th . LA 87 . can Asso ciation season .
American League : Rice . Bos
114 ; ' Sta ut&gt; , Det 104 ; Hisle, Mil
95 ; Thornton , Cle\1 85 : Thomp .
son , Del 82 .

SELECTION
AVAILABLE
NOWI AT THE
99 Mill St., Midd

THE MEIGS INN

ba ckfield retumin'g from 18&gt;1
yea r 's squad . Senior Ed
Whitt , junior Jay Bray an\!
sophomore Tim Murphy all
weigh bet ween 250-270
pounds . Arc hie Mea do ws, u
140 pound suphomore , will
open at quarterback.
The Wildcat defense wrll
Y r. fea ture Ronni e Pa ck, a
12 senior, and Kerry O u r~. &lt;t
12
12
12
•
. 12
WILDCAT SC HEDULE
12 Sept .,1
At Symm es Va l le y
12 Sept . 8
Hannan , W . Va .

l. uach Larry Cr c m c.c n tl' Valley .
Hall!ran Trac-e Wildcats will
HTHS will try to improve
attempt to gel the 1978 grid on its 2-ll of last year ,
season off to a fl ying start The Wildcats have a heavy

HANNAN TRACE HIGH SCHOOL
FOOTBALL ROSTER 1978
· NO:-Pt.A VER
p us. WI .
M inn
000 010 20 1- 4 7 1
90-Rick Clary
E 165
Det
000 000 100- 1 7 0
62--Earl
Myers
C
16.~
Zahn,
Marshall
( 7l
and
76-Ronnie Pack
T 200
Wynegar ; Young, Hi ller {81 and
Parrish . W- Zahn , 1Q-13 . L 72--Tony Saunders
T 153
Young , 5 - ~ . HRs- Minnesota ,
89-AIIen Waugh
E 160
Chiles ( 1), Adams (7).
13-Bruce E. Wau gh
HB 130
(Only games scheduled )
24--Mike Webb
HB 145
Sports Transactions
12--Eddie
Whitt
HB 155 11
l.nternation•l Lealue
By United Press International
Major League Leaders
By United Press International
Pro Football
Umted Press International
3~Tim Beaver
HB 151 11
Buffalo ~ Sig ned free agent
Batting
W. L. Pet. GB
39-Jay
Bray
FB 155 II
wide · receiv er Larry Wa l ton ,
&lt;Based on 350 •t bats )
Chor lestoo
83 Si .610
kicker Tom
Dempsey
and 114--AIIen Fulks
E 130 11
National
League
Pawtucket
79 57 .581 4.
GAB. H. Pet.
linebacker Mario Ce lotto and 43-Randy Green
HB
142 11
Richmond
70 63 .526 1l lf2 Brrghs At!
126 411129 31387 , placed
wid e
recei ver
Dan ·
85-Keith Jayne
E 130 11
Toledo
69 5 .515 13
Parker Pit
117 462 145 .31385 Fu lton on injur e d r es er~o~e .
Tidewater
66 69 .489 16112 Smi th LA
113 401 125 .312
Los Ange les React i \lated
!~Archie Meadows
· ··
QB 140 11
Clark ' SF
129 484 149 308 p unter -k icker G len Walker and
Rochester
66 70 _.485 17
60-Kerry
Ours
T 200 11
center
Dan
Ry
c
zek
.
Col om bus
59 75 .440 23
~;~~o~~ i~F
1~~ ~~~ 11~ : ~8~ New York Jets --'-' Signed 86-Jonny Saunders
E 148 11
Sy r acose
48 BB .353 35
Whitfield SF
122 399 121 .303 Head Coach Wa lt Michaels to a 74--Tim Wright
G' 160 . 11
Thursday's Results
Rose C in
131 547 164 .300 new long term contra ct.
Columbus at Richmond . pdd .,
50-Craig Chapman
G 145 10
Wash ing ton Wai11ed run
Cru z Hou
126 470 141 .300
rain
Concpcn Cin
126 470 139 .296 n ing
back
Al\l in
Maxson ; 57-Dennis Green
G 155 10
Toledo 2, Tidewater 1
How e Hou
117 416 123 .296 c laimed wid e r ecei \ler John
59-David
Montgom•ry
T 149 10
Watson Hou
115 395 117 .296 M c Dan iel.
Charleston 7, Syracuse 4
Ame-rican Le-ague
Ba sketball
63-Lee Mooney
HB 125 10
Today's Games
GAB . .t-r Pet .
San Diego Named as
Columbus at Tidewater
II- Tim MUfphy
FB 145 10
Ca r ew Mi n
125 472 158 .335 trainer Larry Roberts .
Richmond at Toledo
R ice Bos
132 55 1 179 .325
Hockev56-Jeff
Saunders
T 140 10
Charleston at Rochester
Ol iver Tf!x
103 d07 128 . 314
Denver ~ Purch ased defen s e .
7~
Tom
Saunders
T
140 10
Pawtuck,et at Syracuse
Pin iella NY
100 360 112 .3 11 man Jo e Wat son frOm 'Philadel
45-Todd Sibley
HB 135 10
Saturday's Games
Roberts Sea
106 364 112 .308 Phi a .
Munson NY
123.498 149 .2'W
PifiSburgh ~- A n no u n c e d 64-Bruce A. Waugh
Columbus at T idewater
G 140 10
~ Rey nold s Se
119 435 .130 .299 r e t i r c m c n I ol d e t en Se man
Ri c hmond at Toledo
65-Danny
Brumfield
FB
150
9
Whilker
De't
113
40
1
120
.299
Lo
w
ell
MacDonald
.
•
Charles ton at Rochester
LynnBos
1204401 3 1 .298
Colleges
88-Keith Campbell
E 140
9
Pawtucket at Syracuse
Yount M il
99 387 114 .298
M ichig an St ate Named
67-Greg
Webb
QB
145
9
Home Runs
Dave Harsh'man as sistant baS ·
Na tional League : Fosler , Cin ketball coa c h and D'avid M . 54-Mike Waugh
T . 150
9
Major Leig'ue Re-sults
30 ; Smith , LA and Luz insk i, Henry' slrenglt1 and condition
School
colors
:
Red,
black,
and
white.
Nickhame
:
By .United Press tnternational
.
Ph il 28 ; K ingman, Chi, Dawson , ing coach .
National League
Wildcats .. Head Coach : Larry Cremeens. Assiswnt Coach:
Mil and Parker, P ill 23 .
Ba se batl
Mtl
000 001 000- 1 10 0
American League : Rice , Bos
Detro i t Announced the
Cody Boothe. Manager, Dick Meadows. Athletic Director and
Sa n 0go
101 000 31x ~ 6 13 0 36 ; H isle and Tho m as. M i l 29 , recall of p i tchers Steve Baker
Principal, Paul Dillon. Cheerleaders: Karen Stitt, captain;
Frym an , Pir tle (7 ), KnoW les B"vlor , Cal 27 ; Thorn.l on , Cle11 and She ldon
Burnside piU s
18) and Carter ; Rasmussen , 26
outfie ld er Dav e Ste gm an fr om
Lana Church, Melissa Sagraves, Debbie Montgomery, Ca thy
l ee (6 ) and Roberts , Sweet . W
Runs Batted In
their
AAA
farm
team
at
~
Rasmussen , 14 · 10. L National League : Foster , Cin Evan sv il le as soon as th e Angell, Kim Sheets, Amy Fulks, Dianna Angell. Cheerleader
Frv-man , 7.9.
96 ; Garvey,' LA 91 : Parker , Pitt Triplets ron;'lp lete their Ame r i. advisor, Lori Hesson.

THE INN PLACE

10-2

Wildcats open· '78
season this evening

you p~obably haven't used
those muscles si nce last
season.
In times past, men hunted
constantly, there was no need
to get back in condition and
refresh their techniques .
Today we hunt mostly in the
fall and winter. That gives us
sever"! months to gel soft and
out of practice.

BANGOR,Maine(UP! ) Alvin Dark, who managed the
Oakland Athletics when they
won the World Series in 1974,
is coming to Maine to
campa ign for independent
gubernatorial candidate Rev.
Herma n
C.
" Buddy"
Frankland.
Frank land's camparg n
manager Peter Gemma said
Dark will be in Maine for
three days beginning Sept. 22
to campaign for the Baptist
mimster who is trying to
succeed Maine Gov. James
B. Longley as the nation's
only independent governor.

Sept : 22
Sept . 29

Oct . 6
Oct . 13
Oct . 20

Oct . 27
Nov J

K yger Cr eek
AI Gr een
Dawson . B ryant
A t North G a ll ia
AI Ea st ern
Sou thw es t ern
Sou t hern

juni or . Both are big lads wh o
should &gt;1op opposing runners .
Th e Wildcats' non-league
schedule feat ures Hannan .
W. Va . Green , and Coal
Crove .

Tonigh(s games
Greenu p Co . at Wheel e r sburg
Buffa lo -Putn am a t Han na n
W a h ama a t Wayn e
Ba r bour sv il le a l Pt . Pl easa nt
Oak H ill at Coa l Grove
"New Lexing ton at Log an
Mar ie tt a at Athens
Jackson at Logan Elm
Kyger Cree k a t F e de r a l
· Hock i ng
Hannan Tra ce at Sym m es
Va l ley
.
Green L ocal at Sou th west ern
Wat er f ord at Eastern

The
HappyDay5
gang is here.

9

"

On special
Nehi ' cans.

12 oz.

SAVE YOUR RC, NEHI, UPPER 10,
DIET RITE &amp; DAD'S ROOT BEER
BOTILE CAPS FOR CHARITY

RC BOTTLING CO.
MILL STREET
Middleport. Ohio
992 -3542 or 992 -3344

You can combine exercise

with scou tin g trips into the
field to sharpen up on both
countc; . There's no need to go
out and try to run down a deer
to get in shape: In fact it's a
good .idea to start slowly .
Begin by simply taking
daily walks aro und your .,
neighborhood and later
jogging short disU.nces. This
will tone your muscles, but
Ws ~till different from what
you'll have to do later in the
field · Th at's wh ere the
scouting trip comes in.
While you're walking
around in the woods looking
for browse that feeds the
deer, or the old oak tree that 's
a ga thering place for
squirrels, you'll find that
you'll have, to crawl under
deadfalls, ford creeks, climb
banks and other things just
th e way rou will when you're
hunting. Now the exercise filS·
the sport .
Muse les aren't the only
things that you'll be using
differently either. You need
tO get your feet accustomed
to the constant pounding and
twisting an uneven surfaces
you'll encounter . Mt.er you've
oiled those old boots, put
th em on and wear tnem on
your jaunt.s inin the woods .
· They 'll prevent unpleasant .
surprises in the form of
blisters later.
A little preparation now a
cuuple weeks ahead of the
season will make the whole
experience more rewarding
when it counts·.

FALL KICKOFF
SALE!

WANTED

FOR
POMEROY &amp;
MASON, W.VA. AREA

LANDING.

PHONE

OPEN
10 AM TIL 8 PM
•
SATURDAY, SUNDAY &amp; MONDAY

. 9~2r2156

BRAND NEW AND BEAUTIFUL ON THE OHIO RIVER

THE DAILY SENTINEL

, ZINN'S LANDING

BITWIEN

431 Plkt, GIIIIPOIII, OH lUll
1-614-446-i411
Louted lust norlh ottown 011 Route 7 Mlr the S11vtr
Brldgt.

Montreal (Gr im sley 16-9) at
San D iego ( Jones 11 . 12 1. 10
p .m .
New York ( Koosman 3-14 1 at
Los Angeles fRau 12·8L f0 : 30
P.m .
Ph i ladel ph ia (Carlton 12-11 1
at San Fran c isco ( Barr 7-JO J.
10 :35 p .m .
S•turday's Games
New York at Lo s Angel es, 2
Houston al Ch icago
Atlanta at Pi tt sburgh
Ci n cmat t i at St . Loui s
Philadelphi a at San F ran
Montreal at San Dg o, ni ght

Minnesota A, De troit 1
Today•s Probable Pitchers

Return Engagement

toro~ 10 tJetferson 7-10 ), 1·1J .m .

MiiW
01 0 000 000- I 3 0
c reve
ooo 000 000- - o 6 o
Caldwell and Moor e: Pa )(ton
ams Pru i fl. Oiaz . W- CaldweiL
17 -8. L ~ Pa x ton. 9·8. HR "
Milwau kee , Ogl i v ie.t.15) .

•

P, !f ilnd k•cha r di, !&gt;0 34,
Sm i th , s o 37
American League : LeF lo re ,
Del ~9 ; Cr u z. Sea 46 : 01\on e
Oa k 44 , Wil js, Tex 47; W ilso n:
KC 35.
Pitching

NEWSPAI!ER
CARRIERS

AVAILABLE AT ZINN'S

Pomeroy

-·

In 1939, 'reacting to Germany's invasion of Poland,
Great Britain and France
served an ultimatum on Adolf
Hitler but it was ignored and
two days later the Allies
declared war on . Germany.

by Cincy

GAS AND OIL IS NOW

9'12-2115

~ p. m .

~
-STOP IN

__j

recalled

NOW
OPENI
•

Mulberry Av.e .

CLEVELAND (UPI) The Cleveland Indians traded
outfielder Johnny Grubb to
the Texas Rangers Thursday
night for a player to be
named later.
Grubb, 30, was hittin!1 .265
when traded. He had · 14
homers and 61 runs batted in
with the lndians in 113 games
this year.
Grubb came to the Indians
from San Diego in December
1976 for George Hendrick. He
was out of action much of the
1977 season with injuries.

( ht v•me)

At

GAS DOCK

SUGAR RUN MILLS

~utting

~

Only games schedule~:ll
Ameriun Lei19ue

I

wesr

(N iekro )6· 14 and ·
4-9 )
at
Pitt sburgh
(Robmson 10·5 an d Ki son 4 5)
2, 6:05P .m .
'
Cincinnati (80nhft m 9.4) at
St . Lou is ( Dennv- 11 8 ), 8: 35

·~

-

:

Ch 1cag o ( Stone 10-10 and
Bau m garten 2-1) at Balt imore
(Palmer 16-12 and Briles 3-4),
GB 7. 5: 30 P.m .
Sea file &lt;Mitchell 6-13 ) at New
5
York, ( Hunter 9-4) , 8 p .m .
.
5' '1
Oltkland (Keough 7-11) at
12
Boston fT iant 9-6}. 7 :30p.m .
141 '1 ~ Detroit (Billingham 14·6) at
19
Kansas City ( Leonard 15·H l.
8 :30p .m .
W. L Pet. GB
Te x as
(Jenkins
12 8)
at
Los Ang
79 54 .594
M il wauk ee !Sorensen 15 9). 8:30
San Fran
77 56 .579 2
p .m .
Cil'lc inati
73 61 .545 6 11
~le ver and
(Clyde 5 9 l at
San D ieg o
69 65 .515 101 1 • Mmnesota ! E r ickson 13 -8) , 8::)0
Houston
62 70 .470 161 'J p .m .
Afla~ta
59 13 · . 447
19 ' 2
Saturday's Games
Thursday's Results
Ca l i forn ia at TorontO
San DiegO 6, M ontreal 1
Cl eveland at M innesota
Cin c innati 11, St ." Louis 6
Chi at Ball , 2, IW i -nigh t
Today•s Probable' Pitchers
Oa kland at Boston , night
(A ll Times EDT)
Seattle a t New York , n ight
Houston (R icharO 14-11 ) at
Tex as at Milwaukee, night
Ch icago (KruKow 6 21, 2: 30
Detroit atKa n City, n ight
p.m .
Atlanta

Tribe trades
John Grubb

:

Nat1on•1 Le-ague
East
W. L . Pel.
Phi la
11 59 .546
Pittsbrgh
66 64 .508
Chicago
66 65 .504
Montrea l
61 73 .455
St . Louis
58 75 .436
New Y ork
53 79 .407

Mahl~r

exploit that situation,
a veteran defensrve bne on
the freld that IS anchored by
highly touted ends Cedn ck
Hardman and CJ~veland
Elam. ButSan Francrsco wrll
start r.ookre Danny Bunz, .a
ftrst-r~~d draft choice, 10
the cntrcal middle linebacker
slot.
.
Offensively, the 49ers will
have two rookre . P.ass
catchers - wr~ re~tve~
Terry LeCount an hg e~
Ken MacAfee. But the .brg
mystery for San bFr~ncr~~
wrll be at quarter ac • wr
second-yea r m~n Steve
DeBerg, w~ hasn t played a
a down tn N.FL regular
season competitron .
DeBerg got the Job when
the 49ers made th~ m:~
surprrSing . cut 0
to
preseason, g~vrng the axe
veteran Jrm Plunkett.
Rutigliano isn 't saying, but
the Browns undoubtedly plan
to try to harass the young
sig nal -ca ll er
into
the
mistakes of inexperience.

tAT

Seeds - Bird Seeds - Oyst~r Shells and Grit Fertilizers - Lime- Cement &amp; Mortar - Stock
Salt - Water Softener - Remedies - Salt Utters - Vaccine - Roofing - Paints • Red
Brand Fencing - Baler and Binder Twine
Sprays - Gates.

-

By United _Preu International

.

on their roste(! but Coach
Sam Rutigliano will start
only one - tight end Ozzie
Newsome, a swift first-round
draft choice out of Alabama.
Considerable attention will
focus on the return of
superstar r)lnning back O.J .
Simpson, acquired by San
Fra_11cisco in an off-season
trade with the Buffalo Bills.
Simpson is coming off knee
surgery last year, but team
physicians have concluded
the Juice is physica lly sound.
As a result , McCulley has big
plans for the running back.
"We'd like to get the ball of
O.J .'s hands aboul25 times a
game,'' he said.
But Simpson will be
runni ng behind a lightly
experience d offensive line
that rncludes a rookre nght
guard, Walt Downing . And

:

f--o~ r cr 1311.

Morgan (10), Ben.ch ( 19 ) ; St .
Lou is , Carrett (7) .

-

:

Browns-49'ers game features
running of two great hacks
By ROBER:r SANGEORGE
CLEVELAND ( UPI) The Cleveland Browns and
the San Francisco 49ers
match exciting running backs
in t he Natio na l Football
League seaso n opener
Sunday
al
Municipal
Stadium. but there will also
be some question marks at
several other positions.
The game shapes up as a
battle of youth , particUla rly
where the 49ers are
concerned . San Francisco
Coach Pete McCulley decided
to keep 15 rookies, and
carried over 18 players from
la.St year's squad.
In fa ct, the average 49er
has just slightl y more than
two years NFL experie,nce
and the club will start four
rookies Sunday.
The Browns have 11 rookies

1 . t-tR s - Cin( .nnat l,

·

••• •••
• • ••••• I
•••

Padres &amp;, Expos I
Jerry 'l'umer drove in two
fWIS. with a single and a
double,
while
Eric
Rasmussen, 14-10, went 5 1-3
inninga for the win .

'.

·
-

.,

winn ing

a

j',,

singled for two HBI -in the
Yankee win over Baltimore,
while Lou Piniella smashed
his fourth home run and
scored twice. Sparky Lyle
notched his eighth save with 2 ·
1-3 innings of relief for winner
Dick Tidrow, 6-9.
Elsewhere in the AL, MinnesoUI downed Detroit, 4-1,
a nd Milwaukee split a
doubleheader with Cleveland,
U.king the first game, 1~.
before the Indians came back
in th€ nightcap, 12~ . In the
only National League actior&gt;,
Cincinnati put away St.
Louis, lHl, and San Diego
topped Montreal, 6-1.

·

.

'

I

SOLID WOOD
FAMILY ROOM GROUP
Handcut IOild pln• &amp; lOO'Ib extra heavy nylon lor y•ara &amp;
y•ara of rugged family room uae. Buy by the piece, or save even
mor•· mon•Y by buying tha group.

•CHAIR &amp;OTIOMAN '199.90
3 TABLES • 2 END &amp; 1 COFFEE

• ROCKER 1l59.90

THE WHOLE GROUP

'895

ONTARIO, Calif. (UPI ) pefending U.S . Auin Club
champion Tom Sneva barelv
mi ssed the 200 • mile·
perl)our mark in grabbing the
pole position in Thursday's
time tria ls for Sunday 's
$300,000 California 500 at the
Ontario Motor Speedway. He
was clocked at 199.993 mph in
his Norton Spirit PenskeCosworth.
A.J. Foyt failed in qualify
as mechanics could not
straighten out mechanical
problems•· in his PamelliCollworth before. the 6 p.m.·
deadline. He will have w
qualify Friday and wUJ not be
"ble w swrt the race any
higher than 24th place in a .
fi --l·l of 32 or 33 cars.

• WILSON AUTOGRAPHED
WALTER-PAYTON
FOOTBALL
• 1978-79 PRO FOOT8ALL
SCHEDULE .

,,

�•
6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., nottay , &amp;'Pl. 1. 1978

Announces
birth

Meigs Garden Clubs Associations
offer course in flower arranging
Flower urranging iS an art
WHl one wltich almost anyone
ean master with a little instruct ion and a considerable
;.unounl of pradk:tL

That's what eKperienced
arnuigers say , anyway .

And the questions from
Wginners : .. How do you start
making· a flower arrange-

Do you choose the
fluwers fio·st and then find. a

nHmt '!

L'Onla iner to suit

~hem'!

Do
you tmve a \·ase you want to
w;e and then find flowers to

gu with it ' Or do you decide
~·tm want an ar-ran~emeril for
a certain place and then find
H l'OrllCiiner and flowers for
it 'I "

To a nswer the question s of

Mr. and Mrs. James R.
Ball, New Ha.ven , are · announcing the bfrth of their
first · child, .a daughter ,
Undsay Renee, born on July
17 at the Holzer Medical
Center. She weighed seven
pounds, 14 ounces. Maternal
grandparents are Mr .. and
Mrs. Leonard C. Reed, Route
2, Pomeroy, and paternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. James H. Ball, New
Haven , W. Va .

for the first dass the list of
items to take includes live
look like wurksul art rather
corn sllllks 24 'inches long,
Uoan just flowers stuck in a
seven fruit tree branches, 18
vase, the Meigs County
inches long, &lt;:ighl annual
Garden Clubs Association
flowers such as marigolds,
will offer a course in llasic
zinnias , dahlias , small
design . The first class will be
sunflowers, daisies, ro!oies or
held un Sept. II at the Athens
, any round funn flower; a con·
County Savings and Loan
tainer such as a low bowl or
social room . They will conbasket eight to 10 inches in
tinue for four Wt..&gt;ekS itml the
diameter and about two inregistration fee for the entire
ches deep, a paring knife or
course will be $2. The first
clippers, a notebook, and
t•lass will be .un background •
needleponl or slickwn. The
and basoc floral design and
last two items will be
will consist of about one-third
available for purcha5&lt;' at the
· lecture and two-thirds prac-.
class.
tical work in arranging.
Men, women, teenttgers,
Instructor will be Mr·s.
anyone interested inleal'lling
Janet Bulin who has been at·how to make flower arlive in ,t!arden dull work for
r-.mgements are invited to attend the first class. Advance
registo·ation is nut required .
Additional infonnalion on the
d'asses can be obtained by
contacting Mrs. Roy Holter,
county contact chainnan,
Mrs. Bulin, or Mrs. Howard
Birchfield.
FLOWER ARRANGING WORKSHOPs-Mrs. Janel Bolin, course instructor, displays
If enough interest is indicated by the group enrolled
here several of the items needed for the course which will begin on Sept. II .
~IIlli Dtmist• Manuel .
ing weo·e Mr. and Mrs. Robert fur the first four week course,
A potluck dinner was serv- Bailey , Long Bottom ; Mrs. Uoen a second course in more
~-----.:...-....,.
«1 unlhe Roush lawn. Attend- Cl oeo·yl Bailey and Michael, advancl'll instruction will be off ered.
l•mg Bottom ; Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Manuel and son, Tim,
~~~fie~~"~~~ ~;,' ·:··~~:~
bcginiting arTa'ngen;. who
want Ute ir· a l'l'a ngemenls to

18 years, is an outstanding arranger, and an accredited
judge with the Ohio Associaloon of Gao·den Clubs. She was
a judge at the Ohio State Fair
flower show Utis yeHr, and
will be a leaclJeo· at a judges'
schtXII in October. She was eoehainnan of the Meigs Cowlty Fair flower shoWS·and is an
officer of OAGC.
After the first class the conlent uf succeeding classes
will be delennined by the
ability and the desire of the
students .
Mrs. Bulin emphasizes that
the classes will be heavy on
participation so it is iln•
per·ative that st udents lake
materials with which to work .

When it comes to the affairs
-'&gt;f· prominent people, is it
desire lor public scrutiny or
just · plain nosiness that
motivate s
you ?

Excel~e

in
Design and j Qualit-v I
PomeniJ

.

.

Mr. and Mrs. Roush host
'

multiple birthday celebration
Mr. i-ind \1rs. Harry Roush

hosted at their home Sunday
a celebration of the bir\hdays
&lt;1f Sid Marlut'l. Bobby Bailey .
Edith Manuel , J ean Roush.
l.. c •wls Hudson, Bob Bailey .

.

Crossroads
If plants held conventions,
delegates would feel at home
In 1975. Israel and Egypt · in the Big T!1ickel of east
initialed an agreement Texas. Called a · .. biological
ca lling for Israeli withdrawal crossroads of North
from a small slice of the Sinai Ameri ca, " the aree:t is
Desert in return fur Egyptian overlapped by Appalachian
political concessions and and southern forests , flora
substantial pledges of and fauna of the West and
financial support from the vari eties indigenous to Mexico's subtropics.
United States . .

ENROLL NOW
FOR

FALL TERM
AT

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

•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•SECRETARIAl
'
•BUSINESS
ADMINISTRATION
•
• JR. ACCOUNTING
· •GENERAl OFFI.CE

1 The Poet's 1
1
1
: : ''' '' ' " , , ,,,,, , , , , ., ,: :·:,:,:, ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' "'"'' ' ' ' :;:;:, , ,,, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,,, , , , , , , , ' ' ' '::q
Comer

:
Racine: M!· . and . Mrs. Sid 1 )
Manuel , Lung Bottom.
..

byB~~:.1:~ ~~~~~e~e~;~dba~~~

Begin September 18, 1978
Financial Assistance Available
Approved lor Veterans
Accredited by fhe Accrediting Commission of the
Association of · Independent Colleges and Schools.

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
7l · 02 -0~71B

Helen Help :;:

uS • • •

I

,:,

THEPoEr'sDuTY

ijl! the poet's duty is ·

to climb to the top of Mount

By Helen Hottel: s~~~~:u~he

/
nice Bailey. The 31st wedding ,:,:
.;.;
anniversary of the B"ileys
u
was also celebrated.
WHAT'S SCANDAL FOR THE GOOSE...
DEAR HELEN.
I caught my huslland in bed with his lover- who turned out
to be a man . He's in a profession that doesn't accepl .homosexuality very well. He 'd lose many of his client,; if he "came
out."
I promised I'd keep his secret if he'd give me a divorce un
my terms. He did .
But now he's spreading all kinds of rwnors about me, telling
people I am a terrible mether, and lhalllook him for a finan cia I ride.
So far I have told no one he's gay. Would you blame me if I
did ?- VICTIM OF' ASCANDAL MONGER
DEAR VICJ;IM :
Whether I'd blame you or not is beside the poioil. Have you
eonsidcred this? Huge alimony and child support payments
usually fluctuate (by court ordet) with an ex-husband's earnings. The truth might hit where it hurts most : your pocketbQok.- H.
DEAR HELEN.
'
Aboultbe mother who .. scolded, grounded and forllade TV " .
because her daughter rudely retorts, ..Sit on it !" to her orders:
You said, "Try hwnor, discussion, empathy !remember how it
was when you were 12) and a little 'give' combine'() with
MIST! KING
n~essary rules.''
Since when is rudeness to be treated hwnorously? The girl
needs obedience training .
Proverbs 22 :15 says, ''Foolishness is bound in the heart of a
child; but the rod of correeliun shall drive it far from him ." We
Misti
Da wn
King , can say, "I love my child and don't want to hurt her," bullhe
daughlerof Mr. and Mrs. Boule says, ' 'He that spares his rod hates his son ; but he that
Danny Kin g, Route 2, loves him is diligent to discipline him ." Also, ·:Chasten your
Pomeroy. celebra ted her son. (or daughter) while there is hope , and let not your soul
third birthday Monday with a spare for ltis crying, " (Proverbs 19 : 18) .
party.
A good whack with a wooden spoon will do more to correct
A down cake was served the disrespectful "Sit on it '" than depriving a girl of the show
with ice cream, potato chips, it comes from .
and koolu id . Games were
Our 11). and 12-year-old sons would never think of responding
played with po·izes going to rudely to my huslland or me because we train them in the way
Carla King and Gary King, they should go. And they love us for it, as we love them . -ANJr. Presenting gifts to Misti TOINETTE
were her grandparents, Mr. DEAR ANTOINETTE :
and Mrs. Jack King and Mr.
You missed my point, which was to emphasize the real famiand Mrs. David Campbell, ly problem here : '' the unexpected dash of wills when dolldren
Connie, Kim and Ricky Pat- near the trawnalic 13s." Kids outgrow this miserable time
terson , Roger King, . Kathy sooner if parents spare \be rod and try for understanding.
Jat ks, Roy Johnson, Gary (You may even a~r,ee with me by next swruner. )- H.
and Tony King, Debbie King,
Debbie Derenberger, Carla, PERSONAL to "Should I Take a Chance'" You 've described
Darla , Tinuny, Dick and your father and first husband in graphic terms . Can't you see
Greg King, Belly Wilson , this new man in your life has the same bossy, demanding perDink and R. J ., Tinuny and sonality' Recall how bad your former marriage was, knock off
Brad Knotts, and Rainey the father fixation, and pin this quote to your pillow : .. Those
Duff.
who ignore history are condemned to relive it."- H.

domain , then
write
so that others feel what he
has always experienced.
the poet's duty is
to play Cupid lor lovers (by
writing love ballads)
and to reveal truth for
seekers .
the poet's duty is
to begin with nothing (as did
God )
and create a living wonder .
the poet's duty is ·
to rise fro111 the ashes (as did
the Phoenix)
not once , ·hut a thousand
times and begin again
teven if he feel s he has
nothing left to sayl.
the poet 's duty is
to break old molds
so that new ones can be built.
the poet's duiy is
a constant. struggle for
versatility.
- By James Brewer, Jr .

Omoleiie Checkers
all you add is
hay or. pasture.
If yop own a horse. you wa ntl o teed it the fin est
rat ton IJOss ibl e Purona · Omolene · Checkers • .
fed a long wilh l1ay or pasture, provides everythin g·
you r horse needs ol he we ighs ove r 700 pounds.
Omole ne C1,1 ec kers ca n save you the cost of
feedlllg several di ffere nt prod uc ts Le i us s how
you how Om o le ne Cl1 ecke rs can gove you a more
brectse a nd acc urate way lo gtve yo ur horse a ll
the nulnl ton he needs

MODERN SUPPlY
399 W. Main Street '192-2164 Pomeroy. 0.
The Store With All Kinds of Stuff"
For Pets - Stables ~ Large and Small
Animals . Lawns - Gardens.

President-Pitcher
The first president of
Uoe.U.S. to throw out the fir st
llall of the baseball season
was William Howard Taft . On
April 14, 1910, Taft threw the
ball whi ch opened the
American
League 1s
Washin g ton- Phi Ia delphi a
game. The crowd-12,226 paitl
admissions -- broke a ll
previous attendance records.

,. • l

•

.-.tPurma ...
planning tomorrow
with research toda)'

FIX THAT ROOF
No muss - no fuss - no
need to tear off your
roof to renew &amp; insulate
slate, metal. shingle or
buill -up roofs .. Make it
leak-Proof-

•COMMERCIAL

FOR INFORMATION

Brotber remains ill

CALL 446-4367
OR WRITE:

• P.O. Bo• 749
I Gallipohs. OH . 45631

: { ) Please provide me with more

I

1 Name

I Address .

I Phone

No.

Cily

Hart famil holds.reunion
ry
at Foote Mineral Co. park

Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart
and Miss Enna Smith "of
Pomeroy have been making
almost daily trips to Nelson1 ville to visit their brother Ar1 thur Smith, who remains The annual Hart family
critically ill at the Mt. St. reunion was held at the Foote
information!
1
Mineral Co. park, Graham,
Mary's Hospital.
.1
W. Va . on Aug . 20.
Age
I
A pic.: nil' dinner was served.
Slale_ Zip--,J
Attending were Earl Hart,
I'm a wise old bird : you Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Hart,
"I • just
pao·o·ot others' remarks . Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart,
ML and Mrs. Dale Hart and
Legina, Mr. and Mrs. Don

("GiiiiPoiisiusiN"EsscoirE"~t1

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

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Manuel,
and Robin
Manuel , Donita
Mr. and
Mrs .
Charles Pyles, Racine; Mr.
and Mrs. Harold T. Hubbard,

PARK RESERVED

SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 2ND
UNTIL 4 P.M.

"FAMILY OUTING;'
OF
CONSTRUCTION&amp; GENERAL
LABORERS UNION
LOCAL NO. 1353
CHARLESTON
SHOWS&amp; FIREWORKS - SUNDAY
AND LABOR DAY

CAMDEN PARK
U.S. 60 WEST- HUNTINGTON

Mrs, Nora Ball, Middleport ;
Mr . and Mrs._Emory Hart,
Letart, W.Va. ; Mr. and Mrs.
Gary Bumganoer and Landon, New "Haven, W. Va .; Mr.
and Mrs . Michael Wolfe, .Poinl Pleasant, W. Va.: Mr.
and Mrs. Finley Cotton,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Alan
Hart , James Hart, Hurricane, W.Va.;, and Mr. and
Mrs . Reggie Hart and
l;legina , Wheeling, W. Va .

Senior citizens karn crafts
MASON - Ms . Pat
Condee and Ms. Jolene Mlller
of Pt. Pleasant on Thursday
instructed Mason Senior
Citizens, at their regular
meeting home in Mason, how
to make fur flowers and other
crafts. The affalr was potluck
and was enjoyed by ali.
Mrs. Barbara McDaniel,
president, presltled during
the business mectin~ .
Besides making crafts,

many of the ladles enjoyed
quilting.
Attending were Gene
Salem, aide for Senior
Citizens, Mildred Riley,
Barbara McDaniel, Mildred
Tripp, Cora Roush, Ella
Ford, Edna Butrls, Lucy
Johnson, Helen Elias, Gladys
Riley, .EJtelle Werry, Goldie
Smith, Wllda Coleman, aod
tTaft teachers.
1,1

•

ShGp

.

Turns three

DAY or EVENING CLASSES

sr. No .

~~,~~svi:;;:wT~~nm~~~~.~~·,:

Flowei

FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 1.1971
s:DO-Bonanra 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8·
Mister Rogers' NeiQhborhOOd 20.33; Voyage io th~
Bottom\llhe SeoiO; Emergency One 13 · Petticoat
Junction 15.
'
5:311--&lt;ldd Couple 4; News 6; Elec. Co. 20,33; Hogan's
Heroes 15.
6:DO-News 3 ,~,8,10, 13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20; It's
Everybody's Business 33.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4, 15; A8C News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8.10; Over Easy 20.
7:DO-Cross.Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13; News 10;
Gilligan's Is. 15; Lock , Stock &amp; Barrel 20; Insight
33.
7 : 3~Por.ter Wago~r 3; Gong Show 4; SlllO,IJOO Name
That Tune 6, 13; Prl~e Is Righi 8; MacNeil -Lehrer
Report 20,33; Family Feud 10; Pop Goes The
Country t5 .
.
8:DO-Biack Sheep 3.4.15 ; ABC's All -Star ·saturday
6,13; Wonder Womon&amp;;10; Washington Week In
Review 20,33. ·
8 : 3~Watl Slreet Week 20,33.
'
9:DO-Cotumbo 3,4,15; Movie "AI T.he Earth's Core"
6,13 ; Incredible Hulk 8,10; On Being Human 20; To

lO:~~unR::.,;~~

8.10;, News 20;

A ramily wiener roast WC:t S
held by Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence Jordan at lhek
home of Route 143recently.
Attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Pat Aeiker, daughteo·,
Penny; Mr. and Mrs. Randall
Gibbs, Gina and Rhonda ,
Mrs. Patricia Woodyard,
Taoruny, Michelle and Timmy, all of the Chesler area;
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Priddy,
Midillepoo1; Mr. and Mrs.
William Van M•ler,. Tony,
Ricky, Missy, Shonda and
Tanda, Clifton, W. Va .; Mr.
and Mo·s. Charles Rife, Larry ,
Valerie, Debbie, Teresa, and
Cloarles, Jr. Wellston; Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Byrd, Akron;

10 : 3~Monly

Soci"al ',
Calendar 1

11
.

1.

I

· I

FRIDAy
POMONA GRANGE,

8

p.m. Fo·iday at the Hock Springs hall . Baking and sewing
contests to be held, graioge to
be insp&lt;.'Cled, and new of'
ficerstobeelected.
BARN DANCE Friday
from 8 to 11 p.m. at large
dutch barn at Forked Run
State.Park on SR 124. Located
on main park road. Squ,re
and round dancing . Th~ event
11 C
is free to the pub c. oncession stand available.
Musi~ by String Dusters and
caller will be Glen Lambert.
SATURDAY
LADIES Auxiliary .of
Bashan Fire Department will
be selling the remaining ice
cream from their ice cream
f
5
social Saturday rom 3 to ·
Bring own containers.
BAKE SALE Saturday at
Rutland Department Store
sponsored by Rutland EMS.
Any baked goods or donations
w'ill be appreciated.
YARD SALE Saturday at
Syracuse Fire Station
sponsored by Syracuse
Ladies Au.xo'lt'ary. Anyone
having donations may call
992-7351,992-2419 or 992-2613.
SUNDAY
THE
OURS
Family
Reunion will be held Sunday
at the Rock Springs
k d'
Fairgrounds. A bas et onner
will be held at noon .
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH
OF The Nazarene, !0 :30a .m.
Sunday with The Hope
f
M' 1
Singerso Adrian. oc '·
" THE CARRIERS", a
singing group from Belmont,
W. Va ., will be at Rock
Springs Fairgrounds, 2:30
S d f
p.m. un ay or a program
under the sponsorship of the
Rock
Springs
United
Methodist Church
F'ellowshop. Public
free will offering.
SUNDAY
BETHLEHEM

1

Roanoke

1
1

~'----------------------~--

I·

tRace
5 Construct
fJohnPassos

Yesterday'•
%2 Ship
29 ,t.spect
With in 30 days ol pubnconon
·
In a newspaper In the affected
23 Overlook
30 Circumvent county, ony porson moy olso :
an
31 Bowie
(1) submit written comments
re l ating to actions. proposed
offense
or
actions, verified complaints,
U Ann
J
or enforcement compliance
Or')'
anssen
schedule letters ; l2 l requnt
Z5 Tolerably
3t Apollo's
nollce of turther oct Ions or
proceedings . All requests for
Weu
mother
adiudlcatlon hearlnQS and
%1 Prison
31 Candlenut publ ic meetings , and other
communications concerning
topic
tree
"'ub llc meetin;s •. adiud lcatlon

7 Shwmed

8 Earthly
9 Matrlculated
11 Gracefully .
refined
11 Budgetltem
%1 Ship's

ladder

rope

.

t:.--+--1---+--

E.T.A.
:15 Grimaldi
COWltry

fl P&amp;rt o1
a church

• Paint
a Redact
ttTeU
41 Taro root

.----------------------------------1
FOR MORE INFORMATION - MAIL THIS COUPON
.

I

I

HACKETT GRANULATED ROOFING
PHONE H2·2444
Mall~,

OHIO

I

59~

SUNDAES

.

54~

. 69~

&amp; NUTS 10'

QNAHMY
1

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY
·- _T11ur1- 10:00 A.M. till 12 : 00 P.M. Frldoy IIIII
HitS.: 10:10 A.M. 111111: 00 PM
·· · 5 _..
·
·
·
..twllay ·
See us At the Pomel'lll' lend

•ldt•

NA

HMNEP.
OFRB

VXNA

J}iiA

I

VXB .

0.

YMEVOLBIV
•.
Y•nllaJ'a CtSP~IIe: WHATEVER ONE MAN IS
CAPABlE OF OON IVING, OTHER MEN WILL BE ABlE
ro ACIUEVE.-JlJIES VERNE
Olllrlll

tuar Footuroo SrodlcMe, Inc .

126 E. MAIN ST.

~--

,

POMEROY, 0.

Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Unit
POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550

2:00PM
Sunday, s.ptembltr 10

NOW ACCEPTING

o.

guarantee them !

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

VXBE

DEFBOV-

WMYFNEOVNME .

polyester doubleknit i n slac~s

you And slands up to repeal- so com lortable, we ed machine washings.

DEDICATION &amp;.
OPEN HOUSE

· GEMQNEP .

GEMQNEP

NA

thai bends and stretches with

"A SKILLED NURSING FACILITY"

CRYPTOQUOTES
GEMQRBHfB

H tlwM $20 Haggar Expa~Matlc . slacks
aren't the most comfortable slacks you'v' ever worn,
retl.l'n them lol a lull retuncl.

SAND HILL ROAD

One letter simply otando for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's. X for the two O's, etc. Single lett~rs.
apostrophea, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letlen are different.

I

I CITY
STATE
I
L!~!f~----------------·-----~------J

hear i ngs , verif i ed
com ·
plainT! , and regulations ,
should be addressed to The
,--+~1---+-t--t~-i Legal Records Section , Ohio
EPA , P . 0 . Box 10,.9 ,
,.--+-1--+-t--t~-i Columbus . Ohio 43216, ( 6U l
•66 ·6037 . Unlen otherwise
stated in part icular notices ,
,....-+--1'----i all other communications
Including
comments on
:-:--+--1---i proposed aCtions , should be
addressed either to The Air
Ptrm Its and Com pi lance
-+--1f---i Monitor i ng Division or
Perm It and Approval Section ,
- - 1 - + - t - - i whic:never Is ·appropriate , at
The Ohio EFtA , Ft . 0 . Box
1
1049 , Columbus , Ohio 43216 .
Approval of plans and
specificat ions
Lehew , William D.
Salisbury Twp ., Ohio , ef .
fective date oe.2.t-78 .
This final action not
preceded by proposed act ion
and Is appealablt to EBR ,
...-+--i~+~l : septlc Tanks &amp; Prenur.e
Leach Field for Shenan'Q
;n+--l~+-I I Sprlngs Bar .

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to ;work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

I U ROOF U SIDEWALL U PATIO U DRIVEWAY U POOL DECK
U SIDEWALKS
NAME
ADDRESS

The following documents
were received or prepared by
The Oh io Environmentlll
Protectio"' Agency durln'o the
pre't'ious week. The effective
date of each final action is
stated . The issua.nce date of
each posed action is stated .
Anyone aggrieved or ad ·
versely affected by a final
action to is j ue , deny. mod i fy ,
revoke , or renew a permit ,
license , or variance; or to
approve or disapprove plan5
and spec i fications , may file
an appea 1 with The En vironmen t lll
Bqard
of
Review , Suite 305. 395 E .
Broad Sf . , ~olumbus , Ohio
43216, within thirty (30 ) days
· of the effec:tlve date, pur suant to Ohio revised Code
Section JH5 .07 , unless such
final action wu preceded by
tht same or substantially the
Silme prorosed action . All
suc:h fine
actions are so
Identified . Such persons may
request an adludlcatlon
hear ina" before THe Ohio EPA
on a proposed action to Issue ,
deny , modify , revoke , or
renew a perm if. l icense, or
var i&amp;nce : or to approve or
plans
and
d i sapprove
specif i cations , within thirty
(30 } days of the Issuance
date. oRe 3745 .07 does not
prov ide tor adiudlcafion
hear inQ requests or appeals
on orders , verif i ed com ·
plaints , or enforcement
compliance schedule le1ters .

Y

ANNUAL Bi\RBECUE and %1 Didn't
make It
32HOOIIier
hwnoriat
pull at I p.m. Any donations S3}&gt;artol

Pioneer I 1008 ts a monolithiC coati')g thai protects rools agatnst mdustnal
atmospheriC corro&amp;on. sunlight &lt;rl d extreme weather Y'IW'Iances This special
cold process system can be used vf~th or without the various colored ceram1c
granutes wht ch are spray applied to the mastic prior to cJryln g.!

A thought for the day:
Britain's wartime leader
Winston Churchill sent this
message to Nazi dictator
Adolf Hitler, "We. (British )
will
have no truce witlr you or
Streel, Room 1257, Columbus. Black and Matthew, carroll,
OH 43215.
the grisly gang who work
ill·
Jack anti Caryle Ruth and
{'I I. lt c
Tammy, Zura Hawk and yoW' wicked will. You do your
worst ... and we will do OW'
Albert, Otto · and Leola best."
~wartz,
Shade ; Gladys
COUNTY: MEIGS
PUBLIC NOTICE

at hand

I parade at Chester Monday.
1. Serving will begin at 11 :30,
I, parade 1:30 p.m. and tractor

OFFICE HOURS : 9:30 to 12. 21o 5 I CLOSE
AT NOON ON THURS.!- EAST COURT
ST.. POMEROY.

Middleport , Ohio. Written and Mr. and Mrs. Fred
c:omments and oblectlons
concerning the i!suence- of Swartz, Canal Winchester ;
.this license can be sent no Mabel ' Lehman, Columbus;
later tnan October 9, 1978 to
Levester Cannon , Ed . D., Mr. and Mrs. Harry Swartz,
· Commissioner, Division of Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
Menta l Retardation and
Developmental Disabilities , Waid Swartz, Athens ; Robert
C·O Ted Fry , 30 East Broad Swartz, Lancaster; Sherry

1 Oblltruct

Wl1"""

Swartz family
reunion held at
Woode Grove

Willouby, Columbus ; Helen
Fiske
and
Barbara,
Chauncey ; Clara Foil rod,
Alfred; Nina Hobinson ,
Allred ; Grace Swartz,
Alfred; Vernon Swartz, ·
Hockingport; Hobart and
Swartz, Alfred;
Alma
Mandee Williams , Alfred;
Donna Jean Ross, Albany;
Marilyn and Harry Ross,
Albany ; Debbie Swartz,
Marietta; Norma and Gerald
Swartz , Marietta; Julie
Robinson, Belpre; Har old
and Neva Swartz and Lori
dation , Division ot Menta l ~t.
and Jeff, Williamstown, W.
Retardat ion 8nd Oe11elop .
Those attending were : Mr. Va .
mental Oi!ab i llties proposes
to issue a l icense tor a Family and Mrs. Arthur Swartz and
Home ro accommodate three · Bud, Canal Winchester; Roy
developmentally disabled
C 1
residents . This F8mi l y Home and Lois Swartz,
ana
is l ocated at Rt . 1, Box 68 , Winchester; Emma . Swartz

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

3 Sill

Arurua l picnic 'of the United business meeting followed by
Methodist Women of the a social hour. A white
Racine Wesl ~ya n Churcli was tilephant sale was lleld with
held at the cowotry home of $28 being added to the
Gordon and Margao·et West treasury .
Plans were made to begin
Monday evening.
Grace was given by s. Betty meeting at the chui-ch annex
Roush before the buffet din- on the •econd Wednesday of ,
ncr attended by 13 m~;)nbers September to make it~ lor
and two guests. Mrs . Alice the Christmas bazaar. 'l
Wolfe presided at the shm1

The Swartz family reunion 1
was held in the Woode Grove
at Alfred on Sunday, Aug. 27
with a bounteous dinner at 1
o'clock.
Much visiting was done by
the older ones with the young
folks playing games.
' Harold
Swartz
was
I president and Helen Diley
was secreta~y.
The same' officers were
retained
for 1979.
Notices Fridi!ly eal
It was planned to paint the_
PUBLIC NOTICE
shelterhousenextspringand
The Department of Mentl!l an offert'ng taken to' buy 'the
Healtl'l and Mental Retar .

from an Indian word meaning
shell money. The community
became a city in 1884 with the
linking of the Shenaodoah
Vallev Railroad and the Norfolk and Western Railroad.

Roanoke, Va., with a cur·
rent metropolitan population
·of more than 200,000,
origioiated as a settlement
called Big Lick. The later
name Roanoke was taken

yond doubt
13 Bathtub
•
shape
Baptist It Holiday spot

PRODUCT:

93 7TH AVE.

LV

Pomeroy
t
Personal Notes \

zWalt near

PRODUCT DATA

'iI

DEAR POLLY - My dish
towels ~il'e made of several
different materials and when
I dry dishes I find tiny bits of
lint orl 'the glasses, dishes,
etc. What could cause this
problem ? - ANOTHER POir

DEAR POLLY- Some dish
towels do "lint" but I think
linen ones have less tendency
to do so. l would check the
fiber content when buyong
new ones. Check· on the ones
Mrs. Carol Mulbey and soro, you now own and see which
Eric of Newport Beach, Calif. ones do tloe best job. I have
have been here visiting Mrs. some new ones that are taggBertha Canaday and Mr. and ed 100 percent colton but are
Mrs. Paul Chapman and of a ratl1er rough texture and
family.
do a good job. - POLLY
Sunday th• Chapmans
DEAR POLLY - I cool leftentertained with a picnic in over meat juices or gravy
Uoeir honor. Attending were and then pour in ice cube
Mrs. Canaday, Pomeroy Mr. trays and freeze. When need.
and Mo-s . Ferrell Noday, Mr. t&gt;d the required nwnber of
and Mrs. Hany Bailey, cubes can be removed. Blanch Canaday, Mrs . JOSEPHINE
~
Florence Ca naday, all of · DEAR READERS - So as
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs. Mao·- nullo li~ up the use of the iee
shall Canaday, Joyce and cube trays the frozen gravy
Scott, Rio Grande.
or whatever can be removed
and the cubes put in ·labeled
plastic bags to go back into
the freezer.- POLLY
of pies and cakes will be
DEAR POLLY- I get douapprecia!ed . Sponsor is ble use out of my hanging
Chester Volunteer Fire Dept. cloth .calendars. I thread
Anyone wishing to par- about a dozen assorted size
lid pate in the parade may • ·needles with different colors
of thread and scatter them all
contact any fireman.
MONDAY
over the calendar, which is
PUBIJC CHICKEN bar- kept hanging close tv my sewbeeue beginning at II a.m. ing machine. This is very
Monday at the Racine Fire handy for quick repair jobs.Department station . Full M.P.
dinners, $2.50; half chicken,
DEAR POLLY -- My
$1.50.
Pointer is for Mabel who has
paint on her afuhan.
As an a.rTUESDAY
b
ENTERPRISE
United list I have found that dried
Methodist Women will meet aerylic and some latex based
Tuesday at the borne of Mrs. paints are soluble in
Delores Will. Speaker will be denatured alcohol. Test a
Mrs. Madhu Malhotra who spot first, of eourse. If it dues
not hann the fabric use like a
will speak on India.

{

Ch urch !25th celebration 15 N011.1pecific
Sunday . Located at junction 17 Fury
of SR 338 and 124 in Great 18 Ruler
Bend. Covered dish at noon at 19 The : Ger.
Lewis Park. Fellowship in %0 Fonnlc
afternoon .
.
acid source
VICTOR C YOUNG JR
·
·
'
·· %1 French
reunion Sunday at Royal Oak direct
Park, on right side near
or
swimming area. Picnic lunch _Clair
at noon. All relatives and %2Inshort
friends of the family are
supply
invited .
Z5 No longer
MONDAY
blooming
MEIGS Athletic Boosters zt Civil wrong
M d
7 30
t h' h
on ay · : p.m. a
og %7Hlngle
schooL A special invltatlon.to
or Nixon

OPTOMETRIST

_
regular spot remover.' If the'·
spot is large soak it. Such a
soaking also works well on
hardened paint brushes, This
onay not remove all uf lhe
p~inl but will Cllrtainly
remove most uf it. -ANN
DEAR POLLY .- When
Mabel wrote about having
l!ried late• paint on her
afghan you were doubtful
about her being able to
o·eonove it. I have had luck
removing dried water base
paints with isopropyl (rubbing ) alcohol. I have used this
straight from the bottle on
my nylon rug, washable
wallpaper and vinyl tile with
excellent results . I do hope
this helps Mabd and anyone
else with a water base paint
problem. -MRS. D.M.
Polly will send yqu one of
lier signed ·t hank -yo u
newspaper coupon dippers if
she use s you~ favoritt!
Pointer, Peeve or ProQJem· in
her colwnn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of ibis
newspaper.

Dish towel$
leave lint

· -··-··-··- ··~··-,.

I Greek letter
4 Calm
10 Solltary
12 Sho
"-

Youth
invited ;

·

Mo'. and Mr·s. Victor
C.utscholl, Mr. and Mo-s.
Hansel Clark and granddaughter , Lisa : Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Clark, Billy, Donald,
Kevin and Kelly, Paul Mero·il,
Mrl:i. Ne:tncy Smith, Teresa,
Timmy, Charles and Jinuny,
Ballilhore, Md. and Mr. and
Mrs. Lewis Grimes, Kenny,
Steven, Scott, Eric and
Lewis, Bre:tdenton, Fla .

--·-

~--·---- · - ·~

Pyth n's Flying
Circus
II:DO-News
3,4,6,8, tO,
13, ll'20.
Dick Cavett 20.
II : 3~Johnny Carson 3,4, t5 ; Bar etta . 13; Miss
NatlonaiTeen·AgerPageant6; u .S. OpenTennls8;
Movie "The Time Machine" 10.
11 :45---Movle " The Lasl Survivors" 8; U :DO-Janakl
33; 12 : 4o-:.l ronstde t 3.
.
l :DO-Midntght Special 3, 4,15; Movie "The In·
deslructlble Man" 10 ; 1:40--News 13.
2 : 3~News 3; 3::00-Movle "A Woman of Dlsllncllon"
J ; ~ : 3~Movle "Women's Prison" 3; 6:00-Big
Valley 3; 7:DO-Bewltched
Mil• I• Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P.M. - Damnallon Atley (PG )
7&amp;11 P.M.-tslandofDr.ModreautPG)
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, t978
6:DO-Summer Semesler 8, )0; 6 : 3~ TV Classroom 8;
U.S. Form Report 10; Kentucky Atleld 13.
7 :00-Marlo &amp; lhe Magic Movie Machine 4; Matters ot
Life 6; Ghost Busters 8; Public Polley Forums 10;
Jabberlaw 13.
7:DO-Saturday Report 3; Wor ld of Survival 4; Ad·
ventures of Muhammad All IS ; Ousty's :rreehoose
6; Wacko 8; Grape Ape 13; Oynomutt 6.13; Three
Robonlc Stooges 8, 10.
8:30--Go Go Globetrotlers 3,4,15; Superfrlends 6,13;
Speed Buggy 8,10; 9:DO-Bugs Bunny-Road Runner
.8. I0.
.. . .
.
.
9:30--Scooby's Latf.A-Lymplcs 6,13.
t0 : 3o-:.Pink Panther 3 . ~.1 5 ; Botman.Torzon 8,10;
11 :00-Baggy Pants 3.4,15.
.
11 :3o-:.Space Senllnels 3.15; Kroftt Supershow 13;
Lillie Rascals 4; Bewitched 6; Secrets ot Isis 8, tO.
12 :DO-Land of the Lost 3, t5 ; Movie "What Price
Glory" 4; Point ot VIew 6; Fat Albert 8,10.
12 :30- Thunder 3 ,1 5 ~ American Bandstand 13 ;
VIewpoint 8:: Space Academy 10 .
l :DO-Big Blue Marble 3! U.S. Open Tennis 8.10;
Wrestling IS; Cranberry Country 33.
1 : 3~ Rally Racing Fever6; Adam.J213; French Chef
33
·T
Th NFL
oo-B b 11 w
u
1: 35--- his 1s e · 3' 2'
ase •
arm. P 4'
NFL Game of the Week 6; Ironside 13; Bill Moyers'
Journal : International Report 33.
2 1~Basebatl 3,4; 2:t5--Baseball • 15; 2 : 3~NFL
Great Teams·Great Years 6.
3:DO-Movle " The Delphi Bureau" 13; Book Beat 33.
3:3D-Movle " Cloak end Dagger" 6; Wav It Was 33.
. 4:DO-U .S. Open Tennis Continues B. tO; Photography
33 , A:3D-Catch·33 33.
S:DO-Wide World fo Sports 6, 13; 1918 NHRA Sum·
mernotlonals 4; Flolm t5; Zoom 33 .
5:30--Better Way t~ ; Once Upon A Classic 33, 5:45-Hambtetonlon 8,10.
6:DO-NBC News 34,15; Lawrence Welk 8; God Has the
Answer 1S; Zoom 20; Studio See 33.
6 30--NBC News 3,4.15; ABC News t3 ; News 6; CBS
News 10; You Bet Your Lile 20; Economically
Speaking 33.
7:00-Liltle Rascals 3; Lawrence Welk 4, t5; Hee Haw
6; .8; Black Perspective On The News 33; Bugs
Bunny 10; Wild Kingdom 13; Elec . Co. 20.
7':30--We. Think You Should Know 3; Lowell Thomas
h k
Remembers 33; All· Star Anylhing Goes 10 ; S ar s
13; Once Upon A Classic 20.
8:00-Bionlc Woman 3,4,15; 1977 Big Ten Hlghltghls 6;
Bob Newharl 8,10; Onedln Line 20; Greal Per·
formances 33.
·
B:»--The Games Monumenl 6; Pilot 8,t0.
' :oo- Movie " Gable &amp; Lomba.rd" 3,4,15; College
Foolball 6,13; Movie " The Lite and Times of Judge
Roy Bean"" 8,10
9:30--Affalr In The Air 20 ... 10 1»--Movle " Tempest"
33.
10:3o-:.Great Pertormances 20.
11 :00-News 3,4,15; 11 : 25--NeWs 8,10.
11 :3o-:.Saturday Night Live 3.4,15; Janakl 33.
II :55--U .S. Open Tennis 8; Movie "Mutiny on he
Bounty" 10; 12 :DO-News 6,13.
. 12 : to-Second City.. TV 8; 12 :1s--ABC News ..6.
12 :30--Movte "The lOth VIctim" 6 ; Movie The Un ·
dead" !3.
.
12 :4D-Don Kirshner's Rock Concert 8; 1:DO-Movle
" Anzto" 3; Movie " The Man Hunter" 4.
2·00-Movle " A Bucket of Blood" 13; 3:DO-News 3;
. 3: 15--ABC News 13; 3:3o-Movle "Strotegy 01
Terror" 3; 5:DO-Bonanza 3; 6:00-Bewltched 3·
Movle Channel 4 5&amp;7P.M. - TheLateShow(PG)
•··
9 &amp;11 P.M. - Conlesslons of a Pop Performer IRl

I1

PIONEER 1008
1
I

Methodist Women
POLLY·s POINTERS hold annual picnzc
Polly Cramer
.· .

Clarence ]ordens
host wiener roast

TELEVISION
VIEWING

r---~:-w~ooMPloN;o:o~--1, ~~~jfJ~;!~poJ.·~lh~:t::n~~~ 28 ~=~grad

•INDUSTRIAL
•RESIDENTIAL

AppHcahon o l Pioneer " 1008 masl•t::

-

1-The Daily Sentinel, Middl~port-Pomeroy, 0 .. Friday, Sept. 1, 1978

. RESIDENT

RESERVATIONS
,.
675-5236

•

'

'

�MEIGS TIRE
CENTER, INC.

~ -\

John F . FUIII, Mgr.
Ph. 992 -2101
TRINITY 01URCH , lfev . W. H.
Perrin , pastor , Sob Bu ck , Sundo~
school sup!. Church School. ~ : lS
a .m , worship $&amp; rvke , 10.30 a m
Cho•r rehearsal Tuesday 7.30
p .m . under d 1rect1on of Ali&lt;~
N eose .

POMEROY CHURCH OF

TH~

NAlARENt: : Corner U111on and
Mulberry, Rev . Clyde V . Hender
son , pas tor . Sunday school , 9.30
o .m Glen M cC lung , sup ! . morn
1ng worship , 10 :30 a .m ., evening
service. 7&lt;JO: m•d· week serv1ce
Wednesday , 7 30 p .m .
G RACE t:PISCOPSL CI-~U~CH
32b E Main St .. Pomeroy The
Rev . Robert B Groves rector . Ho
ly co mmunion and s.ermon 11
a .m Junior choir and nursery se•
viUL Rome Willtomso n and Dole
Dutton , loy reade rs oss •s t i11g the
pas tor

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIS1
212 W . Main St.John M cAI! hur
pastor Sible school 9:30 o m
mo1ning worsh 1p
10:30 a .m
Youth meeting s b 30 p .m . everl
1ng wor$hip , 7 :30 Wednesday
n1ght proyf')r meet.ng and Bible
study . 7 :30p.m
THE SALVATION ARMV . 115
Bullern ut A"'e . Pomeroy . t n'floy
and Mrs . Roy WitJirtg o ll •cers m
c h arge .
Sunday - hol 1ness
m eetl"ng . 10 o m : Sunday School
10: 30 o .m Sun day sch ool leader
YPSM . Eloi se Adam s. 7 30 p m .
scil'flo l io.n
meet ing .
'f!Ortou~
spe ak e r s and music _spec1a ls
Thursday 10 a . m . to 2 p .m
todies Home l eag ue . alt women
invited . 7 30 p .m . prayer meeting
and Bib le study . Bob Estep
leader .
Re"'
Noel
Hermon
teacher .
BURLIN GTON SOUT HERN SAP
li ST CHAPEL Reule 1 Shade
Pa stor Bobby Elk 1ns . Sunday
sc h ool , 5 p .m .. Sunday worsh1p
5 45 p .m Wednesday prayer set
VICe . 7: 30pm
POMEROY WESTSIDE C HU~ C H
OF CHRIST 200 W . Mom St Jer r y
Poul , m1nister . phone 992 7b66
Cons~r..-o t1v e
non -1nstrumentol
a,b leSuf1doy worship 10 am
study . I I om
wor shtp 6 p m .
Wednesday Bi bl e st udy , 7 p m
O LD DE XT ER BIB LE CHRIST IAN
Smi th ,
CH U RC H
Re v . Ro l ph
past or . Sunday school . q 30 om
M rs . Worley Fronc1s . super1ntc-n
dent . Prea ching ser'flices ftrst &amp;
th ird Sundays following Sunde)'
Sc hool.
G RAHAM UN ITED METHODIST
Pr eochm g 9 :30 a .m . f11 st and se
cond Sundays of each mon th
th ~rd and f our th S unda~ s eoch "
month worship serv1ce at 7 30
p m . Wednesday evenmg s ot
7:30 . Prayer and 8 1ble Study
AD VE NTI ST
SEVENT H -DAY
Mulber ry He1ght s Rood . Pomeroy
Pas tor Albert D i n es , Sabbath
Sc hool
Superintendent , R1IO
Wh1 te Sabb at h School. Saturday
af h?l noon at 2 00, with Wo rship
Se r v1ce fo ll owing at 3· I 5.
FI RST
BAPT IST
RUTlA ND
CHU RCH
St'!.ter
H arnett
Worner . Sup t . Sunday School ,
q 30 o m
morning worsh1p
10 -iSo .m
THE HILAND CH APEL , George
Casto ' pa stor . ~und oy School
q :JO om .: •ven ing wor!.h i p 7 ·30.
Thursdov evemn g praye r ser't1 1Ce
7:30p .m
POMEHOV
FIRST
BA PTIST
Dovtd Man n . min1srer Wilham
Watson , Sunday school sup! Sun •
day school q _JO o m
morn1ng
wo rsh ip I 0 :30 o m
FIRST SOU TH ERN BAPTIST 182
Mulb erry Ave . Pomeroy . Paul J .
Wh1te , Pastor G01y Bash am. Sun
day sc hool ,supf . Sunday school
9 :30 a .m ., morni flg wor sh1 p
10 :30 : e..-ening worship b 30 p m
M 1dweek prayer servi ce . 7 JO
p m.
MIDWAY COMMUNIT Y CENHR .
D•M ter Rd .' lang sville , Ohto Re v.
Cl yde Fe r rell . Pas tor
Sunday
Sc h ool
11
a .m .
Sa tu rd ay
preac h in g ser'fl1c es 7.30 p m
Wedn esday e..-enin g Bible stud y
at 7 .30 p .m
FAITH TABERNAClE CHURCH
Ba i ley Run Rood , Rev . Emrnett
Rowson . pastor Hondley D unn
!!iupt : Sunday school 10 am . Sun day e"'en1ng 1oervoce 7 30 . Btble
t eo cht n g 7.30 p .m Thursday
DYESVILLE
CO MMUNITY
CHURCH . Roger C Turner past or
Sunday school 9 30 o m . Sunday
mornmg worsh 1p 10 30 Sun day
even1ng !&gt;er ·.n(e 7 30.
M IDDLEPORT
MIDDU:I-' ORT
C HUR CH
0~
CHRIST IN CHRISTI AN UNION
l awrence Manl ey pca tor Mr s
Ru uel t Young
Sunday School
Supt. Sunday School 9 30 a .m .
Evemng worsh1p 7 30 Wedne ~
doy prayer meetmg 7 30 p m
MT. M O RIAH CHURCH OF GOD
RaCine Route 2. the Rev Jame s
M Muncy , po st or Su nday !itchoo l.
mornmg worsh1P 11
9 ·.4 5 o .m
a .m .; evenmg worsh1p
7 30.
Prayer meefing 1uesday 7·30
p m . Yo ung peoole s meeting
7 30 p .m . Thur sdoy .
MIDDLEPORT FIRST BAPTIST
Corner Si)(fh and Pohner the Rev .
Kirby
Ode•
po~tor
Ro berl
Porker , super 1n tendent Sunday
WMPO Rad io program 7 45 o .m
Sunday Schoo l q I 5 o m . M orn
ing Worship 10 15 a 1n Youth oc
tiv 1t1e s and l ellowsh1 p for 1un1or
and sen• or h1gh students 6 p m .
Sunday even1ng worsh1p
7 30
p .m M1d week prayer ser v tces ,
Wed nesdoy 7 30 p m
CHURCH
OF CHRI ST
M1d
dleport 5th and Main Geo1 ge
Gloze, mtntster Mike Gerlach
supertn tendenl
Terry Yan key ,
youth tnllll ') ler Btble sthool 9 30
om
m orn tng w or shtp
10 30
o .m
evenmg worsh1 p , 7 30,
prayer serYtef! 7 p m Wednes-

day .
MIODLE POR T CHURCH OF HiE
NA ZARENE Re"' J1m Broome
pastor Mrs Mary lathey Sunday
Khool sup! Sunday school 9 30 ·
o m
rnornm g worshtp , 10·30
o 1n
Sun day
evongel ts! 1C
mee ttng .
7 00 p m
Prayer
meet1ng, Wedne~cfoy . 7 30 p m
UNITED
PRESB't'TERIAN
MINISTRY OF MEIGS COUNTY ,
Dw1ght L Zav d z dlfector
HARRI SONVILLE
PRE SBYTERIAN
Re ..Ernest
St ricklin , pastor Sunday church
school. 9: 30 a .m ., Mr s. Homer
lee. su pt .
mC?rmng wonh"1p

shrp t I am
Sunday even1ng
servtce 7 p .m .. Wednesday' Fami ly Troiing Hou1 , 7 p m Wednesday
\NOrShip Se/YtCf! 7 J0 p .m .
HAlH COMMUNITY (HU~CH
Neor long Ho llern l:dse l Ha rt ,
pa stor Sunday school 10 am .
C hur ch ,
7 30 p m
prayer
meet ing. 7 30 p .m . Thu rsday.
MIODLl:POHl
PE Nl t;COSTA L.
fhtrd A'fle the Rev . William Kn it
te l pastor Ronald Duga n Sun OOy School Sup! . Classes for all
ages evenmg serv1Ce , 7 JO.: Bible
study
Wednesdo)'
7 30 p m
youth sennces Friday . 7 30 p.m .
MIOOll:PORl FHI:l:Witl !:IAP llSl . Corner A sh and Plurri N oel
He1r mon pastor Soturdo~ even·
1119 se r'fl tce . 7 ·30 p m . Sunday
Sc hool 10 .30 a .m .
MEIG S
COOPERATIVf PARISH
METHOOIST CHURCH
Rober t T. Bumgarner
D1reclor
PO MER OY CLUSTER
Rev . James Corbitt
POMl:ROY
worship s~f'wice .
9 15 o m Sunday sc: hool. 10 30
a m
~ @"'
Robert
McGee.
m tntster .
~NTI;;RP ~ ISl.
Worshtp 9 o .m
Ch"tlrc h School 10 a m .
HOCK SP RINGS Worshrp 10
om
Chu rch Sc hool q: rSo m
UMVF o 30 p .m
t- LATWOODS. Wo rs h1p II am
Church School !Oo.1n
. M IDDH POfil CLUSH::H
Re v Rob er t !:lumgo rne•
HtA TH
Ro befl
Bumgmn e r
Pas tor
Wors htp
10:30 am .
Churc h Sc hool Q 30 o m UMVF b
pm
.
Ru tla nd -Solem Cen l er Charge
RUTlAND Wdbur H i lt Postal
Wo1 Sh1p 10 30om Church School
.9 30 a ni
SALEM n NTER Chu rc h Schoo l
Q 4 5 o m wo1 sh1p 9 o m
SYRACUSI: CLUSH R
Rev Ha1vey Koch Jr
ASBURY
Wor ~ h1p
11
am .
Churc h School 9 SO o m . UMW
l11 sl Tuesday Bthl e Stud~ Thu rs .
7 30 p.m
FORESf RUN , Worship 9 om
Ch u rc h Sc hoollO om .
MI NER SV!l l l: Worshrp 10om
Chur ch Sc hoo f 9 a m
SYRACU SE Chur ch Schoo l 9:00
om Worshtp service 7· 30 p m .

SOUTHERN CLU STE R

SWISHER &amp;LOHSE
PHARMACY
Pomeroy

p.m

ST JOHN LUTHER AN CHURCH ,
Pine Grove The Rev W1lli om
M 1ddleswot1h, Poslor . Church
ser ... kes 9 ·30 a .m . Su nday !&gt;&lt;hool
10:30 om ,
BRA DBURY
C HWI CH
OF
·
CHRIST
M
r
.
Donald
Roley
pos
ter
10·30.
.
Su nday schoo l , 9 30 a n1 wor ·
MIDOLEPORT Sunday u hoo l
sh1p se1 'fllte I 0 30 a m Sunday
q _JO o .m ., Richa rd Vaughan . supt
ser
v1ces "/ p m
youth gr oup ,
Morning won hip , 10 :30 .
SYRACUSE/ M o rn ing wors h ip . 9 Wed nesday ? p m
ANTIQUITY' BAPTIST . Re 'fl . fo ri
o .m .. Sunday sc hool. 10 a .m . M rs
Shuler
pas tor
S unde~ schoo l
Sampson Hall , sup t .
~
9 J{J om . Church serviCe 7 p .rn .
RUTlAND CflURCH OF COD
Re v . Bobby Port•r, pa stor. Sun · · youth meelmg , b p .m Tuesday Bi·
da y n hool 10 a .m .; Sunday war hit! !;,tudy 7 p .m

'

'

RACINE
PlANING
MILL

FRENCH'S

SUNOCO

SERVICE
CENTERS

149 S. Third

You c'an make good money at (hings like riveting or
welding, but it isn't always a fun job. There's.a tension to it
that Ulkes its toll of nerves and muscles.

ROSEBERRY'S
PENNZOIL
o.

ALL YOU NEED T'KNOW!

HOW Af&gt;OUT (;STT IN'
PRETTY COCKY,
T' THE POINH M c KE~· Alt-J' T YA" HEAR.
MEKPO~T '~ PAY IN ' ME
'iA BEEN GIV IN'
T' DO A JOB- NOT
OUR ~OY 5 SOME
T' ! OOZE IT UP
TROUBLE:
WITH YOU!
7~

50 WHAT~

YOU GONt-JA
SLAP MY

WRISn

Nationwide Ins . Co.
of Columbus, 0 .
104 W. Mlin
992-2311 Pomeroy

just necessary, both for the doers and for the rest of us,
who profit by their services.

So what comes after work? Staying home and watch·
ing lV, or perhaps a little bit of nothing. It shouldn't be that
way; not all that way, certainly.

RACINE
FOOD MARKET

Th•

Stor.o
With A Heart
Racine
Ph. 949-2626

People do have three facets-mental, physical and
spiritual. It's the spiritual part·that is the most apt to get
shortchanged . today, more's the pity. Because that's
where the miracles begin.

THOSE MUST BE TH ' Se;&lt;:URITY
SENSORS "l}i' OLD O NE

:t UNDERSTAND,
'TASS! I 'LL SliE
'vOU L"'l!:ltJ

Ridenour
·lV &amp; Appliance

WELL , SO FAR , 50

YEAH , THERE IT IS • •• • A N '
CRAWLING 'WI'Tl-&lt; GUARDS

GOOD! lS!SSEE&lt;

MENil~eO!

NOW, HE SAID

'TOO!

OOOlA'S IN "1'1-1 .
MIDDLE DOME ON
TH ' RIGHT. ...

Gas Senice

Start findiflg that out by going to the c hurch of your
choice.
·

Ch..ter 915-3301
Racine 949-2020

'

DOUG'S
MARINE
SALES &amp;

PIZZA SHACK
Ealln or
Carry Out
126 E . Mlin
992 -6304
pomerov

starcraft Pleasure &amp; Fish!
Mercur v

TO WHAT DO I
IF IT Alt-J 'T,
OWE; THI$ HONOR ... YOU' LL FIND
IF- l HAT'S THE
OUT SOON
RIErHT WORD;
ENOUGH:

P. J. PAULEY,
AGENT

•

Lots of jobs aren't fun, aren't even fulfiiUng. They're

Ph . 949-9110

Boa ts ,

I TOeD YA THE BIG MA'-1
n;ee YA- TI-1AT'S

WANT~

282 W. Ml in

MIGOiaport

Ph . "2-1151

Racine,

WORKING

A LL DAY.

Mill Work ·
C.blnet Mlkl,.
Syracuse 992-3971

M SWIGER
STATE-· FARM
INSURANCE

Outboa

t\ND WH EN TH'
000~ OPFNS
VOl E CliN'l HAV E

A liG&gt;H FU\SHII'f..,

QUICK, NOW .1 OUT
Wf GO, ' FORE IT
CLOSE'S ' DO N'T
CAfC"H YER TAIL,
SCtN D'( '

rtE'1' ~ lOOK ~
BE SIDE TH' DOOR
... ~\ t l lllE

PEEPHOL t' ...

VIRGIL B.
TEAFORD SR.

Reuter-Brogan

Insurance
Services

216 Second

Pomeroy
992-3325

Main
992 -5130 Pomeroy
214 E .

Fulton-Thompson
Tractor Sales, Inc.
Farm Machinerv

461 Jrd, Middleport
992-2196

Spring Ave . 992!101
Pomeroy

drivinq me
· stark
ravinq

Your mother
1s ven-1 sweet!

Dan Thompson Ford, Inc.

Deutz Tractors, New Holl•nd

Mt:~4be

Howdqes

it's

he expect

just a \ette r
with no

Probabh-1 40ur

check~

me to
live?

check~

mad!

WILKINSON
Small Engines
Sales &amp; Service
448locust

WAID CROSS
SONS STORE

Ill .

en.

Locu•" &amp;.o&lt;to Stlr..ot
992-9921

Are Sponsored Each Week By The Following:

H H9SS

a p.

MOR SI: CHA PH
Wo r shp 11
a .m .. Church Sc hool 9 30 a .m .
PORTLAND Worship 7 30 p m
Chu r ch School 9 ·30 a m ..
SUTTON . Church S&lt; hool 9 30
am . Worsh tp I stand Jrd Sundays
10 30 a .m .
NORlHI:ASI CLUSHR
Rev . R1 chord Thoma s
Pa s1o1
Dua ne S~dens1r1&lt;he r
John Dougla s
'A ssoetoles
JO PPA . Wors h1p
10 om
Church Sc hool 9 am
Pro~er
Meetmg Wedn e-sday 8 p m
Wor~h1p
q om
0-IEST ER
Ch ur ch School lOam
LONG BOTTOM Worsh1p 7--30
p rn Church Sch ool q 30 o
ALFRED W orsh1 p 7 30 p m
Church S&lt;hool q 30 o m
ST PAUl Wor~h1p 11 o m
Chur ch School9 30 o rn
RHDSV \LU: Sun de~ S(hool 9 :m
a rn W or~h1p 7 30 p m Pray er
Meetmg ·r 30 p •n
1ue sdoy
V•s •tot •on7 30 p m 1st lhursda.,. .
SILVER RIDGE , Wo •slup 10om
Chur ch School q a m
TUPPE RS PLAIN S Wor~htp 9
a .m . Church S&lt;hool 10 o m
KENO CHURCH Of- CHRI ST ~cr
'fiiC e!&gt; each Sundoy q 30 o .rn
George PKk enl&gt; . pastor v.1lh
preach1ng on flf~l and th lfd Sun do~ of month Ol1ver ~wom ~upt
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION
Re v Keith Ebl 1n pos101 Su11doy
Sc hooL
9 30
o .m
leon otd
Gi lmor e first elder even1ng ser vi ce 7 30 p m Wedne sd ay pr oyer
meeting 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH C HU~ C H 01- GOD
Ra c1ne Route 2 lh c Re'fl . Charle s
Hand pa stor Sunday H hool 9 45
o .m
morntng worsh 1p 11om
Evenm g sero.,ces , Tuesda,. and
Fndoy . 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RIOG~ CHUIKH
OF CHRI ST . Duane
Worde n
m1n1ster 8tb le do ss 9 30 o m
mornmg' worsh 1p
10 30 am
e..-en•ng
worsh1p
6 30 p m
Wednesday Btb le study 0 30 p .m
NEW STIVERSVttLE CO MMUNI
TY Church Sun day Sch ool se1
'fiiCe . 9 45 o .m Worsh1p s"e rv•&lt;e
10·30 Evonge ; t1c Se r 'fl tCe 7 :.tO
p m.
W ~'dnesdo y
Prayer
meeting .: JO
ZION. CHURCH OF CHRI~ T
Pome• o y-Horr,sonvl lle Rd , Don
Kennedy po sl 01
Bill Md:lroy
SundQy sc hool
sup!
Sunday
school 9 30 o m morntng wor ·
sh1p and co mmun1on 10 .30 a .m . •
Sunda~enlng you th
lS I ian
l:ndeovor 6 p m
worsh tp ser 'tlic e , 7 p m Wednesday evening
prayer meellng and B1ble study 7

Middleport, Ohio

YOU
BROKEN
T fl E CASE.
NOW GO
ON HOME,
GET SOME
REST.
YOU' VE BEE~

Service

These Messages Of Our Religious !feritage .

Prescriptions

om

p

--212
Street

KU..J'

ALREADY
Joi(INo-••

Complete .
Automotive

We Fi IIIJoclon'

Rev . Dav id Horr1s
Cluster leader
Ri! v . Stvven Wils on
Flo rence Sm1lh
Hil ton Wolfe
A ssoc iates
Bl: THAN Y (Dorcas ). Worsh•p
9 DO o rn . Chu1 ch School 10 .00
' CARM El , C uch Sc hool 9.30
o m Worsh1p I 30 o m 2nd and
4!
ndo s.
AfJ
VE . Su nda y School
9 30 a m Wo rs hip 7:30 p m I Sl
end 3rd Sun da ys . Prayer mee t1 119
Wednesday 7 30 p m Fel !o wsh 1p
supper l irst Saturday 6 p .m UMW
2nd Tuesday 7 30 p m
EAST LETART Chruch School 9
a.m . W orship serv1c~ 10 o m
Praye r
meetong
7 30 p m
Wedne sday UMW f i r st Tuesday
"f 30p m
RACI NE WESLEYAN
Su nday
school 10 o m wo• sh 1p 11 om
Chelf pr aCtiCe Thur sday.
m
LETART FALL S Chu rch S&lt;hool
10 o m Worsh1p serviCe 9 a m
MORNING STA R. Worsh•p 9 30
o 1n , Church Sc hool 10 .30 o .rn
M td -Week Service Wedne sday 8

l(mNke.

( - - -J

Pomeroy

EWS &amp; SONS SOHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Auend The Church

Groceries Gener•l Merchandise

Of Your Choice

This Sunday

YOU M:'AN

R•cine 949-2550

KEN GROVER
PHOTOGRAPHY

THE DAILY
SENTINEL

Profenion•l Service ,

S.keroof
Good Broad

Aeri•I-Schools-

Weddings
Chester 98S-41SS

HA CI N~

CHURCH
OF
!Hi:
He 11 John A (oil
man pastor f-ronkl1n · Imboden
choum011 ol the !:loar d o l (IHI~
tt an L1t e Sunday ~c hool 9 3ll
am
mo1ning w01sh•p
I ll 30.
Sunday even. ng wor sh1 p "I JO
p m Prayer mee ltng Wed ne.,
day 7 JO p m
RA CI N~ HH ~1 BAP11 ST Don l
Wol k e•
Pas tor Ron n1e Sal~e1
Sun do~
s&lt;hool sup!
Sundoy
sdl ool 9 30 om rno r n1ng wor
sh•p 10 40 am Sunday e ve11,mg
wo1 shi p 7 JO Wednesday e'fle n
mg B1ble s Tud y 7 30.
DANVtlll.: Wl:SlEVAN Re"' R
D Br o wn pastor Sun day Sch ool
mornmg Worshtp
9 30 o m
IQ·45 you th SCIVI(e b 45 p .m
even•ng
wo1~h•p .
7 30 p rn
pr ay er and pro1se W edne~ d ov
7 30 p .m .
Sl l VI: R ~UN HUt 8APTIST Hev
Morv1n Mork m pasl o t . St eve l•t ·
lie Sundo~ sc hool supt Sundar
sc hool . 10 om
morn1ng wor
sh 1p
11 a .tn Su nday 9'fltming
worsh1p
7 30 Prayer mee l ulg
and Bible !it ludy Thursday 7·30
p m youth ser..-1re , b p m Sun·
doy .
CHEST ER CHUR CH OF GOD
Rev Donny R. Cook pastor . Sun
day sc hool . 9,30 a .m
wot shi p
servtc e 11 om · even1ng serll"tee
7 00 youth set"vice . Wedne~doy
7 00 p .m
LANGSVIlLE
C HRI ST IAN
CHURCH Robert Musser posto1
':Iunday sc hooL 9 30 a .m .. Roy
S•grnon , su pt rno rnmg wors hip ,
10 30. Sunde)' even•ng ser..-1ce,
7.30. rTlld week se rvtcc Wednes day. 7 pm
SYR A CUS~ CHURCH OF
THE
NAZARENE , Rev . Dole !Joss ,
pastor ,
8~b
M oore
Sunday
School supt. Sunday school. q 30
a .m .. morn•ng worship , 10 • S
a .m . e ... onge hs t•.&lt; serv tce 7 p .m .
Wed ne sday ~e riiiCBS
prayer
ond protse "f p.m
Nqrorene
youth
7 p m. Doily
prayer
meetmg 1:1.30 om . Mens prayer
me-et 1ng Sa turday 7 p .m .
I:OEN UNI rw liRHHREN IN
CHRI!:.l l:lden R Bloke pas ror .
Sunday School 10 a .m ., How ard
McCoy su p!. M orn1ng se r mon
11 o .•n
Sund ay 111ghl nr'flices
Chr•st.o n ~ndoo vo r , 7 30 p .m ;
!:tong set..-lce 8 p rh .: Preoch1ng
Midweek
Pray(!r
8 30 p rn
rneetlf•9 · Wednesday , 7 p .m .. Roy
Adams , loy leodet
CHURCH O F J~SU S CHRIST.
l oco re-d ot Rutland on 1N ew l imo .
R0nd next to Fores t A cre Pork .
Re"' Roy House . pastor . Ho bert
M usser !;.unday Schoo l sup!. ~vn ·
dov o:.c hoo l 10 30 o"'
w&amp;&lt;, ~ ip
NAZAR~N!;

Middlerlort -

Wed ne~ doy .

TUPPUIS PLAIN S CHRISTIAN
CH URCH
~ugene Under wood .
pastor
Howard Ca l dwell ,· Jr ,
Sunday School Supt . Sun day
~c hool 9 30 a m
M o rning Se• ·
m on 10 30 a .m. Sunday eve n ing
ser v1ce 7 p .m .
LUA~ T
FAll S
UNir tD
8R~ fH~t:: N Rev . Freolond N orris
pas to r . Floyd Nor ris . sup! . Sun day
school 9 30 o .m morning ser
man 10 30o m .. Pro y•r ser'fiiCe ,.
Wednesday , 7 30 p.m .
C H~ SH R

CHURCH

OF

THE

Re~;

Herbert Gro te
pastor . Worsh1p ser'flice . 11 o .m
and 7 30 p .m Sunday . Sunday
Sc.ho61 9 30 o .m Richard Bor ton.
supt . Prqy•r meef lng . Wedne~ ­
day730pm

BRADFORD

CHUR CH

OF

CHRI ST . Gabriel Mus , pastor. s;.
ble Sund ay School q:JO a .m .: mor mng chur ch 10 :30 a .m .. Sunday
p .rn
e'tlen•ng
servrce . 7 00
Wednesday ser11ice , 7: 30p .m .
LAURI:L CUFF FRH MI:THOOIS1
CHURCH , Re11 Floyd F. Shook ,
po~lor
Uo~d
Wright , Su nday
Schoo l Sup! ,· Morning Worship
9 30 o-rn . Sunday Sc hoo l 10 20
a .m .. Wednesday Prayer and Bi ble Stud~ 7 30 p m .. Sunday even·
1ng worsh 1p 7.30 p m .. Chon ~rot ·
l id~ Thur sday , 7 p.m .
Ol.XTER CHUIKH OF CHRI ST.
Charles Russe ll. Sr . . minis ter ,
Rich Macomber . sup!. Su .. doy
sc hool. · 9 30 o rn
wor sh1p '&gt;l!'r·
vi&lt;: I! 10 30 o m . Bible Study, Tue~
doy , "/JOpm .
REORCANil~D

CHURCH

OF

JESUS CHHIS1 QJ-, LA HER DAY
SAINT~
Por tland Haculo Hood .
Wllhom Ho ush , post o r , Russell
Rat cliff chur r. h 5chool Duector
Su ~tdo., ~c hoo l , 4.30 a .m
Morn .
ing WOIShtp 10 .:,10 O.m
!&gt;U[Ida y
even1119 ser"' '~ e 7 p m Wednes
day e_,.ening prayer ser v 1 c ~s 7 30
p .m .
aETHll:HI:.M aAP liS T Rev. l:ad
~hule 1 poo; tor Wonhlp ser..-tce
9.30 om . Sunday school 10 30
n rn 8 1ble ~ludy and p ~ oy~&gt; r se1
v• re 1hur\doy .., JO p m

'·

CARLETON CHUR CH Kmgsbury Church b . 45 p .n1 Young Peoples
Hood . Go1'( King paslo r . Sun day ~Or1J1Ce 0.45 p m . E'tl onge l,~ t• c
sc hool q -30 a m , Rolph Carl . ~ervice 7 : 30 p.m. Won:Jen 's Mi s superintendent , evenlllQ worship . S10 nary Council 10 a .m ftrs,l and
third Tu es day s. Pray er ond Bib le'
·1 JO
p rn
Pro~ er
mee t 1ng
S tud~ . Wednesday , 7 .30 p m .
Wednesday . ? 30 p.rn .
HARTFORD CHU RCH-O F CHR IST
LONG BOTTOM CHRI STIAN ,
Bru ce Smith
pastor . Wallace IN CHRISTIAN UNIO N , The Rev .
W•Uiam Campbell . pas lor . SuJldoy
Damewood Sup t Bible Schoo l
School. q : 30 a .m James Hughes ,
9 JO om . Preochmg ser vtce
10 45 a .m . N o evening ser'flice
. sup ! .. evening se r v1ce . l 30 ·p m
even1n g
pray er
HYSELL RUN f"U !;I: METHODIST Wednesday
mee ting , 7.30 p .m . Vquth pro~er
CHURCH , Re"' . Het berl Ailing
serv1ce eo ch Tuesday .
pa stor . Sundav School q _30 a .m .
FAIR V IEW BIBLE
C HUR CH .
M orn in'g servicl"
10 30 o n"L
Lelort . W . Va .. Rt 1. ~ ev Charle s
Evonge l tsiiC service 7:30 p .m
Proye1 meeting , Thul!. doy , 7 30 Hargraves . poster , Wor~h • p ser
vice s, 9 30 a .m .. Sunday ~ c h ool .
pm
FHHDOM GOS PEL MI SSION at 11 o m . e'tlening wor!ihip 7:30
Bold
Kno b
Rev
law rence p.m . Tuesday cott age pray er
C.luc se n&lt;omp Sr ., pas tor . Roger meet1ng Or)d B1ble study . 9 30
W•ll f ord Sr . Sun do., school supt . a .m . Worship service . Wedne!&gt; ·
Sunday schoo l q:30 a
e'tlemng day , 7 30 p m .
CA LVA RY BIB l E CHURCH, now
won.hip ,
7.30 p .m . Proyt:lt
mee lrng W ed ne ~rloy 7 30 p .m . loco ted on Pomeroy P1ke , CoUn ty
Yo uth meeting . Sun day . 5·30 p m . Hood 25, near· Flo! woods. Rev .
wifh Don and M artha M eadow s in Hlockw ood , pas tor . Ser~Jices on
Sunday a t I 0 30 a .m . and 7 30
ch arge.
WHITE'S C HAP~l Coolvil le RD . p .m . w1 th Sunday sc hool. q-30
Re v . Roy Deeter pas to r Sunday om . Bible ~ t u dy , Wednesday ,
7:30pm .
schoo l9 30 om ., wotihl p service
INDEPEND£Nl
HOLINESS
10-30 o rn H1ble ~ tudy ond proye r
CHURCH . INC
Pea rl St. . M•d ·
service Wednesday . 7:30 p .m .
dlepon . Re v. O 'D ell M anley.
RUTLAND
RU TLAND CHURCH OF CHRI ST, pai l or ; So1my Hudson , Sunday
larrv Cole man pa!&gt;tor Co· Sun- !chool supt Sunday school 9.30
dov sc hool s.upl s Sam McKmneY. a.m . even in g worship , 7:30 p.rn .
and prai se
ser'tlice .
and Herb Elh n .Sundoy sch oo l and Pray er
commun1on . 9.30 a .m . Wors h ip Wednesday . 7:30p .m .
THE PEOPLFS CHURCH OF
ond cornu n1on . IO·JOo .rn .
RUTLAND
COM MUNITY POMEROY ._,... Cor ner Moin and
fl oor over
CHURCH. Sunday School. 9·30 Court . Sis , lhi rd
a .m .; worsh1p ser1J1ce . I I a .m .; Ughlho u se Restouronl . Henry
Wednesday prayer meeting, 7 30 Cook, pastor . SU nday school , 10
p .m . youth s~rvkos . Sunday , 7 o .m .: mornmg wor ship , I I a .m .;
ove ning ser vice . 7:J9 . Wednes p m .; Sundoy night worship , 7:30'
RUTLAND CHUkCH OF ~E day evening service , 7.30 In·
NAZARENC . Re v. lloyd D. Gri m , l erdenomination ol. t ull gospel.
RUTLANO CHU~ CH OF COO
Jr. pastor Sunday school ,
30
De nnis Bole s. Sunday
a .m . worsh1p ser v•ce , 10~0 a .m . Pasto r
Br o adcast ltve O'fler WMPO , ~ oung School. 10 o .m .; worship service ,
peop les
serv1 ce .
7
p .m . 11.30 o m . and 7:30 p .m . Prayer
Evangelistic servicv 7 30 p .m . meeting, Wednesday . 7:30 p .m .
RUTLAND APOSTOLIC CHURCH
Wednesday service 7 30 p .m .
OF JE SUS CHRIST . Eld er James
MASON COUNT'!'
Mi ller. Btble study , Wednesdov .
FIR~T SOU TH ERN BAPTIS1 , Cor ·
ner of Second and Anderson , 7:30 p .m . Sunday ~chool 10 a .m .
Mason Pa stor honk Low ther . Sunday n ight ler vice , 7:30p.m .
POMEROY
Wl:SlEVAN
Sundov school q 45 o m .. war ·
H(lrr isonville Roo d :
loh1p serv i&lt;e. 1I a .m . and 7.30 HOLINESS
King , pastor , EdlsorJ
p.m
W ee kly
Bib le
Stu dy . Dewey
Weol/er 'lni•lant H enry Eblin .
W o ·d•1e~ doy , 7 JO p .m .
MAM)N CHUkCfi OF C HH I ~T 1-' . Jr ., Sundoy sch ool su p!, Sunday
0 . Box &lt;iS"/ M1ller St. Mason , W . sch oQI , 9 30om , morning wor ·
Vo ~undoy 61bl e Stud)' lU a .rn ., ship , 11 ~ . m Su nd9y e'flenlng ~er Wor ship I \ am . and "f. p.m . Bible vice , 7·30, prayer meehng, Thur6 ·
Study Wednesday 7 p m Vocal day , 7 :30p.m .
SYRAC::USl: f !RST C~URC H OF
muSIC .
No t f'entecoslo l Re..MASON ASStMBl V O&gt; COO, GOO
Uurlding lone . Mason \'1/. Vo . Geot ge Oilet , pastor Wor,hip
Cl w11oter fennonl , Po slor . Sundoy scr'f!IC"e ~unday q 45 o .m. Sun·
~~100!
Q ~~
11 r11
norl diell .. day sc.hool I I om .. wo 1!&gt;hip se1 ·

HEH · HEH. WHEN
SHE GETS HER BACK
UP, YOU !&lt;NOW
YOU 'VE: HIT A

Fe1turlno Deep Steam

vice . "/ 30 p rn Thu1 sdoy proyer
m eeting . 7 :30p.m ,
M T. HERMO N Un i l ed B1 ethren
Church . .!&gt;u ndoy S&lt;hoo l 9·30 om
Worloh •p
se r v1ce
10.45
Q m.
Preachmg ser vices e'tler y Sunday.
ol ternoling with C. E. Wedne sday
p1ayer meet ing 7:30 p .m . Rev .
Ja mes l eac h , pas l or . David
Holler , 11Jy leader .
JEHOVAH S WllNESSE~ I mile
eos1 ol Rullond junct ion o f Rou te
174 ond N oble Summrl Rood (1 ·
17 4) Sunday Bible le&lt;ture . 9 30
o ... Watchtowe r s tudv . 10 .30
a .m .. Tuesday , Bible sludy . 7 ond
H: 15 p .m .: Thursday . the ocr atic
sch oo l ,
7 30
p .m .
ser v ice
meetmg, 8 30 p m .
HOPE BAPTIST
570 Gronl St .,
Middl e pori. Bobby l:lkin s. postaL
Sunday Sc hoo l . 10 a .m .: worship
service , 11om , evttning ser'flice ,
7·30 p .m . Thut sdoy pra'yer
meeting · a nd, Bibl e study , 7:30
p ,., .
RUTlAND FREEWILL BAPT IST
Chur ch
leland Hole y , pas l or .
Sunday sc hool. 10 a .m .: e'tlening
!&gt;er vice , 7, 30
p .m . Pray er
meet ing . Wednesday , 7-:JO p .m
CH URCH OF GOO of Prophecy.
loca ted on lh e 0 J. White Rood
off hig hwo,. lbO . Sunday School
10 a .m . Superintendeni John
Loveday . Flrs l Wednesday nigh t
of month CPMA ser vices . se cond
Wednesday WMEI meeting, third
lh rough
filth you th
serv1ce.
George Croy l e , pos ter . '
• H OPE BA PTI ST CHAPEL - 570
Gran' St ., Middleporl : Rev . 8obby
Elkins . Sunday sch ool , 10 a .m .:
morning worship , I I ; evening
wa rship, 7: 30 "p .m .. Thursday
eYen ing Bib le stud y and prayer
meeting , 7:30p .m . Atliliated with
S.B.C.

BRA OF O RO

CHURCH

OF

CHRIST. Gabriel Mro z, pastor .~
' Sunday school. 9·30 a ,m .: morn· ing churc h , 10.30 a.m . JuniOr ·
church program u nder dir&amp;cl •on
of Koren Mrot l or chHdren , 2-10,
during regu la1 church hou r in
churc h basemen t. Sunday evening ser'fllce , 7 p .m ; Wtdnesdoy
ser yice , 7 .30 p .m .
JUBIL EE GHRISTIA.N CE NTER
George 's Creek Roo d . Church
S( h ool , 9"l0 o .rn .: m orning worshtp. 10 ·30; a'l•nl ng -ar"'',ce, 7 ·30 .
Prayer meeting W ednesday. 7:30
ptn .
ST . PAUl lUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Corner of iSyt omore and S«:ond
SIS •. "Pomeroy , The Re v. Wllllom
M id dles.worth, Pos.tor ' Sunday
School at 9:415 o .m . and Churc h
Str 'fliCel 11 a .m .
S.AC REO H EAR T, Rev . Fo lhet"
flout 0 . W elt on , po&amp;tor. Pho~e

r

CAM:': ~RO U Gf' ...
FOR 5HE:ET5- ANI7

MY tJES16Ni'

PILLOWCAS ES I

SOFT SPOT!

ExtracHon ·
992-2206 or 992 -7630
Rt . 3. Pomeroy

Pomeroy. 0 .

7 30 p .m B•b le Sludy , W ednesday . 7 ·30 p .m .: Saturday nigh l
pto ycr ser vice . "/ :30 p .m .
H l:MlOCK G ROVE CHRI STIAN .
Roger Wat son . pos te r : Kerm e l h
Byer Su nday sc hool sup!. M o rn Ing worship , q 30 a m .. Sun ·
dayschool 10· 30 om .. eYc ninQ'
ser v•ce 7 30 Wednesday Bibl e
~tudy -/ 30 p .m .
Ml
UNION BAPTIST
Don
W ibon
~und oy
!IC"hool
supermtende.nl Sund ay sc hool .
q 45 o m . evenmg worship , 7:30
p m ~r oye r mee l •ng , 7 :30 p.m

NAZAREN~

. Middleport

OH , HE'S JU;;T
" INE: .

YOUNG'S
CARPETING

MARK VSTORE

IT /7/t:Ji'
n1EY LI KED

• THAT MILL 17:;AL JUST

GARY FA61N?

992.7825. Saturday evening Moss ,
7·30; Sunday Mon . 8 ond 10 a .m ..
Con l ess•on , Saturda y . 7-7 30 p 'm .
VIC TORY BAPTIST
On 1hc
R~u l e 7 b ~ pass Jorn es E. Kees.ee ,
pastor Sundov schoo l 10 a .m .
morning worship , I I a m , even ing ser'flice . 7
TRIN ITY (hiiS lion Assembl y
Cool'fl1 1!e
G ilber I Spencet ,
pa stor . Sunday school . 9 .30 a .m .
m orning worship, II o .m . Sunday
e"'en 1ng
service ,
7 30
p .m
midweek prayer sNvlce Wednes
do~ . 7,30 p .m .
MOUNT
Olt"'e Commu n i ty
Church
Long Botlom . Russell
Cline. super in tendenf. Sunday
School 10 o .m . You th group and
prayer meetinEfi Wednesday 7 :30
p .m . Church ser ... ices Sunday 7:30
p .m . lawrence Bush . pas to1 .
FAilH BAPTI ST Church , MoiOn ,
meet at Uni ted Sl eel Worke1 s
Street,
U nion Ha ll , Ra i lr oad
Mason . Pas tor . Rev . Joy M,t che ll .
M orn ing worsh 1p q-45 a .m .. Sunday School 10 30 a .m . Praye r
meet ing Wednesday . 7: 30pm .

The Almanac
By
Unit ed

F riday , Se pt. I

United Press International

BRIDGE

C::ORR!c:.,.,

Today is Friday, Sept . . 1,
lhe 2441h day of 1978 with 121
til fo llow .
The moon is approaching
its new phase .

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag_ _

eRNIE, Sttr-

AN"I"ICL.IMACriC..FI
. .
.
ex•'b'l't
1 1 y wms
NORTH
. • K 98 6
• A
t A 6 53
+ K Q 10 8

th e d ay.

The mor ni ng s.tars are
Mer cur y ,
Jupiter
a nd

Saturn.
The eveninH stars are Mar s
a nd Venus.

9-l -A

Those born on lhis day are
under lhe sign of Virgo .
.Journa list James Gordon

WEST
• 2
•
• 10 6 5 42
• 98

EAST
• A 54
• 973
t KJ742
• 62
+ 97 5 43
SOU TH
• Q J 10 7 3
• KQJ 8
• Q 10

Incas
The powerful Inca el,lljlire
had tis seat at Cuzco in the
-)\ndes, and covered most of
Peru, Bolivia and Ecuador,
as well as parts of Colwnbla
Chile and Argentillll. Building
on the achievements of BOO
years of Andean .clviHzaUon, ·
the Incas had a high level' of
skill in architect ur e,
eng_ineering, textiles ~nd
soctal organiZlllion .

Wut

North East

Pas s
Pass
Pass

s•

3•

PB8S

Pa ss
Pass
Pass
Pass

I GOT MV POLE AN'
MY HOOK AN'MV LINE ··
NOW. ALL I NEED
15 A

South
1+

4 NT
6+

••

I.

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
It did n't lake South any

li me al all to decide to rise
with 'd ummy 's ace of diamo nds. He wa s n't going to
th row away his nice $lam at
tri ck one and It looked as if
he had better ways to gel rid
of the lo si ng diamond before
letting a defender in with the
ace of trumps.
South started with lh e
clubs. All he needed would
be 10 have both opponents

under Thomas Jefferson, was

acq uitted of charges of
!reason growing out of an
alleged plot til set up an
independent empire in the
nation's Soulh and West.
In 1923, Japan's worst
ea rlhqua ke killed 150,000
persons and inJured many
lhousands of others.

I,,,........rJQo&lt;., •._ . ..........
J .....
IGODO£b
1

r

Opening lead : • 9

(AFF- A- DAY

Bennett was born Sept. 1,
1795.
On lhts day in history:
In 1807, Aaron Burr, vice
president of the Uniled States

Unscramble these lou~ Jumbles.
one lener 10 each squa1e. lo lo1m
tou1 ordinary words

+A J
Vulnerable: East-West
Dea ler : North

,.

Press

Mle.Hl t::'E5CR:I5E
SOME i~ I N6&amp; DONE
IN COI&lt;JGRESS.
A Cahfornia reader wa nts
to know if we ha ve ever seen

a 13-card suit in actual play.
No, we haven 't even seen a

p-card su it but maybe the
next ltme we play we will
run into one . We have seen a

r J

1 KJ

I
Answer here: "K I I I

NEWSPAPER t~ NTE: RPRI SF. " SSN

t

Yeslerday

tFor a copy of JACOB Y MOD·
€RN. senct St to "' Wrn a/
Br idge." care of th rs newspa·
oer. P 0 Box 489. Ratho Ctty
Statson . New Yorl.:. N 'r'J tQ(Jt9 J

gested by the above cartoon.

r I I r·1 I X)"
(Answers tomorrow)

couple of 11 -ca rd suits .
1

Now arrange the circled letters to
term the s urprise answer. as sug-

5

I

Jumbl es FOR1'Y ETUDE DRAGON GOVERN
An swer What he said when asked whe1t-.er he had

liked college - TO A " DEGREE"

Jumble Boc* No . 10. with 1he lat.\ 110 pualea. • evlllllbllllor 11 .315 palt-Pikfffom Jumblt. Clott\lt14iil1QIIIllr,
Norwood. N.J. D?IMI. ...,....
your nwne, dreee. • oodl end~ cn.tita ~to He a 1 I
.

Box"'·

,

f

�L

- 10-il'he Da1ly Sentmel, M1ddleport-Pomeruy. 0 , Fnday, Sept. I, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Business Services

9

Autu !;ale•

WANT AD
CHARGES
It let\
.l iJ&lt;6) S

1

h,u ~-:~

! ~) S

,.,
I •'

I l5
I 'JIJ
U.-.J

h li~\ S

H kl

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I t-1

E&lt;tth ~ o11l UH'f tl w uHntmw u J j
l&lt;iutd~ IS ~ t tlll 1t. J-"'1 \oloi &gt;H I pt t tl&lt;l\
Ath I UII Il lll i{ tJiht I tltotl l t I&gt; IISL'1 Ul t\ t
!lap• ....
lit d iiil i!t'1 1 ,,t tht 1 tl&lt;t\'

,u

ta!t·

In mttmon

( Cit

(lbt \ Uit l ~

6 U 'Jil'

mmunum

CH~h

d uf I !i,w k;, ,mtl
~I

$. 1 1 ~1

IO. Utd

m .uh ruh,

Mub1lt-Hotnt Sillt :.. a ntl \a ttll&gt;&lt;l k '
a ll iUttplt•tJ Ultly \I!Jtl l t a ~lt Y.t llt

vt dt•t 2!1 •t•ut tlwtgt• ft •r .td ~ l il ll \
11 1 ~ BuK Nu111 bt•t In l'.ut tf rill Si II·
Unt&gt;l

fh, Pui.J ib htt rt stl \ t :o. tht l t).:ht
\ll t tlll u t ttjtl l all\ ad ~ t h t tllt l l u lr
Ju lluu&lt;~ l Th~

l'ullhl:&gt;htr 1\ tll rwt bl'

n

Sl)l &gt;lt:. IIJ Jt• fh t II\! II t ' \hd ll IIIII Ull II
l l't l III Sl rli UII

l'hu11t !19".! .! I jt,

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
M,.ntla\
1111 S,t!U t d .t l

ru, ~ tl &lt;~'

Uuu f

4PM

.il l•

n

Suud,11

4P M
1- I td&lt;l ,l

,1rh I /l H&lt; II

IN LOV IN G memo1y o l ou• dear
w1 fe and rn ol her
~hrabe 1h
R1ebe l who le tt u ~ 3 year !&gt; ag o
Sep t 1
God watchf!d yo u wh1 le you !&gt; ul
lered
And he knew you hod your shar e •
He tenderly c losed yo u• we ary
eyes
And too k you .n h1 s co1 e
Dear God Dleas e tok e th• ~
message
To our loved one up abOIII:c'
Tel l her how mu ch we rn • s ~ her
And g•ve her a ll ou r love
Sadly m1ssed by he r h u ~ b'on d
Elber a nd Chddren ~ lee•\
W1 lbur leo Ro ger a nd Hoz dee
and grand ch1ldren

ctmlfi'i!.1lianks
THE SHA D~ R11,1e r Coon '" Hunte rs
A!.so c w• shes to 1honk the
follow•ng bus•ne ss !&gt; a nd pea
pi e lor he lp•ng make o ur U K C
hun! o huge succe!&gt;s Sugar ~ un
Flour Mdl la ndmark Mod e111
Supply Dole s f- eed Mor •e llo
Oh •o Forme r s Bo nk O!&gt;r:ot
Smtih e nd Red Ebl ,n Bol l Spo un
a nd the hne lod•e s. thai worked
so hard '" the k•t chen end los t
but not lea st the great Oo•ly
Sentmel that gave us the f1n e
adver tisemen t Thank you
Shade Rtver Coon Hunte rs and 01
f•cer s

.. .

OIL OR gas lea se f ree 30 a cre'&gt;
1 mtles. north of Pome •oy
014 726 7701 ev e n.ng !&gt;
JOHN TEAFORD Go lf ~ qu• p m c n t
Buy sel l trade 614 9!:1 5 3961
TH~

MEIGS Co l ow ~ n l o r c e me nt
hplorer &lt;o Pos t 730 wdl ho ld o
cor wo~ h on Sol Sepr lnd At
Borton s Sugar Ru n Ashland n
Pomeroy !rom 9 t o~ Pr1ce lor
wo~h•ng a nd dry ong w 1ll be
S1 50

DRtAMING OF a while ( hr t!&gt; rmos
w•th no bdl s? Wo nd e rl ul to
thmk about bu t '' could co me
true Be o Toy l ad e\ hos te &lt;o s 1
In yo ur home o r by orde rs. h om
your fr1end s ~or n I O 'r' ~ and g d n
f re e
Nom e br a nd to ys
reasonably
pr •c ed
w th
guarantee Gdt s. fo r the wh o le
fo mtly Fo r .n fo rmo t1on r oll
7d1 '1377 or fYI7 7056
Wb RK
OV l:RSl:A S
Au stral 10
Afr1 co South A.me11 co l:ur o pe
Co ns tru c t •o n
So le s
e tc
~ nglnee rs ller •co l · e tc S8000
to SSO 000 plus Expen s e ~ po• d
For employme n t mf or mo1 1on
wr.te Ove rs ea s. ~mpl o ym en t
Bo• 1011 Bos ton Mo 01 101
HEL P WANH:D re spons •b le pe1
son to board s.everol c o t ~ and
dogs unt d placed M e• g ~ CG
Huma ne Soc •ety Co li 991 SA'U
or 9911639
WANT A carpente r to do so me
Pho ne
h o u&lt;oe
r e po u
01469852 15
BAB YS ITTER fo r k•nde rgorden age
chtl d G rovel Hil l area AFter 5
99'1 J-177
ON~

FULL t•m e man 0 11er 18
Me e ha n col
e:.pe t~ en c e
destred Apply '" per s. o n on ly
Welker s Ashla nd

oPPoRTUNI TY FOR stude nts. aged
14 to 17 fo r port ltme eventng
wo rk Tues thru Sun 3 o r 4
ntg ht s. per week Must not be
Invol ved tn Bo nd or sporh Ap
ply '"pers on to Donelli s P1zzo
Mtdd leporl Oh•o No phone
calls please
SOMEONE 10 core for e ld erly '"
her home If 1nteres led call
843 7494
FUEl TRU CK dfl ver w1lh e11
pe r1ence d r1v lng hu ck.~ Wrtle
c o Box T':J9 f The Do•lv Sen
t .nel P o mero~ Oh

---NEED SOMEONE lo make and m

s tall w•nd o w!l lo r o ld home
_!85 424.4 E~e~ •n~~ on' ly
BABYSITTER NEEDED tn Syracus e
from 2pm to 11 m yoUI ho me or
m1ne Call 992 5105 Prete r to
come to my house

TAAOOR TRAILER d;iver wo nt ed
Would be home e11ery n•ght
Must have ewperten ce Oh•o
Valle~ Monu la ctun ng l o
1up
pers Plam s
Oh•o
Phone
OJ&lt; 667 3 13 1

...

1973 fOio!D LlO \ door hard to p
P S
P t:1 lo cto rot' 0 11 ste reo
tope dec k 5 ne w rad 1ol s. no w
ti re s ~eo son ob l y pt tced Good
cond rt• o n Co li Q&lt;n 3 &lt;~ 01

A fi Aiol l M ~ NI dvodo blf' lot !&gt;I L''-'P
mg q uotte t s roorr1 fur Ia• lo t.p

men tO n\l n u t e ~ h o m Mo un
l1one e r Plan t ~ 0 1tf ord W Vo
Phone 1 J0 4 BH7 3JS6
IHAI LUI ~ PA n 111 Che ste r m ea
Ve • y secluded o n counll ys od£'
( rt y wa ter pa tche s to otlo{ h
bu tl d• ng lot too ls and !&gt; lo roge
S4 U a mo nt h 98 ~ J909
IWO BI:UHOOM II Otl e r
only q91 33?4

~

8 ~ MO~Ill: HOMI:S PI Plea
son I W Vo be~ 1de Heck s
PU3 Br oo drn or e ld )I( 04 ')
bed room
19lJ Oortonl4 ~~: W2b e droom
f(/7') Vici Or to n 14 x 67 3 bedroom
? bo lh
1'f l') Cove ntry 1211 b ) :J bedr oom
1969 ~t o t c sm on 11 x bO 2
bed roo m

( A ll;RPILLAU 0 4 0 bull dow• f01
!&gt; ole O f !rode lot Iorge huck 01
c ~e c a ... ator backhoe l'.f'n 1478

ileal Estate

for~~"

I:IUIWIN G l Ol lot !&gt;Ol e m
1-' am ero y JOI 100 o f on 0 1 re
Phone 99') J 75~

Service,,... ....
'""" ... ..,.......,.

We .are currently m•k•ng
appointments lor sen1or

c-o.-

honal

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

po,tr ... ts . We

109 H1gh St ,
Pomeroy
8 'J 1 mo

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic !wood" fiber)
Thermal insulation

.

Save 30 pcl.lo 50 pet.
on hNtlng cost
Experience ilnd
fully Insured
Free Est
Call992·2772
8-10-1mo ( Pd )

"

-

'

ROOFING

QUALITY

•

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!
In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Streef-&lt;&gt;11
Mill Street lust behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-4 p .m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8 31 · 1 mo

2 DR
Red w 1th wh 1te landau top, whtte vi nyl

19

..

"'

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

POMEROY
LANDMARK

NTS

~r adford

HWOOD

BOWERS

REPAIR

Discount

Sweepers looslen 1rons ott
small opp lton ces Lawn mower
nex t to Stat e H•ghwoy Ca rage
an Route 7 Phone {614 ) 985
3825

Prices

S~WING

MACHINE Repo11 s ser
v1ce c it makes. 9'12 2284 The
Fob r tc Sho p
Pomeroy
Author~zed S1nger Soles a nd
Serv1ce We sharpen Scissors

-

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

--

_.____

---

WILL do roof •ng consfruCi to n
plum bmg an d heOitng No jOb
too lot ge o r too sma ll Pho ne
7412348
HOWENY AND MARli N be
co vo tm g
s.ep t tc s ystem s.
doze r bock hoe d ump lruck
lunes lone
grovel
blacktop
pov.ng Rt 143 Phone I (614 )
698 73J I

-

-----

o!

-

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC SALE
Not tee ts hereby otven tha t
on Sept 14 , 1978, a publiC sate
will be held at the Cttizens
National Bank , Middleport ,
Ohto to sell for • tash th e
follawmo collateral to w1t
One 197J Ford 1h Ton ptck
up
t ruck
Ser
No
FIOGLR&lt;65B8
The Ctt tzens Nat tona ! Bank
reserves the rtQhl to brd at
th1s sale

MONACO ROYAL 4 DR.,
Sed., auto., power steering, power
brakes, AM-FM. v1nyl top. extra clean
ca r , local one owner

'2595

'

'70 Buick LeSabre 4 Dr HT 795
'72 Ford Maverick 2 Dr Nice 11095

DRIVE A UTILE

&amp;
SAVE A LOT
AU corpat lnsto'iled with
plddlng 11 no chorge.
Export lnstatl1tlon ,

'72 Chev. Imp. Cust. 2Dr. HJI1095
'73 Mere. Montego MX 2 Dr '1295

I
I

I

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

WI:- 00 patnt1ng gu tt er ce•li ng
Ide po ne lmJ
roof repo•r

~:~;b~~i,mao~es co2~~t:9t;;;5

'4• 88

aq. yd
&amp; up

9' and 12'

Vin~

Roor Covering In Stock

os.k for Walla ce Morm

Gi~~~--~"~
BEAUTIFUL
ADULT
femal e
S•ome5e co t
Very gentle
Hou sebr o ken
992 2592 o r
997 5&lt;17
GOOO HOME lg r mo te neutered
cots Ho usebroke n 992 3-427

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

ONt KtTHN 8 weeks o ld Also
m ot her ee l 304 773 5'131

WATER WEll dr tllmg Wtlhom T
_G.!.ant _7_42_ 287q:- '-'---··
QUALIFIED SITTER Will stt in ~our
hom e
onyt•me
Phone
949 2042

Equipment

Shopp1ng
,. ,..,....,,.ntence

Buy whore you con como In
ond . . . who! yau'ro tolling
- Good Mltctlona - F utty
atockocl.=.
· ---Good Stloctlon 01

RUG REMNANTS
Frvm

'29'1

&amp; Up

C.ll742-2211
TALK TO
Wonclotlor Horb Grote
or Gtno Smith

RUTLAND
FURNITURE
742-2211

Rutlond

Hat c hba ck, 6 cvl , auto

1973 PONTIAC GRAND AM .........'1695
1973 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX..... }1495
Auto , p s , p b , vi nyt roo f. atr

1975 VEGA WAGON ....... ~.~!~.:.~!~ . 1 1295
973 CHEV. CHEVELLL ............. 11395
4 Dr. Wagon.

1973 MERCURY MONTEGO ......... ~1295
4 dr auto air, p s , P b

1'973 CHEV. VEGA ........~.~~'.:.~~:..... 395
1

2 DUNE BUGGfS .......:~.~~~~ ....11295
TRUCKS
975 FORD CUSTOM 30_2.......... 12895

. .IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAl
"MAKES A
lED FOR
YOU
REDIIIU•

1973 DATSUN PICKUP................ 11995
With topper, &lt;cylinder. Hpeed, cab tights , Sharp.

VANS

1972 CHM

C-10.~~~:!: ...............12495

RIEBEL'S USED CARS
See

Roger Riebel

2 Conve11ient Numbers
985-3345 or 667 -3463

151_N STOCK
~ LilraHt Stilet'- In lllt'Valltf

St, ~t.

7

•

1 mile north
Tuppers Plains.

Ohio

2_,

(

Reedsville,

CHIP WOOD
Poles
max
d1ameler 10 on la rges t end $!:1
per tan bu nd led s lob Sb per
to n Deli vered to Ohto Pallet
Co Rt 2 P omero~ 992 2689

1973 CHEVY WV .....'.................7~~ .....st'395
1974 FORD COURIER-:.~~!~.'~~~: .~~; ...•. '1995
1976 FORD LONG BED...................... '2995

P S, AM FM

1977 F150••••••.•••.•••••s4295
1975 F150••••••••••••.•• ..S2795
1974 D-200 4X4.••.•••. $AVE$
1974 C-10 •••••••••••.••••• s2595
MecharHc Spectal

0.

-

-

-

TIM8t:f( POMEHOV Fore$! Pro
ducts lo p prtee for stond tng
s.ow t•m ber Colt 9.91 sq65 or
t&lt;e nt Han by ~ 4-16_ 8570

OlD f-UR NITURE •ce bo11es brass
beds Iro n beds desks etc
corn plel~

households

Wnt e

col l99'1 7760
COINS pocket watches
cla ss nngs weddtng bands.
dtomonds Gold or s1lver Coli

OLO

_Rog~r Wom~_!!y 7-111~3 1

WE PICK up tunk auto bodtes. buy
1ng 1un k cars scrap tron bot
lenes and melals
R1d er s
Solvoge
SR 124 f.'omer o'l'
991 5408
WANTtD TO buy any old moto r
cycles or part s. Does not ho~o~e
lo ru n Reasonable pr•cf!os
991 6345

----

"

WANT TO buy 18 500 lb houstng
lor 1909 CMC truck Springs
hubs a nd o11les £ot on rear end
leo Moms 742 2d55

SY NOPSIS

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

OF FtOUCIA~ Y
On Augusl 21 1978 , ' " the
Metgs Coun ly Probate Co urt
Case No 2246S , Jo H Carun t
1149
Glenn
Avenue ,
Co lumbus , OhtO 43212 Wll!
appo1 nt ed Adm tnts tralrtM. o f
the estate of Websl er Bogg.,\
Hodge , de ceas e d late of 114
Laurtt Street , Pome r o~ .
Oh•O
Mann•ng D Webster
Probate Ju d ge
18 1 25 ( 9 1 1. a ltc

OPEN TILL 7 P .M .
E :uept Thursday &amp; Saturday Ttl S 00
Closed Sunday

LOST BlONOE mole Afghan pup
py tn vtctmty of Ohver St tn
Mldd le p o rl
Child s
pet
Heward 985 3901

DAN THOMPSON FORD

LOST TWO BLACK Doberman
Pm sc hers 1 ha s cl 1pped eor
Fori Me1gs
Hutlond oreo
Cho•ns and tag s
Reword
7-12 731b

See Rocky Hupp, Darrell Dodntlor Pal Hill, General
Manager, for a Good Deal on • New or Used Veh1cJe
992-2196
Middleport , 0

BH OWN
BLACK and
wh1te
be agle Mole Small hern to on
stoma ch Needs med!COI!on
Lorge reword Co li coll ect
304 895 340 7 Lost 10 Roc 1ne

b 14 667 -3838

•

'

"

i
•

:

SATURDAY, SEPT . 2 1nd SUNDAY , SEPT . 3
STARTING AT 11 O'CLOCK A .M . EACH DAY.
Take St. Rt . 60 south out of Z1nesvllte to MtConntlsVIIIe - or take St Rl. 60 north out of Mlrletto to
McConnetsvrlte, cross ri¥tr throU!Ih Matta on 51 Rl. 71
west for 2 mtles, slay telt ottop If hilt ont~ St. Rl, 377 to
Pennsville at the Bill Jones Forms 30 m1tes -"'tasl
of Athens
Sell tng a colle ction o f over 200 guns - muzzle loading
rifles. s hotguns , htQh powered rtfles , hand guns,
German Lugers, and man y. many more A lot wscopes AllgunswillbesoldonSUNDAY ,S EPT 3

!
•

•:

:

S.t one of these courteous salesmen : Pett Burris,

•

M•rvin KteHugh

:
•

or

O.Orgt H1rrls.

•

0

•

•

0

: Karr &amp; VanZandt

!

o
"You'll llko Our Quo lily Woy of Doing Business"
:
GMC Fin1ncing
• H2 -5342
Pomeroy
e0
OPen Evenlru;t~
6:00-Til5 p .m . Sat.

o
:

0
0

""'•I

•,

Also se ll ing a very la rge Inven tor y of sporting good5,
ammunition , accessorilts, hundreds of r1lnwur,
several hundreds pairs Tonv Lama western boOts for
men &amp; women, Dtngo Deats for men &amp; women, Georgia
boots, eng meer boots lor OMn. Dan ""'' baols,
Dunham , large assort,.,! work shoos llkt Ch i- a,
Herman. Wol veri ne , ass1 drl'ft ahoes 1 tenntslhoes for
men , women &amp; c htldrtn. over 100 pairs of assorted
sizes mmers boots w -steel toes, tht!l will be a large shoe
&amp; boot sale Very large assortment of pocket knlv~ of
different brands, belt buckles, belts, b,l ltlolds, dinner
buckets, camp stoves &amp; pans, etc Hundreds of pairs of
Levi, Lee, and Wranger jeans Very large assortment
sleeping bags - all s izes &amp; pmes, new tents - att
sizes , beck packs, etc
There sill be some antique furniture, glan, •nd aome
reproduced merchandise lor sale. 2 slalntd gtasa
windows and many other Items not mentlonocl.
1954 Chevrolet Model :WOO, 'AI Ton Pickup Truck. 6
speed trans ., 6 cyt., 750x17 In, rough " ' " on r • n
700x17 In on front Red color - onty 9.000 mil.. Trudo
original . looks good and rUI\S like new. Pr.,.,.ty of
Stockport Volunteer Fire Dept SOLD ON SUNDAY
This large sate contains everything associated with
outdoorsmen and cam~r~ as well as new t:lothlftO,
boots, work shoes, gloves, miners baola, ole. A good
time for everyone to stock up on._ fin~ new mtrchMCII•
at roesonabte prices,· All c on1ents of aporllng IOIIds
store brand new Thla will be an extra gaM't doy • ' •·
So It hold r-rdto .. Qf-ft)eo; ovlsldt. Seli _,....
Clmptr lfllc:t IVIitalilo. ~ty
shoWII btlort doy of Nlll. LtiiCI1 011 twa ••·
your ~wn cllllir, plenty ...... Terms- C..lr
w -positlve t D dov of sole. Nol rtlfllllll"to fer
occldtnls.
Bill Jonosln tltl'll of
Auctloneero-Bitl Jones, Rondy Now.m, ond
AIIOCilfel
Phone 557-3411or 557-31U

.

Drive Home A Winner

DEPARTMENT OF
LIQUOR CON TROL
Clt fforel E Re1ch ,
Dtrecto r

PENNSVILLE, OHIO

•

.

FULLY

Leen to contarr, standal"d

C.OYenants and cancellable by
the Oepertment on n.nety
day~ not •ce

2 DAY LABOR DAY
WEEKEND SALE

: 1976 CADILLAC SED. DEVILLE ..............'6900 :
•
•
! 1974 OLDS ROYALE CPE... ............... '2295 !
FOUND AT Edson Hart res1dence
•
•
Oor wm , o po rt German
:
1972
CHEV.
NOVA
CPE..
....................
'595
:
Bulls have the keenest Vl·
Shephard dog Friendly Pho ne
•
992 5019
won of all living things : a •
:
1973
CHEV.
IMPALA
SEDAN
..
-.....
-......
'895
:
FOUND IRISH Sett er female Lo l soanng eagle can spot 1ts
prey a m1le away
•:• 1975 ·OLDS 98 LS SED .............. --.... 14395 :••
b'l~ '!_or_ol ~_?~P~r~
o
I
o
: 1972 OLDS 98 LS CPL .................. 1895 :
•
•
!• 1975 OLDS CUT. CPE. 442 ................ '3795 :0
: 1971 BUICK SKYLARK CPE................ '995 :
: 1973 BUICK LESABRE SED................. 11795 :0
•
White-WaH CcHlp
:1973 DODGE CHARGER SE ............. : .. .'1895 :
Custom Poly
1976 PACER CPE.. .......................... '2295 !
A78x13
!0 -1975 CHEV. CAPRICE WAGON.............. '3695 •
PrlcolnctudH
Fed. Tox
!does not
: 1975 DATSUN B210........................ 11595 :
lnctudo
sotoatoxor

Control pr oposes to le a se !he
stor e room at 11 2 Mulberry
Avenue Po m eroy . Oh10 -1$709
fr om Rober! Wtngett, Colll!'ge
Road , Syracuse Oht o 45779
tor a pert od of ~ yl!a n at a
monthlY rental ot S230 00
Prem1ses are to·M occup•ed
by State LiQUot Store No 22

PUBLIC AUCTION

COON HOUN D pups Half Blue
$10
t•ck . holf Atredole
985 &lt;232

sg2JI

The Depa rtment ot LtQu or

(9 1 1 ltc

•••
Oleo
•
-.,,!~'1 :
KARR &amp; VAN ZANDfS
•••
••
HOOF HOLLOW Horses Buy sell
GIVE US A TRY
trade or lrotn New and used
••
soddl ei Ruth Reeves Albany
•••
lbl 4)098 3190
BEFORE YOU BUY.
--·- - -- --- -- ••
••
Rt SIN C STAR Kennels Boordmg
•
••
and groom1ng otl breeds
••
Che shire , 307 0292 or 367 0106
•
---------- •
••
LOVABLE WHITE snow dnh great
•
•
••
PYRENEES Puppte s
Phone
•
1 6t.4 b67 3838
•
s1995 •
GHEAT - P- YHANfl'"5 - pu-p;,., t ! 1973 CADILLAC CPE DEVILLE. .... .. __ ., __ ,
!

GUI~RANTIID

r

trans .•

TRUCKS

1973 Maverick 2 Dr •••• ~1895

REED'S COUNTRY STORE

bo~nclngl

CANNING poocht' good 'l'lallty
GET READY next seoson wlfh
F~""ltone
canning peaches
Carefree awnings o~r candl
17 98. bring own container.
tloners, R V. ontl freere at
Relatl and wholesale. lob 1
COONfR'S
CAMPERS Rolnbow
Mort&lt;el ,
Maso n
Midway
fUdge CH 28 f~ ~shan
,,
~a~·~ · Po_!"•roy Oh .

1973 FORD TORINO ....... ?.~.'.. ~:~.:~?~~ .... '1695
1972 FORD LTD ... :.?:. : .~ .~:.:.~. : .~'.'....... '1095
1968 CHRYSLER .... .'.......... :.~: ..~.:•.•.... 1295

,

302 V 8, grabber pack , auto
stereo. tape

CALl THE WISEMAN

.

4 cyl , auto trans , i.more

SEE THEM TODAY

M 0 Mtlle r Rt 4 Pomeroy or

Atr, vinyl roof

Rack , P S, P B , atr

1974.Mustang II 2 Dr s1695
1974 Maverick 2 Dr: •.• s2195

Wgn., ps, pb, ac

V 8, auto ., 2 WB . P .S

REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

I

p b , aura , o cy l , vtnyl roo t

1974 CHEVY IMPALA.~.?.'.:.~.~:.~.?.:.~·~.•.'1695
1914 FORD PINTO WAGON .....~~~ .~.~~~ ....'U9S
-'
1973 CHRYSLER WAGON.......
.. ............11595

2 Dr Ghta, V 6 , auto trans , power s teenng , vinyl roof .
more
~

1974 FORD TORINO .................. 11495

1973 PONTIAC VENTURA ............ 1995

2 Or , p s

1974 Mustang ll.........s2295

rcoNo~r~r

2 dr , AM, w 8 track ster~. cru1se control, p wmdows
&amp; power d oor locks, 350 V-8, auto, p s , p b , vinyl roof,
air

6 cylinder , automatic, P S

1975 CHEVY WAGON.: ••. ~.~~-~. ~........... '2415
1S74 FORD TORINO ..~.~:.~:~:.!..~:.~!r.....'l795
1974 MAVERICK .............. ............... '2100

302 V-8, auto. trans , power s teer tng , P frt dtsc
brakes, vinyl roof , sport mtrrors, drk brow n wtth
chamtots top

,l;'r•.tt:TOir

1977 CAPRICE CLASSIC ............ '5295

Hatchback.

4 Or , auto , P S , P B , ail' ,

302 V 8, grabber pack , auto trans , P S S har p

5 , Dr , CVCC

1974 CHM NOVA ...................11695

1975 FORD GRANADA .......................'2795

4 cyl, auto trans., power steer in g , AM FM radio
elect rear defrost. less than 13,000 m 1les, console

L---------J

1976 HONDA STATION WAGON ...12995

4 Or , automatic. P S , P B , a1r

Or , fully equ 1 ppe~ Wh1fe II. Red

1975 Mustang II 2 Dr $2795

POMEROY, 0,

au to , Ml c he lon rad1al t•res 31 000

1975 MERCURY BROUGHAN ................ '3295

trans , P S, AM radio, luggage ra ck.
approx 29,000 miles

"Finally, Tve found

1974 OLDS CUTlASS ...............12495

Vt n yl roof, p s p b
mil es

4 cy,l , auto

PH. 992·2176

stereo, 2

1976 PINTO RUNABOUT..................... '2495

1976 Chev. Vega Wgn. s2295

I'
I'
I lntergtional
It
Open Friday I'
I u._.
._,nra,11 Tlll7
. 00p m.
I Nnldu • For Your I

JENDLY DEALERSHIP

4 dr

21,000 mttes, atr cond Ptti , P &amp;., AM FM
Dr , blue wrth wh 1te vtnyl rnot

II Equipment Co. II 1977 Mustang II 2 Dr.s4295

BUYS
SAVE ON
CARPETING

1977 CHRYSLER CORDOBA .,_ ...... ........148!5

top

V 6, -4 speed tra ns , power steering la cy spoke
alum tnum wheels AM-FM stereo wtth 23 c han CB
"old wtth black mtertor , sport &amp; shar p

r---------,
I ME~GS I

1

w wh1te

1976 Mustang II 2+2 ••s3695

(9) 1. 3, 5, Jtc

Don 'I forget you owe it to yourself to check wilh us before you buy
any car. New or Used . We can save you money. See or call one of
These Fnendly Salesmen : J . D. Story. Ray Douglas or Bill Nelson .

'

--

THt CHIMN I:Y Sweep Reduced
ra tes td Sep t 1 614 373 b057
weekdays unttl 5

'

'72 Chev. Caprice Wagon ..... '995

197.7 Granada 2 Dr••••• $4795
vinyl roof. fed

SOMf CHEAP GOOD TRANSPORTATION

'72 Ford Gal. 500 4 Dr HT...'795

'3295

6 cyl , auto trans , power s te er mg , a tr cond , ttlt w hee L

1975 DODGE
PRICED AT

Vinyl bed cgver.

4 cyl., auto tran s , appearance d ecor grp Sharp

Phone 992-2111

'3395

'4495

'72 Buick Skylark 4 Dr ......'1395

Auto ., 302 , p s.,
pb , a1rcond

1977 Pinto Runabout..!3195

a MAN-SIZE tractor"

PUL liN S EXCAVATING Co mplete
Ser v1Ce Phone 99'1 1-178
HU:Vl:S I HADING Posl Pogevtl le
Groceru~s.
dry good s hard
wore feed tack sho p Speoal
25 lb
dog too~ 88
AUTOMOBILt IN SURAN CE been
cancelled? Losl yo ur operotor5
lt cense? Phone9912 143

1978 Fairmont 2 dr•.•• !4395

6 cyl.. auto , power steer~ng, power
brakes, air This Pa cer Is all white w1th
red &amp; white tntertor, local one owner

tROOF PAINT

'

1976
FORD RANCHERO
PICKUP ',

"W:..·c~'" W. CarMy, Mgr.

-· .

l: XCAVA TIN G doter loader ond
backhoe work dump truclr.s
and Ia boys lor h1re w1l l haul
fil l d1rl to so 1l l1mestone and
gro vel , Coli Ej,ab or Roger Je f
Iar s day ph o~ 9fl2 7089 n1ght
phone 992 351S_o~W__7 _ 523~ __
fXCAVATlNG dozer backhoe
and d •tche r Charles R Hot
fteld
Bock Hoe Service ,
Rutla nd Ohto Phone 741 2008

Headquarters

CENTRAL REALTY CO.

mtertor a tr, P S, P B , AM FM, one of
the sharpest tn town Local owner

'72 Ford Tormo ....... Only '1095
BRAOfOHD
Auctio neer
Co m
ple te ServiCe Phon e 949 2487
of 949 '1000 Rac1ne Oh1o Cnll

trans., power steertng , power brakes, a ir
cond .• less than 6 ,000 mtles, drk brown Nice.

Pomerat l.andm ark

'5695

8-20-lmo. (Pd)

SPECIAL

v.e, auto

Call now for iippointment.

1976 BUICK REGAL

Free Estil~nales
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

1978 Thunderbird ••••••. s6595

OFF

roof, economteal to r un

1976 AMC PACER

403 e ngme , a uto , power s tee rtn g
power brakes, ra lly w heels, sliver wfth
black in tenor , Pontiac's sharpest car.
one owner

'

v''&gt;vZ7 pJ)

4 cyl , au to trans , power steert ng , AM rad to, vinyl

1976 PONTIAC
TRANS AM

H. L WRITESEL

c~ ].!

SPECIAL
PRICE
EM.pures
Sept HI, 197tl

'5995

Chester, Ohio
10·30-c

'
I

s~

Has v inyl top , su nr oof, power windows.
power seats, cru1se ttlt whee l, AM-FM
stereo Only 17 ,821 mtles

Jack's Septic
Tank
. Service
BoX 3

M0DfL'-___...._~--~1lft

1
•
MONTE CARLO

Hour Service. Any day ,
anytime.
Phone 985·3806
J1ck Ginther 985·31116

\

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

SHARP USfD CARS

Residentiill and commer ·
ctal. Call for est1mate 24

s1295

u.s.-

USED CARS
AT
BARGAIN
PRICES
---·
LA Tf

DAN THOMPSON FORD

Any
mode c•r -ports
extr1 if needed. Excludes
front wheel drive cars.

QUALITY

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

'rile APPAWGIIIAN
8'1011E OOMNNY

..

HIGH

992·2174

.

0

-

0

SPECIAL

4-30-tlc

•289.95

18'...

500 E; MAIN
POMEROY, 0.

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

CBob Hoef11ch)

J&amp;L

SMITH NELSON

St. Rt. 124toword Ruttond ,

The Photo Place

--

WHEEL
ALIGNM ENT

0. '

Call Us Today

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

•••

~. mile oH Rt. 7 by-pall on

tra1ture

Adults

N EED A WATE R
SOFTENER?

use tredt ·
iind ilso
outdoor
par ·

sethngs

te.arure

LOAL l1M l:~ 10Nf !&gt;and grav e l HOU~~ IN M cicilepart remodel
co ln u1n ch lor•de f ertrl•~:er dog
e d 7 •oom s. both central o•r
food and all iypes. of salt h
99'J ~ Ob4
CCI SlOt ~ott Work s. In c ~ M0111
AUU LOl on Rl 7 N•co but ldmg
)t Pomeroy 991 JH91
Sll(' 99/. 7':J l A
19 76 OlU~MOBil~ ~torl 11 €' 4
BURfiOUGHS ~I: N~ I MA Ill
oc
B~Al 1H~ October rus.h G•11e us
'&gt; pee d 4 r: yl111der 25 Q(X) m iles
1'
, ACHi: 3 loca ted 1 mt le h om
cou nt •ng mac hme
Phone
yo u• 01der now for a rrows
Ne w llr c s $2900 98 ~ 3909
Me•g ~ Mm e I D1tlle d well and
99'1
:2
I
Sb
1
he
Oody
~enfmel
cus tom mode th e way you won t
!&gt;ep liC !&gt;ys. tem JOA 8B'J 'J3J4
1911 PLYMOUtH OU ~ HH P ~
I l l Cou rt Str e et Pomeroy
lht"'n1 a nd cut to yo ur .nd• ... du a l
Al
new ! ~r e~ Good wo •k
OhiO
ROOM ho use w1 lh both ]7
HVI:
le11 g1h Ptck up onyt1me be/ore
cor $!9 5 Pho ne 995 3596
For The Best
acres
Born
O the r ou t
Octobe 1 I $~ deposi t Wi th
but ldmg !&gt; (U a Longs v11l e Call
o rde&gt; r
(tos to n Gomeg e ll er) )LA H ~ ~OH sole $~ p1ck up lood
Price In Town
1961 C Hl: V ~Oll: 1 , to n p tr ku p b
Oh•o Vol le y Monufoc turtr1g Co
74"J 2450 fo1 opp t
ol u rn 11H,11n o~r o w'i.
$16 9 ~
cyl !ii1d SS50 Pho ne 991 17 ]1
See
1upper~ PIoms Oht o Phone
d oJ,e n
~•berglo ~~
$ 1.4 9 ~
alter~ p m
J BI:-OHOOM house 'till e lectr•c
614 bb7 JIJ I
Denver Kapple
do 1en We refl e lch arro ws
Ove r I o Crf'!
Mnr1111lg sto r
19 ~ 8 COUGAR XJU A I cond•!t o n
gl as s ol umrn um or wood 111 Ol:AHBOR N CUTOH 'i. OW Wl lh
At
He1ghh 949 1424
4000 rn de s 01 t P ~ P S AM
pulley qq1 b129
cl ucl es 3 new plo ~ lt c vo ne 'i. n•cl.
f-M tope 40 \ ha nne l CB e lec
HOUSI: t-:01( s.ole by owner
a nd • n ~e r t S 1 per or ro w Als.o
tr l l w1ndo w td! wheel rnoou
Shown by oppo1n trnen t o11 ly
we s lro•ght e n olum•num or
Muffler "
100 f and Oth e t OKIIO S (Or1tact
Brakes
991 '1'1'15 after 3 prn
rows !i SU each on ow lrt
Don Hyse ll Rutlan d Oh• o
Shocks
Tires
lo unty ~por t Shop Nort h a nd
~ I X ROOM house and both Ce n
I 4 J:J l ~ 4
1, ,
Cou n ty
Spo rt
Shop
Battery.
'
tro l heat On II a cres. Located
Oow nto wn :J04 0 7 ~ 1988
19 /0 ll D
Mus t s.e ll S400
111 co untry o n H~ se ll Ru n .All
lns~allation Servic:e
997 77 !9
Let
Pom
e
roy
landmark
1mneral nghh 15 mm ute~ 1o
H~All Y PI GS
S'JS ()0 and up
softe n &amp; cond1t1on your
Phone 949 1460
Ph. 99 2848
Pomeroy, 0.
town ~o r So le s •gr1 rn yard Va
19!4 l H~ V I-IOL~1 NOV A 6 r yl J
water Wl1h Coop water
coni SIJ UOO Shown on ! ~ lo 1n
3 -15-lf c
~ p ee d
new t11es
e )(hou!&gt; l APPlt ~
F! lzpolt~ c k
Or chotds
softener, Model UC SVI •
teres. ted porl•es. 74') J074
sysre rn and new s hocks Good
~tot e
fl o ule b ~ (/
Phone
Now Only
ru nnmg cond11t0n
949 1650
SIX ROOM S ond both Some
w.lk es.vd le 069 3 78 )
o il er 5 r.n
remodelmg d ontl &amp; Hl!&gt;u loll on
L et u s tes t your water
J ij by 16 " 7 whee ls Pr
11 e eds more work Alummurn HOMtSIHS for !;Ol e 1 a cre end
197~
Vl:GA ~1A110NWAGON
Free
S1S 00 2 / 00 1&lt; 10 Wt nte r t11 e~
s1d1 ng Good locolton St:ISOO
oulo
J
1rew ~ !e e l belted
up M•ddleport near Rutland
pr S~ O 00 Cal l C,Q'] 7091
Co li 9n 35B7
•odto ls.
b cefl erH co ndll• on
Coll992 7.ot81
As.h.ng S1400 qcn 6CU 8 or 1 9~~ ( J5 Je e p 1&lt;1 71 Ho ndo A!&gt;O
lRAilfH AND !
acres on 31S NI:W :., bed roo m house 2 boths.
Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
99"/ 525 I
94 75 17 1alter5 pm
nem
mme1oo
Dnlled we ll
1 acr e , M•dd leporl
all elec
~ Phone m 2181
7 4'1 2053
1'}69 f-ORO LlD 2 door ha rd top
U~tD f-ARM MA l HINl:~Y
cl ose lo ~utlond Phone 991
Mt 165 dtes e ltro clor
A I me clr o rHCOIIy 191') fo rd
74B1
Mf- '})5 d•e ~ eltro c t or
- ton p1 ck.u p ~02 V 8 S1d ~ hdt
VA
FHA JU yr fmo nc1ng a lso
Mf- '165 d•e s. el tra cto r
Loll / 41 793 ] olt e1 ~ pm
re fm onc m g Ireland Mor tga ge
Mf- 11J5 d• es.eltraclot
JQ ~ S
lJA1 ~ UN
PI CKUP
t o w Mt LOO two fl o w ( hoppe•
77 E Sta te Alh ens ph oM (614 1
mdeo ge ~ l ep bum pe • Good A ( Lleone r (o mbm g w11h 4 row i l.l?O NA ~ HUA 14 11 bS J bedroo m
~97 305 1
lO!ld tHOil S 1!l~O 9!:! 5 JQ79
co rn he ad and IJ It g1o•n
I
both und c rp11l11111g SISOO
THHU: BEDROOM fr ame home 111
tabl e New lcleo o n e •o w ( 0111
an d O!iSu rnP loon 949 /6fJJ o r
. .[111111111
M1ddlepor t Co li 991 3457
p1cke 1
843 3311
IN )YRAC USI: 1 bedroo m hou s.e
~ HIN N ~ IRA Cl OJ.I ~ All: ~
BI O~ WAN1 l: O Ofl o 1 47&lt;~ 00 x 74
45f:j 16JO
MAIN
--~
New storm wm dow"io
New
Modular home Oomoged by
\ard !;ale
leon WV
POMEROY,
O.
~~~·
~•;
u
m
buddtng
1
porches.
hr e 1 he hbme •So well bu1lt an d
conto, ne d J bed1 oorn Iorge l1 v
II YOU ho ve o ser vic e to after
NEW
LISTING
10 °1 ACRtS a room house 4
mg roo m lo t mol d m111g roo m
Bundy cl oture!
wont 10 buy or s ell some th1ng f.OJ? ~All:
Secluded , 3 bedrooms ,
bedroom new bot h new k1t
99') 34 0~
lo.•tche
n
famdy
room
I
o
1
a e loo kmg lo r work
or
ranch , family room large
chen clly wa te r Orr fll 33 m
bat
hs
You
o
re
tnvlled
to
rn
what eve r
you II get re '&gt; ulh JQo8 f- ORD ' , ton s. hor 1 bed step
recreaf ton room , buil t fn
Burl •ngha rn 997 775 1
~ p e e l lhts ho tne lo( Oted '1 rnde
la s le t w•th o Sen t mel Won t Ad
s •de W1th topper 6 cyl s ian
kttchen , se parate dtntng
e
St
HI
143
eo:;
!
o
l
Horrts.on
vtll
( o ii 99'J 2156
area, carpor t , patto Own
HO USE: ~OR sole near pool tn
d01d run s. re al goocl e a ~ y on
l he purcho:oe 1 rnu!&gt;! move th e
water ,
wood
burntng
~yr ocu s.e (o /1 992 5"167
go :. $900 (all ony 111 ne a lt er S
YARD SAlt Th urs Fn a nd Sot
home not la ter than Or! l 5
pin
991
511
7
ftr
e
pla
ce.
and
3,~
acre
on
ly
J9bl
~-tOU SE THAIL ER 12 ._b0 All
4 mile s a ll f11 7 on 143 9 to 5
1978 Mo d !&gt;eoled b1ds to 73
1
S20,500 00
electnc furnt $hed o•r cond
l o h at clot h,n g
set s of IO !iUPUo! SKt ~ 1U~ bo ss boo t
Roose.,.ell Or R A F B Oh1o
NEW LIST lNG R'e al ly
was her and dryer ') lots. m Har
Ho ns lone d shes. and lo t!&gt; o f
1'1 h p Me1cury mo to1 t leclr• c
4321 7 to or r1ve no t lat er than
n tce 3 bedroom ranc h , tn
nsom11 lle H2 2826
In I ~ {
~ept
10 19ll:l Include retu rn
tr o lli ng mo lo r and o cc e s.~o r •e s
the
coun
try
,
close
to
I
r 01ie r Q&lt;;l1 J A8 3
o ddres~ end p ho ne numbe •
YARO SAlt ~ e pt 1-2 0 rn 1 i e~ o tt
Pomeroy, wood burn tng
Annou ncem e nt ol occepto nce
Rt
7
by Merg s Memo r'r' POl A TOI:!:J ~ tO po m t1oc and
ftr e pla ce, lar~e 2 car
of
o
btd
wd
l
be
mode
no
t
la
te
r
G mden ~
[ ~37
493~ 5 togl e
Ke nn e bec So ~ () pe1 100 lb
garage Ca rpettng . small
thon ) e pl 1J 19 78 Te lfn!&gt;
Rod ge Bo!.hon Rd Dt ~h e s ont 1
W e~ I of Oorw1 n 0 11 Go ld fl•dg e
garden space and 2112
Co!&gt;
h'
Cer
td.
ed
chec
k
o
r
bonk
q ue lurn 1t ure and lo ts o l o th e 1
(ectl 1 obon Rt 7 Pomero )'
acres A good buy $15 ,000
draft
1
he
owne
r
te
se
rves
the
il em~ Ph one 949 2560
Ohro
NEW LISTING Wo uld
r 1ght to re tecl a ny or a ll b1ds
you belteve tn Mtddleport,
PO~ l H SAl ~ l- r1 an d ~at
I () 4
P0 1 A10~~ FOH wuil e r Cobble•
f o r o ppouilrnent to 1nspec 1 the
a nice 1 floor plan , 3
Bra d le y Poo ler re~•de nc e 1
Ken nebec and Supc ••o r Phon e
hom e call 7A2 J 172 or Co lu rn
bedrooms w tth d lntng
rn 1le no rth ol Ches ler Wos he•
8JJ 2491
la m ~oy t e Great
bu s 49 / IJI 7
Har old 0
VtRCIL B SR . ~~~
room , enclosed porc h ,
d ra n t de to ble saw wagon
Be nd SR J JI:!
Graham Owner
farge works hop
garage,
whee ls baby lurntlure con,
"2 -332$
1(/ 71 fORO ' • to n ( Oinp e r ~p e c•ol MOBI Lt- HOMI: I C/ 54 L•ber ty 'J
plus a 12 x 60 F urnt s hed
toloupe s o nd rnt !&gt;C
E Seco~d Street
216
Po wer o l1 o ul o duel tank s
bedr G ood co ndll •on 1900
newe r traile r. plus another
1WO FAM I\ Y Gar age ~ olE' ~ept
l: 10c e llen t tunn 1119 cond•l!o n
C he ~ tn u l Or
Goll •po hs Oh1o
tratler , plus another lot for
EQUIPPED KITCHEN - 4
I and "}
10 6 John Keck s
~d4 1 5 qn 2391
Phone 6 l-4 446 1J91
traders Al l rented Total
&gt;
bedrooms, natural gas
res •den ce Mulbe rry He 1gh1s
mon
thl
y
gross
S370
00
tor
heat , l 1h baths, '1 car
Pome ro y o ,or•ely ol •terns f01 RWU U: S.A H e nd lo ": o t wi! h
•
onl y $29.500 oo
GoBP se lob lets 8 l: Vop wa fe r
garage wtth shop over
~ole tnclud mg clo the'&gt; ' eoc rd
POMEROY - $6 ,725 OR
pdl s N e l ~ o n Dr ug
Level lot S27 ,500
" album s an d so on
make an offer, not bad P •2
RACINE
Good
4
PLAID
OUHN
~
•
:
e
ht
de
o
bed
s tor y home wtfh f ul l
LARC.~ YAio!D !:!ale Am mo v.ng
bedroom
home
Ntce
large
co uch w!!h &lt;oo •d1n o t•ng ~o ltd
basement . needs some
e ve ryth1n g rn ust g o H ou~ehold
eat m kttchen, natural gas ,
wa ll hug get rec Ime r M rno o ld
renovatton
fur nt o:. h rng s cloth •ng b Q o k ~
centra l heat tng and large
I
:.
eel
len
t
cond
!to
n
\149
1761
6 ACRES - In Syracuse,
d r ~ he s.
IOys
law n mower
lot $25,000
modern
1
floor
plan
.
wood
mu ch mote Thu rs f-" a nd M Yl: R~ ~ HAL LOW w PII pu mp Ldo. e
BUSINESS LOCATION burning
trreplace ,
3
Sat Aug J l ~ e pt I a nd 1 I()
new
S85 l:l don Walburn
and small residence with
bedrooms, large kitc he n ,
to darK l1 rS I rood o n le i! po&lt;, l
QQ7 7005
bath, kttchen and bedroom
GeorgeS. Hobstetter Jr ,
dtntng room vtew of the
f-ol lo w
Che s 1e1 f11eh ou~ e
Wtll be good for a starter.
Broker
f
IIUWOOO
C
~HN
O f ~ eo s on e d
Beauttful Ohio , 2 ca r
s•gn s 1-1o m at s h•ne
Only Sl3,000
Pomeroy , Ohto.
4•N 7J~8 01 9H~ J ~ 6 7
ga rage, bea utiful back
COUNTRY HOME - New
YAIW ~ Al t ~o t u rdoy Sepr 2
Phone 992-6333
yard for cookouts . etc
3
bedroom , 2 bath home
tU 5 270 l mr oln H1ll Rd ~0 111 l YOI UH VY FOH po1 t ~ lf./ 7J Vega
Offtce Hrs
Ask mg SJ2. 000 oo
mo to r Hoy Ia • sole $ H5 o
Has equ tpped kttchen , nice
ro1r re l ~
9
am
-5
p
.m
.
MINI
FARM
CLOSE
IN
bole 949 1 4 1J 01 949 2849
ca rpeftng , log
ho use,
Closed Thursdays &amp;
Ni ce
3
bedroom
IH~I::l; I-A MIL Y ~ y r o c u s e o c ro!l' ~
woods , and garden land
l
AFr'G~
RO
UNU
bole'&gt;
nwred
hov
remodeled ho me . fru1 t
Saturdays at noon
I ro m P 0 I (J ? 3ot ~ e pt 7nd
Ask1ng $40 000
~1 0 747 1 4 ~ 5
cellar. barn. mtlk hou se,
Your Full Ttme
t day on ly Clo th11,.9 mlo nl ~
pa
s
t
ure
fen
c1ng,
large
thr ough a d ult Chma Cooh PUlltl l:C. C j S JU o dozen Ab o
Real Estate Broker
Are You profiting from
good
garden ,
other
~w mfle. wall pool m•sc
NEW LISTING - ThiS m ce
11n g
ne( ked
pheasa nt!&gt;
tnflat tonH Buy Land
features, over 5 acres
Wdme tt o I e• lh1?1! ~ oc ksp• ng!&gt;
home lo cated o n State
and you wtll 1 1 1
I OU R t AM II Y Ya rd Sole ot f' e le
516,500
00
Pome •o y 9Q7 34 4b
Route 124 has 4 bedrooms,
M•cho e l '&gt; •n Ru'&gt; ti C Hdl s 111
GOOD STARTER HOME
ltvtng room, dmmg room ,
Syra cuse lol eall y n•cc chddre1, s GIB~ O N F il~tlH 2~ t u It c he o; t
- 4 lot s, 1 1h stor y frame
30 ACRES and 3
kt tche n , bafh and sun
a nd wo1nen ~ cl o th es so me
lype Used I year Co il M •'&gt;
wtfh full basem ent Storage
be~room renovated home
men., be d'&gt; p•eo d orr d lU I lo ur.,
porch N1ce big yard wtth
J.l olp h Welk er at 99; J 044
buddtng Many fea tures m
In back of town wtfh rural
house ho ld an d o1he r ll e m ~
plenty of tr ees and fl owers
town
A r eal s tor y at
water Wt ll take a trade-tn
I
OW
J.!
~Y
G
~NI~
44
o
rga
n
~
•
h om t 0 4 on Se pt 1 &amp; l
Owner destres qutck sale
S9 SOO 00
Want $24,500
r f.&gt; llent condt t•on / 47 351 1
Selling price SJO.OOO
LIST WITH US
FOR
SH' 1 'l 01 Cord on Ho lt e1 s on C ~
BASHAN
Large 3
New L!sttng- Ntce s room
PHOTO
LISTING
b e droom
J8 above l o '&gt; ler n ~ r h oo l P11c e~ 14 /4 P ~OWll:~ C AMP~ R 78 !1
home
w i th
~E'II con t o t n~d ') ne w dm rn ond
home tn M iddle por t with
SERVICE, MEMBERS OF
t e duced ot 0 00 o n '&gt; ma lt 1 1 en ~
natural gas and T P water
~ hope d the rma l pone w1nd o w ~
bath and detached garage
INDEPENDENT
REAL
1 hre e whee led b•k. e $50 1 r 1cy
Over an acre of land with a
on t•q uc bo1h tub wt lh l eg ~ I
ESTATE CONSULTANTS,
d e SS Hondo XfU~ S l~ t o y ~
Large yard Selling prt ce
3 car garag e
Lots of
n ew 13 com port 1118 '&gt; used
NATIONWIDE
d ot h e~ a nd mo s( llo, r &lt; o n ce ! ~
outbutldmgs Just $16,000
S30,000
~ wee p e t
•'•" '" po wm hea d
REFERRAL
SERVICE
YOU'LL
PROBABLY
New Ltsttng - 6'12 scres at
H V ~ FAMil V Yard ~o l e
Br yon
"1 4 ') 1577
HENRY E. CLELAND
FIND A BETTER BUY
cr
oss
roa
ds
wlth
500
ft
Ho• ro s. ~ uc u~ !&gt;~ Rood ~ep t ')
REALTOR
TODAY
THAN
!:IN f- O RO li-IA C10 1-1 and 5 loot
frontage on State Route
a nd 3
HANK , KATHY , LEONA
TOMORROW. STOP IN
b• ush hog 19 70 Uodge 1 ton
124 Sma ll cottage and
PA 110 'I' AJ.! D Sole h1 a nd )at
CLELAND
AND
SEE
OUR
Club Cab dua lly w dh I 9 /~ I I
metal outbutldmg Ideal for
ASSOCIATES
5e pl 1!&gt; I ond i nd 9 to &lt;l We hr&gt;
PROPERTIES
loo t
~ ltd ~n g
com pr r ~el f
renlal
or
bus
tness
Ter ra ce
Pom er oy
V o 11 o u~
''2 22S9, 992-6191
Helen L. Teaford
ta n1o 1ned t 11 1e•1ded hea vy d u
prope rty Asking S20.000
1 1~:c"rn ~ tnc lude ma nu a l unde •
Gordon B. Teaford
ty h 1lch tncl uded J )'eor o ld
Racm
e
This
beautiful
wood
typ e w r tte r
S4 0
Sue P. Murphy
rPg s ter e d Ouo1t e1 Horse
home ts ready for your
~w 1v el &lt; ho 1 1
$1 ~
Wmt er o nd
Associates
Ge ld.ng Pol o m mo ~ w1 1h wh•1 e
family to move tnto 3
'&gt;um m£o r clo the !&gt; Mu d an d snow
ma ne an d lo •l ge n tl e outs. to r1
bedroom, dintng room.
Housing
A ll p r~ c ed
9" P
li E'S
r:l tng dt spo~ • loOn 'l Ye ar old Ap
plenly of storage space and
rea son ably
pol oo!&gt;o Geld mg h ce pt •onol
tt has gas hot water heat,
co l o 1
gre en
br o k e
rw O FAMILY Ya rd Sole 1sf lim e
ftrepla
ce and wood and
Ot4
6b f 6 'J l')
th 1s year Man a nd Tu e ~
coal
burner,
also Garage
Across lro m Brad bury Sc hoo l IQ"/4 KAWASAKI J ~ O 1n good
and
pafto wtfh canopy
Doro lh y Boyer res.•de nce t o ts
~ hope 4 Ch e v ~ Roi ly whee l., d
Sttuated on almost an acre
and lo ts of n ce clea n clo th•ng
Chevy mags 9910051
on sta te route 338 In
D•&lt;o hes pons Come and s. hop
Rac tne Wtll sell fast at
ar oun d
S30,000
JUST LISTED - SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL. This moy bt
YARD SALE: ~oturdoy Sept "}
Rutland - 3 bedroom . totl!il
your dream home. tt Ills a largo kitchen with lots of
o n dMo ~
~ept 4 711 S J rd
electrtc homein Hutchison
cobinels, stove, rofrlgtrator 1nd dishwuher. Btoutlfut
M1ddleport
Ne111 to
A ... e
Su bd• visto n Home has full
dining room with sliding gloss doora tudlng out to
Spe e dqu e en l o und rornot l::llu e
basement a md own well
luge deck . l.arge •llvlng room 1nd f1mily room, end to
teon s. beds preads g lasswa re
S1tua1ed on ntce stze lot.
tlntsh this well -l1id out home we h1vw five bedrooms,
gla s.s door boo k shel l set o f
f I)J /\II Y Iiili
Call lod a y• for mo re Info
utrlity room •nd gor•ge, Very low heollng bill. Thol's
d1o mond rrn gs nov elt 1es e tc
qcn 7494
not 111, we have strawberries, r1spt.rrles and g1rden
G£ T. V ·• K
Se ll~ng pr~ ce 132,000
space Red born. flke stor1go building . louted obout
Call us today, we hove
Hotpo,nt 1\ppl
YARD SAH
ept 0 &amp; 7 House
ten m&gt;nutes north of Pomeroy just oil Rl. 7. C. II for
mare
hsttngs
to
t:hoost
betwee r Me•gs Fo.rgrounds
~ .lll' p ,-, ( t ·',
more del1its ond 1ppolntmonl. Asking 155,00,
from
.
and
.;ckspnngs Method• sl
57 ACRES - With a nice Ph story house with 3 bedrms
Cheryl
Lemley,
Assoc.
J.1ck
W
(.,&gt;r·,
.
1 1
Chur ch on Old 3J
and 1'/ :t baths Mostly carpeted. Big central fireplace
Home Phone 741-2003
Mq1
with heetolater. Small barn and outbuildings 20 acres
VARb SA Lf: &gt;otu rday only 9 30
H1ltan Wolfe, Assot:.,
fen ced Nice country setting off blacktop road 1ust 6
to
J JO
lol o ll,n Ra df o rd
Ptl!1111· 'l'lt' ! lh 1
Home Phone 949-2419
m inutes nortn of Racln ~ . Asking $.42,000
resrdence Old 33 Pomer oy
George A Hobstoner, Jr.,
6 ACRES - Nic e 1V, story home mostly carpeted with 3
fOUiol FAM ILY Yard Sole F11 and
Broker
or 4 bedrms., living rm , family rm , with fireplace,
3ot 9 6 Charles Mathew~
Home Phone 992-5739
basement, fuel olt furnace , garage and outbuildings
re s •den (e
Hus t 1c
~ill s
Some renc lng, plenty of road frontage and garden
l{.,aJ
:E•Ialc
for
~le
SyrOCtJse It ems too nume rous
space City water and drilled well . Loc. close to
to l1 s. t Allnems mus. t go
ho•pltal and school at Laurel Clltr. Asking $42,500.
PORCH SAU Frr and ~ot 9 to 4
TWO
ACRES - A beautltul4 year old, 3 bedroom home
EXCELLENT FARM BUY - 148 ACRES - The
8 ltberty Ave Pomeroy Rood
with large eat-In ki tchen. 3 bedrooms, all nlcolv
ow ner ' s age prevents her fr om cont inuing '"operate
c arpeted , 2 baths, full basement with TV room. Many
n ght between Jo nes Hay s and
the farm and s he desires an Immediate sale . SO to 60
Burger Che f
more extras, low heat blll with nat gas forced air
acres t il lable wtth some very good creek bottom fu rnace All this and two nc le acres ofland fn a good
hilltop land The balance 1s In pasture 8. woods, The 6
location. Will go quick lor S35,000
Fodient
room home 1s good (does need some modernization),
40 Acres ot land In Sutton Twp Nice building sites,
la rge all purpose barn &amp; several outbuildings. The
small barn Priced at only 121 ,500 .
CO UN TffV MO BI L!: Home Pork
m inerals go wt th 1t and 1t ' s located in an area where
Rout e 33 north o l P om~r o y
WANTED We have a q ua lified buyer for a lew acres
gas, olt &amp; coal have bl!&lt;!n found to be p le ntif ul Near
Lorg e l ot ~ Coli ~ten '1 479
o f land with a good home with at least 3 bedrooms
Rut land 60's
located on g ood road .
ON~
Bl: DROOM apt
Con ta ct
V1llog e Man or Apt
Mtd
dle po r t qq'} . l7 fJ 7
We need lerge &amp; sm•ll Farms
3 AND ol RM furn1shed and un
and M&lt;ony typo a of pi"'HH'fy
l u r n• ~ h e rl
opt s.
Ph o ne
CALL JIMMY DEEM. Allocloto.f49-2111
99') :, &lt;t J4

ROGER.HYSEll
GARAGE

High School
·SENIORS

EXPERIENCED
Radiator~

Pomeroy Landmark

11d,,,

tht den \..Ji.fHtt pu iJh

19 76 IUO AM C PAO~ b cy l :J
s peed AM FM tope AJ 000
Ill de s
$1500 741 2'111 be fo re
~ 14 '1 7Eil 4 alte r 5

t'or Sale, Rent or Trade

MOORE'S

NOTICE

~!I I ttl

DA l ~ UN

4 dOOI S. IOt tO il
wagon 'J6 OUO m1:es 4 cyl
good go!li nHi e oge 1~ N ::h d
MtQdh!'p011
Phone qq7 rJ'jQ
o lt e1 4 p m

1911

15 w ucch ' " Uut1 1 1
c ""II

t"or Henl

•
II-The Da1ly Senlind, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Fllday, Sept 1. 1978

rs

,.rk:fi •

0
•

••lt-

e
••

•••••e•••••e••····· ···~.~-~ · , ·······•••e•
I

•

�'

''

'

..

•

"e)"";~:;::;;~;:z;"" ' Hurricane

...t.i~

(UP!) ~

Father, sons arrested

Help offered farm workers

adviSory said.
"All coastal interests from
the Carolinas northward are
advised to stay in close touch
with future releases on Ella,"
the center warned .
EUa became the season's
fifth named tropical storm
Wednesday night, and
cootinued to grow Thursday
until it reached hurricane
status with winds of 80 mph.
It continued to develop
through the day, eventually
packing a '90-mile-an-hour
punch.

Massive security steps

Plant purchase denied

LABOR DAY ·1978
A day when we honor our most valuable resource,
the working men and women who se sk ill, energy
and bra ins have made our nation the envy of the
world. To America's workers, thanks for a job
well done.
LEGAL HOLIDAY · LABOR ' DAY · SEPT.. 4TH

ATTENTION:
EASTERN EAGLES' AND MEIGS MARAUDERS'
FOOTBAll FANS - STOP IN THE POMEROY
NATIONAl BANK AND PICK UP YOUR
FOOTBALL SCHEDUlE AND BU ~D E R STICKER.
pomeroy
rutland
tuppers plains

pomeroy .
nationa ·
bank
the bank of
the cet otury
established 1872

Officers installed
A
workshop
for
profess ional people ca ll ed
"cance r update" will be held
in October. This was decided
when the executive board o(
lhe Meigs County Unit of the
Ame ri can Can ce r Soc iet y
met recentl~' at Veterans
"Memorial H~spital.
In other business it was
reported $7 ,426.42 had been
co llected for the year from
the cancer cr'usade .
Th e
·•s top
smo kin g
prog ram " will be held when
enough int erest is shown.
Coo kboo ks entitled " Oh io
Celebrity Cookbook'" are on
sale for $5 . Persons interested in the stop smoking
clinic and purchasing a cook·
book arc to call 992-7531.
Offi cers insta ll ed were
Bernadette And e r so n ,
president; Joan Anderson,
vil'e president : Pat Arnold,
chairman
of
public
educa tion : llhonda Dailey.
chair m an of profe ss ion a l

Unleaded
from page l1
built fo r unleaded gasoline .
h IS reported the Environ·
mental P-rotect ion Agency
1EPA I ha s inc rea sed its
sa mpling act ivities and that
several area retailers have
been fined bet ween $500 and
$1 ,oOO for unleaded violations.
1Conti nued

\@

educa tion : Katie Crow,
chairman of publi c informa tion ; Mike Bendineiii,
chairman of service ; E nna
Smith, chairma n of budget ;
Hank Cleland , Jr ., and
1\ennit Wa lton. chairman of
special events.
Attending were Mike ·
Bendinelli : Teresa Collins,
Rhonda Dailey, Joan An·
derson, Bernadette An·
derson. Dorothy Will, Delores
Frank, Jim Swanger, Clara
L.ochary, Katie Crow, Rick
The Chester Gymnasium
Couch. Ha rliss ~· rank and
Repair . Comm ittee reports
Sharon Michael.
Th,e next meeting will be excellent prog ress on its
held Nov . 14 at Veterans project, but more money is
needed to complete the job.
Memorial Hospital.
The an tiquat ed wooden
gymnasium floor of the
Chester School in
deplorable condilion
has

obor
I day\
Peof!l e

11 11

Apprehend
two yo~ths
Two youths were apprehended in the Rutland
area Thur$day evening by
Rutland Police Chief U!!Ty
Coleman and Meigs County
Juvenile Probaiion Officer
Carl B. Hysell, Meigs County
Sheriff, James J . Proffitt
reported today.
The youths had walked
away from an Ohio · Youth
Commission Camp in Adams
County, Ohio.
They allegedly stole a 1976
D dge pickup in Adams
t
:.J~ officers were search·
ing for the Dodge pickup they
found a 1971 Ford pickup that
had been stolen Tuesday,
Aug. 29. The second vehicle
was owned by Curtiss Riffle,
Middleport: The Ford pickup
had been Stripped. The 1976
Dodge that the youths
allegedly had taken was
found in good condition..
The Adams County vehicle
was returned to its owner.
However, the Riffle vehicle is
bei g held pending collection
of ;;nysical evidence.
The youths are presently in
Meigs County's jail awaiting
return to the Ohio Youth
Commission and hearings
regarding the theft of the 1976
Dodge pickup.

C:

By JAMES HilDRETH
WASHINGTON (UPI)
The natioo 's unemployment
rate, which has bounced up
and down throughout the
summer, feU to 5.9 percent of
the workforce In August with
much of the improvement
occurring among women and
teenagers, the government
reported today.
Total employment rose by
t56,DOQ persons last month to
· 94.6 million, the Labor
Department ss1d. The 5.9
percent
jobless
rate
compared wtth 6.2 percent m
July and June's 5.7 percent a four-year low .
The Aug~t jobless le~el
· was exactly on ~get wtth
President Carter s year-end
goa).
,
The brtght performance
may
offer
some
enc_oura~ement
t,o
admmtstratiOn econom\c
planners who see the drop m
unemployment durtng
Carter's presidency as a solid
accornplishn:&gt;~~t. .
The ad!Dtntstra_lton has
been lightmg a iosmg hattie
most of the year o~ ot~er
economic fronts as inflation
bas risen sharply, the U.S.
trade deficit has expanded
and the value of the dollar
abroad has plunged.
Here is an unemployment
breakdown of each category
of the population:
- Adult men: 4.1 percent,
unchanged from June.
;-Adult , women:
6.1
percent, down from 6.~
percent.
.
-Teen-agers. 1~.6 percent,
down from 16.3 percent.

Mutual
accord
reached

Thursday night durin g a
special meeting of the
So uthern Loca l Board of
Education, the Southern
Local Education Association
and board rea ched mutual
understanding on Article 17 of
the teacher's contract.
In other business, the board
employed William Beegle as
EMll teacher for the 1978-79
sehoul year.
Class will begin Wednesday, Sept. .6. The board
wiii hold a special meeting on
Sept. Sat 7:30p.m. in the high
school cafeteria .
Attending were Dallas Hill ,
president , Gene Yost, vice

superintendent.

FUNDS TRANSFERRED
State Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson announced today
that $1,160,897.25, has been
transferred, the ·seventh of
fiscal year 1979, from the
Ohio Lottery Rotary Fund to
Ohio's General Revenue
Fund.
The Auditor said the
remaining moneys in the
state lottery fund are
distributed between prize
payments to winning ticket
holders
and
expense
payments incu!Ted by the
lottery commission for
operating costs.
GrQSS ticket sales deposited
into the General Revenue
Fund this year, since July I.
1978, totals $5,234,322.75.

CHICKEN BARHI':LUt;
There will be a chicken
barhecue at the Racine Fire
Station Monday, Sept. 4
beginning at II a.m.
Menu includes one-half
chicken , baked beans; potato
salad and roll for $2.00 or one·
half chicken for $1.00.

been removed and concrete
poured . The next' ;1ep is
laying a new tile floor , but
some additional funds will be
needed for that phase of the
project. Other general improvements to the gymnasium are also planned.
. For the time being,
however, the entire project is
at a standstill until roof
repairs planned by the
Eastern District Board of
Education are made.
Contributions may be sent
to Mike Will, head teacher, at
the school In Chester.

LICENSES AVAILABLE
The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources, Division
of Wildlife, announced that
are .
hunting
licenses
available at Davis Insurance,
I H Court Street; across from
the courthouse, 9 a.m. to 5
p.m. daily .
REUNION SET
The Ours reunion will be
held Sunday at -Rock Springs
Fairgrounds . Basket dinner
is at I p.m.
· SPECIAL SINGING
The CarTiers o! Belmont,
W. Va ., will present a special
singing program at the
Jubilee Christian Center at 7
p.m. this evening. The public
is invited.

-Whites: 5.2percent, down
from 5.3 percent.
-Blacks and other mlnori. ties: 11.7 percent, down from
12.5 percent.
-Full-time w&lt;rkers: 5.~
percent, down from ~- 7
percent.
'The unemployment rate
has been one of the
president's few positive
economic acctmp!Wunents
since ·he took office in
January, 1m. SinCe then, 4.3
rnlllioo per111ns have found
work and the proportioo of
the working-age populatioo
that is employed rose to its
highest level In history In
June.
DesPite the success with
reducing unemployment .,.- it
was 8 percent when Carter
was sworn In the
president's popularity has
plummeted
this
year
because, according Ill public
opinion polls, Americans are
disillusioned over
his
stewardship of the ecooomy.
lnflatio~ has been the main
coocern. It has soared at a
near 10 percent annual rate '
since January and the
public's spending power has
been reduced.
On top of that, interest
rates haYe"risen sharply, the
nation's trade deficit Will
probably. hit a record high,
the value of the dollar
overseas bas dipped to
historic lows and there are
coocerns aboui · a possible
recession next year.
Any new and lasting
increase In unemployment
would oqiy add to the
president's economic woes.

Discharged - Dorothy
Mefford, Juanita Runyon .

Huizer Medical Center
Discharges Aug. 31
MAty Bennett; ,Delmar
Bloomer; Roy brinker ; J uhn
Campbell; Rubert CassidY,; .
l..a!Ty Crank; Maria Cunninghatn; Olivet Eblin; ·
Charles EWs; Albert Finney;
Gregory Fuller; Estelle Hall ;
Mrs. Larry Heines and
daughter;
Mrs. Kenneth
Emma Wood Cline forHowery
and
son; Harley
merly Emma Wood Cooper to
Jenkins
;
Judy
Jewell
; Pansy
Jerry Harris, Janet HarTis,
Jones;
.
Fred
Knox
;
Gladys
Parcels, Columbia.
McClelland;
Audra
Mdn.
William R. Williams, Iris
Ross
McQuaid;
Bessie
tyre
;
M. Williams to Leading Creek
Conservancy
Dist . , Merritt; Kathleen Moody;
Esther Nibert; Donald Ours;
Easement, Rutland.
Nellie Zerkle to William Bryan Pettit; Virgie Pierotti;
Keith Adkins, Diana Lee Nora Spriggs; Jeffrey Tabor ;
Adkins, .32 acre, Salisbury. .Derrick Taylor; Stephen
Bernice M. Randolph, dec. Wood .
to Russell Randolph, Cert. of
trans., Olive.
DOLLAR GAINS
Ro&lt;ie E. Ford, Carl D.
TOKYO (UP!) - The U. S. .
Ford to Russell Randolph. dollar today gained sharply
on purchases by Japanese
Parcels, Olive.
Russell Randolph, Janet P. traders for import settlement
Randolph to Russell Ran- on the Tokyo Foreign Exdolph, Janet P. Randolph, change market. Trading was
heavy.
Parcels, Olive.
Virginia Barrett to Paul · The- dollar ended the week .
Ray Stewart ) one-third acre, at 191.2535 yen, up from 190.00
Pi. IOO acre lot 383, Salisbury. at Thursday's close, the Bank
Garland Caldwell, Sarah of Tokyo said. The dollar ·
Caldwell to Blauser Well opened the day at 191.00.
Service, Right of way ,
Orange. ·
Celia Elizabeth Collins to
Dennis D. Blauser dba
HI-LOW TEMPS
Blauser Well Service, Right
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
of Way, Olive.
highest temperature reported
Emma F. Carleton to Thursday to the National
General Telephone Co. of Weather Service, excluding
Ohio, Easemenl, Chester.
Alaska and Hawaii, 'was III
Worley Sylvester Cline, degrees at Gila Bend, Ariz.
dec , to Emma Wood Cline, Today's low was 35 degrees at
Aff. for trans., Columbia.
Alamosa, Colo.

Property
Transfers

.. . iu el·•·ry joh . ..

·· ELBERFELDS ·IN POMEROY

btil ·e f&gt;layed tbe

u 'rJrk iugs mul1nor- .
jJt:rit J of

Olli'

DOUG'S

uation . ·

Th ey"re America's

MARINE

ll'illllillK, / t:(IIJI , • • tlllll

h(ft 'e etlnJ ed

fJJfl'

fJride

Sales &amp;Service

alf(l' res f!ec / f()l·fhe

(614)992-5652

fi ue joh tbey're iloiug!
If' ell d fllll' , A m eri.-a !

be~losed

\

We will
Sunday . &amp; - ,
Monday so that our employes· 1
may
enjoy
the
Holiday
Weekend .

808 W. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

LABOR DAY SALE
SPECIAL SALE PRICES FRIDAY.
AND .SAnJRDAY - IT PAYS 10
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE 9 1 ES
· AT El BERFEI OS

OPEN SAnJRD.\Y 9:30 10 5 P.M.
QOSED MONDAY SEPT. 4th lABOR DAY

ELBERFELD$ IN ,POMEROY

t ·.a:r._..........iiiii.l.i..........._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ .
'I

•

))

J.&lt;Jbor Dioty IS such a tamiliar fixture on the ~tiona\ calendar th~t it is somewhat
surprising to realize it is one of.our more recent holiday:f..
..
· True the first observance in honor oflabor was held_ m New York Oty as far bilck
as 1882, .;.,4 by 1894 Coogres5 had given the occasion official status in the territories
and District of Columbia . Yet ooly for the past hall century have ,all the states
oHiciaily observed it.
.
•
This is a short time in the life of a nation , even one so young as the Umted States.
But Labor Day is now firmly established as a national habit.
·
.
urldoubted1y this is becamse the holiday has come to mark thee~~ of s u.mme~ m.
our minds, with schools starting up immediately afterward and famalles split up mto
their various pursuits.
It 's the last holiday until Thank$glVing, along_ three-day weekend just made for a
short trip or Jin outing , or perhaps it's an oPPQrt~lty to f1msh those chor~s around the
house that have been put off all swruner.
.
..
nlis is so much the case that most of us never think of the or1gmal reason for the
day _ that it was established as a recogilition of and tribute to the American laboring
man . But though we still call it Labor Day , it is no longer labor 's day .
Very few , even those of us who carry unio~ cards; will attend a labor rally tod~y .
Few ci~ies have parades any more. Yet at one time, Labor Day was a magnet draw1ng
folks downtown to the park to listen to the band and speeches and shoot orr the
fireworks left over from the Fourth of July.
.,
On one hand, it is'regrettable that the American scene has changed so much , that
Labor Day has become a private public holiday .
.
On the other hand, this change is part of the success of the labor movement. W1th
recoghi\ion has-come the lo~ of a certain militancy, a sense of separate ness from
"other" Americans.
.
No this is no longer labor's day alone. It helongs to ail Amencans, for ail of us are
labote~s in the sense that the work we do contributes to the cou~try 's strength .
Perhaps the name "U!bor Day" is a little .anachromsuc today, almost a
misnomer. The word "labor" is not quite broad enough to encompass the rneanmg the
holiday has acquired .
.
.
I The name foc this day should express how we honor the workmg. domg,
accomplishing man by casually taking a day off from the routine.
Still a new name would not change anything really . We all' know whatl.abor Day
'
.
means .

Tol-edO firm
•
gets proJect
GALLIP01.1S - Considerations of
sch.ool bus safety , and the .selection ~ of an
architectural finn for a proposed $21
million dollar building program
highlighted a Saturday morriing sp€cia l
meeting of the Gallia County Local Board

I,

tmts
NO. 31

GALLIPOLIS POINT PLEASANT

:iytitem . The operation of such patrols in
other rural school districts is to be

examined.
In a related action , the board moved to
·purchase
back-up horns l(l be installed on
of Education.
Clifr Wilson, Director of Maintenance the ent ire fl eet of, regular buses in the
and Transportation, advised the board system.
In anticipation of the proposed $21
that the bus that had been involved in the
million
building' project, the board moved
Tu~sday , Aug. 29, accident which lofJ k the
life of seven year old Seldon Moore had to employ the hnn Richards, Bauer, and
been fully checked and approved by the Moorehead , Toledo, to serve as architect
Ohio High way Patrol during a safety in- for the program. Orville Bauer and
sp-ection prior to the beginning of the Charles Stark, representatives of the firm ,
were interviewed by board members
current academic year.
The bus was, however, one of two durin ~ their specictl Tuesday meeting . The
buses operating in the system without architecturtil fee will be 5.1 per cent of the
front cross-over mirrors . C ro~ .s-u ver total building program .
During the morning meeting, the
mirrors provide the bus driver with a full
board
took the following actions :
view of the front of the bus.
~ Donna R. Barnes and William
Wilson sta ted that the mjrrurs are not
required by the state, and that the corner Beegle were employed _tu serve as tutors
mirror which was located in the bus in- for pupils who a re incapal'ltated and
volved in the accident was sufficient to uhable to attend school.
~ Ravmund Mann, Patriot ; William
fulfill state requirements.
'
Wilson added that ·cross-over mirrors A. Heyn~lds , Bidwell. and Robert E.
hav e been purchased for installation on the Clagg, Gallipolis, were hired tu serve as
two bu ses operating without them . The substitute bus drivers.
David '1~. Erb, Vinton, was em·
mirrors are to be installed immediately .
!Continued on A-2l
Board members discussed the

•

VOL 13

possibility Qf cstt~b Hsh ing a safety patrol
on the buses upcratlng within the local

tntintl

SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 3. 1978
~

Ella stalls .
off coast at
100 MPH

PRICE 25 CENTS

MIDDLEPORT- POMEROY

EXTENDED FORECAST
Monday through Wednesday, fair
Monday through Wednesday. Highs
Monday will be from the mid to upper
70s und by Wednesday lrom the low
to mid ljO~ I..ows will be from the mid
to low 50s Monday mBmlng and from
the mid 50s to a~outti() by Wednesday
morning.
::·:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::

CAPE HATTERAS, N.C. (UP! ) Hurricane Ella, packing vicious 100 mph
winds, stalled off the North Carolina coast
Saturday, leaving an estimated 65,000
Labor Day vacationers on the Outer Banks
wondering wehther they should relax or
run.
· Forecasters predicted the storm would
contiilue to drift aimlessly for the ne:xt 24
to 36 hours and advised persons. aloog' the
coast to go "about theif noi"m,al blsiness,"
but to keep clos,,wlllch ill tbe event Ella
makes ari uneJI)Oeted hliiRe at land. .
GALLIPOLIS - James Hoga n,
A hurricane watch remained in effect
chainnan of the program committee,
from Cape l.nokout on the Outer Banks
announced Saturday the 115th Emanf!Orthtrard to the Virginia border and
cipation Celebration will be held Sept. 16
small craft were warned to remain in port.
and 17 at the Gallia County Junior
At noon EDT Ella was centered near
Fairgrounds.
latitude 31.6 north, longitude 73.3 west, or
Gates will open at 8:30a.m . each day.
slightly less than 300 miles southeast of
Saturday is youth day. There will be
Cape Hatteras. The storm has been stalled
games from 11 a.m. until 1 p.m.
in approximately the same position since ·
Clarence M cC&lt;.~ be , International vicepresident of Key Club will be the speaker.
Friday.
One resort hotel oo the banks set ·up a
A musi cal treat will be given by the West
large hurricane plotting map in the lobby
Virginia Tcoch College Gospel choir .
and the latest advisories were heing
IT'S BA(]j: TO ~CHOOL - Little seven rear-old _Beity Jo Darst w_as one of
The Sunday morning message will be
l)roadcast over the hotel's poblic address
many youngsters Friday wno were purchasmg clothmg for school WhiCh opens
provided by Brother Calvin Minnis with
system. Tape for the building's large glass
nelll Wednesday . Helping Betty Jo pick out a dress was her grandmother, Mrs.
services starting at 10 :30 a.m .
wlndows and extra water were also on
Kenneth Darst, Middleport. Betty Jo is the daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Rober\ Darst,
Brother Gilbert Craig , Jr. will be the
• RD. Cheshire, and is a second grade student at Middleport Elementary School.
hand.
afternoon speaker. Music wHI be provided
"The sun's shining right now. People are
by Ms. Tonya Scott of Columbus; The
on the beaches. The surf's up a bit, but
Jones sisters, Columbus; 1be Family
that's about it," said Tony McGowan, who
Circle Quartet and the MI . Cannel Juni,ar
lives on ihe banks and is executive vice
Choir of Bidwell, pius a special program
)J"esidenl of the Dare Couhty Chamher of
by the Gallia County Senior Citizen s Old
Co&lt;nmerce.
.
Tyme Chorus.
"I think people are heing cautious and
Refreshments will be in charge of
that's what we want to see," said Ed
FOCUS Inc. and Mt. Cannel Church Clu b.
FOCUS Inc. wiii have a bean dinner on
. PT. PLEASANT - An elderly Point kitchen stove. The lop of the stove was Greene of the National Park Servii:e in
blackened.
This
and
other
evidence
at
the
Buxton
.
"We're
depending
on
the
weather
Saturday
and Sunday.
Pleasant woman was found dead in the
The public is invited. Admi ssion is
kit chen of her apartment Saturday scene seemed to indicate the victim had service and keeping one eye on the ocean."
"We've had calls from ail over the
free .
.morning , her body reportedly , badly been frying eggs when her clothing_-ras
ignited
by
flaming
grease,
Spence
country
.;anting to know if they ' should
burned as the result of a grease f1re.
· come," said sheriff's department diS·
•
:"
The victim was identified as Vera repu rt ed .
Ms.
Martin
was
badly
burned
about
patcher Sidney Shaw. "We don 't know
: Martin, 83, a resident of Fort Randolph
the
face,
chest
and
back,
the
officer
stated.
what to tell them, but we do tell them we're
ierrace, First St.
Mason
County
Coroner
John
Grubb
going
to have some rain ."
. .
· Point Pleasant police reported the
was
at
the
scene
bul
issued
no
ruJing
on
the
Assistant
Dare
County
C1v1l
liody was discovered by a son. Allen
,Martin, who summoned the Point Pleasant death . Instead , he has ordered the body Preparedness Director John Spence, who
Rescue Squad to the scene. The squad tn sent to Charleston for an autopsy to estimated that about 65,000 U!bor Day
determine the cause of death.
vacationers have crowded onto the resort
: tum notified the police at 9 : 10 a.m.
She
was
the
wile
of
the
"late
Arch
islands
that line the North Carolina coast,
GALLIPOLIS - Jack J . Blazer, 45 ,
· • According to Patrolman Jerry
·
Malt
in
and
Is
survived
by
another
son,
·
said
it
would
take 6 to 12 hours to evacuate
presi dent of the J . J . Blazer Construction
Higginbotham, the body was lYing near the
&amp;alph Martin , West Chester, Ohio.
them all if the hurricane heads ashore.
Co., Wheelersburg, was recently elected a
'.., Funeral" arrangements Will be an•
Despite the reduced threat o! a direct director of the Gallipo\is Commercial &amp;
nounced by the Crow-Husscli Funeral hit, coastal residents along the Outer Savings Bank according to U. A. Cornett ,
Home .
Banks girded for squalls with high winds president.
·
and heavy surf. Local forecasts called for
Son of Mr . and Mrs . Claude A. Blazer.
winds up to about 35 inJlh later Saturday
Addison, Blater is a graduate of Cheshire
night and &amp;mday . The surf was expected
High School.
to run 6 to 10 feet and cause erosion in
MIDDLEPORT - Three teachers
A resident of Enid Drive, Wheelerssome spotS.
were hired when the Meigs Local Board of
burg,
Blazer is also president nf the Blazer
JURY AGREES
Campgrounds oo the islands ol Ocracoke
.'tducation
.
met in special· session Frida)'
Materials
Corporation and tleliable Road
LOUI$YILLE, Ky. [UP!) - . Shervita and Cape Lookout were evacuated because
jjjght at the junior high building.
Equipment
Sales and Rentals, Inc.
Steve F . BaloY was qamed Spanish Bibbs told the jury she didn't want her these areas are served ooly by ferry boats,
He is chainnan of the board of The
lather
to
die,
and
the
jury
evidently
agreed
1
and · there would be problems getting
teacher . He iS moving here from . Mons- •
and recommended !hat Henry Bibbs be people ·out if the storm should *ddenly Angel Corporation, a boa rd member of
, field .
General Exploration Co., Dallas, Texas; a
Linda Sehuliz, an Ohio University sentenced to life in prison for kiUing his ex- tuni . In other campgrounds along the thin
member ofthe Energy Company Coal, Gas
Thanksgiving Day.
100-miie ribbon of barrier islands,
graduate, was named a title teacher and wife
and Oil and a member of the executive
The ·9-year-old girl and several other National Park Service officials said the
Wheeler A. Drake was named typing and
committee and audit committee of the
character witnesses , including his situati,on was near no,rmal.
general business teac~er at the high · parents, were the orlly people standing be'
General Exploration Co.
S&lt;:hool.
· . o
' John Wiliiam Blaettnar, distributive tween Bibb.!, 28, of Louisville, and a Using dog's name is
possible jury recommendation he be
education instructor. was named to serve
,
sentenced
to the electric chair.
costly for individual
LIONS PLAN SALE
as advisor for the yearbook. The bo"fd
GALLIPOLIS
- The Gallipolis Lions
approved transportation costs for two
COLiJMBUS,
Ohio.
!UP!)
Larry
Club
wiil
conduct
its 22nd annual " Lighthandicapped students - one to Athens and
Wagner
may
bave
been
working
like a dog,
for-sight
"
Light
bulb
Sale Sept. 18-21.
line to Rio Gra!l'le.
lut it cost bim f100 Friday in Franklin Teal)l captaina are John Hood and Jack
County Municipal Court .
Matthews. Proceeds will go lor eyeglasses
DIGNrrARIES GATHER
"
Wagner,IO, pleaded guilty to a charge of for needy school children in both the city
. VATICAN CITY (UP!) - The might of using hia dog's ntune at work so he could
,
ACTRESS DISCHARGED
and rounty districts.
the world converged on Rome Saturday for
RACINE, Wis. iUPii - Actress Ellen the investiture of a pope so humble he collect fl44 in unemployment benefits
under hia reel name.
Corby, who portrays Grandma Walton on
the triple crown of his
EASTERN BOARD TO MEET
Wagner collected the inooey while he
tile television series, "The Waltons," wus refused
predece..ar
.
·
EAST
MEIGS - Eastern Local Board
was w~rking for a private bus firm in
~leased from St .. Mary's Medical Center
Kings, p(esidenta, vice-presidents and February. He reversed hi• dog's name -· of Education Will meet in special session
Friday.
from more than 100 countries Lord RliiMll - and reported to -,.ork as Tuesday, Sept. 5, at 6:30p.m. to employ a
Mlaa Corby, a Ricjne native, had been premiere
will attend !he investiture Sunday fur Pope Russell Lord.
high S&lt;:hool special educatiun teacher, .a
.
.
"near exhaustion " when hospitalized John Paul I, the fonner Cardinal Albino
Wagner repaid the state for the benefits. primary learning disabilities teacher and
Thursday niaht but was in good condition Luciani of Venice. in the simplest such
Judge William Boyland lined him •100 aDd other business that may be brought tu the
Friday, a spokesman said. She was ce'remony n ·900 ) cars.
suspended
a 110-day' w&lt;rkhouae senlence. ~tKention uf th~ board.
\&gt;!ailing frientb In the city.

James Hogan
chairman of
celebration

-. Pt. Pleasant woman, 83,
•
found dead zn apartment
•

FOOTBALL SEASON IS HERE- Ready or not, the 1978 high school football
season is here . Friday night, several area teams began play, including the Eastern
Eagles who walloped Waterford, 3().1; . In above picture, Eagle defenders (in white
jerseys) bring down QB Allen Henery ( 11) . Eastern players are Dan Spencer (33 I
and Greg Hayman (62 ). See details of this and other games in today 's sports
section . (Greg Bailey photo).

Sheriff charges·man
with grand larceny
GALI.IPOI..lS - Following a week
long investigation by the Gallia County
Sheriff" s department , James E. Tilier.y, 37,
Gallipolis, was arrested friday , at 8 p.m.,
on charges 0[ grand larceny in connection
with the Thursday, Aug . 24 , theft or approximately $6,000 worth of jewelry from
the home of Marie Watkins, BulavillePort er Rd .
Spedal Investigator Geor!:{e Plants
stated Saturday morning that Tillery , who
had allegedlv been livinl! with Watkins

J. J. Blazer named

C&amp;S Bank director

Meigs board hires

OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

tbe j,b

Hats off to us all ·

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Charles
Withee, Pomeroy; Frankie
Stafford, Pomeroy; Ingrid
Hawley, Columbus; Mary
McCallister, Middleport ;
Evelyn Jewell, ~iddleport.

funds are needed

Betty
Wagner,
board
members, members of the
Southern Local Education
Assoc iation, Bill Baer,
president, Connie Enslen,
vice pres ident and John
. Costanzo, Linda Spencer,
cler k, and Bobby Ord,

SEPT 4

Ella is the seconw
lurricane of the year. The
first was Cora, which sprang
up Aug. 8 in the central
Atlantic 1,4~0 miles ~ast
southeast of the Virgin
Islands,
But Cora soon began
deteriorating ajld eventually
collapsed into a band of. rain
showers · that
never
threatened land.

Unemploye(l
rate down

Additional gym

president , Sue Grueser and

l

the foreign ministers Q!
Belgium, Bolivia, Ecuador
and Portugal.
Italy 's ·extreme left
Proleterian Democracy
party, in a statement
protesting Videia's visit,
said, " We are not surprised
that this pope is accepting the
best wishes and ·present'e of
the. Argentina tOrturer, thus
making a clear choice in
favor of the regime, even
against the many priests and
Catholics who are among the
victims of this hangman," the
statement said.
Pope John Paul, the former
Cardinal Albino Luciani of
Venice who was elected six
days ago as leader of the
world 's 700 million Roman
Catholics, .
chose
to
inaugurate his pontificate
with an open-air mass,
skipping the coronation that
has been the rule for more ·
thah eight cent~ries.
. In . line with the pope's
desire f&lt;r simplicity, the
"little throne" on which he
will sit during par\ of the rite
will be a common little
armchair without a canopy.
He will walk into the square
instead of heing carried in the
papal gestatorial chair.

•

\.

Ella moves _up coast

MIAMI
HurTicane ' ' or more," the National
Ella aimed its 90-mile-an- Hurricane Center said in a
hour winds toward the Mid- morning advisory.
hurricane
was
Atlantic coast today but
The
forecasters.
said
a
possible
centered
at
6
a
.m
.
EDT
near
LAKEWOOD, N. Y. (UPI )- Robert Bums, 49, owner of
Transformer Sales, Inc., and his sons, Randy, 20, and Tim, 23. shift in the storm's course latitude 30.&gt; north, loogitude
were arrested Thursday eveiling on North Carolina fugitive made it an " uncertain " 71.8 west, Or about 400 miles
southeast of Cape Hatteras,
- warranls and were being held on four felony and three threat to the mainland.
"If Ella continues to move N.C. It was expected to
misdemeanor charges, in connection with the alleged.Jumping
on
its current course, continue moving toward the
of toxic PCBs along 270 miles of North Carolina highways.
warnings
may be- required west-northwest about t~ mph
'
- over portions of the Mid- today,
Atlantic
states today.
Maximum sustained winds
BELMORE, Ohio (UP! ) - Cesa r Chavez and the United However . Ella might curve were estimated at 90 mph
Fann Workers Union have offered help iQ the strike by towards the north and remain with gales extending 100
migrant workers in northwestern Ohio.
offshore for the 'next 24 hours miles from the center, the .
The strike spread Thursday into Henry County as
caravans of ~rant workers from other areas moved i_nto the
county in an attempt to pull more workers from tomato and ·
CUC1,11llberflelds. "We've had no problems," said a spokesman
for the Henry County sheriff 's off ice in Napoleon . "So far
everything has heen quiet. "
By JACK R. PAYfON
sharpshooters in helicopters
VATICAN CITY (UP! )
and on rooftops guarded VIPs
Massive security measures including first lady Rosaiynn
TOKYO (UP! )- Toyota Motor Co. denied rumors today it were put into effect today to Carter.
has purchased a White-Westinghouse plant in Columbus, Ohio, guard against terrorist
Vice President Walter
to begin auto production in the United States. •
.
attacks on the kings, Mondale will represent
A company spokesman told UPI that "Toyota has never presidents, and premiers who. President Carter at Sunday's
coocrete offers to
American
· "
made
will attend Pope John Paull's ceremooy . His wile, Joan,
hist ory-making inau gu ral and son , William , also will
mass in St . Peter 's Square. attend .
With the memory . of the
Queen Elizaheth II will he
May 9 Red Brigades killing of represented by the duke of
Italian ex-Premier A! do Moro Norfolk. Lord Elwyn Jones,
still fresh in their minds, and Britain's lord chancellor, will
with
lefti st
protest represent the government.
King Baudouin and Queen
demonstrations ex pe cted
against guests like Argentine F'abiola of Belgium, King
President Jorge . Videla , Juan Ca rlos o! Spain,
Italian security officials were Presidents
Videla
of
laking no chances.
Argentina, Eli'IS Sarkis of
Officials said security for Lebanon
and
Rudolf
the Sunday afternoon mass 'Kirchschlaeger of Austria,
will be at least asstringent as , Premier Pierre Elliott
for the Aug . 12 funeral of Trudeau . of Ca nada and
Pope Paul VI, when an army Chancellor Helmut Schmidt
of 7,000 poli cemen , anti- of West Germany were
ter rori st
agents
and expected for the rite . So were

I

'

under the name Jamie Sutton. was
arrested on the pa rkmg lot of the Jones
Boys, following an evening stake out. ·
The jewelry was recovered later in the

evening from the la'undry room at G.S.I. ,
where Tillery is employed.
Inv estigator Plants stated that Tillery
had distorted his fingerprint record at'the
institute by applying a quick drying glue to
his fingers shortly before the prints were
taken .

Tillery , under the pame of Ro)' Andrews Watkins. is wanted in Columbus on
a 1972 charge of arson, as well as in'.. connection with the passing of approximately
$2,000 in bad checks.
According to Sheriff James Mont·
gomery, Tillery. who has a record of
conv ictions in Ne bra ska , Iowa , and
Mississippi , is a tfained locksmith.
A fully equipped locksmith kit was
discovered in the suspect's vehicle.
Also re~overed from the vehicle was a
radio, which Tillery had allegedly stolen
from Thaler Ford. when he was an employee of the auto dealership .

three instructors

.
'

Man reported
•
stable
m

condition

J . J( BLAZER

CLOSED MONDAY
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallia-JaeksonMeigs Community ·Mental Health Center
will be closed Monday, Sept. 4, in observance of Labor Day. Emergency
S('rv ices are available by calling the
Cri!sislinc. Crisisline telephone number is
446-5~4 in Gallia County, 2li6-S:i54 in
Jacksop C&lt;ounty and 992-5554 in Meigs
County.
·

GAI:LIPOLIS - Bruce Richards, 30,
Pt. Pleasant\ was listed in stable condition
in the intensive care unit of Holzer Medical
Center Saturday morning following a
Friday evening incident of felonious
assault at Gino's Place, 161~ Eastern Ave .
Officers of the Gallipolis City Police
were called to the tavern at 10 :42 p.m.,
Friday . Arriving at the scene, the police
discovered Richards being loaded into a
SEOEMS ambulance for transport to the
medi cal eentcr.
Officers report that Richards had
. sustained a severe laceration of the
forehead.
Anthony Merola, owner of the tavern,
advised the police that Richards had,
without apparent ptovocation, been struck
in the forehead with a pool cue wielded by
a subject from South Carolina.
There was no record ~or arrest in
connection with the incident.
I

'

.,.

·~

'

"'

)

't

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