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                  <text>12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Titesday, Sept. 5, 1978

• •••
FIVe

Veterans Memoria l Hospital
where he was admitted for
observation. Criss was listed
this morning in satisfactory
condition.
Qoth motorcycles incurred
moderate damage.
Officers investigated a onev~bicle mishap Sunday at
9:50p.m. on SR 588, one-hall
of a mile north of Mitchell Rd .
According to the patrol, an
auto operated by James
Sayer,
45.
Galli polis,
traveling east. went off the
..right side of the roadway and
struck a tree. Sayer was cited on charges
of OWl. The vehicle incurred
moderate damage. Sayer was
uninjured.
An auto driven by James
Ferrell ,
18 ,
Rodney,

(Continued from page I I
Officers report . slight
&lt;lamage to· the MilUron and
Baker vehicles, moderate
damage to the Snyder auto.
Snyder was cited on charges
of improper passing.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-vehicle accident Sunday at 2:30a.m., on
Mill Creek Rd., 250 feet south
of Georges Creek Rd .
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Edward Fry,
25, Gallipolis, tra veling
north, went out of control in a
curve, passed off the right
side of the roadway, struck
an embankment, and nipped
over on its top:
Fry was transported by a
relative to Pleasant. Valley
Hospital where _he was
treated and released.
---1 The vehicle incurred
moderate dama ge . No

sustained severe damage in

an accident which occurred
Sunday at 4 p.m. on SR 554,
three and seven-tenths of a
mile east of SR 325.
Officers report that the
·vehicle went out of control in
a curve, passed orr the ri ght
side of the roadway, and
struck a guardrail.
Ferrell was uninjured. No

citation was issued.

William Johnson, 24 .
Charleston, was injured In a
one-auto crash Sunday at 6: 15
p.m., on SR 160, three-tenths
of a mile south of U.S , 35 .
Offi cers report
that
Johnson swerved his vehicle
to avoid striking a deer on the
roadway. The auto passed off
the highway , went over an
embankment, and came to
rest in a creek.
• Johnson displayed visible
signs of injury. and was
transported by SEOEMS to
Holzer Medical Center where
be ws treated for a laceration
of the left upper eyelid, and a
knot on the knee, and
released.
The vehicle incurred heavy
damage. No citation was
issued.
Two brothers were involved in a two-motorcycle
accident Monday at 10 :45
a.m., on CR 46, two miles
south of SR 7 in Meigs
County .
According to the patrol,
Ricky Criss, 27, New York,
and Thomas A. Criss, 30,
Canton, 0 ., were each riding
motorcycles south on 46.
· Ricky Criss lost control of
his cycle in a curve. The
vehicle went off the right side
· of the road, and overturned.
Thomas A. Criss j who was
following his brother, lost
control of his cycle in the
same curve. The vehicle went
off the right side of the road,
struck and nipped over the
motorcycle operated by
Ricky Criss.
Thoma·s Criss displayed
visible signs of injury and
was taken by SEOEMS to

citation was issued .

No injuries were sustained
·in a two-vehicle accident
Saturday at 10 :30 a .m. on SR
7 at the junction of Fourth
Ave., In Kanauga .
Officers report that an auto
driven by Rebecca Fry, 18,
Pomeroy, was .stopped

in

traffic .
A vehicle operated by
Arthur Lund. 35, Gallipolis,
failed t~ stop and struck the
Frv auto in the rear.
Both vehicles incurred
slight damage. Lund was
cited on charges of assured
clear distance.
Officers were called to the
scene of a one-auto acCident
Sunday at 9 p.m. ·on SR 554,
two-tenths of a mile east of
White Oak Rd.
According to the patrol, a
vehicle operated by Steve
Ferrell, 14 , Bidwell, traveling
east, went off the right side of
the roadway and struck an
embankment.
Ferrell was uninjured. Th e
vehicle .incurred

modera te

damage.
Ferrell wa s cited on
charges of operating a motor
vehicle without a license.
Officers Investigated a hitskip accident Sunday , at
10 :15 p.m. on the BulaVillePorter Rd ., four and eight.
tenths o! a mile north of SR
160.
According to the patrol, 311
auto driven by J5aren Steinebrunner, 17, Gallipolis, was
north bound, when an
unidentified south ·bound
vehicle went left of center
striking the Steinebrunner
auto. Th e unidentified vehicle
then left the scene.
There was no report of
injury
. The Ste inebrunn er
I
auto incurred moder at e
~ Now . Open Under New
~ damage .
I Management.
Connie Aldridga , Owner
Saturday. at 4:15p.m.. on
1 Cathy
Wood•. Operator
~ SR 7 near Chester in Mei gs
Starting Sept. 12th
County. an auto driven by
I Call
For Appointment
Sharon Loyd. 34, Nashport ,
I PERM SPECIAL
0 . , i ncur red
m oderate
Any Perm - U.OOOFF
dama ge when a deer ran into
L.__,~::~
t.he pa th of the so uthbound

r...-_.._.________

!LINDA'S LADYFAIR
BEAUTY SALON

I
I

______j

HOSPIT.AL
·

NEW.s ,
Veterans Memorial Hospllal
Saturday Admi ssions Brady Knapp, New Haven ;
William
Stephenson,
Pomeroy; Brian Hartwell,
Rutland ; Tracy Scrimsher,
Columbus.
Saturday Discharges Norma Cha pman. Nelle
Klein. Frankie Stafford,
Clara Williams, Thomas
Wells, Richard DeMoss, Lola
Zwilling, Paul .-.nderson,
Joyce Porter.
Sunda y Admissions Juanita Runyon, Oak Hill;
Dianne Hawley, Pomeroy;
Alpha Cotterill, Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges Ingrid Hawley, Ralph Shain,
Chester Mundry , Benny
Spears, Ruth Woodward,
Marie Custer.
Monday Admiss ions Th omas Cri ss. Canton ;
Marga ret Barrett, Middleport ; Melanie Grueser,
Pomeroy ; Allen Mtlls,
Rutland ; Ottie Boston,
Racine; Kathryn Van Matre,
West Columbia; Joan Edwards, Parkersburg; Beth
Dawson. New Haven .
Monday Dis charg es Judith Smith. George Connolly Gloria Decker, Emily
Jeweil. Mary McCallister.

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport emergency
squad was called to Railroad
St. at 8:12 p.m . Sunday for
Cheryl Clark who was taken
to Holzer Medical Center.
A! 12 :41 a.m. Monday, the
squad went to Route 2,
Pomeroy , for Joe Wolfe whn
was also taken to Holzer
Medical Center.

MEET TONIGHT
The Meigs High School
band boosters will meet at
7:30 'this evening at the high
schoo l.

vehicl e.
The deer was killed.
Monday at 4:15p.m., on SR
7, one mile south o! U.S. 35
officers investigated a twovehicle mishap.
Officers report that a
vehicle operated by Robert
Carter, 26, Gal!ipolis, was
stopped in traffic.
An auto driven by Ernest
Thompson , 63, Gallipoli s,
failed to stop and Struck th e
Carter vehicle in the rear.
Both autos incurred slight
dama ge. Thompson was cited
on charges of assured clear
distance .
At II :15 p.m., ori SR 143,
on e mile north of CR t, in
Meigs Co unty, a deer ran into
the path of a vehicle operated
by John Young , 23, Jacksonville, 0 . The auto Incurred
slight damage.

nnzve
•

RUGS

'9.98
Lane

19" Admiral

PLATFORM
ROCKERS

68

1

COLORlV
'398

Anniversary Sale At

CEDAR
CHESTS

BAKER FURNITURE
Middleport, 0 .

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thu~oday
through
Saturday, fair and warm
tbro"'b lbe period, wllh
highs raoglog from lbe low
80s to lbe low 9h aod lows
lo the upper 50s to the
middle 80s.

Damages

heavy in

mishap

By HELEN THOMAS
l UPI While Huuse Reporter
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UP!)
- President Carter says he
wili act as a full partner in the
unprecedented Middle East
peace parley he .is convening
to seek compromises and
oominon ground with Israeli
Premier Menachem Begin
and Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat.
U.s . officials, briefing
reporters before the summit
meetings, said the president
also has ready a variety o!
ideas to Introduce in the openended discussions if and when
he thinks they would be
useful. But he will not seek to
impose a U.S. peace, plan in
any form .
·
Sadat, who stopped over for
dinner In Paris with French
President Valery Giscard
d'Estaing, was expected to
arrive first in the early
afternoon at Andrews Air
For ce
Base,
outside
Washington , D.C.
Begin ,
who
rested
overnight in . New York, was

Installation a few hours later. can be reached and searChing are Dr. Zbignlew Bneilnskl,
Both leaders were expected for exchanges of cc:mprornlse presidential adviser on
are
mutually national security ; Secretary
to make short arrival state- that
advantageous
tD
all
nations of State Cyrus Vance;
ments before flying by U.S.
he
said.
William Quandt of the
involved,''
Marine helicopters to the
Aides
said
the
U.S.
Naticnal Sec..,lty CoWICU;
heavily guarded retreat In
objective
is
IAI
break
through
special
presidential Middle
the
nearby
Catohln
a
number
of
obstacles
at
the
East
·
emmluary
Alfred
Mountains o( Maryland.
U.S. · officials
said top political level. If thi5 can Alhertm; Harold Sawtden,
President Carter would meet · be done, then Begin and assistant sea-etary of lltate
each separately and show Sadat would send new for Near East Affllrs, 111d
them to their quarters In the inslrucUons to lower level White House preaa leCI'etary
rustic country lodges. It was negotiatDrs who will carry on Jody Po.well.
Vice President Walter
not known if all three would the talks in weeks ahead.
Under
a
virtual
media
Moodale
will be in charge of
meet informally tonight, but
blackout,
the
summit
partlcithe
executive
branch In
formal negotiating sessions
pants
hope
to
hold
exhaustive
Carter's
absence
but
begin Wednesday.
disctlllsions
of
the
Issues.
probably
also
will
visit
the
·Carter, In a solemn mood ,
"We just wanted IAI go talks.
settled into Camp David
The adinlnlstratlon has
more than 24 hoW's before his where the telephone doesn't
ring ," said one top U.S. been generally silent about
highlevel guests.
U.S. proposals that may be
Leaving the White House official.
The current violence in PIJl forward IAI encourage a
Monday ,
he
warned :
"Co mpromises will be Lebanon may also be breakthrough.
Speculation !Jas ew~tered
mandatory. Without them, no reviewedty the thr~ leaders
although it is not a lonna! oo a U.S. security treaty with
progress can be expected.
"My own role will be that of agenda item, officials said. Israel or statiooing of U.S.
Carter summoned troops In the Middle East as
a full partner, n~t trYing to
ambassadors
Samuel Lewis part of a peace-teeplng !tree.
impose the w¥1 of the United
from
Israel
and
Hef'llllln Ellts Both
would - require
States on others but
.
congressional review and
searching for common from Egypt to assist.
Also on the U.S. delffl:ation approval.
ground on which a~r....ments

Remodeling still big issu~
Whether or not to proceed
with pt.ns to remodel the old
senior high building for
conversion to a .city ·building
wu dliCIIIIed at Tuesday's
Pomeroy Council meeting.
Larry Powell, councilman,
reported there had been a
meeting with the building
committee, Pomeroy AluRUli
Association, some members
of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce and the Jaycees
regarding renovations of the
buUdlng.
Powell feported it would
cost approximately $100,000
to complete the work on the
buUdlng. He asked if the
village would absorb half the
cost, $50,000_ The other half
l!OU!d be obtained through
donations and grants Powell
reported. Council, sometime
ago, had a bid on its present
building of $10,000. It was
pointed out that some of the'
rooms in the senior high ·
building could be rented to
help defray· operating costs.

Powell stated he thought
that it was possible to pursue
the Issue. Wllliam Young,
councilman, reported the
building was ln pretty good
condition, with .the exception
of its windows.. Harold

Brown ,

·18 die

secretary o! the Oeveland
Teachers Union . "They're
angry and ready to strike."
The teachers want a 20
percent wage increase, but
school offiCials say !here is no
money for raises and that
even with cutbacks made
since Jan . 1, the system still
is $25 million in the red.
"It 's · going to be · an
austerity program, full tilt,"
said Michael J . Hoffman,
clerk-treasure!' of the school
board. "There's no queStion
that some very drastic cuts
be made."
A strike in Cleveland would
affect 101,000 children.
In Marion, Ind .. where a
strike already is in progress,
the teachers today may face
a choice between the
classroom and jail.
Grant County Circuit Judge
A. Morris
Hall
has
swrunoned 300 of them tO a
contempt of court hearing.
Last Wednesday, he jailed
eight leaders of the walkout
on contempt chanes.

keeping them locked up
during the Labor Day
weekend, and he bas asked
pennission to use ·the city's
annory should he .decide to
jail the rest .
A Strike has closed schools
in Richmond, Ind., far six
days ilnd little progress was
reported ·. ln
contract
negotiations in either city .
The two walkouts have left
19,700 children with extended
vacations.
In New Orleans, where
90,000 studenta have been
barred from classrooms by
picket lines for three· days,
Superintendent Gene Geisert

will

.

said he was preparing a
statement outlining
disciplinary action to be
taken. against striking
teachers. Union President
Nat Lacour predlcted Geisert
also would offer back pay to
those returning to the
classroom and branded the
approach ''a strike-breaking
tactic." ·
"I lbink they're (the teachers) simply going lo Ignore
any threat made by the
superintendent or anyone
else," he said. 11 lntimidation.
acts of haranment whether subtle or othenrile
- will not "'""t . ... "

Tueaday wheP. the last pert of the fen~ was installed. The
cOUrts, which cost f17 ,754 were pafd for through grants

I~~~~')_r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_

Immigrant convicted

TOti10 0FF

(SUggested
telail price)

SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - Curtis Tan, 18, an lmmlgrant
from Hong ·Kong, has been convicted of second-degree murder
for hla role as a gwunan In the Golden Dragon massacre .- a
China town restaurant shooting that killed five people.
A Superior Court jury Tuesday found Tan gullty on five
counts of second-degree murder and 11 counts of assault with
the intentioo of caualng great bodily harm. He wiU be
aentenced oo Oct. 3 by Judge Walter Calcagno.

CoWtcil president recalled
TIPP CITY, Ohio (UP!)- City CouncU President Abbey
Bowling was removed from office Tuesday in the city's first
recall electioo in history.
About4 percent of the eligible voters in this Miami County
ccmmunlty of 5,000 people cast ballots In the recaU election,
with 755 voting for recall and 542 against.

· from Playtexs

Five men indicted

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all around for a smoother look under clothes.

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PHONE:
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TENNIS COURTS READY FOR USE - Two tennis
courta located at lhe park in Syracuse were completed

BLOOMINGTON, Jll. (UPI) - Ohioans whose motor
vehicles are Insured by State Fann Mutual will be paYing
more for their premiums after Oct. I.
The compeny, which Insures 702,000 vehicles In Ohio, will
lncreaae Ohio premiums 5.4 percent, or an average of f5.60
more every six mooths.
Although State Fann earned a profllln Ohio In 1977 and
cleclarecfpollcy holder dividenqs of about $10 million out of tbe
eamlnga, the spokesman said the company lost $4.8 million on
Ita auto Insurance operation In the first half of 1978.

MEETS FRIDAY
Mary Shrine No . 37, Order of
White Shrine of Jerusalem, ,
will meet Friday at 8 p.m. at
the Pomeroy
Masonic
Temple . There will be potluck
refreshments.

A New, Modern, Skilled Nursing Facility

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

State F ann rates increase

MEET TONIGHT
Chester PTO will meet in
special session this evening
at Chester Elementary
School at 7:30 p.m. Those
interested in becoming room
mothers may sign up at the
meeting .

Point Pleasant, WV 25550

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01(., . , . September 30, 1178
,.. ,,_ ..,..,. , refuml .,.,,,

Animal keepers now working
. • CINCINNATI (UP!) - All animal keepera and
maintenance employees at the CincinnaU Zoo are to be back on
the job today, endinC the flrll strike in the history of the zoo.
The workers Tuelday wled 32 to 7 to acctpt a three-year
cmlract which calla for an 8.5 percent wage Increase the first
year_ ~~ of 8 percenl and I percent will follow.
Under the old cmtract, workers made between $4.52 and
eu2an hour.

Preliminary hearing set
NABif'iiLLE, Tem, (UPI)- A preliminary hearing was
lcheduled today in General Seulona Court for a "deeply
tlepr 1111 d" Ohio hitcbbiller wilb a history of mental illneaa
*Ito d8lma
he lt11led 17 per10111 during a two-year murder
_

•OPEN FRIDAY 9100 AM TO I PM
eOTHER WEEKDAYS 9130 ·AM TO 5 PM

BERFELDS liN

PITTSBURGH (UP!)-Two Cleveland men and three
Plttaburgb men were named In indlctmenta returned Tuesday
by a federal grand jury, charged with interstate tranaportallon
of obtlcene magazines andmotion pictures.
Nuned in the lkount indictment were Melvin Kamins, 39,
Pepper Pike, Ohio, and Sandy Scbrago, l.yndhurst, Ohio, both
of Soverlgn Newa Co. In Cleveland; Gregory Kocan, 53, of
suburban Allison Park, manager of Majestic News CO. In
Plttaburgb; and Richard Jenkins, 35, and James Calderone, 5,
both of Pltllburgh and employed by Majestic,

EROY

...

Pollceald 1'tlelday nlcht lbey were at a llllndltlll in their
blvtltlptloll ol Kemelb G. Taylor, rl, North Lima, Ohio, who
'-bllnc held 4iD char&amp;• ol murder, armed robblly, aulo lheft
a two trlllc vlolallonl in cmnedlon with the latallhoollng
ol Dl'rld WIUie, 38, Nashville.
!

Voting and Lou Osborne,
council members, Donnie

Ward , and Chief Webster.

Yost resigns
board post
The resignation of Gene
Yost as a member of the
Southern Local school district
Board of Education was
accepted when the bOard met
in special session Tuesday
evening. Yo st resigned
because of health reasons.
The board employed
Russell Johnson as a . substitute custodian for the new
school year and set another
special meeting for 7:30 p.m.
Sept. 12 at the high school
cafeteria.

BUS DRIVERS MEET
All ocbool buo drivers
aod lransportallon persoDDel of the three local
scbool districts In Meigs
Coun'ty
Soutbero,
Easleru and Meigs - are
to allend a oebool bus
drivers safety meeting to
be held at 7:30p.m. Thursday in lhe cafeterta of the
Meigs Junior. hlJb scbool in
Middleport.
Meigs County ocbool
ouperlntendeot Robert
Bowen In &amp;llllounclng the
meellng
said
a
represenlatlve of tbe Slale
Highway Patrol will speak
and a fllm on safety
pracllces will be shown.
"Safety In driving school
buses cannot be over·

stressed," Supt. Bowen
said. He urged all personnel Involved In tbe
transportation of students
to allend Thursday 's
meeting.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Attending were board
NOW YOU KNOW
members Dallas Hill, Shirley
The human sperm cell is
Johnson, Sue Grueser and , only 1-30,000tb the size of the
Betty Wagner .
ova it is designed to fertilize.

en tine
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1978

•

(Continued from page I)
to 10 years.
Dr. John M. Stewart, a blochemiJt at the University of
Colorado Medical Center in Denver, said use of the vacCines
woudd likely avoid dangers aSSOCiated with birth control pllls.

Announcing The P.laytet~ Control Top Pantyhose

SEEK DISSOLUTION
Filing for dissolution of
marriage in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were
Ricky J. Morris, Rt . 2, Racine
and Ci ndy Mae Lawson
Morris, same address.

•

e
VOL XXIX

decreased 73 hundredths of a
cent for 1,000 cubic feet effective Oct. I.
Due to the number of
arrests made last month for
trespassing, the question of
parking in the village was
raised by Councilman
Powell.
Council discussed the
possibility of placing parking
meters on the paved portion .
of the city owned lot .
Wehrung felt it would cost the
village more than they would
gain. No action was taken on
the issue.
Chief Jed Webster reported
his department made 59
arrests plus one juvenile,
investigated 17 accidents,
collected $4,855 from the
parking meters, issued 1,160
parking tickets, an ave~age
of 48 per day and drove 4,245
miles, during the month of
August.
Attending were . Mayor
Andrews, Jane Walton, clerk,
Powell, Brown, Wehrung,

from Housing Urban ·Development and Bureau of Outdoor
Recreation, Robert L. Wingett was grants administrator.
The courts, made of uphalt, were built by Yqrk
Construction, Chauncey.
·

Settlement
far away
By GREGORY GORDON

WASHINGTON (UPI)- In
what one official likened to
the early stages of a boxing
match, negotiators for the
Postal Service and three
major unioos today were
showing little signs . of
movement, well into a special
IS-day bargaining period.
The two sides, attempting
to avert a nationwide mall
strike, were scheduled to
resume faceto-face talks
today Wider the auspices of
Harvard University
Profesaor James J. Healy.
But a time was not set late
Tuesday.
On Tuesday they met
Jointly for the first time In the
slx-day-old mediation period,
for slightly more than two
hours, and departed without
comment.
"I
wouldn't
expect
anything this week,'' said an
official close to the medlatloo
process. "They're feeling
each other out, This is like a
!wound fight."
Under an agreement that
. prevented an IUegal walkout
by as many u 500,000 postal
workers Aug. 28, Healy was

Another
.
tra1n
derails
Four cars of a Chessie
System train deraUed shortly
before 10 a.m. Tuesday on a
stretch of track bet ween
Hartford and New Haven, W.
Va.
According to Dick Flless,
Grafton Division Manager for
the Cbe1111ie System, the cars
carried non-dangerous
plastic ..granules from tlie
Goodyear Plqnt of Apple
Grove.
West VIrginia State Police
along with Hartford and New
Haven officers were at the

.:ene.

Railroad personnel and
equipment were on the site
today dearing the track .

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

'oN THE MOVE - Cathy Blaettnar, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John William Blaettnar, Pomeroy, is "on the
move'' as the 1978 Big Benq Regatta Queen. Named queen
in late June, Miss Blaettnar has attended eight events
since being named to the title to represent the Big Bend
Regatta and the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce,
sponsoring organization . Cathy as the new queen bas
attended already th e 13th annual River Recreation
Festival, July 4, at Gallipolis; Old Canal Days Festival,
July 7-9, at Canal Fulton; Ohio Hilis Folk Festival, July
1:1-16 at Quaker City; Crooksville-Roseville Pottery
Festival, July 1:1-16, at Crooksville; Bratwurst Festival,
Aug.17-19, at Bucyrus ; Homecoming Festival, Aug. 21, at
Belpre; Parade of the Hills at Nelsonville, Aug. 26, and the
Ohio State Fair in Columbus on Aug. 27.

L~.:~ce..!.~~~-~ . ~~~~~!

be available in five

ELBERFELD$

Mi:~~~~-E~I ~ll:~-c~;

will pay $3. It was noted that
other haulers are receiving $4
a month. Manley is not
allowed to solicit business in
the village but persons can
contact him If they desire .
Jane Walton , clerk, was
authorized to purchase two
cycle mowers for the
. cemetery. Mayor Andrews
reported the Shelly Company
will blacktop portion of
Mulberry Ave., · Breezy
Heights, and Butternut Ave.
Larry Wehrung, counciiman, stated (hat residents
who have been notified by·
letter to cut weeds and have
not done so should be fined.
Bill Young, councilman,
reported road conditions on
Pleasant Ridge and Spring
Ave., were in bad condition.
Mayor 1\ndrews also reported
the county was going to do
some grading \ on Pleasant
Ridge .
• According to a letter from
Columbia Gas of Ohio,
municipality gas rates will be

£~.-:)~r_h_-e_w_o_r_fd_T_o_da....&lt;y-

BeUefonUdne : Dou~as L . . .---------------------------------------------------------------------------------,
Harnish
35,
Bellefontaine, Sr.
in , a threevehicle crash on a city street.
accident on a Pike County
road .
Friday Night
Columbus : Gordon Freyermuth, 67, Columbus, struck
by a vehicle while crossing a
city street.

councilman,

suggested a firm figure he
arrived at before any definite
action is taken .
Mayor Oarence 1\ndrews
reported In addition IAI the
$50,000 it will cost an additional $30,000 to move all
communication equipment.
The matter was· referred to
the building committee.
Council approved the hiring
of Marjorie Reuter a~ night
upon
the
dispatcher
recommendation of Mayor
Andrews , who said Mrs.
Reuter was doing a fine job.
In other business, council
granted Lawrence Manley
pennission to Increase his
rates for garbage pickup
from $3 for three cans a
month til $4. Senior citizens

Teacher strikes continuing

Total Savings of as much as

DEDICATION SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 10
OPENS MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 11

-

Summit talks startmg

Heavy damages were Incurred to a car driven by
R&lt;Jger B. Pearch, Pomeroy,
at t p.m. Sunday on Middleport Hill.
·
Middleport Police said
Pearch was traveling uphill
when he lost control of his
car. The vehicle hit a mailbox
and an embankment near the
Clara France property .
Pearch was cited on a charge
of failing to have his vehicle
under control.
Police also reported two
other accidents both of which
occurred Friday. A truck due at the samP Air Fnrre
driven by James E. Province,
R&lt;Jute 1, Middleport, ~eked
into a parked .car owned by
Unda Warnecke, Route I,
Cheshire, on Heiners' lot in By KENNETII R. CLARK
lower Middleport.
United Press International
At the intersection of Third
School bells ring this week
and Coal Sts., a car driven by for most of the nation's
Harry Chesher, Middleport, children, but for more than
going west on Coal, crossed 750,000 of them in cities from
onto Third striking a car Seattle to New Orleans,
driven by Linda Hubbard, teachers strikes may stretch
Syracuse. The Chesher car summer vacatiOn .into
continued its path and autwnn .
striking a parked car owned
At strike-bound or strikeby Grace A. Johnson on Coal threatened schools, the deSt.
mands are for more money,
There were heavy damages smaller
classes
and
to the Chesher and Johnson additional fringe benefits
vehicles and light damage to which beleaguered school
the Hubbard car. Chesher boards say they do not have
was cited on charge of failing the cash to meet.
to yield the right of way.
In financially strapped
O eveland, where the school
district was forced to secure
special borrowing power last
week from the state juS: to
get the schools open, 10,000
!Continued from page ! I
teachers and employees
Ashley: Michael A. Terry, threatened to keep them
20, Marion, in a one-vehicle closed if their wage demands
mishap on Ohio 229.
are not met. ,
Findlay: Dallas A. Kinder
"Our members feel that
Ill, 16, Pandora, in· a two-car nobody cares about us," said
collision on Ohio 235 in James O'Meara, executive
Hancock Cowlty.

Pleasant Valley
Nursing Care Unit

NOW ACCEPTING
RESIDENT RESERVATIONS

.

.

:; :;::::::=:~:::: :::::::: :::::::::::::::::::: :::~::::::::::::::::: ::::::::·: ·

given 15 days either to bring
about a negotiated settlement
or decide any unresolved
issues himself by serving as a
binding arbitrator.
Healy has said if the two
sides are not moving toward
a negotiaied settlement by
Sept. 12 or 13, he will "alert"
them he Is preparing to issue
an arbitration decision.
"' his request, negotiatiors
for both sides spent much of
the Labor Day holiday
weekend gathering statistical
data to assist him If a binding
decision is necessary.
· The unions have expressed
considerable resistance to
arbitration, partially because
it might result In eliminating
a "no layoff" clause that has
been In union contracts since
the Postal Service was
fonned In 1971.
The "no layoff" clause was
maintained In a proposed
threeyear ·contract rejected
· last montll by all three
unloos, who found the offer of
a 19.5 percent wage and costof-living ralae unsatisfactory.

CAMP DAVID, Md. (UP I) to the business of !lie meeting hopeful. Demonstrators in
President
Carter ' was through the U.S. the Lebanese seaport of Sidon
Egyptian President Anwar spokesman, presidential burned Sadat in effigy and
Sadat and Israeli Prime press secretary Jody Powell. children beat likenesses of
Minister Menachem Begin, And even Powell was Sadat with lheir fist s.
secluded in an idyllic un·r eachable within the
Hard-line Arab leaders inmountain setting, today sealed-off compound.
eluding Syria 's ·President
beg·an efforts to mediate
The summit opened amid Hafez Assad and Palestinian
peace in the Middle East.
divided comment around the Liberation Organization
Carter met with Sadat world.
leader
Yasser
Arafa t
early today following an
"The name Camp David is assailed the Egyptian leader
Initial meeting with Begiri . S)'Tl1bolic, as the Israeli flag and said litUe would come of
Tuesdaynighthow-safterthe wilh the Star of David has lhe summit.
Egyptian and Israeli arrived always been given preference
The problems of Lebanon
separately by helicopter. in Washington to national . shadowed the swrunit, with
White
House officials colors of any Arab country,' ' clashes between right-wing
expected the first meeting of the official Soviet news Christian militia and Arab
all three men later today in agency Tass complained. . peace-k ee ping for ces
talks that cqudd last 10 days.
Pope John Paul I prayed lhreating to boil over 'into a
The summit, opening .on a for "the success of Camp direct milif.&lt;l r y confli ct
sparkling autwnn-like day, David," urging the leaders to ~tween Israel and Syria .
was held In almost total be
" farsighted
and
At the request of host
seclusion on the 143-aere courageous." The liS-year-old President Carter there is an
Camp David presidential .. pontiff said he hoped !he talks almos• total news blackout
retreat nestled in Maryland's would ~·open a way toward a over the talks, which could
forested Catoctin Mountains. just and complete peace - last as long as 10 days,
Carter was mediating a one that assures comple!e including a lhree.&lt;Jay break
fO!'eign dispute on American satisfaction and without for the religous holy days of
soil for the first time since leaving unresolved such. !he three leaders over the
Theodore Roosevelt's questions as the problem of weekend. Sadat's [slam day
successfud efforts to end the the Palestinians, the security of worship is Friday; Begin's
RussoJapanese war In the of Israel and the Holy City of Jewish Sabbath begins at
early 1900s .
Jerusalem."
sundown Friday and laots
A near total news blackout
The Palestinians - the key until sundown saturday ;
was clamped on the sessions. to any lastin~ Middle East Carter's Christian day of rest

Connally takes stand
By Daulel F. Gilmore
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Former Texas Gov. John
Connally, wounded in the
gunfire that killed President
John F. Kennedy 15 years
ago, was called to the witness
table today in the House
Assassinations Committee's
investigation of the shooting
in Dallas.
Before Connally could
testify, however, panel

chairman Louis Stokes, DOhio, was forced to shuttle
between the hearicg room
and the House Administration Committee where he
lobbied for more money to
keep the assassination probe
going.
A month of public hearings
is planned on the Nov. 22,
1963, Kennedy killing. The
panel is also investigating the
shooting death in 1968 of

Area six health
·meet mgs SIat e d
1

Area Six Health Systems
EXTENDED FORECAST
Agency, Inc. (ASHSA) has
Friday lbrougb Suday,
SCheduled four (4) public
fair and warm Friday and
meetings to be held in late
Saturday, but cooler
September. These meetings
Suaday wltb showers · are being held In the Interest
poulble. Hlgha wUI be near
of broadening community
to Friday, In the 80s involvement In the developSaturday und near 80
ment of the agency's Health
Sunday. Lows wiD be In the J System Plan. The sessions
80s lbrougb the period •
' wlll focus on comments on
proposed health status goals
and health systems goals for
the area.
Man hurt in
A second focus of these
public meetings will be on the
tractor mishap
potential establishment of
Subarea Mvlsory Councils to
The Pomeroy emergency · provide for additional local
"''uad answered a call to the involvement in the health
Karl Krautter home near planning process.
Pomeroy at 6: 22 p.m .
The
meetings
are
Tuesday where James Hall scheduled I as follows:
had been injured In a tractor Tuesday, September 19, 7:30
accident.
\
p.m.. Ohio University Inn..
Krautter . and Hall were Athens; Thursday, Sepworking on the driveway of tember 21, 7:30p.m., Holiday
the home and were moving Inn. St. Oalrsvllle; Tuesday,
dirt when Hall got off the September 28, 7:30 p.ni.,
tractor. The vehicle moved Holiday Inn, Gallipolis, and
!lightly and the digger caught Thursday, September 28,7 :30
Hall who received a fractured p.m., Bethesda Hospital,
leg. He was taken to Holzer Zanesville.
Medical Center. c ~ _
Proposed goats have been
I

drafted based on analyses ~~
information on indicators of
health status and on the
characteristics of the health
care sy st em ·m th e area. Th e
1
bl '
t'
ill
our pu lc mee mgs w
provide an opportunity for
the public to prioritize these
Is
d 1
1 d
gdiot~ Ian 1 sugges a 1ona goa s.
ASHSA's Plan Developmen I Committee will use
t in
thesepu1ccommens
bl .
kin 't
dati
rna g 1 s recommen
ons
of high priodty goals for the
area for wh1ch more specifiC
.
ac I aon
st eps w111 be
developed. A list of these
goals may be obtained by
contacting the ASHSA Office
at 216 Putnam Street, P. o.
Box H, Marietta, Ohio, 45750,
614-374-2200.
Area Six Health Agency,
Inc. ls the conditionally
designated and funded health
systems agency for eighteen
eastern and southeastern
Ohio counties. The primary
purpose of the agency is to
promote effective health
planning
and
health
resources development
within its htllth service area.

°

Martin Luther King Jr ., and
has heard testimony from
James Earl Ray, King 's
convicted assassin.
Connally and his wife,
Nellie, were riding in the
open presidential limousine's
jump seats in front of the
president and first lady
Jacqueline Kennedy when the
fatal shots were fired at the
motorcade about 1:30 p.m.
EST as it passed through
Dallas' Dealey Plaza.
Connally was wounded in
three places, but it was
unclear how many bullets
actually hit him - leading to
speculation that more than
ooe assassin was involved in
the shooting.
To resolve tbat point and
others, Stokes is asking the
administration coounittee f~r
an additional $790,tnl so his
. panel can stay alive until the
end of the year . The
Assassinations Commmittee
has already spent or
.
'Iii
.
comrrutted $4.5 mt on smce ·
it was fonned two years ago .
"We want to assess all of
!he key evidence on the
.
relevant issues," Stokes sard
in his opening remaPks,
"leaving our ultimate
decisioo to public meetings
··· ,. .
In Dec~mber ·
'bl
Details of poss1 e new
findings
or
insights
uncovered by the committee
Investigators will be r~tioned
out over the followmg ~6
hearings, designed to pill
down the various th_eories and
rumors
atlendmg
the
assasslnatioo.
CLASSES OPEN TODAY
Schools of the Meigs Local
and Southern Local school
districts opened for the 197879 school tenn today .
Teachers In both districts
met Tuesday to prepare for
the Wednesday ~edule.

Both Sadat and Begin expressed optimism when
. they
arrived at Andrews Air Foree
Base for the helicopter ride to
Camp David .
Begin ended his brief remarks with a pun in Latin on
the traditional Vatican
ph ra se uttered at the
successfud conclusion of a
conclave of the College of .
Ca rdinals - " Habemus
Papum" (we have a pope .)
Begin said, "Let us all hope
that out of lhts umque
political conclave a day will
come when the nabons of the
world will say, 'Habemus
pacem, we have peace."'
Sadat :;aid on arriyal~"We
co me here at a cruc1al
crossroads. The challenge IS
tremendous, but we have no
choice ex~ept to ~ccept the
challenge. We can t a.fford to
fatl the hopes of nallons all
over th~ w?"ld." .
In the1r Ill's! evenmg at the
prestdenllal retreat , there
were only informal meetin~s
betwee n. Carter and Begm
and a bnef exchange between
Sadat and Carter. The
American president meets
separately wtlh Sadat th1s
morning, and the first joint
IContinued on page 12 I

Sheriff
•
Issues
reminder
Now that all of the schools
in Meigs County have opened,
Meigs County Sheriff James
J. Proffitt cautions area
motorists to be on the alert
when driving near the school
zones. Motorists are urged to
watch for children walking to
and from school or waiting
along the roadway for the
bus.
Ohio law provides drivers
are not to exceed a speed of 20
miles per how-In school zones
during school recess and
while children are going to
and leaving school during the
opening and closing hours.
Most of the school zones in
Metgs County are eqmpped
With
. h fiashmg
Sh 'ff' school
d t . zones
·ll
11g
ts. er1 s epu 1es WI
be patroling school zones
throughout the year to enforce the speed lumt.
Sheriff Proffitt also
· d
dr.
Oh 'o
r~mm s area . IVers
I
Law _reqmres dr1vers to stop
w1thm 10 feet of the front or
f
hlb • thth
rear o a sc oo u" 3 as
stopped 10 receive ·or
discharge a school child. The
. ·
.
.
dr1ver· of the vehicle
d
·1IS hto
remam stoppe un!l .t e
schooii b,us rleedsumb esh mothoolonl,
or unu. s.gna
Yt esc
bus drtver to proceed.
.,
SPECIAL MEETING
A special , meeting of the
Meigs County Democrats will
be held at 7:30p.m. Thursday
at the Meigs Inn for the
purpose of electing delegatea
and alternates to the
Democrat convention. Other
spel!ial business will also be
discussed . ~

...

;

�••
3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 6, 1978

2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Sepl. 6, 1978

Beat.· ••

Washington
Report By1\1Clarem·c
iller
The President's energy bill
rema ins deadl ocked in
Congress
and
it
is
questionable whether the
impasse can be resolved
before the House and Senate
adjourn in October. This is
hard to comprehend since the
President's political party
controls both Houses of ·
Congress by nearly a 2·1
majority.
,
The probl em centers
around whether higher taxes
and mor e gov ernment
regulations are the solution to
the energy crisis. and I say
they are not . We noted last
year
that
th e
Ad·
ministration's program was
in serious (rouble because it
amounted to little more than
a major tax bill with a lot of
added controls and disin·.
centives
that
would
discourage development of
new energy sources .
The U.S. does not need just
"any energy bill ." We need .a
good one that encourages
energ y produ cti on and
pr omot es conserv ation
through th e free market
economic system . The bill
that passed the House of
Representatives a year ago
which I strongly opposed,
would have done the exact
opposite.
The American people want
and deserve a good energy
measure. They recognize the
need for a .comprehensive,
realisti c, and coherent
energy policy to enable the U.
S. to achieve energy selfsufficiency and maintain a
growing economy. The
question arises over what
kind of energy bill can
achieve these goals .
Many officials in the Ad·
ministration and Members on
Capitol Hill are still ad·
vocating the same tired , old
program of: " If government
spends a little more more
here and there - then we will
so lv e
the J problem."
However, for several years
now, the tide has been .run·
ning the other direction as
people have been telling
Wa shington they have had
enough of high taxes, burden·
some regulations. rising
federal deficits, and govern·

ment creat ed inflation . Many
cltizens view government as
the problem .
Furthermore, it is not a
matter of education. Th e·
President and many of his
c 'o ngr ess ional
leaders
believed that if people could
just understand what their
bill was all about, it would be
enacte&lt;t . However, the more
it was ex.plained and the
closer it was e~amined, the
more it was evident that the
original legislation would not
solve the nation's energy
problem .
As I noted last year, the
Administration 's energy
policy needed a major shift in
direction or America would
end
up
with
more
bureaucracy, higher taxes,
artificially inflated fuel bills,
growing trade defi cits,
greater dependency on
foreign energy supplies, and
worsening fuel shortages. It
appears some on Capitol Hill
began to get the message
from their voters back borne.
A. good bill can be enacted,
but precious time is being
wasted as the leadership in
Congress and the White
House argue over which type
of tax and regulation is best.
It is long overdue for the
President and his leaders to
admit they wrote a poor piece
of legislation that was out of
tune witll the American
people and the real solutions
needed to deal with the
energy crisis. We should still
work for a bill that was
proposed and I supported last
year that would end govern·
ment tax and regulation
policies which make it difficult to find the new ene.rgy
sources our country needs to
remain productive.
As I noted last year. con·
servation of existing energy
supplies along ith conversion
to new and different sources
is absolutely necessary if we
are to deal with the serious
problems at hand . But conservation and conversion
imposed through the free
market pricing mechanism is
far preferable to costlx
energy taxes and government
imposed regulations and
redistribution schemes.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:

Spot r•·du&lt;"ing
a m\·th
DEAR DR . LAMB- I am a
21-year-o ld female who jogs
IS minutes every day. Inside
the house in bad weather or
outside in fa1r. My goal is to
slun down my hips and
thighs . Since I'm S fo ot 5 and
weigh 110 pounds I don 't want
to cut down on what I eat but
the weight I do carry is in iiiy
hips.
J ogging is one exercise I
reall y enjoy and , therefore,
do. However , several people
have told me that jogging
ever y dH y tears down cells,

slimming the hips. while jogging every other day gives
the cells time to strengthen
and build bigger hips and
thighs. Is there any truU1 to
that at all ?
I've a Iso heard that swift
nmnin g builds one up while a
~low· jug slims one down , Is
thi s true ? Certainly I'm get·
ling !inner but what does it
tak e in the way of jogging to
g,et my smaller hip and thigh
rneasure1nents ?
DEAR READER - It
depends on how b1g your hip
and thigh measurement:; are
to start with. There is no such
thing as spot reducing and if
you want to get l'id of fat you
hav e to lose body fat. Of
course, you mi ght develop
muscles at the same time if
you're on an exercise pro~
gram and if you have a well rounded exercise program
U1at may make your overall
body look better.
There's absolutely no truth
to the stories you have heard
about jogging every day or
every other day. It's value in
terms of getting rid of body
fat depends· on how many
calories you Us~ .
If you jog two miles every
da y ,·you're obviously going to
use more calories than if you
jog two miles every other
day. Under those cir·
t:umstances, j oggiu ~ · every
day would certainly be more
effective . The speed makes
no difference either in tenns
or building your muscles or
slimming your thighs .
YQu shouldn' t starve
'

I

yourself to lose weight. Too
many people have done that.
A sensible dietary restriction
pro~ram while you 're exer·
cising will help you lose fat a
tittle more rapidly . Also, if
yuu learn to eat properly it
ma y provide the basis for
good nutrition in the future .
For this reason I am sending you The Health Letter
nwnber 4·7, Weight Losing
Diet. It Will provide you a
bask menu that you can use
to help lose weight at the
.same Ume you art! exercising. Others who want this
issue can send 50 cents with a
lon g, st amp e d , se lf ·
addressed envelope for it tu
me in cct re of this newspaper,
P.O. Box 1551, Radio City Sta·
tion , New York , NY 10019.
You shouldn 't lose more
tl14n about one pound a week .
That 's fast enough. After six
weeks you should stop , eat a
rTillintenance diet for awhile ,
and then return to your
reducing diet. Stick with your
,exercise and be patient. In
the long run you will get .
significant improvement.
Hereditary traiLs are important. Some famili es just
tend to have larger hips and·
thighs than others . We
shouldn't be surprised ab4ut
U1is in hwnan beings as we
see it all the time in the
animal kingdom. For exam·
pie, different breeds of horses
and different breeds of cattle
have different tendencies
toward developing body fat
deposits. Nevertheless, even
if you inherit characteristics
that you don't like, you can do
i:t certain amount to control
U1em through proper dielluy·
and exercise progrcuns.

BODY FOUND
MANISTEE, Mlch. (UPI)
- The body of Doyle Holeim,
33, Toledo , Ohio, was
recovered In Lake Michigan
Tuesday by divers.
Manistee County sheriff's
deputies aid Holeim fell oil a
boat and drowned during the
Labor Day weekend;
Holeim's body was taken to
a local hospital for an
autopsy , ,,

•

timism running high
as NGHS opens season

Of the Bend

•

Bengals waive
Chris Devlin

'

By Bob Hoeflich
Faith Perrin, a 1971 grad of Meigs Hleh School, returned

~ weekend fr!XIl Washington, D. C., after a summer ol

working in the olflce of the emergency health ·services brinch
of Ure Department ol HumatiResources, District of Columbia.

Upon completion of her wort, Faith· was presented a
certUicate of colllJI)endation signed by the Director of Public
Healt.h, citing her outstanding performance In the summer
employment ptogram of the Department of Hwnan
Resources.
·
This week, Faith, daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H.
Perrin, will be going back to the Ohio University campUB to ·
begin her second year of study In the field of science.
'
Incidentally, Faith comments that her biggest thrill of tbe
summer was learning to be a commuter on the new subway
system in Washington.
Clara Mae Sargent of tbe RJiclne area is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center where she has undergone surgery.
Friends rilay send cards to room 202-B.

Court decision upheld
By JOE KAY
CINCINNATI (UPI) - A
state appeals court has
upheld a lower court decision
that Ohio's system of funding
public education results in
unequal educational
opportunities for children and
is unconstitutional.
The 1st Ohio District Court
of Appeals Tuesday upheld
Clinton County Common
Pleas Court Judge Paul E.
Riley 's ruling last December
that current methods for
financing public education
violate the "equal protection
and benefit clauS'&lt;!" of the
state Constitution.
The appeals court also said
the state General Assembly

"should reexamine the
state's
public
school
financing system and enact a
support plan conforming to
the equal protection ·and
benefit clause" of the
Constitution, "a development
which we believe should be
forthcoming in the near
future ."
. '
Last December, Judge
Riley, visiting Hamilton
County from his own Clinton
County, declared the present
school funding system
"establishes invidious
classifications among school·
children which are neither
supported bY any compelling
slate interest nor predicated

The Ohio Constitution requires that the state
legislature
provide · a
"thorough and efficient
system of common schools."
The case, filed against the
Ohio
Department
of
Education by the Cincinnati
Board of Education, is
expected to he appealed to
the state Supreme Court.
Assistant Ohio Attorney
General David Beaver, 'who
has represented the state
Educa lion Department In the
case; . noted Tuesday that
"from Ure ou~ both sides
have said it appearoo it would
go to the Oho Supreme Court,
whoever lost at wha lever

upon any rational basis."

Construction oil schedule
Construction of an "Otisca
Process" demonstration
coal-cleaning plant ·at Ohio
Power 's Muskingum Mine
near Cumberland is "right on
schedule."
·charles
A.
Heller,
executive vice president,
stated that the $6.7-million
facility - the first of its kind
- should be cleaning coa1 "as
planned, late next summer."
The American Electric
Power System announced its
decision to build the Otisca
unit at a gubernatorial press
conference last December.
High hopes are held for the
Otisca Process as a means to
lower substantially the sulfur
content of coal "as burned"
in utility boilers. (During
combustion, sulfur combines
with oxygen to form sulfur
dioxide, which is believed by
some to be harmful to
health. 1
Historically, coal-cleaning
efforts have been based on
water, but such washing of
raw coal has not been very
effective in removin~ sulfur .
_J;he
Otisca
Process works without water,
and in pilot-plant testing

L t&lt;ii'.P
I
8
,..,..
II ,........
A
'-"c,t'-

R
y

.., ....

has proved itself as able tq,
remove a far greater amount
of lhe sulfur than is possible
wit.h conventional coal
cleaning methods.
At full operating capacity,
the new facility will be able to
produce about RS tons of
cleaned coal per hour, from
an input of about 125 tons of
raw coal. All of the plant's
production will he sent,' by
conveyor belt, to Muskingum
River Plant.
Heller said he expects
construction of the necessary
Otisca unit buildings to begin
"in early October." At the
height of the work, he said,
about 30 persons will he
employed.
Responsible for the early
site - preparation work ,
which has gotten underway,
is Sheily &amp; Sands, a Zanesville contractor. The firm
also will drive the piles for
the major buildings . Con·
tracts soon will be let for
concrete placement and other
parts of the job.
"We are anxious to get the
Otisca unit in production, "
Mr. Heller emphasized ,
"because it could have a

Library

firm's

own

mines

in

Southeastern Ohio provide
about 17 per cent (2,:&gt;00) of
Ohio's coal mining jobs.
Heller said Ohio Power is
spending a total of $53 million
at the Muskin~um Mine alone
to increase its production a'nd
processing ability. The
largest portion of that
amount, around $25 million,
has heen set aside for a new,
ll!J.cubic yard dragline now
under construction. More
than
Ill
million
is
being Invested in ad·
ditional equipment at
the mine's preparation plant,
to increase Its processing
capacity and efficiency by
October of next year.
Research work continues
elsewhere on other processes
that show promise of In·
creasing the environmental
acceptability of Ohio coal.

Point Rock

Letters
Sept. I, 1978

Mike Schmidt
Route I
Reedsville, OH 45772

Dear Miki :
You did it! You are the grand champion reader of Meigs
County - 63 books for the swnmer reading club.
The other children who participated In the reading club·
included Barbara Anderson, Tanya Anderson, David Beegle
Melanie Beegle, Orenda Cunningham, Cathy Oei..Alng Jay
Dodderer, Michael Heisey, Susan Jones, Jenny Meadows,
Shannon Slavin, Sherrie Southw.orth, Eric Spencer, Karen
Spencer, Brian Tannehill, Melissa Tyree.
I hope aU of you will stop in at the Pomeroy Library and
pick. up yolir certificates. 1
I hope, too, that you and Ure other boys arid girls in Meigs
County enjoyed the book reviews by Patty Asbeck which ·
appeared In the Library Letters coiWIUllast week and that yoo
will aU write to Patty and tell her what you think of her

reviews.

great impact on the use of
Ohio' s higher sulfur coal by ·
not only Ohio Power but ,all
other users as well."
Already, Ohi.o Power
consumed about one-fifth of
the state's entire coal output,
and is the largest user of Ohio
coal. Recently, however. the
company pledged to increase
its use of Ohio coal even
further by the early 1980s by about 40 per cent.. The

~

Now that school is starting and the swnmer reading club
like summer Itself, has come to an end, 1 hope that you wui
continue to visit the library , Pomeroy Library will be open
10:30-8Monday through Friday, IO:~on Saturday and 2-4:30
oo SUnday. Middleport will continue to be open 10 :36-S Monday
through Saturday.
.
Please spread the word that Club 456 is coming for fourth
· through sixth graders, that parents of 3\0..'i year olda should
call to register their chUdren lor story hour, and that
September is FINE FREE.
All the staff members of the Pomeroy and Middleport
Libraries look forward to seeing you often in the coming school
year . And we sincerely hope that you wiU be one of the first to
sign up for NEXT year's suinmer reading club!
•
Very truly yours,
Ellen Bell
Director of the Pomeroy-Middleport Libraries,
Servmg all of Mejgs County

By Wanetta Radekln
The Star Garden Club held
their August meeting at
Forest Acres Park and enjoyed a picnic dinner. Allegra
Will read devotions from
Matthew and the poems,
Growing Free and Queen
Ann's Lace. Members recited
tbe creed, collect and club
prayer in unison . Nine
members and one visitor
answered the roll call by
naming their favorite picnic
food . The club decided to go
to the Adena at Chillicothe for
their trip In the coming year.
Neva Nicholson reported on
the state convention that was
held
at'
Dayton.
Arrangements of wildflowers
in · something from the kit·
chen were judged with
Allegra Will placing first,
Wanetta Radekin second and
Neva Nicholson third .
Laurel Grange met in
regular session Saturday
night. Plana were made for
an open meeting Sept. g at 8
o'clock. for presenting a 50year certificate to Albert
Bolen and 55, 60 and 65 year
seals to Maud Holcomb.
Members found the premises
had been vandalized for the
third time in one year. This
time the outhouse was turned
over and several articles
stolen from the coal house. At
the close of the meeting all
enjoyed homemade ice
cream prepared by the
brother'1

stage."
The appeals court, In a ~
page decision, agreed that
the lower court "erred and
overstepped its power in
deciding that the finance
system for public schools
adopted by the General
Assembly represents an
'abdication ' by the Assembly
of its duty" under the
"thorough and efficient system"cclause
of
the
Constitution.
However, the court said,
"Our examination of the
7,500-page transcript of
proceedings impels us to
decide tbe evidence supports
the trial court's findings and
conclusions that the statutory
system results in unequal
educational opportunities for
the children in Ohio."
The state Board of
Education
and
other
appellants have contended
there is a "compelling state
interest" in retaining and
fostering local control over
education, as authorized
under the existing financial
system. The appeals court
balked at that contention.
"This court philosophically
favors local control of public
schools," tbe appeals court
said, "but under the present
system local control aU too
often means that local voters .
defeat school levies and
therefore local school boards
are
forced
to
offer
educational opportunities
which are he low par ...
"The constitutional
respoosiblllty to provide for
education rests with the
legislature, and we cannot
perceive a compelling state
lnten!St in local control which
in effect thwarts the
legislature in the exercise of
this responsibility.
" We believe there that
there are other methods of
financing the public school
system which will maintain
the salutary features of local
control
without
the
disequalizing effects fostered
by the present system.
Moreover, real property
taxation seems a pennlsslble
ingredient of the funding
system, as long as the state
does not overrely upon it,"
the court said.
John Uoyd, attorney for
the Cincinnati Board of
Education,
called
the
decision "an important step
forward."
"It
will
probably
accellerate the action of the
General Assembly. I hope
so," Uoyd said.
"We expected the decision.
It ··was
fair
and
constitutionally correct."
The court heard oral arguments in the case July 14, and
Beaver said he was surprised
by the quickness with which
the judges rendered their
decision.
"They had a, lot of stuff to
look at. I thought It would
take two months," he said,
adding, "They seemed well·
Informed and prepared."

After the swruner vaca lion, members of Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, will resume meetings at
7:30p.m. next Tuesday, The sorority traditionally met at the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric building In Middleport,
but since the company's Middleport operation has been closed
the sorority will now hold meetings at the River Boat Room,
Meigs Branch of the Athens County Savings and Loan,
Guy Hysell of the Meigs County React team hopes to get
his distress nag program back Into operatiOn. The team sells,
at a nominal fee, small flags which are kept In your vehicle. II
you have a problem oo the highway, you put up a dlstresa nag
and someone senda help, probably police or state highway
patrol officers. As you no doubt are aware, it is dangerous In
this day and age to stop your car to help anyone on the
highway. So the flag is to alert other motorists to your problem
and they are to Jiotlfy officials for help so that the legitimate
problems can be taken care of.
Nita Wisniskl, RN, of the Meigs ·county Health Dept.
extends a big thanks to all volunteers who partiCipated In blood
pressure clinics held at the Southern Ohio Coal Co. during July
and August.I..Alng hours were Involved and the department and
Mrs. Wisnlskl really appreeiate the effort.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Louks, Syracuse have just returned
from 8n eight-day trip to Hawaii. They had a fabulous time.
The trip was sponsored by Uie Order of Eastern Star and
husbands were Invited. All tours and cruises were planned
ahead. Tourism, of cour~~e, is the number one thing In Hawaii
with a total of 3,820,000 people visiting the state last year.
Hawaii does have somethirig. We hear Bob'Louks Is ready to go
again and our frienda, Gerald and Mildred Shuster of Pomeroy
will be making their amiual trek this fall.
Next to tourism, raising pineapples is second In the state
and sugar cane Is Urird in industry. At one time seven sugar
refineries were .located In Hawaii but they have dwindled to
two.
I always forget, until reminded, that Hawaii became the
50th state on Aug. 21, 1959, 19 years ago and the Islands have
really had a lot of attention since then. statehood Day is
observed on Ure third Friday in August which makes for a
three-day weekend.
Made up of a total area of ·6,425 square miles, Hawaii is
nicknamed "the Aloha State." · The hibiscus flowers are
growing everywhere and the hibiscus is the state flower. The
Louks enjoyed a tour to Punchbowl Crater and the Memorial
National Cemetery where newspaper columnist, Ernie Pyle, is
burled. The World War II memorial was once an andent
Hawaiian hill of sacrifice but todily is commonly called Punch·
bowl. It is an extinct volcanic ·crater with slQiling lawnJllned
with headatone markers for more than 21,000 I!Jei'Vicemen
killed In World Wars I and II, Korea and VIetnam.
The Louks toot a boat cruise tour to Pea~l Harbor. They
Sllw Hickman Field, Ford Island, the remains of the batUeahip,
Utah, which lies oo Its side with only about one-tenth of the
boat above water. Amemorial has been built on the batUeahlp,
Arizona, with the names of 1,102 men who lost their Uves
during the Japanese attack oo Dec: 7, JIIU being lilted.
Another tour which Mr. and Mrs. Louis enjoyed was to the
Polynesian Qlltural Center, an aroWid the Island tour. The
villages of Fiji, Samoa, New Zealand and Tahiti have been
recreated by a network of waterways fed by artesian Jll)rings.
"We saw huts with thatched roofs, a program of songa and
dances by natives In colorful costumes. On thiB tour we saw
llelda of pineapple and sugar cane growing. We stopped at a
Dole pineapple pavilion where pineapple juice and spears were
sold," Mrs. Louks relates.
On Aug. 28, Mr. and Mrs. Louks attended a IUIIIet dinner
cruise with Diamond Head In the background. There waa a
~at deal of Hawaiian singing and dancing featured. Mrs.
Louks commenta that Diamond Head haalo111 been considered
the guardian of the chain of lalands. It II an eltlnct volcano
about 15,000 yeara old and was formed by folded and cre~~Jied
lava rock. During World War n, It aerved aa a ldnd ol
Gibraltar to the Pacific area. Among the shows Mr. and Mrs.
Louka saw were Doo Ho, AI Harrington, Dick Jenaen and the
Ink Spots. They preferred Dick Je~~~en'a program becauae he
pre~~ented older songa. All of the evening shows featured the
traditlooal hula dancera and the vocal nwnbera with emphatic

drums.
Wrapping up the trip on Sunday for Mr. and Mra. Loukl
was a tradltlooalluau at Oceanic Sea Life Part.

Berry's WOrld

.
niE DAILY SENTINEL..

DEVOTEDT0111E
INTEIIDT OF
MEJGII-MAJON AREA
ROBERT HOEn.JCH
Clly FAIIIor
Pullli¥hW dilly n.t'¥pt S.UlniMY
by TIM! Ohiu Valley Publl.lhinll
CvmPMny·Multbflit!di.M, Inc..
111

c. .urt

St.. Pm~ruy. Otliu 4$781.
Bu.su~aK orne~ Phooe 192· 2156.
Editurud Phunt! 81'2-11$7.
S4!•.:ood t:IPI polllllftt' ~)Wid Ill
Pom~ru)' , Ohio.

N111tiurU.J

advert.illinK

·Optimism Is running high
these days at North Gallia as
Coach John Blake's Pirates
'prepare for their season
· opener Friday night against .
Huntington of Ross County.
Coach Blake, entering his
eighth year at NGHS , feels
his team is ready to dethrone
the SV AC champion Kyger
Creek Bobcats. The team's
goal according to Blake is
"To become the best Class A
football
school
in
Southeastern Ohio."
Why are North Gallia fans
"up in the air" this season?
Overall, the Pirates have a
strong team led by nine
returning lettennen.
The club will have
·good wuickness, good ovetall
size and is solid on its of·
fensive and defensive lines.
There are a large number of
players returning from last
year's squad with varsity and
reserve experience.
In addition , the Pirate
winter weight -lifting
program continues to help
develop the football team
along with a strong in·
tennural wrestling program.
North Galli a's coaching
staff has been together for
several years . Assistant
coach Ted Lehew is entering
his third year; Bruce
Gabriel, ·a veteran staff
member at Bidwell-Porter
lias served as North Gallia's
track coach for several
years. His squads have
captured the SVAC track
meet the last six springs. Ron .
Twyman, NG head basketball
coach, is in his sixth year as a
football assistant. He handles
the junior high program.
Blak~ . the veteran ,mentor ,
who graduated from Marshall University and served
as an assistant coach under
Bob Ashley at Southern High
School, said his 1978 Pirates
have a good attitude and want
the SV AC championship.
Leading the list of returning · lettermen is senior
quarterback Sam Smith, a
quick, :&gt;-7, 130 pounder.
Others returning in the
backfield
are
Roger
Cremeens, :&gt;-10, 162 pound
senior, a team leader, good
hitter and quick back ; Tim
"Buddy" Howell, 5-6, 150 lb.
tailback with quick, blOOkenlield speed, who is rated a
good blocker; Stacy Winston,
6-0, 170 pound wing back, who
is a good receiver and strong
runner and Scott Lewis, 6.fl,
155 pound defensive back who
led the reserve squad last
year with six pass interceptions; Don Shupe, a
sophomore will handle the
Pirate punting game and Jeff
Smith, a speedy freshman , is
expected to see plenty of
action. Smith had three runs
of 60 yards or more In junior ·
high last season.
North Gallia 's line will be
big and strong with an
average weight of 178-180 ·
pounds. ·
Linemen include seniors,
Tim McComas, Scott Frank·
lin, Marty Glassburn , Bill
Hash, Chip Kirby and James
Plants and juniors, Jim
Barnes, Jim Cains, Joe Peck
and freshman J. J. Justice.
North Gallla is expected to
use a varied offensive set
with Smith, Cremeens and
Howell doing the bulk of the
running . On defense, the
Pirates are expected to use
either an Oklahoma (5-4) or a
pro 4-4.
Lost via graduation were
Rex Justice, one of the
league's top runners and a
member of the North-South
All.Star squad last month;
Curt Nolan, a member of the
SVAC AU-Dream team; Bill
Lookado, another solid hitter
on defense and AII.SVAC
player; James Kemp, Keith
Holcomb, John Swisher·, Mike
Sheehan, and Calvin Minnis.
North Gallla has one of its
largest freshmen groups in
years. In addition to the
prospects of a good season on
the field, .school officials,
coaches,
parents
and
hoo•ers have worked hard to
Improve the football field. A
new gate has been erected,
bleechers painted, new fence
lnltalled, buUdoziDg'work has
been done on the banks near
the athletic field ar:d a
filming stand has been
coll!lructed.

r~ellt!fl•

J,M.Uvt, IAitKlun , A.lllt.lt:ia~~. llDI
t;LM: lhJ AVII!., Cl~velllnd l...Otuu 4411$.
Subtlcripliun 'r11td : IJtU~ered by
calr'ritr w~re av•U•b&amp;e 'm L'eRt.a Jkf

wa~ek . 8)' Motur Ruutu wlwre c11rritr
t~ervic~ 11111 ;avlliU.bk, One muntb.
13.21. By nu~il In (Jh6o aud W. Ya.,
l)~e Ye•r, f21.00; Six nwnth1,

fii.SG ; Three munth1 ,
~lftwtt t311,00 ynr ; Sl•
JJ :I.$t; Three munlhll.
Kul•:rlo&amp;n prk·e indudtti
Timdl&amp;r!tl""''

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t 7.$0.
Sund»&gt;

NOI"'II 0111111
Sdlodule

'

'

1C

181~j&gt;Y NEA, .,q;. .:tae~

"For ytiars he was sedentary! Last week, he
(Jot carried away with being athletic. Now
he's sedentary again!"

Sept. e
Huntington Ross
Sept. 15 z..n..vlllt Rosecrans
Sept, 22
AI SoulhwHitrn
Sept. 29
Symmn Valley

Oct. 6
Oct. 13
bet 20
·Oct 27
Nov. l
Nov. 10

AI Southern
HanMn Trace
AUiann.,, w. Vo .
Eosttrn
Oplf1

AI Kygtr Creek

A·stros rally,
top Reds, 3-2
PIRATE SENIORS - Seniors playing foot hall this fall at North Gallia High School are
Jim Plants, Marty Glassburn, Roger Cremeens and Sam Smith . Back row, left to right ,
Scott Franklin, Stacy Winston, Tim McComas and Chip Kirby.

Tying run
cut down

· NORTH GAWA LETIERMEN - Returning lettermen for the 1978 North Gallia
football squad are top row, left to right, Buddy Howell, Marty Glassburn, Roger Cremeens
and Sam Sm1th. Second row, left to right, Jim Cains; Jim Barnes Stacy Winston Tim
McComas and Chip Kirby.
'
'

Browns ink
Greg Pruitt

FOOTBALL CAPTAINS - Serving as captains for the
1978 Pirate football squad are Roger Cremeens and Sam
Smith.
NORTH GAWA ROSTER
Pus. Yr. Ht.
Player .
L 11 6-0
Jim Barnes-x
L 10 :HI
Jeff Black
L 11 5-5
Mar~ Brown
L 11 5-10
Jim Cains-x
B 10 6-0
Gene Cham hers
B 10 5-5
Jeff Cisneros
B 12 5-9
Roger Cremeens-x
L
9 5-5
Gregg Dean
L 12 5-11
Scott Franklin
L 9 5-11
Steve Franklin
L II 5-5
Jeff Gardner
L II 5-7
Joe Gibbs
L 12 :HI
Marty Glassburn-x
B 9 :HI
Bruce Grant
L II 5-9
Bill Hash
L
9 .:HI
Bill Holley
L
10
6-2
Scott Howell
L
II
6-1
Mike Jacobs
L
9
:HI
J. J . Justice
L
12
5-10
Olip Kirby-x
B II :&gt;-11
Scott Lewis
(. 10 (;..7
Charlie Lookado
L 12 6-1
TimMcQmas-x
B
9 :HI
Bob McMillin
L II .:;.11
Mark Miller
B 10 :HI
Jim Morris
B 10 5-5
Keith Payne
L 11 :&gt;-10
Richard Payne
L 11 6-2
Joe Peck
L 12 :HI
James Plants
L 9 5-10
Jerry Priddy
B 10 5-8
Matt Queen
B
9 :HI
Bruce Shriver ·
B 10 [)-7
DooShupe .
B 9 5-5
Jeff Smith
B 12 [)-7
SamSmith-1
L 9 [)-4
David SWisher
L 10 :HI
Ralph Taylor
L 10 :&gt;-7
Mark Wilfong
B 12 :&gt;-10
Stacey Winston
B 11 :HI
Tim Howell-a
X - Lattermen,
BIBIONE, Italy (UPI) Italy'• Aldo Traveraaro retained h!l EuropHII light
heaVywal&amp;bl boling crown
aaalnll Argentine·born
Spantm challe111er Ramm
(o
·,

•

the way Chr iS played, "
CIN CINNATI (UPI J Sta r ti ng linebacker Chris Brown said. "That doesn't
Devlin was placed on waivers mean we ' re casti ng the
Tuesday as the bruised and blame for the loss of the game
battered Cincinnati Benga ls on him . But he didn't play a
shook up their defense afU,r a strong game."
Phi llips, a second -year
24-23 upset at the hands of the
linebac
ker , was p.ut on
Kansas City Chiefs Sunda y.
The Bengals then added waive rs during the preRay Phillips, wbo was waived season and then recalled
shortly before the opening when teams claimed him.
· game, to the roster in efforts The Bengals waived him
in · pr eparati on for the a~a in in the final team cut ,
Beng als' sc heduled cla sh and he went unc la1med.
Devlin, a fourth-year man
Sunday
with upstate rival
. LANDS A BIG ONE - John Cremeans, Middleport,
who
started at left lLoebacker
Cleveland.
·
Monday landed a large catfish at Hidden Lakes. The fish
in
place
of the injured Bo
Kansas
City,
employing
a
weighed three and one-half poWlds and was 20 and one-alf
Harris,
said
he didn 't think he
wing-T
offensive
formation
inches long. Sbown displaying the fish are 1-r, Michael and
pla
yed
"any
worse than the
installed by first-year coach
Melvin VanMeter, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Melvin VanMeter,
next
guy."
.Marv Levy. rushed a team
Pomeroy .
HJ felt tha t as a team we
record 69 times for 267 yards
Sunday. The Chiefs, coming didn't carry out the defense
off a 2·12 record last season, the way we were supposed
controlled the ball for almost to," Dev li n sa id. " But
personally, no, I didn 't th ink I
42 m.in utes .
Bengals Assist ant General played that badly. I didn't
Mana ger Mike Brown said . think I played any worse than
....
Tuesday Devlin was placed the next guy."
In preparation s for the
on waivers bec ause the
coaching
staff
wa s ga me against Cleveland,
'·disappointed in the play of Bengals coaches alsO had to
By GARY TAYLOR
lead . But Houston's last- our linebackers against the be concerned abOut their
UPI Sports Writer
inning rally off Tom Seaver , Ch iefs, and we think Phillips a rm-long lis t of injured.
HOUSTON ( UPll - J .R. 12-14, made Richard, 1:&gt;-11 , a can do a better job."
Eight Bengals were hurting
Richard has changed his winner .
" We weren 't happy with Tuesday , not counting the
postgame diet drasti cally and
"That's what they are sup·
earlier losses of quarterback
his race for a Nati ona l posed to do. It' s their job ,"
Ken Anderson 1 broken bone
League strikeout milestone Richard said of th e two-run
in throwing hand ), guard
may be the cause for the ninth inning in which J ose
Gl enn Buj noc h 1sprained
switch.
Cruz' double tied th e game
ankle), offensive tackle Vern
In the past, Ri chard drank and Bob Watson's sacrifice
Holland ( brui sed thi gh) ,
beer fr om a saucepan fly drove in the winrung run .
, lineba cker Bo Harris (knee ·
immediately after a game,
Seaver struck out 10 and
surgery ), and fir st ·ruund
but not Tuesday night.
allowed five hits before the
draft pick and defensive end
"Fill that saucepan up with ninth i1111ing Astros' rally, l)ut
Brow ne r
(bice p
PAWTUCKET, R.I. (UPI ) Ro ss
warm Gatorade ," Richard Reds left fielder Mike Lum - Toledo's Wayne Caughey surgery).
told a clubhouse attendant. "I took responsibility for the was thrown out at the plate
Latest' addi tions to the
don't want to thrown up loss. Cruz' double and Terry Tuesday after failing to score cas ualty list incl uded :
again."
Puhl 's leadoff single both the ty ing run , allowing lin ebacker J im LeClair
A tense 3-2 victory over the sliced over Lum's head.
Pawtucket to edge out the (spr amed ankle ); wide
Cincinnati Reds in which
"I didn 't think Cruz' ball Mud Hens 4-3 in the semifinal receiver Billy Brooks (pulled
Houston scored two runs in was hit that hard. I ran as series of the International muscle in lower back );
th e ninth 'inning, might have fa st as I could toward the League playoffs .
lineba cker Reggie Williams
caused Ri chard to feel line . If f had realized it was
Pawtucket held a 4-1 lead l di ~loc a ted thumb, injured
queasy . But more likely, it hit harder and angled toward going into the ninth inning of knee); defensive noseman
was his game-long tension to the fence, I could have caught the openinR game of the best- Wilso n .Whitley (sprained
record strike outs that af- it with ease," Lum said.
of-five series. Toledo put two wrist ); and offen sive tackle
fected him .
The Reds Cesar Geronimo runners on base on a hit Rufus Mayes (hip pointer ).
Richard has a fair chance caught Wa tson 's game- batsman and a single by
The Browns are coming off
of becoming the first National winning sacrfice fly in Dave Edwards.
a 24-7 opening win against
League right-handed pitcher medium-depth center field
Caughey unloaded a triple O.J . Simpson and the San
to strike out 300 batters in one and had a chance to throw out to right center scoring both Francisco 49ers last Sunday
season. He has a major Cruz at the plate but his peg runners and tried to come all in Cleveland.
lea gue-leading 256 · and has w.S far up the first base line. the way. But he was thrown
five or six starts remaining.
Geronimo, who refuses to out on a perfec t relay to
''When I'm not pitching, I talk to the media, kept his catcher Gary Allenson by
often think about the 300 silence when asked to discuss Buddy Hunter.
not when I'm pitching ," the play .
Pawtucket took the lead
Richard said.
Only twice in National with two in the third on a walk
But Tuesday night in the League hi story ha ve pitchers to hunter, an RBI double by
Astrodome, where Richard struck out 300 or more batters Rick Berg, a sacrfi ce bWlt by
usually is an overpowering in a season . Lefties Sandy Glenn Hoffman and a
pitcher, his seven strike outs Koufax and Steve Carlton did sacrifice fly by Allenson.
did not come easily. And in it.
Pawtucket picked up its
the process of throwing a
Hi chard said reaching such other two in the eighth on
three-hitter , Richard gave up a milestone was important to singles by Ken Huizenga and
• Fishing Tackle
five unintentional walks.
him but that ~e said the effort Hoffman, a wild pitch, an
and Rods
Two walks after two were to attain the strikeout level error and a ground out by
and Reels
out in the Reds' seventh was out of his hands.
Dave Coleman.
• Guns and
inning got Richard in trouble
" II God meant it to be, I'll
Toledo 's other run came in
Reloading
and Mike !.urn's two-run do it," Richard said.
the fifth on a walk to Dan
•Ball
Gloves
triple lifted the Reds to a 2·1
&lt;
Graham , a double by Archie
Camping
Amerson and a ground out by
Equipment
Bob Gorinkski .
e Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Girr
Certificates

WI.
166
139

us

150
150
138

160
141
190
170
160
133
153
168
221
140

165
135
149
190
147
142

163
115
138

123
125
121
178
' 148

123
180

CLEVELAND ( UPI)
The Cleveland Browns have
signed star· running back
Greg Pruitt to a long-term
· contract.
The speedy Pruitt, a key
fa ctor in Cleveland's playoff
hopes this season, had asked
Browns' owner Art Modell to
"re-adjust " his contract after
last season.
Pruitt has rushed for more
than I ,000 yards in each of his
last three seasons. The shifty
nmner picked up last Sunday
where he left off in 1971,
gaining more than 100 yards
in helping boost the Browns to
a 24-7 victory over the San
Francisco 49ers in · the
regular season opener for
both clubs .
Terms of the pact were not
released .
Meanwhile, Coach Sam
Rutigliano, still savoring his
first regular season wln as a
National Football League
head coach, had some
throughls on quarterback
Brian Sipe. Sipe, who has
come under criticism for
some inability to connect on
long passes, hooked up with
wide receiver Reggie Rucker
on a nifty 69-yard touchdown
pass In the fourth quarter
that broke operl the · game
against San Francisco.
"That's not Brian's type of
game - throwing long, deep
jfJSSCS like a (Terry) Bradshaw. His arm is not that
strong," Rutigliano said .
"But, by design , Brian can go
long. We have to choose our
spots. Because he's bright
and intelligent, we can build
on that premise ."
The Browns host the
Cinclnna ti Ben gals Sunday at
Muncipal Stadium.

124
134
121
130
121
142
128
160
150

Avenamar Peralta Tuesday
night.
There was . a tense wait
after the 1&amp; rounds before the
cards of the two judges and
tile rtferee were read.

PROVIDENCE, R.I. (UP!)
- Brown University has lost
starting linebacker and cocaptain Neil Jacob for the
year because of a broken arm
he suffered In · pre-season
practice.
Jacob, a 21-year-old senior
from St. Louis, broke the
upper bone In his left arm, In
Tueaday morning drills. He
was tbe Ivy league school's
second-leading tackler last
aeaaon and was a two-yea~
letterman.

New NFL rules
boosts scoring

Also, wiU1 new rules on
NEW YORK (UPil - New
rule changes instituted for pass blocking and covering
the 1978 National Football receivers in effect, there
League season have helped were 32 touchdown passes in
boost scoring over 31 percent the 14 opening games against
as compared to o~ning day only 15 in 1977 openers.
NFL owners tried to put
last season, the league
reported Tuesday.
more offense into the game
The 14 opening games ,this this season with several rules
past weekend had 506 points changes, the most notable
scored compared to 384 in the giving
linemen
the
14 openers in 1977. Average opportunity to extend their
scoring went !roll) 27.5 points arms and Ollen their hands
in the openers last season to while pass blockin g and
36.1 in games played in a another prohibiting bumping
three-day period over the of a receiver a£ter he goes
five yards past the line of
Labor Day weekend.
scrimmage.
MINNEAPOLIS ( UPI) The Minnesota Fillies, one of
eight teams in the new
Women 's Pro Basketball
League, signed Damaris
"Dee" Hopfenskpirger as
head coach for this season.
Anative of Brookings, S.D.,
Hopfenspirger, 33, played
college
basketball
at
Southwest State University in
Marshall, Mlnn. He spent the
last five years coaching at
Redwood Falls High School In
Redwood Falls, Minn., where
he was coach of the year iii
the state for 1976.

GLENVIEW, Ill. (UPI) :_
Galllfa, All-America
quarterback at Army In 1949
and ~e of West Point's most
celebrated athletes, died in
his home Tuesday after a
long lllnesa. He wBB Sl.
Gallffa had heen with U.S.
Steel Corp, lor 23 years and
was ?!rector of the firm's
operating ~ervlces division in
the Ollcago area .
A naUve ol Donora, Pa.,
Amol~

LOS ANGELES (UPI) Two international soccer
matches were rained out
Tuesday night . at the Los
Angeles Coliseum.
The
games
were
rescheduled for tonight.
In the first match, Cruzeiro
of Brazil faces Municipal of
Guatamala. In the second ,
U.A. of Guadalajara plays
lndependente of Argentina .

601 Main !&gt;1.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.

VISA '
Across trom Courthouse

PHONE
675·2988
Open Sunday 1· p.m.·6 p .m.
Monday thru Saturday
~ ... m .1o8p.m.

Galiffa earned 11 varsity
letters in football, baseball
and basketball. He played pro
football for the New York
Giants in 1953 and tbe San
Francisco ·49ers in 1954. He
ended his playing career
after two years in the
Canadian Football League.

------------------~
PARK RESERVED ·
SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 9tl,
UNTIL 6 P.M.

"FAMILY PICNIC
OF

BOILERMARKERS LOCAL
NO. 667

CAMDEN PARK
U.S.60WEST

HUNTINtJTON
'

"

�1- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday ,Sept. 6, 1978

'

;:,:·:::·:;:-;;:·:::-:-:-:-: - :;:::;:;:&lt;: :::;:::::;::::::::::::~=-~·:::-:;.-:::-·-:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:.:-:-:-:-:-:-:-:.:-:-:··-:-: -: ·::::::::: ::; :;:;:;:;:;:; :;;::_.·::.

·,·,

'

Pirates pull within
Sp~~~~~:,-ade ! half game of Phils
Today

UPI Spqrts Editor

.·.·

·.·.-:-

·-::

NEW YORK (UPI ) - Four years ago, almost to the day ,
Muharmnad Ali, who was about to meet George Foreman and
become only the second man ever to regain the world
heavyweight title, motored down from tile mountaU.. in
Pennsylvania and issued what he felt was tile most earthshaking announcement in boxing hiswry.
Standing in front of a microphone in Madison Square
Garden 's Hall of Fame Club, he declared, as convincingly as
he could, that regard!~ of how he did against Foreman, he
was gomg to retire for good following the contest.
"This is my last fight, " he said.
" Positively?" someone balled him.
" Absolutely," Ali answered . " After tills one, no more ''
Since then, he has fought II times.
.
With tile surruner season upon us, and this being the
accepted time foc reruns, here comes Ali again with yet
another momentous announcement , strangely reminiscent of
tile one he made before .
"This is my last fight," he says, meaning tile one coming up
witll Leon Spinks.
.
His meeting witll Spinks in tile New Orleans Superdome on
Sept . 15, in which he'll be seeking to become tile first man ever
to win the heavyweight championship tllree times, is no more
likely to he Ali 's last fight any more than was his successful
challenge against Foreman in Zaire, Africa, in October of 1974.
It is true that privately, Ali frequently thinks of not fighting
anymore. Why shouldn 't he think that way ? He 's 36, he has
enough money to do anything he wants, within reasorf, and the
training required for the kind of fight he anticipates with
Spinks has long since grown to be an effort and a bore.
But that insatiable desire for continued recognition and
attention, the like of which Ali has grown accustomed to these
past 14 years,.plus the money, is what always prompts him to
keep changing his mind about actually quitting . lt isn't easy to
tum your hack rn money. not when they keep pushing it on
you. a nd it 's even harder to bow out and become jilst plain
Muharrunad He-Used-T().Be, attended by no one, after having
been treated as a king always surrounded by a full court.
Ali is still the biggest drawing card in sports. There have
been various reports as to how much he's getting for his
rematch with Spinks. Some of those reports say he's accepting
less money than his opponent for the first time si!lce his prechampionship days now that he's not the title-holder anymore ,
and others say he 'll receive the same amount as Spinks.
· Actually , Ali will get at least $3:5 million, possibly a litUe ·
more, and if he keeps being offered that kind of money y0u can
look for him to continue fighting until he can't possibly get his
hands up anymore .
The idea which appeals most to· Ali, and has for some time
now, is being named special ambassador by Jimmy Carter and
bemg given a post similar to that of Andrew Young, so that he
can travel around the world, talk to the leaders of the various
·
nations and spread good will for the USA.
He'd probably do a fine job of it. Still, I can 't help thinking of
the obvious hypocrisy in all this because here's a man who
flatly refused to . fight foc his country and now is suddenly
exc1ted about gomg,abroad and extolling its virtues.
Apart from that, Ali has been kicking around a couple of
other tdeas, ones more closely connected witll his upcoming
fight wtth Spinks. Both these ideas are predicated on his
.
heating Spinks, which he honestly feels he can do .
His first option would he to keep the title six months or so and
then announce his retirement. There he goes thinking about it
again. Ali's secood optloo is based on the possibility of his
knocking out Spinks early and having an easier time of It than
he lllight have linagined. In such c~se, he has confided a couple
of tunes , he would he IJlC!med to f1ght again and his opponent
would be Larry Holmes, the World Boxing Council's heavy~
we1ght champ. But ooly if the price·was right.
For next week 's fight with Spinks, Ali has been training
harder than he dtd before hts first contest with him . His weight
IS _down to 220 pounds and he'll probably enter the ring
somewhere around 218, which is a good weight for him . Last
Monday, Labor Day , was his first day off in almost tllree
weeks. He still ran four miles in the morning and did some
exercise.
" I'm gonna be ready this time," he says. "This fight is the
most unportant one of my life. I got to win it and get out on
top."

Tue s day 's Sports Tra nsact ions

SCIOTO RESULTS
Baseball
COLUMBUS ( UP!)
Ball +m ore
Sf9ned catcher Farve! Boy charged past
R +t ~
D empsey 10 l i ve vear
Ammo Star in the stretch
contra c t
Football
Tuesday
night to grab a 2\i.
Cl ev el and - Si gned runn ing
length
victory
in the featured
ba c k Gr eg Pr u i tt to a multi
.,.ear contract .
eighth race at Scioto Downs .
Ch •c ago
ll.c qu ir ed w ide
The winner, driven by
re c:e over Golden R i cha rds fro m
Da l l a ~ tor a fut u re drafT p ic k
Kevin Colston, covered the
Hoclo.ey
Ed monton ( WHA ) A c: mile in 2:02 4-5 and returned
Qu •r ed to r ward s J m Mayer and 17, $4 and $3. Armno Star paid
St eve Car l son on wa 1ver s from $5.60 and $5.20 to place , while
Th e New Eng lana wna ler !&gt;
Besta Money came in third
and kicked back $3.
Mudges Creed woo the
ninth race, kicking off a !;-1-3
NICKLAUS TO PLAY
trifecta combination that was
AKRON , Ohio [UP!) Jack Nicklaus will play in the wortll $2,923.20. R J K was
annual World Series of Golf second and Awesomes Image
tournament at Fire s tone finished third .
A crowd of 3,1102 wagered
Country Club later this
$293,462.
month .
Nick laus had said he might
pass up the tournament because his sons are playing in
a high school football game changed his mind heca!lle of
the same weekend . A the importance of the
to
the
for
the tournament
spo kesman
tourna ment said Nicklaus professional golf tour .
B v U n i t ed P reH I nternat iona l

By FR.ED McMANE
UPI Spurts Writer
Jerry Reuss, an importsnt
part of past Pittsburgh
Ptrates ' championship
seasons, may turn out to he
the key link to another one.
Reuss , banished to the
bullpen by Manager Chuck
Tanner for much of this
season, made his first start in
ti\'O weeks Tuesday night and
turned in a four-hitter in
stopping the New York Mets
11-ll as the Pira~s ran their
winning streak to 10 gamas
and closed within a half game
of first-place Philadelphia in
the National League East. It
was the Pirates' 20th victory
m 22 games.
It was only the seventh
start of Ute season for Reuss,
who was instrumental in the
Pirates'
NL
East

. championship seasons of 1974
and 1975 when he won 34
games. But, it was his second
straight complete game
victory and he could be a key
figure for the Pirates down
the stretch.
" What's transpired here
has been a team effort ," said
Tanner. ''For instance, we
have seven starting pitchers.
We've had some guys who
couldn't go out there and
others went out and did the
job.
" I can't say enough about
Reuss; (Bruce 1 Kison and
(Henry ) Bibby . They 've had
to stan with long stretches of
days off and they've done the
job."
Reuss told reporters that he
hadn 't been happy with his
role in the bullpen and he was
out to prove to Tanner that he

'

belonged in tile starting rota- first 17-game winner by
tion .
tossing a tllree-hitter. Niekro,
Duffy Dyer and Dale Berra who has lost 15, s1111Ck.out si:l
eac h smacked two-run and walk"!'~ two in going the
doubles to support Reuss. distance foc the 19111 time
Dyer's double capped a five- while helping the Braves
run third inning off starter ~ snap a five-game iosing
and loser Jerry Koosman, 3- streak. Jeff llurroughs and
15. Only one of the runs was Dale Murphy also hocnered
earned because of KooSn!an 's for Atlanta.
tw&lt;H:&gt;ase throwing erroc On a
Expos 10, Cubs 8
sacrifice by Omar Moreno.
Doubles
by
Warren
Elsewhere in. the NL, Cromartie, Gary Carter and
Housllln edged Cincinnati 3-2, Dave Cash keyed a four-run
Atlanta beat San Diego Prl eighth inning that rallied the
and Montreal ou tslugged Expos to victory. The loss
Chicago 1~. San Francisco was the sixth in nine games
at Los Angeles was rained out for the Cubs and dropped
- only the ninth home them five games behind the
rainout in Dodger history .
Phillies in the NL East . Pinch
Braves 8, Padres I
hitter Ellis Valentine and
Rod Gilbreath drilled his Larry Parrish homered for
second career grand slam Montreal and Dave Kingman
and veteran knuckleballer hit his 25th homer for
Phil Niekro became the NL's Chicago.

Connors gains quarterfinals
after dogfight with Panatta
By MARTIN LADER
UPI S(J&lt;&gt;ns Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - Serving at match point, already
charged with a fault, Adriano
Panatta stared intently
across Ute net. What he saw
was not so much Jimmy
Connors, the man, but Jimmy
Connors, the legend.

" In Italy we say he doesn 't
want to die," Panatta was to
relate later. "The ·biggest
positive thing for Jimmy is
that he fights every point.
You can't re1ax with Jimmy,
even for one point. "
With this in mind , Panatta
made the snap decision that
was to climax a 3 hour and 36

minute dogfight. Rather than
ease up on his second service,
as is customary, the Italian
reached back and unleashed
another sizzler.
The serve was wide, a
double fault was . charged,
and Connors had a berth
against Brian Gottfried in the
quarterfinalsofthe U.S. Open

Tennis Championships with
Tuesday's 6-4, H, 1~. 6-1 , 7-li
victory .
"I went for the big second
service," Panatta said. "]
had to take the risk at that
time. I couldn't play in back
(in the bock court), not with
Jinuny.''
Cmnors, the second seed,
agreed with the assessment
of his unseeded friend, and it
was difficult for anyone to
disagree after he had rallied
from 3-5 in the final set to win
the last four games.
" I hung in there, I never did
give up," said Connors ~
breaking a week-long boycott
of talking with the press.
" I'm not going to lose it,
they're going to have to win
Cleveland ·took a 2-0 lead in it. I'm not going to roll over
the second inning when Jim and give it to them."
Panatta, winner of .the
Norris doubled home Gary
Italian
and
French
Alexander and scored on a
championships
in
1976
but
single by Ted Q:Jx.
36th
by
the
currently
ranked
White Sox 4, Twins 3
Washin gt on . ATP, saved four match points
Claudell
slugged a two-run homer and before succumbing.
"That's as good as I can
rookie Steve Trout, with help
from three relievers, notched play ," Connors said. "II' s one
major-league of the hest matches I've ever
his first
victory. Washington gave the played. I can't speak for him,
White Sox a 2.0 lead in the but I'm sure he'd have to he
Utird when he belted his ·satisfied with the way he
fourth homer following a played."
Gottfried, tile sixth seed
single by Bill Nahorodny .
who
has lost close duels witll
Trout, son of the late Detroit
Connors
the' last three times
pitcher Dizzy Trout, allowed
they
met,
but says he now is
five hits over 6 J.J innings.

Fading Red Sox
lose ·again, 4-1
By BJU.. MADDEN
UPI S(J&lt;&gt;rts Writer
Sprowl, making his majorIn seasons past - 1973, '75
league debut, departed it\ the
seventh , but his performance
and '76 particularly - Jim
Palmer walked away with all
was heartening to the Red
Sox, and Manager Don
the spoils in the American
Zimmer said Sprowl would
League . This year, however ,
he may have to he content
pitch Sunday against the
with just being a spoiler.
Yankees .
While he may not be ready
By then the Red Sox could
to claim that role, Palmer
be out of first place if IIley
nonetheless became the
don't begin to regain their
winning ways . The Yankees
latest "spoiler" in the Boston
Red Sox' pennant plans that
have certainly found theirs.
appear to be coming apart at
Roy White, making an
infrequent start, doubled and
the seams in a rash of
untimely injuries and five
scored in third inning, then
hit a three-run homer in the
losses in the last six games .
fourth to spark the Yankees'
The three-time AL Cy
Young Award winner allowed
latest win which inched them
five hits over eight innings to ' closer to first place. White 's
homer came off Detroit
gain his 18th victory in a 4-1
win by the Baltimore Orioles
rookie Kip Young with two
over Boston. The loss sliced out in the fourth after Graig
Nettles singled and Lou
the Red Sox ' Eastern
Division lead to four games
Piniella walked .
Elsewhere in the AL,
over the rnrushing New York
Yankees, who were beating Cleveland put away Toconto
Detroit 4-2 for their 11th 6-2,
Chicago
shaded
victory in the last 13 games . Minnesota 4-3 and Kansas
"We're still in this race , City blanked Oakland ~.
believe it .. o r not, " said Texas at California was
Palmer of the fourth-place
postponed by rain .
Royals 3, A's 0
Orioles . "lf·(}Je sweep this
series we'll be only seven
Right-hander
Dennis
games out and anything can Leonard pitched a two-hitter
happen. So we're not really for his third shutout and
spoilers. I don 't really care Frank White drove in all the
who wins it if it isn't us."
runs with a bases-loaded
Palmer , who struck out double in the seventh inning
four - including Jim Rice as the Royals increased their
three times - was locked in a first-place lead in the AL
pitching duel with rookie West to l 1h games over
southpaw Bobby Sprowl California . The victory,
through six innings when the Kansas City's fourth straight ,
Orioles scored twice in the evened Leonard's record at
seventh to take the lead. Lee 16-16. He walked one and
May tied the game with his struck out seven in going the
22nd homer and Andres Mora distance for the 17th time .
followed with a grounder that
Indians 6, Blue Jays 2
went through Hobson 's legs
Hick Waits pitched a fiveat third for an error . Mora hitler and Andre Thornton
wound up on second, moved belted his 29th homer - a
to third on a groundout and career high - to lead the
scored the go-ahead run on Indians . Waits, 11-13, struck
Carlos Lopez' soft line drive out two and walked rne in his

each

10e

CELERY

Gerulaitis against unseeded
South African Johan Krlek,
and 15th seed John McEnroe
against unseeded Butch
Walts .
On Tuesday, Borg trounced
No. i2 seed Harold Solomrn 62, 6-2, 6-0 and Ramirez
outlasted No . 16 seed Arthur
Ashe 6-4, H , ~ . 7~, 6-2.

'

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992-2156

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

French City

LEMONS

Ma.

Dr. Patches Is going to beat
By JENNY KELIJoiER
him.''
said Cruguet, "Slew ~
UPI Sports Writer
. EAST RUTHERFORD, didn't move when I hit him." •
It was Slew's first stakes '
N.J. (UP!) - AI ftrsl, the
Paterson start this year after winning
$150,000-added
Handicap
at
the two allowance races, one in
Meadowlands appeared to be May and one in August, and
the perfect spot for Seattle the colt looked In good shape
Slew to warm 'tp for his "' despite becoming somewhat
confrontali.o n with Triple fractious during the post
crown winner Affirmed in the parade. Once the race
started, however, Slew
Sept. 16. Marlboro Cup.
But in .all their planning settled down and took the
and consideratiion of the · field through early fractions
purse, the distance and the of ::?.'! , :46 and 1:09 44 over
competition, trainer Doug the sluggish track .
At that point, Dr. Patches,
Peterson and owners Karen
and Mickey Taylor and Jim patiently stalking Slew
and Sally Hill couldn't have through the first six furlongs,
made his move and took the
planned oo Dr. Patches.
Tuesday night, the speedy lead under strong urging
chestnut gelding edged from Cordero.
It was Dr. Patches' fourth
Seattle Slew by a neck in the
1\il-mile Paterson, handing triumph in seven starts this
the 1977 Triple Crown winner year foc trainer Jan Nerud,
the second loss of his and the son of Dr. Fager
returned $11.40, $2.60 and
somewhat bizarre career.
$2.80
in completing the race
Admittedly, Slew WIIS at a
disadv-dntage with top weight in 1:48. Seattle Slew, ridden
of 128 pounds and leaving ~y regular jockey Jean
from the outside post in the Cruguet, was sent off as the 1J().horse field. Dr. Patches, 5 favorite and paid $2.10 and
however, also left from an $2.10. lt,:s Freezing finislled
outside post, but toted a mere two and one-half lengths back
and paid $3.110 to show.
114 pounds .
It's Freezing was followed
"I said two weeks ago we
would win by a half-length," by Life's Hope, Father
said jockey Angel Cordero Hogan, True Statement,
after leaping to the ground in Giboulee, Proud Birdie, Wise
the winner 's circle. " I didn't Philip and Cisk. Eighteen
have too much respect for horses had been eqtered in
this horse (Dr . Patches 1until the field, drawn by .an extra
$50,000 in the purse '- worth
he lost to Forego."
In that race, an allowance $104,625 to Dr, Pactehs -but
race last June, the gelding many were scratched when it
flashed to tile lead and was became apparent Slew would
defeated by just a neck by make a start.
Slew 's defeat cast some
Forego's gallant stretch
doubt on his next scheduled
drive.
Tuesday night it seemed as appearance in the Marlboro
if Seattle Slew would come on at Belmont in which he was to
with a stretch drive of his own meet Affirmed as well as
after Cordero guided Dr. runnerup Alydar.
Dr. Patches has developed ·
Patches to the lead on the far
turn, but the seal brown colt slowly for Nerud, but oow has
- who. was making only his won three straight races and
third start tills year- simply in his previous start blazed to
a I :08 3-5 victory in a sixtired and gave way.
"I told them (Slew's furlong test at Saratoga:
owners) that if Slew isn't fit,

getting
it
together
.,upstairs/' gained another
chance at Jimmy with a
SIJ.\'prisingly easy 6-2, 6-4, 6-J
conquest of Roscoe Tanner,
an old friend and the No. 11
seed.
The other quarterfinal
pairings will have No . I seed
Bjorn Borg playing No. 8
Raul Ramirez, No. 3 Vilas

10 1. HR

ChiCilgO , Wa Shington

(4) .

Seattle Slew
loses by neck

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

;b;ase;;·i;.~;l;Jt=h;;;;;::;t:e:::::::::

·

5- nie Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pom~y, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 6, 1978

I
I

••• • ••

Nationll Luvue

· east

w.

Phila
Pittsbrgh
Chicago
Montreal
St. Louis
New York

73
1J
69

66

L.
63
64
69
73
78
84

Pet.

Ga

p .m .

Det roit ! Bill ingham 1S 6) at
New York (Figueroa 14 9), 8:00
p.m .
Chicago (Kravec 10.13) at
Minnt!sota '(Go ltz 1J . 9) , 8 :30
p .m .
Te.:as
(Jenkins
13 -8 and
Comer 7-Jl at Ca lifornia (Har t zell 6 8 and Ryan 6-11).2, B p.m.
Thursday 's Games
Sea ttle at Ch icago
Milwaukee at Toronto , night
Texas at California, night

Mal· or League Results
By Uni ed Press International
National League

San Fran at LA . ppd ., rain
Mil
000 132 040- 10 13 4
030 050 0008 12 3
Chi
Fryman, Pi!-tle 121. Miller
(3). Atkin~on (S), Twitchell (51.
Knowles
(8).
Bahnsen
(9],
Garman (9) and Carter; Moore,
McGiolhen (5), Roberts (6l.
Scoane (81. suner (8 J. Her .
nand er ~91 and Cox . RadCr (6 ).
HRs- Mon tr eal , Valentine ( 22 ),
Parr ish (15) ; Chicago , King .
man (2S) .

1

·

The Missouri-Notre Dame meeting will be of particular interest to Irish mentor Dan Devine as the Tigers were the last
college club he mached before moving on lo the professional
ranks and then to South Bend. Devine's clubs had good success
against the Irish. But the tables will he turned this w..,k as
Notre Dame rolls to a 33-18 triumph.
Walch for N.D. quarterback Joe Monlana to tllrow a few
bombs to split end Krls Haines and to Kevin Hart son of the
All-American and Hall of Farner, Leon Hart. The y~uth will attempt to fill the big shoes of graduated Ken Mac Alee.
TeiWs A&amp;M followers are looking for a big year and with
quarterback Mike Mosley at the hell11, this could well be The
Big Year. The Aggies are loaded with veteran !alent while the
Kansas Jayhawks are still in the rebuilding stage. Look for
A[M to romp in with a 25--7 victory.
·The Washington Huskies' Rose Bowl winners, are the slron~
favorites to repeat as Pacific 10 champs, but the Hoople Hunch
is they will get off to a rocky slart as the Ucli.ns deal them a
:?JI-25 setback. Terry Donahue's Bruins have an excellent offensive club - um-kumph!
Neighbors Illinois and Northwestern won't be challenging
for the Big 10 crown, but when they square off against each
other it will be anybody 's game. Gary Moeller, allllinois, has
ooe year under his belt as a head.coach while Rick Venturi, at
31 the youngest t'Dilch in the Big 10, is making his debut as head
mach at his alma mater. The Moeller forces appear to your
correspondent to have just a little too much for the Wildcats.
So we foresee an lllinois triumph, 28-22.
Penn State's Nittany Lions probably have one eye looking
ahead to their very important clash with Ohio Slate next Saturday, but they had best pay attention to the business at hand or
•
they could be sorry.
Rutgers, winner's of eight of their last nine contests in 1977,
will long remember tbe shocking 4!;-7 pasting they took at the
hands of Joe Paterno's forces in the '77lid lifter and would like
nothing better than to score a big upset. However, such is not
in the cards. Penn State is just too tough. We see it Penn Slate
39, Rutgers 19 -har-rumph!
Now go on witll my forecast:
Air Force ~UTEP 17 (N)
Ariz 21 Kansas St 12 (N)
Ariz St 36 Pacific 10 (N)
ArkS! 20So. Miss 14 (N)
Iowa St 36 Rice26 (NI
WTex St 24 Tex Arl15 (N)
Texas A&amp;M 25 Kansas 7
Dayton 26 Maine 12
Louisville 35 So Dak St 13 ( N)
" Miami (0) 24 Ball St21
Toledo21 Marshall 16 (N)
Bowling Green 14 Villanova 10 Miss 10Memphlsst8 (N)
Oregon St 28 BYU 21
Miss S\ 24 No Texas 21 (N)
Nebraska 22 Calif. 10
Notre Dame 33 Missouri 12
Cent. Mich. 28 KentS\ 13
Holy Cross 28 N Hampshire 18
Chattanooga 18 West Ky. 14
Oklahoma 30 Stanford 21
Colorudo '!I Oregon 13
Okla St '!/Wichita 7 (N)
Delaware 37 Rhode lslllnd 7
Penn Sl39 Rutgers 19
So. Ill. 29 Drake 14
West Va 4S Riclunond 7
Ga. Tech 33 Duke 28
So Calif. 21 Texas Tech 18
NC St. 28 E. Carolina 14
SMU 22TCU 12 (N)
Ohio U 24 East Mich. 21
Maryland 14 Tulane 10 ·
Florida St '!I Syracuse 23
Va Tech 31 Tulsa 14
Fresno St 36 McNeese St 8
UCLA 28 Washington 25
So Carolina 40 Funnan 17
Va 28 Wake Forest 14
Grambling 49 Alcorn St 21 S~Jn VMI 30 Wm [ Mary 7
JooeSI :J!Idaho7 (N)
WashSI 42 Las Vegas 7
Utah331dahoSI 18 (N)
Youngstown 37 No Iowa 16
Dlinois 28 Nortllwestem 22

.'

10) .

Mator League Leaders
By United Press International
Batting
I based on lH at h~'~'
National League
G AB . H . Pel .
Burrg hs, Atl
131 A1 8 132 .316
Parker , P i tt
124 492 154 .313
Clark , SF
134 S06 IS7 .310
Madlock , SF
102 Jn 117 .310
Cruz , Hou
132 49 3 152 .308
Smith , L A
117 412 126 .306
Whillild , SF
116 409 124 .JOJ
Bowa . Ph il
131 549 165 .301
Rose , Cin
136 568 170 .299
Garvey , LA
138 553 164 297
Cromrti. M i l
136 525 156 297
Puhl, Hou
130 525 156 .297
Winfie ld. $ 0
135 501 lr!9 .297
American League
GAS . H. Pet .
Carew. Minn
132 49 1 167 .340
!;-! ice. Bos
137 568 186 .327
Oliver , Te.:
107 423 134 .317
Piniella , NY
106 380 117 .JOB
Oglivie , Mil
107 388 118 .304
You nt . Mil
105 408 121 .301
L ynn. Bo s
125 457 137 .300
Roberts , Sea
Ill 384 115 .299
Thomp sn , Dt
130 50;1 148 .29.4
F isk . Bo s
131 479 141 .294
Reynolds , Se
124 456 13tl .294
Carty , Oak
122 45 3 133 .294
. Home Runs
National League : Foster , Cin
31; Luzi n ski, Phil 29 ; Smith, LA
28; Kingman , Chi 2S ; Dawson.
Mtl and Parker . Pill 23 .
American League : Rice. Bos
38 ; ThOmas. Mil Jl: Thornton.
Clev and H isl e, Mil 29 : Baylor .
Cal 28.
Runs Batted In
Nalional League . Foster, C•n
98 : Garvey, LA96 1 Parker. Prtt •
and Clark, SF 91 ; Smi th , LA
and Winfield. SD 89.
American League: R ice. Bos
12 1; Staub , Del 107 ; Hisl e . M il
99 ; ThOrnton . Clev 94 ; Thomp.
son, Det and Carl.,. , Oak 85 .
Stolen Bases
National League : Merf'no,
Pitt ~2 ; Lop es, LA 40 ; Tav eras,
Pitt 35, R icha rds and SO" iTh,

so 34 .

11

P•wtucket !Hda, t.P.
September 5 - Pawtucket
"'Toltdo 3
September 6 - Toledo at
P•wtucktt, 7:30 p.m.
September 7 - Pawtucket
•t .Toltdo• 7: ~ p.m.
.
• September a P•wtucket et Toledo, 7:30
p.m.
'
.
.
x September 9 P•wtucket at Toledo, 7:30
p.m.
Pewtucket at Toledo, 7: 30
p.m.
• - II necesury .

I

.537
.5JJ
I 1
.500 5
.475 e• 1
.435 u
.396 191 1 4:30 p·.m.
Boston (T iant 9-71 at Bal ·
Pet . -GB timore [0 Mart inez 12. 101 . 1 : 30
.594
p .m .
.580 2
Milwau~ ee (Sorensen 1S-10l
.543 7
at Toronlo ( Jefferson 7 11 ), 7 :30

60
Fearleos Forecaster
55
Egad, friends, this is the week - kaff-kaff - when the big
west
boys start battling in earnest.
·
W. L·
Ang
82 56
Vas, dea.r readers, there are enough ex&lt;-ellent games on the LOS
Sn Froese
80 58
sked to sattsfy even the ~niest football filberts among you .
Cincinnat
75 63
Diego
71 68 .511 111'1
.Foc starters, consider these sterling matchups of leading San
Houston
64 74 .464 18
Big 8 contenders agamst representative Pacific 10 foes: Atlanta
60 78 .435 22
Tuesday's Results
Oklahoo_n~ vs. Stanford; Colorado hosting Oregon; Nebraska
Monlreal 10, Chlca9o 8
entertam1ng Cahfornia, and Arizona a newcomer to the Pac
Pittsburgh B. New York 0,
10, visiting Kansas State.
'
night'
Atlanta 8, San Diego 1, nlghf
And for goud measure, how about Southern California
Houston 3, Cincinnati 2. nighT
against Texas Tech ; Missouri journeying lo South Bend to test
San Francisco at Los An ·
n ight, ppd ., ra in
the lnsh; Texas A[M jousting with Kansas, and Penn Slate vs. geles.
Wednesday ' s Probible Pitchers
Rutgers.
cAll Times eon
Philadelphia (Carlton 12 -12 )
And a pair of conference games will find UCLA at
Chicago t Reuschel 13· 11) ,
Washington in a Pacific 10 meeting their 42nd such encounter· at
2 : JOp .rn .
San Francisco (Barr 7 . 10) at
and Illinois an'd Northwestern of ihe Big 10 tangling for th~
Los Angeles (Rau 12 ·8). 4 p .m .
72ndtime.
·
New York (Koosman J.l-4) ·at
The ' Oklahoma.Stanford contest will he watched with in- M ont real (Grimsley 16·9 l. 7: 35
.
terest to see how \he Sooners react after the Orange Bowl p .m
San Diego (Jones 11 · 12) at
trouncing they look at the hands of the Arkansas Razorbacks. Atlanta (Mahler 4·tOL 7:35p .m .
Pittsburgh (0 . Robins.o n 1J .S)
The Hoople hun~h is that Barry Switzer, leading college coach
at St. Louis (Denny 11 .9), 8:35
m the country m the winningper&lt;."entage departf1lenl with a • p .m .
514-2 record for an astronimical .897, will have his club ready
Thursd~v·s Game5
Philadelphia at Chicago
for another big year. We give Thomas Loll and his Sooner
New York~~ Montreal. night
teanunates the edge, 30-21 .
Pittsburgh a1 St Louis. night
San Francisco at Aflanla.
· BID Mallory's Colorado club, which figures to bllttle it out night
'
wtth Oklahoma and Nebraska for the loop tiUe should start the
San Diego at Cincinnati. nigh!
Los Angeles at Houston , nigh!
season in high gear by dumping Oregon 27-13: It will be much
the same story at Lincoln, Neb., where the Cornhuskers will
prevail over the visiting California Golden Bears by a 22-10
American League
By United Press International
count.
·
·
east
The Pacific 8 was expanded to the Pac 10 this year with the
W. L- Pcf. GB
85 52 .620
addition of Arizona and Arizona State of the Western Athletic Boston
81 56 .591 4
New York
Conference, and the Arizona Wildcats will be out to make their M
79 59 .572 6 ~
ilwauke
first start in the new league a memorable one. We see it Baltimor
78 61 .561 8
75 63 .543 10 1/l
Detroit
Arizona 21, Kansas State 12.
60 78 .435 25 111
Clevelnd
Bolll Southern California and Texas Tech will be slarting a Toronto
55 85 .393 31 1·1
Wnt
lot of young players this fall, but the Trojans of John Robinson
. W. L. Pet. GB
appear to be better fortified than the Tech Red Raiders where Kanss Cty
75 61 .551
new coach Rex Dockery will field an almost complet~ly new ,C alif
74 63 .540
P.t2
Te.:as
66 68 .493 8
~fenslve 11. The Red Raiders graduated eight of last year's Oakland
64 75 .460 12 112
starters. The Hoople System gives the edge to the Trojans Minnesot
62 77 .446 14 1~

P•~cketva. To~

000 000 300 3 0 l
000 000 000 o 2 o
Leonard and Port er , Renko .
so·sa 19) and Robinson
W
Leo nard 116 16l. L Renk o . (6

Chicago 4, Minnesola J , night
Texas at Cali fornJa . night,
ppd .• rain
. Kansas Ci ty 3, Oakland O,
n•ght
Wednesday ' s Probable Pitchers
('All Times EDT)
Kansas City (Sp1i rtorfl 16-llJ
at Oakland (Langford 'I 10) .

By United Press International

t21Jjk;if/)/ ,-,~·~·~Ma~jl;or Amos B. Hoople

.
'
lntern•tloftll Logue
P'-yoffs
Unlttd Prall lntern•llonal
Btstof Five
!All Tim•• EDTI
Clwlr!Htori v1. Richmond
Richmond '-•dl, 1-0
.
September 5 - Richmond
a, Charleston 6
September 6 - Charleston
at Richmond, 7:30 p.m.
September 1 - Richmond
at Charltston, 7:30 p.m.
• - September a - Rich·
mond at Clwlrleston, 7:30
p.m.
• - September 9 - Rich·
mood at Charleston, 7:30
p.m.

KC
Oak

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

Football
Forecast

m~L

I
I

l

58 80 .420 18
51 85 .375 24
Tuesday's Results

Chicago
Seattle

Baltimore 4, Boston l , night
Cleveland 6, Toronto 2. night
New York 4, Detroit 2. night

Page fined
COLUMBUS ( OPI) - Ken
Page, Staten Island, N.Y.,
suspended from the Ohio
State University basketball
for one year, had a three -&lt;lay
jail sentence suspended
Tuesday and was fined $25 rn
a shoplifting charge.
Page was charged witll
taking a tennis racquet cover
from a department store
Monday .
The jaU sentence was suspended oo thO coodition that
P,age incur no more theft
charges for a year.
Page was suspended from
tile OSU basketball team last
month for
undisclosed
"disciplinary
reasons,"
according to Coach Eldon
Miller who scratched page
from the squad now touring
Europe.

San Ogo
001 000 000- 1 3 0
American League : L eFlore .
Alia
200 104 01x - 8 10 0 D~t 62 ; Cruz. Se.a 48 ; Wills . Tex
Rasm ussen , Shirley (7), Mura 46 ; Di lone, Oak 44 ,· Wilson , KC
( BI and Sweet , Roberts (8) ; ]6 .
Niekro and Nolan W- Niekro
Pit~hing
( 17 -15) . L - Rasmussen (14 · 11l .
Victories
HRs- Atlanta, Burroughs {21l ,
National League : N ie kro . All
Murphy (22), Gilbreath (3) .
17 1S; Perry . SO 16.6; Bl ue, SF
16 -7 ; Hooton , LA ,16 8: Grim ·
N.Y .
000000000- 0 41 sley , Mll 16-9 ; John , LA 16 . 10 .
Ptsbgh
105 000 20.: - 8 11 1 American League : Guidry ,
K o o s m a n.
Siebert
t6l. NY 20.2; Palmer, Bait IB 12 ;
Murray (7) and Stearns ; Reuss Ta nana , Ca l and Caldwell. Mil
and o.,.er . W- Reuss (2 -2) L - 17 -9 ; F lanagan , Ball 17 .12.
Koosman (3 -lSl
Earned Run A\lerage
(based on 135 innings pitched)
Cinci
000 000 200- 2 3 0
National League: Vuckov ic:h,
Hou
000 100 002- 3 1 0 St .L 2.l5 ; Rogers , Mil 2.47 ;
Seaver and Correll ; R ichard Swan , NY 2.49 ; Blue , SF 2.54 ;
and Boch.,. . W - R ichard t15 ·11l . Knepper , SF 2.62 .
L - Seaver (12 .14) .
American League ~ui dr'( .
NY 1.84 ; Matlack, Tex 1.36 ;
Americ:an League
Caldwell , M il 2.40 ; Palmer ,
Texas at Calif ppd .. rain
Balf 2.48 ; Goltz, Minn 2.66.
Strikeouts
Cleve
021 200 010- 6 12 1 National Lea _
gu-e:
Richard .
000 001 001 ~ 2 50 Ho u 256 ; N iekro . All 216 ; .
Tor
Waits and Ale.:ander ; Kirk - Seaver , Cin 183 ; Montefusco .
wood, Will is {3). Busk,ey (8 ). SF 1S4 ; Blyleven, Pitt 153.
Cruz (9) and Cerone. W - Waits American League : Guidry,
(11 -13 ) L ~ Kirkwood (3 3l. HR s NY
215 ;
Ryan .
Cal
205 ,
- Cleveland,
ThOrn ron
(29) : Leonard, KC 1S8 ; Flanagan .
Toronto , Velez {8)
Bait 144 ; Eckersley, 8os 135 .

Del
000 000 002- 2 9 0
00130000.: - 470
N .Y .
Young and May ; Tidrow.
Lvle (9 ), Gossage 19) and
Munson W- Tidrow 17 ·9l. L Young (5 ·5) . HRs- New York.
While (8) ; Detroit , Mankowski
&lt;4 ' ·
Bos
010 000 000- 1 52
Ball
000 000 220--4 6 1
SprowL Drago (Sl and Fisk ;
Palmer , 5Tanhouse f9) and
Dempsey . W - Pa lmer 118-12 1. L
- Sprowl (0.1). HR - Ballimore .

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LOS ANGELES (UP!) Nick Beverley, a six-year
NHL defenseman, was
acquired on waivers Tuesday
by the Los Angelef Kings
from the Minnesota North
Stars.
Beverley, 6-foot-2 and 190
pounds, was the North Stars'
captain last season. He
missed 23 early-lleason,
,games with a back injury.
The 31-year-old Toronto
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played with the Pittsburgh
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Rangers before being traded
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PARIS
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place in the French Soccer
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Substitute Yves Ehrlacher
scored In the IIOih minute in a
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Bordeaux, St. Etienne and
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r---------,

6 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 6,·;978

Social 1
1 Calendar l

1

WEDNESDAY
REGULAR MEETI NG ,
Pomeroy Masonic Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM , 7:30 p.m. Wed·
nesday ; all Master Masons
invited.
IMPORT ANT MEETING
Middleport Fire Departmeni
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at fire station with
Bran Thomas, Roberta
Dailey and Norma Jea n
Stivers as hostesses.
POMEROY Lo dge 164,
F&amp;AM, will hold a regular
meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. All Master Masons
are invited.
GALLJA COUNTY Salon
612, Eight and Forty ,
Wednesday evening at the
home of Mrs. Mi ldred
Hamilton, 7:30p.m.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange.
Thursday night at !he hall .
THURSDAY
WES TER N
SQUA R E
dance at Royal Oak Park
recreation building, .8 p.m.
Thursday with Dewey Hart,
Columbus, calling; Western
square dancers invited.
FRIDAY
RETURN
J ON ATHA N
Meigs Chapter, Daughters of
the Ameri can Revolution ,
1:30 p.m. Friday at home of
Mrs. Grai'e Eich with At-

Just Arrivedl
NEW EUREKA .
UPRIGHT CLEANS
WALL TO WALL, RIGHT
UP TO THE BASEBOARDS
As Advertised
On T.V.

torney Patrick O' Brien
speaking on " Freedom 's
Greatest Document " in
observance of Constitution
Week, Sept. 17-23. Hostesses
.will be Mrs. Eich. Mrs. Arthu r Skinn er , Mrs. Gene
Yost, Mrs. J. Edward Foster,
Mrs. John Rose.
HAPPY HARVESTERS
Class, Trinity Church, Friday, l :30 p.m. in the MJcial
rwm of the church.
TOPS I Take Off Pounds
Sensibly) will form a new
chapter Friday at 9:30 a.m.
at the Mental Health Center.
For additional information
call Ellen ful ught at 992.S937
or Debbie Hill at 949-21116.
MARY SHRINE _ No. 37,
Order of White Shrine of
Jerusalem, Frida y 8 p.m: at
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Potluck refreshments.
SA11JRDAY
HYMN SING Saturday 7:30
p.m. at North Bethel United
Methodist Church featuring
the Gospel Tones. Pu bl~
invited .
SUNDAY
JAMES
C.
AND
E THALINDA MOORE
reunion Sunday, at Sutton
Church. Basket dinner at
12:30 p.m. Friends and
relatives invited. Games and
cont ests for all. Baking
contest, pies and cakes, for
women.
BIRDIE WARNER reunion
Sunday at Ft. Meigs on New
Lima Road at pa vilion
number two on left. Basket
dinner at noon. Family and
friends invited .
11JESDAY
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron
Kelton . Program on corn
husk flowers by Dollie
Hayes ; roll call response to '
be a bulb, and the arrangemen t t he me will be
"Memories", last of swruner
flowers . Mrs . Ma rily n
Wisecup will be the judge.

r -----·- -..,

_·:·E--R--···------"""

--.~~~:-~'"_(\~·N••
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0 Lilt-out basket
0 Slim-Wall design- toamedin-pl ace insulation tor
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o Counterbalanced Seal-lite
tid with magnetic gasket
0 Baked enamel interior and
exter ior
0 Defrost drai n
Reg. Price $379.95

•
•
•

..
f

.,,••
,.
1 .

..
,.

GREENE'S
SALES CENTER

('

•'
••

New Haven. W.Va.

.'
Terry

Disposable

BUTANE
LIGHTER

WASH
CLOTHS
Bold Stripes

5 $1

LIGHT
BULBS

WOMEN'S
PANTY HOSE

40W-60W-75W-100W

79c Value

Come in for a
Oemons lration Today !

The Athens County

Return
home

Pomeroy, Ohio

FSTJC
_...._ __
_

0

TERN .
Needs No Care

...••
.

~

REG.

HANGING
PLANTERS
With Saucer Base

~RS88¢

8.99

1

'3"

Women's Fall Sweaters

CapSie~

WOME~'S

POLYESTER
TOPS
FALL COLORS

Plant Not Included

BOLO STRIPE

Opaque Nylon• \

TERRY
BATH
TOWELS

GIRLS
KNEE-HI
SOCKS

1st Quali ty
or
Crew Neck

Irregulars

6 to 81!2

25!.

Choose Yours Now - While
Our Selection Is Complete!

Sweaters

Super
Ja rm! s! ! P
ca sua ls feat ure ho t dogs bUi lt
· r~ g hl •n to I he sole. Su pe r
Dogs have that chu nky look you
lrke and lhe doggonedest soles
you II love. Prc k yours from
several red-hot styles

by

For Every Need or Age!

'31.95

Pr .

MEN'S IRREGULAR .

TUBE

OFF

SOCKS

OUR EVERYDAY PRICE

.,oo

Fits 9 to lS-Extra Long

PAIR

Men and Boys'

Mon . lhru Thurs . &amp; Sat. •

9a .m.-8p.m. Fri.
Closed Sunday

HARTLEY'S SHOES, INC.
I

I

"Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy, 0."

Comfort Top
Regular 39c
Fits8'12t0 ll

25%

3
'a.m.-5 p.m.

WOMEN'S
KNEE-HI
NYLONS

COWL NECKS · TURnE NECKS
V-NECKS - HOODED
BULKY CARDIGANS

'28.95
m
'

WINTER
JACKETS
20.% OFF
Every Day Price

'

' \F

19!

WOMEN'S HAIR BRUSHES .... :............... REG. '1.29...... 50'
All lAMP SHADES............................... .......... .....tL
n pmCE
"'

DOZENS
OF
SALE
ITEMS

Blaker PhD.

Breaking the
pQttern
When a w·oman is
dominated by her husband,

her mother or her molher-in-

law, society fi'OWIII upon but
ac'Cepll · the lituaUon. But
when a· woman -Ia controlled
by her children, there Ia
general dllapproval.
Yet, liB thl.l excerpt from a
hot·~ Call lllUJtrlltes, aU
those fonns of domination
are outgrowths of the same
general pattem of submissiveness.
A woman facell a built-in
c'OIIfllct If abe expects herself
simultaneou.aly to be submissive to her husband and
an authority figure for her
children. Many women struggle to walk !hill tightrope,
Wl8Ware of how much enerJ!Y
the feat consumes.
MRS. B:i .1 am absolutely
exhausted. My dlildren order
me arounll all the time.
Sometimd I honestly feel
like a slave. I realize that
mothering requires a lot of
servant-like duUell, but this
is too much. It also bothers
me that my friends are
critical of the way my
children act toward me. I am
ooly trying to be 8 good
mother. 1

definit.ely help.
The counselor supported
Mrs. B's wish to be more
assertive with her children
bot wal'ljed that the clumge
might have ramifications fur
some of her other relatiunshlps, particularly her relationship with her husband .
Dr. Blaker cannot take
telephone calla from her
readers. However, there are
hundreds of crisis intervention phone lines in the United
Stales. For the phone nwnber
of one near you, contact your
local mental health associa·
lion or mental health information service.
Write to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O' Box
475, Radio City Station, New
York , N.Y. 10019. Volwne of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions or
generainterest will be
discussed in future colwnns.

" Wilen You Wxote on My
Slate, •J Love You So" ". a
smail anan ~ement not to ex·
ceed s ix inch es.
" I Was Your

Barefoot Beau"
wood .
Residents are · invited to
stop by at the bank Friday tu
view the exhibits and express
an

opinion

on

the

BACK TO
COLLEGE
SCHOOL

tt-

Bashfu l
featuring

ar·

Ji::l llgeme nls to rect ive· rib-

bons.
YOUTH HELD
VAN WERT, Ohio (UP!)-:A 17-year-old. Delphos youth .
face s murder charges in
connection with the Saturday
sta bbin g death of Dean
strayer , 15, Delphos.
The youth, whose name
was not relea sed, spent the
Labor Day weekend in the
Van Wert County Jail.
Strayer's body was found in
a creek south of Delphoa
Saturday, several hours after
he was ·reported missing.

For You We Have A Very

A th ought lo~ the tillY:
Social worker Jane Addams
said, "The common stock ·of
intellectual enjo yment should
not be difficult of access
because of th e economic
position of him who would
approach it."

jeffery A llan Rankin

Son born
Mr . · and Mrs. John A.
Hanklt1of Tuppers Plains are

Good Selection of Tires In
Stock Both New and
Recapped.

a nnound ng the bil'l h of their

fir·st child, a son , Jeffery
Allen, burn on Aug. 24 at St.
.J u se phH us p ita l .
Parkersburg, W. Va . The ~rs . 1£ Roy Frya r, Houle_2,
baby weighed seven pounds' Coolv1lle. Mrs. O key Pulhns
11 ounces. Grandpal·ents a 1·c " a!1d . Mrs ._ Lonnc Jones of
Mr . and Mr·s. Tony Jones of Ca lrfo rnr a ar e gr eatTuppe rs Pla ins, and Mr. and grandparents.

Wukly Spacitlla On
f"'I O UC "'O UT ! HI
U O III ~ 0 ~
'ANTA~ TI C lo.t. VIN(a

ON U OCII lUN D
II'IOD UC H

'leMahyaOot
HIIIMireda Man

llo• llolnt• You Buy
Mo1t Oftan.

IIIMI EIICII WHk
LOOI ret THI YILLOW

GOGO 7 lUll DATI

COST CUnll TAGS

011 THIIIIIII

UloiiO .hOW All JUU

OOUNSELOR : You want
lilem to accept your style of
raising your children'
MRS. 8 : No. Actually, I
would like to change the way
I am bringing up my children
so my friends will approve of

me .

RUTI.AND-"School ·Days"
will be the theme of a flower
show to be staged Friday aird
Saturday at tile Rutland
Br·anch of the Pomei'Oy National Bank by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.
Instead of a judge from the
Ohio Association uf Garden
Clubs, the judging will be
dune by viewer·s of the show.
Cards will lie ·provided
vit!Wtl'!:i who will eXpress
Uteir opinion on .w h~ t a 1·~
rangements em: to receive
ribbons. The ribbons will be
placed Friday after· 4 p.m.
The arrangements will r·ema in on exhibit Friday evening and until noon on Saturday .
. .
Classes of the show are:
"Good Old Gulden Hule
Days" , arrangements featurilrg yellow .
' 'When We Were a Couple
of Kids" , using l wo conUtiners.
'
" You Were My Girl in
Calico", using bright colors.

MEIGS TIRE CENTER
700 E. Main , Pomeroy , 0 .
Ph . 992 -2101

YOUR FRIENDLY
KROGER STORES

COUNSELOR : What cbn~oems you IIIOit about !his?
MRS. B: My friends '
mUciam,Jguesa.

J

1

OOUNSELOR : Since it's
not possible to get everyone's
approval, maybe you should
try to please only the people
who agree with what you
want to do.
MRS. B: I am embarra88ed
to say It, bull think that Ia exactly what I always end up
doing. II"! an Idea, but I wait
until f10111eooe elle has 111e
same one. Then I say I am
dolnc it because of them - not
because It is what I secretly
wanted to do aU along ,
OOUNSELOR: What about
the lsaue of child rearing ?
MRS. B: I am dolng the
same thing. I really wa ~t to
be less of a slave to my
children. ! feel so tuenUul .
COUNSELOR: Where do
your children get the idea ·
they can or should treat you
in that way?
l'ofRS. B: They 11et it from
me. I act so subml.ssive. I
allow them to take advant.age
of me. It's all my fault. I
know~!.
COUNSELOR: Do they see
any~ el.oe treatinll you that
way?
MRS. B: Just their father.
When he Clllllea home, he slts
down in his easy chair with
the Jlllper. Even though I
bave worked aU day in the offlee, too COUNSELOR: Do you
WIJI'k outalde y!M' home?
'MRS. B: Y111, why? '
COUNSELOR: I gueu I
just IIIIIUIIIId you were home
an day and had lime to walt
ooevery-.
MRS. B: Well, I do wqrk
and walt on everyone.
Anyway, my hUJbandhome and I mix him I drink,
l1lllke dinner, clean up the
dlahel and then start the
chores for the eveninll. 'lbe
children's lunchel have to be
lllllde for the next day and
thinp like that.
COUNSELOR: How do you
feel about waltlnjj oo your
llllband like that? It's aU
really Jlllrl of the same Jllll-

la(h of theM ldv...,,Md ottml •l req,,med to be

t.cl

•let?~ .

...,. W1N oft., •ou yovr chotr 8 of a coml)o)r itble

fttwn 1 Yi illlb6it. rll f iiii:T• ng thfl s.~~me SII Vtnljll 01 a ram
ctlec:l wnoe h ""'"' tnt•tlt ,.ou to pu•t hi M The &lt;~dvtrhM&lt;I •t ll&lt;"l
•
...,,r, n :II d 1 v~
II.,..,

OPEN
4HOURS
ADAY

.. ,., ..... ,rice
o.n.o..-. Of
~w

OtMr """' l1 TIM
Sttri.

SAVE MONEY AT KROGER

1 11d •l ~

• ........ for .... on ..:;h Kr09111 STOl l!, Ut;llpl •I
l!piiCTI!CM!y no ted ,.., thll 1d t1- do run o~o~ t o t • n 1 d"e'

C O~ 'I'II C HJ

11111 - fHI lliiOGU CO . ITIMI AND .... CD

GOOD SUNDA Y U PT . J JHIU $ATUIOAY IIPT.

t . lt711N

TH f liGHT TO liMIT OUANllltU . NONIIOLD 10 DIALIU.

I

Country Clu
Ice Cream

Green Beans

·27 c

I

•

Domino Sugar

16·•1
Con

5

JOII bePIIhM
Jl 0.: ••• 1111 .....unent you

111111&amp; ftel &amp;nll'd your buld wW belln·to IMP ou\.

POINT PI FASANl cr MASON

AVONDALE CIIIEAM STYLI

Coca Cola
or Mr.; Pibb

25 c

16·01.

Con

8$

(I

·~

MRS. 8: fleD, whit lhouk
I do?
COUNIELOR: Some Jll"

I Eikftll o.wwellna wOulr

$

20-oz.

K•OGU

Catsup

32·01.77 c

20·01;

Lvs.

Bread .. .. ............

IRDGEit COST CUTTER COUN•

KROGER

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Spotlight
Bean Coffee

I

as

3$

29·01.

c.

Rib Half
or Whole
Pork Loin ..........lb.

c

l -Ib.
Pkg.

LIMIT IllS. WtlH COUPON AND 11.50 lODITIONAL PURCHASE
IEICLUOINC THIS IHMJ

.....

liMIT O Nt: COUP ON PER fAMI I Y

,.

COUPOI ' !lOP 5Wm l Sl 'f I lMIW sm•DU 51'1 ~ IHI
SYIJICII Dm trtul! STill 1o lKi l iiUS

• ••••••••••••••
0.5% Lowfat

Hi Nu 2%

Kroger Milk:

Lowfat Milk

$

Gal.
Platic
Ctn.

Gal.
Popar
Ctn.

FROZEN

gc

Serve 'N' Save
Wieners

II:IOGEIII

.-

fRISH

l iMIT ON( COUP ON PER FA Mil 'f
c ou~• ,ooon un sr ,11 1 NUU1 H01 1W I ~ 1~1 1
SUIII{I IO. ,liCU II SII' I &amp; LOCI I I U (~

Itt.

Pears

tiMtl l IIC WITH COUPON UD Sl.ID lDDITIONl,
PURCHASE illClUDINC THIS IT£M ;

"'~

KIOGU GlADE A LAI'GE

AVONDAI. E

Bag

.....

Grade A
Medium . ' •····
Eggs .. ............ Doz.

Kroger
Fried

lb

Chicken ....... · ·

Aliilllllo hiJ lo Stom llitlr Dtli'•
Met F.... Auiialllo II AI·1 PI
SMITHFIELD SLICED

Boneless
Cooked Ham

SIRVI'N' SAVE ALL VARIETIES

Sliced
Luncheon 1•111 •
Meat ..........

~::~~-"""'

$
lb.

.. " •• " " " ... " . " . .. lb.

99
79
$1

~F~IJ!Iakcken"''""""' •.,.....·"··•···'·"·........~449
~

\.n

•tC.'-S'-* Aptii4DIIIIIO r lto!lt

THIN SLICED MEATS

111uler Hard Salami... ......... ... .. . .. • $289
.

MRS. B,: I . . - you're
1111bL But I jlllt want to
chanl• part ol It - j1llt the
a-rt with the children. Maybe
lhatll impaulbll.
' COUNSELOR: It mlcbl be
PGNible lo move Ill U. d&amp;recUan ol belnl - -'lvt
with your cliJdrta wbUe ,..

lind that -

ADVERTISm

·lb.

Corn

HOlL V FAIIMS, U.S.D.A. OIADI

•••••
,
c

laldnt
Potatoes ......... ...

I

-··

hce,t Closed Sllvrday llidni&amp;hl Til 9 AM Sunday

G AUIPOUS. POMIIOY ANO P1 _ PUAU.NT . WI ltiUI'II

tern.

IPIIninl ··hm'"'" to ,...
lltablnd. But IIIUk J011 wiD

NOT
COME, SEE!

'School Days ' theme
offlower show

CHOICEs~~n

HEARING TODAY
CLEVELAND ( UPI I
The International Trade
Commission ·holds a hearing
today to determine whether
fo reign
imports
are
damaging American firms
producing nuts, bolts and
screws.
The hearing will be held in
the 31st floor reception room
of the Federal Office Building
downtown, according to
Kenneth
Mason, ITC secretary.
Ohio is one of the largest
producers of nuts and bolts in
the world.

8 lnch or 10 Inch

waist. button details. Prewashed blue denim . Sizes 10 to
18.

Mr·s . Ka rl Russell and
children, Melissa and Kenny,
have r eturned to their home
in Jacksonville, N. C. after a
two month visit with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Smith, Dun and Mike anlll sl
U . Karl Russell 's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenn eth
Russe ll uf Rad ne. Lt. Ruesell
is on a tour of duly in
Okinawa but will retun1lo the
States in October.

7- 'lbe Qlib' lleatlnel, Mlddleport.P~meroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 6. 1976

. COUNSELOR: It sounds
like you are controlled by
your friends .
MRS. B: It's true. I 11m
always trying to do what
everyone wants.

Bamboo Plastic Design

WOMEN'S
JEA·
N
S
Styles. Stitched, half elastic

4

In 1975, Lynette Fromme, a
foll ower
of
convicted
murderer Charles Manson,
allned a gun at President
Ford in Sacramento, Calif. A
Secret Service agent grabbed
the gun and wrested it from
her grasp before it could be
fired.

SovinQs &amp; Loan Co.
W. !Min St.

•

AI~

Cross Over The Bridge To Big Savings ,

Certificates

Top-load ing disposable dust
bag ca n't clog , keeps sueli on strong. Usab le capaci ty
560 cubic inches

'

FOR

On 90-Day

•ctounts withdr•wn prior
to the date of m•turity .

Regular $1.49

Sheer To Waist

WESTINGHOUSE

AMERICAN MADE

5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Cert ificates of
Deposit.
$500 .00
Minimum .
Interest
Payable
Quarterly .
A substantial penally Is
invoked on a tl certificate

..,,
•

Special
Price

5.75%

Middleport. 0 .

I

Mr·s. Michael Gerla~h. and :.
childr·en. She Willi joined fur •
the weekend by her huoband,
Wendell.
I £o St!arls Is reciiJlerating
at hom e from re~oent surgery
at the Holz_er Medical Center .
Rcc..,nt visitor 9f Mf. and ~
Mrs. Searls was their
ctaugl1ter , carolyn , Colwn- l:
bus.
~

Our Interest is
Greater For You

N . 2nd Ave .

Grucst•r. Mrs. Cctrl Braruum,
Mrs. Clyda Allenswor-th , Miss
Nina Husscll and Mr·s. Gertrude Miller, Middleport ; Mr.
and Mrs .' Don (Bernice) Fox,
Mansfield, and Mrs. Susmr
fut wli ngs, Columbus,
· Mr·s . . Wendell Gerlach,
Olillicuthe, has spent the past
week here visiting her sun
and daug hter-in-law , Mr. and,

•'

In
1977,
Carter
admini strat io n Budget
Director Bert Lan ce was
being urged to resign as
charges flew that he had
committed a series of illegal
acts.

INGELS
FURNITURE

l

H ~ccnl guest' for a several
days' visit at the home- of Mr.
and Mrs. Hobert Jay , Colwnbu s were Mrs. Wi lliam

:

6 CAllers

ONLY

Middleport
Personal Notes

I

Pick '0'
Chix
Combination lb•.
IN
Kroger
Melt
Bologna .......... .
JHI'I'IKI

llllt .... ... .... .... :.. .. .. ........ ..... . " $351
$151

�&gt;

Mrs.

M;D~;;;u;;;o·"w-;;ke';d guestsr··· u;I;;;H;i~'' IMt:and
William Radfo~d
of Mrs. Watson, Mrs. Scott
Us.. .. ByHeienBouerli host G/4ze family reut,Zion:::1

M1· . and Mrs . Glenn
McDonald and daughter,
Anne of I..exington, Ky . Wt!l'e
we&lt;!kend guests of Mrs. Huss
Watson and Mrs. John Scott.
On Sunday a family dinner
was held at the home of M1·s.
Watson and attending ~&gt;&lt;!sides
UlC McDonald family and
Mrs. &amp;:ott were Mr. and Mrs.
Peter

Vanica. cmd sons,
Jonathan and Andrew , Mr.

and Mrs. ·c. D. Arnold.
Stewart; Mrs. Hoscoe Wise
and daughters, Jennifer and
Susanna, Middleport; Steve
Harrison, Gallipolis; Mr. a nd

Mrs. A. H. Knight, Pomeroy ;
M1·. and Mrs. William R.
Kl&gt;ight. Sr .. Mr. and Mrs.
Wil liam Knight, Jr. and John
Knight. Point Pleasant. W.
Va.
Mr. and Mrs. Rick Knight.
Gallipoli s; MJSs Debbi e

from Mexico City to their ucw

IT 'SNOTYET ULTIMATUMTIME!
home in Aruba, Netherland . DEAR HELEN :
Antillies; Jolm Knight , who ·is
I'm 30, have a successful careor, attend night classes, am
leaving for optometi'Y mllcgc divorced 10 years, and I've been thrQugh a mish'mash of relain Memphis, Tenn . Jemtifer tionshiJII'.
·
Wise who enters Rio Grande
Now I'm much in love with 26-year-old man, who also loves
College this week. and the me llut shuns marriage. Afour-yea1· affair with a woman who
retirement of C. D. Arnold.
jilttod him has made him wary, though not at all biltel'. We 've
Pickclsuner, Williwnstvwn,
Other swruner visitors of been seeing each other five months, and he's content to keep it
W. Va .; and Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Watson and Mrs. Scull U1at way indefinitely. We're so good together, I yearn to be his •
Wllliam She_rid a n and have been Mr . and Mrs. Jolm wife.
daughters , Maria. Christina , C. Eiaily and sons, John ami
But I'm ca ught in the tn&lt;p made for lil&gt;t!rated women. It's no
and An ita, Waverly.
Tony, Memphis. Tenn .. Dr. longer acceptable to play games, withhold sex, be coy and
Celebrated at the dinner and M1·s. J . B. Marshall. .snea ky to win a husband. Honest talk is the only way, and that
were the second bii1hday of Louisville. Ky .; Ted Selot, gets me nowhere - he gives honest answers I'd rather not
Anne McDonald, the depar- Westland, Mich ., and Mr. and hear, like he'd "disappoint me be~ause I expect so much of
ture of Mr. and Mrs. Vanica ' Mrs. George Scott and son. him. " Ws true he 's sometimes undependable and forgetful,
and sons who are enruute
David, Sugar Grove.
always late, tends toward laziness among other minuses. But
U&gt;en again, he's kind, gentle, understanding, generous, eventempered, good looking, honest and affectionate, plus many
good traits.
I've tried everything from sweet and considerate to bitchy . I
even stopped seeing him, but we were both so mise1·able it
didn 't last long.
Could you or your readers tell me how to make a man
marriage-minded•
-OVERilBERATED
son, Adam, Ali&gt;t!J1 and Eile&lt;!n David Smith,-Akron ; Charles
DEARO.L.;
Mmtin and son, Mike, Vin- and Jw1 .Batche , Karen and
Look , you've only known this man five months. Why push for
Chri~ Thoma s. Ran and G u~it! '
cent Martin, all uf Pomeroy :
an
early marriage when you're enjoying the i·elatiunship as is?
Ru th Gosney, Middleport; Thuma.s, Betty and Dennie
Give
yourself a year to discover whether or not he ~&gt;&lt;!comes ·
Ril ey and Julie.
what he predicts; a disappointment. Then, if you're still good
together, he may have reached the turning point- the time in a
bachelor's life (usually his late 20s) when he goes susceptible,
and almost any woman can get him to the altar . Be sure you're
very much in evidence when the change happens! - H.
P.S. Ideas, please, readers?
by Gill Fox
SIDE GLANCES

Sixth annual Martin family reunion
held at Norton on Sunday
Tl1e sixth• anrimll Edw[j rd

and Ma ry Franc.:cs Martin
fa mily reunion wa s h'dd at

Forsythe, Mr. and Mrs.
George Glaze and Kim;
Akron ; Mrs. Virgi nia Smith;
Port Ritchie, Fla.; Mr. and
Mrs. Don Glaze, Mr. and Mrs.
John Garsteck, Terry and
Jennie, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Vacha , Heidi, Jamie and
Usa, Mrs. Byron CWlllRutland Garden
ingham, Kenneth and
Rit'hard, all of Cleveland.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Glaze,
Club to hold show Glenn,
Faith, Connie, Paula
and
Judy,
Indiana polis, Ind.;
The Rutland Garden Club
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Don Pullins,
will hold a flower show at the
Amy
Toundaf,
Mr.
and Mrs.
Rutland United Methodist
Chu1·ch Saturday. Oral juding Harry Hill and Tim; Mr. and
will begin at I p.m. lly Mrs. M1·s. Gem·ge A. Glaze and
James Carpenter, an ac- Brian, Rockbridge ; Mr. and
CJ'editcd judge of the Ohio Mrs. William R. Radford and
Association of Garden Cluhs, Brooke, Marietta ; Mr. and
an~ exhibits will remain in Mrs. Roger Gibnore, Athens.
Mrs. Ray Glaze, Greg and
place until8 p.m. for viewing
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Crystal,
lly the public.
Romine, Virgil Glaze, Mrs.

A reunion of !he Glaze
famVr was held Sw&gt;day at
U&gt;e home of Mr. and M1·s.
William Radfm·d, Pomeroy,
with a basket dilmer.
Attending were Mrs. Mabel
Jenkins, Doris Wood , Loretta

OHIOAN FINED
Norton Sunday .
RICHMOND, Ky. (UPI) A basket dinner w.a.s served
Eastern Kentucky University
preceding the bu siness :md
Student . Government
recognition meeting. Mrs.
Association President steven
Mary Ma1tin. president, had
Fos!Alr, 22, Wibningtnn, Ohio,
grace. A c.ard was read from
was fined $37.50 Tuesday
Mrs. Richa1·d Rummell of
after pleading guilty to a
Omaha , Nell. who was unable
charge of public in!IJiication.
to attend .
r----------=----=----::-:--:-;:;;:;::;;:;~:;:::-:-:1 DEAR HELEN.
Foster was arreswd by
Recognized and pr~se nted
police Mondjly night. Police
My
gentleman
friend
is
terrific,
but
so
uninhibited!
We
go
to
gifts were Ralph Martin.
our favorite restaurant a lot. The owner is an older woman. said he was•· standing outside
Beaver. who t raveled t he farShe
comes up to greet him, and he gives her a big hug and kiss, a Richmond bar holding a
Ult:~st : .Jennifer Moore, the
glass of beer, and ran loaide
sometimes
waltzing her down the room .
.
youngest, and Bessie Mit·
He even hugged my mother the first time he met her. Sur- when he saw pollee.
chell. of Columbus, the
prisingly , she didn 't mind .
oldest. Enjoyed during the
He knows everybody . You can hear his laugh even at a noisy
day were pieture al bwns of
party.
This exuberance isn't put on. He says he likes people
past reunions . Games were
and
can't
help showing it.
played.
The
other
day I said my feet hurt so he grabbed me and carOfficers elected fur the '""'-1-'lried me up a night of stairs to my office, then gave me a big
reunion to be held in Meigs
kiss just as a co-worker opened the door. So every body saw
County were Mrs . Everett
- and cheered.
See, Columbus, president ;
Is there any way I could ca~n him down without hurting his
and Mrs. Steve Drown , c,.
feelings •- EMBARRASSED
lumbus, secretary-treasurer .
DEAREMB ,
Attending were the host
I've a better suggestion. Let this terrific, uninhibited man
fami ly, Emil and Donna
tea
ch you the joy of doing what comes naturally. If his open·n10mas and thei r daughter,
ness
continues to embarrass you, perhaps he's chosen the
.Jeanette , Norton ; James and
wrong
partner.- H.
!.aura Mitchell. Colum bus;

Grat'C Glaze, and Mr. and
Mrs. William Radford, aU
local.

Store Hours:
Mi!lnning 0 Webster
Probate Judge .C!erk
(8)' 23, 30 {9) 6 , Jtc

BELKNAP
BLACK
ROOF PAINT

Sunday 10 am-10 pm
1972 DATSUN 4 door st atio nwagon . 16.000 miles. 4 cy l.,
good g_a s mi leage, 250 N'.· 3rd .

Middleport.

P.S., P.B.. factory air . stereo.
tape deck , 5 new radia l snow

tires . Reaso nably priced . Good
co nd i tion . Coll992-3402 .

....

Je~m i e

Drown,

Members are ·selected
to choral ensemble

Tom and loutse Mitchell,
Mike and Rcnalda Marshall
and daughter , Debbie,
Everett and Edna See, all oi
Colwnbus; Ra lph and Edna
Martin, Glenn and Kathy
Moure and daughter , Jennifer , Beaver ; Robert Ma11in
and daughter, Stephanie and

The foll owing students Martin, Mark Rippey, Monty
have been selected as Elliott, Mark Trout, Randy
6
:.:
__. members of the Kyger Creek Thomas, Lori Nof!llan, Mary
son, Steven, and Mary Kay '--...:ec.":c":.:":..;'":::~:.c"'.::··--''•'-.,.='·::.'.c.'"·'"-----------9Jqnior High Choral En - Holt, Tammy Procter ,
Marli n, and Debbie "Whoever thought our daughter would marry a man whose sole
Brenda Bales, Bonnie Sullins,
semble:
Ringwald , Alliance.
mission in life Is lo save blue whales?"
Seventh graders, Lisa Leesa Sheets, Liz Neff,
Osby and Mary Martin and
Russell, Melisslf Bing, Ken Denise Collins, Maxine Webb,
Abram s, Robert Myers , Susie Nay, Karen Shaver,
Vernon Bing, John Alley Canunie Pennington, Alisa
Dray , Kelly Jolley, Lola Rainey, Chris Beebe.
Newly selected members of
Wright, Christy, Curfman,
Patty Simpkins , Tereasa the Kyger Creek Concert
include ;
Bruce
Swanson, Cheri Thomas, Choir
Greg Sheets, Shane Stover, Coleman, Howard Haley, AI
Gregg Russell, Mona Paoli, Thompson, Cindy McAllister,
Jeannette Greeman, Laura Sherry Harrison, Shirley
Williams, Vicki Wise, Trish Schartizer, Roberta Young,
Belew, Lisa Hager, April Jeanette Jones , Linda
Wheeler; Paula· Mokry,
, Jones .
Debbie
Stover and Deanie
Eighth graders include ;
Wilson
.
Mark Harrison, Patrick
French C::ity
by the piece .•1.29 lb.
Hurley , Keith Clark, Jeff
Moles, Danny Johnson, Ron

PLYMOUTH DUSTER . P.S .
A .C. , new tir es . Good work
cor . S795 . Pho ne 985 -3590.
.

CASING BOLOGNA ••••••••••••••.. sliced •1.39 lb.
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ••••••••••••• ~~-. s1.09

With or
Without Fiber

WNCH MEATS ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~b~ •• sl.79

2
gge
5
MARGARINE~~-~~!~.~ I
1 lb. Teen Queen

·

Ohio Colby

LONGHORN

by the piece
$1.49 lb.
............... sliced $1.59

HEAD LrnUCE ..... ~~~-~

39'
e
LEMONS ............. 6/59

200 ct. California

2 lb. ORE·IDA FRENCH FRIES •••••••••••• 99e
.

bag

1 51;, oz. Chef Boy-ar-dee

CHEESE PIZZA •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 89e
S oz . Armour VieHa

SAUSAGE•••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••• 2/97C
103,1• oz . Camobell's

CREAM OF CELERY
SOUP. •••••••• ~ •••••• 2/49'
..
WHOLE TOMATOES •• ?..................... 2/89'
12 oz. Nestle's
HOT COCO MIX ••••••••••••••••.12 1 oz . pkg.
.023 oz.

KOOL-AID•••••••••••••• !:::'!:t:~~ ............... 6/69'
41f&gt; oz.
PRINGLES. •••.••••..••••.•••••.••••••••••••••• 2/984
49 oz . Bold detergent

$

SOAP POWDER••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••. 1.49
3 oz.
INSTANT TEA.~.E~!?.•••••••••••••••• ~ ••••'•••• s1.99

.

Navy Yeoman Third Class
Colston G. Collins Jr., son of
Donna L. and Colston G.
Collins Sr. of Route 2 Box 239,
Vinton, recently participated
111 the U. , S. Sixth Fleet
operation " National Week
XXV ."
He is assigned to the oiler
USS Canisteo, homeported in.
Norfolk, Va .
"National Week XXV " was
a week-long exercise in the
Mediterranean Sea involving
Sixth Fleet ships and aircraft
squadrons. It Was the 25th in
a series of exercises designed
to t est naval warfare
techniques and proficiency .
"National Week XXV "
co nsisted
of
combat
opera,tions, emphasizing
antisubmarine and air
defense , amphibious warfare
and logistics support at sea.
Overall commander of. the
exerCise was Vice Admiral
Harry D. Tra·lh, USN,
Commander, U. S. Sixth
Fleet, based in Gaeta, Italy.
A 197S graduate of North
Gallia High School, Collins
joined the Navy in July, 1975.

--

-

.

--

-

.

--~-

~-

A.C. Good co ndition . 9'12-2903 .

-

5 Gal. Bucket

(Ocl. 24-Nov. 221

overly concerned with

Avail.a ble at:

your own interests will be self·

deleatlng today . Look out lor
ihe other guy and he'lllook out
(Nov. 23-Dae.

~.\CfrrARIUS

PICKENS
HARDWARE

21) Optimism normally be·
comes you, but today this
might spill over into self·decep·
lio n or even wasteful ness .
Look for the Hue meaning
behind your thoughts .

Mason,
W.Va .

CAPRICORN (Dee. 2Z.Jan. 11)

Have .fun with your friends
' today , but skirt fi nanc ial or
materialistic issues . These are
areas fraught with problems .

1974

DATSUN

--

-

PI CKUP .

~92 - bl92of~e r Sp~ -

Ph one

__

BUCKET

1908 FORO . $750 . 949-2091 .

·

- ---- -

CUBE STEAK ••••••• ~.~.~ }

-- ·

('];"'j..'iii:".t.@i - -dlC :;: c
GET READV neMt season with
Carefree ownings , oir co ndi ·
lioners , R. V. a nt i. freeze at

CODNER'S CAMP ERS. Rainbow
_R idge . ~~ 2~ t~ ~ a: hem_:
TRAVE't TRAILER for sole . l''n2
Mark !wain . 1911 . 742 -2500.

PISCES (Feb. ZO-March 201

feelings are sure to result if

and Venus.

you with a big shove. you 're apt

to waste the day away .

·

ARIES (March 21-Aprll 191 This

could be a reasonabl~ gain ful

day il you 're p1epared to roll
with the punches and not set

your sight~ on expecting more
than you should .

4" PLASTIC
PIPE

you tail to live up to a baJgain .
Those born on this dare are
Be sure you 're willing to de- und th si of v·
liver before commiling yourAer .e gn . trgo. k

rner1can socta 1 wor er

sell.

GEMINI (May 21.June 201 What· ,Jane ~ams was born Sept.
eve1 you do today, you'll do 6, 1860.
well. However , ·'' Is not likely
On this day in history·
you'll accomplish . what you
. .
· .
have your heart se l on. You'll
In 1620,149 Pilgruns set sail
ta~e lillie pleasure in your from England for the "New
accomplishments .
World "
CANCER (June . 21-July 221 ' In .90 Pr 'd
· ·
Again today you 'll have a dilliI 1, eSI ent William
cull lime stopping yoorse\1. McKinley was shot and
11001-o•erindulg ing In lrivolou s criticallywouoded in,Buffalo
whims. D9n 'l pursue pleasure N.Y.. He died eight day~
LE~~f~t~"2e!.~~=~ ·221 Keep in later.
.
mind today thai prelentious or In 1909, wocd was received
showy behavior is always that Adm. Robert Peary had
Jesenled. II you're trying _to discovered the N&lt;rth Pole
make a good lmpiesslon, try a five months earli
AprilS
lillie modesty.
er ,
!NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRISE ASSN I
1909.

10' LENGTH

.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

TAURUS (April zo-May ZOI Hard

Today Is Wednesday, Sept.
6, the 249th day of 1978 with
116 to follow.
~
The moon is approachin~
its first quarter~
The morning stars are
Mercury, Jupiter and
Saturn .
The evenins stars are Mars

You're very creative today, but
unless someone gets behind

•

.

69

CRISPY SERVE

BACON ..............~~

You are much better elf toda~ if
you do things quietly by your·
sell. Cohorts, unless selected Tbe Almaaac
llnlt•rl
Press
with extreme care, could dis- Rv
play unexpected greed.
United Press lnternalfimal

LANDMARK ALL BEEF

GRADE A

WHOLE FRYERS •••••• ~·.

5

WIENERS ............~.o;.7

CHICKEN BREASTS •• ~·.
CHICKEN THIGHS •••• ~·.

ENROLL NOW
FOR

.

MASON, W.VA.

FALL TERM
AT

-GAUl POLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE

YELLOW

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

DEDICATION &amp; OPEN HOUSE
2:00PM Sunday, September10

Pleasant Valley Nursing Care Unit
SAND HILL ROAD

NOW ACCEPTING
RESIDENT RESERVATIONS

SHEDD'S SPREAD
2 LB.
BOWL

MARGARINE ••••••

DAY or EVENING aASSES

POINT PLEASANT, WV 25550

Begin September 18, 1978
Financial Assistance Available
Approved for Veterans

PHONE:

•
Accredited by the Accredlllnl Commission of the
Association of llldapendtnt Colleges and Schools.

304/675-5236

A

'

Skilled
Nursing
Facility

GALLIPOLIS
BUSINESS COLLEGE
St.

No. 75-02-04728

FOR INFORMATION

$}49 VALLEY BELL
_$
149
2% MILK.••••••••.••••••••
CRISCO OIL...............
JIF
~ BANQUET
.$
199
2
1
PEANIUT BUTTER ••• !~~.
FRIED CHICKEN ••• ! .~L··· 38 OZ.

1

CALL 446 4367
O!l WRITE:

•

&lt;

••

Birdie Waraer Reunion
. The Birdie Warner reunion
will he held Sunday, Sept. 10,
at Ft. Meigs on New Uma
Road at pavilion number two
on the left. Basket dinner wilL
he served at noon. All family
and fri ends invited.

·.

I

ONIONS ..........!~:.4

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

.

'

-.

.
1974 NOVA CUSTOM . P.S., P.B..

Colston Collins
participates in
National
Week XXV

French City
honey loaf, Pepper Loaf or Pork &amp; Beef loaf

-

l9i'5 DATSUN
PICKUP . Low
mileage , Step bu mper . Good
c::on d irion . $2850 . 985 -3979.

AOUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 111

PRICED
AT
SAVINGS

773-5554

~------

1972

PLUMBING SUPPLIES

cmd

992-7329

197) FORO l TO 2-do or hard top ,

·do-lt--yourself

Ste\.'e

Phone

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT. 9, 1978

offer 4 p .m .
.
-

Have week-end
visitors
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Oillinger, sons, Jon, Jay, and
Josh, Duncan Falls, and Mrs.
Carla · Lohrer and children
sMri and Mike, Troy wer~
weekend visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Russell Wilson. The Ohlingers were the houseguests
of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Ohlinger, Pomeroy'.

Mon.-Sat. 8 am-10 pm

I

I.

LLIPOLIS BUSINESS COLLEGE .
749
iOiiiit.;Oila, OH. 4SU1

l

~ ~ II'IJf\t

j

COUPON
-

PLASTIC GAL

·

-

l.

COUPOI';

_

1

COUPON

)

DUNCAN HINES

PAGE

REG. PKG.

PAGE

PUDDING RECIPE

TOILET TISSUE

KOOL-AID

PAPER TOWELS

lS OZ.

8 ROLL
PACK

I PIM• provldt lne with - • lnlorm•thllll

2/$1

W/C

Lim in Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Ex
Sept. 9, 1978

!

!~.

·

!.!!!!

99~ 11/C r.,.,, 10/79~N/C

Limit l Per Cus1onier
Good Only at Powell's
Oller
Sept, 9, 1978

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Oller Ex
Sept. 9, i978

J::: 3/$1

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 9, 1978

�)

'
10- The DaUr Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Sept6, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwan·t ed Items Into Cash ·
t"or sa.le

WANT AD
CHARGES
J,)

V UN ~

W_urilli:url,JIItlt•r
( 'J~ q,.(l'

Cw~ h

I day
'l: dl:f,\'S

Jdafs
6days

Ltkl
1.50

\.:!.l

].OJ

2.2a

]."'

:ua

:J.OO

En•h wur\l 0\lt'l' lht• IHIIIUIIWI I \3
wurili; l:i ~ l'l'llb p~; r word pt-1" dciy.
Ads l'l.IUilill~ Otht'r lhl:lll l'otu;t&gt;(' UIIV t•
d.Hys wrll bt· duuw -d &lt;~I tht· l t.la~ y

rilk

In mcmor•y, Card 0f Thanks au&lt;t'
01Jrtu1:1ry: 6 l '\'Uts pl'l' word , $3.00 ·
IOUilrnl!Jn Cash in ad v~~o nc e
Mobilt• HUillt' :;.alt.~ und Y;ti\J sulcs
art' llt'l't!pted only with l'&lt;ISh with
Ln ler. t5 l'l'lll e b1:1r~l' ft.~· ads e~:~rr~' ­
ur ~ HolC Nwnlk'1· In Carr uf Tht• St-n- ·
1,.111\11

Thl' Pulllrsl\l!'r n~St'rvcs -the n~lll
" ' ethl or rt'ject Hny 1:1W det'mt."tt ulr
.)tt'lluu.aJ. Tt~ 'Publisher will nut tM·
~spons i ble

fur

mo~

Llwn ur w 1/ll'nt'-

re~..:l m Sl'rtiu n .

PhUILt'_99'l-2 15ll

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DE:ADLINES

YARD SALE . Sept . 8 &amp; 9 , f,. and
Sot . 13 3 Butl ernut Pomerq y
Sol id bro u hanging ligh t. new
sta inless steel si nk. , b•kes.
tr yke )lobby ho rse lurn •tu re .
rnusc. l: ... erylh ing lr o rn the o ld
house to th e k .tthen _ Fr ee col fee . 992 -3079.
THRH FA MIL V Garage Sal e a t
He rman Schu l son CR 28 11 0 1lh
o f ~a5te rn H igh Sc hool. Sep t . 6 .
7 , a, 9 , q am 111 ?
YARD SAU In tl rad bu ry . Sept 7.
8, 9. W ed . Thr u Fr i . We will
ha ve lo ts of gla ssware . p ic
tures. clo the s and t-: lv 1s pr e
lur es . ~to re se ll out9- to 4

G A~A G I::

SA Ll:- . Ro111 or slm•e .
Sep t . 7 8. 9 A crm!i lr o111 Bo ll
l •e ld m M .ne r ~v 1l l e .

Nuun un S&lt;t t it n1il~
T~Wsdgy

YARD SA LI: T h u , ~doy 011d Fndoy.
9
5. Hu tC: hii1SOn subd• v1sion .
baby
•! e m s
C l o th i ng ,
gla ss ware and fl'II SC

lhru Fmli:IY
~P . M .

thi'1U.y lk-for·t· puUhrtt ll " ' '
S uml a ~·

4 P M.
Frlt.liiy aftt:'rlloull
.- - -

.

-

Pi;6ac
:-:~.:.~~~~-: ~-} :.. :
: ::- - -:.
,.. -;: =·;:
-~=---=-;;::.~.

GARAG I: SA l t Sep t 7 8. S-&lt;11
High !:,t. M1 ddl eport '2 sto rrn
d oo r ~
gra te
bed
spnng s.
dre ss e r
me 11 ~
w ome n ~
clothing . lo t&lt;. mt s&lt; ilems 10
o rn to 5 pm . Ruben (o ii"' S

O IL OR gas lea se . Free . 30 a cres . YARD SALI: al Rus t1c Hi ll s on
2 miles north of Pome roy .
l hur s a nd Fr 1 l o 11ll 930 to 4
b I 4-726-:no 1 evenings
Childre n s an d a dul t clo th 1ng
.
A von bo nl es. m1sc. 1tems .
SHOOTING MA TC H Forked Run -·
Sp or hrnon C lu b . ~ept. 3 and YA RD SAL!: Se pt . 7, 8 , ond 9 . 9
ever v Su nda y there o·f te r Foe·
a m to 5 p m . Gene ra l electr 1c
lor y choke gu ns o nlv .
w asher and d ryer . 'j bi cycl es .
.
old roc k1ng ch o 1r . childr en s
NO HUNTING o r trespoH i ng on
games c lathes or1d rni sc . f u rn
rny property wi thout permiS·
ngh t at
Uni ted
M et hod1s t
sia n . Judy McGraw.
- - •n
Tuppe • s Plai n ~
Church
GUN SHOOT Ra cin e Gun Club
tallow s• gmo.
hery Sunday 1 pm . Facto ry
HOUSEHOLD SAtf Se pt "f 8 q
chok e guns o nly .
Thu rs .. F r~ and So t 37 4 1: Mom
Pomeory 9 - ~

-

--

FOUND A r Ed son Hor t res •dence.
Darwin . a
port
German
Shephard dog . Friendlv . Ph one
992 - 501~

FOUND : lARG E l r eeing Walke r
Coon Hound . 949 -235 5.
FO UND ; IN Raci ne area . Ver y
smal l dog . Can be cl"aimed by
•dent• fy mg sel( and color . Co n
ta ct
Ho r .... ey
Leamand
by
_w og_n~ ~o ~d~~re . Raci ne .

YARD SAL !: Sep t 8 8 Q D•shes ,
coolo.mg u t ensd~ clo th es too ls
new el ec trr c ice cream fr eez e r
beddmg
m rsc
Sam Wyatt
res iden ce on 143 above Wo lf
Pen St ore

H V l: I:AMIL Y Yard Sal e 3 b1g
days . Thur s
Se pt 7
~ ri ·
Se pt 8 and Sat Sep t 9 V•c to r
Bohr res td e nce 9 to 4 dail 'f' .
$ .05 an d up .

rRUC K dr iver Wi th ex
penence dr 1v ing tr uck s Wr 1te
c o Box 729-1:: The Oo •ly ~en
!me l P omer ~ y O h

FUI::: l

NHD SOMEO N i:. to make an d .n
s tal l wmdo ws lor old home
985-4244 !:...en•ngs only
l or

Mason

SOME ON£ to do ya rd work
_g ras s s1c k le . 997 ?613

~

Let Pomeroy Landmark
sotfen &amp; condition your
water w1th co -op water
softener, Model UC · SVI.

Now Only

'l

•289.95

Let us test your water

Free

Pomeroy Landmark
W. Carsey , Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

cut

1crn t- O RO

VAN l:conolme ' , ton
JU'l V·'8 std . sl1 d 1ng doo! 4 new
'" e~ p an ell ed a nd carpe ted
Phon f' 9 49-2092 .

197d
9&lt;1')

OA l~UN PIC KUP
619 2 of 1er ~p m

1-'0io!l ABL ~ H !:'Cl RIC d1 ~ h w a s h er
l:l ec tn c d rye r Ha th for $ ~0 .
992 5420.
IRISH CO B8li::R po to1om l o • so le
]47 24b4
~O UR

I:IUR N ~R Ho rdw1c~ burner
ga s sl o"e wi th griddl e th a t con Oi g•tal
vert s t o 5th bu rner
cond .t1on
cl oc k
h cellen l

991·5009.

~--

--

OLD COINS, pocket wot c he~ .
doss r ings. weddin g bo nds, ·
diamonds. Gold or !r.ilver _ Ca ll
Roger W~~s~y~2~_23 3~- __
WANTED TO buy : any o ld m otor·
c yc les or ports . Does no t hove
to run . "ea sonable pr ic e~ .

9'12·63-&lt;S .
WANT TO buy : o ld player piano.
Gall ipolis
6H -44b-387 4 o r
b14 -.t46·3945 .

$-1-295

TRAILER

S~rocuse

across

Phone 949· 2373 .
(

lot in
from pool.

and

Older

home, some · remodeling ,
beautiful view of the river,
must see to appreciate.
Price $12,500 .

MIDDLEPORT

J.tck W C11

'.1

owner wlll help
double
finance down payment or
will take &lt;! newer 3
bedroom trailer.. _1,as down

payment . W~ll worth the
pr ice of 535,000
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804 W. Main
9f2·2298
Pomeroy

E )(pi res

MAIN
POMEROY. 0.
VERY NICE Mobile Home
ful"ly furnished . Lot Is
50x120.

Pomeroy Landmark

Ready to move into .

9.-J!ck W. Carsey. Mgr.

$8,500.00 .
JUST 6 YRS. OLD Lovely 3 bedroom home, all

....

electr ic, lo-vely kitchen . A

Phonem-2111

buy at just S18,SOO.OO.
CLOSE TO MINES Beauti ful fenced 1 acre
with smafl stream
Newer
mobile
home
fullyfurnished . This you

must see. S16,SOO .OO .
2 ACRES WITH very nice 2
story frame, forced air
furnace , 4 bedrooms, other
build i ngs, many other

features . 525,000.00 .
JUST LOOK - 111, balhs,
basement, p.orches, nat .
gas f.a . heat, porches, 1
bedrooms , range , ref .,

washer . Going at sa,soo.oo.
DUPLEX In good

condition , S bedrooms, 2
baths, lovely tot . li-ve in
half
rent the rest.

LA R(,~

FUEl orI s l o~e . Aft er I 30
pm colt 992 -769b.

ACRI: LOT on Rt . 7 N1(e bu ild •ng
sde. 992. 7574 .

Sl S.OOO .OO.
SYRACUSE

SHR!:O CONSOU w1th BSR turn
ta ble , AM·FM 10d1 0 8-tro ck In
goad sha pe , p11ced reaso nab le ,
9Cf2. JSS I
.

1' 4 A CRt:S loca ted I mde h om
M e 1gs M1n e I . [)r ille d well and
se pti c system . 304 -882 2334 .

N . SCA LI: !ro ms w1 th l ty pe
layou t Com plete wi th e ll ~"' "
ches. house ch u1 ch . foc tor• e\o
l:l eout•fu l
!:,ee Ha rvey l eo
rno nd
PO Bo A bJ I . Roc 1ne
Oh •O bv Wag ner Hard wa re
Sto re

1976 TAN GMC Von . msu lated
paneled car pel JJ 000 rn•le~
sta ndard sh1 1t
Good l 11e~
Good
(o nd11 1o n
S3700
9B5 -3857

3b e l ec tr~ c •onge e • cel le" ' lon
d111on 949 74 "f6 ol! e, 5 pm
A nyrune &lt;all C#49 2351
PICK

YOU R

peo c h e~

lo~ ' M m

~ed

OW N .

~km

S 20 o lb . whil e the y
Tue~

Thur s Fr1. 9 b
Wed Sot '::iun 2-b . Bring con
to1ner!&gt; Wagner s F1u1t Form
loy'mo n O h 10 ') ' , rnde s o ff SR
5SOar, CR 6. 61 4-74GI -3:J12

j iX flOO M house end bot h (en ·
l ra l heat On II ooe!&gt; . l oca ted
m co ur\lry on Hy se ll Run . All
rn 1nerol 11ght s. IS rlHn u tes to
to wn ~or ~ole sig n ir1 yard . Va·
( On! $1 3.000 Sho wn on ly to in
terps ted par l ies . 742 · 3074 .
lRA il i:R AND 7' • acr es on 325
neQI
m ines . D·dl ed
well .
742-2053

IWO B!::OR OOM l u11; 1shed house
•n
M id dl eport
Q92 5505.

$1 2000

991 -5791 .

lot ~

~a( •ne

1WO
n ice tradienr partia lly
17 .
:r. bO Ho ll ypork
furn 1s hed . Al so 18 )( 40 cemen l
bloc k
buiJd ing w ith
shed
949-}428 .

QUALITY

GeorgeS . Hobslefler Jr .•
Broker

DE WHITE
•ROOF PAINT

Pomeroy, Ohio

ftomiiOJ Ulldmarl

!Iii.

l'hDn4 "2-2111

Phone 992-6333
Office Hrs.
9a .m .-5p.m .

CHEAP!
In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Slreel-off
Mill Slreel
behind
Tony·~ C•rry
I.
Open Saturday 10·4 p.m.
Sund.ly 12 noon to 3 p.m .
8-31 · 1 mo.

l)::'

~~~~~~~
HOMESIHS for sole. i acre and
up. M idd lepo rt . near Rutla nd .
. Coll992 -748 1.

ViRGIL L "R . .~~~
992-3325
2U ,E. S.cond Street
EXTRA
STRONG
Stucco large 9 room home
with 2 baths ; stove.
refrigerator, furnace, city
water, natural gas , double
garage and 2 bus Iness
· rooms .
Good
corner

locat ion on Rt. 124. Only
SJS.OOO.
2S ACRES - On good
gra -ve l road in Rutland
Township. A real place for

pr ivacy . $12,500. ·
EXTRA NICE -

New

insulated
home
w i th
fireplace in the family
room . 3 nice size bedrooms.
step-saver kitchen with bar
and dining area. 2 car
garage, sun deck and front
porch . Situated in the
woods on a one acre fot .

NEW
LISTING
Furn ished 2 bedroom home
with T.P. water, shower·
bath , . .75 of an acre .

Located on a good paved
country road .

NEW LISTING older

4

bedroom

Good
home,

-

Lovely

newer J bedroom home.
Nat . gas furnace. close to
schools , large garage .

lovely lot . $25,500.00.
TO BUY. SEE OR CALL
CLELAND REALTY THE HOME OF REAL
ESTATE.
MANY
OTHER LISTINGS TO
CHOOSE FROM, STOP IN
OR CALL NOW .
WINTER IS ON THE
WAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank. Kathy &amp; Leona
Cleland
Associates

drilled welL and large level
l_
ot on blacktop road .

NEW LISTING - 4S acres,
3S of limber, old house of 6
rooms and all minerals
near oil and gas f ield . Want

LISTING
11.-vlng

-

3

room ,

carpeting. dining with
sliding glass door to sun
deck . Wood burner in the
basement and 2~ acres.

IF
YOU
WANT
SOMETHING
BAD
ENOUGH AND WILLING
TO SACRIFICE. YOU CAN
GET IT.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
C. BRUCE TEAFORD
SUE P. MiiR PHY
Realtor Associ1te1

Housing
Headquarters

r-----------------------.
CENTRAL REALTY CO.
JUST LISTED- SPACIOUS B 1-LEVEL .This mov be
your dream home. II hos • Iorge kllchon with lots of

or 4 bedrms .• living rm ., family rm ., w ith fireplace,
basement , fuel oil furnace, garage and outbuildings.
Some fencing , plenty of road frontage and garden

1 mile out New Lima road
in Rutland on Jl/ 2 acres .

space . City water and drilled welt. Loc . close to
hospital and school at Laurel Clift. Asking S42,SOO .
TWO ACRES - A beaul lful4 year old, 3 bedroom home

Will sell fast at only Sl9.000
RUTLAND - 3 bedroom

carpeted. 2 baths. full basement with TV room . Many

kitchen and utility . Located

frame home w ith natural

gas heal. Situated on nice
size lot on Main Street .
Ask ing $13.500 .
Middleport - Nice .S room
homse with bath and
detached garage. Situated
on one-third of an acre . Will
sell at SJO.OOO.
·
.
RACINE- This beautiful 3

$92~

with large eat-In kitchen, 3 bedrooms, all nicely

'

Fed. T..
(does not

Route 338. Sells tor $30,000 .
A IGGS CREST MANOR Beautiful 12 room spill
colonial,

hal

s

bedrooms . 3 lull baths and
much, mu ch more! Call
today for more Info and
make an offer .

FULLY
RANTEEO

We have other listings lo
choose from. Pleo .. stop in

W. Uruy, Mtr;
f'llofte 992-2111

•

SENIORS
We are cur-rently making
appointments for senior
portraits . We use ' tradi ·
tional .settings and also
outdoor
por ·
lea ture
traiture.
Call Us Today
.,

109 High St .
Pomeroy
8 2 I mo .

ReSi.d entill 1nd commer· ,
r::ial. Clll for estima1e. 2~ •
Hour Service. Any dav,
anvtime.
.. Phone 91S-3806

Heroes 15.

I: XCAVA liNG . dozer . loader and
backhoe w ork . dump t ru e ~ ~
and lo-b oy!r. for hire . w•!l h aul
I i ll d ir l , to ~oil , lim es to ne ond
gro vel. Call Bob or Roger Jel l ers day ph one 992 1089 , nigh t
phone 992·3525 or 9Cl2 - 5232 .
. EXC A V.A.liNG, do zer , backhoe
and dit cher . Cha rles R. Hot ·
he ld .
~o c k
Hoe
Se r 'l ice .
Rutland Ohio Phone 74'). 2008
Will do rool ing . co nslruc hon.
plurnb ing ond heoti ng . N o job
too Iorge o r too sm a ll Phone
"' /'
742 -23 48 .
HOW~RY

AND
MARTIN
Ev: ·
septic
s y\tem ~ .
co veting ,
dozer , back hoe , durnp tru ck ,
lim esto ne . groli el.
blacktop
po ... mg . "' 143. Phone 1 ~ 6U )
b9l:J . 7331
•

BATHR OOMS
ANU
Kitchen~
rem ode led . ce rom •C t!l e . plum ·
bing . r o•pentry and gene 1al
mo1nt en anc:e. 13 year s ex per ience . 'W2 - 368~
PUlliN S EX C A V ATI~G . Complete
Serv ice. Phone 992-2478 .
REE VES TRADING P o~ I , 1-'agevil/ e.
Groceries , dry good s, hard wore , l eed , ta ck shop . Special
25 1b of dog l oad $3 .88 .
AUTOM O tlllt IN SURA NCE been '
can ce lle d? l os f you r operator~
license ? Pho ne 992-7 143 .
Wf 00 p a•ntlng gu!ler ceiling
ti le . paoel ing . roo f repair ,
plurnb lng and concre te w o rk .
Free esttmote~ . Call 997-7785
ask fo r Wal l ace M orr is .

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Chester."Ohio
10·30·c
THERe"' YI'R l!illl OF LADIN"'THe TRUCK'? READY T'I'I:Ol' ~

_
... _
................
......

Performances 33; james Michener' s World 20.

9:()0-Dick
Cl.a rk 3,4,1S; Roots 6,13 ; Mayor of
Casterbrldge 20.
IO :oo-tncredlbte Hulk 8.10; News 20 ; Great · Per·
formances 33.
10 :3G-Danlel Foster. M.D . 20.
11 :{)()-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson l.4.1S ; Pollee Woman 6,13; U.S.
Open Tennis 8; ABC News 33: Movie " The Boys of

S.rvlce

- --

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

ONE BEDROOM opt . Contact
Vill ag e
Manor Apl. . Middlepo rt . '/(/2 ·7787.

J AND 4 RM . lurnii hed a nd un·
lur n•s h e_g
9Y2-543 d.

opts .

Phone

Af'ARTMEN T. O'ioiloble for 5l eeping quarte rs . room l ur fo r lour
men , 10 m inutes. f ro m Moun·
tianeer Plant , Horfford , W .Va .
Phone 1-304·862 -3356.
TWO BEDROOM tra iler .
o nly . 'W1-J324,
OUPl EX E

APT

in

Ad~~;s

M iddleport.

992-3400.

40 Acres of land In Sutton Twp. Nice building sltts ,

small barn. Priced at only 521.500.
WANTED : We have a qualified buyer for a few acres
of land with a good home with at least 3 bedrooms
located on good road .

4:{)()-M isler Cartoon 3; Superman 4 : For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Mer v Griffin 6 ; Addams Family 8;
Sesame 51. 20.33; .
4:3G-My Three Sons 3: Gillig an 's Is. 4.8 ; Ba tman 10:

I

Little Rascals 15 .
·
My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8 ;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20.33 ; Voyage to the

5 : ~Bonanza 3 ;

~

Botlom of The Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Pef.

REPF!:E&amp;EENi6 THf:
C.OUN"TFC:Y- ON

IGREEMEI

~·..__~-. ~.

.....-...,

rJ I .

home
basis .

GET A

YeSieod ays

home
7 and

I

Jumbles · DOILY

Cheryl Lemley , Assoc.
Home Phone742·2003
Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .
Home Phone 949-2419
George A. Hobsteftar •. Jr .•
Broker

Home Phone 992-5739

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

EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

141 ACRES -

VALVE WEEVIL

1

of Education Meeting 33.
9:oo-Grandpa Goes To Washington J,4, 1S; Hawaii
F ive-0 8, 10.
9:JO--Bix Belderbecke Memor ial Jazz Festival 20;

~-~THOMAS JOSEPH

1976 NASHUA ld .v: 65 J bedr oom
l ' 1 bo th . un derp inn ing , $1500
and assu m o l oan , Gl49 2683 or

Where The Twisted Laurel Grows 33.
10 :()0-Lifeline 3,4,1S; Barnaby Jones 8, 10 ; News 20;
. Mayor of Casferbrldge 33.
10,:3o-0ver Easy 20; II :{)()-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,1S:
Dick Cavett 20 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4,1S; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13 .
U.S. Open Tenni s 8; ABC News 33; Movie " The

by

ACROSS

84J.J:Jll.

--IIU..

1970 Htl LCRtS T 12 )( 60 . Located in
Sol em
Se n t er
on
CR I
b1 4-bb9 -5747

ZRoman

1 Old Jewish

goddess
3 Sacrifi•
cial site
f New York
city
5 U.S . naval

month
5 Monster
10 Symbol of
purity
11 Soldier
of old
12 Dilatory
13 Prophet
lf Anecdotal

CANNING pea ches , good quality . •
Fr ees tone cann mg
peaches
$7 96 br •ng own con tainer
Re tail an d who lesale . Bo b's
M ar k et ,
M aso n .
Midway
Markel , Po meroy . O h

-

6 City in
Judah
7 Plaintiff
8 Doing

{I

16 Accord
18 Perch
U Jazz great,

GASOLINE AI .I.EV

I can·t be a

All carpel installed with
podding at no charge.
Expert installotion .

burden to 40u
an4 lonqer~

Rubber Back Carpel

1.Vhat ~ind

business

zo Gainsay

9 Prelude
to peace
11 Foolish
15 Duffer's
shout

Z1 Carpet
surface

11 FWlgus
%0 Fender flaw

Kid L..:!..__l:~h.!.!!!.!!.!!!..!!..!i~£!!,.~

Haunting" 10 .

11 :45-MASH 8; 12 :0C)-Janakl 33.
12:2G-Movle " I Wil l Fight No More Forever" 8:
12 :4G-SWAT 6,13; ! :{)()-Tomorrow 3,4,1S; ! :So-

Yesterday's Answer
21 Paris"
'~ ' Place %2 Establish
Z3 Big package
2f Teacher's
breather

composer
Z4 Coating
25 Declare
verboten
Z8 Fellow : sl.
Z7 Half-witted
31 Part of
[
a transit system
33 River : Sp.
[ 34 Arthurian

As Low As
sq. yd.
&amp; up

9' and 12' Vinyl
Aoor Covering In Stock

Z8 Sultan's
decree
29 Burn
38 Roomy
building

25 Millcal-

3% Veruce's

culation
27 Railroad
car

beach
35 Cravat

C•ble Channel s 7:00P.M. - Paul Gaudino Family Fifness Show
7:30 P.M. - Supersports
..
10 :00- 700 Club .
W edntsda~· .

- -

.,._+-+WEST

..,...+-+-

Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXK
LONGFELLOW

II

e 1m., NEA.Irlc., uu,,.u.5.""·011

One lel1er simply stands Cor another. In this .sample A is.
used for the three L 's, X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different .

Rutland

CRYPTOQUOTES
THOU6 HT

NO eu
IT' LL HAVE

APPREC IATE
A HOME COOKED
MEAL .

TO PI:JFOR

'YOU M10HT

NOI/I/1

ARE 'IOU PLANN1 o~ 6
10 HAVE: YOUR
FAMILY JOIN
YOU SOON , MR .
FAGIN?

w

-..,.- NKVVUNO

I HAVE ~0 FAMI LY
MR.WINKLE.!M ...
I 'M QUITE ALC'NE t

p E

BGQTKY

J U RK

• QJ108 .1

+ K .I

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : North
North East
~est

00~

-

• A :1

Z

0

PE

QUCK

VUHK

P J VK V

MVWLV

u

Q

DPG

VUHK

An openin g club lead
wo uld have defeated the con·
tracl , but West cannot be
fau lte d for lea ding the suit
his partn er had bid .
Sout h won the diamond
lead with the ace and played
the king of hearts which he

knew would lose to East's
ace.
East returned a trump
whi ch was won in dununy.

• A

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

A J 10

• 10 9 4 J

!Muslim
deity

Call742-2211
TALK TO
Wandell or Herb Grate
or Gene Smilh

•

East's st rong one notrump
over call. This knowledge is
a ll ctecl;u e r needs to make
four hearts . F or all intents
a nd purposes , South know s
whCrc every card in the de ck
is .

SOUTH

title

% ~

t K 65
+ AQ7
F:AST

• . 9 6 54
• 72
• 9742
• 865

r-------~----------~------------------~-------------------,a~~h

( ~

9-fi · A

• K72
•K.t9 65

36 Pitched ball
37 Advantage

~.

cards of a sort

• Q8 3
" Q 10 B i

iLl
FRANK&amp;ERNIE

BRIDGE
--=o=--s_w_a-:-ld-:-:J-ac- o
--;b:--y--a- n- d-;'-;
A-;-:
1a-~n--;S;;-o~n-:-:t....-a.._..g-NO RTH

I I ~E~jDIJ]~~JDJl~ 35 lady
Declaim

Buy where you can come in

St•pt. 6

~...,.;--nrr-abrl,c_ 1 "arked

Z3 "Lulu"

of wor~?

News 13.
Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 9 P.M. - Damnation Alley (PG) ·
7 &amp; I I PM - Island of Dr . Moreau (PG J

hero

~:;;;~[;; 15 collection
Recipe; rule

SAVE ON

Declarer cas hed the king of
diamonds , pitching a low
s pade and ruffed a diamond .
I NT
I+
He led the king of spades
Pass Pa ss H
2"
which East won with the
Pass u
Pass 3 ..
a
ce . East returned the jack
Pa ss Pa ss Pass
of s pades which was won by
dummy's queen Declarer
Opening lead : • 2
trumped a spade in his hand
and led the 10 of clubs. The
cl ub 10 was ducked around
to East 's jac k.
By Oswald Jacoby
East c an do nothi ng but
and Alan Sontag
lead away from his kfngThe day of the Mississippi deuce of clubs into dummy's
riverboat gambler a nd his ace-queen , or lead a dia·
deck of marked ca rds is mond that gives declarer a
past, but an alert bridge ruff and discard. The conplayer can often duplicate tract is now cold .
the feats of this legendary
Even had East never bid,
hustler by li'!lening atten- declarer should have played ,
tively to till( bidding and the hand the same way .
applying logic . Many times Easi 's bid, and declarer's
the cards might just as well lo g ic, simply took the
be marked, so certain: can a sus pense out of the hand.
player be as to where they l NE WSPA Pt; H ENTERPRISE ASSN . !
Sou th
Db!.

are.

© leTS King Features Syndicate , Inc:.

GlORY BE!!

The

IF IT

AIN'T B.UBBA -· MV

15 IN STOCK

North.South have 24 highcard points out of a poss ible
40. Sixteen are missing . De-

clarer knows all sixteen are
in East's hand bec'!use of

owner 's age prevents her from continuing to operate
the farm and she desiros an Immediate sate. so to 60

CALL THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

B:Jo-QnCe Upon A Classic 20; Kanawha County Board

CANINE

"" ) LOVE VIEW "'

YOU

acres tit Iable with some •ery good crHk bottom hilltop land . Tho! balance is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good (does need some modernlzellonJ,
large all purpose barn &amp; several outbuildings. The
minerals go with It and It's located In an area where
gas. oil &amp; coal have been found to be plentiful. Nur
Rutland . 60's.

tletales 8; That"s Hollywood 10; Nashville On The
Road 13; Dolly 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 10,33.
8:()()-Joe Namath 3,4,1S;; Roofs 6.13: Waltons 8;, 10;
Once Upon A Classic 20,33 .

Words heard during a honeymoon-

Answer

15 .

A~C

Bluegrass 20; Consumer Surv i-val Kit 33 .
7:JG-Hollywood Squares 3; Truth or Cons . 4; Tat-

(Answers tomorrow)

THAT'S A GOOD ONE ···

Her~s

News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3G-NBC News 3.4.1S; ABC News 13: Andy Griffith
6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:oo-Cross-Wits 3,4; Newlywed Game 6,13: Gong
Show 8; New1 10: Gilligan's Is. IS; Hocking Valley

D ( I X)

Print answer here:

LEOPARD BUT YOU
HAVE O~ E SI'OTlED~

liD FOR

Wt nHd large &amp; small Forms
and Muy types of pMperty
CALL JIMMY DEEM, Associate, 9•9·23..

1 oo-News 3.4,8, 10, 13, 15:

Now arrange the c1rcled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug gested by Ihe above canaan .

--~-~
SPOHED ? HA 1 HA! HA !
DIDN'T

ticoat Junction 15.
c; · .1~d CouJ;Jie 4; News 6; Hoga n's

PAPER, AI LEAST.

~.[~~~ t.:.~Sale

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT

Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3o-MASH 8; Joker ' s Wild 10; You Bet Your Life 20.

IPiller b

• ITWAfJ NICE
OF YOU TO
INVITE ME
TO (;'INNER .

Cranberry

J:Oo-Another World 3,4,15; Generel Hospital 6,13 ;

I [J

I JTILF. ORPHAN ANN IE

RUG REMNANTS
From S29'S &amp; Up

15 ;

1:3(')-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10'; Where The Twisted l aure l Grows 33 .
.
2:DO-One Life to Live 6, 13 ; 2:3G---Doctors J,-4, 15;

VALLO

WATfR WEll d r i llin g . William T,
Grant . 742 -2879.

CARPETING
DRIVE A UTilE
&amp;
SAVE A LOT

·a: Not For . Women Only

News

Country 33.

I I

4-:IO·IIC

742-2211

byHenri ArnoldandBobLee

Guiding Light 8,10 .

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

Good St leclion Of

-

1:oo-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 ;

BORN LOSER

"'• mil• off Rl. 1 by-pus on
St. Rt. 1241oword Rutland,
0.

COUN TRY MOBILE Horne Park .
Route 33. north of Pomeroy .
Lorge l ots . Call r:w2-7479 .
-

Tomorrow 8, 10; E lec. Co. J3 .

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

GARAGE

~.J!~t l.: ~='~0 ::_-=-~.

12: 3G-Ryan 's Hope 6,13 : Bob Braun 4; Search for

Unscramble these four Jumbles.
one lener 10 each square. to form
four ordinary .words.

ROGER HYSElL

'4 • 88

12:0G---Newscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; Amer ica Alive 15 ;
Young &amp; the Restless 8: Midday Magazine 13.

•

"ftllrul ID'ft

Plo. ,tz.Zf74

and- what you're geHing
- Good .. tactlons - Fully
stocked.

--·--

6:()0-News 3,4,8,10.13,1S; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20.
6:311-NBC N&amp;Wsi3,4,1S; ABC News ll; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy "20 .
7:oo-cross-WIIs 3.• : Newlywed Game 6,13; Last of the
Wild 8; News 10; Gilligan's Is. IS; Dick Cavett 20;
Big Green Magazine 33.
7:311-Ati-Sfar Anything Goe.s 3; People Helping People
•.6,10; Family Feud 8; That's Hollywood 13; Wild
Kingdom 1S; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33,
·
8:()0-Sharks, the Death Mach ines 3,4,1S; Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Movie " Dr. Sfrange" 8,10 ; Great

Jack Ginther 985-3106

Wilt UO bobysi lling ,, my
on weekly o • day to day
ELWOOD BOWER S REPAIR
991-3417.
Sweeper5 . toa ster s. 1rOns . all
small applian ces . l awn mowfH. Will DO babysi tt ing in rny
nev: t to Sta te H igh way Garage
on wee kly ba sis A ges
on Rou te 7 . Phone (614 ) 985 up. ~q2 - 6322 .
3825 .
Sl:WING MACHINl:- Hepair s, ser vic e . all makes. 992 2284 . The
Fabri c:
Shop
P o·rn ero y .
Auth o r ized Sin ger Sol e!. and
Servi ce . W e ~ ho r pe n Sci ~~ o r s _

THURSDAY, SEPT.EMBER 7,1978
S:45- Farm Report 13; s :so-PTL Club 13 .
6:oo-PTL CJ~b IS ; Summer Semester 8i For
You ... Biack Woman 10; 6:45-Mornlng Report 3;
6:SG-Good Morning . West VIrginia 13.
6 :55-News 13.: 7:oo-Today 3,4,1S; Good Morning
America 6,1 3; CBS News 8; Underdog 10: 7:25Chuck While Reports 10.
7:3G-Schoolles 10; ~ : oo-Capt . Kangaroo a,IO : Sesa me
Sf. 33.
9:oo-Merv Griffin 3: Phi l tlonah ue 4,13,15;
9:3o- Brady Bunc h 8; Family Affair 10 ; Bit With
Knit 33.
IO :oo-card Sharks 3,4,1S: Edge of Night 6 ; All In The
Family 8.10 ; Dating Game13; Altair In The Air 33
10 :3G-Ho!lywood Squares 3,4, 1S; High Hopes 6;
Magazine 8. 10; S20,000 Pyramid 13.
II :OG-H igh RollllfS 3,4,15; Happy Days 6. 13 : Montage
33.
11 :3o-Wheel of Fortune 3,1S: Family Feud 6.13 ;
Partridge Fam ily 4; Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St .
33. I
.
II : S$--CBS News 8: Loving ~ree IU .

s :oo-Bonanza 3; My Three Sons 4; Gunsmoke 8;
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 20,33; Voyage to lhe
Bolfom of the Sea 10; Emergency One 13; Pelf Icoal
Junction IS.
S:JO-Odd (ouple 4; News 6; Elec. Co . 20,33; Hogan's

~~~vice"~ "':~-: "
BftADFORO . Auc ti oneer , Com ·
pl ete Service . Phone ~49- 1 4 87
or 949 -2000 . Rae me . Oh 1o . Crill
Brodl ord .

1:()()-Tomorrow 3,.4 ; 1:50-News 13.

Movie Channel 4 S &amp; 7 P.M. - Hollywood Oldie IG J
9 &amp; II P.M. - I Never Promised You A Rose Garden
IRI

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1911

with a canopy . Situated on
almost 1 acre on State

level

inc;lude
sales fa JC or
bal•ncingJ

SEPTIC TANK
••
CLEANING

turnace . All this and two ncle acres of land In a good
location . Will go qu ick for $3S,OOO.

porch . Plenty of storage
space . Garage and patio

Price includes

TELEVISION
VIEWING

more extras, low heat bill with nat. gas forced air

bedroom home has dining
room , fam ily room and sun

White-Wall Co-Op
Custom Po~
A78xl3

High SchOOl

in Letart Township . Nice

storage building . Price 527,000 .
6 ACRES- Nice 1'1&gt; story home mostly carpeted with 3

Re!itl Estate Broker

NEW

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
8-20-1 mo. (Pd.)

520.000 .
NEW LISTING New
sptif.level 3 bedroom home

stove, utllitv room , natural gas forced air heat, outside

Closed Thursdays &amp;
Saturdays 11 noon
Your Full Time
bedroom ,

New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts

WOOD HEAT

dining room with sliding gloss doors Ieiding out to
l•rge deck. U.rgeliving room and family room, and to
finish this welt-laid out home we have love bedrooms
utility room and garage. Very tow heating bi 11. Thai'~
not all, we have strawberries, raspberries •nd garden
space. Red barn-like storage building . Located about
len minutes north of Pomeroy Jus! off Rt. 7. Call for
more del•ils •nd appointment. Asking U! ,OO.
JUST LISTED MIDDLEPORT- This well cared for
newer home has 3 brs, Jiving room, bath, mostly
carpeted , kitchen is equipped with refrigerator and

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING
,

MOVE GOM.PANY

cabinets, stove, refrigerator and dishw•aher. Beautiful

Discount
Prices

, fully Insured
Free Est.
Call 992-2772
8-10-lmo. (Pd.J

ne APPAWGHJtlll'll

bath , natural gas heating.

992-2259- HH lfl

MULI:SERRV
H eight~
l ots ol
pnvocy Men ch 3 bedroom
oVer 1 c eres. ~ru1t l r ees . f .A
fu r nace . Centro! air . Unottoch·
ed '2 cor garage H W . llo01 s
Ory bmem ent . Polio and deck

~ X 1RA

Experience 1nd

I Bob Hoelfich I

1967 HOUSl lflAIU:R 1211 b0 . All
Plectri c l urnis hed. 01r cond
was he• and drye • 2 1 o t ~ 111 Hor ·
r •so n vil le . 742-"1876

PIHJ!k '-1'; i I I U I

Cellulosic Cwood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
Solve 30 pel. to 50 pet.
on hutlng cos!

The Photo Place

SPECIAL
PRICE '

-·

'

Pomeroy,O.
3-15-lfc

$z» OFF

IN SYRA CUSl:- 2 bed room housC
N ew ~ l orm windows
New
alumi num bu dd ing 7 p orc h e~
991 -371q

Mq1

-

AND RECEIVE

lHRH 8HJH00M fr01t1e horne 111
M 1ddl eport Co ll991' -3457

y

JIM KEESEE

COUPON

59'1 - :W~l

S(llt· flrtCt'\

Ph. 992-2148

3

992-7133

Call now tor appointment.

DICK TRACY

2

After Hours

30 yr . f 111ancul g . al so
refmonc1ng . Ire land M o rtg age ,
77 1: State A th e n ~ pho ne (614 )

Holp0111l /\ppl.

Blown Insulation

Muffler - Brakes
Shocks . Tires .
Battery.
Installation Service

bedrooms ,
completely
remodeled ,
car p e t
throughout, garage, cellar,
spring water. grape ar.bor,
nice
garden
spot, •
Immediate
occUpancy ,

BRING IN

V A - ~HA .

For All YIIUI
GE T.V ',, &amp;

CATERPILLAR 0 --4-0 bul ldozer for
sole or lrode for Iorge truck or
excovoto.r backhoe . 99'2 -2-47B .
SMALL

MOORE'S

kitchen , full basement ,
family
alum . sid ing,

or cafl us.

•

SIWJJI.It

3 8 E DROOMS

J&amp;L

For The Best
Price In Town
See
.Denver Kapple
At

bedr ooms , older home,

Real 1-:state for Sale

POMEROY
LANDMARK

TI MBER POMER O Y Fores t Pro duct&lt;;, . lop pn c: e l or sr ond •ng
sow timbe r . Coli 99 2 5965 or
_Ken~ Hon?1_l - 446· B~~ OLD FURNITURE , ice bol(es . br o'i&gt;s
b ed s. 11on beds. de&lt;;, k s, e tc ..
complete ho u sehold s. W n te
M .D M.!ler . Rt . A. Po m&amp;roy o r
ca ll 992-7760.

9&lt;1"1

Sept. 10. 1978

9e.!.c:k W. Caruy, ""'·

1967 CE HVY F0 H po rts. 1q73 V ega
m otor . Hay tor sal e . $.85 a
bale 94q.741 3 or 949 -28 4Q .

clo!oe to ~utloqd , Pho ne
74tll.

carpeted. tully equipped

front-wheel drive cars.

HAY . 997 -775 1

- -"---""=="

FIREWOOD . GRHN or seasoned
949 2358 o r 985 · 3~7

:J bcrii OOIIl hou ~e . 'l balf !s
oH e lef . I acre , M idd lopo•t

11 :45-Hawall

N~ W

$27 .500.
M1DDLEPORT

Any U.S, made car -p•rts
extra if needed. Excludes

19b7 FO RIJ PIC KU P. b cyl. , s td .
$d00 A lso tr uck and co • whee l s
of a ll k•nd ~ I1 49.2SbU. Charl es
I:I1 Sse ll l ong Ha lt om

T.tle
VI
Mu ~ t
be
LO V ABLI: WHI H snow dnft greet
u nemployed 15 ol lm t 70
PYREN EES Pu p p•e s .
Ph one
week s, n=.•s•den t of M e•g s Co
l -b1 4·b6 7· 383A .
n1ee 1 federa l
•ncome
guidelines Con to cr Oh1o Job
Se r v • c e ~
9 "f 78
!:qual Op - ·
p o rtun 1t y
!:m p l oye r
(I)
Corp enler helper ( I ) Cl erk

CHIP
WOOD
P ole~
mo)(
d10me ter 10'. on large st en d $EI
pe• ton Bundled sla b , S6 per
to n Oel1vered to Ohio Pollet
Co Rt 2 Pomeroy. 992-2689

---sP£GIA~-·-

1-'hane

PlAI D l O V ~ ~e ot and mat ch in g
cho11 and o tl ornon ~ e droom
SUi te A ll l1k0 fl(&gt;W 1n E')(C:ellenf
cond •t•o n 949 2761

RI SING Sl AR Kennels Boa r d1 n g
a n d groom•ng , o il breeds
C h _e~hl r e Jb7 0'292 or 367-0 106

';-? f

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

"f4] -'l07 ';)

HOOF HO l lOW Horses Buy se ll
tra de 0 1 l ro•n New and used
!. addl es Ruth R ee"e~ A lbany
(bl&lt; ) b98 J190

BAB YSITl ER FOR lc.mdergor ten
PO TA TOES FOR w in ter. Cobbl er
age child ~92 - 35-46 ~~ ~-': pm
Kenn ebec: a nd Supenor Pho ne
843 24Q1
l a m Sayre . C r eot
fla.itH~)k7
o :_ :_:
Bend SR 338 .

8 by 16 • 7 whee ts. p,
$15.00 _ 'l 700 11 16 Wi n l l:'r tires
pr . $50.00. Coli Q92-769'J .

19'f8 1-0RU ' 1 ton p1c kup 300. b
ryl
J ~ p e ed w1th oVerd,vc .
lo~ e ove r poyme n l s. Sell i ng
Qec au ~e of mov m9 .
Andy
Voug h an
Colt
5 30
pm.

C.E. T.A

-------

CO Al . l!Ml: ~IO N l ~ and grovel .
co lc •u m chl or•de. l er til1 1e1 . dog
fa..,d . a nd all ty pe s o f salt . l: 11
ce lsi or Salt Wor k s Inc 1: Mo1 n
!:, t Pom eroy (jq '] .JBq 1
I:IURHOUGH) ) f:N !:,I-MA ri C ac
co unt ing
ma ch1n e .'
Ph one
992· 2 15 b lhe Ooil y !:,en tm e l.
I II Co iJ •I Sll eet , Pomeroy .
Oh iO ;

FAMIL V Ya rd ~ale , Sept . b .
7 &amp; B. TR 79 Be hind Roc k !&gt;pr ·
m~s ~a•r groun ds

·- -

Nl::l:-DED (A ~R i l:R
304-675 1333

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

~O UR

CARPOR T SAL I: 1hur s and Fri .
I Q. 4
Boy s
7th and 8th .
DREAMING OF a w hi te Chr is t ma s
clo th. ng . SIZ es 10 an d 12.
wl!h no bil ls? Wonderful to
Numerou s o th er •terns Roa ch
lhmk about . but it could come
r esrdence
W11 gh t
St
true Be a To y l odie!r.· hosleB'
Po m eroy . Rom o r sh111e
In your home or by orders fr om
TWO ~AMil Y Yard So le . M on . an d
your fr iends . Ea rn toys and gitt s
Tuo . Sept 11- 12 Fr i an d Sot
fre e
Nome
br and
t oy s
Sept . 15- 16 . 9-d. 277 Main Mid ·
reasonably
pri ced
wllh
d lepo rt . OH .
guarantee . Gilts for th e wh ole
fam il y. For inl orrnatio n co l! YARD SAL E. 305 W r ight St .,
7d2.. 2'J77 or 992 -7050 .
Pomer o y . Oh . Sep r 6 , 7 . an d 8 .
10-5.
WORK
OVERSEAS .
Au st r a li a .
Alr~ c o , South Amer 1co . Eu r ope , HUGE
HOUS E So le on M ai n
high w ay in Sy r ecuse On left . 2
e tc
Conu r uCiian .
Sa l es .
hou ses above f ire stolle n . A n t i
l::: ng tneers Clerica l. etc . SBOOO
que bed . lot s ol clo thmg. all
to SSO 000 plus , b:pe n~e~ po1d
Fo r employme nt information
~1zes a nd many o th er things
wnte Oversea s Empl oyment .
Starlin g Se pt
7
lh•u 2Q
So m eth mg be1ng b rou ghr rn
8 011 1011 , Bo ston. Ma . 02102 .
.
'
ever y d ey
BABY SIT TER for k i nder garden age
YARD
SAU Thuls
Sept 7 and
child . Gravel H ill ar ea Afte r 5,
Q92 -34 77 ,
Frr .
Sept
8 at
M alone
M IChaels on La urel Cli ff . '2 end
OPPORTUNITY FOR students aged
table s c: lo t hm g Glasswa re .
14 to 17 fo r port ! •me evening
work Tue s. lhr u Sun 3 or 4 YA RD SA L ~ Thurs onl y 9 to ?
A cr oss form Syra cuse Pos t 0 1
nights per week Mu st not be
' l 1ce
Ch1ldren
an d
ad ul ts
•n ... ol ved 1n Bo nd or spor ts Ap
Hoby
t l e-rn~
and
clo th 111g
ply in pers o n to Done II• s P•no
clo th1ng To ys em ~e at e t&lt;
M iddlep ort . Oh1 o . No phon('
ca ll s plea se

--

MU!:,ICAt IN!:,lRUM ~ N \'::1 horns
gui le• !&gt; I lu tes clor 111eh tram
bones et£ fo .. ell or h ad e
h i es o; 3rd M rddl e por 1.

-~-

Foi ls, O h1 o . acros s f rom ga s
sto tion . Slb rt s Thu rsday 9 om
thru Satu rday

Mundi!\'

. ··=·::: -

Coll'1'12-2156.
YARD SALE . Sept . 6 &amp; 7 Hou!&gt;e
betw. . n Meigs Foi•g•ound s
and
Rock springs
M e thodist
Church o n Old JJ .

B &amp; ~ M Q ~ILI: HOMlS . PI, PleQ
sant . w . Va . bes •de Heck s.
IGI/J B• oodm a re 14 • b4 ')
bedroorn
llli' J Uorion 14 ~ 60 'l bed roo m
I GI7; Vic t or~on 14 _. 67 3 berlroo"1
L both
1917 (ove nt•y 12 x 6!1 J bedr oorn
1969 ~ t o t esmo n 1'1 I( bO '1
bedr oom .

YA RD SAL l:-. Thu rsday , Friday an d
·satur day From 10 t i l 4. 17b
M idway Dnve. N ew Haven
l"YPI::WRJT UIS PO RI Af:l l l:: !:, e lecW V . Ba by cl o th es. toy s dishes - ''"- -90"'9 10 sel!.o' 1&lt; ado Iho m~
men's a nd worTifl'll s cl o the s.
too , Fd es !:, , :!rd M id dl epo• t
9'1 2 7494 .
YARU SALE a nd a n t i que~ . l e tart

NOTICE

Cr

ANO 0 111 1110 Lo• ge d•sco un t
o n sh o t ~ hel ls . 'f) LR 12 Mag
£:' 1&lt; All l&lt;. ~nd s ol new and u!.ed
'&gt; ho t guns 11lle5 ha r1d guns
'::! o 111etunes yo u don I even need
mor, ey We trade l or ol m9s t
onythuig hf e s ~ :l1d M ,d .
d lepo• l Q9') "fol9d

IF YOU h ove a service to off et
wo nt to buy pr se ll so rnethm g
oe looki ng. l or w o rk
o•
wh ote"e ' ... you'll ge t resu lt s
fo s ter with o Sent inel Wonr A d

Business Services

Heal ~•tate for Sale

t"or S.Uc

Paul Street" 10.
Flve-0 8; 12 :oo-Janakl 33.
12 :&lt;iG-SWAT1 6.13; 12: 55-Ailas Sm ith &amp; Jones 8;

11- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Wednesday, Sept . 6, 1978

I Jl!ST SAW SOMETHING
I'D LII&lt;"E TO I-lAVE FO~
I~HCXJL ... A FIVE HUNDRED
DOLLAR LUNCH BOX !

FIVE HUNDRED
DOLLAR5 ' 1

THAT'S A LOT OF
MONEl/ TO PA'I FOR
A LUNCH BOX

ot:

BROTHER'N .LAW

LET ME TAKE
'lORE BAG,

BUBBA---

(F0 1 a copy of JACOBY MOO·
ERN. se nd Sr to: ·"Win at
Bndge. · · care or tf1is newspape r. P.O. Box 489. Radio City
Statoon. New York. N. Y ~0019. )

�12- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomer:oy, 0 .. Wednesday, Sept. 6, 1978

SQUAD CALLED
; The
Midd,leport
:Emergency Squad a115wered
·a call at 10:19 a.m. Tuesday
Jo Dutchto wn Hill near
,Pomeroy for Bradford Maag
who was having difficulty
.breathing. He was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Weather

Decision Thursday

aear tonight, lows in the
CHARLESTON, W.Va.
mid 60s. Continued warm and
(
UPI)
decision is
suMy Thursday, highs pear expected- byA Thursday
on
90 .
Probability
of when . the United Mine
precipitation near zero
Journal will publlilh
percent today . toni ght and . Workers
West Virginia Supreme Court
Thursday.
Justice Darrell McGraw' s
interview in Penthouse,
The controversial pro-labor
interview appeared in last
month 's edition of the girlie
magazine.
At last month's meeting ol
the state council of the Coal
Miners Political Action Com·
mittee, delegates agreed to
include the article in the
Journal, along with a series
of newspaper articles by
Thomas Mliler of the
Huntington Herald-Dispatch.
Miller's work was titled,
" Who
Owns
West
Virginia ?"
•
UMW President Arnold
Miller said he would have
both included in the Journal.
Journal Editor Harold

\

ALL SUMMER PIECE GOODS
HURRY IN

Voyles Mid the next edition
would preaent Information
about the Union's western
Canadian district . . Voyles
vowed to try to project when
the Penthouae article could

Testing

~lated

Mason County School's Mason County Board ol
Speech, Langu)lse, and Education, Point Pleasanl,
Hearing Department will W. Va. prior to Sept. 18.
begin its annual county wide
screening pro1ram Monday,
Sept. !8. All children in early
childhood education and first
grade will · be screened to
identify speech and language
Two suits for dissolution
problems. AU children in and one for divorce have been
early childhood education liled in Meigs County Com·
and grades one through three moil Pleas Court.
will be screened to identify
Filing for dissolution were
hearing problems.
Ulllan I. Weese, Racine, and
If there are any questions Don C. Weese, Racine; Vicki
concerning the screening Bradshaw, Syracuse, and
procedures or if a parent does Arthur Bradshaw, Pomeroy.
not want their child to par·
Filing · for divorce were
ticipate in the screening Bernice Coffey, Middleport,
program contact Harry Nye against Stephen W. Coffey,
PARTY SLATED
Cramer, Coordinator of Ft. Myers, Fla.
There will be a products Speech-Language Pathology,

Dissolutions,
divorce filed

Area.Death S

party at Hemlock Grange - - - - - - - - - - - - - . - - - - - - - - - • - - Hall Thursday at 7:30 p.m. I
I
~t;:~xone is welcome to

I
I

JULIA MARCUM
MEET THUIISDA Y
Ju)ia
Runyon Marcum, 80,
Evangeline Chapter, Order
a
resident
of Wilkesville, died
of Eastern Star, will meet at
at
Doctor's
Hospital · in
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Columbus
Pomeroy,
0.
Tuesday
.af·
Second St.
temple in Middleport.
ternoon.
She was born July 7, 1898, In
Martin County, Ky., daughter
of the late Harrison and
. Louisa Harden Runyon.
Eight daughters and one
son survive; Edith Newsome
and Lucy Maynard, both of
Ewington; Famie Maynard,
Racin.e; · Olive , Newsome,
Hamden; Opal Metheney,
Ewington; Ernestine Qay,
Amesville; Eva Lou Lawson,
Pleasantville;
Shirley
Parsley, Ewington ; John
Marcum,
Hamden ; · 47
grandchildren, 44 great·
grandchildren,
three
brothers and one . sister
survive.
She was preceded in death
(Tomato&amp;Lettuce ·
by her husband, Sammy
· . ·
·
Sc Extra i
·
l\1arcum in 1958. One son and
one daughter, three sisters
and two brothers preceded
her In death.
She was a member of the
HRS.: lO:OOA.M. tilll :00 P.M. Sun .-Thurs. 10 :00 A.M.tll12 :00 P.M. Friday ond
Saturday.
Utile Flock Old Regular
See Us At the Pomeroy Bend Bridge
Baptist Church at Ray .
Funeral services will be

THE FABRIC SHOP

This Week's
Dairy Valley

SPECIALS
.BURGER 49~· F:I~~GER7- g~
&amp;

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

don't

carry
cash to
college

be run.
Some technical problems
must be worked out lniUally,
111d Pen!house must agree,
he said.
·From his Washington
Oftice, Voyles doubted that
any insurmountable .
probleJJ18 were posed .

I

I

held at the church 2 p.m.
Friday. Burial will be iii
Marcum Cemetery.
Friends 'may call at the
church after 2 p.m. Thursday .
Funeral arrangements are
under the · direction of the
McCoy-Moore
Funeral
Home.

EDNA RUSSELL
'
Mrs. Earl (Edna) Russell,
Louisa Ky.~ former Pomeroy
resident, died Sept 2 in an
Asbian~, Ky., hospital.
She IS sumved by her
husband, Earl, one son,
Garland, Qevelaud, and a
daughter~ Mary Frances ol
Cahforma, four grand·
children, three siSters, .three
brothers and a host of meces,
nephews ·and friends .
Services were held today at
I p.m. at the Warfteld Ken- ·
~ucky Chapel, Warl1eld.
una! Will . be_ m Moore
Cemetery, P1Igrun, Ky.

HOSPITALNEWS VeteraDI Memorial Hotpllal
Admitted - Gayle Oliver,
Middleport; Debra Fleming,
Long Bottom; Jo · Ann
McLau'ghliil, Pomeroy; Jesse
Swan, Langsville; Rhonda
Jones, Rutland.
Discharged - George
Warner, Brian Hartwell ,
Tracy Schrimsher , Carol
Dodderer, Roy Frecker,
Gwendolyn Williamson, Alan
Mills.

Patrol
probes
3 wrecks
The Gallla·Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, Investigated
three accidents Tuesday.
Still under investigation is
a hit-skip accident which
occurred Tuesday evening on
Mill Creek Rd,, Just south of
Georges Creek Rd.
According to the patrol, an
auto driven by Stanley E.
Jones, 47, Gallipolis, was
north bound on Mill Creek,
followed by an unidentified
vehicle.
The Jones auto slowed for
an oncoming south bound
vehicle, and was struck in the
rear by the unidentified auto,
which then left the scene.
The Jones vehicle incurred
moderate damage.
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-vehicle mishap
on SR 160, one and eight·
tenths of a mile south of U.S.
35, at 1:15 p.m.
The patrol reports that a
vehicle operated by Ellis
Kingery, 52, Kitts H!U, 0 .,
was stopped for a nagman on
160.
An Ohio Bell Telephone van
driven by Ray Fisher, 48,
Gallipolis, failed to stop, and
struck the Kingery vehicle in
the rear.
Fisher was cited on
charges of assured clear
distance. Both vehicles in·
curred sljght damage.
The patrol investigated a
one:Uuto accident at 4:40
p.m ., on CR 26,just east of SR
7, in Meigs County.
Officers report that a
vehicle operated by Gregory
Glaze, 19, Pomeroy,trilvellng

Holzer Medical Ceater
Dlacbarces, Sept. 5
Derqetrla Barker; Carl
Bonecutter; Mrs. Paul Bright
and son; Arthur Cain; Cheryl
Oark; Denzil Clelaud; Ethel
CoPley; Debra Kuhn; John
Ml-Guire; Coia Miaer; Mrs.
David Pliillips aud son; Reba
S&lt;:hwarz; John Severt; Nan·
cy Sheets;,Mimi Slone; Toyja
Stapleton; Mrs. Emmett
Thompson and daughter ;
Deborah Walburn; Zelia
White.
BIJ1hs
Mr. and Mrs, Qyde Srruth,
daughter, Bidwell.

Peace
(Continued from page

1)

meeUni ~ the three leaders

is elll*ted ~t.er .
The three partiea, incliJC!lns
foreign minlaters and a !111all
stalf, dined eeparately In
their lodsee Tlle8day. Belin ·
brought his delenae minister,
Ezer Weianan, but Sadllt did
not Iring his minister ol
delense, Moham·med
G111111188y.
Egyptian olficiais ~aid
Gamassy's absence was
deliberate because Sadat did
not want to discula 111y
details of the military
situation in the Sinal. He
considers the return of the
· Sinai to be a cloaed issue,
which should not be raised at
this summit.
Israeli officials said Begin
arrived
for the swmnit in an
Six defendants were fined
extremely
elated mood, in
and a seventh forfeited bond
contrast
to
his
grim and sober
iii the court of Middleport
attitude
durins
his first two
Mayor
Fred
Hoffp1an
meetings
with
Carter.
Tuesday night.
- ·
Three Issues are expected
Fined were Robert Dugan,
to
dcrninate 1he talks:
42, Rutland, S50 and costs,
-Terms
for
Israeli
disorderly manner.; David F,
withdrawal
from
the
West
Smith, Middleport, $15 and .
Bank;
Gaza
strip
and
the
ciists, spinning tires; Donald
Sinai
peninsula.
Lovett, 5li, Middleport, r $100
-The final nature of the
and costs, disorderly man·
peace
that would be declared
ner; George A. McDaniel, 50,
1111 a result of the Israeli
Middleport, $100 and costs,
disorderly manner; Harry withdrawals.
- The role the PalestlnlallB
Chesher, 72, Middleport, $10
win
be able to play in the
and costs, failure to yield the
determination
of their own
right of way, and Roger B.
future,
iii
their
own state.
Pearch, 23, Pomeroy, $25 and
In
addition,
American
olfi·
costs, failure to have vehicle
ciala
said
they
expect
the
under control.
crisis.iil
Lebanon
to
be
raised
Forfeiting a $53 bond
posted on speeding charges durinl the course of the
rambling
was J. T. Warner, 22, Mid· informal,
diacussions.
dleport .
Begin described the
summit "as the most
Important,
the
most
DEFENDER'S FEE
momentous" of all · the
State Auditor Thomas E. meetings that he has held
Ferguson's office reported a with Sadat and Carter.
total of $400,213.78 has been
Sadat said, "I pray to God
sent to 82 Ohio counties as Almighty to guide us in this
reimbursement for costs great endeavor and to enable
incurred under Ohio's public us to B!.'hieve the noble goal
defender program. Meigs which Inspired President
County's portion
was Carter to call for this
I!,G:i6.22.
conference. This Inspiration
is and shall remain a brave
and
gallant
act
of
statesmanship."
But Sadat's remarks also
west on 26, failed to negotiate
contain~d
an
Implicit
a curve, passed off the
warning.
He
said,
"No
one
roadway, and struck a tree
lias
the
right
to
bloc;k
the
road
and an embankment.
The vehicle incurred slight to peace. This Ia no tbne for
damage. There was no report manuevers and worn-out
ideas. It is a time for
of Injury.
magnaminity and reaaon."

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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. Thursday, September 1, 1978

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Carter was grinning
broadly , Sadat was gesluring
expansively cand Begin was
watching Sadat pleasantly.
The meeting, planned as an
overall view of the problems
to be solved, look ~place on a
sunnecked paUo with the
three seated around a simple
redwOQd plank table.
It was the . U.S. intention,
administration officials said,
lor Carter to enter the
dial o~ue
only ,,.~,or, thr

e

conve rsation between t~e issue of the Pcilestinians.
Egyptian and Israeli leaders
The news blackout that
ran into rough places.
Carter had ordered lor the
One official said, " I can tell .summit was near perfect. In
you what the plan was. What I one of the few leaks, Israeli
can't tell you is what the diplomatic sources said
Israeli Defense Minister Ezer
president actually did."
It was the first negotiating Weizman met for 25 minutes
session between Sadat and with Sadat late Wednesday
Begin. since last December afternoon . American officials
when their second meeting refused to confirm or deny
failed to produce any grounds the report.
There had been an earlier,
for agreement on the crucial
chance rne rti nJ.! hPtween

•

at y

Sadat,BeginandWeizman oo
a mountain trail Wednesday
morning.
Sadal and Begin, on
separate stro lls through
woods inside the heavily
guarded compound, met on
one of the trails. White House
spokesman Jody Powell said
they chatted for a while and
Weizman, riding a bicycle,
joined the conversation when
he happened by.

By Bob HoeRleb
While traveling through the
parking lot in Pomeroy
Wednesday afternoon · I
· spotted not one - .but two beautiful white boats similar
to the smaU excursion boats
which visit us from time to
time.
I couldn't resist a better
look at the two boats with
their bright red paddle
wheels and black smoke
stacks, accented in a mat·
chlng red, so I parked the car
and ventured forth.
Approaching the landing
there just dldn 'I seem to be
much action around either
craft. I was willing to bet that
an excursion was planned iii
town and I hadn 'I heard a bout
it.
About the time I was ready
to vote in favor of that
general conclusion, two
ladies walked from the boats
up the levee, towards the
business iection.
Since one has to be a bit
"gutsy" to be ln the
newswriting business, I
asked the ladies a couple of
questions regard!.nl their
connection with .the boats.
Sure enough, they were
passengers. The two boats
had moored at the Pomeroy
levee because of a water
pump problem.
I learned the boats are ·
privately owned and Jhat the
persons aboard were on the
way to Marietta to attend the
boat regatta this· weekend.
Finally, my questions
became.so numerous and my
curiosity so apparent, that
one of the ladies asked me if I
would like to go aboard and
look the crafts over.
Well, who was Ito refuse at
Jhis point, so on board I went.
I was escorted
to
beautifully comfortable
living quarters on the first
deck of the " Bayer ,Island". I
(Continued on page 13)

Alter the first !ormal
summit meeting , Sadat made
an unannounced 45-minute
trip by car through the
Maryland countryside.
American spokesmen said
the trip was Sadat 's idea and
happened
be cause
he
admired the beauty of the
green Maryland mountains.
While Sadat was taking the
drive, the Carters and the
Begins strolled around the
presidential r•troot .

entine

Newsman
tours
crafts

The
first
official
communication from the
swrunit was an unsigned but
jointly iss ued statement
asking "pe&lt;&gt;ple of all faiths to
pray with us that peace and
justice may result !rom these
deliberations.''
After the first meeting of
the three leaders, Carter met with Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance and national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski.

Fifteen Cents
V.ol. 29 , No. 101

I

I

CAPT, Clifford T, Deane at the pilot wheel of the Bayer Island which stopped at the
Pomeroy levee Wednesday afternoon.

Miller running again
BLACKSBURG, Va. (UPi)
Arnold Miller, the
beleaguered president of the
United Mine Workets, says
he plans to run for a third
term despite health problems
and a movement among
young dissidents to replace
him.
"I'm goins to stay for the
remainder of this lerm and
I'm gomg to run again when
this term is up. I think I've
got a. lot to prove yet . The
dissenting factor is a very
small minority," Miller said
Wednesday. ·
Miller said he has bounced
back from a series of health
setbacks and is still more
qualified to lead the coal
miners union than any
potential successor on the
horizon.
"I recommend that they
gel their candidate ready lor
lour and a half years from
now, and I'm going to beat
him and put him back in the
barn where he belongs,"
Miller said.

Ualted Press !Dternatloaal
. NEW YORK- PAN AMERICAN WORLD Airways and
National Airlines announced today that they reached a formal
weement to merge.
"
H approved by the ClvU Aeronautics Board, the merger
wt11 !ulftll Pan Am'a :IG-year dream of getting domestic routes,
a goal which has been thwarted by the federal government
through successive administrations.

EUREKA CANISTER

1

after the Moslem, Jewish and
Christian holy days.
Administration spokesman
resolutely
refused
to
characterize the first !-hour,
4().minute meeting between
President Carter, President
Anwar Sadat ahd Prime
Minister Menachem Begin,
but White House photographs
of the summit showed an
apparently friendly and even
jovial mood .

i,.J~r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

..

POMEROY ,·OHIO

'

By JIM AN(&gt;EIISON
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)
- The Camp David summit
has succeeded in its first goal
of reopening the dialogue
between Egypt and Israel in
an atmosphere of informality
and apperent good will.
White House officials said
the thtee particpants In the
summit would hold their
second fuU meeting today,
and then take a three-day
break, resuming on MnndA)'

Mayor's Court

IJAY
BY.

Farmers Bank

Dialogue between Egypt and Israel reopens

Miller made the comments and make i! more difficult to
at the Ninth Annual Institute meet the nation's demand lor
on Coal Mining Health, Safety coal," he said.
J. Allen Overton Jr., presiand Research at Virginia
Tech. The conference is dent of the American Mining
sponsored by Tech, the Cong.ress, said he was
Federal Bureau of Mines and worried about the effect of
government
the Mine Safety and Health increased
regulation on the industry.
Administration.
" There
are
some
· Gov . Julian Carroll of Ken·
tucky . said government governmental regulations
regulations are forcing many that I consider to be
smaller strip mine operators unne cessary, unsound,
uneconomical, unproductive
out of business.
· "We're finding a number of and uninformed," Overton
small operators are folding said.
" I confess that coal mine
their tents up and getting out
of the business," Carroll said. owners and operators were
" I hope that doesn't all wo often guilty of sins in
continue to be the example the past," Overton said .
But the lack ol concern for
because if it does it 's going to
reduce our coal production
(Continued on page 13)

PUCO dismisses
two complaints
COLUMBUS, Oh10 ( UPI) Two c:Omplaints concerning
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. and Qeveland
Electric Jlluminating Co.
advertising practices have
been dismissed by the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio.
Sandra Sterret of Ohioans
for Utility Reform and state
Sen. Michael Schwarzwalder,
RColumbus, filed
the
complaints in Ocwber, 1976.
They said the PUCO should
prohibit political,
loiltitutional or promotional
advertising by utilities, that
certain advertisements were
misleading and advertising
expenses should not be borne
by the taxpayers.
Wednesday,
the
commission
said
a
corporation's right
to
advertise on political issues
being presented to voters has
been upheld by the Supreme
Court, which struck down a
Massachusetts law that
would have restricted
corporate advertising on
ballot issues.
Commissioners said the
complaints would have had ID
show that the utilities'
advertising activities were
Injurious to the public
welfare in • order for a
prohibition against political
advertising to be sustained .

The commission , in ruling
on the allegation that certain
advertising was false and
misleading, concluded that
the evidence presented did
not support the claim.
fn addition, the PUCO ruled
that blanket disallowance of
advertising expenses would
not be in the best interest of
Ohio's utility customers.
Advertising expenses are
considered on a case-by-case
basis in rate proceedings,
where all of a utility's
expenses and activities are
examined, Ole commission
pointed out.

'"~-'''

THE BOAT pictured doesn't have a name inscribed on
it yet but it is the J. J. Julkast Ill, one of two excursion

type boats which docked at the Pomeroy levee Wednesday
afternoon. The second boat, the Bayer Island, is on the

other side of this one, Both boats are owned by Capt. and
Mrs. Qifford T. Deane of Winfield, W. Va. This boat was
named using the letters making up the first letters in the
names ol the Deanes' grandchildren.

Soviets convict businessman
.

'

By CHARLES M. MADIGAN
MOSCOW ( UPI) - A
Soviet court today convicted
American businessman F.
Jay Crawford on currency
specuiatioo charges, but gave
him a suspended five-year
sentence that opened the door
for him w leave the country.
Crawford immediately
applied for an exit visa .
Crawford, rl, said he was
not surprised at the
conviction, adding: "It's not
what I wanted but it'~ what I
got." He insisted agai.n that
he was innocent.

He rushed from the court·
house, got into his Volvo
station wagon and sped to the
U.S. Embassy. where he
began filling out an
application for a official
Soviet permission to leave the
country.

"I want to get out ol here as
soon as they give me an exit
visa," Crawford said. "It
usually takes about seven
days, but I hope we can speed
it up a bit."
He said he would go on
vacation as soon as he gels
out or the country'
Judge Lev Mironov read
the indictment against
Crawford and three Soviet codefendants, who pleaded
. guilty, and then said the state
had proved its case. He made
no mention of evidence from
Crawford that had weakened
the state's presentation.
Crawford could have been
given a maximum sentence
of eight years in prison
followed by live years of
Siberian exile. He said he had
already packed his bags and
belongings and needed only

tile Soviet visa before he can years in a prison labor camp
leave the country.
and confiscated his property.
CraWford said he was not Kiselev's wife Ludmila got a
happy with the verdict in the live-year suspended sentence
case, insisting even alter the and left the court in tears.
sentence was passed that he The other co-defendant, Alya
was innocent or charges he Solovyova, . re ceived lour
exchanged $8,500 for 20,000 years in a prison labor camp
rubles on the Moscow and
confiscation
of
currency black market.
property .
When Mironov finished
Crawford !ought hard
reading the sentence agains\ throughout the tw&lt;Klay trial
Crawford and the Russian co- for a complete acquittal. His
defendants,
about
20 Soviet attorney, Leonid
Russians who were allowed Popov, told the court the KGB
into the trial applauded.
had failed to prove its case
One looked at a reporter against Crawford and
and said "kan eshna" insist ed that he be found
Russian for "of course ."
innocent of the charge.
The judge sentenced
But Mironov, citing six
Vladimir Kise lev to five pieces of evidence including
testimony !rom the Russian
co-defendants, said the state
had "completely proved its
case." Irollically, four of the
pieces of evidence he cited
were those most heavily
challe nged in Crawford 's
presentation .

Fairhoard
election

The annual election of the
Meigs Cuunty Fair Board also known as the board of
directors of the Meigs County
Agricultural Society - has
been set for Nov. 6.
Although traditionally held
at the office of the Meigs
Cuunty Commissioners in the
HOUSTON -OUT OF FRUSTRATION, Troung Tran and
courtho.use , this year's
his wife armed themselves and sat up ·to guard against the
election
will be held at the
burglars who had been invading their home almost nightly.
secretary's
office on the Rock
Early Tuesday, Tran saw a figure on the second noor of his
Springs
Fairgrounds.
Judge Homer E. Abele,
housing project heme and fired, not realizing it was ~is wife,
Hours
will
be
from
5
to
9
McArthur,
Presiding Judge
Ha Tam Thl Lee, 34. She died later at Hennann Hospital.
p.m. and anyone holding a olthe Fourth District Court of
membership card, actually a Appeals, ·announced lour
IJMA, PERU - POLICE IN ARMORED cars smashed
membership ticket pur- cases are scheduled to be
through a barrier at a college campus to oust S,OOO striking
chased
for entrance into the heard on September 13, when
R. G. WORKMAN
miners and their fam!Ues, then used tear gas and nightsticks to
D. J . LOVE
1978
Meigs
County Fair, at the court convenes in Meigs
Robert
Black,
Rt
.
I.
Port·
break up a civil servants' walkout in the capital.
least
15
days
prior to the Cuunty.
land,
was
hired
as
a
laborer
At least 20 miners were injured- some with buUet wounds·
election
is
eligible
to vote.
In addition to Judge Abele ,
under
the
CETA
Title
Ill
-when the pollee vehiclea crashed through barricades at the
Who
can
run
for
a
scat
on
the
Court is comprised of
special
projects
program
entrance to the medical scl)ool at Uma 's San 1 Marcos
the
board?·
Any
resident
of
Judge
Earl E. Stephenson or
when the Meigs . County
Univerllity Wedntlday and smashed the shelters miners have
Meigs
Cuunty
holding
a
1978
Portsmouth,
Ohio and Judge
Commissioners met In
·- d for three weeki.
membership
ticket
at
least
Lawrence
Grey
of Alhens,
regular session Tuesday
E.
H.
Gloss,
Plant
Manager
for
15
days
prior
to
the
Ohio.
night.
promot;uns to Perfonnance
KIRTLAND, OHIO - THE SUSPENSION of Kirtland
.The Co urt of Appeals
The position of secretary at the Phlllp Sporn ''Plant in Engineer, Senior and then election. Persons wishing to
Police Ollef Edward A. Minor for Insubordination has been
file
for
a
seat
may
secure
a
directly
reviews all cases
New
HHven,
&amp;Mounced
two
Performance Supervising
for the iilfirmary was tabled
cmtlnl!.'l!llndellnltely by Mayor Wesley I. Phillips.
petition
from
Mrs.
Muriel
·
heard
or
tried
in lower courts
promotions
effective
Sept.
I.
for
additional
study
by
the
Engineer,
where
he
served
Mlilor'l two-week fllllllellllon with pay wu to have ended
Bradford
,
secretary
.
A
D.
J
.
Love,
Performance
in
which
a
decision
is being
superintendent
of
the
in·
wttil
September
I.
Love
and
today. But In extendinl the llllpenslon Wednesday, the JJ18yor
petition
is
to
be
signed
by
at
appealed.
These
cases
may
Supervising
Engineer,
was
lirmary.
his
wile
have
one
son
and
one
aiiO ~~~ paylnl the chief.
Wesley Buehl, county promoted to · Production daughter. The family resides least 10 members ol the have been tried in Common
society and returned to Mrs. Pleas, Probate or Juvenile , ·
engineer, mel with the board Superintendent-Operations,
in Gallipolis.
NASHVU..LE, TEN!-4. - PSYCHOLOGICAL examiners
DRIVERS
MEETING
Bradford no later than Oct. Municipal or Cuunty Courts,
and
R.
G.
Workman,
discussing
a
furnace
problem
of
Workman,
a
native
today -nre to complete preliminary te811 to determine
All
transportation
pe~·
30.
and may be either civil or
Chemist,
was
promoted
to
at
the
county
garage
and
Harrisburg,
Pennsylvania,
whether a former menial petlent who claims he killed 17
sonnel
Including
bus
drivers
There
are
Perf
or
mance
Engineer,
live
seats
open
criminal cases.
Judge
Manning
Webster
graduated
from
Rio
Grande
·
per81a In two yo.-. lhot~ld be hospltallud for further
of
Southern,
Eastern
and
Senior.
on
the
board
this
year,
Terms
The Fourth Distri&lt;;t Court
discussed
the
mental
College
in
!977
with
a
Pl)'ddltrlc eumlnlltlonl.
Meiga
Local
School
District
Love
was
born
in
Perry
are
for
three
years.
Those
of
Appeals serves fifteen
retardation
program.
Bachelor
of
Science
degree
in
Plydllatrl~ eumlnatlon wu ordered Wedneaday for
are
Invited
to
a
bus
safety
whose
terms
expire
this
year
counties
in Southern Ohio.
CounJy,
Ohio.
He
received
a
It
was
reported
Americare
Chemistry.
He
came
to
Sporn
Kenneth Q. Tayler, '11, of North Uma, Ohio, bloctlnllawmen
meeting
at
7:30
this
evening
include
Wallace
Bradford,
Bachelor
ol
Science
degree
in
They
are
Adams, Athena,
has
begun
construction
of
the
Plant
last
year
as
a
chemist
,._ qilestloninl him for 11 least two - • about his claims.
at Meigs Junior High School nursing home on Old Sit 33. Chemistry from Rio Grande and served in that capacity who serves as president; Brown, Gallia, Highland,
Attending were Henry Cnllegc In 1970. Love was untll his recent promotion . Danny Zirkle, Fred Goeglein,. Hockir)g, Jackson, Lawrence,
· OOLUMBUS -OHIO NATURAL RESOURCES Director cafeteria in Middleport. A
hi1hway
patrol
represen·
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim employed at Sporn Plant In Workman and his wif~ also C. W, Henderson and )Ierman Meigs; Pickaway, Pike, Ross,
RDbtrt W. Taller denied Weclnuday thlit the halel industry
Carson. All five have filed for Scioto,
Vinton
and
reside in Gallipolis.
Wluenced the Rhodeladmlnlllration'a declalon to use private tatlve will speak and a film ~&gt;n Roush, commissioners and 1970 as a chemist.
sale
driving
will
be
shown.
In
1977,
he
received
Mary
Hobstener,
clerk.
reelection to their posts.
Washington.
manasera 11 llate lodsea Instead of state employes. ·
'
t
'

Appeals
court
•
meetmg

Laborer

employed

Pair promoted

•

'

.,

.

- .

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