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                  <text>12 - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednellday, Sept. 13, 1971

•

·President Carter, Begin hold secret session
By JIM ANDERSON
residence.
_governed by Jordan.
CAMP DAVID. Md. (UPI )
Carter met Tuesday
'Since Sunday's Carter- President Carter and morning with Sadat fir an BeglnmeeUng, thebulkofthe
Israeli Prime Minister hour and 35 minutes.
discussions have Involved the
Menachem Begin met for 90
There was no explanation Americsns and the Egyptians
minutes Tuesday night in a for the official secrecy about as Carter apparently sought
secret session held as the the Carter-Begin meeting, to refine and clarify areas of
camp David summit con- which took place oo the agreement.
ference weighed proposals on eighth day of the summit at
As a kind of holding pattern
the future of Israeli - oc- this secluded mountaintop develops with each side
cupiedlandontheWestBank retreat.
reviewing proposals ,
of the Jordan River.
There was no Indication coolerence officials say the
W1rd of the Begin-Carter 'that a meeting between final outcome of the summit
meeting _ their first since Carter, Begin and Egyptian · remains in the hands of
. Sunday - was first relayed President Anwar Sadat was Sadat.
by conference sources and In the offing today .
Officials now consider it
~firmed by officials this
Summit sources said it was likely the cooference will end
morning ooly after they were major - although not by any · by Thursday at the earli~st .
Confronted with the news by means the only - problem ..Tite first meetings of the
reporters.
remaining in the way of more principals began a week a•o.
. A White House spokesman, direct negotiations is Sadat's
Israeli sources said it is not
Jerrold Schecter, eventually Insistence that the Israelis true, as reported by
. ~cknowledged that the unan- commit. themselves to an televi~on reporters, that the
nounced, private meeting had eventual wilhdrawallrom the Israelis have put forward
taken place fill' 90 minutes in occupied
West
Bank new proposals on the
Aspen Lodge, carter's territories, formerl y Palestinian question.
But the Israelis, Americans
and Egyptians agree the
Israeli delegation has put
forward a series of new ideas
m the West Banlt, and Sadat
has checked those ideas by
telephone with King Hussein
of Jordan.
The conference sources
RING anO PENDANT In
said the holding pattern; a
diamonds at unbelievably
series of cootinuing dialogues
low priCeS . Sl'll!l'll love 10
between the delegations, has
wn r this h1gh lu hlon
turned the tightly secluded
matcnll'lg 111.
Camp David meeting place
into kind of a Middle East .

bazaar with ideas being a s ' ' u n in f o r rn e d
changed and
modlfed speculation," but since he is
coostantly in the inf&lt;ll'mal the only authoritative official
coolacts which are possible 1n source, there can be no
the JX"esidential retreat.
determination
of
the
The security remains ·accuracy of the rep1r1s untU
apparently perfect. Powell the participants . leave the
has described several reports compound.

Ap'/)al team ends
summer
The early weeks of Sep!ember mark the return to
school of not only the Meigs
County students, but also the
students who were members
of the Appal Corps Health
Team Project in Meigs
County during the summer.
The Appal Corps project Is a
continuing program condueled by the Consortium for
Health Education in Appalachia Ohio (CHEAOI to
provide actual working experiences in a community
setting for health discipline
students.
The Meigs team members'
were part of a rigorous
competition before their
selection ll)! CHEAO to
become members of the
Appal Corps program. The
students on the Meigs team

115 CARAT

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•

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It is expected that both
Sadat aJid Begin will. spend
tw~ or three days Ill the
Umted. Slates after the
conclUSion of the conference.
Among the most relia~le
sou~ces of lnformallon
continue to be the carefully

selected olflclal pholograp~
that ~e put out by the
delegallons In Camp David.
They.show the atmosphere ID
be relued and Informal.
The three JX"Incipala have
not. mel together since last
Thursday • but Powell

HOSPITAL NEWS

csutloned not to draw any
eonciUIIons from the abllence
of such a meeting.
carter and Sadat met f1r 1
hour and 36 min.utes Tuellday
and the , Egyptian and
American delegatlona mel
later, but there has been no
meeting Involving the lsraell
delegatloo In the iaat :u
ho~s,lndicatlnglhependlnde g
decialons mUll be ma by
the Egyptians.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pleasant Valley Hoopltal
ADMITTED - Herbert
DISCHARGES - Freda
Gilkey , Middleport; Howard Woyan, Southside; Jackie
J
Nutter, Reedsville; Sandra Hudson, ·Pt. Pjeasant; Mrs.
Two defendants forfeited
Reed, Pomeroy ; Flora Bobby Kinnaird, Southside;
were: Roy Gandolfi, medical Dono h u e, Pomeroy ; Mrs.
Bobby
Sturgill, bonds and two others were
student ,
Ann
Arbor, Jacquelyn.Ginther, Portland; Jackson ; Mrs . William fined In the court of Pomeroy
Michigan; Bob Smith, Violet Stover, Cheshire; Kinnaird, Gallipolis Feri'y; Mayor Clarence Andrews
medical student , Cincinnati ; Thomas Gibbs, Coolville; Robert
German,
Pt. Tuesday night .
Carl King, Jr., New Haven,
Mary Kay Grimm, nursing Edna Belew, Cheshire; Pleasant ; Lj&gt;nnie Toney,
forfeited
a $50 bond posted on
student , Milwaukee; Mary Myrtle' Hayes, Pomeroy; Ashton; Rebecca Laudera
improper
passing charge
Ellen Beardmore, medical Denise Qualls, Pomeroy ; milt, Mason ; Charles Hesson,
and Danny Zirkle, Pomeroy,
dietitian, Newark , Ohio: and Mary Roush, Phoenix, Ariz. Pt. Pleasant.
John McCartney, health
DISCHARGED - Melanie
BIRTH - A daughter to forfeited a $50 bond posted on
education, Toledo. During the Grueser , William Stephen- Mr. and Mrs. Jackie a charge of discharging a
firearm in the village.
students' eight-week stay in son, Marguerite !!Iaker, Donohue, Pliny.
Fined were Don Hill, Point
Meigs County, housing was Brady Knapp, Erma Wilson,
Pleasant .l!o and costs, and
provided by Mr. and Mrs. Charles Nunn, William RiehRichard Peyton, Dexter, $33
Mike Otto of Racine, Ohio and mond .
and costs, both on speeding,
by Marty Geyer, the com- ·
charges.
munity coordinator.
The team · conducted
Five defendants were fined
diabetic screenings in conIn
Middleport Mayor Fred
junction with the Meigs
Hoffman's
court Tuesday
County Health Department, ·
night.
the Meigs Senior Citizens
They were Paul E. Clark,
Center, Meigs County Mental
29, Middleport, and James A.
Health Center and the Ohio
Pennestri, 29, Delsey, Md.,
Depaltment of Health. They
Minnie Marie Abbott to
conducted diabetic education Martin Gene Abbott, Carroll
$225 and costs each and three
classes, and assisted the L. Abbott, 100 acre lot, I acre,
days in jail, each on charges
county health department in Salisbury.
of driving while intoxicated;
blood pressure screening.
Narsa L. Moodispaugh, 19,
Marvin W. Reed, Darlene
After working three days ·a M. Reed to Monongahela
Middleport, $15 and costs,
· week on the community Power Co., Easement, Olive.
speeding ; George A. McDarilel, 50, Middleport, and
project, the team members
Clifford B. Lamp, ·Edna C.
D~tnald Lovett, 55, Midspent two days with local Lamp to Leroy Hendrix, Judy
preceptors . Preceptors for E . Hendrix, 1.919 acres,
dleport, $100 and costs each
the team members were Dr. Orange.
on disorderly manner
Lewis Telle ; Dr. John
charges.
Earl W. Owens, ·Betty J.
Forfeiting bonds in the
Ridgway; Diana Eberts of Owens to Paul A. English,
RETIRES- Clareace R.
court
posted on speeding
the Meigs County Extension Brenda L. English, Lot 14,
Casella has herome the
Office ; Opal Grueser, Meigs Hickory Acres, Orange.
charges
were Sherry L.
first maa to retire lrom
County Health Department:
Lusher,
18,
Langsville, and
Drema Roach, Raymond
Ohio Power Company's
and Nancy Kohlreiser , Roach to Raymond Roach,
Fae
R.
Reibel.
20, Pomeroy,
Gavin Plaat. Mr. Casella, a
Community Mental Health in Drema Roaoh, 2.35 acres,
$27
each.
maintenance man·B,
Gallipolis.
Salisbury.
began his 31-year company
The team unanimously
Kathryn Denison to Jack L.
career at Philo Plant. He
expressed appreciation for Bart rum, V. Joyce Bart rum,
wag transferred to Gavin
the time and guidance given 4 acres, Rutland.
Plant In 1915. Co-workers
to them by the preceptors and
Evelyn Perry to James R.
presented him with a
they also noted that Marty Posler, Beverly Marlene
bicycle
upon
his
Geyer, the community Posler, Palmer's 2nd Add.,
retirement, figuring be bas
coordinator, was invaluable Middleport.
walked enough around
A judgment action in the
in her help to them.
Leo
Kennedy,
Jr .,
power plants during his amount ol $5,916.07 was flied
During the debriefing held Executor ; Leo Kennedy, Sr.,
career. He Is a bowling in Meigs County Common
by CHEAO for the student dec. to James E. Reynolds,
enthusiast, and Is a Pleas Court by George E.
teams at Lake Hope in late Patricia Ann Reynolds ,
member of lbe compaay's . Morris and Mary Elizabeth
August , the Mei gs team Parcels, Middleport.
Veteran
Employees' · Morris, Pomeroy, against,
agreed that its experience in
William Chase, Eunice
Assoclallon. The Casellas Kenna Bu.sh, Cheshire, and
the community had been Chase to Dalton B. Grover,
wlll move to 9U Seborn George Collins, county
outstanding, not only in Barbara Ann Grover, ParAve., Zaaesvllle.
treasurer. The suit Is for
learning skills but in cels, Salisbury.
money due on a prirnlssory
discovering the realities of
Thomas E. Fowler, Mary
note.
rural medicine which cannot Fowler to Stephen H. Taylor,
Judge John C. Bacon has
he taught in a school. They Brenda K. Taylor, I acre,
ASSUME CONTROL
dissolved
the following
also agreed that it had not Rutland.
KENT, Ohio (UPI)
marriages:
·
been all work; there had been
Employees of the nation's
Patricia
Triplett,
Rt. I,
time for a lot of fun in Meigs
largest tree service comPortland
and
David
Triplett,
j)!lny, Davey Tree Expert Co.
County, too.
p
d
The students had several
omeroy squa
of Kent , will take over the no address recorded;
Patricia A. Woodyard and
business.
regrets in leaving Pomeroy, answerS 3 calls
James
.H. Woodyard ;
however; the summer was
Davey Board Chairman
Margaret
Barrett
and James
over too soon ; there was no
The Pomeroy Emergency Alexander M. Smith , a Barrett; Auston Newsome
way for them to personally Squad answered three calls member of the board for 32
thank the many people who Tuesday . At I : 10 p.m. the years, said the board decided and Sandy Newsome ; Unda
had helped them; and there squad went to Union Ave. for to tum over the company to Sue Wolfe and Monte Ray
was no way to personally say Ben Eblin who ·was taken to its 3,000 employees because It Wolfe; Mltzlann McCilntock
·and John Finley McClintock;
goodbye to all the friends Holzer Medical Center.
wants continuity.
Paul Roush and Nancy
they had made in Meigs
Davey
will
buy
ba·
c
k
outAt 5:37 p.m ., the squad
Roush; John Tillis and Wilma
County.
standing
common
stock
and
went to Route 143, the Charles
Tlllis.
an
employee
stock
ownership
Mash residence, where a
subject was treated for a plan and trust will be
hand laceration, and at 5:31 established.
p.m., the squad took Myrtle
Hayes of New St. to Veteran"
(Continued from page I )
FUNDS DISTRWUTED
Memorial Hospital.
program in its seventh year
State Auditor Thomas E.
NOW YOU KNOW
had 170 foster gran9parents,
Ferguson's office announced
Thomas
Jefferson collected the
aiding In child .9.-Y care
SQUAD RUN
September,
1978,
The
Middleport a library of 6,000 books In his distribution of $35,398,811 In
centers as well as schools and
Institutions for retarded Emergency Squad was called lifetime, but owned none Aid to Dependent Chlldre:t to
children and youth.
to 790 S. Third Ave. at. 2:06 published by the fashionable 465,078 recipients in Ohio's 88
Robert Pitts, director, p.m. Tuesday for Hubert Oxford University Press counties.
COAD Energy Conservation Stewart who had fallen. l;le because he considered them
Meigs County received
too expensive.
Program, said the member was treated on the scene.
f/4,227 for 1,032 claimants.
CA agencies had winterized
I ,800 homes in the counties
where the program operates.
He noted the current budget ·
for the activity Is $1,985,000
with I ,800 additional persons
receiving
energy
bill
assistance last year.
The Senior Nutrition
Program report was given by
Its program director, Marilyn
Grant, Wellston . She noted it
aerved 700,000 meals to some
6,010 senior citizens at 82
congregate sites in 26 COAD
counties this year, with 10
more sites scheduled to open
1100n. The operating budget Is
about S2 million, with a staff
of four persons plus Mrs.
•CAMOUFLAGE OUTER SHEU REVERSES TO O.D.
Grant administering the
program. She said 19 counties
•ROOMY ADJUSTABLE DRAW STRING .HOOD
have " meals at home"
•
programs, and that all sites
•2
SNAP
CLOSURE
STORM
FLAP
POCKm
hopefully will be accessible to
handicapped persons In the
•ZIPPER FRONT
future .
Roger McCauley, COAD
•UNDERARM VENTILATION
planner and grantsman gave
a report showing his planning
•ADJUSTABLE SNAPS ON SLEEVES &amp; PANT CUFFS
office had been directly in·
valved with negotiating
federal and state contracts
•IDEAL RAINSUIT FOR WORK OR SPORT
,lor over $6,000,000 In the past
year. That Included obtaining
•SIZES M, L, AND XL
grants to operate the COAD
.MEN'S DEPT. 1ST fLOOR
programs including Senior
Companions, · youth employment, food stamp outreach, energy conservation
among other programs.

t
pro•ec
•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 14, 1978

'

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Fonner President booed ·
NEW YORK (UPI) -About 400 people booed Richard
·M. NW!n as he entered and left the New York University
Ulrary Wedneeday f~r a memorial service. for his old friend
and maj1r financial backer, Elmer Holmes Bobst. Nixon came
to New York from his San Clemente, Calif., home to attend the
service but also took the occasion to sign a contract Tuesday
fir a new book about the challenges the nation will face during
the remainder of the century.

Appeal campaign launched
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The 1978 Cincinnati-area United
Appeal campaign has been launched with a goal of '18.4
mUJion . Wedneeday 's start of the campaign w~ symbolized by
a gigantic flag ralalng - United Appeal campaign manager
Raymond F. Letts hoisting a 67Hqullre foot flag in opening
ceremooles. The '18.4 mUllan goal is a 10.4 percent Increase
over last year's e&amp;m!JIIIgn which ralaed '16.7 million.

Free spending means aitests
PALMA, Spain (UPI)- II was lhelr free spending that led
pollee to the gang that made off with the billford. Learning that
three boys, 5, 6, and 12, had bought about $40 worth of candy
and other trllles, pollee Investigated further and found they
were respCIIsible fir the theft of a wallet containing fl8 from a
parked car. The boyua were turned over to Juvenile Court.

Point Plo•Mnt or M•10n
I

'1095

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

•

CAROL TANNEHILL
NAMED
COORDINATOR- Carol Bachtel
Tannehill, RN, Middleport,
h&amp;s been named coor·
dlnator of the ChUd Health
Services Well Child Clinics
of the Meigs County
Department of Health .
Employed In the offices of
Dr. J. J. Davis In Middleport for the past 18
years, Mrs. Tannehill In
her aew post will coordluate the clinics at which
pediatric evaluation Is
determined through
examination of young
people. The clinics held
twice monthly, are free to
age groups running from
small babies to youag
people Zl years old.

pickets to rell!/rt to picket
lines and picket captains
today with the apparent
intention of defying the order.
Representatives of the 500mem ber DPSU were to meet
with their attorney at 9 a.m.
today to discuss the judge's
order regarding picketing.
Meanwhile, Kessler, who
has been overseeing talks
between the teachers and !he
hoard of education, received
a study don e by Sinclair
Co mmunity
College
supporting the board 's
contention that il does not
have the money to provide
pay raises for the striking
tea chers.
Kessler said if when
federally-mediat ed talks
resume Friday the DEA does
not change its position that
there is money fo r pay raises
)le will enjoin its members
from striking Monday .

Vol. 29, No . 106

Congressional sources said Sadat and Begin are expected to main points in dispute but leaves open some points that could
talk to members of Congress and other American leaders riot he settled.
·Israeli sources said the detailed fra mework uses as its basis
before returning home. On Capitol Hill the mood was also
Begin's
26-poinl plan for "self-rule" in the West Bank, but
upbeat.
significantly
modified by American ideas and leaving open the
Sen. Richard, Stone, D-'li'la., who released fi&lt;st word that the
.
.
.
Camp David summit was to be held , said Wednesday, " I question of soverignty of the area.
It was learned that the decision to seek the comprehensive
believe they are going Ill succeed." Sen. Jacob Ja,vits, R-N.Y.,
said plans are heing made for a report to the nation by Carter, ptan was Carter's. He had decided that important political
an apparent indication that the administration believes decisions should be made when Ule political leaders were in a
position to negotiate directly with each other.
success is near .
An agreement would restore the momentum of the negotiaAcomprehensive blueprint would serve as a guideline for a
tions,
which were broken off in July by the Egyptians because
comprehensive Middle East settlement that would haVe ID
the
Israelis
refused to commit themselves to a withdrawal
include Jordan, since the occupied West Bank is a key issue.
from
the
West
Bank and other occupied territories.
The final details would be worked out by the foreign
The
past
two
days have reached a crescendo of intense and
ministers of the countries, perhaps beginning within two
detailed
negotiations
involving all Ule delegations in tbP
weeks .
mountaintop
retreat.
The ·sources said the comprehensive blueprint covers the

•

Middleport's North Second Ave . (Picture by Dorsel
Thomas)

Widow gives testimony
.
Lee

Th e Rev . Dwight Zavitz,
pa•1or of the Middleport and
Syracu se Presbyterian
G'hurches, was presented a
life memb ership in the
Pomeroy-Middleport Lions
Club when the club met for a
luncheon Wednesday at the
Meigs Inn.
Regret was expressed in
losing the Rev. Mr. Zavitz,
one of the club's active
.members. who will soon be
moving to Virginia.
Durin g th e meeting,
presided over by President
Hobert Hill, it was announced
the local club will host the
next zone meeting in
November. Hill also gave a
report on a zone meeting held
in November.
A report was given on the
sale of small car tickets. The
car went to Charles Dowler,
Middleport. It was reported
two
applicati ons
for
eyeglasses for needy children
in Meigs County were approved by the directors at
their recent meeting. A new
member, David Jenkins, was
welcomed .

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - President Carter's visit to
Columbullbis weekend hu been [IOIItponed for a week because
of whatlbe White House said Wedneeday was "uncertainty" at
the Camp David summit on the Mideast. Instead of arriving In
Columlius Saturday afternoon, Ohio Democratic P"arty
41fector Patrick Leahy said Carter would have "exactly the
same schedllle" Cll Sept. 23.

Poor credit, no new plows
ClEVELAND (UPI)- Frozen In Ita trackl by two severe
Wtnteraln a row, the city has no new snow equipment to avert a
11m1Jar fate this winter because of Its poor credit raUng.
Edward Walllll8n, Maylr Dennla .Kuclnlch'a head of snow
I'IIJIDIIal, aald anow removal will be al;lequate 'even If I have to
get out there and shovel mytelf'. But Councilman Robert Getz
retorted, ''The only way Cleveland will avoid a snow removal
dlauter thll winter Is If there Is no snow."

Fol-d Motor denies charges
DETROrr (UPII - F~rd Molfr Co. ha8 denied chlrgea
leftled by an Indllna ll'and jury that the finn commllled
redd- bamlclde and 'WU criminally rec:kl• In tha dllign of
a Fard Pinto In wlllch three teenqe l!lrll wwe killed. A
~amm for the No. 2 automaller aald the firm will take
apprapr1ate action" In reapan1e to a four&lt;our~t lndlc:tment
bMdld down Wednelday by the EIJdlart County grand jury.

Cteckoff system forthcoming
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Beginntrw In ltll2, Ohio'a 1-11

tillellclll cw"'P'IIJII for IOYernor and the other four llltawfde

..._ could be hllded by a dollar "Check~" IYIIem lbrotilh
Qdo ,....aJ lnCGIIM tupa;r.ra. An Oblo floule.pu11d blU to
lit up ladla 111••m - tlmiJar to tile r.dlra1 "check~" to
llld pruldcillll e11ct1ana •eli four ,_,. - reeelnd the
~~ W~ of the S..ta Wa)'l and M11111
~·
. ~

ADDITION UNDERWAY - Pictured above is a
drive-through facility ~?eing added to the Royal Flush on

Lions life
membership
•WASHINGTON (UPI ) Harvey Oswald's widow
in public and
presented acknowledged
under oath today that she

Columbus visit postponed

MEN'S REVERSIIU CAMOUFlAGE

PARKA RAINSUIT

budget-cutting plan to fund custodians and food service
saiary increases lor the personnel.
system's striking employees.
A union spokesman said
The district's 175 schools attempts would be made to
remained shut down to pupils get bus drivers to honor
while Cuyahoga County picket tines.
Common Pleas Court Judge
· on
Wednesday,
Harry A. Hanna considered a Montgomery County
request by school board Common Pleas Judge Carl
attorneys to order the Kessler issued .an order
teachers and
support forbidding all picketing
personnel back to work.
between 7:30 a .m. and 4:30
Hanna refused the request, p.m. Monday through Fridsy
but James O'Meara,leader of · at Dayton public school
the Unity Committee, a coali· buildings by striking teachers
lion of school work groups, and nonacademic employees.
said unions would have
Last week the judge had
ignor~ the order anyway.
Issued an order allowing no
Logan instructors and more than one picket at each
school administrators mel entrance to school buildings
with a federal mediator in around the city.
Columbus. Superintendent
However, Roberta Hunter,
Richard Nace said Board of president of the Dayton
Education negotiators are Teachers Association, late
prepared to meet cootlnually Wednesday called on DEA
untU the dispute is settled .
A strike conUnued In the
Tallmage school district in
Summit County today and
Substitute teachers and
supervisory personnel ran
classrooms on a limited
basis.
·
• The Daytoo teacher strike
was joined at midnight by
DayiDn Public Service Uilloil
Local 101, which represents
maintenance
workers,

j_.)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_·_ro_d_a_r_

ELBERFELDS

PAINT
ROLLIR
COVERS

Fifteen Cents

Agreement reached .on with-drawal, difficulties still exist

UDited Pre10 International
A strike by non-academic
workers In the Buckeye Local
School District in Ashtabula
County ended early today and
striking teachers In the Uma
Shawnee school district voted
today on 1 a new cool:tact to
end a strike In that district.
The strike by 80-nonacademlc employees began
Sept. 5 In the Buckeye Local
School district and most of
the syatem's 150 teachers
honored picket lines although
schools were open for tht:
system's 3,400 students.
The new contract Includes
a new classlflcallon lor
overtime @lld pay increases
ranging from 11 to 47 cents an
hour over the two-year length
of the new agreement.
The 180 teachers in the
lima Shawnee district, who
have also been on strike since
Sept. 5, voted today on a new
contract following a lengthy
meeting ~·ith the Board of
Education. The district has
3,500 students.
In Cleveland, a state court
· hearing continued Cll the
' school strike there. Board of
Ecb:atlon Clerk-Treasurer
Michael Halfman testllled
that school administrators
are drawing up a huge

CAA•••

Style, basic . Prt·WIIt\ed - They a !!

en tine

Two strikes end today

Meigs
Property
Transfers

filed in cowt

BATHROOM TOILET
TISSUE

aty

By JIM ANDERSON
Jordan River because he view.s ii as the Biblical homelimd of
the Jews.
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI) - Israel has apparently agreed to
, Jordan had previously governed the West Bank territory .
the principle of eventual withdrawal from the West Bank and
Egypt
had looSe control over the Gaza Strip in southern Israel.
the Gaza Strip territories they have occupied since 1967. But
Estimates
that ·the conference would end t.oday appeared
sourcea at .the Camp David summit said loday substantial
JX'ematW'e and a better guess seemed to be Friday.
diffiCUlties are stillln·the way of a formal peace accord.
And Carter will deliver a nationally televised report to the
. Souz:cee confirmed that agreement on th~ principle of
Withdrawal from the lands Israel has controlled since the 1967 . American people some time following the conclusion of the
Middle East war is coming Into clearer focqs, but stipulations sununit, sources said.
It was clear as the summit moved into its lOth day that many
and reservations oo both sides still must he worked out.
of the sticking points dividing the Egyptians and Israelis
The sources said two key obstacles are the future of the
l'!llestlnlans and the Israeli settlements ~ occupied Arab throughout the swnmit were being ironed out and a new air of
optimism was dominating Ule conference.
lands.
The desire of Carter, Begin , Egyptian President Anwar
Israeli agreement ID the principle of withdrawal, as
esplalned by these sources, would be a giant leap forward as Sadal and their delegations to reach an amicable conclusion to
the sununit prompted Carter to postpone for a week a fourwell aa a major accomplishment for President Carter.
state
political tour of North and South Carolina, Ohio and
Israeli Prime Minister Menachem Begin has been adamant
Pennsylv•nia
he intended Ill make this weekend.
In the past in refusing to relinquish the West Bank of the

Money action

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e

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~

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recemly llllldn1111d teDlnl homemlde Ice cream. Orden
bpt ccming ao fast the boyw could not keep up. '""' are

1964. Her testimony today . up with an explanation," she

was more qualified, however.
1n an aggressive examinalion , Dodd pressed Mrs .
personally believes Oswald Porter for the reasons she
killed President John F . believes Oswald acted alone
Kennedy, and that he was not in Kennedy' s murder , Nov.
part of a conspiracy.
22, 1963.
Marina Oswald Porter, the
"Maybe just intuition ," she
Russian-born widow of Ken- said softly .
nedy's accused assassin,
" I do not believe he would
made expressed her beliefs confide in someone," she said
under direct questioning by of her late husband. "He was
Rep. Christopher Dodd, D- not that open (al person ."
Conn., a member of the Oswald, she said, "wanted to
House Assassinations be somebody - wanted to be
Committee.
re&lt;.'O~nized. "
On Wednesday, her first
"The whole matter is so
day before the panel, she irrational , it's hard to come
resisted making such a
statement, saying she was
not qualified for such a
Judgment.
BOND SALES
But Dodd pressed today for
August 1978 sales of Series
her personal opinion, and the E &amp; H United States Savings
37-year , old witness Bonds m Ohio were $38.1
answered. " Yes, 1 do. 1 million. At the end of August,
believe the man was capable the State attained 63 .8 per
of doing such a thing ."
cent of its 1978 Sales GoaL
Did she believe Oswald
Theodore T. Reed, Mei~ s
acted alone ? Dodd asked. Co unt y Volunteer Savings
"Yes," Mrs. Porter said, HI Bonds Chainnan, reported
do."
August sales of Sa vin gs
Her public answers today Bonds in the County were
were similar to testimony she $34 ,541 . The county achieved
gave in closed interrogations 4ll.6 percent of its annual
to the Warren Commission In sa les goal August 31.

continued.
.
She also satd she was
wrong to originally withhold
information about the case
from the FBI, but had acted
out of a variety of motives"
When Rep . Harold Ford, DTenn. ! asked why the
comffilttee should believ~ ~er
today, she rephed , I ~
telllllg absolute!~ the b'uth :
To a later questwn she satd
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
ENTENDED FORECAST
Saturday thru Monday
United Press International
Showers and thundershowers Saturday and
Sunday and clearnlng
Monday. Highs will be in
the upper 70s or lower 80s
Saturday and Sunday and
In the 70s Monday .
0
l ht I
·u be in
vern g ows wt
the mid or upper 50s.
:.:~:.::::::::::::::: : ::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:::·:&lt;&lt;·&gt;:·:·:·:':·:·:·:·:.;.;.;.:;::

Ulat as time went by she felt
she . must satisfy her
consctence and ·tell all.
In 51&gt; hours of questioning
on Wednesday, Mrs. Porter
sa id Oswalk "always spoke
complimentary of Kennedy
... how young and attracttve·
the presid e~! of the United
States was. . .
And she satd, m answe~ to
questwns, 1t was posstble
Os wald could have been
aunmg onl y at Texas Gov .
John Connally·
Co nnall y
was . navy .
secretary at the tune the
Marllle' Corps downgraded
Oswald s dtscharge because
of his defectiOn to the Sovtet
Uruon. Oswald had wrttten
the Navy for a revtew but was
turned down.
"I thought for some reason
he was angry at Co~nally ,"
Mrs. Porter S8ld. It was
hard for .me to believe he. was
ang ry
at
Pre stdent
Kennedy ."

Celebration has

..

tragic ending

MANILA, Philippines
(UPI) A Philippine
presidential plane carrying
celelrators from President
Marcos ' birthday party
crashed near Manila airport
in a rainstorm t.oday and
ploughed through a row of
houses.
The police and Air Force
said 24 persons were killed 15 persons on the plane and
nine villagers on the ground,
including a child. Six persons
aboard the plane survived.
Witnesses said Ule' plane
was. trying to land in a
torrential monsoon downpour
when it clipped the tops off
lour coconut trees, ploughed
through 20 homes and
exploded In a fish pond, a
mile short of the runway.
" It was like thunder," said
village chief Luis Marquez of
the explosion .
Among six known survivors
of the crash was Gen .
Francisco Romualdes , A
cousin of Marcos ' wife
Imelda.
The Marcos family was to
return to Manila Friday from
the birthday party in the
JX"esident's hane province.
· shown making a fresh batch of Ice cream that was very
Spokesmen said the Phlllpgood, according to the many cusiOIMI'I. The scouts did all · plne air l~rce plane left
the w~rk without the help of any adul~
Laoag, 250 miles ;;north of

Manila, for the flight back to
th e capital.
There wa s no official
indication of the cause of the
crash. But it appeared the
had weather may have been a
factor .
Resc ue workers at the
cra sh site worked under
gru es ome co nd ition s,
recovering bodies which had
been torn apari.
The plane itself broke in
two just back of the nose , and
the two parts were separated
by 20 feet.
Marcos and dozens of
friends and preSidential aides
flew to Laoag late last week
for the Monday brithday
celelrations in Batac, his
hometown.
His family and friends also
celelrated the birthday of his
son Wednesday ·and were to
mark his younger daughter's
birthday Friday.

Weather
Highs today and Friday
·bet ween 75 and 80. Lows
tonight in mid or upper 80s.
Probability of precipitation
70 percent today, 80 percent
,
tonight and triday.

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pometoy, 0 ., Thuo·sday, Sept. 14. 1978

3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday. Sept. 14. 1978

50 states compete for $80 billion in grants
1Eb 1TOR • s NOTE :
Following Is the sec1111d uf
three articles prepared by
sevea graduate studeuts In
the Kiplinger Public Affairs
Repor1ing Program at the
Oblo stare Unlvenlly Sehoo.l
of Journalism dealing with
the Impact of the lederal
government on Ohio.)
COLUMBUS (UP! )
There is a total of $80 billion
in federal grants available to
nearly 40,000 stare, county
and local governments in the
United States. Ohio is
competing for some of that
money , but not competing
very well.
A report by seven graduare
students at Ohio State
University shows that state,
county
and
local
governments in Ohio do not
receive millions of dollars in
federal funds for which they
qualify .
There

are

tWo

main

reasons for this - they don't
want the money or they don 't
know how to apply for the
funds .
"To get that money, these
local governments must
dance to a cacophony of tunes
- the fonns, formulas and
requirements that comprise
the red tape jungle," the
rep&lt;rt said.
The report said "virtually ·
every community has its
horror story" and cited
several examples including :
- The village of Bloomingburg in Fayette County
fought federal red tape for
nine years to get aid for a
sewer project and when the
government finally released
the money the cost of the
project had quadrupled to
nearly $1.8 million.
- In Pond· Brook, near
Akron. the U.S. En·
vironmental

Prot e ction

Agency held up a needed $6.5
million project because it
may endanger a rare, four-

toed salamander that some
local officials didn't even
know existed.

The report said there is
little system or consistency in
federal requirements to get
money from the hundreds of
aid programs available to
state and local governments.
"There are needl ess

-

l

dupli cations," sa id Ralph
Widner, president oft he
Academy for Contemporary
problems in Columbus.
" Different age ncies ha ve
different hoops you have to
il\lllP througl)." •
._
· In Ottoville, a northwestern
Ohio town of 914 persons in
Putnam Coo:inty, officials recently found themselves
jumping through the hoops of
two federal ageocies while
seeking aid for a single sewer
project.
''They each had their own
different tangle of paperwork
which in the end meant the
same thing ," said Ottoville
Mayor Joseph N. Niedecken.
"You would think that one set
of paperwork would satisfy
both parties."
·
Barbara England, grants
coordinator in the Ohio
Department of Economic and
Com unity Development, is an
expert ill' wrestling with
federal paperwork. Even so,
a two-inch thick form for a
jobs program last suminer.
nearly undid her.
" Those were the most
absurd forms I've ever seen
in my life," she said. "I'm not

that dumb and I was almost
in tears."
Comn\unities can get some
help from private agencies or
firms - but they have to pay
for it. This, in effect, has

created some million dollar
businesses for firms that
underst'and the government's

red tape jungle.
The Grantsmanship
Center,
based in Los Angeles, holds
seminars for state and local
officials - al$325aliead - to
reach them how to get more
federal dollars for their
slates or communities.
"You can make a living
helping people apply for
federal money," said Widner.
" In a Democratic society,
whv should oeople hire people
is rightfully theirs'"
The Kipllnger students surveyed the heads of 919 Ohio
cities and towns to see where
mos t offi cials have their
problems when dealing with
the [ederal government.
- The response rate was 21
percent (189) and cannot ~
considered definitive but
what \he officials said

.

substantiated scores of
interviews with other public
offiClais, the report S8ld.
Many officials criticized
the lack of standardized
requirements.
"Constant changes ill the
regulations · should be
avooded ," s~1d Bow long
Green Mayor Alvin L.
Per kin s . ' ' S m a II

.

communities do nqt have cited the Department of bureaucracy, some because
adequate personn,el to keep Housing
and
· Uran of thefear of losing control of
abreast of the many changes Development and 58 percent decision making.
that some agencies make ." cited the Department of
"We either do the prolect
Sixty-eeven percent of the Energy. The Department of with our own resources or it
survev reSDOndents said the Health, Education and doesn ' t get done, " said
U. S . En vir o nm ental W&lt;&gt;lfare was named by S1 Mayor James B. Smith of
Protection Agency was the percent.
.
Bradner in Wood County.·
most doffocult agency to deal
A number of offlccals satd "Millll of the time it doesn't
with in terms of complexity they simply didn't want to get get done."
and red tape, while 59 percent involved with the federal
However ,
a
few

BY NANCY SMITH .
the Kanawha Salines, who had
·
it surveyed, and sold part of
The history of Mason City the land to settlers. The town
and its early settlers has been was established In 1853, and
compiled by historian Mildred chartered in 1856.
The book recounts some of
Chapman Gibbs.
An avid interest in history the early life in the town. Acand research, Mrs. Gibbs has cording to the publications.
been working for over eight The first settlers were
years on the historyof Hart- Virginians, English, Welch
ford and Mason. A book oio the Gennans. There are stories of
history of Hartford was the homes they buill, the
published in 1975.
slaves who resided in the town
In her larest edition, the the first schools and churches
book is divided into different and the daily life and work of
sections of the town's history, the settlers.
the first seven years, th.e Civil . In her researcb, Mrs. Gibbs
War period, after the war, the found that Mason City was a
turn of the century and the recruiting center for the Union
later years. The book also side during the Civil War, and
contains the history of 34 early some of the problems and
famiUes.
tales connected with the
· In the book, she records that · nation's most shaking event
Mason City was buill on the on the local level are
salt and coal industry that described.
developed in the Bend Area
Industry in the town conaround 1800-1900. She nores sisted of two main salt comthat the town itself was a part panies. They were the Mason
of the old Waggner Grant, City Salt and Coal Company
given to Major Andrew and the Hope Salt Company.
Waggner as a reward for his MasonCityalsoboastedoftwo
service in the French and saw mills and boat building
Indian War.
enterprises, in addition to
It was sold to John Brown, a those owned by the salt
farmer, who later sold the companies. The Mees Saw and
property to R.C.M. Lovell, of Flour Mill was locared above

the town in thepart known as
Adamsville,and the Young
Boatyard was located at the
head of lbe levy. In addition, a
brick yard .produced building
material for both sides of the
river.
Virgil A. Lewis, . has been
called the most famous son of
Mason, however, many other
people and families helped to
contributetothesuccessofthe
town.
The book is available at the
Mason City Historical Society,
located In the old VIrgil Lewis
Home in Mason, or from Mrs.
Gibbs in Hartford for $10.
Mrs. Gibbs is a life-long
resident of Hartford. Her
family settled in the 1850's in
this town, brought in by the
opening ofthe salt works in the
area. She taught school in
Mason County for 40 years
before retiring in 1976. The
last 20 years of leaching
C&lt;lnsisted of also being prin·
cipal of Hartford Elementary
School. She is married to Lee
Gibbs.
Newspapers in Mason
County, the Western Review,
Weekly Register, and State
Gazette along with the Meigs
County Newspapers,

·To

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ma ny

yuu

of

are

doing

IJu d y

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that involves Jjf.
ting the LHxly aml is i:i weight
llft111g exercise.
Now, there art! very few exlust" gre" t &lt;lea l uf weight an&lt;l
l1ave fli:J bhy skin. My questim1 ercises yo u ca11 du lhot will
l.s whCJ t lypc.s of exen: i s~ a re really help you r skin if you've
lost a lot uf weight. You can guu&lt;l fo r the fi"IJIJy Meas? ·
I belong to a fi gure salon firm up your musdcs and you
can increase thei r size , hut I
wl 1t~ re the instrudurs tt! ll me
I should Uo exer cises fur Jw;· liuu i&gt;t that if you lust a lot uf
ing wei ght r athe r than £inn- fa t tl1lil ;:uu want to make
ing and I lwve skin hanging yuu r JOU:ld es big enough tu
all over . I would U1ink I replace " II the fat tissue.
Ul~.

firm on~ or IJuil&lt;ling.-Wlw

L&lt; cuoTed I Also I &lt;lu aiJout 45
minutes uf exl:!rcise per da y.

Cuul&lt;lthat be too much:
DEAR READER - Exer·

those

on

;·uur a nn

&lt;leve lupe&lt;l IJy go·ioro naces an&lt;l

deg o·ee . Muscles in the leg
v.ri ll improve and get jusl IJi g

enough to suppo o1 the IJo&lt;ly
wt:ight cm d no larger.
The cxert'ises tlnlt. you du
over a lung per iutl uf time ,
1:iUCh as runn ing, jugging ami
even walking , are c e~ ll cd ~n­
du rcm c~ exen:i!ses cmd t hey

IJo rn off calories IJy the
ao now1t of woo·k that is &lt;lone.
In t'untrast , strength

~xe r­

cises help to build an&lt;l finn
muscles. The classic exampl e
here is a weight lifting exercise. To give you more in-

fu nnation on how these affect
your weight J'rn semJing yo u
Tioe Healllo Letter nwn bt!r
:H, Weight Training For
Energy and Weight Contrul .
Others who want tl1is issUt'
"'n send 50 cents with a lung,
stumped, self-addressed
envelope for it to me in care
o:l ~ois newspaP'{I'· P.O. Bo•

It Comes

PIJJyoff results
International

's

United Press International
Championship Series

( Besl of Seven)
All Times EDT

Pawtucket vs. Richmond
Richmond leads J-1
September IG-R ichmond
7, Pawtuckel 3.
September 11 - Pawtucket
6, Richmond 4.
September 12- Richmond
3, Pawtucket 2.
September 13- Richmond
2, Pawtucket 1.
September 14- Richmond
at Pawtuc ket , 7: 30 p .m .

:x · September

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1e - September

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CINCINNATI (UP! ) Johnny Bench has struck out
in a new restaurant venture.
"Johnny Bench's Home
Stretch" restaurant In
nearby .Florence, Ky ., closed
this week because of lack of
business, said restaurant
manager Jep SlepheMOn.
Bench's earlier established
"Johnny Bench 's Home
Plate''

restaur ant

Cincinnati
operate.

contin~es

in

to

the same lime, the Yankees finished up.
Meanwhile, the Red Sox
defeated the Detroit Tigers,
7-3, for their 17th win in the committed three more errors
last 20 games, when triples by in their lo$S to Detroit,
Lou Plniella and Mickey although the deciding run
Rivers keyed a four-run came in the fifth on a
fourth inning against !!&gt;game successful squeeze bunt by
Tom Veryzer that scored Dan
wi.l)ner Jack Billingham.
"It's a nice feeling., " said Briggs, who tripled to lead off
Yankee Manager Bob the inning. The Red Sox
Lemon . "I'm not the managed only seven hils
hysterical type. We still have against winner David Oyde,
to worry about still being 7~·10, and reliever Jim Kern,
while stranding eight.
here on Oct . 1.' '
"We're getting the good
Elsewhere in the AL, Milpitching oow," added Rivers, waukee downed Baltimore, 7"and without pitching you 5, Texas put away California,
can't do nothing."
6-4, and Kansas City drubbed
Indeed.
Rookie
Jim Oakland, 9-1.
Beattie, who was exiled to the Brewers 7, Orioles 5:
Sal Sando homered and
minors during the Yankees'
dark days of July, limited the
Tigers to three hits over 6 1-3
innings for his fifth victory.
Rich , Gossage (who else?)

Toledo results
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Sam The Timer outdueled
Stormy Raleigh in the stretch
Wednesday night to grab a
neck victory in the featured
eighth race at Raceway
Park.
The winner CQVered the
mile in 2:03 1-&amp; and returned
$3.80, $3.20 and $3.80, while
Stonny Raleigh paid $3.20
and $2.80 to place. Lady Noko
came in third and kicked
back $3.60.
Eds Time woo the lOth
race, kicking off an 8-1-7
trifecla cmnbination that was
worth $2,124.20. Uncle Dow
finished
second
and
Rambling Ralph came in
third.
The 5·7 daily double
combination paid $309.60.
A crowd of 1.~ wagered
. $159,014. •

RIVERSIDE
t lw

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One of the ways to help pre·

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This, in turn, helps prevent
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Despite all these measures,

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llllr ve . l ..o~~n d on As»o~:·i&lt;t ii!S 3101
Eut·LuJ Ave ., Clevel&lt;md. Ohru 44 115.
SuiJ&amp;: rlpt ron,"ratell : Ddi ve r ~ by
car·rler whert' ~tvailablt: 75 l't'flt.s pe t
""'*k. B) ·Mutor Routu wtM!re ca rrier
~rva: e f~t!l avaJI&lt;t iJic , OrJC rnonlh,
13.25. By m s1! In Ohiu and W. Vt~ .•
lkle Yen, $12.00 ; Sill monlh!l.
•11.50; Thre e montl•!l, $7.1Xh
f'llrew;tlere ~.00 )'eM:r; Six tllllftth!I IJ .SB; T hre~ monthS, 11.50.
1'\u!)ljCnption .J)r ll1.' lndudtll Suntiay

SPICIA

Dodge Chassis, 25 fool,
fully equipped.

OJ lee the skin is overstretched

surgery to actu"lly tighten it.

PUTNAM HOWE DRIVE
BELPRE, OHIO
PHONE 42:1-9533

OPEN:

MON. THRU THURS. 7:30-5:30
7:30-2:00

FRIDAY 7:30-7:00

too much for Cincinnati.

Upright vacuum

lleg. ....78

NOW

$2895

singled twice foo· three RBI as
the third-place Brewers also
capitalized on Boston's loss
by moving within four games

of first place in the AL East.
Royals 9, A's 1:
Hal McRae drove in four
runs, including two with his
16th homer to back Dennis
Leonard's 17th win and carry
the AL West-leading Royals
to their ninth victoty in the
last 12 games.
Rangers 6, Angels 4,
Toby Harrah 's second tworun homer of the game with one out in the bottom of
the ninth inning - dealt the
Angels their third straight
loss and dropped them 31&gt;
games behind Kansas City.

UPI picks Penn State

VW

anti

go&lt;J is to be achieved.

mor e eti lor ies every m ile
thm1 you wu ultl hHve used if
you were Sitting e~ t hornt:
resting . .Jugging or ru nning
u.ses still mure cC:~ I u ri es . E ven
with the amount of calo ries
you ci:Ul bum up r unning, it
will not in(:r ease the size of
U1e muscles any apprt:l'iable

"Lately, I feel I'm not accomplishing anything. H's been
since I voted myself a pay r1lsel"

everywhe re else. [f they 're
put un&lt;leo· load the ir size will

!Jody . The choice uf the cxcr·

against the Reds in his two
seasons, got the win. It was
his first win since Aug. 2 and
it ran his record to 9-12. He
had to leave the game in the
sixth inning because of a
muscle cramp in his left leg.
Manny Sarmiento, 9-7, took
the loss.
The Padres scored twice in
the fourtb inning but a a tworun home run by Joe Morgan
pulled the Reds even. But the
four-run rally in the sixth was

!Bosox drop out of first place

This flooring is loose laid without cement. Its 12 ft. width means
no seams in most rooms . Assorted patterns. 116175 Header

Facia l muscles are just like

t.:~se

ciSe to lose weight. Simple
w"lking will IJurn off a few

Lowe's Low Price . . .

when~ exerci ~e helps i11
weig ht loss is inJ.he foce li rea .

vent lwllow checks and a sag·
gi ng fa ce is to have fin n
fetci al mus&lt;.:les . Thes~ a re

fl 1s true that you ctm exer-

..

fun"tion

with out an enlightened
public. Do you know your
rights, freedoms, and duties
under the supreme law of our
land ? Read your Constitution.

tl

areo

int' rease.

program t-1 pe rson sho uld
w;c dept!nds cnti n :ly un the

cannot

and they lo!!l a game to the, Reds' chances of catching the
Los Angeles in their Dodgers, said ''I don't even
floundering attempt to catch want to think about it."
the Dodgers.
George Foster turned
"!was shocked to be called philosopher in his summary
up, " Perkins said. "When it of the Reds' bupes.
happened I thought it was
"Our backs are against the
somebody making a crank wall and we cannot afford to
call, but here I am."
lose many games, the Reds'
There he was and there are centerfielder said. "When the
the Reds, seven gave behind Dodgers win it's their gain
the Dodgers with just 16 ·but you have to learn to
games left.
adjust. Life is full of
Cincinnati Manager Sparky adjustments and if you can't
Anderson, asked about the adjust you can't cope in life ."
Pitcher Bob Owchinku, !Hi

i

P.erhaps the must useful

else call

I~ ust•d for tt'v&lt;:~ric ly
uf thffercnt thi ng,o, fu r the

American Revolution remind

sy st.em

that won't end .

!)AN DIEGO (UPI ) Broderick Perkins didn't
mean IAl insult Cincinnati, but
his postgame corrunents must
have convinced the Reds the
odds were simply against ·
them all season.
Perkins, brought up from
the lllln(!rs in mid-July by the
San Diego Padres, doubled
home two runs Wednesday
oight to spark a four-r.un
$ixth-inniQg rally as the
Padres defeated the Reds 6-2.
The loss snapped a four-game
Pncinnati winning streak

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
With the Boston Red Sox
having dropped 11 games in
their lastl4 - and committed
35 errors in the process - the
New. York Yankees, who
were nine games back on
:July 4, sit atop the American
'League East today for the
first time this season.
The Red Sox relinquished
the lead they bad held since
May 24 when they dropped a
2-1 decision IAl the Oeveland
Indians Wednesday night. At

CONSTITUTION WEEK
The Daughters of t.he

Your choice! Tweed or print
carpet with rubber backing.

you r col umn a l&gt;uut skin being
em el&lt;:~~tk sct&lt;:k. I. too. have

nlli t:hi ne::; com l&gt;e set for Ju::;.

...

the people of this Nation that
this week marks the one
hundred ninety-first anniversary of the adoption of
the United States Con·
stitution . The ideals upon
which this document is based
are reinforced each day by
the success of the system to
which it gave birth. But the

lly MARK FRIEDMAN
on June IS.. lost a perfect
UPI Spurts Writer
game in Uie seventh when
For Philadelphia third _ Greg Gross led off with a
baseman Mike Schmidt this L'Ontroversial infield . hit to
season has been a nightmare deeo shortston.

for first time since May 24th

@ matrong

th e

..•

Telegraph, Tribune and
by Gill Fox ·
Tribune-Telegraph provided SIDE GLANCES
much of. the Information ...-:-------~--~--;:;~;-----:-~
compiled in her -book. Other
sources of •research were
Census records for Mason
County,' Meigs County and
various history books of Meigs
and Mason County and the
state of West Virginia.

Covered!

1551, Radi o City Station , New
York, NY 10019. lnci&lt;lentally,

should try to fi n n. Thei r

for nearly 10 years fqr
every t h l n B · I rOm
neighborhood sewer projects
to a .comvlete downtown
redevelopment program.
Nelli : ConDdeace In Govern·
menl

Padres ·drive another IPhils, Dodgers keep winning
nail in Red.s ' coffin

Leogue Playoffs

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:

DEAR DR. Lt\MB -I read

.

of 6,1100, has obtained an
average of $1 mWI&lt;In a Yl!!ll'
from the federal goo.-enunent

Mason City History Recorded

HEALTH
Exl'r!' i ~I' for
flahhv ~kin

communities do rather well
in their dealings with the
federal govennnent.
"You have to bear in mind
that a majority of that red
tape is to protect the federal
dollars being spent in those
communities,:• said Joseph
Wara, comumty development
director of crestline.
CJ'estline, with a pOpulation

&lt;

•

$AVE

1978 Thunderbird, •••••••••••••••••••••••• 56495
1977 Trans AM •••••••••••••••••••••••••••. S6H5
1977 Grand Prix ........................ .. $5695

over ·Buckeyes, 20-17

Ruthven, a reborrt pitcher

One of the game's most
feared hitters, he has been
"struggling" with only 19
homers and 73 RBI, and the
fans won't let him forget that
they expect more - much
more.
"[think tomorrow night is
another game and another
situation," s aid Schmidt
Wednesday night after
backing Dick Ruthven's nearperfect six-hitter with a
three-run homer and a basesloaded walk to help the Phils
maintain a four-game lead
over Pittsburgh in the
National League East with a
6-2 victory over the Chicago
Cubs. "Tongiht is over with
and ... I already know
whether the fans lik e me or

since leaving the Braves,
said, " .. .r definitely had it in
mind after the sixth. But to
pitch a perfet1 ga me you
need a little luck."
The Phillies scored thr ee
runs in the fourth off starter
an&lt;l loser Ray Burris, :&gt;-!2,
when Larry Bowa and Garry
Maddox opened with singles
and Greg Lozinski reached on
an error by th ird baseman
Rodney Scott. One out later,
Schmidt walked on a disputed
checked swing t.o force in
Bowa, and Maddox scored on
Bob Boone's fi elder's ct)oice
ground er . Ted Sizemore
drove in the third run with a
single:
" No, I didn 't swing," said
Schmidt kiddingly. " You can

not. "

check the OOxscor e. ''

Ruthven, 14-10 overall and
12-4 for the Phillies since
being obtained from Atlanta

Schmidt's homer, his 19th,
came off reliever Donnie
Moure after Bowa reached

home on an error and
Luzinski wa lked in the eighth.
The Cubs scored both their
runs in the eighth when ·
Manny Trillo wa lked and
went to second on a single by
Ivan DeJesus. Pinch hitler
La rry Biittner doubled to
score Trillo and DeJesus
scored on Gross' sacrifice fly.
Elsewhere &gt;n the NL, it was
Atlanta 5, San Francisco 3 in
12 innin gs; Pittsbu rgh 7, St.
l~u i s I ; Montreal 4, Ne)V
York 3; Sa n Diego 6,
Cincinnati 2 and Los Angeles
6, Houston 0.
Braves 5, Giants 3:

Run·-sco ring s ingles by
Dale Murphy and Cito Gaston
on the 12th inning lifted
Atlanta over San Francisco ,

CARPET CLEANING

NOW RENT

LOWER

:RATES
Do·it-yourse/t

attract galleries that will

and ger profcss ione l

sw-pass last year' s record

re sul/s

crowds.

Seven of the top lO money
winne r s will be present ,
includin g Andy Bean (No. ·21 ,
local favorite Lee Trevino
(No. 4) who is still trying to
win his first Texas Ooen.
1'-.Hubert Green.
·
VGJif#1
No. 5 and defendin g
champion Hale [rwin (No. 6),
WMPO
who hred an Ill-under-pa r 266
SATURDAYS
last year.
9 til Noon
But the golfer receiving the '---- - ____ _ -· _

Kasem

-------------STAR SUPPLY CO.
949-2525
Racine, 0.

most mention as a possible
winner is Tom Kite, who is on

the hottest streak of his sixyear pro career and always

likes playing on bermuda.
grass before home state fans.

Pomeroy dog named champ

By FRED McMANE
· Chuck Fusina restores
UP! Sports Writer
prestige to Nittany Lions.
Recently the Shade River owned by Ch arles Cleland of
There's a common malady
Michigan 30 illinois 0 called " looking ahead" Wolverines will run over Hlini Coonhunter's Oub hosted a Racine .
Twenty-five dogs entered
among many college football defense like water over hunt at the Meigs County
17,000 mil es, 6·c yl. , aut.. p.s., p.b., Rai ley Wh eels.
the
treeing contest. Results
Fairgrounds . The hunt was
teams that carries the Niagara Falls.
symptoms of sluggishness
Michigan St. 24 Purdue 14 registered as the UKC World were: High Barking Male and quite often leads to sub- - Spartans' Eddie Smith is a Championship Qualifyin g 11ounder owned by Gerald
Eblin of Rutland ; High
Hunt No. 42.
par performance.
top ootch passer.
air, P.S., P . B., auto.
Twenty-eight dogs were Barking Female - Blue Lil
Penh Slate, rlinked third in '
Iowa 20 Northwestern 3 the nation at the start of the Hawkeyes strong against the entered in the bench show owned IJy Cliff Murray of
Pomeroy.
season, has already fallen . run and that's the only way competition .
Fifty dogs ran in the mght
ults
were
as
Res
victim to the disease. The Wildcats can travel.
hunt
with fir st place going to
follows
:C
hampion
An·
case showed itself to he quite
The Midlands
Muskingum
Valley Fannie.
derson
's
Midnight
Mack
serious and caused mild- " Alabama- 2l Missouri 0 The
ow
ner
is
Arthur Dowl er
owned
by
John
Anderson,
mannered Coach Joe Paterno Two major upsets in a row for
Pomeroy; Best Male of Show of Waterford.
Ill lose his patience last Tigers is improbable .
The Coonhunt cr's Cl ub
weekend and close his lockerNebraska 35 Hawaii 0 - A - Outlaw's Blue Ma ck owned
located on W, Va . Side of Pomeroy. Mason
its thanks to all who
extends
by
Carl
E.
W
olzerton
of
At·
room doors to reporrers.
breather for the Comhuskers
Bridge (304)773-5777
water, Ohio ; Best Female of helped make the event a hu~e
Paterno's outburst came after two tough mes.
Show - Little Orphan Annie s uccess .
after the Nittany Lions
Colorado 24 Miami 10 struggled to defeat Rutgers, Hurricanes may be tougher
26-10, last Saturday for their than Buffaloes expect.
second subpar performance
Oklahoma 40 West Virginia
8 - Sooners are an awesome
in a row.
The problem is Penn State Loti.
has been looking ahead since
Tbe Southwest
the start of the season to
Arkansas 35 Vanderbilt 0 Saturday's
game · at Razorbacks have all the inColumbus, Ohio, against gredients to challenge for the
powerful Ohio State.
national championship.
PeM Slate Is a far better
Texas 30 Rice 0 team than it showed in its Longhorns may not let the
first two games, and we think Owls past midfield.
it will prove it Saturday.
Pittsburgh 26 Tulane 6 r-----------·~
Cluck Fusina, Penn Slate's Panthers unveil a new
COUP
fine quarterback , is due foc a quarterback in Rick Trocaoo.
good game and the timing is
The Rockies
Colorado St. 22"Ulah St. 7rJsbt.
Door prizes awarded hourly 10:00 thru 1:00
The East
The Rams have too many
Navy :13 Virginia 6 - Bob Bells (Mike, Mark R. and
GRAND PRIZE · CHAIN SAW with 12" bar - 2:00
Leszczynski's passes will de- Mark E.) not to ring a few
NAME
___________________
_________
stroy Cavaliers' secoodary. chimes this year.
Colgate 17 Holy Cross 6 - · Wyoming 23 South Dakota 3
Red Raiders' defense is - Cowboys can grind it out on
ADQRESS------- -- - - - - --among the best in the East. the ground.
P H O N E - - - - - - - - - - - -- Bostoo College 19 Air Force
New Mexico St. '1:1 Tens
One Day Only-Open 8:001ill2 : 00
10 - Eagles' should be able to EIPaso 6 - Miners might be
Free Gifts For Ail
stop Falcons' aerial Rame. the nation's worst team this
The South
Pomeroy Home and Auto
season .
California 30 Georgia Tech
The Far West "
14 - Cal can move the ball as
Southern Cal 23 Oregon 6 it showed against Nebraska. Cllarlie White wUI give Ducks
Florida St. 30 Olda1"rna St. fits.
10- Johnson and Jordan Ill'~
Washington 15 Kansas 7 a tough duo to control. '
Huskies '
defense will
UCLA 17 Tenressee 14 - decide.
Stanford 30 San Jose St. 20
Johnny Majors' rebuilding
program at Temessee wUI - Should be quite an aerial
begin to reap rewards this show · between Stanford's
season.
sreve Dilts and San Jose
North Carolina St. 26 Syra- Slate's Ed Luther.
Brigham Young 24 Arifona
CII.IIe 6 - Loss of quarterback
Bill Hurley will be 'critical to St. 17 - &amp;m Devils may bave
Orangemen.
left the Western Athletic
Conference, but BYU's Marc
TheMidw..t
&gt;'eM St. 20 Ohio St. 17 - Wilson woo 1 let 'em forget.

1977 Chevy Camaro

SAVE

1974 Cutlass Supreme Wagon

SAVE

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

Sawdust Day

SATURDAY, SEPT. 16,1978

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

._________ _

-------

,"

1976 Gremlin ••••••••••••••.••••••••..•..• S2HS
1976 Buick Regel ......................... 54695
1975 Chevelle Malibu .................... 13295
1975 Cutl1ss Supreme .............. ....... S3995
1974 Fury Ill .............................. 11"5
1973 Ambassador••••••••••••••••••••••••• $1395

1972 Torino................................ $695

1H9 Olds O.Haa&amp; •••••••••••••••••••••••• S495
~N7 Clm1ro ••••••••••••••••••••••••• J.,. . . .

WE 'VE I,OWEREIJ
THE COST OF

Robinson combined to dri ve. ~~~~~:~~
in seve n ru ns and Bert I~

51st Texas Open
has strong field
SAN ANTONIO, Texas
&lt;UPIJ - Barring any more
thunderstorms like the one
that washed out Wednesday 's
pro-am event, the 51st Texas
Open Golf Tournament
begins with one of the
strongest fields in years
contesting for a record
$200,000 in paychecks at the
Oak Hills Country Club.
Although the weather man
predicted more rain might
follow the 6-inch downpour
that
flooded
streets
Wednesday, tournament
officials said "everything is
go" today for the 145 golfers.
The lllurnament, benefitting
Santa Rosa Children's
Hospital, is expected to

Expos 4, Mels 3,
Gary Carter' s two-run
homer in the sixth snapped a
2-2 tie and propelled Montreal
over New York.
Dl)()gers 6, Aslros 0:
Rookie Bob Welch bro~e a
personal three-game losing
streak with a four-hitter and
Rick Monday drove in two
runs to carry Los Angeles
over Houston . The win helped
the Dodgers open a sevenga me lead in the.NL West.

losers of five straight.
Pirates 7, Cardinals 1:
Willie Stargell and Bill
Bly leven scattered five hits,
st"kin g Pittsburgh to a
victory over St. Lo~i s.

606 E. Main. Pomeroy, 0.
992-2091

'.
&lt;

j

�~'fht Daily Sentinel, Middleport:!'&lt;liJieroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sepi. 14,1978
4- The Daily Senline!, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, S.pl. 14. 1978

Earl Hill captures

•••
••• •••
•••

25-lap feature event
MARIETTA - Despite the
effo rts of seve ral Meigs
County d rivers, Earl Hill
captured the 25-lap feat ure
event at Hilltop Speedway
last weekend.
C haflengin g
Hill
thro ughout the race were
Ra cine's Bob Adams, Sr. and
Coolv ille ' s Ronnie Bond .
Pole-setter Bob Adams, Sr ..
who set the night 's fastest
lime, ·battled with Hill early
_in the race and was making
serious attempts to take th e
lea d. The n Adams found
himself battling with Bond in
a fig ht for second pla ce .
Meanwhile , back in the
pa ck, another area driver,

Hilton ' 'Big Fooz" Wolfe , ran
into som e misfort une. ·when
he enter ed turn one, h_e came
into the turn at full throttle
whe n so methi ng in hi s
stee ring mechanism broke.
Before he had time to hit
the brakes his ca r struck the
first turn wall sending him
high into the air. The car .
wh iCh a lm ost complet ely
overturned, landed on its
wheels coming to rest aga in st
the wall in turn two. Wolfe
was not injured, but his car

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sale stads September 15

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

was not so fonunate.
On the restart, the pack
was drawn closer making
with a battle between Hill,
Adams , and Bond. The y
battled lap after lap with
Adams trying to overtake
Hill. Adams then found
himself being pressured by
Bond . With three laps to go,
Bond fina lly squeaked by to
finish second, followed by
Bobby J oe Adams, Dave
Robinson , Bob Adams, Jr.,
Ed Conl ey a nd Gene 1\dkins.
In the first heat, Meigs
co un t ain s really proved
themselves as they finished I·
2·3. The winner was the
younge r of the father-and-son
racing team, Bob Adams Jr.,
in hi s " Adams Drilling Co.
No. 55" Camaro. Bob Jr., who
is following in his father's
fast ways , is in only his
second year of driving . He
had developed into one of the
Ohio Valley's smoothest and
fast est drivers.
He was fOllow ed across the
line by Syracuse 's Gene
Adkins in his " Pink Panther
Special, " and Hilton Wolfe,
Jr. Adams' luck at Hilltop
was a little better than his
luck the previous ni ght.
Adams came from way back
in the pack to take the lead in
teh feature only t o hve a
blowout with one lap to go.
The semi-late heat went to
T erry Gastonwh ile the
featur e went t o " Doc"
Holliday follo wed very
closely by Danny Atkinson
and Homer Wright.

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

KINGSBURY

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110crE.

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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.

M&lt;~ j or Lugu~

St.and i ngs
By United Press lnttr national
National Lugue
Ei$t
W. L. Pc1 . GB
80 65 .55 2
• Phlla
76 69 .52-4 4
PtfiSbrgh
73 72 .503 7
Ch ic ago
70 77 .-47 6 11
Montreal
62 85 .-42 2 19
St . L ouis
59 87 ,-40-4 211 1
New York
West
W. L. P t: f . GS
LOS Ang
88 58 .603
San Fran
81 65 .555 '7
Cinc inat i
80 65 .552 7 11
San Diego
75 12 .510 131,
Houston
67 78 .462 20 11
Atlanta
6.1 82 .438 24
Wednesday ' s Results
AHa 5, San Fran 3, 12 inns .
Ph iladelph ia 6, Chicago '2
P it tsb urgh 7, Sl. L ouis 1
Montreal 4, New York 3
San Diego 6, Ci ncinnati 2
Los Angeles 6. Houston 0
Today •s Prob&lt;~ble Pitchers
j All Times EDT )
Atlanta ( Bouton 0-' or So lo mon 4 5 ) at San Francisco
(Hal ick i B 8 J, 4:05p .m .
Ch icago ( Krukow 7 2) at
Ph lladelphia ·( Ler ch 9-8), 5 p.m .
St . Louis (Forsc h 11 -16) at
P illsburgh (Rooker B· lO L 7: 35
p.m .
Montreal ( Sch atzeder 7-5) at
New Yo rk ( Ko bel J .SJ, 8.05
p.m .
Cincinnat i ( Bonham 11 -4) at
San / Diego !Shir ley 7- 11 ), 10
p .m
Houston (N iek.ro 12 · 12) at Los
Angeles U.oM 16-10 ). 10 : 30 p.m .
Fr iday's Games
New York at Phila , nig ht
Mont r ea l at Pitl sbgh , night
Sf. Lou is at Ch icago
Atlant a a1 Los Ang, n ight
Houston at San Dieg o, nignf
Cinc i at San Fr an cisc o , n ight

Rade r ; Ruthven and Boone. W
- Ruthven. U -10. L - Burr ls, s.
· 12 . HR - Ph lladelpnia , Schm idt
( 19 ).
St .L
010000000- 1 5 0
Ptsbgh
003 000 40x - 7 . 3 o
Falcone. Lopez (3), Schultz
(7) , Fan ier (8] end Kennedy ;
Slyleven and Oyer . W- Biyl even . 13 -9. L - Falcone, '2 7. HRs
- Pi tt sburQI"L B . ~ob ! nson (11},
Starge lf (15).
Mil
000 103 0(,&gt;0-- 4 10 3
N .Y .
100100001 - 3 80
Sanderson , Garman (9) arid
Carter ; E sp inosa , Ber nar d (8)
and Stearn s . W- Sanderson , 2-2.
L - Espinosa , 10 1-4. HRs- Mon trea! , ·E . va,ent ine (2 4 ), Carter
( 181; N ew York. YoU ngblood

171 .
Cinci
000 002 000- 2 71l
San Ogo
000 204 OOx - 6 10 1
LaCoss , !'.a r m i e n to (6 ),
Borbon ~ 6 ), Hume (7) and
Bench ; Owchinko, Fingers (7)
and Robert s. w~Owcni nko . 912 . L - Sarmiento. 9-1. HR ---:Cincinna t i . M orga n (1 2).

ooo-

Houi
000 000
0 40
LA
100 100 12x- 6 12 0
Forsch and Bo chy ; Welch
and Yeager : W- We!ch , 6·3. L Forsc h , 9 -6 . H R- Los Ange les,
Yeager 13 ) .
American League
Bait
000 121 001- 5 13 0
M ii W
151 000 OOx- 7 13 1
Flanagan , Br iles {2 ). Stod·
dard 13 1 and Dempsey ; Replo 161
and
B.
g le, Fa rmer
Mart inel . W - Replogle , 9-2. L Fianagan ,
17-13 .
HRs- Bal timore, Ke l ly (8) ; M ilwaukee, l
Sand o (U), Yount (7) .
Bos
010 000 ooo- 1 7 3
Cleve
00 1 010 OO x - 2 7 I
Eckersley and Fisk ; Clyde ,
Ker n (9) and Alex ander . W Ciyde . 7-10. L - Eckersl ey, 16·8.

Am er iun L eague
East
W. l - Pet. GB
87 57 .604
New York
N .Y.
87 58 .600
I 1
000 412
7 14 0
Bos ton
Oet
010 010 01 o- 3 4 0
MiloNdUk.e
84 62 .575
4
Beatti e, Gossage ( 7) and
Ballimre
81 64 .559 6 1 7
Munson . Heo!l th ( I) : Bill ingham ,
78 66 .542 9
Oetr oi1
Glynn (5) , M orr is ( 6 ), Burn side
63 81 .43 8 24
CleiJel nd
( 6) and May . W- Beatt ie, 5-1. L
Tor on to
57 89 .390 31
- B illingh am, 15·8.
west
~ - L. Pet.
GB
Oak
000 001 ooo-- 1 7 4
Kan City
80 64 .556
002 03400X - 9 70
Cal if
78 69 - .531 311 K .C
Johnson , Sosa (71 and Robin Tex as
72 71 .50 3 71}
son , Ess ian , Meyers ; Leonard ,
Oak land
66 80 .452 15
M ineso ta
64 81 .441 J6l 2 M i11,9ori (7) and Por ter , Kus Ch icago
62 83 .&lt;~28 18 1 7 nyer . W- L eonard , 17 ·17. L Johnson , 10-8. HR s- Oakland ,
Seatt le
54 88 .380 25
Rever in g ( lA) ; K an sas Ci t y ,
Wednesdly 's Results
M c Rae (1 6 ) .
·
M il waukee 7, Ba ll i more 5
Cleveland ,2, Bos ton I
Calif
000 003 00 1- o~ 6 o
New York 7, Detroit 3
Te• as
000 001 302- 6 7 1
Ka nsa s City 9, Oakl and 1
Knapp , La Roche (7) and
.. Te)(as 6, Ca li fornia -4
Down ing ; Matlack ,. Clev eland
Today •s Probable Pitchers
( 9 ) and Sundber g . W- Cie v e(All Ti mes EDT)
land , 4·8. L - LaRO Che. 9-8. HR s
Bosto n (.Wr ight 8·3) at Cleve
- TeKas , Harrah 2 110) , Bonds
land ( Pax ton 10-9), 7.30 p.m .
New York (F igueroa 16-9 at ( 28), Ben iquez ( 111.
(On I v games scheduled)
Detro it ( Sla ton 15 · 10 ), 8 p .m .
Cali forn ia ( Ryan 7 12 1 at
Tex as (E ll is 9-61. 8: 35 p .m .
Oakland
!Renko 6· 10 ) at
Major League Luden
Kansas Ci t y (Le onar d 16-17) ,
By United Press International
8 · 30p m .
Batting
Ba ltimore (M cGr egor 14-12)
( B•sed on 400 .at bets)
at M il waukee ( Ca ldwel l 18·9),
National Lea ue
8 :30 p .m .
· G B. H. Pet. '
Ch icago
( Sto ne
10-121 at Madloc k SF
11 0 411 130 .316
Sean le ( Colborn 4-11 ), 10 : 35 Parker P it
137521 164 .315
p .m .
Burroghs A tl
139 446 140 .3 u
Friday ' s Ga'me s
Cruz Hou
139 519 161 .310
Ch fc agCJ at· Seattl e, night
Garvey LA
146 583 179 .307
Oakl and at Texas , n ig l'1t
Clar k SF
14 1 535 16-t .307
Calif at K ansas City , night
W inf ield s·o
143 530 161 .304
Crmr ti t' Mt l
144 5.53 167 .302
M inn at M ilwaukee , night
Detr oit at Cleveland , night
Bowa Ph il
140 584 115 .300
Toronto at Balt imore , n ight
Smi th LA
123 43.4 130 .300
Bos ton at N ew York , night
American League

ooo-

1

and ends October 15 .

405 N . Second Ave .
Middleport, 0 .
Phone 992 -3148

GHS takes

•••••
••• ••••

992 -7034

ROOF PAINT
Paint Jobs Use Our
"SUPER QUALITY"

.• Red '8.95-'15.95 gal.
• Green '13.75 gal.
• Aluminum '9.95
GALVA -GUARD PAINTS
EKtr emely durabl e pure alkyd pa ints
t ormula t ed
for
ma ximum
g l oss
r e t ~nti on and wea t ner resl ~ ta _n ce
E xcetlen l tor -rnetll l r oofs , buli~ 1 ngs,
woo d t r i m . sh utt ers , la wn t u rn 1t ~r e,
and equipme n t. Pr ime new galv an1 ~e d
su r fa ces w i tn SP - 13 b1 V l nyi -Z 1nc
Chr om ate M et al Con di1 ioner ; badly
ru sted surfl!l ces with No . 84 -A Red Lead
Pr imer .
Spread ra1e appr ol(\metel y 500 squere
t eet P.er galion , depend ing on svr fa ce
con d1t i on .

SHOP OUR COMPLETE PAINT DEPARTMENT

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
PH. 992-2811
110 W. MAIN

golf match·

NCAA
MISSION, Kan . (UPJ
Division I·A individual . leaders released
Tuesday :
Rushing
en ydl ave td ydpg ·
25 186 7.4 4 186.0
Lewis , Va Tech
28 165 5.9 3 165.0
Green, Iowa St
43 312 7.3 0 156.0
Jackson, NTe.St
30
156 5.2 I 156.0
White, Sthn Cal
25
154 6.2 0 154.0
Rhett, Duke
·paaslng
alt COI!III pel yds td Cl!lpg
48 32 4 .667 299 3 32.0
Dils, Stnlrd '
35 21 I .600 296 3 21.0
Thmpsn, Ws
37 21 I .568 283 0 21.0
Wrght, Bwlg
65 34 4 .523 432 2 17 .0
Pusy, W~t Cr
;!6 17 0 .654 280 2 17.0
Ford, SMU
Scoring
td xp fg pi$ ptpg

Monday at Riverside Golf
·Course, GaUipolls coasted to
a golf victory over holll Meigs
and Wellston. The winners
carded a 164, Meigs was
second with 198, and Wellston
came in last with a 217 .
Gallipolis' J . D. Jones was
medalist with a 37 while
teammate Jeff Clary . had a
39. Mark Allen had a 41, Brad
Rogers a 47, and Aaron
Jeffers a 51.
For the locals, Scott
McKinney had a 41 to lead the
way while J . R. Wa~ey had
a 48. Chuck Kennedy had a 52,
and Bob Davis and Fred
Young each had a 57.
Jeff Davis led Wellston
with a :iO while Ted Williams
had a 52. Scott Kibler shot 55 By STEVE WILSTEIN
and Bruce Kuntz had a 60.
UPI Sports Writer
After a Tuesday win over
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Nelsonville York, Meigs is 1·1 Beyond the super-hype and
in the SEOAL and 2-2 overall. theater of Friday night's
Muhammad Ali-Leon Spinks
n extravaganza, there is the
beauty of a great betting

POMEROY

Earned R:un Avtrlgv
( Based on 135 innings pitched)
Nation.1 1 Lugue : Rooer s, Mtl
2.47 ; Swan , NY 2.49 ; Vuc k ovich , Sl .L 2.!.4 ; Hooton , L A
7.64 ; Bl ue , SF 7.70.
Amer jcln Lugue : Guidry,
N Y 1.77 ; Cal dwel l , .A1ill 2.32;
Matlack, Tu '2 .41 ; Goltz , Minn
2.51 1 Pa lmer . Batt 2.53 .
Strikeoprs
N1tlon1 1 Lugue: Richard ,
Hou 267;
Nftkro , ~tl 126;
Seaver , Cin 188 ; Blyleven , P itt
165; Montef usco, SF 160.
Amer iun Lugue : Ryan , Cal
226 ; Guidry, NY 220 ; Leonl!lrd .
KC 166 ; Flanagan , Ball 145 :
KraiJeC. Chi l oU

ST. LOUIS (UPI ) - The St.
U&gt;uis cardinals sald Wednesday guard Kelth W!rlrnan
and defensive back Carl Allen
will not play Sunday againlt
the Washington Redskins
because of knee injuries.
Wortman will be replaced by
Terry Stieve and Allen by
Perry Smith.
The club sald nearly 1,100
ti ckets were available
Wednesday
for
the
W-.blnllf.on game. Unlesa the
tickets are told by I p.m .
nnrllday, the game will not
be shown on television in St.
Louis.

Lewis, Va Tech
Wiener , Bwlg Gr
Merendino, UT-C'ga
Young, Cent Mich
Green, Iowa St
Receiving

4 0 0 24 24.0
4 0 0 24 24.0,
3 0 0 1.818.0 :
3001811.0 :
3001811.0

tt ydlld dJic ,,

9 151 0 9.0 '.
Shetler, Bwlg Gr
9rfll9,0
Lambert , NMexSt
9 60 0 9.0• •
Richardson, TCU
9 53 0 9.0 , ,
Francis, Stnfrd
8
77 0 8.0••
McGee , Nwstrn
.
Tolf.! Offeue
pys yda ydpl YdPI'"'
52 342 8.8 34.2.0 ''
Wright , Bwlg Gr
55 318 5.1 3!8..0 ,·,
Oils, Stnlrd
38 306 8.1 306.0 '
Th()lllpson, Wash ~ ·
26 280 10.8 280.0 ..
Fotd, SMU
32
251 7.8 251 .0
Little, West Mich
li lt

Champ being taken too lightly

fight .

Transactions
Sports Transactions
By United Press International
weonesdoy

.

aue0111

PittSburgh A cquired out fielder Da ve May on wa iver s
fr om M ilwaukee.

Football

Tampa
ea y
Wa ived
offens ive l ine man R andy John -

The odds have been floating
between 2-1 and 3-1 in-All's
favor . But there is a strong
among
many
feeling
hse
hoha
both
0
rversw
ve seen
fighters train, Spinks is being
taken too cheaply by tbe
.
bli
betW\g pu C.
Debate among the "fancy"
at h ote1 barsa nd. around the
gym has been lively . Some

old Spinks also is quicker and
more active.
Experience - Ali has been
fighting professionally f&lt;r 18
years and has a 55-3 record
with 37 kayos. Spinks turned
pro late after a career in the
Marines and has a 7+1
record with five kayos. · .
Pbysical C'nditii&gt;n - Ali,
36, is in the best shape he can
get into at his age. His muscle
tone is good and his legs are
strong . But his reflexes are

..

,

going or gone. Spinks is ':
streamlined raw power, not ·; '
an ounce of fat oo him. Spinks '"
holds a large advantage in
·· ···
this area.
Mental attitude - Ali appears in a more determined
frame of mind than he luiS for ,
any fight .since Joe Frazier
three years agp. Spinks says
he's fighting to "hold on" to .
what he's got. Neither man is :
lacking in confidence .

K.•n•••

Per ry .

.

Philadelphia - Cut r ook ieS
Osbo rn e
Lo ckhart .
An thOny
Murray and Alan Cunningham .

is an inch ~er and abo~t

•

REG.

'5.49

24-lnch

now

LAWN
RAKE
While Supplies Lait

299

All-purpo se lawn rake fe atures 24 steel tines that
clear a 24-inch path. Ra m 's horn s pring h e lps to
distribute loa d easily and prevents d igg ing into
l ~wn . 54 -inch hardwood handl e.
CDA·24

!

HASSURGERY
: Kenneth Madden Ill, son of
r,lr . and Mrs . Kenneth
r,Jadden, Jr. of Middleport,
underwent
open . heart
surgery on Sept. 7, at
Qlildren's Hospital.
: He Is reported to be doing
lfl!ry well. He will celebrate
s fourth birthday on Sept.
. . Cards !paY be sent to him
care of the hospital. The
address
is
Children's
1Jos pital, 'Room 302, 700
cilildren's Drive , Columbus,
Ohio 43205.

J
•

Lee

•

DENIM
JACKETS
&amp;
LINED
VESTS

"
•
•

•

QUANTITIES LIMITED

tr eas ur er ,
r e mind ed
m e mb ers that Scope
subs-cripti ons will be due in
October. She also read a
U1ank you note from St.
John's Cl1urch for the flowers
sent on the IOOth an nivei'sa i·y
t.oele!Jn:Jtion:
It was decided to make a
donation on the new altar
clothes which ai'e to be purchased lor the church.
The Lord 's Prayer in

'

'

tuiison opened U1e meeting
conducted by Mr.;. Blaellnar .
Reported ill were Mrs . Veda
Davis and Mrs. Virgin ia
Thoren .
Mrs. Elva Cotterill had the
Bible study on the family and
worship . Mrs . Rachae l
Downie dosed with a meditatiun cmd prayer . Other~ a ttendin~ were Mrs. J ean Coates,
Mrs. Barbara Fry , and
Pastoi'
William
Mi dilleswalth .

Gilmore reunion held
The Walter Gilmore reu- Gilmore, Jay and J eannie,
nion was held Sunday at the Margie Ward, Mr . and Mrs.
Route 33 roadside park with Charles F. Zei~ler, Mrs. Joan
Mrs. Donna Gilmore ~ i,ving Wise and Rebecca , Mr. and
graL'e bef9rc the basket din· Mrs . Te rry Michael , Mr. anil
Ml'S . Hubert Wolfe and Keith,
11~1'.
Attending were Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Haggy,
Mrs. Albeit Shifflet, Mr . and Pam and Kim, Ric k Gilmore,
Mrs. Claren ce DoiJHhue , Mr . and Mrs . Bryan Gilmore,
Wellston; Maxine Michael, Pennie , Tammy, Keith, Troy,
Pomery ; Mr . and MrH. Cris and Matt, Mr. and Mrs .
Richard Stewart,
Mid· Richard Gilmore, Tracy and
illeport ; Kay Hatfiehl, Corey Shawn, Clyde Dilclwr, Col·
and Jessyca, Racine, M1·. a nd wnbus, Ray . Timothy and
Mrs. J a mes Gilmore and Tum Michael.
Dennis, Mr. and Mrs. Gene

Reedsville carnival date set
REE DSVILLE-Oct. 14 was
set as the dale foi· the school
carniva l when the Rive1-view
PTA met recently at the
school.
Marlene Putman presided
at the meeting du•·ing whkh
time committees fur the cur..

nival were aruwunced cmd
I'Oom mothellti were nam~ . ll
was decided by tile group to
change from PTA to PTO.
Mrs. Grace Webel', principal
annoum.: et.l school i tem~ of in~

REVIVAL SET
There will be a revival at
the Danville Wesleyan
Church Sept. 17 through the
24th at 7:30 p . m . nightly .
The Rev. Don Hwnble of
Waverly
will
be
the
evangelist. Gospel singing
each evening . The Rev. R. D.
Brown, pastor, elrtends an
Invitation to all to attend.

At

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
. SUPPLY
CORPORATION

~an'~
Middleport
Open :
9-5 Mon. fhru S.t.
Fr iday 1118 p..n .

I

terest to the parent.&lt;; in allendance.
Teachei'S of the sc hool were
introduced as well as all of
Uw parenl..s attending U1e
meeting. Maralyn Barton,
U1ird grade student, led lbe
group in the pledge tu the
fla g. The third grade class at·
tendance banner and the
a ward .
Refreshments were served
by the officers .

LEONARD PRESTON
Leonard Preston and the
Gospel Express of Columbus
will be at the Nease Set·
tlement Baptist Church,
north of Pomeroy, Sunday,
Sept. 17. Basket dinner at
noon. Bring covered dish.
Hymn sing at I p. m. The
Rev . Don Karr. past or .
Everyone welcome.

. I

923 S. 3rd Ave .

,
Middleport, 0 .
992-2709 or 992-6611
Open : 7:00 to 5:00 Mon . thru Fri.
7:00to 3:00 S;lturday

carnival·
to be held
CHESTER-Plans lor a fa ll
camival tu be held un S.pt. 30
(I'Om 7 to 9 p.m . weJ'e made
during a m~eting of the
Chestel' PTO hel d Monday
nighi a t the sehoul.
A jitney supper will be held
on the same night .with st! rV~
ing to begin at 5 p.m. Im-

OH, FOR BOTH SIDES OF mE CASE~
DEAR RAP :
I have ~ertain habits I don't wantlo break. But my parents
U1ink just because I'm in the same family I must have their exact feelings . I 'm not even their kid- I' m adopted .
We 've tried talking it uut, but when the three ul us are in tile
same room, we end up yelling .
SuI prefer to stay in my room and avoid them . What else can
I do? -DESPERATE 14
DESPERATE :
First of all, forget this business of " not even being their kid."
Adopted children are especially wanted . II you've developed a
t'Omplex here, recognize it, discuss it, and slop carrying a chip
on your shoulder .
Second, you don't always have to agree- that would be total·
ly dull- but you needn't yell or sulk in your room . Try fur calm
understanding , and look at your differences as lessons in how
to get along with others ; that is, sense when " changing the
subject" is better than needless argwnent .
Third, keep your beli efs, but rememller your parent.&lt;; also
have a right to theirs. And perhaps you'll leam from one
another, if each takeH lime out fur listening. -HELEN AND
SUE
P.S. A letter from your parenl..s might begin , "No matter
what we say or do, our daughter screams at us, then locks
herself in her room ... ''
Conununication would improv~ if you three write down your
feelings , exchange notes, then discuss the areas that trouble
you most. You'll be surprised how much each letter will ex ·
plain the others. - H.

Sevc rttl fund l'f!I Sing prujcds wen~ pl ~umed during ct
meeting ul the Middlepu11
United Pentecusla I Church
Women 's AuxiliO::try hchJ CJt
the chu rch Tuesda y.
On Od. 6 ii l'hil'kcn nuutllc
din ne r will IJe served at th e
l'illlrch with the pu blic lt lvitl.:cl, A Chri shnHs bazacu
was planned for Novembe r.
Calendar dish tuwcln arc fur
sale fur $1.75 a nd can he
Sl'! ' lll 't•d by cu nl~n:t wg M rs:
I.inJa Knittel, 992-2502.
Mrs . Luvena Nea l was the
win ner of ti lt' game of l tOJH~ st y

William
Howard
Navy Chief Warrant Of·
ficer William D. Howard, son
of Elwood and Clara Howard
of Route 1, Harrisonville, is
participating in the major
NATO exercises " Bold Guard
'78" and "Northern Wedding
'78" in northern Europe.
He is an officer assigned to
the amphibious assault ship
USS Guadalca nal, home·
ported In Norfolk, Va.
"Bold Guard '78" and
"Northern Wedding '78" are
designed to refine coordination, command and
control capabilities in the
external reinforcement of
NATO's northern nank and In
conducting combined . land
operations. Taking place over
wide areas of the Eastern
Atlantic , North Sea and
English Charmel, maneuvers
w111 include amphibious
landin gs n the Shetland
Islands and Southern Nor·
way . A large scale landing on
the west coast of Denmark's
Jutland Peninsula will be
followed by an overland
movement of the combined
aUied forces for large scale
ananeuvers in Gennany .
Participants number approximately 40,000 men, 170
ships and submarines and 1100
aircraft from Belgium ,
Canada , Denmark , the
Federal Republic of Ger·
many, the Netherlands,
Norway, the United Kingdom
and the United States. This
represents the largest
combined NATO exercises
ever held In Northern

, .. t

.

.

Hush
Puppj,!~·

FOR ALL
THE FAMILY

wtth Mrs. Joy&lt;.:~ Sauters win·

ning the Rihle g&lt;mll! . Mrs.

THE

Mae Mason spoke on fetltll

and Mrs. Ethel Pnddy dosed
the mct:ling with prayt•r . A
covered

d ish

lunc heon

pr ct:e ded th e me eting.
Twcnty·fivc persum; wt·rc in
attcndCJnce.

HELEN AND SUE :
I'm being mothered out of my mind. Mom want.s to make me
" Little Miss Perfect. " She sneakily checks up on what I ea t,
wbat I buy, who I see, my grades, my friends ; and she dues it
provement to the gymnasium in a " Let's be pals" way that's worse than out-and-o ut " No's. "
was discussed , this to include
I'm not overweight, but she's always hinting about diets. I 'm
new chair·s and new curtains. supposed to tell her everything "because I love her," but I led
Ja nt!l Kublentz will estimate
so overprotected f could scream .
U1e ya rda ge and cost ul
Then if I ever do scream, she's awfully hurt a nd cries.
materiods fur t he cu rta ins
When she pries t:onfidences out of me, she uses them aga inst
and report at the next me ; I told her a gi rl I like at sehoul is black , and she's been
meeting.
talking about the Negro crime rate ever since.
Room mothers fur the year
I've got to be smartest, prettiest, muHI popular , and her best
were ctppoinled . Three new friend , so she can brag on me. The pr·essure is awfu1 lx&gt;~tmse
teachers were introduced . I'm really none of these . (Dad 's no help. )
Next meeting was announced
Give me a mother I can light with ' Compared to "sweet and
for Sept. 18. The Meigs Coun- helpful," it would be heaven 1 Please adv ise - LITTLE MISS
ty Historical Sudety will put
IMPERFECT
on a skit at one of the fall
DEARLMI :
meetings and it was decided
Have you considered " reverse mothering?" Be overly l'UII·
tha t a $25 donation will be l'erned about your Mom's weight, her friends, marriage rdamade to the Society.
tionships , whatever, all in the interest of "perfection ." Maybe
she 'II get the message. - SUE
DEARLMI :
. .. And maybe she 'll think, " At last, my da ughter wants to lle
a pal !"
My Rx for a manipulating mother : a finn statement on
limits ; and keep reminding her when she pressures too hard .
Otherwise, she may be leading you a round by the " No's" the
!'eSt of your life. - HELEN

SHOE BOX
Middleport , Ohio

REMINGTON
ELECTRIC

CHAIN SAW
&amp;INCH

39.95 VALUE

1

F.I.P. PRICE

'Breath of life ' chairwomen set
The Central Ohio Chapter
of · the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation announces the
appointment of the following
chairpersons for the 1978
" Breath of Ufe" campaign:
Ruby
Marshall,
Mrs.
Hemlock Grove and Debbie
Gilmore, Rutland.
The " Breath of Life"
campaign, to be held in these
towns in September supports
research to find a cur~ for
cystic fibrosis, a leadin g
genetic killer of American
childr en, and specialized
medical care for children
with all lung-damaging
diseases in 120 CF centers in
t he United States . Loca l
children affected by CF,
severe asthma , chronic
bronchiti s , bron chiectasis

and recurrent pnewnonia are
treated at the CF Center at
Children 's
Hos pita l
in
Columbus .

FORECAST

BAKE SALE
A bake sale will be he ld by
U1e Ladies Auxiliary of the
Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club a t Krogers oil
Saturday, Sept. 23. Besides
baked goods, the Auxiliary
will have homemade candies
011 sa le.

~urope.

Plarmers for " Bold Guard"
and " Northern Wedding '78"
include General Alexander
M. Haig, Jr., USA, Supreme
Allied Commander, Euoope ;
Admiral Isaac C. Kidd, Jr.,
USN,
Supreme
Allied
Commander, Atlantic, and
Royal Navy Admiral Sir
Henry Leach, Allied Com·
Channel.
mander-in-Chlef,
A 1974 graduate of Florida
Junior College, Jacksonville,
Fla. , with an Associate of
Arts degree, Howaid joined
the Navy in November 1958.

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

PARADE
Those wishing to participate in the Southern
Homecoming Parade on Oct.
6 are asked to contact Bunni
McGraw at Southern High
School .

LOOK INTO THE LATEST
FASHIONS FOR MEN AND WOMEN
AT BAHR CLOifHIERS WHILE
SELECTING YOUR FALL WARDROBE.

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVE.

992-2351

RT 0.

VILLAGE PHARMACY
HONORS ALL

POMEROY &amp;
MASON, W.VA. AREA

OAPSE SESsiON

O.M.W. MEDICAL CARDS
POl MORIINPORMATION CALLI

PH.ONE

VILlAGE PHARMACY

992-2156

Mlddle""rt, Ohio ·
, 992-S75t

'

or

Nlw tteven, W. Ye.
.

182-2005

We also keep records tor vour sso deductible plus

THE DAILY SENTINEL/
IOWBN

rDa/./
j

.

•
•
•

Den Talk

Harry Coffield

•

0

~&lt;

:~:~
::::

Lutheran Church Women
elect officers at recent m.ee ttng

&lt;flurch from 9 a .m . to 3 p.m .
Oood used winter items and
liouselwld ~uods are needed
for the sale.
' Mrs. J udy Eichin ger.

of the Month

:;::
:-:·

plore American furnltur.e
Private study, seminar and
beginning with the !620
prole ss ional training
"Pilgrim Period" up to and
highlight' his background.
through
the Victorian Period
Two of his most notable
of
1830.
Beginning with an
e xperien ces are appraisa l
overview,
each succ~ing
training in New York City
under Dr. Robert Bishop, class session will discuss a
direCtor of the Museum of time period in furniture
America n Folk Art and development.
Coffield explains the course
· private study at . tM Henry
Ford Museum , under the this way : "The history ·of the
direction of J . J or dan world has dictated the
Humberstone, consulting . gradualevolutlon .of furniture
·appraiser to the Henry Ford styles. Each period's styles
were a mixture of the past
Museum.
A member oliO antique and with design and decorative
h ist orical professional motifs renecting history.".
Cost of the entire seven
organizations, Coffield has
session
course is $30. To
conducted continuing
register,
· 'lnterested in·
education classes for the
dividuals
should
call Bernie
Columbus and Worthington
(614)
24S-5353,
or
Murphy
Public Schools.
attend
the
first
class
session.
The course itself will ex·

eil fur Oct. 4 and 5 at the

21)

poWtds heavter than Spmks.
Ali also has a four-inch longer
·
ll
nd 1
reach . Bemg ghter a
1
years yoWlger, Ule 2&gt;year-

To some, Chippendale are
the names oftwo Wah Disney
chipmunks.
To an antique admirer,
Chippendale represents a
furniture period between 1755
and 1790.
A course for those in the
lattercatl!()ry will begin Sept.
17 and run through Nov. 5 in
Anniversary Hall on the Rio
Grande College .and CominQllity College campus.
Mr. Harry Coffield, an
Individual of immense
bac~ground and experience
in antique furniture will head
the class called " American
Antique Furniture." The
class w111 meet .seven Sunday
afternoons from 3-6 p.m.
Coffield has actively
studied antiques for 27 years.

~ A rwnmage se:tle was plann·

IS

co~~:e~-i x - anno unced the
retir- ement ot for ward Cur tis

Antique Furniture course
offered by Rio Grande

New officers we1·e eleeted
at the recent meeting uf the
Ainerican Luthe1·an Church
Women of St. Paul ~nd St .
Jl&gt;hn 's IA!theran Churches.
•Elected were Mis.&lt; Ema
Jesse, p!'csident ; Mr.; . Wilma
Mees, vice president; Mrs.
Jl,an Braun, seer~tary ; Mrs.
ll4argar e t
Bl ae ttnar,
u:e~surcr . They will be inslalled at the Dee. I meetin~ .

~~-ew EngiMd
Pla ced argue
that after ~is
o t f e n ! i v e lineman Dwight performance when he won
~heeler on th~ iniured reserve the
heavyweight
I 1st and acqu1red tackl e Bob
· sh ' F b 15 nd h'
McKay from Detro it on w ive rs
champion
lP e . a
1S
Detroit Si gned cente'r superior condition right i'?W,
Wil lie Broc k and rel eased, Spinks can't lose Others say
guard Gary Anderson ..
. •
. ·
. .
City - Placed kick Ah
ready to ftght thiS time
~e!urne r Larr y Marshall on the and wasn 't ready seven
m tured reserve list .
Basketball
months ago.
Detro it ~ Dropped forward
Man to man Ali and Spinks
AI Eberhard and guard Jim
tr st sha '1 · ·
al
l5rice from the active r oster .
con a
rp Y m se~er
San Diego Sign ed rookie critical areas and the differcen tt:r Jerom e Wh itehead to a ences add up to a gambler's
mult i-year contr act .
•
Los Angeles - Si gned guard delight.
Ron c art er to a multi -year
Physical Advantages - Ali

BY GREG BAILEY
Two big events for youngsters of the area are comin(l up
soon. The first Is a hunter safety course sponsored by the
Division of Wildlife . The course will begin Friday night with
GAB . H. Pet. registration at 7 o'clock . The rest of the course will be given
Ca rew Min
13 7 506 169 .334
Rice Bo s
145 .598 193 .323 from 1 tD 5 p.m . on Saturday and SUnday with a test being
Major L eagu e Results
Pin ie ll a N Y
113 407 131 .322 given at the conclusion.
B y United Press Int ernation al
Oli iJe r T ex
116 457 us .317
All evidence points to upcoming reeuJations requiring .
National L eague
Yount M i l
112 439 lJA .305
( 17 inn ings )
Ogl ivie M i l
114 4 15 125 .301 everyone holding a hunting llcell!e lew the first tiole to have
Atlan t a
Robrts Sea
117 409 123 .301 passed a hunter safety course. This regulatioo will probably be
137 550 163 .296
000 10 1 010 008 - 5 15 2 Munson N Y
San Francisco
Thmpsn Oet
136 579 156 .295 in effect by next hunting sea901l. Head instructor this weekend
]30 478 Ul .295 will be Frank Casto,.and f&lt;r more information you can contact
001 000 0:10 000- 3 10 2 Reynlds Sea
Home Runs
Niek ro , Gar ber
( 11 ) Md
National Le.ague : Foster , Cin him at m-ns1 .
Nolan , Bened ict : Kne pper , Barr
The other big event will be National Hunting and Fi.Bhing
('9), Cur t is ( 121 and Tamargo . 3'2 ; Lu zinski , Ph il 30 ; Smi th , L A
29 ; Parker , ~ i tt 26 ; Kingman ,
W- Garoer , ot 5. L - Curt is, 4·3.
Day on Saturday, September 23.
Chi and Starg eiL P itt 25.
Amer ican Lugue : Rice , Bos
Again this year, the Izaak Walton League, Ken Amsbary
000 000 020- 2 6 2
Chi
Phil a
000 300 03K - 6 7 0 40 ; Bavl or . Cat 3'2 ; H isle and Olapter in cooperation with all other IIJ)OI'I5men'a clubs of
Burr i!., McGlothen {8). Her - Thomas , M il 31: Thornton , Clev Meigs County will spoll80r a show and ahibllloo.in observance
nandez ( 8), Moore ( 8) and 30.
Runs Bitted In
of this day. The day's activities will be held at Royal Oak Park
National l eague : Foster , Cin
104; Ga r vey , L A 10'2; Parker , with registration to begin at 9 a.m .
P itt 100 ; Clarl\ , SF 94 ; Smith ,
The day's activities will Include such things as IMmting dog
LA and W in f ield, SO 92.
exhibitions
with obedience demonstrations, , gun safety,
Am erican League : Rice , Bos
124 ; Staub, Del 108; H isle , M il canoeing, trapping, ft.shing, trap shooting, muzzle loading,
106 , ThornTon , Clev 95 ; Cart v . tomahawk throwing, and many others.
Oak 92.
YoJUll!slers from ~ are welcome to observe or
Stolen Bills
Nat i onill League : Mor en o. participate ln many of the day's evenlll. Free lunch will be
P itt 63 . Lo pes, L A 41: Tavera s, provided as weU as lots of adult supervlsloo . There will be
38;
Sm ith ,
SO
36 ;
P itt
many door prizea given, and there will be a cull prize to the
· R icharas , SO 34 ..
American League : LtF iore , scout troop with the most members in uniform. The activities
Del 63; Cruz , sea l!lnd Wil!s,
Telt 49 ; Oilone, Oak 44 ; Wtlson , will cooclude around 3 p.l!l .
KC 38 .
The coon population seems to be up in the county aa Ia the
Pitching
grouse . But quail seem to have been hurt by the last two
VIctories
National league : Perry , SO savage winters. Early squirrel reports have the squirrel
18-6; Hooton, LA 18-8; Gr im Sley, Mil 18-q ; N iekr o, Atl 18 - population either down or widely scattered. Moat biD!tera can
15 ; Bl ue , SF 16-8; John , LA 16 - lind a few squirrels but nooe concentrated. There Ia a big maot
10 ; Richa r d , Hou 16·11 .
crop and perhapa the squirrels didn't need to coocentrate ; tbat
Am eric an Lntue : GuiCir y .
NY 21 -:1 ; Caldwell . M il 18 -9 : could be the reallOII not many are sighted. Squirrela don 'I seem
Pa lmer , Ball 18- 12 ; Tanana , to be quite as infected with warbles u ln rectnt years.
Cat and Soren sen , Mil 17 -10 ;
HOT TIP - Shade River Fi.Bhing Ia oomin(l alive apln.
Flanaga,n . Ball 17 -13; L ten&amp;rd ,
KCH -17 .
See you the 23rd!

rfjij[j{]@(]f}fij/!}[g)

For Longer Lasting

Division 1~A grid leaders

Pentecostal
Women
Generation R,a p .:
meet
By Helen and Sue Hottel

\if!:===::::::;::::::=:=:::=:=:::=::·=:::=====:=::=====:===== ::=:=:=:::=·====:============:::=====:=========:======:==:=:::::=======:::====:=:=======::=======r

to vour ln1urence compenv.

'~

,

Melp Chapter 17, Ohio
Asaoctatlon of Public School
Employes, will meet at 7:30
p.m. Monday "at the Mellis
Junior High School in Middleport.
.
LeCiean,
field
Bob
representative. wlll be
present to answer any •
questions of the memberahlp
and Ron Bauman. candidate .
for the . .te uecullve board
of tbe Southeast Diatrlct. will
~~ the PfOIP'UII· All non·
certified employ• of the
diJtrlc:t are Invited to · the

meelin8·

•

•

our chance to get the convenience and
dependability of Frigidaire and get special

•I

f.

�..•

.

6-The O..ily
. Sentinel, Middleport-Pome1·oy , 0., Thursday, Sept. 14. 1978

Ms. Sisson heading volunteers
POLLY·s POINTERS

Can you.
wash silk?
By Polly Cramer
DE AR POLLY - Have you
ever washed a silk ge:mnent '?
I have a 100 pel'cenl silk
blouse that Is laheletl "Dry
dea n only" t~ful wonder wha t
wou ld ha ppen if I washed it.
.S.S.

DEAR S.S. - I l'ertainly
have wa s hed s ilk gannents.
Some ha ve come out salisfac·
torily a nd others have noL If
your blouse is taggetl · ·dr·y

dean only" then that is what
yuu shuuhJ do - at least until
it betom es a bit wea ry luuk ·

ing. Then you might wash it
ill a t:uld WCiter detergent fur
fi ne washables. But t his is
afte r it docsn 't se~ m worth

the cu.st uf dry deeming. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pel
Peeve is with peopl_e who
d rive alung i11 ~ars and thruw
g!as;; bottles in people's yards

Final deadline
Sunday, Sept.
Pageant . officials an·
nounced Sunday. September
17, at the final deadline for
applications to the 1979 Miss
West Virginia Pageant to be
staged for the eighth con·
secutive · year in. Fainnont.

The fi ve day event will be
presented in the Grand
Concourse of the Middletown
Mall beginning October 18.
The Miss West Virginia
Pageant is an Official Miss
USA- Miss Universe Contest.
There is no " Talent "
requirement , all judging is on
the basis of poise, personality
and beauty of face and figure.•
Applicants must be between
18 and 28, never married and
at least six months residents
of West Virginia, thus college
dorm students are eligible.
All girls interested in com·
peting for the title must write
to Miss . West Virginia
Pageant Headquarters; 603
Schrader Ave .• Wheeling, W.
Va . 26003 by September 17.
Letters must include a recent

or unthc sitk wCJlks. The glass

17

photo, a brief biography and
phone number.
The new Miss West
Virginia will receive a $500
Fashion Bug Wardrobe,
among her many prizes. The
· new winner will be crowned
by the current titlest, 21 year
old Debbie Davis of Huntington, who will be present
for the entire event at the
Middletown Mall.
The girl chosen Miss West
Virginia ·1979, will represent
the Mountain State in the
nationall y t elevised Miss
USA Pa geant. The new
winner will be awarded a host
of prizes including a full
Wh eeler scholarship , gift
certificates and an exciting
two week stay at the Miss
USA Pageant in Biloxi,
Mi ssi ssipp i. Her offi cial
jeWelry will be provided by
Sarah Coventry, Inc.
Appli cation s must be
postm a rk ed by Sunday,
September 17.

~-------------·-----·
I
.
t

i Mason County News Notes
I
By Alma Marshall

necess ita ted due to the
tremendous r esponse to the

course . Sixty-six

pen:;un.s

enrolled al th e first session
Monday . Mrs. Janet Bulln ·is

••

ins tructor and several other
gH rclen club membe1·s wol'ketl w1ll1lhe grou p.
SecumJ session will he held
Monday night at 7:30 p.m .
Materials to he taken are fi ve
24 inch corn stalks , a round
t'Ontainer about two inches
deep, a tall cylinder lype container (such as a juice ca n or
two one-pound coffee cans al·

J

&lt;

tcu.:JJ~d

tugdher i::imJ p&lt;Jintetl 1,
li ne ma teria l. tnmsitiona l
tncttel'ie~ l , and focal ma teria l,
rou nd

at th e Tl1ur sdet y night
mee ting uf EVi:!ll gl· lin t!
Chapter 172. Order uf the
Eastern St.a r, hel.d at the
Masonic Temple, Middleport.
ln tri bute to Mr·. Fowl er ,
mernl&gt;ers ollserv ~ a moment
of silent prayer . Bessie King

and Bub Ki ng wo1thy matron
and worthy patron presided

Sayre, Elec ta; and lla
Darnell , sentinel. Ca tiu·yn
Ervin wo.s the .sunshine page.
Initiation was held [or Roy
Keste rson am.! Larry Sayre.
'Cunununicatiuns .were from
G1·a nd Cha pter and l11e
dis tril'l president ctnnouncing
U&gt;e district p"11y to he held
Oct. 7 a t the Amesvi lle H i~h
Scll ool, with a 6:30 p.m.
putluek ~up~ r . Jnvite~ ti ons
illl' luded i:l rel·eptiuJI hm1uring

Course location changed
as

The eharter was ~raped in
memory of RuselH.' 0. Fowler

I

A new craft show under Bill Lanyi 's leadership is
scheduled for Huntington Memorial Field House oo December
8,19, and 10. I predict that this show will grow and grow just as
the Charleston Capital City Art and Craft Show has grown ,
under his leadership.

~ uc h

Evangeline Chapter 172
met Thursday evening

'~

success.

Location of the fl ower &lt;Jr-.
ra ngt ng cou rse being sponsored Ly the Meigs County
Garden Clubs Asstx.: i~:~tiun ha,. ,
heen changed from the River·
boa t Ruurn of the Pomeroy .
Bra nch of the Athens County
Savi ngs and Loe:tn to the
rec reation building at Royal
Oak Pa rk .
T he
c ha nge
was

could break and then Le stepped o11 a11d pets, to say
JHJthing of how they Jitter cUI
ut/ Jt~rw i se well-kept a rea . MIKKJ.
DF:.~ R POLLY - Whe11 buying a new shower curtain
S(JVC the old one and usc it fur
&lt;J picni t· ta bl e cover . It works
wt·ll ~cau.sc it i.s big and
·ivasha ble. - VONEDA
DEAR POLLY - One
reader wanted tn know how to
keep the lid on her bottle uf
while glue from sticking so
tightl y. When you gel a 11ew
bottle of glue . pai11t or shellal' newspaper.
remove t he lid and dt&gt;~HI 11w

at the m eeting. The pro tern

MASON - I promised Mrs. Vernon Roush of Mason I
would let her know of various dares of craft events. On Sept. 16,
17, the Harvest Moon Festival will be held at Parkersburg City
Park, Parkersburg. Adults 75 cents and children, Senior
Citizens; 25 cents.
Having attended this one from time to time - it's nice as it
is held in the park, and park pavilion.
On Sept. 28th and 30th through Oct. 1st, the Preston Co .
Buckwheat Festival will be held at Kingwood , W. Va .
Admission is free . We have not attended this fun ction , but
understand it is a good festi val.
The Mountain Stare Forest Festival at Elkins. W. Va . is
held on Oct . f&gt;-7. There is a lot going on -bea utiful city, good
fresh air. Crafts can also be purchased there - but there is
much more to see.
An Okt&lt;Jberfest 1978.is a combination of a craft show, lively
entertainment with German and Bavarian folk dancing and
musi c complete with colorful costumes. It is held in the multipurpose building, Ohio Stare Fairgrounds, Columbus , Ohio on
Nov . 2, 3, 4, and 5.
Judy Turner Persinger, formerly of Mason , is show
director . If you get there please stop by Judy's booth to .say
hello - she 'll be glad to see you.
The Ca pital City Art and Craft Show will be held in
Charleston, at Charleston Civic Center, Nov. 17-19. The
admission is $1.50. This is a great show a nd an excellent
chairman , Bill Lanyi, heads the event. He never fa ils to show
his appreciation for the craftsmen that make this event such a

flo wer s.

Needlcpoinl' and stickwn
-..111 also he needed for the
class.
INNOCENT PLEA
ROCKY RIVER (UP! )
Ro.bert Gibson, 26, North
Olmsted, has pleaded in-

nocent to murder in connection with the slaying of
union rival John Cika Jr., 34,
Brunswick.
Cika was bound beaten to
death Tuesday morning in
front of a r estaurant at Rockport Shopping Center. Gibson
was freed Wednesday on
$10,000 bond.
Police said Cika and Gibson
were involved in a dispute
over an office in Millwrights
weal 1871, a division of the
carpenter~ union.

tilltcr r llh ilflll(! bOttle ~'ilh a
damp dot h. Wille the top out
ca refully and then grease
li~htly with petrolewn jelly on the rim ~md the lid, too. No
mort• sticky mess'. Il the lid is
ah·cady stuck use a knife
Llade to p1·y gently until the
top loosens and then follow
the a bove diredio11s.
If you use relum addl'es&gt;
labels sit dowi1 a11d put them
oil a whole box of e11velopes to
sa ve lime and hunting for
lahels when they are needed .
- NAN
DE AR READERS ..
Mildred wrote that she docs
a bout the same to glue bottles
as docs Nan but she uses any
.sort of gr ease to cover the lid
and cap. - POLLY
DEAR POLLY- To make
.!&gt;t ire you hav ~ a tight sect!
when canning with the st.anda nl eannin~:-: jars coat
arow1d the edges with parri:l fill Wi:IX . You will never
have a leaky ja1·. This is very
helpful fur tlwse who l'annol
screw the hds on as tightly as
tl1cy should be. I have been
doing thi s fur yee~rs and it
really works ,- MRS : C.S ..
DEAR POLLY - To make
my nail polish last longe1· I
dip my finge1tips in a solution
of two teaspoons of vin cgar
and a half-cup of water hefm·e
applying the polisiL - MRS.
T.L.
Polly will send you one of
her s igned thank-you
newspa per coupon dip~rs if
s he uses yo ur favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her column. Write POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of thi s

uffi cer.s wert~ Kctthryn Mitchell, a .ssociatc matron; KC:ty
l.ugan, Es th er; Delor es

t he

c h cdrm i:t n

uf

ar -

ra ngem en ts of Gra 1id
Chapter to he held in Da yton,
one honoring Patricii:l Wi Lson,
grand representa tive, Valley
Chapter, McConnelsville; one
for Nancy Riley. Sept. 30 at
Ma rietta : one for Suzarine
Pearl , Grand Chapter offi cer
i:tl Deli:!Wi:tl"e ; rmd UIIC fur
Ni:!um i McC l a in ~ , de puty
gmnd matron of District 22'
at Mt. Drab .
Also received was an in-

campaign will go to support
research and care programs
[or children affecll!d by lungdamaging diseases Uke
Cystic
Fibrosis, severe
asthma, Clllv!!ic bronchitis,
and bronchiectasis.
Cystic
Fibrosis,
an
inherited incurable disease,
affects approximately 1 in

Jay Crouoe, president of
the Bluegrass Chapter,
Cystic Fibrosis Fo~mdat\00,
8lln0!111Ced today that Mrs.
Jo.hn Siaaon, will lead local
volunteers In Mason -in
organizing a Door-to-Door
CampaJcn in October which
Ia Bruth of Ufe month.
The funds raised during the

Polly Cramer

DEBBIE DAVIS

trutment devllaped llwoUCh·
research over the put •
ye.-a many C-F Jllltieata .-e
now Uvlnc Into lbelr teen.

every I,SOOchlldren born. C-F
is a vicious dl~e~~oe that
produces mucus in the lungs.
It causes terrible breathing
difficulties , repeated lung
infections and serioua lung
damage. The mucus can a1Jo
· interfere with normal
digestioo .
Because of improved

and young lldulthood. This
same treatment is 1110
benefiting md oten cllfinll
chU,..en suffering fl"QIJI other
lung-damaging dlnaau .
Even with IIIia pr,.,.., the
need of mllllons o children
who struggle to breathe
grows lar,er, and with It the
need for more volunteers and
more lunda.

-----.....

~­
PARK RESERVED

CONSTITIJTION WEEK
One hundred and ninetyone years ago, strong-willed
men gathered in Philadelphia to mend and
remold a divided land .
The Article.L_ of Con·
federation which had gone
irito effect in 1781 had failed,
and the task of creating a new

SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 16th
UNTIL 6 P.M.

"FAMILY OUTING"
OF
SEMET SOLVAY
DIVISION
I
,
ALLIED CHEMICAL CORP.
ASHLAND PLANT
OPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY11 AM TIL9 PM

national government wa s

. innmense. 'The Daughters of
the American Revolution
remind you that this week is
Constitution Week, and urge
you to know and to use the
liberties provided for you by
our Constitution. Read your
Constitution.
1

CAMDEN PARK ·
HUNTINGTON

U.S. 60 WEST

•

7- The O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pome1·oy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 14, 1978

County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, met Mond,ay
Jnsudlation of offic~rs
Idghlighted the Monday night
meeting ol Meigs County
Salon · 710, Eight and Forty,
held at the American Legion
hall in Racine.
Mrs. Mary Martin was the
installing ·officer with Mrs.
Julia Hysell as tlJe installing
' l'awnonier, and Mrs. Pearl
Knapp as the Ia concierge.
Cor!lllges were presented to
Mrs. Florence Rid •a•·ds'
outgoing chapeau ; Mrs. Iva
Powell, incoming chapeau ;
and Mrs. Marjorie Goett. in. t'Oming secretary.
Installed were Mrs. Powell,
chapeau ; Mrs. Richards,
pouvior member; Mrs. Veda
O..vis, first demi chapeau
premiere ; Mrs. Dullie Hayes,
...cond demi chapeau duexieme; I Mrs. Joni Sellers, Ia
archiviste; Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, l'aumonler ; Mrs.
Goett, Ia secretairr ec.assiere; Mrs . Eunie

Factory-Direct
TVAntenna ·

Cold .

Chapter ~

"Sweaters and Jackets"
for the elementary
school crowd. They'll
want style . .. you' ll
want warmth. We've got both
in our new boy and girl
collection!

New l...exington, and

p.m .

a nd

th e

mother·

daughter banquet for Oct. 12
with tickets at $2.5() available
from any officer. The inspection of Job '~ Daughters held
Saturday night was also
noted . Members we r e
l'e minded that dues are
payable and have been int:n:ased tu $6.
Refres lunen\.&lt;i were served
by the Masons.

Birth announced

as
seen on
national

14.

....

Hours:
9:30 to 5:00

Mon. thru Sat.
9:30 to 8:00

Friday

Compares to
Antennas Costing
50% More

S ignal sp\ittet
included Wi th
ante nna pur·
chase .

Reg.
. 3" Value
CHARGE IT

ft. (MOST STORES)

SHOPPE
2nd St.
POMEROY, 0.

Covers all TV bands plus FM . Sharpens black
and white. makes color come alive . 60° widesweep c ~tures signals ·on all channels. Gold
Alodized finish fights rust . Snap-on instal·
lat ion . Made in the U.S.A . by Ra(lio Shack.

AUT'~AATIC

by Archer

ANTENNA ROTATOR

5295
27.,,.

six uum:es and was 20 inches

r------··- ,

Social 1
I Calendar 1

1

Tl:llJRSDAY PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, luncheon,
nmrsday' noon at the home
of Mrs. Mary Morris.
Members are asked lo take
gifts for their secret sisters.

1\.
PJeaci'J,.InnA
Pl1'-i:1
A~

Archerotorfl-11 by Archer

,.....9s

L'C rtificate and a trophy ; M1-s.
Rhoda Hackett received a
trophy on her memorial service; Mrs. Richards a dt.Htiml on her chapeau report,
and Mrs. Goett, a certificate
of me1·it on her Ia archjviste
repmt. Mrs. Hampton also
won first plat'e and received a
cash awa1'd and a certificate
on her book or prayer.
Other awards we1·e I'CCeived by Mrs. Knapp, two certificates for Sl'hularship con·
tributions; Mal'ie Boyd,
trophy and certificate for
hesl tuberculosis report bilsl'&lt;i on hours contributed by ·
1nem!Jers in the county tuher- ·
c'Uiusis testing progrHm .
A card of UIHnkS WHS read
fl'om Mrs. Hampton for fOIKI
and flowers at tl1e death of
he1· brother, Tl&gt;e bulletin
from Mrs. Dorothy Bmdy,
departemental chapeau, announced the- American
Legion Auxiliary sehoul of instruction fur Sept. 16 at the
Neil House, Cohnnbus and
U&gt;e Eight and Forty sehoul
for Sept. 30 at the Imperial
House, Columbus. Also an·
nounced was the homet'Oming for Mrs. Lyle Roush lo he
l&gt;eld at Marietta Oct. 1. The
Oct. 21 reception for Erwin K.
Crossman, Dayton, gre~nd
chef de gare of the_Fol1y and
Eight was announced as was
a reception fo•· Mrs. Brady,
on Oct . 29.
The fall The pouvio1·
schedule !01· the yea•· was an nounc-ed, Dec. 2 and 3 at the
Neil House in Culubuus:
March 3 and 4 and May 5 and
6 al tile Imperial House
North, Culwnbus.
For those planning lo attend the school of instruction,
reservations with a check (or
$4 .25 for lhe luncheon are to
be mailed to Linda Edmundson , 1958 Ratlimell Road, Colwnbus by Sept. '1:1 . Chapeaus
passe dues a1·e SQ cents and
should he sent to Kay
Slama tis 3668, W. PHrk Road,
Cleveland, 44111.
Mrs. Ruby Marshall and
Mrs. Martin were hostesses
and served cookies and ice
cream from a table decorated
with a jewel box , beads, and
'"d tapers .

BARBARA SHERIDAN
will be speaker when the

16· 1709

UHF/VHF/Fill ANTENNA COUPLER

Mr. a nd Mrs. Alex- L.
Halley are announci ng the
birth of their first child , a son,
Justin Edward, burn al the
Holzer Medical Center Sept.
9. He weighed seven pounds,

lung.
.. Pa ternal grandparents are
Mr . and Mrs. Robert Halley,
Cheshire, and the maternal
grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Dwayne Carpenter ,
Bonneau B!'Hch, S. C. Pater·
Mrs. Lula Circle ac· nat great-grandparents arc
companied by Mr. and Mrs. Delma Halley and David
Harold Circle and sons at- Grueser 1 CIJt~s hire , and
tended the wedding of Keith Thelma Grueser, Pomeroy .
Circle and Felicia Miller at Maternal greatgrandparents
Winfield, W. Va. on Friday are Louise Downs, Bonneau
evening. A friend , Sonia Beach, S. C. and Mr . and Mrs.
Andrew Morach, Bonneau
White, also attended.
Mr: and Mr s. Russell B!'ach. S.C.
Harris, Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Thompson and baby of Xenia,
Ohio visited with Mr. and
Mrs. Homer Circle, Verna
and Wavie over the weekend.
Mel vin
Circle
from
Wichita , Kansas spent a few
days with his mother, Mary
Shennan F. Ballengee, Eva
Circle. Others at the Circle D. Ballengee to John C.
home during the weekend
Scragg, Esther M. Scragg,
were Mr. and Mrs. James U&gt;ts 3-4, :I:i, 36, VUlage Dexter.
Circle, Mr. and Mrs. George
Charles Karr, Leona S.
Circle, all of New Haven, W. Karr to Anna Lee Mash,
Va .
Parcels, Salisbury.
Betty Van Meter and Eunie
Ferne Lucille Bradbury,
Brinker attended the Gainer dec. to Cecil P. Bradbury,
reunion held at Hebron, Ohio lots, Pomeroy.
on Sunday.
Cecil P. Bradbury to Ar·
Mrs. Homer Circle and son, thur
Gilmore ,
Goldie
Carl , visited with Mr. and Gilmore, U&gt;ts, Pomeroy.
Mrs. Raymond Snyder and
Robert R. Boice, Rachael
Deanie of Columbus on Boice to Joseph Robert
Sunday.
Wilson, Parcels, Salisbury.
Mrs. Robert Lee, Secky,
Herman Ray Wr,ston,
Bob Bill visited with Mr. and U&gt;retta M. Wrilton to Robert
Mrs. Arthur Orr of Chester E. Deibler, Dortha W.
'during the weekend.
Deibler, 13.881 acres, Olive.

~
See the Kiddie Shoppe
,. ·for
your
child's
needs. Sl zes month -

TV

,,,,

I

It's time to think

In Time For New Fill/ Shows, Sports (ilnd Cleilner FM; tooJ!

vitalion tu u~ 75th ;mnivcrsa i'Y pa11y of ·camatlon
also · a rt.!t:~ptiml hunur·ing
B!'rtha Huffman. Thank you
nutes were ree~d from Mrs.
Clara Ci'iswell and Mrs.
MaryIn Wilcox. Mrs. Euvetla
Bechtle reported canis had
been se nt lu Mrs. Wil cox ,
Mrs. Mildred Fowler, Mrs.
Criswell , and Mrs. Audrey
TI&gt;eobald .
Glenna Crisp and Betty
Van Matre wen~ i:!ppuinted to
uu~ prog ram t:onunillee fur
Friends Night to he observed
Oct. 6 al Harrisonville. The,
fa the r ~sun banquet was announced fur Sepl. 26, 6:30

Brinker, la ~onderge .
A re por1 was given on the
cystic fibrosus fund drive
currently w1de1·way and it
was noted that donations to
dale total $518.92: Syracuse,
Hemlock G1·ove and Pomeroy
will be ;mticitetl house-tohouse With fw1ds to go
through lhe Central Ohiu
Chapter of Cystic tribrosis.
Nametl to the auditing committee wer·e Mr·s. Davis and
Mrs. Lula Hampton . Dues are
payable now · and may he
mailed to Mrs. Goett, E. Main
St, Pome1·oy. The Salon voled
to purchase new rituals for
U1e officers. The sale uf candy
as a fund l'ai~ing project was
discussed w1d M1·s. Searles
and Mrs. Knaw are to order
U1e candy .
Noted at the meeting wer·e
U1e awards won by the Salon.
M1;s. took fil'st in the state on
her publicity scrapbook and
Mrs. Hampton ret:eivetl (I

Carmel News,
By the Day

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they care about ae, too!.

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..

•
••

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1. Metn

a,. Nltlltlllllt

l'llmeror. o•

._.__,.._.____.__._w

~

h

..-.

....

____ _ Mahatra speaks
to UM Women
Madu Mailalra of Jndia was
gu\:sl SJ&gt;t!i:lker at a meeting uf
the United Methodist Women
nf

the

Enterprise

Met hodiSt

Unitct1

Cl&gt;u rcil

held

recently i:Jt t he home uf Mr:s.

Scripture from James J ,
through 10 · wa ~ rcStd by·
Mrs. Becky Cotterill and Mrs.
Fr(tnkie Hunr1el .sang The
l.urd 's Prayer. During the
business meeting cuntlucted
lll lc

Oclures Wil l.
by Mrs. Hwmel, Mrs. Mart ha
A n:sident of Pomeroy now Husted was lli:tiOt!tl chainmm
and employed in tile Pomeruy uf the JIUIIlill&lt;lting committee.
LiiJrarv, Mrs. Mahat ra talkOthers attending were Mrs.
til al&gt;o.ut the c.:ustoms of her Cordelia Bentz. Mrs. Kathy
lil llllCii:JtH.l, Cllld till' nwnerous Corbitt, Mrs. Beulah Utter·
cha nges whic.;h a re l.ilking bal'k , Miss Frude~ I..civmg,
place t here now . She Mrs. Durotl1y Srn1th, Dorothy
displayctl a V(:IJ"iety uf items Wt~rt h , Mr s. Jt:nnie Warth,

'

which she Lruught from Jn-

lba . Mrs. Agnes Oixun wc.ts
the !)I'Ogram leatler cmd

11 1-

truduced tile speake r .

and guests, Pe~tl y Edwards~

Amy Warth, cmd Ma.: hcllc
Me~hatra

Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Reid
AUXILIARY MEETS
CHESTE R - The Lad&gt;es
Auxilia ry of the fire depa rtment
met
Wedn esday
evening a t the fire house with
president Karla Cheva lier in
charge . The meeting opened
·with );he Lord' s Pray er
f'&gt;llowed by roll calL The
secreta
ry's report was given
a nother of Mrs. Lusk's
Christy a nd the
by
Margaret
dau ghte r s,
Mrs. J oyce
report
by Opal
treasurer's
Bart rum, Rutland.
Wickha m. A card nf thanks

Lessie Lusk ·reunited with son
for first time in 63 years

Mrs. Lessie Lusk
Mrs . Le ssle Lusk ,
Pomeroy, was recently
reunited with her son
whom she had not seen lor
63 years.

Mrs. Lessie Lusk, Cherry
St ., Pomeroy, was reunited
with her son for the first tim e
in 63 years recently .
Due to financi al reasons,
Mrs. Lusk was unable to rear
her son in Decatur, Ga . They
were separated a nd lime
marched on.
The son , Hugh Dorse y
Reid, a resident of Bla ine,
Wash., had a genealogist
getting together the famil y
tree and he-placed a notice in
a Georgia newspaper. Mrs.
Lusk' s daughter; Helen , read
the newspaper inquiry a nd
answered it. The answer led
to Reid calling his mother on
the phone a nd making
arrangements to travel here
to see her. Reid a nd his wife
spent a week here visiting
with Mrs.. Lusk and with

MONDAY
RACINE Elementary PTO
)rill meet Monday, Sept. II at

,,

mother was read. Retipe
cards were orde red and will
be for sale . Members in a t-

tendance were Betty Newell ,
Mar ga ret Chr isty , Opal
Wi ckham , Shie la Tay lor .
Ethel Orr, Cla ra Conroy, Jnzy
Newell , Cla rice Allen and
Karla Chevalier .

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

Jeans

Jeans

Hold party
-NOW THAT YOU'RE BACK ON THE CAMPUS
SCENE YOU'll WANT TO lOOK YOUR BEST.

r.a ry Wt~lkt.! r
and Robin Hwnphrcy entertained Sundcty with a surpr ise
Pomeroy Chapter of the party tiunuri11g thei r parents ,
Women's Aglow Fellowship Mr. and Mrs. C. Ed. Hw nmeets Thursday allhe Meigs phrcy on th eir :15th wedding
Inn. Doors will open at 6: 30 anniversa ry.
Gifts were p re~eutcd tu thC
for the dinner meet ing with
couple.
A decorated t:~kt: .
dinner served at 7.
frostt'
&lt;
i
fruit
puneh, and min ts
PRECEPTOR BeLa Beta
were
scrved
lu Mr . a nd Mrs
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Raymund
Rardin . . Sr ..
Sorority will meet ThursAt
hen
s~
Be11
Buckft·y. Mrs.
t.ltty noun at the home of
Vern
Rose
,
Mr.
and Mrs.
Mrs. Mary Morris, Lincoln
George
Bucklcy,
Mr . ~ml
Hill, for a lun cheon .
Mrs.
Cl&gt;cste1·
Bucklcy,AIIn
Mcmhers are to take gifts
and Jinuny, Gale McCai n ami
ror their secret .Sisters.
Da le Lee , a nd Mr. o.m d Mrs.
MEIGS COUNTY GIRL
R.itndall Coulson. Juy and
Scout Leader s, other
Kay Sue.
volw1teers, 10 a.m. to noon
at l11e Meigs Inn . P1·ogra m
and activities fur fttll to be
discussed.
7:30 p. m. at the elementa ry
MEIGS COUNTY Hwnanc school. Pa rents are urged to
Society. 7: 30 Thursday at the attend to discuss the fall
meeting room of the Athens
ca rnival. Babysitting will be
County Savings and Loan Cu., provided.
Pomeroy.
TUESDAY
OHIO VALLEY Grange
SAI.ISBUR
Y PTO. i::lO
2612 will meet at the hall in
Tuesday
night
at the scluml :
Letart Falls, 8 p.m. Thursteachers
and
per
sonnel to f.&gt;l'
day ; potluck refreshments .
introduced.
SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN - The New
Haven Volunteer Fire
Department and its auxiliary
will hold a chicken barbecue
Saturday at the fire staUQn
beginning at 11 a.m. Com·
plete dinners wUI be served.
POMEROY Lodge 164,
F&amp;AM, open house, 5:30-7:30.
Everyone welcome.
POMEROY
MASONIC
U&gt;dge 164, F&amp;AM, observing
open houae at the temple 5:30
to 7:30 p.m. Saturday. Ohio
. Grand Lodge film , " A
Precious Heritage" will be
shown and representatives of
Masonry, Job's Daughters
and DeMolay will give
presentations on their
groups. Public invited.
SUNDAY .
COUNTY WIDE prayer
meeting, 2p.m. Sunday at the
Rutland Community Church
with Glen Bissell, class
leader.
SUNDAY
HOMECOMING, Wesley
Chapel Church, Sunday,
basket lunch, 12 :30 p.m.
ANNUAL picnic of the Big
B!'nd Citizens Band Radio
Club will he held Sunday at
the Forest Acres Park near
RullHnd, Sheller 3, at 12 :30
p.m.
LEONARD Preston and
Gospel Express , Nease
Settlement Bapt.ist Church,
Pomeroy, Sun. , Sept . 17.
Basket dinner at noon . Bring
covered dllh. Pastor is the
Rev., Don Karr. Everyone
welcome.

from Jean F reder ick for the
meal provi ded by the
Aux il iary at the death of her

Mr. and

Mr~.

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JEANS PRICED FROM

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126 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

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-

GET READY FOR
OLD MAN WINTER

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�'

8-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Sept. l4, 1978

•

ls~·:~iaPH . To.mato
Bermce Bede Osol

.

·

farmers may switch crops
.

·

a

September 15, 1978
Th1s o: om1n g year you co u ld De
111 sev~ ral

Involved

mteresting

partnersn1p s Su ccess IS lik ely
11 your co unterpart offe rs ta lents you ta ck U he or s he

doesn 't. th e oooos1te may be
true

VIRGO ~Aug . 23·Sept . 22) Mar-e
an extra effo rt t o da~ to be
F?tllure to be a
team player cou ld lead you to
Clo some th 1n g th at woul d o p pose you r bes t 1nterests . Ha vIng tr o uble se lec tmg a caree r?
Se nd tor yo ur copy of Ast raGraph Letter b'f ma1ling 50
ce nts lor each and a long . se lfad dress ed , s tamped em•elope
io As tr a- Graph , P 0 . Box 4B9 .
Rad rO Cll y Sta tro n . N Y. 10019.
Be sure to spee dy birth sig n
co ope rat 1ve

LI BRA ~Sept . 23·0ct. 231 You
may frn d rt necessary !Od ay to
pu t your foo t down 111 a sr tua llo n where someone mrght try
10 cu t rn to b~ne f i t s to whic h
yo u alone are enti tl ed
SCOR PIO ~Oc t . 24· Nov . 22) SoCially you 'll garner a lot o t oohs
and aahs today . but tak e it in
str rd·e . It you co me o n as less
than humble the responses
could turn negativ e
SAGITTARIUS ~Nov . 23·Dec .
l 1) Normall y you en joy bei ng
your own person . but toda y yo u
co uld tr y to do lhrn gs the ·same
wa y someone you ' re impressed with does thing s .
You 'll tall llal.
CAPR ICO RN (Dec . 22·Jan . 19)
Be sure you 're well-grounded
1n facts b~lore you get in to
debates with trrends today .
You1 state men ts wil l be chal len ged l o r verificati on .
AQUARIUS ~Jan . 20·feb. 19) Be
certain that you ca n handle o ld
fi nan ci al obli gati ons bef ore
yo ur assum~ any ne w ones
tod ay. Yo ur boo~ s had better
balance

or you cou ld g e t yo ur·

self inJo a mess
PISCES (Feb. 20·March 20) Do
not le t unQual ified associates
make important dec;isions for
yo u today , even if thei r i nt en ~
lions are mean t to be helpfu l.
Get e•pert adv 1ce where need-

ed .
A~IES ~March 21·Aprit 19) Play·
ing the Good Sam rol e may
have some drawback s today .
Ironica lly . yo ur noble purpose
could be misin terpr ete d by the

one you seek to he lp .

TAURUS (Aprii20·May 20) Pelly
ind ividual s are ha rd for you to
hand le today The y co uld bring
you down to thei r level instead
of you bringrn g th em up to
yours .
GEMINI ~May 21·June 20) Do
not Qrscuss your acco mpli sh·
ments today in fron t of one you
know is a trifle jealou s of you .
You' ll re ce ive only cr itic ism .
CANCER ~June 21-July 22) It 's
best

you

bi te

y o ur

tongue

today 1ather than say uncomp limentary thi ng s to co mpanions .
Put-dow ns tram you w111 evok e
harsher ones in return .
LEO ~July 23-Aug . 22) Be ve ry
careful 1n ior nt ve ntu res today
II you let yo u r guard. down ,
conditions could shill so as to
prove to be personally unprofi t- .
able.
!NEW SPA PER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

Patient killed
KIRTLAND HTI..LS, Ohio
(UP!) - Lois Weaver, 34, a
mental patient , was clubbed
til death with a baseball bat
Wednesday in front of
counselors and other patients .
at an outpatient center, police
said.
The slaying occurred at the
East Shore Unitarian Church.
Director Harry Core of the
Lake County Mental health
Center declined til conunent
on the attack.
Police tl&gt;ok mental patient
JeffS. Hacha , 24 , Willoughby,
into custody . He was being
he ld at the Lake County Jail
today .

Glen Maddy, Fremont, the FLOC represenis
small
By JOHN T. KADY
agent for Sandusky County, minority of the state's 8,000
United Press IntemaUilllal
Tomato
farmers
in which is the state's largest workers and the publicity the
northwestern
Ohio, tomato producing county, o.-ganizalion reeeived was
concerned
with
the said FLOC bad not been' lnto not deserved.
County
this
"They (FLOC leaders)
increasing militancy of Sandusky
season.
claim they are the crusaders
migrant ·workers,
are
Maddy_ contended that for the migrant workers,"
considering switching to
other crops or using
mechanical harvesters nert
year, United Press International has learned.
Some of the questions we service personnel. Examples
The
Farm
Labor
Organizpng Conmittee, which · board members are asked of educational service persays it represents migrant concern the number of sonnel are . (I) librarian, ~2 )
workers, staged a work teachers we employ in our school counselor, (3) school
stoppage in some of the district. We would like to tell nurse, ( 4) elementary art
state's fl&gt;mato fields this year you how staff requirements instructor, ( 5) elementary
physical education inand ·farmers are already are determined.
structor.
(6 ) elementary
One
of
the
state
mandates
looking for means to avoid
music
instructors,
and (7)
understood
that
is
not
really
such confront~tions next
·visiting
teachers.
Each
of
is
the
staffing
requirements
year.
these areas most be filled
for
regular
teachers
and
"The farmers have three
with people that are properly
alternatives. They can go educational service per· certificated . School ad111echanical, they can srow sonnel. Beginning with the ministrators
are
not
other crops, or they can stick 11978-79 school year, each classified as educational
public school in the state of
with the migrant workers,"
Ohio
must employ one service personnel.
said Kimmet. " A lot of
There is a penalty imposed
regular teacher for each 25
fanners have already made
upon
a school district by the
regular claSsroom students.
the decision to go mechanical
Department
of
. For example, if a school State
next year," said Kimmet.
system had 1000 regular Educaiion for nnt meeting the
" One mechanical harvester
st a.ff ing
students it would be required mandated
replaces a l~t of migrant
requirements. For each
employ
forty
regular
to
workers."
·
classroom teachers. The full regular full time classroom
Kimmet said , however, tne
tbne equivalent student in a teacher below what is
purchase of. ~ mechanical
vocational
education required will cost a local
harvester is a big investment
program or a special board of education apon the part of the farmer and
education program cannot be proximately $22,000 in state
the harvester tends Ill get
counted as regular classroom aid . There is also a penalty of
bogged ' down in the fields in
students. Nor can vocational approximately $22,000 for
rainy weather ..
instructors. special education each full tbne educational
"You can't beat a hand- teachers or the teachers of service personnel below what
picked crop but if there is federally funded programs be is required.
going to be so much agitation. counted as regular classroom
Projecting the enrolbnent
then the fanners won't be teachers.
of the regular classroom
able to work with the
Beginning with the 1978-79 student by a school system
migrants," said Kimmit.
school year, each school for staffing requirements is
"If this agitation keeps up system must employ one important. Not employing
we will sbnply mechanize the
educational service per- enough regular classroom
business, " he said. "It means
sonnel for each 200 regular teachers and educational
a large investment but it is
classroom students. If a service personnel will result
something we will have to do
school system had 1,000 in the loss of a significant
if we can 't go with hand
regular classroom students it amount of money to the
labor. ''
would be required to employ system. Based on the closing
Bob Cole, Napoleon, the
five full time educational enrolhnent for last school
county agent for Henry
County, agreed with Kimmet.
"Some of the farmers are
a !ready
buying
the
mechanical harvesters and
Supplemental Security checks. The first $20 a month
getting "ready fo~ nert year,"
Income,
SSI.
makes generally does not count.
said Cole. "But most wUI wait payments to people 65 and Income above $20 a month
until this winter · before over or disabled or blind who except earnings, generally
making a final decision.
do now own much property reduces the SSI payments.
"There are 8ome that will that can be turned into cash. The SS1, check may be
go to other crops although The basic purpose of the SSI reduced if the eligible person
they get a little more mone)l program is to provide lives In someone elses
out of tomafl&gt;es ,' said Cole. monthly checks when they household or earns over $65 a
are needed so that those month.
People who have been
eligible can have a basic cash
income of $189.40 a month for getting Supplemental
one person and $284.10 a Security Income · payments
month for an eligible married for a year are being con·
tacted by Social Security to
couple .
CLEVE LAND (UP! )
A single person can have see if they are receiving the
Negligence was responsible assets - Items owned right amount in their monthly
for the . death of Cheryl worth up to $1 ,500 and still be SSI checks. A yearly
Winiarz, 10, Canfield, in a fall eligible for SSI. The assets of Redetermination of eligiblity
from a carnival ride , couple can be up to $2,250. is required by Law to find out
Cuyahoga County Coroner Assets include savings ac- if there have been any
Dr. Samuel Gerber ruled counts, stocks , bonds , changes in a person's life
Wednesday.
jewelry and .other valuables. which would affect the
The child fell from a ferris
Not everything counts as an monthly
SSI
payment
.wheel at the St. John Cantius asset. For example a house amount.
O!urch festival in Cleveland doesn't count and neither
More information about SSJ
Aug. 17 and died six days does an older car, nor does a canbe obtained by caUing the
later. The Cuyahoga County small insurance policy . Athens Social Security Office,
Prosecutor's office said the Personal effects or household located at 221 \0 CVolumbus
caS€ will go to the grand jury. goods do not count either. Road. The telephone number
Cl eveland
officials You can have some money is 592-1440. Meigs County
previously ruled that Sebring coming in and still get SSI residents can dial 992-$22.
Exhibit &amp; Supply Co.,
operator of the rides, set up
the ferris wheel without city
inspection . Sebring President
I
Carl Bayer had his license
Letters of opinion are welcomed . They should be Ieos
revoked .
than 300 wordsloag (or subjed to reduction by the editor)
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
SQUAD RUN
be withheld upon publlcaUon. However, oa request,
names wlll be disclosed . Letters should be In good taste,
The Pomeroy Emergency
addressing Issues, not personalities.
Squad was called to Condor
St . at 7:18p.m. Thursday for
Tom Wells, who was taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.

they don 'I want .to be
associated with FLOC,
"Number one Is the $14 a
year dues," said Maddy.
"N11111ber two, If a mijranf
has troubles he can talk to
that farmer. He doesn't need
a third party. And some

migrants are allll afraid of
worlllng out of a unllll! haU."
Maddy asreed with the
other agents that If FLOC
cmnes to Sandusky County It
would prompt farmers to
switch to ather a-ops or
..,.
mechanical pickers.
"Two of the largest
Yoor " Extra Touch"
farmers In the county said If
Florist Slnce1957
the workers had left two
years ago they could have
year and on the registration teachers. However, if the handled everything with
for the entering kin· 1978-79 project Is approved by mechanical pickers," said
dergarten, Southern has a the State Department of Maddy, "W1 have farmers
projected enrolbnent o( 960 Education, an additional who could have used
FLOflli·T ·
regular classroom students. reading tea~her will be added mechanical pickers this year
If this projection stands, 38.4 to initiate a reading program because of the dry weather
PH. 992·2644 ~
classroom teachers and 4.8 in theJunio,r High. The Tltle I conditions but used mlsrants
educational service per- reading program Is 100 because they had a com•
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
sonnel will be needed to fulfiU percent federaUy funded.
mitment to the workers.
y,., ... ~TO Fl(l,.l.:.t
the mandated staffing
Another
project
is
"I am proud of the farmers
requirements for the 1978-79 presently being prepared for
school year.
submission to the State
Currently Southern has Department of Education for
employed 39.0 regular a speech and hearing
teachers and 5.0 educational therapist. If approved, an ·
service 'personnel. A survey attempt will be made to
of the student enrollment wiU employ a therapist for the
be conducted in October for district. The cost of this
the district for the State project will be paid by the
Department of Education Disadvantaged
Pupil
from which an actual Program Funds. It should be
calculation will be made. of noted that if the board did not
Southern's staffing needs.
participate in Title I or the
There are other certified Disadvantaged
Pupil
staff needed to fuHill state Program Funds this money
mandates. The Southern would not be used to benefit
Board inust employ five the students of Southern.
special education teachers to
Southern Local also has two
meet the special edUC!IIion full time administrators .
Here's a tiMk bit oll oo t~ar thal'l pr.ctrcal
requirements and it must They are the high school
and comlortlbla Waar rt to wor~- w11r 11
employ three full time principal and the local
lfplay-ycull ,njcy itt llltUtltity Cll t·
tic l1nn with tlylisP, cleated front,
equivalent vocation teachers superintendent.
SECURITY wrt l ItnO IJCI Id f)IICt
to meet the vocation
rn your footwear wardrobe
As you wiU note from the
education requirements.
above we at Southern are not
In an effort to improve the over staffed but we do t.teet
educational program and state mandates required for
Security
service offered to its state aid.
Avellaltlt In
students, the Southern Board
Southern l&lt;&gt;cal Board
•own I Wine
of Education participates in
of Education
special federal and state
Dallas Hill, President
funding programs for this
Shirley Johnson
purp&lt;ise. The Title I reading
SueGrueser
program in the past has
Betty Wagner
employed five reading

Southent board.explains policies·

___

.__,

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

ltr.l E. Main

ON 1979 MODELS
RCA XL-100

Negligence
responsible

By Alma Marshall

I

Dear Sir,
We would like til publicly eztend our thanks to .Dale EUis'
Sohio Station and to the "Hitchln' Post" for donating their
facilities for our recent car wash, held at the EUis Station in
Middleport. We feel our area Ia very fortunate to have men
such as theSe who give of themselves to help others in projects
such as these.
Thank you again.
Sincerely,
WIUtam M. Weaver, co-leader
The YouthGroupofthe
Church of Jesus Christ of
Latter~ay Saints

I

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Thursday Til12 Noon
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773-5592
&lt;t

I,

'

EUGENE FRENCH
Eugene H. (Gene) French,
63, High st., Middleport, died
Wednesday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. French was bom April
8, 1915 at Rocky River, Ohio,
a son of the late Harvey and
Ethel Warner French. He
was part owner and later
oamplete owner of PoweU's
Sunoco Station In Middleport
and had worked .during · his
career for four years with
Ohio Fuel Gas Co . He was a
member of Heath United
Methodl• Church.
Surviving are his wife,
Catherine Powell French;
three sops, Carter P. and

·By PA'rRICIA KOZA
the gift, and possibly
WASHINGTON (UP!)
pocketirtg the cash instead of
The ·House has given givillg it to his campaign
President carter ·a major committee.
boost by passing his civil
In testbnony before the
service legislation. The House Assassinations
Senate, however, is not Committee, thewidowofl..ee
taking any cues, and the fate Harvey Oswald apparently
of the natural gas bill is still could shed no lig))t on what
unknown.
·
her husband's motive niay
Senate Democratic leader have been for killing John F .
RObert Byrd, attempting to Kennedy in 1963.
get !lOme action on the Issue,
In fact, she said Oswald
told
his
colleagues "always
spoke
comWednesday they could finish plbnentary of Kennedy. "
up before tl)e November
In other developments
elections if they could decide Wednesday :
on
the
natural
gas
- House-Senate talks
om1
aimed
at
negotiating
compr se.
differences between each
But his tactic did not work,
andonceagain,Byrdfalledlll body's budget resolutions
get the needed unanimous broke off when Senate
consent Ill set a time for a test negotiators decided til ask the
full Senate whether it would
vote.
The victory for Carter on agree til provide more public,
his
civil
service works projects to create jobs ..
reorganization biU came in
- Former Sen. Eugene
the form of an overwhelming McCarthy testified the
510 vote by the House. The government's requirement
Senate passed the biU, 87·1, that broadcast stations grant
' 'equal tbne" Ill political
three weeks ago.
candidates • is meaningless
The bill would make It
d
d
easier for managers In the because indepen ent an
2.1-milllon
member third-party candidates are
bureaucracy
to
fire not treated fairly . McCarthy
Incompetent employees and ran for president in 1976 as an
independent.
1 dmlnlst ti

Keith E., both of Middleport;
Kbn W. French of New
Mexico; a brother, Warner
Frenc~" of Columbus·, a sister,
Mrs. Velma Roush, Denver,
Colo.

WITH
COUPON

c:rlme.
Sen. Qladll Percy, R-m.,
who orpnlred tbe t.r1n111 to
alert fedlrll aftldala to the
11vw"-! dnltt of - n lor
proftt,
pld
It
"II
IIIIJIIiltallabJJ a lfOwth
•ttrprill and l)'ndlcated .
c:r1me f CL are ridlal tbe
WIYt."

r

provision to give airlines $2.5
blllion to h eIP them Cut
aircraft noise, -despite
charges by ·opponents that it
was a "sweetheart deal." But
"" 93
d
it was close, b,.,.l ' an
another test vote Is expected.

Also surviving are two • The
House
Ethics
aunts, an uncle, several Committee,
beginning
nieces, nephews and cousins disciplinary hearings for four
and two srandsons, Wayne s i ttln g congressmen
and Pat French.
- · • bnplicated in the Korean
Funeral services will be lrlbery scandal, heard Rep.
held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Edward Roybal, D-Calif. •
Rawlings-Coats
Funeral testify there Isn't enough
Home with the Rev . Robert . money in the world to make
Bumgarner officiating. him tie.
But he admitted receiving a
Burial wiU be in Riverview
Cemetery. Frle11ds may call U,OOO cash conlribution from
at the funeral home from 2 to South Korean businessman
4 and'? to 9 p.m. Friday.
Tongsun Park, not reportinR

Scripps won't
run newspaper

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
E.W. Scripps Co. " will not
continue to operate the
Cincinnati Post" if a
proposed business merger
with the Cincinnati Enquirer
is rejeded, says a Scripps
attorney.
The statement by attorney
· Jonathan E. Thackeray at
Wednesday's federal government hearing· on the proposal
was a clarification of Thackeray's statement Tuesday
that Scripps "will close the
newspaper" if the ·business
merger is disapproved.
Asked if Thackeray ' s
revised statement meant the
Brown the president may not Post would be for sale if the
get aU he wants the second merger request is denied,
tbne around in the defense Scripps Preisdent Edward W.
authoriation bill. Carte.r Estlow would not comment.
vetoed the first one because it He also refused comment on
contained a $2 billion how long Scripps would
ked continue operating the Post if
supercarrier he never as
the merger is turned down .
for...:.A researcher from the
Thackeray 's clarifying
Massachusetts Institute of statement was based on the
Tecmology testified that ni- wording of a resolution ap\rile, i' meat additive, sllould prov ed Tue sda y by the
be graduaUy banned because e&lt;ecutive board of the
tests show" a link between Scripps board of directors
nitrite and' cancer.
stating that if the business
'
merger is rejected, Scripps
" will not continue t o operate
ASK TOWED
the Cincinnati Post."
Marriage licenses have
The statement highlighted
been issued to Phillip the third day of a Justice
Richard LaComb, 19, Tup- Department hearing on the
pers Plains, and Tammy joint Post·Enquirer request
LyM Fortney, 18, Reedsville; to combine all but the
Roger Lee Chaney, 23, Rt. I, editorial operations of the
Minersville and Pamela Sue city's only two dai ly
Congrove, 18, Reedsville.
newspa'j&gt;ers.

donations, is this ambulance. The vehicle has been in
service for sometbne.

Minor mishap investigated
Meigs County Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports
deputies took an accident
report from John H. Smith,
21, Reedsville, Wednesday.
Smith .told &lt;!eputies he was
traveling north on SR 124
above
Reedsvill e
ap-

proximately 7 a .m . Wednesday morning in a heav y
fog . His vehi cle ran off the
road and over an em·
bankment. The driver was 1
not injured and severe ·,
damage resulted.

let the good times roll. ..
in fa ntast ica ll y f un ro ller bot tom s by Conni e I Call ing all you ga ls
out thfHe - get the most durable (and really cute, too !) kind
~~~~~
o f shoe tor you . Connie's lace- up style looks super wi
~~~If
jeans and'll kee p your feet warm and dry . But,
'you kn ow w h at's best about you r wa lk ing/
play /e veryday sho e? It's on ly $20
Cider sued e o r copp erto ne
lea'th er upper s.

and
SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

•17.50
DAWN 1110MAS, left, age 10, Ia a new carrier for the
Dally SenUnel. SOOwn with Dawn Ia her sister, Mayrene,

age a, wbo utt11ta her sister with the Pomeroy route. They
the daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Thomas,
Qmdor · Street, Pomeroy, and both attend Pomeroy

are

Elementary School.

Knitted Shirts

Shlpm111t of Fruit of the Loom shim lor m111
and boys. Just the thlrll lor fall .. , warm and
comtortabl•. MMy colors and •1- to chooH from.
Hew

MEN'S S3.98 .
.,'6.95
BIJYS' '2.98 ....·..............•.• '5a95

..,_..

=- . .
Cbllf

Middleport. 0.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

eonjmaatlon wltb local
............. l'trC)' uld.

Pollet

OF SHOES
Open Friday Night
TiiB PM.

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

are

-·'

heritage house

II

uti;.,_ protrlllll In

PHONE 912·7113

NEWEST VEHICLE - The latest vehicle to be
purchased by the Pomeroy Elementary Squad, paid for by .

· N. 2nd Ave.

22 22. 2 2 . , . 22 • • • 2 •

"Fetliral offtctall mtllt
bllln ... Ill pollible halite
111 c111111 _. put 1mo place
nciii'S
.,
_
r

220 EAST MAIN .STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
v

··s la"ti•on ok.a ye·d

. leg~
'

cnne.

WITH
COUPON

SHOP.
Just a short distance out of New Haven, Rt. 33, it used to be
a quiet neighborhood with spacious fields and farm homes,
how we fiild ourselves practically surrounded by industry,
excitement·, lots and lots of traffic. Have you ever been
awakened by rail cars 'overturning ? Have you ever witnessed
the huge task the employees have of trying to get the cars out
of the way ? It's awesome . A state trooper was perturbed by
lightsee'ers lying up traffic . Perhaps he had been up aU night.
Anyhow a lot of people worked very hard cleaning up the meBB.
The New Haven Emergency Squad took Marvin A. McCoy
of Washington, D. C., who was apparently Injured by a falling
rail to Pleasant VaUey Hospital. Just a few minutes ago the
New Haven Emergency took another person Injured at
Mountaineer Plant.
With all the derailments many of us living near the tracb
had better say the following prayer, "God Help Us Through the
Night."

feasible.
Slale oU Is abundant in the
West, but scientists. haven't '
the know-how to ship it after
It's converted to liquid or gas.
Then there are political" and
environmental concerns preventing the use al more coal
and the development of more
hydroelectric and atomic
power plants, he said.
"I hope we don't follow the
lemmings,'' he said.

cIV
• il service.
•

their names wiU be revealed
through legal processes.
..
"There has always been
danger
of
reprisal,"
McNamara said. ''Today It Is
abnost
a
certainty.
InteUigence gathering on
(ll'ganlzed crime In general
and arson, speclflcaUy, is
probably ai ita lowest ebb In
decades."
McNamara, a former
Kanuu City pollee chief who
Is recognised as a leading
pollee adminlltrator, said his
views were shared by
authorities thoughout the
nation.
"An
unforeseen
(Ulaequence of the •FDI Act
111d the Privacy Act has
made cooperalllll! by private
Citizens 10 .halardoua t!lat
pollee will not
their
Information with the FBI,"
McNIIJIWI'I said.
vandalllm lnsteld.
Proeectitors uauaUy may
Sen. JGIIII Glenn, DOblo, blank out the n1me1 of
Informants ·wben they are
complalnld the FBllltill crime claullleatlons ftrced to reveal their lnteWdeveloped
during
the gence files under the act,
p-ohlbltktD era.
McNamara
said,
but
"I've loaaltt f(ll' 1 year to a1mlnall have little trouble
11t the FBI to cllulfy arson In IIUIIIial who they are.
• • majar crime and to lit~
equalinl It with vavancy
and cur1tW vlolalilin In Ita
c:r1me ~~ Glem uld
duriDC
y'l helrinC
on arson and orsanl&amp;ed

XL-100
19"
dla!lonat

$61 !

I

" We don 't know how Ill
store solar energy or how to
transport it, but we'D have to
learn by the end of thla
century,'' he said.
Geothermal power has
lbnlted use. There are only
four areas in the W(ll'ld,
Including CallfOI'!Ila, where
natural steam can be brought
up fl'llm below the earth's
surface. Molily it Is too .far
down Ill be economically

so

By ED ROGERS
WASHINGTON (UP!)
The FBI today revealed It
plans to Intensify efforll to
combat the fast-growing
problem of arson, a criminal
tool widely uaed for both
Insurance
fraud
and
tmderworld revenge.
Deputy Aulttant FBI
Director Edward Bell and
Dmald Moore, another FBI
official, told the Senate
permanent lnveatlcallons
subcommittee the agency
plana to inteualfy Ita effort
npeclally where araon
lnvolvf:ll crpnized
But the omciall llid tbere
are prob!lml In Including
ar10n In the FBI's annual
reports of aerloua crbne
becallle ariOn Ia often linked
to a murder or a blJI'I)ary which are already being
rtp(ll'led - or It may be

RCA

rI ---------'\I
~~d

roUJiiBUS(UPI)- Molt edceofacllff.lhopewedon't
Amerlaaa are blind to nm over the edge In our big
predlctlona the nation Is pow~! aut&lt;moblles," he
nmninll Dill of energy and AAict.
believe tbe U.S. has an
Anderson compared
liii'ililllllbllliqlply an Ohio American ·consumers to the
aclentla llid Wednettday .. lemmings, smaU rodents who
" They are living jn a dream periodically migrate In
world. So are you 11 you think • hordes searching for food,
the energy crisis Ia over," 'dashing to their deaths from .
Richard J. Anderson of the mountain cliffs to the sea.
Batelle Memorial Insltute
American have historically
told · agriculture
ad- believed their
natural
mlnlslrllors representing SO resources were endless. First
states.
it was wood. then oil and
"We are bnporting natural natural gas.
gas from Canada and Africa.
Forty-eight per cent- 01 the
We are running .dangerously energy . In America cmnes
short and will run out of from oil, 25_per cent from
domestic supplies by 1988,'' natural gas and 19 per cent
he warned.
from coal.
.
_
sqrooL BOARD Presidlnt
Anderson sa1d Congress
Jofm Gallagned.
has spent bUllons of doUars
"The gu e&lt;mpanles aren't on
American
space
telling you thla. They want to exploration but only a
seU gas," he said.
pittance for energy.
Anderlon told the NaUonal
Asaoclation of State Departmenta of Acrtculture at their
convention which ended Wed·
nettday, the U.S. produces
LIENS FILED
only half of lbe oil It needs.
The other
per cent Ia
MarshaU liens were filed by
bnported from 30 foreign the Jackson Production
naUons.
Credit Association, Jackson,
He said Arab oil-prOducing In Meigs County Common
nations, members of OPEC, . Pleas Court against Laura J .
supplied the U.S . with seven McGraw, Rt. 1, Racine ,
per cent of Ita oil In 1973. Federal Land Bank of LouisToda that
ts to 33
ville, Louisville, Ky., and
Y
amoun
per
cent
George Collins, treasurer.
"If OPEC Imposes an
Rema
Rae
Lawson,
embargo as they did before, Pomeroy, filed for divorce
there wm't be long lines of from
Clarence Arthur
·
motorists waiting to get La wson, Racme.
gaaol!ne .at aervlce stations.
The stations wiU be closed."
he said.
HOMECOMING SET
The new oil fields In Alaska A homecoming wlll be held
supply the U.S. with seven Sunday at the Morse· Q,apel
United Methodist Church.
per cen t of its gasolin e
demand, but this would run Sunday School Is at 10 a.m.
out In two years If It were the with the afternoon program
only source of oil for the U.S, from 1:30 p.m. to 4 p.m.
Everyone is welcome to
he said
· operating on the· attend.
"We're

FBI begins arson battle

Here's famous XL-100 color TV at a special
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If-The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Sept, 14. 1978

1.---A~~-a-n;~{ii;-l, ~€;:dso~:.~~~ ~.if: ~~~r~ :~~~

SSI funding explained

r-.- ---------------·, ... ?.Jtt,. Fdl5t=..~._.
I Mason County News Notes ' Special thanks extended

I

said Maddy. "But nine-tenths
of the unorganized mlsrants
want noihlng to 'do with
FLOC."
"I have talked to a lot of
migrants myself, and to
farmers ," said Maddy .
"There are various reasons_

·

In the county," said Maddy.
"They have good facUlties
and good relationahi!l' with
their workers. The only-thing
the farmers fear Is fear of .
intbnldation .
.
" FLOC Is a churchgovernment sponsored
organization that Ia carrying
'the baMer for a group that
doesn't wantthem to carry
that banner," said Maddy.

THEY WILL
RECEIVE
9 MONTHS OF
,THE HOMETOWN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

____,~· ~~~
THIS
OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY
COLLEGE
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

OFFER
EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER
30,

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The Dai~ Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769
NAME ••••~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••.••.•.••••.
ADDR~SS ••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,, •• ,•••••••••••••••••.•.••

1978

Cl11f••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ,,,,,,.,,, •• , •• , ••••••••

STATE. .••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••.••• ZIP CODE,,,, •••••..

SORRY,

0

CHECK ............. 0 MONEY ORDER ........... ..
[J AMT•.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

NO
REFUNDS

Jowpb

llcNIIIIIl'l of lan Joaa,

.,.

Cllll,
..

tolnnlt!Diil

~··· llhr .... -

t.r

_... JrNay 1111tM lf.IR.

•

,.

�Movie Channel 4 -

1()...-Tho Dal ly Sen lind , Middlcpol'l-Pumel·oy, 0 ., Thurs day, Sept. 14,1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
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!-::toll 10.!11!1 Ul' t'l tho.• IILilllllilUI I [5
ttuttb t:. 1 t't't\ll&gt; IJt'!' ""'d po.t d;n

Nolic't•s

Wanl&lt;•d lu Uuy

)H0011NG MA tCH f-o rlo. Pd ~ un
~ pc11 t ~man ( luh
~ept
J nnd
Pvt'''ll ~ unday th ('tf&gt; oltl"! fat
101 y r h o t.. P g un ~ nnly

CH I P
WOOD .
Po l&lt;"·
111 0 •
r:i 10mPi f'1 10 on l atqe ~ t e rtrl )H
per tun Hundh.• d !tio h !to pm
ton o~~t. vere d to O h1n Poll('!
(a IH 'J Pomeroy '-I~L 1~1.,1

NO HUNlt NC. £11 IIP1-op{l~~lllq O il
rny p • o pet ty w. thou t p.-•1lilt'&gt;
!.ton Judy M cC. r ow
G UN :.HOO\ Hacm e Gun Club
l:ve • v ~un doy 1 pm ~acto1y
r ho lo. e gu11s 011l y

r\ tb IUIIIlllil.! l&gt;l ht•r (1\,tl l ,,,ll,..._'t'U ll \"l'
t ill)~

11 Ill bt· dmt'l.!o' d

&lt;.~1

Uw I ol:n

I' th •

In n•o•utu l 1 . ( ',u d uf rtto~tok• .md
(tlutu ;n ,l ,; · nnt' I"'' ' " ' "d i.lfl(l
11\UIIIIHJII\ l ·a~hlfl,t&lt;h ill t ' t '

Ul~

:!:Jo'o ll l oh ail.!t lt&gt;r.llbt•,tfl'\ ·

Boox 'li lllll ho.·t In I art ,,fTih So•n·

Uln•l

l'ttt' l'ullh•ltt'l l l!-t'l 1 ,., llw 1 t~l tt

h• t•tltl " I
jt•llh•ll,o l

It

jt't 'l,\ 111 .td• dt•t•ttwd oolr

l'ltt

1

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lt tllnnt

n

4 9'} '}'jTf

\1 o•lJt k lh•nw :.l tlt'~&gt; ,111d \ til d ~tit·~
m• · ,11\'\'Pkt l unl) ttttlt t a~)l ~o~tt lt
ollt ht

Who do you
H?H CL OlHI NC
k now
tho !
ltlo. cs
benut1ful
clo the!&gt; that can 1 pay today s
p• or e~ Gr e at deal!&gt; now beu1~
o H(• r ed 44'1
1ij 441 3941 01

U.•

1\'"~]h •lbthlt• 1&lt; •I' lll• •l't' I h,, ll 1llll 1111'&lt;&gt;1 ·
I l l I Ubt' l lht ll

NO
HUNTIN G
Otl
heelond p 1qpe•tv
01 110

George
Sy ra cuse .

L) IH V I:Il
A V AILAI::IU·
to
bus
r htldren to and h om Gollto
( lu l!&gt;t1on ~c h ool Vm ton O h1o
!ravel N ew luna J,'d
to l-:lm
lt~ o •t v tlle 1 &lt;t:J 10 ~~ 'l to Rt 1::1 4
n nd Ji~ tnto Vtnlon 74/ LOUll

f-'0M l: W0Y I Otl'!t l Pr o
I op pt rr(" l o r :. t&lt;Htdt!lq
' ow trmb ~~~ (o il 1/9') ) t.,I(J') 0 1
Ken t H o11by 1 44b H~ i'{J

O lO ~ UHN il UHl: 1ce bCl•C'!&gt; bto ""'
hed s 11 on bc&lt;h d&lt;' !&gt; lo.:. C't&lt;
&lt;omplete houu•hol d'&gt; . W1riP
M O, M1 ll er Rt 4 l'otn ero y Or

n ou

W~

PICK up 1unk aut o h odtt"' S buy
tunk { 01 !&gt; , !&gt;UOfl n on bo t
lf' r res
and
tf'\elah
+?td E.'! !.
~0 1 110 9~
) h' 1'J 4
Po tn('IOY
~4'} 'J 4btl

"'9

10

~ u&lt;'l

buy

uti

lJ44·11'1b

l'hilUt •1!12 21Jt•

Lo•l and hmnd

NOTICE

~OUNO

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

M on k ey Hun area
Iorge wht! e mol~ dog 1-'on tbly
Gcr rnan !&gt;hepherd 992 2b(J2
111

YOUNG MAl~ pot I beeg le dog
fo u11d h tden tly som eo ne s p e t
wh tt eo wdh b row n a nd bla ck
mark"'9S M01t ha Hus ted . fh .

JJ
'
:\11,tnl.ll
\ o.,onurl $.il ll t il.tt

Hdp Wantnl

lu,•-.d .t~
lhl'll ~ I til. II

Olo' tA MIN(, 0~ o wht l e C hr t~ t m o s
wtth no btl] !&gt;? Wan de du l to
lhtnlo. about bu t tt co uld rome
H ue ~ eo l o y Lo d1es hos Tess'
In your horne 01 by o•der s f rom
your lrtend s ~O il\ toy s Ol\d gth s
!ro e
Nom e
br and
to .,- s
'eo~ono bly
prtred
wt!h
guaran tee Gt h ~ l o t th e wh ole
fomtly
~ or
tnf or mol1on ro l l

I ' :'11
Un·do~t bdo•t•'IIUhh&lt;. lll•&lt;l•
-1

."'tt tu l:ll
I I ' \1
r tlllat
tt·• •ll

,,f,,.,

In

~lemur)

IN

Mf-MOPV o f " ) Y hus band
],' n h"'' t: H o~ t.. m::. 1ht:, poem tS
w rt tl t:'l' to thp tnan I d1emn ed
w ould n('v€'1 lea ve me
Ju b- 1o y&lt;'o r ag o th t~ ver y da y you
IV P ill IO It\/(.' wdh the e
I rn \ure he::. to k mg care o f you
and you f pel no pam al all
I o r ht&gt;ov en ~ where the good
guy~ go w hen God A ll MtghTy
call,
You farhete d o ur ch tldre n our
duoghter ') and ou• so n
Y Ol, l o~ed them all ::.o equally
vou(hO'&gt;I? no fa vor tie Oll£'S
A nd wh t" n o ur ch•ldrt'll mart ted
and hod c htldl(~ ll o f thetr own
lhc•y tOI\ l'd t hpn to res pP c- t you
l or th(' . on&lt;C t11 you d olwoy '&gt;l
You olway~ wflre '&gt;0 !rut~ to"*-'
., nu 11t"' • "' n10de m£' wonder
f-o • th Or 011d rnatl )l o tehr rea!&gt;011!&gt;
ill~ lo,c- gr('w ~ f1 0119&lt;'r
:.a wh en you le ft ro go l o Heaven
11.,, ~1 w rhot you le ft her e t.. now
tnq
lhot the men o ttU!&gt; o f our !&gt;w eel
lo•P w nuld he wh at l.eep~ me

9 01119
:.arfly 1111 ':&gt;S ed by your wtf E'
&lt;h.i dr en a nd
grand ch i ldren

n

IN THE
COM MON PLEAS C OURT
OF MEIGS COUN T Y , OHIO
IN
RE
PROPOSED
S Y R A•c U SE · R ACI PI E
R EGI ONAL
~ EWER

7 4'J .'} 'J'I"Io t

Q97

"! Q~b

WO fiK
OVi:R~ l:A ::.
Au str o l ra
Air teo ~ou t h Am en co , l:urope
e lc
Cons t r urtron
So l es
h1g1 nee r s. Clertca l el&lt; $ij000
To S~{J 000 plu::. b pen~e~ po•d
t- o t empl o .,.rnent m fo r m o t ton
wnte
er~ ea~ l: rnp fo ym enl ,
H o ~&lt; lOll Has ton Ma 07102

o. .

~ABY)Ill U~

IN m y home fo r
wo t t..,ng rnothet
10 da ys o
m on th . Mu st ho11e e~&lt;perten c e
(all 99'} .'}494 al ter~ 00 pm

I:XPtf.' II:NCI: O AUlO body ond
pteperal ton man A pply tn per ·
~o n a t ~ tl: !&gt; Quoltty Body Shop
M1ddlepor t
M~N fA ll V

IH: 1AHOE: O oduh s ore
u1 need o f I os i er care h o rne ~ A
salar y and beneli! s wtl l b e
potd Th ts tS on tn h ome JOb tha t
wtll bene !. ! th e l rle chances o l a
mcntollv retarded ~ or m o re tn ·
formol ton w11 te or coli
~o::. t er Cor e
b80 l; Mo tn ) I
Ja&lt; lo. son OH 45b4CJ
o14 ~ij~ 72bl l logon )
01 614 ~91 - 66{]1:1 ( At hen~ )
!:qual Opportun1 ty l:mployer

Auction

D ISTRIC T .

Case No l51SS
PUBLIC NOTICE
N olic e is ne r eby given
pursuant 10 The provtsions of
Sec110n 6 11? 04 , OhtO RevtSed
Co de , that a t tna l hear•ng Wt l l
beheld by Com m on
Pleas
Court a t Metgs Coun t y , Oh i o.
on lhe 22nd day o f Sep tembe r .
197 8 . ar 10 00 AM O ST a ! l'le
Court H ouse tn Po mer o y .
Oh10 , on the P e1 11ron for the
establ .s hment o f Sy racuse
Ra cine
Region al
Sewe r
O tsl r lct f i led 1n satd Co urt , as
w ell as on
the
P l an of
·Operaf tOn o f the OtStr tCI as
hied tn satd proceeotngs .
Any
persons
or
an y
polit ic a l sub d i vtStOn r es1d 1ng
or ly1ng wrth.n t he area af .
f ec t ed oy the o r gant zat i on o f
tne OtS fr iC t may f ile on or
be f or e th e aate set forth th e
c a se tS Ia be heard rts Ob ·
tect •ons w tthlhe Cte r"k o f
Courts to the granti ng o f th e
request rnade i n the P e lt tion
r equ es t in g extabl1shm ent o t
Sy ra cuse Rac rne
Reg i onal
Se wer o ,s tr 1r1. to the ftnal
orgentla t .on o t t he d •Sf r tcf , o r
t he p l an tor the o peratton o t
the d 1strict a s f d ed •n sa i d
p r ot:eed tnqs
S a 1C1
Pet 1l ton
and
pro cce CI •ngs are Ca se No .
1~ 1 55 a t the Comm on Pl eas
Cou rt o l Me i gs Coun t .,, O h10
an d t he Pcr.t.on . and th e Pl an
o l Operat •on . are now on f ile
ana may oe examtned at th e
Oll •ce of rne Cle rk o f Cou r ts at
the Cou r t House . Pome ro y .
Oh•O

LARR Y SPENCER
CLERK 0~ COU RTS ,
V.E lGSCO UNT Y , OHIO
( 8 J }.\ , 31 ( 9 l 7 14, 21 ( SIC

The Alma!l3c
Unltrd Press International

Today 1s Thursday, Sept .
14 , the 257th day of 1978 with
108 to follow.
The moon is a pproaching
its fu ll phase .

The mo rnin g s tars are
Jupiter .

Sat urn

and

Mermry

The evening stars are Mer.
cury and Ve nus.
Those born oo this daU! are
under the sign of Virgo.
Margaret
S an ger,
American pioneer leader in
the birth control movement,
was b&lt;l'n Sept. 14, 1883.
On this day on history :
In 1847, Mexico City was
occupied by the U.S. A.my .
In 1001 . Pres1dent Wilham
Mc Kinley died from wowods
inflicU!d by an assasson eight
days earlier .
In 1963, the first qu mtuplets
in U.S. history to survive
were born in Aberdeen, S.D.,
to Mrs. Andrew Fischer .
In 1975, Pope Paul VI
declared Mother Elizabeth
Ann Seton a saint, the first
Amarican lo be ··canooized.

Auto Sal~•
1971 0Al :.UN 4 do01 s tO! to n
wogo11 ~b . OOO t nde~ 4 ( yl
good go ~ m. leog e l ~U N J! d
Ph on(' 44'1 1Jl'l
M 1ddleport
a ft er 4 p m
14"14 OA 1SU N PICKU P
947 b 1'1'2 of ter ~pm

Phon~

1%9 CI·H:V Y NO V A V H ~ tonda1d
t ran s
Rur1~
good
Sb~ CJ
48~ 4:1/1
1974 VW BU ') ., passenger t9 'l~
~ ord
Gtanodo
~ reem011
W tlltoms
Mtnf'l !&gt;v1lle
Oh• o
f.Jf.J1 i' b91 ohl?t ~ prn
I'll~

PI N lO HUN A HOUl 4 &lt;yl
44 00() m tl e'J S 1~()() I.IQ1 ]b l I
Cl l 99::1 7719

197 ~

MON11: (A Rl O lot":&gt; o l e ~
trm ~2900 99'1 1 bi:N a! l e t~

1'1"/0 PLYMOUlH b t yl
auto
Ceda r wo t dr ob e l1v111 g room
~U fle tr e adle sewmg tna cht ne
por ch !&gt; w 111g Iorge p 1trh e t and
b ow l 992 '11 I 4
1971 HRONCO 4 whe el
1 ~so . 992 70J4 .

dnve

s

1~ i' O

H?A V H TRAi l l: H l or '&gt;o le 147'1
Mark lwo tn 191 1 141:/!&gt;bb

t 'orHent
COU N TRY MOBilt Ho rne Part..
Rou te 3J north o f Pome ro y
l arge lot'S. Call 991 74"1 9
' 4 RM . fu tn 1shed and un ·

f urnts hed
q9'l-54J4

opt 5

lWO IUDffOOM
on ly 992 -3324

P hone
Adul l ~

tr ot ler

APA],'lMI:Nl !&gt;
I
b edr oom opt $1 I ] m o . plu!&gt;
el er lm M on thly lf'oSes l:qtJal
Oppo! run1 ty Ho uwtg
(oil
44') ll }\ lor oppo tn tmen t

O N~

9&lt;rJ

~!: [)ROOM

mobrle

home

') ~ Gill

49 ') ::t!&gt;JO

fOU R ~ OOM:. and both All new
po ont N ew r 01 pe t No 111~• de
p~?ts Phon{' 9Y:} JOijlU
HOU Sl: f-O H rent (ounfly home
4 bed room l both&lt;.. h ce gas
~ It' 114 Port land 8 4 ] [111

YARD AN D ~ at..e ~ ol e ot th e Long
Bo ttom Cornrrt untty l:lutldtng
f-- 11dO ~ ~epl

I~

YAf.'O !, A L ~
h t
~ep t
1) at
l eo r, a
~ l e wort ~
re~tden&lt;:' P
M u lberry He tghT&lt;,
Pomeroy
~ 1o m 9
to 6 H o w er pot~
d 1 !o hc ~
dre 5ses 1tt to 2CJ ,
r e(Or d~ and rrtt ~(
GARAG I: ~A U: Clo th1 ng cor lug
gag E' cor r ter gal l bog bow and
arrow cur totn s bed ~ p r eod on d
mtH
l'hur ~ dov and Fr td oy
IU J One mtle north o l (he., ter
o n C)( ij'}
IWO f AMil V Yo rd ~ole ~ J
J rd Mtddlepor t ')aturday Cf ?
Boys clo rh,ng 17 )f:j Women !&gt;
clo thtng 14 lb . M ens s. u tl s e )l
ce llent
cond1tton
Med•um
Mt sC
GA ffAC. l: SAU Thur !&gt; and ht 9
to 4 1?1gg&lt;,cr est Mon o r o tf Cit' 78
at top ol l:os tE,&gt;rn Htgh ')ch ool
h.ll
VA It'D ') ALI: at Thelma M oo r es
re ~r d en r P J4LI:Ii' N ew l1mo ],'d
Hut land 1hu1 !&gt;do.,- and Frt doy .
P10c eed!&gt; to go to ward\ buy1ng
bu ~ l o t hee wtlll:lopt t&lt;, t Chu rch
fi V ~

f-AMilY Yard So le lhvrsdoy .
&amp; ~oturdoy 9 to 4 . 138
(ondo r ) I ~ehmd landmodr. .
Porneroy l&lt;'o •n or shtne
~ndoy

GIG ANTI C YA P[) Sale Chr ldr en \
clo lh tng d1 shes gl o ss mtsc
!,oTurdoy ~e p T ltr , Mary Mor
ltn !&gt; res•dence best de Burger
(he f

lW O ~AMI L Y Yotd ~ ole Sotur
day !&gt;ep t l b SlOt trng at 9 om a t
j(J 4 Wet,goll ~t reet , Pomeroy
Man.,. 1tems espeCially clo l htng
o f all st Je s Hotn o r shrne
YA f.' [) '::tAH o11 d Flea Mort.. e t
3ep f ltr Hocme Legton 11o ll ij
om to t. pm
!&gt;tfVH' YAIIIO !&gt;ole OepreS'&gt; IOn
and pressed gl oss 01l lamp.,
McCoy and Hul l art Clo thes
r ugs cu rtoon\ , odd~ ond end s
~ep1 I~ I O 11 h r st ho u!oe on
fig ht on Ur11on Te r race o ff o t
Un1on A ve 9C12 2B03
MU lll f- AM ILY Yard ~ole ~ept
1b q to 4 Chorn be r ch otr oak
roble'&gt; and t ho tr., B!IH rur n tobl P
and l P s h on t.. l.n '&gt;love metal
lathe rw o 14 !He!. , ~cou t ..,now
plo w lever O(lt on M o~s berg
JO 30 . .h011d t ool~ gla ss wor !'
~1• 11'J rock , 6o'-. d rspl uy c o ~ e and
t1'1 0ny mor e u'&gt;elul h ou ~ Pho ld
tT ern\ a nd to i let tab les /4. fiO!&gt;'&gt;
from ~urnme rl relcl s •l'l Ct'!E-sre r
O hto

I

1no r h 111 C !&gt;/UO ln t ~ oiC' r Sl ~uo
Afte r () prn r oll t..lij~ JI JI 111

&amp;

~

~ M O Hill: H OMl:~ PI
Plea sanT W . Yo bes,de Heck!&gt;
l&lt;nJ Eh o odrn o re 14 .. b4 7.
b edroom
1Cj7] Darton 14-, bO ') bedr oom
lfj/4' Vtctor 1on I~ x b"f J bedroom
1 both
1977.(oven try I') }16~Jbedro om
19b9 !&gt; tot e~ma n
17 x 0() 'J
bedroom .

CO A l

liMH TON I: sand gro ve l
( O le tum chlo 1tde l er t tl11 er dog
l ood . and oil type~ o l !oOII h
cel s1or ~ a l l W or k !. In&lt;. ~ Ma in
~ ~ . Pomeroy QQ1.JI:IQ I

I:IU!t'ioo'OUCH) ')I:N!&gt;I MA l'IC oc
co un t rn g
mochrne
Phon e
447. 'Jl)b l' h e Oot ly Sen t tnel
111 Cou rt ~ ! tee t
Pom e ro y ,
O ht O

'J

~

by

1b

:~~

'l

wh~et s

P1
S/5 00 l 700 )I lb W1 n te r IH es
P' $ )0 00 (oi i9Q~ "/ 69 ')

GU N ~ AND omm o l arge dtltCO urll

on !o ho r shells '}'} LH 'J'l. Ma g
t&gt; l c Al l ktnd s o f new and us. ed
shoT gum, 11 il e!&gt; hand guns
~o me t tme!o vo u don t e11en need
mon ey We trade l o t almost
ony t h.ng Ftf e !o ~ Jrd Mtd
dlepor t . ~7 74Q4
MU ) I(Al tN ~ lHUMI:N T ~ hot n'&gt;
guttOI S. flut e'&gt; clonners 11 om.
b one::. e tc t o ~e l l or trade
f tle s s Jrd Mtddleport
1YfJI::Wh' l ll:l&lt; ~

P O H IA Bl l:~ .

ele c
" 1C gotng to sell or tr ad e th em
too . ~il e !o ) J •d .. M1ddlepo rt
99'/ / 494

\4"/4 OAT~U N PICK UP
GIQ') b191 oi l er ~pm

Phon€&gt;

PLA ID l OV ~ sc ot and n; ot ch rng
chotr and oll omon Bedroom
o, u1 te All lt k e new 111 e " ceHent
rondr t1on 9 49 77b1
~ A ll:: trai n s wdh l l)lpe
layou t Com plete wtlh a ll sw11
f he!&gt; . hou!&gt;c church lo c tortelo
~ uoutoful
~ell or ~ wop fo r
&lt;Om p er o f equal 11olu e . )ep
~or v ey leornond f-'0 8 o:.: bJ
h'ac u'e O h1 0 by Woqner Hur d

N

wo re ) tore .
W IN I~ !" 1-' 0l ATOI::~

grade I and
I ( W Pt o fl i l! . Porllon t;l . Oh1 0

11'bH CHf VHO l H ( Af(H't"All
ton b t yl o;, td . Ho ~ lf.JT'J P.ng .. u·~
fully •ll '&gt;ul o ted ond l Orp e ! C'I'i
Good t l rr.o- ~ . $750 ( oil '=1'17 - b ~ "'l:l
Wit i 1 f'O l A TOl- !&gt;. lt'ed w/1t!f'
and yelt nw l"'hOilt' H4:S 'JJ:JI
We&gt;be-rt VJ lr&gt;Wt"' Ht ') l&lt;'n1 "ll
\ P 14'4

'
J

~.

portraits . We use tradt ·
honal se n i n9 s and also
feature
outdoor
par ·

o.

trarlure.
Call Us Today

SPECIAL

lbe Photo PIKe
IBDbHoetlichl

109 High 51

Any U. S. m-ade car -parts
edra if needed. Excludes
front -wheel drive cars.

Pomeroy

l'-~7b

MOVE GOMPANY

• ton LhC v! OICI pt cky p 4

~ pt • ed J~O u"q"• c J rnr h H C&gt;C'~t"'

l 11 11h
I:: J&lt;Ce ll£"nl
Ph nnp 49::1 ~ ]4 ~

KING :. 1tt- wot c 1bed ftom e mot
II &lt;'~~
ped~:.•!&gt; l ol
lo11er lwo te t
l r,&lt;! b K~ I "I ) Kowo s.olo.t on o il
ro ad
1 IOU o(luo l
md e!&gt;
94'1 ':tb'I J Wdl sorftt !t&lt;c Apl
l Oti h' 1~ 01v • e w Mtdd lepor t

Stllt· Prtcl'\
Jc1Ck W C .!r',''•'
Mqr
Phonr· 9Yl 1181

Phon~

SERVICE

992 ·2181

AI\ types of roofing, guners
downspouts, 20 years
experience.
All work
&amp;

Ileal .Estate (QT SaJe

CO Ml:SINt- Alll~ Chalme rs ( w!Th
J head ~ 8 d1og type dr~l lt on t
en d loader l o r o Mf- J!&gt; ) {J It
e le ... ot o t
br u.,h
ho g
cuhpoclo. e t
Andrew
( t os~ .
l e la r 1 ~ oil ~ / 4"/ :/8~7
JU(XJ Kown sot.. , m o to•cy
1: • ce llen T ro ndllt On ~ o me

1411 Kl

e ~tr o ~

prt(ed!eO~Onobl y

G RA VI: lY li? A C IO J.I Wllh lllOW{'r
and ~ ulkey
A lt et
~
c.oll
74/ 79"/H
fll:GI ~1 ~lo'l:

bt eU
wa ~ h er

Tom

IN

~ Y~A CU:. l: ') bed1oom h o u ~e
Nl'w ~ t o r rn wmdow~
New
al urntnum buddtng 'I pm c h u~
(N} J'J I9

A ( RI: lO l on fo'r
~ .t c 9rn
1'::1 / J

i' N tce but ldtt lq

l HWU B~ O f? OQM
lo nd (ln\t"' to
! C0 50110bty Q(j:}

ho u ~l'
~

ot r u ~

3

~r h oo l

pr• red

llb

OCIC !&gt; wt t11 woiPI nnrl o;e wage
on Pe o ,oc t.. Ave
Pom etov
Oh ro :, 1000 d o w n l:ialn nce o l
~h(&gt; 10 pet rnon th ro qualtftmi
per~on f./9'1 ~ 78 b

tHf,'H I::I!:Oh'OOM r mpf' ted horn v
bath !&gt;
l ullv tn&lt;oulo l ed w dh l
111 Pome ro y l? ea .. onob ly p! '' ed
l'ho ne 9"L 38ri

Free

9-7· 1 mo

D AMl:ff tCAN ~ad dl e
Geldtng
A u to maT• (
014 69H J'N U

H0M l: ')11 1: ~ l o t ~ol e

\ acre and
up M 1ddlep ot t , near Rutla nd
(oll&lt;/9';! l 481

VA f-HA :JO yr !. noncmg. al ~o
'(' I IliOn( mg It eland M or lg oge
n I: ~ tol e A th en!&gt; , ph one (614 )
~ 4"1 JO ~ I

l H!t'H !H:UROOM h orne ho1ne IJl
Mtddlep or 1 (a ll 991 -3457

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Pom eroy Landmark
soften &amp; condtlion your
water with Co ·op water
Let

softener , Model UC· S VI.

Now Only
L et us
.Fr tt~

•289.95

t est

your water

Pomeroy Landmark
~ock w. Corwy , Mgr.
_

Phonem·2181

SiWJUt'

!o'OOM hou-..c- and bo th
1ern ode l{'d l ullv ( 01 ]-l(! tl:!'d May
be 5eC!n alter, J pm Phone

I Hh't~ D lt' l out Dcdroom hou'Je

H OU~~

,

111

Ct• l •lr ol

IN Mtnt•• ~v dl e ovvtlool.

mg !tvHI

b t"dr omn
ktt chen
both
and bo~ e rn e nt

toom
roo rn

l1v111g
uttlt ly
lo• • y

4

~ t el d '&gt; 4Cj"J ~ !j LJ

I A~/0 ~O f./ sole H o u ~ e I barn.,
trader large po nd 1U o&lt;rC'&gt; or
til Q(l(!~ "/ 47 l~bO
NI"W HOM !::
J bedr oom 1 .
both !&gt;
f-ully (UipQ tL•d
vonyl
~ ~d1119 v. ilh ~ t ngl e r or gorn gP
l w g£&gt; lo r •n lo' u1lon d on New
lun a Roo d ~ ?7 000 J d') "}')6"}

MAIN
POMEROY.

IN l l:HNA 110 NAl ~ d o1er b woy
blade Wm ch !&gt;leel cob . Corn
ple tely rew or k ed I •lo. £! new
Wt ll tok e tto de~ 949 T/03
f' AHMAll ~ 1(jJ9 model l. l oo k~
and run s ltk e new W tl l tn"-e
tr ode~ 94q li'b:J
b ~ OOT bru ~h hog ·

s,

and n('w
Heavy duty JO ft . hoy elcV" olor
~49

'J7b J

19!1 OI:T ROIT Otl: !&gt;H wt lh du tcl
or,da c orbox . S I $00 I O()() It 4
' 'l uc' tu • al p1pe , Go(ld l'l o tn
&lt;'n d .)lOOn !('lo t / 41 · JO~ J
(IJIJL K PAH 1 ~ A !!' bog ou• tl ioty
( I ~ I(&gt; &lt;;rn g1(&lt; L--.pet'd u • lc ond
It orne . ~ ~ peed gl'o r box ft nn t
tn l•· 70 • 10 t110~ dlf'':&gt;Ci rn t• l (~ l
pO!I&lt; . A/1 fr om !'Jbtl l t~ l t•tlln
r"' " al M(1dnl 1PJ')() l llf' t llnq~
'. t 1 j{J~ :l

THAT DO~SN'T
PROVE! Ttl!' VAN"J
!'MPTYl... DIDN 'T YA
NOTICI' HOW THE)'
SHOOeD 1.15 AWAY
WH II.E THE. STUFF
WAS SE;INf;

~

•

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save JO pet. to so P&lt;l.
on hutlng cost
Experience ond
fully Insured
FrH Est.
Ca II 992·2772
8· 10·1mo. (Pd .)

~ ~T Itt ~.; 1• HA'Jt' 'tlU t:~f!.
01VW AiJ'{ 1liCOOHT TO~ ~IM,

f'I?:1'11JQ:]

Phone 98S-3806
Jock Ginther 985·:1t0.

3 BEDROOMS -

Older

home, some remodeling ,
beautiful v iew of the river ,
must see to appreciate.

BOWERS

Price $12 ,500 .
ACRES - More or less: 4

11

bedrooms, modern • bath ,

la rge kitc hen &amp; dining
room , firepla ce, several
out buildings . ONner being
transferred .

Price

$35,000 .00.
CALL US FOR Al:l YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2291
Aller Hours
C.O II 992-7133
CONTACT ,
Lois Pauley
Bra nth

tXX1

Print answer here:

lWO
~a l e

ttLA CK

INI ) H Setter puppies
30 4· '173· 5538

•

4GE · .. AAD A NOTE · ..

-

Phoneq9l5 100

0.

ped

kt 1che n ,

fl oors, air cond .. ca r port
and stora ge. S:/8,500.00.
SYRACUSE
Close to
sc hool. 3 bedroom s, f ull
basemen t ,

2

l eve l

lo t S.

S27.300.00 .

LETART - B rick r anch
type, 11 ' ba th s, fir eplace,
ce ntr al ai r , modern k if·
ch en , por c hes. $3 1,600 00 .

NEAR

FORKED

RUN

--over 1 acre , 4 bedrooms,
b aTh , nat gas F .A hea t.
large ga r ge &amp; w Df k shop,
o t ner bU11d tn g . $29,500 00 .

CLOSE

- 5

ac r es,
3
bed r ooms. Oa th , ni ce ki, ·
chen, chicken h ou se , ba rn ,
al l fence d, part baseme nt .
OU PL EX - .n Pomero';,
c.o ndition, I has 2
bed room s,
1 has
J
bedrooms, ready to move

MANY OTHER PROPER TIES - CALL TODAY
FOR YOUR NEEDS . THE
HOME OF REAL ESTATE
IN MEIGS COUNTY .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank , Kathv &amp; Leona •.
Cleland
Rea I tor Associates

992 -22S9 - 992·1S68

in Lebanon Township on
good gravel road . Old 4 rm .
house with e l ectri c $20,000.

FAMILY

HOME

- 4

bedrooms, bath , natural
gas heat, ftrepla ce, cit y
water and ex tra lot on Rt .

124. wanl 514 ,000
NEW
LISTING

- 3

bedroom frame home . Just

ott Rl. 33 near Rock Spr·
tngs . N ice kit c hen wtth lots

of ca b i n ets, new gas fur ·

nace, utility room, dining
and level lot . $29 ,500 .
4

ACRES

3 bedrooms,

tor

you

to

stock .

$35,000.
NEWSPAPERS SELL
ADS, SALESMEN SELL
HOUSES . CALL 99l-3J25
FOR RESULTS .
Helen L. Telford
G. Brute Te11orc1

Suo P. Murphy
Astoclates

Hoasinq
Headquarter•,
EXCELLENT FARM IUY - 14t ACRES - The
owner's age prevents her from· continuing to opereto
the farm and she doll res an lmmodlelt .ate. 50 to 60
acr., tillable with oome very good crttk bonom hlttlop land . The balance 11 In pasture &amp; waodo. Tho 6
room home 11 good (doot need oomt modtrnlzatlonl,
large all purpose bam &amp; wvoral outbulldlngo. The
minerals go with II and It's located In an a roe whore
gas. oil &amp; coat have been found to be plentiful . Near
•
'
Rutland . 60's.

CAll THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan' s H e roes 15

6:oo--News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20 .
6' 30-NBC News3,4,15; ABC News 13; Andy Griffith 6;
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .
7:0D-Cross·Wlls 3; PM Magaz ine 4' Newlywed Game
6,13; News 10; Gill igan's Is 15; Ohio Journal 20 ;
Insight 33.
7.3!1-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dallng Game 4; Columbus
Showdown 6; Bonkers ! 8; Family Feud 10; $100,000
Name Thai Tune 13; Pop Goes The Country 15;
MacNeJI. Lehrer Report 20,33.

(I I 1 j ( 1 I X)
(Answers 1omorrow )

S.GO-Movie "Starsh i p Invasions " 3,4,15; Boxing 6,13;
Incredible Hulk 8, 10; Washington Week In R ev iew .

8.30-Wal l Streel Week 20,33; 9·00--Movle " Grand

20; Great Performances 33 .

Yeoterday's Allllftl'
tl Recently
Z9 American
ZZ Cold ·
snake
wind
30 Wash

companion
7 PrefiX
with cycle
8 One's best
effort
9 Nullified
10 Maak or

Thursday, Sept. 14

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

BRIDGE

out

ol Trieste
Z3 Gloomiest
Z4 City

31 Railroad

north
ol Rome
Z5 Maneuver

38 Marsh

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

car

Value of a re-evaluation

elder
31 Regrettable . - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

tail

!I Frenzy

f.IHVE S TRADING Post , Poge ... ille .
G r oceries . dry goods, hardwore . f eed. tock shop . Sp etiol

Knowledge
. Z8 TlmOrese
coin

------

b-+-+-

:zt Devastated
sz Not nay
13 Suffix with
affection
u HIBh prletl 1,.,--1--4---1-Lure

31Benumb
II Make

WAl'I:R WHL drtlling . Wtlltom 1 .
Grant 74'}.287q
W ill 0 0 b~by St ll ing 111 my home
1n Modne area . ~ to 4
Weekdays .
Oonn o
Wolf e .

Di scoun t

D!l~eoq~l~~~ {

fiUI:

WOOD .

compllolntl

~

oROOF

~AI

NT

Free

manure .
•

THREE FREE killen s. long hai red.
Blo ck
and
wh ile
mo le
742 -2328.

i

'

" • ., l.aMinalk

":i=~=------------~,;..:!,..~~~--.!;~J

. ..left w. c.r.,.Mp.

:.

. . . . . . . . fft.llll

6-+-+-

Gengbla

KMn'a

Opening lead :

empire

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's
II

hln\1. Earh

WINNIF.

White-W1I

Custom ·Poly

A78xl3

OPEF

FB

zJ w

IQLP

FVJQW

FCP

J

_a,...... I...

JUGHAID!!
1/0U 'THINK
EVERifONE

15CIJ«IOU5

JACK W. CAUIY, Mp.
'IICMIIf9N111

ZCQSM

ZCQSM

WHAR '5 "{ORE
TABLE MANNERS?

POMEROY
LANDMARK

JWK

FVJQWQWI

CJ if!l 1t1oc .....

PrlcolncludM
. Foii.Ta•
I dots not
Include

DON'TllOU?

South can actually make
three hearts if he plays the
hand as 1f he had see n all the
East and West cards . He
must cash dummy's blac k

winners, lead a heart and
eventually force West to
lead a heart or diamond to
him.
Normal good play will just
brin g in the two-heart contract. All high con tracts are
going to end up in the undertaker's parlor .

•J

You hold :

FB

.. 14-B

X

• KQJ IOXX"
f XX
• XX

By Oswald Jacoby

FVJQW ' CQHEPSX.-J.
U.
IBRFCPK
"yipno(lte()rdaNy't Ci)p&amp;u&lt;ptte: HE WAS BORN WITII A SILVER
1&gt;
IN IUS MOUTH BUT IT HAD SOMEONE F;LSE'S
INmALS.-SOURCE UNKOWN

~P.

tricks to come from ~

work It:

d~y the code
letters ore different.
CllYPTOQUOTES

UJVPWF

sg2•

how to
AXYDLIAAXIl
LONGI'BLLOW

One letter olmply otondl for another. In thlo nmple A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etr. Sinale letters.
tpoatrophu, the lenath tnd formation ol the wordl ore 111

QE

hearts. He jus t has nowhere
to go. Two notrump looks
bad . Where are notrwnp

•

~

l

.

~ ,.q . ;1531 evc,ming~_

j
IDfNiriGAL ;

loGIC

OUTSIDE WHITE

; ; '•

C:.L.ON~5,

show some real sensible con·
ser va tion and pass at two

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : North
welt North East
Pass
1.
Pass
Pass I•
Pass Pass Pass

of comedy

~

oiNSIDE PAINT .

-

J~

ReAD ~ Nev./

ARoLif"

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

EA HN $10 -SI S.OOO per yeor refill ·
tng 11endlng equipment . Loc ol'ly , N o exp erie nce necessary
W e trol p l n¥e~ tment requir e4 .
Ph on e 9A'I ·:l763 .

~V!'
. ~~·i-

tearful

Pnct~s

949·715U.

.

FRANK &amp;ERN IE

one spade.

No w it is up to North to

NORTH
.. 14- A
• AKQ3
• 4
• 972
+AK B65
EAST
WEST
• J 975
• 10 8 2
• 73
• A J 95
• J6
• A Q !0 8
• Q 10 9 4 3
• J7
SOUTH
• 64
• KQ1086 2
t K 543
+ 2

Shapes,
as cllly

put a

PUlliNS l:XC A V A TI NG Comple te
!&gt;er11icc . Phone 9'12-2478 .

12 :00---Baretla 13 ; Janakl 33.
1:oo--Midnlght Special 3,4, 15; Movie " Beast From
Haunted Cave" 10; 1. 10-lronslde 13.
2: 10-News 13. 2;3Q-News 3; 3:00-Movle ·:count
Three and Pray" 3; 4,3()-Movle " Phffll! " 3;
6:00---Big Va lley 3; 7,oo-Bewllched 3.
Movie Ch~nnel 4 58. 9 P .M. - Hollywood Oldie (G l
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - March or Die !.PG I

16 Valley
1!1 Current

in color
zz Fruit decay
shoe parts
Classify
r.---r.:-'1":-"r.-'

Where does she
Ma4be we shoul

call
car washes

" Escape from the Ju ngle" 6; Gunsmoke 8; Movie
" Chamber of Horrors" 10.

George 6 Blanche's

~---"'!.~- Zl Golden
Did~u

11 :oo--News 3,4,6,8,10,13, 15; Dick Cavetl20
11 :3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15; Rona Barrett 13 ; Movie

5 Producerdirector,

17 Uttle Calvin
18 Toothed
1:1. Resident:
suffiX

Auto" 8,1 0. Great Performances 20; Belle of

Amherst 33 .
9 : 3~ulncy 3,4,15
10·oo--News 20 ; 10 :3D-Monty Python's Flying Circus

seasoo

code signal

AND
K1l ch ens
remodeled ceramic t ile . plum·
b ing , carpen tr y . nnd general
mo on l enon ce
13 year s e• ·
pe ri ence . CJ92 3685 .

enc losed bath , new natural
gas furnace with central
air ,
full
ba~eme nt,
c arpe ti ng ,
and
out ·
build ings . Nice fish pond
r ea dy

torm the surprtse ~nswer . as sug·
gested by the above cartoon

DOWN

15 Asian river
11 Morse

lit e . secono !ttreet

NEW LISTING - 50 acres

HER

5.3D-News 6; Santord &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co . 20.33 ; Mary

1 Pungent
2 Fissile rock
3 Attempting
t French

u
~~~~~~~Captain's
~
milieu

SR .

NEW LISTING - Nice 4
bedroom older home with
modern k i tchen and bath
Elec tr ic baseboard heat,
ci ty water, second bath i n
f u ll baseme nt , garage and
nearly 2 acres. $48,500 .

I

Emergency One 13; Petticoat Junction 15.

Now arrange the circled leners to

expert

Beverage
ingredient
Go amuck

992-:U'J'i

hardwood

Misler Rogers 20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10.

An swe r- Add someth1 n~

1 Court ace
5 Curtain·

~ATH ~ OOMS

Man•ger

5.QO-Bonanza 3: Star Trek 4; Beverlv Hillbillies 8;

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Coloring

HO Wff! V
AND
MART IN
1::.: ·
C011 0t 1n g ,
septi C S '(SIOfl'IS ,
dote r backhoe . dump tr u ck .
lunes tone . grovel ,
bla ckT op
pa ving , HI 143 Pho n e I (b14 )
b98 ·"1331 .

AK( Rl: G ISTI: HI: O Sibe 11on Husk y
Cf rnon lh s o ld fl! eni ngs . t:all
949· 'n22 .

KEPT.

~~.,.~_,

&gt;•7·23•8 .

ro ll1 e pupp u3'&gt;

&lt;:;IRAFF5

Theft

WI LL do roof ing . rons truc t ton
plumbing and heati ng No tab
too Iorge or too small. Phone

f or

Sesame St . 20,33; Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4.30-My Three Sons 3; Gilligan 's Is. 4,8; Brady Bunch
10; Little Rascals 15.

lh'&gt;l"'-1ir!Jl,l'l ' I . .
WHA'T iHE P'~OUD
I'

The latest JUMBLES are heft In JUMBt..E BOOK 1'10 and JUMBLE
BOOK t11. Available for $1 .35 EAC~ . post~ald from Jumble, c/o ThiS
newapaper, P.O. Box 34, Norwood, N.J 07648 Make check!i payable to
New apaperbooka

... IT 'S F&lt;&gt;ID YOU ,.. LET'S KEEP IT
1HA1 WAy ·: .. WAL, Ill BE DERNED·

A""' T SEFN SO MUCt-i
IlEAL 0\Stl 11'1 A COON'S

I:: XC AVAliNC . doze1 . backhoe
and ditch e 1 Charl es N. Hoi ·
Hoe
Sen.. ice
fi e l d ,
Ho ck
h' u tland . Ohi o Pho ne 742 -2008

•e trie ver pu p
pie~ . Af&lt; C t egts tered . Cham
p1on
bl oodli n e . Whelped
H-4-71:1
Phone 614·66 7 JOJ9
fven!n g s or weeke11d s.
~ o r de r

"THIS PAYS J I1Tl:RS' BILL TO DATE
... SAY N 01'Htf'IG ... SilENCE IS GOWEN

liXCAVATING doze' loader and
bac khoe wo rk . dump truclo.s
and lo bo ys for hir e will haul
ftll dirl , to •o il , l•mes l one and
g r0 11el Coli Bob o r Hoger Je l ·
fers . day phon e '/91 . 7089. n ight
pha~e ~ 92 - :JS:/5 o r 9'1'1 5'13'1 .

LA~NA OO R

FOf.l SA l I:

.

Cartoon J ; Superman .4; For Richer. For
Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6 ; Porky Pig &amp; Friends 8;

LANKY AGENDA FOMENT
to a " no ." and it might be
yes-A "NQ.O .

Yeste rday s

v t&lt;e. all mak e!&gt; , 9q1 228-4 . Th e
fabr ic
Shop .
Po rne r o y
Authonzed Singer So les and
_Se 1 11 1 C~ W e sharpen Sciuon .

Att; C RI::G !~TI: R~O poodles .
(ho co lo!e ,
1
opr, co t
1· JU4-887. 37 47

J; News 4,6,10; Amer ic a Ali ve 15;

4 : 0()-Mister

I Jumbles· TOPAZ

.

L1 TTLB ORPHAN AJOOE-IIVSH, HUSH MONEY
GRACIOUS ME 1 l#,c:/111!'(!

'
'

.ser·

lI

ITEGOTH

"

~EPA'"

J875

LOV AH LI: WHill: 5now dt~ll great
PYR~NH S
Pup p tC'&gt;
Ph one
I b 14 -b6 7 )838

12 · ~Newscenter

2:QQ-One Life To Live 6,13; 2:3!1-Doctors 3,4,15;
Guiding Light 8,10 ; 3:110-Anolher World 3,4,15;
General Hospital 6,13 ; Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20
3 3D-MASH 8; Joker's Wild 10; Crockell's Victory
Garden 20.

[ I KIJ

••

~w eeper~ . toasters , irons , all
small applt o nces . l aw n mower .
nt&gt;11 l to Stote Highway Carage
on Rou te 7 Phone (6 14) 985·

HOOF 110LlOW H orse~ . Buy , sell
h ade m l rott1 N ow on d u sed
!&gt;Oddles . Ruth R eu v e~ . Alban)/ .
(bi4 J bfj8 :. 090

byHenriArnold andBoblee

Young &amp; the Rslleless B; Midday Magaz ine 13.
12:30-Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search For
Tomorrow 8,10; Etec. Co. 33.
1,oo--For Richer . For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13 ;
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10; N o t tor Women
Only 15; San ley's Tools 33; 1: 15-Sizlng up Shapes
33.
3D-Days ol Our Lives 3,4,15 ; As The World Turns

~VA HB~J..J.-.-...--.

••

I:Jio!AOFORD. Au ctionee r
Com ·
ple !e Serv •ce Phon e Q49 -24tl7
or q4f1-2000 Ho&lt;lne Ohto Cri tl
Brodlor d

( HIMNI: Y H it' I:!, 01 e 11 0 tun' Ho ve
yo ur!&gt; cleaned the du'. tl ess woy
l he
Cht ll'Hl C'f
)wee p .
b l4 -31'J b(J~"I .

Fortune J,A, 15; Family Feud 6. 13, Love of

Llfe8,10; Sesame t. 33; 11 :Ss-CBS News8 . House
Call 10.

I Kl

~

\0·30·C

HWOOD

Wheel of

I HAFFC

-••

Chester, Ohio

Bo• J

~~&lt;;otJf&gt;.L\TY ~

I

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

WI: 00 parnttng gu !l er . ce tltng
t tle . paneling , roo f repatr ,
plumbing and conc re te w o rk
~ rf!e e~ tunot c5 . Call 99'J 7i'B5
a sk for Wollo ce M o r n-. .

9' 30-Brady Bunch 8; Fam &lt;ly Altair 10; Bit With Knit
33.
10 .0D-Card Shar ks 3,15; Consumer Buy line 4: Edge of
Nlghl6; All In The Family 8,10; Dating Game 13;
Bit Wilh Knit 33.
10·3D-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High Hopes 6; Price
Is Right 8,10; Slanley 's Tools 33.
11 :oo--High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6,13; 11 :3D-

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~~ ®

Game

8;, 10; Inner Tennis 33 .

Residential and commer Cii!. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any dly ,
anytime .

JIM KEESEE

Emergency One 6; Hogan' s Heroes 8; Matc h
10; Inner Tennis 33 .

DE PIT
I I I

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

Blown Insulation

\.!::}

·

6 :45-Mornlng Report 3; 6:50--Good Morning. West
. Virginia 13; 6 :55-News 13.
7,00---Today 3,4,15; Good Morning Amer ica 6,13; CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10; 7:25--Chuck While Repor ts 10.
7'30-Schoolles 10, 8,0D-Capt . Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame
Sl . 33.
9:00- Merv Griflln 3; Phil Donah ue 4, 13 .1 5;

At Wolf Trap 33 ; 9 · 3Q- Thracian Gold

ll'itllrut IDll

I'll. HZ·ZI74

J&amp;L

Club 15; Summer Semester 10.

6 : 3()--.-Columbus Today .4 ; News 6; Sum mer semester
8; Societies in Trans i tion 10.

unscrambl e These tour Jumbles .
one lener lo each square. to form
four otdtna l)' words.

SMITH
MOTORS, INC.

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

h'ISING ~ 1 AR Kenne l s Board ing
a nd g roo rnmg
nil breed s
Chesh u c :M&gt;7 0'19'1 or :Jo'l OIOb

VIRGIL~ .

SYR ACUSE (Rustic Hi ll s)
- 3 bed r oom ran c h , equip·

into . $15,000 .00 .

A VO N YOU con go to wodo; whun
the l.t ds g o Ia !trhool ~e ll
A .. on . Yo u se t yo ut o w n hou • ~
~a yo u &lt;on be home whcm tho
krd s get h ome A nd the harder
you w o rk the rnor e you earn
Co l i today A nn 1 homos , A von
Dts tt 1c t Manager i' 421:.1 54

Gutters and
Downspouts

·---

197'J HON UA ( 8 500
)p rY\ 9'1 2 /1:1 71

Pa ul ~oy re ,
c1op o r I ced
Po tTiond . Ohro H~ J 4~ql

HOW COME' we
JUST P~LIV~R~D
OUR LOAD AT
THE PIER!

1967 HOUSl: HIA.Ill:lt' 17 x bO A ll
&lt;5 1b. of dog food . $3 .88 .
e lec tnc furni sh e d . air cond ' ·
-~
Ir o ned . Wo!&gt;h e r and Ory e1 . 1 AU TO MOBIL E INSURANCE been
canc el led? los t yo ur ope1otors
lo ts ~n H orri~OM!IIe . 74'1 2826.
l tcense? Phone~92 2 1.43 .
19"/ 4 M O BIL E: HOMl: . 997. -74 "1 9

good

Cli:AN BARLl:V ~e cd for cov er

WOTTA WE&gt;
STOPP1N'
M~RE FOR·
EASYl

... ,..
...........
.....

197b NASHU A 14 K b5 3 bedr oom
1' , both , unde rpmni ng , 51500
and a ss um e lo on . 949· 2b8J or
8 43 -33 11 .

FO H ~ A ll Nonn1e goa t b mon ths
o ld Call '197. 5907
Coli olt e&lt;

CAI'TAI:-1 F.ASY

''

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER IS, 1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13; 6:0D-PTL

20 .
10:0D-WEB 3,4,15; Soap 6,1 3, Barnaby Jones 8,10;
News 20; Mayor of Casterbrldge 33.
10 :30-&lt;&gt;ver Easy 30; n ·n&lt;r-N.ews 3,4.6.8,1 0,13,15;
Dick Cavett 20; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 33.
1LJD-Johnny Larson 34,15; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13;
Gun smoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie " II Happened At
The World's Fair" 10.
12 :0Q-J anak133; 12 :40-SWAT 6,13 ; 1·00-Tomorrow
3,4; 1: 50-News IJ.

UNLOADED
z

~l:WINC MA(HINI: R eJ=~Otrs

H Y~

Pomero y ~ath and
h eatmg IN? /U/ 4

Performance

IJTTLE ORPHA:\ ,\ ~N IF:

197b ( HI: VY VAN J~(,J aut o fully
cu::. tomtzed
ltltf"r •Or
w hrt e
!&gt;pok e w he~ l~ Good (Ondtt ron
~e e at~rown s l radet f.'o 1lo. lo t
10 M tnc r svtllc O h tO
197] Hlt'HY l ],'Atll: H 'J7 It A C
ro ll ou1 ownmg p o we1 co n
ver !er
l- • eel lent
COt&gt;dllt OP
~&lt;t~OO ltrm 4 G ood y e01 l "/8 1 ~
tue ~ ond wheel ~ oppt o • 700
rnt!e s SJOO Conn l r utnpf'l wr th
co'&gt; e ex ce llenT cond tt iOn )lUO
74'1 ']bb"l

'

lkal t:stalt• (qr Sal.,

W7- ~~3J

YOU H

HK 1RI( ~tlo'tP l ACt au t o ma t ,~
co rner model 94') 70~ 1

c le

Call
Hoskins , 949 -2160.
Estimates .

guaranteed .

OWN
1.'1: 0 ~ KIN
~ARM J 4 acre~
t11nbe r Dr1ll ed
P~A( Hl:!&gt; S l:llb Mon
1 ue ~
w(•ll
b lot k butld111g
o lder
1hu "
h 1 9 to b Wed 3o t
Ol d "' '
i' Che~ l f'l
t1ode r
~ un 'I to 0 tit r11g co ntom ers tf
O ht o 98~ 'JB4"/ be tween d and o
you wont to use ~ rep ladders
br1119 y o ur own YCl u pt rk ap
1-" "
pie-. &lt;O m•ng !&gt;0011 Wagne r ~ ru.r OW Nt-lt' lioo'AN ~ Hio'f.l l:U Mu ~ 1 !iC II
f-orm layman Ohto / 1, 111olt.•!&gt;
:J bed• oo •n Al l eleclrtC ho tne ,,1
o lf
Rt
~JO
On
0' o
M OIIIHlgS tor
')ubdi V I ~ I Q n
b\4 749 3J1:J
4 .\ 9 74'1 4

I'I ( K

''

Service
,_
..._

New or Repair

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

W. Carsey. Mgr.

J'

A~;pl

'

-•
-

Pomeroy, 0 .
3·15·11C

Ph. 992·2141.
'

'

.

BORN IDSEil

Pomeroy Landmark

P ~ .. Sl ~UO . 197 4 Apache
( om p er fo ld down l1 ve 1 g l o::. ~
pone Is S l / 8~ 992 ·3b I I .

GETV.,K.

.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

!;::'

Call now for appointment.

P :.

All Y(llll

Muffler - Brakes
Shocks - Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

•I'

Sept . 17, 1978

ONI: PA IR ( J ch annel ) wolkte
loll. te!&gt;
l•k e new h' co l •!&gt;l ll
~ en'&gt;on obl e Coli 9Yl ~~b6

r"r

..'

'

In Middleport between
Third &amp;' Fourth Street-ott
behind
Mill Street
Tony's Carry
t.
Open Saturday 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12noonlo3p.m.
8·31· 1 mo.

Expires

MOORE'S

4·lO·IIC

CHEAP!

SPECIAL
PRICE

ON !: L)OUHU: b a w l p o r&lt;le1n l op
!&gt;IIl io. r abtnet untt ltk e new
~I ~0
One go ~ dr ye• . '10 lb
cora&lt;' '"' gold lt k c new S1 ~0
"1 P' opone go::. heotet !&gt; good
&lt;Cl ndt!ton One SJOO o ne S/00.
i' 4') ) 11 '/ a ft m ~p n1

POMEROY
LANDMARK

Autp&amp; Truck
Repaif • •
&gt;
Also TransmiSSIOn
Repair
Phone 992-5682

WOOD HEAT

$~OFF

co ndtttOII

1'-177 VO lAk't Plo'~MU: H .:~door Jl8
('ng rne o uto P ~
P H 1IDUCJ
OC!u ol mtle5- SJOOO 141:.1 Nn11o
'1 dr aut o l:•c e ilont &lt;ondr t• on

QUALITY

BRING IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

milo oH Rt. 7 by-p..s on
St. Rt. n4 toward Rultancl,

8 2 lmo

'l1lu AI'PA.WICIIIAN

147&lt;1 !&gt;CH Ulll !Cl lo l ele&lt; tt rr "1
b t:&gt;d•oom wa ~ h c r onrl dry c t
fu1 lli 'J herl
Utld('l puu•ed
o•
h l o( IQI I11eplocf' c_)l. c~:,•ll en t CO il
dtlt OII ~~o 00() 01 be~t ol fe,
!:I'J) ~ ::lnd A ve M, drllt"'pot t 1~
&lt;u It rlepp ft ec1c ~~00 19o'l
(hf'v't' hnpoln ~2') (.1

ROGER HYSEll
GAIOOE

currentrv malctng
i'ppointments
for senior

'II:!') J~d I

99'2 b IUO
lWO 61:l&gt;ioo' OOM trotl er
ol ter ~ pm

We

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

Tu c ~

~ A ],' CO HN
Sl pe r bu . Co rn
~ lr to li f' r )~~{) J l) No ~ tn n w tng

WHHL ( AMPtH sl e-ep s 6 htra s
Oven
fu r nace
ow11 111 Q
Reas onable 949 - 122~
)9'i' 4 PROWLI:R
21:J
ft . )elf
con ! a 1ned Sl e-ep s 0 74'1 '1 5"17

-

High School
SENIORS
a,.e

....'

I

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

C.Obte Chonnel 5 7:00 P.M. - Paul Gaudino
7· 30 - Super sports
10 :00--700 Club .

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14,1971
' 7·30-Hollywood Squares 3; Dating Game 4; Candid
Camera 6; Julie Andrews &amp; Robert Goulet&amp; ; That's
Hollywood 10; Nashville On The Road 13; Dolly IS;
MacNeJt .Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:110-Movle "Clone Master" 3,4, 15; Mork &amp; Mindy
6 , tJ; Once Upon A Classic 20.33; Magical , Mus ical
World of Julie Andrews 10.
8:»--Ptease Stand By 8; Thraclan Gold 33; Once Upon
A Classic 20.
9:110-Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii F lve·O 8,10; . In

•

'1~1 ~ 14 /

Hotprltnl

IJ. YOU hov e o servoce 10 o ff e r

YAHLJ !&gt; All: Clo the !&gt; dtshes elec
Tr 1C oppltancc~ Lmens HoutS 9
to ~ 11 to 11.1 ol Sept 1 md~;?
! rom Longsvtlle CR 10 Ph one
742 7b6tl

11 \'t NlW Jeep A I lta&lt;io. f't

1971 ( HI: VHOLI:l IMPALA Good
rondtl mn
W tll tot.. e tr odes .
949 2'l6J

\ ard Sal"

YA+?O ) All: M an thru f--11 ~ept
II thru 1~ ~yl vto lwell rn g
~ yr acuse Oh1 0
""""

(1.\ AttWIAI I"''''
t lh ·up
~.,.l ,• o '
y (J(Ifl~ ~ ft C)III I('~U(O
OH

GOLUt N lt' ('d Dc ltciOU'&gt;
&amp; Golde11 0f'IH ro u' appl ('~ · ~rtJ
pnlr tc lo.
O r&lt;hm d
~lo'
Oij9
o 1" b()CJ :m1~

3~0

( HI: V Y IMPAL A
992 /704 olt er 4 pm

Business Services

( AI DO hy chnul• c tffllf't N t't d,
rnllrH"' M od{'l l H l'uul ) ~~
"~ t ' H S3UO(.t Wrtl dPit v£• 1 ft pe
I J'J J(JQJ C' VC'flll lQ '&gt;

Gh' tMt ~

v w lt'A HI:II t , s:luoo
Au to rno ft c w o she t and dr)le t ,
5. 1 ~ 997 -29!H

],'I Y!:: H ~I l&gt;~

won t to bu y 01 se ll somethtng'
Ot:! looMmg lor war lo.
or
wha teve r
y ou II get resul ts
lo ~ t er wilh a )en llnel Wan t Ad
Ca ll 99'1 II ~b

~tat 1011
t.JI.J'l ~1tt /

'" ' ~

J ANI)

AU(1 ION f-11d0 y and )otu t doy at
1 prn New and U!oe d mer chon
d1&lt;oe ot Oh ro ~ t vet Au ctron ~:f!
Htgh :.r Mtddlepor 1 Oh oo

Uphol~tl't

~::t'l)

O llJ (O IN ~
r or k('t wo trhe'&gt;
{ IO!t!&gt; r 111r;1~
w!Jdrhn g bon d~
rltamoncis Gold o r -,t1oe1 (all
ioo'oge r Wornsley . 14::1 ::1 :.01

WAN \

(l: HV Y I tW pa t t ~ 14 /:J \'t'go
m n l nr Ha y h" ~ ol f' ) H~ o
fioiP '"V-jij '} I I J 1" 44fi /~ 49

l'IO l

TELEVISION
VIEWING

DiCK TH !ICY

t 'or !;alt·

For~!•·

liMHI: ff
duns

wll '-19'1

5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Late Show ( PH I
9 &amp; 11 P.M . - Confessions ot a Pop Performer ( R&gt;

11- The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday. Sept. 14, 1978

and Alan Sontag
We keep getting questions
on how many points to count
for being short in partn&lt;cr's
suit. We also keep rer.Jymg ·
that there is no simp e formula. In general, we favor
counting full value for our
first bid and then dropping
those short-suit points in
later action unless something favorable happens to
make that s hortage look
good.
South has a reasonably
good hand opposite an opening bid and he has h1gh
hopes In spite of the singleton club . North has substantially more than a minimwn
opening, but merely rebids

SL.IJRP

SLU/Ip

•

Your partner opens one

club and the next hand passes . A Mississippi reader
wants to know what bid we
recorrunend.

We recommend a jump to
four hearts provided partner
will understand what your
bid means.
rNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. t

(Do you have a question for
the expeFts? Wnte " Ask the
Experts. ·· care of th iS newspaper Individual questions will
be answered if accompan ied
by s tamped, se lf-address ed
envelopes. The most mteres tinQ questions will be used ;n
th is column and wifl receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN. I

AUNT SUKEY!! WHAR'S
STABLE MANNERS?

�12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 14. 19?8

Four convicts escape
By CRAIG SCHWED
MARIANNA, Ark. (UPI) Four Temessee convicts who
shot their way to freild&lt;m and
IICaped into Arkansas in a
hijacked plane turned one
hostage loose bUt took two
others today, leading FBI
4gents and local police on a
wild chase tllrough the state.
Rep&lt;rts broadcast over the
Arkansas Highway Patrol
radio network indicated the
fugitives spent the night near
Woodlawn.
The gunm en set free a ·

hostage they had taken
earlier, 19"year-old Richard
Rutledge, an insurance .
collector who bad gone. to
investigate when he saw the
fugitives ' hijacked plane land
on a dirt roa d near Marianna.
Rutledge , according to
reports on the police radio,
telephoned his family this
morning to say he had been
se t free near Woodlawn .
Details of his release were
not disclosed.
Woodlawn : where the
convicts are believejl to have
spent the night, iR about 70
miles northwest of where the
plane landed, and about 40
miles northea st of Little
Rock.
Police had the&lt;rized the
heavily-armed
fugitives
would try to make their way
to relatives of the ringleader,
Vietnam veteran Larry
Chism, 29, whose ex-wife,
parents and brothers live in
Forrest City, Ark ., near
Marianna . The gunmen
eluded theni by heading north
instead.
· The convicts used guns
Stashed .in a bathroom to
blast their way out of a
bowling alley during a priliOO
bowling outing at Dickson,
Tenn. Wednesday.
They took a w001an worker
at the bowling alley's
concession stand hostage,
and made their way to the
DickliOO Municipal airport.
They Jet the woman go, but
then captured airport
manager Mel Romine and
made Romine fly them to
Arkansas, where he, too, was
set free .
·

The FBI said Chism was
wounded in the shoulder
during an exchange of
gunfLre with guards as they
shot their way oui of the
bowling alley. ~ guard and
another conVict
were
wounded in the gunfight.
Their flight triggered a
massive manhunt with
officials calling out search
planes and tracking dogs and
setting up roadblocks.
In a stolen car, the convicts
then headed for the Dickson .
Airport where they commandeered a four-seater
Cessna plane and exchanged
the woman hostage for Mell
Romine, a pilot and airport
mana~er .

While threatening his life
Ha dozen and a half times,"
the gunmen ordered Romine
to fly a "zigzag " path to elude
pursuing planes and radar
screens in nearby Memphis,
Tenn.
Lee County !'alerilf Robert
May Jr. said the pilot was
told they ·:wanted to land
approximately 35 miles
southwest of Memphis."
ROOJine said he set down oo
a muddy "fann road" just as

the 'plane was running low oo
gas. Ordering him to stay in
the plane for at least an hour.
the four convicts fled on foot.
The pilot said the men had
apparently ditched one
shotgun, but still had at least
four handguns and one
shotgun from the bowlingalley spree.
The fugitives took their
guns with them as they
flagged down a pickup truck
driven by Richard Rutledge,
a nearby resident who drove
to the plane to check on the
passengers, May said. The
men jumped into Rutledge's
truck and ordered him to take
off.
The gunmen, who have
been charged with federal
air-piracy warrants and
violation of Tennessee
kidnapping Jaws, also are
being sought by the FBI.
When they landed in
Arkansas, the FBI took over
the case.
Warden Jim Rose of the

Nonstop talks proceed, major issue unsettled

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
WIIKIND SPIC'IALS

Turney Center said he
bellevea the men had some
help with their daring eocape.
" It had to be somebody
outside."' -the warden said.
"Someone stashed those
weapons In there (the
bowling-alley bllthroom )."
Rose Identified the other
escapees as George Bonds,
24, Dyersburg, Tenn., serving
20 years f&lt;r rape ; Floyd
Brewer, 28, Lavergne, Tenn.,
serving 35 years fer rape and
assault with intent to kill, and
Ronald Lyoos, 31, Loveland,
Ohio, serving 50 years for
robbery.

By.JIM ANDERSON
CAMP DAVID, Md . IUP!j .
- Virtually nonstov talks, induding a meeting thi s mum -ing between Secretary of
Stllte Cyrus Vance and Isr·aeli
Prime Ministe1· Menacl1em
Begin, proc&gt;eeded today atthc
Camp Dovid swrunit, sources

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 16
'

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15th
9:30A.M. TO 8 P.M.

9130 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

TWO DAY SALf .

MEN'S 3-PIECE
VESTED SUITS
SQJ_Id colors, stripes, pla ids. 100
per cent polyester. Sizes 38 to 46
In regulars and longs,. new fall
!election .

Bridge
ordered
closed

MEN'S 189.95 SUITS

SALE '71.99
MEN'S 199.95 SUITS

SALE '79.99 ,

CLEVELAND (UP!) The Clark Avenue Bridge has
been ordered closed as of Oct.
2 by Mayor Dennis Kuclnich
because of deterioration.
Kucinich said a report from
Osborn Engineering Co. has
warned that the bridge over
the Cuyahoga River might
oot last through another hard
winter .
Kucinich said replacing the
bridge would cost $30 milllon
to $50 million, 70 percent of
which would be paid by the ·
federal government. He said
the job would take sill years.
The recently reopened Harvard-Dennison Bridge wUI
handle some of the traffic
diverted from the other
structure.
" This is not an easy
dectslon because I know how
important the Clark Avenue
Bridge is as a main access
route," said the mayor. "But
I doo 't want another Silver
in
Bridge
disaster
Cleveland."
The collapoe of the Silver
Bridge spa~ning the Ohio
River at Gallipolis II years
ago killed 46 persons.

said.

The likelihood that lhe
peace conlerent'e would run
&lt;KJ through the weekend wa s
also increasing, lhe som-ces
disclosed. And these sources
,took pains to di~cou 11t
pessimistic news stories
about the swnmit published

Special Clearance prices on pr•teen,
/unlor, missy and half size summer
dresses.

Reg. '9 to '19 ................................ SALE '4.88
Reg. '20 to '30................................ SALE '8.88
Reg. '32 to '40 ............................. SALE '12.88
Reg. '44 to '58 ............................. SALE '16.88

scribers the pay TV
prograrruning of Home Box

Wakeup a
little richer. ••
0=

G
G

VOL. XXIX

WALK SOFTLY

Only

12 ft . Wide sculptured plush
carpet, 100 per cent nylon pile.
Famous Lee's quality, green ,
gold, brown and rust .

Only

11.99

1

-.

BANK

(

RACINE

FURJr.IITURE DEPARTMENT

SPECIAL
The mobile ollice of Sen . Howard M. Metzenbaum
was located in the business section of Pomeroy
Wedneoday to receive input from residents and to record

OHIO

W~s l

Bank cm d Gaza . Under

continuin g e~h nos t ru)ll-stop .
That atmosphl·n• wa ~ · ~·\ · i ­

dcnt Thursday as well, ·as

np1

tht! l s i'Ci:lli
under certain

dom~st ic

eventual Israeli withdrawal

from the West Bank -

a

l'i:idkal departure [rum its re·

l'Cilt pusitiUJIS.
The soUJ'l'C inserted the
word ·· apparently " as i:l ll inaffair:-;, a s t,lication the aecc ptanee of the

BABY BED AND
MATTRESS

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Dr. Carll :Wyler, former president
of the medical staff of Jewish Hospital, Is free on his own
recognizance after pleading innocent to four charges he wrote
Calle prescrlpticm for a narcotic pain killer.
Through his attorney, Wyler, 65, waiver a preliminary
hearing on the feimony charges Thursday. His case Is
espected to go to a Hamilton County grand jury.

Single side drop, adjustable
spring level, durable foam
mattress. white or walnut finish.

SPECIAL

$7 goo

Woman's request denied

COMPLrn

WASHINGTON (UPI) - SUpreme Court Justice Potter
Stewart Thurlday turned down a Tennessee woman's request
that he .halt aU uranium mining, atomic fuel processing and
nuclear reactor operation on grounds they may cause 100 fatal
·radiation eiposures each day.
Mrs. Jeannine Honlcker of Nashville said she turned to the
&amp;lpreme Court, even though her case already is pending
bef&lt;re two .lower courta, because she believes every day of
continued uranium use means additional risk.

--~-·-·~-·-·~---·----·----y---·----·--~-----------------TWO DAY SAI.fl

SAVE 30%

CUSTOM MADE
DRAPERIES
Our annual fall sale. Decorator
Industry and Cortley Custom
Draperies. E~cellent selection
of patterns and colors. Bring in
your measurements and select
your new drapes now.

MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
'8.95 FLANNEL SPORT SHIRT
69

SALE 56

Wmiams returned to Ohio

Sizes small (1~· 1 4if2), medium (15lS'/&gt;), large (16-16'12), extra large
t17 -t7'12) . Colorful ploid patterns,
permanent press, long fall.

EASTI.AKE, Ohio (UPI) - Ea81lake pollee escorted Leon
WWlam.l Jr. of Cleveland, back to Ohio Thursday to face trial
f.r .the decapitation - murder of his wife.
State Pollee In Platlaburgh, N. Y., said federal border
authcrlties called them after a computer check showed that
WWlam.l~ 32, who had been turned back by Canadian officials,
wu wanted for the aggravated murder. Wllilams was
arraigned and waived ei!radltion proceedings, State Pollee

su.95 WESTERN
FlANNEL SHIRTS

SAVE 30%, TOO, ON CUSTOM MADE
BEDSPREADS TO MATCH.

SALE f9

aald.

Forecast record com crop
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Agriculture Department officials
Thursday reduced their estimate of prices farmers will
receive for their corn this year becalllll! of the record size of the
crop. The department said the crop will be a record 6.8 billion
buahels.
AIUPPIY and demand report Issued by the World f'ood and
,\lricultural OuUoolt and Sltuatioo Board predicted the
average price f&lt;r com over the 19'/&amp;.79 marketing year will
rqe frllln $1.85 to f,I.05 a bUShel.

CHILDREN'S

GENERl\TON

~

"Generatioo··" Stailless Steel
18 an (7-1/8'') OPEN SKUET
Hoto'o ,.. _.,..., ta •loT Will lloolll'o -a-otill" - - ·
witlt J1Mr htii26-YUR WAMAIITY. F11 olitoite4 titlo aoly, Ill tlrit • c =o,

WARM-UP SUITS
AND
.SWEATSHIRT JACKETS

Senator Glenn attacks FBI
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. John Glenn, Mhio ,
charged Thursday that the FBI Is keeping araon- the ''fastest
gro~ ~!rime In tbe country" - out of Ita Unibm Crbne
Reporta because of feuding between pollee and fire officials,
Qu.tloned by Glenn before the Senete investigations subCIIIIInlttee, FBI officials conceded their reporting policies are .
blllied on a 19211 agreement with the .International Asaoclatlons
ft. Ollefa of Pollee.

- Jumpsuits and 2 pc. styles.

-Jackets with hoods or collars.
-Extra warm for the cool fall weather.
.

I .

- Sizes 6 to 18 months, 2 to 4, 4 to 7

blllly Unto ..illot II 10 -lolly llbOCiiw l"ieo· ko ...... . _ .
ltl&lt;lll('
lion• --~~~ ..... - - ,. !tony lol

••I

FROM

FROM lOP TO BOTTOM A BIITFR WAY TO COOK
Tun l11h· lo

f. '

f'lll!&lt;Si V

ELBERFELDS IN

EROY

Law professor target·
.'

. CLEVELAND (UPI) - A former Cleveland State
Ulll-11117 law profeuor, Daniel Mlgllere, Ia the target It a
Mrdl by authcrltlll along the Eastern Seabord tor hl.s a~eged
rcla In 1 JDUIII.,qljlllono4ollar intemational drug IIIIIUigllng
r1n1 t1at flew marljuane by the ton frllln Colombian jungles to
tbe United 811\U.
Mlllwa,Jl, until two yeareago 1 profeuor epeclallzlng In
''powrly law" at estf'a ManhaD Law School, was one of 2f
IIII'IJIIII lndlcletl by a arand Jury in Trenton, N. J ., Tuesday .

Israelis watch movie
CAMP DAVID, Md. (UPI)- It Isn't all werk at the Camp
Dawld aummll
'
·
Wla
Carter'• top lldea caucwe&lt;l Thunday
IIIPt, U. . . .Iii aaw 1111 movie "An Unmarried Woman."
. ,,
..
li,

....at

t ht: !ll'gotiat wns within the
•/u ncrica tl dciegation involve
t hick , st ac ks tJf dm:wucnts
atH..I
la rgt: maps. Powell .
Uescribt•d the current ta lks as
"' mteHSl' " but saitl " more
IJrugress and more flcxJOili·

U1e t:onferem.:e suurce smU

ty" have to IJc shown by both

Begi11 hall aecepted the pn n· sides before there ee:tn be
ciple whilt: n~maining i ns is- . ag reeme nt.
tent on the need to mmn tain
Sources said President
Isradi settlements ir1 the ut·- Carter plan.'::i a !J ruadt.:ast rmd
cupied lerTilury - sor net hi11 ~ televised ad dres~ to a joint
both tell Egypti ans and the s.'ss1un uf Congress cmd tlic
Americans consider ill&lt;'gt-J l.
rw ti u11when th e &lt;,.·onferencc is
Photographs released by t·otnpl ct ed .
the White Hum;e .'i how th:-1t

•

•

at y

en tine
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS "".-.

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1978

UTILE ROCK (UPI) The FBI reported today an
elderly couple jJeing held
hostage by one of the four
Tennessee coovicts who shot
their way to freedom has
been released unharmed in
Keni)Jcky . Whereabouts of
the fugitive were unknown.
At the same time, police
said
they
believed
bloodhounds were closing in
oo another coovict in the
rugged woods near the
Missouri
border . .Two
convicts were captured
Thursday.
John Kenney, assistant
special agent in charge of the
FBI office at Little Rock, said.
details on the release of
Woodlawn, .Ark., residents
any questioos they might have . Staffer John Maynard
Mr. and Mrs. John King were
pictured with the unit was on hand to meet the public. scant.
(Photo' by Dorsel Thomas) .
" All we know is that
I
they've been released
.. somewherg·
in
rural
Kentucky," Kenney said.
"They have contacted their
son and they have their car
and they are enroute back to

-i~~~~~~J____r_h_e_w_o_r_id__ro_d_a_y_ Ratification
Doctor free on recognizance
ends strikes

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football program, "Inside the
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Another popular sports
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features a top college midweek basketball game.
Skiing, figure skating and
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COOKWARE N
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GAI(AC.~ 3All:: lhul !) . 011d ~~~ . tj 1o
4 . ~ 1 9Q !i CI., ~ I Mon01 o ff CH ~~ or
to p o f f oster n Htgh ~r ho n l !J ill

delegation,

which tl1ere would be a three- conditions, apparently had
way partnership over the accepted the vrinciple of
this conc evt :
- Jordan would be res[JUn·
sible fur· (lUlil'e duties , education . and passpoJ•ts .
- The Palestinians would

licl ween the three delegations

mle" plan !hal would grant

the v•·i ndpals have IJcen suurl'es saitl
working on a com:e pt under

ur

prilll'lj.Jic
withdra wal is
L'onclitioned on agr~e m ent on
othe r points.
them limited C:~ulonomy .
- Is real would maintain eK· · An l snudi E mb assy
tcrnal .security fur a period of .spokesrmm denied the l't:l fJurt
limited du1·ation.
of a cceptance of the Jl'rirlt'i plc
On TilUrsUay, cot1ference . of e ventual withdra w~tl. but

outlined in th BeJ..!i n "self·

Convicts
free pair

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negotiators worked 'Ill a ('umpli.• x, ll'ipC~ rtlle sharing of
n•spousibility Ior thl' West
Bm1k . ·
Cong1·essional Sl turccs, who
lwve l&gt;cc n in t uuc h With the
Ca1n1_, r&gt;avid negotiators. said

I

PRICES AND

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The network offers major

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ADMITTED - Marjorie
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DISCHARGED - Rose
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the compound is intense and
scl'ious, with the meeti ngs

1

Cousine," and such family

Fur

the newspaper said , and the
summit is going thi'Ough it!;
lcu;t momentS of despair,

eollapsc."
Grave differences remain

recliners, wall -a -ways , swivel
rockers, occasional chairs . Cloth
and vinyl upholstering In a large
selection of colors and styles.

Office, the nation's largest
pay
network. System
manager Richard Newell
plans to begin the monthly
subscription service in
December.
Over 5,000 cable subscribers in Minersville,
Syra cuse,
Middleport,
Pomeroy, and Gallipolis, and
Point Pleasant, New Haven,
Henderson and Hartford,
West Virginia, will be offered
the premium package of
movies, sports and specials.

Hospital News

a!Jt1ut the Israeli military
pr·esence on the West Bank,

ntit will continue through the
wcc;kend , making it a nearly
two-week venture .
"Thcrc is nul yd agreement," the suu1·t:es rcmim.let.l
reporters .
Con f e r c n l' C s o url·c s

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entertainment as " Race For

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NO 107

rcpmts from the F:gypti~m
journali sts, soun·cs said Ole
nc~oti aUons are continuing,

~W.-AJ~R~EH.-0.-Uw~~--·----·--~~~--·-~----:F~U~R~N·~IT~U~R~~EDEPARTMENT

entertainment includ es
outstanding movies, uncut ,
unedited and uninterrupted
by commercia Is.
Recent examples of HBO
programming include "Annie
Hall, "
"The
Deep",
11
Rocky ", .. Network," and
"The Bad News Bears" . Such

Everyday!

Oavid that the summit has
d&lt;!adlocked and that Presid&lt;•nt ·Anwar Sadat would IJc
departing t oday . The
newspr:tper s.aid, ··President
Carter is making the last Loffm1 to save the swmnit from

e

Pointview Cable systems
offering home box office
PoinTView Cable Systems
will offer its ca ble su b-

in Egypt.
The topic of the VanceBegin session , according to
the sources, dealt with the
future of the lsraeli~&gt;ecupit'&lt;i
West Bank of the Jor·dan
River.
The mo&lt;Kl within the compound in the Catoctin MoW1·
t.a in!-:i is inten~e and serious,
the soUJ'ccs said, as meetings
be tween the American,
lsmeli and EgyvUan delegalions go oill'oJmd -the-clock.
Mea nwhil e, th e Cairo
ncwsvaper AI-Ak-h ba r
report~;d in a dispatch from a
corTespond&lt;·nt "t Cmnp

Arkansas.''

·

In their two-day escapade

during the escape, was known
to have at least a .38-caliber
weapon in his possession,
Harper said.
Authorities said they had,
no clue as to the whereabouts
of the other at-large convict,
Ronald Lyons, 32. Lyons fled
to Kentucky along with the
Kings in their car after aU
four convicts spent the night
at the Kin gs' Woodlawn
home.
He had last been seen with
the hostages heading north oo
state Highway 177 toward
MiSsouri.
Convicts George Bonds, 24,
and Floyd Brewer, 28, were
captured Thursday when
they tried to ram a police
roadblock at Hoxie, Ark.,
with a stolen pickup truck.
They surrendered without
firing a shot
Jack Kenn ey, assistant
agent in charge of the Bl
office in Little Rock , said
Chism and Lyons apparently
have split up .
"One of the esca pees a[r
pareiltly commandeered a
pickup with three citizens in
it and later wrecked it off
Arkansas highway 177," he
said. " All fl ed into the
woods."
The three uni dentifi ed
hostages, aU men , were not
harmed. State police said
they were held hostage only
·for a short time before the
truck crashed while being
pursued by a sheriff's deputy.
The four convicts, usi ng
sawed-off shotguns hidden in
a bowling-alley restroom,
escaped Wednesday during a
prison bowling trip at
Dickson, Tenn. A guard , an
inmate and one of the
escapees were wound ed in
the short gun battle.
After. shooting their way
out of the bowling alley, the
fugitives - serving between
20 and 50 years in prison for a
variety of violent cr imes commandeered a car and
forced an unidentified woman
to take them to Dickson
Airport .
They exchanged their
hostage for airport Manager
Mell Romine, a pilot, and
made him fly them !n a smalt
(Cont inued on page 12)

covering at least tllree states
and involving m&lt;re than 500
Jaw enforcement officers, the
United Press International
A court hearing continued escapees have hijacked a
The ratification of new in Cleveland on the school plane, commandeered at
cootracts have ended strikes strike in that city , where least six vehicles and taken
in the Tallmadge, Lima 10,000 employees are .off the eight hostages. AU eight have
Shawnee and Buckeye Local job. The system's 175 schools, either been released or
100,000 students , escaped. None were harmed.
school districts , but walkouts with
conlinued today in Cleveland , remained off the job.
About 60 Jaw enforcement
Dayton teachers ign.red a officers led by police dogs
Logan and in Dayton , where
teachers refused to obey a court order Thursday to stop briefly picked up the trail of
court
order
halting picketing and a judge said he escape ringleader Larry
would wait until the school . Chism, 29, shortly before
picketing.
In the 3,501J.6tudent Tall- board sought a contempt sunrise today in the rugged
thinly
populated
madge School District in citation before taking any and
oorthwest corner of Izard
Summit County where about action. '
Non - academic personnel . County In north-central
130 of the system's 180
Dayton
school Arkansas near the Ml.ssouri
teachers had been on strike joined
since Sept. 5, teachers voted teachers in the strike early border.
early today to ~ccept a new Thursday.
"The dogs did pick up
·contract.
The maintenance, custodial Chism's scent a while ago but
The new pact calls fer an and food service employees lost It," State Police Trooper
annual salary of $9,500 , are represented by Local 101 Charles Harper said from a
retroactive to last February of the Dayton Public Service makeshift
search
and $10,200, retrooctive to Union.
hea&lt;)quarters at nearby
Dayton has 2,200 teachers, Pineville.
Sept I. It also gives teachers
"We still think we have him
a $500 per year raise Sept. I, 500 non-academic personnel
who are striking, and 37,000 trapped out there aomeplace.
1979.
The ratification of new students.
We had roadblocks up all
contracts ended strikes in the
night on all access· roads,
Lima Shawnee school district
too .' '
and Buckeye Local school
Chism, ·who suffered a
district
Iii
Ashtabula
J!Unshot wound to his fingers
Thursday, but walkouts
continued today in Cleveland,
Tallmadge, Logan and
Dayton, where teachers
refused to obey a court order
halting picketing.
The 180 teachers in the
Lima Shawnee District, who
Thlo week's wiim1Ji1
have been on strike since
Lottery numben:
Sept. 5, and the board of
Gold number - 7.
education, both ratified a
While Number - 10.
contract that ended the strike
Blue number - 180.
A Cabell County petit jury
against the system, which
Extra Casb
found
John Lewis Young,. 33,
has 3,500 stadenta.
357817.
Mason,
guilty of burglary,
The contract calls for an
Wednesday,
following a trial
immediate pay increase of E-"ergency squad
In
the
circuit
court there.
$400 a year If a 3.9 mill
has
three
runs
Young
was
convicted last
operating levy Ia approved in
of
second-degree
murder
year
November, with raises
The
Middleport
In
the
1976
death
of
a
Mason
totaling 8700 scheduled over
Emergency Squad answered supermarket owner Mrs.
the remainder of the school
three call.s 'lburaday.
year.
Mary Berry. The six-man, Alx·
At 10:58 p.m. the squad woman jury deUberated for
. The strike by 80 nonwent to Route 7 lor Hubert more than two hours ·before
academic employeea In the
Stewart who was taken to returning the guilty verdict in
Buckeye Local School
Veterans Memorial Hospital. connection with the burglary.
District ailo liecan Sept. ij,
At 12:20 p.m. James
and moat of the Jljltem's 110
Oblinger, 3, was taken from charge. The trial began on
teachers honored picket
lints, altholcJI ldlool.s were · hia home on Broadway to the Tuesday.
Cabell Judge Dan C.
office of Dr. James Conde for
open fer the dlJirict'l 3,to0
Robinson said a pre·
treatment.
students.
sentencing
Investigation will
At
'
8:45
a.m.
Mrs.
Nellie
The new contract includes
be
conducted.
He will hear
Price
was
taken
from
her
a new claaslflc:atlon for
post-trial
motions
at 10:30
at
661
N.
Second
·Ave.,
home
overtlmt and pay Increases
a
.m.
Sept.
28.
to
.Yeterana
Memorial
riiiCinl from 17 -.Q "-nla an
Htolptil with a poulble hlp A Wood County €lrcult
bour ovtr lbltwe ; : leqlh
~.
. Court convietecl Young on
"' lilt - 111'11
9

Jury Finds
Young Guilty

'•

•

Nov. 12, 19?7, of second-degree
murder In the Dec. I, 1976
~tabbing death of Mrs. Berry,
who owned the B&amp;B Market In
Mason.
He was sentenced to five to
II years imptlsonrnent on that
conviction plus five additional
years under the state's
habitual' criminal act because
of an .unrelated, earlier
conviction.
.
Young's burglary trial, like
the murder trial, was moved
to Cabell County on a successful motion for a change of
venue because Muon Couniy
Circuit Cwr1 Judge James
Holliday felt Young could not
receive a fair trial here
primarily becatl8e of adverse
pretrial publicity. .
Young remains lodged ill thP
Mason County Jall.

t

.

·.,.

'
'

•'

KICKING OFF SERIES - David Toma, New York
City cop, responsible for the TV series "Toma" kicks off
the 1978 artist series at Rio Grande College . Toma will be
at Rio Sept. 19.

Toma kicks off
•
•
artists
series
Rio Grande College and entertainers or groups to
Community College will host a ppear on the Rio Gra nde
David Toma for one speaking ca mpus this coming year.
engage m e nt Tue s da y, Following Toma will be
September 19. Best known as Jeane Dixon, October 11 ; The
the real life police offi cer National Theatre Company ,
behind the television series December t3 ; The New
" Toma," David Toma has Vinton County Frogwhomea rned wide acclaim as a pers, February 12 and Robert
Vaughn , April 18.
dynamic speaker.
The . television seri es
Ti ckets for the ent ire
"Torna!l recreated t he ex· season of performa nces are
periences of a New York City still on sale in the office of
cop, a master of disguise, college relations on the Rio
who used wit in&gt;1ead of fo rce Gra nd e campu s. Season
and compassion inst ead of ticket prices are: Individual
violence to do his job. He was $15 ; Couples $20 ; and famil y
a peacekeeper not an en· $25. To place an order call
for cer .
.Jerry Toops at 245-53.13 . Yo u
Toma will speak in the ca n then pick up your season
co llege's cafeter ia at 8 p .m. tickets at the door September
His topic will be human 19. Tickets purchased at the
decency.
door for Toma or any other of
David Toma rs the first of the performances are $S per
five well-k nown pro fessional

person.

Committee will
explore problems
A Juvenile Attention
Committ ee (J AC) has been
formed by representatives of
three Ohio River count ies to
explore the problems and
needs of youth who enter the
juvenile justice system .
Officials from sheriff s
d e partm e nt s ,
co unty
prosecutor s offices. and
juvenile courts in Gallia,
Meigs, and Scioto counties
agreed to form the special
committee at the conclusion
of a day-long meeting held
Thursday at the Holiday Inn ,
Gallipolis.
The meeting was ca lled by
Qallia County Sheriff James
M . Montgo mery, Ga ll ia
County Prosec uting Attorney
Joseph Cain, and Gallia
County Juvenile Oflicer Gary
Bane in response to concerns
for the development of a
multi-c ount y
Juv e nil e
Detention Distri,t.
The Gallia County officials,
who are concerned with the
continued Incarceration of
unruly and delinquent youth
in the county jail, have been
in

communifation · wilh

several other adja cent
counties in hopes of creating
a multi-county approach to
youth de!ention.
The new committee plans
to hold Its first meeting on
Sept. Z9, 1978.
According to Bane, the
committee hopes to involve
Lawrence County, which was
unable to be represented at
the Thursday meeting. "We
plan · to contact county officials in Ironton to see if they
can come to t"e Sept. 29
meeting, which may he held

includes Patt Mamas, of the
Scioto Co unty Juvenile
Co urt ; Ca rl R. Hysell , Meigs
County Juvenile Officer.
A fo urth S(lUt on the committee is being held for future
participation by Lawrence
co unty offic ials.
lnunediate objectives of
the JAC will he to ex plore the
juvenile justice needs within
the lour co unty area. The
committee will furtt ·Jr
examine the possibility of
form ing a Youth Service
Coordinating Council to serve
the pa1ticipating counties, as
well as conduct a feasibility
&gt;1udy and data gethering
effort with regard to future
det ention facilities and
alternatives.
Those in attendance

at

Thursda y' s meeting were
Pall Mamas and Joyce
Childers, from Scioto County
Juvenile Court ; Randolph
Rumble , Scioto County
Assistant Prosecutor ; Carl R .
Hysell , Meigs
Co unty
Juvenil e Office; Sheriff
James M. Montgomery and
Deputy George Plants, from
the Gallia County Sheriff's
Department; .and Gary Bane,

Gallia Co unty Juven ile Offi cer.

Special

te c hni ca l

assistance was provided to

the group by a team from the
Admin istration of Justice ,
[Continued on page 12)

SPECIAL MEETING
Southern l«al Board of
Education will meet in
special session Monday, Sept.
in Lawrence County," Bane
18 and in regular session
said. ·
Tuesday, Sept. 19 at 7:30p.m.
Besides Bane, the com· at the high school.
rnittee former Thursda •·

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