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10-: The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Mt•llday. Sept. 18, 1978 .

Leaders exchange hugs r--A;:-~l}eilibSl
•
£
£0 IIOwmg Con erence
DEBORAH A. GILLILAN
Ellie Manuel.
GWMrsilan.•De!',rahchAnnesterB,eadvieedr
SurvlvHtng are a daughter,
Sunday

.

·

.

.b ·
I Son $

were folded in front ol hbn.
Carter, appearing grayer
than two weeks ago when the
swrunit began, said the firll
agreement at Camp David
had been to ask the people of
the world to pray for auccess
in the search for peace.
"Thoee prayers have been
answered far beyond any
expectation," Carter said.
Carler's obvious elation
lighted his face throqhout
the brief speeches and the
hist... lc signln&amp; ceremony,
He grlrmed broadly when
both Begin and Sadat praised
his efforts.

Beautiful and eff•c•ent w1 th
Si\\le r Lln1ng foam 1nsu1a11on . thi S
also pr ovi des 4 tully
I

slated

are

~

NO PAR~lNG
Pomeroy Mayor Clarence
Andrews aMounced today
that due to paving, no cars
are to be parked tn front of

ven ien t shelves . a s tat1on ery and
1 glide-out basket in the fr~ eze r
side

Crow, Crow and Porter,

INGELS .FURNITURE
N. 2nd Ave .

Middleport, 0 .

Second Street and Mulberry ,
to the foot of Breezy Heights
from 10 p.m. this evening and
all day Tuesday.
Cars parked in the area will
be towed away.

Butch's Response
to Parental Advice
let's face lt . Butch Is far more likely to follow your lll:ample than our aef\llce
So. when It comes to teaching ch ildren about thr ift . .Skip th~ " ~ny
d 1 '
1

penny earned" speech; and , instf'!lld , take the kids with you to Farme~s
let them watch YOU ope-n a saving s accoun t . Now, that 's ~txampfe .

l!!J
t.

Q ...

renamed the Jbnmy Carter
summit. HE ..id Carter had
worked harder than the
partjclpanta' f(J'efathers did
in building tile pyramids,
The audience - and Carter
- ~ed with laughler.
Then, the three leaders
signed the two documents.
Since each leader 101 one of
each document, they signed
six tbnes each. That
completed, ,there was
another r:ound of applause,
and clasped hands and hugs
by lhe leaders.

::k ;.:

Fartners Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
'40,000 Ma•imum Insurance for Each Oepositor
~.~ember federal Deposit Insurance Corporatlln

Reedsville : a brother, John
Beaver, Pomeroy; a sister,
Mattie Hill, Medina. Also
surviving are 28 grand·
children ,
19
great·
grandchildren, several nieces
and nephews.

SQUAD CALLED
The
Middleport
Emergency Squad was called
to 1165 Pearl St. at 1:09 p.m.
Sunday for Carrie Smith who
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center.
At 7:24p.m. Saturday, Ray
Foster was Jaken from his
home on S. Third Ave . to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where· he was trealed 8nd
released.
·

rOo.

services will be
held all p.m. Tuesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev .' Freeland Norris
olliciating. Burial will be in
Meigs Memory Garden .
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time.
~'uneral

Four•••
(Continued from page I)

Vele111111 Memorlll Hotpltal
Saturday Admissions None.
Saturday Discharges Paul Andrews. VIolet Stover,
Terry Brown, Jacquelyn
Ginther, Hattie Powell, Edna
Belew, Sandra Roush, Minnie
Clark, Kathryn Van Matre.
Sunday Admissions Terre Wood, Long Bottom;
Minnie Bengel, Pomeroy;
Lyme Crow, Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges LaDonna· Clark, Dorsa
Parsons .

Complaint,
accidents
checked

i:.J_l_h_e
.

WilllarnB.
Blrlhl, Sept U
Mr. and Mrs. William
Jewell, daul!hter, Racine.
.

(DIIclulrp~, Sept.

II)

!'IJyllis Balley, Charlene
Black, Jonathan Bradley,
William Burton, Tiffany
Byus, Mah.lon Cli'rlstlan,
Barbara Coleman, Lenora
Flowers, Relha Foster,
Eslells Hall, Rex Hatfield,
Willard Henry, Russell
Hineman, Jasper · Houck,
Angela Hunt, William
Jamison, Jr., Charles
Johnson, Eugia Johnson,
Edna
Jones,
Nancy ·
Holzer Medical Ceater
Cohlriescor, Charles Kuhn,
~Diacbarges, SepL 15)
Clara Adams, ·sheila Mrs. ommy Mecham and
Adkins, Juanita Anglin, daughter, Mrs. Randy
Nedra Baird, Christina Bartl· Mercer and son, Jermifer
lett, Laban Burrow, Helena Nlchtlng, Lucllle Pendleton,
Campbell, Christopher Betty Ponn, Russell Roush,
Casey, Virgil Caudill, Wamie Clara . Russell, Mrs. Daniel
Crace, Ruby Duncan, Freda Salisbury and son, Vance
Eddinger, Susan Forrest, Tedrow, Charles Wagner,
Carmon Frazier, Tabitha Mary Wright.
Births, Sept. 18
Gardner, Mrs. Alex · Halley
and son, Richard Hughes, . Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Collins,
Lewis Humphrey, Sr., Jane son, Wellston. Mr. and Mrs.
Lambert,
Don, Lester, Dan Cotterill, daughter,
Michael Marcum, Mrs. Carl · Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs.
McFall and son, .Tekisha William Cox, son, Wellston.
Mitchell, Mrs. Leland Nichols Mr. and Mrs. Tim Crites,
and son, Julia Norris, Jasper daughter, Kanauga. Mr. and
Oliver, Pauline Patterson, Mrs. Orland Floyd, son,
Nimrod Pauley, Jason Pomeroy. Mr. and Mrs. Sam
Powell, Joseph Rose, Michael Holstein, son, Bidwell. Mr.
Stevens, Agnes . Stevenson, and Mrs. Robert Reed, son,
David Supple, Pollyanna Pt. Pleasant.
~ Dl1charges, Sept. 17)
Thompson, Virginia Urwin,
Shawn Corlllo, Wanda
Teresa
White,
~udith
Deweese, Shawn Carillo, Ben
Eblin, Benjamin Harless,
Maudie Harold; Michael
Hyde, Reva Johnso.n, Jerry
N~al, Ramona Roush, Ethel
Sheward, Mrs. Roger Taylor
and son, Wilmer Vencille.

failure to yield.
The patrol investigated a
one-auto accident at 9:52
a.m ., on CR 39, two-tenths of
a mile north of CR 20, in
Meigs County.
Officers report that a south
bound vehicle operated by
Den-ah G. Basham , 38,
wreckage,
Stone
counted
Cleveland,
went out of con·
KELLOGG , Iowa (UP! ) himself
among
the
lucky.
troi,
passed
r,f the left side of
Delmer Stone looked over the
"Everything's gone except the roadway, struck and
rubble that once had been his
home. The yard was littered the west bam," he said as he embankment, and over·
. .
with debris, yet Stone was surveyed the damage - an turned .
overturned corn crib, a
Bash~m was .uninJured.
thankful to be alive.
Stone was among the roofless barn and 8 house that "'The vehicle sustained severe
dozens of victims of the worst literally e~ploded when the damage. No c1tatwn was
issued .
tornado to hit Iowa in a twister hit.
." We're alive _ th~t's
Offic~r~ investigated a twodecade.
something
to
be
thankful
car
colhs10n at 12:30 a.m., on
The storm swirled down
for,"
he
said.
"But
I'll
tell
U.S
.
35, one and ei_ght lenths
into Jasper and Poweshiek
you,
I'd
never
want
to
go
of
a
mde
west of R1o Graude.
Counties from driving
through
that
again
."
Accordmg
to the patrol, an·
thunderstorms Saturday
Throughout
easlern
Jasper
auto
operated
by John Banks,
night, cutting a narrow 20County,
roads
and
fields
told
48,
Vmton,
w~nt
out of control
mile swath that killed at least
a
story
of
terror
_
sheet
wh1le
travelmg
west on 35.
six people, injured 50 others,
metal
from
farm
buildings
The
auto
went
left
of center
destroyed at least 50 cars and
Meigs County Sheriff
caused an estimated $1 was suspended in trees, dead and struck an east bound
livestock were strewn along vehicle dnven by John Parks, James J . Proffitt reports
million in damage.
deputies are Investigating a
The storm was the county roads and homes, 20, LeGrange, N. C...
Officers r~port no. m]uries. complaint frorn Charles
deadliest to strike Iowa since barns and other structures
14 people died in Charles City were gone, their components Both . vehicles mcurred Zeigler, RD Pomeroy (681
and Delwin in 1968. Gov. picked up and deposited mod~rate damage .. Banks East of Qarwin) regarding
was c1ted on charges of left of persons operating dirt bikes
Robert Ray said it appeared along the storm's track.
Not far from the Stone center.
.
.
on his property without
the two counties should be
farmstead ,
Darrell . The_ Galha· MCigs . Post permission Sunday af·
declared disaster areas.
The high winds struck Achtemeier, his wife, Marie, mvest1gatcd three accidents ternoon .
Sheriff Proffitt again
without warning or mercy. and their daughter, Suzanne, Sund~y.
cleanup
Officers were called tothe emphasizes that trail and dirt
There was fear the death toll supervised
operations at what had been a scene of a two-vehicle bike operators are to obtain
might go higher.
sprawling
farmstead
colhs1on at 12 :30 a.m. on Old permission of property
Twisted wreckage was
·
SR
7, at the Junction of SR 7. owners before riding their
scattered over more than two
The
patrol reports that cycles on someone else's
dozen farmsteads and a small
autos
operated
by Boyd property or they could face
slrip of busi~esses just south
Clark,
59,
Crown
City, and charges. Sheriff Proffitt also
of Grirmeli, where the twister
TO MEET
Arthur
Daniels,
19,
Bidwell, advised operators that they
took its worst toil - killing
The Area Volunteer Fire
collid.~d
hca~n
on
Old
7.
are not to operate the dirtfour people, but sparing a and Emergency Association
There
was
no
report
of trail bikes on the public roads
crowded
motel
and will meet at 7:30 Tuesday
injury . Officers report unless they have license
restaurant
night at the Middleport Fire
moderate
damage to both plates and other equipment
The storm destroyed Station . New decals and
autos.
Daniels
was cited on as required by law.
Stone's home and littered his membership cards will be
charges
of
left
of
center.
Sunday anernoon, Meigs
yard wit~ debris from available.
Some
new
The
patrol
investigated
a County Sheriff's Department
demolished farm buildirtgs. equipment will also be on
noon mishap on Little hapdled an accident for the
Yet, as neighbors and friends display .
Bullskin
Rd . five-tenths of a Pomeroy Police Department.
pitched in to clean up the
mile west of TR 23.
According to the report,
According to the patrol, an Janice J . Davis, 30, Rt . 2
MEET TIJESDAY
auto operated by Robert
Chester · Council 323, Thompson, 42, Garden City, Albany , was south bound on
US Rt. 33 and struck a pickup
MEET TIJESDA Y
Daughters of America will
0 ., missed a driveway while truck making a len hand turn
Letart Fa lis PTO will meet meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the
south on Little onto SR 7. The truck was
Tuesday at 7 p.m. at the hall. Quarterly birthdays will traveling
Builskin.
driven by Dan A. Cotterill, '1:1,
elementary school.
be observed and there will be
The
Thompson
auto Rt. 2, Rutland, Ohio. The
practice for instruction . stopped in the roadway to
There will be potluck refresh· r,everse. A vehicle' driven by vehicle driven by Mrs. Davis
was heavily aamaged. There
SQUAD RUNS
ments.
Clarence Taylor, 17, Northup, was moderate damage to the
The Pomeroy Emergency
stopped behind the Thompson pickup truck.
Squad was called for Mrs.
auto. The Thompson vehicle
JOINT
SESSION
Mrs. Davis was cited to
Minnie Benoel at 8:li4 a.m .
backed
into
the
Taylor
auto.
Meigs
County Court for
The
auxiliary
unit
and
the
Sunday. She was taken from
Officers report moderate falling to maintain assured
Bashan
Fire
Department
will
her home on E. Matn St., to
damage to the Taylor aulo, no
Veterans Memorial Hospital meetin joint session at 7:30 damage to the Tholflpson clear distance. Her five-yearp.m.
this
evening
at
the
haU
old son, Larry, received a
where she was admitted.
vehicle. Thompson was cit&lt;'li bump on the head and waa
to
discuss
money-making
At~ p.m. Sunday the squad
on charges of improper examined by a phyaidan
transported Mrs. Lottie projects. Refreshments will backing.
later.
Cohen from her home lo the be served. All members of
Ofricers investigated a
Deputies also investigated
both
organizations
are
asked
Holzer Medical Center.
head-&lt;Jn collision involving a hitskip accident that octo be present.
autos operated by Paul Short, curred sometime early
2&amp;, Crown City, and Terry L. Saturday morning on SR 143
Clark, 26, South Point, on CR in front of the Guy Harper
17, two miles west of SR 218, residence.
at 3:25 p.m.
The unidentified vehicle
The patrol reports that the was southbound on SR 143,
(Continued from page IJ
Clark
vehicle
was went off the road in front of
demolished . There was the Harper residence,
tlliCBped with minor Injuries today when his truck exploded
after slanuning into a tw&lt;&gt;6tory house on U.S. 62 and set the moderate damage to the traveled some 180 feet in the
bouse afire.
Short auto.
ditch and knocked down a
There were no injuries. No newspaper tube . The incident
The rig, driven by Ralph Harbor, 41 of Anderson Ohio
was bound for Pruitt, McDowell County, 'with 40 tons ~ s1eei citation was issued.
is still under investigation.
rails uaed in coal mines. Harbor was delive~ the shipment
for Case Heavy Hauling Co. in Huntington. Mercer County
lilerilf's Deputy Greg V. Smith said the truck careened down
Pinnacle Mountain afler Harbor 101!1 his brakes at about 1:45
a.m.

sweeps Iowa

Meigs County will be better
prepared to meet the needs of
its citizens if a blizzard hits
this winter, thanks to a new
program to be discussed at
the Meigs Human Resources
Council meeting at noon
Tuesday-at the Meigs Inn.
Alice Wamsley, director of
r-r.._-."',.....,fL'Ift/IASlrEI~ Retired Senior Volunteer
program, (RSVP) and Susan
Oliver, administrative
assistant, will discuss the
new RSVP project involving
meeting the basic human
needs of senior citizens and
others who might need help in
ca se of an emergency
disaster such as last winter's
bad weather.
Miss Wamsley .will be in·
viting the support and
assistance of aU agencies in
the county in coordinating aU
available resour:ces.
. A telephone network of
volunteers is being plarmed.
Names of ali people who
might be isolated at the time
of a blizzard or flood are
being collected, and additions
to this list are being solicited.
Members and friends
urged to attend.

adjustabJe temperature
locker and gl1de-ol1f cr isper 1n
the rr~ t nge rat o r side , and 4 con-

Bot!l men 1•ve him full
credit. Becln said the Camp
David summit should be

in death by her parents,
Charles and Fannie Wolfe
Beaver; her husband, Eber;
a son, George, and two
grandchildren, three sislers,
Seva Cline, Della Gillilan and

Program
Tornado
outline

19,0 CU. FT.
FROST*CLEAR

Model RS19F7

~~~ ;

Velerons six sons, Francis, Ralph,

~~ll=~~~- ~ed ~~b~~· ~":~:;~ ~~c~:!o~i

·

Cyrus Vance, Israeli F&lt;reign
Minister Moshe Dayan in his
famous blsck eyepatch, and
E~ptian Foc;eign Minister
Mohl\fllllled Ibrahim Kamel.
Scattered throughout the
audience were Cablntt
members and senior White
House staff personnel ; Sens.
Abraham Ribicoff, Henry
Jackson , Charles Percy and
John Glerm and members of
their families - and an
obviously delighted
Democratic National
Chairman John White .
The applause cmtinued.
Carter smiled and Begin
whispered to him. The three
men were at a table in front of
a cluster of the flags of their
nations. The U. S. Stars and
Stripes was at their right,
behind Sadat, Egypt's fiag
was in tbe center and Israel's
at the left, behind Begin .
Sadat, impeccably dressed
as always in a dark suit and
polka dot tie, sat erect on
Carter's right. Begin's hands

WASHINGTON (UP! ) Israel's Menachem Begin
stepped over to Egypt's
Anwar s.dat and the two men
threw their armB around each
other in a hug thai seemed to
wipe away an enmity dating
back to Biblical times.
Eyes in the White House
East Room moistened. The
audience ol 200 stooC! in
prolonged applaWJe. Jimmy
carter flashed his famous
smile - one he had dilficulty'
suppressing during the entire
ceremony.
Moments after Carter's
helicopter, Marine One, set
down on the White House
South Lawn on a cool, cloudy
night, the three summit
leaders had walked into the
Eaat Room .
The hastily assembled
audience burst into prolonged
applause . Vice President
Walter Mondale sat in the
right front seat next to
Rosa lynn Carter. Across the
aisle sat Secretary of State

al

HOSPITAL NEWS

_w_o_rl_d_To_d_a_y_

Visit planned
here Tuesday
Senator
Anthony
J.
Jr.,
the
Celebrezze,
Democratic nominee for
Secretary of State, will be
traveling and meeting with
people In Meigs County,
during the late afternoon of
Sept. 19.
Senator Celebrezze will be
traveling with Rep: Ron
James, D-92nd District. He
will be meeting with
Democratic counly officials,
and with Meigs County
Democratic Party Cbalnnan,
Chester Wells and Norman
Will, the county coordinator
for the senator's campaign.
EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedaud•y tbrpucb
Friday, l•lr Wedaelcb!y,
with sbowen or thuder. sbowen poulble in nortllera Ohio Thunct.y •ad
spreadlq
the 1lale
Friday. HIP. wW raace
from the upper 7h to tile
middle Ml, wltb low. from
the upper 5011 to tile middle

••rou

lOs.

ASKED TOWED
Marriage licenses were
issued to Floyd Hairm
Cleland, 21, Rt. !, Langsville,
and Elberta Christine
Schuler, 21, Rutland; Ken·
neth Edward Birchfield, 35,
Mason, and Janice Marie
Bush, 28, Mason ; Ronald
Eugene Hawkins, 11, Middleport, and Kelley Sue
Shasteen, 17, Rt. 3, Racine ;
Robert Bruce Reid, 2~.
Pomeroy, and Edith Juanita
Johnson, 22, Pomeroy.
AcriONS FILED
· Sear$ Roebuck and Co.,
Calumet City ,Ill., flied suit in
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court against Ronald R.
Estep and Winnie P. Estep,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy. Plaintiffs
seek $1,040.
Niota V. Zlmmennan wa.s
granted • divorce from
Lester. E. Zlmmennan on
d1arges of grosa neglect of
duty and extreme cruelty.

JUST RECEIVED

-bulbs.

Older women top segment
WASIDNGTON (UPI) - Older women comprise the
largest growing oegement of the Amorle1111 population and
many face a "bleak lot in Ufe," the lnatltule on Aging saya.
"The problema of old age are priJnarUy the problems of
women," inltitute director Robert N. BuUer said tn a
telephone interview.
. In 1977 there were 13.9 million woxuen, compared to 9.~
miWon men, in the IIHnd-older ase group. By 2035 these
flgurea are e&gt;pecl.ed to diverge further, will! • P&lt;JPUlaUon of
33.4 million older women complll'ed to 22.4 miWon men of the
sarne age group.

Escapee still at large
SAlEM, Art. (UP!)-~ pr1aon IICSpee Larry
Olllm emerged from the northern Anwe8rlnj
only 11111111¥• •ad llllllli we• to t•te IIIII 8110ther hoalase

.rooa.

and c0111l11811deer 1101 anothlr vehicle.
But tbla time, the holtace'a wife Clllled pollee in time for
them to caleb up with Chiml. Slate trooper G. S. Huddlelton·
..,. C1U1n Ulle in Carl Henliey'1 pldt.., truck and cbaled
him, l'lrlnl lhoQ •t the fipUve u they raced alone the
lighway.

'

For that great sprin~ gardenplant our "Sure-to-Bloom' bulbs this fall.
Easy to plant and little care.
Imported from Holl1nd.

* TULIPS *CROCUS ' *PARROT TULIPS
* DAFFODILS * IRIS * ltARCISSUS
Ask For Fr"
P11ntlng Instructions

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Delegation seeks more
school improvements
BY BOB HOEFLICH
auditorium floor since il is
A delegation from the felt damages have been
Rutland P .T.O. appeared incurred by tenniles.
before Meigs Local School's
Dwight
Goins,
Board of Education Monday administrative assistant,
night and asked for additional said the district · has 13
improvements to the Rutland . buildings to maintain and
Elementary School.
·
that work is done on a priority
Richard Metzger, spokes- basis with emphasis placed
man for the group, called on what has to be done to
cmditims at the elementary meet' requirements during
school "a disgrace." He cited the summer months.
the need for window
r.nin• Mid a lot had been
replacement, repainting of ~o~~ to. the Rutla11d building
the auditorium, better tables citing unprovements in tbe
for the cafeleria operation, kitchen, painting of restroom
repairs and improvement to floors,
cleaning
the
the downspouting, repair of bleachers, painled the stairs.
water fountains, He stated windows ~ave not
improvements to the parking been repaired because
lot and playground area, need scaffolding is needed for the
for playground equipment repair and 'for work in the
and improvements to the gymnasium. He said the
auditorium fioor.
gymnasium was not painted
'Supt. Cbarles Dowler told because the fioor will have to
Metzger that the building is be repaired in some fashion
not in as bad conditim as the following the examination by
P .T.O. spokesman had the pest control man. He did
i staled. Dowler said two pest promise that paintiilg will be
cmtrol men would be at the done after the floor is taken
achool today to check the care of and Meb;ger staled be

will secure the scaffolding
needed for work at the school.
Goins
pointed
out
vandalism is a factor tn
keeping water fountains
operating, lavatories
operating
and
other
situations about the school.
Goins stated repairs can be
made with · equipment not
working again five minutes
later due to carelessness or
vandalism. Goins outlined a
list of . repairs ·carried out
during the summer months
stressing that the dislrict is
operating on limited funds
and
with
only
two
maintenance men for the
entire district.
The P.T.O. representatives
did concede that the Rutland
school was in a clean
condition for the opening of
school. The group len the
meeting with an amiable
attitude and apparently the
feeling that the board will
look into its probiernB.
Board member, Mrs .
JeMifer Sheets thanked the

•

e
VOL. XXIX NO. 109

representatives for attending
and assured the group that
"the board does care," She
too spoke on the limited funds
and commended Goins for his
work. She urged the P.T.O. to
work towards discouraging ·
school vandaUsm and to mold
students Into school pride.
The board employed
Christian . Garst as high
school cheerleader coach;
Roger Brauer as boys' high
school track coach and girls;
high school reserve basketball coach and named
Dorothy Oliver as junior
class advisor.
The board denied requests
from two teachers to attend
conferences tn their fields of
work on the grounds that the
dislrict cannot afford the
expense. The teachers can
attend .if they pay the
expenses Involved. Ail board
members with the exception
of Mrs. Sheets, turned down
the requests. The board voted
to join the Council for
(Continued on page IOJ

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. mE POMEROY Elementary School Patrol is in full
swmg agam this year providing safety for students. John
Arnott, faculty member, is advisor for the group which is
also working under the supervision of Pomeroy Pollee
Ch1ef Jed Webster. Taking part in the patrol this year are
Teresa Van Cooney, Jaye Roberts , Brad Young, Randy
Jewell , Joe F1elds, H. S.. Grimm, Mark Landers, Paul
Will, Brett Korn, Sean Doidge, Robyn Venoy , 'Debbie
We':'y , Gayla Haning; Maria Averion, Kelly Guint!::r,
Katie !Oem, Rod Roush , Diaries Knopp, Kay Tryall , Pam

enttne
'

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1978

Robert Wingett_ name~. co-publisher
of Ohio ·Valley Publishing Company
Robert Wingett has been
promoted to co-publisher of
Ohio Valley Publishing
Company newspapers, a
division of Multimedia, Inc.,
it was announced today by
OVPC
President
and
Publisher Richard S. Owen.
OVPC
operates
the
Gallipolis Dally Tribune,
Pomeroy • Middleport Dally
Sentinel, Point Pleasant
Register,
all
daily
newspapers; the Sunday
Times-Sentinel and two

weeklies, Belpre Observer
and Mason County News.
In addition to being co·
publisher, Wingett will

with the ·OVPC, having
started his newspaper career
as a mailroom \\'Orker at the

Peoples Bank of Point
Pleasant, member of the
Point Pleasant Rotary Club,
the Trinity United Methodist
Church, the various Masonic
Bodies and president of the
non-profii Mason County
Development Authority. He
recently completed a 12-year
stint on Syracuse Village

Pomeroy • Middleport Daily
continue to serve as vice Sentinel' in 1960.
He worked at. The Daily
president of OVPC and as a
SenHnel
in
various
member of its board of
capacities,
including
news
directors . He is also.
reporter,
photographer
and
editor-manager of the Point
sports
editor,
until
July
of
Pleasant Register and Belpre
1969
when
he
became
editor
· council and currently serves
Observer.
Wingett, 35, is a native of manager o( the Point . as the town's administrator
Syracuse. He recently com· Pleasant Register. Wingett of federal grants.
Earlier this year, Wingett •
pieted his 18th year of service was promoted to vice
was
presented the com·
president of OVPC in 1971 and
munity
service award for
became a member of its
1978
by
the
Point Pleasant ·
board of directors in 1974.
Mason
County
Chamber of
The new OV PC co·
Commerce.
He
was also
publisher is a member of the
board of directors of the Point recipient of that same award
Pleasant · Mason County in 1969 and in 1976 was
Chamber of Commerce, on honored as the Meigs County
board of directors of The " Man of the Year."

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Severe head injuries received in a
car-motorcycle accident led to the death Monday of the Rev .
James "Luke" R. Tupper, a Catholic priest, at Doctors
Hospital North. He was 45. The traffic death was referred to
the coroner's office.
Arrangements for the funeral turned over to the John
Quint Funeral Home, Colwnbus, which said services will be
held at ColumbUB Wednesday morning, at Southgate, Mich.,
where his mother lives Thursday morning, and at Chicago
Friday morninM with burial at Oak Brook, ill.

Banks refuse investments
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Cleveland's five major banks have
refuAed to invest in any of the city's notes and bonds and are
placing Cleveland in a severe financial bind, Mayor Dennis
.Kucinich has charged.
1tr. a result, the mayor threatened Monday to lead an
uprising against what he termed, "The raw economic power"
of Cleveland's banking community.

Lower court order changed
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Afederal appeals court has struck
down • lower court ruling denying benefits to a man who
suffered brain damage in a deadly train-auto collision in
Wayne County.
The 8th U. S. Orc.uitCourlof Appeals ruled Monday aU. S.
Dlllrict Court erred during trial of a negligence suit against
Pem Central Transp&lt;rlatlon Co., and returned the case for a
new trial.

EXTENDED FORECAST
Thursday through
Saturday, a chance of
thundershowers in northern Ohio Thursday, and
over the entire state Friday
and Saturday. Warm on
Thursday, with morning
lows In the lower to middle
60s, and highs in lhe upper
70s to middle 80s. Turning
cooler on Friday, with
highs Friday and Saturday
near 70 In the north and
near 15 tn the south. Lows
will be in the 5Gs Friday
and In the upper lOs to
middle 50s Saturday.
:::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::;:;::::·::::;:;::·

Vandalism

i~)~r_he_w_o_rl_d_To_d..;..a_y_
Wreck injuries kill priest

:::::::::::.:=:-:=:-:-:-::::::;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

incident
ROBERT WINGETT

Charlene Swartz, Bernard Wallace, Glenda Gumm,
Karen Spencer , Sherry Wears, Dianna White, Sandy
Mattox, Vincent Knight , Mark Schloss, Susan Thoma ,
Crystal Lane, Marla Wilson, Sandy Cummings, Kenny
Mankin, Joe Humphrey, Harry EWush, Bobby Staats,
Kelly_ Wisecup , Joe Barton , Kathy Delong, Candy Davis,
Debb1e Krautter , Bill Howell and Lisa Rider . Absent for
the picture were Lisa Baxter, Mary Sturgeon and Mike
Thomas.

Gas bill
faces test
By WILLIAM E. CLAYTON
WASiflNGTON (UPi l The natural gas pricing bill

faced its fir•t big test in
today's Senate vote, with
backers believing passage
now is almost assured more
than a year aft er President

Ca rter proposed h1s own
version .
The Senate was set to vote
at 3 p.m. I EDT) on a motion,

sponsored by a broad-based
co alit iO n headed by Sen.
Howard Metienbaum , D·
Ohio , to send the bill back to
the House-Senate conference
committ ee that work ed
nearl y a yea r on it.

Backers cla.imed a cor;n~
!ortabl e rnargm of 55 to 60
votes aga inst banishing the
bill to co nfer ence, and
declared they had nea rly the
51 vote pledges they need for
final passage. Th e Senate set
that vote for Sept. 27 .
Senate Democratic I .eader

Robert Byrd , D-W. Va .. said
vote pledges put the bill "un
the verge" ol ass ur ed
passage.

reported

Met zen baum

said

his

purpose for wanting the bill

First reading given
council's permission to send
BY KATIE CROW
Pomeroy Council Monday officer Kenny Hoffman to
night held its first reading on police school at Rio Grande.
approved
the
an ordinance providing Council
village street lights. The request .
Bill Young, councilman,
ordinance calls for the in·
stallation of four high reported trash being dumped
pressure sodium lights, one al the new apartment
at the fire station, two at the buUdings was stopping up
mini park and one at Naylor's sewers. He also ·added there
were high weeds in the area
Run.
Jack Welch and Bill that needed cutting.· Mayor
Bellamy , Columbus and Andrews reported crews
Southern Ohio Electric were unable to cut the weeds
Company, met with council at the present time until the
street pavin~ is completed. It
regarding the ordinance.
In other matters, Mayor was reported two lawnClarence Andrews asked mowers had been purchased

for use at the cemetery .
Mayor Andrews reported
paving of Butternut had been
completed from the In·
firmary to Welker's. Crews
would like to pave Mulberry
to Breeze Heights. Also to be
completed is a strip in front of
the school to the cemetery
entrance. Mayor Andrews
said he had been working
with the crews that are doing
the paving. Larry Wehrung
reported that a fire hydrant
on Lincoln Hill was leaking.
Council, in other business,
appro_ved the purchase of two
(Continued on page 101

recommitted was to cut out

Meigs Cou nty She,iff
Ja mes J . Proffitt reported
today deputies are continuing
the invest iga tion o( a beer
bOUle throwing incident that
occurred last Sunday night on
SR 124 at Rutland .
According to the sheriff' s
report. the wind shield of an
east bOund auto driven by
Duane Will , 25, Rt. I ,
Rutland, was shattered when
struck by a beer bottle
thro wn

from

an

a ut o

traveling west.
The driver of the other
vehicle involved has not yet
been id entified . Anyone
hav ing information con·
cerning this incident , please

conta&lt;t the sheriff's office .

all the controversia l pri ci ng
provision s and leave it as an
emergency bill with fed eral
authority to shift supplies of

cong ressional sessio n has

little tim e left before an
expected Oct. 14 adjourn·
menL

The bill as worked out m
con ference com m it t ee -

from two va.tly different
versions passed by 1;-Iouse and

Senate - would phase out
federal controls on newly
produced gas by 1985. Be·
tween now and then, it would
allow cons iderably higher
producti on prices, and would

extend the controls to sa les of
gas within the stat e of
producti on .
The bill lost an important
voter Monda y.
Sen . Fl oy d Yaskeil, D·
Colo., who signed the con·
fe r e nce co mpromi se, a n·

no unce d he would vote
agai11st it. He was the first
co nferee wh o signe d th e
co nfereri ce repo rt to go
against the meas ure.

A spokesman expla ined
tha t Ha skell s1gncd the report
to help get the iss ue before
lhe fu ll Senate for a decision.
"This bill incorporates the
worst

f eat ur es

of

both

r eg ula t[on
and
dereg ulatiOn, " Haskell said.
"While the bill rai ses pri ces
signifi cantly for consum ers,
it will not result in substantial

additional product ion. The

gas around the co untry in

reg ulatory process it creates

dir e shortages.
Byrd sa id that move would
render the bill "dead, dead ,
d· e·a·d.' '
beca use
th e

syst em.''

would be a nightmare and far
wo r se

t han

t he pr esen t

Coal burning
plan offered
COLUMBUS iUPI )- For
the third time in six yea r s t he

Ohi o

Envir onm enta l

Director Ned E. Williams.
Williams said ea rlier, when
announcing the proposed new
plan , that federal regulations

Protection 'l Agency
is
proposin6 a plan to control '' were unrea lististic and
s ulfur diox id e emissions!.~~ would resu lt in reg ulation

which is the by-product o ~ overkill ," just as he Stated in
burning Ohio's high sulfur 1975.
The new Ohio pian is based
coal.
A hearing on the new on the frequen cy with which
!Continued on page IO J
regulation was scheduled for
today at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds.
Twice before, in January,
1972, and May , 1974, the state
approved regulations to

Winter forecasts noted

Registration
funds coming

Woolly bear caterpillars and hornets are locked in
partisan squabbling over the issue in IQUthem Ohio, but the
vole Ia in from com shuclta, August fog, crlcketa and squirrels ·
elaewhere -it's gotnc to be another biQodthlrsty winter.
·
Only the blizzard ·battered citizens of Buffalo, N. Y.,
,mlch relllllbled a base camp aomewi)ere on the RosS Ice
!ltelf of Antarctica through most of the last two wlnlers, are .
offered hope. Their woolly bears are dressing in brown this
fall.

control the emissions . Each

time, however, plans had to
be scrapped wh en co ur t

challenges by Ohio's coa l·
burning utilitieS were s uc-

cessful.
Then the fed era l EPA
submitted its ol'n plan for
Ohio in November,!975, when
George R. Alexander, the U.
S. EPA's Midwest regional

.Prisoner Lyons still sought
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Eacaped priaoner Ronald Lyons

remained •t large Monday, as the FBI reportedly staked out
· the~ of hla famlly 111111 friend in Loveland, Ohio. ''We IIIII
don't baw him. We're worldng onlt. Thal'sall I C8ll tell you,"
aald FBI ag111t Thcmas Kltchena.
Altholllh Kltchena refuled to dllc1181 the caae, FBI agenll

director, said would ".clear

up Ohio sk.ies by 1979 and
keep them blue."
Nine months aner hearings
were conducted a federal
plan was published - but
once again was .:hallenged · this time by Ohio EPA

repcrtedly have llt8ked out the home of Lyons' frlenda and·
relali- in l.Dwland, Juat north of Cindmatl.

Cameron facing murder count
MONTGOMERY, 'W'. Va. (UPI) - Eualace Joeeph
32, of Mont&amp;omery, facea a firll decree murder
chart• in the lbootlnc delth of 1111 Ohio 111811. Cameron,
currently locJced in Kmulwba County J.U in Ol•rleaton, was
arr rtd In the Slnlay murder of George Jacklon of
OuiiiJIIIu, Oblo.
Jeeban, who bad been villllnC friends in Willi VIrginia,
lbot In the cheat with a .Okllllber plalol outllde
c.n- 'a ho-, •ccordiniJ to pollee.

West, Sue Norman , Linda Noel, Dewey Autherson , Mark
Reed, Matt Riffle, Trina Reeves, Brenda Robbins,

c.n-,

Weather
FROG QUU.T - Mra.' Cheater Durst, Erie, Pa.,
center, here villlin&amp; her blllb8nd'1 •unt, May Holler,
MlneriVIIIe,Jeft,dllplayaan attractlwfrog quill made by
MJ'a. Dural ..d her daqhler, Mary Jo Markley for Mrs.
Markley's ~ughler , On the right Is Ada Neue, owner and

operator of the Fabric Shop. Mrs. Markley's daughter Is a
collector of frogs b8VU. over 1,000 dilfert11l varieties. The
frog quilt patlern will be available locally and may be
oecured by cootactln&amp; Mrs. Holler or Mrs. Nease.
.~

Wann and humid tonight,
with lows in the low 70s.
Probability of precipitation is
20 percent today, tonight and
Wednesday.

Me1g's County, which wsa
denied over $7,100 by the
Secretary of State , will
receiVe the ·money anywa)',
as a result of acti on by the
Ohio General Assembly last
week.
Senate Bill 523, sponsored
by Senator Anthony J.
Celebrezze,
Jr . (D-25·
Cleveland) was passed on
Friday . It appropriates
$325,000 for reimbursement in
non .. registratir- n

co unties

which were forced to do
extensive ~dvance voter
registration as a result of a
constitutional
amendment
passed ·last November.
Although the Legislature
had appropriated money to
fund P1ese costs in the 26

counties, the Secreta ry of
State chose to return the
money to the Legislature
rather than provide it to the
counties to carry out their
mandate.

0

�?

The Daily Sentinel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Sept 19 1978

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

tleU..o Ye~ CAt1PAk1N
fcl\' 6oP. CJ\NDl\7ATe:&gt; r
'Ot: MoRe lMA.t&gt;J HArrY

To

~MMM Ye~

•••

A? YQJ KNoW I \k ~UN

To &lt;Jo FtJBLIC A&lt;JAJN
A.N~

Tax revolutiOn resolution
How s the
He e s

tax c o ut on fa

g around the ountry

a u en status eport based on a new nett onw de

survey

ondu ed by he Wash ngton based Coalrl on of
a Pub Emplo}ees
Lin tat u s o p ope ty taxa o s yled after Cal forma s
Jarv s-Ga
n tat e ha e qua fed fur placement on he
No e her ge e a el l on ballot n Idaho Nevada and
0 egun S a pelt ons fa led to qualrfy huweve
n
Ar zona Co urado Flor da and Washington
0 he [onnu at ons usually call ng for tax uts or ,., lrng on
g
ne l pend ng w II be on the ballot n Alaba na
Ar ona Arkansas Colo ado Ill no s M h gan Nebraska
Nortl Dakota South Dakota and Texas Sun lar efforts fa led
n I o s Montana Uta h and Washington
St U un eso ved are the s ua uns n Hawa Ma ne and
Ok aho a So ne slates are sled mo e than on e because
e era! d fcrenl pe l on campa gns we e undertaken and
orne su eeded wh e olhe s [a ed
Arne

GOPs losmg battle
P obab y he b ggest growU dustry
Ame a
po l s s
e f e d of poll a a ton o run ttees PACs
esta b sl ed by orpo at ons l ade assoc at o s and other
bus ness g oups to anne! ampa gn "'n r but ons to favored
and dales for pub off e
W h nuch of that mo ey go ng to and dates for House and
Sena e seals bus ness groups end o favor the Democra
ha nnen o he co g ess ona co nrn tees and s ubcomm t ees
w th JUr sd I on over eg sla on affe t ng the donors
Republ an ha e be orne n eas ngly b tier about that pa
em s n e he r part) has t adit ona ) been more sym
pa het to bus ness nterests The GOP ha s waged an nten
s ve ba tie n e e l yea s to reve se the trend
But new y omp led f gures show lha thus far n the 1978
ampa gn no e lha 61 percent of he $1 78 n I on g ven to
ong ess una and dat s b) bus ness PACs has gone to
Deno ra " hRepub as e v g ess llan 38pe e I

Cahcerrare
m ch1ldhood

peopletalk
By KENNETH R CLARK
Unlted Press Intemallooal
SMOKESCREEN
Has he o hasn l he
smoked
mar Juana tllat s Califorrua Gov Jerry Browu- runnmg for
r~Iection agllnsl Republican state Attorney General Evelle
Younger - says no but GOP assembly leader Paul Priolo
calls that a lie Says he I don t think there are many people n
Sac amento who think Jerry Brown has not smoked pot
B own backers call the charge a smear saying the oppos tron
rs esort ng to desperation tactics Prro o admits he s trred
the weed hunself and says he rsn t bemg moralistic about
B own s derua
that It s not relevant that he smoked t
us tha he lied
JUST BUDDIES Few of the women mvolved w th the late
Howard Hughes ever have been willing to talk about him and
Jane Russell has been no exception But m an Amencan
Alive segment taped for NBC-TV durmg the weekend m New
York for Wednesday broadcast she lays to rest a longstanding
legend Says M ss Russell o co host Pat Mitchell We were
very good fr ends and that s l No romances ever MISS
Russell s 87 year-old mother Geraldirle Jacobi RuneU rs on
the show w th he Of those famed pmup p ctures plugging her
daughle s role m The OuUaw
considered too sex
scandalous m 1941 to show she says We just oomt them
I d dn t know Howard Hughes from Howard Srruth
FOR THE PEACEMAKER If Preoldent Carter 1 Camp
Dav d Summrt drp omacy produces nothmg else 1 will set him
up f&lt;r a shot at one of the worlds most cherished honors U s
Rep Ronald Molt! Mhio says rn Cleveland he s nommaled
Carter for he Nobel Peace Prrze - that only because of
PreSident Carter were Preoldent Amrar Sadat of Egypt and
Prtme Minister Menachem Begin of Israel brought together at
Camp Dav d fo their summrt conference Presulent Carters
role m aymg the foundation for peace m the Middle East will
be remembered as ooe of the outstandmg ach evemenls of the
1970s

DEAR DR LAMB -I don t
really have a problem but rt
would set my nund at ease if
you would grve me some rn
fonnatron I m talk ng about
ancer n young ch Idren In
aU the artrcles I ve read they
never tell about the symplo ns If more people were
aware maybe I could slow
the death rate I sure hope so
Please help me and others
learn about cancer n young
people
DEAR READER Despite
the publrcily that can er in
hildren gels I th nk you
ought to know that the
leading cause of death below
the age of IS rs accrdents
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - They cause 46 percent of all
deaths below IS Cancer s a
poor second There are four
times as many deaths from
a crdents n children than
Matthew 25 31-46 speaks of how we shall be reVIewed and
there are from ancer
Donald F Graff
judged This week I was handed a notice of another revival •
The 1973 VJtal statrslrcs
bemg held in our travel area This caused me to thlnlc about ~.::._=:.._:....___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
show that for the enlrre
rev vals I recall that there is very little time during the course
Unrled Stales there were only
of a year that a revival IS not being held some place I am
2 961 cancer deaths n
unpressed by the call of reVIval I try to attend some of them
children below the age of 15
The people srng and hear songs sung about the love of God the
No matter how trag t may
ByDonGraH
pr ce that JesWl pard for each of us and the power of God to
seem rn the rndivrdual ase
Arch e Sunonson sl Ucan t understand rl
eqwp us to change The evangelist brings the Word of God to
cantoer rn hildhood really
Sunonson some may remember was the Wrscons n JUdge rsn I one of our maJor na
our remembrance He challenges us to become the followers of
Chrrst to seek the ost and to remember the joy of our whose conunents on a rape case before him were heard around l onal health problems Of
salvation He renunds us of how God Ia able to judge the the nat on
olll1e."1t's always major to
Nol ng the sexually pennrss ve envrronmenl of the locah the people mvolved That s
actions of His people and lbose of the world As we sit or stand
we shout our a mens to tbese truths and then what' Have you ly Madrson rn wh h the offense occurred he asked whether the hwnan tragedy and if
considered why you want a rev val' What IS the defuutron of an unpressronable youth exposed to commer a! sex rn they can be prevented or
revrval' Webster defmed a sbrnng up of relig ous fa1th fluen es should be purushed for react ng normally
detected so much l~e better
The reactron among fenunrsls and others n Madison and
among those who have been mdlfferenl
You don t read about the
Psalm 85 67 says Wilt thou not revtve us agam that they e sewhere was outrage ulrninatrng last year n hrs removal symptoms of chrldhood
people may rejo ce m thee Show us thY. mercy 0 Lord and from the bench by JUdicral recall electron
ancer because usually there
Newsweek magaz ne m Is regular updating of notable news are no specif c ones you can
grant us thy salvat on I wonder With all that the evangelist
speaks does he not call us to Go ye therefore mto all lbe slur es recently checked n wrlh Sunonson now m pnvate detect early A third of the
w&lt;rld and do Iikewrse Are there any less m number of the practcoe m Madrson The ex JUdge remarns convrnced that his
an er group cases rn
unchurched or the separated from the church than there were remarks were reahstic but drstorted n therr w despread
hildren are leukerrua The
report ng an altitude backed up by pending multimillion d sease s frequently dete ted
last year' If not to what have we been reVIved'
I believe rn reVIval But I also believe rl should send us mto dollar surls agarnsl the w re serv ces
from blood tests rn the doc
Meanwhile he s sill speak ng out at the drop of a conlrover lor s off! e or because of
the world with the renewed message of that salvation that lbe
Psalmist spoke of
Harvey Koch Jr Syracuse Cluster sral subject Su has the Equal R ghts Amendment which pr&lt;&gt;- unexplarned brwsed spots or
mpled hun to tell Newsweek I don I belreve rn the ERA tendency to hemmorhage
Uruted Methodist Church
un sex garbage that we all should be able to walk down the
Another 10 percent of all
street naked and not be v olaled
the ancers n children are
aused by lymphomas and
l o'::'d he st II can I understand why h s remarks attract allen
these are closely related to
leukerrua Thev nvolve the

COMMENTARY

Names back in the news

CoIumb ia T wp.
The
HALF ACRE
cemetery s located n Sect on
No 2 near Townsh p !Wad
No 4 Reed and Gene Jeffers
own land nearby Twenty
grave markers were found rn
the b centenn al year of 1976
The cemetery s mamtamed
by the Townsh p Trustees
The f st bur a was Mary
Cann chael n 1865 Names of
th ose nterred n th s
cemetery as follows
Markers were
Cannrchae Mary Do cas
James J El zabe h Orr

Repairman
completes
training

Emrly J W II am G
Far ey Clme or Glenn ":l5y
4m 2d not leg -down Jane
Blake My-6m 19d Wife of
Isaac Isaac father 8Iy lim
I!ld Isaac Sarah Graham
Gross Ben)amm D 49y 2d
M ilda 69v 3m
Prckett Hamel I Wrfe of
J F P ckett 24y-Sm 2d
Vanpelt Soph a Wife of
Jacob 82y 7m 12d
Wood Jenme Jam"" M
26y-Jd Joseph E William
Martha
Mary
F rst bu a
Cannlchael
W II am
Last bur a!
Wood Martha Wood
It should be remembered
by those domg genealog ca
research that grave markers
can be reported m error due
to !herr leg b 1ty Therefore
searchers should check
deeds w lis ax records
court records and other
records to con! nn the ac
curacy of the grave marker
report
By H E Tlrrockmorton

Denver L Dav s Installer
Repa rman for West V rg ora
Telephone Company n New
j
Haven W Va has completed
Dare to be different Have a
a course n bas c telephone
GOOD day today
stat on nstalla on at the
Co n nen ta
Teleph one
System Trallllng Center near
Amherst V1rg n a
The I~ day course IS
des gned to equ p the student
w th
the
knowledge
necessary to nstall equ pment properly at telephone
user ocations and con
centrates on g vtng hun a
better understandmg of the
basrc electron cs as l appl es
to telephony The course puts
part cular emphas s on good
safe-workmg habrts
Dav s has been w th the
Co ni n e ntal Telephone
System Since 1976

ThenameofEddreSlovrk s alsobackasabnefnew tern
ThalsPvl EddieS!ovik lheWorldWarllservcemanand
o ly Amer can sold er to be executed for desert on smce the
Cv lWa
His w dow s rnakmg one more appeal lor payment of his Na
I onal Servrce Life Insurance pol cy Mrs Slov k asks a total
w th nteresl of $70 000 She makes the pornlthal her husband
as t he only one of 49 deserters sentenced to death actually ex
e u1ed was unJustly s ogled out
The Anny has heard lbe argument before most recently a
year ago when I agam reJected the appeal of Mrs Slovik now
63 an nvalid and desttule Havmg exercrsed Is prerogalrve
under m litary law the Anny apparently rs as detemuned to
stand by pnnCiple as Mrs Slovrk rs to ontmue press ng her
laun
Which ould make one wonder whatever became of another
pr n pie the one about government of the people by the people and for the people

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Opal Randolph to Pauline
Frances Atkinson PI 100
acre lot 103 Olive
Kenneth Hutchison Laura
Hutch son to Carl Neil
Martin Linda D Martin
13 03 acres Columbia
Vaughn H
Huffman
Roberta M Huffman to
Frederick K Noble Janet L
Noble I 035 acres Columbra
Mary Allee Martin Osby A
Martin to Calvm R Dowell

Berrys World

QUOTE OF THE DAY President Carter quoted by his
mother Miss Ulliao m descnblng his struggle at Camp
David Md to gel Israeli Prime Minlater Meaacbem Begin
and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat together Sometimes I
felt like I could crack somebody s head oot they re lbe most
wonderful men I ve ever met In my llfe
GLIMPSES Redd Fon IS m court agarn - thla lime as
the target of a Los Ange!Ps lawswt by CBS-TV whrch charges
his production company faDed to pay a f33 795 bill owed smce
May 20 for U!l9pecif ed work by the network Christina Wald
helm - daughter of Unrted Nations Secretary General Kurt
Waldbelm - jomed New Jerseys Gov Brerrdan Bynre
Monday night at New York s Metropolitan Opera
ConreU
WUde Ross Martlu Sidney Politer Charlton Heston and Dick
Van Patten were among celebrit es attending a Meet the
Players night at the Arco Tennis Open In Los Angeles
EnlestBorgnlaewill be In New York Sept 26wlth wife Tou to
promote her new line of skin-&lt;!llre products
Qa1Da
Cummbrgs come!! to New York from Los Angelea on Sept 25 to
plug ABC-TV s Family m which she plays Anllle Lawrence

lymph nodes and Iymphlitic
system Thus leultenua and
lymphomas of lbe crrculation
and lymphatic systems
represent almost half of all
the cancers m children
The other relatively frequent childhood cancer IS a
tumor of the brain or L'tntnrl
nervous system About one
out of fiVe childhood canL'trs
are caused by these Depen
ding on !herr locatron they
may present few if any symptoms They may cause
headaches or if they nvolve
an area of lbe bram that
relates to body function that
function may be Impaired
Thrs could be a problem rn vr
sion or I could aHect the
ann leg or almost any part of
the body Vomrtrng rs
sometunes associated wJth a
bram tumor Of course both
headaches and vo101tmg are
more frequently caused by
other condil orur
Leukenua lympbomas and
bra n tumors account for lw&lt;&gt;th rds of the !rrldhood
cancers The rest are really
qwte uncommon and other
than caus ng an unexpllimed
lump wh ch may be fell there
rs not much that the non
profess onal person can do to
detect childhood cantoer
The bottom line to aU this rs
that the only way to detect
must of lbe leukem a cancer
group m children rs by
regular medical exanuna
lions or at the least regular
laboratory tests I wish there
were clear~ul symptoms
that would alert parents and
others mstanlaneously at the
early stage of. childhood
malignanc es but I just
doesn I work that way
Readers who want nfonna
tion about anemras can send
50 cents With a long stamped
self.,.ddressed envelope for
The Health Letter number
4 3 Underslandrng The
Anenuas Address your request to Dr Lamb P 0 Box
1551 Radio C ty Station New
York NY 10019

Lemme call ya back AI baby 1m work n
on a costume design for an NFL cheerlead
ng squad

Arlene F Dowell 30 acre ~7
acre Salisbury
Athens Co Savrngs &amp; Loan
Asso to Bill J Donahue
Mona M Donahue PI Lot 77
Pomeroy
Arthur J Strauss Beulah
E Strauss to Arthur J
Strauss Beuinh E Strauss
Parcels Pomeroy
A R Knight Evelyn Gall
Knight to Vrncent Edward
Knight 9 S87 acres Chester
JWger T Hawk Shirley A
Hawk to J Paul Hutchins
D ana R Hutchins 13 acres
Orange
Lela D Strausbaugh to J
Paul Strausbaugh Donna
Strausbaugh 75 acres
Salem
Jerry Hawk Geraldine
Hawk to Mary McAngus
Lots Pomeroy
James J ProHJtt Sheriff
Elden E Slack Candice
Slack to Athena Co Savtnp •
Loan Co Lots Syracuse
Village
Carl E Reed Dorothy J
Reed to &amp;bert D Szaks
Candace J Szaks Lot 13
Orange
Hershel B
McClure
Rbojean V McClure to Irene
Artis S 'f.. of lot 106 Middleport
Irene Artis to Mary T
Haggerty Part Lot 89
Plrlmer I Add to Sheffield
Salisbury
Evelyn Landers dec to
Penny Sue Landers aka
Penny Landers Smith Cert
of lr8111 Pomeroy
Thomas J Marcinko to
Patricia F
Marc:lnko
Parcels Olive Orange
Opal Randolph Affidavit
Olive
Eua J Sheela Uncia R
Sheetl to Eug•e N Triplett
Karen Triplett I 18 acrea
Pomeroy Salisbury
Kathleen Manley to Middleport Pentecoltal Church
Pt Lot 73 Middleport
&amp;IIana Add
Dennie HW Sandra HOI to
Effie Picken~ ~ acrea Sut

League West It e at home
aga nst the C nc nnat Reds
And hey may not wm the
d v s on by as many games
10 as they d d a year ago
On a ch Ily and w ndy

ByJIMCOUR
Ul'l Sports Writer
LOS ANGELES UP!)
The Los Angeles Dodge s
won t be able to clrnch the r
second stra ght Nat onal

.••••.• .••••.,•

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ood
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55
49

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LOS Ang

603

San F an
San D ego
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A

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PC

3
9
2
A 3 20

Lou s
New Yo k

and

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Bll

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0

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GB
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Ca
Texas

FLOOD

om p Sh s
o d nan e

Try, try, try again

Grave mark ers

Magic number
still 5 for LA

1.awrence E Lamb M D

To T~P..NK l6U FoR
lfib &lt;flb~NilY

Sermonette

••

HEALTH

I ~ALLY WA.~

$6 million senate seat
By Murtha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON NEA
A new record s about to be
estab shed for the ust e~pens ve onlesl ever waged f r a
sea n Cor gress and the dub ous honor be ongs to the state
Ill
egular } boasts of do g everything on the brggesl and
g andes! s ale
That s Texas of o rse whe e Republ an Sen John G
Tower s defend ng I s seat aga nsl a strong hallenge
nou ted bv Democra Rep Robert C Krueger
Towe s we o h s way to ra s ng and spend ng the $.1
nr on estab hed ea e this year as h s ampargn budget
and he money rs o I g f om both b g donors and a re1-'0rd
et ng 62500siUI o trbuors
So ne k owledgeable obser. ers predi I that Tower £Ould
eventua y olle far more han he or g nal goal poss bly $4
n II on o nore
Tower had no ser ous prunary oppos ton but Krueger was
ha enged for the De noc at nom nat on by Joe Chr sl e the
slate s fonne nsu an e onun ss oner The wo nen spent
nore than $ 5 n on that hard rough ontest w th mo e
than " o-th dsof the unds orungfromK uegers offers
K eger o g na lv hoped o ra se nore than $2 2 n II on for
the ge era ele t o
ampa gn but donations fro n the
bus ness o u un ) avedw ndl d follow ng hrs House vo e n
upport o a !abo a" efor n b
aled down h s g nera elect o budget to
K uege now I a
$1 5 n II o That b gs he total for he race up to a t dy $6
nil on o no e
The urren record s $4 2 n II on expended on behalf of the
and da e n 976 a for a Se a e sea fro n Penns) an a
Ab p $3 n on of tha total was pen bv he w nner
Republ a Sen H John He nz III w th nu h of t o rung
f om h s fa ru y s ket hup-p k es-and el sh fortune

cons oe

ods

M
Oak an.d
Ch

and

Carter running

AND
OF
N

Monday n ght at Dodge
Stad urn Cine nnat made
sure the Dodgers wouldn I
wrap up the NL West crown
at the Reds expense w th a 4
o v ctory by 22 year-o d r ght
hander M1ke LaCoss
So the Dodgers mag c
number - any combmat on
of Los Angeles wms and
C nc nnat osses remamed
a f e and the ea I est the
Dodgers can clmch t now s
Fr day n ght a home agamst
he San D ego Padres
LaCoss ended a personal
so s x game los ng s reak w th
• d
h s f rst mator eague
shutout a seven hitter hat
cut he Los Angeles lead over
C nc nnal to 7'h games
The Dodgers have I games
left wh e the Reds are now
down o the r last 12 The
clubs mee f ve mor.e tunes
ton ghl and Wednesday n ght
at Los Angeles and n a three
game se es at Cmc nnat
next week
After Monday n ghl s
game an mprudent reporte
asked Reds Manager Sparky
Anderson w th he d v s on
ace a but sewed up by Los
Ange es f h s c ub now was
JU St go ng through the
mo ons

Wlh remarkable restramt
Anderson rep ed You saw
hem ton ght Were hey ust
p ay ng ou he season
Answer that quest on for
yourself
In the o he clubhouse
Dodge
sk pper Tommy
Laso da was st II be ng
years
cau ous
Las
Nat onal League Manager of
the Year po nled out Los
Ange es loaded the bases on
onsecut ve one-&lt;&gt;ut smgles
by S eve Garvey !Wn Cey
and Dusty Bake n he fourth
mn ng
You ve go to wm t befo e
vou can start th nkmg about
he playoffs he began or
anyth ng along that ne
You ve got to " n he games
and tha s t
THIS WEEKS SPECIAL

·~~·

om

d ng

for reelection?

.

USED CARS

ha
0

OOdS

es wh ch se

e

eo

Ca dwe
d ow

he

By HELEN THOMAS
WASIUNGTON (UP!)
All signs Indicate President
Carter Is rwmlng for reelection And the most
prominent urdication is the
way he is tranaformlng his
new While House staff Into
the mlni..,ampaign operation
The hiring of image-maker
and advertisrng e1pert
Gerald Rafslroon was the
kick-off Rafslroon s changes
rn the White House setup
already are
becomrng
evident as he digs In
Around the time that
Rafshoon moved into Richard
Nil:on s hideaway oHice in
the
E1ecutive
Office
Building appointments
secretary Tim Kraft took
over a political liaison
position
From his office near the
Oval Office Kraft has
organized a series of White
House seaaiona with Carter
and other administration
a des on a state-by-state basis
for Democratic leaders and
rank and We party members
to improve the lines of
communication On such
days lunch for aU Is held at
Blair House the president 1
guest bouse
Raflhoon also has become
a chief coordinator In helping
the preaident to put birr beat
fool forward
First to come on board was
Ame Wesler a Democratic
party worker Iince the days
of Harry Truman An early
Carter supporter It has been
her job to Une up support for
the president 1 programs
and lbe president amonc
various 1roupe In the country
To enhance hll ..ggtng
preltlge with JewUh leaden
and lbe Jewlah commwrlty
Carter has hired Lol Afllelea
lawyer Edward Sanden to be
birr llaflon chief He has an
office In lbe White House and
an office In tbe State
Department keeptnc tab8 on
admlniatration policy 10 lhllt
tllere II no further alllnatton
from Jewilh voters Tbe
$$0 000 a year job wa•

ton
Ga. Beegle Sarah lleelle
to J - C Brink• Narma
T Brinker Lot t Hopklnl
Add Racine

created by Carter but
Sanders has been put on the
State Department payroll
Former Democratic
National Committee vice
chainnan Louis Martin also
has been named to be Car
ter s chief link with black
leaders and the black com
munity Martin Is a political
pro and weU liked In black
circles
Carter has a lot of fence
m•dlng to do with black
leaders who were the first to
complain that he was not
living up to his campaign
promises
The president also dropped
Midge Costanza former vice
mayor of Rocheater N Y
who was on hll senior ataf.!
and was one of hiB first
political supporters and
replaced her with Sar
ah
Weddinaton
flr•t
named as general counsel In
the Agriculture Department
Ml Weddington a fonner
member of the Tens
legislature has been given
her marching orders- to win
ratification of the Equal
Rights Amendment and to be
In charge of women 1 affairs
On another front Carter
has been boldlng a series of
White Howre dinners at the
bebell of Raflhoon lor the
top eucutlvea of news
papers newspaper chains
and television networu He
allo has Invited out-of-town
editors and broadcAit
correapondenta to a Friday
interview every two weeki or
10 rrlnce he took office Atlbe
end of such ISII01111 he JIOIU
for a photograph with Mch
editor
1be preald•t and bla wife
alao have a heavy campaign
travel lchedule tlrirr fall in
support of Democratic
candldlltel and theM efforta
may pay olf In 1810
At IOIDt point then wiU be
the quelllon or wbetber Ill
a1r1e 11 devottnc run ttme to
politlcl or to 1r11nt1 the
1ovemment Apparently
lhllt COIDM lal8r Cuter .,
far has decllnld to lip bla
hand But It II beclmiDI to
look as if he II J1111Un1 hll
polltleal hoUII In order

Who ..YIIIilntcl&lt;efclpr II
no more' Fellow niidnC In
!rant of. Ill II* llllll'lllnc ....
rmoklngone

SPECIAL

99
0 8

72 OLDS

98 LS CPE
'1895

73 DODGE
CHARGER CPE
SE
'1895

Karr &amp;VanZandt
L keOurQually
Way of Do ng Bus ness

You

GMAC F NANC NG
Pomeroy
Open Even ngs I 16 00
T 15 p m Sol

992 5342

any a e a on o
a
s u
e
s ed on
he
Na ona Reg ste o H so c
P aces o a S a e n en o y o

s o c P oces
V~ •nee
means a
o
e e
om
H

g

an
he

equ emen s o
h s o
d nan e
wh ch
pe m s
ons uc on n a manne ha

wou

otne w se

d

be

P oh b ed by h s o d nance
SECTOIIlO
GENEAIIL PAOVI$ ONS
3
LIIN OS TO WH CH
TH S

ORO NANCE

AP

PL ES
Th s o d nance sha app v
o a a eas o sprc al t ood
h'za ds
w h n
he
u sd c on of he V age o
M dd epo
Oh o
32
BASS
FOR
ESTABL SH NG
THE
AREAS
OF
SPE CAL
FLOOD HAZARD
The a eas of spec a f ood
haa d den
ed by
t\e
Fede a
nsu an c e
Ad
mns a on na scentc
and eng · neer no epor en
ed 'The F ood nsunnce
Study to
the v age of
M dd epo
Oh o
dated
Septembe
29
971 w h
accompany no F ood
n
s.u ance Rete Maps s hereby
adop ed by re e ence and
decla ed o be a pa of h 1
o d nance
The F ood
n
su ance S udy o the V age
of M dd epo t Oh a da ed

Sop emce

29

971

w h

accompany ng Food
n
IU lOCI Raft Maps I he eby
adop ed by re e ence and
decla ed to be a pa o h s
ord nance
The F ood
n
su ance Study son t e a he
Mayo s Office l l
Race
S ee M ddlepo
Oh o
3 3 COMPL ANCE
No s ucture o and she
he eaf er be cons uc ed
o a ed u ended conve ttd
o
a e ed w hou
tu
camp ance w h ht e ms of
th 1 o d nance and othe
app cab e regu a ons
3.• ABROGAT ON AND
GIIEIITEA RESTR CT ONS
Th 1 Ord nance 1 no n
tended to epee ebrooe 1 or
mpe
any
ex 1 ng
easemen 1 covtnan 1 or
deed est c ons However

ATTEST Gene G a e C e k
T easu e
M L
Ke y
P es den o Coun c

2

9

9

2c

Th I Wetle I
O~lt Co'""
ftootlta Schedule
United Prtll International
Oh 0 State It M OI;IIIOfl
To tdo at Ball s 1 t
G end Vawlty
M ch
at
Ak

on

Youngs own S 1 t 1 A.ll'l end
(n

Lou sv e at C nC nnat (n
Ma ttt1 1 W tnberg
Den son a Musk noum
Oh o Wes evan et Otttrbt n
n)

Woos e 1 Kenyon

Oh o No he n a Me de be 0
n
Mount un on et Obt 1 n
lu tr I DIV on (n
ea hem lncl at Ott ance
F nd •v •
m no on
Clll Wttttrn It W &amp; J PI
H ram 1
carnct9 e Mel on

w

Po

Th •
n

Pa 1 John cerro
Denotts n ght game

See Bill Chrlds- He Works For You

DOWNING CHILDS
INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
Mtcldleport

o

992 2342

�..
•

t- 'nle O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddlepwt· Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 19, 1978

Local Bowling

Colts Upset
~.atriots·, 34-27

" We ' re

Tum

1. Alabama (34 ) (2 .Q)
2. Oklaho ma ( 4) ( 2-0 l
J ·. Arkansa s ( 1 1 (l .Q)
" · p ·enn St. I l l () . QJ
s. M ich iga n ( 1 J ( 1 0 1
6. T exas ( I OJ
1. So u thern Ca l (2 0 )
8. Sou the r n Ca l ( 2-0 )
B. U CL A 12-0 l
9 Pitts . (l .OJ
lO. Te Ma S A&amp;M I 10 J
l l. LS U ( l -0 )
12 . N ebr aska ( 2)1 ) .
13. F lori da St (1 Ot
14 . Notre D a me (o . J)
15 . Co lo rad o ( 2-0 l

.JJ3
.JJJ
.000

1

3

0

.000

L.T . Pct .
0
0
0
0
0

.667
.667

•
4

•
,.

0

8

Team High Ser: ies - Team
No . 6, 883 : Hot Shot s at• :
Alley Cats 772.
Team High Game - Team
No. 6, 319 ; Hot Shots 312 ;
Sunday Duds 300.
Men 's High Series - Rick
Martin 464 , Cl'larles Sear les
d50, Jeff Martin 403 .
Men 's High Game - Rick
Martin 183, Charles Sear les
163, Jeff Marlin 155 .
Women 's High Ser ies -

Men's high games - Dave
Dobbins, Jr. 195 ; Raymond
Sue Searles 433 , Ann Morr is Roach 183, 179.
371 , Luelle Marlin 367 .
Women 's Qigh series Women ' s High Game - Sue
Bess
Hendricks 490 ; brema
Searles 156, Sue Searles 152,
Luelle Martin U5 .
&lt; Roach 452 : Betty Whitlatch
and Anne Hatfield 435 .
SUNDAY MINERS
High game Betty
Standings Sept: 3, 1978
Whitlatch
and
Bess
Hen·
Won lost
Team No. 6
14 2 · dri cks 181 ; Drema &amp;ach
Hot Shot s
12 4 170; Bess Hendricks 164.
Pinbusfers
Countr y Bumpk ins
Alley Cats
Sunday Duds
.

Team H igh Series -

B

8
10
12
12

6
4

4

Trl.Couojy League
Sept. 5, 1978
W. L.
Roach Gun Shop
3 0
Eagles Club
2 I
Columbia Nat.
2 I
Pomeroy Cement Block I 2
Bill's Body Shop
I 2
H &amp; R Firestone
I 2
High ind. game
Ray
Roach 256 ; Ton Toler 211 ;
John Tyree 210.
High ind. 3 game - Ray
Roach 619 ; Ed Voss 552;
Dewey Smith 548.
Hi~h team game - Ea~les

Team

No. 6, 922 : Hot Shots 844 :

Pinbuster s 792 .
Team H igh Game - Team
No. 6, 336 ; Hot Shots 311 :

.a•. Ra lphHighGibbs •76,

Men 's
Game - Rick
N\a rt in 182, Charles Sear les

178, Ra lph Gibbs 176,
Women ' s Hig h Ser ies -

Sue Searles 438, Shery l Gi bbs
383, Gwen Martin 355 .
Women ' s -High Ga m e -

Sue

Searles 158, Sheryl Gibbs 156 ,
Sue Searles 154.

Pomeruy Bowling Lanes
Early Sunday
Mlsed League
Sept. 3, 1978
Team
Pis.
Jack's Dairy Bar
16
No.2
14
No. 6
10
No. I
4
No. 5
2
No. 3
2
Team series
Jack's
Dairy Bar 1916.
Team game
Jack's
Dairy Bar 701.
Higli series - Larry Dugan
546, Gerri Rought 471; John
Tyree 538, Mary Vo8s 466.
High game - Bill WiUford
211, Maxine Dugan 171, Larry
Lugan 210; Gerri &amp;ught 167.

St _ Lou is

Ch l.

2

1

0

.667

0
0

.333
.000

Green Bay

Detro it
Minn .
Tampa Ba y

2
1
1

I

2 0

29' Value

CLEARASIL
.86

Points

5 93
5:23
504
49 5
.t 3.4
405
389
389
308
195
155
150
138
119
73
59

Mercury.
The evening stars are
Venus and Mars.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Virgo.
Irvin Westhelmer, who
founded the Big Brothers
movement in Cincinnati in
1903, was born on Sept. 19,
1879.

oz . - Reg. - V•n.

'1 .UV•Iue
,,I,P'. Prleol ...

990

"Across From the Court House in Pomeroy"

'

992-6677

~
Twin Pack

Fir s t grad e : shar o n
and room molhers were nam- Stewart ,
c hairma n ;
ed at a recent meeting of the CathyMoore,Cindy !wisher,
Syracuse PrO held at \he Mirmie Harris and Judy
school.
Williams .
.Presiding officers were
Seco nd g rad e : Pat
Janice Usle, president : Don- Philson ,chairman , Shirle y
na Aleshire, vice president; Wolfe, Angie Harden, Judy
Marilyn Deemer , secretary, Pape , Ja~ke Lisle, and Nanand Sally Ebersbach , cy Patterson.
treasurer.
Third grade : Marcia Ar·
Committees named were nold, chainnan, Carolyn Me·
Crystal Simpson and Susan Coy, Donna Aleshire and
Burgess, publicity ; Charlotte Martha McPhail.
Nease and Chris Jacks,
Fourth grade : Corkie
membership, Carol Adams, Davis , chainnan ; Marilyn
Pat Philson , and Judy Pape, Deemer, Carol Adams, Jean
program ; Joyce Sisson, Kloes, a nd Sandra Cobb .
Carolyn McCoy , Judy
Fifth grade : Louise Frank
Williarru;, Angie Harden, chairrnaf\, J eanette Duffy:
Marcia Arnold, Jonetta Carol Adams, Sara Roush,
Davis, ways and means, and Joyce Sisson, Glenna Rum·
Ami Hemsley, spiritual.
mel, and Shirley Landers.
The room mothers are as
Sixth grade : Terri Michael
foUows ;
chairman, Ann Hemsley:
Jonetta
Da vi s,
Sallv

•

'

,.,
.••..

E bersbach Charlotte Nea••
and Jo Ellen Roush .
' Plans were made for the
annual fall halloween carnival and Oct. 28 . was set as
the tentative date. Commit·
tees to ~olicit Mrs. Adams,
Mrs . Philson , Mrs. Burgess,
and Mrs. Sharon Stewart,
Pomeory ; Chri s Jacks ,
Charlotte Ne as e, Corkie
Davis and Donna f!eshire ,
Middleport ; Carolyn McCoy
and Judy Williams, Syracuse
and Minersville ; and Cindy
Swisher and Ang ie Harden,
Racine.
Baby sitting services will
be provided for the monthly
meetings by the Syracuse girl
scouts . For the program, the
parents and teachers were introduced and the teachers explained the punislunent rules
for the school.
~ .

Mrs. Mary Lisle was re·
elected president of the
United Methodist Women of
the Asbury Unilt-d Methodist
Church, Syracuse, at a
meetmg held last week at the
home of Mrs. Rose Ann
J enkins.
Other officers named were
Mrs.. Helen Teaford , vice
pres1dent ; Mrs. ~April Harmon, secretary; Mrs. Bernice Winebrenner, assistant
secretary ;
Mr s.
Ann
Sauvage, treasurer ; and Mrs.
Grace Weese, assistant
secretary .
During the meeting, Mrs.
Margaret
Ei c hinger
presented a letter from World
Vision on the " loa(" program
to combate world ·hunger.
The UMW voted to take pa11
in the program. Mrs . Teaford
reported on a birthday card
sent to June Megill, and also
on
from

Annwl Waldnigfamily reunion held in Racine
The Waldnig family reu- to Bob Waldnig, Julius
nion was held Sunday a t the Waldnig, Pa t Capretta, Alan
home of Mr. and Mrs . Robert Petzo, Jim Moore, Winme
Waldnig, Route I, Racine .
Waldni g, and Alfie Waldnig.
A buffet dinner was served Chad Moore .. won in the
and a pri~e was presented to children's contest.
Mrs. Wayne Briggs for havAttending the reunion ~ere
ing the best dessert. , Julius Waldnig , Wanda
chocolate eclairs. A fish pond Lambert, Bob and Winnie
was provided for the Waldnig, Racme : Mel and
cmldren. Games of horse Wesley Barnett, Pomeroy ;
shoe, volley ball , egg throw, . Jim and Pat Moore, Joe··
sack races, watermelon Moore. Rob Waldnig , Jr.,
eating contests and apple Grove City; Wayne and Cindy
bobbing were enjoyed by Briggs, Alan and Debbie Pel·
those attending ,
zo , Shelly Petzo, Kerne Petzo,
Recognized and presented Galoway; Vicky and Pat
gifts were Julius Waldnig , the · Capretta of Hilliard ; Mike
oldest ; Adriene More, the and Jenna Moore, Chad
youngest; and Mr. and Mrs. Moore, Brad Moore and AnBill Waldnig who drove the driene Moore, Columbus; Bill
farthest , Games prizes went and
Alfie
Waldnig,

EITHER YOU
GO ALL-OUT OR
YOU EAT DUSTI

DAVIS INSURANCE

Mechanicsburg .
The 1979 reunion was set for
the third Solrday in
September at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Waldnig, A
flower fund was started :~ d ·it
was decided to discontinue
prizes for the games and give
one la rge door prize.

On this day in history :
In 1777, American soldiers
won the first Battle of
Saratoga
in
the
Revolutionary War.
In 1863, Union and
Confederate soldiers met in
the battle of Chickamauga,
Ga., during the CIVil War.
The rebels won the following
day ,

Alvord, a m issionary in
Rhodesia.
A total of 71 shutin calls
we re reported . Letters were
read from the district presi·
dent and treasurer and the
group voted to inc rease it.&lt;;
pledge by five percent.
The meeting opened with
group singing of the doxology
and a poem, "Clean Slate ."
Mrs. Teaford read on the
beattitudes from the book ,
"New Happiness ."
The program ''When You
Are Sorrowful " was given by
Mrs. Bernice Winebrenner
with Mrs. Opal Kloes and
Mrs. Eichinger assisting.
Mrs. Kloes closed with a
reading, " Rechoicing for Re·
juicing." Miss Ma rcia Karr
had prayer . Others attending
were Linda F erreJI , Christina
Grinun, Anna HiJldore, a nd
Judy King.

HIGH scHOOL SENIORS
Getting your $enior portrait made, is a
private. personal experience . We make
your appointment to fit into your· busy
schedule and at your convenience including
Saturday and Sunday afternoons.
In order to provide a good variety of
previews for your final selection, we
photograph you before indoor traditional
backgrounds and in attractive outdoor
settings so popular today .
Feel free lo call us- wilhout obligation for details.

THE PHOTO PLACE
(Bob Hoeflich)
109 High Sf.
Pomeroy

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

USDA CHOICE
BONELESS

CHUCK
ROAST

CHUCK
STEAK

FOR LESS!

~.149

LEAN- BONELESS

STEW MEAT ...................~~- ••. ~ 1

69

lB.$}59

FRESH-LEAN

LYSOL
SPRAY

Lay Away for Christmas Available

WEBSTER
TRASH BAGS

12 oz .

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE

GROUND CHUCK .••.•..•• ~~-'1 39

26 Gal. 20 Ct. or
&amp;Bushel 10Ct.
'1 .79 Value
F
Prk:• .~ ..

'2.29 Value
F .I.P , Price ..

SUPERIOR

99¢

BOLOGNA •••..•.•.•..••....•• ~~;. 89e

VALLEY BELL

SUPERIOR

:~~~~........~~~~-~ 109

Pomeroy

FRANKIE$....•......... !~.~~:.~~~~ 89e

HOMO
Ml LK ....................... ~.:.~~-~-

10

BROUGHTON

1% LOW FAT

MILK·

WHY NOT SEND ALONG

FOSTEX
CAKE

THE DAILY SENTINEL

Los An g .
3 0 0 1.000
Atlanta
1 2 0 .333
New Orleans
1 2 0 .333
san Fra n .
o 3 o .000
Sunday ' s R uutts
Seattle 2A , NY Jets 11
Chi cago 19 , De t roit 0
Cleveland 24 , Atlanta 16
NY G ianfs 26 , Kan Cit y 10
PIU!Durgt'l 28 , Ci nci J
Oakland 28, Green Bay J

and

ONIONS

SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

'17.50

\

'

\

lHEY WILL
RECEIVE
9 MONlHS OF
lHE HOMETOWN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL
,

'

The winner. driven by Fred
Ndl8en, covered the 1'f. mlle
distance. in 3:11 ~ and
returned $14.40, $5.20 ·a nd $3.
Abeolum paid $4 .20 and $3 ..W
to place , while Tommy
Tucker captured third and
ldeked back $3.80. ·
E V C'a victory kicked off a
2-S-4 trlfeeta combination
that was worth $1,486.50,
A crowd of 2,71lO wagered

PIUliCRIPTkiNS
FILLED

. SYRACUSE-Committees

/!/=·

BROUGHTON

West
W . L . T. Pet .

ni81Jt,

Trial Size

a PhD in political science, Dr.
Vaughn has toured the coun·
try doing a one-man show on
Franklin Roosevelt.
Season tickets provide ad·
mission to all five per·
formances, Rio Grande Col·
lege and Conununity College
is hopeful of constructing a
perfuming arts center which
will enable local residents to
enjoy many shows and events
in ·a proper envirorunent
without the long drive to a
metropolitan area,

Winning takes commitment. Always has. It's our
business to make sure you have the right
equipment.

Court St .

.333
.333

NOR'111FIELD RF.SULTS
NORTHFIELD,
Ohio
(UPI ) - E V C paced to a
convincing 7'f. length victory
over Abeolum in the featured
H.2110 Big . Triple Paee at'
Northfield Park Monday

F.I.P. Prk:• ....

l--

Pis .
· 12
10
8
6
6
6
High series ~ Richard
RusseJI 553, Nora Rice 50S;
Larry Dugan 544, Pat Carson
482,
High game - Larry Dugan
221, Nora Riace 202; Ray
Roach 211 , Pat Carson 189.
Team series - No. I 2053.
Team game - No. 2 718.

.667
.333

Pn ll a 2-4 , New Orleans 17
Houston 20, Sa n Fra n 19
Tampa Bay 16, M in n 10
Wash 28, St . Lou is 10
Denver 27 , San D iego l-4
Los Angeles 27, Dalla s u
Miam i 31 , Buffalo 2-4
Mond•v'' Result
Balt i more 3A , New Ehg 27
Sunday, Sept . 2•
Baltimore a t Butfa lo
Cleveland at P i ttsburgh
Los Angeles at Houston
M iam i at Philadelph ia
New Orleans at Cl nci
NY Jets at Was hing to n
Denver at KaMa s C it y
Atlanta a t Tampa Bay
Detroit at Seattle
Green Bay at San D iego
St . L.ou ls at Dallas
San Fra n at NY Giants
New England at Oakland
Monday , Sept . 2S
Minnesot a at Ch i cago

49' Val11e

Team
No. 3
No. I
No. 6
No. 2
No . 5
No. 4

T . Pet.
0 1.000

l 0
2 0
0 0

14 oz . - Reg .

1:1:

u M.

Women elect
~ ~ officers last week

Room Mothers eketed
at Syracuse PTO
.

:1:1

21b.

.JJJ
,333
.JJ J

1 2
0 3
Central
W . L.
J 0

Gallon

SMUCKERS
GRAPE JAM

N11tionat Conference
E•st
W. L. T . Pet .
wasn .
3 o o 1.000
Dallas
2 1 o .667
NY G i ants
Ph i la .

A ·coll)mittee of Meigs on Dec. 13 at Lynne Center.
Countlans is handling season Complete sets and costwnes
tlcketa to the Rio Grande Col- enl)ant'e the old England atlege and Community Col· mosphere provided by
lege's artist lind lecture William Shake~peare 's
series which gets underway script.
tonight with the appearant'e
Blue Grass grass, t-ountry
ol David Thoma.
and western , and other music
The tickets may be pur- will be presented by the New
·• t-hased "from Neacil Carsey, Vinton ·County Frog
Betty Fultz, Maidie Morn, Whornpers .at a eont'ert on
· Bill Quickie, or Clara Feb. 12. The " Man from UN·
Thomas. The series for the CLE", Robert Vaughn will
'1978-79 year includes 1!1!- speak on " The Roosevelt
pearances by Torna, Jeanne Era", April18. An actor with
Dixon Robert Vaughn, the ·
National Theatre Co. and the ·
New Vinton County Frog
Tbe Almaoac
Whompers, Torna wiJI speak
UDited Press iokrnatlooal
tonight on " Human DecenToday Is Tuesday, Sept. 19,
·cy."
the 262nd day of 1978 and 103
Jeanne Dixon will appear to follow .
at 8 p .m. on Wednesday, Ol'l.
The moon is between its luU
11, ai the Rio Grande CoUege phase and last quarter.
Cafeteria, ·and the National
The morning stars are
Theatre Co. will perfonn Saturn,
Jupiter
and
"The Taming of the Shrew"
.
'

DOWGARD
ANTI-FREEZE

DEFEATED TWICE
In a non-league volleybaJI
match Monday night , Meigs'
girls dropped two close
games to Fort Frye. In the
first match , the local girls feU
16-14.
Meigs lost . 15·13 in the
second contest. Meigs is 2·1
overall with its next match
slated Thursday at Waverly.

Life

Team No . 6, 301 .
Men 's H igh Series - Ri ck
Marf in 489, Charles Sear les

'•

AGREE ,SHAMPOO

'i_;=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:&lt;=:=:=:=:=:::•~=:=:m=:=~:=:=:•:=:•:&lt;=:=:•:::&lt;i:•:•:::::::•:•:=:::::=:•:::=:•:::=:="''':·:':=:=:::::::::•:•:=:':=:::•:=:=:::::::::::::::::•::;:::::::::::::=:=:=:::::::::::•:•::::~.

. Ti~kets committee -set for Rio
Grande 's artist, lecture series

$hop Here &amp; Save

Tri-Couoty League
Sept. li, 1978
W. L.
Columl:ita Nat. Ufe
4 2
Bill's Body Shop
4 2
Eagles Club
3 3
3 3
Roach Gun Shop .
H &amp;R Firestone
3 3
Pomeroy Cement Blo~k I 5
High ind. game - A. L.
Phelps 215; Ron ·Smith 1 96;
Bill Radford 190,
High ind, 3 games - Ed
Voss MO ; Dale Davis 532; BiD
Radford 525. ,
High team game - Eagles
Club 915 ; Bill's Body Shop
823; Columbia National Life
822.
High team 3 games Eagles Club 2457 ; BiD's Body
Shop 2399 ; Columbia National
Ufe 2354.

Ca~enter .~9f.

.

1-'n1e Dally l)enttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. It, 1978

Club 888; Roach Gun Shop
846; Eagles Club IIS2.
High team 3 games Eagles Club 2493 ; &amp;ach Gun
Shop 2404; Columbia National
Life 2368.

Earl Wednesday
Mloed League
Sept. 6, 1978

rec ords in par ent heses ·

.667
.667

Q 1.000
0 .66 7

1
1
2
2
2

a c-

t i r st .place vo t e!. and won -lost

L. T . Pet .
0 0 1.000
0

not

Pinbusters

NEW YOR K ( UPI J - T h ~:
Un i l.e d Pre ss I n t ernat ional
Boar d of Coache s ' to p 15
colleg e foo t ball r at i ng s , w i th

Ent
W. L. T . Pet .
0
0
0
0
0

just

;;

Sunday Duds
Country Bumpk ins

College ratings ·

NHL Standings
A United Press International
Amerinn Conference

I
1
2
2
J

~~!rh~~~.

customed to losing . On the
Washington pass, it was a
one-shot thing . We thought it
might be something that
would work" Carr said .
New England scored on a I·
yard run by Andy Johnson,
who totaled 109 rushing yards
on the night, and on a 62-yard
pass from Steve Grogan to
Stanly Morgan. The Pats ,
trailing , 27-13, late in the
game , nearly for ced an
overtime on two occasions.
They tallied twice in I :SO on
short runs by Grogan and
Sam Cunningham to knot the
score at '1:1·'1:1 , They then
moved to the Baltimore 14
alter Washington 's kickoff
return before Lyle Blac k·
wood intercepted a Grogan
pass at the goal line with just
12 seconds left.
"We did a good job in
coming back," sa1d Pats '
Coach ·Chuck Fairbanks .
" But, we didn't play par·
ticularly well in any phase of
our game. and we didn 't
capitalize on our op·
port unities . We weren 'I
overconfident."
Troup, starting his second
game in bS many weeks,
completed lO.Of-15 for 221
yards in a driving rainstorm
and threw one interception.
Grogan
had another
miserable passing night ,
completing just ll-of-33 for
229 yards. He threw three
interceptions - two of which .
were intended for Harold
Jackson .
"We just have to get our
offense going ," said Jackson,
who hauled in one pass for 34
yards .

FOOTBALL
2
2
1
1
0
Cenh; al
W.
Cle~e l and
'J
Pitts .
J
Houston
2
Cin .
0
Wut
W.
Oakland.
2
Denver
2
San D iego
1
Kan . Ci ty
1
Seattle
1

Standings Aug . 27 , 1P78
Won Lost

came on a three-yard run by
Don McCauley in the second
period .
Carr, who set a Schaefer
Stadium record with t87
yards on six catches, said he
felt the Colts would bounce
back alter being outscored ,
~. in their first two games
this season .

By PETER MAY
UPI Sportl Writer
FOXBORO, Mass. (UPI ) Joe W-.s~tington thinks the
Baltimore Colts are back on
steady seas after a stormy
start.
The versatile swilty from
Oktaboma dashed 90 Yards on
a rain-soaked Schaefer
Stadium rug with just I : 18
left in Monday night 's
nationaUy televised game to
lead the Colts to a thrilling 3427 upset over the New
England Patriots.
"Our team is like h ossing
the
Atlantic,"
said
Washington, who scored
another touchdown on a pass
reception and threw for a
third. ''You are bound to go
through storms. We've been
througll some storms but
maybe now we're in for some
smooth sailing. We 've
weathered the storm. "
Washington was acquired
by the Colts in exchange lor
Lydell Mitchell , who had
branded the Colts hierarchy
as racists during a bitter
contract dispute this fall. The
Colts were heavy underdogs
in the game, due mainly to
the absence of quarterback
Bert Jones, defensive standouts Stan White and Joe
Ehrmann and offensive
tackles George Kunz .and
David Taylor.
"We showed a lot of
character out there tonight,"
said an ecstatic Colts • Coach
Ted Marchibroda.
The Colts scored four
touchdowns in a wild fourth
quarter to win their first of
the year. Washington tossed a
54-yard flea-flicker pass to
Roger Carr, hauled in a 23yard scoring strike from
backup quarterback Bill
Troup, who also fired a 67yarder to Carr .
Baltimore 's first sc ore

NY Jets
Miami
New Eng .
Bait
Buffa lo

POMEROY LANES
SUNDAY MINERS

Mooday Night
Late Mixed League
Sept.ll, 1978
W. L.
Roach'sG unShop
22 2
Salem St. Mkt.
18 6
12 12
No. 6
No. 2
8 16
3and5tied
6 18
Team high series - Salem
St. Mkt. 2229 ; No. 5 2192 ;
Roach's Gun Shop 2108.
Team high game - No . s
7.79 ; Salem St. Mkt. 767; No . 6
761.
Men 's high game
Raymond Roach 521; Dave
Dobbins Jr . 510 : Roger

'

THIS
OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 457.69
NAME
ADDRESS ••••••••••••••••••••••. ~ ••••....••••••••.••••••••••
0 0 I

0 0 I

0 0 I

0 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 0 I

I

0 I

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0 I 0 I

0 0 .. o 0 o o 0 0 O O O O O O O I O O O O I

CITY .....................................
STATE. ••••••

...

U

GEM
SAPPHIRE NAIL FILE

59~

:~:.~~~ce . . 29¢

29

SCOT LAD

gc
HOTDOG OR BARBECUE BUNS................~.~~~--.4

HOLSUM

COMPANION

With Case

69'
C
SALTINES ........... ........... :.........................~~:.~~-~.... 59

Quart Can
VALVOLINE 0 IL ..............................................
..

bOG FOOD
$ 99

GRADE B

LARGE EGGS

25 LB. BAG

~~~~

COLLEGE

3 LB.

GAU.ON

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I ••••• •

•••••••••••••• I •• •

CHECK .............

U

'

•

I

I

I

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O

30,
1978

I . . . . . . . . . . . •• • • • •- • • • •

Zl p CODE •••••••••

I

•

MONEY OROtiC .......... ..

-

OFFER
EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER

SORRY,

Y,

8-16

NO
REFUNDS

F~~~~T~............................~..~~~~~~ •. ~1 00

59C
PREMIUM CRACKERS............ ~·-~~~..
NABISCO

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$1

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DRar
PEPPER

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~-i~~:'=.... $149

UQUID DETERGENT.. .......................... .

39~,.

UQUID DETERGENT. ....... ~.~-~~:.~~!~... 69
WINCHESTER
•••••••( Carton)

ONLY

Gallon - Herbal - Baby

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Quart

DAWN

THURSDAY

PRICELESS
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PLAIN GOOD
·

oz.

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aomEs

$ 09

.SUPER MARKET ;... ,QP,Eft ~LY t,10 10 P.M.
SUNDAl.lD J8, 10
F*lllooa

S38&amp;,1180.
I

•

'I

I

. ..

,,

�:

__
____
,._._
I
. I
...,..

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Tuesday, Sep\. 19,1978

'

Lois Ann Sauer weds in
Mrs. Andrew.speaks to UM. , Women
. I Social 1
Sunday single-ring, ceremony I Calendar I

LETART FALlS- Mrs. An· Hill read " The World Would · by the hostess lo Mrs. Cross, Hill, Mrs. Inez Hill, Mrs .
drew Cross presented a pro- be a Better Place If We Mrs Harold Roush, Mrs. Shuler, ·Mrs. Pickens, and
gram on missions when the Traveled at a Slower Pat-e" Margie Hunt, Mrs . Enna Mrs. Bell.
United Meihodist Wom en of a nd Mr s . Ine z Hill
11Jii:SDAY
Letart Falls Clrurch met
the
Lois AM Sauer , daughter t'cr e1nuny was perfonnt-'d ed as !Jest rnan for his son .
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY, at the .home of Mrs. Bert nominatinl!: curruniU.ee chair:
man , reported that the same
of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Sauer
bdor·e members of the irn- Ralph Morgan, Wellsburg, W. Veterans Memorial Hospital
officers will be retained for
Middleport , and Will iam H: mediate fa mil y am) dose Va. was the usher, and guests Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. in the Grirrun recently.
Mrs. Cross talked on · the .another year.
Harkins, J r. , son of Mr. and
friends by the Rev. Lorrin were regi&gt;1ered by Renee hospital cafeteria . New of· purpose of most foreign and
Forty-eight shutin calls
MrS. William H. Ha rki ns,
Kreide r . Mrs Jani ce Robison Harkins of Sto&lt;.'kport, sister ficers to be elected and in- home missions, discussed the
were
made during the swnStockport , were marr·iecl on
was org::~ n is t .
stalled.
of the groom .
way of life and the desperate mer . Mrs. Mary Pickens was·Sunday, Sept. 10, at the
Cynthia Mills, Middleport,
SALISBURY PTO, 1::10 needs of the poor classes of
Immediately following the
Athens Presbyteria11 Church.
Tuesday nigl1t at the sehoul; · ~Jt!Uple in countr ies around welcomed as a new member.
wat~ the maid of honor , and ceremony a reception w~.s
IN THE
Plans were made for a
TI1e 1 p.n1. single ring
William H. Harkins, Sr.'serv- held at the Ohio University t~arhcrs cuu.l persunnd ftJ bt' the world, both in body and
covered dish dirmer at the
Inn. Both Mr. and Mrs. introduced.
spirit. Mrs. Cross talked of November meeting to be held
Harkins are employed by the
SPECIAL
MEETING the nt'cessary coope ration or at the home of Mrs. Don Bell
Federal Hocking Local Racine MaS&lt;Jnic Lodge 461, the members of the group to with all women of the church
Schools.
F&amp;AM with work in the help in sponsoring a child . to be invited. Mrs. ·John Hill
Master Mason degree ; aU She illus trated coopera tior• will continue with the Bible
OPEN:
Master Masons invited.
by giving each a shiny new study at !he home of Mrs . InMon .. Tues .. Wed. &amp; Sil,t. 8:30til 5:00
XI GAMMA MU Chapter , coin , separately of little ez Hill in October. Mrs. Bell
Thursday Til12 Noon
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 7:.10 value, but toge ther· of much well have the devotions and
Friday Until5 P.M.
Tu esday night at the Colwn- ben efit to the prot ~cts of the Mrs. Shuler, the program.
Herman Grate
IJia Gas Co. office. Mrs . Annie church . Sh e called . for Refreslunents were served
773-5592 '
Mason. W. Va .
Chapman to ha vt• the culturct l sacrificiGt l giving tu aid the
pmgr·arn , and Mrs. Dcbi pruject..o; and toward spon sor~
Ruck cmd Mrs . Linde~ King to in g another child.
Ot! hostesses.
Mrs. Cross was appointed
Mr·s. Freda Van Inwagen
chairmHn of a corru nith!c to
CHESTER
COUNCIL
323,
was honored for· having lust
selec.:t a youngs ter from a li st
50 pounds at a rec-ent meeting Daughters of America, 8 p.m. ~ of WJSpt1nsored children. Mrs.
of the Conway Diet Class in this evening at the hall With Grimm a nnounced that the
Pomeroy. She was presented quarterly birthdays to be thank you cont.&lt;:l inerS have
and
potluck
a pin and certificate and observed
pro\'etl a gree1t help &lt;:t nd comrefreshments
served.
wekomed into the " foreve r
mended
the group for their inslim " program along with Practice for inspection will terest. and cooperation irr the
be held .
• Mrs. Graee Abbott.
LETART FALLS PTO endea vor.
Twenty-pound weight loss
Mrs. Ernest Sh uler opened
Tuesday 7 p.m. at elementary
pin~ and certifica tes were
the
meeting with devotions
presented to Dodie Seth and school. •
Psilltns 63. Mrs. J olm
from
WEDNESDAY
Unda Warner, and rerogniz ,
LADIES AUXILIARY of
ed for having lost U1e musi
the Rutland Fire Department
weight during the week was
Wednesda y at 7:30 p.m .
E,•eJyn Well with Linda
Election of officers.
Warner and Mildred Jacobs
THURSDAY
as the rwmers-up. At a nother
ROCK SPRINGS BETTER
rece nt meeting of the
Pomeroy da ~s. 28 new Health Clull. 1: 15 p.m . Thursmembe rs were . weil'omed. day at the home of Mr·s. Susil'
Sue Maison and Charlotte Pullins. Mn;. Nancv Murris tu
Erlewine were the "big have the prognun: and Mrs.
Lottil' Leonard. the contest
losers ".
Marjorie Holmes
Twelve new members hHve
MAGNOLIA CLUB Thursbeen taken into the dasses
day 7:30 p.m. home of
those losing the most weight
Kathryn Miller.
were Dreama Mitchell ,
REVIVAL
now
in
Darlene Miller , Kate Stone
progress
at
Da nville
and Marilyn Clark . Connie
Wesleya n Ch urch throu gh
Turley received her 20 pound
Sept. 24 7:30p.m. nightly. The
pin. At the Athens dasses
Rev. Don Humble is the
" Hand in Hand" is the the featured speaker at the Lois Caul a nd Susan Lear:
evangelist. Gospel singing
theme of the &gt;8th Ann ual Ohio .nmrsday luncheon . In " The and Kathi JohiJSOn and Mary
each evening . R. D. Brown ,
Child Conservation League Crown and the Shadow" she DePue were the ones who lost
pastor. The public is mvited.
Convention to be held Octo ber tells about the 1970 stroke the most weight.
BETA SIGMA PHI ThursII and 12 in Co lumbus. The that left her speechless and
Mark D. Slat er, son of Mr.
day 7:30 p.m. at Athens
Wester\'ille Federation will pa rtially para lyzed . Now
and Mrs . David Sla te r
· County Savings and Loan.
be the hostess for two days of virtually recovered , she has
RACINE Legion Post 602 Pomeroy, has completed hi ~
meetings a nd workshops a l re-examined her purpose in
Thursday B p.m. Oyst ~ r basi c training at the
life and in her message she
· the Co lum bus-Sheraton.
Lackland Air Force Base in
supper to .follow.
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser
Mrs . Osca r Heusi, OCCL tries to motivate others to
Texas. He is now enrolled in
EPISCOPAL
Chur
c
h
St at e
Pr esi dent
fr om examine their goals as in~ and Larry, Mr . and Mrs. Women , Thursday, com· the Air Force Techn ica l
Dave Robinette and Nathan,
Defiance, will preside over dividuals and mothers.
School at Sheppard Air Force
and
Mr . and Mrs. Myron. munion .a t 12 noon with Base where he will receive
the 1,000 me mbers who a re
Wednesday workshops will
meetmg to foll ow at parish
expected to a ttend
include a tour of the Ohio Miller, Minersville; and Mr . house. Ta ke sack lunch.
trainin g in t he air craft
One of t he conve nti on Th eatre and a "Fall Fashion and Mrs. Bob Grueser, Todd
maint enance field . Mark is a
WESTERN
SQUARE
hi ghl ig hts 'wi ll be th e Preview'' at the F . &amp; R. and Krmberly , Ca ldwell , dance Thursday , 8 p.m. at 1978 graduate of Meigs High
prese ntat ion by Ma rjorie La zaru s Compa ny. Other were Sw1day visitors at the !Wyal Oak Park recreation al School.
Holme s. best-se llin g in- workshops offered include a homt! of Mr. a n(! Mrs. Pat building with Dewey Hart,
spirational author, at the punch hook demonstration by Quinn and Patrick, Mc- Columbus, calling. Western
Wednesda y evening ba nquet Phyllis S. Collinson and a Connelsville.
square dancers invited.
Miss Holmes will talk about psycho-social drama by
HOSPITALIZED
SUNDAY
" Which is the Real You'" James Million of the Franklm
Sha
r
on
Smith ,
31,
T HE
A NNUAL
with advice and witticisms on Co unty Mental Health Board.
Pomeroy
is
a
patient
at
1
homecoming of .the Eagle
H onored
how to cope with the demands A discussion of ma rriage
iversit
y
Hos
pital,
Un
Ridge Church will be held
of fami ly. job and world, enrichment will be led by
The Rev. ami Mrs. Dwight Sunday with a basket dmner Columbus.
without losing a sense of Laura Armstrong of the Ohio Zavitz were honored Sunday at noon . Special singers will
individua lity and persona l State University , and James following U1e church servic-e be " The Messengers" from
SPONSORS EVENT
value.
E. Kennedy of the Ohio with a receptior1. P.unch and Wellston .
Rutland
American Legion
I' ve Got tn Tal k to Do mini ca n College will cookies were served and they
•.
sponsor
in g a so ftball
is
TUESDAY
Somebody, God and Two discuss children and human were presented with a money
tournament
at
Syracuse Sept.
GROUP
2,
United
from Galilee. soon to be made sexuality .
tree .
23
and
24.
Team
trophies will
Presbyterian
Church,
Mid·
into a movte, are twu rrf Miss
The OCCL., with more than
The Rev. Mr. Zavitz who
Holmes ' well-known works. 14.000 members statewide, ·has pastored the church for dleport, 7:_30 Tuesday at the be presented to the top four
in dividu a l
Sh e is a lso widely read was organized in I918 to the pi:lst seven yea rs, is retir- home of Mrs. William Morris teams with
trophies
being
given
to the
through her mont hl y column pr omot e more effective ing from the ministry. He and with Mrs. David Cwm nings
members
of
the
top
three
in Women 's Day , and her standa rds of famrly li vmg, to his wife are moving to a:; co-hostess. Mrs. Rieh Karr
tea
ms.
will
be
the
devotiona
l
leader.
synd icated co lumn fo r the es tab lish
close r
com- Chester, Va ., a s uburb of
SUNDAY
For addit ional in£orrnatior.
Washington Star. :.!arjorre mu ni cations between home Richmond.
call
742·2279.
MINERSVILLE
UNITED
Holmes will aut ugraph t.:o p1es and communi ty, and to offer
Methodist
Church,
annual
of her latest book, Lord. Let organized support for va rious
homecoming ,
S und ay
Me Love, at a ret.:epuon lc g is lat rve prog ram s to
schuol,
9
i:lm
.; worChurch
following the banquet .
protect young people.
~
hip
service
'10
a.m
.
basket
" The Song Spmners·· ~qlJ
Members of the Westerville
HOMECOMING
dinner
at
noun;
t:~.
fternoon
provide entertamment a.t the Fede ral io n ha ve ·been
MINERSVILLE ··Annu a 1 progrilm a t I : 30 with
banq uet. Thi s versat ile planmng th1s year 's conur
the Ange laires as fea tured
m usical group is fr om \'t'TJliOr: -:inct! October, 1976 h umet'oming
Minersville
United
Methodist
si nger s. Meig s Sen ior
Westerville.
und er the lea dersh ip of
Citizens Choir also to sing.
Jacquelyn Mayer Town- Nc.ncy
Ne ar a nd
co- Church will be held Sundav
9 Others invi ted to sing.
Church school will be
send, form er Miss Amenr a chai rwomen Jan Goodman
.i:t .m ., the worship service at
from Sandusky, Ohio. well be and Co lleen Sigman .
· 10 a .m., and a basket dinner
In 1960, Cuban Premier
from noon until 1:30 at which
tune !he program will begin . Fidel Castro and his staff
F eatured Singers will be the were ousted from a New York
Angelaires of Lancaster. The City hotel because they had ' •
•
Senior Ci tizens Choir of been dis covered plucking
Pomeroy will smg, and other chrckens for cooking m their
Brasel &amp; Brasel, Jnc., 011 CIJ lumbus.
singers are invited to take rooms . The Communist
and gas produ cer s fr om
In addition to the above , part . The public is invited to delegation was in New York
Co lumbus, hosted their fir'1 there were representatives attend .
to attend a United Nations '
meetmg.
annual pi cmc for la ndowners present fro m Pennzoil
and employees on September Unrted, crud e oil purchasing
16, at Fort Meigs pi cnic depa rtment 1who furn ished
grounds. Over 250 pe rsons the so ft drinks 1 and Columbia
were in attcndam:e.
IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VIsit the Board's OHice In Penon
Gas Tran smissi on Corllra se l &amp; Bra se l. In c. poration of Charleston, West
operate some 60 prod ucin g oil Virgi nia, purcha se rs of
- OR - Phone the Board of Elections -OR- Mall the Board
and gas wel ls rn •he Gallia- natural gas.
a Car d.
Meigs count y area and hosted
REUTER.fJROGAN INSURANCE
the picmc m ordt'r to ma ke it
possible for la ndo wn ers
ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify th~ county office, Or If
Holzer Medica l Ceul&lt;r
whose land they have leased
0 . I a~ going lo build • free -standing sign in front of
Discharges
,
Sept.
18
for oil and gas , could get to
mv bus ·n ~ss . What tvpe of insurance would 1need to In·
I&lt;Jndon Ball ; Mrs. Ralph
know and to ta lk with the
sure the S19n and protect myself from any lia bil ity ?
you are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered,
Barcus
and
sun;
Herbert
Buroper ating personn el as well
.as offi ce personnel from son ; Simtlra Cox; Ethel CrabA. Both Pro~erty and ·Liabilit y would be necessary to
tree ; Robert Flannigan ;
Phone the Board.
cover th e s•gn compl etely . To cover any physical
Lawrence Fowler ; Betty
da":Jage to fl'le sig n, Itself. an Inla nd Marine Floater
Hughes; Ner bie Hurt ; Mr&amp;.
POl iC Y would be required. This policy covers all ri sks o f
Wi lli a m J e well
and
~hysical damage t o t he sign and is usuall y wri tten sub ·
DANCE SET
rec r to a 100 pc~ . of its value , In some cases , a deducti ·
A disco dance will be held da ught er ; Katheryn Knotts ;
bte crause appt 1es. A general Liabil ity Pol icy would in McCorkle;
Violet
Rhonda
Saturday, Sept. 23 from 9
sure agai nst liability exposUre , Th is would cover any
Neal; Sa rah Patterson : Mrs.
prop~rty_ or bodi.ly injur y cr eated as a d irect res ult of
p.m . to l a .m . at the Pomeroy Step
h e n Pax so n a n d .
·
the s1gn 1tself.
Elemen tary School for
MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING
dHoghter
;
Leroy
Piersall
;
persons 21 or over.
Sara h P Owe ll ; Ralph
Admission is S6 a couple.
RAdcliff : Larry Sh9ng; Pearl
P. BOX 488, POMEROY, OHIO
The event Is being sponsored
SMi th : Howard Taylor;
by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of
Rnber1 Tilley .
PHONE
Beta Sigma Phi. ~ersons
Birth, Sept 18
The Insurance Store
may call Sonya 0
ger at
214 E. Main
992-5130
Mr. and Mrs. James Sisson,
Pomtroy, O,
992-2426 for reserv:/i 1s.
HOURS 9:004:00 - SATURDAYS 9:00.12:00
SOli , Ga llipolis.

·SHOP

MASON FURNITURE.
FOR THE BEST DEALS

,.....

..

.• /

TRI-STATE AREA

STORE SLICED LUNCHEON
MEAT
,.

MASON FURNITURE

-

BOILED HAM................ ~~~ ..!2 3 '
.·
LB. $139
.....
DUJCH LOAF..................

Receives
certificate

.

~

.

:EXTRA LEAN

CUBE
·.
$}49 .
PORK STEAK ......•L.B: •••
.STORE MADE

:g:~ SAUSAGE••'o8:~.l

$} 19.

SPECIAL BLEND
GOLDEN ISLE

FROZEN
ORANGE
JUICE

19

DISH
DETERGENT •·GIANT 22 OZ. BOTTLE

BIG 16 OZ. CAN

PAPER
TOWELS
2 JUMBO ROLLS

FADDI.E

Has visitors

USDA CHOICE

$}89

RIB
STEAK ........•.......... ~~~ ...

BLUE BONNET

GOLDEN .SLE

Marjorie Holmes to
speak to state meeting

=~:.~.~~~~. . . . .~~~ . .

PALMOLIVE LIQUID

SOFT
MARGARINE
POUND BOWL

ARMOUR TREET

OR

YEU.OW mNKERS

LUNCHEON

SNACKS

MEAT
· 12 OZ. CAN

Sunday

ai

Brasel &amp; Brasel IJosts annual
picnic fo r local employees

GOLDEN ISLE

PIECES &amp; STEMS
MUSHROOMS
4 OZ. CAN

l __ c:_ouPON

992·2697

PILLSBURY PLUS

LB. CAN

W/C

Limil one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

No. 205

2

19 oz.
BOXES

•

99'

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.99~

COUPON

LOG CABIN

89~

No. 125

W/C

.16 OZ. CAN

PANCAKE MIX
No. 155

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
. TWIN CITY GATEWAY

2 LB. BOX

~BIN HOOD

SUGAR CRISP

FLOUR

No. 155
~8 OZ. BOX

89~

W/C

No. 155
5 LB. BAG

WINDEX

VANISH

TOILET BOWL CLEANER

.69''

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coup011 Explre1 Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•,

W!C

2
::~ 49¢
..

No. 185

.

COUPON

69~

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.,

W/C

GOLDEN ISLE

CLUB CRACKERS
No. 105
16 OZ. BOX.

69~

limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept . 23, 1978 ·
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

Limit one please with th is coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

KEEBLER

GLASS CLEANER REFILL
No. 105
32 OZ. BTL

DIAL
DEODORANT SOAP

59~

l fllJPClN

W/C

Limit one please wj th thi s coupon
Coupon Expires 'Sept . 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

59¢

COUPON

POST SUPER

I
'

No. 125
34 OZ. CAN

~--

COUPON

LOG CABIN SYRUP
24 OZ. BOTL

-

NNED FROSTING

( OlJP()N

No. 155

COUPO N

PILLSBURY

CAKE
MIXES
..

No. 305

IDVR·II!JOIRB

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

COUPO N

MAXWELL HOUSE

November 7th General Election
YOU MUST BE REGISTERED
BY OCTOBER 7TH

45769

$}19
-

• the
In Order to Vote 1n

0.

CHEESE
SINGLES
12 oz.
PKG.

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS -

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS

KRAFT
SWISS, PIMENTO OR
AMERICAN

BATH_
ROOM TISSUE
4 ROLL PKG.

W!C

59'

limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 23, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•

•

W/C

�•

' .

1- Tbe O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 19, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash

Business Services

'

WANT AD

CHA~GES

I WOU tU

2.2:i

J.OO

J.7:i .

6u r l ~ r o k e , hu s b o nd

lHRH: t- AM il Y '!' r:1r d ~ oiC' ~ ept.
JI .'J'J . &lt;I om to 4 prn at Chester
~ O ~P v ,n e !&gt; t . Rocrn e . Ohr o .

OWI VH
A V A I LAIH~
10
bu s
chrld r(!n to a nd ! ro m Goll ,o
Ch r rs t ro " ~c h o ol Vrn to n Ohro .
1 ra ve l New l rn' O Wd
l o Hor
rrso n vrlle 143 ro HT "I to WI l l 4
ond 3:? ~ rrll o V rn ton "/ 4'} JOO!l

C ARA G t
onrl 1- rr

o l Ha rold W

to

neighbo rs /a • the •r acts of kind
lh on k!&gt; to the
Koc•ne l::rnN ge ncy Sq uad O r

n e~'&gt; or1d g •l ts

u1g Box Numbt!r Jn C¥n• vf Tlw Ston·
Urfel.

8 lo1 e w ou

l!l'\lt'r 25 l~llt chilr~ fur ads CiiiT)';

Ve te r e n !o M e rnonol
H o~ p • t a l . ~ w . n g Fun e ra l hom e

a n d ~l ev f.'reelon d No rr r\ l o r hrs
con so li r1g w ords W de t mmn
l ee Su d ch ildren and gr and
so n s

tht· ng ht

or tt'jt'&lt;.' l &lt;~ny cub cWt-metl ub-

jet•uonal. Tht· PuLJhsher "'·rll nut Ut·
rt'!ipori.Si b)l' fu r m nrt• than uu t' UI~'UI"·
rt't.1 tn st•rtwn
Phuu\' 99"l·:1l ;,ti

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

8n d

to e11 p res s opprec•ot ion
fr, e nd s
reloftves
a nd

Mobtle H01nt- lWlt'S Htld V11.rd sales
l:t~ IU.'Ceptetl only with l "Hsh wit tr

NOTICE

..

M on d ~:~ )

Noun or r Sa tu nl :. ~

The!&gt;d;n
t hru F m.lii\'

4 P.M . .
Urt' tla~· bcfurt' I'Ullltt·;ll wn

l:lclp Want~d

..

.SuuJa;-

-{I '.M
Frrd&lt;ty aftt-rm-. &gt;n

For Wednesday. Sept. 20

ASI RO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

-VMWil ·

~CJ~li'Vlllc!JlD\1
September 20, t971

!"'Iann ing your m o ves rn adv-ance is extrem el y tmportant
for you th is c oming year . A
sound blueprint enhances your
possibilities · fo r succ ess . s o
don ' t run yo ur pr o gram on a hitor -m is s ba s1s.

VIRGO (Aug. 23·Sept. 22) Your
words have considerable impact lodJy . Person s you ·tl deal
with all sense you say what you
mean and mean wha t you say .
Straigh tforwardness becomes
you . Find o ut who you ' re romantica l ly sue ted 10 by sending
for your copy o f Astro -Graph

Mail 50 cents for eac h
and a long . sell-addressed ,
stamped enve lope to Astra Graph , P.O. Bo)( 489 , Radio C ity
Station , N . V. 10019. Be sure to
speci fy birth sig n .
Leite r

LIBRA (Sept . 23-0ct. 231 Pa·
it you
hope to ben"efit from a JOin!
venturP- . The other party inlien ee is ne cessa ry today

volved is eyei ng you c.a refully
unti l you prove yourself.

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
are aware of everything yo u
know , so it be hooves you to day
to be a g ood lis.tener . especiall y if you 're with one you
know is wi ser tha n you are .

SAGITTARIUS (Now. 23-Dec .
Z1• Succe s s •s ltkely to.S!_ay 11
your goals are in propontrn to
your abili1i es. Be co n tent w i th
small steps rather than one
long, questionable leap .

CAPRICORN !Dec. 22·Jan . t91
Your

organ•zahonal

abilit1es

are e•ceptionally keen today
Not only do you k n ow ho~ to
get everything done effit;:ientty .
and what to delegale to wh om .

AQUARIUS (Jon . 111-feb. t91
· This is a good day to discuss
important domestic issues with
your mate . Answers c ollec tively arrived at w ill be beneficial and positive .

PISCES (Feb. 211-lilorch 10)
wil l welcome yo ur
compan y today , particularly it
your visit is brief Keep this in

· Friend s

mind whether it' s a personal
appearance o r a vrsr t o n the

phone .
ARIES (March 2t·Aprll t91 A
small, but profitable. c hannel
could open tor vo u to add..,.to
your income . It will take cleve r
maneuvering . however , to
bring it aboul.

TAURUS (April 211-Moy 201 Rec·
reationa l outlets should be uli·
lized today . Gettmg yo ur mind
oft mundane thi n gs w ill
brighten your o utlook and
make you more productive lat-

er.
GEMINI (Moy 21-June 201 11 you
hope to gather info rmation 10day , on a matter yo u' re v-ery
curious about , ask tndirec t
questions . not blunt o nes.
You'll be able to pcece the
puzzle together .

CANCER (June 2t ·July

22)

Ou1llty , n o t Quantity , is what

you should look for in companionship today A few selec t
friends will be more enjoyable
than a large group .

LEO (July 23-Aug . 221 Today it
you mu st c hoose between profat or pride of acco mplishmenl ,
you may be wise to choose the

latter. Self-esteem h a s greater
weight than silver
[NEWSPAPER ENT ERPRISE ,~i SS N )

n

G UN ~H OOl Wn cone- G un Cl ub
tvery ~undo ~ 1 p m r ectory
c h o ~ e guns only

~ AMil Y

W l !&gt; hc ~

6 l 't!U\s per word. SJ.OO
· nwr i.mwn . Ctish iu atlvllnl 't' .

Lou t'ttit

I '' I(&gt; HON DA J bU l 4UU oc't utll
YA filJ !&gt;A l l- lui'S th tu l h u r ~o ~ 8 &amp; ~ MOBIIt HOMl: !&gt; Pt. Pl ea
rn_rlt'"
D uron~ . 100 111
1o 11 11t •
t o~ W olf pp 11 l&gt;' ood o ft !&gt;H t4:J .
sont , W. Vn . beside Hec ~ ' •
W"J JOif( .
I q-,3 Brood mor e lA x 64 1
bedroom
!:ICH OOl
BU ~ · ca m pe r
bO
G ARA G~ !&gt; AU
W e dne~do v and 14"13 LJo, iar1 lA x 60 'J bedr oo m
po !&gt; !&gt;enge r wrlh new rl t f''
l hu t 11odoy ~ 6 h er ylh mg tn 14?'1 Vi c tori on 14 .11 b'l J bedroom .
Good condition . (on toc t l oon
du d rn g thp kr tche n ~rnk 49&lt;4
1 both
Monkrn ot (/q'J .72tJ 1.
l mco l n !&gt; t M1d dlepor t
t 4 T} (O II t1n i1V J 'J I( 6 ~ J hedr OOt11
G AHA G l: ~ At ~ . lhur ~ . f1o . ond I Y69 !&gt;tol enn on 1'J " b(J 'J t1 W~ ~K OLD pt~ !i ~4 '! - l(M6
bedroo m .
!&gt;ot
~ cp 1
i' l
'JJ
10?
14"11 YAMAHA XS b SO A - 1 ~ hope
Gr ee n h ou~ e bes rde ~ tol e CO Al liMI:~lON l:: , ~ and g r ove l
l.jlj ;,&gt; ~01 7 oher !&gt; pm .
H 1ghwo y Garage o n ~~ 7 M r~c
co Ierum ch lor rde fe r trli zc r dog
rl e111:. . q!:j ~ ;!) 4)
food . and all lyp e~ o f .snit . b&lt;

NO HUN TI NG or rrcspo ::.srng o n
rn y proper ty v~nt h o u l pt:&gt;rm rs
sr o n Ju dy M cG raw

Ob i tu&amp;~r)' :

Publ ~ het rt"se r.'l~

~

cebtor !&gt;a ll Work s. lnr I Morn
YAHLJ !JAH l ues J 1/. W ed 10 '1.
!:I t , Po m ero y . CW'J .:f81.r11 .
Co uc h f.J ~I :I rug , 'l o ld oo k
dr essers lornp ta bl e lre e aut o BU~H O U G H) !&gt;I:N~ I MA TI C , or ·
wo sh e1 . p o rc h !&gt; w rng . k itc hf'n
co unt ing
m ach ine
Ph o ne
wo r e roc- hf'r boo k CO loe 'I dou
qro / 1 ~ . I he Oorl11 ~e n t rne f ,
ble be d'&gt; 1 I 'J'J ~ Mor n ~ ~
111 Court Stree t , Po me roy .
Pomer oy
O hto
'
1HHH· FAMi l V Yard ~o l e !:lept ~ 8 by l O x 'l wh ee l s. Pr .
141U. LI ~t o 4 ~rn rl e'&gt; o lf~t I
~ L~ 00 . 1 · "/00 x lb Wml e1 lrr es
o n t:agl e k1dge Hd . a t Wo ger
pr !i!&gt;O 00. Call l.rl9:t / b"''l .
re!&gt; 1d e nce C.lol hi ng o f all 5- rH'"i ,
too l s r ug ~ cloc k !; . loi s o f rn1SC lqb·l UHV V ro~ po r l!i . I Y7J Vega
rno to r : Hoy for sole, $.t:l5 o
LAHG l: HUMMA GC So' l e All sires
bo le . 4"'1 14 l3or 94W'l 'd 44 .
clo th rng
ho use hold
i tems.
14
"1 4
OAl"~UN
PI CKUP . Phone
lhur sd oy or~d f-riday . Y to 4 .
'11fl ·6 1Q'/ ofle r Spm
Hen ne G r ange !lol l o ff~~ I:J4
on Oak G rove lld. 111 Ro &lt;r ne. N
SCAll: lroim wi th l rype
Loo k l o r $ig n s.
la yo ut Co rn p le te wi! h all sw i f ·

Hi~

(n memory , Curd of Thaltkli &lt;I !Ill

Tht!

my

f- ou p loy r o m m u n1ty
Mc(o y
M oo •£" ._ unerol H ome V 1n ton
V e ter en !tl M e m ono l Ho!&gt;pi!O l
[), , N 1d gw oy a nd .st o fl and the
h e alth llU I !&gt; e ~ Yo ur kmd ncs s
w a s, g •e al ly op prec• o ted

Eich wurd uv~ tilt' nurumwn 15
wurW. Ls 4 t ents ~ r wur d pt!t thty .
AtLs t'Unning ol..tler than l'Onset:uti vt&gt;
dMy!i will be chc. r~t.'tl 111 tlw 1 lhty

'""·

e Kp r E') !o

wou ld e ipec•oll y lok (&gt; to thonl.
t he ~l e m (en te t ( o mrn u rll ty

'-"'

UIO

to

!1- ln cer(' opp •ec tOi ton for the
h el p g• wen at the deat h of m y
wd e G et 1r ude l.) Urok e I

15 Wurdll or Untlc.·r
C.sh
O wr jl(t'
1.00
1.25
1.50

l, l. e

•.
t .ur...,_
...-..«:

lard Sal{'

t:ard u£ 'lhanb

WORI'\
O V ~H!&gt; ~ A~
Aust rolto
A !r ic a ~o u l h A rne r reo ~ uro p e
e tc
Co n~.tr ur t i o n
~o l e !!
~ n g i neer s Cle m o!. e tc $8(..'()0
to s ~u 000 pl us b ·pe n ses pard .
~ or emp lo y r 1 1 ~ n r
Hl formorron
""'rr lt;o Ov e r ~ ea ~ ~ rn p l o yrn e n t ,
Ho &gt;&lt; 10 11 Ba sta" Mo OJ IO / .
l XPlWitN CHl AU10 body and
p re pe rot ron ma n . A pp ly rn pe r ·
son at HrH ~ Oualit y Body !&gt;h o p ,
M rddle po r t
•
Ml:N r A llV J./l:lAROl:O odull s o r e
rr1 need of Io sier cor e h ome s. A
sala r y and be nefr l s w rll be
par d 1h rs r~ on rn h o m e 1ob that
wr ll bene fi t the lit e chan ces o f a
men tal ly re larded f-o r mor e in l o rm otr on w ri te or co li
1-osler Core
t&gt;BO t . M o rn !&gt;t
jac k son . OH 4!:1640
614&lt;Hl S·lL61 (Logan )
or b 14· 5'12-6b06 { A then!&gt; )
l: quol O pp or lunrl y l: mployer
C ~N~kAl

LABOR
wr ok . Coli
Y91 -JJ"IJ betw een 9 am 10 J JU

pm
W AN I t U 8A~Y ~ Ill i:. W ~ d ay~ a
wee k "I 10 6 W il l pay !i:l ~
weekl y or my home o t w1ll tok e
som eone l or room boa rd and
w ag e ~ fiQ'J 6:/J!l o il e1 b prn
l 0 do hous e .w o r~
worn o" or a 9 " 1. q92-3'l0 4

~ O Ml: O Nl:

.

o

.

IMMWIA H m.1 ~NIN GJ l or ~N
011 d LPN on all ~ hrlr s CCU. OH
medrcol and ~ urgr c o l Co m pe trlolle s olo r r e~ e ~~ c e l l e n t fc
rn ge be r1ef rh. , shrt l d rtl eren t ro l
Pe r so n nel
De pt ,
Co nr oe t
H olr~ r
M e dr co l
Cen te r
Golhpo lr !:o Ohi o . b 14 ~ 44 b !&gt; 10!&gt;.
A MILJUU AGtLJ Ch ns tro n lady or
co uple to stoy w i th o mrddle og
~o~ d lad y on o 14 a cr e lor iT' '}
mrl es out~ r d e th e 1-' 1 Pl eo .. ont
WV
co ty
l rm !l s
( all
J04 b7':! t,qqy
l i MB~~

CUrl ~ It good w ages and
bene l rh wr th fompon y crew
Con tocr John Ow5rony c o
Po mer o y 1-or e sl
1-'r odu f t'&gt;
Po m e roy O hro . 992 5 9b ~

WAN li:: O 10 do odd r ob~ poet
lrrne 4b~ 4])J

Wan red lu Huy

l"IMBH! POMHH)Y
d uct s lop pt •&lt;;£
sow trm ber Call
Kent Ha nb y I 44 6

:.l lomily .

l' h u r ~ .

q to 4 (- ~ /':J . t urn a t

~ r v e P o int ~ or Ches tet . l oo k fOf
" 9'"
&lt; cound &lt;&gt; o &lt;h • led W lN lTJ./ POl A l" Ot!:l. g rad e l and
'l .C W 1-' roffill . Por !land Ohro .
rob le c lo th s. $JO eo Afghan s
c lotl11ng baby It em s lar ge siz e ~ WH· l P 0 1 A l"O~::. . Hed . whrl li'
d r es 1:0 e ~
8-trock lope p loy e r .
and yell ow Phone {J 4J -:J4T/
r1ll'&gt;&lt; Harr y Brown re!&gt; td e nce .
Habe rl W . Le w is J./t ~ - Woc 1n £'
9 H ~ J!:U J
,.. ~J.I 1/ 4

4 ti ~ -

m o nth ~
94 ~ 7'1'}')

9

o ld

l:v en rngs

H~GI !, I" Uf~ 0
w e e k ~ o ld , shot s

Beag le !&gt;. 8
ond w or med .
b1 4 J67-0247 o rb l 4 JtJ7 Woi i' '

Autu Sal"•

( H~

I CI"J(j

VV IMPAlA.
49/ 7104 alt er 4 pm

Pho ne
!:r4 !»0

l C., "/ 1 C H t V ~ Ol U IMPAlA Good
co ndrt ron
Wrl l t o ~ e trodt&gt; s
94Y 17 b3

197'l
MON l A
'::I PYLH~
]ijp
e n gr ne l r ~ e brand r)ew w tt h
eve rylhtng . 141·1'd 'l b
l9'l 4 OlD ~ C U lL A ~!&gt; ~upr em e
G ood shape 9•n. "! UB I
f' ~
P H. om AM l ope o rr
1 9"/~

CAD illAC HOO ~AO O l- ul l
po w e r
ou
AM -fM
r odt o
Clea n Pho ne YY'l "1 40l

147~

PO NliA C A !:,11( t ha l &lt;hbock
bu ck e t !.eats ou l o rnot i&lt; New
rod •ol !. ond be n er y JO m p g
94 9 71H J

1r.,l /J CO UG AR X ~
r n g ~ 997 "/ 'd4J

.,

~ JI:IOO

h en

1 97~

OA l ) UN PI CKUP Good con
d rlron !,/i'9' Yl::l~ ]4"/ 9

197]

G ~AN

lORlN O ]!:II

v l:l

Oil

"1 4 ~

( HI: V Y WA G ON
$100.
( hur ( h ~ r
Hor r rsoro vrlle , Ohro .

19o i'

l:amping Kquipnll"nt

CO IN !&gt;

pac k e r wol(h es W antrd to Hmt
do~\ rrng~
..... ed d, ng bo nds
d romonds Gold 01 srlve r Col i W A N l" 1"0 ren l 2 or J b edr oom
Wogr- r Wom .,ley 141 L3Jl
howoo? a p r
01 tr a de r Ca ll
qq' )1 4'l
W ~ PI(K up IU" I-. au to bod re!&gt; bu y
mg IUJ") Io. car s sc ra p rro n bot
!Cfl es
and
me rol s
~rd e r s
For Henl
!&gt;ol vog12
!&gt; !.' l i 4
Pom ero jl
'192 ) 468
CO U Nl~ Y M O ~U Hom e Por k
Hou l e JJ nor th o f Po m e ro y
WA N I 10 bu y wond o w von "/ 4
l a rge l o h . Call Q92-"14/ Q
'l~ or 'l 6 f- ord or Che vy h ·en
rngs 44') i'b•(J
J A N O 4 HM . l urn t!&gt;hed a n d un·
!urn r ~ he d
opt~
Ph o n e
4q') !:1 43"

Yard Salr

1-UllV equrpped k rtchen
Ir vi ng roo m ~
both and
1:0 h owe r ~ w eek ly lin e n :,er vrc e
newl y de co rat ed ohd carpeted
4CI '} 736'1

'I

LAFF-A-DAY

•289.95

Free

Pomeroy Landmark
• • Jock W. Carsey. 1\19r.

!!!!!!.

Phone 99'2·2111

J,i ;

Pt li.,

r.-

v'..~

h

q!

f'\/

f'tli)ll·

'I''

';.:

l l.rl7b 1 ~ :t!&gt;O ~ u tuki rnolotrycle . I
mor e ho(se. · Ca ll 985 - :J~n
w e el&lt;day s. 9 om l o J pm .
1::1 4 :J :J 4f./1
CVC il l ll!P
and
w f'e kc nd ~

MAG NA VO )( 14 colo r po rlob le
1 V S / ~ 'l'"l'l i'TJ J .
Power 011 au to duo! ton k !&gt; .
t &gt;&lt; cc&gt;ll en r runn i ng rondrl! on .

INHf.INAHO NAL ~OO d o 1 e r t; wa y
blade W rnch . ~ leE' I ( Ob ( o m
pl e te ly rework ed l rk e 11ew
Writ lot.. e rrode s l.rl4 4 ' 'JY O ~

The Photo Place

.

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation·
S.vo 30 pel. Ia 50
on hHIIng cos
EJC,.rl•nc• and
tully lnourld
'
Froe Est.
Catl992-2772
.8·10·1mo. (Pd. I

rl.

~tn

n q-;

HOUANO cho pper I ro w
corn hPod Urr ect cut head .
Y 8 ~ J!l46

Discount
Prices

mo to r

Good

Brand
111e ~ .

QUALITY

OUTS I DE WHITE
•REO
ROOF PAINT

ALIGNMENT

SPECIAL

$}.~

Anr U.S. madt car -ttarts
extra if needed. Excludes
front-wheel drive cars.

.BRING IN

Business Bldg.
- For leaseNear ly · new building, ex ·
celfenf l ocat i on , over a m·
pie park i ng . Ideal for vouprofessiona t .offlces · retail
- who lesa le out let · an ti·
_tor e . You name it and
th e owner will remodel to

que

$~OFF
SPECIAL
PRICE
Expires
Sept. JO, 1978

Coli now for oppol~lmon"t.

suiT your needs .

CALL THE
WISEMAN AGENC:Y ·
446·3643.

Pomeroy Landmark
9.-!,..Ck W. CarMy , Mgr.

!Iii

Phoneft2-2!11

FOR!

'fl'\1'JI'iMl fii)'\l

Sunrlse Semester 10.

6 : 2$--{:hrlslop~er Closeup 10; 6:38-News Conference
&amp;; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8i 6: 45-Mornlng

Report 3; 6:So-Good Morn ing, Wesf Virginia 13.
6:Ss-&lt;:huck White Reporls 10; News 13; 7:110-Today
3 .~.15 : Good Morning America 6,13 ; CBS News 8;
Jelsons 10; 7:3()-Schoolles 10.
8:110-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10; Sesame St . 33.
9:110-Merv Grcffln 3; Phil Donahue 4,13,15; HOQan' s
9:38-Brady Bunc~ 8; Family Affair 10.
10 :110-Card Shar ks 3,15; My Three Sons 4; Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8.10; Dating Game 13.
' 10 :38-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; High Hopes 6; Price
is Right 8,10; S20.000 Pyramid 13.
I! :110-High Rollers J4,1S; Happy Days 6. 13; Lowell

byHenri ArnoldandBoblee

Thomas R,emembers 20.

1! : 38-W~eel

of Fortune 3,4,15; Family · Feud 6,13 ;
Love of Life 8,10; Sesame St . 20,33; 11:55-CBS
News 8; House Call 10.

one tener to each square, to torm

3-IS-Hc ' :

lour ordinary wol-ds.

...--------~ ZIMEA)

12 :()()--.Newscenter J; News 4.6.10 ; America Alive 15 ;

Young &amp; l~e Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 :38-Ryan's Hope 6,13 ; Bob Braun 4; Seart~ for

(J c. .·0·- "' "'V"'0

Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec . Co. 33 .

1:110-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Ch ildren 6,13;
News 8; Young &amp; The Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15.
·
1:38-0ays of Our Lives 3.4.15; As T~e World Turns
8,10; 2:110-0ne Life to Live 6,13 ; .
2:38-Doctors 3.4,1S; Guiding Llg~t 8,10; 3:1»Another World 3.4. 1S; Genera l Hospital 6, 13; Lilias
·
Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:38-Mas~ 8; Joker's Wild 10; Popeye 19; Over Easy
20.
4:110-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the Planets 4; For
Ric~er . For Poorer IS; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig
and Frlends8 ; Sesame St . 20.33; Batman 10; Dina~

J. &gt; l l· ~ ....

cial. call
Hour Service. Any d•Y·
anytime.

IN BAR

Phone 91S·3106
Jack Ginther tiS-3106

00

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

0

ID

/

0

IDULSHOI

0 []

Chester,Ohlo
10·JO·t

8·20·1 mo. (Pd.l

WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER 20,1978
S:45-Farm Reporl t3; S:S&lt;f-PTL Club 13; 5:55-

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

1

and commer·
for estimate. 24

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

4-

Channel Coble Five 7:00 P .M. - Paul Gaudino
7 :30 P.M. - Meigs at Wahama
10 :00 P .M.- 700 Club .

~THAT SCRAMBLED WOAD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

WHAI 1l-4E F"R:'ETT'Y
iATTOO AR1'15i MAD'E

ON HER

CU5TOME~.

· f.Aio'M ] 4 a cre~ . tirnb er . Dr il led
well
block building. older
trorl e r , Old Ht . 7, Chester.
Oh ro qB~ · J ti9"/ between 4 and b
prn .

HOMESifES lor so l e . 1 acre and
up . M rddleport" nea r Hu!lond .
Coli 992 -7481 .
V A -J.=HA . 30 yr . l rnoncin gJ also
refi nancing . Ir eland Mortg·age .
TJ t . St ol e , Athen s phone (614 )

S9l 3051 .

WAHW WEll d~rll r ng . William T.
G rant . 742 -2879 .
LAO Y Wi ll !&gt;if m homes or
hospital wilh pot ienh . M e r g~
Co . are a . 991 -6198

Ilk~
....
. . Ch&gt;pi,mlmti
..
$10-Sl S,OOO per yea r relill rn g ven ding eq urpmen l . l ocal·
l y No eKperience necessar y .
W e train . ln vest m efJI required .
Ph o ne 949 2763 . ' •

N t W l HIUI: bedr o om home, rec
roo m . fu ep lo ce Ior ge desk ,
go..r oge. basement . one and o
hall bnth s 1-'hone lee ( omlru&lt;; ·
ti o n
942 -34!:14 .
weekends
1-b 14 -44 b·4Sbii

furnished ,
2
building , several

HO U ~ ~

Givr Away
I:IG Hl Wl:I:K o ld trger k illen ,
gree n e ye s lo ts of pe r sona li ty .
M e rg s
H umane
~ ocie t y .
992-2597or 992 ·54 17 .

IN Miner svi lle ove rl ook rQ_g r rve r 4 bedr oo m, living
room , k i!chen
both . ulility
roorn and ba semen t. loff y
f-I e ld s '191-)8/J

acres. Nice fish ing cabin,
fruit and
Excellent

nut
trees .
retreat! NOW$7, 700 .00 .

2 BEDROOM COTTAGE
to stores, small
yard, part basement, new
carpeting, in good condi ·

- c lose

tlon . Asking S1 1,000 .00.
SECLUDEO. but close to
- Orig inal

Heal utille lur Stili

to

sell at

$20,500.00 .
NEWER RANCH ,

good

location. eQuipped kitchen,
small level lot with storage
building . Fa i r Market

AC W~

srlt •

m -3:125

I. bedroom hou se.

N ew
Ne w sl or m windo w!&gt;
ol umrn um bu il d ing '1 por { h e ~
44'1 :J1 14
l Or on Rl. I . Nrce bu i ld rr1g
4 Y '} . / ~"! ll .

3 BEDROOMS -

Older

beautiful view of the river,
must see to apprec;late .
Price $12,500.
liACRES - Moreorless, ~
bedrooms, modern bath,
large k!l c ~en &amp; dining

room , · fireplace. several
oul buildings. Owner being
transferred .

Price

$35,000.00.
CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
104W. Mlln
Pomeroy
ft2-22M
AflerHaun
C.llft2-71Jl
CONTACT:
Lolo Pouley
IMMger

Ranch

Type home , 3 bedrooms,
built-in kitchen, large liv

features . Priced

) Y ~A ( U)~

storage

ing room with w .b.f.p .•
recreation room, 3/• ·acre .
Covered carport . Many

Klll i: N !&gt; A N D oduft co r. 985 -4353 .

IN

0.

NEW LISTING -&lt;ln Shade
River, approximately S

town

216 E. Second SlrHI
BUILDING LOTS - We
a number of good
located sites for your
trailer or new home. Some
on Water and Sewer lines.

.ha~J e

RETIREMENT - Ideal
s pot on R!. 124
you' ll enjoy the

fishing and boating. Relax
in this atmosphere and
live . 3 acres plus and 3
bedroom mobile home .

BUSINESS BUILOtNG
-&lt;Jut of high water . Will
sell for less than replace ·
men1

cost , Better check on

!his for stofage.
NEW
LISTING

- 3

bedroom frame home new·
ly
painted inside, new
aluminum siding . Lots of
cupboards in the kitchen
and large full l)asement.
View of River .
SEE THIS - An extra nice
3 bedroom mobile home,
70'xl_.', central air condi ·
tione&lt;:J, on Jf• acre of land .
State Route near town . Better not wait on this one .

NEW LISTING - 5 room
frame home on corner lot
next to school in Rutland .
Nalural gas heal. garage,

Value $27.700.00.
70 ACRES, FARM - Nea r
Long Bottom. ranch lype, 3
home Is untinish·
ed . Barn
and
other
buildings , Ohio River fron ·

bedroom

. toge . A steal at $33,500 .00.
.LARGE OLDER remodeld
home in town, good paten·
tial. Close to E;" Veryfhing .

$29.000.00.
SUPER NICE

~ A · frame ,

close to
Pomeroy,
acres, !tor age building,

I COULD
HAVE A LITTLE
P1ECE 0' GROUND
TO FARM ...

PLEI'ITY 0' LAND HERE

•.. P1CK oUT A PIECE···

21/'z

11h
bathS, 3 bedrooms. kitchen .
li ving room and recreation
room w ith contemporary
fireplace. loft area , deck,
many features . $37,500. ·

OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD ANO WE NEED
LISTINGS OF ALL KINDS
FOR OUR QUALIFIED
BUYERS. CALL TODAY .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Clelond
(Realtor Anociates)
992·2lS9- 992-6191

v
1

EXCAVATING , dozeu , loader ond
backhoe work ; dUmp tru cks
Ond lo -boys lor hirv : will haul
f i ll dir.t, to soil. limestone ond
grove l. Coli Bo b or Roger Jel ·
l er s, do~ phone 992 -708Q, night
_p~o~e_99.!_- J525 or_~1~ 5~32 .

liAI!DLD
GRAYo

ALLEY OOP

WILL do roof ing, ,:on str uc1ion ,
plumb ing and heating. No lob
too Iorge or too !!moll. Phone
---------~

---

H OWERV
AND MARTIN Ex ·
co ll oting ,
septic
sysl ems .
dozer . bock hoe, dump truck ,
limestone . gro11el.
black top
pa vi ng , Rt . 1-43 . Phone 1 (bl4 )
698-733 1.

----BATHROOMS
-.

AND
Ki tchens
remodeled, cer om k tile plum bing . carpentry. ond gene1ol
maintenance . 13 years ex ·

_ _.a...__::=-_L-.~....&lt;-'-....:.....-"-'~--'

·--- ----REEV ES TRADING Posi, Pogevi lle .

t:Jr:~~::;t!;_~5~~J

REAL ESTATE AGENCY ...3643

9 Make baste
10An"'hind
~~~oe
worthless

II ScuD
ze Celestial
Zl Grimalkin

10 : 3o-Danlel

· Yesterday's Alllwer
24 Set up in
30 In a sequence
(instantly I
ZS Put
31 Sea· duck
togethe r
3% "_ Foolish
.
,
%t Old Faithful
111 mgs . . .

%7 - de tete
Z9 What ecdy·
siasts do

34 Observe
38 Golfer's
word

3,4 ; 1:5()-News 13.

Movie Channel 4 5 &amp; 7 P.M. - Late Show l PG )
9&amp; 11 P.M. - ConfesslonsolaPopPertormer IRl
19

~T-ue_s_d•_Y~·__s._P_'_·_ _-::-::-:cc::--:::-::=:-- - - -

BRIDGE

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sonta_,g,__

,.,-+-+-·nn making the right bid
not panaceas and should not

flourishes

NORTH

e

---~

~

~

~~

··-..--,:

--

1%7 HOUSE TRAIL ER 12 x 60. All
electri&lt; , furnished . a ir condi tioned . Washer and Dryer, 2
lo ts i n Horrlson vHt e 7A2· 2826.

filt60 2· or3""b;dr~m

-ith built
on add ition . laundry room .
wos h er·dryer . Excellent condi tion . ' It acre ren 1ed lo t . Albany
~.1! -~· ~ 85" before_3 pm .

() 1t7IO,NlA,I!IC ,TM"''! US,PII0t1.

~

,

+

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it: Pass_
h

w r-.....

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

ea

LAND O'GOSHEN'!!
I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO
I'M MAD AT THE
WI-IOLE WORLD !

POMEROY
.lANDMARK
JACIC W. CAIUIY Mtr
ftHONI tn·21tt
•

DoN"t·AN'IONE DO
AN'&lt;Ti-!ING

SA'&lt;

OR.

AN'1TI11NG 1

1 JUS T WANf ro

LIE IN M'f BEAN
6AG, AND SULK!

KJ932

Pass

It

Pass

Je

Pass
Pass

Pass

1+

4.

Opening lead : • 10

but decided that his hand
was not worth more th3n a
jump to three spades. This
jump is not absolutely fore·
ing , but as they used to say
back in the thirties, 99.44
percent forcing .
South was glad to go on to
game . If North had used the
heart splinter South would
have headed for a s lam . As it
turned out he did well to s top
at four s ince that was all he
made.
He could have made live ,
but he elected to play sa fe
for fo ur .

A New York reader wants
to know if the late Edward

Hymes Jr., ever won the

Vanderbilt cup:
By Oswald Jacoby
He sure did . In fact . his
and Alaa Soaiag
seven
natlonal titles inp
H
PK
ocv GMHF
PJDC
A M G G The splinter bid shows a
eluded four Vanderbilt wins.
singleton in the bid suit and
tf&lt;;EWSP ... PER ENTERPRISE ASSN t
JCD
S C V J IS support for partner's last bid ·
FECYPNMJLM
PB
suit at one and the same
(Do you have a ques tion for
DC
K MDL T
0 CV
CVD. F E CYME Stime. It is a tool f~r e&gt;&lt;peri·
the experts? Write " Ask the
Experts ," care of th i s newspalltlrdaJ'I h II Qllte: HUSBAND, WIFE AND CHI WREN eThnced rtpa rtnh~rsh1pst doenfm
·lye.
per. lndivifual questions ~ill
FORM THE WORLD'S GREATEST TEAM.-RHODA epa ners 1P mus :
exactly which jump bufs are
be answered if accompanted
LACHAR
splinters and which are just
by stamped, self,.addressed
C&gt; lm Kloc , ....,.. Syncti&lt;ato. ""·
normol forcing bids.
envelopes. The most interesting question s will be used in
Also, if you as a reader
this column and will receive
want to try them you must
copies of JACOBY MODERN.)
hear In mind that they are

y

Prlcelnclud"
Fed. T•x
not

t K Q 9
+9 754 2

Vulnerable: North..South
Dealer : North
West North East South

CKYPTOQUOTES

·

EAST
• 6
• K J 93

+AQ

One letter simply •tands for another . In this sample A. I!
used for the thru L's, X for the two O's, etc . Sincle lelters
apostrophet, the lenath end lormotion of the words are
hints. Eoeh dey the code letters are dlflerent.

Whife.Wall Co.()p;

North really wanted to

• 86 4
• 832

4Z Cornered

$92»

make a splinter bid in hearts

SOUTH

eXJIIIIISI!

..

t AJ765
4 K 10 3

• J 86

40 Large
chicken
41 Apiece

....... ..,

"':

unb1d suit.

WEST

3t Arctic

be used merely because ypu
ha ve a singleton in some

• 2

• A Q 10 7 ~
• 10 4

31Free from

9- 19-A

AQ 84

• iO 7 5

35 Sowtd of
disapproval

IETW!EN "r'H&amp;; Ba~
HI\PP"r" fAMILY A'f' YouR
OFFu:.E# ANI&gt; Tlil:. lraC.
HI\PPY fii\Ml~V Iff H~l!,
'bu'v! GoO'!' AN ut.cER.

Foster. M .D . 20; Great Performances

33.
1! :110-News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20.
I! :3D-Johnny Carson 3.4.15; Pollee Woman ~.13 ;
Gunsmoke 8; Movie " Big Parade of Comedy 10;
ABC News 33.
12 :110-Janakl 33; 12 :48-SWAT 6, 13; I :DO- Tomorrow

~------~----------------------------------------------------------~~clfy

1970 NASHUA 14 x 6 5 J bedroom
I ' 1 both , underp i nni ng, $1500
ond ossume ·loon . 9;9.2683 or
843 -33 1, .

Magazine A; Newlywed

33 .

Z8 Dutch --·--t;:;-t--t-tZI Misappropriate
3Z Salver
33 Vocal

FRANK &amp;ERNIE

PM

Garrie 6,13; News 10; Gilligan's Is. 15; Coping With
Kids 20 .
7:38-Dolly 3; Oa!lng Game 4; Mate~ Gmae PM 6;
Price is Rig~t 8; The Judge 10; T~a!'s Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeii · Le~rer Report 20.33.
8:110-0ick Clark's Live Wednesday 3,4,15; Elg~t Is
Enough 6.13; Jeffersons 8,10; Echoes ot Silver 33:

9:110-Movle " Airport ' 77" 3,4,15; Charlie's Angels
6 ,13; Movie " Are You In The House Alone? " 8, 10;
Mayor of Casterbrldge 20 .
10 :110-Vegas 6,13; News 20 .

game
Z4 Droop
%7 AUot

paneling. roof tepalr .
plumbing and con e' e l e worM .
Free es timot &amp;s . Ca ll 992-7785
o1.k tor Wallace Morris .

? : DO-Cross-Wits 3;

James M ichener's World 20.

Tyke's

Hie .

Hogan ' ! Heroes 15 .

6:110-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:38-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20 .

8:38- ln T~e Beginning 8,10 ; Live From Lincoln Center

r:--r;--r.--r.i'"'"1.,-

Man's
nlckname

W£ DO pointing, gutter , &lt;ail ing

A78xll

'

7 Walk

8 Black

~~=;;;::~£~!l! feature

;;!;

AUTOMOBIL( ·INSURAN CE been
cance lled? l ost your oper ators
li cense? Phone 992 -214 3.

Housinq

CAll
. THE WISEMAN

%Took up
membership
3 Grunt
4 KnighUy
title
5 Geraint's
love
1 Modify

10.

Tyler Moore lO i

DURESS

DOWN
1 Unfriendly

21 Capone

Groc:arias, dry good ~ . hord·
wore , feed , lock shop Specia l
• ?5_1b o f dog food. $3 .8_!1 .
...

Associates

EXCELLENT FARM BUY - 141 ACRES - Tho
owner's age provonts her from continuing 111 operate
the farm and she desires an Immediate solo. 50 to 60
acres llllablo wllh oome very good croek bottam ~l!ltop land . T~e bolance' ls In pasture &amp; Woods : Tht 6
room home Is good (dots need oome modernization I.
large all purpose bern &amp; Mverol outbuildings. The
minerals go wllh II and ll 's located In on area whtre
gas, oil &amp; coal · ~ave been found lo be plonllful. NNr
Rutland . 60' s.

CREEK GUNNER

\ Answer : Poured on the politician-SCORN

ACROSS
1 German
novelist
6 Beverage
9 Putting on
r - --11 Society Ms.
12 City in
Oregon
13 Gooe
14 Ending for
,1;-l 'i:':Z~~ pun or gang
,_~- 1~ Pay a caD
17 Famous
trumpete
L.....:._:_-t.~-"--- II Goofy r

She'll be
cominq bl!
i.his alle4'

.P':' i~n~e.:. 992_:~5 .

Custom•Po~y

H t•, 11h111"' ter .~

Jumbles: HELLO

~~by THOMAS JOSEPH

garden , anct au turnlture .

Out of flood .
LIST
WITH
THE
LEADER , STARTED IN
REAL ESTATE tN ltSI.
CALL 992-33l5 TO SELL . 4
SALESPEOPLE
TO
SERVE YOU .
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Te•ford
Sue P. Murphy

1

---- - - --.._.r ---,...,----. I t - Olsen.

PULLINS EXCAVATING . Compl~te
Service. Phone 992· 7478.

CHIMNEY FIRES ore no fun ! Ho ve
yours cleonvd lh e dust len w ay
The
Ch i mney
Sweep .
614 -373 -6057 .

.

ttl.

l:XCAVAltNG . dozer . backhoe
and ditchef . Charl es R. Hotfie ld ,
Bo&lt;k
Hoe
Stl r v i u~ .
Rutland . O hio . Phone 741 -2008 .

-742·2348 .

d

ester ay s

.Jtn1t1M Book No. 10. wtttt
11*1 t 10 pum., II~ tor S1 .35 poet·
.,.ad from Jumtlle, f'JO 1N1 14AI.Pitl• , Bux 34, Nofwood, N.J. 07848. 1ndude
your rwne, ~. $ oodl and mMe c:hlckl ~ 10 ~- pi4A11boc:*e.

-~----p-~-

MACHINE Repairs , ser vice , b ll makes , m -2784. Th e
Fabric
Shop .
Pomeroy .
Authorized Singer Sole) and
__Se~v~~ s horp_!~~ino~s.:.._

s:n

(Answers tomorrow)

MOST CITY KIDS 00 -- ·

yjiS~

REPAIR

Bunch

5:110-Voyage lo t~e BotiQm of t~e Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
-· Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mlsler Rogers' Ne ighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle. USMC 10; Emergency One ·l3 ;
Petticoat Junction 15.
5:38-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33 ; Mary

AN ( I I 1 I I X I I 1 )

Answer here:

H~ · HEH '"SURE, ..

GfE .. · ISURE

Sweepers, 1oasters , irons, oi l
sma ll applian ce~ . lawn mower .
nel(t lo Sto le High w ay Garage
on Route 7, Phone (blA ) 985·
~

HOMt . 3 bedroom . 1 ',
bo rh s. t-ully carpeted
lirnyl
., ,d ing wrt h si ngl e cor garag e .
lar ge lo t rn ~ul land on New
l una kood .
000. 7 42 · 2~62 .

MAIN
POME.B.OY.
_.j;-..::
' .. .

·------HWOOD BOWERS
3825.
-StWING
·.

,....-----"::;;:--"11-

l"W O I:X l~A nt ce l o ts in Hocine
w olh I 'J x ()() Hotlypork !railer .
t-'o r h oll)l furn i!&gt;hed 18 • dO c e m e n t block burldrng with shed .
l o •g e garden spac e wi th frui t
lrCE' l&gt; 444 - '1 4 1~ .

BRADFORD . Auc1ioneer , Com p lete Se rvice . Phone 949. 2487
or !l49-2000. Rodne , Ohio . Critt
Bradford .
-

4:38-Little Rascals 3,15; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve cartoon

llTTLEORP HA N ANNIE

AND RECEIVE
4,000·6,000 Sq. Fl .

OFF~

t.OO!&lt;.Ii'J'

R~idential

New or R_
epair
Gutters and
Downspouts

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth SlrHt-Gff
Mill StrHI l::::t behind
Tony's Carry
t. ·
Open S.turdoy 10-4 p.m.
Sunday t2 noon Ia 3p.m.
8·31 ·1 mo.

TIPPED'EM

THE-'1 WERE

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

N~W

SJ~ .

--WHEEL

9.7. 1 mo.

H. L WHITESEL
ROOFING

WOOD HEAT .

f- AHM ~OR sole . Hou se . 2 bor11 s,
trorlet Lo rge pond l O.ocre~ or
Bi' acr e s "/ 42 2Sb6

home, some remodeling ,
~

Ph. 992-2141

Pl&gt;meroy, D.

GUI!:!1&gt;5&gt;E~ WHAT 3UE\S5ES WHO

1 :45--News 13 .

S&amp;"' P .M . - Island of Dr . Moreau { f-lU)
7 &amp; 11 P.M. - Damnation Alley iPG I

I

Estlmatts.

osklns, .. 949-2160. Free

AND THRIOC.

WHEW ! THR5E-

JU~T CHECI&lt;.IN'
OUT A T!P- WHICH
TURNEP OUT TO liEA FAL~e ALARM ...
OKAY. ON YEI't
WAY. ~UDPIE~!

Chart.tt~l

J ,A;

Heroes 8; Emergency One 6; Match Game 10.

All ~sat roofing, gutters
nopouts, 20 yeors
uporlonco. All work
~uorontoed .
Ca II Tom
&amp;

.

I H~H OW fo ur bedr oom hou se in
Po rn ero y Both and ' , , Cen tral
lr c-o tr ng . Yl.rl'l -707 ll .

'197 2HJ2.

..,_...~-

1

Muffler
Brakes • ,
Shocks · Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

new

1~ t- 0 01 t-IHt:ff Gl A !, ~ boot J S
h p J oh n ~ o n mo tor and trai ler
SJ/JO b4J 4b94.

SERVICE

MIND TEl.l.II&gt;JG
U~ WHAT THIS
IS ALL ABO~r

lhavie

33; 1 :oo-Tomorrow

I 3.

1-0UJ./ IJ ~~ ( rogp r ~ . 7 whil e le i ·
! 1res .
Br and n e w .
re r cd
1 41 :lb76 .
WHU: l~R .

CAPTAIN EASY

MOORE'S

CHEAP!

1HI-I tt !S tDI-lOOM house J acr es
CAl 00 hydraulic do zer . Need s
lond C l o~e l o school , prrced
r eo~o nobl y 94:? -)1 ]6 .
ro llot s M od e l 7H Potd ~ ~)OU
~ ell SJOO(l Wil l delr ve r fr ee
l HJ./I: l: HH&gt;HOOM c arpeted home ,
74/ J09J evenrn_gs .
f u lly rn!.uloted wr lh 1'1 bath s.
1HlJ ( I( t-'A~ l ~ . Arr bog oux rlr or11
rr1 Po rnero )l . Rea sonably prk ed .
o .o~ l e srngl e 2· 5peed o.o~ l e and
Pho ne 497 J ~n .
tr o rne ~ · s peed gear bo11 . fr on t
f IV f !o'OO M hou !&gt; e and both ,
a x le 7U • lU lu es. d•ese l m o tor
r ernode led . full y carpe led. Moy
port ~ . A ll from 1969 lnte t no ·
bL• ~ een of fer :J prn . Phon e
I ton al Model 1850. ~ ... ening ~ ,
Y47 ,~YJ J
"14 / J09J .

l H~ t l:

rtL tt2-ZI74 .

For The Best
· Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

· MUV6 GO.MPANY

ti 19J9 mod el l l nok c,
a nd runs lrk e new Wrl l rak e 1Hlo!~l IH·OROOM frame ho me rn
tr odes . 1/49 ')7 ~J
Mrddl eporl . ( o11991 -J4 57

!97 1 Dl: l" H01 1 Olf ~ l:l wrlh clu tch
ondgeor bo • $1500 )()()O ft 4
strucluro l p1pe Good !Ji o •r1
e nd ! lOO ofoot . 'l 42 J09 ~

SMITH NILSON
MOTORS, INC.

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

'llleAPPAh1GIIJAH·

~A~MAlL

0 ~ 0 0 1 bru ~h hog. Brand ne w
Hea vy d u t,.. :JO ft . hoy e lev ot o1
44 9-'1763 .

Aute&amp; Truck
Repalf
Also Transmission
· ' Repair
Pho(le 992-5682
4-311-IIC

Call ljs Today

tor" 10.

5 :3()-New56; Sanlord &amp; Son B; Elec. Co. 10,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.
6·110-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3()-NBC N~s3,.,1S; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8,10: Over Easy 20.
7:110-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magaz i ne~; Newlywed Game
6,13; Pop Goes T~e Country B: News 8; Gilligan's
Is. IS; Lock, Stock and Barrel 20; How To Buy A
Home 33.
·
Th R
sa·
7:38-Hollywood Squares 3; Lei's Go To e ace • .
Dating Game 4; Candid Camera 6; Price Is Righi
10; Donna Fargo 13; Abbott &amp; Coslello 15; MacNeiiLe~rer Reporl 20,33.
8:00-Grandpa Goes To Washington 3,15; Happy Days
6,13; Jacques Cousteau 4: Paper Chase 8, 10; In
Performance At Wolf Trap 20.
8:38-Lavernl!' &amp; Shirley 6,13: Live From Wolf Trap

o.

traiture.

Farm Park 33 .

9:110-Movle " Alrporl ' 17" 3,4, IS ; Three's' Company
6,13; Movie " The S~oo!lst " 8,10; Union Maids 20;
Movie " The S~ootlst" 8.10; Unl~n Maids 20 .
9:30-Taxi 6, 13; 10 :110-Starsky &amp; Hutc~ 6, 13; News 20.
10 :38-Like II Is 20; To Be Announced 33.
11:110-News 8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20; Over Easy 33.
11 : 38-Jo~nny Carson 3,4,15; Movie " Winning" 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33; Movie "T~e Collec·
12 : ~Janakl

'llo mile off Rt. 7 IIY-1'111 •
51. Rl. 124 llowonl Rwtlond,

portra itt . We use lrldifion•l settings •nd also
feature
outdoor por-

N~ W

l'f/ 2 HONDA C B~UU . Coli olr er
j prn 9'12 / 1:07
A VON YOU con go to wo rk when
the krd s go to H hoo l ~e ll
Avon Vo u se t )'Our ow n hou r !.
~o you co11 be hom e when th e
t..rd ~ ge l home And th e har der
yo u wor l-. . !he more yo u ea rn
Coli rodo y Ann 1 h o mo ~ A von
Or !&gt; trrc t M anager "/ 47 J] ';,.&lt;J

we are currently making
appointments for senior

I !Ji l f- 0~0 ' , ton cornper speci aL

s t 4 1~

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER tt.tt71

I

~ARN

COUPON

In 1881, President James

A tho1J8ht for the day :
James A. Garfield , 20th
president of ·the United
Stites, utd, '"I'hta great .. :.'.-..._;-;;
,.lion tatoo IP'•t to look for I m sure you wouldn 't want
mere · rewJWe but Ill' the to live in OIM! of lh01e duD
leCUrity of tbe future I would developments where aU the
. do everything."
houses look alike!"

let Pomeroy landmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with co-op water
softener. Model UC·SVI .
Now Only

H OO M ~

YAf./ 0 ~ AU: T IU !&gt; y&lt;om ore J t ,
A PI
1-0 r.t r e n t
Oo w n! o w n
M1d d lepo rl M on l ue s Wed
Pa m e r oy Portly l ur nr, hed. ~ i ll'
r oom apl. rn cou n try o n good
elec trrc heal ,
new .
ro od
gar de n !&gt; po l po st ure l o r beet .
A vorlobl e
Oo .
I
Ph one
r,ttr; J 2Ul ofte i 5 pm

Garfield died in E lberon ,
N.J ., of gunshot wo•mds
Inflicted by a disgruntled
ofttcer-eeeker on July 2.

I \I!

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

IW O I:UOHOOM lr o1 ler . A dul l !t
on ly 99'1 J:J'J4

If- YOU ho11e o serv rc e l o oll er
w o n t to buy o r sell sorn etht ng
O Nf- HI: ORO OM m obrle hu rne
oe look rng for w o rk
or
9&lt;11 2~ 9b
w ha tever
you II get res ul ts
I O\ Ier w rl h o ~ent, nel Won t A d IW O Hf-O~ O OM tro1l er qq'} . 'JYiO
oi ler !&gt; pm .
Co11 99 / /1~ 6
G A RA G l ~ AU: T hur ~ and ~r r 9
ro 4 Hrggsoes l M a nor ofl CH 18
o l l op o l to \ l e r n Hrgh ~c h oo l
hrlt

~.rlr

J':J::rl .

Let us test your water

3~

"(

'

GMMJE

8·2 1 mo.

call

AK C

19"/4 O A l~ UN 1-'ICKU P
'19'l ·b 19"} of l et ' prn

II

pi~TRACY

ROGER HYSBl

(Bob Hoeflich)
,09 High St.
Pomeroy

t·~;_r1J&gt;•'ili' !\1&gt;11:

Ch cs hrr e Joi' CJ"ICf '"J or Jb l Ulllb
I OVAHl t WHII"l ~ n ow drrlr gr eat 1Y"/ t; ' . ton Ch evrol e t p1 ckyp 4speed J5() e ngrne :J rn ch Hee se
P YH~NI::I: !&gt;
Puppr e s
Ph o ne
hrt ch
~s. c e l l e nl
co ndol ro n
t b1 4 bb ·I . :Jb 38
Ph o ne qcrt !&gt;J4ti
BLA CK LABF(ADOR r e rrie ver pup·
p oe 1:0 . AK( regi stered ( ham l 'li'J ri:~HY 1HAIHW 'J"I fi A .C ,
•o il o ur own mg po w er con·
p ron
b loo dlmc
W hl'! lped
l: xcell e nl
co ndr l ro n ,
ve • ter
b -A-7t:l . Phone 6 14-b67 ~ UJ Y
!,4500 frrm 4 G ood year l 'lti - 1!&gt;
ev e n mg s 0 1 w ee k en d s.
lr res and whee l s appr o• 'lOO
l-OR 3Al l:. Borde r &lt;o l lre p u pp re\ .
m tles $300. Con n lr um pel w rlh
Pho n e '192 -ti!Ob .
ca se e• cellenr condrtr o n $100.
"1 41 ·1b6l .
AKC WI:GI!,li:RfO !&gt; ob eroon Hu sky

f- or esl Pro l o r ~ l on dm g l i(A VH l ~AH t H l or !&gt;Ole 1917
9'-1/ !&gt;%!&gt; or
M ark lwor n 11/lt . "1 4 :/7~06
bJ "IO
l l&lt; i' 4
PH OWL ~H
1!1 h
~elf
O LO f- U it N I1 U~ t 1ce b o ,. e:. bra ss
ron tooned ~ lee p !&gt; 6 141 'l~ "l'l
bed s rron b eds desh e t&lt;
com ple l e house hold s W r rl e l r,ob C AMPING I RAILI:.~ S8UO
'J4 i ;J1H
M 0 M tller It t 4 !J omeroy o r
c otl 9'rJ II W
OLO

f· r)l' h
C. I

GH IMI:!, GOLO~N ." Hed Oe li crou!&gt; .
N. G o lden Oe l i c io u ~ appl e ~ h tJPcts rur Sale
po trt ck
Or ( ho r d
!:1 ~
M~'l
t:. 14 .ft69-:J i'!l 5.
HOOf- HOl LO W Hor ses Buy se ll
!rode or trorn . Ne w and u ~ e d
soddl e5 Ruth Ree11e s Alba n y . t Ar.' CO ~N . Sl pe r bu . Corn
'.b l4 ) 6r·HfJ7 90 .
she ller ~ 5 !&gt;0 . J.O. N o ~ rnowr ng
mach ine. $100 . lnt l:iote"r Sl400.
RI !&gt; IN G !,l"AR Ke11n e ls. 8oardrn g
Afl e r b prn r oll 'lti ' ·41J l or
oil ,. br eed!&gt;
a nd q roo n1ing

&lt;.Jr.n

( H IP
W OO[)
Pa l e S mo •
d rorne1e r 10 on lor ge5 t end !iB
per ton Hundl e d slob , St.&gt; per
to n Oe lrvered to Oh ro Pol le t
Co J./t 1 !J omero y 9CI2 / 6B9

!&gt;A l ~ .

ches , ilou\e church , lo c1Brres.
~ eo u trful
~e ll or
swo"p lor
camper o l equa·l value . )&lt;'e
Har vey lenm ond PO 8o:w 63,
fio(ine , Ohio by Wogn er Hard
wore Store
'

POMEROY
LANDMARK

I

t-The DeUy.!lenttnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Sept.l9, 19'18

DO WITH M't'SELF NOW

THAT I GOT ALL MY
CHORES

DONE

�'

..

-.

--- ...
-

:

'f"

•

.. . -

10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 19, 1978

Vance dispatched to Mideast for talks
ByHELENmOMAS
UPI Wblte HOIIS.e Reporter
WASffiNGTON (UPI) _
President Carter is sending
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance to the Mideast today to
bid for Arab backing for the
Camp David agreements
before hard-line " rejectionists" have a chance to
undeqnine his achievement.
Th
·
,_
e~e w~s . urgency ~~
Vane~~ mission to . Saudi
Arabl8 ~ Km~ Khahd and
Jordan s Kmg Hussem ,
becdaauset' doppolnetnhtshof!Anwlar
Sa
s eaw1
. · t e · fsrae•s
were movmg just as ast to
brmg down the fragile
" framew ork for peace"
constructed in sessions unlike
any the modem world had

it has not do~e in his
presidency.
At the end, he looked up to
the
Capitol
galleries,
speaking as a Christian,
addressed Egypt's Sadat and
Israel's Menachem f!egin, a
Moslem and a Jew . He
repeated for them these
words of Jesus Christ :
" Blessed
are
the
peacemakers for they shall
'

Carter - smiling triumpha nt , • optimistic
and
politically enriched · by his
handiwork - went before
Congress and, through
television and radio. before
the American people Monday
night to report on how he had
made fonncr foes agree and
to savor that intense personal
success.
Congress cheered Carter as

Da yton sch 00 empIoyees
-- ~

·

United Pl'ess International
Mon t go m ery Co u n I y
aside for the moment as
she riff's deputi es today
began arres ting striking
school employees in Dayton
and about 200 school emSQUAD RUNS
ployees in the Midview School
The
Middle port
fire
department's emergency unit District in Lorain County
went on strike while tea chers
answer ed two calls Monday.
At 2:12 p.m .. the squad in Lakewood voted to strike
went to Leading Creek Road Wednesday.
Strikes by sc hool emfor R. L. Miller who was
ployees
cont inued
in
taken to Holzer Med ical
Cleveland and Logan.
Center .
Deputies arrested between
At 6:46 p.m., the squad
40 and 5() schoo l employees,
went to Wolf Pen Road for
incl uding Roberta Hunter,
Alice Ru ssell who ha d
pr esi dent of the Dayton
received lacerati ons and
Education Association, who
severa l possi ble bone frac·
were picketing in front of the
lures in a fall. She was taken
school
bus garage in Da;1on
Memorial
to Veterans
in
an
attempt
to •1ilp buses
Hospital whe r e she wa s
ruMing
.
from
admitted .
Sixty-two of the system's
• 200 bus drivers voted during
the weekend to seek union
SEEKS DIVORCE
representation. About 140 bus
Vaptyolia Lo uise Taylor , drivers joined the strike by
Pomero y, filed suit for 2,700 school employees on
d ivo r ce in Meigs County Monday.
Common Pleas Court against
A Montgomery Co unty
Lo nn ie K. Taylor, Mid - Common Pl ~as Court judge
dleport. charging gross last week handed down an
neglect of duty and extreme
i njunction
prohibitin g
cruelty .
picketing.
,

Classes continue to be held
in the 37,000 student Dayton
school system on a staggered
basis.
Negotiations were held
with a federal mediator at
Dayton Monday without
progress reported on pay and
other .contract demands for
about half Of the Dayton
school system 's clerical
workers, represented by the
Ohio Association of Public
School Employees. The
clerical workers have indicated they may also join the
strike.
The
Midview
School
District, near Elyria, has
4,000 students and Superin- ·
tendent John Beatty said
schools would be open with
classes taught by supervisory
personnel.
No
new
negotiations have been
scheduled In the strike.
Members of the Lakewood
Teachers As sociatio n
Monday
night
overwhelmingly
voted
to
authorize a strike for Wed·
nesday morning . The 319
teachers will walk out unless
there is agreement before the
deadlihe on a new contract.

..

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'.

I

•
receives
lrlgh honors
Jana K. Burson, dliughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Buraon,
Route I, Shade, baa been
named a commended student
in the 2~h amual National
Merit Scholarship Program,
Meigs High School Principal
James Diehl, Jr., announced.
This honor recogni&amp;es each
student who presents an
outstanding performance on
the preliminary scholastic
aptitude test, National Merit
Qualifying Test .mlch was
administered nationwide to
high school . juniors in ()c.
tober, 1977. Miss Burson, now
a senior, has been presented
a letter of commendation.
A total of almost 35,000
commended
studenti
throughout the United States
are being honored by the
National Merit Scholarship
Corporation.
Students In this group
represent the top five percent
of more than one- mllllon
participants, in the merit
program.
Although commended
students score~ slightly
below the level required for
merit program participants
who were named semi·
finalists and who will con·
tinue in ·the competition for
merit scholarships to .be
awarded in 1979, each
commended stu·den~ has
demonstrated exceptional
academic promise.
To increase their op·
portunlties for college ad·
mission and financial aid the ·
National Merit Scholarship
Program has offered the
names
of commended
students an opportunity to
have identifying information
sent by the corporation on
two higher education in·
stitutions selected by the
student.
In addition, the program
makes it possible for
reglqnaUy accredited U. S.
colleges and universities to
receive home addresses of
commended stUdents, on a
cost basis, . so that an institution may contact any of
these promising students
directly.

Coal .••
_ (Continued from page I)
utilities and industry use coal
burning equipment.
Federal regulations need to
be changed because they
establish limits on the
aasumption that utility
boilers and industrial pl1111ts
o~erate at 100 per cent
capacity 36:i days a year, he
said .
The proposed new Ohio
plan would allow many coal
burning plants to operate
under
an
established
"maximum operating rate. "
" This wiU benefit many
· industrial facilities which
generally operate at less than
· two-thirds of total de.llgn
capacity," he said.
The agency's new emission
limits would be " less
stringent" than the federal
regulations, Williams ad·
mitted.

TO BE CHARGED

IRONTON, Ohio (UP!)
Charges were expected to be
filed today in Sunday's fatal
stabbing of Bobby Lee
Galloway, 47, Ashland, Ky .
Galloway, an employee of
an auto parts store, was
found dead at the side of a
rural road near Coal Grove,
Ohio.
·
Authorities said he had
been stabbed several times.

·Inflation-fighting measures on Carter agenda
•

ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.
(UP!) - President Carter
told a ,United Steelworkers
convention today he will
announce soon inflation fighting measures - almost
certain to be wage-price
guidelines - that will be fair
to business and labor.
"In the near future, Ill will
announce a strengthening of
our limited arsenal of
weapons against inflation,"
Carter said in his prepared
text.
The president said nothing
about wage-price guidelines,
but it is known that his

economic advisers

recommended guidelines that , Carter asked the steel·
will soon be unveiled.
· ·workers "to hear what I have
In a response to AFVCIO to say with open minds and in
President George Meany, a s pirit of cooperation and
who told the steelworkers patriotic concern.''
convention Monday that
He said he had no hesitation
Carter should not impose " in calling upon the conguidelines science of the United Steelwage
price
because workers would have workers of America and the
to bear the brunt, Carter American labor movement"
said :
to help fight inflation.
"! can tell you today that
It is understood the
what we do will be fair . It Will g uidelines will prop ose
not penalize labor or any limiting wage increases to
other group in our society.
about 7 percent a year and
uAt the same time, " he price hikes on goods to 5.5
added, "it will be tough. I percent. The program would
will ask for restraint and be voluntary, but the
have some sacrifice from alL'
government would apply

Coal battle
•
•
contznuzng
COLUMBUS (UPI) - State
Attorney General William J.
Brown has carried his running battle with the Ohio
Power Co. over the burning of
Ohio coal to the parent
c6mpany in New York.
Brown wrote Tuesday toW.
S. White, president of
American Electric Power
Co., New York, which owns
Ohio Power, charging that ·
instead of reducing its
dependence on western coal,
Ohio Power has actuaUy been
increasing its depdendence.
The attorney general also
suggested that Ohio Power
modify its price and service
agreement, which is on file
with the Public Utilities
Commission of . Ohio, to
prohibit the excess cost of
western coal to be passed
through to the consumer. He
said the modification could
contain e~ceptions for energy
shortages.
Brown said officials of Ohio
Power testified before aU . S.

pressure through various
sanctions to try to force
business and labor to stay
within the prescribed limits.
Ca rter has said consistently that he will never
impose wage and pri ~e
controls. But wage-price
guidelines have been used in
past administrations to curb
inflation and have been
recommended by Carter 's

"Such a policy is morally
wrong," he declared.
" To bring inflation under
conlrol , we mu st have
cooperation among business,
labor and government," he
said. " This is indisputable."
He said that the naton has
suffered from severe in·
nation for 10 years, but added, " Our current inflation is
certainly not due to excessive

advisers.

wage · increases or i-espon-

The president said he s ib I e
gover nment
rejects " the policies of the programs."
past" in waging a war on · Carter arranged the flight
inflation " by throwing to New J ersey for a ground·
millions of Americans out of breaking ceremony for a
work."
Federal
Aviation
Ad·

VOL. XXIX NO. 110

MIDDLEPORT OHIO

1Continued !tom page t)
new fire hydrants and accepted the mayor's report for
the month of August showing
receipt.; in the amount of
$4,732.10.
Council commented that
payments lor persons owning
cemetery lots are now due.
Cost is $5 a year for a five
grave lot or $1 per grave ..
Payments may be sent to the
office of the mayor.
1 Council trinsferred $5,500
from general fund to the
cemetery fund. The meeting
was opened by prayer bY
councilman Lou Osborne.
Attending were Mayor
Andrews; Jane Wahon, clerk,
Geri Walt~n. treasurer,
Young, Wehrung, Osborne
and Larry Powell, coun •
cllmen, and Jack Krauuer.

Access
road
"
poses problem
Once again, the access road
to the multi-purpose building
was discussed at great length
when the 'Meigs Co unty
commi ssioners met
in
r egula r sess ion Tuesday
night .
The road in question, if
constructed, would originat,e
near the bottom of Mulberry
Heights and lead to the new
multi' purpose buildin g . It
would cost approximately
$180,000. The money for the
construction was received as
part of a block grant from
HUD.
It was pointed out that

tons.
Instead, said Brown ,
" western coal purchases
increased to well over 'four
million tons. "
He added that records for
the first half of 1978 show
" that over 2.3 million tons of
western coal have been
delivered to the Gavin plant."
" In sum, contrary to Ohio
Power's public pronoun ·
cements , western coa l
consumption
has
not
decreased," wrote Brown.
"In fact, it has actually increased during the past three

.,

SEVERAL POMEROY STREETS are being
resurfaced bY the Shelly Co. Receiving the treatment are
Butternut Ave. , pictured, most of Mulberry Ave ., Breezy

Zimmer plant findings coming
MOS&lt;XlW, Ohio (UP!) - The Nuclear Regulatory
Commission is expe~d to report in !pur to six weeks findings
of its on-sight investisation this week of allegations that
support trays are faulty at the Zimmer nuclear plant.
Edwin Hofstadter, a focrper industrial supervisor for
Husky Products Inc., of Florence, Ky ., has charged in a letter
to the cmunission that Husky used "inferior and weak
material" in 1974 and 1975 to make trays that support power
and control cables at the nearly completed plant.

Post caught in big squeeze
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The Cincinnati post is caught in a
"!lqlleeze" ol declining revenues, swellin~ expenses and
dwindling readership experienced by big city . evenins newspapers, a newspaper broker and financial consultant said
Tuesday ,
Evening papers without Sunday editions, like the Post,
have eapecially suffered from advertising sapped by television
and radio, Vincent J . Manno testified at hearings on a
proposed joint operating agreement between the two large
· Cincinnati newspapers.

Carter visiting Colwnhus
(X)LUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio Democrats wW try again
Saturday to put on their biggest fund-raising event of the faU
with President carter the featured speaker.
1be reception, expe~d to attract more than 1,000 party
loyalisla at $125 apiece, was postponed from last Saturday
when the president decided to stick with the Mideast peace
·
negotiations at Camp David, Md.

Orild injured
on playground
The emergency unit of the
Middleport fire department
was called to the playground
at Middleport elementary
school at 3:47 p .m . Tuesday
where six-year~ld Joseph
Gilkey had fallen from a
piece of equipment and
received a possible fractured
arm . He was taken to Holzer
Medical Center.
At 7:10 p.m . the lire
department cheeked out an
exhaust fan at You ng 's
Market and at 8: 13 p.m. went
Ill the Kelly Mullins rO!iidence
on former Route 7.
A patient had been taken by
private car to a hospita l.
At 9:40p.m. the squad went
to 549 Headley St. foc Evelyn
Murray who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans .Memorial
Hospital where she was
admitted.

Ohio Power Company has
notified the Federal Energy
Regulatory
Commi~si o n
(FERC) that it was temporarily halting work on the
in stallation of generatin g
units in the Racine Dam near

Racine.
Charles
A.
Hell er ,
executive vice president of
Ohio Power, said the com·
pany wa s deferring the
co ncrete phase of con·
struction until next spring, in
order to prepare some design
changes aimed at reducing

Weather
Partly cloudy , warm and
humid through Thursday .
Highs today will be between
85 and 90, with a low tonight
between 65 and 70. Scattered
showers and thundershowers
Thursday afternoon, with
high temperatures near 85.

SMALL
MEDIUM

WGE
£mA LARGE
I

Olle......J-.

,,

.)

Heights and a section of West Main st. The 150,1100 for the
project came from $20,000 in . federal revenue sharing
funds and $30,000 borrowed by the village . (Photo by
D&lt;rsel Thomas ).

Installation work halted

Soeour new foiiMiectlcn of
hooded Z l - ftollt IWMt
1hlrts tor m:~r.s.ttd colon
In ollller 1 f
lined style
or "'""mot lned. Stock ""
now on wlwlt you IIHd.

VIBri'S IN POMEROY - VilllinC In Pomeroy
ru..18J afternoon were Senator Anlhany J . Celebreue,
Jr., the Democratic ncmln• for 9tcrtlary ol State and
Rep. Rill
o.ftld lllltrlct. Shown 1-1', are, J8JIIM
lllerlff .lamll Proffttl llld ,..... Botllh,
cmjmf"onlra. Celebr1v ljiOIWed Senate Bill m
"'*~! IJ'Ued on Friday. It approprlllel 1331,000 for
relmllttrllmmt In non-nt~illratlon counllel which were

'
for future development
Commissi on presi dent ,
Henry Wells stated " alter
reviewing the outline of the
proposed road from Mulberry
Ave. to the multi-purpose
building, I am of the opinion
that the fut ure besii nterest of
this could best be served by
aba ndon ing this part of the .
project and concentrate on
future access from Union

since engineering work has

years."

ijjlllii)~_Th_e_w_o_rld_To_d_a_y_

PRICE Fl FTEEN CENTS

WEDNESDAY, S~PTEM BER 20, 1978

)•'

'~

enttne

Senate subcommittee 18
months ago that the company
would phase out or reduce
western coal at its Gavin
plant at Cheshire.
He said Charles Heller ,
executive vice president, told
the U. S. Environmental
Protection Agency recently
that the Gavin plant had
reduced western coal con·
sumption to three million

HOODED
SWEATSHIRT

Pom~

•

at y

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Zip-Front

Elberfelds In

ministration
experimental
The prog ram would be matters," the president said,
station, followed by the ad- voluntary, but the govern· ca lling this cooperation " a
dress to
the
United ment would flex its muscle significant
development."
Steelworkers of America.
through various sanctions to
Carter also met with the
In his speech Mon da y, try and force business and cast of " AU in the Family,"
Meany stopped short of labor to comply.
which was in Washington for
refusing to go ·along with a
On Tuesday, Carter had a ceremony in which Edith
guidelines program , but what the White House called and Archie Bunker's chairs
made it clear labor was likely a "f ri endly conversation " were placed on display at the
to object uriless the ,burden with Chai Tse-min, the new Smithsonian Insititution.
was divided equally between head of China 's diplomatic
He called the long-running
'Yorkers and industry.
special interest section in Nonnan Lear comedy 11 8
The actual guidelines have Washington and told him , tremendous show that really
not been released by Carter, "You have already begun to has chan ged the conbut are expected to propose work with us on student sciousness of our country."
And he sa id he hoped
limiting wage increases to exchanges and cons ulting
about 7 percent a year and with our business leaders on someday " someone will put
price hikes on goods to 5.5 improved cooperation toward something o! mine" in the
percent .
oi l and other important · Smithsonian .

•

e

ELBERFELD$

There is no penalty for premature withdrawal in the event of the
death of the Certificate owner .

&amp;6

De Iegat_IOD

24 persons

make a mtllion

CERTIFICATE

warfare in Lebanon the in· two weeks.
tervention of United Nations'
For all the joyful triumph,
peace forces have been profound difficulties stood as
unable to sto~..
obstacles to the peace
. H1 gh administration of- ~tructure .~or whic~ a
f1cials. said they expected
framework was built m 13
~usse1~ to accept the summit days and 12 nights of difficult
mvitatlon that he participate negotiations. . .
m the talks on the West Bank
The heads of Iraq, Algeria,
- Issues left ~ettled by South Yemen and the
Sadat smce they mvolve land Pales_tinian Liberation
taken from Jordan they had Orgaruzation were sched~led
no assurances.
to open their own summit in
Sadat revealed he had · Damascus today to draw up
talked with Hussein by plans for making sure the
telep.hon e several times Camp David accords never
during the summit.
take effect.
Crt
8 er 11
e ephonedH usse1n
o
Monday afternoon. The king
was noncommittal. He said
And - m a hint of even h
t d t
t d. th
·
deeper
American
in· /
want" S dot s8u 't
~
(Continued from page I l
volvement in the fraternal Caocrtumen s da Sa • d egm ahn
Leadership for Southeastern
The association rejected an bloodshed that haunts the
er Signe un_ay mg t.
Ohio, Kentucky and West
,impasse panel 's recom· Middle East - Carter said He cut short a Mediterranean
Virginia at a cost of $150. The
mendation of a $600 increase the United States now must vac~tlon and returned to hiS
council conducts workllhops
in the $9·600 starting salary. " join in an effort to bring to capital.
for ad mInis t rat or s
The teachers want an ad- an end the co nflict and
The Ca~ro _newspaper. AI
throughout the year.
ditional
$200
dollars . terrible
sufferi ng
in Akhbar said direct Eg~ptianMartha Vennarl was given
Superintendent Richard Boys Lebanon."
Israeli peace negotiations
permission to attend a
said the schools will remain
Moslems and Chri siians probably would open in the meeting on handicapped at
open for the ·System's 9,000
S
it I I
'lia in about the Hoc••~d Valley M~·r
have been in a state of civil · uez c Yo sma~
~...
""'
Pupils If there is a strike.
Lodge today and two
Meanwhile. officials in
daughters of Troy E. Hyatt
Cleveland decided against an
were released so that the
attempt to resume classes
Alexander District may
today because of opposition
Pleasant Valley Hospital
Neville, Pt. Pleasant; Nina provide transportation . They
by the system's striking
DISCHARGED - Donald Eagle, Milam, Tenn.; Carl are tuition students in that
school employees.
Nott , Pl. Pleasant; Mrs. Jack Schultz Jr., Racine; Charles district.
More negotiations were Bright and daughter, Hen· Getty, Pt. Pleasant; Myrtle
The resignations of Carla
scheduled in the cha mbers of derson ; Mrs. David DeWeese Holley, Buffalo ·and Velma Saelens and Roger Birch 85
Cuyahoga County Common and daughter , Southside ; Parsons, Racine.
teachers in the new federal
Pleas Judge Harry A. Hanna Clyde Rollins, Leon ; Mrs.
reading program were
toward ending the walkout by Thomas Wilson, Pomeroy;
accepted and
Carolyn
tO,OOO Cleveland teachers and Mrs. Richard Roush, New Veterans Memorial Hqspltal Mununey and Carolyn Stnith
support personnel.
Haven; Mrs. William Knapp,
ADMIT TED
Mary were named to the posts.
Logan teachers and non- Leon; Mrs. Norman Searls, Dercnberger , Pomeroy; Gina
At the request of ·Director
academic personnel, who Buffalo; Tom Hatfield, Pt. Arnett, Pomeroy; Barbara Bobby R. Hunt the Meigs
have been on strike since Pleasant; Mrs. John Wade Pi erce, Racin e; Vincent Band was given permission to
Aug. 29 • rejected the last and son, Pt. Pleasant; Sharon King, Pomeroy ; Benny stay overnight in Newark
offerfromtheLoganBoardof Walk er , Gallipolis Ferry; Spears, Syracuse ; Dorothy Friday following the Meigs
Education
during
the Margaret Workman, Glen· J ohnson, Racine ; Tanya game at Waverly. The band
weekend.
No
new woo!! ; Donald Kelly, Mid- Cundiff, Mason ; Marcy wlll
travel
to
New
negotiations have been called dleport ; Millard Davis, Cleek,
Racine;
Janet Philadelphia 011 Saturday to
by the federal mediator in Gallipolis ; Loretta McCarty, J enkins , Pom eroy; Roy participate in c&lt;mpetitlon.
Columbus.
Ewington; Mrs .. Harry Gladman, Gallipolis; Alice The Meigs Band Boosters will
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Russell, Pomeroy; Phyllis pay the expenses of the
I
I Cadle, Middleport.
overnight stay and any
I DISCHARGED - Lowell addltlqnal insurance costs
1
I McNickle, Terri Wood.
needed.
I
A report was given on the
EVA MAE BAILEY
retired wholesale grocery
high school roof by Supt.
Mrs . Eva Mae Watson salesman.
.
Dowler and Goins. They
Bailey, 66, 2811 Maple Ave., . He was a member of the
stated an authority told them
Point Plesant, died Monday Mirror Lake Christian
the roof was not done ·
morning in Pleasant Valley Church in St. Petersburg. He
properly in the first place and
Jiospital.
was preceded in death by his
can never be satisfactorily
She was born Feb. II, 1912, wife Leona W. Knapp in 1971 .
repaired, but wW have to be
Olive Hill, Ky. to the late
Survivors include three
replaced. There is $3,740 left
James W. and Alice Rose sons, Charles 0 . and Arthur
ih the bond coverage on the
Watson .
E . Knapp, both of Charleston,
The names of 24 residents roof and thatwW be avallable
She was a member of the and George H. Knapp, St. have been drawn for national for repairs. The roof baa been
St . Paul United Methodist Petersburg, Fla .; seven participation in the Dairy Isle 011 the building eight and one·
Church, Point Pleasant grandchildren and five great- and 3-in-One Stores sweep- half years.
stakes with the top prize
John W. Lehew and
Chapter 75, Order of Eastern grandchildren.
Star, Chapter 283 White
Funeral services will be being a
1955 Hudson Jemlfer Butcher were added
Shrine, Gallipolis, and a held Friday 11 a .m . in the Metropolitan .
to the list of substitute
retired social worker for the Wilcoxen Funeral Home with
Twelve names were drawn teachers and the financial
W. Va . Department of the Rev. Mr. Andrew Jones at the Dairy Isle, Locust and reports of Jane Wagner,
Welfare with 23 years of officiating. Burial will be in Fourth Sts. in Middleport, treasurer, were approved.
service.
Lone Oak Cemetery.
and 12 at the 3-In-One
One person was given
Survivors include her
Friends may call at the Restaurant, 354 Main St., permission to attend aeveral
husband, James Raymond funeral home Thursday from Pomeroy. All will receive gift classes at Meigs Hlgh as a
certificates.
post graduate student.
Bailey ; two sisters, Mrs. 2 to 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m .
Their names are now being
Enrollment lor the year
Lucy Newsome, Monaville,
W. Va ., and Mrs . Lena
sent to Utica , Mich. , for the was reported down 54
Thackett, Huntington .
national competition . No students under last year and
Funeral services will be
IDA VARIAN
purchase was necessary for several routine transfers
held Wednesda.Y 3:30p.m . in
were
approved
. b
Mrs. Ida E . Varian, 87, 2101 participation.
Boar
d
c arol
the Wilcoxen Funeral Home
The names selected from
mem er
with the Rev. Herman Hayes Mt. Vernon Ave., died Sunday the Middleport business PIerce waa named t o c he c k
officiating. Additional sei- evening at Pleasant Valley include Rev . !Wy Messenger, property owned by the
vices will be held Thursday 1 Hospital after a short illness. Letart , W. Va .; Cheryl district which Mrs · Alex . E ·
p.m. in the Maryatta United
Born Nov. 22,1890, in Mason Lefebra , Pomeroy; William Birchfield wishes to purchaae
Baptist Church , Verdunville, County, she was 8 daughter of P. Hager, Bidwell; Eddie and th'e board took action for
w. va. The body will be taken the late Lorenzo Dow Clen- Merrill, Charleston , w. Va.; the $25,000 Catherine E.
to the ch urch one hour prior denen and Lyda Anne Mark Markham, Pomeroy ; Sefton trust fund, now in
to services . The Rev. Glen McCullougH . Clendenen. She Guy M. Games , Jackson California, to be turned over .
White will officiate at these was a member of the Heights Pike ; Mrs. Delores Whitlock, to
the
diatrlct .
The
services. Burial will tie in United Methodist Church.
Syracuse; David W. Smith, adminlatratlon of the fund is
Highland Memory Gardens,
Her husband, John Varian, Hartford, W. Va .; Ed Stiles, presenUy eating up the
Logan.
·
died in Oct., 1963 . Also Middleport ; Shawn Whit- proceeds and attorneya in
' Friends may ca ll at the preceding her in death were a tekind, Pomeroy; Tom Darst, California recommended the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home after sister, Ora, and a brother, Middleport,
and
Dave iransler.
6 p.m. today . Chapter 75, John F . (Rags) Clendenen.
Mattox, West Columbia, W.
Attending the
meeting
Order of Eastern Star will
Survivorsincludeonesister, Va. The 12 winners from the were Supt. Dowler, Goins,
hold a memorial service at Mrs . J ohn R. (Daisy) Pomeroy 3--in-One are Amy Dan Morris , director of
7:30 ton 1·ght.
Sisson, Pomeroy·, Sandy curriculum; Principals
J
Diehl d Bob M ·
Douglass, Point Pleasant; and
Wright. Potneroy ·, Laura ames
an
orriS ,
four nephews, John F. , George
Mf Bon 1 ""-'1 the
Hassley , Pomeroy ; Chris
s.
n e "•••er o
T. a nd Kendall E . Clendenen,
Meigs
Local
Teacher
Huffines, Rockbridge ; Eber
s, 1111d
AR11fUR 0 . KNAPP
aU of Point Pleasant, and Pickens , Syracuse; Terri board '·~members • Sheela •
Arthur 0 . Knapp, 89, 392
Pomeroy;
Terry Pierce, Wendell Hoover,
Hanes Road, St. Petersburg, J effrey L. Clendenen, Letart. Fife ,
Services
will
be
held
Gardner,
Middleport;
Larry Virgil King and Dr. Keith
Fla., died Sunday afternoon
at the Appolio Medical Center Wednesday at 2 p . m. at J . Hudson, ·Pomeroy ; June Riggs.
in St . Petersburg, after a long Wilcoxen Funeral Home with Van Vrank en , Pomeroy ;
the Rev. Thomas Malcolm Ester Graham, Pomeroy;
illness.
He was born June 6, 11187, officiating. Burial wiU be in Martha Graham, Pomeroy,
. and Tom McClung, Pomeroy.
Mason, to the late William R. Lone Oak Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
S. Knapp and G. A. Deweese
Knapp. He was a former funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7
resident of Charleston and a .to 9 p,m. on Tuesday.

Depu·.ti•es arr
·. e·s t strikin
.· g
.,

ev~~t"::'~e hazards were set

3 MONTHS

be the children of GOd."
sign a peace treaty in
Sadat and Begin were Dec~ber - " a wonderful
making
their
own ChriStmas present for the
congressional appearances world - and called the optoday, explaining, one at a portunity for peace he ·
time, in personal meetings ha~ created " one of the .
with members of the Senate br1ght mome~ts m human
Foreign Relations Com· history."
..
mittee, what they gave up
The American president
and what they got and what appealed to the moderate
they expect to happen next. · states• of Jorda~ and "!'•·
Carter said the two may Western Saudi Arabia,
America's chief source of oil,
to . join now in the peace
movement .
' .
H
hi t · 1 te the
rec:lc:r~~t sta~e~~:ich are
.
denouncmg
Sadat as a
traitor.

Miss Burson

forced to do extensive advance voter reglatrallon as a
result of constitutional amendment passed last
November. Meigs County, which was denied ov!!l' $7,000
by the Secretary ol State, will receive the money
according to Celebrezze. The Legislature had
appropriated money to fund those c:oa1.1 in the 26 counties,
however, the Secretary ot State chole to return the money
to the legillature Celebreue etmmented.

the overall project cost.
At the present time, the
entire cofferdam structure is
comp let e. He said the
company notified FERC that
the proposed changes would
establish a greater degree of
simplification in the layout
and arrangement of the
project, and result in savings
in material and construction
costs.
Work began in November,
1977, on the installation .of two
generating units of an advan ce d European design .

Nease
chosen
RACINE - David Nease, a
former board member was
appointed to fill the unexpired term of Gene Yost when
the Southern Local school
district board of education
met Tuesday night. Yost
resigned recenily due to
health reasons.
Nease will serve the
remaining ')lear and three
months of Yost's team.
The board approved bills,
financial and a&lt;tivity fund
statements and added Jennifer Butcher, Deborah
Harris and John Lehew to the
substitute teachers list .
Mrs . Harold David was
named a substitute cook and
Wasumas~ Sbimizia was
admitted as . a foreign ex·
change student from Japan.
Bus routes and· schedules
as recommended by drivers
were adopted, a disability
leave of absence was given
Marjorie Salser, boundary
lines for elementary attendance centers were
established and several
tuition students were accepted. Wendell Ervin was
also employed as a regular
bus driver.
The next meeting was 'set
for 7:30 p·.m. on Oct. 17. The
board met in special session
Monday night to discuss
grievance procedures.
Attending Tuesday night's
meeting were DaUas lUll,
Shirley Johnson, Sue Grueser
and Betty Wagner, board
ml!lllbers, Supt. Bob Ord and
treasurer, Linda Spencer.

each with a capacity of 24 ,000
kilowatts.
In announcing the Racine
project last year , Heller had
pointed out that the inst allation of ge nerating
facilities in a ' government •
owned flood control dam was
compatible with Presidenl
Carter's energy program .
At the peak o! activity at
the project last spring, over
70 person s were employed.

Ave."
lt wa s announced that no

bids had been received for

excavation Work at the site of
the multi-purpose building .
Attendin g were Henry
Wells, Richard Jones and Jim

been completed . and the Roush, commi ssioners and
outline of the proposed road Mary Hobstetter, clerk.
reviewed by the com·
missioners. serious tho ught
should be given to abanCHARGES DISMISSED
doning the project a nd using
KNOXVIllE, TelUI . (UP! )
funds available in one of the
- A Sessions Court Judge
following maMers :.
(1) Begin at the new multi· Monday dismissed crimina l
purpose building to construct trespassing charges against
a new road on county owned Tennessee basketball player
property that co uld som e day Bert Bertelkamp . and two
s t u d e .n t s .
be completed . through to o t h e r
Bertelkamp.
20; Joseph Dale
Union Ave. This would also
20
,
and
Jeffrey Gra[\t
Bailey.
open up many areas of county
Turner
,
21,
ali
of Knoxville, .
owned property for future
charged
July
23 with
were
development: (2) begin on
inlll
a
city-owned
breaking
Union Ave. and const ruct as
much road as possi ble with gymnasium so they could
the fund s avai lable an- play basketball.
ticipating that it could some · " We s pend tax dollars
day be co mpleted and serve building recrea tion centers so
as another means of access to people can use them and
the mult i-purpose building they're locked so no one can
and Veterans Memorial get in, " Judge Harold
Hospital. This would also Wimberly said as he
serve to open up new areas dismissed the charges.

Troops manned roadblocks
JERU SALE M (UPI ) Troops maMed roadblocks
today and . barred Israelis
from the occupied West Bank
of J ordan to prev ent any
attempts to set up illegal
settlements in the Arab
territory that would violate
agreements made at Camp
David.
Scattered disturbances
broke out among the 640,0011
Palestinians in the West Bank
to protest the accords' lack of
a provision lor a Pa lestinians
state.
The governme nt a lso
resolved to evict 200
ultranationalists who have
begun a squatters' settlement
on a bald mountaintop near
the West Bank city of Nablus
to dramatize their intention
to extend Jewish settlements
in occupiea territory· .
The illegal settle ment
occupies a site that makes it
nearly impregnable , but
sources close to the squatters
predicted the government
would try to starve them out.
"T he
government
repudia~es every settlement
set up without its approval,"

said a communique after a David to freeze creation of
spec ial cabinet session new Jew is h settlements on
Tuesday .
teh West Ba nk for three
Israeli troops stood guard months and to vacate Israeli
on major roads, and settlements in Sinai, pending
authorities designated t he approva l by Parliament.
occupied West Bank as off
Foreign Mini ste r Moshe
limits to Israelis to dissuade Dayan and Defense Minister
unauthorized settlers.
Ezer Weizman began briefing
The crackdown was in- the cabinet today on the 13-tended to show the govern· day summit
a nd the
ment's commitment to an agreement about the setagreement reached at Camp tiements:
Deputy Premier Yigael
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::. ::::::::~:::-::
Yadin said the government
was deterined to maintain the
EXTENDED' OUTLOOK
ban on new settlements on the
Friday through Sunday,
West Bank to abide by its
a chance of showers
commitm e nt to President
Frtday, wltb fair wealber
C
Saturday and Suoda~ .
arter.
Lows will be in the 50s
early Friday , cooling by
TIGHT SECURITY
Sunday morning to the
BURLINGTON, Ky . (UP! )
Middle 40s or the lower 50s.
- Exhaustive questioning of
High temperatures during
perspective jurors and tight
the period will be In the 70s
security marked the first day
Friday,
cooling
by
of jury selection for the
Saturday andSuodliy to the
murder trial of Eugene Gall
mid or upper 608 in nor·
Jr ., Hillsboro, Ohio, charged
them counties and to the
with the rape-&amp;aying of a 12-.
lower or middle 70s in the
year-old Columbia Township,
south.
Ohio, girl.
Jury selection is expected
to last several daya due to
pretrial publicity.
'

Pomeroy finances presented
The balance in aU funds for
the village of Pomeroy as of .
Aug. 31 totaled $231,709.58
according to a report submitted to Pomeroy Council
Monday night by Jane
'Walton, clerk.
Receipts, expenditures and
balance resiJOC!ively in the
active funds were: general,
" ,619.73, $10,257.23, $8,159.43;
federal revenije sharing, no
receipts, no expenditures,
$33,599.87 ; anti-recesalon, no
receipt_~. tl ,006 .84, $128.15;
~

sewer, $5,374.05, $1 ,756.42 ,
$38,982.29; fire department,
$950, $2,07l.ii3, $..024 .60 ;
cemetery, $290 , $1 ,483 .33,
($5,006.34); street, $3,006.31,
$5,604.96, $1,730.52; state
highway, no receipts, $194.28,
$6,097.10; water operating,
$14,823 . 36 ,
$9 , 163 .60,
$16,089.61 ; guaranty meter,
$275, $250, $5,679.05; parking
meter, $2,433.50 , no expenditures, $18,635 .57; utility,
no
receipts,
$1 ,421.86,
$13 ,871 .48. Receipts , ex·

penditures and balance in aU
active fund s respectively
were $34,77 1.95, $33,210.05,
$141,952.33.
Balance in all inactive
funds were, bond retirement,
$65,022.99 ; sewer bond
retirement and improvement
fund , $24,734.26.
.
Total in aU inactive funds
were, $89,757.25. . Receipts,
expenditures and balance in
all funds respectively were
$34,771.95 , $33 ,21 0 .05 ,
$231,709.58.
.

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