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12 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., Wednesday , Sept. 20, 1978

State school strikes continuing
United Press lnlematiooal
Teachers in the Lakewood
school district went on strike
early today, bringing the
nwnber of school employees
off the job in Ohio w over
14,000 and disrupting the
education of 156,000 students
in five districts.
School empl oyee strik es
continued today in Oev£land ,
Dayton, the Midview District
in Lorain County and · at
Logan.
Negotiations in Lakewood
continued down to the wire
late Tuesday, but did not
avert a midnight strike by 319
school teachers in the 9,000student district in sUburban
Oeveland. Carol Dolgosh,
chairwoman of the Lakewood
te"chers' negotiating team,
said ·the Lakewood Teac hers
Association

v o ted

overwhelmingly to strike if a
_J contract se!Uement was not
reached .
She said the teachers were
disturbed about what they
considered th e school board 's
c'ontr a ct
viola t ions
concerning layoffs, teacher
transfers
and
other
administrative activities.

The association rejected an

6~%

1,000 Minimum

l Yr. Term
Eftectivr r1 te w i th com ·
poundinq 6.66 pe r ctnt .
N i net y day i nterest penalty
if
w ithdrawn
"'eto re
m•tur i ty da te .

\._~

T he Aonens County
SiJ VInljJ\ I. Lo•n Co
W . MI IR Sf

Pomero'f' , Oh•o

FSIJC

time."

Without a raise lor two
years, the strikers have
asked for a 20 percent salary
increase. But the financially
hard-pressed school board
has said there caMot be

raises without ma ssive
budget cuts - including
hundreds of layoffs - or
passage of a 3.7-mlll levy
Nov. 7.
In Dayton, Montgomery
County Common Pleas Court
Judge Carl Kessler has
ordered negotiations between
the Daywn school board and
the
striking
Dayton
Education Association J,o

continue
under
court
juriadlction today.
" We 're hopeful we can get
it settled by Friday," he said.
" If not, at leaat get enough
meaningful movement that
we'll know how much Ienger
it will take."
The
judge
delayed
contempt of court hearings
for DEA officials, scheduled
Tuesday, and modified his

·

h
ttl
h
S. U . e
By J IM ANDERSON

Unitt·d Press International

Se&lt;"relory of Slate Cyrus
Va nce be1-1 an a diplomatic

shutll e lo the Midd le Ea't
tod" y by appealing for vital
Arab support for the
milestone Camp David acco rdl'j, !.Jut oppos ition to the
ag reement s mo unted in the
Arab world .
E\'cn before Vance left
We:t shi n gto n , J o rdan
d1s&lt;.tssociu ted itself from the
il,t.!rC(' JJlen t s an d Saudi
Ara l&gt;i &lt;l sa id th e twin
ag re e me nt s wcr~ nut a

l~iberati o n Orga niza tion from
the pea ce proces s.
Th e Kuwaiti s t ae men t ,
m a de aft er an emergency
cabinet meet ing. called fu r

the complete withdrawal of
Israeli forces from all oc-

cupi ed Arab lands. including
Jerusalem .
It al&lt;;o said the PLO was the
so le representative of the

Palestinian people. Israel has
dt·tl:Hed

it

will

ne ver

with the PLO.
. 'C urter will pa y ... for the
dirt) deal." PJ.O chie f
Yitssr r Ar ;Jf&lt;Jt vo we&lt;l in
ne~ot iate

eg

.
e-~i:!it~:~ay:~En~::
un h Y Vane E~~r~i:H~c~n~:~;~

to

p la n

.

strategy to oppose the accords.
A general strike called by
the PLO to protest the ac·

Lebanon.
In the volatile southern
region,
Israeli-backed
Lebanese Christians and
co rd s paralyzed business armed Palestinians fought a
activity in Moslem areas of fierce artillery duel that
Lebanon today. Columns of damaged houses in the town
smoke rose from burning of Nabityeh, eight miles north
.
tires in the streets of Moslem of Israel.
Radio Israel reported II
western Beirut, and towns
and villa ges sh ut down Olristians were injured in the
throug ho ut so uther n rightist enclaves of Marjayoun and Kleia, 6 miles
from the Israeli border and
some of the injured were
ca rTied by helicopters to
hospitals inside Israel.
In
Baghdad, . lraz.,
newspapers criticized the ·
Camp David resolutions for
the second straight day . AI
Thawra urged the Arabs to
"expose the conspiracy and
ST. LOUIS (UP! ) - A brief collaborators" and stressed
earth tremor shook the St. that "liberation and victory
UJuis area this morning.
over the enemies of the nation
No damages or injuries require the rejectio~ of
were reported from the
tremor, which hit about 8:25
a .m . EDT .
Dr. Otto W. Nuttli of St.
Louis University, contacted
at home, said he had no

St. Louis
shaken by
earthquake ·

12 cases

immediate seisomographic
readings on the tremor but

noted: " It was definitely an
earthquake . I'm sure of
that."

Authorities in much of the
St.

Lo uis area

rece iv ed

telephone
ca ll s
from
DarnHS&lt;'us
resid ents reporting th e
llw httrdh nc ArLlb ~1 at es of tremor. However , a spokesSouth Yemen , Algeria and . man for the New Madrid
IJU) a. plus the PLO and County ·sheriff's office, nea r
r• d,cal Popu lar Front for the the location of the New
l.tbc rattun of Pales tine. Madrid fault in southeast
g"t hered 1n Syria for a Misso uri, said no calls were
euu nt cr-su mriut

bu•lding, but still harmed all
pickets from the school
system's
transporlation

.

.

neighbo r Saudi Arabia
rejected the accords because
they ex cl uded the Palestine

1

exchanged information with
Board
of.
Education
representatives, but added
that actual officials "did not
make any new offer at this

·

" une:trcerta blc. ··
Kuwait today in .a statement simila r to its oil-titan

Of Deposit

in 'sight.
Superintendent Peter P.
Carlin was f..-ced to close the
IOO,OtJO.student system again
today. " We cannot ask.
children w report It schools
with unsafe and uncertain
conditions" he said.
James O'Meara, leader of
the Unity Committee, a
coalition of Cleveland school
unions, said his group has

Ml. ddl·e East d·I·pto· mati·c· ~v:~:;gpr~~~· ~~z~

"fram ework for peace" a nd

INTEREST
On Certificates

Jf/AJ

mpasse
p a n e 1•s
recommendation of a $600
pay !*e in starting salaries.
Supef'intendent Richard Boyd
saidthesystemwouldremain
open, despite the strike. No
new talks are scheduled.
The strike by · 10,000
Clevela nd Public Schoo l
teac hers and
support
personnel is nearing the twoweek mark Wday with no end
I

received there.

tenninated

Seven defendants were
fined and five others forfeited
bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night .
Fined were Regina But·
cher, Rutland, speeding, $16
and costs; Steve Van Meter ,
26, Pomeroy, speeding, $10
and costs; John Nicinsky, 42 ,
Rutland, speeding, $14 and
costs; Danny E. Morris, 18,
Pomeroy, assured clear
distance , $10 and costs ;

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••IIIII William
Walters, Middleport,
all owing · a
to run
do~

loose, S5 and costs; Dennis M.
Smith, 21 , Mid~rt , no.
operator's license,lP&gt;O and
costs ; Allen P. Mills, 22,
Rutland , failure to have
vehicle under control , $50 and
costs, and $50 and costs on a
charge of leaving the scene of
an accident.

Forfeiting bonds were L. D.
Wilson, Ill , Gallipolis, $32,
posted on a speeding charge ;

NAME BRANDS AT ANNIVERSARY PRICES FLEXSTEEL - ADMIRAL - HOOVER .:cALORIC

Maurizio Tu~, 24, Mason,

$27, speeding; RayS . Foster,
•Ml'llclleport, $100, assault and
battery; Ralph Pratt, Mid·
dleport, and Wilbur Ward,
Middleport, $17 , each, posted
on a charge of allowing a dog

SPEED QUEEN - FRIGIDAIRE

to run loose.

0

classes are being held on a
staggered basis with classes
taught by subatitute teachers
and supervisory persormel.
Midview Superintendent
John Beatty said schools
would be open for 4,000
students with classes taught
by supervisory personnel
again today . No new
negotiations have been
scheduled in the strike by 180
teachers in thaI district.
The 180 Logan teachers and
120 non-academic personnel,
who have been on strike since
Aug. 29, have set no new date
for negotiations.
Severt negotiating sessions
were held last week with a
federal mediator, but no
progress was reported.

capitula!ioniSt settlements."
B~t millions of Egyptians
began pouring into Cairo to
give a hero's welcome to
President Anwar Sadat that
was expected to exceed his
reception on his return from
Jerusalem last November,
Egyptian press -reports said.
The Egyptian cabinet earlier
voiced unanimous support lor
the twin accords.

Hospital News
VeteraosMell)orial Hospilal
ADMITTED
Zelia
Taylor, Racine ; Donald
Covert, Pomeroy; Helen
Jeffers , Syracuse; Enda
Wil coxen, Racine; Daisy
Sayre, Racine; Charles
Withee, Pomeroy; Evelyn
Murray , Middleport; Ferman Moore, Pomeroy; Mark
Michael, Pomeroy.
·
DISCHARGED - Edward
LeMaster, Myrtle Hayes.

.

Patrol probes
three mishaps
me Gallia-Meigs Post,
Highway Patrol, investigated
three one-vehicle accidents
Tuesday.
Officers investigated an
accident on U.S. 33, one mile
west of Pomeroy, at 10 :13
p.m.
According to the patrol, an
auto operated by Tamera L.
Adkins, 18, Racine, traveling
east, went out of control when
a right rear tire blew.
The vehicle went left of
center striking a sign and a
guardraiL
•
Adkins displayed visible
signs of injury, but was not
immediately treated.
The patrol reports heavy
damage to the auto. No

Holzer Medical Center •
l Discharges, Sept. l9l
John Altizer, Rowena
Barnett, Debbie Bays, Harold
Burcham,
Mrs. Jerry·
Coolinas ·and son, Mrs. Tim
Crites and daughter, William
Davis, Della Duhl, Henry
Fletcher, Holli s Grate,
Sandra Henry , Jam es
Hoover, Henrietta Jenkins,
Lannie John so n, Mark
J ohnson , Mary Jones,
Stephen Kalinowski, Sanford
Kinsel, Dorsel Knapp, Alma
l-emmon, Leona Maynard,
Albert Mullins, Olasity Oiler,
Linda Palmer, Robert
Patrick, Martha Reed, Jerry
Ring, John Rodgers, Dearma
Schoonover, Sandy Star,
Debra Taylor, Olristopher
Trotter, Gina Viland, Garrett
Watson, Mrs. Leo Wellington
and son, Peggy Yeauger.
Births, Sept. 19
Mr . and Mrs. Allen
Rainses, son, Bidwell. Mr.
and Mrs. John Staten, ·son,
Hamden . Mr. and Mrs.
Randy Halley, son, Crown
City. Mr. and Mrs. Jiriuny
Riddle, daughter, Jackson.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bachtl,

citation was issued .

At 7:25a.m., officers were
ca lied to the scene of a
mishap on Patriot · Cadmus
Rd ., eight-tenths of a mile
east of SH 141. :
The patrol reports that
Kenneth Sylvia, 28, Poris·
mouth, temporarily blackedout at the wheel of his auto.
The vehicle went left of
center, cut back to the right,
struck a utility pole, and W'l!ll
down an embankment.
son, Jackson .
Sylvia was uninjured. The
patrol reports minor damage
to the auto . No citation was
The Almanac
Issued.
Uulted Press !nternaUonal
AI 7:20 a.m ., a vehicle
Today is Wednesday, Sept. · operated by Raymond
ro, the 263rd day of 1978 with Morrison, 56, Thurman, in·
102 to follow.
curred moderate dama ge
The moon is approaching when a deer ran into the path .
its last quarter.
The deer was killed .
The morning stars are
Saturn ,
Jupiter
and
Mercury.

12"x12"
PLAIN WHITE

CEILING TILE

wrlter

SANTFORD COZART
Santford W. Cozart, 78, Rl.
2, Greenwich, 0 ., was dead on
arTival at a Wellington, 0.,
hospital , following an
automobile accident on
Monday .
Mr. Cozart was born in
· Meigs County, son of the late
Lewis S. and Stella Oark
Cozart. His wile, Dora, died
in 1965. He waS'also preceded
in death by one sister, lona
Sandow.
·
He retired from the .0.
Ames Co., Parkersburg in
1963 and lived a greater part
of his life in the Long Bottom
area. He attended the Long
Bottom Christian Olurch.
He is survived by four sons,
DarTell, Coolville; Vaiian,
Catlettsburg, Ky. ; Santford,
Greenwich, and Lewis of
Lorain . Two daughters, Mrs.
Nellie Gonzales, Gardenia,
Calif.; and Mrs . Helen
Bailey, Long Bottom ; two
brothers, Clifford and Lewis,

pennsylvania; three staters,
Irene Todd, Beaver County,
Pa., Gertrude, of Florida and
Zory of West Virginia, 19
grandchUdren and 20 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
held Friday at 2 p.m. at the
White Funeral Home ln
Coolvllle wlth the Rev .
Freeland Norris olflclatlng.
Burial will be ln Bald Knobe
Cemetery. Friends may call·
at the funeral home alter 2
·p.m. Thursday.

Six defendants forfeited land, $30, on an improper
bonds in the court of Pomeroy backing charge.
Fined were Nancy Bar·
Mayor Clarence Andrews
timus, Reedsville, 1250 and
T11esdaY night.
.
They were Loshla Mitchell, costs on a reckless operation
Middleport, $30 posted on a charge and S50 and costs on a
charge of failure to yield the disorderly conduct charge;
right of way ; Larry Nelson, Thomas Peck, no address
Middleport, · $30, rWining a recorded, $100 and costa,
red light; Harold Davis, lnt01ication; Delbert
Minersville, -$30, wrong way Fridley, Pomeroy, ·reckless
on a one way street ; Brenda operation, $100 and costs and
Stout, Middleport, $200, petty James W. Stone, Pomeroy,
theft ; Allen Dodson, Mid- $1ii0 and costs, improper use
dleport, $350 posted on a of firearms.
driving while intoxicated
charge arid $50 on ·a no
operator's license charge and
Howard Ebersbach, Port·
OPEN HEADQUARTERS
Meigs County's Democrat
DANCE SLATED
H\'3dquarters will officially
There will be a round and open at 8 p.m. Thursday in
square dance at the Senior , the Orchid Room, over Sears
Citizens Center.Frlday , Sept. Store, East Main St.,
22 from 8 to II p.m.
Pomeroy.
The dance is open to the
A reg~lar meeting of the
public. Muslc will be party will be held in con·
provided
by
the junction with the opening ..
Stringdusters. Admission is There will be a program and
$1 for adults with children light refreshments will be
under 12 admitted free with served. AU Democrata are
their parents.
Invited.

explorer of the West, was
born on Sept. 20, 1849. This lB
actress Sophia Loren's 44th
birth&lt;lav.
On Lllis day in history :
In
1~19,
Portuguese
navigator
Ferdinand
Magellan began a voyage to
find a western passage to the
East Indies. ·
In 1873, financial chaos
forced the New York Stnck
Exchange to close . It
remained closed for 10 days.

United Press lotematlonal
striking Dayton teachers
and non-academtc employees
are talking with school
officials about settling their
strike, but talks have broken
off in other districts hit by
strikes.
No talks are scheduled in
Oeveland, Lakewood, Logan
and Midview in Lorain
County.
striking Dayton teachers
and non-academic employees
return to the Montgomery
'\ County Court Building today
for more talks in attempting
w end their strikes.
Both groups met in
: • different parts of the court
building Wednesday lor eight
hours. No information was
forthcoming , since a gag
• order has he en installed .
/
The 2,200 teachers began

their strike Sept. 6 in a wage
dispute and were joined one
week later by non-academic
employees, members of the
Dayton Public Service
Union.
Meanwhile, some of the
37,000 students have been
attending classes.
A judge who ordered no
picketing , put several
teachers in jail one day thls
week when !hey disobeyed his
order.
No
negotiations
are
planned at Lakewood where
most of the 319 teachers
walked out Wednesday
morning.
"We tried to settle with the
board ... but we couldn't,"
said
Carol
Dolgosh ,
spokesman for the Lakewood
Teachers Association. uwe
did manage w settle one non·

iijlllll)___r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_
Final briefs must be filed
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FWRENCE. if. (UP!)- A preliminary autopsy report
Wednesday indicated a 33-year-old ·reptile collector was
strangled to death by one of his three pet pythons in the
basement of his home late Tuesday night.
In a baffling case, alate police said Emmett Martin, an
electrician who collected exotic repUies and spiders, died after
his wife found him lying on Uhe basement stsirs with one of his
pet pythons wrapped around his neck.

President loses rounds
WASRINGTON (UP!)- President Carter !oat a couple of
small rounds on Capitol Hill Wednesday, but there is growing
sentiment he might win one of his biggest battles.
Two leaders of a atrange coalition fighting the natural gas
bill, Reps. Joe Waggonner, D-La ., and Antopy Moffett, DCmn., concede that if the bill clears the Senate, they have a
dwindling chance to block it in the House. And Senate
Democratic leader Robert Byrd, speaking for the
~istration. iays, "Our momentum is increasing ."

Vorster leaving office

FORT JACKSON, S. C. ( UPI) -An Army training brigade
coiiUilander has recommended that two drill sergeanta be
court-rnartlaled m charges stemming from the heat stroke
deatha of two teenaged baslc trainees.
· U . Col. A.M. Holder, commander of the 3rd Battalion, 1st
Balle Training Brigade, Wednesday placed charges of
dereliction of duty against a third drill sergeant for falling to
render llrat aid to one of the reaults: ·

OOLUMBUS (UPI) - The federal government la putting
the finishing touches on a study that accuses the Rhodes
adminiltration of mlamanaging the alate's health planning
program, It was reported today. ,
,
Scripps-Howard NewsplljM!Il said the report lB highly
llignlftcant beca~~~e lllates are under federal orders to project
the pr_,t and future health needa of the people and to plan
lor ..-derly growth of hoapllals and nursing homes so paUents
wm'l be JIIIYing for the upkeep of lllllleceiiSIII')' facilities.

Plans scrapped for plant

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ClNCINNATI (UPI) - Cnclnnati Gas I&lt; Electric has

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

: •n•lw-11 yur w1ter. Blge
• discounts on w1t1r softners•
• and accn•riel on till Is:

MATERIALS CO.
773·5554

W.VA.

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IC!'apped plana for a aecmd generatlntl unit at the Zimmer
nuclear power plant in Clermont County beca- of rising
COlla and uncertainty over federal regulal!ona, fuel aupplles

SALE ENDS SAtuRDAY,
SEPT. 23, 5 P.M.

and wute dlapoMI, the utility IBid. .

Jury selection continuing

Stop in the home furnishing depirtment first floor. See tile many
samples of Custom Made DraperiH. Select the paHern and color

.a.:::;:.~;~~j......_EL_BE_R_FE_lD....S_I_N_PIIiljOMiliiiiEiiiiR_ov....
'

BURLINGTON, Ky. (UP!) - Jury ~ecljoli continued
under tlebtliiCIIrlty today in the murder~~
Hlllaboro,
auo, man charged with the rllpHlayin&amp; of a 12.-year-old girl.
~lion lind defe- lawyera are cloiely qlllltlonlng
III"OIIIIdln jurura to hear tbe trial of Eua- GaD, u.
bavt ulred prOI)IIICiift jWWI their vlewa 011 the
death )IIMlty IIIII 1Junll7. A.def- lawyer hu Aid he will
plead 1Manl17 by Gall u a defeue.

oh

that's besf.ior you and a.ve 30-percent during the fall drapery sail.

r

during the strike," said

Superintendent Richard
Boyd. "We have taken steps
iO take care of the lunch
problem and any other
problem we can foresee."
The strike by 10,000
Oeveland Public School
teachers
and
support
personnel is nearing the twoweek mark with no end in
sight.
CUyahoga County Common
Pleas Court Judge Harry
Hanna has refused three
Urnes this week w issue a
back·to-work order.
Superintendent Peter P.

at y
'

Ll.,...

Carlin closed the 100,000student system
again
Wednesday.
.
11
We cannot ask children to
report to schools with unsafe
and uncertain conditions," he
said.
Midview Superintendent
John Beatty said schools
woUld be open . for 4,000
students with classes taught
by supervisory personnel
again today . No new
negotiations have been sche·
duled in the strike by 180
teachers in that district.
The 180 Logan teachers and
120 non-academic personnel,
who have been on strike since
Aug. 29, have Set no new date
for negotiations.
Several negotiating
sessions were held last week
with a federal mediator, but
no progress was feported .

No one hurt in
five area wrecks

Pet strangles, kills owner

Mismanagement study coming

Friday' Sept. 22, 1971
: Pomeroy Landmark :
: Will have a Water •
••
:
SOftner Clinic
: 9:00a.m. -4:00 p.m·. :
• Tht t•ctory reprttantativt•
• wttl bt there to t..t and:

monetary issue, but that was
just the easiest of all the non·
monetary issues to settle."
Schools are . open, but
attendance is low.
" II is ow- intent to keep the
schools open every day

There were no injuries in
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) - A federal judge has given
attorneys for both sides in a lawsuit challenging the five accidents investigated
COIIItltutionallty of Akron's controversial abortion control Wednesday by the GalliaMeigs Post. Highway Patrol.
ordinance unUI Nov. ! to file final written briefs.
Testlmmy in the case cmcluded Wednesday before U. S. · Officers were called to the
District Court Judge Leroy Contie Jr. who said enforcement of scene of a two-vehicle mishap
the ordinance, which was to have gone into effect last May, will on SR 1~3, at the junction of
be delayed until he Issues a ruling .
SR 692, ~t 9:ii0 a.m.
· According to the patrol,
autos operated by Michael

Court-martial reconupended

ONLY

•

possibUities for a just and a comprehensive pea ••."
Jordanian sources sald Hussein was now likely w Dy to
Saudi Arabia and Syria - Vance's two other stops - within the
coming weeks in a bid to get the opinion of key Arab states
before deciding his position on Camp David.
Vance held a final informal meeting with Hussein earlier
Thursday before Dying to Riyadh , Saudi Arabia.
, Diplomatic sources in Riyadh said there was little chance
the secretary of state could persuade King Khalid and Crown
Prince Fahd w give even lukewarm endorsement to the Camp
David agreements - at least publicly . But their tacit approva l
could enhance President Carter's peace i!\itlative.
The United States is .Saudi Arabia's largest supplier ·or
arms and Vance preswnably would try to cash in on the good
will created when Congress gave approval of the U.S. sal• of

60 super-&lt;lOphisticated F-15 jet lighters w the Saudi monarch.
The diplomatic sources in Riyadh said Saudi Arabia is
deeply disappointed with the sllJTilllit l!greements but will not
cut off oil supplies to the Western world in retaliation and ,will
try w discourage other Arab oil states from doing so. Other
more radical Arab states have mentioned such a possibility .
The best the United States could hope for would be wget a
promise from Khalid not w issue a formal d~nunciation of the
pacts. That would enable ·moderate states such as Jordan to .
join in the negotiations. So far Saudi Arabia has heavily
critiCized the pacts without formally rejecting them .
Before leaving Amman, Vance held a fmal informal
meeting with King Hussein in a bid w press the skeptical but
still - undecided monarch to join the Camp David peace moves.

•

enttne

Fifteen Cent s
Vol. 29, No . Ill

..

Logan strike talks off

PRETORIA, South Afrlca ( UPI) - Prime Mlnlater John
Vonter leaves offlce hounded by international rebakes for his
decision to hold independence elections in Namibia without
outside supervision . But condemnatioq is bardlx, new to hlm.
His departure also sets off a heated race am8ng would-be
succe8110rs who must bear the burden ol ruling a country
condemned almost universally and faclng potent economic
· sancttms for its policies.

CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES

determination for the Palestinians.
But the statement concluded: ' 'It was agreed by both sides
that the dialogue between the. two countries (the U. S. and
Jordan) should continue on all these questions related w the
Camp David accords in the interest of peace."
Vance alated the talks were friendly and said he
appreciated the chance to brief Hussein on Camp David. He
caUed it "an important step in the continuing dialogue on this
subject."
Reflecting Washington 's effort to convince Hussein and
other key leaders to go along with Camp David on the
118,9urnption that their objections might be met in . the
·continuing negotiating process, Vance stressed : "We believe
Camp David opens new possibilities for peace, new

e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, September 21, 1978

Six forfeit, five fined

SAVE 30%

and

AMMAN, Jordan (UP!) - Jordan stressed today it was
committed w the Camp David accords but lelt the. door
f..- joining the peace moves later.
An olfldal statement 81Ulounced the Jordanian posltion as
s..,.,rot.tn~ of Slate Cyrus Vance ended his tallts in Amman and
to
Arabia to try to sell the Camp David accords to
equally skeptical King Khalid.
·
Reading a statement on behalf of King Hussein, Jordanian
Minllter of Slate for F..-eign Mfairs Hassan Ibrahim told
reporters at Amman airport that Jordan was ''not a party" to
the Camp David accords. .
·
·He reiterated Jordan 's conviction that "any future
settlement that can endure and be supported by Jordan'' must
be based on the principles of Israeli withdrawal from aU
occupied Arab land, including Arab Jerusalem . and self·

E. L. FOLLROD
E. E. (Jack) Follrod, 73,
Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy,
chairman of the Meigs
County Republican executive
commlltee for 18 years
· during his career, died
Wednesday morning at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mr. F.ollrod was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy emergency
squad about 11:57 p.m.
Tuesday. He was born Aug.
14, lliOii at Alfred, a son of the
late William and Emma
Bentz Follrod. He also was
preceded in death by two
brothers and four staters.
Surviving are his wife,
Philomena, three sons, Jack
Eugene, Racine; John Philip,
Vinton, and Dan Edward,
Pomeroy; two daughters,
Mrs. Don (Jo Ellen) Rowdl,
Syracuse, and Mrs. Terry
(Kay) Fulks, Athens; three
siaters, Mrs. Ada Neutzllng,
J..on8 Bottom ; Mrs. Leula
Swartz, Shade, ·and MM. Nina
Robinson, Long Bottom, four
grandchildren and three stepgrandchildren.
Mr. Follrod was a retired
superintendent of the Meigs
County highway department.
Funeral services will be
held at 3 p~ m . Friday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
the Rev. Paul· Welton of·
flclating. Burial will be in
Sacred
Heart
Cemetery .Friends may call
at the funeral home any time
after 7 this evening.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

The evening stars are Mars

and Venus.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Virgo.
George Bird Grlnnel,
American'

HARRY V. ANDREWS
Harry V. Andrews, 83,
Tampa. Fla., formerly of
East Uverpool, died Monday
evenlPIIA!t Kermedy Nursing
Home( Lakeland, Fla.,
following an extended illness.
Mr. Andrews was born in
Greece. He was owner and
operator of a restaurant ln
East Uverpool lor several
years. He was a member of
Loyal Order of Moose and
had lived in Florida the past
five years,
He was preceded in death
by his wile, Laura Wires
Andrews in 1968.
He is survived by one son,
Kenneth H. Andrews, Tampa,
one daughter, Mrs. John
(Edna ) Kinsey, Angola, N. .
Y., and . several grand·
children.
Funeral services will be
held Thursday.at I p.m. at the
White Funeral Home in
Coolville with the Rev. Roy
Deeter officiating. Burial will
he in Weatherby Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home any time.

ordan not commiued to Camp David accords

Y
· 0 U th Shot
early today

Risch, 23, Logan, and Mary
Haning, 38, Pomeroy, were
east bound on 143.
The
Haning
veh icle
signalled a left tqrn. The
Risch auto was unable to stop
and swerved to avoid
, collision, went off the right
side of the roadway, and
overturned.
Officers report moderate
damage to the Risch vehicle .
Risch was cited on charges of
excessive speed.
At ~ : 10 p.m., officers investigated
a two-auto
collision on Little Kyger Rd.,
five-tenths of a mile east of
Swisher Hill.
According to the patrol, an
east bound vehicle operated
by Russell T. Almanza, 20,
Pomeroy, met a west bound
auto operated by Susan

UNDER CONSTRUCTION - Under construction is
the new nursing home located on old U. S. Rt. 33. The
building is being built by Eller Construction Co .,
Colwnbus, general contractors and is privately owned by
;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

REGISTRATION HOURS
Tbe Meigs County Board
of Elections olflce located
lo the Masooic Temple
bulldiog, Pomeroy, wUI he
open from 6 to 9 p.m.
Friday and from 9 a.m. to
12 noon Saturday lor tbe
convenience of residents

who wlsb to register to
vote.
Deadline
for
registration ls 9 p.m. on
Saturday, Oct. 7. Some
9,266
residents have
registered· leaving about
2,000 otbers unregistered.
Reglstratloo Is required
and those wbo have oot
dooe so will not he permitted to vote at tbe Nov. 7
e1ectioo.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:

Evidence
illegally
obtained

Seventeen-year old Brian
ll~Jtphin, Cheshire, was shot
this morning, in the lelt slde,
on the parking Jot of the
Merry-Go-Round Tavern,
Storys Run Rd ., ln Cheshire
Twp.
Hudson , 29, Cheshire, in a
Meigs County Common
Officers of the Gallia one-lane bridge.
County Sheriff's Department
Pleas
Court Judge John C.
The
Hudson
vehicle
were called w the scene at stopped. The Almanza auto Bacon has ruled that ~4 . 3
1:04 a.m. to investigate a failed to stop striking the pounds of marijuana con·
reported altercation at the .Hudson vehicle.
fiscated as evidence against
tavern.
Officers report minor five HarTisonville residents
Arri vlng at the scene, damage to' the Almanza auto, was illegally seized a nd
officers report that they moderate damage to the cannot he used as evidence
against them .
discovered Sutphin, and 78- Hudson vehicle.
Cl\arles Butcher, Ronald
year old Fred Conkle,
Almanza was cited on
BldweU, lying on the parking charges of assured clear Butcher, Robert Butcher ,
Randall Butcher and Alpha
lot.
distance.
Butcher,
were collectively
Deputies of Sheriff Mont·
The patrol was called to the
gomery's Department report scene of a two-vehicle ac- charged with 10 felony counts
that Cmkle was suffering cident at I :30 p.m. on U.S. 3~. in violation of the Ohio Drug
from injuries In the head.
laws plus two counts ol obat the SR 160 ramp.
In the case, which lB still
Officers report that an autq, structing justice.
under
investigation, operated
They reside on township
by
Jame ~
witnesses report that they Thevenir, 20 , Bidwell, road ~2 between Harrison·
heard two or three sh()\t
ville and Carpenter.
(Contino~ on page 9)
cm~lng from the parking l6t
area at appromnately 12;ii0
a.m.
At the scene, officers
recovered from Meigs County
deputies a .25 calibre Tltan
automatic pistol.
Sutphin and Conkle were
transported · to Holzer
Medical Center,
Sutphin was treated for a
gunlshot which penetrated
the muscle of hla left hack,
lind released.
1
Cmkle was treated for ·a
facial fracture and a
laceration of the left cheek,
and released.
Conkle Incarcerated
ln the Gallia Cotmty jaU
wbere he la being held m
charges of disorderly
cmduct.
In other action, H. C. .
Waugh, Upper River Road;
reported " to the deJIIrtment
Wednesday, the Tuesday
theft of a Gravely tractor and
rotary plow, and a lawn
tractor.
According to the report,
ALMn&lt;!T 200 MEIGS High School students are boning
aometiine d..-lng the ntcJd,
up lor the firlll heme football Kame at the Melp Stadltull
thlevel tnllred the prage Ill
in Puneroy ·Friday nlght. The Maraudera will meet
the Waugh reaidence by
Belpre in lhe ftr!l contest at home. Some 136 band
bruklna lhe lock m the
members, cheerleaders and some iiO team members are
overhead gtll'age door.
J

Alnericare Corp ., Columbus . The nursing hoine will be a

· 28,000 square foot structure and will house 100 residents. It
is anticipated that the facility will be completed in the fall ·
of 1919 . The $1,600,000 facility will be of no cost to Meigs
County .

Car stolen, juveniles held
Meigs Co un ty Sheriff
James J. Proffitt reports a
1973 Buick auto s t o l~n
Tuesda y

eve nin g

fr o m

Charles Bartel's residence on
Mulberry Aven ue, Pomeroy,
was recovered after being

abandoned at the Charles
Smith Gas Station at Wolfe
Pen . Two juveniles r eportedly fled on foot alter being
unable to pay for the gasoline
at the station.
According to the report,
three youths had skipped
schoo l Tuesday at · Meigs
High It was learned one of
the boys was on probation,
"nd one of th e terms was that
he attend school regularly.
The juvenile officer, upon
being notified of his truancy,
fil ed violation ol probation
charges.
When the Pomeroy Police
went to the yo uth's residence
Tuesday evening, he fl ed out
a bathroom wind ow and got
with one of the other boys that
had skipped-schoo l with him.
They then took Bartel's auto
and headed out SR 143.
Being low on gaso line, th ey
stopped at Olarles Smith's
sta tion at Wolfe Pen but when
Smith beca me s uspi c ious,
they ned on foot.
One of the youths was
picked up in a ditch a bout
one·fourth mile south of
Wolfe Pen by Dep. Dave
Ohlinger. Th e oth er was
lncated later in the evening at
a trailer in Pomeroy.
The youth that was on

probation has been sentent-ed
to 'the Ohio Youth Commission by Juvenile Judge
Mann ing Webster and is
currently held in the Juvenile
Section of the Meigs County
Jail pending transportation to
the Vouth Commission. The
other youth has been released
to the ci)stody of the parents
pending ·,; hearing later in the
Juvenile tour! .
Wedn esda y aftern oo n,
three juveniles from Tuppers
Plains, sought for truancy

by Dep. Darrell Slone and
Special Deputy Walt Manley.
The juveniles were placed in
d e tent io n
pending
IIi: . ·tieat1on of their parents.
They will appear in juvenile
oourt at a later date .
The sheriff's offi ce has also
been notified that a 14-yearold Middleport female who
ran away from home on
Monda y, has been picked up
by Texarkana, Ark. police
Tuesday night. Members of
her family are enroute to

from home and school since

return her to Meigs Count y.

Monday, were aporehended

Public .-h earing
slated Sept. 30
HUNTINGTON - A publi c Ohio, causes many double
meet ing regarding the lockages (tows have to be
replacement or modificat ion broken in two and put through
of the Gallipolis Locks and the locks in two actions ).
Dam will be held Saturday,
The principal alternatives
Sept. 30 at 2 p.m . at th e being evaluated are : A single
Gallipolis Lock site on th e 1200-fuot lock in a canal; Dual
West Virginia side of the Ohi o locks in a canal ; A staged
River near Apple Grove.
dev elopment plan with an
The existing Gallipolis initial 1200 -loo t loc k and
prdject is located in a hend in provision for a future lock
the river which results in the and the contin uation of th e
lock chambers heing aligned existing project .
at an angle to the apAll of the plans incl ude
proa chin g tows , makin g ma jor rehabilitation of the
lockages difficult.
navigation dam. There will
In addition, the relatively be no raise - in t he water
small size of th e lock levels.
chambers compared to other
The public meeting will
modern structures on th e permit
all
in te rested
organizat ions and individuals

to express publi cly th eir
v1ews for the record on teh
overall engineering and
design studies fora si ngle
1200-foot replacement lock in
a canal, and the laternatives
suggested.
The study was authorized
by the Water . Reso urce
Development Act of 1976.

Weather

'·
•
'.. ,,, .., ~ ~·~~ ;, .....,. ~ ~
"

Continued warm and humid
today , with a chance of
thunder showe rs thi~ af·
ternoon and highs in the
upper 80s. Coo ler tonight and
Friday, with scattered
showers possible. Lows
tonight will be in the mid iiOs'
and highs Fridav will be in
the upper 60s or lower 70s.
The
probability
of
precipitation is 30 percent
today , 40 percent tonight and
.. 30 percent Friday.

doing their thlng ln preparation for the event. The

acCillllpanying pictures are by Dorsel Thomas. ':.'rllllng in
the IIIUI118l September heat are members of the Meigs
Marauder hand preparing for the Friday night show.

,

NOW YOU KNOW
pean Martin's real nall)e is
Dlho Crocetti.

•

�2-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Sept. 21, 1978

€TT"A

IN WASHINGTON

..

3--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 21,1978

F&lt;ljq

I:-4U(.I'&lt;I~

Y'&lt;O!Z\11 ~,"fELf@I'M ,
N.E.F\ . 78

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

•,

Donald F. Graff

Citizens geta 'Fair Share'

Welcome, and bring money

By .Martha Angle and Robert Walters

By Doa Graff

BOSTON (NEA ) -Citizens in this city's Roxbury section
have battled s uccessfully for more mass transit service.
East Boston residents are pressing for improved police
protection. In Dorc heste r ; the people want better banking
facilities.
Throughout Massachusetts , col'llll)unity-based citizens'
organizations are exercising their llewfound power and
influence. In Fall River, for instance, residents recently
won a campaign for prompt reconstruclion of a fire-razed
·
neighborhood school.
After a Revere youngster was killed by a passing
commuter train, an outraged corrununity demanded - and
got - full fen cing on . both sides of the track. In
Worchester's Grafton H1ll sect10n, residents won !hell'
struggle for d emolition of a n aba ndoned building that was
a neig hborhood eyesore.
All of those local groups share a common affiliation :
They are chapters of Massachusetts Fair Share, one of the
country 's most successful and sophisticated practitioners
of cOmmunity organizing .
.;.
Most of Fair Share's 20,000 dues-paying member
families are headed by a low-income or blue-collar wageearner whose annual salary is in the $10,()(JO.to-$14,000
ral')ge . Few 'tuld any record of prior participation in civic or
"If they'd just slow down enough, I'd invite them to reading clas~."
political affairs.
Many had been alientated from local; state and federal
politicians and burea ucrats perceived as unresponsive to
their needs. They we re afflicted with what Michael
Ansara, Fair Share's staff director, describes as " a
par-alyzing sense of powerlessness .''
"E very member we organize comes with a whole lot of
work " says Ansara , a talented, articulate 31-year-&lt;&gt;ld. " It's
not as if we're riding the crest of a great wave."
Further complicating the organizing task is the ethnic
Clarence
divers ity of membership that ironically also is one of Fall"
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:
Share's great strengths: The Dorchester chapter is heavily
Miller
Irish, the Roxbury unit is dominated by blacks and the
East Boston affiliate is predominantly !!allan.
Portuguese-Americans are hea vily represented in the
In 1975, wh·en the Com- costly efforts in Vietnam and
Fa.ll River c hapter, with nwnerous French-Canadians in
munist
Khmer
Rouge critical of our country's
Lowell and Spani'!h-speaking citizens in Jamaica Plain.
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
puddings and other cooking ' ~liberated" Cambodia, there continued ' support of what
To avoid unwanted philosophical clashes, Fair Share
DEAR · DR . LAMB _ items and, in this way , you were approximately 8 million !lOme viewed to be an unmembers have agreed to disagree on two highly emotional Thanks to your column on can significantly increase people inhabiting this un- popular regime, the Congress
subjects ~ school busing and abortion - by purposely
problems caused by milk, 1 your calcium and protein derdeveloped Southeast refused to act on the
avoiding any organizational position on those issues .
am
now enjoying my cereal intake.
Asian nation . Today, reliable Presidents request for $222
But there's no dea rth of other issues for Fair Share's 30
Lact-Aid
milk
a
nd
To
give
you
more
informaestimates
from various in- million in military assistance
with
affiliates spread across the Bay State. At the local level,
avoiding
all
other
foods
in
lion
about
the
milk
problem
ternational
sources indicate for Cambodia. In spite of
neighborhood groups are constantly battling municipal
up a very 1 am sending you The Health that as many as 2.5 million of continued pleas by the Adofficials for improved street lighting , traffic signals, snow Iwhich milk. makes
It'
t
t Letter number 7-2, Milk
rt
removal, recreational fa cilities and other services.
arge po lon. s grea no Products, Good and Bad. these people may have died ministration, that unless aid
The community units in each city' usually are also to dhadve thhose awthful c ramps Other readers who want this by execution or forced hard· was provided a Communist
an answers.
~arr ea Wl no appar- infonnatton
·
working concurrently on at least one broader municipal ent
can sen d 50 sh1'p s1'nce the Communist takeover was imminent, the
issue. In Springfield , for example, Fair Share affiliates
Congress turned its back on
Since we have solved this cents with a long, stamped, takeover.
ha ve challenged a $1 3.1 million rate increase being sought in the sense that I ca n eat self-addressed envelope for
the
request. Within weeks all
Countless stories of bar·
by the local gas company.
the
dire forecasts began to
ce.rea l with milk as long as I it to me in care of this barism , of torture, and mass
In Worcester, a citywide campaign hwniliated the
1
51
unfold.
owners of a hotel, a nursing home and other commercial use !.act-Aid everyone, espe- newspaper, P.O. Box ~ • murder of innocent civilians
me, wants to know if I Ra(lio City Station, Ne w are related almost daily by
As for the present, we now
properties into paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in, dally
'11 be bl t
·
h
York, NY 10019.
have
members of Congress
w1
a e o enJOY c eese,
escaping refugees from this
delinquent real estate taxes .
calling
for outside inand
those
food
s
strife-tom
nation
.
Stori~s
are
ice
cream
F'air Share also campaigns for social and economic
told of people being clubbed tervention tO put a stop to the
justice on a statewide basis, emerging in recent years as a again . Do you ever get your
enzyme
back after it has
to death to save anununition. atrocities being committed
potent lobbying force in the stat e capitol on Beacon Hill .
disa ppea red·~
One recent effort w.as instrwnental in convincing the
I've had some fra c tures.
Others have been bound by the Khmer Rouge
state legislature to require auto insurance companies to
together and buried alive by government. In 1975 many of
rebate $55 m illion to more than 600,000 drivers. On the Can your bones get wea k
bulldozers, or suffocated by these same people were
general election ballot this year is a Fair Share-inspired from not having e nough calcium
?
I
a
m
55
yea
rs
old
and
having
plastic bags tied over 'stridently criticizing
initiative to provide property tax "r elief for aU MassachuFour workshops designed their heads . According to a American involvement in
have never bee n much of a
setts home-owners: .
·'
drinker
but
ha
ve
alto
meet Ohio Division of report submitted to the Cambodia as an obstacle to
milk
With an arinual budget of almost $600,000 and a staff of 50
loved ice c ream,
.
United Nations R. ights' self-determination, while
organizers, Fair Share stands as a model for aspiring ways
yogurt , cotta ge c heese and Men ta l
Retardatl o n community-based or ganizations now springing up through- puddings . ·
. bil1't 1e
' s Commission in Geneva, ignoring the fact that the KhDeve1opmen t a 1 D1sa
. out the country to enhance citizen participation in the
Now f'm tryi ng to r emem- standards and The Ohio Caml!odia's leaders are mer ROuge was receiving
political a nd governme ntal processes.
massive outside support from
" Perhaps our most important accomplishment," says ber to eat a couple of cans of Department of Education permitting no hUman, civil, China . They . viewed the
requirements political and economic rights
Ansara, " is our success in restoring to some citizens the sardines a wee k because certification
they contain bones as we ll as will be spcnsoi-ed by The Ohio and freedoms in Cambodia. government of Lon Nol ps
belief that they can control what happens to them."
being nutriMus in other University affiliated Center One refugee told the Com- oppressive and unresponsive
respects . Should I be oupple- f H
D
t d mission, " The Khmer Rouge to the needs of its people. In
menting my diet with ca l- or wnan eve1opmen .a n
their judgment the Lon Nol
cium in som e other way ? I the 0 · U· Wor ks hops Offite at have clamped down o,n every ·
_govern!!Jent
failed to meet
·
Jocat10ns
·
d urmg
·
facet of life. The central
really don't ca re that muc h vanous
the
highly
idealistic
stanfo r milk even now that it October and November.
government's policy is to
dards
they
measure
governdoesn 't ca use stom ach prot&gt;"Counseling of Parents of exerminate all the old people,
!ems.
·
the Handicapped" will be so as to have a new ments by. Therefore, it was to
DEAR READER - Any offered at the Ohio University generation of Cambodians be forfeited, regardless of the
~
in your age group Belmont Branch on Oct . G-7, who have never known a good risk that the government that
woman
A
probably
should get the 13-14, 20-21, with sessions life." In a further attempt to would follow migbt be worse
R
same
a
mount
of calcium running from G-9:30 p.m. on purge the citizenry of any ties than the one that went before
y
that occurs in one quart of Friday s and from 9 a .m . until with the past, many schools it.
fortified skimmed milk a
have been closed and the
Let us not be so naive in our
day ' That 's over a gram of 5 p.m. on Saturdays. Infuture
dealings. Let's stop
·
teachers executed, temp1es
Septemberl8, 1978 calcium a day, prefe rably structors WI'11 be Dr. ElSle
running
around the world
about one and a hall grams . He1se1 an· d Ms. Bett y Black , have been pillaged and
Cllristine Grueser
judging
the
performance of
burned, the priests sent toTh
the
Women who are on ca l- R· N., F' · N·P ·
R. D. 2
other
country's
governments
cium defi cient die ts are five
The O.U. Portsmouth fields to toil as peasants. e
Pomeroy, OH 45769
against
a
rigid
set of towntimes as likely to have fra c- Branch will be the site of the capitol city of Phnom Penh,
hall
democracy
criteria .
lures from weakeni ng of the " Behavior Management for which at the time of the
Dear Christine :
Let's
accept
the
fact
that
Now you are, at least in theory, enjoying the retirement bones as women who get th e Mentally Retarded" Communist takeover in April certain cultures are not
workshop , instructed by Dr. of 75 had a population of over
you requested . You said that after all these years of working enough calcium .
to
a
totally
There
are
quite
a
few
Elsie
Helsel and Dr. Sally 2 million, was totally geared
you felt that you deser ved a rest. Knowing you, I doubt very
democratic
form
of
govern·
people who cannot digest Schaaf. This will run con- evacuated; its people sent to
muc h that you really are resting .
·
th
unt 1'de t live and ment. This is not to say that
lactose, the sugar that 's in
e co rys
o
The children at Middleport really miss you very much . milk, because they lack an secutively with the counwe should not continue ·to
They ha ve come in for their story hour and wondered why enzyme that breaks it down selmg course. Registration practice agrarian collec- strive for
better world
U1ere isn't one . You have only been gone from the library for a into si ngle s uga r s for / deadlme for both workshops tivism .
order,
but
we
should
so do
Could we have prevented
absorption. These individu- IS Sept. 29 .
few weeks, but to them it seems longer .
with
the
realization
that
there
Drs . Helsel and Schaaf wiU this course of events? Vfe will
Madhu Malhotra had hoped to be ready to start story hour als do have gas, diarrhea
are
Umits
_
as
to
what
can
be
again before this, but it is hard to learn everything necessary and diffic ulties whi ch you again lead the Behavi.or never know. In February of expected. To replace the
have e xperi enc&lt;-d .
Mangement workshop ..»-the 1975 iAn Neil the pro-western
in such a short time .
pmduct
ca
lled
!.actDining Pavilion of the leader of Cambodia, was in imperfect with the uol&lt;nown
A
ne
w
At last , however, your story hour children will have a
in the hope that such change
storyteller again. Madhu will have a story hour at Middleport Aid can be added to the milk Gallipolis State Institute on dire need of additional out· will be for the better often
a
nd
it
will
brea
k
down
the
Oct.
13-14,
27-28,
and
Nov.
IGside
financial
assistance
to
oo Wednesdays (starting September 27) and at Pomeroy on m1Ik sugar before you use 11. II . Meeting times will be .,_ keep his administration doesn't work out that way.
Thursda ys (starting September 28 ). Both story hours will be at You can get more tnforma - _
F' 'd
d
•
ing T1'red of our long
•
I p.m . and the mothers will have to ca ll ahead and register lion about itfrom S uga r-Lo w 9.30 p.m . rl ays an 9 s .m . go ·
their children so that Madhu will know how many children to c ompany,J54oAuanticAve- 5 . p .m .
s~turdays .
nue, Atlantic City, New J er- Reg••t ratlOn deadline IS Oct.
expect .
______;:___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Once Madhu and the children have learned to know each sey 08404 . lncident•lly, some 6.
dairies
in
selected
regions
of
A
fourth
workshop.
other , I know that she would be happy to have you come to a
the United States have "E ducation of the Multistory hour so that you can see "your" children again .
started
mark eting milk that Handicapped", will be led by
The adult patron s at Middleport have missed you too. Ruth
has already bee n treated Dr. Helsel and Ms. Romola
Powers has been doing her best to keep them happy, but I think
the
Ohio
many patrons feel that dealing with you was nice because you :~~·tLahc~~~~di~~o\~:!.:'ceeop:~ Hopkin~ at
milk
suga
r
.
Umvers1ty
Lancaster
branc!Ikn ew ahead of time just what they wanted. It wiU take Ruth a
Of cou rse once the milk The sessions will run Friday
little time to know them that well ,
All of us on the staff and the board of trustees sincerely has been t;e•ted with the evenings, 6-9 :30 and Saturhope that your retirement is everYthing you wanted it tO be . We enzyme then you ca n use the days, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. on Oct. 27will miss you, but we know that you are doing what you want treated milk to make your 28, Nov . 3-4 and 10-11.
most to do . - Sincerely yours, EDen Bell, Ubrarian (Serving own home made ice cream or Registration deadline for the
cottage cheese 1f you WISh . workshop is Oct. 20.
all of Meigs County) ,
You can . also use such
Teachers and professional
treated ffilll{ to make puddfM
1
TilE IJAII .V SENT INEL
ings which you like . Yes, r staff of the Division o enta
DF.VOTEOTOTHE
think you need calcium and RetardatiOn-Developmental
INTERF.sTOF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
the lack of it can be a fa ctor Disabilities are eligible for
R O Rt~ KT HOEFLICH
LAFF _t A- DAY
in your tendency to have stipends for all but the
Clly F..dilur
PuUiislt~'\.1 dci •ly I!IU.'ept S(l lurda}
bone fractures .
" Education of the Multiby Tilt! .Ohio Vttllt-y Pullhslurlfo!
There
are
a
variety
of
Handicapped"
workshop .
['otnpCHI)'·Mullirnr'IJnt , lnl'.,
Il l
calcium
tablets
that
you
c
an
College
credit
may
be earned
(:tiUI'I Sl. , Pumt:~y . Oluu 45769.
riU!II!lCSS Otfin! Phunt~ 992- 2156
take if you cannot increase from aU four workshops.
F:chtun&lt;tl Pl•tHM' ~r.r2 ·ll 5i
your calcm~ Intake m your
For more information
~I' UfU.J t li!S.'l pu.~ \;1).:1.' fJ&lt;'\d 1:1 1
\
d1et. In add1t10n to the bones
t ct th w ....
Of
Porncro} , Oluu.
in sardines as a calcium con a
e
or.... ,o(lll , •
N&lt;ttl ttmtl :tdvcrt!SIIII( rt'Jircscn
source, don't forget canned flee , 301 . Tupper Hall, Otuo
t&lt;ttlv'C, l~mltm i\S!!iK't&lt;llC!l , JJOl
1-:udul J\ ve Cll· Vdantl, Oltilt 44 1JS,
salmon . Anothe r way to in- University, Athens, Ohio
Sul)!;l'rl/tll!oll ' '•titS rlt'H vcrcU IJy
crease your calcium intake 45701, telephone 614-594-6851
t'!ll'l'll'r W lt~n: 'il\'itlllllllc 75.~.:cnL~ pt'f
is to use skim milk powder or 800-282-4408 toll free for
\Oo1lt•k. By MO lt~ HHUle where t"arrter
. !;Crvit •' 1\'1 ti\'Hibtl.lh.!, Ottl' rnunlh .
and make extra ncb mllk. Ohio residents.
I) 1971 fN NU, Inc. /}.JA._J:l.lALJ....
13.25 I:Jv 11\il tl 111 Oluu anll W, Vld. ,
To this mixture you can add
.
.
'--lc Vl:wr . St.!.OO: S1x 111urtUili
'-0'''"~--?;7
your
L.act-Aid
powder
to
diToday,
kcepmg
up
w1th
the
~11.50 ; Three months. 17.00 ;
gest
the
milk
sugar
that
Juneses
1s
no
.
problem
"'
El~cWhe~ $21i.OO year ; Sti 1nunth.t
"Something tells me it wasn't $ 1.1 . ~0 : Thrt\' munlhs, $7..50
"How do you like our new game? We call It
would be in the reconstitpted -they 're stuck gomg up "
tiui)St'rlJ)IIOI\ prtt't' inehttkl&gt; Su ncl&lt;~}
'wages and prices'. "
entirely accidental."
milk . This super rich milk down ~cooomic escalator
TI !I\!•'I.,O: o•n l ll' l
can be used for grayies, same a.; we itre.

Washington
Report By

HEALTH

Make your own milk products

work sh 0 pS
sch e dul
' ed

Li·b rary

~

e

Letters

a

Berry'S World

\

-

. -------

11

•

&lt;

MaraUder~

The forecasts are turning out to be right on target.
This is indeed shaping up as the biggest year ever for
foreign tourism in the United States. On the bull of head
counts so far, the United States Travel Service 1.1 looking

for a year~nd total of at least 20 million vi.ljtora from
abroad, up some 8 percent over 1977,
.
Europeans have been arriving at a rate almost 30
percent above last year's and the yen-laden Japanese,
maintaining their ranking of the last several yeara as the
largest overseas contingent, are more numerous this year
by some •20 percent. Their year~nd total should top one
·
'1
million.
The greatest numbers o! visitors ...however, continue to
come from immediate neighbors - Canada and Mexico.
The Canadian flow is slightly under eJ&lt;pectatlons, possibly
a consequence of the confederation's dollar being in even
worse shape than the U.S. version, but together the two
countries stiU account for three-quarters of all vlJIItora.
The tide of foreign travellers to the Uulll!d Statee has
been rising for some time, doubling in the past decade
alone. A number of factOI'S are involved - increasing
prosperity throughout most of the non-Communist world,
price slashing in air fares, proliferation of special tourist
packagell, and charter flights and, most recenUy, the
depreciation of the dollar. The United States, once
affordable only to the jet set and business elite, has become
a bargain vacation destination, for citlzell8 of superhardcurrency countries in particular.
As a consequence, there has been a distinct change in the
visitor profile. Masses of middle-class tourists and even
blue-collar groups on package tours now account for the
bulk of the travel traffic.
There also has been a change in U.S. destinations for the
visitors. New York and Washington still head the li.st, but
foreign travellers are increasingly exploring the American
hinterland, a development to which the rapid expansion of
international air connections has contributed massively .
With Houston, AUanta and other Inland clUes now gateway
points for overseas flights, tourists are exploiting to the full
the wider choice of U.S. arrival pointa.
There is a bottom line to aU of this, and it is ellpected by
the end of the year to approach $9 bUiion. The Travel
Service estimates visitors wUI be leaving that much behind
at hotels, restaurants, transportation facWties and shoos.
Hospitality, like virtue, is usually its own reward. But l'or
a nation with a·n apparently nonstop balance of paymenlll
problem, the cash compensation certainly comes in handy.

• PREPARE FOR BELPRE - Meigs' football team is
hard at work in preparation for the annual home opener
SP.orts Trilnnctions
IV Untted Press International
Wednesda';'
Basketball
Boston Released guard
Oan 5 Skinner .
Football
New York Jels Placed
r_ookie c orn er c a c k Regg ie

.

Grant on wai"Vers and signed
tree -agent cornerback Lar r y
Riley .
Baseball
New York Yankees - Coac_h
Dic k Howser announced h1 S
resignation 'effect ive ar th e end
of the season

And now a word about traveling Americans.
They certainly are. Departures for oveneas are running
almost 9 percent over 1977, pointing toward year~nd total
considerably above last year's 22:8 million Americall8 who
saw some ol the world beyond their own borders.
As traveling Americans outnumber foreign visitors to
the United States, they also spend more. Americana
dropped $10.3 billion abroad in 11177, and this year will top
thatligure easily.
·
But as the Travel Service figures It, cheapened dollar
and aU, foreign spendthg in the United States is rising at a
faster rate than U.S. spending abroad liO that the deficit
this year should be the lowest since 1971 - under S3 bllllon. ·
The way things have been going in our foreign
exchanges, that rates as good news.

By KENNETH R. CLARK

:::;;::~

United PreaalatmuoUoaal
FAN.CY PANTs: Back in 1933, Sally Rllld thrilled, ahocked
and scandalized Chicago's "Century of Progeu" upoaltion
with her now-legendary Ian dance in the "Streets of Paria"
show. She's in her 7&amp; now, but her bawdy boalt of old - "I
never made any dough 'til I took off my pants" -IIlli holds,
and she'D take them off again to help celebrate the 50th
anniversary of the show. Miss Rand has agreed to POle with
her lamous fans for students in the Ufe-drawing ciau ol the
American Academy of Art. Their wort will be llled to promote
the J!Qiden jubUee, which comes up in 1983.

.Meigs County
People

RACINE

~·

HOME

NATION~l

BANK
RACINE

Injui;.es

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD

OHIO

NFL gaJlle

aosfon , Rice (42) ; Detroi t ,
Wh itaker (3) , Staub (23) .

VANYL-ITE
PLASTIC VINYL ACRYLIC LATEX

Slr~~~~man, after mating uncomplimentary public remarb
about coPr Gabe Xaplao, a~ts in Hollywood llhe's been
trying for years to get !Ired. Says she, "I hate the -'es ... I'm
jUBt eerving-my time." What about the cute twin bibles the
writers gave the happily married Kotters? "That hat to be the
dumbest idea ever." Why is she thereat aU? "I mlllt be paying
off some enormoUB kannic debt.".

95

GLIMPSES: Ninety-live-year-old mualcman Et!llie 111a1e
wu on stage Wednesday for the Broadway opentnc of the lbow
bearin11hllnmne- " Eubie" -buedon bll own life and work ·
With Noble lliHie ... Grepry PedJ relld the JII'UIIIble to tile
Olarter ol the United Natioot W~y, ope. . . tbe D'd
llellion of the General Auembly mel celebr•Unc the D'd
annlve..-y of the world body's nm1JI'Of)t public relltlonl
orf18nlzatlon called "UN We Believe" .•. FOI'IIIa' Pretldent
Get-aid Ford hal been tapped for the job ol Gnnd Dlllrlhallt
next May's IndlanapoJi,s 500 Felltlval Memorial Parade ....

•

GALLON
STANDARD COLORS OR
CUSTOM MIX COLORS
SHOP OUR COMPLETE PAINT DEPARTMENT
•

EBERSBACH HARDWARE
PH. 992·2111
110 W. MAIN

4l

Pitching

Victories
National Lugue : Per ry, S D
M ilw
201 000 02o-- 5 7 0 19 .6 ; N ickro , Atl 19-15; Hooton ,
K C.
201 001 ooo-- 4 9 0 LA 18 9; Gr i msley , Mil 18 10 ;
soren sen , Castro (7) , Aug us- Ri chard . Hou 17 -11.
tine (7) and Mar t inez ; Gale,
Amer ican League : .Guidry ,
. Pascha ll (1 ). M cGilberry (8 ) NY 22· 3: Caldwell. Mil 20·9 :
and Port er:. W- August ine , 13· Palmer , Ball 19 12 ; F igueroa ,
12. L - Pa scha ll, 0-1
NY 18-9: Splitt orff , KC 18 12 ;
Flan agan , Bait 18 -13; L eonard ,
000 002 100- 3 e 1 KC 18· 17.
Texas
Mlnn
000 40 1 OOx - 5 8 0
Earned Run Average
Comer . Bar ker ( 4), Cleveland
( B~sed on 14~ Innings pitched)
( 6) llnd Sundberg ; Goltz and
Nationt~l Lugue : Swan , NY
Wyne;ar . W- Goltz . 14 10. L 2.42 ; Rogers , M il 2.47 ; Vuck eam er, 9-5. HR - Texas. Zls k ovich , St .L 2.52 ; Hooton . L A
120),
2.65 ; Blue , SF :t.78.
American League : ..\&gt;Guidry ,
(Only games schedul ed )
NY 1.8 1,' Ca ldwell , M il 2. 23 ;
Matlac k. · lex 2.36 ; Palmer ,
Ba it 2.51 ,· GoltJ . Minn 2. .52 .
M•lor Le~gue Leader~
Strikeouts
IY United Prest lnternattonal
Natlon•J L~a;u ,e : ~ i c hard ,
Batting
Ho u 290;
N1ekro. Al l 232 ;
(lased on 425 at bah)
Seaver 1 Cl n 209 1 " Montefusco ,
National L eague
·
G AB . H. Pet. SF 170; Bly le ven , Pitt 169.
American League : R\lan. Cal
Parker Pit
138 545 117 .325
BurroghS Atl
14-4 461 143 .310 24 1: Gui dry , NY 226 ; Leona r d ,
Gar"Vey LA
153 610 188 .308 KC 169 ; F lanagan , Bait 150 ;
143 529 163 .308 Kravec , Ch i 148.
Cruz Hou
Clark SF
146 554 169 .305
Winfield SO
149 553 167 .302
Cabell Hou
151 616 185 .300
Crmrtle Mt l
150 576 173 .300
Rose Cin
150 619 185
COncpcn Cin
1-45538 161 .299
American League
G AI · H. PC 1·
Carew M in
143 532 181 .3..0
Rice Bos
152 629 201 .320
Oliver Tex
122 480 152 .317
Pinlella NV
120 431 135 .313
Roberts Sea
123 433 130 .300
t
u1 63A 189 .m
LeFlore 0 e
119 468 139 .297
Yount Mil
Bostock Cal .
145 561 166 .296
Ot is K C
132 454 134 .295
Munson NY
143 574 169 .294
Slnoltn Bal
139 A70 138 .294
Home Runt
.
Naflonal League : FOS1~r • C•n
1 Lurlntkl. Pnll 32; Sr':uth , L A
and Parker , Pitt 29 ; K•noman,

THISfLE RESULTS
NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
( UP I )
J oc key Rod
Madri ga l guided Nat ive
Highness to vi c tory in
Wednesday 's featured eighth
race at Thistledowr , covering
the six furlongs in I : 12 2-5.
Mickami placed and Tanya
Boy sh owf'li .
The 1&gt;-4 combination of
Scout Ruler and J eanne's
Way returned $69.40 on the
daily double . There were 62
winning tickets on the 6-2-10
g roupin g of Amberha ven,
Donna 's Kitchen and Extra
Extension in the ninth race
trifecta, each worth $692.70.
The crowd of 4,134 wagered
$445,602.

.m

.

I

may decide

rf!iJ[l]@(jf}fiJ[!}@

UNWELCOME BAC!t: The name of the 1V show may be
"Welcome Bact Kotter," but that's not a eentiment shared by
actress Marcla Slraumu, who plays Kotter's wife. Mill

Felder .Hellers: (good and
cholc.) 2.50 to 300 lbo. 57 to
62 ·501 300 to .QJ lba. 52.50 to
51; 400 to 500 lbo. 48.50 to
55.50; 500 to .00 Iba. e.25 to
52.35; .ao to 700 lba. •1.50 to
4B.75; 700 lind over 39.75 to
•7.25.
Feader Bulla· (......., lind
_.__, 1
' ~.... ce 250fo 300 IllS, 5I to 72 ;
JOO to «JJ Iba 55 to 70 · .QJ to
500 1111. 47.50. to 6/1.25/ 500 to
eoo Ibo 48 75 to 63- .ao to 100
lbo 42'50 •
•
• · to 56.50; 100 lind
31
48
50
ovor
to · ·

offense , like that of Meigs,
hasn 't been sharp so far .
11le Golden Eagles have
dropped two tilts this season,
21 -14 to Fort F'rye and last
week 25-11 to Trimble. Last
week , the Eagles were held to
ju•t 146 total ya rds , led
mo•·tl,y by quarterback Mike
Holcfer.
Meigs ha s been led by Greg
Becker, who last week notched 90 yards 'on 22 ca rries
whi le John Stout r•n for 41
ya rds and both touchdowns.
Quarter ba c k Da n Thomas
com pleted four of his eight
passes.
If the Meigs offense can
cnm e around and the defense

&gt;tays sound , then the Eagles
co uld be in for a long night.

gam es and hopin g the
DOd gers lose seven pf nine .
But it was obvious lbat the
Reds are tempering their
determination with a reali stic
outlook.
" We haVe to win the rest
and lbey have to lose most of
theirs, " said Pete Rose . " But
to look at it honestly, we've
got a slim chance. We are
going to try to win ever y
game and if we gel
eliminated, we 'll probably
still try to keep winning."
The Dodgers' locke r room
- t he losing locker room was louder tllan tlle Reds '
quarters. While the Dodge rs
wouldn't adm it it 's over, 1t
was clear the team is not
concerned with a few recent
losses.
" I wouldn 't want anyone to
roll over and play dead," said
Reggie Smilll . " The Reds
scored runs wh en they had to
tonight and Seaver pitched
well - you can 't take that
away from him .
" I'm not worried about the
playoff s yet - we've got to
get thi s matter taken care of
first . But we'll be all n ght. "
Ron Cey cracked two !lome
runs to pace the Dod~ers'
attack. He said a ny celebration s
now
woul d
be
premature.
" The Reds are just going to
keep co ming a t us until it's all
over," the compact third
baseman said. " It 's not over

with l.lfltil we 've eliminated
every team ."
George f'oster cracked his
34th hom e run m the fourth
innin g off loser Don Sutton,
15-1 1. It was a two-run blast
and gave the Reds a 2.() lead .
The Dodgers got one run
back in their half of the fourth
with Cey ' s 22nd homer .
Seaver singled in two runs in
the sevenlll for a 4-1 lead but
th e Dodgers rallied in the
ninth beh in d Cey's 23 rd
horner and pinch hitler Lee
La cy' s RB I s in gle , but
couldn 't get an y closer .
Dodger Manager Tom
Lasorda gave the best
indication of the the mixed
feelings of his play ers.
" As long as a learn is not
mathemat ically eliminated,
you have to keep going ,"
Lasorda said. " But once the
playoffs begin it starts fresh
- you forget the seaso n.' '

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&lt;'

· STILL A MYSTERY: Fifty-two yeara ago, mystery writer
Agatha Cbrillie spun a real-lite puzzler by dlsaJ&gt;IIearing for 1l
days and reappearing with no explanation. Now a book and
6Jm are out with a fictionalized accQWit of the epiaode. It's one
not so flattering to the late author, who died in 1978, so her
famUy sued to bar distribution. Daughter RoullDd Hlcb ~ays
the book " Agatha," which hu the author cooking up a plot to
murder her hUBband's mlltress, infringes on her mother's
"right of publicity." Not so, says U.S. Di.ltrtct Collfl Jaclte
Lawre~~ce Pierce in New York -her fans may never know the
truth about the di&amp;appearance, but they have a right to read
the fiction ,

•·

A Home Bank
Fur

TilE MA'I'(.'HMAKERS: The Brltiah preu- always eager
to bannerline the love Ufe of PriD&lt;e Cbarlet- has lined him up
with a new girlfriend. She's Czech Cowlten AqeJJU
Lazaiulty. and she was a RUest of the royal family last
weekend in a soiree at Balmoral Castle in the Scotti.sh
Highlands . She's being quoted u ~aytng the prince Ia "the
most wonderful and channing per10n I have ever met." That 's
enough for the matchmakers, but the counten says she never
said it. She told UP! Wednesday in Paris, "I have made no
statement of any kind to the press and I have abeolutely no
comment to mate." Buckingham Palace Ia more blunt- cali.s
the rumors "a whole load ol rubtuh ."

s• 25

LOS ANGELES I UP!)
The mortally wounded giant
took another gasp of air,
refusing to die a peaceful
death.
The pride of the Cincinnat i
Reds just won 'l allow the
team to give up . The club will
be fighting and scratchin g to
th e very end .
Wedn esday ni ght Tom
··
Seaver
fired a fi ve-hitter over
Detroit
(Witco
x
13·101.
8
p
m
.
Major League Standings
New Vork [ Hunter 10-5) at .
Bv United Press International
eight and two-tllirds in nings
Toronto (Moore 6-ll . 7:JO p .m .
National League
to pick up his 15th win against
Milwaukee ( Replogle 9-2) a1
E as.t
CINCI NNATI (UP! )
ct. GB Kansas City (Leonar d 18-17) . Sunday 's game between the
14 defeats as the Reds
1 W . L. P_
8 · JOp .m .
Phil a
83 68 .550
defeated
their nemesis, the
Texas
(Matlac
k
13
·13)
at
Cincinnati Bengals and the
Pittsbr gh
81 70 .536 2
M innesota (Serum 9 81. 8: 30 Ne w Orl ea ns Saints is
Los Angeles Dodgers, 4-3.
Chicago
75 76 .497 8
p .m .
71 82 464 13
M ontreal
In the midst of his worst
shaping up as the battle of the
Friday's Games
St . LOUIS
65 88 .425 19
season of his. career, Seaver
Seattl e l!lt Tex as. n igh t
New Yor k
63 89 .414 20 1'2
brui sed.
Kansas City at M inn . n1ght
West
Johnson's got tlle engines started again,
Both
Bill
Ca li forn ia at Chicago , nig_ht
W. L. Pet . GB
Oakland at Mflway kee , n 1ght
L os Ang
92 61 .601
Bengals and Dick Nolan 's struck out 12batters and set a
New York at CleveiMd , night
Cincina1 1
84 68 .553 7 '~
Saints find their ranks major league record . The
Boston at Toronto , n ig ht
Sa n Fran
83 69 .5-46 8 1 '~
decimated by injury going third victim gave Seaver 200
Detroit at Balt imo re
San Diego
79 74 .516 13
Houston
68 83 .450 23
into tlle fourth regular season strikeouts lor the season, t he
Atlanta
68 84 .447 231f2
Major League Resuit~
game, at Riverfront stadium . fir st pitche r to have 10
. Wednesday ' s Results
By
united
Press
tnrernat
tonal
In th e winless Bengals seasons with 200 or more
Ch icago 5, Pittsburgh 1
Nationill League
Ph iladelphia 4, Mon t real 2
Ptsbg h
001 000 ooo- t 4 o _camp, quarterback Ken strikeouts.
New York 7, St . Louis 6
The Dodgers still hold a
Chi
110
200 01'- 5 13 I ·Anderson began his first full
Atlanta 3, Hous ton 2
Rooker , Reuss (4 ), Jackson
.
, d
commanding
seven a nd .oneSan Fran 6, San Diego 3
1
(8 J and Ott , s a n g u i 1 1 e n ; week of throwmg ues ay,
Cin ci nnati 4, Los An g 3
half game lead with just nine
Krukow
and
Blackwel
l
.
W
but
will
miss
the
Saints
game
.
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
Krukow (8 .21. L - Rooker ( O.ll l . Running back t_envil Elliott , games
rema ining. Any
&lt;A It Times Eon
Pittsburgh (R obinson 13-6) at Phi l a
ooo
01
3
ooo--4 7 o who dislocated a shoulder , combination of Reds ' losses
Chi ca go (Lamp 7·14 ), 2 :30 p.m .
002and
ooo- Boon
2 8eO; was cleared to start workouts and Dodger wins totaling
Phil adelphia (Carlton 15-12) MtlLerch . Reedooo(.9)
at Montreal (Grimsley 18.10 ), Scha tzeder, Garman ( 8 ) and We dnesday, but ·was not
three gives Los Angeles its
7: 35 P.m .
. w - Ler ch , 10 ·8. L
cleared to play. And first- second consecutive NL West
New York (Swat~ 8-5) at St . carter
Sch atzeder , 7 6. HR s- Phi l ad el
h ·
R
Lou is (Urr ea 3-9), 8:"35 p .m .
phia, Luzinski CJ2l. Schm1dt r ound draft c mce
oss title .
Atlanta (Niekro 18 .15 ) at
1n the subdued winning
Bro wne r a nd linebacker Bo
Houston (Forsch 6-13J. 8: 35 (2 1); M ontreal ; Per ez (14 ).
locker
room, llle Reds spcke
p .m .
N.Y .
000300400- 7 90 H~ris remain out of action _
San Fran cisco ( Montefusco Sf .'L
of
winning
their next nine
100 002 02 1- 6 10 l
Also ailing a re cornerback
11 -7) at San Oiego ( Perr y 19-6),
Kobe l.
Koosma n ( 8J and
10 p .m .
Stearn s; O' Br ien , Frazier (6). Scott Perry (twisted knee),
Cincinnat i (Hum e 6-11 ) at Los Lope z (7) , Thomas (71 , Schultz a nd
lin ebacker s Glenn
Angeles &lt;Sutton 15· \0 J. 10 : 30 (9) and Swi!.her . W- Ko bel , 4·5.
Cameron
and Tom DePaso
p .m .
L - Fra zie r , Q.J. H Rs - Mazz i lli
Fridily's Gamei
.
( 16 ); St . Lou is, Hernandez (1 1). (sprained ankles).
Ph il a at New York , nig ht
1-2,
Will
be
Th
e
Saints,
Chicago at St . Lou ts. night
Alia
100 100 00 1- 3 9 0
Cinc inn ati at Atlanta , nigh t
Hous
100 010 000- i 5 1 ~ i ssin g offensive guard
San D iego at L os_Ang, nignt
LaCort e, . Ga rber
(8)
and Emanuel Zande rs ( knee
Houston at Sa n Fran , night
CINCINNATI (UP! )- The
Nolan , Ben ed ict ; J . N ie kro and surgery Monday ), offensive
Puiols . W- Garber , 6-5. L - J .
Cincinna ti Reds are abuout to
gua rd Conrad Dobler (knee
Niekro , 12-14_.
break two major league baseinjury ), running back Chuck
American League
San Fran
201 100 2oo- 6 12 1
ball a ttendance marks in two
East
San Ogo
000 100 11o-- 3 10 1 Muncie (torn ligament) and
W. L. Pet. GB
weeks
.
Blu e, M o ff itt ( 8), Lavelle- ( 8) kicker Rich Szaro (pulled
New York
92 60 .605
The
Reds set a record for
and H i ll ; Rllsmussen , Sh irl ey
Boston
groin ).
90 62 .592 2
(4 1,
Lee
(6 1.
Mura
(7),
attendance at a way games
V!ilwauk e
87 66 .569 5 1 2 O'Acqu is to ( 8 ) and Tena ce . W The Saints have announced
Ba ltimre
85 66 .563 611 Biue, 17 9. L - Ra smuss en , 14.
Tuesday night in Dodge r
1
they
will start Mike Strachan
Detroi t
81 70 .536 10 / J 14.
Stadium
, when 50,450 fan s
: le'Jelnd
66 84 .440 25
in place of Muncie, Dave
roronto
58 93 .384 33' 2 Ci nci
0002002D0-4 60 Lafary in place of Dobler, saw Los Angeles shut out
We!lt
LA
000 100 002- 3 6 0
Cincinnati 8-ll. That increased
W L . Pet . GB
Seav er , Ba ir ( 91 and Ben ch ; and Robert Woods in place of
th e
R eds'
1978 r oad
&lt;an City
85 66 .563
Su tton ,
Ra uf zhan
( 8 ) . and
Zanders. The club also has
: alit
Bl 72 . 519
5
to
.
2,236,
419, w1th
at
tendance
Ferg uson . W- Se a"V er . 15-14. L
re:..: as
75 74 .503 9
- Su lfon , 15· 11. HRs- Ci nci n - been looking at kickers, and
four• more away games
Vli neso t a
69 82 . 457 16
nat i, Fos te r (34) ; Los Ang eles . was expected to sign one by
Jakll'lnd
68 86 .44 2 18 1·2 Cey 2 (23) .
scheduled.
today .
: hi cago
67 85 .441 18 1 '1
The old National League
ieattle
55 93 - .372 2B h
. Wednesday's Results
att
e ndan ce
mark
was
American League
Toronto e. New York 1, lst
(1st game)
2
207
530
set
in
1966
by
San
' New York 3, Toronto 2, 2nd
N.Y .
000000 1QO- l.61
•).an~isco.
The
ma
jor
league
Detro it 12 . Boston 2
Tor
230 Ot l Oh: - 8 13 1
M i lwaukee 5, Kan Ci t y 4
mark was 2,216,159 fans
Gu 1dr y ,
M e Call
( 2}
an d M il 31.
M innesota 5, Te xas 3
M unson ; W ill1 s and Cerone . w
Runs
Bitted
In
drawn
on the road by the New
Today ' s Probable Pitchers
- Wi ll is, 3 6. L - Gu idr y, 1~ - 3 .
National
League : . Perker ,
"(All Times EDT)
York
Yankees
in 1962.
HR s- New York , C. Johnson Pi n
111
Fost er , Cin
108 ;
Boston (Eckersley 11 ·Bl at
( 6 ) , Toronto . Howel l ( 6t .
Ga r vey , LA 105 ; Clark , SF 95 ;
Next week, the Reds also
1\1\ontanel. N Y and Luz inski . will become the first team in
(2nd game )
Ph il 94
.
N.Y .
000000003- 3 60
American League : Rice , Bos major league histor y to go
Tor
020 000 ooo- 2 6 1 131 ; Staub , Del 1 14 ; HiSle . M tl
Clay , Goss l'tge (7) an d 108; Tho r nton , Clev 99 ; Carf y , over the 2.5 million pa1d
attendance mark at home for
Munson , Underwood , Cr uz (9), Oak 94.
eu skev (9) ana Ashby . wStolen Bases
three consecutive seasons.
Gossage , 10-10 . L - Cruz , 7-3.
Nation••
Lugue : 1 Moreno ,
The
Reds currently have
Pitt
65;
Lopes .
LA and
Bos
000 000 002- 2 6 1 Ta'o' era s, P itt 42 ; Sm ith , s o 39 ; drawn 2,316,4 12 fa ns at
Oet
10020360x - 12 15 0 De Jesus. Ch i 37 .
To rrez , L aRose (5), Wright
Amer ican League : LeF lore , Riverfront Sta dium , a nd
(7 ), Burgmeier (7) and Fisk ;
Oet 66 : Cruz . Sea 54; Will s, Tex have six remainlng home
Rozema and May . W- Roze me, SO ; Oilon e , Oak 46 : Wilson , KC
dates .
9-10 L - Torrez , 15-12. HRsFriday night against Belpre. Meigs has a 1-1 record going
into the contest.

Parker , a guard and
defensive end who is li •ted a•
a ·questionable •tarter for
tomorrow night. If his leg
injury isn 't improved, then
Brent Bolin and Mike Drehel
will have to step in.
Cornerback Rick Blaettnar
is just getting back into ac·
tion after an injury , and Chris
Judge did an admirable job
filling in last week. Blaettnar
and Drehel are both st ill
hobbling , but they should be
ready for F'riday as the
M•rauders tune up for their
SEOAL opener next week .
Belpre, coached by veteran
Ra lph Holder, fields a mos:ly
senior ball club with 10 •enior
sta rt ers . Their deft!nse, is
relat ively good, but their

Seaver beats Dodgers

Attendance
record set

peopletalk

48 t 0

fense has been absent as
Meigs has fumbled at crucial
times or ha s committed
costly penalties. Last week,
despite the win, Meigs was
assessed 95 yards in
penalties.
The overall exec ution of the
offense must improve, but
with the inexperience of some
of the players in the lineup ,
Coach Chancey is confident
the sha rpness will come with
every passing contest. He
feels that the potenti•l for a
fine offense is there, if these
few thorns can be corrected.
Illness and injury have
plagued the Marauders all
season beginning with
preseason practice.
Latest victim is Robert

1

Two-way traffic

OHIO VALLEY
LJVISTOCK
MARKET REPORT .
Prices taken from the
auction of Saturday, S.pt. t6,
'
1978.
Trendo: Feador cattle
a&lt;:tlve to SJ to S&gt;4 higher. Cows
steady, veal calves steady.
Total H•d: tt20
C.ltlt
.
'F ~
St-• (good and
..... ..choice I 250 to 300 lba. 51.50 to
73; 300 to 400 tbo . 56 to 70: «JJ
"' 500 lbo 54 50 "' a7' 500 "'
600 Ibo. si.50 'to"' ..,0 to 100
lbo. 4B to 51.50 ; 100 iond over

BY GREG BAILEY
The Meigs Marauders play
their first home game Friday
night when the Belpre Golden
Eagles come to Pomeroy
Stadium.
Last year, Belpre stunned
the Marauders at Belpre with
a narrow !HI victory, so the
boys of Meigs Coach Charlie
Chancey have a score to
settle.
Meigs is fresh off a IH win
. ove r
cross-river
rival
Wahama . The Meigs defense,
touted by some fans as
superb, actually held The
White F'alcons to a minus 39
yards rushing last week, and
in the season opener against
powerful Point Pleasant,
Meigs a llowed just eig ht
yard s ru shin g in a 14-8
overtime loss to the Big
Blacks.
Th e missing link so far is in
the Marauder offensive attack, although it may gel any
lime, hopefully Friday night.
Th e sharpness of a good of-

host Belpre

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�•- -'''he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday , Sept. 21 , 1978

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keep lead,. beat Expos

By MARK FRIEDMAN
UPI Sports Writer
•
The Philadelphia Phillies
hitched up their britches
Wednesday night, drew a
collective deep breath and
vowed to stop trying so darn

playing all that bad, but
tonight we hit the ball a little

Philadelphia's first run CI!Jlle
in the fifth on an RBI siilgle
harder .~~
by Ted Sizemore.
Philadelphia led , 1-0,
In Chicago, a .tough loss to
entering the sixth when swallow didn't totally
Garry Maddox lashed- a one- dishearten
Pittsburgh
out double against loser Dan Manager Chuck Tanher .
Schatzeder, · 7-6. Luzinski · " I never thought we'd win
followed with his 32nd homer all of them down the stretch,' '
into the left-field bleachers to he said . " After all, we've still
make the score, ~. Mike got four games left with
Sclunidt then hit his 21st Philad-elphia, and they're aU
home run - to abnost .the at home .''
id-entical spot - boosting the
The CUbs' victory -behind
Phillies' lead to 4-0 behind the four-hit pitching of Mike
left-band-er Randy Lerch, 16- Krukow - and a I:J.bit attack
8, who ·went the first eight against three Pirate pitchers,
innings. Ron Reed finished broke a seven-game winning
for his 14th save .
streak for the Pirates.
Tony Perez hit a two-run
"Kruko·w killed us ,"
homer for Montreal, his 14th, Tanner said. "He was in
in the sixth, after Andre command aU the way ."
had
singled .
Dawson
In other NL games, it was

htrd.

It must have worked,
because the Phils used the
long-ball approach to take a
4-2 victory over the Montreal
Expos and stretched their
lead in the National ~ague
East to two games over
Pittsburgh, 5-1 afternoon
losers to the Chicago CUbs.
" It 's about time I've done
something," said Greg Luzinski, who powered a twwun
homer to key a three-run
sixth inning. "Actually, I
don 't think we've been

Angeles.
New York 7, St. Louis 6;
Glllnts I, Padres 3:
Atlanta 3, Houston 2; San
Vida Blue notched his flnt
Francisco 6, San Diego 3, and
win in six weeks, bu.t faDed
Cincinnati 4, Los Angeles 3.
for the seventh straight tisne
Mets 7, "cardinal• 1:
to go the dlslance in a
A tw&lt;H"UD single by Willie triumph by San Francisco
Montanez highlighted a four- over San Diego.
run seventh-inning rally and
helped New · York to a
triumph over St. Louis.
Braves 3, Astroo 2:
Glenn Hubbard's twO&lt;Jut
run-scoring single in the ninth
inning scored pinch runner
By
Ed Miller with the winning
run and gave Atlanta a
All American
victory over Houston.
Reds t, Dodgers 3:
Tom Seaver fired a fiveMEETS
hitter for 81-3 innings and set
a major~eague record with
•OHIO BUILDING
the lOth 200-strikeout of his
CODES
career as the Reds took Los

HOMES

•FHA &amp;VA

Yanks split, Boston b.e aten
eight hits. ln the second game
Tom Underwood, another
lefty, gave up just three hits
over ;&lt;fl 1-3 innings before
giving way to loser Victor
Cruz.
The Red Sox seem to be
doing their best to ensure the
Yankees' third straight AL
East title. With a chance to
close the gap to no worse than
a game and perhaps even tie
for the lead again, they were
bombed out in Detroit. Mike
Torrez was tagged for seven

ninth 3-2,
inningofthe
nightcap
to
win,
and increase
their
first-place lead to two games
over the Bostori Red Sox, who
were losi~g 1:'.-2 .to Detroit.
"If we're gonna gain
ground. we've got to beat the
last-place teams," said Graig
Nettles, who singled home
pinch runner Paul Blair with
the winning run . "This is the
time of year when good.
ballclubs should handle the
last-place clubs."
In the first game, Guidry,
22-3. was sent to his earliest
~rture of the season when
th} Blue Jays stunned the
Yanks for five runs in the
first two innings. Rick Bosetti
had a two-run triple and two
singles and left-bander Mike
Willis tamed the Yanks on

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hits and three runs in four wauk~ shaded Kansas City,
S-4, and Minnesota put away
plus innings.
Rusty Staub and Rookie of Texas, 5-3.
the Year candidate Lou '!'wins 5, Rangers 3:
Whitaker led the Tiger
Dan Ford had three hits
assault with three-run and drove in two runs and
homers, while Dave Rozema Dave Goltz scattered eight
pitched a six-hitter,losing his hits for his 14th win .
shutout bid in the ninth when Brewers 5, Royals 4:
Jim Rice hit his 42nd homer.
Sal Bando tripled in the
"We're just lucky the Yan- tying run ·and Paul Molitor
kees didn't win two games," .doubled home the gamesaid Yastrzemski. "We got to winner in the eighth inning as
win 10 in a row now, that's the Brewers snapped a string
all."
of 10 straight losses in Kansas
Elsewhere in the AL, Mil- City.

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES
IIOG-E . Main
Pomeroy, Ohio

SHOP

Early Wed. Mixed
September 13,1978

Forecast

.
Ry M11jor Amos R, Hoople
Tie Wizard of Odds
f:gad , friends, this could
be"The Week That Was" for
at; least two of the nation 's
p~mier elevens. Yas, "The
Week That Was " for th~
lo~er s in the key gam,e s
rn~t c hing

Southe rn

.Alaba ma

vs.

Ca lifornia

and

NOtre Dame vs. Michigan .

r$ew

a.

rivalry last con- Columbia 28 Harvard 14
Houslon 32 Utah 21 IN)
Stanford 24 llllnols 14
Washlogtoli 28 Indiana 21
Birmingham when the visit - Iowa State 14 Iowa 10

ing Trojans take the field to
a\{empt to . avenge a 21-20
defeat suffered at the hands
of·host Alabama last vcar .
In the a fternoon ·affair ,
Notre Dame 's defending na -

second biggest game on
t~eir schedule. next to archrival Ohio State . So they can
be expected to go a ll out.
Apd a ll-out for Michigan can
be very good indeed - un kitmph !

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IN THE

chips arc down so the hunch

The Ir is h al ways seem to

here is they will once again
rise to the occas ion and win

the closel-y contested fray,
31-27. .Jove ! 'Twill be some
Later , to the delight of a
TV

audi e nce ,

Alabama 's ta lented quarterba ck. Jeff Rutledge, another
. authentic lieisman candi date. will lead the Tide
against an excellent Trojan
~m .

.
Super runners Charles
White and Dwight Ford of
the Trojans figure to keep

th e ga me c lose throughout

the evening but we see the

fina l tally 28-20 for the Bear
Bryant team - har·rumph !

While the spotlight will ·be
shining on the two big
games , there will be a lot of
cxc.ting footba ll on
'around the country .

tap

The venerable Ivy l&gt;eague
will kick-&lt;&gt;ff with a full slate
of games : Yale vs . Brown;
Cornell vs. Pr inceton: Da rtmouth vs . Penn , and Columbia v~ . Harvard .

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Two intensely emotional
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Iowa and Iowa State, and the
Miami Hurricanes hosting

F'lorida State. And in a nocturnal affair

t;~. t

Austin , Tex .,

Fred Akers' Longhorns will
entertain his old Wyoming
Cowboy charges.
Yale and Brown are meeting for the 83rd time and the
Elis, defending ivy champions, should edge Brown, las t
year 's runner-ups . Make it
· Ya le 28, Brown 10. 'l'he
Princeton Tlgers are our

as
seen on
national

choice to over-run Cornell 's

Big Red, Jii-7.
The Dartmouth-Penn se-

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~

can be . In 4~ previous
ga mes, Dartmouth has pre•Vailed 22 times, Pennsylvania has won 21 times and two
games have finished in ties .
When the shooting is all over
this Saturday, the Penn boys
will have evened the series
at 22 wins each with a twopoint victory, 1~ . They heh-heh - like to play 'em
close!
·
Rounding out the Ivy competition, Colwnbia 's Lions
will defeat John Harvard's
representatives, 28-14.
When intra-state rivals get
together, anything can happen and usually does. So we
expect a couple of real barnburners in the Iowa-Iowa
State and Miami-Florida
State encounters, The Iowa
State Cyclones appear to be
a mite the better team and
the Hoople System gives
them the edge, H-10.
The moon over Miami is

great for song and romance.
But it won't help the host
Miami Hurricanes repel the
onslaught of the Florida
State Seminoles. Bobby
Bowden's team is a little
short on experience compared with last year's Semi·
noles. But they still have ~
much talent lor Lou Saban 's
club and will win by a 27-13
coWit:
·
Wyoming will do its best to
give fonner mentor Fred
Akers a warm evening, but
Akers • Longhorns should
win rather easily, Our scouting reports give Texas a 24point margin in the final

oeore\ 38-U.

a•aL••

~~;;::~::

UCLA 23 Kaosas 10

Kentucky 35 !laylor 21
Colgate' 14 Lehigh 7
LSU 21 Wake Forest13 IN l
Mphls Sl2t Miss Sl21 IN)
f1a St27 Mlamt (F) 131N)
Miami 101 15 W Mlch 10
tional .champions, whQ were Mich Sl 19 Syracuse 12
jolted back to the land of Ohio St 28 Mlnn 21
r~a lit y by Missouri. are Missouri 21 Min B
faced with a mui t-win s itua - No Ariz 34 Moolaoa 14
tion if they are to stand any NMex 33 Nev Vegas 20 (N)
No Te• St38 NMex St 15 IN)
c ~ancc at a ll of .. rCta inin g No Caro It Marylaud 10
their cr own .
Wise 25 Northweskrn 12
For Bo Schembel:hler and Noire Dame 31 Micb 21

High Team Game Young's Market 661.
High Ind. Series - A. L.
Phelps, Jr., 520, Bob Couch,
511, Debbie Hawley 497,
Maxine Dugan 496.
High Ind. Game· - Bob
Couch, 197, A. L, Phelps, Jr.,
189, Debbie Hawley !92,
Maxine DuRan 173.

5

Drake ~ I Ark. St ~0 1N1
Army 33 Virginia 8
Ball Sl 24 Toledo 14
Te• A&amp;M 22 Bost Col 13
Owing Gr 26 Gmd Vly Sl 6
Vale 28 Brown 10
Rutgers 35 Bucknell 12
Calilorula 24 Pacific 16
!.'ville 22 Clncf zo INI
VM1 Zll Cllade 15 IN)
Colorado 31 SJose St 18
Navy 17 Conn 1

tested 25 y~ars a~o .
And it will be the sa me
st~ry under the lights in

FOR THE BEST DEALS

Mon ., Tues .. Wed . &amp; Sat.8:30til 5:00
Thursday Till2 r&gt;~oon
Friday Until'S P.M.
Herman Grate
773-5592
Mason. W.Va.

Name
HI. WI.
Nicky Riggs
5
84
ShawnEads
5-l 94
Jon PerriJ1
5-3 124
JohnAeiker
4-ll 75
David Follrod
5
90
Wayne Dent
5
116
Michael Willford · 5
100
Chris Burdette
ii-2 118
Jay Evans
5-4 97
Andy lannarelli
ii-I 115
Randy Carl
4-11 85
Bryan ~irkle
4-10 98
John Powell
ii-2 112
Robert Bishop
ii-9 132
Danny Davis
ii-I 161
Vaughan Spencer
ii-I 119
James Farley
5-jj 145
Howard Barr
ii-7 137
David Roush
5-3 103
Bryan Betzing
4-11 109
Bobby Southern
~ 106
Larry Lee
~ 128
Coaches - John Arnott,
Jim Crow, and John
Krawsczyn.

~opes for the national Prl.ncetoo 35 Cornell 7
cllampionship will be on the Peon tO Dartmealh 8
Duke 28 So Carolina 14
liae at South Bend when Clemson 17 Georgia 5
Mchi!l8n 's Wolves invade to Ga Tech 18 Tulane a

MASON FURNITURE

1888.

MEIGS 7TH
GRADE RoSTER

(

Pts
Team3
18
Team I
12
Team2
12
Team4
12
Zide's Sport Shop
10
Young's Market
8
High Team Series - No. 2,

TRI-STATE AREA

'

Football rosters

hts Wolverines, this is th e

Local Bowling

Greg Pruitt hospitalized

Junior

Hoo..Ja•s
. ~ h·.
Igh

MODULAR

-

By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sports Writer
The last-place Toronto Blue
Jaysa111bushed the New York
Yankees, 6-1 , in the first
game of Thursday's twi-night
doubleheader and carried a :&gt;..
0 lead into the ninth inning of
the second game.
But the Yankees, after
watching their seemingly unbeatable ace, Ron Guidry, get
roughed up lor five rims in I
1-3 innings of the opener,
rallied for three runs in the

..
Ma~

Now go on with my· fore-

cut:

S.lurday. Sepl. 23

AFOI'ft 11 11Crw1 7

MEIGS 8TH
GRADE TEAM ROSTER
HI. WI.
Name
5-ll 169
Matt VanVranken
5-4111
Rick Chancey
Oklahoma 49 Rice 7
5-3 105
Rick Edwards
Arlulosas 31 Okla St 18
Oregoo 21 TCU SIN I
ii-2 120
Scott Pickens
5~ 105
Peon St. 28 SMU 14
Eddie Blount
Pftl 24 Temple 10
5-3 113
James Quillen
Purdue 14 Ohio U 7
5
96
Brill King
w Tex Sl35 So m 22
Mike
Manley
5
106
E Caro t7 SW La 8
4-11 88
Brett Carl
Teon 21 Ore St 18 INI
5-4 110
Paul Hysell
Teus 31 Wyoming 14
SDicgo Sl 35 UTEP 7 IN 1
5-3 115
Greg Taylor
Tex Tech 28 Ariz 13 (N)
~ 135
Greg Fife
Kao St 20 Tulsa 19
ii-I 131
Jeff Nottingham
Utah St II Fresno St 14
5-4 124
Marc Fry
VaoderbU122 Furman 10
Mike
Hawk
5-3 127
WinMary 29 VUianova 14
5
110
Brad Alexander
Auburu 27 Va Tech ZO ·
Ariz St2t Wash St18
4-9 116
Ivan CarL
ii-2 101
Craig Bolin
4-11 94
Brian Spencer
4-10, 90
.John Blake
ii-I 111
John McKinney
~ 125
Cliff Icenhower
Bill Holcomb
5-5 155
.
5-3 114
Steve Powell
6
167
BiUBiount
5-7
149
Steve
Bunce
DELAWARE, Ohio (UP!) .
4-11
81
Scott
Harrison
- The 33rd runnipg of the
Little Brown Jug toftay at the
ii-7 133
Delaware
County Mike Jackson
5-3 107
Tim
Justis
Fairgrounds shapes up as
Troy
Bauer
ii-2 113
three-horse affair among
Ken
McCullough
5-3
101
Abercrombie, Falcon
Almahurst and
Flight
Director.
tth Grade Schedule
Sept. 21, North Gallla, 5:311
Those three aU go in the
second of two elimination p.m. ·
Sept. 28 at Kyger Creek.
considered
the S:JO f.m.
h eats,
stronger of the two, and mad-e'
Oc . 5, Point Pleasant, 5:30
necessary by the large 13- p.m.
Oct. 12 at Jackson , 4: 30
horse field .
p.m.
Aberc~ie, driven by
Oct. 19, Worren , 5:JO p.m .
Glen Gar~~~y)was made the
Oct. 76, Athens, 4: 30 p.m.
Nov . 2 at Gallipolis, 5: t5
prerace favorite at Mo-5,
followed by Bill Haughton's p.m.
7th Gra.de Schedule
Falcon Abnahurst at Z.W-1
~et, 25, 6_elpre, 5:30p.m.
and F1ight Director, driven
Oct . 16 al Chancey. Dover,
• : JO p.m.
by Joe O'Brien, at 5-to-2.
Oct. 26 at Chauncey· Dover,
Haughton , winner of five
5:55
f .m.
·
previous Jugs on the halfOc . lO at Belpre, 5:55p.m .
mile Delaware track, puts the
favorites tag for this year's
Local Bowling
Jug, with a record«tting
purse of $186,760, qn ·
MONDAYNITE
Abercrombie.
Sept 18, 1978
WL
"Right now, Ahercrom ble
gets the edge," said Roach's Gun Shop
30 2
Haughton, " but my horse or Salem St. Mkt.
18 14
18 14
Flight Director can beat Fryes PennzoU
him.''
Powell's Market
12 20
Abercrombie drew the No. No.2
10 22
3 post position, with Flight Heiner's Bakery
8 24
Director, starting on the
Team High Game
outside.
Roach's Gun Shop 805,
The other horses in the PoweU's Market 796, Roach's
second division are Double Gun Shop 782.
Splendor, driven by Archie
Team High Series McNeil; Never Wrong, Roach's Gun Shop 2363,
Carmine Powell's Mkt. 2223, Salem St.
driven
by
Abbatiello; and Herve Mkt. 2!7Jl.
.
Filion's Armbro Tiger.
Men's High Game- Larry
The lineup for the first Hendriclta 209, Randy Roach
elimination has, from the 200, Larry Hendricks 194.
post out, Helmsman, driven
Men's High Series - Larry
by Lew Williams; Peat Moss, Hendriclta 553, Randy Roach
d~iven by Doug Arthur;
497, Raymond Roach 491.
League Leader, with John
Women's High Game Hayes Jr ,, the driver; Wizazd Bess Hendricks 183, Debbie
Abnahurst, driven by Keith Dobbinl 188, Beu Hendricks
Waples; Distant Thunder, !80.
driven by James R. Allen;
Women's High Series Mr. Wight, driven by James Bess Hendricks 546, Naomi
La rente; and Happy Eacort, Floyd 488, Drema Roach 456.
driven by William Popfinger,
The Jug winner must
capture two heats. The flr!ll
four linishers in each dlvtaion
return for a third heat. H
neither of the heat winners is
Wed. Early Blnll
victorious then, the three
September 5,1118
winners return for a fourth
WL
and deciding h""t. .
Teaml
6 2
4 t
Team3
4
4
4
OHIO TEAMS RANKED
Team
KANSAS CITY, Mo . (UP!) ~=:
- Wllminston and Findlay Team 2
2 8
college football teama were
.,, ... lnd G
ranked in the first ratings of
•...,.
· arne - Shirley
the 1978 NAIA Division . 11 Sbnmona 190, Ann llatfield,
f!J()thall poll.
IM.
Wilmington (:1-4) is 19th
Hlgh Ind. Series - Mar'lene
with 23 poinla and Findlay (I- Willon &amp;18, Ann Hatfield 4110.
o) Ia 20th with :MI poinll. Flnt · Hlch Team Series :- Team
Ia Unfleld {Ore.) with eight 3• 2180 ·
.
firat: place vote• and 282
.Hich Team Game- Team
poinll.
3, 'IM.

CLEVELAND (UPI) The Cleveland Bro- take
on the Pittsburgh Steelers
Sunday in the battle of
unbeatens. But cleveland will
be without running back Greg
Pruitt again thia week.
Pruitt; a key to the
Cleveland . offense, was
hospitalized at the Ueveland
Clinic Wednesday. He
suffered deep contusions in
his left calf muscle in a game
with the Cincinnati Bengals
two weeks ago and mlsst!d
last Sunday's game against
the Atlanta Falcons.
A Browns • spoke!IDan said
Pruitt · · wilt
remain
hospttalized until his injured
''decided
leg
shows

running back slot against the
Steelers.
· · "We won last Sunday (2416) without Pruitt, but I'd

---------JUDO TEAM
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) John Saylor of Columbus,
Ohio, is a member of the
United States team that will
compete in the PanAmerican· Judo
Union
championships and the Kano
CUp this fall, the AAU
announced Wednesday.
The Pan-Am event is scheduled for Buenos Aires Sept.
25-&lt;Jct. 2, aM the Kano Cup in
Tokyo, Nov\ 23-26,
Team members selected at
improvement."
the National Sports Festival
Coach Sam Rutigliano has in Colorado Springs.
indicated fullback-lialfback
Saylor is the over 209-lb.
· Mike Pruitt will start at the division .

.......

rather not have to try and do
it again," Rutigliano said,
"We're not the same team
offensively without Greg. But
then
you can't plav
Pittsburgh · without
a
balanced attack."
The Browns share the
National Football League
Central Division lead with
Pittsburgh this week on the
basis of victories over San
Francisco, Cincinnati and
Atlanta.
WOMEN'S COACH
AMES, Iowa (UPI)
Brian Roberts of Defiance,
Ohio, has been named
assistant women's swinuning
coach at Iowa State
· University .
Roberts had coached at
of
Ohio
and
Miami
Talawanda , Ohio, High
School.

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BEAUTIFUL NEW
FALL FASHIONS
E¥Ming Hours ly
Sped1l Appolntmtn1t

OPEN DAILY
9:00-5:00
Phone104,182-3312

PRICES GOOD THRU
SUNDAY, SEPT. 24TH

Brown Jug
evenl sel

a

::

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fit your budget.
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Ronatd Hanning,
Mon, lhru Sat". 8:00 1.m. to9 p.m.
SuiiAy 11:Jflto 12 : 3jiiM51otp.M.

flttiSCitiPTIONS

hiendlr s.Mce

0... Nltllts-tlll t

PIMh--

........ o.

A...... IIUSCIItNI

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�-•

---------·
- -I
1

7-'Ibe Dallv Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pc:meroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 21, 1978

Two attend meeting \
Mrs. Pat Holter, OVAL
delegate, is In Columbus
attl!llding tbe Ohio White
House Ubrary Conference
being held through tomorrow
at the Hotel Sheridan.
Alao at tbe meeting Is
Robert Fox, .resident poet of
the Oblo Arts Council. now

BOOTS

,

THE "CHRIS"
WARM LINED

'\

l

• I

I
'••

j
tD r , first flighi wirmers, Helen Fenderbosch, Gallipolis,
low gross; Georgia Milhoan, South HiUs, low net, and
Mary Roush, Hiverside,low putts; back row, I tor, Eva
~iley, Hidden Valley, low gross; Nancy Reed , Ga)lipolls,
low net; Sandy Colley, Fairgreens, low putts, aU second
flight wiJmers; Hilda Gygax, Riverside, low gross; Mary
Bwion, Riverside, low net, and Grace Eich, Gallipolis,
low putts, all third flight winners .
,

Elizabeth Hayes chosen deputy state
councilor of Chester ·Council 323
CHESTER - The commission of Elizabeth Hayes
as deputy state councilor of
Chester
Council
323 ,
Daughters of America, was
presented at the Tuesday
night meeting held bt the hall.

A reception to be held Oct. 8
from 2 to 4 p.m . at the Saint
Mark-'s Methodist Church,
Belpre , honoring Faye Hosel-

The commission came

begin at 7:30 and at that time
practice will be held for inspection. Inspection will be
held on Oct . 17, and officers
are urged to attend the
practice.
• Dorothy Ritchie, deputy of
District 13, was escorted to
the altar by the flagbearers ,
and Mary K. Holter, on behalf
of the Council, thanked her
for accepting the commission

from Mary Stipp, Ohio State
Councilor and was accepted
by the Council. Mrs. Eileen
Martin, councilor, presided
at the meeting attended by 30
members. The death of Rose
Pahner, associate national
councilor from 1956-58 was
noted and the charter will be
draped without ceremony for
30 days.

ton , state associate vice
councilor, was· announced.
Next meeting Oct. 3 will

as district deputy for another
year , She was commended on
her work and was presented
gifts . Mrs. Ritchie spoke
briefly.
Quarterly birthdays were
observed with the honored
group being seated at a
special table centered with
fall flower s and a decorated
cake made by Mrs. Margaret
Tuttle . Gifts were at each
place. Council members sang
" Happy Birthday" to the
honored group, Mrs. Ritchie,
Betty Roush, Mrs. Holter,
Doris Grueser, Mrs. Hayes,
Julie Rose, Laura Mae Nice,
Leona Hensley, and Doris

BY Allu8h · •
1\Jpp!~.!
. -

.,_

.fl.
.

THE ''GIGI"

,.

-.::

'

WOMEN FROM SIX AREA golf clubs were guests
Tuesday aftemooo wh!!fl the Ladies Association of the
Pomeroy Golf Club held an invitational tournament at the
Pomeroy club . Club6 represented included Gallipolis,
Hidden Valley, Point Pleasant , Riverside, Mason ; South
Hills, Parkersburg; Worthing.ton : Parkersburg;
Fairgreens, Jacltson. Winners pictured include seated, I

Koenig.
Helen Wolf was pianist for
the meeting . Potluck refresh-

ments were served. otHers
attending were Ada Neutzling, Mae McPeek , Letha
Wood, Ada Morris, Esther
Ridenour, Margaret Tuttle,
Charlotte Grant, Zelda
Weber, Ada Van Meter ,
Erma Cleland, Dorothy
Myers, Marcia Keller, Ada
Bissell, Dorothy Lawson,
Thelma White , G.o ldie
Frederick, Mabel Van Meter:
Opal Casto, and lnzy Newell.
A comforter used in a fund
raising project was . won by
Mrs. Ada Van Meter.

· These are special prize winners of the Pomeroy Golf
Club Ladies ASiocialioo invitational tournament held
Tuesday at the Pomeroy club, Seated I ID r, Georgia
Milhoan, South Hilb; Alice Icard, Hidden Valley; Diana
Karr, Riverside and Grace Eich, Gallipollls.

Friendly Circk met,
discussed dinner plans
A ie!lowship
dinner
following the worship service
on Sunday, Oct. I, was announced when the Friendly
Circle met Tuesday evening
at Trinity Church .
It was voted that the meat
and beverages will be
provided for the dinner but
that members are to take
covered dishes. A program
will follow. Also aMounced
'was a rummage sale to be
held at the church on Oct. 3, 4,
and 5 by the Happy Harvesters Class.
Miss Elizabeth Fick,
president, gave a report on
the sales of the Talent
Blenders Cookbook. Food

Has birthday

THE "CUDDLES"
WARM LINED

items brought by the
members for the food pantry,
a continuing project of the

Sandra Roush
--"
graduates

class, were stored. Mrs.

Marine Private First Class

Lawrence Stewart suggested
that containers suitable for
rhythm shakers lor use at the
Mental Health Center be
brought in.
Mrs. Arthur Slusher was
welcomed. Mrs. Opha Offutt,
program leader, used the
'theme "When You are
Fretful" based on Psahn 37,1.
"Worry comes," Mrs. Offutt
said, "when we lack faith,
when we 'try to handle
problems aU by ouraelves."
She said that fretful patienta
should examine the ILst of
essential Ingredients lor
Christian living - love, joy,
peace, faith, temperance.
Mrs. W. H. Perrin and Mias
Erma Smith served a dessert
course to the 17 members
attending.

Sandra L. Roush, daughter of

Harold E. and Rosalie Roush
of Mason, W. Va ., has
completed recruit training at
the Marine Corps Recruit
Depot, Parris Island, S. C.
During ihe eight-wee~
tratning cycle, she was in·' traduced tp the typical daily
routine that she will exPolly Cramer
perience during her enlist_.::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
ment, and studied the personal and professional
standards traditionally
exblbited by Marines.
By Polly Cramer
She participated in an
POLLY'S PROBLEM
active pbysical conditioning
program
and
gained
DEAR POLLY - I need help for a friend who now
proficiency in a variety of
lives in Japan . She soaked some clothes in her
mllitary skills Including close ,. washing machine overnight with dry bleach (a
Japanese product) and the next morning discovered
· • order drlll and first aid.
•
the inside of the machine was discolored and all
Twn:work .and self-discipline
black . What will remove this discoloration ? Vinegar
were emphasized throughout
did
not work too well . Three or four washings have
the tra_ining cycle.
been done ln the machine. The stains do not come off
She Joined the Marine
on the clothes but stili remain in the tub. Help ! Corps in March, 1978.
STEFANI
DEAR STEFANI - I think your friend shoulll
contact the makers of the dry bleach and ask them
what could be causing her trouble. She Is In Japan
G~ MEMBERSHIP
and she used a Japanese product so they should be
Ford .Division of the Ford
able to give her some help. - POLLY
Motor Company recently
announced that Darrell
, DodriJI baa attained memDEAR POLLY - I want to tell Lela that I stretch my
. •. • benblp ln the Ford ~lety of
: Profesalonal Sales Coun- knee socks every night after I wash them by putting them
over the spigots on the tub.
.·
_
' ' selon for 1978. ·
use
a
fork
when
mixing
yeast
witlf
water
because
Always
Society membership can
a spoon gets too gummy and takes too long. You can see the
only be attained by those difference . - MRS. F. Y.
· · Ford sale11men who display
DEAR POLLY - A reader recently wrote that she used
outstanding sales a paper c lip as a book mark . I find they can be too tight and
achievement during the mark or damage the page. A spring type hair dip works
. calendar year. Dodrill is easier and is less damaging . I have even seen such chps
employed with Dan Thomp- covered with little lace-trimmed felt " mittens ."
One of my Pet Peeves is with those women who appear
eon Ford Inc . and has been a
on
TV with their bosoms almost e ntirely exposed. Also
member of their sales staff
'those women and men, too, with hairdos that look like they
Iince 11r1•.
have not been combed for a month. - MRS . A.T .
DEAR POLLY - I have been painting my home here in
Hawaii and found that after opening a can of paint if I
punctured a few holes in the groov_e around the c~n this
allowed the extca paint to drrp back tnlo the can. Thrs IS an
espeCially big help when using gallon cans . No problem
later with paint dried in the can . Much Aloha . - LU
DEAR POLLY - '-la• -- you ever tried to spread butter
when it was frozen soJid ': ! have but then discovered a fast
and simple solution to the problem. f take a carrot or
potato peeler and shred lh• butter thinly into a butte r dish .
Within a couple of ·rninutes it is soft and ready to spread.
I recommend that you try the following in your wor_k
shop. Save a large piece of plastic l&gt;ackrng foam and narlrt
to the side of your work bench. Naris, screws, drrll b1ts or
cotter pins can be con venientlY.st~c~ mto the fo~m tnstead
of rolling off the benc h when 11 IS JUSt about lime to use
them.-'-- DOT
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippe~s if she uses y~ur favon~e
Pointer Peeve or Problem m her column . Wrrte POLLY S
'
.
.
POINTERS m oare of \hiS newspaper.
\

•

POLLY.S POINTERS in~~oLEPORT

The tub turned black

THE
SHOE BOX

........................ '" ........

Levrs
•

.was carried out. Garnes were
played and refreshments
served. A prize was awarded
to each of the guests. Attending were Gene, Patsy.
Eric and Lisa Oiler, Angie

VISITS
Mr . and Mrs . Chester
Knight and their son and
daughter-in-law, Mr . and
Mrs. Terry Knight, and son,
Stevie spent several days in
Pennsylvania at property
owned there by the Pomeroy
Knights . Enroute home they
stopped at Kent to visit Mrs.
Knight's brother , Willard
Ashworth. and his wife, and
then went on to Canton to see
the Footba ll Hall of t' ame.

Ronnie Lee Casto
fC)r an /Excellent Selection of Levi's,

Casto, Ronald, Sis, Candy
Bachtel. Tina, Tracie, and
Wendi Collins, Lori, Scottie
and Shelly Casto, Debl and
Nickie Whitlatch.
Sending gifts were Audria
Arnold, Bill Jeffers, Betty
and Junior McDaniels, Otho
and Florida Casto, Leslie and
Susie McGrail, Jim and
Phyllis Bearhs, Amy Dillard,
and Jo Ann Weyersmiller.

.-

.

Denim or Brushed Denim.
In Sizes 29-44. Try a pair on at:

BAHR CLOTHIERS
N. 2nd AVE.
MIDDLEPORT

992-2351

10

[liS
WHY NOT SEND ALONG

F1JN STYLE SHOW- Participating in a fun fashion show at Monday night's meeting
were from the left, Carol Lyons in her full length -box suit; Mrs. Edith Forrest with a
plunging neckline; Unda Lambert in a fashionable tea dress: Mrs. Terrie Walker in a
combed cotton suit ; Mrs. Catherine Welsh in a slip over sweater ; Mrs. A! wilda Werner in a
sack dress , and Miss Erna Jesse in a print dress.

Mrs. Loretta Jones speaks to BPW
Mrs .
Loretta
Jones,
Jackson, the director of
District 17, Business and
Professional Women 's Clubs,
was guest speaker at the
Monday night meeting of the
Middleport BPW Club.
In her talk, she aMounced
several upcoming meetings
Including one to be held on
Oct. 14 at the Hilton East
Hole! in Columbus where the
national preaident will be the
apeaker .. She also aMounced
a tri-state prayer breakfast
011 Oct. 1~ . at the South Point
Holiday Inn, and a 50th anniversary celebration to take
place on Oct. 19 at the Athens
BPW Club.
Mrs. J ones complimented
tbe club on their participation
In the heart, cancer and cystic fibrosis lund drives and in
the nuroes scholarship

program chainnan, Donna
Davidson. introduced Mrs .
Janet Korn who narrated a
fun (ash ion show.

Participating in the style
show were Miss Erna Jesse
who modeled a print dress
designed of newspapers

complete wit ~ "00\lcs to give
color: Alwllcl.o Nemer in a
sack t1res of sacks straight
from the grocer y Store and a
mat c hin g
tr i-co rnered
grocery sack hat and sack
purse to match ; Catherine
Welsh in a slip over sweater;
Terrie Walker in a pant suit
of combed cotton complete
with .combs and cotton balls ;
Unda Lambert in a tea dress
designed of crepe paper with
tea bags attached and carrying a tea pot; Edith Forrest
with a street dress with a
plunging neckline featuring a
plunger around her neck ; and
Carol Lyons who wore a fuU
length box suit decorated
with oranges.
Games were played and
prizes awarded. Refreshments i\JC!uded a decorated
cake in a fall nower motif to
match the table decor.

lHE DAILY SENTINEL
and
SUNDAY nMES-SENTINEL
FOR ONLY

ANTI.fREEZE AND

COOlANT

'17.50

.

•

CLIP &amp; MAIL
4 The Dai~

Sentinel, Court Sl, Pomeroy, 0. 45769
NAME ....................................................... .
ADDRESS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Cl11t •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
ZIP CODE .......... .
ST•·JE
I ••••• ; ,, •••••••

NAME BRANDS AT ANNIVERSARY PRICES . FLEXSTEIL - ADMIRAL -HOOVER - CALORIC SPEED QUEEN -FRIGIDAIRE

COLLEGE
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

" ·································
0 CHECK ............. 0 MONEY ORDER ............ .
I I AMT•.•••••• ·-··~-· ••••

I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• I ••

$299

cub scout
245 fall roundup Thursday 7
·p.m.
at
Middleport
Elementary
School.
Any
youngster 8, 9 or 10 years
of
age or who has completed the
second grade and has not
been a member are invited to
attend with their parents.

1975 PINTO .SQUIRE WGN.
$2695
1977 CHEVY CAMERO
$4695 .
6 cyl.. auto., P.S., P. B.

SORRY,
NO

.
••
•''

REFUNDS

-

CLIFTON
AUTO SALES

Muppets -to entertain at youth~-----.
rally on Sunday afternoon
·~

rf:.:

There will be a Meigs
County Youth Rally this
Sunday afternoon at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ
located at 212 W. Main Street.
Ail teenagers from junior

high through high school are
invited to attend this special
event.
The program this month
will be presented by the
World Mission Volunteers
from Cincinnati. They are a

group of college students who
go out on weekends to spread
the gospel message of Christ
by preaching , teaching,
singing and the use of
muppets.
The Youth Rally begins at

'Homebuilders' plan
39th annual banquet
The 39th annual banquet
was · planned wh en the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
met Tuesday evening at the
church.
Mack Stewart had charge

of the meeting with Edward
Evans giving the opening
prayer . The banquet has been
set for Oct. 17 and will be
se rved by the Philathea
Women .
Tickets
are
available from Mrs. Peggy
Brickles or Mrs. Co!een Van
Meter, and former members
are invited to contact either
for a ticket to the dinner.
Mrs. Nora Rice, Mrs. Hazel
Wilson, and Mrs . Edna Evans
wi!l have charge of the
program , and Mrs. Flo
Grueser,
Mrs . Shirley
Bumgardner, and · Mrs .
Brickles will handle the
decorations.
The class gave a contribution to the roof fund for
the church. Plans were made
to buy a case of soap and for
the class members to take
Various other items to fill a
box which will be sent to the
Grundy Mountain Mission
School.
Devotions were given by
Mrs. Brickies who used " Just
for Today" as her theme.
Mrs . Grueser and l'v!rs .
Brickles served homemade
ice cream and cake to Mr.
and Mrs. Mack Stewart, Mr.
and Mrs. Herman Kincaid,
Mr . a nd Mrs . Raymond
Baker , Mr . and Mrs .
Ra ymond Cole , Miss Thelma
Boyer, Mrs. Nora Rice, and
Mr . and Mrs. Edward Evans.

With Mat chin Solids

10~.

with the most exciting 1hape around! Connie's buckled -up
sandal makes the scene pn the famous Yo· Yo's
bottom . Neat leather uppers
will fill any fashion bill . Get 'em today I In wine,
leather uppers,

Until
&amp;p.m.

OF SHOES
N. 2nd Ave •

'

~~ ~

Middleport, 0

OFF

"'

To Home
Economic Students

urry

lection

THE SEWING CENTER
'o.

THE

l:ltDIEE

SEWING, KNITTING, ETC• ••

ALL

FULL &amp; TWIN SIZE

conn1e·

Open :
9-S Mon . thru Sat.
Friday till p.m.

50"-54" Velours '3.98-'4.98 yd.
60" Fur f,abrics '2.98-'4.98 yd.
60" Sweater Knits '2.98_yd.
so~ T-Shirt Knits '1.98 yd.

BEDSPREAD
unmistakably

*RUBBER
EOOTWEAR

FALL
FASHION
FABRIC

JACQUARD

Nights

*WESTERN
BOOTS
•WORK SHOES

MEETING SET
There will be a joint
meeting of the Racine Fire
Department, ladies •
auxiliary and the emergency
squad, Sept. 26 at 8 p.m. at
the Racine Fire Station. All
members are asked to please
attend.

PRICE

Friday

Middleport

2:00.

ZIPPERS

~oplii

•
..)

SHOWN ARE the preaching, singing, teaching
Muppets, who will be entertaining at a Youth Rally to be
held at the Pomeroy Church of Christ Sunday afternoon ..

heritage hous~

M

"

•

1.)!

PICKETS MEAD
CHILLICOTHE, Ohio
(UP!) - ·Members of Local
422 of the Office and
Professional
Employees
International Union picketed
the Mead Copr . paper plant
here after striking ln a wage
dispute.
Local President Max
Woods said this is the first
lime in 15 years the c&lt;mpany
has not offered clerical
workers the same cmtract
provisions established for
plant employees.

~w~~

••
•

19~

fhe Gospel ~
f Tesus

SATURDAY
p.m. featuring · the Gospel
RUTLAND
American group Genesis from Marietta .
Legion sponsoring a softball Tlie Rev. Richard Thomas
tournament at Syracuse cordially invites all memSaturday and Sunday. Team hers, friends and former
trophies will be presented to pastors to attend.
HOMECOMING at Eagle
the top four teams with individual trophies being given Ridge Church Sunday.
to the members of the top Basket dinner at noon. The
three teams. For additional Mt,ssengers from Wellston
information caU 742-2279.
will be featured.
· DISCO DANCE Saturday at
T H E
A N N U A L
Pomeroy Elementary froidm 9 homecoming of the Eagle
to I for persons 21 or 0 er. Ridge Church will be held
Admission is $6 a couple. Sunday with a basket dinner
Reservations may be made at noon . Special singers will
by calling Sonya Ohlinger at be "The Messengers" from
992-2426. Sponsored by Ohio Wellston.
Eta Phi chapter of Beta
MINERSVILLE UNITED
Sigma Phi.
Methodist Church, annual
WEEKEND REVIVAL at homecoming .
Sunday .
Hemlock Grove Church with Church school, 9 am .; worBoyd and Blaine ' Cornwell, ship service 10 a .m . oasket
Athens, graduates of &lt;nark dinner at noon ; afternoon
Bible College, as evangehsts. program at 1:30 with
Saturday 7:30 p.m.; Sunday Angeiaires as featured
at 9:30 a.m. and 7:30 p.m . singers . Meig s Senior
Social hour following the ' Citiz~ns Choir also to sing .
Saturday night service in Others invited to s ing.
church basement . Public
TUESDAY
invited.
GROUP
2,
Unrted
SUNDAY
Presbyterian Church, MidHOMECOMING at Langs- &lt;l!eport. 7:30 Tuesday at the
ville Christian Church home of Mrs. William Morris
Sunday. Basket dinner at with Mrs. David Cwrunings
12 :30 in the fellowship room. as co-hostess. Mrs. Rich Karr
Afternoon services at 2 p.m . will be the uevotional leader.
featuring the Good News Trio
SINGSPIRATION; Meigs
from Pomeroy and the True Co. Holiness Ministerial
Tones of Ravenswood. Robert AssoCiation, at Laurel Cliff
E . Musser, pastor, welcomes Free Methodist Church, 7:30.
the public to attend.
HOMECOMING at Chester
CECIL HILL
United Methodist Church
Cecil J. Hill, Racine, is a
Sunday. Regular services at 9 patient at Thomas Memorial
a.m . followed by Sunday Hospital,
McCorkl e
School at10. Basket diimer at Ave., South Charleston, W.
12 :15. Altemoon oroRram at 2 Va. His room number is 254.

V-6, auto., fadory air, low miles.

30,

presents

•

••

OFFER
• EXPIRE$
SEPTEMBER

Jll'OCI"Am.
Mre. Louise Davis presided
at the meeting and the

-

, IIJRRYI

lHEYWILL
RECEIVE
9 MONlHS OF
lHE HOMERMN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL
THIS
OFFER
GOOD
AT ANY

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS BF:ifER
Health CluiJ. I : 15tun. Thur~­
•iay at the home of Mrs. Susie
Pullins. Mrs. Nancy Morris to
have U1c pro~ram, ami Mrs.
Lottie Lt.'Onaru, the contest
MAGNOLiA CLUB Thursday 7:30 p.m. home of
Kathryn Miller.
0
REVIVAL
now
in
progress
at
Danville
Wesleyan Church through
Sept. 24 7:30p.m. nightly. The
Rev. Don Humble is the
evangelist. Gospel singing
each evening. R. D. Brown,
pastor. The public is invited.
BETA SIGMA PHI Thursday 7:30 p.m . at Athens
County Savings and· Loan.
RACINE Legion Post 602
Thursday 8 p.m . Oyster
supper to follow .
EPISCOPAL Church
~ Women, Thursday , communion at 12 noon with
meeting to follow at parish
house. Take sack lunch.
WESTERN
SQUARE
dance Thursday , 8 p.m. at
EMERGENCY ASSISTANCE PROJECT - Mrs.
Royal Oak Park recreational
Alice Wamsley, Retired Senior Volunteer Program
building with Dewey Hart,
director, standing, and Mrs. Susan Oliver, administrative
Columbus, calling. Western
assistant, seated left , outlined plans for an emergency
square dancers invited.
assistance project at the Meigs Hwnan Resources Council
OFFICIAL OPENING
Tuesday. Working them them on securing agency
Democrat Headquarters in
information and c001piling a master list of senior citizens
the Orchid Room over Sears
residing alone or in isolated areas are Ohio University
Store,
E. Main St., Pomeroy ,
social work interns, Karen McCormick, left, and Pam
8 p.m . this evening; a regular
meeting to be held also with a
program and light refresh- - - - - - - - - - -- - -- ments. All Meigs Democrats

...

The seco~d birthday of
Ronnie Lee Casto, son of
Ronnie and Susie Casto,
Pomeroy , wa s celebrated
recently with a party at
Royal Oak Park.
A cookie monster theme

MRs. LORETTA JONES, District 17 BPW director, left, is pictured here with the
Middleport Club officers, Mrs. Louise Davis, president ; Mrs . Eva Robson , vice president;
Mrs. Catherine Welsh , secretary, and Mrs. Terrie Walker, treasurer , left to right . ,

Social 1
I Calendar 1
1

residing near Han-lsonviJie;Botb Mrs. Holter IDd Fo&amp; ' I
attended tralnlna aeaslo114.,, 1
Sept. a In preparltlon lor !
being group leaders. Em :
phasia of the meeting will be~ •
on proposals for tbe naUOfUll '
conference.
:

JUST ARRIVED

NEWSERIVCE
PORTSMOUTH, Ohio
(UPI) - Vehicle ferry boat
service between her•. and
SoUth Shore , Ky ., was
expected to begin today ,
ae&lt;;ording ID Portsmouth City
Manager Barry Feldman .
who said Keystone Richmond
Co. of Virginia would provide
the service with two tug
boats, an autobarge ana a
work barge docked in
Portsmouth .
The toll-free service was
prompted by the closing last
July of a bridge crossing the
· Ohio River between the two
cities. Motorists had been
forced tD detour several miles
in either direction to cross the
river.
The ferry boat service
would provide motorists with
an alternative to driving out
of their way .

GREEN
&amp;
GOLD

POLYESTER
DOUBLEKNil
MATERIAL
VALUES TO
14.95 YD.

99~ YD.

· MOUNTAIN MIST
DACRON

QUILT BAITS
90"Xl08"

$388

8l''X96"

$299

FIBERLOFT
$ 33

STOP IN AND
SEE US
. REG. 1.19
1

SALE

YARN

�I

C,;a1\:lo()f'fhanko

-

CARD Of' THANKS
WOULD l l kt to I ha nk a ll

Athens.grid
coach resigns

·\we

of our fr iends , ne ighbors ,
reletives Bnd our pastor for
the k.idness shown us at the
time of the dea th of our

grandr:taughter ,

lrmoard

Golling Harr i s, daughter of
Mr . and Mrs . James F .

Harris , El

Paso .

Te )(as .

enough to

express our

Thanks tor all o f the ~J i s i ts ,
cards and telephone c a l l.
Thanks
doesn ' t
seem

feel ings but ma v God B less

each and

e~Jeryone .

Helen and D ic k Harr is .

Nuticeo
NO HU N TING 0 1 t i'J~ p o~~~~l Q 0•1
my prope rly w oth oul pi=' r-m•~

sm n Judy McGraw
GU N SHOO! Roc .ne Gun Club
her y Sunday 1 pr n ~ o c to• y
chok e gun ~ o nly
.AVAILAtH!::

l)RI V H

bu~

to

chrld r en to ond h om C o ll•o
( hrl!;lion ~ &lt; ho o l \/in ton Ohto
1rove I New l•mo ll d to Hor
r •s on ... d le 143 t o ~ ~ 7 to l-It l'l 4
ond :J 2~ ml o Vo n l on / ,J ') /OOH

For Rent

'

COU N l'RY MO E!Ilt: Ho me , 1-'nrl&lt;.
Ho ut(&gt; 33 no rrh of Po r no1o ~
l or ge Iars Call94 'l 7 4 1Q

1u1 r11~ fw 1l

'''
.J AND .,' "~'~"'

apt ~

l u rn r-:. h ed

o ••d un
1-' IHlll('

~ 4 34

q9'1

1WO !H: UU OOM 11 alit"•
Only qql :J3:,1J
O N ~ Bt: OHOOM
99J.J;9H

mob de

Adu l t~

ATHENS - Athens High
School football coach Les
Walker has resigned from the
school system in the midst of
an investigation by the
co unty prOse cutor's office
into a lle ged "sexual im·
propri Cties ,"

in.vo lving

Walker and a former female
student.
Walker submitted his
For Friday, Sept . 22

ASTRO·G=RA
=P~
H
Bernice Bede Osol

September 22 . 1978
;ng

~ea r

Yo u w ill co n sc ren -

rous Y st r.v e to 1m pr ove your
lo t rn Ide Yo ur c hances of
honH' suc ceed1ng took ye ry good

VI~GO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) .To-

lWO Bl:O~O OM Tra der &lt;.&lt;DJ l~JO day you coul d fin d yourse lf m a
ofrer ~ pm
pre d1camen t where you co uld
llO OM ~ . f--Ully
d 1..
pe r sonall y p ro ftl . bu t may have
,•. ,,,
equ• ppeb ' ' dl('n to lower yo u1 standards m
2 1 • 9 ro o m ~
a1 11 o"c 1
.

~how e r s week ly

"'""'v•ce orde1

to d o so F1nd ou.t more
new ly decorQ teJ tm d t or pE&gt; I r&gt;d about yourself by sendtng for
997 :i'JtJ2
your copy o f Astra-Graph Let·
ter Mai l 50 cen ts for each and a
lonen

TWO BEDROOM ap1

Bu il t

long . self-addressed. stamped
in 1\itchen . c lose to town . en velope to Astra -Graph . P.O.
After 7 p .m . Call 99 2.J592.

Box 489 , Rad to City Statton.

N.Y 10019. Be sure to spec ify
b1rth stg n
UB~A

(Sept . 13-0ct . 23) Be a

per former today . no t a ra tional -

Pet&amp; for Sale

izer, Ins tead of searchi ng for

.
re asons why somet hing won ' t
110
· Of- HOLl OW H or~e~ Bu v &lt;.el l wo rk, take aclton to pro lo'e that
1rodc or tro• n Ne w ond u-.,-.d 11 w ill
~addle s Ruth lle e11cs A l ban y

l ~ l 4 ) 09tJ . J:/90

lli~ING SlA~ K enn e l~

~nd

!io or dlllQ

gr ~ m.rng

o il ' b •ee d&lt;.
C he ~ h1 r e J07 O:t42 or Jo t 0 100

lOV ABLI: WHIII-- ~no w

dr,f r greor

PY I&lt;!I:NH ~ P u pp •c~
1 61 4 6ot JKI8

SCORPIO (Oct

24·Nov. 221

.

Normally rl yo u lee! J'Ou 're
gettrng the shor1 end of somethrng you' re ready to stand up
tor you r righ ts . Today , you may
be reluctant to do SO .

!-'h one SAGITTARIUS

(No• . 23-0ec .
21) You may put too high a
BLAC" LABR AOO R relr • &lt;' ~(' 1 pup premium on your indepe~d­
p•e s AK C rf'g• s t~ • ed ' ( horn e nc~ to day and do somethrng
p1on
bl oodl; nc · Wh elpe d too l•sh . jUSt because someone
H &lt;1 l H Ph on .;- 61 &lt;1 oo t Ji.J:N concern ed abou t you strongly
e ... en•ngs or w 12 ekend ~
su ggests you do otherwise .
f-O R ~ Ail: BorrlPr c oll , e. pupp•&lt;'~
Pho ne 99/ 5 !Ob

CAPRICORN (Dec . 22-Jen . 19)

Other s have more respect and
apprecia tio n tor yo ur talent s
today than you do . Believe it
AK C IU GI ~ lUH: [) ~· bl'! oan Hu., ky when th ey pra1se your wo rthy
9 mo n th ~ olc1 f:: 1&lt;'!- non g... ( Oil
etlort s.
Cjl&lt;1Q'l')'22

AQUARIUS (Jan . 211-Feb . 19)·

Rt: GI~H IH:lJ

AK C

w e ek ~

B Po giP~

·B. When you are m the presence

~ho t c. and worrnpd

old

OI J 36 7 O'l':n o r b 1 4 'J o ~ UJ .t 'l

NOTICE OF

of a cerlarn rn dividual . vou tend
to irrationally see yoursell as
some what mlerior. Today yo u
might tooh s h ly let lhts happen

aga ~n .
INVITATION
PISCES !Feb. 20.Morch 20)
FO~ BID
Th e G~lli e Metropo lit an · Don 't be O ~Je rly co n ce rned 'toHous i n9 AUthor i ty 1nv i tes day about doing th ings to
p rivate
B uil ders
and plea se another if it goes
Developers 10 parl ici pa te i n agarns t your be tter judgment.
the Turnkey m ethoo o f
qmstruct ion o t 100 dwell i ng Operate under your own high

un i t s,

Row
~ To wn ho use )
in Gal lia County , Ohio
on srtes to be acquired by the
Deve lo pe r
wh i ch
is
sat isfactory to lhe Gall i a
Metr opo l i tan
Hous i ng
Auth or ity and to Co l u mb us
Area O ff ice o f the Depart
ment of Hous in g &amp; Urb an
Oe velopm en I .
Proposa ls w ill be rece i ved
at
G a ll i a
Metropo lt l an
Hou si ng Author ity , !3o• 191 ,
16 . St ate Stree l, Gall ipol is,
Oh•o 456 31. until 1: 00 p .m .,
ESDT on October JO , 1978 .
Inf o r mation pa c ~ ets m ay
be ob tai ned fr om the off ice of
the Hous ing Au th or'i t y
by
deposit ing S25 .00 i n the fo r m
of c ert i f i ed or c a s.h i er ' s
che ck , mone y ord er oavao le
to the Galli a Metropo l it an
Hou s i ng
Autno r i t y
In
terested
B u i lders
an d
Develop ers
shou ld
im
med i ate ly conta c t Mr John
P . Roder us , D ire ctor of the
Gall ia Me t rop oli tdn Ho us ing
A u t nor ity at Bo:oc 191. 16 Stat e
St ree t . G all ipOl iS, Oh i O 456 31,
le lephone { 614 446 .Q2S1 ) for
further and m o re spe ci fic
Typ ~,

informat ion

John R Roden
D•rector
{9 ) 71 , 28, 21 c

standard s
A~IES

much

·(Morch 21 -April 19) Too
del iberation

regarding

decisions today co uld be self·
defeating Yo ur firs t thoughts
are yo ur best , so behave
accordingly .

TAURUS (April 211-Moy 20) Be
careful in situations that call for
divvytn g- up today . Unl ess the
SPOilS are div ided eq ually ,
someone will haYe hurt feel ings.

GEMINI (Moy 21 -June

28)

You

are very susceptible to flattery
to dav . One who is aware of thi s
may use sha llow praise in
orde r to twi st yo u around his
little finger

CANCER (Juno 21.July 2Z) Be
cliscnmmat ing today regarding
disclosure o f confidential infor·
matro n _Talk openly to persons
you loVe and trust. but be
lightlipped with ot hers .

LEO (July 23-Aug . 22) Your sell·
disciplr ne may not stand up
tOday if you are !empted by
things you k now you shouldn ' t
do. Steer clear o l si tua tions
where it co uld be put to the
test.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN 1

IN THE

COMMON PLEAS .COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY , OHIO
IN - ~ . RE
PROPOSED
SY R AC U SE · R ACitiE
REGIONA L

SE WER

DISTRICT

CueNo . 1S lH
PUBLIC NOTICE

Nol •c e rs hereby g •v en
pur suanl to the prov rsion s of
Se ct ion 6 119 .0 &lt;1 . Oh •o Rcv •sed
Code . fl'\at a fina l he anng w rl l
beh eld bv Common Pleas
Court of M ei gs County . O hi o ,
on t he 22nd day of Septe m ber ,
1978 , at 10 •00 AM O ST a t the
Cour t . House rn Pomero y ,
On io . Of"l rne Pet it ion fo r the
es la b li shm ent of Syracuse

Ra cine

\\-'antf'd to Hen I
WA N I 10 f f•n l
hou~P Op!
!t(J') ~1 4 /

o• :J bed room

')

Or

1

r(HIP I

Ca ll

Cancer victim believed Cured

rarely affects both lobes of pitals," Doering said.
this side effect of the drug, mound in Little League play .
Wilfred and Nora Smart, and there are no signs of He ls given a thorough
U!e liver . Doering said oo
more than 200 cases have the boy 's parents, first further heart complications. examina ti9n at the Clinic
ever been reported and tbe noticed a lump on the child's
"It is Important to )ioint out every three months and has
cause .of the disease in stomach and took him to a that the complications or side been advised only to av.oid
effects involved in treating a getting excessively tired.
local hospital .
children is Wlknown.
"I knew I was slowing disease of this type are often
" Although liver cancer in
resignation Tuesday and has
general is considered to be down," the boy said, "but the as potentially devastating as
left teaching and coaching
.
one of the deadliest of all lump was not bothering my the disease itself . You have to
duties on sick leave. His
Your "Extra Touch"
cancers,
a little league pitching."
childhood
strike a fine balance between
resignation is effective Oct. I.
Floris! Since 1957
Teas revealed the cancer. dealing aggressively with the .
children's cancer specialist
&lt;;:oWlty Prosecutor David
may see only one or two case
"The doctors wid us there tumors and avoiding severe
Frey Tuesday confirmed that
of
it in children every five was no chance of recovery side
effects
from
his office had been con·
years," Doering said.
and that J81Des had about hyo treatment.''
dueling an investigation of
He said the procedures months to live," Mrs. Smart
The boy has not needed any
Walker's possible sexual
treat
the
Conway
boy
used
to
said,
adding
that
her
son's
therapy during tbc
addition
involvement last spring with
,LA&gt;fii.-T
notlling
out
of
the
feU
from
66
to
weight
rapidly
were
past
16
months,
"and as far
a 14 or !~·~ear-old student.
ordinary .from those used 44 pounds.
as we can see, his tumors are
Frey saicW an investigator
PH. 992-26~
before,
·
"except
that
we
Under
Intensive
treabnent
in a state of complete
from his office and a city
aggressively
alternated at tbe Clinic from July, 1976 remission," the doctor said.
police investigator began
352 E. Main, Pomeroy
between radiation
and Ill September, 1977, James
Do,lring the summer, the
looking into the case after his
y,., ... I=TO Flor l:.t
chemotherapy, and surgery. had two major operations to boy returned to pitcher's
office had received numerous
11
ln other words, we used remove some of the tumors
queries from residents about
maximum
levels of radiation and more than a month of
the alleged involvement.
and
drugs
to reduce the size frequent radiation therapy.
received
many
the
tumors
· and then He also had more than six
of
inquiries from persons in the
operated
whenever
we could months of chemotherapy to
community asking us if we
eliminate the remaining
to
remove
them."
were making an investigation
He
also
emphasized
that
tumors.
or what we were doing . It was
."During the intensive
earlier
advances
in
surgical
the accumulative effect of the
chemotherapy
schedule,
and
therapeutic
treatment
of
inquiries that led me to
James
suffered
serious
heart
liver
cancers
in
children
believe we should be making
failure
following
frequent
served
as
an
invaluable
our own inquiries," Frey
doses of a potent drug called
resource in the case.
said.
The Social Security law
Adriamycin, ' which is known
"Interestingly,
most
of
" Although the rumors requires persons who file for
to
sometimes cause beart
these
advances
over
the
past
always had a tag line that the Social Security benefits or a
damage,
but is essential to
10
years
have
been
made
by
abuse was widespread , I'm social security card to submit
treatment,"
Doering said.
various
Ohio
physicians
satisfied the situation was
a public or religious record of practicing
"However,
James }las
in
Akron,
limited to one student," Frey their birth made before age
recovered
completely
from
Columbus, . Cleveland,
said.
five.
Cincinnati
and
Dayton
hos·
" The Investigation in·
In most cases a birth
dicated there was one victim certificate can be obtained
at most," Frey said.
from the local court house or
Frey said there would be no health department where you
non·governmental, its entire
Ralph Rife of Cheshire was
prosecution
of Walker were born. A religious record
support
must come from
because, " the purported such as a baptismal record or named Mental Health Bell· contributions, suCh as those
victim has failed to make a cradle roll can be obtained ringer chairperson lor the collected
October
i~·
complaint and has not from the church where the October 15-November 15 November 15.
campaign in Cheshire ac·
coopera~d in our attempts to
The original and continuing
cer.emony was perfonned. cording to F. Harrison Green,
High, Wide
gain statements voluntarily."
All states also have birth President of the Mental purposes of the association
Frey said they did not know certificates or records in the
and Handsome
are to :
the specific nature of the state department of health. Health Association of Ohio.
improve
attitudes
The
Mental
Health
alleged sexual improprieties.
Here are the Levi's '
II you were bom in West Association . is the largest toward mental illness and the
Walker could noi be Virginia for example, you can
mentally
ill;
Movin
' On '" Jean s to
reached for comment this write to State of West citizens' voluntary advocacy
the
improve
services
for
really
move
you out in
organization in the United
morning.
Virginta, Department of States fighting mental illness mentally ill; and
style . The wide, two-inch
Schools Supt. Sam Hender· Health, Charleston, West
- work for the prevention
waistband features four
son said the school conducted Virginia 2530~. enclose $2 and and promoting mental of mental and emotional ill·
health,"
said
Green.
rows
of contrast stitching
its own investigation of the be sure that you include in·
ness and promotion of mental
Sinde
the
organization
is
and a double-snap
alleged incident beg!Ming formation about your date of
health.
.closure. in back , a
last
spring .
The
in· birth, place of birth, father's
vestigation, which Henderson name , mother's maiden
comfortable elastic
said lasted throughout the name, and of course, your r----~-~------------------1
., wais tband . The
'
I
.
sununer, resulted in no achorse-s
hoe shaped
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They sboald be less
name at birth .
ceptable evidence which
than 300 words 'long 1or subject to reducUon by the editor)
back pockets are
While the Social Security
would allow the school to law requires that you try to
and must be slfllled with the signee's address. Names may
high lig hted wilh
proceed with legal or obtain a public or religious
be withheld upon publication. However, 011 request,
special copper
disciplinary action, he said. record of birth recorded prior
names will be disclosed. Letters should be in good laate,
oxide buttons .
Henderson said head to your fifth birthday,
addressing issues, not personalities.
A~ailable in
coaching responsibilities will sometimes there is no record .
indigo blue
be passed on to John Murray, In these cases you should try
denim and
the current defensive coor'to obtain ·. the next oldest
dinator, until a pennanent document showing your date
sateen.
head football coach is of birth.
eventually named.
The · next oldest document
.Henderson said a substitute
could be a school record
will be hired to assume. which can be obtained by
teaching responsibilities until contacting the board of
a permanent replacement education where you went .. o
Letter to the Editor, To the Southern Local High 8chool fans.
can be found .
school. If a school record is
I'm a Tornado fan from 1974. I travel34 miles to 100 miles
Walker has been head loot· not there, then proof of age
to
come
and watch ''Our" boys play: You are the perfect
ball coach at Athens since can be secured through a
example of fair weather fans . I was not ashamed of our players ·
1973 when he replaced Gerald marriage license, discharge
Inbody . He is an Ohio papers, ch ildren 's birth as much as I was of our fans. There was no cheering, no
University graduate and certificates , voter enthusiasm from the crowd. I remember when Southern was
ca me to Athens from registration card or a federal on the bottom for"" long, that when we finally climbed our way
to tbe top, I was so proud and you'll never find more spirit in
Pickerington.
census record .
that school than like it was in "Im." It felt good to flnaUy
His overall record at
A delayed birth certificate reach that, .I don't want to ever see them on bottom again, I
Athens was 27· 23-2, inchiding recorded after your fifth
a 1·1 record so far this year. birthday may not be suf· would like to see as much enthusialgn for football as there is
His best overall record was in !icient to prove your age. lor basketball. Our announcer, Steve Wilson, wu doing hla
J9n when the team was 7·3 . Having a delayed birth best.to get the fans interested but they were either talldng to
! Although his tea!DSi;never · certificate filed in court only their neighbor or staring into apace. So. come on, Southern
126 E. Main Street
won a championship, the for Social Security purposes fans, ·get behind our team and coach while there's still time! Pomeroy, Ohio
A
gtladuage
of
"74,"
C.
J
,
Hill,
Washington
Rd.,
Parkersburg,
Bulldogs tied for second in may be a needless ex·
W.Va
.
1973 and 1975, tied for third in penditure of your time and
1976, and finished third on two money , as the docwnents
other occasions. - 1Athens used to file a delayed birth
Messenger) .
certificate can be used to
prove your age for Social
Security.
If you ca Mot obtain a
public or religious record of
GET LICENSES
your birth made prior to· your ..
Marria ge iicenses were fifth birthday it's best to call
the Athens Social Security
,
issued to J effrey Lynn o!!ice at 592-4441!, (Meigs
Counts, :ro. Syracuse, and County residents can dial 992·
Melinda Ca rol Barnett, 18, 6622) ' lor guidance in
·
Rt . 4,d Pomeroy; Glen Lee securtng
K
proof of age
1
enne y, :ro, Rt . · Rutland documents . The Athen s
and Brenda Sue Bishop, 20, . Social Security office can tell
you what, where, and how to
Rt. 4• Pomeroy ·
obtain evidence of your age.

··we
~ \Jr:JIJJJ
~ ~nlflJwillw\'J
New ambitiOUS asptralio ns will
be awakened 1n yo u t hi s co m-

CLEVELAND (UPI) Doctors at the Cleveland
Clinic believe they have
"apparently cured " a boy
who suffered from multiple,
cancerous twnors in both
lobes of the liver .
James Conway, 12, North
Ridgeville, Ohio, ·recently
was permitted to resume
normal activities after Clinic
doci!Jrs were able to control
and virtually elimimate his
tumors
with
surgery,
radiation
therapy
and
chemotherapy.
Dr. EdmWld J. Doering m,
the Clinic pediatrician who
coordinated the 14-month
treatment used for the boy,
said tbc patient suffered from
multifocal hepatocellular
carcinoma. The disease is a
rare and often fatal form of
liver cancer.
In children, the disease

po li t ic a l subd i'II ISion res •d ing

or lv in g with i n tl;e area al
fe c led by t h e or gan i l.!lt ion o f
the d istr ic t may f i le on or
before the da te set for t h tne
case is to be hea rd i ts ob
[ections w 1tnl he Cle r" k of
Courts to the granting of th e
request made in the Pet it ion
request ing ext ab tishment o f

Syracu$e · Ra c ine
Reg iori al
Sewer Distr i ct , to t he f inal
organ i zation of tt'le d ist r i ct , or
the p l eh for tne operation o f

the distr ict as f ilect i n sa id
proceed ing s.
Sa i d
~ P etition
and
proceed ings are Cc\se No.

i

tl'le Court
OhiO ,

House , Pome r oy ,

LARRY SPENCER

CLERK OF COURTS ,
MEIGS COUNTY , OH 10
(I) 2A , 31 ( 9 ) 7, I• , 21 ( Stc

'---------'

Levrs

The team needs your support

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

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

(LIMITED QUANTITY)

Rowe was llvery cool clod

No one

(Continued from page 1)
collided with i vehicle driven
by Olive Scabdue, 6!, St.·
Albans.
There was moderate
damage to the Scabdue auto,
minor damage to the
Thevenir vehicle.
Thevenir was cited on Mexico ; Theodore Downie,
charges of failure to yield.
and William Downie, both of
At 1:20 p.m., officers in- , Pomeroy.
vestigated a two-vehicle
Funeral services will be
collision on Danco · Fairfield held Friday at I p.m. at
Rd. , two and five-tenths of a Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
inile west of SR 588.
Robert McGee officiating .
According to the patrol, an Burial will be in Beech Grove
auto operated by Barbara Cem&lt;:(ery . ~' riends may call
Wilcoxen, 21, Gallipolis, at the funeral home any time.
failed to stop at a stop sign,
and struck an east bound ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:::::;:;:::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::·
vehicle operated by Carroll
EXTENDED FORECAST
Saxon, 34, GaUipolis.
Saturday
through
Officers report moderate
damage to both vehicles . Monday, fair Saturday aod
Wilcoxon was cited on showers possible Sunday
charges of failure to stop at a and Monday. Highs wit! be
In the 70s and · lows will
stop sign .
range from the mid lOs to
The patrol reports that at
the
low 50s.
3:30p.m. gravel fell from the
bed of a truck operated by
Edward Harrington. 22,
Bidwell, and chipped the
windshield of an auto driven
by Gary L. Fountain, 35,
Gallipolis,
while
both
vehicles were traveling north
on SR 160, four-tenths of a'
mile south of U.S. 35.

First
sample
•
commg

Hospital News

Court actions

TRAVIS P. GIBBS
Travis P . Gibbs died at the
All Saints Hospita l in Wynd·
moore, Pa ., on Sept. 11.
Mr. Gibbs was a former
resident of Midd leport and a
member of the Middleport
First Baptist Ch urch wh ere
his father, the late Lewis
Gibbs, was choi r director for
many years.
Mr . Gibbs was buried in
Grave l Hill Ce met e r y at
Cheshire where his pa rents
and wife were buried . .
Graveside services were
conduc1ed by the Rev . Rubert
Bungamer. He is survived by
his son, Lewis Gibbs and a
in
h ost
of
fri ends
Philadelphia and Middleport .

United Press 1nternational
rne urst sample of fall
weather greeted residents of
the upper Plains and Midwest
today, two days before the
officlal autwnnal equinox .
A cold front stretching
from the Great Lakes to
Texa s
moved
st eadily
eastward, leavin g cooler
temperatures and some frost
or freeze frost warnings in
the northern states .
Frost advisories were
posted over much of the
Dakotas , western Nebraska
and eastern Colorado. During
its passage, the front dumped
large accumulations of snow
in the Rockies from Montana
to Colorado .
The upper Midwest and
lower Great Lakes states,
which had been swe ltering
Wider the longest hot spell of
the summer, we re doused by
thunders t orms during
passage of the front but no

HERBERT E. JOHNSON
Herbert Edgar J ohnson,
Pho enix, Ariz., died in
Duran go, Co lo. , Monday,
Sept. 18.
Mr. John son was born and
lived in Pomer.oy untill948 at
wh1ch time he moved to
Phoenix , Ariz. He was a coa l
min e r whil e livin g It!
Pomeroy.
He is s urvived by hi s wife.
Florence E Hi gg ins Johnson ,
form erly of Me~ son : one
da ughter , Janet Yubieni, one
brother. Elber M. J ohn son.
Pomeroy, and three grand·
children.
Funeral ser viCes wi11 be
held Fnday, Sept. 22 at 2 p-.m.
at the Para d ise Chapel
F'uneral Home . Bu ria l will be
in Phoenix .

By ARTHUR HIGBEE
RIYADH, Saudi Arabi a
IUPI ) - Saudi Arabia is
deeply disappointed with the
Ca mp
David
s ummit
agreements but will not c ut
of! oil supplies to the Western
world in retaliation and will
try to discourage other Arab
oil states from .doing so,
dJ plomatic so urces said
today .
They sa id that there is little
chance that Secretary of
State Cyrus Vance will be
a ble to pers uade Saudi
Arabia 's King Khalid to give

expected to ask fur more U. S.
coo peration
in
a rm i ng
moderate Arab governeJJts

now that Camp David has
been denounced by militant
Arab r egimes and th e Soviet
Union .

Khalid sees no use in
reviving the embargo that
cut off Arab oil to the West ·
lor mont hs a ft er the 1973
Arab-Israeli war. Khalid · is
s peci fi ca1ly . interest ed in
obtain in g U. S. mi li ta r y
s upplies f or t he new military
but non·Marxist regime in
No rth Yemen and is willing to.
even ltikewann endorsement help pa y lor them.
to Cam p Da vid, publicly at
The Saud is see No r th
least.
Yemen as a buffer between
But Kha lid will not , them se lves a nd Marx ist
denounce Egyptian president south Yemen .
An wa r Sa dat. The last thing
They a lso would !I ke tile
t he Sa udis want is to see United States to send more
Sadat ove rthr own by an military supplies to Soma lia
extr emist r eg ime.
in it s di~pute with Marxi~"t
At the
Khalid -Va nce Ethiopia over the Ogaden
meeting in t he vast ro ya l de sert .
·palace in Riyadh. Kh a lid 1s

Cold

Weather
Beaters
JACKETS ·

HAS SURGERY
Mrs. Bea Wood underwent
major surg ery at Holze r
Medica l Center un Monday.
Her room nu mber is 334.

AND
SWEATERS
Soon your child will
need war~er clothing

HO'f DAY
CLEV E LAND ! UP!) The record high temperature
of 92 degrees for a Sept. 20 in
Cleveland set in 1895 was tied
Wednesda y at around ~ : 15
p.m . at L1eveland Hopkins
Interna t iOn a l
Airpor t,
according to the National
Wea th er Service .

for the cool ch illy mornings.
The K1ddie Shop has Jackets
and Sweaters . Sizes Month-14.
See them soon for your ch ild 's clothing.
Hours :
9:30 to 5 :00
Mon . thru Sat .
9 :30 to 8 :00
Friday

Valley. along the Gull Co ast
and into Flor ida . Rain and
log blanketed the Pacific
Northwest .
Skies we re fair and

KIDDIE SHOPPE

temperatures warm over t he

Atlantic Coast and the Ohio
Valley . Well behind the front, ·
skies also were fair across
the Northern Plai ns and
Rockies.

2nd St.
POMEROY , 0.

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY-SEPTEMBER 23rd

severe weather activity was

UNTIL 5 P.M.

reported. Temperatures fell
to comfortable 50s and 60s
readings .
The National Weath er
Service said temperatures
would be cooler than normal
through much of the Midwest
lor the next several days_but
no records would be
threatened .
FaD officially begins early'
Saturday.
Showers
and
thunderstorms also extended
through the Mississi ppi

11

FAMIL y OUTING"
OF

'AMHERST COAL CO
OPEN ALL DAY SUNOAYll AMTlL9 PM

CAMDEN PARK
US60WEST

I here are

·but

HUNTINGTON

on,. King

The leader inwood heating for 75yean.

IF YOU ARE NOT REGISTERED: VIsit the Board's Office In Person
- OR -:- Phone the Board of Elections
a Card.

-Q~- Mall. the

MODEL
CLOSE
OUT
NATIONAL CHEVY WEEK

Board

·

PASS. CARS, lh &amp; ~ T. PICKUPS
· USING REG. GAS.
VAN CONVERSIONS, MOTOR HOMES,

ALSO, If you MOVE you must notify the county office, Or If

EL CAMINO &amp; SUBURBAN

Available
In Black
&amp; Rust

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

PHONE 992·26?7
HOURS 9:00-C:OO - SATURDAYS 9:00.12:00

city sandal in new fall
_ leathers.

Set the automatic thermo stat and enjoy even tern' ·
peratures overnight with·
out refueling. Has cast iron
grates, door frames, ash
and feed doors, flue collar.'
Linings of high·temp re·
fractory brick. Lifetime
porcelain finish . Optional
blower. Lift-off top for
emergency cooking .

(BLOWER EXTRA)

An
automatic
coal
· circulator with grates ·:
designed for coal burning.
(9900. Bl

MARGUERITE'S SHOES

P. 0. BOX 488, POMEROY, OHIO ~5769
'

Our newest stacked heel

I

"Your Chevy Dealer"
Pomeroy

992-2126

Open Evenings Tll8:00 p.m.

,,
•

•

disappointed

I owner, good tlres,V -8, automatic. P.S., P .B., radio.

MASONIC TEMPLE BUILDING

POMEROY 0.

''I categorieally· deny that
the investigatioo into the
assassinatioo was deficient,"
he said. " I have seen no new
evidence which would change
my view."
Fourteen years ago Ford
was investigated by ti"\e FBI
as a possible SOW'Ce of leaks
the
press · about
to
infonnation the commission
had turned up.

MRS. T. W. BENGEL
Mrs. T . W. ( Minnie \
Bengel, 00, 502 East Main
Street ,
Pomeroy , died
Wednesday afternoon at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. Bengel was born Jan.
4, 1888, daughter of the late
Wallace and Elizabeth Evans
Vining . She was al so
preceded in death by her
husband, T. W. Bengel, one
brother, Valcie Vining, and
one sister, Mittie Stevens
Bradshaw.
She is survived 'by seven
ni eces, Mildred Bradshaw,
Paonia, Colo.; Janice An·
drew s,
Olathe,
Colo.;
Christine Downie Bright ,
Dunbar •.W. Va.; Mrs. George
Siegler, Mrs. Ralph Fal!rnam
and Mrs . Gladys Bengel, all
of Marietta, and Mrs. Grace
Sullivan, Pennsboro, W. Va . ;
three nephews, Arthur
Vining, Las Crucus, New

1976 GMC % Ton ••••• J3695

MEIGS COUNTY BOARD OF ELECTIONS

ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE II

in tbe car from which the
fa tal shots were fir.ed, was
the state's star witness
against Thomas, Wilkins and
W.O. Eaton, who is now dead.
He testified during Wilkins'
trial that he saw Wilkins and
Eaton fire shots at Mrs.
Liul.ZO'S car near HayneviUe
oo U.S. 80 the night of March
25, 1965. He said Thomas was
driving the car and gave
Wilkins the gWI mnly minutes
before Mrs . Liuzzo was
slain.

Secret Service ."

Sport Pickup, 350 V -8. automatic trans., P.S., P.B.,
radio, like new tires, bed ralls, orange with white lrlm .

Phone the Board.

IN AND PLACE YOUR ORDER NOW

massive
Selma - to ·
Montgomery march in 1965.
Mrs . Liuzzo 's son, Anthony
Uuzzo Jr ., said in Detroit
that be was pleased to hear
Rowe
apparently
was
indicted . "I'm happy," the 23year-&lt;J!d construction worker
said . "I feel good that finally
!here's the possibility my
mother 's murderer .will come
to justice ...
Lowery said Rowe was
fired Tuesday from his jot\ as
a security guard " because of
this mess." But he added that

the FBI, CIA and

1976 Chevrolet. ••..•.•.. s3495

yau are In doubt as to whether you are properly registered,

992-7113

By BOBWWRY
HAYNEVILLE , Ala. (UP!)
- Gary Thomas Rowe Jr .,
who spied on the Ku 10 ux
lOan for the FBI in the 1961E,
apparently has been indicted
in the death of a civil-rights
worker killed 13 years ago as
she drove along a lonely
Alabama road.
Lowndes County Circuit
Court Judge harthur Gamble,
angered over report.s that
Rowe had been charged in the
slaying of Viola Liuzzo,
ordered the indictments kept
sealed until the accused were
per!!Onally served .
District Attorney Jobie
Bryan said if Rowe was
indicted It may be several
days before it is made public
since it will "have to go
through channels."
Rowe's lawyer , J. Paul
l..owe,ry of Montgomery , told
reporters
outside
'the
whitestone courthouse that he
believed his client was
indicted .
"I wouldn't be here if I
didn't think in my heart that
be was indicted,' ' Lowery
said . " But I don't kmw that

ment -

1973 Monte Carlo. ••••• s1895

In Order to Vote in the

BE SURE TO STOP

issued to Douglas Win
Holsinger , 21, Coolv ille and
Debra L. Shields, 19, Tuppers
Plains.

.

critics!--Ar~~-n;;~th;-1 S!ludi. A~ahia

Dr.••••••• 2995

MEIGS COUNTY VOTERS

REGENCY
__
PROGRAMABLE SCANNERS

GET LICENSE

-A marriage Jicense was

.

'
objective"
about
the
Veteraos
Memorial Hospital
reopening of the Liuzzo
filed
Wednesday
Admitted
- Juanita Justis;
mtirder .
Sandra
Patterson,
Pomeroy;
" He is not paranoid," said
A Juit in the amount of Racine; Penny Stewart,
Lowery. " He 's just disgusted
· $1,245.38 has been filed in Syracuse; Billy O'Brien,
wilh the system."
'
Pa yne,
The grand jury of 17 blacks Meigs County Common Pleas Shade; Donald
and one white ended their Court by the American States Harrisonville; Danny Will,
deliberations after hearing Insurance Co ., Columbus, Pomeroy.
Discharged- Mary Roush,
testimony from several and Jinuny W. Alexander,
witnesses, including two Rt. I, Rutland, against Pat Jay Mitchell, Herbert Moore,
Marjorie Gibbs.
Klansmen
who
were 'Mitchell, Rt. I, Rutland.
The suit is for damages as a
originaUy charged with Mrs.
result of fire at the Alexander
Uuzzo's murder.
Holzer Medical Center
The men, Eugene Thomas home on Feb . It, this year.
Discharges, Sept. 20
and Collie Leroy Wilkins, The suit charges it was
Louise Belcher, Mila
escaped conviction on a caused by the negligence of Blankenship, Earl Burks,
murder charge in state court, the defendant, who con· Janet Bush, Hames Camphe was.; "
Mrs. Liuzza , · a Detroit but they were later convicted structed a fireplace for bell, Vernella Case, Robert
of violating Mrs . Liuzzo 's Alexander.
Ca~ldy, Jane Corbitt, Mrs.
housewife and mother of five
An
appeal
to
participate
in
right.s
.
civil
Dan Cotterill ·and daughter,
children, was killed by shots
Workmen
's
Compensation
Rowe
,
who
reportedly
was
Ernest
Vicki
Dillon,
fired into het car alter the
was filed by Wayne D. Beal, Drummond, Grace Ellis,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, against Anna Erwin, Georgia Estes.
Robert Daugherty, ad- Mrs. Oiland Floyd and son,
ministrator of th,e Bureau of Julie Gillman , Jennifer
Workmen's Comi&gt;ensation, et Haddix, Belle Hall, Granville
at.
Hall, Gary Hart, Linda Hill.
Mrs. Sam Holstein and son,
Holly Howell, Mrs. Michael
5
Kincaid and daughter. James
TENT REVIVAL
The Heavenly Highway ·trio KiMison, Lawrence Lewis,
Local owner. clean Interior, AM-FM CB radio, good
will be featured Sunday at Pearl Little, Micky McBride,
tires .
7:30 p.m. at a tent revival at Robert Myers, Carla Neal,
the
Gallia
County Rita Neal, Roy Phillips,
Fairgrounds,
Gallipolis . Pauline Ray, Eugene Reed,
Evangelist Rev . Chaptou of Terry Reynolds, Opal Ross,
_. cyl., automatic, good tires. blue finish , radio, good
Saunders,
Wendi
Florida will be the speaker. Dow
economy &amp; real sporty .
Seaver , Tressie Stevens,
The public is invited.
Anna Thompson , Ceroba
Waldron. Noami Williams,
Margaret Wilson , Sophia
PICNIC SLATED
Landau V-8. automatic , P.S. , P. B., air, AM, 8 track
stereo rlldlo, power door locks and windows . High
ChaMel 28 CB will hold its Wilson.
mileage but a real bargain .
Births, Sept. 20
last picnic of the S.ason
Mr
.
and Mrs . James
Sunday, Sept. 24 at Reedsville
Johnson,
daughter, Mason ;
Locks and Dam. All chaMel
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Keith Saunders,
28 are invited . Bring own
·son, Bidwell ; Mr. and Mrs.
table
service
and
covered
Local 1 owner car, v .a engine, automatl'c trens ., P.S.,
Jerry Johnson. daughter,
dish.
P.B., radio. Clean Interior.
Gallipolis.

f)~

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II

ANNuAL MEETING
Dr . John H. Ackerman
director of Ohio Departmeni
of Health, will he the.featured
speaker at the lith annual
meeting of Ohio Valley
Health Services Foundation
on Thursday, Sept. 21 at the
Ohio University Inn, Athen~
at 7 p.m . A social gathering
will be held at 6 p:m.

said Ford, " is that in too
many cases critics of the
Warren .C ommission have
either misstated or omitted
facts developed by the
commission and in the
process have led the public to
have less than full support for
the commission 's conclu·
sions."
Ford, who . served 011 the
commission in 1963 and 1964
when he was a congressman,
srud he could "categorically
deny"
allegations
the
commission's investigatioo
was deficient or rushed.
Was 'it proper, staff coW&gt;Sel
Gary Cornwell asked, to rely
almost totally on the FBI, the
CIA and the Secret Service
for
the
commission's
investigative work.
''In my judgment," Ford
said,
"the
Warren
Commission made a proper
decision that
it
was
inadvisable to recruit a
totally new investigative
staff. And we felt it was far
better to employ a limited
group of very outstanding
lawyers ... to head a staff
organization which under
close supervision would work
with various investigative
agencies of the U.S. govern-

Former FBI spy indicted

Levrs

... ~.. ~:...__

misstating
facts
or
eliminating fact.s in their
discussions."
. Briefly supporting the
fmdlng that Oswald alone
Kennedy,
Ford
killed
referred to evidence that
Oswald was linked to tbc
shooting of both KeMedy and
a Dallas police officer on the
day of the _assassination and
that there was considerable
evidence that the bullets
which killed the president
came from Oswald's rifle .
''The point I wish to make, ''

'

Movin'On··
Jeans

COMING SOON TO. .•

220 E. MAIN

a

necessary

JS1S5 of the Common Plea s

Court of Me i gs County . Ohio
and the Pet ition , and t he P l an
of Operation , are no w on f i le
and may be examined a l the
Off let of the Clerk of Cour ts at

WASHINGTON (UPI)
Former President Gerald
Ford:
member of the
Warren Commission that
investigated the murder of
President John F. KeMedy,
today denoWlced critics of the
panel 's finding that Lee
Harvey Oswald was the lone
assassin .
Coospiracy theorists, said
Ford, have
sometimes
deliberately misled the
public.
The former president, who
said he was not prepared to
answer questions coveriflg
the period of his presidency
from August 1974 to January
1977, answered questions
posed
by
the
House
Assassinations
Committee
which is investigating the
Nov. 22, 1963, shooting in
Dallas.
Security was tight in the
hearing room as he began his
testim0f1Y·
In a strong defense of the
Warren report he heloed to
prepare, Ford charged that
"critics who have attained
the wi.dest publicity have
either
deliberately
or
negligently misled the
American
people
by

-·--

Rife named chairperson

Ford denounces
By Daniel F. Gilmore

Age proof

R eg i o11a1
Sewer
D i str i ct f i led in said "Court. as

wel l as on the Plan · or
Opera t ion o f the d istr ic t a~
f lied in sa id pro ceed ings
An v p ersons or
a ny

9-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy 0 Th sda
' ·• ur Y. Seot. 21. 197~

•

~-The J?allySentinel,M~ddleport·Pomeroy , 0., Thursday, Sept. 21, 1978

Betty Ohlinger
102 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, 0 .

1

�;

:•l--The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 21, 1978

Want Ads J'urn Unwanted Items Into Cash
\ard Sail·

WANT AD
CHARGES
j.l Wurdsur Undt•l

Citsil

VAR:O

,.

Che~ r.'(l'

2ll,;n•s

'"'"

\~\

Jday::.

\80

! 2~

6 doly!l

'l.OO

'175

,,~

'"'

F'.;nh Word OVt't till• ILHIIUilW!l I ~
t.'~l\ti iJ'.'t wurd IJ't't !l&lt;ly
AW rut\llllllr: ol h~r tha n t'OJI!it'l'U\1\'t'
d&lt;l y~ \j,' JII I.Jt' d w1 ~t'll &lt;tl tht&gt; I d&lt;ty

words

I.S

4

r .. ,,.

In 111Cilllii'Y. Cal'll 11£ Th1:1nk::. ;md
Obitucu y 6 ~~ 11 \.s pt-1 wun.l. $:100
lnu1unum Cash llllti.IW111&lt; t•
Mubllt• Huuw so.~ I &lt;~ aw l Yard s;:~ lt•s
an· aH't&gt;ptt•d only With t as ll ll'llll
mll'l :!Stv ut du:ti):t ' hu a d!&gt; u trn ·
till'(

SALE
Thu r s , Fri ,
Sat ,, Su!"'
129 Bu tternut
A'tle
Cloth.ng , odds and
ends etc .
'

R.1x Numlk1 In Ca!t' ,,f Tht• St-u-

Und

Publtsht't n•st• n t.~ t l~t• lt)&lt;! ltl
tv t•th l or rt' jt't I ill\\ iid» d~llll'll tl lr
~diOIICI I Tht· Pubhsht•J " il l nut lit·
n.'SJ}\Inslll lc fur l llll l t' lh&lt;t n uut' Ult.'ll l'
rill'

rt'l l lnst·rtwn

P huue\19'1-ll;.ii

NOTICE

t :ampin!&lt; J::quipnn·nt

For Sah·

11o'A VI I 11o'A I!I k l o t ~ olf' 1 ~ 1'1
Mark 1wn " ' 1"'1r / I/ } ~ IJO

ll.iftJ l~ J)l!

1'-l l ..t
l ' f.?O WI ~lo'
/H
It
.._,l,lf
( (lll i(IH&gt;P('\ ~IPt 'l"' tl / J 'J J' 'j.//
l llt-JM ( AMI'IN G

FIVE FAMILY Y ard Sale .
Sat ., Sep t 2Jrd , 9 to J al
Gary Wolfe residence , to p
of h i ll on Ma in St. Ractne ,
turn left. shod d i sta nce off
Ma tn Many I te ms, clothes
of most SIZes , cht l dren's,
women 's and men s
FRIDAY EVENING at t er
4 00 and all day Sat . the
23r~ Our ftrst gar age sa le,
tw o famil y . Lots of fall
clothes , ma tern tly i t ems .
children
and
t nfan t
cloth1ng , Men 's and ladles
w i nter coats
AI
Jim
Wh tte ' s, last house on ' TR
79 , beh 1nd
the
Me t QS
Fair~ro v nds 992 588 3
MIN I
fiLEA
Market
Depress i on
Glass
and
m a ny. many collectables ,
size 1 jea n s and dress
pants , rugs , curtains and
l ots of odds and ends . AI
Max Orenners res1dence on
Union T errace oft of Un1on
Avenue on Sept n , 23 , and

Tut ~t l tn

SALE , FIRST time . Fr1 da y
""d Sa tur day
Wmdoww ,
frames , great for summer
c ottage
Baby
rtems ,
sca les , swt n g , dresses and
sleepers Cl othes , washtubs
and more 808 East . above
Kroge r 's

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

tilt' dit~ !wfult' pullllt'all•••t

SumJ&lt;1 \
pM
rrtllill :tftt'l 111.10 11
~

W00LJ
P ol€'~
rna •
d romf' h~ r 10 on lotge~1 end ~H
pPr 10 11 l:lurr d iPd ~l ob So p ~r
ron 0{llr ve r eci ro Ohoo Pallor
l o Itt / Po rn c t Cl y IJCJ l 108'f
I or£&gt; !&gt; r Pro
due l !&gt; l op pro ce for ~ ro nd 1ng
"0"" trrnb('r Coli f.Jr.r; :,"'b) 01
Ken t Hanby 1 .J..t b !l ~ /U ~

l iM~ H~

Hdp

Want~d

WO h'K
OV ~H ~~A~
Au s11 ol1a
Air rca ~ou rh Arnerr co ~ u r op f'
(' 1c
(on strurt ron
~a l e s
b1grr1eer ~ llencol f'IC
':!~()(){J
to 5.)0 (){J{J plu.,. bp e n ~l' ~ purd
~o r
l::!mpl oymenr rn l orrno lr Qil
wrrle Ove r ~e o ~ ~m ployrn e nr
~a~ l Oll Bo:. ron Mo 0 ~1 0 ~
~XP!:HI~NCH)

A UIO body and
preperorron man Applr trl per
~ on a t ti rll s O uo lily Borly ~ h o p
M rdd le por !

M~N 1 All Y

POM~ !l l)Y

O LLJ 1--UHNtl Ul&lt;t 11 e bo • ('s bra ss
bed ~
rror bed~ deo ~ h e tr
Wr 1lf'
r or n ple1c hou ~ ~?hold\
M 0 Moil er I( T 4 Pome r oy 0 1
w11U4'/ /7 00
CO I N ~

po ck e T wold1c~
r rn qs wedd1119 bond s
drar11ond., G o ld o r srlver Co li
l(:og er Warll !&gt; le y 14/ /JJ l

O LO

dms

W~

PI( K up 1unl..
rng 1unk COt &lt;,
ler res and
':&gt;ol., og e
':&gt;f.?
(/Q'} :, 4b!l

Ou l o bodrc -,. buy
scrap 11011 bol
me ta ls
l-l•d £&gt;r ~
17&lt;1
Pomeroy

!4 /:J l-!r o orlr nort~ 14 • Ool 1
ht•dr oo rn
t'-~ IJ Oo••or 1 1-.1 . b(J 'J bpdroorr1
14 1') Votj n rron I~ • tT l J bf'dr oorn
1 bo th
l lJ /)( o vl •rHt'f' l'l~6 :,J bf'rlroorn
) 4()lJ )lor.-..., rnorr 1/
bU 'J
bo-.rl roo rn
CO A l LIM! ":&gt; I ONI ... and grn~d
t C11( rt Hn f hl orrdf' IPrtrlrl t'r dog
food a nd oil typt''- o f •,all b ·
&lt;C' I~• o r ~ all W o rk ~ Inc
~ Morn
~~
l'o rne&gt;r oy CJCJ'/ .t t! '-' 1

IMMHJIA 1t Of't NIN G~ lor ,_. N
and LPN on all shd rs (CU 0 !:1
medrcol an d su rg t(al
Com
pe rrto ve so lorr es excellen t I!
rngf" beonefr ts !&gt; hrlt ct.fler~~ n tr ol
Con ro e t
Per !&gt;onn £&gt; 1 De p t
Hol 1er
M edoco l
Ce n te r
Goll1pohs O hr o t;.14 440 ~10;
A Mtlll.H ~ A Gt: O Chrr srro r1 lady o r
couple to sr oy wr!h a rnodd l(. og
ed lad y on o 14 acre fo rm I
m rl es oul srdP the Pt Plea sant
W V
Cr l y
lo rn r t s
C a ll
) (.) 4 O i'~ 69Q9

11M!:IH? L UlH H good wages and
b~?nefrt s w oth cornpony cre w
Jo hn Ow~rony r o
· (onl act
Pom e r o y f-ore st Prodv ch
Pomeo ro ,.- Ol:lr o Q(l'} ~'ilb~
WANH:O 10 do odd tob&lt;:&gt; po rt
to me '1!:1~ ~ J~J
MENTA L LY
RETARDED
adul ts are in ne-ed of f o ster
care homes A sal l'lr y and
benef i ts w rll be pa id H1 tS 1S
an tn h ome lOb that writ
benef i t the lt fe chances of a
ment a l l y retarded person
For more inf ormation wr tte
or ca II
FO ster Care
680 E Ma tn St
J a ck son , OH 45640
614 .]85 7461 (Lo gan )
or 61 4-592 -6608 { Athens I
EQua l
Opportun t ty
Em
• PIO'r'er

i-.-------------

P OS I TION AVAILA B LE
PROGRAM DIRECTOR
The Gallia MetQS Commun1ty
Ac l 10n Agency i s a cc ept ing
appl tca110 ns tor th~ post t ron
of ener~y program home
reparr program d i re ct or
Respons r btl i tq~s
i n c lude
grant managemen t
in
elu d i ng al l aspects o f crew
coord inat ro n , pur chast ng ,
onvenrory , qu a lity control ,
and vehicles Other dultes
W i ll tnc l ude coord tnat ion of
etlorts w h en ne c essar y
w i t h FmHA , subm i SS IOn Of
reports on a timely bas i s ,
and attendt"'nce at meet in gs
or tra tn tng sesstons a s
necessary . lhe pos ttr on
reports to the exe cullve
director
Quiltl i f tc at tons f or the
cos rt ron Include a degre e In
ps ychology ,
so cio logy ,
b us1ness , or related fie l d
pr i or
exper rence
w1f h
federal pr ogri!lms and -or
so ci al servrce agen ctes wilt
be an asset . Salary range
Sl1 , 300 to 112 ,500 . A p
pti c&amp;tions and or add tti ona l
i nformation i s ava i lable
from the agen cy or the l ob
serv 1ce offrce m Call ip ol rs
App lic at to n s
w 111
be
rec e ive d unt i l Sept 28 , 1978
Resumes sho uld be m a il ed
to Execut 1"e O t rector .
C&amp;I H&amp; MftOS C . A . A , Bo x
212 , Chesh i re , Oh to 45610.
Phone 361 -7341 or 992 -7000 .

C AI-(AGl )AU
l hu r ~
f-r, n nd
~a t
~e pr 'II
')'} 13
1(.) ?'
Go ee n ho u' e b e~ rd(&gt; ~ r o t e
H rqhwor Gorog o? on kr I M r..,(
r t e rn~

YA k l) ~ A l t 1uc-' j 4 WC'd 10 U
Cour h ~• ll rug I ol d ook
dr e':ose r ~ larrt p ro b le lrf'p au to
w a,hPr pa r ch ~w my k rl dlfln
w a rP rot kp r boo k &lt;O'&gt; C' I dou
b le b {· d ~
11 T/ l Mo rn ~ ~
Po mct o y
lAttG ! HUMMAG~ ~ o!r- A ll ~· J e~
r lolh on g
hou':&gt; {'h o ld
o t~:&gt;r T•~
t hu r ~ d a y a nd I 1 rdoy CJ to 4
io!o &lt;r n(l Gran g e He ll o il Ht l /4
on Oak G r o" f' fold on 1-loc rr n'
t oa k l or ~ '9""

Yard ~ ole 'lPr t
4 am to 4 p rn a 1 Che~ r e r
k' o seo Vo nlt' \ t Ro( m e Oh• o

I HkH

n n

~I- N ~ I MA 11(
oL
{Q Url l• ng
ITlO (h tllf'
Ph o nf'
J.,!l./ 'j '/ l)t&gt;
lhf' Oo rly ~ C t ll!ilt'&gt;l
i l l (o ur I ~lt &lt;' t~ l
Po mer o y
Ohoo

by IO • / w heeh
~;~ UU J
IUIJ 1&lt; lb W rn t{' t
pr ~) CJ 00 t aiii.Jii'J l o'n

1-'r

ti

lo.,IO / CfH V Y ~ ORpo 1b

l rrf'~

1~ / JVc go

1110 to r Hay l o r ~ ol e ~ U) a
ha If' 1./ ~ t.,J '1 41 3 or f.J J4 '/ !;l J 'i

l'hn nr"

N
) ( A U tro rr1 '&gt; wrth I typo"
lor out lo rnp lo•tP wr th all ~ wrl
( hf' -. h o u ~ f' r hu r&lt;h l o c t oJre~
B{'ov••l ul
~ I' ll 0 1 !&gt; wop l o r
carnppr o f Pquol value ~ce
Hor ..- e y I C'om ond PO !:Ia ..: OJ
Hac1ne Ohr o hy Wog rrer Hard
war f' ':&gt; l or o•
W INHI(

IJOJAlO I ~

grndP 1 ond
Pro ll oll Porllor1 d Ohr o

J ( W

'&gt;WH l POlAIO I ~ lo' rrl ,..,h ,le
ond yPIIow l'lr cml' ll J ] / JJ/
Hn bc•r t W lt•w,... 1-(f '/ l-I m rr 1(.•
~R

THREE FiAM I LY Yard Sale .
Sept 20, 22 , 23,
to -4 5
m tles off Rt 7 on Eagle
R idge Rd at Roger Car
penler r es i den ce Clofhtng
of &amp;II stzes. tools , rugs ,
ClOCkS , lOI S Of mtSC

a

Auto Saleo
1'0 4

OA I)UN PICKUP
qr.r ; C147oft e r ) prn

11.1 /(J

(H ~ V Y

1./4')

IM PALA J)O
/104 oll e r 4 prn

Phone
S.&lt;~)()

14/1 C H~ V I-t01~1 IMI-'Al A G ood
rondo rron
W• ll rol- e trade!&gt;
r.,I4C/ /i' t:JJ
M O N ZA
) 1-' YOI:: H
30~
eng rn e L1 k e brand new wtlh
ev ery thrng '/ 42 'ltl10

14 11

14 1&lt;1 OLD) C U1LA)~ ~v pre me
G ood ~ hope 9Q') ·; otrt P l
P ~ om AM tope orr
- 1117!;, CAOILLA (

HL&gt;O ftAOO f ull
po we r
o rr
AM f·M
rodr o
( le on Pho nt&gt; 941 l 4b'l

I Yi'~

PONli AC A &gt;l J-t~ hol&lt;hbock
bucl• e t sea t s au tom otr c N ew
r ad rol! and bellery ](J m p g
9 4'1 77!:1]

ll! /) CO UG AH XH 1 ~JBUU l::ven
rn gs 9'17 / M43
1 9 7~ lJAI~U N

d.r.o n

PI( KUJ-' Good con
9~~ Jl!'/ 9

~1'79~

14 /J CHAN 10HIN O J~l V tl au
/ 4 ~!l

1901' ( H ~VY WAGO N
~~(K)
Chu rc h &gt;t Ho rr rsonv1lle Oh ro

1/ -l

WOI"'I to bu'( or se ll so rr eo!h mg
oe l oo krng for w o rk
01
whnle ver
you J/ ge t r e ~ uit s
l oster wrth o 3en! lnel Wont A d

Co/1991-11!&gt;b
GA kA ~ t: SAlt:

Thurs ond h r 9
to -4 . Htggscres l Mono 1 o ff ( Jot 7Cl
01 lop o l f:o ster n l:t tgh ~choQI
htll .

YARD )All: 17U !, yco more ) t
M 1dd leporl Mon l'ue~ Wed

1970 P LY MOUTH VALIANT , '
6 c yl .. good work c ar

99 l -

7A92 or 992 -3716
1977 FORD
LTD
-4 dOOr
sedan . Like new w rth atr ,
P S., P . B ., lilt wheel. AM
FM 8-track . More extras .

7&lt;2.2826

POMEROY
LANDMARK
F &lt;ll A II Y "111
Gf T II o,X.
Hofpotnf Appl
s~-•lt' ~)r1r~ ,}
J,l(k W C.11 'd y
M&lt;p

TWO BASE C B 's - Teaberry
40 ch with D 104 power
m1c. 1 160 Royce 23 c h . with
o 104 pow er m tc, 1100 . Call
949 , 2045 after 4 p m .

an d used saddles , Weste r n
or Eng i1 Sh . camper 1600
1969 Inter nationa l
.. an
a ski ng S1200 . Excelle n t
condition Also some an t i qu e!!. Phone 614-698 -3290
or 61-4 698 5436 .
H AY

FOR

SALE

rnochm£&gt; S:IOU ln t Balpr St.J (.t(j
Alrr&gt;r 0 p rn t (Jtl '1 8~ J 131 o r
&lt;.,I tt) J) J i'

~~r~' "'C!'u "a~1ereys~ oJ"~-t~c ,

992 29 95

WELL

CONSTRUCTE D

Dr illed well and septic
svs lem . 1 304 - 8~2 - 233-4 .

-------------LEVEL DOUBLE lo t. almos t

acre tn the Lyons Ad
dit 1o n between Wahama
H tgh Schoo l and Clifton ,
WV Lovely bui l d ing si t e
19500 A ft er 5 p .m . ca ll 6 14 99:1 2666 .
111

IN

w•H&lt; O l!)

p•g ~ 9J 'J

:IU..t b

f (f// Y A M A.HA X ~ O; O A
CJ 4 '} ~01/ o f ter ) pr n

14 1 J HO NUA

C B ~OU

l ':&gt; hop£&gt;

)prn 9l!/ IH /7

pl(ot e ly rf' WOft..r&gt;d ltio. ('
W oll !okp !!od e~ f./J{j 'llb J

bwoy
(Ofl1
I I (' ....

19/b NA !,HUA 14

1&lt;

Bu y th ese two no m es tor
the pr rce of one or sptrf
th em u p Owner sr. y s se ll !
Mnk e u s &lt;tn off er

o:, :J b£&gt;d r oom

1%i' HOU)!: 11-!A il !: H 1/ ~ t&gt;U All
ele CII rC l v rn r~ h c d orr condr
tron{' d Wa sher and Or yet I
l o r ~ on Hort rson.,rlle l tl'/ :i'l:Ob
1"'xW '1 or 3 b edr ootll wt!h burl!
011
odd1!r on
lau ndry ro om
wo shet' dt 'f' t' r bne ll (ln l t on dr
!ron
&gt;Ul rc ren ted lor A lbany
o1a c9B b 11:1~ bf'fo r c J pm

No I llxoO E ICOn fl mobrle
11o rnc c o mpl e te ly furn1~h e d
.on a n1cc 't Nr r cond 1t0n
eel
cc- ment 1 p a lt o
n nd
.dr• VC' WdY

1970
HILLCREST
12x60
L ocated tn Salem ~enter on
CR 1 614 669 51-t2 or 14:1
2689

Jantce I. Gettles,
Realtor
Ro·b•·rla HuH man

~a~;~~.:;l;i;6::'t8·6300 ..

TW O BEDROOM tra il er on · ~
acre rn Rac ine 949 2373

Uin~ A~

•

!:IG HI WHK o ld 1191•! krtten
gre en f'ye ~ l o t ~ o l per ~ o nolr ly
Merg'&gt;
Humonp
)o c rc ry
'141 -?'J 9') or &lt;
N 1 ) 4 )1
KIII~N~ANOod ul r c o t

Let us
Free

•289.95

test

y our water

• ~omer., Landmark

~ack W. Corsoy, Mgr .
-

·

Phone 992 .2111

miles . '92 -71 11 or inQuire at
Me igs Auto Parts .

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

Nf:W HOtt ANO chopper , 1 ro w
corn h f' od Orrcc t (U t lworl
-1~) :JH46

bedrooms,

bath ,

modern

large kitchen &amp; dining
f i replace,

several

CALL US FO~ ALL Yl)UR
REAL ESTATE NEE
804W . Main

MAIN
POMEROY. 0
ac r es. Nice f 1sh i ng ca bin,
turn1St'led ,
2
storage
b utldtng, seve r al fruit a nd
trees .
Exce ll ent
nu t
re tr ea t ' NOW $7 , 700 .00 .

COTTAGE

~n-ir••• Offered

SEC LUDED, but close to
town - Orig ,nal
Ran c h
Type home, 3 bedrooms ,
bu tl t in kitchen , l arge l ~v ·
i ng room wi th w .b .f p ,,
recrea tion room . l~ acre .
Covered
carpor t
M any
featu r es . Pr iced to sell at

Uu5iOe55 OpportunilicPJ

$20 ,500.00 .
NEWER RANCH ,

~AI-IN ~1 0 51 ~ OOU per yeo1 rel rll

good

Value 527,700 00
70 ACRES, FARM - Near

ta ge . A s leal a t 533 ,500 00.
LARGE OLDER re modeld
h ome tn town, gOOd p o te n t ial Close to ever ythtng

529 ,000 .00 .
SUPER NICE - A·frame .
close
to
P o m eroy,
2 1h
a c r es, s torage building, 1111
baths, 3 bedrooms, kitchen ,
lrvtng room and rec reation
room wit h c ontemporary
f i r eplace , loft area , deck ,
many f ea tures 537,500 .

E• tali' for Sale

OUR SALES HAVE BEEN
GOOD AND WE NEED
LISTINGS OF ALL KINDS
FOR OUR QUALIFIED
BUYERS . CALL TODAY .
HENRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
Hank , Kathy &amp; Leona

Cleland

M W t HHII bed roo m ho m{' r e&gt;c
oon rn fra•p loc e lotqP d(' ~ lo
gor ugl' bO '&gt;C me'" o ne orrd o
hal l bo t h~ . Phone l cf• ( on !&gt; !rue
~4/ J 4 ~ 4
we e k t• nd ~
I ro n

992-3325
216 E. Second StrHI
BUILDING LOTS - We
.have a number o l good
locate d
si tes
for
your
tra tl er or new nome. Some
on water and Sew e r lines.

&gt;

IIE'T '()UI2 11001'5
I'M RUIJIJIIJ0 A'#JAY,
W.IXIB .. .

... I'M SIC!(~ PWP\.~ WU..Il.le1 W'
I OOIJ'T KOO#J HCW 'I) 00 W'&lt;lllll.Jb FOil. MI'S!:OL.F!

I

(Bob Hoellict) 1

MACHI N!: 1-lep oir s, s.er vtee oi l mak es 9q1 7284 The
Fobr )c
Sh o p ,
P omero y
Aulhomed S1nger So les and
~ e rv i&lt;e . We sha r pen !:Jcrssors

tX(AVATI N G do!er . lo oder a nd
backhoe wo rk dump !rucks
ond lo -boy s l o r h rre, oN rll haul
fHI difl, to sor l , "me stone a nd
gro11el Co li tl o b or ~ o ge r Jel
ler S doy phone 997. '/Otl9 '"9hl
pho ne 992-3525 or 9'92 52:J2

1'MA'T A 61Rt.!

Autt &amp; Truck
Repalf
~lso Transmission
Repair
Pholle 992-5682

~pe c ro l

AUTOMC)HIII. ~ IN SUMAN n been
ca ncelled? l o~ ! your opNalor.,
license? Phone 9Q2 -2 143

( HIMNH FIIHS o re no fu n I Hove
your ~ cleaned lhe du stless woy
The
Ch rmney
~weep
014 -373-6057
~RAOFONO

Auc1ionee1 • Com
plete ' Scr11 1ce Phone 949 1487
o r 94Q 7000 . Racine Ohro Crt !!
li1 adf ard

WHE~

liMESTONE,. tiE SAVS "'

HER

BUILDING

-out of high water . Will
sell for tess than rep lace·
ment cos t Better ch ec k on
thi s for storage.

NEW

LISTING . - 3

be droom fr ame nome new·
painted
inside, new
ly
a luminu m siding Lots of
cu pboards in the kitchen
a n d l arge full basement.
V 1ewof River .
SEE THIS - An extra nice
3 bed r oom mobile home ,
70 ' x14', ce ntral a ir condi ·
troned , on lf" acre of len d .
State Route near town . Bet ·
ter not wait on th1sone .

SHE CAN'T

IH 111AT FIELD ...

9 · JI · f8

,\ J.l.EY OOP

;~~~~~~o~S~~~i~~~~~

:
:
•••
:

r

'.-.

::'T'H::-:::e:-':"'"""!1!:7"-::IF:-::~==::::::-:-:S&lt;!I::::ID:.-11
uke a dog
SOMe'TJ.iiN ' ABOIJT'
13 Hastened

-,T
- v.cu-=-l.D-=-::se=l
6CteNTII'IC
COMMUNITY
ON I'TS E'Ail, El.l'!IERTI

rr.....,..,1"':Qa~f=r--1:
~~-

GOIN' SACI&lt; ' 0
OE.lJ'ON,,
WE'RE&lt;
~D'Y)

• will be there to test and •

: analyte yur' w1t1r. Bit•.
• discount&amp; on water softners•
• and accenorl11 on this:

:day

•

•

Pomeroy Landmark :

Someda4s

-- .

it's not eas1.1
the car
wash!

WHEEL
ALIGNMENT

SPECIAL

DURING OUR
SEASONAL
CLOSEOUT

$}rs-r

Any U.S. made car -part~
1f needed. E•eludes
froni·WhHI drive cars.
extra

SPECIAL
PRICE
Expires

Sept . 30, 1978

•RED
ROOF PAINT

Ca II now lor appointment.

,,

•

s-r'fleAM. ••

·Pomeroy landmark

t

ack W. CarMy, Mgr.

•

Phone992-2111

Natural gas heal, garage,
ga rden. an&lt;l all turniture .

Out ot flood
LIST
WITH
THE
LEADER . STARTED IN
REAL ESTATE IN 1951.
CALL 992 -3325 TO SELL. 4
SALESPEOPLE
TO
SERVE YOU .
Helen L . Teaford
G. Bruc1 teaford

Sue P . Murphy
Associates

.

$92~

White-Wall

WINNIE:': ; A LOT MORE
COMPA5510NATE: .
THAN 1/0U THINK.
i!&gt;ESI DES ...

Co{IID.·

Custom ·Poly
A78xl3

IIIII- -

Housiny
Hc.ulquarters

IC1 4J4b4~08

H l)U )~

EXCELLENT - FARM BUY -

141 ACRES -

14 One of the

The

acres tillable with some very good crHk bottom hilltop land . The balance Is In posture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good (does need some modernization) ,
large all purpose barn &amp; several oulbulldlnqs. The
minerals go with II and It 's located In an area where
.IJOS, oil &amp; coo l have bHn found to be plentiful. Near
Rutland . 60's.
"

f.lf./'/ 1) '/ J

tHRH lii 1J k' 00M hou~c J (! C if'~
lo rrd Ct nsr- to ~ c hool prrtc·d
r PO!&gt;Onobl y 49 / ~ 110
1HRH I:H OkOO M ccu peled hon w
fu llv rr l'&gt;uloted wrlh I , both,
tn Pomeroy Rc o~o nob l y p r rr ud
PhMc 'i4'J 138n

CALL THE WISEMAN

I-lOOM l1ouse an d ho rh
• t•modcte d l ulfy 1OlpP ir&gt;rl Mov
h(' " f&gt;CI • af 1.-.r .:1 prn l'honr•
--J'O JYJJ

REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

·POMEROY

1

Gilligan ' s

,3·

s : oo--Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea
Star Trek 4 ,
Beverly H1llbiH1es 8; Mister Rogers N erghbo rhood
Pett i coat Junction 15

Jumbles ARBOR

I Answer

'

5·31i-News 6: Sanlord &amp; Son 8: E lec . Co 20.33. Mary
Tvler Moore 10 , Hogan's H e roes 1S.
6 DO- News 3,4,8,10,13.15. AtK News 6; Zoom 20,33
6 3()-NBC News3 ,4,15 ; ABC News 13, Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6, CB S News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7 oo-Cross -Wits 3: PM Magazine 4, New lvwed Game
6,13;: Newlywed Game 6.13 . News 10: Gil ltga n's
Is . 15 ; Ohio Journal 20 .
7 30--H ee Haw Honeys 3; D ati n g Ga m e 4; S1 98 Beauty

WHA"T 'IOU MIG&gt;H'T

L..IKE THE E!oU'TCHER
'TO 5L..ICEL

Contest 6: Fami ly Feud 10: Bonkers! 8. $100,000
Name That Tune 13: Pop Goes The Country 15:
MacNeil · Lehrer Report 20.33

r I I J[X I

a . oo-Waverly Wonder s 3,4, 15 ; D o nny &amp; Marie 6, 13;
Wonder Woman 8, 10 , Wash ington Week 1n Re v iew

IIJ

20.33

8 : 3~Who's Watching lhe Kids 3,4, 15; Wa ll Street

Wee k 20 ,33.
9 ·00-Rockford F i les J.,4, IS:; Mov i e "The Bad News
e ea r s" 6, 13 ; Incred ibl e Hulk 8, 10; Rostropovich at
the White House . 20 ; Evening at Pops 33
10 oo--Eddi e Captr a Mysteries 3.4 , 15, N ews 20 Great
Performances 33
10 J~MoniY Python's F lyin g Circus 20

FAUNA

GU ILT Y BLEACH
Thrs rather uncputh character has a couple

of bars- A " BAR ·BAA·IAN '

11 .00-News 3,4.6,8.10,13,15 , Di ck Lavell 20

Wio!EN I'M MA() I
JUST WANT TO SULK
IN MI.{ BEAN 6AG

1 JUST WANT TO
LIE 1-!E~E ALONE
AND BE MAO !

I

"A

n · JQ--Johnny Cars-on 3,4, 15 , Baretta 13 , M ovie
· Taste of Evtl " 6 ; Gunsmoke 8 ; M ovie " Godz1 ll a vs .
the Smog Monster " 10
12 : 3~Janakl 33 , 12 41i-lronside 13

..

1 DO-Midn ight Special 3,4,15 , Mo vte

. ..
Blood Manta

oo--M

10.

"M"

4Q-News 13 ; 2 : 3G-News 3 , 3
ov1e
1,~s
Sadi e Thompson ~' 3, 4 · 3o-Mo1Jie '_' 3 : 10 to Y uma

Z city
Disap-

1. 6 .00-Big Valley

prove of
3 Perutent
4 Suffered
from
5 Terrified
6 Jury list
7 Cuckoo
8 Taking up
precious

3: 7:00-Bewotched 3

Movie Channel 4 kingdoms
5 &amp; 7 P .M. - Piece ot oflhe Act ton {PG l
v
..
terday'•
Answer
15 Blue grass
9 &amp; 11 P .M - Cousi n , Cousi n e ( RJ
22 Succor
%9 Irrunediately
11 "You - My
Z3 Distaff
30 Having
Swtshine"
Thursday, Sept. 21
rabbit
more
17 Uncle
25 Espied
moisture
18 Ending
26
Astan
moun·
32
Mountain
for lion
tain system
crest
IS Lamprey
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
27
Mass
.
re38
Medii. is·
hours
28 Gear tooth
sort town
land : abbr.
9 Bechann
n Delay
12 Sad verse 28 Keyboard
Z3 Flat-bot·
instrument
tomed boat 11 Of aircraft
singleton diamond and forcZ4 Ule, in
,-....,,-.,.....,.,:-~2 1 -A
NORTH
ing to a spade game.
• K Q7 6
com·
South's three hearts was
• 972
control showing so North
pound
t A
jumped to fo ur spades to
words
• AK852
show good shades and South
25 One of the
Blackwooded to the gr and
EAST
1 WEST
h,....j- + Trinity
slam
• 8
• 10 3 2
He knew he was taking a
• Q 10 6
26 Resting
•KJ543
chance when he bid seven.
• QJ 75 0
t K 10 8
28 Teeter
North's two km gs mtght ln·
• 96 4
• 10 7
31 Alncan
elude
the kmg of hea rts and
SOUTH
the queen of spades had not
• AJ954
been guaranteed but South
• A8
gambled
and the gamble
• 96 2
paid off North held th e right
• QJ 3
cards and one diamond ruff
was the 13th tn ck
Vulnerable . North.South
Dealer : North
West North Ea st South
Pass a
Pass 3•
Pass 3 t
You hold :
Pass 4 NT
Pass 4.
Pa ss 5 NT
Pass
• 9632
Pa ss
Pass 6"
• K J 5
Pass Pass Pass
t AQ2
• QJ 8
9 Zi
Openmg lead : • 2
A reader asks what the
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work lt:
expert response ts to a
AXYDLBAAXR
standard notrump opening
By Oswald Jacoby
bid.
Is LONGFEI.LOW
and Alan Sontag
It 1s a raise · to three
One lette r simply stands for a nother In this sample A is
If you want to use splinter notrwnp. Yo u don 'I use
used for th e three L's, X f o r the two O's, etc. Singh.• letters, bids decide just which of Stayrnan to try to fmd a 4-4
apostrophes, the length and fo rmati ~m of the W(l rds are all your jwnps will be splinters. fit in spades here, s ince even
hints Each day the code letters are daft'erent.
The most general rule and wtth a 4-4 spade fit , the odds
the one we use is that any . are that this hand will proCRYPTOQUOTES
time you bid in a new s uit duce as many tricks m
and bid one more than nee· notrump .
A B
B AI U
SLN
J A
CN
A I N essary for a regular forci ng tNF.WSPAPER t-:NT !'.; RPRISf~ ASSN I
bid you are using a splinter,
A F L showing a si ngleton in the
ENQSFJN
s· I A V D N L
roo you have a questiOn for
splinter suit and forcing to the experts ' Write " Ask the
J S 0 N game in the last bid su1t.
VDN
Experts care of th1s new spa·
SLN
SRPON1VJ
North and South were per lnd1V1dual questions Wlfl
y
•
playmg tha t a simple re· be answered rf accompamed
' ·
X A I S V D S I
J C R B
verse bid was forcing so that by stamped, self·addressed
Yetterday'o Ceyploqaote: THERE ARE THREE FAITHFUL a two-diamond rebid would envelopes The most lnteres~ ­
--:.,.. FRIENDS-AN OlD WIFE, AN OLD DOG , AND READY be a force in diamonds.
lng questtons wt/1 be used m
MONEY.- BEN FRANKIJN
Hence, when North bid three lh1S column and w1ll rece1 ve
©19'78 Kane F'eat.ures Syndicat-e, Inc:.
diamonds he was showing a copies of JACOBY MQOERN I

owner 's ageJ'revents her from c:ontlnulng to operate
the farm a~ she desires an Immediate ~ale. 50 to 60

AUH l 0 1 orr k t '1 N rc c b vrl do ng

Is 8. Brady Bunch 10.

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

BRIDGE

I,..

Sz-' OFF

.nooT&lt;JOE WHIT E

Garden 20 .
.4 ·0Q-M ister Cartoon ,3; For Richer , For Poorer 15,

,.,.-+--+--1

BRING,._ IN
COUPON
AND RECEIVE

Discount
Prices

J · Jo-Mash 8 ; Joker 's W1ld 10 : Crockett's Victory

Correct use of splinters

•

W. Carsay, Mgr. •
992-2111
!

-·---

3 ~»-Another World 3,4, 15 ; Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
t2 Wading bird
1 Cork port
43 German
5 Freshet
river
10 - Harbor,
DOWN
Guam
I Wyoming

• The factory reprtsentaHv•:

NEW LISTING - 5 room

992-2259 - 992-6191

f u~ ld ~ 1./4'/ ~ 1-iL J

d .
, ester ay s

v

2 3G- Doctors 3,-4,15,

Guiding Light 8, 10

~

WATER
SOFTENER
CLINIC
: Friday, Sept. 22, 1978
• Pomeroy Landmark
: Will havea Water
.:
Softner Clinic
: 9:00a.m.-4:00p.m.

2 . 0IJ---One Life to Live 6, 13,

{Answers tomorrow )

TH' QUARRY 15 FULL
0' LIMESTONE ...

RAISE NOTHitl'

FREE

frame home on corner lot
next to sch oo l in Rutland

«Realtor Associates )

IN M me r s~o~o !IC ov PIIoolo.,
•11 q 1 rvr&gt; 1 4 bf'rlr oorn l1vrn g
roo m
krt dr J?r~
bo th
ut1ltl'f'
room on d bo ~e rn(l n t
lorry

Pnntanswerhere:

IHMY, 1H15 GROUND IS
ONLY "SOUo&lt;' ... AND

4-lll-ttc

AND
MAR liN
t •·
cov orlong , 'septrc
sy~ t ems .
dozer , bo ck hoe dvmp I ruck
hm es l ane, grovel
block l op
pa~o~rng f.?t 143 Phone I (bl4 )
6qtt.7:J3l

hord

HATe TO SEE
DISAPPOINTED

3,4, 15, As The Wor ld T ur ns

8, 10 .

Now arrange the circled lene rs 10
form the surprtse answer. as sug·
gested by the aOOve cartoon

0.

HOW~HV

THROOMS
ANO
K•tchens
remodeled , ce romrc Ide . plum ·
bing , ca rpentry ond general
mar ntcnonce
13 yea r!&gt; ex
99] Jb85

t

mile oH Rt. 7 by-pass on
Sl . Rt. 124 toward Rutland,

Will do r ool 1ng, con slru cl tan
plurnbrng ond heo trng No jOb
too Iorge or too small Phone
7 41 1348

Only 15
JG-Days of Our Live'S

I

'~'•

dozer , backho e
and d rtcher Chorles H Hot
f. el d
Bock
Hoe
) e rvoc eo
l-lutl and Obro Phone 74'1 lOOt!

12 .00-Newscen1er 3; News -4,6, 10 ; Amerrca Altve 15 ;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; M i dday Magazine 13
12 : J~Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Se ar c h for
Tomorrow 8, 10 , Elec. Co . 33
I : ~For R teher . For Poorer 3: Al l My Children 6,13:
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women

£&gt;"9'ooo-

GARAGE

~ X C A V Al i N G

Squares J,4,15, High Hopes 6: Price
$20,000 Pyramod 13
11 DO-High Rollers 3,4 ,15: : Happy Days 6,13 , Elec .
Co 20
11 :31i-Wheel of Fortune 3.4. 1S:
Love of Ltfe 8,10:
Sesame St 20,33: 11.55-CBS News 8. House Call
10

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenriArno&lt;dandBoCLee

ROGER HYSEll

RETIREMENT - Id eal
on Rt. 124 where
you' ll enloy tile best ot

BUSINESS

r

tNEPTLY

8·2 1 mo

~tW tN G

Nigt'lt 6; All In The Fam lly a, 10 ; Dattng+0Ga me 13

1 0 · 3~Hollywood
lS Right 8,10:

20,33: Gom er Pyle, USMC 10 . Emergency One 13:

109 High 51
Pomeroy

~Today

4 : JG-Little Rascals 3,1 5 , G!lllgan · s IS 4 ;

t &gt;l 'l "' J. . C..:... T·-

The Photo Place

10 30 c

Reports 10: News 13.
3,4, IS ; Good Morntng Ameroca 6, 13: CBS
News 8: Jetsons 10.
J · 3~Schoollesl0 ; 8:DO-Capl Kangaroo 8, 10: Sesame"
St . 33 .
9 ·00- Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4, 1J,15,
Emergency0ne6; Hogan ' s Heroes 8; Match Game
10.
9 : 3~ Brady Bvnch 8. Fam ily Affair 10
IO :DO-Card Sharks 3, 15; Consumer Buy line 4; Edge of
7

Merv Grtffi n 6, Porky Pig &amp; li'rlends 8. Sesame Sl.
20.33, Bat ma n 10. Dinah 13.

I I

sp ot

f i sh1ng and boat ing . Relax
,n t h ts atmosphere and
l i ve . 3 acres plus and 3
bedroom mobi l e hom e .

m,

New~ 6 , Sunrise Semester 8;
6 · ,.5- Morn ing Report J ; 6 50- Chuck Whlte

Unscramble these lour Jumbles,
one tetter to each square , to lorm
four ordrnary words

We are currently milking
iitppointments tor senior
portraits. We use tradt ·
tional settings and also
feature
outdoor
por ·
tra1ture.

Chester. Oh10

6 · 25-Socletles In Transition 10

6 . 30-Columbus Today 4;

~ ~~ ®

Call Us Today

Wf 00 pointong. gutte r cerlrng
trle
pa neling, roo l •epo ir ,
ptumbtng and con e rete work .
Free es lr mot es. Co li 991 77 85
a~!.. far Wolio ce Morrr s

NEW LISTING -on Shade
R iver,
approximately
5

- Cl ose to stor es, small
yard. p a rt base ment , new
c arpettnQ, in good condi ·
lion . As-k ing S11,000 00.

'

dry good s
fe ed tack shop
of dog l oad, S3 BB

Bnrtch Manager

2 BEDROOM

commer-

.,.,, DlNli f.' os l Pogc .nlle

Alter Hours
Call ,;2 .7JJ3
CONTACT:
Lois Pauley

AUCT I ON , F r r and Set! n il es
al 7 p m
New and ust&gt;d
mer c hand rse at Ohio R rver
Auct i on , 537 H i gh Sl
M rddiC CO rl , Ohio

~• I t•

Pr ice

Pomerov

l llU(K PAUl~ Au bog ou•tha r y
o~l e !&gt; •ngle 'I s pt~e d o ,.- lc a nd
Nl W HOM I:.t b1•d1 oo m
l 1om p ~ s peed gear b o ~ Iron !
I utlr' carpc i C'd
vrrt yl
hnt h...
o~l c l U "' IU hr es d1£&gt;~P I rn o tor
~ ·dmq ".-o lh ~ • n g l£&gt; &lt;Ot gorage
por t ~
A ll lr orn 1t104 lntcr no
l ur qe&gt; lo T "' ... vtl and o n New
lrorr o l Model rtt~ ~ ven 1nq -,.
l11010 l&lt; ood ~ II UOO J ol';/ 'J':Jb'l
1' 4? )()qJ
1 ~'J 0 ~X1 1&lt;A r1tC (· l e i ~ otl l-lmrr1c
f OU J.' I :,I ~ ) C ro ga1~ J w h! Tf.'&gt; 1(&gt; 1
wr Th )/ . bO Hollypatl.. trorl t •r
IPr Pd
I ll('\
!:lr on d n(' w
l ' ortrolly furno\ht:&lt;d 11:1, .:1 () ce
/ 4 '/ /8"10
rn \.·n l blot ~ hurldlllq w llh !&gt;h t&gt;d
lo rg, gnrdPn ~ p acp w rlh lr 111 1
I HJ-1 1-~
WH~ I LH'
Hre nd rw w
l o, . , .~ 4ll f.l /4"11:1
rr10To r
Good
111 c ~
~J~()

Let Pomeroy Lindm•rk
soften &amp; condition vour
water with Co -op wilttersoften er. Model UC · S\11.

Prt ce S,li1,500
11 ACRES - Moreor les&amp;. 4

'fi:J ~ 4 :J~3

Auetion

H~al

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?

appreciate.

$35,000 .00 .

Long Bottom , r a n c h tvpe, 3
b edroom home is unfinish ·
ed
Barn
and
oth er
buildings, Ohio R rver fron ·

1001 HHt fi G l Al~ boot J )
h p JOhn!&gt; on mo to r a nd tra der
~ :wu 1:143 4894

to

t ran sfer red.

AVO N YOUR f irst jOb pays
the btlls Se ll ing Avon buys
'14 9 ') l t;.J
tne trill s Earn a seco nd
rncome and have money to
1'111 Uf: l HOil Ult~l:l wrlh ( lut(h
spa r e Sell Avon in your
on d gea r bo~ ~!)00 I OJ() fr J.
free flmt&gt; Se t your own
~ t r vrt urol p1pu
Good' l'lo rn
hours Be your own boss
('n d S100o l ao t '/ 4/3(J4:J
Call todav , 742 2354 , Ann
Thoma s , Avo n D rs tr 1Cf
CA I Db hy dr oul r( da re r Nemh
Ma n ager
r o llo r s. M ode l I ll Pa rd ~ ) ~
~e ll S:WOO Wtll d elrvc r l ree
! tr:l Jo&lt;I J cvcn •ng ~

1~

see

room .

f-001 br u ~ h hog ijr or,d nPw
Heo .. y du ty J(J It hor c&gt; le vo tor

4'11 ~~3"1

3 BEDROOMS - Older
home, some remodeling ,
beautiful view of t he river,

out buil d ings Owner being

l oc atron, equi pped k itc h e n ,
sm a ll level lot wrth s t o r age
bui ld ing .
Fa i r
Market

b

,.

'\1Jl\1Nf

\:!)

High School
SENIORS

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

SIJQUt

. .,

'

Jack Ginther 985 .3806

,.

must

Pomeroy, 0 .
3· 15tfc

anyt1me .
Phone 985-3806

J81~

No . 1 You will nave t o see
t hr s 1 be-d r oom nome to
be l iev e I h e pr1 c e F e a t u r es
a large lrvtng ro om w n e w
c arpe ltng , ex tr a l ar ge d rn
1nc1 r oom Two n tc;e lo ts.
wrlh pl enty o f shade . N o w
rf'nttng f o r ex lr n IN COME!

I , bo th underprrmrng ~ 1:&gt;00
and o ssuTH e to ol\ 944 ;)()t!J or
tiJJ 3:JI1

tn Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Str"t-oH
Mi II Street lust behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open S.Oturdoy 10·4 p . m .
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p. m.
8·31 -1 mo.

ci•l. Ciittl for estim•te . 24
Hour Service . Any d•v,

H WOOU ~OWI:H S RH'A IR
!iweepers loo s. l er s. Iron~ all
small opplronte s l own mower
ne"r 10 Slate H rg hwoy Goroge
on Hou l e 'I Phone (014 ) 98)

STASH!~'

MAR !JUANA lr.J
OUR VAt.~!

WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
"Installation S..rvice

BoX 3

US - !&gt;Y

QUALITY

Denver Kapple
At

ReSidential and

New or R.epair
Gutters and
Downspouts

698.6JOG
44 STATE STREET
ALBANY, OHIO
YOUR CHOICE

See

Ph . 992-2848

Go.MNNY

MOVE

PONT &lt;9 1VE US THAT.
YOU PUNK! SOME·
&amp;ODY T~IED T'FIIAME

WE~~. Y·Y-VEAH ...VOU
TIIIO JUST DE LIVERED
LOAD FROM TH' PLAWT
AN HOUR AGO

na~·*iiiN

For The Best
Price In Town

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

8·20· 1 mo. I Pd.)

HV~

1973 GRAN TORl NO . 53.000

~ Y HA ( U ~ l i beodrOO ill hou ~ P
N{'w s to r" ' w •n dow !&gt;
New
o lr.rr lliiTtJ tn bu •ldtng '} p O I ( h c~

1ng ve ndlllg Pqurpmen l l oca l
ly No t:'tpe rren ce ncc c~ S O!y
We tram tn v C'~ ! rnc n t requ•rcd
Phone C/ 49 1'/(&gt;J

I AllMAll ~ t'JJ4 rnodel I I o ok ~
ond run., lrk e ll (' w Wrll talo. e
I! ode ~ ~ ~ q 'li b]

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

!hP krd .., yo IO H h oo J )C&gt; II WAl H ' WHl drrl lrng Wrl lrom I
A .,o, Yo u ~e t yo ur o wn hour ~
Gran t / 4 ') 'li:Ji' 9
~o r ou con be hotnc w11cn th f'
lAOY
WILl .,, , '" h o rn e~ o r
k 1 d ~ Q C' I horne And the harde- r
h o ~ pr lo l """h po 1 10111~
Me r g ~
you w o r ~ lh e rno rf• you ~?O r r \
l o nrPo Qf.l') b1i.l/:j
l o ll tod a y Ann lhorno !&gt; A vor;
l) o ~ l rr c I M anage• / J ') 'j:J)4
IN I ~I-INAliONAl~d o !CJ r
h lo de W11rch ~re el ( Qb

9-7 -1 mo

1967 INTERNATIONAL BU S,
30 passenger Low m ile age
E xce llenl cond i t ton
104 882 3122, 304 -773 5370 or 304
773 5482

( (JI I alt e r

AVO N YOU ( Otl go lo w o rk w h(&gt;n

All types of roofing, guHers
20 years
experience.
All work
guaranteed. Call Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160. Free
Estimates.

&amp; downspouts,

992 7751.

STAN'S
BARGAINLANO
Where eve r yone gets a ta• r
deal
O pen 9 to 5 da11y
enep l Su nday , 12 to 6
Mam Sf , Rutland , Ohio

S.Ove 30 pet. to 50 pet.
on healing cost
Experience ond
fully Insured
Fl'ftEst.
Call992· 2772
8·10·lmo. (Pd. )

MOORE'S

SERVICE

441 ] "114

~C H OL) I

11

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

1H~! I !:!~ OI-IOOM f r orne hom P rn
Mrd cHr•po r I l oll '14'/ J 4.) /

PART
SHEPHERD
and
co lire Approx ~ 9 mo old
Needs someo n e wtth land .
1'1 / 0 HO N OA JOV /J(JO ollu o l
See at 224 Wetlnut , M id
t nr lr~
Ornrnq roo rn
~ vrt t'
dleport att er .s
liCJ/ J011;!:
BUl
co mpt' '
t.:&gt;U
po ~&lt;:. e n q e t
w rth nf'w t rrf' '&gt;
Good co ndrl•on lon ro n l o rn
Monk on otlf'N ;.';O l

Ca11992-701!
For FrH Estimates
f ·21 · 1mo.

P• ACRES ' l ocated 1 mile
f rom Metgs Mine No
1.

,........_

lrv1ng r oom o .. ers tulfed
cha1r w ith ottoman . Done m
dark brown ott wh it e plaid
uphols t e ry
Ex ce llent
cond tt ro n , S10 Cha r len e
Hoetl rc h , 992 -5292

Pomtrov , O.

'

Cellulosic (wood' fiber)
Thermal insulation

SMITH NELSON.
MOTORS, INC.

220 E. Main Strett,

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22,1978
5:45-Farm Reoorl 13: 5 : ro-PTL Clvb 13 , S.55Sunrise Semester 10.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 21, me
7 : ~Cross · WIIs3: PM Maga1lne 4; Newlywed Game
6,13 : News 10: Gilligan's ts. 15: Hocking Valley
Bluegrass 20.
7 : 3~Holtywood Squares 3: Dating Game • : Bonkers
6, Please Stand By 8: $100,000 Name Thai Tune 10:
Nashville On The Road 13. Dolly 15;. MacNeil ·
Lehrer Report 20,33
8 . ~Prolecl U. F .O . 3,4,15: Mork &amp; Ml.ndy 6.13 :
Watlons 8,10: Once Upon A Classic 20,33 .
8 :30- Whal's Happening 6,13 , Possum Trot 33; Once
Upon A Classic 20
9:DO-Qulncy 3,4,15: Barney Miller , 6, 13: In Per
formance AI Wolf Trap 33.
9 : :1l- Soap 6.13: PossumTrot 20
10 DO-WEB 3,4, 15: Family 6,13: Barnaby Jones 8,10 ,
News 20 : Mayor of Caslerbrldge 33
10 3&lt;&gt;-0ver Easy 20.
11 . ~News . 3, • .6.8 .10.13,15: Dick Cavell 20. Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11 · JO-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Slarsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13:
Gunsmoke 8: ABC News 33: Mo vie "Any Wednesday" 10: 12 ·00- Janakl 33
12 : 4~SWAT 6,13; 1:00-Tomorrow 3,4 ; 1· 50-News
13
Mov ie Channel 4 5 &amp; 9 P .M - March or Die {PGl
7 &amp; 11 P .M . - Hollywood Oldie {G)

'

JIM KEESEE

L~bb

NEW
THREE
bedroom
home , rec r oo m , firep l ace ,
la rge
deck ,
garaoe .
basement , one and a half
bal Ms
P ho ne Lee C~n struction
992 3454 ,
weekends
1-61.4 -.446-9568.

SU F FOLK RAM Also goo d
ear co rn . 61 4 698 4-499 .

-------------T HREE TRAIL horses N ew

r J'/

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

01annel Cable 5 7:00 P .M . - Paul Gaudino
7: 30 P .M . - Supersporls
10 :00 P .M.,.-700 Club

TELEVISION
VIE.WING

•

Blown Insulation

Service
.._
._

APPUANCE il

IAh'M 101-1 ,o t r~ Ho v " t' '} horn..,
trcu lt •r lorr.w po rnl 1U ocr p~ 01
10 n r r ,....,

carpeting

EU.IOTT

.1 4 -t Q(r(" &lt;,

tH HI I l) lr' l orrr bo-.dr oorn h ou..,,.. rn
t ru ll (' l n y t:lalh (Jn d
lpntrol
l r,nr rrrq 41./ / 7 (J / 4

--------------,.

'1-lobilc Homr• for Sale

So/ per bu t o rn
~ ) ~ 0 J 0 N o ) r 11 0 wrn~

CO l-IN

... hC' II €'1

~strong

..•

J&amp;L

Your Headquarters For

l rmhPr IJt rlll•tl
....,,. 11
h lo ck burldn 1q
nld f'r
r, nrl o•r
Old h'l
I
fhf'~ t rr
Ohro 4 H.) ]H ~/ ht•twl '('ll ol und 6

1/\~M

Ph&lt;l11&lt;' ~~I ! 181

~ All

Now Only
I ~ YOU ho ve a servtC.C to oiler

SI J &lt;.Jil l 1/ :JJ

GRAVE LY TRACTOR and
30 " mower Goo d condttton
992 -7492 or 992 3716 .

~ AM ILY

~A H :J l o rn rly 1hur"
and l rr 4 to 4 ( 1-( ? ~ turn or
l rvP f'o rnt '&gt; or Che ~ I E' t l oo lo. l or
&lt;:.r g n~
2 rou nd cro ch t&gt; tt&gt;d
robl ('(lo rh s !»LO e-o Af gha n~
&lt;to rh rng ba b y rl ern'&gt; largp '&gt;lTC
d leS'i&lt;' '&gt; fi Tr o( lo t o p~· p layer
mo ~(
Harr y Br o w n re-~rci(&gt;rlC (&gt;
4 ~) J!l)J

CCll n r p('lt 1oh l1•

G f.?IM• .) GO lO~N l&lt; f'd O&lt;'lr r r o u~
tl. G o lden OE'It ( ! O \J ~ oppl(· ~ ·~ r t 1
poll r( io.
Ot &lt;h ord
~ k'
Otl'J
b I J bt&gt;'J J/8)

GA..- A (:.~

4t.f'j

YardSaJ.,

ll!;l ) ] )4)

l m on( mq o l -. n
' ' l rroor" '''f..! lrr•lnr1d M n r l qu!)P
Il l . _, rot(' . Arhr ••"' pho nt&gt; ,b.l.:l
"''1/ J U~ 1 "

BUf.HIOUG H ~

~Alt-

Wed nE&gt; sdo)' and
l h u r ~d oy
ll b
l:: ve r ,.- rhrng 111
clvd rn g thP 1-. rk h('n ..,,n ~ ~ 9 4
. lrn ro!rl ) I Mr d d i(J'po r 1

MAG NA VL)X I lJ

1:! ~ ) MOBill H O M ~~ PI Plea
to O P I W Va b\"~ r rlP HNk ~

'J

10 yr

-./A I HA

pm

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

GA fiA G ~

n nd

U- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 21. 1978

Business Services

llr )r\'l"11l.._, l or ,UI! · l mr 1• onr
''I' Mnlrtlr •pc11I ri! 'OI H1 r1lo•rd
• nl l I.J~I I l l" I

t 'orSak

IUIAfiOHJ adult ~ 01e
1n need o f foster cor e ho n1e s A
~ alo1y
an d bene lrl~ wrll tw
pard 1hr~ · ~a n rn home jOb that
141o , to n Clw vrol e ! P ' ' ~YP 4
will bene f rt the I ri p chance s of a W AN\ 10 buv w ond o w vo n l 4
"PPI"' d J ~(J l'nqrrlf' J rtt &lt;h lo' f'(' ~ P
1:,
or
I
t;
fo
rd
or
(he
"
y
~
V
l'
ll
rn('nlolly retard ed t-or r•1 o r(' m
hrh h
!: or f' fll'll !
co rrdolr o n
rng ~&gt; '1f.l') 1' ~ 4 :J
l orr]lOt ron wrrte o r call
Ph on&lt;· 4'f.l'j ~ J ~ I:I
1- os l er lor ~
l l.ilj lllo'lo'Y I RAit~H ') I II A l
O L D MOTORCYCLES and
DHU ~ Morn )I
par i s Doesn ' I have to ru n
r(l ll ou 1 0 w 11 rng po wer ' ro n
Jackson O H 4~04 0
992 -6345
v ( r r ~.~,
I!&lt; C{'IICn t
co ndotrnn
oJ,i:Jtl~ i'/ol (lo gor1
S ~ ~ W l rrn 1 ~ Goody o•nr l / H I ':I
or0 14 J&lt;l:lob08 1Ath er1s r
CHIP WOOD . PoleS ma11.
lor f'~ and w h o &gt;el~ oppr 0 ,
! [)()
!:Qual Oppor tun11y bnplo ye r
dtamrer 10" on largest end ,
rn rl e~ ~3 00 (O il II II U 'llp€' 1 wrlh
S8
50
per
ton
Bun
dled
slab
.
G!: NH~Al
lABO fl wrok
lol l
co" " C' , f f'l lerr l 10nd1 t ro n ~1 00
S6 .SO per ton Del rv ered to
~(r; :JJ/J between 4 om to J JO
14'/ lObi
Oh i o Paller
Co
Rt
2,
pm
Pome ro ,.- 992 2689
LIKE NEW Hondo gu tlo!!r and
WANaO BAB Y)IIIl:fl ~ day '&gt; a
c ase, extra se t of slrrngs
week I to 0 W rll pay 52~
and p icks i nc lu ded . Maytag
\"ard
Sal
~
wee k ly or my horne 01 wrllroke
Copper t one
· Porta pa 1r
'&gt;omeone l or room board and YA ~D ~AU l ut' 5 th ru lhur s Q
washer and dryer . Very
wages 991 0~18 alte r 0 prTI
good cond tl ron , sell as set
t o ~ Wolf Pen Road o f! ) f,' l -0
Sylvan1a
T tm es - a tan
~te v E' Hoggy s [ e s r d e nn ~
~OM!:ON~ 10 do houseworlo.
a
wornon or a grr l 991 J704

W l" t'&gt;k f'; ld ~

t 4/ l H)l-ll) ' l orr rompf' • 'l" 'l iOI
• I'C'I w(' r o rt oulo d uol toni, ..
~ lf&lt; f' II£'J1!
rurmin q roncfrl ron
~d.J / :, 1.14J')J'I'I, '

OAI ~ U N
PllKUP
4'-J'} 0 I Ci j o t lf'r ~ pm

CHIP

'' "'' ''"'&lt;! "

t~.r : l jolJ.,I]

l\J

1~ / .J

uu·u Ft lda'
~ p M

~~{l(J

.., .., ., ).1/H

24

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

I ... Aill ...

'-,u11 rl.r r11nl o 11 'f' h • I
rnnr r
l1nr "'"'
t oll
'JH'l l'i l t
.,, , ,~kf1oy ... 4 "'' ' '' '.. • I''"

\

&lt;"

5~ 10 I' ALONE I"

I'

PAW·· I THINK TATER
15 601N'TO BE ONE OF
THEM HIGH· FALOOTIN'
INTERIOR
DECORATORS

WHAT IN
THUNDER
MAKES liE

7.

HE JEST DONE OUR WALLS OVER
IN CORNMEAL MUSH I./ALLER

SAV THAT?

LANDMARK
JACK W.CARSIY.Mtlr.
PHON I f92·2 llt

•

'

•

�..

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.
'

Average income
increases 9.6%

SPECIAL TWO DAY SALE

'

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22ncl &amp; SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 23rd

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8
.MEN'S BLUE DENIM
WORK DUNGAREES
Another big shipment, waist sizes 29 to 42.
Choose your correct length. 10 oz . blue
den im , sanforized shrunk .

SPECIAL

•9••

SIZES 44 TO 50 WAIST SPECIAL 110.68

SPECIAL ~1.69

DOTIED SWISS
45 inches wide, 65 percent polyester.
25 percent cotton . Good selection of
colors, permanent press.

$119

YD.

MEN'S st6.95
BLUE DENIM
Bl B OVERALLS
100 per cent cotton, sanforized shrunk .
Triple stitched seams. Sizes 30 to 50 waist .
Spec ial two-day price.

. SPECIAL

'
One size fils all sizes 10 to 13 . Big selection ·
of solid colors and heather tones .

99e

PAIR

CARHARTT s13.99
HEAVY DUTY BLUE
DENIM

PILE LINED VEST
Button front. two pockets , machine
washable , sizes S, M L, and XL

.,, ••
SALE

GIRLS' TOPS
Vests, sweaters , knit taps, sizes 2 to 4, 4 to
'6X, 7 to 14.

REGULAR '4.50 ·.. · ..................... SALE '3.59
REGULAR '7.00 ...................... ... SALE '5.59
REGULAR '9.00 ••···•.... •• .. ·••·•• ·... SALE '7.19
REGULAR 111.00·........................ SALE '8.79
....................... SALE 111.19

SAVE NOW ON

KROEHLER
Sleep -or · lounges and Simmons hide · a ·
beds .

-OUEEN AND FUU SIZE BEDS
-NYLON AND HERCULON COVERS
-PLAIDS, TWEEDS, FLORALS
SAVEFROM

Regular price $3.49 and $3 .99 yard, 45 inches
wide. cotton polyester blend, solid colors
and patterns.

•229

Home Furnishings-1st Floor

FLANNEL... SHIRTS
65 per cent cotton . 35 per cent polyester, two
pockets, long tails, excellent selection of
plaid patterns . Sizes S, M Land SL.

$5 99

'11

1

SA TIJRDA Y SAUl

• ,,.

YARD

99

. MEN'S s18.95
BLANKET LINED
OVERALL JACKETS
This Wrangler work coat comes in sizes 38
to 50 . Button front. warm blanket lining, buy
what you need now.

SALE

$13.99

Tremendous selection of these popular
socks , white with colored tops. Men 's sizes 9
to 15, boys' sizes 7 to 11 , regular price $1.25.

PAIR

MEN'S .BAN LON
DRESS SOCKS
SIZES 10 to 13, BIG SELECTION

1

~

TWO DAY SAU'f

COUCH AND
CHAIR
THROWS
.
...

MEN'S
JOG SUITS

5

27~95

TO

$1

099

PAIR

REG. '435.90

WOODBURNING HEA
-HEAVY STEE~ CONSTRUCTION
-FIREBRICK LINING
-THERMOSTAT CONTROL
-2-SPEED BLOWER
INSTALL NOW BEFORE COLD WEATHER!

ELECTRIC
PIZZA BAKER

LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS!

20% OFF

SALE!

BATONS

REG. 14.95 BALANCED BATON,
20, 22, 24, 26 inch lengths
SALE

LANE
CEDAR CHESTS
ANTIQUE MAPLE AND PECAN
WITH PADDED TOP

Lf

DAYTIME DRESSES
· -

Poly-cotton blend
Machine Washable
Sizes 12 thru 20
14 112 thru 24'12

REG. '9.00 ................................ SALE '7.19
REG. 110.00 .•..•.•••••.••.• •••••••..•••••. SALE 17.99
REG. '11.00 ............................... SALE '8.79
REG. 112.00 •·••.. ••··•.. ·•.. •.. ·.... •~ .. · SALE '9.59

REG. '14.00· ·· ·••·•·•· ···· ···· · ·••·· ······SALE

OPEN SA

ERFELD IN

•

TRICOT, SEAMLESS, FIBERLINED,
SIZES 32 THRU 38
SPECIAL

\

2

ONLY

$300

BESTFORM
BRA SALE

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

FURNITURE DEPARTMENT

Kneehole and -roll top desks. pine. maple ,
pecan, oak .

'

32.95 JOG SUITS· ................... 526.99

5

.'1995

$39500

DESK SALE

26.95 JOG SUITS ··.. ··.... ···.. ··; · '21.99

5

MIRRO

Popular "Walta Pizzaria" saves up to 70
per cent energy. Dozens of uses . FridaySaturday special.

OF COLORS.

Sweat pants with matching long sleeve tops,
small. medium, large and extra large.

Save plenty now on these foam back
furniture throws. discon,tinued patterns and
colors . Regular prices $7 .49 to $18.99.

399

publication of a "letter of
understanding " ·on tile settlemeht issue, the unfinished&gt; .
summit business still ·
occupying negotiators.
Letters covering other
issues, such as the future of
the East Jerusalem holy
places, were expected today.
Meantime, Carter was preparing to begin a two-day
political speech-making
foray to South Carolina,
North Carolina, Aliquippa,
Pa . (outside of Pittsburgh ),
and Columbus, Ohio.
He departs at 3 p.m. EDT
for Asheville, S.C. to attend a

VOL. XXIX NO. 112 .

at

PGMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

?.

I

j_.),___,r_h_e_w_o_rl_d_T_od_a_y_

Retail sales
tax receipts

up in August

Three hurt
in wreck

WOMEN'S SWEATERS
Hooded styles, V-necks, turtle necks, ·
cardigans. crew necks, vests, coat
sweaters. Regular sizes S, M. L. XL. Extra
sizes 40 thru S2.

REG. '8.00 ••••••••••• ••••• •••••· ••· •••• SAl.£ '1.79
REG. '11.00 ••·••••••••••••••••••·•••••• SALE '9J5
REG. '16.00 ••··•··· •··•··••··•••··• ·• •• SAL£ 113.60
REG. '21.00 •·u························ ¥ i17J5
·n.w ·············.······•••i•··· SALE
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

.......

,.~

\-.·
ADDRESS ENVELOPES - Members of the Retired Senior Volunteer program were
busy Thursday addressing 8,000envelopes that will be mailed to Meigs County residents foc
the Meigs County Historical Society. Residents , if they desire , may _compile a story of_the1r
family ( 500 words with pictures of Ule family ) for a history of Me1g~ County . The hiStory
books will be delivered in 1979and will be sold on a pre-publicauon blls1s only.
:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

Area sportsmen and
youth are reminded that
tomorrow, at Royal Oak
Park, the sportsmen's
clubs of Meigs County will
be celebrating National
Hunting and Fishing Day.
The day 's activities will
begin at 9:30 a.m. with
registration to begin at 9
for door prizes.
Free lunch wli' be
provided with adult
supervision all day . The
activities will w!t'd up at
3:30.

up~-Reagan

Missile component causes cancer ·
SA &amp;.I

•

Americans fed

•-al

FOR

WASHJONGTON (UPI) - HEW Secretary Joseph
Califano AYI testa indicate the stralegic metal beryllium, a
maj&lt;r CGDponent In the nation's nuclear missiles, ca111es
cancer. He advloed the Occupational Safety and Health
MmlniiCralion Tlllraday to "proceed promptly" with plarw to
carefully control manufacturill8 of the light, supel'llrong
iDeta1 to prolect thOUI&amp;nds of workers expoHd to it.
The beryllium cmtroveny arose last week when Energy
Secrelllry Jamt1 Schlealnger warned tile melal is eaaentlalto
natlanall!eCUI'ily ond 18!ely cha1111es proposed by the Labor
Depu lmint mllbt be too expensive f&lt;r planll located in
s...llml, Pl., and Cleveland.

. The Pomeroy Emergency the bead in an auto accident.

Ridle at 4: :II a.m. Friday for

1'1

•

Donald E. Lukens, the
Republican nominee f~r state
auditor, and said his proposal
would
eliminate
the
"overhead" of federal
bureaucracy, curb inflation
and restore state control of
programs.
"I think X percentage of
the income tax ought to be
returned to the states, to be
used as they see fit," Reagan
Wid a $50-a-plate fund-raising
luncheon for Lukens
Reagan later told a news
conference he doeo not know
what percentage "X" is, but
that it ought to equal the
amount of federal grants sent
bllck to the states now. He
said that averages out to
$5,300 per American family.
"With our computer
capability, we ought to be
able to figure out just what is
the proper percentage of
individual earnings that the
government can take without
upsett ing the economy,"
Reagan said.

Tax reimbursement

distribution made
A total of $144,702.01 in
second-half 1977 property tax
reimbursements ha s bee n
distributed to Meigs County,
its political subdivisions and
school districts, State Auditor
Thomas · E . Ferguso n announced today.
Meigs Count y and its
political s ub divisions
received $45,336.63 of this
distribution , whil e sehou l
district s within the county
received $99,365.38 of the
tota l.
Through a provision in last
year's appropriations bill , the
state board of education imd
state auditor are required to
send 10 percent property tax
rollback a nd ho mestead
exemption reimbursement
checks directly to loca l
taxing authorities.
Previ ously, each co un ty
auditor received one check
for the funds for distribution
twice a year to its cities,
schools, villages and town·
ships .
Under
the
rollback
program, in effect since 1972,
counties reduce taxes owed
by property owners by 10
percent a nd th e state
reimburs~s
the taxing
districts for the lost revenue .
The homestead exemption for
elderly
and
disabled
homeowners, based on t he
person 's income, also ca ns
for the sta te to reimburse the
taxing distri cts for the

VISITS RSVP PROGRAM - Mrs. Maggie Rogers, left, state progranunlng director of
the Ohio ACTION offtce, recflltly vWied the Retired Senior Volunteer Office at the Meigs
Senior au.n. Canter in Pcmeroy to dlacuaa with Mrs. Alice ·Wamaley, right, RSVP
procram dlredor in Melp County, the con\bllltlon project griiDI for the RSVP's seventh
year· While in "-vy Mn.' Rogers spent tfme wi'tl1 RSVP volunteen and mef witli office
peraonlll!l. CeiUr in the photo II Mn. Stella Grueaer.

A train derailment took
place at the Hobson Crossing
below Middleport about 7
p.in . Thursday. A car jumped
the track but no cars were .
overturned in the derailment.
The car was replaced on
the track and the crossing
was reopened to traffic
Friday morning. A detour
around the crossing was used
to keep traffic moving at the
site.

reduction in local . revenue.
Property
t;u
reimbursements are funded entirely by the stat~'s personal
income tax .
T otal
r e imbur se ment
checks to Meigs county and
it s subdivi sion s were as
foll ows: Me1gs County,
118 ,737. 05 ; Middleport ,
$2,566 .2 6 : Pomer oy,
$2,631.82; Racine , $844 .71 ;
Rutland, $56().71: Syracuse ,
$901.30 : Bedford Twp.,
$27 0.7 1; ChesterTwp . ,
$879.95 ; Co lumbi a Twp.,
$444.38; Lebanon Twp ., $422 ;
Letart Twp., 1361.24; Oliv e
Twp., $671. 01 ; Orange Twp.,
$496 .68 ; Rutland Twp .,
$627.91 ; Salem Twp., $703.13 ;
Salisbury Twp., $680.70;
Scipio Twp. , $317.76; Sutton
Twp., $690.73.
Distributio ns to Special
Districts totaling $12,528.56
were : ' Eme rgency Levy,
$3 ,572 .39: Meigs Co unty
Hos pital. $35 7.23; Mental
Retardation Bonds, $2,178.73;
Rio Grande Comm unity
College, $4, t59 .39 ; Tri-County
Mental Health', $831.88 ;
Tubercul osi s Hospital,
$1 ,428.96.
Distributions to the school
districts were as follows :
Alexander,
$7,338.36;
Eastern, $16,630.20; Meigs,
$41,5 36. 12; Southern ,
$23,166 .23 ; Tri-County Jt.
Voc. S.D., $593.06.

Ohio River has low organic
chemicals concentration
CINCINNATI ( UPI) Samples from the Ohio River

Train derails

Injury sustained in fall
Squad wu called to Eagle She was taken to O'Bleness
Hoapltal in Athens. At 5:28
KIIIIDttb Lawton who bad p.m. Thursday, the squad
·received rib injurlea in a fall. went to Mechanic St. for
He wu talten to Holler Paula Derenberger, 13, who
Medical Center.
was taken to Vete1rans
At 7:01 p.m., the ~quAd Memorial Hospital for
_ . lo the Blll'llnlham orea medical treatment and then
for Mindy Long, Middleport, was discharged.
who had received a bump on

.PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1978

BYS'rEVEGERSTEL
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - For the past 20 years,
Dem()Cralic Leader Robert F. Byrd has lived and died by the
Senate rules.
I.
Now, however , Byrd is so "fed up" with the way the rules
~~er
are being used, he's ready and even eager to change them.
' The veteran West Virginia legislator - his temper
growing short as adjournment nears - lashed out Thursday at
those in the Senate impeding his · efforts to gel action on
"must" legislation.
Sometimes almost shouting angry .
in anger, stridill8 back and
·He told the Senate eoogresforth to the limits of his sional leaders had targeted
microphone cord, waving his Oct. 14 for adjournment but
anns and pounding oo desks, at least 2S "must" bills
Byrd denounced the delayers. remain to be completed and
1
'1 know who they ar~," he the date cannot be met
WINNER- Nine year old Tina Grimm, daughter of Mrs. Edna Grimm, New Haven,
declared, naming no names. without time agreements to
waa lbe winner of the "Save A Tiger" coloring contest sponsored by Burger Chef in
Byrd's outburst came at limit debllte.
Pomeroy. A $10 donation to World Wildlife Fund was made in ber name and she was also
mid-afternoon when he called
" I know why we are having
'presented a ael of four glasses and a .dinner at Burger Chef for her family. Tina is sho"11
up the foreign aid money bill I r o u b 1 e getting time
being presented her glasses by manager of Pomeroy Burger Chef, Greg Gatrell.
and sought a time agreement agreements," Byrd said.
for the measure.
" But, I won't say because I
He was told by assistant still hope we can get time
Senate GOP leader Ted agreements.
Stevens that at least three
"But, if we c11n't,
Republican senators would everybody will know," he
object.
added.
That's when Byrd got
Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah ,
Death toUs climbs lo 25,000 .
showing quite a bit of
Retail sales tax receipts for
courage, interrupted to
TABAS, Iran (UPI) - The known death toll from last
complain that .Byrd was
week's maaaive earthquake in eastern Iran stood today at Au~ust, this year, were up
heaping the blame Cil
25,000, but officials aasured the outside world ~o foreign 29.11 percent compared to
visitors were among the victims . .
August , 1977, while motor
Republicans and said " the
Retcue workers in Tablls, which was virtually destroyed vehicle sales tax receipts for
(Continued on page 141
by the quake, stepped up efforts today to extricate bodies from the same period last year
Three' persons were injured
fallen bulldill8s as IUI'vivors besieged them with pleas to find were down 9.43 perce nt ,
in
a one-auto accident, which
their deceaaed loved ooes. "We want bodies of our dead ones, according to the monthly
is
still
under investigation by
not just relief," shouted survivors gathered around the report of Mrs. Gertrude
the
Gallia·
Mei~s Post High·
wreckage of their borneo
Donahey, state treasurer.
way
Patrol,
on SR 33, one- ·
Retail sales tax receipts for
Investigating Carter's friend
tenth
of
a
mile
west of CR 23,
August ,
1978 ,
totaled
Thursday,
at
7
p.m.
WASHINGTON (UPil- The White House is investigaling $77,176 .20 compared to
to
the
patrol, an
According
tile actiona of Bill Milliken, a friend of President Carter's, who $59,772.01 for August , 1977, an
auto
operated
by
Jack
admlta to being a go-between with federal official8 for a increase of $17,4ll4.19. Motor
Carder
,
16,
Middleport,
private developer who contributed $10,!nl to his charitable vehicle sales tax receipts in
programa. "We asked the legal counsel to look into the August of this year totaled traveling west on 33, went out By LEE LEONARD
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) lituatloo," White House press secretary Jody Powell told $59,460.50 compared to of control around a curve,
passed
off
the
right
side
of
the
Former
Ca lifornla Gov .
reporters Thursday . "We're moving as rapidly as we can," he $65,658.46 for August , 1977, a
roadway,
recrossed
the
Ronald
Reagan
high·
says
aald.
decrease of $6,197.96.
way,
went
off
the
left
side,
Americans
are
fed
up
with
Powell aald Carter was being kept informed of developand
struck
an
embankment.
high
taxes
and
inflation,
and
menta and had agreed a ''full investigation" was needed.
Officers report that Carder proposes that a fixed
Mail extortion scheme halted
and
two
unidentified percentage of federal income
NOW YOU KNOW
This year, .j'S many as one passengers were transported taxes be returned to the
COLUMBUS (UPI) ..;... Officials at the Soutllern Ohio
states for their own use.
Correctional Facility have put a halt In a mail edortioo out of every 10 attorneys in to O'Bleness HospitaL
No further details were
Reagan campaigned
ICheme being uaecl by inmates at the Lucasville prison. Eleven the United States will be sued
Thursday for state Sen .
available.
Inmates have been found guilty of violations dealing with mail for malpractice.
priYIIeces, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections
i!pObaman George Lehner said Thursday,
'
The Rulea I~ractlon Board at the Lucasville facility
determined the inmates coospired to extort money by asking
people on the oulllde to send them lunda, which they said
woold be uaecl for legal fees, postage stamps and family
matters. JAhner uld the operation probably was under way
for
weeka bef&lt;re it was uncovered recently by Lucaavllle correctlooal perliOMel.

--

NEW YORK (UPI) - A majority of AmericUII
Interviewed in a Harris poll released Thulllday put
ioflalioo at the top of their lilt of worries, with other
economic matters close beblnd.
ID the survey, of l,CU adults oadoowlde, 19 percent
said "getting Inflation UDder control" should be the
country's top priority. Thlrty-&lt;me perceat, citing federal
spending as the primary fuel of iofladoa, called lor sharp
CUI&amp; lllld Z8 percent gave top priority to control of soarill8
health cosls.
'"J11is survey ... Indicates the American people are
oow as el~se to being single issue oriented as they have
been In .some time," _the Harris survey reported
concluded. " loflailon is believed w have a pervasive
impact on nearly all phases of We In this country."
Other issues ul concern were unemployment, with 30
percent of those surveyed calling for government creailon
of new jobs. Twenty percent gave high priority to·welfare
reform, and Z3 percent pot control of crime near the top of
the Ust.
Other priority worries included control of air and
water pollution and "restoring Integrity to government,"
bulb of 13 percent.

en tine

Senators
scolded
by Byrd

I

lnf/8tion tops worry list

reception for John lll8ram,
Democratic ca ndidate for
governor, and will fly later to
Columbia, S.C., to attend a
fund-raiser for Democratic .
Senate candidate Charles
Ravenel.
In speaking of the
co ntinuing U .S.-Israeli
dispute, Powell said, "With
regard to tbe agreement on
the West Bank settlement,
the president and the
administration have made
our JlOSition quite clear. I will
stipulate and reiterate every·
thing the president has said
on the matter."
.:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::

•

Chef

SPECIAL SALE PRICESI

SALE PRICES$

Thursday just bef&lt;:re Begin
flew home from New York.
A spokesmali said that
during the personal call
"both expressed confidence
that all issues" on which
there is disagreement ''will
be worked out."
Press . secretary Jody
Polfell
'indicated
the
disagreement, involving the
West Bank settlements issue,
is confusing Camp David
summit understandings and
probllbly will linger until
Begin returns to Israel and
confers with his advisers.
. That would further delay

e

SKEIN

15.95 EXTRA SIZES 18, 19 and 20
'14,95 SLIM SIZES, MEDIUM, LARGE, EX-LARGE

MEN'S AND BOYS'
TUBE SOCKS

a

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While HOWle Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Carter is standing
his ground in a dispute witll
Israeli Prime Minister
Menachem Begin, and
remains confident their
differences will be ironed out,
according to White House
spokesmen.
Carter conveyed that word
to Begin through national
security affairs adviser
Zbigniew Brzezinski who
made a personal telephone
call to the Israeli leader

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of colors arranged for your easy selection .
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MEN'S MR. LEGGS

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twin or full size beds, nylon binding.

SPECIAL SALE

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99~

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or full size beds. Floral pattern.

MEN'S '6~50 WEMBLEY TIEs ....... $519

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TWO DAY SALE

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE
BLUE CHAMBRAY
SHI.RTS

WASHINGTON (UPI) - The average Income of each of
the 218 mllllon per9011s who lived in the United States last ·
year wu $7,019, an increaae ..of 9.6 percent from 1976, a
government report showed TOOrsday.
Alulla, with Ita petroleumdomlnated economy, once
again led the nation with income of $10,588 for each of its
to7,000clli!ens, However, Alaska was last in percentage
gain from the previous year.
Millllaippi ranked last in per capita income with $5,030,
but ita percentage gain was healthy 10.7' tile Census
Bureau survey said.
In general, the study said, states with high income
levela were located in the Far West and the NortheastGreat Lakes rnanunacturlng belt. ·
MO!Il of the states with low incomes were in the
·Southeast, Southwest and Roclty Mountain regions, the
report said.
·
Ell!hteen states, Including Ohio, and the District of
Colwnbla bad per capiljl incomes abuve the f/,019
' national average .
In the cootinental United States, the District of Colum·
bla's 6110,000 residents bad the highest incomes, an
average of $8,999. Coonecticut was the highest state at
$8,061.
The bottom four states were all located in the south:
·South Carolina, $5,628; Alabama, $5,622; Arkansas, $5,540,
and Miasiasippi, $5,Q30,
'
.
Ohio's average income was listed at $7,084 and 18th
among the 50 ~tales.

Carter standing firm
in dispute with Begin

LOTTERY WINNEKS
Gold-%

White-31
Blue-Z&amp;6
E•tra Cash-03%70

and tributaries taken over the
course of a year show a low
co ncentration of some
organic chemicals, an
interstate agency rE!p(l'ted
Thursday.
A U.S . EnvironmeQtal
Protection Agency official
warned, however, about
misinterpreting the results.
"U ~ople conclude they're
in great shape, that's not the
case," said Lee McCabe,
chief of the Field Studlea
Division of the EPA
laboratory in Cincinnati.
"The city still has to dis~Nect
the water. In the process they
produce chloroform that
approaches the proposed
limit.''

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