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Sunda y 1i m.-e·Stontint&gt;l , Sunday , Sf. pl . :!4. IQ7H

Sixth donation
given by club

Connection not known
By DANIEL F. GILMORE
WASHINGTON !UP!) Former
CIA
Director
Richard Helms says no one
knows if the murderer of
John F . Kennedy was connected to tbe Soviet KGB, and
·nearly the entire government
covered up U. S. plots to get
rid of Fidel Castro.
Helms was both urbane and
defensive Friday as he
testified for five hours.
leading
the
House
Assassinations Committee

through the dark and secret
- Whether Lee Harvey
paths followed by U. S. in· Oswald, Kennedy's apparent
telllgence ln the 1960s. He assassin, had been recruited
dealt with two major issues : by the KGB. Russia's secret
- Whether the Warren police and espionage agency ,
Commission should have when he defected to the
known about U. S. plots to Soviet Union. The Warren
dethrone Castro as premier Commission had believed
of Cuba and even perhaps Yuri Nosenko, a defector who
assassinate him. Since it has said the KGB had no Interest
been learned that Castro in Oswald. Helms says it
knew about some of these cannot be proved Nosenko
efforts. conspiracy theorists was a genuine defector.
say Kennelly may have been
Helms told the committee it
had been a mistake to keep
killed in retaliation.
from th e· Warren Com·
mission 's assassination probe
infonnation about the plots
against Castro and the fact
they had been approved by
two presidents, Dwight D.
Eisenhower and Kennedy.
If he had the chance to do it
again, Helms said, "I would
have taken all the documents
and put them on the Warren
Commission's desk .''

But, Helms said, he would
not take the whole blame.
'"All kinds of people knew. It
was a government · wide
operation to get rid of
Castro."
Despit e the Senate In·
telligence Committee's 1975
declaration it could not prove
any president knew of the
plots, Helms said Kenedy
knew. Helms also said that on
or about May 10, 1967 he
personall y told Pres ident
Lyndon B. Johnson of efforts
to murder Castro.
Helms also told the com·
mittee it could be deduced
"by implication" that Oswald
may have been tied to the
• • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • KGB if the defector Nosenko
-.
had t&gt;een planted to give U..S
1 ~1
g
officials the opposite iffi.
pression.
•
Nusenko, who claimed to be
st·~~A. a KGB official. defected
scarcely tWo m~nths after
Kennedy's assassmauon. He
said the KGB had had no
8y
• interest in Oswald during his

78 BUICKS &amp; PONTIACS
IN STOCK
READY TO GO

' e •:
. u' \A ••
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Today

•e

cram course in financ ing .

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How much money will you
want down? How wlll you
delerm ·ine th e prospec t' s
cred it history? Will vou
accept a second mortgage?
Have you been in close
contact with f ina ncia l
·ms t't1 utions, t he F HA or

•

Realtors know that many

valuable asset _

is the •

SAVE 20%
KROEHLER ·
liVING ROOM

stable condition at Pleasant

m
e
Y u ·
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• said
''still . hangs in the air
must make fl nan c1al sense . •
, '

field of real estate please

sates are lost strictly tor p~one or drop in at
REAl
They a lso know th e ESTATE. S12 Second Ave .•
in tr ic ate mel hods and Gallipolis. Phone 446 •7699 .
sources of fi nancing .
We're here to help.

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Marine radar operator had

at New Haven.
Cremeans was taken to the
hospt'tal bY the New Haven
Rescue Squad. Hospt'tal officlals report his Injuries.
include a fractured leg and

access· to military secrets

arm.

telligence offi cer co uld
believe Nosenko's clabn that
h KGB
t e
had no interest in
Oswald , who as a former

e
e

SUITES

the Mountaineer Power Plant

He said no seasoned in·

sales l!re hand led by people •
· the profe .. ·on
1

An
e~cellent
new
seleclion of suites - ·
patterns colors· modern
· Early Amerlun ·
Medilerranean style Buy now and save !t big
20 Pel. in the furniture
dept. on the 3rd floor.

that could have included the
Cremeans is reported to be
an employee of Bristol Steel.
2 spy plane.
Details of the accident were

u-

•

DESKS

· not wtavailable.

Another man was treated
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •· and released Friday morning
·
.
at the hospital for minor in·
I juries sustained in a fall at
I 8:30a.m. at the Philip Sporn
1 plant, near New Haven. "
1 Dean Hawk, 25, Mason, an
I employee of Lord Electric,
I reportedly fell about 10 feet,
injuring his left hip. He also
I was transported by the New
I Haven squad.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ft

SAVE

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842 SECOND AVENUE

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
INVITES YOU TO A SPECIAL
-

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COOKING DEMONSTRATION

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II

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COUPON SAVINGS

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CIUPOI

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"' 1P 'II SAVE
SAVE

O lp thh coupon and bring It with vou . Good h)r 120.00
on th• purc h.se of ~EM 7600 Of' SIO .OO on REM 1400

I~

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WEDNESDAy' SEPTEMBER 27
10:00 A.M. TO 3:00P.M.
FREE DEMONSTRAliON

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"" .,.., ot '"' •~"''"•Uon.

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MIDDLEPORT
A
message from District ·
Governor Frank Annine, Jr.,
Marietta , was presented by
member John Werner Friday
night when the Middleport Pomeroy Rotary Club met at
Heath United Methodist
Church.
The message read : "'A
second special happening
occurred just this week , when
on our Barnesville visit we
were privileged to meet
Rotarian Pabner Laughlin.
What is so special about that'
Well, Rotarian Pabner was
born Sept. 2, 1878, and joined
Rotary In 1925.
One hWJdred years of age,
fifty -three years a Rotarian,
and still active and attending,
it was just a great thrill for
me to shake his hand and see
his smile . Palmer H.
Laughlin , Sr., 211 East
Walnut St., Barnesville, Ohio
43713. Fantastic.
President John Rice was In
charge of the meeting and
Caah Bahr led group singing.
The club currently has an
attendance contest un derway. Women of the church
serveq dinner.

1
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Whirlpool

lttm1crowave ttoven

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S. e

I Message
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I presented

EMPIRE FURNITURE

....)

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DIVORCE GRANTED
GALLIPOLIS - A decree
of divorce was filed Sept. 20 ln.
Gallia County Common Pleas
Court. Granted divorce was
Jackie Edward&amp; from Steven
Edwards.

Knee holt 1nd roll top
desks of excellent
quality- w11nut • o1k ·
maple. Choose . your
favorite now and 11ve 20

SAVE
20%
I

ec

•

a

I

Kroeh ler
or
Berkline chair ·
straight chairs
recliners
wallaway
recliners
rockers
and
swivel rockers.
All very well
made.
Tremendous
selection.

OCCASIONAL ·
TABLES
SAVE
·2 0%

Pet.

Vance returns following cool Arab reception
Ulllted PresslnterDatloaal
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance returned home today
from his crucial Middle East
lrlp convinced the Camp
David accords offer a basis
for "real peace' despite a cool
Arab reception to the
&amp;greemenll engineered by
Prelrident Carter.
VIIIIC.'O!'I lhreHtation, fiveday mission to sell the
milestone
accords
to
skeptical Arabs received a
big . boost &amp;mday when the
laraeU Cabinet endorsed the
twin

pacta.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, September 25, 1978

Ullited Press Iuteroalloaal
Striking Dayton school
teachers today denied a court
order to stop picketing and
return to the classrooms. No
arresta were Immediately
made and negotiators met for
six hours early tnday.
Montgomery County
Conmon Pleas Court judge
Carl Kessler last w.eek
ordered the 2,200 teachers to
return to their jobs and to
stop picketing. The 500 nonacademic employes, alao on
strllte, were not affected by
the order.
Classes In the 37,000student district have been
held on a staggered basis by
substitute teachers and
superviBory personnel.
Buaes continued to run ln
Dayton early today . A
number of the system's some
200 bus drivers voted two
weeks ago to seek union
repreaentaUon and local 947
of the Team.ters Union has
asked for a representation
election aa the bus drivers
bargaining agent .

E

Jail overrun, prisoner dies

PORT MORESBY, Papua New Guinea (UPI ) - A mob
armed with axes, spears, knives .and sticks stormed a jungle
jail and hacked a prisoner to death ln the third such incident in
leu than two weeks, police reported today.
Authorities said more than 50 prisoners fled during the
weekend Incident at the jail in the settlement of Banz, 24 miles
east of Mount Hagen ln the western highlands. A pollee spokesman said the Ylctlm of the mob of about 50 men had been
Involved In a fa tal road accident. The mob easily overpowered
guardl at the jail and at least two men with axes killed the
Jrlaoner awaiting trial, pollee said.
·

Veteran bull runner gored
PAMPLONA, Spain (UPI) - For 84 years Jeronimo
Echague has run with the bulls through the streelll of
Pamplona during the San Fermin festival made famous by
Ernest Hemingway In his novel, ''The Sun Also Rises. "
The 7~year-old Spanish Ovll War veteran, who said it
would be an honor to die ln tbe ruMing of the bulls, had
suffered four gorlngs and 11 lesser injuries in previous
festivals . In the weekend resumption of the rioWilarred
feolival, Echague was gored In the left thigh . He was
holpitaliled In "not so serious" condition.

WMfl!NGTON (UPI) -Former Secretary of State Henry
Klalinger saya he may run for Sen. Jacob Javlta' seat If the
New York Regublican retires.
"Obviously a lot of pellple bave mentioned It to me,"
Klaainger said Sunday. "It'd be silly to say that one doesn't
think about it." He made his remarks on NBC's "Meet the
Pr-" procram.

! !

"\'&lt;l"
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Hundreds sent to beach~

Tradilional multi-drawer desk.

·
_SAVE/

The extreme heat In Southern California sent hundreds of
thouaandl of people ~eampering tD the beaches and prompted
LoeAncelell publlc«hoolauthoriiles to achedule only lialf-day
lellllona for studenla today.
Light tlhowera and ocattered thundershowers dotted the
Plains llates and nort!H:enlral Teus early today . M&lt;lll of the
rest of the nation had clear skies. The mercury at the Los
Angeles Civic Center reached a i:ecord high of 108 degrees
Sunday, br~ the old mark of 102 aet on Sept. 24, 1975. It
waa .the aecmd c:o~~~tcliUve day of 100-plua temperature.

20%

Park legislation expected

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at y
absence of 180 teachers.
Lakewood's 319 teachers
remain off tlte job in the 9,000pupil district.
Special elections are sche·
duled Tuesday In Brunswick
and Elyria school districts.
Brunswick school officials
have a .5 mill lev)o on the
ballot which would railte an
additional ·$2 million for more
classrooms. The money
would come from the state
building assistance program,
set up in the 1950s· to help
school districts which need
money for more classrooms.
A6.9 mill additional levy is
on the ballot in Elyria which
faces the possibility of . the
state taking over the
financial situation of the
schools. Elyria voters have not
approved an additional
operating
levy
since
December of 1971. Since then,
six additional levies and five

Collision
claims 3

WILUAMSTOWN, W.Va.
(UPI) - The body of a
Marietta, Ohio man, the
owner ~nd preswned to be the
'operator of a houseboat in
which he and two oilier
people were killed ln an Ohio
River barge collision, was
sent to the state medical
aamlner in Charleston for
an autopsy Sunday .
The body of Robert Hawes,
60, was recovered from the
wreckage of his 4$-foot boat
Sunday afternoon, about 16
hours after it was hit
broadside by an oil barge.
Also killed were Betty J.
Surrena, 41, and her daughter
Betlt Ann Allendar , 13, both of
Marietta, Ohio.
The accident late Saturday
night about 300 feet south of
the Interstate 77 Bridge
between Williamstown and
Marietta involved a Union 011
Co. barge of Evansville, Ind.
moving upstream and
Hawes' 45-foot houseboat
going downstream.
Capt. George Streeter, pilot
of the towboat L.W. Sweet at
the tbne of the collision, told
authorities the houseboat
made an abrupt tum right In
Iron t of the barge just after
the boats had achanged
whistles to signify they had
sighted each other.

The barge, carrying 560
tons of lube oil, rammed the
IS-ton houseboat underwater
wh ere it became lodged
under the barge . Fog
hampered efforts to dislodge
the boat and recover the
victims Saturday night and
work was halted at 3 a.m.
Sunday. Workmen started
again at daybreak.
After the three bodies were
extricated from the wreckage
and debris of the smaller
craft, the boat was towed
· from underneath the barge
but remained submerged in
about 15 feet of water .

BAND DID WELL
Tbe Meigs High School
MarcbiDg Band directed by
Randy Hunt, with Alan
Hunt as assistant director,
fared well In competition at
a baud festival staged
Saturday In West J effenoo.
The Meigs Baud won first
place In tbe Class B
competition while the
band's riDe and nag corps
woo flrat place honors
amoag aU of tbe bands
participating ID the com·
petition regardless ol class.

·Another attempt scheduled
Coffee t1bles · end
tables · drum tables.
Many styles and Wood
finishes. Sale includes
our entire stock.

CAMBIUDUE, Ohio (UPI) - Another attempt will be
made tGday by Red Adair, the country'l best known well-ftre
apert, to 1111011Mr a ro.tnc nalur81 gu well fire .. that It can

Kroehler end Slmmona
- comforteblt sofa by
day · full liz• bid by
night. S.ve 20 Pet. now
on the one you lllut.

ELBERFELD$ IN POM

be cotpped.
Tbe -Jy broulllt In auper Nab pnaun gaa well caught
tire tUtna ClfPPIDI llcrta Friday. EIPt riC handl were
lltlrMd,
The lire flied through the weekend,
"'
1111~ • · • a1 natural 1M daib' 81111 IIPI'Irilll na- u
· lq!IM flit in the air and 100 ffllt alcmg the iJ"OIIIId.

tlinl.-.,.
tiJ

y
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and Jordan.
Arab opposition, which
Vance was oent to cbart while
. explaining the accords, ceotered on the swrunit's lack of
specific
detail
about
Palestinian rights or Israeli
withdrawal from occupied
Arab land, including east
Jerusalem.
"Camp David gave Israel
everything it wanted," ABSad
said Ina Syrian communique.
"It goes against basic Arab
rights, especially the rights of
the Palestinians to an
independent nation, to

•

WASHING1'0N (UPl) -Sen. Howard M. Metzenbawn, I).
Ohio, plana this week to introduce a major piece of legislation
desiCnld to upcrade parb, playgrounds and other
recreational areas in American cities.
"For too muy years, we bave not addressed the
recreational .-cis of the mUIImw who Uve in the concrete
corrldcn of our Cities," the &lt;leveland Democrat said Saturday
in aanouncing It will be COipOIIIOred by 13 blpartiaan aenators.

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The World Today

Kissinger may be candidate
;,;

e

Teachers In the 37,000 pupil one in two years.
Cleveland school board
district are seeking a pay
raise. During their walkout, President John Gallagher
classes have been held on a says board members and
staggered
basis
and leaders of the striking school
conducted by supervisory employee unions want to
personnel and substitute make a formal presentation
to the state Controlling Board
teachers.
Negotiations are to resume Wednesday, in an effort to try
tnday In Cleveland, one of to convince it that pay
four otber districts hit by increases ahould be granted
the district's 10,000 workers.
strikes.
They plan to ask for extra
The walkouts affect more
tltan 156,000 students in the state revenue or easing
five ·. diatriclll while 14,000 restricuons on a $20.7 million
state loan granted the system
employees are on strike.
Two dlstricll have special in June.
"Meetings were' held in
elections scheduled for
Tuesday where voters will be Logan and Colwnbus during
asked to decide the fate of the weekend in efforts to end
operating levies. One otber !he strike·by 180 teachers and
district approved a levy 120 non-academic personnel
Friday.
at Logan, underway since
Classes have been called Aug. 29.
off ln the 101 ,OOIJ..pupil . The 4,000 pupils in the
Cleveland school district Midview School District in
where both teachers and non- Lorain County still are
academic employees have attending classes, despite the
been on strike since the day
before classes were to have
begun.
Teachers are seeking a pay
raise since they haven't had

~•.'-----------------------"'~-~s~.u.-.-.

f. I

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The American secretary's his visit to Damaacus by 24 for peace In the volatile
misalon ended In Syrta with hours to walt for the Middle East.
the diplomat gaining little conclusion of the hard-line
"I alwayw a.-wned there
syccess
In
softening Ara_b conference there, would he serious questions,
Oamaacus' ·bitter opposition earlier failed to get either a and there were, but we still
to the ."framework of peace" conunltment from Jordan to feel the frameworks of Camp
that emerged last week from enter the Camp David David provide the buia for
the 13-day Camp David dialogue inunediately or a real peace," Vance told
sununlt.
promise of outright support . rep&lt;rters as his plane headed
The most Vance could to from Saudi Arrabla .
west over the Mediterranean.
say about his Ialka with
But U.s. officials said
The two accords oulllne the
Syrian President Hafez Vance r~d convinced framework for an EIIYPtianAssad
before
leaving the ac~ords, signed by laraell peace treaty within
Oamaacus was that they had Egyptian President Anwar three months, and then an
been "helpful" and the two Sadat and Israeli Prime overall setUement with Israel
countries would keep talking. Minister Menachem Begin, signing treaties with Syria
Vance, who had to pn!&lt;lfY&gt;ne were the beat building blocks

sovereignty In their land."
Saudi Arabia said the
accords did.not recognize the
role of the Palestine
Liberation Organization.
Israel has vowed never to
negotiate with the PLO,
which was not mentioned in
the accords.
An official statement in
Riyadh said Saudi officials
"reiterated tbe necessity of
total withdrawal from
Jerusalem and its return of
Arab sovereignty."
Jordan's King Hussein said
at a news conference in

Amman tltat he turned down diplomatic offensive with
invitation from President Arab, Africa and European
Carter to visit Waahlngton ambassador to mollify Arab
next month. The king added, opposi ti on to the pea ce
however, he uaccepted in accords.
principle 1Carter' s) kind
In Jerusalem, Begin said
invitation" til visit at a later be would be willing to move
date.
Israeli settlers out of 20
In Beirut, Syrian focces Jewish towns and villages in
mounled a massive aheUing the occupied Sinai if that is
offensive against tbe strong- tlte last step toward peace
holds of Israeli-armed with Egypt.
Christian .irregulars In the
His carefully worded statecapital's bloodiest fighting in ment c~e out of an wtprece.
more than two weeks.
dented eight-hour Cabinet
In Cairo, Egypt planned a meeting that endorsed tbe
Camp David acco~ds .

an

en tine

Fifteen t:ents
Vol. 29, No. I 1:1

Dayton teachers defy order

·W orker
LRJ.u re d

g1ven a ne w identity and 1s a

1"\.
.er 75 percent of all home •
~

two daUihlers to know tbelt ·
teachers are aUve and weU.
The spokfllllllan far the ·
teachers, jailed for refullng
to obey a Judee'a blcll-towork order, aald condltlona
we.re adveroe but the
teachers were coping.
No progreu In the
negotiations was reported
and the teachen were joined .
In picketing by profesaors at
the University of Bridgeport. ·
The public-ocbool ltrllte had ·
idled 23,000 studenll and the
university strike canceled •
classes lor ~.ooo.
In Chicago, city college
officials and strikin1 in·
structors met with Mayor ·
Michael Bilandlc for 11101t of
the day, trying to reach a
mediated settlement. The
governing board for the •
IIO,OOO·student coliece
system has set a Monday
dejldllne for a settlement or it :.
says it will cancel the fall
term.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
20% SAVIN.GS SALE
FINE FURNITURE

professional way. Just as • $38,325-a·year consultant for Valley Hospital with injuries
you would go to a doctor for • the CIA .
medical aid , you should go •
The question whether received when he fell a~
t~o a R~altor for assistance .• Nosenko was uenuine, Helms proximately 50 feet ln an
s 11 10 g 0 r home 11
•
accido;ll Wednesday at 4 p. at

e want of proper financing . LEADINGHAM

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SQUAD CALLED
POMEROY
The
Pomeroy Emergency Unit
answered a call to Laurel
Cliff at 10:35 p.m. Friday for
Harry Stahl, who was taken
to Pleasant Valley HospitaL

In Fall

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VA? Can you advise a
• prospect where to get '"
•
•
• mortgage funds and who
•
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WI
pa y wha t c 1osl ng
•
• costs?
.
If there is anything we •
•
On the other hand . can do to help you in the e
•

The personalized sign
indicating the support of th~
Emblem Club , appears at the
entrance to the Elks Hall. The
month of October will be
sponsored by the Elks Club
No. 10"1.
An yone Interested in
contributing to either the
Television or the Toy Fund
ahould contact Neff at 1113
Teodora Avenue in Gatupolis.

'United Preao lntenatiGul
About one·fifth of tile 1,250
pu blic·school teachers In
Bridgeport, Conn., are doing
jail tbne In an old National
Guard barracks, but they say
"we're not cracking" in their
3-week-&lt;~ld strike.
"We feel we're political
prisoners," an unidentlfied
spokesman for tile 271 jailed
teachers said Friday. " We've
sent a letter to Andrew Young
at the United Nations, in·
dicatlng his remarks about
political prisoners should
include us."
Across the nation, teacher
walkouts have halted or
curtailed classes for more
than 250,000 elementary and
high school pupils and 180,000
college students .in 13 states.
Bus loads of Bridgeport
children visited their jailed
teachers Friday In Windsor
Locks, Conn. Lois Coffey,
who organized the 6$-mlle
journey, said ahe wanted her

: ~~r i~ ~u:~; J:7n~w:':. Oc• , Nosenko was interrogated
by the CIA fotlive years at an
• agency "sale house. " He was
Honestly, The best way • released in 1968 as an a"c 1 "11 0
t0
k 1
h
~
A oo VI e, . mart, Everett
mar
e
your
ome
•
parently
bona
fide
defector
Cremeans,
34, is · listed in
probabl y
your
m os t
.
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AVOID fiNANCIAL HEADACHES

•
Thinking about selling
your home on your own? If
•• so., ~u
should c.ommence a
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Willis :~~~f.:ingham

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ANN 1110MAS
Mn. ADD Thomas, Route
I, Middleport, Is the ffnt
Meigs Cou~tl.a to be
oamed as au Avon Produd
district maaager. In her
position Mn. Thomas has
Meigs
and
Jackson
Counties, ball of Gallla and
a part of VIDtoo County.
She has 152 women on her
staff wltb some 58 residing
In Meigs County. Mrs .
Thomas, who Is associate
matron of Evangeline
Chapter 112 , Order of
Eastera Star, Middleport,
works out of tbe Buckeye
Division of tbe company
wblcb Is Ia CIDciDaatl. Mrs.
Thomas attends tbe
Rutland Baptist Churcb.
Her husbaad Is - James
Thomas and lbe couple has
two sons, John Thomas,
Route I, Middleport, and
Joe Thomas, at home.

GALLIPOLIS
The
Gallipolis Emblem Club, No.
199 has made their sixth
consocutive donation to the
Holzer Medical Center
Pediatric Television Fund to
provide free television for all
of the children who are
hospitalized on tbe Pediatric
unit at Holzer during the
month of September, 1978.
Leota Gu[nther, president
of the local Emblem Club,
expressed the pleasure of her
orga nization to he able to
continue on an annual basis to
participate in such a worth·
while project. All contacts for
the Television and Toy Funds
for the pediatric patients at
Holzer are made by Earl
Neff, who has been respon·
sible for the total program
since it began in October of
1972.

Teachers jailed

UNOCCUPIED - Thilapartment c~~nplmr on Union
Avenue In l"omero) ...mains UIIOCCIIPied althoulh It is
IIJIIlllreMly near completion. The CCIIIIplex - lmown aa
Pomeroy Clllfs Ltd. - was built by Prime Builders,

bond

issues

have

been

defeated.
Voters in Cambridge approved an 11.2 mill operating
levy Friday , the first time in
five tries a levy had been
approved . The start of
classes was pushed ba ck
because the district did not
have enough money to keep
classes
open
through
December .

Motorcycle
recovered
A motorcycle stolen early
Sunday .morning' in a B&amp;E of
a cycle shop in Athens was
recovered Sunday in a corn·
field on King Ridge following
a chase by Meigs County
Sheriff Deputy Darrell Slone.
. According to the report,
Meigs Co unty Sheriff James
J . Proffitt's office was
notified that two subjects
OFFERS TIPS - Frank Casto showed youngsters muzzietoarung techniques at the .
wer_e in the Harrisonville
National
Hunting and Fiahlng Day Saturday at Royal Oak Park . The event- was
a rea riding new 1978
spearheaded by the Izaak Walton League . (More pictures on page 3).
motorcycles without tags .
Deputy
·Slone
was
dispatched to Harrisonville
where . one of the cycle
operators sped north on SR
.
Uulted Press International
Saturday
684 wilh Slone in pursuit. The
Palmer Jr, 22, Shadyside,
Springfield
:
Karen
A
At
least
12
persons
were
kill ed in a one-vehicle
other cycle went south on SR
143 and Deputy Robert killed in traffic accidents this Rankin, 21, Sprin gfield, accident on Ohio 7 in Bebnont
Beegle and Charles Rife gave weekend , the State Highway struck and killed on U.S. 40 in County.
Clark
Cou nty
nea r
Sandusky: Jack Graham,
chase, however, the cycle Patrolssaid today.
The Patrol survey showed Springfiled as she tried to 19, Port ClintQn , killed in a
was lost on Homer Hill.
Followin g a five hour three deaths Friday night. push her out-of-gas car off the twovehicle accident on Ohio
'
53 in Ottawa County.
search with the assistance of four Saturday and five road .
Mt.
Vernon :
Joe
Akron: Robert E. Markely,
a Harri sonville res ident, Sunday.
Tw o double
fatality Nussbawn, IS, Mt. Vernon , 48, Seville, killed in a oneGary P. Hartley, 20, Rt. I
New Marshfield, was taken acc idents were r ecorded killed when tlte car he was vehicleaccident on Interstate
riding in crashed into a utility 77 in Summit County.
into cust o-d y by Sheriff during tlte 54-hour period.
Viola K. Murray , 26, and pole east of here.
La ncaster: Harold R.
Proffitt. The Harrisonville
Canton : Theresa Wators, Pierce, 32, Ruahville, killed ln
resident held the suspect at Sandra K. Johnson, 21, hath
of Bolivar, were killed Friday 16. and William Sexton, t6, a onevehicle accident on U.S.
gunpoint.
Hartley was identified by night ln a Tuscarawas County both of Canton, killed in a 22.
Batavia, Laura J. Hoh, 20,
Deputy Slone as the operator ·crash and Theresa Waters, lw&lt;&gt;-vehicle crash on a city
New Richmond , killed in a
'of the cycle that traveled into 16, and William Sexton, 16, street.
one-vehicle crash on Ohio 132
the cornfield on King Ridge . both of Canton, were killed Sunday
in Clermont CoWJty .
Saturday
in
a
cras
h
in
St.
Clairsvi
lle:
How
ard
Hartley was advised of his
Canton.
rights, but refused to make
any statements. Ca pt. Friday Night
Beasley , Athens Police
Bolivar: Viola K. Murray,
Department ca me to the 26, and Sandra K. Johnson,
scene and processed the cycle 21, both of Bolivar, killed in a
lor latent prints.
twovehicle accident on Ohio
Hartley is currently l'OD· 212 in Tuscarawas County .
lined to the Meigs County Jail
West Jefferson : Bill E.
CAMBRIDGE, Ohio (UPI ) of natural gas aauy and
pending completion of iri- Hart, 58, Colwnbus, killed
spewing Dames as high as 60
vestigation .
wben his car ran off a - Red Adair, the COWJ!ry"s feel in the air and 100 feet
Sheriff Proffitt thanked Madison County road near best known weU.fire expert , along th e ground.
successfully smothered the
area residents and officers West Jefferson.
Adair's crew, ruahed from
largest natural gas well lire
that assisted in the case .
Texas
Saturday, pushed 3,000
in Ohio history tnday using a
Late Saturday night,
mixture of mud, chemicals barrels of mud and water into
deputies investigated a light
the well Sunday. Today the
and salt water.
at a local night club. Several
team
pumped 6,000 gallons of
The super high pressure
Mostly sunny today with
Columbus residents injured
mud-pack
into the well.
ln the melee were treated and highs in the low 70s. Clear and gas well caught fire during
Adair
said
the trick was to
released
at
Veterans cool tonight with lows from capping efforts Frida y,
pack
enough
mud in the well
Memorial Hospital. No the mid to upper 40s. Surmy burning eight men. tltree below the fll'e to choke off the
Tuesday with highs near 70. seriously.
charges were filed.
Adair's Texas crew tried to flames, and not focce the fire
stop the. roaring blaze inside the ground.
Officials of the Armstrong
Sunday , but the 3,000 barrels
Drilling
Co. at Wooster said It
of mud and salt water
was
the
largest gas well
pumped into tbe well was
blowout
ln
Ohio history. It
blown out by the pressure.
was
drilled
as part of tile
Adair tried a slightly
energy
self-help
program of
different mixture tnday, and
Li
bbey-Own
es-Ford
Co. of
within minutes of pwnping ln
Toledo,
Ohio's
largest
glass
the solution, the pressure
manufacturer
a
gas
1 when
dropped off and only a flame
pocket
4,000
feet
below
the
of four-to-five feet remained'
surface
was
hit.
burning.
11
We've got it/' said Adair I
as l!e removed his asbestos Older citizens
~t and confidently walked
up to the wen and touched the
may be employed
structure. "It's over.''
Adair said his crew will
Residents SS or older on a
continue pumping mud and
low
income can supplement
water Into the well until they
their
earnings with part tbne
are sure the well is dead .
employment
secured through
Then the capping process will
the
Ohio
,
F
armers Union
start over.
Green
Thumb
program.
The fire raged through the
Pomeroy
Village,
under the
weekend, consuming $20,000
program, is pennltted sh&lt;
employes in the age category
with low income and each will
MEET TUESDAY
work 20 hours a week at a
The Southern Local Board minbnwn wage.
of Educatim wUl meet ln
Four are still needed to fUl
Colwnbus. One source reports the complex has been
special
session
Tuesday
at
the
quota . Persons interested
e&lt;mpleted and is waiting fL"lBl government Inspections
7:30
p.m.
in
the
high
9Chool
.
should
contact Pomeroy
before being opened to renters.
cafeteria.
Village Hall.

12 die on Ohio highways

Adair smothers
gas well fire

Weather

•

�? - The Dally Sentinel, MiddlepOrt-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Sept. 25, !978

'

COMMENTARY
t_ 'J

f

Navy tosses in the towel

Donald F. Graff
.

.

After Camp David

Ry Martha Angle and Rohert Walters

By Don Graff
WASHINGTON tNEA ) · What ever happened to the
United States Navy 's centuries-long tradition of men and
&lt;hips battling against overwhclmmg odds rather than
surrendering?
Navy Captam John Paul Jones was outmanned and

outgunned by the British during one of the bloodiest battles
of the Revolutionary War. " I have not yet begun to f1ght,"
he proclaimed. then went on to claim victory in the battle.
The ship commanded by Navy Captain James Lawrence
was captured by a British frigate durmg the War of 1812.
But La wrence 1s best r emembered for his final order,
Issued alte r he was fatally wounded and was being carried
below deck by h1s c rew : " Don't give up the sh ip"
In contrast with tha t proud heritage of bravery and
coura ge stand the recent decisions made by Navy
Secretary W. Graham Claytor Jr .• who apparently has
embraced a " toss m the towel" philosophy
The ·· enemy " these days isn't a hostile foreign nation.
Irs a trto of American-owned corporate conglom era tes
whose s hipbuilding s ubsidiaries hold billions of dollars
worth of Navy constructiOn contract s They are .

• The Electric Boat Co ., of Groton , Conn ., a s ubsidiary of
the Genera l Dynanucs Corp .
• The Ingalls Shipbuilding Division. of Pascagoula,
Mtss .• a !iUbsidJary of L1tton Industn es, Inc.
• The Ne wport News Shipbuild in g and Dr ydock Co. , of
Newport News, Va ., a s ubs tdiary of Tenneco, Inc .
After experiencmg massl\re cost overruns on ship
constructton , all three filed cla1ms seekmg to convince the
Navy to pay each !trm hundreds of millions of dollars m ore
than the price s ag reed upon in the original contracts.
" The complex and long-standmg litigation and controversies with the country' s three lar gest naval shipbuild·
e rs " are " the Navy's most difficult problem," says
Cla}lor.
All three compdnles have threatened to halt work on
cur re nt Navy ship buildmg projects unless their claims
were promptly resolved, but the Navy secretary rnsists
that he's " not a bit afraid or frightened" by those threats.
" I neve r have- been constdered one who rolled over and
played dead or waved a whit e Oa g, " Claytor says. But he
has agreed to pay $484 m1ll 10 n to General Dynamics and
SH 7 m1 lhon to Litton - even t hough the companies ' claims
ne ve r have been full y a nalyzed, acC'e pted or verifted by

Precious little Is ever predlcatable in Mldeut affalra.
An exception as a consequence of the c.mp David
Summit Is the vehement oppoaitlon the IuaeU-I!:IYJitlan
agreements have aroused within Israel and throuchout
much of the Arab world . It's a tossup as to wbo faces the
tougher task - Egypt's Sadat In selling a deal with the
detested Zionists to Arab hardliners wbo continue to define .
·peace as the extermination of Israel, or Israel's Begin In
selling hardliners in hls own government on foregoing
Jewish settlement of occupied territories.
Begin's is the more immediate test, with the tw!Mfeek
deadline for the Knessel's consideration of settlements .
policy. It is a parliamentai:Y confrontation certain to be of
epic proportions which will not only determine the
seWements policy but Begin's political future . The right to
settlement throughout the biblical Jewi.lh homeland 1.1 an ·
uncompromisable principle to ultranationallsta who are
the core of Begin's political strength and now threaten to
I
desert him for an accommodation they view u "national
,,
suicide.''
Paradoxically, the opposition could he his salvation in
the vote on the Camp David agreements. The Labor Party
opposes occupied territory settlements and favors an
Egyptian agreement, in recent months having attacked
Begm for not being nexible enough to achieve it. But Labor
backing could mean winning the battle for the agreementa
only to lose the war for control of the government. It could
be the tum of events that turns the hardliners In Begin's
" Bostock just happened to factious coalition against him.
slaying.
and meaningless."
They said charges of homi· be in the wrong place at the
California Angels Manager
While Sadat's challenge is less immedta'! 1 ~t may In the
Jim Fregosi said his star cide and attempted murder wrong time," said Police Sgt . long run be more difficult. And decisive. Begm's batUe will
at least be all In the Israeli family and within the
outfielder's character as a would be filed against Robert Highsmith.
Bostock, who came to tbe parliamentary arena where some rules of order apply.
man transcended his ability Leonard Smith in the slaying
major
leagues In 1975, hit .336 Sadat must contend with the chaos that passes for poUtlcs
of Bostock and the wounding
as a ball player.
for
the
Minnesota Twins last within the Arab world of many sovereignties.
of
Smith's
estranged
wife,
" As far as I 'm concerned, 1.
There is no doubt that he can deliver his own Egypt season and then became a and as Egypt goes, so goes most of the miUtary muscle
lost a very close personal Barbara, 26.
Police said the woman was free agent and was reported within the Arab ranks. Without Egypt, an Arab miUtary
friend, " the grief-stricken
manager said. " He was the the target of the Saturday to have signed a contract with challenge to Israel is unthinkable. He thus starts from a
type of kid who was a great night shooting. She and her the Angels for $2.3 million position of some strength. It IS !!lso probable that he can
persuade Jordan and Saudi Arabia to go along, providing
guy to have on a ball club. · sister were riding in a car over five years.
He made headlines early Israel 's disposition of the settlements issue Is ~~&amp;tisfactory .
He bad ability but that's not with Bostock and Bostock 's
But Syria, which scarcely waited to hear the Camp
what we're really talking uncle , Thomas Turner of this season when he tried to
David
terms before denouncing them, is another matter,
ahout here. It was his ability Gary, at the time of the give a month's salary back to
not
to
mention Libya, Iraq and the Palestine Uberation
the club because he was
as a man .
slaying.
Organization. To these fanatics of Arab nationalism, to
Bostock was shot at point- playing poorly. When club accept any settlement recognizing the existence of a
While the Angels were
hearing the bad news before blank range with a !dlotgun owner Gene Autry wouldn't Jewish state Jet alone guaranteeing secure borders would
their game with the Chicago from another car. He was take the money, Bostock gave amoWit to self-destruction of their reasons lor elliatence.
White Sox in Chicago, police taken to St. Mary's Hlll!lpital it to charity.
Sadat's hest prospects at this point would appear to be In
He was hitting .296, ninth making a low-key case to hold Arab moderates in line, no
in Gary were arresting a 31- where doctors tried to save
year-old man in Bostock 's his life for 31&gt; hours before he best in the American League, matter how grudgingly, while isolating the fanactlcs, very
likely with a considerable assist from their own predictat the time of his death.
died at 1:30 a .m . Sunday.
ably hysterical overreaction.
That would not make peace in the Mideast a sure thing.
But if it enables him to sign a settlement with Israel and
remain In power, it will be a considerable accomplishment '
indeed.
Neither Sadat nor Begin can be sald to be a winner at this
promising but still early point . If there is such, It is
fourtb-&amp;ld-one at the Denver of Ken Stabler's pass at the the first for Chuck Knox since certainly Jimmy Carter. The visibly fatigued president
.Wto set up the winning drive . Oakland 34 with 73 seconds be tonk over as the Bills' smiled frequently during the solemnities in the East Room
of tbe White House . Super serious as the occasion was, he
Eagles 17, Dolphins 3:
left.
coach at the start of the
had every rl~ht to.
Mike Hogan caught a 4- Saint&amp; 211, Beagals 18:
season .
He had laid his shaky prestige and possibly · poUtical
yard TO pass frOm Roo
Newly acquired John Ley- Cowboya %1. Cardinals 1!:
future on the table in convening the Camp David summit.
Jaworski and ran five yards poldt's '!/-yard field goal,
Tony Dorsett ruabed for 154 He had as much or more to lose than the leaders of the
for
another
TO
as which hit the left upright and yards ~nd tri~Rered a actual combatant peoples in lour wars over 30 years. They,
PIIUadelpllia upset Miami. bounced
through
the lleCOnd-hall rally that carried had they been so Inclined, could have blamed failure on
The Eagle defense held the goalposts on the final play of Dallas past St. Louis and him.
Instead, he has a foreign poJicy success which, if the
Dolphins to just 82 yards the game, carried New handed Cardinals coach Bud
promise
of the initial agreementa is realized, few modem
ruohing.
Orleans
over
winless Wilkinson hlB fourth straight
presidencies
can equal.
Patrlot.s Zl, RaJdera 14:
Cincinnati.
Iosa.
The Camp David agreementa are still far short of a
Sam Cunningham dived Bills 24, Colts 17: ·
Packen Z4, Cbargen 3:
comprehensive Mideast settlement. But the momentwn is
over from a yard out with 16
Joe Ferguson's two TO
W'lilie Buchanon, playiJ,~ now such that they may very well lead to that. Stranger, or
seconds left io rally New paSIIes and Curtis Brown's where be was a coUege hero, shall we say less predictable things have happened- such
England past Oakland. 102-yard kickoff return. intercepted four paliiJe8 and as,for an appropriate example, the Sadat journey to
Cunnmgham' s TO was set up boosted
Buffalo
over returned one 77 yards for a Jerusalem which started it all less than a year ago .
by Mike Haynes' interceptioo Baltimore. The victory was TD to lead Green Bay past
mistake1li'One San Diego in
temperatures that reached
105 degrees.
CINCINNATI - Twenty- Mi ke
Compton ,
Marc Glmts %'1, 411en 10:
three of the t op young Bombard, Jim Hoff, Jim Lett
Joe Pisarclk threw a 29prospects in the Cincinnati and Woody Woodward.
yard TD pass to AI Dixon
Reds ' farm system began
..arly in the game and Bobby
play today in the Florida :',
Hanunond set up two other
Instructional League , a
TilE DAlLY SENr.NEI..
TDs with long I'UIUl io spark
DEVOTEDTOntE
program designed to acBy United Prt~~lnternad..W
the Giants past winless San
INTEREST OF
ce lerate the progress of
MEIGS-MASON AREA
Francisco. New York's Larry
BACK TO BEAT: Detectiv!f;urned-«uthor Joe WambaughROBERT HOEFLICH
young players that includes
Csonka became ooly the sixth known for scrapping with moviemakers he thought ruined the
aa,. Editor
intensified
instrucllor
Published W.ily e:u~pt &amp;tturday
player In NFL history to ru!dl !ibn versions of some of hlJI books - has taken on the job
sessions as well as game IJy The ,Ohw Valley Publi.shinf'
for 7,000 career yards.
himself for "The Onion Field." Says the fonner Los Angeles
Corn pt~ny-Mu:lim~di.a . Inc ,
ll J
experience .
Court St., Porner\ly, Ohio t5769
Se•awa
Uoa• 11:
cop, "I've started my own production company. I'm putting
The young Reds hopefuls 13.u.s~ Offil~ Phone 992· 2156
Jim Zorn threw three my money where my mouth is. I'm saying I can do It better. I
will play a 45-game schedule , Editori..111Phone 992·1157
fourth;&lt;~uarter TO pasaes to
woo't be able to blame anyroe else for this one. I'll take the
Set::ond &lt;.'Ius posU.~e pa'ld a
ending Nov . 15, in tl)e Pomeroy, Ohio.
rally Seattle over Detroit. bouquets or the horse manure, whatever they want to throw .
NaUoiial adYmislnl!l represenleague's Northern Division
Zorn looped a 4-yard TD pass If, God forbid, this movie doe1111't break even, I'll be going to
Uitive. Uutdon Assul'lll~ s. lJOJ
wh ich
include s
team ~
Eucli d Ave., OrVebmd, Ohlu 4411 ~
to Ron Howard with 9:17left the chief!!I' my old lob back. I have all my mooey In this .
Subscri ptwn,~ t.es: Dell\'t'red b)'
representmg Detroit, Mm
to give the Seahawks a 21·16
WSTING FOR CHEESFCAXE: New Yort reataurateur
ca~r where 1vailable 75 L't'llts per
nesota , Philadelphia , St
~k. By Mut.or Rout» where carrier I lead and later passed to Sam
Deary 8p'o110, owner of an antique mop cum cabaret called
Louis, Montreal, New Yor• !lervit:e JP IIVaiU.bW , Ont' mooth ,
McOiilum from 12 Yards out. Once Upon A Stove, has a new custnmer - named Jimmy
Mets, Baltimore, Cleveland 13.2!1 By ln.a11 Ln Ohio and W Va.,'
Jlllccaeen
14, Falcou I:
Carter. Sgrosso's speciality is cheeaecake and when Carter
o... v..... m.oo: s.. ffi&lt;llllhs. I
and Toronto . The Reds will 111 .$0 , Thre e months , 17.00 ~
Rookie Doug Wllliaml hit visited the city last month, staying with Mayor Ed lAid! at
play their home games at Elk wile~ $26 00 yev ; Six months
Jt· . O' Bradovich with a 1~ Gracie Mansion, Koch's chef, Rolle8llle Gold, called upon
11 3 SO , Three months , . 7.50
Lopez Field in Tampa with aU Subsl.-npUon prkt Includes Sunday
. .rd, fourth-quarter TD pass Sgrosso to deliver one made to order. He made It with peanuts,
other games being played in :f.!!n~-Sen tlnel.
to lift Tampa Bay past naturally, and now the president has ordered another one to
St. Petersburg, Clearwater
..u'anta.
be delivered this time to the White House.
'
and Dunedin .
I
CAST YOUR BREAD UPON 111E WATERS: Four mon&amp;ba
Instructors for the Reds'
ago the pastor of St. Peter's Episcopal Oiurch In Lakewood
team will be Scott Breeden ,
a fiaful
of new $10The
billaRev.
to IWl
contre~~atiui
, _ _ _..::__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __, Ohio,
with apasaed
requestoutthey
be multiplied.
RkbNt_Morrll

Bostock shot to death

GARY, Ind. (UP! ) - Mal
Schaus is used to delivering
pre-game prayers in locker
rooms but it was a different
sort of message he bad to
bring Sunday to the grieving
teanunates of baseball star
Lyman Bostock.
Bostock, at 'll one of the
highest-paid players in
baseball and respected by his
teanunates for his character
as well as his talent, was shot
to death by a man who police
Na\·y professionals.
srud
was trying to kill liis
Tenr lt't:o's clatm for almost $742 mtllton remains
estranged
wife .
unresolv ed , but its orft c la ls an' argumg that ' 'it is
" It was the hardest thing
unreasQnable for the Na \:y to ma kt:' the settleme nt ... With
ou r two ma/·or cnmpeutors and leave Newport News to I've done ," said Schaus, an
fe nd for itse f. ..
officer of Chicago's First
Almos t 75 percent of the General Dynamics settlement National Bank who is active
1S359 m1ll10n l a nd more than .W percent of the Litton in the Fellowship of Christian
set tle ment ($182 m1Ihon 1 a r e to be paid under provisions of
Athletes .
"I
don' t
an obscure 1958 law that is s uppossed to be " effective only
understand.
It
was
senseless
dunng a na tiona l emergency decla red by Congress or the
president ., .
It a uthorizes Defe nse Department officials to "enter into
contracts or into amendments or mod ifications of contra cts . wtthout regar·d to other prov ts1ons of law lt 1f they
dete r mine that " such ac tton would facilitate the national
defense ."
Althou gh clearly designed lor emergency use during BY JOE CARNICEW
time of war, the sta tute has been abused in recent years.
The larges t s mgle pnor payment under the law was a $624 UPI Executive Sports Edlior
Futility is often the father
mill iOn bailout of the Lockheed Aircraft Corp. in 1971, after
to trickery.
1t had large cost overruns on Air Force contracts.
The Pittsburgh Steelers'
Claytor acknowledges that the proposed payments to
L1tton and Genera l Dynarrucs are " not merely to settle high-powered offense was
some s peci fi c claims " but rather to avoid "years of absolutely futile Sunday ,
negotiation and liti gation'' with the contractors.
managing only three field
The Navy secretary is rightfully defensive about the goals and winding up in a 9-8
government 's latest corporate bailout, claiming that " this
is a vtcto ry for us , not a s urrender." But John Paul Jones tie with Cleveland at the end
and James Lawrence probably are turning m their graves. of regulation time.
Then came the trickery .
Faced with a second-andnine at the Cleveland 37 in
sudden~ath
overtime
Steeler ' quarterback Terry
Bradshaw handed off to
running back Rocky Bleier,
who handed back io wide
lawrence E. Lamb, M. D:
receiver Lynn Swann on an
apparent reverse. But Swann
uJcateo 1n yo ur. case.
suddenly
tossed back to
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My Bradshaw and he threw a
DEAR DR. LAMB - What
wife and I would like to ttavel loog pass that tight end
can be done lor fungus of my
16 the Northwest Rockies, but Bennie Cunningham took in
toes ' The growth 1s thick and
there isn 't much information stride at the three and
fibrous and adberes to the
a vailab le
co n cer ni ng carried in lor the winning
toes. It fa lls from the na il. It
altitude, who shoul4 go and touchdown with 3:43 gone.
is very sore to touch and it is
who should not go, etc. Any
" They had run several
impossible to even touch th"e
information would be ap- reverses and we hadn't run
bed covers at night. Is there a preciated .
any ,'' said Bradshaw. "I
chance of blood poisoning? I
DEAR READER - Very figured when they saw the
got this during the service in
few changes occur below reverse, they'd think reverse
the South Pacific Islands
5,000 fee t Since Denver , and wouldn't think pass .
during World War II .
Colorado, 1s a mile high city, There was a time to run that
DEAR READER - One of
that
means you wouldn 't play and that was it. It just
my friends with the same
expect
to notice any reaction happened to work out lor us."
problem says he has "ter·
to
altitudes
below the Denver
It was the only iouchcown
mmal toena Lls,'' and I g uess
level.
in a game do~ted by
that's as good a term as any .
A pretty safe guideline is kickers. The Browns had two
Fungus mvolvement of
that
used by the commercial touchdowns caUed back by
the feet can attack the toenail
airlmes
. Cabm pressure in penalties - a 61-yard pass
and t his IS a frequent so urce
our
modern
Jet aircraft is from Brian Sipe to Reggie
of const ant reinfectiOn
constantly kept at 7,000 feet Rucker and a 17-yarder to
Sometimes it is so bad that
or below . Individuals who are Gerry Sullivan.
th e toenail involved has to be
qmet and not overly active
In other games Swxlay, it
removed .
can us ually tolerate allltudes was Los Angeles 10, Houstoo
You are cenainly going
to 7, 000 feet witho ut any 6; New England 21 , Oakland
to need direct care from your
noticeable eff ects.
14; Philadelphia 17, Miami 3;
physician. He may want to
The exceptions are the New Orleans 20, Cincinnati
give you a medicine by mouth
peopl e who already have lung 18; Washl1ll!ion 23, New York
used to treat fungus infection
disease , or those who have Jets 3; Denver 23, Kansas
called griseofulvin (F ulvicin
advanced heart disease, or City 17 in overtime ; Buffalo
U+sF J. This is sometimes
any other medical condition
used in the presence of dif- that results in an increased 24, Baltimore 17; Tampa Bay
fi cult fun gus infections as you labored or difficult breathing. 14, Atlanta 9; SeaWe 28,
Detroit 16; Green Bay 24, San
desc ribed yo urs.
It follows that most people, Diego 3; Dallas 21, St. Louis
I am sending you The
except those with reasonably
12; and New York Giants '!1,
Health Letter number 11-10,
severe illnesses, can expect
San Francisco 10.
Common F oot P roblems .
to travel to a ltitudes of
Minnesota is at Chicago
What To Do About Them . It aro und 7,000 feet without
gives you more tnfonnatton difficulty as long as they tonight .
on treating athletes foot ,
RamJ 10, Ollen I :
don ' t ex ert t hemselves
which IS a fungus disease.
Cullen Bryant ran three
vigoro usly at the same time.
yards in the first period lor
Other readers who want thi s
People who get into t rouble at
~n fo rmatlr.n can send 50 cents
the game's ooly TO and Los
nlut ude a re often those who
with " lung, stamped . '"l f- ure do mg an unaccustomed Angeles' rugged defense aladdress e~ envelope for 1t.
amount of physical exertion lowed Houstoo only two field
goals .
Address yo ur request to me in
before they adjust to the
ca re of this newspaper , P . 0 . altitude.
Rl!daldns %3, Jell 3:
Box 1551 , Radio Cit y Station ,
Joe
Theismann
had
If you are going to altitudes
New York, NY 10019.
ius
best
passinR
day
in
the
as high as 10,000 feet, then I
As ll,e material I am
completing
214..10
NFL
thmk you should consult with
sending you explains, fungi
your physician before you do passes for 209 yarda and two
can live 1n your shoes and
so . An ybody with lung TDs - and Mark Mosely
socks . That means that you
disease or heart disease added three field goals to
need to change your socks
carry Washington past New
regularl y , and th e socks should cons ult his or her York . The
Jets
lost
physician before traveling to
should be sterilized . That's
alt itudes higher t han 7,000 quarterback Richard Todd
us ually accompli s hed by
for six to eight weeks with a
ironing them . Horne eare, in feet .
Som •' tl m es individua ls fractured left clavicle.
terms o f. attention to your
traveling by land will go over Brooc01 %3, Chiefs 17:
shoes and socks, may help
Dave Preston swept a yard
you in the overall picture in mountains with altitudes of around left end with 4: 32 left
10,000 feet or more and are
' treating your fungus disease
actually
exposed to higher 1n overtime to pwih Denver
while
your doctor is
altitudes than if they were past Kansas City. Middle
prescr1 bing the medicines he
Oying In a pressurize d linebacker Randy GradlSlar ·
thinks a re particularly in·
stopped Tony Reed on a
commercial aircraft.

Steelers heat Browns in overtime

HEALTH

II

'

..

'·

Instructional season begins

peopletalk

c;...--------.

zs,

III

Berry s w· orld

received IWl firlt return Sunday_.,$?$ f&lt;r the 82,JOO
distrllllled. Morria said be ropes to eventually recelw •10,000
to $12,000 and he seemed pleased by the lngenioua wa)'l IWl
parishioners put their money io work . ~ YCMq man toot IWl
$10 and bought a bag of fertilizer . •'Then be fertiJl&amp;ed a lady's
lawn and cut It all summer " said Morria "He turned 1n a •100

FIRST MEETING
OOLUMBUS (UP! ) - The
first
meeting
of the
Zoological Advisory Council
will be Thursday when the 13
gubernatorial appointees will
discuss ways of helping the
state's public zoos.
The council has until the
end
of
January
to
recommend long-range plans
for improving operations,
maintenance, expansions and
financial support for public
zoos in Columbus, Toledo,
Cleveland and Cincinnati.

bill toda)' 'tl
AND DUCK WHEN rr REnlRNS: It wu 1 totlllb net..d
for ev8118elist Billy Graham. Appearing In Olio, NCII'Way,
Graham wu hit In the face by a rotten tomato Slltwday by 1
woman who said me was protesting Graham•1 "power
I

Ou1stlanlty." Then Sunday heetlel'tl at a revival meeUnc
tosaed fruit and cream cakes at Grlham but none bit their
mark. Graham dldn't eeem too upeet by the umran1ec1
ollerlngs. ,;•I•m honored," he quipped, wiping lbe tolllllo olf
, ~ce~~e time ago, I got a lei!ICII pie In Ill)' face. It

SHE

TO BE AllRA1CNEI5 -

I.A)ST

MORE 'l1lAN HER MrrrEN8 · Tbe lblef wbo

entered the double hotel Illite of aetre.RIIa &amp;)wall ...sea
double haul - two mink coati valued at fl ,IOO, Odcwp pollee
uld Sunday they had no dlllllln the Satwday nllbt llllft 111111
Ha)'W(I'th said one of the coata, a fullolalltb Iliad! dl~
mink valued at ••000, belonged to her. Tbe olber, a lbnl=~ mink, belonged to her trawllnc aqanlon,

-

WILLOUGHBY ,
Ohio
(UP!) - William R. HoUar
33, Willoughby Hills, faced
arraignment
today
in
Willoughby Municipal Court
in connection with the
!hooting death of Thomas R.
Collier, 24, Wickliffe.
Collier, police said, was
killed early Saturday at the
Starlight Inn, Willowick,
when a revolver Hollar was
carrying discharged
strilting Collier in the faee .
Hollar is charged with
involuntary manslaughter.

•

flll71llyNtA. Inc

C(jt4.:. ~

y,
I
I
" ou c.n ~W/Jya te I the r'/Jthera on TV

ahOwl. They're the onea who /Jre mindless,
_l_n_elfec~-tu_•_l_b_u_ffoo
__
na_t_'_'

'-

---------1

G~ES: Televilion llal'tl A-. Wllllual of "IIAJIP)'
Days and WOUe Amet of ''Eiaht Ia Enoucb '' WW.IIIIIllllthe
big names helping to rai1e moMy for the u.s. 017pm1c TWill
at the ~ R.cera Tennil Totmamant at ftonwui Clllt
during the weekend ... 11evw1y sm. 1111 down to ~

alta;:

thNter.Qinner Sunday ni&amp;ht wttb the patm. of the New York
aty
following the 01*11111 ~of '"''ba Tift Ill '

?,Pen
1taJy ... P1an111 VJadtm!r Hwuwlll '"'Nd wllb

t

rt'~

Zlllllll Melila and the New Yort ~Or 1
1 11111
~ eoneert 1\ir the ardleCa tsJ - • to tba Ullltld .....

• Europe Slllday ...
'rl

•

By Gnc Bailey
1
Approximately 00 youngsters and adults enjoyed the
feetlviUeaSaturday at Royal Oak Park when National Hunting
and Fllhln&amp; Day was observed. The event was sponsored by
the Sportsmen's clubs of Meigs County and organized by lhe
Izult Walton League, Ken Am1bury Chapter .
After reptratlon, Roger Birch and his bird doga gave a
training llld retrieving exhibition, one of the 1tlghllghts of the
day.
~ Harry Lee Bailey and Gary Sisk watched the youngsters
while they had a chance to take part In some archery.
Jack Stanley gave a trapping exhibition, and then It was off
to the lq lake where Art Sklmer gave canoe rides to all the
youngsters. He let them try their hand at rowing.
"l'!'&gt;fnre lunch. Roecoe Wile and Glen Lambert Instructed
!!iQ~ !!!" klda tried fly fi!hiJIB., some f&lt;r the first time. Tbe
lunch menu Cllltslsted of deerburgers, apples, and pop . Thanks
to RC for the donation of the beverage.
After lunch, It was oil to the range where kids and adults
were pennltted to try their skill at reloading, trap shooting,
and mllllleloading. A special thanks went to Cliff Albley, John
Jeffers, Darrell Hawthorne, Frank Casto, Jim Johnaon, David
Oiadwlill, Wendell Jeffers, and others who helped with the
afternoon program.
Following the day's events, youngsters went back to the
focal point wbere door prizes were awarded to nearly hall of
the kids who attended.
Speclallhanka go to Horace Karr for the use of ihe park
grounds, and to Pleasanton Processing of Athens who donated
the time, wrapping, and equliJ!IIent for the meat preparation .
lal't it great how 110me of these lllslnesses·and business men
are lnlerellled In our youth?
Thanks too to all you parents for taking the time to bring
your young ones out. I doo 'I think there 11:as a child there who
didn't have a good time. Thanks too to Andy Lyles, our fine
Game Protector, who helped with some arrangement&amp;. I must
not f&lt;rget you lzaak Walton .m embers who were there to assist
. .. you were all great. Thanks to aU . After all, that's what our
youth today needs - our lime. See you next year.

FINE EXHIBITION - Roger Birch and his English
Springer Jill put on a fine exhibition at the National

Western title

;l

••

!

BASEBAll SCOREBOARD

Ch icago
(Lamp 7 U l
at (based on 144 innings pitched)
Pltfsburgh (0 . Robinson 13-6) ,
Nat10n1l League : Rogers , Mtl
7: 35p .m .
2 .47 ; Swan, NV 2.d , Vu ck ·
Montreal ( Schatze&lt;h!r 7 6) a t ovl ch, St .L 2.58 . Hooton , LA
Phll&amp;delphla (Lerch lO·Bl , 7 · 35 ana Blue, SF 2.68.
p.m .
Amerinn Lfague : Guidry ,
Sl . Louis &lt;Martinez 8-8) at NY 1.74 ; Caldwell, Mil 2.23 ;
New York (Kobel -4 5) , 8 05 Matlack, Te• 2 35, Palmer ,
pm
Bait 2. .47 ; Goltz, Mi nn 2 54

Tuesday's Game~
51 . LOUIS at New York, nlgt\1
Montreal at Philadelph ia, 2,
tw i night
.
Ch icago at Pittsbur gh , n ight
Houston at Atlanta , night
Los AngtiH at Cincinnati,

night

Str ikeouts
National League : Richard ,
Hou 297 ; Nlekro . All 232 .
Se aver, Cin 209 , Blyl ~ven , P itt
177 ; Montefusco , SF 172 .
American League : Rylln, Cal
2.47 ; Gu idry, NV 23.4 : Leonard,
KC 175 , Flanagan, Bait 159,

San Diego at San Fran cisco. Matlack, Tex 1•9
night

American League
East
W. L Pet. GB
New York
9• 62 .603
Boston
93 63 .596 I
Mllwauke
90 67 .573 -.41/2
Balllmor
86 69 m 7'h
u 12 .5:18 10
Detroir
68 85 .... 241Jt
Ctevelnd
Toronto
59 96 .381 341ft
West
Kanss Cty

W. L

118 68

Pel.

GB

.564

73 .532 s
7.4 .523 6'1&gt;
85 ..455 17
87 .•:w 191h
89 .43J 20'1&gt;
Seattle
55 91 .359 31 1h
.:.:.!&gt;5aturday•a Results
Bos 3, Tor 1
Cleve 10. N.Y . 1

Catuorni
Texas
Minnesot
Chicago
Oakland

83
81
71
68
61

Ch i 5, Calli •

Mllw 13, Oak 4
Ott .4, Bait 3, 1st
Bait 6, net 1, 2nd
K.C . 3, Minn 1
Texas 7, Sea 2
Sund•y's R11ulh
8os 7, Tor 6, 1.4 Inn
N .V A, Cleve 0
Oet .c, Bait 2
Texas s, Sea 3, 1st
Texas .4, Sea 3, 2nd
Minna 6, K .C. A

Calli 7, Chi 3
Mllw 5, Oak 2

TDCiaw's Probable Pltchtrl

CAll Times I!DTI
Oakland (Johnson 11 -ll at

Chicago (Kucek 1-JJ. 8:30p.m .
seattle (ColbOrn A-11 &gt; lit
K•nses Clt v (Leonerd 19·17).

1 :30 p.m.

M lnnesot• (Serum 9-9) at
TtXII (MatliCk 14 ·131. 8:35
p .m .

Tu ..clay'a Gomes
Detroit al Bolton, night
Toronto at New 'York, night
Cleveland at Baltimore, nlght
Oakland at Chicago, nlghl
Seattle •• Kansas City , nigh I
Minnesota at Texas , night
MIJwauket at cotllorn lo, nlghl

,.. .,. LNiu• LtHtro
By Unl1
H Prnatnltmotlonol

aottlna
CIIIHI on 415 11 Nhl
.-NUiaaJI0 )ff H. Pet.
.Porker, Pit
W 557 111 .325 4. Mel~•
Madlock, SF
118 All 136 .31.4
.,....
Garvey, LA
156 6:12 194 .312 5. Waverly

LUI""

~~~.~·J!,

season."
In other National League
games, Philadelphia downed
New York 8-2, Montreal
blanked Pittsburgh 4-0,
Cincinnati edged Atlanta 2- t,
Chicago nipped St. Louis 5-4
and San Francisco swept a
doubleheader from Houston ,
7-0 and S-4.
in the Amencan League, it
was New York 4, Cleveland 0;
Boston 7, Toronto 6 in 14
innings ; Detroit 4, Baltunore
2: Milwaukee 5, Oakland 2:

Minnesota 6, Kansas City 4;
California 7, Chicago 3, and
Texas 5-3 and 4-3 in a doubleheader sweep of Seattle.
Phlllles 8, Mets 2:
Bake McBride hit the first
pitch of the game for a home
run and Tim McCarver added
a three-run blast in a four-run
sixth innin g to lead the
Phillies. Steve Carlton, !6-12,
pitched eight inrun gs for the
win
while
helping
Philadelphia increase its
Eastern Division lead to four
games .
Expos 4, Pirates 0:
Rookie Scott Sanderson
fired a three-hit shutout and
Ell1s Valentine drove in two
runs to pace Montreal and
VIr! ually r uin any hopes t he
Pira tes
may
have
entertamed ahout catching
th e Phillies.
Reds 2, Braves 1:
Right-hander Tom Hum&lt; .
7-11, tossed a three-hitte r and ,
Champ Summers doubled in
the decisive run to give
Cincinnati the victory . Jun
Bouton, 1-2, who hurled e1ght
IDDings, took the loss.
Cabo 5, Cardinals 4:
Mik e Vail and Larry
Biit tn er singled home runs off
reliever Tom Bruno in the
ninth inning to give Chicago
the win . The vidory went Lo
Lym McGlothen, 5-2, who
worked three innin gs in relief
of Ken Holtzman .
Giants 7~. Astros 4-0:
Pinch hitter Bill Madlock
doubled hom e two runs the
seventh inning to g~ve San
Francisco Its m ghtcap
victor y after Vida Blue
pitched an eight-hitter for his
18th victory of the season and
Darrell Evans, He1ty Cruz
and Jack Clark hit home runs
1n the opener.

·Ironton favored to
•
wm SEO grid title
Coach Bob Lutz and the
Ironton Tigers are the
overwhelming choice to
dethrone Logan as the 1978
SEOAL football champions is
the prediction of the SEO
Sportswriters and Broadcasters A&amp;lociation.
Meeting Sunday in Jackson
to plan for the 1978-79 athletic
I!Cbool year the scribes and
Casten gave the nod to
Ironton with Wellston picked
lor ~MM:ond place and Jackson
dead
last.
Ba10d on tbree lm·
preatlve 11011-leape wlu
over Aabland, Ky., Portamoutb, aad WaabiDJioa
C\Mifl H- tile TfCel'tl
were accorded flrat place
by 13 of llle 1S votlag
members:
Of 120 points Ironton
1 ed 117• an d weN a 1so
rece v
the choice of the league'•
eight head footbaU coaches.
Here is the 1978 predicted
ord,e r of flnlah :
POS.-Team
Pia.
1.1ronton
117
102
2. Wellston
3. Athens
79

5. ,Logan
35
6. Waverly
33
7. Jackson
15
8. GaUipolis
14
Meeting at Jolly Lanes the
men who follow the eight
league teams gave a resume
of team personnel, returning
starters, lettermen, an d
coaching before making the
predictions.
It wu also pointed out
that If tbe teachers' strflte
at Logu Is not settled this
week tile Chieftain football
team wfll not play
Gallipolis this week.
The Logan board of
education and the superintendent officially declared
school open In Logan last
Thursday and did not permit
any girls' volleyball on
Thursday, or golf on Friday,
led
ru
that Logan could not
play Nelsonville-York In
football Frtday , and would
not sanction the participation
of the band In the festival at
Marietta on Saturday.

In other action the group
elected Pete Wilson of the
Waverly News an d Watch·
man as president. Andy
Hoover of WMPO, Middleport
as vi ce president , and Odie
O'Donnell of the Gallipolis
Tribune as sec re tar y •
treasurer.
The association voled to
continue to select the All·
SEOAL
football and
basketball teams with the
aid of the bead coaches In
both &amp;porto, to award
certificates to players
named to the teams, and to
assist any organization In
the league In s pousoriog
the two major all-league
banquets.
This action was triggered
by the decision of league
administrators at t he August
meeting to delete from the
league
constitution
a
paragraph requ irin g one
footbaU banquet and one
basketball banquet.
As it now stands there wiD

73
70
50

m:!i l~ :m6. Logan

1.,

CINCINNATI I UP!) J ohn Leypoldt became a
Saint last week and a savior
Sunday .
The vetera n placekicker,
acquired by the New Orleans
Saints Just last Thursday,
hounced a 'll-yard field goal
off the left upright and across
the goalpost on the last play
of the game Sunday to lift the
Saints to a 26-18 victory over
the
winless Cincinnall
Bengals.
The Saints hadn 't hesitated
to heap a do-&lt;lr-die lllrden on
newcomer Leypoldt
Even though they trailed
National FooTball League
Bv Un1t ed Press 1nternat1onal

American Conference
East
W L T
Pet.
NY Jets
2 2 0
500
M1am1
2 2 0
500
New Eng land
2 2 0
.500
I J 0
250
Bal t11nore
Buffal o
I 3 0
250
c entral
w. L . T Pd .
P1tlsbur gh
4001000
] 1 0
750
Cleveland
Houston
220
500
Ci n c 1nna ti
040
000
West
W L T
Pet .
Denv er
3 I 0
7SO
Oakla nd
2 2 o .SOD
Se attle
2 2 0
.soo
San Diego
1 3 0
250
250
Kansl!s CiJY
1 3 0

Nal (onal Conference

1

I

East
W

L

T

Pet.

Washington
d 0 0 1 000
Dalla s
J 1 o
750
NY Gtant '&gt;
J I 0
.750
Ph i lad el phi a
2 2 o
500
StLO UIS
040
000
Central
W

Chicago
Green Bay
Tampa Ba y
M1nne!.ola

Detro1t

L

Pet.

T

3 0 0 1 000
750
J I 0
500
2 2 0
I 2 0
333
1 J 0
250
West
W

L

T

Pet

Los An geles
4 0 0 1 000
New Orl ean s
2 2 0
500
Atla nta
1 J o
250
San F r an c1sco
0 .t 0
000
Sunda y ' s Result s
Buff 24, Bal i 17
Ptft IS, Cleve 9
L .A. 10, Hous 6
Phila 17, M1am i 3
N .O 20, Cinci 18
Wash 23. NY Jets 3
Den 23 . K c 11 ot
Tmpa By 14, At1a 9
Sea 28 . Del 16
G B 2.4 , S D 3
Cal '2 1. 51 L 12
NY Giants 27 , S, F . 10
New Eng 21 , Oak. 14
Monday 's Gam e
M 1nne sota at Chicago, 9 p m .

not be an Ali.SEOAL loot baD
banquet m December unless
an organization or individual,
or business agrees to obligate
th e m sel ves financially t o
sponsor th iS traditiona l

event.

18-17 in the closing seconds,
New Orleans let !be clock run
down to just three seconds
before calling time out to
permit Leypoldt to either win
it or lose It with a 'll-yard
field goal attempt .
And Leypoldt's kick was a
little strange .
"The ball was at about the
goal line when I looked tip,"
recalled Leypoldt. "And 1!
was driftmg to the left. Over.
Over. I JUSt hoped it would get
through before It hit the bar."
It didn't.
The baD hit the left upright,
but took a saintly bounce
towa rd the center of the
goalpost. and dropped over
the crossbar for a three-point
fieldgoal, a 26-18 New Orleans
win and quite a success story
for the 32-year old Leypoldt .
Best known for his early
career with the Buffalo Bills,
Leypoldt went to the Seattle
Seahawks two years ago but
was cut at the end of this
year's exhibition season.
"Last week at this time I
didn't have a job, " said
leypoldt, who practi ce d
kicking at a high school near
his West Seneca, N.Y., home
during the first three weeks
of the regular NFL season.
Then , last Sunday , regular
Saints ' placekicker Rich
Szaro suffered a groin injury
that figures to keep him out
for a month and New Orleans
went shopping for
a
replacement.
" They (the Saints) called
me Monday night and I tried
out Tuesday, " recalled
Leypoldt .
Signed to a one-year
co ntra c t on Thursday,
Leypoldt practiced with the
Saints the last three days of
last weekand then on Sundsy
got the bounce he needed to
make him an instant hero
Whil e that caro m shot
evened the Saints ' record at
2-2, it left the c lawless
Bengals with a 0-4 mark.
" It do esn ' t make a
differe nce how they go
through, if they go through ,"
groaned weary Bengals' boss
B1ll Johnson . "As I told the
players, it 's un canny how
things work out.
" I' m so spent ," added
Johnson , " I don' t know
whether f'm walking out of
here upside down or on my
feet. "
What really hurt the
Bengals was the fact that

Mun-.

"

Custooi full
In one or too daus
o~,~ r slafr of dentists and
1ethnicians will make )lour
cus1om dentures quicklrand

Manning co nnected with
Henry Childs for 20 yards to
move the ball to the Cincy 11,
well within Leypoldt's field
goal range.
The Saints !ben ran a
couple of plays and allowed
the clock to tiCk down to three
seconds to make s ure the

Beneals wnuldn 't

~~u

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
Young men ana women
Oft en ask. why the y ha ve to
pa y
more
fo r
the ir
aut omobile insuran ce .
Dr1vers 1n t he ir tee ns and
ear:lier tw enti es ca use far

more tha n thetr share of
tr affi c accid~nts ReJX)rts
the
Nat ional
Safety
Coun c1 1· 2 1. 8 per ce nt of all
motor is ts are 24 years of
age or under , yet these
you tht u I operators are
inv olved a s dr ivers in 38 .6
per ce nt of a ll accidents
and 37.3 per cen t of all fatal
m ishaps
A great m an y y ou ng

people

ar e

sk i lled ,

resp onsi b le
drivers
OJviousl y, though, quite a
few ore not
There 's no su bst itu te for
de 11e lopment competence

and the right alllludes,
i n c lud i ng
a
po sit i ve
appr oa ch to def enstv e

soaring hospital
and surgical bills.
Call me.

dr ivi ng .
Ou r agen cy provides
f i nancial prote ct i on a nd
servtce in case of acctdents
involving y oung dr ivers .. .
bu t
many
of
these
acci dents
can
be
prevented. That's why we
say - preve ntion is the

Mike

·&amp;

I was a drmking man /'

Prev ention is
the bes t policy . . .

It can help pay

....

h:::.ll

added Cincy lineback er
Glenn Cameron after it was
all over, " I'd b e drunk right
now.''

Person to person
health insurance

' ""

llP.t ·thP.:

against before calling time
off and bringing Leypoldt on.
"I canJt -beheVe tt, I can't
believe it ," Reaves kept
r epeat ing after watching
Leypoldt give the Bengals the
boot.

be st pol icy .
SUI!_

f ~R M

DALE C. WARNER

MUTIIAI

loJIOftiDI!I" llltu•~f'IC f ( omo•n,
~- Ol!oc: e

992 -2143

BffillllurllljiDn nlrln11

102 W.

Main

Pomeroy

•Dr. A.J . Sllehll•Dr. C. IV il&lt;aJ •Dr. G.J . Slombaugh
•Dr W.D. Kimball •Dr. J C. Murpl\y •Dr. J. Ochman

The Riviere Center
949 E. livinpton Awt .

PRE-FINISHED
GUnERING
-vouR.SELf\
[)0-li· •
· You'll need no proless•onol help or equipmen t to put up th ,s:reody-to-hang guttenng ;
all parts slip togelher easily arid lit snugly . The
boked-on pa1 nt film is securely bonded lo the metal
and won ' t lloke or peel. See 11 al The Friendly One !

DtRooald ERiviere
,,

they had led most of the game
and were en)oymg an eight·
point advantage with less
than SIX minutes to play .
"They refused to give m,"
first-year New Orleans coach
Dick No lan said of hiS
battered Saints, who were
missing four starter s Sunday .
' 'They fought it down the line.
The score was 18-10 (Cmcy ),
and they were not going to
give in . You've got to be
proud of them, because they
stayed tough."
By midway through the
final quarter , the Bengals
had mounted their 18-10 lead
on field goals of 42 , 22 and 20
yards by Chris Bahr, a 12yard John Rea ves to Don
Bass TO pass and a safety
when a Saints' center snap
sailed over the punter's head
and out of the end zone.
But New Orleans, which
through three and a half
quarters had managed only a
five-yard TD run by H1ke
Strachan and a 39-yard field
goal by leypoldt, began its
comeback whe n Strachan
scored on another five-yard
run with 5·25 to play.
The Saints' game-wmnlng
drive started with only 2:14 to
go after Wes Chandler had
returned a punt 32 yards to
the Cincinnati 49
A key play in the drive
came with I : li to play on a
third and seven at the
Bengals ' 31 when Archie

The banquets were started
in GaUipolis by the Kiwanis
Club in 1949 and have grown ·
into the highlight of the
A thought lor the day:
football and basketball American a uth or William
seasons for the past three Faulkner said, " I declme to
decades.
accept the end of man."

J:t mJ::

a: mau::

)I

goal nips Bengals

~cono m ica ll y

. 153 569 176 .309 7. Gaillpolia
30
5:13 liW .301 8. JacJtson
!9
~~~:;."r,~·Jlt 1
:~ . In a poU conducted by Tom
. concpcn, Cln
1., s.. liW .m Metters of the Athens
Allltrlcon L•l!tue
Messen~er
the lea~ue's
G. AI H. P'&lt;t.
" '
"
Carow, Min
,., 541 115 .l:II official atatlatlclan,the
Oliver, Tex
U7"" 160 .321 coachel rated the tNma u
Rlct, Bol
156 650 205 .315
Plnlllla, NY
124 &gt;141140 .313 follon .
R-11, SN
12t 451137 .30&gt;0 l'ei.-TPia.
13
~~~II
I, Ironton
Dtlllvle, Mil
12S 451 Ill .297 2. Alhens
47
Bostock. Cal
141 561 161 .296 S Wllllton
46
LeFlore, Del
1521U ttl .29• ; M
36
NY
141 M9 173 .29. •• e1gJ
Wlnlltld, SD
RICI!rcll, 50

Saturday at Royal Oak Park. The Izaak Walton League
spearheaded the event.

~:~;::oo,;;::~ Last-second field

By RICHARD RO'rfKOV
UPI Sports Writer
Last season, first -year
manager Tom Lasorda bred
••• l ••
love and pride in Dodger-blue
•• ••
into
an
unchallenged
•• I •• I
• • I •• • ••
National League West title.
-' - '
Though the Dodgers had to
overcome inconsistency, a
surprising San Fran ciSco
Giant
team, the alwaysMator League Standings
Hom• Runs
By Unl1ed Press International
National League : Fosler. C1n dangerous Cincinnati Red
Nltlonal LIIIUI'
35 , Luzlnsk l, Ph il 32 ; Smith, LA
and
a
well-pubhcized
East
and Parker, Pitt 29 ; Kingman ,
clubhouse brawl, Lasorda
W L Pet. GB Chi 27.
Phil a
86 68 558
American League R ice, Bos never had any doubts his
P 1tfsbrgh
82 72 532 •
.tJ , Bayl or, Cal and Hisle, Mil team would come through
Chicago
77 78 .497 91f2 33 . Thornton, Clev 32 ; Thomas ,
Montreal
73 12 ... 71 13'12 Mil 31
again.
St. Louis
67 90 .427 20'12
Runs BAtted In
"When we were six games
New York
63 93 404 24
Nat1ona1 League : Parker ,
West
behind on June 'tl, everybody
P 1rt H2 ; Fosrer, C1n 110 ;
W. L
Pet. GB Garvey, LA 109 ; Clark, SF 98; thought it was the end of t he
x Lcs Ang
94 62 .603
Winfield , SO 97
Clnclnnat
86 69 .SSS l 1f2
American Lugue R ice , Bos Dodgers, hut it was really the
Sl!ln Fren
87 70 .55.4 7'h 133 ; Staub , Del 119 ; Hisle. Mil beginning, " Lasorda said in a
San Diego
81 76 .516 13'h 113 ; Thornton, Ciev 103; Carty ,
champagne-soaked
locker
Houston
69 87 .u2 25
Oak 95.
Atlanta
69 87 ..u2 25
room after th e Dodger s
Stolen Bases
• ·cl1nched division title
National League : Moreno, blank ed the San Di ego
Saturday's Results
P1tf 67 ; Lopes, LA .f-4 ; Tavera s.
Phi Ia 1. N.Y . 0, 1St
Padres W to clinch t he
Pitt .43; DeJesus, Chi and
Phi Ia 6, N .Y . J, 2nd
Smith , SO 39 .
West
ern
Division
title
SILS, Ch i l
American League LeFi o.ce , •
Sunday.
Mont 3, Pitt 2
Del 67 ; Cruz , Sea 55 . Wills, Tex
LA. 5, S .D . J
SO ; Ollone, Oak 47 ; WilSOn , KC
" I'm proud of this whole
S.F. 3, Hous 2
.43.
.
team.
I always believed we
Atla 8, Cine I 1
Pitching
could win the title."
Victories
~ Sunday's Results
National League : Perry, S O
Steve ·Garvey, who had
- 'l&gt;hlla I. N .V 2
20 6 ; Hooton . LA 19-9, Gr im Mont -4, P itts o
three
hits and drove in three
sley, Mtl 19 10 ; Niekro. Atl 19Ch i 5, St .L -4
16, Blue, SF 18-9; R ichard, ~ou
rlDls
Sunday. said, "This
Cincl 2, A tl a 1
17-11
victory
wa s more satisfying
L.A . .4, S .D . 0
American League : Gu idry ,
S.F. 7, Hous o, 1st
NY 23 -3; Caldwell, Mil 21 9 ;
because
we cam e fr om
S.F. 6, Hous 4, 2nd
Palmer. Ball 20. 12 . Spllflortf ,
behind
this
year, while we
Today's Probable Pitchers
KC 19 -12 , Leonerd, KC 19.17,
(All Times EDTI
won it with our 22-4 start last
Earned Run Average
•

ENJOYS ARCHERY - A large crowd enjoyed the
archery event at the National Huntmg and Fishing Day

Columbus

,

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Depart men I Store of
Building Since 1915

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~ - ~ l)IIUy Sentlne!. Mldflleov&gt;rt-Pcmeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 25,

1976

POLLY·s POINTERS
Polly,cramer

The Rev . and Mrs. AI Welsh

Vivian has been singing
wiD be ministering in musi~ since the age of two. She
and the Word at the Laurel studied music with private
Cliff Free Methodist Church tutors and at Olivet Nazarene
Thursday tbroogb Sunday, College. She w88 a featured
Sept. 28 and Oct. I at 7:30 Gospelanil Oratorio soloist in
p.m. They will also be the Detroit, Michigan area.
ministering in the Sunday She has sung on television,
morning worship service at radio, and In city-wide and
9:30· a.m.
church revlvala.
AI and Vivian Welsh have
For 2S years AI and
been ministering In the Word Vivian's duets have been
and song for 25 years in many especially featured. She
areas of the United States and accompanies all their
some foreign countries. AI selections on the piano.
has also been writing and
The. public is Invited.
sin~ing his own GoSII"l songs,

Meadows family reunion
held in Gallia Co.
GALUPOUS - The lith
annual Meadows family
reunion was held at
the activities building on the
Galli&amp;
County
Junior
Fairgrounds recently. There
were 51 Jl"rSOns in attendance
and grace preceding the
dinner was given by Mrs.
Mae Thivener.
During the business
meeting presided over by
Archie Meadows, officers'
reports were given and new
officers for the next three
years were named. They are
Archie Meadows, president;
Mae Thlvener, treasurer, and
Ruth Smith, secretary.
Noted was the birth of
Chasidy Rose Meadows,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Henry
Meadows,
the
youngest girl attending. Also
recognized were Ruby
Meadows, the oldest woman;
Kenneth Meadows, the oldest
man; and Donald Wayne
' Shaffer. the yoWtgest boy.
Attending the reunion were
Mrs: Ruby Meadows, Mr. and
Mrs. Archie Meadows,
RandaU and Earnest, aU of
Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Meadows, Tammy
and Tommy. Mr. and Mrs.
Doug Meadows, Ellen and
Tim, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Leo James, Terry and Kelly,
' ·Crown City; Mr. and Mrs.
Jerry Rowe and Jennifer, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Smith ·and
James, Donald, Ressie and
Wayne Shaffer, Racine ; Mrs.
Maxine Houck and Lisa.
Crown City; Mr. and Mr'$.
Roger Houck and Roger, Jr.,
San Diego, Calif.; Mr. and
Mrs. Vernon Houck and Tina,
Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs . Henry
Meadows and Chasidy,
Crown City ; Mrs . Cora

Strickland, Mr. and Mrs. BiD
White, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Meadows, Jr. ,
Kenneth III, Kara, Kathy,
Keith and Kevin Wright,,
Akron; and Sheila Lambert,
GaUiPOlis.

,------,

The Rev. and Mrs. AI Welsh

Annual Bailey family
reunion held Aug. 20
The Bailey family reunion
was held Aug. 20 at the
Shriner's Park in Racine.
Officers elected for the 1979
reunion were Lenora SJl"n·

1 Social 1 cer,
Carol Wines,
secretary, and Sharon
treasurer.
1 Calendar 1 J{earns,
Attending were Lenora
presid~nt_;

MONDAY
ru::"NO 0' THE RIVER
GARDEN CLUB, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the homd of Mrs.
Glen West. OffiCers to be
installed. Arrangement

Spencer, Pomeroy; Joe
McNabb, Syravlise ; Mr. and
Mrs . Carroll Teaford,
Racine ; Mr. and Mrs. Elmer
Bailey, Shade; Mrs. Sandie
Sarg_ent and Jonathan,
theme " Summer' s Gone-- · Pomeroy ; Mr . and Mrs .
Here
Today,
Gone
Tomorrow."

MIDDLEPORT. PTA, 7:30 .
Monday night. featuring
panel

"Let'~

Talk Kids. 11

Norris, Route 2, Racine, or
broueht to the meetinl(.
PAST
MATRONS,
Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
Tuesday evening at the home
of Mrs. Norma Parker.
MEIGS COUNTY Holiness
_Minlster.ial ~- iall kickoff
singspiration '7 :30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Laurel Cliff
Free Methodist Church.
JOINT MEETING of
Racine Fire Department,
ladies
auxiliary,
and
emergency squad Tuesday 8
p.m. at Racine Fire Station.
All members urged to
attend.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
Citizens Birthdsy supper and
dedication of new building
Tuesday 6:30 p.m . at Town
House in Harrisonville. Bring
covered dish and table ser·
vice. Everyone welcome.

Brian Keams, Sonia and B.
W. , Mason. W. Va.; Mr. and
Mrs. Richard L. WaOIIlley
and Richie, Racine; Mr. and
Mrs . Harold Blackston,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Francis
E . Shaeffer,
Pomeroy; Doris Clenenger,
Hatfield, Ky .; Mrs. Georgie
Bailey, Marlene and Darlene,
Hatfield, Ky.; Mr. and Mrs.
David Keller, Sandy and
Val erie, Reynoldsburg;
David Blevins, Hatfield; Ky.;
Mr. and Mrs. Otis Bailey and
Lois, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Bailey, Michael, Lori and
Christa, Patriot: Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Wines, Brett and
Teresa, Westerville; Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Hedrick,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry L. Bailey, Pomeroy.
Mr. and Mrs. WiUiam F.Hedrick, Barbara and Brian,
Athens,; Mr. and Mrs. Henry
HiD, Melinda and Monica,
Letart; Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Matheny and Dale. Colum·
bus; Judy, Dawn and Kim
McClelland,' Groveport.
The 1979 reunion wlU be
held at the same place on the
third Sunday of August .

members were represen-

tatives of Custom Family
Portraits to outline plans for
family portraits. Families
can secure a cOupon for a
8x10 picture for a $4 donation
to the auxiliary and then can
ourchase individual prints or
a package for $44 ,95. Appointments will be made for
Oct. 8 from noon to 10 p.m. at
10 minute intervals. Ad·
ditional lnfonnation can be
secured by telephoning 949--

R.K.

DEAR POLLY- I uaed to
. have trouble getting my dog
to take medicine. !'low I just
!llllother the .plU with Jl"anut
!&gt;utter and the dog swallows it
with no trouble. - B.B.
Polly wiU send you one of
her
signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers If
she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
her coluinn. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this
newspaJl"r.

.

·

dtscussed pro;eqts
MIDDLEPORT - Holiday
projects were discussed
during a meeting of the
EJecta Circle of the B. H.
Sanborn Missionary Society
of the Middleport First
Baptist Cbufch held at the
home of Mrs. Louise ll)ompson with Mrs . Isabelle
Wlnebren.ner. as hostess.

SCOTCH FOURSOME
A scotch foursome wUl be
played at the Pomeroy Golf
Course Sunday at 4 p. m. A
covered dish dinner will be
seryed.

Racine Social Events
'
By Mrs. Francis Morris
The Esther Missionary
Circle held the September
meeting at First 'Baptist
Church with Helen Simpson,
hostess. The hymn "Teach
Me to Pray" OJl"ned the
q1eeting with devotions, by
Vera Beetle entitled, "The
Impossible Prayer" after
prayer by Gretta ·Simpson,
scripture read in unison,
Matthew' 6:7·13, Colossians
4:2, James 5:16, Philippians
4:6, 7. A buSiness session
followed with Gretta Simpson, chalnnan, presiding.
The program was in charge
of Dorothy Badgley, wpich
opened with the hymn
"Others" sung by the group.
Scripture, Romans 8:35-39,
prayer by Marie Roy .
Readings were "When thou
prayest,'' ••Revelation ,''
Broken Dreams." "Two
Bowls of Water." Readings
from "The Hiding Place,"
"Corrie Ten Boom," hymn,
"The Great Physician" and
"Blest · Be the Tie That
Binds" was sung and the
closing prayer was by Mrs.
Marie Walker. Eleven
members and one visitor
were present. Delicious
refreshments were served by
Hefen Simpson , hostess.
Mr: and Mrs. Frank
Cleland SJl"nt Sunday af·
temoon and evening with
Edith Hayman, Grace, Ruth
and Jane Ellis in Columbus
and were their dinner guests.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Feuerbacher of Morristown,
Tenn. SJl"nt 8 week with her
mother, Mrs. Addie Petrel
and his parents, at Jackson.
Hazel Carnahan and
Frances Foster SJl"nt a day
with Mrs. Loe Tisdale at
Buckeye Lake.

Mrs. Irene Slovak and Mrs.
Ruth Jean Van Hom of
Beaver FaDs, Pa., and Mrs.
Grace Heilman of New
llrighton, Pa. SJl"nl a couple
of days with their cousin,
Mrs. Hazel Carnahan.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cleland
spent Labor Day weekend
with Mr. and Mrs . Jed
Pickens at Shelby, N. C.

I

Mrs. E;llr.abeth Slavin had
the OJl"ning prayer, and Mlsa
Rhoda HaD gave devotlona
using "How High Ia Heaven"
from the PortaIa ol Prayer. A
report was given on a gift
taken to Mrs. VIvian Titus on
her birthday anniversary.
Mrs. . Clara Bell Riley
reported on a vlalt which she
and Mrs. Mary Brewer had
with Mrs. Titus.
Mrs. Teunna WeD· wiU be
sending card3 to shutlns this
month. Mrs. RUey read a
letter from Mrs. Rife announcing the Cheshire
Baptist Church silver tea.
Members were reminded to
ssve bottle caps for project
work. Get-well card was
signed for Mrs. Allee
Freeland, and members
remembered Dr. Raymond
Boice with SJl"Cial prayer.
The program by Mrs.
Freda ·Edwards was entitled
"You Are There" and was
about the World Fellowship
offering.
Mrs. Winebrenner assisted
by Mrs. Thompson aerved
refreshments to thoae named
and Mrs. UIUan Demoakey,
Mrs. Elects Souders, Mrs.
Bernice Baker.

Sale! 5-pc. combo
that's all a-rage!

11

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•

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Au l hen t •c E r1ghsh Pub ! l yllng w•th l'l leg;m l nolll•
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INGELS FURNITURE
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Middle110rt, 0.

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THEY WILL .
RECEIVE
9 MOrmtS OF
THE HOMEIDWN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

Young adult chss met Thurs.
A discussion on the book of WeyersmlUer and Mrs. Darla
Revelations highlighted a Hawi•y serveo refreshments.
meeting of the Young Adult
Attending were the Rev.
Class of the Laurel Cliff Free and Mrs. Floyd Shook, Mr.
Methodist Church held at the and Mrs. Bob Barton, Sherrie
Meigs County Infirmary Clark, Mrs. Weyenmiller,
Thursday nijht.
Mrs. Jacoba, Mr. and Mrs.
Mra. Mildred Jacobs led in Randy Hawley , Michael
the Bible discussion foUowing Wright, Mrs. Etta Mae EUIB,
group singing around the Betty Wills and Leona
plflno and prayv. Mrs. Joan Martin.

THIS

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SAYRE HARDWARE
126 MAIN

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GOOD
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COLLEGE
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UNITED
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882-2525 .
NEW HAVEN, W. VA.
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il\1

: US • • •By Helen Bottell\1

·.·

::::

A SURE SIGN OF LOVE!
Dear Helen
Just In case you get weary of hearing marriage problems,
Mrs. Martha Vennari, learn about students like may I ten you about my friend&amp;?
gu'll&amp;nce director at Meigs, them.
They've been married 16 years and still flirt with eacb
bas
announced
that
other.
They aren't Into total loge~- both have careers,
By taking the PSAT·
sophomores, juniors, and NMSQT, they can enter Ahe are separated often by different conunibnenta. But "coming
some juniors will be able to comJl"tition for Sl:!holariihlps home" Ia the best part of their day.
join over one milUon other administered by the National
At parties or meetings when they're at a dlatance, you'D
stud..ts around the world in Merit S~bolarshlp Cor· see two banda go up, giving their &amp;Jl"Cial alsnal. It's sign
taking the Preliminary poration and can get a good language for "!love you" - thumb,lndex and little linger up,
Scholastic Aptitude Test· idea of what the Scholastic two middle fingers bent.
National Merit Scholarship Aptitude Test (SAT) is like.
Isn't this a terrific way of quietly saying, "You're the
Qualifying Test (PSAT·
Along with their score best?" - PROUD OF TIIEM
NMSQT) this faD. The test, reports, students will receive Dear Proud:
co-sponsored by the College a copy of ABOUT YOUR
Yes! It'sa SlD"e sign of love. Thanks for sharing. -H.
Board and National Merit PSAT-NMSQT SCORES, a
P.S. In an advice columnist's life, a day without
Scholarship Corporation, is booklet
that
contains coincidences Is a day without mall. The following excellent
an important step in making valuable how-to infonnation letter arrived with yours:
college plans.
about: estimating SAT
++++
Scheduled for October 24, scores; finding out where to Dear Helen:
at Meigs, the PSAT-NMSQT get and how to use detaUed
I've been reading with Interest the letter from "Mother of
measures
verbal
and infonnation about colleges an ,Angel," and the notes it Inspired. Many of Ul are making
mathematical aptitude - two and financial . aid: and efforts to help nortnal children understand "special" children
abilities important In doing planning for financing a (andadultl) so that they won't be taunted or Ignored.
college work. The test can college education.
As president of the Jeraey Shore Association for the Deaf
·
also lead to other op·
Also, students can use the and Hard of Hearing, I'm conducting a clsallln sign language
portunities for high school College Board's College for f&gt;.year-olds.
students. For example, Handbook, to compare their
' In addition to providing important social values to these
students can ask to par· scores with those of enrolled non-handicapped youngsters, the lessona increaae dexterity,
ticipate in the College students at more than 2,800 visual discrimination, and they buDd ego, as the students mw
Board's Student Search colleges and universities.
possess a skill not shared by moat adulll.
Our children have learned aeveral rundred worda, songs,
Service which helps colleges
etc. via linger spelling. They watch the National Theatre of the
Deaf on vledotape and are proud that they can "sign" along
with the performers. Tbey eKcltedly report when they see
, Patricia Lee Roush, someone signing at a store. And, of course, they do mt ''make
daughter ol Thomas and fun" when they understand. A few have deaf relatives or
Rhonda Roush . Middleport, friends with whom they can mw communicate.
A gqod example of how effective theae early-cbUdhood
celebrated her first birthday
programs
are Is demonstrated by the comments of a child
on Sept. 4.
discussing
someone with an eye pstch. She exclaimed, "Oh, I
A Winnie·tbe·Pooh cake
know,
he's
hard-d.aeelng."
.
made by Marty Ferguson
The
Meeting
Street
School
in
Rhode
Island
lw
a
funded
was served with ice cream.
program
lor
orientation
to
the
handicapped
lor
their
Attending were Patricia's
kindergarten
to
fourth-grade
classes.
It
includes
simulation
of
maternal grandparents, Tom
problems,
meeting
with
handicapped
adultl,
etc.
Children
who
and
Dorothy
Roush; ·
maternal
grandparents. learn compassion early won't tease or stare or WlConaclously
Bonnie Whittington, and burt others later ·on.
One . of our problems Is to obtain the uae of prOJl"r
Delmar and Darlene Hawley,
tef111inology
in the media. The description of "deal mute" or
Chuck Pullins. Charles
"deaf
and
dumb"
still crops up. This deoolel retardation, as
Whittington, J6an Snyder.
"dumb"
to
many
doesn't
mean silent, bul "stupid." Moreover,
Rhoda and ' Misti Stewart,
Jl"Ople
usuaUy
aren't mute. Somelimes they chooee
these
deaf
Darla, Brenda and Rick
not to speak in public becauae their voices ere "different."
Hawley, Georgie -and Toni They've never heard sound&amp;, so they can't copy, but can only
Turner, Debbie and Jennifer
Fink, Connie, Jr. and Donna follow their teacher's instrucllOIIs. When llaleners show shock,
Manley, Judy and Cathy they tum silent. By no means are they dumb. Thanks for
Laudermilt, Karla and letting me use my soapbox, II getl to be a habit. - CAROL
Sherry Kapp, Jeannie Roush, FERREIR
Bobby, Sherry, Willie, Sara,
and
Bob Johnson, Stacy and
POINT ROCK - Laural
KeUie
Tyree, Jeanette Smith,
Grange 1030 held an OJl"n
Sharon
and Dorothy Older,
meeting recently to honer
Ricky
Older
and Jimmy
their older members.
Older.
Albert Bolen received a
Sending gifts were Marge
certificate for 50 years of
and
James Stewart, MOdred
continuous membership and
DeWeese,
Jane Gilkey, Freda
A Halloween party to be with prizes going to Mrs.
seals for 55, 60 and 65 years of
Laudermilt,
Betty Blande, ·held at Seddons on the Grand Gilmore, Mrs. Browning and
membership were presented
to Mrs. Maud Holcomb. The Carolyn Lisa and Teresa Central MaD Willi planned Mrs. Flo Strickland. Next
regular and substituting Stewart, Joyce, Terri and · during a meeting of the Sew- meeting wUI be held at the ·
Rite Sewing Club held • home of Mrs. Shirley Baity. A
officers contributed to the Todd Grover.
recently at the home of Mrs. family picnic wlli be held in
special
presentation
Lenora McKnight.
October.
·
ceremony. Attending were 29
The dinner wUI be held on
Mrs. McKnight served a
members and guests who
Oct. 25 at 7:30p.m. Mrs. Ann dessert course to those
enjoyed homemade lee
POMEROY - Mr. and Browning had the treasurer's named and Mrs. Lucy White,
cream and cake at the close
Mrs. Dan A. Cotterill of Route report and Mrs. Evelyn Mrs. Barbara MuUen, Mrs.
of the meeting.
3, Pomeroy. are announcing GUmore gave the aeeretary's Betty Wehrung and Mrs.
the birth of their first cblld, a report . Games were played Martha Hoffman.
RETIJRN
MASON, W. Va. - Bill daughter. Cynthia Ann, bom
Elias and David Varian, on Sept. 16, at the Holzer
Mason, W. Va.,haveretumed Medical Center, Galllpolla.
Maternal grandparents are
from a trtpto Washington, D.
Mr.
and Mrs. James F. Will,
C., Maryland and Virginia . In
ByMr~.HerbertRolllh
Mr. and Mrs. Don Bell
Route
3, Pomeroy. and the
Washlngtorl they visited
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ronnie
Ables,'
spent
two weeks vacation ·at
many polnta of interest in· paternal grandpsrents are Vicki Ables, Paul Ables, Atlantic Beach, North
eluding the Jefferson Mr. and Mrs. Don A. · Cot· Butch Ables of Canal Win· Carolina. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Memorial, the National Air terlll, Route 1, Rutland. chester spent the weekend Hart of Columbus were able
and Space Museum, and the Maternal great-grandmother with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables to spend five days with them
Museum of Natural History Is Mrs. Marion Howell, and assisted their parents In there.
of the Smithsonian In· Columbus; and the paternal moving.
Mr , and Mrs. Don Riffle
stitution . The two also SJl"nt great-grandparents are Mrs.
Mr , and Mrs. Arnold Hupp, and children of Wheelersburg
Oleva
Cotterill,
Middleport,
time in Ocean City, Md., and
and Mr. and Mrs. Noah Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp attended the wedding of Vicki
at Virginia Beach.
Birchfield, Dade City, Fla. have moved from the fonner Roush, daughter of Mr. and
Dan Hartinger !ann to their Mrs. Lester Roush and Greg
at Portland.
Cundiff, son ol Bud Cundiff of
fann
MEIGS CO. SALON
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Rocky
Hupp
·
Syracuse.
Mlsay Riffle was
Partners of the Meigs
COUCH
ELLEN
(newlyweds)
have
returned
bride~~~~ald.
Others attending
County Salon, Eight and
POMEROY
Mrs.
Ellen
from
their
honeymoon
In
the
wedding
Sunday
were Mr.
rorty. planning to attend the
acbool of Instruction to be Couch attended a meeting of Tennessee and are at home to and Mrs. Russell Roush,
held in Coiumbua Sept. 30 are the Missionary Society of the their friend&amp; In the Belt Edward and Cindy, Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mrs.
asked to call either Mrs. Pomeroy First Baptist residence at Portland.
Mr. and Mrs. James Edna Roush, Mrs. Gladys
Pearl Knapp, 99U1:M or Mrs. Church Thursday night. Her
Veda Davis, 992-2913, about name was unintentionally (Wimpy) Hunt and lamUy Shield&amp;, Mr. and Mrs. Lester
reservations. Fees mUll be omitted from a listing of enjoyed a weekend vacation Roush, Johnnie and Mike,
at Sea World between Akron Mr. and Mrs. Gary Roush and
sent with the reservations. those attending.
and Cleveland and other children, Mrs. Iva Orr.
points
of Interest.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Durst
by Roger Bollen
FUNNY BUSINESS
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Morrl.a and children of Springfield
and famUy of Bowling Green visited his mother, Mrs.
spent the weekend with Mrs. Ralpb Dul'llt Saturday.
THIS IS SEW~
Anna Wheeler. Erin, Jason
Mlu Vicki Ables, Paul
and Rachel remained for a Ablel of Canal Winchester
. week' a visit with . their spent the weekend with Mr.
grandmother, Mra. Wheeler. and Mrs. Jack Ables.
IT1L.L
A cookout W88 enjoyed at · Local patients at Veterans
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Memorial Hoapllal are Mrs.
Ronald Ruuell Sunday Mae Durst, Mrs. Erma
evening in honor ol Dorsa Wilson, Dorsa Parsons,
who
waa Lowell McNickles, Darla
Parsons,
celebrating hlo birthday. White and Ott Booton.
Attending wore Mr. and Mrs.
Raasell Roush, Cindy and Ed,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis,
Mr. and Mrs. baac Lewis, WALTERS Qurrs
Mr. and Mn. Dorsa Pa..-s,
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Mandy and Michael Ru.aeU. David McLean Walters,
Davd Roush wu Wllble to · Prelldellt Carter'• personal
attend
UJd - t a gift.
envoy to the Vatican,
i
Mr. and Mn: Bruce Hart ol reallned for Jl"raonal
~ Columbus were overnlsht reaaon1,
the
State
~
8111111
of
Mr
.....
Mrs.
Don
Department
aald
Saturday.
I BeUSaturday.
A
Deplrtment
Mr. and Mn. David Sayre spokeaptnat said Walters,
i!plllt five daya vacation In 11, a naUve ol QeYIILmd,
. Qlicqo, m. and allo vlalted Nllgned Alii!. 18, but could
Gecqe Sayre.
provide no other detaill u to
Mrs. Robert Hart, Mrs. what led to his resignatil!ft.
Linda JeweU of Letart, W.
A While H - press office
Va. vlalted their mother apoknman aald M suc~r
Tuesday,
to Walters had ~n named.

Has birthday

Apple Grove News Notes

~/WHAT TIME DID

lEY SAY

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The Daily Sentinel, Court St., Pomeroy, 0. 45769
NAME •••••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••.•• •••••••••••••••••••••
AOORESS... •• ••••• ••• •• •• •• ••.••• •.••. •• •••• •••••••••••••••
C:l11t ..•.............•....•.......•..•..••.•••.....•••......•.

0

• •

"lheVISED

~ ~£~£

.Sl-ATE. ••••

PSATINMSQT
tests ·to be
administered here

Announce birth·

THE DAILY SENTINEL
and
SUNDAY TIMES-SENTINEL

The pledge and the Lord's
Prayer OJl"ned the meeting
conducted by Chris Shain.
Rut~
Shain read the
secretary's report, and
Beulah Autherson gave the
treasurer's report . Kay
Roberts won the door prize
and the birthday of Emma
Lyons was observed. Mrs.
Lyons, assisted by Gene
Lyons, served refreslnnents
to those named and Maxine
Rose, Mae Cleland, Jean
Johnson, Wanda Lyons, Mary
Slater, Bev Cummins, Debbie
Lyons, Kay Roberts, Aggie·
Boggess and Oretba Pickens.

110 attended ninth annual Cleland
Helen Help ·:
family reunion at Forest Acres Park

:::::::::::;!;!:!:!;!;!;!;!:!:!:.:;::!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;!;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:::::::

Sew-Rite Sewing. Club
pla~s Halloween party

10

2720.

..,

Laurel Grange
has meeting

rour 11111ra wooa ch • •n at110 reaturl!! ug ·proot
se&lt;111 ano a r e on ant,qued briUS tlaU Clisters Th.,

r--~:lfOOMPTOti,-o:o~--1I

Racine Auxili4ry Firemen pi/Jn
fund raising projects recently
RACINE - Fund raising
projects were planned during
a meeting of the Racine
Firemen's Auxiliary held at
the firehouse recently.
Meeting with the auxiliary

clothes from faDing down ir
the closet when we weu
puUing our camper but have
found that If the hangers are
put on the rod facing toward
me they wUI not faD. - MRS. ,

and A.M. 6:30 p.m. at the
FATHER~N BANQUET
OF Middleport Lodge 363, F.
and A. M. 6:30 o.m. at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
Tickets, $2.75 to be purchased
from a member. No tickets
will be for sale at the _door .
TUESDAY
GROUP 2,
United
Presbyterian Church, Mid·
illeport, 7:30 Tuesd&gt;ty at the
home of Mrs. William Morris
with Mrs. David Cwrunings
SINI}SPffiATION
as co--hostess. Mrs. Rich Karr
The Meigs County Holiness
will be the devotiomilleader.
Ministerial Association will
SINGSPIRATION; Meigs
hold a klck·off rally,
Co. Holiness Ministerial
singspiratlon. Tuesday, Sept.
Association, at Laure! Cliff
26 at 7:30p.m. at the Laurel
Free Methodist Church, 7:30.
Cliff Free Methodist Church.
The public is invited to at·
AMERICAN LEGION
tend.
AUXILIARY, Racine Post
602,7 :30 Tuesday night at the
WEDNESDAY
haD. Dues are payable now
POMEROY
MID·
and may be sent to Julia DLEPORT Lions Club QUICK FIGtrr
COLUMBUS (UP!) Wednesday noon at the Meig;
Bridegroom
Walter L.
.
Inn. Visitors Day to be ol&gt;
Donald
Jr.,
24,
faces
charges
I
OPTOMEl
KIST
served andall Uons urged t&lt;
of disorderly conduct, assault
OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to 5 !CLOSE
attend.
AMERICAN LEGION on a police officer and 1 AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT
AUXILIARY , Feeney· resisting arrest stemming
Bennett Post 128,6:30 potluck from a domestic disturbance
supper followed by 7:30 a few hours alter his
meeting. Beverly Hoffman Saturday mar.riage.
Pollee were sent to InvestiSchool Guidance"; Dr. and Shari Mitch, Buckeye
gate
a domestic dispute
Girl
State
delegates
,
to
give
James Rodgers , school
Saturday
night. One officer
their
reports.
Girls
and
their
psycholoist , "Strokes for
said when they arrived, a
Uttle Folks"; Dan Morris, mothers invited to attend .
AMERICAN
LEGION, woman ran out of the house·
Meigs Local School District,
"First Aid lor Kids", arid Dr. Feeney-Bennett Post 128, 6:30 yeUing, "I'm going to have
WHY NOT SEND AlONG
Nan Mykel of the Mental potluck, followed by 7:30 you arrested.''
The
officer
said
she
bad
a
Health Center, "Parents are meeting.
O.K., Too."
WILDWOOD GARDEN swoUen lip and said "be" hit
The Rev . James Broome CLUB, 7:30 Wednesday at the her.
Pollee said witnesaes told
will be giving the devotions home of Mrs. Ada Holter,
them
the Walter and Diane,
and the
refreshments with a plant exchange.
21,
were
celebrating their
following the meeting wiD be
only
a few hours
marriage
served by the executive
before.
committee.
FOR ONLY
Mrs. Clara Roush of Akron
Mrs.
Hazel
Shuck
of
Miami,
is visiting her sister. Miss
Florida spent a week with
Vera Beegle.
Mr. and Mrs. Elza Birch.

'Let 's Talk Kids ' topic
of Middleport PTA meet
IDDLEPORT - A pan·
el
discussion
entitled
"Let 's Talk Kids" wiD be
featured at the 7:30 monday
night meeting of the Mid·
dleport PTA.
Robert Morris, principal,
will narrate the panel of the
Rev . George Glaze, pastor of
the Middleport Church of
Chri st who will talk on
"Church. School and Kids" ;
Tim Flesher, Meigs High
guidance coWISelor. whose
theme will be "Student and

POU.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY- A Gennan
friend told me tilllt llhe and
her family never used
parrafin when making jam.
Instead they always put
about one-eighth Inch of
liquor (scotch, bourbon ,
brandy) on top of the fUled
jar and then pill the cover on
It as soon as the jam or jelly
had cooled. I tried this last
summer and round it to be
successful. I used the last jar
that was so treated 10 months
after it was made. My
question is - have you ever
heard of this method and if so
how long can one safely store
these liquor-sealed jars ..
While I always buy and use
·regular caMlng jars I would
prefer using tile empty 011es
from commercial products some are quite pretty and
there's certainly less expense
involved. What about using
the
oth«
jars?
FLORENCE
DEAR FLORENCE- I was
fascinated by your Pointer
but am sorry to say I found no
one who had ever heard of
this before. The Department
of Agriculture Extension
Service representative I
talked with was not able to
learn anything about it
either. I was told that they
now suggest a five-minute
processing for jams and
jellies made in hot, humid
cllmates. Those living in
different climates might
check with their own Ex·
tension Service to see if It is
necessary where they live.
Glass jars that mayan·
nalse, Jl"anut butter, etc.
come in are not made for
home canning. They are
called "one trip" jars. '
Sorry not
to have
discovered more about the
liquor topping. How does it
affect the taste of the jams
and jellies . . Do you pour it
off before · using them . . POJ:.LY
DEAR POLLY - Do teD
Ruby that I have a ~by-12
foot braided rug in my dining
room which bas required
cleaning. I wash It with a
commercial rug shampoo always wash with the braids,
never acrosS them - and it
comes out beautiluUy. If it Is
very soiled I let. it. dry and
tllen repeat the cleaning In a
few days. Try this and I think
you will be proud of the rug. GOLDIE
DEAR POLLY - I think I
have a good idea to pass on to
our camping friends. I have
1lwl!ys bad trouble keeping

.

___ ____ _

5-'lbe DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport-r ••11eroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 25, 1978

Electa Circle met,

l'he Rev. AI Welsh ·
to minister Word

~

I ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

ZIP CODE •••••••

il •• I

CHECK.:........... 0 MONEY ORDER ............ .

I I AMT•.••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
- .
··•···•·•···•

OFFER
EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER
30,
1978

SORRY,

•

NO

REFUNDS

,

Be- ON ?

I

•

The ninth aMual Cleland
reunion was held at Forest
Acres Park with no Jl"rllons
attending.
Gifts were presented to
Floyd Cleland, the oldest;
Jimmy Tolson, the yoUJ~gest,
and Ernest Dawson, the one
who traveled the farthest.
A basket dinner was served
at noon with 'the Rev. Clyde
Farrell giving the biessfng.
Atte!)dlng w·ere nances
Cotterial, Worthington; Mr.
and Mrs. Hurley Rife and
son, Wellston; John Goheen,
Wellston; Mr. and Mrs.
Hurley W. Rife and family.
Wellston; Helen Riggs,
Hurley Hutton, Mr. and Mro.

Floyd Cleland, Mr. and Mrs.
Merle Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce Davis and sons, Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Cleland and
family, aU of Rutland.
Debbie and Pamela Davis,
Michael Grant, Minersville;
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Dawson,
Carland; Mr. andMrs. Junior
Cleland, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Bohner and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Wendell Cleland,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
David Gardner and Scott, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lambert
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
Clyde Hampton and son,
Langsville; Mr. and Mrs.
Melvin Cleland and family.

New Knoxville; Nida Me· Pomeroy ; Mr.' and Mrs.
Clure and grandchildren, Delbert Redman, Mr. and
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mrs. Louis Parsons, and Mr.
Paulsen and daughters, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Redman,
and Mrs. Charles Friley. Dunbar, W. Va.; Richard
Albany; Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hampton and son, Ewlngton;
Shuler and son, Cheshire; Mr. and Mrs. Michael ParMr. and Mrs. Charles Goheen sons, Hurricane, W. Va.; Mr.
and family, Coalton; Mr. and and Mrs,. Gary Layne and
Mrs. Darrell Wheeler and · daughters, Hurricane, W.
son, ldr. and Mrs. Jerry Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Harten
Tolson and
daughter, Wheeler, Dexter; Mr. and
Stewart ; the Rev. Clyde Mrs. Richard Hatfield and
Ferrell and Danny, Tommy son, Diana Wheeler , Dexter;
Meade, Bidwell; Mr. and Mr . and Mrs. Hurshel
Mrs. Paul Taylor, Barberton; Wheeler, Guysville; Mr. and
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beckie Mrs. Ron Watkins and Wes,
and son, Doylestown; Mr. Nitro, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs . Harold O_xley, James Kirk and family,
Charleston, W. Va.

Edna Roush honored on 92nd birthday
A party was held at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hill in Racine Tuesday
evening in honor of Mrs.
Edna Roush, who was
celebrating her 92nd birth·
day.
Mrs. Roush was presented
a cake decorated in white
icing with yellow flowers and
green leaves which said
"Happy Birthday, Mom, 92,':
by Mr. and Mrs. Howard
Roush, and a cake decorated
with white Icing, pink roses,
green leaves with "Happy
Birthday, Grandma," by ~er·
granddaughter,
Roberta .
Lewis.
The East Letart Church

Sending a gift were Mr. and
presented her with a bouquet and Mrs. Pat Hill, son, Jerod
of pink gladiolus. She also of Middleport ; Edward Mrs. Ronald RpsseU.
received many cards, money Roush. Mrs. Roger Manuel,
and several nice gifts.
daughters, Angie and Amy.
Mrs. Roush received a
Others attending were Mrs.
phone call from her daughter, Jim Connolly, Brian and
Mrs. Edith McDade in Troy. Shelly. Michael Russell ,
Attending the party were Mandy. Russell, Mrs. Eddie
Mrs. Gladys Shields, Mr. and Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Garr
Mrs. Herbert Roush, Mr. and Roush, Jeremy and Brandt,
Mrs. Lester Roush, Mr. and Johnnie Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Russell Roush , Mr. and Dana Lewis, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Howard Roush, Mr. and Roger Roush , daughter
Mrs. Greg Cundiff, Mr. and Kimberly Lynn. David
Mrs. BUI Davidson of Mid· Roush.
dleport; Cindy Roush, Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Roberts,
Todd, Chad and Leslie, Vicki
C.:undiff of Syracuse; Jay Hill,
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Hill, Mr.

Garage sale
to be held

Covered dish dinner pkmned
A fellowship covered dish
dinner has been planned for
the congregation of the
Trinity Church, Pomeroy. for
SLATER
Ainn8JI Mark D. Slater, son
of Mr. and Mrs. David A.
Slater of R.D. 3, Pomeroy,
has been selected for
technical training at Shepard
AFB, Tex., in the Air Force
aircraft maintenance field .
The airman recently
completed basic training at
Lackland AFB, Tex.; and
studied the Air Force
mission, organization ·and
customs and received SJl"Clal
Instruction
in
human
relations. Completion of this
training earned ' the in·
dividual credits towards an
associate· in applied science
degree through the Com·
munity College of the Air
Force.
Alnnan Slater is a 1978
graduate of Meigs High
School.
'

next Sunday following the
morning worship service .

Members and guests are
invited to attend.
On Oct. 4 and 5 a rununage
sale will be held by the Happy
Harvesters Class in the
basement of the church .
Recently .the Sunday School
enjoyed a swimming party at
the Syracuse pool an~ then
went to the home of Mr. and
Mrs . Roy Holter for a
hayride. .Roy Mayer is
superintendent of the Sunday
School.

Seroice news

Plans for a garage sale to
he held Oct. 3 and 4 at the
home of Mrs. June Sayre in
Syracuse were made during a
meeting of the United
Methodist Wom•n of the
Minersville church held in the
church social room.
Persons with rwrunage to
contribute are invited to
either take it to the Sayre
home or contact a member
for pickup. Homcoming held
Sunday was also discussed.
The meeting followed a
morning
of
general
housecleaning at the church
in
preparation
for
homecoming . Mrs. Betty
Koch had the program using
an article ''You Shall Be My
Witnesses" with scripture by

LOOK
FOR OUR
FALL
SALE
CIRCULAR

IN THIS

WEEK'S
MAIL

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO.
The Department
Store of auilding
Since 19_
1_5

Mrs. Helen Maag and a
meditation " Developing a
Personal Theology" by Mrs.
Koch. A discussion was held
on the. meditation written by
Leontine Kelly and the group
closed the program with
'' The Lord's Prayer" in
unison.

BAKE SALE
The HillbillJes 4-H Club will
!lpOIIsor a bake sale at the
Rutland Department Store on
Saturday beginning at 9 a. m.
Orders are being taken now
for five pound pails of popcom.

Alfred
Social Notes
Sunday ·School attendsnce
on Sept. 17 was 50. Offering
was $25.25. Worship services
were held at 11 a. m. with an
attendance of 68. Howard
Flanders led the singing and
the choir sang a sJl"CCal
number, "Constantly
Abiding". Rev . and Mrs.
Thomas presented a special
number
also.
The
homecoming message by
Rev. Thomas was "We Are
Forever People". The closing
hymn was "His Truth Is
Marching On."
A dinner served on- long
tables on the church lawn was
enjoyed by au present In·
clildlng several from other
churches who came to spend
the afternoon with ua and
enjoy the special singers
"The United Hannonizers"
88 well 88 others Including'
Rev . and Mrs. Thomas, Rev.
Randy Lavender with his
guitar and testimonies from
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Bentz,
Rev. Cbas. Domlgan . an&lt;!_
lamUy. Many trten&lt;ls a no
neighbors and other churches
represented were Orange,
Cheater, Tuppers Pllins,
Joppa, Athena and several
others. The homecoming II
Alfred Ia the third Sunday in
September each year.
The Orange Cburcb held Its
bmnecoming last sunday with
a good attendance and
program.
Mr, and Mrs. Hobart
Swartz and Nina Roblnaon
and Mary Carr and Tertii
Buckley of this area were
amonc those who attended
the
Oran1e
Church
bomecomlng 1ast Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ruasell
Balnum of Columbus vlalled
with Cbu. and Helen Woode
last Tutlday and Wednesday.

FOLEY
Ainnan Marty R. Foley.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary J.
Foley of Syracuse, has been
selected for technical
training at Sheppard· AFB,·
Tex., in the Air Force civil
engineering structural and
pavements field.
The airman recently
completed basic training at
Lackland AFB , Tex., and
studied the Air Force
mission, organization and
customs and received special
instruction
in
human
relations. Completion of this
training earned the In·
dividual credits towards an
associate in applied science
degree through the Com·
munity College or the Air
Force .
Ainnan Foley is a 1978
graduate of Southern High
' School, Racine.

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door
• Eas~ · V iew Surface Unit

controls
• Broil er-roaster Pan

Now Only

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BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

TUESD~ Y

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SALE
25% Off Purchase,
Just Present Your
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When Ordering.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VAllEY

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�.'
7-'lbe ~~ ~nl_!!lel, Middleport-I' -.nero)', 0 ., Monday, Sept. 25, 1976

I - 'lbe _Dally Sentinel, Mldcl.tPort-Pw!ft!!IJY, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 25, 1978

.l(rllf~~ ~ ~ ' ,-~ .
NO HUNTIN~ or t n,~ poni ng on
my prOJM!'r fy w ithout

perm i s·

s•o n . Judy McGraw .

'

GUN SHOO l:_ Racine Gu n Clu b
hery Sunday 1 pm.' Factory
c hok_e g uns_on ly .

to
b u!&gt;
chi ldr &amp;n to and fr·om C oll io
Chrls Hon Sc h ool , Vi n ton , O hio .
Travel Ne~ limo Rd .. ro Horrisorw i lle, I .C) to Ht . l tofU . 174

OfUVtR

A VAILAB LE

ond 37S into Vi nton . 7.C 2-100ll.
HUNTING FOR dup li cate
bridge partner for Mon . or

Tues .

night

to

play

in

P•rkersburg . 9.. 9-2609 .
- DUE- To- U";,spOrts-;,anl.i ke
manner , there wi!l be no

MENTALLY

RETARDED

adults are- In need of tolfer
can homes . A ulary and
benefits w ill be pa id . Th is Is
an in home lob that w i ll
benefit the life chances of a
mentally retarde-d person .
For more Informa tion write
or c all :
Foster &lt;.:are
680 E . Me in St .
Jackson , OH 456-iO
61,. .385 -7461 (Logan )
or 614,592 ·6608 CAthens l
EQual Opportun it 'tl
Em r
player .
POS I TION OPEN for parts
ass i stan t. Exper i ence
preferred . App l y at Two
Ri\lers Ford , Inc ., Rt . 62 N .,
Pt . Pleasant , WV . 3Q4 -67 S1490.

more hunting on either or my

farms at Minersv ille or
Sumner

withOut

perm I ssion .
Wi lliams.

d ir ect

Freeman

LEGAL NOTICE

Notice is hereby ; lven that
Columbia Gas of Oh io, Inc.
has f l ied an app ll"c atlon
r~ques tl ng
authority to
continue to refuse to supply
new gas service under r ight
of way tap agreem~ts The
Public Utllitln Comm ission
of Ohio finds that a con solidated hear i ng i n this
matter and Case No. 71 -929GA-ASR will be held on
October 17, 1978 at 9:30A .M .,
at the offices of the Com .
m i ssion . 180 East Broad
Street , Columbus , Oh io 43215.
At the hearing, all Interested
partiH will be g i..,en an op portunity to be heard. Fur ther i nforma ti on can be
obtained from the Secretary
of the Comm Ission.
The Public Utilities com IT1ission of Ohio ·
By : Richard L . Smith ,
Secretary

GENERAL LABOR work .
Call 985 -33 73 between 9 a.m .
and J :30 p.m .

Pm for 5ako
HOOF HOLlO W

WAITRESS WANTED . Apply
in
person . Me lg5
Inn ,
Pomero)l . Ohio.

LEGAL NOTICE

H o r s~s .

Huy sell

trod• o r tra in Ne w a nd used
saddle s. f.lut h Ree ves. A lb any .

(014 ) 09!&lt;-37'10.

Notice is hereby gi ven that
Columbia Gas of Ohio , Inc
has filed an applicat ion ~~
Case No . 71 -929-GA-ASR Wirh
the Publlc Utilities Com mission to modify Its ex ist ing
natural gas restr ict ions , as
they 'pply to residential ana
commercial c us.t om•rs. and
as prHcribed by the Orders
of tne Commission dated
February 18, 1976 in Case No.
75-584 -GA-AGC and May 19,
1976 in Case No. 76.67-GA COI . A public hearing in th i s
matter will be held on Oc .
tober 11, 1978, at9 : 30A.M ., at
the offi c es of th e Com .
miss ion. 180 East Broad
Street , Columbu s, Ohio 43215.
At the hear ing, all interes ted
parties will bt" given an op portunity to be heard. Further informat ion can be
obtained fron; the Secretary
of th e Comm ission .
The Publ i ~ Utili t ies c om mission of Ohio
By : R ic hard L . Sm i th ,
Secreta r y
(9 ) 2S , He

(.Jtrpenter
Personals ·
Mrs. Loretta Stansbury,
Reba and Aaron , Charle!lton,
South Carolina, visited her
parents, Mr . and Mrs .
Chester Price , Albany, her
moth e r -in-law , Mrs . Dale
Stansbury and other relatives
in this community durillg a
recent weekend .
Mr. and Mrs. Clair Stansbury
and
family
of
Groveport and Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Stansbury and sons,
Reynoldsburg, spent a
weekend here with their
mother, Mrs. Dale Stansbury
and other relatives .

and Ziba Midkiff ; a reading,
VISITATION HELD
Twenty-seven members of " The First Day " by Avanel
Meigs County Pomona Holllday; some facts on
Grange , representing Star, education. - then and now,
Laurel ,
Harrisonville , Arthur Crabtree; poem, " In
Hemlock and Columbia School Days" , Westin a
Granges, visited Athens Crabtree ; skit, " Health
CoW&gt;ty Pomona Grange at Begins at Home" by Mr. and
Albany on Thursday evening, Mrs. Robert Reed, Ziba
September 14 B!ld presented Midkiff and Helen Quivey ;
the literary program under Farming Notes by Pauline
the direction of the lecturer, Atkins; a selection, "Forty
Mrs. Mendal Jordan.
Years
Ago" , Stanford
Using the theme "Sep- Stockton ; closing with an
tember, School Days and original poem, "Changing
Autumn" numbers presented Seasons" by the lecturer,
included the singing of School Elizabeth Jordan . Mrs .
Days
by
the
group; Jordan announced that the ·
Recollections from My School lecturer for the ensuing two
Days by Mr. and Mrs. ·Earl yeal'5 , Pauline Atkins, would
Starkey, Norman Will, furnish
the
November
Nonna Lee, Pauline Atkins, program at Meigs County
Mr. and Mrs. Waldo Poston Pomona Grange.

A delicious potluck JUpper
was enjoyed by the 7~ grange
members who were In at·
tendance at the joint meeting.

-

.

..

Mrs . Andy Liedel and
Michelle Combs , Hartville,
Ohio ; Edgar Comb~ II,
Monroe Falls, Ohio, villted
with Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Smith. Michelle Combs Is
. entering Ohio University as a
freshman .
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Smith
visited in Point Pleasant, W.
Va ., with Roy Dougherty and
· Mr. and Mrs. Leo Daugherty
on Sunday l!ftemoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Reed Jeffel'5
were weekend guests of her
cousin~, Mr. and Mrs. John
BraMon at South Charleston,
W. Va, and attended a famlly
gathering_,

MAN TO work In reta i l store ,
Moe?ern Supply , 399 w .
Mam , Pomeroy , Ohio .

---- -------

Saturday 's College
Football Resul1s
United Press International

Penn St . 26, SMU 21
Pittsburgh 20, Templ e 12
RP I 15, Plott•burgh 9
hst
Rutgers 27, Bucknell 13
A l ban y 28 S. Connectic ut 12 Seton Ha ll 22, Chane y 7
Am er ican lnt ' llJ, Norwlch 14 Shippensburg 37, Kutztown -17
Am herst 6, Spr ingfield 2
Sl ippery Rock 19, C. Conn . 10
Bates 48, Un ion 32
St . Peter 's 6, J . Cit y St . o
Boston U . 15, New Hampsh i r e Texas A&amp;M 37 , Bo• t"" Coli. 2

Watson captures fifth tournament
Over 92 roW&gt;ds of golf this
year on the PGA Tour,
Watson has a stroke average
of 70.164, and to him, winning
the Vardon Trophy is more
important than anything else.
He won it last year as well,
with a stroke average of
70.320 .
He also won Player of the
Year honors in ·1977 and the
most money , $310,6S3 . With
five victories and $343,429 ,
Watson is the leading
candidate for money and
player honors again .
"But winning the Vardon
Trophy, to me, is more
important than the other

NAPA , Calif. ( I)P1 ) EW!n If Andy Bean and Jack
Nicklaus beat out Tom
W~n this week -in the
hid Series of Golf, it would
.. hard to pass up the
fnckled-faced redhead as the
POA's Player of the Year .
Watson won his fifth
tournament of the year
Iunday when he took the
ti!O,OOO Napa Open by three
'llrokes over Ed Sneed, and
going Into the World Series he
aeemlngly Is the man to l!eat
although Bean and Nicklaus,
who have won three events
, each, will draw their share of
support.
Watson's 72-hole score over
Silverado's two courses was
Ill-under-par 270 and It helped
him take over the Vardon
Trophy lead from Lee
Trevino.

awards," Watson said. "Of
course, if you win the Vardon
you are also going to win a lot
of money . Still, I think when
my career is over people will
remember me more for the

Vardon Tr ophy than the
money.
Watson shot 66 on Saturday
to lay two shots off the lead
and his 67 on Sunday, which
included an eagle, five
birdies and tw o bogeys ,
closed out the competition .
Sneed made a run at
Watson early in the round,
then fell back. He did rally to
birdie the last three holes and
grab second place at If&gt;.
under-par 273 .
Barry Jaeckel, who' also
made a run, WOUild up third
at 275 while Orville Moody , D.
A. Weibring, Bob Gilder and
Bob Zender tied at 276 . Thirdround leader Jay Hass
ballooned to a 75 and finished
in a tie at 277 with Lou
Graham , Danny Edwards
and Bruce Lietzke .
Watson credited his long

iron play and his putting for
the victory here . He· said he
will need to play !Ill weD in the
5
World Series to have a
B'water r,t_ 14, Fr am ingha m
chance .
Sf . 12
" I came back after three Coast Guard 21 , Worcest er
Tech 13
weeks off and I played like a
Columbia
21. Harv ard 19
man who had a good rest ,"
Cornell U , Princeton 14
Watson said. " I'm especially
Curry 39, W. Connectic ut 20
pleased with the way I hit my
Dart mouth 31 , Penn 21
Fordha m 14, Rochester 3
long irons and the way I
Hofstra 21. Pace 8
putted."
Indiana I Pa . l 21. We s t.Because the winner 's prize
minster 21
in the World Series is
Itha ca 27, Cort land 13
Juniata 21, Albright 14
$100,000, Bean or Nicklaus
could pass Watson on the · leh igh 38 , Colgate 7
Manhattan Coil. 26, Siena 1•
money list if he fails to place
Ma ssa chusett s 40, Ma ine 6
second or third . One event
Mass . Maritime 27 , Plymo uth
St . 19
remains on the tour - the
Miller
sv i lle 22, Edin boro 20
Pensacola Open but
Muhlenber g
56,
J oh n s
Watson said he ' would not
Hopk in s 20
play
in
the
Florida
Nav y 30, Connectic ut o
N. Y. Tech 23, Keane Coli. 3
tournament even if it meant
Nichol s 17 , Boston St. 14
the money title.

Trenton St . 48,
ter son 0

Wm . .Pat -

'

Wash . &amp; Jell . 34, Case Wsn .
Res. o
Willia m &amp; Mar y 21. Villanova
17
Yale 21 , Brown 0

South
Alabama A&amp;M 19, Alba ny St .
15
.
Aiabama St. 34, Miles 3
Atcorn St . 24, Cent . Mich . 16
Appalachian St . 2•. Rich mond 19
Auburn 18, Virginia Tech 7

aeth .-Cookman 16, N. C. A&amp; T
li
Centre 20 , Washington 8. lee

Flor ida A&amp;M 37. Delawa re
St . o
Florida St . 31, Miami 21

W in .-Sa lem St . ~3. Va . Un ion i)

7

Georgia 12, Clemson 0
Georgia Tech 27, Tulane 17
Guilford 26, Em ory &amp; Henry

Midwe•t
Akron 28, Wayne Sf. 0
Alma u , Valparai so 13

18
Hampton lnst. 19, Johnson
Sm ith 6

19

Jack son St . 27, M iss . Valley

16
Kentucky 25 , Baylor 21
Kentucky St. 14, Knox vill e 7

Maryland 21. North Carol ina
20
Miss . Coil. 24, Li vl n9st0f1 16
Miss . St. 44, Memphts St . 14
Newber r y 21 , Catawba 8

N. Carol. St . 29, W. Virg inia
15
N. Aalabama 7, SE Louisiana
7
NE Louisiana 27, N . Ill i nois 10
Northwest ern St . 10, Me ·

Neese 51. 7
Presbyterian

14,

Lenoir

Rhyne 7
Savannah St. 26. Morehouse 0
Shepherd 19, W. Liberty 7
6
Chattanooga 77, Marshall 23
So . Cal . 24, Alabama 14
The Citade l 14, Va . Military 3 · Tennessee lJ, Oreg on St . 13
Cl ar~ e 21, Fisk 6
Troy St. 16, Nicholls Sf . 6
Da vidson 31, Woflord 27
Vanderbilt 17, Furman 10
Duke 16, South Carolina 12 Wsn. Carolina 17 , Elon 7.
E. Kentucky 49. E . Tennessee W. Kent ucky 17, Austin Pea y
Northeastern 28, C. W. Post 8 6
13

.,

Anderson ( Ind .} 38, Defiance
Ark .· Pi ne Bluff 27, Lin co ln 0 . l
Augsburg 28, Carleton 7

Baker 56 . Concord ia ( Neb.l

20

.

Ba ld. Wallace 31. Capital 6 '
Ball St. 20. Toledo 0
Beloit 31. Marana tha 7
Bened ict ine· 27, Wm . Jewell

t7

~tha ny 13, Tabor 0
Bethel 51 , Maca leste r 7

1

Bowl. Green 49, Grand Val ley
3
Buena Vista 21 , Si mpson 0

C. Meth . 37, Cu i. -Sfockton 71

Chadron St. 10, Kear ney St. 10

Coe 30, Graceland 16

Dubuque 28. Willia m Penn 10
E . Mich igan 27, Indiana St . 8
Eau Claire J5, River Falls 27 ,
Emporia St . 24, C. M issour i 23
Eureka Co li . 9, Oli vet Naz . 0
Evangel 32, fWJ . West ern 20
Ferri s St . 17. Sag inaw Valley
17
F indlay 14, Wilmington 10
~
Ft . Hays St. 36, NW M issour i

22

RISING STAR Ke n nels . Boarding

and grooming. a ll b r £&gt;ed~ .
Ch£&gt;sh ire . .307-079:2 or Jo. / -0106 .
LOVABlE WHIH snow dr il t great
PYRI::NH S Puppies. Ph one
1-61 4 -667-383ij .

BlACK "LABRADOR re tr iever pup pies. AK C reg i!;tered . Champion blo o dline . Whe l ped
tl-4 -78 . Phone 014 -607-J039.
e~&lt;~e n i ng s or weekends .
FO~

SAU:: l:torder collie puppies.
Phone 991-5106.

FEMALE AKC registered
Boston Terrier . 16 we-eks old.
Has be.n spayed . 992 -5621 or
992-2205.
TWO IRISH Setter puppies .
:10&lt;-773-5538.

A.,.,~,. f&lt;~G ISH:R~O Siberian Husky .
9 months o ld. t:venings . cell

q,q.n n .

REGI STfHED Beagles. 8
week s old . shot s and wormed
614 ·36 7-0 29 :2 orb 14-367 -0347.

AI&lt;(

MALE
ONE
year
old
Dachshund, house broken ,
black and brown , long_
haire~ . '92 -5098 after 5 p .m .

COUN THY MOBILE Home Pork
Jl oute 33 , north ol Pomeroy :
Large lots . Coll992-7479.

3 AND 4 flM . furn ished an d unfu rn i shed
o pt s,
Ph one
.. 992-5434.

n- YOU

TASTEE BOLOGNA •••••••••••••••••••••~·••

ho ve 0 sel I./ ICe to o ff er
wa n! IO buy Or sell some th.r1g .
oe look mg for wo do. . . . 0 ;
wh at eve • . . you II get re sul Ts
l aste r with o 3Pntinel Wont Ad
C oi 1 992 - L I ~O .
.

VAUGHAN

MINI
FLEA
Market .
Glass" and
· Depress ion
many , man ")I collectables ,
size 7 ieans and dress
pants , rugs , curtains and
lots of odds and ends . At
Max Orenners residence on
Union Terntce off of Un ion
A\lenue on Sept . 22 , 23, and
24.

r ·ina I
&amp; PEARL STREETS

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SALE , FIR ST time. Friday
and Saturday . Wlndoww,
frames , great for summer
cottage .
Baby
Items ,
scales , sw ing , dresses and
sleepers . Clothes , washtubs
and more . BOB East. abOve
Kroger ' s.
Y'Afll) !:t AL ~

•

T!O ':&gt; ycomore St .,

FLEA
Market.
Depression
olass
and
many , many collectab les ,
size 1 jeans and dress
pants, r ugs, curtains and
lots of odas and ends . At
Ma x Orenner ' s residence
on Union Terrace off of
Union Avenue on Sept . 22,
23 and 24.

. f/9 '} . 2:JtJ 2

SHARE APT . l i..,ino tOr
elder l y only in Pomeroy :
available i n November ,
everyThing furnished ex cept mea ication . Sl75 per
month covers el l. Write
Anne Ha ines , 951 Lock bourne Rd .• Columbus . OH
-i3 206 . Call collect 1-253 5481 .

Two- li1itiRooM""-;pl.- sum .
In k itchen , close to to wn
After 7 p .m . Call 992-3592 :

------:--- -- ---

HEINZ

AuTO-

Gi:NI::RAL lABOR wrok . Coil
992-3373 bet ween 9 am to :J:JO
pm .

POSIT I ON AVAILABLE

PROGRAM DIRECTOR

The Gallla -Melgs Communlfy
Action Agency is accepting
applications for the posi tion
of energy program -home
repair program director .
Respons l bilitfes Include
grant managem•nt in clud ing all aspects of crew
coordination , purchasing ,
ln..,entory, quality control ,
and vehicles . Other duties
will Include coord ihat ion of
efforts wh•n necessary
with FmHA. , SubmiSSIOn Of
\ ,
reports on a timely basis ,
' ' and
attendance at meetings
'
or training sessions as
necess1ry . The posit ion
''
to the executive
' reports
director .
i
Qualificat ions for the
position lncluae a degr•e In
sociology ,
psycho •ogy ,
'
business, or re l ated field :
•
prior
exper i enc•
wl1h
f~er·al progr•ms and -or
social service agencies wlfl
be 1n anet . Salary ranoe

•
•

.

'' '

''
'
•'
•••
'

''•

!•
I

~'

'.
~

•

$11 ,300 to $12 ,500 . Ap -

plications and -or a~d i tlonal
Information Is available
from the agency or the lob
serv ice office In Gallipol is.
Applicat i ons
will
be
received until Sept . -21, 1978 .
Resumes should be mailed
to Executive Director.
Gallla -Meigs C.A.A. , Box
272, Cheshire . Ohio 45620.
Phone 367 -7341 or H2-7000 .

FRESH LEAN

CUBE

ST~EAK
LB. _
$169

JIF

Lb.
Can

PEAIUT BUTTER
KRAFT

WHIP

AQUARIUS !Jon. 21J.Feb. 19)
Your decisions today are well
thought ou t and will prove
beneficiaL However, an associ·

c

Our food is tasty.Vou get plenty of it. And our prices make
sense these days.We know how you feel about the high cost
of living. We feel the same way. So any time we can give
you something extra for yourmoney, we're happybecause you're happy.

Devils Food,

PISCES (Feb. 21J.Mortll 2D) You
will be able to accomplish a
great deal and have quite a
rewarding day , but know when
10 QUit .
ARIES (March 21·April 19) Con·
ditions are so ripe lor you to
have a good lime with o thers
today that you have a slight

t503 E..tern Avenue, Gallipolis

r---------------------------------~

Shef and Small French
.
Fries

TAURUS (April 211-Moy 20) An
may be an annoy-

ance to you today, but If you
can laugh it off he or she will
day .
GEMINI (Moy 21..June 21) Com·
municatlon channels are wide

open today . but I doubt If you 'll
use them for anything other

than social purposes . This
woutd be self-gratifying , but
unproductive.

CANCER (June 21..July 22)
There Is plenty of material
opportunity about you today,
but you seem to be In a hurry to

get rid of anything you acquire .
Ws doubtful much will stay In
your pocket.
LEO (July 23-AUII. 22) Even
though your notices will be
unselfish, you're likely to fare
better personally than the peo-ple you may be trying to do
things for today .
YIROO
ZS..S.pt. 22) Be-

jA...

~

S(lx

...,

~

~

~---------------------------------,

.!

.
.

L. ,,.•••,.,-- ...._

,.....

l~MILK········ ..···· gal. '19•
OOfNCRl)IWlO~ lORDEN

1
1
.J

Bordtn Small ar Large Curd

I

.

IFRIIZER VALUES I

Cheeseburger, Small French
ries and 16 oz. Drink

1

-~

Box

ZESTA CRACKERS

FACIAL TISSUE

VALLEY. BELL

Only$1.00 .
.

I LEE IEX

$379

~~~z.

~&lt;;0

lil..•"l"i~J'";;t...1'"]'":"•

StORES • CARDINAl fOOO STORES ..,..

12-oz.
Pkg.

5

' Ot MUIHfiiOOM · 01.
IIIOWN. ONION. CHICKEN
12

t/30/11
1 llo,•l llllue StOt"n

HEIIZ GRAVIES ........ .... ....... ,.,

00-,0·01

GOLDEN GRAIN

MAC. &amp; CHEESE
"

2 c-

11·01 .

NAIIICD CHEESE NIPS Oft

5C

nD I ITS .................' :~"." 6 ,

UQlJID .:~~·- s I It
ILEACH .......0.r.:" 591

atiiDIIVI

AWAKE ................... .. 2

~ 01.217100

V StORES

um~~-wtm-pan

coupon nquina Mparate purchase .
Preaent coupona when ordering.

OIIIIDAIIIIa . ., ClltNKLI CUT

FIEICH F.ES ......... 2 :!i

I

CO~DNET

BATHROOM TISSUE
'
1]9
....•.

cause things come . your way

1-Ct.

1oday without too much effort,
l ou might be challenged on
how you acquired your goods.
Don't enter Into 1 diopute.

$

~

..IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII..IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII~~-~STDRES
I

'

"

,,

~

~

89(~

IIDIEY BEAlS ~: 79·

ICE MILK

\7.:

TE

.. ,

COnAGE CHEESE .................~:~':,; 99'

$1.fMl~

coupon requirea Ml)llrale purchaM .
Present coupona when ordering.
•411f-"""lr.....- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -

'1

CHIP I .DIP .............................. 1:~,:~ 6

r----------------------- ----------~

and Small French
Fries

Willie

.JOAN Of AIIIC

45

&lt;;"'? .•,'

·.- ...... ~--- -- -- ---------·--u

W~ -B._HOMO MILK gal.

..

Each coupon requires separate purchate.
Present coupons when ordering.

16 oz.
LOAVES

IUnERBEAIS

I DAIRY VALUES I

1

:::;
~

CARDINAl \IS"

lEA II DE

Hamburger and Salad

0

BREAD

3

COFFEE

OnJy$1.00 I

tendency to overindulge . Avoid

have little effect on your pro-ductivity and won 't spoil your

32, oL J a r ' '
Umit one with
$10.00 purchase

MAXWELL HOUSE
INSTANT

Stop in and try these good-tasting specials!

extremes .

associate

1•,..,,

119-oz.
Yell~w,

NABISCO

ate might not be able to see the
advantages and co uld give you
a hard time.

eoupo.; , ...-

8

16-oz .

CARDINAL

DUNCAN HINES

good

lhi ngs rolling In today . Getting

belong to be Included . Keep

on• """"- .,...._

'
...... t /30/ 18
0... .. Cerdinal Jlof •l 111111• Storel

MIRACLE

congenial and friendly . Be extremely careful not to come on
loa strong.

freeloaders out of the act.

--

00' 17 -C&amp;

valuable ally today , If you ' re

commercial situations , but not
if you allow those who don't

JijellliJ"el:l
--

POTAto ~auos !
,{:!¢ ',,.
9(~"'.

Oft•

'f ou 'll make a favorable impressio n and gain the support of a

the

• CARDINA LFOOO ST ORE S

BETTY CROCKER

L..m•t

long , self-addressed, stamped
envelope 10 Astro--Graph , P.O.
Box 489, Radio City Slation ,
N.Y. 10019. Be sure to specify
birth sign .
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-No•. ZZ)

keep

'449

;

Mall 50 cents for each and a

will

93~

CREAMY or CRUNCHY

copy of Astro--Graph letter.

nature

Average 135 lb.

COFFEE

ln ~eStments . Someone might
wrongfully try to convince you
otherwise Find out more about
yourself by sending for your

folly .
CAPRICORN (Dec . ZZ..Jon. 19)
You should be lucky Ieday in

WAN H O TO do odd 1ob:s pori
ti me. 985-4353 .

694

FRONT QUARTERS
BEEF

~N::.;EH,;,iiil~OR.,.U~P~PE~R~TE~N~
- S.....
9'

thiS c;:om ing year with new and
int,restlng people .who come
into your life .
LIBRA (S.pl. i3-0cl. Z3) You

IMM!::: DI A T!::: OPE NING S for HN
and LPN on oil shif fs _CCU 0 8
medica l and surg ical Com:
pe l1l0ve sol aries , ex ce llent fr inge benel 1ts . shift diffe r enl•a l.
Co nt ac t Per !.onn e l Dep t .
Ho he r
Medi cal
Cen ter
Gallipol is . Ohio. 61-i -44 6-5105 ·

-

LIMIT 2

S.p1o01ber 26, 1171
Valuable conlacts will be made

uptight about a situation over
whic h you have no control is

------ --

1978

Cut, Wrapped,frozen

O:Jnl/\]})dlm\7

o

-

POTATOES
10 LB. BAGS

HIND QUARTERS 135 LB. average
BEEF Cut, wrapped, frozen. '1 19

6 PAK 16 OZ. BTLS.

SOM!:::ONi: TO do housew ork
woman or o girl 991-370A .

TIMBER CUTT EH . good wages and
benefit s w ith compan,- crew.
( oniact John Ows1ony C·o
Pomer oy Fare !. t Products .
Pomeroy . Ohio . 991-5965.

CHOICE

U. S. NO. 1

\fum

SAGITTARIUS (No1. 23·Dec.
211 Maintaining a philsophical

A MIDDLE AGED Chr. 5. tion lady or
couple to stay wi th o middle oged lady on o 1-i acr e for m . 2
miles ouh 1de the Pt Pleasant,
WV
c i ty
l•m ll s .
Co li
304·675 -6999.

••

a
v

•••••••••••••••••••••

APPLES "............ J.~~J~. 594
YELLOW ON ION .~•.~.~-.~~~~- 994

Bernice Bede Osol

WANHD BAB YSITTEH 5 days 0
week . 7 to 6 . W1ll pay S'lS
week ly ot my home or will to ke
someone fo r room. board and
wages. 9q')_~ tJ? l ~ o_lter ~ pm .

-- -----

45¢

RED OR GOLDEN DELICIOUS, JONATHAN
OR GRIMES GODEN

79~

ASTRO•GRAPH

without the need for costly

WORK
OV ~RS~ A S ,
Au strol1a
Afr ica , South A meri ca. l:: uro pe.
etc
Con:s tru ct1on . Sa le'&gt;
1-:nginee rs . Cl erical. etc_ $6000
to $50.000 plu s hpemoe!ii pa 1d .
~or employment inlormorion
wr ilf!' . Overseas ~ mpl o yme n l
Ba .. lOl l , Boston, Mo . 021 01
, Ex.PERiENcEo~d~ · o~d
preperot ion man. Apply tn per son of Bill"s Quality Body Sho p
~ ~d~lepor t

BONELESS CHUCK ROASJ••••••••••••••~·.~.1 49

PRODUCI

KETCHUP

-

,b,~ Ll;

can make great strides today in
~dvancing your sell· interests

~~~ ! t~; ~ ~;

FRYERS
UMIT 4 WITH
.OTHER PURCHASE

SALE DATES
SEPT.

AUCTION , Fri. end Sat . l')lfes
TWO BfDROOM trailer. Adult s
at 1 p .m , New and used
only. 992-332.4
merchandise at Ohio Rl\ler
.,
AUction, 537 High St .,
Mld~leport, Qhlo .
TWO B~OflOOM Tr oiler . 992 2530
: after 5 pm .

. ~OOMS . J-:Ull Y equipped k itchen .
2 li11i ng rooms. both and
• showers weekly linen :s er vic@,
' ne wl y decorated and ca rpe ted

CHICKEN THIGHS

M tddle port Mon . lues . Wed. ·
MIN I

LB. 59~

WHOL_E
lb

IN TOWN! .
Quantity Rights Reserved

79 e

�• •

~-

..

.

I

8- The n.Uv Sentinel. MldcBeuort-Pomerov. 0 ., Monday, Sept. 25, 1976

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
Autu&amp;l.,.

WANT AD
CHARGES
1;, Wvrds llr Urlilt&gt;r
Cash
Cllilrt:c

...

1.25

100

l ili"

uo

t di!V!i
J d&lt;!Ys
6tbl ys

'"'

U!l

;1.00

;1.7,)

EI:H'h wurd ovt"r the mm imwn 1!1
L'i 4 t't"lllli per "·mxl pt'r do~~y .

words

Ads runr\Ul!,( ul~r llum I'O tUiet'lJIIVtl
~· 111

dily"

bt·

d\Hr~t"d

at tht&lt; I clety

nlltt•

In

m~ m u ry, C.~:~ I'll

uf

Th&lt;~nks

cmd

Obituary: 6 l't'nLs pt&gt;r won!. $3.00

minunwn. Cash In allvant't'.
Mobile Homi' sa .lt:~ ;md Yard Still'S
art'

;t{'t_'t"J)[t!d

only i!.·tth 'TII.&lt;dt· w1th

on.lt'r t5 L't'.n l chctrgt' fur ads l'H.rry-

Bux
lint' I.
Uig

The

Nwn~r

Pul&gt;l~ht!r

In C..rt&gt; uf Tht• &amp;on·
rt'st&gt;rves

U~

n!(hl

\IJ ~tt or rt'jt.'t:t any &lt;tds Ll~mt'd utr-

)el.'lturwl. Tlw: Pul.llisht·r will not l.k•
ll.•spon:.:lbll· fur m un · them rntt' mt•ur··
1~.'\ lllst:'ri iUil
Pllt~lt'

"'.- aott·d to Bu,·

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

liC.H l

t.)l l.) ~UHNIIUiol~ 1&lt;£' bo , e.., b1o!&gt;s
bed-. •ron becb de~ k ~ e tc
&lt;o;nple te h ou&lt;:.e hold ~
Wnt e
M .Ll Md l£'• loll 4 Pomf'l ny Ot.
col i '-'4'J "1"/ 60
O lll COI N ~ pac kPI wolch f''&lt;Ia -. ~ r 1ngs wPdcl1ng bond ..,
d•omond .. Gdlrl 01 '&gt;11\/f'l (all
Hoger Won1 ~ lcy ~ 4 / 1:JJ I
Wt: pl(t(. up 1unk au to bod re-:. bvy
u1 Q 1unk coro, ~cr op 11011 bot
It~; rf' '&gt;
and me tal-.
lt1d£'r ~
:,ot ... og£1
:,~o: I /4
Po"rne • oy
qrn ~ Jt» !:l

old llgcr k1tten .
loh o f pf'l '&gt;onoltty
M&lt;'•g:.
Hu ii,Onf'
:,ac1c ly
1./IJ"/ '/)4'/ or 4~1 ~..t:n

WAN I 10 buy wmdow von 74
-~ ~ or l b ~ o1d 01 ( he ... y ~ ""£'"
CHIP WOOD . Po i~S max
diamter 10" on largest end ,
$8.50 per ton . Bundled slab .
56.50 p er ton . De liv ered to
Oh io Pallet Co . Rt. 2,
Pom eroy . 992 ·2689 .
OLD MOTORCYCLES and
parts . Doesn 't have to run .
997 -6345 .

ONE MOTHER , grey- anC
black cat. 2 male kitten!. 742

SUFFO LK RAM . Also good
ear co rn . 614 -698 -4499 .

PART
SHEPHERD ant
collie . Approx . 6-9 mo . old
Needs someone with land .
See at 224 Walnut, M id ·
dleport after 5

2328.

Spin &amp;Iince
I Reg. ) ~.5 0
With Alignment S3.50
Bubble B.olonce
( Reg.) S2.50

THREE TRAIL hOrses . New
and used saddles , Western
or Eng l ish . Ca mper 5600 .
196 9 Int ernational \/an
a5king 51200 . Excellen t
co nd ition . Also some M ·
ti ques . Phone 614 .698·3290
or 614 -698 ·54 36. '
FOR

with alignment $:Z.50
If

you
want an
experienced front
end man ask for
Trent.

SA LE . 992 -7751.

1967 INT ER NATIONAL BUS ,
30 passenger . Low m il eagt&gt; .
Excellent cond ition . 304 882 -3122 , 304 -773-5370 Qr 304 773 5482 .
..

SPECIAL FREE
GREASE JOB

STAN ' S
BARGAINLANO .
Wher e e\leryone get!. a fair
dea l Open 9 to 5 da ily
except Su nda y. 12 to 6 .
Main St ., Rutland , Oh i o.

Absolutely free with
alignment
and
balance.
Bring In
Coupon and Receive

GRAVELY TRACTOR and
JO" mower . Goo d condit ion .
992 .7492 or 992 ·3716 .

'2.00 OFF
on alignment

PAINTS

Special
Price
E Kpires.
. Oct. 7 . 1978

. Mt&gt;f!da\·

Noun un Satimiay

DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!

Tucsda\
thru Fridiiy
4 P.M
tht' da)· bt-f ure publiL·atu •II

AVON . YOUR f irs t iob pays
the b i lls . Selling Avon buys
the frills . Earn a second
in co m e and have money ro
spa r e Sel l Avon in y our
free time Set your own
hours . Be your own boss .
Call to day , 742 ·2354, Ann
Thomas , Avon D ist r ic t
Manager .

Su11da r
4 P.M.

Fnda~ ilftt' r!L lX IIl

t :amping EquipiJH'nt
11-!AVh HIA ilUi for sole 14l'l
Mork lwou1 14 It 742 · '2~bb
Pf.iOWltH
It
co ntauwd ~leep!&gt; 0 7 4'} . 2~ 71
I Q~B CAMPING HIAIHW

~800

492 - ~J:ll:l

GET READY next season
with Carefree awnings , a ir
conditioners , R: .V . an .
titreeze at CODNER'S
C AMPERS .
Ra i nbow
Ridge , CR 28 to Basha n .

\\'anted to R-rnt
WANT 1"0 rent '1 or J bedr oon'
house apt . or tro rler Coli
'14') ~1 4 /

LOST : REO D urham bull
Approx . 600 or 700 lb . In the
vicinity of Hemlock Grove or
Cherry Ridge area . 992 -5826 .

~lubilc

Humes

for

Sale

1974 N OVA CUSTOM . P .S.,
P . B . • A c , good co nd ition .
99 2-290 3.
1913, GRAN TORINO . 53 ,000
1m il e~ . Wt -7711 or inq_u ir.e at
Meigs Auto Pa rts .
lli7U

er n

C H~ V Y

IMPAlA
"1104 oher 4 pm

3~0

1'-1/1 CH!: Vf.IOU.I IMPAlA Good
con di!ron Wrll toke rrod c5
Q4q TI 6J
1974 PINTO L1 Blue. auto .•
new battery , new exhaust
system , 46 ,000 miles Sl400 .
992 -3757 after 5.
ADULT
OW NED
Ram charger SE . Heavy duty 2
wheel. Regu lar gas . B l ack .
Lo aded , in cluding a ir and
cru ise Co bra 138 SSB E T
wneels Ga rage parked .
Sold ne w Marcn 191 8 $9 ,050,
se ll 56.995 . 992 .5240.
1915
PONTIAC
ASTRE
hatchback , bu cket seal!&gt; ,
au tomat ic . New rad i als and
oa nery . 30 mpg . 949·1263
atter 7 p m .
1976 FORD L TO , air , n ic e
Harold
Brewer ,
Long
Bottom , Oh io 985 3554.
1977 FO RD L TD 4-door
se dan L i ke new wit h ai r ,
P .S., P .B ., t i lt whee l . A.M ·
F M 8-track , More e~o:tras .
742 ~826 .
1973 P LYMOUTH DUST E R .
Good condition Can be seen
any!ime . Phone 992·3189.
1976 SC OUT II A·Wheel drive .
E)Ccellent condit ion , V 304,
auto , P .S.. P .B . Call Me igs
Eq uipfn en t Co . at 992 -2176 for
more in for mat ion .
ONE OWNER _ 1974 Bon
nev il le . Lo w mil ea ge . Good
condlt ion . Phone 992 -667 1 or
446 -3364 after 5.
1974 FORD F -100 PICKUP
TRUCK . 19 73 Plymouth
Ous ter . J.speed on floor 992.
2550
1977 MONZA SPYOER , 305
e n g i ne . Like new w it h
everyth ing . 742 2826
1917 MO NZA
eng1ne l1ke bro nd ne w wdh
eve•yt hmg 742 18?b

1914 OlOS C U lL A ~~ ~u pr e m e
Good ~hope 997 l06l P ~
P 8 om AM tope on
1117';. CAOil l A C HO Oio'AOO J:ull
power
on
AM ·H/t. rod1o
Cleo11 Phone 99'1 7 4b7
197!&gt; PONTIA :.: ASHil: hatchba ck
bucket !&gt;£.&gt; 01!&gt; aut omahc New
r ad,ol ~ and bettery Jo m ,p .g
949 2283
197!&gt; COUGAH XR 7 S. J800 hen
lll Q S '/92."/fjd')

l Cf!':J l&gt;A I"~UN PICKUP C.ood con
d1t ron S'n9!&gt; 98 S.J979
19./3 C HAN TOHIN O J) I V 8 01r

'-1&lt;11

74 ~

IGit-7 C H~VY WAGON . $100
Churt h St Horrisonvll le , Oh ~o

C.ll now ""' oppolnlmllll.

Red roof paint

1971 HI L LCREST 12X64,
bed r oom wi th lip out living
room ." tota l elect r ic, un ·
fu r n ished , $5900 . Can be seen
at
1100
E.
Main
St..
Kingsbury Home Sales 992·
7034 .
TWO BEDROOM t rai ler on 1 1
acre in Racine . 949 .2373 .

t'or Sale
H .!!.

~ MO~Il~ H O M~ ~

f-'1 Pt eo
~ ant W Va be!&gt; •dE• Heck ~ 1ern Hroodm ore ! 4 ~ 6.4 I
bedroom
19/'J Oa•• on 14. bO i bedroom
I Qf / V1C IO! lOll 14 " t:. l 'j bed room .
')both
19/'J Coven tr y 1{ x ~~ 3 bedroom
IC#b4 ~lotesm(Jn
1/ x 00 I
bedroom

COAL UM~ ~ l" ONI:: sand . gro~el
coiC1u rn chlor ide lendi1e1 dog
load and all ty pes ol sof t 1: "
cel~ • o • ~o tt Wo r k s In(
~ Mo 1n
~~ Pome roy 9C#'} 38'11
8UHHOUC.H:, !&gt; ~N ~I MA TI C 0{
count.ng mo chon e
Ph one
49') '} IX, . 1he Oorly ')erH tn el
I l l Cour 1 ~ treet
1-'orner oy
Ohro
140"1 nH VY ~0 ~ pa n ~ 1&lt;03 Vega
molor Hoy l or sol e. S H~ o
bole ~4 q 24l 3or 949 '1849 .
I Q/ 4
'I'll

l)A l~ UN

PICKUP

~19lol t e r ~pm

!-'hone

-·

aa,._,_Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
P!lone "2-2181
-

( A 1 Oo hydroulrc doH'r Need ~
,ollo r ~ Modt:&gt;l tW Poo d S.:a)l!U
~ ell ~ J OOO Will df'li "'"'' fr ee
14') JOGI J (' VC'P I!IQ ':&gt;

1:t •OO 'J or J bedroom V•nth built
on addition , laundry room
washer-dryer . ~ ~ ce llent co nd r
Iron . ' • one rented Ia ! Alba ny
0 1 4 - ~98 - o 185 " bel ore 3 pm

Pomeroy landmlfk
9 ...-!._ock w. caney, Mgr.

Pomeroy Landmark

1 % 7 - H Q U :,~

HILLCREST
l2x 60 .
Loca ted in Salem Cen ter on
CR 1. 614 ·669 -5742 or 742 -·
2689 .

197.4
PINTO
STAT I O N
Wagon , .47,000 m i les . N ice .
S1350or best offer . 742 -2460 .

Outside While

l&gt;l /1 lH· l HOil Olt :, ~L wrlh clu t&lt;h
ar 11l qt·•or boll S,I)()(J 1()0() 11 &lt;I
~ l! llf t u ool p•p ~
Good Plo 1n
,..,nd SI{J() o l oo t / J '} :.K14J

1HAILH 1'2 • ~() All
elec lr •c, furnished . au condo ·
honed . Wo 5he1 and Ory er _ '1
lots m Han1son.., rl le 7 4 / -2fflb

parts exira If needed.
Excludes front-wheel
drive Cil rs.

11.// o NA ~ HUA 14 x ~J 3 bedroom
I ' bo th underpinrung , S\!:100
ond ass ume loon 949-76Cl3 or
BaJ :m 1.

1970

1972 FORO COUNTR:V Sedan
Station
Wagon .
9
passenger . All
power .
Excellent mechanical
cond ition . No r ust . 51700.
992 -5721 days or 992 ·5246
after 5.

Any U .;,. maue car-

Seasonal

During
Our
Closeout.

HW CK

A u bog ou~ d, ory
o ~ IP ~• ngl l? '1 '&gt; PPPd {P it • ond
f10II\£' ~ '&gt; f~t"'d q£1or bo,- h ont
o"l" "/U ~ 1U r•rf ' ~ di(''-"CI 11101oo
port'&gt; All lr orn 14D4 lntf'rnn
r•ono l Morl cl l/:i~0 f. )l(.'rlln9 "
! .J )

PA in ~

JO~J

l l)Uf.' IJ

,, .,· ,,d

.' .J I lt!'JO

WHIH !: H
motor
Goorl

rlf'W
II! ('~

'.J'-1") 'l/.{J/

h p
~JUO

boat J)
mo tor and trodl"r

~l~l:H C. lA J:,

Joh n~ on

!l 4J

4 ~i4 4

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Le1 Pomeroy L11ndmark
soften &amp; condition your
water with Co -op water
so ftener , Model UC· SVI.

Now Only

•289.95

L et us ' test

you r

water

,. Pomeroy Landmarh
"fl.. Jack W. Car,..y , Mgr.

!Iii!.

P!l&lt;&gt;ne99l-2181

BUN WARMER , Hotpo i nt
deep t r .,. , Hotpo in t gril l,
p icnic table ,'~ h .p. electr ic
mo tor . m il k sh ake blender ,
30 " soda f ou nta in comp l ete ,
good cl ar inet. ola ttottle s,
e l ectr ic
floor
buffer .
re s taurant d ishes . See a t
Shammy's , 605 W M!!l in St ,
Pomer·oy , OH 45 769.

P...... ft2.2ll1

IN l lli NA 110 NAl !&gt;00 do1e1 0 wo.,hlodf' Winch '&gt; l~i&gt;~l l Ob Com
pletf'ly r('wOik€'d l 1kt' ll€'W
Willla l&lt; •• trodf' !&gt; 1-.J.Sf.l 'Ji'63
I AI&lt;'MAII B 14:J'il morlf' l l loob
o,,(J r un~ l1k e llf'w W1ll tok £1
t•odP.., 'i .S 'i "1 / bJ

o

~00 1

b • u~ h

H p(1 ~ y

4 .S &lt;I

hog B•or1d n ~w
duty :m It hoy clev ntor

' l bJ

tY/h 1'-,

(-LJ J

molor f yde I
(all 9ti) J:.t 'l J
4 orn to J pm
C' \1Cn1119 'an d

(~() ~uru l-..,

h o1~f.'

rnnr(•

J -Ill

I

---· .. . .

Rtl idential and commercial . Call tar estlm1te. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime.

Service
1 ........ .......

SMITH NELSONMOTORS, INC.

l

v

s, ·; ~

ROOFING
.New or R_
epair

K....J Estah. tor Sat.t
-

3
.

Guttets and
Downspouts

HOU&lt;:-l IN Mll lf'l':&gt;Vr ll&lt;' Ovf&gt;r loolo&lt;
1r1q r •v f'r 4 bc droa111 livu19
ro~rn
kll r hpn
bath ut ility
10orn · and bo!&gt;ellH-'11 1 l orr y
l1pld~ Y4J :,B:n
I H~H ~HW OOM hom e hom e
M1dd lepor t (a ll 4'~'/ 34;·1
~VRACU ~ I-

Free Estitnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160
8-20.1 mo. (Pd . )

tn

Checkout counter, 1 la rge
regis ter with automatic coin
changer and register st and .
\.500 . One 8' or 1.2' display
cooler chest w ith electric
bo)Ces and single Phase
compressor . 1 egg displa y
case and coo ler , bo1h for S250.
Ca ll 742 -2255 after 5.

Ne w
New ... rorm w1nd o w~
olulniiiU"' bu .ldmg "I porch e ~
'/f.J"I .J114

J&amp;L

Blown Insulation

I HHH !)WHOOM h o u~ e . 3 ocr eo;
land CIO!&gt;{' to !&gt;Chool pncerl
rPo ~onob ly 4'1{ J l 16.
1HH~ l: B~ lJilOOM carpe ted home
lully 1nwlo tcrl w 1th l , both '&gt; .
1n PonH•• oy Weosonobly pnc('d
f'hont' '- I'll :J(jn .
H Vt HOOM house and both
rC' 1nodeled fully ca rp t' ted Mav
b~· '&gt;Pt' '' o l r~_~, J prn
Phone

LEVEL DOUBLE lot , almost
'h acre in the Lyons Ad d i tion between Wahama
High Schoo l and Clifton,
WV . Lovely build ing si te .
$9500 . After 5 p .m . call 614 ·
992 -2666 .
NEW
THREE
bedroom
home , rec. r oom, firep lace,
iarge
deck.
ga rage ,
ba sement. one and a half
bath s . Phone Lee Con .
sttuction
992 · 3454 ,
weekends
l - 614 - 446 · 9 ~'~ .

JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
Sne30 pel. to 50 pet.
on healing cost
Experlencund
fully lnsuted
Free Est.
·call 992-2772
8-10-1mo. !Pd.)

VA.f HA :JO yr . financ ing . al ~o
1efulon c rf!g lrelond Mortgog(.' .
Tl ~
~ 4I

Custom Poly
A78x13

Pomeroy Landmar!l

9.,

P~tl!lntffl-218'

THIN&lt;&amp; ROTTEN'S GOING
ON AT THE PLANT-AND
WE AIM T'FlN D OUT
WHO'!I SEHIND In

MIDDLE PORT

The Photo Place
(Bob Hoeflich)

109 High 51.
Pomeroy

~to te . Athen s . phone ( bl4 )
'l n .. '

SHOULD BE SOLD -3
hedroom ranch, 2 belhs,
central air. good full
basement, large lof, only 8
/~ars old, good condition .

ONLY $21.000.00.
1'1\ .~ i':E OFFER -

4

~
tlr

and sl'lade trees. 4 to 5

bedroom !lome, all city
utilities. central air and
heat . basement. -4 porches,
and storm windows .

BUSINESS

BUILDING-

also small residence wlth

bath, and all city utilities .
A cheap way to make a

and parking . A good buy at
$9,500.
NEW COUNTRY HOME 2 full baths. forced air heat,
drilled well, nice carpeting
and old log !louse tor
company. 28 acres of land
with sale. Lots of road
frontage near the new

bridge.
DLDE R HOME -In the
country on good country
road . J bedrooms, bath,
and several outbuildings on

one &amp; one-th ird acres . Just
$16,000.
JO
ACRES
Near
Pomeroy . Old renovated
!lome with drilled well . and
water

and

State

This 2·

11ome Is located on ·a

street In Middleport .
s In livable conditionStarling al $13,500 .
RANCH IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION -2'12 acres. 2
Cllr garage, wood burning
fireplace, nice kitchen.

RACINE - Large lot out of
high water with nice view

patio

and

barbecue.

BELOW FAIR MARKET
VALUE at $25,000.00.
10 LOTS - In the country,
nice 1 floor pion oome with
basement,

barn,

other

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING!
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

ti i M~

'\lJ1\irul j'ji}'if

•

~

All types of roofing, gutters
downspouts. 20 yoors

In Middleport bolweon
Third &amp; Fourth SlrHI-1
Mill Slroel lust behind

experience .
All
guaranteed . · Call

work
Tom ·

Hoskins, 949·2160. Free

()pen Saturday 10·4 p.m.

Estimates .

Sunday 12 noon to l

9-7-1mo.

house

must be

mo'led-

16,000.00.
ALSD-1S nice acr .. of
ground to put house on. Call
for details.
EXPERIENCE,
KNOWLEDGE &amp; HARD
WORK SELLS HOUSES.
WE NEED LISTINGS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Honk, Kollly &amp; Leono
Clol1nd
(Realtor Auoclolosl
f92-2259-99l-2568
m -6191

Iaroe living room , part
basement , fuel oil hut,
fully carpeted ; mobile
home rented . CI1V water In
ttoth . Sm all barn and stg ,
building . W i ll sell together
or d ivide . Near Jet . 160 and
Appalachian Hlghwa.,. . Call
61.4 .596·4137 .

Jo~ acre s, tirnbe1

[)ri lled
well , bloc k bu dd ing , older
tro 1ler
Old Rt. ·1, Che!&gt;ler
Ohio . &lt;18~ - JH47 b e t wee11 4 ond b
pm

NI:W HOME . ::t bedroom , I ',
baths . Fu lly carpeted , vi nv l
!&gt; 1dlng wi th single cor garage .
t.~;~ r g e lo t in Rutland on New
Luna Hood . S'J'l,OOO. i'42.25b2 .

1"W0 I:XHtA nice lots in Hocine
w 1th I :t • b(J Hollypork trailer .
Partially furn ished . ltl x 40 ce·
ment block bu ilding with shed .
Lorge garden space with fru it
IHHU: l)~ lour bed1 00ITI hou se in
trees . Y.oolq ·242EI .
Pome1 oy . 8oth and ' 1 Cen tr al
hco11ng f.I&lt;I'J .7U/ 4
134 ACRES located 1 m ile ,
~ A~M ~OR sale. Hou~e . 'J barn s
from Meigs M ine No . 1.
Dr illed well and septic
11ader . lorg ~ - ond 1U a&lt; re s or
system . t .JQA ... :I:.2l34 .
B'J cues. l 4"11!lob6

.

EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

141 ACRES -

Answer here:
!JTTLE ORPHAN ol NN IF.

Saturclav·s

LISSA SAID AWNIE
~0

A VALUABLE SfORE
1t&gt;l.. TH' cnv ... SOLD IT
FOR CASH .. ,

BEDROOMS -

room.

fireplace.

,. ".;;:J.;_;I.~E;YFOmP!iiii!;n:-;j!a;s:ii:ii':Tvi!S:'~T"\"i:;;:iB[T,l
O

I

1

r----:--:-:-::-:------"'V'-:--...,----:---,12;: Yule air
IF 'TH~'S Nt'( I'OeSIBLE

~~ ~A~~VE~

Dept. to its
detractors
Woman
personified
II Soticitude
17 Poet McKuen
18 One: Ger.
19 Shoulder or
stamp !2 Building

Gar 1tl TAKE IT!

WIL L do roofing. construction .
plumbin g and heating. No job
too large or too small. Phone
747 -7348 .

winS
23 Scarlett's
borne
Z4 George

SAVE ON
CARPETING

..---

---

Price

been

ten

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804W. Mol~
PomtrGY
H2-2nl

Buy where you can

A&lt;.:kt lOJ" on Rt. 'l. Nic e building
si te 9~'J . 1':37 4,

I Disdain
7 !Ale star,

10 :00--Starsky &amp; Hutch 6.13; News 20; 10:30-Like It Is
ADswer

34 Ulrnptighter's

need

Gunsmoke 8; Movle " H ow to Steal a Million " 10.
1;00-Tomorrow 3,4; 2:DO-News 13.

nation
37 Olatter
:18 Anglo-Suon
coin
39 Swiss

cantoo

tO Hebrew
for Lord
...--..--r.--r:-""1:::"-r

r:-'TFT-r.-ti,;--

20 ; Area Showcase 3"3 .

11 :GO--News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; Dick Cavett 20 : Over
Easy 33.
11 :36-Johnny Carson 3.4,15; Movie "Avantl !" 6,13;

35 Oil-rich

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

A sticky problem solved
NORTH

Vulnerable : Both
Dealer : West
ll'eet
Pasa

ln-+-+-f-+--

Pus
Pus

CRYPTOQUOTE-

YOlJVE GOT A OOOD
HEAD O N YOUR

PERHAP5 Set WEEN
U5 WE CAN GET VOU
OUT OF TROUBLE ...
AND XEEP YOU
OUT}

MAKES A
lED FOR

S.Utb
It
3NT

By Oowald Jacoby
ud Alaa Soatllfl

One letter timply st1nds for another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O"s, etc. Sin&amp;le letters,
Oswald : " Some time ago
1postrophes, the lenctb •nd formation of the words "" •II Britiah errt VIctor MoUo
hints. Each d•y the code tellers are dil!erenl.
preaente
some brldfle
banda
as
rather
interesting
CllYPTOQUOTES
problema . Let's show some
YEAYMN of them thll week."
XN
ASJ
Y
QKEEJA
OKTEYLXHR

SK

HJ

N

SX

ZNZYEEM

SYN

FXTXJHN .

AXENJH

Oswald: " The answl!r is
the deuce of clubs, althouflh
the six-five or four woJ.lld
serve the same PllfiiCIIe· "
Alan : "South needs five
club tricks . He must duck a
club to score them . II West
started with K x or K x x
11
South is home.
Oswald : "By leading the
first club from dummy
South gets an utr!l chance.
East may bold K -10, K-9 or
K~ and rise with the king. Of
course, he shlw4fn 't make
that play, but as Confuctous
said, 'Give a mari a chance
to make a mistake and he
may make it.'' ' .
Alan : " West has three
cluba to the king .-a nd three

notrwnp makes. n

...._B

You hold :
+ AQx

•KJx:rs:

Here's how to work it:

SHOULDER~_GARY.

:IF YOU NEED
.A SOFA TH~T

Nortb Eat I
Pass
1+
Pass
2+
PaM Pass

Opening lead : • K

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

.WINNIE
-

...._A

+ A2
• 1016
• t 3
+AQ6 l 42
WE$T
EAST
+ KQJ8
+ 654
•J72
•Q543
+ J64
+ KQ75
+ K 10 8
+J 9
SOUTH
+10973
• AK9
• A 10 a 2

hazardous '--"'"-.._............._

Rullond

Howard

9 : ~Taxi 6,13; Great Performances 33 .

Sharon 8 Prado
Yeatefday's
display
t card game Z4 Sea :
10 Shade tree
Fr.
11 Hit the silk Zli Irish rebel
19 Average
group
2G Rainbow
28 Sarcastic
shape
conunent
21 Bunnese
Z'l Tito's rank
dagger
31 English
ZZ Nigerian
river
city
32 Ellington's
23 Scottish
"- DoU"
river
33 Overhead

DOWN
lias
DAILY

10;

Goes To Washington 3,1 5; Happy Days

• 73

4f0cean
greyhound

Alan: ..Here is one of
them.
South Ia in a poor
QJJE

three-notrump contract and
things look bleak after Weal
NZN- opens the klng of spades. He
N
muat play dummy's ace.
GXPHKL Victor uka, ' Wbal card
should be played. from
dwruny at trick two'' "

t XX
• A Jt

X

Your partner opens one
spade and rebids two spades

over . your

twoaheart

response .
A Missouri reader waats
to know what you bid ne:rl.
You should bid three clubs
with every intention of nai.sing spades later. Your hand
is too strong for a mere jump
to four spades.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ABSN .}

(For a copy of JACOBY MOO·
ERN, send $1 to: "Win at
Bridge, " core of this new•~·
per, P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station, New York, N.Y. 10019.,1

!lARSF:Y

WAAL·· I FINALLV GOT TH'
HOUSE IN APPLE·PIE ORDER··
ALL E)(CEPT FER ONE Ot:

The

15

I~

I .TOCK

CAll ntE WISEMAN .
REAL ESTAlt AGENCY 446-3643

Newlywed Game

Mask" 33.
·
8: 3Q- Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9; ~Movie " Battered"
3,4,15; Throe's Company 6,13; Movie "One In a
Million" 8,10; Evening al Pops 20.

U Uving
acanvey
in oils

owner' s age prevent. her from continuing to operate

fhe farm and she desires an Immediate sale. 50 to 60
acres tillable with some very good croek bottom hilltop land . The bolance Is In pasture &amp; wiJ!Icls. The 6
.room home Is good (dotS need some· modornlzallonl.
large all purpose born &amp; 10veral outbuildings. The
minerals go with It and It's located In 1n area where
gas, oil &amp; coal have been found to be plenlllul. Nter
Rutland . 60's.
·
.

7:QO--Cross-W it s 3; Sha Na Na 4;

Island

FRANK &amp; ERN IF:

comt In

4' ~---

3,4,6,8,10,13,1S; ABC News 6; Zoom 20 .
6:30-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, tO ; Over Easy 20 .

6, 13; Jacques Cousteau 4; Paper Chase 8, 10; In
Performance at Wolf Trap 20; Movie "The· iron

song

RUnAND
FURNITURE
742·2'111

to the Bottom ot the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hlllblllles 8; Mister Rogers' Neigh borhood 20.33; Gomer Py le. USMC 10: Emergency
One 13; Petticoat Junction 15.
S:36-News 6; Sa nford &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary

Costello 15; Mac Neii · Lehrer Report 20,33 .

II Sc«tish

. C.ll742-2211
TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grllt
•• GtnoSmifh

OWNER TRANSFERRED, 3
bedroom , all electr ic home on
I acre lot . Some appliances.
included . 949 ·2424,

Bunch 10.
5 : ~Voyage

B : ~Grandpa

gannent
37 Porter

ca 11992-IUJ
CONTACT:
Lois Pouley
Bronch Manogor

Richer. For Poorer 15; Merv Griffin 6; Por kv Pia &amp;
Friends 8; Sesame SL~P-~3 ; Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:3Q-Liltle Rascals 3. 15; Gilligan's Is . 4,8 ; Brady

Candid Cam era 6; Price is Rial"lt

cars • Kind of

ond- wh•l you're g•lll,.
- Good selections - Fully
stocked.

After Hours

tO.
9:36-Brady Bunch 8; Famllly Affair 10.
10 : ~Card Sharks 3,1S; My Three Sons 4; Edge of
Night 6 ; All In The Family 8,1 0; Dating Game 13.
10 :36-Hollywood Squares 3,4,15; Andy Griffith 6;
Price is Right 8, 10.
1 1 : ~High .R ollers 3,4,15; Consumer Survival Kit 20.
11: 36-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Fam ily Feud 6.13 ;
Love ol Life 8, 10; Once Upon A Classic 33 .
11 55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.

Jarv is' Nat iona l Tax Revolt Special : 13; Abbott &amp;

there~ 31 Craggy hill
'---r 32 Rested
t;;-+--1-rc;::~ 35 ofBeggar
Ithaca
:II Arab

Floor Cowering In Stock

$3.5,000.00.

Etiot novel
Great
lAkes port
Zt cau it a

""'" ... place! za
have

sv:;

9' and 12' Vinyl

several

Kangaroo 8,1 0; Sesame

Home 33.

battery

U.S. State

l:XCAVATING . doz er . back hoe
on(:! dilcher Charles If . Hot·
fie ld , Elo ck
Hoe !tervice .
~ utlond , Ohio . Phone 742·2008.

•4.ae

8 : ~Capt .

7:36-Let's Go To The Ra ces 8; Hollywood Squares 3;

ZUtah city
3 Fringed
I Egg drink
5 Type of

ACROSS
1 Use up
6 Hackneyed
11 Zeal

As Low As

out buildings. O..ner being
transferred ,

Newspaperbooks.

Rubber Back Carpet

l'rlce S12,500.
11 ACRES - More or less, 4
bedrooms. modern bath,
large kllche'n &amp; d ining

10;

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 's Heroes 15.

by THOMAS JOSEPH

All corpet lnslolltd wllll
paddln' ol no chorgo .
Expert nslollollon .

Older

(Answers tomorrow)
Jumbles: PROBE ABATE HAPPEN INSIST
Answer : Could be the reason - for having married

~~~-~tr'

DRIVE A LITn.E
&amp;.
SAVE ALOT
home. some remodeling,
beautiful view ot the river.
must see to apprec iate.

News 8; Jetsons 10.

6,13; Pop Goes The Cou ntry 8; News 10; Gilligan' s
Is . 15; Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20; How To Buy a

t: XCAV AHN G dozer . looder ond
backhoe wo rk dump ir uc~·s
and lo ·boy:. lor h1r e w1ll houl
l dl d irt . to so d , limes tone and
tgro¥el (qtl ~ ob o r Hoge1 Jel ·
fers . doy phone qq2·7089 . night
phone 997 .J525 or 99'}. S131 .

Auctioneer . Com plete Scr .. ice . Phon e 949 ·1487
or '141 9-2000. kaci ne. Ohio Crill
6radfotd .

I ) "t I I X]"

The /ateat JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 111. Available lor $1 .35 EACH, postpaid !rom Jumble, clo lhl1
newspaper, P.O. B o~o: 34, Norwood, N.J. 07648. Make checks payable to

Fot Free Eitlm•les
'·21-1mo.

~HAUFOHO .

Good Mornlf1!1, West VIrginia 13.
6:55-Ch uck While Reports 10; News 1
7:00--Today 3,4, 15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS

6 : ~News

Coli 992-7013

( HIMNl:Y FIR~ ~ or e no fun' Ho11e
your s cleaned th e dustl es-; woy
lh e
Ch imne y
~wee p .
b14 ·373·605i' .

I

[I] t I

in Spain -"THE SENORA"

ANNIE 'S NO CROOK .,.
8&lt;IT ALL THA1 "'ONEY
FOR ONE LITTLE GIRL ...
EVEN FOR ONE AS
SMART AS ANNI E ...

Pomeroy,O,

- .3825.

Now arrange the circled leners to
form the surprise answer , as sug gested by the above cartoon.

IIJ

220 E. Moln Street,

HWOOO BOWI: WS f..I~PAIR
Sweeper ~ . toaster!&gt; . 1rons. al l
small app li an c e~ . lawn mower
ne x t to ~ t ore Highwa.,. Go roge
on Houle 7. Phone (614 ) Y85·

6:25--Con·cerns &amp; Comm~nts 10; 6 : 3(}-Focus on
Columbus 4; News 6,· Sunrise Semester 8; 6 :50-

4:QO-Mister Cartoon 3; Battle of the P l anets 4; For

ELLIOTT
APPUANCE II

WE 00 po •n ting . •gu tter . ce iling
tile
paneling . rool repair
plurnbrng and concrete work
free eshmo te5 . Call 992 · H B~
ask lor Wallace Morns .

· TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26.1978
5·45-Farm Report 13; 5:5()-PTL Club 13; 5:55. Sunrl~ semester 10; 6 : CIO-PTL Club 15.

12 :36-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; -Eelec Co. 20,33 .
1: ~For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6, 13;
Younq_&amp; The Restless 10; Not For Women Only 1S .
1: 3Q-Days of Our Lives 3,4,15; As The World Turns
8, 10; 2:00-Qne Life to Live 6,13.
2:3o-Doctors 3,4,1S; Guiding Light 8.1 0; 3 : ~
Another World 3,4,15; General Hospltal6,13; Lilias
Yog a &amp; You 20.
3:36-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; Consumer Survival Kit
20 .

[j

(J

I

Armstrong Carpeting

li:WING MA(HINI:: Hepo1r\ , ser lli(e . all makes . 992-1284. The
Pomeroy .
Fo br •C Shop ,
Authorlzed Singer Sales and
~er v~ c e. '!'Je sharpen Sciuor s.

1:00- Tomorrow 3,4; 1: 3Q--News 13.

l2:DO--Newscenter 3; News 4,6,10; America Alive 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.

p.m.

Your tteadquaners For

BA lHHOOM~
AND Kilchens
remodeled . ce ram1 c tile, plum·
b•ng , carpen try . end general
marntenoncc . 13 year s ex•

l

byHenri ArnoldandBobLee

r

I I

8-31 -1 mo.

I floor plan home. barn .
storage build ing, good
fenced pasture . ONLY
$16.500.
IN THE COUNTRY -Near
Pagevllle-Very nice !lome
In excellent condition. the

buy your home now.
G. Bruce THmd ·
Holen L. Tumd
Suo P. Murphy
Associates

Ht.•, rdquartl?f .\

~~ ®

Unscramble these lour Jumbles.
one le"er to each square, to form
four ordinary words .

Carry Out.

Tony's

acres, remodeled and nice

Ltt your investment grow
while you live In H. Think,

HoustiH/

\!::t)

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

WOOD HEAT

&amp;

"Two for the Road " 10.
11 :45-ABC News 33; 12 : ~News 6,13; 12 :30-FBI6;
Ironside 13.

9 :00- Mer v Griffin 3; Phil Donahue" 4, 13, 15 ;
Emergency One 6 ; Hogan 's Heroes 8; Match Game

QUALITY

CHEAP!

11 :3D-Johnny Carson 3,41, 15; Gun smoke 8; Movie

St . 33.

MOVE GOMPANY

SERVICE

8:30--0peration Petllcoal4,13 ; People 8,10; Turnabout
20.
9 : ~Movle "Overboard" 3,4,15; NFL Football 6,13;
Mash 8,10; Long Search 20; 9:3D-One Day At A
Time 8.10.
10:00--Lou Grant 8, 10; News 20; 10 :3D-Over Easy 20 .
11 :GO--News 3,4, 8,10,15; Dick Cavett 20.

7 &lt;1~-Schoolles

'Ilia APPAioiiGIIJAH'

buildings. Fru it trees and
be rries.
A steal at
S17,700.00.
MINI FARM -Over 5

Highways . Nice view and
good buy.
NEW LISTING - Wa lk to
the stores from · th is 3
bedroom home wllh all city .
ulllllles . Has large rooms
with lots of carpeting and
aluminum siding . 2 loh and
2 car garage . All this for FOR SALE : Large 3 bedroom
home , bath , large kitchen,
only S1S,OOO.

~ANM

DI01AL WITH
CR00K5- E'VE'"
AFTEit VOLTA
THI':EATENED

4·31-IIC

8·2· 1 mo.

~ X(AV Al"IN G . Complete
~erlli&lt;e . Phone QqJ .'"J4 7fJ

bedroomer,
1 112 baths ,
furnished kitchen. natural
Qi!IS, 2 car garage with
rarge workshop Over . Level
lot near stores .

on

HUS&amp;AND DI5APP!ARED ...MIKIO'
MORAN SAYS HE
~AN THe UNION
lOCAL

Y·Y.YESoIT'S
TRUE~ JUAN
WOULD NOT

Aut' &amp; Trur.k
Repair
Mso Transmission
Repair
Pho.t:te 992-5682

pei" ionce. 992 ·3665
r----:;::;iiiii;::-~;!lflr PULL
INS

Is

natural gas furnace , city
water. large lot for garden

White-Wall Co-()p

¥. mile oH Rl. 7 by-pou on
51 . Rl. 124 loword Rutl•nd,
0.
..

MA~l"IN
HOWUI Y A Nil
ca vo t ing , sept ic sys tems .
H.t•al E•tatc for Sale
darer . backhoe . dump tru ck ,
H O Mt-~ll ~~ for sol e . I one and
li me5 tone , gra ve l, blacktop
up M1ddlepo11 near Rutland . · pov ong . Ht \ 43 . Phone 1 (b14 )
Co ll 4'1'1 1.4til
bYH -733 1..

992-3325
216 E. Second Street
MINI-FARM
Acres .
Sutton Township. S7,500.

GIBSON
AU TOM ATIC
washer and dryer 992 5621 or
992·2205.

N '&gt;CAl l: 1rQifl!&gt; wr th l type
la you t Comple Te w rth all ~ W it
t ht!s hou!&gt;e chur t h loctor •e!&gt;
lieoutd ul ~ell or ~w op lor ·
H &amp; N Da y Old or started
camper ol equa l .. alu e ~ee
leghorn pul lets , bol h f loo r
Hor ... ey l ~omo nd PO Ko. OJ
or cag e grown avc\ ll abl e.
Hoc1nc Ohoo by Wagner Har d
Hous i ng
and
P o ultr y
ware :,rooe
Auto m a tion ,
Modern
P o ultry . 399 W . Ma i n ,
WINH IJ P 01 A101: ~ gradP I and
Pomer oy . Phone 992 2164.
I ' W !-' ro lldl 1-'ootlond Oh oo
NEW
H AWK IN S
':lWI:ll P 01 A l m ~ Hed wh ot e
THOMPSON
mun l e
ond yPI Io ...., f'hone !lJJ 'l~:.t:l
toader 50 ca l iber . All ac Hobe rt W lew•s ~~ I j,' mrnc
ce5so r ies 742 2750 .
Prices inciUOh
~ H I "j ,j
Fed . Tax
ONE DISHWASHER , par .
G f.iiMt ~ GOlD t-N Hed l)el,nou '&gt;
tabl e Also , r ecline r . Cal l
1does not include
H. Go lde" Dei•(• Ou'&gt; oppl ('~
992 -2205 or 992 S621 after 5
sales tax ar
pOii •c ~
0 1t hord
~ I(
p.m .
bolancingl
bl ,j 0()4 3'ltl~
FULLY
1973
TERRV
TRAI LE R
GUARANTEED
TRAI L ER 27ft . A .C. , roll
lA t-.! (OHN ~ 'I per bu (o •n
Other si!,.:.·
ouT awn i ng , power con .
.. heller ~~~U J 0 No ~ ono.,,,.,ng
ver t er . E )I;Cellent condit ion .
compara i:l •i
nlQ(honc ~7 00 lr11 Boler ~ 1 4 00
54500 f i rm . 4 Goodyear L
priced .
Alter b pm call 41:1~ 4IJI o•
78 IS t i r es and wheels ,
lib~ J~)l
approx . 700 miles . 5300 . 741 ·
1667 .
1'-H6 ·, lon [ hev oolel p• ckyp 4.
5pc cd J)O en gine 3 1nch Hee-5e ""O N E ROW case cornp ic ker ,
h .r ch
l• ce llen l ~ond1 t •o r1
n~eds a l i ttle wor k . A lso 7
Jaclt w. ca rsev
year ol a r egi -ste red Polled
1-'hon&lt;' 441 ~3 4 tl
Hereford bu ll . E)l; cellen1
••
14/J l f-IHl Y lf.i Aill:-H ") I It A (
disposition . RRS F arms .
rol l ou t ow rHng po....,CI con
992 -2826 .
~e • lf&gt;r
1:;11 Cf'llen1 (ond•t•o• •
PING PO NG table . Car
~LI~(J(J l 1r·m 4 Good year I /tJ I~
luggaoe ca rr ier . Parts t or
tr rE&gt;s ond w heel !&gt; opprox "/ ()()
3 0~ Ford motor . One 4 hole
mdt::~&lt;o ~300 Conn 11u1npe1 wllh
;nd one 2 hole self feed ing VJA I I: I( WI:L L dr,llu'q Wrii!OtTt I
CO H' fl i' Cellenl (Of'di11 0 fl $1{)()
hog f~eders . 985 ·3920 .
G • m1 1 "147 2ti?CI
14'1 'JM l
196 ~ F OR D PICKUP , good
lAOY WI Ll !&gt; rl 1n home!&gt; or
shape . 52i . Call 992 7330.
LIKE N E W Hondo gu itar and
hosprtol with pot1ents Me•g'&gt;
c ase , extra set of strings
Co. or eo. 9'12 -b1ql1 .
WH A T
THE
IN ·
and p ic ks inclu ded . Maytag
DEPENDENT S
HAVE
Coppertone
Porta .pair
THA T
THE
F I S HER
washer and dryer . Very
DOESN 'T : A FO RCED
good condition , sell as set .
A IR SYS TEM - Heal tubeS
Syt ... ania
Times - a . tan
through heart of s tove and
Su n l amp and eye protec
an option.a I blower ,
tors . Call after 5 :00p .m .,
2. INTERNAL SAFFLE 992-2995 .
Transfers hea t to the stove
surface , not up the chim ·
ney . More heat from ress
N!:W H{,)llANIJ chopper I HlW
wood and less cresote, too
corn hrod Ou e-n ( u t heod
LOCAL
'25
YEAR
3.
4IJ~ :.U:i 46
G UARANTEE- Made
ln
Ash land , Ohio .
l
4. LOWER: PR:ICE l"O'J !WI HONOA C fS ~OU Co il ofter
1380, optional blow er ::., $75 .
~prn '-19'../ ')ij7f
QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP . I n M i ddleport
Wl7 YAMA HA X~ b~CJ A I !&gt;hope
fr om the m iddle o f t o wn go
oown M rll St . 10 tony 's
Carryout and turn down the
alley or t urn down 3rd Ave .
WOOD STORM w indows . 949 and make tt)e 1st left. a
2286 .
sma ll a l ley next to Sta te WILL BABYSIT in m.,. home
fo r children und er 1 yea r s
Farm Sunday 10 a .m . to .s
Jljr""l ~ HONL&gt;A ::tbO
'1400 o&lt;""tuol
ol d . Anna Mae Leamond by
p .m . : Saturday 10 a .m . to 4
Wagner
Hardwar e
In
p.m .
APPALACHIAN
m1le~
Oum!R r OOill !.U 11 ('
Rac ine .
1./92-301 8
•
STOVE CO . 614 ·698·7191.

we are currently making
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Hf l: VI::S l"RA OING Pos t. Page..,, lie
Grocer ies . dry goods , hard
wore . feed . tack shop . Spec1ol
25 lb . of do~ f ood , SJ ,fj_f:!

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Exc e llent
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22" 3.5 h .p .• '5. 35 . Part s for
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STORE EQUIPMENT

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan's Heroes 15.

6:00--News 3,4,8, 10,1 3, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3Q-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
. Friends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:GO-Cross.Wits 3; PM Magazi ne 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13; Marty Robbins' Spotlight ' 8; News 10;
Gilligan's Is . 15 ; Almanac 20; Know Your Sc hools
33.
7: 3Q-That Nashville Music 3; Dating Game 4; Muppel t
Show 6; Wild Kingdom 10; $1.98 Beauty Show 13;
Nashville on the Road 15; MacNeil-Lehrer Report
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High School

H. L WHITESEL

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PEA HAU L ER 'S Count ry CB
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only Sept . 26th thru 30th .
Mobile units Kr iss -XLSO 585.
Halllcr afters HCM ~61 , $58.
Ba5e l used tram 0201A .
PhOne 843 -2064 .

5:3Q-News 6; Sanlord &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co. 20,33; Mary

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t 4/l ~Oio:L) , IOf"l&lt;Omp('t ':&gt;pNr OI
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C hetter, Ohio

W1'l• lo. c ncl~
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IN

5:00--Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hlllblllles 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One 13;

MOORE'S

Phone 915·3106
Jack Ginther 915-3806

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MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1978

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8:0G-Uttie House on The Prairie 3,.4,15; Welcome

9- The Dilly Sentinel, Ml&lt;ldlcport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Sept. 25, 1978

~--------~------------~ . 1 ~~~~~~~~~====

''WERE 't'OLI IN

W~EN
S~E

I CALLED?"
ASKED

•j

I

''NO,'' l-IE SAID...
''I WAS' OUT AT
THE INN ! II

WOODSTOCK LOVES
INN JOKE5 1

BAD APPLE

...

~

�1~- The_!Ially Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday ,Sepl. 25,

1978

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

Ohioans asked to support Celeste
COLUMBUS (UP!)
President carter has given a
political pep talk to Ohio ·
Democrats who helped elect
him In 1976, urging them to
give 'him a governor he can
work with.
carter visited Columbus
late Saturday, dedicating a
black-owned residential and
commercial complex and
then addressing a major
Democratk
fund-raising
event.'
The president SPent most of
the lime durtng his 30-minute
speech extolling Ohio DemocraiiJ and reciting his accom•
pli.!hmenlll in office.
Bot in the last five minutes
he leveled harsh criticism at
the
administration
of
Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes for Ohio's failures w
clean up Its air, stabilize the
steel industry and solve its
school finance problems.

He 'als&lt;i made a strong
appeal to the Democrats w
elect Lt . Gov . Richard F .
Celeste w replace Rhodes.
Although carter did not
menlioo the Ohio governor by

name, the inferences were
clear : the president feels
Rhodes is responsible for a
''lack

of

cooperation "

between the slate of Ohio and
the federal government,
particularly in air pollution
cootrol and getting the steel
industry back on its feel.
Carter was cheered by an
estimated 1,000 Democrats
who paid $125 apiece w sip
wine and munch on hot and
cold hors d'oeuvres al the
Alladin Shrine Temple near
Gahanna , a suburb of
Columbus.
The president said Ohio is
the only stale in the nation
that has not implemented an
air quality system .which

• For cosmetic, baby
cere and home uses I
• Bagof280

,.,. ,,

57!
I!IBENJIRANKLB
IIJ\\e bt lug tuilety tolife!
POMEROY BEN FRANKUN
100 East Main

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complies with federal
standards.
" Forty-nine states have
gov e rnors
and
administrations that have
evolved acceptable air
quality standards," said
Carter. "One state has not,
!he slate of Ohio.
" We
need harmony ,
cooperation and partnership
between Washington and
Columbus, but we don 'I have
it. "
He said the steel industry
was "sliding backwards"

HOSPITAL
NEWS

! Area Deaths I

I
when he became president in
1977.
11

We

0

have

•

seen

this

problem turn around," he
said, adding lha I one of the
lone exceptions ill in
Youngstown where ' 'we do

have a serious problem."
carter again cited a lack of
cooperation between Ohio's
local and slate govenunents
and Washingwn.
"We need people !here who
we can work In harmony
with," said the president.
He called Ohio's school
financing problem "a very
embarrassing situation that
doesn 'I occur anywhere else
in our nation so far as I
know.''

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sept. %21
Kermit Adkins, Douglas
Allen , Joanne Austin, Charles Williams, Dollie Wolfe, Robin
Bane, Ruth Boggs , Beth Zinn .
Brumfield, Carolyn Crabtree,
Births, Sept. 23
Budd Darst, Melva Davis,
Mr . and Mrs . f harles
Christi Dillinger, Shelly McGrath, daughter , R~tland .
·Donlon, Lloyd Dugan, Bert
Mr. and Mrs. Kermit ·
Payne, Christine Fraley, Fisher, son, Gallipolis.
Martha
Giles ,
David
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis
Grueser, George Hackett, Parson, daughter, Gallipoilis.
Veronica Hall, Jennie Henry,
Mr. and Mrs. Walter
Ada Harold. Mary Hysell, Fraley, son, Hamden.
Belly Linscotl, Jess McKee,
Mr . and Mrs . Dwayne
John Meadows, Thelma Curtis, son, Oak Hill.
Nibert , Carolyn Nicholson ,
Mr . and Mrs . Marlin
Goldie Rice, William Rich- Scurlock, son. Wellston.
mond, Mrs. Jimmy Riddle
(Discharges, Sept. %4)
and daughter, Anna Rot&gt;Carol Barnett, Mathinla
binette, Charlotle Shaffer, Copley , Cara Gillispie, Mrs.
Steven Shoemaker, Anthony James
Johnson
and
Smith , George Sparks, daughter, Clarence Mahle,
Lonnie Spurlock, Daniel Danise Mitchell , Louise
Thomas II, Richard Thomas, Mullins, Patricia Radcliff,
Jane Tucker and Georgia John Sizemore, Frances
Wehrung.
Springer, Donald Staley,
Births, Sepl.2
George WHkerson, Beatrice
llfr. and Mrs. Michael Wood.
Elbin, son, Gallipolis.
Birth, Sept. 24
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Mr. and Mrs. John Evans,
Blevins, daughter, Waterloo. daughter, Long Bottom .
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff
Schoonover, son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Malone, Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions daughter, Oak Hili.
JoAnn
Roush, New Haven;
!Discharges, Sept. 231
Jonathan
Bissell, Long
Judy Canter, Rebecca
Bottom
;
Catherine
O'Connor,
Chapman, Gene Childers,
Racine
;
Wanda
Sprague,
Cynthia Cole, James Crisp,
Mrs. Randy Halley and son, Tuppers 'Plains.
Saturday Discharged Lora Jarvis, Iva Malone,
Mrs. James Johnson and Daisy Sayre, Evelyn Murray,
daughter , Audrey Martin, J oyce Vance , Benny Spears 1
Lawrence Marti, Donald Payne, Catherine
Margueritte
McCulloch , Brown, Brenda Haning, Ray
Steve McMannis,
Roy Gladman, Mark Michael,
Pierson, Mrs. Allen Raines Billy O'Brien, Jakeson
and son, Jeremy Roush, Rankin.
Sunday Admission
Dorothy Sheets, Lloyd Shinn,
Gertrude
Swartz, Middleport.
Bonnie Sm1thson, Truman
Sunday
Discharged Souders, Mrs. John Staten
Penny
Stewart,
Gina Arnett,
and son, Ollie Swick, Lester
Vincent
King,
Lynne
Crow.
Thompson ,
Douglas

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II

•,

HOWARD R. NU'rfER
daughter, Mrs. Richard
Howard R. Nutter, 67, Rt. I, (Luella ) Fick, alao of Chesler.
Reedsville, died Saturday
He was a retired supervisor
afternoon at
Veterans of the Marietta Manufacturing
Memorial Hospital following Co. with 46 years of service.
a brief illness.
He was a member of !he
Mr. Nutter was born at Heights United Methodist
Quinwood, W.Va., the son of Church. He moved to Chesler
the late William and Della in 1971.
Persinger Nutter. He was
He was born June !0, 1885 In
preceded in death this year
Flalswood,
W.Va. to the laie
by his wife, Bessie O'Dell
Camden
and
Dora Sumpter
Nutter. He was also preceded
Newlon.He
was
preceded In
in death by several brothers
death
by
!till
wife
Ella D.
and sisters.
Newlon
in
1976.
Mr. Nutter attended the
Survivors include one son,
Baptist church and was a coal
G.
Russell Newlon Jr., Point
miner having retired in. 1970.
Pleasant;
one sister, Mrs.
He had been a resident of the
Fred
Lorentz,
Sutton, W.Va.;
Reedsville area the past eight
one
grandchild
and one greatyears.
He is survived by one grandchild.
Funeral services will be
daughter, Mrs. James
(Connie) Rucker, ReedsviUe; held Thursday, 2:!0 p.m. In
four sons, William of Reeds- the Crow-Russell Funeral
viDe; Billy of Rising Sun, Home with the Rev. William·
Md. ; Frank and Bill of Middlesworth officiating.
Northeast, Maryland; one Burial wlll he In Suncrest
sister, Lura Brown, Nettie, Cemetery.
W. Va., 15 grandchildren and
Frlenlls may call at 'the
five great-grandchildren.
funeral home Wednesday 2 to
Funeral services will be 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m.
held Tuesday atll a.m. at the
Eden United Brethren
Cliurch with the Rev. Eldon
Blake officiating . Burial
will be in the church
cemetery. Friends may call
at the White Funeral Home in
CHESHIRE - Judy Darst
Cool ville any time. The body and Jon Thompson, seniors at
will lie in state at the church Kyger Creek High School,
one hour prior to services.
have been appointed Voter
Information Program CoHOWARDL.MATI.ACK
ordinators by the Ohio
Howard Lowell Matlack, · ,Secretary of Stale, Ted W.
59, Stewart, died unex- Brown.
pectedly Sunday eveniug at
The American Governme.nt
his residence.
Class at Kyger Creek is
Mr. Matlack was born in working in conjunction with
Tuppers Plains son of the late the Gallia County Board of
Howard Matlack and the late Elections . They will be
Velma Swindler Mailack conducting
a
voter
Cassidy. He was preceded in registration program for the
death by his first wife, Rosa general election in NovemFaye Matlack in 1974.
ber.
The
places
of
He was a member of the registration will be at the
International Union of Addison Townhouse and the
Operating Engineers LocallB Bradbury
Building
in
of Columbus, a superin- Cheshire on October 3,
tendent of road construction Tuesday.
in the area the past 20 years.
He was a member of the First
EXTENDED FORECAST
Baptist Church, Athens.
Wednesday through
Jle is survived by his wife,
June Randolph Matlack, one Friday, chance of showers
son, Howard Lowell Matlack, Thursday, otherwise fair.
Jr., Stewart; two daudlters, Highs will be from the mld
Mrs. Joseph (Yvonne Kay)
to upper 70s and lows from
Barkie, Park Hill, Ky ., and the mid 40s to low 50s.
, •.
Mrs. Gary (Lola) Carol)
Taylor, Lancaster; three

Appointed
coordinators

step-sons , Barry Halsey,

Cleveland; Dennie Randolph,
Shalmar, Fla., and Benjamin
Randolph, Akron; one
brother, Carl Matlack,
Tuppers Plains; one halfbrother, Clair . Cassidy,
Tuppers Plains; Two sisters,
Mrs. Leota Cooper, Syracuse,
and Mrs. Dorothy Lambert,
Appache Junction, Ariz.,
eight grandchildren and
three step-grandchildren.
Funeral ser\'ices will be
held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
the First Baptist Church, 336
E. State St., Athens, with the
Rev . Gary Taylor officiating
assisted by the Rev. John
Poe. Burial will be in the
Coolville cemetery. Friends
may call at t!W White Funeral
Home in Coolville after 1 p.m,
on Tuesday. 11\e body will lie
In state at the church one

HI-LOW TEMP
NEW YORK (UPIJ -The
highest temperature reported
Sunday to the National
Weather Service, excluding
Alaska and HawaU, was 109
degrees at Spring Valley,
Calif. Today's low was 11
degrees at Hibbing and
International Falls, Minn.

HMC FUN RUN
Nome·----------l 1 Mile (I Ftmolt
Address

Ag1e--.,

Race Distance ( 1 1.5mlle ( )J.Omlle
T·shlreslze ()Small ()Medium
x. Large

(I 6.0mlle

(I Lorge

( )

In submitting this entry to participate In the HMC Fun
the Holzer Hospital Foundation dba · the Holzer
Medical Center. 1 attest that I am physically fit, that I
have sutflclenlly trained for my participation In this
by a physician.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, September 26, 1978

Return entry to : Ms. Beverly Jackson, Treasurer,

Recreation CommlHee, HMC, PO Box 280, Gallipolis,
Ohio •5631

SQUAD RUNS
The Middleport Fire
Department Emergency
Squad answered a call to the
Middleport Church of tbe
Nazarene at 6:54p.m. &amp;mday
for Nellie Cox, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Ple888nl Valley Hospital.
At 6:54 a.m. &amp;mday !he
department look a tanker to
Route 554 near Cheshire to
flush !he highway at !he
scene of an auto accident.

SEEK UCENSE
A marriage llcenae was
issued to Gary Lee Dye, 20,
Rt. 2, Coolville and Marcia
Marie Dillard, 18, P001eroy.

FREE CL0'111ING DAY
The Gallla·Melga
Canmunlty Actlm Agency
will hold Its free clothing day
for low Income persona
Wednesday, from 9 a.m. to 12
noon. The agency'• clothing
bank is loealed In the old high
school building at Cheshire.

YULE PLANS

Plans for the annual Clristmas promotion wlll be
formulated
when
the
lltiddleport Chamber of
Canmerce meetul8:30 p.m.
Tuesday at !he Meigs Im.

ELBERFELDS
SALEI •10995
EUREKA
UPRIGHT SWEEPER

992-7113

.

HARTWELL

WASHINGTON ( UPI) - Pasuenger and . freight train
service across the country ground to a virtual stop this
morning as a 2-monlh.,ld strike against the Norfolk &amp;Western
Railway Co. spread to railroads nationwide.
Railroad workers in other unions were refusing to cross
picket lines set up by the Brotherhood of Railway and Airline
Clerks, meaning that, in all , 43 railroads were affected by the
pickets, a union SPOkC8111an said.
Brian Duff, a spokesman for Amtrak, which runs much of
the passenger raU service in the eastern half of the country,
said !hill morning the strike means that "effectively, all
Amtrak train service this morning is stopped .
"Trains that left for their destination before 6 a.m. eastern

time wlll run, but no others," Duff said. Ae said, however, that
trains in the Northeast corridor, running from Washington to
Boston, would attempt to remain on schedule throughout the
day.
"Nothing's moving," said Duff. "We've got about 250 trains
a day and all of those trains outside the Northeast Corridor are
being affected." He said about 500 communities across the
nation were affeCted.
BRAC president Fred J . Kroll said, "We are taking this
action in order to bring increasing pressure on the Norfolk and
Western to start negotiating a settlement in good faith and with
a sense of realism that so far has been lacking from the offers
of the management negotiators."

Meigs County gets HUD grant
Meigs CoWity is receiving,
f82,!196 from ' HUD grant Jor
the rehabilitation of homes.
This was reported by Mrs.
Carol Costanzo, of the Farmers Home Administration,
at Monday's meeting of the
Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission.
Mrs. Costanzo reported she
had rewritten an earlier
program to . conform with
requirements and had been
advised that the grant has
' been approved for Meigs
County.
She will take the matter
before county commissioners
this week. Commissioners

will decide how the program
is to be carried out.
A coordinator will be hired
and additional funds are
included in the grant to pay
the salary of one full time
coordinator in addition to
other admlnlstrative costs.
The entire grant is for about

$80,000.

the state under the new law
has been approved.
The bond levy will be
reduced since the additional
state aid is forthcoming,
Judge
Webster
said.
However, there are no
operating funds and a 1.25
mill levy has been placed
before voters of the county at
the Nov. 7 election.
The state has mandated the
education of the retarded as it
has lor other young people,
Judge Webster commented.
If the operating levy does
not pass on Nov. 7, then the
operating monles must come

from the county's general
fund . This could result in the
county
commissioners
having to reduce funding for
other services and projects.
There has not been much
support for the program for
the retarded, Judge Webster
said, probably because there
is such a small number affected. He said about 20 are
school age, eight or nine
adults attend a workshop
school and several others,
prior to this year, have been
given homebound training.
There are probably some 30
adults who need or would
benefit from training, the
judge stated.

Mrs. Costanzo reported the
money will be granted to
residents who would like to
rehabilitate their homes, but
do not have personal
resources to handle such a
project. They will not have to
repay the funds used in the
rehabilitation of their homes.
Meigs County Probate
Judie Manning Webster, who
is chairman of. the Meigs
Board for Mental Retardation, spoke to the council
seeking Its support.
Juctce Webster said the
local program ceased in 1975.
Classes are being held In
Since that time, Meigs
County's retarded are now Logan today but 180 teacher1
taken to Gallla County for and 120 non-academic
schooling. No contract has employees continued . lbetr
been completed this year walkout which bef!an Aug: 29.
Logan school offtclall are
with Gallla Coi!IIIY for the
still
in sessioo with a federal
schooling, but Judge Webster
mediator.
,
ltatecl he understands 11 has
r.'jeanwhlle,
unleu the
been signed and must only he
strike
il
settled
by
Friday, all
dellv•ed.
He pointed out that in 1973 eltra curricular activities in
Meigs County voters ap- the Logan City Schools
proved a $260,000 bond Issue syatem will be cancelled
for a facllity for the mentally again lhil weekend.
Loaan's football team,
retarded. At that time, the
county would have had to defending Soulheutem Ohio
provide ilO percent of the League champions, was
conltruction colla while the achedulell to play at
lltate would have provided ilO Galllpolla Friday night In the
percent. However, the ~d annual SEOAL ·opener.
Gallipolis officials,
facility was not constructed.
Since then the law has meanwhile, are attempting to
changed ao that the state lind a aubltltute opponent in
provldn 80 percent and only ·case Friday'a conference
10 percent musl be provided opener with Logan is
canceUed.
locally, the judge lltated.
Aa a n1ull of the eUn!le,
MeiCI County wW pay only
.... tltiO ..,lha ..,,000 facility
Fourteen
plckellng
lor tllf maally rttarded and teacben In the •rlbbound
a .-bmltted application to Dayton School System were

The local facility is planned
on the Carleton .College site in
Syracuse , a location approved by the state, Judge
VVebster reported . State
funds pay for students and
adults receiving training, he
stated . He added the
disadvantage of an out-ofcounty program is that

locally there is no control of
the operation of the S&lt;ihool.
Costs for those receiving
training in Gallia County this
year run about $35,000, the
judge concluded.
E. F. Robinson and C. E.
Blakeslee, executive director
of the council, reported on the
(Continued on page 10)

Ohio bridge
bids approved
Construction of the Ohio
approaches to the new
Ravenswood · Racine bridge
across the Ohio River should
begin soon, according to West
Virginia Governor Jay
Rockefeller.
The
West
Virginia
Department of Highways
awarded

an

excavation

contract Aug. 29 for $1,396,180
to Carl M. Geutel Construction Company
of
Columbus
calling
for
grading , draining,
bituminous
concrete

• Wide. bright headlight helps discover dirt
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• Exclusive 6-posltion dial control Is easy
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HOME FURNISHINGS
1st FLOOR

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

I

...

'

.

arrested
today
by
Montgomery Comty sheriff's
deputies, but the work
stoppage by most of lbe
distrlct's 2,700 employees
Clllltinued.
Walkouts alao were still In
effect
at
Cleveland,
Lakewood, Logan and tbe
Mldvlew School District in
Lorain County.
The teachers were arrested
f&lt;r delylng an order by
Montcomery County
Ommon Pleu Court Jlldp
Carl Kelller to atop picketing
and return to work.
A large number of tl!achera
were o·n the picket llne
earlier, but moat had gone
home by tlie time the arreota
were made.
The order llaued by Kesaler
affected ..,)y the system's
2,200 teachea and mt !he 500
nonacademic employees who

are

ala~

oo strike.

"The pickets have caUied
irreparable
harm
to
operaUm of the schools,"
said Keasler.

The outstanding ·Issues involve job protection for veteran
workers, according to a union spokesman.
Thousands of rush hour commuters were stranded and
forced to use alternate means to get to work because of the
strike. A Chicago and Northwestern Railway spokesman in
Chicago said 200,0110 . commuters in that city alone were
expected to be affected by the union action.
An extended walkout on a scale as large as this morning 's
would have a major ripple effect in the nation's industries,
which depend on rail shipments for much of their supplies.
Court action to bar the "sympathy" pickets was either under
way at various points around the country or was in the
planning stage.

Weather
Sunny today, with highs in
the low or mid 70s. Clear and
cool tonight, with lows In the
upper 40s or lower 50s. Partly
cloudy Wednesday, with
highs in the mid or upper 70s.

.,

pavement, one abutmenl, ,,.
five piers and signing.
While only one approach
span is to be constructed on
the West Virginia side, under
contract also let on Aug. 29,
six steel girder spans at
MISSING - Tool Ann
approximately ISO feet each,
Pope, I7, 760 Laurel St.,
will be built on the Ohio side
Middleport, bas been
to serve as an approach to
missing from her borne
three steel truss river spans.
since 11:15 p.m. Thursday
The bridge on W. Va. 56 will
night. She has red blonde
provide two 12 foot lanes with
straight shoulder length
four foot shoulders, and will
hair, a very fair comconnect W. Va. 2 and 68 with
plexion, and is 5-3, 104
Ohio 338 in the Great Bend
pounds. She was last seen
area.
wearing white jeaas, a pink
top wllb black writing on
the front, She also wean
large . plaatlc rimmed
glasses aad Is very near
sighted. Anyone seeing her
should noltfy Nancy L.
Pope or the Mellis County
shertff's office.
No negotiations between
the Dayton Education
Association and the Board of
FUNDS DISTRIBUTED
Education have been held
MASON - StateAuditor
since Sunday.
Glen B. Gainer, Jr., anThe district has 37,000 stu- nounced his office has mailed
dents, and IChoola have been checks to the counties and
opened on a otaggered hasis municipalities of West
with clanes taught by
supervillory per10nnel and Virginia for the first half
collections of public utility
subllltute teachers.
tax
fori97S.79.
In Cleveland, where 10,000
The
checks amounted to
employees have been on 122,574,700,
an increase over
strike f&lt;r more !han two last year's Initial payment by
weeks In the 100,00ktlldent
district, achool some $1,171,350. Mason
portion
was
administrators are aeeldng County'a
1402,300.
wayo to trim the pr-nt
Point Pleasant received
bud&amp;et In an atlempt to lind $4,300;
Hartford, $250; Mason
money f&lt;r pay ralss.
City,
f650.
and New Haven,
Oasaea were alao open In $850.
the 9,ooo..tudenl Lakeview
School District, where
teachers have been on strike
CAA MEETING
for more than a week.
The Gallla-Meigs ComCl•aaes were being held In
Logan, where school olllclals munity Action Agency board
have met with a federal of truateu will hold its
mediator, but closed in the monthly meeting on Thursday, Sept. 28 at 8 p.m. in the
Midvlew School District.
Cheshire office.

Logan holds classes hut
walkout still fu effect

Portland, 0.
September 20

FR~D

Middleport ES has four calls
Four runs were answered Memorial Hospital.
At 6:40 p.m. Viele
Monday by the emergency
unit of the Middleport Fire Williams, Rout e I, Cheshire,
wh o suffered from body
Department.
At 3:32 p. m. John Will, 5, burns was taken to Veterans
was taken to Veterans Memoria l Hospita l and at
Memorial Hospital from 244 a:05 p. m. the squad went to
Sycamore St ., when it was near the Imperial Electric
believed that he might have Co. in lower Middleport for
eaten some poisonous berries Nelson Morrison, 132 Pearl
St. , who sustained injuries
from shrubbery.
At 5:09 p. m. C. M. Baker while playing. He was also
was taken from his home at taken to Veterans Memorial
16i S. S1&lt;th Ave. to Veterans Hospita l.

en tine

at

Cremeens.
Mrs. Cremeens attended
the Addison United Methodist
Church. She is survived by
two daughters, Mrs. Charles
(Vivian Carol ) Taylor, Addi so n, and Donna Kay
Cremeens, at home; a
broth er ; Kenn eth Lemley,
( Continued on page 10 )

Fifteen Cents
Vol . 29, No. I 14

Train service grinds to virtual stop today

Parental Signature, if entrant
under age of 18

Legislature caused costs

MGR. ·

vestigation by the GalliaMeigs Post, State Highway
Patrol.
Mrs. Cremeens was born
Nov. 23, 1921 , in Cheshire
Township, a daughter of the
late Leland and Manill a
Darst Lemley. She was also
preceded in death by her
hu sband ,
Hora ce
D.

Signature of entrant

... #/t.~:

POMEROY, 0.

•

e

event, and that my physical condition has been verified

r-------------------------1

220 E. MAIN ST.

'

along the roadway when she was struck by an east bound pickup truck
operated by Delmar Quickie, 63, Cheshire, who was apparently blinded
by the sun. Cremeens' dog was alao killed during the accident. The case is
still under investigation. (Larry Ewing photo).

sCENE of Gallia County's second 1978 traffic fatality. Hazel
Cremeens, 55, Addison, was killed this morning shortly before 8 a.m. in a
traffic accident on Addiao~-Bulavllle Rd. Cremeens was walking her dog

Run, 1 waive and release any and all rights ond claims
for damages, demands and actions I may have against

I
.
I
Letten of opinion are welcomed. They should be leu
I thaD 300 words long &lt;or subject to reduction 'by lbe editor I
I IUid must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
I be withheld upon publication. However, 011 request,
I llllmes will be disclosed. Letters should be in good taste,
I &amp;ddrelslag luues, not personalities.
I
I
.9~
I
I
I
I
.!-.

ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE II

..

HMC Employee ( 1 Yes ( 1 No

MAN ELECI'ROCIJTED
ELYRIA, Ohio (UPI) Th001as Buckhold, 25, was
electrocuted early today 1\!:"Y,-11
while apparently fooling
around with friends near
some guy wires at a city
Intersection.
Police .said Buckhold wss
holding the wire when it
brushed against some high
voltage lines and killed him.

Dear Editor:
Just heard Mr. Celebrezze, candidate for Secretary of
State, expressing his happiness ai being in Meigs County and
giving his concerns for the people down here,
He wanted us to know that fi,IOO, I believe waathe figure,
is corning to Meigs County to defray the burden that the
election board went to to register voters last SPrtng. Wasn'llhe
Iuue about changes In voting In Ohio lllrred up by thil
legislature of which Mr. Celebrezze is a member of !he
con trolllng faction?
A lot of voter registratlm last SPring was done (1) by
volmteer workers who worked 11 no ellpeflae to !he state. (2)
by regular election olllciala whowerepaldanyhow. (3) by ..ld
poll w&lt;rk4!1'S at the electlms. (4) by voters who registered
lhemaelves.
The IIUII of fi,IOO lllOb like a lot of mmey f&lt;r Ibis avowed
purpilee. Our vollnl precincts in Meigs County were recently
reorganized In the name of ecooomy. The big funding of voter
registration looks like pork-barrelllng coming as it does just
before the IIIII elections.
I spent ~everal hours in our precinct registering voters and
never aaw a dime. I did II to giveth- voters a chance to do
aomethlng about polltlclanlud bureaucrats who want to tax
and spend us into oblivion, - Gayle Price.

Hazel Cremeens, 55, Addison, was killed this morning
shortly before 8 a .m. in a
traffic accident on AddisonBulaville Rd.
Cremeens was walking her
dog along the roadway when
she was struck by a pickup
truck operated by Delmar
Quickie, 63, Cheshire.
Quickie, who was driving
east on Addison-Bulavil! e
Rd., was apparently blinded
by the sun.
Evidence at the scene indicates Cremeens' body was
apparently drug by the truck
approximately 50 feet before
coming to a stop.
A sec ond pi ckup tru ck
operated by Mike Elliott, 35,
Gallipolis, who wa s following
Quickie, stopped suddenly to
avoid collision with the
Quickie vehicle, and was
struck in the rear by an auto
operated by Mary Drum·
mood, 51, Gallipolis. The
accident is still under in·

.W;. L "

SEEKS DIVORCE
In Meigs County Conunon
G. R. Newlon Sr., 93, Pleas Court John Lee Davis,
Chesler, 0., for;nerly of Point . Long Bottom, filed suit for
Pleasant, d1ed Sunday divorce against Melinda Jane
evening at the home of his Davis, Pomeroy.

OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 1, 1978

Gallia woman zs
accident victim

WALT SAUNDERS,.Ielt, president of !he Employees'
Recreation Cmunittee a\ the Holzer Medical Center,
holds up the American Heart Association poster thaiiii!Y•,
"Run l&lt;r your life ... exercise", as he djscuases the
upcoming Fun Run SPmsored by !he Employees
Cmunittee with Diana Bittinger, rigl!t, a member of the
staff of !he personnel department at the hospital.

G.R. Newlon

,,

•

I

hour prior to services.

ALL

'

"We took this step only because the N&amp;W has maintained an
aloof and arrogant position throughout the entire negotiating
period," said Kroll, who walked out of the last negotiating
session on Thursday . He said he hoped !he " public protest"
against the action would force the railroad to be more flexible.
The Norfolk &amp;Western operates lines that extend as far West
as Kansas City, Mo., and as far north as Buffalo, N.Y. Dozens
of spur lines in local communities use the N&amp;W tracks. The
strike has gone on since July 10.
Major railroads affected by the walkout included: Tile
Southern; Burlington Northern; Seaboard Coast Line;
Atchison , Topeka and Santa Fe ; Union Pacific; Baltimore and
Ohio (to a limited extent ), Chicago and Northwestern; and the
Chessie System .

Village gets $60,000
ARC·grant for system
The Appalachian Regional
Commission has announced
approval of a basi c
assistance grant totaling
$60,0110 to aid in the expansion
and renovation of the sewage
collection system in Middleport .
This was the gist of a
communication presented
Monday night when Middleport Village Council met tn
regular session.
According to th e announcement, the project ca lls
for the construction of a
sewage lift station , conversion of the existing sewer
system into a storm draining
system and construction of
new sewage collection lines.
The improved sewer system
will serve the planned nursing home, an industrially
zoned section of land and a
low income housing project.
Tota I cost of the project will
be $240,000. The Department
of Housing and Urban
Development has approved a
$128,000 grant and loc al
resources of 152,000 will
complete the
funding
arrangement.
Middleport Council last
night passed the necessary
legislation designating that

$52,000, the local share will b• sewer in the lower end of
available for the project.
· town . Kelly suggested that
Controversial Topic
money lor the equipment be
A new backhoe - a con ~ taken from $125,000 in sewage
troversial topic at Middleport fund s held in escrow by the
Council meetings - aga in town .
came up for discussion la st
Grate remarked that an
night. Council. two weeks earlier co un c ll had ear·
ago, voted unanimously to marked that money to be
purchase a piece of equip- used against the town's inment from the Southeastern debtedness and he expects to
Equipment Co., Gallipolis, fulfill that plan.
for about $19,000.
Grate indicated he would
At that time Clerk- try to find funds with which to
Treasurer Gene Grate said pay for repair of the present
the village is not financially backhoe.
able to purchase the equipMayor Fred Hoffman inment and indicated that he dicated the repair cost would
will not sign ne cessary be $3,0110 or $4,0110. Mullen
papers if the council, as in- indicated he is against repair
dicated, tri ed to borrow of the backhoe, because the
money for the purchase.
repair might last only a short
Last night, Grate said the time and then other costly
Board of Public Affairs had repair work have to be done.
not authorized the purchase
Council revi ewed the
and again warned the village prospects of discussing the
cannot spend its funds down problem with Solicitor
to a point where it does not Bernard Fultz. Grate said he
have mon ey to handle would indicate, if asked, by
emergency situations.
Fultz that the village cannot
Coun c ilman Ch a r l e s afford to buy the new backMullen stated the backhoe is hoe.
definitely needed to provide
Councilman Dewey Horton
services for the town.
di sc usse d aspects of the
Councilman Marvtn Kelly problem if it were to go into
said he feels the backhoe is co urt . A meeting of several
more of an emergency than a
(Continued on page 10)

-.
*

,&lt;

!f:t;

''

·'

,__,a_., ..-..

NEW LOCATION- Simon's Gift Center formerly located at Simon 's Pick-A-Pair has

been moved to 128 West Main Street next to the Farmers Bank and Savinga parking lot. The
shop, which offers a variety of items, will be open dally from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. except 011
Thursday when it closes at I p.m. Mrs. Simon is shown with a few of the many attractive
items offered.

,

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