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                  <text>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

l'llmeroy, 0.

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
In darkest corners.
• Exclusive 6-posltion dial control Is easy
to reach, adjusts front end of cleaner lor
best overall performance .

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
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ELLIOTT
APPLIANCE II

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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

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hour prior to services.

ALL

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"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)

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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.

,

�2 - The Daily Sentinei, Middlepoi'\;Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday,Sept. 26'::1..:1:::;978:::.....~--------

3- .The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tueaday. Seot 26. 1971

IN WASHINGTON
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Donald F. Graff

And now some good news

Counting on the 'old faithful''·

ByDoaGnlf

By Martha Aagle aod Robert Walkrs
WASHINGTON ( NEAl - The early pank of congressoonal Democrats over possible voter retaliation for the
huge Social Security tax boost approved last year has
totally evaporated ~ along with any serious effort to roll
back that increase.
It's not that anyone expects the big bite to hurt less w~n
it takes hold this coming January . Indeed, the ..Soctal
Security tax hike is so stiff that most Amertcans wtll pay

more £ederal taxes next year than they do now even after
Congress votes a reduction ip. income taxes .
.
But cong ressmen can count - especially at election
time . And they know tha t older voters, who worry about
the solvency of the Social Security system and the safety of
their own benefit funds , tend to tum out at the ~Us far
more faithfully than younger wage-earners who will bear
the brunt of the tax increase.
.
House Majority Whip ·J ohn Brademas, D-l!!d., dtd a
computer a nalysis of those who actually voted m his last
congressional .contest two years ago and diScQvered that
more than half those casting ballots were at least 55 years
old . And the heaviest turnout of all was among .voters 65
and older - those already drawing Soct~l ~urtty · .
There's nothing unique about the 3rd Dtslnct oflndtan\',
which Brademas represents. In fact, pollst~r Lo~ Ha!"""
ass ured House Democratic leaders that it IS qwte lyptcal
of the national turnout pattern.
. ,
Once edgy House members worked out this polittcal
arithmetic they stopped worrymg about a backlash from
the tax .,.,.;st and started boasting that they had saved the
Social Security system from bankruptcy .

"That's interesting. Do you have huff and puff insurance on YOUR
house?"

'

Maryland's most remarkable upset
For sheer irony , it's hard to match this year's
Democratic gubernatorial primary in Maryland, where
acting Gov . Blair Lee III was upset by hmgshot Harry R.
Hughes, who wasn't even supposed to ftgure m the fourway competition .
Hughes, a former state senator who later served as state
transportation secretary, came out of nowhe~e m the final
three weeks of the campaign after the Baltunore Sunpapers endorsed his candidacy .
.
.
.
What gave special piquancy to hts surprtse vtctory was
the fact that Lee once backed Hughes for governor. That
was 10 years ago, when both men served m the state
senate . Spiro T. Agnew had JUS! been elected vice
president , and the Maryland General Assembly was

choosing his

successor~ gove~or .

· Although most Marylanders bave forgotten by now,
there we re two candidates for the job - House Speaker
Marvin Mandel and Senate Majority Leader Harry R.
Hughes a maverick liberal from the conservattve Eastern
Shor e. Mandel won handily, but Lee supported Hughes.
Much to his surprise, Lee was then asked to become
Mandel' s lieutenant governor. Like Agn~w, Mandel ultimate ly wound up in federal court, convicted of political
corruption charges. Lee, untouched by the scandal,
became acting governor and conftdently expec.t ed to wm
the job in his own right until Hughes knocked him off.

Incumbents: not unbeatable
Even thoug h the conventional wisdom holds. that
inc umbents are headed for a good year, the prtmary
season has been marked by one upset after another.
On the same day tljat Hughes was ambushing Blair Lee,
supposed " frontrunners " bit. the dust m ~~esota, .
Wisconsin , Vermont and Ute Dtstrtct of ColumblB m races
for everything from the U.S . Senate to ~yor . They had
plenty of company earlier in the year - m Oregon, Texas,
South Carolina , North Carolina, New Jersey and MISSISSIJ&gt;"
pi to name a few states where frontrunners fell down.
There's been no discernible pattern to the upsets, no
ideological trends. But politicians as diverse as Dem~
cratic Chairman John While and Senate GOP Leader
Howard H. Baker Jr. now suspect that more surpriSes may
be coming in November.

.,. Library

HEALTH

L t&lt;JII
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8

Lawrence E. Lamb, M.O:

A

Hardening of the arteries
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - The
last two years I have walked
poorly and the doctor iiays it
is hardening of the arteries
but indicates there is nothing
I can do for it. I'm '17 years
old. From my feet up to my
seat the insides of my legs
feel tender.
Recently I did a lot of yard
work with lots of bending
over and for several days I
co uld hardly get out of a
chair. A relative of mine, the
same age, had an operation
four years ago to put new
arteries in his legs and this
helped him for nearly two
years. Then it came back. My
attorney says he knew a man
who had good benefits for five
years and died in his 80s.
Would an .electric body
massager on arteries help or
burt . . Someone said this
might cause blood clots.
Would it. .
DEAR READER - There
·are a lot of people younger
than you who might be a little
stiff and sore after yard
work.
When a person has leg
problems related to poor
circulation throulffi the ar-

R

teries to the legs it can
sometimes be corrected by
surgery . The prpblem is a
build up of fatty-cholesterol
deposits in the walls of the
arteries to the legs. This
blocks the circulation.
When the area is localized,
a surgeon can put in a graft
above tbe block and below the
block . The graft simply
detours blood around the
blockage.
Now, if ·the artery is
blocked all the way down the
leg, there is no open art en
you can detour ihe blood to.
An operation is of no value in
that case. These operations
only work for people who
have localized blockage with
pretty good . arteries beyond
the blockage .
In your relative's case, as
the fatty-cholesterol build up
continued in the artery below
or above the detour graft, the
circulation would be blocked
again and the symptoms of
poor circulation would

return.

Surgery is great to detour
around the localized blockage
! NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . I
1
but it is important to realize
the basic disease, the a ccumulation
of
fatty·
cholesterol deposits in the
arteries, is still there and can
progress after surgery.
Even if it is possible to put
in a graft to detour around the
BY REV. HOWARDC. BLACK
artery , it is still important to
Mason and Area
218 W. Seveoth Sl., Mt. Carmel, IL.IIZ883
take measures to improve the
Persboals
Telephone: (618) 26%-5'178
Mr . and Mrs . Michael circulation. That means
Fields of Washington, W. Va . preventing any more acFUNNY ISN'T IT? -OR IS IT?
of
fattya ccompanied by Mr. an&lt;l, cumulation
Human nat ure is an interesting study , but often an
cholesterol
deposits
in
the
Mrs. I. W. Gibbs and Miss
incomprehensible expe rience. It's hard to understand some
Lois AJ\!1 Gibbs of Hartford, arteries. Exercises within the
people. Most of us don't even understand ourselves !
spent several days with Mr. limits of the patient, diet and
The old observation , " It takes all kinds of people to make
cessation
of
and Mrs. William Allemang, complete
up the world - and , oh , boy ! - we sure have them all !" only
brother of Mrs. Gibbs, in smoking are all important
emphasizes the fact of the diverse personalities, character
Vincennes, Indiana . On parts of the treabnent.
traits, and mental temperaments of the peoples of the world . Sunday they were joined by
A vibrator or muscle
That is what makes hwnan behavior so unpredictable.
th e Allemangs ' daughter, massage by any means may
What most of us probably do not realize , however, is that
Mrs. Paulette Grey and son, help to relax muscles that are
we generally see our own attitudes and behavior mirrored in
Mike. They were entertained in spasm caused by poor
the lives of others, sometimes greaUy distorted, by our own
at the E•ecutive Inn for circulation , but it will not
misjudgments of the motives of others . No matter how
dinner by their hosts. On improve the circulation in
unprejudiced we may like to think we are, we cannot
Monday evening the group any way . It will not cause
completely escape the bias of our own ego . Sometimes, without
were dinner guests of Mr. and blood clots.
rea lizing it . ourselves, our opinions are a camouflage for
When you have poor cirMrs . Wayne Allemang of
jealousy, resentment, and fear as a protective reaction for our
culation
to the legs and feet it
Monroe City, Indiana who
own eg o. This often leads to misunderstandings among people,
is
important
not to expose the
ow ns and operat es th e
a wron g image of self, and a mistrust of others.
foot
or
leg
to
too
much heal or
· Allemang Peach and Apple
Isn't it funny how we are prone to excuse our attitudes and
of injury.
cause
any
kind
Orchard and sells the
rationalize our actions , when, at the same time we are
Good
$hoes
are
important.
produce at their market . On
judgmental toward others for the same attitudes and actions?
Tuesday their hosts held an Any Injury ·in the presence of
When someone else takes a long time to do a job, he 's slow,
old-fashioned wiener roast poor circulation may not heal
but when I take a long time to do tl\e same thing, I'm thorough.
and cookout at their home for properly .
When a nother person refuses to do something he is asked the guests and their families
Good foot care may save
to do, he is lazy . But when I refuse to do the same thing, I'm before their return home.
your foot or leg from amjust too busy !
Mrs. Evelyn Stewart was putation . So I am sending you
On the other hand, when someone else goes ahead and does
accompanied home by her The Health Letter nwnber 11a job without having to be told to do It, he's over stepping his
son and daughter-in-law, 8, Your Feet and How To
bounds. But when I go ahead and do it without having been
Major and Mrs. Jack Stewart Care For Them. Others who
told , that's initiative.
and family after spending want this issue can send 50
When the other fellow strongly state his side of a question,
two weeks visiting at their cents with a long, stamped,
he 's bullheaded . But when I state my opinion strongly, I'm just
home In Fort Harrison, Ind. self-addressed envelope for
being firm .
Major and Mrs . Stewart it. Send your letter to me In
When the other person overlooks some rules of etiquette,
remained for a few days visit care of this newspaper' P .O.
he 's rude . But when I skip a few of the rules, I'm being
with his mother and brothers Box 1551, Radi.o City Station,
or iginaL
and and family , Mr. and Mrs. New York, NY 10019 .
When someone else does something that pleases the boaa,
George Robert Stewart In
he's "polishing lrass." But when I do something that plell8es
Mason .
DIE DAILY SENTINEl.
the boss, that's cooperation !
DEVO'I'ED TO TilE
Mrs. Josephine Martin, Mr.
And , when the other fellow gets ahead, be had all the lucky
INTEIIE8TOF
and Mrs. Arnold Patton, Fort
MEIGS-M,._ AREA
breaks. But wben I manage to get abead - man! - that was
Wayne, Indiana,
were
ROBERTIIOUUCH
the result of my hard work!
OtyU\er
weekend
guests
of
Mr
.
and
lsn 't it funny how our own reflection In others becomes
lubHihed dilly U l..'f!pt &amp;llwdiY
Mrs
.
Vernon
Roush
and!
by The ,Ohiu, Valley PubU.hing
such a distorted image of ourselves, actually, by our own
Q.mp!lny-Muldmedla, In&lt;: .,
Ul
family
to
attend
the
.
weddinir
misjudgments of the other person 's motives ?
Cwrt St., P~y , Ohio ~7Ml .
of
Mr.
Vernon
Roush,
Jr.,
~tlSUldUJ Offirc Phone 992· 21M.
·
Funny, isn 't it - or is It ?
Mason, and Miss Gayle Price Editorial Phone 11924157.
Next Week : "utlng Otben Aa Well AI YourseU ."
St·eood ctus post&lt;&amp;ji!e p¥'\d Mt
of Belpre on Sept. 16.
Pomeroy. moo.

The Open Road

NORTHFIELD
NO RTHFIELD,
Ohi o
(UPI ) - George Mueller
reined Dwyer Scott to a wire·
to-wire victory Monday night
In the featured ninth race at
Northfield Park .
The winner covered the

Vikings upset .Bears

COMMENTARY

mile in 2:02 ~ in gaining h!J
third straight victory that
$3.40
to
win
paid
ticketholders.
Tarport Tara was second ,
41&gt; lengths back, and
Brunswick County came in
third.

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Letters

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y

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September 25, 1978
Mrs. Naoma Brinker
CETA
Courthouse
Pomeroy, OH 45769

Dear Naoma :
Thank you so much for your help in obtaining a CETA
worker for the libraries to replace Ruth Powers (who took the
library position from which Otrilltlna Grueser retired). I know
that Margaret Burkhammer will be of great help to us and the
people of Meigs County, whom W\! all serve ..
Margaret was only me of several applicants for the job,, I
know; andl'msureyou wish, as we do, lhatCETA had enough
money to hlre all the people who are looking for work.
However, since you could hire only me person, I'm delighted
that you chose a woman who is sure to fit in nicely.
Perhaps Margaret told you that we have some other
Federally -funded assistants who recenUy joined us. They are
all part-time assistants who have come to us for on-the-job
experience through the efforts of Joan Culp and the
Community Action Agency . Debbie White will spend 20 hours a
week at Pomeroy, while Patty Dugan and Jill Smith will each
work for 10 hours ·a week after school. Brian Brauer plans to
spend 10 hours a week, including Saturdays, at the Middleport
Library.
In a week or so, Margaret Burkhammer and Ruth Powers
will begin to share the workload.at Middleport. !'in sure that
all of Chrilltina Grueser's loyal patrons will find both these
ladies pleuant to deal with. And Clarice Erwin has very k,lndly
offered to spend Mondays assisting them.
As you can set. we have very suddenly gone from being
seriously understaffed to being adequately staffed . I hope that
you and the other folks in Meigs County will stop in and meet
the newcomers and give us all suggestions about ways the
lilraries can serve you better than ever before.
Sincerely yours,
Ellen Bell, Director

Athe01 Uveotoek Sales
Saturday, Sept. Z3, 1978
(CatUe)
Feeder Steers ( 401).11()() lbs. )
Choice 59.-J;74 ; Good 44-:i9.
Feeder Heifers (400-700
lbs. ), Choice 50-63.50; Good
34 .23-49.50.
Feeder Bulls (401).11()() lbs. ),
Choice 55-71.50; Good 39.7554 .50.
Slaughter Bulls (over 1,000
lbs 37.50-47.
Slaughter Cows, Utilities
35~. 50; Canners and Cutters

It's not quite coming up all roses - yet, but some things
certainly have begwt to blossom for Jlnuny Carter of late.
T1le Camp David agreements on the Mldeaat, to which
tbe prealdent's contribution was vital U not poulbly
indispensable currently command the headlines.
But tbere'; more. Aa a domestic curtain-raiser for
Carter's International coup, Congress gave him a civil
service refonn bill. Both houses by lopsided majorities
have approved legislation that will place, once a final
compromise version Is worked out, greater job emphasis
on perfonnance and less on security for more than two
million employees In the federal bureaucracy.
T1le legislation does not give the president everything he
wanted In particular by retaining the veterans preference
In fede~al appointments which he wished to eliminate. But
it comes close enough to fulfilling hiB requlrementa for
reform as "the single most important step that we can take
to lnaure that the government does wbat It is suppoeed to
do : meet the needs of tbe Americail people ~th the
minimum of waate and a mulmum of efficiency.
Still pending In Congress are as important or more so
Items on the White House must list- tax refonn, weUare,
employment 'a nd health care measures. But momentwn of
the civil service action may well carry over to speed action
on these when Congress reconvenes In the new year.
The administration's victory on the Panama Canal
treaties has receded into recent history, already all but
forgotten by the public. But that, as it is turning out, also Is
good news for the White House. The treaties are not
proving to be the public Irritant once predicted. Their
discernible imf.act has been nil in primaries so far. No
candidate has oat because of his vote for the revlslona or
woo because of his opposition, putting a number of
congressional Incumbents in the happy position of having
the White House in their debt without having endangered
their reelection proapects as a ·consequence.
T1le president also has scored with the suslalnlng of hiB
nuclear carrier-prompted veto of the defense bill and the
lifting of the embargo on anns supplies to Turkey. Next
could even come a popularity upturn In the opinion polls,
which Is precisely what the politically prescient are
commencing to predict.
· A chief executive could be forgiven for finding all this
heady stuff, particularly one who only a few weeks ago was
being discussed as a probable one-tenner.
But a shrewd chief executive knows that what goes up,
like public popularity, can also all too eaally go down
again .
.
There's more to presidential success than foreign policy
grandstanding, as Richard Nixon . can. testify. Or an
impressive body of domestic legiSlation, as Lyndon
Johnson discovered.
It requires some of both, plus large helpings of practical
political sense and luck. In which case, the present
president's ho~ for the future may lie In the evidence of
his past - which has demonstrated that he is not deficient
in either respect.

31 .85-38.60.
Veals (Choice and prime)
59.50-75.
Baby Calves (by the head)
23-57.
(Hogs)
Hogs (No. 1, Barrows and
Gilts, 200.230 lbs. ) 49.70-61.75.
Sows 42-44.75.
Boars 32.50-36.
Pigs (by the head) 1&amp;-30.
(Lambs)
Slaughter Lambs 58.51Hil.
Feeder Lambs 66 .

Berry's ·world

~k -

Abaolwn won the fir!ll race,
kicking off a 1~ big triple
combination that waa worth
~.~.

A crowd of 2,938 wagered
J389,510.
\

7S t'mtll ptr

f ll. rM) ;

Three

lt J . ~ ;

126.00 year: Six munlhi
Three monlhs. 17.$0

Ebew,t~t r e

montha. 17.00 ;

fiub!lcriPtkm prit~ indUIJt.l( Sund.M:
;ri.me!l. .~rr.tin.. r
,

news.

Sometimes it's difficult to tell the difference these days.
(NEWSP-APER ENTER.PRISE ASSN. )

WS ANGELES (UPI) -

Cotinty in 1980.
Mayor
Tom
Bradley
Members of the 12-man
announced the foJ1118tiOn of a committee appointed by
special committee Mmday to . Bradley Include City Council
find a National Football President John Ferraro,
League team to replace tbe County Supervisor Kenneth
Los Angeles Rams in the Hahn and Lew Wasaerman,
Coliseum, who will move to head of Universai-MCA.
Anabeim Stadium in Oran~e

peopletalk
United Press blterutloul
TilE INSIDE $TORY: The towel may 100n become as
important to the bashful members of the New York Yankees aa.
their .gloves and hats. A federal judge has ruled the Yankeee
management can no longer bar women sports writers from the
locker room after a game. The ruling came In a ax·
discrimination complaint flied by Mellua Ludtke of Sporta
illustrated who said she was barred from the Yankee
clubhouse during the World Series last year. Said U.S. Dlllrict
Judge Colllltace llllDter Motley, " ... the player wbo Ia
undressed and wishes to move about in that state can uae a
towel to shield himself from view." Yankee owner GeGI'Ie
StelllbreDDer said the club would comply with the court's
ruling and he said its han had been enforced by a directive
from CollliDII1ioaer Bowie Kubo.

LET DAD HELP OtJ:I': Actor Doaald Sutberlaad wu no
bystander at the birth of his son at a hospital in Vancouver,
Brltlsh Columbia. Sutherland and tbe attending physician
helped French Canadian actress Fl'ucllle Rllcette deliver the
baby using the Bradley Oilldbirth Method. Two bo~n after the
birth of the &amp;iJound, 15-ounce boy Sutherland and Mlu Rllcetle
returned to their apartment They also have a 4-year-old 1011.

YOUNGER'S BEST JIRIEND: California AUo1'111!7 Gmeral
Evelle J. Youaaer had to mila a recently lcheduled
confrontation with opponent G&lt;Jv. F4maM G. lin- Jr., but
Y0111111er had a good SCIJII. The Republican challenpr In the
November gubernatorial race bowed out of a IJIIIICh becahe had to take his dog to lbe veterinarian. Brownlbowed up,
however, and joked about the fiCI tllat his lather, tbe klrmer
governor of California, baa said he wanta his bachelor 1011 to
get married. San Fraadlc:o pollater Met vlu ll'lllciN711\ would
be a pollticll mlllake for Brown to get I1IIITiecl blfart the
November election, the gowmor lllid, and Pl•ldlllt Carter'•
mother ''1171 I'm nuta" for remainlol a bachelor.

By MoW" Rou~ where ct~rrier

~~trvice """ avallable . One rnonth,
13.25. By lnail In Ohio 11nd w. V111.,
One Ye&amp;r , St2.00; Six munlh!i,

The United States went into the hole by $3.26 billlQnln Ita
dealings with the rest of the world for the second quarter of
thla year.
That is the Commerce Department's final figure on the
balance of payments deficit for the April-June period. It Is
the eighth successive quarter of red Ink and pomls toward
a year-end deficit topping 1977's $15.27 billlon. That is
clearly bad news.
However, the deficit was less than half that registered in
each of the preceding two quarters, suggesting a levelinll
off of the long-term trend. ~ tha~ Is considered good

SUIT, COUNTERSUIT: The ex-wife of Sen. Edward Broolle
says the Maasachuaetts Ropublican haa failed to live up to
their divorce agree~ RHal&amp;la Broolle contends her a·
husband has failed to pay almOIII $37,000 owed her aa part of
their divorce. Brooke reaponded with a suit tJ his own, sayinl
his a-wife has failed to llign over to him property he needs to
get the cub to make the payments. Brooke, the nation's only
black anator, faces a dllllcult r«!ledlon battle In November,

NYtiuiual 1U.I11erti.ting r~;:pre!kn ·
l.ltllve , Lltndon ANUeliHts, 3101
Euclid Ave ., Clt"Ve~ml, Ohio 44 1 1 ~.
Sub&amp;t!rlpuon'rttln : Delive r~ by
t Mrritr wM~ l.vaU11ble

Two ways of looking at it

''As 1 Red Sox f1n, how much longer can I be
expected to keep my sanity?"

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

GLIMPSES: FrW 8lualra, whole father wu a llrwnan Ill
Hoboken, N.J ., will playholttomemberaof the New York cttJ
Fire Qepartment during his week ol performapcea at Jlldlo
aty Mullc: Hall nest monlb ... On a dare frmi''Tonllht" lhow ·
guest holt 8teve M8rtlu, a.t ReJIIOidl avec! orr tba IJIUio
tache he had wom Iince 1m ... Actr.a Lllllu Ola, '!'motion picture car.' 1p101 -~~~ ~ ..tea, 1111 rtellvecl the
Heart of Holl)"'l'ood Award d~ a ~ prior 10 the ·
West Cout benefit prenU.e of Rellat Altr•'l "A Wlddlnl."

... UoJd llrldc•

'II'U - . ....

ernd •IMndl"l 1111 NeW

York benellt preview ol ''SoQJebody KIDid lllr lluelwMI,"
starring Brldgea' aon, Jeff, and JPunlt hweeta 'hlon....
t

By ED SAINSBURY ·
CHICAGO ( UPI) - Tbe
Minnesota Vikings are far
from dead, and the Chicago
Bears can testify to their
rejuvenation.
The Bears began Monday
night's TV game unbeaten in
three games and a threepoint favorite . The Vikings
scored the first 14 points,
never trailed, and posted a 2420 victory to move into
contention for a seventh
straight championship in the
NFL's National Conference
Central Division.
" We were victims of the
Vikings and our own
mistakes, " Bears.' Coach
Neill Armstrong said.
On the sixth play of the
game, Minnesota's Fran Tarkenton passed to Sammy
White for 33 yards and a

Vikings' touchdown. On the
Bears' ninth play, Chicago's
Bob Avellini fwnbled the ·
. snap
. from
center,
Minnesota's Mark Mullaney
recovered and lateraled to
Matt Blair, who ran 49 yards
for a touchdown and a 14-4
Vikings advantage.
The two touchdoW118 were
enough to decide the game.
''There was a lot of pressur~," Vikings' Coach Bud
Grant said, "but there's
pressure every week. This
was not a Super Bowl, it was
just a game ."
The win gave Minnesota a
2-2 record, one game behind
the Bears and · Green Bay,
tied for the Central .Division
lead with 3-1 recorda.
Minnesota won the conlelt
on rushing yardage too,
limiting Walter Payton to 5I

yards · in 24 carries. Both
Rickey Young and Omck
Foreman outsa !ned Payton,
Y01J1111 with 11 yards in 17
carries and Foreman with 73
in 17.
" Running
was
the
difference in the game,"
Armstrong said. " We were
ready, but they played more
3-4 defense than we expected
and they ran more than I
thought they would."
The Bears p(cked away at
Minnesota's 14-polnt lead and
Payton ran three yards for
the ilrst of his two
touchdowns before Bob
Thomas booted field goals rl.
27 and 32 yards to cut tbe
Vikings' advantage to one
point.
But then Tarkenton look
charge . Relying on hla

passing, he carried the
Vikings from their 31 to tbe
Bears' one, where Foreman
plunged a yard for a
touchdown and an elghtpolnt
VIkings edge and Rick
Danmeler , who converted
after each touchdown, booted
a 29-yard field goal for an 11polnt Minnesota lead with 12
minutes to play .
Avellini, forced to play
catchup by passing, wound up
with 207 yards on 22
completions in 38 attempts,
but he had two passes
intercepted in key situations,
and the fumble which .
resulted In Minnesota 's
touchdown gave the Bears too
many turnovers to keep pace.
Tarkenton passed for 152
,ards on 14 completions In 20
attempts and had ·only one
Interception, by Doug Plank
·on the Beers' two to stop a
·Mlmetow threat

Bengals need victory
tsy Klt;ll VAN !iANf
CINCINNATI ( UPI) - The
Cincinnati Bengals look the
same to the players as to the
·
fans: "Awful."

"This is awful ," Bob
Johnson, the eldest Bengal,
said after Cincy lost Its fourth
straight game Sunday.
Johnson, the first player
drafted when the Bengals
were formed II years ago,
has been prowling the
sidelines most of the season
as his young understudy,
Blair Bush, is trying to learn
the NFL ropes.
"Our defense Is not as good
as it used to he, our nm
offense is not as good . In
fact, " offered Johnson, "The
whole team is not playing
weU."
Not only has Cincy lost all
four of its games, but three of
the losses have been at home,
where ihe Bengals onee were
almost unbeatable.
And, losing to the New
Orleans Saints at home
Sunday did not sit well with
Johnson at all.

"This was a win we r.lb
needed," he said. "~aw
m the I'Oid and we're lolne 10
need them all."
The only thinp the Benpla
have going for them thll week
is that injured quarterback
Ken Anderson may be ready
to play Sunday agalnat San
Francisco and the fact that
the 49ers also are without a
victory.
The Bengals, 49ers and St .
Louis Cardinals are the only
winless clubs in the .28-team
NFL .
A Cincinnati. newspaper
wondered in a headline
Monday, " Ben gals worst in
the league? "
A loss to the 49ers Sunday
would make . that question
easier to answer.
Clncy 's
0-4
record
represents by far the worst
start in tbe history of the
franchise . In 10 previous
years, the team never lost
two in a row to open a season.
''One thing has me the most
frustrated," said Bengals'
coach Bill Johnson . "We are

weo

team after the fourth straight
albact, Johnson admitted,
.. It 's down. "
And, for the second time in
four weeks, the Bengals
attracted the smallest crowd
In the NFL Sunday. More
than
15,000 Rlveffront
Stadium seats were vacant as
~.455 customers turned out.

Royals clinch.
tie for title
By BILL MADDEN
UPI Sport&amp; Wrlkr
An unprecedented repeat of
the same four plaoff finalists
is closer to becoming reality
today with the Kansas City
Royals having dincbed at
least a tie for the American
League West and the
Philadelphia Phillies inching
closer to the National League
East title.
The Royals clinched a tie
for their third straight AL
West title Monday night by
beating the Seattle Mariners,
7-2, behind the six-hit pitching
of Dennis Leonard, who won
his 2oth game for tbe second
straight season. At the same
time, the Phillies maintained
their four-game lead over
Pittsburgh In the NL East by
coming from behind to heat
the Montreal Expos, 3-2, in 12
Innings.
John Wa than had a two-run
triple for the Royals in the
first and the Royals added
four more in the fourth to
stake Leonard to his fourth
straight win and help him
become the first pitcher in
Royals' history to win 20
games twice.
"It's unbelievable," said
111e Royals' Frank White .
"Some teams don't get this
far in 30yearsand we' ve done
It three years in a row. We
went through a lot to get

here."

also had a pair of RBI for

•

Reds meet
LA Dodgers

••

·SCOREBOARD

W. L . Pet.

GB

87 611 .561
83 72 .535
77 79 .494
73 83 .468
68 90 .430
63 94 ... 01
Weal
W. L. Pel.

•
10112
14 1/ 2
20 117
25

Wynegar ; Matlack, Cleve la nd
{91 and Sundber g . W- Cieve land (5 -8). L - Marshall (8-12).
HRs- Tex as, Grubb ( 15) , Bonds

130).
[Onl y game s scheduled )

Miior League Leaders
Bv United Press International
Batting
GB
(Based on 425 at bats )
x -Los Ang
94 62 .603
National L eag u e
Cinclnari
86 69 .sss 7lf'l
GAB. H . Pet.
San Fran
87 70 .554 7112 Park er Pit
1.42 56 1 18-1 .328
San Qiego
81 76 .516 lJlf2
Bu ckner Cni
11 2 427 137 .321
Houston
69 87 .442 25
Madlock SF
11 9.433 136 .314
Atlanta
69 87 .442 25
Garvey L: A
156 622 194 .312
x-clinched division title
Clark SF
151 574 179 .312
Monday's Results
Cru z Hou
148 547 170 .311
Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 4
Winfield SO
153 569 176 .309
Phila 3, Montreal 2, 12 inns .
R icha r ds SO
149 533 164 .308
St . Louis 3, New York 0
Burrogh s Atl
148 475 146 .307
Today's Probilble Pitchers
Concpcn Cin
148 549 164 .299
(All Times EDT)
American Lugue
Wlontreat (Mav 7-101 and
GAB. H. Pet.
Palmer Q.OJ at Philadelphia Carew M in
149 552 186 .337
(Kaat 7-5 and Christenson 12 - 01 iver Tex
128 504 162 .32 1
14 ), 2, S:J5p .m .
Rice Bos
156 650 205 .3'\5
Chi cago
&lt;Lamp
8-IO J at
Piniella NY
124 4.48 140 .313
Pittsburgh (Rooker 9-11) , 7:35 Roberts See
129 455 137 .301
Yount M il
123 485 145 .299
p.m .
Houston ( J .Niekro 12 -141) at Ot is KC
137 471 140 .297
Atlanta (P .Niekro 19-16), 7 :35 Oglivie Mil
125 458 136 .297
Bost ock Ca l
147 568 168 .296
p .m .
St L oui s ( Oresler 0-0 J at New LeF lore Oet
152 656 193 .294
York (Swan 8-6J. 8 :05p .m .
Munson N Y
147 589 17 3 .294
Los An~eles (John 16-10 ) at·
Home Runs
Cincinnati (Seaver 15-14 ), 8:05
National League : Foster , Cin
35 ; Lu zinski. Phil 32 ; Smith, LA
p.m .
San D ieg o {Perry 20 -6) at San and Parker , P i tt 29; King man ,
Francisco {Montefusco 11 -8&gt;. Chi 28 . .
American League : Rice, Bas
10 :35 p .m .
·
Wednesdily 's G•mes
43 ; Bay lor , Cal and Hisle. Mil
San Diego at San Francisco
33 ; 'Thornt on , Clev 32 ; Tho mas.,
Montreal at Phila , night
M il 31 .
Ch lC.!QO !U Pittsbgh , n ight
Runs BaUed In
Houston at Atlanta , night
National
League : . Parker ,
Los Angeles at Ci nci, n ig ht
Pitt 114 ; Foster . Cin 110 ;
Gar vev . LA 109; Clark , SF 98 :
Winfield, S O 97 .
,
Ameriun League
American League: Rice , Bos
Eoot
133: Stau b , D et 119 ; H is le, Mil
11 3; Thornton , Clev 103 ; .Ca rt y ,
New York
~· ~2 P~J3 G 8 Oak
95 .
Boston
93 63 .596 1
Stolen Bases
Milwauke
90 67 .573 A,n
National League : . M oreno ,
Baltimre
86 69 .555 7 1h
P itt
68 ;
Lopes,
LA
and
Oe tro il
8&lt; 72 .538 10
Taye r as, Pitt 44 ; De Jesus , Chi
Cle'v'etnd
68 85 .444 24 \i• and Sm ith , SO 39 .
Toronto
w!~t 96 .381 3A,h
American League : LeFlor e.
Det 67; Cruz, Sea 57; W ill S, Tex
w. L. Pel. GB 51; Oilon e, Oak 47 ; Wilson , KC
~!~t City
:~ ~~ : ;;~ 5,h 44 .
Pitch ing
Texas
82 74 .526 61h ·
Victor ies
M lneso t a
71 86 . .452 18 1
National League : P erry , SO
Chi cago
69 87 .442 19 h
Oakland
68 90 .430 21111 20·6; Hooton , L A 19·9; Gr im sl ey, Mtl 19 10 ; N iekro , Al l 19Seattl e
ss 99 .357 32'h
16 ; Bl ue , SF 18 .9; Ric hard, Hou
Mond~y ·s Results
17 -11.
Ch ic ago 6. Oakland 2

than 3,000 hits, 1,700 runs -

For the Phlllles, keeping
the pressure on wasn 'I quite
so easy. First they had to
cune from behind to tie their
game with Montreal by
scoring a pair of runs In the
,
ninth. Then they walched the ·
acoreboard to d~over the
aecond-place Pirates had
beaten the Chicago Cuba, 7-4.
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The
Finally, they put tbe Expos conquered
meet
their
away In the 12th when rookie conquerors tonight
The Cincinnati Reds, elimiOrlando Gonzalez beat out an
Infield lingle, moved to third nated SundBy by the Los
on an error and a sacrifice Angeles Dodgers from the
and scored 011 Larry Bowa 's National League West title
lingle.
chase, entertain the Dodgen
")'m aching all over' n aaid for a lltree-game series
Bowa, who broke an o.for-11 beginning tonight.
streak with his game-winning
Mmtha ago, thll aries In
hit. "I'd love to lit in th"- sun the final week of tbe season
figured to be decisive.
for a week."
M lor the Pirates, who kept
Now It 15 meanlngleas.
their 111m hopes aUve by
The · Dodgers, · alter
beating Chicago, once again clinching the Weat title
It waa Dave Parker providing Sunday, are now only
the bulk of the offenae. concerned about things like
Parker railed his NL-Iea!linc resting players. and ad)UIIIIni
average to .3111 with a lingle, their pitching rotation to be
double and triple, and aet for ned week'a National
tnc:reued his NUeadlng RBI League playoffa aga14t either
kltll to 114 with two. Omar the Philadelphia Phllllea or
M~eno and Frank Taveras Pltllburgh Pirates.

''

Phila
PiffSbrgh
c nicago
Montrea l
St . Lo uis
New York

I o

••• l···_j

east

Pittsburgh.
Now if the Yankees can couldn't even hit BoutOn
hold onto their one-game lead yesterday .
over the Boston Red Sox in
~"He throws like Ulis,'' said
the AL East, the same four Rose, 'moving his hand in an
teams wm be hack again to overhead arc.
vie for World Series honors.
" Just like my softball, "
Elswhere in the NL, St. Carter said.
l.Duis blanked New York,~.
Rose, 37, was referring to
In the only other AL games, Jim Bouton, 39, who has
Chicago topped Oakland, 6-2, returned to 'pitch for the
and Texas edged Minnesota,
Atlanta Braves after being
3-2, in 11 innings.
out of tile major leagues
White Sox 8, A's Z:
I years.
Lamar Johnson's bases- - severa
Rose came to Washington
loaded single scored two runs to be honored at the White
"'·
In the third inning for the House and in Con gress fOl"uco
White Sox · and Olet Lemm hitting streak second mly to
hit his 13th homer for Joe DiMaggi~'s 56 games In
another .
1941.
Hangen 3, Twins Z:
HHe was rooting for me,"
Bobby Bonds achieved his Rose told rporters later In
fifth :JG.homer, 31J.&lt;Jtolen base reference to Carter. ~'He was
season of his career. He sorry it had to happen in
scoredoon AI Oliver's twCH&gt;ut Atlanta," where the streak
single to give Texas the win.
ended In early August.
Cardinals 3, Meta 0
Rose, wearing a threeSilvio Martlpez, !h'l, pitched
iece suit said Carter
P
''de . him
d
his second two.hitter of the expre ssed pn
m
an
season and heat tbe Mets for showed an awareness of his
!he third time in as many
statistics.
starts.
In answer to carter's ques~
·ons,
Rose said he had more
ti

Also r,'IJn

••

Netional League

Rose talks
shop with
president
By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
' WASHINGTON (UP!) Baseball hitter Pete Rose and
softball pltc)1er Jimmy
Carter got together and
talked shop Monday - in the
White House Oval Office.
"What are you hitting?"
asked Carter, who is no
greats shakes as a sandlot
hitter .
n .298," said the Cincinnati
second baseman, who had a
4:4.. game hitting streak,
second best in major league
history, earlier this season .
"I'm going so bad .n01• I

.;;1r

M•lor League Stendings
By United Press International

Alked about the spirit of his

Ohio grid standings

···1
: :II : :

~
BASEBAll

lhird down llall!. li'l
• .- Ci%.-t! ~nd !a... but tbe
lllltd IIIII lhort - lldrd and
lwo, lhk'd and tine - lhat
abaolulel)' kll1a ua.
..We •ve." he uid, ''nO
•11 control at all."

I poor

but less than a tbousand runs
batted ln.

''I'm a leadoff man," Rose
said.
"We're really proud of you,
Pete," Carter said as he
chatted with Rose and his two
children, Fawn Ro8e and
Pete Rose Jr . "I think the
whole country was excited ."
" I might get you to lobby
for some ol my programs on
Capitol Hill," Carter said to
him with a laugh.
Outside, Rose declined to
talk about politics or his
upcoming
contract
negotlations.
"I'm just looking ahead to
'79," he said .
Following hiB visit at the
White House, Rose went to
Capitol Hill where he was
honored by tbe Houae.
A resolution introduced in
his honor prlilaed Ro8e " for
his dedication and aervlce to
the game li baaball."
Rose, In his lith season
with the Cincinnati Reds,
reached the 3,000 car- hit
mark this summer and
moved up to tenth place on
the 11a1 of players with the
moat lifetime hita.
With jult 15 more hits this
aeaaon, Roae can break a tie
with .Ty Cobb and reach the
200-hlt mark for the tenth
year.

Kanses City 7, sea1tle 2
Tex as 3, M lnn 2. 11 Inns .
Todav ' s Probable Pitchers
1 All Times E DTl
n
C l~vela nd IReuschel 2·31 al
Ball•more 1F lana ga n
18 ·1&lt;1 ,
uo p m .
Delroil I Rozema 9 1a 1 at

Boston 1Ecker$lev 1a.a1 . 7 , 30
Toronto (Underwood 6-131 at

p.m.

Ne~ York 1Figueroa 18 -9L 8

P·;;&gt;akland
Chicago

!Wirth

( Kravek.

0 1
11 -151.

at
8 : 30

P·seolll e
t Abbott
7·13l
••
Kansas City (Spl iftorff 19·12).
8

' ~ 1 ~;,~$ota

IZahn 1&lt;. 13 1 a1
Tex as (Medlch 9.8) , 8 :35p .m .

M ilwaukee (Sorensen 17 ll l
et Cal iforn ia (Aase 11 -8), 10. 30
p m.
·
Wednesday ' s Games
Deloit at Boston , n ight
ToR&gt;nto at New York , n ight
Cleve at Balt imore , n ight
seatTle atKan City . n ight.
M innesota at Texas, ni gl'1t
Milwaukee at Calif , n ight

Mllor Le•eue Results
By United Press 1ntern1tionill
National League
Chi

000 100 03Q- ' 11 0

Pt sbg h
212 020 oo x ~ 7 13 o
Krukow , Geisel {3 L Moore
(7)
and Rader ; Candelar ia ,
Tekutve (8 ) and O l t. wcandelaril {12-11) . L - Kr ukow
(8-3 ) . HRs- Ch icago . K ing man

1281 . \/all I'J.
&lt; 12 Innings)
Montrea l

Ola 010 000 ()()()-- 2 6 2

Philadelphia

000 000 002 001 -

3 60

Schatzeder, Garman (9 ),
Knowles (9). Bahn sen ( 11 J,
Fr'yman
( 12)
and
Carter ;
Lerch , Brusst.!r ( 9). Reed ( 101
end Boone . w ~ Reed (3 -3) . L Bahnsen {1 -SL HRs- Montrel!ll ,
Carter 2 (20) .

st.L

ooo11oo 3oo- J
ooooooooo-o

10 a
23
Mertlne~ and Swisher ; Kobel,

N.Y .

Koo1m1n (7) and Stearns . W Martlnez (t-1) . L - Kobel (4 -6).
(Only qam ~ed uled )
Amerlc1n Lt•gue
Oak
010 010 ooo- 2 7 4
102 oo0 21X- 6 10 2
Chi
J . Johnson , Heeverlo (8),
Lacey
{8)
and
Rob inson ;
Kucek , LeGrow (8 ) and Col bern . W- K ucek ( 2-3) . L - J.
Johnso~ (11 ·91. HRs--'O ekland ,
Page (11J. Plcclolo (1 ); Chlca oo. Lemon (13 ).

Sea

and Virgil Taylor ; back, Elmer Young, manager , Mike
Baker, Dave Wolfe, Joe Sayre, J ohnny Riebel , Scott Hill ,
Steve Browning a nd Ed Werr y, manager .

EASTERN'S RESERVE SQUAD - Making up the
reserve squad at Eastern High School are front 1-r, Mike
Bissell, Ray Spencer, Lee Gainer, Mike Hauber, Tony
Kennedy, Nickey Leonard, Cllarles Massar, John Beaver,

000 100 Olo- 2 6 2
2oo •oo a1x- 1 9a

Ohio Coll~ge Football Records
By United Press International
Mid-American Confernee
All Games
Coole renee
w. L. T. w. L. T.
3 0 0
Ball State
3 0 0
2 1 0
Central Mich
2 0 0
2 I 0
1 0 0
Bowling Green
1 1 0
OhioUniv
1 0 0
2 1 0
1 1 0
WesternMich
1 2 0
Miami
I 2 0
0 3 0
0 1 0
Toledo
0 1 0
0 2 0
Nor fllin ois
1 :! 0
0 2 0
Eastern Mich
1 2 0
Kent State
0 2 0
Ohio Conference
t Red Division 1
All Games
Conference
w. L. T. w. L. T.
2 0 0
Bald win-Wallc
0 0 0
2
0 0
0
OhioNonhem
0 0
1 0 1
Denison
0 0 0
1 1 0
Mount Union
0 0 0
0 1 I
Ohio Wesleyan
0 0 0
0 2 0
Heidelberg
0 0 0
1Blue Division 1
All Games
Conference

w.

T.
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0
0 0 0

W. L

Wittenberg
Wooster
Muskingum
Ca pital
Ma r ietta
Otterbei n

X
x-Kenyon
X
X X
x·Oberiin
x-not competing for title
Oth ers

Dayton
Youngstown State
Findlay
Hiram
Akron
Case Western
Wilmington
John Carroll
Ohio Stale
Cincinnati
Central State
Ashland
Defiance
Bluffton

Hunting permits
now available

The Ohio Department of mttted by Oct. 23 .
Landowner antlerless deer
Natural Reso urces, Division
permits
wilt be issued in
of Wildlife , reminds spans!:ielected
counties upon the
men that deer hunting perof
landowners or
request
mits are now avail able at
their
child
ren
owning 10 or
most hunting license agencies. Deer permits are $10 more acr es. One permit per
plus a 50 cents writing fee . landowner fa mily will be
Deer hunters must have a issued . Ap pli cations for these
i97B hunting license jn ad- pennils may be obta ined at
a ny loca l de er chec kin g
dition to the deer permit.
tion or offi ces of the
sta
The application blank for a
Ag
r icult ura l Stabiliza ti on
free antlerless deer hUntin g
and
Con servation Service .
permil is attached to the
An
tlerl
es s deer pe rmits
bottom of the 197B deer
will
be
available
for selected
li cense . Antl e rl ess dee r
count
ies
in
two
deer
zones. In
permits will be ava il able in 42
deer
Zone
One.
antlerless
selected counties . ·
Hunters wanting to apply permits will be issued for
Amerlcin League : . Guidry,
Allen, Crawford, Defiance,
NY 23-3 ; Caldwell , Mil 21-9; for antlerless deer hunting
Palmer . Ball 20 -12; Leona rd ,
permits have until Oct. 23 to Delaware , Fulton, Hancock,
KC 20.17 ; Spl itto r ff , K C 191 2.
Earned Run A verage
mail their appli cations . Hardi n. He nry . Huron,
(Based on 144 innings pitch ed &gt; Successful applica nts will be
Logan, Lu ca s , Marion,
National League : Rogers , Mtl
by rand om Morrow , Paulding, Putna m,
2 .47 ; Sw an , N Y 2.48 ; V u ck - determin ed
Sa ndu sky. Seneca . Union,
ovic h , St .L 2.58; Hooton , LA computer selection and will
2.68 Blue. SF 2.71.
William s, and Wya ndol
American League : . Guidr y , be notified by maiL
NY 1.7-4 ; Ca ldwell , M il 2.23 ;
Those disabled veterans Counties .
M atla c k, Te.: 2.31; Pa lmer ,
In Zone Four . antlerless
exempt from purchasing a
Bait 2.•:17 ; Golt z, M inn 2.54 .
penn
its will be issued for
Strikeouts
hunting license or deer
National League : . Ricna r d , permit may request an antAthens, Belmont, Coshocton,
Hau 297 ;
N iekro , Afl 232 ;
Fairfield, Gallia, Guernsey ,
Se aver , Cin 209 . Blyl even , Pitt lerl ess dee r · permit a p177 ; M ontefu !iCO , SF 172 .
plication from the Division of Harrison, Hocking, Jackson,
American League : R yan , Ca l
Meigs,
Knox , Licking,
247 ; Gu idry , NY 234 ; Leona r d . Wildlife, Ohio Department of
M
o
nr
oe.
Mor
ga n,
KC 119 ; Fla na g an , Bait 159 , Natural Resources, Fountain
Ma fla c k , Telit 154.
Muskingum
.
Noble,
Perry,
Square , Col umbus 43224 .
Applications must be sub- Richla nd. Ross, Tuscarawas,
Vin to n. and Wa shington
Co unties .

2
2

L.
0

1

2

L.
0

2
2
1

1
1

0
0

3

4
3
2
2

0
0
1

1

w.
2
1

1

1

0
0

X

0
0

0
0
1

2
1
0

X

T.

0
0
0
l
l
l

T.
0
0
0

1
1
1

1
2
2

2

0
0

0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0

OKLAHOMA CITY (UP! )
- Two goals and one assist
by Bob Sheehan paced the
MiMesota North Stars' 5-l
NHL exhibition win against
the Colorado Rockies Monday
night.
THIS WEEK ' S SPECIAL

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OLD$'
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GMAC FINANCING
992 -5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenings 'tiU :00

Til5 p.m. Sat.

College ratings

BLOOMINGTON,
Ind .
(UPI)- Veteran guard Jeff ·
Phipps is out indefinitely with
a knee injury suffered In
fndlana 's upset victory over
Washington and may have to
undergo surgery, Coach Lee
Corso reported Monday .
Doctors won 'I be able to
decide If Phipps needs knee
surgery until the swelling
goes down, the coach said .
Corso said Mark Johnson, a
junior from Cincinnati and
backup left guard, wi)l move
into Phipps' starting spot at
84 right guard against Nebraska
54 Saturday .
22

NEW YORK (UPI ) Th e
n 1 ted Press Intern ationa l
Board of
c oaches' top 20
colleoe tootball ratin gs, wit h
first -place votes and won -los l
records In parentheses : .
Team
Points
1. Oklahoma 1251 IJ.Ol
558
2.
Co/if . (7) IJ .al
516
3. Mich igan (3) (2 -0)
499
4. Arkansas (3) { 2-01
461
S . Penn St . {1 1 l.t -Ol
450
6. Texas (2 -0)
372
7. Alabama (2. 1)
286
8. Texas A&amp;M (2 -0)
260
9. Florida St. {3 -01
194
10. P ittsburgh (2 -0l
184
11 . L SU (2-0)
156
12. Nebraska (2-11
116
13. Maryland (3-0)
10 1
14. Colorado {3 -0)
98
15. Ohio St. 11 · 11
116

u

so.

16. Iowa St . IJ.OI

17 . Missouri (2 -1 )
18 . Kentucky 0 -0-1)
19. Stanford (2 -lJ
20
20. Purdue t 2-01
19
Note: By aor eemen t with the
America n
Football
Coa ches
Association , teams on probation.'
by the NCAA are lnet1oible tor
top 20 and ·nat ional cha mp lon !thl p consideration bY the · UPI
Board of Coaches. Those t eams
currently on probation are :
M i c h i g a n State, Oklahoma
Sta te end Grambl lno .

To say it simply,

"We're Here
To Serve

You"
Spor ts Transaction s

By United Press 1ntern1tional

See Us For Your Insurance Needs. ••

Mondav
K .C .
Fooll&gt;lll
Honeycutt , Parrott (4) and
San Olego Head Coa ch
Stinson ; Leonard end Porter . W
- Leonerd {20 -H L L - Hon~v - 1 Tommy Pro thro re$ 1Qned and
was rep l aced by Don Coryell .
cutt (S -11 ).
Hockey
I n d Ia n a poI i $ (WHA) (11innlnlll
Mlnn
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�-·----

-- ~

t _The OaUy sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 26, 1978

Harrisonville Senior Reedsville U.M. Women
Citizens ' Club
met with Dorthea -Riebel
finally .finds 'home'
By Charteae Hodlldl
Six years of meeting here
and there and everywhere
ends
today · for
ihe
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Club.

They have a 11 bome" now in

SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER - The old Harrisonville townhouse has been converted
into a center for the Harrisonville Senior Citizens . Pictured here in front of the buildinS are
Nellie Borgan , president ; Minnie McGrath, vice president ; Louise Eshelman , secretary,
and Frances Sampson, one of the members.

the old Harrisonville town
house. The Scipio Township
Trustees
provided
the
building and a lot of
businesses · and individuals
contributed furnishings .
Tonight an open house is
being held and residents are
invited to join the It club
members for a potluck dinner
and social hour.
The club members who
refer to themselves as the
" golden agers" , began
meeting in October 1972. For
a t lme they were at the school
building in Harrisonville but
for the past few years have
met in the winter at members ' homes and in the

summer at the Forest Acres
Park.
This summer the officers
began looking lor a permanent location and approached the trustees about
uae of - the townhouse. The
trustees agreed · to let the
senior citizens use one side of
the
building,
had
it
drywalled, the
ceiling
lowered and new lights put in.
The members
began
gathering up kitchen and
living room fumiahings and
found many merchants and
individuals willing to contribute . Woodgerd Bottled
Gas Service of Dyesville
provided the hookup for· the
kitchen stove, and agreed to
do the same for the heater
and also to give a discount on
bottled gas.
Paint for the interior of the
one large room was donated
by Orville and Eugene
Phillips who also helped put it
on the walls. Vinyl Door
coverinq was laid, a large
·table big enough for covered
dish dinners as well as craft ·
work was brought in, and
after the open house, quilting
frames will be set up. .
The kitchen is in one end of
the room, while a sitting area
is in the other. Several
davenports and chairs,
tables, lamps, and wall
hangings provide a · com·
fortable area for the "golden
agers" to visit.
As for handling the expenses of maintenance and
utilities, the senior citizens
will be quilting, having bake
sales, and doing a variety of ·
things to raise money from
time to time. Their dues of $3
a year go into the treasury as
well as birthday money and
they're looking forward to
expanding their membership ,
now that they have a

The Reedsville U.M.W. met
with Mrs. Dorotha Riebel at
her home in Belpre. Mrs.
Mamie
Buckley
was
devot.lonal leader . The
program topic was " Golden
Moments of Christ's Work."
The Lord's Prayer was
prayed in unison followed by
readings by several membdrs. The program 'was
closed with prayer by Mrs.
Marlene Putman.
Business sessi on was
conducted by Mrs. Vivian
Humphrey . The club voted to

pay the pledge to missions at
the October meeting . Mrs.
Pat Martin gave her report
on the awning project for the
church . The group voted to
purchase the awning. Annual
meeting and Western Ohio
Conference
of
United
Methodist Women 's meetin g
were announced . Twentyeight shut-i n calls were
made. Game prizes were
awarded to Mrs. Putman and
Mrs. Buckley. Door pri~e
went to Mrs. Violet Satterfield . Refreshments

served buffet style consisted
of different kinds of sandwiches, cake, sa lad and
coffee , tea, and lemonade to
the following: Mrs . Kay
Humphrey , Mrs. Vema Rose,
Mrs . Putman, Mrs. Buckley,
Mrs. Martin, Mrs . Dolly
Reed·, Mrs. Satterfield, Mrs.
Lorraine Wigal, .Beverly
Wigal, Mrs. Connie Rucker,
Mrs. Vivian Humphrey, and
Mrs. f.,illian Pickens. October
meeting will be with Mrs.
Rose.

Little Kyger Congregational Christian
Church to host installation service

Melody Redman honored
with la_yette sbower

BULOVA

QUARTZ TRAVEL
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1 Social \
1 Calendar t

M~IH •

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world timer that operat es manua ll y , te lls t ime In 2&lt;1
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GOESSLER JEWELRY
J&gt;URT ST.
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POMEROY, 0.

Whv is it s.id insurance i1 1 better lnvntment thin
manv other types of inv•stments?

Q.

A. Diversification Is the answer . Insurance companies
are able to use your money and theirs to cover a
broader spectrum of Investments than Is available to
most Individuals. They are able to make use of :
Diversification In enormou! numbers of Investments·
Diversification in the different matur ity dates and
time of purchase of Investments (more leeway) . The
fi nancial ~tructure of Insurance companies allows for
wide distribution of policyholders, reducing the
likelihood of a serious depletion of assets In cases of
local disaster s . These Investment earnings have
hel ped keep th• cost of Insurance down for
pol icyhol ders .

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE
Tht 1nsur1nc1 Stort
21&lt; E. Main

9t2-5110

Pomoroy,O.

THIS
OFFER

GOOD
AT ANY
·COU£GE
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

ENTERTAINED
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
entertained Sunday with a
dinner party in celebration of
the birthday of their grand·
son, John Lehew.
Others attending were Mr.
and Mrs. William Lehew, Ted
and Billy, Pomeroy; John's
friend , Dawn Hermaz,
Hockingport; and Mrs. Sadie
Thuener, Syracuse.
JITNEY SUPPER
The Chester School carnival and jitney supper will
be held Saturday, Sept. 30.
The jitney supper will be
held from 5 until 7 and from 7
to 9 . Games, bingo, hayride,
movies, country store and
cake walks will be featured
and door prizes awarded .
RETURNS
Mr . and Mrs . Fielding
HaWkins have returned from
a week's visit in Jackson,
Mo., with Mrs. Hawkins \
nephew, Charles Athey, and
family .

FOR THE BEST DEALS
TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

The Rev. and Mrs. James Green, Canton, Ill., are the
special workers at revival services which opens this
evening and continue through Sunday, Oct. I at the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene. Services will be at 7:30
each evening and 10:30 a .m. on Sunday morning. The
public is invited.

Pomeroy U.M. Church
to host singing evangelist
The Rev. Roy McKinley,
singing evangelist of Huron,
will be at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church Friday and
Saturday evenings with
services at 7:30 p.m. both
nights. The Saturday service
has been designed as youth

Methodist
Rally
and
Celebration
of
Huntington
Church , attended the United
District on September 21 at
Johnson Memorial United
Methodist Church.
Reverend
Harper
T.
Callison District Superintendent spoke on " The Call to

'-IC~.•-otw..,..ceol

Commitment. 11
Dr. Wildman is pastor of
Mason United Methodist
Church.

=

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INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.

WHOLE
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SUPERIORS

We Ind ........ llllp.

MADE

su~~=~oRs

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BUTTERMILK
BROUGHTON

7

$ 59

HOMO MILK

CLIP &amp; MAIL

The Dai~ Sentinel, Court Sl, Pomeroy, 0. 45769
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ADC, ELEC. PERK, DRIP, REGULAR

LB. CAN

·49

r - -GRADE
- - -B- - ,
LARGE

MELLOW ROAST
INSTANT

EGGS

COFFEE

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8 oz. jar

OFFER
EXPIRES
SEPTEMBER

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SUNDAY 10 18 10 ·

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PICNIC SHOULDER······••h••
$109
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POLISH SAUSAGE
99~
PORK SAUSAGE················
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IVER P DOING
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,,,9

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:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~

A thought for the day . tllJ•lll_l~ 3~!!~~L~~::;;~'::!)/
American
c l ergyma n Reinhold Neibuhr said,
See Bill Childs - He Works For You!
" Man's capacity for justice
makes democracy possible
but man's inclination to injustice makes democracy
necessary ."
Middleport. 0.

night. Prior to the Saturday
evening service a 5:30 p.m.
carry-in dinner wUJ be held at
the church. Everyone is
welcome to the services and
the carry-in dinner, the Rev .
&amp;bi!rt L. McGee, pastor,
annoWlces.

SLICED
BACON

'\:arQCONTn tnA C~

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

SUPERIORS

125 E . Main - 992-2171

THEY WILL
RECEIVE
9 MONTHS OF
THE HOMETOWN
NEWSPAPER BY MAIL

!' ,,

TOPS CLUB
The Friday morning TOPS
(Take Off Pounds Sensibly)
Club met at the old Meigs
General Hospital with seven .
members weighing in and all
showing a weight loss. Total
pounds lost was 21. Biggest
losers were Helen Hill and
Garcia Adams. Anyone in·
terested in joining may
telephone 992-0937 or 949-2016 .
for more information.

Ohioans

•17.50

Pr 'n

'ftJESDAY
PLANS FOR the &amp;Miial
Chrl.ltmas promotion will be
made at a meeUng of the
Middleport Chamber of
eoounerce to be held at 6:30
this evening at the Meigs Inn.
OHIO ETA Phi Chapter of
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
meet at 7:30 this evening at
the Meigs 1M rather th~ at
the River Boat Room of the
Meigs Branch, Athens County
Savings and Loan Co .
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs
Inn. Visitors Day to be observed andaU Lions urged to
attend.

Delta Kappa Sorority held Swackhamer, Helen Smith: June Lee, Jan Norris, Maxine
following a picnic at the Ida Diehl, Nonga JWberts, Winget!, and Donna Sayre.
Mason_ Community Park.
Representing the chapter
at the meeting will be Jean
Alkire, Eileen Buck, JeMifer
Butcher, Leah Ord, Susanne
Wolfe, Elma Louks, Frances
Roberts, Connie Ens.l en,
WINDING TRAIL
Donna Norris, Debbie Roush,
Members of the Winding
Edna Price , and Joyce
. Trail Garden Club will meet
IN THE
at the Ohio Power Co . Ritchie.
Bernice
Carpenter
was
building on Spring Ave. at6 p.
m . tomorrow and go to the appointed chairma~ of Alpha
Delta Kappa Week. Daisy
home of Francis Shaeffer to
v iew his dahlia gardens. Blakeslee distributed order
From there they will go to the blanks for the Meigs County
OPEN :
roadside park on Route 33 for history book to be published
and asked that members
Mon .• Tues . , Wed . &amp; Sat. 8:30til S: OO
a picnic supper .
write about their _families.
Thursday Til12 Noon
Mrs. Alkire presided at the
Friday Until S P.M.
business meeting . Grace
Herman Grate
before tbe picnic was given
ATTEND RALLY
Mason, W.Va .
773-5592
MASON - Dr. and Mrs. by Mrs. Buck. Others atwere
Lucille
John Wildman, William tending
Zerkle, Larry Bumgardner
and Maxine Arnold, all of
Mason Unit ed Methodist
The Southeast Central
District meeting to be held at
the Ohio University Inn on
Oct . 14 was announced at a
rece nt meeting of Alpha
Epsilon Chapter of Alpha

The moments that mean so much. You want them to be per feet Whether
it's for the wedding cer en o•y, the college education, or for aJ:!Y Other good
reason, come to City Loon &amp; Savings for a personal loon~ with trust
where
have saved with trust since 1912.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
and
SUNDAY TIMES.SENTINEL

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE

Social
I
.
I
r Calendar 1

I
I

Southeast Central District meeting
to hold Oct. 14 meeting at 0. U. Inn

THURSDAY
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
Thursday evening, Sept. 28,
7:30, at the home of Mrs.
Frank Bise. Serving as cohostess will be Mrs. Gene ,
Wilson. An auction wiU be
ehld, club officers will be
installed.

Welendahand.

[liS

,-------~

- . ---

5 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 26, I978

AMERICAN
LEGION
AUXILIARY , Feeney Bennett Post 128, 6: 30 potluck
supper followed by 7:30
meeting. ~ Bev~rly Hoffman
and Shari Mitch, Buckeye
Girl State delegates, to give
their reports. Gi~ls and their
mothers invited to attend.
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post 128,6 :30
potluck, followed by 7:30
meeting.
WILDWOOD GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Wednesday at the
hoine of Mrs. Ada Holter,
·with a plant exchange .
.
'111URSDAY
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation
League
meeting, Thursday evening,
7:30 p.m. at the River Boat
Room of the Meigs Branch,
Athens Cow!ty Savings and
Loan; a white elephant sale
will be beld.

~--P~;e~--l
l Personal Notes 1

Mrs. William Lehew and
daughter, Cheryl and Mrs.
Veda Davis were in Orient
Saturday for a visit with Miss
Dorothy Leifheit. They were
joined there by Mrs. Harold
Johnson
and Mrs. Richard
Couches and chairs provide a comfortable sitting area for the senior citizens, Minnie
Leifheit
of
Springfield.
McGrath, Ne llie Borgan . Frances Sampson, May Mason, and Louise Eshelman, left to
Mr.
and
Mrs. &amp;land
right.
Will of Lexington, Mass. have
~~pent the past week here
~isiting Mr . and Mrs. Chester
Knight and other area
relatives. Thursday evening
Mr. and Mrs. Knight entertained relatives with a
dinner party. Other guests
were Mr. ,and Mrs. Pete
Elberfeld,
Chester, and Mr.
Little
K yger Resch, on Sunda y ahernoon,
Executive Secretary for
and
Mrs.
Glenn Lambert,
Congregati onal Chri stian Oct. I at 2::10. There will be a
Pastora l _Relations, The
'
Church, Little Kyger Road. short peri od of instr umenial National Association of Middleport . Mrs. Elberfeld dhome."
Cheshire, will be hosts for a and voca l music preceding Co ngregationa l Christian and Mrs. Lambert are sisters
The officers are Nellie
of Mrs. Will .
Recognition and In sta llatiOn the servi ces.
Borgen, president; Minnie
Chur~hes, Milwaukee, Wis.
Patty
Lochary,
a
student
The speaker will be the
McGrath,
vice president;
Service for their new
Guest ministers from
minister, The Rev . Daphn e Rev. Ra y Applequist , D.D.. neighboring ch urches in the at Ohio University, spent the Louise Eshelman, secretary;
area will give the charges to weekend here with her Grace Turner 1 treasurer; and
the minister and to the grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Hazel Stanley, reporter .
congregation and participate Patrick Lochary.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike
in other parts of the service.
Hammer
and Mr . and Mrs.
Invitations have been sent
Steve
Martin
and son, Stevie,
to members of the Ohio
Co
lumbus
were
Saturday
ALUMNI BAND
Association of C. C. Churches
visitiors
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Bob
All
graduates
and previous
A layette shower was held Becky Rowley . T. J . and and to congregations of other
Hoeflich
and
Jayne.
members
of
the
Southern
recently honorin g Melody 1\cbecc a, Kat hern Metsge r. ch urches in the surrounding
High
School
marching
band
Scaggs Redmond at the home Sot• Met sg er , . Amy and area.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Paul
Nease
in
interested
in
performing
Rev . Resch is a native of
of Mrs. Kitty Darst with ·sh ell y, Debbie Fink and
recently
~eturned from a
an
alumni
band
at
the
Linda Broderi ck a nd Scherry .J e nnife r . Ma r y Rin ehart . northern Ohio and graduated
Che ryl L•ne a nd Elizabeth , from Bowling Green State three week vacation in the homecoming game on Oct. 6
Lane as co~host esse~ .
West. In Seattle, Waah . they are asked to attend one or
A pink and blue color Doroth y McGuffin, Nadine University with a B.S. degree
more rehearsals starting
in Elementary Education and VISited nieces of Mrs. Nease.
scheme was ca rried out in the ~ca ve r , Millie Westphal.
Monday, Oct. 2 through Oct.
Education of the Hearing
decorations. Cake baked by
5.
Sending gift s wer e Betty Impaired . She received her Norris, Route 2, Racine , or
Donna Pullin, punch , mints
Rehearsals will be held in
and nuts were served . Games La ne , Sue Gruese r , Pam Mas1er of Divinity Degree at broueht to t.he meetine.
the
high school band room
Theol ogical
were played with prizes going Kelly, Fl orence Workman. Princeto n
PAST
MATRONS, from t p.m . to 5 p.m . Music
to Mary Workma n, Mary Bea Stewa rt , Vickie Pestill i. Seminar in May t978. She was Pomeroy Chapter 186, OES,
Jane Scag~ s and Scherry 1\uth Pestilli , Pa uline Smith, orda ined at her home church , Tuesday evening at the home by the alumni band will be the
school's fight song and the
Co ngregational, of Mrs. Norma Parker.
Marsha Simon. Mary Wells. Plain
Lane , and Cynthia Russell
National Anthem.
Bowling
Green,
on
June
23,
Ve n t Thompson, and Nola
won the door prize.
MEIGS COUNTY Holiness
1978.
She
was
called
to
be
the
Others at t endi ng were Swisher
Ministerial Assn. fall kickoff
pas1or at Little Kyger on singspiration 7: 30 p .m .
April 9 and began her Tuesday at the Laurel Clilf
FOR HOME •••OFFICE
ministry here on Juen 5, 1978. Free Methodist Church.
WHENEVER YOU GO
JOINT MEETING of
Racine Fire Department,
ladies
auxiliary,
and
emergency squad Tuesday 8
p.m. at Racine Fire Station.
WHY NOT SEND ALONG
All members urged to
attend.
HARRISONVILLE Senior
TUESDA v
Citizens Birthday supper and
2,
United dedication of new building
G R 0 Up
P,·e, byterian Church; Mid- Tuesday 6:30 p.m. at Town
dlcJXHt, i ::I(J Tue, day at the House in Harrisonville. Bring
home uf Mrs . William Morns covered dish and table ser'
wi th Mrs . David Cwrunings vice. Everyone welcome .
asco-hostess . Mrs. RiehKarr
'AMERICAN LEGION
FOR ONLY
willbe the devutionalleader. AUXILIARY, 7:30 p.m .
SINGSPIRATION; Meigs Tuesday at the hall . Drew
Co. Holiness Ministerial. Webster Post 39.
Association, at Laurel Cliff SATURDAY
Free Methodist Church, 7:30. POTLUCK supper · and
81ack caS '' Brush~d
alumrnum sunbur st dra t
AMERI CAN LEGION songfest at Cheshire United
$37.95
AUXILIARY , Racine Post Methodist Church, Sept. 30,
6()2, 7: 30 Tuesday night at the supper at 5:30, singing at
ha ll. Dues are payable now 7:30. The Lemley Family
and mav be sent to Julia singers.

r------·- ,

-- ---

IIWd To Lliit Ql!ai.lle

ALPO

DOG FOOD·····3

DR.l
PEPPER
8 PAKggt

~

�&amp;-The Daily Senllnel,Middleport:Pomeroy, 0 ., ~y.Sept_.ll&amp;, 1978

Meigs Co. branch of the Athens Co. Savings
-·
Buckeye
POLLY·s POINTERS Hills courses &amp; Loan Co. to sell advertising for junior Miss
The Adult Education
Department at Buckeye HW
career Center announced
that I buy in a craft shop. today the beginning ol the
Apply with a smaU piece of winter Adult Buic Educatim
board or an old spatula and (ABE) Jli'OIP'8111 !bat wW be
let it dry thoroughly before &lt;tiered during evening houra.
using the rug. Such rugs may The claN starts on Oct. 2,
be washed when needed and 1978, and wW be cm!Ucted
the latex does not wash off. - each Monday, Wednelday
MARTHA
and 1buraday evenlnp from
DEAR POLLY - An old or 6 p. ·m. until 9 p. m. at
unused vinyl checkbook Buckeye Hills career Center.
cover makes an ideal folder Any peram slxteeil yean of
to use for holding "cents off" age or older may enroll In the
eoupons. The coupons stay in Jli'OIP'am free of charge. One
place and are easy to find. ol the main objects of ABE Ia
Also, I am looking forward to w increase knowledge in
receiving one of your coupon E~lish, Math, Science and
clippers. - GLENDA.
Reading . It may be of mOll
DEAR POLLY - Cover a importance for indlvlduala
can of frozen orafU{e julce· who have not cwnpleted high
with a cloth napkin or hand· school and wish to prepare
kerchief to have a fine cold for the High School
compress or pack to relieve Equivalency Test (GED) or
bleeding or swelling.
for people who want to learn
If a watch or clock is
disturbing an ill person with lnitlally how to read and
its loud ticking cover the write.
Carol
Banks,
ABE
offending time ·piece with a
instructor,
staled
that
ABE
tumbler or glass bowl. "The
instructim
Is
for
adults
and
time can be seen but not
cmducted
on
the
adult
level.
heard."'
•
When gripper fasteners on It is not like school prosrama
uniforms or other clothing no designed f&lt;r chlldrel yean
looger stay 911apped place a ago &lt;r even today. We w&lt;rk
with
adult
students,
small square of paper over
individually
w
find
out what
the gripper before fastening.
reading,
writing
and
Presto, it holds. - NELlJE
arithmetic skllla they already
have and then determine
what they want from ABE.
Students are then scheduled
into a learning center or
group Instruction class and
provide learning
opportunities
whclh meet
I W OU LO li k e t o tak e t h is
opporfun if.,. to th ank a ll of their interest and needs.
m 'p' nei ghbor s and fr iends
Adult Education
tor
th e
many
ca r ds ,

Polly Cramer
POU.Y'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - I hope
someone can help me with
my problem. I have a white
enamel saucepan that gets
brown on the inside when I
boil potatoes with the skins
on, as well as some other
vegetables. What will remove
this? - MRS. B.S.
DE'AR MRS. B.S. -I have a
favorite green enamel pan
that turns brown both inside
and out when cooking some
things. But a soap-filled steel
wool pad always cleans it off,
even brown tea stains. POLLY
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
Peeve is with those drivers
who do not move over to the
left lanes to permit merging
traffic to enter the freeways,
particularly when they are
not going to use the off ramp
and can move over safely.
This is not only discotirteous
~ut dangerous because the
merger has nowhere to go
and is forced to stop. This can
cause accidents. If every
driver were courteous many,
many .accidents would be
prevented. - TERRI
DEAR POLLY - I have
been using the same throw
rugs for several years by
merely treating or renewing
the backing with rug latex

AUCTI O N , Fr i and Sat . n i le s

at 7 p .m . New and used
mer chandise at Oh io Rive r
Au cti on , 537 H ig h Sf. ,
M iddleport , Ohio .

WORK
OVt R S~ A S .
Aus tr ol1a .
Ail 1co . South America . ~ u r ope ,
e re

Construc l 1on

~a les ,

ro $50 .000 plus . l:x penses po id .
f-01

emp loyme11t

wri!e
~01'(

o .. erseos

1n l or mol1 0r1

Em pl oymen t .

lOll . Bos ton . M o . 02102 .

A U I"O bod y and ·
pr e p e r ohon ma n A pply m per ·
son a t Bill s Ou o li l y Body )hop

Mr ddle por t

Suy &lt;;e ll
t ro d~ or t ram New and use d
s ad dl e ~ ft u th Reeves Alba n y .
(61 4 ) 69!:i-J74U

l&lt; t ~ tN G

~ l AR Ke11n el s Boor d ing
and groomrng
o il b reed s
( h eshrr e ] bi' U'IQ"] or :Jb 7 01 00

MAN T O work in ret a i l st or e.
M odern Su ppl y , 399 W .
Ma in , Pom er o y , Oh io .

LOV ABI

~ W HIH ~now drrl t

P Y Ri:.NH ~

PO SITIO N o"P EN fo r par ts
as s i st a n t . Ex p e r i e n ce
p r ef err ed . A pply at T wo
R iver s Ford , Inc., RT . 67 N .,
Pt . Plea sant , W V . JQ.t..675 ·
1490.

!::llA( K LA BHA OOR re trre ver pu p
p r e~

8 -4 1H

6 U ·60·f .:J0]9 ,

weeKend s

I 0 1-1 !! AU: Bo rder (Q ilif" pu p pi e ~
Phone 99'1 -5100

FE MALE AK C reg istered
Boston Terrier 16 weeks old .
Has been spayed 99~2.5621 or
99 2-22 05.

MEN T A L LY
RETARDED
adul t s Bre in need ot foster
c are homes . A saiBry and
benef it s w i lt be paid . Th is is
an in home iob that w ill
b enef iT t he life cna nces of a
m en t all y retarded person .
F or m or e in forma tion wr ite
or c a n :
Foster Care
68 0 E . Ma in St.
J ac kson , OH 45640
61 -4 -385 -7461 &lt;L ogan l
or 6l d-592-660 8 ( Athen s )
E qual
Opp ort u n i ty
E mr
p layer .
C~ N i:.~Al
LAB0!-1
wrok
Ca l!
f/97 ]]i'J be tween Q om to ] ]0

pm

J day s a

week

., to b Wdt pay S7J
wf"ekly o l my home o r w ill toke
~ameo ne l or roorn board and
wage ~ 9'12 ·6718 after 0 pm
o

IMMI::OI A I~ OPI: NIN G'l for WN
ond tPN on all sh1 lt s. ((U 0 ~
med~eo l and
~urgr(Q i
Co m
p1Pt rtave ~olarres e .c cellent lr
rnge be ne l 1t~ sh1 tt dlfle r er~· lta l
Con ta c t
Per ~onnel
lJ ep!
Hol 1er
Medt c o l
(en ter
Gollrpol r&lt;, Ohro 614 44b ~10~

A M llJDU:

Ph o ne

e ... en rn g s or

GENER A L LABOR work.
Call 98 5-3373 between 9 a . m .
and 3: 30p .m .

!!OMi:.ONt 10 do hou~ewor k
woman oro g rrl c,q"} ] 704

A K C regos tered Ch a m ·
bloodl r ne .
Whel p e d

pron

WA NTED . Apply
rn
p er son .
Me igs
In n .
Pom eroy , Oh io.

B ABY~IlH:f.!

greo l

!-' hone

I Ol &lt;l 06./ )ijJij

~A \T R ESS

WANniJ

Pupp•es.

AG~O Chrr !. t +an

lady o r
cou p le to &lt;; loy wdh o rnrddiP ag·
ed lad y on o 14 one larrn 2
mrle !. ou h1de th e Pt 1-' l(.'o !.ont
W V
Cl l'l
l r mrt s
(al l
]04 o/ 5 o9!f4

l iM fUR C UTl H~ gr;&gt;od wage !. and
benefit ~ wrt h &lt;ompony cr ew
l o n toct Joh n Ow &lt;;r any &lt; o
Po mer o y
f-ore st
Pr odu&lt; t~
Pom eroy Ohro 997 ~90~
WANT.i:.O TO do odd tab~ port

trme 9!:1 5 4353
PO SI TIO N A.V AI L ABL E
PR OG RAM D I RE CTO R
The Gatli a -Me igs Communi ty
A c t ion Agency is a cc ep t in g
a pp lic a tions f or t h e posi t ion
o f ene r gy prog ram ·home
r epai r progra m dir ect or .
Res p ons i b lli t ies i n c lude
grant m a n ag e m en t in ·
el ud ing all a spe cts of crew
coo r din at ion , pu r ch a sing ,
in \lentory , QU al it y co n t r ol,
and veh i c l es . O ther du t ies
w ill in clu de coord in at ion o f
e ff orts w h en ne cessa r y
w i th Fm HA . subm issi on o f
repo rt s on a t im el y bli! Sis ,
and a ttenda nce a t m eeti n gs
or t r ai n in g se ss i on.s a s
necess ar y , T h e p os i t i on
r epor ts to t he ex ecu t iv e
d ir ec t or .
Q ua l ific a ti on s f o r th e
positi on in c l ude a degree in
soc iol og y ,
psyc ho' o g y ,
b u siness , or r el ated f ie ld :
p rio r
e,.:. p er i ence
w i th
f ed eral programs and -or
spci BI ser v ic e agen c ies w il l
be an asset. Salary rang e
$ 11, 300 to Sl 2, 50 0. Ap pl ic ations a n d -or ~dd i t i onal
In format i on i s av a il a bl e
from the agen c y or the lob
serv ice o ffi c e In Gal li po li s.
w il l
be
A pp lic a ti ons
rec ei \l ed until Sept . 28, 1978 .
Res u me s sho uld be ma il ed
t o E x e cu t i v e Oi_rector ,
Galll a -Mei vs C. A .A ., Box
272, Che shi re , Ohio 45620.
PI"IOne 367 -73-4 1 or 992 -7000.

TWO IRI SH Sett er pupp ies .
30-4 -173-55 38.
AI'&gt; C Hi:.GI~l i:. fUD ~ l beflo n Husky
9 mon th s o ld he nrn g s (O il

949 1777
AK (

Wi:. GISI

week~
~

H~H&gt;

old

B eagle~

~ h oh

14 :!6 7 ()'}9 '] or

B

O N E YEA R old Da chs h und ,
ma te , h ousebrok en , gentle
with ch il d r en . S50 99 2·5098
after 5.
TH RE E COO N hOu nd S and
all the dog boxes . S600 99 2
5705

t'ur Rent
Ho one Po rk

nor th ol Pomero y

Lorge lo ts ( all qq7

l WO

~ 4 /9

lurnr shed and un
u p rs
Ph o ne

IWO H ~O ~ OO M
onl y 997 ]:J14
B~ D H' OOM

tr oile o

t1a rl er

Ad ul t s

49'1

~

f- Ull¥ eour pped

ltvrng

~ hower s

and Nonna Hawthorne, Long
Bottom,-. have been named
Mental Health Bellringer
Chairpersons in Letart Falls,
Rutland
and
Chester,
re.tpecllvely, for the Oct. ·1:&gt;Nov. 15 campaign, F .
Harrison Green, president of
the Ohio Mental Health Assn .,
announces. .
"The Mental Health

organization in the United
States fighting mental illness
and promoting mental
health," said Green. Since
the organization Is non·
governmental, its entire
support must come from
contributions, such as those
collected
October
ISNovember 15.

advocacy

On this date In history:

In 1777, British troops
occupied Philadelphia during
the American Revolutionary
War.
In 1950, the worst typhoon
in Japanese history left 4,464
dead.
In 1972, the United States
proposed a new world
monetary system to allow
greater flexibility in ex·
change rates .

Workers are needed for the .
food booth at the football
games it was reported. A
discussion was held on the
revision of the by-laws. Pat
Wood presided at the meeting
with Florence Bearbs giving
the secretary's report, and
Mary Dorst, the treasuer's.
report.

uBuy the Parts You Like Best"

..
!

CHUNK

LB.

BOLOGNA

SENIORS
We'll be happy to HI your Hnlor portrait appoint-

mont to Ill into your busy sc-ule, Including Saturday
and Sunday att...-s.
We uH tndlllonal all backdrops and attractive ·
outdoor Hllings to provl... you with 1 good varltly of
previews.
Telephone us - without obligation - for complete
detail•

79~

CHICKEN
LEGS &amp;THIGHS .......................l~~ •• 79c
CHICKEN BREASTS ...................~~·.89c
CHICKEN WINGS ......•...............~~~- 59~
CHICKEN
BACKS &amp; NECKS .......................l~~.19c

THE PHOTO
PLACE
( Bob Hoeflich)
109 High St.

ASSORTED

p,,

POP TARTS

59e

BOX

Who really foots the bill
for health care?

GOLDEN ISLE FROZEN

SHOESTRING
POTATOES

3 .,
20

oz.

BAGS

MARTHA W ITE

CORN
'MUFFIN MIX

5

7VzOZ. . ,
BOXES

STOREMADE
SANDWICH SPREAD

\

LB.

1000 ISLAND OR
FRENCH ·DRESSING

79e

16 oz. BTLS.

ZESTA
CRACKERS

9e

1~.

BOX
CRISCO

SHORTENING

·1··

3LB.

CAN

NATURE SCENTS

COMET

CLEANSER

89e

22~~i

FORKLIFT DRIVING
Area plant I1l8llllfler&amp; and
safety supervision should be
inf&lt;I'IJied that Buckeye Hills
Career Center will be offering
a F&lt;rkllft Trucli Driving
Training Seminar as per
OSHA regulatims oo October
4 and October 5, 1978. The 6
hour seminar will meet from ·

DEODORANT
SOAP

BARS99e

kr~ c hen .

room~
ba t h and
week ly lrnen se r ,.rce .

newly decora ted a nd &lt;orpe l ed .
491 1Jb1
SHARE A PT . livin g f or
elderl y on i 'p' in Pomeroy :
availabl e in No -vember .
ev eryth i n g f u rn ished ex cept med ic at ion . Sl75 per
month c over s alt. Wr i te
An na Ha ines , 957 L ock bourne R d ., Col umbus , OH
-4 3206 . Call col lec t 1-253 S-481 ,
TW O BEDRO O M apt . Built ·
in k it ch en , cl ose 1o town .
Att er 7 p .m . Call 992 -3592 .

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

FO R R EN T : 3 moDile nomes
for sea son , 1 shady a c re ,
wat er furn i shed Or for sale
$30 ,000 . 50 m i les from
Sar a so ta and Fl . Myers and
9 mile s from Arcad ie .
W a lter Messi er , l -813 -d-4 2857 . No cotl ec t calls. ·
T WO BEDR OOM f u rn ished
or Un f ur n is h ed apt . .at
T u pper s Pla ins, Oh iO. 614667 .JJ.49 .

-------------TWO BEDROOM furn l!hed
or un f urn i s h ed apt . at
T upp er s P lai n s, Oh io . 614
667 -:'13 49 .

SMA LL
new
hous.e .
l
bedroom , water furn ished ,
adults on ly . No dogs . S50
secur ity depos it . 614 -378·
6276.

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

NEW CROP

Townthipt-lO Pet .
{As to Township
Road Ml

Bedforct
Chester
Col u mb ia
L ebanon
Letar-t
Olive
Orange
Rut l end
Salem
Salisbury
Scipio

Sutron

B. 18
12 17

$ 3,608 . 16

7 ' 18

5. .476 .56
3. 231.00

998

-4 ,491 .00

• . 79

9.78
7.78

9. 18

I 0. 19
5.99
7.99
6 .79

U28.04

1(,-40 1.00

3.501. 00
• •131.00
4.585 . .56
2, 695 ..56
3, 595 . .56

J, O» , J&gt;

4.1,000.00

CAULIFLOWER

3LB.BAG59e

Scott Coddington, Adult
Em!cation Sllpervilor, stated
that the course Ill designed to
comply
with
the
requirements as set by the
Occupa tlonal Safety and
Health Act, 1910.178 (K) (1) .
It cmsista of classroom and
driving techniques qualifying
the student to meet the
standards for forklift truck
operators certificate. F&lt;rkllfl
truck driving experience is
required.
PUBLIC NOTICE
The amount of Locel
G o vernment Oh i o In c ome
Tax Mon ies to be all oc a t ed to
the var ious sub -divis ions of
Mei~s County , Ohi o , as set
forth bv The Meigs County
Budget Commiss ion at th~
com" letion of the ir meeting
held in the County Auditor's
Office on August 10, 1918
show i ng
percent
of
allocation . also the a ct ual
yearly amount is as follows :

JUMBO SNO WHITE

YELLOW ON IONS

6:30 unW 9:30p.m.

7~30

a lt er !:r prn
H OO M ~

citizens'

•

0]4'/

THR EE GE RMAN Shepherd
puppi es . 6 week s old . Very
pla y f u l . 142-30 57 .

l u rn1s h ed
Q9l ~4:J 4

volunt~ry

Racine, Joarm May, Rutland,

.-•

RADIO CODE
An Amateur Radio Code
program will be offered in
adult education at Buckeye
Hills Career Center atartiQg
October 3, 1978. The class wW
meet each Tuesday and
Thursday evenings fnm 7
unW g p. m. Instructloo
includes preparation for
novice and technician
amateur radio licenses.
students wW coocentrate on
· teaming M&lt;roe Code through
eight words per minute.
The fee for the twenty-eight
hour program Ia S25.
Interested students should
cmtact the Adult Educatloo
office at ~. ext. :1!&gt;2.

ONE
vur old
Da c h sh und . hou ~ e broken .
b la ck. and brown , tong
h a ired . 992 -5098att er 5 p .m .

J ANlJ 4 HM

POMEROY- Joyce White, · Association is the largest

For further information
call the Adult Education
Office at ~-

MA I..E

Hau t e JJ

Tag Day to lie held on Oct. 7
was amounced at the recent
meeting of the Meigs: Band
Boosters held at the school.
It was also noted that the
band will leave for com·
petition In Newark im·
mediately foilowlng the
football game at Waverly and
will .stl!l_overnlght there.

.'

•

ond wo 1med

o 14 ·:107

COUN I I&lt;V MOI:HU

Extenson Service of Gallia • by area businesses. A2!i cents
and Meigs Counties, this style registration fee will be
revue will consist of outfits charged to help cover ex·
featuring designs from penses. This program is open
Simplicity Pattern Company. to all on a non-discriminatory
Local male and fennale basis without regard to race,
residents will be modeling the color, national origin, sex, or
outfits. Displays of patterns religious affiliation. For .
and fabrics will be provided more information, caD the
Meigs County Extension
Office at 992·3895.

mentioned and tile poaibillty
of participating dlsCuued·
Betty Jean KrawiiCIYR and
Sherrie Abott gave the
cultural report on marriages.
Hostesses were the 1978
pledges, Carol Cro!. Patsr .
Ogdln, Jenelle Haptonatall
and Tonya Davia.

' .

....

'Tag -Day' announced

Otairpersons appointed

permits."

H OO ~ H O Ll OW , H orse~

I: XPUmN CElJ

lnterest'ed In seeing the
latest fall fashions lor
teenagers and adults? Then
you won't want to miss the
showing of "Fall Fashions
1978" on Thursday, Sep·
!ember 28, at 7:30 p.m. at
Meigs High School. Spon·
sored by the Cooperative

said "We have offered the
program lll . thl.s schedule
because the community
interest exl.sts. The leamlng
center approach to ABE l.s
quite flexible. Students can
enter the center at any time
and attend as many &lt;r as few
hours per week as their time

!:ngineers , Cler ic al . etc. S8000

It was noted that Pat
Miss Pageant program book donation to the women's
Brogan
and Peggy Stout are
Auxiliary
of
the
Meigs
County
next month.
taking
leave, and Brenda
Health
Department,
and
Plans were also discussed
Haggy
will
serve as service
from
Debbie
LaValley
also
of
for the Christmas bazaar to
chairman
in
the absence of
the
Health
Department
for
be held on Nov. 2!i. Thank you
Ms.
Stout.
Sonya
Ohlinger
$100
donation
toward
the
cost
letters were read from
reported on projects of the
Sharon Roseberry for a $2; of a tutor for a child.
ways and means committee. '
The Christmas parade was

Meigs High School presents 'Fall
Fashions 1978' this Thursday_night

Sllperv!P'' Scott Coddingtm,

! l owers ,
mas se s
and
prayers . th at were sent an d
said dur ing mv r ec ent i l l ·
ness . Th ank you aga in for
y o u r m an y · k i nd n esses .
John Goett .

HdpWanl~

Meeting at the Meigs
County Branch of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Co., the Ohio Eta
Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority made plans to
sell advert(3(ng fnr lhP .Jnninr

•

-. .

-.---- ..

-~-- - -- ···-

-

-~

l

COU PO N . j

COUP ON
-

MELLOW ROAST

You do. There are a number of
reasons why health care costs are
going up. One, is that some people
think they can be careless with their
health. Modem medicine will patch
them up. But that means higher
health care costs. Costs that get
passed along to you. Because
whether you pay for health care
protection through payroll
deduction... whether your employer
is paying with dollars that might have
gone into your pocket. ..
it's your money. Your

Blue Cross and
Blue Shield
plans are m:&gt;rking to hold down
these costs. One ~ is by
developing positive heakh care
programs... aimed at helping people
stay healthy. That ~ we m:&gt;n't
need as many expensive new hospital
beds, it could mean fewer _trips to
the doctor's office. And, it means
added value for your health care
dollar. Thats important .. for all of
us... because the real news here
is.that we're all footing
thebill. ·

Corporations - ·
JO Pet .
Capltl1f701
38.80 $17,460.00
Mtddlepor t 39.01
17.554.32 .
R~c i ne
5.79
2.605 . .56
R uti and
7.93
l.S68 .56
svracus.e
8.47
3.811..56
County
S45,000.00 .
P~ m er o v

$}49
W!C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

10 OZ.

J

(UMIT 3)
49~
11 OZ. PKG.

•

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30,1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

Blue Shield.,

G overnment
40.00
60,000.00
Total
150,000.00
Howard E . Fr enk
Me i gs County Auditor
Clerk of
Budget Commission
(9 1 26, li e

Value added.
'

(!l RliJ IIIMM M1rk1 Blue Crotl Auoc llllon
A.uoct111on ot Blue Shield Plan•

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

:1

CO UPON

W/C
Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

DREAM WHIP TOPPING
99~

POUND CTN.

W/C

•

•

•

•

•

•

I Limit one please with this coupon

Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

:I...

•

•

•

•

•

•

•

0

•

'

•

•

39¢

W!C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•

COUPON

KEN·L·RATION

CAP'N CRUNCH

DOG FOOD

CEREAL

6 1~~~

99~

N:/:05

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GAT£: WAY
r

CHJ PON

JELLO

4

30Z.
PKGS.

79~

16 OZ. BOX

89~

NO. 105

W/C

Limit one-please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

NO. 205

W/C

Limil one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
COUPO N

ASSORTED FLAVORS

NO. 155

W/C

0

-

CO UPON

,

W/C
!ftl" Rtal".,ld hrviC* Merkl ol ltr. N11lon•t

•

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

DRY DOG FOOD
5 LB. BAG 99~

60Z.BOX

.

DIXIE MARGARINE

W/C

:

$}79

.

oz. btl. $}99

I!IJPL,JN

20 CT. BOX

.

FABRIC SOFTENER
96

ALPO BEEF

·FROZEN DINNERS

•

FINAL TOUCH

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY
l _ l.ilUPCJ N

BANQUET

t:lliii.. _,___ -

-

-

•

COLJPrl N

•

-

JAR $359

NO. 405

Blue Cross.

•

INSTANT COFFEE

GLAD TRASH BAGS

(AsPer .

-

cr•st?e a

MAXWELL HOUSE

.COFFEE
No. 405
POUND CAN

89~

HEAD

I

KEEBLER RICK 'N' CHIPS

COOKIES
13 OZ. PKG.
9~

7

NO. 105

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Sept. 30, 1978
TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W/C

�.'

1s WDrds llr Urltkr
CctiJt
l ... y

Cha~ ~

1.00

1.%5

!.Ill
3.00

1.90
2.!5
j ,75

L"

2dilyN
3dily~

6doiy~

~ Lfi

"'unl uvltl" U~~t mini.mwn 15
words it! .f t:~nLI pt'f wonJ JM!r t.lwy.
Ad!i runninK other Uwn L'ORSl"l'utive
dlly.!l will bt: chMr~td Ill tht.- I dwy

!llubill' &amp;mce for Sale for Sale

1912 FORO COUNTRY Sedan
Station
Wagon .
9
passe-nger . All
power .
E)(cellent mecrunlcat
cond iti on . No rust . 51700.
992 -5721 days or 992 -5246
after 5.
197.4
PINTO
STATION
Wegon , 47 ,000 miles . Nice .
S1350 or best otter;,. 7A2 -2A60.

------------"" NOVA CUSTOM . P .S.,
P . B . • A .C .. good cond ition .
992 ·2903 .

ratt- .
hr memory, Card of Thanks rutd
Obit~ry : 6 l't'ILI.'i pt-r "'~''".1. J:\.00
minumuu. CYsh in advanet:
Mobr~ Hunw sales and 'Ycml Silk!s
are a&lt;.'t-epltl&lt;i only with ca~h with
ord~r. ~ &lt;.ocnt chM.r.c~ for 11ds carryur~ Bolt Nwnbt&gt;r In Curt' uf Tht&gt; ~~~­

bnel .

Tilt' Pubhslwr rewrves Ilk! nght
lUI)' ads de.-rllt'd 1Jb..
jt't'lrurwl . Thr Pubh.sllt"r willrk1l IJt&gt;

to t!dlt or rejtot·t

responslbk! fur mun· tll&lt;(rl out• meurre.:t tnSt'rllun.
Phon~ !192-2156

Saturday

ru. . s!.Lt~

thru F'mla,·
~P . M . Ut ~ W. y bt&gt;fort' puiJltl'lll!vl\
S UI Kill\'

~ P. M~

rnd .. y llftt&gt;nJUun

Nutitt!
t r e ~ pos s • ng

condd 1on
'14CJ '111:/J
PONTIAC
985-398 1'

Catalina ,

S3 .700.

1973 GRAN TORINO . 53.000
mile$. .. 99~ - 7711 or _i_nqvir_e at
Meigs Auto Parts .
1

on

my p.r operty wrr hou t peHT'1 1!&gt;
!&gt; •on Judy McGraw

GUN )H001 . f.!oc,ne Gun Club
l: very Sunday 1 pm 1--octory
choke gun$ only .
Of.!I Vl:R A VA ILA I:IU to bu s
children to and from G01ho
Chris tian ~chool Vi nion Oh1o.
rro ... el NeW l imo Rd . to Hor
r •sonville , IA3to Jolt 'I toRt 12A
and ~25 into V.nton 742 -10UCI
N6TTC-E ..:. OLIVE Townshi pTrustees wi l l t ake ap .
plications for a . grader
operator , a.t Reed's Store in
Reedsv il le ,
OH
until
Sa turday even i ng , Sep t.
30th .
OU E TO unsportsman li ke
manner , th ere w ill be no
more huM t ii'IQ on either Of my
farms at M i ners\li,l le or
Sumner
w i thout
direct
perm issi on .
Freeman
W illi ams .
HUNTING FOR du pli cate
bridge partner for Mon . or
Tues . n ight to play in
Parkersbu r g . 949 -2609.

1970 SCOUT II A-wheel dr ive .
Excellent condition, V 304,
auto ., P .S., P .B. Call Meigs
Equ ipment Co . at 992 -2170 to r
more informat ion.
ONE OWNER . 1974 Bon nh' ill e. Low m ileage. Good
condit ion. Pnone 992 -6471 or
446 -3364 after 5.
1974 FORD F -100 PICKUP
TRUCK . 1973 Plymouth
Duster, 3·speed on floor . 99 22550,
1977 MONZA SPY DER. 305
eng i ne . Like new with
everyth ing . 742 2826.
1 117~

OA 1:.U N 1'1CKU P Good C'O n·
d!IIOil S :l'l9 ~ 'H~~ - J97'il

l!Jn G f.!AN lORINO
99'} 'l 4)~

3~1 V - ~

ott

lliU( K I-' AWl~ . A tr- bo~ oux tl1o r~
o .. ll' , ,ngl£&gt; 1 ~ peed ox if' onrl
f, ("llll f' ) ' PC'Cd gear box f, ant
n•lf" 10 ~ 10 Itt e!&gt;, rlte ~(! l mo t of
rorl'&gt; . All lrom 1961./ luteor,,a
loOnal Mocff:!l 111)0 . heninq ~
14'1 j (}4J .
.

-------------1971 HILLC REST l2X6A, l

be-droom w ith tip out living
room ~ total el ectr i c: , un furniShed, S5900. Can be seen
at
1100 E . Ma in St. ,
Ki ngsbury Home Sales . 9927034.
TWO BED ROOM trail er on 1h
acre in Rac:ine . 949 -2373.
1970 HILLCRE ST
12x60 .
L ocate d in Sa lem Cen ter on
CR 1. 614 -669 -5742 or 742 2689 .
-------'----~-------

YARO ~All: TIO Sy cam ore !:,t
M 1ddleport Man _ lues Wed .
M I NI
FLEA
Market .
Depression
glass
and
many, many collectables ,
size 7 jea ns and dress
pants, r ugs , curtains and
lots of odds and ends . At
Max Or enner ' s residence
on Union Terrace off of
Un ion Avenue on Sep t , 22 .
23 and 2A .

-----------

M I NI
FLEA
Market .
Depress i on
G la ss
and
many , many collectab les ,
size 7 jeans and dress
pants , rugs , curtains and
lots of odds and ends . At
Ma'flo. Drenners res idence on
Un ion Terrace ott of Un ion
A\lenue on Sept . 22 . 23 . and

2• .

-------- ---SA L E , F I RST t ime . F r iday
and Satu rda y . Windoww .
frames , great for summer
cott ao e .
Bab y
i tems .
sc a les , sw ing , dresses and
sl eepers _ Cl othes , wash tubs
and mo re . BOB East, above
Kroger's .

---------- --Y A RD SALE unt i l sold out .

All
'S i zes · of
c loth ing ,
afghans . w inter clo th ing .
m acra me , flower 'tarters ,
knic k knac~s . 11n mile off
CR 4, west of Dexter

-------------LARGE YARD SALE . 909
Brown ell Ave ., Pu l lins
res i dence
Everytn i ng
cheap . Tues .. 26th un t i l
F r i., Oc t . 6

-------- ----YA RD SAL E . Wed ., Fr i and
Sat . at Le tart , 2nd hou se
pas t gas station . Watch for
signs . Clot hes , wood bur
ner , tools , dishes , rug s and
oth er it ems . 9 t il ...._
dark .·

147 4 OLD ':! CUH A ':I':I ':lup teme
Good ~ hope 49'1 -7UtJ7 P ':1
P B. om AM tope OH
J!,I'J) CAOi l lA( l:LOO HAIJO

powe1
011
AM 1-M
( leon Phon I'&gt; 9t,l'] "14b'J

l-- ull
ro d1o .

1117) PONrtAC A 'Jl"IH ha tchback
buck et !&gt;eoh out om ohc New
rod•o ls and be tt cry :w m p.g
449 12133
1970 PLYMOUTH VALIA NT.
6 cy l .. good work ca r . 992 749'1 or 992 -3716.

Wanted tu.Buy
rt MB~R
duc t ~

f-'OMt:k OY f- ore s1 Pr o
l op pr•ce fo r stond.ng
~ ow timber Coli 99'1 )90) or
Kpnt Hanby 1 4A6 ·!:1)i'0

OLD 1-=UHNil Ulol~ 1ce bo x e) bra ss
be d ~
•ron bed s desh f',tc
compl e1e hou!&gt;ehold s Wr1le
M 0 M .l le• '-!1 4 Pomero y 01
coll99'} '/i' b(J
OlD

CO I N ~

poc ke t wo t&lt;he s
r mg s weddmg bond s
d 1o m o n d ~ Gold o• ~liver Coli
lo!oger Wom ~l ey "14 / 7:!:11
d o s~

W~

1-'I( K up tUtl l..
•ng 1un t.. cor \
t er t e~
ond
':lol vage
~ ~~

au to bod•es buy
scr ap •ron bo1
me ta l$
fl 1der .,
1'}4 f-'ome•o -;

44') ) At!!:!

CH ! P WOO D . Pol es m ax .
d•&amp;mter 10" on largest end
fiB .50 per ton Bundled slab'
fi6 .50 per ton Det i \lered t~
Oh io Pallet Co . Rt
2.
Pomer o y . 99 2-2689.
--~----------~

OL-D MOTOR CYC LE S and
part s . Doesn 't h ave ro r un .
992 -6345 .
WANTED TO buy : 100 He ifer
steers aM bu ll c a lf . Also ,
some cows an d large bulls .
614 -59 3-5 132 anyt i m e.

__________ __ _

991 ;n•

GET READY next seaso-n
w ith carefree awninos . air
c: ond l flo ners , R .V . an tifreeze a t CODNER ' S
C AMPERS ,
Ra in bow
Ridge , CR 28 to Bashan .

KITH N!, ANO odult cot 9!.15-4353

LOST I N Bunker Hilt area .
Fawn Dober m an . Left
Sunday nile .
Wur i ng
colla r . Da y 992 -5271 ; after
s. 992 ·7184 .

-------t------LOST : RED Durham bull .
Appro'f/.. , 600 or 700 lb. In the
vi cinity of Hemtocl&lt; Grove or
Cherry Ridge ar~a . 991-58?6 .

WANT TO rent 2 or J bed room
house , opt . or trail er . Col i

ONE MOTHER , grey and
bli!llc!l; cat, 2 mete k itten s 71.7 .
2328.
.
PA R T
SHEPHERD and
COll i&amp;. Approx . 6·9 mo . old
Needs someone w Jih land :
See at '12A Walnut , M id ·
dleport after 5.

l 11e.,
h ' t t'd
/ 4 '/ 7!i70

tlr and

Whitt-Wall Co-Op

cumm

lH H~~

WHt-HfH .
lllCtiOI
GoOt--1

Hrend
tu v t.

BoKl

h p John ,on rnot Oi
~JUO H ~ J

nl'"'w

Fed. Tax
(d- not ln&lt;ludo

~ J)O

High School

&lt;HiC/4 .

NEW
HAWKINS
THOMPSON
muzz l e
loader . 50 ca liber . All ac cesso rie s, 7 42 ·2750.

We are currentlv making
appointments for senior
portraits . We use tradi·
tional settings and also
feature
outdoor
por traiture.

cam,.rablr

priced.

weeke nd~

N' ~(AlE HOm!&gt; wi th L typ e
layout. Compl e te woth all :!&gt; w•l
ches . house church foclor re s
tJ eout itul ~ell 01 '&gt;WOp for
camper at equal 11 aluP ':lee
Hor vey l eom ond PO Box O:J
Racine O h1 0 hy WognE&gt;t Hard
wot e Sto•P
WIN l"tH Pl.) lA10~ .~ QI O.dt&gt; 1 ond
I C W P•olt 111 Por1 lond O h1o
)VJl~ l'

P O IA 10 ~ ':1
NPd while
an d ye llow 1-'honf' (l 4J 'J4J:/
Rober I W lew " "Ht ') l&lt;oci ne
~H

l i .t .

GOLOI;N llf&gt;d Ueli c•ous
g Gol den [)elr ctou s applE-s h tz
Orc har d
!:,H b~ q
po lt •f "014 tJofo :.t7ti)
:,'} pe• bu Co rn
~ he ll!?• } ~ )0 J 0 No ~ mow1ng
fr'lorhrl11? SlOO 11"'1 1 l:lale 1 ),1 JOO
Af lct 0 :,m call &lt;18 !1 41]1 o•
3'J:.n

l:A~

COHN

,.(j,

14/ (.1 ·, •o•' Chev role t p1 t kyp 4
~peed ))(l pngihe J 1n ch R e ·~~ e
hi!(h
I. ellen ! co nd1 11Df1
Ph one &lt;4fo) ':iJ 4!:1
1117j ll:IHn" 1 1-!A IL~H '1 7 ft A (
ro ll ou t o wt 11ng powe1 co n
ve 1ter
l •tE'II Pnl (Ondii!Cn
),4)00 l 1111'1 4 Goodyear L ·,a. 1!I
IHP'&gt; or1rl wlwP b opp•o • 100
m ile~ ~ JOV Conn hvmpe t w1th
ca se e • c e ll ,~ n l (ond •t• o " ~ I()(J
l 4'l '160 1
WOOD STORM w inoows . 9&lt;19 22 86.
1cr1 6 HO NOA JW /4 ()() ac tual
i1'111 ('~ .. 011l111Q
10011' \ U1 1(&gt;
49'.1 :.lU I!:!

1r.rn YAMA HA X':lb)O A I
4'-1'/

~0 1/ o il e r~

~hQpe

~I :1 / ~

"44'J .') :.J 91

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy.- L ·a ndmark
soften &amp; con~ltion your
water with Co -op water
softener, Model UC-SVI.

Now Only

•289.95

Let us test vour water
Free

Pomeroy Landmark

9 .. Jock W. COrsey , Mgr.

!Iii!.

Phonom -2111

1N H WNA 110 NA L )()() dote• t1 way
hlode W1nch ~ t eet cob Com ·
plc tC'I '( rew orked l ik e new .
Wdt t o ~ e I! od es 9.tllit -:?7b3
t- AkMAll tl 19J9 model L Loo l.. s
ond · fUn !&gt; l1k e ne w . Wdl tok e
l tade., !J A'I 7l6J
b ~ 0 01

b•u 'J.h hog Hr and new
Ht&gt;o vy dut'( JU ft hoy f'levotor
'144 '1/oJ

PE A HAULER ' S Country CB
Sales and Equ ipmen t , Por t land , Oh . Specia l th is week
on l y Sept . 26th th ru 30th .
Mobi le units Kriss -XL50 $85 .
Ha1 ti cra t ters HCM 261. 558.
Base 1 used tram D101A .
Phone 843 -2064 .

PAINTS
DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!

pm

l f./ 1'1 HONDA C B ~OO
) pm qrn . 2H'l7

(oil alt er

N ~W

HO lLANU r hoppe-t l 10w
( Or n head U ~tc c t cu t head
l,l/::1) JH 46

During
Our
Clonout.

Outside White
Red roof point

W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone "2-2181

~C H 00 l

I:W!:,
comp et
bU
po !&gt;~ Pnge r
w llh n{'w Ill('~
Good cond.t. on Contact l orn
Monl. ,n 01 ~ 2 /'10 1

TWO BASE CB 's - Teaberr y
40 ch . with 0 -104 power
mic: , S160 . Royce 23 ch . with
o . 104 power mic , SlOO . Call
949 -2045 11ffer 4 p .m .
SU FFOLK RAM . Also good
ear corn . 614-698 -4499 .
THREE TRA I L horses . New
and u sed 5i!lddles. Wes t ern
or English . Ca mper S600.
1969 I nternationa l van
ask i n g 5 1200 . EKcel t ent
condi t ion . Also some an
f iQues . Phone 61A -698 -3290
or 61A - ~ 9 8 · 5&lt;~36 .

1967 INTERNATIONAL BUS,
30 passenger . Low m ileage .
~)(Cetlent
co ndit ion . lOA ·
882 -3122 , 304 -17 3-5370 or lOA ·
773 -5482 .

Suson•l.

8 H .P
RIDING LAWN
mower . 273 ci Dodge motor
and Dodge 4-speed tra nsm ission w ith sh ifter . 992 ·5891 .

STORE EQU IPMENT
Checkout cou n t er, 1 1ar9e
register w ith automatic colfl
changer and register stand ,
\500 . One 8' or 12' d lsptav
coole r chest w ith electric
bo"!(es and sing l e P hau
compressor. 1 egg display
case and cooler , both tor $250 .
Call 742 -2255 after s.
19 76 FORD VAN E -150 .
Custom i zed .
E•cellent
condi tion . 949-2125.

GI BSON

AUTOMA TIC

wasner and aryer . 992 -562 1 or
992 -2205.

STAN ' S
BARGAINLAND .
Where everyone gets a fa ir
dea l. Op en 9 to 5 di!ll lly
e)(cept sunday , 12 to 6.
Ma in St. , Rutland , Ohio .

LTD 1350, P.B., P .S., • ·

ao.ooo

---- - --------.

WAlfR WEll drilling. William L
Grant . 742 -2879 ,

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I

3-l.S-tfc

'

i

;

J&amp;L
Blown Insulation

HOWERS

I--ARM 1-0io' ~ o l e Hou ~e 1 barn s.
tr ool e 1 lc•ge pond 10 O (r e ~ or
tJ'J OCIC!&gt; . / 4'/ :/~ .

house . 3 acre~
land (lose to school , p11Ced
reosonobt.,. YY'J . ~ 1 2b

l' H H~~ - lU U R OOM

appreciate.

1HI-lt~ Bt::ONOOM carpeted home .
fully rnsuloted w ith I ' J bath s.
,, Pomeroy . Neo-.onabl\1 prt&lt;ed
f-'hone 1141 -'JBI/ .

fireplace,

several
Price

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
104W. Main
Pomeroy
tn-1291
After Hours
C. II "2-7133
CONTACT:
Lola Pouley
Bro"ch Ma·nager

HVt- HOOM house and both .
, emodeled , tully co• pel ed. Moy
be 5een offer J prn . Phone
W'l -393J .
lHf.IH l:ll:ONOOM home home •n
M tddl epor t, ( oil 99':). 3457.
IN S YHACU~f · 'l bedroom house.
New storm window~ . New
aluminum building. '1 por c' h e ~
t~91 - J21'# .

HOU)t IN Mirw,sville overlook ·
mg r•ver 4 bedroom . livmg
room . k i!chen , bath . u!di! -;
room and basemen t. l orry
~ telds. Y92 -582:.t.

Ph

In
•

baths.

Plains. Oh io . 614 ·667 -3349 .
HOUSE
IN
Minersville .
Atu·mlnum !idlng . . Newly
carpeted . Partly furnished .
4 bedroom , li ving room ,
klfchen . utility r oo m , bath ,
nice basement. Only asking
$17 ,500. 992 ·5823 .

POMUO..Y.

water, large lot for garden
11rtd parking . A good buy 11
$9,500.
NEW COUNTRY HOME2 full bafhs, forced air heat, ,
drilled well , nice carpeting \
and old log house for
company . 78 acres of Iand i
with sale. Lots of rood '

ACRES PLUS . bulla ,n g 1UIS
In Chester area . 985·3981.

-------------HOU SE IN Pomeroy . Laroe

lot .
Some .
r ece nt
remodeling , new carfet ,
ce ntral neating , ut i ltv
room . full basement, 2
porches . Furr~lshed or
unfurnished . 992-707•.

frontage

near

the

new

bridge.
OLDER HOME - In the
country on good country
road. 3 bedrooms, bolt\ ,
.and several outbuildings on
one &amp; one-third acres. Just
$16,000.
30
ACRES
Near
Pomeroy. Old renovated
home wlfh drilled well, and
on waler end • State
Highways . Nice vlow and
aood buy.
JIEW LISTING -Walk to
file stores from . this 3

~r,:.~ :r.~·~:.:a~~~ ·

------------- FOR SALE : Large 3 bedroom

wlfh lob of carpeting and
aluminum siding . 21ols and
2 car garage. All this for
only SIS,OOO.
Let your lnvntmont grow
while you llvo In 11. Think.
buy your homo no.w .
G. BrucoTNIIrd
Holen L. Tilford
Sue P. Murphy
As-letts

o,

SHOULD BE SOLD - 3
bedroom ranch, 7 baths,
central air , good full
basement, large lot, on Iy B
years old, good condition .
ONLY 521.000.00.
MAKE OFFER - This 2·
i~o;d home Is located an a
strMt In Mlddltp(irl.
s In livable condlllonSiorllng at S13,500.
RANCH IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION - 2'h acreo, 7
car garage, wood burning

- -

--- --

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

TRUMPET
AND
Si ngt r
tr eadle sew ing m achi n e .
Both in e)(cellenl cond ition .
F irewood . 949 -2358_,_.

__________ __ _

USED OLDS trumpet, c as• .
music stand and several
b ooks . Good condition . s.so.
Call 992 -25 31.

tree•. 9•9·1•2ij.
ACH l01" on Ht . 'l . N ice building '
.,. ., ... . ti!J"l - 1~14 .

OWNER TRANSFERRED,;·
bt'droom,alltlectrlc homt on

1 a en lot. SOme •wllencn
Included . 949 -242•.

~A~~~~IN r-----~~~~-=~~==:7.~::~;:::::~~~;;~
Jdntlltl Boo6l No. 10, wlh"' lltlrll110 puzztll, II........,.. tw $1 .35 poll:·
pl6cl ffom Jumble, oo.,. n• r r• , Bole :M, Norwood, ~~ 07141. : : : '

"'-"'- L.NI

THOMAS JOSEPH
to "-the
ACROSS
by

group

AI.I.EY OOP

Proceedings
r~~~~~f--;~~~c;~~Sf1~iii~~~~
BIJT.,.AU.
14

I'M TelLING '10U , rr'S
A

...IT'S AGAINST
8EI ICR JUCGMEN:!j
1
!i:IGKl ' I'L.L 00 li,

MATTEI!: OF Lt~

AND DEA'Tl-1 i

l3 Howler
l%
lmmedialely
lli Wray or
Bainler
11- had il!
17 Dept. of

quess he Then wh4 has
up
she been so
two other runs
secret?
the
~w::les on

the

wall!

their

car

phone!

pool!

ON

Nllv~

t~~7-~1f71

u-:5. modo ca,._

pem utrollllOtdtcl

Elc ludft frant.Wf111i

drive cars. .

gas, oil &amp; coel have boon found to be plentiful. Near
Rutland . 60's.
'

H&amp;/.PIJ-E.?

lal

11M'--

'·"

.l KNOW, l'lUT YOU'RE A HUMAN !JEING
... AND I HAVE FAITH IN YOU! I'M
WILLING 10 HELP YOU, IF YOt/'Rc

WILL/No 70 HELP YOI/R8ELF/

...
,.

Tueoday, Sept. 26

Donna, e.g.
30 Excuse
31 Georgia's

BRIDGE

famed

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

mountain

3C Jan. and
Sept., e .g.

A double avoidance play

3'7 Hawaiian
staple

ace, leads dummy 's queen of
spades and once more dis-

NOR Til
• Q 10
•KJ94
• 10 7
WEST
+ AKJll3
• 5
t A 6 43

• Q 10

..

EAST

+9854 2
•2
• QJ 8 5

+KJ

3

SOUTII

---

• AQIOI 763
t K 92
• 98 7

Vulnerable : East-West
Dealer : West

1;:--t-t--

Weot
I+

North Eaol
Double 3+

Pass

Pass

Pass

•AQx
t I X

Opening lead'!'+ K

ln-+-+-+-t--t--

OWG'TA

OWG

You hold :
•KJxxx

lo work it: By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Don't ask us where North
found his double of one
spade or why East and West
didn 't bid four spades. That
contract makes easily . However, South was allowed to
play four hearts.
Wesl opens the king of
spades. Victor Mollo asks,
B H J L "How can South be sure of
his contract if clubs break 3·
W R 2 and what tricks does he

One letter simply stands for anothe r. ln this sample A is
u.sed for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Singl e letters.
apoolrophes, the Jenglh and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code leiters are different.
C&amp;YPTOQUOTES ,

HR

cards a club.
Thus, the defense has two
spade tricks and still will
take a diamond, but that is
all . South will be able to set
up dummy's clubs for two
diamond discards.
The play is not complicated, but it is unusual since il
is a double avoidance play .
South must give away those
lwo spades to get lwo club
discards and avoid letting
East get in Ia lead a diamond through the king .

JVEGTVDDO

VEETVSE

v

OWE

lose?"

0 H B A

The answer Is that he lets
the king of spades hold the
first trick. South discards a
F H D D H V U
R A V E N A T
club. If Weot continues
Yetterdlf'' CIJPitplile: A FEU.OW WHO IS ALWAYS opades, South chucks a secDECLARING HE'S NO FOOL USUALLY HAS IUS ond club. If West shifts to a
miSPICIONS.-WJL80N MIZNER
club, South takes dummy's

MAWMDA

OWG

L W J' E

• A X: X

In yesterday's " Ask the
Experts" the bidding with
oppone nts passing was
North opened one spade;
you, South, responded lwo
hearts : North bid two
spades, and you bid three
clubs.
He continues with three
hearts. What do you do now?
Bid four spades. This tella
your partner that you are
interested in a slam, but ·
have two quick diamond

losers.
/ NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

(Do you have a question for
the experts? Write " Ask the
Experts ." care o f this newspaper. Individual questions wiU
be answered if accompanied
by stamped, self-11ddressed
envelopes. The most intet;esfing questions wiff be used In
this column and will receive
copies of JACOBY MODERN .)

!lAfl:'lF.Y

"

111 ollgnmont
Special
Price

•.•
Any

room home II good (doH need some modernlzetlon),
llrge all purpose barn &amp; •veral outbulldlngl. Th··
mlntrlll go with It •nd lf'aloc•ted In an erN wher~'

fOR ME 1 WINNIE? 'M-IY
ARE YOU WILLING 10

WH~ YOU HARDLYiWOW ME ...
ANv A (;AM~ER.II&gt; l'HE
WOR.'JTP086!8J.E Rli:&gt;K.HES
A&amp; MUCH AN A!71/ICT
A&amp; /HE DRUG U~R ...
OR ALCOHOLIC!

5: 311-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; E lee. Co . 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moor 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6 :0G-News 3,4,8;,1 0,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6:3o-NBC News3,4, 15; ABC News 13 ; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7 : ~ross- W its 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Is. 15;
Coping With Kids 20; Big Green Magazine 33.
7:3G-Dolly 3; ; Dating Game 4; Match Game PM 6;
Price Is Right 8; The Judge 10; That' s Hollywood
13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Reoort70.33 .
B:OG-Dick Clark's Live Wednesday 3,4,15; Eight Is
Enough 6,13; Jeffersons a, 10; Grtat Performances
33: James Michener' s World 70 .
8:3G-In The Beginning 8,10; 9:0G-Movle " Zuma
Beach 1' 3,4, 15; Charlie's Angels 6, 13; Movie "Thrr·•
· Days of the Condor" 8, 10; Making Oeievlslon Dance
33; Mayor of Casterbrldge 20.
·
IO:OG-Vegas 6,13; News 70; Great Performances 33;
10:3G-Daniel Foster, M.D. 70.
11 :OG-News 3,4,6,1 3, 15; Dick Cavell 70; Lilias, Yoga &amp;
You 33.
11 :7s-News 8, 10; 11 :3G-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Pollee
Woman 6,13; ABC News 33.
11 :Ss-Gunsmoke 8; Movie " Wa ll Unti l Dark" 10.
12 :4G-SWAT 6.13; l :IXl--Tomorrow 3,4; 1:50--News
13.

+ A6542

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how
AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW

,.,Me FOii

Cltt7111itNU..k.UI. ,.U.I.l'ltOII. T~

Kelly's
autlon
38 Dileo Ught
3t Novelist

Friends 8; Sesame St . 20,33: Batman 10; Dinah 13.
4:3G-LIItle Rastals 3,1 5; Gilligan's Is . 4,8; Brady
Bunch 10.
S:OG-Voyage lo the Bollom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
70,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Aflerschool Special

Wiater

ANY-rHINO..

'WHY ARE YOU DOIN(71'H I5

Zl Prima

3'7 Walt

'$1«'$

Spin lalanc:o
(Reg.) 14.50
Willi Alignment suo
Bubble Ia lance
( Reg. IS2.SO
wtlllallgnmont S2.SO
II you want on
experienced front
end mon ask lor
Tront.

11 Detail
19 Cookbook
verb
Z% Bolivian
river
Z4 Avian
%5 Finally
Zl Taken
care of
t7 Irritability

shoe"
30 "-the
:IZ Be leased
33 Lawyer's
degree
34 Explosive
35 Fancy
word
for lack of

,..INC. -· - -

2.00 Off

tree

Yeslenlay'a ADiwer ·

cruelest
month . .. "6---f-+-

-----;;::::;:;;:;;~;----------------------~

1

z

conveyed
tary group
- -- - - - - : -- . %5 Regioo of r.---,.;---,;--r.-And what kind of a
Arabia
car wash is it that n cavity
. never answers 21 "Gwn-

FRANK &amp; ERNIE

AbiiOIUiely fret with
alignment
ond
bolance.
Brl... ln
C011pon lnd Rocolvo

U Concerning
DOWN
1 Office group
Famous
jockey
3 Name for
cairo, Egypt
4 Hawaiian

5 Wor\&lt;ed oo
Defense : abbr. by Figaro
I carried
18 Rime-eoated
7 SiiJW[
ZO·Before
8 Bernstein
Zl Frequently
musical
"2 Foetered
I Again!
Z3Energy
Z4 British mlli· 11 Legally

JlUfl)Oie

m ...,,

Attic"

l Pillage
5 Put away
ll Musical

-

SPECIAL FREE
GREASE JOB

·

~CDe,t

fireplace , nice kitchen ,
patio
and
barbecue,

lhtlerm In she dnlrn an Immediate sallt. 50 to 60
acrH tillable with some very good crHk bottom hilltop land . The balance II In paature &amp; woodl. The 6

MI SHAP GIBLET

Answer : How the cops spotted the lence-

BY HIS "GAIT"

AUT OMOBILE IN SUR AN CE been
conceited? l os t your operators
license? Phone 9&lt;12 -21 A3 .

f-ully carpeted . Vi nyl ,, . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . . . : . - : : - - - - - : - - ,
~iding w itt"! s.ingle cof goroge.
IXCELLINT FAIM •UY - 141 ACRiS
Th..
Lo rgE' lot in Mutlond on New
owntr'l age/revents her from continuing to ope,rate
t XTRA nice lots i11 Hocine
' wit h I·'J .. bO Ho llypor~ traile r.
Part ially l urni,hed . 11:1 .-: 40 ce·
ment blotk building with $heeL
Large go1den space .,.,tith fr uit

YesterdayS

Tfll TH' GIRLS

-

J

Uma ~ood S17 .000. 142·1)02.

REA.L FARMIN ' ...

DOES! I'll

REfVES TRADING Pos t, Pogev ille .
Groceries , dry goods, herdware . feed . tack shop. Spec 1ol
?5_1b~ doglooi:_$3.88 _

Hou'&gt;iny
H ,,.,uhtllilf wr '•

rWo

0"' DOIN' SOMf

. \ Jumbles: LATCH SIXTY

HM-M ··· SHE

!)URE

PUlliNS EXCAVATING. Comple 1e
Service. Phone 9&lt;J2 -2-47S .

BELOW FAIR MARKET
VALUE at $25,000.00.
10 LOTS - In the coumry,
nice 1 floor plan home wlfh
basement, . barn , other
buildings. Fruit trees and
berries . A steal
at
$17,700.00.
MINI FARM - Over S
acres, remodeled and nice
1 floor plan home. barn,
storage building, good
fenced pasture. ONLY
$16,500.
IN THE COUNTRY -NHr
Pagevllle--Very nice home
In exceilenl condition, the
house must be movtdU.OOO .OO.
AL~IS nice acres ol
ground Ia put house on . Call
for details.
EXPERIENCE,
KNOWLEDGE &amp; HARD
WORK SELLS HOUSES.
WE NEED LISTINGS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLELAND
.
REALTOR
Hank, Kothy &amp; Leena
Cleland
( lltallor Assocletnl
"2-22Sf--m-2UI

"IT) ( I Xl J"

~o.ocol

BATHROOM S AND Kit chens
remode led , ceramic tile , plum·
bing , corpvn try , ond general
ma•nlenonce . 13 ye ar' ex ·
perience . 992 -3b8S .

bath s.

Lll"..t. NEW Hondo gutter and
easel extrll set of strings
and p ick!. In c lud ed . Mayteg
Coppe rto ne
P orta .palr
washer and dryer . very
good condiH on. se ll as set .
Call after 5 p .m . 992 ·2995.

THAt '9 A~NIE "'R
'I'OU -.. SOLD HER STORE
F&lt;JR PLHITY , •• St&lt;£'5
GOT A HEAD ON HER. !

FINE, JfRR"f ... fAC.T
15 , SHE. JUST BOUGHT
A lRACTOR--· FIGGERS

4 :QO-Mister C artoon 3; Battle o f the Planets 4; For
Richer , For Poorer 15 ; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;

13 ; Petticoat Juncti on IS.

your nerN, . . . . .. zip coOt lind tMke r;:hedr.a prfllbMi kiW I

098-7331.

MAIN

I

------------LOT AN 0 acreage in Tuppers

HI rn1EF ·-· BEEN
ME-AN IN' 10 ASK
HON MY LITTLE
PAL, Al"tN1E , 15
MAKIN' OUT ...

AND
MARTIN ' E• ·
HOWERY
co vo!ing , sept ic systems.·.
dozer . backhoe . dump 1ruck .
limestone , grovel , blacktop
paving , Rl 143 . Phone 1 (b i oi )

furnished kitchen, natural
gas, 2 car garage with
large workshop over. Level
lot near stores.
RACINE - Large lot out ol
high water wllh nice viand shade trees . • to 5
bedroom home, all city
utilities, &lt;entrol air and
heal, basement, • porches,
and storm windows.
BUSINESS BUILDIN~
also small residence . wlfh
bath, and all city utilities.
A cheap way to make 1
start for only 513,000.
7 ROOMS:-COrpeted home
with 3 bedrooma, bafh.

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

(Answors tomorrow)

WILl do roofing, construction .
plurnbing and heating , No job
too Iorge or too small Phone
i'41 -2348 .

natural gas furnace, city

NEW 2 bedroom house ,
carpet. garaoe . beautiful
kitchen. 1 acre lot. Located
at Tuppers Plains . Oh io.
61.4 -667 -33.19 .

rxr

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

Sutton Township for only
MIDDLEPORT

,\DROBIFj

EXCAVATING , do1er . back hoe
and ditcher . Charles R. Hal ·
field . Ba ck
Hoe Ser vice .
flutlond , Ohio . Phone 742-2008 .

$1 ,500.
bedroomer.

WHAI 'JIOU MIISI-f'T

F IND IN 8011:NEOON A NAIIVE.

SEWING MACHINE Repairs. ser vice . all makes , 992 -218ol. . The
Fabric
Shop .
Po mero y .
Authorized Singer Sale' ond
Ser vice . We sharpen Scissors. .
+-- - ..-~EXCAVATING, do1e, , loader ond
backh oe work ; dump trucks
ond lo ·,bovs l or hire; will haul
,td l dirt . to soi l . limes.tone and
gravel. Call Bob or Roger Jef fers . doy phon• 992-708ff, night
phone 992 -3S25 or 992· 5~31 .

MINI -FARM- Now you
can own a S acre plot

lZOAMANt

PL HZ-1174

$3S,OOO.OO .

992-2666.

I I (

U'5Tl'f.l
Wflj;f.l I
T,&amp;..LK.!

MOTORS, INC.

l&gt;rtce S12,SOO.
·
11 ACRES-Moreor less, •
bedrooms, modern beth,
large kitchen &amp; dining
transferred .

m -n2s
216 E .. Secand SlrHI

TH~ DO
~

SMITH NELSOM

out buildings. Owner being

LEVEL DOUBLE lot . almost
h acre in the Lyons Ad dition between Wahema
Higl"t School and Clifton,
wv . Lovely bu II ding site .
S9 SOO . After 5 p .m . c att 6U ·

Young &amp; the Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13.
12 3G-Ryan's Hope 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Sear&lt;h for
Tomorrow 8,10 .
l :OG-For Richer , For Poorer 3; All Mv Children 6,13;
News 6,8; Young &amp; The Restless 10; Not For Women
Only 15:
1:3o-Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10; 7:()()-{)ne Life to Live 6,13 .
2:3G-Doctors 3,4,15; Guiding Lighl 8,10.
3:0G-Another World 3,4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 70 .
3:3G-Mash 8; Joker 's Wild 10; Over Easy 20.

C''"""""~'-

220 E. Main Sir"'·
Pomeroy,O.
C. II m-7013
For Fr" Estlml!f••
9-21 -lma.

3 BEDROOMS - Older
ho'me, some remodeling ,
beaulltul view of lhe river,

St . 33.
9:C)()-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Emergen&lt;y One
6; Hogan's Heroes 8; Match Game 10.
9:3()-Brady Bunch 8; IO :oo---&lt;:ard Sharks 3,15; My
Three Sons 4; Edge of Night 6: All In The Fam ily
8,1 0; Dating Game 13.
10 :3G-Hollywood Squares 3,4, 15; Andy Griffith 6;
Price Is Right 8, 10.
11 :IXl--High Rollers 3,4, IS; Happy Days 6, 13; Lowell
Thomas Remembers 20.

RORN I.OSEH

,·-

to

News 8; Jetsons 10.
7 :3G-Schoolles 10; a:oo-Capt . Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame

I I I M"""""-j

_... _...
__

see

6:4s-Mornlng Report 3.
6:50--Good Morning , West Virginia 13; 6:55-Ch uck
While Reports 10; News 13.
7:0G-Todav 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13; CBS

12:oo-Newscenter 3: News 4,6,10; America Alive 15;

Service

must

6 : 3G-News Confer@nce 4; News 6 ; Sunrise Semester 8

11:3G-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15 ; Love of Life 8,10;
Family Feud 6,13; Sesame 51. 20,33 ; 11 :5s-&lt;:BS
News 8; House Call 10.

Prlntanswerhere :

room,

NEW
THREE
b~dro o m
home, rec . room , fireglace,
large
deck ,
garage,
bas~ment. one and a half
baths . Phone Lee Con s tr uc tion
992 · 3A54,
weeken,ds
l -6U -Aof.6 .9568 .

r'·

EWOTI
APPUANCE II

WOOD HEAT

srn oll appli an ces . Lawn mower ,
next to Sta te Highway Goroge
on ((out e 7. Phone (614 ) 98SJ!:I15

SRAOFORD . Auctioneer , Com ple te Service . Phone 94q -2487
or 949·2000 . Racine Ohio (ri ft
l:lrod ford .
.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER27, 1978
5:4s-Farm R-rt 13; S:50--PTL Club 13; S:SsSunrlse Semester 10.
~
6:0G-PTLCiub 15; 6:2s-&lt;:hrlotopl1er Closeup 10. .

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one iener to each square. to form
four ordinary words.

Armstrong carpeting

QUALITY

~AHM

1HRH 0 ~ lour bedroom hou!&gt;e Ill
l'ome• oy . l:lolh end ',. Cen tral
llPOimg 9'-/'/ -lU'J 4

l :oo-Tomorrow 3,o4; 2 :0G-News 13.

'illt~Nl ID~ ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
~ ~ ~~ s
bytienriAmoldandBoblee

Your HeadquntS For

ftOV6 GOIIIPANY

REPAIR

3 4 acres limbe• l)r illed
bloc~
bui lding
older CHIMNEY FIRES or e no lun ! Have
we ll
.,.ours deaned t,he dustle ss way
l •o•l"-" ' Old ~ ~ 7, C h e~ l ~ r .
The
Chimney
~weep .
Oh1 0 . t,I {J) JB&lt;Il be tween A ond b
014 -373 -0057 ,
pm

IUT YOUR HUSI!IA&gt;ID
11.6FUSED- SO VOLill
THRE'ATE'~E'D HIM i

TOO TRUE, CAPITAN!

A (3ANS,TeR NAMED
VOI.TA CAME TO THE
UNIOI-J MAI.L ...

II WOUL.D IIRIN(; MANY
JOIS TO MEKPORT!

-

'1118 AJIIItAWGilmiN

~weepe r s . toasters , irons. 011

VA ~ HA 30 yr . linonc 1ng al so
•el lnOn(lng, Ireland Mortgage .
II ~ ':I IOIP Athens phon~ ( bl A )
)1,1/ 30)1

WHE&gt;I MoKEE 1'-lDUST~IE S
f!,OU\!IHT THE P~AIJT- JUAN
WAS GlAD I HE THOU6HT

.fully Insured .
Fr~ Esl. .
Coll992-2712
8-10-lmo. (Pd.)

00 painting . gutter. ce iling
tile , paneling , roo f t epoir.
plumb1ng and conc re te work .
~ r ee estimates . Coli 992-778!:i
osk for Wallace Morr is .

lor sole, 1 ac re and
up M,ddli"pm t , neot Rutland .
( all 94'/-74ijl
HWOOO

20; Area Showcase 33.

11 :OG-News 3.",6 ,8, 10,13115; Dick Cavell 20; Over
Easy 33.
ll :Jo-Johnny Carson 3,A,15 ; Movie " Avanti! " 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; Movie "How lo Steal a Million" 10.

Ezperienceand

wr
HOM~ 'J ill:':l

IO :OG-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13; News.70; 10: 3()-Like Ills

7: 3G-Let 's Go To The Race• 8; Hollywood Squares 3;
Candid Camera 6; Prl&lt;e Is Right 10; Howard
Jarvis' National Tax Revolt Special : 13; Abbott &amp;
Costello IS ; MacNeil-Lehrer Report 20,33.
8:0G-Grandpa Goes To Washington 3, 15; Happy Days
6, 13; Ja&lt;ques Cousteau 4 ; Paper Chase 8, 10; In
Performance at Wolf Trap 20; Movie " The Iron

Cellulosic !wood' fiber)
Therma I insulation

s. ••
30 pel. to so
on healing cos

Million" 8,10; Evening at Pops 70.
9:Jo--Taxl 6,13; Great Performances 33 .

Home 33.

CAPTAIN EASY

JIM KEESEE

on

In Mlddloporl between
Third &amp; fOIIrlh SlrHI-&lt;111.
Mill Str"t lust behind
Tony's Carry .Out.
Optn Saturday 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m .
· 8-31 -lmo.

9-7-1 mo.

Heal l::olale fur Sale

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

CHEAP!

All types of roofing, guners
&amp; downspouts, 20 years
experience.
All work
guaranteed . Call Tom
Hoskins, 9~9 - 2160. Free
Estimates .

WILL BABYSIT iri my home
for children under 2 years
old . Anna Mae L ea mond by
Wag'ner
HtHdware
tn
Racine .

'

3,4, 15; Three's Company 6 ,13; Movie " One In a

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 26,1971
s :oo-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek • ;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogero' Neigh borhood 70,33: Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency
One 13; Petticoat Junction 15.
5:3()-News 6; Sanfor d &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 70,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Hogan 's Heroos 15.
6:0G-News 3,.,6,8, 10, 13, 15; ABC News 6; Zoom 70.
6:3G- NBC N~ws3,.,15 ; ABC News13; Carol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 70.
7:oo---&lt;:ross-Wits 3; Sha Na Na 4; Newlywed Game
6, 13 ; Pop Goeo The Country 8; News 10; Gilligan's
Is. 15; Lock, Stock &amp; Barrel 20; How To Buy a

Downspou1s

I

Pomeroy,O.

- .

SERVICE

LAOV WILl 5il in homes or
ho!&gt;pitol wit h patients
Meig s
( o area. 992 - 6 19~ .

I

4-30-IIC

OHIO VAU.£Y ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

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

-----------=---N~W HOMF
3 bedt ocun , 1'

------------BUN WARMER , Hotpolnl

door , v inyl tog,
m tels . 99~ - 2779 ,.

POTATOES

l:J4 ACRES located 1 m ile
from Meigs Mine No . 1.
Drllltd well afld septic
•vsttm. 1·30.1·112-2334 • .

TRAM
D210A
C B base
station , S450, stack three
beams and 50 f t. of tower
plus other C B equ ipment .
949 2322 .

'

Ph . "2-2141

8-2· 1 mo.

61'-596·••37.

30 " mower . Good cond ition .
992 ·7492 or 99 2-3716 .

DYNAMARt( LAWN -mover
22 " 3.5 h .p ., SlS . Par ts tor
1955 Cnevy. 2 ·rear glass , 1
ba ck , 1 trunk lid , 1970 Ford

Pomeroy

home , bath . large kitchen,
large liv ing room , part 1
basement, fuel oil heat ,
tufty carpeted ; mobile
nome rented . City water In
both . Small bern and stg ,
building . Wlll sell togeth*r
or d tv tde . Near Jet . 160 and
Appatachtat'l Hlghwav . Call

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

deep fry , Hot polnt gr ill.
ptcntc tab,le , y,. h .p . electric
motor . m 1lk shake blender
30" soda fountain complete:
oood cla r i net , Old bottles ,
electr i c
flo o r
buffer
restauran t d ishes . See af
Shammy'' s , 605W , Ma in St . ,
Pomeroy , OH 45769 .

109 High St.

available this wee k. Paui
Say r e , Portland , Grei!llf
Bend Rd . 843 -4591.

'

New or "'tplir
Gutt.s and

Autt&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Pho.ne 992-5682

( Bob Hoeilich l

KENNEBEC

H. L WRITESB.
ROOF1NG

St. Rt. 12• toword Rutland.
0.

ThePholoPiace

Phone m-2181

MOORE'S
Muffler . Brakes Shocks - Tires .

'1'4 milt off Rt. 7 by-pass

Call us Today

Pomeroy Landmark

I

i

ROGER HYSELL
GAIWiE

SENIORS

bolanclngl
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Oilier sitos

boot J )
lroilf'l

011ci

ONE DISHWASHER , por tab le . A lso , recliner , Call
992 -7205 or 992 -5621 affer 5

Chesler, Ohio
10-JO·c

sales tax or

I IH~f.I G lA 'J~

10 01

P~

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

'
Battery.
Installation Service

Prices includts

4 4'1 'JbJ 1
I)

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

A78x13

nt~w

19b'l n HVY 1- 0~ pori '&gt; 111'13 Veqoo MAGNA VO X J&lt;J co lor pollob le
molot Hoy lor sol e ~ ~ !I o
IV S "l) tJ'-fi ·77:J'J
bole . t:,I49 -;.? 4 1:J or9411 'Jij4ijl
JI,I'JI 1-0NO • ton &lt;ompe • ~ pe n al
1974 DA l'!,U N Pt(KUf-'
Ph one
Po we r. o •r , au to . dual toni.. ~
992 -6 19') af ter ) pm ,
• .: rellen t rvn n1n g &lt;ond• t• on

------------l:ARN SIO -SIS.OOO per yea• re fill Ing vending equ 1pme n!. Loc al·
ly. No e•per ience nece5s ory.
We tro iM fn."e !o tme nt required
Phone qA9 271/J

Jock Ginther 915·3106

~ ) C• ogm !&gt; . 1 whtt(' le t·

I OUI? I :.J

-----------GRAVELY TRAC TOR and
l:IGHT WHK old llger k 11ten
green eyes . lo t!&gt; o f per sonality
M e1gs
Humo•'e
~o c iet.,.
99;; 2592 or W2-542'l

. . .idential •ncl commercial. Call tor Ktimate. 24
Hour Service. Any d•v.
anytime.
Phone 915-3106

p.m

---'----------HAY FOR SALE 992 -7751.

AVON . YOUR f irst 1Cb pa-,.,
the b i l_
l s. Selling Avon buys
the fr ill!. . E arn a !econd
in c:ome and have m one\1 to
HtA VH T HAIL ~ R lor ~ ale 1&lt;1/2
sp&amp;re Sell Avon in your
Ma rk l"wo1n 19ft 14'1 -'l'JotJ
free t ime . Set your own
hours . Be your own boss .
11174 PROW L ~R
'lfj
!1
)elf
Call today . 742 -2354 , Ann
conto1ned !:, leep ~ b / 47 -'1)77
T homas. Avon Distric:t
Manager
I 9MJ CAMPING JI.IAill:R $80()

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

4 NEW

h~o;i , au he doz et Nerd,.
ro llo" Model 7H Va1d $)!&gt;00
-.(Ill ~JOOO W1ll dPI1 vet fr eol"'
I ~ 'J :J{)l.IJ C\leo!l!ngs .

11~~;()()

CH IM~ ':i

( Hl:VV WAGON
~20()
Church ) I Hor n!&gt;on v1lle Oh1 o

l ~bl

MUN LA '::. PV O l:~
J O~
eng.ne l•ke bra nd new w1 th
eve ty th,ng 74'1 :JW/6

·tf- YOU hove a ser ... ic e to olfer·
want to buy or se ll some th ing ,
oe looking for wo r k
01
whatever .
you II get resul ts
las ter with a )ent inel Wont Ad
Co li 99/ -2156.

., ,r UciUfOI ptp !! Good fJIO!! I
•·nd SIOO o l oo t 'l.t'J J(JqJ

C A I Ott

1973 NASHU A mob ile nome. 3
bedroom , part i ally fur fl i Shed . Asking pri ce S5, ooo
949 -2224 .

Business Services

IIU l m 1H0 1l Ult-~H woth clut t'l o
(llldQN'IIIJ.o~~; , S,\!&gt;(X} IOO()ft 4 ,

19b7 HOU~· HIAHl:N 17 "60 All
electri c, fun 11s hE&gt;d air &lt;o 11d1
ltoned . Washer and Or'f t"! ' '1
loh m HorHsonY ttl (&gt; 74') l'H10

1 Of J bedroom wtth budt
loundty TOOm ,
on addit ion
wa sher dryer . ~ xcellpn t rond1
'•on . J. OcrE&gt; •ented lot Alban-;
014 -b9!:1 -b1H!&gt; befor e J pm

DICK TRACY

Fur Sale

19 73
TERRY
TRAILER
1977 FOR 0 L TO 4-door
. TRAI·LI:R 27 f1 . A . C., roll
sedan . L i ke new with air ,
out awn ing , power con P .S., P . B .• till wheel. AM ·
verter . Excellent co ndit ion .
FM S-track . More e)(tras .
forSak
54500 f irm . 4 Goodyear L 742-2826.
78 - 15 tires a nd whee-ls ,
IJ. S M081ll: H O M~ ~ f-'1 Plea appr oM. 700 m i tes , S300. 742 .
~;.;PI~O~J~~~~~-,-;; ., 8 sant
2667 .
. W . Vo be ~ •d e Hec k s.
,
new baffery , new e)(haust
6d
'J
lt,I7J
Broodmote
14
"
system , 46,000 m iles . 51400.
ONE ROW Case cornplck.er .
bedroom
992 -3757 i!lllfer 5.
needs a l i t t le work . Also 7
I &lt;1/3 Oar ion 14 " bU 7 bed• oom
year old registered Polled
A DULT
OW NED
Ram .· 19Tl Victorian 14 ~ b i' J bedroom
Hereford bull. EKce tlent
cha rger SE . Heavy du ty 2
'1 bo1h
d isposition . R:RS Farm!l .
wheel. Regular gas. Black.
1117'1 Co Yen tr -; 1;; x tl!l 3 bedroom
992 -2826 .
Loade d , inc luding a ir ilnd
1%9 ~lol es rn o n I 'j " t~O 1
cruise . Cobra 138 SSB E -T
bedtoom
PIN G PONG tab le . Car
wheels . Garage PiHked .
luggag~ carr ier . Par ts for
Sold new March 1978 59 .050, COAl. LIMl:~ 1O Nl: , ~ and gt o ... e t
302 Ford motor . One" hole
se ll fi6 .99 5. 99'1 -52 40 .
calcium chlor1de f ertdrzer dog
and one 2 hole self feeding
hog f ee ders . 985 -3920
1~ , and all t-; pe~ o f solt h
1975
PONTIAC
ASTRE
ce lsior 'Jolt Works Inc l: Mo m -~---~ ------hatchback , bucket se ats ,
1962 FOR D PICKUP, good
~~ . Pome• oy 9&lt;11 :.t~~ 1
automat ic New radials and
shape. 527 5. Call 99 2-733 0.
battery . 30 mpg . 94 9-2283
BUIII-lOUG H) ) •N)I MA II( or
after 7 p .m .
counl1119
mo c!l , ,e
Ph ont, IQ/6 1:0 '1 ~0 ~ u tuk t rno totcy cle 1
1976 FORO LTD , air . nice .
11101 f' horse
Co li t/ tJ~ . :p 7:.J
'N") . 'Jl~b
l ho ()a1ly ~en 11 11el
Harold
Brewer .
Lon g
wf'e~rl oy ~
9 om to J pm
Ill Cour l ) tr eet Pon,e•oy
Bot tom , Oh io 985 -355A .
ij .f j ] .1191
even• ng s [ln d
Oh iO

lilT/

99? · ~1 4 7

under p11H) IIl Q ~I )00
and o:.'!oum e loo" 4411 'lbt!J or
8-AJ -3!1 I I .
1'1 both

A220 .

M~i &lt;lal·

01

IMPALA Good
Will tok E' itod('s

(Ht V W OL~1

1972 CHEVY BLAZER . 4 wheel dr i \le w it h lock out
hubs. 307 V -8 with P .S.,
P .B .. 4new 6p l y tires . 985 -

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

NO HUNTING

Jlfll

~4~

1966 CO R V ETTE . 327 4-Speed
convert ible fop . 949 ·23U .

NOTICE

:-IIMJII un

l t/10 C H~ VY IMPAlA 3::.0
1./9'1 17UA nlti"r J pm

l'Ub NA!!.HUA l A " 6!&gt; 3 bedroom

Mask" 33 .
8:3G-Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; 9; 0G-Movle " Battered"

9- The DaUy Sentinel, MiilcDeport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Sept. 26, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
Aulus.Jeo

~

\

i _ 'lbe v.lly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tueod«y, Sept. 26, 1978

WANT AD
CHARGES

--- ... -

..

"A Guide to
Running.,

Chapter One

How to run llke
a rabbit .

Hop Hop Hop

HopHopHop

EVER' ONCE IN A
WHILE I WONDER
WHAT 'IE ·woULD
A· LOOKED LIKE IF
'IE HAD BEEN A
LEETLE GAL,
TATER

GLORV BE!!
SWEI;:T
TATER BELLE
SMIF!!

I' 5 .I? . .,Jilt.
.'

CAlL THE .WISEMAN
REAL ESTAtE AGENCY 44&amp;3643

'

:

•

•

�10- The Daily.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Sept. 26,1978

;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;

f~in TView

Cable plans
satellite service soon

Office, which originates in
PT.
PLEASANT
Somelime this fall , a "new New Y,ork and offers first-run
dsy" will begin for customers movies, sports and en·
of PolnTView Cable TV in Pl. tertainment exclusives. In
Pleasant. Mason, New addition . plans call for
Haven, Hartford and Hen- PoinTView to offer two new
derson in West VIrginia and chaMels via satellite shortly
Middleport ,
Pomeroy , thereafter. These wiU be
Ga.!·ipolis, Minersville and WTCG. Channel 11 from
Sy, .cui". In Ohio. The age of Atlanta, Georgia, and CBN,
·sate; te television will Christian Broadcasting from
Virginia Beach.
.
arri ~ WTCG is an independent
satellite · receive ter• •111 (earth station) will be 1non-network ) television
.n111a Ued at the Cable TV station with a 24-hour
tower site near Lakin State program day. This will be the
first 24-hour television station
HospitaL
This wiU mean an im· · available to PoinTView
mediate change from the customers . The WTCG
current pay service, the schedule consists of movies
Movie ChaMel, to Home Box (more than 30 hours a week),
?

$6888
SALE
•. omplete With
Tools

e"lt Beats, As It Sweeps,
As It Clelns"
elnNnt Rug Adjusbnent

EXTENDED FORECAST
Sbowen Tbunday and
Saturday and fair Friday.
Hllba will be In the 70s,
while low• will be Ia the
upper 401 or the 581.

sports 1more than 30 hours a
week - including Atlantic
Coast Conference basketball
in-season) and your favorite
off-network and syndicated
shows. Christian Broadcasting will also offer a 24hour broadcast dsy, con·
sisting of religious and
family-oriented programs.
The popular "700 Club" CBN's flagship program - is
just one example of the kind
of shows that make Christian
Broadcasting an exciting TV
alternative.
PoinTView
Manager
Richard Newell pointed out
that the installation of an
earth station will truly be the
beginning of a new day for
cable TV ..
" These two stations are
just the begiMing, just the
first two - we don 'I know
how many will be available in
the years to come." Newell
emphasized that the cost to
PoinTView to offer these
stations is not small. An
adjustment in the hasic cable
rate will be necessary.
"We will be going befor~
the Various town coWlcils to
request a general rate increase of $1 per month,"
Newell said. "We would have
had to ask for some kind of
increase in any event, due to
steadily rising costs of
materials and manpower.
However, at $1 increase will
allow us to cover these costs
and also offer something new,
very different and very
special to our subscribers."
" If we are granted this
increase in our rates, they

• Edge Cle111lng Suction ~­
Power

will not become effective
until such time as these two
chaMels actually are made
available in the com·
munities."

The~besl way to care for carpet

Hoover Convert able Cleaner .

BAKER FURNITURE

Newell said brochures from
bOth WTCG and Christian
Broadcasting are available at
the cable TV office in Pl.
Pleasant and at the pay
stations In Middleport and
Gallipolis . Anyone with a
question about either station
is invited to call the cable
office.

Middleport, 0 .

Auto loans
·11 gea..ed to

~

'79 prices•••

C.--..

Plane crash toll reaches 150

leave much of anything,"
!IJ.al sounded like a bomb," L. Boswell, 35, of Oceanlide, Pollee Chief Bill Kolender
By STEW AR'f SU VIN
Calif.,
an
experienced
pilot
SAN DIEGO (UP! ) - It Sjlld Mrs. Joseph Alessio, who
instrument sald. "I've never seen
among the witnesSeS who practicing
was a balmy morning ,
landing
techniques.
A force of anything so bad in my Z2
watched in fear as the
:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt;::::::::::::::::::::::::::: warming toward 100 degrees, crippled jetliner began to 100 Marines waa posted years of police work."
the hottest Sept. 25 San Diego
When heavy equipment
had ever known . The SlDI was burn, explode and fall 0111' of around the wreckage to lifted a jet engine, ooe of the
guard agalnal more looting,
brilliant in a clear sky when the skf.
and coroner's officials said . lew remalnlnl ldentillable
the
tail
end
of
the
"I
saw
there came a boom like
pieces of the PSA plane, the
thunder and an awful rain. plane come ·off, and two they eJq~ected to 'cootinue bodies of a wmnan and five
Pouring from the skY over objects fell from the plane. I working atleallall day lqday chll&lt;k-en were found beneath
a
quiet
residential guess the flrll was part of the to Identity the dead from the , it.
neighborhood came fire and tall and I be second a person. pieces. "There wasn't a
The PSA Olght was heading
steel and people, dead and God, it seemed like it took single enUre body recovered for a landing at San Diego
oo
the
whole
block,''
said
forever to fall," said Andy
dying . .
coroner's supervisor Warren International Airport, Und·
Hollywood movies have Russell.
bergh Field, endlng a .flight
.The craSh killed 135 people . Chambers.
fantasized and pilots bave
·
from
S&amp;cramenlll ·and Los
The
crash
demolished
the
Meigs County Sheriff warned of similar disasters. aboard the PSA flight Angeles,
when it collided with
James J. Proffitt reports his A small cessna, its pilot including the seven crew jetliner, wrecked an eight- the light plane,
which took off
unit apartment building,
department investigated practicing
instrument members and 31 other PSA
oo
a
training
flight from
flying
as leveled 10 homes and
three accidents Sunday.
landings, clipped a Pacific employees
Mootgmnery
Field,
five miles
The first accident was at Southwest Airlines Boeing 727 passengers - two In the seriously damaged five
to
the
north,
for
a
landing
at ·
Cessna and at least 13 on the others, setting the block
6:15 p. m. Sunday on private at 3,000 feel.
Undbergh.
.
The
Federal
afire.
'
property in Letart Township
But it was real ~ too ground.
Bodies were difficult to find Aviatioo Administratlm said
The single engine Cessna
which sent a nine-year-old horribly real.
both pUota were alerted to the
youngster to Holzer Medical
Within minutes, at least 100 172 carried a flight instructor In the smoking-rubble. ''The presence of the other plane In
intense
heat
of
the
fires
didn't
Center for treatment of a leg people - all those on both and Marine sergeant, David
the vicinity and each
injury.
planes and more t1111n a dozen
confirmed they could see tbe
According to the report, on the ground - perished in
other
plane,
Jarrod Hill, 9, and 12-year-old the de adliest aviation
1
Tina HiU, Rt. 2, Racine, were disaster m U.S. history.
riding cycles on a private
People on the ground
lane on the Adams farm when watched in horror as the
Charles, Racine, and William
Tina turned left in front of blazing fuselage plummeted
JAMES A. SPROUSE
(Continued from page I)
J arrod. There was slight into the quiet neighborhood
James Allan Sprouse, 41, of Meridan; two step· officials with Fultz was
dsmage to the cycles.
like a blockbuster bomb, Meridsn, Conn., formerly of dsughters, Paula and Donna ; suggested, but that plan also
Jarrod was transported to leveling homes In a tumble of Pomeroy , died Monday three sisters, Mrs. Darrell !ell through.
Holzer Medical Center by the flying wreckage and fiery morning
at
Meridan , (Wanda) Sellers, Portland;
Kelly said he agreed with
Syracuse Emergency Squad. blossoms of burning jet fuel , Wallin g ford Hos pital , ·Mrs. John (Barbara) Stahl, Grate that the village does
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Rodney riot have the money for the
A second accident occurred mangling and incinerating Meridan.
at I :30 a, m. in Rutland the occupants beyond
He was born Feb. 19, 1937, (Linda ) Jones, Rutland, and purchase.
.
the son of the late Charles T. several nieces and nephews.
Township on CR 3, ap- identification.
Mayor Hoffman said his
Funeral services will be plan was for the village to pay
proximately two miles north
A professional Sprouse . He was also
held
Friday at 10 a. m. at $2,000 from the water fund
in
death
by
two
preceded
of SR 124.
photographer, Hans Wendt,
Cla udia Asbury,
23, happened w be nearby and infant sisters. He had served Ewing Funeral Home with and $4,000 from the sewer
the Rev . O'Dell Manley of· fund on the equipment and
Mulberry Hts., Pomeroy, was took pictures as the jetliner, with the U. S. Navy.
northbound on CR 3 when she , its wing aname, plunged
He is survived by one son, ficiatlng . Burial will be In finance the balance.
lost control and struck a nose.first toward earth.
James
Sprouse,
Jr., Rock Springs Cemetery.
Grate reported he was
bridge abutment. There was
Mechanicsburg,
N.
Y.;
his Friends may call at the advised on the state level not
Bodies rained down. They
heavy fog at the time of the smashed w earth in yards, mother, Mrs. Mattie Sprouse, funeral home alter 9 a. m. w sign any papers for such a
accident. Her car was crunched onto roofs and side- Rutland ; two brotheu. Thursday.
purchase If the village does
demolished .
walks and snagged in trees.
not have money to buy the
The final accident occurred Two falling bodies crashed
equipment.
at 9:15 p. m. on private through a car's windshield
Even though the motion to
Hospital
News
property at a residence on and killed the occupants, a
buy the backhoe passed two
Gold Ridge.
woman and her baby .
VeteraDI Memorial Hoepllal weeks ago, and was perAccording to the report,
Ghoulish looters scurried (Continued from pa~e l.l
Admitted
Luther mitted to stand, council did
Ruth Francis, RD Pomeroy, into the burning wreckage to work of the Meigs-Athens
Gilliam, Pomeroy; Enuna vote 4-1 with Mullen casting
had been at the Alvin Smith rob the dead. They stripped Industrial Site Study.
Ryan, Mason ; Mary Rum· the disaenting vote to get
r esidence attending a bodies of their money and
Blakeslee listed the field, Pomeroy ; Charles estimates on the repair of the
Products Party. She backed jewelry. Nine of them were possible industrial sites and
present backhoe.
her auto into a basement wall arrested for looting and 15 indicated it will be necessary Ohlinger, Middleport; Mark
A motion by Mullen that a
Michael, Pomeroy ; Clero
causing severe damage to the onlookers for disobeying to secure information on Baker, Middleport ; Richard daily mileage log book for ali
wall.
police orders w leave the whether the named sites are Turnbull, Mason.
village
equipment
be
The incident is still under area.
actually for sale. A seminar
maintained
died
for
the
lack
Discharged ~ Helen Jef·
investigation.
"I looked up and heard is plaMed for January when fers, Zelia Taylor.
of a second after several
the industrial sites will be
council members said they
presented to the public.
felt the village was too small
Blakeslee reported an
of an an operation for
Holzer Medical Center
application has been filed for
maintenance of such a log.
Dtscbarges, Sept. 25
a program development
Council set trick or treat
Mrs. Clyde Bachtel and
grant and whether the son ; Ray Barker; Clair night for Mondsy, Oct. 30,
program .is approved or not Beyerly; Mrs. Virgil Blevins from 6 to 7 p.m., and accepted
will probably not be known and daughter; Mrs. MiChael the local govenunenl money
charges
of
left
of
center.
until Oct. I. Blakeslee Eblin and· son; Beverly division as establilhed by the
The Gallia-Meigs Post ,
The
patrol
investigated
a
reported the improvement of Garr.ett ; George Goheen ; county budget corrunlaslon.
Highway Patrol, investigated
two-vehicle
accident,
inPage
St. in Middleport is still Patnck McGuire; Mary
three accidents Monday.
Attending were Mayor
voiving
a
school
bus
owned
by
plaMed,
but probably will not Miller ; Rebecca Oiler; Jack Hoffman, Clerk Grale,
Officers were called to the
scene of a two-vehicle the Gallipolis City Board of become a reality until next Pickins; Pearl Riffle; Mrs. Councilman Carl Horky, Btu
collision on Johnson Rd., six- Education at 8 a. m. on SR year. He also reported tbat 1 Keith Saunders and son ; Walters, Kelly, Mullen and
tenths of a mile east of Lin· 325, one-tenth of a mile west :;oo copies of the new rural Jeffrey Shifflet; Carrie Horton and police chief, J. J.
of U.S.35.
address directory for Meigs
coin Pike, at 4:25 p. m.
Smith; AMa Spaulding and Cremeans, along with a
Officers
report
that
the
bus,
·
County are at the county Tracy Wills.
village worker. The village
According to the patrol,
autos operated by Timmy traveling north, operated by commissioners' office in the
worker discussed a persoMel
Births, Sept. 25
Caldwell, 16, Crown City, Donald Wells, 33, Gallipolis, courthouse. He said a map of
Mr. and Mrs. Keith problem with council in ,
traveling west, and Robert stroJck a southbound auto the county is expected to be Kanode, son, Wellston; Mr. executive session at the close
McGuire, 26, Gallipolis, driven by James Saunders, available within the next six and Mrs. John Coleman, son, of the regular meetllig.
months.
eastbound, collided headon in 17, Gallipolis.
Oak Hill ; Mr. and Mra.
The
patrol
reports
that
both
Work is progressing on the James Pratt, daughter ,
a blind curve.
An occ upant in the vehicles incurred slight sewage disposal systems for Jackson.
Rutland and Racine McGuire vehicle, Catheryn damage.
No citation was issued.
Syracuse, according to
McGuire , 3, Gallipolis,
(Continued from page 1)
Officers were called to the statements at yesterday's
displayed visible signs of
Cleveland, and three grandinjury, but was apparently scene of a one-auto accident meeting presided over by
SQUAD RUNS
children.
on
CR
I
in
Meigs
County.
Thereon
Johnson,
council
not immediately treated.
At 12:31 p. m.Mondsy the
Funeral services will be
According
to
the
patrol,
a
executive
committee
Officers report moderate
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
held
at I p.m. F(!day at the
damage to both vehicles. south bound vehicle operated chairman.
went
to
168
Mulberry
Avenue
Poplar
Ridge
United
by
Diane
S.
Young,
27,
Ca ldwell wa s ci ted on
for Judith Bacon, a medical MethndiBt Church near Kyger
Dexter, went of! the right side
patient who was taken to with the Rev. William Beagle
of the road striking a fence
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
officiating. Burial will be In
and the guy line of a utility
POTLUCK THURSDAY
At
5:18
p.m.
Monday
the
Poplar Ridge Cemetery.
pole.
The Women's Association
Young was uninjured. of the Middleport First squad took Myrtle Hayes, Friends may call at the
Officers report moderate United Presbyterian Church New St.. to Veterans Rawlings • Coats Funeral
Home In Middleport from 2lo
damage to the auto. No will hold a potluck Thursday, Memorial Hospital.
4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday.
citation was issued.
Sept. 28 at 6:30 p.m.
Hostesses wtll be members
of Group 'ane and devotions
and program will be given by
Jean Moore.

was

Deputies

check 3
accidents

Village

Meigs. • •

Patrol checks .three
auto mishaps Mopday

TB testing
announced

LOOK
FOR OUR
FALL
SALE
CIRCULAR

Why stand stil l in select.ng your new ca r? See us
the mot1on spec ialists , lo r a low-cost auto loa~
with t rack -tested terms . On approval. our loan
spec1alist ca n arrange ar1 exte nded , personalized
payment plan 1 Get Facts.

IN THIS

WEEK'S
MAIL

...... .f.~:,

IMiiUPOitl'
01110

:•
"
I

· · ~!._0~

'

POMEROY ·CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department
Store of Building
Since 1915

,

A tuberculin skin testing
clinic will be held Monday,
Oct. 2, at 7:30 p.m. In the
E.M.S. building in Rutland
according to Jane Brown, R.
N., tuberculosis nurse for
Meigs County who will do the
testing.
The clinic is free and all
E.M.S. workers, firemen,
church groups, school
children, school personnel
and the general public are
urged to attend.
Those who receive skin
testa on Monday will be expected to return on Wed·
nesday, Oct. 4 at 7 p.m. to
have the results read.
Mrs. Brown said there has
been a very good reaponH to
the other night clinics
throughout the county and
hopefully there will.be a good
attendance In Rutland.

I
I

·'

I

.___________________________..._... 1....--------·-.J
Deposits Insured to $40,000.00.

Member FDIC

'

-~: US .

1978

. ,. By Helen Bottel\\

·:::

LANDLORDS AGAINST CHILDREN'
BY
'
DEAR HELEN:
HELEN BOTI'EL
We have three children. Does that make us pariahs ' Mf
huaband got a good Jnb offer in a lovely location. We'd like to
move but In any of the decent apartment buildings landlords
refuse to lake families with children. Buying ~ house at
present prices Is out of the question. Rental houses? Again
kids are oil-limits.
·
'
What's offered, nobody would wanl!
Our three aren't monsters and wouldn't wreck a place. Why
~ ~ds make lt so ro tough on parents?- MR. AND MRS.
DEAR MR. AND MRS. W.:
· .
Landlords answer:-•·we must protect our investments"
Adult tenants often back them: they don't want kids botherin-g
around.
· .
·
And what can parents do ? Concentrated protests have
opened a few more apartment complexes In varioua cities
Occasionally a clever ad in a local paper will turn up ~
suitable house for rent.
Sometlmes the company which hires the new employee will
offM
er 1eads.
.
.
kimy suggestion: Wetgh the gOQd job and location against
porary poor housmg. If the former wins take what you Cllll
~ttoand keep lOQldng for ~tter : it may apP.ar, once you're in
e wn and have more time to search Good luck 1 H
DEAR HELEN :
.
·- ·
I'm living with my friend and he's so lazy he won't do
anything for himself. I pick up his clothes run his tub even
serve his meals before the TV as he won't e~t at the table '
If I don't do everything, he gets mad , but I work aU ~y too
What should I do?- VERY TIRED FEMALE
.
DEAR TIRED :
Tell~ ~ou ~en't a "maid to order" item and if he doesn't
r;t crackin you U start packln'. Happy apartment huntin~. _
DEAR HELEN:
Do . grandparents have legal rights to see their
gran~hildren? My brother was accused of messing around
with his sister-In-law. It caused a family fight and now be won't
allow his children to vistt our parents. His
visitatim rights? - E. B.
DEAR E.:
I caUed several lawyers on this one. Their opinions are that
the court would probably not interfere in a family squabble
alth~ugh grandpa~ents do have certain visitation rights
spec18l mstances, t.e., death of the parents and relocation of
the children, marriage dissolution, etc.
But don'tlake my word f&lt;r it. CaD your district attorney's
office and find out for yourself.- H.
· Got a problem ? An adult subject for discussion? ·You can
talk it over m her colwnn if you write to Helen Bottel care of
th 1!1 newspaper .
.'

Store Hours:
Mon.-Sat. 8 A.M.-10 P.M.
Sunday 10 A.M . • 10 P.M.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, 0.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPT. 30, 1978

Whole Fryers ss~
lB

FRENCH CITY

Wieners ...... ~ ..1:.~~.

u;

Harrisonville Society News
Atkins.
Mrs. Velma (Ha rm on)
Long of Columbus was an
overnight guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Roy_ Wiseman. Other
callers were Waid Nickelson
and daughter, Evelyn, of
Dexter.
The Lend-A-Hand Circle
met Friday evening at Mrs.
Ardis Waggoner 's home with
co-hostess, Mrs. Anne
Williams. There were 15
members present.
Mrs. Catherine Weaver
spent two weeks in California
visiting her son and family
Sam Stiemetz . They ac:
companied her home for a
two weeks visit.

Mr. and Mrs. Charley Stacy
of Florida visited Mr. and
Mrs. David Riggs on Wednesday evening.
Calvin Epple of Penn·
sylvania visited a few days
with his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Mike Epple.
Mrs. John Wil son of
Columbus visited over the
weekend with Miss Ruby
Diehl.
Mr. and Mrs. Theo Hinds of
Newark visited Mr. and Mrs.
K. C. Welsh and her mother
Mrs. Leatha Cowen weni
home with them to stay a
week.
Mr. and Mrs. David Riggs
and family were Sund
dinner guests of Mrs.

Chicken Thighs... ~s~
CENTER RIB

PORK CHOPS ••••••••• ~B~

$}lg

CENTER LOIN

PORK CHOPS

LB.
••••••••••

••

$}49

CRISPY SERVE
LB.

BACON

•••••••••••

:-------......- ..

Ga11ia •••

J

(

~- · .· H;y;;"H;iP"' ' I ~~c~~~~!!!!!!J......~---•.------

..7..:: ~-~UY. Senlin&lt;!l, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Wednesday, Sept.

'

LIGHT DAMAGE
There was Ught damage to
a car owned by Ernest Van
lnwagen, Middleport, on
Wllllalllll st., at 7:20 p. ni.
Monday when a. Royal Crown
Bottling Co. truck allpped out
of gear and struck the parked
Van Inwagen car.
I'

·
.
3LBS. BAG
APPLES • ••••••••••••••••••

BANQUET FROZEN

REGISTER NOW
New Quarter Begins

Sept. 18, 1978

BENEFIT SHOW
TUPPERS PLAINS ~A
benefit country and Blue
Grass music shOw scheduled
for Wednesday evening in
Tuppers Plains has been
cancelled..
NOW YOU KNOW
The first fatality In
powered aviation occurred
Sept. 17, 11101, when a plene
being flown by Orville Wright
crashed, kUling a paaH~~~er
and Injuring Wright.

BONNEVILLE SALT
FLATS, Utah (UP!) - An
Army Renrve recruiting
sergeant from Loa Anlelea
set a world land ltpead record '
for ~~~tall · engine lpol'ts can 1
Monday, lipping acrou the
salt flats at 92 mph.

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4GENIRAL OFFICE
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SEE OUR NEW
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ELBERFEUDS IN POMEROY
..•

32

oz.

FRIED CHICKEN··········$ 99

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

SEEKS DIVORCE
Thelma Tharpe, Rt. 3,
Pomeroy, filed suit for
·divorce in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court against
Gerald
L.
Tharpe,
Jacksonville, Fla.

7

RED or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

BORDEN'S

2% MILK ................. $}49
OXYDOL DETERGENT $239
84 oz.

PAR KAY

•••••••••
MARGARINE
LB.
69
DAWN DETERGENT"_:.$}
I I ) I J! ' I )I~

I

KRAFT

MIRACLE WHIP.
32 oz.

89~

ZESTA CRACKERS
'
W!C.

WIC

Limit 1 Per t.usromer
Good Only 1t Powell's
Offer Expires Sept_. 30, 1978

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires S.l't· 30, 1971

JELLO GELATIN
No. 1505

6/$1

·wI ·c·..

COtJr"()N

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FLAVORITE NAVY

BEANS
LB. BAG2/$1

W!C

Limtf 1 l'er Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Offer Expires Sept. 30, 1978

~.~
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Go.od Only at Powell's
Offer Expires
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J

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'

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