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                  <text>,2 _The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Sept. 27, 1978

tersection of Nye Ave., and
Main St .. a car driven by
Glenn Cole, 26, Columbus.
pulled from a parking lui
West Main St., when a ca r Pauline Ulddle, Haelnc Lane
dnven by Harry Roush, was cited fu r failure tu yield acruss from the buokmubile
headquarters and st1·uck an
Minersvi ll e, stopped at the the right of wny .
east
buund car driven b)'
Gruver Klein . a passenger
Sunoco Station . It was struck
Cheryl
Ann Hysell. 22.
by a driverless car owned by in the Lane car, was taken to
Middleport.
There w~re
Dallas Va rian. 51. Mason .. Veterans Memorial Hospital medium damages and Co le
The Varian car. left running by the Pomeroy emergency
wa s cited to court on a charge
and unatten ded. at th e squad fur treatme~t of rninur uf (ailing to yield the right of
Ashland Station across from injuries. There were medium ·way .
the Sunocu Station. jumped damages to both cars.
AI 1· 15 p .rn at th&lt;' inintu gear and moved across
Main St. hilling the Roush
A'rfEN'flON
car. There were medium
U you qualify and are interested - The Middleport
damages.
Fire Dept. may have openings in the near future for
At 12 :20 p.m. Tuesday, on
persons to serve on the Fire Dept. and-or Emergency
Wt!st Main St.. a l'ar driven
Rescue Squ&amp;d. If you are at least' 18 years of age, a
by Elizabeth Lane. Pomeroy,
resident of the Village of Middleport, holder of a valid
att empted a left turn into a
operalilr 's license , with ny physical handicaps that would
Dairy Shop and st ru ck a
hinder a normal and sale performance of expected duties :
west bound car driven bv
Fill out the NO OBLIGATION questionnaire and mail to
the Middleport Fire Dept., Race St., Middleport, or give to
any active Middleport Fireman .

Jne person injured in accidents ·
Pomeroy
police
in·
vestigated three accidents
Tuesday and this morning.
At 6:35 a.m. today "n
unusual accident t.IC&lt;'urred on

Incumbent
1Continued from page I I
continue tu do su.

"The pre\'ious philosophy
of spec ulation was replaced
by a policy of so und investment proced ure s whi ch
earned for the State t•f Otuo
more Qloney thiln has been
ea rned by any prev ious
administration of this offi ce
- near ly $463 million to
date ."

ANNUAL

Date - - - - -

CHILDREN'S

Name._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Stride Rite
SHOE SALE

Age--Sex - -

A "bike rodeo" will be held SUnday, Oct. 1 at the Meigs
County ~·airgroWJds sponsored by Boy Power, Inc.'
The event is for youngsters age 3 through 18. Youngsters
interested are to complete the registration form below and
submit itlil the judge at noon on Sunday . The events will take
place a! I p.m. Parents' permission is required for motor-x
events. Registration forms will also be available at the game.
All forms must be signed by parent or legal guardian. ·

Name __~~~----~~-----------------first
las!

Address._ _ _ _ _ _-:--- Married- Single -

Mol or -x _________

Bike race 20 inc h _____

---

Big wheel motor -)(

! Area Deaths !

Six•••

MEET THURSDAY
Prece pt or Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
will meet Thursd~y at 7: 45
p.rn . at the Meigs Inn . A
report on Boys' State will be

IN I H E
COMMON PLEAS C OU~T ,
PROBATE DIV IS ION

MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
IN
THE
MATTER
SETTLEMENT
OF

COUNTS ,

MEETING SET
Pomeroy Ga rden Club will
meet Munda y, Oct. 2, at 7: 30
p.m. at th e home of Marga ret

fiducia r ies hav e been f i le d in
the Probat e Cou rt , Me i gs
County, Oh io , tor approva l
and se 111cment ·
C AS E NO
20478 Fou rt h
A.n nu al A ccoun t of Mar th a
Chil d s, Trustee und er
t he
Las t W ill ancl Testament ol

Georg eS . Hobstetter Jr.
Bro~er

Vour Full Time
Real Estate Broker

Office 992-6333
Middleport

.

Charm i ng

l ocated on
Ave n ue . 3
bedrooms, l 1 '2 baths, new
gas furna ce and new roof .

ol d er h ome
South
3rd

Sells ' "' Sl5.000.oo.
MIDOLEPORT -

Owne'

has reduced pr ice of this
nice 3 bed room home. If
has a detached garage and
is siTuated on one.fh ird of
an acre. On ly $26 ,000.00 .
We ha ... e other listings to

$59

..

t o t low ing

name d

Ber tie N wan s , Decea sed

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

'

PROBATE

given .

Blaettnar.

.'

OF
AC ·

C OURT , MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Accounts and vouc h ers of
th e

choice

choo se from . Call us today
for mor e information on
buying and selli ng your
hom e.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Home Phone 74 2·1003

CAS E NO 22313 F i rs t and
F i na I Ac co unt of Donal d A .
Cal d e r one, Tru stee under
Ite m I t o t t h e Last W ill an d
Tes tament o t Gfo r ge F
Ritt en h ouse . De ceased .
CAS E N O . 222 64 Final ancl
Accou nt
of
O is tr i b u t iiJe
Lillia n 8 K1ng . Executrix ot
the Esta t e ot B essie E .
Musser , Deceased .
CAS E N O
20 199 E ight h
Annu a l Account o t Pau l D
Stu rg eon ,
.Gu arct ia n
of
Ka thlee n K Sturgeon . . John
0
Sturge on,
Paul
W.
Dw i ght
E
St u r geon ,
St urgeon. an d Mar y L .
Sturgeon . M ino rs .
CAS E N O 22 136 Final and
D IS tr ibut i ve A cc ount of John
tn ~ Es tate o f V io la M . J et
ter s. Deceased .
U nless except ion s ar e f il ed
therelo , sa id accounts will be
lor hearing before said Cou n
on Th e 27fh da y ot Oc tober ,
1978 , at wh ich t ime sa id
acco unts w i tt be consi dered
and con tinued fr om aav to
day unt il f ina ll y disposed ot .
A ny person inter es ted may
til e wr itten e•cep t ions to sa id
a cco unts or 10 maile r s
perta 1ni ng to til e e.:ecu lion of
llle trust , not tess than li11e
days pr ior l o Th e da te se t f or
nea r i ng

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .
Home· Phone 949 ·1589
GeorgeS . Hobstetter , Jr .,
Broker
Hom e Phone 991-5739

~
~

UJ

co

Slop in lhe Ladies
Ready To Wear
Department, 2nd
floor, and •ee all
lhe
•lyle•
wom e n's winter
coats .

You'll

like

our ulection . Use
our convenient laya -way plan.

TO

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
COME ON IN FOLkS

Glamour ...
by the handfuli

SEE THE NEW

1979 CHEVROLETS
ON DISPLAY NOW

"1979"

NEW!"

• Brill iant head lig ht

'· ·: , 60" FLEECE

60" CHALLIS
60" KNITS

MODEL 1424

FO:OTH I

Home Economic

SAVE •45.90

Students Received

10% OFF

INGELS
FURNITURE

Monte Carlo Sport Coupe

"1979"
Caprice Classic 4-Door Sedan
Any one ot th ese cho1ce
co lo red 1ewe1s coUld be
tust th e one shes wanted
lo r so long 1 See ou r won·
deri ul
select1on - com·
plete for holrday g1v1ng
A H andcarved shell

Cameo
8 Lustrous Jade
C Glamorous Ga r nei

0 Clllturea Pearl
SpHlt'IS
.- u,llustrllt.ons e nlll•n••U

REGISTER: DOOR PRIZES
FREEGim
EVERYONE WELCOME
SEE CHEVROLn FOR '79

POMEROY ·MOTOR CO.
Pomeroy, 0.
992·2126

Second St.

Pomeroy, 0.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States trade
deficit, a major reason for the
sleep slide of the dollar
abroad , narrowed to $1.62
billion In August as exports
soa red lo a new record.
August 's bri ght trade
performance was tbe second
be3t of 1978 and was
announced by the Commerce
Department one day after
President Carter unveiled a
new program to boost the sale

of American-made products
in foreign countries. Carter is
hopeful th at in creased
exports will help reduce the
troublesome deficit.
The August deficit was
significa ntly belo w July's
$2.99 billioo red ink liltal, and
was the second lowest of the
year, topped only by June' s
$1.60 billion.
Despite the improvement ,
the deficit for the first eight
months of the year now

Prosecutor's office objects
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Officials in the Franklin County
Prosecutors' Office Tuesday strongly objected Ill conditions
placed by the state Controlling Board on use of the Ohio
Highway P&amp;trol in the prosecutors' investigation o( the state
audllilr's office.
The "conditions" were stipulated Ill remove politics from
the grand jury investigation, said board president Robert
Howarth.

Another critical levy loses
Another critical tax levy proposal has gone down Ill defeat
in an Ohio school district - this time in Elyria.
Voters in Elyria rejected a 6 . ~ levy Tuesday by a
narrow margin - 4,679 Ill 4,~ - with about 31 percent of
registered voters casting ballots. Assistant · School
Superintendent Thomas Showalter immediately predicted that
the financially strapped school system would be forced to close
by about Dec. I.

Rhodes onler evaluation
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - A r...,valualion of the former
Nelsonville Children's Psychiatric Hospital lor possible use as
a state facility was ordered Tuesday by Gov. James A. Rhodes
at the request of local officials who cited the need for more
employment.
"We had been hopeful that this facility would be sold Ill a
private owner who woultl provide badly needed jobs in the
NeJsonville area," Rhodes said. HHowever, those negotiations
have fallen through and the . fact remains that this is an
excellent laciUty which can serve the state in the future."

industry pointed out that
produ ct ion could halt by
week's end if shipments do
not resume.
Genera l Motors Corp. and
Ford Motor Co. officials said
they already had t'llt back
operations and laid off
workers a t some faciUties,
where parts shi pment.s had
not arrived .
AGM spokesman sa id most
of the firm's plants could be
shut down by the weekend.
And right now, the AAR
spokesman said , 70 percent of
the grain movement in the
country has "stop ped."
Virtua lly all movement of
industria l produc ts ~ 70
percent of coal production ground to a hail

Chicago appeared to the
hardest hit city with te ns of
thousand s of comm ute rs
forced to find other means of
tran s porta ti on .
Mayor
Michael Bilandic pla ced
police on emergency standby
to help move traffic . One
commuter
line,
the
Milwaukee Road,
had
reswned normal operations
into Chicago, however.
As for court action , federal
judges across the country
granted railroad requests for
new temporary restraining
orders to get the clerks back
to work. But the carriers
" have reported difficulties in
serving tho:;e notices on un ion
chairmen in their areas ." the
MR di sclosed.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1978

Open Ennlngs till p.m.

sta nds at $20.98 billion
compared Ill $16.02 billion ·
during the same period in
1977.
Unless s ub s tantial
improvement is made during
the remainder of the year , the
1978 deficit will lM! in the
biggest in history.
The department said
imports last month liltaled
$14.09 billion, a decline of 5
percent, while exports
climbed by 6 percent to $1 2.47
.....:_.- , a new record.

Almost every category of
imported goods dropped last
month wi th one nota ble
exception - oil.
· Oil imports rose 3 percent
Ill $3.6 billion. One of Carter's
lilp economic goals is Ill
redu ce U.S . relia nce on
foreign oil.
Such key imported goods as
stee l, cars, food and radio
and telev ision sets all
declined in August.
the strofg elport perfor-

Head teacher. principals at
the Chester, Riverv iew a nd
Tuppers Plains elementary
sc hools were given increases
lor thei r additional duties
lthe fi rst given in three
years ) when the Eastern
Loca l School District Boa rd
of Education met Tuesday
ni ght.
The in creases changed the
extra pay of the three to
$1.500 a nnu a lly fr om t he
present $900.
The boa rd received the
resignation of Cathy Osborne
as secretary at the Chester
elementary sc hoo l and a
letter was read from Barbara
Harmum, secreta ry to the

superintendent asking that
she be given the Chester
posi tion.
Action is expected on that
before the end of the month
and the secretarial post in the
Superintend e nt 's offi ce is
open. Applications are being
received by Supt. Clark Lees
at the h1gh school.
The board discussed the
proper methods of meeting
ex pen ses of the band for trips
to aw"y games and other
activities and it was agreed to
submit a statement to t he

Ohio
Department
of
Education that Eastern will
coo pera te with · Ga llia ,
Jackson, Vinton and Meigs
schools in programming for
the handica pped.
It was agreed to pay $5.50 a
day in transportation costs
fur one student to the Shade
elementa ry school with part
of the costs to be reimbursed
by th e stale.
·
It was also agreed to enter
into an arrangement for ad ult
ba sic education to be
provided again at Eastern
High School with Gary Reed
as instruct or. The Scioto
Valley School District will be
the fisca l age nt for the
prugram . There is nu cust fur
the ad ult educat ion program
to be given in the evenings
and ad ults interested are to
contact Reed at the high
schoo l.
A letter fr om Hele n
Crumley , consul tant uf t he
State
Department
of
Education , Di vision or Food
Services, was read making
recommendations on im proving the financial conditions of cafeter ias in the
district. The boa rd "PPrtii'Cd

In Shreveport, La ., 17 N&amp;W f.inandally during their
strikers were arrested when strike , which has been going
they refused to disperse after ·on since July 10.
a federa l judge issued a
The picketing - ini tially
restraining · order against limited to key terminals,
picketing at a railroad yard. cros.&lt;.;i ngs tmd interchanges
Similar pr ob l ems where N&amp;W ex changes
permitted the pi cketing to freight cars with 43 other
continue , and a spokesman carriers - was allowed by
for the clerks sa id union Bur~er's move to expand to
leaders and their attorneys 73 carriers the un·ian claims·
were "ca refully evaluating" are fu!Ulcling $800 ,000 a day
the new restraining orders . to N&amp;W under a mutual
On Tuesday, several hours stnk e aid paet.
after the expanded strike wa s
In
Washin gton,
10
under way , Chief Jusllce congressmen . led by Rep .
Warren Burger gave the Paul Findle y. H-Dl. . signed a
clerks further leeway, lifting letter
ur g ing
the
an earlier injunction that had admtnistration to ha lt the
prevented pit ketin g against strike f(J r GO da ys to a llow £or
other railroads that helped mov&lt;.'Illent of the fall harvest.

..

. .r -'·';

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

mance was p"ced by a $104 res umed . "~
Carter has prom ised other
million increase in airplane
sales a nd a 40 percent jump in · countries to reduce the huge
the shipments of soybeans, defkit as a m ea ns to
sU!blizing the value of the
the department said .
' Until July, the government dollar overseas .
When the trade deficit is
had believed it was making
strong progress in reducing high , more dollars are sent
the nation 's trade deficit. overseas, t hu s de pressing
Some administra tion officials their va lue. An e xcess
said they were "shocked'' by amount of dollars a broad also
makes
it eas ier
for
the size of July's deficit .
But lhe rebound in August speculators Ill drive down the
a ppare ntl y ind icated the dollar 's value.
do wnward trend may ha ve

au.

a n amended appropriations
document of $1,131,554 to
a bsorb additional foundation
funds and voted to pay one·
ha lf the cost up to $150 on a
set of encyclopaedias for
Tuppers Plains.
It was agr eed to subscribe
to the se rvi ces of the
Nelsonv ille-York District in a
program to ide ntify the
ha ndicapped. Cost to the
dist rict will be a bout $137.
Supt. Lees submitted a new
policy on st ud ent activity
accounts to be studied by the
board.
ll was an noun ced that
st udent s of th e Chester ,
Tuppers Plains and River·
view schoo ls will take part in
a dental healt h prog ra m of
the Ohi o Depa rtment of
Health in February.
Supt. Cia rk Lees listed
some 20 students who will be
ready for early mid-year
graduations and payment of
10 cents a mile for three
teachers who must travel be·
tween schools of the district
was approved. A letter from
Dr. Michael Kabler on the
dist rict's learning disabilities
program wa s rea d in

\

\

reference tu housing fur the
new program .
A pay ment of $86.17 for
extra hours for cafeteria
workers earlier this sc hool
year was a pproved and the
sc hedule has now bee n
changed so that extra hours
are not needed.
The boar d ap proved
payment of 16 an hour to
Marty Ba um for tuto(lng.
Approva l w as

g ive n

fo r

faculty mem ber. James Hoff.
to attend a meetin f! on grants
in Co lumbu s in October.
The board rece ived policy
st ate ments on vacations and
early graduation procedures
from Supt. Lees for st udy.
Avis J ackson was named
cheerleader advisor and a
drill press was pu rchased for
the ind ustria l a rt s depart·
ment for $359.
Attending the meetmg were
Su pt. Lees. Clerk Eloise
Boston, board membe rs Doug
Bissell , Ja mes Caldw ell ,
Dary l Well. Dorot hy Ca la way
and Dorsel Larkins, Prin·
cipal James Page. and head
teachers, Tom Gumpf, Mike
Will and Gr"ce Weber.

lncunnbenttreasurer
campaigns in Ponneroy

Ohio 's Demo cratic in· Pomeroy Tuesda y afternoon
cumbe nt,
Mrs.
Ger· as a part of her campaign for
trud e Donahey , was in re-e lection. Mr s. Donahey
sa id , " We are c urr ently
hand ling more than twi ce the
workload of eight yea rs ago
wit h virtually th e sa me
number of full time em·
ployes . We hav e made
prudent use of temporary
help at times of peak tax
collection periods at a suir
stantia l savings over the
option of hiring full time,
permanent employes. And we
have returned to the state's
general revenue fund more
than $1 million from our tight
operating bud gets . I a m
proud of my reputation of
being tight-fisted with the
taxpayers' money."
"We live in an era of keen
compe titi on between the
states of our nation · for new
TROPHIESAWARDED - LaStweekendwasa busy one for the Meigs Marauder Band.
and expanded industry as a
/lllllt reeeiYinc alfllncllnc ovation at the Mel&amp;s-Belpre football game, the Meigs musicians
source of employment and
heldecl north to ccmpete with aome of the top bandit In Ohio at West Jefferson . The
tax growth without tax in·
Mlntuler Bud ccmpeted In the CIIU B. C&lt;llllpellllon and brought back five trophies
creases. While I am most
lncludlnc lbe belt Oag corp1 d all clauu, the best rlfie corp1 d all three classes, first place
supportive of these efforts, I
In
B. 1 finalllt trophy and aauperlor ralinl trophy. The Melga Band was ooe of six to
am fully aware that our
be uUd to perform for the Brand championlhip title. Following the West Jefferson
legislative a nd executive
CIJIIIIIIIIIIGD, lilt Mlnadln headed into the Columbul 111'81 and performed their show
bran ches IJ f government·
before appioalmalltly e,aoo people at the Hilliard Hilh School Band Festival. No awards
should lM! the prime movers
wert linn, but~~eb bind received a partlclpatlonlrophy, Tbe Marauders next coo test is at
ln this area .. If we CaiUlut
Weatlud Hilh School in Columbul. Shown above are the trophies awarded Meigs High
suc ceed in t hese areas
School'• Marauder Band OYer the past weekend at Welt Jelferaon and Hilliard.
~
~

'

•

" The vast majority of
freight is LM!ing held up," a
spokesman for the American
Association of Railroads said
early today. "Within two
weeks, if the strike continues
on this sc ale,' ' he said,
"economic losses to the
nation would r.opresent 5.8
percent of the Gross National
Product '' - a multi-billion
dollar impact.
The AAR said a two-week
strike of this size would
doubl e .unemployment boosting it as high as 12 Ill 14
per ce nt. About ·350,000
railroad workers are direcUy
affe cted by the walkout, but
the ripple effect would
prompt tens of thousands of
layoffs. The automo bile

•
iJ.~.._r_he_w_o_rl_d_To_d_a_y_ ·Head teachers get mcrease

JACKSONVIlLE, Fla. UPI) - When none of the boys at
the West Jacksonville Sixth Grade Center would admit writing
an obscene word on the lavalilry wall, school PrinCipal Willie
Young lined up 71 of them and gave each three licks with a
wooden paddle.
The only male student who was spared Young's paddle
was the boy who reported the obscenity to him. Because of the
incident, Duval County School Superintendent Herb Sang said
Tueaday, Young was removed as principal at the school and
reaosigned to the school system's evaluation division.

Camaro Berlinella Coupe

EUREKA
UPRIGHT

NO. 115

Spankings cause reassigrunent

'17 . lie

60" WASHABLE
SUEDE
45" CORDUROY
60" GABARDINE

Thursday.
Much of the Northeast
includin~ the Boston-New
York-Washington corridorwas spared because those
lines are owned by Amtrak or
Co nrail , the government
opera ted pa ssenge r and
freight carriers.
Elsewhere, Amtrak sa id
the situation remains
virtua lly un change d fr om
Tuesday.
Where trains were moving
- and they were moving
almost normally on the West
coast
supervisory
personnel were runnin g
them. The Norfolk &amp; Western
rWls trains as far west as
Kansas City, Mo.

''

Trade deficit reason for decline

You're Invited

EACH

.-106--.N;.;
. Z;;,;,N;.D;.;AV.;,;E·----~~~EPORT, 0.

VOL. XXIX

Manning 0 Webs ter
JU D GE
Common Pleas cour t ,
Probate Div ision,
Meig~ County , Ohio
(9 )

• Self-stonng tools 1n
li ft· Ofl tray
• Steel cons truct10n with
fu ll cle.an 1n g power .
• 9 pc . t'ool set fo r lu l l
f loo r to ce•ltn g cleaning .

*119

~

Two defendants were fined
and four others forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined $2oo and '" Costs each
on destruction of property
charges were Roger K.
McDaniel, Pomeroy, and
Terry · Walk er, Rutland .
Forfeiting bonds were Ja nice
Reitmire, Letart. W. Va.,
$200, posted on petty theft

Je fl e rs , Admi n ist rator of

A

' Bergen
By Drew Von
involve job protection.
International
Labor SecreU!ry Ray MarStriking rail clerks shall ca lled a
news
ignoring back-to-work orders conference for mid-morning
- held the country's trains at for what he ca lled a "major
a standstill again today, announcement" on the
imperiling the nation's grain administration's efforts Ill
harvest, raising the spectre reslilre service.
of widespread industria l
Marshall met throughout
layoffs and opening the Tuesday with labor and railprospect of government road officials including
intervention .
clerks' president Fred Kroll,
At dawn lilday in the East, officials of the National
the situat.ion remained Railway Labor Conference,
virtually the same as and the United Trans·
Tuesday's first day of the portation Union .
expa nded the 2-month-old
Industry sources said they
strike by the Brotherhood of expected Marshall Iii unveil a
Railway, · Airline
and new plan to get BRAC and the
Steamship Clerks against the N&amp;W back Ill the bargaining
Norfolk &amp; Western Railway ·U.ble. Formal talks broke off
Co. The issues in that dispute
Unl~ Press

en tine

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

EUREKA CANISTER

90

giving false. statements to
police office rs; Sandra
Tyree, 20, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs , no operator's license ;
Florence A. Bea rhs , · 31,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
improper backing; George A.
McDa ni el, 51. Middleport,
$100 and cost s, disorderly
manner a nd Lonnie K.
Taylor, 20, Middleport, $10
and costs, unsafe vehicl e.
Forfeiting bonds in the
court were Sandra L. Carol,
21 , Westla nd , Mich ., $33,
posted on a speeding charge;
Melodie E. Black, · 24, Mid·
dleport, $30, speeding; Ar· ·
nold M. Grate, 61, Rutland,
$30, speeding; Crystal Lee,
18, Pomeroy, $27, speeding,
and Ti m R. Hood, 18,
Pomeroy , $27, speeding.

Or·d ers ignored, trains at standstill

cc

(Continued from page 11
east on 14t , turn ed left
striking the St ewart a uto.
PLAID PLUS; Giani muted plaid I halos so so h 10 1ouch.
Office rs report sli ght charges, Debbie Hill, Racine,
in a blend o f wool and nylon Fun to we~r anytime sty le that
dama~e to both vehicles.
says. ··rm New". from the Bett y Rose• co llec ti on of co ntem·
$30, spee din g; Brenda
Alha was cited on cha rges Kennedy , Rutland, $30,
porary looks for Fall .'78 . Vic una . Wild Ric;s:, 8 to "16
of improper turning.
speedin g a nd Dea n Hill ,
OfHcer s investigated a twu- Racine , $30, running a stop
vehicle mishap on SR 7, at the sign.
junction of SR 248, in Meigs
County at 10 a.m.
According to the patrol,
autos operated by Thomas
Mankin , 35, Pomeroy , and
William
Ru ssell ,
31,
Pomer oy, incurre d slight
damage during the accident .
No citation wa s issued.
Officers report that at 10:30
a .m., a n auto operated by
Andrew Villa rs, 62, Waterloo.
traveling so uth on TR 26,
swerved to avoid an on·
coming log truck, went off the
right side uf the road and
overturned in a small creek.
"YOUR CHEVY DEALER "
Vill a rs was uninjured .
There was moderate damage
lo the vehicle.

95

• Excl usive 6-way
Dial -A-Na p rug
he ight adjustment
• Power-driven
, 2·inch beater
bar brush rol l

0

Wh eely con tes t,________

Nine persons were fined
and fiv e others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Signature1------~--~
Fined were Benjamin G.
Blackburn , 32, Pleasantville,
-----------~-------------- $225 and costs a nd three days
in jail, driving while in·
toxicated ; Parlin E . Jewell,
I
I 22, West Columbia , $225 and
' Kenneth , Hockingport; three costs a nd three days in jail.
LUCY M . SCHULTZ
Mrs. Lucy M. Schult z. 80. brothers, Harvey, Walter a nd driving whil e int oxicated,
Route I. Reedsville, died Clifford Roc khold , a ll uf and $50 a nd costs on charges
II
grand - of leaving the scene of an
Munda y at St. J ose ph Reedsville ;
Hos pita l. Parkersb ur g, children;
II
great· "ccid e nt ; Jim Jones, 21,
following an extended illness. grandchildren and one great - Middleport, $25 and costs,
Mrs. Schult z was born in gr eat -gra nd son. She was disorderly manner, and 125
Me~gs Co unt y, a daughter of preceded in death by her and costs, issuing menacing
the late Ma rce ll us and husband, ~· l oyd, in 1974, a threats; Robert L. Cummins,
Martina Ba rber Rockhold. son, a daughter and two 25.· Mtddleport , $50 and c0sts.
permit tin g an unlicensed
She was a member uf the sisters.
driver
to operate a motur
F unera l serv1ces will he
Eden Un ited Brethren
vehicle,
a nd $100 and costs.
Church a nd was a lifelong held at II a.m. Thursday at
resident of the Reedsville the White Funeral Home in
Coo lville with the Rev . Tim
area .
She is survived by twu sons, Snyder ufficia ling. Burial will
Everett. Tuppers Plains, and be in Ede n Ce metery.
Friends may ca ll at the
fune ral home any time.

Your

C/)

Bike race over 20 inch,_ __

List previous training in either field :. ____________

ELBERFELDS

LIJ

Ba la nci ng beam s _ __

Mayor's courtc

citizens' voluntary advocacy
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 15 ·
November 15.

.6'

E vent ~check each event you wish to en .
ter)

Interested in : Fire Dept. ( 1Rescue Squad ( ) Both (

AT
"'-..:
9:30 A.M.

~·

Age~---------------------------

Barre l race

llruce McKelvey of Port·
land was named Mental
Health BeHringer chair·
person for the October 15 ·
November 15 campaign in
Portland announced F .
Harriso~ Green, president of
the
Mental
Health
Association of Ohio.
" The Mental Health
Association is the lar~est

o..---------......

REGI STRAT ION FORM

Bi g whee l _ _ __

Place of Employment.______ Hours Worked Shift ( )

THURS . \.~

McKelvey heads Portland drive

Bike registration

through the combined efforts
uf our sta te's Depa rtment of
Econom ic and Community
De velopment
and
our
· legisla tive leadership, an
added bureaucracy within
the t reasurer's office is not a
produtt ive alternative.
" I would lik e to touch on
some recent statements that
the treasurer's office trans·
fer s money from department
to department at will. The
st a t ute
co verin g
the
operation of the treasurer's
offi ce clearly prohibits the
treasurer from such actions.
·For obvious reasons, this is a
prot ection of state funds, and
I have not deviated from this
sta tute.
"I reject the idea that the
treasurer's ofllce should
usurp the authority of other
duly elected office holders.
Our Ohio Constitution for
exa mple, clearly delegates to
the Att orney General the
investigation and prosecution
11f cases of fr a ud and
misa ppropriation . I have
always followed the state
c.,nstitution in cooperating
with •he Attorney General in
suc h instances, and will
(Continued on ~ge 12)

GERTRUDE DONAHEY

Level four
discussed
A discussion on Level Four
of the grieva nce procedure
was prese nt ed when the
Sout hern Loca l Board of
Education met in special
session Tuesday night. The
board also discussed ,bus
rout es and acce pt ed the
voluntary servi ces of Greg
Bailey as golf coach for the
1978-79 school year.
Attending were Dallas Hill,
president, Shirley Johnson,
Betty Wagner, .and l.lavid
Nease, board members,
Bobby Ord , superintendent
and
Linda
Spencer ,
treasurer.

MEIGS RESERVE CHEERLEADERS - These are
the Meigs High School reserve cheerleaders this season.
They include bot lilm, 1-r, Unda Kovalchik , Lori Rupe,
Beth Perrin ; second level, Tanuny Blak e with Kenda
Braun at lhe lilp .

Six accidents
probed by OSP
Th e Gallia -Meigs Post.
Highway Pat rol, investigated
six accidents Tuesday .

. Offi cers were called to the
scene of a hea d-on collision un

Macedonia Rd ., eigh l·lent hs
of a mile so uth of CR 5. at i :30
p.m.
According to the patrol. a n
auto operated by Kenrteth
Jenkins, 15, Northup, came
around H curve left of center ,
and struck a vehicle driven
by Albert Sa unders, 41 ,
No rthup, head-on.
Sa unders cla imed injury ,
but

was

not

immedia tely

treated.
The Jenkins auto incurred
severe damage. The Saunders vehicle was demolished.
Je nkins wa s Ci ted on
charges of operating a motor
vehi cle without a license.
The patrol investigated a
two-vehicle accident a t 5:40
p.m., on Nebo Rd .. one and
eight-tenths of a mil e north of
CR 3.
Officers report that a sound
bound auto operated by
Carpenter . 19,
J ohnny
Patriot, went over a hill crest
left of center , and sideswiped
a vehicle driven by Debra
Cox, 21, Patriot, t raveling
north .
Officers report moderate
damage to the Carpente r
auto, severe da mage to the
Cox vehicle.
Carpenter was cited on
charges of fai lure to yield
one-half the roadway.
Officers were ca lied to the
sce ne of a three-vehicle
mishap on CR 5, one-tenth of
a mile west of SR 1, in Meigs
Co unty, at 5:10p.m.
According to the patro l, an
a uto operated by Wilbur
Hanning, 61, Middleport ,
backed from a priva te drive
onto CR 5.
A wes t bound vehicle
driven by James Hannon, 23 ,
Middleport , attempted to
pass the Hanning auto, just as
Hanning started a left turn .
The Harmon vehicle struck
the left front of the Hann in~
a uto.
The Harmon auto then
slipped off t he roa dway
striking a parked vehicle
owned by Charles Hatfl id
Backhoe Service, Rutland.
Officers report moderate

damage to the Hannon and

Hanning ilutus. nu da mage
the Ha tfield vehicle.

to

Ha nnin g Wi.LS c it ed on
charges of failure to yield.
ll a rm un was ci ted on
charges (J f excessive speed .

At 3: 30 p m . officers innstigated a twu-auto accidcnl on C{Jra-Beaver Rd .. at
the junc1ion uf SR HI.
Accor ding to the patro l, a

so uth bound auto operate&lt;! liy
M"ry Ste wa rt, 27, Pt.
Pleasant , had stopped at a
stop s1gn at 141.
i\ vehi cle driven by Paul
Alha. 29. Patri ot. traveling
•Cont mued on page 121

Otristmas
parade set
The annua l Ch ristma s
pa rade wa s se t fu r t he
eveni ng of Monday, Nov . 27,

when
the
Middle port
Chamber of Commerce met
Tuesday ni ght "' the Meigs
Inn.
Candy Inge ls was named to
head thi s year ' s pa ra de
welc oming th e Chri stm as
sea son .
Plan s

wer e made f or
merchant conta cts fo r funds
to finance treats. advertising
and the appearance of "Santa
Claus" l hrou~ h o ul the
season. Pres id ent Ge or ge
Ingels and Manning Kloes
were named to head the
preparation of the Chamber
of Commerce fl oa t in the
parade.
A disc ussion was held on
the type of merc hant
promotion to be used for the
holidav season . It was
derided that each business
will pla n its own giveaway
a nd promotio n rather than
use a joint effort with the
pooli ng of gifts to be given to
shoppers. Also plans were
discussed for having pictures
of children taken with Sa nta
during the holiday season.
Au ending the meeting were
president Ingels, Miss Ingels,
Mr . and Mrs. John Werner,
Mr . and Mrs. Don Wilson, Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Baker, Mr.
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mrs.
.Elizai.M!th Stumbo.

:

f

�-.
3- The DaUv Sentlllel. Middleoort-Pumeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. 'll, 1978

2- The Daily,Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 'll , 1978
El'T~ FOI:IWCJmlllr~-~
HU~IIIIE
I'I.E.R. 18

. :.' ' IN

The

scar~d

*··-

,, ~

"';••
,-

~ .

By Martha . Angle a nd Robert Walters

When the old boys go .

WASHINGTON ( NEA ) . ~'or public employee unions, the
fastest growi ng segment of the America n labo.r movement,
the!:ie are the best of times a nd the worst of tunes.
The bad new~ is more a pparent than the good, with
voters from California ·to Massachusetts on the warpath
aga 1nst high taxes and the government workers who spend
Yet ·th os very climate or hosti lity and duress is
paradoxica lly promoting the case of umontsm m the pubh~
sedor . More than 16 million Americans, about 17 percent
of the tota l .work ·force . are now employed by federal, state
or loca l ~over nmenl and about ha lf or them belong to a
Ul\100

With hard times at hand , that pt"rcentage is likely to
grow. ·· J hate to say it . but Proposition 13 has been a
tt•rriflc organizing tool ," said one union official here .

actiOn to foresta ll similar· tax initiatives or spendmg
limitations in other s tat~s . but the mo~entum is against
lhem .
" It looks like we' re headed for a wipeout in November,"

conceded Donovan McClure, assoc iate director ol the
Coalition or American Public Employees, an umbrella
g roup lor fi ve major unions and associations .
CAPE is making no attempt, from the nabonallevel, to
stem the tide at the polls . Instead, it is saving its resources
a nd en~rg. " for combat this winter in the various state
' wht&gt;re tax a nd spendin g limits are sure to
legislatures
come up .

.

And it is seeking to get off the defensive and seize the
ini tiative by a dvoca ting tax relief through major tax
reform rather than " meat·ax" cuts that henefit business
and the rich more than ordinary homeowners and
taxpayers.
" Nobody benefit$ from a great confrontation hetween
publi c employees and the public ," McClure said. ·:we
learned from California that we cannot allow the roght
wing to control the debate. We've got to get involved ~arty
and shirt t he focus to tax reform that guarantees rehef to
thos&lt;• who deserve it without sacrificing serv ices for those
who need them."
CAPE pla ns to concentra te its campaign on six or eight
states in the Northeast and Midwest where the tax
structure is both burdensome and inequitable, seeking
a ll iances with existing public interest groups already at
work in those states.
" It's ti me to tell people who is paying taxes and who
isn 't , to get rid ol special abatements for busineSll, .to shift
I rom re li a nce on properly taxes to a progressove mcome
tax ," McClure said .
" We take g reat solace from the polls that show the one
group more unpopular than public emp,loyees right now is
business."
Th e publi c em pl oyee unions have their work cut out for
lhern . They ha ve ridden the gravy train for so long, without
inquiring abo ut its ultimate destination or the source of·~ .
fueL suppl y, that their a ttempts to get in front of the tax
relief issue wilt understandably generate suspicion.
Nonetheless, it will be interesting to see what they come
up wit h in the way of reform suggestions. The tax s~r~ct';lrE
in most states could use a thorough overhaul, and 11 IS h1gh
time that those who spend our .taxes start showing some
sens itivity to the legitimate gripe•.oi those who pay them.
1NF. WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

HEALTH
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - The
other day I went with a friend
to the west side of the island
to see a fri end of his who is a
fisherman . He lives in a tent
on the beach. While seated
and talk ing with thi s
fishennan, I noticed that boih
ol his feel were s wollen . I
asked him, " What happened
to your feet ?" He satd that it
had been going on fo r quite
so me lime. There is no pain.
t he swe lling only happens
during the day and disappears at nig ht. Now what
makes this swelling and the
disa ppearing aet '
DEAR
READER
Swelling ol the feet and
an kles is a symptom . It ca n
be caused by many different
diseases but , of co urse, it
mea ns the accumulation of
fluid .
I am sending you The
Health Lette r number 11-&lt;i,
Swelli ng:
Cause s
and
Management. Other reade rs
who want this information
can send 50 cents with a long,
s tam ped se lf-addr esse d
envelope lor it. Address your
request to me in ca re of this
newspaper, P.O. Box !551,
Radio City St ati on, Ne w
York, NY 10019. This issue
will di scuss with you the
different mechanisms t hat
cause swelling and, in more
detail , why the swellin g
.develops during the day and
disappt'ars at night.
Briefly . fluid tends to " run
downhill ." When yo u have
excess fluid in the body, and
you are sitting upright , or
st anding upright , it a c·
cumulates in the feet first.
The more fluid you have, the
more swelling occu rs and the
higher up the leg it will extend .
When you li e down at night,
so thai the feet are at the
same level ol the hea rt , the
fluid runs out of the feet and
back Into the rest of the
circulation .
That is why swelling from
most medical causes tends. to
occur during the day, gets

•

worse as the day progresses
and tends to decrease or may
even disa ppt'ar at night when
you a re lying down. You
could also get rid or it during
the day if you 'were lying
down the whole time.
The
oc c urr ence and
disappearance ol swelling in
· this fas hion does not establish
what causes the swelling. It
can be caused by heart
disea se . liver di sease ,
va ri cose veins , kidney
disease or a number ol other
medical problems.
DEAR DR. LAMB -I have
been using nose spray for
almost a year now. I can't go
without it. It seems that I
need it even more when I am
in the company of other
people . I know of several
other pt'ople who are just like
me. I don 't step out of the
house without it. I don 't want
to damage my nose tissue and
wonder if I am doing so. I am
24 years old . My father also
uses it. Co uld this · be
hereditary ?
DEAR READER - You
ha ve developt'd a ba'' habit.
Many of the nasal sprays are
useful for temporary relief.
The medicines in them shrink
the swollen membranes in the
nasal passage so that one can
breathe
easier.
Un·
for t unat ely ,
when
th e
medicine wears off, these
tissues often have rebound
swelling , causing the air
passages to he blocked again.
II a person uses nasal
sprays too often , he will have
a constant shrinkage and
rebound reaction. This can
result in chemical irritation
and th e person literally
becomes hooked on nasal
spray . It 's not that these are
addicting but you just can 't
get relief from blockage of
the nasa l passage by ·always
resorting to the na"'!l spray.
What can you do about the
problem if you are hooked on
nasal spray s? A good
technique is to use the spray
in only one side of the nose for
several days. During this
period of time tht• untreated

SVAC teams zn
non-league play
Fiv e non-league ga me s
highlight at1iun this weekend
in th e Suuthern Valley
1\thlctic Conference.
Friday night. North Ga lli a
and Eastern, two teams with
a ~uod chance of winning the
SV AC this fall will both sec

• •

By Don Graff

thrm.

·· People are sca red . so they're sig ning up ."
Public employee unions were ca ught unprepared by the
Vt!heme nce of this year 's much-heralded tax revolt. In the
past . they have generally been a ble to defeat tax and
spending limits proposed by stale legislatures or placed
dorectly on t he ballot by warning that popular public
S(' rvices would suffer if s uch lids were imposed.
Th os time. it did n 't work. California voters, infuriated by
spiraling property taxes and star ing a t a $5 billion state
surplus, simply didn 't believe .the dire predictions. And
their skepti cism proved justified.
·
Now t·he government unions are fi ghting a rearg~rd

,

Donald F. Graff

••

sign up

•

Meet the Marauders

COMMENTARY

~

.·~
o••

"It looks like our sportsmanship lessons are going to be delayed - why
don't we sneak out for some fun-:- like 'kick-the-can'?"

Health .conference set
The 1978 District Health
Ccnference, sponsored by the
Ohio Health Ccuncil, will be
held on ,Wednesday, October
4' 1rom 9 : 30 a.m. to 2 :30 p.m.
at the Jackson Area Ex·
tension . Center , Route I,
Jackson . Theme for this
year's conference is " An
Ounce of Prevention is Worth
More Than a Pound of Cure."
The program begins with
registration and coffee from 9
A IO Ph 11
'l' L
P
·
to 10 a.m. t
Grover, Extension Spt'ciatist ,
Community Resour ce
Development, will talk to the
group on " How To Stay
YoWlg At An Old Age! " Betty
Reese, Athens County Ex·
tension Home Economist will
discuss " Weather Related To
. Health. "
"Exercise For Fun and

·.

chicken
dinner
wit h
vegetable, sa lad , rolls,
dessert , and a beverage or
you can bring a sack lunch.
Babysitting for two-to-five
year old children · will be
provided at the Area Center,
if you pre-register your child.
We will provide a child's
lunch and morning and afternoon snacks for $1.50 .
There is no charge for babysitting.
There will he a registration
fee of Sl pt'r person (no
charge for children) and
reserva lions need to he made
by September 29. Contact the
Meigs County Ext ensio n
Office at 992·3895 to make
your reservations. Transportation can also be
arranged if you need a ride .
All educational programs
co nducted by the Ohio
Coo perati v e Extension
Service are .available to all
potential clientele on a nondiscriminatory basis without
regard to race , co lor,
national origin , sex, or
religious affiliation.

Washington
By Clarence
Report Miller

To most , G.S.A . is a
meaningless acronym, but to
those or us in government it
has become a classic
example of bureaucratic
mismanagement and waste.
G.S.A. stands for the General
Services Administration. It is
the government's landlord,
architect, purchasing agent,
office manager, real estate
broker and construction
manager. Its budget amounts
to approximately $5 billion a
year. It employs over 34,000
people. Through its public
buildin gs service, G.S .A.
owns 2,500 government
buildings and leases space in
Health" will be tbe topic for
Fritz Hagerman, Ohio
another 7,500 owned by
University , Athens, Ohio.
private developers. Through
This will be followed by a
its federal supply service
panel to answer individual
G.S.A. buys six million dif·
questions . Grover, Mrs.
ferent goods and services and
Reese and Mr. Hagerman
maintains an 84 ,000 car motor
will make up the panel.
pool for the use of' other
.
agencies.
In short , it is a lot ol
.Three dollars will provide a
things to a lot of people.
To some, and apparently to
Til E: DAILY SENTINEL
all
too many, it has been a
DEVOTED TO TH E
Iva Johnson spent several means of making a lot of
INTEREST Of
MEIGS-MASON AREA
days with her niece. Mr. and money
quickly
and
ROBERT HOEF LICH :
Mrs.
Frank
Sarver
and
sons
For
the
last
dishonestly.
•·
Cily Edilur
Pulllishl!d d&lt;lily t!lll'epl Saturda~
of Hatfield, Indiana.
year, G.S .A. has been the
!Jv Tht&gt; . 0111u V~tlle)' Pull l1slun l\
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Franklin
focu
s of intensive in c'umiJOny-M ultulll!tli&lt;l , lnL..
I II
Court Sl .. Pum~r\1~, Olliu 15 76~
Russell, Middleport, Mr. and vestigation by the Justice
~us n ~ss O ffic.·~ Phunt' 99'l· 11::,().
Mrs. Clinton Gilkey, Albany, Department for numerous
EUnuri.a l Phun4' 992-1157.
Ray Russell, W. C. House, allegations of wrongdoing .
S.:t·unll d itss pttstill(t' jlilill &lt;1\
P11111~ru )' . Ohlu .
Mr . and Mrs. Tad Russell and
These investigations have
NiillurUt1 allvcrtl.'iinl( l't!p~sen­
baby , Mrs. Harold Gillogly, Wlcovered evidence of almost
t.a uve, Utndurt ASSQ('II:I tcs, ~1 01
Eud1d Ave ., Clt•ve!anll . Oln1.1 -14115.
Vicki of Albany were Sunday every imaginable kind of
Sull&amp;'nptiun•ra tl'.'l : !)dlvcrt•d IJ\
visit ors of Mr . Lin co ln waste and corruption :
l·urrter where 'u..,cult~ blc 75 t'l'l llS pt'r
WI:ICk . By Mulor Ruule W I IC I'~ Cilrrter
Russell.
numerous managers of
l*'rvlce !l_t~ l av;ul&lt;~Ll l e, Om· munth ,
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Mitch G.S.A. office supply stores
~ .25 . B)' mail m Ohw ;m tl W. Vii ..
and family have moved to ha ve accepted cash and gifts
Ch Vc&lt;~r . 12'l.OO: S1x munli\.'1 ,
S ll.~O :
Th r ct• Ul u!llhs, S 7 . 00 ~
their new home at the former from supply firms in return
Ebr\Vhtorl' $26.00 ~ear ; SIX months
propt'rty.
Johnson
for allowing the firms to he
$1:1.30 : Thrt'l' muntlu . $ 7 . ~ .
Sui.J~-rt pltu n prn:t indutlt•1i Su1Kla)'
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp, paid by G.S.A . for supplies
Tum:s..,S,·ntmtl .
Kail, Kevin and Charles, that were never received; a
were Sunday dinner guests of number of G.S.A. managers
Mr. and Mrs . Charley Smith. of federal buildings have
Mr. and Mrs . Larry accepted bribes from con·
side of the nose recovers I rom J ohnson and family have 't ra ctors in return for
chemical irritation. AI thai moved to the former Musser allowing them to be paid by
point . you should be able to propert y where th ey are G.S.A. for repair and
maintenance work that was
stop usin g na sal spray building a new home.
Iva Johnson was a Sunda y never done; G.S.A. and other
altogether .
I doubt that you have diMer guest of Mr . and Mrs . government drivers ha.ve
inherited th e need lor nasal Harley E. Johnson and pocketed as much as 10
pt'rcent of the $200 million
spray fr om your lather, famil y.
Iva Johnson was a Thurs-. they charge each year on
although you could both have
the same allergy that can day afternoon visitor or Mr. G.S.A. issued credit cards for
and Mrs. Charley Smith.
gasoline , oil, auto parts and
cause problems.
repairs. The list of alleged
offenses is long and ex·
pt'nsive. It is estimated that
since
the early 1960s, the
1
govenunent has been cheated
out of approximately $66
million a year due to
corruption at the General
Services Administration.
One is compt'lled to ask
why it has taken so long to
un cove r such rampant
wrongdoing. In part it is the
nature of the beast. The
bureaucracy, as created by
Washington's big spenders
and empire builders, has
insulated itself from detec·
lion . With its self-serving
system of Internal audits and
political cronyism it has been
able to smother any serious
attempts at disclosure .
The compul5ion to spend
the public's money here in
Washington 15 legend. Should
agencies approach the
closing of the fiscal year with
appropriated funds still
unexpended, the order goes
out, as it was uncovered at
G.S.A ., to spend it whatever
way they can. It is the fear
that the next year the
Congress will be inclined to
cut back on funds for the
agency in question should
they have anything left over.
With such a spendt hrifi at·
"What kind of news do you prefer, hard or
titude on the part of much of
soft?"
·
the bureaucracy lt ill no
wonder that untold sums of
federal
dullars find I heir way
' - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - -·

Wolfpen

Berry s World

r-----=----------------.. . ,

into the wrong hands. Waste
begets waste. Jn the name of
need, bureaucrats are ac·
cusomed to getting much of
What they ask for. As a result,
they want for little. If they
were made to live within
ce iling then maybe they
would better appreciate what
they ha ve and would learn to
manage it more wisely. It's
time they were made more
accountable for the way they
spend their monies and to
justify more fully the con·
tinuing need for the fWlds
they are requesting . Often·
times man y in Congress
make little effort to get byond
the numbers 'they are
provided by the agencies
coming before them. They
accept at face value the
budget
justifi c ations
provided without the benefit
ol further invest igation.
It is time we get a better
handle on how and where our
federal tax dollars are being
spent. Perhapa what we need
is a system whereby the
va rious federal agencies are
subject to indept'ndent audits
every so many years rather
than the internal audits now
performed. That way those
responsible for managing the
agencies are not the same
people responsible for calling
any deficiencies uncovered to
the public's attention . It is
apparent when we let the fox
tend after the cliicken coop
we have been coming up a lot
or chickens short .

a

Meigs
Property
Transfers
Joyce Circle, George Circle
to Janice E. Gibbs, W. 12 lot
434 , Middleport.
Ethel E . Underwood ,
Affidavit, Syracuse.
Helen Olristian to Ivan
Wallace, Naomi Wallace, 40
acres, Cclumbla.
Dale Bachner, Garnet
Bachner to Larry G. Johnson.
Gloria J . Jolmson , Easement •.
Rutland .
Boyd E . Johnson to Carolyn
Sue Jolmson, divorce decree,
Olive.
Willie Wise , Dovle Wise to
Mont Vance, Joyce Vance,
Parcel, Sallabury .
Thelma Montgome·r y to
Milo Hutchison,
Betty
Hutchison, 2.163 acres,

Is organized labor programmed to self~estruct ?
A reading of recent trends might almost suggest
something along that line.
.
Consider that while the total U.S. work force has been
growing steadily, fr~m 86 million. "! 1970 to almost 100
million currently, un1on membership IS st~:~ck at about 19.4
million essentially where it was In 1970.
The ~umbers alone suggest that .t he union movement is
marking time , but a closer look at 'their distribution
reveals more. Membership remains concentrated in the
old-style heavy manufacturing indu.strles, where In most
cases work forces are shrinking, while o.~ganizational
efforts have been spotty in rapid growth areas which have
•
sprung up in the economy in recent years.
In a current analysis of labor trends, The Conference
Board notes that unions have scored slgnificanUy In only
one ma jor growth area - state and local government
where about half the eligible employees are organized and
the leading union, the American Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees, has tripled Ita member·
ship In little over a decade to around the million mark.
In other expanding fields, the nonprofit research
organization observes, union pt'netration Is slight to
virtually nonexistent - 15·pt"rcent in services, where more
than 5.4 million new jobs have opened up in the past
dec~de; 6 perc.e nt in wholesaling and retailing, which
account for about a quarter of all current jobs, and less
than a tenth of 1 percent ip flnsnce .
Notable exceptions to the generally negative pt'rfonnance of old-line unions are the Teamsters and Steelworkers, both having taken cues from corporate plaMers and
diversified, reaching out into other not always related
areas to broaden membership bases.
1
A nwnber of factors are probably at work In the union.
Leadershlpa often handicap themllelves by dragging past
concepts, past jurisdictional squabbles and outlooks
engendered by past successes and failures into ClliTent
organizational efforts. They are slow to recognize and
seize. new opportunities as such open up.
Membership growth has also been stunted by what might
be tenned organizational chauvinism. While women have
been moving into the work force in ever increasing
nUlflbers - by t9n accounting for 41.9 per cent - only 16
petcent are organized.
The psychology of the changing work force plays a part.
Many new-job holders are not union oriented, conaldering
themselves technicians or professionals rather than
identifying with the traditional blue-eoUar organization
image. Also, enlightened management in some cases has
outflanked the unions by offering better pay and benefit
packages before organiZers show up to demand Improve-

ments.

Unions today represent only one in every five U.S.
workers , a lower proportion than in any other indu.strlal
democracy, and t~e ratio is still dropping. Prolongation or
the trend suggesta diminishing union influence not only in
the labor force but in political affairs.
There is, however, another factor to be considered which
is the opposite of lorig tenn .
The high command of American organized labor today
ba.s something important in common with .t he leadership of
the Soviet Union in that both are geriatric elites and
overdue for an infusion of new blood. Seven of the 15
members of the AFL-CIO Executive Councu· are over 65
and Mr. Labor himself, President George Meany, is 84.
A transfer in the near future o( organized labor power to
new leaders is inevitable, and with it will come new
thinking , new directions and quite possibly new trends.
!NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN. 1

peopletalk
Ullited Press lntematloul
JACKIE AND THE BOOK BUSINESS: For those who
haven't read enough about Jacqaellne Onusll there's yet
another book out about her . This one -"Jackie Oh!" - by
former Washlngtm journaUst Kitty KeUey is supposed to be
based on more than 300 interviews with people connected with
the Kennedy administration and Mrs. Onassis. The book
emphasizes the difficulties of the Kennedy marriage due to'
Preside a! Jubu F , Keauedy's semal promi.scuity, Mrs.
Kennedy's calculated marriage to .Ariltotle Ouull, the
souring of that marriage due to her extravagances, and the
again off~gain relationshipa with the Kennedy family . The
book also says her career in the book publishing business has
not been pleasant because she has had difficulty being
"accepted as a professional."
ROSE HUSfLES ON : On Monday basehall star Pete achatted with Prt.ideol Carter and was feted by Congress.
Pretty heady stuff , but it doesn't seem to have affected ROle.
On Tuesday he was hooored at a fancy luncheon In Cincinnati
given by a shaving-lotion company for which he does TV
coounerciab. Pete pointed out he had noticed the emu who
appeared with him in the after-&lt;lhave coounerclal5 have now
gone on to star in weekly TV shows. "When you gonna get me
in a TV show, " he asked a shaving company executive.
" Maybe something like, 'Godzilla Comes Back.' "
DRIVE FABIAN, DRIVE : 1950s singing idol FabiiiD
competes this weekend in the Celebrity Match Race portion of
the Toyota Grand Prbt at Watkllll Glen, N. Y. Fabian, whose
full name Is Fablau Forte, stars as a race car driver In the
sooo-to-be-released film "Fireball :iOO." Joining him in the
Watkins· Glen race Sunday will be Jam~ Brolla, O.n
Haggerty, Kent McCord and Dick Smothen.

ALBERTSON RECOVERING: Actor Jack Albertloa has
undergooe successful surgery for removal of a minor
Sallabury.
intestinal obstruction. The tar of the "Grampa &lt;Joel to
Frederick C. Boyd, Betty J. Washingtoo " televillon aerl~ was operated on Tuelldlly
Boyd to Shirley Ann . afternoon at St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, Calif. A
Hubbard, Wayne Allan spokesw001an for Albertson said he "is doing fabulo111811d taln
Hubbard, Lot, Pomeroy.
great spirits." Albertaon should be released from the blllpltal
Tuppers Plains Chester later this week. Episodes of his have been filmed in advance,
Water Dlst., Easements, an NBC spokesman said, caUiing no problem in the telecast
Pomeroy.
schedule.
Oscar Fitch, Rena Fitch to
Billy T. Daily, Carole M.
GLIMPSES: Noi'IIWI MaUer IJid lallftll S.call
Dailey, 6.2 acres, Olive.
among th01e a ttendlng a New York reception bonorlnc Artllu
Carolyn JohniOII Adams, ScbleaiDcer Jr. on the publication of hla new boot on Haberl
.Douglas Adams to Glen Keuedy ... Burt Reyllol• has been named male "Star ~ the
Blake, Grace Blake, 5 acres, Year" by the National Allociation of Tbeattr 0wnen ,.,
Olive.
I!Ytelle Pano• wu among thoee .concralulatq producer
Jolepb Papp m the premlei'e of hll cabaret act In New Yorll

..-e

I .aurel Cliff
Nt&gt;ws Nott·s

Attendance at the Free
Methodill Church on Sept. 17
was 89. Choir members
present were 10. Rev. John
King, Coolvllle, w,s the guest
speaker, representlne the
Gideon organization.
Ralph

Swan remalna a

Jlllllent In Holzer Medical
Center, Gallipolis.
Harold Dailey, brother of

Tuesday night ...

Mrs. Emma Fox, 15 in In· visited recently iilth Mrs.
tensive care at Holzer Fern Dora Story. 1
Medical Center, Gallipolis.
Randy Hayea of Paden
The Sunday. School plmlc City, W. Va. and Mra. Laura
will be held Saturday evening Creba, Carpenter, were
at Fort Meigs Park at 6 p. m. dinner gu911 Sunday ol Mr.
Ms. Edna Shaefer and and Mn. Vem Story and 1011,
daughter, Fern Dora Story, John.
villted rectntly with Ma.
lb. Clare Robe, Newport,
Mildred Perry, Athena.
villted reeently with Mn.
Ms. Mildred Story and Mn. Vem Story.
Grace Ryan of CaWornla

'.

'

action .

Nurth t;allia hosts Syoruncs
Valley wh ole Eastern plays at
Federal Hucking. In other
games, Portsmouth East is at

Southw estern and Hannan
Trace gc1es tu Green.

Sat urday night, Suuth ern
plays at Wahama.
Las t 'weekend, Eastern
beca me the udds un favorite
tu capt ure Ihe SV AC with a
12-9 win over !\lex;lnrl ,..··

ENDS- First row,l-r, David Hysell, Craig Niclnsky,
Henry McCoy, John Stout. Jeff Wayland. Second row, 1-r,

Bolin, Joe Powell, Brian Swann, Larry Stewart,
Bob Selig .

Two weeks ag~, . . the
Sparta ns buried Kyger
Creek, 41-0. North Gallia
bounced ba ck I rom opening
t.,sses to Hu ntington uf Russ
a nd Zanesv ill e's R.,secrans to
e~ rn a 14-7 win over Suuth-

we st ern. The Hi ghlanders
had won two st raight priur to
the heart-breaking loss.
c .,ach I..a rry Creemeens'
Hannan Trace Wildcats mad e
history by ty ing Kyger Cree k,
2().20. Never in the last 20
years had a Wildcat varsity
football team tied or beaten
"Kyger Creek.
Synunes Valley, which has
withdrawn from the SV AC to
join the bigge r Ohio Valley

·

ANDERSON WATCHED
CINCINNATI (UPil The Cincinnati Bengals
coac hing staff closely
watched quarterback Ken
Anderson work out with his
winless team Tuesday, for

Conference I OVC ) was
truunced 39-8 by Chesapeake .
s .,uthern , another team
hurt by injuries and inexpt' rience, sullered a 56-0 loss
to Ca ldwelL
SVAC STANDINGS :

All GAMES
TEAM
W L T POP
Eastern
2 l 0 50 23
Southwest ern 2 2 0 76 61
Sym . Valley
North Gal lia
Souther n
Han . Trace
SVAC

2 2 0 64
1 2 o 40
0 2 I 0
0 3 '1 34
ONLY

79
40
90
10 1

TEAM

W L T POP
1 0 0 14 7
Eastern
0 0 0 0 0
Southern
0 0 0 0 0
Kyger Creek
01120 20
Ha nnan Tra ce 0 0 1 20 20

North Gallia

Southwester n

Totals

0
1

I 0 7 14
1 I 61 61

Rose ties club record
with 51st 2-base hit

doubled home the other two .
heck too," he said .
CIN CINNATI (UP!) Rose's second double scored
"
I
went
fi
shing
yesterday
Pete Rose has another
Junior
Kennedy with a I ourth
in
a
friend
's
lake
and
dropped
baseball to add to his fast
a
n
anchor
on
it,"
he
in
the fourth inning and
run
growing souvenir collection .
But he'd like to pick up a ex plained , so mewhat George Foster followed a Ken
Griffey single with his 36th
couple of more before the sheepishly .
The strained knee and sore homer of the season in the
season end s Sunday.
Rose's run -produ cing instep Seaver took into the fifth inning to cap the Reds' ·
double in th e fourih inning ga me are typical of the scorin g for the night.
" I've been winning lately ,"
Tuesday night was his second ailments that hav e plagued
of the night, boosted his him periodically dw-ing his said Seaver, " but actually
I'm not pit ching any
league leading total to 51 and illustrious career .
"I've never had any arm differently than I have all
tied the club record set by
Frank Robinson back in 1962. problems," he pointed out . season. It's just that we've
The 37-year-old Rose con- "One year it was a sciatic been scoring m ore runs."
While Seaver admits it has
cedes, though , that getting nerve problem. This spring it
the record-breaking double was a pulled muscle in my leg been a disappointing sea son
will be easier than rapping from slipping on loose dirt for both him and the Reds, he
has one consolation.
out the 10 hits he needs to while I was ruMing."
" I've been working my tail
Steve Garvey PoWlded out
reach the 200 mark for the
of
the
six
hits
Seaver
for three years trying to
three
off
lOth time in his career and
develop
an effective changeyielded
before
his
departw-e
.
shatter a maj or league
record he now shares with Ty One was a sol.o homer in the up ," he said. "Now I have one
sixth that accounted lor one I'm confident I can throw for
Ccbb .
Rose 's record-tying double · of the two runs off the Reds' a strike any time 1 want to
use it. "
came in his .2,500th National 33-year-old right-hander.
More than a few of the 12
Doug Bair gave up the
League game, making him
only the ninth player in the other two when Steve Yeager strikeouts Seaver racked up
loop's history and 19th in the followed a ninth inning pinch in his last start against the
majors to accomplish the single by Manny Mota with Dodgers in Los Angeles last
his fow-th homer of the week came on hos change-up.
feat.
So did two ol the six he
Rose's doubles were two of season .
QUARTERBACKS - L-r, Dan Thomas, Rick Williamson, Chris Ingles, Bob Ashley.
Seaver's lead-off single, the recorded Tuesday night as he
10 hits the Cincinnati Reds
collected as they beat the Los first of Rose's two doubles ran his season wtal to 211.
"Once you've developed
Angeles Doclgers, IH, in the and a s ingle by Dav ey
opener of a three game Ccncepcion gave the Reds confidence in the pit ch,
one of three runs in the third you've got w learn when and
!jeries.
The vict or.y, his 16th inning off Dodger starter how to use it," he said. "I did
By 'fiM MILLER
event- with a Series victory. against 14 losses, went to Rick Rhoden. Johnny Bench this year and it has paid off .
"Now I don 't think you 'II
AKRON, Ohio ( UPI)
Chasing Watson for both Tom Seaver, who left the
see
anyone sitting on my
money
winning game after seven innings
Amidst the nurry of football the
and the heat of baseball's championship and the Golfer when his left knee , strained
fastball, " he added .
~nnant races, the PGA Tour of the Year title, are Andy while pitching off a high
winds to a conclusion this Bean and Jack Nicklaus mound in San Francisco
week when the golfing elite who have each woo three durin g the.Reds' recent West
descend on the famous and tourneys this year .
Coast swing , again stiffened
CLEVELAND ( UPI ) Bean, who has tapered off up oo ·him .
feared Firest one South
Vetera n running back Calvin
Ccurse for the $300 000 World somewhat after a strong
"Nah, it;s not gonna keep
Hill was signed Tuesday by
Series of Golf.
'
· start, is a loog hitter, but it is me from pitching Sunday,"
the Cleve land Browns, who
Its the third year for the Nicklaus who must rank right said Seaver. "It hurts. But
have severe injw-y problems.
new and expanded World behind Watson as the tonight is the secood time I've
in the backfield .
Serie s,
which
PGA strongest contender in the started since I strained it.
The Browns lost Tom
Commissioner Deane Beman Series.
One more time won 't bother
Sullivan
for the season to a
ATHENS, Ohio ( UPl l restructured in an effort to
The Golden Bear has made me ."
knee
injw-y
in last SUnda y's
Jeff Bramley, a IH ~und
make it the showcase of golf Firestone his pt'rsonal gold
A sore knee wasn't the only junior midi:Ueguard for Ohio defeat at Pittsbw-gh and still
40c Size
and t he climax of the long mine - winning m ore money ache Seaver took to the
With Purchase Of
list running star Greg Pruitt ,
tour·.
at Akron than many pros win mound with him Tuesday University, will not play any
with a badly bruised calf
for
the
more
this
season
.
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL
And this year's event has in a lifetime .
night.
muscle, as questionable for
of
medical
Bobcats
because
Nicklaus has won five
all the makings of a thrilling
:·My left instep is sore as complications resulting from the upcoming Holl'!ton game.
CHEESEBURGER
$
finish, with the title of Golfer World Series - four coming
a leg injured in the 23-22
&amp; FRIE$ .......•......•..•......
of the Year and the money- under the old format, which
opening
win over Eastern
winning
championship limited the fi eld to winners of
Michigan
Sept. 9.
possibly riding on the the year's four major
Doctors
advised Bramley
outcome.
tournaments . And he has
Tuesday to refrain from playTom Watson won his fifth amassed mor e than a $1
ing the r est of this yea r.
tourney of the year Sunday million on the South Course
CLEVELAND ( UPI J
when be captured the Napa and has been in contention in Veteran running back Calvin Because he has missed two
Open and enters the Series as virtually every tourney he Hill was signed Tuesday by weeks of classes this fall
while in the hospital ,
the man to beat for Golfer of has played there.
the Cleveland Browm, who Bramley will withdraw from
Nicklaus has rested since have severe injury problems
the Year.
school. OU officials said he
Watson, who won both winning the British Open and in the backfield.
·
plans to return for the winter
Goller of the Year and thO the following week in Phila·
The Browns lost Tom quarter.
money titles in 1977, is a delphia and knows the Fire- Sullivan for the seasoo to a
Bramley, a graduate of
strong longiron player, a stone course as well any pro. knee injury in last Sunday 's
(N.Y .l High School,
Clinton
necessity on the· demanding
One dark horse - who may defeat at Pittsbw-gh and still
was
the
most
valuable player
7,131).yard, par-70 Firestone be as familiar as Nicklaus list running star Greg Pruitt
at
Hudson
Valley
Community
RT. 124
South layout.
with the course - is U.S. as questionable for the
Colle
ge
in
1977.
Watson rested for three Amateur Champion John upcoming Houston game.
weeks prior to his Napa win Cook.
Pruitt has missed two
and said he is playing
games with a badly bruised
extremely well and would
calf muscle . In addition,
.
love to close out the year - in
fullback Cleo Miller has he en
which he did not win a major
playing with a cast on one
hand and rookie Larry Collins
pulled a leg muscle In
Pittsburgh.
Hill, 30, with 17 career 100.
OOLUMBUS ( UP!l - The yard games, was released by
Ohio Division of Wildllle has the Washington Redskins just
announced a program before the start of the 1978
designed to accelerate the season . He was the NFL's
increase of bobwhite quail in rookie of the year when he
the
state,
including hegan hill career wlth Dallas
canceUatlon of the 1978 quail· in 1969, having gained 942
"Ace is the place with
OF
huntllig season.
yards.
the H elpful Hardware Man ..
Dale Haney, chief of the
Hill had two 1,000.yard
division,
said surveys seasons, 1972 and 1973, with
indicate the population of the Cowboys hefore signing
quail In Ohio at 90 percent with Hawaii of the now
below the previous 17-year defunct World Football
average. He blamed the League in 1974. He had been
reduction In the IU'ds on the used sparingly by Dallas in
severe winters of the past two 1974 while playing out his
option. " ·
years.
"We will follow soundl In two seuollll with the
biological principles which Redskins, 1978 and 1977, Hill,
LASt OPEN DAY OF 1978 SEASON
will include - a habl tat 6-4 and 2'll pounds, gained 301
management program, and 2S7 yards, respectively,
restocking programs and in a bscltup role to Mike
closure
of the 1978 quail Thomas. He was hampered
RIDE 11 AM· 9 PM
ll!a80n in Ohio," Haney said by
injuries
in
both
In announcing the program. campaigM .
•
•
•

Akron set for World Series

OUloses

the first time since he
broke a bone In his right
index linger Aug. 26.
Coach Bill J ohnson hoped
th ~ sorely-missed
An·
derson could he ready to
play Sunday against
equall y
winless
Sao
Francisco on the coast.
Anderson took soa ps
lrom Bengals center Blair
Bush lor 15 minutes
Tuesday, then threw lor
about 10 minut es. AI·
ten\·ards, he sa id the injured hand felt fairl y good.
1t's a little tired now,''
said
Anderson.
" Everything considered, it
11

felt pretty good ."
If he can operate, he " 'ill
sta rt Sunda y," Johnson
said ol hi s first-string
quarterback.
General
Be n ga l s
Manager Paul Brown this
" 'eek gave Johnson a vote
of conHdence in the wake of
the club's fo urth straight
lo ss.

LEBANON RESULTS
LEBANON, Ohio IUPI) Alvin York won Tuesday
night's featured eighth race
at
Lebanon
Ra ce way .
covering the mil e on 2: 10 1·5.
Mi ss Vicandy came in
second . one length back , and
Aunt Gid finish ed third.
Alv in York , driv en by
Larry Landon , returned $19,
$10.40 and $6.20, while Miss
Vicandy kicked ba ck $11 and
$7.20 and Aunt Gid paid $9.80.
Honeybr ook Easter and
Call Me Tillie tea med up lor a
2-8 daily double comb ination
that was worth $82.60.
1\ crowd ol 1,314 wagered
$123 ,119.

• Fishing Tackle
and Rods
and Reels
t Guns and
Reloading
· tBall Gloves
Camping
Equipment
• Archery
• Indoor Games
• We
have Gi It
Certificates

middle

guard

1 10

VIS4'
l

Across from Courthouse

PHONE
675-2988
Open SUnday 1· p .m .-6 p.m .
Mondav thru Saturday
'i" m .!o8p .m .

Browns ink
Calvin Hill

Quail plan

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY - SEPTEMBER 30TH
UNTIL 6 PM

601 Main St.
Pt. Pleasant, W . Va .

announced

.

E

HARDWARE

ACE HARl'WARE
MEIGS PLAZA

407 PEARL, MIDDLEPORT
992-3662

FAMILY OUTING

IRONTON COKE CORPORATION

SUNDAY - OCTOBER 1ST

APPRECIATION DAY

HAND STAMP

•400

•

�'"

-

••••••• ••• ••••
•
•
•••

Ma~ ·

-

Hoople's

•
•
I •••

_,l

Mat or Lea gu e S1and1ng s
Na tion;, ! L ea gue

By Major Amos B. Huupl&lt;
Amazln' Pigskin Prophet
Egad, friends, we have an
excellent ca rd for you thts
week - wtth the bonus of two
good games on Frtda y ntght.
Leading off will be Penn
and Leht gh in their 46th
renewaL In this long sen es
the Quakers hold a lopsided
40-5 ma rgtn . The lehi gh
Eng ineers usuall y play it
tough aga inst Penn . but too
often are out-manned. And
such will be in the case again
Frtda y. Make it Penn 21.
Lehigh 7.
In the other Friday en·
counter , Southern Ca lifor·
ma s Troj ans entert a in
dangerous Michigan State.
The Spa rt ans. who ha ve
sh own sign s rece nt ly of
returning to the glory days of
Duffy Dau gherty's reign,
aren't quite ready for a club
like the Trojans. Play mg on
their home turf, super-rmmer
Charles White and his frtends
will grind out a 32-20 victory um·kumph !
The Saturday sked featu res
Alabama vs. Vanderbilt :
Auburn

v s.

T enn essee;

Florida State vs. Houston:
Texas vs . Texas Te ch ;
Oklahoma vs . Missouri ; Penn
St. vs . TCU ; Pitt vs. North
Carolina , and Kentucky vs.
Maryland .
Bear Bryant 's Alabama
boys Will open thetr drtve for
their seventh Southeastern
Conference t1Ue 111 the past
etght year s aga 111st th e
Vanderbtlt Commodores . The
Tide fi gures to have little
trouble with the Commodores
as they win by a 35-12 count.
The Auburn Tigers and the
Tennes see Vol un t e e r s
meeting in Birmingham will
be a real bam-burner, with
the Tigers prevailing 28-21.
Johnn y Majors has the
Volunteers on the right track
and before the season is over

they will sta rtle some folkskaff-kaff!
Florida State has lived up
to our pre-season forecast
wh en we predi cted they
would wind up in the Top Ten
for 1978. The Seminoles are
bl essed with not one but two
outstandin g quarterbacks Jimmy Jordan and ba ck up
Wall y Woodham . Houston
foes will jom other FSU op·
ponents m believin' there
ought to be a law agamst that.
Nevertheless, 'twill be quite a
game wit h Fl ort da State
winning' 35-21.
Neither Texas nor Texas
Tec h may wm the So uth·
western utle this year. but
they will have a lot to say
about who does. And who w1ll
It be this week? The Hoopl e
System sees the Lo nghorns
winning a tornd struggle, 21·
17.
The
Oklahoma-Mi ssoun
contest. fi rst Big E'1 ght game
for either team this year. will
be a nother br uismg affair.
The "Show Me" state boys
wtll prove they are for real as
they push the Sooners to the
limit before succumbing, 2421. This one Will be worth the
price of admission.
The Penn State Nittany
Lions host the Texas
Christ ian Horned Frogs and
will probably "boot" .them
into submission. The bootmg ·
• heh·heh - Will be at the
talented foot of place ktcker
deluxe Matt Ba hr , who
seem ingly ca n't miSs And
speakin g of the N1ttany
Lions, your Amazm· Pigskin
Prophet wishes to express his
thanks to the great num ber of

you who have taken the time
to send us congratulations on
our correct forecast of a Penn
State w1n over Ohio State.
·Twas nothing really! tEd.
Nnte · Oh Yeah'.1 1 Bark to

Saturday 's ga me. Give it to
Penn State. 30-14 .
Pittsburgh w1ll be in good
form as the; edge a fm e
Nun h Caroli na eleven. 21-13,
and Kentucky wi ll look more
like the Wildcats of last
season as they triumph over

an excellent Maryland team
by a 14-7 score.
Some othe r contests worthy

of note this week are the
Not re Dam e- Pur due don·
nybroo k at So uth Bend - thetr
50th meetmg, Baylor's m·
vaswn of Columbus to take on
Oht o St ate , Rice host ing
po werful LSU : Washmgton
ta nglmg with Oregon Sta te:
and M1 ch1gan pl ay mg at
home aga 111st the Duke Blue
Devi ls.
Th e P urdue- Ir ish en·
co unters are usually ht ghscorm g affai rs w1th the air
full of footballs and the upcomin g ga me should follow
the same script. In a down-tothe-wire fini sh, Notre Dame's
J oe Monta na will outduel
Purdue's excellent thrower
Mark Herrmann as the Irish
prevail. 28-22.
·In Co lumbus. the Buckeyes
will t um back Baylor. 17-14,
111 an evenly played match.
u;u has too many guns for
R1ce and . will win rat her
easi ly, 35-17 . We confidenlly
predi ct the Washm gton
Husk1es will take the Orego n
State Beav ers. 33-14, and
Mi chi gan's Wolverines \\ Ill
prove to be rud e hosts as they
tra mpl e t he Duke Blu e
Devils' 26-12.
Saving the best for last . we
~ i ve you the Hoople Three·
Star Special of the Week. Now
- hak-kaff .. hold on to your
hats. kidd 1es . The Tul sa
Gold en Hur r icanes
•'l artle the collegiate football
world by upset ting the h1ghly

"'II

r egarded Arka nsas Razo r-

ba cks, 17-14- har-rumph !
No w

gu

un wit h

my

forecast :

Frida y, Sept. 29
l'enn 21 Lehigh 7 1N1
USC 32 Mtrh St. 20 IN1
Saturday. Sept. 30
Alabama 35 Vanderbilt 12
Iowa 24 Arizona 21 tN I
Ariz St. 2i UTEP 14 1NI
Tulsa Ji Arkansa s 14

Wash St. 30 Army 12
Auburn 28 Tenn 21
Na\ y 18, Host t:oiG INI
Brown 14 R l 13
Hall St 26 Cent Mich 22
Cl('m s on 24 Vtllano\'a 13

Colgate 14 Cornell 13
Cohl 22 Nthw strn ti
Columbia 12 Lafytte 6
Dayton 26 Mia III 1 21 INI
E Caro 31 Tcx Ari 21JNI
Fla 24 Miss St 22 tNI
Fla St 35 ouston 21 t N1
Ga Tec h 40 Citad el 10
llanard 17 Mass 13
II Cross 21 Dartmouth 20
No Ariz 28 Idaho 22 tN )
Nebraska 36 Indiana 20
Iowa St 28 Drake 12
Miami 1F 1 22 Kansas 20
Atr Force 15 Kan St. t3
Ohio U 23 Kent St 21
Louisv ille 42 Ind St 14
Kentucky 14 Maryland i
Michigan 26 Duke 12
TcnnCha 32 MidTenn 6 t N1
BYU 28 Nc" Mex 16 t N 1
N Tex St 26 Okla Stl9 tNI
Notre Dam 28 l'urdue 22
Ohio St 17 Baylor 14
Okla homa 24 Missouri 21
Wash :13 Oregon St 14
LBch St 31 l'acifle 12 tN I
Penn St 30 TCU 14

I

_J

BASEBALL SCOREBOARD
S y Un1t ed P ren tnt ernat i on il l

Football
Forecast

'

Eut
W L. Pel . G B
88 69 .501
84 7'1 .SJS 3 1 I
77 80 490 11
74 84 .468 14 1 i
68 91 .428 ' ' ·
64 94 .snr, ? ,:~ t ,
W es t
W L. Pet . GB
x LOS AnQ
9J 03 599
Cmc.n ar i
87 o9 558 0 1~
Sq n Fran
87 71 551
711
Sa n Oieqo
81 76 519 111,
Houston
70 87 440 24
A tlant a
69 88 439 25
x -c linch ed dh·rs ion titl e
Tu esday 's Res ul ts
Ph ri a 5. Montrea l 3. lS I
Montreal 3. Ph ria 0, 'ln d
P 1flsburgh 5, Ch ic ago 2
Houston '/ , Atlanta 0
New York 3, 51 L ou is 1
C1n ci nnatr 6. Los Ang J
San Orego 4, San Fran 1
T oday 's Probabl e Pit chers
tAll T i m es eon
San D 1e-QO ( Rasmussen 14 141
at San F r an c rsco ( Knepper 16
11). 405pm
M ontr eal ( Gr1msley 19 101 ar
Ph ilad elphi a (C hnstenson 12
1J ), 7:35 p m
Ch1c ago
( Bur r iS
7 12)
al
P!lt ~ b u r g ll
( Biylev en
14 10 ),
7 35 p m
Houston
( Ru hle
'l 3J
at
Atlanta ( M c WIII ICi mS 9 2) , 7. 35

Phil a
P1ttsbr gh
Ch ic ago
Montreal
Sf LOUI S
New York.

Ch i
000 000 700 - 'l 61
Pt$Ogh
003 002 Q0)( - 3 10 0
La m p , Hottzman ( 6 ) , Seoane17) and Rader . O.Robinson ano
011 W 0 Ro bin son ( 14 6 ) L
Lamp {7 15) HRs Pilt5burgh,
Starg ell ( 26 ).
Hous
100 100 000- i 8 0
Alia
ooo ooo coo ~ o 7 1
J Niekro , For sch (9) and
Puj ols ; P.N iek r o and No lan . W
· J N iekro ( t3 14 ) L - P .N iekr o
119 I ll
St.L
000 100000- 1 60
N Y
100 001 OOx - J 8 0
Or es sl l"r , O' Br ien (7), Li tt ell
and
Ken ned y :
Sw an.
(8 )
Murray (8 1 a nd St earn s. wSwan (9 6 ) L - Dress ier (0 1)
LA
000 001 102-r-- 4 8 0
003 110 00)( - 6 10 0
Crnct
R h o d en , John (6 ) a nd
Yeager , Seaver , Barr ( 8) and
Bench W-· Seaver ( 16 t4 ) L RhOden I 10 81 H RS - L os An geles , Gar vey ( 20) , Y eager (4) ;
Cmci nnati , Fos t er (3 6 ) .
10 1 000 002- 4 7 1
San Dgo
San F ra n
000 000 01 0- 1 6 1
Per ry , Sh ir l ey (8), Frng er s
(81 a nd Tena ce , Montefusco.
Lavel le (7) , M off 1tt (9) M d
Tuma rg o W- Perr y (2 1-6 ). L Mon t et usco ( 11 9 1. H Rs- San
'
Dieg o, Per krn s (i )

pm
L os Angeles (S u tt on 15 11) a t
Cr n c mnal i (Moskau 6 4 l. 8 05
pm

Amencan League
Thur sda y's Gam es
Cl eve
000 000 001 - 1 J 1
Houston at A t lanta . n1ght
Ba it
200 000 Ol x - J 11 1
Lo s Ang eles at C1nci . nigh t
Reuschel , Sprll ner (8), M onge
and
D ia z;
Flani!lg an,
(8)
Stanhouse (9) a nd Demp se y W
- F l an aga n ( 19 -lA l L - Reusch
Am er i can L eague
el ( 2 4) H Rs- Cievet anc:l. Alex
E as t
an der {26 ) :
B a 1 1 r m or e.
W L. Pet.
GB OcC .nces !261
New York
95 6'1 .605
Bos ton
9J 63 599
1
Oet
000 000 000- 0 7 0
M i lwauke
90 68 570 51' Bo s
300 021 OO x - 6 14 0
1
Balt.mre
87 69 558
7 2
Roze m a, Tob rk (6 ) and M a y .
Det r011
84 73 535 11
Ec kers ley
and
F isk
W1
Clcvclnd
68 86 447 25 &lt; E ckers.ley ( 19 81 L - Ro zem a
1
Toronto
59 97 378 35 ~ (91 1) H Rs - Bos ton . R 1ce (44 ).
W es t
W L Pet
GB Tor
000 coo 100- 1 6 1
x Ka n Cily
90 68 570
N Y
030 001 000- 4 9 0
(Qi i f
84 73 535
51 1
U n d e r w o o d an d As h by .
Te)(as
82 75 522 71 , Fig uer oa, Goss ag e (9 ) and
Mrnnesor
72 86 456 18
M unson W - Fi gu er oa ( 19 9l. l.
Ch1cago
69 88 439 70' 1
Und erwood
( 6 14)
HR sOak land
69 90 . 43 4 711? Toron to, Ma'/ber r y (22).
1
Sea tile
55 100 .355 33 t
x -clinched div rsion title
Oa k
020 000 800- 10 14 J
T uesday 's Result s
Chr
002 01 0 000- 3 6 1
Bal!t m ore 3, Cleveland 1
W1 r lh a nd M eyer ; Krav ec.
Bos ton 6. De t ro tf 0
L aG r ow (7), Ba um garten (7 ),
New York 4, Tor onto 1
Wrlloughby ( 8) an d Fo ley WOa~lana 10, Ch ica go J
Wirlh ( 55) L - Kra vec ( 11 -6) .
Kansas Ctly 4, Seatt le 1
H Rs Oak land , P iccio lo { 2)
Mmnesota 6, Te)(aS 2
Ca l d J . M il w 3. 10 rnn s
Sea
000 100 000- 1 3 0
Today ' s Probable Pitch er s
K c
00003 1 oox - 4 !lO
( All Ttm es EDT)
Abbo l t and St 1nson ; Gu r a and
Cl eve land (Wa 1tS 12 14 ) at Po r ter
W- Gur a ( 16 4) L Balt imore ( 0 Mart1nf'l 14 11 ), Aobo l t
( 7 14 ) .
HR - Sea ttl e.
7 30 p m
Ro ber ts (22)
Detrotl ( W IICO)(
13 11 J a t
Bo ston tT1ant 11 8). 7 30 p m
M1 nn
000 000 015 - 6 8 0
Toronto (W ill is J 6) a t N ew Texas
000 000 070- 2 10 2
Y ork ! Hunter 11 5 ), B p m
Zahn ,
Marsha ll
{8)
and
Seallle ! M cl augh l in J Bl a r Wyneg ar , M edic h . M ir abella
Kan sas C1 t y ( Pa ll in 3 3), e·30 (9 ), Cl evel and (9 }. Umb arger
p .m
!9 ), Bark. er ( 9) and Sund be rg .
M innesota ( E r ickson 14 13) a t W- Ma r sh all (9 17 J. L - M ira
Te )(a s Uenk1n s 17 8J. 8· 35 p m .
bella (2 2) . HR s- Tex as, Zis k
M il wa u kee t Repl ogle 9 4) at (2 1).
Ca lr.for n ta ( Frost -1 4), 10 . 30
pm
{ 10 rnMinQS)
Thur sday 's Gam es
M II W
101 000 001 0- 3 8 1
Te)(as a! Se alt le, nrght
Ca lr f
000 001 110 1- 4 9 2
Ch1c dgo at Cali f , n ight
So r ensen,
Aug ust ine
{10),
Cleve a t Ba l t rm ore . n ig h !
Castro 110 1 and
Mar1rne z;
To ro nto a t New Yor-. , n i ght
Aase , Harue tl (3L La Ro che (9J
nPtr o1 t a t Boston . n1ghl
and Down ing W - L aRoche ( 10·
8) L - Sor en sen ( 17-121 HR sCa l if or nl a, L an dreaux (4)
M~jor League Result s
B y United Pr ess International
Natrona! Lugue
-~--

(Mil
1stgamc J 000 010 002- 3 50
Phil a
102 00 1 Ob - 5 6 1
Palmer , T w i t c h ell 15 ),
K nowles (6 ), Alkmson (8 ) an d
Ca rt er . KaaL Brus!. tar 17J.
Reed (9 J ana Boone . w - Ka a1
( 8 5 ) L - Pa lmer (0 I ). H Rs Phtl ad el ph l a Luzins k i (3 3)
12nd gam e I
Mil
000 100 101
3 90
Phtl a
000000000 0 41
May and Car ter , McGraw .
Reed 18) iind Boone W Ma'/
( 8 10 ) L M cG raw li\ 7) HR s
Mon treal , Cr om art 1f: , 101

,

Royals make playoffs
third straight year
By FRED McMANE
UPI Sports Writer
The Kansa s City Royals
clinched the 1978 American
Lea gue West Division title for
the third straight year
Tuesday night when Larry
Gw-a stopped .the Seattle
Mariners, 4-1, on three hits
for his 16th victory in 20
decisi ons.
Unfortunately, it's only a
half pennant and the Royals
have had trouble the last two

Both times , ihey have lost to
the New York Yankees in five
games. This year, however,
the Royals are confident they
will captW'e that elustve AL
pennant.
Kansas City's opponent will
be either New York or Boston
and it doesn't really matter to
the Royals.
·For instance, "I'd rather
play El Segunda High School
in tlle playoffs," said the
Royals' George Brett.

"That's where I went to
schooL I think we can beat
the Yankees , Red Sox,
Philadelphia or Los Angeles.
This is our year."
Kansas City would seem to
have an edge in the playoffs
since the first two games are
scheduled for their own park,
which has artificial surface.
The Royals have been
overpowering in their
stadium this season, posting
a -record of 54-23 for a .701

\'ears Jte tting fhP nth "'" h ., ll

Phils split pair
with Montreal 9
J

By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
Montreal Manager Dick
Williams doesn't give a hoot
about who fimshes in first
place in tlle National League
East - he's more concerned
with the first division.
After his Expos blanked the
Philadelphia
fir st-place
Phillies, ~. to gain a split of
tlleir double-header, Tuesday
night, Williams said, " I'd like

to win tomorrow , too,
because we're still fighting
for tllird place."
The Phillies won the first
game, &gt;3, but the secondgame defeat, coupled with
PitlsbW"gh's triumph over
Chicago, means Philadelphia
cannot cltnch its thtrd
straight dlviston title at
home . The Phils lead
PitlsbW'gh by 31!! games and
their -magic number for
clinching the division IS down
to three, but they end the
season with four games in
Pittsburgh - where the
Pirates have been invincible
over the last quarter of the
season .
" I'd rather those two settle
this thing in PittsbW'gh ... let
them fight it out," Williams
added . "If we win tomorrow
night and the Pirates win, it 'll
be 2.,. games. Wbo Knows,

maybe they (Pirates) will
have to play that game in
Cincinnati after all."
The Pirates have a makeup
game to play , if necessary,
against the Reds on Monday,
Oct. 2.
Warren Cromartie hit a
home run off Tug McGraw,
making his first start in four
years, while Rudy May
pitched a four-hitter to lead
the Expos to victory in the
nightcap after Greg LllZinski
drove in three runs with a
single and his 33rd homer to
power the Phillies to an
opening-game triumph.
In other NL games, Pittsburgh topped Chicago, 5-2,
Houston blanked Atlanta, 2-0,
New York downed St. Louis,
3-1, Cincinnati beat Los
Angeles, 6-4, and San Diego
beat San Francisco, 4-1.
l'irates 5, Cubs 2:
Willie Stargell moved into
15th place on the all-time
major-league, ' home-run list
with his 427\h career homer,
a threHun shot, and rookie
Doo Robinson lllssed a sixhitter to lead tlle Pirates over
the Cubs.
Astros 2, Braves 0:
Joe Niekro combined with
Ken Forsch on a seven-hitter
to outduel his brother Phil
and lift Houston to a shutout

CAYS WIN
BOWUNG GREEN , Ohio
IUPl)
Jim Brewer
dropped in 10 points and
raked off a dozen rebounds
Tuesday night to lead the
Cleveland Cavaliers to a 10096 exhibition victory over the
Detroit Pistons.
Brewer also blocked five
shots during his 30 minutes at
the center and forward spots.
Rookie Harry Davis, vymg
with Brewer, had nine points
and two rebound s in 17
minutes of play.
1
Campy
Russell
was
Cleveland's scoring leader
with 16 points and sJJ
Cleveland players in all hit
double figures .
Playing without Bob
Lanier, the Pistons were
paced by Leon Douglas with
17 points and Kevin Porter
with 15.

••

5.75%

•

On 90-Day

.,

•

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

•
'
•
•

WILL BA BY SIT in my h ome
for ch ildr en under 2 y ear s
ol d . Anna Ma e L eamond by
wagner
H ar dwar e
In
R ac:i ne .
~--·-----------

Certificates
5.75 per cent paid on
90 day Certificates of
Deposit ,
SSOO .OO
Minimum.
Interest
Payable Quarterly .
A substantial penally is
Invoked on all terlifitale

•
•

•ccounts withdrawn prior

•

to tho

•
•
•

LAOY wnl ~ , , 111 hcH''"~ nr
ho spi!ol wt th pott(&gt;f\1 1)
M [1 t9"
C:o or eo 4'12 r,t'l!:l ,

d•!• of

Notin·~

l) HI V~ H

t o b P"
h o m GCl ll1 cr
( hiiStron ~choo l Vt~ d o n O ht o
lo Ho1
I I Qvt'l N eW l 1mo lh f
W•Ot1V1 11t-. 1JJ to Rt 7 lu fi t 1/J
a nd :J')'.t 111 !0 Vt niOII 71{/ :/()OH

FSIIC

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$3,7 00

more supple and

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HANDS BEAUTIFUL
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Also
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Leather Palms
by Aris

w h ee l dr1 ve wrth lock. o u t
h ubs 30 7 V -8 Wit h P 5 ..
P . B , 4 ne w 6 pl y tire s. 9854220 .

YARD SA L E Thurs and F rr .
Fr a n c es A lk rr e r es rden ce,
Harrtsonv i lle.

1977 F ORD LTD 4door
sedan Like new with air ,
P .S., P . B , lilt whe e l AM FM 8 t rack M ore ext ras .
742 -2826

YA RD SALE F r i , Sa t , Su n ,
Sept 29, 30, O c t 1 10 a .m .
D i sh es. radto , clot he s,
a n trQu es an d mi sc . Phil
Baldw in r es id en ce, I m il e
N Be acon Sla ti o n on R L 7

1974 PINTO . Lt. Blu e, auto ,
new b atter y, n ew e)(haust
sys te m, 46,000 m lies S1400.
992 -37 57 aft e r 5

YARD SALE . Clifton , WV
Frrday onl y , Sept. 29 . 9to A
Dan a L ew is r es i de n ce
Follow stgn s

ADULT
OWNED
Ra m ch arg er SE . ~vy duty 2
wheel R egular g as . Bl ac k .
Load ed , rncl ud rng air and
cruise Cobra 138 SSB E -T
w heels Garage parked .
So ld n e w March PU.B..S9 .050,
se ll 56,995 992 5240
1975
PONTIAC
ASTRE
hatc h b a c k , bucket s eats,
automatr c. New radials and
batt ery 30 mpg . 949 2283
afl er 7 p .m .
1976 F ORO LTD . arr , ni ce
Har old
Br e wer ,
Long
Bo tt om . Oh io 985 -3554.
1976 SCOUT II 4-wheel dr ive .
E xc ell ent cond i tion, V 304,
a uto ., P .S , P B Call Mei gs
Equ ipment Co . at 992 -2176 for
m or e 1ntormat10n .

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OL O ~ ( U ll A ~S ~up r e111e
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t4"i) ( A lJIILA( ttOO I&lt;'A OO ~u ll
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WILKINSON

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

SMALL ENGINES
SALE &amp; SERVICE

MATERIALS CO.

498 Locust St.

773-5554

u .m .-sp.m .
Mon. thru Thurs. &amp; Sal.
9 o.m .-8 p.m. Fri.
Closed Sundoy .

W.VA.

2-LB.

49c

CABBAGE
5th &amp; Pearl

LB.

12C

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FOOD FAVORITES

f ;:: T READY ne)(t season
. 1t h Car e f r ee awning s, a ir
...:u r d i l i one r s,
R V . an trfr ee ze af CODNER ' S
C AMPERS ,
R a in bo w
R i dge, CR 28 to Ba shan

PICNIC HAMS......................... ~: •.79•
BACON.~ ...................................L!I;. $1 39
TIDE ...... "J"' ..................................
BRAUNSCHWEIGER..................l;8.·•• 79•
HI·DRI TOWELS ................... -~~~~. ~~!~ . 49'
MAGIC BLEACH ..........................~·.': .. 69' SLAB BACON .......................... ~; .. 79•
DASH SOAP............................. ~. ~~:12 •oz.." •• 3'1
Nort•nhouse Assorted
MEAT &amp; GRAVY........ ...................~~~- 69' I
FIG BARS ..................................2 lb. 89'
1

CELERY
BUNCH
Valley Bell
'

24 oz.

$}15

COTTAGE CHEESE ........:~~·.....
Blue Bonnet
C
ED MARGARINE ...~ .·.·:~~~. ~~:. 59

49c
Grown

POTATOES
SO!b.
bag

'

COOKIES .....•.................. ~.~~:.·.'.~r.':~ 31'1
GrHn Giant

RELOCATING TO area .
N e ed 3 or 4 bedroom house
to rent or 1eas.e . will turn Ish
r e ferences, depo sit . Ber nard K ingsley , Bo-. 63 1,
Orrville , Oh io .

lliJoine8 Opp&lt;&gt;rtunitic6

SUCED GREEN BEANS ........... ~~.~~?...3fl

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NAME BRANDS
ANNIVERSARY PRICES

FLEXSTEEL- ADMIRAL- HOOVER
CALORIC -

F OR RENT 3 mo bil e ho mes
tor se ason. 1 sh ady a c r e,
wa te r furn i sh ed . Or f or sate
530.00 0. SO m i l es from
Saraso ta and Ft . Myer s and
9 m i le s f rom Ar ca d i a .
Walter M essle r , 1·81 3 -494 28 57 No colle c t ca ll s

SPEED QUEEN -

FRIGIDAIRE

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

______ _

10 do hou~&lt;'wor k
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ond Lf' N on oi l •,h ilt s (( U O B
rned t(OI and su1g oca l (orn
pc t ttove !.OIOitl"&gt; PH PII&lt;'n t l1
tngc bcn e l t l ~ ~h 1 lr d dtc r(.' " ''ol
Lont of t P c i ~O n Pcd
lJ e p l
M('cit cOI
(c n l c r
Holl..- r
G oll 1po l" Oht o b l &lt;l 4&lt;16 '::! I U~ .

,'
1
.
.
'

'

be ncft l'&gt; v-.tlh cornpUtly cre w
(o11 IOC I Joh n Uw ~ tOil'/ c o
Po m ero y ~ o ~ e ... t
P ro du ct~
f'omc roy Ohto '-14/ ~'l b'&gt;

'

'

,J.

it

WA N ll:l&gt; 10 do odd 1 o b ~ po rt
lltnC '11:$ ) - 4J~:J

PO SITION AVAIL A BLE
PRO G RAM DIRE CTOR
The Gall ia -Me1gs Com mu ni t y
A c t ron Agen cy is acc epti n g
applicat ion s for the pos i t i on
of energy program -home
repair progra m d~rec:tor .
Respons i b il i tie s i n c l ude
grant man a g em ent i n clud in g a l l asp ec t s of c rew
coord ina ti on , pu r cha si ng ,
inventory , quatrt y control ,
and v eh ic l es . Oth er dut ie s
will include coord ination of
effor t s w hen n ec es s ary
with FmHA , subm issi on of
reports on a ti m el y basis ,
and attendance at meet rngs
or tra 1n lng se ss ions as
necesury . Th e p os it ion
reports to the ex- ec utive
dlrec: tor
Qualifications for the
position Include a degree in
sociology,
psy c hology ,
business , or related field :
prior
experien c e
w i th
federa l pr ogram s and -or
soc: Ia I serv ice agen c ies will
be an asset . Salary range

lo

512 , 500

Ap ·

pli c at lons and -or addit ional
rnformation I s available
from the agen c: v or the job
serv i ce office in Gallipol is .
Appl i ca t ions
w il l
be
rece i ved until Sept 28, 1978.
Resumes should be ma il ed
fo Exe c: utlve D l rec:tor .
Gall l a -Me lgs C. A . A ., Box
272, Chesh i re , Ohio •S620
• Phone 367 -73 .&amp;1 o r 992 -7000 .

QtlJCK WAGON

BAKER FURNITURE•s

G i r-J HIA l
LAilO H wto k
( ol!
44'/ :.JTI :J b( l w f't&gt;ll 'J om to :J JU
p n1

111 , 300

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
.
.

LIVER PUDDING .....................~; .. 'l29

_

li M B ~W ( U1 tl: fl g ood wage ~ a nd

i ng Ye nding eq uipment l oc a l
ly . No e)(perience ncce:ssor y.
We trol n . Inve stmen t t equ ired .
fJ hone 949 -:nbJ.

atUCK
WAGON

MENTAL L Y
RETARDED
adults are in ne ed of foster
c are ho m es . A sala r y and
benefits will be pard This i s
an in home lob tha t wil l
b en e f it t he li fe c hances of a
m en tally r etarded p er son .
F or more informat ion wnte
o r ca ll ·
Fo ster Car e
680 E . Main St .
Jackson , OH 45640
614-385 -74 61 t Logan J
o r 614 592 6608 (A thens )
E qual
O ppo rt u n1ty
Em ploy er .

Wankd lu Ht•nt

~A R N !il O-SI ) .OOO pe r yeor reld l

$219

---

-

MO~IIl

TWO B EDROOM apt Buitt rn k i tc h en , clo se to town
Afler 7 p m Call 992 -3592 .

GENERAL LABOR work .
Call 985.3373 between 9 a.m
and 3 . 30 p .m

-~--

SEPTEMBER 27, 28, 29, 30

TWO BED ROO M f u r n ish ed
or unf u rn is h e d a pt
at
Tupp er s P la1ns, Oh io 614
66 7 3349

-----------

SPECIALS

5 lb . 4 01. King Size

MAN rO work m r ~ t a il store ,
M odern Supply , 399 W .
M atn. Pom er oy , Oh io

A M IOOl ~ AC!: U ( hl t~ l toll lady 01
co up I-.• to stoy wt1 h 0 rruddl e og
ed lady 011 o 1~ orrt? lo11ll I
m dcs o uts1d e rhu PI Pleo ., ont
WV
c t ty
l o r nt 1 ~
( all
:JU.J b"/) b'iY'-1

This Week's
Dairy Valley

Try Me Silt

~ aOO

FINAl. DA YSI

SHARE A PT
li v1 n g for
elcer l 'l onl y rn Pom er oy :
availabl e i n N ove mb e r ,
ever'/ th i n g f u r ni sh ed e~~:
ce pl m edt ca t ion $17 5 pe r
month c o ve r s al l. Wr rte
Anna Ha 1n es , 957 Loc k
bo u rn e Rd ., Columbu s, OH
43 206
Ca l l co l lec t 1 253
5481

IMM ~ U I A 1~

I I(A il t fl

On th1s day in hiStory:
In 1825, in England , George
Stephenson operated the first
locomotive to pull a
passenger train.
In 1939, after 19 days of
res1stmg heavy atr r aids and
artillery bombardment, the

JJ

IWO il ~ ORlJOM trod c t
on ly 'J'-!'1 :J:!:I ~

11&lt;'A VI:I l fiAil l: fl l or ~ ol e 111"1'/
Mar l&lt;. lv.IIQtrl I~ II "1 4"J 1!100

~4::/ - ~ !A (

Middle of Upper Block, Pomeroy, o.

AU 10 body and
p tr&gt; pc rol to n m n n Apply 111 PP '
~o n n t () til ., O uol tly Bod y ':lhop
M 1ddlcpo 11

W011l0 11

WA Nl 10 ren t "J 01 J b£&gt;d1oo rn
houH' o p t
o r ho tt er Ca ll

HARTLEY SHOES. INC.

.i

Any Size Pius
Recappable Tire
&amp; F. E. T. Black
Or White Wa II
No charge for mounting

1722.

Hom {' l'(ll k
r1or th o l f'o n11 r,1y
l w qe loh l oll 1191 / J /11

~ ou l ro

$1895

The ev ening sta rs a re Mars

For lim I
C&lt;)UNl i&lt;!Y

RECAPPED
SNOW TIRES

and Venus.
Those born on lhts date are
under the stgn of Libra .
Amertcan patnot Samu el
Adams was born Sept. 27,

TH,RE E COO N h o u n d s and
all th e dog boxes S600 991
57 05.

~O M~O N ~

)J '/~

~-·-·----~--

O NE YE AR o ld D a ch shun d
m al e, h o u se brok en. gentl e
W1lh ch il d r en S50 992 5098
a fter 5

&lt;.:am ping Equipmt·nt

"'q1

joyce.

----

W AN I H) B MIY I.., t \l ~k' ) cloy '&gt; a
w eek "I !O 0 Wtll pay ~') '::!
w ('c k )'l O! ll"!y ho tn(' 01 wtll ra k "
~O fll(' O t'e lot 10011l board OPfl
wnqe~ 4"1""1 bll ~ olt(' t b pm

14(&gt;8 CAM PIN G

Most versatile -- Joyce's classic boot!
Here's a boot just loaded with dash! The
handsome silhouette tops a high stacked
heel. comes in softest leathers- and zips on
the side! A most versatile boot made to be
worri with the soft new looks for fall .

THREE G E RM A N Shep her d
puppies 6 wee k s ol d . Ve ry
play f u I 74 1 3057

19 70 PLYMOU T H VA LI A NT ,
6 c yl , go od work c ar . 99 2
749 2 or 992 -3716

White

ONIONS

~'/00

Ohro

THE ALMANAC
Untied l'ress lnternaloional
Today is Wednesday, Sept.
27 , the 270th day of 1978 with
95 to foll ow.
The moon is between its
last quart er and new phase.
The morning sta rs are
Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.

fi~ Gt'-J1 1 ~ 1 0

M A LE
ONE Y e ar
o ld
DachShund , hou se bro ken ,
bla c k and br o wn , l ong
ha i r ed 99 2-5098 alt er 5 p .m

fit t iOt' 51"/CJ':J 4f!) J'l79

I Yo /

•"l'j 'J:!t.'J

l:it-oq lP&lt;.
H
o ld '&gt; h O I ~ t'" d wortn t•d
tJ I J "J6~ U:/'-l:l o1 01&lt;1 .Mil UJJ/

14 7 ~ lJA 1 ~U N PI(KUf' G oo d con

l t.IIJ C.RAN lORlNO J)l V 11 0 11

1oorn·
hu tlt a nd
w! •t•lo. ly !11 ' ' · r 1 '&gt; &lt;'I vt( I"
ro( •wl y dPI(II 01Pd ruul COtpo l• ·d

wpu k ~

~ X 1 1 HI I ~ N UU

WA I T RE SS WANTED Apply
rn p e r son .
M eigs
Inn.
Pom eroy , Ohi o

14"/ A PROWll:t.'
I t! it
~el l
&lt;D1, t01 ned ~ l ccp!. 6 "1 4:1 '1)71

Dark Brown Smooth
Black&amp; Wine

AK \

W/ 1; :.1 u

I
lt v o11q
•.h nw r •r .,

At\ { l&lt;!fG I ~H- H I D ~~h t • tton Hud• y
4 r n oro r h ~ ol d I ,,.-. ntt 1 q ~ col!
'4-lt./ I'll:!

WOHK
OV H~~ ~ A~
Au~trolto
A lrt(O ~o uthArn P t t ro ~u 1o p e
PI&lt;
(on~ t r u dt on
~Cl le ~
~ nqtn ee l ~ Cll'f t{ol elc ~"OOU
10 !))U OO(J p lu ~ h pem&lt;.· ~ po1d
I or em plo y1n en 1 tn lo rma 1to n
Wtt te Ovf'I ~C O !&gt; ~ m pl o ytn c n t
Bo• l (J 1J Ho!&gt;lon Mo ()ItO/

1974 FORO F -100 PICKUP
T RU C K
1973
P lymo uth
Du st er , 3-speed on floor. 99 2
2550.

14/) 1-'l)NliA( A ~ liH ho t&lt;hbot k .
htJ( i.. (•l ~COil&gt; ou tomot tC New
rmhtl ~ and hPIIPry JU rn p g
lJ .!l.l 1"/f.j:J

PLAIN WHITE

T WO I R I SH Sell er p u pp ies
304 -773 5538

OUR SNOW
TIRES ARE READY
FOR WINTER!

fJ t lDM'-J I Ull V • qu1 1•fl' rl ~tit lwn

HdpWankd

ONE OWNER
197 4 Bon
nevill e L ow mileage Go od
con dt lion Ph one 992 6671 or
446 -3364 a ft er 5

( hu rch

Bolen's

F EMAL E A K C r egiste r ed
Boston Ter r ier . 16 wee k s o ld
Has been spayed 992 5021 or
99 2 2205.

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

PO St TION OPEN for parts
ass i st an t. E x per re n c e
pr e f err ed . Ap p l y at Two
R iver s Fo r d, Inc , Rt 62 N /
PI Pl eas anl. WV 304 675
1490.

1977 MONZA SPYDER . 305
e n gi n e . L 1k e n e w wi t h
ev er y t hing . 742-2826

Complete
Seletlion
of
Styles

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

In 1961 , Syna ·broke away

TWO B EDROOM lfH nished
o r u n fur n rshed a pt
al
fu pp er s Pla1n s, Oh10 614
667 3349
I WO Bl LWO O M trntlro1
rd tr 1 ~ pon

fr om the United Arab
Republic in a revolt led by
am1y officers.

Germans .

SMALL
n ew
n o use ,
2
bed r oom , wal ~ r f urn ished •
adults only . No dog s . S50
sc-cu r ily depoSit
6 14 378
6276.

pu~p t f' ~

C H OCOLA T E
PO IN T
Si amese cats . 1 yea r o ld
992 5016

Y ARD SA LE T hu r s and Frr ,
Sept. 28 &amp; 29 at th e Paul
Ba er r es id ence f ir st far m
on t h e r ight pa st th e high
way garag e on Rt 7. Bo ys•
fall and w rnler c lo t h eS, si 1e
3T and some 2T . J ewe l r y .
Kn rc: k k na c k s and m i sc

9 4 9 - 2 3 1 &lt;~

li&lt;ll d l"t roll o1•
&lt;Jql ') 106

~ Alf

l ' l ~t•f'

Y A RD SA LE . Sep t 79 -30 77 6
G r a nt St., Mrddl eport.
Toys , good c loth ing , ha ir
dn er , m a ny misc . art icles
rn good c ond i ti on . Ra in date
Oct. 6&amp; 7.

------------1966 CO R V ETTE 32 7 4 -spe ed
co n v erl rbl e to p
------------1972 C H EV Y BLAZER . 4

MASON, W. VA.

If· Propelled
4 H.P.
,__I

I 0~

L A R GE YAR D SA L E . 909
Brown e ll A v e ., P ul l i n s
r esidence .
E ve r y th i n g
che ap . Tu es , 26l h unlr l
Frr . Oct. 6 .

1974
OL D S
C UTLA SS
Supre me Good shape . 992
7084 P S , P .B , AM tape ,
a tr .

making them feet

\+·············~

HlAl K 1 1\~WAlJOfll l' lttC 'Y ( 't puj o
p ti'" AK ( t PQ 1 ~ t r 1 r•d {. hom
I' I(Hl
bloodl tn r·
Wh plp •·d
H·l lfl
1' hOI If' tt1 4 6(l/ :!OJI.i
1 vi 1111 19" 01 wr&gt;f&gt;lo.Pnch

GARAGE SAL E . 27,2 8,29. S
mi l es on E a gl e R idg e R d
T urn off Rt. 7 a t Memor y
Gar d ens Ce m e t er y

1mi l e~ 99 ~ 71 ! 1 or ingu1r.e af
M e ig s Auto Parts

Bolens
·Mulching
Mower·_,

991-30'11
Middleport, 0 .

Gnnd
!rnrl•· ~

lnl...o •

I DV AKl l WHI I f &lt;.t&gt; ow oi l ti l w• ·ol
f'Y IH Nl ~ ~
l' ttp pt,.:.,
Ph' ' " '
I hi JI1b/ :.HfJI:I

II Y\ ) U hnv•' o ~•· r Y ll , , lc~ ntf c 1
v.r111 t tn h11r or ··•·11 ~C"1 111&lt; 1 1 hl n q
m • lnn lo.H IQ lor W t' t~
01
•·.rliOi o•v o·l
'f O il II qf' t fl '"lllh
l n~ l l' l w ill! 11 '-JI'llttltl 'l Wotol Arl
, nil r.J4'; i' I )O

-------------1973 GRAN T ORi NO 53, 000

for relaxing hands,

t PICKENS HARDWARE t+

\ nrd ::&lt;nh-

19 71 PLYM O UTH FURY
P .S ., P B ., "A .C. A -1 co n
dil 1on $1.5 00. 74 2 279 0.

ISO-MASSAGE
ACTION

: BUY NOW WHILE THE SELECTION IS GOOD : •

Wdl

1-'l ) lt.JG \ IAk l&lt; !• ru 1 p l ~ Boor d u1q
n il htl ' \ 'd~
Or1 1i (11(\ (l iiHII CJ
I In ,h u ~ · lit / OIU:I n 1 ll-. 1 (I I(H:&gt;

'J .I4

ISOTONER 500
DRIVING GLOVES

+PORTABLE HEATERS: :

•

\ 0111dil t(ltl
'J"ffJ'J

HI)OJ HOll OW l k'"'' "'' buy ~•·I I
qo df"' C"l l 11(111 1 N~ · w 0111! u• , •d
-. t~ d d h •&lt;. loluth 1-ft't ·vt ·&lt;. A II IW ')
, , ,-l b411 .rl4ll

L OST I N Bunker H i ll area .
Fawn
Doberman . Le tt
Su nd ay
nile
Wear1ng
co l lar . Day 992 5272 . aft er
5. 992 7384 .

;,.1' "1

1~0

1'-' "1 1 ( HIVRO II I IMI 'A!A

HUNTIN G F OR dup l tc a t e
bridg e parlner f or M o n . o r
Tues . n ight to pla y in
Park ersburg 949 2609 .

t.

ARVIN

t&lt;J/ U ( H~ V Y IMPA l A
"--'l'J 'l'/{)4 o l lf'l &lt;1 pn1

to attd

DUE TO un spor ts ma nlr k e
manner , ther e w i ll be no
more hun t ing on eith er o f my
ta r m s at Minersvi ll e or
Sumn er
wi th out
dir ecl
p e rmi SS ion .
F r ee m a n
Willia ms .

.................+
:NOW IN STOCK...

AVAI I A IH~

t h ll ci~t~ ll

NOTI CE - O L IVE Town ship
T ru s te es w i ll t ake ap
pli cat 1ons fo r a , g r ader
op er ator , a t Reed 's Store in
R ee d sv ill e ,
OH
unt rl
Sa turda y e v enr ng , Sept
30th .

The Athens County
savings &amp; Loan Co.
W. MainS!.
Pomeroy, Ohio

1974 NOV A C U STOM . P .S.,
P B ., A .C ., go od co nd ition
992. 2903 .

~ H 00 1

floo nf" G ur1 ( lu h
~ ve&gt; 1 y ~ u nday I p111
l ac i('IIV
chokl' Qlll\ l&gt; only

GUN

maturity.

•
•

1974
PINT O
ST A TION Wag on , 47, 00 0 mil es . N ic e
$1 35 0 o r bes t o ff er 742 2460 .

NO HUN 11 NG 01 t te~ po ~!&gt; UIQ Cltl
111V Pl (_l pPr ty wt thOlt t pPt lllt.,
~ 1 0 11 Jurly McG ra w

----------------------1
THE ONE AND ONLY

l..'i U 35 Rict· l7 tNI
Cin r mnati 24 Kchmd 21

UCLA 24 Minn 21
Colo St 29 Utah 19 t N 1
\'Ml 22 Virginia 14
Va Trc•h 21 Wm&amp;Mary 20
NC St 15 WForest 13 1-N 1
Wrhta 30 WTcx St ll t N1
Callfornia 35 W Va 6
Bowling Gr 28 W Mlch 24
Wi s 12 Oregon 10
Utah St 23 Wyoming 21
Yale 27 Conn 15
INI Night game

"

WAH.
H WH
d r dl in g Wtlltotn I
Gran!
"1 4"Jl 1tlltl

Decorate Your
Boots With
Boot Bracelets
From Hartley's

&lt;ir a mblmg 38 Prairie \'w 18

Tr xa s 21 Texas Trr h 17

•

..

-""'!~------Our Interest is
Greater For You

1972 F O R O CO UN T R Y Seda n
St at io n
W agon .
9
passen ger
All
pow e r .
E xce ll ent
m ec hani c al
condi tion No ru st . 51700.
992 5721 d ays or 99 '2 -5'2 46
aft er S.

heroic defenders of Warsaw ,
Poland , surrendered to tne

t'orR .... t

L&lt;,.t and t 'ound

Autu ~alco

a

Pitt 21 No Carolina 13

SJose St 35 SCiara 12
Ga 14 So Ca ro 13 t N1
Miss 20 So Miss to
Stanford 2i Tulane 16
Syracuse 25 HI 14
Templ e 18 Del l7 t NI
Tex A&amp;M 19 Mphs St 15

_ "!1le Daily Sentinel, Middleport·[·otneroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 21, 1978

percentage.
Elsewhere In the AL, ,
Boston blanked Detroit, ~;
Baltimore downed Cleveland,
3-1, Oakland routed Chicago,
10-3, Minnesota topped
Texas, 6-2, and California
edged Milwaukee, 4-3, in 10
innings.
Yankees 4, Blue Jays 1:
Back-to-back doubles by
Bucky Dent and Mickey
Rivers "yed. a three-run
second inning that carried the
Yankees to victory.
Red Sox &amp;, 'flgen 0:
The Red Sox remained one·
game behind the Yankees as
Dennis Eckersley, 19-3,
tossed a seven-hitter .
Eckersley struck out four in
ootching his third shutout.
Orltlles 3, IndlaDll 1:
Mike Flanagan lost a nohitter wltll two out in the
ninth Inning when Gary
Alexander hit a 320-foot
opposite.field homer, and
gained his 19tll victory with
relief help from Don
Stanhouse .
A's 10. White Sox 3:
Rob Picciolo doubled and
hit a two-run homer during an
eight-run seventh-inning that
paced the A's to victory. Alan
Wirth, 5-5, .went the distance
for the win .
'l'wlns 6, Raogen 2:
A, throwing error by first
baseman Mike Jorgensen
with ooe out in the nintll
inning allowed two runs to
score and paved tlle way for a
five-run rally that gave the
Twins a victory.
Angels 4, Brewen 3:
Carney Lansford singled
home tlle winning run in the
lOth inning to give the Angels
a victory. Ken Landreux hit a
two·run
homer
for
California.

1 9662ss

I-

I§
I"
I
I

I

LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PURCHASE
r.f...., OD\Ij)()&lt;'ll '"llr&gt;OU\ ""t ln g " ' " fM!UtrOd ~ u•CI&gt; COMI&gt;I ~l"

'

Hoi m~tl •-

II'ICOII1'9" " fll'()jM11~

10 get ~ ll "'"""Y

IIIIMI

"

Anctiun

'

~

HilS.: 11110 A.M. lit 11:10 P.M. Sun.-Thun. ltoiOA,M. 11112 :10 P.M. Friday ontl
Salllrder.
lea Ul At the 1'11111-r leMllrl!lle

••
•'

AUCTION , Fr i. and Set. nites
at 1 p .m . New and used
merch andise at Oh io River
Auction , 537 High St. ,
Middleport , Oh io .

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

•

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Wednesday , Sept. 'l/, 1978

Rutland Garden .Club hears speaker

POLLY"$ POINTERS
Polly Cramer
POLLY'S PROBLEM
some household dismfectant
DEAR POLLY-- What on a cloth to keep S&lt;!U irrels
makes a pie crust shrink from bird seed containers so I
from the pie plate so that it is soaked some cloths with the
lou small for a one-crust ./)i-f ? disinfectant a nd hung them
Also what is a good way to on each side ul the garage
clea n one ' s den tures ? _ door up at the rafters. i used
MARY R.
a hoe to gel them up there and
DEAR MARY R -- to take them down when I
Regardless of what causes a want to add. fresh disinpie crust to shrink while fectant . Needless to say we
baking I presume what you have no more wasps.- MRS.
rea lly want to know is how lo J.C.
prev ent this. Different cooks
EAR POLLY - When a
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tuckerman
ha ve di fferent cures. Some canning far-to-empty. 1 clean
put another pie lin on top of it, put a piece of paper towel
the rrust after it is put in the down in the jar and then
pan and leave it there during another piece across the lop.
the baking. Do not roll crust Screw on the metal top ring
too thin and do not stretch it and the jar stays clean and
but be sure it is pushed free of odor and the ring does
aga in st t he corners. Prick not rust . I do the same with
with a fork here and there. 1 Jam and jelly glasses.- MRS.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred hosted by their family, Mr.
have even hea rd of a crust A.K.
Tuckerman
will celebrate and Mrs. James C. Reeves,
being baked on the outside of
DEAR POI&gt;LY - I bought a
their
50th
wedding an- Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elam, Mr.
the pan I t urned upside down lamp a nd shade at a rumniversary
on
Sunday,
Oct. 8 and Mrs. Eugene Haning, and
fur bak ing I a nd wh en ba ked mage sa le for 30 cent s and
tra nsferred to the ins id e then used white glue to apply from I to~ p.m. with an open Mr. and Mrs. Paul Darnell,
before the filling ts added.
a lot of collected stamps to house at their home, Route 4, Jr., Pomeroy ; and Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Reeves. Chester.
There are se\•eral very the shade . When this was dry Pomeroy .
The celebratif•n i ~ hf'in f'
good denture clea ners sold in I added a coat of clear
drug stores, etc. My dentist la cquer and it looks maralso suggests perio di c velous both when t he lamp is
clean in g by soaking in either on and off. 1Polly's note - Of
whlte vinega r or a solution of course one would not do this
ha lf water and half bleach. - with a valuab le stam p
POI.l.Y
collection. 1 - BRUCE
DEA R POLLY - Aft er
DEAR POLLY -- An
learing off a ptece of plastic electric knife does a beautiful
wrap I fold back what is left job of cutting any kind of
A community halloween cystic fibrosis fund during the
on the roll for about Jne-ha lf foam . -- M.W.
party
was planned for Oct. 28 meeting and Mrs. Lottie
mch so it is easie r the next
Polly will send you une of
at
the
Grange hall when the Leonard and Mrs. Louise
time I need some. - MRS. her
signed
t ha nk -you
Rock
Springs
Better Health Bearhs were named to send
RC .H.
ne wspaper coupon cli ppers if
Club
met
Thursday
at the cards to those sick in the
DE AR POLLY - For 10 she uses yu ur favorite
.
home
of
Susie
Pullins
.
community .
yea rs we have been bot hered Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
Mrs
.
Martha
Kin
g,
Prayer and the flag salute
wi th wasps in our garage and her co lumn . Write POLLY'S
opened
the meeting with Mrs.
president
appointed
Helen
have Lough! all kinds of POINTERS. in care of this
Blackston
and
Judy
HumFrances
Goeglein giving
sprays and strips but nothing newspaper.
phreys
to
work
with
her
on
devotions.
Fourteen memhe lped. I hea rd about pouring
the committee. Th e club bers and two gtiests, Dorothy
made a donation toward the Leifheit and Agnes Dixon,
prizes for the party.
answered roll call. Officers'
A donation was made to the
reports were given.
Mrs .
Nancy
Morris
presented the program with
South eas t Ohi o Junior contact Southeast Uhiu U T '11'
0 readings including "The Best
Miss. Inc., announced today . Junior Miss, Inc. , P. 0 . Box VV
6 Medication is Meditation'' by
til e annual ori entati on IOl , Pomeroy, 45769 ; be sure
·
,
' Mrs. Morris ; "School Kids
meet mg for a 11 high school lu give name. address and
.suni ur gir ls mtercsted in sc hoo l attending.
Need Immunizati on" by Mrs.
'..)'
Lottie Leonard, "Vitamin E
The J unior Miss finals will
ent ering the 19i8-i9 Southeast
fur Premies" by Mrs. Ethel
Ohi o .lunior Miss Finals . The
be held November 19 at the
The birthday of William Grueser ; " Have Your Eyes
meellng will be held Sunday, Meigs Junior High School
October 1 at the Meigs Inn auditorium. Middleport , King was celebrated Sunday and Nose Been Turning Red "·
by Mrs. Betty Conkle ; and
Banquet Room beginning at beginning at 3:15 p.m. Two with a family gathering at the
"Tooth Feeling to Prevent
2::10 p.m.
Jun w r Misses will be selected King home in Bradbury.
a barbecue, Cavities" by Mrs. Bearhs.
If una ble to attend the to represent Southeast Oh io Following
ice
cream and
The contest prepared by
homemade
meeting and yo u wish lu enter m the state finals at Mount
cake
were
served.
Attending
Mrs.
Leonard was won bv
t he Junior Miss Program Vernon in Janua ry .
were Mr . and Mrs. Rick · Mrs. Lenora Leifhei t and
Mickstroth, Huntington , W. 1 Mrs. Phyllis Skinner. Mrs.
Va ., Kevin King, Mr . and · Mary Shaeffer will host the
Mrs. Hank J ohnson , and Mrs. next meeting at which time
William King, Bradbury ; and seeret paIs will be revealed.
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Finlaw,
Heather and Matthew,
Chester a rea .
·

Tuckermans celebrate
50th anniversary

Halloween party
planned at Grange Hall

Orientation meeting set

11-Jtam

K tn
•

haS bzrthda11

Nifty .Stitchers met for
potluck supper Monday
The Nifl v Stitchers mel
Monday cv~ning at the home
of Mrs . Hele n Milh oan,
llHrwm. for a potluck supper .
Plcws wer e made for a trip

Warner, Janet Korn . Marlene
Wilson, Kay Logan, and a
guest , Dwighl Loga n.

to P(JJnt P leasant on Nov . 15

fur a pre-holiday party .

Membe rs are to meet at 5
p.m. at the Elberfeld parking

lot for the trip . Next meeting
will be held on Oct. 12 at the
home of Mrs. Ruth Moore.
The annual Christma s p~rty
will be held at the home of
Mrs. r.racc Warner with the

dett&lt;' tu be ann ounced later.
Attcndm g the meeting were
Agnes Dixon , Ruth Muore,
Will ie Ma ude Co ates, Jean
Hlaz ewi cz. Mabe l Moor e.
Lo u t ~e
B"e arh s,
Gr ace

Fairview
News Notes
Hy Mrs. Herbert Roush
Donn 1ta Manuel was a n
u\'crm ght gue:;t of Legina
flilf\ at f! aci ne Monda y.
Mr . a nd Mr s. Th omas

Warn er and Mrs. Inez Hoy of
H~1 cine visited their molhcr
Mr s
Hom er
Warner ,
Tuesday even ing .
The children of Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Roush held a
surprise party fo r Mrs. Roush
who wa l:i ce lebrating her
bilthday Wednesday . Ca ke
and ice cream were served to
Mr. and Mr s. Ronald Russell ,
Mandy and Michael, Mr . and
Mrs . Dana Lewis, Davtd ,
Edwa rd and Cindy Roush.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Dorsa Pa rson s and Mrs.
Edna Roush.
Mr. a nd Mrs . Russe ll
H(JUSh were dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp ,
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp at
Portland .
Mr . and Mrs. George Hupp
have moved thei r mobile
home to Portla nd to be near
their son, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp.

SPEAK UP
Are you tongue lied
sa lespe rson or a bashful
business manager' Would
you like to stand up and speak
confidently before friends or
club · members? Buckeye
Hills Career Center, Adult
Edu cation Department, will
be offering a course entitled
"Speak Up" starling October
3, 1978. The program covers
tlle basic keys to effective
publi c s peaking, reviews
refere nce materia l and
prov ide s class speaking
experience. It will be held
each Tuesday from 7 until9 p.
m. in room 'l/0 at the Career
Ce nter . The twenty-four
program ends December ~ .
Interested
individuals
should register between 6:30
p. m . and 8:30 p. m.
September 25 or 26 at the
Career Center .

Announce birth

Mr . and Mrs. Joseph R.
Bailey. Route I , Minersville,
are announcing the birth of a
son, Christopher Eric, Sept.
19, at St. Joseph's Hospital,
Parkersburg, W.Va .
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles F.
Sargent, Coolville, and
paternal grandparents are·
Mr. and Mrs . Rex Bailey,
C.b ester.

NEWSPAPER ADS
A
small
Business
Advertising
Newspaper
Seminar will be cooducled in
Adult Education at Buckeye
Hills Career Center on
October 3, 1976, from 7 until
10 p. m. The seminar is
designed for the small
business owner and small
business employee interested
in newspaper advertising. It
will improve the advertising
BASEMENT SALE
effectiveness of a small
The
Women's Guild will
business. The tllree hour
hold
a
basement
sa le at the
program
will
include
Sacred
Hea
rt
Church,
from 9
advertising copy and layout
..
Tuesday
and
a.m
.
to
3
p.m
techniques , utilizing the
Wednesday.
newspaper media . Larry
Boyer, Advertising Dlrector
of tlle Gallipolis Daily
JEFF RANSON
Tribune is the coordinator of
Jeff
Ranson will be guest
the seminar. Mr. Boyer has
speaker
at the Sunday
been
involved
with
morning
worship
service at
advertising for the past ten
the
Bradbury
Church
of
years at the Tribune.
Christ.
He
is
a
funner
pastor
Registration fee for the
seminar is $3 .00 payable at uf the church. The public is
invited.
tlle first session.

HUTI.AND-Mrs. James
Nicholson reported on the
c.'un vcnti un ,,f the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs
held in Day ton at the Monday
night meeting of the Rutland
Garden Club held at her
hum c.
Delegate to the convention
from the club was Mrs. Ralph
Turner and also attending
wa s Miss Ruby Diehl. Mrs.
Nichulson tuld of the theme of
th e flower !how, " Birds,
Butterflies, and Botony ."
Reports were also heard at
the meeting · on the Meigs
Cuunty fair flower show with
Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Virgil
Atkins, and Miss Diehl
receiving red ribbons and un
the Rutland Garden Club
show held earlier this month.
Mrs .
Virgil
Atkins
presidinq in the absence of
Mrs . Turner, president ,
thanked Mrs. Charles Lewis,
general chainnan of the show
and all those who made
arrangements and ·brought
specimens, along with Mrs.
Turner who provided refreshments.
It was noted that dues are
payable tu Mrs. Roy Snowden
this month. A report was
given on the Harrisonville 4-H
Club of which Mrs. Virgil
Atkins is advisor. Janet and
Joyce Lambert to ok the
project this year of perennial
plants from seed and both
made arrangements for the
Meigs County lair and
r&lt;:ceived blue ribbons on their
exhibits. They also exhibited
at the Rutland flower show
and Joyce received a red
ribbon .
A report was given on the
tour of the Weber ga rden .
conducted by Mrs. Vernon
Weber. On the tou r were Mrs.
Dayton Parsons, Mrs. Ann
Webster, Mrs. Carl Denison,
Mrs. Turner, Mrs. Chris
Diehl, Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs.
Lawrence Milhoan, Mrs. C.
0 . Chapman, Mrs. Eugene
Atkins, and Mrs. Harry
Williamson .
It was also noted that
several members are taking
the county flower arranging
course and they are Mrs.
Virgil Atkins , Mrs. Turner,
Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs. Albert
Woo dard, Mrs. .Bernard
Ledlie, Mrs. Ann Webster,
Mrs . Parsons, and Mrs .
Harvey Erlewine.
The annual Christmas
dinner and party was tentatively set for Dec. 11 at
Craw's Steak House. Mrs. C.
E. Bishop was reported ill at
home. Thank you notes were
read from Mrs. Russell Little
for flower sent her while she
was hospitalized. For roll call
members answered with the
name of a fall flower they
want to plant. Guest at the
meeting was Mrs. Raymund
Chapman.
The traveling prize furni shed by Mrs. Chapman was

won by Miss Diehl. Mrs.
Everett Colwell will furnish
lhe next one. Ideas for October were given by Mrs.
Chris Diehl in the absence of
Mrs. V. E. Nelson.
A demun st ration
on
weathered and drift wood
was given by Mrs. Virgil
Atkins
who
made
arrangements with flowers
and wood. She talked about
different shapes and sizes of
wuod . and of their 11~ for

backgro und or accent in
arrangements. She suggested
the fields and woods after a
windstunn or flood as places
where weathered wood can
be found. She said some of
these will be sunbleached,
some marked by animals and
all _ in teresting . Another
location to look is where
bulldozing is going on, she
said.
Wisteria,
wild
grapevines, or other vines
are always good for use in

Communities welcome fall with Oktoberfests

flower arrangements,
Atkins said. She explained
how to bleach weathered
wood and· how to use liquid
wax, and also advised
disinfecting all wood before
taking it into t he home.
Mrs. Erlewine displayed a
line mass arrangement of red
and while dahlias using the
theme "An Autumn Story."
Mrs. Nicholson, Mrs. Eugene
Atkins, and Miss Ruby Diehl,
hostesses, served refresh-

I . Social

RUMMAGE SALE
Women of St. Paul Lutheran
Church will hold a rununage
sale on Oct. 4 and 5 in the
chur~h fello'wship hall. 9 a.m.
to 3 p.m. each day'

1

Calendar 1

LAFF- A· DAY
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club,
Wednesday noon at the Meigs '
IM. Visitors Day to be observed andaU Lions urged to
attend .
AMERICAN LEGION
AUXILIA[{Y , FeeneyBennett Post 128, 6&lt;30 potluck
supper followed by 7' 30
meeting . Beverly Hoffman
and Shari Mitch, Buckeye
Girl State delegates, to give
their reports. Girls and their
mothers invited to attend .
AMERICAN
LEGION,
Feeney-Bennett Post128, 6:30
potluck, followed by 7;30
meeting.
WILDWOOD GARDEN
CLUB, 7:30 Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. Ada Holter,
with a plant exchange.

1 lb. Golden Isle Vac- Pak

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••~~~. s-1.39
2 lb. Roll

LANDMARK HAMBURGER ••••••••••••• ~~'!}2.69 ·
HOMEMADE HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••'~~. $1.09
$

2 lb. Fisher's

DfEESE

New

·

DELIGHT~~-.1.79 GREEN CABBAGE.. .. !~:.. 17~
6

1 lb. Teen Queen

oz. Pkg.

MARGARINE ....~~-~~~~.~~49~ RED RADISHES~ ..... 2/29~

11 oz. Morton or Banquet TV Dinners •••• 69~
10112

oz . Campbell's

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP•••••••••••••••••• 2/49~
15'12 oz.
Arc
RED KIDNEY BEANS ....................... 2/79c
Joan of

.

Rich- N- Ready

.

~

~:~~~~. 89'
ORANGE DRINK •.•.••••••••.••••.••.••...
'
4 Roll Charmin white
TOILET TISSUE ............................. ~~?: 95c
24

oz. Aunl Jemima

PANCAKE SYRUP. ...................... ~~t~~ - $1.29
32

oz. Aunt Jemima

PANCAKE MIX ••·•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••b.o.x. 85'
15112 oz . Whitney

PINK SALMON ...........................c:.n•• $1.69
48 ct. Tender Leal
TEA BAGS••••••••.•.•.••••••.••••••••.••.• ~:. $1.29
10 oz. Maxwell
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••••••••••••• ~a:.. s4.49

SILYII IIIDGI PLAZA
446-1923

{

SHOP WEEKDAYS 1000 Til 900 SUNDAYS 100 Ill 600

CELEBRATE OUR 69th ANNIVERSARY
WITH GREAT BARGAINS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS

..'·
'

'

' '~L'

~~

'

ilWlinr~·~
I

'

.... . .. ···· ~ • "' - · · ~ .. ~·-

~ · 17

" I'll work for you , I'll slave for
you ..

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 will be
ehld, club officers will be
Installed.
MIDDLEPORT CHILD
Conservation
League
meeting, Thursday evening,
7:30p.m. at the River Boat
Room of the Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and
Loan; , a white elephant sale
will be held.
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION
of the Middleport First
United Presbyterian Church
potluck Thursday 6:30 p.m.
Hostess members of Group
One . Devotions a nd program
by Jean Moore.
FRIDAY
MARY SHRINE 37 ORDER
of White Shrine of Jerusalem
inspection Friday 7:30 p.m .
at Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Inspecting officer will be
Valma Joy Burnie, Supreme
Worthy Higl:b, Priestess.
Potluck refreshments.
SATURDAY ,
CARNIVAL AND jitney
supper at Chester Elementary Saturday. Jitney supper
from ~ lu 7 p.m. and carnival
from 7 to 9. Sponsored by
Chester PTO.
POTLUCK s upper and
songfest at Cheshire United
Methodist Church, Sept. 30,
supper at ~ : 30, singing at
7:30. The Lemley Family
singers.
SUNDAY
REV . GEORGE OILER,
pastor of the First Church of
God. Syracuse, will begin
broadcasting live from
WMPO beginning Sunday at
9:30a .m.

Minster's Oktoberfest this
weekend by riding in
Sunday's parade.
'Ibis year's ()ktoberfest,
the fourth annual German
heritage celebration, will run
from Friday through Sunday.
Events and food for the
festival bear a German
flavor, including tbe German.
Heritage Mass celebrated
Sunday morning.
Other Oktoberfests this
weekend are at the Dayton
Art Institute Saturday and
Sunday and in Bremen
Friday through Sunday.
Dayton ' s Oktoberfesl
features
working
craftspersons, ethnic foods,
arts and crafts, German
music, beer and bratwurst.
The community of Sugarcreek turns into a little
Switzerland Friday and
Saturday for the Ohio Swiss
Festival.
The air will be filled with
polkas, Swiss music and
yodeling, while visitors can

participate in stone throwing
and other games, ·w atch
parades and enjoy the Alpine
atmosphere. !)'lore than 20
plants turn out tons of Swiss
cheese, not ooly lor this
festival, but all year roiUld .
The Hickory Festival will
be Saturday at Harpoter in
Wyandot County. Hickory nut
crafts and food items await
the visitors.
Valley Vineyards at
Morrow in Warren County
hosts the eighth ann~al Ohio
Wine Festival Thursday
through Saturday.
Visitors can doff their shoes
for the Grape Stomping Contest, taste a variety of wines
and tour the winery where
grapes are turned into wine .
Judges will pick the best
wines in a variety of
categories, including
homemade wines.
Food and cheese accompany the wine and music
will be provided by a Gennan
band .

Barnesville hosts the Ohio
Pumpkin Festival Saturday
through
Monday
with
pumpkin . contests,
agricultural displays, antique
show and sell car show and a
parade . The "Gay 90s"
Mansion in Barnesville will
he open for tours.
carriage Hill Reserve in
Dayton celebrates Autumn on
the Farm Saturday and
Sunday. Fifty working
craftspersons show their
skills on the recreation of a
19th century Ohio farm .
The Appalachian Fall
Fann Festival will be held
Saturday and Sunday at
Albany in Athens County.
A drive-it-yourself tour is
on tap for Ashland County
Saturday and SWlday. Maps
are available at the Ashland
County Extensive Office, and
the tour includes stops at a
cider press and country
stores.
Another drive-it-yourself
tour is the Swiss Hills

OVER 600
PIECES OF

COLORS: BURGANDY AND GREEN

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

BEAUTIFUL NEW
FALL SPORTSNEAR

15.3 Cu. Fl.
Chest Freezer with
Lift-Out Basket
Model FC153P
0 Infin ite-pos it ion temperalure cont rol with recessed
knob
0 Lift-out basket
0 Sli m-Wall design-foamed-

SHIRT ·
BLAZER
VEST

in-place i nsulation 1or
more space inside

0 Counterbalanced Seai-Tite
lid with magnet ic gasket
0 Baked enamel inferior and

PANT.

exterior

0 Defrost drain
Reg. Price $379.95

$29995
SIZES
8 TO 18

GREENE'S
SALES CENTER
New Haven, W.Va.

'

'

REG.

SALE

'19.00 '9.50
'30.00 '15.00
'24.00 112.00
'15.00 '7.50
'15.00

THIOOGHOUT TWI

UOIIfOI
fANTASTIC U.YINGI
ON IIIIOCOIIIIAND

PROOUCU

'·

3

NO
PH.O NE
ORDERS

*

COPTIIGHJ lf71- JMI .ltOOII CO. IQMI AND ~
GOOQ SUNOAY IIPT . U THitu U.fUIDAY 11n • • • 1971
lfiiiii.YIIIWIDOII f'OMIIO'f lriOGin. WI.Uilvl fill

PLEASE

bce,t Closed Sallrhy li•&amp;llt TII9 AM Sladay
bce,t Hilllal, Wllite S.!,ltar s,riacs I
514 S. Tlird Slii'IIIH

Wesson
Oil

IMIASSY

.,..., ••k ... .
,_,....t

foo4s-,.

MGHt TO UMIT OUAfiiTlTliS. MONI SOlD tO DIAUIII.

Comet
Cleanser

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Kroger 20-oz.
White
Bread.____ ...... _...
ICWGII NON DAIIn

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE.
10·12-ll. AVG.

$

-

Whole
Boneless
Beef Rib Eye . 111.

,-

89

co\1
rou,oll
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Detergent

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Pecan
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Serve N
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12-oz.

Pkg.

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Lilt! l nGS. Will COII'Gllll 11.50 ltllnOfllli'IICUSI
(ElCtUDIIC THIS \lEI)

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Captain's Choice
Bucket·O·Fish

or
Delidous

ts.ft.3
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(EICIUOtiG THIS \Ill)

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Whole Fresh
Pork Loin .............111.
THI
Kroger
Meat
Bologna 111.

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114 SHilTS Pllt ROLL,
fLliCI

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C. . . . . . . .,sm. l4THIUillllll£1f . JI. ItJt
llllftt T&amp;llfttea~IT&amp;n a liiM ruu

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Ketchup

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$ 19

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46-oz.
Cans

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SliCED FREE INTO CH0'5 IN ONI
CONVENIENT TAKE HOME P'ACKAGI
1··17-LI. AVG.

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$

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10$ 99

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Fruit Drinks

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llltKEII COST CUTTEII COUrOI

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lf.ANDU liQUID

Paper Towels

DF

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Domino
Sugar

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t..,..CIIISIINTIIn 24TllhSilllll!SUT Jl. lt11
lllllfl II lrf'llt&amp;IL! ltln &amp;IIUL tillS

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Large Eggs .. Doz.

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(IXCLUDIIC lltS ITEI)

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Ctns.

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Ice
Y2·Got.
Cream __ ....... Ctn.
KIOOIR

In lt73, VIce Presidenl
·Spiro Agnew, who had
pleaded no contlll to tu
, , ev81lon charges, said he
· ; would not re~lgn but did &lt;in
Oct. 10.

hosts the American Folk Arts
Festival Saturday and
Sunday.
.
Early American crafts, a
country kitchen and store,
and strolling musicians are
featured .
.
A coin show will be held
Saturday and Sunday at New
Philadelphia , while
a
chrysanthemum show and an
art show will be held at
Kingwood
Gardens
in
Mansfield Saturday and
Sunday.
.
Professional golfers will
try to lame the famed
Firest one golf course i:n
Akron this week at the World
Series of Golf Thursday
through Sunday.
And on the fair schedule,
the Brown CoWlty Fair runs
through Saturday and tbe
Coshocton County Fair opens
Saturday, running through
Oct. 5.
The Barlow Fair, an independent fair in Washington
County, runs Friday through
Sunday .

ADAY

C( r'

procedures.
The program begl111
October &amp;, 1!178 lllld ends Cll
November 30, lrlll. The fee
for the 28 hour COlll'le la $17.
Reglater by cmtlng .to the
Adult Education Office at
Buckeye H1Ua Career Center
the week of September •
from I a.m. until4 p.m. or Cll
Monday
and Tuesday
eventncs from 8:30 until 8::10
p. m. September 25 and 211.

iOterpretive nature hike will
be held Saturday at Fort
Ancient at Oregonia.
Nature hikes, at 5 and 8
p.m. feature the Dora and
fa Wla of the Fort Ancient
area.
Bob Evans Farm in Rio
Grande is the setting for
Timber Stand Improvement
and Firewood Field Day
Saturday,
. Field day instruction will
be given on how to select cuts
of wood , proper use of cbain
saws, fall a tree, cut it into
firewood, skidding trees and
functional usefulness of
certain trees .
The faU roundup Horse
~ow will also be held at the
Bob Evans Farms Saturday
and Sunday.
This show features contestants participating in barren
racing, flag racing, Western
and
English
classes,
horsemanship and halter
class competition.
The Unitarian Universalist
Olurch in North Olmsted

OPEN
24HRS.

'I&gt;·G•'-4

INCOME TAX
An
Income
Tall:
Preparation Course will be
offered at Buckeye Hllls
during the ~pc&lt;lllllng winter
session. '!be class will meet
each Thursday from 6:30
until 9:30p.m. in room 2811. ·
'!be class 'lbe course bu
been designed in cooperation
with tlle Internal Revenue
Service for
new
or
inellpel'ienced preparers of
Federal Tu: returns. When
succesalully c&lt;mpleted, the
course will assist the student
In becoming more proficient
In preparing these returna.
The program provldea
certain basic of the present
tax law,
recommends
procedures for preparing
incmte ta~: returns reflecting
theae basics and illustrates
research and .updating

Autumn Tour Sunday in
Monroe County.
Among the 13 tour stops are
a modern dairy operation, the
St. John's United Olurch of
Christ where services have
been held for more than 150
yea rs, and the Hannibal
[,ocks and Dam.
Sunday is FoWlder's Day at
Ohio Village in Columbus,
observed from 10 a.m. to 6
p.m .. The agenda include pie-.
eating contests, apple
bobbing, tug of war and
entertainment by the Ohio
Village 'singers and bands.
Fall Foliage River lours
are offered on Ule Valley
Gem
Sternwheeler
at
Marietta . The tour is a fourhour ride up the Muskingum
River,leavingat9a.m. and I
p.m . Saturdays and Sundays
through October. Advance
reservations are required
and can be made through
. Captain James Sands at 123
Strecker Hill, Marietta, Ohio,
4~740 , (614) 373-7862.
An outdoor slide slow and

YOUR FRIENDLY KROGER STORES

Chi.

i'

•

l!nd harvest.
Susan
Perkins
of
Middletown, Ohio, who
recently traded her Miss
America crown lor civilian
life, will help usher in
October as she participates in

r-----.._.-..-.1·

-7------:::::-::=::-:-:::------===--------------------'·

By SANDRA L. LATIMER
u.lted Preu lolenlatiODal
Many communities
weic:omefall with a variety of
feltlvals, ranging from the
Oktoberfeats to festivals
cer~tered around the season

I

WHITE

Special
Price

9- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-PoU:eroy, 0 ., Wednesday, Sept. 27, 1978

HI Nu 2%
Lowfat

Milk .. .' .......... ..

49
$
,.,.,
Gal.

Ctll.

Roaat 811f

THIN SUCED MEATS
.. .... ..... . . . . . . .. . . .....

,.

••

$399
$311

Turkey Breast Roll . ...... .. .... . ... ••
Stet
Chopped Ham .. .. . . .. . ...
~.

$2"
$151
Gtr11111n lolav• ... .......... ,.. ... ...
Hard Salami .. .. . . .. .• .. . .. .. .
GWALfNI'f

~.

�'

'0.

o

'

I

'
10- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday,
Sept. rl, 1978

l l - The DBUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday, Sept. rl, 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
For ~It·

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wunb tJt· Un1.k r
I dit}

,.,

t di:!yli

l.a4l

:Jttlys
6 ilil y~o

:1.00

C:u.h

'"'

FIVE P I E CE d inette set 992
7040.

bt•rli ('&gt;(l ll'
IQ/J [lortOI 1 IJ • b(ll ~t· d r OO t11
IIJ'} Vt&lt;l&lt;lltllniJ • h ' J bt•dtOO lll
J bo th
jr.J / J (C\\.,•f\1&lt;~ I J • b'l J ho •d100111
bU
I
ll.it)"' ~!Oft"· l l &gt;O" I)
b o•d r oorn

I 25
1.90
~. 25

3.75

E&lt;t1'h w urd m·cr tlk' llllllllllWil 15
LS .. l't:nLs ,p..·r wurd pt'r da~ .
1\d~ nttU IIfl)( uthe r Llu.u nmsL't'ULtvt&gt;
U.,.y~ ~o~· tl l !J..· \:hett'J.!t't! it \ th1• I d a~·

liMI~IO M
&lt;o lrt \JIII &lt;11101 td&lt;•

"a nd q rov('l

~~

Jtl 14 1

CO A l

wurlls

In l llt'IIIUI'~ , C.artl uf Thauk" &lt;tnt!
Obnua 1r 6 t•enl\i p.;•r wtwd . S:1 01.1

I 'OI11 o'•(l &lt;;

H U k~ O U G H ~

uuuunwn. C&lt;tsh m atl,·at ll 'l'

MiJlHic Hulllt&gt; s.ttlt"S IIIIi! Y t~ l' tl ~b
l:irt' Ctl't:t' pl ~d unly wttli n1sh wit h
oci.k.&gt;r. :15 L't' ll ~ du.rl&gt;(l' fur ad" l'.aiT) ·
mg Bux Num~r In Cfld't' uf Tht' .SCI I·

)l N ~ I

t&lt;J/o
m

MAIIl

! I ~ t•

"''''(• t

Ill lnur t
0 1Ho

The PuLhsht"r n•st•n't•s lht· nght
tu rthl ur l't' Jt'cl an)' iHb dt't'lllt'd ullJt"l'lltillill. The Publ!slll'r w1llnut llt.•
n!spl)llSlble fur 1nure thew ••nl' LrKur·

~

AH

Phurlt' 99'1·21ati

NOTICE

t\ S t)

f' li,·llt'

!&gt;I J /~

I

co ndd 10"

tno tot Hoy In&lt; ~ol" S H ~' a
hol t.' YJt.l / J 1J "' (.)J Q JtW -1
lJ Q'i

till'~

tl1ru Fmia1
4 PM ..
tht•tlay

be fort" IJUblit·ath lll

Sunda\

grade I onci
/ ( W 11 t olhtt Po tllr111d Oh1o

WIN l ~R f-'01 Al0~~

F'nt.lay aflt"ru uun

', Wl: l-1 1-'01 A 1 0 ~ ') f.( ed wh d &lt;'
ond y('llow Ph o n r (-lJ j :J . Ij f
f.lo b0 rt W I C' wt \ f.(t I RortiH ·

IJu~-

HMHl:H . POMf.R OY f.or e~ l Pr o
duc t ~ l op p n r e !or ~t ondmg
!. Ow 11mber
(all Q':l1 . ~ 'fo ~ ot
'
Kent H onb~ I 440 8~ 7 0

r..,~

C HIM I :, C O l LHN

OI J 00&lt;.1 3'/b)

tCe bo&gt;&lt;e&gt;!. bf'O l&gt;!.
bed!. tro n bed s d e ~~ s c t'
comple te hou seh o ld s Wr tte
M l) M1l let HI 4 Pomer o y or
ca ll '19'1 7lb0
C Ol i~~

1 urt~ c o r~

scrap 1r on bat
metal s
Rtd e • ~
',) R
1'14
Pomeroy

and

~ o!vog e

992 ;40!:j

'wANT TO buy : 1967 Dodge
Cornet 440 . 949 ·2&lt;170.

OYNAMARK LAWN mover
72 " 3.5 h .p ,, t35 . Parts for
1955 Chevy , 1 rear g lass , 1
ba ck , 1 trun k lid , 1970 Ford
l TO S350 . P .B .. P .S... 4·
door , v iny l top , 80 ,000
miels . 992 1779.

CHIP WOOD . Poles max .
diamter 10" on largest end ,
$8.50 per ton . B undled slab ,
$6 .50 per ton . Del i vered to
Oh io Pallet Co . Rt. 2.
Pomeroy . 992 .2689
OLD MOTORCYCLES and
parts . Doesn't h ave 10 run .
992 .63• 5.

TWO BA SE lb " - Teabe rry
40 ch . w ith 0 104 po~er
mic. Sl60 . Ro yc e 23 ch . w1th
0 ·104 p ower mic , SIOO Call
949 2045 afler .1. p m

WANTED TO b uy . 100 He i fer
steers ·and bull calf Also ,
some cows and large bulls .
614 ·593 ·5132 anyt i me .

l::IGHT WHK old ttger k trten
green e~el&gt; lots. o l persona lily
Me •g\
H umo11e
~or 1 e ty
9Gl1.2592 or 991 SA/7
KIT1 l::N) AND adult cor &lt;;l(l;. 4J;J

-

ONE MOTHER . grey and
black cat , 2 m a le k ittens 74'1

2328

F'ART
SHEP HE RD
and
collie . Approx . 6 9 mo . old .
Needs someone w i th l ana
See at 224 Wa lnut . M ia
dleport atter 5.

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

SUFFOLK RAM . A lso good
ear corn . 01 A.698 · 4499.

-------------THREE TRA IL horses . New
.,nd used saddles , Western
or Engl lsn . Cam per S600 .
1969
1nter11at ion erl van
ask i ng s.DOO . Excellent
cond i t io n . Also some an ·
t iques . Phone 614 ·699·3290
or 614 ·098 ·5436 .

-----------FOR SALE . 99 27751.

H AY

Wtnc h

ond

-------

i9o7INTERNATIONAL BU S,
JO passenger . Low mileage .
Ex cell ent con d i t i ol1
304
882 -31 22 . 30A .J7J .5J70 or 30.4
713 5481

-----------STAN ' S
BARGA I NLAND .

l1kP
r.J JY '/ / OJ

B i!.lJ':I tn odPI l l o o k ~
l!~ c nl'w Will tok e
1:/4 &lt;/ ll 6'J

11ad s~

f.OOl b•u ~ h ho q Btond ne w
Hec vy dull' 'JU ti hoy (' lev a to r
(.) J':I 'I I OJ

6

PAINT S
DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!
Our

Season a I

Closeout.

Outside While
Red roof paint

Pomeroy landmark
. .~Jack w. carsey. Mgr.
-

Phone992-2 181

8 H .P . RIDING
LAW N
mower , 273 ci Dodge moto r
and Dodge 4 speed trans .
mission wi th shifter . 992 5891.
STORE EQUIPMENT
Chec ko u t cou nter , I large
register w i th ~utomatic coin
chanoC'r and reg is ter sta~:~d ,
S50D One .8' or 12' disp lay
co. t r chest · w ith el ectr ic
b o(~s
and s i ng l e Phase
co m or essor . 1 egg d isplay
case and coo ler , both tor $250.
Call 742 .2155 after 5.
19 76 FORD VAN E 150.
Customized .
Excel lent
co na i t iQn 949 -2125.
G IB SO N
AUTOMATIC
washer a11d dryer 992·5621 or

992-2205 .

Where eve r yone gets a fa ir
deal. Open 9 to ~ da ily
except Su11day , 11 t~ 6.
Ma in St. . Ru1 1and , Oh10 .

GRAVE~Y

-----111

f92-3325
216 E. Second Street

Any u .s. m11de arports extra if needed.
Excludes front-wheel

drive cars.
Call now for aptiOintmont.

Pomeroy lJndmllt
w.ea..y.Mtr.
Phone 992-2111

~---­

01. 11&lt;011 l.) lf:',) l:: l wt lh &lt;lu !Ch
0&gt;1d q P OI bOt ) ) )()() 10()() !t 4
&lt;, Tructu1al ptpC' C.ood Pla1n
•·nd ~ I{)O o l oo t 1 ~ 1 J{)'i:J

Ht•al E•tatc for ~lc
HOM I;- ~11 ~ ~

lor ~01€.' 1 ooe 011d
up M1ddl,...parl near fo' u t lcnd
CoiiY'fl / Jt:ll
JO y1 l ut011C i n~ ol~ o
1e l tnon r 1ng Ireland Mo; tgog e
rt t ) tol e Ath cn ~ phone lb l d)

VA f.HA

': /n

30~1

J 4 O ti C~

Uttl led
.....,&lt;'11
b lock butfd 1ng
older
lr C11 1f'r
Old j,' t 7 Che !&gt; ter
Oh op ti l) ~ J/:1 4'1 bl:! tw een A and b

fAf.&lt; M

tu n b r &lt;

IHfl H O f.! lou t h e d r oom h o u ~C' H1
1-'orli E' t Oy bolh and
(enttol
he att ng CjCf'j ? Oi' J
~ ARM ~O io/ ~ elf' Hou !&gt;e 'J bo1m
lro ole r lmq p pond I{) O(l e!J or

('II oCt e~ 7 ~/ J j M

NEW

THREE
bedroom
nome , rec . room , f irepla ce ,
deck ,
garage,
l arge
basement , one and a ha lf
b aths . F'hone Lee COn ·
s t r-uct i o n
992 . 3454,
weekends
1·61• · •46 ·9568 .

LEVEL DOUBLE IOf. almost
1~ a c r e in the Lyons Ad ·
ditio n between Wahama
H igh School and Clifton ,
WV . Lovely buildi ng site .
S9500 . AllerS p .m . call 614 ·

992 -2666 .

-------------BI;OkOO M
J ac'r£&gt;)
\ HI-ll;~

hou~e

Clo~t'

lo r1 d

t f' O~ on ob l y

to

~r hool

pr1cod

f.J 4',! ~ l ib

I H~ i 1:: B ~ O~ OOM car pe ted home

f ull y 111~ ul o 1 e d w rT h 1 r both ~
tn t&gt; o rn«? ro y fieo !.onobly pnccd
I' hone {J(j'J JEITi'
! IV ~

~O O M

hou'&gt;e ond both
I C'm ode led fu lly car pe ted May
bt:' ... c• en oltet :.! pm f.lhonP
Qf./J 3YJJ
111

107 () NASHUA 1-l,.. o; J bed room
l , both under pmn 1ng S I~OO
and C!~&lt;o " m e loo n (j 4Q 7b8J or
H43JJ11
1% -1 HOUSl: I HAI L !::~ 1'1,; O(J A ll
el eclr 1c furnt &lt;; ho?d 01 r c(H' U•
l•oned Wa~he r and Dry e r I
lo ts 1n Horn sa11 vtlle 711 2 1820
I :1 .:60 '} 01 3 bed 10om w1 th bu1h
on ad dit •on
la undry room
w as her dry e r b ·cell en t con d •
110n t O&lt;re re nt ed lo t Albo 11y
b 14 llqBll1 !:1 5 be l ore J pm
1973 NA SHUA mob il e- home , 3
be dro om . part 1a t ly f ur
n i shed . Ask ing pr ice S5 .000
949 22'24

~QUjol

lJ

)')( I oqoto.,
T 11 r·~

t e r ed

I wh kIf.&gt; I

Htqnd

nt •w

! JI :.J H:I6

I Hjoltl:_
rno tor

WHII llK
C.ood

l:lr ::lilrl
lt !P~

, ,,,.,

I'J lOOt I IHII-IGLA S':! bon t J)
h p John,on onu 1o• (l nd l&gt;cl d ' 'l
~JUO BJ3 J(l '&lt; d

1962 DODGE 1,. t on A w neel
Or 1'o' e , r un s g oo d
1'966
Pl.y mo u th Va li a11 1, 50,000
miles . 6 cyl , a ut o , really
n ic e Ph cm e 949 17 63.

197 1 H I LLCREST 12x6• , 3
bedroom w i th ti p out l iv ing
room , t otal electr i c. un
furn ished. $5900 Can be seen
at
1100
E
Ma in
St..
Kinosoury Hom e Sales . 992
7034

DATSUN
PI CKUP
Lo w
m i leage , good condd ion .
step bumpe r . go od t1res ,
tr uc k m ir r or s $2 .950 985
397 9

TWO BEDROOM tra il er on 11
acre in Rllc i ne . 949.2373 .

NEW
H AWKI N S
THOMP SO N
muzzle
loade r . 50 ca li be r All ac
cesso r ies . 74'J 2750 .

12x60 .
1970 HIL L CREST
Loc.!lted In Salem Center on
CR I. 614 .669 -5742 or 742.
2689.

~( H 0 0 l

B U~
&lt;a mpe t
bO
po ssenget
w 1th new tu e~
Good con d1I !Dn Con tact lo t"
Mank in oT f/CJ ') 1701

ONE DISHWASHER . par .
tahlle Also . re cliner Call
997 2205 or 992 562 1 alter 5
p .m
1973
TERRY
TR A I L ER
TRAILER 27 ft . A .C , roll
ou 1 awn ing , p ow er co n
verier . Excellent conct i tion .
~&lt;1500 f l rm . 4 Goodyear L ·
78- 15 tires and wh ee l s ,
appro x . 700 miles. \300 . 742 ·
'}667 .

O N E ROW Cas e cor np ic k er ,
needs a ·titt l e work . Also 7
yea r ol d reg is t e r ed Poll ed
Hereford bul l.
E)(cellent
dispos i t ion . R RS Farms .
992 ·2826 .
Call oft e1

Nf. W HOI I A N D r hopp er t row
( 0 1•1 h(•Od
Ll1rer r r ut hPod
&lt;//:j; J8ab
I CITl HO NDA ( H::,(X.I
; pm 'J9'J. 'J'IJ TI

197 ' YAMAHA XSMO A 1 shape
99'} )O i l ofhH ~ pm
JCj'Jf:&gt; HONDA

360

mil es. 01 n rng
CJQ';/ J() I E1

J.sOO orluol
room

!tUl le.

TRU MPET
AND
Si nger
Headle sc w 1ng ma ch in e
Bo th in e:w: cellcnt cond it ion .
F irewood . 949 135 8.

P I NG PONG tab l e . Car
luggage carrier . Paris for
302 Ford motor . One 4 ho le
and one 2 hOle sett feed ino
hog feeders . 985 -3920 .
- - - - -- - - - - 1962 FORO PICKUP , oood
Shape . 1275. Ca ll 992 -7330.

U SED OL D S trum pet , c ase ,
mus 1c stana and severa l
book!. . Good cond i t ion S50 .
Call 99? 253 1.
KENNEBEC
POTATOES .
avail ab le th is week . F'aul
Sayre , F'ortla11d , G r eat
Ben d Rd . 843 · 4591.

4 NEW
TIRES

SHOULD BE SOLD -3
bedroom ranch, 2 baths.
centra l

air ,

good

full

basement. large lot . only a ·

Custom

Po~

A78xl3
Prices includes

Fed . T ..
{does not include
sales tax or
balancing)

FULLY
GUARANTEED
Other si1:es
companbly

prk:ed.

Pomeroy Landmark
w. car.._y,
Pt"'ne 992-2111

Pomeroy
8~2 - 1

C\PTAI:-1 F: ,ISY

mo.

Cellulosic (wood' fiberl
· Thermal insulation

SERVICE

S.Ove 30 pel. to SO
on heaHngcos
Experlone» and
.f ully lnaured
FrH Eat.
Ca 11992-1172
8-10-lmo . IPd.l

All types of roofing, ilullon
20 y.. rs
experience.
All work
guarantted . Call Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160 . Free
Eatimales.
9-7-1 mo.

IF CROOKS 11/t:RE
JUAN TIO.I£D•
!5CAI'.IN6 THE U'-IION SUT THE POLICE;
WORK61'.S- COU~DN' T CHIEF- 15 A MERE
'r'OUI'. HU55At.JD 60
STOOGE OF
T' THE: COPI&gt; CR.
VCLTA't;.
CIT'f HALL l
t.\OS!

ONLY $21,000.00.
MAKE OFFER -

WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

.

large workshop o-ver. Level
lot near stores.

RACINE - large lol out of
high water with nice view

8-31 -1 mo.

g~

SO THAT'I&gt;

water, large lot for garden

ond parking . A good buy at
19,500.
NEW COUNTRY HOME 2 full boths, forced air heal,
drilled well , nice carpeting

old

log ho"'e for
company. 28 acre&amp; of land
with sole. Lots of road
frontage

near

the

OW NER TRA NSFE RREO , 3
bedroom . a ll electric home on
1 acre tot . Some appliances
inc lu ded . 949.2424.
N ~W

HOM~ .

J

bedt oom . I ',
bat hs 1-u lly carpeted vinyl
!&gt;1d1ng w1lh smg le r o t gmage .
l o rg(&gt; lot &lt;I ' l-lutlond On Ne w
l 1ma 1-/aod . S'J7 .000 . 'I A'J . 'J';,b'l .

l WO t XlWA m ce lo ts in Racine
w1t h 1'1" bO Hollypork troi le t .
Port1ally f ut l1i!.hed . l&amp; 11 4() &lt;C
ITi e r~i bl oc !~ bi.Jdding w1lh shed
lorge gcrrde n spa r e wtl h lru •l
!tee ~ . 444·'14:/H •

new

sawmf

bridge.
OLDER HOME - In the
country on good country

RE~oRRfD

one &amp; one -third acres. Just

with lots of carpeting and
aluminum siding . 2 lofs and

2 car garage . All this for
only 515,000.
Let your Investment grow
while you live in it. Think,
buy your home now.

G. Bruco T.. ford
Helen L. Tnlord
Sue P. Murphy
Asaoclates

Housing
Headquarters

on

ftfii}Nl fe}1J'

fireplace , n i ce kitchen,
pati o
and
barbecue ,

BELOW FAIR MARKET
VALUE al 525 ,000.00.
10 LOTS - In the country,
nice I floor plan home wllh
basement , barn , other
buildings. Fruit trees end
berr l e~·.
A
steal
at

517,700 .00. .
MINI FARM - Over 5
slorage build ing, good
fen ced pastu re . ONLY
$16,500 .
IN THE COUNTRY - Near
Pogevll le-Very nice home
In excellent cond ition , the
house must be moved- ·

56.000.00.
ALSo-15 nice acr .. of
ground to put house on . Call
lor details .
EXPERIENCE,
KNOWLEDGE &amp; HARD
WORK SELLS HOUSES .
WE NEED LISTINGS ,
CALL TODAY .
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
. Honk , Kathy &amp; L.. na
Cleland
·
I Ro~llor Auoclatoa)
f92-225f-992-2561
f92-61'1

~THAT SCR.MBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~ ®

~y Hen ri ArnoldandBoblee

Sunrise Semester 10 .

6:0Q-PTL Club 15; 6 · 15-For Yo u .. BI~ck Woman 10;

I KWONN I

News 8 ; Jetsons 10 ; 7 : 30-Schooties 10 .

Heroes 8; Match Game 10 .

9:3()-Brady Bunch 8; Fam ily Affair 10.
10 :0()-Card Shar ks 3,15 ; My Three Sons A; Edge of
Nighl6; All in The Famil y B,10; Dalng Game 13 .
10 :3()-Ho llywood Squares 3,A,15; Andy Grlffllh 6;
Pri ce is Right B,IO ; S20,000 Pyram id 13.
11 :O().....High Rollers 3,4,15; Happy Days 6.13 ,
11 :3()-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15; Fam il y · Feud 6, 13;

0

Love of Life 8,10 ; Sesame S t . ·20 ; Once Upon A

rx J

Classic 33 .
11 :55-CBS News 8; House Call 10.
12 :0Q---Newscenter 3 ; News 4,6, 10; Young &amp; the
Restless 8; America Alive 15; M idday Magazine 13.

12 :3()-Ryan 's Hope 6,13; Bob Bra un 4; Elec . Co. 10,33 :
Search for Tomorrow 8, 10 .

IODUXTEI
e
I (J
I

: DO-For Richer, For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,13;

~ BENTIC I

,~-

(]

~

~ . AI'Mr: A [

.

Young &amp; the Reslless 10; Not For Women Onl y 15.

WHAI HE 13LAMED
13AD LUCK ON.

~

,...,

White Repor ts 10 ; News 13.

7:00-Today 3.4.15 ; Good Morn ing Ameri ca 6,13; CBS
8:00-Capt . Kangaroo B.10; Sesame Sl . 33 ;
9 :DO-Merv Gr i ffin 3; Phil Donahue 4,13.15 ; Hogan' s

Unscramb le these tour Jumbles.
one lener to each square. to form
lour ordinary word~ .

220 E. Main SlrHI,

HOWERY. AND · MARTIN
Ex ·
co ve ting , septic
systems .
doler , backhoe , dump huck ,
l1mestone . gra vel , black top
povmg. HI. 143 . Phone 1 (614 )
b98 · 7331 .
HAlHROOMS AND
l&lt; itc he11 s
remode led . cera mic lile, plum ·
b ing . co r pentr~ . and general ,
main tenance . 13 year~ e• ·
per ience . 997.:.3~85 .

: Jo--Days of Our Lives 3,tl , 15. As The World Turn s

8,10.
2: DO--One Life to Live 6, 13 ;

II

Lil ias Yoga &amp; You 20 .

3:3()-MASH 8; Joker 's Wild 10; You Bet Your Li fe 20 .
4 ·(}(}-Mister Car t oon 3; Battle of the Planets tl; Mer v
Griffin 6; Porky Pig 8. Friends B: Sesame 51. 20.33 ;
Batman 10; Dinah 13.

XI I ] AT THE [ I I I XJ

~

3 BEDROOMS - Older
home, some remodeling,
beaullful view of the river,
must

see

to

appreciate.

Price $12,500.
II ACRES - More or I.. !, 4
bedrooms, modern bath,
large k itchen 8. dining
room,

fireplace,

several

oul buildings . Owner being
transferred .

Price

$35.000.00 .
CALLUSFORALLYOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.
804 w. Molin
Pomeroy
992-2291
Aller Hours
can "2-7m
CONTACT:
lois Pauley
Bra•ch Molnager

148 ACRES -

The

CALL THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

CENTRAL REALTY CO.
SPACIOUS BI-LEVEL
This may be your dream home . II hu a large kitchen
with lots of cablnels, stove . refrigerator and dishwasher . Beautiful dining room with sliding glau doors
leading out to large desk. Large living room and family
room . and to flnl!h this well -laid out home we have five
bedrooms. ullllly room and garage . Very low htellng
bill. Thars nat all , we have strawberrlu, raspberrl ..
and garden space. Red barn-like storage building.
Localed aboullen minutes north of Pomeroy jual off
Rt. 7. Call for more details and appointment . Asking

.--

BOWERS

REPAIR

Sweepers . too, ters . irons . o 11
smal l opplion(es . Law n mower .
ne x t to Stote Highway Garage
011 Route 7. Phone (b 14 ) 985·

6 ACRES- Nice 1'12 •tory home mootly carpeted wllh 3
or 4 bedrms ., living rm ., family rm., with fireplace,
baMment, fuel oil furnace, garage •nd ou!bolldlnga.
Some fencing, plenty of road fronlage and garden
space . City water and drilled well. Loc. cl011 to
hospital and school al laurel Cliff. Asking $42.!00.
TWO ACRES- A beaut i ful~ year old, 3 bedroom home
with large eat-In kitchen, 3 bedrooma, all nlc.ly
carpelod, 2 balha, lull basement with TV room . Many
more extras, low htat bill wllh nat. gas forcod air
furnace . All .thls and two ncle acr" of land In a good
location. Will go quick for $35,000.
40 Nr" of land In Sutton Twp . Nice building sliM,
small barn . Priced at only 521,500.
WANTED : We hove a qualified buyer for a few ocrea
of land wllh a good home with at least 3 bedrooms
located on good road.
.
_
515,000 - Good s bactroom house wllh 2 full baths.
Natural goa forcod air hoat. localod In Chesler.
Slo.tOO - 3 Bedroom mobllo homo on 1 acre land. Nal.
goa heat.

NEW - JUST OFF PRESS! JUMBLE BOOK 111 with 110puules Is avail·
able tor S1 .35 postpaid lrom Jumble, c/o tl'11s newspaper, P.O. Bo• 34,
NorwOOd, N.J. 07648. Include your name, address, zip cOde and make
checks payable to Newspaperbooks.

MW MUSTARD IS
DRIVING THE TRACTOR ...
AND ANNIE AND LISSA
ARE WITH HIM ···

A NEW TRACTOR ...
AND All SORTS OF

· Chester, Ohio

10·30-c
t ... tl

~~WI NG MACHINf Repoin . se r ·
vr&lt;e , oil makes, fjq2.228.ti . The
f a br ic
Shop ,
Pomer av .
Auth or ized Singer Sole!&gt; and
~e r vlc-:, - We__ s~o~~l1- S: •S!roOfS:.

:r:.:;:t:

n~• · ' · _,,..._-.

L..L _ _

.\l.l .r.Y OOP

~XC A VA TING dozer . loader a nd

backhoe wo rk : dump !rucks
ond lo -boys l or hi re . wil l haul
fill dirt , to soil , limestone ond
~rove!. Coil Bob or Roger ·Jef fers , day phone 992·7089, night
pho11e 992 -3525 or 992 · 5232 ,

----

--

_,_ -

.

sell to 120 ac res, whatever
you want with 8 vear old,
1,400 sq . A . ranch style
house . J bedroom, 1 tull
baths , central a ir and htat
pump, welt Insulated on
good road , city water . lruly
beautiful home . 2 barns, 2
ponds , 3 pastur es. all new
fence , timber , lOS ' new
mac:hinerv
shed
and
workshop , 25 acres In
meadow . For appointment
to see , call ow ner . 614 .949·

SAVE ON
CARPETING

Is 40ur
jeep dirtlj?

•4.ea

acts~

UHorseman

9 :QO-Quincy 3.4 , 15 ; Barney Miller 6 , 13 ; Hawa ii F lve -0
8, 10 ; Previn &amp; the Pittsburg h 33.

DOWN
1 Non-Jew
2 Begin
3Rock
formation
4 FoUow '
5 Interweave
&amp; Pronoun
7 Machismo
adherents
8 Enraged
9 Precept
10 Jovial

9:3()-Soap 6,13 : Islander 20 .
10 :0()-WE B 3,4,15; Family 6,13 ; Barnaby Jo nes 8.1 0;
15 Decay
19 Resounded
21 Just

over
25 Baffliilg
25 More
tranquil
27 Offer
29 Succor

30 Quiver
32 Assail
33 Duck
34 Twilled
fabric
38 Indonesian
island
39 Parched
41 Hideaway

WHEN

I)•Sc.Ov!fl 1\ Nf:W
!f~Nit,

I&lt;IND

you can COIIIIe In
what you•ro telling
- Gooll Mllctiona - Fully
atockod.

'

----____,

You ~1.191- NAM!

__...
In.,.

~

~~

&amp;.,,.1
=,_;~,

No'f" !RGJf

· ·

INDIVI ..._. •••

..,lltt!IIP ~

RUnAND
FURNITURE

aft
UIIOI'M.
,t/IA

Wednesday, Sept . 27

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

BRIDGE

~-+--+----~A · hasty

NOT TONIGHT1
PAW ... :&gt;HE'S DIN IN&amp;
WITH THAT NICE MAN
FROM THE OFFICE: ;
G,A,RYFAGIN.

• A 10 8 3

WEST
.8 742

¥ Q 10 9 B
• 6&gt;2
• QJ94
• 9B732
• &gt;4
SOUTH

.• Q

1.-:--+-+-

¥ AJ532

• K7

• A K Q 10 6
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer : South

:~ ~:.,nlc

Wes t

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
Is

A X V D L B A A X R
L 0 N G F E L L 0 W

One iell er simply stands for anolher. In this sample A is
used lor the three L's, X lor lhe lwo O's, clc. Si ngl e letters,
apo11trophes, the l ength and f ormation o f the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe r ent.

IN .WUQKCH

N K C

GAMNf'R!

DINNER?

MAKES A
'lED FOR

VNQU

East

1+
H
4 NT
7•
7 NT
Pass
Pass
Opening

Pass
Pass
Pass
Obi.
Db!.
Pass
lead :

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

South
1¥

4.

3+

5¥

Pass

Redbl .

+5

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag

CRYI"rOQUOTES

E K .

North

VNKMCK

Yetlerday'1 Cryptoqaote: IF YOU' RE NATURALLY KIND
YOU ATTRACT A LOT OF PEOPLE YOU DON'T LIKE.WIWAM FEATHER
© lWTS Kine Features Syndieatl. lne.

Good players know when
to double. Great players
know when not t o double .
The diagrammed h an d ,
played during a money r ubber bridge game, turned into
a nightmare for East-West.
The nightmare was caused
by East 's greed and it cost
him dearly .
East can defeat seven
hearts. He has no c hance

'~ A~"''\F'\ '

15 IN .• TOCK
Lergnt S.lec:tiiD In Tile Vellef

''IT DOES NOT Sl!I T
OUR PRESENT NEEDS "

'' HOUJEVE~. WE WOULD

liKE TO THANK 't'OU
FOR CONSIDERING US "

'' BUT WE'RE NOT
GOING TO ! ''

OL' SHERIFF TAIT
SHORE IS HANDY AT
SAWIN' AN' NAI LIN'

HE

SAW
SNUFFY
STEAL
MVO~

HEN·-

·-THEN HE

NAILED
TH' VARMINT

against

seven

notrump . The first double,
disastrous bul understanda ble, c atapulted Nort h South into an unbeatable
seven notrwnp. North had

bid seven hearts without

EAST
. 963

¥ 7

FX
N
UNYM
Xl
V C K.------...---.,...-----......, F K N Y C E
B.ECAUBE I LIKE
I STILL DON'T
HWHFCAYC
NAE
KNOW WHY YOU YOU GARY EVER.
AXF
UNYM
WANT TO HELP
SINCE. 1HAr NIGHT
YOU KISSED ME .. .
A CONFE::Ot&gt;ED
FNUCAF
XK
NLWUWFZ

FOR

!1-27-A

• J

cedony

DAILY

double is costly

¥ K64

TNAZ

HOME

Tiflanvs " IQ.
1&lt; :4()-SWAT 6,13: 1:5()-News 13.

• AKJIO&gt;

Rutlaftil .

WINNIE

Gunsmoke 8; ABC N ews 33 , Movi e " Breakfast at

what eve r

L..:..;:...;:.;.;,.____.;;,;;,;;;;,;;;~

COM INo

II ·O().....News 3, 4,6,8. 10,13,15; Dick Cavel l 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33 .
11:3()-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Slars ky &amp; Hutc h 6,13 ;

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag _ _ _

~------------------~~~----~~-~aw-

I~N'T

News 20; Mayor of Casterbridge 33.
IO : JQ-Over E asy 20 .

Yesterday's AnAwe r

NORTH

ed

-ro

A SOFA THAT

Upon A Classic 20 ,33; Wal to ns 10.

8:3()-What's Happening 6, 13; Please Sland By 8;
Islander 33 ; Evening At Pops 20.

suffix

Z3 Miss

31 Corrupt-

FHANK &amp; F:llNIF:

Ivy
and -

742-:1211

A; $100 .000 Name That Tune 10; Nashvi lle On ·: he
Road . l3 ; Dolly 15 ; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8:00-Project UFO 3.4,15 ; Mork &amp; Mindy 6.13; Once

44 A Fagin
trainee
45 Nwnerical

31 Kind of
club
32 ROU8e
oneself
as Large

Floor Cowering In Stock

11-. t"omero.,. . Large
lot.
Some
recent
remodeling , new ca rpet,
central heating, utility
room . full basement. 2
porches . Furnished
or
unfurnishtd . 992 ·7014 .

region
U Of the
stars
16 Hot time
in Paris
17 Shooting
match
18 Trumpet's
relative
20 Droc1ping
2% Greek
letter

an event

9' and 12' Vinyl

HOusE

Va lley Bluegrass 20 .
7: 3Q--H ollywood Squares 3; Waf tons 8 ; Dating Ga!"11e

court

·v:.;

cAt1742-2211
TALK TO
Woncltll or Herb Grate
or Gene Smith

6,13; Fami ly Feud 8; Gilligan ' s Is. 15; Hocking

Horne
Z4 Hotbed
28 Held

AaLowAa

61A-596-AI37 .

ACRE S ~LUS, building lOIS
_ I~_Ch~ ~~~~~_!~::!! 1. .

phone?

that ...and
carpool and
the wa1.1 she

,...,...-:---.....-:

Rubber Back Carpet

SY RACUSE . 7 r oom house
and bath with eKtra lot.
Iaroe ca rport , new root and
storm windows . 992·3717 .

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

Just because
the4 don't
answer the

So Slim's mother
works at a car
wash!
Whll
upset

r-,----~......,,

All carpal lnatallod wttll
paddln, at no chargo ,
Expert natallatlon .

2163 .

FOR SALE : Laroe ·l bedroom
home, bath, large kitchen ,
large living room, part 1
basem~nt ,
fuel oil h~at ,
· fully carpeted ;
mob ile
home rented. City water In
both . Small barn and stg.
build ing . W ill -tell together
or d ivide . Neer Jet . 160 and
Appalachian Highway . Call

-

DRIVE ALimE
&amp;.
SAVE A LOT

1 "Beau - "
6 Particle;
jot
10 Irish
partisan
11 Present
12 Require
13 Arabian

coastal

/ 42 ·23•8 .

COUNTRY ESTATE . Will

6 :Jo--NBC News 3, 4, 15 ; ABC News 13 ; C arol Burnett &amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7:00--Cross . Wits 3; PM Maga zi ne 4; Newlywed Game

by THOMAS JOSEPH

EXCAVATING , dozer . ba ckhoe
and di tcher . Chorle~ R. Hot ·
38&lt;5 .
ft e ld . Bock
Hoe
Ser vice ,
Rutl011d . Ohio . Phone 741·2008.
c HiMNtY FIRtS ore no lun 1 Ha ve
- - yours cleaned the du st leu w ay Will do roof ing , co nstruction ,
.
The
ChimneySweep
plu m bing and heating . No job
61.4 -313 -6057 .
too Iorge or too smoll Phon•
!!N.A OF ORO . Au ction eer . Com ·
ple te Service. Phone 949 · 241EI7
or 949·2000. Rodne. Ohio . Crill
Srodford .

20,33 ; Mary Ty ler Moore to ; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6:00-News 3,4,B, 10,13,15; ABC News 6; ; Zoom 20.

tf&amp;.uMwd

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

$55.000.

MIDDLEPORT
This well cared for newer home ha• 3 BR! , living room,
balh, moslly carpeted, kllchen lo equtppeq with
refrlg..-alor and stove, utility room, natural gas forced
air heal, outside storage bolldlng . Price 127.000.

JE8~ QUICK' LOOK I

Phone 985-3106
Jack Ginthtr 915-31116

_&lt;S ib. ol ~oil_ood . SJ .88 .

w~ 00 pointing, gutter . (eiting

5 :0(}-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Star Trek 4 ;
Bever ly H illb il lies 8; Mister Roger s' Nei ghborhood
20,33; Gomer Py le, USMC 10 ; E mergency O ne 13 ;
Petticoat Junction 15.
5 : 3D-Hogan's Heroes 6 ; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co .

llTTI.F: ORPII ,\l\ ,\ :&gt;/N IF:

ReSidentill 1nd (ommerci•l. Call for estim•te. 2C
Hour Service. Any d1y,
anytime.

TRADING Post . Pogevi l! e .
Groceries , dry goods , hard·
wore . feed . t ack shop . Special

B rady

Bunch 10.

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

R~ EV!:'S

AUTOM081lt INSURANn been
concellcd? l os t your operators
li cense? Phone q92 -2 143.

2 · 3G--Doctors 3,4, 15 ;

Gu iding Light B, IO .
3:0().....Ano1her World 3,4,15; General Hospital 6.1 3;

Now arrange the ci rcled letters to
form the surprrse answer. as sug ·
gested by the above canaan

4 :3Q--litt le Rascals 3.15 : Gilligan 's Is . .:1 , 8;

PUlliNS EXCAVATING . Comple te
~ervice . Phone 992.24/8 .

I:LWOOD

EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

a

street In Middleport .
Is In livable condltlonSiart lng at 113,500.
RANCH IN EXCHLENT
CONDITION - 2'12 acres, 2
car garage. wood born lng

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28,1978
5:45-Farm Report 13; 5:5()-PTL Club 13; 5:55-

6:5()-Good Morn ing, Wesl VIrgin ia 13; 6:55-Chuck

ELLIOTT
APPUANCE II

tile . panel ing , roof repair ,
plumb.ng ond concr ete work .
Free est imates . Coli 9'?2·7785
o"iok lor Wolloce Morr is .

road . 3 bedrooms, balh.
and several oulbull dlngs on
116,000.
.
30
ACRES
Near
Pom..-oy . Old renovated
home with drilled well , ond
on water and &gt; State
Highways. N ice view and
good buy.
.
NEW LISTING -Walk to
!he stores from lhl• 3
bedroom home wllh all city
utilities . Has large rooms

13.

(Answers tomorrow)

city

BUSINESS BUt'LDINGalso small residence with
bath , and all city utilities.
A cheap way to make a
start for only 113,000.
1 ROOMS- carpeted home
with 3 bedrooms. bath,
natural gas furnace, city

ond

Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.

11 : 5s-Gunsmoke B; Mov ie " Wa il Until D ark " 10.
12 : 40-SWAT 6,13 ; I :QO-Tomorrow 3 , .:1 ; l so-News

6 : 30-Doctors on Ca ll 4; N ews 6 ; Sunrise Semester
8; 6 : 45-:-Mornlng Report 3.

1

Call 992 - 7~13
For Fr" Eatlm~tea
9-21-lmo.

Yo" 13
11 : 2.5-NewsB,lO ; 11 : 30--Johnny Carson3, 4,15; Police
Woman 6, 13; ABC News 33.

WHAT THE-

&amp; downspouts.

PDmeroy,O.

Days of 1he Condor " 8, 10; Making Telev ision Dance
33 ; Mayor of Casterbrridge 20.
IO :OD-Vegas 6, 13; N ews 20 : Great Performan ces 33 ;
1n · "'" r"'\ , ,.:., • f" - r •r .. V r") ?n
11 :co-News 3,4,6,13,15; D ick Cavell 20 ; Lilias Yoga &amp;

SHARI&lt; THil:EAT5

4 to 5

utilities, centr!ll air and
heat , basement, .4 pOrches,
and storm windows.

Thi5 2-

storv home is located

51! !CCAUS!i HE:
KEEPS A TANIC OF
LIV&amp; SHARKS AT
Hlf; S!AS~OREJ;STATE!

Annstrong Carpeting

QUALITY

years old, good condition .

acres, remodeled and nice
1 floor plan home, barn,

White-Wall Co-Op

109 High St.

Your Headquarters For

· 8'1'0\'E CO.MPANY

gas, oil 8. coal have been found lo be plenllful . Near
Rut land . 60's.
LI KE NEW Hondogu ilarand
case , extra set of strings
and p1cks included . May t ag
Copper t one
Porta .pair
washer and drver . Very
good conc i rion , sell as set .
Call after 5 p .m . 992 2995 .

!Bob

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

r'·

'rita AI'I"AWM&gt;&gt;IIAN

mineral s go with it and it's loCated In an area where

'!I.J'lU

Y4'J 'JHJI

Aut' &amp; True~
Repaif
Also Transmission
Repair
Pho.lle 992-5682

acres tillable with some very good creek bottom hilltop land. The balance I! In pa!lure 8. wood!. The 6
room home Is good (doe• need some modernization \•
large all purpose barn 8. sevoral oulbolldlngs. The

l ~ U( K P A~ I~

Mubile Horn..s .for Sale

mile all Rt. 1 by-paso on
St. Rl. 124 toward Rulland,
0.

owner ' s age pre\t'ents her from continuing to operate
the farm and she desires an immediate sale. 50 to 60

( A t Oo hyd1oul•( do' "' Nc&lt;' d s
1oll o• ~ M odel I ~
f.lo ,d ~;:,oo
&lt;; ('\ I ~J(){)(J Wdl rlf'&gt;ltvPI h PE'
} J } ._l(l(,j j E'V('Iltllq'&gt;
A11 bag au odoo ry
o , 1£- &lt;oonql1• I ~ r"'f'fl o olt" 01•0
l rOifH' 'J \ pf'lt•O qr&gt;ar bo • lt on t
a ~ I·· ; u . I() lirl'&gt;&lt;.. doPo.,("l m o 101
po• r ~
,0. 11 h om J(,rt&gt;(J lnlt&gt;I!IO
t to nol M od•·l I H~U ~ &lt; (' no n q ~
! 4/ J09J

GARAGE.
'~'•

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Slrpl--&lt;&gt;11
Mill Street just behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-4 p.m.

hedroom home. all

IN ~ Y I"A C U~~ I bedroom hou'&gt;C
New
New ~ 10 1 m w111daw ~
olurn tnum bu old1119 'J p o r chc&gt;~
'141 J')l 4

1\

MINI-F ARM - Now you
can own a 5 acre plot In
Sutton Township for only
$7,500.
MIDDLEPORT
4
bed roomer , 1'1:~:
baths,
furnished kitchen, natural
gas. 2 car garage with

and Shade trees .

Bt lJHOOM l•o•ne home
M1ddiC'par t Co li f~ CrJ :J 4 ~ 7

TRA C TOR an d
30 " mower Good cond i t ion .
9t~ J . 7 A9 1 or q9 2 3716

A VO N YOUR f ir st job pay s
the bills . Se l l1 n g Avon buys
the fr ills Earn a sec o nd
i ncome an a have money to
s pare. Se l l Avon 1n your
free l ime
Set yo ur own
ho urs. . Be y our o w n boss .
Ca ll today , 742 235 4. Ann
Thoma s , Avon D i str i ct
Ma n ager

E.:pires
. Oct, 1 . lf78

lH~tl:

-------

The Photo
Place
Hoeflich)

BORl\ I.OSE 11

p 111

During

Call Us Today

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

J&amp;L

B:3().....1n The Beginning B.I O; 9:0()-Movle " Zvma
Beach" 3,4, 15; Charlie ' s Angels 6, 13; Movie " Three

5:00-Voyage to !he Bottom of jhe Sea 3; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hlllblllle5 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33 ; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Allerschool Special
13; Pelllcoal Junction 15 .
5:3()-News 6; Sanford 8. Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moor 10; Hogan' s Heroes l5 .
6 :QO-News 3,4,8;, 10,13,15; ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20 .
6:3()-NBC News M,IS; ABC News 13; Carol Burnett 8.
Frlen~s 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20 .
7:00-Cross -Wtts 3; PM Magazine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Sha Na Na 8; News 10; Gilligan' s Is . 15;
Coping With Kids 20; ·Big Green Magazi ne 33 .
7:»--0olly 3; 1 Dating Game 4; Match Game PM 6 ;
Price I• Righi B; The Judge 10; That's HOllywood

we 11re. cur,..ntly
appointments tor tenlor
poJ"tr•its. We use traclltion•l setting• •nd •Ito
feature
outdoor
por tr.aiture.

8-20-1 mo. (Pd.)

ROGER HYSEll.

Ni( e butl d mg

Price

ti (' W

r u n~

Ph . 991-1141

SENIORSm•kfRI ·

Special

b wooy
~ 1 ec l co h · (olll

WtiJ to~e trade ~

BUN WARMER . Hotpo i nt
deep fry , Hotpoint grill ,
p icn ic table , 14 h .p . electr ic:
motor , milk shake blender ,
30 " soda founta in co mplete ,
good c lar inet , old bottles ,
electr ic
floo r
butter ,
r es taurant dishes . See at
Shammy's,605W . Mai n St.,
Pomeroy , OH .45169.

Wl:: PI CK up jlJil k auto bOdtes buy

tenes

hl~d e

0.
3-15-llc ·

4-311-IIC

do1e1

p le t&lt;' ly 1C' w orl&lt;cd

Free Estil'nates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

Pomeroy,

2.00
OFF
alignment

--

fA~ MALl

TRAM
D210A
CB base
station , S450 , stack three
beams and 50 ft . of tower
plus othe r C B eq ui pme11t .
949 .2321

pa r ke! wotch e'&gt;
c los'&gt; rmgs
wedd.ng bo nch
d1omond~ Go ld o• ~ d v er Col i
!-lager Wo m !o ley '/ 4") '] J3 1

"'9

fled Del•( 10 u ~

Brakes
Muffler
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
Installation Service

Enough 6, 13 : Jeffersons 8, 10: Great Performances
33; James Michener's World 20 .

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER27,1978

on

Phone992-2181

iNlllo!NA liON Al ~ 00

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New or Repair
Gutlels and
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MOORE'S

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PEA HAULER ' S Country CB
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Mobile units Kriss XLSO S85.
Hall icra t!ers H CM 161 , S58.
Base 1 us ed tr am D20 1A .
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13; Wild Kingdom 15; MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,j3.
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DICKTI\ACY

scientifically exploring for
the best co ntract . He
checked for aces with Blackwood and that was all .
East's double brought him to

his

senses .

Why would East double? It
could only mean he had at
least one trump ·trick . North
bid seven notrump, the conLract he s hould have been in
a ll along . East's second double s te mmed from frustration and immaturity .

Conunon sense is very important in bridge, as it is
w1th everything els e . Doubling seven hearts could, at
most , gain 100 points. In-

stead it drove North to seven
notrump and cost East-West
the 2,930 points North-south
won on the redoubled grand
slam plus the 100 points they

surely would have scored for
defeating seven hearts
undoubled .
When opoonents wind up

in an

infenor

contract, it

is

silly to chase them out of it
with a double .
!NEWSPAPF.::R ENTERPRISE ASSN . l

(For a copy of JACOIJY MODERN, send S1 to: " Win at
Bridge , " care of th is newspaper, P.0 . Box 489, Radio City
Station , New York , N. Y. 10019.}

�•

YOU'RE

INVITED.

• •

Nationwide rail strike spreading over Ohio

Edison Hobstetter's

By JOHNT. KADY
Ualted Presalllternat!ooal
Anationwide rail strike spread even further Into Ohio today,
threatening the state's,. bQmper grain harvest, while
productlm has been curtailed at least one motor vehiCle plant
In thestate .Othersare expected to be closed by the weekend if
the walkout continues.
' 1be strike by railroad clerks spread to the Baltimore &amp;Ohio
iectlon of the Otesoie system early today when picket lines
were aet up in Colwnbus and Dayton. Supervisory per10nnel
lllllllled trains in the Dayton ares.
T&lt;m Joo111011, a spokesman for the Otessle System In
Cleveland, said the clerks had struck B&amp;o facilities throughut
the nation "after promising the Secretary of Labor the~· would
negotiate In good faith .

50th Aunndversary
I
I

"This is the Pearl Harbor of railroad strikes," Said Johnson.
Picket lines were established earlier in Cincinnati, Toledo,
Youngstown, Cldeveland and at the Otesapeake &amp;Ohio section
of the Chessie system in Colwnbus.
The strike began in July against the Norfolk &amp; Western
Railroad and spread to over 70 rail lines this week,
C. William Swank, executive vice presidentofthe Ohio Fann
Bureau Federation told UPI the work stoppage has created a
"totally intolerable" situation with Ohio grain farmers .
"They ar~ just coming into the biggest harvest we've ever
had," said SWank. "Now we can have a real problem with
backup. They won't be able to get what is coming off the fields
to the grain elevators.
"The fanners may not have any storage areas' and they will
have to let it stand in the field or put it on the ground where it
will deteorlate and they will lose a lot of the crop," said Swank.

•

••

September 28,

September 28,

1928

1978

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, September 28, 1918

e

at

en tine

Round -the-clock talks
going before deadline
UDited Press JternaUooal
Negotiators were holding
round-the-clock bargaining
sessions today to meet a noon
deadline Imposed bY the adminiBtration for settling the
nationwide rail strike or face
government Intervention .
As the two sides met , the
striking Brotherhood of Rail-·
way. Airline and Steamship
Clerks switched tactics broadening their walkout to
73 railroads.
' Labor Secretary Ray Marshall and special mediator
James Reynolds met with
bargainers for the clerks and
the Norfolk &amp; Western
Railway
seeking
an
agreement.
.The clerks claimed they
were not violating a series of

You can have your cake and eat it, too! At our
big rumiversary celebration, Thursday the 28th.
Come, toast Mr. Hobstetter on the occasion of his 50th
anniversary with the Pomeroy National Bank.
Be our guest Thursday, September 28th, Friday,
September29th . and Saturday, September 30th,
for cake and coffee.
Bring the whole family and be here when the
celebration begins! Favors for all.

temporary restraining orders
handed down by federal
judges after picketing began
against 43 railroads Tuesday.
Those · pickets
were
withdrawn, the unicm said,
but new picketing on a
separate issue - a mutual
aid pact with the N&amp;W during
the strike - had begun.
Rail users, both passengers
and shippers, were caught in
the middle, first believing
their troubles were over, then
discovering it was worse than
before.
Aspokesman for the clerks
cited action by Supreme
Court Justice Warren Burger
on Tuesday vacating an
earlier injunction against
striking the mutual aid
· railroads the clerks say

i.,.)..__r_h_e;_W_or_ld_To_d_a_y_
Rosalynn highlights rally

WIN A
8

roLUMBUS (UPJ) - Rosa lynn Carter, wife of the
president, will highlight a Democratic "Old Fashioned
Political Rally" in Cohunbus Oct. 6.
Mrs. Carter's scheduled appearance and speech was
announced Wedne!day by the Franklin County Democratic
Party and Citizens With Celeste, representing Lt . Gov.
Richard F. Celeste, the Democratic nominee for governor.
The '10 per-per!llln event is planned to raise money for
'statewide and Franklin County Democratic candidates. It will
be held at Veterans' Memorial Auditoriwn.

Edison Hobstetter

50°0 bond

Metzenhaurn opposed air tax

Register Thursday,
September 28th thru
. Saturday, September 30th.
Need not be present
to win.

·funnel $800,000 a day to N&amp;W
during the strike that began
July 10 by 4,500 employees
over a seniority issue.
The clerks also said they
filed a $350 million antitrust
suit against the Association of
American Railroads and four
carriers.
Marshall said the strike
had snarled two-thirds of the
nation 's
rail
tra ffic,
jeopardized the Midwest
grain harvest and forced
automakers to consider
large-scale layoffs.
Food supplies, he said,
" will soon begin to rot if the
strike is not setUed."
He said t he administration
was prepared to move possibly with a back-to-work
order or legislation - at noon

Milk prices going up 4 cents

serv ice

on

/ :;:::?

~~N····

FOLLOWING A TiiREE-year effort by the Silver
Bridge Plaza Merchants, traffic lights at he entrance a nd
exit to the Silver Bridge Shopping Plaza have recently
been installed by the Ohio Department of Transportation .
The Silver Bridge Plaza Merchants Association raised
$14,000 necessary for the installation of the traffic control

By AU.EN Al:fER
JERUSALEM (UP! ) '
Israe l overw he lmingly
approved the Camp David
accords today, paving the
way for the Jewish state's
first treaty with an Arab
nation in what President
Carter hailed as a " great step
forward 1' to peace.
I srael 's
120-mem ber
Knesset ended its longest
debate ever by voting, 64-19,
with 17 abstentions, to give up
20 settlements in the Sinai in

exchange for the beginning of
negotiations with Egypt - a
decision legislators called the
most momentous since Israel
was born in t948.
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin , who signed the
summit
accords
with
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat, said the "yes" vote
means peace ta lks with
Egy pt can begin as early as
next week. A treaty. Israel' s first with an Arab
nation - could be signed by
Christmas, possibly even .

Weather
Clear , cool tonight. Lows in
the mid 40s. Mostly sunny
Frida y, highs in low 70s.
Probability of precipitation
10 percent today, near zero
percent ton ight. Friday.

FOURSOME SI;ATED
A Scotch Foursome will be
held at 4 p.m. Sunday at the
Pomeroy Gol f Club. Those
attending a re to tak e a
covered dish. A bevera ge and

table se r vice will be
provided. The event is open to
members , green fee players
and guests.

before Thanksiving.
"Happy are we that we
reached such a night/ ' Begin
said in an emotional address
that capped the raucous 17hour debate - the session
lasted from Wednesday
morning until about 3:40a.m.
(9:40p.m. EDT Wednesda y).
"This is a historical turning
point of great importance ,"
Begin said.
Carter, who engineered the
twin accords in 13 days at
Camp David with Begin and
Sadat, received the news of
the vote in a scrawled note
pa ssed to him during a
;.··· ....·....•··:·.·: .· ... ··... ·..· .·;..·

SPECIAL HO URS
The Meigs County Board
of Elections will maiolaln
special hours this weekend
to accommodate residents
who wish to register to
vote. Regi stration Is
required for all persons
who wish to vote In the Nov .
7 and subSequent electi ons.
The office, located In the
Pomeroy Masonic Templ e
building, Mulberry Ave.,
will be open from 6 to 9
p.m. Friday and from 9
a.m. to 12 noon Saturday.
So far, ·9,36% residents are
registered.

political fundraising party .
He
an nounce d
to
overwhelmin g applause :
"We've made a great step
forward in the negotiations."
"That 's sure proof of the
tremendous co urage of
Prime Mini ster Begin and the
Israeli members of t he
Knesset,

who

now

ha ve

formed
a
possible
partnership for the rest of our
lives with their neighbors, the
Egyptians,
under
th e
leadership of Presi dent
Sadat," Carter said .
Sadat stayed up late to
await the results of the
morning vote at his swnmer
residence beside the Nile, 15
miles north of Cairo. He gave
up early today as the Knesset
speeches droned on, but an
official spokesman delivered
the Egyptian government 's
reactio n:
"The Knesset approval is a
victory for the Camp David
agreements and basically a
triumph for Preside nt
Sadat's ini tiativ e in visiting

~· ~

1()1-·. . . . . . . . .
•

J

u

breaks out.''

The vote a lso means
approval for deciding the fate
wit hin five years of 1.1
million Palestinians living on
the West Bank of the Jordan
and the Gaza Strip, also

State schoo l foundation
payments to Meigs County's
three local school districts for
September tota l $ 2 46 , 0~~
following deductio ns for
retirement of certified and
non-certified employes.
Amounts received include
Eastern, $56,723.25; Meig s
Local, $128,495.98, and
Southern, $60,835.77. A direct
aiiotment of the county board
of
education
totaled
$17,077.03.

Gnharn's crusade criticized ·

BAND PRAcrJCING - Elultern's high llchool band
has heen practicinfl hard the past week for Friday's

•

halftime llh&lt;iw of the Eagles-Federal Hocking game.
Eastern ..W host Kyger Creek Oct. 8 in lin important
SVAC cmteat.

..

occupied in the 1967 war .
'Dvring the debate, a bomb
made up of more than 12
pounds of explosives blew up
near three movie houses less
than two miles from the
Knesset building.
One person was slightly
injured. but many display
windows and car windshields
were broken, throwing layers
of broken glass on the street.

"g reat un certa'in ty" su r -

rounded the accords.
Hundreds of Israelis wiHJ
will lose their homes in the
Sinai settlements as a result
of the Knesset 's vote were
massed outside the Knesset
to protest the decision .
"The settlers are in my
heart ," Begin said. "But
when I hear that a peace
agreement is almost in hand,
I think of their sons, who
would fall in a war if a war

School fwtds
distributed

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The "406 Grw Getter," a nylon
otrlng edger and trimmer 10ld by Montg&lt;mery Ward, may be
lb()cklng ,
' .
' 'The electrlcallnllllblUon m some of the sarden tools may
have been damaged durinlllhlpping and could expoae the uaer
IQ 811 electric ohock," the Consumer Product Safety
Ccmmlulon warned Wedneadlly. No Injuries have been
reported, however.

m'OCKHOCM, Sweden (UPI) - American evanaelllt
Billy G1'11111m'a CI'UIIIcle ·to Scandinavia ts drawing heavy
erllldlm from Swedee and Nonresians who say he Is peddling
reJiglaa lib a uaed-car uletman. •
Grlhlm, who laid he .... not offended by the criticism,
IIIIo hu been pelted with fruit and dabrls durlnc two of his
public ......-.. Hla pnldling, belll!led to 21
bldlnavlan cltlll em a cable '*vtalon network, baa
trlqand crllldlm of the methods he uaa for proeelytizinc
rellglaa.
I·

communications team would
arrive in Egypt today to set
up a " hot line" with
Jerusalem for th e pea ce
talks.
At the United Na ti ons,
Britain s u p p u r t e d the
twin " frameworks for peace ··
-one for a treaty with Egypt
and the oth er for a
comprehenstve pact in the
Middle East. But France said

.·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:·:·:·:·:·:::·:::·:·:;:·:·:·:·:·

Trinuner may be shocking

the 'bank of the century--established 1872

deVice by assessing participating merchants. The area at,
and immediately to the north and south of the shopping
plaza had been labeled by the Ohio State Highway Patrol
as one of the highest accident sites in Gallia County .
Meanwhile, the traffic light in the village of Cheshire has
been taken down for repairs.

Jerusalem last November."
The spokesman said the
vote to abandon the
settlements was spurred by
Sadat . He said israel 's :;:::-:-:;:::·:·:-:·:::::::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-:;:;:·:;:·::::::::::::::::::::::::
"change of attitude in such a
EXTENDED FORECAST
short time is almost
Saturday
through
unprecedented in history."
Monday , a c han ce of
Th~ Egyptians announced
showers each day, with
Wed nesda y an Israeli
highs In the 70s and lows In
the 50s.

WASHINGTON (UP)) - The pace is picking up In
Congress as the targeted Oct. H adjournment date nears, but
sometimes it seems for every step forward, ll)e Senate is
falllnc two steps back.
On Wednellday, for example, the Senate p8S8ed a bill that
would provide '10.2 bWioo for publlc.works or ''pork barrel"
Jli'OJects, deapite President Carter's warning that he will veto
II. The Houae pasaed the measure earlier.

pomero
nationa
bank

Vol. 29. No. 116

two

additional routes as a result
of new picketing - the
National Limited between
New York and Indianapolis
an d the Sunset Limited
between New Orleans and
lns Angeles.

Congress pace picking up

•

Fifteen Cents

Israel approves peace accords

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. Howard Melze'lbaum, O.Ohio,
who opposes the airline tax bill passed by the U. S. House last
weelr:, calls It "an inexcusable handout" to the airline industry
and plans to vote against it when it comes to the Senate Door.
SQUAD RUNS
"At a time when we are suppooed to be trying to fight
The emergency unit or the
lnflalioo, how can we consider confiscating 1-1 billion from Middleport Fire Department
American consumers to subsidize a highly . profitable answered three calls Wedindustry," Melzenbaum said .
nesday .
At 12 : ~9 p.m., the squad
went to 157 Dock St. for
Charl es Knapp who wa s
WASHINGTON (UPI)-8en. John Glenn , D-Ohio, cast his taken to Veterans Memorial
ballot wtth the majority Wednesday in the ~7-42 vote by which Hospital where he was adthe Senate pallled the c&lt;mpromise natural-11as pricing bill.
mitted.
Sen. Howard Metzenbawn, also O.Ohio, was among 22
At 6:18p .m. the squad took
Democrats voting against the measure.
Paul Saunders of Middleport
fr om the Ellis Service Station
to · Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was adCLEVELAND (UPI)- For the secOnd lime In five weeks, mitted.
the retsU price of milk is expected to Increase four cents a
At 6:43 p.m., the squad
galloo, effective Monday,
went to Laurel St., Pomeroy
The previous price hike of four cents a gaUon took place for Janice Hakia who was
Aug: 21. The price increase is expected to affect the price of taken ·to Holzer Med ical
milk in surrounding states as weU as throughout Ohio.
Center.

Ohio senators split again

if an agreement was not
reached.
The clerks said renewed
striking began at 2:30 p.m.
local time Wednesday, and
there were reports of
immediate resumption of
picketing at the Seaboard
Coastline Railroad, Uni on
Pacifi c, Sante Fe, the
Burlington Northern and
Illinoi s
Central-Gulf
railroads where -picketin g
had ended earlier in the day.
Amtrak was forced to
curtail

"Here we have a perishable commodity. It's not like a car outlook is for tomorrow," said Jerry Beavers; a GM spokesassembly line that can be started back up.
man in Dayton. "We are down now to playing it closer to hour"This severely penalizes a group of people who have to take bY-Ilour than day-IJy-day ."
a risk on weather and everything else and when they get to the
"We are still cootinulng on a day-to-&lt;lay basis in the Clevepoint that they may get their money back this happens," said land area," said David Bodkin, a spokesman for GM In
Swank. ' 'That's the unfairness of it aU. They could lose their Cleveland. "We do expect a shortage of materials supplied by
crop for the year."
rail to affect General Motors Assembly and manufacturig
Ford Motor Co ., which employs about 35,000 persons at 10 operations and a continuation of the strike as it is this morning
Ohio plants, said production had been curtailed at its lnraln, could result in a shutdown of most of our assembly operations
Ohio, passenger car assembly line. Workers are on eight hour bY this weekend.
shifts instead of 10 hour shif'.s.
Nancy Uchty, a spokeswoman for the giant GM complex at
General Motors Cll'p., with 22 plants and about 100,000 work- lnrdstown, said both shirfts would run through today .
ers in Ohio, said the ·situation is rapidly becoming more
"We are waiting to see where we stand at noon before going
critical.
any further," she said. "Both plants are scheduled for Saturd"We are working two shifts at the Norwood assembly plant day production but at this point we don 't know about running
·
today and later today we will have to assess just what the Friday and Saturday or either."

DEER KILLED
A deer was killed in a
traffic accident at 7 :30 p.m.
Wednesday on US 33, one
mile south of SR 681.
The Gailia - Meigs Post
State Highway Patrol said
the animal ran into the path
of an car operated by Phil
Ohlinger, 21. Pomeroy. There
was minor damage to his
vehicle.

$79,000
grant
•

g~ven
Mei gs County has received
a grant totaling $79.000 for
updating county plat maps
acco rdi ng

to

an

an-

noun ceme nt by Naomi
Bri nker,
CETA
administrator.
Mr s. Brink er informed
Mei gs Co unty Commissioners
rega rding the grant Tuesday
night. She .also discussed
em ployment applications
with them .
Al so mee ting with the
board was county engineer,
Wesley Buehl who reviewed
the progress made on the
county hi ghway system.
Buehl stated that county
roads 31 and 46 had been
completed and that work was
presently bei ng done on
county roads 35 and.43. It was
also reported that e.tensive
work on t he s· raightening and
widening of county road 30, at

the Dan Smith property, is
nearing completion.
Mildred Jacobs, matron of
the County Infirmary, met to
di scuss the hiring of a new
employe to fill the vacancy
created by the death of the
late Mildred Circle.
Upon her recommendation,
Mrs. Ruth Dailey was employed
on
a
90-day
probationary basis.
A letter was read from the
county sanitarian outlining
several corrective measures
needed to be taken at the
county landfill .
Pat O' Brien, Pomeroy
attorney, was appointed to
the Jackson - Gallia - Meigs
648 Board of Mental Health
and Mental Retardation to
replace William Young who
resigned .
Attending were Henry
Weiis, Richard Jones and Jim
Roush, commissioners and
Mary Hobstetter, clerk.

�,2 _The Daily Sentinel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Wednesday , Sept. 27, 1978

tersection of Nye Ave., and
Main St .. a car driven by
Glenn Cole, 26, Columbus.
pulled from a parking lui
West Main St., when a ca r Pauline Ulddle, Haelnc Lane
dnven by Harry Roush, was cited fu r failure tu yield acruss from the buokmubile
headquarters and st1·uck an
Minersvi ll e, stopped at the the right of wny .
east
buund car driven b)'
Gruver Klein . a passenger
Sunoco Station . It was struck
Cheryl
Ann Hysell. 22.
by a driverless car owned by in the Lane car, was taken to
Middleport.
There w~re
Dallas Va rian. 51. Mason .. Veterans Memorial Hospital medium damages and Co le
The Varian car. left running by the Pomeroy emergency
wa s cited to court on a charge
and unatten ded. at th e squad fur treatme~t of rninur uf (ailing to yield the right of
Ashland Station across from injuries. There were medium ·way .
the Sunocu Station. jumped damages to both cars.
AI 1· 15 p .rn at th&lt;' inintu gear and moved across
Main St. hilling the Roush
A'rfEN'flON
car. There were medium
U you qualify and are interested - The Middleport
damages.
Fire Dept. may have openings in the near future for
At 12 :20 p.m. Tuesday, on
persons to serve on the Fire Dept. and-or Emergency
Wt!st Main St.. a l'ar driven
Rescue Squ&amp;d. If you are at least' 18 years of age, a
by Elizabeth Lane. Pomeroy,
resident of the Village of Middleport, holder of a valid
att empted a left turn into a
operalilr 's license , with ny physical handicaps that would
Dairy Shop and st ru ck a
hinder a normal and sale performance of expected duties :
west bound car driven bv
Fill out the NO OBLIGATION questionnaire and mail to
the Middleport Fire Dept., Race St., Middleport, or give to
any active Middleport Fireman .

Jne person injured in accidents ·
Pomeroy
police
in·
vestigated three accidents
Tuesday and this morning.
At 6:35 a.m. today "n
unusual accident t.IC&lt;'urred on

Incumbent
1Continued from page I I
continue tu do su.

"The pre\'ious philosophy
of spec ulation was replaced
by a policy of so und investment proced ure s whi ch
earned for the State t•f Otuo
more Qloney thiln has been
ea rned by any prev ious
administration of this offi ce
- near ly $463 million to
date ."

ANNUAL

Date - - - - -

CHILDREN'S

Name._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Stride Rite
SHOE SALE

Age--Sex - -

A "bike rodeo" will be held SUnday, Oct. 1 at the Meigs
County ~·airgroWJds sponsored by Boy Power, Inc.'
The event is for youngsters age 3 through 18. Youngsters
interested are to complete the registration form below and
submit itlil the judge at noon on Sunday . The events will take
place a! I p.m. Parents' permission is required for motor-x
events. Registration forms will also be available at the game.
All forms must be signed by parent or legal guardian. ·

Name __~~~----~~-----------------first
las!

Address._ _ _ _ _ _-:--- Married- Single -

Mol or -x _________

Bike race 20 inc h _____

---

Big wheel motor -)(

! Area Deaths !

Six•••

MEET THURSDAY
Prece pt or Beta Beta
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
will meet Thursd~y at 7: 45
p.rn . at the Meigs Inn . A
report on Boys' State will be

IN I H E
COMMON PLEAS C OU~T ,
PROBATE DIV IS ION

MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
IN
THE
MATTER
SETTLEMENT
OF

COUNTS ,

MEETING SET
Pomeroy Ga rden Club will
meet Munda y, Oct. 2, at 7: 30
p.m. at th e home of Marga ret

fiducia r ies hav e been f i le d in
the Probat e Cou rt , Me i gs
County, Oh io , tor approva l
and se 111cment ·
C AS E NO
20478 Fou rt h
A.n nu al A ccoun t of Mar th a
Chil d s, Trustee und er
t he
Las t W ill ancl Testament ol

Georg eS . Hobstetter Jr.
Bro~er

Vour Full Time
Real Estate Broker

Office 992-6333
Middleport

.

Charm i ng

l ocated on
Ave n ue . 3
bedrooms, l 1 '2 baths, new
gas furna ce and new roof .

ol d er h ome
South
3rd

Sells ' "' Sl5.000.oo.
MIDOLEPORT -

Owne'

has reduced pr ice of this
nice 3 bed room home. If
has a detached garage and
is siTuated on one.fh ird of
an acre. On ly $26 ,000.00 .
We ha ... e other listings to

$59

..

t o t low ing

name d

Ber tie N wan s , Decea sed

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

'

PROBATE

given .

Blaettnar.

.'

OF
AC ·

C OURT , MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
Accounts and vouc h ers of
th e

choice

choo se from . Call us today
for mor e information on
buying and selli ng your
hom e.
Cheryl Lemley, Assoc .
Home Phone 74 2·1003

CAS E NO 22313 F i rs t and
F i na I Ac co unt of Donal d A .
Cal d e r one, Tru stee under
Ite m I t o t t h e Last W ill an d
Tes tament o t Gfo r ge F
Ritt en h ouse . De ceased .
CAS E N O . 222 64 Final ancl
Accou nt
of
O is tr i b u t iiJe
Lillia n 8 K1ng . Executrix ot
the Esta t e ot B essie E .
Musser , Deceased .
CAS E N O
20 199 E ight h
Annu a l Account o t Pau l D
Stu rg eon ,
.Gu arct ia n
of
Ka thlee n K Sturgeon . . John
0
Sturge on,
Paul
W.
Dw i ght
E
St u r geon ,
St urgeon. an d Mar y L .
Sturgeon . M ino rs .
CAS E N O 22 136 Final and
D IS tr ibut i ve A cc ount of John
tn ~ Es tate o f V io la M . J et
ter s. Deceased .
U nless except ion s ar e f il ed
therelo , sa id accounts will be
lor hearing before said Cou n
on Th e 27fh da y ot Oc tober ,
1978 , at wh ich t ime sa id
acco unts w i tt be consi dered
and con tinued fr om aav to
day unt il f ina ll y disposed ot .
A ny person inter es ted may
til e wr itten e•cep t ions to sa id
a cco unts or 10 maile r s
perta 1ni ng to til e e.:ecu lion of
llle trust , not tess than li11e
days pr ior l o Th e da te se t f or
nea r i ng

Hilton Wolfe, Assoc .
Home· Phone 949 ·1589
GeorgeS . Hobstetter , Jr .,
Broker
Hom e Phone 991-5739

~
~

UJ

co

Slop in lhe Ladies
Ready To Wear
Department, 2nd
floor, and •ee all
lhe
•lyle•
wom e n's winter
coats .

You'll

like

our ulection . Use
our convenient laya -way plan.

TO

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
COME ON IN FOLkS

Glamour ...
by the handfuli

SEE THE NEW

1979 CHEVROLETS
ON DISPLAY NOW

"1979"

NEW!"

• Brill iant head lig ht

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60" CHALLIS
60" KNITS

MODEL 1424

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SAVE •45.90

Students Received

10% OFF

INGELS
FURNITURE

Monte Carlo Sport Coupe

"1979"
Caprice Classic 4-Door Sedan
Any one ot th ese cho1ce
co lo red 1ewe1s coUld be
tust th e one shes wanted
lo r so long 1 See ou r won·
deri ul
select1on - com·
plete for holrday g1v1ng
A H andcarved shell

Cameo
8 Lustrous Jade
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REGISTER: DOOR PRIZES
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EVERYONE WELCOME
SEE CHEVROLn FOR '79

POMEROY ·MOTOR CO.
Pomeroy, 0.
992·2126

Second St.

Pomeroy, 0.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON (UPI) The United States trade
deficit, a major reason for the
sleep slide of the dollar
abroad , narrowed to $1.62
billion In August as exports
soa red lo a new record.
August 's bri ght trade
performance was tbe second
be3t of 1978 and was
announced by the Commerce
Department one day after
President Carter unveiled a
new program to boost the sale

of American-made products
in foreign countries. Carter is
hopeful th at in creased
exports will help reduce the
troublesome deficit.
The August deficit was
significa ntly belo w July's
$2.99 billioo red ink liltal, and
was the second lowest of the
year, topped only by June' s
$1.60 billion.
Despite the improvement ,
the deficit for the first eight
months of the year now

Prosecutor's office objects
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Officials in the Franklin County
Prosecutors' Office Tuesday strongly objected Ill conditions
placed by the state Controlling Board on use of the Ohio
Highway P&amp;trol in the prosecutors' investigation o( the state
audllilr's office.
The "conditions" were stipulated Ill remove politics from
the grand jury investigation, said board president Robert
Howarth.

Another critical levy loses
Another critical tax levy proposal has gone down Ill defeat
in an Ohio school district - this time in Elyria.
Voters in Elyria rejected a 6 . ~ levy Tuesday by a
narrow margin - 4,679 Ill 4,~ - with about 31 percent of
registered voters casting ballots. Assistant · School
Superintendent Thomas Showalter immediately predicted that
the financially strapped school system would be forced to close
by about Dec. I.

Rhodes onler evaluation
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - A r...,valualion of the former
Nelsonville Children's Psychiatric Hospital lor possible use as
a state facility was ordered Tuesday by Gov. James A. Rhodes
at the request of local officials who cited the need for more
employment.
"We had been hopeful that this facility would be sold Ill a
private owner who woultl provide badly needed jobs in the
NeJsonville area," Rhodes said. HHowever, those negotiations
have fallen through and the . fact remains that this is an
excellent laciUty which can serve the state in the future."

industry pointed out that
produ ct ion could halt by
week's end if shipments do
not resume.
Genera l Motors Corp. and
Ford Motor Co. officials said
they already had t'llt back
operations and laid off
workers a t some faciUties,
where parts shi pment.s had
not arrived .
AGM spokesman sa id most
of the firm's plants could be
shut down by the weekend.
And right now, the AAR
spokesman said , 70 percent of
the grain movement in the
country has "stop ped."
Virtua lly all movement of
industria l produc ts ~ 70
percent of coal production ground to a hail

Chicago appeared to the
hardest hit city with te ns of
thousand s of comm ute rs
forced to find other means of
tran s porta ti on .
Mayor
Michael Bilandic pla ced
police on emergency standby
to help move traffic . One
commuter
line,
the
Milwaukee Road,
had
reswned normal operations
into Chicago, however.
As for court action , federal
judges across the country
granted railroad requests for
new temporary restraining
orders to get the clerks back
to work. But the carriers
" have reported difficulties in
serving tho:;e notices on un ion
chairmen in their areas ." the
MR di sclosed.

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1978

Open Ennlngs till p.m.

sta nds at $20.98 billion
compared Ill $16.02 billion ·
during the same period in
1977.
Unless s ub s tantial
improvement is made during
the remainder of the year , the
1978 deficit will lM! in the
biggest in history.
The department said
imports last month liltaled
$14.09 billion, a decline of 5
percent, while exports
climbed by 6 percent to $1 2.47
.....:_.- , a new record.

Almost every category of
imported goods dropped last
month wi th one nota ble
exception - oil.
· Oil imports rose 3 percent
Ill $3.6 billion. One of Carter's
lilp economic goals is Ill
redu ce U.S . relia nce on
foreign oil.
Such key imported goods as
stee l, cars, food and radio
and telev ision sets all
declined in August.
the strofg elport perfor-

Head teacher. principals at
the Chester, Riverv iew a nd
Tuppers Plains elementary
sc hools were given increases
lor thei r additional duties
lthe fi rst given in three
years ) when the Eastern
Loca l School District Boa rd
of Education met Tuesday
ni ght.
The in creases changed the
extra pay of the three to
$1.500 a nnu a lly fr om t he
present $900.
The boa rd received the
resignation of Cathy Osborne
as secretary at the Chester
elementary sc hoo l and a
letter was read from Barbara
Harmum, secreta ry to the

superintendent asking that
she be given the Chester
posi tion.
Action is expected on that
before the end of the month
and the secretarial post in the
Superintend e nt 's offi ce is
open. Applications are being
received by Supt. Clark Lees
at the h1gh school.
The board discussed the
proper methods of meeting
ex pen ses of the band for trips
to aw"y games and other
activities and it was agreed to
submit a statement to t he

Ohio
Department
of
Education that Eastern will
coo pera te with · Ga llia ,
Jackson, Vinton and Meigs
schools in programming for
the handica pped.
It was agreed to pay $5.50 a
day in transportation costs
fur one student to the Shade
elementa ry school with part
of the costs to be reimbursed
by th e stale.
·
It was also agreed to enter
into an arrangement for ad ult
ba sic education to be
provided again at Eastern
High School with Gary Reed
as instruct or. The Scioto
Valley School District will be
the fisca l age nt for the
prugram . There is nu cust fur
the ad ult educat ion program
to be given in the evenings
and ad ults interested are to
contact Reed at the high
schoo l.
A letter fr om Hele n
Crumley , consul tant uf t he
State
Department
of
Education , Di vision or Food
Services, was read making
recommendations on im proving the financial conditions of cafeter ias in the
district. The boa rd "PPrtii'Cd

In Shreveport, La ., 17 N&amp;W f.inandally during their
strikers were arrested when strike , which has been going
they refused to disperse after ·on since July 10.
a federa l judge issued a
The picketing - ini tially
restraining · order against limited to key terminals,
picketing at a railroad yard. cros.&lt;.;i ngs tmd interchanges
Similar pr ob l ems where N&amp;W ex changes
permitted the pi cketing to freight cars with 43 other
continue , and a spokesman carriers - was allowed by
for the clerks sa id union Bur~er's move to expand to
leaders and their attorneys 73 carriers the un·ian claims·
were "ca refully evaluating" are fu!Ulcling $800 ,000 a day
the new restraining orders . to N&amp;W under a mutual
On Tuesday, several hours stnk e aid paet.
after the expanded strike wa s
In
Washin gton,
10
under way , Chief Jusllce congressmen . led by Rep .
Warren Burger gave the Paul Findle y. H-Dl. . signed a
clerks further leeway, lifting letter
ur g ing
the
an earlier injunction that had admtnistration to ha lt the
prevented pit ketin g against strike f(J r GO da ys to a llow £or
other railroads that helped mov&lt;.'Illent of the fall harvest.

..

. .r -'·';

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

mance was p"ced by a $104 res umed . "~
Carter has prom ised other
million increase in airplane
sales a nd a 40 percent jump in · countries to reduce the huge
the shipments of soybeans, defkit as a m ea ns to
sU!blizing the value of the
the department said .
' Until July, the government dollar overseas .
When the trade deficit is
had believed it was making
strong progress in reducing high , more dollars are sent
the nation 's trade deficit. overseas, t hu s de pressing
Some administra tion officials their va lue. An e xcess
said they were "shocked'' by amount of dollars a broad also
makes
it eas ier
for
the size of July's deficit .
But lhe rebound in August speculators Ill drive down the
a ppare ntl y ind icated the dollar 's value.
do wnward trend may ha ve

au.

a n amended appropriations
document of $1,131,554 to
a bsorb additional foundation
funds and voted to pay one·
ha lf the cost up to $150 on a
set of encyclopaedias for
Tuppers Plains.
It was agr eed to subscribe
to the se rvi ces of the
Nelsonv ille-York District in a
program to ide ntify the
ha ndicapped. Cost to the
dist rict will be a bout $137.
Supt. Lees submitted a new
policy on st ud ent activity
accounts to be studied by the
board.
ll was an noun ced that
st udent s of th e Chester ,
Tuppers Plains and River·
view schoo ls will take part in
a dental healt h prog ra m of
the Ohi o Depa rtment of
Health in February.
Supt. Cia rk Lees listed
some 20 students who will be
ready for early mid-year
graduations and payment of
10 cents a mile for three
teachers who must travel be·
tween schools of the district
was approved. A letter from
Dr. Michael Kabler on the
dist rict's learning disabilities
program wa s rea d in

\

\

reference tu housing fur the
new program .
A pay ment of $86.17 for
extra hours for cafeteria
workers earlier this sc hool
year was a pproved and the
sc hedule has now bee n
changed so that extra hours
are not needed.
The boar d ap proved
payment of 16 an hour to
Marty Ba um for tuto(lng.
Approva l w as

g ive n

fo r

faculty mem ber. James Hoff.
to attend a meetin f! on grants
in Co lumbu s in October.
The board rece ived policy
st ate ments on vacations and
early graduation procedures
from Supt. Lees for st udy.
Avis J ackson was named
cheerleader advisor and a
drill press was pu rchased for
the ind ustria l a rt s depart·
ment for $359.
Attending the meetmg were
Su pt. Lees. Clerk Eloise
Boston, board membe rs Doug
Bissell , Ja mes Caldw ell ,
Dary l Well. Dorot hy Ca la way
and Dorsel Larkins, Prin·
cipal James Page. and head
teachers, Tom Gumpf, Mike
Will and Gr"ce Weber.

lncunnbenttreasurer
campaigns in Ponneroy

Ohio 's Demo cratic in· Pomeroy Tuesda y afternoon
cumbe nt,
Mrs.
Ger· as a part of her campaign for
trud e Donahey , was in re-e lection. Mr s. Donahey
sa id , " We are c urr ently
hand ling more than twi ce the
workload of eight yea rs ago
wit h virtually th e sa me
number of full time em·
ployes . We hav e made
prudent use of temporary
help at times of peak tax
collection periods at a suir
stantia l savings over the
option of hiring full time,
permanent employes. And we
have returned to the state's
general revenue fund more
than $1 million from our tight
operating bud gets . I a m
proud of my reputation of
being tight-fisted with the
taxpayers' money."
"We live in an era of keen
compe titi on between the
states of our nation · for new
TROPHIESAWARDED - LaStweekendwasa busy one for the Meigs Marauder Band.
and expanded industry as a
/lllllt reeeiYinc alfllncllnc ovation at the Mel&amp;s-Belpre football game, the Meigs musicians
source of employment and
heldecl north to ccmpete with aome of the top bandit In Ohio at West Jefferson . The
tax growth without tax in·
Mlntuler Bud ccmpeted In the CIIU B. C&lt;llllpellllon and brought back five trophies
creases. While I am most
lncludlnc lbe belt Oag corp1 d all clauu, the best rlfie corp1 d all three classes, first place
supportive of these efforts, I
In
B. 1 finalllt trophy and aauperlor ralinl trophy. The Melga Band was ooe of six to
am fully aware that our
be uUd to perform for the Brand championlhip title. Following the West Jefferson
legislative a nd executive
CIJIIIIIIIIIIGD, lilt Mlnadln headed into the Columbul 111'81 and performed their show
bran ches IJ f government·
before appioalmalltly e,aoo people at the Hilliard Hilh School Band Festival. No awards
should lM! the prime movers
wert linn, but~~eb bind received a partlclpatlonlrophy, Tbe Marauders next coo test is at
ln this area .. If we CaiUlut
Weatlud Hilh School in Columbul. Shown above are the trophies awarded Meigs High
suc ceed in t hese areas
School'• Marauder Band OYer the past weekend at Welt Jelferaon and Hilliard.
~
~

'

•

" The vast majority of
freight is LM!ing held up," a
spokesman for the American
Association of Railroads said
early today. "Within two
weeks, if the strike continues
on this sc ale,' ' he said,
"economic losses to the
nation would r.opresent 5.8
percent of the Gross National
Product '' - a multi-billion
dollar impact.
The AAR said a two-week
strike of this size would
doubl e .unemployment boosting it as high as 12 Ill 14
per ce nt. About ·350,000
railroad workers are direcUy
affe cted by the walkout, but
the ripple effect would
prompt tens of thousands of
layoffs. The automo bile

•
iJ.~.._r_he_w_o_rl_d_To_d_a_y_ ·Head teachers get mcrease

JACKSONVIlLE, Fla. UPI) - When none of the boys at
the West Jacksonville Sixth Grade Center would admit writing
an obscene word on the lavalilry wall, school PrinCipal Willie
Young lined up 71 of them and gave each three licks with a
wooden paddle.
The only male student who was spared Young's paddle
was the boy who reported the obscenity to him. Because of the
incident, Duval County School Superintendent Herb Sang said
Tueaday, Young was removed as principal at the school and
reaosigned to the school system's evaluation division.

Camaro Berlinella Coupe

EUREKA
UPRIGHT

NO. 115

Spankings cause reassigrunent

'17 . lie

60" WASHABLE
SUEDE
45" CORDUROY
60" GABARDINE

Thursday.
Much of the Northeast
includin~ the Boston-New
York-Washington corridorwas spared because those
lines are owned by Amtrak or
Co nrail , the government
opera ted pa ssenge r and
freight carriers.
Elsewhere, Amtrak sa id
the situation remains
virtua lly un change d fr om
Tuesday.
Where trains were moving
- and they were moving
almost normally on the West
coast
supervisory
personnel were runnin g
them. The Norfolk &amp; Western
rWls trains as far west as
Kansas City, Mo.

''

Trade deficit reason for decline

You're Invited

EACH

.-106--.N;.;
. Z;;,;,N;.D;.;AV.;,;E·----~~~EPORT, 0.

VOL. XXIX

Manning 0 Webs ter
JU D GE
Common Pleas cour t ,
Probate Div ision,
Meig~ County , Ohio
(9 )

• Self-stonng tools 1n
li ft· Ofl tray
• Steel cons truct10n with
fu ll cle.an 1n g power .
• 9 pc . t'ool set fo r lu l l
f loo r to ce•ltn g cleaning .

*119

~

Two defendants were fined
and four others forfeited
bonds in the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Clarence Andrews
Tuesday night.
Fined $2oo and '" Costs each
on destruction of property
charges were Roger K.
McDaniel, Pomeroy, and
Terry · Walk er, Rutland .
Forfeiting bonds were Ja nice
Reitmire, Letart. W. Va.,
$200, posted on petty theft

Je fl e rs , Admi n ist rator of

A

' Bergen
By Drew Von
involve job protection.
International
Labor SecreU!ry Ray MarStriking rail clerks shall ca lled a
news
ignoring back-to-work orders conference for mid-morning
- held the country's trains at for what he ca lled a "major
a standstill again today, announcement" on the
imperiling the nation's grain administration's efforts Ill
harvest, raising the spectre reslilre service.
of widespread industria l
Marshall met throughout
layoffs and opening the Tuesday with labor and railprospect of government road officials including
intervention .
clerks' president Fred Kroll,
At dawn lilday in the East, officials of the National
the situat.ion remained Railway Labor Conference,
virtually the same as and the United Trans·
Tuesday's first day of the portation Union .
expa nded the 2-month-old
Industry sources said they
strike by the Brotherhood of expected Marshall Iii unveil a
Railway, · Airline
and new plan to get BRAC and the
Steamship Clerks against the N&amp;W back Ill the bargaining
Norfolk &amp; Western Railway ·U.ble. Formal talks broke off
Co. The issues in that dispute
Unl~ Press

en tine

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

EUREKA CANISTER

90

giving false. statements to
police office rs; Sandra
Tyree, 20, Pomeroy, $25 and
costs , no operator's license ;
Florence A. Bea rhs , · 31,
Middleport, $5 and costs,
improper backing; George A.
McDa ni el, 51. Middleport,
$100 and cost s, disorderly
manner a nd Lonnie K.
Taylor, 20, Middleport, $10
and costs, unsafe vehicl e.
Forfeiting bonds in the
court were Sandra L. Carol,
21 , Westla nd , Mich ., $33,
posted on a speeding charge;
Melodie E. Black, · 24, Mid·
dleport, $30, speeding; Ar· ·
nold M. Grate, 61, Rutland,
$30, speeding; Crystal Lee,
18, Pomeroy, $27, speeding,
and Ti m R. Hood, 18,
Pomeroy , $27, speeding.

Or·d ers ignored, trains at standstill

cc

(Continued from page 11
east on 14t , turn ed left
striking the St ewart a uto.
PLAID PLUS; Giani muted plaid I halos so so h 10 1ouch.
Office rs report sli ght charges, Debbie Hill, Racine,
in a blend o f wool and nylon Fun to we~r anytime sty le that
dama~e to both vehicles.
says. ··rm New". from the Bett y Rose• co llec ti on of co ntem·
$30, spee din g; Brenda
Alha was cited on cha rges Kennedy , Rutland, $30,
porary looks for Fall .'78 . Vic una . Wild Ric;s:, 8 to "16
of improper turning.
speedin g a nd Dea n Hill ,
OfHcer s investigated a twu- Racine , $30, running a stop
vehicle mishap on SR 7, at the sign.
junction of SR 248, in Meigs
County at 10 a.m.
According to the patrol,
autos operated by Thomas
Mankin , 35, Pomeroy , and
William
Ru ssell ,
31,
Pomer oy, incurre d slight
damage during the accident .
No citation wa s issued.
Officers report that at 10:30
a .m., a n auto operated by
Andrew Villa rs, 62, Waterloo.
traveling so uth on TR 26,
swerved to avoid an on·
coming log truck, went off the
right side uf the road and
overturned in a small creek.
"YOUR CHEVY DEALER "
Vill a rs was uninjured .
There was moderate damage
lo the vehicle.

95

• Excl usive 6-way
Dial -A-Na p rug
he ight adjustment
• Power-driven
, 2·inch beater
bar brush rol l

0

Wh eely con tes t,________

Nine persons were fined
and fiv e others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
dleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Tuesday night.
Signature1------~--~
Fined were Benjamin G.
Blackburn , 32, Pleasantville,
-----------~-------------- $225 and costs a nd three days
in jail, driving while in·
toxicated ; Parlin E . Jewell,
I
I 22, West Columbia , $225 and
' Kenneth , Hockingport; three costs a nd three days in jail.
LUCY M . SCHULTZ
Mrs. Lucy M. Schult z. 80. brothers, Harvey, Walter a nd driving whil e int oxicated,
Route I. Reedsville, died Clifford Roc khold , a ll uf and $50 a nd costs on charges
II
grand - of leaving the scene of an
Munda y at St. J ose ph Reedsville ;
Hos pita l. Parkersb ur g, children;
II
great· "ccid e nt ; Jim Jones, 21,
following an extended illness. grandchildren and one great - Middleport, $25 and costs,
Mrs. Schult z was born in gr eat -gra nd son. She was disorderly manner, and 125
Me~gs Co unt y, a daughter of preceded in death by her and costs, issuing menacing
the late Ma rce ll us and husband, ~· l oyd, in 1974, a threats; Robert L. Cummins,
Martina Ba rber Rockhold. son, a daughter and two 25.· Mtddleport , $50 and c0sts.
permit tin g an unlicensed
She was a member uf the sisters.
driver
to operate a motur
F unera l serv1ces will he
Eden Un ited Brethren
vehicle,
a nd $100 and costs.
Church a nd was a lifelong held at II a.m. Thursday at
resident of the Reedsville the White Funeral Home in
Coo lville with the Rev . Tim
area .
She is survived by twu sons, Snyder ufficia ling. Burial will
Everett. Tuppers Plains, and be in Ede n Ce metery.
Friends may ca ll at the
fune ral home any time.

Your

C/)

Bike race over 20 inch,_ __

List previous training in either field :. ____________

ELBERFELDS

LIJ

Ba la nci ng beam s _ __

Mayor's courtc

citizens' voluntary advocacy
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 15 ·
November 15.

.6'

E vent ~check each event you wish to en .
ter)

Interested in : Fire Dept. ( 1Rescue Squad ( ) Both (

AT
"'-..:
9:30 A.M.

~·

Age~---------------------------

Barre l race

llruce McKelvey of Port·
land was named Mental
Health BeHringer chair·
person for the October 15 ·
November 15 campaign in
Portland announced F .
Harriso~ Green, president of
the
Mental
Health
Association of Ohio.
" The Mental Health
Association is the lar~est

o..---------......

REGI STRAT ION FORM

Bi g whee l _ _ __

Place of Employment.______ Hours Worked Shift ( )

THURS . \.~

McKelvey heads Portland drive

Bike registration

through the combined efforts
uf our sta te's Depa rtment of
Econom ic and Community
De velopment
and
our
· legisla tive leadership, an
added bureaucracy within
the t reasurer's office is not a
produtt ive alternative.
" I would lik e to touch on
some recent statements that
the treasurer's office trans·
fer s money from department
to department at will. The
st a t ute
co verin g
the
operation of the treasurer's
offi ce clearly prohibits the
treasurer from such actions.
·For obvious reasons, this is a
prot ection of state funds, and
I have not deviated from this
sta tute.
"I reject the idea that the
treasurer's ofllce should
usurp the authority of other
duly elected office holders.
Our Ohio Constitution for
exa mple, clearly delegates to
the Att orney General the
investigation and prosecution
11f cases of fr a ud and
misa ppropriation . I have
always followed the state
c.,nstitution in cooperating
with •he Attorney General in
suc h instances, and will
(Continued on ~ge 12)

GERTRUDE DONAHEY

Level four
discussed
A discussion on Level Four
of the grieva nce procedure
was prese nt ed when the
Sout hern Loca l Board of
Education met in special
session Tuesday night. The
board also discussed ,bus
rout es and acce pt ed the
voluntary servi ces of Greg
Bailey as golf coach for the
1978-79 school year.
Attending were Dallas Hill,
president, Shirley Johnson,
Betty Wagner, .and l.lavid
Nease, board members,
Bobby Ord , superintendent
and
Linda
Spencer ,
treasurer.

MEIGS RESERVE CHEERLEADERS - These are
the Meigs High School reserve cheerleaders this season.
They include bot lilm, 1-r, Unda Kovalchik , Lori Rupe,
Beth Perrin ; second level, Tanuny Blak e with Kenda
Braun at lhe lilp .

Six accidents
probed by OSP
Th e Gallia -Meigs Post.
Highway Pat rol, investigated
six accidents Tuesday .

. Offi cers were called to the
scene of a hea d-on collision un

Macedonia Rd ., eigh l·lent hs
of a mile so uth of CR 5. at i :30
p.m.
According to the patrol. a n
auto operated by Kenrteth
Jenkins, 15, Northup, came
around H curve left of center ,
and struck a vehicle driven
by Albert Sa unders, 41 ,
No rthup, head-on.
Sa unders cla imed injury ,
but

was

not

immedia tely

treated.
The Jenkins auto incurred
severe damage. The Saunders vehicle was demolished.
Je nkins wa s Ci ted on
charges of operating a motor
vehi cle without a license.
The patrol investigated a
two-vehicle accident a t 5:40
p.m., on Nebo Rd .. one and
eight-tenths of a mil e north of
CR 3.
Officers report that a sound
bound auto operated by
Carpenter . 19,
J ohnny
Patriot, went over a hill crest
left of center , and sideswiped
a vehicle driven by Debra
Cox, 21, Patriot, t raveling
north .
Officers report moderate
damage to the Carpente r
auto, severe da mage to the
Cox vehicle.
Carpenter was cited on
charges of fai lure to yield
one-half the roadway.
Officers were ca lied to the
sce ne of a three-vehicle
mishap on CR 5, one-tenth of
a mile west of SR 1, in Meigs
Co unty, at 5:10p.m.
According to the patro l, an
a uto operated by Wilbur
Hanning, 61, Middleport ,
backed from a priva te drive
onto CR 5.
A wes t bound vehicle
driven by James Hannon, 23 ,
Middleport , attempted to
pass the Hanning auto, just as
Hanning started a left turn .
The Harmon vehicle struck
the left front of the Hann in~
a uto.
The Harmon auto then
slipped off t he roa dway
striking a parked vehicle
owned by Charles Hatfl id
Backhoe Service, Rutland.
Officers report moderate

damage to the Hannon and

Hanning ilutus. nu da mage
the Ha tfield vehicle.

to

Ha nnin g Wi.LS c it ed on
charges of failure to yield.
ll a rm un was ci ted on
charges (J f excessive speed .

At 3: 30 p m . officers innstigated a twu-auto accidcnl on C{Jra-Beaver Rd .. at
the junc1ion uf SR HI.
Accor ding to the patro l, a

so uth bound auto operate&lt;! liy
M"ry Ste wa rt, 27, Pt.
Pleasant , had stopped at a
stop s1gn at 141.
i\ vehi cle driven by Paul
Alha. 29. Patri ot. traveling
•Cont mued on page 121

Otristmas
parade set
The annua l Ch ristma s
pa rade wa s se t fu r t he
eveni ng of Monday, Nov . 27,

when
the
Middle port
Chamber of Commerce met
Tuesday ni ght "' the Meigs
Inn.
Candy Inge ls was named to
head thi s year ' s pa ra de
welc oming th e Chri stm as
sea son .
Plan s

wer e made f or
merchant conta cts fo r funds
to finance treats. advertising
and the appearance of "Santa
Claus" l hrou~ h o ul the
season. Pres id ent Ge or ge
Ingels and Manning Kloes
were named to head the
preparation of the Chamber
of Commerce fl oa t in the
parade.
A disc ussion was held on
the type of merc hant
promotion to be used for the
holidav season . It was
derided that each business
will pla n its own giveaway
a nd promotio n rather than
use a joint effort with the
pooli ng of gifts to be given to
shoppers. Also plans were
discussed for having pictures
of children taken with Sa nta
during the holiday season.
Au ending the meeting were
president Ingels, Miss Ingels,
Mr . and Mrs. John Werner,
Mr . and Mrs. Don Wilson, Mr.
and Mrs. Edison Baker, Mr.
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Mrs.
.Elizai.M!th Stumbo.

:

f

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