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                  <text>•

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.

�I

· - The Dailv Sentin!!l.Middleoort-Pomerov. o.. 'Thursday, ~pt . 28, 1978

Poet's
•comer

'

1 Martha Angle and
1

~ Robert Walters

Ry Martha Angle and Robert Walters
WASHINGTON cNEA I · Far too many members of
('ongre$S subordinate personal conviction and conscience
when ta king stands on issues because of an unhealthy

fiXa tion about maintaining their political popularity and
wmning r e-e lection.

That' s the discouraging conclusi?n rea&lt;:hed by three
retiring legis lators who are unammous 10 expressmg
c-oncern about the insidious pressures that ·too frequently
lea d to indi vidual courage being supplanted by political
expeditmce .
.
. .
There ar e represt&gt;ntatives " who dec111e that the JOb ts so
damned important to themselves that lhey're prepared to
sacnflce their tntegrity," says Rep . Lloyd Meeds, D·Wash.
Elections since 1970 have produced "an increasing
number of members {of Congress ) who come to Washington with a determination to be popular" rather than to fight
fo r their con victions, adds Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calil .
Sen . James G. Abourezk , D-S.D.. says he's disappointed
by colleague s who are all too wHling "to compromise

heat of the moon
oblivious to the . blood ·that
stains the beach.
The oboe again wails ·its
desolate song the dragons passion has
claimed
·
another victim.

pri nci ple a nd occasionally themselve s !! to attain their a~l­

consuming goal of winning election to another tenn m
Congress .

~ lo ng , g~

along ."

.

.

Abourezk is only 43 years old, Meeds IS 50 and Moss IS 63.
" I though serious and reflective, all three also are among
the few members of the House and Senate willing to take
pr incipled 'but '' tlnpopular 1 ' ·s tands on controversial issues.

Their blunt analysis of Congress Cl!me during a recent
P.111CI discussion on "The Rites and Wrongs of Congress,"
,oonsored by Ralph Nader's Public Citizen Forum.
While work on Cap.itol Hill can be " lrustr~t.mg and
d•ffic ult ," says Moss , it also can be " exc1tmg and
inte re sting be cause it's a place where you can do whatever
you want if you have the will to do it."
C1ting numerous structural refonns that have produced
ma jor improvements during the past decade, Meeds also
rejects the simplistic notion that Congress "has fallen on
bad da ys and bad ways."
Proud of being a maverick, Abourezk has undisguised
contempt for officeholders he classifies as " technicians"
·- th os e who " read the polls on every issue" to see which
way the political wind IS blowing before declaring their
pos ition .

.

He believes that " people should not be allowed to stay Ill
off• ce too long," but thinks the current situation could be
re medied without imposing a statutory hm1tation on the
num ber or terms an individual could serve.

Instead , committee chairmanships should be rotated,
pt:l·haps as frequently as · every two years . " You 'd see
people r etiring voluntarily ," says Abourezk .

.

Moss would carry that idea a step further, rotatmg the
entire me mbership of committees. The ' ' ultimate corrup-

tion" of the legislative sys~em, he believes, is having "a
little group responsible to the anned forces of this country
or som e other special interest. ' '
Those views merit serious consideration because they

come fr om a trio of especially thoughtful members of the
House and Senate, willing to speak with exceptional candor
as they pr~pare to depart from Capitol Hill.

lawrence E. Lamb, M.D:
La1Nrence La mb, M.D. -different ways with different
u t..l\n DR . LAMB - One of medicines. lt is perfectly true
your columns recently talked that a high percentage of uric
nbout uri c aci d kidney stones. acid stones can be dissolved .
The treatment tha t yo u Unfortunately, it is not true in
mentioned di ffered from that all cases. ·
of our son·s. so I though! you
There have been enormous
would be int erested in our strides forward in learning
story.
how to treat kidney stones in
When he was 13 years old recent years. You have to
he was hospitalized with a know wha t kind of stone it is
k1dney infection and found to before you decide whether
have a large uric' acid stone. you wanl the urine to be acid
He wa s placed on a very or alk al in e. Some slones
st rict uric acid free diet with dissu lve in an acid urine.
nu red meats - onl y chicken , whe reas other slones dissolve
fi sh. turkey. He drank a glass 10 an alkaline urine.
of water ea ch wak ing hour to
or course , t here are stones
keep his kidneys fl ushed, plus that don't dissolve at all. With
ho ur glasses of orange juice the current knowledge ahout
and a solution of sodium st ones , though, most of them
citrate and ci rtic acid which, can be prevented from
m tu nt , ca used his urin e to

enlarging further and a good

be co me

ma ny of them

alkal ine.

can be

Bathing a uric acid stone in
a \kal lne s oluti on ove r a
pe r iod o f t im e d isso l ves

disso l ved . Also, you can
pr event formation of new
.!»t ones .

~t one

childien. Uric acid stones can

stones.
It is perfectly true that uric
After three months of faith - acid stones cannot be seen on
full y followin g the treatment. an ordinary X ray. It is not
new X ra ys showed that the . true that they occur only in
was gone and our son's

ki dney was ba ck tu nonnal. and do occur in adults.
Surgery had been avoided.
To give you mo re in·
Ou r· son IS still checked at formation about kidn ey
reg ula r intef\' a \s but, to date,
there ha s been no recurrence

st une s a nd th e c urrent
th inking about them , I am

of urtc acid crystals or in·
fection.
We lea rned a great deal out
~o f this experience. First. that

se nd ing you Th e Health
Letter number 11·2. Kidney
Sto nes : Treatment Has
C.11anged. Other readers who

ur ic a cid st ones appea r in

want this information can

chi ldren and calcium stones
appea r in adults. And thai
uric acid stones are trans·
pa rent and, therefore. you
can 't see them on ordiary X
rays. but have to inject dy e to
observe them.
Also, children today eal

send 50 cenls w-ith a long,
stamped. . self·a ddressed
enve lope for it. Address your
requ est to me in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 15M,
Ra di o Cit y Stat ion, New
Yurk . NY t0019.
Despite what kind of stone
a perso n has, the one point on
whi ch ther e is alm ost
universa l agreement is that
an y .. ne wh o ha s such
prublems should drink lots of
nuid s, parti cularl y walk ·
111ey should drink enough

m ure meat than is necessary

and drink less water than
they should . Consequently,
they dun't flu sh out tht uric
acids m their system .
DEAR READE R - Most uf
the things you say are right
un t ar~ et a nd they are not th cause the kidneys to flush
part icularly different from water out of the body around
what 1 have commented on the clcoek , rather than just
before in terms of uric acid drinking large amounts of
st ones .
fluids two ur three limes a
The chi ef difference da y. 111e dilute urine helps to
probably is in the method of prevent the clu mping of
making the unne alkaline. minerals and chemicals that
111is can be c.J une in several rorm str,nes.
&lt;

· ~sident Carter, who rod~ into office promising a lean
.· and efficient govemment, nugh_t do well to act on a new .
Brookings lnaUtution study. .
·
·
. 11 says the Pentagon' c.ould save about •• billion a year by
ceasing to overpay civilian employees. ·
. ··
·
Brookings 15 ·a highly respected research organization. ·
And its 113,page report should be studied by 1\Je White
Hoilst the budget office and the defense establimment.
· In a 'series of key reconunendations the atudy ~~ged: · .
• _ 'That the Defense Department stop paying ' unJU411fl·
· Ably high wages" (more than Is paid by private1nduatry) to ,
· its white· and blue-collar civilian workers.
•
- 'That as many as 377,000 joba now done. by nillltary ·:
personnel be turned over to civilian~. No hann to military ·
readiness will result If, say, cler1cal work II done by
civilians - who cost overall 2S percent l.Ss than unlfonned
personnel.
·
_: . That the Pentagon contraCt out to private Industry
certain work' now being done by its own employees. The
. savings would average as much as 20 percent.
-That the Defense Department cloae unneeded batlell and
stop ·employing more civilians than are necessary to the
nation's security.
·
Some of the changes reconunended by Brooklnij: could be
put in effect by Carter and his appointees in the entagon.
Others would require congressional action and thua are
less likely since J)(\lltlcs would rear Its head.

Wh15tleblowers who work for the government aren't the
only members of this all-too-rare species who get shot down.
'The Wall Street securities analyst who uncovered the
Equity Funding Corp. scandal five years ago hal been
ordered punl5hed by the Securities and EJ:change Commlaslon.
.
ded Ra·---'
An SEC administrative law judge suspen
''""'N
Dirks from the brokerage buainesa for 80 days for
dlsaemlnated" Information about Equity Fund·
·
.
I "selectively
ing.
Apparently
some Investment companies managed to
Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be leu 1 sell their shares before
the fraud scandal broke.
than 300 words long (or subject lo reduction by the edllor) 1
"The government is attempting to punish the bearer of
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may 1 bad tidings," Dirks claimed, noting the companies Involved
be withheld upon publlcallon. However, on request, I got off with light censures.
.
,
names will be dlscl011ed. Letters should be 1D gOQ!Itaste, I
He vowed to "fight It all the way to the Supreme Court.
addressing Issues, not persooalllles.

1

A "bike rodeo" will lie held Sunday, Oct. 1 at the Meigs I
County Fairgrounds sponsored by Boy Power, Inc.
I
'The event is lor yoUilgllters age 3 through .J8. Youngsters I
interested are to ccinplete the registration f&lt;rm below and. I
submit it tO the judge at noon on SWiday. 'The events will take
place at I p.m. Parents' permission is required for motor-x
events. Registration forms wlll also he available at the game.
I
All forms must be signed by parent or legal guardian.

I

I ...

I Mickey Mouse scene
II At first it seemed odd that Treasury Secretary Michael ..
Blumenthal and the Saudi Arabian minllter
finance,
Mohammed
Abalkhall,
secretly
met
about
the
declining
I dollar in, of all places, Florida's Walt Disney World.

~
Yf:J.'/:~.
~. uuwr,:

/07~

On second thou!Jhl the locale seemed lust right.
Given the admmislration's poor job in maintaining the
value of the dollar, it's fitting that Its fate was dlscuaaed in
the land of Mickey· Mouse.

Libraries very important

Dear Mr. Editor:
.
imagine
the
public
reaction
should
this
article
appear in
Event (check each event you w ish to en .
the newspaper tomorrow: "DUE TO LA.CK OF INTEREST, "Toy'' computer
1er)
THE LOCAL IJBRARIES HAVE 13EEN FORCED TO CLOSE
W.e. have become ~ used to advan~es in .electronics that
Motor.x______
THEIR DOORS PERMANENTLY."
.
.
stories on the subject are almost · m the dog·biteiHilBn
Many times we hear people say, "If only I had an category. That is, inte£sting but not really startling.
Balanc1ng beams, _______
Every once in a whl , though, something lmpreuea upon
education." Frankly, if one truly wants it, it can be gained
Bike ra ce 20 inch _ __
right at the local library. Why, there is Information on us anew just how far e field has progressed In only a !••
'
practically any subject into whicl) one desires to look, whether decades.
Bike ra ce over 20 Inch•---Consider thl5: a new microcomP.uter the size of a sUck of
it be "How-to.fix.jt" or "Self-improvement." Let's not
has roughly tbe same capabilities as the University of
overlook all the material available f&lt;r pleasure reading too. gum
Barrel ra ce _________
Pennsylvania's multimillion-dollar ENIAC computer But, books are not' all that the libraries haVe tO offer·and whic~ weighed 30 tOll.!, was housed In a room 50 feet ~~e
Wheel y contesto _______
anyone who has not looked into the many services available ·and reputedly dimmed every light in West Philadelphia 1
from them is depriving himself of unlimited opportunities.
when it was turned on back in the late 1940s.
Big wheel _____
I have lived In the community for more than a year and
'The man·biles-&lt;log angle is that the new microcomputer is
Big wheel matar .x ____________
rarely do I see other people at the library when I vls(t it. Tiley the basic component in a recftlltlY marketed ~ "toy" say, "You are what you read." Well, I believe that reading designed to teach mathematics to children.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN . I
builds minds and minds In turn build people. 'These people are
the ones who are the backbone . of the community and the
A'ITENTION
·
leaders of tomorrow. .
If you qualify and are· interested - 'The Middleport
If the publishers of this newspaper could do something to
Fire Dept. may have openings in the near future for
stimulate more Interest and cause the libraries to gain more
persons to serve on the ·Fire Dept. anlk&gt;r Emergency
recognition, I feel the community would profit greatly from
Rescue Squad. If you are at least 18 years of age, a
such action. Must we walt until an article such as the one
resident of the Village of Middleport, holder of a valid
mentioned at the beginning of this letter becomes a reality and
operator's license, with ny physical handicaps that would
appears in the news before we realize the importance of our
hinder a normal and safe perf~mance of expected dulles:
local libraries? I, for one, certainly hope not. - Sincerely
Fill out the NO OBLIGATION questionnaire and mail to
concerned, Kathy Foster.
Ualted Preai IatetDallonal
the Middlep~t Fire Dept., Race St., Middleport, or give to
HO'fLIPS, VERY: That wasn't special effects smoke from
any active Middleport Fireman.
the "Korean War" rolling through the set of the TV series "M·
Date---A..S.H" in culver City, Calif., Wednesday. The set really wu
Racine, Ohio on fire - and seriously damaged, with two a-ew memben
Sept. 27' 1978 treated f~ smoke Inhalation. Loretta "Hot-llpe Houlllwl" Swll
Narne~--------------- Age--SexTo the Editor of the Sentinel:
blamed the blaze on a torrid love scene she was playing "that
I wish to clarify a lew points in a letter to the Editor on ignited the celluloid." The fire department had a more pl'oaaic
Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ Married -Single Monday, Sept. 25, and signed by Gayle Price of Portland. ·
explanation: an electrical sh&lt;rt. Jamie Farr, who plays the
In the summer of 1977 the General Assembly of Ohio transvestite, Corporal Klinger, quipped: "I hope they don't
Place of Employment
Hours Workedenacted intc law ' Senate bill125 requiring voter registration in chan~e the name of the series to 'A..S.H'."
Shift ( )
ail the 22 counties that were not registered. These counties
were among the last in the whole U.S.A. The legislature also
Interested in : Fire Dept. ( ) Rescue Squad ( ) Both (
111E BET'I'ER PART ... : Cathy ''Cat" Davis fought male
appropriated money to assist the counties to accomplish this prejudice WJd bureacracy to become the first llceneed woman
task.
LiSt previous training in either field: ______________
boxer in New York state, but last week she found out you can't
1 remember asking you, Gayle, to get registration blanks win them all. First her car was towed away while she was
and assist in registering your neighbors which you did. 'There watching the Broadway hit "Dracula." She got the car back,
were scores of citizens and organizations assisting as a public but later, while out for a late-night bite with manager Sal
service. None of them, including yourself as you said, "ever Alglerl in a suburban New Rochelle, N.Y., cafe, she was held
Signature----------saw a dime." This voluntary work saved the taxpayers up by three gun-toting men. They gal away with a diamond
hundreds of dollars.
ring, her purse and left the attractive lightweight fuming. Says
Another cost you seemed to have omitted. What happened Cat, "If the thugs didn't have guns, I would have belted them."
to the 9,000 forms when completed and returned to the Board of
Elections? 'They had to be thoroughly checked, typed,
HORSEPLA. Y: Dwlgbt Elleubower's paulon f&lt;r golf Ia weU
alphabetized, etc., and placed in the proper voting precinct. known; but not 10 his fondneiiU f&lt;r hol'lell. David
1
'This required many, many hours by two trained workers.
Elleawhower, who's researching a book on hla late grandad,
Other costs Incurred were the purchase of cabinets and told ail audience In Washington Wednesday of the time IOine
supplies for filing, and we had to pay by bid 13 cents for each steeds got loose on Ike's Gettysburg, Pa., farm Wld lore up a
r -'-------.::....------------------------------1 voter registration form that would comply with the law.
golfing green that took three years to bulle!. It was enough to
'There 15 another point I wilh to clear .., In the above drive most duffen reaching f&lt;r their 9-iron, but Ike merely
mentioned letter In relation to Senator Anthony Celebrelze. said the rompwaa "the most beautiful sight I'd ever seen." He
During the recent session of the legillature, Senator wasn't 10 kiRI!Y towards some other memben of the animal
Celebrezze learned !IOIDe of the money appropriated had been kingdom, h&lt;nnver. David says the general-president kept a
returned and not l!tllt to the newly regiltered counties. for gun handy to shoot a-ows and ordered cats shot on sight.
expenses incurred. He immediately put a bill through the
legislature to compenaate the countlea.
HOW SWEET rr IS: Four years ago, Fraak Valellla opened
As a statewide candidate, and recently in Meigs counly he W1 exclusive- and expen.slve- French restaurant called The
mentioned to the news media the fi,IOO. Naturally that's the Palace. New York City food critics laughed, saying It would
good old way of American campaigning.
never last . It's doing nicely, thank you, and Wednesday nigbl
So, Gayle, this iJ not porlt-barretlng as alluded In your Valenza got his sweet revenge . But instead of having the
letter but only paying a juat debt to the taxpayers of Meigs critics eat crow, Valenza served up an kourae dinner, wllb
county. - E. E. Wingett, Racine.
nine rare wines, including an 1880 CClgllac called Paradla. In
attendance was Reller Yueea, president of the Chevalier de
- - - - - - - ~. Taste de Vln, the exclusive gourmet society. Said Valenla, a .
Bronx boy, "No one can say I'm nota good sport."
Age•-----------------

Wishes to clarify ·points

.

Berry s world

Veterallll Memorial Hospital
Admitted
Harold
Triplett, Pomeroy; Mistie
Grueser, Pomeroy; Viele
Williams, Wilsta~);, Ky.
·
Discharged - J uanlta .
Just15, Fennan Moore, Mark
Michael.

" 01 course, I'm pleased to see that LIFE Is
back, but .. . "

MEET MONDAY
A regular meeting · of
Racine Chapter, OES, wW be
held at 7:30p.m. Munday at
the Temple. 'There will be
election of officers and dues
are payable at this tim.e.

GIJMPSES: Hlat&lt;rianl WJillnd Artellllmlial were honored
Wednesday night at a dinner at USC to sn-t them with the ,
first Irwin Blacker Award f&lt;r contrlbuU0111 to Ulerature ...
Rita Haywortb and daughter YMmlllltball:wwe spotted out'
!or dinner Wednesday night at Le Premier l'eltauralit In New .
Y&lt;rk City ... Country millie enlertalner Joluy Cull II In
Mem&lt;rlll Hospital in Nashville, Tenn., for .testa and a IWt ....

MASON DEGREE WORK
Shade River Lodge 463,
F~. Chester, will l)old a
lpecial meeting at 7 p.m.
Saturday with work to be In
the Master Muon degree. AU

Master Masons are Invited.
The members of Shade ,
River Lodge an ubd to btlp
with the repair of the roof of,
the Lodge HaU at 10 a.m.
Saturday, weather per•
mltting.

'The Fifth Annual Fall
Round-Up will be sponsored
by the Ohio Valley Horse
Show Associ a lion ( OVHSA)
on Saturday and Sunday,
Sept. 30 and Oct . I. The twoday show will be held at the
Bob Evans Farm in Rio
Grande, rain or shine.
Six futurity classes will
be gin at 1 p.m. on Saturday
with nine halter classes
beginning at 14 p.m. The
performance classes on
Saturday night will begin at 6
p.m. with 15 classes.
Asquare dance will end the
Saturday festivities.
Sunday morning nine
halter 'classes will begin at 9
a.m.
At II a.m., the Fall Round·
Up Queen will be crowned.
1

of

REGISTRATION FORM

Name __~~~----~~-----------------f irst
last

FULLBACKS -First row, 1-r, Tim Basham, Todd Eads, jerry Fields ; back , Van Willford, Dave Blake.

,-------------------------,
1
I

yard rushing .
Probably the strongest
point of the Rockets attack is
their running backs. All lour
backs are standouts as they
were last year.
Junior quarterhack Lowell
Settles calls the signals while
Don Oshorne runs from the
fullhack spot. Halfback Jerry
Patton last week scored four
touchdowns and raced lor 74
yards. The other halfback ,
Curtis Jayjohn , gained 87
yards in nine

tries, an

average of over nine yards
per carry. The club makes
very few mental mistakes,
and has few turnovers.
On the other side of the
field,
Coach
Charlie
Chancey's Marauders are an

improved ball club, losing
only to Point Pleasant in
overtime. The Big Blacks are
ranked seventh in West
Virginia.
The pride of the defense has
been carrying the Marauders
thus far . They limited Belpre
to just 77 yards. The front line
composed of Tim Faulk,
Dave Davis, Randy Arnold,
and Dave Blake has been
nearly impenetrable.
Bob Seelig, Robert Parker,
junior Van Willford, and
sophomore.Jerry Fields have
been doing well at linebacker.
Cornerback John Stout has
been outstanding all year and
Greg Becker did well at
safety against Belpre. The
rest of the defensive lineup

Fifth annual round.u p
slated this weekend

Blowing the whistle

Bike registration

Meigs hosts Wellston
By Greg Bailey
SEOAL gridiron action gets
underway Friday when the
Meigs Marauders, 2·1,
entertain the Wellston Golden
Rockets, 3-0. Both teams are
preseason picks for the first
division , Wellston being
picked second, and Meigs a
close fourth .
Last week, the Golden
Rockets thumped Vinton
County 50-6 while Meigs
squeaked by Belpre 10-6,
although the Marauders
outplayed Belpre in every
aspect.
Wellston is known to be
solid with all II starters on
offense back from last
year . Its defense is not
lacking either. Wellston held
Vinton County to a minu~ nne -

.Trimming·
. . military fat

peopletalk

HEALTH

ver y

By Jim Brewer, Jr.

'SEOAL season begins

Meet the Marauders

. .'

SONG ·OF DRAGONS
Waves of ·dragons ·spii forth
.their
'
frothy breath .. .
wltite stones .of corral .
lay ro.ck · .. .
lucked
by the hypnotic-power
of the blue-gray fury .
·
· d
The bengeM serpent~ raw
·back their heads .
and with cunning wickedness
· they swallow the sun. ·
·. At mid-morn scavengers
·
·
· gather ·.
to collect the waste
.
that the dragons have
vomited upon the shore.·
Cadaver's embrace 'under the

Popularity before integrity?

"Starting with the first re-election campaign, you begin
taking little pieces of yourself and handmg them to
individuals and interest groups" to either gam the1r
support or " keep them off your back, " adds Abourezk .
Many members of Congress, addicted to the power that
comes with protracted tenure, tenaciously hold onto their
jobs even though they are in their 70s. and 80~, often
physi cally or mentally incapable of meetmg the rtgorous
demands of the position.
But Meeds, Moss and Abourezk are in a very different
category - legislators retiring relatively early after
becoming frustrated and discouraged by a system that
places too high a premium on a philosophy best swnma·
rized by the durable Capitol Hill slogan : "If you want to get

•

3- 'The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 28, 1976

Belpre earns
14-8 victory

.,

,.
HALFBACKS - First row 1-r, Troy Griffith , Rick
Hovater, Brian King, Chris Taylor , Terry Gardner;

second row, Doug Cl~land , Greg Becker, Rick Blaettner,
Todd Smith.
.

OSU entertains Baylor
By GENE CAODES
UPI Sports Writer
Just about the time Woody
Hayes gets his team 's feet
back on the ground (literally )
and the Buckeyes look to be
somewhat predictable, the
rest of the week's schedule
takes on tlle appearance of a
crossword puzzle.
Hayes ' Buckeyes stuck
pretty much to the ground
last week in doing a solid 'J:I.
10 job on Minnesota , and the
Invading Baylor Bears can
look f~ about the same thing
this week - tllump, thump,
thump.
Last week 's recordoll:&gt;-6-2
was below tlle first two
weeks' percentage and
dropped tlle season's mark to
46-13-2 - .770. But, the worst
may be yet to come .
Games such as Bowling
Green at Western Michigan,
Ohio University at Kent
State, Miami at Dayton,
Eastern Michigan at Toledo,
Eastern Illinois at Akron jnd
Cincinnati at Richmond
make you want to give up
predicting.
Although Bay lor will bring
an 0-2 record int o Ohio
Stadium Saturday, the Bears
could very well .be 2.0. They
have lost by two points to
Georgia and by lour to
Kentucky .
Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes again plans to go with
freshman Art Schlichter at
quarterback and may even
let him throw more than the
seven times he did against
Minnesota . But, don 't look for
an air show on the part of the
Buckeyes.
Baylor has thrown 60 times
In its first two games, but,
would also rather travel by
ground
with
Greg
Hawthorne . But that ma1 not
be possible against tough
'Buckeye defense. Ohl11 State
31, Baylor 10.
Although some of the
competition
has
been
questionable, Bowling Green
(,_1) has had no trouble
putting pointa on the board
tllanlta to quarterback Mike
Wright, who leads the nation
lit total offense . The Falcons
may lace their toughest test
I

Saturday
in
Western
Michigan and its outstanding
tailback, Jerome Persell . It
should make lor a high·
scoring game, with things
turning out Wright lor BG .
BuwUng Green 35, Western
Michigan 24.
Toledo, still looking for its
first win, hosts Eastern Mi·
ch1gan. The young Rockets
appear to be getting better
but have scored only 12 points
in three games and those
were against Minnesota alter
the game was decided .
Eustern Mlehlgan 20, Toledo
1.
Dhio University is coming
off a good effort against
Purdue, ahtough losing 24.0.
Kent State got its first · win
over a mistake-prone Illinois
State club, scoring all of its

touchdowns as a direct result 20 - Zips burst Panther's
of Redbird turnovers . 'The bubble.
Bobcats don 'I ligure to be an
In other games : Northwood
onerous. Ohio University 11, (Mi ch.) over Ashland;
Kent State 14.
Tennessee State over Central
Miarni and Dayton meet lor State ;
Denison
over
tlle 42nd and last time on the Marietta; Baldwin-Wallace
gridiron at Dayton . The over Muskingum; Otterbein
Flyers, now an NCAA over Heidelberg; Wittenberg
Division III school in football, over Ohio Wesleyan; Wooster
are IUlbeaten in foUr games over Oberlin; Mount Union
tllis year and have won a over Grove City ( Pa.) ; Ohio
school record nine in a row Northern over Georgetown
overall. But, they haven't (Ky .) ; Kalamazoo (Mich.)
played anyone of Miami's . over Kenyon ; Anderson
calibre so far. Miami 28, (Ind. )
over
Bluffton;
Dayton 14.
Defiance over Taylor (Ind.);
Cincinnati 20 Ri chmond 21 · Findlay over Manchester
- But Bearcats must limit (Ind .) ; Wilmington over
Earlham (Ind.) ; Carnegiemistakes.
Youngstown state 34, Sagi- Mellon ( Pa . ) over Case
naw Valley 7 - Penguins' Western;
Hiram over
offense is in high gear.
Allegheny(Pa .); W&amp;J(Pa.)
Akron 27, Eastern Illinois over John Carroll.

Princeton rated No. 1
By GENE CADOES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Dhio (UP!) Cincinnati Princeton, the
first team to beat Cincinnati
Moeller since 1975, also holds
the Crusaders' familiar spot
in the first United Press
International Ohio High
School Board Qf Coaches
football ratings.
'The Vikings of Coach Pat
Mancuso, who have beaten
Moeller, the three-time
defending champion, and
rugged Upper Arlington the
past two weeks, snapped up
the No. I spot in the first of
eight weeks of voting by the
coaches.
It marked the first time
since the end of the 1975
season that Moeller, which
hilda 37-game winning streak
snapped by Princeton, has
not held the No. I r anking in
Class AAA.
But Moeller, despite its 1:112 loss to Princeton,
continued to get plenty of
support and was a solid
choice f&lt;r the No. 2 spot over
Massillon Washington.
Elyria Catholic, last year's
ratings champ but runnerup

to Wyoming in the playoffs,
was a slim three-point leader
over the Cowboys in the Class
AA
balloting,
while
Covington, under new coach
Larrie Tisdale , tops the Class
A ratings.
Princeton ( 3-0 ), received 27
of 33 votes cast by the AAA
· coaches, with no other team
getting more than one.
Massillon ( 3-0), was third
with 208 points, followed by
arch..-ival Cantoo McKinley
In fourth and Lakewood St.
Edward in fifth. St. Ed Wld
Moeller meet Friday night .
Cincinnati Elder fmished in
sixth, followed by Sandusky
in seventh, Zanesville in
eighth, Fremoot IWssln ninth
and Cleveland St. Joseph and
Warren Western Reserve tied
for tenth .
,
·
Elyria Catholic totaled 149
points in the AA voting to 146
for Wyoming and 140 for St.
Marys Memorial, another
playoff team from a year ago.
Ironton and Columbus
DeSales round out the top five
in AA, with oobeaten Bucyrus
in sixth place, followed by
Cincinnati Reading in
seventh,
Cleveland

Benedictine and Orrville tied
for eighth and Elida in tenth .
Newark Catbolic finished a
distant second to Covington in
Class A, 149-106, with Cory
Rawson in third.
Hamler Patrick Henry,
former state champion .West
Jefferson , Montpelier and
Ada finished In tlle fourth
through seventh positions,
with three teams
Mechanicsburg , Tiffin
Calvert and West Liberty
Salem - tied for eighth.

In a game played Monaa·y
at Meigs Stadium in Mid·
dleport, the Belpre seventh
grade football team posted a
14-8 victory over Meigs. Alter
Meigs fumbled a punt at·
tempt, Belpre drove in to take
a IHI halftime lead .
In the third quarter, Meigs
drove 65 yards for its touch·
down behind the rushing of
fullback Chris Burdette and
tailback Jon Perrin. Perrin
scored the touchdown on a HI·
yard sweep.
Burdette's try for the .ex·
tras resulted in a fumble at
the goal line which was
recovered in the end zone by
alert Perrin makin g the score
8 10 6 Meigs .
Belpre scored on a fourth
and II situation with less than
a minute remaining to clinch
the victory.
Meigs' defense was led by
Andy lnnarelli, Eddie Bishop
and Mike Wilford.

GAHS defeats
Meigs' girls
On Tuesday in a non-league
malch, Meigs' Girls Volley
team' fell to Gallia Academy
in three games.
Gallipolis ran away with
the first gal)1e, IS-4, but
Meigs came hack to take the
second thriller, 15-13. In the
rubber match, GAHS scored
a 15·7 win. 'That makes Meigs
2-3 on the year.
The Meigs Reserves fell 0-2
for the season in the
preliminary matches
Gallipolis won 15·11 and 15·1.

This event ends the year long
competition between three
girls lor the title . The
contestants are Kristin
Anderson, daughter of Bill
and Jermifer Ander9Jn of
Pomeroy ; Kim Notter,
daughter of Dr . and Mrs. Dan
Notter. Gallipolis; and Cindy
Wallace,daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Wallace of
Athens.
'These girls have been
accumulating
points
throughout the year by
attending OVHSA point
shows, participating in
special horsemanship
classes,
attending
a
per9lnality competition and
finally a written test to the
OVHSA association rules.
'The
girl
who
has
accumulated the most points
will be crowned ql!"en. The
OVHSA is quite proud of the
competition since it is the
only one in the state of Ohio
which is not con trolled by a
committee or board or
officers. Only the efforts of
the girls themselves controls
the outcome
of the
competition .
The queen will receive a
tiara especially designed for
western hat wear, roses, and
many gifts from the ruling
clubs and local merchants .
Each contestant receives

will be filled by Rick Blaetl·
nar and Dave Hysell, both
returning after injuries .
Parker will be back at
offensive
guard
and
defensive end.
But another key injury now
laces Meigs. Quarterback
Dan Thomas is out
indefinitely with a badly
bruised leg. Freslunan signal
caller Bob Ashley showed
poise and looked good ·in a
brief stint last week. Ashley
is also an outstanding
punter.
'The · offensive execution
was much better although
penalties and fumbles
continue to haunt the tinup .
Although Parker will be hack
at guard, Brent Bolin wlll still
see a lot of action.
Becker last week gained 9S
yards while Seelig caught
three passes for 39. It all adds
up a real rock'em, sock'em
contest, and whichever
defense breaks down first will
be the turning point of the
game .

nowers and a gilt.
Following the crowning of
the queen, 21 performance
classes will hegin at 12 noon .
Judges for tlle two day
sh ow are : Donna Price ,
Circleville, as the western
judge ; and Bob Off,
Delaware, as lhe English
judge .
Persons needing
information may contact
Edwin IWush, New Haven,
W. Va .• or Shorty Meeks,
Athens.
·

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Gra nd PIIX LJ

HOUSTON (UPI) - 'The
Houston Astros Wednesday
activated outfielder Cesar
Cedeno and said he would be
able to play the weekend
series against the San
Francisco Giants.
Cedeno has been sidelined
with torn knee ligaments
since the game with the
Chicago Cubs m June 16.

Elecll a 225 Seda n

Refreshments Will Be Seroed
Favors For All

Smith Nelson Motors
500 E. Main St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

�•
4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday. Sept. 28, 1978

DALLAS (UP! ) - Tbe
TOLEDO KAI.:EWAV
BHOOKI.INF., Mass . IUP I I
Lura! Kuwling
TOl.F.DO , Ohio (UPII
- Center Dt~ vc (),wcn.o.; and ll.allas Cowboys Wednesday
Wedriesday Earlybirds
Knight All used O:J ~trung guHrd Ni:ttc Archibald mO:Jy he ann•ounced their Oct. 8 &amp;IDle
Sept. 13, 19!1
stretch' drive Wedn esday missin~ frum t.h c lincUfJ wht?n witll the New York Giant. in
night to capture the featured the Bostun Ccitit-s visit the Texa s Stadium would lllvi at
Standings'
Team
W.
L.
· h h
t Ra ceway New Jersey Ne~' t 'r id•y in an :1 p.111 . CDT instead of the ·
Team'·
10 6 e1g I race a
uri~inally aMounced I p.m.
Team 1
· . :10 6 'Par.k.
·.
NBA exhibition game .
Team o
a a. Driver Tim Suter ~uided Cowens is nursing an alling The kickoff tl'me . •as
Team 2
·8 8 the ·winner from sixth at the back while Archibald has the changed to allow tile same to ..
f:!~~
:~ . top of .l!'e stretch to a l'h Ou . Neither player practiced be . televised · nationally, .
In ~ . hiqh qame- Delore .. length Vlt1or.y over Mor~co Wednesday at tile team 's making it the lOth Dallas
Surface 100 : Marlene Wilson Bound Ul ·2:04 ~ . pa)'lllg Hellenic College training site game to be give'l .national
1.92 ; Jean Norton • Mary Voss · $12.60, $S.60 and · $3.20. 'Mr and Cowens has not . treabnent ttus year - more
1 ~·
.
. .
'Bullet came in third.
any other club in the
Ind . htQh series- Marlene
· n. f'fth ·participated in any practices than
NFL.
.
tllis preseason.
Wilson 502 : Bess' Hendricks . · Billy st~ woo woe . 1
Jean Norton 474 ; Mar Y. Voss race, ·kicking off a &gt;-1-7
1/&gt;6.
.
· trifecta combinatipn that was
High ·geam ~am.,_ Team · 4 worth . $3 939.80 . Westerns
~~~~ ~';',; ;:r'ie~ea;:~~ 564 Sarah ivas' second and Ensign
2192 : Team 1 .2187 ; Team 6 Duke showed. .
2133 .
·
A crowd of 1,640 wagered
$144,872.
.
Friday Lite Mixed
TwoWii.Y
.
FOR WiJQJJ[Q)a §Itt!~
Communicators
Letaue
·LEBANON RESULTS
Team
W. L.
LE:BANON, Ohio (UP! ) Team 5
•
8 0
WITH
You,ng 's Gulf ·Siation
8 0 Tender Caress outdueled
Young's Carpeting
6 2 Skipper Goose in the stretch
Team 2 ·
· 2 6 Wednesday night to grab a
Team6
0 8
Team4
0 a neck victory in tile featured
OLD MAN WINTER IS
High ind . game - Women, eighth race at Lebanon RaceMarlen.e Wilson 216, 172, 164. way.
A TIME AWAY
· HiAh ind game - Men
Big Dm finished third.
Bulcli Roush 184, 162; Leroy
The winner, driven by Cliff
Simpkins, Jr. 167.
High team game - Team 2 · Albertson, covered the mile
333 ; Young 's Carpeting 319, in 2:06 3-li and returned $6.20,
312.
$4 and $4.20.
·
Te~~lm . higiT
series She's A Corlrer (6) and Sun
Young's Carpeting 939 ; Team
1 860; Young's Gull Sla . 851. Storm ( 8) teamed up for a
Ind . high series - Women , · daily double that was worth·
Marlene
Wilson
552 ;
N. Second Ave.
.
.Margaret Wyatt 416 ; JoAnne $29.60.
Middleport, 0.
A crowd of 1,229 wagered
Clark 273.
Ind . high series - Men , $112,260.
Bu tch Roush 498 ; Leroy
Simpkins 441 ; Mike Capehart
408 .

Self-discipline was expected
CINCINNATI (UPI ) George Foster realized even
before the season started that
he was going to have w
exercise a lot of self
discipline at the plate this
year.
Ally guy who bats .320,
slams ~2 homers and drives
home 149 runs ligures to be a
marked man . Arid those were
the statistics Foster compiled

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hecause they were witllin his ga~e relief· piicher Pedio
reach, not becau~ tlley were Borbon his eighth victory
in the strike zone.
against two losses. .
· ·
Borbon was th.e second of
"What I did .was sacrifice
se lf-discipline for · what . I three pitchers ci1lled upon by
thought was tile good of the . Aslder~n hist night. · Relief.
club," said Foster. "! felt · ace Doug Balr blanked the
tllat with Jopnny ( Bench) and . Dodgers in the Qinth w gain ·
Joe !Morgan) injured it was · his 28111 save of the season.
up to me to furnish t!le long The sW"pri5e starter was .
ball."
·
Mario Soto , who was a last .
Foster's 37th ·homer of the minute substitution for ·Paul
season, coming off · Los Moskau ; who · had . a
· Angeles Dodger knuckle- . recurrence . of ·shoulder .
baUer Charlie Hough ,after a miserieS 'While warming up
one"'ut walk to Ken Griffey in · befor.e the game. .
.
the bottom of ·tile eighth
"SoW made line bad pitch
innii)!i Wednesday night,, tied - a high inside slider," said
Anderson . ·
the score at threeall.
And before the inning
Teddy Martinez se.nt the
ended, til e Cincinnati Red.s pitch over ·tile left field fence
added two more runs on a with two aboard in the third
walk to Bench, singles ~y · inning t o give Dodger starter
Danny Driessen and 'Champ Don Sutton a 3-&lt;1 lead.
Summers and a sacrifice fly
by Arturu DeFreites W make
Air
condi t io ning ,
it two in a row over the
Local Bowling
automat ic floor sh ift, p.s.,
Dodgers with a :&gt;-3 victory .
Rally stri pe wire wheel
Summer 's single drove
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
covers. white walls.
Early Sunday
home the tie-breaking run.
Mi,;ed League
Foster's 37 homers and 114
Sept. 24, 1978
RBI are in1pressive figures.
Standings
Not so impressive is his .282 Team
Pts.
28
batting average, considering No . 6
Ja ck's Da iry Bar
24
it's 38 points below his mark 3in0ne
22
of last year .
Gibbs ' Gr ocery
18
•l sut, as I said," repeated Meigs Inn
16
12
Foster, " I've swun g at a lot of Royal Crown
4 wheel drive, auto .. air
series - John Tyree'
con d ., roo l rack . al uminum
pitches I'd normally take. 639High
: Betty Smith458 ; Ed Voss
wheels, p.s., p.b., wood
But that is because I know 555, Beck y Kloes 455
gra in .
I'm not going to win many
High game - John Tyree
243, Becky Kloes 188 ; John
games by drawing walks.
" Unless," he . added , Tyree 218, Pearl Russell 172.
Team series
Jack 's
smiling, "!draw one with the Dair v Bar 2050.
Tuesday Tl"iplicate
bases loaded and the score
League
Team game
Jack 's
Standings
Dairy Bar 721.
tied. "
Team
Pis.
The fa ct that Foster has
Royal Crown Cola
21
struck out 133 times this
No .3
18
Early Wednesd.-y
supports
his
season
17
Friendly Tavern
Mixed League
16
Reuter · Brogan Ins .
Sept. 20. 1978
statement. So does his base
Auto ., ai r , " Camper
No . 2
16
Standings
on
balls
total
66.
Arid
15
of
Special. " p.s., p .b., am .fm
Team
Pts. Robert Robie Const .
8
those walks he has drawn No . 3
rad io, camper top ,
HiQh individual game
20
were issued intentionally.
Zide's Sport Shop
18 Bev Henslev 202 ; Debbie
18 Hawley 196 , 'Pat Carson 191 ."Last year," said Foster, No . 1
High series - Bev Hensley
14
"I'd get two or three good Young 's Market
501 ; Pal Carson 499 ; Debbie
Long
Shots
14
pitches to hit each at bat. This No. 2
12 Hawley 498.
year I've been lucky to get
Team high game - Reuter ·
High series - Charles
two or three good pitches to Sm ith 588, Helen Phelps 504; Brogan Insurance 505.
Team ~igh series - Royal
Larry Dugan 554, Pat Caron
hit in a game ."
Crown Cola 1390.
501 .
The Reds' four.;un spiW'ge
High game - Larry Dugan
in the eighth that enabled 214, Char.les Smith 208. Helen
them w maintain tlleir one Phe lps 176, Pat Carson 174.
Team series - Zide 's Sport.
game lead over the third
2078 .
place San Francisco Giants in Shop
Team game - Zide 's Sport
Fridav Late Mixed
the National League West Shop 721 .
Sept. 15, 1978
Two Way
Communicators
League
Team
W. L.
No . 5
14 2
Young 's Carpet ing
12 4
Young 's Gull Sta.
10 6
Team2
a a
Team4
2 14
Team6
2 14
High ind . game - Women ,
Marlene
Wilson
170 ;
Margaret Wyatt 150 ; Marlene
Wilson 143.
High i~d . game - Men,
Terry Se1denabel 182, 179 :
Bu tch Roush 111.
Ind . series - Women ,
Marl ene
Wils on
454 ;
Margaret Wyatt 401 ; Edith
8 PM THRU MIDNIGHT
Hall 323.
~nd . series - Men , Terry
FRIDAY, SEPT. 29, 1978
Se odenabe l 510 ; Butch Roush
436 : Harry Clark 397.
Team high game U.S. NO. 1 ALL PURPOSE
Young's Carpe ti ng 352 , 320;
Team 6 312.
.
·
Team high series ~~
Young's Carpeting 964; Team
6 897 ; Team 1 752.
last year while winning the
National League's most
valuable player award.
'' I expected pitchers w
pitch me differently this
year," said Foster, "and they
have. I've seen more offspeed and breakilig pitches
on 3-1 and 2-1 counts than I
did last year ."
Arid many is the time he
ha s swung at tllem merely

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.

298 SECIJNO ST• 8 PM - MIDNIGHT
PRICES
.
FRIDAY
EFFECTIVE
SEPT. 29, 1978 :

tHIS

· otfER
GOOD
AT ANY
COWGE
IN THE
UNITED
STATES

i

1

McLaughlin (4 .8 J. L- Splillorfl
( J9. JJ l HR - Kan,as Citv. Brett
('il ) . -,.

Minn
101 101 lDO- 5 12 1
'Texas
00011 1 s2x..:... 1o 11 1
Er ickson ,· Perzanowsk l (6),
Marshall ~7). Johnson (81 and ·
wynegar ; Jenkif'lS , 'Mirabella
(7 and .Sundberg . W- Mirab.el.
Ia (J .2J. L- P.erzanowski (2 .7).
HR- Texas, Harrah (11).
Mi\w
000 000 OIQ- 1 10 1
Calif
000 021 10x- 4 1I 2
Rep logle, RodriQUez f6 l and
Moore : Frost. LaRoche (91 and
Downing . W- FroSt 15-4). LF~:eplogle (9·5l . HR - Callforn ia,
Landreaux (5).
(Only games sdeduled )

MAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS.
. By United Press International
BATTING.
(based on 425 at bats)
NATIONAL LEAGUE
Parker Pit
~4A5~7 ~Sa ~JCJf2
Bu ck ner Chi
114 434 138 .318
Gar11ey LA
IS8 630 198 .314
Mad lock SF
120 438 137 .313
RIChards SO
1-51 5 41 169 .312
Cruz Hou
150 554 172 .310
Clark SF
153 580 179 .309
Winfield SO
155 575 177 .JOB
t1
Burroghs Atl
ISO 482 146 .JOJ
!
Conc~.;n Cin
150 556 166 .299
l
AMERICAN~EAGUE.
.
. ;.
G AB , H .' Pet.
1
American League
Carew Min
ISO 556 186 .335
t
East
Oliver lex
IJO513 167 .326
f
w. L Pet. GB Rice Bos
158 659 207 .314
N)w York
96 62 .608
Piniella NY
126 456 143 .314
Boston
95 63 .601 1 Roberts Sea
131 462 141 .305
Milwauke
90 69 .566 6,~ Ogli11ie Mil
. 121 461 142 .304
~Jifimre
88 69 ,S61 71!2 Otis KC .
139 479 143 .299
~troi1
84 74 .532 12
LeFlore Oet
154 664 197 .297
ctevelnd
68 87 .439 261/~ Bostock Cal
147 568 168 .296
r.ronto .
5~ 98 .376 3611'2 Yount Mil
125 4941 1.46 .296
;
W•st
HOME RUNS. . ,
. •f . . ..
NAT
I 0 N A L
LEAGUE'I:
W. ~ . Pet. GB
x"Kan City
90 69 .S66
Foster, Cin 37 ; Luzinski , Ph1
cllit
as 73 .538 41t4 33; Parker , Pitt 30 ; Smith, LA
fixas
a3 75 .525 61 •4 29: Kingman . Chi 28.
/Jinesota
72 87 .453 18
AMERICAN LEAGUE: Rice,
69 88 .439 20
Bos 44 ; Baylor , Cal and Hi sle,
Cf!li cago
O)k land
69 90 .4341 21 Mil 33 ; Thornton, Clev 32 ;
SJaltle
56 100 .3S9 3·2'!• Thomas , Mil 31 .
-.x·clinch~d division title
N A·;~~S J'~TLTE~~~GUE:
' Wednesday's Results
~~lfimore J, Cle!ieland 1
Parker , P.ltt 115; Foster , Cin
..,Boston s, Detroit 2
114 ; Gar11ey, LA 110 : Clark , SF
f]Jew Yc;.rk s, Toronto 1
98; Luz inski , Phil and Winf ield,
~,Seattle 4, Kansas City 2
SDA~ER:ICAN LEAGUE : Rice,
:t'exas 10, Minnesota 5
;fCalifornla 4, Milwaukee 1
8os 135; Staub, Del 120 : Hisle,
~ Todav '' ProbAbl~ Pitchers
Mil 113 ; Thornt on , Clev 103;
•
(Ait Tim@S EDT)
Carry, Oak 97.
:c leveland (Hood 5·41 at
STOLEN BASEi.
NAT I 0 N A l LEAGUE :
allfimore (Palmer 20.12 ), 7:30
pvn .
·
Moreno, Pitt 68 ; Lopes, LA 415 ;
· · ~etrolt (Young 6·6 1 at Bos ton Taveras, Pitt 44 ; DeJesus , Chi
and· Smith, s·o· 40 .
( orrez 15·12), 7:30 P.m.
. AMERICAN, LEAGUE :. Le
oronto &lt;Moore 6-Bl at New
v. rk (G uidry 23·31. 8 p.m.
Flore , Oet 69 ; Cruz, Sea " 57;
·chicago (Hinton 1 5} at Wills; Tex 51 ; Dilon~ . O.lk 49;
d. li forn i ~ (Ryan 9.13) , 10 :30 Wilson , KC 44_
"-fJ
.
PITCHING .
p,mT .
(AI
d 9 10 ) t' · . . · VICTORIES. . . .
• e)Cas
exan er .
a
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Perry ,
Sfattle (Rawley 4·81, 10 :35 p.m . SO 21 _6; Hooton , LA 19-9;
. ·
·
fridly's Gimes
:Toronto at .Boston, night . . Grimsley , Mtl 19·11 ;" Niekro, All
\Cleveland~~ ~ew York. night 19-17 ; Blue, SF 18.9; Ri chard ,
~Balt imo re ~tOetro l t,n ight
HouMd t&lt;nepper ,'SF 17 .11.
Minnesota atKan City , nigh t
AMERICAN LEAGUE :
,Khic~go at Californ ia, nl'ijlht
Guidry, NY 23·3: Caldwell. Mil
"Milwaukee at oat"!nd , nigh I 21 9; Palmer , Ball 20-12;
~ e 111 as at seat1'1 tr-kl'li'Qht
Leonard , KC 20·17; Eckersjey:
~
.1
Bos 19·8: Figueroa. NY 19 9;
:
··-..--... ,.. ,_.,.,F'.
Splittorll , KC 19·13 ; Flanaga n,
Ball 19·14
~
EARNED RUN AVERAGE .
(b•sed on 153 innings pitched )
I M•jor Lutue Ruults
NATIONAL LEAGUE : Swan,
Jy United Preu lntern•tion•l NY 2.43 ,· Rogers, Mtl 2.47 ;
l
NAtlon•l Ltlt~Ut
Vuckovich, Sf.L 2.58; Knepp er,
Sen Ogo
000 000 ooo- 0 S0 SF 2.63 ; Hooton , LA 2.68.
SllnFrn
01000000x - 1 S O AMERICAN LEAGUE :
Rasmussen . Lee (81 and Guidry , NY 1.74; Caldwell, Mil
c:astitlo, Ten ace (8}; Knepper 2.23 ; Mat! a c k, Tex 2.31;
and Hill . W- Knepper (17. 11 l. L Palmer , Bait 2.47 ; Goltz, Minn
_. Rasmussen (14 ·15).
2.54.
.t
STRIKEOUTS. . ·
Mtl
000 100'021 - 4 9 2 NATIONAL .:LEAGUE: ·· Ri ·
~h i la
021 002 OOx - S 12 0 chard , Hou 2~7 ; Ni~kro , . . . Atl
i G r i msl~',l . Garma n (8 ) and 242 ; Sea 11 er. Cfn 215; Bly leven ,
·carter ; Christenson, R.~~d 191 Pit! and Montefusco, SF 177.
and Boone. W- Chr istenson (1 3.· AMERICAN LEAGUE : Ryan ,
14 l. L- Gr imsley (19 .11) , HR - Cal 247; Guidry , NY 234 ;
Montreal , Oawson US! .
Lfonard , KC 179; Flanagan,
'
Ball 164 , Matlack, T ~)C 154 .
&lt;21 1
100 200 000- J 7 0
F(tsbgh
011 006 00)( - a 11 o
Burris, McGlothen (6) , Rob
fs (7) and Blackwell ; Revss
d Ott . W- Reuss 13·2&gt;. LSP.orts Trtnsactions
rris (7.13 ). HR - Piftsburgh , By Un1ted
Press International
rker (]O J.
Wednesday
t-jous .
000 000 04G- 4 1 0 Atlanta -Football·
Defensive end
Alia
000 000 000..- 0 5 1 Claude Humphrey
an nounc,ea
~ Ruhle ,
Sambilo (8) and his
immectiate retir ement.
chv ; LaCorte, Davey (8),
New York Jets - Placed
eiss (9} and Bened ic t. W- fight
end Sob Raba oil injured
hle (3.3). ~C orte (O·ll .
reserve llsl and resigned
Reggie Grant .
. 000 300000- 3 52 cornerback
Seattle - Traded defensive
nci
000 010 04)( - 5 7 0 tackle
Bill Cooke and a future
Sutlof'l , Hough (7), Raullh&amp;n drafl choice
Detroit for
1 and Ferguson. Yeager (BJ ; defensive end to Ernie
ice;
to, BorDen (8 ), Ba lr (9 ) and waived center Geoff Pr
Reece
nch. W- Borbon {8·2) . Lugh (5.SJ. HRs- Cincinnat i,
ster (37) ; Martinez (1 ).

f.m..

$

·

*

T'r
000 1oO ooo- 1 6 1
N' Y.
031 010 OQO- 5 10 1
}.VInis, Murphv (4 1, Wil ey (7 )
and Ashby ; Hunter and
Munson. W- Hunter 112·5) . LWt111s ( ]' .7) . HRs- New York ,
Nt!ttles (27 ), Jackson (251 :
Toronto, Howell 171 .
sea
ooo 100 003- • 8 o
K.C.
100 000 010- 2 7 0
· Mclaughlin and Stinson ;
S~l i ttorff and Wathan . w- ·

.

********************
MAXWELL
HOUSE INSTANT********

Le.gue
Eut
W. L. Pc:t. GB
Ph ll a
89 69 .563 Pittsbrgh
85 72 .SAl 3 111 ·
Chicago
77 81 .487 · 12
Montreal
74 85 .465 15 1 1~
St . Louis
68 91 .428 211 '~
New York
64 94 .405 25 ·
;... ·
West
.
W. L. Pet.· GB
X OS Ang .
94 64 .595 · cinati
ea 69 .561 5 1~
n Fran
88 71 .5SJ 611:1
S•n Diego
82 77 .S\6 12 1 1~
~uston
71 87 .449 23
!111imta
69 89 .437 25 .
*·Clinched dlvi.sian tltl'
~
Wedntsdty's Results
"f,an FranciSCO 1, San Diego 0
l:hiladelphia 5, Montreal 4·
rlttsburgh 8, Chicago 3
+touston 4, Atlanta 0
~lncinnat15, Los Ang 3
: TOCIIIY'S Probable Pitchers
..
(All Times EOTl
.+touston (Rich.!lrd 17· 11 1 at
nta (Mahler 4.111 , 7 : 35
os Angeles (Rav 15.9 at
cinnati (LaCoss 41·8L 8:05
· ~ridly's Gimes
"'·ew York at Chicago
iP
.Ph il a at Pitlsbgh , 2, twi .nite
~ontreal al St . Louis, night
:.O,tlanta·at Cihclnnatl. night
;san Fran at Houston, night
~os Ang at San Diego. night
N1tion11

j

'By FRED MCMANE
UPI Sports Writer
It's a ·sure bet ·the guy who
mak.e s up the football
sched!lle at the University of
Missouri will never win a
popularity coolest .
There may never have been
a first month's. schedule as
demanding · as the ooe the
r;gers have enco!llltered tlli.s
year . When has a. team
·opened with a defending
nation's ! champion and
fol19wed by playing two No. I
ranked tearils .within the next
tllree weeks? ·
.
Such is tile plight of the
Tigers. They opened against
defending national champion
Notre Dame (and surprised
tllem witll a :J.O victory) then
played top-ranked Alabama
the second week of the
season. Missouri lost to the
Crimson Tide, but it wasn't
one-sided.
After a breatller last week
agaillst MissiSsippi, Missouri
comes face-to·face this
saturday with anotllerNo . I
ranked club, Oklahoma,
which took over the top rating
this
week
following
Alabama's loss to Soutllern
California. .
Judging by Missouri's PlaY
thus far against the top·ranking
oppone-nts,
Oklahoma will have its hands
lull. The Tigers ore a tough
club to run against and the
Sooners' wishbone offense is
geared to tile running game.
Suffice it to say Oklahoma
will find MissoW'i no bowl of
Rice.
Here's how we see the
games across the country :
The East
PeM St. 33 TCU 6 - Ever
sllltl!~lle days of ancient
Rome the Christians have
always hod trouble witll the
lions .
Pittsburgh
20 North
Carolina 17- Pimtllers have
11 pair of .. banged-up
quarterbacks.
Washington St. 40 Army 10
- Jack Thompson takes no
prisoners.
NaY)' 22 Boston College 8 Middies' aerial game tough to
stop . .
The South
Alabama 30 Vanderbilt 7 Crimson Tide gets some of its
lost color back.
F1orida St. 31 Houston 22Jlnuny Jordan and· DaMy
Davis compare throwing

underestimate tile Bears.
Michigan 24 Duke 13
Wolverines wear teams down
in second half.
Nebraska 28 Indiana 10 Huskers learn from Huskies'
mistakes.
The Midlands
Oklahoma 22 MissoW"i 12 Tigers can play defense.
Iowa ·St. ~ Drake 7 Bulldogs can't'handle Dexter
Green.
·
Kansas 20 Miami (Fla .) 13
- Jayhawks due for a
letdown after last week's
upset of UCLA .
Colorado 40 Nortllwestern 3
- There ought to be a law
against games like this.
The Southwest
Arkansas '1:1 Tulsa 14
Razorbacka should contain
P.ssing of Dave Rader .
Texas 23 Texas Tech 9 Longborns' offense still isn't
coordinated.
I.SU 36 Rice 3- Tigers turn
to dine on Rice.
Texas A&amp;M 42 Memphis St.
10 - Aggies can grind you to
death.
.
The Far West
, Southern California 31
Michigan St. 13 - The
Trojans
against
the
Spartans? Why isn't this
game being played in Atllens,
Ohio?
Stanford 37 Tulane 8 Steve Oils is making

one ."
downed Detroit, 5-2. Seattle tile San francisco to victory
lly IRA KAUFMAN
Jerry Martin had four hils, upended Kansas City, 4-2, fo r his sixtll ~utout aild 17th
UP! Sports Writer
The
fi r st
pla c e including a double and a Baltimore topped Cleveland, triumph .
Texas
whipped Astrus 4, Braves 0:
Philadelphia Phillies take on sin ~ le to key a pair of two.;un 3-1.
Vern Ruhle and Joe
10·5,
and
Pittsburgh at the Pirates' lnnings, and the Phillies sur· Minneso ta t
Three Ri vers Stadiwn in vived a ninth-inning scar e w Ca lifornia beat Milwaukee, 4- Sambito combined on a fivehitter and r ookie Jeff
their next fourgame series edge the Expos.
1.
Leonard capped a four.;un
Larry Christenson, 13-14, Gian1s I, Padres 0;
tll al will in all probability
Bob Knepper held San eighth-inning witll a tllree·
decide the National League 's scattered eight hits, including
Asldre Dawson 's ~til homer Diego to five hils in his last run double to pace Houston
Eastern Division title.
Philadelphia hung on for a in the fourth inning , before start of tile season, pitching over Atlanta in a battle for
fifth place in the West .
5-4 triumph over Montreal yielding W Ron Reed with two
a nd Pittsburgh whipped on and one out in the riinth .
Chi ca go , B-3, Wednesday Nter allowing an RBI single
They'll Do It Every Time
night, setting up the four- to Tommy Hutt on, Reed
ga me weekend showdown struck out Dave Cash and Del
J'EVER NOTICE?
beginning with a Friday night Unser ror his 16th save.
in Pittsburgh, Phil Garner
double-h ea der . The Phillies
M~ OLD SHACK ..
lead tho Pirates by 3V. games druve in four runs wilh an
l 'M SELLING IT..
1 NEE'[] A ~HLJT()
and need on ly one win to RBI rorce&lt;&gt;ut and a base sFOR THE
chnch their third strai ght loaded triple that capped a
ESTATE
six-run sixth inning and kept
Eastern Division crown .
Sli'OCHURE ·Phillies' shortstop Larry Philadelphia 's magic number
Bowa believes his team ha s for clinching the division at
two .
the upper hand.
Pirate captain Will ie
" I' d rather be in our
Stargell
term ed
th e
than
position
now
up co ming series, " The
Pitt s bur~h 's ," sai d Bow a .
"They've got to win four and Shootout at the OK Corral,"
tllen go to Cincinnati and beat but declined to predi ct the
tllem . We only have to win survivor .
"That," he said, rolling his
eyes, "ltm not going to
Cardinals' fans forget all revea1 , because if we knew,
there wouldn 't be any use or
about Guy Benjamin.
UCLA 24 Minnesota 12 - playing the games."
In other NL games, San
Enough of that fresh air in
Kansas. Bruins glad to be Francisco blanked San
back home in Los Angeles Diego, HI, Houston shut out
where you can taste the air Atlanta , 4-0, and Cincinnati
beat Los Angeles, 5-:l.
when you breathe.
In the American League,
Washington 15 Oregon St .
New York Ya nkees
the
10 - Huskies still searching
defeated
Toronto, 5-1, Boston
for a n offense.

anns.
Nortll Carolina St. 27 Wake
Forest 15 - Ted Brown's a
tough man to bring down .
Kentucky 16 Maryland 10 Wildcats cage Terps' . wild
bone Steve Atkins .
'The Midwest
Pilrdue 22Notre Darrie 17 Our UPSET special Will the
Pope
launch
an
investigation?
Ohio St. 26 Baylor 17 Woody had better not

fr om fhe injur ed reserv.e list.
Baseball
·
Atlanta ~ Signed shOrtstop
Jerry Royster .to a one.year
contract
San FranciscO - ~igned
Manager Joe Allobelli for 1979
and annovnced that Coaches
Dav e Br istol, Jim Davenport
and Tom Hailer agreed to
term s
Hou ston - Activated ovtfield
er Cesar Ced eno.

1979 Trans Am

:
A~erlc~n L11gue
carve
000 000 Ol G- 1 10 3
100 010 01x- 3 7 0
t
aits Kern 18 ) and Alexan·
d
Pruitt (8) ; D. Martinez
a Dempsey. w- o. Mart inez
( .1J ). L- Waifs (12.15} . HR B IT Imore, Roenlcke (3) .
100 001 ooo- 2 50
3100000Hc- S 70
s
ilcox, Hiller (8) and May ;
T nt , Hauter {7). Stanley (9)
a Fisk. W- Tiant (12.8). L'Mtcox: (13-12l. HRs- Detroit ,
Sfaub (24), LeFlore (12 );
BOston, Scott (12) .

SUNDAY nMES-SENnNEL

~~ ~~kti -;, -··************************
16 oz.

M•lor lt1gue Stlndlngs .
By UniJtd Prns tntern1tlonill

Phils, Pirates keep winning

UPI favors Buckeyes
.over Baylor, 26~17

,

(On ly games schedulect )

and

·~ ~:•~

• •
••• ••••

• ••
• •
•••

~

11

CRISPY SERVE

***************************
Favorite

...• ...

~

••

BACON L8.59~*

5- The Daily Sentinel, MlclcDeport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday Sept . 28, 1978

~~~· ~
CLIP &amp; MAIL
Tlie Dai~ Sentinel, Court Sl, Pomeroy, 0. 45769
'•

NAME •••••••• ••.•••••••••.••••••••••..••..
c

••••

0 ••••• 0 •••••••

ADDRESS ••••••••••••••••••• •••••••••••• •••••• ••··•······•••
CITV' ....................... ............. ...................... .
'sTA~ .................................. ZIP

CODE •••.•••..•. ·

U CHECK ............. 0 MONEY ORDER ........... ..
U AMT~ .•••.••.•••••••••••••••••••••. .' ••••••••••••••••••.••

Ann surgery
said success

OFFER
EXPIRES

SEPTEMBER
30,
1978

SORRY, ·

CINCINNATI (UP!) - anclnnatt Reds pitcher Bill
Bonham, who underwent
elbow ggery in Los Angeles.
be
Wednesday,
will
bllpitallzed for four days. .
Dr. Frank Jobe, the
· Dodgers' orthopedic
apeciallst , performed the
~at.loo .

NO
REFUNDS ·

'*************************************************************·---------------I

•
E

; "Loole bodies and bone
were clellled out of
ham '1 elbow and his
ar
nerve
was
ttanspllnted,'' Reds' team
Jllyaicllll Dr . George Ballou
fiiiOWICed here.

I

1979 Bonneville Brougham

•'A lways Glad To
Help ·Y oul
• Roger· Barnhouse, a recent graduafe of Ohio
Slate Unlv. Col!igeot Pharmacy, end 1 native of
Wellston, Ohio hils recently beo;jun employment
with u1 and exprMS@S a desire to serVe ,our
customers In a prompt, courteous manner es
does ltle rest of our staff at

.·DUlTON DRUG CO.
992-3106

N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport. &lt;i .

197.9 Sunbird
Imagine ci bold n!!w br!!ed of Firebird Trans Am with
o tail lamp block as cool. lmagme o new Gron9 Pnx .
with personal luxury for the 'SO 's and beyond . lmogme
a new mid·size Grand LeMons with its widest choice
· of availabl!! interiors in' y!!ars . Imagine never more
luxurious lull-size Sonnevilles. Imag ine four fun new

. l ittle Sunbirds. Imagine a rood worthy Grand Am
designed by enthustosts. For enthusia sts . Imagine the
only luxury compac t cor built in Amer ica with Pontiac's
specia l fla ir-Phoenix . :
Now slop imagin ing . The '79 Pontiocs ore here ... as
our best get better!

THE 1979 PONTIACS' OUR BEST GET

�'Fall Fashions 19 78 ' subject r'"G;;;;;ti~;;"R;pJ Rutland Methodist Church .
./. .By Helen and Sue Bottel .: to celebrate 60th anniversary
of September fashion .show
with homecoming,_·sunday_

8 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978

'

fabrics. This special fashion and accessOriZIDg are .alSo
show will be modeled by. explained. Groups of mixcommunity members on match separates, versatile
September 28 at 7:30p.m. in daytime dresses, beautiful
Meigs Local High School. ·everiing · clothes and garments for the male members
Registration is 23 cents.
''Fashion Trends and · of the family will be showil: .
Techniques" Is designed . Mark "the date on · your
especially for the woman who calendar. !! you sew, 'or want
sews. It highlights all the . to learn ·more about sewing,
newest cnlors, fabrics and you'll be Interested . tn atgarment constructio.n tend.lng this educational
methods:· Wardrobe planning fashion presentation.

The fall

fashions are
prettier than ever this year
and the silhouette is soft and
easy . Warm col ors and
various textures are em·
phasized for the fabrics .
Simplicity Pattern Company
is very happy to show you
some of the latest styles. The
seasonal showing of "Fashion
Trends and Techniques" will
bring you up to date on what's
new in the fashion world and
the latest information on

Meigs Cancer Society elects officers
By Mike Beadlaelli
R. Pb.
The Meigs County Branch
of the American Cancer
Society recently elected new
of ficers and committee
chairpersons . These few
!'WPle are willing to head up
the various committe~s ,
however ,
many
more
volunteers are needed to
implement the necessary
programs.
Many people think that the
Cancer Society is involved
only in collecting money ; this
is not true, fund raising is
only a part of the Cancer
Society's activities . There
are live distinct committees
and volunteers are needed for
each. These committees are :
L
Service
and
rehabilitation ~ this com·
mittee works directly with
the cancer patient .or his
family , providing financial
aid and moral support .

2. Professional education this committee plans one or
two seminars yearly for
physicians, nurses and other
health professionals of the
community conceriling advances in cancer research
and treatment.
3. Public education - this
committee is involved In
presenting to the public, both
children
and
adults,
programs involving current
problems
and
cancer
preventative measures (such
as stop smoking clinics,
films, etc.)
4. Public information this committee is involved In
publicizing events . and
programs of the Cancer
Society ..It is also involved in
the Cancer Line article
published in the local paper.
5. Crusade ~ this committee is involved in fund
raising activities ~ whether

Name:

Addre;;•~·~~=========================
City :
Tel ephone H:
I woul d li ke to s erve on t he follow i ng
committee :
( ) Servic e ( ) Pr ofe ss ional ed .
( ) "P ublic . ed . ( ) . Pub li c i nfo .

( ) Cru s ade
Ple a s e se nd .to 1
M e i~ s

Count y Cancer Society
c/o Seni or Citi 'l.ens Bld. E. Main

Pomeroy, Ohio 4 5769

Woman kills daughter to keep
her from becoming prostitute
BURLINGTON , Vt. ( UPI )
· - Marilyn Dietl awoke one
morning last May and
thought to herself, "Today is
the day she dies."
With tears her eyes, Mrs.
Dietl , 41 , told a judge
Wednesday that she took her
18-yearold daughter Judy for
a drive in the family car later
that day and shot her to death
to keep her from running
away to become a prostitute.
"I must have gone crazy,
because I couldn 't let her
go, " she told Chittenden
Olunty Superior Olurt Judge
Ernest Gibson.
Mrs. Dietl had pleaded
innocent by reason of insanity
to a first -degree murder
indictment. She changed the
plea to guilty Wednesday
after authorities agreed to
reduce the charge to second·
degree murder.
State 's Attorney Mark
Keller said he agreed to the
lesser charge because he did
not believe justice would be
served by sending Mrs. Dietl
to pri son for the rest of her
life, the sentence in first·
degree murder cases.
He said he \\ill seek a
sentence of up to 2Q years.
Mrs. Dietl told Gibson it all
be gan in 1977 when Judy went
away to college in Boston .
She said she soon learned her
daughter moved out of the
YWCA to be come a
prostitute .
"Judy got involved with a
black pimp in Boston ," she
told the judge. "When I found
out ... I brought her home . I
did everything I could to keep
her home. "
The pimp pursued Judy at
her home in Ollchester, Vt. ,
by letter and telephone, Mrs.
DieU said. Once, Judy tried to
run away and was caught by
her mother at the bus station .
Finally, Mrs. Dietl said,
she told Judy she would have
to stay home and cut all Ues
with Boston or "leave the
house and never come back."
When Judy decide9 to
leave , Mrs. Dietl said she
awoke the morning of May 5
and thOught : "Today is the
day she dif1!."
" It was as if she was
already dead ," Mrs. Dietl
said. "I felt so· relieve~ she
was safe .·•

sales .
Mrs . Dietl asked her
daughter to get out of the car.
Then, she said, she began
shooting Judy with the
revolver .
"No mama! " Mrs Dietl
said her daughter cried. "No
mama!''
" Judy, I can't let you go,"
Mrs. Dietl said she answered.
Breaking into tears in the
courtroom, Mrs. Dietl
testified she could not hear
the sound of the shots.
"I kept hoping somebody
wolild come out of the house
(next door ) and stop me," she
said.
No we came until police
arrived .
"I
just
killed my
daughter," Mrs. Dietl told an
officer.

Reedsville

•

Mrs. Dietl said she found
her husband 's two guns, a .38callber revolver and a .22
derringer , in a closet. ·
She told her ~aughter they
were going for a drive. The ·
two drove to the shady
parking lot of the Ohavi
Zedek
Synagol(ue
In
Burlington , a place Mrs. Dietl
had visited for rummage

Mr. and Mrs . Howard
Young of Paden City spent a
few days with Mr. and Mrs.
Garth Smith .
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Bise,
Mrs. Mabel Hetzer, Scotty
Foster. Mrs. Virginia Walton.
and Susie Cowdery went to
see the New River Bridge in
West Virginia.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Brown
and David have returned
home alter a vacation trip to
Canada. They were ac·
companied by Mr. and Mrs .
Steve Cowdery.
Mrs . Kathryn Dlett of
Belpre, Mrs. Lyle Bliiderson,
and
Kay
Balderson
vacationed a few days at
Myrtle Beach, S. C. recently .
Visiting with Mrs. Helen
Archer recently were Mrs.
Milton Tuttle of Texas Road,
Kim Olleman and friend of
Ollumbus.
Mr. and Mrs. John Calaway
and family of Marion visited
with Mrs. Virginia Walton
and Susie and Mr. and Mrs.
Jim Q)wdery and family.
Mr . and Mrs . Roger
Chaney have moved into the
former
Bess
Larkins
property.
Mrs. Opal Randolph visited
with Mr. 'lind Mrs. JohnQY
Hayes at Laurel Fork, Va.
She also traveled the scenic
Blue Ridge Parkway and
went . to see the New River
Bridge on her way home .
Mrs. Rose Thomas visited
with her sister, Mrs. Gladys
Baughman at Gahanna ..
· Mrs. Opal · Randolph met
Crystal ' Needs · at tbe·
Eastfand Shopping Mall at
Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. George Arnold of Granada Hills, Calif.
spen\ a few days at the
Williams · Balderson home .

ONCEAJVNKJE,ALWAYSONE?
BY HELEN AND SUE BOTl'EL

Flower·arranging course gets
off to enthusiastic beginning

"

DEAR RAP:
The 60th anniversary of the
My father says drug abulers can't be rebabllitated-ooce a · Rutland United Methodist
junkie, always one, be lnalats. He quo~ professionals who Church will be observed at a
believe a "cure" caMOt be conHrmed until the former U.!er homecoming on Sunday. Oct.
dies Without havlnl( ever lhot uP or taken pUis again.
1~ .
.
Do you believe thla?-Can'T ACCEPT IT .
Following the morning
DEAR CAl : .
.
worship service, there ":ill be
That's Wt'ong assaying the vl~tlm of a nervous breakdown
will always have a mental probleni.
II a drug ·abuler has been rehabilitated psy~ologlcally and
physically, th!! cure can be pennanent. :- HELEN
NOTE FROM SUE&gt; But the psychological cure is much the
. EAS'fERN STAR
A regular meeting of
more important here.
We preaent Emlblt A: .
Racine Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star, will be held at
DEAR HELEN AND SUE :
I'm a young mother living at home again With my parents. II · the ' temple at 7:30 p.m.
It weren't for their love and COllcem I wouldn't be writing this. Mon.day with election of of!took drugs for years-It wasa way for me to escape dealing ficers to be held. Dues are
with everyday pressures. I even tried klUlng myaelf, not payable at this time.
wanting to faee the fact that I was hooked on drugs.
Near death In the hospital! reallzed I wanted to Jive . That's
wben my folks took over.
In a rehabllitatloo program now, I see a paychlatrlst
regularly and I'll be starting school soon to take up nursing.
I'm a happy and responalble mother, a real pel'llOII, and each
day Ia more Important than the last. A whlle back I couldn't
care less!! it was yesterday, tomorrow or never.
My parents provided encouragement and trust when others
wrote me off, figuring I couldn't he ssved. If more people
would believe that Junkies can came back aU the way, more of
us wotild make 11.-A NEW AND HAPPY PERSON

a carry·in dinner. ')'he af· will present. music during \he
. ternoon program v.-:11begin at · afte~noon ~rogram. The
2 p.m. with forme• members . public ts tnvated.
and pastors ath:nding to be .
.. .wr._....-..,. ... ..
recognized . The Angelaires
Your "Extro Toueh"
Florist Slnco1957 ·

-s

CONFINED ·
Mr. and Mrs . Henry
Meifert, the former Mary
Eynon of Syracuse, are
confined to their home. Mrs ~
I!LOFIIST
Melfert is recuperating from
a fractured hip and her
PH, 992·2644
husband is confined folio wing
a heart atlack. Cards may be
352 E. Main, Pom&lt;tro~
sent to the couple,. frequent
y,.., ... J:TD Flo,.;.·.t
visitors here, to 920 Shedborn
r.-~-----Ave ., Dayton, Ohio.

door--to-door , mailings,
special events or local
projects.
Each committee will have
a short article in succeeding
issues of the Sentinel
describing their activities in
further · detail. If you would
like to serve .on any par·
ticular committee, please fill
out the form In this.article. If
you would like more in·
formation on any one committee, please look for the
article concerning that RAP:
1have a terrible problem I caL 't discuss with my mom. I'm
committee In future issues of
HYPOAUERGENIC
14
and hadn't kissed a boy until we played Sptn the Bottle at a
the Sentinel or call the Meigs
Olunty Cancer Society Of- party. Everyone made fun of me and called me " Jaws."
fice, telephone number 992Now I've met a guy I llke a lot but a girl told him my
MAGNETIC
7531 between the hours of 1
nickname
and
I'm
so
embarrassed.
I
may
never
get
a
real
p.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tuesday
boyfriend becaU.!e who'd go with "Jaws"1 I thought it came
and Thursday.
naturally but I guess I'm Just a terrible kisser. What can I do?
JAWS
DEAR JAWS:
If ki$ took evei.-Y!Iiliig they were teased about seriously
they'd all become reclU.!es. The first ldas is almost always selfconscious and awkward, but a new boyfriend may be as
worried about a goof as you are, so he won't mind practic~ . HELEN
.
JAWS:
... And if he's experienced, he'll be glad to teach you. Watch
THURSDAY
outf&lt;r this type, friend.-~
RIVERVIEW Garden Club,
(GOT A PROBLEM? Or a subject for discussion, twoThursday evening, Sept. 28,
generatioo style? Direct your questions to either Sue or Helen
7:30, at the home of Mrs.
Hottel or both, if you want a combination mother-daughter
Frank Bise. Serving as co\,nhllU'"" 1, .--(} ' ;·
answer - In care of this newspaper.
hostess will be Mrs. Gene
VV-::7
r· · 1
Wilson. An auction will be
ehld, . club officers will be
installed.
Mll&gt;DLEPORT CHILD
Conservation
League
meeting, Thursday evening,
7:30 p.m. at the River Boat
Room of the Meigs Branch,
Athens County Savings and
RUTLAND-Women of the by Mrs. Harold Sauer, 7.42Loan; a white elephant sale
Rutland
United Methodist 2301.
will be held.
The second fund raising
Church will hold a bake sale
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION Saturday beginning at 9 a.m. project will be a yard sale on
of the Middleport First at the Rutland Department Oct. 4, 5 and 6 in the church
United Presbyterian Church Store . Contributions to yard. Household items, good
potluck Thursday 6:30 p.m. the
'kenneth McCullough, R. Ph.
Charles RiHie, R. Ph.
store
may
be clothing and shoes will be
Hostess members of Group brought, or will be picked up offered for· sale. Items are
Ronald Hanning, R. Ph
Mon. thru Sat. a,ooa .m. to 9 p.m .
One . Devotions and program
needed for the sale.
Sunday
10 : JO to 12: JO and s to 9 p.m.
by Jean M"!'re.
On Oct. 26 a soup, sandwich
PH. 972· 2955
and pie sale will be held. . ._ _ _ , . PRESCRIPTIONS Friendly.Servlce
PRECEPTOR Beta Beta Resigns as lecturer
Serving
will
begin
at
noon
in
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Pomeroy/ 0.
E. Main
Mrs. Jo Ann Newsome has the church social room that
Thursday 7:45 p.m. at Meigs
Open
Nigh"
till9
.
day.
Inn. Report on Boy's State resigned as Conway Diet
Class lecturer as of Sept. 30.
will be given.
Mrs. Newsome will be
FRIDAY
associated with the Slin'
.
MARY SHRINE 37 ORDER derella Diet Classes which
of White Shrine of Jerusslem are starting. The schedule for
•
•
•
''
inspection Friday 7:30 p.m. the Slinderella groups to
'
''
at Pomeroy Masonic Temple. meet include: Monday night,
'
'
''
'
Inspecting officer will be 7:30p.m., Mason, W. Va., St.
'
I
Valma Joy Burnie, Supreme Joseph Catholic Church;
''
Worthy High Priestess . Tuesday, Middleport, 7:30
I
I
Potluck refreshments.
p.m. at Heath United
''
Methodist Church; WedSATIJRDAY
'
~~··- --1' ·.
CARNIVAL AND . jitney nesday morning, 10:30 a.m.
~-- - -L'
I
supper at Chester Elemen- Point Pleassnt at Krodel
'
Park
Club
House;
Wed'
tary Saturday. Jitney supper
.·
'I'
from 5 to 7 p.m. and carnival nesday night, 7:30p.m., Point
'
from 7 to 9. Sponsored by Pleasant area at Krodel Park
''
'
Club
House.
Anyone
wishing
'
Chester PTO.
'
I
any further information may
POTLUCK supper and call Mrs. Newsome at 614-992'
songfest at Cheshire United 3382.
Methodist Church, Sept. 30,
supper at 5:30, singing at
7:30. The Lemley FamilY
sing en.

·:.,...·:*':

the Lasting, Loving Gift ..... ~. ; ; ~··
~~"'"'

..

FUN IN LEARNING-Sbaron Pratt, Pomeroy, Delores SUrfRce and Clara B!llle Riley,
Mlddlep«t, left to right, are among the 70 women and men enrolled In the Meigs Olunty
' Garden ClubB A.sloclation !lower arranging"l:ourae. None of them belong to a garden club,
but say that they ·enjoy working with flowers so much that they may )otn one.

ily Charlene HoeQicb
arr.anging Increases as the
They came with baskets, weeks go by. Already plans
buckets and bags of garden are being made to offer
flowers . and
roadside another course, this time in
materials, and left with modem design . So far the
arrangements anyone would emphasis has been on
be proud to claim.
traditional arrangements
lt·was the third class of the whicll, of course, are more
flower arranging course suitable for home use.
being taught by Mrs. Janet
Next week dried materials
Bolin, an accredited judge of ior
use
in
flower
the Ohio . Association of arrangements will
be
Garden Clubs, for the Meigs discuued by Mrs. Bolin, who
County
Garden
Clubs will have on display
Association. at the recreation many dried ·nowers and
buUdtng at Royal Oak Park. plants which she uses from
To create an Interest in time to time .
home beautification throu~h · For the final class of the
the. U.!e of flowers, both live course, arrangers are to take
and dried, is the objective of a piece of weathered wood or
the four week course which some accessory they want to
has a total of 70 women and make their arrangement
men from a three county area with, a needlepoint holder,
enrolled.
and plant materials, to make
Average attendance so far a favorite design.
hasbeenover50perclassand
Mrs. Bolin will be
the enthusiam for flower demonstrating how to dry
.,
plant materials. She'll show

a(r drying techniques, drying
with silica jel, with cornmeal
and borax, using glycerin,
pressing, and even how to
handcraft flowers:
Emphasis of previous
classes have been on line, line
mass, and mass de.sign.
Those attending have 'been
taught about basic geometric
form of flower arranging, the
technique of establishing a
m~in line, the auxiliary lines,
and then filling in for complete mass d~lgns.
Several local arrangers
have worked as assistants to
Mrs. Bolin during the flower
arranging workshop which
follows the lecture and
demonstration period of each
class period. Pat Holter,
Meigs County contact
chairman, Ruth Erwin. liettv
Lou Dean, Evelyn Hollon,
Bernice Carpenter, Leola
Young,
have
helped
arrangers, many of whom
''~.~,~:.;~

. ,h ·i,l:~.
' - Wf,•.

For Fall

J./~~

'

•PIERCED EARRINGS

Experienced flower arrangers assiat the unexperienced
and here Pat Holter, Meigs Olunty Contact Chainnan,
lends a hand to Mrs. Nilda Sola of Rodney, one of several
Gallia Olunty residents enrolled In the arranging course.
are new at it. Marie Birchfield, secretary for ' the
county association, has been
the registrar.
Flower arranging as an
art, a means of self-

.

fl

a
:5il

•PIERCELESS EARRINGS

.-..------·
1
. ·-·-I

Social !I
1 Calendar 1

Rutland U.M. Women
to hold bake, yardsale ,

. ~ t~ 8.
$t

.r------------ ------------- --- --------- r
'

Colors
• Rusty Rail Ruby

•Grey
• Black

THE ' CHIFFON"
• Grey

·1

• Black
GUIDING HAND_: Shown are, left to right, Jan
con~ltant ; caryl Kiser, bead
teacher; Steve Moore, assistant teacher, and Twlla Harrison, aide .
·

Beu'.

JANET BOLIN, Instructor for the courae, gives tips on making mass arrangements to
Mrs. Grace Fllher and Mrs. Hilda Yeauger.

SPECIAL

--

'

Apple Grove
News Notes

SPECIAL MEETING,
Shade River Lodge 453,
By Mro. Herbert Roullh
F&amp;AM, 7 p.m. Saturday at
Dorsa
Parsons
was
hall In Chester. Work In the
returned
to
his
home
Sunday
MM degree; all. Master
Masons
invited.
Also from Veterans Memorial
members are asked to help Hospital.
Mrs. Florence Smith Is
with the repair of the lodge
assisting
In the care of her
hall roof at 10 a.m. Saturday,
daughter , Mrs . Dorothy
&lt;weather permitting.
Johruon of Racine, who Is a
surgical patient at Veterans
SUNDAY
REV. GEORGE OILER, Memorial Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Dm &amp;II
pastor of the First Church of
God, Syracuse, will begin attended the wedding of
broadcasting live from Roger Chaney to Pamela
WMPO beginning Sunday at Olngrove on the lawn at the
homeofthelrCilu.sin at Torch,
9:;1() a.m.

0.

MONDAY
Mr. and Mra. Roger Roush,
POMEROY Garden Club daughter Kimberly Cindy
Monday 7:30p.m. at.)lome of Roush were dinner gueata
Margaret Blaettnar.
Sunday of Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Roulh.
Mr. and Mrs. Ml¢lael Ruth
and three children were
PRICE GOING UP
called here from Maine due to
Need a haircut ? Better get the death of Mrs. Rush's
it now and beat tnflatl~n . The father ; Harold Bird.
Pomeroy · · Middleport
Mr. and Mrs . Herbert
Barbers Assn. has voted to Rousl\, M,rs. Eula Wolfe were ·
increase haircuts from f3 to . visitors at Athena &amp;~~tdiy.
f3 .50 effective Oct. I.
.
·
VISfrORS
RUMMAGE SALE
Mr. and Mrs. Rua•ell,
A rummage sale will be
held at the Sacred Heart Archer, Guysville, spent
Church. Pomeroy, Oct. 3 and Sunday here vlalttng Mra ..
'Eva Archer.
4, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

by

THE "CONTESSA" .

.,~;;L. ·.:/'

BUDGET
.PRICED

BEAUTIFUL
DRESS SHOES

Hush Puppj~s"

•STICK PINS
•THIN LOOK CHAINS
•NECK CHAINS
•ANKLETS
•FASHION RINGS
f _p'f /
•INITIAL RINGS
--..{)! l 1~
,

I
I

express10n, is a new experience for many of those
enrolled in the course, and
one which most are finding
not nearly as difficult as they
thought it might be.

FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY -Our stock
of heavyweight denim Big Bells are reduced
in price. A price with a savings everyone will
'
want to take advantage of. Now is the time to .
stock up.

Guiding Hand school.expands
program to include pre-school

On October 10, Guiding. ·Development in Atbens, as
Hand School will be adding a well as by other county
new dimension to Its con- agency professionals. These
tinually expanding program; SP.fCiallsts will aide the classa pre-school class will be room teachers in carrying out
opened for the young n· more specific needs and
ceptlonal chUdren of Gallla programs each child requires
and Meigs counties. This to reach his full potential.
caryl Kiser will be the head
project, which Ia state aild
teacher
and Steve Moore the
federally funded, will be
aulltanl.
Both have been
located In 'tho Cheshire
Home
Based
Specialists in
BaptU! Church.
GaUia
and
Meigs
counties
Children attending thll
and
are
familiar
with
the
class are thoae under tile a1e
children
entering
the
class.
of sl:r who have been lclllltlfled by their Home Butd Twlla Harrison and Paula
Specialist or otber sources .. Back will be the aides. Jan
very young children who need Bet&amp; hal served as consultant
speclallzed help outside the on the project and will be
home. At the pruent time, we assisting In programming
will be serving children be- and assessing the children.
The class will be in
tween the ages of two aild sl:r.
The focua of the pre-school operation Tuesdays, WedIs to provide quality In· nesdays and Thursdays from
terventlon of the young child. 9-3. The children wUI be
Child development research riding the Guiding Hand bus
aupports the Importance of or will be personally driven
early learning experiences by parents and a free lunch
and the benefits of quality will be provided. Donations of
environments. The classroom crlbll, crib sheets, playpens,
will provide stlmulat_l!l~ •. highchairs, or any other preenriching surroundings In school toys will be highly
Only a Jlllrl of the large 8l'OIIP enrolled In the flower arranging course are ahown here as
which the chUdren will learn. appreciated. .
they begin makJni nwu arrangements.
Involved
In
Those
During. the class day the
developing
this
project
children will be worked with
Individually as well as In believe that the young exNOW YOU KNOW.
The first two-car accident 11111all grou)lll by the teachers\ ceptional child can best reach.
was believed to have oc- aides and volunteers. The his fuU potential by creating a
curred In 1900 in ~anssa City, children will be visited stimulating environment and
Mo. - there were only two regularly by professionals by helping him Interact with
cars In the city at the time. from the Center for Human that environment. It ia flnniY

believed that parents and
family are an important part
of the carry-over of the preschool program and for that
reason parents are urged to
attend the classes at least
once a month.
Anyone interested in more
information about this
program, please contact
Guiding Hand School at 3670102 or Caryl Kiser at 367·
OISJ.

NEW YORK CLOTHING HOUSE

.We're concerned
health!

with

good

VILlAGE PHARMACY

126 E. MAIN
POMEROY, 0.
1

r

,.•· .....

BAHR
·CLOTHIERS
N. 2ND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

992-2351

~--------------1 presents America's most
buttoned·up ·
button·down.

Arrow
Dover
As usual , Arrow (America 's
most bunoned-up shirt company)
has taken a basic concept and
made it be~er. They starto,d with
a natura'! blend of canon and
polyester, added exact sleeve and
neck sizes . semi-tapering , and a
seven bun on front. Result? One
the·mosttashionable. most
comfortable shirts ever deSigned .
It you're looking to look very
buttoned-up , come see us tor a
wide selection of Arrow button·

FINAL DAYSI

Ae members of your community
and u an important part of your
"health line" to your doctor,
our pharmacii!IB are dedicated
to deliver the beet in profeB8ion·
al 1ervice to you,

THE
SHOE· BOX
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

LEVI'S BIG .BELLS
NOW
ONLY

MATCHING HANDBAGS

17'1'

Lor~g Sleeves 1

HURRY I

NAME BRANDS
ANNIVERSARY P.RI~
•

•

FLIXSTiiL ...:._ ADM.IIAL ·"HOOVER
CALORIC - IPIID QUliN - FIIGIDAIII
•

..

AFINE SELECTION OF
ARROW NAME
BRAND SHIRTS
•

�1-

'1111 Dallf Sentinel, Mlddlo

metroy,O., Thur~ay, Sept . 28,1978

Alpha Omicron Chapter of Delta Gamma
--------------------POLLYlPOINTERS Society began .fa/1 schedule meetings

PollyCramer
·
~:::.._:::..__ _
_________
. -----By Polly Cramer
where it is supp&lt;ised to and
POLLY'S PROBLEM
the ex cess wa ter can still
DEAR POLLY - I have a drain out. - MRS. W.T.L,
big iron skillet that is so
DEAR POLLY - My Pet
burned on the outside that Peeve is to have something
black falls off on the stove planned right down to the la st
when I am cooking. I would · detail and then have sume.one
liketo knowwhatwillremove · in authority, like a husband ,
this. This skillet was given to want to change everythin g
me and had a lot of 3C· around at the last ·minute.
cumulated grease on it when Another Pet Peeve is: to have
I got it . .. MRS. L.J .
someone make lengthy exDEAR MRS. \..J . - Some cuses when a simple, honest
years ago a reader asked this · explanation would do as well
question and literally hun- or even better.
drcds of readers wrote in to

Now for a Pointer or two . A

say that they burned off such
acc umulated grease l&gt;y
putting the skillet in a fire
that was in same safe place

Teresa Benedum. weds
Mr. and Mrs. Francis
Benedqm, Itt. I , Reeds· "
ville •·re anbouncing the
marriage of their daughter,
Teresa, to Michael Whitlock,

of ... Mr.

son
and
Mrs. Donald Whitl ock,
Coolville. The wedding look
place on July 2 at the home of
the Rev . and Mrs. Robert
Sanders, Route I, Reedsville .

1978 District Health
Conference to be held
Three dollars will provide a
The lt78 District Health
dinner
with
Conf-,11p01180red by the chicken
vegetable,
salad,
rolls,
Ohio tlldh ,Council, will be
held 011 Wldnesday, October dessert, and a bevera~e or
4, 9:30a.m. to 2:18p.m. at the you can bring a sack lunch.
Babysitting for two-to-five
Jack-.· Area . Extension
year
old children will be
Center, Route 1, Jackson .
provided
at the Area Center ,
The tlleme for this year's
if
you
pre-register
your child.·
conference is ' iAn Ounce of
We
will
provide
a child's
~-t~ II Worth More
lunch
and
morning
and afThan a hui of Cure."
ternoon
snacks
for
·$1.50 .
The • . . .rim will . begin
with. t 'W tNiloll and coffee There is no charge for baby·
from 9 11110 a.m. At IO Philip sitting.
There will be a registration
L.
Grover, Extension
Specialist, . Community fee of $t per person (no
Resource Development, will charge for children l and
talk to the group on "How To reservations need to be made
Stay YoiDig At An Old Age !" . by September 29. Contact the
Betty fteese, Athens County Meigs County Ext ensi on
ExtensiOft Home Economics Office at 992·3895 ·to make
wlll discuss "Weather your reservation . Trans~
portation can also be
Related To Health."
·
"Exercise For Fun and arranged if you need a ride.
All educational programs
Health!" will be the topic for
by the Ohio
conducted
Fritz Hagerman, Ohio
Cooperative
Extension
Univ~, Alhens. This will
Service
are
available
to all
be folM«&lt; by a panel to
potential
clientele
on
a
non·
aMwer IDdlvldual questions.
discriminatory
basis
without
Mr. Gr8¥er, Mrs. Reese and
Mr. Hagerman wiU make up regard to ra ce, co lor ,
national origin , sex ~ or
the penel.
The conference will ad- religious affiliation.
journ at 2:30p.m.

Ch€ster PTO sponsors carnival
The Chester PTO will
sponsor a carnival from 7 to 9

p.m. S.turday at the Chester
Elementary SchooL
There will be a jitney
supper, door prizes, games,
hay rides, a country store,
sweet shop and other
featuNI. The committees for
the -"mt are :
Jitney Supper - Rosemary
Keller, Jean Sim.
Carnival - Jean · Norton,
Becky Mankin, Karen Werry.
Ticket! - Mr. and Mrs.
Howard
Parker,
Miss
Carolyn Smith, Miss Melanie
Beegle.
Pound the Nail - Mr .
Roger Spencer.
ClothN Pin Drop - Linda
Bentz, Charlotte Grant ,
Linda Faulk.
Penants
Eleanor
Leonard, Jeanie Bahr.
Fish Pond - Linda
Hudson . Joyce Reynolds .
Bottle Throw - JoAnn
Baum, Carolyn King.
Jewelry - Jo Hill , Shelia
CurtiJ.
BaUoon Dart - Marilyn

TOPS HERE
A MW chapter of TOPS
(Take Ofl Pounds Senllbly )
weight.Qlntrol · organl'iatlon
bas been formed in Pomeroy.
The chapter meets each
Friday at 9 a.m. at Mental
Health Center, Second St.,
Pomeroy.
Offlcen olthe chapter are :
Mrs. Gerald (EDen) Rought,
leader; Mrs. LW;e (Kathy!
McDaniu, co-leader; Mrs:
Leo (Helen) HW, secretary;
Mrs. Robert (Ilelorse) Hawk,
treuurer; Mrs, Roger
: (Deb~ie)
Hill,
weight

,rec.,...

• F..._. lllterlnation about

,TOP'S 111!1 tht new chapter
'1118Y lill obtabled by calling
Ellen ftougl!t at 992-5937,

Harris, Pam Hoffman.
Small Basketball throw Jenevia and Don Maxson.
Pocket Lady - Chloris
Gaul.
Dish Throw - J oAnn
Newsome, Shirley Gibbs.
Cake Walk
Pat ti
Woodyard , J oAnn Scar·
brough .
Sweet Shop - Debbi e
Finlaw, Pat Wilson.
Bingo - Jon and Connie
Karschnik .
Country Store - Jan e
Harris, Janet Koblentz, Pat
Wolf.
Hayrides - Bruce Myers,
Harold Norton, Flip Werry ,
Paul Harris.
Ping Pong - Barbara
Tripp, Mrs. Anna Rice.
Gun Raffle - Robert and .
Kathy Davis, Max Eichinger.
Afghan Raffle - Sharon
Louks.
Safety - Mike Will. Larty
Hudson .

ANNOUNCE BffiTH
Dr. and Mrs. Isaac (Jean )
Frydman of Buffalo Grove,
Ill., are amouncing the birth
of twins, Sarah Ann and
Joshua Adam, born Sept. 20
at Northwestern University
Hospital, Chicago, Ill.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr : and Mrs. Ernest
Whitehead of Reedsville, and
paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Abe Frydman
of Dayton, Mr. and Mrs.
Whitehead are spending a
few days with the Frydmans
assisting with the care of the
new arrivals.

Alpha Omicron Chapter of
Delta Kappa Garruna Suciety
International began its fall
schedule of meetings Monday
evening with a dinner at the
First Un it ed Presbyterian
Church in Jackson.
Hostesses in charge of
arrangem ent s were Wanda
Farrar, c hairman, Ann
McCarroll, Anna Maude

--Fehrman,
·-

Harrisonville
Society News

A musical spectacular wm Nashville and the Nashville
be presented at Glen Flint's Sounds.
Rocking F Ranch located . On Sunday Gospel music
one mile past the Porterfield will be pres~nted from noon
Baptist Church on Township until 7 p.m . Featured will be
Road 15 at Riverview Estate the Newsmen Quartet from
loc ated in Wa shington Charleston . The Devotions
County .
from Park ersbur g, The
The event will begin Friday Gospel Tunes from Chester
through Sunday. Featured on and sp ecial guest s from
Friday will be county music Nashville , The Singing
starring The Nashvill e Hemphills with a 10 piece
Sounds with Bill Carr, Trish band.
Lipps, Miss Wood County
Admission Friday is $3 and
Pageant Queen of 1978 plus Saturday and Sunday $4.
others . The gates open at 4 Children und er 12 wi th
p.m. on Friday and the show parents admitted free , There
starts at 7 p.m.
is also free parking for
On Saturday , bluegrass will campers.
be featured beginning at I
There will be a complete
p.m. starring the McCumber grocery store a.nd concession
brothers, Wriston brothers, stand on the grounds, 100
The Stone Mountain Boys acres of mud free park mg. no
from W.W.V.A. jambore e dirt, dust or swamp to park
plus others.
on, blacktop road into the
Special guest Saturday campgrounds .and 14 ,000
night will be Don King , square feet of seating on the
recording star direct from inside in case of rain .

Ms. Benson conducted the
business
meeting
and
reported on the stale con•
vent ion held in Akron. Other
members there were Bar·
bara Litter, Viola Gettles,
Maxine Philson, Mary V.
Reibel, Dorothy Scott, and
Dorothy • Woodard . Anna
Maude Fehrman attended the ·
international convention held
in Chicago during the sum·
mer . She gave highlights of
the conconvention and also
displayed a number of
momentos from the various .
meetings she attended. She
presented each one with a
needlecase · which she had
made in the shape of Ohio
Seyler , Micky , Betty ·Reed , having gotten the idea from
Judy Lynn Hall, Margaret
Wyatt and Jane, Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Barton, Scott, Joey,
an&lt;! Billy, Edith Barton,
Brian and Deann Denny. Mr.
and Mrs. Randy Lee, Debbie
Hatfield, and Adam Wyatt
gifts
were
Sending
Mr . and Mrs. · Roscoe Wise
and Judy Harrison. The
children enjoyed a surprise

Robby Wyatt honored on
fifth birthday by parents

mothball or two in the garba ge can will keep insects
and animals away. Also,
Terry and Brenda Wyatt
lemon J1eel will help keep entertained at their home
such as an outd·oor grill {)f odors and insect s fr om recently with a party
fireplace. After all the ac- garbage cans. If you need a honoring their son , Robby, on
cumulation
has
been make-up mirror and nbne is his fifth birthday.
removed the skillet must be handy place a dresser mirror
Games were played with
re-seasoned befor e using with a haridle in a quart jar pri zes going t o Mirand a
again. -POLLY
with the mirror standing up. Nicholson , Scott Barton, and
DEAR POLLY - Mrs. R YoU will have a nice sit up Tony Darst. Refreshment s of
wanted to know how to fluff mirror for any table. - cake. ice cream. potato chips,
up her velvet dress to make it JUNE
kuol aid and coffe e were
look like new. After wearing
DEAR POLLY - I always served to Tabatha Phillips,
my red velvet coal I hang it save pizza cardboards and Dora Roush and Dawn, Mrs.
on the shower rod so when put cakes and the like on Carolyn Nicholson, Billy Joe
someone takes a shower the them when taking something 3nd Miranda , Helena Darst,
steam will .fluff up the nap. ll to a shower or gathering of Tony and Stevie, Kay Rupe,
really does wonders for my. any sort c Cover with foil and Bobby Joe and Laura, Nelia
coaL - MRS. J .K.
it will look very nice. No plate
· DEAR POLLY -' When I or pan to be returned . pot or repot. plants I put a MRS.M.M.B.
double fold of cloth in the
Polly will send you one uf
bottom of the pot to keep the her
signed
thank-you
soil from leaving the pot newspaper coupon clippers 1f
through the drainage hole. A she · uses your favprite
piece of an old sheet or Pointer. Peeve or Problem in
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
pillowcase works well for her column. Write POLLY'S
Chapman, Silv'e r Springs,
this . The soil in my pots stays POINTERS in care of thi s
Md., arc visiting a week with
newspaper .
Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl.
Sunday supper gu_est s at their
home were Mr. and Mrs.
Da vid R1ggs and family , Mr .
and Mrs. Felix Alkire. Mrs.

M us~cal spectacular
set for weekend

Amy Junes, and
E,sther Dauber. Initiation
was held for one candidate,
Cecelia Maerker, with Anna
Elizabeth Turner, chainnan
of the initiation committee,
being assisted by Margaret
Bensen , Barbara Litter,
Viola Gettles, Nellie Parker,
and Esther Maerker, all of
whom are officers in the
chapt er .

Pauline Atkins alsu visited in

the evening .
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Sayre,
Mrs. Joe Sa yre and Mrs.
Wilson took a tour of the
Amish country at Sugar
Creek and on to Byesville to
visit Mrs. Alice Epple .
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gibson
and Hobin, Columbus, were
Sunday dinner guests uf Mr.

and Mrs. Bub Alkire.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey
and Mrs. Wilda Wi sema n
vi sited Mrs. J essie Jewell in ·
Columbus on Monda y.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Welsh
and family of Kent, Ohio
visited Mr. and Mrs. K. C.
Welsh over the weekend.

.

the Ohio . luncheon at the
convention.
Group singing was led by
Esther Cassell with Virginia
Atkinson as accompanist.
Memberswereremindedthat
dues are payable and
also that the October meeting
date will be Oct. 28 with a
12:30 lunchoen at Lake Hope.
Meigs County members
attending "'ere Lee. Lee,
Winifred Naas , Geneva
Nolarl, Olive Page, Nellie
Parker, Maxine Philson,
Mary V. Reibel, Beatrice
Rinehart , Fay Sauer, Rosalie
Story, Rebecca ·Tate, Anna .
Turner , Wykle Whitely,
Roberta Wilson, and Dorothy
Woodard .

KIDS

ON THE GO

visit from Bozo the Clown

who presented them with
favors.

School financing suit filed by Cincy board
COLUMBUS (.U PI)- The
Cincinnati . Board
of
.Education. · · flied
suit
. Wedneaday In .u .S. DiStrict
· Courl here claiming t!Je
state 'a f!lethod of ·school
financing ~)ales the .U.S.
Qlnstltutlon.
.
, The lliitls one of a series of
similar e.ctlons filed in Ohio
courts by tbe board over tbe
'past two years. ·
The other ·actions charge
Ohlo~a system of financing
pu)lUc education violates the

HOMES .
'

.I-

By DALE SINGER
S'J:. LOUIS (UPI)
On
Sunday morning, members ol'
Ivy Olapel, U,nlted Church of
Olrlst, will hold their weekly
worship setvice at their
building in west St. Louis
Gounty ,
On Sunday night, members
.of Kol Am·, a Reform Jewish
congregation, will greet their
new year by celebrating Rosh
Hashana In the same room.
Such pracUcal ecumenisni
is normal procedure for tbe
two young congregations ,

MEETS
•OHIO BUILDING
CODES
•FHA &amp; VA

SEE OUR lOT
MODEL TODAY

By ANDREW A. YEMMA
Ualted Press Interutlonal
Striking Seattle teachers
have · voted by a narrow
margin to obey a court order
and
return to their
classrooms Friday for a
delayed start of the !aU
semester and the opening of a

'

~!

Fall Fashions for
Kids on the go.
Large Selection of Jean·s, Tops,
Shirts, Sweaters, Coals and. more
at the:

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

Hours:
9:30 to 5:00
Mon. thru Sat .
9:30 to 8:00
t::kJ~
Friday

'

.
. . . .i

llO&lt;rE. Main
Pomeroy , Ohio

2nd St.
POMEROY, 0 .

992-7034

ELLIOTT APPLIANCE II

By STEWART SLAVIN
SAN DIEGO (UPI )
Abo~t 40 seconds before the
worst plane crash in U.S.
history, a new warning
system soilnded an alann
that a jetliner was about to
collide with a smaU plane.
But controllers talking to the
pilots could not hear the
alann, and those who could
were unable to contact them:
A computerized warning
system in operation a little
more than a !J10111th sounded
an alert at the Miramar air
control station while the
tower at Undbergh Field eight miles away - was
controlling the , lllghts, the
chief
federal
crash
investigator said Wednesday
A shrieking siren so111ded,
warning of the impending
collillon at 3,000 feet between
a Pacific Southwest Airlines
Boeing 7Z7 and a lingle·
engine Cessla that killed at
leaSt 150 persolll! Moo day.
The. system signaled the
alert only 40 ~onds before
the collision "and' posalbly
less," PhUiip Hot~ue, head of
the NaUonal Transportatioo
Safety Board investigatioo
team, told a news conference.
But the warning was not
received by controllers at
Undbergh Field, wbere both
pilota intended to land, and
which had taken over
guidance of the two planes
minutes before, be said.
; Cmtrollers at Miramar,
• who had broken radio contact
with the pUota, . franUcaUy
callid the Undbergh Tower
· to relay the warning and urMC

FUNNY BUSINESS

which have shared facilities
since 1974. The facilities,
owned by Ivy Olapel and
rented by Kol Am, rarely sit
vacant.
11
'1he JX"evious pastor here
took Kol Am in pretty much
oo his own authority," tbe
Rev, Dennis Lindberg of Ivy
Olapel said. "Then he got the
approval of the church, and it
sort of took off from there.''
Rabbi Bruce Diamond said
families in Kol Am - Hebrew
for "Voice of the People" bad broken away from an

landmark busing program.
"School will be opened with
court"'rdered teachers and
voluntary desegregation,"
Richard · L.
Andrews,
chairman of the Seattle
Public Schools District-Wide
Advisory Committee for
Desegregation, said
Wednesday.

the jetliner pilot to climb.
But they were too late, he
said, The Lindbergh tower
told then\, "PSA is going
. "
down.
Hogue said investigators·
were playing down the tbeory
a third plane was in the same
air space and contributed to
the crash. Investigators had
speculated the other plane
confused the jetliner pilot into
thinking he had the srnaU
plane in sight, not realizing
he was looking at the wrong
plane.
The pilot of a "third plane"
located Wednesday turned
out to have been seven to
eight miles west of the
jetliner when it was hit,
indicating he was too far
away to have heen involved,
Hogue said.
Investigators have not

UNEMPLOYMENr DOWN
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio Bureau of Employment
Services said . Wednesday
9,Z17 newly unemployed
Ohioan's
filed
for
unemployment benefits for
the week ended Sept. 23, It
was lowest number since
JuneJ3.
Bureau
Administrator
Albert T, Giles said the filings
last week were 6.1 percent
lower than the 9,818 who filed
the previous week.
Cmtinued claims of those
unemployed one or more
weeks were estimated at
64,139, including ~7 ,000 under
the regular Ohio law, a slight
decline from the 64,487 of the
previous week,

'?Y Roger Bollen

SPARE A QUAl&lt; IER. PAL
~DO )00 INWT A ~...
INVOUieD SOB-SitJf&lt;Y
?r----..;
•

OFFER EXPIRES OCT. 1, 1978

Available in
Black &amp; Rust

ELLIOTT

APPLIANCE II
MARGUERITE'S SHOES
Belly Ohlinger
Pomeroy, 0.

POMEROY, 0.

992-711.3

MGR.
FRED
HAIIWEU.

---- --

older, larger congregation
and were looking for a new
home.
Now the Christian and
Jewish congregaUons live in
hannony, along with other
community groups ranging ·
from Weight Watchers to the
Girl Scouts, who also use the
building.
''You go into big churches
and they're empty most of the
time," Diamond said during
a quick tour of the building,
"This place is being used aU
the time, for good reasons.
I'm showin~ you Rrnnnrt like 1

own the place, but I'm just
the tenant. That's the way
things work here.' '
Both clergymen help out
with small chores in their
congregation . Lindberg was
lugging a vacuum cleaner
and hOpping up on a couch to
water a hariging plant while
Diamond shoved aside a coat
rack to show Kol Am's
bulletin board.
Basement classrooms
house pre-school in the
morning, Hebrew school in
the afternoon, Koi Am's

Lindberg responded by
reciting
in perfect Hebrew.
minutes.
"He
was
meticulous, better
The
co-existence
is
The main sanctuary, used peaceful, though both men than any of my people could
weekly by Ivy Chapel, has a readily admit there are · do," Diamond said.
Both groups are growing ,
large cross on the .altar , But underlying tensions between
Diamond demonstrated how the two groups that surface at and Lindberg and Diamond
Kol Am copes with this particularly sensitive times, recognize the curr.e nt
problem on occasions such as such as Easter an~ arrangement is temporary .
"Independence is the goal
the High Holidays, when the Christmas.
of
both groups," Lindberg
Jewish group needs a larger
But the congregations learn
said.
" It doesn't grow out of a
room.
from one-another, too . They
uwe carry our ark in here, hold a joint Thanksgiving hatred or anything like that,
put it up, then lower the boom service, and ooce when Dia- it 's just a question oflooking
on the cross by pulling this mond called on Lindberg to forward to coming of age ."
"Ivy Chapel has been very
rope and lowering a tapestry take part in a Torah reading ,
generous. and we look at that
to cover it." f)iamnn rl said .
as a real exa mple of
Christian charity," Diamond

religious school on Saturday
morning and the Ivy Chapel
Sunday school.

The whole operation takes 20

Lin·stock Report

DENIM SHIRTS
sg95 to sls~
BOYS SHIRTS ALSO

Open

said . uThe lesson is not lost

9-5 Mon . thru Sat .
tiiB rn .

on us."
COLUMBUS ( UPI ) - Ohio 48-51.75. Good 2-3, 800-1100 lb.
42.5()..18.
livestock auctions :
Slaughter cows : Utility and
Compared
to
last
2-4, 800-1800 lb.
commercial
back-to-work
order.
The
Wednesday
:
Slaughter
steers
The strike delayed the start
36-44,
high
dressing
44-47.75,
board
tentatively
set
next
firm
to
1
higher,
and
heifers
of classes for :;:;,ooo students
Canner
and
cutter
1·2,
675Tuesday
as
the
fll"st
day
of
slaughter
cows
steady
to
5
for
three
weeks
in
1400
lb.
32-40.50.
school
for
the
district's
31,000
higher,
slaughter
bulls
steady
Washington's largest city.
Slaughter bulls: 1's 1001J.
to 2 higher, feeder cattle
In nearby Tacoma, where students. ·
1800
lb. 49-52.50, couple 54.35Other
strikes
are
keeping
.
3-4
lower.
steady,
vealers
negotiations to end a strike by
55.75.
2's 900-1700 lb. 42.5()..19.
more
than
250,000
pupils
in
12
Supply
:
43
percent
the district 's 1,800 teachers
Vealers:
Choice and prime
states
out
of
school.
17
percent
slaughter
steers,
bogged down, the board went
140-Z75
lb.
66-79.
75-130 lb. 50In Cleveland, Board of heifers, 20 percent slaughter
to court seeking a similar
66.
Good
and
choice
160-Z/5 lb.
Education officials indicated cows, I percent bulls, 18
48&lt;i5.
65-110
lb.
41h'i0.
Good~
hundreds of public school percent feeder cattle .
95
lb.
32.50-44.
employees may be laid off
Slaughter steers : Choice
Feeder cattle: Steers :
tnday in an attempt to cut the and prime 2-4 : !10().1400 lb. 54Choice
and .prime 300-570 lb.
budget by more than $10 56.30. Choice 3-4, 950-1225 lb.
61.50-73.50.
million to fund pay raises for 52-54.50. Good and choice 2·3,
Bulls : Choice JOIJ-450 lb. 50striking teachers.
825-1200 lb. 49.25-53.90. Good
53.
Seattle
is
the
first
major2-3, 900-1325 lb. 48-51.
completely eliminated the
Steers : Choice 60Q.&amp;O lb .
"third plane" possibility, he city school district in the .Standard 2-3, 950-1300 lb. 44•
51~0.
Standard and good 300to
begin
desegregating
nation
48.10.
said, "but it woUld appear not
600 lb. 5(hl7. 600-1000 lb. 44 .85without
a
court
order.
About
Slaughter
heifers
:
High
to be a factor."
students
will choice and prime 2-4, 825-1000 50.
The. death toll meanwhile 12,500
Heifers: Choice and prime
in
the
massive
participate
lb. 52-54 ,90, few 55·56 .50.
was reduced from 151 to 150
280-50() lb. 54~ . 500-720 lb .
busing
program.
No
strikes,
Choice
2-3,
700-1000
lb.
49.75Wednesday when PSA
48.50·55. Goo d 390-800 lb .
corrected the number of boycott or demonstrations 52.80, bulk 52-52.50. High good
43.75-54.
have
been
planned
by
an
and
low
choice
2-3,800-1100
lb
.
persons aboard the jetliner
Hogs : Barrows and gilts at
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
from 136 to 135. tbe crash also opposition group, although its
Mount
Vernon 2.25 higher.
leaders
said
they
would
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
killed two men aboard the
sows 1.40-3 higher, boars .90
attempt
to
end
the
program
REASONABLE PRICES.
Cessna, a Marine sergeant
higher, feeder pigs 4 higher .
through
a
statewide
initiative
taking instrument flight
Barrows and gilts : US 1-2,
drive.
CASY&amp; CARRY
WE
lessons and his Instructor.
205-245
lb. 51.86-52.45.
of
The
disclosure
An estimated 13 persons
DELIVER
.---PRICES
Sows : Mediums and l's 305were killed on tbe ground impending massive layoffs in
430 lb. 43-44.80. us 1-3, 4~75
when the flaming jetliner Cleveland came as the strike
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
lb.
45-46 .90.
by
10,000
teachers
and
smashed into a block of
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Sid
Manuel
of
Boars:
420-725lb. 37.50. 200supJ)ort
personnel
marked
homes and exploded. Their
Long
Bottom
visited
Mr
.
and
277
lb
.
35-37.75.
the
end
of
its
third
week,
The
bodies were so badly tom and
Feeder pigs : US 1·2 35 lb.
Mrs. Joe Manuel Sunday
burned that no official strikers, who haven't had a
evening.
40.
45-liO lb. 46-54 . 50-55 lb. 51·
raise
in
two
years,
are
identifications have been
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Joe
Manuel
58.
us
1-3 30-40 lb. 31-42. 60 lb.
demanding
a
20·
percent
inmade yet, Coroner David
visited
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Arnold
43.
crease.
Stark said Wednesday it may
Sheep : Slaughter lambs
Once the budget is Hupp, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
take weeks.
completed, negotiations are Hupp at Long Bottom wooled steady , shorn .25
higher. Feeder lambs steady.
expected to resume between Sunday.
Slaughter lambs: Choice
the board and repre·
EXPAND AU'fHORfrY
and
prime 94-107 woo led
COLUMBUS (UP!)- Gov. sentativcs of school em·
923 S. 3rd Ave.
Middleport , 0.
59.60·U90.
102-105 lb . shorn
James A. lthodes plans to 'ployee unions.
992
-2709
or
992
-6611
with
number
1·2
pelts
59In Uvonia , Mich., •triking
seek legislation to expand the
Trt-County League
Open: 7: 00 to 5:00 Mon. fhru Fri .
62.50.
authority
of
security faculty members and clerical Team
W.
L.
Feeder
lambs
:
Choice
and
7:00 to 3: 00 Saturday
personnel working in Ohio workers at Schoolcraft Com· Columbia Nat. Life
6
3
65-86
lb.
65-70.
fancy
Metropolitan Housing munity College agreed to
5 4
return to work and submit Eagles Club
Authority facilities.
Pomeroy
Cement
Block
4 5
Rhodes s&amp;id Wednesday the· their contract disputes to a
Roach
Gun
Shop
4 5
legislation would be aimed at court-appointed fact-finder. Bill's Body Shop
4 5
sp okesman
said
"freeing thousands of our A
H
&amp;
R
Firestone
4 5
older Ohioans who are the 350 fa culty mem·
High ind. game - Hay
and
60
secre·
currently held prisoner in bers
Roach 212; Dave Peterson
their
own homes or taries would be back on 205; Ed Voss 197.
apartments by the fear of the job today for the first time
Team high game
Our nat ur ~l good -lookers are sty led to pai r with t he
becoming a victim of crime.'' since the walkout began Sept. Pomeroy Cement Block 885,
enti
re
deck
of
Fal
l dressi ng . So deal you rse lf sli mmed ·down
lthodes said that currently, 18. The strike idled about triO; Columbia National 830.
w
ooden
heels topped in genuine leather most ~urity perso!Uiel have 9,000 students.
Team high 3 games what could be more winning ? kn otted va m p in brown.
·
little or no authority to arrest
Otber walkouts continued Pomeroy Cement Block 2576;
''the hoodlum element that in Indiana, Massachusetts, Columbus Nationa1 Life 2405;
currently plagues such Maine,
Michigan, Roach Gun Shop 2371.
elderly housing facilities,
Pennsylvania, Minnesota,
High ind. 3 games - Blaine
especialy Metropolitan New York, New Jersey, Carter 554; Ed Voss 548; Ray
Housing Authority projects.''
Connecticut and California. ' Roach 530.
The governor said the
legislation would be designed
to
grant Metropolitan
Housing Authority security
personnel the same authority
on their premises as a pollee
office in "putting a stop to
lilts harr888lllent of older
Ohioans."

and

building materials

Warning was ·sounded

night .

Go booting
with Vogue's
super new
lashion boots
for fa iL Leather
upper in autumn
tones.

implementing the loan Education a nd the Ohio
program and to block· the . Controlling Board.
distribution of state money
under the current financing
system .
The board is seeking· an
order to require the. state to
reallocate money in an
equitable way .
Defe ndants in the suit are
Franklin B, Walter , state
school superintendent, the
Ohio
Department
ol
Education and state Board of

'Big churches are empty most of the time ••• '

Seattle teachers will return

By
All American

ALL

102 E. Main

Ohio Constitution.
or
eliminate
program until the first education.
It charged that children reduce
. Since the recent passage of matter is resolved .
The suit also says that the attending schools .which must progra ms which exceed state
, legislation authorizing the
The result was filing in the system
of
financing borrow monev or close are_ minimum standards.
state .to loan money to lederal court.
· education discriminates ·'substantially
" This further depresses
disadvan·
troubled schooL districts, the · I,ast July, the legislature · among · school children in . taged"
as
co mpared educational levels in districts
board. says this now ·violates set up the loan fund and dollar expenditures, and that to the d1ilctren in th e affluent already starved for funds at a
· the U.S. cilnstitution as weD. · directed
tlie
state the loan . program puts distri cts which have. the time when the childreh of
The Qnctnflatt' board has Department of Education to districtS in deeper financial money to avoid applying for . marly districts are enjoying
to ·excellent
adequate
.won. its case · through the make recommendations oo ·trouble because · of budget loans .
Hamilton County Olurt of ·behalf of ·school districts cuts imposed by the state
.
ed.ucational
opportunities,"
'The suit alsO complains
Appeals. II is now pending in applying for loans.
the
suit
says.
Department of Education and that the loan program allc) ws
the Ohio S~Jpreme Court , · . The federal' court suit the state Controlling Board, the state superintendent of
The . Cincinnati Board of
,. which issued an order that further charges that the the agency through which sc hools to order local Education asked the federal
the lower could could not take legislature is trying 1&lt;J put an school districts would receive districts in need of money to court to grant an injunction to
tip the issue of the stste's loan end to local control of P,Ublic the loans.
stop
the stat e from

MODULAR

220 E. MAIN ST.
SUPPER SLATED
A before-the-game supper
will be held at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy from 4 to 7 p.m.
Friday . Soup, sandwiches
and homemade desserts will
be available.

0- '1111 O.Uy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978

BUILDING OR REMODELING?

Fairview
News Notes

VALLEY LUMBER &amp;
SUPPLY
CORPORATION
dea 'fOUrse f
a pair of naturals

sruDv BEGINS
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Federal officlals will open a
formal study Oct . 17 in
Columbus on the Impact
proposed reductions of
manpower at Rlckenhacker
Air Force Buewouldhave m
Central Ohio.
Sen. John Glenn, o.ohlo,
requested tbe f&lt;rmal study,
which, he said, is upected to
take ·90 days.
Glenn said representatives
of the Olftce of Economic
Adjustment will meet for two
days wllb city, collllly and
civic leaders aa they analyze
the nlaUng economic
environment, study direct
and llldlrect impacta of the
pro~ realignment m lht
cmununlty, lind develop a
prellmlnary • ...., to · any ~entlallmpact.

carhaPtt

MlRK CLOTHES
HEADQUARTERS

..

• Bibs
• Jackets
•Vests

• Pants
• Coals
•Hoods

•Insulated Coveralls
Check Our Prices
Save Money I

,...~~ ~

OPEN FRIDAY

.,.-«'00 .

(_,0
heritage house

NIGHTS TILL 8 P.M.

OF SHOES
Open Frtdey Til 1:00 p.m.
'

.

N. 2nd AVE.

M

�10 - The Daily sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978

Vance-Gromyko meeting, looking for formula
NEW YORK (UPI) - For
the fourth time in less than a
year, the Soviet Union and
the United States are meeting
to find a formula for
diminishing each nation 's
capacity to destroy the other.
Secretary of State Cyrus
Vance and Soviet Foreign
Minister Andrei Gromyko
. met for more than two hours
Wednesday at the Soviet
Mission to the United
Nations, and they planned an

even lengthier session today
on a new strategic arms
limitation treaty.
Following the opening
round of SALT talks, Vance
said he was "neither
en co uraged
nor
discouraged ," and added, "I
believe it is possible to reach
a treaty this year."
The optimistic view oo
early agreement has been a
constant refrain of U.S,
officials from President

Carter to chief arms
negotiator Paul C. Warnke
lor nearly a Year.
During his last meetings
with Gromyko In New York In
May, Vance said they had
"examined lhe two principal
remaining issues still left .to
be solved."
The current round of
negotiations
has
the
advantage of takiilg place
without the "state of tensloo"
Vance acknowledged existed

in the spring, when Carter
strongly objected to Soviet
and Cuban involvement in
Mrica.
Wha I both sides want Is a
new agreement to replace the
outmoded SALT I treaty of
June 1972, modified at
Vladivostok in 1974 to limit
botll the United States and the
Soviet Union to a total of 2,400
strategic missiles and
bombers.
SALT I explrrrl last

_,

announcement

of

Ohio 's

partici!)1'.tion in what will be
called The Area Health
Eduaction Center program is
to be made later this week by
tlle Ohio Board of Regents ,
which will administer the
program, aiid the Health
Resources Adminsitration of
HEW .
Although the contract is for
a one-year planning period ,
federal particpation is
expected to last for nine
years after which the
Education Center network

throughout Ohio is expected
to be able to function without
federal support.
Projections are that federal
payments t ota lling $13.S
million will flow into the state
over the nine years to be
supplemented by some $3.S
million in state matching
money, the newspaper said.
Ohio's medical schools are
the Northeastern College of
Medicine at Rootstown ; the
Osteopathic College of
Medicine at Ohio University ;
tlle Medical College of Ohio at
Toledo a nd the Medical
Schools of Ohio State
University, tlle Univrersity of
Cincinnati, Wright Sta te
University and Case Western
Reserve University .
Cin cinnati will help the

recently of Legionnar ies '

disease , and confirmed tllere
are several "isolated'' cases
of the disease in the area.
Leff and Stanley Troup,
director of the University of
Cincinnati Medical Center,
said the man , whose name
was

not

released ,

wa s

brought to General Hospital
and diagn osed to have
Legio nnaires' disease and

"other significant medical
problems."
Leff said "tllree or four "
other cases of the disease
have been confirmed in the
area h rec-e nt months ill
recenl · .. ,ths .
How
Leff sa id the
cases wt::rt isolated and he

Russell, John Roush, James
Morris.

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Sept. 27)
Ernestine Bostwick, Ed·
mund Ca mpbell, Mildred
Donohew , Charles Ellis,
Marsha Ervin, Mrs. Kermit
Fisher and so n, Zachary
Forbus, Susan Fox, Mrs.
Walter Fraley and son, Mary
Freeman, Janis Gorby,
Dorothy Hale, Carolyn Hall,
Robin
Harris,
Arthur
Lanham, Lawrence Uoyd ,
Kathryn Mathais, Dorothy
Cla l
May! , Karen McGrath,
Ro nald Miller, Lemoyne
doesn't expect the cases to be . Myers, Roma Nickels, Sue
"of any significance."
Oesch, Mrs. Dennis Parsons
" I suspecl as we are better and daughter, Betty Ponn,
able to diagnose it, we'll see Mary Rausch, Norman
mor e and more cases (of Rayburn, Roc ky Rece ,
Legionnaires' disease ) diag- Clarence Riffle, Effie Roach,
nosed, " Leff said.
Hazel Robertson, Anna
Earlier this month , a Sisson , Minni e Smith,
Lorain
man ,
Horace William Swan, Harley Truitt,
Lobertini, S6, died of the Wilma Turner, Lillian Unroe,
disease at Lorain Community Mr s. Russell Well and
daughter, Mabel Wells, Ona
Hospital.
Officals of the Federal Wh etstone, Luella Wood,
Center for Disease Control, in Barbara Woodruff.
Birth, Sept.27
Atlanta, Ga., confirmed that
Lobertini, admitted to the
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pugh,
hospital Aug. 31, died Sept. 9 daughter, Wellston.
of the disease.
An autopsy showed he had
died of acute pneumonia
CLAIM BACKED
commonly associated with
CLE VELAND (UPI)
Legionaires' disease and a Mayor Dennis Kucinich's
specimen of lung matter was claim that Cleveland's big
sent to the disease control business establishment was
center in Atlanta .
out to get him in the recall
election he survived last
month appears to be backed
up by ca mpaign financial·
data .
The recall committ ee 's
rep ort to the Cuyahoga
County Board of Elections
showed contributions by the
boa rd chairmen of several
corporations and 30 lawyers·

·med

Cincinnati man
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Cincinnati Health Commissioner
Arnold Leff said Wednesday
a 60-year-old man died

Regents administer the
federal contract.
The !972 federal law establishing the centers seeks to
decentralize medical school
education at the same time it
puts medical specialities
within easier reach of
disadvantged people.
In part, it is a respoose to
criticism such as that voiced
in the Carnegie Commission
Report that medical schools
are turning out graduates too
specialized and too remote
.from a large segment of the
popula tioo .
As the program is phased in
over tlle next few years, each
Ohio medical school will
establish its own Area Health
Education Center.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitt ed
Mary
Allbritton, Portland; Milton
Geary, Racine ; Paul Klem ,
Pomeroy; Charles Manley,
Middleport ; Jeffrey Barton,
Coo lvil le; J ohn Riffle ,
Syracuse; Charles Knapp,
Middleport ; Aleta Billings·
ley, Pomeroy ; Paul Saun·
ders, Middleport .
Discharged . - Milford
Ba iley , Herman Mic ha el,
J onathan Bissell , Linl ey

You're Invited
TO

Soviet long-range bomber to make sure tlle missiles
work, but not enough to
known as the "Backfire."
Last mooth, Warnke took develop high accuracy.
The United States would
new U.S. proposals to
use
Its exception to.develop a
Moscow in an attempt to
.
weapon
called the MX, or the
lreak the stalemate.
MAP,
for
Multiple Aim Polnt
· One of the Warnke
missile
system.
The system
proposals calls for one
would
be
developed
to ease
exception on either side in the
testing and development or Pentagoo fears that · Soviet
new missiles. Both sides accuracy would make the
would be permitted about six current Minuteman force
tests a year , which vulnerable by the mid 1980s.
presumably would be eno~~~th

Logan strike continues

Ohio gets $662,000
_for medical schools
LORAIN, Ohio (UP!) Ohio will be getting $662,000
In federal funds so the state's
seven major medical schools
can
alter
teaching
procedures to provide many
of the state's rural areas and
city slums with better healtll
care.
Th e
Lo ram
J ournal
repor te d Wednesday it
learned tllat the Department
of Health, Education and
Welfa re has approved a
$662,000, one-year contract to
launch the program. The
paper also said the program
will require vir tually all
medical students in Ohio to
receive at least 10 percent of
their undergraduate clinical
mstructions off campus in a
medically deprived area of
tlle state.
The paper also said official

October but the two nations entry .warhead vehicles.
The draft treaty also
agreed to abide by its terms
while a SALT n treaty was contains a separate threenegotiated to run through year protocol on the
development of new weapons
1985.
U.S. officials say the two systems and sets guidelines
sides already have agreed on for further disarmament
a 50-page draft treaty that agreements.
But the talks have been
would set a new limit of 2,lro.
2,250 strategic vehicles. Of complicated by the developthat nwnber, a maximum of ment or the U.S. "Cruise"
1,320 could be missiles missile; a highly accurate
equipped with multiple and drone that can be launched
lndependenUy targeted re- from land, sea or air , and the

POMEROY MOTOR CO.

"TAX REFORM, TAX relief and Inflation" will be
the lop Issues on voters'
minds when they head to
the polls this fall, says
Democrati c National
Chairman John White.
While says he will consider
It a victory H his party
loses fewer than 40 House
srats iD

the

November

mid-term elections. But he
blnts the Democrats may
even gain a few seats in
the Senate.

3 soldiers

ldlled in
accident
HANAU, West Germany
( UPI) Three more American
soldiers on a NATO
maneuver have been killed in
a traffic accident, raising the
death toll since the fi ve-week
war games began Sept. 7 to
16.
The three American
soldiers died Wedne sday
when tlleir jeep drove into the
oocoming traffic lane on a
curve and collided with a U.S.
Army truck , German police
reported Thursday .
Police said the jeep
apparently had been going
too fast to take the curve.
The soldiers were acting as
referees in the Autumn Forge
series of exercises that is
taking place from Norway to
Turkey to test NATO f~ces.
About 300,000 soldiers from
six nations are taking part in
the 30 different exercises .
The
maneuver dead
included five American
soldiers, four West German
soldiers, one Canadian, one
British, and five German
civilians.

" I certainly had h....-1 that
thinns could be worked out to
avoid
this
kind
of
confrontation, oot I guesa we
were unsuccessful," Johnson
said.
The Whitehall Education
Association says tea chers
have not received a
negotiated raise in the past
two years.
LOOTERS CHARGED
SAN DIEGO (UPI I - Nine
persons will be prosecuted on
charges of attempted looting
in the wreckage of the worst
U. S. plane crash that killed
ISO persons, authorities said
Wednesday .
A total of 26 people were
arrested after the crash
Monday , police reported, but
most were charged wit h
failure to o~y police orders
to leave the scene .

Birthday
celebrated

By WESLEY G. PIPPERT
WASHINGTON (UPI ) President Carter is using his
streak of good luck politically
to seek passage of legislation
oo hospital costs, equal rights
for women, hill employment
and inflation in the waning
days of tlle 95th Congress.
"The best birthday present
I could get from Congress,"
he to ld a $1,000-a-plate
Democratic dinn e r
Wednesday night , "would be
to
pass
the
airline
deregulation bill, to pass the
hos pita l cost containment
bill, to send me appropriation
and authorization bills that
are solid, firm and cut-to-thebon€! without any waste."
He got prolonged applause
from the crowd of 1,200 when
he called for equal rights for
women - presumably a
reference to the bill to extend
th e time for ratification and for passage of the late
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey's
full employment bill .
The president was certain
Ill plug these proposals at a
nati onally televised and
broadcast news conference at
4 p.m. EDT today.
Within a few hours Wednesday :
- The Senate passed the
controversia l nat ural gas
pricing proposal, the last big
remaining
barrier
to
enactment a comprehensive
energy policy, Carter's key
domes'.ic program.
- The lsr aeli Knesset
ba cked the Camp David
accords by voting to remove
Jewish settlements from the
Sinai.
Ca rter interrupted hi s

SHOP

speech to announce the
Knesset vote. His ·top aide,
Hamilton Jordan, scrawled
tlle vote on a piece of paper,
walked to the podium and
handed to him .
The president paused, read
it, and then announced the a:;.
19 vote.

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''That's indeed good news,' '

carter said. "That 's sure
proof or the tremendous
courage of Prime Minister
Begin and the Israeli
members of the Knesset , wbo
now have formed a possible
patnership for the rest of our
lives with their neighbors, tbe
Egypt ians,
under
the
leadership of Presid ent

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Thursday Til12 Noon
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Sadat."

from the powerful law firm of
Squires, Sa un ders and
Dempsey.

PARK RESERVED
SATURDAY- SEPTEMBER 30TH
UNTIL 6 PM

FAMILY OUTING
OF

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SUNDAY -

LAST OPEN DAY OF 1978 SEASON

HAND STAMP

·but

COME ON IN FOLKS
SEE THE NEW

OCTOBER 1ST

APPRECIATION DAY

are

" HJ UR CII EI ' Y /) £A LiiR"

1979 CHEVROLETS

was "a shock and surprise.

Teachers in the Columbus District were up again today
United Preos International
suburb
of Whitehall voted although schools were open.
The Cleveland Board of
Wednesday
to strike the The teachers went on strike
Education tonight will
school
system
on Mooday In a Wednesday alter rejecling a
co nsider cutting back on
contract calling for a 13.1
contract
dispute
.
hundreds of workers in the
The layoffs in Cleveland percent pay increase.
city's strikebound school
Scattered pickets were resystem as a means of finding will be the main part of
ported
in Dayton, where 2,700
funds for increased salaries. massive budget cuts being
school
employees remain on
by
school
Walkouts continued in five proposed
strike.
Classes
were open for
·
adminstrators
in
hopes
of
other districts around the
the
system's
37,000
students.
finding
funds
foc
pay
raiSes
state.
Schools
remained
open
for
the
city's
10,000
school
Work stoppages continued
today
In
the
Lakewood
and
employees
who
have
not
had
in Dayton, Lakewood, Logan,
Logan
School
district
with
a
raise
in
two
years.
.
Painesville Township and the
Pickets lines in the Paines- classes taught by supervisory
Midview School District in
ville
Township School personnel and substitute
Lorain County.
teachers.
However, classes in the
Midview School District remalned closed.
The teachers In Whitehall
voted 13S-28 to withhold services Monday unless the
board of education "shows
some positive action."
Whitehall Superintendent
Gilbert Johnson said the vote

•400

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Linings of high-temp re:
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blower. lift-off top for
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An
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(9900- BI

(BLOWER EXTRA) ·

11- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978

~!.~s

.Mass .layoff may hit Cleveland schools

briefing .

CLEVELAND. (UP!) The beleaguered aeveland

Board of Education meets
tonight
with
strong
indicatioll8 it will lay · off
hundreds of school employees
in an effort to slash its budget
by more than $10 million to
fund pay raises for ·strikers.
The
disclosure
of
impending layoffs came as
the strike by 10,000 teachers
and support personnel
marked the end or its third
week Wednesday . The
strikers, who haven't ~tad a
wage hike in two years, are
demanding a 20 percent
raise.
George Dobrea, chairman
of the scbool board's Finance.
Committee, said as many as
1,000 employees may hi laid
off - mostly food service
workers and educational

aides. He said the board and
state officials have singled
out food service and
educational aides as two
areas they consider averstaffed.
Dobrea also indicated that
som e
t op-Ieve I
administrators may find
themselves back in the
classroom in the 101,000student system. They would
have to be paid at their
current rate until their
contracts explie next year.
Such demotions, ho.wever,
are expected to · speed up
reslgnatlona and retirements
and save more money for tbe
hard-pressed system, largest
. in Ohio.
The layoffs will be the main
part of llUISSive cuts being

educatlori . And we've got to
By LEE LEONARD
have accountability/'
OOLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Celeste even suggested a
Ohio Education Alaocl,tioo Ia proposed television
to hold a ''newa briellng" advertisement to sell the
today to outline deficiencies plan.
in lhe educaUon financing
"Don't be surpriled to see ~
plan of Gov . James A. television spot that starts out
Rhodes, setting the stage for something like this," he said.
an alternative proposal, "Do any of you really believe
perhaps involving higher that Jim Rhodes can solve the
taxes, by Lt. Gov. Richard F. problems of the schools
Celeste.
wlth9ut any additional
Celeste,
Rhodes' dollars? And that ends up
Democratic opponent in the something !Ike, 'This may not
general election campaign, Is be good politics, but the next
scheduled to unveil hill school governor has to have the guts
financins plan at an OEA · to tell the truth about what Is
rally Saturday.
required, and I intend lj) tell
It is baaed on the belief tllat the truth.' ''
more money Is needed to
keep schools open, and that
Rhodes is "blowing smoke"
wben he says the existing tax
structure will provide tbe
needed revenues.
"Jim Rhodes is selling us
some snake oil, because his
plan will result in more than
$1 billion worth of property
taxes,"
Celeste
told
supporters In suburban
Cincinlll!ti two nights ago. ·
Against the advice of some
top Ohio Democratic leaders,
oot with the backing or some
others, Celeste Is planning to
recommend a shill ln the
burden from real estate taxes
to individual and corporation .
inc&lt;me taxes f~ financing
public schools.
The shift inay ra~ taxes
file some citizell8 and •lower
them for others. The overall
effect is not clear. In any
case, voters would have to
approve the shift in taxes. .
In addltioo, Celeste plans to
offer a stepped-up minimwnlevel basic state ald package
for all Ohio school districts,
plus a series of "add-ons" for
vocatlooal and special education and other programs.
Local districts Interested in
going beyond tlle minimwn
state requirements will be
able to do so oo their own.
The entire proposal repre.
A great way to start your bathroom remodeling.
sents a modification of the
Plan around this convenient flbervla88 IIIIth cove.
idea hatched late last year by
This on&amp;-piece fiberglass bath cava has no seams or joints
state Rep . John E. Johnson,
to collect dirt or soap film. It's easy to install, too,
D-Orrvllle.
because of·the on&amp;-piece construction. MeaaurH 60' wide,
Ted
Celeste,
the
35'12" deep, and 731'2" high. Gieamino while. o~201o.
candidate 's brother and
campaign manager, INisted
Wedneadsy the plan Is not yet
llnallzed.
But he confirmed that hla
brother •'has met with a lot of
people in trying to put
together a package" for
school financing.
There have been reports
that Celeste has been
discouraged from his plan by
Democratic and labor
leaders who fear "he will
blow the electioo" if he even
Add safeiJ' &amp; good looks
hints that Income taxes may
to
your front entr11nce.
go up .
This black wrought iron
" A lot of those stories are
railing Is easy to install
just not true ," said Ted
with rio special tools. 1"
Celeste,
thick,
4' section. 114215
Rhodes has claimed
schools can live oo $1.1 billion
in revenue growth !rom the
existing tax structure during
the next four years.
"There's only ooe word for
that," Celeste told his
supporters, "but I'm running
for governor and I can't uae
it. You've got to u.te It for me.
He's not telling the truth. "
Add storage 1p11ce &amp;
Celeste maintains Rhodes'
a
look of permanence.
$1.1 billloo will not keep the
Mobile home skirting of
schools open without another
galvaniZOid
steel in easy-tof/50 mUllan to $1.25 billion
handle,
llgh~ight 28" x
!worth of local tax increases in
60" panels, with rock
; the fonn or operating levies
like plllem. H0782
•In the next four years.
; Celeste has virtually laid
~ out hil whole program in
I pieces on the campaign trail,
Ibasing 11 oo the hyp&lt;thellis
Ithai he 1.1 ''Up front" about
!"hat It will take, while
\Roocses' plan has a hidden
lax.
l " Anyooewho says there's a
pie way of solving the
"This guttering le 10
ucatlon problem and It's
t going to cost you any
e11y to Install!"
ey 1.1, I think, blowing
While aluminum guttenno Is
oke," Celettte said.
llghlwelghland ••Y to lnatall.
"We've got to move away
Pre-painted to cut down on work
the property tax and
time. 10ft. seetlona. 111560
k toward the corporate
d per.mal Income tax to
lirovtde the growth doUara fpr

proposed by administrators
In a revised school budget.
Once
the
budget is
completed, negotiations are
expected Ill resume between
the
board
and
representaUves of school employee unions.
The layoffs would be
needed to pare the budget to
the $167.3 million level
required by the state under
terms of a $20.7 millioo
emergency loan granted tbe
district in June.
Once that figure is reached,
members of the State
Controlling Board, which
monitors the district 's
spending, have indicated they
may allow the school board to
grant pay hikes.
In federal court develop-

If You're Fighting For

~\

~

ucatlon.' '

JII'OIRIIII,
'iipiiCiallllucll&amp;lan,"
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be llld. "We'ft ptlll llllw
t..llnl PfDI'IIIIII . OD a
....- ltulalll . . tblt the
ltlljl are Rettinl a lolld ballc

Mrs. .Louis DeLuz was a Birch, Waterford, Mr. and
guest of her sister, Mrs. Mrs. Joe Lipps, Vincent, Mr.
Lucille Southall, Ripley, W. and Mrs. Elza Birch, Racine,
Va., for a few days last week. Mrs. Hazel Shuck, Miami,
Mr . and Mrs. Buddy Fla., Mrs. Earl Poweil,
Corn ell and Sherry, Industry, Torch , Howard Frank, ·,
Pa., Mrs. Robin Albritton and Racine , Mrs. Barbara ;5
Mrs. Violet Ritchie, local, Talbott and Mrs. Bonnie
visited recently with Mr. and Wlllford, local, called during
Mrs. Bill Bryant, Debra and the past week at the home ol
Oint Birch and daughter,
Dave.
Mr . and Mrs . Thomas Leota.

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Parking

1.1 golntl to nqlire a
te 01 the peOple," lllld that a
pnrgrllll 01 education
'ma .- be dependent on
tlonal real el!ate tall

u-

SHversville News Notes

...

,1_1

~tlon

IIIIIHibln tbl milllmum, aald
'OIIelte 'niiJ can vote for
flltldlthlal property tuea.
• "Wt'VIIpl to define what a
•bulc educatlllll Ia and
mab ldtknl fir r-•"•1

There has been no indication
when the appeals court will
run in tlle dispute .

Ferguson has re fused to
release the funds and has
appealed Battisti 's order.

Can Help

But he als&gt; said that "any ·
ubatantlal change
In

~=·~·
bu~t and
on aIncome
combination
lo p operty
taxes.
! 9ome dlllrlcta wiD .am

ments, at least nine manufac·
turers and dealer s have
submitted bids to provide
schools buses to the board for
the start of desegregation In
January . Among the bidders
were General Motors and
International Harvester.
School Business Manager
George Mazzara said it appeared that as many as 200
vehicles could be ready by
Jan. 15, if money becomes
available soon to lease them .
Currently, an order by U.S . .
District Judge Frank ..J.
Battisti that would provide
the school district with up to
$14 million in state funds is
being held up by the 6th U.S.
Circuit Court of Appeals in
Cincinnati.
State Auditor Thomas

"I'll have a real brick
waH with half the world"
Z·Brlck it allcea of rwal
brick, but 10 much eaaJer to
install linea Red . Cornea In
cartona of 30. 11eeoo

S4~ACorton
OPEN: Mon. lhN Thull. 7:30-5:30
FridiJ 7:30-7:00 SltuniiJ 7:30-2:00

"I koep l»ul Irritating duet
I dirt with thlt dull motJ&lt;."
I moako per packoge. 1-10715

S'f9....._

OF

BELPRE, OHIO
PHONI 423-9533

PUTNAM HOWE DRIVE, BELPRE, OHIO

•

•.

�12 - The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleoort·Porneroy, 0 .. Thunday, Sept . 28, 1978

13-'l'lle DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Thursday, Sept. 28, 1978

Want Ads Turn ·Unwanted Items Into Cash

'

Nuti&lt;'&lt;'~

WANT AD
CHARGES
15 Wurdsu.- Under
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words ts 4 \~t\l.s pt&gt;r -.·un.l per dit.)'
Ad:i ruiUung o~r than l"onsecut•ve
WI \~ w1ll be Lh&lt;il)!t!!..l al Lht' 1 do~~~
ratt'

ltr uwmury, Ccm.l of Thanks &lt;1nd
ObilUi:tr}

6 Ct!IILS

per "'urc.l.

$3 00

rru.nunwn C.11.f&gt;h url11h'a!K't'
M~bd~ Homto sales o~~nd \'11rd SC$ Ies
are aL't'~'Plrtl onl} wttlr cash. w1l h
ortl~r 25 L't! nl dw r!lt' for alb c11 r ry ·
111g Bux Numllt!r In C a~ of The St&gt;n·
Wl ~l.

The Publ i.sher r~rvc::; Uit' nghl

w t•(.hl or reJect lin~· 1uis tkcmt!d

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Phum: 99'2-2Jj6

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Mur]tl.ii t•

NtKIII un S&lt;t lm dii ~

Tuesdil)

thru FnJa\
4 PM
the Uil y bt'fure publ..iea tron
Sur Kiln
4 1-'1\1
Fnd&lt;~ :&gt;

SHOOT ,
R:aclne
F' ire Dept . Every
Saturdey 6 : 30pm . at the i r
bu ilding in Basnan . Fac .
tor y choke guns oniy
Volunte~r

l,j()

;! dltys

. ·so.ni~ee Offti:.ed

ilfh·nwun

I WOULD lrke to than k. a l l of

th e slatf a t Veterans
Memor ta l Hos !=l lta l for t1'1e lr
care and kindness dur in g
my recent Illness a n d
hoSp1 tai 1ZC1 t 1on
Spec1al
thank.s to t he nurses , a 1des ,
Dr
Vdlaneuva and Dr
Telle . 1 would al~o l ike t o
thank all who sen t c ards
and l)ff ered prayers dur ing
my
hospllat
stay
EYeryone 's k1ndn ess was
greatly app;ec1ated
Mr Pa ul F Andrews

THE ALMANAC
U lilted Press 1aternatlonal
Today is Thursday, Sept
28, the 271st day of 1978 with
94 to follow
'l,'he moon is approaching
its new phase
The mormng stars are
Merc ury , Jupiter and Saturn
The evenmg stars
are
Mars and Venus.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Libra.
American entertamer Ed
Sullivan was born Sept. 28,

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Ro!Jc1ne 1
beam s and SO tf . or tower
p lus other ce eQuipment .
, , AKC
REGISTERED 9.49 2322.
NOTICE · OLIVE Tow n ·
Beagles B weeks otd , shot s ....... ................
s h 1p Trustees W1ll tllk e
~~"=•==z = ; .--; , and
wormed . 61.4·367 -.0292 LIKE NEW Hondo guitar and
appi1C1!1fions for a , grader ,
operator , at R:eed 's Store · RELO.CATING TO . area .
or 611·367 ·03.t7 ,
case , .extra set ot str ings
... .. .. , ........... .
1n Reedsville , OH until
Need 3 or 4 bedroom hou se
a' nd
pi c ks 1ncluded ·
MALE
ONE
year
·
Old
Saturday ' evening , Sep
to rent or tease . Will
Maytag Coppe;tone Porta .
Dachshund
,
house
broken
,
I
30th .
turn1sh
. ret,er er ·
pair wahser and dryer. ·
bl ack and b r own , long, Ver y good condition , se l t
Ber,arct
· ces , de.po slt
ha,ired . 992 5098 after 5 pm .
K1 ngsley , B o~ 631 , orr .
as se t . Call a fter s 00
v d ie , Ohio
pm . 99~ · 2995
l:amping t:quip'""nt
ONE YEAR ol d da chshu nd ,
male
Houseb r oken , gentle TRUMPE T
AND
Si nQ er
TRAVEL TRAILER tor sa.le.
with children S50 992 -5098
t r eadle sew ing
mo!J ch 1ne
1972 Mar~ lwa1n 19 H 7.42
after 5.
·
Both in ex. cellent co n
..... ....... " "
2566 .
Uition . F1rewood . · 9.49.. 2358
1973 OLD S, 4.door , S1 ,050. 985 ·
THREE COO N hOunds and
3839 6 cyl rebuilt Chevy
all the dog bo xes . $600. 992 · U SED OLDS trum'pet, can ,
en g 1ne
5705
m us1c s tand and severa l
Wanted
.......
books Good co nd1f ion . t50
19'68 FORO F 100 'I~ ton
WANT TO buy eledr1c ·or
Call 9~2 - 2~31
·p ick up . 6 cyl. , std 99 2-7663
gas copperlone range Also ,
or see at C1t11ens Nat1ona1
draw d rapery ;ods . After 6,
Personals
Bank , Middleport
ca ll 304-88 2 25 66
TWO PUP PIE S M other is
springer span 1el: fa ther Is
1974 DATSUN
P I CKUP
WAN T ED : BLACK walnut s
poodle 992 .7416
Phone 992 6192 aft er 5pm .
B r~ng your b lack walnuts to
, DI.SCOUNT
E~ce l stor Salt works , Inc ,
1975
CADIL LA C
PRICESIII ·
eo ~ 267 , Pom eroy , Oh io
ELDORADO F ull power ,
45769
Pay1ng top pric e
air, AM -FM rad io
Clean
after they are hauled .
During
oUr
Seasonal
Phone 992 7462
Start 1ng Oct 1.
Closeout.
1977 FOR D L T D 4door
Outside While
THREE BEDROOM house .
se dan Like n ew with a1r.
CHIP
WOOD
Poles
Rod roof paint
107 Locust St., Pomeroy .
P S , P B , ti lt whee l AM ·
m ax. . d i am eter 10 "
on
SlSO per month plu s $100
FM 8.treck. More e1t tra s.
la r gest end , SB .SO per ton
depos 1t. References . 992
7.42 2826
Bundled sla b , t6 .50 per ton
33 60 after 5 p .m .
0e11vered t o Ohio Pallet
1977 MONZA
SPYDER ,
Co , Rt 7, Pomeroy . 99 2
305 eng i ne . L ikebrand new COUN TJO!Y MOBILE Home
2689
W1th every lh 1ng . 742 ·1826.
Park
R oute 33, north of
Pomeroy . Lar ge lots . Ca ll
T IMBER POMEJO!OY For es t
19 75
PONTIA C
AS TA E
ducts Top pr1ce for
P ro
992·H7 9.
hatchba ck , bucket
se.!l t s,
stan d ing sa w t1mber Catl
automatic
New radials 3 AN D 4 RM . f urnished and
991 S965 or Kent H anby , 1
FIVE P I ECE din ette set 992
un turnlshed ~ o!Jp t s
and battery 30 mpg . 949446 -85 70
70 40.
22 83 afte; 7pm .
Phone 992 5434 .
... " " ........ .
OLD
F URNITUR E ,
1Ce
i.96 2.... o()oG·E· ~ 3;~ tqr 4 .
197'.2 F ORO COUNTRY Seda n
TWO B ED JO!OOM t ra iler .
box.es , brass beds , 1ron
wheel drive , ru ns good
Sta t 1 on
Wagon
Adults only 992 3324 .
beds . desks. et c , c omplete
1966 Plymou t h
valiant,
hous eho ld s
Write M . D
9 passenger . All pow er .
50 ,000 miles, 6 cyl.,auto.,
BEDROOM mob 1l e
M i ller , JOlt
4, P o me ro y
E~C: c ellent
mechanical ONE
really nice Phone 9~9 - 2763 .
home
99 2 2598
or call 991 -1760
cond1t10n No rust . Sl700
992 -5721 days or 992 -52.46
1975 DAT SUN
PI CKUP .
OL D CO IN S, pocket wat .
after 5
SHARE APT
l 1ving tor
Low m lleage , good con class ; ings , weddmg
c hes
elderly onl y In Pomeroy
dition , sfep bumper , good
1974 NOVA CUSTOM . P .S ,
ban d s, diamon ds Gold or
available
tn N o&lt;Je rnber ,
tires , truc k m ir rors . $2850.
P B. . A . C. . good condition
si i&lt;Jer . Call R oge r Wam
eve ;yth 1ng
furn ish · e d
ISS 3979.
99 '1 2903
s l e~ . 742 233 1
exce pt me d1 cat1on . $175
per month c overs
all .
4 HP OU T e.oARD motor .
1966 CORV ETTE 327 .4 -speed
WE PI C K up jun k auto bodies
Wr i te Anna Heines , 95 7
Four 8 75 ~ 16 5 t 1res 52
con
ver
table
top
.
9.49
23
14
buy ing junk cars , scrap
Loc kbo urne
Rd ,
ga ll on
water heater .
iron , bat tenes and metals
Colum bus , OH -3206 (.!I ll
P 1ston ty pe water pum p
1972 CHEVY BL AZER . 4
R ider ' s Sa!&lt;J age , SR 124 ,
co l
lec t 1-253 5481.
Ax le spr i ngs ad n ti res
wheel dr1'Je w tth lock ou t
Pomeroy . 992 ·5•68 .
to m ake trailer . Slant
hubs J07 v .8 w 1th P .s .,
FOR RENT : 3 mobile hom es
Sill: Fl'lymo u tl'1 with std .
P 8 , .4 new 6 p l y 11res 98 5
OLD MOTORCYCLES and
tor season , 1 shady a cre ,
t ran smis s 1on
Doub l e
4220
parts
Doesn ' t have to run
water furn i shed . Or for
barrel shOt gu n
500 watt
992 ·6345
sale $30,000. SO m i les fr om
Demon l 1near 20 0 watt
19 76 PONTIAC Cata l i na
Sarasota and Ft . Mye_rs
H E C l1 near Phone 9.t9 $3100 98 5 3981
WANTED TO buy
100
and 9m iles from Ar
cad1a .
27 63
H e1 fer steers and bull ca lf .
Walter Messter , 1 813.494
19 71 P LYMO U T H F URY
A lso , some c ows and la r ge
7851
No
colle
ct
ce
lls
PS , PB , A .C A . J CO n
bulls . 61.4 ·593 5132 anyt1me
d ilion $1500
742 ·27 90
SMALL
new. hous e ,
2
WANT TO buy · 1967 Dodg e
bedroom , water fur nished,
19
74
OLDS
CUTLASS
Cor onet 440 949 2470
adul l s on l y
No doQs . $50
Supreme
Good sha pe. 99 2
secur1ty
depOSi t
614 378·
7 08~
P S , P . B , AM -tape ,
6 27 6

____

_-;-~-

.
-

PAINTS

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

PhotO
Place
The ('Bob
Hoellich) ·

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949 -21~0 .

109 High St.. .

BODY AND c l eenup men
Haro ld Hy sell ' s Gerege ,
Rutland . 01'110 . Apply in
person or c all 7~2 · ll54
NEED TRU CK Or ive r im
med iately
Prefer
ex.
per ience b ut not necessar y
Must be 21 ye ar s of ag e ,
appl y 1n person Pomeroy
Landma rk

Pomeroy

8-20-1 mo. CPd. l

'

.

8·2-lmo .

JIM KEESEE

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
. 'AND · .
HOME MAINTENANCE

a! llulosic I wooci' fiber. I

SERVICE

.Blown lnsulltiOn
Thermal insuiation

r'·

StvolO pet. I~ 50
· on I!Milng cos
E ·~rlence •nd
.lu IIY Insured

.·

C.:.r-~M'f.i2

.

8· 10-Jmo. (Pd.)

G AR AG E SA LE Thurs o!Jnd
Fr1 9 to •
JO!iQQs c r es t
Manor oft CR 28 at top of
Ea stern H ig h School hil l

BURROU GHS

SENSI

MAT IC
ac co unt i ng
mach 1ne
Phone 992 -2156,
The D ally Sent ine l, Ill
Court
S t r e et ,
Fl' omer oy , Oh 10

YARD SAL E unt i l sol d ou t.
All s tzes
of
clo th i ng ,
l'lfghans . w 1nter cloth lniii ,
macrl'lme , flower sto!J rter s,
kn ick knacks
1
m de off
c~ A, wesl of De~ter

SWEET POTATOES
Red,
while , and yellow . Phone
8~3 - 2.431
Robert w Lew is.
Rt 2, Rac in e, SR 124 .

LARGE YARD

GRIMES

SAL E

909

GO LDEN .

De liCIOU S,
Gol den
Dei 1C 1ous o!Jpples
Fitz patr i ck
orc h ard,
SR
689
61.4 -669·3785.

YARD SAL E Wed , Fri o!lnd
Sat at Le tart . 1nd hou se
pa !.t oas sta
t ton Wo!l tch
tor si gns
Clo thes. wood
bu r ner . t ools , diShes, rug s
and ot her Items 9 ti l dark

SCHOOL
B US
ce mper
60 !=lOSSenger w i th new
t 1res
Goo d
condit ion .
Con tact Tom Mankin at
997 .2201

NOTICE OF
INVITATION
FOR BID
YARD ' SALE . Thurs
and
Tt1e Ga ll ia Me tr opo lit an
f'rl . Sep t
28 .. 29 at the
Housing Autl'1or i ty 1nvites
Paul Baer res1 dence f 1rs t
pr tva te
Bu il ders
an d
farm on the r1Qh t po!Jst th e
Deve lopers to part icip ate In
hi g hw ay g arage on R t
7
the
Turnkey method o f
Boys'
fall
and w i n t er
constr uction of 100 dwel ling
clothes , SIZe JT and some
un i ts , Row
(Town house )
2T Jewelr y . Knick knacks
Type , In Gallia County , Ohio
and m 1SC
on s 1tes to be acQu lnd by the
Deve l oper
which
Is YARD SALE . Th u rs end
sat i sfa c t ory to the Gallil!l
Fr 1
Frances
Alk i r e
Me t ropolitan
H ous i ng
res idence . Harr isonv ille
Author it y and to Colu m bus
Area Off ice of t he Depart
YARD SALE . F r i., Sat, Sun
ment of HQ us inlil &amp; Urba n
Sep t
19 , JO, Oct 1 10 am
Deve lopment
D 1s hes , rad io .
clothes ,
Proposal s will be rece i&lt;J ed
an ti ques e n d m1sc Phil
at
Gallla
Metr opol 1tan
Ba ldw 1n resi den ce , l m li e
Housing Au t Mor1ty , 80)11 19 1,
N Beacon Station on Rt. 7
16 Sta t e St;eet , Gal li poliS.
Oh io •5631 , unt i l 2: 00 p .m , YAR D SALE . Clifton , WV
ESCT on October 30, 1978 .
Fn da y on l y . Sept . 29 9 to
In format ion packets may
ot
Dana Lew1S res idence .
be otHained from the office or
Follow s1gns .
the HOUS ing AuthOrity b y
depos 1t i ng S2 5 00 In the form GARAGE SA LE . 21 , 28, 29 S
of certified or c o!ls hie r's
miles on Eag l e Ridge Rd .
check , money order oaveble
Turn oft Rl . 7 at Memory
to the Gallia Me t ropo l it an
Ga rd ens Cemetery
HOUSing
Author i ty ,
In
terested
eu ll aers
end
Developers
Should
lm
GIA NT YARD SALE . Sept
media tel y contact Mr JOhn
29-JO. 9·.4 . Moses N orma n's
P . Roder us , D 1rector ol t he
rPcsidence at Hysell R un for
Gall le Metropol itan H ou sing
JO!utland Ctw r ch of God .
A ut hority at Bo x 191. 16 Sta te
Stree t, Gelllpolfs. Ohio .t56J1 ,
tele phone (614 -.446 0251) f or
YARD SALE on Old Rt. 33
north of fairgr ounds thru
turther and more specific
Information
Sa turd ay noon . EverythlnQ
chea p
John R Roden
D irec tor
TWO FAM I LY Yor d Sale .
Fr i . and Sat.. Sept . 29 and
( 9) 21, 28, '2tc
30 Fr om 9 til .4 At 20,.
Lasley St .!! cross from Old
Sugar Run Schoo l We have
drapes~
bedspreads , fur .
nl ture, d i5hes, lamps end
real
n i ce
dre sses .
Someth ing for everyone .
Watson Sm ith .

Pritlllncludes
Fed. Tax
(does not include
sales fix or
balancing)
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Other silos
comparably
priced.

Red

Brownell Ave .
P ull tns
res 1dence
EYeryth 1ng
ch el'l p
T ue s
76th until
Fr i. Oct . 6 .

YARD SA LE . Sepl 29
30 .
776 Grant St . M iddleport .
Toys , good c lothing , hatr
drye r , many m lsc art1 cles
1n good condition
Ro!lin
date Oc t . 6
7

White-Wall Co-Op
Custom Polv
A78x13

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landm11rk
soften &amp; condition you r
water with Co·op water

Pomeroy Landmark
Jatk w. car..y, Mt•
Phano 992-2111

t HOME SITES tor So!Jie, l acre
end up M iddleport , near
Rutland . Call 99 2 7.481.

softener, Model UC- SVI.~
Now Only

•289.95

L et us test your wate r
Free

Pomeq L.andmarll

~atk w. car..y , Mgr.·
-·

Phont992·2111

fDLAY P EN. , car seat end
walker Good con d i tion .
985·.4259, anytime .

Ohio . 985·3831
YAR D SALE . Sert 29end 30.
9-4. At Hysel Run Free
Method i st
Parsonag e .
0 1shes, clot h ing . m i sc .
items . H ysell Run Rd

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

3051.
THREE BEDROOM frame
home tn Middleport. Call
992·3457
FIVE ROOM house en d
bath , remodeled ,
tully
ca rpeted
May be seen
after 3 pm Pn one 992 3933 .
FARM FOJO! sale H ouse . 2
barns , tra de; Large pond
10 acres or 82 a cr es . 742 ·

2S66 .

HUTC H . SOLID har d roc k
ma ple . 992-99 75

N EW
THREE
bedroom
home , rec room . f ireplace ,
large
deck. garage ,
basemen t, one and a half
bath s
Phone Let Con ·
s tru c t l on
992 - 345,. ,
weekends 1 614 446 9568 .
NEW 2 bedroom house,
car pet , garage , beautiful
kitchen , 1 acre lot . Located
at Tuppers P lains, Ohio.

614.667 33&lt;9.
LOT AND acreage In Tup pers Pta 1ns , Oh io 61,. ·667 33.49

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

YAR D SALE
If ·,tra in ,
oerage . Fr l end Sal. 9·5. 6
cyl. Chevrolet eng ine . Baby
bed , and tables and coffee
table . &lt;J i se, ti res, baby
Item s, a few antique, . 6th
on rigl'1t on N ew Hope Road .
Henry Hartm en, Chester,

VA -FHA . 30 yr1• fina ncing,
als o retl nanc1ng
Ire land
Mo rt ga g e , 77 E
St,a1e.
At hen s, phone (614) 592 -

PI~

acres locat•d 1 milt
f;om Meigs M i nt N o . I
Drilled well and septic
system . I 304 ·882 ~334 .
.. .. . ......... ... .
STAN'S
BARG AINLANO .
Where everyone gets a felr
deal Open 9 to S da itv
eKcep t Sunday, 12 to 6 .
Ma in St .. R u11 and, Ohio .
1973 TER RY T RAILER 27 tt
A . C. , roll ou t awn ll\g ,
power c on
verter . E ~
c ellent c on dit ion . $.4500
f i rm , ~ Good year L :78 l5 tires and wheels , ap
pro:-: 700 miles , S300. 741 ·

HOU SE
IN
M i nersville .
Alum inum.,. sid ing .
Newl y
carpeted .
Par .
tty furnished . .4 bedroom,
l i ving room ,
k i t c hen ,
u 11111v room , batl'l, ni ce
basemen t
Onl y alk · ing

$11 ,500 992 ·5823

Armstrong Carpeting

HOU SE IN Pomeroy . Large
lot . So m e
re ce nt
remodeling ,
new carpet ,
central
heating ,
utility room, ' full
basement , 2 po,. c hes .
Furnished
or
un furn ished . 992·707.4 .

·:,·w·o.. ·e~ ·;.· RA ... ~.i~~

2667 .

. . . . . . ! .• • • • .. . . . . . . . . . . ... .

KENNEBEC

POTATOES ,

available this week. Paul
Sayre, Portland , Grtllt
Bend Rd . 143--4591.

To"tlin.

Rac i ne with
l2 •
60
Hopypark frllttr . P•rtllll Y
turnl,htd . 11 )I( 40 cement
block building with lh•d.
largt garden IPICt with
trult trtes. Ut-2421.

------------ACRE . l7x60mobllthomt
nur Oexter "2-5151.
- -- -.....,.--------1h

0.
Aut, &amp; Truck .
. ' Repllf ·
Also Transmission ·
. Repair
Phillie 992-5682 ·
.
4:Jt.i4c
·.'

.

SMITH NELSOM

MOTORS, IN(.

Af UIIION 110551, EH l

GAN65TER!I

m-3325
216 E. Second SlrHI

VOLTA'f

THE WORI&lt;EillH

·..;

WOOD HEAT
In Mlddlep~rl between
Third &amp; Fourlll Str:etl-off
Mill Sh'HI lust behind
·
Tony'S carry but. .
Open saturday 10-4 p.m.
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.,
·
8·31 ·1 mo .

new

bridge.
OLDER HOME -In the
cou,try on good country
road . 3 bedrooms, bath,
and several outbuildings on
one &amp; one-third acres. Just
$16,000 .
30
ACRES - ' Near
Pomeroy . Old r4Piovated
home with drilled well. and

and., State

Highways. Nice vllw and
aood buy
·
JIEW LISTING -Walk to
the storM from thla 3
bedroom home with all city
utllllln. Haa Iorge rooma
wllh lots of carpeting and
aluminum siding. 2 lola and
2 c•r garage. All lhla lor
on Iy $15,000.
Let your lnvHimont grow
while you llvoln It. Till'*•
btly your hame now.
G. Bruce TNford
Holen L Toofonl

Suo P. Murphy

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
byHenrr ArnoldandBoblee

Unscramble lhese tour Jumbles ,
one lener 10 each square to form
tour ordinary words
'

Here,dear you 'll need
a few bucks

I PINYg

•

I

\

rJ J

I ENGAL~

'IOU'D EX"EC.I
TO PAY FOR: AN
AC.UP'UNC'TU R:E
iFl:EAIMENI.

r 0
IREEMIPj
KJ r
I I

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

Print answer here:

Now arrange the circled leners to
torm the surpnse answer, as sug·
gested by the above canoon

r I X)

(I1:t:t1
(Answers tomorrow )

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

Ye91erdey 9 I Jumbles KNOWN LISLE TUXEDO INJECT
Answer · What he blamed his bad luck on-

TJTTI.E OR I'll 1\ .\~NIF:

A JINX AT THE LINKS
The latest JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 and JUMBLE
BOOK 11111 . AYIIIIble !Of S1 35 EA.CH, pos!pald from Jumbtt, c/O lhle
newspaper, P.O Box 34. Norwood. N J 07648. Mike ehecka payable to
Newapaperbooka .

MOORE'S
3 BEDROOMS - Older
home, some remodeling,
beautiful view of the river,

musl see lo appreciate.
Price $12,500 .
11 ACRES - More or loss: ~
bedrooms . modern bath ,
large k llchen &amp; dining

room ,

fireplace ,

several
Price

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS .
104W. Maln
Pomeroy
992·2291
Aller Hours
call 992-7133
CON'I;ACT:
Lois Pauley
Braoch Manager

~HIM~e,t

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery.
•
.
Installation Service

Ph. 992-2141

ACROSS

·Pomeroy, 0.
3·15-llc

6 Secret group

"'"'-'""-.ro::.;• II Nitwit

BRAOFOR 0 , Auct i oneer',
Com · ptete Serv ice . Phone
9.49 - 2487 or 949 2000..
Rac ine,
OhiO ,
Crltt .
Bradford

AL LEY

12 lnfinn

nor
1 ... I !XlN'T 1&lt;N0W
HOW "10 ~(HIS

.... ,.,.................... .. .
ELWOOD

BOWERS

NliW MQCUL&amp;.

REPAIR:
and Swetpers,
toasters , Irons , all am•ll
appliances .
Lawn
W\ower , next to State Hlghwa.y Garage on Route 7.
Phone ( 6U l 915
3825

SEWING

MACHINE

Repairs,
ser v i et,
all
makes ,
99~ · 221.t .
The Fabric
Shop,
Pomero~
Authorized
Si nger Sales end Strvlce
we sharpen Scissors .

EXCAVATING , dozer , loader
and backhoe work , dump
trucks and lo boys tor
hire ; will haul fill dirt, to
soil , limestone and Qravtl
Call Bob or Roger Jef fers ,
day
p hone
992 .7019 ,
night pl'1 one 992 3525 or f9l ·

•

~ 1iolr. Slim's

5232 .

MAIN
POM~OY.o.
SHOULD BE SOLD ~
badroom ranch, 2 balhl ,
central air, good lull
basement, largo lot, only 8
years old, good condition .
ONLY $21.000 .00.
MAKE OFFER - This 2·
home Is located on a
I
slrHI In Middleport.
s n livable conditionStarling at $13.500.
'
RANCH IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION - 2'1• acres, 2
ear gar•go, wood btlrnlng
llreplaee . nice k itchen,
"patio
and
barbecue.
BELOW FAIR MARKET
VALUE at S2S,OOO .OO.
10 LOTS - In lht counlry,
nice 1 floor plan home with
basement, barn , other
btllldlngs . Fruit t r - and
berries.
A .-,steal at
$17,700.00.
MINI FARM ' - Over S
acres. remodeled and nice
1 floor plan home, barn,
storage building, good
lencect pasture. ONLY
$16,500.
IN THE COUNTRY -NNr
Pagevllle-Very nice home
In excellent condition. the
house must be moved$6,000.00.
ALSO-IS nice acres ol
ground to put houu on. call
lor ct.t•lla .
EXPERIENCE,
KNOWLEDGE &amp; HARD
WORK SELLS HOUSES .
WI NIED LISTINGS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY I . CLELAND
REALTOR
H•nk, Kathy &amp; Leona
Clelllnd
( RtaHor AIIOCIItOSI
992-22SJ-m-2S61
9924191

just want
to see if
she is!

moth.Jr is l11'r1q,

EXCAVATING ,
dour ,
bac khoe and
d l t ch er .
Char les R . Hat field , Back
Hoe
Service, Rutland ,
Ohio. Phone 7d-2008.

Sis?,--.....,_

~---+---+--+--1- Bad

Rt . 10. Phone 1 16141 691 ·
733 I.
FRA:-IK &amp; F:R:-JIF:

3685 .
992

No, \NE I)I')N,... HAvEJWY &amp;.e,.,.eRS oF
IZeGOMM!NDIPPtON --Jc,~ A F!W &amp;.ei"TI!P$

EXCAI/ATING .
Servlct. · Phone

2~78

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

;

RrEEVES TRADING Post ;
Pagevlllt . Groceries. drwo
goods , herd w1re, feed,
tack shop. SpeC Ill 25 lb. of

dog food, $3 .11.

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

~df
~:::::::
--JI
r.....\ ,.,.

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
bten

cancelled .• L.ost your
license . ~hone

~erators

CH·~~~~y·· · F-iR.ES ··~r•'•renh~
fun! Havt vours
the dusfltll wey
Chlmnev
sweep, 61.4 ·37l 60S7

L .I DIDN'T I.AEAN
FOR YOU 10 GET
114 E WRONG IDEA
ITWASJUSTA ...
A ... /(/$6/

992.5016.

RELAX, GARYti DIDN'T READ ANY
MORE IN10 I THAN YOU

INTENDED. BUT I SUDDENLY
REALIZED YOU WERE
TENDER .. SENSITIVE

ALL THAT
.... FROI.A

ONE KISS?

... AND QUITE
VULNERAP.iLE.

............................
Slamen cats.

POl
1 rear

II

1976 NASHUA

II•

U

btdroom li!J
derpinn l nQ,
111umt
loin.
or 143-3311 .

4 "I::_y,,u b:ri--"1f-f-tBabe"

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to worlc It:
AIYDLBAAIR
LONGFELLOW

Is

One letter simply alando for another. In this sample A lA
L•s, X for th e two O 's, et c. Sin gle letters,
a""alrophea, lhe lenglh and formation of the words are all
h1n11 Each day the code letters are different.

Vuinerable : East-West
Dealer : Nortl\
West North East
Soutb
Pass 2 NT
1+
Pass 3 NT Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead : •J

used for the three

taYnOQUOTES
VGWWVS

YZBNVSQKS

By Oowald Jaeoby
G L lllld Alaa Sontag

A heart lead by Wes t
W M X W would leave South no pjay
lor his contract, but West
GL
NMJ
LB
DXZJ
E S U L 8 Z L Q B Z • W elected to open the jack of
cluba.
·
NG WM . . G·W . - Q X ·~
YGQ ZSJ South won in dununy, led
.
.
·. ·
the nine of diamonds and let
Yee&amp;er.t.f'l Ceyp&amp;i!Jilale: ' TOO MANY FAILURES ·A RE It ride. West could still beat
TRACED TO A LACK OF PERSISTENCE AND NOT LACK OF the lulnd. He could tak~ his
TALENT OR ABIUTY.-OR.PAUL PARKER
kmg ofd1amonds and sh1ft to
.
a heart, but West ducked.
cnm
Inc.
At this point South could
. Kt., FootunoS,..dioall,
.

'x

QXZKSUBPL

W M G Z K ."

be s ure of nine tricks if he
we nt a fter spa des. Three
spa des, three clubs, one .
heart and two diamonds

come to a total of nine.
However, South had never
learned that a finesse i~ only
proven when a defender fails
to follow m a su1t.
South repeated the dia·
mond finesse .' This time
West took his king, thought a
while , s hifted to a heart and
left South half way between
a rock and a hard place with
no wa y to get those mne
tricks .
There is another lesson to
be learned here. It is that if
you don 't know how to play
the dununy , you shouldn't
rush t o bid notrurnp.

A Virgima reader wants to
know what is meant by the
expression " He tapped the

declarer."

·

To tap a declarer, dununy
or defender i• to force h1m to
ruff and thereby reduce his
trump holding by one . .
i NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN J

(Do you ha ve a question fo r
the experis? Write " Ask the
EXperts, '' care of Utis newspa·
per. · ln dtvtdUa! quest/ems w1ll
be answered '' accompanied
by stamped sell-addressed
envelopes. The most in tert~st­
ing questton s wtff be used m
/h1s column and will receive
copres .of JACOBY MODERN I

.PAW!! 'SUPPER'S
ON TH;TABLE

.................... ....•.....
, 1970 Amhont 50x12 2 IR
1970 Cllamplon 60xl2 2 IR
1965 Gtneral 6Cht12 2 IR

1961 PMC 52K12 2 BR

1955 Pralrlt Scl\oontr 2bl

BR
1913 Royal Embusy MxU
BR ,
1959 Slor SOx 10 2 BR
1973 Star 60X I~ 2 BR
1961 Star 60x 12 2 BR
1970 sylva 101112 2 BR
19M v 11•1" 101112 2 111
19U Windsor 51xl0 2 Ill
1910 Kirkwood 12x10 1 IR
8 .. S MOIILI HOMI SALU
PT . PLI!AI ... NT, W.VA. ,1

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

+42

· ux

WI~ :-J IF.

THREE GERM,o,N ~lht~&gt;ardi
pupplos . 6 weeKs
ployful. 7•2-1051 .
CHOCOLATE

to worse to terrible

+AKQ53
WEST
EAST
•K96
•!75
'P Q 9 4
'P K J 10 7 3
tK54
t 732
+J1098
+ 76
SOUTH
• A Q 42
.. 8 6 5
t A Q 108

Ex cavatlnQ ,
septic
systems, dour, backnot ,
dump truck , limestone ,
gravel.
blacktop PlYing ,

Housinlf

CM.L THE WISEMAN
REAL ESfAlE AGENCY Ui3643

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

ation
38 Part of
the
31Soul :
rn,.,,t.hlir?J 42 Filed

I

ExCELLENT FARM IUY - 141 ACRES ·- Tht
owntr'l •go prevents her !rom continuing Ia operate
lholarm and lilt cltslrH •n lmmtdl•to selo. 50 Ia 10
atros llllablt with some wry good crook bollorll hilltop lend. Tht belance Is In pasture &amp; woods . Tho 6
room homo Is good I~ nood some modtrnlztiiOIII
l•rgo all purpoee barn &amp; otvtr•l outbuildings. Th~
mlnor•l• go with It and ll'a loc•tect In an aroo whore
gaa, oil &amp; coal haw boon found lo be plentiful. NNr
Rutland. 60'1.
·

BRIDGE

• J 96

BATHROOMS AND
K it chens rtmode led , c•ramlc
tile, plum bing , cerptn tr v ,
and oeheral mllntenanct .
1J rears tx per l ence . 992 -

.

:If Engage
37 Indian city
39 Descended
Movie " The Vengeance af Fu Manchu" 10.
12 41l-lronslde 13 : 1:110-Movle " Terrified" 10.
to Darius, e .g.
1:31l-Midn lghl Special 3,4,15; 1·4G-News 13
UGennan
3:0G-News 3; 3:31l-Movle "Tighl Spot' 3; s ·oo-Movle
river
" Father is a Bachelor" J .
43 Ages and
ages
fbursday , Sept. 28
44 Grand Opry

HOWERY AND MARTIN

Complet~

Tyler Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15 ·

6:110-News 3,~ , 8 , 10,13 , 15: ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:31l-NBC News 3,4,15; ABC News 13; Carol Bunett &amp;
Friends 6 ; CBS News 8,1 0, Over Easy 20
7:QO-(ross-Wits J; PM Magaz i ne A; Newlywed Game
6,13; Muppet Show 8; News 10; Gilligan ' s Is . 15,

NORTH
• J 10 3
'P A 2

Aa-lites

•

25 Fonner
chess
champion
21 District of
England
Z8 Auto graveyard , e .g.
31 Verve
34 Felt poorly
35 Imitated

WILL do roof i ng , con .
struct!on , plumbing
and
helting . No lob f OCI large or
too sm111. Phon• 742 ·21.41 .

PULLINS

9·oo-Merv Griffin 3; Phil Donahue 4; Emergency One
6; Hogan 's Heroes 8; Match Game 10.
9:31l-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10
10 ·1»-Card Sllarks 3.. 1S: Consumer Buyll ne 4; Edge
ol Nigh! 6 ; Allin The Family 8.10; Dating Game 13.
10:31l-Hollywood S&lt;tu•ros 3,4, 15; Andy Grlffllh 6;
Price Is Right 1,10: 120.0011 Pyram id 13 .
11.0G-High Rollarsl.~. 15 : Happy D~yS6 , 13 ; E lec . Co
20.
11 :30-Wheel of Forfuno 3.• ,15 ; Family Feud 6.13 ;
Love ol Lite 1.10; Sesame 51 . 20,33 .
11 :55--{:BS News I ; House Call 10
12:oo- Newscentor 3; News U .1 0; Yo ung &amp; lhe
Restless 8; Midday Magazine 13
12:31l-Ryan' s Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4; Search for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elee. Co 33 .
.
1: oo-For Richer. For Poorer 3; All My Children 6,1i.
News 8; Young &amp; the Restless 10: Not For Women
Only IS .
1:3D-Days ol Our Lives 3.4,15; As The World Turns
8,10.
2:00-&lt;lne Ute lo Live 6,13; 2 3G-Doctors 3,4,15;
Guiding Light 8, 10.
3:0()-Another World 3,~,15 ; General fjo•p ltal 6,13:
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20 .
3:31l-MASH 8; Joker ' s Wild 10; Crockett's Vlclory
Garden 20
• :oo-M ister Cartoon 3; Bailie of !he Planets 4; Merv
Griffin 6; Porky P ig &amp; Friends 8; Sesame S 20,33:
Batman 10; Dlnoh 13 .
4·31l-Liltle Rascals 3,15; Gil ligan 's Is 4,8; Brody
Bunch 10.
5·oo-Voyage lo llle Boltom ol the Sea 3; Six Mil lion
Dollar ManA; Beverly Hlllblllles 8: Mister Rogers'
Neighborhood 20,33; Gomer Pyle . USMC 10;
Emergency One 13 ; Petll coat Junction 15.
5·31l-News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co 20,33; Ma ry

20.33
.
.
8 3D-Who's Watching the Kids? J. 4,15; Wal l Street
Week 20,33.
I .OG-Rockford Files 3.4,15: : General Elec . AII ·Siat
·Anniversary 6.13 ; Incredlble Hulk 8,1 0: Great
Performances 20 ; E've ning at Pops 33 .
10.0()-Eddie Capra Mysteries 3,4,15; Flyi ng High 8.10;
News 20; Great Performances 33 .
10 3D-Monty Python's F lylnlt Circus 20 .
11.0()-News 3.4.6.8.10,13, 15; Dic k Cavell 20
11 3G-.Johnny Carson 3.4, 15 ; Baretta 13; Movie " In
Broad Oayllght " 6; Gu&gt;Smoke 8, ABC News 33;

· Yettenl!ly'a Alllwer

~~~~CWn~~-~~~~~-

l; r\ ' '14)1 ,; · 1: . .• .~.!.: 1

6:110-PTL Club 15; 6 :2!&gt;-Socletles In Transition 10;
6 · 31}-Columbus Today 4i
News 6; Sunrise
Semester 8
6:4!&gt;-Mornlng Report 3; 6:5G-Good Mornlno. West
Virginia 13; 6 :55-Chuck While Reports 10, News
13
.
7·0G-Today 3,4,15; Good Morning America 6,13, CBS
News 8; Jet sons 10.
1 31l-Schoolles 12 10; 8·oo-Capt . Kangaroo 8. 10:
Sesame St. 33.

&amp;·()()-..:Waverly Wonders 3,4,15; Donny &amp; Ma'rie 6. 13;
Wonder Woman 8, 10. Washington Week in Review

8 Whirring

13 Worthless :
sound
slang
9 He plays
15 Before
Hawkeye
16 Woman's
on TV
name
10 In case
17 Infonn on
U Always
18"- Jacques"18 Celebrated
ZO Peel
It Univ. in
%3 Far apart
Georgia
Z7 The pick of
ZO Part of
29 Demolish :
r.p.m .
slang
Zl Drink
30 &lt;lleap
ZZ t1ear of
whiskey
Z4 Resident :
32 Depend on
suff!J:

' FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1978

5 : ~!&gt;-S Farm Report 13 ; 5·51l-PTL Club 13; 5.5!&gt;unrlse Semester 10.

7· 31l-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Doling Game4 , Sl 98 Beauty
Show 6, Bonkers 8. $100,000 Name That Tune 13;
Pop Goes The Counlry IS

5 Anesthetic
6 Liza Minnelli movie
7 Blackbird

I Ski hoose

10 3&lt;&gt;-0ver Easy 20
11 :001-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13,15: Olck Cavett 20; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33
11 :JO-Johnny Carson 3 , ~. IS ; Starsky &amp; Hutch 6,13;
Gunsmoke 8; ABC News 33 ; Movie " Breakfast al
Tlffanys " 10.
12 : ~1l-SWAT 6,13: 1 :50-News 13.

Oh io Journal 20; Cranberry Country 33

by THOMAS JOSEPH

............,.. ................. .

baths,

furnished kitchen, natural
gas, 2 car garage with
~arge workshop over. Level
lot near stores.
RACINE - Largo lot out of
high water with nice vi and shade trees . ~ to 5
bedroom home, all city
utilities, central a ir and
heat, basement,~ porches,
and storm window. .
BUSINESS BUILDINGalso small residence with
bath, and all clly utilities.
A cheap way to make a
start tor only $13,000.
7 ROOMS-Carpeted home
wllh 3 bedrooms, bath,
natural gas furnace, city
water , large lot lor gar&lt;Mn
and parking . A good buy at
$9,500 .
NEW COUNTRY HOME21ull baths, forced air heal,
drilled well, nice tarpellng
and old log hoUM lor
compeny. 28 acres of lend
wllh solo. Lots of rood

fii)'il

~~~~ Ill

Choster,Ohlo
IO·JO·C

MINI -FARM - Now you
can own a S acre plot In
SuHon Township for only
$1 ,500
MIDDLEPORT
~

near the

WI T~

WHY DIDN'T YA T!~~
THe FSI A&amp;OIJT MAYOR
"!JHAR~" 8()1965- AND
THe THRSATf T'SCA'R!

QUALITY·

1'. "Z.ZI74

out buildings. O.Vner being

on . water

HAIJD·IN·GLOVE'

Phone 915-3106
J•ck Ginther 915-3106

COUN T RY ES TAT E . Wil l
sell t o 120 acres , whatever
you wa nt w 1th B year old ,
2400 SQ . A . ran ch style
house ,
3
be droom ,
2
ful l baths , centra l air and
h ee t hea t pump , well in su Ia ted on good road , c ity
water .
Truly
beaut iful h ome . 2 barns , 2
ponds , 3 pastures, a ll new
fence . tlr'T) ber , 105 ' new
ma ch inery shed and work
shop , 25 acres 1n mead ow
For appointment to see ,
call ow ner. 614 -9.49 .2763

1'12

fl.' HE If

'IOIJ~ ~Uji&amp;AIJD

Plf... PPEAR!D • MOKIE

'i}jfj;~

SYRACUSE, 7 r oom house
and ba th with e•tr " lot ,
large car port, new roof
a nd st orm w in dows 99 2
3717 .

frontage

I"'HEN

1~ 1·

anytime.

220 E. Main SlrHI,
Pomeroy, 0 .
can 992-7013
For Free Elflm•tes
9-21-lmo.

bed roomer,

C \PTtl l:-1 E

R..identlal and commor·
cial. Call tor esttmatt . 24
Hour Service. Anv diY 1

ELLIOTT
APPUANCE II

Hu,ulctu.Jr t• '' ',

ACRES PLUS , building lo ts
in cnrs ter area. 915 3981.

Rt:

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING .

YCMir Headquarters For

$35,000 .00.
COA L , LIMESTONE , sa nd ,
g ra v el. calc i um chlor 1de,
tertil 1zer . dog food , and all
types ot salt , E~ · ce ls lor
Salt
Works .
I nc ,
E.
M a 1n Sl , Pomeroy
992.
389 1

~ mile off
7 by.:,.ls •
. 51. Rl. ft4 19w•nl Rutt.ft!l,

' CHEAPI

Alllypas of roofing, gutlorl
&amp; 'downspouts, 20 v•n.
exporlencit . AU work
guuanlood . Call Tom
Hoskins, Ut -2!60 . Fru
Esllm•ltl . ·
·
9·7-1 mo.

transferred .

I F YOU ha ve a service to
ott er , want to buy or sell
something , are look1ng tor
wor~
or who!lleyer ..
you ' ll iiiE-1 re-sults ta .st er
w ith
a
Sentin el
Want
Acl. Call 992 2156

. · GWSE · ·

DIJR!'Y TOOK OVE ~

J&amp;L

5 oo-Voyage lo the Bottom ol the Sea 3; Star Trek 4,
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mlsler Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Gomer Pyle, USMC 10; Emergency One 1~ .
Petticoat Junction 15
5:31)-Hogan' s Heroes 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec . Co.
20,33; Mary Tyler Moore 10; Hogan' s Heroes 15.
6·oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15, ABC News 6; Zoom 20.
6: 3D-NBC News 3.~ . 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Fr iends 6; CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7.0G-C ross-WIIs 3; PM Magaz ine 4; Newlywed Game
6,13; Family Feud 8; Gill igan' s Is 15; Hocking
Valley Bluegrass 20.
1.31l-Hollywood Squares 3: Wellons 8; Dallng Game
4: SIOO.OOO Name That Tu ne 10; Nashvi lle On The
Road 13; Dolly 1S; MatNeii . Lehrer Report 20,33
8:0G-Prolect UFO 3,~.15 ; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13; Once
Upon A Classlt 20,33 ; Waltons 10.
8:3().,-What's Happening 6,13; Please Stand By 8;

'

~

• • - " " ".!.-" ' ""

WORK
OVE RSEA S ,
Aust;al ia , Af;i ca ,
South
Ame r i ca ,
Europe , etc .
Con s tru ct1on ,
Sa les. Eng ineers , Clerical.
eiC S8000 to $50,000 plu s
Expenses pa1d
For em .
p l o y m e nt
1n
1ormat1on write Ove,.seas
Employment , Bo x
1011.
Boston , Ma 02102

..

COli Us Today

------

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

1973 NASHUA mob i le home ,
part1ally
3 bedroom ,
furniShed
Ask 1ng pr 1ce
t5000 949.2224

·. SENIORS ·

poJtra lts. we use tradl·.
tlonal 1eHings and •lso
feature . outdoor .·portraiture.

..,n,

-:-

.ROGER trfSEII

• We 1re· currently mak l n1
appolnt"lents fpr setti oi' ·

N.W or' R...,.ir
G~tteiS 1nd .
Dow
..

News 20; Mayor of Casterbridge 33.

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1971

Hi&amp;h SchoOl' .

·H. L.WRITf.SEI .

GUN SHOOT . Recine Gun
Club . E&lt;Jery Sunda y l pm .
Factory choke ou11S only

ro Buy

'

t'or sBic
LIKE NEW .H ondogulferand
cue •.. eK tra set .of strings
end
picks l nclude'd .
May t ag Coppertone Porta
pair washer and dryer .
Very good condlt'lon , sell
as set: Sylvania Time ·.!! ·
t an Sunlamp .ano
eve
protectors . Ca ll after s·oo
pm, 992 ·2995 .
... .............
... .

HOLLOW. Hdrses .
W'IL L BABV SIT i n m y home .
. 992 ·7636, Syr acuse
.::..... .
~ Buy, sell trade or tr.!l ln .
New and usec;t saddles .
Ruth
Ree¥es ,
W I LL CARE toi' theelderh 11'1 .
Albany . (61~) 698.]290
our home." P hone 992 731.4 .
~

1902.
On this date in hsitory :

In im, baseball' s biggest
scandal broke. A grand jury
indicted eight players of the
Ch1cago White Sox for
" throwing" the 1919 World
Series games w1th. the Cin·
ciMati Reds
In 1937, President Franklin
D. Roose velt dedicated
Bonneville Dam on the
C&lt;J iumbia R1ver m Oregon .
In 19~3 . Robert Greenlease ,
Jr. , was kidnapped The &amp;year-old SCJn of a wealthy
Kansas City, Mo., automobile
dealer was fo und dead and
the kidnap-murders were
eventually executed .
In 1976, Lebanese Christian
and Synan trooops opened a
major offens1ve against the
Palestine
LiberatiOn
Organization m Lebanon .

_________ ___ _

Pt•l• fur Sale

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Business Services
..

Islander 33; Evening AI ~ops 20 . .
I :OCI-Qulncy 3 .~. 15; Barney M ille~ 6,13, Hawaii Flve.o
8.10 ; Provln &amp; !he P ittsburgh 33.
1:30-Soap 6, 13; Islander 20.
.
10 oo-WEB 3,, ,1S. Fam ily 6.13. Barnaby Jones 8,10;

.,

Jogging For
Everyone "

A Detailed
Guide to Running

Chapter One

'

I

�.r---Are_a_D;ath;-1

It - The Dally stntlnei, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Thursday, Sept. 21, lrll

ELOISE HOFFMAN
Eloise Hollman, 47, Route
3, Pomeroy, died Wednesday
night at he r home. The
Pomeroy emergency squad
was called to the residence.
She was dead .upon the
squad's arrival.
Born Nov. 10, 1930, she wu
preceded In death by her
father, Floyd Sinclair.
Surviving are her mother,
Ora
Midkiff Sinclair,
Pomeroy ; a brother, Charles
Sinclair , Pomeroy; three

sisters. Mrs. Paul (Mildred )
Hauber, L&lt;&gt;ng Bottom; Mrs.
Hobert (Delores) Hawk,
Pomeroy, and Mrs. Hobert
(Mary Allee ) Bowl es,
Pomeroy ; three nephews and
ani..,.,, She was a member of ·
the _Ji radford Church of
Christ.
Funeral services wt11 be
held at I p.m. Saturday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with
bur ial in Cherry Ridge
Cemetery. Friends may call
at the funeral home after 7
this evening.

Energy discount
Bucci named to Akron deadline nears
M.T. BUCCJ

W. B. HIRSCH

post, Hirsch -successor
Goodyear official s an ·
nounced today the appointment of Michael T. Bucci,
plant manager of the Point
Pleasant plant. to the cor·
porate position of director,
production, general products
manlacturing, Akron.
Replacing Mr. Bucci at the
Point Pleasant plant will be
William B. Hirsch, formerly
manager, chemica l plants
engineering. Akron.

Driver cited
after
. mishap
~

Mei gs County Sheriff
James J . Proffitt reports
deputies investigated a
traffic accident Tu esday
afternoon at Racine.
According to the report, 18·
year-old Debbie Evans, Rt. 1,
Portland, had pulled into
E ber's Gulf Statio n at
Racine. She lost control of her
car and struck the building
damaging the door, door
casing,. frame and an outside

pop cooler.
Ms. Evans was cited to

Meigs Co unt y Co urt for
operating without a valid
operator's license.

GET LICENSES
Mar ria ge licenses we re
issued to Billy Lee Wallace,
39, Middleport, and Mary
Catherine Bostic, 21, Middleport ; Harry Clark, 45. Rt.
2, Pomeroy, and Joann Clark,
42, same address; Kenneth
Ray Neig ler, 26, Rt. 2,
Racine, and Brends Darlene
Haning, 24, Rt . 't , Middleport .
ACTIONS FILED
In Meigs County Common
Pl eas Co urt two divorce
actions were filed along with
a suit lor partition of rea l
estate.
filing for divorce were
Karen Sue Eakins, Ht. I,
'-&lt;&gt;ng Bottom, against Ronald
Ea kin s, Racine ; Hazel
Max ine Wiener Hawk,
Tuppers Plains, against Carl
Lee Hawk , Sr., Wellsville.
Filing for pa rtit ion of real
es tat e was Le na Ethel
Guthrie, Ht. 2, Coo lvill e,
against Caro l Olivie, Fairfax,
Va., and Gera ld Guthrie, Rt.
2, Coolville.

A native of Providence, R.
!. , Mr. Bucci received his BS
deg ree
in
Chemical
Eng in eering from Rhode
Island State University in
19•3. Mr. Bucc i joined
Goodyear in 1943 as a factory
office trainee in Akron. In
1946, he was promoted to
juni or chemica l engineer
serving in that capacity until
1948 when he was named a
senior chemical engineer.
In 1957, Bucc i was
promoted to department
foreman at Goodyear's Akron
Chemigum plant and was
moved to division foreman
two years later. H~ was
transf erred In 1962 as
manager of the Le Havre,
France Chemigum plant. In
1968, he returned to the
United Stat es a s plant
manager of Goodyear's Point
Pleasa nt Chemical Plant.
Mr. Bucci will report to F.
V. Prus , vice president ,
dpmestlc general products
manufacturing and will be

The deadline for Ohio
Energy Discount program
applications is Oct. I.
However, due to the weekend
date, applications wW be
accepted through Oct. 2.
Eligible Ohioans interested
in applying for aulstance in
payment of their 1978,1979
winter heating bill mUll fUe
with either the Ohio
Department of Taxation
(renters ) or the County
Auditor (homeowners ), in
order to receive the discount
benefit.
In order to be eligible for
this program a person must
meet
these
three
qualificaiions :
- The applicant must be
the head of the household or
spouse and
- must have reached the
age of 6li by December 31,
1978 or be totally and per·
manently disabled ill any
age, and
- must have a total annual
income of no more than $7,420
lor 1977 or an expected total
income of no more than $7,420

relocating in the Akron area .

A native of Uma, Mr.
Hirsc h received his BS
deg ree
in
Chemical
Engineering from Case Inst itute of Technology in 1964.
Mr. Hirsch joined Goodyear
in 19.64 as a chemical
enginee r in the chemical
plant s engineering division.
From 1968 to 1969, Mr.
Hi rsch served as staff
eng inee r at the Point
Pleasa nt pl ant
before
returning to Chemical Plants
Engineering in Akron for two
years. From 1971 to 1974, Mr.
Hirsch served as project
man age r for Goodyear 's
Isoprene Pl ant Projects
serving first in Japan and
later in Europe .
Returning to the United
States in 1974, Mr . Hirsch
se rved
as
produ ction
at the
superinte nd ent
Houston, Texa s plant until
1976. In February of 1976,
Hirsch was appointed to the
posi tion of mana ger chemical plants engineering
in Akron, a position he held
until his appointment as plant
ma nage r of the Point
Pleasant Plant. Mr. Hirsch
will report to M. T. Bucci,

Pleaoaat Valley Hoapllal
Discharges - Mrs. Melvin
Halstead, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs.
James
Jeffers,
Southside ; Charles Ut·
terback , Point Pleasant;
Sharon Walker, Gallipolis
Ferry;
Mrs.
Ronald
Wickline, Henderson ; Mrs.
Scholtz ,
Point
Frank
·P l ea s ant ;
Norman
Laudermilt, Mason.
Births - A son to Mr. arid
Mrs .
Clinton
Stover,
Gallipolis; ·&amp;son to Rev. and
Mrs. Thomas Malcolm, Point
Pleasant ; a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Wilson,
Point Pleasant.
BOOSTERS MEETING
Plans lor homecoming to
be held on Oct. 6 will be made
when the Southern '-&lt;&gt;cal
Athletic . Boosters meet at
7:30p.m. Monday at the high
school. Parents of all par·
ticipants in the athletic
progra ms are urged to attend .

SEEKS DIVORCE
In Meigs County Common
director .
Pleas Court Kennie C. See,
Mr. Hirsch, his wife , Middleport, flied suit for
Glor ia. an d their th ree divorce against Bernice See,
children will be reloca ting in Weston, W. Va.
the Huntington, W. Va . area.
Ilene HaD was granted a
These admi nl st r ati ve divorce from Truman D.
changes were effective Sept. Hall.
1.
.

COOKIE

JARS•••

for 1978.
The · Energy Discount
Program is a d!rect
assistance to those elderly or
disabled Ohioans who are
suffering from higher winter
heating costs," Undley says.
The discount provides a 25
percent reduction on utility,
bills for the billing months of
December through April to
those persons who purchase
their energy from a metered
utility company. For those
persons who purchase their
heating supply from a retail
dealer, the program provides
a payment of $87.50 to the
applicant.
Applicanti ons for
homeowners may be obtained
from the County Auditor.
Applications for renters or
house trailer residents are
available at local banks, post
officf!l~ , libraries , se:nior
citizen centers and District
Offices of the Ohio Depart·
ment of Taxation.

Third annual
·college day
set Oct. 25
ATHENS - Southeast Ohio
high school students will have
the opportun ity to meet
representati ves
of
60
colleges, universities and
nursing
s chools
at
the third annual Col·
lege Day hosted by Ohio
University on Oct. 25.
The program will be held in
the Convocation Center from
8:30 a.m. until noon . Each
college representative . wtJI
have a separate table where
he or she will discuas their
school and answer questions.
In addition. sessions on
career planning and financial
aid worksq ops will be
presented for students at 9, 10
and 11 a.m.
Instituti o ns send ing
representatives include most
of Ohio's state universities,
several private and technical
colleges, and the U. S. Air
Force and Naval academies.
Last year over 1,100
students
from
22
Southeastern Ohi o high
schools
attended
th e
program.
Persons wi shin g more
information should contact
their high school guidance
counselors or write the Ohio
University Admissions Of.
lice, Chubb Hall, Athen s
.:i701.

El

•

S!lfely tuck your money
In one of our regular savings
accounts and watch It
grow, earning the highest
Interest rates allowed.

A Hom e Bank _ _.
For
Me igs County

People

RACINE
HOME NATIONAL
BANK

Pope John Paull ound dead today
By-JACK R. PAY'I'ON
VATICAN CITY (UP!) Pope JOOst Paul I was found
dead of an apparent heart
aUack In hla Vatican
apartment t.oday, leaving the
throne of St. Peter vacant for
the aecond time in less than
five weeks.
The end of hl8 Jt.day reign
- the briefest In four
centuries - stunned hl8 700
million Romlln Catholic
lollo:wers, stW grieving the
death of Pope Paul VI oo
August 6.
Thousands of mourners
. poured · into St . Pete r's
Square, their faces ,numb
with shock and grief. They
feU to their knees to pray lor
the repooe of the soul of the

•
•
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29th AND SAnJRDAY, SEPTEMBER 30th
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

- JUNlOifSIACK_S__

---woMi.~N's~o-P..-EN-sw-To-cK--11

BLOUSES

Stylish junior $1aci&lt;s in solid colors. Junior
sizes 3 to 1s:·
Save this weekend on our new fall collection
REG. 111,00.... ;................ ;...... SALE 18.79
of women 's regular size blouses. Sizes 30
REG. '14.00 ........................... SALE '11.19
tEhfiru :fi.846
.
.
SALE ~.39
SALE 11199
R •
... .. ..... .......... ..... ....
v
REG • 11500.
. •• ••. •• ••.•• .•••. .••••••• •.
.
RE • I
SALE '7.99
REG. '19.00 ............... .. ..... .. .. SALE '15.19
R.E • 112.00. .. ......................... SALE '9.59
REG. 120.00 ........................... SALE 115 99
REG. '14.00 · ..................... ·····SALE 111.19
,17 '59
REG. '15.00 ...........................SALE '11.99
REG • '22 •00 .. ... ... ... .... ....... .. .. SALE
.
• TREG 116 00

o.oo............................

. . . .- - - - - - -

.

.

I-I

I

I

Skirts.F~~~s.~~e~~!~~~~m
fall
colors, latest styles.

- -

j

SPECIAL PRICES ON FREE SPIRIT BODY
BRIEFER, PANT LINER, BRIEF, BRAS, CROSS
YOUR HEART STYLES AND SUPPORT CAN

END OF THE MONTH SALE

SCHOOL NAME
TOBOGGANS
regular price
two colors with

Our
s:i.95,
school name. for these area schools,
Eastern Eagles , Meigs Marauders,
Southern Tornadoes and Wahama White
Falcons.

•233

1 SPECIAL CLEARANCE SALE I

MEN'S

SPECIAl. SALE PRICE

Wr~~~:~ru~~~k~~e~~~~es l Wrangler~~~c~de~i~r~~r

in shorts, regular , tails. two way
zipper, grey hickory stripe or blue denim.

36 Ia 50

$

1799

prices
~ $13 .95 and $15.95, Western styling, straight
legs, flares and some big bells, not every
I size in every style$849d quantity.

,. ., -..-_... . ,_.....__ ,_L_...,.- - •- _...w ,_.._.._

•

MUSIC DEPARTMENT

w--~---·---1

FREE
STEREO
STAND
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A CHANNEL MASTER OR PANASONIC COMPONENT SYSTEM. WE

$2995

HAVE AN EXCELLENT SELECTION OF STYLES. MODELS WITH
CASSETIES, TURNTABLES, STEREO RADIOS.
TWO STYLES OF STANDS

----------..1--I
MEN'S LONG SLEEVE
BLUE
CHAMBRAY SHIRTS

Sizes S, M. L and XL. Two pockets.
permanent press, full shirt tails.

SPECIAL
PRICE
-- · ~--

1

' ·

8 TRACK PLAYER RECORDERS,
LIMITED TO

VALUE

DISCONTINUED PAmRNS.

MOUNTAIN MAID
THROW RUGS
All purpose rugs for kitchens, bedrooms.
hallways. bathrooms, machine washable.

VATICAN CITY (UP! )- Hours before his death, Pope
John Paull spoke of Chrlst's promise of eternal life in his last
pubilc addlresa.
"His (Oirlst's ) chief promise is eternal life," the pope told
a group of visiting bishops from the Philippines on Thursday .
"Jesus truly has words that lead us to etemalllle."

$10.49.

PRICE
__'_____________,__,__

Strict guidelines proposed

,_~,,--~

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Strict operational guidelines
'lhould be in force if the century-old Cincinnati Workhouse is
kept open beyood a court...-dered Oct. 12 closing dste, an
attorney representing ilunates at the facility said Thursday .
Leagl Ald Society atlol:ney Robert Newman also told
Q:mmon Pleas Court Judge Harry T. Klusmeier Thursday
there are good reasons why the judge should deny a city
request to extend the closing date.

END OF THE MONTH SALE

'599 BED BLANKETS
Acrylic polyester blend, sizes 72x90 Inches
for twin or full beds, nylon binding, machine
washable.

States join opposition
NEWARK, N. J. (UP! )- New York, Ohio and Michigan
have jdned New Jersey in voicing their opoislUon wa plan for
the coostruction of a $1.4 biWon coal gasification plant in
Mercer, N. D.
state Energy Commlasioner Joel Jacobson said the plan is
being proposed by a conaortium of live companies, including
two major suppliers of natural gas to New Jersey, and would
be paid f&lt;r hv Imposing higher rates on consumer.

1

-(,;--·-----..

----sivffo'7soo----·~· ~-~~i~v~~·~2o::----~~;
on a wallaway chair by Berkline.
The recliner that works just 1112
inches from the wall. Large
selection of nylon covers, solids,
tweeds, plaids and vinyls. Also large
savings
on
rock-o-loungers,
recliners, swivel rockers and
occasional chairs. Lay a chair away
for Christmas deliverv.
. . . .- - - - - - - - - - -........

I

or

the Roman Catholic cliurch
began moving to name his
successor. And in furthe r
tradition the great bronze
doors of St. Peter's were half
closed. Chains were placed
across the entrance to the
Vatican palace as a symbol of
death. The red and yellow
Vatican flags flew at half
sta ff as the bells of Rome

ON A

KROEHLER 2 PIECE·
LIVING ROOM SUITE
Regular S749, $750, S769.

DINffiE SETS,, BUFFET
&amp; HU'JiCHES

at

SALE '581.00
Only a suites in this group, grHn, brown,
rust, blue plaids. Early American style.

SAVE·20%

in Columbus.
President
Ca rt er,
Thursday, acting under the
National Railway Labor Act,
named an emergency board
to work out a prompt
settlemen t between the
railroads and their striking
workers. Officials say the
President will most likely
order strikers back to work
during negotiations.
The strike over job
diSplacement of clerks in the
fa ce of automation began
bega n two months ago at the
Virginia based Norfolk and
Western Railway after two
years of talks, then spread
this week to over 70 rail lines.

~,

.

._., .
1,' .

.

GRANDFATHER 'CLOCKS
-

LAY ONE AWAY FOR atRISTMAS
DELIVERY

'

EDISON HOBSTETI'ER, right, was greeted on the occasion of his 50th anniversary
with the Pomeroy National Bank by 1-r, Roger Morgan, director and George Harris. The
celebration will continue through Saturday.

No order will be issued, hearing
rail
strike
scheduled today on
'
..

Dy DREW VON BERGEN
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Declaring he would issue no
tempora r y . res trainin g
1rders , U.S. District Judge
Aubrey Robinson today
sc heduled an afternoon
hearing on whether to try and
halt th e nationwide rail strike
by court order .
President Carter told a
news conference Thursday he
was creating an emergency
board under the National
Railway Labor Act to solve
the dispul!' which began July
10 involving Norfolk &amp;
Western Railway.
His action , according lo the
White House and Labor
Secretary Ray Marshall ,
automatically ordered
striking members of the
Brotherhood of Railway,
Airline and Steamship Clerks
back to work.
But BRAC members, who
had brought the rail system

wa

stands\111, did not heed
The roads wan ted a
Car t e r' s
dir ect i ve restraining order against the
immediately, and lawyers for picketing which has spread
both the railroads and the from N&amp;W w 73 railroads,
union
instead
sought a nd the unions wanted
temporary "moral&lt;lriums" in 8SSW'ance of no reprisals.
district court.
Robinson heard their argu-

Applications now accepted
Ap pli ca t io ns fo r ene rgy
discounts are still being taken
at the Senior Cit izens Center
in Pomeroy.
Resident s 65 or older or
perma ne ntly and tot•IIY
disabled residents and heads
of households or spouses with
a total income of $7,420 or less
a re eligible for the 25 percent
discount on th is com in g
winter's heating bills. The
dea dline has been extended to
Oct . I and applications will be
accepted until Od . 2.
Homeowners who filed last
vear should have received an

Elberfeld• In Pomeroy

Cancr.a lor approval thil year.
t'

below $7, 42Q in 1977 and either
the husba nd or wife is
di sa bled can quality.
Residents can stop by the
center or call 992·7311 and an
outreadh worker will visit the
home and fill out the form .

CG&amp;E files
huge suit

- 25.

Single-digit - 8.

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - A
utility has filed a $52 million
"""
lawsuit again st a coa l
I
co mpany for alleg-edly
\
supplying the utility with
~ "dirty" Coal.
•
Cincinnati Gas &amp; Electric
Co., which filed the suit in
Cincinnati federal court ,
complained that Coosumer
Coal Corp ., of Dayton, Ohio,
through its subs idiary,
Kentucky Prince Coal Co. of
Hazard, Ky., sold the utility
' coal that did not meet low
sulfur content specification$.
High sulfur coal produces
the pollutant, sulfur dioxide .
The utility , which in 1976
signed a Ill-year con tract
with the coal c&lt;mpany for
50,000 Ions of low sulfur coal a
month, alleges that the coal
did not meet the cootract's
low sullur standards.
The utility is seeking SSI .6
million from the company,
the amount It says It wtJI have
1o pay for hlgher.prlced, low
sulfur coal the next 10 years.
The utility also is seeking
$285,000 in compensatloo lor
payinents already made to
the coal cotnpany.
Utility officials said the
coal In question exceeded
High School thil aeaaon. They are Penny Miller, front;
Environmental Protection
second row, I to r, Tammy Ferguaon and Unrecka
Agency standards for sulfur
Johnson , with KeUy Tyree at the top.
emlsoioos.

_.j '

1

Talks at difficult point

to

couple whose income was

up . I don't think it will take all
that much more time,'' he
said when he recessed the
court.
Carter's call for an end w
" I think we can wrap it all . the four-day strike was not
immediately heeded, and in
San Francisco, just the
opposite occurred.
Within a half-hour of
Carter 's a nnoun cement ,
strikers set up pickets on the
Southern Pacific commuter
line bet ween San Francisco
and San Jose, f~rcing 4,500
rush-hour commuters to lind
other means of getting home .
Amtr a k
c an ce l ed
Thi s week's winnin g
passenger
service
between
numbers:
Sa
n
Francisco
and
Los
Weekly 50 Ce nt Game
Angeles
.
Five-digit Wlnathon 001&amp;8.
Three-digit Blue Number
- 744.
Tw&lt;Hiigit White Number

'.'

UNITED NATIONS (UPI ) - Secretary of State Cyrui

OPEN SATURDAY 9130 A.M. TO 5 P.M.

application in the maiL This
application has to be filled uut
and returned or the disco unt
will not be given. Home-owners file with the Meigs
County Auditor .
It is stressed that residents
do not have to be senior
citizens to qua lify. Any

menta in a three-hour court
session which ended shortly
after midnight today, and set
a 2 p.m. EDT hearing rn a 00.
day injunction.

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Carter believes the
time haa come fer the United Slates to participate in an
intemaUooal conference to Iring peace to a unlflad Lebanon.
"The 1ulferlng of the people of Lebanoo haa beeR
atracrdlnary," Carter aald Thlll'lday at lU 37th formal news
cooference. '"'1sere ila tracedy in Lebanon that llli rest of the ·
wcrld.haa not adequately addr..ct, including otll'IMIIves."

Vanee and Soviet Forqn Minllter Andrei Grcmyko aay their
SALT II laib an at a dllllcult alage, and compromlae In
llftl'll . . will nat come euUy.
· 1bt two dlpkmala' 10bar r·
•tta .came 'nlurada{
llfflr roar ._..ofllll«&lt;atlonl, and appeared to dim lilt llOpea
Prttldlnt Cll1« ..ld lor aendlntla new lllratelic arma treaty

MR. AND MRS. Edison Hobstet ter at the 50th
. anniversary celebration honoring Edison on his 50 years
with the Pomeroy National Ba nk . On the table is a gold
coffee service presented w them by the direcl&lt;lrs of the
bank. Cake, coff ee, and punch .were served to the many
that stopped in to offer their congratulati ons. Favors were
also given. The event will continue through Saturday.

,,

Involvement time here

ON

.

On his feet were the bright
red "shoes of the fisherman"
symbolizing the Roman
Catholic belief that pontiffs
are the heirs of St . Peter, the
fisherman !rom Galilee who
became Christ's chief
disciple.
The white silk miter
symbolizing papal authority
covered John Paul 's head,
which rested on green-andsilver pillows.
At both sides of the bier,
black-c lad priests prayed
quie tl y in eight pews ,
occasionally sprinkling holy
water toward the late pope 's
body .
The five windows of the
room faced St. Peter's
!Continued on page 12)

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1978

SAN DIEGO (UP!) - Federal crash investigators say
Clllllrollers at two air traffic centers teD different versions of
what happened in the minutes a jetliner collided with a small
plane and craahed Mooday, kUling 150 persons in America 's
wcrll aviation dlauter.
The confualon has not been clarlfled, Brad Cunbar, of the
Natlooal Tranaportalioo Slllety Board, told a news conference
Thursday night.
·

chairs.
30 Inch maple bar stools.
36 Inch maple or pine buffet and hutch.

.

W set a broken nose and two
lo remove gallstones.
The pope's 61-year-old
brother Eduardo Luciani said
in Adelaide, Australia the
pontiff had recently suffered
"some bad feelings around
the heart," but a medical
checkup had tur ned up
nothing w alarm doctors.
"What God wants has w
happen," the younger
Luciani said.
The pope 's face was pale
and shrunken and his fingers
clutched a rosary as his body
lay in state in a room covered
from floor to ceiling with
frescoes about the rei ~ of
17th century Pope Clement
VII and ot her religio us
subjects.

enttne

DiHerent versions given

5 Piece maple or pine 36" table, 4 chairs.
7 Piece maple or pine, 42" table, 6 chairs.
7 Piece metal chrome or bronze table, 6

OAK, CHRRY, MAPLE.

for II a.m . (5 a.m. EDT)
Saturday
to
make
prelim inary funera l arrangements.
Although John Paul had a
history of medical troubles,
Va ti can
officials
had
described them as not serious
and said he was in overall
good health .
John Paul, the son of a
Socialist migrant bricklayer
from the Dolomite mountain
hamlet of Forno di Canale,
had entered health spas twice
fo r trea tment of a long
condition caused by a bout of
tuberculosis as a youth.
Dur ing his lif e,. he had
undergone four operations for the removal of his tonsils
as a child, another operation

•

nl - - . - - - -

SAVE UP TO '111.00
..

-~

Etemallife in last message

FulL twin and queen sizes plus pillow cases.
Percale, not every size In every style or
color, limited quantity, regular prices up to

2.99 SIZE 24x45 ................ 12.39
REGULAR 15.99 SIZE 24x90 ................ '5.39

continuing possibility we may
have to close our assembly
plants ."
The GM complex at Lords·
town is w~rklng today but
scrapped plans to run the
passenger car production line
Saturday because the strike
has cut into the shipment of
parts to the plant , a GM
spokesman said .
A sp okesman for Ford
Motor Co. said all its plants
were operating today but the
situatioo there could also
~hange if no break is seen in
the strike.
The strike by railroad
clerks expanded Thursclay to
the Baltim~re &amp; Ohio sectioo·
of the Chessie system when
picket lines were set at B&amp;O
fa cilities Utroughout Ohio.
Picket
lines
were
established earlier
in
Cincinnati ,
Tol e do ,
Youngstown, Cleveland and
at the Chesapeake &amp; Ohio
section of the Chessle system

----

CANNON BED SHEETS

--------~· ~--·-----------w~•·--~~·---~W-1_...__..._"'

By JOHN T. KADY
Ualted Preas IDteruatloaal
At least 2,000 auto workers
have been laid off in Ohio
because of the national rail
strike, and the passenger
production line at the giant
General Motors Corp.
complex in L&lt;&gt;rtlstown will be
shutdown Saturday because
of a shortage of parts.
The layoffs of the 2.000
workers were at the Inland
Division of General Motors
Corp. In Dayton and
Vandalia . About 800 were laid
off at the division's Vandalla
plant which produ~ es
Instrument panels and foam
sea !Band the other 1,200 were
laid off In the weatherstrippinn ilne of the Inland
Division In Dayton.
" 'I'Ile cwporation Is taking
a look at the situation today,"
said Jerry Bishop , GM
spokesmari In Dayton. "We
will have to see where we
stand in shipping products
out and parts in. There is the

j~)_r_h_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

STOCK ONLY

1/2

END OF THE MONTH SALE I

centuries ol d machinery

tolled the fearful tidings.
The last rites of the church
were said by Monsignor
Canisto van Lierde. With him
was the Vatican Secretary of
State, French Cardinal Jean
Villot, and Monsignor Virgilio
Noe.
Viliol has assumed leadership of the church until a.new
pope is chosen - he had done
so whe n Pope Paul died. He
immedicately called a
conclave to elect a new pope
- directions laid down by
Paul say the conclave must
begin in 15 w 20 days,
between Oct. 13 and 18.
Betwee n 20 a nd 25
cardinals were in Rome at
the time of the pope's death
and they scheduled a meeting

Strike causes
2,000 layoffs

BE BEAUTIFUL BRAS.

'5.40
'6.00
'9.00
~!~~!.1~0!:.~:; ::;::;,;.• ':,:;:.;;.:!AlE~!!:~;...-!~·w~"-'_"_w____._,__,""--' •w---w---·--..,---~-1
ANOTHER SHIPMENT

bedroom of Pope John Paul I.
Not having found him in his
chapel as usual, he was
looking for hlm in hls room
and fo und him dead in bed
with the lights still oo, as if·he
were still reading," the
of f ici a l
V atican
announcement said.
With in
minutes
the

•

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIX NO. 117

---· -·------------;=-+---·--------------·-----4

washable. Sizes 2T thru 10.
REGULAR '9.00 ......................... SALE
REGULAR '10.00 ....................... SALE
REGULAR 115.00 ....................... SALE

apparently while reading in
his bedroom .
Within six hours of his
death , the pope's body was
dressed in his red and white
papal vestments and placed
oo a bier in the Clementine
Hall on the third floor of the
Vatican Palace for public
viewing.
The first person to enter the
room was Italian President
Sandro Pertini.
TheVaticankept the pope 's
death !ifCret for eight and a
half hours. Its official announcement came at· 7:30'
a.m. (1:30 a.m. EDT).
·''This morning at about
5:30 a .m. the priv ate
secretary of the. pope, Father
(John) Magee, entered the

e

-

PLA YTEX SALE
I SAVE UP TO •3.00

REG. '6.00 .......................... ;... SALE '4.79 ~I
REG. '9.00 .............. ... ............. SALE 17.19
REG. '11.00 · ·· ·· ............. ·· ........ ·SALE '8.79
REG. 114.00 ....................... .. ... SALE 111.19
REG. '16.00 ...................... -.-.. SALE 112.79
REG. '22.00 ............................ SALE 115.99
-~
CHILDREN'S
DEPARTMENT

LITTLE BOYS AND Gl RLS
JACKETS
Lined and unlined styles. machine

pontiff whose hcrnely ways
had won. their hearts.
" It's irnpoasible. II just
can 't be true," wailed a
Vatican attendant ushering
thousands through St. Pete~
Basilica . "He had opened his
anns to all of us and now he Is
gone· so quickly."
The shockwaves of the
pope 's sudden death rolled
around the world and there
were similar outpourings of
grief from world leaders.
The 263d pooliff of the
Roman Catholic chuch was
found dead by his private
secretary at 5:30a .m. (11:30
p.m. EDT Thursday). The
Vatican said John Paul, 6li,
died about 11 p.m. (5 p.m.
EDT ) Thursday night ,

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

,..... ,_.._.._

PRE-TEEN

REGULAR

aranotfor
•
sav1ng
mo·nayl

sIn Pome

..
FRESHMEN CHEERLEADERS - These are
memben of the freohmen cheerleadlng squad at Meigs

"The railroads refused w
agree to a ny gua rantee
against re prisals," BRAC
President Fred Kroll said. "I
cannot send my people hack
lo work because it would be
like send ing sheep to
slaughter .
''Now the strike will COil·
!Continued on page 12 1

' '~~i~~rifri '~tif2I~f''
S unda y throu g h
Tuesda y, a chan ce of
showe rs Sunday, with fair
weather both Monday anctTuesday . Highs will range
from the upper 60s to the
middle 70s on Sunda y,
warming to the 70s both
Mond ay a nd Tues da y.
0H rni ght lows
will
generally be between 15
and 50.

Firewood
field dJJy
Saturday
A Timherstand Improvement and Firewood Field
Day will be held Saturday at
Bo b Eva ns Farm in Rio
Grande, beginning at 9 a.m.
and continuing throughout
the afternoon.
The day's act ivities center
around woodlot management
for fuel production. It is an
opportunit y to learn how
forestry can be an efftctive
part of fuel conservation.
Those in attendane&lt;! will
see demonstrations on how to
grow trees and then protect
them; how to decide which
trees should be removed from
the woodlot for lirewood ; how
to fell a tree and bow to best
prepare the wood for use as
firewood.
The Field Day is sponsored
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources' Forestry
Division, the forestry In·
dustry's Tree Arm Com·
mitt ee and Bob Evans
Farms,

I.

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