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                  <text>. -:

•

•

•.

OAPSE promoting
bus safety week
COLUMBUS - Ohio will
observe "School Bus Safety
Week" Oct. 8-14. The Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees (OAPSE), an
independent
labor
organization representing
8,000 school bus drivers in
Ohio. is working to promote
school bus safety in October
and throughout the school
year. Part of the effort in·
cluded mailing public service
announcements to Ohio radio

JOINS FIRM .- Phillip
D. Sauaders of Bidwell,
Ohio has just been added to
the sales staH of Century 21
Real Estate, Southern Hills

by .the Gallia County
Engineering Department
and also is a veteran of the

Street,

Air Force. He has a full

Gallipolis. Phil has just
completed
the
state

time position at Buckeye

of

23

Locust

requirements

for

Rural Electric Co-op. Phil
has completed the state

real

requirements through Rio
Grande
Com mun i ty

estate sales by passing the
state exam August22, 1978.
Phil has been employed

Coll ege, Rio Grande.

••••• •••••., ••1•

.

6~
.· c~

a

••

••

.· .·

'-.uS t

cr;"

·

•
a • •
1
11

ate:
.f.

•

T0 d.ay

By .
Willis T. ~eading_ham
Realtor

1
1
1
1
1
1

: THE IMPACT OF EXTERNAL APPEAL

•
•

••
••
•
••

The external appearance
e :lf your home has an i m e oort ant impact on potential
• Juyers . You will never get
3
prospect int erested
• unless he stops to look .
• Don ' t rely on the ins ide of
• your home " se ll ing' ' i!.
e Your prospec t may be
• " turned off" before he
• reaches the front door . So
.• looK at the exterior w ith a
cr iti ca l eye.
•
Give the house a fresh
·• coa t of paint if needed .
• Replace any brok en or
·.e cracked windows . Replace
~ loose shi ng les. Fix th e
• fe;nce . Keep the l awn
mowed and the shrubs
• trimmed to give your house

e tha t "welt -ca red -for " took .

e
•
•

Make sure your screen or
storm door is in top shape

••

and your wooden door is
inviting with a fr esh coat of
paint or varni sh . It is not
un common to see a hun dr ed dollars w or th of
improverrrenls and some
elbow grease incr ease the
value of a house over a
thousand dol lars .
Put yourself in the
buyer 's shoes . He is looking
for
charm,
comfor t,
location and a bargain .
Give him the best show for
the money .

• .

e
e

•
•
•

e

e
•
•
•
•

e

If 1here is anything we •
can do to help you in the •
field of re al estate please e

phone or drop in at
~EADtNGHAM
REAL
ESTATE. Sll Second Ave.,
Gallipolis. Phone 446-7699.
We're herto to help .

•

1

e
• ·

•

·~·························

stations. The radio tapes
explain state law regarding
when to stop in the vicinity of
a school buS and the
motorist's responsibility.
OAPSE Executive Director
Larry DeCresce explained
that the greatest danger to
youngsters is not while riding ·
a school bus, but rather in
loading and
unl oa ding
sit uations . He cited statistics
illustrating that all student
fatalities in Ohio between
1969 and 1976 resulting from
school bus accidents occurred outside the bus. " One
million Ohio students ride a
yellow school bus each day.
We are proud that the 12,000
school bus drivers transport
students 132 million miles
every school year with very
few prob lems, " DeCresce
said .
Gary Howard cuts treads for stairstePs to length using a table saw during a house
" We want those students to
construction class at Meigs High School. Observing is Henry McCoy.
be as safe when they are
boarding or leaving their
school bus as they are while
riding on it," he added.
DeCresce outlined Ohio law
regarding school buses :
Henry McCoy uses a cross cut saw to make stringers
POMEROY - What with information is included in the otherwise been afraid to
- When a school bus stops
for stairsteps while Steve Pullins observes during a class
.,.
.
housing
costs jumping by course since it is offered just . tackle.
on your side of a four-lane
at Meigs High School on house construction.
leaps and
bounds, a one period a day. Special'
divitled highway. you must
stop.
relatively new course at emphasis is placed on
framing procedures with the
- On an undivided highthe Meigs High School
PT. PLEASANT - The .
way ; traffic moving both
house construction ·- could area covered Including
~cer
footings
and
foundations,
·
theft
of tapes, records :
ways must stop within 10 feet
eventually
prove very
food
lroni a Leon resident
and
of a stopped school bus.
floor
framing,
wall
and
beneficial to students .
CINCINNATI (UP!) framing,
roof · was reported Friday to the
with sexual imposition and
- Traffic must stop any
The 18-week course begins ceiling
time the school bus is loading Jeremiah, the male go-go knowingly causing him with a study of the fun- framing, roofing materials, Mason County Sheriff' s
.
damental hand and qJachine stair construction, windows Department.
or unloading, whether or not dancer, will bocgie on down physical hann.
to
a
oouple
of
courts
next
,
Jeremiah
claims
Block
tools
used in building trades. and exterior doors.
the bus lights are flashing.
Nedra Ann Cottrell, Leon
week .
,
grabbed him in the vicinity of Each tool is given treatment
While the course may not Route I, reported that she had
Jeremiah, whose last name his body normally covered by but without an unnecessary alford
the
knowledge
is Shastid, is involved in a a . G-string during his quality of detail since the necessary to build a home, it left her home Friday at II: 30
a.m. and when she returned at
legal hassle with the · performances.
course is intended for will, at least, enable the dcrit- 5 p.m. foWld a chair and other
TO HOST SESSION
manager of a disco where he
beginning students in the yoursellers to handle many items out of place. Upon
GALLIPOLIS
The
has heen perf&lt;rmlng.
area of building.
jobs they would have further Investigation, she
ME'l110DIS'J'S 'fO MEET
Triedstone Baptist Church
Trumps disco manager
Only the mo&lt;t. significant
COLUMBUS (UPI)
will host the second Annual Phil. Block charged Jeremiah
·discovered food had been
Fall Guild
Fellowship with assault In connection Thousands of members of the
taken from the kitchen
meeting of the Providence with an alleged fight the two United Methodists of the West
cabinets. Also found to be
Regular Missionary Baptist had at the disco Sept. 28. Ohio Conference will hold a
Kucinich plays down slim win
missing were about seven
Association on Saturday, Oct. Jeremiah has pleaded big convention at Columbus
tapes and several recorCIB.
Oct. 16 as part of the church's
28 at 7 p.m.
innocent to the charge and a national gatherings this
The thief or UUeves are
to visit Mayor Gerald
CINCINNATI (UP!) The theme of the meeting is trial is scheduled next
Cleveland Mayor Dennis Springer and consult with believed to have entered the
"Yo uth Speaks Out." The Thursday in Hamilton County month under the theme of
Kucinich, recalling his recent Cincinnati public works house by going through a
"Committed
to
Christ
speakers will be a Guild Girl Municipal Court.
recall election, Friday played officials on snow removal, garage door into the
Called to Change."
from each Sub-District that
Meanwhile, a hearing is
The program f(J' pastors of down his slim victory which he said has become basement.
make up the Providence scheduled
Monday
in West Ohio's 1,380 churches, margin.
"almost an emergency
The Sheriff's Department
Association. Special singing suburban Springdale Mayor's
He
said
he
preferred
to
call
situation"
ill Cleveland in also is investigating the _theft
Ohio
from
Lake
Erie
to
the
is planned also. Other details Court on a countersuit filed
River , includes messages his win, " not narrow, but recent winters.
o1 two wheels, two tires and
will be announced later.
by Jeremiah, charging Block from Bishop Carl J. Sanders, great."
Kucinich also gathered four hub cabs from a car
"! had three te levlsloo inf(J'mation on Springer's tax belonging to Wllliam J .
Birmingham, Ala.,
concerning world hunger, stations, five radio stations, proposal to keep 10 percent of Phillips, Apple Grove Route 1.
from Bishop Ernest T. Dixon, three newspapers , both all federal taxes at home to
The Items, valued at over
Topeka, Kan., on the church's political parties and big directly provide servies. $500, apparently were taken
outreach to its ethnic business against me,'' said Kucinich said such a plan overnight and discovered
would mean about $70 mllllon
minority local churches, and Kucinich.
missing on Wednesday.
Kucinich was in Cincinnati lor Cleveland.
host Bishop Dwight E . Loder,
Columbus, on evangelism ..

This Sport Model has the two lone
paint finished in Brentwood
brown and
Deser1
Sand .
Equipment includes air con ditioning , automatic tran ·
smiss i on, cruise control, tilt
wheel and radial
ti r es . Only
22,100 miles.

'5295
1976 FORD
ELITE
A super inte rmediate 1rom Ford .

Finished In Ivory white with gold
vinyl 60·40 seating ·and a gold
landau top . Equipped with AM·
FM track, air condltlon lno . tilt
wheel. cruise control , wire wheel
covers. Accent stri pes, much
more. Dr iven only 23,449 miles .

New limited trade .

'4695
NEW 78 PONTIACS

LEFT OVER

Go-go

ching bucket seats. This G.P. has
It all .. Air conditioning, tilt
whee l, AM radio with B-track
stereo, and rally wheels . We sold
it neW.

SHOP All THIS .WEEK .FOR EXCEPTIONAL V8JJES DURING OUR 114TH
ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION

This intermediate 9.passenger
wagon is finished In dark
burgundy with woodgrain ap.
pllque and black teatheretto Interior . Equipment Includes Air
Conditioning , luggage rack, tilt
wheel and New premium tires.
SPECIAL.

'5495

-ic CARHARTT BROWN DU,CK WORK CLOTHES

*WOMEN'S COATS

* BOYS WINTER JACKETS

*JUNIOR.SKI JACKETS

\

* MEN'S AND BOYS TUBE SOCKS

is

2 SKYLARKS
1·CENTURY WAG.
4 REGAL CPES.
3 LeSABRE CPES.
2 LIMITED SEDS.

wheel: wlre wheel covers and AM
rad io with B track ·stereo.
Save on 'this Model Now.

~4695

•o

•

SundiJ Shoppers Welcome
MORE
TO CH90SI PROM Come In &amp; Browse Around

""'

., .~.

Phone 446·2212
'

Gallipolis

elections office.

Weather
SOUTHERN MAJORETTES - These majorettes are fronting the Southern High School
marching band this fall. They are, from the left, Lori Chapman, Carol Morris head
majocette, and Crista Bee~le .
'

i,..]__rh_e..;...w_.~o-rl_d_T_o_da_y_
Will boost campaign
SAUSBURY, Rhodesia ( UPI)
The Rhodesian
govenunenl plans to give Prime Minister Ian Smith's
American campaign to win more friends a boost with dramatic
annoWlcemenls on lessening of official racial discrimination.
But a small white liberal opposition party, the National
Unifying Force, has announced plans to put ils leaders on the
same platforms as the prime minister to challenge his policies
before the American public.

New doctor in Vinton County
McARTHUR, Ohio (UP!) -Dr. Richard Chmielewski has
,.begun a part·time practice in Vinton County, an area of southern Ohio without a doctor since January .
Clunielewski is under a one-year contract negotiated with
the Ohio Valley ·Health Services Foundation, and drives to
McArthur on Mondays and Thursdays. He lives in Carbon Hill
near Nel80nville.

*WOMEN'S SPORTSWEAR

*- MEN'S SWEATERS

*WOMEN'S WINTER ROBES

*BOYS FLANNEL SHIRTS

*WOMEN'S WINTER PAJAMAS

*MEN'S 3 PC. VESTED SUITS

*WOMEN'S WINTER GOWNS

* MEN'S WRANGLER 14 OZ. JEANS

* WINTUK KNITTING YARN

* MEN'S CORDUROY TROUSERS

*CHILDREN'S COATS

*CAR TAPE PLAYERS

* EUREKA SWEEPERS

. *MAPLE QEDROOM FURNITURE

*AREA RUGS

RAVENNA, Ohio (UP!) -Hope Sa viers, 23, Ravenna, was
killed and her eight-rnonth-&lt;Jld son wounded Sunday night In a
shooting In front of her in-laws residence .
Portage County Sheriff Donald Schwartzmlller said M~s .
Sa viers and her infant son Andrew were shot as they left her rnlaws residence. He said her estranged husband, Gregory, 23,
Cleveland, was charged with aggravated murder and
attempted aggravated murder.

*RCA CONSOLE COLOR T.V.'s

Kennedy Bible donated

HUNTSVILLE Texas (UPI)- The Texas Department of
Corrections intenw; to keep David Lee Powell alive until he can
be executed.
Powell however, wants to die in his own way.
The 27-year-&lt;Jld former University of Texas honors student
who was convicted of murdering an Austin police officer has
refused food for a week and is determined to die of
malnutrition. But corrections spokesman Ron Taylor said~
state was prepared to f(J'ce-feed him to keep him alive .

:&lt;,.

* POLYESTER &amp; COTTON BED SHEETS

BUICK
PONTIAC

extremely relaxed in leh
past couple of years and
those wishing to vole via
the absentee route should
contact the county board of

Prisoner refused to eat

NEW 78 BUICKS

LEFT OVER~

convenience · of absentee
voters. Abs e ntee voter
regulations have been

TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) - The New Jersey Division of
Consumer Affairs plans to take the Firestone Tire Co. to court
if the federal government fails order the recall of the
controversial Firestone 500 steel-belted radial tire .
David Johnson, assistant to the director of the consumer
agency, says New Jersey may take its own action to have the
tire recalled.

*TIMEX WATCHES

*MEN'S KNIT SHI,RTS

'1995

.1976 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

•

at

may now cas t absentee and

Firestone going to court

SAVE ON:

STATION WAGON

Th is lull sized 2 dr . coupe has on
ly 15.571 low mil es and is loaded
witl1 opt ional equ ipm ent like air
cond il ioning, crui se control, till
wheel, power door windows,
powe r door Jocks, r ear windows ,
defogger a nd AM· FM radi o.
Don' t mi ss th is one.

2 PHOENIX

1911 Eastern Ava.

e

•

disabled ballots In the Nov.
7 election. The Meigs
Board of Elections office
located in the Masonic
Temple
Building
at
Pomeroy will be open from
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday
through Saturday lor the

ATLANTA (UP!)- Mumps, once a common and painful
childhood infection, is on the decline in the United Slates, say
researchers at the national Center for Disease Control.
The CDC said reported cases of mumps have declined
sharply this year, reaching the lowest point since reporting of
the disease began in 1922.

CON·TINUES ALL WEEK

1973 CHEVROLET
LAGUNA

1977 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE CLASSIC

· Equipment includes air conditioning cruise control, tilt

GMAC AND BANK
FINANCING

Right-wing " Radio Free
Lebanon" i'ssued reports that
said up to 1,300 people died
and more than 2,000 were
president. "and we are very injured in the fighting . Red
optimistic."
Cross officials said tMy felt
Assad said "we were these estimates were "surely
discussing practical steps" to exaggerated."
resolve the Lebanese crisis
Badly outgunned Christian
and he added that Sarkis leader s, including former
"will have to choose the most President Camille Chamoun,
appropriate measures".
said the cease-fire arranged
The Syrian leader said in Damascus by Presidents
Sarkis would return to Elias Sarkis of Lebanon and
Damascus after his Arab tour Halez i\.ssad of Syria would
and "we will conclude these not last.
discussions" on a solution to
"My co nfidence in the
the Lebanese crisis.
effectiveness of the cease-fire
Accurate casualty figures worked out in Damascus is
from a week of heavy shelling very limited," the 78-year-&lt;Jld
were impossible to obtain. Chamoun said. "In past

ABSENTEE VOTING
Meigs County residents

Orlldhood disease declining

'4895

ready for your Inspection. Bright
red exterior with white Landau
. top and matching bucket seats.

7 GRAND PRIX

ELBERFELD$ IN POME

F inished in arti e whit e with blue
custom tri.m . Th io:. custom delux
model has the economical 6·
engine, auto . 1rans .• r ea r step
bumper and only 211 miles . Yes,
·on ly 211 miles .

'5795

2 LeMANS

1 BONNEVILLE 4 Or.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, Oct. 9, 1978

the way down the road," he
told reporters in Damascus
early today alter four hours·
of talks with the Lebanese

goes to court

1978 CHEVROLET
PICK UP

Finished in canary yellow with
buckskin landau topand mat.

locally owned Monte

capital.
Otherwise, both the staterun Beirut radio and the
right-wing Phalangist radio
said Lebanese citizens had
"spent another calm night,
free of artillery and rocket
shells"
'
President Elias Sarkis was
leaving for Saudi Arabia
today on the first leg of a tour
of Arab capital , Beirut radio
said.
Syrian President Hafez
Assad indicated the SyrianLebanese summit on the
crisis in Lebanon had failed
to reach agreement on all
issues after four days of
discussions.
" We are three~uarters of

Thefts probed

1977 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX

Th1~.

BEIRUT; Lebanon (UP!)
·- Sniper fire marred a
Syrlanengineered cease-lire
in Lebanon today while the
presidents of Lebanon and
gyrla concluded four days of
political and military talks in
Damascus apparently
without
reaching
lull
agreement.
Although the cease-fire was
generally reported holding in
most of East Beirut, Its
suburbs
and
adjacent
mountain areas, Christian
right-wlrig radios said three
people were killed and one
o!her injured today by Syrian
sniper fire on the two key
bridges commanding the
northeast approaches to the

Building course offered

QUALITY CARS
1977 GMC
SPRINT

•

Sniper lre mars two-day cease lre

D-12- The Sunday Times-Sentinel , Sunday, Oct. 8, 1978

Estranged husband charged

BOSTON (UP!) - The family Bible used by John F.
Kennedy at his presidential inauguration has been donated to
the K~nnedy Memorial Library by a cousin of the late
president's mother.
·
The Bible, which Is val~ed at '15,000' conta~s a
handwritten record of births, deaths and marriages rn the
Fltqerald family George Gloss, the Cambridge book expert
who Bet the value ~flhe Bible, said Sunday.

AND MAN¥ .OTHER ITEft\5

OPEN WEEKDAYS TIL s'P.M. - FRIDAY TIL 8 P.M.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

.

Partly cloudy, wa rm er
Tuesday. Highs from the
upper 60s to the low 70s.
Probability of precipitation
near zero today , tonight and
10 percent Tuesday .

ceasefires, when the fighting fighting with the ri~;htwing
stopped, (the Syrians) Christians, who rejected
reinforced their positions and Syrian control of their
started fighting again."
northern Lebanon
"There will definitely be strongholds.
more fighting," one Christian
Israel has threatened to
co mmander said. " This intervene on the side of the
ceasefire is not hing."
Christians if the fighting does
The current cease-lire was not end. Observers believe
the latest in a long series that such an action could
began during the 1975-76 endanger the Camp David
Lebanese civil war between peace agreements between
the Chris tians and the Israel and Egypt and eould
Palestinians, ' backed by lead to another Middle East
Lebanese leftists.
war.
·An Arab League peaceRightist r"'lio reports late
keeping force, made up Sunday said two shells fell on
almost entirely of Syrian the southeast Christian
troops, ended the civil war 23 suburb of Hadath, two on the
months ago but stayed on and Karan tina area of east Beirut
became involved in new and five on the Christian

village of Douar.
radio
A
right-wing
broadcast said about 30
people were wounded while
trying to cross the Karantina
Bridge to escape from east
Beirut Sunday.
"The fact that the refugees
would brave fire to escape
showed how desperate the
situation has become/' one
witness said.
The state-run Beirut Radio
said, " There were li1nited
and isolated violations of .the
ceasefire, which were dealt
with quickly in order to
stab ilize
lire
security
situation in the country."
"Radio_ Free Lebanon"
quoted a spokesman for

en tine

answer questions concerr.ing
school attendance, especially
its legal aspects.
Meigs
High
School
programs and procedures
can be explained by Principal
James Diehl and Assistant
Principal Fenton Taylor, two
. more panel members: Final
panel member Tim Flesher,
guidance counselor, is
familiar with scheduling,
testing , or personal problems
students might encounter.
Between those live persons,
parents should be able to

Rescue
workers d ng
through tons of rub ble
searching for survivors in
buildings that collapse d
under the heavy fire .

Pair facing robbery charges
Two U. S. Marines wanted
in connection with the Sunday
afternoon robbery of the
Mason , Vista Station were
appr ehended in Pomeroy
within five minutes of · the
initial police· broadcast.
Ma son Police broadcasted
the alarm to the sheriff's
office at 1:45 p.m . At 1:50.
p.m. Pomeroy Patrolman
Kenny Hoffman and Sheriff's
Deputy Robert Beegle took
the two suspects into custody
on Main Street in the vicnity
of Nelson Drug Store.
At the time of the alert
Patrolman Hoffman was
traveling west on Main Street
and stopped at Karr and Van
Zandt Motor Co. Deputy
Beegle was at the sheriff's
office and immediately went
to Main Street to observe
a pproa ching vehicles at the
intersection by the Meigs Inn.
Patrolman Hoffman
spotted the vehicle traveling
east on West Main nea r Karr
a nd Van Zandt and gave
chase. The suspect vehicle
was forced off the road near
Nelson's Drug Store where

Hoffman was joined by
Deputy Beegle.
Two suspects offered no
resistance, although a fully
loaded and cocked .45 caliber
automa tic was found on the

l1oorboard. A wad of bills was
found beside the seat on the
passenger side.

The suspects, a t7-year old
Columbus youth and 22-year
old Edward W. Berryhill, Rt.
2, Guin, Ala. , are being
lodged in the Meigs County
Jail until court proceedings
Tuesday. They , at the time of
the robbery , were not AWOL.
Authorities said that while
Berryhill
was
buying
gaso line , the juveni le allegedly pulled a .45 caliber
pistol on a female attendant
and demanded money .
The two suspects; during
questioning at the sheriff' s
office, admitted committing
the am1ed robbery at the
Mason Vista Station and also
a dmitt ed committing an
armed robbery Saturday in
South Ca rolina. ~
According to their information they r obbed a

liq uor st ore in Beaufort,
gett in g afound $90. The
sheriff's office in Beaufort
was notified. They confirmed
there had been a robbery at
the liquor store and that the
desc ription of th e tw o
suspects matched what information they had obtained.
The two suspects said after
they came across the bridge,
they turned and went back
into Monkey Run area,
swit ched
dri vers
and
changed some of their
clothing.
Other officers arriving on
the scene short ly after their
arrest were Chi ef Jed
Webster, Patrolman Henry
Werry and T(\111 Werry,
Deputy Dave Ohlinger and
Sheriff's Investigator- Gary
Wolfe, Mason Police Chief
Person , and Cpl. J. R. Fitz·
water of the West Virginia
State Police.
Sheriff James Proffitt
advised today that if they
waive extradition they will be
turned

over to Mason
authorities. If they refuse to
waive extradition, they wiH

•

he ·held pending e&lt;tradition
hearing~ .

The sheriff's department is
investigating the theft &lt;•f
firewood from a farm at Rt. 2.
Coolville
Mrs. Doris Avis reput1cd
sometime between Tuesday ,
Oct. 3 and Friday , Oct. 6.

someone had entered their
property a nd cut down
several trees.
Mrs. Avis sa id no one lwd
been

given

permission

to

enter their property to cut the
firewood .
At 12:15 a .m. Saturday a
deer was killed on SH 124
'"'hen it ran into the path of nn
auto driven

by_ Ray mond

J-'urbee, Rt. 2, Racine. There
was sli ght damage to IIH~
Furbee car .
At 11 :35 p.m . another d('&lt; •r
was killed when it ran into t ile

path of a car driven hy
Tammy L. Pitzer, Rt. 1,1-&lt;&gt;ng
Bottom . T he accident

curred on County Road

CIC·
~II

nea r Keno . There was slight

property damage.

Shootill;g

incident

I
I

Parents are
invited to
participate

tendance offiCer, who can

possessions .

Fifteen Cents
Vol. 29, No. f21

EXTENDED FORECAST
Showers Wednesday and
Friday. Highs wfll be In tbe
60s Wednesday and 'Thursday, dropping to the upper
ous and tow 60s Friday.
Lows will be from the mid
40s to the low 50s.

All Meigs High School
parents are invited to meet
with a " panel of pros"
Tuesday;Oct . 10 at 7:30p.m.
at the high school.
These pros are men, who by
profession, work closely with
young people in general and
Meigs High School students in
particular. Ther&lt;liore, they
should be able to pnswer any
questions a parent might
have about the school, attendance there, or other teenage related problems.
Serving on the panel will be
Ca rl Hysell, county juvenile
offi cer, who will be prepared
to discuss among other
topics, drug problems in this
area. Another panel member
is Otis Knopp, 5'0WJty at-

Lebanese rightist forces as
saying they would reject any
accord reached between
Sarkis and Assad that did not
provide f &lt;r the inunedia te
withdrawal of Syrian troo(JS
from Lebanon .
"There will be no real
ceasefire WJtil our brothers
return (to Syria)," il said .
Residents of rubble-&lt;Ohoked
east Beirut emeQ!ed fr om
makeshift basement bomb
shelters to look for . relatives
and friends and to assess the
damage to their homes and

probed
MASON - A Mason m" n is
listed in good condition at
Pl easant Valley Hosp ita l
followin g a shooting incident
durin g a family dispute tl lis
morning.

Michael David Williamson,
24, Front St .. was wounded in
the right hand by a blast frorn
a 12 gauge shotgun.
According to Mason County
sheriff's
deputies,
the
shooting occ urred a t t i&lt; C

•
RESERVE CHEERlEADERS - Southern High
School reserve cheerleaders strike a pose for the Sentinel
camera. F rom the left are Sonja Hlll, captain; Denise

Riffle, Della Johnson, co-&lt;Oaplain being held by Terri
Crouch, Amber Warner and Paula Wolfe .

some
2,200 employees
today.
A dozen other defiant continued.
In Cleveland today, aU
Dayton school teachers and
parties
involved in a strike by
WJion officials are to start
10,000
school-district
serving weekend jail tenns
Friday. They, too, must put employees were to appear
their feelings on the law into before Cuyahoga County
Common Pleas Court Judge
writing.
P a rent s,
substitute Harry A. Hanna . He was to
teachers and supervisory consider additional
personnel conducted classes contempt&lt;Jf-&lt;lourt charges
for Dayton's 38,000 students . against those who continue to
while the monthlong strike by defy his backto -work order.

an

occurr ed

altercation

be·

Eaton: Kathy J. Harrison ,
19, Eaton , killed in a twovehicle accident on Ohio 127
in Preble County.
Franklin : Stephen
Navarro, 23, Hamilton, killed
in a onevehicle accident on a
Franklin street.
Columbus : Ellen Riechert,
17, Galena ,' killed when the
car she was driving from a
shopping center at Columbus
was hit by a city police
cruiser.
Saturday
Willoughby Hills: Richard
A. Brazis, 24, Willoughby,
killed in a two-vehicle crash

, Williamson . The victim was

transferred to the hospital by
his wife, Carr ie. The incident
is still under investigation .

Wahama band
wins trophy

Superintendent Peter P.
Carlin said all employees
The Wahama band won a
were expected to report lor
first place trophy for the
work today, adding that once
second time in tw.o week s at
teachers report, it would be a
the
Wheeling
Park·
matter of just a few days "Cavalcade of Bands" at
before the system's 101,000
Wheeling, W.Va.
students are told when to
The festival was hr ld
report.
Saturday at 6 p.m. after a
Talks aimed at resolving hard rain had aimost forced
the walkout, which began . ca ncellatioii"'o!"lne 'leStiv«i.
Sept. 7 and has kept the
Wahama r eceived tho:: most
(Continued on page 10 )
points in its classification hut
ended up tied for first place
with Bridgeport, Ohio after
being penalized three points
for going overtime.
In addition to winning fi rst
on a Willoughby Hills street.
place, Wahama's newly
Lucasville : Jesse Locke,
fonned auxiliary units ran:u
66, Lucasville, struck and
killed while trying to cross a well .
Wahama's rille cor.ps
street.
received the trophy of being
Coshocton: James R.
the best of all those comHerron, 29, West Lafayette, peting. Although the fiag
killed in a two-vehicle corps did not receive a
accident on a Coshocton trophy, it did place third in
County road.
overall points.
Mansfield: Alan D. Oney,
The band was accompanied
27, Mansfield, killed in a two- by manY carloads of parents,
vehicle accident on Ohio 556 alumni and supporters of the
in Richland CoUnty.
band . The band is now
Carrollton: Michael W. preparing lor homecoming on
Johnson, 4, Carrollton, killed Oct. 14 and Tri State Band
in a two-vehicle accident on Festival oil Oct. 21. Charles
(Continued on page 10 I
Yeago is the director.

14 die on Ohio highways
Traffic accidents in the
Buckeye State during this
past weekend claimed the
lives of at lest 14 persons,
including two pedestrians
and one motorcyclist.
·
The State Highway Patrol
keeps the weekend count
between Friday evening and
Sundsy midnight.
The count shows three
deaths Fridsy night, nine
Saturday and two Sunday.
One pedestrian was kUled
Saturdsy and one Sunday.
The motorcyclist was killed
in an accident Sunday.
Friday Night

during

tw een Williamson and hi s
Gary Willard
brot her ,

Whitehall instructors
return to work today

Striking teachers in the
Columbus
suburb
of
Whitehall returned to work
today while Dayton teachers,
who ended a strike last week,
paid lor their actions during
the weekend . Walkouts
continued in five other
districts.
. About 200 teachers in
Whitehall, who had been on
strike for a week, agreed to a
new contract with the Board
of Education Sunday night
and reported to classrooms
receive answers to any today.
question or concerns. A
Classes were open during
special invitation is being the strike and were taught by
extended to the parents of substitute teachers and
freshmet., but aU parents are supervisory _personnel.
invited and urged to attend.
Eighteen Dayton teachers,
The meeting is sponsored wbo accepted a new contract
by PAT (Parents and last week but refused to cross
. Teachers) in an effort ot the picket lines of another
improve communication be- school union, spent their
tween school, home and weekend at the Montgomery
community.
County _ Jail while several
hundred
sympathizers
SQUAD RUNS
protested outside.
The Middleport Fire
The teachers worked
department Emergency Unit behin&lt;! bars Saturday and
answered, a call to 749 S. Sunday on a ~word, court. Third Ave. at 9:23 a.m. ordered essay describing
Sunday for Mrs. Nettie Hayes . what "the rule of law" means
who was taken to Holzer ' to them. The papers were to
Medical Center.
· ·
be submitted to a judge

Willia mson residence arou nd

3:30a.m. today.
It a ll eged ly

'

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 9, 1978
\

IN WASHINGTON

3-1'he Dall :senunel, Muldlepon·J:iomeruy, 0., Monaay, vet. 9, l,!l'l b

..
''

ETTA f"Oilf wo!ZT\1 Sr~~R·TELEHU~ME
N.E.A . 18

Meet the Marauders

COMMENTARY

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

Donald F. Graff.

SENAWR
feKKALOT

Integrity isn't enough
By Martha An.:Ie and Robert Walters

China rediscovered
By..Don Graff

WASHINGTON (NEA) - The dirty little secret of the
General Accounting Office (G AO ) has now been revealed :
The work performed by the vaunted "watchdog" of the
federal bureaucracy too often is slow, narrowly focused
and overly technical.
•
For more than a half-century, GAO remained inunune to
criticism While It regularly exposed all manner Of Waste,
meffictency and incompetence at virtually every ·other
government department and agency.
Until recently, nobody ever seriously examined the
quahty of the work done by the revered " investigative ann
of Congress.'' Now, however, a congressional committee
bas completed an unprecedented assessment of GAO's
performance.
The report of the House Select Committee on Congressional Operations was released without any fanfare. But
that 's not surprising stnce GAO is one of Congress'
"chtldren" and politicians are notoriously chary of
criticizing members of the " fam..ijy."
Thus, the report's primary conclusion is that "GAO is a
valuable asset to Congress." That's followed by another
equally favorable finding :
" A substantial majority of the agency's congressional
clients ... have a generally high regard for the quality,
professiOnalism and integrity of its services and products
and for the competence of tts personnel. "
But buried in the committee's 84-page ~eport is
considerable material suggesting that there's a great deal
of room for improvement at GAO. Some examples:
When representatives, senators and staff members of
their committees were asked to evaluate GAO, approximately half of those queried were critical of the lack of
tuneliness of the agency's reports.
Comments from those surveyed, all reported anonymously, include characterizations of GAO as "rarely quick
enough l,o be effective," "slow and ineffective" and
" thorough and reliable but slow."
One legtslator ts quoted as saying: "GAO is excellent
wheil you inform them of specific and serious fraud. They
can be utterly unresponsive and late at other Urnes."
The committee report also alludes to GAO's penchant for
"me"ticulous" investigations of vecy limited scope, as well
as "certain bureaucratic rigidities" and "internal rivalries" within the agency.
.
The unattributed conunents from the House and Senate
members are far more explicit. One of those surveyed
complains of "auditors" possessing "little policy insight or
basic program understanding."
Another refers to GAO reseachers who "pull their
punches," are " too tradition-bound in their approaches"
~~ -:: don't offer creative solutions to the problems they
Start members are even more critical, referring to GAO
as "timid and political" or "amtioua notto displease vested
corporate or congressional interests."
.
One aide chides GAO for its "ultima.te unwillingnesS to
'make waves' and (its) obsession to detail," while another
notes that the agency "often resists taking bold stands and
initiatives."
Years of examining GAO's work confinn most of those
findings. The agency has displayed extraordinary independence and integrity in its work, maintaining uncommanly high standards while operating in a political
environment.
.
But the diversity of opinion represented in Congress
produces continuing discomfort for GAO. If the agency
praises or criticizes any policy, program, philosophy or
institution, there are bound to be legislators who strongly
disagree.
Because GAO is part of the legislative branch of the
federal goverrunent, those legislators are seldom reticent
about expressing their feetings. To protect Itself, GAO
invariably waters down potentially strong conclusions.
The congressional report includes numerous propo&amp;ala
for improvement at GAO, but notably absent is one obvious
suggestion: The politicians on Capitol Hlll ought to
minimize
meddling
in the
agency's
_ _ _their
__
_.....;;_
_...::___;,.
_work.
_____
For Tuesday, Oct. 10

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

a

\J(!Jl!J[i

October 10, 1978

LIBRA ~Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Today
you may be tempted to cater to
whims of overindulgence . If

you do , there is an indicalion
you may suffer financially as

well as physically. Find out
more about yourself by send·
mg for your copy of Astra-

Graph Letter. Mail 50 cents for
ea ch and a long , selfaddressed , stamped envelope
to Aslro-Graph. P 0 Bo• 489,

Radio C1ly Station, N.Y 10019.
Be sure to spec1fy birth sign

SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
could succumb to a desire

today to make an imporlanl

change JUSt for the sake of

change Oon 'l lei restlessness
lead you Ia unsound reasoning
SAGITTARIUS !Nov. 23-Dec. ·
21} Relrai n from embellishing
your achievement too grandly
today . Your credtbilily will suffe r by ielllng tall tales .
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11)
For one who seldom coun~s .his
c h&lt; c ke ns before they re
hatched . you may be banking
too heavily today on something
nol yel a reality.
.
AQUARIUS (Jon. 20-Feb. 11)
Someone who is aware that
you can be mani pulated '?day
through flattery may lay •t Ofl
ra ther thick in order to achieve

his ends.
PISCES (Feb. 20-M arch 20) Oisappomlmenl Is likely today If
you e&lt;pect others to do more
lor you than you would for the m
1f roles were reversed.

ARIES (March 21-April 18)
Large groups could get on your
nerves today, so by all means

don '! subject yourself to them .
You'll be happier where things
are less hectic

TI\URUS (April 20-Moy 20) Takprematurely

for

something not yet accom·
pllshed could backfire on you.
One who'd like to trip you up
mtght ask to see the finished
product.
GEMINI (MaY 21-June 20) Usually you like to play lhings by_
tremely careful in horse-trad='"

lng today. You'll go In thinking
that you have the edge. In
reality, you won't.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
You're not your usually rell,ble

•

Opponent criticized
COLUMBUS ( UPI)- Gov.
James A. Rhodes says his
opponent,
like
an
bou
overmatched fighter a I to
be knocked out, is "dying in
lna room."
the dre..
_._...,
Rhodes put oo his own
boxing gloves Saturday
evening in defense of the
office he bas held for 12
years, roundly criticizing
Democratic Lt. Gov. Richard
F.
Celeste
as
an
inexperienced, Indecisive

man wbo "has no programs"
and favors higher taxes and
utility' bills.
Though be never menUooed
Celeste by name, there was
no mistaking Rhodes'target
as he lashed out at .his

q~ponent time after time in a
35-minute speech to 1,700
cheerlnl: supporters
attending a flOO-per-person
beef barbecue fund-calser for
the governor and his running
mate, Cuyahoga County
Commissioner George V.
Voinovlch.
"When Joe Louis knocked
out Billy Com In 11 sectbds of
their second fight, the
headlines said: 'Billy Conn
died in the dressing room,"'
related
. "This
happens toRhodes
politicians,
too.

could experience

some serious pitfalls.
through with what they've
CANCER (June 21-July 22) Be been talking about foc six
wary of geUing 1nvolved in a mmths."

to you because of something

You WLII have more than your
share of opportunities this
com1ng year , but they will not
be in the long-shot department
Sttck to the blue chtps and sure
lh 1ng s.

bows

"Henceforth when hiring staff members get the tallest ones you can
find - we n~ed to justify the sixteen-foot ceilings in the new Senate
office bailding."

ear, but today If you don't have They do not have the
everything planned step-by- intestinal fortitude to go
step you

Greg Becker
5-10, 145lbs.
Sr. TB-DS

are.

venture today where the heavy
Rhodes indicated Celeste is
end of the expenses could tall oothe,.,..,...becausebefalled

~ ITlnli'VllidJmiJ

ing

~

What hath Richard Nixon wrought?
A scant six years after the former president's journey to
Peking, China is a nation whose American time bas come
in a massive way. More than an area of interest, It has the
makings of an obsession.
That is Mainland China we're talking about. The
People's Republic, Red China, the 'Yellow Peril ujldated
according to Marx, as correct thinking on our side bad it
during 20 years of diplomatic deep freeze . Who would have
predicted that the thaw would progress so fast so far?
Americans, officials and growing numbers of the just
plain curious, are all over China - or would be, if more of
It were open to the foreigner. It soon may be. To develop
tourism, China is looking to U.S. finns for help that may
. indude construction of hotels and tourist-related transportation facilities. For the upwardly mobile American
politician, Peking is becoming as obligatory a port of call
as Moscow once was and the Vatican and Jel"D881em still

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

you permitted another to man- 10 ccme up with a concrete
age.
fmancial program to support
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Be ex- Ohio's schools. It bad been
rumored that Celeste would
call foc increased taxes.
Even so, the governor
GE'l'S GRANT
castigated Celeste for
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Rep. wanting to increase taus by
Chabners Wylie, R-Ohio, said suggesting an elltra $3 bUUoo
Saturday that $526,000 has foc schools over the next four
been given to the Ohio years. No fewer 11\an 20
Department of Economic and times,
the
governor
Community Development by mentiooed taxes, saying he
the Law
Enforcement. doesn 'I want any more and
Assistance Administration. his opponent wants to
The mooey will be used for increase them.
the department's Division of
"We doo 't need any more
Administration of Justice for inccme taxes," said' Rhodes.
planning comprehensive "We don 'I need any more
juvenile
delinquency sales taxes . And we don't
prevention programs.
need a governor who S8YIJ we
do ... oc we might ... or
maybe.
"Our opponent, on the other
OHIOAN J{D JED
hand, bas often indicated that
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ohioans should pay more
Theodcce R. McClatchey Jr., taxes," said the governor,
50, Columbus, a chief petty claiming Celeste !lpollSOred
officer in tbe Navy Reserve
killed' the original state incone tax
was me of 16 persons
bill in 1971.
when an airplane crashed
"In recent newspaper
into a hill near Santiago, interviews, he bas indicated
Cbile Friday.
that in the next four years, be
He' was on temporary wants to hike your taus
active duty in South AmeriCa again," Rhodes C!lltinued.
and was crew chief on the ill- "How much? He won 'I say.
fated plane.
At least he won't say until
The C-l18 cargo plane bad after the election.
been participating In an
"But we do know this
annual joint training exercise much. He bas c&lt;rnmltted
·
1 in th Unl ed State
himself to spending $3 bUUon
m~p V g e
~
• s,
Chilean and Peruvl8D naVIes. Jll&lt;l"e for education alone and I can tell you here and
now that if he does that, he
nt£ DAILY SENTINEL
bas · to boost your peraonal
DEVOTED TO TilE
inc&lt;me tall or your sales tax
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
oc both. And that's just one
ROBERT HOEFLICH
bi8 tax grab he ls talldng
Cll! FAilor
Publ iJht:!d tba!y t!Xt.'ept SMturdMy
about.''
by The Ohio Y11Dty PublishirtM:
His voice often rising to a
Com!Miny-Multbnt!dia, Inc.,
Ill
Court Sl , Pomeroy, Ohio 4$769.
shout, llbodel appeared mOlt
B~inl!tll:l Offk't.! Phunt! 992- Z156.
agitated at crltlcllm Celeete
Etllturlal Phollt! 992-2157
has leveled at him for the last
Secont.l cbli!B pw~age paul! al
Pulfkruy, Ohiv
nine moolhs.
NwUuti.YI advcrtl8U1!( rei)I'Qeii"You tnow me and you
Miv~ . I.am,km A.QUCillle~. 3101
Euclid Ave., Cleveland, Ohiv 44115.
know thla team,'' Rhodes said
Su~riptiOn n•l~s : Ot!ll\l~rted by
of hill admlnlltratioo. "You
carrlt!r where IIVIILMblt' 7S L'tnb per
know what we have done and
wt.•t!k. By Motoc Ruul.t! when~ c11rri~r
:wrvlt't.l not IIV&lt;dlable, One nwnlh.
what we can do. We have
SJ.:l:i. By nuul in Otllo ancJ W V11.,'
delivered for Ohio and we will
One Yc11r, $22.00: Six mmtlul ,
tll.6Cl ; Thr~e 1 months , t7 .00;
C!lltinue to deUver for Ohio.
F.I:Jewhert $26.00 Yt.:llr , Six mooUus
"This Is no time for Ohio to
fJ3 . ~0 ; Threl,l monthiJ, t7 ~
Sub111.:riptlon prlr't! mdude1 SUndlly
take a gamble oo inexperienTurlt:!i-&amp;nlLm·l
ce," Rhodes said. "Thls is a

'

time to keep Ohio moving
fQrward surely and
solidly."
Again citing "newspaper
reptrts," the governor said
Celeste's energy and utility
plan "would p)ace as much as
an extra $710 million in
higher rates m the backs of
Ohio conswners."
"Our opponent bas not said
ooe word about Ohio coal,"
said Rhodes, referring to his
own effocts to ease up &lt;11
clean air standards to penni\
the burning of higbo~~ulfur
Ohio"coal and save jobs in the
mihing · and mimufactui'ing
industries.
Rhodes ridiculed Celeste's
plan to appoint a commission
to decide 011 how to solve the
school finance problem.
"My opponent may think be
can run from the tough
declsioos and tall8tion, but be
camot hide," said the governor. "And be cannot appoint a
cmunission to solve all the
problems of Ohio.
"He says education is. a
crisis. So was the blizzard (of
January 1978). And we did not
have to appoint a commission
to solve the blizzatd."
"I believe the peq~le of
Ohio want to know where the
candidates stan!! before they
go in the voting booth, not

after," said Rhodes. "You
know where I stand. I stand
foc ecoo~my in govenunent.
When you elect a governor,
you elect management and

not a commissioo." .
Rhodes reviewed his
administration's accomplishments
in
mental
he!J)tb .prQgralllll. reducing
welfar")ratx~, S\l"aigb(enlng
out workers' · c&lt;111pensation,
establishing senior citizens'
programs and attracting jobs
to Ohio.
"I want to be known as tbe
workingman's governor,"
said Rhodes, blaming the
administration of former
Democratic Gov. Joon J.
Gilllgan foc driving industry
out of the state with an "antiindustry" attitude.
"It's easy to criticize if you
don't have programs," be
said, returning his attention
to Celeste. "It's easy to be
cynical if you have no
programs. My oppooent has
no programs that he can put
forth I, 2, 3, 4.

"People say 'when are you
going to debate?" ' said
Rhodes . "He has no
programs."
Some of Rhodes' most strident tones were reserved for
the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency, with
which he has feuded for
months over air pollution
C!lltrols.
"I am going to continue to

down. Go find jobs someplace
else.' You don 't do tbst in this
state," shouted the governor.
Kent
B.
McGough,
campaign coordinator foc the
governor, said between 2,000
and 3,000tickets were sold for
the event at the Ohio State
Fairgrounds.
McGough
urged
the
Republicans to find five
neighbors,
friends
or
business associates who
might not vote and get them
to go to the polls. "We need a
high voter turnout," he said.
Republican State
Chairman Earl T. Barnes
said Rhodes "has tbe guts to

tell you how it is. When he
tells you he's not going to
raise taxes, you can believe
it."
"We're going to keep Jim

Rhodes as governor," said
Barnes to the cheering
aUdience. " We're lucky we
have a governor and not a

cominittee."
Rhodes supporters paraded
through the hall carrying
signs which read: "Jim
Rhodes - Ohio's Greatest

Governor" and "Celeste
Wants ·More Taxes" as a
lively brass band played
" Rock Around the Clock" and
the Ohio State "Fight Sqng."

r-------------------------,

I
I

Letters of opinion are welcomed. They should be less

II
I
I
I
I

than 300 words long (or subject to reduction by the editor)
and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may
be withheld upon publication. However, on request,
aames wiD be disclosed. Letters should he in good taste,
addressing issues, not personalities.

J

I
I
I

Wants other parties named s, oruo
. 5, 1978
Dear Editor:
Twice now, I have seen my mother's name, Mrs. Neva
Grinun, in the paper, cocnceming so called property, that Paul
Simons is supposed to own and paying taxes on for several
years. This property Is located along East Main Street in
Pomeroy, supposedly from the Coal Tipple to the Nye Ave. red
light.
· Whether Paul Simon knows this or not, when her name
appears in the paper, she is asked all kinds of questions about
what is going oo.
I'd like to know why only my mother's name was published
and not about 30 other persons also involved in this episode.
I inquired to the Daily Sentinel before ,'Clerk of Courts, and
also an attocney and the excuse was, because my mother's
name was the first name on the documents, that were, served.
And another question, after my mother told Paul Simon 's
attorney, "Pat O'Brien", that she bad never paid taxes or
claimed the "riverbank" and never would, why her name bas
been thrown around and-published and not the other parties.
I just want to let the guilty people know how I feel. For I
love and respect my mother and I will protect her anyway I
can. And I want to make this plain, my mother does not know
anything about this letter, but she 1viU if you print it. I doubt
that it will be published the way I've written it, but this is the
way I feel and everyone has the right to their personal opinion
and this is mine .
Sincerely yours,
Mrs. Minnie Johnson
54'h S . May Ave., Athens, Ohio 45701
Phone No. 593-7941

Berry's World

~ttheEPAw~theywill

not compromiae and come to
an understanding in Ibis
state,"
said
Rhodes,
maintaining the federal
agency baS cost the Republic
and Wheeling-Pittsburgh
steel companies several
rniiUon dollars for pollution
cootrol systems which didn't
wock.
·~1 am going to fight their
attitude that says: 'Shut ·

The interest is reciprocal. Chinese visitors to the United
States may not be so numerous, but are no longer rarities.
They come as parties of politely inquisitive journalists,
industrial shoppers and specialists of one variety or
anotner. And if Peking carries through reported plans to
tap the West's intellectual resources, they soon will be
coming as students by the thousands. No tourists yet, but
just wait· a bit and don't be surprised.
U.S. oil finns are stumbling over each other in
anticipation of dealing themselves into exploitation of
possibly massive Chinese reserves. Excitement is also
beginning to sUr in other industries, with discussions
initiated as to the feasibility of cooperative production
operations within China. The China market itself, once
upon a time the basis of a clutch of great American
fortunes, is beginning to look interesting to traders again.
U.S ..Chinese exchanges are expected to top $1 billion Ibis
year. That may be very small lichee nuts in tenns of world
trade - last year U.S. business with its top_ partners,
Canada and Japan, reached $55.1 billion and $39.1 billion
respectively. But for an opener, it shows promise.
Diplomatically, the two governments are either tacitly
cooperating or carefully not opposing each other in a
number of areas.
In tenns of very recent history, all this Sino-American
togetherness may be mind-boggting. But in the long tenn It
reasserts the historic relationship between the two nations.
A tie bound a very young United States and a very old
China throughout the 19th century. The difference today is
that the Soviet Union rather than imperialist Europe is
prompting a classic demonstration of that most ·durable
rule of alliances : The enemy of my enemy is my friend .
, Peking openly acknowledges its immediate purpose is to
strengtb&lt;;n itself in its confrontation with the Soviets and,
beyond that, to speed realization of the late Chou En-lai's
goal of transforming China into the world's most powerful
Socialist state by the year 2000. That the J?Oticies now being
pursued to achieve this involve consortmg with the once
detested West bothers Peking's present pragmatic leadership not one whit.
Premier Teng Hsiao-ping explains it: "It doesn't matter
whether the cat is black or white. What matters is whether
it gets the mouse.''
For the present, the detente that is becoming rapprochement works to the American advantage. But one of the
many lessons to be learned from China's long history is
that for the Chinese there are no lasting friends; all
foreigners in the end are devils. Or perhaps, in Teng's neoConfuclan tenns, mice.
The Chinese do not have a monopoly on sage sayings.
There is also a Western one to the effect that China is a
sleeping_ giant, and others might be well advised to let it go
on sleepmg.

~· ~

,,

By dREG AiELLo
UPI Sports Writer
The Green Bay Packers
were embarrassed enough by
what Walter Payton did to
them last year with his
running. They didn't need the
added insult of what he
reportedly
did
before
Sunday's game with his
words.
The Chicago Bears' usually
amiable running back was
quoted in a Green Bay
newspaper Sunday saying the
Packers were overrated and
not the team their 4-1 record

'

:
·
·

suggested. He added the
Bears would beat the Packers
just as they did twice last
year when Payton rushed for
a 205 yards in the first game
and 163 in the second .
"We were upset by what he
said, " said safety Steve Luke .
" We wanted to show him just
how good we are."
Naturally, Payton's comments were circulated
around the Green Bay locker
room prior to the game to
provide more incentive for an
already important task. The
Packers responded wtth

another unexpected victory,
24-14 over the Bears.
Luke figured considerably
in helping the Packers
remain the season's biggest
sUrprise. He recovered a
Payton fumble to set up
Chester Marcol's 41-yard
field goal in the first quarter,
the game's first score, ' and
returned an intercepted pass
63 yards for a touchdown in
the third quarter.
The victory at home sent
the astonishing Packers, l&gt;-1,
two games ahead in the NFC
Central, where they were

Alliso·n easy winner

I

I

By KENNE'm R. CLARK
UDited PressiDteroaUooal
OAKIE 'IRmU'I'E: Rita Hayworth was dancing with host
Buddy Rogers at Pickfair mansion in Beverly Hills, Calif.,
when Cesar Romero cut in for a waltz. The hostess, Mary
Plcldord, remained reclusive, staying inside while 400 guests
mingled on the lawn. The occasion: a tribute to the late Jack
Oakie oo what would have been his 75th birthday. Proceeds
from the Sunday soiree go to the University of Southern
California's Jack Oakie Archives and Scholarship Fund. Also
on hand: Allee Faye, WinDle Gibson, Jane Withers, Toby Wing,
Efrem ZlmbaUst Jr., Virginia Mayo and Oakie's widow,
Victoria .
HOME AGAIN : The race is on in Nashville, and Ibis year,
Dolly Parton thinks she's been forgiven . That could be bad
news for Ronnie MUsap, wbo hopes to repeat his sweep last
year1 of the Country Music As110ciation awards. Dolly was
frozen out then after she hired a Los Angeles management
firm to steer her career out of "pure country.'' But she's a
runaway favorite in tonight's nominations. Says she, of critics
who want her to stay down home, "People like me - country
people with a lot of heart and soul-shouldn't be put in a circle :
and in a cage and told 'well , you're country and you can't go
out of Nashville.' Freedom is the sweetest thing in the world, I ·

..

CAPffAL COVENTRY: The Washington woes of Ham.Uton
Jordan grow again. Now he's a non-person in the eyes of high
society. He's vanished from the pages of the 49th edition of
Washington's Green Book - the capital's unofficial social
register. Banished with him is Presldeot Carter's appointments secretary Timothy Kraft. Publisher Jeaa Murray says
they were axed because the book sniffs disapproval at people
in the process of divocce . Then too, there's tbst matter of
" unpleasant notoriety" about Jordan's alleged disposal of a
drink down a woman's bodice. But Jordan -still the closest ·
thing the White House has to a chief of staff -probably won't
be hurting for dinner invitations.
HAVE MEGAPHONE, WILL TRAVEL: Fifty years ago
today, New York's famed Co!iacabana opened Its doors for the
first time, and on stage for the debut was a young crooner '
billed as the "Vagabond Lover." He won't need the megaphone
that became his trademark tonight, but Rudy Vallee will be
back, helping the club celebrate its golden anniversary.
PIZZA,PLUS: Here's food for thought: an 80-foot pizza,
baked in a 2S-acre field atop 200 4-by~oot carbon steel plates
heated by 40 propane burners. It's also food for the Gumne!ltl ·
Book of World Recocds and the record LoreDIO Amato broke &lt;
Sunday in Wilton, N.Y., was his own. Last Columbus Day, •
Amato-entered the record book with a 4Moot pizza. This year's .
__redoubled effort was sold amid rain, snow. and hail to collect
$5,000 foc the Muscular Dystrophy Association. Amato's
recipe: Take 5 tons of flour. Add 664 gallons of water, 316 •
gallons of 'pizza sauce and 1,320 pounds of cheese. Sprinkle
generously with l,200pounda of pepperoni ... and enjoy.
GUMPSES: Toay Orlaudo was in Chicago Sunday, promoting his new business, called "Klng Mutt" - a firm that ·
makes "Christmas gifts for dogs who have everything" ~
Including disco shirts, elaborate leashes and sequine&lt;l evening .
gowns foc "doggie debutantes" ... Betty Ford - and her new '
face- outshined the Hollywood stars Friday at a tesUmoolal •
to Fred Allaire, unveiling results of her facellft in her first •
public appearance since surgery in the company of Raben :
Stack, Steve Allen, Lome Greene and Jeau Stapleton ...

REPORT AWArrm
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Police expect a report
tl) li71byNEA.In&lt;.
Tuesday on the death of an
lnfant.wbose body was found
Saturday In a suitcase in a
trash container.
"Would you kindly stop regarding Howard
The badly decomposed
Cose/1 with mild bemusement - you're
body was sent to the Fra'*lln
ID 1934, King Alexander of
driving me NUTS/"
Cowtty coroner to determine
Yugoalavla was P"essinated
the age and sex of the Infant
by a Croatlin terrorlat during
and to determine how and
a state visit to France.
when it died.
L-----------------------~

Jeffrey A. Waylaod
5-8, 130 lbs.
Soph. ead·CB

Bob Carpenter
5-10,190 lbs.
Jr. tackle

MIAMI (UP!) - Cincinnati
Coach Homer Rice and
quarterback Ken Anderson
hope tonight will be the start
of a turnaround for the
winless Bengals when they
take oo the healing Miami
Dolphins.
Cincinnati has gone down to
defeat in five regular •season
games, a performance that
led to the resignation of
Coach Bill Johnson last week
and the promotion of "Rice,
the team 's quarterba ck
coach.
Rice sees his fLrst task as
" bringing the lroops hack
together," but that may not
be easily accomplished if
linebacker GleM Cameron's
assessment ·is cocrect.
"The
defense
starts
fighting with the offense, the
offense hates the defense and
the thing just goes from
there," Cameron said last
week. " I can't really tell you
in words how bad it is."
A big part of the Bengals'

slide can be blamed on the
loss of Anderson to a hand
injury in the fll'st game of the
season. The eighth-year pro
came back last week, only to
throw four interceptions in a
26-12 loss to San Francisco.
" You've got to believe be 's

going to be much more ready
to play this week ," Dolphm
Coach Don Shula said .
Shuia's No. I quarterback,
Bob Griese, will be suited up
on the sidelines tonight for
the first time during the

Jim Gilliam, 49,
claimed Sunday

INGLEWOOD, Calif. ( UP!) Brooklyn Dodgers ill 1953,
-Jim '•Junior'' Gilliam once when he was named National
said baseball was in his blood League Rookie of the Year.
and would stay there until the The switchhitting infielder
day he died
was voted to the All-Star
The Los Angeles Dodgers' team in 1956 and 1959,
first base coach died late although he did not play m
Sunday night from the r esults 1956.
of
a
massive
brain
Gtlliam became an out·
hemorrhage suffered Sept. field er and
eventually
15. He was 49.
bumped Jackie Robinson
Gilliam underwent more from second to third base.
than seven hours of brain Perhaps his biggest 3SSI!t w
surgery last month and a the Dodgers of the 60s was
spokesman for
Damei hitting in the second spot
Freeman Hospital said beh ind
Maury
Wtlls,
Gilliam died at approx 1- protecting the speedster on
mately 10:55 p.m . PDT U1e bases .•
without e ver regaining
He played in seve n
consciousness from the coma World Senes, three in
yards to the Chicago 15. he lapsed into following Brooklyn and four m Los
Moments later , Terdell SIU'gery.
Angeles, with perhaps · his
Middleton scored from the
The Dodgers, who clinched best year in 1956, when he
two to give Green Bay a 16-0 the National League pennant batted .300 with 178 hits and
lead.
Saturday, have said they are 102 runs scored.
Leo Durocher once praised
Luke's touchdown followed " dedicating the World
later in the third quarter. Series" to Gilliam, who spent Gilliam as the man who
After Avellini threw the first 26 years with the team in "does everythmg nght ... he
of his two fourth-quarter TD various capacities
never misses a stgn."
passes to James Scott, David
Although
never
an
The Dodgers kept trymg w
Whitehurst sent the Packers overpowering hitter - his retire Gilliam, who would
in front 24-7 two plays later career batting average in 14 keep in shape by taking
infteld practice regularly. So
with a 58-yard scoring pass to seasons was only .265 rookie James Lofton.
Gilliam was a ve rsatile , w~n the team would call hun
The day's majoc upset took · · player who could handle:·, , back w acttve duty , the
place in San Diego where the second and thtrd base and player was ready.
He first retired in 1962, then
Chargers recorded their first then move with equal skill to
victory under new coach Don the .o~tfteld .
.
returned to the active list
Gilltam came to the btg May 28, 1963. He was made a
Coryell by holding tfte Denver
Broncostol66totai.Y.B!"d,s.and leagues out of Nashville, c9a ch again the ~ext year,
taking advjntage of five Tenn ., . where he l)egan re placmg the flery Leo
furnovers in "23'() . trhiinp!l." playillg ill the ~egro leagues. Duro&lt;; her . and becommg the
The Chargers scored in the
He broke mto th~ Dodger thU'd Negro coach m the
first baU on Don Woods' 1- rmnor league orgaruzation m m&amp;Jor league.
yard run and a 14-yard pass 1951, playing two years in
from Dao Fouts to Hank Mo~treal before joining the
Bauer . Rolf Benirschke
Person to person
added three field goals in the
health insurance
second haU.
·
"It feels great," Fouls said
of San Diego's second wm m
It can help pay
six games. "We were well
prepared by our coaching
sciarlng hospital
staff. Coryell really got us
and surgical billa.
ready. Any team reflects its
Call me.
coach like a child reflects its
parents. There Is a different
kind of emotion ·with the team
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
now.''
992-llSS
Boston
Celtics are find ing out 149 S. Third
In other games, it was tbe
New York Jets 45 Buffalo 14, what it means to be without Middleport, 0 .
New England 24 Philadelphia playmaker John Havlicek.
The former Ohio State star
\lUI t H/11
14, Cleveland 24 New Orleans
STA!f fAR~ lo4 UlU Al
retired
from professional
16, Tampa Bay 30 Kansas
lwtDil!o!l'l! ln~u~ ~ ~ e C""'a1or
Hom~ tl!!!lr
City 13, Baltimore 30 St. Louis basketball after last season.
~1oom1n ~1 0fl ll •~rn!
Boston
Coach
Tom
Sanders
17, Washington 21 Detroit 19,
Pittsburgh 31 Atlanta 7, Oak- says his club needs "more
land 21 Houston 17, Dallas 24 balance in our play selection,
New York Giants 3, Los do a better job on the boards,
Angeles 27 San Francisco 10 sharpen the offe ns e, a nd
and Seattle 29 Minnesota 28. shoot better ."
His comments came after
Cincinnati seeks its first
the
Philadelphia 76crs
win tonight at Miami, which
defeated
the Celtics 110-102
hopes to keep pace with New
.
Sunday
rught
in an exh1bitton
Englaixl in the AFC East: ..
game in Columbus.
Philadelphia led all the
Jets 45, BU!s 14
Kevin Long ran for three way, getting 23 points from
touchdowns, Burgess Owens Julius Erving and 21 from
returned an interception 40 Doug Collms However, theU'
yards fcc a score and Bruce individual performa nces
Harper bad an 82-yard TD were overshadowed by B tU~, ..
run on a punt return during a Knight and Earl Willia m~,;
35-point first-hall burst for who each had 24 points for
the Jets at home. The Jets, Boston.
though completing only four
But Philadelphia's Steve
passes, turned a blocked Mix and Uoyd Free came off
punt, a pass interception, a the bench to dump in 15 and 12
punt return and two fumble points respectively.
After pointing out the probrecoveries into scores to end
their three-ga me . losing lem areas the Celtics will
streak.
have to work on, Sanders
added : "You have to
Patriots 24, Eagles If
New England won its third. remember that we have a lot
staight when Steve Grogan of new players and a lot of
threw a 58-yard TD pass to new attitudes out there a nd it
Stanley Morgan and Sam will take time for them to
Cunningham
and
Don mesh together. "
One area which pleased
Callioun each scored on short
runs. Philadelphia, which Sanders was the play of
bad outsccced its opponents Williams, a free agent out of
Winston-Salem, N.C.
62-20 in the fourth quarter in
· " He (Williams) was just
its first five games, was held
scoreless in the final period at super," he said~ ''but he has
Foxboro, Mass. The Eagles been that way since day one
of our training. camp. "
had won three straight.
'

Packers shock Bears

Peopletalk

guess."

Van Willford
6-0, 170 lbs.
Jr. FB-LB

Rice makes debut tonight

.,
In 1910, foceet fires in •
northern Minnesota ,
destroyed sill towns .with a
loss of 400 lives and damage •
estimated at $100 rniiUon.

CHARLOTIE, N.C. (UP!)
- Bobby Allison's recent
health problems seemed to
have no effect on him SundBy
as he drove a Bud Mooreprepared Ford to an easy
victory in the National 500
stock car race.
The 4().yearo()!d Hueytown,
Ala., driver picked up his
fourth victccy of the season
and $40,000 in the 3lh&lt;lecond
win over Darrell Waltrip at
Charlotte Motor Speedway.
"I would say things really
went well for us, " Allison
said. "The car handled
extremely well and ran real
good . It was fust, it droo,re
good and it turned the comers
really good.''
Allison's chances were
greatly improved after
mechanical problems took
Cale Yarborough
and
Richard Petty out of
contention with less than 200
miles to go in the 334-lap
event.

Yarborough, stili in good
position to win a thtrd
consecutive Winston Cup
points championship despite
his 22nd place finish, lost 24
laps while his crew took 13
minutes to exchange engines
in his Oldsmobile.
Petty, making his best
showing since switching from
a Dodge to a Chevrolet, led
102 laps before a fouled
ingition ruined the chance for
his first victory in 15 months.
Allison led 106 of the final
129laps, including the last 61,
and finished 30.3 seconds
ahead of Waltrip, who passed
Dave Marcis at the finish
line . Marcis had to coast the
final lap - out of gas.
Donnie Allison finished
fourth, barely in the same lap
with his brother, and polesitter David Pearson was
fifth, one lap back.
"The car was loose (no
traction) all day and , as the
track got slicker, the looser

0

we got,'' Pearson said.
Petty fmished 27th, but was
pleased with the performance .
of his car.
"That was the best yet for
this car," be said. "The car
ran good and handled good.
" This lets our team know
that we have caught up. We
should be ready to win

now."

again for diamond title
makes us want to come back
and prove that we should
have won last year. It's not
always the case of the best
team winning. I thought we
bad better players last year,
but they (the Yankees) did a
better job. I also felt the Red
Sox were .a better team than
the Yankees this year."
The 75th World Series will
begin Tuesday at Dodger
Stadium(8:30p.m. EDT) and
will mark the loth time tbe
Yankees and Dodgers have
met to settle baseball's
biggest stakes. Yankee
manager Bob Lemon selected
right-ltander Ed Figueroa to
be his opening game starter,
while Dodger skipper Tommy
Lasorda was leaning to
veteran left-bander Tommy
Jolui over 19-game winner
Burt Hooton .
"There's no doubt we're
goihg to win this time," said
Lasorda confidently. " I can't
put it any clearer. I'm just so
gratified we dedicated the
playoffs to a great man, a
great human being, Jimmy
GUUam. We dedicated the
permant to him and we're
dedicating the Fall Cla~ic to

a

Falcons
outscore
Rockets

Allison, who has been
hospitalized several times in
United Press International
recent months because of
Mike Wright not only gets
nagging health problems , kind words from his own
said he planned to return to coach wben he engineers a
the Mayo Clinic after big win; he also rakes in
participating
in
an praise from the camp of tbe
International Race of Cham- defeated.
·
"Mike will make the type of
pions event next week .
"I'm going back to the player
that
other
hospital," he said . "At the quar te rbacks can't, ' '
end of last year and early this Bowting Green Coach Denny
year, I've had a lot of trouble Stolz said after his signalwith nausea. I've lost weight caller passed foc a pair of
touchdowns and ran for two
and got weak. "
He said doctors have found more Saturday to spark the
nothing to pinpoint the cause nation ' s second-leading
for the problems and further · offensive team to a 4~27 Midtests are scheduled.
American Conference victory
over winless Toledo.
Wright, lauded as " lruiy
outstanding" by Stolz, rushed
131 yards and passed 210
more for 341 yards total
offense, one yard short of tbe
team record.
"Mike Wright is the guy
who made the difference,"
Rockets Coach Chuck Stobart
agreed. "We just weren't
problems. While the Dodger quick enough to stop him.''
staff is well-cested, Lemon
"We surely put points oo
will have the luxury of using the sccceboard," s~id Stolz.
his ace, 25-game winner Ron
"They did some things
Gwdry, only twice. Guidry
differently •nd surprised us,
pitched Saturday night's 2-1
and so did we .''
pennantclincheroverFUulsas
Central Michigan punched
City and will not be available over two last haU touchdowns
now until the third game in ,
at Athens to ge.t a 17~ ..MAC
New York on Friday.
win over Ohio Uni_versity ~ ~ ,
"I'm not really so anxious game where junror runrung
to play them (the Dodgers)
back Will Young gained liO
again," said the Yankees' yards in 24 carries and scored
Reggie Jackson. "That's be- me touchdown.
cause we played them last
Western Michigan's star
year and you know they'll be running ba~k, Jerome
up for us."
Persell, was disappomted m
SANTA MARIA. Calif. no! ~reakmg the record for
(UP I )-Rex Caldwell of gammg more tha~ 200 yards
Lompoc, Calif., fired a 9- m four consecutive games.
under par 63 Sunday He "!as held to 99 yards in 30
including two eagles and six ~mes but satd the 14-0 MAC
birdies to capture the wm over Kent State was more
Califocnia State Open golf imPortant.
Western tallied a TD in
tournament by me stroke.
each
of the last two quarters.
Caldwell's 63 tied the Santa
" Ke,!JI Slate's defense was
Maria Country Club record.
His 277 total was one shot oo me all day, " PerseU said.
better tbsn that of rumer-up "However, the main thing is
Dave Barr wbo led entering that we won the game, that's
what counts."
the final round.

It's Yanks vs. Dodgers
LOS -ANGELES (UP! )
Money. Whether it be the root
of all evil or what makes tbe
world go 'round it is most
certainly what this 1978
Wocld Series between the
New York Yankees and Los
Angeles Dodgers is all about.
With the two largest media
markets in ~he ' copntry
meeting for the second
straight year, the TV
networks are happy, the
advertising people are happy,
the show-biz types are happy
and, yes, even the players are
happy.
"Alii know," said Reggie
Smith, right fielder for the
National League champion
Dodgers, "is that when I was
in my first Wocld Series - in
1967 with the Red Sox - tbe
loser's share that year was
$5,000 and the winners got
eight. Last year, we got
$21,000 fcc losing. I'm glad
the Yaokees are back in it
again because it gives us tbe
opportunity to make more
money because of the size of
their ballpark.
"Believe me, money is the
reason I. play this game."
, Last year, the Yankees
· took the Dodgers in sill games
and both cluba made more
money than ever before.
What makes this year's
rematch even more enticing
to all concerned is the fact
that most observers feel the
Dodgers are a r.11H"h better
balldub this time and a series
that goes the full seven
games is
a
distinct
poaalbillty.
"l'mgratefulfoc the opportunity to play the Yankees
again," said Smith . "It

picked to flounder near the
bottom . Chicago, Minnesota
and Tampa Bay are each :h'!.
The Bears gained more
than twice as much yardage
as Green Bay (357 to 166) but
were undone by three
interceptions
and
two
fumbles . Payton was held to
82 yards in 19 carries as
Chicago lost its third straight.
In the third quarter, defensive end Mike BuUer forced
the second of Bob Avellini's
interceptions by hitting the
Chicago quarterback's arm
as he, was throwing. The ball
dropped into the hands of a
surprised carl Barzilauskns,
a tackle, who rumbled 5

Celts lose
exhibJ"tJ•Qfi

encounter

Cnst001 full.
In one « two dags
Our staff or dentists and
technicians w1 ll make your
custom dentures qmckly and
economically

him."
Gilliam, a Dodger coach
and member of
the
ocganizaUon since 1953, died
early today. He bad been in a
coma since suffering a brain
hemmorhage
in
mid September.
Besides emoti on
the
Dodgers have some other
factors going foc them.
Most signifcantly, the Yankees, having been fcrced to a
playoff with Bostm to get into
the playoffs, have pitching

.

denture serv1ce,
partials &amp; relines.

regular season, but it is
unlikely he'll see action
Shuia said if everything
works out and fe els good at
game time, '' I wou ld
consider" using Griese if
there were a situation "where
it would be advantageous to
get him in the game."
Fullback Leroy Harris also
will start after sitting out two
games wtth ao ankle injury .
Defensively, things are
startmg to get back to where
Shula had hoped they would
be, with the return to the
starting lineup of end A:J .
Duhe and linebacker Steve
Towle.
Duhe, the 1977 AFC Rookie
of the Year who underwe nt
knee surgery in August, has
seen only spot duty behind
rookie Doug Betters SQ far
this season.
Towle has missed three
games with a knee injury that
required two weeks in a cast .
He wilt repla ce Earnie
Rhone, who has been
hampered by a sore elbow.
Bob Matheson , the other
middle line backe r, wtll
remain on the sidelines with a
back injury suffered two
weeks ago. Rusty Chambers,
who now leads the team in
tackles, ts his replacement.

Prevention is
the be st policy ...

'

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
Young men and women
ofte n ask w hy they have to
pay
more
for
the i r
automobile Insurance.
Drivers 1n their teens and

ear lier twenties cause far
more than their share of
traffi c accidents . Repor ts

th e

Na t &lt;onal

Safe ty

Council : 21.a percent of all
motori sts are 24 yea rs of
age or under, yet the se
y outhful operators are
involved as dr ivers in 38.6
per cent of all acc1dents
an d 37 3 per cen t Of all fata l
mishaps

A great many young
peo ple
are
ski l le d ,
re s pon s ible

driver s

Obv iou sly, though, qu1te a
few are not .
Ther e's no substitute fOf'"
development com pete nce
and the r 1ght attitudes ,
Inc ludin g
a
positive
a ppr oac h to def ens i ve
dri vi ng .

Our a gency

pro v l c' ~s

1inanc1a l prote ction and
ser'VIte In case of accidents
Involving young driver s ...
but
many
of
these
acci dent s
can
be
pr evented . That's why we
sa y - prevention isj the
bes t policy

DALE C. WARNER
992-2143
102 W. MaIn
Pomeroy

Every night Tommy
gets ready for his dad
to come home.

There are a lot of
childre n out t here like
Tommy, a bused b y parents
who badly need help
before they do something
they may live to regret
· forev er.
You may be surprised
to learn that the United '

Boy's Clubs, or maybe the
Girl Scouts.
The truth is that th e
United Way, th ,:ugh older
agencies s uch a s the
YMCA and YWCA a nd
other newe r agencies,
supports many non·
traditional services.
As the n ~eds of your
Wny is doing o;;:.n rn"thinrr1 n
1 '1tl ·p von
' ,, '

,,

'&gt;1, I

d ol) ,

J V •~ p h . .

think of tbe

.

II

~

.1

'

tht. 1 L \,do11g1ng with

YMCA, ...... them .

I.JnltMIW.W

..

1

!Ia.,... · - - " " · " ' -

A p,1bllc servtce
ol This Nt!wSpApel ~The Adve r t l t~lnQ Counci l
'"-&gt;kJi

�t- Ine uauy ~;eDIUlel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . Monday , l.kt 9l!ll8
NFL Standings
Bv Un ited Press tnternat•onat
Amencan Conference

East
W L T Pet
New Engla nd

4

M 1a m 1
NY Jet s

3

2
2
3
4
4

3

,.'

Buffal o
Balttmore

0
0
0
0
0

661

600
500
333
333

Central

W L T Pet
6
.t
3

Pittsburgh
C l eve l ~t nd

"'

Hou ston

0
2
3
5

0

C•nCnn at•

0 1 000
667
0
500
0

0

000

BEULAH RESULTS
GROVE
CITY, Ohio (UP!)
Or r v tll e .40 T usca r awas
Valley 6
- Brent's Dancer led wtre to
Poland 17 W Branch 6
wtre Sunday m winning the
Sa ndy VAlley 33 Malvern 11 $21,800 Red Rose Handicap
Wheetrng (W Va J Cent 14
by a head over favored Bold
Steubenville Cen Cath• 11
Youngstown S 27 Youngstown Soctety at Beulah Park
E 0
Noble Card showed
Western Res Academy 26
Wll!ner, rtdden over the
The
Cuyahoga His 7

Ohto H1gh School

E 12

Football Results
Untted Press lnternattonal
Akron E 14 Ak ron S 6
Akron F ~res tone 17 Akr on
Cent Hower 0
Carroll ton 14 E Canton 0
Cle Holy Name 6 Bedford
Chane! 6 (t te)
Hawken School 44 Ledgemon t

13
Jewett Sc 1o 3 Strasburg 0
K~rttand 43 ~ le Hls Lutheran

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPI )
mile and !-16th m 1:44 3-5 by
Three-time Horae of the
Juan T~rres, returned $16 60,
Year
Forego wUl briefly
$5 60 and $4.80.
mterrupt
hill retirement lhil
The 3-4 datly double
Frulay
to
make a public
e&lt;mbmalloo of MighUator
appearance
at Keeneland
and Pine Pal as worth $147 80.
Attendance was 6,082 and Race Course
The 8-year~ld gelding
the handle $661,487.
recently reUred by o'wner
Mrs. Edward Gerry to John
Ward Jr.'s trainlnll center.

wUI parade under stlks at the

--··----

early training

track where he received hls

.

II1

OPTOMnRIST

1::::

OFFICE HOURS: 9:30 to 12,2 to s (CL.OSE
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COURT

1 :;:

I ·.:;

1-!~~2~!!2~-----~-·------jr f ·--

..

W L T Pet
4
4

2 0
2 0

3

3 0

Sa n 0 ego

2
1

'
5

Kansas Cdy

667
667
500
333

0
0

167

Nat•onal Conference
East

W l T Pet
6 001000
4 2 0
667
3 30
500
33 0
500
06 0
000

Wash 1ng ton

Da llas

NY Gt ants
Ph l adelph1a
St L OUIS

Green Bay
Ch cago

BALLOT LANGUAGE, EXPLANATIONS, ARGUMENTS, AND
RESOLUTIONS FOR AMENDMENTS TO THE OHIO
CONSTITUTION PROPOSED BY THE GENERAL
ASSEMBLY TO BE SUBMITTED TO THE VOTERS AT
THE GENERAL ELECTION, NOVEMBER 7, 1978

PROPOSED AMEND NT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION

Central
W L T Pet
5 1 0
833
J
3 0
500

M1nn esota
Tam pa Ba y
Detro•!

3

3 0

500

3
1

3 0
5 0

500
167

West

W L T Pe t
6 0 0 1 000
2 4 0
333
2 4 0
333
I 5 a
167

Los Ange les
New Orlean s
At lanta
San~r anc• SC

sunday's Resuns

1

New Eng lan d 74 P hllad etph•a

13

'
Balt•m o re 30 St Lou• s 17
Gr ee n Bay 24 Ch ic ago 14
Cleveland 24 New Orleans 16
San Oteg o 23 Den v er 0
Oak la nd 21 Houston 17
Sea ttl e 29 M nn eso t a 28
Dalla s 24 N ew Y ork G tant s 3
Los An g eles 27 San F r anc ts
co 10

Monday's Game

Cmc rnn a tr at Mlam t 9 p m
Su nda y, October 15

TO MODIFY THE PROCEDURES BY WHICH THE VOTERS OF A
COUNTY MAY ADOPT. AMEND. OR REPEAL A CHARTER FORM
OF COUNTY GOVERNMENT.

co

4p

m

Monday, October 14

Chtcago at Denver 9 p m

College results
•

Southwest

Sf

lOUI Siana 14

C

Arkansas

23,
17

NW
Ark

-

-T~o

I

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADO PTED'

I
EXPLANATION OF ISSUE NO. I (ao prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board!
The Conshtutwn now con tains proviSions for the p eople o( any county
to frame and adopt a ch ~ rter Such cha rters provtde for the form of government of the county and may mclude the duhes of each county officer
The amendment to Section 4 of Article X would
I. Reduce th&lt;&gt; n umber of signat ures r eqmred on a pellbon from 10% to
8% of the electors m a county to place on the ballot at a general election
a proposed amendment to an extstmg charter, or a proposal to select
a charter conurusston to draft a county charte r or propose amendments
to a n ex1stmg charter
2 Penmt e lectors t o place a proposed ch a rte r on the ballot by subnuttmg
the proposal b y a pehtwn stgne d by 10% of the electors to the county

comnuss10ners.

3. Requtre that a proposed charter amendment relate to one subJect only.
4. ProVIde t hat 1f more than one charter, or conflichng amendments are
5

10

NE Loutstana 17, Lamar 17
N Texas St 35 West Texas

St

o

Oklahoma 3\, Texas 10
Ouachlta 41, S Arkansas 6
SW Louisiana '24, Louisiana
Tech 6
Texas A&amp;M 38, Texas Tech 9
Tex Arl tngton 28, N M ex St

6
7

17
Tul sa 24 Louts vtlle 7

8

West
Alabama 20, Washrngton 17

9

Callforma 21 Oregon 18

Cat Luth 37, OCCidental 0
Clare Mudd 25, USIU 20
Colorado 17, Kansas 7

10

Colorado M1nes 31. Mesa Coli • •

24
Colorado Sf 39 Tex -EI Paso 29
Fort
Lew ts 10,
NW
Htghtands 6
Long Beach Sf 24, No Ill 19
Montana Sf 21 , Weber St 14
Navy 37, A1r For ce 8

Nev Las Vegas 53, Idaho 14
New Mex1co \9 Wyommg 15
No
Artz
31,
Ca l Poly
Pomona 3
San Otego St Jl, Fresno Sf 14

Sa nta Clara 19, Northndge 7
UC LA 27, Stanford 26
Uta h 51 24 BYU 7
Western St 31 Adams St 18

How they fared
NEW YORK &lt;UPI J - How
the top 20 UP I college football
teams fared on Sa turday
Oct 7
1 Oklahoma (5 OJ beat
Texas 31 10

2 Sou thern Cat (4 OJ was

1dle

3 Mtchtgan (4 OJ beat

Anzona 21 l7

4

Penn

Sf

(6 OJ

beat

Kentucky 30 0

5 Arkansas (4 OJ beat TCU
42 3
6 Texas (3 1) lost to
Oklahoma 31 10
7 Texas A8.M (4 OJ beat
Texas Tech 38 9

8

Alabama (4 t J beat

Washmgton 20 17

9 Pi ttsburg h (4 OJ beat
Boston College 32 15
10 Nebraska 14 ll beat
l&lt;jWa Sf 23 0
11 LSU 14 OJ beat Ftonda
34 21
12 Colorado (5 OJ beat
Ka nsas 17 7

13

Maryland

(5 OJ beat

Nort h Carol ma State 31 7

14 Ohro Sf (2 1 1) !ted
ISMU 35 35
15 Iowa Sf ( 4 1) lost to
Nebraska 23 0
16
UCLA (3 1J beat
Stanford 27 26
17 Houston (3 ll beat
Baylor 20 18
18 Stanford (3 1J lost to
UCLA 27 26
19 N c State (4 ll lost to
Maryland 31 7
20 Auburn I 3 1) lost to
Miami 17 15

In 1975, Andrei Sakharov,
fllther of the Sovtel hydrogen
bomb, became the ftrst
Russian cttizen to wm the
Nobel Peace Prize

- A thought for the day
•

•

American novelist Wllla
Cather sald, "No me can
build his secunty upoo the
nobleness of another person."

12

voted on at the same electwn, the charter or amendment recetvmg
the most votes, not less than a maJonty, 1s adopted
Permtl an electwn on the·repea1 of a county charter if ~~ of the county
conumsstoners vote to hold the election or If the e lect1on IS petitioned
for by 8% of the electors of the county
_
C hange from 60 to 95 days the mirumum hme required between the
board of electwns' cerbficat10n of the stgnatures on the petition and
the electwn at whLCh the proposal1s to be voted upon
Specify that the requued pubhcatlon of charter proposals to the
e lectors occur at least 30 days pnor t o the election and that notice of
proposed charter amendments may be given lly n ewspaper advertlsmg
if provtded by Ia w
R eqmre county comrrusstoners to appropnate funds for the operation
and expense of a county charter comrmss10n
AuthoriZe the General Assembly to prov1de by law for the organizatiOn
and operatiOn of a county charter commtsston
Change the time at whtch a person must file to qualify as a candtdate
for member of the county charter commission
Permit up to four public office holders to be elected as members of a
15-member county charter comm1ss10n and perm1t members of a county
charter commtsswn to run for public office (Current provtswns of the
Ohto Constitution are stlent on these pomts)
Permit a county ch arter commtsston to resubmtt a defeated charter,
or revtse and subm1t a defeated charter, one time only (Thts can only
be done at the nex t gen era l electwn or at any mtervemng countyWide
election)

ARGUME~T FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

HELP YOUR COUNTY GOVERNMENT RESPOND TO CITIZEN NEEDS
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
Issue I makes 1t eas t~r for you to put a county charter on the ballot
A county charter allows .the people to change the general state-mandated
form of cou nty governm ent to one tailored to thetr spectfic needs
The advantages to local residents would be
• Decreases the number of sign atures needed on a ch arter commtsston
pehtwn
• Makes posstble the s u bmtsswn of a charter to the voters b y pehtlon ,
bypassmg the charter comnusswn
• Provtdes a method for repeal
• No more than fou1 elected offictals on a charter commtssJon
• One r esubmtsswn of a charter
LET 'S LEARN FROM EXPERIENCE~
HELP ST REAMLINE THE PROCESS - VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
Outdated language and gaps m our consbtutw n have made adopting a
charter a contused and di ffic ult process Issue 1 would stmphfy that process
by makmg mechamcal ch an ges , whtle preservufg the ongmal concept of
charter government Issue I would remove the doubt surroundmg the
adopt iOn of county charte rs, allowm g you to vote lust as before but on the
merits of a charter
ISSUE I MEANS PROGRESSIVE COUNTY GOVERNMENT
VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
County charters are needed more today with ever mcreasmg urban
pressures and dema nds for serviCe Without creating any new government
a charter can give cthes a strong partner m the county After all local
governme nts know best what local n eeds are
Issue 1 will benefit all Ohwans It saves t1me and money It mcreases
your abthty to control your own government Issue I gtves you a better
chance to vote on the best government-responstve to your needs
ISSUE l I S YO UR GOVERNMENT
VOTE YES ON ISSUE l
Commtttee For t h e Amendment Kenneth R Cox, P ete Crossland and
Helen Fix
ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
'

This proposed constllutwnal amendment would make it easier to change
the ex tstmg form of local and county governments in Ohio
The Oh10 Constitution presently proVIdes a means by whiCh voters can
dectde whether they want a county charter form of government. Proponents
of county cha rter form of government have fatled repeatedly since 1933 to
convmce voters to move towar d such government. These failures, however, should not now requtre any alteration or looserung of the present
mechamcs by whtch the voters dectde the question
•
The re ar e areas m our goverrunent that n eed change and improvement.
But th ·s 1s not one of them
Ch 1nge 1s essential to a growmg Democracy-but only change that has
been rl ocum en ted f rom demonstrated and proven need.
•
The ConstitutiOn should not be a ltered regardmg the way Ohioans decide
the questwn of county charter form of government. Vote NO on Issue 1
Comnuttee Against the Amendment. DonS Maddux and Bob MeEwen

dollars m the world

wc1s 1 ep01 tL'&lt;I M~ m ber s f11led
y ut pledge ra nis and th e pro-

ston, notmg that the d!Vlsl!ln gra m do~ed with pr t~yc•
ts one of the .seven tlivtsruns of
Bc1me~ Bmlcy p i t Sid ed a t
the Boa rd of Globa l the husmcss uu etmg OfM1mstnes 1espunsrllle fur the fa_crs' rcpoi ts wc1e giVen
mi.sswn oul1 each of Ute and a lt'adc1 shrp tr auung
Umtc'&lt;l Methodtst Chut cl1
wur ks hup fo1 all ofhcet s was
Umted Me!hodtsl Women aJUJ UUJH..'ed fm Od ll Hl the
gtven about $14,000,000 an Rutland Umted Me!h(J(h;t
nually through local umts. tl Chu1ch I .Wtu 4 p m

LETART FALlS-A SIXyear-old Indonesia chtld wtll
be sponsored by the Letart
Falls Untted Methudtst
Church Women, 1t was decided at a meelmg held recently
at the home of Mrs John Hill
Mrs
Andrew Cro s s
presented mformatwn on the
youngster who IS from the
over-populated ISland of
Java, her home environment
and the large and fatherless
famtly
Plans were made ilurmg

I. TO REMOVE THE CONSTITUTIONAL PROHIBITION AND REQUIREMENT REGARDING PRISON LABOR, ALLOWING THE
GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO REGULAtE THIS AREA BY LAW• .
2. TO REMOVE THE CONSTITUTIONAL RESTRICTIONS ON THE
SALE OF PRISON-MADE GOODS.

•&gt;

A maJonty affirmative vote 1s necessary for passage.

'
SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE AOOPTED'

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE NO.2 (u pnpared by the Ohio Ballot Board)
The Constitution presently requtres the General Assembly to pass laws
proVIding for the occupation and employment of prisonets m state penal
mstltullons Thts amendment elimmates that requrrement and allows the
General Assembly to pass such laws as are necessary. Existing laws providmg for pnson labor would remam m effect until amended or repealed by
the General Assembly.
The Constitutional prohibJilon agaJnst pnson contract labor whtch consists of pnson work which 1s to be sold, farmed out, contracted, or gtven
away ts repealed by the amendment The elinunatton of this Constitutional
prohibttlon would not authonze pnson contract labor smce 11 1s prohibited
by laws whtch remam m effect unless repealed by the General Assembly.
This amendment would allow the General Assembly to regulate in the
area of contract labor.
The repeal of the Consltlutwnal prohtbitwn agamst the public sale of
pnson-made goods not consptcuously marked "prison made" would not authome the sale of such goods smce this 1s currently prohibtted by law
which rematns m e ffect unless amended or repealed by the General
Assembly. Current Jaw prohibits the sale of pnson goods on the open
market even 1f specifically Jdentifie,d, but perrmts them to be diSposed of
to the state, 1ts political subdtVISY?ns, or state or local mstltullons The
Conslltutional amendment wouldj!,llow the General Assembly to regulate
the public sale of pnson-made ~ods

ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
Senate Jomt Resoluhon 23, 1f adopted, would undo the present conslltuttonal restncllons on the use of pnson labor and would giVe unfettered authority to the General Assembly to re~l~te conVIct labor without constitutional gutdelmes, or even to abohsh 1t completely.
The Ohio Consbtutwn m ,cludes a section, now sought to be deleted, which
Hally forb1ds the use of pnson labor in the market-place in competition with
pnvate mdustry T he language has been unchanged since the voters of
the state approved 11 m 1912, and we do not believe that in vtew of our
current economtc situatwn 1t should be changed at this time Since the
only known way to fight infiation results in more unemployment it is
very poor strategy to have state-subsidized prison labor throWing lawabidmg Citizens out of work
The federal case law suggests that prisoners would have to be patd at
least the mimmum wage; but on the other hand, if rented out for contract
labor, the prlson"rs m1ght be l"ft with little protection Thts sttuation
prompted the current conshtutional prohibition.
Why should we turn our backs on history by gtvlng this broad discretion
to the General Assembly' The argument is that "work-release" programs
must mclude "meanmgful employment" to be successful. We do not believe
that until meaningful employment Is plentiful for our citizens, we should
be apporttorung 1t out among those who have been proven to have engaged m antisocial conduct.
We are not wtlhng to vest m the General Assembly the authonty to
forbtd pnson labor, to make 11 lucrative for the pnsoners, or to hire their
labor to those who want to explOit It for profit We urge a vote against
changmg the Constitution for any of these purposes.
Commtttee Agamst the Amendment· William G Batchelder, Rtchard H .
Finan and AlanE Norris

GALLIPOLIS-- Descendants of Charley and M1nnte
Cox White held a reunwn
recenlly al the Galha County
fatrgrounds Fred Smtih gave
grace precedmg the potluck
dinner
Offtcers elected for the next
three years were Archte
Meadows, president; Ruth
Snuth, secretary, and Ethel
Banks, treasurer
Enlerlauunent was mustc
by Dewey Nibert and sons,
Gary and Davtd A game of
football was enJoyed by the
young people

•
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'••

IBIUB-1.
(Ameaded. a.nata Jolat RHDlu.lloa.
Ro U)

IOIKT JIEIOLVTIO.
to ame1111 11ec11oe 4 Of
Aitkda x of ... CollaJINdon o1

Pro~

u. llata 01 Obkt ....,.... 11w
.,..,• ..., aad prGC4tdue. ol
oo......, cbUtar a et•.. u , to
..... , . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lo . .
eleclloa Ml r;er'!C ·"-. of a
•: 111d. cbut• lD alectlOD w-

Iii-.topo....Upal&gt;lle-.

=__
boldaa

ao ...... • CDWIJT UUIIr

C'll
' ,...a
... •.....,
2

I

...

-

~· for ...
Clauler, 10 ...

.-be that a chuler .,....._..,.

:0 ':!t ,..ot~:

eunw
charta• 1o

.-..

to ,_... •

H •bm'n. . oa ,_._
of . . . . . . . . . . to tdiiUy

,
c~ elluter psol111- UC""

-

Bo It reool- b,. 11lo O.onl
AMernbl!' of tlte sto• of ~·01!10'
thrw-fttfha of the manbeft ewcwa
to eoc1t tltorolll.

1bat tb.ere shall be Mlbmltted to
the electon of the .tate 1n the
manner Pretcrtbed. by law at: the
pneral election to be held on the
1'lloldoy 11le lint Monday
in • November, :1878, a propoql to
am.,d uae cormttutton ot: the- state
of Obio by amendlna Sedlon 4 o1

-

ArtiOle X thenot ,u

follows.

were fmah zcd fur the

F: lcdrun Day dinnr 1 and
bazaar to be held on Tuesday.
Nov 7 I here wet e ~.l srck
calls matlc b) mcmUe1s tllll
m~ the month of September

the meetmg for a cover ed
dish dmner to be held 011 Nov
I at the home of Mr~ Don Bell
to wekome and honor all
women of the church At that
lime new officers will be Installed and a program will be
presented
Mrs Bert Grurun , prestdent, opened the meetm~
wrth an tnsptratwmil readmg
Devotions were g1ven by Ml s
Bell " hu read from the 143
Psalm and gave a prayer fot

guuJam:e She abo read ,
B1I ghten th e Corner
Whe1eve1 You fJI e
Dur rng the bu s i nes s
meetmg rt wa s noted that 20
shutm calls had bJvQ made
Mr s John Hill he!~ a Bible
study on the stxlh and
seventh chapte1 s of Matthew
The prog1am by M1s Bell

Mt s Inez Hr ll Sharmg by
M1 s H,u old Rou sh, Give
Me Farth · lly Mrs Alrce
Balser. Mur tUng P raycr by
Mrs
Cr uss,
1 houglllfulness " by Mrs John Hr ll
Wut t hi Bcss
bv Mrs
G1unm a11c.J Thanksglv1r1g'
b) Mrs Bell who dosed w1th
PI &lt;::IVCJ

was on faith ontl pu:1y e1 and

had been pt epared by Mrs
E1nest Shuler Readrngs mduded Be M) Gmde • by

Gue.st.s at the mcetmg wei e
MIS La rr) Turley and son
Kuk

''

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,

~

•
•
•
•
•
•
•

"'otr

may be passed to PI'Ovtde

orcantzatlon and procedures
county charter commtssJona tn-

clud.Jne the ftlltng Of any vacancy
which may occur and otherwise to
lacilitate- the operaUon of this section The basil upon which the re quired nwnber Of petitioners in any
case Provided for :In this •etlan
shall be determined , shall be the
total number of votes cast tn the
county for the omce of Govemor
'u' the last Precedin&amp; general elecon 111erefor

The foregoing provtslons ot th1J
section shall be seH-encutlng ex~t as herein otherwise provided
Etrective Date and Repeal
1ftoadopted by a majority of the
e1ec rB voting on this amendment
the amendment ahall take immed.l'
ate effect and existing section 4 Of
ArUc:le X shall be repealed from
such eflectlve date

•
•
•
•
•
•

the

Stale of

Priloa. labor.

Oblo

rt~htln... to

•

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•

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ate amlfendment shall take tmmed.te eet, and exii:Ung Section 41
gth~rt;h~J lib ot the Constitution ot
effective date~ !'@pealed. from. .SUch
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
OFFICE OP' TH1: SECRETARY
OJ' STATE

Sa ndy Drummond a nd
MIChael , Dwna Drwnmund
and .Jerem) , Ro btn, John , Jr
and Sharon Drummond ,
B1enda Hyde and Stephen,
Gary and Jamey, Mrs Loren
Taylor, Mr and Mrs Charl es
Casey, Mr and Mrs Larry
Casey and Charles , ,Mr and
Mrs Homer Davts and Patty,
Mrs Phrl Saunders and
Angte, Mrs Bob Phillips, Mr
and Mrs Rick Casey and
Bryan, Mrs Ma1 k Bayhss,
Sean, Jenny and Michael,
Dan, Mtke and Mar~ Casey
Mrs Rub) Meadows, Mr

and Mrs F red Smith and
James , Mrs Ge:ul Ro\\e and
Jenmfe1, Ronald Wagner, Archie MeHdO\\S and Earnest,
Mr and Mrs
Char les
Mee~do\\ S, Tcunmy and Tornmy, Mt and Mrs Doug
Meadm« and Timmy Mr
a nd Mrs Leo James, Terry

and Kelly , Mr

and Mrs

Homer War·ren, Mr and Mrs
Ronme Dovenbarger Rhon

da , Regenna Rebecca and
Mark
Vrs1t01 s were Rogel
Bmsden, Rhonda and .Jeff,
.J an ice Whtte, De bb ie
Ha;shrp and Eddie Russell

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:·•••
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• By Helen Hottel

Math contest scheduled

~FROM w;;;,P.ON'

-

SAYRE HARDWARE

Houdini 's final escape
Even m death, the Great
Houdmi , the world's greatest
esca pe a rttst, managed
another act of escape •
Hts last "t rtck" was to
qmetly assure that hts famtly
would escape hnanc1al
pn vat1on,
reports
the
American Council ol Ufe
Insurance For when Harry
Houdm1 dted utiexpectedly at
age 52 from a ruptured
krdney which became Infected, he left over $100,000 m
hfe msurance to h1s

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

I The Poet's I
1

Comer

1

beneftctartes
Held 5 Pollcles
Houdm1 dted on October 31,
1926 At that tune, he had five
separate pohctes - one for
$25 ,000 contammg a double
mdemnrty clause
Although Houdtm defied
death as part of hts regular
act for over 30 years, he was
not conSidered an UMusual
rtsk by hts hfe 1nsurance
company
The reason, accordmg to
the company, was that
throughout h1s ca reer,
Houdtm had never had an
acctdent of consequ ence And
he was m excellent phystcal
condition So the company
decided he was a safe rtsk
But on October 23 he was
struck an unexpected blow Ul
the abdomen Etght days
later he was dead

6·00 a.m. (one morning)
at 6 00 a rn (one mornmg )
1

THESE
molds used
atrcraft
such

stood on a mountam

and when the sun rose
1 grabbed a hold of 11, and
placed It w1thrn
my heart
tt's energy surged
through my spirit
In 1934, on an adjusted and 1 communed wtth
basrs, the real price of sugar all the elements of creatwn
was 13 7 cents a pound
when 1 spoke, spun gold
flowed from my hps
and Mrs Kathryn Rollms, and 1 knew , yes, 1 knew
Letart, v1stted thmr cousms, that for a mom ent
S1dney Durst and Mrs Iva 1 was God
Carpenter and daughter, on
t was free
Thursday afternoon
so free
Mrs Rtchard Abels, Long
(and 1 loved,
Bottom, VISited her s1ster,
truly, 1 loved)
Mr and Mrs Louts De Luz,
By Jun Brwer, Jr
on Wednesday evemng

NOT gtant pte pans Instead,
bowl-shaped wmdows for millitrury
fmisher Terry Morgan lllSpecls one
a Callf&lt;l'ma rurcraft products plant at

PPG
benefits are
cash wages. u~,......~ ·
of 1977 sugar

With

Stiversville News
Notes
Hupp have moved from

ARTICLE II
Section 41 Laws may be paged
providing for and re.rutattng the
~tion and employmenl ot
P
nen sentenced to the several
penal Institutions and refonnatortes
in tht&gt; atate
EFFECTIVE DATE AND REP!:AL
U adopted by a majority of the
~~:'tors voting on thl.s amendment.

Lmcoln Russell was a pound of sugar costs the
Saturday evenmg VISitor of American wage earner less
Iva Johnson
today than 1t dtd m 1947
Allee Russell return ed
How can that be when
home
from
Veterans everyone knows that a pound
Memonal Saturday and IS of sugar costs about 21 cents
at the grocery store 1
lmprovmg
Inflation IS the answer But,
Mr and Mrs Cecil Gtles
and family of N. Dakota have m laC\, spga r is cheaper than
returned and are at home ever when lis cost IS adjusted
Wllh Mr and Mrs. Clatr for inflation
Today,
the
average
Giles
Mrs
Howard Thoma American wage earner m the
VISited recently wtth Mr. and pnvate, non-agncultural job
Mrs. Eugene Underwood of sector, works jus! seconds
over two mmutes to earn
Tuppers Plam
Mrs
Howard Thoma enough to buy a pound of
visited Wednesday wtth Mr sugar In 1947. he and she had
and Mrs. Larry Barr and to work about five mmutes
In addtlwn, accordmg to
famlly of Rutland
Mr and Mrs. George Casto noted economtst Eliot
and son were recent VISitors Janeway, the real pnce of ·
of Mr and Mrs Paul Darnell sugar today IS below what It
was m 1934, when President
and Jeff.
Roosevelt signed the first U
S Sugar Act mto law
"In 1947, the retatl pnce of
sugar was 9 7 cents a pound,
whtch, when adjusted for
Mrs Eva McBnde and son, mflallon 1s 14% cents
"In 1977, the price " as up to
Kenneth, of East Liverpool,
21
62 cents, but, adJusted lor
Ohto, spent from Tuesday
mflatwn,
the 'real' prtce was
unttl Sunday With Mrs Goldie
down
to
119 cents,'' says
Fredertck of Chester.
Janeway
Mrs Opal Etchmger and
Further, Janeway says that
Laura Jean vtstted wtth them
when
the value of frm ge
Tuesday evemng. They spent
Wednesday at Ptketon
vtsttmg
Mr s
Hatt1e
Fredertck at the Pleasant
Mrs Esther Dalley has
Htll Convalescent Center
returned from a two weeks
Whtle here they called on visit at the home of her
Mr and Mrs Jack Fredenck daughter, Mr and Mrs Don
and family, Midilleport, Rt Crumbley and fanuly , East
I, Mr and Mrs. Jerry Liverpool
Freder1ck and fanuly and
Mrs Mik e Evans and
Mrs Mae Spencer and Matthew,
Brenda
a nd
Vance, umg Bottom, Rt I, Lawrence made a busmess
Mr and Mrs. Mtlford tnp to Nelsonville a recent
Frederick, Mlnersvtlle, Rt I, Fnday
Mrs Garnet Ervme and
Mrs Fannie Durst vtstted
family, Raclne, and Mr. and Ruda Durst and Mr. and Mrs
Mrs John Hayes, Mr. and Tun Wtlkmson and sons, m
Mrs Arthur Orr, Mr. and Columbus, for the past week
Mrs CurtiSS Wolf and Mr
Debra Bryant attended a
and Mrs. Roscoe Hollon of birthday - slumber party at
Chester
the home of K1tty Sellers
On Thursday, Mrs Mc- Saturday mght.
Bride spent the day wtth
Mr and Mrs George Hupp
some former classmates, and Mr _and Mrs. ._rno'd
Mrs Lucille Smtih, Mrs
Tlllle Baum, Mrs Mae
Lambert and Mrs. Grace
COLUMBUS Htkmg
Rawly
enthustasls
can'
enJOY
the
They had lunch at Bob
scemc
beauty
of
tbe
changmg
Evans Restaurant and spent
the afternoon vtsttmg a fall colors at Shawnee State
lonner school teacher, Mrs Park Oct. 2().21 dunng acFlor.ence Qutckel of VInton ttvilles scheduled as part of
the amual fall hike
The weekend outmg IS cosponsored by the Ohto
DREDGING BIDS
Department of Natural
BUFFALO, NY. (UPI) - Resources and the PortsBleil Will be asked about mouth Area Chamber of
Friday by the U.S. Anny Commerce
Corpe of Engineers from
ActiVIties wtll begm F rtday
cmunerdal contractors for evenmg (Oct 20) at 8 p m
the dredging of some 250,000 around a campfire near the
cubic yards of material from park's campground check-m
Sandusky (Ohio) Harbor.
station
'l1le work. estimated at
Events on Saturday (Oct
~ween ll million and l5
21) Will Include a five-hour
mllllm, 18 to be c&lt;mpleted by gulded nature hike, to start at
Jan. 6
9 a m at the check-m station

Lang Bottom
News Notes

ISSUE Z

(AmertUd Bertate lolnt a .. oluUon
Mo. 21)
lODtT REIOLUTIOJf
Propoe.lar to amend S.ctiOD 41 of
Arf:kle II of tb. CollltlhtHOil of

Altendmg were Mr and
Mrs Bill Russell, Don and
Nancy, Mrs Ethel Banks a nd
Rusty, Mr and Mrs Eddie
FeusteJ, L1sa , Teresa , and
Kimberly, Mr and Mrs
Butch Tnplelt, Rhonda ,
Paula and Butchte, Mrs Sandi a Comer, Todd, Kelh and
Ta1rum, Mr and Mrs Terry
Gloves and Juhe, Mrs Myrtle Sampson, Mr and Mrs
Dewey Ntbert and David Mr
and Mrs Gary Nibert and
Steve, Mrs VIcktc Kmget y,
Mike, Malt and Michele, Mr
and Mrs John Drwrunond •

Wolfpen
Sugar costs less
today than in Mother's time
•
News Notes cepllons
Desptle popular misconto the contrary, a

•

•

FUll. TEXT OF THE RESOLUTIONS
PROPOSI.NG EACH AME~DMENT

fo1 Nov I at I ~0 p m at the
Chur t'h Be l th cl
Smith wrll be the leade1
Ches t er

Annual White reunion held recently

NO

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
IT MAKES COMMON SENSE TO PASS ISSUE NO.2
TO PUT PRISONERS TO WORK INSIDE OUR PRISONS
OHIO PRISONERS SHOULD BE AC'tiVEL Y , WOlUClNG WITHIN
PJ;\ISON WALLS AND NOT SITTING IDLY~DAY. AFTER DAY, WEEK
AFTER WEEK. YEAR AFTER YEAR. ISSUE NQ. 2 WOULD HELP PUT
PRISONERS BACK TO WORK IN THE PRISON SYSTEM. Unlike years
past when pnsoners were actively and productively mvolved at work, Unfortunately today the maJonty of pr1Soners spend most of thmr day doing
nothing Staltsltcs show that 95% of pnsoners now m prison eventually will
be released !o the commumties, and, under present law, wlll have learned
no trade wh1le m pnson Issue No. 2 will remove constitutional restrictions
a,gamst th~ use of .Pl!son labor thus ensuring mearungful work opportunities, vocatwnal tra1rung and a full work day for those in prison. Legislative
executive and cttizen committees have found constant Idleness and th~
lack of actual work assignments the major cause of tension and security
problems in Oh10 pnsons. Prtson officials ctte pnsoner Idleness as a maJor
cause of prison violence The amendment will simplify constitutional
language and provtde greater flextbihty m estabhshing pnson work programs The amendment IS recommended by the General Assembly, Ohio
Constltutwnal Revision Commtsston and Ohio Department of Rehab1Litahon
and Corrections
Committee For the Amendment Ed1th Mayer, Tim McCormack and
Edward J Orlett

Uruted uf

M c tg s County "as annourlcL'&lt;I

Pl ~::~ n s

Silnderella Dret classes and 7 30 p m
onder the superviSion of Ju
Anot her class wrll be
Ann Newsome hctve begun 1n sl&lt;l rlc'&lt;l thrs week al Mrdthe ai ea Last Monday mght dleport at 10 30 a m at the
classes were held at St Melhudrst Church and the
Joseph Catholre Ch urc h, Poml Pleasant classes ~ rll be
OF GREENER GRASS, ALAS '
Mason , on Tuesday at Heath changed fr om Wednesda) to
HELEN BO'ITELDEAR HELE N
Methodist Church Mid- Thursday, both mornrng and
Four years ago I d1votced Elwmlo marry a man 1 thought dleport, both at 7 ~0 p m and cvemng Informa twn can be
was everylhrng No l wasn I vrtal, altve romantic and sen- on Wednesday at the Krodel ob ta in e d f r om Mr s
sttJvc tu my needs
Park Club House 10 ~0 a m Newsome, 992-3:l82
Wrllnn a) eat he 'd s haken down to dull
l know now that I ve always loved Elwin who was depen
dable and steaufa sl The drvorce hurllumlernbly, though he
ha.s suH.:e become eng~:t ged to H wmmm who, frankly doesn t
fl]lve my looks or pe rsonahty
ATHENS - Jumors and d!sl!ng utshed professor of
I've called hun seve1 al tunes and he puts m"'uff, but I m
semors
from Central and mathematics educat ion and a
.'!lUI e tf I were lhvorcetl he'd realize he still loves me He wun t
Southea;t
OhiO high schools member of OU 's faculty for
tne~ ke any moves wlule I'm m e:u 11ed as he dot!Ml 't app1 ove of
wtll
be
on
the
Ohw Umvers1ty 42 years Sal es of hiS
lwme-wt et:kers
campus
Nov
4
to compete for mathemaltcs texts and workMy present ilusband p10v1des well and I dun t hke living
cash
pnzes
and t UIIIOn books exceeded 50 mrlhon,
alone Should ! lake a chance and leav e hun ' - REGRETFUl.
awards m the Second Annual and before hrs death m 1976
DEAR REGRETFUL
t wo OU
L
Morton he endow ed
Elwm doesn't approve of home-wrel:kers You wrecked his Robert
Educatwn professorships one of them In
home when you left hun Why then would he reapprove you, Mathematrcs
mathemaucs education
Contest
espet'tally smce he's found someone who may smt hun better)
Complete rnformatron on
for
entry
m
the
Oeadlme
I d guess you 're the grass rs always g1 eener" type -whtch
the
contest IS a vmlable by
contest
1s
Oct
20
could be wl1y Inot because 1your husbands turn dull
wrttmg
Dr Donald 0 Norris,
MathematiC
S
teachers
are
Concentrate on your present man and he may start shmmg
chairman
of the Department
also
mv1
ted
to
come
w1th
a gam - H
MathematiCS,
Oh10
thetr top students and attend of
a short conference on the Unrver srty, At hens. Ohro
DEAR HELEN
45701
I must wrrte regmdmg In I uve But Htutrng • who wonders teachmg of mathematics
whelhet marnage lu a homusexual man would work Ple~:~se
The top scorer m the two- ; ; ; ; ; ; ; : ; : ; ; : ; ; :
tell her to run from a relattonshrp lhal, can only end m a hour problem solvmg contest p
Will recetve $50 m cash and a
pecuhar gray fog of emptmess
$200
luttwn certificate to Ohio
I've lleen mar n ed 10 years to a man whQ prefers males to
Umvers1ty
The next SIX
females Perhaps he's nul unfaithful- were late mtddle aged
highest
scorers
wtll recetve
-but Ius leamngs are vet) apparent Sex to him IS a duly, and
cash
pnzes
rangmg
from $30
he avo1ds II by d armrng headaches, backaches , whatever He
to
$10
and
tUition
certificates
neve1 shows affedwn, tbough he's a fme husband m other
ways, from helpmg wrth huusewu1k to betng a good and worth from $150 to $100
While on campus, the
generuus prov1de1
Provides an
Oh, he tn ed when we we1e fust ma rried, and I suppose he parti Cipants and thetr
escape channel for
tnes now but the lahmt g~:~y nes.s can t Ue ove1 come Through teachers Will be guests at the
the years we've adueved a sort of partnership [t 1sn tenough 1 OU-M1am1 footba ll game
melttng tee and snow
The contest honors the late
!loved my handsome wonderful man so much I attempted
Dr
Robert L Morton,
sutctde when I tea lrzed I d neve1 1eally have him Now I'm
resrgned Ma) be tn) letter" Ill help persuade ILBH awa) from
marrtage whe1 e no matter how letztftl' } uu are, ) ou can t wm
-BEEN THERE AND W~ITI NG
BRUNSWICK MAN DEAD
DEAR HELEN
MIDDLEBURG HEIGHTS,
In Love But Hurlrng thmks she could be broa&lt;lmrnded Ohto (UP!) - Davtd Shogan,
enough to shat e her man with other men But the hrdden hope 15, Brunswick, died Saturday
IS, My love can c.: hange hun lo hetero '
mght at Southwest General
ll won 't w01 k, ILBH Suon you ll become a mother-type who Hosptta l fr om mult1ple
Avatlable at
hstens to hts problems and soothes away his reJectiOns even mjur1es suffered Sept 28
fmdmg hun replacements
when
struck
by
an
Gay males have t1emendous atli act1on for women because automobile whtle ndmg hts
the) '1e sens1t1ve, urulerstandmg, Intuitive- they thmk ltke we btcycle m Strongsville, pollee
do But don 'l fallmlove with one of them 1 It 's sheer misery
S31d
New Haven , W Va
!KNOW

us ..

Wmld CommunJt} Day fm
t'huH:h Women

Diet classes begin

Helen Help

United Methodi~t Women to sponsor child

To amend Section 41 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio

-~ --1

I Y ES

Monticello 7

Hardmg 17, Ark Tec h 10
Houston 20, Baylor 18
McNeese Sf 35 Ntcholls Sf

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

1~-------------------~------~---------~----1

pled~e

nethunaJ and women s di VI

'

A maJonty affirmative vote 1s necessary for passage

Arkansas 42, Tex Chr isfian 3

Arkansas

•

•

YES

Da llas at 51 LOU IS 2 p m

Kansas Ctl y a t Oak land d
pm
Los Angeles at M.nnesota 4
pm
Mtamt at san Otego 4 p m
New Or leans at San Franc s

•

(Proposed b y Resolutwn of the General Assembly of Ohio)

Buffalo a t Houston 2 p m

M !waukee, 2 p m

I

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

Tampa Bay at Ne w York
Gli;!n l s 1 p m
Wash .ngton at Ph la delp h a 1
pm
Det ro1 t a t Atl a nta 1 p m
New Eng la nd a t Ctn c•n na t1 1
pm
P ttsbu rgh at Cle ve land
pm
New York Jets at Balt tmore
2p m
Seattle vs Green Bay at

•

To ,,mend S ectwn 4 of Article X of the Constttuhon of O hio

14
Wash m g to n 21 De tr o• t 19
P11tsbur gh 3 1 Atlanta 7
Ne w Yor k J ets 45 B uff alo 14
Tam pa Ba y 30 Kan sas Cdy

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

-

CHf;STER- ' We Wttness
Through M1sswns" "as the
theme of the pledge servll'e ·
presented by Kathryn Wmdon and Betty Moore al a recent meelmg of the Chester
Untied Methodist Women
held at the church
The program opened wrth
smgmg led by Daylene Bahr
The leaders explamed use uf

'&gt;IMI

PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE
- . OHIO CONSTITUTION
2

'We Witness Through Missions'
theme of pledge service recentlY

r---R:w~ooM'Pllfri;D:D~--1 :

West

Den ver
Oakl and
Seattle

5--The Datly Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Monday, Oct 9, 1978

Letart Falls to their property
on Smtih Rtdge
Freeland Noms and Mr
and Mrs Harold Roush,
Racme, VISited last week wtlh
Chnt Btrch and da ughter,
Leota
Mr
and Mrs
Eob
Morehead v1s1ted Mr and
Mrs R R Durst a recent
afternoon
Mrs Evelyn Holter and
Mrs Sharon Card and sons,
Racme, were among those
attendmg a Stanley party at
the home of Mrs Ada Van
Meter on Wednesday attemoon
Mrs Mane Chck , Mrs
Faye Lyons, Mt Alto, W Va ,

Hiki.ng e\ ent slated Oct. 20
Htkers are advised lo wear
warm clothmg and sturdy
hikmg boots or shoes and to
brmg a sack lunch
The Portsmouth Chamber
of Commerce will serve apple
ctder, coffee and doughnuts
followmg the hike
Nature films and an oldfashioned campfire smgalong at 8 p m wtll conclude
Saturday's actlVllles
In conJunction with the
htk e, auto tours of the
Shawnee Forest , area are
scheduled both Saturday and
Sunday, Oct 21 and 22. The
auto tours will depart from
Portsmouth Ctty Hall at 10 30
a m each day and wtll wmd
up at Shawnee Slate Park
Lodge at 3 p m.

Let THE FRIENDLY ONE

Right now, at your kitchen
dealer, right here in town,
for a limited time only, you
can buy modular pieces of
your new kitchen at a 15%
discount off list price!
You can save another 200fo if you
wuu• kitchen yourself. And we're happy to tel
~::5'you how to do it right. Come in and talk to ,..,.,u•
of our kitchen el(perts.

help you with your
REMODELING PROJEOSI
You con odd cobrnels, a room drvrder or
even a room no get great results oil you
need ore the proper tools, bu1ldmg molenols and a few ltps
No molter how Iorge the pro1ect, see us
we con help
hghten the lood ol the Fnendly One•

DALE'S
KITCHEN CENTER

POMEROY CEMENT

BLOCK CO•
The Department Store
Of Buildtng
Stnce 1915

2119 Jackson Awe.

675-2318

Point P.l11sant

WE SERVICE l HAT WE SELL

•

..

�..

Mrs. Ben Philson hosts opening meeting
of Middleport Literary -Club Wednesday
Mr•. Ben Philson hosted
the uptming meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club for
the 1978-79 vea r at her home
Wednesday:
Mo·s. Sibley Slack, presi·
dent , led the group in the club
&lt;.'o l lec t an ti members
responded to roll call by naming a yet unfulfilled desire.
Progo·am books prepared by
Mrs. Harold Sauer were

distributo•d, and the regisna-

tm_·mbcr uf a large family . uf

liun fmm membership of
Mn;. Petuline Horton was al'eepted with regret. It was

whidt he was lhc most uni-

He was considered, Mrs.
Bachtel said, to be the
greatest author of his time by

'IUC .

noted that Mrs. James Titm;
will host the nex t meeting .
. such people as Sint'lai1·
Fur the po·ug•am , Mrs. Fur· Lewis. He died at 37 years of
rest
Be:i c htcl l't:lv iewed age and because of his sl1oo·t
··Thomas Wolfe, Novelist. " life many authuo·s felt the
She noted that he was burn in world was depriyed of much
North Carolina and was a g rcatliter~::~tur-·c.

hjs cluttered life . noting

that ht&gt;·kepl evo•rything " 'ch
i:IS

uotcs

and

manuscripts

S&lt;'l'aps

of

in cuntaincrs

by the authoo· including "You
Ci:in'l ff u Home Again '", '' t\
Tim!! and the River", The
Web and the Ruck ", and
-- Look Homeward Angel."

1

I

Polly Cramer

Furniture comes clean
By Polly Cramer

POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY - A long time ago I read in the
column about how to wash furniture. I think the
solution was made with pure olive oil and turpentine
water but I do not remember the correct amounts : I
hope someone can help me. - MARY G.
DEAR MARY G. - Tbe formula I have for
washing furniture consists of three tablespoowi
linseed oU and one tablespoon turpentine mixed well
In a IJUart of bot water. Wben Ibis cools a rag is
wrung out oL the solutloa Blld used to clean off a
small area at a time wblcb Is lmmecllately dried with
a clean soli cloth. Continue unto aU Is clean. Rub
with the grain of the wood~ - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - Do tell Lola that I used kitty litter in a
room that had a musty odor and a shag carpet. I put it in
small alwninum pans that were placed under the sofa and
the odor disappeared. I think this would work in her
suitcase. - ZELLA
DEAR POLLY- I have found the ideal way to store ,my
kitchen tongs : I saved a cardboard tube that had waxed
paper on it and now slip the tongs in thls before putting
them in the drawer. This keeps them from springing open.
Of course, any cardboard roll would work whether from
waxed paper, foil, paper towels or even toilet tissue. CARYL
DEAR POLLY - My Pet Peeve is with all those people
who have no time to open a door for me when I am entenng
or exiting with a baby in my anus and pushing another
small one in a stroller. I have always been polite to people
and feel goo9 when I can assist someone else.
I taught my toddler to eat with a fork and spoon by giving
him foods that would "stay put" - mashed potatoes or
oatmeal on a spoon, peas, meat and green beans on a fork.
-MRS. E.B.
DEAR POLLY - To save both energy and water I
always cool the eggs and potatoes for potato salad in the
same pan at the same time. I use medium or small
potatoes that are scrubbed with a brush and put in the
bottom of the kettle with the eggs on top. 'Cover with cold
water and bring to a boil. Boil until largest potato is soft
when pricked with a fork : - WANDA
Polly will send you one of her signed thank-you
newspaper coupon clippers if she uses your favorite
Pointer, Peeve or Problem in her column. Write POLLY'S
POINTERS in care of this ne'!'f.spaoer.

masterpiece The Threepenny workshops on all aspects of scription , including tickets to
Opera written by Bertoli the theater. as well as three two shows. Both offer more
Brecht with music by Kurt fully-mounted productions. than 20 percent savings oveo·
WeilL This production will be
The Ohio
University the general admission price.
presented in conjunction with Theater is once again of·
All reservations, sub·
teh School of Music . The Cering seasi&gt;n subscription scriptions, and ticket in·
Threepenny Opera, the tale of . tickets at a substantial · formation are available
Mack the Knife, is one of the savings. This year, you have through the Ohio University
most highly acclaimed plays the choice of purchasing a Theater Box Office located in
of the Twentieth Century. It regular subscription, in· Kantner Hall, College Street,
will be held February 22·25 eluding tickets to all six Athens, or 9Y telephoning 594and 28; March 1·3.
shows or a quarterly sub- 5010.
As a new feature to their
season, Ohio University
Theater will be presenting a
premiere production on May
~ and 9·12. The .production
NEW YORK (UP!) - A volunteer groups within a 50staff is now in the process of man slashes a knife through mile radius. ·
reviewing all of their London the top of a convertible and
He claims a 45 percent
and New York literary seiz,es the frightened poodle recovery rate for an
resources. Their choice will inside.
estimate(ll,OOO customers so
be announced by ·mid·
A German Shepherd bolts far, uand that isn't bad."
December. Scenic design for after
a squirrel
in
But the 38-year-old former
this production will be done Manhattan's huge Central nursing home administrator
by Broadway designer Eldon Park and doesn't come back. - he says he shut down the
Elder . Mr . Elder has
A caller with a French facility to protest inhumane
designed sets, costumes, and accent tells a grief-stricken conditions - claims hunting
lighting for many of the dog owner : "I'm a bartender animais is only pari of his
major fine arts groups in the and ooe of my customers has job.
country. He has designed in your pet." Pretending to act
"The most Important
London, for the New York as an innocent g&lt;&gt;-between, he service we provide is
Now it 's salt that may be
Shakespeare Festival, the sets up a rendezvous, takes counseling. We deal with a lot
hazardous
to your health!
American Shakespeare $100 and disappears.
of ,QII;Iel" ; pe,Ppje, :·,widows;, · In
fact,
even
that
Festival, the San Francisco
Every day in New York ' lonely people. ' 'It can be proverbial grain you are
Opera, and the Seattle City, on the average, heartbreaking. We try to give
often asked to take with tall
Repertory Theater. His someone steals a dog for
them no-nonsense advice," tales is being considered as,
television credits include the ransom. Other animals strav he said.
perhaps, too much, says the
sets and lighting for the from their owners, who oftel}
"For
example,
many
of
Health
Insurance Institute.
production of " Helen Hayes: plaster whole neighborhoods
want
to
take
out
costly
That's
the contention of a
them
Portrait of an Actress". Mr. with heartwrenching posters
We
point
out
that
growing
number
of
display
ads.
Elder will join the School of offering rewards for the
anybody
who
fmds
a
pet
is
authorities
advocating
Theafer Faculty as part of
return of their pets.
. most likely to look in the drastic curtailment of the
the visiting artists program
A group called Petfinders classifieds."
average family's daily salt
of the College of Fine Arts.
tries to track down the
His
eyes
flashing
in
anger
consumption.
They claim
The final production will be
runaway or stolen canines through gold-rimmed glasses that practically all of us are
Howard Sackler's . Pulitzer
need
Prize winner The Great and in the process, coosoles and his long, bristling beard eating more salt than
their worried masters or giving him the appearance of - many of us so much that it
White Hope. It is based on the mistresses. All it takes is a
an Old Testamett' prophet, is either a contributing cause
story of Jack Johnson, the
know-how and a lot of West scorned pel!tappers for of high blood pressure or a
first black heavyweight little
grueling detective work.
"playing on people's feelings factot in increased pressure.
champion of the world, to be
"I
got
the
idea
two
years
of
helplessness and grief.''
It has reached the point
perfonned May 17·20 and 23·
ago
when
I
was
taking
a
long
·
But,
he
said,
the
victims
where
homemakers are being
26.
,
nOticed
a
bunch
of
walk
and
cool
and
try
urged
to count their family's
should
keep
their
Stage Three, the 'winter
signs
describing
a
lost
dog,"
to
drive-a
hard
bargain
over
salt
intake
as regorously as
touring project, will be
Irving
West,
founder
of
the
)ilone.
many
of
them do their
the
available to high school,
They
should
reject calories.
college,
and
covoc non-profit organization said.
"About 40 blocks away I repeated, late night calls or
Did you know, for example;
organizations. It will consist
saw
a
'found'
sign
and
the
midnight
meetings
in
obscure
that
many soups contain 2.6
of planned lectures and
description matched. And I places, he said. "They should grains of salt · per serving?
thought, there really ought to refuse to pay outrageous Large cheeseburgers, a bout 3
be a central clearinghouse to ransom demands - and they grams? Two slices of bacon
compare the various sources should never hand over L 7 grams• A large dill pickle,
of
lost-and-found money until they actually see 5 grams? NOTE: Some
infocmation.''
their pet."
authorities believe anything
Now there is. Foc a $12 fee
West, who has two ~a~1 . more than one gram per day
good for the lifetime of the concedes that some people• ~·• Is excess.
pet, West fills out a card today are perhaps too '·· Dr. Robert L Levy, head of
detailing
breed, color, weight devoted to their animals. But the National Heart, Lung and
BONN, West Germany unfortunat e
American
and
other
features, then he feels that others harbor an Blood lnsitute, says flatly
(UP!) - "The American traveler learns the hard way
begins
a
search
.
overdose of hostility toward "salt is related to the process
ordered a cup of coffee," the his telephone bill really is
Along
with
his
wife,
Frieda,
both pets and owners.
of hypertension," and " less
resta l : ran~ manager said.
lofrger than his hotel bill.
couple
of
volunteers,
and
a
"What
I
think
we
~
in
salt is better than more .sa)b:'
"As 1n afterthought, he
Some people think they will
Assistant · Secretary of
asked :h price. Then he save by using credit cards as West regularly combs the our crowded cities Is' more
canceled the order for coffee often as possible, to avoid lost-and-found columns of all tolerance and ccmpasslon all Agriculture Carol Tucker
I've never experienced that exchanging cash from one 52 New York City daily and around," he said. "We have Foreman , formerly the
before/'
currency to another. The weekly newspapers and to try to make others happy. director of the Consumer
that's
what's Federation of America, puts
Since the dollar hit a record credit-card strategem has its sends a printout of missing And
pets to all shelters and important."
it this way .
low price against the Deut· disadvantages, however.
schmark Tuesday, a lot more
By the time the credit card
American visitors in Ger· company's Germany office
many will find the price of a has sent the bills on to the
SUPPOR'f REOPENING
CHICAGO
(UP[)
cup of coffee Is too much to United States, the exchange
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio
highest available olace .
bear.
rate of the dollar may Chimney sweeps Dee Miller where God is closest."
(UP!) - The House of
In a sit-down restaurant or decrease further, so once and David Stoll were on the
rui they exchanged wedding Bishops of the Protestant
coffee house frequented by again the size of the bill will top of the world Sunday.
Church
in
vows 103 stories above Episcopal
Flanked by an entourage of Chicago streets, smiles and America, during its Kansas
the ordinary middle-class be greater than anticipated.
German " burgerliche "
The answer is to use all of black..,uited chimney sweeps applause broke out among City meetings, unanimously
family , a cup of coffee costs your American dollars to buy . brandishing flower-bedecked the mlookers.
approved a resolution urging
1.80 marks. Add in a 20.. German marks the moment thistle brushes, the couple
"I've never heard of this President Carter to support
pfennig tip and it costs $1.04. you reach Germany . Do not exchanged wedding vows being dooe oo the Eiffel the
proposal of
the
And that $1-a-cup price buy small amounts of marks atop the Sears Tower to the Tower," laughed Jean · Ecumenical Coalition of the
buys no refills. The " bot· in anticipation of an upward delight of family, frienda 'and Clement, a tourist from Mahoning Valley to reopen
surprised tourists.
tomless cup" of American turn. It will not occur.
Paris. "In France it's just the Campbell Works under
"It's the most fitting place done in a church."
diner lore is unknown here.
community-worker owner·
How can you tell what will
Drinking alcohol is more happen to the dollar• Ex· for · us to be married," 8
The couple met 10 years ship.
fun and less expensive, as perienced international beaming Stoll said. "The ago when Stoll was a
The Rt. Rev. John Allin,
long as you avoid the hard observers believe they have Sears Tower is the world 1s marketing expert and Ms. presiding bishop, senlloa telestuff. A small beer costs 68 found a link between world tallest building, we met at Miller was developing a gram
containing . the
cents. A quarter-liter - a events and currency ex· Sears and, of course, our cosmetic line for Sears.
resolution to President
generous pint - of either change rates.
wock puts us on rooftops. I
Their romance bloomed Carter.
white or red wine costs $2.34.
Take the Bonn economic think we and everyone with and Stoll, who had suffered a
Eating, however, can be summit last July, for us is on top of the world."
heart attack, decided to quit
LAFF- A- DAY
His moist-eyed bride his high-pressure, big salary
expensive. The McDonald example. Participants and
told
onlookers:
smiled
and
chain, expanding throughout observers alike declared the
marketing job for something
Europe, charges $1.69 for one meeting of the leaders of the "The .wedding was glorious. he " really enjoyed."
Big Mac.
world's seven· largest in- It was more than I had ever
"Laying there in the
Americans visiting Ger· dustrial democracies was a lwped for."
hospital I began to re·
many usually siumble over success. The dollar fell im·
The two, in white tuxedos evaluate everything," he
and top hats, walked through said. "I call it a Ufeattack.
the telephone tolls. They get mediately.
President Carter brought a thlstle-btush and Dower And then Dee came to visit
off their jet, got to a hotel and
phone home to Columbus or Egypt and Israel together at archway held up by 16 fellow me and brought flowers and a
Kansas City. Only when they Camp David. As a result, the chimney sweeps from across paper, The paper had an
pay their bills the next dollar fell .
the country. A wool-capped article about chimney sweeps
Saudi Arabia said it will guitarist in soot-black pants and I got interested in it."
ljlorning do they discover
hotels in Germany, as in most stick with the dollar for its oil played love songs.
Stoll, ·49, now l'Uils his own
•··~·-·- - ~ ~ ·-·-•o·i
"I've never seen a wedding chimney sweeping company
of Europe, triple the cost of pricing. Naturally, the dollar
"He
stopped
talking
just
afte;:·
fell
again.
like this," ooe tourist said as and a school for chimney
ptwne calls as a service
Switzerland took action to she ushered a chUd away sweeps. Ms. Miller, 41, who the 30-day guarantee ran out. ' '
charge.
A three-minute call from a reverse the appreciation of from a viewing window over still is with Sears, doos the
German hotel to the United its currency . The dollar to the ceremony.
.traditional ·black..,uited tails National Olimney Sweeping
States can cost as much as sagged some more.
"This Is not a publicity and top hat of the sweep on Week ,
National
Fire
The answer is clear : stunt," the Rev. John T. weekends.
$40.30.' The line at the hotel
.
-P revention Week and the
cashier's office each morning whatever happens, the dollar Shaffer said. "It's especially
Stoll said tbe wedding was 107th anniversary of the
usually jams while some goes down .
fitting because this is the timed to coincide with Great Chicago fire .

Pet-napping gains popularity

Experts nix salt

we

Price of German coffee
shocks consumers

A wedding on top of the world

II

Social ·
POLLv·s POINTERS I Calendar I

HI'IJUild his IIOIOC .

Sltc tnentioncd ttthcr works

-~----··--

'I

Mrs . Bachtel t•unuucntcd
· tlll

Ohio University School of Theatre
opens ·season with 'My Sister Eileen
ATHENS - The Ohio
University School of Theater
has announced its 1978-1979
season. Continuing • their
tradition of great theater, this
year's season will be
highlighted by productions of
Brecht, Shakespear, Shaw,
and a p~emiere presentation
of a new play. Also as part of
Ohio University's !75th
Anni ve rsary celebration,
Ohio University Theater will
offer, as a gift to the state,
Stage Three, a statewide
theater tour.
The season opener will be
the delightful comedy, My ·
Sister Eileen, a play about
the adventures of two sisters
from Columbus, trying to
seek fame and fortune in the
"Big Apple." This production
will run October 19-22 and 25·
28. The Ohio University
Theater is proud to announce
thai the second production, A
Midsummer Night 's Dream,
will feature world renown
actor, Morris Camovsky. Mr.
Camovsky will portray the
role of Bottom. One of the
founding members of the
legendary Group Theater,
Camovsky has centered his
career recently at the
American Shake spear
Festival in Stratford, Con·
necticut . At Stratford,
Camovsky has played King
Lear, Shylock, Prospero, and
both Polonius and Claudius.
His film credits include
Cyrano De Bernerac, A View
From the Bridge, The Life of .
Emile Zola, and most
recently The Gambler with
James Caan. Production
dates are November 2-5 and
&amp;-11.
Winter Quarter will open
with George Bernard Shaw's
Misalliance. This show offers
the wit a~d wisdom of Shaw
on the subJects pf parents and
children, and .. social cl~ss. It
will be performed on
February 8·11 all'a 14·18.
Following that will be the
I

........

" As long as there is
evidence ,tl]at large amounts
of salt are harmful and no
evidence that lowering salt
causes trouble, I think you
know enough to lower salt."
Meanwhile a few food
companies are reducing salt
levels in their products.
Several major baby food
finns are eliminating salt
from their products. A soup
compimy is test-marketing
five "no salt added" soups in
several cities.
The Center for Science in
the Public Interest; a
Washington based consumer
group, has filed a petition
with the Food and Drug
Administration to require the
labeling of all food packages
with the amount of salt they
contain. It has also asked that
limits be set on the amount of
sodium which can be added to
processed foods.
The Center's director, Dr.
Michael Jacobson, iold the
Institute he recently par·
ticipated in a taster's test of
salt ·free foods.
"Some, like peanut butter,
canned asparagus and
canned tomatoes, needed
little, if any salt," he said.
Of those that seemed to
need additional salt, like
several soups, beef stew, tuna
fish, he said the group was
able to add a little salt on its
own to provide "excellent"
taste.
He continued:
"Once we got used to un·
salted and lightly salted
foods, 'highly' salted foodscontaining about one-half the
nonnal amount - tasted far
too salty.
"This test demonstrted to
us what some people already
know: we· acquire our taste
for a given level of salt."
Dr. Jacobson recommends
that food manufacturers and
individuals "experiment with
using less salt and more of
other spices to make tasty,
healthier dishes - there is no
reason why preventing
hypertension cannot be· a

I

MONDAY ·
GOSPEL MEETINGS, 7:30
p.m. each evening at the
Success Church of Christ,
County Road 46, Reedsville,
· with Keith Kress, Pennsville,
evangelist. Public invited.
UNITED Methodist Women
of Heath United Methodist
Church Monday 7:30 p.m.
Book review by Etoilla
Cassell.
GOSPEL meetings at
Success Church of Christ,
County Road 46, Reedsville
area, 7:30 each evening,
Monday through Oct. 15 with
Keith Kress, Pennsville, as
evangelist. Public invited.
LA LECHE LEAGUE
meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday at
home of Chris Mitchell,
Gallipolis. For infonnation
call Bev Splete 446-4010 or
Betsy Crank, 675-2776.
POMEROY PTA, 7:30 p.m .
with a special panel discus·
sion on " Let's Talk Kids." Introduction of parents and
teachers, nursery provided.
RUTLAND PTO Monday
7:30 p.m. at Rutland
Elementary gym.
TUESDAY
SOUTHERN
Band
Boosters Tuesday 7 p.m.
RACINE LODGE 461
F&amp;AM, Past master night
will be observed. All master
masons invited.
POMEROY Chamber of
Commerc,e Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. Christmas
promotion to be discussed.
SYRACUSE PTO Tuesday,
7:30 p.m. Program by
Syracuse Brownie Troop
1120. Babysitting services
available . Everyone
welcome.
MODEL Meeting, Ohio Eta
Phi Olapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority, 7:30 p.m .
Tuesday at Riverboat Room
of Athens County Savings and
Loan.
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) Officials of the New Orleans
Jazz Wednesday requested
waivers on two forwards,
Fred Saunders and Ron
Davis. ·

MEIGS CHAPTER 53,
Disabled American Veterans,
meeting 7:30p.m. Tuesday at
chapter home, Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy.
WEDNESDAY
SOUP SUPPER Wed·
nesday 4 to 7 at Methodist
Church annex .
POMEROY Cha pter 80
R.A.M. Wednesday 7:30p.m.
Bosworth council 46, royal
and select masters 8:15.
POMEROY
MID·
DLEPORT Lions Club will
hold a regular meeting, at
noon Wednesday , at the
Meigs 'lnn.
THURSDAY
DISTRICT ll 's 48th annual
convention of Pythian Sisters
at Gallipolis Temple 76.
Thursday. Registration and
coffee hour, noon until! p.m .
when business session starts :

Evening session at 7:30p.m.

coN'mAcr vorE
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Columbus firefighters may
vote tonight and Tuesday on a
proposed contract that would
increase their wages by 33.8
percent d~ring its four-year
life.
The contract, retroactive to
Oct. I when the old
agreement ran out; retains
the 56-hour workweek instead
of reducing it annually as
contained in the prior offer
which firefighters rejected.

7-T.he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Oct. 9,19_78

American Association of University Women
Twenty members and
guests of the Middleport·
Pomeoy Area Branch of the
American Association of

University Women enjoyed a
potluck dinneo· recently in the
Riverboat Room of the
Athens Cowoty Savings and

The room and tables car·
ricd out the fall motif with
colored flowers and candles
and the pinons were colored

Racine Social Events

leaves. Bookmarkers wel'e

given as favors.

By Mrs. Francis Morris
and children of Westerville
Mr. and Mrs . Henry Ervine spent the weekend with her
were called to Flemingsburg, mother, Mrs. Anna Wines.
Ky., due to the death of their
Mrs . Mildred Swift of
slster·in·law, Mrs. Lena Columbus and Mrs. Christine
Lucas. They were ac· Gould of Nelsonville spent
companied by Rev. Lawr~nce Sunday with their parents,
G\usencamp.
Mr . and Mrs. Francis Morris.
Mr. Francis Morris was
Bill McKenzie of Gallipolis
taken to Veterans Memorial spent Sunday with Mr. and
Hospital Tuesday night by the Mrs. Roy Riffle .
Emergency Squad.
Mr . and Mrs . Edison Brace
Mr. and -Mr&amp;.·Paul North of visited their daughter"in·law,
Gallipolis spent Sunday with Mrs. Judy Brace at Crown
Mr. and Mrs . Roderi ck . City, who accompanied them
Grirrun.
to Ashland, Ky . Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Baker
Mr. and Mrs . Ronald Hart

.

Mo·s. Harriet Woud, a
teacher !rom the W1•1lston
schools, and division .consul·
tant and statr repo·esentative
of cultural mterests, spoke
using chalk illustrations to
emphasize the culture in-

during
Columbus USA
TWO HONORED
COLUMBUS (UP!)
festivities .
Native Ohioan Lowell -· Thomas, 86, explorer ,
Thomas and Pamela · Kay world traveler, radio and
Lamport of Columbus, Miss., television personality and
were hooored Saturday night author, a native of Darke
County, was presented with
the Chri~topher Columbus
and Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart Award.
spent WednesdaY till Sunday
Miss Lamport was chosen
at Marblehead, Ohio with Mr. Miss Columbus USA from
and Mrs. John Fisher.
other contestants from cities
Mrs. Helen Simpson spent aroWld the country named
the weekend with Mr. and Columbus. Nancy Jean
Mrs . Brian Simpson and Shepley of Columbus, N.J.,
family at Baltimore.
was first runnerup.

tcrcsts within this a rea fur

woll

creativity in action from PEP
1people with education can
produce 1.
ll was noted that the Col·
legiate Aluonnae began as
early· as 1682 and 1921 changed its name-d to the American
Association of University
Women . With the change in

meeting on " Lcg islHtiun uf
Iuter est tu Women ., ,.

~rowlh

name came a wide

thi'Uughout the United States.
In 1924 in Columbus AA UW in
Ohio became a vital part in
the national and international

be speaking at

the

OCT. 11-15

The fall conference was announced for Oct. 14 at the Sa lt
Fork Lake Park Lodge ncar
Cambo·idgc, 8 a.m . to 4 p.m.
Oct. 14-20 has been proclaim·
cd as AAUW Wee k.

WESTSIDE
CHURCH OF CHRIST

FAU HARDY MUMS
51.()() Each

Corner of Butternut &amp;
Ohio .'

Also : '
Hanging
Baskets.
House
Plants and African
Violets.

uq~anization .

Guests were invited to
membf:rs or the loca l
branch and will be welcomed
at the Oct. 24 meeting at 7:30
p.m. at the Meigs Inn. Teresa
Casco has applications and
other met terial for ne w
members . Rep. Run James
~&gt;~;come

Main , · Pomeroy ,

Evenings 7 :30--Sunday 10 : 00 . 6:00

Speaker: Paul Casebolt

HUBBARDS
GREEN HOUSE

Paden City, W.Va.

Syracuse, 0 .
992-5776

COME AND HEAR THE TRUTH

•

FRYING
CHICKEN

ina I

The Publ ic Utilities Com·
mission of Oh io has set for
public hearing Case No.
78-627-EL·FAC to review
the fuel procurement prac-

LB.

.. u,.uST &amp; PEARL STREEn
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

49e

WHOLE FRYERS
CHIP CHOPPED

tices and policies of the
Columbus &amp; Southern

FRIEN

SERVICE IN TOWN!

SUPERIOR SKINLESS

WIENERS ............ ~.~:

QUANTITY RIGH_TS RESERVED

__..;~SEAFOOD VALUE

CHICKEN
THIGHS 59L:

BUDGET PAK

VAUGHAN

LEGAL NOTICE

Ohio Electric Company,
the operation of iti Fuel
Cost Adjustment Clause,
and related matters. This
hearing is scheduled to be·
gin at 10:00 a.m . on Octo·
ber 30, 1978 at the Commission's Offices, 180 East
Broad Street, Columbus,
Ohio. All interested per·
sons will be given an
opportunity to be heard .
Further information may
be obtained by contacting

Loan .

GOSPEL MEETING

.

99

LB.

LB ,

HAM ...............................·.... .

¢

ROYAL RIVER

~WIFT

LB

.

*89"'

SLICED BACON .............. :....

SALE DATES OCTOBER 9 - 14, 1978

$159

49~

149

•

OCEAN
PERCH

,.

~~r-..

LB.

PERKINS

SWIFT PEPPERONI PEPKIN .. ~~Y... 95~
WAFER SLICED

SWIFT SLICED PEP E 0
•-··· 75~
P R Nl .... ~~~--

'INSTANT

NESCAFE
1:,~:~ ,~:.~ • 69

the Co"!mission.

THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
By : Richard L Smith,
Secretary

CARNATION

U. S. NO. 1

3

'

~
~

POTATOES

COFFEE MATE

50 LB.

% BUSHEL All PURPOSE

,., s1••

22 ·0( .

GOLDEN DELICIOUS
GOLDEN RIPE

APPLES •• ~ $24

9

~.

~

E - u 10/1 4 / 711

i t' t:'atdinal Ro~al 81 11a Stm..
00-60 -06

1/l

!§'

Ch,ll C OI~ O I~IA ll~

NAt

Jlt•liJ ilt•l: I

Ftlon STORE S

~

BLUEBEARY

$299

MIX

BANANAS••••••••••• ~B;. 19*

tJ V.Co,.

,

6QJI ""

~

79(

~

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FRESH CRISP

CUCUMBERS ••••••• ·••• 2/29'

STO RlS • CARDINAl FOOD STORl S
ASSORTED VARIETIES
BETIY CROCKER RTS

SOLID GREEN

CABBAGE ••• ~ ••••••• ~.19~

38•01.
let lie

"'F.~ftT~~..'ft

I ,_l\tl1Jwl•l.71
- - - - ---

FROSTING
· 1'~oz .

plaskoli1e,""

Con

CARDINAL
BAOWN N SEfiYE

THE INSIDER
10% OFf

· DURING OU1J 'S ALE

~~ ~""""'~
--~~
:-

~

LAHII(N•'L f OQ.d s r ORES

ciiiiiliR

~~

• Clear rigid plos:
"':0.
tic sheet in the • Securely frames • Forms c secure

mootcommon
window sizes. .

sheet, self-ad-

·2··

RICELAND

RICE ........................... ... •................. 2

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ASSORTED VAfiiiETtES
LACHOY

ASSORTED VARIETIES
BANQUET

CHOW ME II ..•.......•.........

BUFFET

Since 1915

IllOLIVE

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

'

11:00

P. M.

Thurs. 10&lt;00 A.M. Ill
12 :00 P.M. · Friday
and Saturday.
See Us At the
Pomeroy

Bridge

Bend .

Valley

Bell

.

.

lf2 GAL

.

SYRUP1
K-h

'WSW

llmil on• wlll"l

c~

eoupo, par i•n)~

••

5~

LIQUID
22-oz.
DETERGENT Bottle

CUT GREEN IEAfiB. COMN. MIXIEO YEQETAILEI,
PEAS or•YEOETAILEI fOf IUW

FRESHLIKE VEGOABLES ....................·~·";

PO RITZ PIE SHELLS ......................

7

1-Lb

AMEIICAN SINGLES ................ ·.. ·......... ""0:

.2

~~

59
61Jc

'REAMES EGG NOODLES ...................... .'~";

sI

Borden
,..o.o.
CROCOLATE DII.K ....................
•·•

C
69
.conAGE CHEESE ................. ~;:::,;
f'III'•H rARGE Of IMALL CURD

GOLDEN GRIDDLE

XI( ell) tJ:•l: 1.
l12 V. ·oz.\

FUDGE STRIPES

·BUnERMILK ....................
KIIAFT ILICED

SIORES '

KEEBLER DELUXE GRAHA:NIS

OEEP DIIH

~

L:AROINAL \1\S .

• CIIROtNAl FOOD STORES

'RGAiiNE 2~ $1

10:

~0

~

;:
Vl

s1 '.

]9t

l DAIRY VALUES I

'

Golden Buckeye Card
When Ordering.

27

SAUERKRAUT ............................;~·

25% Off Purchase,
Just Present Your

4 ~~0:·

.

~~

2!~ $}29
SILVER FLEECE

I • • •••••••••••••••••••

691

lb

Pkg .

CHOW MEINIIIOODLES ............. :.............. ~::

SUPPERS

SALE

·

SPAGHml SAUCE................................. ·~;~·s1"
~M·~
s•
CHILl BEANS ...................................... 3 ·~: 1

ln·Sider cut heat loss thrOUQh window transmission by 41%.

Blu• Swr..
00 -20-05

a&lt;?o STORES

PLAIN , W/MEAT or W/MUSHROOM

R4GU

Conventi~ storm windows only do port of the job. By insfalling
ln·Sider too, heot lou savirw.~s double. Together, storm windows and

Your Department Store of Building

~

• .. pi,. . 10/ 14)78

•t Cardi, at

IWO with

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

s100 ::

,_a.o.

Boxes

.

DOUBLE PLUS PROTEOION
AGAINST HEAT LOSS

SENIOR CITIZENS

~

MOIST

&lt;

seol to the
window sill.

heslve backing.
• Clear, rigid plastic storm windows fit easily into strips of .
adhesive backed vinyl trimapplied to window frames
• Fit airtight - eliminate drafts

delicious crusade."

J 3•li] ill t]: I

1

59'

:~-;· ~:.:;,;•;:. _,., Pkg.

y89c

..,..,ott•n•

...,. "'" C1rdln.l f'loyat lh••

~

(11 V&gt;·OZ )I '

":

�•
8- The Daily Sentine l, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday. Oct. 9, !1!78

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday , Oct . 9, 1978

Want Ads Turn . Unwanted Items Into Cash
NO TICE T O

CO NTRACTORS

WANT AD
CHARGES

STATE O F O HIO

DE PAR TME NT OF
TRA N SPORTATION
Col u mbus , Ohio
Se pte m ber 29, 1978

1;, Wur1h ur Ulul,·~
l "ol.'&gt; h

Con1ra ct Sales Legal
Copy N o . 78 -818

U N IT P RI CE C O NTRACT

R0 5-000 SU4J
P MS -0005( 143)

SRS-0005(6l l

•

Seal ed pr opos al s w il l be
r ec eived at th e o ff ice o f the
D i r e c tor
of
the
Ohio
Departm ent
of
T ran s port ati on , Col um bus . Oh io ,
until
10 00
A M , Ohio
Standard T i m e , T uesday .
Octob er

31.

1978,

fo r

im ·

p r o\l em ent s in
Athe ns. Ga ll ia ,

Hoc kmg ,

Met QS,

Mo r g an ,

Monro e,

Noble ,
Vi n t on
and
W ashin g ton Co un ttes , Oh io ,
'o n varto u s l ocations , by
r emo v ing e x ist ing ma rke rs ,

refle ctors

or

sig n s

at

speci f ted lo c~ t i on s a n d in sta lling new t raff tc con tro l
d ev ice s
Th e Oh to D epa r t men t of
Tra n s p or t at . on
her e b y
no t 1f 1es al l b tCi d e r s that,, will
a f f i rmat i v el y in s ur e that in
an y cont rac t enter ed into
p u r s ua nt
to
th is
ad ve r tise m en t ,
m i n o r it y
bu si n ess en terp ris es w i ll be
a ffo rde d full oppor tu n.t y to
subm i t bi d s in r espon se to
fh1 S in vita t io n and w i l l not be
d •Scr 1m1nat ed again st on th e
grou nd s of r a c e , col or, o r
n a tio nal orig i n
in
con
si derat lon f o r a n award
" M in tm um wa ge r ates to r
th i s p r oj ec t
h av e bee n
predetermined as r eq ui red
b y taw an d ar e se t forth •n t he
b •d prop osal. "
" Th e da t e se t fo r com .
plet 1on of thi S work sha ll be
se t f or th 10 th e b 1ddmg
proposa I."
Eac h b1dd e r
s h a l l be
required to file wi th h i s b id a
cer ti fied ch eck or cashier 's
c hec~ for a n amou n t eq ua l to
f h.,e per ce nt o f h• s bid , bu t in
no even t m or e than f ifty
th o usa nd d oll a r s , o r a bond
fo r ten per ce nt of hi s b id,
pay abl e t o t h e D irec t o r
Bidd ers must ap p l y , on th e
forms ,
tor
p r o p er
Qualif ica ti on s at l east t en
da ys pr1 or to t h e date set tor
op ening b ids in a cco rd anc e
with Chapter 55 25 O h io
Revised Co d e .
Plan s a n d sp e c i f ica t ions
are on f ile in t h e D epa r t men t
o f Tra n sp ort at ion and th e
off ice of. th e D is tr ic t Deput y
Di r ecto r
The D 1re c to r "reser v es the
r 1gh t to r e1 ec t a n y a nd a ll
b id s
D A V I D L WE I R
DI R E CTOR
Rev . B-17 73
Oc; t 9 , 16

l liii Y

JJ"I

.! tl;l\ ~

I 511

J Ua~ s

1.841

1.2:1
1.90
2.2:1

ti da~· s

,\ Oil

J.7:i

111. 01J tiVl" l Llll' llllll ltn Wil l :i
wurds Is ~ u •nls pt•r w.u·tl I"''' d11.~ :
' Ads 1 Ulllll/1~ otht•r thtlll l'U II St.'t' Ull V~
t&amp;l:l y~ '4111 l.;l' l'llCII')!l'd a t Llw I day
f: on h

I"Uh'

La st Kno wn A ddress : Ben
Avo n , Penn sy l va n ia
U n~ no wn He ir s, Succ essors
or Assig n s
Y o u a r e he r eby given
n ot ice t h a t a ce rt ai n o i l a nd
g a s lea se r ecord ed in V olum e
13, Page 117 o f t he Meigs
Count y L ease R ecord s, dated
Jul y 23, 19 14, w hi ch en c umber s 74 a c r es . more or
l ess, in Sec tion ) 9, T own 7,
Ra nge 14 o f Sci p io To wn sh ip ,
M ei gs Co un ty , Ohi o , w hi c h
p r o p ert y
is
m ore h il l y
de scribed as T r ~cts No s 2
an d 3 o f a deed r e co rd ed in
Volume 218 . P ag e 20 7 of th e
Me 1gs Coun t y D ee d Reco r ds ,
1S f orf e i te d d ue t o n on .
paymen t of r e n t al s and
roy a lt ies and b y i ts t erm s.
Curr en t ow n e r of th e r ea l
estate. wi ll fi l e a n aff i d avit o f
fo rf ei tur e p u rs uant to Ohio
Rev i sed Code Sec t ton 530 1.332
wi t h in 30 days o f t h i s date i f
sa id lease IS not released .
Dat ed : Oc t obe r 5. 197 8
Th e lm a Dalt on
By : Ro g er Adams ,
Cu r r en t Lessee
{ 101 9, lie

Meigs
Property
·Transfers
Ern est Mitch e ll , Shir ley
Mitch e ll t o Con nie R .
Chapma n, 5.50 A., Scipio.
Connie
K.
Ch a pman,
Charl es W. Chapman t o
E rn est Mitc hell , Shirley
Mitchell, )..368 A., Scipio.
Norman F . Rohrkaste, dec.
Flore n ce · Ashfor d
to
R o hrka ste, H ar ri e tt
Rohr kaste, Na ncy Rohrkast e
Kunkle, et a I. , Cert. of Trans .,
Scipio.
Harriet B. Sterrett; Lora in
P . Sterrett, John T. Burnell,
Eleanor B . Burne ll to Russell
W. Moore , Hope Moore, 4,000
sq. ft ., Pome roy .
Ira
Bra w le y ,
Bessie
Brawley t o Geor ge E . Hor-

ner, Judy A. Horner, %, A.,

Hdp Wanll'tl

I "'OY
PLYMOU IH
~ IAl iO N
wogon $3 ~0 C01 l ~ t il l 400
Rutl and !:,1. M 1ddl epor l Oh10

WORK
Ahi ( O

CADILLA C t tLJO RA UO l ull "
powe r on d A C AM FM r od1 Cl
powrr )E'O I':. ( oJ141/"J "14b"J

147"1 ( AOtlL A( ~ W O R AOO ~ul l
po wer and on . A M f M rod m
~u e l1 n j ec t 1 on Coii49 'J I .U/ 1
BUI CK RI V Il-f.! A
Low
m ileage
Ooy !lrn e 94'J. 'l'J~ 4
Af ter 5 Y41 5Jo3

14"1'1

Mub1 le Hunu• ~ I t'S &lt;t lld Y.11d Si! lt•s
(Ut' iltl't•ptt•d Olll) WI(IJ l"iiSil With
u l d t'l ~ o.:~ n t c.: h ll l ' ~ l' fur &lt;ttb t'arryUII;! Bux t'i umllt!r In CLJrc uf rhc St•n·
Und

Tht' Pul.;hsher rest'rvl!s ti lt! d~ h t
1.o cd1t ur rcJt'l"l ll ll) at.l~ llt:t'llll...! olJ.
jt'l'llullill Tht' Pubhsht'l wi ll nul t.•
1:t&gt;spun:;1Uic fur mun · than un l' UII 'UI ·
l l't"! III J;t' l1.1! 111

Phullt' !1'12 -~ liiti

f.! ENl

J mob1l e ho me s fo r
I shady acr e w at e r
furr1 1shed O r fo r so le S:.JO OCXJ .
~0 mrles tr a m Soroso l o ond Ft
Myers and l.i mil es fr om A rcod•o
Wo lt e r
M es sier
1 - ~ 1 3 494 :J!:I ~ -, No co ll ec t co i ls
s ~o s on .

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
Munlla)
Nuu11un&amp;ttu1d &lt;~ y

ti ll'

tl:n

1 UcS dii~
ttu u F"ntla}
M

'r
lx' fo l l' ].JUbht'&lt;l tiHII
S uml&lt;:~ i
~

lWO BEDR OOM. k •tche n l urm sh erl opt Co li b efore t:l om
4Y'J · 2'JBB
t-:OUN BEDROO M '1
4 11 Lmco ln St ,
Ohro SJOO pl us
month For more
coli Q4Y 231:10 after

IWO IU DHO OM i ro ile r Rea l n•ce .

pM

Adul!s on ly qcn 33'1 .4

F 11d &lt;ty &lt;r fh· r w- 111

For Silk, Rent or Tradt'

NotiCES
NO HUNTING o r tr espass •ng on
my prop er ty w• thou 1 perm •ss•on Judy M cG raw

W b9 VW FA CT Oio' Y ca rn pe• Good

cond •llon
Trade fo r ho use
I roller or w1ll sell fo r 5 159S
/.fJ'J1 9:! .

G UN SH O OT Racme G un Cl ub
~v e r y Sunday 1 pm
Fa ctory
choke guns only
G UN SHO O T, f.! oci ne Volu nteer
h re De pt . her y Saturday b JO
pm a t th e1 r b uildmg in 8oshon
t-:act ory chok e guns on ly
PA ~ A S Ol

BOUTIQU~

Bea uty
Solon nex t to Ska te a way
tio ll er R1 nk ann oUnces October
Sp eoo l
Pe rma nen ts 10°., oft O perat ors
,Sond ra Ke rns Cry stal Rayb urn
Phone· 91:15-41.4 1
I AM o p rm'b p le lookm g for ga s
and oi l lea ses 111 the Rutl and
area Have dn ller an d money
Call af ter 6 pm 609 -t:l29 -77 28
. .
. f.IACI Nf GU N Club 1979 M ember sh •p d ues o re du e October 1
Mu st b e pm d before January 1
Due s ar e $20 .

f.' o l e s •no l(
CHIP WO O D
d• omete r 10 ' on larg est e .-, d ,
5!:1 SU pe r ton Bund led slo b
SO SO pe r to n Oeh "er ed lo
Ohio Pol let Co , 1-lt '2 . Pom eroy
991 'Jb1:19
TIMB t R. POM ~ HO Y
d uc ts To p pn ce
sow lim be r Call
Ken t Ha nby 1 440

Fores t Pr o
fo r slo nd ing
99 '2 -5965 o r
1:1570

OW ~ URN ITUH~ . rce b a~e e s bras s
beds 1ron bed s desl.s e tr .
comple te hov seh9 ld s. Wnte
M 0 M1lle r Rt 4 Po me ro y o r
ca ll 99'1 -T/60
O ll) COINS pocket w a tches .
do ss nng s, we dd mg bOnd s,
dtomond s Gold or Sli ve r Coli
Hoger Wam.sley 742-2331

Wanted to own and operate
candy &amp; confection vending
route .
Pomeroy
and
sur rounding area . Pleasant
bu siness. High profit items.
Can start part time. Age or
e xperien c e not important.
Require s car and $1495 to
S4995 ca s h investment. For
details write and includ
your phone number :
Eagle Industries

3938 Meadowbrook Rd.
Minneapolis, Minn . 55426

LOST l A RG t w h1t e l emol e do g
w i th on e blue eye and on e
brown 1n Bu rl mg ham qreo .
Rewo rd A nswers to A my ·
992-20 16.

AD.tu&amp;.l"""
19"15 ( H~ V f.IOLn IMPALA b:
cell ent cond1h o n Lo w m il eage
992 7768 o r 992 -56"11
19-/ 0 PLYMOUTH VALIAN T 6 cy l ,
g ood w o r k cor . 992 -7492 or
992 -37 l b
19Ml FO RO F lOU 1, ton piCku p 6
cyl , std 9&lt;12 "f6b3 o r see o l
C1tizen 's Not1onol Bonk Mid
dl eport
1978 F-100 FORD NGHI p1ck up
lr ucl. b p lo rer pa cl. age, P S .
P B , a ut o tr ans .. ' , ton 300
C !· D . b : y l_ e n ~ • ne . _ 7 ~2 - 28_26_
t 969 OLOS DEL TA 1:1 8. P.B . P.S .
A C
engin e .4 55 , 2 bb l
992-27.40
1973 FOJ.! O ST ATION w a gon . b ce llen l r unn.ng cor
$750
992-57Ub
195f:l Fo rd I
949-2508 .

lon t ru ck

ph one

Clarice M. Erwin t o Don M.
E rwin , Cathy G . E rw in ,
parcels , Middleport.
Eileen Barber to Robert
Barber , parcels, Scipio.
Marc ia M. Spa ulding ,
Marcia M. Terry , Gary T .
Terry t o David A. Acr ee,
Linda Acree , Lot , Middleport.
Hom er W. Belt, Shirley G .
Belt to Rocky Ray Hupp,
Carol June Hupp, .284 A.,
Lebanon.
Arnold J _ Hupp, l ona V.
Hupp t o Rocky Ra y Hupp,
Carol June Hupp, .855 A.,
Lebanon.

I SPECIAL FEEDER SALE I
ATHENS LIVESTOCK
SALES
OCIOBER 12, 8 P.M.
Calves can be brought in Wednesday from
noon til 6 P .M . and Thursday until 11 .M .
State graded .

FOR MORE INFORMATION
CAll

592-2322 or 698-7331
or

Athens_or M ·
Extension

If YO U hove o se rvice to aile • .
want to b uy or se ll some th ing
oe look •ng lor wo rk
or
whole\le r
you II get resu l ts
IoSier wr th a S en t ~ne l Wo nt Ad
• c at199'1 -21Sb.
YA RD SAL!: O ct S-0. G reen hous e
Green hou se be h tnd Stat e
H.ghw oy _Go r og ~ o n _J.It. 7 10-A
M OVING OU T Ga rage Sole Fn
and So t o t l o&lt;l Spnng A ve
Pomer o y The re w •ll be d1f
lerent th mgs br ought out eve ry
day, a lso wil l go o n n e x t
weeken d Oct I J . 14. ~ o tn or
5h me
FAMll Y Yar d So le . Tues
and Wed 9 t1 l 5 f:IB2 l ogon St ..
M1 ddle por 1

T HR I: ~

C.AHAGI: SAL~ M an o nd Tu e&lt;:.
Oct 9 lO 8 30 td b 427 l incoln
St , Mtddl epor t. Brow n ho use
bet w een 5th and
Pe a rl .
Clo1hes . drap es, ho us eh o ld
rtems. toys

l OVABl t WHITt sn o w dnft grea t
PYRt-:NH S Pupp ie s. !-' ho ne
1-b14 bf:J"/ J838
H ~ C. t ~ nRW

BOSTO N Bull Terne r ,
mole. 9 mon th s o ld Hod a ll
~ ho t s
Call Mrs . Sull ivan .
J04 8b3 8500.

APRICO T
POO DLE
A KC
_re~ ~ ~te re~d _S~~ _3 ~4 -~!l-2- 32.4 2
TWO 7 week old Do ber m an
Pt nsc h e r pup s,
p ur e br ed ,
block , ta1ls do r l. e d de w cla w s
cut . worm ed S75 each o r bot h
SI OO These or e greol pup s
How ard
Coldwe ll
Tuppers
Plo1ns , Oh1 0 b l 4·bb7-3493
.
GOING OUT of Bu sm i!!'SS So le •
Pood le s, Pek 1n ges e, Pomera nian . Teacup , Tin1 es . S3S to
$125 PhonQ614 -b96-129 7

~ 43 - 3 3 11

1970 Amh ers t SO x 12 2 BR
1970 Ch am pion ()(J x 12 2 BR
1905 General bO x 12 2 BR
l96f:l PMC S1x 12 2 HR
\95 5 Prairi e Schoone r 21:1 x8 1 SR
11f7:J Roya l t:mbassy bB ~e 14 3 Bl-1
1959 Sta r 50.: I U 2 HR
1973 Stor 6(hc14 '1 8R
1 9(1 ~ Star bOIC I :/ 2 8R
1970 Syl va bOx 12 2 8R
1961:1 Vil lages 60 x I '1.2 BR
19MWtnd so r 5h1 () 2 8R
197() Kirkwood 12x60 .J 8R

B&amp;S MOBILf HOMf SAU S
PT . PLfASANT W.VA.
11, A C f.l~ 12 x bO m ob ile hom e
near Oex t ttr . 992-5858.
1Yb7 HOU SE TRAILfH 12 x bO. Al l
electr iC, furni sh ed 0 1r co nd1
honed , wa she r a nd dry er Al so
Ho r r .son v i ll e .
2 lot $ 1n
741-2!l26 .

1909 l:? x bO ST A R 2 bed r oom .
~ o i !o e d fr ont k i tchen Co n •e·
ma in on lot . M e 1gs !)c hoo l
D ls tt iC t .
H a r r1 so n v 1I I P
/ 4'1 3 11;{

CHEAP!

WAHl{ WHL dnll mg
G ra nt 74 2 21:17lf

~ITlt · NELSOM

Wi ll 1am T

W IL L STJ.!IP an d ref1 n1sh l u r n 1lure
See An n l ea m ond by Wogn e r
Hmdwo re,

LIK E NEW Hon do gu llo r and case
e ~e lf o se t o f str mgs an d pick s
1nclud ed M oyto g (opp e rto ne
Porla-pa •r washe r a nd dr yer
Ve ry good cond1t 1o n . !&gt;ell a s
se t
Sy lv on ro
T1rn e -o t o n
Sun lamp an d eye · pro tector s
Call al te r 5 00 pm , Q92 '19QS

J&amp; L

LIK E N~W Ho ndo gu•t or and case
e.: tro se t of stn ng s and p1 ck s
tncl ud e d M oytog Copp er lon e
Por ta -pa rr w oh se r and dryer
Ve ry good cond •t •o n se ll o s
set
Co li after 5 00 pm .
992-2995 .

n SI:A Star boss boot l i S
h o n r ud c .
Fully
r igg e d
992-3193.

19"1 1 FOH O ' • ton camper spec1 o l.
power 01r a uto . d ual tank s
~.:ce ll e nt
1unn1ng condi t ion
$ 1395 992-239'2

Experience 1nd

.f ully insured
. Free Est.
Calf99l -2772
8-10-lmo. (Pd.)

H~M O D~LIN G

l1 ng
!:,ee
74/ nfJU

ANO house pm n
Gary Cr e m ea ns,

l:l O fi Ot R C OL LI ~ pu ps m o ~ e good
wo rk ing do gs for sh ee p o r co t
tie
Gentle wrt h ch•ld rer'l
. Phon e 9'12 -5 106.
lWO KITTl:N S wi th .:;lr •pes lon g
han 9'12 -5677
l HI{H MO NTHS o ld ye l low mo le
k ille n Heal thy 99 2 2591 or
qq'j 2639

H OU S~ IN Pom er oy. 3 o r 4 bedr

f HR H Gf.IE ~ N H OU S~S locat ed o n
Sku ll Run fold W1 ll se ll one o r
all A lso . hove bo de r w 1th 05
fee t o l he a ted benc h . Pmed fo r
qu1 ck so le . Mu st be m oved Ca ll
::104 -BbJ -8500

l ull
s1z e basemen t
Noce
d r iveway
Lorge me chon•col
goroge Lor ge lo t 992 76_2"1

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

LUMP HOU Sl: coot 535 per 'on
delr ve r ed 992 -"1 126,
HAY PHO NE 997 "17 51 .

DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!
During
Our
Closeout.
Outside White

Seasonal

Red roof paint

W. Carsey, Mgr.
Phone 992-2181

g ood o ld er hom e that has 9
room s,
4 be droom s, 2
ba th s, f u rn ac e, and l arge
ya rd w i t h 2 c a r ga r a g e?
N E W LI STING - Like new .
On l y 7 years o ld .'"l H as 3
b edrooms, e nc lose d b a th ,
k i t c he n .
L ar g e
m Od ern
ca rpet ed f a m i l y r oo m with
woo d bur n i n g
f ir e p la ce .
La r ge lot t oo . Just $29,500.

FAMILY HOME - 10
r oo m s, 4 t o 5 be drooms,
f amily r oo m , basem ent,
s ho p , na tur a l gas fu r nace,
c a r pet ing, g arage , and 3
tots

LARG E YARD Sal e O ct 11 , 12, 13.
14 . Some th ing fo r everyo ne ,
l 1rs t house on le ft offer you
c•a ss
Ra i lr o ad
f 1oc k s at
Chesh1 r e ol the Ma ry l ay ne
r es1denc e
HOHSI: 1 RA ILEH l or on e hor se
G oo d
c ond il1 o n
$2 50
Y ~ 2 2488 .

Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften •&amp; condition your
water with co-op wal e~
softener, Model UC· SVI.

Now Only

,

309 ,95

Ler us t est y our wate r
Free

.Pomerc, Landmark _ '

9. Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.•

!Iii!.

Phone 991-2181

19"14 SATO H THACTOH 27 h .p . 2b0
hour s w ith fron t loader . ~we r
steer ing , 3 pt. hi tch, difler en 1101 lock , 1 bo tto m 16' p low . 1
row cul l i\l olor and 12 post ho le
digger .6 1.4 -9BS ·J5Ba.
.
·-·
~--S~ AR S Kt:NMOJ.Il: elE-ctr ic w ashe'r
tor ports Go od m oto r . $ 15.
t,IC/ 2. 5420
197J BRO NCO 4x.4 . 302 . a uto
P S,,
ro d •o . wh1t e spak u
whee ls. ver y g ood cond •fl on 1
~ J d OO o r best off er . 992-bJ:lJ

.

"RfOUCE SA Fl. N. l ost wll h C.oBese
Toh lc t \o 8 ~ · V ap ' wo iP' p il ls'
r ~ c ls o n Drug .

LISTING

- Cam psi t es o n th e Ohio
R i ver on Rou t e 124.
LIKE NEW - 3 bedroom
split -leve l hom e . Enc losed
ba th , d rilled wel l a nd 24
acr es in L etart T own s h ip

NEW
GRA VH Y TRACTOR ond JO '
mo w er
Good
cond1 ! 1o n .
99'2 -7492 or 992 -3"1 l b

o.

Aut' &amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 99;!-5682
.

4·30-IIC

LISTING

- 3

bedroom 7 r oo m house with
bath, na tu ra l gas h e at, and
c i t y wa t er i n t own .

NEW LISTING - 1. 46 ac re
bui ldmg lot on 124 W est .

NEW LISTING - 1976 Holl y Pa rk m obil e h o m e. 3
bed r ooms, 2 l ull ba th s, cen
t r a l air and h ea t , and 1 66
ac res on St ate Route .

GENUINE
STYLE - 3

bu1 lt·in ki tche n, el e ctric
heat, in sul ated, carport ,

stora ge bldg , $28,500.00 .
MOBILE HOME - wi th
nic e lev e l lot SOx 120, rea dy
to mov e into. 12x60 2
bed room s, n ice kitc hen and

living R. JU ST $8,500.00 .
ABOVE THE AVERAGE

Associates

Housing
Headquarters
10 x 50 fra iler and 1 ac re of land .
l oca ted 111 l on g Bo ttom area
~1:1 5 4351.

HO M !::SITES to r sa le , 1 a cre and
up Mtdd lepor t , nea r Rutl and.
Co li 992 -"1 481.
VA fH A 30 yr . fm o nc 1ng , al so
r eli noncrn g Ir el and M or tgage,
n E. St ole, A th ens, pho n e (01.4 )
592-JOS I.
THRH BEDROOM !rome home m
!'ll~~~ l e£o~r t :. C_o l~ 9~2 :3'!_57~- _

J

BORN I.OSE H

I NUKKS
I

s ACRES

2 STORY

REMODELED

HOME - 4 bedroom s, for m a l dining , enc losed f r ont
por c h , 2 c a r g ar age, other
s tor age bldg , Low ga s bill s.

529,500 .00 .
.
NEWER BUILDING -5

fireplace,

several

transferred .

Pr i ce

$35,000.00.

HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992·2259
992-6191
•
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
·
Cleland ·

..

..

U TT I.F: ORPII A:\ ,\ 'IN IF:

Satu Jday's

YOU BET--- THAT
WAS fl. GREAT
ID EA YOU H~ D,

IT WAS ~ fAl l Y

WE'VE GOT TO

YOUR IDf A ,

,\ND PLAN
BIG ·· HOW YOU
SPEND MONE'f IS
'PORTA NT ··-

AHNlE · GEF,

EXCELLENT FARM BUY -

141 ACRES -

THIN ~

A

HUNDRED MILLioN
ro HE-L P oRP't{ANS .r

LISSA ,. ,

The Photo Place

l: Jo-Days of O ur Li ves 3,4, 15; As T h e Wo r ld Tur ns

II
II

ONL..,. FtOYAl:TY
HAVS:: SUCH
Now a rrange the c1rcled leHers to
form lhe surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

I Jumbles : CHESS

BAT HJ.! OOM S ANO
K1t chens
re modeled , cero m1c til e, plu mbmg. c.or pentry and gener al
momleno nce
13 years e iC ·
p en ence 992-3085 ,
- - - - ~-- ~-----

PULLINS t: XCA VATIN G . Com ple te
Serv1ce Phone 992 -2478 .
Rli fVES lRADtN"G: Post , Pogeville,
G ro cerie s. dry good s. hard w ore feed , tack shop Spec 1al
25_ 1~ o_f ~01! ~00~ ~$_3_:.88 . ____
AUTO MOBtll: INSURANCE been
cancelled ? l o st you r operators
license? Phone 992 -2143
- -~ ·--,--CHIM Nt-: Y FIRE S o re no fu n 1 Ha.-e
yo urs clean ed the du stl ess way
.
Th e
Ch1mn c y
Swee p ,
614 -373-0057

- --

----- -----GASOI .! Nf: Al.l .f.Y

SAVE ON
CARPETING

one

DRIVE ALlffiE

&amp;.

MORBID

GRAVEN

The latest JUMBLES are here In JUM BLE BOOK lf10 and JUMBLE
BOOK 1111 1 Avail able for $1 35 EACH, postpaid from Jumble, c/o thi s
newspaper, P.O. Box 34 Norwood, N J. 07648. Make checks payable to
New spaperbooks .

6:()()-News 3,4,6, 8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom
20 .6 3~ NB C News 3,4,6; ABC News 13, Carol
Burnell&amp; Friends 6; C BS News 8, 10; Ove r Easy 20
/ .DO--C ross-Wits 3; PM Magazine 4: New lywed Game
7 : 3~ Hollywood

Squares 3. Le t' s Go To The Races 8;
Dating Ga me 4; Candid Ca mera 6; Pr ice Is Right
10; Donna Fa rgo I 3; Abbott &amp; Costello 15; Mac Ne ilLehrer Re por t 20,33.
8:()()-Wor ld Series 3,4, 15; Happy Days 6.13: Pa per
Chase 8,10; Soundstage 20; City Repor t 33 .

8: 15-Wo r ld Series 3,4, 15; 8 : 3o-Laver ne &amp; Shir ley

6, 13; Whe n the Boat Comes In 33 .
9·00- Thr ee's Company 6, 13; Mov ie " Jacq ueline
Sus ann ' s Once I s Not E nough " 8, 10; Movie " Word
is Out" 20 .
9 : 3~Tax l 6,13, In Perfor mance AI Wolf Trap 33.
10 ·oo-s tarsk y &amp;: Hutch 6, 13; A rea Showcase 33 .

ll :OCI-News 6,1 3.20: Over E asy 33 .

Yesterday's Answer
21 Drag
22 Food fish
23 Washington
Irving book
24 " Broken Arrow" star
25 Sandwich
filling
27 Vocal rendltions

l1 :25--News 8, 10 ; 11 3Q-N ews 3, 4, \5 ; M ov ie " Play

29 Get up
30 Additional
clause
31 Chew the
scenery
32 Mghanis tan city
35 British
dandy
37 Female ruff

Misty For Me" 6, 13; ABC Ne ws 33; Dick Ca ve tt 20
II :55----Gunsmoke 8; Movie " My Ge isha " 10.
12·0o-Johnny Car son 3, .4, 15, 12 : 55-News 8.
1 :3~ Tomorrow 3,4; Ne ws 13.

BR'IDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Expert standard American
Alan : " I believe you won
NORTH

+ 10 9 6

WEST

rr

Buy where you can come in

I~N'T
•

.JAW~

• Q 10 9 6 4

+AQ9

Vulne r a ble: North-so uth
Dealer : N or tb
West North E ast South

Pass
3•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

Pass

It

6+

I

· ~~[~-~JI

O n e letter simply st ands f o r another

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

"5==
iiii

3

YOU'RE HUMAN! IF
YOU TRY ABA I~I'L L
GIVE YOU ALL IHE

SUPPORT I CAN !

uz

WUI W

UGO

W G R S0

MAKES A

C GEE

SRW

YRP P I S F

CGEE
U GO

A G O U RT

O R RS
• I Y -

CGEORS

Yesterday's Cryptoquote : CHARACTER IS A BY-PRODUCT;
IT IS PRODUCED IN THE GREAT MANUFACfURE OF
DAILY DUTY.- WOODROW WILSON

THAT'S TH' LAST TIME
I GIVE lATER HIS

The

THAT'S LINU5 ... HE'5
M'( SWEET BABBOO...

SUPPER ON
A PAPER
PLATE

I'M NO'f '{OUR
SWEET BABBOO!!

vanced s tandard Amer ica n.
In othe r wo rds t hey ma k e

normal opening bids a nd
hav e all sorts o f slam

strong, b ut not forcing so
Malcolm just bid six . "
Os wa ld : "He won the
trwnp lead in dwnmy; led a
heart to his te n a nd West 's
queen . Late r on h e r uffe d out
East 's king of he a rts t o find
a p a rking place for his th':ee
of s pa d es on dummy 's jack
of hearts . If this hadn't
worke d he could still have
fa lle n back on t he club

Oswald : " The t wo m ost
can bridge are the Va nde rbilt and Sping old Cups. The
fea t of winning both in the

RV

Oswald . " The team us es
. wha t m 1ght be ca lle d a d-

fin esse."

prestigious events in Ame ri-

YRP P ISF

1934 and 1938 s om e

By Oswald Jacob y
and Alan Sontag

· CRYPTOQUOT ES

W U R JH UWO

E RO Z

Opening lead : t 2

I n th1 s sampl e A . ts

I0·7 u sed f or th e t hree L 's, X fo r the t w o O's. e t c . Si ngl e l cllcr s,
~~:::::::: apost r ophes, t h e l en gt h and formati o n of t h e w ord s are all
==
h i n t s. Each day th e code l ette r s ar e different

WI NNIE

WHO'S THE KID
WITH THE BLANKET?

Pass

tn

gadget s ."
Alan: " Here is a poppa momnna sla m bid by Brachman and Sol o w ay . Paul 's
three dia m ond bid was

¥ A IO

DAILY C RYPTOQUOTE - H e r e's how to work it :
A XYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

Wendell or Herb Groft
orGeneSmHh

1

+ KJ 4J

+A K3

I Bogart role l......f,.....I"-..L.....,L,--

i. AND 2..

¥K 8 7
• J 3

SOUTII

C~~.~~TlQ. u;:;u

IF

+ Q B 75

+ 10 B 7 6 2

rF•R•A•N~K_&amp;__E_n_N_Ir:_'------------~~--------------~========~~~r-----------------M~~~
cheese
ALL YOU
~ USurfeited IN~I-1.

E AST

+ J4 2
"Q 6 4 3
• 2

both

years befor e I was born and
it has bee n done twice be ~
t w e en now and then."

• 5

38 Bouquet
39 Tempt.

sq~~p

IG-!J-78

.. J 9 52
t AKB 75

mountain

Floor CcMring In Stock

Largest Selection In The

6,1 3,· New s 10 ; Love , A m er ic an Style 15, Lock.
Stoc k &amp; Barrel 20; Eco nom ically S pe~k i ng 33.

30 Alkali
330beisance
34 London
ritual
36 Turkish

9' and 12' Vinyl

15 IN STOCK ·

10; P ett icoat Junction 15.

5·00-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3; Sta r Trek 4;
Bever ly H illbillies 8; Mi ster Rogers' Ne ighborhood 10,33; Gomer P yle. USMC iO : Emergency
One 13; Brady Bunc h 15.
5 : 3~ N ews 6; Sanford 1!. Son 8; E lec Co. 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moo re 10; Odd Cou ple 15.

bush?

SAVE ALOT

RuHoncl

8, 10; 2 :oo-on e Life to Live 6,1~ .
·
2:3()-Doclors 3,4, 15; Guiding Li ght 8. 10.
3:()()-Anothe r Wor ld 3,4,15; Genera l Hospita l 6,1 3,
Lilias Yog a 1!. You 20.
3 : 3~Ma s h 8;; Jo ker 's Wild 10: Di ck Cavett 20
4·()()-Mister Ca r toon 3; Hollywood Squares !5: Battle
oflhe Pla net s 4: Porky Pig 8. Friends 8: Sesa me St .
20,33, Ba tman 10; Dinah 13.
4 . 3~L i lll e Rascals3 ; Gil ligan 's Is. 4.8: Brady Bunch

source

- Good soloctlons "-- Fully
stocked.

'

XI XI XJ
{Answers tomor row )

CRA FT

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Royal na me
ACROSS
1 Box office
3 Athletic
draw
setting
5 Old Nick
t Gallic
... ljLJT I CAN NO LONGER AHTtJ 115 ALIVE, OI.D
10 Unsullied
cbap's
PICK Ul" H IS iHOUGHo
'
H~~~,':Ak~YS &lt;"-'""" 11 Not dense
name
PATTERNS, AND I FEAR
HE MAY HAYS BEEN
'10 '11-te VALLPY
12 Arab la nd
5Seed
'mRMINI&gt;rr'ED BY HIS
01" SMOKES7
13
Mind
you
'
6 Indian
!!ROTHE!&lt;: i
14 Defeated
mulberry
_,._,.......__..t',ii'--- 16 Weirdo
7New
17 Gaslight Jersey
city
18 English
8 Bring
river
comfort
19 Former chess
9 Snuggled
champion
11 Barracks
" Lafayette,
sound
&lt;l!jl~~~=- we - here"
15
Madness
"'
21 Theater box
20
Chemical
221mpudent
suffix
25 Harmonized
Especial h1 at
Wh4 don't 40u stop
26 Villa d' - r.--r;'""T;-"'1~
~hat's not beatinq aro~And t.he
27 Appreciated : sl.
even
26 C&lt;Jnswned 1;-:;----t-t-+open!
29 Energy

8·2·1 m o.

owner ' s age prevents her from continuing to operate

the farm and she desires a n Immediate sale. 50 to 60
a c res tilla ble with some very good creek bottom hilltop land. The balance Is In pasture &amp; woods. The 6
room home Is good (does nee&lt;~. some modern ization) ,
large all purpose barn &amp; several outbuildings. The

Onl y 15

~ -

(Bob Hoeflich )
10'1 High 51.
Pomeroy

A'~W
TWO BEUROOM S. w1 ndow se at ,
fir epl ace · w 1fh mantl e and
boo kshe l ves w it h gloss doo rs.
Mode rn k 1t chen wi th ba r . Port ly .
Mo1n ,
ca rpeted . BUB t a st
991-JB'/ 1.
- - - - " - - - - · ---~3 ~ ·, ACRES in ,..omeroy , secl uded
wooded area on top , of hill,
Over look s r~ ver Water and
electri c available 992 381:16

Ho pe 6, 13; Bob Braun 4; Sear ch for

To morrow 8,10 ; Elec . Co. 20,33 .

Call Us Today

CALL US FOR ALL YOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

15;

Con su m e r Su rvival K i t 33
1 2 : 3~R y an ' s

Answ e r. Threaten ed to rain o n th e acto rs at the
o utdoor theater - " OV ER CAST"

SENIORS

-

Alive

Young 1!. the Rest less 8, Midda y Magazine 13:

Printanswerhere: (

1nd Me \!:that you're getting

804W. Main
Pomeroy
992-2298
After Hours
C.ll992-7133
CONTACT :
Lois Paul'y
Branch Maneger

rJ

1

outbuildings. Owner being

r e nta ls,
good
goi n g
bus iness, v e r y nice i n co m e

property . $47,200.00
DOUBLE YOUR JOY IN
ONE OF THESE FINE
BUYS . WE ALSO HVE
OTHERS.

IAFDACEI

9-7-1 mo .

....~

room,

12:0G-N ewscenter 3; News 4,6, 10; Am e r ica

I :()()-Hollywood Squares 3: All My Children 6,13;

I ()

As Low As

11 ACRES - More or less, 4
bedrooms, modern bath,
large kitchen 8. dining

11 :55--C BS New• B: House Call 10.

h

IUPBRALI

We are currellt•~ making
appointments for senior
portra i ts. We use traditional settings and also
feature
outdoor
·por·
traiture.

-

of Fortu ne 3,4,15; Fam ily Feud 6,13;

N ews 9; You ng &amp; the Rest less 10; N o t For W omen

Rubber Back Carpet

$11 ,000 00 .
- with fruit and
nut t r ees, n ice 3 o r 4
b edroom home, na t . gas
hea t, fir epl ace, bas e m ent,
2 c ar g ara ge, overl ooks the
r iver . 532,000 .00.

rJ

All corpel lnslollod wolll
padding 11 no charge.
Expert instollotion .
.

- 2 bedroom s, carpe ting
and pa n e ling , base m e nt,
n a t . gas h eat , s mall lot,
id e a l
f or
a c ouple .

Adjust yourself to modern
living . Invest in YO.ur
family's dream home.

WOULD YOU LIKE SOLD
ON YOUR PROPERTY?
TRY US, IT JUST MIGHT
WORK, BUT IT MUST
MEET OUR APPROVAL.
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford
Sue P . Murphy

RANCH
be droo m s .

E merg ency One 6; Hoga n 's He r oes 8; M at ch Game

10.
9-3()-Brady Bunch 8; Fam ily Affai r 10.
IO : O~Ca rd Sharks 3, 15: My Th ree Sons 4: Edge of
Night 6: All In The Fa m ily 8, 10; Dating Ga me 13.
I 0 : 3~Jeopa rdy 3,4, 15; Andy (.; rlttl th 6; P r ice I• Righ t
B. 10 ; 520.000 P yram id 13.
11 :()()-High Rollers 3,4.15: Happy Days 6,13; ConLove of Li fe 8,10 .

•

0.

6·45----Mor nlng Report 3; 6 : 5~Good Morni ng . West
VIrgin ia 13.
6:55--Chuc k White Reports 10; News 13.
7:0CI-Today 3,4,15 ; Good Morning Ameri ca 6.13; CBS
N ews 8; J etson s 10.
8:0CI-Capt . Ka ngaroo 8,1 0. Sesame St . 33
9 :00- Me r v Gr llfln 3: P h il Donahue 4, 13,15.

sumer Su rv i v al K it 20 .

Tom

High School

on

6 :'2&gt;-Con cerns &amp; Commen ts 10; 6 : 3G-Focus
Columbus 4; News 6; Sunrise Semester 8.

11 : 3~Wheel

oskl'ns, 949· 2160. Free
Estimates.

TU ESDAY, OCTOB E R 10, 1978
5:45----Far m Report 13; 5:50--PTL Club 13; Sunrise
Semestele r 10; 6:oo-PTL Club 15.

Unscramble the se fo ur Jumbles,
one letter to each sq u are, to form
four ordinary words .

All types of roofing, gutte11
downspouts, 20 years
experience .
All work

I
I

12 :31&gt;-N ews 8; 1 : ~Tomorrow 3,4 ; News 13.

li'JtlfliMJ fii}'i} ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
"9 ~~ ®
by HennArnold and Bob lee

&amp;

Call

Movie " All In a Night's Wo rk " 10.
11 :45----FB I 6; 12·()()-lronslde 13.

~

Pomeroy, 0 .
3-15-ttc '

tuaranleed .

11 . J~Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; News 13; Gun smoke 8;

5:()()- Voyage t o the Bottom of the Sea J; Star Trek 4;
Beverly Hillbi ll ies 8: Miste r Rogers 20,33; Gomer
P yle, USM C 10: Emergency One 13; Brad y Bunch
15.
5 : 3~ News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec. Co. 20,33; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6 :oo-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6 : 3~NB C News3. ~ . 1 5 : ABC News 13; Carol Bur nett &amp;
F r iends 6; CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 20.
7:()()-Cross-W its 3: PM Ma gazine 4; Newlywed Game
6.13; Marty Robbin s' Spatllqhl 8; News 10: Love ,
America n Sty le 15; Al ma nac 20 ..
7 : 3~ That Nas hville Mus ic 3; Dat ing Game 4: Muppet
Show 6; Match Ga me PP M 8; Wild Kingdo m 10;
$1 .98 Beaut y Show 13; Nashville On T-he Road 15;
Mac Ne il -Le hrer Re port 33.
8:()()-L IIlle Ho use On The P ra iri e 3,4, 15; Welcome

·SERVICE

HOWtRY AN D M ARTIN
h cavo ti ng
sep ll c sys t e,m s ~ '
d o zer backhoe . dum p lruck .
l1 m e ston e
gr ove l , blac k top
pav ing, Rt 143 . Phone 1 (614 )
698 -7331

POMEROY,

NEW

Pomeroy Landmark

o/4 mile ott ttt. 7 Dy-pass on
St. Rt. T241oword Rutland,

608 E.
MAIN lo.:o~O:..:...I

992-3325
216 E. Second Street
FAMILY HOME - Wa nt a

J U6T WHAT I'M
THI NKIN', POPN~
- AND THAn;
E'KACTLV WHV
I AIM T' TRV
AND LI!JTeN
IIIH

OHIO VAllEY ROOFING
AND HOME MAINTENANCE

bed room hom e rec SI: W ING MACHINE Re po.rs ser
roo m , f irepl ace. Io rg e d eck ,
v 1ce , oil makes, 992 -228.4 The
go rog e, bas e ment , one ond a
Fab r iC
Sho p .
Pom E&gt; r o y
hal f bath s. Ph one lee Co n st rucAu th on 2ed Smger So les and
h on
q9 2 34 5.4 . w ee k ends
Serv1ce We sharpen Sc 1ssors.
.
- - . 1 b 14 -446 -9S6t:l
~ XC AVA TIN G , doz er , loader and
H O U S ~ IN Minersvil le Alum inum
backh oe wor k dump trucks
s1d1 n g Newly ca rpeted . Po r tly
an d lo boy s l or h1re wil l haul
fu rn 1shed .4 bedroom , Ir ving
f1 l1 d1r t , to so d, l1mes ton e and
room k1 tchen , ulil•ty ro om
g ro ve l . Coli Ho b o r Rog e r Jet
bo th . niCe ba sement . Onl y a sk f e r s. day phone 992· 70H9 n1gh t
m~ s_n_, 5~. 9?2 5~2~ . - - .
phon_e 9Q2 - ~52S _o r_9 ~2 -_ 5 ~33._. _
HO USE IN Po me roy Lorge lo t
~XCAVA TING
doz er , bacl. hoe
Some recent remodeling , n ew
an d d1tcher Charles R Hot carpe t . cent ral healing . u td il y
field . Boc l. ~o Se r \I ICe .
rob m lu ll bas eme nt 2 po rRutla nd, Ohi o Phor "/42-2008
ches Fu rn1 shed or unfurni sh ed .
~~lldo. ~o~fi- , c~n;I;~;;~C:n ,
99'2 -1074 ,
pl umbmg ond eatin g No 10b
too Iorge or too smal l Ph(' ne
74 2-23.4 8

SJO per truck load .
fd2 -235Q eve nmg s.

I/3 FO HO F-100 p1cku p Power
iC
stee r•ng . o uto . msu loted lop per S1UOU Cor trade r SS OO.
9A 9-28!j0 ,

HE MUSTA
MIGHTY
PRE5SE'D A BUTTOf&gt;J ... INTER65 TIN5! ...
.I DIDN'T EWE'N !JSE'
Hcc; H WALLS
WHO WAS IJ.J
ALL AROUI.JD
THE'RE!
Hl5 i5TAT£'8UT HE' 5T!Lt..
WAI.JTS E-~TRA
PJI:tVACY !

Brakes
Muffler
Tires
Shocks
Battery .
Installation Service
Ph . 992-2848

BRADFORD , Auct ione er . Com
pl ete Serv1ce Pho ne 949 2A87
or 949-2000 RaCin e O hio Cn tt
F t V ~ ROOM hou se an d both,
Brad for d
remo de led . fu ll y carpeted . M ov
f WfH S Rf PA IH
be seen aft e r 3 pm Phone ~L WOO D B
Swee per s. t oas te r s. 1ron s. a ll
991-39JJ
smal l app l1ances Lawn mower ,
!-=ARM f O J.I sal e House 2 barn s,
n e~et to St at e High way Garag e
lr o•le r Lor ge pond. lO a cres o r
o n Houl e 7. Phon e (6 14) 9H5
BJ acres. 7 42 - ~Sb6
J825

H~ E W O O O .

NtW G IBSON 10.000 BTU o•r co n
d •t •on er . Onl y us ed 2 mon th s
'i9L-bJ50

I

N~W T HR ~ t

Giw Awa y

DRAP• S !&gt;LIDE !&gt;HUT, 1-!IPII.JC:. THE'·
~lc!IHTSD ROOM FROM VIEW I

GNAT~ I

t-- ---:-::-::-----"-

Cellulosic I wood· fiber)
·Thermal insulation
S.ve 30 pet . to ~0 pet.
on heating cost

I·OR VO UH com ple te ho usmg
ro.:o1n od elmg . ro n!&gt;lruCIIOn and
mam lro non ce, gtve J.R a tr y
Re l e r e n ce
o v o il obl e
Reo sonobl e p nc e s.
Phon e
4&lt;,1 '1 SI Yl

10·30-c

8-20-1 mo. (Pd .)

JIM KEESEE .

WRH O UG H!:, ~t N ~ I - MA II(
oc
r o un h n g
lllOl h1n e
Ph one
YY:/-LI ~ 6 The Do•l y Se nllne l .
111 Co ur t Stree t Po meroy .
Ohio

At.tD E'A,Y WATCH FROM THE'
EPc!lli OF MAYOR 806G5 ' 5HA~I&lt; POOL-

MOORE'S

Free Estifnates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

MOTORS, INC.

A~ WA!JH

. For The Best
Price ln Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

-

New or R.epair
Gutte!S and ,
Downspouts

CAPTAI!II E i1.'iY

Che ster, Ohio

BoX 3

11 : 15--'--News 6.

10; Petti coat J unct ion 15

Jdck's Septic
Tank Service

ROOFING

COA l . liMt S T ON ~ . sand gravel
co lcr um chl on de. fer t1 l11 e r dog
l oa ~ . an d a ll type s o l salt. 1:: .:
ce lsror So il Wo rks. Inc . E M om
~~
Po me roy ltr.rl JBY I

BUS
rom pe r
60
SCHO O L
pa ss e nger w1th new t1res
Good co nd it ion Con tact Tom
Monk m a t lilr.rl 'l20 1

MONDAY, OCTOB E R 9, 1978
3; Ba ttle of the Pt~;~uc i s 4;
Hollywood Squares 15; Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;
F r iends 8: Sesame St . 20,33; Batman IO; Dinah 13.
4 : 3~ Utt!e Rascals 3; Gil liga n's Is . 4,8; Brady l!unch

- Phone 985-3806
Jac k Ginther ~85-3806

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Foorth Street-off
Mill Street just behind
Tony'!l Corry . Out.
Open S.turday 10·4 p.m .
Sundar 12 noon to 3 p.m .
8-31·1 mo.

H. L WRITESEL

~ni&lt;"cs Otfcttd

Moirli..' U:4~ ~&lt;irf~• NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
19"16 NASHUA 14 x b5 3 bedroo m
I ' 1 bo th , unde rp innm g, $1500
and ass ume loo n. 949-2b83 or

9-21 -1mo.

Phone 992-2181

H O O ~ HOL LOW Hor se s Buy , se ll

STA R Kenn e l s Boar ding
and gro om mg. a ll breed s
Chesh1 re , 3b"l -0292 o r 367 -0 106

For Fre e Estimates

WOOD HEAT

W. Carsey,

PAINTS

~ IS I NG

Fed. Tax

Other sizes
comparably
p r iced .

MIXED H A Y 992 2453.

trade o r trot n Ne w and used
saddles Hv th Reeves , A lba ny .
(oi&lt; Jo98 -J 190.

Pr ices in cludes

Call 9'12-7013

t'or&amp;k

G HIMl: S G Ol DEN f.!ed Delic'. o ul&gt; ,
IS Gol d e n Del •ctous appl es Fitz
po tr 1ck
O rc ha rd . SH b8 9
61.4 b69-37 fJ 5

I '

Resider1tia l and commer c ial. C1ll for estima t e. 24
Hour Service. Any Uy ~
anytime.

QUALITY

Blown lnsulatioo

1b
TWO MA L ~ Ooberm ons lost m
Ru lland On e has lo ng ea r s
one has 1hem cl 1pped Ha" e
cO ll ars 7d2-'231b

Pomeray, O.

balanc ing)
FULLY
GUARANTEED

RESPONSIBLE
PERSON

sto ry house
Midd le por t
utlllli i?S pe r
•n fo rm o llon ,
0 pm

f.! OOM AND bo01d for o ne pers o n
m Portl and oreo !l43 25 14.

220 E . Mllln Street,

(does not Include
sales ta x or

J A ND .4 H:M l urn1 shed an d un op t s
f u r nr sh e d
f.' hu n ~
9Q;J 5434

~ OH

·ElliOTT
APPUANCE II

White-Wall Co-Op
Custom Po~
A78x13

COUNTR Y MOB I L ~ Horn e Por k .
flov te 3J north o f P o m e~oy
large lots Co il r.t'fl "/ .4 /'11

TELEVISION
VIEWING

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

'11118 AJIPAh1GIIIAll(
· M'0116 GOIIIPANY

Armstrong Carpeting

WAN f l: O
MA N AG I NG
IO!&gt;Ille to hg1st w .t h clicn lele
A bove Av e rage c o mm 1 S~ 1 0 n
Wr1 1 e l:l o ~~ 1/':J M1ddl epo rl O H
~ l o l1ng e • pe • ience ond phone
numbe r ~ ep l 1 e!&gt; conf• den11ol

Bac k, Kotter 13; A Sense of Adventure 6; WKRP In
Cincinnati 8,10: Evening at Symphony 20 : Person
to Person : 33 .
8:3()-NFL Football 6,13; Mash 8,10: Lowell Thomos
Remembers 33.
9 :0CI-Movle " Secrets of Three Hungry Wives " 3,4,15;
Long Search 20; Great Performances JJ .
9 :30----&lt;:o~ntry Music Assoc. Awards 8, 10; IO: oo-News
20; Even ing at Symphony 33
10:30-----Cr'ockelt' s VIctory Garden 20.
11 :oo-News 3,4,8, 10, 15; Dic k Cavett 20; VIsions 33 .

.4 :01)-M ist er Cart oon

Your Headquarters For

t 'o r Hmt

l WO IUDROOM trailer I.J&lt;/:J "J5:.!0
a l te r~ pm

Business Services

4 NEW

Ausll oho
~o u t h Am en r o. ~ u r o p e
etc
Con s II uct •on .
~ ol c&gt; o..
t~1g m eer~ . ( ler .col etc ~!:1000
Ia 5 ~0 {X)() p ill '&gt; 1.- .:p o n ~ e '&gt; po1rl
f or emplo y1nent mfo r rHo l 1on
W111c.• Ovc 1 ~c o ~ 1:mp loyrnPrlt ,
So l( 10 11 ~ as t o n Mo Ut' I OL

1 '11!~

h i l llt' II JO r y, Ca1tl uf 111a uks a nd
ObLt u&lt;~ ry · li l't-' ll ls Jll' l wurd, S:! 00
ITW IUil UI Il C&lt;1:oh Il l ;n.h'illll'l'

-

LEGA L. NOTICE
TO : C. F . A n derson

Olive .

l "l liU' ~l'

Auto~~.,.

' ACY

HOW

COME,
MAW ?

same year was just accom·

plished by t he t eam c aptained by Ma lcolm Brachma n of D allas t ha t included
Paul Soloway, B obby Goldman, Eddy Kanto r and Mike
Passell. They w on twe lve

successive matches against
the best in America to do
this.''

A M aine rea der asks, "Do
all e x perts use the Gerber
conve ntion as well as !lla c k-

wooct•!"

We c an 't s peak for all, but
those exp erts we know do
use it when it i s obv~uus .
·
!NE WSPAP ER E N'T'E RPRTSE

(For a copy ot JA COBY MODERN, send $1 1o: " Win af
Bridge , ,. care of this n e ws~
per, P. 0 . Box 489, Radio City
Sta t1on , New York , N Y. 10019)

HE LEFT TH'
SUPPER AN' ATE
TH' PLATE

Velley

miner~ls go w i th It and It's located In an area where

ga s, oil &amp; coal have been found to be plentiful. Near
Rut land . 60's.

CALL THE WISEMAN
REAL ESTATE AGENCY 446-3643

.

'·

\

-

.

•

A SSN~ )

'

�10-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .. Monday. Od . 9.1978
MEETS TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Chapter 255,
Order of Eastern Star, will
meet at 8 p.m . Tuesday at the
Temple. There will be
election of officers. · Dues are
payable at this time.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admissions Paula Horton. Middleport :
Eula Welk er , Colum bu s:
Ralph Carl , Pomeroy: Leora
Strom, Pomero·y: . Goldie
Roberts, Racine: Celia Rite ,
Middleport .
Saturda y Discharges Barpara King, Philip Numm ,
Charles Nunn, Nellie Price,

Charles
With ee.
Paul
Saunders, Mary Reynolds,
Cora Jewell, Agnes Brown.
Sunday Admissions George Hnpp . Long Bottom ;
Avis Lawson, Langsville ;
Mary Howell. Pomeroy .
Sunday Discharges - Lela
Easterday, Brian Riffle,
Caryl Tyler.

SQUAD CALLED
Eastern ranked
The Pomeruy Emergency
Squad went to Bailey Run at
15th in region
7: 05 p . n~aturday fur Leora
Strum who was taken to
The Ohio High School
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ball ·Ranking System
Fuot
where she was admitted.
released
its poll and ratings
At 2:26 p.m. Sunday the
squad was ca lled to Condor this week with several teams
St. for Tom Wells who was in the area ranking highly.
In Class A, Region II,
dead upon teh unit's arriva .
Eastern is tied for the
number 15 spot with Miller
SELLS WINNER
being 13 . Trimble and
David R. Harbarger , Ohio Ca ldwell are tied for 19, and
Lott e ry Director, today Croo ksville is way up there at
announced that Kroger Co.
No. 2.
Store No. 698 · of Pomeroy,
North Gallia and Waterford
sold a winning $500 WIN-A- are both at 27, Kyger Creek is
THON ticket in the lottery's 36, and Southern is 43 .
Weekly 50 cent game.
Eastern's impressive win
Harbarger stated, " so.me over Kyger Creek friday
fortunate ticket buyer who should jump them up, and
will be announced after North Gallia's win over
validation of ticket, became a Southern will help the
Winner by matching one set of Pirates.
'
five-digit numbers from the
In Region 7, Class AA,
eight sets printed on Ute_WIN- Ironton is 17 and Meigs is 23.
A-THON stub. The wmnmg Wellston is ranked 35,
number 03270 was drawn Alexander 37, and Jackson 46.
during the lottery's television Belpre and GaUia Academy
show Thursday, September are tied with eight others lor
21.
number 60 out of 69 teams.

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

i

Area Deaths ! ~~in~~·pa;e,~

PAULL. MANUEL
. Obio-171 in CarroU ·County .
, Ro
. Akron: Martin Griffen, 25,
.Paul L. Manuel, 80,
ute Phoe . Ariz · k!Ued when
2, Racine, died Sunday at
. rux_,
~:W,ed in 1-76
Veterans Memorial Hospital. his vehic1e c · ·
bo · Ma
near Akron.
Mr. ManueI was rn
Y
Akro . Cia de BeUomy 26
IN HOSPITAL
19, 1698 in Racine, a son of the Wads:~th ~Uled when'
Mrs . Esther !Scotty I
' aabed on Ohio
late Edward and Ella
oto
Manuel. He was also m · rcyc1e cr
Simpson has entered Holzer
preceded in death in 1973 by 261 near Akron in Summit
Medical Center for ob·
servation 'and treatment. His
his wife, Freda ' Warner County .
oh
Manuel two brothers Harry
Dayton: Joseph J nson
room number is 5o:i.
and Ce~il. and two 'sisters, DI,_54, Cleveland, killed In an
Holl~r Mcdkal Center
Blanche Cleland and Edna acctdent on 1-70 near Daytoo
Discharges, Od. 6
in Montgomery Co~ty ·
Shram.
Clarence Adkins: Gracie
Chardoo: Patrict~ Grosse,
Surviving are a daughter,
Baker: Billie Ba1·bcr : Gladys
Mrs. Robert (Carrie) Roush, 8, Wickliffe, killed m a tw~
Barlow: Edith Belvisn: Twila
Route 2, Racine; a son, vehicle accident oo U-S 422 m
Buck lev· Ma1·tha Chambers:
Eril'e:1 O~gUn; l.ind(j Edgi:lr ;
Lester P. of Logan; ~ sister, Geauga County.
Margaret Gei~~r; Charles
Mrs. Fred (Sarah) Spencer,
Sunday
Mason, W. Va.; three
Cleveland:A!ft:edJ ._ Webb,
Herdman: Lui a Jllll es;
grandchildren, Robert H. 18, Cleveland, killed tn twoPhillip Kanouse: Michael
Roush and Paul Roush, vehicle crash on a city street.
McBride; J anis McCAmRacine, and Kathy Manuel,
Toledo: Catrina Boyer, 10,
mon: Jamie McQuaid : MOnt
Logan.
Toledo,
struck by a cat as she
Melzer ; Mrs. Vernon Miller
A retired school . teacher, tried to cross the street near
and daughter; Mrs. George
Mr. Manuel was a member of her home.
Newsum and dau~=:htcr;
Frances Pancake ; Mrs. CArl
the Ohio Retired Teachers
Parker and son; Mamie
Assn., and the Racine United
Rubinson : Debora h Russell :
Methodist Church. He taught
in . the Meigs area for a
Mrs. .John Shuler and
(Continuedfrom oa~e 1l
MEUIODIS'f MEE'fiNG
number of years. He was a system's 101,000 students
daughter : Gladys Ward:
Helena While ; Cathy W1Ison:
member ofthe I.O.O .F . from attending classes, have
COLUMBUS (UPI)
DIES OF BURNS
failed to bring about a
Pastors and members of the
Lodge .
Edith Yerian .
CLEVELAND ( UP!)
Funeral services wiil be settlement.
Births, Oct. 6
KenneUt Blubaugh, 32, Cleve- United Methodists of Ute West
Meanwhile, the head of the
Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
land, died Sunday in the Burn Ohio Conference churches
unity
group of striking Clevethe
Rawlings-Coats
funeral
from
Lake
Erie
to
the
Ohio
Brancau, daughter, J~ckson .
Unit
at
Cleveland
land
school employees'
Discharges , Oct. 7
River
will
attend
a
gathering
Home
in
Middleportwith
the
Metropolitan General
Annie Armstrong; Frankie Hospital , where he was in Columbus next Monday ,Rev . David Harris of- unions has been fined $500
Branuner ; Cordelia Brown; admitted Sept. 28 suffering part Ute church's national
ficiating . Burial will be in sentenced to 10 days in jail,
ELMA E. SMITH
Mr:;. J ames Burrsi ond ,~:i on;
on
the
Mrs.
Elma
E.
Smith,
66,
Letart Falls Cemetery. Ute maximum allowed by Jaw.
meetings
this
month
from chemical burns over 50
Route
I,
Langsville,
died
Friends may call at teh for contempt of CQur\ .
Clarence Campbell : Crystal
theme
of
"Committed
to
percent of his body.
James E. O'Meara, also
Christ-O!IIed to Change." unexpectedly Sunday at the funeral home anytime after
Fowler ; Margaret HArdin :
Albert fox; Donna Hopper;
executive secretary of the
The program includes talks Holzer Medical Center.
10 a.m . Tuesday.
Cleveland Teachers Union,
So nia Isreal: Linda Jenkins: - - - - - - - - - - · by Bishop Carl J. Sanders,
Mrs. Smith was born Nov.
Pomeroy.
Birmingham, Ala., on world 18, 1911 in Salem Township, a
Saturday was found guilty by
Helen Kimt:!s: Dennis I .ucy;
,. daughter.
WILLIAM NEASE
Mr. and Mrs. Tirruny Slush. hunger, by BishOP Ernest T. daughter of the late Earl and
Clyde Marks: Wyuma
William Michael Nease, 63, Hanna, who delayed the sentD'txon, T ope ka , Kan ., on the Dorcas Ogdin Strong. She Racine, died Sunday night at ence and payment of Ute fine
McGhee; Dessic Patterson : son, JaL"ksun.
church's outreach to its was married on Jan. 16, 1931 Holzer Medical Center.
Discharges, Oct. 8
ORa Reynolds ; Vivian
until Tuesday. That Is when
florence Barrett; Charles ethnic
minority . local to Titus Smith who preceded
Richardson; Lori Ruthel·O'Meara
is to report to a
Mr. Nease was born July
furll; Howard Saye1· ; Linda Bostic; Brenda Imboden ; churches, and host Bishop her in death on July 13, 1962. 25, 1915 the son of the late Tim probation
officer
to
A retired cook at the Salem and Miranda Martin Nease. detennine if there are any
Shinn; Mary Th ol'nlon; Donald· Kirk; Alphadine Dwight E. Loiler, Columbus,
on evangelism.
Center Elementary School, He was also preceded in mitigating circumstances to
. Charles Wood : Raymond Lemley; Alherla Parsons:
Timothy Parsons: Sara
Mrs. Smith had served as death by two sisters, llizie' prevent the, sentence from
Zerkle.
Pierce; Thomas -ROdney:
clerk for the Salem Township Harris and Cora Ritchie and being imposed .
Births, Oct. 7
Trustees for the past 11 three brothers, Howard, Don · A lawyer for the . unity
Mr. an d Mrs. Joseph Junes, Elc~n or Shane.
On Utis day in history:
Births, Oct. 8
years.
group said
O'Meara's
son, Beaver.
and Gerald.
In 1701, Yale College- now
· Mr . and Mrs . Jinunie
SUrviving are six sons,
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
conviction will be appealed.
Mr.
Nease
was
a
veteran
of
Shepherd , Daughter, McAr- Yale University -was foun- Corwin, De Borgis, Montana;
Lewis, daughter, Oak Hill .
Other school strikes
Pomeroy , 0 .
World War II, member of the
200 East Main
ded.
Lloyd, Baltimore, Ohio; Racine Baptist Church, continued
in · Logan, ·
Mr. and Mrs . Ja mes Sisson, thur.
Theodore, Conesville, Ohib;
Wellington,
Twinsburg
and
Racine American Legion,
Paul of Pataskala; Larry and former owner of Racine Painesville Township.
John, both of Route 1, LangsA judicial ·back-to-work
Home Laundry and Car Wash
ville; four daughters, Mrs.
&lt;rder
was being ignored by
and was employed by SouthBill (Dolores) Wallace,
striking
school employees in
ern Local School District.
Louisville, Ky.; Mrs. Bill
Logan.
Despite
an injunction'
He is survived by his wile,
(Bernice) Garnes, Dexter;
by
Hocking
County
issued
Virginia, one daughter,
Mrs. Thomas (Dolt) Stewart,
Pleas
Court
Judge
Common
Karen Lyons, Racine; two
Salt Lake City, Utah, and Ms.
James
Stilwell,
strikers
tried
"Sons, Mike of Racine and
Hope Imboden , Rodney.
to
block
school
entrances
Also surviving are 30 Mitch of Marietta, one sister, Friday. Police pushed them
Beth Pickens, Rochester,
grandchildren, six greathack so otbers could get to
grandchildren, a brother, Pa.; one brother, Oren of Uteir classrooms.
Rufus Strong, San Diego, Renton, Washington, three
Noo-teaching employees of
Calif.; a sister, Mrs. Edith grandchildren and several the Twinsburg Public School
Talbert, Rutland , several nieces and nephews.
Funeral service&amp; will be District met Sunday to hear a
nieces, nephews and cousins.
report oo the latest contract
Preceding her in death held Thursday at 1 p.m. at the negotiations
with
the
besides her parents were her Racine Baptist Church will administrition . The strikers,
husband, a stepson, a Rev. Don Walker officiating. members of the Ohio
brother, ,a sister and grand· Burial will be in Greenwood Association of Public School
Making youngSiers happy-is there anything better thai
Cemetery. Friends may call
son.
Employees, have been off the
you could do with your time? And, if that happy moment
Mrs. Smith was a member at Ewing Funeral Home after job since last Tuesday.
comes at Christmas, it turns for many children a sad time
of the Salem Center United 2 p.m. Tuesday.
Negotiations last were held
into a happy one .
Methodist Church where she
Enter d1e Dress-A-DollrM Contest or the Design-A-ToyTM
Friday night.
served as Sunday School
Negotiators for striking
Contest. You may participate in one or both, whatever you
THOMAS H. WELLS
superintendent. She was a
Painesville
Township
choose . We fumish the doll and the toy . They are both
Thomas H. Wells, 79,
member of Star Grange and a
available now in our lobby . You dress lhe doll, and those
teachers
resumed
bargaining
past president of the Salem Condor Street, Pomeroy, died
entering the toy contest need only assemble the toy from a
Sunday.
The
190-member
at his residence Sunday.
Center !.'X A.
sheet of complete instructions and add whatever decoration
Mr. Wells was preceded in Painesville Township
Funeral services will be
they choose to the ex.rerior of the toy . The toy , a truck,
Education Association struck
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at death by his parents, William
comes in th ree differem models: log truck , fire engine and
Ute district Sept. 27 over
the Salem Center United Henry and Sarah Davis
dump truck . We will give dull s and toys to needy boys and
wages
and
working
Wells,
one
son,
Darell,
who
Methodist Church with the
girls in our area.oO ne of our l ocal organization s will help
conditions.
W"'i
killed
in
action
ill
World
Rev. John Davis officiating.
distribute them . They know where the dolls and the toys are
About 4, 700 students are
I will be in Salem War II, two sisters, Happy
Buri
most needed . You would be surprised how many need
enrolled in Ute system's 10
Clark
and
Charity
Jones.
Cent
emetery.
so much .
schools.
Mr. Wells was a former
Fri
ds
may call at the
•
Along the way , your doll and loy will be on display in
Union
Baptist
member
of
Mt.
Wa '
Funeral Home in
our lobby and people from m.iles around will be i'nvited to
Funeral services will be
a
d
anytime from 10 Church at Carpenter.
see them . Both dolls and !rucks will be judged and you can
He
is
survived
by
his
wife,
held
Wednesday at3 p.m. at
a.m. Tuesday to 12 noon
even win a prize.
Irene Stewart Wells, three Ewing Funeral Home with
the
body
Wednesday
when
Make some li nle girl or boy happy this Quistmas and you
will be taken to ,the church to nleces, one nephew, several the Rev . O'Dell Manley ofwill have a happier 01ristmas too . Enter our Dress-A-DofiTM
in state. The family will cousins, a step-daughter, ficiating. Burial wlll beln
lie
or Design-A -ToyTM Contest. It Lasts you nolhing but your
'''
receive
friends from 2 to 4 Clydia Anthony, Buffalo, W. Wells Cemetery. Friends
rime to sew a doll dress or assemble a truck.
and . two
step- may call at the funeral home
and 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday at the Va .,
•.
grandchildren.
after 7 p.m. this evening.
funeral home.

COTION-POLY
FLANNEL
45 INCH
PRINTS AND
PLAIDS

HARRY CLARK
Harry Oscar Clark , 79 , a
resident of Roush Lane,
Cheshire, died Saturday
evening at his winter home in
New Port Richey , Fla. He
had been in failing health the
pa'i\ three years.
Mr , Clark was a retired
inspector for the New York
Central Railroad . .
He was born April 9, 1899,
at Cheshire, son of the
late William and Mary Blackburn Clark.
He is survived by his wife,
Geneva Gorden Clark, whom
he married an March 20, 1920,
at Gallipolis.
One brother survives, Jc.e
Clark, Leesburg, Fla. One
sister, Mrs. Ethel Bolin ,
A~ron, survives. Six brothers
and sisters preceded hirn in
death .
Mr. Clark attended church
in New Port Richey and
Cheshire .
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Thursday at the
Waugh-Halley-Wood funeral
Home with Rev. William
Uber officiating, Burial will
be in Gravel Hill Cemetery·.
friends may call at the
funeral home from 3-5 and 7-9
p.m. Wednesday.

ruS·

1I1 BEN FHANKLIM
til \\e bring variety to'life!
POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN

ke someone happy
this Christmas.

Like a child you don't even know.

POMEROY, OHIO
'40,000 Mnimum lnSUIInCI For Each Oepos;a
~omber Fe&lt;ienl Deposit Insurance torpomion

•

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MILL END CLEARANCE
ROOM SIZE RUGS

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*EXCELLENT QUALITY
*BOUND EDGES
*JUTE BACKING

MECHANIC ST. WAREHOUSE .

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enttne

the cost of repair would
probably go to $7 ,000 if it
could be done at all.
King said he resented
council's sitting and looking
at the estimates when the
group had voted unanimously
to purchase a new backhoe at
tbe ea rlier meeting. He said
when a governing body votes
to do something, &lt;t should be
done. Grate told King that all
council merllbers were aware
"there is not enough money to
go around." Grate said he
had spent two hours with
·Solicitor Fultz trying to work
out the problem .
The counclusion of the
sometimes " heated discussion" came as Soliccitor Fultz accompanied by
Willis Anthony, a member of
the Board of Public Affairs,
upon arriving at the meeting·,
announced th e board had
voted to pay three-fourths of
the cost of the backhoe and
that the village has money to
pay for the remaining onefourth of the cost.
RATE HIKE REQUEST
Paul Gerard of the PoinTView Cable Televiswn Co.,

j).......--------The World Today

. ~

, Negotiators leaving today
CAffiO (UP!) -Egyptian negotiators left for Washington
today carrying a 22-article draft treaty for peace with Israel
that President.Anwar sadat hopes wiU be the cornerstone of a
just and durable Middle East settlement.
The delegates, led by Defense Minister Kamal Hassan Ali
and including Acting Foreign Minister Butros Ghali, were
stopping for a night in Paris where the two ministers will have
talks with Uteir French CQunterparts . before going on to
Washington Wednesday .

McDonald Corp. denies rumors
'\

OAK BROOK, lli. (UP! )- Officials of McDonald's Corp.
have moved to dispell a rwnor sweeping through Ute Bible Belt
Uiat founder Ray Kroc has contributed company profits to the
Church of Satan. McDonald's executive Doug Timberlake
appeared Monday before Ute Baptist Ministers Association in
Birmingham, Ala., to deny the rumor. A spokesman for
McDonald's said Timberlake has made similar appearances in
two other SouUtern cities.

$500,000 improvements soUght .
N~:&gt;;WPORT, Ky . (UP!) -Improvements totaling around
$500,000 have been recommended by the State Bureau of
Corrections for the Campbell County
Jail. The
recommendations include dividing the jail floors into more cell
blocks which would limit .the jail from holding any more than
42 inmates.

Fi!tet·n Ce nts
\'nl. 2!1 . .'lio. 124

a renov ation program at the
pool sometime in the future.
ordinance.
FIREMEN COMMF,:NDED'
Grate read a comCo un c il .commended the
muni cat ion indicating the
purchase of flood insurance Middleport Fire Department
in the community will be for purchasing a complete
continu ed since the village · back up r adio system which
h as com plied with all will give service to the

review provisions of the

necessary agreements at th is community in case of a power
P&lt;Jint. Council approved th e failure or in case the sheriff's
September report of Mayor system should go out of
Fred Hof fman showin g commission
Council voted to meet with
rece ipt s of $1.~89.50, in cluding $!06 in merchant Pomeroy Council to discuss
polic e
collectio ns and the possibility of th e two
towns merging to m a~e an
$1,883.50 in fines and fees.
Mayor Hoffman reported application for a grant
on a recent ins pection of the through the Buckeye HillsMiddleport P oo l by a Hocking Valley Regi onal
representative of the Dowlin g Planring Commission.
Pool Co. The pool needs a new .l Council discussed th e need
chlorinator and a new 10 for trash and litter imhorse po wer pump at once , provements near an apartaccording to the rep ort. ment bu ilding on Brownell
Council voted to purchase Avenue and the Street Light
these items . The chl orinator Committee will study the
will cost about $780 and the need for more lighting at a
pump,
$2,293 .
The cemetery near Park and
Co uncilman
representative also indicated Pa ge ' Sts.
that plans should be made for William Walters expressed ·
the need for a mailbox on the
" T". Councilman Carl Horky
said the town is badly in need
EXTENDED FORECAST
of a bricklayer to point up
Showers Thursday and
village hall. Any bricklayer
Friday and moslly cloudy
willin
g to do the job is asked
Saturday. Highs will be in
to
phone
Horky .
the 60s through the period,
the meeting were
Attending
with lows in the lower 50s
Councilmen
Mayor
Hoffman,
and early Thursday and In
Kelly, Charles Mullen, King,
the middle or upper 40s
Horky a n·d 'Walters, Clerkearly Saturday.
Treasurer Grate and Gerard.

Postal contact accepted
By GEORGE GORDON
WASH1NGTON (UP!) - In a victory for federal mediators, members of the nation 's
second largest postal union have voted overwhelmingly to go along with an arbitrated
contract settlement - virtually endin g chances of an illegal mail strike.
Sources told UP! Monday the 180,000-member National Association of Letter Carriers,
which was expected Lo announce its official results as early as today, voted by a lopsided
•
margin to ratify the new Utree-year contract.
In a separate ballot , however, un ion members voted to oust president J. Joseph Vacca.
The arbitrated settlement was considered " final aild binding," but until the vote results
were known there were lingerin g uncertainties about the possibility disgruntled union .
members would attempt a wildcat strike :
The largest and most militant postal union - · the 280,000-member American Postal
Workers Union - will finish its contract vote in another week or two . Union sources are
predicting its rank-and-file also will ratify the contract. .
. , ..
" It 's quite obvious the membership doesn't want to stnke, " one letter ca rr1ers offi Cial
said of his union 's vote.
·
The CQntraci settlement was announced Sept. 15 by special mediator-arbitrator James
Healy, a Harvard University professor assigned to avert a postal strike in an unprecedented
l:Kiay bargaining process.
When Healy could not bring the two sides together over the issues of wages and job
~ity, he took on the role of arbitrator . The unions had previously resisted arbitration,
the process for settling postal contract disputes under law.
But Healy's compromise decision awarded about 500,000 postal workers Wllimited costof-living increases corresponding to the rate of inflation , slightly ltigher pay and lifetime job
security for those currently on Ute payroll. It gave the Postal Service leeway to lay off shortterm workers hired in the future.
Healy's decision was binding under an agreement between the two sides, but the door for
a strike was left open by union mandates requiring the leadership to submit any agree ment
for ratification.

'I!

Peace treBty talks slated

.

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Pe11ce treaty negotiations
between Israel and Egypt are to begin Thursday and President
Carter may address the opening session, according to the State
Department. The department said Monday the talks will be
!Mild at Blair House, Ute president's official guest house across
the street from the White House, with- as agreed - the U. N.
flag flying over. lt.
I
I

BROOM-MAKER JAMES sHAfFER, Charleston, W. Va., is one ·of over 100 earlyAmerican craftsmen who will demonstrate their skills at the Eighth Annual Bob Evans
F'ann festival Utis weekend at th e Bob Evans farm in Rio Grande. More than 100,000
people are expected to visit the thr~..:lay "ole country gatherin~". In addition to crafts,
Utere will be field demonstrations and continuous entertamment. Adnuss10n , parking and
entertainment are free. Hours are lOa.m.lo 6 p.m . frida y; 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Saturday: and 9
a.m. to 5 p.m . Sunday. Camping is available for a one-time $5 service char ge.

Accident ends high
speed chase Monday
Three persons were injured
in an accident Monday
evening on Ball Run when
their auto struck a bridge
abutment, Sheriff James J.
Proffitt's department
reported this morning .
Injured were Charles E .
McGrath 18 · his sister,
J~n es, 19, and
Rhonda
Laura Sigler 14 all of Rt. I,
Rutland . Th~y ~ere taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Pomeroy E·R Squad .
They · were treated and
released ..accord ing to
deputies.
According to the sheriff's
report t he vehicle wa s
traveling up Ball Run Road at
a high rate of speed attempting to elude a sheriff' s
cruiser when it struck the
bridge abutment.
Deputies Rand y Forbes
and Keith Little were on
routine patrol when they
spotted the auto on the Rt . 7
bypa ss operating without

G.

POZNAN, Poland (UP!) - Evangelist Billy Graham,
preaching for the first time in a Roman CaUtolic church,
praised the late Pope John Paul I before a congregation of
2,1)00 people Monday . " He was a superm~n . wiUt a smile,"
Graham said in his sermon at Poznan's Dommtcan church. "In
the short time he bad he taught us to smile. This is the first
· sermon I have ever given in a Roman Catholic church, "
Graham told the congregation, which was made up of both
Roman CaUtolics and Baptists.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
I

requested a company rate
increase of $1 per month,
from $6 to $7 for customers.
Semor Citizens and di sabled
persons would pay $5.25. He
said his company plans to add
two new channels which wi11
replace two present channel s.
The two new channels would
be Channel 17, a 24 -hour
;tation out of Atlanta, Ga .,
featurin g movies, spoM.s and
net work shows, and a
Chri st ian Broad cast ing
Channel, also on for 24-hours
a day, which featur es
religious and Bible programs
in addition to family orient ed
shows. Replaced by the two
new channels would be
Channel 4, Columbus, and
two local channels to be
combined into one channel.
Gerard said Chann el 4 is
" lou sy" and that there is not
the need for two local
channels , If Middleport does
not approve the rate increase
s ubscribers will have two
blank channels, Gerard said.
Co un c ilman Ca rl Horky
objected to the removal of
Chann el 4 on the grounds that
cable was desired in the
community in the first place
so that the town could receive
Columbus sta tions. Councilman King moved to give
the incr ease a first reading,
but withdrew his !botion
when Councilman Marvin
Kelly said he needed time to

Graham praises late Pope

•
I

•

AVON LAKE, Ohio (UP!)- For the first time in 17 years,
voters in the Avon Lake school district defeated a school levy .
The 6.27-miU levy was defeated 1,458 to 1,283. It would have
brought in $1.13 million a year for raises and building
improvements.

's•

.

By Bob Hoeflich
Middleport Village will get
its controversial backhoe.
This was announced by
Village Solicitor Bernard
Fultz when village council
met in regular session last
night.
The backhoe subj ect was
introduced by Councilman.
Allen King who pointed out
that on Sept. 11, Council had
voted Wlanimously t o purchase the backhoe and to
borrow money, if necessary,
for the purchase, The bid on '
the equipment went to the
SouUteastern Equipment Co.
of Gailipolis for $19 ,284.
However, at the Sept . II
meeting, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate warned council
that there were not adequate
funds for purchase of the
backhoe and stated that he
would not sign necessary
papers if council attempted to
borrow money for the purchase.
At last night's meeting, an
estimate was given on repair
o! the pres~nl backhoe, The
estimate ran at a minimum o!
$4 ,450. One councilman said

School levy defeated

'

Reg. $sgoo 9'Xl2' •••••..•••••••••• Sale $3488
Reg. $7900 12'X12'••.••..•••.••••• Sale $4']11
Reg. $sgoo 12'Xl5'•••• :•••.•.••••• Sale $5388
Reg. 51Qgoo 12'X18'••...••..••••• Sale
Reg. $12goo 12'X21'••••••••••••••• Sale 577D
Tfll - A TII.A08111U AND Sf.IIVICf M"IIK OF kiC!t ... IO STEIJIIINS 111'-'0 AS~I)(IAlES . INC.

e

Christian militias - on the side of l..ebanese Moslems and
Ute Christian sectors of East Beirut.
Sniper fir e kept the two strategic bridges controlling the leftists.
The
mandate
of the Syriandominated, 30,000-man Arab
northeast approaches to the city closed and witnesses said a
l..eague
peace-keeping
force eXpires Oct. 26 and although
small arms clash erupted today between Syrian troops and
said
he
will
ask
for its renewal - a move strongly
Sarkis
has
Christin militias but there were no reports of casualties.
opposed
by
rightist
leaders
- the request has not yet been
The pro-Syrian Beirut newspaper As Safir said the Syrians
Lo
lhe
Arab
League .
formally
submitted
told Sarkis, " We are ready to leave Lebanon at any time, but if
Sarki
s'
~isit
to
Saudi
Arabia
was seen as particularly
we leave, we must tell you frankly it will be in order to fight our
just fight against the Israelis in Lebanon - with the necessary important due to the financial leve rage of the Saudis over
·Syria and the Palestinians, to whom they contribute sub$tlfnweapons and without restraint."
Western analysts interpreted the report, if true , as an lial sums annually .
The Kuwaiti newspaper AI Qabas reported from Saudi
indication that if Syria did not have the mandate of its troops
renewed as a peace-keeping force at the end of the month, it Arabia Utat Sarkis had asked the Saudis for 10,000 troops to be
would Cllntinue to fight the "Israelis in Lebanon ," - rightwing stationed in Christian-held areas in place of the Syrian forces
now in those areas .

Backhoe finally purchased

G.EVELAND (UP!) - Police today said they were still
looking for Ute killers of Olarles FeaUters, a Park~rsburg, W.
Va. man shot down in a shopping center parking lot. Feathers,
his \vue, Margaret, and son, Scott, were outside a shopping
center when they were apprqached by four men who
demanded they turn over a microwave oven in the trunk of
their car.

··~

,.
! ,.

The sources said the Russians moved out of Uteir embassy in
Ute war-ravaged Lebanese capital this morning after the
Syrians brought heavy artillery into the city Monday night.
The cease-fire in Beirut, its suburba and nearby mountain
areas held for Ute third cons&lt;&gt;eutive day despite sporadic
sniper fire. Officials began to survey the extent of death and
destruction in more than a week of rocket, mortar and artillery
bombardments involving Syrian troops and Christian rightwing forces .
A Spanish Red Cross official who visited Beirut estimated
BOO people killed, 3,000 wounded, 5,000 apartments destroyed
and half a million people displaced as a result of the fighting
that raged over a 200 square-mile area .
The right-wing Phalangist radio charged the Syri:lhs were
maintaining a blockade of food and medical supplies a~"in•t

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Tuesday, October 10. 1978

Police seeking killers

'

·,•

'

By' NED 'fEMKO
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) - President Elias Sarkis today
pursued an Arab diplomatic mission liimed at turning the
precarious cease-fire in Lebanon into real peace. The 3-dayold
truce in Beirut held despite sniper fire Utat closed two
strategic bridges.
After talks in Saudi .Arabia, the Lebanese leader flew to the
oil-rich United Arab Emirates. He also was expected to visit
.
Kuwait and other Arab states.
In Tel Aviv, Israeli sources said Soviet diplomats and their
families evacuated the Russian Embassy in Beirut today and
Syria brought heavy artillery into the city in what appeared to
be preparations for a he~vy offensive against the Christians
·
'
official Israeli' sources said.

Whitehall

. , , , YARD

Farmers Bank

President Sarkis pursues diplomatic mission

Weather
TEACHES WEEKLY CLASS- Eric Chambers, left, demonst~ates the use of a ku~tan
restraining device for Middlepo'r t Police Department Capt am Sid Little. The restrammg
device will eventually be used as subject of instruction by Ch"'!'bers who w11l start classes
for Middleport police officers Wednesday. The kubotan is only five and one-half mches. long ,
five-sixths inches in diameter and weighs only two ounces but w1th proper use IS effective as
~ restraining instrument.

'

Low tonight between 45 and

50. Mostly cloudy and a
c hance of show e rs Wednesday, wit~ highs near 70 .
Probability of precipitation is
40 percent . Wednesday.

I

tags. They attempted to stop
the vehicle but were unabl e to
d? so. It contmued north at a
high rate of speed .
When the auto turned onto
Ball Run. Deputy forbes
backed off because . o! the
gravel road. He arnved on
the scene several mmutes
following the acc ident.
McGrath IS bemg cha rged
with failing to display license
plates, reckless operation
and eluding &amp;n -oflicer. .
The
department . ln veshgated another acc1dcnt
Monday evening when Ge~·a ld
S. Ebhn, 30, Railroad Street,
Middleport , was trav el mg
north on SR 143, nne-fourth
m1le north of Ba1lcy Hu n
Road when a deer ranl nto the
pa th of the Ebhn car.

Tlie deer apparently was
not injured as it ran from the
sce ne. There • was sli ght
property damage.
TI1e sheriff's department
has been notified concerning •
the arrest of Kenneth Kut·
chey, Romeo, Mich., on a
warrant issued by the Meigs
County Court charging hirn
with issuing a bad check.
Michigan officials advised
Kutch ey would be taken
before a co urt hearing today
toascertainif hewouldwaive
extradition to return to 1\'feigs
Co unty.
Sheriff Proffitt said Kut·
chey is currently confined in
the MacComb Co unty Jail.
According to the warrant,
Kutchey wrote a check in the
amounl of $4,500.

False alarm calls received
The Pomeroy and Middleport fire and Emergency
Units received several raise
alarm ca lls lat e Monday
nig ht and early Tuesday

morning.
The
Mi dd leport
fire
department ans wered one the first ~ call and found the
r es ident at th e reported
address where' the fire was
supposed to have been, in
bed. The other calls were not

answered.
Officials point out that such
calls jeopardize the safety of
the communities in that it is
sometimes difficult to
distinguish falSe ala1m calls
from the calls where help is
actually needed.
Anyone knowing .yho is
making the false alarm calls
is asked to notify eiUter the
Pomeroy or Middleport
police department ,

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