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                  <text>14- The Daily Sentinel, Middlci)Ort-Pumcruy. 0 ., Wednesd"Y · Oct. 11 , 1978

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

Money actions filed in court
Two suits for money, a
foreclosure and a dissolution
of marriage have been filed
in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court .
Robert Venoy , Rt. 2,
Pomeroy, filed suit against
the P&amp;P Paving, Inc.,
Wellston, in the amount of
$2,200 for poor workmanship
in pouring a driveway .
TheRacine Home Natio~al
Bank filed suit in the amount
of $854.23 against James
Junior Dailey and Bonnie
Dailey, Pomeroy:
A foreclosure suit was filed
·by Citizens National Bank,
Middl epor t , against

Frederick W. Klein and
Martha Ellen Klein, Middleport , and George Collins
as Treasurer.

Hospital

Nc-'w~

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted ~ Rhonda Jones,
Rutland ; Laura Sigler,
Rutland : Aida Doerfer,
Midd leport ; Adria Swick,
Langsville: Merle Manley,
Middleport.
Discharged
Ai r won a
Walker.

BURGUNDY
SMOOTH
EATHER

Area -D eaths -1

1
I

SARAH E. SIMPSON
Mrs. Sa nih E. Simpoon, 62,
Middleport, formerly of
Arbuckle, W. Va ., died
Monday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Survivors include five
daughters, Mrs. Daisy
Raac~. Texas; Mrs. Betty
Downing, Georgia; Mrs.
Mary Roberts, Robertsburg ;
Mrs. Sarah Stanley, Middleport; Mrs. Sandra Wolfe,
Poirlt Pleasant ; one son,
have occurred in Mason Harry SimpSon, Jr., Winfield,
County this year.
and 14 grandchildren.
Bennett was born June 27,
Services will be Friday, 2 p.
1962, in Point Pleasant, to m. at the Raynes Funeral
Marvin Bennett Jr. and Lena Home with the Rev . Cladls
Yvonne Swartz.
Paxon officiating. Burial will
He was a junior at Wahama be in the IOOF Cemetery,
High School and a member of Poca.
the Broad Run Lutheran
Friends may call at - the
Church.
funeral home 6 to 9:30 p. m.
Additional survivors in· today and from 2 to 9:30p. m.
elude two sisters, Cheryl Ann Thursday.
and Rebecca Yvonne Bennett
at home ; three brothers,
Marvin E., Timothy Wayne
Holzer Medical Center
and Charles William Bennett
Discharges Oct. 10
at home; maternal grandThomas
Back, Margaret
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Brohard,
Ronald
Brown,
Edward Roush , Letart, and
Wade
Carroll,
Charles
Burt,
paternal grandparents, Mr.
Carter,
Bruce
and Mrs. Marvin Bennett Sr., Parnie
Donohew,
Davison,
Mildred
Point Pleasant.
The funeral will be held Ray Ellis, Thelma Grueser,
Friday, I :30 p. m. in the Ronald Hammond, Janis
Foglesong Funeral Home Hankla, Betty Meadows,
with the Rev. John Campbell Archie Patterson, Guy
Dixon Roush,
officiating. BuMal will be in Rollins,
Rebecca
Sargent,
Shirley
Graham Cemetery.
Shepherd,
Hansford
Stanley,
Friends will oe received at
the funeral home Thursday Clyde Stollings, Heath
from 2 to 4 and from .7 to 9 Tackett, Ebb Tomblin ,
Robert Tucker, Kay Warden,
p.m.
Donna Waugh and Helen
Wroblewski.
Blrlbs Oct. 10
Mr. and Mrs. Danny McTHE ONE AND ONLY
Neal, son, Oak HilL
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Row,
son, Gallipolis.

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ABORTIONS BARRED
WASHINGTON (UP!) Most free abortions for
military
personnel or
dependents would be barred
under a .record · breaking
$117 .5 billion defense ap, propriations bill sent to both
Houses by a coference
committeec
The House and Senate hope
to vote on the compromise
legislation - the largest
appropriations bill in history
- before they adjourn at the
end of the week.
·

crease in tbeir real estate
taxes . Property owners
whose real estate has increased in value at a faster
pace than the annual rate of
inflation would have a slight
increase in taxes. And those
whose - valuations have
remained the same or fallen
will receive a reduction in
their real estate taxes.
Those property owners in
charter cities will not receive
all the benefits of the
package, he said. Because of
the Home Rule provision of
the Ohio Constitution, it is
impossible to reduce charter
millage. Taxes that are
levied according to the
charter of a city caMot be
reduced unless the charter
contains a provision calling
for the reduction of the
charter millage in a reappraisal year. However,
Voinovich urged officials in
charter cities to take "a hard
look" at their need to receive
additional property tax

revenue.
The plan, he said, also calls
for a constitutional amendment which will halt the
current shift of the real estate
tax burden to the homeowner
and farm'e rs, from the
commercial and industrial
taxpayer. This will be done
by applying the tax reduction
factor of H.B . 920 by class of
property, rather than adjustment on the entire tax
duplicate.
Voinovich, who is called
"Mr .
Homestead"
ln
Cuyahoga County because of
his sponsorship of the constitutional amendment that
put the Homestead on the
ballot, and his successful
efforts to expand its benefits
for the senior citizens and
disabled, said the RhodesVoinovich plan calls for
expanding the Homestead
income eligibility level to
$15,000, up from the current
$10,000 level.
The exl'ansion of the
Homestead provision will
allow approximately 30,000
additional senior citizens to
benefit. In addition, .it will
increase, by five per cent,
each · income class a
maximum . allowable
exemption up to $5,000 in tax
value.
Richard Jones, Meigs
County Commissioner and
chairman of the Meigs
County Republlcan executive
committee, introduced
Senator Oakley C. CoUins and
Voinovich.
Jones, in introducing
Voinovlch, stated that the for
the first time in the history of
the State of Ohio, candidates
for governor and lieutenant
governor are running as a
team.
"George Voinovich is not a
household word in Meigs

SEEK FUNDING
WASWNGTON (UPI)
'
'36.95
The executive leaders of
One that's blown deep into
three
of the nation's major
your lawn. See for yourself
OTHER STYLES FROM $28.95
at ..
religious communities today
called on President Carter to
make $100 million aqailable
in federal assistance to an
interfaith
group seeking to
Middle of Upper Block. Pomeroy. 0 .
SMALL ENGINES
reopen steel mills in
SALE &amp; SERVICE
Youngstown, Ohio.
County," Jones commented,
9a .m .-Sp.m.
Mon. thru Thurs. &amp; Sat.
" but when you talk to people
498 LDCU$1 St.
9 a.m .. u p.m. Fri.
~ho know him everyone
992-301'2
Closed Sunday
UNUSUAL DECISION
I
Middleport, 0 .
speaks highly of him." The
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!)- fn best recommendation Jones
an
unusual
coroner's received was when he asked
~--••••••••••••llli•••••• decision, a train derailment Ralph Welker, former
that killed three people has representative, what he
been ruled a homicide.
thought of him. W~lker said
Montgomery County that he was the finest man he
Coroner Dr. Robert Zipf said ever met.
an investigation indicated a
Voin0vich explained that he
derailment last month in was delighted to be in Meigs
nearby Miamisbu~g was County and that Oakley
triggered by poor distribution Collins had given him the
or loads of steel ingots in grand tour. He also comrailroad cars.
mented he .referred to Ralph
Welker as the sheriff since
Welker was sheriff in Meigs
County some years ago.
Voinovich explained that
LEBANON RESULTS
the lieutenant governor in tbe
LEBANON, Ohio (UP!)- past presided over the seante,
Sinart Shadow nosed out Ms. but this has been changed.
Pebble at the wire Tuesday
'f he lieutenent governor will
night to win the featured be a member of the gover- .
Right now, at your kitchen eighth race at Lebanon nor's cabinet. For the first
Raceway.
time, a lieutenant governor
dealer, right here in town,
The winner, driven by Jeff
will take an active role in the
Brewer, covered the mile in
stale's
decision-making
for a limited time only, you 2:07 4-S and returned $25.80,
process. In the absence of the
$9 and $5.80. Ms. Pebble
can buy modular pieces of kicked
chief executive, he will
back $4.60 and $4 to
preside
over
cabinet
your new kitchen at a 15~ place, while Glory's Best meetings
,
Voinovich
ex·
came in third and paid $7.80.
plained.
.
discount off list price!
The 8-3 nightly double
combination of She's A . The biggest change in the
Corker and So Be It was lleutenant governor's duties
will be his work with the
$26.40.
You can save another 20% if you 1ns11a worth
A crowd of 1,214 wagered newly-forrned State and local
government commission of
$116,789.
~.:::;::::::~ your kitchen yourself. And we're happy to
Ohio.
and rechops ~rasa ctip·
pings into a fme mulch.

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e

(Continued from page I')

I nation would have no in-

JOHN W. BENNETI
A Letart · youth, John W.
Bennett, 16, died Tuesday
afternoon in St. Mary's
Hospital from injuries
received in an· autumobile
accident Oct. I on Route 33 in
front of the Foote Mineral
Plant, Graham Station.
Two other Bend area
youths died from the same
accident. Their deaths bring
to seven the total number of
highway fatalities which

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Rhodes •• •

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'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio
Thursday, October 12, 1978

•

at

•

enttne

'Fifteen Cents
Vol. 2!1, No. 126

V'mton County record passed

Negotiations continue in long Logan strike
EXPLAINED PROGRAM- Deputy Becky Mohler is shown as she addressed the sixth
grade classes at Pomeroy Elementary School Tuesday. On Mrs. Mohler's right is Usa
Thomas a junior at Meigs High School who is a member of Explorer Post 230.
"Get acquainted with your police officers" was the idea behind the meetirlg. Meigs
County Sheriff Deputies and Carl Hysell, juvenile probation officer, spoke to the sixth grade
classes. They informed the students that the purpose of the program sponsored by the
Sheriff's department, was to acquaint the children with the police officer and to establish a
better relationship. They explained that a police officer has an obligation to do his job. It
was also noted that the police protect the public and children should never fear going to a
police officer for help. They emphasized that the police officer was their friend .

Orlld assault
draws fine,
jail sentence

Access road abandoned
Meigs
Co unty
Commissioners Tuesday night
decided to drop the idea or
constructing an access road
from Mulberry Ave. to the
new multi-purpose building.
After many hours of
discussion during the past
month Commissioners issued
the following state ment ·
concerning the proj ect :
"After a great deal of
deliberation the Board of
County Commissioners have
decided to discontinue plans

Bobby Shaver, 27, 101
Second St., Pomeroy, was
arrested by Pomeroy Police
Officer . L. B. Vaughan for
assault upon a 11-year-old
boy Saturday evening.
At the tim~ of Shaver's
arrest, he was found with a
concealed weapon .
Shaver appeared before
Mayor Clarence Andews
Tuesday evening and was
fined $500 and costs for
assault and $300 and costs for
having a concealed weapon.
Shaver is presently being
held in Meigs County Jail.

Weather
Thundershowers tonight
and Thursday. Lows tonight
between 50 and 55. Highs,
Thursday
near
70.
Probability of precipitation
20 percent today, 50 percent
tonight, 40 percent Thursday.

SVAC MEETING
A meeting of the Southern
Valley Athletic Conference
will be held at 7:30 p. m.
Monday at the Kyger Creek
High SchooL ·

, Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharged - Mrs. Max
Wilson and son, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Ray McCoy and t wins,
Clifton; Watson Upton, Leon;
Mrs. Harry Neville, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Johnnie
Owens, Southside; Mrs.
William son ,
Raym ond
Mason; Brady Bonecutter,
Leon ;
Ca rol Masters,
Gallipolis; Ferris Morgan,
Cot ta gev ill e; Leroy Hill ,
Buffalo.
Births - A son to Mr. and
Mrs. Michael Marcum,
Vinton; a daughter to Mr. and
Mrs. Dorman Pearso n,
Henderso n; a daughter to Mr.
and Mrs. Timothy Double,
Southside.

to construct an access road
from Mulberry Ave. to the
new multi-purpose building.
It is the opinion after much
study and consideration that
the county would be better
served if the money available
for such work would be spent
to construct an access that
would eventually lea d to
Union P,ve., and would, 9pen
up more than 100 acres of
county owned land for future
development."
County · Engineer Wesley
Buehl discussed County Road
improvements.
Commissioners outlined a number
of complaints they have
received concerning needed
road repair. Buehl agreed to
investigat e
them
immediately.
Carol Costanzo discussed
the housing acquisition and
rehabilitation program. Mrs.
Constanzo reported that final
approval had been received
and that the project was
ready to sta rt.
The Commissioners agreed
an oversight committee
· consisting of three people
would be appointed at the
Oct. 17th meeting.
Appointed to the Gallia Meigs Regional Airport
Authority for one-year tenns
were Thomas W. Bowen,
Ronald J. Browning and
Franklin Rizer.

Elberfelds ln. Pomeroy

LOGAN
(UPI)
Negotlat ions co ntinu ed
Wednesday in Logan, where
school employees have been
!&gt;ll strike since Aug. 29.
A ' pre;setnement
agreement reportedly was
reached earlier this week, but
the
Ohio
Education
Association said the board of
education voted not to accept
·
the settlement.
Non-teaching employees of
the .district, .repreSented by
Chapter 218 of the Ohio

Association of Public School
Employees, do not appear to
be close to an agreement with
the board.
The stMke has now passed
the length of the previously
longest Strike, which OC·
curred in Vinton County five
years ago and lasted for six
weeks .
Meanwhile, teachers in the
1,600-student Wellington
Public School District ended
their walkout Wednesday
after approving a new, one-

Lottery probe underway
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov. James A.
Rhodes today called for an Ohio Highway
Patrol investigation into "several possible
irregularities" in the awarding of contracts by
the Ohio Lottery Commission.
Rhodes, in a letter to Ohio Highway Safety
Director Robert M. Chiaramonte, told
Chiaramonte to "take the appropriate action
necessary to gain Controlling Board approval
for .the State Highway Patrol" to begin the
investigation.
''Recent newspaper reports have pointed
out several possible irregularities with regard
to the awarding of contracts by the Ohio
Lottery Commission," said Rhodes. "It is
imperative that no questions remain
unanswered with regard to the operations of
the Ohio Lottery Commission."

LUDINGTON, Mich. (UPIJ - Sheriff's deputies and U.S.
Coast Guard officials say they have had repeated sightings of
!rightly llghted, fast-moving unidentified objects over Lake
Michigan.
"The lights were lremendously bright," said Oceana County
Ilepaty ~ ol an t;)ct. I lighting. " They made you
dizzy to loolf at !bern. )'ou don't want to get too excited about
IIIia beca111e peop!e thlilk you're goofy, but I saw it and it made
a definite believer out of me."

Medicine prize .being shared
. STOCKHOLM (UPf)- Dr. Werner Arber of Switzerland,
and Drs. Daniel.Nathans and Hamilton Smith of John Hopkins
University in Baltimore, Maryland, shared the 1978 Nobel
Pl;ze for Medicine, the Karolinska lnstitute announced today.
They were cited for their "diSCQvery of restriction enzymes
and their application to problems of molecular genetics."

COLUMBtm""(UPI) - The State Controlling Bcfard has
been asked to reconsider the conditions it attached to use of the
Ohio Highway Palrol by Franklin County Prosecutor Geor~e
C. Smith to investigate the state auditor's office. Board
President Robert Howard confinned Wednesday that he had
received a letter requesting reconsideration of the board's
action from Franklln County grand jury foreman Albert
Kuhfeld.

Parolee charged with murder
SAGINAW, Mich. (UPI) - Keith Ray Pontseele, nearing the
end of three years' probation for a window-shooting spree, had
found a steady job as a bartender and was about to become a
free man. But Wednesday, the 29-year-&lt;&gt;ld Army veteran was
jailed on charges of first-degree murder, assault with intent to
commit murder and using a firearm in a sniping incident last
month that killed a young boy and wounded two other children
in nearby Merrill.

AEP seeks coal permit
ASHLAND, Ky . (UPI) - The U. S. Army Corps of
Englileers has received an application from the American
Electric Power System for a penni! for rail to river coal
transfer facility on the Ohio River at Wurtland in Greenup
CoWity. KentuCky Power Co. executive vi~ president Robert
Matthews said Wednesday the proposed facility - upon
o:mpletion - will result in use of low sulphur coal from
eastern Kentucky and will employ about 60 people.

A credit of $91,430 will be
shared by Ohio Power
Company's 600,000 customers
in November under an order
issued October 11 by the
Public Utilities Commission
of Ohio.
The reduction amounts to
about four cents for the
residential customer using
700 kilowatt hours of electricity a month. The amount

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fuel reserves, power plants
were operated to ieveitze the
coa l supplies at each plant
and that those steps were
taken in customers' inter ests.
According to the PUCO
order, the company 's action
was tak en in advance of the
time deemed appropriate by
the commission, and, since
the efficiency standard was
not met, the reconciliation is
required.
In September, Ohio Power
reduced customer bills, as it
had volunteered to do, by a
total of $707,422 through the
fuel clause as the result of
a nother
coal
strike
development.
That credit, amounting to
about 32 cents for the 750kilowatt hour per month
exa min a t io n . Wagher residential cust om er,
complained of back and leg resulted from over-billing of
·
customers during the strike
pams.
Edward Berryhill and a 17- due to incomplete fue! cost
year-old juven ile arrested information received from
Sunday in Pomeroy for the electric utilities from which
armed robbery of the Mason the com pan y purchased
Vista Station were released to emergency power, Ohio
the West VIrginia State Power officials said.
Police Wednesday afternoon .. In a related matter, the
after waiving extradition to PUCO has granted . Oh1o
West Virginia.
Power a rehearmg on Nov . 30
Berryhill and the juvenile of a commiSSIOn order m
are marines from Paris connectiOn wtth .the ~et·
lsiand, S.C.,whenquestioned tlement of a lawsUit agamst
Sunday afternoon, they ad- the Westmghouse . Electrtc
mitted to having robbed a Corporatt on regardmg . a
liquor store Saturday ar- malfunctJOnmg generatmg
ternooQ in Beaufort, S. C. No umt.
charges were filed against
them in Meigs County .

Gravel pins
Young Work er
An 18-year old Rt. 3, Racine
man escaped possible death
after being pinned for more
than two hours by gravel at
the Tri-State Materials Plant
at Apple Grove.
According to the Meigs
County Sheriff's Department,
Darrell Wagner, an employe,
was on top of. a pile of pitrun
gravel at the conveyor belt
and slipped into the trap
when loose gravel gave way,
trapping him up to his waist.
The accident occurred
around 7; 30 p.m. Frontend
loader operator, Pete J elfers,
Portland, observed Wagner
sliding into the hole, otherwise he would have dumped
approximately two ton of
gravel on him.
Company employes ,
Racine Fire Department and
emergency squad members
worked for approximately
two hours to dig Wagner out.
When freed at 9:45 he was
transported
to
Holzer
Medical
Center
fo r

NOW YOU KNOW
The Murchison meteorite
that fell on Murchison,
Australia , in 1969 contained 8
amino acids, including six
that are found in living cells
on earth.

Fire kills five
BOSTON, N.Y. (UP!) Five children died early
today when fire broke out in
their Erie County home,
filling it with smoke and
suffocating them while their
parents were out to d,inner,
state police said.
Troopers said the five were
found in two upstairs
bedrooms after firefighters
broke a window to get into the
Robert Clifford residence .
The fire did not severely
damage the two-story home,
but acrid smoke filled the
building, officials said.

The dead were identified as
Robert Clifford Jr., 7, Casey
Clifford, 8, Roxame Clifford,
10, Jacqueline Hustead, 14,
and Stephanie Hustead, 13.
Police said tbe Hustead girls
were step-sisters of the
Clifford children .
The fire was believed to
have begun in a · first-floor
living room , but officials said
an investigation would
continue into the cause.
Authorities said the · cause
of death was asphyxiation.

Test-tube baby gets welcome

Alleged heroin head booked
: CHICAGO (UF'f) - The man drug agents say heads the
nation's largest heroin smuggling ring- an enterprise whose
estimated $100 niilliori annual profits outrank 75 percent of the
Fortune 500 corporations- has surrendered to authorities in
Mexico Federal agents said Wednesday the arrest of Jaime
Herrer~-Nevarez, the godfather of the ' 'Mexican Connection",
could lead to more arrests in a year-&lt;&gt;ld effort to break up the
lrOwn heroin smuggling operation.
·

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SALE ENDS SATURDAY, OCT. 14TH
•
AT 5 P.M • .

But this time, school union
leader James O'Meara said
the ratification vote should
succeed. Ratification of the
settlement could end a strike
which began Sept. 7 and has
prevented th e district's

will be credited to the fuel
clause portion of November
bills.
The credit was ordered for
failure by the company to
meet PUCO-esta bli shed
generating efficiency standards in January, 1978 during
the coal miners' •trike.
Company officials sa id that
in an effort to avoid power
curtailments and to stretch

CALCUTTA, India (UPI) - _Nine-day-&lt;&gt;ld Durga Agarwal,
the W«ld's second test-{ube baby, and her mother came home
Wednesday and were greetinR with a traditional Hindu
welcoming chorus of conch shells. Durga's father, Prabhat
Kumar Agarwal, 36, arid her grandjMlrents celebrated the
homecoming with worship of the Hindu goddess Durg~.
revered as the destroyer of evil and harbinger of good luck.

car'l'laPtts

margin .

101,000 students from at- to give ongoing education and
tending classes ali falL
we can't sit back and let til is
The Painesville Township continu e," she said.
Board of Education has
If teachers don't reputt for
approved a resolution saying work today, they wouhl be
any teacher who remains off notified by registered mail
the job by today will be listed that they have voluntHrlly
as having voluntaril y resigned , Ms. Karir- said.
resigned.
Teachers' association Pr e s ~
Boa rd President Patricia idcnt
Kath leen
IU Joy
Karle said the board decided charged the school board '" "
to take the action in an effort attempti ng " to intim id:Jte
to get classes back in full teachers through threatei!•Jd
session.
" Tehe
maj or firing s."
· responsibility of any board is

'

.

UFO sightings reported

state legislative delegation to
urge support of the relaxed
loan standa rds.
A week ago, the city's
teachers a nd support personnel rejected a proposed
contract by a 60-40 percent

Ohio Power customers
share ordered credit

j_J~. _rh_e_w_or_ld_To_d_a_y_

Seeks reconsideration

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year contract with the back in their classrooms Walter requested the board to
of after ratifying a one-year meet as soon as possible to
Wellington
Board
Education.
contract with the Wellington rescind requirements that the
The system's 90 teachers, Board of Education Wed- Cleveland district escrow any
who .struck Oct. 4 over nesday.
back taxes collected from the
grievance
procedures,
The state Controlling Board Penn Central Railroad, and
previously had agreed to pay was asked Wednesday to build a 3 percent reserve fund
raises averaging 13.4 percent relax the tenns of a $20.7 from program and personnel
across the board.
million state loan to the cuts.
Striking Cleveland school Cleveland Public School
A "united committee"
employees were to vote today District to provide for pay comprising members of the
on a second attempt to ratify increases for the city's 10,000 six striking school teacher
their school board's latest striking school employees. and employee unions and
contract offer, while in
State Public Construction Cleveland school officia ls
Wellington, t eacher s are Superintendent Franklin B. was to meet with Cleveland's

MEIGS QUEEN CANDIDATES - One of these five Meigs High School seniors will
reign as homecoming queen Friday night at the Meigs Stadium. The candidates fr om tl!e left are Judy Hall, daughter of Mrs. Betty Reed, Middleport ; ~' honda Wood, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Lee Wood, Rutland area; Jamie Johnson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jaml'&lt;
Johnson, Wolfe Pen Road; Shari Mitch, daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Gene Mitch , Pomeroy ,
and Sandi He.mjlt.ol.'l, daughter af Mr . and MrS. Charles Hamilton. Route 1, Minersville. 'l11l'
queen will be crowned during pre-game ceremonies.

L zcenses
•
discussed,
new councilman named

NEW HAVEN - The issue
of a business license and the
naming of a new council
member were discussed at
the Tuesday meeting of the
Two Middleport men, New Haven Town CounciL
According to' a spokesma n
James P. McCloud, 19, and
Dennis Michael Smith, 21, for the council , James King, a
were arraigned before Judge resident of the towr appeared
John C. Bacon in the Meigs requesting that action taken
County Common Pleas Court during the last meeting be
Wednesday. They appeared revoked . When council me.t
on Bills of Information un Oct. 3, a petition was
chargi ng t wo co unts of presented from residents who
opposed King having a tire
breaking and entering.
The men entered guilty shop on his property. Council
pleas to charges or breaking then in turn denied King a
and entering a North Fifth business license to operate.
In the Tuesday meeting,
Ave. residence and removing
antiques and breaking and King again approached
entering the Martin Ant ique council and asked that his
Shop and ta kin g severa l business license be granted .
The town ordinance was read
items.
and
council voted not to grant
Mc.Cloud was released
King
a license. He was told by
Wider a $5,000 recognizance
council
the spokesman noted,
bond pending a preto
close
his business and take
sentencing inv estiga tion .
down
aU
signs. It was also
Smith was remanded to the
t hat several
custody of the sheriff until r eported
sentencing at I p. m. Friday. neighbor s attended the

Pair enters
guilty pleas

other items of wearing apparel for you and
your family and frunishings for your home. -

Elberfelds in Pomeroy
t.

•
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Agriculture Department
· ' Wednelday f&lt;l'ecast 1978 corn production at 6.82 billion
bulhell, up less than I percent from last month, for a record
crop which is spected to moderate reaW food inflation.
Proapeelll for a record crop and the already existing surplus
havedr aged c&lt;l'll prices below, farmers' cost of production.
With prices low, COlis of feeding livestock and poultry also
have decllned and should slow the Increase in retail food
;rices, which Ia spected to be 10 percent this year.

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

EXTENDED FORECAST
A chance of showers each
day and cool through the
period, with highs In the
50s. Lows will be in the 40s
Saturday and Sunday and
In the 30s or lower 40s
Monday.

~

~

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

Weather

APPLE BUTTER TIME - The making. of apple
butter has aimost become a lost art - but not for
members of the Retired Senior Volunteer Program and

other interested seniors of the Meigs Senior C itizen~
Center, Pomeroy. They arrived Wednesday at 7:30a . m .
to begin the day-long job. Approximately 130 quarts were
made and sold.

at th e next meeting un Orl .
24 .

Trick or treat night was srl
for Oct. 31, 6: 30 to 7:30p. m.
Phil Burgess was granted
approval to operate a 11 ~il('l'
park with a maximum of two
trailers.
Attending were Mnyor
Cha rles Smit h, Reeurder
Wendy Divers , counci l
members Mike Fields, .Jeff
Mankin, James MncKnight
and David Jones. Othe rs
were Mrs. Raymond Sisk,
.Jame s Parsons, Lar ry
Duncan,
Paul Girard,
Douglas Draper, Ray!IIPIH !
Sisk Jr. and James K inl!

Thunderstorm.s
hit Florida

United Press International
Thunderstorms continued
to poW' rain on southeast
Florida
and
norther~
Missouri
today
and
rainshowers were scattered
1 from the Great Lakes into the
upper Ohio Valley.
' Widely scattered showers
also were reported over
northern Nebraska , southern
Sout h
Dakota
and
northwestern Montana.
A travelers advisory was
posted in southwestern
wuisiana, where dense fog

Com -crop up from last month

SAVE
'oURII\IG
OUR
. l14TH
ANNIV,ERSARY CELEBRATION on Many

meeting protesting th e
establishment
of
th e
business.
Pat Fields, New Haven ,
was voted upon as the new
council member to replace
Virgil Weaver, who resigned
his post on Sept. I I.
In other matters, Pau l
Girard of PoinTView Cable
TV appeared before council
asking for a rate increase in
cable service. The increase
would be $1 per month per
unit. The increase would
allow the service to provide
two addi tional stati ons .
ModificatiJn was read for the
first time on the matter and
will be read the second time

Showers
and
thun derstorms tonight , with lows
between 50 and 55. Showers
continuing and turning eooler
Friday, with hi ghs in the low
or mid 60s.

blanketed highway s and
surrounding areas. Pntdtcs
of fog also covered porti ott&lt; of
the Gulf Coast.
Much of the remainder uf
the nation experienced partly
cloudy skies and near seasonal temperatures .
Temperatures arow1d the
nation early today ranged
from 35 degrees at St.
JobnsbW'Y, VI. to 78 deg•·ees
at Blythe, Calif.
Wednesday af ternoon
tempera tures ran 10 to i fJ
degrees higher than seasonal
averages throughout th e
Southern and Central Plains,
with 90-degree readings
extending from central Texas
into south-central K:msas.
San Francisco also was
unseasonably wann witi1 an
afternoon high of 87
degrees.
Temperatures w&lt;r~ in the
60s and 70S throughout much
of the remainder ~&gt;I the
Plateau and Rocky Mountain
regions. The Gulf and South
Atlantic Coast states enjoyed
70 and 80 degree weather
while temperatures over the
rest of the eastern half of tb
· nation were generally in tt,_
60s to low 70s.

.,

�2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport -Pom•.•roy, 0 .. Thursday, Od . 12, 197R

...'

\

II WASHINGTON

THE U.S. AND YOU

Martha Angle and
Robert Walters

William Steif .

Needed: 'short form' charity

Holding down drug prices

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters

By William Stelf

WASHINGTON (NEA) • "Charity never faileth," proclaims the Bible. Perhaps charity wiU "endureth aU
things," but that optimistic assessment was offered long
before the Treasury Department began promoting "short
form" tax returns.
The ubiquitous 1040A "short form" for individual
taxpayers allows a generous but fixed standard deduction
as a substitute for the various itemized deductions including those for charitable contributions - available on
the longer, more complex form 1040.
In recent years, the Treasury Department and its taxcollecting agency, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS ),
have waged a determined (and successful) campaign on
beha lf of the 1040A.
In 1970, 52 percent of all taxpayers used t!Jat abbreviated
form but Treasury and IRS convinced Congress to sweeten
the pot by increasing the size of the standard deduction five
times in eight years.
By last year, 77 percent of aU individual tax returns were
s ubmitted on the " short fo'rm," and federal officials have a
strategy designed to push that number even higher - to 84
pereent.
The benefits of the 1040A are obvious: It greatly
simplifies both the taxpayers' chore of preparing the forms
and the IRS' job of auditing the returns.
But that reform has produced an unhealthy side effect:
It has eliminated, for many low-arid middle-income
ramilies, the tax incentive to make generous contributions
to charitable organizations.
The Treasury Department's own figures confirm the
direct correlation between the percentage of taxpayers
using the IRS "long form" (which aUows itemization and
deduction of charitable gifts) and the percentage of
personal income donated to charity.
Martin Feldstein, a profesor of economics at Harvard
University, estimates that charitable giving would rise this
year from $34.5 billion to $38.6 billion - ar1increase of $4 .1
billion or 12 percent - if all taxpayers were allowed to
claim deductions for their contributions.
Treasury and IRS officials generally agree with those
estimates, but they uppose itemization because it would
produce an annual federal revenue loss of approximately
$2.6 billion.
Legislation authoriZing itemization of charitable donations on the IRS "short form " was introduced this year in
the House by Reps. Joseph L. Fisher, D-Va., and Barber B.
Conable Jr., R-N. Y., and in the Senate by Sens. Daniel P .
Moynihan, D-N. Y., and Bob Packwood, R-Ore.
Those proposals were rejected by both the House Ways
and Means Committee and the Senate Finance Committee,
but the sponsors of the legislation - convinced that theirs
is an idea whose time has come - will reintroduce the

measure next year.

...'"

OUR BOARDING HOUSE

TV ... in Review

YOU BEEN
WORKIN ON, Pl&lt;'Oi="~

I t£AR T~E 60VERN ·

By JON HANAUER
M~NT SHIPPED YOLl
UPI Television Writer
ALM~T ENOLlcSH
NEW YORK (UPI) -Bob Denver looks older, but what can MON~Y TO FUND A.
CONGRE~SIONAL
you expect after 15 years on "Gilligan's Island ?"
NBC has brought back almost the entire crew to re-crea te JUNKET!
~-rlr
that remarkable piece of televison nonsense in a two.IJour, twopart "Rescue from Gilligan's lsland " that aires Oct . 14 and 21,
9-10 p.m ., Eastern time.
The original ''Gilligan" series ran from 1964-&lt;i7 and its
reruns still surface, preswnably still earning residuals for
Denver in the title role, Alan hale Jr. , as the Skipper (Hale now
is a restaurateur), Jiln Backus and Natalie Schafer as the rich
Howells, Russell Johnson. as the Professor, and Dawn WeUs as
Mary Ann.
Judith Baldwin is the new version of a sexy Hollywood
starlet, in the role originally played by Tina Louise . Miss
Baldwin more than fills Tina LoUise's shoes. Shoes ? Well ,
whatever .
/.\
Life on the island has been continuing for 15 years at the
opening of episode one. The scene shifts to a Russian space
~
control center, Where the scientists destruct a spy satellite that
SACHELOR ,
has degenerated into eccentric orbit.
NPI.iUIIALLY =
Gilligan finds a disc dropped from the Russian spacecraft, l.!.~!!.!!~l!:~!!!!~l'd
which allows tbe Professor to fix his barometer and predict a
tidal wave.
The islanders tie thetr huts together and float off on the tidal
wave, to be rescued by the Coast Guard - after an incident
involving sex a mong the sharks that even by "Gilligan"
L t&lt;l".,.o~
standards stands out in stupidity.
I
The group is welcomed back to civilization, where the
B
Russians spot their disc, now being worn on a chain around
II
Gilligan's neck. And on that slender thread hangs episode 2.
A
The jokes are the same old standbys - "I just coined a
R
word," rich man Howell says. " Thurston, coins are beneath
y
you," replies his wife. "Nighbnare? " the Professor asks after
Gilligan after the latter wakes up screaming . "No, thanks, I
just had one " is the reply.
Dorothy Reibel
"GUligan's Island" is an acquired taste. This show is for • 116 Union Avenue
those who have acquired it.
Pomeroy , OH 45769

· Ubril!ffi is an anti-anxiety drug for which the patent
expired 'two years ago~ It is made by Roche Laboratories,
·'
part of a huge, multinational ~harmaa;utlcal c_ompany. Its
",
chemical - gimeric - name IS chlordoazepoxode bel.
Ubrium costs your pharmacist .5.3 cents for .a fivemilligram capsule. Normal mediCal prescripllon for ' '
Ubrium Is fonr daily, or 21.2 cents .
·.
· Three other companies make the same drug and market
it under the generic name. Their prices for four capsules of
the same dosage run from 4.3 cenls to 10.6 cents - a fifth to " ' '
a half the cost of Llbrlum .
Yet Ubrium has more than 95 percent of the U.S.
market, says Tom Fulda of the Health Care Financing
Administration.
·
Fulda has spent the past year working on a booklet with
which HCFA an arm of the Health, Education and Welfare
Department,' hopes to hold down drug prices and so reduce
the soaring costs of medical treatment.
Drugs represent 10 percent of all U .S. medical costs. In
1976 their prices averaged 50 percent higher than in 1974,
the U.S. Consumer Price Index shows.
The HCF A booklet, now In draft form and circulating ·
among 500 health professionals, Is entitled "Guide to Drug
"
Prices ." HCFA plans to send it to the nation's 350,000
with Major Hoople physicians; to pharmacists and to consumers who ask for it
by the end of the year. It's free.
.
It is, In effect, the first free catalogue of comparative
price information on prescription drugs and some nonprescription drugs.
It divides 196 of the most frequently prescribed drugs,
plus pain-killers like aspirin , into 16 therapeutic categories
such as analgesics and antl-infectlves.
In each category, the guide lists the generic and trad~
names of each drug, their manufacturers, average pertablet price to pharmacists based on a mid-1977 survey of
· 1,000 pharmacists, and total cost of normally recommended daily dosage. HCFA plans to update the guide
D J!&gt;lAN~I every
six months .
Fulda says half the drugs on the U.S. market are "patent
.,
2-~'!"'1 monopolies" - the patents protect manufacturers from
competition.
But patents expire . That's what happened with Ubrium
and that's what wiD happen In 19114 to another Roche
product, Valium, the nation's biggest seUing drug with $250
'.
milllon in sales last year.
The problem, Fulda says, is that "doctors have lots of
information from drug companies but not price information ." Pharmacists have lots of price information but not
·•
comparative price information. HCFA's guide fiUs the
gap.
The guide is 11 0nly a reference/' Fulda says. He stresses
that HEW does not Intend to " abrogate, interfere or
otherwise infringe" on medical judgment.s.
But Fulda thinks doctors " will start writing (prescrip~--..:...~:_:~ lions) more genericaUy." He says pharmacists "can cut
their Inventories" by using the guide.
In addition to price comparisons, Fulda thinks the guide
will enable doctors to make more economic price decisions
in picking from among different drugs that perform
similarly. Example : Eli Ully 's patented anti-infective,
Keflex, costs 30.5 cents for a 25()-milligram capsule. But
another anti-Infective, ampiciUin, is often uSed the same
way . Ten kinds of ampiciUin are listed in the . guide,
ranging in price from six to 18.7 centa per capsule.
HEW Secretary Joseph A. Califano says only 12 percent
of prescriptions now specify a drug's generic name. " If one
of five physicians uses this guide to cut the cost of
prescriptions by 10 percent," he says, "that would save
.'
consumers $120 million a year in prescription drug coala. "
(ThiB weekly column provides information about federal
·servicea offered to Individuals and groups. Queries are
invited. We can't reply to each letter but will answer as
many as possible. Write to "THE U.S. AND YOU," care of
this newspaper) .

Opponents of that approach argue that the standard
deduction already includes an aUowance for charitable
contributions, the additional !pte wiU complicate a tax
form whose principal virtue is simplicity and the change
will set a precedent for the addition of other itemized
deductions.
.
-But the "short fonn" already aUows itemization beyond
the standard deduction - for such -items as p&lt;llitical
contributions, alimony payments and moving expenses.
More significant is the special role voluntary giving and
private charities traditionaUy have occupied in a country
whose citizens are rightfuUy proud of their compaSsion for
the oppressed, the sick and the needy .
For decades, much of the burden of alleviating the
misery of those less fortunate people has been borne by the
United Wa y, Salvation Army and other privately endowed
charities.
.
If those groups' 'financlal base continues to be eroded,
U1eir respo.nsibilities undoubtedly will shift tb federal ,
state and local government agencies.
1bere already exists a national consensus critical of
The World Series on NBC adds excitement and undoubtedly
Dear Dorothy:
government for engaging in too much meddling in too
will
add to NBC's standing in the ratings. But it's time for the
Thank you so much f(l' your generosity. Bej:Buse of you,
many people's lives. The failure of Congress to pass the
Monroe and Alfreda McCown , and the nice people who came to
needed remedial legislation next year will only exacerbate annual complaint about the broadcasters. Won 't they please
interrupt their inexhaustible supply of anecdote, biography . the first Friends of the Libraries meeting, our Friends are of!
the si{uation.
and color to keep the fairweather fans informed on balls,
to a good start.
strikes and outs?
Another program which is off to a good start is tbe plantThis is a ball game, not a talk show. And it is television, not
sitting service which you suggested . Patty Asbeck's umbreUa
radio. One picture may be worth a thousand words, but on
tree, which no longer fils in her house but cannot win!er
television at World Series time it seldom is.
outdoors in this climate, is now in residence at tbe Pomeroy
Library. I hope that other Jl'l&lt;lple will keep the libraries in mind
when looking for a place to care for their plants for the winter
or just while away on vacation.
lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
I hope that you will be able to attend the Many.Splendored
Self program on Monday, October 16th. Tbe program will be at
the Pomeroy Ubrary at 7:30p.m. Under a grant from the Ohio
underlying hea rt disease
Program in the Hurnanitities and with the help of tbe
Man with
Your age, blood pressure
CountY Friends of the Ubrary, Marietta College
Washington
and labora tory studies sughiatal ht·rnia
Professors
Carol
Steinhagen, William Hartel, and Steven
gest that you do not have
· Secretary of State Ted W. address notification is only
Blume
will
examine
the role of literature, painting, and other
heart d1sease and, yes, obarts in liberaling individuals from ' the stereotypes that
DEAR DR. LAMB - I am a viously, you could have chest Brown today urged all Ohio oneweekawa}'," Brownsald,
characterize tbem on the basis of profession , race, gender,
28-year-old man with a hiatal pain from your hiatal hernia . registered voters who have "so I would urge any citizen
who
needs
to
have
a
change
of
they
last
voted
moved
since
class and age . Tbe program bas had such a favorable response
hernia that has been disturb- That Uuesn't mean, however,
elsewhere that the Washington County Friends of the Library
ing rnc £or four years. Can that's the source of your chest to notify their boards of address recorded to go
wanted to be sure that Meigs Countians had a chance to enjoy
this cause pam in the left side pain as there are other causes elections of their new personally to his election
addresses before the 4 p. m. hoard or branch office to do
too .
it,
of the chest '
for c hest pain .
it,. have a friend pick up a
Oct. 17 deadline .
And
now that we are hack to the subject of Friends, thank
I have seen my doctor and
To satisfy your request, I
"Voter registration closed form for him, or call tbe
you again for being our Friend . ! know that you wiU plan to be
she responded with a chest X am sending you The Health
at the next meeting of the Friends, which will be at Middleport
ray whkh was clear, and an Letter nwnber 4-8, Hiatal Sunday, Oct. 8, but citizens board of elections."
Brown
stressed
the
Ubr-ary on Monday, November 6th at 7:30p.m. And be sure to
EKCi ami a stress lest which I Hernia, ·Esophageal Reflux . who are registered to vote
call the library if you need a ride to get there; we'd like to have
pa sse&lt;!. My blood pressure Other readers who want this still may record changes of importance of the address
all of Meigs County come.
was 110-70 . I would also like to iss u~ can semi 50 Ct!nts with a address with their boards of change noting citizens who
Sincerely yours,
leam more about hiatal her- l ong, s tamp e d , se lf- elections until4 p.m . Oct. 17," failed to complete the
procedure would be denied
Ellen Bell, Director of tbe
nia. ll~1y is the operation so addressed envelope for it. Ad· Brown said.
advised
the their right to vote Nov . .7.
Brown
Pomeroy and Middleport Ubraries,
risky '' Also, where can I get dress your request to me in
"
Any
registered
voters
be
made
on
notification
must
Serving All of Meigs County
my ha nds on some good care of this newspaper, P.O.
reading tnr:Jterial about this Box 1551, Radio City Station, prescribed forms so voters having any questions about
should go to their county their registration status
condition'!
New York, NY 10019. This boards of elections or branch should call their boards of
DEAR HEADER- You are issue Will provide you with inyo unger tha n most of the peo- formation about diet, sleep- offices, such as libraries in elections today,'' Brown said.
ple who ha ve a hiatal hernia. ing habits and other factors many counties, to obtain
It is a very l'Ommon problem tha t are important in con- them.
· Tbe Almanac
"The deadline for change of
in individua ls past the age of trolling symptoms caused by
United Press IntemaUoaal
40.
Today is Thursdsy, Oct. 12,
a hi atal he rnia .
· In most instances, it is
285th day of 1978 with 80 to
the
Operating on the holt! in the
THE DAII.YSENTINEl.
simply an enlargement of the diaphragm lo correct a hiatal
follow.
OEVOTEBTUHI E
lNT E I\F~IiT UF'
,;ormal hole in the diaphragm hernie:t is major surgery. In
The moon is between its
1\o'IEIGS·MASON AREA
where the esophagus (food addition , even when l h!:! herfirst
quarter and full phase .
RORF:RT HOEFUt'll
City Edit nr
tube i passes down through nia is repaired, it may not
The morning stars are
Pubhslied da ily ex ce pt Salu rdlly
the chest a nd goes through stop the leaky problem at the
Saturn and Jupiter.
IJy Tht• Ohio Valll!y Publishin g
the diaphragm to join the lop of the stomach. A faulty
Ct!tnp:llly-Multlu wdiu , IlK'.,
11 1
The evening sttars are
Court St., Pumcl'o&gt;'· Ot1 io 4576!1.
stomach. Thi s enlarged hole dusure met: hanism may perMars,
Venus and Mercury.
Busrrrcss Offit·•· Plrmr c 99'2: 215/l.
a llows a small portion of the sist. That means burningJn
·- Those born on this date are
Ed t lul'i~tl Plrur11: 99'.2·2l:i7.
&amp;enml d:tss poslct)o\e pard at
slormtt:h to hernie:tle or rup· the pit of the stomach and
wder the sign of Libra.
Pumcru)', Olrln.
lure through thediaphragm esophageal s pasm could conEbner Sperry, American
N;dir•uill mlw r t rs iu~ r eprcserr·
•
liJ
II
\Ic,
l.a
m.lull
A
ssuc
iall!~
•
.
1101
into the chest .
inventor
and electrical
tinue.
F:udid Ave., (;lcwlantl , Ohi u 411 1$.
When this happens, the nurengineer
,
was
born Oct. 12,
Fur these reasons, surgery
Sullst•r·iptiull 1'11 \cs : Dclh•c rt:d lly
·ma l closure mechanism at is usually not recommended
1860.
cmTrcr wlrcn.· availa ble i5 cc nl'i pt·r·
\l'l'Ck. . 11)' Mutur Route wher·c t 'it1Ti1•r
the top of the stomach is unless there is a real opThis is Collimbus Day in
Sl'n' ll'C nul avali lblc, Om: mtoulh,
distm·bed . This will allow portunity to do something
many states, although
s:J .:l:i. R,t.' ma il in OhJU and W, Va .,
Un t• 1i c;.u·, $2:.!.00; Six. months,
acid digesti ve juices a nd about the hiatal hernia and if
Monday was the official
$1 1.50: Thr ee m outh ~;, $7.00 :
other litera lly s pill back into it is n ot poss ible to
federal
holiday.
P.lscwht•n• S;!ti .OO ycu r ; Six months
the lower pa rt of the reasonably control the hiatal
$1 :1.,50 ; Tht't'l' m uuths. $7 .50.
On this day in history:
SuiJst•t'iJl\iulr pru:c inl'lutlc.!l Sunday
esuphagns . This may ca use hernia symptoms with sensiIn 1492, Christopher ColumTi mcs·l~: nurw l
heartburn and other symp- ble changes in living patterns
bus discovered the New
tom ~.
World known as "America."
such as suggested in the is._'i ue
It may be associated with of The Health Letter I ' am
The first landing is believed
spasms of the esuphagus .
the diaphragm. Any in creas- to have been made in the
sending you.
pressure in · the abdomen Bahamas, southeast of what
ed
Tlwsc muscular spasms
fnd ivlduals who are
may cause chest pains that overweight are 1nore prune to will do this. That is why so now is F](rlda.
even re.sembl~ heart attacks. hiatal hernia . If you are many women develop a hiatal
In 1973, Pr~dent NQ&lt;oo
Usually, Lhcre is no way to overweight it is important to h ernia wMen they are preg- oominated Ho1111e Minority
"It's Richard Nixon! He wants to suggest a
differentiate ch . ·t pains from
Leader Gerald Ford f&lt;r ,the
you to lose weight. That 'ex- na nt.
play!
"
esophageal s pasm except by cess fat inside lbe abdomen
Of course, you should avoid vice presidency to replace
extensive testing and ruling
literally helps squeeze the anything light around your Spiro Agnew who resigned
two days earlier.
out ;lily major likelihood nf stomach lhrou~ the hole in abduml'n.

Library
Letters

HEALTH

Registration
reminder given

Berry's World

,.

•

..
Peopletalk •..
••

By FRED McMAJIIE
UPI Sports Writer
!.OS ANGELES (UPl)
The Los Angeles Dodgers
turned loose their little '
carmon, Ron Cey, and rode
his run-scoring single and
howit~er-lik e
three-run
homer to a 4-3 victory
Wednesday night over the
battle-sca rred New York
Yankees to take a commanding two-game lead in
the World Series.
The Yankees now must
turn to their meal ticket, 25game winner Ron Guidry,
when the Series resumes
Friday night in New York in

order to get themselves back
in the running for the world
championship . Don Sutton
will start f&lt;r the Dodgers.
With three regulars center fielder Mickey R ivers,
first
baseman
Chris
Chamblis s and
second
baseman Willie Randolph sidelined with injuries , tbe
Yankees put up a gallant
fight behind their warhorse,
Reggie Jackson. But at the
finish, with two men on and
two out in t he ninth inning,
Jackson struck out on a 3-2
pitch to end the game .
· Jackson gave the Yankees

a 2-0 lead in the third inning
when he doubled home a pair
of runs. Cey, who loves to bat
against the Yankees' Jim
" Catfish" Hunter , narrowed
the lead to 2-1 with a runscoring single in the fourth
and the Dodgers went to work
on Hunter in the sixth .
Davey Lopes, the hero ~f
Tuesday night's opening
game victory, started the
Dodger sixth with a single.
Mter Bill Russell popped out
trying to· sacrifice, Heggie
Smith sent Lopes to third with
a line single to r ight . Hunter
appeared to be out of the jam
when he got th• dang•ron&lt;.

Steve Garvey to foul out but
Cey belted a 2-0 pitch oo a line
·into the left-center field
stands to give the Dodgers a
4-2 lead.
It was Cey's second World
Series homer, and both of
th em have come off Hunte r .
Sharing tbe spotlight with
Cey in victory for the
Dodgers were relievers Terry
Forster and rookie Bob
Welch . Forster took over for
starter Burt Hooton after Hoy
white led off the seventh
inning with a single. After
giving up a double to the first
batter he faced- pinch hitter

Welch 'smoked' Reggie Jackson
!.OS ANGELES (UP!) liner to right - then came game .
Now, having been "smoked"
Reggie J ackson, who had
" No,'" he answered tersely
away by rookie Bob Welch in driven in all their previous and then added, " .. .! was
ninth
in nin g
of three runs on a two-run upset abo ut something but
. th e
Wednesday night's gripping double in the third and an I'm not gonna talk about it .
second game of the World infield out in the seventh.
He did an outstanding job. He
Series, the New York
A strike, a ball, three put th e pitches where he
Yankees can understand the . stra ight fouls , another ball, · wanted them . I just got beat,
frustration the Boston Red another foul, another ball and that's all.''
Although trailing now two
Sox must have felt .
finally a majestic swing and a
It was a finish ironically mlss. Bedlam.
games to nothing with at least
reminiscent of the Yankees'
"Tommy just gave me the two questiona ble start ers
5:4 playoff win over the Red ball and told me to throw from here on out, lemon
strikes," sa id We lc h. " ! remained unflappa ble in the
Sox 10 days ago.
The Dodgers, behind the wanted to go after them and face of yet one more uphill
" l'l!nguin Power" of Ron make them hit my best pitch, battle.
Cey's three-run homer, were that 's why I thre w all
"When !took over the club,
holding a precarious 4-3 lead fastballs. "
f had two months to get things
going into the ninth inning .
Ja ckson, who threw his bat going," said Lemon , " this
But they had their relie f ace, against the dugout wall in time I've got only a co uple of
Terry Forster, to get the last disgust after his strikeout, · days . But I felt Ca tfish
three Yankee outs and what was asked later if he felt a (Yankee starter Jim Hunter)
looked to be the easiest pari little like Yastrzemski in the pitched very well . He had
of the order coming to bat. Yankee-Red Sox playoff ·things under control except
Yankee Manager Bob
when Cey got to him.''
Lemon had run out of spare
infielders so he co uldn'tH
~
pinch-hit for his light-bitting
I.
shortstop Bucky Dent. So
LOS ANGELES (UPI) There is no reason to panic.
Dent singled to start t hings Th e New York Yankees, You either do it or you don 't .
off . Roy. White's bouncer down two games to zip in tbe Guidry can get us back on tbe
back to the mound moved World Series, talked bravely right track Fridily, then we
Dent into scoring position at about getting back on tbe can go from there.''
second .
winning track after their 4-3
Up until Cey's hom er,
However , the next batter loss to the Los Angeles Hunte r looked like a winner.
was Paul Blair and Lemon Dodgers Wednesday night. The Dodger third baseman
had no one to hit for him
Catfish Hunter went six hila 2-0 pitch into the seats in
either. So Blair walked. And innings Wednesday, giving up leftcenter field over the 38SDodger Man ager Tommy all seven hits and four runs. foo t· mark.
Lasorda walked too, to the Ron Cey hit a three-run
"It was a slider that I didn't
mound. He wanted Welch, the homer in the sixth to put the get far enough away from
26-year~ld right-hander who Dodgers in front, 4-2.
him, " said Hunter.
" If any team can come
Lemon snorted wben asked
became a professional only a
little over a year ago.
back from a t wo-game deficit about pressure with his team
Welch got the right-banded we can," said Hunter . two down .
" We've had pressure on us
hitting Thurman Munson on a "We've done it all year.

Cey, who singled home the
first Dodger run in the fourth ,
got to Hunter two innings
later when, after singles by
Davey Lopes and Reggie
Smit11, be slammed a 2-0 pitch
over the wa ll in left-&lt;:enter .
" With two outs and two on ,
I was just looking for
something I felt I could hit
ha rd," explained Cey: " But
when I hit it , I knew il was
out .
"If we can beat Guidry on
Friday, I t hink we can
sweep."
·
For the 15th lime this year,
the Yankees will be calling on
Guidry , thei r 25-game
winning mealticket, to come
to their resc ue after a defeat.
The Dodgers will counter
with ve teran right-hander
Don Sutton.

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COMMAND PERFORMAN/CE: The sirens walled and the
police cars rolled -aU the way from the Longacre Theater to
the New York Hilton, with the Broadway stars wedged Inside.
It wasn't a raid- just a high~wered police escort for NeU .
Carter and Andre de Sblelds 1'starsof " Ain't Misbehavin,"' and
Ann Reinlrlng of "Dancln.'" They were on their way to do a
special booking - for the 85th Annual Conference of the
International Association of Chiefs of Pollee. With them was
Mrs. Louis Armstrong, wife of the late, great j82ZIIl8n
wearing a diamond necklace cast in the shape of
Manhattan skyline- the last gift Satchmo gave her before he
!tied.

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QUO'l'E FO 'mE DAY: Born-again Christian Jaet Clarkstar outfielder for the San Francisco Giants - In the
November Issue of Sp&lt;rt magazine rn how he was able to hit
.306 this season despite a banged-up knee: ''The Lord knows I
have a liad knee and can't run the bases too good so he bleaecl
my bat and let me hit all those home runs to ~ve my knees.
The l&lt;lrd knows his basebaU."

.

PAY

Biack·black-black . Loaded .

AUT

OLD WOUNDS 'fENDED: Not too many years ago, the
Dau~hters · of the American Revolution barred opera diva
Marian ADderson from singing in their Coostitution Hall in
Washington because she was black. Next week, th&amp; first lady
will make It up to her'. Rosalynn Carter wiD present Miss
Anderson with a special congressional gold medal Tuesday honoring ber "distinguished career, her untiring promotion of
the arts and her cooiributioos to the caWJe of peace,"

'

WHY

9 til Noon

all year," he said. "We had to
come from hehind and beat
the Red Sox and then we had
to come from behind in
games to beat Kansas City in
the playoffs.' '
"Our shock troops came
through pretty good tonight,"
said Lemon . " Bob Welch
(Dodger relief pitcher) took it
to us pretty good - he
challenged everybody, and he
won ."
The 21-year-&lt;&gt;ld Welch got
Thurman Munson on a fly to
right and struck out Reggie
Jackson for the final out on a
3-2 fastball .

•

WHlfE HOUSE FEVER: The first family had a. special
dinner guest at the White House Wednesday night. "Saturday
Night Fever" star John 'l'ravolta joined President Carter,
wife Rosa lynn, daughter Amy and sons Cblp and Jeff and their
wives in a spaghetti feast in the Carter's private quarters.
Says Mrs. Carter's press secretary Mary Hoyt, of what may be
Travolta's most prominent fan, "Amy admires his music very
!Jluch.".

.r._
u.s.

signed w ing F ra nk Beaton to
the New Haven N igh t Hawks of
th e Amer ican Hockey Leag ue
and sa id tha1 cen ter Way ne
Oi l ton and detensernan Don
Awr ey w ill be reass igned i n t he
near t uture .

1978 CUTlASS SUPREME
BROUGHAM ............................ SS495

•

GLIMPSES: Cameraman Ray Reaaban - who won tWo
Oscars, f&lt;r "Gooe with the Wind" and "Blood and Sand" wt of
12 n&lt;minatloos In a 511-year career that began in 1914 - wu
honored Wednesdsy with the 1,899th star In the Hollywood
Boulevard "Walk of Fame" ... Britain's PaiDL-eu ·Marprella
scheduled to attend roll-out ceremoni.. In Lancaater, Calif.,
today for the firat loog-cange Trlstar buUt by l«!rbeed for
British Airways ... Retired Air Force Lt. Gea.
H.
Doolltde, who won the Medal of Hoo&lt;r for teadq the firlt
air strike IICainst'Japan in World War II, baa been Milled flrlt
wlmer of the Award for E&amp;ceUence in A91ation liven by the
AII'J)&lt;rt 1)perators Council lntemat!onal....
•·

Seco nd Ga me
NEWYO RK .
ab r hbi
N H l Standing s
W h i l e It
S 2 7 0
By Unite d Press Internat ional
Thomasson c t
3 0 1 0
ca mpb e ll Conferen ce
Blair cf
1 0 1 0
Pat rick Oi\'i s.ion
Munson c
.'1 l 1 0
W. L. T . Pts . Jackson dh
4 0 1 3
At l an ta
0 0 1
1 Nett les Jb
4 0 0 0
NY Isl ander s
_ 0 0 0
0 P in i etta rt
4 0 2 0
Ph il adel phia
o o o
o Spen cer l b
4 0 l 0
NY Runger s
0 0 0
0 Doy le 2b
J 0 I 0
Sm y th e D i\'is ion
Johnso n ph
1 0 0 0
W. L T Pt s Stanl ey 2b
0 0 0 0
Vancou ver
I 0 0
2 Dent ss
4 0 1 0
St . Lou is
1 0 0
'l Hunt er p
0 0 ·O 0
Chicago
0 0 1
1 GOSS &lt;I ge p
0 0 0 0
Co lorado
0 1 0
0 Tota l s
37 J 11 J
Wales Co nf er ence
lOS ANGELES .
ab r h b i
Norris D ivis io n
Lope s2b
4 110
W. LT . Ph
Ru ssel l ss
4 0 t 0
Montr ea l
1 0 0
'1 Smi lhrt
d2 10
Wash ington
1 0 0
2 Garvey lb
3 0 l 0
Los Angeles
0 1 0
0 Ccy Jb
3 I 2 4
Pitt sbur gh
0 1 0
0 BaKer If
3 0 0 0
D et roit
0
1 0
0 Monda y cf
J 0 0 0I
Adam s Di vi sion
North c t
0 0 0 0
w. L T . Pt s. L ocy dh
J 0 0 0
Tor on to
1 0 0
2 Ye age r c
3 0 1 0
BOS to n
0 0 0
0 Hooton p
0 0 0 0
Buffa l o
0 0 0
0 Fors ter p
0 0 0 0
Minne so ta
0 t 0
0 Wel ch p
0 o 0 0
Wednesday ' \ Result!.
Tot al s
JO 4 7 4
Montrea l 5, Mi nn es'o ta 2
N. Y .
002 000 100- 3 - - - -- ---Tor ont o J, Pitt sbur qh 2
LA
ooo 103 oox - 4
St . Lo uis 5, Delroit .'1
DP N ew Ynrk 1,. LOS A n
A tlanta .'1 , Cll icago 4, lie
getes I LOB N ew Y or k 10.
Vanco uv er 8. Co lorado 2
Los A n geles 2. 28 - Munson ,
was hing ton 4, Lo s Ang el es 2
Jac k son : B l ai r . HR - Cey { 1).
T hur s day's Game s
SB· W h it e
P h i la a t N . Y . R anger s
I P H . R ER 88 SO
N .Y tslndrs at Butlato
Hunlr . LO · I
6 7 4 4 0 2
Piltsburgh &lt;:I I Bost on
Gossage
2 o ·oo oo
Friday' s Games
Ho tn . W t .Q
6
8 3 3 1 5
washing ton at Atlanta
For str
2 I J J 0 0 I 3'.
51 Louis at Van co uver

unt er ee1s Yanks will bounce

•

By KENNETII R. CLARK
United Press International
PYRAMID PUNCH : White House press secretary Jody
Powell says there's another story behind that tale of White
House aide Hamilton JordJ!n's alleged "pyramids of Egypt "
wisecrack while peering down tbe bodice of an ambassador's
wife. In a Playgirl magazine interview, PoweU says Washington Post reporter Sally Quinn wrote it after a running feud
in which he already was angry enough to "punch ber right In
the mouth ." Tbe issue -Powell's refusal to call her boss.and
boyfriend Ben Bradlee "Ben." Powell says he told Miss Quinn
he'd been " brought up to refer jj) people that much older as
"Mister." Says he, "It was after that foolishness that she
wrote the pyramid story. Since I can 't punch SaUy Quinn,
maybe I could punch Ben Bradlee and see if she cared."

Pa ul Blair - For•1er struck superbly in the Dodgers'
out Thurman Munson, got opening-g ame victory over
Jackson to boun c..i into a run- Philadelpl;ia in the National
playoffs,
was
scoring groundou t, a nd . League
fanned Graig Nettles to get swnmoned with runners. oil
first and second and one out
out of the jam .
Forster, however, needed in the ninth. Welch proceeded
help wh en the Yankees to retire the Yankees' two
started a rally in the ninth most dangerous hitters inning and it was Welch who Munson and Jackson . He got
proved worthy to the test Munson on a lineout to right
once again in post-season field a nd then str uck out
Jackson as a crowd of 55,982
competition .
who
pitched rose to their feet in unison to
Welc h,
applaud the yo ungs ter 's
effort.

Sports Trans01ct io'n5
By United Pres s Internat ional
Wednesday
Football
Philade lph i a Pla ced lin e
Qac ker
John
Bun t i ng
and
run(l ing back Herb L usk on the
in jured re serve li s t and signed
linebacker Ray Ph i llips and
corn erba c k BobbY L ee H owa r d .
bot h free agent s.
P i ttsbur gh
S1gned tight end
Jim Mand ic h .
Atlanta • .., Signed pla ce k icker
Tim Mazzett i.
·easketball
Clev eland ~ Pl aced guard
Bing o Smith on the iniured list .
Ch icago
Ac qu i r ed guard
Charles Dud l ey from Gol den
St ale for " f utur e draft consider
aliens," wa i ved gua r d Nor m
Va n L ier and center J im Ar d
and p·laced gua rd Tat e Ar- m
stron g on t he in ju r ed reserve
t ist.
Ph i ladel ph ia - Waived guar d
TE-d McCla in to r educ e the ir
roster to 12.
Hockey
New York Ranqer s As

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�•
4- The Daily Sentinel,Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0 ., Thursday, Oct. 12, 1978

'No-t looking ahead '--Cey

Meet the MaraUders

WS ANGELES (UP!) - Series."
Ron Cey's an!'lysis of the lm
CeY was heavy in his praise
Angeles Dodgers' 2-0 World
Series start over the New
York Yankees was typically
Ron Cey .
Cey is definitely a baseball
politician. He's also one of the
sport's most underrated
players and his low-key
personality doesn 't lend itself
to gaining national attention .

uwe're not looking ahead,"
he emphasized following his
four RBI performance in the
4-3
Dodgers'
victory
Wednesday night. "Now we
will concentrate ort the game
. at hand and the one ahead of
us is game 3.
"The Yankees have a good
ball club. They fought from
behind all year long . I don't
believe tbat just because
you've won the first two
games you have a lock on the
John M. Monls
5-10, 141lbs.
Soph. G-LB

Terry Gardner
5-10, 140lbs.
Sr. Wfi.SS

Chris Judge
s-9, 150 lbs.
Soph. C.CB

Joseph Powell
5-8, 13Ubs.
Soph. End-DE

Meigs, Jackson tangle
• •
In Important contest
By Greg Batley
Meigs and Jackson square
off Friday evening in an
important SEOAL game for
both squads. Both are 1-1
inside the league. Overall,
Meigs has a 3-2 mark while
Jackson is 1-4. Kickoff time is
8 p.m.
Meigs, much stronger than

preseason predictions, is
coming off a tough 35-20 loss
to powerful Ironton while the
Ironmen of Coach Terry
Adsit fell to the host Athens
Bulldogs last Friday, 12-0. In
the Meigs-Ironton contest,
the Tigers of Coach Bob Lutz
had all they could handle
before pulling away from
Coach Charlie Chancey's
Marauders in the final
quarter.
. Referring to last week's
loss, Chancey said he was
pleased with his team's
performance overall and that
Ironton simply had a tough
bell club. But as any observer
of last week's contest would
attest to, another match-up
might see the Marauders
come out on top.
But all that is history.
However, the Marauders are
still very much in the race for
the league crown.
Wellston,
another
powerhouse in the league, fell
to Meigs just two weeks ago,

23-20. Ironton still has to play
the Rockets, and a Wellston
win could really throw the
league into a race.
.
. First things first .
Meigs has , to face the
lronmen tomorrow and that
earn wlll be no pushover.
Although they own only one
win, a 2().14 victory over
Waverly, the visitors are
tough. Last week's loss was
the result of two many turnovers in critical situations.
· Halfback Brian Landrum is
a fine running back. Last
week he picked up 72 yards in
a losing cause. The team
gained 10 first downs over the
Bulldogs, 132 yards rushing,
and 84 yards through the air.
Meigs didn't have it easy at
Ironton, but a fine showing.
Eleven first downs and 113
yards in the air is nothing to
sneer at, especially against.
someone like the Tigers.
Greg Becker was the
Marauders leading rusher
with 43 yards. The receiving
duo of Larry Stewart and Bob
Seelig, near the top in the
league •. hauled in 45 and 43
yards, respectively.
Doing all that tossing was
freshman Bob Ashley who
was starting just his second
varsity contest. In those two
games, Ashley had connected
on 17 of 26 aerials for a total of

206 yards. Not llad .

The Meigs defense • ha4
been the prid e of the
Marauders all season, but
last week it was the offensive
line that really ·put ·ou~.
Ironton contained the Meigs
running attack, but the
Tigers didn't stop it as they
have other teams this year.
Ashley and the backfield did
well, but Chancey especially
praised the linemen for doing
so well against a quick
Ironton front wall. Meigs'
offensive line is composed of
Tim Faulk at center, Roger
Parker and Mike Drehel,
guards; Randy Arnold anrt
Dan Edwards at tackles, and
Seelig, Stewart, Stout, and
Dave Blake alternating at the
ends.
Marauder team · attitude
this year is just great, and it
really showed in the Ironton
game. Outsized and the
underdogs, the Marauders
never flinched . And very few
mistakes could be · found · in
their game plan. The team
had just one fumble (which it
recovered) and just one
penalty, a five-yarder.
The only Marauder not
healthy is regular quarterback Dan Thomas, who is ~
still out with a leg injury. A
healthy team, a great attitude, and a whole bunch of
desire just might be the

Rio Grande to host
cross country meet
RIO GRANDE - Thirtynine high schools will bring

BEULAH RESULTS
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UP!)
- Smokin Pro won the
featured race at Beulah
Park, going the mile and an
eighth in I : 53 2-5 Wednesday,
fmishing two le11gths ahead of
First Chair, while Kiss An'
Tell was third.
Deimaria Lady and Billy
Bearbow won the first two
races to return $25.80 on the
daily double combinattioo of
2 and 3.
The ;,..n-&amp; combination of
Lu Vee, SoiDid of Bells and
Yomoy returned $4,522.50 in
the trifecta to 18 ticket
holders .
A crowd of 4,164 bet

$479,648.

THISTLEDOWN
NORTH RANDAL4 Ohlo
(UP!)- Jockey Larry Hanks
guided Lassie Go Go to
·victory in Wednesday's
featured eighth race at
ThiBtledown.
The 3-year-old winner covet'edthesixfurlongsin 1:1115 over a fast track to pay
~.40, $3 and $2.40. Barb's
Dream placed and Lake
N..-th showed.
Evil
Jumper
and
Amberaute retwned $120 on
the H daily double, and there
were 109 winning tlc.kets oo
the 11-6-3 grouping of Valiant
style, When It Rains and
Mental Strain in the ninth
race trifecta - each worth

f458.30.
Attendance was 4,221 and
the handle totaled $484,ot3.

their best distance runners to
Rio Grande College and
Community College Oct. H .
Class A, AA, and AAA runners will all be represented
when the eighth annual Rio
Grande Invitational Cross
Country meet begins at 9:30
a.m., Saturday.
Three races, one in each
class will take place that
, morning with an awards
ceremony sched uled for
noon. Rio Grande cross
country coach, Bob Willey,
host of· the invitational, expects a good day for spectators. "There should be
some extremely tight races
over the hilly 21&gt; mile course .
The crowd may also he
getting a preview of the
future Rio Grande College
cross country team, as many
of the individual winners in
previous years have ·later
enrolled at Rio Grande."
Interstate competition will

ingredients to down another
formidable team from
Jackson.

bander Ron Guidry, said out
loud what everyone was thinking . .
I
. .
"We did what bad to be
done in Los :Angeles," he
smiled . "U they had won one
game here, they would have
done what they wanted . Now
we can afford to lose one in
New York and they can't .''·

struck out Reggie Jackson to
end the game with two on and
two out in the ninth,
combined the rest of the way
to deny the Yankees a split in
Los Angeles.
Blll North, who will start in
center field in place of Rick
Monday at New York Friday
night against Yankee left-

·.-.
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~ He had lust gotten through the easy part, getting
clutch-

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THE SHOE BOX

Soccer

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

San Jose - Af5J:lointed F rank
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Hun ter , Gossage (7) an d
Munson ; Hooton, Forst er (7),
Welch (9) and Yeager . WHooton (1 -0J . L - Hunt er 10-l J.
HRs- Los Angeles, Cey ( 1) .

PIITSBURGH (UP!) The Pittsburgh Steelers
Wednesday signed tight end
Jim Mandich, an 8-year NFL
veteran and former Miami
Dolphin, to replace · injured
Benny Cunningham.

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·,SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

li,;j,;:o;.~:.;,;;,;,;;o,;;;:.;;;,;::o;,;;~~~il

By Major Amos B. Hoople
Plgsldn ~nlus

Forecast

lor will beat SMU, 34-24. Aiid ·
TCU's Homed Frogs will eat
Rice, 31&gt;-14 - heh-heb!
In the AUantic Coast Conference, Nortl! Carolina will
whack neighbor Wake Forest, 38-14, and Clemson will
overpower Virglnla, 38-7.
Maryland, having a good
seaaon to date, will add
another victory as they beat
Syracuse, 42-14.
· And up in Hanover, visiting . Yale will defeat Dartmouth, 33-14, in the 62nd
engagement in this 1¥)'
League. rivalry.
Now go on with my forecast :
SATURDAY, Oct. 14

t::·

Rivers involved in
scuffle once again
LOS ANGELES (UP!) said his leg was bothering
Center;fielder Mickey Rivers him.
did it again Wednesday .
Before Wednesday's game,
Rivers got involved in an Lemon said, "I went to him
altercation with a New York and told him I thought it was
Yankee club official when he best that he stay out. I
boarded the team bus at a thought with three days off,
hotel for the trip to Dodger hopefully, he could come
Stadium lor .. the seco11d game back for Friday's game in
of the World Series.
New York.
Rivers bad a young man
Rivers glossed over the bus
with him and Yankee incident.
traveling secretary Blll Kane
"I don 't want to mess up
stopped him, pointing out it the guys," he said, meaning
was against club rules to let he did not want to weaken the
outsiders on the team bus. Yankee lineup by playing
Rivers said the young man hurt.
was a relative.
Manager Bob Lemon and
coach Elston Howard had to
break up the ensuing scuffle
·betWeen Rivers and Kane.
Rivers got off the bus and
took a cab to the stadium .
After the Dodgers beat the
Yankes, j-3, Lemon was
asked if Rivers had bem
involved in a fight on the bus.

RIFLE CORPS- This Southern Corps is fronting the
Tornado Marching Band thls year . Members are from left

to right , Penny Sffiith, Lisa Warner and Jeannie Johnson .

Reds will know by Friday
if Rose will he back in '79
CINCINNATI (UP!) Pete Rose and his agent
mulled over the Cincinnati
Reds'. latest contract propos!
Wednesday,
an
offer
described by Reds President
Dick Wagner as "simply as
high as we can go."
Wagner said he spoke with
Rose's agent, Reuven Katz,
by telephone Wednesday, and
Reuven indicated he and
Rose would reply to the offer
by Friday . Katz had no
comment on the proposal
Wednesday afternoon, but
said he would discuss the
offer with Rose Wednesday
evening .
"Pete made some requests
through his counter-offer ,
and we have changed our
original proposal to answer

some of his requests,"
Wagner said.
The Reds' first proposal,

believed to include the
highest salary offered in
Cincinnati Reds' history, was
rejected by Rose and Katz,
who then made a counterproposal. Katz called the
Reds' first
offer
"a
reasonable starting point ,"
but insisted the management
would have to go higher to
sign the 37-year-&lt;Jld switch
hitter.
In announcing the Reds'
latest offer, Wagner said,
" We sincerely appreciate all
that Pete has done for the
club and we have told him
that we want him to continue
his career with the Reds.
"AI the same time, we feel
this latest offer is simply as
high as we can go : We made
our first offer a strong one in
the hope we could eliminate
protracted ne gotiations. We

Princeton, Wyoming,
Covington top polls
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Only
minor changes rippled
through this week's United
Press Internationa l Ohio
High School Board of Coaches
football ratings as Cincinnati
Princeton, Cincinnati
Wyoming and Covington
continue to .lead the way.
Princeton rolled to its fifth
win without a loss Friday
night with a 2().7 decision over
Hamilton Taft 2().7 and maintained a comfortable 245-206
margin over runnerup
Cincinnati Moeller in the
Class AAA balloting.
Wyoming, despite its 6~
drubbing of North North
College Hill, saw its lead over
second place St . Marys
Memorial in Class AA slip to
eight points, 217-109, while
Covington's
lead
over
runnerup Newark Catholic
dwindled some in Class A,
with the Buccaneers still
holding a 168-ltG margin over
the Green Wave.
For the third straight week,
Massillon finished in the third
spot in AAA, but Canton
McKinley's 21-6 loss to
Barberton made for some
changes among the final
seven spots .
Cincinnati Elder took over
No. 4 with Zanesville moving
up to fifth. Lakewood St .
. Edward jumped aU the way
from ninth to sixth, with
Cleveland
St.
Joseph
remammg .in seventh.
Rounding out the top ten are
Findlay, Fremont Ross and
Barberton, making its first
appearance .
Defending poll cbampion
Elyria Catholic is stlll a

distant third in the AA
balloting this week , The
Panthers, with 150 points,
trail Wyoming by 67 , while
Columbus DeSales is another
big jump behind in fourth
with 121.
The rest of t he AA top ten .
are Ironton in fifth, followed
by New Concord John Glenn,
Paulding, Brookfield, Elida
and Cincinnati McNicholas.
Paul~ing and McNicholas are
newcomers , while Elida
returns after a week 1 s
absence .
Jeffersson,
an
West
impressive 23-15 winner over
previously u n b e a t e n
Columbus Grandvi ew last
Friday night , moved up from
fifth to third in this week's
.ClasS A ratings, dropping
Hamler Patrick Henry and
Cory Rawson into a tie for the
fourth spot.
Columbus R eady and
Montpelier share No . 6,
followed by Middletown
Fenwick, Fremont St. Joseph
and Versailles. Montpelier
returns to the top ten after a
week's absence, while St.
Joseph and Versailles are
both newcomers to the list .

intended for it to recognize
Pete and his accomplishments.
" We felt , and we still do,
that it is important to sign
Pete quickly so that we know
where we stand. We can't sit
back and wait. We need to
make our plans now if we are
going to have a championship
team again in 1979."
Contrasted to Wagner's
tone of urgency, Katz has
said he and Rose feel no
reason to rush.
"There is no real pressure
on him w make a quick
decision," Katz said last
week . "We would ·like to
avoid the bitter batUe that
went on two years ago . In
fact, we won't have that.
Then,
Pete had two
alternatives - sign with the
Reds or not play. Now he can
go through the draft."
The draft is Nov. 3. The
Reds
can
continue
negotiating with Rose until
three days before the draft
and then, if they choose, also

negotiate with other teams
that select Rose in the
draft.
Rose this season reached
the 3,000 career hit plateau
and later hit safely in 44
consecutive games, tying the
National League record held
by Wee Willie Keeler.

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world Series Standings
By United Press International
;:-: ..., New York vs . Los Angeles
M~(Best-of-Seven)
._
(All Times EDTJ
-..
(Los Angeles leads, 2·01
:=, oct. 10 Los Angeles 11 ,
~·New York 5
~ ~ Oct . ·11 - Los Ang eles 4, New
c : rork 3
..,l~. Oct. 13 - Los Angeles at New
,._..-; ark, 8:30p .m ,
• • r, Oct. 14 - Los An gel es at New
'(ork , 3 :30p .m .
Oct. 15 - x -Lo s Angeles at
NeW York , 4:30p .m .
Oct. l7 - x -New Yor k at Los
Angeles , 8:30p .m .
Oct. 18 - x -New York at Los
Angeles , B: JO p .m .
X· if necessary

SAVE

by ~eallstlc

Football

· Egad, friends, this is the
week the collegia.ns start the
earnest fight for conference
titles. There's a full complement of games in .the Big 10
and the Big 8 plus some very
important clashes in the
SEC and SWC and the Pacific 10.
Highlighting the Big 10
will be the 76th meeting of
the powerful Michigan
Wolverines and intra-state
rival Michigan State at Ann
Arbor. The Wolves, averaging better than 35 points per
contest, get the Hoople nod
to smash the Spartans kaff-kaff - by a 35-14 count Colo st 35 Air Force 7
Alabama 35 F1orlda 1%
- um-kumph I
Elsewhere, Purdue will Callf !8 Ariz 13 (N)
visit Colb.mbus and stun the usc 31 Ariz st n (N)
Buckeyes as Mark HolyC,..uUArmy7
Hernnann fills the air with Baylor 34 SMU Z4
footballs. We make it Pur· • Bowllag Gr 31 Keat St 21
due 32, Ohio State 21.
PeDD U BroWD 10
Minnesota will shade Colamllla Z% PriD&lt;eloD 18
Iowa, 21-H; Wisconsin will Yale 33 Dartmouth 11
sneak past Illinois, 14-7; and Day1oa Z4 E Keulaeky 17
Indiana will have an "up" E Mleb 41 ~ 14
day and roll over Northwest- Miami (F) Zl Ga Tecb 21
CorneD !8 Harvard %2 ·
3
e'i:;
Big a, awesome Te:1 AlcM Ill Hoaatou 31 (N)
Wise 14 IUlnols 7
Oklahoma will prevaU over lad 35 Northweslera 1%
host Kansas, 38-12. Ml.ssouri, LSU Z7 GeorJia ZZ. (NI
another up-and-&lt;lown club, . BaU St 21 La Tecb 21 (N)
will trip fine Iowa State, 24- LoaliVflle %2 NW La 11 (N)
21.
Miami (0) Z3 Manball !1
Nebraska, which scores Mpllla St 14 Webla 8113 (N)
touchdowns like Alvin and Mleblpa 35 Mkb .St 14
Leander - heh-heh · - de- Mbmeaela !1 Iowa 11
vour hamburgers at KeatackyZ7 MIA 10
McDonald's, will swarm all 1'111 St S8 Mlu 8t 12
over KanBils State, winning Gnmbllag %5 MIA V St !1
4!1-7. Colorado, getting better Mo Z4 Iowa St 21
each week, will trounce Ok- ldabo 1li Meataaa 1%
lahoma State, 31-14.
Na\')' 17 Dab 10
Alabama, the . perennial Nebraoka 41 Kau Sl 7
Southeastern champ, will Tes Teeb Z!l NMe:~ U (N)
down improving Florida, 35- 1'1111a 114 NMu St !1 (N)
Noire Dame %1 PHI Zl
12. Watch for Louisiana Colerade 31 Oilla St u
State's Tigers to outsnarl the BYU u o.e1108 21
Georgia Bulldogs, 27-22, 111&gt;- Pardue 3Z ObJo St 11
der the lights in Baton VM1 11 Rldlmoad 11
Rouge: This might be the Rulllen zz CoDA 15
best game of . the entire So CUollDit Z7 Oblo u 1%
weekend - hak-kaffl
E Cai'O!nlo MIA 1% (N)
Kentucky's has too much Wull Zl Stalenll%
for Ole Miss and should win Md U Syraeue U
27-12. Auburn, a definite Temple Z1 Clacbmatl7 (N)
threat for the loop title, will Teuo 3t No Tu St 18
take the measure of Vander- TCU 35 Rice 14
bill, 31-6.
~.!1aBootu~c:•.!',N(N)
'Twill be a big night for the
- o•
~~ - ' l
state of Arizona as their top Utah Zl Weber St 11 (N)
teams entertain two Callfor- UIU Sl 23 Lac ll&lt;b St 14
Allbaru Sl VaaderbUt I
nia powers. Arizona meets VlllaDova 15 Col&amp;ate 7
California and Ari2ona State Cleauou 21 va 7
faces Southern Cal. TheHoo- Va Tecll 23 w Va Z1
pie System sees California ' No CUo 38 WForelll4
dumping Arizona, 28-13, and W Tell Sl 21 Lamar 17 (N)
the Trojans thumping State. Clr.del u W CUo 12 CN)
31-21. Har-rumph!
Wmt.Mary 15 JMiodtlou 7
In other Pac 10 games, SDiego St 18 Wyo 10
Washington will out-muscle
Stanford, 26-12, and Wash·
ington State's Jack ThompLAKE FOREST, Ill. (UP!)
son will hurl his club past
UCLA, 23-26. .
The Chicago Bears
High-scoring Texas A&amp;M Wednesday claimed Alan
faces Houston. Playing Page on waivers from the
away, the Aggies will have Minnesota Vikings and the
to he at.their best. And that's defensive tackle said he
e:xactly what we foresee: an
World Series Result
By United Press International
A&amp;M triumph, 311-31. Jove, would decide before noon
Gamet
Thursday whether he would
N.Y
002000'00- 311 0 'twill be worth the price of
report.
admission.
Elsewhere,
BayLA
ooo lOJ oox - 4 7 o

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

19900

W11H

tOugh Thurman Munson on a fly ball and sometimes tougher
:Yet Reggie Jackson on strikes, with two men on in the ninth
iJ¥lipg, to nail down the Dodgers ' second straight World Series'
win · over the Yankees.
: ~ow c~e the tough ~rt, keeping both feet on the ground
wli)Je lle10g surrounded 10 the clubhouse by newsmen intent
upon finding out from him precisely how he had done it.
• Welch is only 21. He never before had. heard the kind of
thunderous roars from a crowd that he did from the 55 982 at
Dodger Stadium Wednesday night after he struck out J~ ckson
oo a 3-and-2 pitch to nail down a 4-3 heart-stopper .against the
Yankees.
;·The perspiration was still rolling down Welch's face when he
got back to the clubhouse and peeled off his uniform in front of
ills locker. There .was a chance this might be the Dodgers' last
game at home thiS year s10ce they are 2-up in the Series with
three gaines scheduled over the weekend at Yankee Stadium.
. "Don't f&lt;rget to pack your bags," Nobe Kawano, the
Dodgers' equipment man, reminded Welch.
The 6-foot-3 right-hander from Ferndale Mich. frowned. ·
' "You win a World Series and you still gotta pack your own
bags," he dead-pamed .
·He was kidding, of course . Atle.St, the Dodgers hope he was.
Welch hasn't won the World Series for them yet nor has he
even gottencreait for a Series' victory, but he saved their skins
Wednesday night with an eye-popping performance that
iqlpressed everyone who witnessed it.
He made ~ly 11 pitches after taking over for Terry Forster,
the Dodgers second pitcher, with two on and one out in the
ninth . Welch threw two of those pitches to Munson and nine
rilore to Jackson in a confrontration, which had ali the
e)ements of that celebrated shootout at OK Corral. When the
dust bad setUed, it was the Dodger rookie who was standing
there triumphantly in the middle 9f the street with his gun still
smoking and the mighty Reggie Jackson lying wounded on the
ground.
Welch had never pitched to Jackson before. He admitted he
was nervous.
"I threw him all fast balls," he revealed. "People told me he
••was an excellent low ball hitter, so I tried to get the ball in on
" him and above his waist."
That was exactly where Welch got his last pitch, and
Jackson, swinging with all he had, missed it.
Somebody asked Jackson how he felt when he struck out and
heard the crowd go wild and he said, "I felt I got beat; I didn't
do the job." ·
Before that, Jackson had driven in all of the Yankees' runs
with a two..-un double off Dodger starter Burt Hooton in the
third inning and an infield out in the seventh' with Forster
pitching. The Dodgers had gotten to Yankee starter Catfish
Hunter for a run in the fourth and three more in the sixth when
,: ;fton Cey homered over the left field fence with two men
~board.
:; As it turned out, Cey's blow provided the Dodgers with their
&gt;!"Victory margin but it could have easily vanished in the ninth,
when Bucky Dent led off with a single and Paul Blair walked
with one out.
That was when Dodger manager summoned Welch from the
bullpen, calling on the kid the club had brought up from
Albuquerque of the Pacific Coast league last June 19.
T&lt;mmy John, who beat the Yankees in Tuesday's Series
opener, was sitting in the corridor outside the Dodgers'
£lubhouse watching the game on TV when Welch came in from
the bullpen·.
John looked as Welch set down Munson and Jackson and
inarveled along with everyone else at the kid's composure.
"I wasn't that surprised at the way he pitched, though," said
the Dodgers' veteran lefthander. "I remember the first game
he was in for us against the Reds on July ·8. He pitched two
innings, went boom, boom, boom, just like that, and blew 'em
away. I'll tell you this : he's just getting started in this game."
That doesn't come as a piece of particularly good news to the
Yankees.

-

R( PRQGRAMIIABL.ETV GAll(

FACTORY CLOSE-OUT

l

.

SAVE
Reg. 89 95

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

·.·.

Men's Warm lined Sport Boot
by

SAVE
40°/o

N. SeCond Ave.

. ·11

· LOS ANGELES(UPI) -:-Rookie Bob Welch, with only three
and a half IIIOI)ths 10 the b1g leagues behind him looked a little

TRC-427 by Realisllc

OLD MAN WINTER IS
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.,:~:~

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THE "YUKON"

FINDLEY NINTH
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP])
- Unbeaten Findlay College
picked up 91 points, including
one first place ballot, to gain
a tie for the No. 9 spot in this
week's NAIA Division II
football ratings.
The 4-0 Oilers are tied with
Northwestern of Iowa, which
has a 5-l record.
Linfield of Oregon, 4-0, with
224 points, retained the No. 1
position in the ratings.

highlight the AAA competition · as Huntington,
Huntington East, Barboursville, Parkersburg, and
Parkersburg East high
Reg.
schools of West Virginia join
14995
Athens, Copley, Hudson ,
Forest Park, Marietta,
Get safety, security while driving! Instant emergency
Meadowdale, Miamisburg,
channel-9 priority switch, warning light for antenna
Norwood, Roth, and Oak Hllls
from Ohio.
problems, LED modulation indicator/ channe l readout,
The AA race will feature
switchable ANL. Includes all mounting hardware.
teams from Heath, Bethel .
Don't be stranded without one! 21 -1534
Tate, Chesapeake, Circleville, Edgewood, Fairfield .------------------:-~---:::--=--::-:-:-,
Union, Goshen, Indian Lake,
A®
Ridgewood, Waverly, and
K
1"1
PI
Wheelersburg high schools.
Thirteen class A schools
will run the first race of the
day. They are Caldwell,
Batavia, Cincinnati Country
Day, Portsmouth East,
Lancaster Fisher Catholic,
Georgetown, Oak Hill, Skyue,
St. Bernard - Elmwood,
Waterford, White Oak and
Zane Trace.

Middleport,

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CAPTURES AWARD
WS ANGELES (UP!)
Andre Thornton, the slugging
first baseman of the
Cleveland Indians, has been
named winner of the annual
Danny Thompson Memorial
Award, given to the majorleague player who best
exemplifies the Christian
spirit in baseball.
Thornton 's wife and ~year­
old daughter were kUied in a
car accident in 1977, but the
Indians ' first baseman recovered remarkably from the
tragedy and enjoyed his
biggest season in the majors
with 33 home runs and 105
RBI.
I

of Catfish Hunter, the Yankee
starter, who surrendered his
RBI single in the fourth
inning and three-run homer
in the sixth .
"Hunter is an outstanding
person and a . player," he
stressed. " As far as I'm
concerned, he's tbe same
pitcher who pitched for the
Oakland A's in 1974."
Wednesday night's win
went to Burt Hooton, who was
removed after giving up a
leadoff single to Roy White in
the seventh inning . After
pinchhitter
Paul Blair
delivered a ground-rule
double on the first pitch by
Terry Forster, Hooton
stonned out of the dugout.
mair did score but that was
it as Forster and rookie Bob
Welch, who dramatically

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'.'No," said the manager.
" There was no fight. There
was a disturbance.lt was just
a misinterpretation of the
rules. There was no real
problem."
Lemon indicated the
' trouble had nothing to do with
his selection of .Gary
Thomasson to start in center
field in the second game of.
the series. He had said
,Tuesday after the Yanks lost
the first game, he might start
Thomasson if River'sso:&gt;re hip
and bad left leg bothered him.
Rivers took himself out of
the Tuesday game after he
went hitless in four trips. He

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series
Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Hottel
BAD CONSCIENCE DOESN'T QUIT
RAP :
Four years ago we moved. I'd borrowed a girlfriend's
jewelry (mostly cheap stuff ) and didn't return it \o her as she
was out of town when we left.
What with not knowing her home address and forgetfulness,
1 never returned it. (I don't know her parents' first names, and
her las( name is common, so I can't look them up in a phone
book.)
.
1 know she's now outgrown the jewelry she liked when she
was 11 , but I still feel -guilty. I'd like to apologize and maybe
buy her something to make it up, but how can I get in touch?
-ERIN
DEAR ERIN:
If the grrl still lives in your former home town, she'll be in
high school by now . Why not write a letter to the principal, asking him to have her contact you?- HELEN

ADVISOR RECOGNIZED - Shown above is Rachael Downie, 4-H advisor of the Meigs
County 4-H Pleasure Riders, being recogni;ed as a·20 year advisor at the Ohio 4-H Advisors
Luncbem held Oct. 4. Shown with Mrs. Downie during the presentation are Tony Pusarich,
a member of the Ohio 4-H Foundation and sponsor of Ute advisor recognition awards; Dr.
Roy M. Kollman, Director of tbe Ohio Cooperative Extension Service; and Dr. Charles
lifer, Ohio State 4-H Leader. Pictured behind these individuals is "Chris Clover", which is a
new idea to be used to promote 4-H throughout Ohio in the future.
'

ERIN:
And if you explain the reason why I'm sure he'll put you two
in touch. -SUE
P.S. May this be the beginning of a renewed good-friendship!

DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
I have a spme curvature (scolwsis ) and will have to wear a
back brace. I don't want to because it shows through my.
clothes and I'm afraid people will stare and laugh. No boy will
take me out. Imagine hugging somebody in a brac'e! My social
advisor of the Meigs County Plains 4-H Girls.
life will go down the tubes and I'm just starting high school.
4-H Pleasure Riders; Rose
Mrs. Downie was also What can I do?- FUTURE STIFFNECK
Carr, a !a-year advisor of the honored as she was selected DEARF.S.:
Tuppers Plains 4-H Girls; to sit at the ·Speaker's table
Scoliosis unchecked can cause crippling and deformity.
Charles Frecker, a l!l·year and receive her award on Wearing a brace .is rough, but if it 's a choice between temadvisor of the Chester Farm behaH of all 20-year advisors porary WJgainliness and perhaps pennanent misery, you've
Boys and the Chester in Ohio.
got only one way to go.
Champs; Delma Karr, a HIAdvisors being recognized
When feeling down, daydream of the day you'll be free. Let's
year advisor of the Busy were presented with clover hope it won't be long.- HELEN
Beavers 4-H Club; Alan pins, which were symbolic of
--~
Holter, a 5-year advisor of the !he counties~ hours that 4-H F.S. ·
County
Better advisors have spent helping
Meigs
Why not look on this year as a personality test? Ac'Cept the
Livestock Dairy 4-H Club; youth
increase
their brae" and concentrate on making good friends. If you don't let
Byron Miller, a a-year ad- knowledge through worth- it stop you, 'others will soon forget'you 're wearing it. -SUE
visor of the Meigs County while projects and activities.
Better Uvestock Beef 4-H They represent the advisors' RAP :
.
.
Club; and Cecilia Murphy, a a dedication and achievement
1'm a young man of 18. Please don't think I'm conceited but I
year advisor of the Tuppers as·well as their service to the have this certain thing about me. Women won't leave me
4-H prqgram.
alone.
During 1978 there were
I am seeing four girls presently. How can I drop three gentover 21,400 volunteer 4-H ly ? I like them all. -J.P.R. J :
volunteer 4-H advisors in
If you have no special favorite, why drop any of these girls?
Ohio
. who provided the (Unless four "re too hard on the wallet, etc. ) Where IS it writIn addition, the Student ,
Financial Aid Office in Room leadership and help to more ten an 18-year-old can't play the field?- HELEN
126, Old Main, and the Career than 216,000 4-H members. In
Services and Placement Meigs County there are 62 NOTE FROM SUE: But don't let each girl think she is the only
Office in the Prichard Hall advisors working with ap- one. That can lead to a lot of ovefce&lt;tful evenings when they
lobbY. also will remain open proximately 350 youth in- catch you out. And they will' -SUE
volved in the 4-H program.
on Tuesdays.
"Marshall has a large
number of part·time students
in evening classes," Fisher
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Musser,
explained. "Many have fullRoute
4, Pomeroy, are antime jobs during the dsy, and
nouncing
the birth of a
we want to serve all students
daughter,
Mendi
Dawn, Aug.
at times that are most conSundaY, Scifool attendance 27, al the Pleasant Valley
venient for them.':
Mr . and Mrs. Douglas on Octoller 8 was 44. The Hospital. The baby weighed
Circle called on Mr. and Mrs. offering was $29.27. Worship eight pounds, four ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Musser have
Roy Van Meter and family at services were held at 11 a. m.
with the · Rev . Richard three other daughters, Rut!\.
Morning Star on Sunday.
Thomas speaking on l'The Ann Krautter, Reedsville,
Florence Circle visited Mr.
and Mrs. Garrett Circle of Call of God" Exodus 4:2. and Barbara and Dorothy, at
Attendance at this service home, and five sons, Tommy,
Racine on Sunday.
Mrs. Faye Dunlavy of was 24 with Florence Spencer Dennis, John Todd.and Rudy
Middleport was a guest of Mr. at the piano and Howard Ray, all at home.
Mrs. Ruth Musser of
. and Mrs. Edson Roush Flanders as songleader.
The County Council on Athens are the paternal
would operate for only three Saturday night and Sunday.
Mrs. Naomi Archer of Ministries met at the church grandparents.
hours a day and would not
here on Monday evening at
have the food requirements. Athens visited Eva Archer on 7:30
with an attendance of 41)It would also provide training Sunday.
:;o
from
the following churVisitors at the Douglas
sessions for the children
ches
:
Morriing Star, Cannel,
attending who would he from Circle home recently were
three to five years of age. Tbe Mrs. Ray Johnson and son, Racine, Pomeroy, Midday care center would take Mrs. Glenn Tuttle of Eagle dleport, Chester, Sutton, among them.
children ranging from babies . Ridge, Mrs. Richard Ables of Rutlijnd, Syracuse, Tuppers
Charles and Helen Woode ,
Bald Knobs and Mary Russell Plains, Alfred and others. called on Chester and Mamie
through five years old.
Routine
business
was
conThe Meigs County Com- of Waverly, W. Va.
Frederick Sunday afternoon
Mary Russell called at the ducted with Fred Smith, recently. She is recovering
missioners did make an
chairman.
application for a federal borne of Homer Circle on
several families from here from surgery.
grant to provide funds for a Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Mary Circle spent an af- attended the St. Paul Atherton went to Partrersday care center but that
application was turned down. ternoon with Mrs. Hattie Homecoming Sunday, Oct. 8. burg Tuesday to consult a
With data on the needs and Powell and daughter, Addie, The Clair Edward Follrod, physician.
Nina Robinson and Clara
wishes of parents, the · ap- of Racine R. D. recently.
The UMW will meet
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart
Follrod,
plication could be resubMr. and · Mrs . John
Tuesday evening Oct. 17 at
Swartz,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
mitted and perhaps, be more Marrison and Mr. and Mrs.
the home of Thelma Heneffective, Mrs. Buck points Russell Marrison visited Mrs. D. Woode, Florence Spencer derson.
Everyone
is
and Eleanor Boyules and
Eunie Brink'er recently.
out.
welcome.
Russell Archer family were
Parents are asked to
complete the questionnaire in
today's Daily Sentinel and
mall it to Mrs. Bernadette
Anderson, 242 Mulberry Ave.,
Pomeroy, by Oct. 18.
A meeting will be held at 10
a. m. on Thursday, Nov. 2, at
the home of Mrs. Anderson to
dlscuss the possibilities of the
new program. Cblldren are
welcome to attend the session
VICE FOR 8
with !heir parents.

Meigs 4-H advisors recognized
Seven 4-H advisors from
Meigs
County
were
recognized at the Ohio 4-H
Advisors Recognition Lun·
cheon held Wednesday, Oct.
4, at the Ohio Union at !he
Ohio State University,
Columbus.
The ceremonies · honored
volunteer leadership of Ohio
4-H advisors who have
completed a, 10, Ia, 20, 25, 30,
3S, 40, 4a and :;o years of
volunteer service to the Ohio
4-H program and our youth.
Advisors from Meigs
County honored were :
Rachael Downie, a 20 year

'

Marshall offers services
In an effort to serve Ute
growing number of students
enrolled in evening courses at
Marsh aU University, several

student service offices will be
open until 7 p.m. every
Tuesday.
The
Counseling and
Learning Service Center in
Prichard Hall will offer
counseling, tutoring, and
assistance with reading and
study skills, according to Dr.
Richard G. Fisher, vice
president and dean of student
affairs .

Announce birth

Alfred

Carmel News,
By the Day

Social Notes

:' . Does nursery school, day
care center interest you ?

"

.,

.,

As a parent, are you interested in a nursery school
or a day care center in Meigs
County?
If so, you are given an
opportunity to express those
wishes and, perhaps, be
beneficial in the establishment of one or tbe other.
A group of Meigs County
parents Is currently conducting a study to determine
the needs and desires along
these lines and the data they
collect through the accompanying questionnaire
could prove vital in securing
a federal grant for the
establishment of a nursery
school or a day care center.
Mrs. Debbi Buck, one of the
involved parents, explains
that a day care center is
primarily for working
parents and would operate
from about 7 a. m. in the
morning to 6 in the evening,
five days a week. This type
facility is more complicated
to establish because of the
need
for
food
acconunodations as well as
other provisions for children
who would be staying there
while their parents work. In
contrast, a nursery school

.,

•.'

NURSERY SCHOOL
AND DAY CARE CENTER QUESTIONNAIRE
Name
Address
Number of Children who might use facilities
· Nursery School
Which would you prefer: Morning ...... :Afternoon ..... . ;

Evening ......

.&gt;·

If ooly an evening school were provided would you use the
facility? Yes ...... No ......

What days of the week would you use the facility?
Monday ...... Tuesday ...... Wednesday ......
Thursday ..... Friday ...... (Oleck days).
Day Care Ceater
What days of the week would you use this faclllty?
Monday ...... Tuesday ...... Wednesday ... . . .
Thursday ..... .Friday ...... (Oleck days)

•
'

What age child would you leave at the center?
Mooth9.. .... ; 8 months ...... ; 24 months ...... ;
three .... ..
four .... . . ; five . . .... (indicate with check mark)

LAMPS •
SMOKING STANDS

SALE S2J.95

Reg. 529.95

IRONSTONE
DISHES

Reg. $79.00

4. 5, 6

RODlRON

TIERED STANDS

SPANISH LAMPS

$15

21

95 • 5

95

OWLS &amp;
HORSES
Each

$

PR.
HAND PAINTED

FLOWER POTS
$]00

And Up

GIFTS FOR AU OCCASIONS •••••••• 984-

HUNTINGTON, W. Va. A "Viennese Gala" with the
Tonkuenstler Orchestra of
Vienna will open the 1978-79
Marshall Artists Series
community segment, th e
Baxter Series, on Thursday,
0ct. 19, at 8 p.m. in the l{eill)Aibee Theater.
" Although season membership tickets are all gone,
we will have some seats
available to the public for
individual performances,"
said Mrs. Nancy P. Hindsley,
Marshall University cultural
events coordinator.
"These tickets are being
sold now at the Keith-Albee
Theater box office and on
Marshall's campus in the
Artists Series Office in
Memorial Student Center
Room 2W22," she added.
Prices for the tickets are $6
for the balcony and $8 for the
orchestra and loge. Youth 17

years and under pay $.1, while
Marshall students with both
an MU 1D and activity card
are admitted free . Students
without an activity card pay
the regular price.
The Tonkuenstler Or·
chestra was founded in 194a
and is the youngest of th'e
three major orchestras in.
Vienna. It is especially noted
for light classical and ballet

music.
Franz Allers conducts the
Tonkuenstler Orchestra and
Elizabeth Hynes is featured
as soprano.
Conductor Allers has
presented " Music from
Vienna" programs
throughout the United States,
conducting orchestras from
Philadelphia , Chicago,
Cleveland'and San Francisco.
He also takes American
music to Vienna, as he

conducted the Tonkuenstler
Orchestra in "My Fair Lady"
for a performance in Vienna.
Elizabeth H_ynes Is a young
sopranowho made her New
York City Opera debut in 1976
as Margret in "Lizzie Bor·
den." She has also appeared
in " The Magic Flute."
"L'Italiana in Algeri," " La
Boheme" ·and the Baroque
Most recently she opened the
Fall 1978 season of the New
York City OPera in a new
production of "Naughty
Marietta."
The program for the
Viennese Gala includes
selections from SChubert's
'' Marche Militaire," Haydn's
" Serenade for Strings,"
Mozart's "I Wish I Were the
Emperor" and pieces of Josef
Strauss and Johann Strauss,
Jr.

THE "LET'S TALK KIDS" PANE~Robert Morris,
principal of the Pomeroy Elementary School, narrated
the panel composed of Dan Morris, Meigs Local assistant
superintendent, James Rogers, psychologist in Meigs

NEW YORK (UP!) - Defenseman Randy Holt of the
Vancouver Canucks was suspended for three games and
fined $.100 by the National
Hockey League Wednesday
for incidents in an exhibition
game, Oct. 4, with the
Edmonton Oilers of the World
Hockey Association.

nesday.
She said Ute traveling and
fiddling
keeps her young.
good."
"Once
you stop doing
Miss Gerkins left Yankton
something,
you just can't get
Sunday with her dsughter
back
to
it."
She said she has
Midge, who plays the banjo.
fiddled
in
about
every state
They headed to Cheyenne,
"west
of
Pennsylvania,
but
Wyo., and planned to leave
not
north
of
Wyoming."
for West Virginia on Wed-

(Mall cunpleted fonn to Mro. BemadeUe Andenon, 242
Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769). ·
·

W. MAIN

POMEROY

Kids";

•

Tim Flesher, guidance
counselor at Meigs High
School, "The Student and
School Guidance";
. James
Rogers,
psychologist in the Meigs
· County Schools, "Strokes for
Little Fulks" ;·
Dan Morris, superinten. dent of curriculum, Meigs
Local School District, "First
Aid for Kids".
Dr. Nan Mykel, Community Mental Health Center,
" Parents are OK, Too!".
Mrs. Dorothy Roach
presided at the meeting
which opened with members
of ·Pomeroy Junior girl
scouts, Troop 1276 leading in

Regular $14.00'

·suggested retaiL

DUTTON
DRUG CO.

N. 2nd Ave.

Middleport
992-3106

, p~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!JIIJIIIIJII!!!!!••IIIt!

lhe pledge. John McArthur, Eleanor Blaettnar, second
Pomeroy Church of Christ grades; Mae Young and
pa.stur, gave the devotions.
Paula Whitt, lhird grades;
Members were reminded to Carul Wolfe, special Educasave Campbell Soup and Col- tion ; Mary Hysell and Rebecgate labels noting that the ca Tate, fifth grades; and
Campbell soup labels must go Pam Crow and John Arnott,
in by Feb. 28. The
sixth grades.
The annual Halloween carRefreslunents were served
nival wa s announced for by the officers, Mrs. Roacl1 ,
Saturday, Oct. 28 with Mrs. president; Mrs. Reeves, first
April Smith as general chair- vice president; Norma
man. Volunteers to work that Baker, second vice presi·
night are asked to contact dent; lad Martin, secretary ;
Mrs. Smith.
Jim Soulsby, treasurer;
Mrs. Roach also asked for Gerri Mowery, correspunvolunteers to work on the
bookmobile during its next
visit to the sehoul.
Committees for the year·
were announced and include:
Susie Souls by, Becky Tannehill , and Judy , Werry.r
membership ; Hank Cleland';
Carl Roach, Jim Soulsby,
George Korn , Roger Mowery.
and
Mike
Wright,
RACINE - Plans lor a
playground ; Hank and Kathy
community
Halloween party
Cleland, Delores Long, ~nd
for
youngsters
of Racine in
Linda Mayer, book; Carolyn
lieu
of
trick-or-treat
night
Reeves and Barbara Colmer,
were
made
when
the
Ladies'
ways and means.
The room count was won by Auxiliary of the Racine Fire
Department -met in regular
the first grade.
Faculty members atten- session.
According to plans made
ding and introduced were
for
the party, trick or treat
Mary Carolyn Wiley and
night
scheduled for Oct. 28
Becky
Tann e hill,
has
been
. cancelled. The
krndergarten;
Jeanette
auxiliary
will
stage the party
Thomas and Carol Ohlinger,
from
6
to
7
p.
m.
on Oct. 30 at
first grades; Ida Diehl and
the fire station and there will
be treats and prizes for
yoWJgsters 12 and under. The
auxiliary is accepting
donations for the party and
these may be turned over to
any member. Anyone having
Hall, Room 211, or from NTE, any questions on the event
Box 911, Princeton, N.J., may call 949·224a.
Chris Shain, president,
08541.
opened
the meeting with the
Once registered, each
to
the flag and prayer
pledge
candidate wiU receive · an
with
Ruth
Shain conducting
admission
ticket
and
notification of where to report
for the test.
During the one-day testing
session, participants may
SIGNATURE NEEDED
take
the
Common
WASIUNGTON (UPI) Examinations, which test The 1978 Civil Service
professfonal and general Reform Act, now awaiting a
education, plus one of the 26 presidential signature,
Area E.aminations, which represents almost aU the
measure knowledge of a changes President Carter
particular subject matter and had requested - and a bit
teaching methods.
more.
The
Common
The act will bring a
Examinations will begin at sweeping reform of the
8:30 a. m. and continue to federal civil service- for the
12:30
p.m.
Area first
time
protecting
Examinations will be con- "whistleblowers," allowing
ducted from 1:30 to 4:1a p.m. workers to be fired for
rudeness or inefficiency, and
providing promotions for
other reasons than length of

Registration planned
HUNTINGTON, W. Va. Prospective teachers planning to take the National
Teacher Examinations
(NTE)
at
Marshall
University on Nov. 11 have
less than two weeks to
register with the Educational
Testing Service (ETS) in
Princeton, N. J.
Registrations must reach
ETS not later than the .Oct. 19
deadline, according to · Dr.
Jack Maynard, assistant
dean , MU College of
Education .
Late
registrations, accompanied
by a $a penalty fee, will be
accepted through Oct. 2a,
Maynard said. On-the-spot
registration Is not permitted.
Registration forms and
instructions may be obtained
from the MU College of
Education Office, Jenkins

•Aluminum Door Strips
•Aluminum Door
I
Bottoms
.t=elt Weather Stripping .
•Self-sticking Foam
Weather Stripping·
•VInyl Foam Tape
•Mortlte Caulking Cord
•Window Plastic
•Stove pipe, elbows
•Stove Acceuorles

"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"

dloWlaif.

Jewell , hb1orian, and sixth

grade mothers, Pat Thomas,
Joann Wears, Rtla Field::~,
Wanda Swartz, and Judy
Werry.
Next meeti ng will be on
Nov. 13 with room visitation
to be observed. The program
will be on taxes and will be
presented by C"rl "nd Mary
Kebler of H&amp;R Block.
'l11e fourth and fifth ~rade
mothers
will serve
refreslunents.

roll call and giVIng the
secretary's report. Beulah
Autherson
gave
the
treasUrer's report.
Plans were made for
holding card games at the
fire station each Wednesday
evening from 7:30 to 10
beginning oct, 2a: The birthday of Ruth Shain was
observed and Mae Cleland
won the door prize. Attending
were those named earlier and
Mary Sloter, Debbie · Lyons,
Wanda Lyons, Emma Lyons,
Oretha Snider, Mae Cleland,
Maxine Rose, Jean Johnson,
Beverly Cummins and Agnes
Boggess.
TOLEDO RACEWAY
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)
Gabriel Time used a strong
stretch drive Wednesday
night to grab a l'h length
victory in the featured eighth
race at Raceway Park.
· Pacing third at Ute top of
the stretch, the winner,
driven by Mark Grismore,
moved to tbe outside and
cruised horne the winner in
2:04, paying $8, $.1.60 and
$4.80.
Morocco Bound was second
and Shiaway Ted showed.
Surka Chikoe won Ute fifth
race, kicking off a J-&amp;.:&gt;
trifecta combination that was
worth $1,79a.60, Andys Stone
was second, followed by
Roman Hal.
Raceway P.ark had its
largest quinella payoff of the
season Wednesday night
wh~m the f&gt;-7 combination in
the third race paid $.111.80.
A crowd of 1,388 wagered
$122,008.

filfl RokM.

Pllice

As members of your community
and as an important part of your
"health line" to your doctor,
our pharmacists are dedicated
to deliver the best in profession·
al service to you.
concerned

with

good

health!

, VILLAGE PHARMACY
MiddlepQrt, 0., &amp; New Haven, W.Va.

100 Pet. nylon fleece
robe, button front.
self·ruffle neckline,
lace yoke with ruffle
.e dge, ruffle lace cuff.
Size 7-14 in
Assorted Colors

ONLY

KNOW YOUR CARRIER -Tim Cassell, 11, son of .
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cassell is a carrier for The DaJly
Sentinel. Tim attends Pearl Street Elementary School and
is interested in all sports. He has purchased a new bike
with the earnings he has made from his paper route . Tim
and his family moved to Middleport in December of last
year.

Leave your thumbprint in time.
The Meigs County History
Book is nearing reality!
Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society president
Charles Blakeslee has
announced plans for a giant
Kick.()!! potluck dinner . The
event will be held Sunday,

Historical program set

!It II Spedol

We're

Ebersbach Hardware
PH. 992·2811

ding secretary. and Judy

service.

· BEFORE WINTER ARRIVES

•

SIMON'S GIFT CENTER

the conunentaries by each of
the panel members The Rev. George Glaze,
pastor of the Middleport
Church of Christ, on "The
Church and the School and Its

French Purses
and Clutches

-Use Christmas Layaway-Gift Wrap Free

What do you presently pay Ill' a babysitter a week' . . ... .
What time period does this Include?

The emotional, social,
religious, and educational
aspects of the well-adjusted
child, and effective methods
of achieving that goal, was
the topic of a panel discussion
I Monday night 's PTA
meeting at the Pomeroy
Elmentary School.
"Let's Talk Kids" was the
theme of the panel introduced
and narrated by Rubert Morris, principal
Group discussions followed

Amity offers two popular ladles' items at a low
once-a-year sale price. For fumb le-free money
management in three super-soft leathers and six
fashion colors. A,ll are attractively gift boxed .

County Schools, the Rev. George Glaze, pastor of the Middleport Church of Christ, and Tim Flesher, Meigs
guidance c'Ounselor, pictured left to right, with Mrs.
Dorothy Roach, Pomeroy PTA president.

'Let 's Talk Kids ' topic of discussion

~MITY~

$9.88

lion and works as long as you
like. This can be done when
using either plastic or metal
thimbles. -DOROTHY
DEAR POLLY - I think
DEAR POLLY - I wore a
new dungaree suit to school Winme 's Pointer for deeming
and accidentally got some small-necked boltles with unvarnish on the pants. I did not popiJI'd corn, hot water andtry to . wipe it off because I or vinegar is greut. If one
thought il would smudge so does not have any popcorn in
please tell me how I can get it the house sand or gravel will
of without ruining the pants. idso work. -MRS. R.B.
DEAR POLLY -- To
-T.C.
DEAR T.C. - To remove WIScrew a stubborn jar lid I
Vartlish one can &gt;'poDge the hold it over a flame for a mospots wilb turpentine or ment. This softens the rubber
alcohol and then wash ac- seal and the lid will unscrew
cording to directions for the easily.
Another tip for cleaning
particular fabric . Of course,
flower
vases is to fill with
old and hardened spots are
water
and
add one teaspoon
much harder to remove than
automati
c
dl shwashing
fresh ones and may require
powder.
Let
stand
a short
more than one treatment. time
and
then
shake.
The
POJJ"Y
DEAR POLLY - When scum will come off easily. I
wrens have hatched and gone also find this good' for stamed
for the summer· c'Over th.e coffee or tea mugs.
My Pet Peeve is with
holes in your wren house with
drivers
who do nul use their
adhesive tape to keep wasps
turnsignals.KATHRYN
from building their nests m
DEAR
POLLY
- I use those
them. The houses will be
white
plastic
bags
the store
ready when the wrens are
clerks
put
my
ice
cream
in to
ready to build in the spring.line
the
trash
container
I
keep
AUCE
DEAR POLLY - When in the car. They are also
sewing by hand my ihread gr·eatto carry in my pu"e for
would frequently knot m the doggie bag when eatmg in a
middle of the strand. Many restaurant. I tlo not have to
times it would have to be cut bother the waitress by asking
off at that point. I foWJd that for one. -MRS. C.G. W.
Polly will send you one of
threading the end into the
her
signed th a nk-y ou
needle thai was just cut from
newspaper
coupon clippers if
the spool helps lo eliminate
she
uses
your fav orite
this .
If your thimble keeps fall - Pointer, Peeve or Problem in
ing off your finger moisten her colwnn. Write POLLY 'S
your finger and then put on POINTERS in care of this
the thimble ..This forms a sue- news paper .

Varnish on
dungarees

opera " L'Arbore di Diana."

().&lt;!

We invite you to visit and look over our pretty gifts.

Polly Cramer

"The only time I'll stop
playing is when I don't feel

•

~·

POLLY·s POINTERS

Grandmother still fiddlin ' at 81
By Melanie JUgney
YANKTON, S.D. (UP!) Lala Gerkins, the 81-year-old
"Grand Old Lady .or the
Mountains from
West
Virginia," kept the audience
stomping Sunday as guest
performer at the South
Dakota and Open Oldtime
-Fiddlers' Contest.
For 73 years, Miss Gerkins
has stroked and plucked
tunes from the fiddle her
grandfather taught her to
play. "When I was 12 and he
was 72, we played on each
other's birthday," she said.
"The one whose birthday it
was had to tap dance."
At Ia, she played mood
music for silent films - "The
Volga Boatman was a good
one for jungle pictures" afterward performed at
dsnce halls. "I liked the
dance halls because the ones
I played at dido 'I sell liquor."
Miss Gerkins, who doesn't
read music, said she has
competed in countless fiddle
contests· and "never finished
anything but first." The
reason, she said, is' per..
forming tunes nobody else
will touch.
Her favorites are "Bing
Crosby, Southern bluegrass
and symphony. But I hate
country western music .
There just Isn't anything to
it."
Miss Gerkins stands about
a-foot~ and weighs a bit more
than 100 pounds: She wears
flowered print dresses and
bas cocoa-colored hair.
"My hair don't'get gray,
it just gets faded," she said.
"I never dyed my hair. I'm
not trying to bide my age
because I want to get older.

.

$11 95 -

stories, giving readings and
disc ussing the "good old
days.'' Musical presentations
will be made by Ms. Betty
Osborne . Ms. Margaret
Parker; secretary of the
Historical Society will speak
briefly on the newly founded
Junior Historical Society.
Following the business
meeting and entertainment,
there will be a social period
for the audience to meet the
PTb Officers and the
His t orical Society
representatives.
The public is invited to
informal manner , telling
attend.

The Chester Parents,
Teachers Organization and
the Meigs County Pioneer
and Historical Society are
jointly sponsoring "An
Evening to Remember" on
Monday evening, Oct. 16. The
entertainment w[ll be
presented as pert of the
regular Chester PTO meeting
beginning at 7.:30 p.m. at the
Chester Elementary School.
Ms. Norma Newland wiU
present historical data on
Chester ViUage and Township and school days iri an

EBER LEWIS
Eiler Lewis of Mason, Ohio,
wrmer Middleport resident ,
is confined to the Bethesda
North Hospital, Mon lgomeroy Road, Cincinnati.
His room nwnber rs 131. Mr.
Lewis suffered a heart attack
and has been hospitalized for
the past week.

Parent workshop planned
The Meigs -Community
Mental Health Center, 236
West
Second
Street,
Pomeroy, will offer a
workshop entitled "Coping
With Children" starting oo
Oct. 18. The workshop will
run for five consecutive
weeks
on
Wednesday
evenings between Ute hours
of 6:30 -8:30pm.
The w... kshop, which will
be conducted by John
Brammer
and
Bill

Breckenridge, specialists in
perent-ehild relationships,
will be directed toward
belping parents cope with the
challenging
and ever
changing demands of
childrearing.
The cost will be $1a.OO per
family. All parents, single or
couples, are eligible for
enrollment. Arrangements
can be made for those wbo
cannot aff(J'd the cost but
desire the training.
For more information,
please contact Ute Meigs
Community Mental Health
Center at 992-2192.

,------··-·1
Social 1
I Calendar I
·1
I
l

'

SATURDAY
NEW HAVEN Volunteer
Fire Department chicken
barbecue beginning 11 a.m.
Saturday at New Haven city
building; full dinner to be
served.
SUNDAY
HYMN SING, 1:30 p.m.
Sunday at Nease Settlement
Church with music by the
Gospeltones of Chester.
ANNUAL Homecoming
Morning
Star
United
Methodist Church Sunday.
Carry-in dinner at 12:15,
afternoon program at I: 30.
Wesley Clark, district
superintendent,
Athens,
guest speaker. Special
singing.
RED KEATON
Albert
Red Keaton,
Syracuse, ls a medical
patient at Holzer Medical
Center. His room number Is
206. Cards may be sent to him
in care of the hospital.
VISITOR
Michael Andrews, Columbus, spent several days
recently with his parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Andrews, Long
Bottom.
In 1980, Soviet Premier
Niklta Khrushchev removed
ooe of his shoes and pounded
oo his desk wiUt It during a
speech beill'e . Ute United
Natloos. General Assembly
President Frederick l!Qland
lost his Irish temper and split
his gavel trying to restore
... der.

Ocwher Ia at the muser .,
144 Butternut Avenue.
Everyone interested in

"Leaving Their Thwnbprint
in Time" will want Ill attend.
Letters have been sent to
households around the county
describing the History Book
pro ject.
Those who have questions
about submitting their
Family Household History
should attend the meeting
Sunday , October 15,1 :00 p.m.
at the museum .
Aloo invited are those who
have an interest in topical
history about Meigs County
places, things and events .
The annual meeting of the
Hlswrical Society will be held
in conjunction with th e
history book " kick-off" .

and
b11ilding materials

BUILDING OR REMODELING?
SEE US FIRST AND COMPARE OUR
PRICES. QUALITY MATERIAL AT
REASONABLE PRICES.
CASY&amp; CARRY
PRICES

SELLING COOKBOOKS
The Auxiliary of the Big
Bend Citizens Band Radio
Club are selling cookbooks.
The books sell for $1 each and
the money will be used on the
annual Christmas project of
the Club of assisting needy
families.

NETTIE HAYES
Mrs. Nettie Hayes of Middleport suffered a heart attack earlier this week and is
eonfined to the intensive care
unit at the Holzer Medical
Center.

WE

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Open: 7:00 to 5: 00 Mon. lhru Fri.
7: oo to 3: oo Saturday

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8- The Daily Se.ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Thursday. Oct. 12, 1978

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 . ; Thut·~ay, Ort. i2, 1978

Big Bend Citizens Band Radio Club gives shower

'
.

)·

The Big Bend Citizens Band
Radio Club Ladies Auxiliary
entertained recently with a
layette shower honoring Mrs.
Cindy Aeiker at the home of
Mrs. Clarence Jordan.
A pink and blue color

dan, and Mrs. Etta Will. Mrs.
Leona Krautter won the door
prize. Refreslunents of cake ,
potato chips, punch, and coffee were served by the
hostesses after . the honored
guest opened her gifts .
Attending were Mrs. Mary .

scheme was carried out with
a stork centering the gill
table .
Games were played with
prizes being won by MI'l\. Betty Wilson, Miss Sharon
Johnson, Mrs. Clarence Jor-

Bacon, Mrs. Nettie Hayes, Pa~r icia Woodyard, Mrs.
Mrs. Shirley Gibbs, daughter, Marlene Wilson, Mrs. Rutli
Rhonda , Mrs . Ellen Johnson
and daugl\ler, Sharon, Miss
Tammy Capehart, Mrs. Maxinc Jordan , Mrs. Betty
Wilson, .Mrs. Will( and Mrs.
Krautter.
Sending gifts were Mrs. ,

JACK FLASH - Wben RolUng Stone magazine tbrew a
bash to celebrate their first. aoulversary ol movlllg to
New York, ex-President Gerald Ford dropped by witb
his son, aspiring publisher Jack Ford. Jaek 18 assistant
to tbe publisher of Rolling Stone lind Outside magazines. He describes his position as, "lending my name,
making exciting things happen." Jack also confided
that " I own three weekly papers In tbe San Diego area,
and I'm starting a fourth newspaper In Solano Beacb
_CalU., on Oct. 26." His goal with these local papers b~
jolted, is , " to become the next WOllam Rand~pb
Hearst."
·

Three attend seminar
Barbara Andrews, Lone
Bottom, Judy Radford,
Pomeroy, and Anita Yates,
Wellston, recently attended
the Ohio Osteopathic Medical
Association's
Assistant
seminar held in Youngstown.
The seminar was conducted by Douglas L. Marcum, pre sident of Ad-

ministrati ve Health Management, Inc. The program dealt
with improvement of and recent changes in medical office management.
The three are medical
assistants employed at the
Ohio University College of
Osteopathic Medicine in the
Medical Service Clinics.

·Milk marketing discussed
The 1978 Milk Marketing,
Inc. Annual District Meeting
was held at the Salisbury
School, Pomeroy, on September 25.
A
report
of
the
Association's business and
marketing program was
presented
by Division
Manager Donald E. Zehr and
other MMI staff members
and directors. At this
meetiJlg, members of MMI
Locals 6-7-8, District 10,
elected
the
foll owing
delegates for 1979 : John
Robinson, Shade ; Arvil
Holter, Long Bottom, and
Paul Butler: Crown City.
Milk Marketing , Inc , is a
dairy farmers ' marketing

cooperative which strives to
market its member's milk to
the best advantage of aU its

members.

·

PATIENT
Debbie Friend of Middleport is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center. Friday morning she will undergo
surgery on her fractured leg. ·
Debbie is confined to room
334. She and her husband,
Brian, Belinda Friend, and
Tum Souls by were involved in
an automobile accident in
Columbus Thursday. Debbie
was the only one receiving
any major injuries.

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Stephanie Starr, program
developer for Ohio University, accompanied by ·Robert
Hedrick, were speakers at a
meeting of tbe American
Lutheran Church Women of
Sl . Paul and St. John
Lutheran Churches at St.
Paul's recenlly.
The two spoke and had
members fill out questionnaires on the needs and wants
of workshops in Southeastern
Ohio.
Mrs. Margaret Blaeltnar
presided al lhe bu$iness
meeting with Mrs. Judy
Eichinger
reminding
members that the SCOPE
subscriptions are due now.
Cost is $2.50 per year with the

r-

.-esource book being $1.
After a report on altar
clothes, the group voted to
purchase the purple one. It
was decided lo hold a ruml)lage · and bake sale at · St.
Paul's Church on Nov. 3, 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. Mrs . Wilma
Mees will have charge of the
bake sale, and Mrs. Veda
Davis the rummage sale.

Buckeye Central Local
may be first challenge

Hysell, Mrs. Catherine White,
and Mrs. Jane Snouffer.

SHOP

MASON FURNITURE

NEW WASHINGTON, Ohio
(UPI) - The first serious
challenge to Gov . James A.
Rhodes' promise that no Ohio
sehool district will close lllis
fall becaUl!e of lack of funds
may come when the Buckeye
Central Local School Board
meets tonight.
The five-member board,
whose Crawford County
·district faces a $153,278
deficit by tbe end of the year,
may decide to become the
first already open school
district in the state to close
lllis fall because of lack of
funds .
The district, which has
been audited by state Auditor
Thomas Ferguson and has
certified as lacking sufficient
funds, could close Friday due
to llle deficit.
The board voted in .August
to defy a pOlicy e~abliahed
by stale SUperintendent of
Public Instruction Dr .
Franklin B. Walter, which
mandated the borrowing of
funds from a special $40
million state loan fund .
The loan fund option was
created by the General
Assembly and requires
boards of education facing
deficits by the end of the year
to first seek loans from local
financial institutions and Ill en
from the state special loan
fund . before the st ate

FOR THE BEST DEALS

Starr, Hedrick speak locally

Your "E)(tra Touch"
Florist Since 1957

Mrs . Davis led in the Bible
discussion " Not Only on Sunday" and Mrs. Rachael
Downie had the offeratory
prayer. Others attending
were Pastor William Middleswarth , Barbara Fry,
Jean Coates, .ElVa Cotterill,
Virginia Thoren, and Janet
Hill with Betty Young serving
refreslunenls.

IN THE

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE
OPEN:
Mon., Tues., Wed.&amp; Sat.8:30tiiS:OO

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Friday Until s P.M.
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773-5592

Mason, W. Va.

ID

J

-,

1 Social
1 Calendar

(0

THURSDAY
PRECEPTOR BETA
BETA Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi will meet Thursday at
7:45 p.m. at borne of Jane
Walton. Co-hostess is Jeannie
Werry.
OHIO VALLEY urange
2612, Letart Falls, will meet
at 7:30p.m. Thursday at the
hall to make plans for a
Halloween party to be held
for children of Letart
TownShip on Oct. 28; potluck .
refreshments.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
Thursday night at the hall.
Time changed to 7:30p.m
WOMEN'S
AGLOW
Fellowship, Poni eroy
Chapter, Thursday at Meigs
Inn. Dinner at 7 p.m., $3.50 a
person. Mavis Hankey guest
speaker.
DISTRICT II 's 48th annual
convention of Pythian Sisters
at Gallipolis Temple 76,
Thursday. Registration and
coffee hour, noon until I p.m.
when business session starts.
Evening -session at 7:30p.m.
LAUREL CUFF Better
Health Oub, anniversary
meeting. Potluck dinner at
Amber Lohn's home, 6 p.m.
Sunshine sisters to have gift
exchange.
MEIGS County Humane
Society, 7:30 Thursday at the
Meigs County Branch of the
Athens County Savings and
Loan Association.
PARENT-TEACHER. Forum of Meigs Junior High
School, organizational
meeting, 9:30a.m. Thursday
In the conference room. Ptan.s
for open house on Oct. 24. All
interested parents invited.
FRIDAY
PAST
MATRONS,
Evangeline Chapter 172,
OES, special meeting, 2 p.m.
Friday al the masonic temple. ,
YARD AND BAKE Sale
Friday ai Bethany Church
annex, one mile east of
Racine on SR 124. SJ)onsored
by
Dorcas
Women's
Fellowablp. Open from 9 a.m.
until dark.
DAUGHTERS of the
American Revolution, Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Friday, 1:30 p.m. home of
Mrs. James O'Brien. Guest
speaker Mrs. Hilda Grace
McPherson, registrar of Ohio
DAR, CoShocton. Hostesses,
Mrs. O'Brien, Mrs. Larry
Wiley, Mrs. Nancy Reed and
Mrs. A. R. Knight. Guests
members of French Colony '
Chapter of Gallipolis.
MARY SHRINE 'll, Order
of the White Shrine of
Jerualem, ceremonial at 8
p.m. Friday at Pomeroy
Masonic Temple. Officers are
to wear fonnals; potluck
refreshments
served
following ceremonial.
SATURDAY
SALEM
CENTER
Educational Organization
yard sale Saturday froiD 10
a.m. to 5 p.m.
FALL FESTrtlAL Saturday at
Letart Fallli
Elementary School by PTO
with meat loaf and turkey
dinners, giDlell and country
stol'e; serving starts at 5:311
p.m.
FISH FRY, Saturday, ·7
p.m. by Modem Woodnien of
America Camp '1230 at ball In ·
Burlingham. FiBII dinJief free ·
of charge and members to
take a covered ~; busineu
meetiJUl wW follow.

superintendent authorizes
closing .
So far, Walter has not
authorized the closure of
Buckeye Central Schools ,
even though Ferguson in late
May established an Oct. . 6
date for the district to close .
That . closing date was
puSh ed back to Oct. 13, when
llle district -was able to cut
corners in its budget to stay
open tbe additional week.
The board's intention to
close,
despite.
the
announcement by the state
s uperintendent that the
district would have the option
of the state loan fund, brought
state
notic e
by
the
Department of Education .
In response to the notice,
sent both to the department
and Rhodes that the district
would not borrow money
from the state loan fund, the
state Board of Education
r equested a special Buckeye
Central School board meeting
in late September for the
purpose - of discussing the
state loan program.
That Sept. 21 meeting was
attended
by Assistant
Superintendent of Public
Instruction William Phillis,
who told the board the district
could lose its st~te foundation
money, estimated at nearly
$450,000, should the district's
combined junior and senior

•

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1977 CHEVY
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C...rltt RIHie, R. Ph.
ltonald lflnnlng, R. Ph
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Mon. thru Set. I:OOa.m. to9 P.m.
Sunday 10:30 to 12:301nd 5 to' p.m.
PRESCRIPTIONS
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THRU SUNDAY, OCT. 15th

Shown .

''

,.

.••

=·••

I

Masonic societies. He was a
veteran of World War II. He
belonged to the South Canaan
Baptist Church.
Mr . Dixon owned and
operated the Troy Welding
Co. at Coolville and the Meigs
Mobile Home Sales in
Tuppers Plains. He was a
welding instructor at the
Washington Technical School
in Marietta and had served as
a pressure piping inspector
during his career . .
Surviving are his wife,
Beulah Groves Dixon; a son,
I... Keith, Chapel Hill, N, C. ; a
daughter, Janice Dixon,
Yellow Springs ; three
brothers, Clifford, .Coolville ;
ROBERT L. DIXON
Rob ert L. Dixon, 61 , Wilbur, Sidney, Ill., and John
Coolville area businessman, of Stewart, and three sisters,
died Wednesday at his home Mrs. Ward (Nina) Layner,
in Coolville following a brief Little Hocking; Mrs. Mull
(Ruth) Dunfee of Stewart and
illness.
Mrs.
Otis (Mary) Allen of
Mr. Dixon was born at
Coolville.
Coolville, a son of the late
Funeral services will be
Edgar and Myrtle Skeels
Dixon. He was a member of held at 2 p.m . Saturday at the
COQiville·Lodge 337, F&amp;AM of White Funeral Home in
which he had served as Coolville with the Rev. Paul
secretary. for a number of T. Williams and the Rev.
years and belonged to Minear William Hunter officiating.
Chapter 274 Orrl~r of En:rtcrn Burial will be in Coolville
Star at Guysville having been Cemetery. Friends may call
a past master. He was also a , at the funeral home from I to
member to all Athens 4 and from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
BENNE'l"J' RITES
Funeral services for John
W. Bennett, 16, Letart, Rt . I,
who died · Tuesday in St.
Mary's Hospital, will be held
Friday I :30 p.m. in the
F og lesong Funeral Home,
Mason. Burial will be in
Graham Cemetery.
In the listing of survivors in
W ed nesda~ 's edition , the
name of Ted Swartz, Letart,
step-father,
was inadvertantly omitted.
Friends may call at the
funeral home today from 2 to
4 p.m. and from 7 to 9 p.m.

Veterans Memorial Hospitol
Pleasant Valley Hospital
ADMITTED - Ronald
DISCHARGES Art
Rigsley , Pomeroy ; Dana Gilmour, Pomeroy; Shennan
Blumenauer, Pomeroy; .Parker, Addison; Mrs. Carl
Donna Rose, Racine ; David Gillespie, Pl . Pleasant;
Durst, Racine; Thomas Michael
Williamson,
McKay, Jr. , Racine .
Kenova ; William Stevenson,
DISCHARGED - Carl Pomeroy; ly1rs. William
Smith, Leora Strom, Ralph Johnson, Pt. Pleasant; Jerry
Carl, Cloyd Brookover, Harper, Racine; Jan Hindy,
James Lowe, Merle Manley, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. James
Walter Vaughan , Charles Woomer, Pt. Pleasant;
Karr, Laura Sigler.
Bobby
Ellenwood,
Pt.
Pleasant; Flossie Trout,
Gallipolis; Mrs. Raymond
Smith , Pomeroy; Robert
Moore, Pt. Pleasant; Michael
Woodall, Gallipolis; John
Four
divorces
were Hatfield, Pt. Pleasant.
granted and three others
have been dissolved in Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
PTOMEETING
Granted divorces were
The Chester PTO will meet
Karen
Sue
Ebersbach
Monday , Oct. !6 at 7:30p.m.
Simpkins from Edward Lee
at the school. The program
Simpkins ; Kay · Hale from
John E. Hale; Dian Molden will be presented by the
from Bobby Molden ; Dottie · Meigs County Historical
Cremeans from Charles Society and Clark Lees,
superintendent, will he guest
Cremeans.
Marriages dissolved were speaker.
be
Babysitting
will
Ricky J . Morris and Cindy
Mae Lawson Morris. Cindy provided and refreslunents
Morris was restored to her served. AU parents and interested citizens are urged to
former name Cindy Mae
·
Lawson; Lillian I. Weese and attend.
DOn C. Weese and Teresa W.
Huffman from Brady Huff-

Seven couples
end marriages

STOP IN LOOK OVER
OUR SELECTION
OF WOOD.
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12.65

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energy
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MODULAR
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later this year, if a two-year
11.8
mill
emergency
operating levy passes in the
Nov. 7 election. Should the
levy fail , the district plans to
reopen school at the beginning of 1979.
.
The di~rict has turned
down two levies p-eviously in
the last year - an 11-mill
three-year emergency levy,
turned down In June, and a
5.7 mill continuing levy,
defeated by voters last
November.

MEIGS' Marauder Rifle Corps this year is out on a winning season in which it has
already received a first place rating at West Jefferson . This year 's members include, front
row, left lo right, Brenda Williams, Connie Bailey, Carin Bailey, the captain, and Mandy
Sisson. Back row,Stephanie Radford, Cathy Hess, Ruth Blake, and Kathy Blake.

SQUAD RUNS
The Pomeroy Emergency
Squad was called to Nye
Ave.,at 2:58 p.m. Wednesday
for two-year-old Carl etta
Buckley who was ill. She was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where she was
treated and released.
Al 6:55 a. m. Thuraday the
squad went to Mechanic St.
for Cindy Darst who had a leg
injury. She was also taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

KINGSBURY
HOME SALES

Parents losing confidence
COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Par- problems of the schools and the poll showed parents also·
ents with children in public yet they think they know the viewed the schools' difficulty
in hiring good teachers, size
schools say they are losing answers," Garrett said..
cunftdence in the quality of
Among other top problems, of classes, pupils' lack of
education their offspring reinterest and vandalism.
ceive and point to lack of
discipline as the major
problem In the schools, a
national poll reveals.
The
Ohio
Education
Department said Wednesday
the sw-vey by the Gallup Poll
repocted that only 36 per cent
of parents with children currenUy in public schools rated
schools highly as against 48
pet cent five years ago.
The poll showed that
parents ranked second
among problems the proper
financial support for schools
followed by llle use of drugs,
problems
related
to
integregation, poor curriculums and low scholastic
standards.
Parents with children in
nonpublic schools and those
with none in public or private
schools ranked lack of discipline as tjle top problem.
They differed slightly,
however, in evaluating other
problems.
State School Supt. Franlin
presented
B,
Walter
cundensed results of the poll
to the Ohio Board of
Education for members to
study . Waller said llle poll did
not single out Ohio.
The survey, he Said, was
takea to measure the
attitudes of Am ericans
toward their public schools. It
was the lOth such annual poll
funded by llle Institute for
Development of Educational
Activities, an affiiliate of the
Charles
F.
Kettering
Fomdation .
.
Akron board member
Thaddeus Garrett Jr., a vice
president for the Corpor atioo
for Public BroadcaSting, said
the poll didn~ impress him .
PRICES EFFECTIVE FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
He tenned it as unscientific.
Garrett said parents rated
their own lack of interest lOth
on the list of top problems. He
indicated this should be much
BEITY OHLINGER
higher
among
their
concerns.
"The public's perception is
hazy. They don't know lbe

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high school and two
elementary schools close
without authorization.
But Buckeye Central Local
School Superintendent Roo
Yaussy will recommend to
board members that they
pass a resolution authorizing the closing of the
school district effective this
Friday, with or without
Walter's authorization.
Classes for the 95&lt;liJupil
rural district in northeastern
Crawford County will reopen

HOSPITAL NEWS

·" Camper Special"
Automatic, A-C, AM,
.fi M. camper top, ,V-8

" We Sold It New"

•

REG. 7.89

1975
C-20

1975 v.w.
'BEETLE

REG. $2.03

1

30 FREE

'6995

atLORASEPTIC

'

OPENINGS EXIST
Several vaca ncies st ill
exist in Saturday's adult
welding program at Buckeye
Hills Center , For additional
information , call 245-5334.

RAIN CHECK SPECIAL

IJ •
~0

ADDED SAVINGS FOR YOU!
• , .WITH YOUR PURCHASE OF REGULAR PRICED
MERCHANDISE YOU WILL RECEIVE A RAINCHECK •••••
IN THE AMOUNT OF 10% OF YOUR PURCHASE, TO

AWAIT FINAL ROUNDS
WASlUNGTON (UP!) President Carter is eagerly
raising the curtain on the
final round of Egyptlanlsraell
peace
treaty
negotiations expected to
bring an end fo 30 years of
bitter conflict.
Unllke the 13-day Camp
David summit on the Middle
East, Carter wW not be a
direct participant in the
three-way ministerial level
talks.
But he apparehtly plans to
be nearby, and to keep · a
watchful eye on the talks
aimed at settHng final detallB
of Israel's total withdrawal
from the Sinai Peninsula.

BE USED ON YOUR NEXT PURCHASE. OFFER GOOD
FROM OCTOBER 13TH THRU OCTOBER 31ST. A
GREAT WAY TO START YOUR FALL SHOPPING OR
CHRiSTMAS SHOPPING!

*LEVI BIG BELL

OPEN FRIDAY TILL 8 P.M.

JEANS

$13.50

REG. PRICE 17.00
1

126 E. MAIN STREET
'i
'

POMEROY, O.

·.

�...

.'

10- The D•1ly Scntmel. MJddle pUJ I·Pum cJUy , 0 ., Thursd.J;. OLI 11 1'1 7K

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
For Frldly , Oct t3

- ---ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

A

~J.JIJJI]

~ l!J~ltilW~WL/
Octobe r t3, t918
Es labhst1 wo rthy goals tor
yours elf lhts comtng year and
the n pu rsue them ¥tgorously
You can ac h 1eve th at wh 1ch you
destre by sheer de te rmtn at1 o n
and wtllpower

LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 23) Somethmg unusual may sudden lr
de11elop today th at could benehi you matenall y A person
you ve work ed with be fore may
be Involve d L1ke to fm d out
more of What ltes ahead fo r

you? Send for yo ur copy ol
Astro-Graph Letter by matltng
50 cents lor each and a long ,

self-addressed sta mped em·elope to Astra-Graph, P 0 Box

489. Rad1o C1ty Stalio n, N Y
100 19 Be sure to spect fy bt r th
stgn

SCORPIO !Oct. 24-i'lov. 22)
How muc h yo u en JOY yo urself
w111 be de term ined to a la rge
exte n t b y th e com pan y you
kee p Stt mulat m g com pam ons
Wi ll mspt re yo u today

SAGITIARIUS li'lov . 23-Dec.
21) Condtt to n s may not be as
ro utm e at home a s yo u a ntlct-

paled to da y EnJOyabl e dropIns co ul d s l tr thmg s u p 1n a fu n

way
CAPRICORN (Doc. Z2·Jan t9)
Muc h to y o ur c red tl you m ay
partt c tpate m a d e l tc at e s ttu a!lo n tod ay affec tmg a cl ose
ln e nd and s tra ighten m atters
o ut wt lh co mpa sst o n and
und erstandin g

AQUARIUS (Jan

20-Feb. t9)

Keep o n your toes at th ts tt me
Th e re are deve lo pm e nt s bre wtn Q tha t co uld c o ntrt bute handsome l y to your sen se of well be mg and sec unt y

PISCES (Feb . 211-March 20) Do
no t be mttmtdate d today by
what m ay appea r to be road bl ock s ba m ng y o ur ro ute to
s u c c ess
T h ey c o u l d be
loggers to awaken your tmag lnatto n

AlliES !March 2t-Aprllt9) Your
strengt h

lt es

tn

you r

alli es

today who'll do what' s needed
to make thtng s eaSter fo r you ,
e ven 1f tl s o nl y word s of
e nc ourag ement

TAURUS (April 211-May· 20) Your
sunn y dispositio n and positive
att1tu de

qual tft es

you

as

a

leade r toda y Yo u br1ng out the
b es t tn oth ers be c au s e yo u see

only good
GEMII'II (May 2t-Juna 20) You

AO VE; RTI SEME N T

FOR BIDS

B i d s w ill be r ec e1v ect aT th e
Off 1ce of L e ad 1ng C re e k
Con se rv a ncy Ots tn ct , Sta te
Ro u te 124, Rut la nd , Oht Q
until 12 00 Noon on the 2ot1'1
d ay o t Oc t ob er , 1978 t o r t he
fo tlow tn g
EQ U I PM E NT
SP E CIF ! C AT ION S.
A M •cr- oprocessor - b a sed
a cco unttng a nd book k eeptn g
ma ch.n e p r o v1 d 1ng at tea s!
4K byte s o f user mem ory plu s
at l e-ast 6K b)ltes o f ROM
based f trmwar e F trmwar e
sha ll be cap abl e o f t ra n s
l a ttng pr ogra m tnstr u ct tons
dtrectly
tn t o
macht n e
lang u a g e , w lt h n o c om
ptla t• on or ass em b l y st ape
r e q u. r ed
P r og r a m
1n
st ruc t to n s set su ppo r t ed sha lt
be
BAL
or
eQ"l! tva l e nt
a ss embly lan guage
B
D ua l Flext bl e D isk St orage Un1 t t o provtde at
le a st 622 000 by t es of on I m e
s to rage , u pgr ade abl e f ro m
th 1S l o at le a st 1 2 m tllton
bytes Wtlhout use o f ad
dttton a l d tsk drtves
C 1 T he keyboar d tS to be
a n .nteg ra l pa r t o f t h e
pr tn lt n g un tL c a pab l e of
gene r atm g th e ful l
12 8
c ha r ac te r ASC II se t
2 The pr tn ter mu st prt n l at
a mm tmum of 45 cha r acter !.
per seco n d , al p h a bette o r
n umer 1c
3 T he p r tn ter tS to be a full
f o rm e d c h a r acte r , tm p act
pr .n l e r
4
Abso lu t e ta b u l a tton
hor •zontally at a fTll n tm u m of
50 tn c h es per seco nd . and
v ert tca ll y at a mm1m u m o f 24
ltn es p er se cond
5 O pera tor selec t a b le t en
or twe l ve ptl ch ( ptca or elt le
t en o r t w el ve cha ract er s pe r
m ch l
6 L 1n e length of et th e r 132
or 158 chara cters , op erato r
sel ecta bl e
7
P r. n ter
sh ou l d
be
pr og r ammabl e t o pr tn f 10 1
60 " tnc r em ent s horrzo n ta 11 y
and 1 &lt;1 8" m cre m ents ve r
t tca ll y
8 Fo r m fee d devtce sh o uld
mclud e ope r a t or se l ecta bl e
p 1n feed spro cket or frt cl1on
fee d
9 Pr •nler sho u ld h ave an
audtbl e err o r Stgnat t o al er t
oper at o r when m co r r ec t keys
or too ma ny k eys h ave b een
dep r essed Th•s f u nct •on 1S to
be aut omatte as w ell as
pr ogrammab le
10 L edge r c ar d cap abil1ty
both fo r man u a l card a li gn
m ent an d a u to mat •c co~t r d
al•gnment , both c apabtltft es
o n the sam e c ar d po st u n tt
11 T he prtnt er m u st ha ve a
mtn tmum o f 157 ch a ra cte r
pr •n ter buff er
12 Ch ar a cter tr an sf e r r a te
mu st b e 120 c hara ct er s p er
sec ond
13
The keyb oard m ust
ha ve a t en key num bertc
en tr y pad as we ll as a s t a n
da rd a l p h a n um e r t c ( t yp e
wrt t er l key board
0 Sys t em Sha ll be fU l l y
progr am m ab le f r om tt s own
key b oa rd
E Sys te m shall no t r equ 1re
use of a CRT d tspla y d evt ce
b ut such a d ev tc e sh all be an
o pt ton a l a ddtt ton t o t he
syst em

can r ead 1ly attra ct th e attenti On SOF TW AR E
IFI CAT IONS
of th e r~ght people and ga1n a SPEC
A
System sh a ll

suppor t
sol td se n s e o f ac ht eveme nt by fl op p y dt sc ba se d Ut dlfy
laking extra pride 1n your work B tl lt ng So ft w a re Capab tltft es
of tht s softwa r e sha ll tnclude
tOday
l Rando m on llne access to
CANCER (June 2t-July 22) Do
a1 le as t 1850 cu stom er ac
fun th 1ngs to day, but mak e s ure c oun t s. m ax tmum access
th e y 're p hystc all ")t ac ttve You t.m e not I t;&gt; excee d 8 10 o f a
may ' not thmk you have the second
2
Prmt tng of bill 1m
necessary pep , b ut y ou d o
m e d1at e l v upon entr y of
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Th 1s 1s a m
eter r eadmg
goo d day to mak e a maJOr
3 Pro v •ston fo r m ulttpl e
c h ange yo u ' ve been c ontem- m eter s for sa m e acco unt
plat in g , or to a t least take some
4 Pro v tsto n for b •l ltn g
pos 1t tve steps to make tt posst- m ulft p le serv•ces
5 P r0V1S1 on f or mu lt t It er
ble
ra te st ruct u r e ( m tnt mum o f 7
VIRGO (Aug . 23-Sept. 22) A t ters l
pro bl em buggtng yo u c an be
6
A utom at tc ca tc ut a t to n
solv ed today tf you have some- and print ing of p e n a lt y
on
pay m e n ts
one who ts a good soundmg a m o unt
board to hear you out Seek a recetved a f t er pa st du e d~ t e
7 Pr ov tSion fo r p osh n g of
fnendly lis tener
full an d part 1a l pa y m ents an d
a11oca t1 o n o f
t he se
for
m utttpl e sen11ces
8 Ca lcut at ton and st o ra ge
o f avera g e u sage for e~c h
me ter an d opft onal pr 1n l tng
of l h1 s as esttma te d c h arge on
bi ll
9 B tll tng su mmar y t lstt ng
c u r r'i nt btllm g s for a ll or
se l ect ed account s, ava ilabl e
tm med• a t etv att er prin ttnQ of
b ill s
10 Repor t b r eaktn g d own
George E Hom er , Judy A cp1opnesu mptton o f water b y
11 Pr ovtsion f or full y or
Homer lo Sta nley Eugene
1a ll y
e x emptin g
a
Bennett J r., Susa n Dtane part
c us t o m e r _ from tax and
Bennett, parcels, Ohve
re por ttn g monthl Y o n a mo unt
Bet ty Th roc kmort on t o of exem pt charges
12 Re po r t sho wtng a mou n t
Jes s And e rson , Audrey u se d by ea ch c usto mer
13 Prov•s• on for a d1u stm g
Anderson, pa rcel, Dyesv1Ue.
cas h re ce tp l s am ount s, 10
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Fred c ludtn o
a d1u s tm en t
of
W. Crow, Jr., lrvmg Carson a lloca 110n to v ano us se r
·
Crow to General Telephone v •ces
B Softw a r e shall b e wrttt en
Company of Ohw, easement, tn
BA L
or
equ i vale n t
ass emb ly la n gu ag e
Chester
D e l tve r y and tnstalla tton of
Don C Weese to L11lian I
th e compone n ts mu st beg tn
w tthtn 45 days f rom the date
Weese, parcels, Sulton
of bt d a cce ptan ce a nd be
Lllhon I Weese to Don C pr
omptly
tn s t a l le d
Weese, parcels, Sutton.
therea ft er Payment f o r t he
me n t will be m ad e
Freda E Buchana n t o e1nqsutp
t a 1t a t to n and pr oo f o f
Ro bert S
Montgomery, pro p er f u nct rontn g The r i ght
Aretta M Montgomery, lot, •S reser ve d to re 1ect an y a nd
a ll b 1d s

Meigs
Property
Transfers

Letart.
James J . Proffitt , Sheriff,
E lizabeth E . Sm1th , et af, tu
Richard A. Wa rner, 10.50 A ,
Salisbury
Cec1l Wa gone r , Less 1c
Wa goner to Chest er R
Foully, Ocie L. Foutty, 1 52
acre, Ohve
Way ne E. Peck, Hester
Peck t o Wa nda R Peck, 5
acres, Columbta
Wayne E Peck, Hester
Peck to Alice M. Lievmg,
Randy J L1evmg , S acr es,
Columbia.
Way ne E Peck, Hester
Peck to Helen L. Kuykendall ,
Ro bert J . Kuykendall , 5
acres, Columbia . ·
Wayne E . P eck, Hester
Peck to Robert D. Peck, Sue
A Peck, 5 acres, Columb1a.
Wayne E . Peck, Hester
Peck to Mary M. Brady,
Natha n L. Bra dy, 6 3 a cr es,
Columbia.
La rry Lee Wtley, Mary
Ca roly n
Wiley,
David
Richard Wiley, Ruth Ann
Wil ey, t o Ter r y Smith ,
Kunberly Smith, lot, Middlepof\.
H.Pgh P. Custer to Jan

LEAD IN G CREEK

CO NSE RVA NCY
DI STR ICT

110 ) 5, 12, 19 , Jtc

WANT AD
CHARGES
I' \\o utd:OH•t lJI di t

(

(

.1 ~ 1

t Jt lliU HN t llJ Wl t &lt;l..' bo ~~P~ l uo ~~
h , .t ~ 11011 beds cit&gt;s k ~ t• lc
, nmplt•le hou~Pho l ch
IN1 tle
M lJ M dl, ' ~~ 4 Pom 1•1 oy 01
t oil '-N 'l nb()

1 ~. 1 gt

Iiiii

\ d .t\ "

,.,
"'

I 2~

ht l.tl "

IIIII

! :l:i
I ia

l d&lt;l l
1 d.n ~

LOIN S poc k. e t wat c h e~
c ia ~ ~ t mg ::. , we dd1ng b.ond~
ci tamon ds Gold 0 1 ~~lver Call
H o~er Wa m sley l4'll3J I

0 1U

'""

1111 11 1111 1111Wil ]&lt;I
1wt tb t)I .J tt ub l"' t "' td 1)l r d u~
,\lb I Ulli11Ht.! u l h ~ t \ h ,ltl t ui L~l't Ull\' l'
tl;.tl ~ II Ill bt• dl il f g~t f ,11 tilt• I ti H~
I ,11 h 1\ Uid UH I

WA NH: D to b uy I to 3 a cr1..·~ o l
lo •• rl pr t&lt; E' d low or no I to eK
Ct&gt;erl 5500 per acre Wnte bar
'J'lJ Hut land O hto 45 U5

t.l h

In lllt"llltUI l.iil tl uf l l t.t n k.~ and
Olnt u.u \ h t tnts I"' I \\ utd $11111
ti1111111Hllll \ ,tsl tut ru!Y,UH'l

W~

PICK up 1u nk au to bod1 es. b u y
tng 1u nk. co • s sc rap 11 on bo t
h&gt;rws a nd me ta l~
~•d er !t
Sa l va ge
SH 114
Po m e ro y

Mubtlt U t u w s;.~ h ,.;md Y. IIl i!'V!It 1'i
i1H tiUtJ.lh ll Ull f\ "llfl lit ~h 1'! 1\h
un it I 1 1t ttlldli:ll .l!t f 111 ud stH rt \ ·
111.1! fiu)o. Nu1111Jc t Ill ( dl l' ul f ht St•n·

9r.rl ~ 4 6 H

\aril ~k

tim· I
I ht• Pub ltsl)l' l 1e"t l Vt s lhl• tt l!h l
!J i tt ft \ Ul l l jl: d

it II\ ml~ dtt'l ll\ d

I~

ttiJ-

JU l l•trlii l l ilt Pu ll h ~l lt 'l 1'1 1il t1o 1 bt
rt':&gt;]l111 1s li.J it• fut llltltl t ha 11 1 ~ 1 t ' Ulll ' l ·
11'(( 111 ~ 1 111 11

l'honl

:r!l"!-2 1"~

NOTICE

YA IW ~ A U: O ct 10 I I 12 13 9
to S pm I E:l5 South Fron t St
M •ddleporf Oh to Hed spr eads
cam era po ng game dresse s
s•le 10 ' , e tc

WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

YARD SA U Thurs 12 Fn IJ
Sot
1&lt;1
Clt tf o r d Heegl e
res tdence O n Rt 124 111 Do r ea~
Lod1 e(&gt; w htle un 1for ms qu1l l ng
fr ame s M e n s women s ond
ch•l dr en s c lo tht ng
a ll Slles
dt shes e tc Ho m w il l can ce l

Mund.l\
Nuurtllll Sa!Utt l,n

l m sdd\
tl tt u!- t tda \
-1 I' M
ll tt•d,n bl.'fut l p uhla

tl lull

PORL H SA Lf O ct 12 ond 13 95
i'5l
Br o wn e ll
M tddl e por t
Wml e r clo th es a nd m tsc de ms

:-.mnl,n
-I I' M
~

11\l,l\ tl( i l tlH •II

Notices
NO HUNl! NV o r tr es poss mg on
m v p roperl y w 1thout pe r m 1s
s10n Judv McG raw
G UN SHOOT Roc1ne G un Club
!: ve r y Sunday l pm f a ctory
cho ke guns on ly
G UN SHOOl Roo ne Vo lunteer
f1 re Dept hery Sat urd ay 6 30
pm a t the tr b u1ldm g m Bosha n
Facto ry choke g uns onl y
PA RA SO L BOUT IQU f
Bea ut y
Solon ne 11 t to Skote o w av
Roll e r R1nk onno.unces Octo ber
Sp ec1o l
Pe rman en ts l0 °u oH Ope ra to rs
Sond ra Kern s Cry stal Ray b urn
Phone 9~ 5 4141

NOTICE

l HRH FAM ILY Ya rd Sal e Oc t 11
&amp; 13 1Ou r" to Spm ea ch day
l o ts of g ood cla thm g an d m •sc
John Dam ewood s res• dence
above !:as te rn H1gh Schoo l on
CJD!l
YAH[) SAU: ~ u m n e r Hood l si
trw let o n le ft 1 hursd oy and
Fr tdoy Clothes baby 1tems
CIC

YA HU SAL f Fr1 Co rner o l Fo rest
n Hd
and Rt ~ 9 J Ho m
can ce ls

former customers . We ar~
back rn bust ness again and
takmg orders for furniture

STAR Ken ne ls Boardtng
ond g room tng
oi l breed s
l he shtre Jb7 0292 or 3b7 0 I 06

SYLVIA'S
UPHOLSTERING SHOP
Mrs. Woodrow T. Zwelling
Syracuse, Oh1o

LOVA BLI: WHIT t snow dr~fl great
PYRf NH:s
Pu pp tes
Phon e
. 1 6 1 4~7 383~ ~,
-GOI NG OU T o f &amp;ustnes s Sole•
Pood les Pek mgese Po me ro
n •on Teacu p Ttn es $35 to
Sl 25 Phon e 61 4 (196 1297

.

LosJ ~~ ~ ~;
LO ST BRITT AN Y Sp on1el M o le
wh1te an d b row n Sol•d brown
head
Ar o un d Vand erhoof
Rtdge Tuppers Plo1 ns a re a
61 4 bb"l 3908
LOS1 IN f.loc1 ne mol e Blue T1 ck
hound 40 50 lb New co llar No
I D tog Re w or d t it Va nce
949 1 124

WOf.IK
OV I:: flSI::AS
Au5t ro lt o
Alr Ka South A men co fu rope
etc
Co n str u ctiO n
Sol e s
l:ng tne er s Clem o l e tc 58000
to 550 000 plu ~ f xp cn sc s p 01d
Fo r em ploym e nt mfa rmoft o n
w r lle Ove1seas Empl oym e n t
Box l Oll Bo ston Mo 02 102

1 9~$

CADILLA C HDOIM DO ~ u l l
pow er a nd A C A M FM rod1o
power sea t s Co ll992 7461

19 7! CADILLA C HDOHADO ~ u l l
pow er an d ot r AM FM rod• o
fue l tn!ed ton Coll9?2_7 4b2
19 i'O PLYM O U TH VA LI A NT 6 cyl
good worlt cor 992 7492 or
992 37 16
19 i'H F
!roc k
PB
l IU

100 FORD NG f fl p 1ck up
btplmer p ockage P S
auto Irons
1 ton
JOO
6 cy l e ngt ne 742 2H26

l%!l Vdl ogt&gt;-. b0x 12 'l BH
llfb4 W1n d )oor 51111 0 :/ I:U.I
1910 Ktr k wood I LK60 :.1 BR
't:H:t; ': :a M O B I L~ H O M~ SALe !»
f'l Pt i:A!J AN l W VA

F o r Sale
COAL L!Mf ~ lO N f ~ a n d grave l
ca k •u m chl or tde fer ltlt ze r d og
lood a nd all ty pes of so il h
ee ls tor Sa l t Wor k s In c ~ Mom
S l Po meroy 991 "J89l
BURROUGH S Sf N!:il MAliC oc
co u n l t ng
mo ch tne
Ph one
49'2 1 156 1he Dody Senttn e l
11 1 Cour t Str eet Po meroy
Oh 1o
GRIMI:S G O LOf N Red De ltcJou s
8. Go lden L&gt;e l•c•o us app le s F1tz
po 1r 1ck
Orcha rd
SR 6H9
b t 4 6bq :J l 8S
SC HOO L BU S cam per
60
p assenger w rth new ltres
G ood con dt11on Co nta ct Tom
M onk tn at 99'1 2201
16

SI: A Star boss boo t 11 5
~ v o r1r u dto
~ ull y
n gged
991 Jlq3
~1

LUMP H O U S ~ cool S35 p er !on
del• ver ed 992 i' l 26
HAY PHO N!: 992 l75 l

949 250 ~

CHI P WOOD
Po les
ma x
d to me ter 10 on larges t e n d
$8 50 per ton Bund led slob
$6 50 per ton Delivere d to
Oh 1o Po ll e t l o Ht ') Pom eroy

992 2669
Fo rest Pro
lo r stan d mg
992 596 5 o r
8570

PROBATE COURT DF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO
ESTATE OF GER
TRUDE
E
DRAKE ,
DECEASED

On Sept e m ber 29, 1978 , 10
t h e M ei g s County Pr o bat e
Co urt , Case N o 22 48 3, Bu rl
Dr ake, Ro u t e L Vinton. Oht O
4568 6 was app o tnt ed Executor
of the st ate of Gertrud e
Dr ak e , decease d , l a t e o f
Route 1, V.n t on , Oh10 .45686

1970 LTO W ITH p s p b o c
vtny l to p 4 d oor Pod s l o r 1955
Chevy 9~2 2779

f'~ a~ ~-~ ~1 ;·: ~' ;:~
CO UN TRY M 0 81H Home Park
Ro ute 33 nor th ol Pomero y
La r g~ lo t s ~a~l99 ~ 7_4!9

::1 AND 4 RM f urn•shed a nd un
opt s
Ph orte
f ur n t s h ed
992 5434
TWe&gt; Bf DR OOM kt tchen l urn ts h·
ed opt Coi l be for e B om
99'1 2288
FOUR BfDROOM 2
411 Lmco ln St
Oh1 o S300 pl us
mon th Fo r more
ca ll 949 2386 alter
11

( 10 ) 5, 12, 19, Jl c

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY ,
OHIO ESTATE OF MINNIE
V . BENGEL, DEC EASED
Case N o 22487

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY

On Sep te m ber 29, 1978, 1n
t he M erg s Co unt y Probate
co ur t.
Case
No
22 487 ,
T he odor e A D ow nt e , 106 H 1Qh
Stree t. Porp ero y , Oht o 457 69
w as o~tptSO tnt ed Ex ec u to r o f
the e51a te of Mmn l e V
Be n ge l. decea sed , late o f
Pom ero y , M e tgs Coun t y ,

P1ckett. 20 acres, Salem.
Paul S. Smart , Frances ·M.
Smart, to Phyllis S. Hackett,
George Hackett, Jr., pa rcels,
Oltve.
O h tO
Mabel V. Moore, Carl E .
M a nntn g D W eb ster
Moore to Charles R. Hysell,
Probate Judg e Cl e r k
K a thryn Hysell , pa rcel ,
Salisbury.
•.', 1101 s, 12 , 19, 3tc
........
1
· '' ...,• , r'r .o~~ ti(
f

60 M08 tLE ~ o me m Rocme
area 992 58 5H
I(

12 11 60 m obil e ho me near DeMler

991

e

M a n n tnO D W eb ste r
Pr o b a t e J ud ge Cler k

sto ry house
M 1d dleparl
ul il &gt;l1e s per
tnform olton
6 pm

5~ 5~

196!:1 12 :.: 65 mob~ le mobile h ome
Very gp od conrhlton
Com
plete ly f urnt shed , por ch own
tng q x I 0 shed 2 o r 3 bedroom
op tion SS&lt;XIO terms n ego t•oble
Coun t1y Mob tht Home Pork l o t
'} 1 Wn b'J 44 for mformOIIOO

'

l f.Jii' ACALH:MV MOBIU hom a 'J
bP.d ro om w1t h ho !s t~ ~ h oe ktf
c h ~&gt; n lof ge du nng 100m ~mm
o t "l "J 7 Beech St Mtdrl leport
O h to
I•
, t

AC R~ 17 x N.l rn("lt-ilr. h&lt;.une
u r t.u··~ It • U4'} "H!Jtt

';};ip"

J&amp;L

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

Blown lnsulatioo
JIM KEESEE
Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
Sav030 pd. to SO pet.

on heating cost

Exper1enc~ and

fully insured
Free Est.
Call9nl71l
B-I0-1mo IPd)

High School
SENIORS
W e are curreitlv maktng
appointments lor semor
portratts. we use trad1
honal se tttngs and also
por outdoor
f ea tur e
tra tture

Call Us Todav

The Photo Place

"'• m1le oH Rl. 7 by-pass on
St. Rl. 124 towa rd Rutland,
0.

Autt &amp; Truck
Repa ir
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

109 Htgh St .
Pomerov

PAINTS
DISCOUNT
PRICES!!!
During
Our
Closeout.

Seasonal

1-=0 fl YOUH com pl ete hous tng
re m odeling constr uct iOn a nd
m ot nlenonce gtv e J R o try
~e f e r e nce
ov o d ab l e
Re a so nabl e
pr 1ce s
Ph o ne
9q:J. 5191
~f MOOHIN G A ND house po tn

ling
See
i' 42 22H8

Outside While
Red roof paJnl

G ar y

Crem eans

EliiOIT
APPLIANCE II
9-2,1-1mo.

HOUSI:: IN Pomer oy l arge lo t
So me r ecent re modelmg New
ca rpet Cen tral h eot mg U!d tty
r oom Ful l basemen! 2 p a r
ches Furmsh ed or unlu rm shed
992 707 4

A STRO 6f A M CB bo se ant en na
7.42 218i'

Now Only

•

309,95

Let u s test your water
Fre e

romeroy Landmark
. . . . Jock W Carsey, MgJ.

~

THRH Bl: OR O O M fram e hom e 1n
Mtddleport C~ l : 9J2 _:.t-:s~

_.

FA HM FOR sal e H ou~e 2 barns
t ro tle r Lorge pond 10 a cr es o r
E:l1 acres 147 2566
Nt: W THREE be dr oom hom e r ec
r oom h re pla ce Iorge deck
g o roge baseme nt one a nd o
h a ll bat hs Phone Lee Con strue
!t o n 992 345 4
w ee k e nd ~
1 0144469568
3 , ACHES tn Pomer oy se cl uded
wooded oren on top of htl l
Overlook s n ver Water and
e lectnc a votloble 992-3886

-

11 ACRES - M oreor tess, 4

bedrooms, modern bath ,
large kttch e n &amp; dmlng
room / firepla ce, severa l

outbuildings. O.Vner being
transferred

Pr ice

$35 ,000.00

lq66 G MC VAN Panel ed s• nk
b ed B troc lt tope Runs g ood
$450 7d2 2Sf:l9
1'113
KAWA SA KI
992 6263

175

Colt

l qf'l FORD TRUCK sho rt b ed 351
eng tne auto $.4200 992 i' 6S3

.

.

804 W. Matn
Pomeroy
992-2298
Aft~r Hour!

Call 992-7133
CONTACT,

I

'

years
work

llll~Nl

..r:=

···-l:.:t

I NOAKE

' ,.'

I'M D~ Ul f&gt;.H ~OIJ ,
BUT M'{ FRIEiiJ!h CALL.

,.,.

Phone 985·3806
Jack G•nther 985-3806

Jack's Septic
Tank Service
Chest~r,

I

•

.

[j

.r J I

....,.'

..."""

·--

At&amp;IIA'TED WHERE
c.oocTAIL6 Alli:e

CONCeR'NED.
Now arrange the o rclad letters to
form ttle surpnse answer, as svg·
gested by the above cartoon

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE-BACK IN TH' HOLE

.....
...
t ...... .

WE ' LL E51' MATE IT 1
COUNT A PECK OR

YOU SAID IT ·

1'40W l tiEH _ F!RSl

·~~

TWO .. THEN FIGGER
HOW MAW( PECKS
IN TH' PILE ••

Wf 'LL GO TO TI1AT
ROOM WITH THE

~
~

GOLD MONEY•

r,o.J,

Prlntanswerhere:

THE (

I I I I I )
(Answerstomonow)

EVEH THAT'S

GO IN ' TO TAKE

AN AWFU L
LONG liME ..

Yesterday s

I

Ju mbles DIRTY HEFTY JOSTLE CRABBY
Answer

Come In this and you'll wlni - FIAST

The tat•at JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK 110 ll'ld JUMBLE

BOOK 111 Available tor 11 35 EACH, postpaid from Jumble, clo thll
newspaper, p 0 Box 34, NorwoOd, N J 07648 Make chec:kl payable to
N swspaperbookt.

Ohto

10 30 c
·-·

t

•

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING
Relidenttal and commerCial. Call for estimate. 24
Hour Servece . Any day,
anytime.

by Henn Arnokl al'\d Bob Lee

I SHWIK

··m~t.:'l'. "

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
M1ll Street just behind
Tony's Carry Out.
Open Saturday 10-4 p.m
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p .m.
8-31 -1 mo.

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

Unscramble these lour Jumbles
one letter to each square , to form
fo ur o rdtnary word s

Jll)H\ LOSEE

QUALITY
WOOD HEAT
CHEAP!

ID1t

~ ~ ~~ ~ •

-.~

~-~to.r

-

BRAD FORD
Auct1oneer
Com
pl ete Ser vu:e Ph one 949 2d87
or 949-2000 Ractne O h1o C r~ll
Brodfard

,.'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

\LLE Y flOP

1 "It - Be You"
2 Pianist,
Claudio 3Sad
tOld Dutch

·•'

H WOOO BOWER S REPAIR - ~
Sweeper5, toasters tr a ns al l
small o pplt o nces Lawn mower
nex t 10 Stol e Htghw oY Go rog e
on Route l Phon e (b l 4) 985

'

·BRIDGE

----~--

SfWi NG MA CHIN!: Repo 1r s ser
v1ce o il ma k es 992 2 284 Th e
Fo b r 1c
Sh op
Po m er o y
Au thomed Stng e r Sol es ond
~e!~'!.~e sharpen Scts5or s

Ye~tenlay'•

Z2 OnHhlrd of

arum
title

EXCAVATI NG dozer lo ad er ond
back hoe wo rlt d um p trucks
and fa-boys for htre w tl l haul
I til d1rt to so d l1m e stone ond
grov el Call Bob o r Ro ger Jel
l ers day ph one 992 708 9 n1ght

Z3 Brltlah
nobility

I:XCAVATING
dozer
ba ck hoe
ond dttcher Charle s R Hal ·
Bo ck
Hoe
Se r v tce ,
l u; ld
Hul lond O ht o Phone 742 2008
WILL do roofm g con st ruc t• on
plumb•n g an d hea li ng No tob
too Iorge o r too sma ll Phone
742 2348

',.
,.

-·
.
'

just.

I
qot am~

we've
openinqs!

'this is

m4 son.

Shm,

Z4 Diamond
signal
15 Potatoes
au -

~"'f/1'-~-./i-d

GENUINE
STYLE - 3

RANCH
bedroo ms ,

but It 10 kitchen,
h e at , tn sulated,

e lectnc
carport ,

nt ce leve l lot 50x 120, ready
to move tnto 12x 60 2
b edroom s, ntc e k i tc hen and

loving R. JusT sa,5oo oo
ABOVE THE AVERAGE
- 2 bedroom s, ca rpettng
and paneling, b asement,
nat gas h ea t , sm a ll lot,
id e al
for
a
co upl e .

PIGS FOR sol e 992.3 141
1'11 7
YAMA HA XS650
Low
rml eoge bce ll enl co nd1 lton
$700 Heoson fo r se lling owne r
gon e tn lo m dttary serv •ce Co li
99'1 !ib55 o r 991. 2:Lf9 any t•me

nut trees, ntce 3 o r 4
b e droo m home, nat gas
he at, f tr eplac e, ba sem ent.
2 car g arage, ove r look s t h e
rtver $32, 000 00

12

HOME - 4 b ed r oo m s, fo r ·
m al d ming , e nc:; losed front
porc h , 2 c ar garage, othe r
stor age bl d g Low g as bt ll s .

2 STORY REMODELED

$29 ,SOD 00.
' NEWER BUILDING • - 5
re ntal s,
g ood
go in g
b ustness. ve ry n tee i n c om e

property $47,70U 00
DOUBL'E YOUR JOY IN
ONE OF THESE FINE
BUYS WE ALSO HVE
OTHERS.
HEI'IRY E . CLELAND
REALTOR
"2·2259
"2-6191
Hank, Kathy &amp; Leona
Clellnd

A-lB

Only 7 y ea r s old Has 3
be drooms, e n closed b a th ,
m odern
k ttchen.
L a r ge
carpe t ed famil y room w ith
woodburnln g f t r e pl ace
L arge lo t t oo Just $29 ,500

FAMILY

HOME

- 10

room s, 4 to 5 bed r oom s ,
fa mtiY r o am . base m ent,
shop, natura l gas furnace ,
ca rpettng , garage, a nd 3
lo ts .

NEW

•

•

I
••
l

A UCTI ON FR IDA Y and Satu rda y
mght a t 7 p m New and used
mercha ndt se !ncludtng 2 anll
que b ulle r ch urn s at O hro Rtver
Auc tton 537 Htgh St , M1d

!i

di!P?~· ~~o'-----

\ •.

• I

'

LISTING

split le vel h ome

I. WOULD HAVe BTARTED

"''

HER TO COVER

Enc losed

MY GAMBLI NG

DEBTS.

a c res m Le tart T ow n ship.

LISTING

- 3

b ed room 7 room house w1 th
bath, n atur a l g as heat, and
c tty water tn town

NEW LISTING - I A6 acre
building lot on 124 West .

NEW LISTING - 1976 Hoi·
ly Park mob1 le home 3
b edro oms , 2 full baths, cen ·
tral a~r and h eat, and 1.66
acres on St a te Rout e.

Adlusl yourself to modern
liv ng , Invest in your
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. Tulorcl
G. Bruce Teoford
Sua P, Murphy

·~

Lol/JE!!I

.STEALING FROM

ba th, dnll ed wel l a nd 24
NEW

White-Wall ~P
Custom Poly
A78x13

'

"'
'

Prices Includes
Fed. Tox
ld011 not Include
soltslllor
bo lone Ina I
FULLY
GUARANTEED
Olllerslus
com')llrobty

'

EODOAA! WHAT ARE
~OV DOING WITH

THAT BLANKET?

priced.

Pomeroy Landmark

Housurq

Juk W. CoriiJ, Mtllr.•

He;Jdqwuters

Pllonem-m :

liiiiiiiiii----~

South

Pass
Pasa
Pass

Pass

Pasa

2e
30

••

You hold ·
• 8

• AKQ76

•K

'

LIKE NEW - 3 bed room

2•
3•
3+

Opening lead: ••

--~----·

- campst t es o n t he Ohto
Rt ver on Ro ute 124

.A96
SOU111

a squeeze for the balance.
He sunply won the heart
return in his own hand :
cashed the a ce of dtamonds
and his last trump .
That play of the last trump
squeezed West He had to
unguard either the jack of
clubs or jack of hearts. HI.!
select10n was the jack of
clubs whereupon Malcobn
threw the last small heart
from dwmny and made the
last four lr1c ks w1th the king
of hearts and klng-&lt;Jueen
seven of clubs .
At the other table Paul
Soloway opened a diamond
against ll)ree notrump and
declarer was held to his
contract. Fifty points plus
was worth two IMPs .

10-12-B

A UTOM OBIL E INSUR A NCE been
cancelled ? Lo sl your o perator s
l1cense? Pho ne 992-2143
~

• I 75 2
•QlO
o Ql084

1+

Pus
Pill
Pill
Pill

RHVES TRADING Pos t , Pagev tll e
Grocenes, dry goo d s ha rd
wor e l eed tack sho p Spectal
1~~9 food S3 88

-- - --

10-12-A

EAST

Dealer: South
Wett Nortb Eaot

PULL INS EX CAVA TI NG Comp le te
Ser vtce Phone 992 2.478 ,

-

NORTH
• Qt
• K9653
• 73
• KQ73

dropsy
3Z Flippant
U !\fauna :II Brulllan
tree

-+--+-11 Vulnerable: Neither

BA THROOMS
AN D K ttchen s
remode led cerom tc tile plum
bt ng ca r pe ntry and g enera l
momle no n ce
13 ye ars e.:

i'IEW LISTII'IG - l 1ke new

On developing the squeeze

•AKJIOI
• .1.8
t A962
• 10 2

-- ------- ~

good o lde r h ome tha t has 9
r oo m s,
4
be drooms ,
2
baths, fu r n a ce, and lar ge
yard with 2 c ar gar age?

Zl Fabric
:II Form ol

•J742
,....+-+~-+--+-lit KJ5
.J854

p~~~~~- 992 360cB'C5:=--:::~-:-:­

MA IN looltWI ;;;;:;.;.-..
POMEROY, 0.

down

Speed

AND MA RTIN Ex
cavo 11n Q
se plt c sys t em s
dozer ba ckhoe dump !ruck
ltmesto ne
gro vel
blacktop
povmg Rt 143 Pho n e 1 ( ~14 )
698 7331

H OW~R Y

"2-332S
216 E. Seoond Street
FAMILY "UME - Want a

Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Allllwer

2f Touch

:-,.,.......,....,.,......,..""'l'r::-, I WEST
• 13

to look!

Mr.

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

Lois Pauley
Branch Manager

---- ----

$11,000 .00
S ACRES - With lru1 l and

OH Ray ca mper
o n I ton truck

-

..... ''
"

p ho~e ~-2-~5~-o~!~~~

CALLUSFORALLYOUR
REAL ESTATE NEEDS.

H Vf ROOM house and bath
re mode led , ful ly ca rp eted May
be see n aft er 3 pm Pho ne
992 3933

storage bldg , $28,500 00
MOBILE HOME - w1 th

Phonem-2181

ARE THOSe
SLIOtNe DOORS
J,.O CKED1'

WH\1 DON'T \lA
VOLTAf• .SET HI/II
T' TAKE THE STUFF OFF
YER HANDS- HE '.S
RIJNNIN' TH&amp;
8f.I51NES61 l

r "- ' ..,,.. '

S:oiS-Farm Report 13; S:» -PTL Club 13
S·5S-5tfnriM Semester 10: 6 oo-PTL Club 1S
6·n--.Socletlot In Transit ion 10.
6:30-Columbus Today 4, i'lews 6, Sunrise Semester 8.
6·oi5-Mornlng Report 3; 6 · ~ood Morning, West
Vlrglnlo 13: 6 :Ss-&lt;:huck While Reports 10, News
13.
7 : ~Today U, 1S; Good Morning Amerlco 6.13; CBS
News 8; JtiiiOnt 10.
7·30-SchooiiH 10
8:01J-Capl Kangaroo 8, 10; Sesame St. 33
9 O!f-Merv Griffin 3, Ph il Donahue 4, 13, IS ;
Emergency One 6: Hogan' s Heroes 8; Match Game
10.
9:30-Bredy Bunch 8; Family Affa ir 10
IO:OIJ-Card Sharks 3,15; Consumer Buyllne 4, Edge of
Night 6; All In The Family 8, 10; Dating Game 13
10:30-Jeopardy 3,4,1S; Andy Griffith 6, Price Is Right
8,10; $20,0011 Pyromtd 13
11 ·110-High Rollers3,4,1S; Happy Days6.1 3; Elec Co
20.
t 1:30-Wheei of Fortune 3,4, 15; Family Feud 6, 13;
Love of Life 8,10; SHame St. 20,33
11 55-CBS i'lews 8: House Call 10
12 ·00-Newscenler 3; i'lews 4,6,10: America Alive 15;
Young &amp; the Restless 8, Midda y Magazine 13.
12 30-Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Bra un ~ . Sear ch for
Tomorrow 8, 10; Elec . Co. 33.
I :~Hollywood Squares 3; All My Children 6,13:
News 8, Young &amp; the Restless 10, Not For Women
Only 15
1·30-Days ol Our Lives 3,4,15: As The World Tur ns
8,10.
2 !»-''ne Lite to Li ve 6, 13; 2 311--0octors 3,4, 15;
Guiding Light 8,10
3:1JG-..Anolher World 34, IS, General Hospi tal 6, 13,
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20
3:30-Mash 8; Joker's Wild 10; You Bel Your Life 20.
4 Oil-Mister Cartoon 3, Baffle of the Planets 4:
Hollywood Squares IS : Merv Griffin 6; Porky Pig &amp;
Friends 8, Sesame St . 20,33 , Batman 10, Dinah 13
4:30-LIIIIe Rascals 3, Gilligan's Is 4,8; Brady Bundl
10; Pefflcoat Junction 15
5 IJG-..Voyage to the Bottom of the s ea 3; Star Trek 4 ;
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33; Emergency One 13; Brady Bunch 15
s 30-News 6, Sanford &amp; Son B; Elec Co 20,33 ; Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 1S.
6:1JG-..News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6; Zoom 20,33.
6:30-NBC News3,4,15, ABC News 13; Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6, CBS News 8, 10, Over Easy 20
1·DO-Cross-WIIs 3, PM Magazine 4, Newlywed Game
6, 13; Muppel Show 8; News 10, Love, American
Style 15; Consumer Survival Kif 20, Insight 33
7 30-Hee Haw Honeys 3; Dating Game 4. $1.98 Beauty
Show 6, Bonkers 8, Pop Goes The Country I 5:
$100,01111 Name That Tune 13, Mac Neil -Lehrer
Reoort 20.33.
B:OO-World Series Pregame Show 3,4,15, Donny &amp;
Marie 6,13; Wonder Woman 8,10: 1 Washington
Week In Review 20,33.
1 15-World Series: B »-Wall Street Week 20,33
9 : ~Movle "A Guide for the Married Woman" 6, 13;
Incredible Hulk 8,10, Congressional Outlook 20,33
9·311--Turnabout 20, Charleston Jaycee's Report 33
10 00-Fiylng High 8, 10; News 20. Movi e " Word Is
Out" 33
10 ·311--Monly Python's Flying Circus 20.
11 GO-News 6,8,10, ll, Dic k Cavett 20
11 311--News 3 ,~. 15, Barel! a 13, Movie " The People
Next Door " 6; Gunsmoke B; Movie " The Devll's
Own " 10.
n ,oo-Johnny Carson 3,4,15: Monty Python 33
12 :»-Twlggy's Jukebox B. 12 411--lronslde 13
I oo-News 8; Movie " Ten Little Indians" 10
1 30-Midnighl Special 3,4, IS; 1 411--News 13.
3 oo-News 3, 3.30-Movle "Madiga n" 3
~ oiS-Movle " River of M~lery" 3
'lhnday, 0&lt;1. 1!

3 ~ 25

NEED A WATER
SOFTENER?
Let Pomeroy Landmark
soften &amp; condttton your
water wtfh Co -op wate.\"
softener, Model UC· SVI .

.

'

S'IOVE GOMPANY

-- -- - - -

1973 BR O NCO 4x 4 302 a vto
HOM fSITES lor sole, l acre o nd
spo k e
P S
rod 1o
w h 11 e
up Mtd d le po rt neo r Rutla nd
w hee ls ve ry g ood cond1 t10n
Ca ll 992 7481
$3400 or best o ff e r 992 6323
VA fH A 30 yr l mon Ctn g al so
REDU Ct: SA!-= E &amp; fa st wt th Go 8e5e
reltnoncm g Ire land Mo rtgag e
Tabl e t s 8. I: Vo p w ate r p dls
77 1:: Stol e Athens phone (61 4)
Ne l son Drug
592 3051

M ae

,

--~~--

SIICOi

r \PTA;'' E \,, y
CA~L

Esttmates

BoX 3

•

'

'

guaranteed . Ca II Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160. Free

THJ.I H I:! I::DO RO M f ully carpete d
b asement ga rage Haven Hts
304 !:!82 2596

KENMO RE elec tnc wa sher
for polls Good motor $15
992 5420

CORNPI CKC R l o r
sol e
Spencer 965 38_i' q

&amp; downspouts, 20
expertence .
All

Armstrong Carpeling

S ~AR S

FI RI: WOO O f OR sol e $20 per
p1clt up load 992 6057

'

•

'11111 AI'PAiti'IGIIIAN

OPfN HOU Sf Sundoy Oct I Sth
from I pm to 4 pm Th ts a l l
WILL 00 baby stttmg tn my hom e
br tck 7 r oom s 2 bo lhs 2 cor
1n M 1ddl eporl Co ll 992 3422
go roge Io rg e polio po rch 2
acres la nd w ll h cham lin k
fenc e
Be a ut ifu l pr o pe rt y
l yo ns Add 111o n Ma son WV
Ja k e Somer v tl! e Real Estat e
Pt
Plea sa nt
WV
Phon e
675 3030 or b75 4232

1919 CHI: VRO H T d whee l dnve
JSO a uto P S P B sho rt w1 de
be d 8000 m 1les Fibergla ss l op
pe r
Lo ts ol ex l ro s $8000
.1.4 2 2336

~

All types of roofing, gut1er1

Your HeadquarteiS For

1974 ~ ATOH. T R AC 1 0 H '[ I h p 200
ho u r s w tth l ro n t loode r power
steerm g 3 pt httch dttfer en
t1o l loclt I bo tlom 16 plow l
row cu lllv olo r a nd 12 po !&gt;t ho le
d tgger 614 _98 5 35!:1 8

-~

SERVICE

9-7-1 mo.

For Free Estimates

WATER W~Ll dnllmg Wilh am T
G r ont 742 28 79

,.,
-·

"' • , ,f

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

4-3o.ttc

220 E. Main Street,
Pomeroy, 0 .
Call 99':1 -7013

I Bob Hoetllch l

-J

"lll';

Pomeroy, O.
3-15 lfc

Ph 992-2848

·M-Tnmt'lr-rt'lW 1 ,. : 1· :1;0---N e w s 11

THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1971
5·30-News 6; Senford &amp; Son 8 ; Elec. Co. 20,33: Mary
Tyler Moore 10: Odd Couple IS.
6 IJG-..News 3,4,6,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6: Zoom 20.
6' 311--NBC News 3,4, 1S; ABC News 13: Carol Burnell &amp;
Friends 6; CBS News I, 10; Over Easy 20
7 oo-&lt;:ross-WIIs 3, PM Magazine 4: i'lewly- Game
6,13; Family Feud I ; News 10: Love, American
Style IS: Hocking Valley Blutgrass 20, Conoumer
•
Surviva l Kif 33.
7:30Hollywood Squares 3: DatiOQGame4, Bonkers 6:
Walton• 8: $100,000 Name Thai Tune 10; Nashville
On The Road 13; Dolly 15; MacNeil Lehrer Report
20,33
'
B:OG-Prolect U F.O. 3,4,15; Mork &amp; Mindy 6,13; Nova
20.33; Wallons 10.
8 30-Whal's Happening 6,13 .
9·0D--Qulncy 3,4, 1S; Barney Miller 6,13; Hawaii Flve-0
8, 10, Throe by Four 33; Mayor Casterbrldge 20
9 311--Soap 6, 13.
10:0G-Weekend 3,4,1S; Family 6,13, Barnaby Janos
B. 10; Sneak Previews 33; News 20.
10 311--Reel West 33; You Bel Your Life 20.
11 :GO-News 3,~,6,8, 10, 13, 15; Dick Cavell 20 ; Lilias
Yoga &amp; You 33.

....,.

Battery.
Installation Service

Free Est1 mates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

8·2 1 rno

1969 VW FA CTO RY cam pe r Good MAYTAG COPP fHTO N f Po rt o.
con d tflo n
1 ra de for house
Pot r w ashe r o nd drye r Very
trader or w il l se ll l or $ 1595
good co nd ttton soli os set Coli
141 - ~ 192
o ffe r 5pm 992 2995

Sak

,.,....,

!192ZI74

Shocks

';:

~.

rN.
'

Brakes
Tires

uffier

T HE BODY.

.:!·

~

TELEVISION
VIEWING

YES, AND HE
WA NTS YOU TO
HAVE A L.OOK

'
I( Tlf

MOORE•s

G RA V ELY TRAC TOR an d 30
mowe r
G o od
cond1t to n
992 'l 492 o r 992 J / 16

t-:OOT
m o un ted
• 992 2i'94

Mo bile ltom@ for

......

MIXI: D HAY 992 'l 45J

JVC R ~CfiV~ R 2 JVC spea ke rs
Centrex 8 tra ck tope deck
Marantz tu rn tabl e Used 2
m onths Aft er 5 991 7Sb7

phone

New or Re tr
Gutters and
Downspouts

......hlf ......

8-20-1 mo (Pd )

1958 Ford

ton l rtlck

Radiator
Service
r.--tM._....

P~

KING WOOD hea ter w1t h b lo we r
Used I seaso n Al te r 6 coli
6 14 69E:I 3809

I

EX PERlE

MOTORS, INC.

140"1 H O U ~~ IHA I L ~H 1:2 11 b(l All
e lec Inc l ur msh ed 01r co nd1
t1o ne d w osher an d dry e1 Al so
'l
l o ~s
1n
Hor r lson v tl l e
14'1 1UL6

.

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
At

H. L WRITESEL
ROOFING

DICK TJ ;ACY

·~ ~:
~
M

ll./ I O~y l "a6U x t 1"1 B H

1973 f O RO ST ATION wogo n ~x
cellenl run ntng cor
$ ~50
992 si'f:l 6

CHI:VROLET PICKUP tru clt
__.
- - - - 1962
con d 1t1on
$550
b :ce!le nl
MH )! CA L TE CHNO LOG IST mal e
992 29~ 7
or female A cce pl tng op pl tco
!tons for ful l 11me perm anen t 19""13 FORO G RA N Ton no statton
te chn o log •sl M LT or CL T w 1lh
P S
fl B
4 door
wagon
H fW lolesu me s o r oppi !Co l• o ns
Be tge w1th brown 1nten or
con be mo ded to Vet e ra ns
55 000 mdes $700 747 25E:I9
---------··
M em orto l Hosp •tol Box 749
M u lberr y He1 ghts Pomeroy 195 1 CHI::VROUT 2 door hard top
Very_goo_? c:_o'::'d~lt ~ n _ 9~9- 2621
Oh• o
4 57 69
Pho n e
014 992 2104 ( W ~ )
1970 CADILLAC SEDAN Loa ded
Coli qr,n 6 107 o r 997 27 40

TI MBI::R POM U~OY
d u els Top priCe
sow ltm be r Co li
Ken t Hanby 1 446

I 'NO A111 ht~ r s l ~ UK I "J. 1 BR
l l/10 &lt;._hu m p 0 11 b011l ') '1 !:I H
ll.IO!J Gen e• ol oo~ 11 'l. E:l ~
llftXJ PM C !J1x I J "l i:H~
I'I')!J l' t a •n e ~(hoo n er :/H.:I:J I BA
I 'Il l Royol h nbossy blh 14 J !:IH
19:,4 ., lo r ~0~~10 'l BH
l l./l3':::1 1o i 60K I4 :/ BR
1%!$ '!a ta t 6()1( l l 'l. B~

~ . RI SING

to be upholstered.

,

11 :30-Johnny Car10rt 3.~. 15; Starsky &amp; Hutdl 6,13;1
Gunsmoke t ; ABC Newt 33; Movie "John Goldfarb,
P I - Como Home" 10.
12:30-News 8; 12: 0•12?-SWAT 6,13

11- The Dally Scntmel , Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Thursday , Oct. 12. 1978

H I,

for t'ai&lt;

141() NA~ H UA 14 11 O!J :J b~rl t C"IO I
1
hot h undet p111nmq !&gt;t ..OO
o nd (l )o-. utne loon 114'1 JbH:J or
HJ i :t'll l

f OUR FAMIL Y Yorct So le Sa t
0 &lt;t 14 a cr oss I ro m th e Fi re
Uepl tn Syracu se
VA HD SAl!: 6 11 S 7nd M1 d
d lep01 I
Teeno ge boy s 011 d
pre teen
gtr ls clo thes A lso
m15c tl em s h 1 ond Sa t l Oam
to 6pm

Business Services

HOOF HO LL OW Ho rses Buy sell
trade o r tr01 n New o n.d u sed
sad dl es Ru th Re eve s, A lb o11 y
(&lt;&gt;14 ) o9~ 3290

Too all our frtends and

FIDUCIARY

In
1976 ,
swine
flu
moculatJons were halted in
nine states after three
persons died shortly after
taking the shots.

YOU ho ve o serv •ce lo o ff er
wo nt to bu y or sell so me l hu' g
oe loolt &gt;ng for wo rlt
or
wh ateve r
you II ge t r es u lh
foster w tl h a Sent tnel Won t Ad
l a l1992 21 Sb

YA HL&gt; SA L!: O ct S b G reen hou se
G re en h o use behmd Sta te
,H1ghway Garag e on Rt I l U -4

Case No 22 .4 83
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

A thought for the day :
Amer~can President Franklin
D. Roosevelt said, " There is
notbmg 1 love as much as a
good fight. "

Ho n~&lt;·•

llob ilt·

.,

:

••

THAT BLANKET BELONGS
TO MH SWEET 6AB600...

I'M NOT 1/0UR

8A8800!!

=+--+-+--1 uti
By Oswald Jotoby
Alaa Soatac

.AK95 43

A Nevada reade r a s k • the
correct opening bid in s tand-.1.-....L.~,~~ 1\flke Passell made a win- ard Amer1can and wh im tw c•
ts played as the cr.ly
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's how to work It: ninl decision with the North clubs
band. He decided to give a lorcmg opening bid .
In standard Amertc an vou
A X Y D L B A A X •
spade preference over Mal·
Is L 0 N G F B L L 0 W
colm Brachman's three dla- should open two clubs Wilen
you use two clubs a f! an
One letter ••mply stands for another. In this oample A 11 monda. Malcolm continued ar!Jhclal forcing Opf'mng b1d
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, el&lt; Sin11e letters, on to game and West opened it is better to open jus t ot:c
apostrophes, the length and formahon of the word1 are all the four of clubs.
club so that when yo u JUIIIP
h1ats Each day the code letters are different.
At this point Malcolm
made an unusual but emi- in hearts later your partner
CRYPTOQUOTES
nently correct play. He wtll know that you have a
called for the three of clubs two-su1t hand.
! NF.WSPAPER ENTE RP RISE ASSN I
NGY from dummy.
RCVXYQ C FGC
YXVFQYM
East took hill ace and led
(Do yo u have s quest1on for
beCk a trwnp whereupon the experls? Write " Ask lhrt
CGYCG 1\falcolm developed a
RC
TXNNXY
CX
NITF
Experts, care of th1s newspa ~
•equeeze against • West to per IndiVIdual que stions wtll
RYP
DSRQY
PGRSQYM . - GNGLCXY make an overtrick. He be answered If accompanied
Yesterday's Cryptoqaote: A UE TRAVEI.'l AROUND THE played fou r rounds of by sramped, self-acldresser1
WORlD WIULE TRUTH IS PUTl'ING ON HER BOOTS.- trumps while discarding two envelopes The most mteresthurts from dununy. Then lng quest•ons wtff be used m
SPURGEON
he led a low diamond. This thts column and will r11ceive
© 1rt8 Kln1 Feature~ Syndtcate, lac.
&amp;ive up of a Irick developed coptes of JACOBY MODERN )

�r

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Ponieroy, 0 ., Thursday. Od. ~WL------------------"""--.__,..

ANNIVERSARY SALE

MEN'S SWEATERS
VESTS.· SLIPOVERS - CARDIGANS - EXCELLENT
STYLES ~ND COLORS - All SIZES

SALE PRICES
BOYS'

WINTER JACKETS
Sizes 8 to 20- excellent selection of styles
for cold weather wear.

SALE PRICES
CARHARTT BROWN DUCK

3:00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
3: ~untry Twins
3:41;--Grande Chorale
4: !&gt;-Stone Mountain Boys

Coveralls - jackets - bib overalls- dungarees
- Our entire stock included.

SALE PRICES

OF :

:.::.· Complete shows~ t~:.~~~.N3~~RATIONS
Bradford's Border Collies (herding sheep and ducks)
;;;; Trick Mules -Richard Sheets

1

!;[[

~.:;::::!_ Bo~ag'an~~~gey

ANNIVERSARY SALE
····

READY-MADE DRAPERIES
Lined and unlined styles- choose 63- 72 or
84 in(:h lengths.
Regular Price$10.99to$14.99

Complete show:"a~·~O~~~~~f~ATIONS
Logrolling (amateurs invited to participate)
:
··:· Watercraft demonstrations
:,:,!,·

1h PRICE

H2~:ESHOE

•. :. .:::. Friday at 12:30 &amp;
PffCHING
Saturday
and
Sunday
at
10
:30,
12
:30, 2:30
.:
..
Championship Reno Family
:.::.:
COUNI'RY MUSIC CENTER
Country Expressions Hillfolk Dancers

ANNIVERSARY SALE

1.:!~~:.::~::::1:::~~'

JUST 25
MEN'S 149.95 AND '59.95

SPORT COATS .
Selected from our regular stock. Broken
sizes 38 to 46.

'19"
ODD LOTS AREA RUGS
DISCONTINUED SlYLES - LIMITED
QUANTilY - WHILE lHEY LAST
I

lh·PRICE
ANNIVERSARY SALE

Bath Tow.el Ensemble ·
Floral pattern on white background. Choose
blue, pink or gold.

WE'RE
PEOPLE
HELPING
PEOPLE
Your money in a savings account is there when you need it,
in a safe, convenient place. But
while it's there, we put it to work.
By arranging money for home
mortgage loans, building loans,
and hundreds of other community uses, we're helping our
community change for the better.

A Home Bank
Fur

Mew• Counr,
People

~··I

RACINEHOME NATIONAL

BANK
·,MtiNE

RSARY SALE

JUNIOR'S
SKI JACKETS
VERY POPULAR WINTER FASHIONS
AT SAil PRICES!
-MACHINE WASHABLE
~SHELL AND LINING 100% NYLON
-100% POLYESTER FILL

REG. s3r........................ ~. SALE $32.95
REG. '461......................... SALE '38.95
REG. '5~ ......................... SALE '43.95
REG. SSS.OO ...................... SALE $49.95
REG. 'Gr.......................... SALE s57.95
'

ANNIVERSARY SALE

:~ t!f!:~~=En~{!rs

::::

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTTIL 8

. ..

WORK CLOTHES

441;--GooserownA~~=~EDAYS

OHIO

By JOHN T. KADY
souUJeastern Ohio coWJties, purchase &lt;•f m11re than 50 oil
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The and have made contact with and gas lea ses near
Ohio atrorney general 's office numerous energy producers Cambridge.
.
said Thursday it does not sa1d Jack McCormick, head
Jim Gravelle, a spokesman
have the authority ro initiate of the Bureau of Crimina I for Ohio Attorney General
an investigation into rep«ted Identification .
·
William J . Brown, said a bill
involvement of organized
Sam Garfield, who has that passed the Ohio Senate
crime figures in oil and gas given addresses . of Clare, but that has been stall"&lt;! in
production in Southeastern Mich . and LaCosta, Calif., · the House would have given
Ohio.
and was one time owner of the attorney genera l powers
Organized crime figures, the Rivera Hotel, a gambling to conduct an investigation of
including reputed Mafia .casino and hotel in Havana in such purchases.
banker Meyer Lansky, have the pre-Castto days, has been
"If that bill had been
been seen in enerev-rich involved in the sale and · oassed three years ago when

.

9 : 3~rande do~~RDAY,OCTOBER14

····
{

Organized crime figures active in SE Ohio
.

:.•,:.:
: 10 :00-Stone Mountain Boys
{ 10 :41;--Goosetown Astonishers .
·:·: 11 : 3~uthem Appalachian Cloggers
} 12 :IJO.-Grande Chorale
· · 12:31f-Stone Mountain Boys
\ 1:11;--Gooserown Astonishers
2:00-Country Twins
2: l~uthem Appalachian Cloggers
2:41;--Grande Chorale
3:1&gt;---Stone Mountain Boys
4:IJO.-Gooserown Astonishers
4:41&gt;--CQuntry Twins
5: 00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
SUNDAY, OCI'OBER 15
9:~cred Music-,Joyce Hawks
;·,=.!,'
Congregational SingRing-PMerlinH Rokss
.
10 :00-Worship Service- ev. au1 aw s
!.!,!.! 10 :4&gt;---Stone Mountain Boys
•
11 : 3~ooserown Astonishers
! j 12 :Jf&gt;-CQuntry Twins
;::: 12 : 3~uthem Appalachian Cloggers

...

·Attorney g~neral helpless

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
FRIDAY &amp; -SATURDAY
LAST TWO DAYS

Eighth ADIIIIal
BOB EVANS FARM FESTIVAL
OUIDOOR THEATER
Paul E. Wagner, Emcee
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13
School, Senior Citizen 811d Tour Bus Day
10:00-Hillfolk Dancer~
lO : ~one Mountain Boys
11 :3()-{;rande Chorale
12: 00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
12 : ~Introductions and Announcements
12 :45-Stone Mountaip Boys
1 : 3~rande Chorale
2:00-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
2: 2ti--Announcements
2:30-Stone Mountain Boys
3: 11;--Grande Chorale
3:45-Southem Appalachian Cloggers
4: Ii;-Gooserown Astonishers
5:00-Hillfolk Dancers

...'•...·'!.··'·

___________________,. ________,. ____.,1.

3A9 BATH TOWEL. ••••••••••..•••••••••••• 12.49
12.49 HAND TOWEL •••••••.•.••••••••.••••. 11.49
11.39 WASH CL0111 ..••••••••••••••.•.••• ••• 79'

1

ANNIVERSARY SALE

Dutch Rower Bulbs
Now is the time to plant Dutch Flower bulbs
- Save on our fine selection of tulips,
hyacinths, crocus, iris and many others.

SALE PRICES
ANNIVERSARY SALE

REGULAR $149
RED HEART WINTUK
Knitting Yarn -

Big selection of colors.

•11•

Skein

MEN'S $1395
WRANGLER JEANS
14 oz. blue denim - limited quantity.
Slraight and flare leg styles. Broken sizes 27
to 42 waist - not every length .

'6"

36.

VOL. XXIX

ANNIVE" ..""'

School Name Toboggans

WILLOW ISLAND, W.Va.
(UP!) Poorly mixed concrete
that was too wet for use was
poured a day before a
scaffolding broke loose high
inside a power plant 's cooling
lower where 51 workmen died
last spring, a Charleston
newspaper reported roday.
The Charleston Gazette
.quoted Ty Looney, an
investigator · hired by the
Occupational Safety and
Health Admini stration, as
saying tests he undertook
wtcovered many m~croscopic
air pockets in the concrete.
OSHA still hasn't unveiled
Its official report on the April
27
accident
at
the
Monongahela Power Co .
plant.
Looney, on the scene a day
after the tragedy, said his

'5395

WAREHOUSE

REG. sl2.oo ... ········ ············SALE $1055
Color Television Special
REG. '16.00 ···· ··········· ····•·· · SALE $1 4.05
G.E. 19 INQf COLOR PORTABLE
REG. '20.00 ....................... SALE '17.60
* 100. SOLID STATE
REG. $24.00 ....................... SALE $21.15
*HANDSOME STYLING
REG. 528.00 ...................... SALE 524.65
ONLY '39900
REG. '33.00 ............. ;......... SALE '29.05 1---·--·--WO-M-EN_'S_W_IN-TE-R- - - - - -

CHILDREN'S COAT SALE
Buy the c·o-ats. your children will be needing
for the winter months.
Many styles and colors for little boys and
girls.
Sizes 2-4, 4-6x, 7-14.

PAJAMAS AND GOWNS
Special sale on our new winter ·line of
palamas and gowns.

FROM

$525

REG. '18.00 ........................SAI.E $14.39 )------SA_L_E_ _ _......_...
REG. s2Z.OO ....................... SALE ' 17•59
DAYTIME DRESSES
REG. '27.oo ....................... SALE '21.59
Special group selected from stock.
REG. 132.00....................... SALE '25.59 ·
Regular and extra sizes.
REG. '54.00 ....................... SALE '43.19

lf2. PRICE

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S WINTER JACKETS
Save Friday and Saturday on our entire
stock men's jackets- waist length and car
coat length styles. Excellent selection
including winter vests in blue denim or
quilted.

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S SUITS
SIZES 36 TO 46 - REGULAR AND LONG

'89.95 SUITS ..........................'71.94
MEN'S s22.95 JACKETS ............ ,...$19.54 S99.95 SUITS...... ................... '79.94
MEN'S $24.95 JACKETS ................ '21.24 ,_____A-NN-1-VE_R,_SA_R_Y~-S~A-LE--·---........
MEN'S $29.95 JDETS ............... $25.44 BOYS' FlANNEL SHIRTS
MEN'S s34.95 JACKETS ............... $29.74
Sizes 8 to 20 - plaid patterns. Regular and
MEN'S '54.95 JACKETS............~ .. :'46.14 western styles.
MEN'S '79.95 JDETS ...............'67.94

SALE PRICES

ANNIVERSARY SALE!

MEN'S
SPORT SHIRTS

OPEN
TOPS
·
Cowl Necks, turtle necks, V-necks.

Includes all our men's hanging sport shirts
and table shirts- S., M., Land XL sizes. A
tremendous selection.

._ ,

SPORT SHIRTS...................•....... ..'7:J.4
MEN'S $10.95
SBJ4
~1-CJRT SHifllr!) .......................... .
MEN'S $12.95
s
SPORT SHIRTS ...;.............•........ 10.44
MEN'S 514.95
sPoRT SHillS...........................$12.04
MEN'S S16.9S
SPORT SHIRTS .......................... '13.74

Dressy and·casual styles in assorted colors
and prints.
Sizes S-M-L·XL.
Reg. $7.00 •• Sales 5.59 Reg. Sll.OO ••Sale s 8.79 .
Reg.$9.00 ··Sale$ 7.19 Reg.$13.00•_-5aleS10.39
Reg.S10.00•·SafeS 7.99 , Reg.S14.00••SaleS11.19

-NFL Colors -Great for Autumn weather
·-Months sizes thru size 6
REG. S4.50 .................... ~ ••• SALE $ 3.95

REG. S6 .oo ........................ SALE S 5.25

REG. sa.oo ..•..••..•......••.•..•. SALES 7.05
REG. $11.00. ................... ·· ·SALES 9.65
REG. $13.00 ...................... SALE $11 .45

....

' .

FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1978

concrete, should have know
the batch wasn't a proper
one.
The Gazette quoted Looney
as saying Pittsburgh Testing
Laboratories "didn't test it
right. If they had, they would
have stopped work."
Looney disparaged a Pitts·
burgh Testing official 's claim
that he tested the concrete by
smacking a hanuner against
it.
"If he had, it would have
been like taking a hanuner to
a watermelon," Looney said. •
H.e also blamed, to some
extent, the men working on
the tower.
"Any man who has been
pouring concrete any time
knows if it 's too wet,'' he said.
"It doesn't take a lot of
smarts to test that."

A~~entee ball~ting
Meigs County's Board of
Election is maintaining daily
hours for the convenience of
voters wishing to cast absentee ballots.
The board office, located in
the
Masonic
Temple,
Mullberry Ave., Pomeroy,
will be open from 9 a.m. to 4
p.m. Monday through Saturday , for the convenience of the absentee and
disabled voter. Deadline for
such voting is 12 noon on Noy.
4.

There is one local race to be
decided in the fall election,
and that is for the one commissioner post. Candidates
are Giles Smith, D., and
incumbent, Henry Wells, R.
Howard Frank is ruming
unopposed lor the auditor's
post, a position which he now
holda.
Robec Buck is unopposed
for the probate court ,
juvenile division, judgship
since Manning Webster ,
incumbent, did not file for

i ..

reelection. Judge Buck will
be leaving the county court
next year. Unopposed as
candidate for the county
court judgeship is Attorney
.
Charles Knight.
The county does have some
tax issues Nov. 7. A 1.25 mill
levy, a new tax for five years,
to provide operating funds for ·
facilities for the county's
retarded is the only measure
of a county-wide scope.
In Pomeroy Village, voters
will decide a .9 of a one mill
renewal and .1 of a miU new
tax for lire protection, and in
Middleport, a new one mill
levy will be voted on' with
proceeda from the levy being
used to purchase a new fire
truck .
In Syracuse, there is a
renewal of a lire levy with a
decrease making the renewal
to be voted upon just one mill.
Rutland Township voters
will decide the renewal of a .3
of a one mill levy for lire

')_r_h....,e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_
·-..

Lack of funds force closing
NEW WASHINGTON, Ohio (UP!)- The Buckeye Central
Local School Board voted Thursday night to close the district's
schools until Jan. I, 1979, because of a projected deficit of more
than $150,000 by the end of the year.
The board voted 3-2 to close its schools despite James
Rhodes' promise that no Ohio school district will close this fall
~cause of lack of funds.
The Crawford County district thus becomes the first
already open school district in the state to close Ibis fall
because of lack of funps.

10 fudi~ents expected
CANTON, Ohio (UP!) - Search raids Thursday by the
FBI in suburban Perry Township, including one on the offi ce of
Township Pollee Olief Salvatore Birone, are expected ro lead
to at least 10 inductments, authorities said. .
' There were no arrests during the raida, conducted as part
of an investigatioo of alleged pollee-protected gambling in the
township.
·

Steelworkers like Celeste

COLUMBUS (UP!) - The United Steelworkers of
America Legislative Committee of Ohio announced Thursday
it haa endorsed Democratic Lt. Gov. Richard F. Celeste for
governor, as weD as the entire Democratic statewide slate for
· electloo in November.
·
·
· The committee represents all sill USWA districts in Ohio,
taking In Cleveland, Canton, YoiD'Igstown, 90utheaslem Ohio,
southwestern Ohio and northwestern Ohio.

~;LEVELAND

Elbertelds In Pomeroy

tests showed 50 percent more
voida in the concrete level
poured on the day before the
tower collapse than in any
other. level, the Gazette said.
Each day, workers tried to
· add another level to the
cooling tower. The victims
plunged 168 feet to their
deaths while trying to add the
27th level.
"It had th e rig ht ingredients," Looney was
quoted by the newspaper. "It
just wasn't mixed properly."
According to Looney; the
only poorly mixed concrete
was in the level where the
sca ffolding tore loose in the
fashion of an apple being
peeled.
Looney was quoted as
saying Criss Concrete, St.
Marys, which . supplied the

.Kennedy s~umping for Celeste

OPEN SATURDAY 9:30A.M. TO 5 P.M.

entine
PRICE FIFTEEN -CENTS

Poorly mixed concrete strike ends
poured before a Cc l•dent

., ..

. SALE PRICES FROM

PILE, BRUSHED TRICOT AND FLANNEL

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

gas leases dating back to 1968
in the Guernsey County Court
House and determined .that
Garfield had been involved in
the purchase and sale of at
least 50 nil and gas leases
over the last 10 years.
The leases have been sold
or transferred to individuals
(lf C
flrpr(1atiQns in Las Vega s,
South
Orange,
N.J .,
Carlsblad, Calif and Salt
Lake City. Utah .

Oeveland

Regularly $2.95 For these schools :
Eastern Eagles, Meigs Marauders,
Southern Tornadoes and Wahama Falcons.

Dressy and casual styles, wools, fur. trim,
knit . Many, many more!
Reg. $64 .00 to $248 .00

LONG AND SHORT STYLES IN FLEECE,

NO. 127

"any infiltration or control
that the mob could get over
such a vital area affects all nf
~
us."
"What happens when one
day we all turn around and
find nut that one of the most
importa nt things we haveene rgy - is owned by the
mob ," said McCormick .
" We'd be in pretty bad
shape."
The
Cam bridg e
Jeffersoni;m checked (Iii rmd

•

e

Regular price $14.95. Straight leg or boot
flare. All sizes 29 to 42 waist- lengths 30 to

WOMEN'S
WINTER ·COAT SALE
Jr. Missy - Extra Sizes.

WOMEN'S
.WINTER ROBES

MEN'S 58.95

.ANNIVERSARY SALE!

SAVE ON.
MEN'S .WRANGLER NO FAULT
. BLUE DENIM JEANS .

we proposed it, we would
have the necessary authority
to
condu ct such
an
investigation ,".said Gravelle.
"It is incredible the state of
Ohio does not have a multicounty or a sta tewide
nrga niz e d
c rim e
investigative arm," said
Gravelle: " It simply doesn 't
exist."
McCormick said with
energy beiqg .0 important

(UP!) -:- Sen. ~ard M. Kemedy; [)..
Man., will campaign l&lt;r Lt. (l(lv. Richard F. Celeste, the
Democratic gubernatorial candidate, Tuesday in Cleveland.
Kennedy, It was announced ~y, also will speak
about hll ·natlonal health insurance plan upon arriVing fr.om
YOWigstown, Ohio .

..

None of the concrete wall
that crumble&lt;! clung to steel
rods used as reinf{lrcements,
he said.
"If the concrete had dried
at all, it would have st uck to
those roda ," he said.
The Gazette said an OSHA
official refused to comment
on Looney 's findings, saying
only that a report is to be
publicized soon.
"They ca n't prove me
wrong,'~ Looney challenged.
" I can't see how they can."
The tower's subcontactor ,
Research Cottrell, was fined
$105,100 by OSHA. Pittsburgh
Test was lined $1,600, and
general contractor United
Engineers and Construction
of Philadelphia was assessed
a $1,600 fine .

underway

prot ect ion . liW Salisbury
Township, two nl.'W levies are
up to voters. They include a
one mill for cemeteri es and
two mills for dust control.
In Olive Township, there is

a new . three-mill levy ' to
provid e money for dust
controL All levies renewals or
new taxes will be for a li ve
year periotl.
·
In Bedford Township,
voters will decide upon a
local option as to' whether
ma lt and mixed beverages
and wine should be sold for
off Premise consumption .

Officers named,
three accepted
Officers were. elected and
three new members were
accepted when the GalliaMeigs Fraternal Order of
Police met in regular session
Wednesday night.
Elected were James Rife,
president, Steve Hartenbach,
v ice-presiden t, Larr y
Co leman , chaplain Larry
Hudson , condu ctor, Carl
Hysell , guard and Ray
Manley,
secretary
treasurer.
New members acc epted
were Kenny Hoffman, Eric
Chamb ers
and
Dale
Rockhold.
In other business, plans for
the annual Christmas dinner
were formulated. It wili be
held in November by the
ladies auxiliary of the Mid·
dleport Fire Department.
1

. RETIREMENT ANNOUNCEMENT - The
retirement of Gladys Eo
Walker of Pomeroy was
announced today by
General Telephone Co. of
Ohio.
An operator se rvi ces
clerk at Athens , Walker
launched her telephone
career In 1951 as an
operator In Pomeroy. She
was an operator for 17
years
before
being
promoted to the clerical
position.
Friends and associates
recently honored her at a '
retirement party at The
Sportsman, Athens . Sbe
retired · under tbe firm 's ·
early retirement plan with
an effective date of Oct. 8.
She resides at 838 E.
Malo St., Pomeroy.

u nited Press International
The 101,000 public schoo l
students in Cleveland finally
should begin the fall semester
next week and th eir st riking
teachers return to the classrooms wday with the promise
of an 8 percent pay raise,
their rirst in two years.
The 10,000 union teachers
and support personnel voted
by a
narrow margin
Thursday to end a 5-week-old
strike
against
Ohio 's
,largest school district. The
DR. E. J: LOWD
2,358 t~ 2,212 approval vote
was conducted by about 45
percent of union members.
"It's been a long five weeks
and we're very glad th at the
strike is over and we'll be
able to get on ·with the
educational process,'' said a
boar d
relieved school
Dr. Edwin Jerome Lowd,
President John Gallagher .
an
0 1thopedic Surgeon. has
In Memphis ,
Tenn .,
JOined
the staff of Holzer
striking teachers urged the
Clinic
Ltd.;
according to an
school board to resume
announcement
made today
negotiations today and union
by
Robert
E.
Daniel,
Clinic
leaders faced a contempt
Admi
ni
strato
r
.
Dr.
Lowd
hearin g for failing to obey a
comes
to
the
clinic
after
court's order to teach classes
completing
two
years
with
for the city's 113,000 students.
tbe
.United
States
Navy
strikes Ill ·.x' other!rtates
Medical Corps at Camp
curtailed or halted classes for
Lejune,
North Carolina .
about 400,000 students at
A
native
of Waycross, Ga .,
week's end.
Dr.
Lowd
receiyed his
Teachers in the Long Island
bachelor 's and master's
sc hool dist rict of Rocky
Point, N.Y., approved a degree education at Tennessee State University and
contr act settlem ent · and
hi
s medical degree from
return ed to th eir jobs
Medica l College in
Meharry
Thursday, ending a strike
Nashville,
Tennessee m 1969.
that began last week and
,Subsequently,
he had a
idled 2, 700 students.
g
internship
at Harlem
rotatin
Other, smaller strikes were
Hospital
Center,
New
York
reported in Ohio, Indiana ,
City,
and
received
three
Illi n o is,
Main e ,
years or general surgery
Pennsylvania, New Jersey
residency training at Harl em
and New York.
Hos pita l and Col umbi a
Presbyterian Medica l Center
from 1969-1973. He then
comp leted hi s orthop edi c

New doctor
joins Holzer
Clinic staff

OSP checks
two wrecks
Th e Ga llia-Me igs Po st
State Highway Patrol investiga ted a two-car accident
at 8:40 a .m. Thursday on SR
124, two tenths of a mile east
of the entrance to Meigs Mine
1, west of Langsville.
Offi cers sa id an auto
operated by John Gaus, 30,
Rutland, has pulled from a
private drive to travel east on
SR 124 when an auto driven
by Wanda B. Johnson, 51,
Langsville , going east, came
over a hillcrest.
Mrs. Johnson swerved to
avo1d the Gaus auto and her
vehicle Struck a n em(Continued on page 141

residency training at Harlem

Hospital from June 1973 to
June 1976.
Dr. Lowd is a member of
the Medical Association and
American
Co ll ege
of
Emergency Physicians.
Dr . Lowd, his wile,
Carolyn, who is a nurse, a nd

their youn g da ughter,
Charmaine, have purchased
a home in the Gallipolis area.

Weather
Showers, turn ing coo ler

tonight. Lows in the mid 40s.
Cloudy , coo ler Sa turday.
Hi ghs in the mid 50s.
Probability of precipitation
70 percent tonight, 30 percent
Saturday .

Five hurt by
severe storms

United Press International
At least fiv e people were
injured, one or them
se riousJy ,
as
sev ere
thunderstorms that spawned
at least one tornado pounded
parts of eastern and southern
Ohio Thursday night.
Alisha Sims, 3, ol
Baltimore, was seriously hurt

winds, passed through the
areal leaving a widespread
area

of

Lancaster

a nd

Fairfie ld County wit hout
power for a short time and
ca us in g
some
mint•r
structura l damage.
At least one tent at the
fairgrounds collapsed during
the storm, but nCI one was
when a lar ge \imb, blown reported injured.
from a tree d~rin g a
The •torms, touched off by
thunderstorm, struck her on a cold fnmt that moved
the head at the Fairfield through the sla te today, also
Co unty fai r gro unds in dumped heavy rain in several
Lancaster.
areas.
Four Columbiana County
Kidron in Wayne County
residents were injured when reported receiving 1\'z inches
a wrnado destro yed \heir of n un during a 311-minute
Winona home.
period Thursday night, while
Howard Bailey , his wife, Massillon got 1 •inch in less
Myrlle, a nd thei r tw o than two hours and Cincinnati
daughters were hospitalized a half-inch in six hours.
in satisfactory ccmdition at
Salem Community Hospital
FUN DS DISTRIBUTED
with injuries s uffered when
Governor
J ames A. Rhodes
their bri ck home was
ha
s
a'
n
n
ounced
the Bureau of
destroyed by the twister U&gt; at
hit the Winona area , fi ve Motor Vehicles is releasing
the sixth installment or 1978
miles south of Salem.
The tornado also heavil y li cc ns€' revenues totaling
a
Ge ner al $10,488,Hl8.64 for distribution
dama ge d
Te lepho ne Co. equipment among co unty a nd loca l
building, downed trees and governm ents of t he state. Of
power lines, ripped the roof the total, Meigs County will
off of another home and receive $34,090.34.
overturned several mobile
homes at th e Spring Valley
Trailer Park as it skipped
across an area about 100
yards wide and one-!! all mile
long.
The tornado fir st touched
down at Winona then hit the
trailer park about one half
mile east. Th ere were no
other injuries reported.
Miss Sims was in criti cal
LOTTERY
condition ear ly
today
CLEVELAND
(IJ PI)
following
sur ge ry "•.at
This
week's
winning
Ohio
Chi ldren's Hospit al in
Lott
ery
number
s:
Columbus.
Gold
numb
e
r
-3
.
She was attending the Fair·wh
ite
number
-H.
field County Fair when that
Blue number-421.
storm, accompanied by
Win-A·Thon
marble-s ized hail and high
JJ787.

Wahama homecoming

•
EXTENDED FORECAST
Very cool through the
period, with a ehanee of ·
showers late Sunday and
again Monday and a
chance of snow Dorries In
eastern Ohio Monday Dlgbt
and Tuesday. Highs
Sunday will be In the low or
mid 50s, falling to the mid
.tOs or the lower 50s Monday
an&amp; Tuesday. Lows will be
in the upper 30s Sunday,
but In the mid ZOs to the
lower 30s by Tuesday.

FIELD CO MMA NDER
Jody Grueser , a
sophomore, is field commander of the Southern High
School band this year. Jody is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Don K. Grueser, Route 1, Minersville.

HOMECOMING CANDIDATES- The boys, as well as the gills, get in on the
act.at Wahama's homecoming. In addition to !he selection of queen candidates,
escorla also are named Vying for queen, left to right, front row, are Carina Roth,
Tracey Roach and Susan. Edwards. Behind them are escorts Kenny Hankinson,
David Camp and Da'o'id Knight. Voting will decide which of the lucky guys will
escort the queen .
'
·

Thr ee seni or girls and
senior boys are vying for the
title of "Homecoming Queen
and Escort" this week at
Wa(lama High School.
Several activities have
been planned at the school in
preparation for the game between Wahama and Spencer
to be played Saturday, 8 p.m.
on the local field.
A parade will form in New
Haven Saturday 1:30 p.m.,
and proceed toward Mason.
Friday has been set aside as
red and white day (school
colors! at the school. with
students dressed in these
colors. Also on Friday a
snake dance and pep rally
will be held in the evening.
The queen candidates are
Ca rina Roth, Susan Edwarda
and Tracey Roach . At the
schoo l. escorts are also
selected by the student body

..,.

for the candidates. They are
David Camp, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Camp, Mason ;
Kenny Hankison. son of Mr.
and Mrs. J ohn Hankison,
Mount Baldy, Calif., and
David Knight. son of Robert
Knight and Mrs. Barbara
Roush, Hartforu.
Miss Roth is a Rotary
Exchange Student from
Sweden . She is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Mitchell
Roth, Gothenbourg, Sweden.
She is presently making her
home with Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Moxley, New Haven.
Susa n is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin T. Edwards, New ·Haven. She is a
cileerlead.?i'lll!d a member of
the National Honor Society.
Miss Roach Is the daughter
of Bob Roach and Ms. Zelma
Roach of New Haven.

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