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I'Jw Su11da~

1'11 1 1\' :-.-....; ~

11tlnd. :\itnd; t~

. ( )d .•~~~.

i ~ t ;H

New director
is ·appointed

C1inical portion underway
GALLIPOLIS- The sevenmon tll clinical pral'tice
pmtic necessary to com·

plete lhe two-y ear program
at Rio Gra nde College and
Community College for the
t r ai n ing
of
medical
labor atory technicians bega n

this past week in the Medica l
Laboratory of the Holzer
Medi ca l Center .
Nine students.

Kio Grand e, \\'ill be actively
working during this seven

month period in the hospital
la boratory, and will graduate
with an associate degree in

Applied Science from Rio
Grande College and Community College in May, 1979.
Upon completion of their
tota l training and receipt of
thei r deg re e, these nin e

••
•
••

Should they des ire to
extend their education and
training fur an additional two

•

RIO GRANDE - In the
bank or up the chimney! Are
bum '! Valua ble lips on in-

experience

sulation and other permanent
energy savings measures wil1

be giv en at the Energy
Savings Techniques Seminar

se lec t

Today

I
I
I

w; His T. Leadingham

I
I

By

Reatlor

for the wint er days ahead.

•

• doubt. be ad ve rt isi ng it .
e You may s ta r t by plant ing
e ·;) ·· For Sa le By OWner"
• si gn in your front lawn . But
• Nil I th is be seen by e·nough
• - or any - prospect ive
• bu yers?
·
n ews pap er
Th en
• adv e rtising . Thi s can
• becom e more cost ly and
• less effecti ve t han you
e th ink if done improper ly . It
e cou ld e ven le ad to over• expos ureoftheh ouse to the
e point wher e , if you shou ld
e decid e later to consu lt a

inte rested prospects who
are r eady, wilting , and
finan cially ab le to buy.
There' s a more effective
and fa ster wa y . List wit h a
Rea ltor! He has prospect s
already in the market for
homes r ealistically priced .
On e of them m ay be
look ing for just such a
hom e as yours.

effi cient

Learn low cost , no cost ways
to save energy and make
your home more comfortable

I

The ba sic reason for
adv erti sing is to attr act

•
•
•
•
:
•
•
•
•

e
e

Mrs . Oberho!zer is a gas
utilization representative at
Columbia Gas. She is also
professi onally known as
Betty Newton . Her work
takes her all over so utheast
Ohio where she gives
educat ional progr ams on
energy efficiency and the
wise use of gas appliances.
Mrs. Oberholzer is a native of
Nebraska and a graduate
from the University of
Nebraska with a B.A. in

•
• Home Economics.
Jake Koebel, Columbia Gas
If there is anything we •
can do to help you in the •~ Co., Scott Coddington and An
field of real estate please
Rieser of Buckeye Hills
phone or drop in at
Career Center directed the

LEADINGHAM

REAL

•i•e 1l

.

Votomatic procedure explained
MIDDLEPORT - Mr s.
Dorothy Johnston, director of
the Meigs County board of
elections, and Mrs. Frances
Thomas, a deputy of the
board, spoke and dem onstrated
use
of
th e
~ ·v ot oma ti c''

when

th e

Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary
Club met Friday evening at
Heat h United Methodi st
Church.
The votomatic will be used
at all33 polls for the fir st time
at the Nov. 7 election , Mrs.
Johnston reported.
The small machines will
greatly increase the efficiency of counting voles
cast in the election since
counting is done by computer. The prooper use of the
machine was demonstrated .
and explained.
It was also reported that
9,764" Meigs countians have
registered for the Nov. 7
election and that 116

efforts for bringing this
presentation to this area.
There is no cost for the
seminar, it is absolutely free. residents have cast a bsentee
'
ballots in the up com in g

ESTATE , 512 second Ave., • ~
Gallipolis . Phone 446· 7699. e .
We're here to help.
e·
•

.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••

MLT CLASS-The MLT class is pictured in the classroom at the Holzer Medical
Center with Stephan Elberfeld (r) . They are, back ro w, left to right : Molly Grinnan, Mary
Sauer, Sallie Cooper and Laura Oliver . Front row , left to right, Patty Warner, Bobbi
Chapman, Debbie Taylor , Ralph Taylor and Cindy Bateman .

equipment will be given by
Rita
Oberholzer , Gas
Utihzalion Representative,
Columbta Gas of Ohio, Inc.

•

THE BEST ADVERTISING

energ y

QUALITY CARS
1977 GMC

1977 PONTIAC

SPRINT

GRAND PRIX

This Spor t M odel has the two tone
pa int fi ni shed in Br entwood
brown and
Desert
Sal"'d .
E quipment includes air con ditioning , automatic t r an s mi ss iQn , cr'uise contro l, ti lt
whee l and radia l tires. Only
22, 100 miles .

'5295
1976 FORD
ELITE
A s1.1 per intermediate from Ford .
Fin ished in ivory whjte with gold

vi nyl 60-40 seating and a gold

landau top. Equipped with AM·
FM track, air cond itionina. tilt
w heeL cr ui se Control, wire wheel
covers . Accent stripes, much
more . Dri ven only 23,4.49 miles .
New lim ited trade .

'4695

chlng bucket seats. Th is G.P. has
it all .. Air. conditioning, tilt
wheel, AM radio with 8-track
~tereo ,

and rally wheels. We sold

it new .

'5495
1977 CHEVROLET
CAPRICE CLASSIC .
Th is full si zed 'l dr . coupe has on
l y 15, 571 low mi les an d is IOclded
with option al eq uipm ('n t lik e dir
conditioni ng, cr ui se cont r ol , tilt

wheel. power door winclow s,
power door locks, renr wi nclows,
de fogg er

a n9

AM FM

racli .o

Oo Ji' l m iss t hi s one

'5495

1977 PLYMOUTH

1978 CHEVROLET

VOLARE PREMIER

CAMARO

Station Wagon
Artie white exterior with wood
grai n applique and 60·40 tan
vinyl interior enhance the Beauty
of th is compact wagon . Equip.
ment includes the economical
slant s i x e ngine , automatic
transmission , cruise control, Air
conditioning , lUggage rack , and
rear gate defroster .

SAVE$$$

NEW 78 PONTIACS

LEFT OVER

This sports model is sure to catch
your attention . Carmine exterior
and black bucket seats with air

conditioning, automatic tran smlsslon, AM·FM radio and sport

styled wheels .
Pri ced to sell

'5995
1978 CHEVROLET
MONZA 2+2
Flrethorn e .:terior with
whi te interi or .

This Sports Model has the
economical 4-cy linder engine,

1 LeMANS
6 GRAND PRIX
GMAC AND BANK
FINANCING

1976 BUICK

Nancy Rudd , a se nior

medical student at Ohio State
University. was introduced

ACCEPTS INVITATION
CLEVE LAND !UP!) Saudi Arabia's King halid,
showing

no

apparent

discomfort from a recent
double coronary bypass
operation, has accepted an
invit at ion from President
Carter to have. lunch at lbe
White House Friday.

SQUAD CALLED
MIDDLEPORT - Th e
Middleport Emergency unit
of the ·Fire Department was
called to the New Lima Road
near Rutland at 1:30 Friday
for Edith Lambert who was
taken to Holzer Medical
Center.

automatic transmission, power
steering , AM radio, bucket seats
and styled wheel covers. Only
5,911 miles on this Beauty .

SAVE$$$

Bamboo cream with a full gold

control, tilt wheel and AM Ra(fi o

with 8-track stereo. Thls tocat
senior citizens trade has onty'
17,776 low low miles.

SAVE$$$
1977 CHEVROLET

ASK TOWED
GALLIPOLIS - Making
application for marriage
license in Gallia County
Probate Court Friday were
Dwight Lowell Rees, 21, Rio
Grande, · coa l miner, and
Christi Ann Cook, 19,
Gallipolis, L.P.N.

formation , counseling and
referral services to seizureprone persons and to their
families, teachers., employers and friends. Also, the
EASO offers transportation
to and assistance with
medical appointments for .
seizure·prone persons.
The association is a lso
concerned with educating the
public and correcting
misin .formation often
associate d with epilepsy.
There are film s and
brochures available and the
EASO stall will talk to

GALLIPOLIS - Dan Evans, Vinton,
reported the vandalism of the Vinton
Masonic Lodge to the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department Friday.
According to the report , food and other
items had been thrown on the Door and
walls of the building .
Entry was reportedly made through
the basement of the building.

COMMI'ITEE MEETS ocr. 31
GALLIPOLIS - The meeting of the
Gallia County Safety Council will be Oct.
31 at 12 noon at the Mental Health Center.
Guest speaker will be Jack Monte,
district fire marshal, and he will be
speaking about "Fire Safety."
Telephone the Chamber of Commerce
office 441Hl596 to make arrangements for
lunch , says Lester Plymale, president,
Gallia County Industrial Safety Council.

AKRON, Ohio (UP! ) Gov. James A. Rhodes said
IDday the election of Lt. Gov . ·
Richard E. Celeste as
governor would " mean a big
stale spending program, with
a doubling of the income lax
or an equivalent taxhike to
pay for it."
·
Rhodes
made
the

sta tement in remark s
prepared f&lt;r delivery at a
breakfast meeting of the
Akron Regional Development
Board at the Tangier
Restaurant in Akron .
"Celeste still has not told
the truth about his taxation
plans," said Rhodes.. "He has
talked publicly about wanting

organizations and clubs about
epilepsy, how it affects them
and what they can do to help.
All services are free of
charge.

to spend an excessive $3.3 program is vague and lacking campaign is for candidates l.o
billion more on schools alone in a price tag ," said Rhodes . talk specifically about tbe
in the n ext fo ur years, "Our opponent refuses to tell .issues, so that voters know
together with other plans that Ohioans. about his plans until what they are getting in
will make heavy demands on after the election when it will . advance," said Rhodes.. "We
the state treasury that cannot be too late f&lt;r people 1.o reject have proposed a specifi c
him if they do not like what he edu cation program which
be met without new taxes.
" Newspaper after is offering.
will grant our schools more
newspaper has commented
"The purpose of a money than they have ever
editorially that the Celeste

•

e

schools, businesses, civic

VOL. XXIX

NO. 138

with Blue cloth interior, crulsa

control, tilt wheel rally wheels
and much more. If you are
look ing for a sharp one, see thi s
one Now .
·

PRICED ACCORDINGLY

'4995

f

GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
City Police investigated a
two-vehicle accident Friday
at 9:28 p.m. at the intersection of Second Ave. and
Pine St.
Officers report that an auto
operated by Sandra K.
Drummond, 25, Addison,
traveling north on Second,
attempted to enter the intersection on a yellow light as
a south bound vehicle driven
by Kimberly P. Wright, 17,
GaUipolis, started a left tum .
The Drummond auto struck
the Wright vehicle.
Officers report moderate
damage to both autos. No
citation was issued.

Includes an economical 4 cyl.
eng . 5-speed transmission, radio,
new premlurri white side wall
tires and special sport accent

Members include, left to right, Sonia Carr, Treasa Dailey,
Darlene Barton, Wendy Elkins, Cassie Sheets, Paige
Hayman, Sheryl Bush, and Debbie Eynon.

EHS .FLAG CORPS - Fronting the Eastern Eagle
Marching Band this year is the Eastern Flag Corps.

Due to the many acts of
vandalism that have occurred in Pomeroy, Mayor
Clarence Andrews and
Pomeroy village council have
placed a curfew in the village

Hawtted house
'popular place'

I)'
Minor mishap

,...,.._,.

investigated
The Gallia-Meig s Post
Stale highway Patrol investigated a single car accident at 6 p.m. Sunday on
U.S. 33, four-tenths of a mile
south of CR 37.
Officers said an auto.driven
by Charles McDaniels., 39,
Mason, traveling south, ran
off the right side of the
roadway, striking a guardrail. There was minor
damage and no one was injured or cited.

'2695
NEW 78 BUICKS

LEFT OVER

Ohio Extended Forecast

Offer
Expires
Nov . 11, 1978!

United Press lnternatlonid
Fair Wednesday, with
showers Thursday and rain
ending Friday. Highs will be
in .the upper 50s or the 60s
Wednesday and Thursday,
cooling to the 50s Friday.
Lows will be in the 30s early
Wednesday and Friday and in
the 40s early Thursday.

The sheriff's department is
investigating the theft of an
aluminum gate reported to
the department Saturday by
Mrs. Betty Stout, RD Albany.
According to the report, the
gate was stolen from a

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

.·.·.·.·.·.·.·,·.·.·.·.·,·.·.·.·.·,·.·,·.·,·.·,·.·.·.·.·,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,·.

Dollar ·declines to
record postwar low
TOKYO iVPI) - The
dollar dropped to a record
postwar low of 181 yen on tbe
Tokyo foreign exchange
market today , reflecting its
sharp decline against major
European currencies.
Trading was active with
turnover amounting .to $503

mlllion.
The dollar opened this week
at 182 yen compared with
183.75 at.Friday's close and
hit the new low shortly after
opening today. The previous
low of 181.80 was recorded
last August.
The greenback fell to the
new record lo\v of 181 shortly
before the market closed at 3
p.m. (2 a.m. EDT).
Market sources said the
latest drop in the value 6f the
dollar followed its sharp
dec line against major
European currencies on
overseas money markets
over the weekepd.

Theft of g,ate being investigated

ELBERFELDS in POMEROY

\rmenia to study for the

God," he said .

Mikoyan was one of Stalin 's early friends. On Stalin's
ascendency after Lenin 's death, Mikoyan entered the
(Contmued un page 101

VATICAN CITY (UP!) - Pope John Paul II urged world
·leaders today to seek not only the well-being of their own
citizens but to promote cooperation of all peoples in the
interests of human progress and a lasting peace. He said the
Roman Catholic church can help them achieve this goal.
The former Cardinal Karol Wojtyla of Poland issued the
appeal during a meeting with the 125 delegations from nations
and international organization that attended his inauguration
Snow fell today in parts of Upper .Michigan and in the
Mass in St. Peter's Square.
central and southern Rockies, and isolated thundershowers
were reported in Arizona and near th e souther tip of Florida .
The new pontiff, urgin~ !he delegations in French.
A cold front stretching from southwest Texas to lower
world leaders to open their
" But one certainty imposes
Michigan
produced drizzle, rain and thundershowers from the
borders wide to religion, also itself more and more and you
southern
Rockies,
across parts of west and north Texas and
held a series of se parate are the first ones to he
audiences with monarchs , convinced or it: that there into eastern KansaSl&gt;qd the middle Mississippi Valley.
presidents and premiers , cannot be .real human
including the leader of his. progress and durable peace
native Poland.
without a coura geous, loyal
MOSCOW (UP! ) - Appa rently making progress,
"Certainly men of stale and and unselfish sear ch for Secretary of State Cyrus Vance .today opened a second day of
their qualified aides have as cooperation and un ity among talks with top Soviet leaders in a major effort to reach general
their first priority their own all people," he said.
agreement on a pact to limit strategic arms.
nations and the well being of
Vance met with Foreign Minister Andrei Cromyko for the
their citizens, " the pope told
"In this regard the church second day in the Kremlin . The tw o men met for seven hours
encourages all initiatives that Sunday and Vance may meet later in the day with Soviet
can be taken, all plans that President Leonid Brczhnev, U.S. and Soviet sources said .
can be accomplished both
' .
bilateral and multilateral.
beginning this evening at B: 30
"The church, continuing its
p.m.
specific aim of sending man·
AKRON, Ohio (UP!)- Proclaiming its "500 " series steelAll teena gers under 18 must kind down the right path, belted radial tire is not defective, Firestone Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
be off the streets at the helieves it can contribute its . has nonetheless agreed to the biggest tire recall in history.curfew hour un less ac· share - thanks to spiritual potentially 7.5 million tires.
companied by their parents. love - UJ this building of
The agreement last week ended several months of inle':""'
Any person over 18 cau ght unity and to a humanization wrangling between Firestone and the U. S. TransportatiOn
in an act of vandalism will be more profound than ever in Departm ent 'Ove r Ute controversial til'es.
prosecuted to t he fullest the family of man and in his
extent of the law, the mayor history," the 58-year-old
warned.
pontiff said.
TOKYO (UP! ) - Jpan and China signed a peace and
On the night of the Meigs
football ga me, teenagers will
friendship treaty today and Chinese Vice Premier Teng HsiaoJohn Paul II spoke to the ping told Emperor Hirohito that Peking will "let bygones be
be gi ven an extra 45 minutes
delegations
jointly aft er bygones" and try to build peaceful relations .
to get home following the
privately
in formal
meeting
The accord signed by Teng and Japanese Prime Minister
game. The siren will sound
audience
with
delegations
led Takeo Dukuda brought cries of co ndemnation from diehard
each evening. The curfew will
by heads of state or their anti-Communists and cold, angry silence from Moscow .
be in eff ect until Nov. I.
wives.
Aller the joint meeting, the
pope held a second , informal,
meeting with Pres ident
COLUMBUS (UP!) - U. S. Ambassador to the United
Henryk Jablonski of Poland Nations Andrew Young - say ing the slate needs "someone to
and the Polish delegation , clea n out the corners and sweep under the rugs of Ohio" - has
Vatican officials said .
{Continu ed on page 10 l

Curfew ordered

High School Saturday
night.
The seasonable feature
will be open to the public
from 7 p.m. untll at least 10
p. m., tomorrow evening .
through Oct. 31.

stripes, If you're looking for
economy this Is it. Specially
priced at

Galllpot • .

;~

priesthood.
He graduated with honors in 1915 and immediately
entered the stormy world of Bolshevik politics, fighting in
th e revolution and in the civil war .
"The more I studied religion , the less I believed in

·Second day of talks opened

MAJORE'ITES - The 1978-79 Eastern High School Marching Band Majorettes are,
from left, Val Labonte, Paula Hysell, and Beth Riebel.

2 SKYLARKS
3 REGAL CPES.
2 leSABRE CPES.
2 LIMITED SEDS.

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

Mikoyan entered a seminar . .

Snow falls in upper Michigan

former Pomeroy Seujor

VEGA, Hatchback
vinyl bucket seats. Equipment

Rwnors of Mikoyan 's death began circulating in
Moscow over the weekend but Soviet sources were able to
report only that he had been sent to Kuntsevo Hospital, a
special facility where high party officials and their
families are treated .
Although there was no word on funeral plans it wa s
expected Mikoyan would be given a full stale ceremony
followed by entombment in the red brick walls of the
Kremlin, near the remains of di ctator Josef Stalin and
other fo rmer Soviet off icials and heroes.
Mikoyan was born Nov . 25 1B95, the son of an Armenian
carpenter. His fa mily was devoutly religious and young

The World Today

A total of 237 residents
visited lbe haunted bouse
of the Meigs Jaycees at the

1977 CHEVROLET
Chestnut brown exterior, gold

announced " wit h deep sorrow ."

New Pope appeals
to world leaders

·minor mishap

ELBERFELD$

Q

en tine
MONDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1978

MONTE CARLO
Stunning Midnight Blue Finish

MOSCOW tuPI l - Former Soviet President Anastas.
lvanovich Mikoyan , the shrewd Pumenian whose political
career survived 60 years of purges and bloody terrors of
the Soviet stale, is dead at 82.
The Tass news agency reported his death in a brief
dispatch Sunday. Tass said the politician died Saturday
after a "grave and long" illness. The death was

1

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

had in the past, a 40 percent
increase over the next four
years." "This increase will
solve our school problems,
but our opponent is playing
emotionally on the school
issue in his attempt to pull off
a large and needless tax
gra b," said the governor.

Mikoyan dead

Police probe

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Calvin
POMEROY - Meigs County sheriff's
Pick
ens, Racine; Betty
deputies Friday night investigated
Hamm
o ns,
Reedsvill e;
vandalism of windows at Meigs High
Woodrow
Zwi!ling,
Syracuse.
School and the alleged shooting of a cow
DISCHARGED
owned by Joe Sayre, Rt. I, Rutland.
Sayre told deputies the animal, a 1,000 Mearlene Arnett, Eugene
to 1,200 pound Hereford, had been dead at Underwood, Mary Osborne,
Brian Spencer.
least two days.
Friday at 12:04 p.m. deputies
investigated a two-&lt;:ar accident at the
SQUAD RUN
Meigs High School parking lot.
POMEROY
The
Elaine M. Barnhart, 17, Pomeroy, and
Pomeroy
Emergency
Squad
Betty Bishop, 40, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, were
was called to Route 143 at
pulling out of the driveway.
5:56
p.m. Friday for Mary
Mrs. Bishop did not see that Miss
Hysell
who was taken to
Barnhart's car was stopped and struck the
Holzer
Medical
Center.
rear of the Barnhart vehicle.
There was slight damage to both
vehicles.
GRANTED DISSOLUTION
GALLIPOLIS - Granted
MEET TUESDAY
dissolution : of marriage in
GALLIPOI.JS - There will be a GaUia County Common Pleas
special meeting of the Gallipolis City Court Thursday were Kathy
Commission at 8 p.m., Tuesday, Oct. 24, in Ann Dillard and William Lee
the
Municipal
Court
Room . Dillard.

Sunday Shoppers Welcome
40 MORE
TO CHOOSE FROM Come In &amp; Browse Around

Phone 446·2212

in education,

social work, administration
and counseling. A high school
coun selor and psycholog y
teacher, Mrs. Wolf ha s
worked with the Red Cross
and other social agencies.
The EASO, based in
Athens , se rves Athens,
Hocking , Meigs, Perry,
Washington , Morgan, Noble,
Monroe, and Vinton Counties.
The association offers in-

Act of vandalism .
probed by sheriff 1

Lodge damaged by
vandals at Vinton

first on your list. Finished In
vinyl roof and matching·· 60-40
Velour Seating . Equipment Inetudes air conditioning, cruise

Newma n

TO END MARRIAGE
as a guest of Dr. R. R.
GALLIPOLIS - Filing for
Pickens. Miss Rudd has been . di ssolution of marriage in
studying under Docto r Gallia County Common Pleas
Pickens 'for the past few ·Court Friday were Sherri
weeks with Dr. Pickens Johnson , Kanauga, and
ser ving as her clinical inDanny Johnson, Gallipoilis .
structor . Women of th e The
couple was married June
church served dinner .
14, 1975.

LeSABRE 4 dr.

BUICK
PONTIAC
1911 Ea1tern Ave.

election .
President John Rice
pres ided over the meeting
with Cash Bahr leading group
singing.
-

This 79 Buick trade Is sure t o be

Finished in canary yellow with
buckskin landau topand maf .

Kan sas

College, Wichita and an M.A.
in psychology from Wichita
Slate University. She has

'

bank ur do you have Inoney to

~state:

• alr eady wit I ha ve seen the
• propert y and , hav ing failed
to buy , will be harder to
• Interest a second time.

from

your savings going in the

·······Cf~~-·!

.• Rea lt or, good prospects

•

at Buckeye Hills Career
Center, Ria Grande, Monday,
t ra inin g p ortion of tHeir October 23, from 7to 9 p.m. in
education . Elberfeld is the room 213.
Technica l Administrative
Su ggestion s. on how to
develop better energy saving
habits at home and how to

Se ll ing your home? Then
your firs t thought wilL no

•
•

slate(/ Oct. 2."J

Sctence degree, they will then
be eli gible tu beco me Medical
Techno logists.
Coordinating the program
a( the Holzer Medical Center
for these nine Rio Grande
College and Com munity
College M.L.T. students is
Stephan Elberfeld, responsible for the Ho spital clinical

••
••

••
••
•

ATHENS - Anne Wolf has
been appointed as th e new
director of the Epilepsy
Association of Southeastern
Ohio iEASOi .
Mrs.. Wolf has a B.S. degree

Technicia ns.

years to attain a Bachelor of

now into

their second year of siudy at

I

students will then be eligi ble Ass i stant uf I hL' M edic ttl
to ta~e the National Registry L.aboratHry at the Holzer
Examination. Followin g the Medical C'rnter .
passage of these tests, th ey
wtll beco me re gist ered
Medica l Laborat o ry Energy seminar

Rhodes claims Celeste election
would mean higher taxes in Ohio

pasture along the road near
the Pearl Chapel Church in
Columbia Township. The gate
was chained and padlocked
and apparently a hacksaw
was ·used to cut the chain.

When asked If the dollar
would continue declining
against other currencies., including the Japanese yen, a
Bank of Tokyo official said,
uyes , I think so."

The Deutchemark finished
the day at 1.8005-15 to the
dollar, com pared with 1.83~
35 Friday, and the British
pound was at 2.0030-45
compared with 1.9930-45
Friday.

.

Hope treated by specialist
COLUMBUS (UP!)
juvenile delinquents named
Comedian Bob Hope was in Hope's honor .
Battalion Chief Robert
treated for "a mild form of
cardiac disturbance" early Smith, of the Columbus Fire
Sunday shortly after taping D e p a r t m e n t ,
who
segments of an upcoming accompanied medics to the
television special.
suite, said one o!Hoipe's aides
Dr. Ralph D. Lach, chief of reported the comedian "got
cardiology at Mount Carmel dizzy while he was doing part
Medical Center, was called to of his routine at the Ohio
Hope's suite at a downtown Theatre."
hotel about 1:30 a.m. Sunday.
Hope,
along
with
. "He suffered a mild form of perfocmers Ginger Rogers,
cardiac
r h y t h m Vic Damone and Carmen
disturbance ," said Lach. Cavallaro, was in Colwnbus
"We changed the heart to tape a special for NBC-TV ,
rhythm and converted it back which is to be aired Dec. 3.
w normal by massaging a The special was. taped at
· blood vessel high in the the Ohio Theatre, which was
neck."
declared a national historic
A spokesman for the hotel landmark shortly before the
said the 75-year-old comedian taping
in ce remonies
left the hotel later Sunday attended
by
several
morning for Cincinnati , dignitaries including former
where was expected to take.· President and Mrs. Gerald R.
part in· a benefit today for Ford.
Hope !louse, . a home for

Biggest tire recall is begun

Friendship treaty signed

Andrew Yowtg supports Celeste

$50,000

suit filed

A suit in the amount of
$50,000 has been filed in
Meigs Co unty common pleas
court by Robert L. Snowden,
Two car s were damaged in
Rt. 1, Rutland, aga inst John
an
al'cident on Nye Ave ., at
E. Hauck, Gallipolis.
The suit is' for injuries as a 2:32 a.m. Sunday. Pomeroy
result of an accident that police said a northbound car
occurred on SR 7 at the in- driven by Pamela Graner,
tersection , near Bradbury, on Pomeroy, went left of center
Oct. 22, 1976.
In another action, Brenessa
Lee Wright, Middleport, and
Charles Ri chard Wright,
Pomeroy, field for dissolution.
of marriage.

Two vehicles damaged

Weather
Considera ble

and

wat1 ll

cl oudiness

today

with a

chance of showers by af-

striking a southbound car ter noon and high between 70
driven by Donna Mesner, and 75. Cooler tonight with
Route 1, Cheshire.
showe rs end ing a nd lows in
Graner was cited on a left the mit! to upper 30s.
of center charge. There wer e Beco ming partly cloudy and
no injuries police sa id.
cool Tuesday , with highs in
the mid to upper 50s.

COLUMBUS (UPII Secretary of Stale Ted W.
Brown predicted Monday
that the Nov. 7 general
election would set a record
gubernatorial year absentee ballot vote of nearly
150,000.
"I would estimate that
this year's gubernatorial
election will see at least
20,000 more absentee
ballots cast than In any
other previous gubernatorial election," said
Brown.

COFCTOMEET
The Middleport Chamber of
Commerce will meet at 6:30
p.m. Tuesday at the Meigs
Inn.
SQUADMEN SUMMONED
The Middleport emergency
unit of the fire department
was called to Route I Middleport at 11 :57 a.m. Sunday
for Hank Johnson, a medical
patient, who was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

DISPLAy TOP TROPHIES - The Wahama White Falcon Band, under the direction of
Charles Yeago, came away from the H~nti ngton Band Festival Saturday with. ~he top
trophies in their division. Four auxiliary band members are shown here exhibltl~g ~e
trophies, as well as the band mascot, during the halftime performance of Saturday rught s
game against the Par)lersburg Catholic Crusade~~ · Pictured, from left are Melame
Mossman, holding the trophy won for first place .m the ~ifle corps competition; LJsa
Pickens, the trophy for first place in class; Becky F1elds, wtth the band mascot and Ellen
McDermitt, the trophy for the band having tbe top fla g corps m class.

�3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 23, 1978
2- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday ,Oct. 23, 1978

~·

IN WASHINGTON

Upsets, injuries mar grid weekend

..

COMMENTARY

By IRA KAU.FMAN

Donald F.Graff

Iowa sings Ted's Song

By Don Graff

200 school issues on
November 7th ballot
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is essay on what the law means
the fHth in a series of 11 In them .
Cleveland t eac hers and
dispatches prepared by
nonacademic
employees also
United Press Intemallonal on
off
the
job in Septemwalked
the contests and Issues facing
ber
,
asking
for
a pay raise,
the voters at the Nov. 7
election . Today's article since they had not had a raise
outlines the school districts In in two years. Cleveland has a
Ohio that have operating, 3.7-mill operating levy on the
capital improvement or bond ballot.
Howev e r, Cleveland
issue levies on tbe ballot.)
schools, the state' s largest
district, borrowed from the
By SANDRA L. LATIMER
state's
emergency loan fund
United Press International
for
a
$20.7
million loan, but
The Buckeye Central
with
the state that
argued
School District in Crawford
restrictions
on
the loan were
County closed its doors In
some 950 students after too strict.
The State Controlling
classes Oct. 13 because the
Board relaxed restrictions on
district ran out of money.
It opted for closing rather the use of the loan Oct. 16 so
than dipping into the state the school employees could
emergency loan fund for get an 8 percent pay raise the
board promised them.
schools .
The Cleveland strike ended
Voters in that district will
Oct.
12, with the 101,000
be asked to decide the fate of
students
reporting to classes
an 11.8-mill,
two-year
Oct.
17.
emergency operating levy
Cleveland schools were orand a .9-mill capital
improvement 'levy on the dered to begin desegregation
Nov . 7 ballot. Schools will this fall, but the order was
reopen after the election if pushed back by U.S. Distrtct
the levy, the largest in the Court Judge Frank Battisti
state, is approved. If the levy after the schools successfully
does not pass, classes will not
resume until state funds
become available Jan. I.
Voters in that district have
turned down two levies in the
past year - an 11-millthreeyear emergency levy in June
and a 5.7-mill continuing levy
last November.
Closing those schools
presented a serious challenge
In Gov . James A. Rhodes'
promise that no Ohio school
district would close because
of a lack of funds.
DAYTON, Ohio ( UPI ) Several other districts face
Former
President Gerald
financial problems and could
Ford
was
ushered from the
dip into the state emergency
Center
Dayton
Convention
loan fund to keep them
Saturday
by
the
familiar
operating. Some of those
districts have levies on the 9lrains of Ohio State's
Nov. 7 ballot and approval " Buckeye Battle Cry."
But, during the Republican
will keep districts from
fund
raiser which prompted
closing.
his
visit,
the former Michigan
At least 200 school issues
football
player
revved up the
are on the ballot, with 130 of
party
faithful
with
a battle
them for operating expenses.
cry
of
his
own
inflation.
Another 'tl are for capital
"It saddens me that the
improvements and 43 are
Carter
Administration has
bond issues for construction
pursued
a
d isastrous
projects.
economic
policy
in
the last 21
Following closely on the
months,"
Ford
told
about 400
heels of the Buckeye Central
people
at
the
$100-ai!late
levy is the 8.11-mill operating
levy f&lt;r the Bucyrus City luncheon for Congressional
School District , also in candtdate Dudley P . Kircher.
Crawf&lt;rd County. It is the "They literally have blown It
second largest issue on the and it hurts those who .ean
least afford it."
"·:
ballot.
1
'The
Carter
School officials say if that
levy is defeated, some of the Administration , by their
district's schools may have In irresponsible fiSCal policies,
has reignited t he flames of
close. .
Daytnn 's 8.9-mill operating inflation and there is little
levy is the third largest . sign there will be significant
Dayton school employees improvement."
Ford said he had re!ld
went on strike when teachers
about
the wage and price
walked out Sept. 6, the day
guidelines
Cart er
is
before classes were to begin,
on
s
iderin
g
:
a
skin
g
c
asking f&lt;r more pay. Nooacademic
employees
followed the action of the
THE DAILV SF..NTINEL
teachers.
DE'JOTEDTOTH F.
Bef&lt;re that strike was settINTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AR EA
led, several teachers were
ROBERT HOEfliCH
arrested for disobeying a
City Edltur
Montgomery County
Pu 1JI1 ~ lhnl )l excepl &amp; turd1:1y
by TI1e OhlU Va ii ~Y Pulllisln ng
Ccimmon Pleas Court Judge 's
Cot n pt~ny ·Multun~ l a , lnt·.,
111
bact-tow&lt;rk ocder . After the
Court St ., Pm n~1 uy , Oh1o •5769
Busi ne~s Offlt ~ Phone 9!1'1· 21:;6.
teachers went back to the
F.t.htol litl Phune 992-2157
classrooms , several of them
St•cond class posi~Ht! !Will at
P111m.!l u1 , Ohw .
were sentenced to weekends
Natwlta\ itd v ~ rli.!i lll l( t CJlft':Jt'll·
in jail, writin~ a 200-word
Utl!Vl' l.omtlon Assot:1 1:1 l~:s , 3101

pleaded thetr financial hardship. The school district contended it would not have
enough money tn purchase
the buses necessary to
transport pup1ls In carry out
that desegregation order .
The Board of Education in
Octnber voted to ask for a
further delay of that order.
At least II districts face
deficits which will force them
to either close or dip intn that
emergency loan fund. Nine of
those districts have issues on
the ballot.
Besides Buckeye Central,
districts whtch face deficits
are Tri-Valley in Muskingum
County ; North Fork in
Licking County; Caldwell in
Nobfe County ; Springfield in
Lucas County ; Fairfield in
Butler County ; Paint Valley
in Ross County; Reading in
Hamilton County ; Southern
in Columbiana County ;
Arcadia in Hancock County ;
and Little Miami in Warren
County. Only Paint Valley
and Little l'lliami do not have
issues on this ballot.
Columbus schools have
been told their bank account

Inflation ·

HEALTH
Lawrence E. lamb, M.D.
DEA R DR LAMB - Six
months ago I had my prostate
gland removed. Now, my problem is lha l whenever I have
!:i~ K, and reach a climax , the
~jac ulat 10n doesn 't find a way
out. Yet 11 feels ltke I have
completed the act. What happens when the flutd doesn'I
leave the body? I am 73 years
old and would a ppreciate

your answe r.
DEAR READER - I am
always sur prised by the large
number of letters I gel from
men asking thi s question. Of
course, prostate gland
surgery is extremely com·
mun and that's no surpnse .

:
.
:
•

:
:

But what diles surpnse me IS
that a man Will have surgery
and not know what to expect
afterward
The prostate gland rests
Just at the outlet of the bladder . When it enlarges and
shuts off the outlet of the
bla dder, 11 causes trouble,
and that's the usual reason a
person has to have surgery.
There are a series of very
complicated little valves at
the outlet of the bladder that
shut the bladder off from the
rest of the organs. When a
man ejaculates, this valve is
closed and , therefore, he has
forward or normal ejacula lton.
·
When this valve is damagc'!l or destroyed in any way so
that the valve isn 't shut off,
the ejaculation lllllY go
back ward mto the bladder .
We ca ll this retrograde
ejaculation .
P rostatic surgery almost
always dama ges this valve
mechamsm at the outlet of
the bladder. There just isn't
any way that a s urgeon can
remove the diseased prostate
without damaging the valve
at t he same time in most
cases. For thls reason ,
retrograde ejaculation is the
expected normal event after
prostate surgery.
Retrog rade ej aculation
does not interfere with normal sexual activity, or normal sensations , but it can
sure worry a man if he

doesn't know what's really
ha ppening In the presence of
retrograde eJaculation, the
semen that accumulates in
the bladder is s1 mply
eliminated the next time the
bladder is emptied .
To give you more mfonnation about the prostate, I am
sending you The Health Letter nwnber H , Pro;1ate
Gland. Other readers who
want lh1s ISSue can send 50
cents wtlh a long stamped,
self-addressed envelope for
it Address your request to
me in eare of this newspaper ,
P .O. Box 1551 , Radio City Station, New York , NY 10019.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I
would appreciate any in·fonnalion you can give me on
the pituitary gland and what
the loss of this gland can do to
the body. I have a very dear
friend who had a tumor of the
p1tu1tary gland about seven
years ago. He went to a wellknown clinic and had the
tumor shrunk . In so doing,
the gland was destroyed and
he was placed on medication .
I would like to know what effect lhe lack of the medicines
would have on the body as a
whole and anything else you
can tell me about this parltcular problem.
DEAR READE R - The
pituitary gland is very ;mall
and located just underneath
the brain and almo.st directly
behind the eyes. It really has
two parts. The back part
releases hormones that
stimulate the uterus to L'Ontract and can influence blood
pressure.
The front part of the gland
is the master hormone gland .
It releases hormones that
st1mulate the thyroid gland .
The adrenal gland , the
ovaries in a woman and the
testicles in a male. Without
these governing hormones,
the thyroid gland doesn't produce enough honnone, the
adrenal , gland doe..,'l produce the honnones it should
and the sex glands will stop
producing enough sex hormones. Tlu• produces a w1de

The eighth week of the
expanded 1978 NFL season its new mid-point - proved a
mirror image of what has
gone before: stunning upsets,
stirring battles be tween
playoff contenders ... apd
more injured quarterbacks
than you can: shake a crutch
at.
The P ittsburgh Steelers,
who go after their eighth
straight vic tor y Monday
night when t hey host
Houston , became the NFL's
only unbeaten team Sunday
when the New Orleans Saints
s urp ri s e d
p re vi ou s l y
unbeaten Los Angeles 10-3.
In the day's other major
upsets, the Seattle Seahawks
took advantage of Oakland's
mam wea kness Ke n

A lifetime bargain

By Martha Angle and Robert Walters
DES MOINES ( NE A) - Just as Sen. Ed ward M. Kennedy
reached the microphone at a crowded fund-raiser here for
Sen. Dick Clark, a n accordion player in the next room
abr uptly terminated his rolltckmg rendition of " When Irish
Eyes Ar e Sm1ling."
" I recognize that song!" Ke nnedy shouted. " But Dick,"
he moaned 10 mock d1smay , " it seems to have stopped in
the middle! "
He needn 't have worried. In Iowa these days, nothing
stops the Kennedy music for long - not even Jimmy
Carter's triumph a t Camp Da vid a nd subsequent surge in
the polls .
Iowa Democrats, with their first-in-the-nation precinct
caucuses, gave Jimmy Carter his initial boost towards the
White House way back 10 J a nuary 1976. But there IS no
guara ntee they will repeat the favor in January 1980- not
while those Irish eyes of Ted Kennedy are snultng so
allur ingly.
Ca rte r has clearly recaptured much of the ground he lost
during the fi rst 18 m onths of his presidency , quieting perha ps for good - the doubts about his competency which
had gna wed at eve n his staunchest supporters here .
But the bloom 1s off the rose nonetheless. The emotional
allegia nce many Iowa Democrats felt to Candidate Carter
has been largely d issipated by President Carter. With one
qu ick tr ip to the state, a trip blUed solely as a support
miss ion for Dick Cla rk , Ted K ennedy electrified every
crowd he addressed and touched off talk of a draft
movem e nt for 1980.
Chuck Gifford, director of the United Auto Workers here
and a key early Carter supporter the last time out, is
·effectively off the reservation now. Kennedy is his
:candtdate 1f Kennedy will run - and will quite probably be
his camlidale even tf he continues to ins tst he ts not gotng to
:run .
- Tom Whitney , who was chairman of the Democratic
; Party when Carter won the 1976 precinct caucuses , is
·quietly talkmg with key political activists in other states:New Ha mpshire included - about organizing a full-fledged
·" dra ft Kennedy" movement early next year, an effort that
:would be concentr ated on the Iowa precinct caucuses and a
-wr1te-in vote in the New Hampshire primary.
: Ed Campbell, Whitney's successor as party chairman, is
-mor e discreet - but clearly cool to Jimmy Carter.
· All of them, and others as well, will be meeting with like: mtnded Democrats from every part of the country when
: the national party holds its mid-term conference in
Memphis in early December.
J ohn White, Carter's hand-picked national party director, has rigged the conference rules so tightly that there
· wiU be no meaningful opportunity for dissent during the
formal program proceedings in Memphis. Kennedy will
participate in a panel discussion of national heaUh
insurance, but he will not go near the full conventton
'plenary sess10n .
The real politicking at Memphis will be taking ,place in
· corridors and hotel rooms, and Iowa Democrats are likely
to be in the thick of the plotting.
The precinct caucuses of 1976 were pure opportunity for
Candidate Carter, an obscure former governor from
Georgia who simply started sooner and worked harder
than anyone else in the field. For President Carter, who
: can no' longer devote even days - let alone months - to
. cultivating caucus support, they are pure peril.
: In Iowa, Carter does not have two mor~ years to solidify
. his populartty and instill enthusiasm in his supporters. He
. has a year at most, and quite possibly less. Kennedy can
. claim he IS not a candidate until he is blue in the face , but
: that alone will not deter some very savvy Iowa Democrats
. from championing his cause at the precinct caucuses
· eitlier directly or indirectly through the election of
: " uncommitted" delegates.
· Carter came in first in the 1976 Iowa precinct caucuses
· with a mere 28 percent of the votes. That was a triumph for
· an unknown candidate. It would be a disaster . for an
: incwnbent president.
'

UPJ Sports Writer

For some 40 million Americans, a cure can be literally
worse than the disease.
It could be fatal for the one In five among us who have
hidden or special medical problems and may respond
negatively to the accepted treatments for a ny of a host of
conunon ailments .
These a re the people who are the present or potential
beneficiaries of a 25-yea r-&lt;Jid success story called Medic
Alert .
You may have heard of it. This is the program under
which diabetics, epileptics, hemophiliacs, persons suffering from drug a llergies a nd other medical problems carry
identification alerting anyone treating them of their
special conditions.
It is worth mentioning today as an example of a great
public service that grew frQm a good idea.
Med ic Alert began with a slender silver bracelet
engraved : " Allergic to Horse Serum." It was devised by a
California physician , Dr. Marion C. Collins, for his teenage
daughter for whom antitentanus treatment had almost
meant death. The vehicle for the antitoxin at the time,1953,
was horse serum, to which the girl was violently allergic.
That first bracelet led to the establishment of the Medic
Alert Foundation lnternattonal in 1956 to aid similarly
afflicted individuals. In the subsequent two decades,
growth of the program has been explosive. It now numbers
more than a million members internationally in 14
affiliated foundations . In the United States alone, more
than 7,000 new members join each month.
With membership, they receive a bracelet or necklace
hearing the red Medic Alert symbol and engraved on the
reverse side with an identification number, special
medical information and the Medic Alert bot-line telephone number. Additionally, members carry wallet cards
updated annually to reflect any changes in their conditions.
.
The card, like the emblem, carries the emergency
number of Medic Alert's computerized central file at
Turlock, Calif., where all the information necessary to
proper treatment of a member is stored. It is available
immediately to anyone treating a member in an accident
or other crisis via a collect telephone call to a 24-hour
emergency information service.
A number of medical problems have been added to those
Dr. Collins originally had in mind, including cardiovascular disease, implanted pacemakers, glaucoma asthma
and even .contact lenses , which sortie individuals cannot
wear for extended periods and should have removed in the
event of emergency treatment.
The service assists thousands each year, often in lifeand-death situations. According to staff records, more
than 2,000 individuals gave Medic Alert credit for saving
their Jives during a recent 12-mQDth period.
Medic Alert functions today as a nonprofit, charitable
organization maintained solely by continuing enrollment
of new members plus grants and contributions from
business, other foundations and individuals.
For members, the lifetime fee is $10, with an ad,ditlonal
charge of $3 whe n there is a- need to update a personal file.
In cases of financial need, there is no charge at all.
Not only a great public service, Medic Alert has to be one
of today's great bargain!'.

United P ress International
Chuck Stoba rt was rtgtit or
the money.
The Toledo coach naa
figured that if his Rockets
didn 't do well la te in
Saturday's game at Ohio
Univer sity, they wo uldn ' t

will be in the red Nov . 22 and
could close until the first of
the year.
The Colwnbus School District, the second largest in the
state, saw an emergency levy
defeated earlier this year.
The School Board decided not
In resubmit the issue in
November since the schools
are in the middle of a school
desegregation issue.
The Columbus Board of
Education, faced with closing
and having t he state
Education Department
exercise its takeover pow.ers
and operate the :;chools in
receivership, or oorrowing
money, voted Oct. 17 to ask
for an $8.9 million loan In
keep schools open.
The school district was ,
ordered by the U.S. District
Court in Columbus to
desegregate in the fall, but
the board of education woo
ByKENNETH.O.CLARK
permission from a U.S.
United Press International
Supreme Court Justice to
MEG MIMES MAE : The act ranged from Sophie Turker's
delay implementing the
order, pleading financial old " Red Hot Mama" routine, through the torrid vamp gig
immortalized by Mae West and wound up in the horned helmet
problems.
of a Valkyrie. And who was handling all those roles earlier this
Next: Treasurer
week? None other than ·Britain's Prbicess Margaret. The
London Daily Mall Monday ran a picture of the princess, all
decked out in a platinum pageboy wig, shinune~ing black
dress and feather. boa for the Mae West routine, done for 150
people in a five-act " country house play" at the Scottish estate
of her friend Colin TanDBDI. Costars in the production Blanca Jagger and 7-year-old daughter Jade, and the princess'
pop singer boyfriend, Roddy Uewellyn.
BACK TO TilE FIRE-HOUSE : 01' Blue Eyes came home
Sunday - or at least he came within a Hudson River span of
borne. Frank Sinatra didn't make it out to Hoboken, N.J. ,
where he grew up, so some of the home folk came In
Manhattan where he was giving a standing· room-only concert
at New York's Radio Citv Music Hall. Six Hoboken ftremen Edward McDonald, Peter CAlandra, Jobn Slleehan, Michael
Fitzgibbuns, James HaHoran and Joseph Segura- visited him
He said, " wage and price backstage after the show, to hand him a plaque in memory of
or
more his father, Martin A. Sinatra, with whom they rode to the
guidelines ,
specifically wage and price alarm and battled blazes before the first teenybopper ever
controls, historically have swooned away over his son .
,
been good politics but lousy
THE GREATE'IT STAR: They've know him in the past as
economies. A president gets the heavyweight champ. Sunday they met him as Muhammad
euphoric response when he All - aspiring matinee idoL Hundreds jammed downtown
announces he is goin'g In streets Sunday in Jackson , Miss., to celebrate " Muhanunad
restrain prices and wages. Ali Day" and " The Greatest" didn't dissppoint anybody, Ali
"But the facts are that led a parade , waving and mugging for his fans . He's in
shortly thereafter, it becomes Mississippi In star in the NBCTV movie " Freedom Road," in
an
administrative which he plays a freed slave who returns to the old plantation
boondoggle. I think it's a after the Civil War and eventually winds up in the U.S. Senate.
mistake for President Carter His costar, on location in Natchez - Krill Kristofferson.
In approach our inflation with
REDDY MONEY: Helen Reddy and manager-husband Jeff
a band..aid when he ought In · Wald threw a Sunday afternoon reception at their Brentwood,
Calif., mansion for Gov. Jerry Brown. Among the 400 guests
were Jane Fonda and husband Tom Hayden, and the
governor 's parents, former Gov. and Mrs. Edmund G. Brown
Sr. The governor, running for a second term, arrived in his
blue Plymouth and parked it beside Miss Reddy's beige Rolls
Royce convertible with burgundy upholstery and portable telephone. Quipped she, "He accepts our lifM~tyle and we accept
his." Asked why the bash for Brown's campaign, she said,
"When you pay over a half million•dollars a year in taxes you
have a responsibility to see that it's well spent."
GUMPSES : MHllcent Martin, Don Scardino and Pamela
Blair opened Sunday night in "King of Hearts" at New York's
Minskoff Theater and were surprised with a backstage visit
from yesteryear's screen star Sylvia Sidney ... Alerda Smltb,
Ethel Merman and Sllelley Wloters got together Sunday with
Yul Brynner and Mayor Ed Koch to tape the first in a series of
New York episodes of the " Merv Griffin Show" ... Greta Waltz,
a 25-year-&lt;Jld runner from Oslo, Norway, won the women's
division of the 26-mile, 385-yard New York marathon Sunday,
setting a new world's tecord even thoUgh she'd never before
run more than 16 mlles and says she didn't tra!Ji for the race.

win.
"I thought our players hung
on well ," said a gleeful
Stobart after Toledo shut out
the Bobcats 14-&lt;1 in the final
quarter to gain their first
victnry of the season, 28-14.
"OU defensed us very well
and kept the pressure on all
the way," said Stobart. " I'm
very proud of my team. "
The Rockets boss was particularly pleased wtlh t he
performan ce of Toledo
quarterback Maurice Hall,
threw
for
t wo
who
touchdown s and r an for
another in pacing the MidAm e ric a n Con f e r e n ce
triwnph .
" Hall played an excellent
game," said Stoliart. " It was
his best game. "
Stobart, whose charges ~n­
Lt!reo ~;ne contest w1til. s1x
losses (three in the league) ,
said it was a "very, very
emotional game" .for him.
Stobart played his college
ball at Ohio U. under the late
Bill Hess.
" I was super-ready and
fired up for it," he said.
ou pilot Bob Kappes said
his team 's loss was s1mply a
matter of "too many big
plays" by Toledo.
"We jumped out at first :

Peopletalk

or

variety
symptoms but
weight loss and weakness are
two of the prominent symptoms that can develop.
Fortunately. the failure of
honnone produdion can be
pr·etty well n •placed !&lt;~lay .

F:uchd /1\'l' , ( It vel ami, Ohlo44ll5.
Sub.'!cripllun rates Ddivett'tl by
earn er wlu~ l'c ava tla lllt• 75 ccnlll per
week Ry Mohw Route wh~ n· t•arr1er
ser vu~c uot ~vcn l.. bl~ . One munUr,
SJ . ~ H} nwri in Oh ro uml W Vu ,
Onl' Yc:4r, $2'l 00 : S111: month :-~,
$11 .aO. 1'hrct· muuth:;. $7 Ofl ;
r :bn·v. ht·rt· $2/i.UO yct~r . St11 munlhll
:1 1:1 511
lhrl'l' rnurrth !(, Si.:iO
Suf~oo;('tiJIIltil l 111 1 ~ t' 1n t lt 11lt•s Su nda~

J UllCl&gt; ..."icllllllt'i .

NFL Stnading s

By Unrted Press lnter natronal
A meri can Conference

Eas t
New En gland
Miami
N Y Jets
Buffa lo
Baltr m ore

~ 1~78by NEA, tnc ~1..4''~
/""A,......._. ~Ah.
"Listen , son - nobody ever said spending
money like it 's going out of style was going
to be EASY! "

the crowd. "And the only
Ume you let someone have an
extra strike was, you know,
when they didn't know how In

play."
The Dayton stop was the
first on a three-elty swing
Saturday, as the former
president sought to whip up
support for Republican
candidates In the November
election. Foc-d then Dew to
Northern
Kentucky
University on behalf ol Congreulonal candidate Larry
Hopldnl, and jetted to Cdumbus for taping of a Bob Hope
show at the Ohio Theatre.

W L T

6
5

2
3
3
5
5

5

Pet.

0
0
0
0
0

750
.625
.625
.375
375

3
3
Central
W L. T. Pet.
Pittsbu r gh
7 0 0 1. 000
Houston
57 1
4 3 0
Clev eland
4 40
500
C1nci nnat r
0 8 0 .000
West
W L T Pet .
5 3 0
625

Oak lan d

Denver
Seatt le

5
4
2
2

San Diego
Kansas Crty

3
4
6
6

0
0
0
0

.625
.500
250
250

National Conf e.-ence
Ea st

W

Dallas
Washin gton
NY Grants
Ph ilad elph ia
St. LOUIS

Green Ba y
M rnn esota
Tampa Ba y
Chicago
Detro it

Berry's World

go to the cause.
"And the cause is an
irresponsible fiscal policy,"
Ford suggested Carter
would
do
better
by
restraining federal spending,
lifUng "the regulatory load"
on the economy, and taking
"other afflnnaUve actions."
Displayin8 a Cl''"fY of the
Newark (N.J.) S&amp;ar-Ledger,
Ford read aloud a headline
that said Carter was about In
unveil hill " fourth effort at
voluntary inflation lighting."
"When I played sandlot
baseball, three lllrlkes and
you were out," Ford
interjected, to the delight of

Oakland's perennial All-Pro
qua r ter back a staggering
total of 19 interce pltons
halfway thro ugh the season.
Sherman Smith's two short
TO runs and David Sims'
eighth touchdown of the year
evened the Seahiwks' record
at ~ .

Bill Troup tossed a 19-yard
TD pass to Glenn Doughty in
the second quarter and Mike
Barnes blocked J im Turner 's
potential game-winning 27yard field goal attempt in the
fi nal eight secor1s to
highlight Baltimore 's upset
over Denver. The Colts lost
Troup - who was fillin g in for ·
injured regular qua rter back
Bert Jones - in the final
per iod with a damaged left
shoulder.
Two second-year running
backs dominated key Eastern

Division contests in both
conferences .
Horace Ivory 's seco nd
tnuchdown of the game, a 23yard scamper with 3:10 In
play , led New England to a
33-24 trj wnph over Miami and
into sole possession of first
place in th e AFC East.
The ot her sophomore
runner made news with his
mouth rather tha n his feet .
Tony Dorsett, last year's
NFC Rookie of the Year,
sounded off b1tterly after
being benched by Coach Tom
Landr y in Dallas' 14-7 victory
over Philadelphia that lifted
th e Cowboys into a f1rst;Jlace
lie with Washmgton in the
NFC East .
Miami's Bob Griese, in his
fi r st start aft er be in g
stdelined witt~h~~ap~~~;~~~"rknee injury, C·
35 for 227

to uchdow ns, but couldn 't
overcome
a
punishin g
Patriots' ground game that
led' them to their f1ft h straight
trmmph.
Roger Staubach hit Drew
Pearson on a n 11-yard TO
pass and Robert Newhouse
scored on a !-yard run to
account for the Dallas
off ense, and t he Co wboy
defense limited the Eagles'
Wilbert Montgomery ~ the
NFL's lead ing rusher - to 57
yards in 18 ca r ries
Vikings 21, Packers 7
Fra n Tarkenton threw
three touchdowns, lwo to
Ahmad Rashad, in leading
Mtnnesota to a cr ucia l win
over Green Bay , 6-2.
J ets 23, Cardinals 10
Scott 01erking ran for two
tnuchdowns and Pat Leahy
added t hree field goals w
pace the New York Jets to

their fifth win in eighth
games and hand hapless St.
Louis its eighth str aight loss.
Chiefs 17, Browns 3
Reserve M nold Morgado
rushed for 74 yards a nd two
touchdowns to lift Kansas
Ctty to a surpri sing wm over
Cleveland. Morgado scored
on runs of 8 and 2 yards to
hall the Chiefs' six-game
losing streak The Browns fell
to 4-4.
Giants J. Redsklns 6
J oe P ism cik threw a 43yard TO pass to Jimmy
Robtnson and set up his own
:1-yard scoring run with a 46yard fleafhcker pass to spark
the New York Giants to. an
upse t over Wash mgton. New
Y ork 1S record ts 5-.3_
Lions 31, Chargers 14
Gary DanieL&lt;;On completed
17-of-23 passes for !55 yards
and three TDs in the opening

half against Detroit as the
· dormant Lion offense came
alive for 31 points and 326
yards.
Buccaneers 33, Bears 19
Rookie Doug Williams
' threw for tw o scores and
a dded his
first NFL
touchdown on a !-yard run in
leading Tampa Bay past
slwnping Chicago, which ts
now at 3-.1.
Bills 5, Bengals 0
Tom Dempsey kicked a W.
yard field goal and Buffalo
added a fourth-quarter safety
to provide all the scoring as
':.~ Bills bla nked winless
Cincmna ti . Buffalo 's is 3-5.
Falcons 20, 49ers 17
Newly signed Tim Mazzetti
kicked a 29-yard field goal
with one second left to climax
a 13-point fourth-period rally
th at carried Atlanta past San

Francisco

Stobart right
on the money

GOP revved up
by Ford cry
businesses In limit price increases In 5.75 percent and
calling for a 7 percent
voluntary ceiling on wage
hikes by labor.
"But he is pointing the
finger at the wrong villain,"
Ford contended. " The villain
is the Carter Administration
and its fiscal irresponsiblity
and it 's about time the
American people take action
tn correct that. This is an
opporturuty to tell the people
in Washington, they've made
a mistake. They've bloWn it. "

Stabler's myslertously inept
left arm - to pin a 27-7 loss on
the Raiders, and the
Baltimore Colts held Denver
without a touchdown en route
to a 7.0 victory over the
Broncos. The twin losses keep
Oakland and Denver atop the
AFC Western Division with :;.
3 records.
The Ra ms were penalized
13 times for 138 yards and
they joined the standingroom-only crowd of NFL
teams wh1ch have blasted
officials this season.
The Samls won 'on a 19-yard
TO pass f rom Archie
Manning to Tony Galbreath
with 2:22 remaining . The
Ra ms
committed
SIX
turnovers - four in the final
quarter.
Seallle pic,ked off four
Stabler passes, givmg

L. T . Pet .

6 2 0
6 2 0
5 3 0
4 40
0 8 0,

.750
.750

.625
500
000

Cent ral
W L. T Pet .
6 2 0
750

Los Ang eles
Atla nta
New Orleans

4
4
3
2
west
W.
7
4

4 0
4 0
5 0
60

l.

.500
.500
.375
250

T

Pet •
1 0 .875
4 0

500

4 4 o .500
san·Francfsc
1 1 o . 125
Sunday ' s Re sults
Tamp e Bey 33, Ch ict'lgO 19
Bu f falo 5, Crncln nat r o
New Yor k Jets 23, St . Louis

but they came back, and then
we went ahead, but that
interception broke our back,"
noted Kappes, referring In·
John Penza's key pick-off
with 8: 50 left in the game.
The Toledo middle guard
raced 55 yards tn the end zone
to wra!) up the victnry
" That did it," sighed the
Bobcats skipper.
OU fullback Kevin Babcock
put the Cats on th e
scoreboard first with a 19yard TD ja unt, but th e
Rockets tied the score in the
second frame on' a 33-yard
Hall-Butch Hunyadi pass.
Ohio took a 14-7 lead in the
third
sta nza
when
quarterback M1ke Scimeca
hit light end Mark Geisler
w1th an e1ght-yard scormg
toss, but aga in Toledo knotted
the score , this time on a 25yard Hall-Brett Milkie pa ss .
Hall , a freshma n from
Warren , Ohio , scor ed from a
yard out in the final quarter
before Penza clinched the win
over the Bobcats, now J.,J
overall and 1-3 in the MAC.
In other games tnvolvmg
MAC teams Saturday, M1ami
downed Bowling Green 18-7
and Kent ~ta te t opped
Marshall 20-17. ·
In a n Ohio Conferen ce
battle
of
unbeatens ,
Wittenberg whipped Wooster
28-14 for ttS sixth victory
overall and third tn the
league. Wooster is now :&gt;-1 for
all games and 2-1 in the loop.
Also in the OC Blue
Divi sion , Capital stopped
Otterbein
10-3
and
Muskingum beat Marietta 127.
•
In OC Red D1v1s10n bouts,
Baldwin-Wallace thrashed
Ohio Wesleyan 48-14, Demson
toppled Ohio Northern 14-10
and Mount Union defeated
Heidelberg 20-17.
Findlay
r e m ai n e d
unbeaten Saturday with a 19~
Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
shutout
of
Anders on.
Defiance posted a 15-6 win
over Bluffton and Hanover
blanked Wilmingtnn 21~ in
other H-BC contests.
In
t he
President's
Cooference, Bethany ripped
Case-Western Reserve 14-3
and· J ohn Carr oll topped
Hiram 26-19.
Youngstown State notched
its seventh win of the season,
agamst no losses-and its
third Mid -C ontin e n t
Conference triumph of the
year-with a 27-3 rout of
Akron .
In other games involving
Ohio college teams Saturday,
Ohio State blasted Iowa 31-7,
Grand Valley slammed
Central State 31-12, Dayton
beat Fordham 19-10, Geneva
shut out Oberlin 37.(), Grove

United P ress International
Akron Buchtel 20 Akron East
14
Ak. Hoban 24 Lor. Southv1ew
6

Berkshire 20 BEachwood 0
Buffa lo, NY Nrchols 26
University School 21

FOR YOUNG
DRIVERS
Young men

Council

2 1.8 percent of a l l

m otor rsts are 24 years of
age or und er, yet these
y out hful o p e r a tor s are
rn vol ved a s dr1vers rn 38.6
per cent of all acc rdents
an d37. 3percent ota ll fata l
mi shap s.
A gr eat m any youn g

people
ar e
re spo n s i bl e

GOOD BLOCKING, FINE RUNNING -Greg Becker (13), tailback
for the Meigs Marauders, is shown getting some good blocking as he
carried the ball here dur~g Friday night's 17-0 win over Waverly Other

ORCHARD PARK, N.Y .
They did come close, but
(UP! ) - The script had been Buffalo's Mario Clar k spoiled
written befoce for the Cincin- their only serious tnuchdown
drive , picking off a · Reaves
nati Bengals.
A mistake on a punt, a key pass inte nd ed for wide
interception and another loss. receiver Billy Brooks at the
" We beat ourselves today. ' Buffalo 10.
We have not put it aD
" It was a close decision, "
tngether," said' Bengal Head Rice said of Clark's diving
Coach Homer Rice.
interception. "The ball was
Rice wa s attemptmg to pretty close _to the ground ."
appear optimistic, but the
~~ n
wasn't
an
in~
fa ct was that his Bengals had ter ception .' '
Reaves
lost their eighth straight a rgued. " The ball was
game. The Buffalo BUls had trapped ."
only scored 5 points Sunday,
The Bills also scored on a
but it was enough to spoil safety when punter · Rusty
Rice's day.
Jacks on 's
boot
s ent
" This is the third straight Cincinnati's Dennis Law
game the defe nse played weU
enough to win, ' ' Rice said.
The Bengals coa ch had
SPINKS ARRESTED
another problem on his mind,
E LYRIA, Ohio (UPI )
howeve r, a complicat ing F orm e r
hea v yw eig h t
injury to star quarterback champion Leon Spinks was
Ken Anderson .
arrested and charged with
" Anderson has an elbow failure to control the car he
injury/' Rice sai~. "We won't was driving after he drove
know the extent of it until through a fence near a
Monday. He's· had a lot of shoppin g m all Saturday
Iough luck ."
mght , police said.
After Tom Dempsey'S 2()A police spokesman said
yard field goal at 2:15 of the Spmks , who was alone in the
second quarter, which gave car, a pparently lost control
the Bills a 3-ll lead, the while driving down Ohio 57
Bengals ran into their share and drove through the fence.
of hard times .
He was not injured.
Anderson left the game at
Spinks posted bond of $50
the 3:32 mark of the first and was ordered to appear
quarter and was replaced by later ln court . Spinks told
J ohn Reaves. Reaves failed police he was in the Elyria
tn move the club , as the area looking for property for
Bengals have finished their a possible t raining ·site.
last 13 quarters without a
tnuchdown .

City downed Kenyon 34-21,
Hillsdale bounced Ashland 2().
7 and Tulsa nipped Cincinnati
27-26.

Canton Central Catholic 20
Akron Central Hower 0
Cle Holy Name 14
Garfield Hts Trinity 7
Cle Adams 7 Cle Kennedy 6
Cle Hay 2 Clc Collinwood 6

ski l led ,
d rrve r s
Ob VIOUSly, t h ough , QU ite a
few ar e not .
Th er e's no subst rtu te f or
devel op ment com pete nce

Me1gs players ptclured, Include from left, Larry Stewart (80) Van
Wilford ( 32), John Stout (81). Mrke Drehal \61), and Bob Ashley (1 2l

and the

Person to person
health insurance

'We heat ourselves today'--Rice

Detro it 31, San D ieg o 1.4
New Yo rk Giants 17 . WaSh ·
ington 6
Da llas 14, Ph ila delphia 7
Ka nsas City 17, Cleveland 3
Minnesota 21, Green Bay 7
New Eng land JJ , M iam 124
Atl anta 20, San Francisco 17
Ba lti more 7, Derver 6
New Orl eans 10, Los Ang eles
3
Seattle 27, Oakl and 7
Today ' s Game
Houston at Pittsbur gh, 9 p.m.
Thursday, October 26
M innesot a a t Da llas, 8 :30
p m.
Sunday, Octobe r 29
Houston at Cincinnati , 1 p.m .
Ka ns as. Cit y at Pittsbur gh, 1

racing mto the end zone just
53 seconds into the final
quarter.
Law was tripped up by Lou
Piccone and tackled by CurtiS
Brown, who shined on the
B1lls' special teams as well as
offense.
" Obviously, Dennis (law )
didn't know where he was,' '
Rice lamented. "He drifted
too deep . You stand at the 10
yard lme and you don't step
back ."
" I was hustling down In
cover th e ba ll ," Piccone
recalled " When he got past
the 10 and didn 't signal for a
fair catch, I figured it was
cl ean-up time."
The game was a victory for
the B11ls, nonetheless , and
Coach Chuck Knox took an

optim istic view
" It wa sn 't a great offensive
show,' ' Knox admitted. "Our
defense hustled and h1t better
tl1an it has all year. We just
have to tic 1t • lllogether. But
the btg thmg is to wm a nd I .
look for better thtngs every
V.•eek . ''
While Kn ox looks for better
things, Bmwn be lieves he has
already r eached a goal. He
picked off 100 yards rushing,
th e first Buffa lo back lo reach
the mag ic mark thts season.
" We have been lrying to get

our run ning game gomg1"
satd Brown, a second-year
back from Missouri. " I think
I have achieved something. I
just hope that if 1 can 100
yards , then the oi her backs
can get 100 ya rds."

·It can help pay
so11ring hospital
and surgical bills.
Call me.

"" '

r ig ht attr t udes,

i n c luding

a

appr oac h

to

po si t ive
defen sr ve

drrv rn g
Our ag en cy pr ov rd es
fi n ancial p r ot ec t 1on a nd
se r vice
in
c a ses
of
acciden t s rnvo lvrn g you ng
dr i ver s ... but m a n y of
these ac c idents can be
pr event ed . That' s wh y we
say - pr ev ention is the
be st pol rcy

DALE C. WARNER
INSURANCE

....

S! AI£ ~~RM loiUIUAI
Aut om~b le l~!Oi l ~ Ce Cutn Di"'

liam• Ol~&lt;e
61 DOR'IIn9TD~ linD I

L:::=::::_______j
,.. , .... .. c ~

Cust~m

992 2143
102 W. Main
Pom eroy

full

hi ooe or two days

Our staff of dl' ll! Jst~ &lt;t nd
!e"t'hnrcHJn &lt;; "ill make your
cu.o;rorn dt·nturt•s qukklv and
t"CO IIO llli C&lt;! Jl y

One or two da&gt; full
denture ser \l lcc ,
panrals &amp; relines.
Complete
From Anywhe re In Ohio

Dr. Ronald ERiviere
•Dr A J Smehh • Dr. C. W . Beal • Dr. G.J Stombaugh
• Dr W D. Kimball • Dr . .I .C. Murphy • D r. J. Ochman

_____ __
•

The Rl\l lcrC Ce nler
949 E
......_

-

Lr11i ngston Ave. ...Co lumbus
....

~

NEWSPAPER
CARRIERS
WANTED
FOR

MIDDLEPORT AREA
PHONE
992-2156

p.m.

Buffal o lil t Cleveland , 1 p m .
New York Jets at New

Eng land , 1 p.m
St . Louis at Ph iladelph ia, 1

THE DAILY ENTINEL

p.m.

San Fran cisco at washi ng ton,
1 p.m.
Tampa Bay at Green Bay , 2
p m.
Detroit at Chicago, 2 p.m .
New York Giants at New

Orleans, 2 p.m ,
8a ltl mor ~ et Mlai'T'IL 4 p.m
Denver at Seattle, 4 p .m .
San Diego' at Oa kland, -4 p m.
Monday, October 30
Los Ang eles at AUanta, 9
p. m.

w om en

pay
mo r e
f or
t h ei r
autom ob ile insurance.
Driver s 1n the ir. teens and
earl 1er t wenti es ca use fa r
mor e th a n thei r share of
traffiC acc rd ents Re ports
th e
Na t ron a l
Saf et y

10

•

and

oft en ask why t hey ha ve t o

STRONG EASTERN DEFENSE AT WORK - The strong Eastern Eagles defensive
unit, which blanked Hannan Trace Friday night, is shown here halting down a Wildcat ball
carrier. At far right are Eastern's Brian Bissell (12) and Mike Hayman ( 80). Eastern won
the outing, I!Hl.

BETWEEN
8 AM and 5 PM

�-..
•

4 _ The Daily Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday . Oct. 2J, 1978

OSU looked like old Bucks Saturday .
.

OOLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)SaturC..1y's 31-7 Ohio State
victor) over Iowa looked like
the Buckeyes of old.
It was not so much whom
they beat, but the way they
did it.
It was no contest after Ohio
State built up a 31~ lead with
just under six minutes left in
the half and Coach Woody
Hayes called off the dogs.
"Yeh, we did,'' Hayes said,
when asked if had tried to
keep from running up the
score and not emb;lrrass
Iowa Coach Bob Commings,
the former Massillon High
School mentor . · " In the
second quarter, we just
wanted to get far enough
ahead that they couldn't
catch up ."
The
Buckeyes
accomplished that, running
their lead from 10-0 to 31~ in
a period of just over two
minutes.
" The first half we couldn't
do anything wrong," said
Hayes, " and in the second
half, we couldn't do anything
right."
Iowa, which dropped its
fifth game in a row, lost its
. starting quarterback, Jeff
Green, due to a first quarter
injury, but the Hawks never
gave up.
"They lost their passing
quarterback (Green) and it
hurt them," said Hayes.
" But, they regrouped at
halftime and came back."
Hayes said his defense,
which has come under
considerable criticism lately,
"played excellent ball the
first half," when it allowed
the Hawkeyes only 40 net
yards.
The Buckeyes aiso picked
off three Iowa passes, middle
· guard
Mark
Sullivan
returning one of !bern 13
yards for a touchdown.
OHIO COLLEGE RESULTS
United Press Iotematlooal
Baldwin-Wallace 48
Ohio Wesleyan 14
Bethany, W. Va. 14
Case-Western Res 13
Capital 10 Otterbein
Dayton 19 Fordham 10
Defiance 15 Bluffton 6
Denison 14 Ohio Northern 0
Findlay 19 Anderson 0
Geneva , Pa., 34 Kenton 21
Hanover, Ind. ?I Wilmington
0
Hillsdale, Mich. 20 Ashland 7
John Carroll 26 Hiram 19
Kent State 20 Marshall17
Miami 18 Bowling Green 7
Mt. Union 20 Heidelberg 17
Muskingum 12 Marietta 7
Ohio State 31 Iowa 7
Toledo 2B Ohio Univ. 14
lulsa 27 Cincinnati 26
Wittenberg 28 Wooster 14
Youngstown St. 27 Akron ~

ENROll NOW
FOR NEW QUARTER
STARTING IN

DECEMBER
College-level diploma
courses in a year or
less .. .
Secretarial
General office
Accoutning &amp;
Bus. Management
Limited Enrollment

We have more job calls
than graduates!
·
We do not employ sales
representatives nor use
telephone solicitation .

For information or catalog,
visit or call 446-2239 soon.

SOUTHERN HILLS
SCHOOL OF
BUSINESS
Thomas C. Breech ,
Director
414 2nd Ave.
RN05158

Professional

Gallipolis
Bus. &amp;

Bldg.

"Nat aHiliated with any

Hayes, however, said he'd
judgment on
withhold
whether
the
turnover
;&gt;roblem had be\!n 59lved.
"Anytime you say you have
those tbings covered," he

said, " you better wait until
the next play."
Quarterback Art
Schlichter, wl)ose 78-y.ard
touchdown pass to Doug
Donley capped the 24-i&gt;Oint,

second-period
explosion
which put !be game oul of
reach, hit six of ·12 attempts
for 102 yards. But Hayes satd
his freshman signal caller
played with a sore right arm.

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

PROPOSED AMEND ENT
TO THE OHIO CONSTITUTION
PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT

.

" That's !Ile reason I put
Greg ( Castignola) in there,"
said Hayes . "Art was forcing
the ball. And he has ~nough
arm that lie doesn't have to
force it."
Cmunings said he was
" very embarrassed" by the
31~ halftime score.
" We were out of it at
halfiime and we had to play

for pride," said Qmmlngs.
•'There was not much else we
could do. And I think !bey
did."
Cmunings called the Buck·
eyes "a typical Ohio State
football team and they are
going to get better. They will
probably play like this the
rest of the year."
finished wltb
The Buckeyes
.

.

.PROPOSED AMENDMENT
TO THE .OHIO CONSTITUTION
2

PROPOSED CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT
To amend Section 41 of Article II of the Constitution of Ohio

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

To amend Section 4 of Article X of the Constitution o~ Ohio

'

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)

TO MODIFY ' THE PROCEDURES BY WHICH THE VOTERS OF A
COUNTY MAY ADOPT. AMEND. OR REPEAL A CHARTE;R FORM .
. OF COUNTY GOVERNMENT.

A majority affirmative vote is necessary for passage.

(Proposed by Resolution of the General Assembly of Ohio)
YES
A majority affirmative vote is necessary for passage.
-·- -

I YES

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_

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- -

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTED•

1

The Constitution now contains provisions for the people of any county
to frame and adopt a ch~rter. Such charters NOVide for the form, of government of the county and may include the duties of each county officer.
The amendment to Section 4 of Article X would:
1. Reduce th,. number of signatures required on a petition from 10%. to
8% of the electors in a county to place on the ballot at a general electton
a proposed amendment to an existing charter, or a proposal to select
a charter comrrtission to draft a county charter or propose amendments
to an existing charter.
,
. .
2. Permit electors to place a proposed charter on the ballot by submtttmg
the proposal by petition sign~d by JU 'f&lt;, of the electors to t he county

commissioners.

a

3. Require that a proposed char!er amendment relate. to one subject

o~ly.

4. Provide that if more than one charter. or confl1Ctmg amendments are
5.

6.
-7.

8.

9.
10.

12.

· -- - - 1

SHALL THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
BE ADOPTEr)?

NO

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE NO. I (as prepared by the Ohio Ballot Board)

11.

T,\KE FIRST PLACE
COLUMBUS (UP!)
Kathy Noble of Delaware and
Hank Clason of Dayton won
first place in the versatility
class at the All-American
Quarter Horse Congress at
the Ohio State Fairgrounds
Saturday.
Twenty horses were entered in the four-event
competition that is for one or
two riders.
Noble and Clason won
$1,912 and a solid silver belt
buckle worth $1,430.

'

And the offense, which has
moved the ball but has been
plagued by turnovers the first
five games, turned in an
error-free
_ performance
against the Hawks.

•

voted on at the same election, the charter or amendment receiving
the most votes, not less than a majority, is adopted.
Permit an election on the repeal of a county charter if 'Ya of the county
commissioners vote to hold t he election or if the election is petitioned
for by 8% of the electors of the county.
Change from 60 to 95 days the minimum time required between the
board of elections' certification of the signatures .on the petition and
the election at which the proposal is to be voted upon. ·
Specify that the required publication of charter proposals to the
electors occur at least 30 days prior to the election and that noll~e. of
proposed charter amendments may be given by newspaper adverttsmg
if provided by law.
. .
.
.
Require county comnuss10ners to appropnate funds for the operation
and expense of a county charter co~sion. ·
.. .
Authorize the General Assembly to pr ide by l&amp;w for the orgamzalton
and operation of a county charter commission.
.
.
Change the time at which a person must file ·to quahfy as a candidate
for member of t he county charter commission.
Permit up to four public officeholders to be elected as members of a
15-member county charter commission and permit members of a county
charter commission to run for public office. (Current proVIsiOns of the
Ohio Constitution are silent on these points.)
Permit a county charter commission to resubmit a defeated charter,
or revise a nd submit a defeated charter, one time only. (This can only
be done at the next general election or at any intervening countywide
e lection.)

ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
HELP YOUR COUNTY GOVERNMENT RESPOND TO CITIZEN NEEDS
VOTE YES ON ISSUE I
Issue I makes it easier fo r you to put a county charter on the ballot.
A county charter allows the people to change the general state-mandated
form of county government to one tailored to their specific needs.
The advantages to local residents would be:
. ,
• Decreas es the number of signat ures needed on a charter commtsswn
petition
. .
• Makes possible the submission of a charter to the voters by pe1tt10n,
bypassing the charter commission
• Prov ides a method for repeal
• No more than fou r elected officials on a charter commission
• One resubmission of a charter
LET 'S LEARN FROM EXPERIENCE HELP STREAMLINE THE PROCESS - VOTE YES ON ISSUE 1
Outdated lan,t::uage and gaps in our constitution have rnade adopting a
charter a confused ·and &amp;fficult process. Iss ue I would simplify that process
by making mechanical changes, while preserving the original concept of
charter government. Issue l would remove the_ doubt surrout;tding the
adoption of county charters, allowmg you to vote JUSt as before but on the
merits of a charter.~ ;
ISSUE I MEANS liHiOGRESSIVE COUNTY GOVERNMENT
VOTE YES ON ISSUE I
County charters are needed more today with ·ever increasing urban
pressures and demands for service. Without creating any new government
a charter can give cities a strong partner in the county. After a ll local
governments know best what local needs are.
.
Issue 1 will benefit all Ohioans. It saves time and money. It mcreases
your abi lity to control your own government. Issue I gives you a better
chance to vote on the best gove rnment-responsive to your needs.
ISSUE 1 IS YOUR GOVERNMENT
VOTE YES ON ISSUE I
Committee For t he Amendment: Kenneth R. Cox, l&gt;ete Crossland and
Helen Fix.
ARGUMENT APAINS'f THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
This proposed constitution al amendment would m~ke it .easier to change
the existing form of local and county g?verrunents m Ohio ..
The Ohio Constitution presently provides a means by which voters can
decide whether they want a county charter form of government. Proponents
of county charter form of government have failed repeatedly since 1933 to
convince voters to move toward such government. These failures, however. should not now require any alteration or loosening of the present
m ech a nics by which the voters decide the question.
.
·
The re are areas in our government th at need change and Improvement.
But thi s is not one of t hem.
' Change is essential to a growing Democracy- but only change that has
been documented from demonstrated and proven need.
The Constitution should not be altered regardi ng the way Ohioans decide
the question of county charter form of government. Vote NO on Issue 1.
Committee Against the Amendment: Don S. Maddux and Bob McEwen.

EXPLANATION OF ISSUE NO.2 {as prepued by the Ohio Ballot Board)
The Constitution presently requires the General Assembly to pass laws
providing for the occupation and employment of prisone,·s in state penal
institutions. This- amendment eliminates that requirement and allows the
General Assembly to pass such laws as are necessary. Existing laws providing for prison labor would remain iq effect until amended or repealed \lY
the General Assembly.
The Constitutional prohibition against prison contract labor which consists of prison work which is to be sold, farmed out, contracted, or given
away is repealed by the amendment. The elimination of this Constitutional
· prohibition would not authorize prison contract labor since it is prohibited
by laws which remain in ,effect unless repealed by the General Assembly.
This amendment would allow the General Assembly to regulate in the
area of contract labor.
The repeal of the Constitutional prohibition against the public sale of
prison-made goods not conspicuously marked "prison made" would not authorize the sale of such goods since this is currently prohibited by l!\W
which remains in effect unless amended or repealed by the General
Assembly . . Current law prohibits the sale of prison goods on the open
market even if specificnlly identified, but permits them to be disposed of
to the state, its political subdivisions, or state or local institutions. The
Constitutional amendment would allow the General Assembly to regulate
t he public sale of prison-made goods.
ARGUMENT FOR THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT
IT MAKES COMMON SENSE TO PASS ISSUE NO. 2
TO PUT PRISONERS TO WORK INSIDE OUR PRISONS
OHIO PRISONERS . SHOULD BE ACTIVELY WORKING WITHIN
PRISON WALLS AND NOT SITTING IDLY DAY AFTER DAY, WEEK
AFTER WEEK. YEAR AFTER YEAR. ISSUE NO. 2 WOULD HELP PUT.
PRI~NERS BACK TO WORK IN THE PRISON SYSTEM. Unlike years
past when prisoners were actively and productively involved at work, unfortunately today the majority of prisoners spend most of their day doing
nothing. Statistics show that 95% of prisoners now in prison eventually will
be released to the communities, and, upder present law, will have learned
no trade while in prison. Issue No. 2 will remove constitutional restrictions
against the use of prison labor thus ensuring meaningful work opportunities, vocational training and a full work day for those in prison. Legislative,
executive and citizen committees have found constant idleness and the
lack of actual work assignments the major cause of tension and security
problems in Ohio prisons. Prison officials cite prisoner idleness as a major
cause of prison violence. The amendment will simplify constitutional
language and provide greater flexibility in establishing prison work programs. The amendment is recommended by the General Assembly, Ohio
Constitutional Revision Commission and Ohio Department of Rehabilitation
a nd Corrections.
.
Committee For the Amendment: Edith Mayer, Tim McCormack and
Edward J . Orlett.
ARGUMENT AGAINST THE PROPOSED AMENDMENT

423 net yards, with fullback
Paul Campbell · getting 89
yards In 15 carries, aU In tbe
first half.
Tailback R&lt;Il Springs returned after miuing the last
two game and fml.shed with 71 ·
yards In 11 carries, including
a 39-yard, first period
touchdOWJl run which opened
the
8COfing for !be Buckeyes.
·

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ISSUE l
(Amended S.nai• Jolat: JlleaoluUon

No, lll
IOINT REIOLUTJOif
P.OpoaiDIJ to unend. hdlon 4 of
AI'Ucle X of the Coutllullon of
lhe Stale Of Oblo regu.U.. the
organlu.tlon and proc•durea of
coWLIY cJaart.., co-•••lom, to
ln!cn... Uw tim• pdM to aa

•l.edoll toe e•rtlfkallcm of a
pro; a II d. cbutu IO IIKIIOJa aa-

lboritlel. 1o permU ptlblic , ollie•
boJ4en 10 ..ne u ·c owdY daantr
commluioun, to proYid• for .,...
pHl of a county cbutM, to If·
quire that a cMrter enr.enclment
Nl•t• tQ . only one -abJect, to
permU rnubmllllon of • defta.ttcl
chazlaot Ollt time, to permU a
cliUI... IO bt aUIILlUecl oa petllton of tluton. aDd lo clidfr
cqunty charter ~0111 ... d ••·

mon UDJJlg\llllts.

Ii~

it resolve:d

Assembl;y

by the General
of the State or Ohio

thtee-ftfths of the memben eleCted

ft ·

e-ach house •concu.rrln•r therein,

that the-re shall be submitted to
the electora of the lta\e 1n the
manner prescribed by law at the
g~neral election. to be held on the
flrat Tuesday alte-r the ftnt Monday
in November, lWI'I, a propo~al to
amend the Constitution of the State
of Ohio by amendih&amp; Section 4 of
Article X the~o1 aa follows :
ARTICLE X

Section 4. The LeJialaUve authority (Which. 1.ncludea the Board
of County CommiNioaen) of any
county may bY a two-Ullrdt vote of
Its members, or upon petltloa. of
et1ht per cent ol the electon of
the county aa certtfted by the
e-lectiOn authorltiel or the oounty
shall forthwith, by retoluUon IUb•
mit to the. el~cton ot tbe oounv
the quHtion ..Shall a COUD'Y
charter commla.i011 be chOsen?" The
question ahall be voted upon at
the next aenenJ eleeuon, ocmarrtnr
not · 800net' · than nln~-ft.. dayt
after oertlfteaUon of the resolutlOil
to tbe election authoritiel. The ballot coatainJDt the qu..UOn lbll.l

-·..-..--· ~ Sport Parade-~
-.

:m

~

;:;:
)

By MILTON RICHMAN
UP! Sports Editor

·.·.
•.•

NEW YORK (UP!) - Part of the eternal creed of all football
coaches is that they perpetually mask their misery behind a
calm facade and tight little smile, and In that respect, Bud
Wilkinson is doing just fine.
He looks fine aiso . That's more than you can say for his ball
club, the St. Louis Cardinals. They don't look so good a tall.
·With the season hall over, they haven't won a game yet.
They've lost all eight and people are starting to ask questions
abput Bud Wilkinson .
:'fhat's re~~Uy nothing new because they were asking
questi!Ils about him when he was named coach of the
Cardinals seven montbs ao.
How would he fit Into the pro ranks, they wondered, never
having coached In tbein before and having been away from the
game 15 years? And at 61, he wasn't any spring chicken,
eitber. Naturally, everyone wanted to know what possessed
owner Bill Bidwill to bring him in as a replacement for his
eminently successful )redecessor, Don Coryell?
'The question asked most often was whether tbere would be
B!IY communication gap between Wilkinson, who had been one
of !be most successful coaches In college football history, and
the Cardinal players, most of whom weren't even born yet
when he began winning championships at the University of
Oklahoma.
•bet it be noted that hardly anyone .bothers asking that
qu~sti~ anymore because there is no communication gap
whatsoever between Wilkinson and the Cardinal players. They
and Wilkinson are on the same wave length completely. He
knows they have lost all eight games this season and they know
fl1e same thing.
·
· Veterans like Dan Dierdorf, Tom Banks and Mel Gray play
tlieir hearts out every week and some of the younger members
like Mike Dawson and Eric Williams give a good account of
tliemselves also as they did in Sunday's 23-10 loss to the Jets at
shea Stadiwn. Nonetbeless. with !be kind of dry toastbuitermilk offense the Cardinals have, they conceivably could
wiild up 0-!6 this year.
·Now that Terry Metcalf is gone, !be bulk of the running
attack falls to Wayne Morris, Jim Otis and Steve Jones, and
none of !bern are even a pale carbon copy of Metcalf .
Gooe also are aU-pro guard Contad Dobler and wide receiver
Ute Harris, and when you have a flock of injuries on top of all
that, such as regular quarterback Jim Hart being out and
backup Steve Pisarkiewicz having to make the first start of his
professional career Sunday, the result is predictable.
llisarkiewicz ·didn't do that badly, completing 10 of 27 passes
for 164 yards while being intercepted twice, but ro give you
some idea of what he was up against, !be Cards missed
converting. eight straight !bird down plays before finally
making tbeir only one of !be contest with 2: 371eft.
.
" We find ourselves struggling, groping, coming up empty
every week," said Dierdorf, with the Cards eight years now .
" It hurts. It's getting harder and harder ro get over this sort of
thing each week . When we take the field every Sunday, if we
dop't have the ability to put it out of our minds, then we're

bear. no party dniJnaUon. Provlsion

allaU be made thereon lor the elec-

tion to auch commiulon from the
county at 1a.r1e of fl.ft~n electon
if a majority o.t the elee&amp;ors votl.ng
on the question have voted in the
aftlrmattve.
Candidates for such commission
shall be nominated
petition o[
one per cent of the e ectors of th~
coUnty. The. petition shall be .ftled
with. the election authorities not
less than seyenty-ftve day• prior to
su~h · election. Candidates shall be
declared elected in the order of the
number of Votes received, begJn·
nin&amp;" with the candidate' receiving
the· largest number; but not more
than seven ca ndida~ restdin&amp; in
the same city or vWaKe may be
elected. 'lbe holding of a pilbllc
offict". does not preclude any person from seektne or holding mem bership on a county t:harter commillion nor does membership on a
county charter eomml.uion preclude
any auch member from seek.Jng or
holding other public office1 but not
more than four offiC'I!.holoera
may
be elected to a county charter commtaston at the same ·time. The
!Aogialat!ve authortty shall appropriate sufficient sums to enable the
charter commission to pertonn tta
duties and 10 pay all reasonable
expenses thereof.
The Commisaioo. shall frame a
charter tor the county or amendments to the exlsting charter and
shall, by vote of a majority Of the
authorized number Of members of
the commlaion. submit the aame to
the electors of the eounty. to be
voted upon s.t the next aeneral
election next following the 'election
of the commission. The commlsston
ahall certify the proposed charter or
amendments to the election authorities not later than seventy-five daya
prior to such election. Amendment.
to a county charter or the question
of the repeal thereof may also be
submttted. to the electon~ of the
county in the manner provided in
this section for the submission ot
the question whether a charter comml.uion shall be chosen, to be voted
upon at the ftrst 1eneral election
occurrJnr not sooner than alxty
days atter their aubmillaJon 'lbe
Le(islative authority or charter
commi~on submitting any charter
or amendment shall, not later than
thirty days prior to the election on
such charter or amendment_ matl or
otherwi~c dbtr::lbute a copY thereof
to each of the electors of the county"
as far as may be realiiOnably poSSJbJe, except that, as provided b
law, notice of proposed amendmeng,
may be given b;y newspaper advertising. Except as provided in
Section 3 of this Article every
charter or amendment shan' become
etreeUve if it has been approved b
the majority of the electors volin~
thereon. Jt shall take effect on the
thtrtieth day arter such approval
~nless another date be Hxed there.
m . When more than one amendment. which shall relllte to on!
one subject but may atrect or Jl_
clude more than one section or
part of a charter, 1s submitte-d at
the same- time, they shall be 80
submitted as to enable the electors
to vote on each separately, In case
more than one charter Is submitted
at the same time or in case of confltct between the provisions of two
~ more amendments s ubmitted at
e same time, that charter or provtston shall prevaU which received
the highest affirmatjve vote, not leas
than a majority. It a charter or
amendment submitted by a charter
COmmission is not approved by the
electors of the countY, the charter
eommtsslon may resubmit the same
one tlme. in Its original fonn or as
revbied by the charter commJ!Ilrlon
to the electors of the county at th.;
next succeeding general election or
at any other election held throulhout the county prior thereto, 1n th~
manner provided for the or1final
submission thereof.
The Leg!slaUve autbortty of an1
county, upon petition of ten per
cent Of the e lectors of the county
shall forthwith, b;v resolution, sub;
mit to the eJectors of the county
1n the manner provided 1n thta see;
tion [or the submbsion , Of the
ques~lon whether a chuter commlsaton •hall be chosen the question of the adoptiOn of a charter
1n the form attached. to such pet!·
11 on.
Laws may be ·passed to provtde
for the organization and p,rocedure5
of county charter eomm ssions including the fi.UJng of any vacAncy
which may occur, and otherwise to
facmtate the operation ot this section. lb.e !&gt;aais upon which the- required. number of petitioners 1n any
cue provided for in thta section
shaU be detenn..tned, shall be the
total number of votes. cast in the
county for the office of Governor
at the last :Preceding ceneral election therefor.
The foreKOinf provisions of thta
section shall be !lelt-execuunr except as herein otherwJse provided.
Effective DAte and Repeal
If adopted by a majority of the
electors voting on this amendment
the . amendment shall take immedt~
ate effect, and exUting ,Section 4 of
Article X shall be repealed from
such effective date.

br,

dead."

l

Dierdoif, a 280-pound mountain of a man and possibly the
best tackle in !be NFL, stared at his shoelaces.
·
· "We never expected this," he said. "We've got a Iotta good
football players on this team, but it's been like this every week
fQI' us. A few things here; a few things there; a penalty at the
wrong time."
Banks, ·another veteran like Dierdorf, has been with the
Cardinals just a:s long, so that he remembers how they were 1041n.1974, 11-3ln 1975 and 1~ in 1976 under Coryell and how !bey
!pltde !be' divisional playoff in twd of'!bose years." · ·. • ·' .
· "What's happening to us now is terribly disappointing," he
said. "Nobody can blame coach Wilkinson for that. He's doing
!be best he can. He's a good man. The only way to change all
Ibis is to be positive. It's completely up to us; nobody eise."

• BEULAH RESULTS
, GROVE CITY, Ohio {UPI)
~Nothing captured Sundsy's
leatured eighth race at
Qeulah Park, running the six
furlongs in I: 11 :1-li and
paying $9.40, $4.80 and $2.40.
' Rugged Sail flr 'shed
second, returning $33.~. and
$7 .60, an~ T's Lucky Oak was
!bird, paying $2.80.
A crowd of 6,540 wagered
$700,267.

TOLEDO RESULTS
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - A
stron·g stretch drive carried
Ryal N to victory Sunday in
!be featured eighth race at
Raceway Park.
Running fifth at !be U&gt;p of
the stretch , the winner,
driven by David Cowell,
charged past the leaders to
gain a one-length win over
Ted MacGrattan, the horse
that had led all !be ' ·y
that point. Sam Bengazi
finished !bird.

, Columbus Centennial,
down two strokes at the
~)fway point in the 1978
Class AA Ohio High School
Golf Tournament, came back
tl\e final!B holes Saturday to
capture the champumship
with a 667 team effort.
Coach John Milhoan's
Gallipolis Blue Devils improved their play the final18
boles, but still placed last in
the field of 11 state finalists
with a 723 effort .
· J. D. Jones paced the Blue ·
Devil llnksters with a 170
~otal. Jones, aiso the Blue
'Devils 1978 medalist, fired a
~on Friday. He came
'lilick with a 39-43-112 on
:flaturday.

I, TED W. MOWN, Secretary of
State, do hereby certify that the
loreroinc- ia a true copy of
Amended,. Senate Joint ResOlution
No. ll, and Amended Senate Joint
Resol.utlon No. 33, flied in the office
of the Secretary of State, propostn1
to amend the ConaUtution of Ohio,
to1eth!!t with the ballot Iana:ua1e
and explan•tiont certlfl.ed. to me by
the Ohio Ballot Board and .arau·
menta for and. •rainst amendmenta
aa submitted b;r the appropriate
eommitteet.
IN TESTIMONY WHEREOF t
have hereunto aubscrlbed my ni.me
and alllxed. n1Y oftlcl•l •ea1 at Columbus thU Dth day of September
1911.
'
TED W. BROWN,
Secretary of State

• THISTLEDOWN .
. • NORTH RANDALL, Ohio
&lt;(UPI) -- Jockey Mike Moran
:aUJded Capt. Billy Bud to
:ytctory In Sunday's featured
·lilnlh race at Thistledown. ·
~ -The 5-year--old winner covlred the 5~.furlongs In 1:04 4~ over a fast track to pay
$2.60 and
~IHornla Jim placed and

tuo.

1Sea1)

Jeff Clary shot a 97 on
Friday and 81 on Saturday for
a 178 effort.
Brad Rodgers scored a 93
on Friday and 94 on Saturday
to finish with a 187 total.
Aaron Jeffers was 95-93 for
166 and Mark Allen 103-101 for
204,
Dave Learmonth, Cen·
tennial, was state medalist
with a 77-74-151 total.
Here are the final 1976
Class AA State Tournament

BY GARY CLARK
Jack Smith, &gt;'9" 180-pound
senior running back , rushed
for more than 200 yards
Saturday night to lead the
Wahama White Falcons to an
easy 37~ victory over the
visiting Parkersburg Catholic
Crusaders.
Smith, tht hard running
fullback for Coach Bill
Jewell's gridders, picked up
202 yards in 22 carries and
· scored two touchdowns to
bring his season totals to 618
yards rushing and 36 points
scored. The senior backfield
star now needs to average 127
yards per game in each of the
White Falcons final three 1978
outings to reach the coveted
1000-yard plateau.
While Smith was having the
best game of his career, so
was the remainder of the bend
area Falcons. As a team the
locals piled up an unbellevabie
411 yards rushing and another
44 yards passing to give them
a total of 4&gt;5 yards for the
game.
The defensive unit was also
playing a superb game by
limiting the Cusaders to a
mere two yards during the
entire first half. Catholic
ended up with 91 yards total
offense with most of that
yardage coming in the final
period against te White
Falcons reserve unit.
To recap the scoring
Wahama wasted little time in
getting on the scoreboard
when Kevin Roush capped off
a 64-yard drive following the
opening kickoff with a 15-yard
scamper.
Bobby Elias.
returning to action after
missing ' last weeks' contest
due to an injury, booted the
first of five consecutive extra
point kicks to make it 7 ~ with
6:&gt;5 remaining in the initial
quarter.
After Parkersburg Catholic
failed to move the ball on the
ensuring kickoff the locals
regained possession and
marched down to the
Crusaders one-foot line where
'[hey lumbled . wit}t Catholics
Neil Starkie recovering.
Seconds
later
Mark
Dearman was tackled in the
White Falcon end zone for a
safety giving the bend area
team a~ lead with 2:16 left
inthe period.
·
In the second stanza,
Wahama added two more
touchdowns to increase his
lead to ~ at the half.
Jack Smith's four-yard run
completed a nine play 61-yard
drive and Elias' kick made it
16-&lt;l at the 5:33 mark.
Rick Barnitz scored the
final touchdown of the half,
when with :36 seconds
remaining he picked off a
Walt Pavalo aerial and raced
22 yards to paydirt. Elias' boot
made it 2~ at the half way
· t.
pom
The White Falcons continued
their- mastery over . the
Cusaders
following in-

--•••

l'• I '
L

T11ck~

,,,

termission by once again has showed he can run the
scoring on its first possession White Falcon offensive attack .
of the half.
The junior signal caller gained
This time the Falcon drive · 45 yards on the ground and
covered 54 yards and on the passed for 44 more yards and
eighth play , Jack Smith also scored a six-pointer with
· d th e ptgs
· k.m ·m fr om a 22-yard pass interception.
came
five yards out. Bobby Elias S ince taking ov er the
made it 30-0 with 4:24 gone in quarterbacking duties the &gt;'7 ''
the third canto.
150-pound junior has picked up
The · final Wahama tally 132 yards rushing and comcame with 1: J6 to play in the
third period when Kevin
Roush covered the final \9
yards on an end sweep Elias
kick made it 37~.
Two minutes into the fourth
and final quarter, the second
unit entered the game and
finished out the contest for the
winning White Falcons.
----------STATISTICS
WAH Pkgs .Cath.
First Downs
18
&gt;
Yards Rush .
54-411 25-33
Yards Pass.
44
58
Tot. Yards
455
91
Passing
J.l! 5-15
Interceptions
2
3
Fumbles-lost
3-2
2-1
Penalties
10-105 6-&gt;5
Punts-Avg.
1-25 6-22
Off. Plays
G4
49
Score by quarters :! 2 3 4 Tot
Pkg.Catholic
0 0 00 0
Wahama
9 14 14 0 37
Scoring:
Wah.-Kevin Roush !5 yd run
(Elias kick)
Wah.-Tackled Ball ca rrier tn
end zone for safety
Wah.-Jack Smith 4 yd run
(Elias kick)
Wah.-Rick Barnitz 22 yd pass
interception (Elias kick)
Wah.-Jack Smith &gt; yd. run
(Elias kick)
Wah.-Kevin Roush \9 yds run
(Elias kick)

pleted 10 of 17 aerials for 215
yards and two touchdowns. He
has been intercepted only

twice.
With the 411 yards rushing
by the White Falcons against
Parkersburg Catholic, a much
needed head of praise and
credit must go to the offensive
lin e of the local charges. So
next time six points go up on

ENROLL NOW!

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the cold months ahead with
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tape from Tuck.

l!lBENFRANKLIM
Ill~ bring variety to'life!

POMEROY BEN FRANKLIN
Pomeroy. 0.

200 East Main

THIS
WEEK
ONLY!

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Reg . $119.95 Value!

With purchase of TV shown below.
Additional cartridges
sold separately

COLECO

In addition to Jack Smith's
list of credentials in the game ·
were the individual statistics
of his running males. Kevin
Roush and Rick Barnitz.
Roush rushed for 126 yards
in is attempts while scoring
two touchdowns. The senior
tailback has now picked up
452 yards and has scored
seven touchdowns and one
PAT conversion for a team
high 44 points.
Barnitz, since taking over
for the injured Vince Weaver,

TAUGHT BY JUDY RIGGS

Bran•

DUCT TAPE ·

MOVING ON -Fieetfootoo Wahama Senior back Kevin Roush (25) is shown scurrying
for a first down on one of his several outstanding runs during Saturday ni.ght's game against
the visiting Parkersburg ~tholic Crusaders.

. ALL AGES

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Phone: Chester 985-3595

\

first of which will take place
on Saturday night at Duval.
The
Yellow
Jackets
currently sport an 8~ record
and a third . place ranking in
Class single A circles. Kickoff
time for the contest is 7:30
p.m .

. 2-ln x 30- Yd. Rolls!

CLASSES STARTING
FOR FALL AND WINTER

sr.so.

· lW!g returned $150.60 6n the
U dBUy double, and there
' lra'e 31 winning Uckets on the
.,a-=11-9 grouping of Hasta
~J.pl8ta, Dusty Buster and
liii9P Talking In the lOth race
illlecta each . worth
~458.10.
' ' A crowd of 8,002 bet
, $701,804 .

standings:
CLASS AA STANDINGS
TEAM
SCORE
Col. Centennial
667
Akron SV
674
Uhrichsville Claymt.
676
Ashtabula Harbor ;
689
Dublin
691
Pemeroville EW
696
Springfield Shnee
700
Louisville ST
703
Norwalk
705
Cin. McNicholas
713
Ga Uipolis
723

the Wahama side of the
scoreboard think of the often
forgot linemen who more than
likely made it possible.
Wahama, with the triumph,
saw it's season record elevate
to 4-3 on the year with three
away · dates remaining. The

NEW

:U'l!Jtv showed.
,;,;Bpas Wilson and Egg Foo

.'

Wahama wins big over Crusaders

Columbus Centennial
AA champ; GAHS 11th

other school."

J

·.'•·::,·•,.,':·:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,T:;:J':'y,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,::,,,,,,,.,,,,:,:::,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,\

•

Senate Joint ·Resolution 23, if adopted, would undo the present constitutional restrictions on the use of prison labor, and would give un- ISSUE 2
fettered authority to the General Assembly to regulate convict labor with(AIDeD~ Stnata Joint ll .. olullo~
Ho. 23)
out constitutional guidelin es, or even to abolish it completely.
JOilfT
REIOLUTIOif
The ·Ohio Constitution includes a section, now sought to be deleted, which
Pro~g to unnd Section 41 of
Hatly forbids the use of prison labor in the market-place in competition with · Al'llcJt lJ of tlut Conatltutton. Of
the State of Ohio relatm.- to
private industry. The language has· been unchanged since the voters of
Pl'iaoll labor.
the state approved it in 1912, and we do not believe that in view of our
Be tt resolved by the General
of the State of Ohio
current economic situation it should be changed at this time. Since the Assembly
three-Htths or the members elee1ed
to
each
house
concurrtn« therein
only known way to fight inflation results in more unemployment, it is
that there shall be subm.tted to the
very poor strategy to have state-subsidized prison labor throwing law- electors
of the state in the manner
preacrtbed by law at the general
abiding citizens out of work.
eleetton to be held on the Hrst TuesThe federal case law suggests that prisoners would have to be paid at day after the first Monday tn No1978, a proposal to amend
least the minimum wage; but on the other hand, if rented out for contract vember,
Section 41 o[ Article II ot the Con·
labor, the prisoners nii ght be left with little protection. This situation stJtution of Ohio to read as tolloww :
ARnCLE IJ
prompted the current constitutional prohibition.
Section 41 .- Laws may be passed
Why should we turn our backs on history by giving this broad discretion providing
tor and regulating the
to the General Assembly• The argument i.s that· "work-release" programs occupation and employment of
PriiOners sentenced to the several
must include "meaningful employment" to be successfuL We do not believe penal ln.11tJtuUons and refonnatorles
that until meaningful employment is plentiful for our citizens, we should in the state.
DATE AND REPEAL
be apportioning it out among those who have been proven to have en- . EFFECTIVE
If adopted by a majority of the
gaged in antisocial conduct.
elector:s voting on thls amendment
the amendment shall take tmmedl:
We are not willing to vest in the General Assembly the ·authority to ate
eft"eet, and exllting Section 41
of
Article D ot the Constitution of
forbid prison labor, to make it lucrative for the prisoners, or to hire their
Ohio shall be repealed from wch
labor to those who want to exploit it for profit. We urge a vote against effectJve- date.
changing the Constitution for any of these purposes.
.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
STATE OF OHIO
Committee Against the Amendment: William G . Batchelder, Richard H.
OFFICE OF THE Sl:CRETARY
OJ' STATE
Finan and Alan E. Norris.

FULL TEXT OF THE RESOLUTIONS
PROPOSING EACH AMENDMENT

5-The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday. Oct. 23, 1978

~

..
••. ' •

•'

•,.

,f

•

�6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday ,Oct 23~·-I_
rn_a_
· -------

1
.
1 Social
1 Calend

BIG LEAGUE - Big league baseball came to the
Guiding Hand school last week when Chicago White Sox
Tommy Spencer autographed baseballs as part of the
open house. Spencer is shown autographing a baii!Qr Jo
Huntington , Superintendent of the school.

Halloween party planned
by Sew-Rite Sewing Club
A Halloween dinner party
will be held Wednesday night
at the Seddons on the Mall,
Vienna, W. Va. by members
o( the Sew-R ite-sewing Club.
Meetmg recently at . the
home of Mrs. Shirley Baity,
the club made plans for their
annual Christmas dinner to
be held at the Meigs Inn, 7
p.m. on Dec. 12 with a party
at the home of Mrs. Baity to
follow. Members drew names
for a gift exchange.
Mrs. J oni Hoffman had
charge of the meeting with

Mrs. Ann Browning gtvmg
the treas urer 's r eport , and
Mrs. Evelyn Gilmore, the
secretary 's report. The door
prize wa s won by Mrs .
Pandora Collins. It was noted
tha t Mrs. Carolyn McDaniel
is hos pitalized and that
flowers had been sent to her.
The hostess served a dessert
course to those named and
Mrs. Lucy White, Mrs.
Lenora McKnight , Mrs .
Barbara Mullen, Mrs. Nettje
Boyer, Mrs. Flo Strickland,
and Mrs. Betty Wehrung.

She can't cry, but she's
certainly not laughing
'

CHICAGO (UPI ) - J ennie
Pankow hasn't shed a tear for
18 years. She has a rare
medical ailment.
"When there's a tragedy or
something bad, I really Wish I
co ul d c ry," she sa id.
&lt;(There's no release so I have
to bottle my feelings up. I get
a knot in my stomach and a

market, before I cross the
parking lot I'm looking for a

wate.r fountain," She said.

"When I make the two-hour
drive to my son 's home, I
have a thermos in the car
with me."
Mrs. Pank ow perspires
only when she is very active.
She suffer s from arthritis,
sweJling in my chest. "
which often accomp_anies the
Mrs. Pankow, 58, of Lock- syndrome. She uses lotions to
port, Ill., is undergoing tests counteract her dry skin.
at Chicago's University of " I knew I couldn't cry and
Illin ois Hospital where had to drink a lot, but I never
doctors hope to. ease her knew why ," she said. "I just
conditi on. They sa id the thought as I got older, my
cause of t he ailm e nt body couldn' t do certain
Sjogren's Syndrome - is still things anymore. Then a few
a mystery.
months ago, a doctor referred
They do know, however, me to the hospital, thinking I
that antibodies in syndrome might have this syndrome."
suffers "go awry, " attacking
Doctors said the tendency
their joints and saliva, tear toward the syndrome is
glands and possibly sweat inher ited and symptoms
glands as if they were foreign become a pparent after adultorganisms in the body.
hood. Mrs. Pankow has a
When someone is upset or sister with a similar conla ughin g hard , m uscles dition.
around tear glands tighten,
The re have been more
causing t ears to flow. But se vere cases than Mrs.
. Mrs. Pankow has no tears. Pankow's, doctors said,. in
"I couldn't even cry at my which co rti sone or other
husband's funeral," she said. drugs are used to suppress
"People who didn't know me the body' s irrununity system.
very well must have thought I But, they said, the drugs can
was cold-hearted. I just asked cause dangerous side-effects.
the doctor if he could give me
some tears."
She uses fak e tears, an
artificial eyedrop solution, up
CHRISTINA SMITH
to 10 times a day to substitute
Chri stina Smith , grandfor the lack of real eye daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
moisture. Without the drops, Albert Rou sh, underwent
her eyes become irritated surgery on both of her hands
and caked with a mucous recently. While they are both
film.
' in casts, she has returned to
Doctor s said without school.
moisture, eyes will dry out
and the lids will fuse, causing
blindness.
NANCY GREENLEE
Because she has virtually
Miss Nancy Sue Greenlee
no saliva in her mouth, she
always has water at hand. of Pomeroy left today via jet
Saliva helps in digestion, but for Tacoma, Wash. , where
there are other chemicals to she will be married on Oct. 28
ta ke its place in the stoma ch, to Dale Thoene, stationed at
the McCord Air Force Base
doctors said.
'"When I go to the super- there.

""'-=

MONDAY
BETHEl. 62, International
Or~er ·of Job's Daughters,
7:30p.m uf Job's Dau~hters,
7:30 p.m. Monday at the
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Elementary PTA, open house with
room visitation, 7: 30 Monday .
night at the school. Pled~e by
Miss Barbara Logan 's second
g ra~ e, short films for the
children in the gym ~uring
visitation to inclu~e "The
I.ion an~ the Mouse", "Two
Mini Pozos", an~ "The Seven

Manderines. ''
THE MEIGS Uiapter, Ohio
Association of School Employes, will meet at 7:30p.m.
Monday in the junior high
school cafeteria, Middleport.
QUARTERLY MEETING,
Meigs County Regional
PlaMing Commission, 3: 10
p.m. Monday in agricultural

conference center, Fanners

:~~it;:::m:~~:::d::

Commerce Tuesday at noon
at Meigs Inn. Christopher
Layh will be guest speaker.
OCCL ALL - LEAGUE
meeting ; potluck, 7 p.m.,
Kyger Creek Clubhouse.

Inn.

help you with your
REMODELING PROJEOS!
Vou can add robinets, o room divider or
even a room! To get greet results oi l you
need are the proper tools, bui lding materiels and o few tips.
No molter how Iorge the project, see us ... we can help
lighten the lood ot t he friendly One I

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Department Store
Of Building
Since 1915

POLLY·s POINTERS

press photographers shoe er

Ponvcramer
Stubborn Zipper Story
BY POLLY CRAMER
POLLY'S PROBLEM
DEAR POLLY ....:. I need
some help. I have a new set of
luggage with zippers on the
sides but they are so hard to
open and close that I am
afra id they will break. I do
hope some of the readers
have some ideas I could try to
make those zippers work
more freely. - MARY R.
DEAR pOLLY - It is quite
embarrassing when . pants'
zippers stick. I have found
that rubbing with a bar of
soap or wax will eliminate
this sticking. - KAREN.
DEAR MARY R.-1 think
Karen's letter will answer
your question . A luggage
repair shop told me that
paraffin or candle wax are
the best things t o use on
luggage zippers - - POLLY
DEAR POLLY - I have a
!!low but easf way to get spots
off concret e. ,' lhstead ' -of
mixing a lot of things and
then scrubbing l sprinkle dry
cat litter on the area until the
spots
are
com~letely
covered. Of coune, the age of•
the stain has a lot to do with
the suceess of this but leaving
it on for a week wiU usually
do the trick. Just sweep up
the litter.
My Pet Peeve is with those
people who carry on long
conversations on CB radio,
particularly on the chaMei
number
that
is
.for

emergencies. Once you have
m ade contact switch to
a nother
channe l,
you
shouldn't tie up this
emergency cha nnel. - BILL
DE AR POLLY - When I
boil eggs I boil three or four
extra ones to have on hand for
tuna salad, etc. I store these
boil ed
eggs
in
the
refrigerator and mark the
end of each shell with an X so
th~y are easily distinguished
from the raw eggs. A pencil
will make this X. - KIM
DEAR POLLY - My
Pointer is for the reader who
wanted to get oil base paint
out of her husband's work
clothes. I a m an artist and
have found the answer is oven
cleaner. I spra y t his
generously on the stains, let it
set for an hour, then throw
the clothes in the washing
machine an~ laund er as
usual. This works great for oil
base paint but not latex. If
someone finds something that
will work on latex please let
me know. - DENNY
Polly's note - Be sure your
fabri cs can "take" the oven
cleaner since it is strong. Test
first on a bit of your fabric.
Polly will send you one of
her signed thank-you newspaper coupon clippers if she
uses your favorite Pointer,
Peeve or Problem in her
column. Write POLLY 'S
POINTERS in care of thi s
newspaper,

PARIS (UP!) - Japanese
designer Kenzo Takada, one
of the biggest stars of the
Paris ready-to.wear scene,
got the spririg fa shion
collections under way with a
shocker : he eliminated his
usual mobbed big show and is
giving tiny private shows
wit h all photographers
barred.
In
another
. Kenzo
revolution, he has invited
groups of press and ·buyers;
on ly :;o at a time, to view his
1979 spring styles ea ch
morning for two weeks over
coffee, in the quiet of his
workrooms. He showed a
special film of the styles on
closed-circuit color television ·
and flashed photographs of
his ereations on the wall
before the parade of live
mannequins began.
Not only was the traditional
army of photographers completely barred Thursda y.
Kenzo became the f1rst Paris
designer to try to sell press
photographs of his clothes at $~0 each.
" I thought I'd do something
different ," he laughed after
the first quiet show that
highlighted the opening of

LADIES Auxiliary of
Racine Fire Department will
hold a card party Wednesday
at 7:30 p.m. at the fire
station.
OHIO VALLEY Commandery number 24, Knights
Templar Wednesday 7:30
p.m.
LONG BOTTOM CommUnity Aasociatoln Wednesday 7:30 p.m. at community building.
·
WILDWOOD · GARDEN
Club, Wednesday night 7:30
at the the home of Mrs.
Hiram Fisher. "Come as you
are" party and meeting,
THURSDAY
TWIN CITY Shrlnettes,
7:30p.m. Thursday at home
of Emma Clatworthy, High
St., Middleport .
FALL CONFERENCE of
the . Eighth
Diatdct,
American Legion AuxWary,

• • • • • • • • • • • • • • - ' Thursday at the Middleport

,- ,

Helen Help

uS •

two weeks of collections for
international press and
boyers.
The ·a udience at the first
show seemed pleased at the
intimacy, and thoroughly applauded a toned-&lt;lown , less
farout Kenzo line that looked
wearable for all ages and
types.
The new collection was
very Egyptian in an apparent
bow to President Anwar
Sadat and the blossoming
Middle East peace,
.The Kenzo girls wore black
Cleopatra wigs with outfits
featuring a pharaoh's collar
- huge, stiff, round metallic
collars completely separate
from strapless siriped jersey
rnmidresses, orfourlayers of
round organdy collars that
stood up at the_back of the
neck. The traditional white
bridal gown that closed the
show~ had a wide "coll~r"
slanted around the hips as
well as around the neck.
Applause greeted Kenzo 's
long, collared organdy
dresses, see-through except ·
for the hips , hidden by layers
of stitched tucks.
To add to the Cleopatra

mood, Kenzo draped his girls
with hip chains of colored
glass , forehead beaded
bands, belts and upper arm
bracelets in the form of
Cleopatra's snake and wide
brass arm bracelets. The
snake also showed up in the
form of gilt shoulder straps
with the head of the serpent
embroidered on the gown.
The amusing closed-circuit
television fil m · of his
collec tion was made In
Egypt. In th e film one
Cleopatra in pants and
pharaoh collar glided down a
palace stairway inexplicably
into a 1936 white rickety
Dodge whil e a cast of
thousands of extras holding
flaming torches· lined the
road. It was one of the
funniest scenes in Paris fa shion, and could change the
entire method of staging
fashion shows.
Elsewhere, the early shows
so far echo the new skinny,
broad-sho.uldered look unleashed In the July high
fashion collection s. The
F rance Andre vie parade
feat ured
extra
wide
shoulders on 1940-ish outfits.

Committees for t he
Syracuse PTO fall carnival to
be staged Saturday night at
- -the Syracuse Elementary
School have been announced.
The ~oor tickets will be
handled by teachers of the
sc hool, while the game
tickets will be handled by
Terri Michael , Jonetta Davis,
Carol Adams, Janice Lisle
and Angie Harden .
Two shifts have been a rranged for each of lhe activities during the evening .
Additional workers as well as
makeup and unbreakable
dishes are nee~ed .
The committees are:

i

Count ry kitchen : Marcia
Arnold, Susan Winebrt.1 /lllCI'.

Mary Chancey, Sylvia Cook,
Ca they Ba ld win, Mary
Pickens, Pat Hou~ashelt ,
Carolyn McCoy, Lois Davidson, Mrs. Robert Cunn·
ingham, Martha McPhail ,
Corky · Davis an~ Tet·ri
Michael.
Coffee and pop: J eanctle
Duffy, Edna Laven~er , Hilda
Weaver, Sally Ebersbac h,
Caro lyn Reynolds, Mae
Gru ~ser, and Carol Ada ms.
Sandwiches : Ann Hemsley,
Sa ndra Cobb, J u~y Pape,
J uanita Grueser, Jo Ellen
Roush, Jinna Arnott , Ka ren

Housh.
Prize tabll• : Juyec Sisson,
Loui se l'..,rank, Marilyn
Ot•etner, .Jocelyn Bailey.
f&gt;nnna Alcshir·e and .JoneltH

nmiis.

Fish pond : Cht·i s JHeks,
Bunnie Freeman , Bremla
Wolfe. Mrs . Cox , Joyce
Qui ll en, and Betty Van
Meter.
Duck pond : Susan Burgess,

Crystal Simpson, Mrs. Custer
Mrs. Harris.
Basket ba ll throw: Jun
/\dams, Don Housh.
R. C. Toss : Dennis Moore,
Jaekie Williams, John Van
Meter , Robe1t Will is.

an~

l&gt;art. Throw ; C.:larcJH'l'
Frank, Rnb Oocmt&gt;r. Hunnil·
Quillen, and Wi lliam Cogar.
Jlean bag toss : Barry McCoy, Jerry Aleshit·e. Ken
Jacks, an~ Phil Burgess.
Pumpkin faL'e ' Bnb Davi s,

( iun lon Wir ll'hrcnncr. Mary
Pit·kt•n:;, and Svlvia Cook .
Pt·nny pit.-1:: Mike Fn.
Mike Stewart ; Hi lda Weaver,
arHI Karen Cvmwll y.
P en dulum :
Larry
F.bcrsliach, Pete Michael ,

The Almanac

cury, Mars and Venus.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of sCorpio.
French actress Sara Bernhardt a nd American· talk
sho w host JohMy · Carson
were born on Oct. 23 - she in
11145 and he in 1925.
On this day in history:
In 1915, an estimated 2,~00

United Presslnlernalional

Today is Monday, Oct. 23,
the 296th day of 1978 with 69 to
follow.
The moon is in its last
quarter.
The morning sta r s are
Jupiter and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mer-

NEW
P ICK UP T RU CK

.Judy Pctpc, NcuH:y Pittter.sun ,

Kathy Fry, Hush Ph:lson ,

and Jcctnctlc Duffy\

Shrmm SteWart, .:tnd .Judy

Tic-lat:·toc : ..John Li s le,
Oon Hcu·tlen , Ca thy Baldwin,

Williams.
Susie Gruc:;cr iJ!ld .Joyce
Thoren will be !he fortune
tell ers. with Ci ndy Swisher
an:J Judy Flagg handling the
nwkP-Up center. C~:~ thy Mourt:!
will be the pocket la~ y, and
Shi rley Cogar the b&lt;:illuon

Honni&lt;•

Fn.'C ilH tll ,

HIHI

.Ju.anita r.rucscr .
Spook huu~c : Pat Phil son ,

women marched in New York
City demanding the right to
vote throughout the United
States.
In 1942.. the British 8th
Army launched an offensive
at El Alamein, Egypt ,
starting a campaign that
eventually swept the Axis
forces out of North Africa .

SHI EL DS- FLAIR S

at

Codner's Campers
Rai nbow Ridg e

C. R. 28 to Bas han

- ------- ~0---- ,
I~----------N. W. COMPTON,
0. . 1
OPTOMETRIST
I
III OFFIC
E HOURS : 9: 30to 12, 2 to 5 (CLOSE I
AT NOON ON THURS.) - EAST COUR T I

1-~~.!2~~!!2!:--------~------·
'

HALLOWEEN APPLE SALE

ARM POT ROAST ........

0 ""'

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U.S.D.A. CHOICE

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SUPERIORS

BRAUNSCHWIEGER ..............................•o•••

-----

ENGLISH CUT ROAST -•o••• '1 29

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~ ALL PURPOSE JONATHAN
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FOR A
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CARROTS

BLADE CUT

BEEF ~ TEW .......................... --.... --•--•o··• '1"

FRENCH CITY

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$ 49

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WHITE GRAPEFRUIT ... .. ......... 5 lb bag 11.19
SAlAD-PAC TOMATOES ........... ........ ea. 49'
HOME GROWN YAMS ... ... .. .. ... ...... lb. 19'
YELLOW ONIONS ........ ...... 3~b. bags 89'

PARSNIPS
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BEEF CUBE STEAK ..................... Pound 199

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BATTERED DIP

Angeles and Paris .
Mark Traynor.
"I'm a salesman . I can sell
A year and a half later he
anything, 11 Carmen says . was doing press fa- WUhelIndeed he has -- from mina's model agency. Soon,
. ffiakeup to toys to plastic his company was promoting
sandwich bags - since all sorts of items. Now his
breaking into PR six years product is people, the famous
ago to represent cosmetician and the soon-to-be.

.

Committees anf!ounced for Syracuse PTO coming fall carnival

People never tire of good gossip

NEW YORK (UP!)- John
Cafll)en was a 14-year-&lt;&gt;ld
dropout when dreams of fame
and a stage career swept him
to New York. Within five
years, he wasn 't buying those
dreams anymore - he was
selling them.
· A year ago, singer Grace
::: Jones was virtuaUy unknown
)
=:= outside the gay disco circuit,
but now she 's a top
=::: .
}
e
e
·· international star. She did it
with exotic looks, a model's
poise, an eyepopping act and
IS SMUT-TALK GOOD THERAPY?
lusty
voice.
BY HELEN BOTTEL
And with John Carmen.
Dear Helen:
It 's the best of times for the
My friend says I'm repressed because I don 't swear or use
dirty words. He insists those four-, 12- and 10-letter expletives press-agent biz : everybody
are great releases, and you can 't be mentally healthy unless with a 36-point ega has a shill
- entertainers, writers,
vou let ~o and shout them once in while.
Actually, !'ni a more liberal thinker, and communicate politicians, cosmeticians ,
even society bluebloods. •
better than he does. ,
And though John Carmen
He goes to a therapy group where they sj&gt;end the first few
minutes yelling unprintable things at one another, which, he never made it past seventh
grade, he sooq realized there
says, frees them up ..
were lush pickings in that
Is this necessary, really ? - NEVER MISSED THEM
mother lode of American Idol
worship.
Dear NMT :
"People will never get tired
While somErepressed people abhor dirty words, it doesn't
follow that all "clean talkers" are repressed .' A few shy souls of gossip. Gossip is here to
might benefit from the shock therapy your friend suggests, but stay," says Ca,rrnen, born
Carmen John Ambrogio :!5
ooly temporarily,
Th08e who depend on unprintables in their conversations years ago. "People are also
fascinated by outrageous and
O!ten lise them to fill in blank splices left by inactive minds.
unreal things."
Be glad you've "never missed them." - H.
The skinny kid from .Pater+++
son, N.J ., has parlayed those
Dear Helen :
If TV advertisers must replay their commercials a two principles and some fast
thousand or so times before they get new copy, why do they talking into a thriving
okay th08e awful skits which turn your stomach the first time business - seven figures, he
around, but make you want to break the tube after you've says with tax-purpose
modesty . - He
keeps .
heard them repeatedly ?
Since they evidently can't afford new material from apartments in New York, Los
decent ad writers, why not simply flash the name of the
product with Its picture on the screen• That would be far better
than hearing ad nauseum about "rings about the collar," etc . PREVENT INTERIO
- HOT AROUND THE OOLLAR

:_i!_.:_, '_:

k

· .

Bank Building.
'
TUESDAY
PAST MASTERS night
observance when Middleport
Masonic Lodge 363, F&amp;AM,
meets at 7 p.m. Tuesday; aU
Master Masons invited.
OPEN HOUSE, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at Meigs Junior
High School cafeteria,
Middleport. Tour of building
and meeting with teachers in
their classrooms; refreshments by Parent-Teacher
Forum.
HARRISONVILLE
Senior Citizens Club Tuesday 7
p.m. at club house in
Harrisonville. SandwicMs,
cookies and coffee will be :;;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:=::::::::::::::,:

SPECIAL
MEETING
Southern Local lloard of
Education, 7:30p.m. Tuesday
in high school cafeteria,
WOMEN'S Auxiliary of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
at 7: 30 p.m. Tuesday in the
hospital cafeteria. Mrs. Edna
Russell will speak on home
health care.
MiDDLEPORT
POMEROY Area Branch of
the American Association of
University Women, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs IM
social room. Rep. Ron James
to speak on legislation of
interest to women.
MEIGS ·· AREA Holiness
Assn. meeting. 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday
at
Danvllle
Wesleyan Church with Rev.
James Broome speaking.
WEDNESDAY
MEETING of the trWltees
of Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society, 7 p.m.
Wednesday at the museum ·in
Pomeroy ; committees for
1979 will be appointed.
LONG BOTTOM Community Assn . meeting 7:30
p.m. Wednesday in the
community building. Long
- Bottom area residents asked
to attend and support community growth program.
REVIVAL SERVICES,
All eg hany
Wesleyan
Methodist Church, 7:30 each
evening. Located south of
Coolville on Route 7. The Rev.
Lewis Urey, evangelist; Mrs.
Janet Urey, vocalist. Rev.
Robert Cherry, pastor, invites the public. To continue
through Oct. 29.
MEIGS County Republican
Women's Club meeting 7:30
p.m.-Wednesday in banquet
room of Meigs Inn, There will
be .a guest speaker and free
refreshments. All Republican
women are Invited.
·
Wj·~.fi'tJ.f'--t 'POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT Lions Club
meeting, noon, at the ·Meigs

Let THE FRIENDLY ONE

Spring fashion shows give

I

7- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Monday, oct. 23, mH

~~c~~~~...........~:. 7 9 ~

20 CT.

By Helen Hottel(

WATER DAMAGE

-.,. .. ,. - . r:n . .
llt .:_. ,lJUf-\H

DEAR HATC
~~-- ~
..,..,-:P: · :
· Ah, the agony of repeat!
.
Many companies take the germ warfare approach to W~
advertising: they figure if you bombard people long enough ROOF l.. GUTTER CABLE
with the same thing, they're bound ro "catch" it.
Unf&lt;rtunately, they're right: Precious few of us boycott a
Provides an
product because we hate the ad, and even fewer contact the · escape channel for
manufacturer expressing our dislike.
melting ice and snow.
(I do, scmetimes. How about you ?_) - H.

+++

Dear Helen :
This is an open letter to people wbo leU their friends
visiting in your city to "stop by and get acquainted" with you.
Mavbe they're ~Ueat persons, but I resent having my busy life
interrupted with, "HI, this is SoandSo. We have mutual friends
in Mr. and Mrs. Whosit who think we should meet." If I make
anexcUJe !feel like a cad, and if I don't'! usually end up bored .
Tell 'em, Helen! - T.C.L.
DEAR T.:
You already did! - H.

Pope has invitations
NEW YORK (UPI) - The ·pope's election. Some 200
new pope of lhe Catholic people attended the mass at
Church, John Paul II, has the 12~- year-old Brooklyn
two Invitations to visit New cathedral.
~ork.
Szpilski, pastor of St.
Gov. Hugh Carey and a Stanislaus Kostka Church,
Poliah priest from Brooklyn recalled a visit made by the ·
issued invitations to the pope new pope to the Greenpoint,
Tuesday.
.
Brooklyn, parish In 1969 "1 am going to personally and another visit three years
recommend to the PreSident ago in Krakow, Poland, with
that he send U. Gov, Mary the then-cardinal.
Ann Kru[l8ak to lrivite the
" Cardinal Wojtyla often
pope to visit us here in New spoke to me about GreenYork," the governor said.
point. During our conAt the same time,· Mon- versation, he mentioned that
signor Joseph SzpUski, a he would like to come and
friend of the new pope for the visit us again," he said.
last 20 years, l~ued his own
Invitation In a homily
DUES DOE
delivered at . St. James
Members
of the American
Cathedral In Brooklyn.
Legion
Auxiliary
of FeeneySzpilskl · was one of 70
Bennett Post ,128, Mid P.riests - many of them of
Pollsy ancestry - con- dleport, are reminded that
dpes are payable now. At the
celebrating a masa of thanks-giving In honor of the new Thursday district conference
to be held at the Middleport
hall, roU call of units will be
llali beginning at 12 noon. taken, and the Auxiliary is
Sev~ral Department of Ohio hoping to make membe~ship
officers to attend.
goal by that time.·

a

Available at

SALE DATES
QUANTITY
RIGHTS

RESERVED

OCT. 23 TO
OCT. 28

OCEAN SPRAY

99

~~~~E~~~.~.~~~.l 09

¢

8- 16 01 ,

,I Bottles

CARNAT ION

'~;·.· ~- I''

HOT COCOA MIX
RE G. or W/ MINI MARS H MAL LOWS

VIETII

HOT DOG SAUCE .. ........ ........ ,.... ,

310·0.!

sI 00

INSTANuf COFFEE ·~~:· ~ J79

Cono

MONARCH

KETCHUP............................ ~~~~~ ...3/'1 oa
MONARCH . Sliced or
Site 59~
PEACHES...~~!~ ..........................
FRANCO AMERICAN
SPAGHETTI.. .................. ~·K i. 4/'1 00

SHORTENING

CRISCO

Every night before
Cindy goes to bed she
prays ·her clad .will
leave her alone.
Until recently, the
partnership with_ .
subject of incest has
numerous agencies, 1s
been taboo. A topic to be providing that help.
avoided at all costs
In fact, the United
in polite discussion.
Way, through a comFor many, it still is. bination of old and new
But silence won't
agencies, is meeting
make incest go away.
contemJ?orary needs of
Only help will. Help for many kmds.
the innocent victim.
As the needs of
Help for the sick
your community change,
and confused offender.
you can be sure
In many enlighto the United Way
ened cities across
will be right there
America, the
changing with
United Way, in
them.

.

SAYRE HARIMARE
New Haven. W. './a..

A Publ ic Service of This Newspaper &amp; The

Ad "~e rtislng

~~APPLE

Lb.

Can

LIMIT ONE _

HA.DiN

35-oz.
Jar
I

~
~

w

TOWELS -

DAIRY
VALUES

· 12·••·

-

-~

12-oz.

Gallon

DRINKS ........~~~... .

~

-aVo STORES

. ,.,

\

1

79~

~

~

"'
•
n
,.

Lim it two wilh
$10.00 purchase

~

"

z,.

"

... , ...

'Oo S10R ES

FREEZER VALUES 1--- -

99'
IIIJJIIIflllll 1111.... ... ....... .................... ....... ::!~.
: Borden
~-o•' sJ2' ·
L~OY'D J . HARRISS

ICE CREAM ..... .

'

0 ••• • I

28-oz .

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

~:~~~

10-CI. $

HEATH BARS ............ :•.••.•.• •......................'!'l'.

12f

VALUES

$

c!;.~;,.

.•\l S1ORES •

~V
,..__,
• \..._,, \ 1
KEEB

\'\. f

"'z '
0

t ... .

$139

2
MARGARINE.,....

BLUE BONNET

",.

u

I

LITE LINE CHEESE ..... ~~.~ ....

FRUIT .

.

~

z

Jumbo
Roll ·

$1

Ga llon

TIDE

59¢

COTTAGE CH~!~~ ..... ~}15

,.

n

GIANT SIZE
49 oz.

BOUNTY

BORDENS

Bend

XI\ell) iJil•): 1
0

----'-----1

Pomeroy

JELL

V;·(~-

SEN lOR CITIZENS

DAlRY VALLEY

XIJt•lllill•l:l

'' .

ASSOR TED

SJit

CHOtOLATE DRINK .. ~~?......

ADOLPH'S

SIORES . CAROINALFO OOSIOHES

~

BORDEN

: 10:00 A.M. II
11:00 P. M. Sun.Thurl. 10:00 A.M. til
12 :00 P.M. Friday
and Saturday,
See Os Altho

591•SO!~!s

CEREAL

994
AMERICAN SINGLES.~~~: ..

25% Off Purchae,
Just Present Your
Golden Buckeye Card
When Ordering.

MARSHMALLOW

FIYIO POP
Assorted Diet Flavors

BORDENS

SALE

KEEBl ER F U D G E

SJOAts • CARorNA L FO OD s1 ORES

VALLEY BELL
Council

0

APPLE CIDER ........... ~~:·

.': ~:· 89

¢

GRAHAMS ...................

0

MONARCH

Unlb•dW.y
T t • b liD yau.IIIWDI'ka.
Pllr . . .,. ...

-: tioilv.M.\IIt

11 ·2

20' OFF LABEL
AJAX LIQUIO

21 -oz.

U ' OFF LA.aEL
AJAX LAUNOR\'

.

J

S H

CLEAIER .........•........... •..........•....•..... ~:-~.

48-or. $ ,

••

omRGEIT .............. ······.. ·······.. ······....'~~.
39«
DIAL SOAP .......•.......•........•.•........••....•Pn.

WHITE, GOLD, AO\!A, PINK

15·01,

~\\0 SJ OR ES • CAR DIN ALFOO OSl \ RES

X1\•l IJ :;;:; •]:I
.

~

"0z
"

~

u

�'.

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. , Monday, 0&lt;-t. 23, !978
L

_

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items. Into Cash
ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

~\?~[DlJ

w

-

[D~[fl]lli~Gl\7

WANT AD
CHARGES

NO HUN IING m Ue!&gt;pass in g on
my proper ly wn hou l pe nm s!\iOn Judy M(Gr ow

,,-, "' ... ~~ ~ .. , lli ltt,• t

GUN ~ H OOT No cmP. Gun Club
h c ry ~undoy I prn fo• tory
r hoke gun ~ only

l •• ~ ~~
I 1.1

,I dol\ '

,.,
,.,

htl.t\ ~

t ·- )

1 d,u
~. l.t \ "

ettorts will be matc hed by Lady
Luck to bn ng tht s about

SCORPIO (Oct . 24-Nov. 22) It's
tmperattve to focu s on your

important goats today . You ' re
capable of rather rem arkable
achte\lement Proceed, not
postpone , should be your motto. Ft nd out more abou t yourself by sending for your copy of
Astra-Graph Letter Ma tt 50
ce nts fo r each and a long, selfaddressed . stamped envelope
to Astro-Graph , P 0 aox 489 ,

Aadto Ctt y Station , N.Y 10019
Be sure to spectfy birth sign .

SAGIITAAIUS (Nov

23-Dec.

21) You wtll learn somethtng
from all your tmportant encounters today At a later date
you Wi ll fmd a rewarding appli·
catton for thts knowledge

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Do not interfer~ wtth one who
1S presently managing a matter
successfully for you As long
as yo ur best interest ts served ,
you are wise to remam m the
bac kgroun d

! J. j
I ;:,

j ",nh \\ lli l \ il \'t' l ti ll" IIIIIIIIIIIUI I 1.1

di:i} "

lh,tr t tnll"l"!,.IJ\1\t"
lt tll l.11 t'lt.tl god !II lht• I t ilt~

li t

tm• m ptt

Good things are likely to happen to you today , but they will
be due 1n large measure to
efforts of persons you ' re associated with Their luck r ubs oft
on you

PISCES (Fob. 2D-March 20) Situations could take a surpnsmg
turn today where your work or
c3reer Is concerned. In areas
where you were previously stymied, opportuntltes wtll loom .

ARIES (March 21·Aprll19) Selle
any opportunity to be w1th
friends today There ts something quite bene ficial 1n the
off1ng that c omes through social encounter

(AP&lt;II

2D-May

20)

Dame Fortune has selected
you to recei\le one of her favors
today . Concentrate on a personal desire. Your chances of
getting tl are good

GEMINI (May 21-Juno 20) You 'll
be happtest today if you can
move freely, both mentally and
phystcally . Even mundane
errand-runmng could turn tnto
a pleasant adventure

CANCER (June 21-July 22) Today you ha\le the knack for
taking sows' ears and turn 1ng
them mto silk purses. Your
skillful mampulattons can make
a tidy profit tor you .

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) You have
enormous resiliency today Because of this ability Ia bounce
back , success is likely in situations you control Be pos1t1ve

Forge ahead
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) You
can achieve the results you
hoped for today because you'll

have the right people to back
you up when the ch1ps are
down . Their support is essential

LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 23) Be
opttmistlc regarding new prolects that you launch today .
Conditions are promtsing . If
you thmk and act ·· win, " you

Will.
PROBATE COURT OF

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF NAOMI M
MILLER. DECEASED
22515

NOTICE OF

APPOINTMENT

OF FIDUCIARY

On October 18, 1978, m the
Meigs county Probate Court,
Case 22515, Raymond M
Miller . Rt I , Box L37 , Reeds ville , Oh10 45772 was ap
po tnted Adm1n 1strator of the
estate of Naomi M Miller ,
deceased , late of Rt. 1. Box
L37 , Reedsville . Oh to 45772

Mann i ng 0 . Webster
Probate Judge Clerk
23 , 30 { 11 1 6, 3tc

Wolfpen
News Notes
Russell Family Reunion
· A picnic and familv
gathering was enjoyed at the
Fort Meigs. Those attending

( ',nd ,.(

M• •lJ tlt• llutllo ' ..;;J h ·~ ,wtl \ .u d ~.al l'~
;Ht ol&lt; t t•pl &lt;d IJtl f~ II ti lt I a ~ ( I Yiitl l
utdct ~-ot "t rtl d !W" J.!t \oll llth t ,lll"\ ·
Ul).! I ~• I:\ Nutnl.wt In ~.tit' o( J"ltt• St'lt·
Ultt l
l"t tt" l'uLh:;lwr n·~··rH·~ tl tt• t t).!l tt
LL•t'llll •• r t t'jt'el a11~ ,td ' dt'l'tt tt'l i ••bJl't"lu•na t l ht• PubiL, In•t •t tll ltul bo.·
ll."S jll!ll ~ lbh · f II 111
1111 th,ill 11111. I Ill PI"·
11'1 "1n t ~t · rltnr t .
l' h1"lt' ~lfU- 2J :Jji

\1 u u !i&lt;t~

:tl ..Oil &lt;IJI S. t\UI dll\

I Ul' ~ t l .n
lluu l'lt tlo~

SIO il

01-'fNtNG ~OO N Co ke 011d Con
dy Cr o l t Shop Any on e 111
tc re sted tn &lt;oke decoro tm g
c las se s
b eg •n rr 1ng 1 on
Novem ber ca ll 992 1S8:J or
~ f.Jl - 3189

1-'ur~ah·
COAl UM~ S TON~ . sa nd grove l,
calnum chlortde fertt ltzcr . dog
food and all type s of soli t x
celsoor Salt Works , Inc ~ Mo tn
~~ 1-'omeroy 'N1 :JB91

-------WO~K

OV E~ SE AS
Au slrolto .
Afr iCa . Sou th Amert co , ~urope ,
e tc
Cons t ructro n
Sole s,
Engtneer s Clemal , et c $8000
to S50 .000 plus . ~ x p e n s es po1d
for emplo ymen t tnfo r mafmr,
wrote Overseos bnp loyment
Bq x lOll ~ as t on Mo 02_102

SC HOO L
BUS
cam per
60
pos.s.enger wt t h new ttre s
Good condttton Contact Tom
Monktn at 991 2201
MA YT AG COI-'P~RTONI: 1-'orto
1-'otr washer and dryer Very
good cond•tton se ll os s.e l . Call
alter ~pm 991 2995 .

MAN OR woman to represent
Lif e m
We ster n Sou th er n
Pomeroy or Mtddteporl Must
hoY e cor No experienc e required Sa lary , commt ss ton s
car e~epense ond all bene ftt s
Mtntmum age 22 Apply m per
son
We stern -South ern Ltfe .
218 ' ~ ~ Mom_ P_omeory _
OH .

-l I' :\1

WAITIU:SS WANTto . Over 11
Ntght shttl No expenence
necessary
Fr re ndly Tavern
Mrddl eporl

}- tll.l iJ~ .tfli' t 11111 11\

Apple Grove
News Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Jean Ashley of Ravenswood is spending a ,week with
her father, Ralph Ashley .
Mr . and Mrs . Wayne
Wilson, Mrs. Kathryn Hunt,
Beverly Wickline visited Mrs.
Erma Wilson at the Arcadia
nursmg home at Coolville
Sunday .
Mr. and Mrs . Ronald
Russell, Mandy and Mike,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton visiled Mr. and Mrs .
Eddie Hupp, Mr . and Mrs.
Arnold
Hupp
Monday

THt WACKE:NHU T Corp rs now
accepting opplt catron s ond con·
ducltn g tnlerviews f or full lime
and port time sec ur•ty postlt ons
rn th e New Hoven . WVA oreo
tnt ePnews will b e g•v en at
lOom unttl Spm on lues 0&lt;1.
14 1971::! at the 1-'t Plea sant Inn .
M•htory background prefer red
bu t no t requored J-lleose apply
m per son No phone inquones
,We ore on ~0~ t::mployer
--

_______

WANUO COUNT~R man A pply
tn per son Motor Ports Co ,
M tddleport . Ohio No phon e
call s.

evening.
Mr. and Mrs . Rocky Hupp
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Hupp at
Marengo.
Mrs Florence Smith attended the homecoming at
Morning Star church Sunday.
Mrs. Smith was pastor there.
Virgil Norris of Mt. Vernon
spent the weekend with h1s
parents, Mr. and Mrs Ross
Norris at Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hart
of Columbus spent the
weekend with Mrs. Don Bell
and visited her father, Don
Bell at Holzer Medical
Center. Mr . Bell received
injuries in an automobile
accident .
Mrs . Gladys Sarsons, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Sarsons
of Beaver Falls, Pa. spent
from Friday till Tuesday with
her sister, Mrs. Elizabeth
Roush .
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Wheeler
of Fremont spent a weekend
with Mrs. Anna Wheeler.
Mrs. Florence Smith,
David Harris, Steve Wilson
attended a Methodist Church
Retreat at the home of Mr.
and Mrs Charles Gaskill at
Mu!dleport Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs Roger Roush,
daughter Kim spent Sunday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Dana Cewis at Clifton. Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mrs. Iva Orr visited the
Lewises Monday evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Norris
of Racine visited Mr. and
Mrs. Marshall Adams Sunday .
.,
Mrs. Herbert Roush visited
Mrs. Pearl Norris Monday

evening.

' ....
'''

'

Fairview
News Notes

CH IP
WOOD
Poles mox
dtarneler 10 on large sl en d
St:l 50 per ton Bu,dl ed slab
Sb 50 per ton. Deltvered to
Ohto Polle t Co ., Rt 2 flomeroy
992 -2b89
TIMBI:::R POMEROY ~ores ! 1-'ro duct s Top prt ce for stand ing
sow ttmbcr . Call 992-5965 or
~e_n~nby_ 2_: 4!~- 8~7~ __ _
OLD FURNITUR~ . tee boxe s, brass
beds ~ron beds d esk s, etc. ,
complete househol ds
Wrtle
M D M1ller , Rt 4 1-'omeroy or
call 9fl2 -77b0

--------------OLD COINS fJOckel watches
cla ss rings weddt ng bo nds
dtOrnonds Gold or sil11er Coli
Roger Womsle)l 7.d2 -2331

---·---·

WI:: PICK up tunk auto bodtes buy
mg 1unk cars , scr ap tron . bot
tertes and me tal s
Rider's
Sa lvage , SR 11.d
Pomeroy
992 5468
WANTED TO buy 183 or 350
Chevrolet motor havtng 50,000
mtles or less bl4 -l:&gt;b9 -37b9 or
conta ct Delton Garnes . Rt 2
Box ~ 10 , Roc me Ohto

--- - --

J~AN

----·

SKIRTS and o th er sk irt s.
Su e 7 6 992 3b18 .

Auto Sales
1977 MONZA SPYOER 305 engine .
Power sle erm g 1-'ow"er broke s.
AM ~M radio . More ex tra s Ca ll
742 2820 .
1978 TOYOTA CHICA GT Lth
bock Special edtt ton Block
Phone 99158b0 or 992 32M .

-- - -

-

-------

--

1977 MERCURY STATION wagon ,
15,000 mtles. 4 whe el dt s. k
brakes . trotler tow•ng package.
Speed con tro l. Aulo· l emp air
co ndt!t o mng
ttl!
w heel
q49 -274b
l 9btl CORVETT~ co nvertobl e wtlh
hard
top
$5500
Day s
~B_5 - ~3~ll - he~lr~g ~ . ~ij~ ~1 ~0 __
1974 OLOS CUHA SS Supreme Sta·
lion
Wag on
Full power
992 -7663
1974 liNCOLN CON TINENTAL Ex·
Ira clean AM -FM r odto lil t
wheel ; powe r seats ond win dows . Many othe r e&gt;~l ros
$3000 992-3230 alt ar S

--.-------- ----1974 DODGE COLT .:'Runs good
Need s so me body work $1200
_99_1 - ~~-of~e~4~~~ doys __

t 9"1b OLD S MOBIL~ STARfiRE . 4
. cylt,nder , 4 speed 25,000mtles
New !ires. ~xcelle n t conditton
S7150 9B5 :!909 .

Wanted to Rent
WANT TO rent storage space f or
auto s Moson , Pomeroy, Mtd·
dlepo r t orea See RiC hard Hor nson , l dO N 3rd A ve . Midd lepor t

PHON~

-

19"10 RED 1-'ACER 3 speed b cyl
AM ~M tope player , (8 rodto
Must se ll Phone 7t.2 1874 .

New or Repair
Gutle!s and
Downspouts

-----

- --

19611 Sta r OO~e l 2 'l BN
1q1o Sylva 6U x 111 BR
1968 Vt lla ges 60x 111 ~R
1964 Wi ndsor 51x 10 'l BR
\9 :/0 Kirkw ood 11 .. bO:J!:IR
~&amp;S MO BIL~ HOME SALES
1-'T. PUA SANT , W VA

--

c LARK 4uo0 lb fork ltft. In good
opero ltng
con dtlton. Days .
9~~ - 330 1 he~t~g ~. ~El ~ - ~1 ~0 .
HAY FO~ sole . 992 7751

------·

POMEROY
LANDMARK

AKC· WHIT~ poodle Female 1' ,
years old , 8 drawer dresser
wtlh m~rror . Kirby uprtght
sweeper
Prices
cheap
992 -358 1.

Industrial
and

Building
Any Type , Improvements
All Type Concrete Work
No Contract Too Large Or
Too Small

HOMESIUS for sole, t ac re and
up M iddleporl , near ~ullond
Co11992 7481 .

Mqr.
Phone 992 -2 161

- - -

---

EXCAVATING dozer loader and
backhoe work . dump tru ck s
ond lo -boys for hire will haul
fill dt r l lo soil , ltmes tone and
groYe l. Call Bob or Roger Jeff ers , day phon e 991-7089, nt ght
R~o~ ~-92 - J515_o r 992 - 5231

------- ---·

VA -FHA , 30 yr. financing , also
relinonc tng Ireland Morlgoge ,
77 ~ Stol e, Athens , phone(bl4)
592 -3051:.;___
.

__

Ho·:ol E-l:oll' l'nr !'ial•·
~OOM

house and both
remodeled fully carpe ted . May
be se~n oiler J pm flhone

THREE B~DROOM fra me home m
_ !" ~dle£.~.'-~~92~4 5~-- _
FARM FOR so le House 2 barns
lroiler Lorg e pond 10 acres or
82 acr es 742- 2566
N~W THR~E

HOUSE IN 1-'omeroy large lot
Some r ecent remodelmg New
ca rpel Cent ral heot tng Utdily
room ~ ul l ba sement 2 per
ches Furn ished or unlurm shed
992 -7074,

bedroom home rec
room , fire p lace . Iorge deck
garage, basement, one and o
hall boths. I-' hone lee Construe
11on 991 -3454 , weekends
1- bt4 -446-95bB

Bl:AUTifUL 3 bedroom all elec trtc
home wi th over I acre of land
Prtce reduced 9.d9 2424 ,

~XCAVATING ,

dozer , backhoe
and dttcher. Charles R Holf•eld , Bock Hoe ServiCe ,
Rut land , Ohto . Phone 742 2008

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

WILL do roof tng , construclton,
plumbtng and heating No 10b
too large or, too small. J.»hone
742 -2348 .

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

HOW~R'(

AND
MARTIN
EM coYottng
se plic sys t ems,
doter back hoe dump t r uck ,
ltmestone, grovel
blacktop
povmg Rt 143 Phone 1 (6 14 )

-- _______ __ _

&lt;&gt;98.733 1
--

UAT~ROOM S

AND Ktlchens
remodeled, ceramic trle plum·
bing , corpenlry and general
maintenance
13 years ex
_pe_!"•!nce 992 - :J~~- _____ _

Groceries , dry good~ . hard w ore , feed , tack shop specrol

_251b . ol ~o&gt;l food, $3::.::.
88_ __

Qll\._o&gt;ll o&gt;ll ,(.-.. $347
"' ~~gal .

Town &amp; Country
Pomeroy Landmark
. . . .!atk W. Carsey, Mgr.

-·

...

Phone 992-2181

HONDA XR75 985 4219
1-'IGS FOR sole Charles Seorl es
741 2910 .

Pets for Sale
home, new ranch with
basement, large family
room with wood burning
fireplace,
large I ivl_n g
room, dining room and n1ce

992-3325
216 E. Second Street
REDUCED- 4 bedrooms,
gas heat. city water, city
water, near stares. and
schools. Has a 2 car garage
with stora9e over . Ntce

kltehtn. 3 bedrooms. IV'
baths, fully carpeted,
garage . tf has etec. te lling

level

features . $51,500 00 .
CLOSE
IN-NEWER
RANCH , 3 bedrooms,
beautiful kitchen, larger

lot

tn

heat, deck , many modern

Middleport .

$23,000.

.

BUSINESS BUILDING 36&lt;80 Building oul of high·
water ,
conditiohing,
heat. city
concrete

Has
alf
natural gas
water, and
floor.
In

- - - -----------125 HONDA . $52S 949·2U3b

Pomeroy .
-GOOD OLD HOME- .66 of

LOWREY G~NI~ 44 Ai l ex tra s. In
perfect condifto n 9'12-3215
·r--1975 CH~V ROLET HEAVY duly •r,
ton b c'yt . st d. with topper
V@ry good condthon A lso, 8
h.p. rotoflller 949 - 24~9

an
acre in excellent
location on No. 124. Large
eat - In kitchen, central
heating
and
air
conditioning ,
several
porches, and city water.

THREE SPHO bike. lO·speed btke .
needs r epOi{ New 3'/, qt slow
cooker tb m Homelr te c h oir'~
sow , almost new . 992-3079.

----- - -·---- - - ·
A 1978 Hondo Hawk , 400cc motor·
cycle

1200 mdes $1150 Co li

742 -1018

By Mrs. Herhert Roush
Mrs . Ett Warner spent
- -- - ----- --- --SNOW
Sunday night with Mr. and
For Rent
Mrs. Hoyt Ferguson at Point
TIRE SALE
Pleasant.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Pork
Reule 33 , north al Pomeroy
Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Roush, son Ed, were visitors __lo~9! l~ ts. Co~l 992-7479 ,
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
of Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Hupp, :J AND 4 RM furnt shed and unfurnt s he d
opts
1-'h one
POMEROY ALNDMARK
Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Hupp
992 -54:14 .
SERVICE STATION
Sunday evening.
----------TWO B~DROOM kd chen furn ish David Roush of Clifton was
ed , opt Co li before 8 om
a Sunday dinner guest of his
4Y2-22~8 .
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
mo le adult
T~Ail~~ .
ON~
....~ck W. Carsey, Mgr.
RusseU Roush.
492 -31 !:1 1
. . . Phone 992-2181
Mr. and Mrs. Sid Manuel of
TWO BEDROOM mobde home 2
Long Bottom visited Mr. and
rn tl es ou t on SR 14 3 Adu lts on ly
Mrs. Joe Manuel and Tim.
or wilt consider one ch ild .
TWO PIECE divan and choir. 2
He f erencc and depostl re
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Bush
upholtered choirs 1 gold, 1
q utred Potd utittttes 992 3647 ,
spent Thursday till Tuesday
brown. I stove . 992 -:J454 or
St! p~e_n ~ e~ ders o_n . __ __ _
9'/2-5455
with Mrs. ' Margaret Manuel
.
.
at Cleveland, Mr. and Mrs. THH~~ BEDROOM . $150 per CHICKE:N fOR sol e , $1.25 each,
mo nth $100 deposit . 107 Locust
Phone no. 9'12 -7507
Roy Bush and family, Mrs.
St , Pomeroy House will be
.Susie Lewis at East Uver4" .&gt;~ 8 .SLATE top poo l tabl e, com ·
s.hown Sot Oct 281rom 10-2
---·--·-··-··
ple te with bo lls , rock , poo l
pool, and attended church THAill:R
LOT on Gran t St Mtd·
stt cks and one 5pc. cue . 5250.
services at the Rex Humbard
dleporl
Inquir e
f loss•e
Phone 1:192 -14 t:J
Allen
sworth
b
I
'1
G
rant
St
church in Akron Sunday.

Pomeroy Landmark

-·

-

Now only $25,000.
EXCELLENT LOCATION
- Has 3 large bedrooms,
bath, natural gas heating,
ctty water .In Rutland,
reduced to only •$11.000.
28 ACRES New 3
bedroom. 2 bath, 24' • 48'
home. Nice step- saving
· kitchen, dining room and
second older house .

NEW

LISTING

3

bedroom renovated home
with enclosed batli , central
heating,
rura I
water,
woodburner, and over an

acre ol land . $23,000 for
prompt sale.

LIST WITH US, WE HAVE
YOUR INTEREST AT
HEART. NEW FREE
CALENDAR.
Helen L. Teaford
G. Bruce Teaford

Sue P. Murphy
As50ciates

Housing '
Headquarters

HOOF HOLLOW Horses, lluy , se ll
lrode or tr am. New and used
saddles Ruth Ree11es , Albany

(" 14) o9B· 3290
RISING STAR Kennels Boardtng
end grooming, all breeds
Cheshtre, 367 -0292 or 307 -0106

-----------LOVAB l~ WHITE !!.now drrlt great
PYHENH S Pupp •es
l -614 -667 -3838

Ph one

room,
carport.
storage buildings, oiJer 1

GOING OUT ol Business So le 1
P"oodles , Pektngese Pomero n ton , Teacup , Tini es . $35 to
St 25 . Phone 614 696-1297

acre. V. A. approved for
easy financing if you
qualify. ONLY $31,000.00
HERE IS- A nice newer 3

BEAGLE PUPS and !rained rabbit
dogs. . Young ond old. Wdl selt
or trade for guns or somethtng
of equal 11olue. 7.42 2511 ,

t hting

bedroom,

all

modern

ranch. equipped kitchen,
carpeting, sitting porches,
small garden space, !level

lot. A STEAL AT $27,700.00
NEAR POMEROY
Secluded

and

spacious,

W. B. F . P ., 3 bedrooms,
built-in kitchen , recreation
room, lf" acre. Below Fair

Market Value. $20,500.00.
70 ACRES- Farm , ranch
type home, barn, other
buildings. $33,500.00.
$9,500 will buy this 1'12
story, 3 bedroom home.
NEED TO SELL - Price
reduced . Lovely 2 story
frame, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2
bifths,
very
modern

kitchen. N.G. hot water
heat, (budget $69.00 per
month) corner lot. Loads of
remodeling. $27,500.00.
WE HAVE SEVERAL
BUSINESS
AND
INVESTMENT
PROPERTIES.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
992-22$9,992-6191
Hank, Kathy &amp; Loon•
Assotllfes

&amp;W

Now arrange the Circled letters to
form the surpnse answer as sug·
gested by the .above cartoon

LITII.E ORPHAN ANNIE

Answarhera: "[

I.ITft.E ORPIIAif AIIIOE-WHO D.A.T!

I I I I I I ) ITJ'
(Answers tomorrow)

~~~: Saturday·s j Jumbles GAUGE AFOOT CANDID FORGOT

~

BUT WHOEVER
'T""S GOT HIM···

Answer

Rather old-fashioned-but managed to go

out with boys nevenheless-"DATED"

VIELL, HE"S STILL
IN THERE --.

The latest JUMBLES are here In JUMBLE BOOK •10 and JUMBLE
BOOK tV11 Ava ilable lor $135 EACH, postpaid !rom Jumble, c/o thle
newspaper. P,O Box 34, NorwOOd, N J. 07646 Make checks pa~able to
Newspaperboolls.

Open Saturday 10-4 p.m .
Sunday 12 noon to 3 p.m.
8-31 -1 mo.

REPAIR

80W~HS

~A::L:::L::E.::Y....:OO:..::.:P_ _ _ __,--,----:::---:----::-:--.:-:-::-1
WE'RE 61'.1NtNG ON
~IIICE "TJ.IUM AND 1
lollS~. ALLEY.

Sweepers, too sters , tran s. all
smal l opphonces lawn mower
next to Stole Htghwoy Garage
on Route 7. Phone (614 ) 985-

WE'R!: NOT ONLY GAINING
ON 1EM, WE'RE &lt;90NNA
Pl&gt;.SS 'EMJ
~-~

3B2c:' ·c __ _ _ _ _....,~
SfWtNG MACHINE Repotrs , ser·
v•ce oil makes 992·2284 The
~obr tc
Shop ,
Pom e r oy
Authortzed Smger Sales and
Service. We shorpen Scissors .

- --

-~-----

-- ----

AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE been
ca ncelled? los! your operators
IKense? fl hone 992 -2143

SAVE ON
CARPETING

MALE AND female Beogle dogs.
2 '' ' years old. Trained . 5100
eoch Rolph Wtgol. Reed svtl le.

1·378·6245 .
ONE REGISTERED Geld1ng Ten ·
nessee Walker 9 years old.
Regi stered Blue Ttck, female .
742 ·300 6 .

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Bacteriolo1 Reliable
gist's wire
5 Nimble
·40 Condition
..------..---;--:-----...o:r-=:=--:::="""'\--lo Medicinal 41 French river
DO YOU SEE
plant
DOWN
WHA"T I SEE •
1l English
1 Native-born
S~HE!R?
I
li
strait,
srae
with "The"
2 Alaskan
13 Swiss city
tribesman
Yesterday's ADBwer
14 Console
3 As of now
12 " Uttle Miss 29 Stigmatize
Stodgy state 4 Poetical
Marker"
30 Furze,
16 Egyptian
adverb
a plant
deity
5 Give the O.K. 16 Winter pear
19
Milk:
Fr.
31
Inviting
~~~1~?::..-. 17 Portuguese 6 Honker
22 Hunting dog
conunand
)I
title
7 " - Never
18 L',t•ict on
Smile Again" 23 Moorish drum 36 - Fail,
24 Greek island
crowning
the
8 Diane Kea25 None
stone
C
20 Uttle devil
ton and Uv
better
37
Non- ... 21 Dude tertmmaM

~~~ri~~~?j~~~

'

GASOLINE ALLEY

,,,. .. c.... ... ,, ... ... ~ ...... ' •"• ...

"""'Q
"" .... ....

DRIVE A LlffiE
SAVE A LOT

Rubber Back Carpet
As Low As

9' and 12' Vinyl
Floor Covering In Stock

111

: Wlil d~lJ_Jl~~~~l~
1.

5 : 5~PTL

Club 13.

5: 55-Sunrlse Semester 10.

6 ·00-PTL Club 15: 700 Club B.
10 ; 6 · 3()-Focus on

6:25-Concerns &amp; Comments
Columbus 4; News 6.

6: 45-MornlnQ Report 3, 6· 5~Good Morning , West
Vlr91n1a 13: 6:55-Chuck Whtte Reports 10. News
13.
7 00-Today 3,4,15: Good Morning America 6.13: CBS
News 8; Jetsons 10.

7 3~Schootles 10.
8: DO-Capt. Kangaroo 8,10, ~"a me Sl . 33
9 ·00-Merv Griffin 3: Phil Donahue 4, 13, 15; Hogan' s
Heroes 8; Match Game 10.
9 J(f-Brady Bunch 8; Family Affair 10.
10 :00-Card Sharks 3, 15; My Three Sons 4, Dating
Game 14, All fn The Family 8, 10.
10:J(f-Jeopardy 3,4,15; Price Is Righi 8,10, $20,000
Pyramid 13.
11 :00-H tgn I( oilers 3,4, 15, Happy Days 6, 13; Con.

Young &amp; the Restless 8: Midday Magazine 13;
Music 33
12:3~Ryan's Hope 6,13; Bob Braun 4, Search for
Tomorrow 8. 10; Elec. Co . 20,33 .
1:DO-All My Children 6,13; News 8: Young &amp; the
Restless 10. Not For Women Only 15
1: 3~Days of Our Lives 3,4, 15; As The World Turns
8,10: 2:1l0-0n&lt; Life to Live 6,13
2 : 3~Doctors 3,4,15: Guiding Light 8,10.
3:00-Another World 3,4,15; General Hospi1al 6,13;
Lilias Yoga &amp; You 20.
3:3~Mash 8, Joker's Wild 10, Dick Cavett 20
4:00-Speclal Treat 3,4.15: Edge of Night 4; Merv
Grllfln 6; Porky Pig &amp; Friends B. Sesame St. 20,33 ,
4:3~Gilllgan's

Is. B: Brady Bunch 10
5:00-Voyagetothe Bottom of the Sea 3: Star Trek 4 ;:
Beverly Hillbillies 8; Mister Rogers' Nel~hborhood
20,33 : Gomer Pyle USMC 10: Emergency One 13,
Brady Bunch 15.
5:3~News 6; Sanford &amp; Son 8; Elec Co. 20,33: Mary
Tyler Moore 10; Odd Couple 15.
6:00-News 3,4,8,10,13,15; ABC News 6&gt; Zoom 20.
6 : 3~NBC News 3,4,15: Carol Bur nett &amp; Friends 6:
CBS News 8,10; Over Easy 20.
7:00-Cross.Wtts 3; PM Magazine 4: Newlywed Game
6, 13; Pop Goes The Country 8; News 10 ' Love
American Style 15: Lock. Stock &amp; Barrel 20:
Economically Speaking 33

7:31}--Hollywood Squares3: : Let's Go To The Races 8:
Dating Game 4; Candid Camera 6, Price Is Righ t

FiND -r~e
peAC.E, Vou'RE
GOiNG. lf'"O HAV~ '.'0

----

caU742-2211
. TALK TO
Wendell or Herb Grote
or Gene Smith

RUTLAND
FURNITURE

e»ivE uP GHiLi.

Rutlonci

11 : 30--Johnny

Carson

3,4,15,

Movie

"Suc h

Good

Friends" 6, 13; Gunsmoke B; ABC News 33 ; Movie
"The Pleasure of His Company " 10.
12:3~News

8: 1:oo-Tomorrow 3.4: I : 3~News 13

BRIDGE
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag

Drawing trumps may lose
10.23-A

• Q 10 6 3
t K 61

+ K 6 53
WEST
EAST
• QJ 8
• 10 7 b 2
.. 5
• A 12
t J B2
• Q 10 9 5
• J 10 9 2
+ AQ 87
SOUTH
t A K 63
• KJ987
t A73
• 4

'll'eat

Nortb Eaot

Pus 2•
Pass

Pass

Pass
Pass

trwnp. ''

Alan: " What South can't
afford is that third round. If
h1s king is allowed to hold
and he continues, West can
take his ace and lead a third
trwnp. South will wind up
losing one trick In each

suit."

Soutb

Oswald: "South must plan
to ruff his two little spades.
After taking his king of
trumps he must play aceking and a thlfd spade . He
ruffs in dummy, comes back
to his hand with the ace of
diamonds, ruffs his last
spade, leads dwruny's queen
of trumps and loses three

t•

tricks,

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

35 Becky
Sharp's
friend
37 Encircled

takes his ace and leads that
second

• 94

••

not four."

38 Coat
feature

Opening lead: •J

Ia

WINNIE

I WA&amp; NEVER MORE SCAREI7
IN MY LIFE! IF YOU 170N'T BAIL ME

DSK

FEYXH

GYH

CXJT...W/lNIN THEHOUR. ..
IM 170NE FOR !!!

NXT

TEJO

QLJG

RLJA

• JB
• ~Q71
tAK2

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

One letter simply standi for another. In this sample A Ia
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation or the words are all
hints. Each day the code !etten are d•iferent.

DSK

XN

DSK

ASXTS

OKGXRJO

You hold:
10-23-B

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:

CllYPTOQUOTES

IF YOU NEED
A SOFA THAT
MAKES A

9·3o--Taxi 6,13; In Performance at Wolf Trap 33 .

10 .00-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6, 13 ; News 20
10 : 3~Like II Is 20: Area Showcase 33.
11 :DO-News 3,4,6,8,10, 13, 15; Dick Cavett 20. Over
Easy 33 .

roUnds - m case a defender

~·F~R~A~N~K~&amp;:.:E~R~N~IE~----,--;-----:--------------------- :U ~l~eone's 1::::+--t-

and see what you're geHing
-Good selections- Fully
stocked.

Lehrer Report 20,33 .
8 :00-Grandpa Goes to Washington 3,15; Happy Days
6,13: Jacques Cousteau 4; Movie "Pall lion" 8, 10;
Soundstage 20: City Report 33
8 : 3~Laverne &amp; Shirley 6,13; When the Boat Comes In
33
9:00-Movle "Donner Pass : The Road to Survival "
3,4, 15; Three's Company 6, 13 : Champions 20

NORTH

in
the
Beatitudes
1::::+--t-

Buy where you can come In

742-2211

ntory

ze

All carpet installed with
padding at no charge.
Expert installation.

sq. yd.
&amp;up

5: 45-Farm Report 13:

~hannon

22 Indigo
plant
23 Jellied
25 Aquatic
plants
Caustic
27 Colt
· 28 Pub quaff
29 Ship's
weight
\.,:.~~f-"""7:1'1 32 - relief
33 Verb

&amp;.

'4•88

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24,1978

10; Donna Fargo 13: TV Honor Society 15, MacNeil -

BRAD~ORD ,

ELWOOD

6 ; News 8: Ironside 13.

Batman 10; Dinah 13

QUALITY

------ - -

NEW LISTING- A dream

'THie. 'TOA'!:r'T.

'Diu APPAWGIIIAN.
S'IOVE GOMPANY

R~EV~S TRADING Po st. Pagevrl le

ANTI-FREEZE
PERMANENT
ANTI-FREEZE
Why pay $3.99

iHEY

........

1-'UlltNS ~XCAVATING Complele
Servtce Phone 992 -2.d78

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

0

fully insured
Free Est.
Call 992-2772
B-10·1mo. (Pd.)

Aucttoneer, Com plete Servtce Phone 949-1487
or 949-1000 Ro cme. Ohto (fltl
Brodtord,.;_______-'-:"c::--

t2 : 3~FBI

l : OQ-Tomorrow 33 ,4; 1: 3G-News 13

12 : QO-Newscenter 3; News 4,6d0 ; America Alive 15 ;

Tony's Carry Out

For Free Estimates

" Divorce American Style " 10.

12:00-News 6,13;

sumer Survival Kit 20

Dl
6-l'T DOWN
WHEN 'THEY MADE

In Middleport between
Third &amp; Fourth Street-off
Mitt Street just behind

220 E. Main Street,
Pcmeroy,O.
can m-7013

9:311-0ne Day At A Time 8,10 .
10:1J0-Lou Grant 8,10e; News 20. Evening at Sym.
phony 33
10: 30-Crocketts VIctory Garden 20.
11 ·DO-News 3,4,8, 10, 15; Dick Cavett 20 : VIsions 33.
11 : 30-Johnny Carson 3,4, 15; Gunsmoke 8; Movie

11 :30-Wheel of Fortune 3,4,15: Family Feud 6,13;
Love ot Life 8,10
11 :55-CBS News 8: House Call 10.

on heating cost
Experience and

CHEAP!

9~21-lmo_

Real Estate for Sale

Dl

BORN LOSER

WOOD HEAT

APPUANCE II

To Existing Structures

Phone 992-6144
992-7547
10·18·1 mo.

Sale Prices
Jack W Carsey.

fiV~

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

Cellulosic (wood· fiber)
Thermal insulation
Save30 pd. to 50 pet.

ELLIOlT

Home

byHennArnotdandBobLee

Blown Insulation
JIM KEESEE

Armstrong Carpeting

All Work Guaranteed

992·3933
NEW 30106 Remington 742
rtfle with K3 Weaver scope
and sl1ng strap Extra fancy
walnut stock 5112 boxes shells .
$330 Ithaca model 37 1:::1 ga
pump 30 mch full choke vent
rlb ba net almost new . 5200.
Homet tfe XL12 chatn saw 16
tnch bar wtth wood cutters
ktf. almost new condition,
S150 E ngltsh made 12 oa .
double bane! in very good
co nditiOn . S150 Call 742 -2359
eventngs .

Type

J&amp;L

Your Headquarters For

25 Years Experience

For All Your
GE T.V.'s &amp;
H otpotnt A ppl.

-~

All

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~\£I~~®

9-7- l mo.

Pomeroy, 0.
3·15-lfc

Ph 992·2848

Mourning and
Price BuildeiS
Commercial

.

--------

'fliflif.\.0 ID'il

All types of roofing, gullers
downspouts, 20 years
experience.
All work
guaranteed. Call Tom
Hoskins, 949-2160 . Free
Estimates.

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
Tires
Battery .
Installation Service

Chester, Ohio
10 30 c

TOPP~RS

-

views 33.

&amp;

MOORE'S

Jack's Septic
Tank Service

cleanmg The Chtmney Sweep.
Call 614-373 -b057

LUMP HOUSE cool. $35 per ton
delt vered 99~-7~~ - __

,.

SERVICE ·

For The Best
Price In Town
See
Denver Kapple
AI

Jack Ginther 985-3806

DUSTL~ SS ~ UUY L An and chtmney

- -- ......----·- -·--·

•
'

a 2 1 mo

4-30·11C

Phone 985-3806

99~ · 5191

1973 KAWASAKI F7 lots of ex •
tro s
Also , Craig AM - fM
cossetl e tn dash cor slereo ond
Jenson speaker s Alter , call

5 00- Voyagelo the Bottom of The Sea 3; Star Trek A;
Bevrrty Hillbillies 8: Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
20,33: Gomer Pyle, USMC tO : Emergency One 13;
Brady Bunch 15.
5:J(f-News 6: Sanford &amp; Son 8: Etet . Co. 20,33; Marv.
Tyler Moore tO; Odd Couple 15.
6.00-News 3.4,8, 10, 13,15: ABC News 6 ; Zoom 20.
6:J(f-NBC News 3,4, 15; ABC News 13; Carol Burnet! &amp;
Friends 6: CBS News 8, 10; Over Easy 2Q.
7:1J0-Cross.WIIs 3; PM Magazine 4: Nwlywed Game
6,13: Devil &amp; Daniel Mouse B: News 10; Love,
American Style 15; Almanac 20, Know Your
Schools 33.
7 : 3~ That Nashville Music 3. Dating Game 4; Muppet
Show 6 ; Match Game PM 8: Wild Kingdom 10; $1.98
Beauty Show 13; Nashville On The Road 15:
MacNeil -Lehrer Report 20,33.
B:IJO-Littte House On The Pra irie 3,15: Supers1ars ,on
Staee attheOh lo State Fair 6,13: Election Rally 78
4; WKRP In Clnclnnall 8: DwiQht 10. EvenlnQ at
Symphony :ro: Person to Person : Selected Inter

•

OHIO VALLEY ROOFING
AND
HOME MAINTENANCE

Auto&amp; Truck
Repair
Also Transmission
Repair
Phone 992-5682

Residential and commerciaL Call tor estimate. 24
Hour Service. Any day,
anytime_

FOR YOUR complete hou~tng
remodel111g , cons truclton and
mom tenonce, gtY e J R o try .
Ref e r e nc e
avotlobfe .
Rea sonable prtces
Phone

"/.d2-3154
--- . AI-'1-'ALACHIAN STOVE CO large
selec lton ol wood or cool
hea ter s lowest pnces , feolur tng Ashley Open Sot 10 tit
4pm Sun 12 noon hi 3pm In
Mtddleport between :Jrd and
down the alley lrom
4th 51
Tony s
Carryout
1-' hone
614 b98 -7191

St. Rt. T24toward Rutland,

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

---WATER WELL dr tl ltn g. Wtlltorn T
Grant. 741 -2879

----- - -

Pomeroy

Great Performances 33 .

MONDAY, OCTOB E.R 23 •. 1911

.

Services Offered

.

.

109 High St.

o.

10·22·1 mo.

TRAt l l:R ~OR sole 2 bedt
slep
up krt chen and dtnmq area
Con be lelt on lot 74'l-J122.

PAIR SNOW !ires stze 14 Less
than 50Cl miles SyiYonto co lor
TV , S30 bl4 - ~7-- b~3? ___ _

'I'• mile off Rt. 7 by-pass on

Reasonable Prices
References Available
Phone 992 -5191

1475 OAKMONT 14 • "!0. :J b edr
Un l u tnt sh e d
Co mpletely
redecorO ted I 304 6"15 1958 fo r
oppomtrnent
'

-

1Bob Hoeflich)

PomtlttJ'

ROGER HYSEll
GARAGE

Construction
Maintenance

electn c furnt '&gt;h ed Oir cond •·
honed , wa sher an d dryer Al so
'l
l o ts
111
Horrt sonvdl e
H'l 1820

-

992 2522

p.. 9!2·1171

Painting

lqb7 HOU SE TRA ILER 11 x bO All

•

••
"•
••••
••

The Photo Place

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

8: J(f-People 8,10: Lowell Thomas Remembers 33 .
9:IJO-Movle " Kalle : Portrait of a Centerfold" 3,4, 15;
NFL Football6, 13; Mash 8, 10: The Long Search 20 ;

TELEVISION
VIEWING

Catt Us Today

Carpentry, Electrica I,

-

-----

.._........ the

J. R. Construction
Co.

1 AC R ~
11 &gt;~ bO rnob tle home
nc ar Oe J&gt;C ter 99'2 5058

1'

BABY DRESSHHTE Youth bed
Jumper chaff Phone 991-556"/
--~·

are currently mak1ng
appointments for senior
portraits . We use tradt·
ttonat settings and also
feature
outdoor
portra•ture.
_

19 1 :JSiorb0&gt;~14'lBR

Sole CARI' LT ~EMNANTS . Odd s
an d tnds Shop Rt I Mtd
dleporl . Ohto
992-b17 J or
992 _b206

-

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

High School
SENIORS

B-20-1 mo . !Pd.)

':, KYLINI:
MOBIU
ho me
1
bedroo m s Noturol ga s heat , 1
acre o f level gro und, par che s
and awnt ngs. 4 cor ceme nt
b loc k garag e 14 x 54 !-=r01 t
trees l oca ted ol Heecl svd le
Oh to on SR 124 Clos e Ia sl ore
Ca ll ' onyttm e alter ::!pm
52 GALLON Mar-Flo elec trtc ho t
614 -JB ! b:J5t for oppo tntm enl
woler heater New cond1 1ton
S2U UUU
S50 See or coll74'1 1411

-

we

Service
,,_,

'
Free Estimates
Phone 949-2862
or 949-2160

llf /0 Amh er st 50JC 111 13R
I '1 !0 Chomp ton O{)JC l 2 :1 ~R
1'-Jb':J Gene r ol 60~e 111 ~R
14bH 1-'MC 51x l :I1 8R
14SS l-'r01r1 e Sc hoon er 1H.I(B I ~R
19"/J Royal bnbo s~y b(bd 4 3 BR
I 959 Sta r SO x 10 '1 ~N

1964 11::! fT Franklin trotler Self cont a tn ed wtth wot er pump .
New 12 volt bofl ery . Gas
retngerator
slave . furnace .
owm ng , tacks ho t water tonk
Sleeps s1• ~h_o~e ? 4~ ~8?4

TRUCK

Wanted to Buy

------~

J-=OUR tJ tnch Cragor SS whee ls
Wtll ftl ford and Chevrolet
$:100 !4'1 2626
J(,/74 DATSUN 1-' ICKUI-'
lf'n·bl92 .

- -

1416 NASHUA 14 x b5 3 bed roorn
11
bot h undet ptn ning, $ 1~00
and osloume loon. 949 lb H:J or
B4:J-:J:J II

GOLDI:::N Red Del ~t: t o u s
&amp; Golden Oehc•ous apple s htl
patrick
Ofc har d . S~ e89
6 14 -t\09 3"1 85 .

· - - Hel_e__Wa_tlt_ec!

--

ROOFING

DICK TRACY

.--:-:;-;--=-:--.---, ..

H. L WRITESEL

'lohilt · ll_ot ~u·_.. l~ •r_~&lt;_!l•·

C.IHM~S

-

~Utll l tl l

-

BURROUGH S SENSI·MATI( oc
co unltng mo chm e
Pho ne
qen :1156 The Do•ly Sentonel
111 Courl Street . Pomeroy
Ohio

BODY AND cleanup men for 13ody
Shop
Hysell s Used Cars
Hutlond Oh1o 741 :J tS.t

il ' M

tlw tla~ Ut•(u tl' puhho. ol 11111

were :
Louise Earnheart, Jake
and Charlotte Earnheart,
John and Elizaheth· Haning ,
Jim, Diane and Johnnie
Haning, all of Columbus; Iva
Johnson, Evelyn Thoma,
Sharon, Michelle and Dav1d
Barr Naomi and Charley
Smith , Jan, Doyle, Kail,
Charles and Kevin Knapp, Jo
and Stacy Worley, Ida,
Peggy, Barbara, Carmel
Murphy, John, Julie and
Chris Murphy, Joe Evans,
Harley, Kathryn, Tammy,
Cheryl and Terry Johnson,
Uncoln Russell, Dale, Betty
Jane Russell and Susan, Jane
Alderman,
Sarah
and
Tracey, Franklin and Irene
Russell, Louise and Clmton
Gilkey, Walter, Kathy,
Joshua and Jeremy Jordon,
Mr. and Mrs. Todd Gilkey,
daughter, Ha~old, !Jaisy,
Vicky and Bruce Gillogly,
Fred and Gladys Tuckerman,
Viola, Rhonda and Ronald
Haning, Dorothy Reeves and
Jell Darnell , Freda and
Carolyn Elam and Leslie
Frank and Jerrv Hollev.
Mr. f:arl Russell of Kentucky was a recent visitor of
Mrs. Bertha Russell.

YOU ll oubled w llh wt ld
on unol s.":l t- o .. mtnk , racoon
oponum beover e tc? Coli th e
,, 0 pper em~ :J~H J Wrll cont act
111
pe1 .. on lor stgned perm ts

NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES

lWO LOV AUlf half grown yellow
'-.tllf'n s Ia good hot ne Call
'IM~ -11 10

/1~~

'l'h;mk" ,lftd
l'luf"tl. U ~ I

l.&gt;IJtlllo l l I
h lt'rtb jk' l
tiiU\IIt t Uill ~ dlih \I I iHI\ ilt U't"

WHI H long haired :J
"'""' '" o "d , b wee k &gt; g&lt;oy 1
ti\OIIIhlo , Met!=jS Hu rno r1e OCIO
ty 'l'n 1':J41 and 441 :/()~9

,,..

[,_------~----~ ~

It YOU hov e a ~etv tce to offer
wan l to bu y 01 se ll ':&gt;Ome tht ng
OC' loo lo. tng l o• work
01
who l eYC' f
. you II gel results
Ia ~ Iet wt lh o Senltnel Wo n! A d
Colllf'l"i ;J);b

Kll l i: N~

GU N ':,HOOl i(Q O IIC .'nlunt eer
I Il l' Dcu t very !»o t urdoy 0.30
p 1n o l 1he11 budd111g 111 f;loo;hon
I e1 . 1or y c ho~ e gu n~ only

t&lt;tl t

AQUARIUS (Jan. 2D-Fob. 19)

I 101

1 ~1

r\lb IUI\IIIIIIo: &lt;&lt;lhl' l

October 24, 1978

Case No

h,u ~··
I :!a

"'"' ~~~ '" 4 ot'HI~ 1~1 " "l"d jM.'t tlaJ

A nse tn stalus 1S hkely thiS
commg year , as well as a
marked Improvement m your
ma ten al affatrs Your dtl1gent

TAURUS

t

Business Services

Yard Sale

G1ve Away

Notices

Tuesday , Oct. 24

9- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Mooday , Oct. 23, 1978

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Soatag

• Q 10 8 5
A Wisconsin reader wants
to know if we open one
notrump.
We certainly do. For years
experts have opened almost
all 16 point H-3·2 hands with
one notrump. Today standard American bidders still
require that a doubleton include the jack or higher so
this hand meets everyone's
standards.
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.}

(For a copy of JACOBY MODERN, send II to: " Win at
Bridge, ·· care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 489, Radio City

Station, New Yorlr, N. Y. 10019.1

15 IN STOCK
Largest Stlectlon In The Valley

THAT CAT HA5
Ml{ BLANKET!

1-\0W ARE WE GOING
TO GET IT BACK?

fOR SALE by owner 512 E. Motn
St ., 1-'omeroy.b rbom hou se
carport
W B
fireplace , MODERN 3 bedroom home, fully
carpeted, central air, full basecarpe ted , complete modern kit·
ment with fireplace , inclosed
chen , conc rete dirve Also od sun porch, located on b' • acres
IOcent A frome bus tnes s
neor Ractne on black top rood.
bui ldtng wtth concrete porktng
area . 555 ,000 . For oppt phone
Heasonobty P,rtced. $40,000.
~ Q;l . :JI:J:/1
,
949-~B~ af!~H 7pm . _

•

'

�.10- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday . Oct. 23, 1978

Egypt takes favorable
view of treaty draft
United Press Ioteruallooal
Egypt today took . a
favorable but qualified view
of tlle draft of a historic peace
treaty witll Israel that could
officially end three decades
of hostility between the two
nations.
Moshe Dayan; Israe l's
chief treaty negotiator and
foreign
minister, was
presenting Ule draft text to

Ule Israeli cabinet today in
Jerusalem for its approval.
Dayan, on arrival from
Washington SWJday witll De·
fense
Minister
Ezer
Weizman, said the two sides
were '(closer together" but
emphasized "there are a
number of areas where even
now we do not have an

agreement.''
Israeli and

Egyptian

• Automatic Cook-Master
Oven Control

negotiators announced in
Washingtoo SWJday they had
resolved all the "principal
issues" of a treaty under
which Israel would withdraw
from Ule Sinai and Egypt
would allow economic and
cultural ties with the Jewish
nation.
A cautiously worded
Egyptian statement issued in
. Cairo today was large ly
favorable to the draft treaty
and high on praise for
President Carter for his role
in eliminating differences between Israel and Egypt.
"Egypt holds that some
points in the draft might
require further study to make
it r eady for signing, "
Presidential Press Secretary
saad Zaghloul Nassar said
today.
Nassar praised President
Carter's intervention witll the
Israeli and Egyptian negotiators late last week to bring
tentative agreement on the

draft .
The spokesma n thus
impled that Egypts reaction
to. the draft was largely
favorable.
"Egypt must pay tribute to
the wonderful and honest
effort made by President
Carter who held a lengthy
meeting with UJe Egyptian
delegation Saturday morning
to push Ule process toward
agreement and to overcome
some
difficulties
and
differences," Nassar said.

Mikoyan dead
IContinued from page ll
innerctrcle as commissar of trade .
In Ulat role, he was Ule first top Communist official to
visit the United States. After a tour in 1936, he brought
back ice cream pies, corn flakes and mechanized
bakeries.
"We must study America," he said.
Mikoyan seemed w have a built-in political baro~eter ,
an instinct that always seemed to put him beside the right
person at tlle right time.
Stalin's purges feU hard on Ule inner circle, but Mikoyan
managed to survive, carrying a deputy-premier's title he ·
was to hold for more than three decades.
But he had close calls.
"Stalin held ' us in his hand," he ooce said. "Only one
escape was left to us (suicide) . At the end of Stalin's life, I
was about to be executed."
But it was not to be. Mikoyan's barometer led him to tlle
side of Niklta Khrushchev during Ule coup of 1957. When
Khrushchev emerged, Mikoyan rose with him.
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges Oct. 20
Dorothy Adams, Joseph
Adams ,
Billie
Akers,
Margaret Bray, James

•Glass 'window in oven
door
• Easy-View Surface Unit

controls
• Broiler-roaster Pan

Now Only

34900

5

BAKER FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturda y admission Dorothy Greathouse, Racine.
Saturday discharg es Henry Greathouse, Betty
Pauley, Gina Arnett, Brenda
Fry, Marilyn Powell, Goldie
Roberts, Larry Smith, Calvin
Pickens, Monid Good, Merle
Manley.
·
Sunday admissions - Mary
Bonecutter, Pomeroy; Nona
Winebrenner, Middleport ;
Jr.,
Edward
Martin,
Pomeroy.
Sunday discharges- Mary
Evans, Otmer Grimm.

PAULA SISSON; left, educa tiona! consultant of the
Ohio Deoartment of Education. confers witll Greta Suttle,
a county school supervisors and chairman of Ule coWlty's
right to read program. Ms. Sisson and Mrs. Suttle met
witll the county committee on the right to read program
Thilrsday afternoon to discuss the future steps to be taken
_in.the program .

someone happy

this··Christmas.
Like a child you don•t even know.
Mak.ing youngsters happy-is there anything beUer that.
yOu could do with your time'? And , if that happy moment
comes at Christmas, it turns for maliy children a sad time .
into a happy one
Enter th~ Dress-A-Do!lru Contest or the Design - A -Toy n.~
Contest . You may participate in one or both , whatever you
choose . We furnish the doll and the toy . They are bo!h

Brenneman, Lily Browning,
Karen Bullington, Maril~n
Campbell, Hugh Childs,
Maude Corder,
Bruce
Davison, Deborah Friend ,
Thelma Green, ·Roberta
Hartley, ~Y Hill, Reginald
Hill, Freddie Houdashelt,
James Israel, Wiima Jolley,
Mrs. Robert Jones and
daughter, Donald LeNay,
Julia Lee, Nora Lucas, Ralph
Mahan, Effie Mahle. Kathryn
Maines, Robert Mayries,
Helen Manring', Helen
McGuire, Ray McGuire,
Charles North, Roy Phillips,
Linda Preston, Home&lt; Rees,
Anthony Remy, Catherine
Shifflet, James Simms, Seth
Stobart, Nina W::tgner,
Rebecca Woltz.
Births, Oct. %0
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Craig,
son, Scottown ; Mr. and Mrs.
James Garey, daughter,
Middleport.
Discharges, Oct. 21
Joseph Beattie, Mrs .
Johnny
Berkley
and
daughter; Glenn Biddle, John
Brunton, Roy Burns, Mildred
Clarey, Grace Copas, Dawn
Elliott, Hobart Ferris,
Glennie Fox, Donald Fox,
Thelma Houck, Charity King,
Edwin Larue, Donald Lipscomb, Meda Mink, Hillard
Newsome, Dorothy Pierce,
Tamara Lance; Mary Riggs,

1------------------~------·
I

1

JAMES WILFORD ROUSH
.lame&gt; Wilford Roush, 62 of
Newton Falls, died early
Thursday morning at the St.
Joseph Hospital at Warren.
Son of the late Orval and
Myrtle Thornton Roush, he
had been employed for over
25 years at the Newton Steel
Tube Co. He was reared by
his grandparents, the late
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Thornton of
Mt. Alto.
· He is survived by his wife,
Evelyn Jordan Roush., five
daughters and one son, and
was preceded in death by an
infant daughter, and three
brothers, Floyd , Homer and
Jesse. He is survived by a
brother, Albert Roush, Route
4, Pomeroy , and an aunl,
CORRECTION
The Meigs County sheriff's
department erroneously
· reported that Mrs. Betty
Bishop, 40, Rt. 4 Pomeroy,
struck a car driven by Elaine
M. Barnhart, 17, on the Meigs
high school ' parking lot
Friday. This was incorrect as
Miss Barnhart did not see
that Mrs. Bishop was stopped
and Miss Barnhart struck the
rear of the Bishop car.
Charles Rowland, Elsie
Saunders, Orin Smith ,
Tressie Stevens, Einma
Swon, Evelyn Tredway.
Births, Oct. %1
Mr. and Mrs. Leland Burd,
son, Gallipolis; Mr. and Mrs.
Randall Shobe, daughter,
Leon, W. Va.
Discharges, Oct. 22
Debra Adkins, Ronald
Brown, AnthO!lY Davis,
Wanda Dillinger, Carol
Drake, Hazel Harding, Mrs.
Eugene Hornsby and son,
Blanche Johnson, Bessie
McCormick, Harry Parsons,
Minnie Riffle, Callie Roberts,
Edna
Rollins,
Joshua
Rutherford, Ronald Swisher,
William Will.
Births, Oct. 21
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Clark, caughter, Wellston.

IJ,..:_r_h_e_W_or_fd_To_d_a_y_
(Continued from page I )
urged voters to cast UJeir ballots for Lt . Gov. ·Richard Celeste
for governor.
Speaking along witll Celeste at a get-&lt;Jut the vote rally for
the Coaltitlon for Political Participation Saturday, Young told
a primarily black audience of about 300 tllat "one vote
shouldn't make a difference - but it does . One vote could
mean Ule difference between healtll and happiness or
mediocrity and confusioo."

ELBERFELD$
.

'·'· '

'

,.

Mrs. Mary Dean, Bidwell.
Funeral services were held
at 11 a.m. Saturday at the ,
Browski Funeral Home at
Newton Falls.
Albert Roush a ttend~d
along with other members of
his family, Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Parsons, Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Roush, Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Flowers, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Roush and Susan.
· BERTHA C. PLANTS
Mrs. Bertha C. Plants, 81,
Regency Apt. Five, Point
Pleasant, died Saturday
evening at her' home.
She was born Feb. 6, 1897 in
Mason County, to the late
James C. and Amanda J.
Meadows Edwarda.
She was preceded in deaUJ
by her_. husband, Dell D.
Plants in 1974.
Su..Vivors include two sons,
Duane Plants, Jericho Rd.,
Point Pleasant; Kenneth D.
Plants, Morgantown ; two
sisters, Mrs. Osia Riffle, Pt.
Pleasant and Mrs. Cora
Morgan, Mason; six grandchildren.
Services will be.Tuesday 11
a.m. in the Crow-Russell
Funeral Home with the Rev_.
Wilbur Baxter officiating.
Burial will be In Yauger
Cemetery.
Friends may call at the
funeral home after 2 p.m.
today .
EULAH BRACKEN
Eulah Norris Bracken, 81,
Darlington, Pa., formerly of
Letart Falls. died Satnrrlav
afternoon at a hospital in
Midland, Pa .
Mrs. Bracken was the
daughter of the late Philson
and Ella Norris. She was also
preceded in deatll by her
husband, Roy, one daughter,
Kathryn, one son, Carl
Peacock, and one brother,
Edwin Norris.
She is survived by one son,
Earl Peacock, New York, two
daughters-in-law, several
grandchildren and great ·
grandchildren, four brothers,
Tom Norris, Letart Falls,
Ross Norris, Syracuse, Carl
Norris, Junction City and
Rev. L. T. Norris, Rome City,
Ind., and a host of other
relatives.
FWleral services will be
conducted Wednesday at 2
p.m. at the United Brethren
Church, Letart Falls. Burtal
will be in Letart Falls
Cemetery.

BY BOB HOEFLICH
During the meeting presided over by Thereon Johnson,
.The Ohio Environmental Agency has not been formally chairman, plans were made for a special session for reviewing
advised that a coal loading facility is being readied in the Ule indUstrial site study report. The report is to be completed
Minersville area, C. E. Blakeslee, executive director of the by the JeMings and Associates Consulting Co. in January and
Meigs COunty Planning Commission, reported Monday when according to plans made Ule meeting to reveal the study to the
the 'commission met at the Farmers Bank Building.
public will be held in conjunction with the Pomeroy and
Wakeslee reported tllat he had talked to EPA persoMel in Middleport Otambers of Commerce. H. E. Shields and E. F.
botll Logan andfl:olwnbus and Ulat tlley had advised him that . Robinson were named to attend tlle November meeting of the
no application had been filed for the planned coal loading Meigs and Atllens County group which is working on the
facility but did indicate that ooe would have to be filed . The .industrial site study . .
facility does have permission from UJe State of Ohio to run a
Johnson reported that progress is being made at the site of
conveyor for coal under the road in Minersville and has been Ulenursing home construction on former Route 33 and Blakesgiven permission by the U. S. Corps of Engineers for using the lee annoWJced Ulat maps of Meigs CoWJty heine made bv Ohio
river as a part of tlle operation, Blakeslee reported . .

entering the toy contest need only assemble the toy from a
sheet of complete instructions and add whatever decoration
they choose to the exterior of the ro)'. The toy, a truck,
comes in three different models : log truck, fire engine and
dump truck We will give dolls and toys to needy boys and
girls in our area . One of our local organizations will ,help
distribute them. They know where the dolls and the toys are
most needed. You woul d be surpri sed how many need

so much .

Along the way , yoor doll and toy will be on display in
our lobby and people from m.iles around will be i'nvited to
see them . Both dolls and !rucks will be judged and you can
even win a prize.
Make some linle girl or boy happy this Chri stmas and you
will have a h"appicr Cltristmas too . Enter our Dress-A-DoJJTM
or Dr:sign-A-Toy !),j Contest It ~..:osl"i you nothing but .your
time tO sew a doll dress or assemble a truck

Farmers Bank
POMEROY, OHIO
~

Member Feder~~ Oopotit '""""'" C..poqt»n

VOL. XXIX NO. 134

rw -

A TltA0E&gt;1o\Jtll. AND SERVICE MARK Of IUCHAlD ITEIIBII'IS _.,/liD AS~OCI .-.lU . INC

•

•

at

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

enttne
PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1978
,•

Cable TV
rate hike
denied
WHICH MASK? -That's what Amy Joy Boston was
asking herself Monday as she prepared for Halloween .
Amy· is the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Mike Boston of
Letart .

·Explosion

kills

•

SIX

By JAMES L. OVERTON

Twilight beef
:meeting set

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

University are nearing completion.
committee . Blakeslee also pointed out Ulat legislation on land
Mrs. Carol Costanzo reported on several conferences she use in Ohio 'is to be introduced in Ohio's General Assembly in
has had with Ule county commissioners in reference to a home January and he stated tllis will have some effect on Meigs
rehabilitation program. The coun ty has some $80,000 which County.
will be used to rehabilitate homes and no repayment will be
Archie Stegall, Shields and Robinson were named to serve
necessary for tllose receiving benefits. Shields and Carl as the nominating committee and besides selecting a slate of
Denison have been named by the commissioners to an officers the group will also recommend a citizens'
overseeing committee and a director will be hired by the representative on the commission. The next regular meeting
commissioners for tlle home improvement program . Mrs. was set for January 4unless a special meeting has to be called
Costanzo indicated tllat Ule director might find other federal earlier to handle business matters which might arise.
programs through which additional funds for similar
Attending the session were Johnson , Blakeslee, Robinson ,
programs might be obtained.
Shields, Mrs. Costanzo, Stegall, Wesley Buehl, Edison Baker,
Plans were made for printing _the annual report of the Rick Crow and Boyd Ruth .
commission in December and Blakeslee is to namP A rPvif'W

e

four to six and two houses
were totally destroyed."
Officials said about 150
persons lived in Ule trailer
park. Most commuted to
work in Houston or to nearby
chemical plants.
'-' II was like daylight when I
got tllere," said David Smith,
ooe of tlle first Pearland
Emergency
Service
personnel who arrived at the
scene. " We had a tremendous
fire."
Smith said several of the
injured . were
burned
critically and were airlifted
to a Houston burn center.
Others less seriously injured
were taken to a nearby
elementary school and
treated.
Classes were canceUed at
the school, located about a
mile from Ule disaster area,
and classrooms became
temporary shelters for the

BROOKSIDE VILLAGE,
Texas (UPI) - A natural gas
pipeline exploded before
dawn today, sending flames
racing through a small trailer
park. At least six persons
died in Ule infetno and dozens
were injured.
· Police said 43 persons were
taken to nearby hospitals
with burns . The more
seriously injured were
evacuated by Houston
hospital helicopters and U.S. ·
Coast Guard choppers.
, Brookside pollee chief B.G.
: Ellis also said residents of the
· small community, located
· about 15 minutes from
downtown Houston, were
being evacuated because
, "they are expecting another
· · explosion ."
The 3:30a.m . explosion left
: a Hi-foot-wide cra'ter andlflat·
: tened nearby mobile homes.
• The fire "turned the night evacuees.
' into day ."
The blast could be felt in
' "The flames were 200 to 300 soutlleast Houston more than
feet high and visible for at 20 miles away.
least 10 miles," said Lt.
"I can see the flames from
· Qndr. J.C. Cobb of Houston's here," said a spokesman for
· Coast Guard air station. "I Aviation Charter Inc., an
' didn't count the trailers ambulance service at Hobby
(damaged) but I estimated Airport in soutlleast Houston .
(Continued on page 10)

available now in our lobby . You dress the doll. and those

'•0.000 Mnimum l1110110te For Elctl

Application has not been filed with EPA
for planned Minersville coal loading facility

Area Deaths !

There will be a twilight beet
meeting at the . Dave
near
Gloeckner farm,
· Ractne, on Wednesday,
· October 25, at 6 p.m., with
: many interesting things to
' show and discuss.
·
- Pasture management for
more beef per acre.
- Demonstration on the
control of multi-flora rose.
- Observe and discuss
handling equipment.
- Discuss and observe the
beef herd.
-Discuss the use of Ralgro
and other growth stimulants.
- Talk about intensive ·
management of beef cattle.
Refreshments will be
served.
For more information or
directions to the farm,
contact the Meigs County
- Extension office at 992-3895.
•

I

~'

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Members of Middleport village coWJcil are satisfied with
the service of the PoinTView Television Cable Co. "just as it
is. "
That was tlle gist of a motion passed by the council at a
regular meeting Monday night when Paul Gerard,
representative of Ule Cable co·., appeared before tlle group to
request for Ule second time a rate increase. Gerard explained
again that the two local channels would be combined into one
local channel and two ·new channels would be added to the
service witll Channel 4 Colwnbus to be removed from the
service.
Gerard had asked coWJcil said he is concerned about
to approve an increase from whether residents on fixed
$6 to $7 a month for incomes can meet additional
Middleport customers and prices to which Gerard·
from $4.50 to $5.25 for senior pointed out that his firm does
citizens
and disabled offer a 25 percent discoWJt to
residents. Middleport has senior citizens and disabled
some 700· 'cable . customers. persons.
Mayor
Fred
Councilman Carl Horky Hoffman said that he does not
commented that the idea of think the cable company can
cable television in the first remove Ule two channels
place was to secure more from the Middleport service
Ohio news, sports programs with the changeover if the
and other state oriented raise is not approved. Gerard
programs and that he felt said as the situation now
Ulat the removal of Channel 4 stands, there will be no
defeated
the original programming on the two
purpose. Councilman Marvin channels affected by the
Kelly questioned the $25 changeover if Middleport
maximum
charge
for does not ~pprove the rate
subscribing and reconneting increase.
to Ule service . Gerard said
CoWJcilman Dewey Horton
tllat Ule maximum charge said that all of his neighbors
would be used only in cases are against tlle change and
where several members of the increase and upon his
Ule firm were required for motion
coun cil
voted
long periods in installing the unanimously that the town is
service.
satisfied with the service "as
(Continued on page 10)
Horky said that the
company will be breaking its
franchise in not providing
programming from Channel 4
after Gerard said that
Channel 4 is definitely
scheduled to be removed
from tlle service.
Robert Fisher, attending
the meeting as a fire
department representative,
said Ulat the cable company
should conduct a survey to
determine 1he wishes of
subscribers.
During questioning in
regard to what improved
services the c'Ompany had
provided in Middleport ,
Gerard said that equipment
had been updated and tllat
repair service offered by the
company is quicker than that
offered by any utility.
CoWJcilman Allen Lee King

CANCE R UPDATE '78 was held Saturday by the
Meigs County Unit of the American Cancer Society at ·
Meigs JWJior High in Middleport. Moder.ator was Rhonda
Dailey, R. N., B. S. director, professional education
committee Americ;an Cancer Society, Ohio Division, Inc.,
Meigs County Unit. The welcome was given by Frances
Helmick, R.N., director of professional education
American Can"'r Society, Ohio Division , Inc., Cleveland .

Rhodes plan
for education
•
lS detailed
By-t.EE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS I UPI) - Gov .
James A. Rhodes told the
Ohio Congress of Parents and
Teachers tOday he is "completely dedicated" to local
control of schools, and that
under his education plan,
there will be enough money to

$2 million track
project started
CHARLESTON, W.Va .
((JPI) - Consolidated Rail
Corporation said today it has
started the final phase of a
$10 million, three-year track
rehabilitation project
between Charleston and
Colwnbus, Ohio.
The West Virginia work
involves rehabilitating 44
miles of track between Point
Ple8118Ilt and Nitro at a cost
of $2 million, as well as
renovation of Dickinson Yard
east of Charleston.
The completion of this work
and a similar project in
soutlleastern Ohio will result
In removal of slow orders
from Ule ~ile line, the
company said.
The current West VIrginia
projects calls for installation
•I

of 34,000 crossties on the main
line and another 4,000 in the
yard, 1Coorail said.
The work is being done by
two tie gangs of 50 workers
and 25 pieces of equipment
each. One group is beginning
work at Buffalo and
proceeding toward Nitro . The
otller gang is scheduled to
start work next month
working from Point Pleasant
to Buffalo.
Since rehabilitation of the
Charleston-Columbus line
began in 1976, Coorail said it
has Installed 63,017 ties
between Gauley Bridge and
Nitro. The railroad has also
surfaced the track and
renewed switches and
highway grade crossings.
•

I

Medication update was give n by Ruth Bope, R.N., M. N.
Oncology clinical purse specialist med ical oncology, Inc.,
Columbus. Nursing care of the patient with an·ostomy was
given by Margaret Milen, R.N., E. T., Riverside Hospital,
Columbus, an.d Patricia Hurd, R.N., E. T .. Doctors
Hospital, Columbus. Phychological Aspects of Cancer
Nursing by Beverly Nichols&lt;in. R.N., B.S., head nur~e of
oncology WJit at Riverside . Shown are 1-&lt;, Rhonda Dailey,
Beverly Nicholson, Rutll Bope and Frances Helmick. Mrs.
Dailey is director of in-se rvice education at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

iJ,c"_r_h_e_W_or_ld_To_d_a_y_
Country music mother dead

NASHVILLE, Tenn . (UP!)- "Mother " Maybelle Carter,
69, whose haWJting ballads from dirt-poor Appalachia helped
pioneer today's $400 million country music recording industry,
died at her suburban Madison, Tenn., home Monday.
increase teachers' salaries
The former Grand Ole Opry performer, called "The
without local property tax Mother of CoWl try Music" by her peers, had been in failing
health from Parkinson 's disease. Although she had been a
hikes.
" ! am tota ll y and member of son~n-law Johnny Cash's road show and appeared
completely dedicated to local on network television with him, she limited her performances
control of your schools," in recent years.
Rhodes said. "I will continue
to stand against efforts to
impose costly mandates on
CLEVELAND I UP I) -Cleveland City Council has voted
local scho ol districts in
overwhelmingly to file suit against Mayor Dennis Kucinich's
Ohio."
Rhodes detailed his plan to appointment of Jeffrey Fox as police chief of Cleveland.
Amid repeated charges that Fox is unqualified for the job,
spend an extra $1.1 billion on
the
coWJcil
voted 7-6 late Monday to challenge the appointOhio public schools in the
next four yea rs and said it ment, announced earlier Monday by the mayor . "Fox will be
would provide enough money just .another member of the 'Kucini ch cult,' " said Council
to increase average teacher President George Forbes.
salaries by more than $1, 100

Appointment riles council

per year over the four year

period .
two
Rhodes
add ed
qualifi cat ions : If schoo l
administrators maintain the
current share of their budget
which goes to teachers and if
they tailor their budgets to
declining enrollments.
"There is no person more
important to a child 's
education than UJe classroom
teacher," said Rh odes .
"Teachers deserve adequate
pay,"

Rhodes also leaned heavily
on his plan to keep schools
open and said UJat no school
in Ohio has lost any days Ulis
fall unless by its own
choosing.
''We will keep schools open
in Ohio," said Rhodes. "We
must
ma nage
them
efficiently."
Rhodes was asked after his
address about two school
districts which have clooed in
C'rawford County.
"They closed becase of
their own choosing," said t he

governor . "They didn 't close
becaue of a lack of state
money .It was local money. If
they borrow from us they can
· open tomorrow. "

Secretary Vance succeeds

LONDON IUP!) - Secretary of State C)Tus Vance
succeeded in resolving two items in the U.S.-Soviet talks on
limiting strategic arms and mde "some progress" on other
issues, a senior American official said today .
Vance stopped in l.llndon enroute home from Moscow
without the strategic arms limitation pact he was sent to
complete, but with a commitment from the Soviets to "bend
every effort" to reach a new treaty.

U.S. dollar rallies
. TOKYO (UP!)- The dollar rallied sharply today on the
Tokyo Foreign Exchange market and closed at l82.25 yen, up
from Monday's record low of 181.
Dealers said both Japanese traders and foreign banks
bought back dollars to r~ad just their holdings following the
spectacular plWlge the previous day. The dollar opened the
day at 181.50 and moved between 181.30 and 182.40. Spot
turnover totaled 435 million, down from $5(13 million Monday.

Punk singer slashes wrists
NEWYORK 1UP! ) - Friends of British punk rock star Sid
Vicious say Ute 21-year old musician screamed "I want to die, I
want to join Nancy," after he slashed his arms in an alleged
suicide attempt at a Manhattan hotel room . Vicious had been .
(ree on $5(1,000 bail in the stabbing death of his American
girlfriend, Nancy Spungen.
Vicious, whose real name is John Simon Ritchie, was listed
in satisfactory condition today at Bellevue Hospttal's
Psychiatric Division, according to a hospital spokeswoman.
Meanwhile ,lawyer William KWJstler said he had been asked to
defend Vicious but had not yet decided if he would take the
case.

Burglary under investigation
•

DENISE WHITE, a sophomore at Eastern High
School, is the field commander for the Eagle Marching
Band. Denise is the daur hter of Mr . and Mrs. Marvin
White. Rt. :t Pomeroy .

The Meigs Co umy sheriff' s
department is investigating
the breaking and entering of
the lzaak Walton Gun Club
that occurred sometime be~
tween F'rida y evening and

I

vicinity of the club over the
Monday artcrnoun.
The kitchen doo r fr ame weekend tnat might have
was ' damaged as was · a seen any suspicious persons
window in the main club or autos in the area is
· req ues ted to con tact the
room .
Anyone who traveled in the sheri ff 's office.

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