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Ill-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Monday, Oct. 30, 1978

In secretary of ~tate battle

EXTENDED FORECAST
Wedaesday tbrougb
Friday, fair Wedaesday
with showen Thursday,
endtog Friday. Highs will
be between 410 and 65
Wedaesday aad In the 50s
Thursday aad Friday. Tbe
overnight low will range
from the mid 30s to low lOs.

Celehrezze will attempt
to unseat Ted W. Brown
(EDITOR'S NOTE: This is
the olnlb In a series of 11
dispatches prepared by
UDlled Press International
about tbe contests and Issues
oo the Nov. 7 general election
ballot. Today's article deals
with tbe race for secretary of
state.)
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) Everybody ought to know
who the secretary of state in
Ohio is. He's Ted W. Brown,
and he's been in office since
1~1.

Brown
has
favored
postcard registration and has
grudgingly gone along with
door-to-door signups, but
fears further expansion of
registration programs would
limit eligibility checks and
allow fraudulent voting.
" You can't go out and haul
them in off the street and
make them vote," is his
attitude. "Qualified persons
must be encouraged to
register and vote and
participation in Ohio's
elections must be expanded
while at the same time
maintaining the safeguards
to protect the integrity of the
votes which are cast."
When Celebrezze and other
legislative
Democrats
liberalized voter registration
in 1977, Brown led the ·
successful drive to repeal
election day registration,
abandoning his normally
neutral posture to campaign
for a ballot Issue foc the first
time in his career.
Celebrezze says Brown has
not properly implemented
other parts of the law,
including voter registration
at deputy motor vehicle
registrars' offices.

But a lot of people don't
know what the secretary of
state does, according to
Brown's opponent, state Sen.
Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr., DCieveland.
Celebrezze says he took a
survey and "60 percent of the
people think the secretary of
stale represents Ohio at the
United Nations."
They might conlinue to
think that way but foc the
ambitious campaign
Celebrezze is waging to pry
Brown from the office.
Actually, the secretary of
state administers Ohio's
"Each time you renew your
complex but important
election laws, registers driver's license, they are
corporations and perfocms a supposed to ask lf you want to
variety of minor ministerial register," said Celebrezze. "!
tried it and they thought I was
functions.
Brown, now 72, believes
he's done an outstanding job
.at it over the last 28 years and
has national awards to prove
I
it.
Celebrezze, 37, claims
Brown has done a dismal job
FRANCIS E . .MORRIS
and Is running the office "as
Francis E. Morris, 85, Rt. 3,
though we were still in the Racine, died Sunday at
1950s."
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The secretary of state's Mr. Morris was preceded in
office Is rarely the object of a death by his parents, Benfierce campaign, but this jamin and ·Fannie Smart
year is different. The winner Morris, three brothers,
could lip the balance of the Alban, Ernest and Roscoe
state Apportionment Board, Morris.
which will realign legislative
Mr. Morris was a painter, a
boundaries foc the 1980s.
member of Sutton United
So
Democrats
and Methodist Church and Senior
ocganized labor are pouring . Citizens Center and a past
unusual amounts of money member of Rock Springs
into Celebrezze's campaign Grange .
treasury - at least $120,000 of
He is survived by his wife,
the $170,000 he has raised.
Ura D. Sayre Morris, three
And Brown has responded daughters, Christine Gould,
to the chaUenge by opening a Nelsonville ; Mildred Swift,
campaign headquarters for Columbus, and Audrey
the first time in his lengthy Schroeder, Fayettville, Ark.,
career and by raising $150,000 three grandsons, one grandin his own defense.
daughter,
one
greatOne of the main issues has grandson,
one
greatbeen the differing views be· granddaughter, one steptween the two candidates on granddaughter, one step the role of the secretary of great-granddaughter, one
stale in encotu"aging voter step-great
grandson,
participation and brothers, Clifford Morris,
registration.
Racine and Delbert Morris,
Celebrezze thinks it is the Athens, siSters, Elsie Roush,
secretary
of
state's Pomeroy,
and
Marie
responsibility to take an Chapman, Pomeroy, and
active role, gelling voters several nieces and nephews.
signed up in shopping
Funeral services will . be
centers, libraries and as held Wednesday at 1 p.m. at
many other public places as Ewing Chapel with the Rev.
possible.
Don Walker and the Rev.

nuts! "

Celebrezze Is the son of
former Cleveland Mayor
Anthony J . Celebrezze, who
served as the secretary of
health, education and welfare
under President Kennedy and
is now a federal judge.
Brown likes to discredit
that role by poinling out that
Judge Celebrezze is the
"boss" of U.S. District Cuurt
Judge Frank . J. Battisti, who
ordered busing of school
children in Cleveland.
A graduate of the U.S.
Naval Academy with five
years' active duty as an
officer, candidate Celebrezze
received a master's degree
from George Washington
Ul)iversity and a doctorate
from Cleveland Marshall
Law School.
Brown, a product of Springfield' public schools and
Wittenberg College, was a·
two-term Clark County
recorder in the 1930s and an
administrative officer with
the state bureau of motor
vehicles before he made his
first try foc statewide office
in 1944.
He was defeated three
straight times by the
Republican incumbent before
he succeeded in 1950. He has
since been re-elected eight
times.
Next: Governor

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

' Area Deaths I
I

Steve Wilson officiating.
Burial will be in Greenwood
Cemetery.
Friends may caD at the
funeral home at 7 p.m. this

evening.

Veteran

SEE THIS UMITED nME
SPECIAL N(M

'68U

educator

·retiring

Wreck•••

Fire damages
beauty shop

SENIOR CITIZENS

SALE

ADOLPH'S

DAIRY VAU.EY

f

,,

TV ON AGENDA
A
representative
of
PoinoNlew Cable TV Will
meet with Syracllll! Village
Council Thuraday, Nov. 2 nt
7:30p.m.

'

TEL AVIV, Israel (UP!)- It said Defense Minister
Israeli Foreign Minister Hassan Ali and Acting
Moshe Dayan met informally Foreign Minister Butros
for two hours with the top Ghali initiated the contact at
Egyptian peace treaty the Madison Hotel in
negotiators in their hotel Washington. There were no
room at their request, the · · details about the discussions,
sta~un Israeli radio said the radio report from
today.
Washington said.

The informal session was for another special sessioo to
held despite a suspension in djscuss the Egyptian amendthe formal talks caUed by the ments to the Amerlcan-auUnited States pending receipt thoced · draft treaty. Both
by President Carter of a · sides have amended the
leUer from Prime Mtoister document.
.
Menachem Begin explaining
Begin reportedly wrote a
Israel's decision to expand its pointed reply to carter's
se«lements in the occupied criticism last week of the
West Bank of Jordan.
Israeli decision to expand its
Begin convened his cabinet ·se«lements on the occupied
West Bank of Jordan .
carter said the expansion
Marshall
See,
Point
could hamper the delicate
Pleasant ; Mrs. Roy Brinker
peace negotiations going &lt;11
and son, Mason; Virgil
(Continued from page I)
in Washington between Israel
Phillips, Middleport; Mrs. mediocre · year in football and Egypt.
Richard Fauver, Leon; Oren would be around $20,000 ,
In his reply , Begin
Hanna , ~oint Pleasant; while a great year would be in reaffirmed th.e right to move
Beatrice Juhling, Point the neighborhood of $23;000. · Jews into the West Bank and
Pleasant ;' William Flora,
Last fall was a great season reminded Carter he had
Grove;
Alpha money-wise for LHS, as the agreed
Apple
Israel
could
McKinney, Point Pleasant; football program made over strengthen the setUements
Mrs.
Leslie Wilcoxen, $23,000 for the school.
"by the addition of several
Fraziers Bottom; Jennie
Basketball has to make hundred families," govHalley, Crown City; Melissa $6,000 to $8,000 a season for a ernment officials said.
Gleason , Point Pleasant; good year, thus the athletic
Israeli reports described
Mrs. Oris Hoffman, Letart; · department always hopes to Begin's letter as "aggressive,
Clara Lavender, SYracuse; make around $30,000 a year to sharp, decisive and ascetic."
Mrs . Roy Turner, Hen- keep things going.
Government aollrces said
" We've
been
self· there had been some progress
derson; Tex Priddy, Buffalo;
Pamela Granen, Racine; supporting," Stilwell said. made in the treaty talks
Aaron DeWitt, Henderson. "We've always met our during shuttle diplomacy
Births: A son to Mr. and budgets with our gate carried out by Secretary of
Mrs. Lawrence Pierce, Point receipts." Stilwell noted the State Cyrus Vance and U.S.
Pleasant; a daughter to Mr. following budgets are ob- envoy Alfred Atherton. They
and Mrs. Fred Heldreth, . served for each sport: said there had been some
Mason; a daughter to Mr.and Football, $12,000; basketball, narrowing of the gap on the
Mrs. Eugene Prunty, Sandy· $2,000; track and baseball, political clause of the draft
ville, W. Va.; a son to Mr. and $1,000 each; trainer's sup- pact.
Mrs. Jerry Johnson, Rutland . plies for every sport, $1,500;
The national television said
wrestling, $800; golf, tennis the cabinet would discuss tbe
and cross-country, $150-$200 Egyptian
TB CLINIC
requests for
There will be a public each.
changes in the first draft of
All girls sports (volleyball, the peace treaty.
tuberculosis skin test clinic at
the Syracuse town hall tennis, basketball, gymnastics, track and softball)
Tuesday at 7: 30 p.m.
All firemen, emergency are grouped into cine and
personnel, food handlers and have a total budget per year
EVENT TONIGHT
the general public are urged of between $2,500 and $3,000 .
Trick or treat will be held
Stilwell said that in most this evening in Syracuse from
to attend. Those having a skin
test on Tuesclay must return cases, the money goes for 6 to 7 p.m. The siren will
on Thursday at 7:30 .to have new equipment and uniforms, sound to begin and end the
reconditioning of other gear activities.
the results read.
and
for tournament entry
Persons known to be
positive reactors will be fees. Foot baD also has money
given letters for free chest x- alloted for game films,
" SEEK LICENSE
ray at Veterans Memorial scouting and insurance.
A marriage license was
The athletic director's issued to Steve Allen Fraley,
Hospital.
budget of up to $10,000 per 22, Prairieville, La., and
year covers things such as Patricia Lynn Edwards, 20,
MEET WEDNEsDAY
officials,
transportation, Pomeroy.
A regular meeting o(,
awards,
banquets,
office
Pomeroy Lodge 164, F and
.
athletic
expenses
and
any
AM will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday. All master department purchases, such workers (such as football .
as weights for the weight linesmen and basketball
Masons are invited.
scorers), pollee auxiliary and
room.
Registered officials are ticket takers.
Thus, the budget comes to
used in all sports from the ,
POTLUCK PLANNED
$26,000
for the various sports
high
level
up,
costing
·
junior
The annual Friendship
$8,000 to $10,000
plus
another
$30
per
man
in
varsity
conNight of the Daughters of
for
the
AD office, making an
tests
and
$15
each
in
reserve
america, District 13, will be
overall annual athletic outlay
beld Thursday with a potluck and junior high per game.
·that
may
come
in the area of $35,000.
A
statistic
dinner at 6:30 p.m. at the
1n addition, Stilwell said
that
the
LHS
as
a
surprise
is
Chester Lodge Hall. All
the
Chieftain Boosters con·
members
are athletic department paid out
Lodge
over $5,000 during the 1977-78 tribute around $5,000 per year
welcome. Those •ttending
are to take a covered-dish and school year for officials. and the Chieftain Squaws
$2,000 a year to support the
their own table service. A Other expenses covered by
are
for
game
LHS athletic program.
the
AD's
budget
business meeting will follow
the dinner.

HOSPITAL NEWS

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharges, Oct. Z7)
Clarence Adkins , Violet
Barnhart, Leota Beaver,
Floyd Bennett, Clint Birch,
Leonard . Brown, Katherine
Buckhanan, Evelyn Carter,
Daynell Clark, Cynthia
D. Russel Lee, Superin- Cotterill, David Cox, Wilber
tendent of Butler County Crance, Leola Ones, Linda
Schools, is retiring after Dodson, Emma Forthe,
nearly .W years . of service. Susan
Gilbert,
Linda
The effective date of his Gilliland,
Christopher
retirement Is January, 1979. Haning, Virginla Hood, Chad
Lee is a graduate of Racine Humphreys, Esther James,
High School and Ohio State Edward Klodowski, Mrs .
University. He earned his William
Langer
and
Master's Degree from OSU daughter, Mega Leach,
and did extensive graduate Charles Lindauer, Mary
work at Miami University. McManis, David McQuaid,
He and his wife, Helen, Mary Metheney, Mary
reside in West Ches- Middletown, Nancy Mullins,
ter,
0.
They
have Iva Neal, Edna Reibel,
two sons, Charles Lee, a Frances Reynolds, Heber
graduate -of Ohlo State ·Riffle, Maxine Russell, Mrs.
University, who is employed Ralph
Saunders
and
by the First National Bank of
daughter, Ethel Simms, Ola
Cincinnati and Dr. David St. Clair, Tracy Tackett, ·
Lee, Professor at Western Candy Tedrwo, Cecil Perry,
Kentucky University.
Sherman Whi!e , George
All of Lee's educational Wilkerson and Frances
career has been in Butler William's.
Cuunty which began in 1939.
Births
His first position was teacher
Mr. and Mrs. Lorraine
of vocational agriculture at Aeiker, son, daughter,
West Chester, Buller Cuunty
Pomeroy.
in 1939. He later served as
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Local Superintendent Union Merry, daughter, Rodney.
Township Schools which later
Mr. and Mrs. Virgil Goff,
became the Liberty - Union son, Thunnan.
Local School District.
(Discharges, Oct. 28)
Then in 1964, he was apDoris Adams, Jill Angel,
pointed to his present Arlene
Blair,
Kelly
position, Superintedent Bonecutter, Myrtle Brown,
Butler County Schools.
Casey,
Elton
Dorothy
Through the years, Lee has Cleventer, Ethel Cook, Betty
served
on
numerous
DeCoy, Amy Elkins, Anna
professional and civic
Hays, James Israel, Bertha
organizations which include Knox, Edna Lee, Barbara
!)1emberships · in Phi Delta
Uoyd, Cora McGhee, William
Kappa Fraternity, A.A.S.A.,
Mitchell, Mellissa Nance,
R.A.S.A., O.C.S.A., as well as Eilison Ragland, Gypsy·
being listed in Who's Who in Ratliff, Mrs. Michael Shuler
American Education. He is ·a nd son, Jeremy Smith,
presently serving as a
Jeffrey Tatman, Robert
member of the Board of Warren, Melissa Wheeler and
Directors, · Fort Hamilton - Terry White.
,
Hughes Hospital; President,
Births, Oct. 28
Board of Directors, Butler
Mr. and Mrs. James
Cuunty Auto Club; member Watson, son, Coolville.
Board of Directors, Butler
Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Cuunty Heart Association;
daughter,
Pt.
Lyons,
and. a member of Hamilton
Pleasant.
Rotary Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
The public is invited to an
PaUerson, son, Pomeroy.
open house . honoring Lee
(Discharges, Ocl2!1)
which will be held on Nov. 5 ·
Mrs. Roland Goodwin and
from 2 to 5 p.m. at lbe D.
son, Bethel Grover, Donna
Russel Lee Vocational Kemper, Donna Kerns, Olive
School.
Stapleton and Talma
MEETS WEDNESDAY
Birlb, Oct. 29
Wiles.
The
Ladies Auxiliary of the
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Stiffler,
Fire Departm~nt
Middleport
son, Jackson.
will meet Wednesday, Nov. 1,
(Continued from page 1)
at 7:30 p.m. at the fire
failure to yield.
station.
Hostesses will be
Pleasaat Valley Hospital
The patrol was called to the
PhyUis
Baker,
Sue Imboden
Discharged - Mrs . Ode
scene of a two-vehicle acBarbara
Hoffman.
and
cident on U.S. 35, six-tenths of Beaver, Crown City; Grace
a mile east of SR 588, at 7 Rogers, Henderson ; William
Kirker, Point Pleasant;
p.m.
SQUAD CALLED
Sadra
Birmingham, Point
According to the patrol, a
The
Pomeroy emergency
west bound auto operated by Pleasant; Mrs. Gerald squad was called to West
Joel Atha, 52, Bidwell, Young, West Columbia; Main St. at 7:42 p.m.
Thelma Gill, Glenwood; Eula
stopped in traffic on 35.
Glover,
Henderson; Mrs. Saturday· for Ronald Hudson
A vehicle driven by Donald
who was taken to _Holzer
Thacker, 28, Vinton, failed to Rick Yost, son, Rutland;
Center.
·
Medical
stop and struck the Atha auto Clyde Hubbard, Syra~use;
Russell Meadows, Point
in the right side.
Thacker was cited on Pleasant; Mrs. Joseph
charges of assured clear Wilson, Point Pleasant;
GRANTED DIVORCE
distance. Both vehicles in· William Parsons, Apple
In
Meigs County common
curred moderate damage. Grove; Mrs. Birdie Queen, pleas court Gary F . Hysell
Southside; John Coles, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Robert Ayres was granted a divorce from
and son, New Haven; Mrs. Carolyn Lee Hysell.

JAMES SPENCER
James Thomas Spencer, 51,
a resident o'f 132 Pine Street:
Gallipolis, died at 5:20 a.m.
Sunday at his home. He had
been in failing health the past
five montha.
Mr. Spencer was born in
Cleveland, Ohio, on !'lov. 13,
1926, son of the late Rev.
Bishop H. J . Spencer and
Helen Lee Spencer, who
survives and resides in
Columbus.
Mr. Spencer married Betty
Harris on June 13, 1947, in
Columbus. She survives,
along with four children:
Patty Mabry, Mrs. Douglas
(Terri) Johnson, Robin
Spencer and Tommy Spencer, all of GaUipolis. Two
grandchildren survive.
Two brothers and one sister
survive: William Spencer,
Toledo;
Sam Spencer,
Columbus
and
Ruth
Halloway, also of Columbus.
One brother preceded him in
death.
Mr. Spencer was a :W year
employee of the Gallipolis
• • • • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .. State Institute. He was a
member of Rehobeth Temple
in Columbus and attended
church in Gallipolis.
Amerie.t. Tru3ts "Hoover"
He was a summer league
baseball umpire for several
It beats as It s-ps as it cleans. Makes
years and was a member of
carpets · last · longer and the feature you
the Gallians' baseball team in
the late 1940s and early 1950s.
would exped and 5ome extra ones besides.
He · was also a weD-known
slow pitch softball player in
the tri-county area.
Mr. Spencer served with
the U. S. Navy during World
War II.
A FULL SIZED HOOVER
Funeral services will be
held 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
CUA"ER COMPLnE
Cremeens Funeral Home
Shirley's Beauty Nook ,
with Rev. Vance Watson and located in a mobile home on
·WITH TOOLS
the Rev. Calvin Minnis of· Carroll St. in Syracuse, waa
ficiating. Burial will follow in heavily damaged by a
Pine Street Cemetery.
. Saturday night fire of unFriends may caD at the determined origin.
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
Syracuse Fire Chief Robert
p.m. Tuesday.
Willis said the blaze, which
was discovered at about 10:50
p.m., was confined to the
interior of tbe moblle home.
The mobile home is owned by
Shirley WoHe, operator of the
beauty shop.
Flames had broken out in
two different locations of the
mobile borne upon the arrival
of Syracuse volunteer
firemen with two trucks, but
waa quickly brought under
controL No estimate of losses
has been made. Twelve
25% Off Purchase,
members ·of the department
responded to the alarm.
Just Present Your
Syracuse
emergency
Golden Buckeye Card
squadmen were also summoned Sunday, at about
When Ordering.
noon, for Ralph Shain who
waa suffering cheat pains. He
was transported to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

HOOVER .

Informal session conducted

l..ogan 'Sa

• •

i~):.__.r_h_e_W...,..o_r_ld_To_d_a_y_

(Continued from page I )
Police said witnesses told them Cantrell and Eleecia
Draughton broke up last week and had been quarreling
periodically since then. She was alleged to have visited
CsntreU's home Thursday night and dumped aU his clothes
into the bathtub, then turned on the water.

N-0-T-1-C-E
DR. CONDE ANNOUNCES HIS REIURN
TO PREVIOUS OFFICE HOURS.

EFFECTIVE lHIS DATE APPOINTMENTS
ARE BEING ACCEPTED AS BEFORE.

r~c:tc:::::-lceleste
believes
voters
will
assails anti-inflation ·
i!l.

il!: .

!)!,

,iij

By DREW.VON BERGEN

CLEVELAND · (UP!) Democratic
gubernatorial
:;:;: candidate Richard Celeste
!;!;! has accused Gov. James A.
:::~ Rhodes of clinging to the
:;:: same tired school financing
!:!: method ·that has - bled
!;!; hOmeowners while faDing to
:::: solve funding problems for
::~: . the past 12 years. .
;!;: . "For twelve years Jim
;:;: Rhodes has been governor
;::; and in each of those twelve
;!;' years he has failed to solve
:': the crisis in school financing
:::: which locks children out of
:;:; their classrooms," Celeste
::::

M.!~~NGc~~d(~~ -;;dminiAkerst';'aatl'mon~sr oafnCtio~naetirocen 't
~·

:::::

1::: guidelines "a straitjacket on workers and business
':::: people."
;:;:
The nation was to learn today how organized lahorfeels
;!;! about it.
·
The AFL.CIO executive council- perhaps organized
:::: labor'smost Influential panel-scheduled its fall meeting
.:::: alter a one-week postponement because of President
,!;!; Carter's anti-inflation announcement.
;!;!; ·The federation's president, George Meany, ls expected
,!;!; .to deliver tbe first public statement on the wage'llfice
:!;!; guidelines after the 35-memiM:r group meets.
:::: ln the past, M~ny criticized both voluntary and
·;;;: mandatory wage-pr1ce controls, but made 1t clear he
:;:;: prefers the latter. af!er le;~rning the administration
:::: planned merely gwdelines.
!{ The council session comes one day after Jack Csrlson,
:!::: chief economist foc the U.S. Olamber of Commerce, as'!!:! sailed carter's plan to have industry voluntarily hold
:::;: down prices and unions adhere to a 7 percent annual wage
:·:·: hike
j:j "The imposition of wage and price guideline controls
:::! have created the most negative respon&amp;e of any
!;!; government policy announcement in recent history,"
!!!! Csr\son said, noting that the dollar abroad has reached

?

!.~·:·
:;;
;:;

ender ••..&lt;iritllder... Mixet... SIIcet/Shreddw/Salad Maker,
.
and Q Doughmakat, tool
Be sure to see all the other
electric a~pliances in the
Housewares Dept ., 1st Floor
Excellent for Chrlsfmas
giving - Use our convenient
uw -Away Plan .

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

·

·

·

said Monday at a n.e ws
with Cuyahoga
County Treasurer Frank
Gaul.
"Jim Rhodes may be the
only pOlitician in the country
who does not understand the
message of Proposition 13,
because the governor has
proposed an education plan
which is based upon
increased property taxes,"
he said. "His running mate ,
George Voinovich, says-it will
succeed by creating a climate
where people will vote for
local school levies.
·

~terence

" And Jim Rhodes' own
budget director . thinks the
Rhodes plan requues at least
$300 million in increased
property taxes."
Gaul, a Democrat, has
often proposed shifting tbe
burden of property taxes
from homeowners to the
bustness commumty. He
produced a chart which sa1d
the 1976 property tax
reappraisal for Cuyahoga
County
res4lted
in
homeowners paying . $39
million more while busmess
got an $8 million cut.

.

·:'!

J

!'!
::;:

- ''On Nov . 7 the residential
prope'!y taxpa~ers of this
state will send Jun Rhodes a
message he will understand,"
Celeste said. 1'The message
will be clear. We should shift
the burden of financing
education to the state,
because property tax hits
hardest at homeowners and .
those on hxed mcomes such
as the elderly, the under·
employed and the . unemplayed."
.
.
Celest~ pr~dlCted the
voters will reJect ~hat ~e
called "the buy and lie ·media

•

e

'!!

at y

.

·

:::L,,:::::::::,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:::::::;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::::;:::::;:::::::::.:·:::::::::::j:l

VOL. 'IJ..IX

NO. 139

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

campaign" being waged by
the governor: Asked about
the governor s charge that
Celeste 's schoo l financing
plan will mean a state
take~er of the schools, the
candidate called the charge
"desperation tactics."
Cel~ste_ sa1d the state
conshtuhon re'l_u1re s th e
state . to guarantee an
educahon fo.r all children and
Oh1o has fa1led to live up to
the reqmrement under
Rhodes. And he charged that
Rhodes stands for more of the
same.

"Rhodes'
for
nothmg new, " he
88ld. When you get m the
rut , climbmg out of _the rut
seems radical. Anythmg new
seems rad1cal to J1m
Rhodes."
Celeste said he does 'hot
believe charges that his
proposals for funding schools
through state taxes will hurt
the chances for the passage of
local levies. He said be thinks
Ohioans want a leadership
change that would give them
a chance for a long-term
answer to funding problems.

ab;SOI~~ly

en tine

j:!:

PRICE FIFTEEN CENTS

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31, 1978

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

Negotiations on
treaty resumed

ew Nursing Home being built·-- - - _,

-·

'

By JIM ANDERSON
of informal suspension over
WASHINGTON (UP!)
the weekend, and the
Amid · encouraging signs of personal intervention of
progress on fundamental dif- · President Carter prevented
ferences, Egypt, Israel and recall of the Egyptian
the United States today were delegation.
After an informal meeling
planning to resume focmal,
fac.Ho.face negotiations on a - Sunday night between the
·
~gyptian and Isra~li delega'
peace treaty.
After a meeling with U.S. tions heads, both SideS came
Secretary of State Cyrus to the State Department
Vance, Monday Egypt's Mon~ay .Eor
separate
acting Foreign Minister meetmgs With Secretary of
Butros Ghali said the three State Cyrus Vance.
()8rties would meet today in a · Israeli Foreign Minister
full, three-way session at Moshe Dayan said later, "!
Blair House.
see no obstacles, really, for
It would be the first such getting an agreement. I think
session in 10 days. During it is feasible and attainable
· that interval the talks came and we can get it in a very
close to s..P..,slon over the short tim~." .
GhaU S8ld hia meeting with
crucial issue of linkage to the
wider questlorr of a Vance )lad been "very concomprehensive settlement structive and positive," and
involving the West Bank and he announced today's Blair
meeting.
The
Gaza strip.
House
The talks went into a state . Egyptians were scheduled to

j~)_r_h_e_w_o_r_ld_T_o_d_a_y_
Amin invade's territory
DARARRES SALAAM, Tanzania (UP!) - Tanzania
charged today Ugandan President ldi Amin has invaded its
territory and large numbers of ground troops were reported
involved in fierce border fighting.
The U. S. Embassy in Darres Salaam said 16 Americans
were known to be in the area of the heavieslfighling.

An absentee candidate •••
WS ANGELES (UP!) - Most elections· have absentee
voters. The race for the state Assembly seat representing the
western San Fernando VaHey has an absentee candidate.
The Democratic candidate, Hal Goldman, has been
evicted from his home for nonpayment of rent and left no
forwarding address. Reporters and others trying to contact
him say he cannot be located.
'

Elderly woman identified
MANSFIELD, Ohio (UPI ) -The body of a woman found
in a wooded area in Mansfield has been identified as Mrs.
Besse Irene Buker, 84, who walked away from a nursing home
on Aug. 14, Mansfield city police confirmed today. The body
was found Sunday by an area resident walking through some
brush .
Police said a green Mansfield General Hospital wrlat band
waa found on the body and the body was clothed in a blue
. pantsuit which Mrs. Baker was wearing at the time of her
disappearance . Police said there were no indications of foul
play .
CINCINNATI (UP!) - An airplane pilot charged with
buzzing a high school football game pleaded innocent Monday
to six counts of inducing panic.
·
· John C. Stahl Ill, 20, of suburban Reading and son of a
Reading policeman, was freed without bond after pleading
innocent in Hamilton Cuunty Municipal Cuurt. A pre-trial
bearing was set for next Monday. Stahl was accused of flying a
single-engine plane within 50 feet of the Reading High School
football stadium just before a game last Friday night. He was '
charged with six counts of indu~ing panic on grounds be
allegedly buzzed the stadium, which was filled with football

~,

·.

1 controlguidelines lsend Rhodes clear messaue
~is

Pilot enters innocent plea

..

-

see Vance a second time
today, just before the
tripartite session.
Israeli officiala sald there
had been significant progress
on aU issues of the peace
treaty, · including
the
preamble which includes the
delicate language laying out
the relationship with a
permanent settlement.
After their last aU-party
session, a conference spokesman
announced
the
delegations had agreed on the
text of a treaty. But changes
demanded
by
both
governments required a
return to bargaining.
The
subsequent
negotiations
were
complicated by an open
dispute between .Ill,~ Unit_ed.
States and Israel over tbe '
announced "thickening" of
Israeli settlements. in the
West Bank.
Vance described that as a
11
serious matter" and said he
was disturbed by it, but the
Israelis insist the setUements
are legal.
Dayan, after his meeling
with Vance, described tbe
seUiements as "a blessing,
not an obstacle" and said
they were not illegal and
would not drive a single Arab
off his land.

ONLY A PART- This is only one part of the framework on the 100 bed nursing home facility well underway in Meigs County .

Construction
•
progressmg

Up to 500
words can
he written
Margaret Parker, co·
chairman of the Meigs
Cuunty History Book com·
mittee, explained today that
each household is entitled to
500 words in the book free of
charge.
This means that children
who live in Meigs County or
have lived-here and have now
left the county can each
submit 500 words, Mrs .
Parker states.
wishing
inAnyone
vitational, explanatory letters sent to children out of the
county should drop a request
in tbe mail to Box 145,
Pomeroy, no later than
Monday. Senior citizen
volunteers are addressing out
of county letters this week.

PAUL ELLER of Eller Enterprises, Inc., Columbus, checks out materials on the site of
the nursing home facility in Meigs Cuunty. Eller is construction superintendent for the home
which will be owned by Americare. Eiler says that beautiful fall weather has put Eller
Enterprises way ahead of schedule.

Three youths facing
~~;::;~~~~~::;;:~;:::;;:~~;:::~:::';~~:~:=;' charges in vandalism
be voted upon Nov. 7 will be published in the final two issues of
Charges ~~ vandalism will
the local papers prior to election day. ·
be filed today against three
of this policy is to assure that no char~es or . juveniles foUowing an instatements w!U be published without adequate oppoctunlty for tensive investigation by
refuFrtinlgdasyu~shpachpearrg(esNo'vor. 3s)tawilltembeenthtse. last day for letters on sherlff's deputies and Meigs
·
·
d · di !dual races Letters should be in the county juvenile officer
Carl
all e1ec tion ISSUes
an m v
.
.
H II
hands of the editorial department no later than 5 p.m. on
yse .

PurJiose

n.ur~J;s~f~~!:!'~~~::Jj~r·:o~. ~we1er.t~

Weather

The three juveniles from
Rt. 1 Middleport, Rt . 1
Cheshire and Pomeroy area
gave statements admitting to
most of the vandalism that
occurred a 1ong SR 7' between
Storys Run and the GaUia.

~ltoholic drinks for the
JUVeniles .
.
Hysell extends his thanks t_o
the pare~ts involved for their
cooperation and assistance m
bringing this case
to a sue.
cessful conclusion.

:!~~~?ct:~~~in~~:· ea;~: ' ' '~~i;~~~~';g¥~r~:~JK''

less than 300 words long (or
su ec
r uc on Y
Cleartonight,lo'!VS between
editor) and must be signed with the signee's address and - 40 . and 45. Mostly sunny

statements, the juveniles had

Saturday, lair through the

r,f;g:;:m::~::m:::::mi::t::::::::tt':'::t:=f:t::: : :::t::::: :: : ::it:!:t:t:f!f/:::::f:::i :~~~~~t, W!:"n:~~~. percent

been drinking and did not
actually remember what all
th.ey had damaged. Char~es
also will be filed against the

period, with ,blghs ill the
low or mid 60s Thursday
and Ia the mid 50s or lower
410 8 Friday and Saturday.

adult that purchased tht . .

'·lephone number. Names may be wt,thheld upon request. Wedn•sday, with bighs to the
.,.
ill be disclOsed Letter should be
'
However, oo request, names w
•
low 60s. Probability of
In·goOd taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
precipitation 10 percent

,

}:&lt;?:~.~ :~,!,ll.,~,.m.J~,t~S..:,..,.,,,

.,

BY BOB HOEFUCH
No one probably likes the thought of going into
nursing home. By the same token, families are also prone
to be against placing a family member in a nursing home .
However , this does become necessary in many cases,
although it is far from a joyous occasion, it may be some
consolation to Meigs C&lt;Juntians to know that within the
next few months at least there will be a local facility.
Since small nursing homes have been closed down in
the county because they were unable to meet the costly
state standards , local residents have had to be placed in
nursing home facilities, 20, 30, 50 or more miles from the
county.
This, of course, has made the situation even more
difficult for the relatives as well as the patient in that the
patient is uprooted from familiar scenes and familiar
faces and relatives must travel long distances to visit many times a real morale booster for the patient, too.
While plans for a nursing home facility in Middleport
have fallen through, at least for the time being,
construction is well underway on a !()().bed facility on
former Route 33 in Meigs County.
Excellent progress is being made and the pleasant fall
weather has been an asset to this progress. Builders say
that the structure will be ready for occupancy well ahead
of the 10 month period set by the contract.

Firemen, squadmen
called to. wreck scene
At 6:54 a.m. today, the
Middleport emergency unit of
the fire department and a fire
truck were dispatched to the
scene of a train-truck accident at Cheshire , Dale
Whitt , truck driver , was

treated on the scene.
The emergency squad went
to 735 Beech St., at 9: 16 p.ln.
Monday, for William Wilson
who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was admitted.

TWO MARRIAGES END
In Meigs county common
pleas court one marriage was
dissolved and another was
granted. The marriage of
Martha Diane Hoffman and
Ronald Mark Hoffman was
dissolved and Mary Kay
Blanks was granted a divorce
from George Allen Blanks.

TOWEL SHOWER
A towel shower will be held
when the Ladies Auxiliary of
the Middleport fire department meet Wednesday, Nov.
1 at 7:30 p.m. at the· fire
station. Hostesses are Phyllis
Baker, Sue Imboden and
Barbara Hoffman.

'

I

·Crime alert'
Mei gs county Sheriff
James J . Proffitt offers the
alert
following
crime
suggestion in the wake of the
receni auto thefts :
" It takes a lot of hours and
hard work to pay for an
maintain your automobile .
But many people won't take a
few extra minutes to keep a
thief out of their car .
Operation Crime Alert and
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department remind you to
lock your car whether it's
parked on the street or at
home in your driveway.
Never leave the key in the
ignition and never leave the
title in the car . Stay alert and
be on a crime alert - lock it
and pocket the key."

�Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Tuesday, Oct . 31,1978

,

'

IN
Martha Angle and
Robert Walters
~

tTTA
HLILMf

~artha

COMMENTARY

~C' ~WO~t\

Slll~ TELEGJQ&gt;M.

Donald F. Graff

.

By Don Graff

WASHINGTON ( NEA) - An antense behind-the-scenes
struggle has developed within the Carter administration
over the extent of the federal government's commitment to
solar energy as a source of power in the 21st century.
The prev iously unpubltcued confb ct has been confined an
recent months to the Domestic Polley Review on Solar
E nergy, a gove rnme nt-wide task force estabbshed last
spring by Prestde nt Carter to propose solar options for the
future.
The policy dispute ts likely to erupt in public before the
end of thts year because members of the study group are in
disagreement over v1rtually every fundamental issue
relatmg both the c haracter and scope of the federal
commitment to solar energy .
•
Compounding the problem are the conflicting signals
that have come durmg the past year from the prestdent,
who tmtially proposed a sharply reduced budget for solar
research and development during the current ftscal year .
But soon after the potential of solar energy began to
caP.ture the imagmalton of the pubhc, Carter dramatically
shifted his pos ttion and made a " Sun Day" pilgrimage to
the federal government's Sola r Energy Resear ch Institute
m Colorado
·
In a speech there, Carter announced that he had
mstructed the Department of Energy (DOE ) to shtft $100
millton of tts current fundmg, tntltally earmarked for

:

He a lso quoted wtth approval a Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ ) study which estimated " that we could

meet as much as one-fourth of our energy demands from

passive, small-scale, decentralized solar systems under

Peopletalk
By KENNETII R. CLARK
United Press IDternatlonal
DOWN HOME DIRT: When Count Dracula comes flying out
of hiB coffin for a blood transfusion this Halloween, he'll be
doing it right for the first time since he made his name on
Broadway. Producers of "Dracula" - now in production both
in New York and Los Angeles- fmally bave come up with the
one authentic touch that was missing - soil from the
Transylvanian homeland. That's a coffm decor the Dracula of
legend JUSt couldn't die without. Now, the stage coffins of !tau!
Julia, who plays the role on Broadway, and Jeremy Brett, the
Los Angeles gore.gorger, each will contam a handful of dirt
imported from the village of Snagov- now Romania -where
the real Dracula , better known in his day as Vlad the 1m paler,
lies buried
CALL AND RAISE: President Carter's 8().year-&lt;Jld mother
looks like anything but the average person 's idea of a highroller, but Miss Ullian left the Las Vegas Strip a winner last
week . Monday , she told a breakfast meeting group in Everett ,
Wash ., her gambler's luck netted her $3Win a private game at
Caesar's Palace - a game tbat turned out not to be penny ante
after all . Says she, " I thought I was playmg with nickels and
dimes, but instead they were $100 chips."
SORE TIIROAT : The chicken bone that choked Elizabeth
Taylor two weeks ago as she campaigned with husband John
Warner stillts giving her trouble . She's back in the hospttaltn Richmond, Va . - with "complications." Her physictan, Dr.
Owen Gwathmey, says she'll be there lor at least three days,
that, "It is my optnion that she has developed severe laryngitis
which bas aggravated her original condition of laceration to
the esophagus for which she was treated earlier . As a result,
she ha s inflammation and spasms to her upper esophagus and
even the adJoining muscles are inflamed." Translated: a very
sore throat.
CRYSTAt BALL : The Class of 1953, taught 25 years ago by
Richard Auerbach at the Eggert Road Elementary School in
Buffalo , N.Y., has come up with a precognitive batting
average any seer would envy . Auerbach asked his fifthgraders
. to write essays predictrng conditions in 1978. Monday, he
: opened the ''time capsule ." Among the prophecies: "I think
the world will have very high prices in 1978 ... Trains wiU not be
used very much .. . Some men may even walk on the moon."
· Michael Lappin envisioned the Concorde, predicting,
"superoonic airplanes that will fly across the Atlantic in 3
hours." There was only one goof. Frances, who didn't sign a
last name, predicted "warmer winters m Buffalo."
GLIMPSES: Allee Cooper, whose show-biz makeup fits the
role, will play a representative from the lower depths of Hades
on the Halloween segment of " The Muppet Show" when he
tries to tempt Kermit the Frog 'to stgn over his soul ... Melba
Moore will be in New York next month followmg concerts in
Louisville, Ky., to promote her new album " Melba" and to
headline at Avery Fisher Hall ... Burt Reynolds stars next
month in New York in Paramount's "Starting Over" ... Dolly
Parton will be in Loodon Nov. 11 for a guest spot on the
Parkinson Show ... Robe.\ Vaughn will be on location in
Colorado in November to film "The Scream of Eagles" Otapter 12 of NBCfV's "Centennial," baaed on the best-&lt;~eller
by James Michener ....
·

•

Once upon a time a beginning college student who hadn't
decided on a major was allowed to drift along for a few
semesters until he found himself and hia interests or, In too
many cases, lost interest and dropped out.
,
Higher education is taking a second look at these •
dropouts by default these days and discovertng that they . ;
are not ~enerally poor college material to start witil; but:: :
include m fact some of the potentially best and brightest. • •
Their problem ls immaturity and, in the past. the a6sence~ :
of attention and guidance on the part of the institutions ln.,. •
which they have been enrolled. They have been, almost"; '
literally, lost in the campus shuffle.
•
A number of maJor institutions and the U.S. government;,
via the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, are~
currently not only taking note of the situation but step~ to "
do something about it, The Wall Street Journal reports m a .
campus survey.
.
HEW has developed a special course and textbook for
undecided students which it is trying out at three schools Ohio Slate University, Union College in Kentucky and East
Tennessee State University.
'
The most favored response to the problem among school
administrations is expanded counseling services an~ a ~
variety of special courses, including courses on how to p1ck
major courses .
One of the more elaborate programs is Ohio State's, •
where there is a special dorm for Wldecided students.
From scheduled discussion sessions for dorm residents
and informal bull sessions, it is hoped that clearer
understandmg of career auns will develop.
According to one estimate, some 20 percent of entering ;
freshmen are Wldecided as to a major. A program that
keeps a significant portion of them in the educational
mamstream amounts to qwte a salvage operation.
,1
9

nuclear programs. to solar resea rch .

local control, with the benefits of the new technology
available to people m all income brackets.
Those criteria were emphasized- by many of the
witnesses a t the 12 public hearings conducted around the
country by the study group, as well as several smaller but
voctferous federal agenctes represented on the government task force .
Although Carter endorsed the goal of using solar power
to meet 25 percent of all national energy needs by the year
2000, the study group first suggested that the maximum
practtcal ftgure was in the ll&gt;-to-20 percent range and now
has lowered that estimate to only 9-to-15 percent.
The study group has given only cursory attention to the
potential of alcohol as a substitute for petroleum in the
production of auto fuel and bas totallr ignored subjects
s uch as solar storage, harnessing tida energy and usmg
solar power to propel electric autos.
The solar enthustasts on the federal task force, who soon
may take their case to th• nubile, noted that the president
likened the challenge of harnessing the sun's power to the
bold action taken by the United Slates to meet "the
challenge of the space race."
But after haggling over almost two dozen draft versions
of tts recommendatiOns ·oto the White House, the study
group has produced only a collection of Inoffensive,
ununaganat1ve proposals that wtll thwart rather than
promote the growth of solar energy.

Ex-bartender boots 5 field
Meet the Southern Tornadoes
goals as Falcons upset Rams

Dropouts by default

Angle and Robert Walters

solar sources by the end of thts century and perhaps more
than half by the year 2020."
The study group is composed of representatives of
approximately 30 federal departments a nd agencies But
DOE dominates tts work because it controls the secretariat , E nergy Secretary James R . Schlesmger IS chatrman of
the full task force and a nother DOE official heads a key
s ubcorruruttee
Many DOE officials, long corrunitted to the wholesale
expansion of the country's nuclear power capability, have
been notably cool toward the notion of harnessing the sun,
wmd, tides and othe r forms of solar power as a major
energy soun.-e.
They are, howe ver, wtllmg to accept the concept of
la r ge-scale, capttal-mtensive solar collectiOn and distrtbutJOn systems opera ted for the profit of private utility
companies.
On the other side of the tssue are those in favor of

''
'

I

Struggling over sun power
By

- 3:.. The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy , 0., Tuesday, Oct. 31, !978

Democrats are ready to vote
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUI\1BUS (UP!)
Majcrity Democrats on the
Ohto Senate Energy and
Public Utilities Committee
are ready to vote next month
on the confirmation of
Cummins '
Howard
A.
appomtment as a public
utility commissioner.
And if Monday's hearing
was any indicator, the
ouUoo k for Cwmnins Is not
good.
"I'm not leaning one way or
the other," said Sen. Neal F .
Zimmers Jr ., D-Dayton,
committee chairman, after
the Democrats had given
Cummins
his
second
consecutive grilling.
But, Zimmers, added,
"Thus far, his performance
has
been
rather
discouraging."
The chairman said he
anticipates a vote on
Cununins at the committee's
first meeting after the
election, probably Nov. 15.
He declined to say whether
he thinks Cummins is
qualified
to
be
a
cmunissioner. "That will be
for the committee to decide," '
said Zlmmers.
But Zlmmers and the other
Democrats on the committee
put Cwnmins through an
intensive series of questions
at the second confirmation
hearing.
Republican senators did
not participate . They have
satd It was ''pohtical" for .
Zimmers to schedule the
meetmg during the heat of an
election campaign.

'

Cummiits is a registered
Democrat appointed by
Republican Gov. James A.
Rhodes, who is running for
re-election, and Democratic
committee members
wondered about Cummins'
loyalty to thetr party and its
candidate for governor.
" There's no doubt that I'm
a Democrat," said Cummins.
" All you have to do is ask
about a thousand of my
friends.
But Cununins said he was
" going to have to squirm a
little" when asked if he
supports the Democratic
plank on utility reform. "I'm
not sure what the Democratic
party platform says on
utilities, " he told the
committee .
" It's very vague, but I'd
have to support it, being the
kind of Democrat I am," he
finally answered.
Cummins also said he is
uncertain about utilityrelated pledges made by
Democratic
gubernatorial
nominee Richard F. Celeste.
He' described as "a little
weak spot" a plan to repeal
the , fu~l
adjustment
surcluirge. "because there's
nothing to' replace it." ·
The commissioner said it

"wouldn't

hurt"

to

implemerit Celeste's proposal
of annual utility rate reviews.
He was reminded, but
laughed off,
Celeste's
promise ·to fire all the
incumbent commissioners.
Cummins' interim term
expires in February.
CUmmins was asked about

his role as a "coininissioner
and some orders he has
helped wrtte smce joinmg the
threemember
utility
regulating board last month .
He was confronted with an
order he signed reducing
thermal efficiency standards
required In coal burned by
the Dayton Power &amp; Light Co.
Zimmers said the order
was apparently signed to
allow DP&amp;L to recover
$670,000 in additional fuel
costs last winter.
"I don't know that it (the
crder) was related to that,"
satd Cummins.
"You denied some of those
costs, but you lowered the
standards to allow them to
recover," said Zimmers.
"The efficiency ratings
were such that DP&amp;L could
not recover that to which they
were entitled," responded the
•
commissioner.
"How are you going to
force utility companies to
operate efficiently if you
don't give them targets to
shoot at," said .Zimmers.
"Why not keep the standards
to give. them the impetus to
imrrove their management?
Why penalize the customer?"
" You can't have a target
the company can't meet,"
replied Cununins. "You've
got to be reasonable."
Cwrunins was appointed by
Rhodes last Sept. 12 as a
registered Democrat, as required by law, 8lld as a

''conswner representative''
according to the governor.
Democratic senators have
questioned both qualities in
the commissioner.

As happened at hiS mittal
conftrmation hearmg three
weeks ago, Cummin-• was
quizzed about hiS role as a
member of the Democratic
party .
Cummins again said he was
lifelong
and
loyal
a
Democrat, and claimed he
' 'misunderstood the
question" at a September
news conference in the governor's office when he was
asked if he voted for Rhodes
in 1974.
His answer was, "I think I
did ,II
"There was a lot of noise
and confuston m the room
that day," Cummins told the
committee . I thought the
question was did I vote
against Jim Rhodes, and I
answered, 'I think I did.'
They turned It around on me,
and when I read the paper the
next morning, I almost fell
over."
In answer to other
questions , Cununlns said:
- Utilities should "go the
last mile" before cutting off
service
to
customers
delinquent in paying their
bills .

-He

" would

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - ThiS year's race for governor pits the
wily incumbent, Republican Gov. James A. Rhodes, against
Richard F. Celeste, a young man wbo has made a meteoric
rise through the Ohio General Assembly to the head of the
Democratic ticket .
Rhodes, 69, began his political career in the university area
of Columbus 44 years ago, before the challenger was even
born He has already served three tenns as governor and is the
oldest chief executive in the United States. ,
But that's not enough for him. Rhodes, who thrives on being
governor, wants four more years and is capitalizing on what he
perceives as an anti-tax, anti-federal govertunent mood of the
voters.
Celeste, 40, served two tenns in the Ohio House out of
suburban Cleveland and was elected lieutenant governor in
1974.
Now Celeste believes tt's tune to retire Rhodes and get
"fresh leadership" to carry Ohto mto the 1980s. He IS trying to
capitalize on the state 's school financing problems and unrest
over utility bills to propel himself into the top spot.
Rhodes led Ohio through most of the 196&lt;B, and Democrats
thought they bad him turned out to pasture when he finished
two consecutive terms' In early 1971. But after earning hiS
fortune through real estate development and other investments, Rhodes made a comeback In 1974 and upset
-'
Democratic Gov. John J. Gilligan.
Rhodes has served longer than any other governor in Ohio
histcry. For the last four years, he has battled a hostile
Democratic Legislature, winning some important battles and
•
"
losing his share.
Celeste, a Phi Beta Kappa at Yale and a Rhodes scbolar at
Oxford in England, headed the Cle:veland deleg_atlqn his second
term in the House and was the majority whip .
The issues in the campaign are clearcut :
Rhodes says he has solved the education financing problem
by creating a state surplus through "prudent management "
and can offer the schools $1.1 btllion over the next four years
without new taxes.
Celeste says basic changes are ne~ in the way rn.9m&gt;:)S
raised and distributed to schools, and it may or may nol

require new taxes.

n.

I/Oth candtdates are committed to reducing real estatt;
taxes

Another approach to the dropout problem is being taken ..
at Ohio University .
·
'
The school, a liberal arts institution at Athens not to be
confused with gtant Ohio State at Columbus, is trying :
something new by borrowing something old - the tutorial ·
system long in use at Britain's prestigious Oxford and ,.
Cambridge.
,;
Five years old now, the Honors Tutorial College is
designed to meet the needs of the especially bright student ..
who might be turned off by the structured routine of·· ·
classwork and take the dropout exit from boredom. It '
offer~ them, according to director Dr. Margaret Cohn, "a ' ·
challenge, pushing them to the limits of their abilities ... · •
giving them intense one-tiH&gt;ne contact with faculty ,,

members . . ''

_

_

Rather than following a routine class schedule, the ..
tutortal stndents meet on~n-&lt;lne with faculty members of
the various disciplines.
Operating on a modest budget with two part-time -~
administrators and a secretary, its total enrollment thia ..
year is !35 out of the university total nf some 13,000. '
Graduates to date number 35 and despite their odd '
transcripts, are reported by the school to be well-accepted "'
by major graduate and professional schools.
.
Although the program IS viewed as successful and
growing, it is never expected to involve masses of students.
Scholastic requirements are high and the individuality and
self-discipline required are not for everyone.
It will remain an elite program, but a valuable one If in
the long run it stimulates the special student to remain in
school.

guess"

requiring
stack
gas
scrubbers on coalfired
electric utilities would add
about $8 a month to average
electric bills, oot' $23 as
claimed by the governor.
PUCO
has
- The
historically allowed a utility's
legal fees to be recovered
from conswners, but the
Legislature could hold the
shareholders responsible.

Issues in governor's
race are clearcut
EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is tbe 11th and final installment in
United Press International's series on the contests and Issues
before the voters at the Nov. 7general election. Today's article
details the race for governor.

Old-style tutoring

Rhodes has outlined an energy program through which Ohio
coal will be burned while the state seeks w,a ys to generate new
fuel sources and comply with clean air standards.
Celeste is concerned will! oversize gas and electric bills,
wants an end to special fuel surcharges and an annual review
of utilities to check on their management practices, and hopes
to oust current public utilities commissioners, aU appointed by
Rhodes.
Rhodes pledges to continue an aggressive campaign to lure
industries to Ohio and induce them to expand operations,
creating jobs instead of prolonging the welfare system, which
he says leads to high crime rates.
Celeste says tax Incentive programs for industrial expansion
should be tailored to encourage companies to open plants In
tru1er city areas, where most jobs are needed. He clauns the
current system is little more tban corporate welfare,
rewarding firms for moving wherever they will.
The candidates for governor and lieutenant governor are
running m tandem for the ftrst time In Ohio history.
Rhodes' running mate is George V. Voinovich, 42, of Euclid,
a Cuyahoga County commissioner and former member of the
Ohio House .
VoinoVIch, an attorney, is also a former county auditor and
Is regarded as an expert in taxation and finance. He is also a
particular asset to Rhodes' campaign in the Cleveland area,
where he has proven• popular.
Celeste bas another local government expert running with
him - Ftanklin County Commillsl«!ner Michael J. Dorrian, 48,
a general contractor and former assistant to the mayor of
Columbus.
Dorrian bas proven highly popular In the Colwnblis area,
leading the ticket for Democrats In past elections.
Either Dorrian or Voinovich Is expected to give strong
leadership to a new State and Local Government Commission
assigned to the winning lieutenant governor candidate.
Three mdependent teams are entered In this year's gober·
natorial contest.
.
Allan Ftiedman , 'ZI, and Bruce Wood, 29, of Cleveland
represent the U.S. Labor Party.
John O'Neill, 53, a perennial candidate from Fairview Park,
and Conrad Gutermuth, 49, of Uniontown, represent the Socialist Labor Party.
And Patricia H. Wright, 28, of Cleveland, and John M. Gaige,
31, of Toledo, represent the Socialist Workocs Party.
Highly competitive and expensive campaigning bave characterized the race between Celeste-Docrlan and RhodesVoioovich, with each team exceeding the f1 mllllon mark In
spending.
Although surveys bave shown Celeste-Dorrian ahead by four
percentage pomts, the race Is regarded as too cloae to call.

HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.

..
When the
room spins
DEAR DR LAMB- I had a
five-hour blood sugar test and
it showed at the fourth hour
that my sugar was low
enough to make me feel faint.
It ts just the opposite of a
diabetic person. Would this
cause rmging in my ears all
the time and, once in a while,
dizziness so that objects
move and, when I lie down,
the room goes around? This
lasts for three or four days at
a time. The only thing that
helps me is Antivert.
I am 5-feet-4 and weigh 140
pounds. I am a 47-year-&lt;lld
female. I am supposed to lose
weight , but I find it very hard
to do . Would you be kind
enough to explain this thing
about not enough sngar in my
blood?
DEAR READER - You
have enough different problems that it would be very
difficult to say specifically
which problem is causing
which symptom. Ringing in
the ears and dizziness being
treated with Anttvert suggests that yo~ have a problem
in the little balance canals in
the ears. If that's true, these
symptoms are not caused by
low blood sugar .
You bave described true
vertigo when you say that the
room moves around you. The
false sense of motion is true
vertigo. It is different from
the dizziness people feel when
they are faint or at the onset

DIE DAILY SENTINEL
DEVOTED TO 'DIE
INTEREST OF

MEIGII-MASON AREA
ROBERT HOEfLIIJI

Cltyl!dltor
PuUIIIIht-d W:illy eXl.'ept Saturtl.ay
by 'l'he Ohio Valley Publiahing

Cumpany-Mult.lml'dla, Inc ,
Ill
Court St., Pumeroy, Ohio 45769,
BWJtllt!Sti Offtce Phune 992- 21" J
Editorial Phone 992·2157.
St!cond clBBS poa\iije pakl at
Pomeroy,Ohlu.
N~U0011I advertitling repraen•
taltve, Umdon AMoclat.es, • 3101
Euclid Ave , Cleveland, Ohio Mlli
Sub!M:rlt&gt;Uon !'Illes: DeUverod bf
Cltrner where 1tvallable 75 cents per
week By Motor Roull! where canier
scrvic.oe not svallable, One mont~\.
$3. ~. By nwll In Ohio and W Va.,
One Veld', f22 00: Six montha,

til 50, Three months ,
Elsewhl!re 126 00 year , Six
$13 .60: Three months.
Subscription ·pric.'t! includet
Tilne!I-St!rJIIn ~J .

t7 00;
mmlhl
17.50.
SIUidiy

of a fainting episode. To give .:
you more mfonnation about' '
this I am sending you The '
Health Letter number !1-10, '
DIZZmess and Vertigo.
Other readers who want this information can send 50 "
cents with a long, stamped;
self-addressed envelope for
it. AddresS your request to
me tn care of this newspaper, · ,
P 0 Box 1551, ltadio City Sta-· ·
lion, New York, NY 10019.
A low blood sugar level can··
cause a person to feel faint
and have other symptoms; '
but you can have a relatively "
low blood sugar level and ro
have no symptoms at all. Au·
prudent course would be to ~
eliminate all of the sugars, ..
concentrated sweets and the "
concentrated starches such ·
as found in white bread and
bakery· products made with ·
white flour .
If you shift to a diet that
eliminates sweets and concentrated starches, this often
helps relieve some of the
symptoms. In your case,
since you wani to lose weight, ·
it would also be advisable to
cut out obvious sources of fat: :
I am also sending you The "
Health Letter number 3-9 "
Low
Blood · ' Sugar: •
Hypoglycemia , to give you·
more infonnatio about that
particular problem.
,.

•

' NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI)
- Vanderbilt football Coach
Fred Pancoast, whose
Qmmodarea have wm only
five games In the lut three
years, announced Monday he
will quit at the end of this ;

aeaaon.
"I

have

decided

to

relinquiah my reaponlibllltles

'
'
•'

u bead coach at VIDderbllt :
Univocldty at the condullm
of the current Mason,"
Pancout lllid at a newa
conference after meeting
with his players. "This
decildm Ia made at tbla time
lor many reasons, moat
hnportantly to relieve the
c:mcerna that IIIIITOWJI the
players and coac:blni ltafl ."

'

;
:

·
'

~

,
;
'
~

..;

DIUUI Swffl, 5-10, 175 lbs.
Junior Tactle.

Kelly Taylor, 5-7, 1251bs.
Senior Guard.

Tom Allen, 5-9, 165 lbs.
Senior Guard.

Ed Smith, 5-10, 175 lbs.
Senior Tackle.

ATLANTA (UPI) - The
'folks in Smokey Joe's bar in
Philadelphia were whooping
it up Monday mght.
Tim Mazzetti, who was
barttll)ding there three weeks
ago while dreaming of a shot
at pro football , had his
wildest dreams fulfilled
befcre a national televisioo
audience - including the
crowd at Smokey Joe's when he kicked five field
goals to give the Atlanta
Falcons a 15-7 upset victory
over I..os Angeles.
"It's the most unbelievable
· day in my life," exclatmed
the 22-year-&lt;Jld Mazzetti in
the excited Falcons' dressing
room. "I keep asking myseH,
'Why do I deserve this .'"
Mazzetti's field goals - on
kicks of 21, 37, 30, 26 and 37
yards - tied a team record
set lll 1973 by Nick Mike-

Mayer, also against the
Rams. They also brought the
Falcons back from a 7-&lt;J
deficit , boosting Atlanta 's
record to 5-4 and handing the
Rams their second straight
loss after seven wins.
"The way I felt tonight I

couldn't

TV survey upsets Woody
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio State Coach Woody
Hayes is not particularly fond
of surveys, especially those
which say he should hang it

up.
Hayes reacted strongly
Monday when asked about a
television survey in which 56
percent of those taking part
said he should resign.
"You know something,"
Hayes replied to a question
by WCMH-TV's Marty Reid,
"most of those 56 percent
probably weren't even living
when I started winning here.
I'm not interested . It's more
what I want to do .
11

People are fickle /' coo ..

tinued
Hayes,
whose
Buckeyes are in jeopardy of
baving their string of six
straight Btg Ten titles
broken. "There has been
nobody around who has won
as much tn this league as I
bave.
"H you're one of those 56

American caliber," and
describing Moore as " a
great, great blocker."
He then swung over to the
the Buckeye ground game,
which accounted lor 511
yards against Northwestern.
''Our running has improved
from 89 yards a game the
first game to where it is now,

Bench homers in
2-0 Reds victory
SAPPORO, Japan (UPI)Johnny Bench slammed a
solo homer and George Foster hit a · sacrifice fly
Tuesday to back the one-hlt
pitching of Mike LaCoss and
lead the touring Cincinnati
Reds to a ~victory over the
Ycmiuri Giants in their third
exhibition game in Japan.
. The victory was the Reds'
second in three games
against the Giants, who
place&lt;\ second in the regular
season in the Central League.
A crowd of 24,000 saw the
game at Maruyama Stadiwn
in Sapporo City on the
northernmost island of
Hokkaido.
Both teams were scoreless
over the first seven innings .
In the eighth, Foster hit a
sacrifice fly to right to bring
in a run. Bench, following
Foster, then blasted a homer
over the left field stands and
into the streets. It was his
second homer since the Reds'
17.game tour started in Tokyo
last Saturday .
Giants' Manager Shigeo
Nagashima praised Kazuaki

WASHINGTON (UPI) Tom watson won a tourrecord $362,429 in prize
money this year to become
the PGA's leading money
winner for the second
straight year, the PGA
announced Monday.
Twenty4our players topped
the $100,000 mark, one short
of the record set last year. A
record six players passed the
$200,000 mark - Watson, Gil
M~rgan, Andy Bean, Jack
Nicklaus, Hubert Green and
Lee Trevino.

NFL. Standings

per cent," Hayes told Reid, 298 yards per game ," said
" I doo 't care much about you Hayes. "Running the ball
either. And, if you don t like it doesn't mean you can't pass
you can go stratght to hell ." it, but you better be ready to
Hayes then departed, slam- run it. That's been the baSis
mmg the door behind him .
of OW' success.,
Earlier, a calm Hayes told
Hayes has long said that as
his weekly news luncheon the football season draws to a
that the Buckeyes came close , teams are ettber
through Saturday 's 63-20 win
over Northwestern "without
any major injuries, whtch
means we should be stronger
this week."
Ohio State visits Wisconsm
this Saturday.
Hayes put in a few good
words for linebacker Tom
Cousineau and ttght end
Jimmy
Moore , saying
Cousineau was "truly all-

Fu]ishll'o, hia losing pitcher .
"I tbought he could go all
the way but he got tired in the
eighth," Nagashima said .
"But I gave him a passing
mark for holding the Reds
scoreless m the fll'st seven
innings.''

WBL

"If

Wl

not

perm it media
in locker rooms
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Will
male reporters be aUowed in
the locker rooms of the new
Women's Basketball League?
Probably not, according to
league o!ficials. But neither
will female reporters.
"All
reporters
will
probably be banned from the
players', dressing rooms,"
said Rod Lein , general
manager of the Iowa Cornets.
Lein said he believes tn
equal opportumty, but the
line should be drawn in the
case of locker room interviews. He added not even
his team's coaches will go
mto the Cornets' locker room.
"The league wtll cooperate
with the courts to permit
equal opportumtles for all
reporters but wlll never
compromise the individual
privacy of the players,"
league president Bill Byrne
satd.
The league begins play
Dec. 9 when the Milwaukee
Does host the Chicago Hostle.
A recent court decision
ordered the New York
' Yankees to allow female
reporters to enter thetr locker
room to interview players.

You Wouldn't

Buy a
Cheap Parachute?
Neither shoutd vou buy cheap insurance for your home

or car. By the time you find the holes, It's too late. You
have many reputable compan1es to choos e from wh en
you insure

- with -

DAVIS INSURANCE AGENCY
"Across from the Courthouse

In Pomeroy"
Bill Quickel- Jeannie Starcher

getting better or worse, but
By United Preu International
American Conference
not standing sttll .
East
" I think as a team we are
L T. Pc:t.
getting better," said Hayes . New Engla nd
2 0 .778
667
6 3 0
"I know we are . Our defense M1am1
NY Jets
5
0
556
IS getting better, but it seems
Baltimore
3 6 0
333
3 6 0
333
like there is always a penalty Buffal o
Centnl
which hurts them. The
w L T Pet
8
I 0
889
defense gave us the football Pittsburgh
5 4 0
556
in good field position Houston
Cle\leland
5 4 0 556
Saturday. Our drives were Cin c1nna t1
1 8 0
111
West
mostly 50 yards or less."
w L. T Pet
Moore and tackle Keith Denver
667
6 3 0
5 4 0 556
Ferguson were the top Oak land
4
5 0
offensive linemen for the Seattle
San D1ego
3 6 0
333
Northwestern game, while Ka nsas City
2 7 0
222
sub tailback Calvin Murray,
Natrona! Conference
whose 55-yard touchdown run
East
W. L T Pet .
opened the scoring in the first
7
2 0
778
Washrngton
quarter, was ptcked the back Da llas
6 3 0
6{,7
NY G1ants
5 40
556
of the week
Philadelphia
4 5 0 .444
Defensively,
outside St
Loui s
1 8 0 .111
Central
Coach Ted Lehew's North linebacker Paul Ross, who
W. L T Pet.
Gallta Pirate reserve football had three lackles for minus Green Bay
7 2 0
778
5 40
556
squad ended tts season with yardage, and Vince Skillings, M 1nnesota
T!!lmpe Bay
4 50
444
an 8-1 record Monday night wbo intercepted two Wildcat Ch
1cago
3 6 0 .333
passes, were the top award Detro 1t
by blanking Eastern, 24-&lt;l.
3 60333
West
Sophomore Keith Payne led winners.
W l T Pet
the way with two touchdowns
Los Ange les
7 2 0
778
New Orlean s
5 4 0
556
one on a 75 yard pass from
MARSHALL, Minn. ( UPI) Atlanta
s 4 0 556
Bruce Shriver and the other - Lew Shaver, head footbl!.ll San Franc isc
1 8 0
111
Thursday
'
s
Result
on a 61 yard run.
coach at Southwest State
M innesota 21, Dallas 10
Charles Lookadoo scored UniverSity, has accepted a
Sunday's Results
Cincinnati 28, Houston 13
on a 25 yard run. Prtor to the posttion as director of
Pittsburgh 27, Kan C1ty 24
conclusion of the first baH, athletics and recreation for
Cleveland 41. Buffa lo 20
Shriver bit Don Shupe with a Rehabilitation Education
New England 55, NY Jets 21
Sf LOUIS 16, Philadelphia 10
a:i-yard scormg pass.
Services at University of
Washington 38, San Fran 20
Defenstvely, the Ptrates Dlinois.
Green Bay 9, Tampa Bay 7
Detro 1t 21 , Chicago 17
had three interceptions and
Shaver's resignation ts
New Orleans 28 , NV G1ants 17
recovered two fumbles . effective Nov. 22 and ' Mtamr 26, Ba lt rmore 8
San Olego 27 , Oakland 23
North Gallia's only loss was Southwest State , Prestdent
Denver 20 , Seattle 17, ot
6-0 at Meigs.
Jon Wefald said lthe school
Mond•y 's Result
Atlanta 15, LOS Angeles J
will accept applications for
Sunday , Nov. 5
head football coach until Nov.
Detroit at Mi nnesota , 1 p m
Green Bay at Phila, 1 p m
10.
New Eng at Buffalo, 1 p.m
PHILADELPHIA ( UPI) New Orlns at Pittsbgh, 1 p m
NEW ORLEANS (UP!) NY G1ants at St LOU tS, 1
The Philadelphia Eagles
Newly signed free agent Ira pm
Monday placed running back
san Fran at Atlanta , 1 p m
TerreU could see hiS ftrst
Seattle at Chicago, 1 p.m
James Betterson on the
action with the New Orleans
Cle\leland at Houston, 2 p m
injured reserve list and
Oakland a t Kan City, 2 p m
Jazz in tonight's game
claimed runnmg
back
Tampa Bay at Lo s Ang , 4
against the Chicago Bulls.
pm
Lawrence Barnes, 24, on
Dallas at M lam1 , 4 p m
TerreU WBl! signed to a
waivers from the St. Louis
Cro
ci at S.!!n D1eg o, 4 p m
freeagent contract Monday,
NY Jets at Denver, 4 p m
Cardinals.
replacing veteran guard Gus
Monday, Nov 6
Betterson,
24,
tore
Wash at Baltimore , 9 p m
Bailey wbo was cut
cartilage in his right knee
Sunday while returning a
second.quarter kickoff in the
team's 16-10 loss to the
Cardinals . An Eagles'
BLOOMINGTON,
Minn. for the Minnesota Twins this
spokesman said Betterson
undergo
surgery ( UPI ) - Mike MarshaU, the past season, is trying to
will
Tuesday at Paoli Memorial only consistent relief pitcher decide how much it's worth to
him to play for Twins
Hospital.
manager Gene Mauch.

} f·

•

Pirates
defeat
Eastern

miss,"

said

Mazzetti, wbo beat out two
other kickers at a spectal
tryout when the Falcons
dectded to repla ce Fred
Steinlort three weeks ago "
Mazzetti' s ktcking was a
needed boost for the Falcons,
who lost starling quarterback
Steve Bartkowski in the
second quarter with a
shoulder separation and t he
team trailing, 7-&lt;1, as a result
of a !~yard scoring pass

...

ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Pittsburgh's Don Robinson was
named National League
rookie pitcher of the year and
Atlanta third baseman Bob
Horner was chosen rookie of
the year by The Sporting
News.
Robinson posted a 14-6
record for the Pirates with a
3.47 ERA. He had 135
strikeouts in 228 inrungs.
Horner hit 23 homers and
drove in 63 runs with a .266
batting average lor the
Braves.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- Pitcher Larry Gura has
declined to sign a contract
with the Kansas City Royals ,
club officials announced
Mwday.
Team spokesman Dean
Vogelaar said the left-handed
veteran notified Executive
Vice President Joe Burke,
"he ... wants to find out what
his value is on the freHtgent
market ." Vogelaar would not
disclose the tenns of what
Burke called an "extremely
fair offer .''

Sports Transacttons
By Un•ted Press International
Monday
Pro Basketball

New York - Pl aced guard
Ttcky Burden on wap.,ers
New Orleans Cut guard
Gus Ba !ley and signed free
agent forward Ira Terrell to a
m u lt 1 year contract
Baseball
Ch1cago White Sox - Added
rrght . handed p1tcher
Fred

Howard and second baseman
A J . Hill frOm KnOXVIlle (South ·

ern League) and th1rd baseman
Joel Per ez of Durango (Mexi can League) , liSSigned 1nf 1eld ·
ers Mike Eden. Juntor Moore
and John Flannery and right·
handed pitcher John Verhoeven
to Iowa (Amencan Asso cla ·

tion)
Mi lWaukee - S1gned catcher
Buck Martinez to a mul t1 year
contract
St LOUIS - Added Pil Cher
John Fulgham , f1rst baseman
Leon Durham and outfielder
Dave Pennia !I to winter roster ;
assigned pitchers Ear l Bass
and Roy Thomas to Spnngfield,
Ill , farm c lub.
Detroit - Reca lled pi tchers
Jim Crawford, Jac k M urphy
and Bruce Taylor, catcher
Bruce Kimm and infielder
Chuck Scrivener from the1r
Evansville farm club ; pur·
chased pitchers Dan Petry,
Gary Grafton and Pa t Underwood , 1nf ielder Jerry Manuel
an d outfielder Dan Gonzales
trom EvanSVIlle, released out
field er Charl ie Spikes , assigned
pitchers Fernando Arroy o and
Steve Viefhaus, catcher Bob
Adam s and mfletder Tom
Brookens outnght to Evans vll
Ie.
Pro Football
New York Jets Put
llnebacker GreQ Buttle on
rnlured reserve list for the
season w 1th a knee lnl ury
Philadelphia - Placed run
nmg back James Betterson on
th e 1 n 1 u red reser\le I 1st ,
claimed running back Law .
ren ee Barnes on waiver s from
St LOUIS
College
vanderbilt - Announced
resignation of head footba ll
Coach Fred Pancoast , effective
at the end of the season
Colorado State - Announct;od
res1gnatlon of assistant foo tball
c:oach Charley Arm ey

BLOOMINGTON,
Ind.
(UPI) Two Purdue
Umversity students face
sentencmg Nov . 10 on
misdemeanor charges of
attempting to steal the "Old
Oaken Bucket" from Indiana
University.
Paul Nevtll, 21, Carmel,
and Edward Gedeon, 21, Indianapolis, entered guilty
pleas Monday and could be
sentenced to a year in jail and
a $5,000 fme each. The Old
Oaken Bucket is the symbol
of footbaU rivalry between
Purdue and Indiana .

may have come late in the
third quarter when the Rams,
still ahead, 7~. sent running
back Cullen Bryant up the
middle on a fourth.and-&lt;Jne
play at the 50. Bryant lost a
yard and the Falcons quickly
drove to Mazzetti's go-ahead
field goal - a 3~yarder on
the first play of the fourth
quarter.
"That was a big play," satd
Bennett. " It knocked the
wrnd out of thell' sails when
they dtdn't make it."
An mterception by Rolland
Lawrence - his second of the
night - started the Falcons
on a !().play, 64-yard drive
which led to Mazzetti's fourth
field goal - a 25-yarder wtth 6:44 left rn the game .

'

Ohio grid standings
Ohio College Football Records
By United Press International
Mid-American Confernce
All Games
Conierence
w L T
W. L T
7 1 0
5 0 0
Ball State
6 2 0
5 I 0
Centra!Mtch
6 2 0
5 2 0
WesternMich
5 2 I
3 2 0
Miami
4 4 0
3 3 0
BowlmgGreen
2 5 0
2 3 0
Ohto Umv
I 4 0
3 5 0
Eastern Mich
3 5 0
I 4 0
Kent State
0
I 7 0
1 5
Toledo
3 4 0
2
0
0
Nor ntinois
Ohio Conference
(Red Division)
All Games
Conference
W. L. T.
w L. T.
7 0 0
4 0 0
Baldwin-Wallc
3 4 0
2 2 0
Ohio Northern
3 3 I
2 2 0
Denison
2 4 1
2 2 0
Ohio Wesleyan
3 3 I
2 2 0
Mount Union
0 7 0
0 4 0
Heidelberg
(Blue Division)
All Games
Conference
W. L T.
W. L T
0
7 0 0
0
4
Wtttenberg
1
0
5
2 0
3
Capital
5 2 0
2 2 0
Wooster

Otterbein
Muskingum
Marietta

x-Kenyon

2 4
2 4
4 3

I

3 0
1 3 0
I 3 0

--

1
I
0

X
X
X
I 6 0
x.Qberlrn
X
X
X
0 7 0
x-not competing for title
. Hoosier-Buckeye Conference
Conference All Games
w L T w L T
Ftndlay
6 0 0
7 0 0
Hanover
5 1 0
5 1 1
Deftance
4 2 0
4 3 0
Manchester
3 3 0
3 4 0
Wtimmgton
4 4 0
3 4 0
Anderson
3 4 0
3 4 0
Bluffton
2 4 0
2 5 0
Taylor
I 5 0
I 6 0
Earlham
I 5 0
I 6 0
Others
L. T.
7
Youngstown State
I
0
Dayton
7
I
I
4
2
0
Htram
1
Oht o State
4
2
5
3
0
Akron
5
0
3
John Ca rroll
2
5
0
Cmcmnau
Case Western
2
6
0
0
Central State
I
6
I
7
0
Ashland

w.

This Week'S

Ohio College
Football Scedhu le
Untted Press International

Ohto State at Wts consi n
Ball State at Bowling Green

Toledo a t Central Michigan
Kent State a t Northern
Illinois

Miami at Ohio Uni'llersity
Temple at Akron (n)

at Ashland
NE Louistana at Ci nci nnati
Central State

Dayton

at

F err 1s

Northern M1c h at

Youngs.

lown Sf

Cap1tal at Manetta
Musklngum at Wooster

Wittenberg at Otlerbein (n
Heidelberg at Baldwin -

Wallace
Oh ro Wesleyan at Denison
Mount Un1on at Oh1o Nor thern

Wabash ( Ind ) at Oberl•n
Bluffton at Wllminglon
Hanover (lnd ) at Findlay
H~ram

John

(Pal

n -

Tommy}ohn,
Dodgers may
part company

Sta te

(Michl

at Ca se Western
Carroll at Alleg hen y
denotes n1 ght game

Marshall may leave Twins team

MILWAUKEE (UP!) The Milwaukee Brewers
Monday Signed catcher Buck
Martmez- to a multi-year
contract, leaving little-used
catcher Andy Etchebarren as
the only player eligible lor
the re-entry freeagent draft.
Etchebarren,
who
appeared In only four games,
is the only player not signed
through next season, making
him eligible for the draft.

from Pat Haden to Ron Jessie
on the first play of the second
quarter.
But the Falcons turned a
blocked punt by defensive
lineman Edgar Fields on the
Ram 23 and an interception
by Rick Byas of a Haden pass
on the Ram 33 into field goals
by Mazzetti to get back in-the
game.
Mazzetti satd the 37-yarder
which came wtth 32 seconds
left in the half was the most
difficult ktck because it was
the longest and it was rnto a
cross wind.
"On those long ones , the
goalposts look skinnier ," he
quipped .
Atlanta Coach Leeman
Bemett said the turning potnt

Marshall satd earlier tl).ts
year he signed with the Twins
because he wanted to play for
Mauch. But Friday he will go
through the majll' league reentry draft in New York
along with 41 other playe rs.
He said if he ts offered
$150,000 , especially by a
National League team, he
may leave the Twins.
The National League is
attractive to hun , Marshall
satd Monday, because he
hates the designated hitter
rule used only m the
American League.
"I cons1der it a travesty,"
he satd.
Marshall earned a reported
$100,000 last year.
Twins' President Calvin
Griffith would nol comment
on Marshall's salary request,
blit he said the major needs of
his club are a left-handed
pitcher and a power hitter .

LOS -ANGELES (UPI) The Los Angeles Dodgers and
veteran left-bander Tommy
John apparently are parting
company .
Negotiations between the
35-year-&lt;Jld John and the
National League champions
broke off Monday and Bob
Cohen, John's attorney, sa1d
Dodger Vtce President AI
Campa nis told him th e
Dodgers would not select
John rn Friday's free-agent
reentry draft .
John, 35, then listed 10
clubs he would stgn wtth tf
selected by them rn the draft ,
including the world cbampton
New York Yankees The
others
were
Boston ,
Caltforma, Cin cinnati ,
Kansas Ctty, Milwauk ee,
Philadelphia, San Otego , St.
Louts and Texas.
" In all pr obabtltty,"

CampaniS satd, ''we will not
claim him Friday . We don't
feel we want to get mto a
bidding war for the servtces
of a player we already have
had under cootract "

" I'm

perpiexed -

and I'm

dtsappointed, " John sa td
from his home at Yorba
Linda, Calif., when asked
ahout the Dodgers' posture .
"I'm disappomted that I
won't be able to play for
(Manager) Tommy Lasorda
next season because I love
him and I'm disapPQinted I
won~ be able to play with the
best 25 guys in baseball - on
and off the field - anymore .
I'm perplexed about the
nego ttaltons .
I
don 't
understand the Dodg e rs '
thmk mg
They
dido 't
calculate I would have a good
year but I bad an excellent
year and I had a n excellent
playoffs and World Series. As
a result, the Dodgers were
always three or four months
behind."
In Monday's developments,
the John Side turned down the
final Dodger offer and then
the Dodgers rejected the final
John proposal

ST. LOUIS (UPI)- The St.
Lows Cardinals have added
pitcher John Fulgham, first
baseman Leon Durham and
outfielder Dave Pennlall to
their winter roster .
Cardinals
also
The
assigned pitchers Earl Bass
and Roy Thomas to their
farm club.
Springfield,

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INSURANCE AGENCY, INC.
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f92-2342

�•••
••
4 _Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Tuesday, Oct. 31, 1978

Sooners remain on top
NEW YORK (UP! ) - ..
Unlike the crostant changing
of the weather this tin;le of
year , college football's Top 10
·remained virtually the same
as Barry Switzer's Oklahoma
Sooners held on to their No . I ·
ranking in the UP! coach's
ratings.
The Sooners, with an easy
56-19 victory over Big Eight
rival Kansas Stat.,.Saturday,
actually picked up another
point in the ratings, totaling
• 578 ( 32 first place votes) to
No. 2 Penn State's 547.
The only change in the Top
10 came as a result of
Houston and UCLA switching
places. Houston's Cougars,
who sent Arkansas. reeling
with a relatively easy 2!1-9
victory, moved from lOth spot
to eighth, while UCLA , 24-14
victors over Arizona Friday

night 1 went down to lOth with
Michigan remaining ninth.
Following Wldefeated Oklahana and Penn State in the
Top 10 are Alabama,

Rockwell
inducted
Monday

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Six
new members were inducted
Monday into the Ohio High
School Athletic Directors
Hall of Fame at the group's
annual meeting.
The inductees were headed
by Frank G. Curtiss, who
spent 40 years as coach or
athletic director at Lyndhurst
IN THE
Brush High School in
COMMON PLEAS COURT
suburban Cleveland.
OF MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
RICHARD E . PHILLIPS ,
Curtiss, who earned 10
Plai!1tiff,
varsity
letters in football,
vs.
BARBARA G . PHILLIPS ,
basketball and baseball while
Def endant.
at Kent State University,
No . 11002
began his career at Brush in
- NOTICE FOR
PUBLICATION 1929 and stayed their until his
Ba rba ra G . Ph i llips, whose
retirement
in 1969.
last known address was Bo x
9'2 , Middleport. OhiO , WhO
He served as Brush athletic
may have been residing in
director from 1951 until his
ca r e of Edna Jordan , Dige n
Str eet. Jac k sonv ille. Florid a
retirement.
3205, w hose address
is
The other inductees were
oth erw ise unknow n will take
Norvin G. Smith, of Troy;
notice that on the H th day of
Octob er, 1978, Ric ha rd E .
Granville S. (Sam 1 Hatfield,
Phi llips . as P l aintiff , t i l ed a
of Philo ; Milton G. Will, of
com plain t charging g ro ss
neglect of duty and ex t reme
Canal Winchester; Arnold
cruelt y against her in wh ich
Brown, of Toledo Woodward;
th e relief demand ed is a
and Jim Rockwell, of New
di vorCE! and other rei iet and
that this c aSe may be heard
Lexington, now athletic
tw enty -eight days after th e
directo~
at West Musllingum.
la st p ub l ication of noti ce
which will be made on th e
Smith spent 38 years as a
28th day of November , 1978,
teacher, coach and athletic
and that the final hearing has
been set for 9:00 a.m . on
director . A graduate of
December 30, 1978.
Wittenberg and Columbia
Yo u are required to answer
Wliverities, he coached at
this com plain t by not later
than
twe n ty -eight
days
Brookville, West Carrollton
foll owi ng the last publica tion
and Troy. While at Troy, he
of th is notice or judgment b y
defa ult may be taken against
coached three players who
you .
went on to be collegiate allLarr y E . Spencer ,
Americans.
Clerk of Co urt
Hatfield spent 30 years at
Common Pleas Court.
Philo
where, besides serving
Me igs County, Oh io
as athletic director, he
j,'o ' ' ' · 2'· 31 1111 7• " · 2 1. 26 · coached football, basketball,
baseball and track. The Philo
football stadium is named
after Hatfield, who was
inducted into the Naismith
Basketball Hall of Fame in
1971.
Bernice Bede Osol
Will was at Canal
Winchester for 30 years,
l'l:.mlol
coaching all sparta as well as
Ul!J\!JlJ
serving as athletic director.
l'lR,.,-,fl...&amp;\TJ He helped form the Mid.State
~U\IUli.Jl!MJ 11 League of which Winchester
November 1, 1971
is a member·
Be ready to grasp unexpected
Brown served as athletic
chances that could give you a~ director at Woodward for 28
opportunity to advance your years. Prior to that he
self-interests this coming year. coached at Huron High
Several things close to •the School.
heart are in store for you .
ll
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) You
Rnckwe coached football
need to· share your day with at New Lexington for 18
someone who Is Interested In years, posting a 144-27-8
doing different and unusuAl record . Prior to that
things. Find a pal _who also Rnckwell coached at Ironton
wants a change. Ftnd ~ut to and Wellston He was voted
whom you're romantt c ally •
·
suited by sending for your copy the UP! Class AA coach of the
of Astro-Graph Letter. Mail 50 year m 1970 and went to West
cents for each and a long, self- Muskingum as AD in 1977.
Radio City Station, N.Y. 10019.
Be sure to specify birth sign.

SAGfTIAAIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
21) You're al_ways seeking a

new adventure or experience,
but today you' re even more
attracted to exploring strange,
Unfamiliar things.

CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.

Local Bowling
Pomeroy Bowling Lanes

Tuesday Triplicate
League
Oct. 24, 1978
Standings
Team

Pis.
48

19) Reuter -Bragan Ins .

If an associate offers to do Royal Oak Park

48

something for you today , stand Roya l Crown Cola
clear. Let him do it his way. His Doug's Mar ine Sales

45
32
29
methods and success may as~ F r iendly Tavern
Robert Roble Con st.
14
tonish you .
Hi9h Indiv idual game AQUARIUS (Jon. 211-Feb. 19)
Dugan 195 ; Helen
Events should take a startling Max10e
Phelps
193
; Betty Whitlatch
turn when an elusive goal sud-

denly falfs Into your lap today. 184.
High series Bet1y
It'll happen when you 're not Whitlatch
493 ; Helen Phelps
looking .
489 ; Betty Smith 473.
PISCES (Feb. 211-March 20) Team high game - Reuter
Striking like a boll of lightning, Brogan Ins. 542.
lhe missing piece of a puzzle Team high series
will suddenly be presented to Friendly Tavern 1455. ·
you . You'lf recognize II when It
hits.
ARIES (Morell 21·Aprll 19) A
chance lo have something you
Friday Late Mixed
didn't plan on but would love to
League
have may be offered to you
Od. 20, 1t78
loday by someone quite fond of Capehart's
41 15
you . Take advantage of lt.
Coleman's
34 22
TAURUS (April 21-MIY 20) If
, Ca
25
someone asks to team up with YoWlg s rpeting
31
you today, don't be reticent. YoWlg's GuH Station
28 28
This person likes you very Team 4
24 32
much and will turn out to be a Team 6
6 50
good cohort. ,
Team high series GEMINI (May 21-June 20) Har- Capehart's 887 ; Young's
mony and order could be
brought to a sticky situation Carpeting 861 ; Team 4 830.
you've been working on
Team high game through a unique Idea you get Young's
Carpeting
today. Give your brainstorm a Capehart's 311 ; Team 4 294;
chance lo prove Itself.
YoWlg's Carpeting 389.
CANCER (Ju"" 21-July 22)
Some of the nicest things that
Men's high series- Butch
happen to you today occur Roush 486; Terry Seidenabel
lrom the least probable sourc- 396; Mik"e Capehart 386.
es. You'll find lots to smile and ' Men's high game - Butch
laugh about.
Roush 172 156· Terry
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Dlsrup- Seidenabel 1S3.
'
lions in your routine could give
,
.
you an excuse to break away
Women s high series and do something for yourself. Marlene
Wilson
469;
You couldn't have planned the Margaret Wyatt 430; Edlth
day better.
Hall 356.
VIRGO•(Aug. :13-Sept. 22) HavWomen's high games - ·
lng a buoy schedule today and M 1 W'l
158 157 154 ·
going to a lot of new places will

ar ene

1son

'

'

•

prove to be quite enjoyable.
There's a strong chance you'll

Wednesday's Early birds
meet someone you'll Ilk&lt;! very
much.
Oct. 18, 1t78
LIBRA (Sept. D-Oct. 23) An
w. I.
unexpected shift In events Royal Crown
39 17
could turn Into something prof37 19 ·
Swisher
and
Lohse
Itable if you're on your toea
24 32
today. Think dollars and cents. Jack'sClub
!NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
24 32
Riebel's Used Cars

'

Nebraska,
undefeated
Maryland, Southern
Califochia, Texas and then
Clara Williams, Sam F.
Houston, Michigan and
Williams,
et ·a! to · State of
UCLA.
Ohio,
Judg.
Entry on setOf the top seven teams,
tlement, Bedford.
t:r~IY Nebraska, 22-14 winners
Everett L. Smith, Sharon
over Oklahoma State, won by
K.
Smith to Roger Adams,
less th~n 27 points and two, .Right
of way, Meigs.
Alabama and Maryland, won
James
N. Smith, Constance
by shutouts .
C. Smith to Roger Adams,
NEY; YORK IUPil - The
U n i t e d Press . ln ter Mtiona l Right of Way, Meigs.
Lewis E. Harris, Mary A.
Board of coaches' top 20
c oll~e football ratings , ~lth
Harris
to Lewis E. Harris,
first .plac'e votes and won .fost
Mary A. Harris , Lot,
records in parentheses :
Team
Points Salisbury.
1. Oklahom a ·(32 ) (8 -0J
578
James C. Conde , Juanita
2. Penn St. (7) (8-0 )
5.47
3. Atabl!lma (7. 1)
465
Conde to Joseph M. Salyers,
4. Nebraska &lt;7 ·1l
432
Mary Jo Salyers, 9. 794 acres,
5. Maryland (8 -0)
405
Chester.
6. So . Ca lif'. (6-ll
395
7. Texas (6 -1 l
338
Ernest A. Wingett, Maxine
301
B. Houston (6 -l l
S. Wingett to Daniel P. Riffle.
9 . Michigan (6 -1)
281
10. UCLA 17 -ll
255 Pamela Riffle, Rickie L.
11. Navy (7 .0)
145
Clark, Cathy D. Clark, Right
12 . Geciroia (6 -ll
132
13. LSU 15-1)
llB of Way , Sutton.
14 . Purdue (6 -1 J
88
Howard E. Emrich, Ruby
15. Notre Da me (5-2)
61
L. Emrich to . Elmer J .
16 . Clemson 16· ll
49
17 . Arkansas (4 -2)
21
Medling, Bonnie C. Medling,
18. Colorado {6-2)
11
19. Georgia Tech (6-2)
7 Edgar C. Medling, Juanita C.
20 . Oh iO St. (4 -2-l l
6
Medling, Pareels, Olive.
Note : By agreement w ith the
Wesley Stewart, dec. to
Football Coaches
A m eric,an
Associat ion , t eams on prQba tion Julia E. -Stewart, Edith E.
by th e NCAA are ineligible .for
top 20 and national champ ion - Stewart Everitt, Aff. of
ship consi deration by the UP ! Trans., Rutland .
Board of Coaches. T~ose team s
Charles A. Landers, dec. to
cu rrently a n probation are :
Eliza J. Landers, Raymond
M i c h i g a n Sta te, Oklahoma
State and Grambling .
H. Landers, Charles 0 .
Landers, Aft. of trans., Salisbury.
·
Eliza J . Landers, dec. to
Raymond H. Landers,
Charles 0 . Landers, Aff. of
trans., Salisbury.
Charles 0 . Landers,
Clarabelle Landers to
Raymond H. Landers,
ATLANTA (UP!) - 'nle . Eleanor J . Landers, Parcels,
Atlanta Braves confirmed Salisbury. Marie Offutt to
Monday a report that Braves Charles Bissell, Margaret
owner Ted Turner plans to Bissell,, Parcels, Olive.
select Pete Rose in Friday's
GeorgeS. Hobstetter, Zelda
lree agent draft and will M. Hobstetter to Cleland
make an all-out effort to sign Realty, Inc., Pl. Lot 88,
the long-time Cincinnati star. Pomeroy.
Turner, himself, was less
John T. Blake, Marjorie H.
Blake, to John S. Jagers,
committal.
"! guess we'll probably Robin B. Jagers, I acre,
draft Rose, " he said. "!don't Salisbury.
· want to say anything else.
Ruth E . Tompkins to
Ever since I got suspended William A. Young, Ramora
for a year for alleged tam- . C. Young, Lot, Pomeroy.
pering in the signing of Gary
Brenda S. Berry to Charles
Matthews, I've had to be Berry, 48 acres, Scipio.
·
careful about what I say in
James Fl. Arnold, Ruth B.
these matters."
Arnoid to James R. Frecker,
A Braves spokesman said 50 acres, Lebanon.
the main problem in signing
Josephine Blevins, Dallas
Rose, th~ most recent major Blevins to Josephine Blevins,
leaguer to reach the 3,00Q-hit Dallas Blevins , Parcels,
mark, is that Rose has said if Chester.
he leaves the• Reds he wants
Everett Connolly, Nellie
to join a contender. The Connolly to R. E . Quillen,
Braves have finished last Velma QuUJen, Lots 10, 11,
three straight seasons.
Letart, Letartsville.
However, the spokesman
R. E. Quillen, Velma
said that Turner " will give it Quillen to Bennie Rhodes,
his best shot" in trying to sign Kenneth Rhodes, Lots 10, ll,
the 37-year-old switch-hitter, Letart, Letartsville.
who hit In 44 straight games
Daniel E. Thompson, dec.
last season. If the Braves sign to Louise Thompson, Jonnie
Rose, an all-star at third base Sue Kinney, Nancy Hill, Cert.
for the Reds, they would use of trans., Olive, Middleport,
him at first base, the club
R. L. Davies, Marjorie R.
said.
Davies to C. W. Henderson,
Thelma Henderson, Parcels,
DENVER (UPI)- Denver Orange.
Broncos Head Coach Red
Ferne B. Hayman, dec. to
Miller said quarterback June Wickersham, Cert. ·of
Craig Morton , with a bruised trans., Letart.
groin, and receiver Rick
Naomi M. Miller, dec. to
Upchurch, who suffered a . Raymond M. Miller, Cert. of
bruised lower leg, should be Trans., Orange.
discharged in a day or two
Miles Homes of Ohio, Inc.
from St. Luke's Hospital, to Insilco Corp., Agree of
where they ate being treated
for the minor injuries they
,......
_.._._...
received in SWlday's 2().17
overtime win over Seattle.
The
Broncos
were
scheduled to have today off
and will return to practice
Wednesday afternoon.

!

.1

I

King Builders
22 34
New York Clothing
22 34
High ind. game-Debbie
Hawley 196; Betty Whitlatch
193; Debbie Hawley 184.
High ind. series - Debbie
Hawley 548; Betty Whitlatch
513 ; Melanie Barnett, Ann
Hatfield 473.
High team game - Royal
Crown 746, 727; New York
Clothing 725.
High team series - Royal
Crown 2182; New York
Clothing 2122; Riebel's Used
Cars 20ll.

By SANDRA L. LATIMER

United Press International
Although October is turning
into November, there's one
more Oktoberfest left in Ohio.
That will be this weekend at
the Ohio State FairgroWlds in
Columbus, headlined by the
International King of Polka,
Frank Yankovic, perfocming
nightly Thursday t hro)lgh
Sunday.
Hundreds of musicians,
dancers, and singers promise
continuous entertainment. A
tasty array of traditional
German and Americari .foods
will be in abundRneP A long

.

with more than 120 (!isplays cutting , grinding
and
and demonstrations of arts smoking the meat - will be
and crafts.
demonstrated. Ham arid bean
Other attractions include soup and cornbread will be
an arts and antiques auction, served.
kiddie rides, games of
Butchering day will run
strength and skill, dancing from 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 pm .
and sing-alongs.
·
with butchering being done
An admission price is set by IX!Oil .
for adults and children over
A Harvest Dinner and Auc12.
tion will be held Saturday at
Ushering in November will · Hale Farm and Village at
be Butchering Day Saturdsy Bath, near Akron.
at Sauder Museum in
H(IJiemade food will be
Archbold.
available while the auction
The complete story of features antiques and items
butchering as it was 100 years from Hale Farm's gift shop.
ago - butchering the hogs,

Dollar dips to new low
By
United
. Press
lnternaUona1
The battered dollar
plwruneted to rei:ord lows .in
Tokyo and six European
markets today, including
Frankfurt, Zurich and Paris.
Tokyo dealers said the dollar
.seemed In .a "bottomless
slide" and a ZUrich banker
said it was caught in . a
"vicious circle" of inflation
and fear of oil price

increases.
Gold climbed, going to
$244.125 per ounce in Zurich
against Monday's $242.8750
but dipping to $244.50 per
ounce in London against
Monday night'.s all-time high
of $245.1250.
The dollar, once the world's
strongest currency, plunged
to new lows in Frankfurt,
Zurich, Br.ussels ,
Amsterdam, Milan, Paris
and To!lyo. "The market is
hectic, everybody is selling
dollars," a Swiss dealer
said.
The latest rWl against the
Merger, Pomeroy.
Salem A. Yates to Billy H.
Cretsinger, Sharon . K.
Cretsinger, .234 acre, Sutton.
W. S.' Coleman, dec. to
Charlotte Coleman, Tressa
Coleman Swain, aft. for
trans., Olive.
Charlotte Coleman, dec. to
Tressa Coleman Swain, aff.
for tr~ns., Olive.
Tressa Coleman Swain ,
dec. to William N. Swain,
Pauline
Dixie Teboe,
Primmer,
Geo~ia
· Autherson, Durward
ain,
Hope Drake, William
ain,"
James 0. Swail_l, aff. for
trans., Olive.
William N. Swain, dec. to
Dixie Teboe,
Pauline
Primmer,
Georgia
Autherson, Durward Swain,
Hope Drake, William Swain,
James 0 . Swain, all. for
trans., Olive.
F . Way Clark, Audrey M.
Clark to Marie Offutt, Lot 7,
Orange, Weatherman's Sub. ·
R. Clifford Hill, Pauline
Hill to Roger Adams, right of
way, Letart.
Raymond T. Rowe, Kay M.
Rowe to Roger Adams, right
of way, Letart.
Leroy W.
Donohew,
Mildred D. Donohew to Roger
Adams, right of way, Letart.

____ -

________ .

Tuesday, Oct. 31, 1978

One Oktoberfest left

Turner
after
Rose

. ASTRO•.GRAPH

addressed, stamped envelope
Ia Astro-Graph , P.O. Box 489,

Meigs
Property
Transfers

/

.._

A Wildlife "and Nature Aft
Show will be held Saturday
and Sunday at the Ohio
Historical
Center
1!1 •
Colwnbus.
This is a show and sale of
wildlife and nature prlnta.
Hours are Saturday from 9 '
a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday
from 10 a.m. to 5 pm . .
A couple· of ,programs
provide some • holiday
atmosphere.
•
Selected artists . and, :
craftsperson8 of variouS: ;
skills will demonstrate an«&lt;: '
sell their goods at the Holiday._;
Arts and "Crafts Show at ·
Wayne . General , and ;
Technical College at Orrv1lle. -:
An admission trice Is char· ·
ged. Hours are Saturday ;
from noon to 9 pm. and .
Sunday noon to_6 p.m.
Thanksgiving
and .
Christmas holiday ·
arrangements will be :
featured Sunday at the ~
Decorative Holiday ·
Arrangements
at
tbe ;
Pennsylvania House at ;
Springfield between 1 and 4 :
p.m.
.

dollar began last week after "ex tremely n ervo us
President Carter announced conditions" London where
a new program to combat the poWld sol.d at $2.0945
inflation . Dealers in Europe against $2.0990 at the stari of
and Asia" said it was not tough trading.
enough to whip U.S. inflation
and put the world economy
In Tokyo, the greenback hit
back on SOWld footing.
three successive lows on the
Although the dollar's woes Tokyo foreign exchange
began with U.S. inflation, the market, opening at 176.70
Jack of a genuine energy- yen, slipping to 176.48 and . - - - - - - - - , '
economizing policy and an finally to 175.50. It recovered
early unreadiness of the marginally Ill close at 176.05
•
CAROUSEL
Ca rter Administration to - a record low.
CONFECTIONERY
support the American
currency, a Zurich banker - Tokyo dealers attributed
Cake &amp; Candy Craft Shoppe , ,
Opening Saturday,
·
said the situation has now the drop to discouraging
October 21th
~'
"turned into a vicious repocts including the Kuwaiti
Comein and register for
circle."
finance minister's remarks
cake decorating or candy '•
1
... Even if Washington took that oil prices would have to
cla sses.
317 North Second Ave.
firm action, such as genuine be increased to m~ke up for
Middleporl, 0.'
deflationary measures, it losses being taken by oil
Phone 992· 2583 or 985-4134 ·;'
{
would take time for the effect producing countries because
to be !~II," the Zurich banker of the sagging dollar.
'
Said.
~-------------JJ'!
"Meanwhile, the slightest
'
report of a large oil price
increase, the Wall Street
price decline - all these
things feed on each other."
The Dow Jones industrial
average of common stocks
fell through the 800 level
REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE .
.)
Monday dropping at one point
17 points but then staged a
dramatic rally in the third
heaviest trading day in the
history of the New Yock Stock
Q . Wi1h winter coming and being a g~d time to trim
. trees, I was wondering if a tree trimmer shapes my
Exchange 59,480,000
trees and a branch damages the roof; whose Insurance
shares.
pay~, mine or the tree trimmer's?
At the start of trading on
European exchanges, the
A. The person who trims 1he trees should carry some
dollar opened at I. 7235
form of General Liability Insurance to cover bodily
injury or property damage which could occur as a
German marks against
result
of his negligence. However, If he does not carry
Monday's close and record
proper coverage , your insurance, providing It Is a
low of 1. 7275 in Frankfurt, at
Broadform or ·an All -Risk Coverage Polley, will take
1.4775 Swiss francs against
care of 1he ~amage , less 1he deduc1ible on your policy .
Monday's new low of 1.48225
in Zurich, at 3.99 French
francs against 4.000 in Paris,
at 27.95 Belgian francs
against 28.03 in Brussels," at
1.8630 guilders against 1.87 in
Amsterdam, at 786.55 lira
The lnsuronce Store
against 788.05 in Milan.
214 E. Main
Pomeroy, O.
992-5130
The dollar opened under
..

•.

I

205 North Second Street
Middleport, Ohio 45760

BONELESS

.

4
Cucumbers, Gr. Peppers, Gr. Onions ...... .
MIX 'EM OR MATCH 'EM

lARGE
,
HEADS

_

FOR

_

$}00

$149

EXTRA LEAN

aiiCK:u~=~~. ~-~.~-- ~-~.~~~~..~~~-~~-~-~-~~:. 99$

CUBED
$149
BEEF STEW•••••••••••••••••••• ~~·•••

CHICKEN LEGS &amp; THIGHS.................................... ~~:. 89c
CHICKEN WINGS.................................................~~-..49$
CHICKEN BACKS &amp; NECKS..................................~~: .. 19C·

EXTRA LEAN

CHUCK STEAK •••••••••••••••• ~~~.

99¢

. -SAVE•SAVE;··s.AVE;·SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE•SAVE
COUPON

I

COUPON

NO. 305
LB. CAM

$199

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov. 4,1978

-....
w

8AJH 8AR
W/C .
Umit Three with Coupon .

~

c

125 E. Main St. • 992-2 I 71

••
'

.."

coupon Expires Nov. 4, 1978;

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

.r

••

~~~G.

69e

W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
coupon Expires Nov . 4,1978

"'m·
•
••"•

(10013700)
NO. 205 .
7V. OZ. BOXES

4

••
•••
••

9

'•

79

¢
W/C

Limit one please with thiS coupon
Coupon Expir.es Nov. 4,19781

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

••••

••

NO. 105
15 CT. BOX

Limit orie please with th.is coupon
·Coupon Expires Nov. 4, 1978

'

-••• .

g~
·
W/C

'

•

~~·:.BOX $}79
CotJPDN

TALL KITCHEN BAGS

Macaroni &amp;Cheese

"

W/C

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

·HEFTY

BEnY CROCKER

•••
••
•
••

TRASH CAN LINERS
Limit Q.ne piease with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 4, 1978

l_ COUPON

··~

•

W/C

HEm

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

•
••

..•

69¢

NO. 105
50 CT. BOX

"

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov. 4, 1978

MARSHMALLOW COOKIES

39e

:;;. ~ .

STATE REPRESENTATIVE

W/C

KEEBLER FUDGE

DEODORANT SOAP

•

'
''

When you're making an a~tion (of any kind), or need money fer any gOOd
reason, talk to us at~ City Loon PJmpany. When major projects requiTf,
larg~r ~unts, we can arrange a Homeowner Loan quickly and with
cons1derat1on.
'

99.

28 OZ. BOX

Limit one.ptease with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 4, 1978

SAFEGUARD

'I

Welendahand

W/C

59¢

(100 13700)
NO. 405 ·

SCRAP BAGS
W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov. 4, 1978

~~~~~TaW~IN~C~IT;Y~G~A:TiE:W~A5Y~~~il~~~~~i.T:W~IN~C;IT:Y::G:A;T;E:W~A;Y~~:~:::~~~~~~iT~W~I~N;C~I:T~Y~G~A~T~E~W~A~Y~~~~~~~~~~TiWiiiN~CI~T;Y,G;A~TiE~W~AiYi!ii~~~

..,.

FAIR UTILITY RATES

NO. 185
5 LB. BAG

HEm

POTATO BUDS

FLOUR

COFFEE

L__!.:_OU_PON-

BETTY CROCKER

ROBIN HOOD

MAXWELL HOUSE

'
'I'

to Eled R. James. C. Allen, Chairman .

LB

9

.. ~~j~SH ROASt •••••••••••••••• :.$
; CHUCK ROAST
LB. 149

992-6658

RON· JAMES

Cans

3

- ;~~E~~~ST.................... ~~;.~ 1

Telephone

LErS KEEP

99

REUTER-BROGAN INSURANCE SERVICE

general dentistry.

Yes! Ron James ~ants to keep working for just that. He
sp~~sore~ legislation that has already saved us over $12
m1lhon, but he knows we must change our PUCO to make
them protectors of the public.

JOAN OF ARC

15¥2 oz..

HEAD LETTUCE .....................

office for the practice of

Office hours
by appointment

·

3 TALL
CANS

CHILLED ·
lfz GALLON
ORANGE JUICE .... ~~!?.~ ..

IRII·IIIIOH _,...

Cartons ·

PET

~~~~~~~•~•~••••••••!:.?~:~.A.~.4 95
CRISP

1 lb.

MARGARINE.........

HERSHEY

MINUTE MAID

e

2 99
EVAPORATED
'1'
00
MILK •.••.••..•........................•...
'1
00
~~~~E:.. . . . . . 3

BLUE 80NNET

·=~. . . . . . .:~~-~-~-s...99 e

..

R. CRAIG MATHEWS,
D.D.S.

II

BARREL HEAD

'

-~--

Announces the opening of his .

~

I

I

BETTY

BROWNIE MIX

(:~:::;:

gge

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon Expires Nov . 4, 1978

TWIN CITY GATEWAY
l

COUPtJ"'

J

KLEENEX BOUTIQUE

BETTY CROCKER

BATHROOM TISSUE

BISQUICK

~:~,~:::.I!~~:,!j
coupon Expires Nov . 4, 1978 .

TWIN CITY GATEWAY

W!C

(10013700)
NO. 125
40 OZ. BOX

•

99~ W/C

Limit one please with this coupon
Coupon E,pires Nov. 4, 1978

TWIN CITY

Y

�6 _ The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., 'l'uesday, Uct. 31 , l~'IH

Future Farmers of America meet

Wildwood Garden Club_plans program
A therapy program at the
Gallipolis Stahl Institute on
Nov . 16 was planned dm·ing a
meeting of the Wil dwood
Garden Club held Wednesday
night at the home of Mrs .
Hiram Fisher.
For the party members will
furnish cookies and punch,
Mrs. Grace Fisher will provide pinecones with Peggy
Moore and Betty Milhoan to
get other s upplies for the
therapy project. Mrs. Doris
Grueser will have the program .
The dub also voted to ma ke
a donation of money to lh~ an.nual coun try fair to be held at
the Ohio Department of Mental Health a nd Menta l Retardation Center at Athens .
The inv.itation to the
dedica tion of the activity

center at the Gallipolis State
lnslilule was noted a long
with the regional meeting tu
be held Nov. 4 at the Baptist
Church in Marietta.
Plans were made for the
ann ua l Christmas party with
Mrs . Evelyn Hollon being
named t o check on a place
ami dale fur a dinner. The
·party will be held at the home
uf Mrs . Carrie Grueser with
members drawing names fur
"gill exchange of $2.
Mrs . l)orothy Smith presided at the meeting attended by
18 members and two guests.
M1·s. Helen Maag and J eri·
mfer Arnold . It was a " come

as you ore" party. Mrs.
Mildred Phillips had devotions using Proverbs 3, 2!i to
27 verses, and readings, " He
Is Always There ". " A Tide of

AuttulUl'.. "Octulwr." and
" JtL' t a Bent! in the Road."
Garden Lips were given by
M1·s. Mac Holter who noted
tha t now is the lime to plant
dutch bullll;, starting with the
small bulbs fir st anti usmg
bone meal and sulphate fertilizer. These indude tulips,
hyaci nths, and crocus , she
said . She a lso suggested planting evergreens and shrubs
now, destroying all diseased
plants, and continue mowing
the grass as long as it grows.
She conduded by reading a
poem , "October is a Beautiful
Month " with a conunentary
on the beauty of trees and the
need for enjoying the beauty
of October an d be ing
thankful.
Fur the program, Mrs.,
Peggy Moore presented a

1

Announce btrth

,--~:.:::.:::;:~-

-l

I1
I

I
I

KAY'S BEAUTY SALON
Hi9N .2ndAve.
Call Today

L~~~::

____ ~-2725

and Mrs. Roush.
RUMMAGE SALE
A rwrunage and bake sale
will be held at the St. Paul 's
Lutheran Church on Friday, 9
a .m. to 3 p.m.

1

P~I·lidpa l ed

in several contests and have several projecls Illldcrway.

Social Calendar

I

soon_.

Po-meroy

I

•

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

FOR THE BEST DEALS

Just tell Him all your
troubles,
And He will take you thru;
He'll. give you faith and
courage
To travel on life's way,
So, tum your thoughts on
Jesus,
And to Him humbly pray .

II The p'oet' s t'

I

TRI-STATE AREA

MASON FURNITURE

Comer

II

TURN YOUR moUGHTS
ON JESUS
If you are broken hearted,
And don't know what do do,
Ju!1( turn your thoughts on
Jesus,
For He still cares for you ;
He heals the broken hearted,
And gives rellef from pain,
So tum your thoughts on
Jesus, '
And pray to Hlm again.
Cbol'llli
Just turn your thoughts on
Jesus,
For He still cares for you , .

Personal Notes 1

Mr. and Mrs. Nat Prentice
were recent visitors of Mrs.
Welby Whaley. They were
enroute to their home in
Akron from Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Blackston spent a recent
weekend vacationing in
Gatlinburg, Tenn. Here last
week with their ·grandparents
were He,ather and Emily
Kane, child of Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Kane, Marietta.
Mrs. Genevieve Meinhart
1111d Miss Erma Smith have
returned from Columbus
where they visited Mis.s
Jeanne Hines, and Cleveland
where they were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Russ.
On Thursday evening Mr. and
Mrs. Rus.s entertained with a
party for their aunts. They
drove them home on Friday
and visited until Sunday.

Costum e prizes were man, Beulah While, Ann a
awarded ' at the halloween ·Mae I..ewis, Peggy ,IA!wis, a mi
party held for the children of Mrs . Mary Brewer, tile adults
the Middleport First Baptist attending.
Children at the party we1·e
Church Sunday School.
Pullins , Susie
Receiving prizes were Chuc kl e
Teresa Lieving, prettiest : Pullins, She!lie and Amy MetJeff Burke , most original ; zger, Dodie Cleland, Jeff and
Van Klein , the ugliest. Prizes Damon Burke, Ry&lt;~n Cowan ,
were given to aU of the Penny and Ellen Lewis, Danchildren. Pizza. cookies, and ny Lewis, Mary Beth Brewer ,
koolaide were served by Mrs. Kelly D~uglas, Teresa a nd
Freda Hood, Jerry Pullins , Jennifer Lieving, Van Klein,
Debbi e Cleland, Pearl Hoff- and Cindy Parker .

JIALU)WEEN SPOOKS - The Alpha Delta Epsilon fraternity Rio Grande CollegeCommWJity College held a Halloween party for students of the Guiding .Hand school last
Friday. Shown above are members of the fraternity, left to right, back row, Ron Adkins,
Craig Ewing, and Bill Barcus. Winners of the prizes are, left to right, Linda Fooce,
funniest; Rose Marie West, prettiest ; Billy Neurling, most original; and Dale TUcker, best .

MASON FURNITURE

1
1

If you . become discouraged
When things ahead look dim ,
Just tum your thoughts on

Jesus,
And put your trust in Him .
Keep looking '\ward the
future,
Where shines the brighter
day,
And in your heart keep saying
"Dear lord, show me the
way."

lfyou are now rejoicing
In His great love today,
Just keep your thoughts upon
Hlm,
And do not go astray.
Old Satan keeps on trying
To snatch away your joy,
So, keep on trusting Jesus
For help when things annoy.
Composed in July 1964, By
Mrs. Riley Pigott, long
Bottom, Ohio 45743.

w---~---._,...,.

I The Poet's I
1

I

OCTOBER 30th
THRU
NOVEMBER 4th.
.
.
~

1.- ESU17 AMANA FREEZER ....... 17

......;$330

cu. ft., white.. ............ 1470 .....

..'380

- ESR16W AMANA REFRIGERATOR.... l&amp; cu. tt., harvest ................. $430
1 - ESRF16W AMANA REFRIGERATOR .. 16 cu. ft., harvest 594 ...... $485
1 - ESRFC14A AMANA REFRIGERATOR. 14 cu. ft., harvest '602 ...... $480
1 - ESRF16B AMANA REFRIGERATOR .. .l&amp; cu. tt. coppertone 648 .....$506
Freezer on Bottom
$
1 - ESBFC16B AMANA REFRIGERATOR. I&amp; cu. ft., harvest •729 ........ 590
1

1

1

- ES216D-3MR AMANA AIR CONDITIONER .l&amp;,ooo
1 - CTF18H HOT POINT. REFRIGERATOR .. lB

1

btu 1547 .......

cu. ft., white

$405

'561 ....... $450

1 - CTF18EW HOT POINT REFRIGERATOR.U cu. ft., white '561.. ..... '450

X

Del.lvery Not Included
'

Home Of Beautiful Kitch·ens!
2119 JACKSON AVENUE

jorie Crow, a nd Mrs . Evelyn
).arming .
Middleport members atteniling were Mrs. Katie Anthony, Mrs . Evelyn Lewis ,
Mrs. Marie Hawkins, Mrs .
Clatworthy, Mrs. Hughes ,
Mrs. Grace French, Mrs.
Hel en Reynolds , Mrs. Euvetla Bechtle, Mrs . Beulah
Haye s, Mr s. Genevee
Chesher, and Mrs . Rosemary
I .yons. The decorations of the
table were handles by Mrs .
Hayes, Mrs. Be helle, Mrs.
French, and Mrs . Chesher'·

McLaughlins hold family gathering
f.,,

Paris Island , N.C.
In here for the weekend
were Mr. and Mr.s. Alan
Mc Laughlin , Fostoria; Mrs .
Doris Holelling, Alvada: Mr.
and Mrs . Bill Howell s and
sons, Robbie ., Scott and
Kac-cy, Rittman; and Miss
Debbie Me!.aughlin , Rittman, who is now employed at
ART-GRAFT SHOW
the Akron Children's
An arts and craft show will Hospital. Debbie and Duane
be held at the Orchid Room, Me!.aughlin telephoned from
E . Main St. , Pomeroy, from 9 Ida ho Falls, Idaho .
a.m. to 4 p.m. Nov. 10 and 9
Sat urday
Debbie
a.m. to noon on Nov . II . Price Md.aughlin went to the
is $3 per table for the two Holzer Medical Center to see
days. Those interested in
displaying may call 949-2409 .

A family gathering was
held at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth McLaughlin
over the weekend in a
farewell celebration for their
son, Kevin, who left Monday
for the U. S. Marine Base at

PHONE 675-2318

8-16 oz. BoHies

ATTENDS fNSP ECTON
Mrs. Marie Hawki ns was in
Chillicothe Saturday night for
the inspection of Nazarene
Shrine, Order of the While
Shrine of Jerusalem . Velma
Joy Burnie, supreme worthy
high priestess .. was the inspecting offi cer. On Sunday
Mrs. Hawkins visited iu Colum bus.

N-0-T-1-C-E

REVIVAL SET
The Rev . Ralph Smith,
Coolville, will be speaker for
revival services to be held at
the Old Dexter Church Noy. 3,
4 and 5 at 7:30 each evening.
The Gabriel Quartet will
appear on Saturday evening
and music will be by The
Messengers on Sunday
evening. The public is invited.

DR. CONDE ANNOUNCES HIS RETURN
TO PREVIOUS OFFICE HOURS.
EFFECTIVE THIS DATE APPOINTMENTS
ARE BEING ACCEPTED AS BEFORE.

SUPERIOR

S-BRAND

BOLOGNA

,.

SLICED BACON .... ~ ....1~·.P.~: ... '1 59
$}
USDA CHOICE
· $}59 . FRESH • LEAN
39
ROUND STEAK ................................':8·
·
GROUND ROUND........... )~·.. .
BROUGHTON$
$
149
LOW FAT MILK .............~~~~ •••

DR. PEPPER
8PACK
16 oz. BoHies

. 99~

Plus Deposit

\1

,.~~~G~:SUE.. ......................................~. ~~~. 69~,
~~~:~ELS ................................. ~~-~.~~-.~~~~ ...49~
r~~8~~ERGENT. ............................ ·-·...~~.~~~ ··· 39~
"-~~N:~
~.~~ ~· ~l29 ~

... . . . . . . . . . . . . .·. . . . . . . . . . .

MOTOR
OIL
QUART

69$

~~~ SIZE BREAD•••••••••••..••••.••••••...•••••••.••••. :?~!.. 49

PARTY ICE
5 LB. BAG

~M
49~
Hotdog &amp;Bar-B-Cue Buns••••••••••••••••••••••••••••..~!'.~~ ..
GRADE B

LARGE SIZE
BARREL HEAD
ROOT BEER
or ORANGE CRUSH

Thurs. Only

RC or DIET RITE

KffP
GOVfRNOR Rtl()l)fS ·

8 Pk.

.

'

Issued by: Rhodes for Governor Commlnee, E. F, Mulligan, Chairman, 40 Sheridan Rd., Coshocton, Ohlo,43812

SUPERIOR

,\

e
SUPER MARlEY - OPEII .DAILY 9;10 10 PAt
.

SUNDI.l \0 M. 10

We lctept Fedlrll FaDci..*'III-Wt 11_,.1111_Ri&amp;ht

. .

lo lrnit ~al"'tt*

•

a former classmate, Christi
Chambers , who was injured
in the pla ne cras h a t
Gallipolis.

l~149 FRANKIES .....~~-~~.P.~L

Coal mines in Ohio are being forced to
close because of unreasonable demands by
the federal EPA.
Thousands of miners' jobs are at stake.
Richard Celeste is standing back of the
federal EPA. He endorses the EPA mandates
that are forcing Ohio mines to close.
GOVERNOR JIM RHODES, on ~he other
hand, is fighting the federal EPA to keep Ohio's
coal_ mines open.
GOVERNOR RHODES is fighting against
importing western coal to Ohio. GOVERNOR
RHODES is fighting to keep Ohio coal miners
0n the job.
We don't need politicians who stand back
of the federal EPA on this issue. We need a
governor who will stand up to the bu~eaucrats.
We need GOVERNOR RHODES, ·who will
continue to fight for the coal miner and to keep
the mines open.

'

white ............. 1405

Orphan Annie. "
Games were played with
prizes going to the winners.
Table was decorated in a fall
motif with ivy, cornicopia,
and an a r rangement of fall
leaves .. Sandwiches, sa lad,
L'ookies and coffee were served .
Attending from the
Pomeroy Chapter were Mrs.
Thelma Dill , Mrs . · Thelma
McMurray, Mrs . Lucille
Swackhammer, Mrs. Marie
Curd ; Mrs. Edna Schoenlell,
Mrs. E(la Smith, Mrs.
GerCtldine Yonnl!. Mrs . Mar-

SUPERIOR

REF RIG ERA TOR RIOT

1 - UF12W AMANA FREEZER........ 12 cu. ft.,

Past
m a tr ons
uf
Evangeli ne Chapter 172,
Order of the Eastern Star,
entertained the past matrons
or Pomeroy Chapter with a
part)' Friday night at the
Middleport Masonic Temple.
In the absence of Mrs.
Virginia Buchanan, president, Mrs . Emma Kay Clatworthy welcomed the
members and guests. Mrs.
Mary Hughes gave devotions
using a medita tion entitled
" The Need of Prayer ", had
p1·ayer. e~m l Ht·~·adin,, ·· r.itt ],.

ROUND
STEAK .

'

SALE
COST

wind,
then twine to a destination pf
disctinction
charted in a storeho use of
mis-information.
The nostrils are fill ed with tar
and green air is shoved into
the waiting mouth .
The heart thumps
and pumps
bla ck blood to veins already
collapsed
by the discontented ugliness
of continuance.
The swampland never rests,
it only waits
the
ever-present
for
quicksand
to sever the cord then vanish .
By Jim Brewer, Jr .

Past Matrons entertain

BONE-IN

DALE 5 KITCHEN
CENTER, INC.

. LIST
PRICE

1

Comer

the woman who did
commit suicide
Bewilderment!
Silent noises ...
swampland
is
Th e
surrounded by immense
puddles
NOW YOU KNOW
Halloween originated with of churning quicksand.
the Cells and for them was Leeches lay sucking behind
the eyelids
the only day of the year on
waiting
patiently for the cord
which the devil could be inbecome
completely
to
voked for help in matters of
severed.
marriage, luck, health and
Lacey-tips of the fingers
death.

1

THINKJNG ABOUT A NEW REFRIGERATOR!
THE FOLLOWING UNITS ARE AVAILABLE AT
SUPER LOW PRICES!-

The preferential tea held
Sunday was noted along ·with
a weekend halloween party .
Arrangements were made for
S&lt;)nya Ohlinger to order a
new Santa Claus suit. The
holiday bazaar was announc·
ed for Nov. 2!i from 9 to 5 with
the place to be announced
later . It was reported that
Patty Pickens was installed
as vic'e pres ident of cily council. Pictures will be taken on
Dec . 2and 3.
Carol Ault and Brenda
Haggy served refrestunenls.

Costume prizes awarded

SHOP

register for aU four of the
workshops at a reduced fee of
$60.
Additional information
concerning the workshops
may ~ obtained by contacting Millce Pletcher,
CHEAO, in Athens at 593~526
or by calling Janet Byers,
R.N., in Gallipolis at 446-5264.
- - - - -.. -·-· - ·-··-· ~

1
1j

A cultural report on home
birth with Barb&lt;tra Hackett
Mariann a Mitchell and
Christine Diglio as speakers
was presented at the recent
meeting of the Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi
Sorority held at the Rive rboat
Room of the Meigs office of
the Athens County Savings
and Loa n Co.
J a nelle Haplonslall had
charge of the program and in·
traduced the speake rs who
related their experiences in
home birth.

The soil judging team · ing. Other -members of the
recently placed second in team were 'Earl Pickens. Bill
county judging, seventh in Whitlock, Phil Kincaid, Bob
the di~trid rural area, and Lee Mark Profitt, and
'
first In the district urban sia~ley Holter.
r··_:-··-··-·---~--------, area
Now
the
seniors
qnd
juniors
. Albert Holman got the
are
working
on
little
red
high score in the distrid judging with David Lawson plac- balll8 and wagons while the
ing second in the county judg- sophomores are .learni~g
about small engmes m
TUESDAY
following supper.
preparation for beginning
BLOOD PRESSURE clinic
PLANNED
PAREN- p.m. workshop on Christmas work on th~:,m
Stud:,: of
day Tuesday sponsored by THOOD clinic Thursday. arrangements and decora- the freslu)lan class IS on-soils.
tions . Members tu take a sack
Harrisonville Senior Citizens
Appointment necessary. Call
lm1ch, materials and ideas. . Officers for the year are Ed
Club at' club house beginning
992~912.
Some materials will be Roush, president; Bill Harat 10 a.m. The clinic will be
BAZAAR . Thursday at
ris, vil'e president; Bob bee,
available for purchase.
held once a month and is free
Vatholic Churcjl. Dinner at
secretary; Albert Holman,
4:30 p.m. Creamed baked
treasurer; Tammy Smith,
of charge.
chicken and ham dinners.
reporter, and Perry Smith,
MEIGS LOCAL Athletic Country store and fancy
sentinel.
Boosters, 7:30 p.m. at Meigs stands .
At 20, you thought you were
The FFA is now conducting
High SChool with films of the
U1e
captain of your fate: after their annual fruit sale and
Athens game to be shown; all · EVA~GEIJNE CHAPTER
interested persons invited . . t72, O.E.S., 7:30p.m. Thurs- 40, you know you've been · orders may be . placed by
REGULAR
MEETING day at the Masonic Temple , traveling as deckhand on the telephoning 992-3734, 949-2033,
or 247-2615.
Drew Webster Post 39 , Middleport. Officers to wear Titantic.'
·
gowns.
Am eri can Legion, 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the post home;
WESTERN
SQUARE
refreshments.
Dance, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
WEDNESDAY
the Royal · Oak Park
LADIES AUXIUARY of recreation building. Dewey
Hart of Columbus will be the
Middleport Fire Department
Wednesday 7:30 p.m. at iire caller. All Western ·Square
station. Hostesses are Phyllis Dance Clubs are Invited. ·
POMEROY
MIDBaker, Sue Imboden and DLEPORT UONS Club zone
IN THE
Barbara Hoffman.
REGULAR MEETING,
meeting for 13K, Thursday, 7
Pomeroy lodge 164, F&amp;AM, p.m. at the Meigs Inn. James
Wednesday 7, 30 p.m.; all c.. Butler, district governor
master masons invited.
will be the speaker. All Lions
urged to . attend.
. THURSQAY
ANNUAL FRIENDSffiP
OPEN:
FRIDAY
night of Daughters of
Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Sat. B:30til 5:00
· POMONA GRANGE, 8
America, District 13, Thurs- p.m. Friday at the Rock SprThursday Till2 Noon
day, 6:30p.m . potluck at the ings Grange Hall. Hemlock
Friday Until&amp; P.M.
Chester lodge hall. All lodge Grove to be host.
Herman Grate
SATURUAV
members welcome. Covered
773-5592
Mason, W.Va.
MIDDLEPORT · GARDEN
dish and own table service to .
be taken. Business meeting CLUB, Saturday, 10 a.m. to 2
..
RACINE-Members of the
Racine Ch&gt;tpler of the Futur&lt;•
Fanners of America have

poe m, " Some Call it Autumn,
But f Call it G&lt;~l." She had~
contest on identifying leaves
with M·rs. Mae Holter and
Mrs. Erma Roush winning
the prizes .
Jennifer Arnold won the
door prize. Mrs. Evelyn
Hollon, Mrs. Virginia Fisher,
Mrs. Ada Holter, ~nd Mrs.
Grace Fisher received blue
ribbons on flower arrangments. Members viewed
the mums at the Fisher
home.
Next meeting will be held
at the Riverboat Room of the
Meigs offi~'e of the Athens
County Savings and Loan if
the room is available .
Mrs. Hollon gave each
members a madeira bulb.
Th e
ho s t ess
se rved
refreshments.

Faculty development workshop scheduled
Registration fees are $20 shops are: "Management of
NELSONVILLE - The
per
workshop including Clinical Experiences,''
first of a series of workshops
CEU hours have been March 2, 1979, the Lafayette
lunch
.
and eva luat ion for allied
applied
for through the Ohio Hotel , Marietta; "Using
hea lth and nursing faculty
Nurses'
Association at no Media for Evaluation," April
will take place on November
4, 1979, Hocking Technical
charge
to
the participant.
13 at the Hocking Valley
Nelsonville, and also
College,
instructor
for
the
The
Motor IJ•dge in Nelsonville.
workshop is Dr . Donald on April 12, 1979 at the
The pnc) ·arn will begin at
Wonderly from Kent State Muskingum Area Technical
8:30 a.m. with registration.
College in Zanesville; and
University.
Th e program, th e first of a
The workshop is sponsored ''Legal
Aspects
ot
series of four , is entitled,
by the Consortium for Health Evaluation," May 10, 1!1.79..
" Test Con struction ." This
workshop will provide an · Education in Appalachia Town Center Motel, Zanes(CHEAO )
in . ville . A particiapnt. may
opportunity to explore basic . Ohio
cooperation
with
the
Belmont
concepts of test development.
Technical College, Hockin'g
The relationship between
Technical College, Holzer
objectives and test items,
Airman and Mrs. Jeffrey
School
of Nursing, Jefferson D. Matheny of the Philippines
princ iples of item construl1ion , item analysis and Technical College, are announcing the birth of a
Muskingum Area Technical seven pound, eight ounce
use, development of a~ test
College,
Ohio University - daughter , Maria Bonita"
bank, utilization of tests as
learning tools and alternative Zanesville Campus, and born on Oct. 12.
,
marking systems will be Shawnee State College.
Mrs. Joan Hudson of
The three remaining work- Okinawa is the paternal
discussed.
grandmother and Donald D.
Matheny, Wilmington, N. C.
the paternal grandfather. Mr.
and Mrs. Henry Matheny,
:-.low Open Mondays 12 :00-4:30p.m.
Rouie 2, Leon, W. va . and Mr .
And Thurs. &amp; Fri. evenings
.and Mrs . Albert Roush,
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy
for the working Women
are great-grandparents. The
Brenda Sayre Randolph has
baby was born on the 42nd
returned as hairstylist
wedding anniversary of Mr.

Talk given on home birth

158Pkg.
oz. Btls.
Plus Deposit

99¢

�9- The Daily Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Oct 31 J978

8- The Da1ly Sentmel Middleport Pomeroy 0 Tuesday Oct 31 1978

Want Ads Turn Unwanted Items Into Cash
WANT AD
CHARGES
1 ~ W11J urUnd r
c.~

i llo

c ldtg~

I 25

1\1(]

"''

"'
"'

180

""

'"
NOTICE
WANT-AD
ADVERTISING
DEADLINES
ru , 1
I

OF

~

' F db
4 p J\1
!Jt.fur puUI

&lt;1

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT

MEIGSCOUNTY OHIO

CARL A RITCHIE
Pia nt ff

" Defendants

NORMA RITCHIE
-

ET AL
Nl) 16 756

NOTICE OF SALE-

Pursuant to an Order of
Sale ss ued by the Common
Pleas Court of Me gs County
Oh o I w
off er for sa e at
pub c auct on on the Jrd da y
of November 1978 a t 10 00
A M
on th e Co urt House
step s a t he Court House n
Pomer oy Oh o the follo w ng

d esc r bed rea estate

The follow ng rea estate
s tuated
n the County of
Me gs n th e State of Oh o
and
n the T own sh p of
Ches er
an d bounded ana
d esc r bed as fo ows
Parcel No 1 S tu ate n
Ch es ter T ownsh p
Me gs
County Oh o and n Sect on
1 Town 4 Oh o Company s
Purchase beg nn ng n the
center of the road at
&lt;&gt;
n ortheast co rner of grave ot
a nd m eet ng house lot s
then ce west 15 rods to a
corne r the nce north B rods to
a corne r th en ce east 15 rods
to a corn er thenc e 8 rods to a
c orn!"r hence e~s 1 15 rods to
a co rn er thence south 8 rods
o rhe place of beg nn ng
con ta n ng J acre
Parcel No 2 s tu ate n the
Towns h p of Chester Me gs
Coun t y Oh o and be n g a
pa r t of Sect on 7 Town 4
Rang e 12 Oh o Company s
Pur c ha se beg n n ng on th e
wes t n e of Sec t on 1 where
th e sout heast corner of lands
of F w Zehm ntersects sad
sec t on t ne and runn ng west
a on g the north 1 ne of lands
o f John Baker 28 rods 5 feet
to t he ce nt er of the townsh p
r oad known as the School
House Road through sa d
Sec t on 7 hence n a nor th
eas e ly d rect on along the
me ander ng s of th e cen ter of
sa d r oa d to where the west
I ne o f sa d Sec! on 1 c rosses
sa d road then ce so uth along
th e sa d w est ne of Sect on 1
to th e pla ce of beg nn ng
conta n ng 5 acr es more or
less
Parcel No 3 s tuate 1n the
Tow nsh p of Chester Me gs
Co unty Oh o and n Sect on
T own 4 Ra n ge 12 Oh o
Company s
Purchase
b eg nn ng at w II am Bells
n orth e a s t co rner
thence
n o lh to the ea s branch of
Shad e R ver thenc e up sa 1d
cr eek w th s m eander ngs 96
r ods to a sta ke thence sou th
5 degrees west 16 rods to the
co un y road thence easter ly
on sa d road to the p ac e of
beg nn ng
conta n ng
8
ac r es rn.ore or tess
Ex cept a at deeded t o
Sch ool D re c tors of D sf
tor
schoo p u r poses
Parcel No 4 S tuate n the
To wn sh p o f Chester Me gs
Co unty Oh o A so another
p ece o f and be ng d rectly
we sl of the above descr bed
p ece beg nn ng at the center
of Shade Cr eek on th e west
ne of sa d Sec t on 1 th e
sou thw es
co rn er of
and
formerly owned by Freder ck
Fe g er th en ce 25 ads to the
county r oad t hence easterly
on sa d road 35 r ods to a wh te
oak ma rked for a corner
thence nor th 5 degrees east 20
rod s to the ce nter of sa d
c reek
the n ce no rth 65
degrees wes 7 r od s to the
bran c h of sa d creek and
s one corner thence north 8
d egr ees w est 5 rocts t henc e
o
he
w estward 24 rod s
ne and place of
sec t on
b eg nn ng cant a n ng 4 acres
and 14 7 rods mor e or ess
Parcel No 5 S tuate In the
Town sh p o f Ch es ter Me gs
County
Oh o
A so the
to o w ng p ec e o f land ly n g
south of and ad tO n ng th e
abo&gt;J e
de sc r bed
p ece
Beg nn n g a t Cha rl es B
Cowde r y s northwes t corner
th ence east 105 3 • rod s o he
southwes t co rner of lands
so ld to Ben tam n Johnson
the nc e north to th e northwest
corner of Meet n g House an d
bu ry n g ground then ce east
to ce nter of the road th ence
nort h 10 d egrees eas t to the
center of th e road that eads
up the h I by th e schoo l house
to owmg the meander ngs of
sa ct road wester y to the
sec ti on ne thence south 13
rods to he pla ce of beg n
ca nt a n ng 19 acres
n n9
m ore or tess
Except l ~ a ~.: re actio nlng
he c hu d and bu ry ng lot
so d for a sc h ool o t
F u r t h e r ex c e pt ng from
Par c e l No
5
2 2 acres
conveyed to Emerson Bell by
deed recorded n Vol
103
P age 2 16 of the Deed Reco rd s
of M e gs couhty Oh o
F'iirce No 6 S•tuate n the
Townsh p of Chester Meigs
County
Oh o
Also the
follow ng descr bed premises
ad ton n g the ab ove on th e

south Beg nn no at the west
1 n e of said Sec t on I and the
center of Sha de R v er thence
down sa1d creek 68 rods to a
bend in the creek
t hence
down said creek 66 rods to a
corn er the n ce north 70 rods
to a co rn er thenc e northwest
20 rods to a corner then ce
wes t 98 rods to the sec tion
ne thence so uth on sa d I ne
o place of beg nn ng co n
ta n ng 50 acres more or less
Except the Co wdry tam ly
b ury ng g round
Parcel No 7 S fUated 10
the Townsh p of Chester
Me gs Cou nty Oh o Also the
fo ow ng descr bed p ece of
parce of and ado n ng the
as t descr bed p ece at the
nor th e a st
co rner
and
descr bed
as
follows
Beg nn ng n n ety e1ght rods
eas t of Ch ar es B cowden's
no r hw es co rner
t h en c e
so uth 45 deg East twent y
rod s to a stak e thence north
fo urteen rod s thence west
fo urteen rod s to pace of
b eg nn ng co nta n ng n nety
e ght rods be the same more
or ess
Parc e ls 3 4 S 6 and 7
ab o ve descr bed
e west of
the road lead ng from Ken a
to T uppers Pans
Parcel No 8 S tuated n
the Town sh p of Chester
Me gs Cou nt y
Oh o and
s tuated In Sec t10n
Town 4
Range 12 of he Oh1o Com
pany s Pur c hase bounded
and descr bed as fo llows
Beg nn ng 2 rods 18
nks
north 30 degrees west of a
Black walnut tree on s de of
he road thence 19 rods on
the road to a stake and the
corner of t he meet ng house
ot thenc e wes t 3 rods 10 nks
o a stake
hence north 16
nks to the southwest corner
ot the meet ng house thence
west a ong said I ne of the
mee t ng house ot 35 feet to
the southwest corner of the
meet ng house lot thence 19
rods 20
nks sou th thence
east 6 rods 12 1 I nks to the
p ace o f beg nn ng
con
ta nmg 116rods more or tes s
Parcel No 9 S tuat e n the
Townsh p of Chester Me gs
County
Oh o
S tuated
n
Sect on 1 Town 4 Range 2 of
the OhiO Company s Pur
chase beg in n ng
od west of
the black wa nut tree on the
so uth lme o f and formerly
owned by Ethan Cowdry
thence sou h 33 rods to a
h edge th ence east 17 rods to
a stake
thence cant nu ng
eas t to the center of tne t:.ast
Shade Creek
the nce north
easterly to ow ng the center
of the meander nos of the
creek to land former y owned
b y Dav d Osborn west I me
thence north w th s.e d I ne 9
rods and 1• thence west 95
rods to th e place of beg nn ng
Parcel No 10 S tuate n
th e Town sh p of Chester
Me gs County
Oh o
The
follow ng ctescr bed p1ece of
and ad olnmg the above
descr bed tract on the East
beg nn ng at a stone '" the
center of S~c t on 1 Town 4
Range 12 thence from sa d
ston e eas erly to the center of
the creek thence down the
ce nter of the creek to the
mouth of Sedore run thence
easterly 6 ads 12 feet to a
W llow thence a little west of
so uth to the center of the
creek
thence down sa d
creek about 10 fee t be low an
old m II da m thence easterly
about 2 rods to an oak tree
thence east 9 rods \2 feet to a
stake thence south 18 rods to
a Gum tr ee n a small ravme
thence a 1 tt e west of south 40
ro ds to a stone n John F
Forrence s west I ne thence
west on sa1d
ne to Oav d
Osborn s north and south
ne hence on sa d I ne to the
p ace of beg nn ng
con
ta n ng 15 acres more or tess
Parcel No 11
A lso ad
o n ng
the
last above
desc r bed parcel on the south
S1tuate n Chester TownshiP
Me gs
County
Oh10
Beg nn ng on the center I ne
of Sec on 1 r unn ng north and
so ut h abou 10 rods south of
where sa ct I ne crosses the
creek a stone corner n sa d
sec t on
thence nor t h 80
degrees west to the center of
the creek thence tallow ng
up sa d c: r eek to said center
ne the nce south about ten
rods to the place o f beg nn ng
conta1n ng 1 acre more or

ess

Parcel No 12 S tuate n
the Townsh p of Chester
Me os Co unty Oh o All that
part
of
lhe
follow1ng
described rea estate that I es
south of he center of the E~st
branch of Shade R 1ver to
w t Begmn ng 132 rods east
of the northwest c rner of
Sect on 1 thence .,v uth 46
rods to a dra n thence south
70 degrees east 41 rods to the
center of sa d sect on thence
south 16.4 r ods to Bells I ne
thence eas t 73 , rods to Dav d
Osborn s ne the nce north to
sect on I ne thence west to
the p ace of beg n n ng
n
Tow n 4 Range 12
Parcel No 13 S1tuate n
the Townsh p of Chester
Me gs County Oh o All tha t
part
of
the
follow ng
descr bed real es tate that I es
south of the center of the East
branch of Shade R ver to
w t Be ng n Sec t on 1 Town
A
Range 12 of the Oh o
Company s
Purchase
ctes cr bed
as
follows
Beg nn ng BO rods east of the
northwest corner of Sect on
1 thenc e east 62 rods thence
south 46 rods to !I dra n
thence south 70 degrees east
.tl rods to the center of sec
runn ng north and
1 on
so uth thence sou th 163 rods
!hence west 58 r ods to the
center of the road thence
north 2 , degrees west 2-4 rods
on sa d road to a Walnut tree
thence north 10 degrees east
52 r o ds o the center of the
east branch of Shade R1ver
thence west 7 rods to mouth ot
sma ll r un thence north 10
degrees we st 152 rods to th e
plac e of be g nn ng
con
ta n ng 95 acres more or less

TERMS OF SALE

Cash

tor not le ss than two th rds of
the appra sed va lue
and
sub ected to rea estate taxes
tor 1978
Pr o perty appra sed at
S33 600 00
James J Proffitt
Sher ff of
Me gs County Ohio
110) 3 10 17 24 31 51

--"'
G~
11

e A_wa:t.___

_

TO GOOD home fema le borde
co li es 1 fo u nonths 1
yeo !&gt; old Spayed orl d all sho ts

092 5106
G VE AWAY Wh te mol! adult
cat Alas half g own k tte ns
yel low tabby ond while ond
tabby Meigs County Humane
Soc1ety 992 2592 or 992 2b39

L.ost and Found
------ - - - OH

LOST
token ch ldre s pet
Slack and ton hovnd Area on
Rt
124
Wm
Halley s
es dence Loo"' s I ke good hun
I ng dog (a I 992 3165
IN THE

PROBATE COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF THE
ADOPTION OF RICHARD
DONALD BROOKS AND
TONYA RENEE BROOKS
No 22 524

- NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONDonald R chard Walker
whOse last known address
was
R I&gt;Jerv u!W
Dr ve
A bany Georg a 31701 but
whose address and place of
res den ce are otherw se
unknown
Will take not ce
that on the 27th day of Oc
tober
1978 Will am Perry
Brooks f led a Pet ton for
Adopt1on or R chard Donald
Walker I I and Tanya Renee
Walker and for a change of
the r neme toR cha rd Donald
Brooks and Tanya Renee
Brooks tt has been alleged m
the proceedings that you have
fa ed w thout just flable
cause to commun cate w th
the sa d m nor Children and to
prov de for them the man
tenance and support as
requ red by law and tflet
therefore your consent to the
adoption 1s not requ red Th1S
Pet ton Wi ll be heard n the
Probate Court Of Me gs
county Oh o at the court
House n Pomeroy Oh10 at
10 00 A M on the lOth day of
January
1979
You are
requ red to answer th s
Pet ton w thm twenty e ght
days
after
the
last
publ ca t on
Mann ng D Webster
Judge and Ex Off co
Clerk Probate Court
of Me gs County Oh o

110) 31(11 ) 7 14 21 28 ( 12 ) 5
12 7t

78 1092 PL ABN
AppendiX B
LEGAL NOTICE
Notice s hereby given that
Oh o 0 I Gathe r ing Cor
porat on I has f led an ap
p i iCllfiOn with the Public
Ut tes Commisson of Oh o
m Case No 78 1092 Pl ABN
for author t y to abandon the
fo low ng p pel nes together
w th such pump ng stat1ons
as may be anc l l ary or
related thereto tog~ther w1th
the
serv ce
rendered
thereby
A One three nch (3 &gt; I me
be tw een Syracuse Statton
Me gs County Oh o and Joy
Stat on
Morgan Cou nty
OhiO
B One three nch (3 ) line
between Chester Stat on
Me gs County Oh o and t he
I ne described
n
sub
paragraph A above
C One line cons st ng of
var ous segments of two nch
( 2 l three Inch (3 l and tour
Inch (4 ) lines betwe~.n.
Honey
Creek
Stat orl
Hock ng County Oh o and
Haydenville Stat on Hock ng
County Oh o
0 One two inch (2 l I ne
between Star St at on and
Honey Creek d1scherge I ne
both
n Hock i ng County

_ car_!! of Thani!L_

GUN SHOOT Roctne Gun Club
!:very Sunday I pm Factory
choke guns only
GUN SHOOT Roc ne Volun eer
~ re Dept t: very Saturday b JO
pm at the r bu ld ng n So shon
rectory choke guns onl y
AHI:: YOU t oubled w h w ld
an mals" Fo&gt;c m nk racoon
opossu m beaver etc? Loll the
I opper YE:I5 3YE:I4 W II contact
n pe son to s gned pe m s
&gt;0

RACINE GUN Club
ty at Royo Oak
Na~o~ 4 7 30 t
members and w

ts hav ng a par
Po k Sot n te
II M dn le All
ves nv ed

ATHNTION
SHIRLt:Y S Bo uty
Nook Custome s Due o 1 e
Sh rley w I now be located at
L ndo s Lodyto
Hoc ne

949 2838
Help wanted
WOUlD LIKE: o fema le to Ve n
and help co e for 2 g Is ages b

8 8 992 7288
PART TIME Cl n c Recept on st
Clerk App 0)( 32 hour s per
month Requ rements nclude
es dence n Me•gs Co obI ty
to mee1 peop e eos ly occuracy
w th f gures and spell ng clear
hondwr I ng local referen ces
!:qual oppo tun ty employer
~o
more nformot on contact
Pl anned
Par en thood
of
Southeast Oh o Oft ce n Lour
!house phone 992 5912
WANTED AUTO mechen c for
new cor deolersh p W te Box
143 Pomeroy Oh o or phone
q92 2174

APPLICATIONS
Wil l be rece ved at the
Veterans Office Pomeroy,

to employ a Veteran

0

Servlce Officer to fill the
vacancy .of the late Wallace

E One line consisting ot
var ous segments of two nch
(2 J and three Inch (3 )
I nes between Ewng Staton
and Haydenvi lle Stat.on both
n Hockmg County Oh1o
r:. One three nch (3 l line
bet ween Carbon H II Stat on
and Haydenv li e discharge
1 ne both In Hockmg County

Amberger
must

be

All applicants

a

veteran

applications
must
submitted by Nov lsi

All
be

P One 1 ne conslsttng of
vanous segments of four mch
(4 l and s x nch (6 l lines
and one four nch (4 ) I ne
between Lodi Station
and
Berea Stat on bot h 1n Meet na
County Oh o
Q One four nch (4 l I ne
between Homan Stat on and
Lad Stat1on both n Medina
County Ohio
R One four nc h (4 ) I ne
from
K llbuck
Sta t on
Holmes County Oh o north
to Shreve Junction discharge
I ne Wayne County Ohio

and

s
Pumpmg stiHions at
Syracuse Chester Honey
Creek Star Ew ng Carbon
H II Clark Murray Greer
Moh ca n Berry Sind Homan
Tt)e Commiss ion will hold a
publ c hear ng In this metter
beg nn ng at 9 30 A M E S T
November 15 1978 at the
offtces of the Public Ut1llf1es
Com miss on of Ohio 180 East
Broad Street Columbus Ohio
"3215
f=or
further
in
format on concerntng this
.JPP I cat on
p lease contact
Oh o 0 I Gathering Cor
porat on I I Suite 400 201
K1ng of
Pruss a
Road
Radnor Pennsylvania 19087
or the
Public
Utlllt1es
Corhmlss on of Ohio

OHIO OIL GATHERING
CORPORATION II

BV
Proheska

J
Raymond
Attorney at Law

110) 24 31 (11) 7 14 Ate

(

Pets for Sale

-......,

Service,_
...........
..,
.. . . ,,.,.

.....
-.

SMITH NELSON
MOT..ORS, INC.
P~IHZI74

"• mile off Rt 7 by pass on
51 Rt 124 lltwaril Rutland,

Typo
ldduotrlol
All
Commercial •nd Home

Auto &amp; Truck
Repa1r
Also Transm1ss1on
Repa•r
Pholle '1'12 5682

H. L WRITESR
ROOFING
New or Repair
Gutters and
Downspouts
Free Est1mates
Phone '14'1 2862
or '14'1 2160
8-20-1mo (Pdl

1

Jack's Septic
Tank Serv1ce
Chester Oh1o

10 30 c

---

Yard Sale

'

IF YOU ho~o~e a serv ce to offer
wo n t o buy or sell someth ng
ae look ng for work
or
whoteve
you II gel results
laster w th a Sentmel Wont Ad

Coll992 2156
VARO SALE fr day No.. ember 3
10 3 Sen or C1flzens Center
Pomeroy D shes boots cu r
to ns toys good cloth ng and
many ~

!!~

POIKH AND Yard Sale
143 Wed t II ?

_ __

m eup

RUMMAGE SAlE start ng the 2nd
of Nov and w1ll cant nue thru
the w nte every Thurs Fr
Sot n Chummy Shoe Shop n
Sy acuse Two beds one ant
que and one bed ond dre sser
lots of cloth ng and~~~
VARD SAL!: now n p rogress c:or
ner of 3 d ond College
Syrocvse Lady s pant su Is and
good dresses
m sc Items

992 5655

NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Sealed b ds w II be ac
cepted at the off1ces of Trott
&amp; Bean 51 w Broad St
Co umbus Oh o 43215 for the
purpose of
raz ng and
remov ng com m un ty Hall
approx mately 9 500 gross
square feet on the R o Grande
Campus The budding
in
cJudmg footers and basement
areas s to be removed from
the
prem ses
Contract
spec f cat ons are av!!llable
from Trott &amp; Bean Visual
nspectlon
availab l e by
contac t ng
R o
Grande
Community College office
B1ds are due November 1
1978 The col ege reserves the
nght to retect any or a ll bids
Oct

11 2-4 31

NOTICE OF .BIOS
Noti ce s hereby given that
b ds w II be rece ved by
Co l umbia
Township
Trustees Me1gs County Rt
3 Box 82 Albany Oh io 4.5710
unhl November 3 1978
B d!o
wd l
be
opened
November -4 1978 a t 8 p m
New tractor
ndustrlal
type
d esel engine wlfh
mmtmum iO horsepo~er ef
least to p l y front t re!o 6 ply
rear t1res hydraulic brakes
t 1ghts
t urn signals and
Uashers equipped with In
dustrial type front end
loader QUICk detachab le type
backhoe and hydraulic boom
type mower
B dder to submit detailed
!opec flcat ons of equipment
offered
The Boerd of Trustees
reserves the right to reject
any and all b cts
Put the word
Bid
on
outstde of enve lope
By Order of the Board of
Trustees
of
Columbia
Townsh p
Glorta Hutton clerK

110) 17 H 31 3tc

~~gal

Pomeroy Landmark

-·

Phone 992 2181

COLLI:CTOR S ITEM 19b4 Chevy
Impala conve table 283 Std NEW 3010b Rem ngton 742 r fie
Exira n c:e body W II trade for
w th K3 Weaver scope and sl ng
p ckup or $450 ~a~~~ 2431_
strop Ex tra Ioney walnuts ock
5 boxes she ll s $330 lthoc:a
model 37 12 go pump 30 nch
full choke &gt;Jent r b bone! almost
COUNTRV MOBIU Home Pork
new $200 Hamel te XL12 c:ho n
Route 33 north of Pomeroy
saw I b nch bor w th wood cut
~ orge lots Col1992 7479
ters k t almost new cond ton
$150 l:nlg sh f::ngl sh mode 12
3 AND 4 RM furn shed and un
go double bonel n ve ry good
turn shed
opts
Phone
cond ton $150 Col i 742 2359
yq2 5434
even ngs
TWO BEDROOM k tchen furn sh 1975 FO-~Rc,D:-V
ccA
-:-~N:---cE:-3:-00
c::----:-N-o~
w
ed opt Call before 8 om
po nt new t res Wh te spoke
992 22B8::____ __~
wheels Carpet ng 992 7876
TWO BEDROOM fro le
Adults
WARM MORNING cool heater
only No pets $135 per mon h
D104
power
m ke
Cal
plus ut ht es Secur ty depos t
992 71M2
equ ed P~ !_949 2253
HOMI::MADt: QUILTS for sole $20
ONE BI::DROOM furn shed house
eo 7A2 4964
Wrok ng men only 992 2598
ONt: SCREW type log spl Iter
HAVE ONE room for rent to a con
Ha ll fcrofler
ham
rod o
struchon worker Has pr vote
992 o229
to let and wash bowl f des red
w II furn sh TV and !!iome k t GOLF SHOI:S for Chr stmas John
chen pr v leges Coli 992 2b23
Teoford 985 3961
after 6 pm

1970 FORO 1 ton stoke bed truck
52000 992 7583 after bpm
TRAPPING SU'PPLIESSo!;~
regu lar pr ces on oil size I raps
Stretch@ s Moron l=ur House
N Brown Mason WV Phone
614 773 5296

---

-----

HAY FOR SALE 992 2&lt;53

OLDA ND VOUNG fro ned beagle
dogs mole and lemole Or w II
I ode for guns of end descr p
ton 742 2521
CLARi&lt;400o-n;-tork 1h 1n go~d
operol ng
con dttlon
Days
9B5 3301 Even ngs98S 4140
1973 El CAMINO cruse control
P S f.l B aulomattc lock Also
rollawoy bed SJ5 742 2b69
------~

- - -Beech Grove

CEMHARY LOTS
gro~o~es 5 &amp; b
lol 45 $50
61-4 373 3877
HE
Boney
Marietta Oh o lnqu re at C ty

- ~~~~~me~~

------

MF2t.5 d esel tractor MF 145
0 esel trocolr MF 1135 dutse
troctor Case 430 gas tractor
Ford 660 gas I actor MF200 2
row chopper Sh nn s Tractor
Soles leon WV 304 458 1b30

-

--

ROBYN OG 30 mob le (8 rod o
Antenna nduded 992 7b30
1911 DATSUN 1b00 and topper
t:xt an ce 74.3_ 2850 after 5p~
REDUCE SAFE and fast w th
Goltese Tablets 8 E Vap water
p li s Nelson Drug
21

color

console

-~

TV
Needs
mmor repa1r S..5 Gas range
$15 99~ 7236
TON TRUCK W1l l trade or se ll
Phone 992 526:l

RCA MARK 8 sol d state stereo 8
lrock tope player home unit
w th bu It n spcohr and QlJ)(
locks Very good cond t on
suit
Coli o'te
Spm
M us
qy'} 1'195

592 305

THREE Bt:OHOOM frame home n
-~d~lepo.c!__Coll992__3_&lt;c:57- , - FARM FOR sole House 2 borns
tro ler Lorge pond 0 oc es o
E:l2 ocres 742 256b
FIVE ROOM house and bath
remodeled fully corpe ed Moy
be seen otter 3 pm Phone

992 3933
THHEE OR &lt; bedroom house for
Pomeroy
Centro!
Full
basement

sole
n
heot ng
992 7074

- -----·-:-:,---;-:-----:PROPt:RTY FOR sole Good .n&gt;Jest

Pomeroy Landmark

-

. . .~ck W Carsey Mgr
. . . Phone m 2181

Serv1ces Offered

WAHR WI::Ll dnll ng W1lham T
Grant 742 2879

·--;---,--

fOR YOUR complete hous ng
remodeling cons1ruc flon ond
maintenance g ve J R a try
Reference
avo l able
Reasonable pnces
Phone
992 5191
DUSTLESS F REP LAC!: and ch mney
clean ng The Ch mney Sw&amp;ap

_c o_ll o1~00
:::5
::;7-':;--Wtll TAKE care of the &amp;ide ly n
my home 992 731 i

- - -----

WHAT W&amp; HAVEN'T
GOT 15 TH&amp; MOI!I S. 50
5STWEE&gt;J TO THI= Mf'I:(QflAND lHIO UNION.

LEADER l KE J UA'-1
AND A COMPA&gt;JY
sNOOP LIKE Me

THI5 MARUUANA
IN 50665 OWN
I!&gt;A5EMENT A5

HAD T l!&gt;e GOTTEN
RID OF

&amp;VlDEN CE

~ ~ W~ O!

Muffler
Brakes
Shocks
T1res
Battery
Installation Serv1ce

Ph 992 2148

FAGT WAS

J. R. Construction
Co.

gas
furnace
parking and garden space
On ly $9 500
30 ACRES - and 6 room
house with city water new
balh and two outbuildings
In back of Pomeroy lust off
Rt 7 S24 500 or will trade
BASHAN
Large 3
bedroom heme wllh over
an acre of land Natural
gas
woodburnlng
firep lace T P water and
lots of outbuildings Just
S16 000
NEW LISTING - 1 yr old
3 bedroom home with bath
garage
'"ce kitchen
alnlng ...... with g lass
natural

door garage end 1 acre

INVESTMENT business

Brick

locat ion

or

residence with natural gas
furnace bath and garage
WE CAN GET MOST
PROPERTIES
FINANCED IF IN GOOD
REPAIR CALL 992 3325
FOR THE TEAFORDS
Holen L TNford
G Bruce Teoford
Sue P Murphy

byHennAmoldondBobLoe

All My Children 6 13
News 8 You ng &amp; Restless 10 Not For Women Only

15

3D--Days of Our Ltves 3 4 15

\AI""'....,.. A

SC.Oi~NMIGHI CON~IDER A ~EVEN-c::&gt;AY

3 OG-Another Ward 3 4 15

HWUUU BOWEHS REPAIR
Sweepers toosters rons all
smoll oppl onces lawn mower
nel{l l o Stole H ghway Garage
an Roue 7 Phone (b14) 995

I I I J
l!ITl E ORPHAN ANNIE

Jusr A r I

Answer here

LITTLE ORPHAN ANMIE-CAN'T MISS
vesleidays

3B25.-':--:-:--:-=c:::--::--:-SI:WING MACHINE Repa rs ser
v ce al molo.es 992 2284 The
Fobr c Shop
Pomerov
Author zed S nger Soles and
Serv ce We sharpen Sctsso~

I Jumbles
Answer

(Answers tomorrow)

ITCHY COLIC NEARLY SIMILE
They often hang abou11n 1he cold-ICICLES

wow 1 so 'ntiS

WILl do roof ng

construct on
plumb ng and heat ng No tob
too Iorge or too small Phone
7-42 23.48
A~
N~
D --M
~
A~
RT=I~
N--~
Ex~ ·
HOWERY ~
c: avot ng
sepl c systvms
dozer backhoe dvmp truck
I mestone
gra&gt;Jel
b lacktop
po&gt;J1ng Rt 143 Phone 1 (614}

~~ "TH

VALI..&amp;V OF SMOKES'

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Mother
I AfriCa s
of Dwnysus
longest nver 40 Play the roue
5 Burt Reynolds DOWN
111m
I Zola novel
II Barren
2 Dubliners
12 Ocearuc
3 Frightfully
13 Greek v1ctory 4 Dutch
goddess
conunune
14 Peaceful
5 Beamed
15 Peer Gynt s
6 Many WIVes
mother
lor one man
16 Londoner s
7 Subways
bolter
- for
17 Surruner Fr
Sleepmg
18 Section
8 Health
of NYC
resort
20 Urut of light
9 Integral
energy
whole
21 Danng
IOW1thdraw
22 Stable mater.--~~,.....,.,.23 Minnesota

LOOK -n-IORNSTAULK
"Tl-lERE S ALLeY

b98 7331
BATHROOMS AND l&lt;1tchens
remode led ceram c I le p lum
b ng carpentry and general
mo ntenonce
13 years ex
...__per enc:e 992 3685
PULliNS EXCAVATING Comp lete
Serv ce Phone 992 2i76
REI:VES TRAD NG Post Pagev1lle
Grocer es dry goads hard
wa e feed tack shop Spec ol

25 lb ol doglood $3 88
AUTOMOB/Lt INSURANCE been
ca ncelled? l ost your operators
I cense? Phone 992 21A3

!::--+-+--1--

%4 Trust
%5 Alan or

Real Estate for Sale

Robert

Z6 Become

27 One way

MAIN

-&lt;&gt;

POMEROY, 0.
In

NoBOf&gt;Y G-1\IE'.S A
tw2N ANYMOR!'!-

Nl:W LISTING - Small
Buslneos opportunity car
wash and lot In good
location on St Rt 7 Good
pctentla l for a part time
ob Ca ll for details
N THE COUNTRY - 10
lots barn lenclng a
storage bui lding plus a
nice 1 floor plan 3 bedroom
home with basement View
of Hlo Rl"er Garden fruit
trees- a ll for only $17 70
RANCH
Excellent
neighborhood 3 bedrooms
built In kitchen basement
2 level lots separate
utility owner wil l help
finance $27 300
BEAUTIFUL BRICK Ranch 3 bedrooms 11/z
baths nice kitchen dining
room
covered oatin

%.

wood burnmo

$AW A

ffeAVf~ IN A

l

firep lace Bela_w market
va lue $31 ~
COUNTRY - Great 2
bedroom home In excellent
condition must be moved
to new location A steal at
S6 000 Also owner will sell
I 15 acres lor the house
PRICE REOUCED FOR
QUICK SALE - This 2
bedroom home In good
condition with many new
veatures
Excellent
neighborhood
In
Middleport Now $9 500
USE
OUR
PHOTO
LISTING SERVICE
HENRY E CLELAND
HENRY E CLELAND,
JR
REALTORS
, , 2259 992-6 m
leona - Koltly
b1llor A11ocl.teo

.JuS'r

L.easu~e

surr ...

~

to pay
Z6 Mov1e
planet role
30 Capek play
31 Table scrap
32 Pier
prowler
34 New York
lake
36 Actress
V1rna 37 Climbed
over
38 Punch sl

CBS News 8 10 Over Easy 20
7 DO-Crass W ts 3 PM Magaz1ne 4 New lywed Game
6 13 Sha Na Na 8 News 10 Love Amenclm Style
15 Cop ng w th Ktds 20 Btg Green Magaz ne 33
7 30-Dol ly 3 Oat ng Game 4 Match Game PM 6

Pnce s R1ghl 8 The Judge 10 That s Hollywood
13 W ld Kmgdom 15 Mac Ne il Lehrer Report 20 33
8 00-D ck Clarks Live Wednesday 3 4 15 Eight IS
Enough 6 13 Jelfersons 810 Marie Cune 20 33
8 30-ln The Begmn ng 8 10
9 QO--Movte
Thou Shalt Not Comm t Adu tery
Pr soner 20

11 3D--Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Pollee woman 6 13
Gunsmoke 8 Movie Cleopatra 10 ABC New~ 33

12 30-News 8 12 40-SWAT 6 13
1 00-- Tomorrow 3 4

~

WITHME?I
lnlll•ll&lt; YOU GOT YOUR
51GNAL5&gt; CR055&gt;ED I

AROUND
HERE I

1

OVER THIRTY 6RANO

BRIDGE

When a deep finesse pays

'-.,...-,.IN SMALL BILLe. I

IHDDBE

Here's

how to work It

AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW

I HD

PGHP

GB

I HD p

I H D
I HD

HDR
OFP

H

IHD

H

I HD

IHD
GB•
IHESTRD
JBTTV
Yealerdoy s Cryploquole SEEK NOT FOR FRESHER
FOUNTS AFAR." JUST DROP YOUR BUCKET WHERE YOU
ARE --sAMWALTERFOSS

© 19'1'8 Kllll Futurn S1nd1cate

BARNEY

BALLS 0' FIRE!!
THEI(~E KilliNG

EACH OTHER!

ITS A 60Y CAT
AND BIRD FIGHT 1

4"

Pass

Openmg lead

IHDDBE

PGLDA

1 so--News lJ

Yestenlay s Answer
Tuesday Oct 31
16 - nght
25 Crossword
With the
direction
world
Z6 Military
19 Vat1can
display
Oswald Jacoby and Alan Sontag
tnbWlal
28 Prototype
22 Arizona
29 Pamter s
c1ty
need
23 Move petu 33 Exhaust
lantly
35 0 Neill play r - - - - - - - - - - , nght but Will fall miserably
1f the ace 1s to your left
24 Bluster
36 Card game
!G-31 A
NORTH
After East who had passed
+ AQ
his partner s s pade b1d pro
.. 6 3 2
duced the kmg the heart ace
t A J43
was surely held by West
+ K 10 8 6
This st1ll left South w1th a
c
hance
to make h1s contract
EAST
WEST
He
won
the spade return led
+
K
6
2
;=;---t--t--1 • J 1191 7 5
a trwnp and stuck m his
.. J 10 7
"A 4
e1ght It wasn t much of a
• 975
• B6
chance but 1t succeeded
.J743 2
•AQ
East he ld both the Jack and
SOUTH
10 of trwnps and after th1s
deep sea llnesse they
•KQ985
weren t gomg to do h1m any
t K Q 10 2
good
at all
• 95

Pass
Pass

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-

H

B 10

10 DO-Vegas 6 13 News 20
10 30-Eiecl ons 78 Pelude to 70 20
11 DO-News 3 4 6 8101315 D ck Cavell 20

CRYPTOQUOTES

• LAW{_YOU RE IMKIN&amp; THE 1/EALS

s Angels 6 13 Movte Gator
Great Performances 33

3 4 15 Charlte

Vulnerable Both
Dealer West
West North East
a
Pass Pass

WINNIE

DONT WORRY, IVE GOT IT
TH IRTY
THOU8AND RIGH T HERE1 BUT YOUVE
DOLLARS? GOT 10 PROMISE NEVER TO
61VE GARY CREDIT AGAIN
OH MY
0001/NES :;. ; 1 ..____,..,

3 30-Mash 8 Joker s W ld 10 Over Easy 20
4 DO--M tster Cartoon 3 Battle of the Planets 4 Men;
Gnlf n 6 Por&lt;y P1g 8. Fnends 8 Sesame Sf 20 33
D nah 13
4 3(}--{)ur Gang Little Rascals 3 Gi lligan s Is 4 8
Brady Bunch 10 Pet t coat Junct on 5
5 QQ-Voyage to the Boltom of the Sea 3 Star Trek 4
'"Bever ly H lib Illes 8 MISier Rogers 20 33 Gomer
Pyle 20 33 Emergency One 13 Brady Bunch 15
5 30-News 6 E lee C 20 33 Odd Couple 15 Mary
Tyler Moore 10

One letter stmply stands for anolher Jn thts sample A 11
u sed for the three L s X for the two 0 s etc Smgle letters
apostrophes the length and formation of the words are aU
hints Each day the code letters are different

iF ')()U WANT 6ARY FAGIN
TO WALK OUTrA HERE
ALIVE YOU GOTTA HAND

Genera l Hosptfal 6 13

•u

l1

liiiiiiiiiiill___llllf .Ifltl MAKIN 1 v

2 30-Doctors 3 4 15

6 DO-News 3 4 8 10 3 15 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
6 Jo--NBC News 3 4 15 Carol Burnett &amp; Fr ends 6

~

EXCAVAT NG
dozer backhoe
and d tche
Cho le s R Hat
f eld
Back Hoe Serv ce
Rutland Oh1o Phone 7112 2008

-

r Jr I r r J

Jumt:M Book No 10 with the lateet 1 0 pvr:zlee .. available b $1 3.5 po8t
paid from JumtM elo this newspaper Box 34 Norwood N J 07&amp;48 Include
'/OUf name add rea zip code and make checka pe;~at:H to~

EXCAVAT NG doze loader end
backhoe work dump trucks
and lo boys for h re w1 ll haul
I II d rt to so 1l hmestone ond
g ovel Call Bob or Roger Jet
fers day phone 992 7089 n ght
phone 992 3525 or 992 S232

As -he Wor d Turns

Llltas Yoga &amp; You 20

Now arrange the ctrcled leners to
form the surprtse answer as sug
gested by the above cartoon

LUKEY 5 TOO OLD
TO BE JOGGIN
ALL THAT FAST

Aa-latet

1-lrw::.IIJ&lt;f

fl f)i/ ( Jq lid It,.,~

2 DO-One l te to L ve 6 13
Gu d1ng L1g ht 8 0

J.IEAR'TY

CASE OF ii-IE Fl-U

Phone 992 5191
10-22-1 mo

s Heroes a

1 DO-Hollywood Squares 3

References Ava1lable

central a r

Hogan

12 QO--Newscenter 3 Bob Braun A News 6 10 Mtdday
Magaz ne 13
12 JG--Ryan s Hope 6 13 Search for T omorrow 8 to

Reasonable Pr1ces

LISTING

Match Game 10

11 30-Wheel 01 Fortune 3 15 Family Feud 6 13 News
4 Love of L fe B 10 Sesame 51 20 33
11 5~CBS News 8 House Call 10

INEDDAWI

$7 500

527 500
CONDOR STREET - 3
bedroom home
bath

6

9 30-Fam lly Affa r 10
10 DO-Card Sharks 3 4 15 Edge of N ght 6 All In The
F am ly 8 10 Oat ng Game 13
10 30-Jeopardy 3 4 15 Andy Grlff1lh 6 Pr ce 1s R1ght
8 10
11 00-H gh Rollers 3 4 15 Happy Days 6 13 Lowell

810

12 x 60 mobile home level
lot patio fencing, off
street parking ONLY

carport and nJce level lot

8 oo--Capt Kangaroo 8 10 Sesame St 33
9 oo-Merv Gr ff n 3 Phtl Donahue 4 Emergen c y One

Pamhng

Pomeroy nice 2 beGroom

FAM ILY HOME 4
bedrooms bath nalural
gas heat dishwasher In the
kitchen
dril led well

News 6 Jetsons 10
7 1 ~Weather 33 7 30-Schoohes 10

0

10

Construction
Maintenance

6 45---Morn l ng

6 50-Chuck Wh te Reports 10 News 13
7 00-Today 3 4 15 Good Mornmg A mer ca 6 13 CBS

M'{ QUBS\IOf.l

~SIABl..\SI-Ie:D
'{~MS Aid)

News 6

5 5~

Report 3

~1'\\RI\'?e

Carpentry E lectrlcal

NEW

992 3325
216 E Second Street

6 JQ-News Confere nce 4

0

BORN LOSER

!-liT /if.

1 JG-News 13

Thomas Remembers 20

EUDLE

Pomeroy 0
3 1S tfc

1 ()()-Tomorrow J 4

WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER 1 1978
5 4~Farm Report 13 5 50-PTL Club 13
Sunr se Semes1er 10
6 OD-PTL Club 15 700 Club 8
6 2~Chnstopher Closeup 10

Unscramble 1hese four Jumbles
one lette 1o each square to form
four ord nary words

b148oo 9027
REMOOt:LI:O OLDER home on l
acre 3 o 4 bedrooms Full
basement Gas cen al heat
budge! $50 a month Detached
garage 992 7030

12 30-News 8

'ftfl\iwt
~~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

men! 3 , acres w1th opprox
ove 200 ft of r ver lrontoge
Am ous to sell Coli at er bpm

SNOW
TIRE SALE
SNOW TIRES
ON SALE AT
POMEROY ALNDMARK
SERVICE STATION

VOU TWO

CA'-1 TeSTIFYAND W&amp;VE GOT

MOORE'S

Town &amp; Country

...

OKAY

UN/0'-1

At

Phone 985 3806
Jack Ginther 985 3106

COAL LIMI::STONI: sond grovel
cole u n chlar de lert I zer dog
RISING STAR Ken nels Board ng
food and a I ypes of sal l::x
ond g oom ng
al l breeds
eel s or Soh Works Inc I: Men
Chesh re Jb7 O'i92
Sl Pomeroy 992 3891
LOVABLI:: WHITE snow d ft g eat
Mnhtlt lfcunc' fur Sole
Phone BURROUGHS SI::NSI MATIC oc
PVRENHS Pupp es
count ng mach ne
Phone 197b NASHUA 14 x bS J bedroom
1 b14 b67 3838
9921156 The Da ly ~~ntne l
ba h underp nn ng SI SOD
GOING OUT of Bus ne5s Sale
I 1 Court Street
Pome oy
and oHume loon 949 2683 or
Poodles Pek ngese Pomero
Oh o
843 3311
n on Teacup T n es $35 a
$125 Phoneb14 b96 1297
GR MI::S GOLOI:N Red D c ou!&gt;
1970 Amhe sf 50•12 2 I:IR
8 Golden Del c ous apples F tz
1970 Chomp on bOx 12 2 8R
AKC HI::GISTEREO Beagl e E:l no
pair ck 0 cho rd
SH bB9
1405 General bOx 12 2 I:IH
th s old Male $75 3b7 0292
61 4 b69 37E:I5
19b8 PMC 52x12 :2 BR
AKC REG Ge man Schnauzer
1955 Pro r e Schooner 28)(8 1 BR
MAYT AG LOPPt:IHONE Porta
pupp es 992 7040
Po r washer and dryer Very 1913 Roya l Embassy bBx14 3 BR
good cond on se I os sel Ca ll 1959 Star SOx I 0 2 SR
AKC Rt:GISTERED Block labrador
1973Sa 60)(1421:1R
ret eve
pupp es
Wormed
of er Spm q92 2_995
190E:I S or W~e 2 2 DR
Shots l::xce lent w th ch ldren
1Y74 DATSUN PICKUP PHONE
1970 Sylvab0•12 2 BR
Phone b 14 007 303q E&gt;Jen ngs
992 6197
1968 V !loges 60x 12 2 BR
o weekends
Sole LAHPH HEMNANTS Odds 19b4 W ndsor Slx10 2 BR
1970 K kwood 12xb0 J BR
and Ends Shop Rt
M d
885 MOBILE HOME 5AIE5
dleport
Oh o
992 6173 or
PT PLEASANT W VA
1&lt;177 MONZA SPVOt:R 305 eng ne
992 o206
Power steer ng Pow@ b okes
AP PALACHIAN STOVE CO lo ge
AM FM rod o More extras Co
se lec t on of wood o
coo l 1 1 ACHE 12 x bO mob le home
742 2B2b
near Oe xte 992 5858
heote s lowe!&gt;t pr ces feotur
JtnJ FORD GRAN To no 351 V 8
ng Ashley Open So
10 t I 1967 HOUSI:: TRAILER 12 x bO All
A C 992 7458
4pm Sun 12 noon I Jpm n
elect c furn shed a r cond1
M dd eport between 3 d and
1 oned washer an d dryer A lso
1&lt;175 DATSUN PICKUP Good con
4th St down the alley I om
2
ots
n
Harr sonv li e
d on
Good t re s
Low
lorryout
Ph one
Tony s
742 2626
m leoge Slep bumpe
Truck
61-4 b9E:I719
m rron s:nso 985 3979
SKVLINE MOB lE
home
2
bedrooms natural gos heat I
1917 DODGE CHARGER SE Under LUMP HOUSE co o $35 per ton
del yered 9Cf:J. 7126
ocre of level ground po ches
10 000 m1les Loaded Phone
ondown ngs
d
cor cement
992 2003
block garage 24x54
Pru t
19711 PONTIAC Coto l no A door
trees located at Reedsv lie
A C 56 000 m les Make offer
Oh o on SH 124 Close Ia store
992 3B90
PERMANENT
Coli onyt me
after 3pm
ANTIFREEZE
1972GMC 11 passenge von 1972
b 14_E! 6351 _!_or appt $20 000
WilY pay $3 99
VW 7 possen~r &gt;JOn Sold to
h ghest D dder owne reserves
~ (.i- $3(1
r ght to re1ect all b ds Call
Rea l Estate for Sale
992 788b
Sen or C1t1zens
"'
HOMESITI::S
for so le I acre and
Center lo make orrangemenls
up
M
ddleport
near Rut land
to see B ds mus t be n by Fr
Coll 992 7481
doy November 3 Payment
nusl be mode by cert I ed
VA ~HA 30 yr f none ng also
check
refmonc ng lrela.nd Mortgage
. . . :l,ack W Carsey Mgr
77 E Stole Athens phone (614)
1974 VEGA GT n good cond ton

01'\_oil

$0 NATURALLY-

/IN HONEST

For The Best
Pr1ce In Town
See
Denver Kapple

anyttme

---

CAPTAIN EASY

Phone 992 6144
992 7547
t0-18-1 mo

ReSidential •nd commer
c1a1 Call for est1mate 24
Hour Servtce Any day

!:\RADFORD
Au ct oneer Com
plete Serv ce Phone 94Y 2467
o 949 2000 Rae ne Oh a C 1ft
B odfo d

(o14) o98 3290

Any Typa lmprovomento
To E~esttng Strudures
All Typo Concrote Work
No Contract Too urgo Or
Too Small
25 Years Exporlonce
AI~ Work Guaranteed

SEPTIC TANK
CLEANING

so• 3

TUESDAY OCTOBER31 1971
4 DO-Mister Cartoon 3 Battle ot the Planels 4 Merv
Grllfln 6 Porky Pig &amp; Friends a Sesame Sl 20 33
Balman 10 Dinah 13 Hollywood Squares 15
4 »--&lt;lur Gang little Rascals 3 Gilligan s Is 4 B
Brady Bunch 10 Petticoat Junction 15
s DO-Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea 3 Star Trek 4
Beve~ly Hillbillies B
Mister Rogers Neigh
borhood 20 33 Gomer Pyle USMC 10 Brady
Bunch 15
s 30-News 6 Sanford &amp; Son 8 Elec Co 20 33 Mary
Tyler Moore 10 Odd Couple IS
6 DO-News 3 4 8 10 13 )5 ABC News 6 Zoom 20
6 30-NBC NewsJ4 15 ABC News 13 Carol Burnell&amp;
Friends 6 CBS News 8 10 Over Easy 20
7 ro--cross Wits J PM Magazine 4 $100 DOD Name
That Tune 6 Pop Goes The Country B News 10
love American Style 15 Lock Stock &amp; Barrel 20
Economically Speaking 33
7 30-Hollywood Squares 3 Let s Go The Races 8
Dalmg Game 4 Candid Camera 6 Price Is Right
10 Donna Fargo 13 TV Honor Society IS MacNeil.
Lehrer Repcrt 20 33

Bulkhng

0

4-31),11C

HOOf HOLLOW Ho 5es Buy se ll
ode or a n New and u5ed
saddles Ru h Reeves A bony

9B5 413:1

Oh o

Oh o

BIG AUCT ON Sole f
I pm
A lso ot 7pm Lois of Chr stmas
tems and other new merchon
d se ot Oh oR .... er Auct on SJf
Hg h Sl M ddleport Oh o No
sole Solu day n ght

GAUGE

Radiator~

8 DO-Grandpa Goes To Washington 315 Happy Days
6 13 Jacques Cousteau 4 Paper Chase 8 10
Soundstage 20 C1ty Notebook 33
8 JO-laverne&amp;Shlrley613 WhenTheBoatComes In
33
9 DO-Movie Stranger In Our House 3 4 IS Threes
Company 6 13 Movie Devil Dog 8 10 Movie
The California Reich 20
9 30-Taxl 6 13
lQ:.DO-Starsky &amp; Hutch 6 13 News 20
10 30-Eiectlons 78 Prelude to 80 20 Area Showcase
33
11 DO-News 3 4 6 8 10 13 15 Dick Cavett 20 Over
Easy 33
11 30-Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Mov ie The laughing
Policeman 6 13 Gunsmoke 8 Movie The SpY.
Who Came In From The Cold 10 ABC News 33

TELEVISION
VIEWING

I WISH YOU AND DADDY
COULD COME WITH US,
GRANDPA

Mourning and
Price Buildels

ROGER HYSEll.

EXPERIENQD

ANTI -FREEZE

Oh o

o

Wanted to_!5u_y_ _ _

Notoces
NO HUNTING or trespass ng on
my property w th out perm s
s on Judy McGraw

Business Services

.

Wt: WISH to express ou s ncere CHIP
WOOD
Pole s mo ll'
g ot tude ond tha nks to our
dame er 10 on Ia gest end
n e ghbors
and
f rend s
$8 50 per ton Bundled slob
relet ves fo the r many acts of
$b 50 per ton Del vered to
k ndne~s prayers cords food
Oh o Pollet Co ftt '1 Pomeroy
and flowe s dur ng the deeth of
992 2b89
our
husband
and lather
T MHI::R POMf::ftOY Fo est Pro
SpeCial thank s to Or R dgway
ducts l op p ce far slond ng
Or Abels and Or Vallee the
saw t mber Call &lt;192 59bS o
nurses n Cord oc Core Un t o
Kent Hanby 1 4116 8570
Holze.r Hasp tal The Seoems
Un t
l:w ng ~unerol Home
OLU fURNITURE ce bo•as brass
pollbeo en and Rev F l o~d.
beds ron bed,s desl.; s e c
Shook
complete househ old s Wr le
The Leland t: Nelson Fam y
M 0 M ller Rt .t Pomeroy o
call f/92 TlbO
MHS ETHAL M Stout e)(tends
than ks lo every one help ng OLD COINS
pocket w atches
celebre e my 9lst b r hdoy 50
class r ngs wedd ng bond !&gt;
odd love y greet ngs chu ch
d omonds Gold o s lver Coli
groups and f owe s and e c
Roger Wam sley 742 2331
lam l y go her ng en tov ng o
WE
PICK up JUnk auto bod es buy
de ghtful supper prepared by
ng 1unk ca r s scrap on bol
my daughter Moe 13 Oo st
fer es and metals
R der s
God Bless each one s my
Salvage
SR 124 Pomeroy
p oyer
(/q'j 54b!:l

Case No

G One four nch (-4 l be
tween Clark Stat on Morglln
County Oh o and the FIsher
Kauffman
Junct on
d scharge
I ne
Morgan
County Ohio
H One tour 1nch (4 J lme
between Murray Stat on
H ock mg County Ohio and
the Heydenvllle d!schllrge
l ne m Perry county Oh o
One tour nch (-4 ) tme
betwe~n Greer Statton Knox
County Oh o and the Br nk
haven d scharge I ne
n
Homes County Ohto
J One line conslstmg of
var ous segments of two nch
(2 J three nch (3 ) and four
nch (4 l lmes between
Moch1can Stat1on
Ashland
County
Oh o and Greer
Stat on Knox County Oh o
K One line cons st.ng of
vanous segments Of two nch
(2 ) and four nch (4 J lines
between Berry Stat 011 and
Moreland Stat on
both
n
Wayne County Oh10
..._ One four nch (4 ) ne
between M lersburg Stat on
Holmes County Oh o end the
Berry More and Stat on
ne
r~ferred to n subparagraph
K above
M One four nch ( 4 ) 1 ne
between Berry Stat on and
Wooster Stat on
both I n
Wayne County Ohio
N One s x nch (6 ) I ne
and one four nch (4 J ne
between Shreve Junct on
Wayne County
Oh a
and
Wooster
Stat on
Wayne
County Oh10
One t~ne consist ng of
various segments of four Inch
(d ) and s x nch (6 ) lines
and one four Inch 14 ) I ne
between Wooster Stat 1on
Wayne County
Oh o
and
Lod Stat on Med na County

-~

T&gt;ICKTRACY

10

•

Inc

South

2"

Pass

"'J

By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
South was qUite happy
when he looked at dummy It
looked as If he could lose two
trwnp tricks and still wrap
up game and rubber
HlS happmess was short
lived He played dununy s
queen of spades and East
produced the kmg Now
South could only afford one
trwnp loser
The normal play of th•s
trwnp sUit 1s to lead to an
honor 1f 1t holds you return
to dwnmy and lead a second
tune Th1s succeeds 1f the
ace of trwnps IS to your

You hold

10-31 B

+A 2

"KQJ8 6
• KQJ74
• 3

You respond one heart to
your partner s club opening
and bid three diamonds af
ter he goes to one notrwnp
His next b1d IS three
notrump A Vermont reader
wants to know what we do
next

We pass Our partner has
heard our bids and elected to
play m notrwnp Tins should
be the best contract
(NE WSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN

(Do you have B quest on for
fhe experts? Wnte
Ask the
Experts care of thiS newspa
per Jnd v1dusl quest1ons w 11
be answered f accompan ed
by stamped self addressed
envelopes The most mferest
ng quest ons wdl be used n
this column and w II receive
cop1es ol JACOBY MODERN)

�-.
10-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Tuesday, Oct.

More gove~11m~nt
servi~es sought

,•.·

·:·:

WEDDINGS CAN RUIN FRIENDSHIPS
RAP :
J erry and I grew up together and our parents are good
friends - or were, until they started planning our wedding.
When we told them we were engaged they were superpleased. Right away they decided they'd go in together on a
big, sit-down dinner wedding bash. Ever since, our lives have
not been calm. ·
Each mother wants a different menu. They are bickering
over the nwnber of guests, the kind of wedding cake, music,
flowers, you name it. Mom and Jerry 's mother, even .though
they're like sisters. compete a Jut, ami our Dads arc gelling in"
to the act too . It's still fou r months to go, and ah·eady Jerry
and I are nervous wrecks . The parents forget it's supposed to
be our day, and we wanted something simple. When we tell
them that, they get their feelings hurt . As in , " What would people think if you had a chintzy wedding ?"
What would you suggest 7 - TERRY AND J E RRY
DEAR TERRY AND JERRY :
As a non-believer in big, posh weddings, I'd suggest you two
make a dale with your minister, invite dose relatives, and
have a simple ceremony in his study. Your respective mothers
may even feel relieved ~ after they recover from nearcoronaries. -HELEN

TERRY .A NDJERRY :
If Mom 's way is just too simple, why don't you make your
own wedding plans and slick to them, no matter how the
parents howl ? It's your day, No one should take it awaY from
you, even though they think they 're doing you a favor. -SUE
DEMONSTRATES
DEAR HELEN AND SUE:
JAWS OF LIFE-Mason Fire
I thought I'd be a "liberated woman " and ask a guy \o go to a Chief Ross 'Roush, front,
disco with me. He made up some .l ame excuse, very embar- demonstrates this new piece
rassed. We're pretty good friends, but ' now we avoid each of emergency equip.menl
other. And I feel just plain crushed .
. designed to free a trapped
Now I understand what fellows go through ellery lime they person from a vehicle. The
~~out a new girl. One rejeclion was enough to finish me . Yet
males are supposed to keep right on trying. No wonder a lot of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
guys don't date. I wouldn 't either if l always had to take the inAdmitted - Paul Shuler,
itiative. -FEELS FOR THEM
Portland;
Edna Evans,
DEARFFT:
Middleport
;
Debbie Eynon,
Your letter shows again why in today's world, it may be
Pomeroy; William Wilson,
"okay" for a girl to ask a boy for a dale, but most girls won't.
Middleport.
Centuries of conditioning have geared us to be the ref users, nul
Discharged - Deborah
the refused . - .SUE
,
Ridgway, Betty Hammons.

situations throughout the
Hurat Jaws of Ufe was
county. Looking on, left to
purchased through matching
right : Commissioner Micheal
county and state funds. While
Bob Hockenberry,
Whalen,
the Mason Department wiU
keep and maintain the tool, it .. who is president of the Apwill be used for emergency palachian Emergen c y

Medical ·services Board of
DireCtors ; Commissioner
William Rardin; and Mason
Mayor Fred Taylor, who is
also emergency services
director for the county.

~--A~e~-D;;atiis-1

Logan teachers· settle,

OAPSE members still out
di;;pute .
The students, most of them
Negotiations between re- seniors, established the camp
presentatives of the board Monday about half a block
and OAPSE were scheduled from their teachers' strike
for today. ,
h~adquarters.
Ron Bawnan, president of
The students , indicating
the local OAPSE chapter,
they are the victims of the
said 17 - 13 language and · strike, said they will continue
the protest around the clock
four money issues
until teachers return to work.
remained to be resolved
Court action was expected
before today's meeting.
The teacher's &lt;ditract pro- soon, possibly today, 01! a
vides a base salary of $9,100 request by the Painesville
and sets forth procedures for Township Board ol Education
negotiations when the pact for contempt citations
against teachers refusing a
expires.
back to work order.
Elsewhere,
strikes
The board also wants
continued
today
in
negotiations, which broke off
Painesville Township-and the
Monday, t 0 be contingent on
Lorain
County
Joint
teachers returning to work.
Vocational School District.
The teachers walked out
Meanwhile , about two
dozen Painesville Township
Sept. 27 in a fight over wages
and working conditions and
High School students have set
up a camp to protest their
have stayed out despite a
court ruling against tbeir job
school system's 31K!ay-&lt;&gt;ld
teacher strike.
action .
Teachers in the Lorain
County Joint Vocational
School District at Oberlin
went on strike one week ago
in a dispute over salary,
fringe benefits, dismissal
policies and retroactive pay.
All school districts ln
Lorain County, except the
city of Lorain, send students
to the vocational school.
going Into the Mall

By
United
Press
International
The Logan Board of Education and the Logan Education
Association
have
unanimously ratified a new
contract, but the state's
longest school strike h
history continued today.
LEA
President
Bill
Parrigin said teachers would
man picket lines again today
in supp&lt;rl of striking nonacademic
personnel,
members of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees.
Parrigin said negotiators
for the board and the LEA
reached
a
tentative
agreement on the new twoyear pact Monday'and it was
approved by both sides in
meetings a few .hours later.
The teachers in the 4,100. students system walked out
August 29th in a contract:

SPRAWUNG FACilJTY - The Sentinel camera was unable to pick up the entire
construction picture of the new nursing borne facility in Meigs County. The large H-shape
complex will c~tain 28,000 feet of floor space.
PRODUCTION SHUTDOWN
TEHRAN, Iran (UP!) - A
general strike against the
shah today completely shut
down Iran's $20 blllion-a-year
oil industry, which supplies
both the United States and the
Soviet Union with fuel, newspapers reported.
The shutdown was total, the
Kayhan newspaper reported.
Major oil weDs in southern
Iranian fie lds stopped
producing crude and the
world's largest integrated
refinery at Abadan has

MORE THAN
$ ·1 30,000.00
·~·

Will be

Monday, October 30, 1978
To Our 1978 Christmas
Club Members to help provide .
them with a Worry-Free

FUNDS APPROVED
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
state Controlling Board
Monday approved the release
of $1.7 million for construction of an office building

in Marietta for the Ohio
Bureau of Employment
Services.
The bureau said slightly
over $1 million of the money
wil_l be taken from funds
planned lor a similar olfice in
Painesville. Those BES
facilities will continue to he
leased.
Another $307,561 will be
transferred from funds intended for an office building
in Findlay, where the cost
can be reduced, a spokesman
said.

~------..

Holiday Season.

~R,~

,...--JOIN ~
OUR
'79

Open Your New Accounts
· As of October 31,1978
Walk-Up Teller Window
And Auto Teller Window

M~e~--------------------Phone'-----~-----------Type of Entry_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Please complete and mail to Candy Ingels, in care of
Ingels Furniture Store, N. Second Ave., Middleport, Ohio
45760.
ceased
refining
products, it said.

most

ABORTIONS CONSIDERED
WASIIINGTON (UP!) The inflanunatory issue of
abortions for minors will be
considered once again by the
Supreme Court this . session.
The high court agreed
Monday to review the constitutionality
of
a
Ma~achusetts law requiring
unmarried girls under 18 to
obtain · consent from their
parents or a judge before
having an abortion.
The court's review follows
a 1976 ruling in which it held
unconstitutional a Missouri
statute containing a " blanket
rule" requiring parental
consent for minor daughters
to obtain abortions.

L:ili1ens l'ational
••aLEI'OkT
01110

"'n·•-•

•' .y., .

'·
Member F.D.t.C. Deposits Insured to $4~.000.00.

LAFF- A- DAY

"Let's get out of here! The
MENUS cost a dollar and a

ELBERFELD$

hal£."

1976

CADI~

Full Power

Diamonds total 1 ct.

Special Price
•

Set

Rent o BLUE UJSml' slmtpooer

10 got me !ICMlbing oction you .
need to k&gt;osen and till out

ground-it dl~ ond.grine. And use
BLUE WS1RE shampoo to got
·
yout COTpeiS brigllt. cteon ond

ELDORADO

RENT only $2.50 Ptrdoy

992-2920

'9700
Karr &amp; VanZandt
You'll LlkoOurQuolity
Woy 'of Doing Bualnoas ,

· Everything you cou ld ask for
in a bulky sweater-jacket!
Space-dye cab le knit cardigan of
100% Acrylic : convertible collar, front-tie
belt, two patch pockets, cuffed sleeves.
Grey combination and beige combination.

Sizes S,M,L

GMAC FINANCING
992-5342

PDmoroy
Opltl Evonlnga '1116 :00
TitS p.m. Sat.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Wblte HOUle Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UPI ) - President,Carter today ordered tbe
Treasury Department and the Federal ·Reserve Board to
implement a series of moves to halt the damaging decline of
!h~ dollar.

Officials said tbe Treasury and the board would move
immediately "to strengthen tbe dollar" and to "counter contintllng domestic inflationary pressures."
The board said it would:
-Approve a 1 percentage point Increase in the discount rate
at the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from B'h to 9'h
percent, effectively immediately. The discount rate is tbe rate

charged member banks when they borrow from tbeir district
Federal Reserve Bank.
- Establishment of a supplementary reserve requirementin addition to present member bank reserve requirements equal to 2 percent of time deposits in denominations of $100,000
c.- more.
·
.
-Increases in the boatd's reciprocal currency (swap)
arrangements with the central banks of West Germany, Japan
and SWitzerland from $7.6 billion to $15 billion, and activation
of the swap arrangement with the Bank of Japan ..
Carter told reporters at ti-.e White House, "Tbe continuing
decline in the exchange value of the dollar is clearly not
warranted by the fundam·ental economic situation. That decline threatens economic progress at home and abroad and the

success of our anti-inflation program."
" As a ... step in the anti-inflation program, it is now
necessary to act to correct the exctlSsive decline in the dollar
which has recently occurred," the president said .
"Therefore, pur$uant to my request that strong action be
.taken, the Department of the Treasury and the Federal
Reserve Board are today initiating measures in both tbe
domestic and international monetary fields to assure tbe
strenth of the dollar."
. Treasury Secretary Michael Blumentbal said that in addition to the domestic measures being taken by tbe Federal
Reserve, " The United States will, in cooperation with tbe
governments and central banks of Germany and Japan and tbe
Swtss national bank, intervene in a forceful and c""rdinated

Levy passage urged,
road problems aired

,

Marauder

BY NED TE[W(O
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!)
- Arab foreign ministers
today debated a compromise
proposal on dealing with
Egyptian President Anwar
Sadat while countering U.S.engineered peace moves in
the Middle East.
The sharply divided Arab

• •
participate

I_.J~r.....~~.-e_w_
. ._or_ld_To_d_a_y_
Merger hearing concludes

Governor's fund to be used

Wellston
residents
irritated

·· be voted upon Nov. 7 will be published in the final two Issues of
; the local papers prior to election day.
·
Purpose o1 this policy is to assure that no charges or
• 1

WELlST6N,Ohlo (UPI) A group of Jackson County
residents said Tuesday they
would begin a petition ~ive
to stop the dumping of
industrial wastes in the
county by a Houston, Texas,
firr.l .
Representatives
of
Browning-Ferris Industries
of Houston met with concerped citizens in Wellston
Tuesday night and said' they
had nothing to lear about
dumping the industrial
wastes from various area

sources.
BEAUTIFUL WEATHER - Horsemen at the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds are taking advantage of the
beautiful faD weather in getting yearlings into training for .
I!I!XI summer's racing program. One of them is Ed
Humphrey, Rock Springs, pictured with his yearling,

(:ralg Bowman of Lake
Charles, La ., vice president
of the firm's chemical
services division, and A.J .
Kennard of Houston , a
company engineer and vice
president of the firm' s liquid
(Continued on page 12)"

compromise plan , as printed
by Beirut's conserva tive AI
Anwar newspaper, reflected
a victory foc the hard-line
camp led by Syria, without
completely antagonizing
Saudi Arabia - the Arab
world 1S arch mocl er ate and

bankroller .
The newspaper said the
pla
n stressed the Palestinian
ministers
meeting
in
question
was the core of the
Baghdad sought the last East
conflict, rejected
Middle
minute compromise plan of
the
Camp
David
accords and
action to present to a summit
condemned
Sadat
's policy .
meeting Thursday called to
The compromise, the paper
counter the Camp David
said , also stressed the Arab
initiative.
the compromise wa s cha racter of Jerusalem 1
worked out in a five-h our ca lled for greater financial
or
Arab
meeting
late
Tuesday support
between the representatives .. confrontation " states, and
of Syria, Iraq, the Palestine
Liberation Organization,
Kuwait, Jordan and Tunisia .
The six were entrusted with
boiling down tbe existing
Arab differences on Egypt's
peace initiative into a
"unified plan of action"
Dr. April B. Magnussen, a
acceptable
to
Arab
in
Inte r nal
moderates and hard-liners, sp ecialist
Medicine, ha s joined the staff
diplomats said.
draft
of
the of Holzer Clinic Ltd., acThe

agreed on a

~~temporary"

tr ansfer of Arab League
headquarte rs from Cairo to
Tu nis.
But the French-Language
L'Orient-Le J our reported
from Baghdad the moderates
were prevailing .
Arab diplomats noted the
AI Anwar version of tbe
comprom ise fell short of
reported Syrian calls for
categor ical expul sion of
Egypt from the Arab League ,
breaking of all poli t ical ,
. economic and trade ties with
the Sad at regime and the
application of sanctions
against it because of its peace
overtures with the Jewish
state.

Dr. April Magnussen
joins clinic staff

Arrests solve
Mayor
coal firm B&amp;E urges

hand will

, statements will be published without adequate opportunity for
,refuting such charges, or statements.
Friday's paper (Nov. 3) will be the last day lor letters on
- -all election Issues and individual races. Letters Should be in the
banda o1 the editorial department no later than 5 p.m. on
'rhunday, Nov. 2, for Friday's publication.
Letters o1 opinion are welcomed. They should, however, be
' lesllhan 300 words long (or be subject to reduction by lhl!
•-'ediiiJr) and must be signed 'with the signee's address .and
telephone nwnber. Names may be withheld u~ request.
However, 00 request, names will be dlaclosed. Letter should be
~ .Ia ~ lute, addresaing issues, not personalities.

manner in tbe amounts required to correct the situation ."
Carter said the international aspects of the program have
been developed with other major goverrunents and central
banks, "and they intend to cooperate fully with the Unitud
States in attaining our mutual objectives."
Blwnenthal said, "The fact is this foreign exchange situation
that this program is designed to correct has gotten out of hand.
It must end and will end.
. " The dollar's deterioriation already has lead to a rise in
unport competitive pr ices which further fuels inflation and
per petuates a vicious cycle. The image of tbe American
economy and its leader ship is adversely affected by this.
" Failure to act now would be injurious ... "

Compromise being debated

Fred George and Harold
"This operating levy should
"We are convinced the
Dewhurst, Rutland Township not be confused with a con- training of the retarded of our
Trustees, met with the Meigs struction levy of .50 of a mill . county can be best a c. County Commission Tuesday which began to be collected complished by a program
night discussing conditions of this year. Due to an ad- located in our county, taught
a bridge and roads in . their ditional grant from the state by local teachers and adtownShip.
made in June 1978, this ministered by our local
Also meeting with the construction levy will cease retarded board.
'···
commi~ionerswasJim Page when $90,000 is collected. We
" To meet such need the
'
MEIG S COUNT¥
of Fleming, Page and Stolte, anticipate that this will stop county conunissioners are
.
fhH&amp;l Add~1u1 01 ~tor't
ent:ineering firm. Page next year.
submitting to the electors at
dis~ussed the alignment of
"Because of lack of the coming general eleciion a
the access road to the new facilities in Meigs County, we special tax levy of 1.25 mills
multi-purpose building.
have been transporting our for the operation of an
The board requested Page mentally retarded. to GaUia adequate mental retardation
prepare two alternatives on County on a temporary program for this county, we
the final construction of the yearly contract since 1975. are recommending passage
road. ·It will run · in con- The cost of service varies of the levy. The amount
DiRECTORIES ON SALE - Meigs CountY Rural
junction with the parking lot from year to year.
requested is estimated to be
Address
Directories are available for purchase, 50 cents
" At the present, there is no the least amount required to
of the building. Comeach
which
includes a map of the county with a cross
missioners authorized Page levy for the operation of a operate such a program. If
at ·the office of the Meigs County
reference,
to finalize detailed plans for mental retardation program. such levy fails to pass, then
Commissioners.
The directories give listing of the new
the access road from Union · All costs' come from the such cost must be borne by
rural ad~esses. Mary Hobstetter, clerk for the
Ave. to the parking lot. county's general fund. At the county general fund
commissioners, is shown holding one of the directories.
Commissioners
have pre~ent 31 mentally retarded Which wiD mean a curtailing
released the following are being served on this of other.county services that
statement regarding the temporary basis. The state are now provided."
mental retardation levy.
has estimated that there are
Attending the meeting were
"The Meigs County com- 83 mentally retarjied needing Henry Wells, Richard Jones
missioners recommend and service in Meigs County.
and Jim Roush, comurge the s,upport of the
" AU chil~en are entitled to missioners,
and Mary
operating levy for the mental receive an education or Hobstetter, clerk.
retardation program for training at public expense
Meigs County which wlll be and aU, including retarded
submitted at the cop1ing are required to attend school.
'- ... · " h breaking and entering num·b.er.· .-an&lt;\. tlescription
gentit'al'~l'riloo. "'l'hts ·Jevy The public school systems do
of the Jaymar Coal Company matched a vehicle stolen last
ill for 1,25 ' miU levy for the not provide ·a training
on Oct. 24 has been solved and week on SR 7 near the Gallia
operation of the new facility program for the retard·
for the retarded. There was ed and such are certia stolen car has been County line. ·
When Deputies Darrell
formerly a levy of.75 of a mill - lied and transferred to
recovered with the arrest of
Slone,
Keith Little, Walt
two
walkaways
from
the
which expired in 1975 and a the county mental retarManley
and
Manning Mohler,
School
for
Boys
.
.
Fairfield
.20 of a mUI which expired dation _program · for apAccording to. the Meigs Larry Coleman, Rutland
this year. There is presently propriate \raining. The cost
Marshal, Gary Wolfe, Inno levy for operation. This of such specialized program
Meigs High School March- County Sheriff James J.
vestigator
and county
levy amounts to$1.25 for each must be borne to a large part ing Band
under
the Proffitt, deputies were juvenile officer, Carl Hysell
$1,000 of tax yalue of by Mr.igs County.
direction of Randy and Alan alerted Tuesday afternoon arrived near the Swadley
Hunt will compete Saturday ·two boys had an auto stuck in
property at Langsville, two
at the annual Newark High mud at the strip mines near
juveniles
were in the stolen
license
plate
School marching band Langsville. The
.
.
.
vehicle.
competition to be held at
One of the youths was from
Whites Field footbaU stadiwn Emergency units
Meigs County and the other
in Newark.
from Scioto County. They had
Eighteen competing bands had three calls
walked away from Fairfield
will be judged on playing
School for Boys on Oct. 23 and
The emergency unit of the
performance, marching and
hitchhiked to Meigs County.
CINCiNNATI {UPI) -A seven-week federal hearing on
field maneuyering from 12 to Middleport Fire Department
According
to
t he
the prop05ed business merger of Cincinnati's two daily newswas called to Plum St.,
statements taken from the
papers, tbe Enquirer and Post, bas ended and written briefs 5 p.m.
Each band will compete in Pomeroy at 10 :34 a .m. juveniles they entered the
are to be submitted during,lbe' next several weeks before a
the division according to the Tuesday for Thelma Grueser, office at the Jaymar Coal Co. ,
ruling is made, says a Justice Department attorney.
size of its school. Seventeen a medical patient , who was near the Meigs - GaUia
Just)ce Department attorney Charles Stark said Enquirer
trophies . will be awarded taken to Veterans Memorial county line and took apand Post lawyers will bave three weeks to file briefs and then
recognizing Hag corps, rifle Hospital where she was proximately $1,000. They
lawyers lor groups opPosing the proposed merger wiD have corps, field commanders, admitted.
three weeks to file their response .
At 1:04 p.m . the lire walked a short distance away
~ill teams and marching
department
went
to and took the car. They ~ove'
bands. ·
to Sandusky then returned to
The Newark Marching Cheshire to extinguish a fire
Meigs
County
Sunday
Band competition is another in a corn field owned by Joe
evening.
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Initial funding ol a training opportunity for Meigs band Thompson and located near
Following questioning, both
program for 250 people idled by industrlallayoffs in the Mans- parents and boosters to Kyger Creek High School.
individuals
gave written
At 8:11 p.m. The fire
field area will be provided through $229,000 from tbe support the band. Tickets
statements admitting enwill be on sale at the Newark department was caUed to tering the J aymar Coal
Governor's Discretionary Manpower Fund.
stadium,
adults
$2.50, Utile Kyger where a bridge
Gov. James A. Rhodes said Tuesday tbe money will be
Company.
students
$1.00.
Food
will
be was reported on fire .
used to sponsor training prosrams through the North Central
Approximately $600 was
Technical College In Mansfield. Additional funding for the available manned by the lfowever , the department
recovered.
They
are
program to carry through 1979 for at least 1,000 jobless sponsoring group the Newark was returned to station
currently being held in the
before reaching the scene.
workers, at a total cost ol $1.3 million, is being reviewed by Band Parents' Club.
juvenile section of the Meigs
state officials, be said.
county jail.

"Bunny Stone."
I

F iftee n Cents
Vol. 2!), No. 140

Carter issues orders to.· halt skidding dollar

No letters to the editor pertaininglO caridllliites or Issues to

1977 CADILLAC

pltl$111

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRYCourtSTO
St ..

at y . . . . enttne

'5995

$86500
Now is the lime lo Lay Away
For Christmas

e

OOLUMBUS (UPI)- State Attorney General William J.
S:.own has been asked to freeze aU records in Ohio Auditor
'n11111as Ferguson's office that would be needed in a grand jury
investigation.
·
·
"This is an wwsual step f&lt;l' a political cl)allenger to take,"
· Dmald Lukens the Republican candidate f!ll' state auditor,
•said in a letter to Brown Tuesday. "However, it is an unusual
· situation for a candidate to he •campaigning against an
lnCIDJibent who is also under grand jury investigation.

SEDAN DEVILLE

14K white gold

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 1, 1978

•

All records will be frozen

USED CARS

Ba~....,·

·
·~
£6
/
~!f5LJI!~j~z~,G2~{~d~, ~---~~-~~~--..._

The enjoyment of hearing
rain pattering on the roof is in
inv erse proportion to the
possibility it leaks like a
sieve.

·~:i·

YOUR BEST ·DIAMOND
BUYS ARE HERE
FIRE-LITE

.THE FRIENDLY BANK

.

.Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

(Darlene) Shortridge, Rt. I,
W. J. ROLLINS
Thurman;
· Mrs. James
William J . Rollins, 92,
(Irene)
Coe,
Rt. 1, Bidw.eU
Route 2, Letart, was
and
Mrs.
Jimmy
(Ruth)
pronounced dead on arrival
Barnes,
Rt.
1,
Bidwell.
at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Nineteen grandchildren
He was born Sept. 29, 1886
survive
along with nine greatin Letart, to the late H. N. and
grandchil~en.
Sarah Smith Rollins. He was
One sist_e r survives, Maude
preceded in death by his wife,
Sarles,
Pomeroy.
Elizabeth R. Smith Rollins.
Funeral
services will he
He was a member of the
beld
at
p.m.
T)lursday at
Star . Church,
Guiding
Rebecca Lodge of Letart, and Miller's Home for Funerals
the IOOF, Point Pleasant for with Rev. John Jefferies
65 years. He was a farmer officiating. Burial will be in .
Camp&amp;ign Cem!'{ery.
and banker.
Friends may call at the
Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. Sybil Norris, funeral borne from 2-4 and 7-9
Junction -City, 0.; Mrs. p.m. on Wectnesday.
Kathryn Ble;;sing, Mrs. Clare
Capehart, both of Letart; two
sons,
Nathan,
Letart;
EVA G. WEI.8H
George, Elgin, Ill.; 10
Mrs. Eva G. Welsh, 86, 5155
grandchildren; 16 greatN. High St., Colwnbus, died
grandchildren.
Saturday at her realdence.
Funeral services will be
Mrs. Welsh was retired
Friday 2 p.m. at the Guiding
from the Columbus and
Star Church, Letart, with the
Southern Ohio Electric Co., ·
Rev. Wilbur Baxter ofAthens, after 28 years serficiating. Burial . will be in
vice. She was a member of
Evergreen Cemetery.
· the Maple Grove United
Friends may caD after 3 Methodist Church and the
p.m. Thursday at the ·Athens
Business
and
Foglesong Funeral Home.
Professional Women's Club.
Surviving are sons ·and
daughters-in-law including
CECIL RUSSELL
Cecil Russell, 68, a resident Roger C. and Ruth Welsh of
of Rt. I, Bidwell, died in Grove City; John . M. and
Holzer Medical Center 3:30 Anne Welsh, Gallipolis,
former residents of Meigs
a ,m. Monday.
He was born July 4, 1910, at County; five grandchil~en;
Pomeroy, son of ti)e late four great-grandchil~en; a
sister, Bernice and her
Lewis and Allee RusseU.
Mr. Russell served in the U. husband, Bernard Higley of
S. Army during and after Grandview.
Funeral services were held
World War II, from 1943
Monday evening at the
through .1946.
He was a retired employee Woodyard Co. Chapel, 255 E.
of the Ohio State Highway State St., Colwnbus, with the
Garage,' havlrig retired in Rev. Hans Klee officiating.
The body was then taken to
1974.
Mr. Russell married Hazel the Jaegers Funeral Home in
Fields on May 11, 1974. Sbe . Athens where services will be
survives, illong with four ehld at 10 a.m. Wednesday.
step-children :
Bert Friends may caD at that
Browning, GaUipolis; Mrs . funeral home. Burial will be
Joseph (Sadie) Jones, Rt. 1, in Wells Cemetery in Meigs
Bidwell;
Mrs.
Harold County.

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

Open Friday Evenings S to 1 p.m.

'~~

C&lt;mnt us in to take part in the annual Middleport
Chamber of Commerce Christmas Parade on the evening
of Nov. ?:/.

FOR CHRISTMAS AND fOREVER

CHRISTMAS
CLUB

By THOMAS J. SHEERAN
Hospital care can be
I,.OUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI ) obtained on the Kentucky
- Gov. Juli81) M. CarroU side of the river with only an
pointed Monday to residents additional live or ltkninutes
of northeastern Kentucky in travel time over · the
who are angry over tbe normal driving time to
shutdown of the U.S. Grant Portsmouth, Carroll said.
The U.S. Grant Bridge, the
Bridge as representative of
increasing citizen demand for ooly link between Ohto and
more government services. Kentucky for 25· miles, was
The residents of South closed in July when
Shore - who normaUy use structural defects were
the bridge to travel across the discovered. Officials hope to
· Ohio River to Portsmouth, repair the defects within 13
Ohio, for hospital care · months.
have
"complained . Earlier, ca·r roll was
vociferously," a bout the cheered by the highway
bridge problem, Carroll said. administrators when he
"The American public is pointed -out the state's ·
demanding more and more of success in raising $600 millioo
us every day," Carroll told through lhe sale of bonds in ·
delegates to a convention of recent years to pay for coalstate highway department haul roads.
"Wouldn't you like. to have
officials from around the
nation.
an authority like that," a
Carroll noted he was unable beaming Carroll asked. The
to·
continue
medical question was met with warm
emergency helicopter service · applause.
·
between South Sbore and
The governor also said he
Portsmouth. The helicopter believed inflation made it
service was discontinued cheaper to bOrrow money at
because of its $1,000-a-day · interest rates which he said
cost.
can
make
highway
" They don't understand construction costs lower in
why we can't just pull the the long Mil). Last week the
money out of the sky," said state sold highway bonds for
Carroll, referring to demands 6.506 percent while lnflation
by South Sbore residents for a may reach 10 percent this
reswnption of the helicopter year, CarroU noted.
service.

•

cording to an armoun cement

made today by Robert E.
Daniel, Clinic Administrator.
Dr. Magnussen comes to
the clinic after · completing
her residency in Internal
Medicine in Western Pennsylvania Hospital in Pitts-·
burgh, Pa.
.
A native of Gallipolis and
daughter of Dr. and Mrs .
Keith R. Brandeberry of
Gall ipolis, Dr. Magnussen
Middleport Mayor Fred graduated magna cum laude
Hoffman
today
urged from Marietta Coll ege,
residents to vote for and
support the one-mill levy
which will be on the Nov. 7
ballot in the village.
This levy, which wiil be for
a five-year period , will
provide funds for the purchase of a fuUy-equipped new
fire truck for t112 Middleport
Volunteer F ire Dept.
Approximate cost of the
new vehicle will be between
$80,000 and $100,000. The levy
will provide approximately
$45,000 toward this purchase.
The fire depart ment has
$10,000 which they have
earned which will be paid on
the truck at the time of
purchase, along with any
other mon ey which is
available.
Through t he negotiating
efforts of fire department
members, Cheshire Village
OR. APRIL MAGNUSSEN
and Cheshire Township wiD
also be paying their fair
share on this new vehicle.
These two areas have fire
protection contracts with our
fire department and will also
greatly benefit from this new
piece of equipment.
.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking
The truck which will be
replaced is approximately 20 Valley Regina! Development
years old and is naturally not
District and its Area Agency
as dependable as it was a few on Agin g announ ced the
years ago even though it has availability of approximately
had good care and proper $250,000 for Social Service
Programs for Senior Cit izens
maintenance.
This one-mill levy amounts in its eight-county area . The
to only $1.00 per $1,000 of funds are- made available
property appraisal value and from Title III of the Older
is certainly a small price to American Act through the
pay for improved fire Ohio Commission on Aging.
Funds are to be used to
protection in the village.
Fire Department members provide needed services to
have always worked hard in persons over the age of 60 in
money-making projects and the followin g co unti es:
have always been supported Athens, Hockin g, Meigs,
by the residents of the Monroe , Mor gan, Noble,
Perry , a nd Was hingt on .·
community . Most of the
equipment
and
Im- Among the services for which
provements which have been the $250,000 may be used are
made during the past several Information and Referral ;
years have been made with Transportation ; Escort ;
money which fire department Outreach; Home Services;
members have made from Legal and other Counseling
and Assistance Programs ;
these projects.
The mayor luriher stated, and Residential Repair and
•
"I urge all residents to Renovation.
Application for funds in the
support this levy for tbe fire
department of our com- form of a proposal may be
munity and help us to con- submitted by any governtinue to have one of the finest ment unit or public or private
and . most efficient depart' non-profit corporation.
Proposals must be on the
ments in the area . You have
. always supported their proper format, reviewed by
needed projects in the past the local County Council on
and I'm sure you will over- Aging, and Sumbmitted to
whelmingly endorse this Buckeye Hills by November
30.
levy."

.

-

·passage

$250,000

available

Marietta, in 1973. While there
she was el ect~d to Phi Beta
Kappa . She completed her
medical school training at
Ohio St ate Univ ersity,
Col umbu s, in June , 1974 ,
achieving cum laude status
and was a memher of the
Alpha
Omega
Alpha
honorar y academic society.
From J u\y 1 , 1974 to June
30, 1975 , she served her int ern ship
at
Riverside
Method ist
Hospital
in
Colum bus, and her residency
training in Internal Medicine
was completed two years
lat er at We stern Pennsylvania Hospital in Pittsburgh.
Dr. Magnu~en and her
hu sband ,
Dr.
Jim an
ENT ·
Magnu sse n,
specialist who joined the
clmic staff in August, and tOmonth old son, Ro bert ~ a re
residin g at 5 Vine St. in,

Gallipolis.

Teachers
honoring
OAPSE line
United Press International
Striking teachers in the
Painesvill e Township School
Dis tr ict t oday asked for
binding arbitration with tbe
township board of education.
But School Superintendent
Earl Bardail says the board
is going to see what steps
have to be taken to fire I~
teachers .
Meanwhile, a strike by nonacade m ic
empl o yees
continued in the Logan School
District , with teacher s
honoring picket lines. And a
strike by teachers at the
Lorain
County
Joint
Vocational School also continued today .
The PainesviUe Township
Educa t ional Association,
which represents the striking
teachers, today asked for
binding arbitration in the
contract disupte.
However , Bardall said tbe
r eques t would not be
dis cussed at the board's
schedul ed m eeting today,
but, instead the board would
discuss po~ible avenues it
could take to terminate tbe
teacher's contracts.
Logan ' teachers and tbe
Logan Board of Education
reached agreement on a contract earlier this week, but
nonacademic employees are
still negotiating.
The teachers , said they
would continue to honor the
picket lines of the nonteaching personnel untO . a
contract agreement IE
reached .
Schools have been open
with classes taught by
substitute teachers and some
regular teachers who haw
refused to participate in the
strike.

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